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An index to the collected works of William Hazlitt cover

An index to the collected works of William Hazlitt

Chapter 22: Q.
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About This Book

This reference volume furnishes a systematic index to Hazlitt's collected essays and papers, chiefly listing names of real and imaginary persons, places, and subjects, together with a curated list of quotations. Editorial notes and a preface outline compilation methods, corrections, and addenda discovered during preparation, explain filing conventions for characters and quotations, and note deliberate omissions to limit length. Cross-references and corrigenda aim to help readers locate writings and variant attributions across the collected volumes.

Q.

  • Quadratus (in Marston’s What You Will), v. 225.
  • Quakers, i. 49 and n., 50.
  • Quarles, xii. 48 n.
  • Quarrel, The (in Liber Amoris), ii. 294.
  • Quarterly Review, The, iii. 192;
    • also referred to in i. 95, 139, 166, 365, 376, 384, 385–6, 410, 456; iii. 44, 110, 112, 126, 202, 203–4, 211–15, 217–22, 224–5, 229, 231, 242, 262, 295; iv. 298, 302, 307–8, 310, 343, 419; vi. 59, 87, 99, 152 n., 226, 263, 284, 479; vii. 131, 208, 301, 312, 381; viii. 453; ix. 246 n.; xi. 322, 419, 537, 547, 551; xii. 169, 295, 314.
  • Quattro-Fontane-, Via di (at Rome), ix. 233.
  • Quebec, Battle of, xi. 546.
  • Queen (in Lust’s Dominion), v. 207.
  • —— (in Shakespeare’s Richard III.), xi. 194.
  • —— Caroline (in Scott’s Heart of Midlothian), viii. 413 n.
  • —— Charlotte, The (passage boat), ii. 242.
  • —— Dollalolla (in Fielding’s Tom Thumb), vi. 453.
  • —— Elinor (in Shakespeare’s King John), xi. 411.
  • —— Katherine (in Shakespeare’s King John), i. 311; vii. 306; viii. 223.
  • —— Mab, vi. 276; viii. 32; xii. 20.
  • —— Whim (in Rabelais), iii. 128.
  • Queen’s Matrimonial Ladder (Hone’s), xii. 172 n.
  • —— Trial (Hayter’s), vi. 386; ix. 128.
  • Queensberry, Duke of, ii. 28; vii. 211.
  • Queensberry’s Duchess, xi. 375.
  • Quentin Durward (Scott’s), iv. 248; vii. 339.
  • Queries and Answers; or, The Rule of Contrary, xii. 296.
  • Quevedo Y. Villegas, Francisco Gomez de, i. 387; xi. 234; xii. 348.
  • Quick, John, i. 155; vi. 275; viii. 230, 386; xii. 198 n.
  • Quickly, Mrs, xi. 312.
  • Quin, James, i. 157; iii. 389; xii. 33.
  • Quintilian, i. 394.
  • Quintus (Cicero’s brother), x. 251.

Quotations—

  • A.
  • A jocis ad seria in seriis vicissim ad jocos transire, i. 52.
  • About a league from the town is a place called Walheim, etc., vi. 6 n.
  • above all names, a name great, i. 143.
  • absolute, that in itself summ’d all delight, ix. 54.
  • absurd to talk of a complex idea, it is as, etc., iv. 379 n.
  • Accept a miracle instead of wit, etc., viii. 15.
  • according to the book of arithmetic, viii. 346.
  • according to knowledge, xi. 324.
  • ace of clubs, like an, i. 69.
  • Ackermann’s dresses, in the manner of, etc., iii. 321; iv. 358.
  • acquitted felon, ii. 149, 157.
  • action is momentary, etc., iv. 276.
  • action is momentary, The motion of a muscle, etc., viii. 130.
  • actions, all the, that we have any idea of, etc., xi. 60.
  • adamantine scales, turned to the stroke, his, etc., xi. 522.
  • added a cubit to his stature, viii. 208.
  • admire anything, Not to, i. 81 n.; xii. 181.
  • admired, needs but to be seen to be, iv. 230, 360.
  • admired of all observers, the, xii. 325.
  • Adonis of fifty! an, etc., iv. 358; vii. 123; viii. 475.
  • advantage of this method of considering objects, The, etc., vi. 136.
  • advantage, dressed to, xi. 375.
  • Advance, soft soother of the mind, etc., ii. 74.
  • advice in a word is this, my, etc., vi. 128.
  • A few termes coude he, etc., vii. 270.
  • affectation, that seal of mediocrity, vi. 461.
  • Afric on its hundred thrones rejoice, Let, viii. 338.
  • Age after age, from sire to son, etc., iii. 50.
  • age of chivalry is gone for ever, iii. 233; v. 189; vii. 374; xii. 91, 285.
  • age of comedy would be gone, The, etc., viii. 15.
  • age of hobby-horses, the, x. 40.
  • aggregation of ideas, viii. 55.
  • agreeable surprise, viii. 467.
  • Ah! idle creature, viii. 73.
  • Ah! noble prince, how oft have I beheld, etc., v. 195.
  • ah, pardonna, viii. 297.
  • ah, voila de la pervenche, i. 92; v. 103; vii. 372 n.; xii. 329.
  • Ah! well-a-day, my poor heart! ii. 113.
  • Ah! what a weary race my feet have run, etc., v. 121.
  • airs and graces, xii. 237.
  • airy, notional good, an, vii. 395.
  • alarmists by trade, x. 121.
  • Alas! he is not dead; he’s in a trance, etc., v. 243.
  • Alas! how changed from him, etc., v. 78; viii. 409.
  • alas! Leviathan was not so tamed! iii. 329.
  • Alas the wo! alas the peines stronge, etc., v. 29.
  • Alas! they had been friends in youth, etc., v. 166.
  • Alexander—If I were not, xii. 198.
  • Alexis, here she stay’d among these pines, etc., v. 302.
  • Aliquando sufflaminandus erat, i. 311; vii. 38; viii. 41.
    • See Nunquam.
  • all earth’s bliss, both living and loving, of, etc., viii. 407.
  • all germins spill at once, xii. 67.
  • all hail him victor in both gifts of song, etc., iii. 47.
  • all men are mortal, vi. 324
  • All our surgeons Convent in their behoof, v. 258.
  • all power given them upon Earth, iii. 106.
  • all the art of art is flown, xi. 496.
  • all the beasts of the forest are mine, etc., vi. 392.
  • All the editors with the exception of Capell, etc., i. 353.
  • all the inward acts of worship, etc., iii. 270.
  • All the mutually reflected charities, i. 30; viii. 137; ix. 80, 144.
  • all this I will do with the stone, xi. 171.
  • all was one full-swelling bed, v. 88.
  • all which, though we most potently believe, xi. 274 n.
  • All whose parish ther was non, etc., v. 24.
  • All eyes shall see me, etc., viii. 148; ix. 69; x. 191.
  • allegiance and just fealty, etc., iii. 209.
  • Allemagne, tu es une nation, et tu pleurs, xi. 282.
  • Alley has a brother, where each, etc., iii. 424.
  • allow for the wind, to, iv. 192; vi. 81.
  • Alma redemptoris mater, Oh, etc., v. 29; x. 76.
  • alone give value and dignity to it, ix. 397.
  • Alps nor Apennines Can keep him out, Nor fortified redoubt, Nor, vi. 66; ix. 291.
  • Alps o’er Alps arise, where, ix. 191; x. 132.
  • alter et idem, viii. 463.
  • alternate action and repose, ix. 327, 329.
  • always speaks in blank verse, i. 239.
  • Alworthy had done so many charitable actions, Mr, xii. 309.
  • am I not thy Duchess, etc., v. 246 n.
  • amalgamation of the wonderful powers, an, viii. 191.
  • amaranthine flower, The only, etc., xii. 251.
  • amazing brightness, purity and truth, x. 191.
  • amber-lidded snuff-box, of, justly vain, etc., i. 25; viii. 134; ix. 76; xi. 498.
  • amid the forest deep, stock-dove plain, v. 88; vii. 114; xii. 153.
  • Among the rocks, etc., xii. 316.
  • ample scope and verge enough, iii. 140; iv. 340; vi. 57; viii. 403; xi. 470, 483.
  • amusing to see this person, sitting like one of Brouwer’s Dutch boors, it was, etc., iv. 307.
  • anarchy is the shortest lived, Of all evils, vi. 164.
  • ancestral voices, xi. 515.
  • ancient Gower, v. 34.
  • ancient knights of true and noble heart, Oh, x. 71.
  • And all my fears go with thee, etc., v. 256.
  • and all that day we read no more, x. 62 n.
  • And all the rest forgot, etc., x. 394.
  • and are, when unadorned, adorned the most, xi. 440.
  • And as the new abashed, etc., i. 226; v. 20.
  • And by his side rode loathsome Gluttony, etc., v. 39.
  • and curs’d the hour, and curs’d the luckless day, etc., iv. 222.
  • And down the streams which close those mountains, etc., x. 266.
  • and e’en on Sunday, etc., xii. 20.
  • And eke that stranger knight, v. 38.
  • And have not two saints power to use, etc., viii. 63.
  • And in his nose, like Indian king, etc., viii. 63.
  • And more to lull him in his slumber soft, etc., v. 36.
  • And next to him rode lustfull Lechery, etc., v. 39.
  • And now from out the watery floor, etc., ix. 268.
  • And see where surly Winter passes off, v. 86.
  • And setting his right foot before, etc., viii. 65.
  • and struts Sir Judkin, an exceeding knave, iii. 237.
  • And that green wreath which decks the bard when dead, etc., v. 120.
  • And turn’d and look’d, and turn’d to look again, v. 119.
  • And when I think that his immortal wings, etc., vii. 85; ix. 164.
  • and when that last, iii. 118.
  • And with a quavering coyness tastes the strings, v. 318.
  • angel from Heaven, ii. 312.
  • angels ’twas most like, To, vi. 259.
  • angels’ visits, few and far between, Like, iv. 346 and n.; v. 150 and n.; vii. 38; viii. 316.
  • angels weep, as make the, viii. 471.
  • angles at the four corners was a right one, not one of the, viii. 93.
  • Anna, the silver-voiced, vii. 301.
  • another Yarrow, vii. 229.
  • Anthony Codrus Urceus, a most learned, etc., vi. 238.
  • antic sits, And there the, etc., vi. 354.
  • any faction that at the time can get the power, etc., iii. 291.
  • Apelles of the flowers, the, v. 300.
  • Apollo, without making one observation, I cannot quit the, etc., vi. 139.
  • appears to have been the first who discovered the path, he, etc., vi. 126.
  • Arabia have I seen a Phœnix, So in, vi. 233 n.
  • Arcadian! I also was an, i. 163; v. 98; vi. 27; x. 187; xi. 267.
    • See Et and painter.
  • are you our daughter, viii. 446.
  • Argicide, He said; and straight the herald, etc., i. 71 n.
  • Arguments from reason, of the, etc., xi. 54.
  • Argument, they own’d his wondrous skill, In, etc., vi. 80.
  • arm-chair at an inn, the, xii. 121.
  • army of Macedonian and Swedish mad butchers fly before him, an, v. 123.
  • Around him the bees in play flutter and cluster, etc., v. 151.
  • arriving round about doth fly, There he, etc., viii. 404.
  • arrogant a piece of paper, as, iii. 231.
  • arrowy sleet, vi. 54.
  • art, by his so potent, vi. 272.
  • art is long, and life is short, vii. 61.
  • art of being well deceived, the, vii. 204.
  • Art thou not Lucifer? etc., v. 317.
  • artists, as Vasari likewise observes, Many, etc., vi. 136.
  • artists, Few, have excelled Wilson in the tint of air, etc., xi. 201.
  • artists who have quitted the service of nature, Those, etc., vi. 130.
  • as a lamb, he was led, etc., iii. 239
  • as beseems him well, iii. 114.
  • As having clasp’d a rose within my palm, etc., v. 225.
  • As I walked about, etc., v. 14.
  • as if he were a God to punish, etc., viii. 348.
  • As if they thrill’d frail hearts, etc., vii. 282.
  • as in a glass darkly, but now face to face! vi. 9; xii. 152.
  • as in a map the voyager his course, v. 326.
  • As Julia once a slumbering lay, etc., v. 313.
  • as much again to govern it, iv. 321; vi. 317.
  • As the morning lark sings over her young, etc., v. 210.
  • as those same plumes, so seems he vain and light, etc., xi. 479.
  • As when an owl that’s in a barn, etc., viii. 67.
  • As when, in prime of June, etc., xii. 174.
  • Ashby, The gentle and free passage of arms at, etc., xii. 18 n.
  • ashes live his wonted fires, Even in his, x. 386.
  • asinos asinina decent, iii. 207.
  • ask the Apollo to dance, And would, ix. 174.
  • Ask me no more where Jove bestows, When June is past, the fading rose, etc., v. 311.
  • Aspiring to be Gods, if angels fell, etc., vii. 196.
  • assumes the rod, affects the God, etc., vi. 215.
  • assured; what they are least, xii. 363.
  • Astonishment, fear, and amazement beat upon my heart, etc., v. 212.
  • at an easy rate, ii. 149.
  • at every trifle scorn to take offence, etc., v. 75.
  • At once he took his Muse and dipt her Right in the middle of the Scripture, ii. 340.
  • at one end of a rod, xii. 19.
  • at the public good, v. 215.
  • At this the knight grew high in chafe, etc., viii. 66.
  • Au-dessus du mont Jove, un mont plus escarpé, etc., xi. 231.
  • aujourd’hui jour de Pâques fleuries, etc., vii. 372 n.
  • Auld Reekie, iv. 245.
  • aut Cæsar aut nihil, vi. 274; vii. 167; xii. 326.
  • author, ’tis a venerable name, an, etc., vi. 162.
  • Auvergne alone, when in, etc., iv. 206.
  • avarice, If there had been no such thing as, xi. 298.
  • avengers of mankind, the, iii. 99.
  • aversion, it is his, iv. 258.
  • awake, my sack-but! iii. 50.
  • B.
  • Babylon, by the waters of, vii. 122.
  • Back and side, go bare, go bare, Both foot and hand go cold, etc., v. 288.
  • bade the lovely scenes at distance hail, And, vii. 304.
  • Bailey, that unfortunate Miss, iii. 160.
  • balsam of fierabras, xi. 304.
  • bambouzled and bit, iii. 156.
  • bane and antidote, its, iv. 8; xi. 524
  • Bann’d be those hours when ’mongst the learned throng, etc., v. 283.
  • barbarous kings, iii. 111.
  • bard whose soul is meek as dawning day, i. 429.
  • bared his swelling heart, iii. 338.
  • bare trees and mountains bare, the, etc., i. 113; iii. 168; v. 163.
  • ball of dazzling fire, xii. 342.
  • base cullionly fellow, xii. 285.
  • Be every day of your long life like this, etc., viii. 75.
  • Be mine to read eternal new romances of Marivaux and Crebillon, v. 118; viii. 106; x. 25; xi. 333.
  • Be niggards of advice on no pretence, etc., v. 75.
  • Be silent always, when you doubt your sense, etc., v. 75.
  • Be to her faults a little blind, etc., iii. 217.
  • Be wise to-day; ’tis madness to defer, etc., v. 114.
  • beaker full of the warm South, Oh for a, etc., ix. 174.
  • bear a charmed life, xii. 151.
  • Bear thou that great Eliza in thy mind, etc., iii. 112, 278.
  • beautiful is vanished, and returns not, the, etc., vi. 186; xii. 293.
  • Beautiful mask! etc., xii. 321.
  • beauty and grandeur of the art, The whole, etc., vi. 134.
  • beauty, By their own, etc., x. 349.
  • beauty in creatures of the same species, etc., vi. 137.
  • Beauty, Love, and Truth lie here, etc., ii. 75.
  • Beauty out of favour and on crutches, vi. 221.
  • beauty, rendered still more beautiful, xi. 212.
  • Beauty the lover’s gift? Dear me, what is a lover that it can give? etc., viii. 73.
  • Beauty, When he saw nought but, etc., iv. 217.
  • because he was a lord, firstly, etc., xi. 487.
  • because it would do that in verse, etc., xi. 491.
  • because on earth their names, etc., i. 23; x. 63.
  • Because you think me a savage, viii. 442.
  • bees in spring-time, like, xii. 121.
  • beggarly, unmannered corse, xii. 285.
  • beggars are coming to town, The, etc., viii. 408 n.
  • beguile the slow and creeping hours of time, xii. 157.
  • Begun in gladness, whereof has come, etc., vii. 57.
  • Behold the fate of a reformer, etc., vi. 378.
  • Behold the lilies of the field, etc., xi. 504; vi. 392.
  • Behold the twig, to which thou laidest down thy head, is now become a tree, v. 199.
  • Behold thy mother, etc., v. 184.
  • beholds that lady in her bower, etc., viii. 308.
  • Believe me, the providence of God, etc., vi. 100.
  • believes him to have been the greatest genius, etc., v. 123.
  • believes in a fat capon, x. 69.
  • bellum internecinum, iii. 61; xi. 469.
  • Below the bottom of the great abyss, etc., v. 315.
  • Belton so pert, and so pimply, viii. 120; x. 38.
  • Beneath the hills, along the flowery vales, etc., iv. 272.
  • Beneath the hills, amid the flowery groves, etc., vii. 233.
  • Besides these jolly birds, whose corpse impure, v. 80.
  • best can feel them, xii. 43.
  • best company in the world, the, viii. 82.
  • best of kings, i. 305; iii. 41.
  • best of men (The) that e’er wore earth about him, was a sufferer, etc., v. 185.
  • best tennis players, the, vii. 42.
  • best-found, and latest, as well as earliest choice, viii. 392.
  • best thing (that the) that could have happened to a man was never to have been born, etc., i. 1.
  • bestow his tediousness, xii. 40.
  • Better be lord of them that riches have, etc., vi. 111.
  • better none, x. 185.
  • Beware, therefore, with lordes for to play, etc., iii. 385.
  • Beyond Hyde Park all is a desart, etc., vi. 187; vii. 67; viii. 36.
  • bidding, at his, viii. 236.
  • bid a gay defiance to mischance, must, etc., viii. 160.
  • Bidding the lovely scenes, etc., ix. 94; xii. 151.
  • Bigger than a mustard seed, at first no, etc., x. 395.
  • bis repetita crambe, vii. 126.
  • bitter bad judges, i. 94; vi. 310, 407.
  • black and melancholy yew trees, No, ix. 145.
  • black mutton or white, v. 114; vii. 173.
  • black upon white, and white upon black, vi. 319.
  • blasts from hell, viii. 363.
  • blazons herself, viii. 74.
  • bleating oratory, the, v. 323.
  • blesses the Regent, etc., iii. 42.
  • Blessings be with them, and eternal praise, etc., i. 22.
  • blights the tender blossom, etc., xii. 140.
  • blind with rain, ix. 109.
  • blindness to the future kindly given, Oh! etc., vi. 250.
  • blinking Sam, xi. 221.
  • blocking out and staying in, xii. 233.
  • blossom tear? Ah! why so soon the, xii. 207.
  • blotted out the map of Europe, xii. 291.
  • Blow, blow, thou winter’s wind, xii. 122.
  • blown about by every wind, etc., xii. 441.
  • blushes with blood of queens and kings, vii. 225.
  • body of this death, the, xii. 125.
  • bony prizer, viii. 357; xi. 367.
  • bonzes and priests, of all religions, the, etc., viii. 104.
  • book in the world he was the best pleased with, viii. 94.
  • book, sealed, ix. 29.
  • Books do not teach the use of books, vi. 73.
  • Books, dreams are each a world, and books, we know, are a substantial world, both pure and good, v. 247; vii. 372; viii. 120; x. 38; xi. 295.
  • book and brain, within the volume of the, etc., vi. 173.
  • bordered on the verge of all we hate, viii. 188.
  • Borealis race, Or like the, iii. 141.
  • born for the universe, iv. 251.
  • Born for their use, they live but to oblige them, etc., vii. 80.
  • born in a garret sixteen storeys high, iv. 258.
  • born to converse, to live, and act with ease, xi. 381.
  • Born universal heir to all humanity! vi. 42, 253.
  • born within the sound of Bow-bell, vii. 70.
  • bosom of its Father and its God, v. 137.
  • both end and use, iii. 323.
  • both living and loving! ii. 310.
  • Both thought it was the wisest course, etc., viii. 66.
  • bound them with Styx, xii. 260.
  • bow their crested pride, iii. 11.
  • brain would have been like a smokejack, my, vi. 275.
  • brangle and brave-all, etc., iii. 314.
  • brave man in distress, a, xi. 533.
  • brave sublunary things, vi. 193; vii. 265; xii. 153.
  • brazen throat and iron tongue, with its, etc., xii. 55.
  • break out like a wild overthrow, vi. 164.
  • breath that under heaven is blown, By every little, iv. 333; xii. 22.
  • breath can mar them as a breath has made, A, vii. 52; xi. 197.
  • Breathed hot, From all the boundless furnace of the sky, etc., v. 88.
  • breezy call of incense-breathing morn, ix. 51.
  • Brentford on one throne, So sit two Kings of, ix. 236.
  • Brentford to Ealing, from, etc., viii. 168, 318.
  • Brightest, if there be remaining Any service, without feigning, etc., v. 255.
  • brilliant land! Ah! etc., viii. 441.
  • Bring back the hour of glory in the grass, etc., vi. 257.
  • Bring but a Scotsman frae his hill, etc., xi. 446.
  • Britain’s warriors, her Statesmen, etc., iii. 162, 258; xi. 429.
  • Britain’s warriors, the flower of, etc., xi. 429.
  • Britannia rival Greece, bid, vi. 270.
  • broad as it is long, as, xi. 369.
  • brother, and half the story had its, etc., viii. 399.
  • brother of the groves, a, viii. 467; xii. 133.
  • brother, Sir Charles, lived to himself, her, vi. 90.
  • brothers of the angle, xii. 19.
  • Brownies and Bogilis full is his Buik, of, x. 311.
  • Brunswick’s fated line, iii. 117. bubble knocks another on the head, one, etc., viii. 464.
  • bud of the briar, the, v. 323.
  • building up of our feelings through the imagination, vii. 408 n.
  • Buonaparte, little bookselling, xi. 386
  • burden and the mystery, the, v. 67; ix. 159.
  • buried as a man, he had been, etc., xii., 353.
  • burning and shining light, i. 60.
  • burnished fly in month of June, a, v. 88.
  • Busied about some wicked gin, xi. 581.
  • But a little way off, they saw the mast, etc., v. 323.
  • But for an utmost end, etc., xi. 265.
  • But he so teazed me, viii. 255.
  • But I will come again, my love, An’ it were ten thousand mile, ii. 290.
  • But if, unblameable in word and thought, etc., v. 94.
  • But not for me the merry bells, viii. 525.
  • But of the two, less dangerous is the offence, etc., v. 74.
  • But still the world, etc., iii. 254.
  • But ’tis the fall degrades her to a whore, etc., iii. 46; vii. 368; xi. 475.
  • But the admirers of this great poet have most reason to complain, etc., i. 177.
  • But the commandment of knowledge, etc., v. 332.
  • But there is matter for a second rhyme, etc., xi. 282; xii. 275.
  • But thou, oh Hope, with eyes so fair, etc., viii. 436.
  • But where are the other eleven? i. 257.
  • But where ye doubt the truth not knowing, Believing the best, good may be growing, etc., v. 280.
  • butterflies flutter around, And gaudy, xii. 25.
  • buttress, wall, and tower, Where, ix. 266.
  • by a long tract of time, by the use of language, etc., vii. 387.
  • By him lay heavie Sleepe, cosin of Death, etc., v. 196.
  • By our first strange and fatal interview, etc., xii. 28.
  • By the first part of this last tale, etc., v. 275.
  • by the help of his fayre hornes on hight, v. 42.
  • By the mass I saw him of late call up a great black devil, etc., v. 288.
  • by words only ... a man becometh, x. 135.
  • C.
  • Cætera desunt, vi. 121.
  • calamity, the rub that makes, etc., xii. 199.
  • call evil good and good evil, to, xi. 341.
  • Call not so loud or they will hear us, vii. 377.
  • call up him who left half-told, And, xii. 27.
  • Calling each by name, etc., ix. 401.
  • Calm contemplation and majestic pains, iv. 274; vi. 26; ix. 44.
  • Calm contemplation and poetic ease, v. 71; xi. 432, 508.
  • calm, peaceable writers, vi. 254.
  • came, saw, and were satisfied, we, viii. 455.
  • Canning had the most elegant mind since Virgil, xi. 336 n.
  • canny ways and pawky looks, xii. 91.
  • canonised bones, his, vi. 58.
  • cant religious, cant political, etc., xii. 338.
  • capacity, a greater general, etc., x. 178.
  • caput mortuum, xi. 495.
  • careful after many things, They are, etc., xii. 197.
  • Care, mad to see a man so happy, etc., v. 129.
  • Care mounted behind the horseman, etc., vi. 87.
  • cares, And ever against eating, etc., xii. 142.
  • Carnage is its daughter! i. 214; vii. 374; viii. 348.
  • Carnage is her daughter, iii. 120 n.
  • Carnage was the daughter of Humanity, i. 391 n.; iii. 166.
  • Carnation was a colour he never could abide, xi. 457.
  • Carlo Maratti succeeded better than those, etc., vi. 124.
  • carries noise, and behind it, it leaves tears, it, viii. 348.
  • cast both body and soul into hell, xii. 359.
  • cast some longing, lingering looks behind, viii. 250.
  • Castalie, the dew of, v. 14; x. 156; xii. 294.
  • castle walls crumbled into ashes, his, etc., viii. 309.
  • casuist, that noble and liberal, i. 235; viii. 186.
  • cat and canary-bird, the, etc., x. 195.
  • catalogue they go for actors, in the, viii. 465.
  • Catch a king and kill a king, xi. 551.
  • Catch ere she falls, The Cynthia of the minute, xi. 402.
  • catch glimpses that may make them less forlorn! vi. 27; xi. 267; xii. 42.
  • catch the breezy air, vii. 70.
  • cathedral’s gloom and choir, The, etc., ix. 207; xi. 535.
  • Caucasus, the frosty, xii. 149.
  • cause of evil, re-risen, iii. 117.
  • cause was hearted, the, xii. 288.
  • Cease your funning, viii. 194, 255, 323. 470.
  • censure the age, When they, etc., vii. 377.
  • Centaur not fabulous, xii. 228.
  • certain lady of a manor, a, i. 422; xi. 273 n.
  • certain little gentleman, a, iii. 312.
  • Certain so wroth are they, iii. 268.
  • certain tender bloom his fame o’erspreads, A, xii. 207, 262.
