'':^ V? ^>-^'. .4'- 7" \ ' ^, .^-^ ■% ^ .^ .^ ^*'^ ■%. ~ ■N^ 1 c ?^<^- ^% ' f ^ ,. %^ , . , V- - N " v>^. •"o 'O'^ « ^ ^ ^ 'f 0> •%. N°^' ,^5 -:>. %'--;/.. %,# %<^'' ,.>^% "J- >^^ J-^ v = %.^ .^.-.^Z' %^ <^ ■> ^^.^ '^O ■ 0^ - y -z;^ s^ ■%. ■*'?'■ 4-, ^■' * " , %^ %^' T- %-f /% ■»*"% c ^'>-> O ' cP" c « '^ '■ » -V "% -^• fj- -^^ - ' -V -- . "^, .-Jy^ -^ V :. -^c^ c ^ -^A V* . % "^ \-^^^. ,av •^.. O 0' "^. C^^ -'^^ '.^^' ■ 1, ^ '% C .^ %:'^ ,%'"• ■ \»*' t : 5.0=.. ■^ rr> c- .0- N *■' o^ .^•^ *• ~ ^^^ V .r. ■*bo^ .0 o^ .^■^ -^*. A^^' '^^ 'e. ^^ <<. ^'^ V. .^X^ \^^^ -v^ -">- A^^' '^/. <^' \> >/■-. ■^^. , ^-p J> ,"'"'■ ■O. '' , ^°^. .^ ■^>.. •^. , V . s ' =■ , . >0 o ..s ■ l'^ • .^-^ ■'.^^ * #■''» -i-.. «:^ -n^ A TENNYSON CONCORDANCE Uniform in Size with this Volume A GUIDE TO THE BEST FICTION IN ENGLISH. By Ernest A. Baker, M.A., D.Litt., F.L.A. New edition, entirely re-written and greatly amplified, forming an invaluable guide to English and American fiction. With a classified Index of 170 pages. A GUIDE TO HISTORICAL FICTION. A companion volume to the above. By the same Author. New edition, entirely re-written and greatly amplified, forming an invaluable illustrative aid to the study and teachmg of the history of all countries and all ages. With a classified Index of 1 50 pages. THE BEST BOOKS: A READER'S GUIDE. By William Swan Sonnenschein. New and revised edition (con- taining about 150,000 titles) of a work that has for many years been a universal reference - book and guide to literature, in the hands of librarians, students, general readers, and book-lovers. 3 vols. A CONCORDANCE TO THE POETICAL AND DRAMATIC WORKS OF ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON i INCLUDING THE POEMS CONTAINED IN THE LIFE OF ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON," AND THE "SUPPRESSED POEMS, 1830-1868. By ARTHUR E. BAKER, F.R.Hist.S., F.L.A. SECRETARY AND LIBRARIAN, TAUNTON. AUTHOR OF " A BRIEF ACCOUNT OF THE PUBLIC LIBRARY MOVEMENT IN TAUNTON," ETC. NEW YORK THE MACMILLAN COMPANY LONDON : KEGAN PAUL, TRENCH, TRUBNER & CO., LTD. 1914 TO THE MEMORY OF MY MOTHER, MY FIRST AND BEST TEACHER, THIS BOOK IS AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATED. " Until the day break, a?id the shadoivs flee aivav. PREFATORY NOTE It may, perhaps, not be out of place to say a word or two as to how I came to undertake the compilation of this work. Some years ago, when occupying the position of Deputy - Librarian in a public library in the North of England, I received numerous enquiries from readers 'mirk. * ^^ ^^^^ institution for a Concordance to the "Works of Tennyson. Eealising that here was a distinct desideratum in the library of the student of English Literature, I there and then decided to undertake the compilation of such a Work. Taking from one of the Book- presses a copy of the poet's Works, and opening it, my eyes fell on the following quotation : — " Make knowledge circle with the winds ; But let her herald, Reverence, fly Before her to whatever sky Bear seed of men and growth of minds." — Love iliou thy land. I jotted down the lines under their respective key-words, and thus the work was commenced. Shortly afterwards it happened that I removed to my present position in the South of England ; consequently the matter was for some time "shelved"; but at the end of 1907 I returned to the subject, and after about eight years of what has been to me a labour of love, I present my humble labour to the public, with a sincere hope that students, and lovers of Tennyson, and others, will find it of interest and utility. The volume consists of Verbal Indexes to the Poetical and Dramatic Works of the author