  • Certainly, as her eyelids are more pleasant to behold, etc., v. 324.
  • C’est un mauvais métier que celui de médire, vii. 205.
  • Chaldee wise, The, etc., v. 292.
  • Challenges essoine, from every work he, xii. 46, 225.
  • chamber, was dispainted all within, His, etc., viii. 128.
  • chapel-bell, the little, xii. 305.
  • chargeable, very, x. 172.
  • Charity begins at home, iii. 289; xi. 319.
  • Charity covers a multitude of sins, vii. 83; viii. 33.
  • charm these deaf adders wisely, xi. 415.
  • Charming Betsy Careless, the, viii. 144.
  • Charron, Or more wise, viii. 93 n.
  • chase his fancy’s rolling speed, x. 120.
  • cheap defence, i. 295.
  • cheat the gallows face, xi. 551.
  • cheese-parings, as a saving of, etc., vii. 273.
  • chemist, statesman, fiddler and buffoon, i. 85; x. 207.
  • cherish our prejudices, etc., xii. 395.
  • child and champion of Jacobinism, iii. 99, 227; iv. 6; xi. 422.
  • child is father to the man, the, vii. 231; xi. 334.
  • children of yon azure sheen, As are the, xii. 262.
  • children of the world are wiser, the, etc., xi. 522; xii. 298.
  • children’s play, Come, let us leave off, etc., iii. 132.
  • children sporting, We see the, etc., vi. 92; xii. 130.
  • chips of short-lung’d Seneca, The dry, etc., x. 98.
  • chop off his head, viii. 201.
  • choosing songs the Regent named, In, etc., iv. 359.
  • Christ, inscribed the cross of, etc., xii, 261.
  • Christ Jesus! what mighty crime, etc., vi. 239.
  • Christian could die! to see how a, xii. 330.
  • chrysolite, this one entire and perfect, xii. 105, 235.
  • Ci giace il gran Titiano di Vecelli, etc., ix. 270.
  • Circled Una’s angel face, and made a sunshine in the shady place, v. 46; x. 77.
  • cities in Romanian lands, Of all the, etc., xii. 323.
  • city, no mean, ix. 69.
  • city set on a hill, a, etc., x. 335.
  • clad in flesh and blood, i. 13, 135.
  • Clad in the wealthy robes his genius wrought, etc., ii. 108.
  • Clamour grew dumb, unheard was shepherd’s song, etc., v. 315.
  • clap on high his coloured winges twain, v. 35; x. 74.
  • clappeth his wings, and straightway he is gone, viii. 404; ix. 70.
  • clear it from all controversy, to, etc., iv. 335; vi. 52.
  • Cleopatra, will be the fatal, xii. 310.
  • clerk there was of Oxenford also, A, etc., i. 84.
  • clock that wants both hands, A, etc., viii. 434.
  • Close to the gate a spacious garden lies, etc., ix. 325.
  • clothed and fed, with which they are, ix. 93.
  • cloud by day, neither the, etc., ix. 361.
  • clouds in which Death hid himself, the, etc., vii. 14.
  • clouds of detraction, of envy and lies, through, vii. 367.
  • clouds over the Caspian, like two, xii. 11.
  • Cockney School in Poetry, xii. 256 n.
  • coil and pudder, xi. 554; xii. 335, 383.
  • Cold drops of sweat sit dangling on my hairs, etc., v. 212.
  • cold icicles, the, from his rough beard Dropped adown upon her snowy breast! v. 38.
  • cold rheum, vi. 304.
  • Colonel took upon him to wear a shirt, x. 382; xii. 142.
  • colouring of Titian, the grace of Raphael, etc., vi. 74.
  • come betwixt the wind and their nobility, vii. 378.
  • come, but no farther, xii. 108.
  • Come, gentle Spring, etc., v. 86.
  • come home to the bosoms and businesses of men, i. 200; v. 333; vii. 293, 337; viii. 91; xi. 548; xii. 377, 400.
  • Come, kiss me, love, viii. 265.
  • Come, live with me and be my love, v. 99, 211, 298.
  • Come, say before all these, etc., viii. 265.
  • Come then, the colours and the ground prepare, etc., vii. 290; viii. 73, 186; xi. 240.
  • comes like a satyr, iv. 246.
  • comes the tug of war, viii. 219.
  • comforted with their bright radiance, xi. 346.
  • coming and going he knew not where, i. 90.
  • Coming events cast their shadow before, vii. 50; x. 221; xii. 113.
  • Coming, gentlemen, coming, x. 382.
  • Coming Reviews cast their shadows before, x. 221.
  • common people always prefer exertion and agility to grace, ix. 173.
  • companion of my way, Let me have a, etc., vi. 182.
  • companion of the lonely hour, xii. 53.
  • companions of the spring, The painted birds, xi. 271.
  • company, Tell me your, etc., vi. 202; xi. 196; xii. 133.
  • compelled to give in evidence against himself, i. 129.
  • complex constable, that, iii. 299.
  • compost heap, a, vi. 37.
  • Compound for sins they are inclin’d to, etc., viii. 18.
  • conceit or the world well lost, all for, xii. 363.
  • condemned to everlasting fame, x. 375.
  • confined in too narrow room, iii. 290.
  • conformed to this world, to be, iii. 275; viii. 146.
  • Conniving house (as the gentlemen of Trinity), etc., i. 56.
  • conquering and to conquer, xi. 418.
  • conscience and tender heart, Where all is, ii. 371; iii. 155; iv. 204, 326; vi. 165; vii. 173, 280; x. 238.
  • conspicuous scene, etc., xii. 31.
  • constant chastity, unspotted faith, etc., iii. 208.
  • constrained by mastery, iii. 166; iv. 220; v. 86; vii. 197; viii. 404; ix. 17; xii. 188.
  • constrain his genius by mastery, viii. 479.
  • consummation of the art devoutly to be wished, a, viii. 190; xii. 125.
  • contagious gentleness, viii. 309.
  • contemporary bards would be admired when Homer and Virgil were forgotten, xi. 288.
  • contempt of the choice of the people, i. 394, 427; iii. 32 and n., 175, 401.
  • contempt of their worshippers, in, xii. 244.
  • content man’s natural desire, vi. 324.
  • Continents have more, of what they contain, etc., iii. 272; vi. 205; xii. 16.
  • Contra audentior ito, xi. 514.
  • conversation, To excel in, etc., vii. 32.
  • converse with the mighty dead, Hold high, ix. 69.
  • convertible to the same abandoned purpose, iii. 91.
  • cooped and cabined in by saucy doubts and fears, viii. 477; xii. 125.
  • copied the other, Which of you, ix. 33.
  • Corinthian capitals of polished society, the, iv. 290; xii. 131.
  • coronet face, the, xii. 226.
  • Corporate bodies have no soul, vi. 264.
  • corrupter sort of mere politiques, The, etc., v. 329.
  • could be content if the species were continued like trees, he, v. 334.
  • could he lay sacrilegious hands, etc., viii. 269.
  • counterfeiten chere, To, etc., iii. 268.
  • courage never to submit, etc., xii. 192.
  • courtly, the court, viii. 55; ix. 61.
  • courtiers offended should be, lest the, etc., iii. 45; viii. 457.
  • Cover her face: my eyes dazzle: she died young, v. 246.
  • covers a multitude of sins, vii. 83; viii. 33.
  • coxcombs, the prince of, proud of being at the head, etc., viii. 36, 83.
  • crack of ploughs and kine, xii. 380.
  • Craignez Dieu, mon cher Abner, etc., ix. 116.
  • Created hugest that swim the oceanstream, vii. 13.
  • Creation’s tenant, he is nature’s heir, xi. 500.
  • creature of the element, a, etc., xii. 30.
  • Credat Judæus Apella, xii. 266.
  • Credo quia impossibile est, vii. 351.
  • credulous hope, the, etc., xii. 321.
  • cries all the way from Portsmouth, etc., viii. 322.
  • crisis is at hand for every man to take part for, the, etc., vi. 154.
  • crown which Ariadne wore, etc., x. 186.
  • crown of the head, From the, etc., xii., 247.
  • cruel sunshine thrown by fortune on a fool, etc., xi. 550.
  • crust of formality, a, vi. 356.
  • cry more tuneable, A, etc., xii. 18.
  • cubit from his stature, a, viii. 263.
  • Cucullus non facit monachum, vii. 236.
  • Cuique tribuito suum, v. 368; vii. 191.
  • Cupid and my Campaspe play’d, etc., v. 201.
  • Cupid, as he lay among Roses, by a bee was stung, v. 312.
  • cups that cheer, but not inebriate, The, etc., vi. 184.
  • cure for a narrow and selfish spirit, a, xii. 429.
  • curiosa felicitas, v. 149; xi. 606.
  • curl her hair so crisp and pure, to, etc., viii. 465.
  • curtain-close such scenes, And, etc., xii. 328.
  • Cut is the branch that might have grown full strait, etc., v. 206.
  • cut up so well in the cawl, They do not, etc., iii. 321; vii. 202; viii. 340.
  • cuts the common link, xii. 402.
  • Cymocles, oh! I burn, etc., x. 245.
  • D.
  • daily food and nourishment of the mind of the artist, the, etc., vi. 125, 126.
  • daily intercourse of all this unintelligible world, the, etc., viii. 420.
  • dainty flower or herb that grows on ground, No, etc., iv. 353.
  • dallies with the innocence of thought, That, etc., xii. 177.
  • Damn you, can’t you be cool, etc., iii. 226.
  • damnation round the land, iv. 224.
  • dancing days, Such were the joys of our, etc., viii. 437; xi. 300.
  • dandled and swaddled, vi. 270.
  • Dapple, and there I spoke of him, There I thought of, vi. 61.
  • dark closet, with a little glimmering of light, a, etc., xi. 174.
  • darkness dare affront, and with their, xii. 198.
  • darkness that might be felt, in, iii. 57; vi. 43.
  • darling in the public eye, iv. 298.
  • darlings of his precious eye, the, xii. 195.
  • dashed and brewed, vii. 140; x. 235.
  • dateless bargain, to all engrossing despotism, a, xi. 414.
  • daughter and his ducats, his, xii. 142 n.
  • daughters of memory, the, iv. 348.
  • day, It was the, etc., viii. 288.
  • Dazzled with excess of light, viii. 551.
  • dazzling fence of argument, the, xii. 358.
  • De apparentibus et non existentibus eadem est ratio, v. 341 n.; vii. 50; xii. 56, 217.
  • De mortius nil nisi bonum, viii. 323.
  • de omne scibile et quibusdam aliis, vi. 214; vii. 315.
  • de omnibus rebus et quibusdam aliis, xi. 467.
  • d’un pathetique à faire fendre les rochers, vi. 236.
  • deaf the praised ear, and mute the tuneful tongue, v. 274.
  • Dear chorister, who from these shadows sends, etc., v. 300.
  • Death may be called in vain, and cannot come, etc., v. 357.
  • death there is animation too, Even in, ix. 221.
  • deathless date, vi. 291.
  • decked in purple and in pall, etc., viii. 308.
  • declamations or set speeches, His, are commonly cold, etc., i. 177.
  • decorum is the principal thing, v. 360.
  • dedicate its sweet leaves, i. 386.
  • Deem not devoid of elegance the sage, By Fancy’s genuine feelings unbeguiled, etc., v. 120.
  • deep abyss of time, fast anchored in the, vii. 125.
  • deep, within that lowest, etc., xii. 144.
  • defections, his right-handed, etc.,
  • vii. 181.
  • defend the right, to, x. 167.
  • degree, in a high or low, etc., xi. 442.
  • Deh! quando tu sarai tornato al mondo, ix. 251.
  • Deh vieni alla finestra, viii. 365.
  • deity they shout around, A present, etc., x. 191; xii. 250.
  • deliberately or for money, iv. 339; vi. 56.
  • delicious breath painting sends forth, What a, etc., ix. 19.
  • delicious thought, of being regarded as a clever fellow, i. 93 n.
  • delight in love, ’tis when I see, If there’s, etc., viii. 73.
  • delight in! to fear, not to, xii. 243.
  • Deliverance for mankind, vi. 152 n.
  • Delphin edition of Nature, xi. 335.
  • Demades, the Athenian, condemned a fellow-citizen, etc., viii. 94.
  • Demanded how we can know any proposition, but here it will be, etc., xi. 130.
  • Demogorgon, dreaded name of, the, xii. 259.
  • demon that he served, the, vii. 285.
  • demon whispered, L——, have a taste, Some, vi. 94, 403.
  • demure, grave-looking, spring-nailed, the, etc., vi. 221; vii. 242; xi. 530.
  • Depreciation of Pope is partly founded upon a false idea, etc., xi. 490.
  • depth of a forest, in the kingdom of Indostan, In the, etc., xi. 267.
  • Descended from the Irish kings, etc., i. 54.
  • deserter of Smorgonne, iii. 54.
  • Desire to please, etc., viii. 278; xii. 177, 183, 426.
  • Despise low joys, etc., xii. 31.
  • Despise low thoughts, low gains, etc., v. 77.
  • Destroy his fib or sophistry: in vain, etc., iv. 300.
  • Detur optimo, vii. 187.
  • Deva’s winding vales, xii. 265.
  • devil said plainly that Dame Chat had got the needle, the, v. 288.
  • Devil was sick, The, etc., xii. 126.
  • Devil upon two sticks, viii. 404.
  • devilish girl at the bottom, a, viii. 83.
  • Di rider finira pria della Aurora, iii. 371.
  • diamond turrets of Shadukiam, the, iv. 357.
  • Diana and her fawn, etc., xii. 58.
  • Did first reduce our tongue from Lyly’s writing, etc., v. 201.
  • Did I not tell thee, Dauphine, etc., viii. 43.
  • Did not the Duke look up? Methought he saw us, v. 215.
  • Die of a rose in aromatic pain, vi. 249; vii. 300; viii. 143; ix. 391.
  • Died at his house in Burbage-street, etc., vi. 86.
  • differences himself by, v. 334.
  • digito monstrari, vi. 286.
  • dim doubts alloy, no, xi. 321.
  • dip it in the ocean, and it will stand, iv. 197; vi. 160 n.; ix. 133 n.
  • dipped in dews of Castalie, v. 14; x. 156; xii. 294.
  • direct and honest, To be, etc., xii. 219.
  • disappointed still are still deceived, And, ix. 287.
  • disastrous strokes which his youth suffered, the, viii. 96.
  • discipline of humanity, a, i. 123; vii. 78, 184; xii. 122.
  • discoursed in eloquent music, vii. 199.
  • disdain the ground she walks on, i. 71 n.
  • disembowel himself of his natural entrails, etc., vi. 267; xi. 322.
  • disjecta membra poetæ, viii. 423; ix. 309.
  • distant, enthusiastic, respectful love, viii. 160.
  • distilled books are, like distill’d waters, etc., xi. 203.
  • divest him, along with his inheritance, to, etc., viii. 72.
  • Divide et impera, vii. 147.
  • divinæ particula auræ, ix. 361; xii. 157.
  • divine Fanny Bias, iv. 359.
  • divine, the matchless, what you will, the, vi. 175.
  • Do not mock me: Though I am tamed, and bred up with my wrongs, etc., v. 252.
  • Do unto others as you would, etc., vi. 396.
  • Do you read or sing? If you sing you sing very ill, vii. 5; viii. 319.
  • Do you see anything ridiculous in this wig? viii. 21.
  • Do you think I’ll sleep with a woman that doesn’t know what’s trumps? viii. 427.
  • docked and curtailed, xi. 316.
  • Does he wind into a subject? etc., vii. 275; viii. 103.
  • does a little bit of fidgets, viii. 469.
  • dog, he still plays the, viii. 263.
  • dogs, among the gentlemanlike, etc., iii. 278.
  • Don John of the Greenfield was coming, vi. 359.
  • Don Juan was my Moscow, etc., iv. 258 n.
  • Don’t forget butter, viii. 264.
  • Don’t you remember Lords—and—who are now great statesmen; little dirty boys playing at cricket, etc., v. 118; vii. 205.
  • double night of ages and of her, The, etc., xi. 424.
  • Doubtless the pleasure is as great, etc., iii. 169; vii. 204; viii. 302.
  • douce humanité, iii. 36; xi. 525.
  • doux sommeil, iii. 108.
  • Down the Bourne and through the Mead, ii. 87.
  • dragged the struggling monster into day, viii. 164.
  • dramatic star of the first magnitude, a, viii. 164.
  • drawn in their breath and puffed it forth again, vii. 59.
  • dreaming and awake, ’twixt, vi. 71.
  • dregs of earth, the, xii. 41.
  • dregs of life, the, vii. 302.
  • Dress makes the man, the want of it the fellow, etc., vii. 212.
  • Drip, drip, drip, drip, drip, etc., v. 306.
  • dross compared to the glory hereafter, etc., xi. 322.
  • drossy and divisible, more, vii. 173, 453; xi. 174.
  • drunk full ofter of the tun than of the well, v. 129.
  • dry discourse, but, xi. 25.
  • Duke and no Duke, viii. 263.
  • Dulce ridentem Lalagen, Dulce loquentem, vi. 61.
  • Dull as the lake that slumbers in the storm, iii. 22; vii. 278.
  • Dull Beotian genius, viii. 370.
  • dull cold winter does inhabit here, vii. 176; ix. 62.
  • dull product of a scoffer’s pen, v. 114.
  • dulness could no further go, The force of, vi. 46 n.; x. 219, 377.
  • dumb forgetfulness a prey, for who to, xi. 546.
  • Dum domus Æneæ Capitoli immobile saxum, etc., vii. 12.
  • dungeon of the tower, From the, etc., xii. 158.
  • durance vile, xi. 237.
  • Durham’s golden stalls, iii. 123.
  • dust in the balance, But as the, iv. 63.
  • Dust to dust, etc., xii. 53.
  • dust we raise! What a, vi. 240.
  • dwelleth not in temples made with hands, ix. 48.
  • dwelt Eternity, ix. 218.
  • dying Ned Careless, viii. 72.
  • dying shepherd Damætas, I give it to you as the, etc., xi. 289.
  • E.
  • Each lolls his tongue out at the other, etc., xi. 527.
  • Each man takes hence life, but no man death, etc., v. 225.
  • ear and eye, He is all, etc., xii. 121.
  • earth, earthy, of the, i. 239; vi. 43; ix. 55, 389.
  • ease, he takes his, xii. 123.
  • eat, drink, and are merry, xii. 16.
  • eat his meal in peace, vi. 94.
  • Ebro’s temper, the, viii. 103.
  • eclipsed the gaiety of nations, i. 157; viii. 387, 526.
  • Eden, and Eblis, and cherub smiles, iv. 354.
  • Edina’s darling Seat, xii. 253.
  • Edinburgh, We are positive when we say, etc., viii. 105.
  • effeminate! thy freedom hath made me, xii. 124.
  • Eftsoones they heard a most melodious sound, etc., v. 36.
  • eggs, with five blue, i. 92.
  • Eke fully with the duke my mind agrees, etc., v. 194.
  • elbow us aside, who, iv. 99.
  • elegant Petruchio, an, v. 345.
  • Elevate and surprise, vi. 216, 290; x. 271, 388.
  • elegant turn of her head, ix. 147.
  • eleven obstinate fellows, the other, xii. 326.
  • Elysian beauty, melancholy grace, vii. 366.
  • Elysian dreams of lovers, when they loved, Th’, etc., viii. 307.
  • embowelled, of our natural entrails, and stuffed, are, viii. 417.
  • embryo fly, the little airy of ricketty children, iv. 246.
  • Emelie that fayrer was to sene, etc., i. 400.
  • Emperor’s frown, his, viii. 309.
  • empty praise or solid pudding, iii. 171.
  • empurpling all the ground, x. 187.
  • emulation, the native hue of, etc., xii. 201.
  • enameller of the moon, the, v. 300.
  • enchantments drear, x. 41.
  • encroachment, the figure of, iii. 75.
  • ends of verse and sayings of philosophers, i. 394; xi. 489.
  • endure to the end for liberty’s sake, ix. 162.
  • enemy had written a book, O that mine, vi. 205.
  • enemy of the human race, viii. 284; ix. 321.
  • enfeebles all internal strength of thought, vi. 71.
  • enforc’d to seek some covert nigh at hand, etc., xi. 503.
  • England had made Bonaparte, etc., iii. 99.
  • English nation, universal, vii. 167.
  • enlarge the conceptions or warm the heart of the spectator, to, vi. 134.
  • enriched, ix. 211.
  • Enter Sessami, vii. 86; xii. 120.
  • Entire affection scorneth nicer hands, viii. 455; ix. 22; xi. 524; xii. 238, 259.
  • envy, malice, etc., xii. 381.
  • Epicuri de grege porcus, iii. 42.
  • Epithalamia were thrown into his coffin, x. 214.
  • equal want of books and men, viii. 29.
  • equally great on a ribbon or a Raphael, ix. 352.
  • Erasmus aut Diabolus, Aut, ix. 34 n.
  • Ere the sun through heaven, etc., x. 271.
  • Eremites and friars, etc., xii. 337.
  • error of the time, the very, xi. 251.
  • escap’d from Pyrrho’s maze, etc., iii. 258.
  • essence of genius is concentration, x. 279.
  • Et ego in Arcadia vixi, vi. 172.
  • Eternal City, a part of the, ix. 232.
  • ethereal braid, sky-woven, xii. 203.
  • etherial braid, thought woven, iv. 216.
  • Ethiopian change his skin, Can the, etc., vii. 240, 370.
  • Et quum conabar scribere, versus erat, v. 79.
  • Et toi, guerrier infortuné, etc., xi. 282.
  • Et vous êtes Yorick! vii. 33.
  • eulogy to kill, Oh! for a, xii. 285.
  • European, when he has cut off his beard, If an, etc., vi. 157 n.
  • Even from the tomb, etc., vi. 120; xii. 159.
  • Even then (admire, John Bell! my simple ways), iv. 305 n.
  • even to o’erflowing, ix. 382.
  • even when he killed a calf, xii. 336.
  • ever charming, ever new, viii. 352.
  • ever lifted leg, viii. 11.
  • ever strong, upon the stronger side, etc., xii. 459.
  • every good work reprobate, to, vii. 135; x. 235.
  • Every moment brings, etc., iii. 207.
  • everything by starts, and nothing long, i. 104.
  • everything by turns and nothing long, xi. 515.
  • every variety of untried being, i. 23.
  • every time we called for bread, and, xii. 142.
  • evidence of things unseen, the, x. 86.
  • Evident to any one who takes a survey, it is, etc., xi. 101.
  • Ex uno omnes, vii. 51; viii. 366.
  • exact scale, according to an, viii. 93.
  • exaggerated evils, iii. 209.
  • Examines his own mind and finds nothing there, etc., vi. 124.
  • excellencies bear to be united, Some, etc., vi. 143.
  • Excellent Brutus, viii. 59.
  • Exchange the shepherd’s frock of native grey, etc., i. 113.
  • Excise, monster, iii. 465.
  • exhalation, Like an, etc., xii. 261, 292.
  • expatiates freely there, v. 102.
  • exploded author, that, xi. 287.
  • extravagant and erring spirit, vii. 16; x. 145.
  • Extremes meet, This is the only way of, etc., i. 97–8.
  • exuberant strength of my argument, iv. 21.
  • eye to look at, not to look with, ix. 34; xii. 354.
  • eye offend thee, If thine, etc., xii. 305.
  • eye, with lack-lustre, xii. 31, 59.
  • eye-judging sex, an, xii. 436.
  • eyelids many graces sat, Upon her, etc., x. 83, 348.
  • eye-pleasing flowers, v. 323.
  • eyes and see them, have, vi. 159.
  • eyes, in their arms, in their, etc., i. 45; xi. 273.
  • eyes of youth, x. 391.
  • eyes shall see me, All, ix. 69; viii. 148; x. 191.
  • eyes, with sparkling, etc., xii. 43.
  • F.
  • Fables for the Holy Alliance, iv. 360.
  • face to face, etc., xii. 43.
  • face was as a book, his, etc., xii. 271.
  • facilis descensus Averni, iii. 161.
  • fade by degrees into the light of common day, they, i. 250.
  • faded to the light of common day, ix. 62.
  • fænum in cornu, ix. 244.
  • Fain would I to be what our Dante was, etc., ix. 394; xi. 202.
  • faint shadow of uncertain light, Like a, vi. 113.
  • Fair, and of all beloved, I was not fearful, etc., v. 213.
  • fair clime, the lonely herdsman stretch’d, In that, etc., i. 114.
  • Fair moon, who with thy cold and silver shine, etc., v. 299.
  • Fair Semira, viii. 248.
  • Fair variety of things, the, ix. 332.
  • fairest of the fair, xii. 61.
  • fairest princess under sky, vi. 238; x. 242.
  • Fairfax and the starry Vere, vii. 232.
  • Fairy elves beyond the Indian Mount, etc., v. 274.
  • faithful remembrancers of his high endeavour, etc., vii. 430; xii. 116.
  • Fall blunted from the indurated breast, iv. 274.
  • fall degrades, But ’tis the, etc., iii. 46; vii. 368; xi. 475.
  • fall into misfortune, xi. 349.
  • fallacy, In terms a, etc., xii. 113.
  • Fall’n was Glenartny’s stately tree, etc., xii. 324.
  • false, sophistical, unfounded, etc., iii. 370.
  • famous for the keeping of it up, v. 131.
  • famous poet’s page, iv. 346; ix. 178; x. 243.
  • famous poet’s pen, ix. 178.
  • famous poet’s verse, x. 243.
  • famous poet’s wit, i. 23.
  • Fancy was a truant ever, Th’ enthusiast, vi. 72.
  • fancies and good-nights, xii. 224, 285.
  • fanciful chimeras, such, etc., iv. 282.
  • far darting eye, viii. 180.
  • far from the madding strife, vi. 100.
  • far from the sun and summer gale, iv. 266.
  • farce is over, now let us go to supper, The, vi. 150.
  • fared sumptuously every day, iv. 150.
  • farthest from them is best, iv. 261.
  • fashion of an hour mocks the wearer, The, etc., xi. 438.
  • fat and fair a bird, and how, etc., vii. 303.
  • fate and metaphysical aid, viii. 378.
  • Fate, I follow, etc., xii. 3.
  • father of lies, the, x. 327.
  • fault, it was ever the, etc., iii. 55.
  • faultless monsters which the world ne’er saw, Those, i. 434; ii. 129; iv. 224; vi. 263; viii. 429; ix. 129; xii. 60.
  • Faunus, this Granuffo is a right wise good lord, etc., v. 226.
  • favours secret, sweet and precious, i. 372; viii. 14.
  • Fear God, and honour the King, iii. 282.
  • Fear God, my dear Abner, etc., ix. 116.