comprised in the Comidetc Edition, published by Messrs Macmillan & Co., to the Poems contained in the Life of Lord Tennyson by his son, and published by the same publishers ; also to the Suppressed Poems, edited by J. C. Thomson, and published by Messrs Sands & Co. The Concordance has been arranged in strict alphabetical sequence ; the different senses or grammatical functions of a word are frequently distinguished under separate headings : Arrangement. . j. ./ o c n > the dialect words are paraphrased ; all proper names are included, and occasionally some indication has been added of their identity. Line-references are given, thereby greatly facilitating the finding of a quotation or reference, particularly in the larger poems. viii PREFATORY NOTE As each oue has to number the lines for himself in all but school editions of Tennyson's Works, I must explain the method, or rather methods, of numbering for the purpose of this Concordance. numberiDg Lines. ^^ ^^^^ Poems the lines have been numbered without regard to the typographical peculiarities of the standard edition, which has two columns to a page. The following lines, here reprinted as they stand in that edition, were numbered 1-6, thus : — 1 These to His Memory — since he held them dear, 2 Perchance as finding there unconsciously 3 Some image of himself — I dedicate, 4 I dedicate, I consecrate with tears — 5 These Idylls. 6 And indeed He seems to me — Idylls of the King. Dedication. That is to say, a line broken into two by the printer was counted as one ; a line broken by the poet was counted as two. In the Dramatic Works, another and merely mechanical system was adopted. There every line of print as it occurs in Macmillan's one- volume edition of the Complete Works was numbered separately, even if only containing a single word. Thus : — 1 Cranmer. To Straslnirg, Antwerp, 2 Frankfort, Zurich, Worms, 3 Geneva, Basle — our Bishops from their 4 sees 5 Or fled, they say, or flying — Poinet, 6 Barlow, — Queen Mary, Act i., Scene ii. Metrically, of course, there are only three lines here, not six. A method of numbering that is not to be avoided in the prose portions of the plays has intentionally been extended also to the blank verse, in order to facilitate rapid reference to copies of the text in which the lines are not already numbered. On receiving a reference, say to line 560 of The Falcon, a reader using Macmillan's standard edition in one volume can quickly reckon out the page and even the column in which the quotation appears, by remembering that the column contains approximately fifty lines of print. Had the lines been numbered metrically he would have had to count from the beginning of the piece. Only the lines of the text proper, not tlie stage- directions, have been numbered. Cross-references are supplied in the case of compounds and dialect forms — c.(/., Life Cross-reSerences. {bee also After-life, Loife). In the Collected Works, two poems appear bearing the same title — viz.. To the Queen. The one which appears on page 474, immediately preceding the Lover's Tale, has been described as To the UUpilC&tC i.ltI6S 1-1 ■• ml 1 p and Headings Queen ii, in contradistinction to the one which appears on page 1. Then there are a tew oS Poems. poems with no distinct titles, but simply headed thus : To , Song, Sonnet, etc. To avoid confusion, these are referred to in the Concordance by the first two or three words of each poem. PREFATORY NOTE ix No quotations are furnished for the following words. A few quotations, however, may be found under those marked with an asterisk {Poetical Works) or dagger {Dramatic Works) itted Words. , but they are there to illustrate some especial use, and by no means represer rrence of the word : — A But tif Ourself Too About By In Out 'Twas Above Can ♦Indeed Over 'Twere Adown Cannot Into Perchance 'Twill tAfter Canst Is ♦Round ♦Under Again tCould It ♦Scarce Until Against Couldst Its Scarcely Unto Ago Did Itself Seldom Up Ah Didst Lest Shall Upon Albeit *Do Let Shalt Us tAll Does May She ♦fVery Ahnost Done May'st Should ♦tWas ♦Along Dost Me Shouldst Wast Aloof Doth ♦Mid Since We Already Down Might So ♦tWell Also t Downward Might'st ♦tSome Were Although Each tMine ♦tSomething Wert Alway E'er More Soon Y\^hat Always ♦Either Most Still (adv.) Whate'er Am Else Must ♦tSuch Whatsoever Among Ere My Than ♦tWhen An Even Myself That Whence And tEver Near The Whene'er tAny ♦Every Nearly Thee Where Are For ♦Need Their Whereat Around Forth Ne'er Theirs Whether Art From tNeither Them Which As 'Gainst ♦Never ♦Then Whicheve At Had ♦No Thence While Athwart Hadst ♦None There Who Atwain Has Nor Therefore Whom Atween Hast Not These tWhose Away Have Nothing They WTiy *Ay Having tNow Thine ♦Will Back He tThis Wilt Be Hence O'er Tho' With Because Henceforth Of Those Within Been Her Off Thou Without ♦Before Here Oft Though Would Behind Herself Often Thro' Wouldst Being Him Oh Through Ye Below Himself On Thus Yea Beneath His Once Thy Yes Beside ♦How ♦tOuly Thyself Yet Between Howe'er ♦Onward Till You Betwixt However Or 'Tis Your Beyond Howsoe'er Our To Yours Both *I Ours Together Yourself X PREFATORY NOTE It was originally intended, in order to curtail the heavy expenditure entailed in publication, to omit various adjectives and other words ; but as enquiries were made regarding their omission, it was decided later to insert these words as far as it was possible. As, however, the letters A-D (Poetical Works only) had already been printed, it was impossible to make these entries, consequently many ordinary adjectives under the above letters are omitted. Poems in '^he following poems in the Life occur also in the Collected Works, or in the Duplicate. Suppressed Poems, and are, of course, treated only once : — As when a man that sails in a balloon. (See Suppressed Poems under JJreani of Fair Women.) Check every outflash, every ruder sally. (See Suppressed Poems.) Farewell, Macready, since to-night we part. (See Collected Works under To W. C. Macready.) First drink a health, this solemn night. (See Suppressed Poems under Hands all Round.) A few readings peculiar to the Life are, however, recorded in their place. God liless our Prince and Bride ! (See Supjiressed Poems.) Grave mother of majestic works. (See Collected IVorks under Of old sat Frenlom.) Helen's Tower, here I stand. (See Collected Works, under Helen's Tomr.) The sole variant is duly recorded, however. Here often when a child I lay reclined. (See Suppressed Poems under Mablethorpe.) Important variants in the Life are recorded. Me my own Fate to lasting sorrow doometh. (See Suppressed Poems.) Rise, Britons, rise, if manhood be not dead. (See Suppre-^sed Poems under Britons, guard your own.) Important variants in the Life are recorded. Row us out from Desenzano, to your Sirmione row ! (See Collected Works under Frater Ave Atque Vale.) The North wind fall'n in the new-starred night. (See Suppressed Poems under The Hesperides.) Therefore your Halls, your ancient Colleges. (See Suppressed Poems under Cambridge.) The signiiicant variants are all recorded. Thy prayer was " Light — more Light — while time shall last ! " (See Collected Works under Epitaph on Caxton.) The poem Lover's Tale appears in the Collected Works and also in the Suppressed Poems. The portion common to both versions have not been indexed twice ; they