  • fear no discipline of human wit, iii. 63; xii. 378.
  • fear of being silent strikes us dumb, The, etc., vii. 32.
  • feast of reason, the, and the flow of soul, ii. 10; xii. 42, 153.
  • feathered, two-legged things, vii. 5.
  • fee-grief, due to the poet’s breast, some, vi. 174.
  • feel is to judge, to, xi. 85.
  • feel what others are and know myself a man, vii. 55.
  • felicity, the throne of, xii. 121.
  • felicity can fall to creature? What more, etc., vii. 181; xii. 2, 200.
  • fell of hair is likely to rouse, at which our, etc., viii. 127.
  • fell opposite the, viii. 356.
  • fell stillborn from the press, vi. 65.
  • fellow Burke were here now, he would kill me, If that, viii. 103.
  • felt a stain like a wound, v. 267; viii. 289.
  • Ferrara! in thy wide and grass-grown streets, xi. 424.
  • Few (of the University) pen plays well, etc., v. 282.
  • Fiat justitia, ruat cœlum, viii. 440.
  • Fideliter didicisse ingenuas artes, etc., vii. 235.
  • Fie, Sir! O fie! ’tis fulsome, xi. 419.
  • fields his study, nature was his book, the, vi. 181.
  • fierce with dark keeping, vii. 182, 278; xi. 27, 164.
  • fiery ordeal, x. 370.
  • Fiery soul that working out its way, viii. 344, 378; ix. 363; x. 393; xi. 351.
  • fight, The, the fight’s the thing, etc., xii. 1.
  • figures nor no fantasies, They have no, xii. 5, 263, 299, 379.
  • finds an apple, A man, etc., vii. 176.
  • fine by degrees, and beautifully less, v. 359; ix. 42; xi. 386.
  • fine fretwork he makes of their double and single entries, iv. 364.
  • fine oleaginous touches of Claude, ix. 35.
  • fine summer evenings, when in the, they saw the frank, noble-minded enthusiast, etc., v. 363.
  • fine word Legitimate, iii. 284, 293.
  • finical speech, a, iv. 281.
  • fire hot from Hell, xii. 281.
  • fire in the room, there was a, vi. 382.
  • First-born of Chaos who so fair did come, etc., viii. 58.
  • First come, first served, i. 53.
  • first garden of my innocence, that, vi. 257.
  • first it may be demanded, etc., But, viii. 26.
  • first of these is the extreme affection of two extremities, etc., The, v. 331.
  • first sprightly runnings, The, i. 8; viii. 97.
  • first was Fancy, like a lovely boy, The, etc., v. 40.
  • fishing rod was a stick with a hook, a, etc., vii. 161.
  • fishy fume, ix. 214.
  • fitter for heaven, he is the, viii. 269.
  • Fix your eye here, etc., vii. 53.
  • flames in the forehead, etc., xii. 169.
  • flat as the palm of one’s hand, as, xi. 283.
  • flattery that soothes the dull cold ear, the, etc., vii. 206.
  • Flavia the least and slightest toy, etc., ix. 147.
  • fleecy fools, vi. 7.
  • flesh and fortune shall serve, as the, xii. 304.
  • flies of a summer, as the, iii. 284; vii. 234.
  • flocci-nauci-pili-nihili-fication, iii. 33, 231, 313; xii. 169.
  • Flushed with a purple grace, etc., iv. 276.
  • fluttering the proud Salopians, etc., xii. 259.
  • fly high, do we not, v. 240.
  • fly that sips treacle, The, is lost in the sweets, v. 129, 301; vi. 96; xii. 121.
  • followed in the chase, etc., xii. 272.
  • following things are all essential to it, the, etc., xi. 68.
  • Follows so the ever-running sun, etc., xii. 5.
  • fond deceit, And let us nurse the, etc., vi. 251.
  • food for the critics, viii. 223.
  • food whereon it lives, the very, xii. 374.
  • Foolish daughters of Pelias, etc., xi. 46.
  • fools aspiring to be knaves, iii. 67.
  • fools rush in where angels fear to tread, ii. 366; v. 346; ix. 480; xii. 70.
  • foot, an hand, an eye from Nature drawn, a, etc., v. 215.
  • foot of fire, with the, vi. 161.
  • foot mercurial, His, etc., xii. 277.
  • for a song, xi. 435.
  • For after I had from my first years, etc., v. 57.
  • For alas! long before I was born, etc., vi. 417.
  • For as much as nature hath done her part in making you a handsome, likely man, etc., v. 284.
  • For her dear sake, That loves the rivers’ brinks, etc., v. 255.
  • For how should the soul of Socrates, etc., vii. 72.
  • For I am nothing if not critical, viii. 170.
  • For that other loss, etc., i. 118.
  • For this medicine, etc., v. 278.
  • For ’tis my outward soul, etc., viii. 52.
  • For true no-meaning puzzles more than wit, i. 139; viii. 552.
  • For wit is like a rest held up at tennis, etc., vii. 42.
  • For whom the merry bells had rung, v. 88.
  • For women, born to be controll’d, etc., vii. 203.
  • forehead, Her ivory, full of bounty brave, i. 69.
  • forerunner of the dawn, a, vi. 169.
  • forget the things that are behind, etc., vii. 167.
  • Forgive me, Now I turn to thee, thou shadow Of my contracted lord, etc., v. 272.
  • form and motion so express, in, etc., xii. 248.
  • Fortune’s fools, vi. 460.
  • fortune swells him, His, etc., viii. 274.
  • fortune, Who shall go about to cozen, etc., xii. 297.
  • Forum wait for us, Let the, etc., viii. 456.
  • found him poor, etc., iii. 217.
  • fountain of blood, iii. 6.
  • foxes have holes, and the birds of the air, The, etc., vi. 120.
  • frailty, very name is, x. 397.
  • France, restored and shaking off her chain, iii. 51.
  • Franciscan think to pass, And in, etc., iii. 267.
  • fraught with potential infidelity, x. 127.
  • free born Roman maid, the, viii. 457.
  • Free from the Sirian star, etc., vi. 211.
  • French have a fault, If the, etc., vi. 307; ix. 113.
  • Frenchman’s darling, ix. 159.
  • friend in my retreat, a, etc., vi. 181.
  • friend in your retreat, A, etc., xii. 321.
  • friendly man will show himself friendly, A, etc., vii. 238.
  • friendship of the good, The, etc., iii. 110.
  • From discontent grows treason, And on the stalk of treason, death, v. 208.
  • from grave to gay, from lively to severe, v. 32.
  • from her fair head for ever and for ever, v. 73.
  • From injuries to arms, and from arms to liberty, iii. 424.
  • From that abstraction I was roused, and how, etc., i. 117.
  • From that hour that Disciple took her to his own home, v. 184.
  • From the sublime to the ridiculous, there is but one step, viii. 23, 159.
  • From Windsor’s heights the expanse below, vii. 13.
  • From worldly care himself he did esloine, etc., xi. 333.
  • frozen winter and the pleasant spring, the, etc., xii. 124.
  • full eyes and fair cheeks of childhood, the, viii. 405.
  • full of matter, vi. 52.
  • full solemne man, a, iii. 311; xi. 413.
  • full to overflowing, x. 286.
  • full volly home, viii. 302.
  • fuller’s earth that takes out all stains, the true, xi. 547.
  • fumbling for their limbs, v. 359.
  • Fundamental principle of the modern philosophy is the opinion, etc., xi. 100.
  • furnishing matter for innocent mirth, and, viii. 36.
  • fury in that Gut, there is some, viii. 304.
  • G.
  • gain but glory, iii. 259.
  • gain new vigour, etc., xii. 156.
  • Gallaspy was the tallest and strongest, etc., i. 55.
  • garlanded with flowers, ix. 145.
  • Garrit aniles ex re fabellas, iii. 419; iv. 237.
  • gather grapes of thorns nor figs of thistles, i. 249; vii. 200.
  • gaudy-days, xi. 360.
  • gauger of ale-firkins, a, v. 131.
  • Gay, sprightly land of mirth and social ease, etc., ix. 93.
  • gayest, happiest attitude, the, etc., viii. 41; ix. 426.
  • generation of actors binds another, no one, viii. 384.
  • generations, the, were prepared, the pangs, etc., v. 67, 235.
  • generous friendship no cold medium knows, A, etc., iv. 263; vi. 253.
  • Genius is naturally a truant, etc., vii. 59.
  • Genius was the child of the imitation of others, etc., vi. 127.
  • Genius, you must have no dependence on your own, xi. 213.
  • gentle craft, the, v. 302.
  • gentle husher, vanity by name, a, etc., vi. 289; ix. 196; x. 121; xi. 555.
  • gentleman and man of honour, iii. 178, 181.
  • Gentlemen, I can present, etc., viii. 275 n.
  • germain to the matter, more, xii. 239.
  • Gertrude’s eyes, Till now, in, etc., iv. 346.
  • ghost of one of the old kings of Ormus, v. 231.
  • Giace l’alta Cartago, etc., x. 71.
  • giant form roll before him in the dust, seeing his, etc., viii. 344.
  • giddy raptures, with all its, vii. 227.
  • Give a dog a bad name and hang him, iv. 1; ix. 245.
  • give a reason for the faith that was in me, v. 302; xii. 396.
  • Give me the thing and I will readily give up the name, xi. 65.
  • give his own little Senate laws, vii. 272.
  • give sorrow words, the grief that does not speak, etc., vi. 39.
  • give to any man without compulsion, to, xi. 419.
  • give up a kingdom for a mass, x. 363.
  • give us reason with his rhyme, vii. 371.
  • given in the furnace of our palace, v. 279.
  • gives a body to opinion, it, etc., vii. 266.
  • gives evidence of it, viii. 424.
  • gladdened life, and whose deaths eclipsed the gaiety of nations, i. 157; viii. 387, 526.
  • glades mild-opening, etc., xii. 202.
  • gladiatorship, in intellectual, viii. 84.
  • gladly would he learn, and gladly teach, etc., iv. 285.
  • glares round his soul, and mocks his closing eyelids, vii. 76; xii. 204.
  • glass darkly, as in a, vi. 9; xii. 152.
  • Glorious John, xi. 535.
  • glimmer, and now in gloom, now in, vii. 368; xi. 424.
  • glimpses that make him less forlorn, iii. 275.
  • Gli occhi di ch’io parlai, x. 65 n.
  • glittered green with sunny showers, vi. 186.
  • glittering bride, becomes his, etc., iii. 160; vii. 279.
  • glory hereafter to be revealed, the, vii. 261.
  • glory, the, the intuition, the amenity, vii. 120.
  • Glory to God, etc., iii. 266; xi. 413.
  • gnarled oak, the, xi. 508.
  • gnawed too much on the bridle, iv. 279.
  • gnawing the skull of his adversary, etc., ix. 401.
  • Go, go, you’re a censorious ill man, i. 392.
  • go seek some other play-fellows, v. 42.
  • Go thou and do likewise, vi. 164; xi. 410.
  • Go thy ways, old world, etc., vi. 328.
  • Go! you’re a censorious ill woman, viii. 78.
  • goes sounding on his way, iv. 214; xii. 265.
  • goes to church in a coranto, etc., xii. 57.
  • going into the wastes of time, ii. 350.
  • God Almighty’s gentlemen, vii. 219; viii. 85.
  • God knew Adam in the elements of his chaos, xi. 572.
  • God made the country, etc., iv. 226.
  • God save the King, viii. 298; ix. 93.
  • God the Father turns a school-divine, v. 63.
  • Gods have eyes but they see not, Your, etc., xii. 244.
  • Gods of his idolatry, the, xii. 72.
  • Gods partial, changeful, etc., xii. 245.
  • God’s image carved in ebony, xii. 392.
  • God’s viceregent upon earth, i. 130; x. 363.
  • Gog’s crosse, Gammer, etc., v. 287.
  • golden age, in the, v. 297.
  • golden mean, iv. 253.
  • Goldsmith of the stars, the, v. 300.
  • good, they did it for his, vii. 208.
  • good clever lad, etc., iii. 68.
  • good haters, i. 103, 374 n.; vii. 180; viii. 269; ix. 122.
  • good, he means, bad fortune, xi. 387.
  • good-humoured fellow, Now I think I am a, viii. 103.
  • good king, A, should be ... a mere cypher, etc., xii. 243.
  • Good lord, that there are no fairies, etc., vi. 167 n.
  • good-nature is a fool, mere, vii. 78.
  • good of the country, for the, vii. 375.
  • good old times, iv. 249; xi. 197.
  • good picture and a true, a, xi. 245.
  • goodly sight, It was a, to sally out from his castle, etc., i. 87.
  • goose pie, In form resembling a, ix. 71; xi. 200.
  • gorge the little fame, they get all raw, They, ix. 356.
  • gorge rises, our very, xii. 126.
  • gospel is preached to the poor, iv. 295.
  • gossamer that idles in the wanton summer air, the, x. 44.
  • Gothic cathedral ... like a petrified religion, a, vi. 369.
  • grace above, All is, etc., viii. 402.
  • graceful ornament to the civil order, etc., viii. 70.
  • graceful ornaments to the columns, the, etc., vii. 205.
  • Gracious and sweet was all he saw in her, vi. 346.
  • grand caterers and wet-nurses of the State, etc., ix. 24.
  • grandeur in it, there was a, vii. 303.
  • Grant I was tempted: Condemn you me, for that the Duke did love me, etc., v. 241.
  • grant me judgement, you, xii. 360.
  • grapes of thorns, You cannot gather, etc., i. 249; vii. 200.
  • great book is a great evil, A, v. 114; xi. 244.
  • great discoverers obtain, How, shall our, i. 115.
  • Great Divan, the nation’s, xi. 336.
  • great grandmother without grey hairs, a, viii. 160.
  • Great is Diana of the Ephesians, xi. 603; xii. 244.
  • great lords and ladies do not like to have their mouths stopped, Because, vi. 301.
  • great man’s memory may outlive him half a year, i. 146.
  • great princes have great playthings, etc., iii. 243.
  • Great Vulgar and the Small, i. 324; ii. 18; v. 56; vi. 157; viii. 463, 518; ix. 391, 428; xi. 437.
  • Great wits to madness nearly are allied, x. 231.
  • Greater love than this hath no man, etc., xii. 99.
  • greater the sinner, The, etc., xii. 330.
  • greatest happiness to the greatest numbers, the, vii. 180, 182, 184, 185, 193.
  • green-eyed, spring-nailed, etc., xi. 530.
    • See demure.
  • green upland swells that echo to the bleat of flocks, vi. 186.
  • Grieve not for me, etc., vi. 327.
  • grim-visaged comfortless despair, vii. 260.
  • grinding law of necessity, iv. 66, 295; vii. 193, 374.
  • grinding the faces of the poor, iv. 2.
  • grinned horrible a ghastly smile, etc., xii. 11.
  • grinning scorn a sacrifice, To, etc., xi. 525.
  • grotesque ornament to the civil order, i. 46 n.
  • ground, however unsafe, On this, etc., vi. 128.
  • grove, The, Grew dense with shadows, etc., x. 264.
  • Grove nods to prove each alley has a brother, etc., xi. 472.
  • grows with our growth, etc., vii. 60; x. 336.
  • guide, the anchor, the, etc., iii. 211.
  • guide, the stay, the, etc., iv. 205.
  • Guido from a daub, a, ix. 480.
  • Guido, from want of choice, etc., vi. 139.
  • Guido Reni from a prince-like affluence of fortune, etc., vi. 20.
  • guinea and the gallows, xi. 288, 472.
  • guns, drums, trumpets, viii. 403; xi. 532.
  • H.
  • habit; there is nothing so true as, vi. 33; viii. 124; x. 42; xii. 398.
  • Had I foreknown his death as you suggest, etc., v. 241.
  • Had I a heart for falsehood framed, viii. 165.
  • Had Petrarch gained his Laura for a wife, etc., vii. 112.
  • Had we but world enough and time, This coyness, Lady, were no crime, etc., v. 314.
  • Hæ nugæ in seria ducunt, xi. 442.
  • Hæret lateri lethalis arundo, i. 135; viii. 22.
  • Hail, adamantine Steel! etc., xi. 505.
  • hail-fellow well met, v. 294.
  • hair-breadth ’scapes, xii. 17.
  • hair on end, at his own wonders, with his, etc., vi. 295.
  • Half thy malice youth could bear, viii. 166.
  • halfpenny head, having a, etc., vi. 431.
  • haloo an anthem, xii. 349.
  • hand, an ear, an eye, a, xi. 484.
  • hand had done, whatever the, etc., ix. 420.
  • hands that the rod of empire had swayed, etc., vi. 14.
  • handsome as you, I was never so, etc., viii. 114.
  • hand-writing on the wall, the, viii. 144; ix. 129.
  • Hang both your greedy ears upon my lips, etc., v. 208.
  • hang upon the beatings of my heart, vi. 257; ix. 107.
  • hanging locks, Like to those, etc., viii. 159; ix. 47.
  • Hanover rats, vi. 221 n.
  • happy alchemy of mind, i. 65; v. 107; viii. 408.
  • Happy insect, what can be, etc., viii. 59.
  • happy things in marriage are allowed, Two, etc., i. 68.
  • happy warrior, xi. 327.
  • hardest stone, the, etc., iii. 261.
    • See melancholy.
  • hard to say if greater want of skill, ’Tis, etc., viii. 401 n.
  • Hark! ’tis the twanging horn, etc., xii. 240.
  • Harlot old, that, etc., iii. 36, 177.
  • hart panteth for the waterbrooks, as the, vii. 226, 307.
  • hashed mutton, Amelia’s, xii. 141, 327.
  • has just come into this breathing world, xii. 162.
  • Has she not gone, trowest now thou, and lost her neele? etc., v. 287.
  • Hast oft been chased, etc., xi. 132, 186.
  • Hast thou seen the down in the air? etc., viii. 56.
  • hate, all we, ix. 340.
  • hate to fill a book with things, I, etc., vii. 399.
  • hated, not to be, viii. 332.
  • hated, needs but to be seen, which to be, etc., viii. 288.
  • hates conchology, he, etc., iv. 277.
  • hath a devil, ix. 59.
  • haut et puissant prince, agé d’un jour, un, viii. 176.
  • Have I not seen the household where love was not? xii. 88 n.
  • have proved a monument, i. 125.
  • have their hands full of truths, iv. 310.
  • Have ye not seen sometime a pale face, etc., v. 21.
  • Have you felt the wool of the beaver, etc., v. 322.
  • He could not read them in his old age, viii. 14.
  • He finds himself possessed of no other qualifications ... than what mere common observation, etc., vi. 124.
  • He had received it from his grandmother, etc., viii. 228.
  • He hath a demon, v. 153.
  • He instanced it too in Lord Peterborough, vii. 209.
  • He is indeed a person, iii. 67.
  • he is one that cannot make a good leg, etc., vii. 25.
  • He is owner of all he surveys, vii. 68.
  • He is ten times handsomer, etc., viii. 442.
  • He looks up with awe to kings, xi. 515.
  • He might if he had pleased have married, i. 55.
  • he must rank, as a universal genius, above Dryden, etc., v. 123.
  • He never is—but always to be wise, iii. 139; vi. 148; ix. 249.
  • He openeth his hands, etc., vi. 392.
  • He prized black eyes, v. 189; vii. 207 n.
  • he saw nature in the elements of its chaos, etc., v. 341 n.
  • He sent a shaggy, tattered, staring slave, etc., v. 210 n.
  • He so teased me, viii. 323.
  • He takes most ease, and grows ambitious Thro’ his own wanton fire and pride delicious, v. 254.
  • He that is but able to express, etc., vi. 207.
  • He that of such a height, hath built his mind, etc., v. 309.
  • he was a fine fellow once, xii. 145.
  • he was a fine old mouser, vi. 347.
  • He went up into the mountain to pray, Himself, alone, and, iii. 152.
  • he who knows of these delights to taste, etc., vi. 173.
  • he’s but his half brother, viii. 74.
  • head to the East, Nay, nay, lay my, iv. 248; viii. 146 n.
  • heaping coals of fire, etc., x. 360.
  • hear a sound so fine, there’s nothing lives ’twixt it and silence, etc., vii. 40.
  • hear the loud stag speak, xii. 269.
  • heard it, but he heeded not—his eyes, ix. 165 n.
  • hears it not, his thoughts are far away, He, etc., ix. 234.
  • hears the tumult, and is still, He, i. 338; v. 90; vi. 91.
  • heart of hearts, yea, into our, xii. 177.
  • heart of man is deceitful, the, etc., xii. 304.
  • hearts unkind, I’ve heard of, iii. 172; xi. 515.
  • heaven and all its host, he shall not perish, By, etc., viii. 307.
  • Heaven lies about us in our infancy, i. 250; x. 358.
  • Heaven, nigh-sphered in, v. 51; xii. 33.
  • Heaven of Invention, vi. 219.
  • heaven-born genius, x. 178.
  • Heav’n’s chancel-vault is blind with sleet, while, vi. 90.
  • heaves no sigh and sheds no tear, i. 135; v. 30.
  • he! jam satis est! iv. 305 n.
  • Hebrew roots, although they’re found, For, etc., viii. 64.
  • held on their way, etc., xii. 45.
  • hell of waters, A, xi. 424.
  • Hell was paved with infants’ skulls, vi. 76, 364; vii. 243.
  • hem was then heard, consequential and snapping, A, etc., i. 377.
  • Hence, all you vain delights, v. 295.
  • Her armes small, her back both straight and soft, i. 227.
  • Her eyes are fierce, etc., viii. 448.
  • Her finger was so small, the ring, etc., viii. 56.
  • Her full dark eyes are ever before me like a sea, like a precipice, i. 70.
  • Her heroes have no character at all, xii. 64.
  • Her voice, the music of the spheres, etc., viii. 63.
  • her whose foot was never off the stair, vii. 319.
  • Her’s is the afflicted, vi. 363.
  • herb that would cure him, The, xi. 328.
  • Here and hereafter, if the last may be? xii. 115.
  • Here are all that ever reigned, xi. 234.
  • Here be truths dashed and brewed with lies, vii. 140; x. 235.
  • Here be woods as green As any, air likewise as fresh and sweet, etc., v. 254; vi. 183.
  • Here is some of the ancient city, vii. 255.
  • Here lies Father Clarges, etc., xii. 150.
  • Here lies a she-Sun, and a he-Moon there, etc., viii. 53; xii. 28.
  • Here will I set up my everlasting bed, etc., viii. 210.
  • Here’s a health to ane I lo’e dear, etc., v. 140.
  • here’s the rub, xii. 234.
  • hermit poor, xii. 126.
  • heroic sentiment of, etc., iii. 61.
  • Hesperus, among the lesser lights, shines like, etc., viii. 164.
  • hewers of wood, etc., x. 124.
  • hew you as a carcase, etc., xii. 181.
  • Hey for Doctor’s Commons, viii. 159.
  • hiatus in manuscriptis, vii. 8, 198; xii. 305.
  • Hic jacet, x. 221.
  • hid from ages, i. 49.
  • High as our heart, v. 271 n.
  • High-born Hoel’s harp, etc., xii. 260.
  • high endeavour and the glad success, the, vi. 28; vii. 125; ix. 318, 373.
  • high leaves, the, etc., iii. 232; iv. 268.
  • high grass, the, that by the light of the departing sun, etc., v. 363.
  • high holiday, of once a year, on some, iii. 172; vii. 75.
  • High Legitimates the Holy Band, the, xi. 423.
  • High over hill and over dale he flies, v. 43.
  • High-way, since you my chief Parnassus be, etc., v. 326.
  • higher and the lower orders, the, xi. 370.
  • highest and mightiest, vi. 439.
  • hill of ages, ix. 69.
  • himself and the universe, x. 166.
  • Hinc illæ lachrymæ, xii. 187.
  • hinder parts are ruinous, its, iv. 201.
  • his bear dances, vi. 412; viii. 507; ix. 351.
  • His garment neither was of silk nor say, etc., xi. 437.
  • His generous ardour no cold medium knows, etc., iv. 263; vi. 253.
  • his little bark, v. 74.
  • His locked, lettered, braw brass collar, etc., v. 132.
  • His lot, though small, He sees that little lot, the lot of all, v. 119.
  • His plays were works, while others’ works were plays, v. 262.
  • His principiis nascuntur tyranni, etc., vii. 347.
  • his ruin meets, v. 301.
  • his spirits gave him raptures with his cook-maid, xii. 155 n.
  • his soul was like a star, and dwelt apart, v. 180.
  • his yoke is not easy, etc., iii. 85.
  • hitch into a rhyme, viii. 50.
  • hitch it, iii. 64.
  • Hitherto shalt thou come and no further, vi. 268; viii. 425; x. 344.
  • Hoc erat in votis, xii. 126.
  • Hoisting the bloody flag, x. 374, 376.
  • hold our hands and check our pride, x. 378.
  • holds his crown in contempt of the choice of the people, i. 394.
    • See also contempt.
  • Holds us a while misdoubting his intent, etc., xi. 123.
  • holiest of holies, x. 336.
  • hollow and rueful rumble, with, xi. 374.
  • holy water sprinkle, dipped in dew, a, iv. 246.
  • Homer, have not the poems of, i. 23; ix. 28.
  • Homer, the children of, ix. 429.
  • honest as this world goes, To be, etc., iii. 259; xii. 218.
  • honest man’s the noblest work of God, an, iii. 345; viii. 458 n.
  • honest, sonsie, bawsont face, viii. 450; ix. 184.
  • Honi soit qui mal y pense, vi. 65; ix. 202, 338.
  • honour consists in the word honour and nothing else, xi. 125.
  • honour dishonourable, etc., xii. 247.
  • Honour of Ireland, and as they were curiosities of the human kind, for the, i. 54.
  • honourable vigilance, v. 264.
  • Hood an ass with reverend purple, etc., viii. 44.
  • Hoop, do me no harm, iii. 212.
  • Hope and fantastic expectations spend much of our lives, etc., i. 2.
  • Hope, thou nurse of young Desire, vi. 293.
  • Hope told a flattering tale, viii. 298.
  • Hope travels through, nor quits us till we die, vii. 302.
  • Hope! with eyes so fair, But thou, oh, etc., vi. 255.
  • Horace still charms with graceful negligence, etc., v. 75.
  • Horas non numero nisi serenas, x. 387; xii. 51, 52, 53.
  • horizon, at the, vi. 150.
  • horned feet, And with their, etc., xii. 258.
  • horse-whipping woman, that, viii. 468.
  • hortus siccus of dissent, the, iii. 264; x. 370.
  • host of human life, xi. 497.
  • hour when I escap’d the wrangling crew, The, etc., iii. 225.
  • house of brother Van I spy, The, etc., xii. 449.
  • house on the wild sea, with wild usages, v. 153.