have been neglected in making the Concordance to the Siqjpressed Poems. The volume contains approximately 150,000 quotations and references ; and as each quotation or reference was written on a separate slip, which was then placed in its alphabetical '' Oie^ckin^ ^° order, and afterwards classified according to the sense or grammatical function of the key-word, it can better be imagined than described what an immense amount of labour and time was thus bestowed upon the work. In this respect my acknowledgments are due, and are hereby tendered, to Miss Beatrice Hewlett (the hon. librarian of the Crewe Green Parish Library, Cheshire), and to my two sisters. Miss Mary E. Baker and Miss Miriam Maud Mary Baker, for their valuable assistance in this Appreciation. . _ , portion of the work. At the same time, 1 beg to tender my hearty thanks to those who have from time to time written me encouraging letters, which have greatly assisted me in PREFATORY NOTE XI my arduous task, and in this respect I would specially mention Mr Lionel E. M. Strachan, English Lecturer in Heidelberg University, for the great interest he has invariably evinced in the compilation of the work — particularly for his valuable help in the checking of the proofs — and for his readiness at all times to render assistance. A. E. B. Taunton, 1914. CORRIGENDA Page 132 Dawn (verb) Tiresias 206 read Dawn (s). 252 Gave (See also Gied, Giv) read Gave (See also Gev, Qied, Giv). 256 Gev (give) read Gev (gave). 258 Give (See also Gev, Gie) read Give (See also Gie). .334 Hope (verb) Supp. Confessions 31 read Hope (s). 832 Alight (lighted) read Alight. 832 Alighted. See Lighted— rfe?e(e. CONTENTS PAGE SHORT TITLES AND ABBREVIATIONS xv CONCORDANCE TO THE POETICAL WORKS OF ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON . . i CONCORDANCE TO THE DRAMATIC WORKS OF ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON . . 829 CONCORDANCE TO THE POEMS CONTAINED IN THE "LIFE OF ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON," BY HIS SON 1137 CONCORDANCE TO THE "SUPPRESSED POEMS," 1830-1868 ..... 1165 ADDENDA 1209 xui LIST OF SHORT TITLES AND ABBREVIATIONS Achilles over the T. . {adj.) (adv.) A gate and a field . Akbar's D., Hymn . Akhar's D., Inscrip. Along this glimmering Arabian Nights Are those the far-famed A spirit Jiaunts A surface man Batt. of Brunanhurh Beauty^ Good, etc. Because she bore Blow ye the trumpet Bold Havelock . Bright is the moon Britons, guard . By an Evolution. Check every oidflamh Church'wardt'n, etc. Com. of Arthur Come Jioty when, etc. {compar.) . Could I outvjear D. of F. Women D. of the Duke of C. D. of the O. Year Dag-Dm., Pro. Sleep. P. „ Sleep. B. ,. Depart. Ep. . Ded. of Idylls . Bed. Poem Prin. Alice Deep glens I found Def. of Lucknow Demeter and P. Be Prof., Tuw G. ,, Human C. Early-wise England and Amer. Epit. on Caxton Epit. on Gordon Epit. on Stratford Every day, etc. Faded ev^ry violet Far off in the dun First drink a health Flow, in cran. wall Frater Ave, etc. Achilles over the Trench. adjective. adverb. A gate and a field half ploughed. Akbar's Dream. Hymn. Akbar's Bream. Inscription, Along this glimmering gallery. Recollections of the Arabian Nights. Are those the far-famed Victor Hours ? A spirit haunts the year's last hom-s. A surface man of many theories. Battle of Brunanburh. Beauty, Good, and Knowledge are three sisters. Because she bore the iron name. Blow ye the trumpet, gather from afar. Bold Havelock march'd. Bright is the moon on the deep. Britons, guard your own. By an Evolutionist. Check every outflash, every ruder sally. Church-warden and the Curate. Coming of Arthur. Come not, when I am