  • housing with wild men, etc., x. 279.
  • How am I glutted with conceit of this? v. 203.
  • How apparel makes a man respected, etc., v. 290.
  • How blest art thou, canst love the country, Wroth, v. 307.
  • How do you, noble cousin? etc., v. 258.
  • How happy could I be with either, etc., xi. 426.
  • How is it, General? i. 209.
  • how it grew, and it grew, etc., vii. 93; xi. 517.
  • How little knew’st thou of Calista, iii. 180.
  • How lov’d, how honour’d once, avails them not, v. 176.
  • How near am I to happiness, etc., ii. 330; v. 216.
  • How oft, O Dart! what time the faithful pair, iv. 305 n.
  • How profound the gulf, etc., xi. 424.
  • How shall our great discoverers obtain, etc., i. 115.
  • How shall we part and wander down, etc., xii. 428.
  • how tall his person is, etc., vii. 211.
  • howled through the vacant guardrooms, etc., ix. 229.
  • Hudibras, who used to ponder, and, etc., viii. 66.
  • huge, dumb heap, vi. 28; ix. 56.
  • human face divine, x. 77.
  • human form is the most perfect, the, etc., x. 346.
  • human reason is like a drunken man, etc., vi. 147.
  • human understanding resembles a drunken clown, etc., xi. 216.
  • humanity, a discipline of, i. 123; vii. 78, 184; xii. 122.
  • Hundred Tales of Love, him of the, xi. 424.
  • hung armour of the invincible knights of old, is, i. 273; viii. 442.
  • hung like a cloud upon the mountain; now, etc., vii. 13.
  • Hunt half a day for a forgotten dream, iv. 323; ix. 64.
  • hunt the wind, I worship a statue, etc., vi. 97, 236; xii. 435.
  • hunter of shadows, himself a shade, a, vi. 168.
  • huntsmen are up in America, the, v. 340 n.
  • hurt by the archers, iii. 456; iv. 104.
  • Hussey, hussey, you will be as much ill-used and as much neglected, etc., v. 108; viii. 194.
  • Hyde Park, all is a desert, Beyond, vi. 187; vii. 67; viii. 36.
  • Hymns its good God, and carols sweet of love, xi. 427, 501.
  • Hypocritical pretensions to virtue, i. 392.
  • I.
  • I also was an Arcadian. See Arcadian and painter.
  • I am afraid, my friend, this letter will never, etc., i. 94.
  • I am not as this poor Hottentot, iv. 44 n.
  • I am, on the contrary, persuaded, etc., vi. 126.
  • I apprehend you, viii. 10.
  • I cannot, seeing she’s woven of such bad stuff, etc., v. 238.
  • I cannot marry Crout, xii. 122.
  • I care not, Fortune, what you me deny, etc., vii. 371.
  • I’d sooner be a dog, xii. 202.
  • I hate ye, iv. 272.
  • I have secur’d my brother, viii. 86.
  • I hope none living, sir, And, viii. 201.
  • I knew you could not bear it, viii. 228.
  • I know he is not dead; I know proud death, etc., v. 208.
  • I know that all beneath the moon decays, etc., v. 299.
  • I’ll have a frisk with you, viii. 103.
  • I’ll walk, to get me an appetite, etc., v. 268 n.
  • I’m feeble; some widow’s curse, etc., viii. 274.
  • I never saw you look so like your mother, In all my life, viii. 456.
  • I never valued fortune but as it was subservient to my pleasure, viii. 72.
  • I observe, as a fundamental ground common to all the arts, etc., vi. 32.
  • I pr’ythee, look thou giv’st my little boy some syrup for his cold, etc., v. 245.
  • I prythee, spare me, gentle boy; press me no more for that slight toy, etc., viii. 55.
  • I rode one evening with Count Maddalo, etc., x. 261.
  • I see before me the gladiator lie, xi. 425.
  • I see him sweeter than the nosegay in his hand, etc., i. 65; v. 107.
  • I set out upon this adventurous journey, etc., xi., 249.
  • I stood in Venice, on the bridge of sighs, xi. 423.
  • I, that might have married the famous Mr Bickerstoff, etc., i. 7; viii. 96.
  • I think not so; her infelicity seem’d to have years too many, etc., v. 246; x. 260.
  • I think poets are Tories by nature, xii. 241.
  • I thought of Chatterton, the marvellous boy, etc., v. 122.
  • I too, whose voice no claims but truth’s e’er moved, etc., i. 379 n.
  • I’ve heard of hearts unkind, etc., iii. 172; xi. 515.
  • I was invited yesternight to a solemn supper, etc., viii. 41.
  • I was not train’d in academic bowers, etc., v. 283.
  • I will touch it, iii. 127.
  • I wish I was where Anna lies, iv. 305.
  • I wish my old hobbling mother, etc., viii. 80.
  • I wish you would follow Dr Cantwell’s precepts, vii. 189 n.
  • I would borrow a simile from Burke, etc., iii. 419.
  • I would not wish to have your eyes, vi. 19.
  • I would take the Ghost’s word, xii. 88 n.
  • Ici rugit Cain les cheveux hérissés, etc., xi. 234.
  • Idea can be like nothing but an idea, an, etc., xi. 109.
  • Idea, It is true we can form a tolerably distinct, etc., xi. 57.
  • Idea which in itself is particular becomes general, an, etc., xi. 23.
  • Ideas, If in having our, in the memory ready at hand, etc., xi. 45 n.
  • Ideas, operations, and faculties of the mind may be traced, all the, etc., xi. 167.
  • Ideas seemed to lie like substances in the brain, iii. 397.
  • ideas seem to elude the senses, moral, etc., xi. 88.
  • ideas and operations of the mind proceed? Whence do all the, xi. 171.
  • idiot and embryo, iii. 270.
  • Idleness, with light-winged toys of feathered, xii. 58.
  • If a man lies on his back, etc., x. 341.
  • If a thousand pardons about your necks were tied, etc., v. 276.
  • If any author deserved the name of an original, etc., i. 171.
  • If aught of oaten stop or pastoral song May hope, chaste Eve, to soothe thy modest ear, etc., v. 116.
  • If ever chance two wandering lovers brings, etc., v. 76.
  • If Florence be i’ th’ Court he would not kill me, etc., v. 241.
  • If his hand were full of truths, etc., ii. 393.
  • If o’er the cruel tyrant love, vi. 293; viii. 248, 320; xi. 304.
  • if the poor were to cut the throats of the rich, etc., iii. 132.
  • If these things are done in the green tree, etc., vii. 140.
  • If they cannot succeed in what is trifling, etc., vii. 168.
  • If this man Had but a mind allied unto his words, etc., v. 264.
  • If to her share, viii. 525.
  • If to their share some splendid virtues fall, etc., vii. 83.
  • If we fly into the uttermost parts of the earth, etc., v. 16.
  • If ye kill’d a thousand in an hour’s space, etc., v. 276.
  • If you cannot find in your heart to tell him you love him, I’ll sigh it out of you, etc., v. 290.
  • If you were to write a fable for little fishes, vii. 163.
  • If you yield, I die To all affection, etc., v. 255.
  • ignorance was bliss, vii. 222.
  • Il avoit une grande puissance de raison, etc., i. 88 n.
  • Il y a aujourd’hui, jour des Paques Fleuris ... Madame Warens, vi. 24.
  • Il y a des impressions, etc., iii. 152; xii. 261.
  • Il y a donc des esprits de deux sortes, etc., xi. 287.
  • Ils ne pouvoient croire qu’un corps de cette beauté, etc., vi. 200 n.
  • ils se rejouissoient tristement, xii. 16.
  • Iliad of woes, iii. 10; iv. 41.
  • Ille igitur qui protrusit cylindrum, etc., xi. 73.
  • illustrious obscure, x. 143.
  • illustrious personages were introduced, These three, etc., vi. 209.
  • Illustrious predecessors, i. 380.
  • image and superscription, ix. 330.
  • image of his mind, the, iv. 372.
  • imagination étoit la première de ses facultés, etc., i. 88 n.
  • impeachment, We own the soft, x. 142.
  • impediments, the first of these, etc., x. 258.
  • impenetrable whiskers have confronted flames, Those, i. 422; xi. 273 n.
  • imperium in imperio, vi. 265.
  • implicité, it is without the copula, etc., x. 121, 129.
  • imposition of names, some of larger, some of stricter signification, by this, etc., xi. 129.
  • Imposture, organised into a comprehensive and self-consistent whole, etc., iii. 147.
  • imprisoned wranglers free, set the, iii. 390.
  • in all things a regular and moderate indulgence, etc., xi. 518.
  • in corpore vili, iv. 3.
  • in dallying with interdicted subjects; v. 207.
  • In doleful dumps, etc., xii. 12 n.
  • in each hard instance tried, oh soul supreme, x. 375.
  • In green vine leaves he was right fitly clad, v. 35; x. 74.
  • In happy hour doth he receive, etc., iii. 49.
  • in his habit as he lived, xii. 27.
  • in medio tutissimus ibis, viii. 473.
  • In my former days of bliss, etc., xi. 284.
  • In one of Mr Locke’s most noted remarks, etc., xi. 286.
  • In peace, there’s nothing so becomes a man, xii. 71.
  • In poetry the same effect is produced by a few abrupt and rapid gleams of description, etc., v. 33.
  • in Pyrrho’s maze, iii. 226.
  • In search of wit these lose their common sense, etc., v. 74.
  • In spite of these swine-eating Christians, etc., v. 210 n.
  • in their eyes, in their hands, etc., i. 45; xi. 373.
  • in their untroubled element shall shine when we are laid in dust, etc., v. 52.
  • In vain I haunt the cold and silver springs, etc., v. 302.
  • Incredulous odi, vii. 102.
  • independently of his conduct or merits, etc., xi. 417.
  • Indignatio facit versus, iii. 257, 317; v. 112.
  • Individual nature produces little beauty, xi. 212.
  • incapable of its own distress, viii. 450.
  • inconstant stage, the, viii. 383.
  • indolence is the source of all mischief, iv. 70.
  • Indus to the Pole, from, xii. 185, 278.
  • inexpressive she; The fair, the chaste, the, xii. 205.
  • inexpressive three, viii. 454.
  • infidels and fugitives, as, etc., xi. 443.
  • infants’ skulls, Hell was paved with, vii. 243.
  • infinite agitation of men’s wit, iv. 314; vi. 312; xi. 323; xii. 441.
  • infirmity, of our, viii. 402.
  • informed with music, sentiment, and thought, never to die, v. 274.
  • inhuman rout, the, v. 89.
  • inimitable on earth, etc., viii. 55.
  • innocence and simplicity of poor Charity Boys, ix. 18.
  • inscribed the cross of Christ, etc., iii. 152.
  • Insipid levelling morality to which the modern stage is tied down, etc., xi. 298.
  • insolent piece of paper, an, xii. 168.
  • Insensés qui vous plaignez, etc., iv. 100.
  • instance might be painful; The, but the principle would please, viii. 21.
  • instinct with fire, viii. 423.
  • insulted the slavery of Europe, etc., iii. 13.
  • interlocutions between Lucius and Caius, viii. 417.
  • interminable babble, vii. 198.
  • Into a lower world, to theirs obscure And wild—To breathe in other air, etc., v. 262.
  • intoxicating, whatever is most, in the odour of a Southern spring, etc., i. 248.
  • Intus et in cute, vii. 24, 226; viii., 116; x. 34.
  • invariable principles, xi. 486.
  • invention of the enemy, A weak, etc., viii. 355.
  • inventory of all he said, viii. 103.
  • invincible knights of old, the, etc., i. 273; viii. 442.
  • invita Minervâ, vii. 8, 56, 119; viii. 379.
  • Irish People and the Irish Parliament, xi. 472.
  • Irishman in a row, like an, etc., xi. 494.
  • Iron has not entered his soul, The, xii. 277.
  • Iron mask, the Man in the, iv. 93.
  • iron rod, the torturing hour, the, xii. 215.
  • irritabile genus vatum, iii. 221.
  • island in the watery waste, lone, iv. 190.
  • Islands of the Blest, ix. 253.
  • It is a very good office, etc., viii. 2.
  • it is better to marry than burn, iii. 272.
  • It is by this and this alone, etc., vi. 135.
  • It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle, etc., i. 376 n.
  • It is he who gives the second blow, etc., vi. 396.
  • It is my father, v. 237.
  • It is not easy to define in what this great style consists, etc., vi. 123.
  • It is not with me you are in love ... Sophia Western, etc., i. 44.
  • It is observable, I know not for what cause, etc., i. 318.
  • It is the keystone, vi. 36; xi. 581.
  • It is the same harmless thing that a poor shepherd, etc., v. 343.
  • it only is when he is out he is acting, vi. 296.
  • It’s well they’ve got me a husband, viii. 82.
  • It was even twilight, etc., i. 218.
  • It was my wish like him to live, etc., v. 362.
  • It was reserved for Shakespeare to unite purity of heart, i. 253.
  • it was very good of God, etc., xi. 352.
  • It will never do, iii. 361; vii. 367.
  • Italiam, Italiam! ii. 329.
  • Ithuriel’s spear, ix. 369.
  • J.
  • jackdaw just caught in a snare, And looks like a, etc., viii. 238.
  • Jacobin, Once a, etc., i. 430; iii. 110, 159.
  • Jacobin who writes in the Chronicle, the true, iii. 175.
  • Jacques, The melancholy, etc., xii. 285.
  • Jactet se in aulis, etc., iv. 71 n.
  • Je suis peintre, non pas teinturier, ix. 435.
  • jealous God, at sight of human ties, The, etc., xi. 147.
  • Jew that Shakespeare drew, the, i. 158.
  • jewels in his crisped hair, Like, xii. 450.
  • Job’s comforters, vii. 179.
  • John de Bologna, after he had finished, Thus, etc., vi. 140.
  • Johnny Keats, vii. 208.
  • jolly god in triumph comes, etc., the, v. 81.
  • jovial thigh, the, etc., xii. 196.
  • joys are lodged beyond the reach of fate, Those, vi. 23.
  • Joy, joy for ever, my task is done! etc., iv. 357.
  • judgment, after it has been long passive, the, etc., vi. 128.
  • judgment is really nothing but a sensation, xi. 86.
  • Juger est sentir, xi. 87.
  • Juno’s swans, link’d and inseparable, Like, xi. 472 n.
  • Jupiter tonans, xi. 308.
  • Justice is preferable to mercy, xi. 86, 88.
  • justify before his sovereign, he would not, etc., vi. 100.
  • justly called the Silent, viii. 13.
  • justly decried author, a, xi. 167.
  • K.
  • Kais is fled, and our tents are forlorn, for, etc., vi. 196.
  • Kean’s Othello is, we suppose, the finest piece of acting, viii. 414.
  • keeping his state, viii. 402.
  • kept in ponderous vases, are, x. 161.
  • kept like an apple, etc., xii. 171.
  • kept the even tenor of their way, have, vi. 44; viii. 123; x. 41.
  • kept under, or himself held up to derision, i. 147, 149.
  • key-stone that makes up the arch, ’Tis the last, etc., vi. 36; xi. 581.
  • kill at a blow, the two to, xii. 194.
  • killing langour, relieve the, etc., iii. 132; v. 357.
  • Kind and affable to me, etc., xii. 267.
  • King could live near such a man, no, i. 305.
  • King is but a king, a, etc., xi. 324.
  • king of good fellows and wale of old men, the, viii. 103.
  • kings, As kind as, etc., xii. 140.
  • Kings are naturally lovers of low company, vi. 159; xi. 442.
  • kings, if there were no more, etc., i. 387.
  • King’s Old Courtier, The, etc., iv. 232.
  • kings, the best of, i. 305; iii. 41.
  • Kingly Kensington, xii. 275.
  • Kiuprili, Had’st thou believ’d, etc., xi. 412.
  • kirk is gude, and the gallows is gude, The, etc., viii. 269.
  • knaves do work with, called a fool, which, xi. 415.
  • knavish but keen, iii. 60.
  • knight had ridden down from Wensley moor, etc., v. 157.
  • knight himself did after ride, The, etc., viii. 66.
  • know another well, were to know one’s self, vi. 316.
  • know my cue without a prompter, vii. 226.
  • know that I shall become that being, But I, vii. 395.
  • Know that which made him gracious in your eyes, etc., v. 290.
  • Know the return of Spring, xi. 317.
  • know to know no more, v. 67.
  • Know, virtue were not virtue if the joys, etc., ix. 431.
  • Know ye that lust of kingdoms hath no law, etc., v. 195.
  • knoweth whence it cometh, no man, etc., xii. 312.
  • knowledge, that had I all, etc., vi. 225.
  • knowledge, Though he should have all, etc., vii. 199; x. 208.
  • Koran and sugar! the, ix. 56 n.
  • L.
  • La ci darem, viii. 364.
  • La nuit envellopait les champs et les ramparts, etc., xi. 236.
  • la téte me tourne, etc., xi. 125.
  • laborious foolery, with, iv. 239; ix. 121, 332; xi. 289.
  • labour of love, ix. 223.
  • ladder of life, the, xi. 388.
  • lady of fashion would admire a star, etc., xi. 499.
  • lady of a manor, A certain, etc., i. 422; xi. 273 n.
  • laggard age, xii. 208.
  • Laid waste the borders and o’erthrew the bowers, iv. 282, 334; vi. 50; viii. 36.
  • Lancelot of the Lake, a bright romance, ’Twas etc., viii. 441.
  • landlady, the, and Tam grew gracious, etc., v. 129.
  • languages a man can speak, for the more, etc., vi. 70.
  • lapped in luxury, ix. 284.
  • large heart enclosed, in, xii. 303.
  • last objection, In regard to the, etc., vi. 141.
  • last of those bright clouds, the, ix. 477.
  • last of those fair clouds, the, that on the bosom of bright honour, etc., v. 345. 369.
  • lasting woe, vii. 429.
  • latter end of this system of law, the, xi. 89.
  • laudator temporis acti, iv. 241.
  • laugh now who never laugh’d before; Let those, etc., viii. 469; xi. 316.
  • Laugh to-day and cry to-morrow, viii. 536.
  • laughed with Rabelais, etc., iv. 217.
  • Launched on the bosom of the silver Thames, xi. 505.
  • Law by which mankind suffers, etc., iii. 203.
  • law of laws, the, etc., iv. 203.
  • Laws are not, like women, the worse for being old, viii. 22; xii. 161 n.
  • laws of nature which are the laws of God, etc., iv. 295.
  • lawful monarch’s bleeding head, his, etc., viii. 309.
  • lay heavy burthens on the poor and needy, They, iv. 150.
  • lay the flattering unction, etc., xii. 230.
  • lay waste a country gentleman, viii. 36.
    • See Laid.
  • lay’d a body in the sun, Say I had, etc., vi. 315.
  • La père des humains voit sa nombreuse race, etc., xi. 233.
  • Le son des cloches, xii. 58 n.
  • lean pensioners, vii. 401.
  • Leaping like wanton kids in pleasant spring, vi. 172.
  • leaps at once to its effect, xii. 185.
  • learn her manner, To, etc., ix. 326.
  • learned the trick of imposing, iii. 16.
  • leave, oh, leave me to my repose! i. 84; vi. 71, 182, 249; viii. 313; xii. 121.
  • leave others poor indeed, xii. 219.
  • leave our country and ourselves, etc., xi. 353.
  • leave stings, vii. 287; ix. 72.
  • leave the will puzzled, etc., xi. 446.
  • Leave then the luggage of your fate behind, etc., v. 357.
  • leaving the things that are behind, etc., x. 195.
  • leaving the world no copy, viii. 272.
  • leaves in October, like, viii. 142.
  • leaves our passions, afloat, etc., iii. 92.
  • leer malign, with jealous, xii. 43, 287, 387.
  • left its little life in air, it, xii. 322.
  • left the sitting part, he, of the man behind him, viii. 17.
  • leg? Can it set a, etc., i. 6.
  • lend it both an understanding, etc., xii. 55.
  • Lend us a knee, etc., v. 257.
  • Les Francs à chaque instant voient de nouveaux guerriers, xi. 232.
  • lest it should be hurried over the precipice, etc., vi. 156.
  • lest the courtiers offended should be, iii. 45; viii. 457.
  • Let Europe and her pallid sons go weep, etc., v. 115.
  • Let go thy hold, etc., iii, 192.
  • Let honour and preferment go, etc., xii. 323.
  • Let loose the greyhound, and lock up Hoyden, vi. 414; viii. 82.
  • Let me not like a worm go by the way, v. 30; xi. 506.
  • let me light my pipe at her eyes, xii. 455.
  • Let modest Foster if he will, excel, etc., vi. 367.
  • Let no rude hand deface it, etc., vi. 89; viii. 91.
  • Let not rage thy bosom firing, viii. 248, 320.
  • Let the event, that never-erring arbitrator, tell us, v. 258.
  • let there be light, viii. 298.
  • Let those laugh now who never laugh’d before, etc., viii. 469; xi. 316.
  • letting contemplation have its fill, iv. 215.
  • leurre de dupe, iv. 5; vii. 225.
  • Leviathan among all the creatures, the, etc., vii. 276; viii. 32.
  • Leviathan, the, tumbling about his unwieldy bulk, vii. 13.
  • liar of the first magnitude, v. 279.
  • liberalism—lovely liberalism, ix. 233.
  • liberty was merely a custom of England, xii. 215.
  • Liceat, quæso, populo, etc., iii. 299.
  • license of the time, viii. 186.
  • lie is most unfruitful, The, etc., viii. 456.
  • lies about us in our infancy, that, i. 250; x. 358.
  • life, a thing of, ix. 177, 225; xi. 504.
  • life an exact piece would make, Who to the, etc., ix, 326.
  • life and death in disproportion met, Like, vi. 96; xii. 127.
  • life, From the last dregs of, etc., xii. 159.
  • life is best, This, etc., xii. 321.
  • Life is a pure flame, etc., xii. 150.
  • Life knows no return of spring, vi. 292.
  • life of life was flown, when all the, vi. 24; xii. 159.
  • Life! thou strange thing, etc., xii. 152.
  • ligament, fine as it was, that, etc., vii. 227; xi. 306.
  • light as a bird, as, etc., iii. 313.
  • light, But once put out their, etc., xi. 197.
  • light, her glorious, ix. 316.
  • like a surgeon’s skeleton in a glass case, viii. 350.
  • Like a tall bully, ix. 482.
  • Like a worm goes by the way, xi. 514.
  • Like angel’s visits, few, and far between, iv. 346 and n.; v. 150 and n.; vii. 38.
  • Like as the sun-burnt Indians do array, etc., xi. 334.
  • like Cato, gave his little senate laws, iv. 202.
  • like importunate Guinea fowls, one note day and night, iii. 60; xi. 338.
  • like it because it is not vulgar, I, vi. 160.
  • Like kings who lose the conquest gain’d before, etc., viii. 425.
  • like master like man, xii. 132.
  • like morning brought by night, v. 150.
  • Like old importment’s bastard, v. 258.
  • Like proud seas under him, iv. 260; vii. 274.
  • Like Samson his green wythes, xii. 128.
  • Like some celestial sweetness, the treasure of soft love, v. 253.
  • Like strength reposing on his own right arm, v. 189.
  • Like the high leaves upon the holly tree, iii. 232; iv. 268.
  • Like the swift Alpine torrent, etc., x. 73.
  • Like to the falling of a star, etc., v. 296.
  • liked a comedy, better than a tragedy, He, etc., viii. 25.
  • lily on its stalk green, the, v. 296.
  • limited fertility and a limited earth, iv. 294.
  • limner’s art may trace the absent feature, Yes, the, viii. 305.
  • Linden, when the sun was low, On, etc., iv. 347.
  • line too labours and the thoughts move slow, The, etc., viii. 313, 331.
  • line upon line, and precept upon precept, x. 314.
  • lines are equally good, All his, etc., viii. 287.
  • Linked each to each by natural piety, xi. 520.
  • link of peaceful commerce ’twixt dividable shores, i. 144.
  • liquid texture, mortal wound, And in its, etc., iii. 350.
  • lisped in numbers, iv. 215; v. 79; xii. 29.
  • little leaven leaveneth the whole lump, iv. 267.
  • little man and he had a little soul, There was a, iv. 358 n.
  • little man, but of high fancy, A, etc., vii. 203.
  • little sneering sophistries of a collegian, the, xi. 123.
  • little spot of green, i. 18; v. 100.
  • little things are great to little man, These, etc., vi. 226.
  • Little think’st thou, poor flower, etc., viii. 51.
  • Little think’st thou, poor heart, viii. 52.
  • Little Will, the scourge of France, etc., v. 106.
  • live and move and have their being, they, vi. 190.
  • live, if this may life be called, Yea, thus they, etc., viii. 307.
  • live in his description, iv. 337; vi. 53.
  • live to please, he must, etc., viii. 433.
  • live to think, etc., xii. 147.
  • lively, audible, etc., xii. 130.
  • lively sense of future favours, a, viii. 17.
  • lives and fortunes men, vii. 364; xi. 437.
  • living with them, There is no, etc., vii. 300.
  • Lo, here be pardons half a dozen, etc., v. 277.
  • lobster, like the lady in the, viii. 430.
  • Lochiel, a far cry to, viii. 425.
  • lodge in some vast wilderness, Oh! for a, etc., ix. 287.
  • logic of form, ix. 168 n.
  • logic of passion, viii. 311; ix. 168 n.
  • logic was so different from ours, thy, etc., xii. 164.
  • long-forgotten order of chivalry, the, viii. 108; x. 28.
  • long insulted the slavery of Europe, xii. 287.
  • Long life to the conqueror! v. 156; x. 394.
  • look abroad into universality, iv. 200; vi. 44; vii. 123; viii. 416.
  • look energetic, xii. 325.
  • look green, iv. 337; vi. 53.
  • look in the face, etc., i. 42.
  • Look to thy Sire, and in his steady way, etc., iii. 114.
  • looked forward beyond this world, it, etc., i. 45; xi. 273.
  • looked only at the stop-watch, my lord; I, vi., 278; vii. 272.
  • looked round on them with their wolfish eyes, And, etc., vi. 425.
  • loop or peg to hang a doubt on, a, xii. 280.
  • loop-holes of retreat, xii. 120.
  • Lord be merciful to me, etc., vi. 152 n.
  • Lord is imprisoned, in the Bastille of a name; a, etc., vi. 68.
  • lord of the ascendant, iv. 241; vi. 147.
  • Lord of himself, uncumbered with a creed, iv. 232.
  • lord of one’s-self, uncumber’d with a name, vi. 185.
  • lord once own the happy lines, Let but a, etc., vi. 209.
  • Lord, a Right Honourable Lord, viii. 277.
  • lords who love their ladies, like, ix. 68.