dead. comparative. Could I outwear my present state of woe. Dream of Fair Women. Death of the Duke of Clarence and Avondale. Death of the Old Year. Day-Dream, Prologue. ,, Sleeping Palace. ,, Sleeping Beauty. Departure. ,, Epilogue. Idylls of the King. Dedication. Dedicatory Poem to the Princess Alice. Deep glens I found, and sunless gulfs. Defence of Lucknow. Demeter and Persephone. De Profimdis : The Two Greetings. „ The Human Cry. Early-wise, and pvue, and true. England and America. Epitaph on Caxton. Epitaph on General Gordon. Epitaph on Lord Stratford de Redcliffe. Every day hath its night. Faded ev'ry violet, all the roses. Far off in the dun, dark Occident. First drink a health, this solemn night. Flower in the craimied wall. Frater Ave atque Vale. Frenchman, etc. From shape to shape Full light aloft G. of Swainston Gardener's D. . Gareth and L. Geraint and E. God and the Univ. God bless our Prince Gone into Darkness He was too good Hear you the sound Heavy Brigade Here, I that stood Here often when a child High. Pantheism Hither, when all Hold thou, my friend Home they brought him How glad am I How is it that men How strange it is I keep no more I, loving Freedom In Mem., Pro. „ Con. „ _ W. G. Ward I met in all (inter j.) In the Child. Hasp, (intrans.) . June Bracken, etc. L. C. V. de Vere L. of Burleigh . L. of Shaluit . Eancelot and E. Leonine Eleg. . Life of the Life Light Brigade . Lit. Squabbles . Little A ubrey . Locksley H.^ Si,rli/ Long as the heart Lotos- Eaters, C. S. Love, Pride, etc, Mariana in the S. Marr. of Geraint May Queen, N. Y.'s Con. M. d' Arthur . Frenchman, a hand is thine ! From shape to shape at first within the womb Full light aloft doth the laverock spring. In the Garden at Swainston. Gardener's Daughter. Gareth and Lynette. Geraint and Enid, God and the Universe. God bless our Prince and Bride. Gone into darkness that full light. He was too good and kind and sweet. Hear you the sound of wheels ? Charge of the Heavy Brigade at Balaclava. Here, I that stood in On beside the flow. Here often when a child I lay reclined. Higher Pantheism. Hither, when ail the deep, misounded skies Hold thou, my friend, no lesser Ufe in scorn. Home they brought him slain with spears. How glad am I to walk. How is it that men have so little grace ? How strange it is, God, to wake. I keep no more a lone distress. I, loving Freedom for herself. In Memoriam, Prologue. „ Conclusion. ,, William George Ward. I met in all the close green ways, interjection. In the Children's Hospital, intransitive. June Bracken and Heather. Lady Clara Vere de Vere. Lord of Burleigh. Lady of Shalott. Lancelot and Elaine. Leonine Elegiacs. Life of the Life within my blood. Charge of the Light Brigade. Literary Squabbles, Little Aubrey in the West ! Locksley Hall, Sixty Years after. Long as the heart beats life within the brea-st, Lotos-Eaters. Choric Song. Love, Pride, and Forgetfulness. Mariana in the South. Marriage of Geraint. May Queen, New Year's Eve. ,, Conclusion. Morte d'Arthur, XV XVI LIST OF SHORT TITLES AND ABBREVIATIONS M. d'Arthur, Ep. Me my oivii fate Merlin and the G. Merlin and V. Methought I saw Miller's D. Move eastward . My life is full . N. Farmer, N. H. „ 0. S. New Timon North. Cobbler . Not a whisper . Not such were those Not to Silence Ode on Well. . Ode Inter. Exhib. God, 7nahe this age Oh, Beauty O leave not thou Of old sat Freedom . Old ghosts On Jub. Q. Victoria On One who effec. E. M. One was the TishHte Open. I. and C. Exhib. Oriana sad No more! Pallid thuMderstriclcer {part.) Pass, of Arthur Pelleas and E. Poets and their B. Popular, Popular Pref. Poem. Broth. .' (prep.) . ^ . Prin. Beatrice . Princess, Pro. . „ Con. . Pro. to Gen. Hamley Prog, of Spring Prom, of May . (pron.) Bemember you . Remembering him Rise, Britons, rise Romney's R. Roses on the T. (s). St. S. StylUes . Shall the hag Sir •/. Franklin Sir J. Oldcastle Sir L. and Q. G. Sisters (E. and E.) Speak to me Spec, of Iliad . Spinster's S's , Spurge with fairy Steerstnan Sugg, by Reading Jlorte d'Arthur, Epilogue. Me my omi fate to lasting sorrow doometh. Merlin and the Gleam. Merlin and Vivien. Methoviaht I saw a face whose every line. Miller's Dauj^hter. Move eastward, happy earth, aud leave. My life is full of weary days. Northern Farmer, New Style. „ Old Style. The New Timon and the Poets. Northern Cobbler. Not a whisper stirs the gloom. Not such were those whom Freedom claims. Not to Silence would I build. Ode on the Death of the Duke of Wellington. Ode smig at the Opening of the International Exhibition. O God, make this age great that we may be. Oh, beauty, passuig beauty. i) leave not thou thy son forlorn. Of old sat Freedom on the heights. Old ghosts whose day was done ere mine began On the Jubilee of Queen Victoria. On One who affected an Effeminate Manner. ( >ne was the Tishlnte, whom the raven fed. Opening of the In lian and Colonial Exhibition by the Queen. BaUad of Oriana. sad No more ! sweet No more ! The pallid thunderstricken sigh for gain. participle. Passing of Arthur. Pelleas and Ettarre. Poets and their Bibliographies. Popular, Popular, Unpopular ! Prefatory Poem to my Brother's Sonnets. preposition. To H.R.H. Princess Beatrice. Princess, Prologue. „ Conclusion. Prologue to General Hamley. Progress of Spring. Promise of May. pronomi. Remember you the clear moonlight? Kemembering him who waits thee far away. Rise, Britons, rise, if manhood be not dead. Romney's Remorse. Roses on the Terrace. substantive. St. Simeon StyUtes. Shall the hag Evil die. Sir John Franklin. Sir John Oldcastle, Lord Cobham. Sir Launcelot and Queen Guinevere. Sisters (Evelyn and Edith). Speak to me from the stormy sky ! Specimen of a Translation of the lUad in Blank Verse. Spinster's Sweet-Arts. Spurge with faiiy crescent set. Steersman, be not precipitate in thine act. Suggested by reading an article in a newspaper. Supp. Confessions Take, Lady That is his portrait . That the voice . The child was sitting The form, the form . The lamps were bright The lintwhite . The night, etc. . The noblest men The winds, etc. There are three things Therefore your Halls They say, etc. . They wrought, etc. Third of Feb. . Tliou may'st remember Though ni^ht . Thy soul is like 'Tis not alone . To a Lady Sleep. To A. Tennyson To C. North . To F. D. Maurice . To J. .¥. K. . To One who ran down Eny. To Prof. J ebb . To Mary, of Dufferin To Master of B. . To Prin. F. of U. . To thee with wliom . To W. H. Brookjield Townsmen, etc. (trans.) . . . . Trans, of Homer V. of Cauteretz V. of Maeldune Vicar of this . Voice and the P. Voice spake, etc. TV. to Alexandra IF. to Marie Alex. . Walk, to the Mail Wan Sculptor . We lost you (Veil, as to Fame What rustles Wliat time I wasted . Wherever evil While I live Why suffers Will Water Window. At the W. „ Marr. Morn Woman of noble Yon huddled cloud . You ask me, why. You might have won Young is the grief . Youth, lapsing Supposed Confessions of a Second-rate Sensi- tive Mind. Take, Lady, what your loyal nurses give. That is his portrait, painted by himself. That the voice of a satisfied people may keep. The child was sitting on the bank. The form, the form alone is eloquent. The lamps were bright and gay. The lintwhite and the throstlecock. The niglit with sudden odour reel'd. The noblest men methinks are bred. The winds, as at their horn- of birth. There are three thmgs that fill my heart with sighs. Therefore your HaUs, your ancient Colleges. They say some foreign powers have laid their heads together. They wrought a work which time reveres. Third of February, 1852. Thou may'st remember that I said. Though Night hath climbed. Thy soul is like a lanJskip, friend. 