  • lose it afterwards in some vile brand, to, vi. 329.
  • lost over a wide, and unhearing ocean, iv. 284.
  • lot is cast under the British Monarchy, My, vi. 153.
  • loud and furious fun, xii. 7.
  • loud torrent or the whirlwind’s roar, ix. 298.
  • loud-hissing urn, xi. 503.
  • Louis XVIII. has the same undoubted right, etc., x. 218.
  • Louise Eleonore de Warens etoit une demoiselle, etc., i. 90.
  • Love himself can flatter me no more, And, vii. 292.
  • love the French Republic—he could not, v. 318.
  • love’s thrice reputed nectar, viii. 72.
  • loved bequest, and I may half impart, a, etc., iv. 345.
  • loved hospitality and respect, vi. 282.
  • loved not wisely but too well, of one that, etc., viii. 414.
  • loved the world, nor the world me; I have not, vi. 97.
  • lovely Marcia, The, etc., iii. 219.
  • lovers of low company, vi. 159; xi. 442.
  • lovest me, No more of that if thou, xii. 106.
  • low, fat, Bedford level, vii. 12.
  • lower than the angels, a little, vii. 85.
  • lowly children of the ground, xii. 341.
  • lucid mirror in which nature saw, A, etc., vii. 56; ix. 71.
  • luck holds, the same, etc., xii. 248 n.
  • lucus a non lucendo, ix. 152.
  • lumpish heart, viii. 119; ix. 64; x. 38.
  • lusty man to ben an Abbot able, A, iv. 225; xii. 6.
  • luxury of woe, all the, viii. 127.
  • M.
  • Mad but wise, iii. 161.
  • Mad World, my Masters, A, v. 191; xii. 87 n.
  • made as flax, x. 264.
  • made desperate by too quick a sense of constant infelicity, i. 4; v. 284.
  • made good digestion wait, etc., xii. 238.
  • made life’s business like a summer’s dream, xii. 24.
  • made my wedded wife yestreen, ii. 316.
  • made th’ insult, And, etc., xii. 323.
  • madman that maintains the doctrine of Divine Right? Where is the, iii. 240, 285.
  • Madmen reason, vii. 250.
  • madness in them which our first poets had, that fine, vi. 183.
  • magic circle, viii. 231.
  • Magis pares quam similes, viii. 401.
  • Magnis excidit ausis, ix. 138.
  • Mais vois la rapidite de cet astre, etc., ix. 281; xii. 123 n.
  • majestic world, got the start of the, vii. 200; xii. 275.
  • make Gods in their own image, x. 344.
  • make mouths at him, viii. 188.
  • make the age to come her own, x. 210.
  • makes it pregnant, i. 112.
  • Makins was the only one, Mr, i. 54.
  • Malbrook to the wars is going, vi. 93.
  • malice in the case, none at all, no, etc., vi. 314.
  • malice of a friend, with the, viii. 177.
  • malice of old friends, the, iv. 266.
  • malignant renegado, A, iii. 210.
  • mammon of unrighteousness, the, xii. 279.
  • man becomes excellently wise, etc., ii. 400.
  • man is a bubble, A, etc., v. 342.
  • man is a noble animal, etc., xi. 559.
  • Man is in no haste to be venerable, xii. 207, 229.
  • man may indeed be a reviewer, the, etc., xi. 418.
  • man may indeed pretend to prefer my interest to his own, a, etc., xi. 135.
  • man may steal a horse sooner, One, etc., xi. 342 n.
  • man of God, a little round, fat, oily, etc., i. 59; xii. 332.
  • man of honour and a cavalier, iii. 409.
  • man of peace and reason, x. 360.
  • Man seldom is but always to be robbed, ix. 249.
    • See he.
  • man was confined in Newgate a short time before, a, iv. 302.
  • man was made to mourn, i. 53; xii. 9.
  • man were author of himself, As if a, etc., xii. 50.
  • man whose eye is ever on himself, The, etc., vi. 91; xi. 422.
  • manly man to ben an abbot able, A, xii. 348.
  • man’s a man for a’ that, A, vii. 88.
  • man’s mind is parcel of his fortunes, a, viii. 455.
  • Manager beseems, as, viii. 406.
  • mankind’s epitome, not one but all, vi. 424.
  • manna is descending, while the, vi. 198.
  • manna is going to fall, x. 69.
  • manna was falling, The, x. 225.
  • Marall, come hither, etc., viii. 274, 285.
  • marble air, accessible to all; the, xii. 419.
  • marching the Muse’s Hannibal, viii. 58.
  • Marcian Colonna is a dainty book, vii. 225.
  • mare’s nest, a, iv. 239.
  • mariners, That come from a far countree, I love to talk with, vi. 67.
  • mark or likelihood, of no, vi. 212; vii. 278.
  • Marks and badges, two, of suspected and falsified science, etc., v. 329.
  • Marlowe’s mighty line, v. 208.
  • marry, they neither, iii. 87 n., 385; iv. 120.
  • Martin Pelaez, Here the history relates, that at this time, xi. 329.
  • master of a boarding-house with a green door, etc., viii. 240.
  • Masterless passion sways us, etc., xii. 95, 442.
  • matchless, divine, what we will, v. 179.
  • Materiam superabat opus, v. 192, 376; vii. 118; xi. 257.
  • May one have the sight of such a fellow for nothing, etc., v. 227.
  • Me voici déjà tout aussi sûr, etc., vii. 454 n.
  • meanest flower that blows can give, to him the, etc., i. 20; iv. 273; v. 103; vi. 44; xi. 574.
  • meanest peasant on the bleakest mountain, The, etc., vii. 83.
  • meanest peasant in this our native land, iii. 62.
  • Means of government are the guinea and the gallows, Their only, viii. 21.
  • measure with a two-foot rule, i. 175; iii. 23; vi. 105.
  • meddling with the unclean thing, x. 379.
  • meek sorrows and virtuous distress of Katherine, the, etc., i. 303.
  • Melancholy Andrews, xi. 485.
  • melancholy appearance of a lifeless body, the, etc., vi. 327.
  • melancholy hat, v. 270, 290; xii. 325.
  • melancholy madness of poetry, the, etc., iii. 404; v. 294.
  • melancholy, the heaviest stone which, etc., iii. 261; vii. 267; xi. 447; xii. 137.
  • melted, thawed, and dissolved into a dew, xii. 226.
  • memory slept, open all the cells where, vii. 194; xii. 322.
  • men act from calculation, All, iv. 196; vii. 250; xii. 87 n.
  • men I ever knew in my life, Of all the, etc., i. 44; xi. 272.
  • Men in their first use of such phrases as these, etc., xi. 67.
  • men of choice and rarest parts, viii. 447.
  • Men palliate and conceal, etc., vii. 230.
  • Men should not quarrel with their bread and butter, iii. 276.
  • men should serve a cucumber, as, etc., xi. 326 n.
  • men suffer it, their toy, the world, Because, etc., iii. 288.
  • men think all men mortal but themselves, All, vi. 324 n.
  • men were brutes without them, vi. 68.
  • mendicant in argument, this, iii. 81.
  • Mens divinior, vii. 201.
  • mere scholar is a creature that can strike fire in the morning at his tinder-box, A, etc., v. 284.
  • merry and wise, xii. 22.
  • Metaphysical poets were men of learning, etc., viii. 49.
  • methought, And ayen, etc., xii. 327.
  • Methought I saw the grave where Laura lay, etc., v. 298.
  • Methought she looked at us, etc., ix. 203.
  • Mice in an air-pump, vii. 46, 133.
  • Michael, by some ’tis doubted, etc., viii. 42.
  • mighty dead, the, xii. 30.
  • mighty heart, all that, etc., xii. 124.
  • mighty land-marks of these latter times, vii. 184.
  • mighty stream of Tendency, iv. 290; v. 280; vi. 256.
  • mighty Tottipottimoy, The, etc., viii. 64.
  • mighty world of eye and ear, all the, etc., i. 176; vi. 74; vii. 46.
  • Milanie’s foot of fire, viii. 454.
  • Mild as the moonbeams, viii. 453.
  • milkmaid, a fair and happy, etc., v. 99.
  • mille ornatus habet, mille decenter, x. 210.
  • millions made for one, iii. 178.
  • mimic statesmen and their merry king, of, vii. 219.
  • mind alone is formative, that the, iv. 380; xi. 81, 128, 176.
  • mind happy was he that died, And in my, vi. 294.
  • Mine Host of Human Life, xi. 503.
  • mingled air of cunning and of impudence, a, xi. 416.
  • Miraturque novos frondes et non sua poma, iii. 285; iv. 228; v. 263.
  • Misfortunes, There is something in the, of our best friends that pleases us, viii. 9.
  • mistaken for you, I shall be ever, xii. 105.
  • mistress and a saint in every grove, a, i. 52; ix. 382; xi. 237.
  • mitigated authors into companions, etc., i. 83.
  • Mitigated into courtiers, and submitted to the soft collar of social esteem, viii. 69.
  • mob, The, are so pleased with your Honour, viii. 286.
  • mob of gentlemen who wrote with ease, v. 373; xi. 372.
  • Modern Athens, iv. 246.
  • modest as morning, etc., xii. 76.
  • Modest merit never can succeed, vii. 224 n.
  • Mokanna, ’midst the general flight, In vain, iv. 357.
  • Monaghan was an honest, i. 54.
  • monarch of all I survey, I am, xii. 409.
  • monarchise, be feared, etc., xii. 204.
  • monkey-preacher, a, iv. 229.
  • monster, A huge sized, of ingratitudes, vi. 99.
  • monstrum ingens, biforme, ii. 405; xii. 155 n.
  • moods of mind, x. 270.
  • moody madness, etc., viii. 397.
  • moon’s a gallant: see how brisk she rides, etc., The, v. 218.
  • moral is here! The, xii. 229.
  • morals on the time, xii. 52.
  • moralise our complaints, etc., xii. 127.
  • morbid sensibility, i. 14.
  • more favourably incline, do, viii. 464.
  • more honoured in the breach than the observance, viii. 225.
  • More misfortunes, sir, viii. 72.
  • more potent spirit, the, v. 214.
  • more solid pretensions of virtue, the, i. 422.
  • More subtle web Arachne cannot spin, etc., v. 72; ix. 37; x. 257; xii. 233.
  • more than natural, xii. 399.
  • morn risen on mid-night: like, xii. 236.
  • Mortality, behold, I fear, etc., v. 344 n.
  • moss upon the desolate rock, like, viii. 308.
  • Most blessed paper, which shall kiss that hand, etc., v. 324.
  • most civilized, and with one exception, the most enlightened, iii. 62.
  • most easily beset him, xii. 331.
  • most elegant mind since Virgil, the, xi. 304.
  • most marvellous to see, x. 159.
  • most obvious distinction, the, between the two styles, etc., v. 348.
  • most sensible of poets; the, v. 373.
  • most small fault, viii. 447.
  • Most women have no character at all, etc., vii. 234.
  • Mother, come from that poisonous woman there, v. 246.
  • mother-wit and arts well known before, xi. 478.
  • motions of the body, as it is in the, etc., xi. 61.
  • mountains à la Russe, the, iv. 359.
  • mountain sides, Or from the, etc., i. 21.
  • mouse, that takes up its lodging in a cat’s ear, a, vi. 94.
  • moved by the orphan’s tears, Is he not, etc., viii. 277.
  • mower whets his scythe, the, viii. 297.
  • multiplicity of persons and things, i. 133.
  • Multum abludit imago, iv. 9; ix. 322, 424; x. 393; xi. 532.
  • murder to dissect, xii. 396.
  • murmur as the ocean murmurs near, and, viii. 465.
  • Murray, silver-tongued, iii. 416.
  • music, the poor man’s only, xi. 502; xii. 56.
  • musical a discord, so, etc., xii. 289.
  • Mutual interest, the greatest of all purposes, etc., xi. 137.
  • mutually reflected charities; all the, i. 30; viii. 137; ix. 80, 144.
  • My all’s in my possession, viii. 323.
  • My father pressed me sair, etc., v. 141.
  • My father’s, mother’s, brother’s death, I pardon, etc., v. 358.
  • My heart is harden’d, I cannot repent, etc., v. 205.
  • My heart leaps up when I behold, etc., v. 103.
  • My heart with love is beating, viii. 532.
  • My kingdom is not of this world, xii. 463.
  • My mind to me a kingdom is! vi. 6; vii. 56, 121; viii. 407; x. 280.
  • My peace I give unto you, etc., v. 183.
  • My soul, turn from them; turn we to survey, iii. 166; viii. 411.
  • My task is done, etc., xi. 426.
  • Mystery and silence hung upon his pencil, ix. 388.
  • N.
  • nakedness, in utter, i. 251.
  • names, Because on earth their, i. 23; x. 63; xii. 36.
  • Naples! thou Heart of men, etc., x. 267.
  • narrow his mind, etc., viii. 62; xii. 328.
  • nation of shopkeepers, a, ix. 182.
  • Nature did ne’er betray, etc., i. 20.
  • nature doth not die, but, xi. 423.
  • nature erring from itself, And yet how, etc., viii. 217.
  • Nature had made him different from other people, vi. 280.
  • nature herself is not to be too closely copied, I will now add that, etc., vi. 134.
  • Nature is the rule; but still to follow, etc., xi. 316.
  • Nature! Oh the wonderful works of, viii. 286.
  • Nature, Oh Menander and, etc., i. 183.
  • nature to advantage drest, ix. 159.
  • nature’s mighty feast, at, iv. 139.
  • naughty varlet thou art to continue, thou, xii. 115.
  • nauseous harlequins in farce may pass, those, iii. 63.
  • Nay, but hear me first, x. 392.
  • Nay, if you come to that where did you find that bodkin? viii. 72.
  • Ne Deth, alas! ne will not han my lif, etc., v. 34.
  • neck so free, And from his, etc., xii. 236.
  • Nec Deus intersit, nisi dignus vindice nodus, v. 150.
  • necessity that is not chosen, but chuses, etc., iii. 303.
  • negative success, vii. 273.
  • νείατον ἐς κενεῶνα, x. 7.
  • neighbour, who is thy? iv. 204; v. 184.
  • neighbour, thou shalt love thy, iv. 204.
  • Neither can the experience of one man’s life furnish examples, etc., v. 329.
  • neither to sing nor say, viii. 371.
  • neither truce nor rest, xii. 193.
  • ne quid nimis, iii. 120.
  • Never ending, still beginning, vi. 92; vii. 65.
  • never look back, ne’er ebb to humble love, i. 203.
  • never more be officer of mine, But, etc., viii. 473.
  • Never so sure our rapture to create, etc., iii. 253; viii. 473; x. 154; xii. 26.
  • never yet was woman made, There, etc., viii. 55.
  • new book, And what of this, etc., xii. 161.
  • New manners and the pomp of elder days, xi. 354; xii. 286.
  • Newspaper-man, the, vii. 378.
  • nice conduct, vii. 210.
  • nice derangement of Epitaphs, a, viii. 509.
  • nice morality, of a, viii. 162.
  • nickname is the heaviest stone, A, etc., xi. 447.
    • See also melancholy.
  • nigh sphered in Heaven, v. 51; xii. 33.
  • night was winter in his roughest mood, etc., v. 92.
  • Nihil humani a me alienum puto, iv. 270; vi. 60; vii. 78, 206; viii. 139; xii. 99.
  • nine years, Horace’s, x. 250.
  • no baby, vi. 319.
  • Noctes cœnæque Deum, xii. 293.
  • no day without a line, iv. 323.
  • no great clerk, iv. 29.
  • No Indian prince has to his palace, etc., viii. 63.
  • no line which dying he would wish to blot, v. 85.
  • no more of a cat than her skin, xii. 208.
  • no more of talk, xii. 293.
  • no more indulgence is to be shewn, etc., xi. 350.
  • No more: where ignorance is bliss, etc., xii. 135.
  • no one can bring up his master’s dinner but himself, viii. 242.
  • No Popery, iii. 294; iv. 249.
  • No soul, ye know, entereth heavengate Till from the body he be separate, etc., v. 276.
  • no such being, at any period of life, etc., v. 123.
  • No; we are to unite the strength of the Hercules, etc., vi. 143.
  • No wher so besy a man as he ther n’as, v. 24; ix. 367.
  • noble heart that harbours virtuous thought, etc., v. 58.
  • nobleman-look? The, etc., vii. 209, 216.
  • Noblest Charis, you that are Both my fortune and my star! etc., v. 305.
  • noblest monument of Albion’s isle, Thou, etc., v. 121; vii. 256.
  • non bene conveniunt, etc., iii. 403.
  • Non ex quovis ligno fit Mercurius, iii. 264; vii. 199; xii. 301.
  • none but itself could be its parallel, etc., iv. 261; viii. 372.
  • Non omnia possumus omnes, iii. 425.
  • Non satis est pulchra poemata esse, dulcia sunto, ix. 173; xi. 452 n.
  • Nor Alps nor Apennines can keep them out, vi. 66; ix. 291.
  • Nor can we think what thoughts they could conceive, i. 136; v. 177; xii. 326.
  • norma loquendi, vii. 251.
  • North, The stern genius of the, etc., x. 186.
  • Northern Waggoner had set, By this the, etc., viii. 16.
  • Not a jot, not a jot, viii. 189, 272.
  • not a year or two shows us a man, It is, vi. 303.
  • not till then, iii. 119; vii. 382; viii. 17 n.
  • not to do evil that good may come, xi. 476.
  • Not to admire, etc., i. 81 n.; xii. 181.
  • Not with more glories in the ethereal plain, etc., v. 72.
  • nothing but vanity, chaotic vanity, xi. 527.
  • Nothing can come of nothing, viii. 459.
  • Nothing can cover his high fame but Heaven, etc., iv. 262.
  • nothing human is indifferent to him, viii. 139.
    • See Nihil.
  • Nothing is sacred in its pages but tyranny, iii. 314.
  • nothing was given for nothing, xii. 269.
  • Notwithstanding, certain it is, that if those schoolmen, etc., v. 330.
  • Nought fer fro thilke paleis honourable, etc., v. 31.
  • Now all ye ladies of fair Scotland, xii. 88.
  • Now by the proud complexion of my cheeks, etc., v. 209.
  • Now have I found one mastery, etc., v. 276.
  • now in glimmer, and now in gloom, vii. 368; xi. 424.
  • Now mark a spot or two, etc., iii. 266, 271.
  • Now meet thy fate, incens’d Belinda cry’d, etc., v. 73.
  • Now night descending, the proud scene is o’er, etc., v. 8, 76; viii. 18.
  • Now this now that she tasteth tenderly, x. 210.
  • Now tragedy, thou minion of the night, etc., v. 209.
  • Now was Martius set then in the chair of state, etc., i. 219.
  • Now you set your foot on shore, viii. 45.
  • Nugæ Canoræ, ix. 354.
  • null and void, i. 48.
  • nunquam sufflaminandus erat, iv. 336; vi. 52.
    • See Aliquando.
  • O.
  • O maxime conjux! etc., xii. 166.
  • O procul este profani, xii. 13.
  • O reader! hast thou ever stood to see, etc., v. 164 n.
  • O si sic omnia! xi. 425.
  • O waly, waly, up the bank, etc., v. 142.
  • obdurate and rapacious foe, iii. 67.
  • Object of any one who is inspired with this passion, etc., i. 93.
  • Obscurity her curtain round them drew, etc., v. 10; xi. 224.
  • observation with extensive view, Let, iv. 277.
  • Ocean smil’d, And, etc., ix. 267.
  • Odds, triggers, and flints, viii. 508.
  • Odia in longum, etc., iii. 176.
  • odious endeavours, viii. 158.
  • Odious, in satin, ’Twould a saint provoke, viii. 454.
  • Odi profanum vulgus et arceo, vi. 163.
  • o’er-informed, vi. 171; ix. 31, 363.
  • o’er-informing power, vii. 340.
  • Of all creatures breathing, I do hate those things, etc., v. 227.
  • of all men, the most miserable, ix. 59.
  • of one crying in the wilderness, etc., iii. 152.
  • Of such we in romances read, iv. 101.
  • of the frequent corse heard nightly plunged amid the sullen waves, v. 88.
  • Of whatsoever race his godhead be, etc., iii. 174; xii. 244 n., 384.
  • Of which we priests and poets say such truths as we expect for happy men, etc., v. 306.
  • Oh Alma Redemptoris mater, loudly sung, v. 29; x. 76.
  • Oh ancient knights of true and noble heart, etc., v. 224; x. 71.
  • Oh Faustus, now hast thou but one bare hour to live, etc., v. 206.
  • Oh! for my sake do you with fortune chide, etc., i. 24 n.
  • Oh, gentlemen! Hear me with patience, etc., v. 207.
  • Oh gin my love were a bonny red rose, v. 140.
  • Oh! had I been by fate decreed, vi. 352.
  • Oh heav’ns if you do love old men, etc., viii. 448.
  • Oh! ho, quoth Time to Thomas Hearne, etc., vi. 384.
  • Oh, hold it constant, It settles his wild spirits, etc., v. 245.
  • Oh, how canst thou renounce, etc., i. 18; v. 100.
  • Oh, how despised and base a thing is man, etc., v. 303.
  • Oh! I am gone already, The infection flies to the brain and heart, etc., v. 244.
  • Oh I could still, like melting snow, v. 306.
  • Oh! I grow dull, and the cold hand of sleep, etc., v. 209.
  • Oh, lasting as those colours may they shine, etc., v. 78.
  • Oh! let me perish in the face of day, vii. 138.
  • Oh memory! shield me, etc., vii. 223.
  • Oh, not from you, viii. 127.
  • Oh, Richard! oh, my love! viii. 195.
  • Oh sir, you’re welcome home, etc., v. 216.
  • Oh speak no more! For more than this I know, etc., v. 212.
  • Oh, that speaks him, viii. 43.
  • Oh thou conqueror, Thou glory of the world once, now the pity, etc., v. 253.
  • Oh Virtue! I embraced thee as a substance, i. 435.
  • Oh what delicate wooden spoons, etc., iii. 231.
  • Oh what fine their hair hath Dipsas! etc., v. 201.
  • Oh! who can paint a sunbeam to the blind, v. 237.
  • Old Genius, the porter of them was, etc., vi. 173.
  • Old Mr Southern is here, etc., v. 359.
  • old prize-fighting stage, viii. 230.
  • old True-penny, xi. 534.
  • old Sylvanus at their head, xii. 258.
  • Olympus, the cloud-capt, ix. 429.
  • Omne ignotum pro magnifico est, vi. 274; ix. 348.
  • Omne tulit punctum, iii. 175; iv. 165; ix. 216; xii. 362.
  • Omnes boni et liberales humanitati semper favemus, viii. 384.
  • omnipotence of reason, xii. 407.
  • On a good foundation a good house may be built, xii. 197.
  • On entend à ces mots toutes les voix célestes, etc., xi. 233.
  • On his release from prison, he gave an entertainment, etc., v. 234.
  • On jugera bien que la vie de la mâitrise, etc., i. 91 n.
  • On the contrary, I have largely declared, etc., xi. 66.
  • One fate attends the altar, etc., iii. 34, 277.
  • One murder makes a villain, millions a hero, i. 389.
  • one note day and night, iii. 60; xi. 338.
  • one of quality, xii. 285.
  • one of those, he is not, vii. 365.
  • one that had had misfortunes, ix. 181.
  • Once a Jacobin, and always a Jacobin, i. 430; iii. 110, 159.
  • once a priest, and always a priest, iii. 269.
  • Once a philanthropist, and always a philanthropist, iv. 267.
  • Once more, companion of the lonely hour, xii. 53 n.
  • open and apparent shame, vii. 375; xii. 288.
  • Open Sesame, vii. 86; xii. 120.
  • Open thy gates, O Hanover, iii. 50.
  • opens all the cells where memory slept, etc., vii. 194; xii. 322.
  • Ophelia does not go mad because she can sing, xi. 395.
  • Orion hungry for the morn, and blind, etc., vi. 168.
  • orphan’s tears, by, viii. 290.
  • Other pictures we see, Hogarth’s we read, viii. 133; ix. 391.
  • otiosa Eternitas, ix. 218.
  • otium cum dignitate, vi. 283; ix. 261; x. 387.
  • ounce of sweet is worth a pound of sour, An, i. 2; vi. 226; xii. 93.
  • Our Cupid is a blackguard boy, etc., xi. 353.
  • Our greatest good is but plethoric ill, iv. 63.
  • Our system is not fashioned to preclude, etc., i. 114.
  • Ours is an honest employment, etc., iii. 163.
  • Out of my country and myself I go, etc., vi. 189.
  • out of sight, out of mind, vi. 373; ix. 91; xii. 128.
  • outlasted a thousand storms, that has, etc., viii. 445.
  • outward shew elaborate, Of, etc., xii. 247.
  • Out went the taper as she hurried in, etc., iv. 303.
  • over a vast and unhearing ocean, viii. 472.
  • overflow, that sweeps before him, Like a wild, etc., viii. 421.
  • over laboured lassitude, iv. 245.
  • overrun with the spleen, v. 91.
  • over shoes, over boots, xii. 352.
  • P.
  • pagan suckled in a creed outworn, A, xii. 171.
  • pain, The labour we delight in physics, xii. 45.
  • paint ladies with iron lap-dogs, vii. 94.
  • paint a sunbeam to the blind, Oh! who can, etc., xi. 64.
  • paint them, They best can, etc., vii. 298; xi. 386.
  • painted sepulchre, white without, etc., iii. 34.
  • painter! I also am a, vi. 13; ix. 163.
  • painting is an art, they think, As, etc., vi. 135.
  • Painting is and ought to be ... no imitation, etc., vi. 130.
  • painting was jealous, and required the whole man to herself, i. 85; x. 208, 279.
  • palaces, her ladies and her pomp, iv. 45; vi. 69.
  • pale and wan, fond lover? Why so, etc., viii. 55, 240.
  • pale face and raven locks, the, xi. 533.
  • pale reflex of Cynthia’s brow, the, xi. 507.
  • pampered jades of Asia, Halloa you, etc., vi. 299.
  • Pan is a god, Apollo is no more, v. 192; ix. 372.
  • Pandora’s box, xii. 222.
  • pangs, the internal pangs are ready, etc., v. 67, 235.
  • Paraclete’s white walls and silver springs, From, vii. 369.
  • paradise of dainty devices, ix. 159.
  • parson in a tie wig, a, i. 9; iv. 269; viii. 99; xi. 543.
  • parts are contained in the whole, iv. 27.
  • particularities and details of every kind, all, vi. 135.
  • passes shew, that within which, xii. 243.
  • passing wind, to the, viii. 473.
  • passion loves, Which pale, ix. 11.
  • passion makes men eloquent, iii. 397.
  • passion of patience, for the, etc., vi. 165 n.
  • Past slightly, His careless execution, etc., v. 258.
  • pathétique à faire fendre les rochers, d’une, xi. 317.
  • patience and simplicity of poor, honest fishermen, i. 56; v. 98.
  • Patient Grizzle, ix. 432.
  • patron’s ghost from Limbo lake, His, etc., xii. 302.
  • pauper lad, vii. 366, 7; ix. 283.
  • paved with good intentions, ix. 215.
  • Peace on earth and good-will towards men, vii. 373; xii. 288.
  • Peace to all such, xi. 84, 181.
  • pearls, he had found a few, etc., xi. 450.
  • peas, as pigeons pick up, xii. 134.
  • peasant’s nest, the, ix. 285.
  • peep through the blanket of the dark, xii. 125, 244.
  • Pembroke’s princely dome, where mimic art, From, etc., ix. 49; xii. 202.
  • pence, Take care of the, etc., vi. 235.
  • penitent tear, a, iv. 357.
  • penny for his thoughts, A, iii. 138.
  • people are a superior order of beings, his, etc., vi. 137.
  • perceive a fury, but nothing wherefore, ix. 245.
  • perceive a softness coming over the heart of a nation, iv. 346; v. 184.
  • Pereant isti qui ante nos nostra dixerunt, viii. 94.
  • perfection in an inferior style, Indeed, etc., vi. 128.
  • perhaps of none, except that there are certain persons, etc., xi. 267.
  • perilous stuff, that weighs upon the heart, ix. 133 n.
  • perpetual volley arrowy sleet, xi. 515.
  • person can in earnest doubt whether there be, if any, etc., xi. 141.
  • person and a smooth dispose, a, etc., viii. 134; ix. 76.
  • Persian abodes, the glittering temples, vii. 264.
  • pestilence strike all trades in Rome, Now the red, etc., viii. 349.
  • Petulant set his mark, vii. 497.
  • peuple serf, corveable, etc., iii. 290.
  • Phœnix gazed by all, xii. 388.
  • Phœnix Pindar is a vast species alone, The, viii. 57.
    • See vast.
  • Phœbus sung, the no less amorous boy; Like, etc., viii. 73.
  • phantasma, in a; or a hideous dream, etc., xii. 192.
  • Phidias is illustrious, That the name of, etc., vi. 241.
  • Philarmonia’s undivided dale, In, iii. 166; iv. 218.
  • philosophy fell into a sadness, Thus repelled, etc., iii. 123.
  • Physician, heal thyself! vii. 65.
  • physician, The whole need not a, i. 58; xii. 174.
  • physical consideration of the senses and the mind, xi. 129.
  • picks clean teeth, where he, iv. 147.
  • picks pears, saying this I like; As one, etc., iii. 371; iv. 22.
  • pictures of nothing and very like, xi. 248.
  • pictures we see, Hogarth’s we read; Other, etc., viii. 133; ix. 391.
  • pierceable by power of any star, not, vi. 288; x. 372.
  • pigmy body of a fiery soul, etc., viii. 176.
  • pilloried on infamy’s high and lasting stage, etc., vi. 222; viii. 65.
  • pilloried, the fellow that was, x. 375.
  • pilot to weather the storm, the, iii. 98.
  • Pingo in eternitatem, iv. 220; ix. 313.
  • pious orgies, ix. 14; xii. 258.
  • piping as though he should never be old, v. 98; ix. 9; xii. 261.
  • Piqued, we were, i. 172.
  • pity is only another name for self-love, xi. 140.
  • places where I also am admired, There are, vi. 93.
  • plain and honest method, A, vi. 145.
  • Plain truth needs no flowers of speech, xii. 105.
  • Play round the head, i. 135; vi. 149.
  • player’s province, they but vainly try the, etc., iv. 224.
  • pleasant sight see, And I that all this, etc., xi. 269.
  • pleasant though wrong, viii. 167.
  • pleas’d attention ’midst his scenes we find, with, etc., viii. 263.
  • Pleas’d they remember their august abodes, x. 255.
  • pleased with a feather, tickled with a straw, etc., iii. 40; vi. 234; ix. 118; x. 173.
  • Pleased with itself, ix. 480.
  • pleasure in art, which none but artists feel; a, i. 76.
  • pleasure in painting which none but painters know, There is a, vi. 5.
  • pleasure’s finest point, viii. 409.
  • pleasurable poetic fervour, x. 158.
  • ploughed with our heifer, if they had not, etc., iii. 293.
  • plumb, it was out of all, etc., vi. 218.
  • plume her feathers, and let grow her wings, Can, etc., viii. 204.
  • Plutarch of Banishment. He compares those who cannot live out of their own country, etc., vi. 101 n.
  • poet blind and bold, the, vi. 176.
  • Poeta nascitur—non fit, v. 379.
  • Poetry has something divine in it, because it raises the mind, etc., v. 3.
  • poets succeed best in fiction, iii. 49.
  • pointing to the skies, viii. 336.
  • politeness of his style and the genteelness of his expressions, by the, viii. 157.
  • pomp of elder days, the, x. 205.
  • pomp of groves and garniture of fields, The, ix. 98.
  • Ponder well, viii. 323.
  • Poor gentleman, it fairs no better with him for he’s a wit, i. 116.
  • poor man’s only music, The, xi. 502; xii. 56.
  • Poor Robinson Crusoe, etc., x. 358.
  • Pope Anastasius the Sixth, I am the tomb of, v. 18; x. 63.
  • Popery was the ghost of the Roman Empire, etc., ix. 374.
  • popular harangue, the, the tart reply, iii. 406.
  • porcelain of Franguestan, the, ix. 60.
  • poring pedantry, of, v. 176.
  • port as meek as is a maid, And of their, etc., vi. 216; vii. 25; viii. 371; xi. 340; xii. 68.
  • Posthæc meminisse juvabit, vi. 25.
  • Posterity, that rich and idle personage, i. 298.
  • potent art, by their so, xii. 143.
  • pound of honey would draw more flies, a, etc., viii. 442.
  • pours out all as plain, As downright Shippen or as old Montaigne, He, iv. 321, 341; vi. 57; viii. 93; ix. 258.
  • power of conferring benefits, by the, etc., vii. 427.
  • powers that be, the, vi. 148; viii. 375; xii. 284.
  • power to do if we will, that it is a, xi. 59.
  • Praise and blame, reward and punishment, are just and proper, etc., xi. 279.
  • praise him, or blame him too much, viii. 396.
  • Pray lend me your garter, Madam, xii. 451.
  • pray no more, viii. 309.
  • precepts here of a divine old man, The, vi. 332.
  • precious jewel of the soul, xii. 105.
  • preferable regards, viii. 153.
  • prejudices, because they are, vi. 36.
  • Prematur nonum in annum, ii. 104.
  • prepared to sacrifice or to hazard, etc., vi. 153.
  • presens Divus, iii. 18 n., 350 n.
  • present no mark to the foemen, i. 11.
  • present deity they shout around, A, etc., x. 191; xii. 250.
  • preserve the most perfect beauty, if you mean to, etc., vi. 138.
  • pride and covetousness, iv. 2.
  • pride in erring reason’s spite, In spite of, xi. 552; xii. 270.
  • Pride, where wit fails, steps in to our defence, etc., v. 74.
  • priest calls the lawyer a cheat, The, etc., xi. 443.
  • Priests were the first deluders of mankind, etc., iii. 277.
  • Pritchard’s genteel and Garrick’s six feet high, viii. 176.
  • privilege of talking nonsense, the, etc., x. 120.
  • Procul, O procul, este profani, vi. 185.
  • prodigy of genius, as a, v. 123.
  • production of a scoffer’s pen, the, i. 116.
  • progression from them, to take, etc., xii. 47.
  • Proh pudor, iv. 199.
  • Prologues spoken by the ghost of an old king of Ormus, xii. 28.
  • propagation too, there were, vi. 174.
  • proper study of mankind is man, the, viii. 91; xi. 492.
  • prophet has most honour, A, iv. 189.
  • propter vitam vivendi perdere causas, Et, vii. 162.
  • prophesier of things past, iv. 241.
  • prophetic mind, iii. 343.
  • Proteus coming from the sea, There is old, etc., i. 34; viii. 149; ix. 491; xi. 197.
  • proud as when blue Iris bends, xii. 166.
  • Proud Glaramara northward caught the sound, etc., iii. 157.
  • proud keep of Windsor, iii. 336 n.; vii. 11; vii. 276; ix. 37.
  • proud submission and dignified obedience, viii. 99 n.
  • proud to be at the head of so prevailing a party, viii. 36, 83.
  • proud to die what he was born, viii. 290.
  • Proudly I raised the high thanksgiving strain, etc., iii. 115.
  • proved that the painter, If it has been, etc., vi. 131.
  • public creature, vii. 77.
  • publish, But why then, etc., xii. 32.
  • puff direct, vi. 289.
  • pull an old house, etc., iii. 124.
  • punish the last successful example, iii. 290.
  • pure, all things are pure, To the, viii. 53.
  • pure defecated evil, vi. 314.
  • Pure in the last recesses of the mind, i. 57; iii. 273; v. 361; vi. 7; vii. 281; xii. 44, 149.
  • pure religion breathing household laws, xi. 190; xii. 464.
  • purple light of love, the, i. 251; x. 380; xii. 156.
  • put his hook in the nostrils, vii. 13.
  • puts his hand in his breeches’ pocket like a crocodile, That he, vi. 67.
  • puts the same common name into a capacity, etc., xi. 128.
  • puzzling o’er the doubt, xii. 127.
  • pyramid of sweet-meats, a, etc., ix. 278.
  • Q.
  • Quam nihil ad tuum, Papiniane, ingenium, vii. 294; xi. 549; xii. 186.
  • Quantum lenta solent inter Viburna Cupressi, v. 82 n.
  • quantum meruit, v. 123; xi. 363.
  • Quatre heures passées il faut fermer, Citoyens, vi. 16.
  • Que peu de chose est la vie humaine, vi. 27.
  • Que peut vous inspirer une haine si forte? etc., iii. 120.
  • Que, si sous Adam même, etc., x. 250.
  • Que terribles sont ces cheveux gris, viii. 159.
  • queen of night, whose large command, The, etc., viii. 67.
  • Queen overhearing what Betty did say, Then the, etc., xii. 302.
  • Queen’s name was a tower of strength, the, xi. 555.
  • question being reduced within these limits, the, etc., xi. 85.
  • Quicquid agit quoquo vestigia vertit, etc., ii. 331; vi. 105.
  • Quicquid agunt homines nostri farrago libelli, viii. 91.
  • Quid sit pulchrum quid turpe, etc., viii. 92.
  • quidlibet audendi potestas, x. 13.
  • Quit, quit for shame, etc., xii. 435.
  • quite optional, xi. 338.
  • quite chap-fallen, xii. 4.
  • quod sic mihi ostendis incredulus odi, ii. 129; viii. 127, 243, 436; ix. 132.
  • R.
  • race is not to the swift, the, etc., vii. 195.
  • rainbow’s lovely form, Like the, iii. 289.
  • rais’d upon his desperate foot, And, etc., viii. 66.
  • raise jars, jealousies, strifes, etc., v. 223.
  • raised so high above all height, viii. 463.
  • random, blindfold blows of Ignorance, the, vii. 59.
  • ranged in a row, ix. 57.
  • Raphael grace, the Guido air, the, vi. 270; xii. 156.
  • rari nantes in gurgite vasto, vi. 299; x. 356.
  • Rash judgments and the sneers of selfish men, vii. 367.
  • ravens are hoarse that croak, etc., xi. 304.
  • reaches the verge of all we hate, x. 398.
  • Read his history in a Prince’s eyes! iv. 329.
  • read no more, etc., x. 62 n.
  • Read the names, says Judicio, v. 280.
  • reading rabble, the, iii. 218.
  • ready to allow that some circumstances, I am very, etc., vi. 134.
  • ready to sink for him, I was, etc., viii. 301.
  • real hearts of flesh and blood, etc., viii. 205; xi. 197.
    • See warm.
  • reason but from what we know? What can we, etc., iv. 113; vii. 51, 249.
  • reason for the faith, etc., v. 302; xii. 396.
  • reason how this came to pass is, the, etc., vii. 174 n.
  • reason I shall beg leave to lay before you, For this, etc., vi. 129.
  • Reason is the queen of the moral world, etc., iv. 206.
  • reason of their unreasonableness, the, v. 325.
  • reason of this terrible summons? What is the, etc., viii. 216.
  • reason, make the worse appear the better, xii. 289.
  • reason pandering will, xi. 110.
  • reason why, The, I cannot tell, But I don’t like you, Dr Fell, v. 318.
  • reasoning, self-sufficient thing, A, an intellectual all in all, ii. 130.
  • reasons for the faith, etc., i. 172.
  • Rebelling angels, the forbidden tree, etc., xi. 123.
  • recantation had no charms for him, Such, iii. 157; vi. 176.
  • reclaim’d by modern lights, And though, etc., viii. 51.
  • Red cross, the, etc., iii. 111.
  • red-leaved tables of the heart, within the, v. 235; vi. 192.
  • Reduce all tragedy by rules of art, etc., viii. 67.
  • reeds bow down, the very, as though they listened to their talk, v. 199.
  • reign, he held his solitary, xii. 75.
  • refined and intellectual music, viii. 363.
  • reformer nor a house-breaker, xii. 310.
  • reform and live cleanly, vii. 175 n.
  • reformed rake makes the best husband, a, v. 238.
  • reformed this indifferently among us, of late, etc., vi. 134.
  • reformer is a worse character than a housebreaker, a, iv. 264.
  • rejouissoient tristement selon la coutume de leur pays, se, i. 100.
  • relegated to obscure cloisters, x. 208.
  • relieve the killing languor and over-laboured lassitude, iii. 132; v. 357.
  • religion, established by law, excepted our, x. 363.
  • relish all as sharply, passioned as we, to, iii. 226.
  • relish him more in the scholar, You shall, etc., viii. 378.
  • Rembrandts, Correggios, and stuff, vi. 312.
  • remorse, shall be in him, etc., xii. 458.
  • Remote, unfriended, melancholy, slow, etc., vi. 90.
  • renounce, Oh how canst thou, the boundless store, etc., i. 18; v. 100.
  • Replete with strange hermetic powder, etc., viii. 63.
  • Repose! won’t you have the whole of eternity to repose in, xi. 289.
  • reprobate, to every good word, etc., vii. 135; x. 235.
  • reptile sting another reptile; What? if one, etc., viii. 422.
  • re-risen cause of evil, iii. 111.
  • resembles a person walking on stilts in a morass, viii. 331.
  • resembling a goose-pye, ix. 71; xi. 200.
  • Respice finem, vi. 27; vii. 200.
  • restored and shaking off her chain, xi. 413.
  • retire, the world shut out etc., ix. 292; xii. 122.
  • return to our own institute, But to, etc., vi. 180.
  • returning with a choral song, etc., x. 187.
  • revenge, And so is my, viii. 228.
  • revered and ruptured Ogden, xi. 341.
  • reverberation, with thousand-fold, xi. 413.
  • reverbs its own hollowness, xii. 160.
  • reverend bedlams, colleges and schools, v. 118.
  • reverend name, a, ix. 23.
  • revive the ancient spirit of loyalty, xii. 446.
  • reward, He has had his, ix. 25.
  • reward, its own exceeding great, ix. 65.
  • ribbed sea-sand, as is the, etc., vi. 196; xii. 274.
  • rich and rare, v. 369.
  • rich strond, iv. 214; v. 192.
  • rides in the whirlwind, viii. 560; xii. 292.
  • right divine of kings to govern wrong, The, i. 285; iii. 105; vii. 374.
  • right hand, the, knows what the left, etc., x. 345.
  • Right well I wote, most mighty sovereign, v. 187.
  • ring of mimic statesmen and their merry king, the, viii. 152, 555.
  • Rings the earth with the vain stir, vi. 61; xii. 395.
  • rise sadder and wiser on the morrow morn, v. 359.
  • river wanders at its own sweet will, the, i. 319 n.
  • road had done the Captain justice, the, iii. 131 n.
  • roast duck, a, vi. 417.
  • Roaming the illimitable ocean wide, xi. 495.
  • roguish eyes, has, xi. 298.
  • Roland for his Oliver, a, iv. 296.
  • Roll on, ye dark brown years, etc., v. 18; xi. 300.
  • rolling stone gathers no moss, a, xi. 519.
  • Rome of the sea, the, ix. 267.
  • Rome, when you are at, vii. 66.
  • Romulus et Liber pater et cum Castore Pollux, etc., x. 7.
  • root springs lighter the green stalk, so from the, etc., xi. 1, 131, 183.
  • rooted malice of a friend, with the, viii. 474.
  • rose and expectancy of the fair State, xii. 276 n.
  • rose like a steam, etc., xii. 261, 292.
  • Rosy Ann, vii. 70, 71.
  • round fat oily men of God, i. 59; xii. 332.
  • Round Table, To the President of the, i. 41.
  • Rubens’s pictures were the palette of Titian, ix. 52 n.
  • rubies, its price is above, ix. 351; xii. 377.
  • runs the great circle, etc., viii. 102; xii. 49.
  • runs the great mile, etc., xii. 253.
  • rule, a little sway, a little, etc., vi. 328.
  • ruling passion once expressed, the, iii. 211.
  • ruling passion strong in death, etc., vii. 230.
  • run and read, to, v. 183.
  • S.
  • sacred to verse, and sure of everlasting fame, vi. 45.
  • sacro tremuere timore, etc., iv. 17.
  • sad historian, the, of the pensive plain, i. 114; iii. 315.
  • sad wicked dogs, ii. 160.
  • said or sung, viii. 264.
  • Sailing with supreme dominion, etc., iii. 323; iv. 215; v. 12; viii. 57.
  • St George for merry England! xii. 15.
  • saint, That is the man for a fair, xii. 277.
  • salt of the earth, the, xii. 402, 425.
  • same footsteps of nature trending or printing upon several subjects or matters, by the, v. 327.
  • same that was, and is, and is to be, the, iii. 177; xi. 414.
  • sanction of all mankind, But we have the, etc., vi. 128.
  • sand-bank, ix. 326.
  • sanguine flower, Like to that, etc., xii. 261.
  • sat not as a meat but as a guest, And, viii. 54.
  • Satan, profoundnesses of, xii. 402.
  • Satyr that comes staring, A, etc., vii. 215.
  • Saviour, when the meek, bowed his head and died, v. 184.
  • scale, a weight of ignorance, putting in one, etc., vi. 146.
  • scales that fence, the, xii. 269.
  • Scared at the sound himself has made, iv. 322.
  • scatter his dung with a grace, iii. 51.
  • Scatter his enemies and make them fall, viii. 198.
  • scattered like stray gifts o’er the earth, etc., iv. 346; vii. 224; viii. 144; ix. 366.
  • sceptical, puzzled, and undecided, etc., vii. 266.
  • Schiller! that hour I would have wished to die, etc., iv. 219; vii. 226.
  • Scholar! I was a master of scholars, a, viii. 167, 177, 320.
  • scholar’s melancholy, the, xii. 75.
  • School calleth unto School, ix. 106.
  • School, ’Tis a bad; it may be like nature, etc., i. 324.
  • schools, an exercise in the, ii. 136.
  • School’s up, etc., viii. 278.
  • school-boy counts the time, The, etc., i. 2.
  • schoolmaster the greatest character in the world, a, x. 328.
  • Scotchman is not ashamed to shew his face anywhere, a, viii. 333.
  • Scotland, judge of England, Oh, etc., viii. 478 n.
  • Scots wha hae wi’ Wallace bled, v. 139; vii. 70 and 71.
  • Scottish peasantry are still infected, etc., xi. 558.
  • Scrawls with desperate charcoal on his darken’d walls, xi. 196.
  • screws one’s courage, etc., xii. 140.
  • Sculpture can express more, Those who think, etc., vi. 139.
  • sculptured grace, and Promethean fire, viii. 257.
  • scurf o’er life, like a thick, v. 223; xii. 384.
  • sea, earth, and air, xi. 483.
  • sea-porpoise, a great, viii. 279.
  • seas of pearl and clouds of amber, vi. 149.
  • Search then the ruling passion, xii. 78.
  • seats firm, to keep their, x. 367.
  • secret, sweet, and precious, i. 372; viii. 14.
  • Secret Tattle, iii. 139, 148; viii. 388.
  • secrets of the prison-house, the, xii. 238.
  • Sed hæc hactenus, iii. 161; vi. 233.
  • Sedet, in eternumque, sedebit infelix Theseus, iv. 201; ix. 338 n., 375.
  • see how dark the backward stream, And, etc., vi. 23.
  • See, see how firmly he doth fix his eye Upon the crucifix, v. 245.
  • see merit in the chaos of its elements, etc., viii. 480.
  • See o’er the stage the ghost of Hamlet stalks, etc., v. 355.
  • See o’er the stage the ghost of Munden stalks, viii. 436.
  • see ourselves as others see us, To, viii. 150; xii. 299.
  • See the chariot at hand here of love, v. 304.
  • see the sun to bed and to arise, to, etc., iv. 366.
  • See where on high stands unabash’d Defoe, x. 375.
  • See who ne’er was nor will be half-read, Who first sung Arthur, then sung Alfred, etc., v. 108.
  • See with what a waving air she goes, ii. 331; vi. 96.
  • seek his merits to disclose, no further, etc., xi. 477.
  • seem to know that which they do not, to, vi. 216.
  • seen a long way off, upon a level, viii. 151.
  • seen of all eyes, xi. 425.
  • sees and is seen, ix. 260.
  • sees into the life of things, vi. 10.
  • Segnius per aures demissa, etc., viii. 222.
  • seizing their pleasures, etc., xi. 359.
  • self-applauding bird, the peacock see, the, etc., iv. 363.
  • self involved, not dark, vi. 44.
  • self-love and social, v. 131; vi. 264.
  • Semper Ego Auditor, iii. 153.
  • Semper varium et mutabile, viii. 383.
  • Senecio was a man of a turbid and confused wit, etc., viii. 60.
  • sense, And filled up all the mighty void of, i. 59 n.
  • sense of joy, a, etc., iv. 272.
  • sensible, warm motion, xii. 151.
  • sent us weeping to our beds, v. 359.
  • sentir est penser, vii. 453.
  • serene and smiling, x. 62.
  • seriously inclined, xii. 5.
  • sermon, A man may read a, xii. 252.
  • Sermo humi obrepens, vi. 246.
  • servetur ad imum, iii. 422; xi. 508.
  • servile slaves, iii. 42; xi. 260.
  • Servum pecus imitatorum, vi. 162; vii. 241.
  • Sesquipedalia verba, the, v. 105.
  • Set a mark of reprobation on it, i. 332.
  • Set but a Scotsman on a hill, etc., xi. 327; xii. 194.
  • set him up on one side, xii. 195.
  • set his bow in the heavens, He hath, etc., i. 72.
  • set up a pocket-handkerchief, iv. 298.
  • sevenfold fence, That, viii. 153.
  • severe in thought, Or if, etc., iii. 264.
  • Severn’s sedgy side, viii. 408.
  • Shake her starry head with palsy, ix. 218.
  • shall no more impart, iv. 158.
  • shame in crowds, His, etc., xii. 238.
  • shame, the blood be upon their heads, The, etc., xii. 288.
  • shame, the open and apparent, vii. 375; xii. 288.
  • She comes not like a widow, etc., v. 241.
  • She doth tell me where to borrow, etc., v. 84.
  • she hears the sound of rustic festivity, etc., x. 43.
  • she may sing, may go to balls, etc., viii. 311.
  • she moved with grace, x. 83.
  • She shall sooner cut an atom than part us, viii. 68.
  • She-Sun, Here lies a, etc., viii. 53; xii. 28.
  • shedding a faint shadow of uncertain light, etc., v. 193.
  • shedding a gaudy crimson light, ix. 348.
  • shepherd boy piping, as though he should never be old, v. 98; ix. 9; xii. 261.
  • shivering on the brink, x. 398.
  • shone all glittering with ungodly dew, That, i. 59.
  • shone in darkness, His light, ix. 67.
  • shorter excursions tries, vii. 70.
  • Shut their blue-fringed lids, and hold them close, etc., viii. 440.
  • shut the gates of genius on mankind, vii. 276.
  • shuts the gates of wisdom on mankind, vi. 36; vii. 276.
  • shut up in measureless content, xii. 202.
  • Si Pergama dextra, etc., vi. 230.
  • Si prisonnier ne dit point sa raison, x. 55.
  • sic transit gloria mundi, xiii. 468.
  • sigh, still prompts the eternal, etc., viii. 110; x. 29.
  • sight of one was good for sore eyes, the, vii. 272.
  • sign of an inward and invisible grace, the, etc., xi. 439.
  • Signior Friscobaldo, etc., Friscobaldo, oh! pray call him, etc., v. 235.
  • silly shepherds sitting in a row, xi. 201 n.
  • silver foam which the wind severs from the parted wave, The, etc., v. 296.
  • silver nail or a gilt anno domini, etc., v. 341 n.
  • simple movement of her finger, vii. 304.
  • simplex munditiis, ix. 282.
  • sin that most easily besets it, the, etc., iv. 62; x. 223.
  • sing their bondage freely, v. 261.
  • sing those witty rhymes, etc., xii. 57.
  • singing face, a, xiii. 371.
  • singing the ancient ballad of Roncesvalles, v. 140; viii. 110; x. 30.
  • single-hearted, iii. 278, 279.
  • singular d’altra genti, vi. 280.
  • singular instance of prematurity of abilities, a, v. 123.
  • sinner it or saint it, to, i. 58.
  • sins that most easily beset him, xii. 258.
  • Sir, if you will lend me your cane for a moment I’ll give him a good threshing, etc., viii. 12.
  • Sir John with all Europe, x. 161.
  • Sir Joshua might be ashamed, etc., vi. 445.
  • Sir Thomas Browne is among my first favourites, etc., v. 339.
  • sister where did you find that pin, And pray, viii. 279.
  • sisters every way, viii. 72.
  • Sithence no fairy lights, no quickening ray, etc., iv. 311; xi. 268, 428.
  • Sits with his eyes shut for seven days, i. 53.
  • Sitting in my window printing my thoughts, etc., v. 262; vii. 134.
  • sixty years since, iv. 250.
  • skin and slur over, xii. 448.
  • skulked behind the throne, i. 378 n.
  • sky-tinctured, i. 402.
  • sleep of death may come, in that, xii. 199.
  • sleepy eye of love, the, i. 177.
  • slendre colerike man, a, v. 24.
  • Slide soft, fair Forth, and make a crystal plain, etc., v. 300.
  • slip-slop absurdity, i. 394.