'Tis not alone the warbling woods. To a Lady Sleeping. To Alfred Tennyson, My Grandson.' To Christopher North. To the Rev. F. D. Maurice. Sonnet To J. M. K. To One who ran down the English. To Professor Jebb. To the Marquis of Duflerin and Ava. To the Master of BaUioI. To the Princess Frederica of Hanover on her Marriage. To thee mth whom my true affections dwell. To the Rev. W. H. Brookfield. Townsmen, or of the hamlet, young or old. transitive. On Translations of Homer. In the Valley of Cauteretz. Voyage of Maeldmie. Vicar of this pleasant spot. Voice and the Peak. A Voice spake out of the Skies. A Welcome to Alexandra. A Welcome to Her Royal Highness Mario Alexandrovna, Duchess of Edinburgh. Walking to the Mail. W^an sculptor, weepest thou. We lost you tor how long a time. Well, as to Fame, who strides the earth. What rustles hither in the dark ? What time I wasted youthful hours. Wherever evil customs thicken. While I live, the owls ! Why suffers human life so soon eclipse ? Will Waterproof's Lyrical Monologue. Window. At the Window. „ Marriage Mormng. Woman of noble form and noble mind ! Yon huddled cloud his motion shifts. You ask me, why, tho' ill at ease. You might have won the Poet's name. Young is the grief I entertain. Youth, lapsing thro' fair sohtudes. A CONCORDANCE to the POETICAL WORKS OF ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON. A mouthing out his hollow oes and acs, Aage (age) owd a as 'appy as iver I can, 'Aair (hair) an' cryin' and tearin' 'er '« Aale (ale) Says that I moiint 'a naw moor a : Git ma my a, (repeat) I've 'cd my point o' a ivry noight an' doesn bring ma the a ? an' droonk wi' the farmer's a, An' the taable staain'd wi' 'is a, tha niun nobbut hev' one glass of a, 'Aapoth (half-pennyworth) Joiines, as 'ant not a sense, Aaste (haste) thaw summun said it in 'a : Abaddon ^ t and Asmodeus caught at me. Abase A those eyes that ever loved Abash'd so forlorn As I am ! ' half a him ; Enid, all a she knew not why, man of thine to-day .1 us both, A Lavaine, whose instant reverence, beauty of her flesh a the boy. Abate A the stride, which speaks of man Abbess Our simple-seeming A and her nuns, till in time their A died. Was chosen vl, there, an A, lived For three brief years, and there, an A, past Abbey ' Come out,' he said, ' To the A : But we went back to the A^ fellow hath broken from some A, The helmet in an a far away Abbey- ruin Carved stones of the .^ -r Abbey- wall I see the moulder'd A-io's, Abbot An a on an ambling pad, Abdiel Titan angels, Gabriel, y{ , A-bealin' (bellowing) An' thou was a-b likewise, Abear (bear) for I couldn a to see it. An' I can't a 'em, I can't, Abeat Eats scarce enow to keep his pulse a ; A-begging 1 never came a-h for myself. Abeyance Those winters of a all worn out, Abhor I hate, o, spit, sicken at him ; Abhorr'd they fell and made the glen a : Abhorrent .1 of a calculation crost. Abide ' Trust me, in bliss I shall a Tho' much is taken, much as ; In whose least act as the nameless charm you failing, I a What end soever : hate me not, but a your lot, A : thy wealth is gather'd in, ^■1 a little longer here. Dare I bid her a by her word ? but a Without, among the cattle A : take counsel ; for this lad shalt « her judgment on it ; * I will a the coming of my lord, thou art man, and canst a a truth. Yet better if the King a, The Epic 50 (Mod Rod 3 A'orth. Cohhier 34 N. Farmer, O. S.,Z „ 4, 36, 68 7 6.fi Viflagp ^yi/f 77 Spinstfr's y^s. 99 Ovxl Hod 20 '(? o' N. Farmer, 0. S., 49 27 ,S'(. S. Stt/Hles 172 Princess ii 427 £«ocA , I crfwi 288 Man: of Geraint 765 Ba/in and Bahui 71 Lancelot and E. 418 Pelleas and E. 78 Princess ii 429 Gitiiicirre 309 692 „ 096 Princess, Pro., 61 „ Cnn., 106 Gareth and L. 456 Holy Grail 6 Princess, Pro., 14 Talking Oak 3 L. of SImloU ii 20 Milton. 