  • slow canal, The, etc., xii. 238.
  • smack, it does somewhat, viii. 81.
  • smack of honour, xii. 91.
  • smile and smile, etc., xii. 459.
  • smile delighted with the eternal poise, vi. 146; viii. 551.
  • smiled and it was cold, It, vi. 248.
  • smiler with the knife under his cloke, the, v. 195 n.
  • Smirk, Mr, you are a brisk man, i. 13; viii. 154.
  • smites us on one cheek, etc., vi. 396.
  • Smith, Mr, you’re wanted, xi. 449.
  • Snails! what hast got there? etc., v. 207.
  • Snatched a wild and fearful joy, v. 189.
  • snatches a grace beyond the reach of art, ii. 377; iv. 344; vi. 218; ix. 408; xi. 402.
  • Sneaking contempt, vi. 441.
  • Snow-falls in the river, the, etc., vii. 365.
  • snowed of meat and drink, it, i. 278; v. 24, 190.
  • snuff box justly vain, Of amberlidded, etc., i. 25; viii. 134; ix. 76; xi. 498.
  • Snug’s the word, xi. 413.
  • So am not I, xii. 152.
  • so carelessly did we fleet the time, xii. 2.
  • so divinely wrought, etc., x. 257.
  • So fails, so languishes, and dies away, etc., viii. 303.
  • So from the ground she fearless doth arise, etc., v. 11.
  • So shalt thou find me ever at thy side, Here and hereafter, if the best may be, ii. 301; vi. 287.
  • So, sir! They tells me, Sir, that you and my foolish husband, etc., ii. 118.
  • So that the third day after, etc., v. 321.
  • So was it when my life began, etc., iii. 192; xi. 500.
  • so well policied, x. 311.
  • sober certainty, of waking bliss, the, vi. 173.
  • Society became their glittering bride, etc., iii. 160; vii. 279.
  • soft collar of social esteem, the, xi. 48; xii. 215.
  • soft myrtle, the, xi. 508.
  • Soft peace enrich this room, etc., v. 270 n.
  • soft precision of the clear Vandyke, The, ix. 387, 473.
  • softly sweet in Lydian measures, viii. 461.
  • Soldier tired, viii. 320.
  • soldiers’ bare dead bodies lay; And as the, etc., xi. 421.
  • Sole sitting by the shores of old romance, xi. 212.
  • solemne man, a full, iii. 311; xi. 413.
  • solid pretensions of virtue and understanding, etc., xi. 273 n.
  • solid pudding, or for empty praise, viii. 477.
  • solitariness, an accompaniable, etc., v. 323.
  • solitude and melancholy musing born, of, viii. 37.
  • Some are called at age at fourteen, etc., v. 342.
  • Some ask’d me where the rubies grew, etc., v. 312.
  • Some by old words to fame have made pretence, etc., v. 74.
  • Some demon whisper’d, Visto, have a taste, vi. 94, 403.
  • Some hamlet shade to yield his sickly form, etc., v. 149.
  • some happier island in the watery waste, etc., iii. 20.
  • some high festival of once a year, iii. 172; vii. 75.
  • Some minds are proportioned, etc., vii. 262.
  • some trick not worth an egg, xii. 90.
  • something—as having divine in it, x. 326.
  • something in the idea of perfection exceeding satisfactory, there is, xi. 354.
  • something more divine in it, viii. 106; x. 26.
  • somewhat fat and pursy, xii. 262.
  • somewhat musty, xii. 1, 168.
  • Sompnoure was ther with us in that place, A, etc., v. 24.
  • Son to tread in the Sire’s steady steps, the, iii. 298.
  • Sons and Daughters of Corruption, the, iv. 335; vi. 51.
  • song you sing, And when your, etc., viii. 372.
  • song from Mr Speaker, A, xii. 450.
  • song of the kettle, the, xi. 503.
  • songs of delight and rustical roundelays, iii. 278; xi. 310.
  • sorcery was wrought on me, And yet some, etc., viii. 306.
  • sorry if what has been said, I should be, etc., vi. 135.
  • soul as fair, a, vii. 202.
  • soul is fair, But his, etc., vii. 370.
  • soul of pleasure and that life of whim, that, xi. 356.
  • soul proud science, His, etc., xii. 299.
  • soul supreme, in each hard instance tried, A, ii. 370; x. 375.
  • soul turn from them, My, iii. 166; viii. 411.
  • Soul-killing lies, and truths that work small good, iii. 259; viii. 20.
  • sots, and knaves, and cowards, xi. 511.
  • sound book-learnedness, x. 145.
  • sound itself had made, from the, xi. 398.
  • sound significant, xii. 96.
  • sounding always the increase of his winning, etc., v. 13.
  • sounding cataract haunted me, The, etc., vii. 59.
  • Sounding on his way, iv. 214; xii. 265.
  • source of thirty years’ uninterrupted enjoyment and prosperity to him, the, vi. 12.
  • spake, And when she, etc., viii. 364; ix. 207.
  • Spaniard or Moor, the saucy slave shall die, v. 209.
  • Spanish nation, the universal, xi. 339.
  • speak evil of dignities, xii. 172 n.
  • speak, In act to, ix. 48.
  • speak it profanely, not to, vii. 234.
  • Speak out, Grildrig, i. 387.
  • speaking a word in season, x. 373.
  • speaking face, a, xi. 316.
  • speech bewrayeth them, Their, vi. 162; vii. 249.
  • Speech was given to man to conceal his thoughts, vi. 303; xi. 474 n.
  • Speed thou the work, etc., iii. 117.
  • sphere of humanity, i. 211.
  • Spins the thread of his verbosity, etc., xii. 280.
  • Spirit and fire, the, vii. 293 n.; xi. 548 n.
  • spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak, the, etc., xi. 320; xii. 330.
  • Spiritus precipitandus est, iv. 309; vii. 62.
  • spite of shame, in erring reason’s spite, in, vi. 268.
  • splendour of Majesty leaving the British metropolis, etc., vii. 13.
  • spoiled child of disappointment, iv. 278.
  • spoiled child of Fortune, iv. 278.
  • spoken with authority and not as the scribes, vii. 269; ix. 320; x. 325.
  • spolia opima, ix. 373, 425.
  • sport, as good, i. 143.
  • sport, But now a, etc., viii. 17.
  • spot of green, a little, i. 18; v. 100.
  • spreads its light wings, ix. 477.
  • spring comes slowly, the, etc., xii. 321.
  • sprightly runnings, The first, i. 8; viii. 97.
  • spun his brains, iii. 92 n.
  • squint, a sort of, iii. 194.
  • Sta viator, heroem calcas, iii. 183.
  • stage of society, There is a certain, etc., viii. 154 n.
  • stain like a wound, which felt a, etc., v. 267; viii. 289.
  • stamp exclusive and professional, xi. 590.
  • stamp exclusive and provincial, a, vi. 162.
  • stand now with her sorceries and her lies, etc., iii. 178.
  • Stand off, etc., iii. 267.
  • standing like greyhounds, etc., xii. 7.
  • Stars had gone their rounds, etc., i. 45 n.
  • stars, in favour with their, i. 58.
  • start of the majestic world, to get the, vii. 200; xii. 275.
  • Stat nominis umbra, vi. 205, 337; xi. 449.
  • stately heights (Windsor’s), v. 118.
  • statesman, chemist, fiddler, and buffoon, ix. 479.
  • statuary must represent the emotions, etc., x. 347, 348.
  • statue of Mars upon a carte stood, The, etc., v. 30.
  • statue that enchants the world, viii. 149, 304; ix. 107, 212, 491; xi. 196, 424.
  • Sternhold and Hopkins had great qualms, When they translated David’s Psalms, v. 298.
  • Still green with bays, each ancient altar stands, etc., i. 4; v. 74.
  • still prompts the eternal sigh, viii. 110; x. 29; xii. 201.
  • still sad music of humanity, v. 118.
  • still, small, iii. 5; vi. 98; ix. 40; xii. 122, 345, 400.
  • stilts, a man walking upon, etc., x. 118.
  • Stock-dove’s plaint amid the forest deep, v. 88; vii. 114; xii. 153.
  • stone tied about his neck, and had been cast into the sea, vii. 206.
  • stone which the builders rejected, etc., iii. 80.
  • stones and tower, The, etc., xi. 497.
  • Stony-hearted, ii. 314.
  • Stood all astonied, like a sort of steers, etc., vi. 280; xi. 48, 579.
  • stoops to earth, vii. 16.
  • Stores of ladies, whose bright eyes, etc., vii. 215.
  • storms, A thousand winters’, ix. 229.
  • stout notions on the metaphysical score, vii. 72.
  • straight another with his flambeau, And, etc., viii. 64.
  • Strain out the last dull dropping of their sense, etc., v. 75.
  • strains that once did sweet in Zion glide, Those, xi. 452 n.
  • strange child-worship, ix. 224.
  • strange power of speech, xi. 534.
  • Strange that such difference, etc., iii. 44, 48 n.; vii. 186; xii. 383.
  • stream of tendency, a mighty, iv. 290; v. 280; vi. 256.
  • strength below, and all above is grace, Where all is, etc., ix. 257.
  • strength of his desires, by the sole, x. 63.
  • strides on so far before you, that he dwindles in the distance, He, vi. 280.
  • strife, At this time it came to pass that there was, etc., xi. 328.
  • strike his lofty head against the stars, viii. 455.
  • strong passion deprives the lover, xii. 193 n.
  • Strip it of its externals, etc., xii. 241.
  • stript of all her charms, etc., iii. 23.
  • strong, marked and peculiar character, the, etc., vi. 138.
  • stronger Shakespear felt for man alone, i. 252; x. 116.
  • Struck with these great concurrences of things, etc., v. 316 n.
  • Struggling in vain with ruthless destiny, iv. 216.
  • stubble is yellow, the corn is green, The, etc., x. 271.
  • stud of night-mares, vi. 225.
  • study with joy her manner, and with rapture taste her style, vi. 5.
  • stuff o’ the conscience, xii. 208.
  • stuff of which life is composed, the, viii. 116; x. 34.
  • stuffed with paltry blurred sheets, i. 376.
  • stumbling block, to the Jews a, etc., v. 184; ix. 314.
  • stupidly good, ii. 365.
  • sublime to the ridiculous, From the, etc., viii. 23, 159.
  • sublime piety, iii. 139.
  • sublime restriction added by Leibnitz, the, etc., xi. 166, 168.
  • submits to the soft collar, etc., xii. 286.
  • Subtle as the fox, etc., xii. 298.
  • Subtleties for men to have recourse to, etc., xi. 172.
  • succeed at the gaming-table, the candidate, to, etc., vi. 288.
  • succession of persons and things, i. 133.
  • Such a one aims at the throat of his adversary, etc., xi. 464.
  • Such a one is a man of sense, etc., viii. 20.
  • Such are many disquisitions which I have read, etc., vi. 143.
  • Such are their ideas, such their religion, etc., vii. 11.
  • such as he could measure with a two-foot rule, etc., i. 175; iii. 23; vi. 105.
  • Such gain the cap, etc., xii. 139 n.
  • Such is the modern man of high-flown fashion, etc., ii. 121.
  • such very poor spelling, v. 289.
  • such was the lustre with which, etc., x. 46.
  • such were the joys of our dancing days, viii. 437; xi. 300.
  • Such were the notes our once-loved poet sung, iii. 153; xii. 261.
  • sudden illness seized her in the strength, A, etc., i. 121.
  • suffering all, who suffers nothing, as one, in, etc., viii. 211.
  • Sufficient to the day is the evil thereof, xi. 313.
  • sugar’d sonnetting, v. 301.
  • suit of office, viii. 388.
  • summer shade in winter fire, ix. 176.
  • Summum jus summa injuria, xi. 476.
  • sun had long since in the lap, The, etc., viii. 16.
  • sun is warm, the sky is clear, The, etc., x. 269.
  • Sun of our table, the, vi. 213; vii. 76.
  • sun to bed, and to arise, To see the, etc., ix. 64.
  • sun which doth the greatest comfort bring To absent friends, The, etc., v. 297.
  • suns and skies so pure, those, etc., vi. 23.
  • sunshine, made a, etc., viii. 389; xii. 189.
  • sung, but broke off in the middle, was, viii. 301.
  • sunken wreck, like, etc., xii. 167.
  • superficial parts of learning, the, x. 375.
  • Sure never were seen, etc., ix. 73.
  • Surely like as many substances in nature which are solid, etc., v. 330.
  • surely Mandricardo was no baby, And, vi. 319 n.
  • Surely never lighted on this orb, i. 71.
  • surrounded by a thick cloud or mist, On a sudden I was, etc., ix. 66.
  • Survey mankind from China to Peru, iv. 277.
  • swaggering paradox sinks into unmeaning common-place, a, iii. 367; iv. 18.
  • swallows total grist unsifted husks and all, vi. 161.
  • swan’s down, the, v. 323.
  • sweepings of mind, the, xii. 349.
  • Sweet bird, thy bower is ever green, etc., ii. 328 n.
  • sweet flowers! that from your humble beds, etc., iv. 304.
  • sweet in the mouth, etc., vii. 222.
  • Sweet is the dew of their memory, etc., vii. 224; viii. 199.
  • Sweet is the dialect of Arno’s vale, etc., ix. 218; x. 62.
  • Sweet object of the zephyr’s kin, etc., ii. 80.
  • sweet smelling gums, xii. 294.
  • sweet voices, the most, viii. 403.
  • sweets of the evening, Then come in, vi. 190.
  • swell’d the war-whoop, iii. 243.
  • swelling figures and sonorous epithets, i. 175.
  • swept and garnished, iii. 256; xi. 456.
  • Swiche sorrow he maketh that the grete tour, Resouned, etc., v. 21.
  • swinish multitude, xii. 76, 204.
  • swoop, at one fell, xii. 211.
  • sword a dagger had his page, This, etc., viii. 63.
  • sword, true as o’er billows dim, And every, iv. 358.
  • synge untoe my roundelaie, O, etc., v. 126.
  • Syria’s land of roses, Now, upon, etc., iv. 356.
  • T.
  • Tables are not full, iv. 295.
  • tables of our hearts, the red-leaved, v. 235; vi. 192.
  • take no thought for the morrow, They, etc., vi. 249.
  • take the good the Gods provide us, iv. 278; vii. 176; x. 209.
  • take up his bed and walk, vi. 71.
  • take up the isles as a very little thing, etc., vi. 169.
  • takes an inventory, x. 388.
  • tale, but if you think it is no, iii. 172 n.
  • tale of other times, i. 155.
  • Talents, The, xi. 447.
  • talked far above singing, He, v. 262; vi. 183; viii. 389.
  • talk with some old lover’s ghost, I long to, etc., viii. 52.
  • talking of marrying, While you are, etc., vi. 150.
  • talking of me, They were, for they laughed consumedly, viii. 9.
  • talking potatoe, vii. 101.
  • tall deer, the, that paints a dancing shadow, etc., v. 346.
  • tall, opaque words, vi. 243.
  • Tam knew what’s what, etc., iii. 312.
  • Tartarean darkness overspreads the groaning nations, etc., iii. 37.
  • taste of the ancients, ’tis classical lore, ’Tis the, viii. 456.
  • tasted of all earth’s bliss, He has, etc., xi. 421.
  • tasteless monster that the world ne’er saw, viii. 429.
    • See faultless.
  • taught with the little nautilus to sail, iv. 221.
  • tawny beard was th’ equal grace, His, etc., viii. 63.
  • tear forgot, as soon as shed, the sunshine of the breast, the, vi. 29.
  • tears were tears of oil and gladness, His, etc., viii. 468.
  • tears of sensibility, iv. 262.
  • tears such as angels shed, xii. 67.
  • Tearing our pleasures with rough strife, etc., v. 258.
  • tease him together, they all, xi. 427.
  • teazed me, But he so, etc., viii. 194.
  • tediousness of a king, Had I the, etc., viii. 79.
  • tel petit bon homme, un, viii. 121; x. 39.
  • Tell him if he i’ th’ blood-siz’d field lay swoln, etc., v. 257.
  • Tell me, pray good Mr Carmine, vii. 216.
  • Tell me your company, etc., vi. 202; xi. 196, 519; xii. 133.
  • temperance that may give it smoothness, xii. 67.
  • temples not made with hands, etc., i. 145; viii. 148; xi. 456 n.
  • Templum in modum arcis, vii. 12 n.
  • tempora mollia fandi, iii. 93; xii. 181.
  • tempt but to betray, ix. 61.
  • tempter glozed, so well the, xii. 290.
  • tender bloom, A certain, etc., xii. 207, 262.
  • tenth transmitter of a foolish face, the, i. 367; iv. 261; xii. 204.
  • Tenth or ten thousandth break the chains alike, viii. 477.
  • Ten thousand great ideas filled his mind, etc., vii. 199.
  • teres et rotundus, iv. 263; vii. 238; ix. 197; xii. 255.
  • terræ filii, vii. 57; x. 186.
  • Terra plena nostri laboris, x. 204.
  • testimony of Dr Knox, the, does equal credit, etc., v. 123.
  • than which what’s truer, xii. 375.
  • That deals in destiny’s dark counsels, etc., viii. 64.
  • That house’s form within was rude and strong, etc., v. 42.
  • That if I did not like them, it was because I did not dream, viii. 14.
  • That is the effect I intended to produce, but thought I had failed, vi. 8.
  • That is true fame, iii. 149; v. 88.
  • That is true history, x. 197.
  • that it is not his purpose to enter into a laudative of learning, etc., v. 332.
  • That Milton had not the pleasure of reading “Paradise Lost,” i. 40.
  • That pleasure over, our work became very arduous, etc., v. 141.
  • That stondeth at a gap with a spere, etc., v. 21.
  • that they must live, i. 149.
  • That those times are the ancient times, vi. 154.
  • That was Arion crowned:—So went he playing on the watery plain, i. 71; v. 38; xii. 30.
  • That which is, is, etc., xii. 351.
  • That’s every one’s conceit that sees a Duke, etc., v. 215.
  • their hearts burn within them, xii. 383.
  • theme in crowds, my solitary pride, My, ix. 107.
  • Then, oh farewell, viii. 189.
  • Then, perhaps he’s but half a fool, viii. 74.
  • Then saw I how he smiled with slaying knife, etc., v. 195.
  • Then when there hath been thrown Wit able enough, etc., vi. 192.
  • Ther maist thou se coming with Palamon, etc., v. 25.
  • there are not so many wrong opinions, etc., vi. 432.
  • There died the best of passions, Love and Fame, v. 75.
  • There goes my wicked self, xi. 530; xii. 218, 242, 404.
  • there is but one perfect, iii. 211; v. 75.
  • there is not so much difference between good and evil, that, iv. 375.
  • There is nothing so true as habit, vi. 33; x. 42.
  • there is old Alderman Ox, etc., vii. 171 n.
  • There is one precept, however, etc., vi. 122.
  • there needs no ghost, xii. 96.
  • There through the prison of unbounded wilds, etc., v. 89.
  • There was a time when all my youthful thought, etc., iii. 112.
  • There was also a nonne, a Prioresse, etc., v. 22.
  • there where we have treasured up our hearts, v. 346.
  • there would be another Raphael, etc., x. 300.
  • There’s nought so sweet on earth, etc., vii. 70.
  • These dignities, Like poison, make men swell, etc., v. 209.
  • These three bear record on earth: vice, misery, and population, iii. 373; iv. 24.
  • They are not sought for, etc., x. 124.
  • They found it poor at first, etc., x. 195.
  • they had learned the trick of imposing ... upon their readers, etc., i. 127.
  • they had nothing else to do, viii. 17.
  • They make everybody else laugh, etc., vi. 400.
  • They receive him like a virgin at the Magdalen, iv. 235 n.
  • They say Green’s a good clown, etc., v. 290.
  • they should love one another, v. 183.
  • they take in vain, vii. 124.
  • they toiled not, neither did they spin, etc., iii. 136; v. 67.
  • they two can be made one flesh, viii. 303.
  • they were sought after because they were scarce, etc., v. 179.
  • they will have them to show their mitred fronts, iii. 280.
  • they will receive an open allowance, v. 329.
  • thief, the judge, and the gallows, xi. 375.
  • thieves break through and steal, when, vii. 249.
  • Thigh bone or a skull, etc., v. 340 n.
  • thin partitions do their bounds define, For, vi. 156; viii. 21; xi. 442.
  • thing of life, a, ix. 177, 225; xi. 504.
  • thing no more difficile, a, etc., vi. 394.
  • things themselves are neither new nor rare, the, iii. 391.
  • Think of its crimes, its cares, its pain, etc., vii. 114.
  • Think not that lapse of ages, etc., iii. 118.
  • think that I should make my Molly weep, to, viii. 167, 317.
  • think that his immortal wings, And when I, etc., vii. 85; ix. 164.
  • thinks nothing done, etc., vii. 167.
  • thirsty earth soaks up the rain, The, etc., viii. 59.
  • This argument, however, from Judge Blackstone, etc., iv. 297.
  • This devil and I walked arm in arm, etc., v. 279.
  • This fellow comes to me ... you slave, said he, hold my horse, etc., v. 294.
  • This glass is too big, viii. 22.
  • This I like, that I loathe, viii. 403; xi. 486.
  • This is my wife, xi. 297.
  • This is no world in which to pity men, v. 214.
  • This lovely pair, etc., iii. 115.
  • This Malerole is one of the most prodigious affections, etc., v. 228.
  • This night thou shalt sup, etc., xi. 322.
  • This vice, therefore, brancheth itself into two sorts, etc., v. 330.
  • This we among ourselves may speak, etc., viii. 64.
  • This will never do, iii. 361; vii. 367.
  • thorn in the side of freedom, a, xi. 515.
  • thorn in the side of poetry, as a, iv. 353.
  • thorny queaches, v. 303.
  • thoroughbred metaphysician, i. 434.
  • Those that are not with us are against us, i. 174; iii. 280; iv. 311; xi. 526.
  • Those who run may read, xii. 358.
  • Those wholesale critics, etc., viii. 64.
  • Thou art the man, iii. 193.
  • Thou, boy! how is this possible?... there were sects of philosophy before thou wert born, etc., v. 293.
  • Thou gladder of the mount of Cithaeron, v. 82.
  • Thou hast a wild hand indeed; thy small cards shew, etc., v. 290.
  • Thou noblest monument of Albion’s isle, etc., v. 121; vii. 256.
  • Thou should’st have followed me, but death to blame Miscounted years, etc., v. 297.
  • thou strong heart! There’s such a covenant, oh! etc., vi. 324.
  • Thou wert not so, e’en now, Sickness’ pale hand Laid hold on thee, etc., v. 239.
  • Though equal to all things, etc., vii. 198.
  • though he was no duke, yet he was wise, v. 227.
  • though I had rather you did not do all this, viii. 311.
  • Though I’m old, I’m chaste, etc., viii. 14.
  • Though listening senates hung on all he spoke, etc., vii. 168; xii. 388.
  • Though some resemblance may be traced between the charms, etc., v. 222.
  • Though that their joy be joy, etc., xii. 291.
  • thought, his body, vi. 11; ix. 362; xii. 357.
  • thought that thou shouldst tread, And it was, etc., xii. 305.
  • thought it a bad French custom, he, etc., vi. 182.
  • thoughts burn like a hell, His, etc., xii. 193.
  • Thoughts that glow and words that burn, iv. 256; v. 378; vii. 46, 370.
  • thoughts that often lie too deep for tears, v. 140.
  • thousand years at least to answer, iv. 288.
  • threads of shrewd and politic design, iii. 405.
  • threaten to swallow them up quick, should, viii. 471.
  • thrice happy fields, etc., xi. 212.
  • Thrice howl’d the caves of night, etc., v. 317.
  • Thrills in each nerve, and lives along the line, vi. 83; ix. 342; xi. 158, 179.
  • throne or chair of State in the understandings of other men, to set a, vi. 7.
  • through happiness or pains, vii. 120.
  • through the blaze of war, xii. 168.
  • through the hush’d air the whitening shower descends, etc., v. 90.
  • throw a cruel sunshine on a fool, To, ii. 363; vii. 100.
  • Throw aside your books of chemistry, iv. 201.
  • Throw him on the steep Of some loose hanging rock asleep, v. 8.
  • throw honour to the dogs, etc., xii. 104.
  • throw our bread upon the waters, etc., vii. 163; xii. 412.
  • Throwing a gaudy shadow upon life, xii. 24.
  • thrown into the pit, ix. 106.
  • thrust us from a level consideration, iii. 93.
  • Thus by himself compelled, etc., iv. 352.
  • Thus far shalt thou come, etc., iv. 207.
  • Thus I confute him, Sir, xii. 266.
  • Thus painters write their names at Co, i. 378.
  • Thus passeth yere by yere, etc., v. 20.
  • Thus shall we try the doctrines, etc., xii. 400.
  • Thus stopp’d their fury and the basting, etc., viii. 65.
  • Thy stone, oh Sisyphus, stands still, etc., iii. 159.
  • tiger-moth’s wings, vii. 225.
  • tile, In cut and die so like a, etc., xii. 449.
  • Till Contemplation has her fill, iv. 257.
  • time-hallowed laws, vi. 148; xi. 197.
  • That time is past, etc., xii. 158.
  • Timeo Danaos, et dona ferentes, iv. 172.
  • Tintoret, spirit and fire of, xi. 548 n.
  • ’Tis here, ’tis done! Behold, you fearful viewers, etc., v. 253.
  • ’Tis, I believe, this archery to show, etc., viii. 58.
  • ’Tis late to join when we must part so soon, etc., v. 358.
  • ’Tis not a life, ’Tis but a piece of childhood thrown away, v. 262 n., 296.
  • ’Tis not enough, no harshness gives offence, etc., v. 75.
  • ’Tis now, since I sat down before, that foolish fort, a heart, viii. 55.
  • ’Tis three feet long and two feet wide, viii. 421.
  • ’Tis with our judgments as our watches, etc., v. 73; viii. 24.
  • ’Tis woman that seduces all mankind, viii. 255.
  • Titian’s manner was then new to the world, etc., vi. 135.
  • Titianus faciebat, vii. 126.
  • To be a spy on traitors is honourable vigilance, v. 263.
  • To be sure she will, etc., viii. 456.
  • To church was mine husband, i. 422; xi. 274 n.
  • To let a fellow that will take rewards, i. 229.
  • To make us heirs of truth, vii. 11.
  • To shew that power of love, how great, etc., v. 148.
  • των ὐπὲρ θουληυ ἀπιστῶυ λόγοι, x. 15.
  • Tongue with a garnish of brains, vii. 198.
  • too deep for his hearers, vii. 202.
  • too fond of the right to pursue the expedient, x. 359.
  • torrent of passion rolls along precipices, viii. 308.
  • torrents of delight had poured into his heart, ix. 296.
  • total grist, unsifted, husks and all, the, iv. 322.
  • totus in illis, vii. 370.
  • To stand himself, etc., iii. 142.
  • T’ the full as genteel a man, vii. 379.
  • To the principle I have laid down, etc., vi. 142.
  • To the winds, to the waves, to the rocks, I complain, ii. 318.
  • To twine the illustrious brow of Scotch nobility, v. 131.
  • toad, ugly and venomous, like the, etc., iv. 289.
  • toil-worn cotter frae his labour goes, the, etc., v. 137.
  • tokay, from humble porter to imperial, xii. 75.
  • tomb of Pope Anastasius, I am the, etc., v. 18; x. 63.
  • tombs of the brave, the, ix. 183.
  • tomb, Even from the, vi. 120; xii. 159.
  • totidem verbis et literis, iv. 348; vii. 258.
  • touch the root, they do not, etc., xi. 559.
  • toujours perdrix, iv. 275; xi. 304.
  • Tous ces sous là vont au cœur! ix. 170.
  • Tout homme reflechi est mechant, i. 117, 136; xii. 220.
  • tomb in Arqua, xi. 423.
  • tragedy the chief object is the poetry, In, etc., viii. 324.
  • tragedies of the last age, the, v. 297.
  • tragedy was skill, i. 177.
  • tragic scenes, In his, there is always something wanting, etc., i. 177.
  • trampled in the mire, under the hoofs, be, etc., vii. 271; xi. 311; xii. 171.
  • tranquillity and smiles, all, iv. 325; vi. 109; vii. 218.
  • travelling out of the record, vii. 14.
  • Tray, you don’t know the mischief you have done, Ah, vi. 239.
  • treason consists in supporting a monarch, etc., viii. 254.
  • treason domestic, etc., xii. 160.
  • treasure is, there his heart is also, Where his, viii. 132; xi. 509.
  • trembling hope repose, where they in, etc., viii. 104.
  • trembling year, While yet the, etc., v. 96; xii. 270.
  • trespasses and sins, multitude of, i. 129.
  • Tricking’s fair in Love, viii. 195.
  • trinal simplicities, viii. 535.
  • Troja fuit, vi. 153 n.
  • Trop heureuse d’acheter, vii. 24.
  • triumph and to die are mine, To, xii. 223.
  • trouble deaf Heaven, etc., xii. 127.
  • true pathos and sublime of human life, v. 139, 266; xi. 495; xii. 130.
  • true, there might be inconvenience attending the measure proposed, etc., iii. 16.
  • Truly he hath a devil, viii. 344.
  • trumpet with a silver sound, loud as a, xi. 336.
  • trumpet make the spirits dance, Which like a, ix. 349.
  • truth is, that in these days the grand primum mobile, The, etc., xi. 494.
  • truth, the whole truth, etc., iv. 193, 280.
  • Tu y seras, ma fille, x. 98.
  • tub to a whale, ix. 244.
  • tug and war, the, viii. 378.
  • Tumbled him down upon his Nemean hide, etc., v. 257.
  • Tummy! Well, viii. 286.
  • tuning his mystic harp, iii. 206.
  • Turn we to survey, viii. 411.
  • turn what is serious into farce, to, xi. 342.
  • turned from black to red, xii. 450.
  • turning like the latter end of a lover’s lute, vii. 37.
  • turnpike men their gates wide open threw, The, etc., xi. 306.
  • Turk, a malignant and a turbaned, xi. 283.
  • turnspit of the King’s kitchen, i. 105, 427; xii. 291.
  • turretted, crown’d, and crested, etc., viii. 465.
  • Tutus nimium, timidusque procellarum, v. 149.
  • twa lang Scotch miles, xi. 316.
  • Twang, twang darillo, xi. 364.
  • twanging off, It came, etc., viii. 277.
  • ’Twas I that did it, xi. 398.
  • twinkling of a star, There’s but the, etc., vii. 196; viii. 18.
  • twisted tail, The while his, he gnawed for spite, v. 317.
  • two at a time, there’s no mortal could bear, For, etc., viii. 273.
  • Two of Sejanus’ blood-hounds, whom he breeds With human flesh, to bay at citizens, v. 263.
  • two or three conclusive digs in the side at it, i. 373.
  • ’Twould thin the land, etc., xi. 313.
  • Tyrants swim safest in a crimson flood, v. 208.
  • U.
  • ugly all over with affectation, ii. 130; xii. 62.
  • ugly all over with hypocrisy, i. 211; ii. 337.
  • ultima ratio philosophorum, iv. 192.
  • ultimate end, an, xii. 213.
  • ultima ratio regum, iii, 44; vi. 37.
  • Ultra-Crepidarian, i. 368, 394; vi. 226 n.
  • unbought grace of life, iii. 284; iv. 285; v. 91; x. 188; xi. 445.
  • Under him his genius is rebuked, iv. 237.
  • understanding and a tongue, an, xi. 421.
  • Undoes creation at a jerk, etc., xi. 123.
  • Undoing all, as all had never been, etc., xii. 291.
  • unhoused, free condition, etc., viii. 429.
  • unfeathered, two-legged thing, viii. 419.
  • Unfortunate boy, short and evil were thy days, etc., v. 125.
  • un-idead girls, with some, viii. 103.
  • Universal Pan, etc., ix. 394.
  • Universality belongs not to things, etc., xi. 127.
  • unkempt and wild, vii. 215.
  • unkind and cruel fair, for one, etc., xii. 190.
  • unmerited fall, like to see the, etc., xi. 299.
  • unquenchable flame, the etc., xii. 461 n.
  • unreason our reason, iv. 207.
  • unreasonableness of their reason, the, etc., iii. 90; iv. 207.
  • unrivalled power of illustration, his, iv. 373.
  • unslacked of motion, iii. 171.
  • unsuccessful adventurer, an, vii. 183.
  • un tel petit bon homme, x. 39.
  • upland swells echoing to the bleat of flocks, iv. 46; ix. 285.
  • upon account of a slight the artist conceived, etc., vi. 10.
  • Upon the top of all his lofty crest, etc., v. 35.
  • used to shew himself, He is, vi. 275.
  • ut lucus a non lucendo, iii. 313; xii. 15.
  • V.
  • Va Zanetto e studia la Matematica, i. 90.
  • vain to attend to the variation of tints, It is in, etc., vi. 135.
  • Vale augusta sedes, etc., ix. 229.
  • vanity, chaotic vanity, xi. 373.
  • variableness, there is no, etc., viii. 377; xi. 207.
  • Vashti, his, v. 92.
  • vast cerulean, ix. 291.
  • vast species alone, a, vii. 77; viii. 57; xii. 34.
  • vast, the unbounded prospect, The; etc., xii. 151.
  • veil of the Temple ... rent asunder, vii. 57.
  • Venus, when she did dispose, They say that, etc., viii. 437.
  • verd et riant, ix. 296.
  • Verily we have our reward, vii. 27.
  • very lees of such, The, millions of rates Exceed the wine of others, v. 258.
  • very top of our lungs, to the, viii. 427.
  • Vesuvius in an eruption, etc., viii. 301.
  • vicariously torturing and defacing, iv. 379 n.
  • Vice is undone, etc., xii. 248.
  • vice loses half its evil in losing all its grossness, i. 26; viii. 135; ix. 14, 77; x. 380.
  • vice that most easily besets us, the, i. 60.
  • Vice to be hated needs but to be seen, ix. 130; xi. 365.
  • Video meliora proboque, etc., ii. 378; xii. 331, 381.
  • Veluti in speculum, xi. 384.
  • view with scornful yet with jealous eyes, To, etc., vii. 380.
  • vindicates the ways of God to man, And, ii. 400.
  • vine-covered hills and gay regions of France, the, vi. 189; viii. 465; xii. 134.
  • violets dim, i. 177; xii. 340.
  • Virtue, I thought thee a substance, Oh, vi. 176.
  • Virtue is not their habit, etc., iii. 21.
  • Virtue may chuse the high or low degree, etc., v. 76; vi. 440.
  • visions, as poetic eyes avow, And, etc., i. 112; v. 9; vi. 82; vii. 121.
  • vision splendid, And by the, etc., iv. 345; xii. 236, 242.
  • visions, swift, sweet, and quaint, And there lay, x. 266.
  • vital signs that it will live, iv. 364; vi. 421.
  • Vive la Charte! xii. 456.
  • Vix ea nostra voco, xii. 73.
  • Voice-music, v. 323.
  • voice of nature cries, Still from the tomb the, etc., vi. 327.
  • void made in the Drama, to see a, viii. 476.
  • volcano burnt out, a, ix. 60.
  • volumes that enrich the shops, the, etc., xii. 177.
  • volume paramount, No single, ix. 152 n.
  • Vous aimez la botanique, vi. 319.
  • vows made in haste, etc., xii. 201.
  • vows made in pain, etc., xii. 126.
  • vox et præterea nihil, xii. 313.
  • vox faucibus hæsit, vii. 202; ix. 375.
  • W.
  • waft a thought from Indus to the Pole, That, iv. 189.
  • walked gowned, v. 335; vii. 42.
  • walking under, And still, etc., ix. 10, 63.
  • wandering mazes I found no end, in their, etc., vii. 223.
  • wandering through dry places, etc., xi. 213.
  • wandering voice, v. 103.
  • want of decency is want of sense, viii. 242.
  • want of store and store of want, v. 323.
  • wanton poets, v. 250.
  • War is a game which were their subjects wise, etc., xi. 249.
  • war was a thing that was quite going out of fashion, i. 50.
  • Wars he well remembered of King Nine, v. 38; vi. 323.
  • wars he well remembers, The, iii. 116.
  • wars of old Assaracus, the, etc., vii. 254.
  • warbled his love-lorn ditties all night long, viii. 240.
  • warm hearts of flesh, etc., i. 13, 135.
    • See real.
  • warn and scare be wanting, to, etc., vi. 156.
  • Was this the face that launch’d a thousand ships, etc., v. 205.
  • wasteful and superfluous excess, xii. 60.
  • waste her sweetness on a blackguard air, xi. 374.
  • water blushed into wine, The, viii. 53.
  • water parted from the sea, viii. 321, 451.
  • watery Aquarius, of, iv. 305 n.
  • way lies right: hark, the clock strikes at Enfield, The, etc., v. 294.
  • we behold the fulness of the spirit of wit and humour bodily, i. 278.
  • we convent nought else but woes, v. 258.
  • We had good talk, sir, vii. 33.
  • We have been soldiers and we cannot weep, etc., v. 257.
  • We have offended, oh! my countrymen! etc., iii. 242.
  • We’ll tak a cup of kindness yet, etc., v. 131.
  • We may kill those of whom we are jealous, etc., ii. 391.
  • we might spill our blood, that, etc., iii. 62.
  • We miss our servants, Ithocles and Orgilus, etc., v. 270.
  • We perceive a continual succession of ideas, etc., xi. 109.
  • We poets in our youth begin in gladness, etc., v. 116.
  • We will dance: music; we will dance, etc., v. 272.
  • We would be private, only Faunus stay, etc., v. 226.
  • weary, stale and unprofitable, vi. 52.
  • web of our lives, The, etc., xii. 229.
  • weeds and worn-out faces, the list of, etc., viii. 393.
  • Weep’st thou already? List awhile to me, v. 211.
  • well assured, I am, etc., v. 328.
  • Well done, thou good and faithful servant, etc., xi. 321.
  • Well done, water, ix. 25.
  • Well, enjoy one another; I give her thee frankly, Apelles, etc., v. 202.
  • Well, let us to Endymion, etc., v. 199.
  • well of native English undefiled, vi. 245.
  • welling out of the heart, v. 28.
  • went up into the mountain to pray, And, etc., xii. 261.
  • Whan that Arcite to Thebes comen was, etc., v. 29.
  • What a thing! Bless the king, viii. 469.
  • What are thy arts (good patriot, teach them me), etc., v. 264.
  • What avails from iron chains, etc., xii. 124.
  • What can be more extraordinary, than that a person of mean birth, etc., vi. 110; viii. 61.
  • What can ennoble sots, or knaves, or cowards, etc., vii. 363; xi. 436.
  • What can we reason, but from what we know? iv. 113; vii. 51, 249.
  • What death is’t you desire for Almachildes? etc., v. 220.
  • what delicate wooden spoons shall I carve? etc., viii. 109; x. 29.
  • What do I see? Blush, grey-eyed morn and spread Thy purple shroud upon the mountain tops, etc., v. 291.
  • What, do none rise? No, no, for kings indeed are Deities, etc., v. 208.
  • What found most employment, etc., i. 157 n.
  • What from this barren being do we reap, xi. 425.
  • What I have written, I have written, iv. 340; vi. 57.
  • What idle progeny succeed, etc., vii. 74.
  • What is great Mephostophilis, so passionate, etc., v. 205.
  • What is the human understanding? etc., xi. 133.
  • What is this world? etc., ii. 300.
  • What lacks it then, ix. 25.
  • What! man, ne’er pull your hat upon your brows, vi. 39.
  • What, Monsieur D’Olive, the only admirer, etc., v. 231.
  • What more felicity can fall to creature, vii. 181; xii. 2, 200.
  • What Muse for Granville will refuse to sing, vi. 367.
  • What said my man, when my betossed soul, viii. 210.
  • What’s serious he turns to farce, xi. 479.
  • What shall it profit a man, etc., xii. 300.
  • What song the Syrens sang, etc., v. 335.
  • What speed could be the herald of this news, etc., xi. 284.
  • What, then, went ye forth for to see, iv. 202; ix. 556.
  • What things have we not seen done at the Mermaid, vi. 192.
  • What though the radiance, which was once so bright, i. 119; vi. 23; ix. 195; xii. 236.
  • What trash are their works, taken altogether, viii. 416.
  • What was my pride is now my shame, etc., viii. 192, 320.
  • what was new and what was true, it contained a great deal both of, vi. 146.
  • Whate’er Lorraine light touch’d with soft’ning hue, etc., vi. 13; ix. 425.
  • Whatever attracts public attention to the Arts, etc., i. 148.
  • whatever is, is right, vi. 314.
  • wheels, put a spoke in the, xii. 291.
  • When a Tartarean darkness overspreads, etc., iii. 281.
  • When Adam delved and Eve span, etc., v. 164.
  • When chapman billies leave the street, etc., v. 132.
  • When Greek meets Greek, etc., vii. 34.
  • when he next does ride abroad, And, etc., xi. 305.
  • when he was young, studying his art, etc., vi. 130 n.
  • When I read the researches of those learned antiquaries, etc., v. 124.
  • When I was in my father’s house, etc., vii. 222.
  • When one is considering a picture or a drawing, etc., vi. 19.
  • When sharp is the frost, etc., ii. 195.
  • when she spake, Sweet words like dropping honey, And, etc., viii. 364; ix. 207.
  • When the date of Nock was out, etc., xi. 374.
  • When the sky falls, iii. 297.
  • When we become men, we put away, etc., vii. 256.
  • When wind and rain beat dark November down, viii. 471.
  • Whence alone my hope cometh, ii. 326.
  • Where did you rest last night, viii. 263, 310.
  • Where is the madman, etc., iii. 240, 285.
  • Where Murray, long enough his country’s pride, etc., v. 77.
  • Where one for sense and one for rhyme, iv. 278.
  • Where pure Niemi’s fairy banks arise, etc., v. 342.
  • Where pure Niemi’s fairy mountains rise, etc., v. 89.
  • Where slaves no more their native land behold, iii. 20.
  • Where the treasure is, etc., viii. 132; xi. 509.
  • Whereas, in the succession of thoughts, etc., xi. 287.
  • Whether it is the human figure, etc., vi. 136.
  • Which after in enjoyment quenching, iv. 145.
  • Which as me thought was right a pleasing sight, etc., v. 27.
  • Which Copland scarce had spoke, but quickly every hill, etc., xi. 284.
  • Which I was born to introduce, Refined it first, and shew’d its use, v. 279.
  • Which when Honoria view’d, etc., xii. 323.
  • While by the power Of harmony, etc., vii. 290.
  • While groves of Eden vanish’d now so long, etc., ix. 349.
  • While I beheld things with astonishment, etc., i. 54.
  • While with an eye made quiet, xii. 238.
  • while yet the year is unconfirmed, v. 96; xii. 270.
  • whiles some one did chaunt this lovely lay, the, etc., v. 36.
  • whist players, that set of, vii. 131.
  • whiteness of her hand, the, viii. 97.
  • Who did essay to laugh, etc., viii. 27.
  • Who enters here forgets himself, etc., vi. 89.
  • Who enters there must leave all hope behind, etc., vii. 194.
  • Who far from steeples and their sacred sound, iii. 276.
  • Who had been beguiled, etc., ii. 347.
  • who have eyes, but they see not, etc., v. 79.
  • who have none to help them, iv. 2.
  • who is our neighbour? iv. 204; v. 184.
  • Who prized black eyes, and a lucky hit At bowls, above all the trophies of wit, v. 189; vii. 207 n.
  • who rode upon a rouncie, etc., v. 24.
  • who still slept while he baus’d leaves, etc., v. 225.
  • who were by nature slaves, xi. 302.
  • who would not grieve if such a man there be, iv. 252.
  • whoever comes to shroud me, do not harm, etc., viii. 52.
  • whole history exactly followed, and many of the principal speeches, etc., i. 218.
  • whole loosened soul, ix. 151.
  • whole need not a physician, The, i. 58; xii. 174.
  • wholly in his subject, v. 340 n.
  • whom the king had deigned to salute, viii. 443.
  • whom the world was not worthy, of, vii. 136.
  • whose boast it was to give out reformation to the world, ix. 246.
  • whose coming seems a light, etc., iv. 358.
  • whose genius had angelic wings, and fed on manna, xi. 514.
  • Whose is the superscription? vii. 29.
  • Whose jewels in his crisped hair, etc., viii. 71.
  • Whose noise whets valour sharp, like beer, etc., viii. 63.
  • whose parish was wide, etc., v. 24.
  • whose studie was but litel of the Bible, v. 24.
  • Whosoever shall stumble against this stone, etc., iii. 260.
  • Why, dance ye, mortals, etc., xii. 57.
  • Why did I write? What sin to me unknown, etc., v. 78.
  • Why dost thou shiver and shake? Gaffar Gray, etc., ii. 138.
  • Why do you let that fair girl? etc., x. 273.
  • Why, good father, why are you so late, etc., v. 292.
  • Why, Hodge, was there none at home thy dinner for to set? v. 287.
  • Why how now, saucy jade, viii. 255.
  • Why is’t not strange to see a rugged clerke, etc., v. 190.
  • Why make that little fellow a captain, i. 97.
  • Why proffer’st thou light me for to sell? etc., i. 227; vii. 255.
  • Why rack a grub—a butterfly upon a wheel? iv. 305 n.
  • Why rail they then if but one wreath of mine, etc., v. 77; xii. 31.
  • Why shulde I not as well eke tell you all the purtreiture, etc., v. 30.
  • Why troublest thou us before our time? x. 376.
  • wicked cease from troubling, In which the, iv. 104.
  • widow in his line of life, he has a, viii. 98.
  • widow’s curse that hangs upon it, Some, viii. 290.
  • wielded at will the fierce democracy, etc., vii. 264.
  • Wild strains, iv. 305.
  • wild wit, invention ever new, vi. 308; viii. 74.
  • wilderness, of one crying in the, etc., xii. 261.
  • wilful man must have his way, A, iv. 264.
  • will be of sure sale, etc., i. 142.
  • will, could not be disarmed, as if his, etc., vi. 40.
  • will never from my heart, ii. 297.
  • will of a virtuoso, The, etc., vi. 119 n.
  • wind and water, he hit the stage between, iv. 227; vii. 271; xi. 409.
  • wind into a subject like a serpent, as Burke does, Does he, vii. 275; viii. 103.
  • windy fan of painted plumes, xi. 479.
  • wine of attic taste, with, xii. 146.
  • wine of life is drank up, xii. 152.
  • winged words, xii. 293.
  • winged wound, ii. 311.
  • winglet of the fairy humming-bird, Or, etc., iv. 353.
  • wink and shut their apprehensions up, iv. 251; vi. 76; xi. 480; xii. 315.
  • wisdom in a multitude of counsellors, iii. 2.
  • wisdom is justified of her children, vii. 163.
  • wisdom of parliament, the tried, iii. 164.
  • wise above what is written, x. 325; xii. 343.
  • wise passiveness, in a, i. 46 n.; xii. 47.
  • wiser in his generation, etc., iii. 42.
  • wisest amongst us is a fool in some things, the, etc., vii. 238 n.
  • wisest and most accomplished man is like the statues of the gods, the, etc., ii. 408.
  • wisest, meanest of mankind, The, vii. 99; xi. 538.
  • wisest thing a man can do with an aching heart, the, viii. 82.
  • wish is father, The, etc., xii. 39.
  • Wishing to be like one more rich in hope, etc., xii. 199.
  • Wit at the helm, etc., xii. 178.
    • See Youth.
  • witch the world with noble horsemanship, x. 28.
  • witchery of the soft blue sky, the, vi. 92; vii. 373; viii. 411.
  • with all his heart, and soul, etc., vii. 305.
  • with cheerful and confident thought, iii. 126.
  • with conditions, x. 372, 373.
  • with him a wit is the first title to respect, viii. 77.
  • with limbs of giant mould, v. 8.
  • with silver streams, v. 323.
  • with what a waving air she goes along the corridor, etc., ii. 331; vi. 96.
  • With what measure they mete, it has been meted to them again, v. 53.
  • Within his bosom reigns another lord, etc., x. 396; xi. 327.
  • within these arms thou art safe, etc., viii. 265.
  • without benefit of clergy, viii. 53.
  • without form and void, i. 112; v. 341 n.; xi. 81, 128, 176.
  • without limitations or restrictions, x. 363.
  • without o’erflowing, full, i. 222; xi. 473.
  • without suffering loss and diminution, iv. 371.
  • wit’s a feather and a chief’s a rod, A, etc., xi. 342 n.
  • Wittenberg, Would I had never seen, etc., vii. 224.
  • Woe unto you when all men shall speak well of you, iv. 331.
  • wolds and sholds, xi. 375.
  • Woman, behold thy son, v. 184.
  • Woman is like the fair flower in its lustre, i. 65; v. 107; viii. 194.
  • woman that deliberates is lost, the, iii. 193.
  • woman who follows her husband to a prison, The, etc., viii. 280.
  • Women and wine are the sustainers, etc., iii. 226.
  • Wonder, And near him sat ecstatic, etc., xi. 409.
  • wonderful works of nature, Oh the, xi. 556.
  • wondering senates, Though, etc., vii. 168; xii. 388.
  • Wooden spoons shall I carve, Oh, what delicate, etc., viii. 109; x. 29.
  • wooden walls of old England, xii. 404.
  • woods as green, Here be, etc., v. 254; vi. 183.
  • woods, to the waves, to the winds, To the, etc., xi. 358.
  • word is a good word, being whereby a man, the, etc., i. 391.
  • word which the slave utters, It is the, etc., viii. 309.
  • words of Mercury are harsh, The, etc., vii. 16.
  • words of truth and soberness, the, etc., iv. 264.
  • Wordsworth! That dunce, vii. 104.
  • work, he challenged essoin, From every, etc., vi. 111.
  • works, ye shall know them, By their, etc., ix. 207.
  • workers in brass or in stone, etc., x. 124.
  • world and its dread laugh, the, xii. 304.
  • world, both pure and good, a, xii. 129.
  • world enough, Had we but, etc., xii. 48.
  • world forgetting, by the world forgot, The, vii. 114.
  • world is too much with us, early and late, The, i. 6.
  • world rings with the vain stir, the, xii. 312.
  • world’s encumbrance they did themselves assoil, From all this, i. 82.
  • world’s volume, i’ the, Our Britain seems as of it, ix. 84.
  • worldly goods them endow, with its, etc., viii. 393.
  • worn them as a rich jewel, etc., ix. 106.
  • worshipped a statue, hunted the wind, etc., vi. 97, 236; xii. 435.
  • worshippers of cats and onions, xi. 197.
  • worst inn’s worst room, In the, etc., iv. 350.
  • worst of every evil is the fear, The, xii. 128.
  • worst, the second fall of man, the, vi. 152 n.; xi. 382.
  • Worth makes the man, etc., xii. 251.
  • worthless as in shew, vi. 248.
  • worthless importunity in rags, iv. 8.
  • worthy of all acceptation, vii. 229; viii. 107.
  • Would he had blotted a thousand, v. 85.
  • Would to God that I had remained, etc., vi. 93.
  • wound up for the day, vii. 210.
  • wounded snake dragged their slow length, like a, etc., x. 298.
  • wretches hang that Ministers may dine, If, iv. 326.
  • wretched have no country, The, viii. 307.
  • wreck of matter and the crush of worlds, The, xi. 512.
  • write a fable of little fishes, If he were to, etc., viii. 102.
  • write by stealth, Or, etc., xii. 44.
  • writes himself armigero, xii. 221.
  • writer of third-rate books, a, i. 403.
  • wrought himself to stone, vii. 89.
  • Y.
  • Yarrow unvisited, v. 146; vi. 256.
  • Yea in this now, while malice frets her hour, etc., iii. 113.
  • yellow tufted banks and gliding sail, With, ix. 36.
  • yellow forest-leaves, When on the, etc., xii. 436.
  • Yes—’twas a cause as noble and as great, etc., iii. 318.
  • Yes, yes; but they got a supersedeas, etc., v. 228.
  • Yestreen, when to the trembling string, etc., v. 140.
  • Yet, for he was a scholar once admired, etc., v. 206.
  • Yet not more sweet, etc., i. 110; v. 40.
  • Yet on that wall hangs he too, etc., viii. 54.
  • Yet should the Graces all thy figures place, etc., vii. 93.
  • Yon cottager, who weaves at her own door, etc., v. 94.
  • You are an honest man, v. 279.
  • You left us no choice between the highest point of glory, etc., iii. 11.
  • You sing your song with so much art, vii. 64.
  • You will find nothing in the world so amiable as Nature and me, v. 119.
  • you would make them talk like great whales, i. 421.
  • You’ll forgive me, etc., v. 237.
  • young Nobleman with a glove, A, etc., vi. 15.
  • Your hand I’ll kiss, etc., v. 243.
  • Your name, Sir? Politick. My name is Politick, viii. 43.
  • your very nice people, iv. 44 n.
  • Youth at its prow, etc., iv. 221.
  • youth has some parts, some ideas, the, ii. 131.
  • Youth that opens like perpetual spring, v. 253.
  • youthful poets dream of when they love, ix. 237.
  • Z.
  • Zanetto, lascia le donne, et studia la matematica, vi. 326.