5 Oiod Roa 89 N. Farmer, 0. S., 64 Church-warden, etc., 13 Balin and Balan 105 Dora 141 Princess iv 440 Lvcretius 199 Lancelot and E. 42 Enoch Arden 473 Palace of Art IS Vli/sses 65 Princess v 70 405 S2)ileful Letter 11 In Mem, lii 15 „ h-iii 11 Maud I xri 25 Gareth and L. 273 730 Marr. of Gerainl 584 Geraint and E. 131 Balin and Balan 501 Last Tounuvment 109 Abide {^continued) the wife Whom he knows false, a which thou wilt a, if thou be wise, Wretch you must ait . . . Abidest a lame and poor. Calling thyself Abiding A with me till I sail To seek thee Able-bodied Grew plump and a-h ; Abler A quarter-sessions chairman, a, none ; Abode at the farm « William and Dora. those four a Within one house Wherein the younger Charles a she a his coming, and said to him stately Queen a For many a week, mightiest of my knights, a with me. Clave to him, and a in his own land. Time and Grief a too long with Life, Abodest While thou a in the bud. Abolish Caught at the hilt, as to a him : Aborainable The ^1, that uninvited came shapes of lust, unspeakable, .1, and shatter it, hold it a. Abreast One walk'd a with me. Abruptly broke the sentence in his heart A, Absence she mourn'd his n as his grave, in his « full of light and joy, Absolution find A sort of a in the sound Absolution-seller a-s's, monkeries Absorb in its onward current it as Absorbing --1 all the incense of sweet thoughts Abstraction They do so that affect a A-buried I'll hev 'im a-b wi'mma Abu Said (Sufee Poet) him A S—a. sun but dimly seen Abuse (s) ' lest from the a of war, bore without a The grand old name Perchance from some a of Will Abuse (verb) wayward grief a The genial hour my Leonard, use and not a your day, Abused God's great gift of speech a Abysm feU into the a Of forms outworn, weigh'd him down into the a — into the a. The A of all ,1 's, downward too into the a. Abyss and the waste wide Of that a, to sound the a Of science, lighten thro' The secular a to come, 0, from the distance of the a upheaven from the a By fire, to sink into the a again ; bubble bursts above the a. Of Darkness, Acacia Was lispt about the a's. The slender a would not shake Academe The softer Adams of your A , this your A, Whichever side be Victor, A-callin' a-c ma ' hugly ' mayhap to my faace kep n-c' o' Koii till 'e waggled 'is taail Acanthus-wreath many a wov'n a-xu divine ! Guinevere 515 Ancient Sage 35 Forlorn 52 Tvm Voices 197 In Mem. CX.XV 13 The Goose 18 Princess, Von., 90 Dora 1 „ 169 Talking Oak 297 Geraint and E. 139 Guinevere 146 „ 430 „ 440 Lover's Tale i 107 Tn'o Voices 158 Man; of Geraint 210 (Enone 224 Lucretius 158 BoddJeeo, 65 Lrmer's Tale ii 86 Geraint and E. 42 Enoch Arden 247 Lover's Tale i 425 Sea Dreams 61 Sir John Oldcastle 93 Isabel 31 Lcrrer's Tale i 469 Princess ii 359 North. Cobbler 106 Akbar's Dream 94 Princess v 126 In Me^n. cxi 21 Epilogue 24 //(, Mem. cv 9 Loeksley H. , Sixty, 265 A Dirge 44 Lover's Tale i 796 Columlms 137 Ancient Sage 39 LocMey H., Sixty, 146 Two Voices 120 Princess ii 176 In Mem. Ixxvi 6 ,, xciii 11 Pass, of Arthur 82 Rmnn^'y's R. 52 Princess vii 251 Maud I xxii 45 Priiicess ii 197 „ 230 Spinster's Ss. 91 Ovd Roil 105 Lotos-EaUrs, C. S., 97 Accent Added Accent an a very low In blandishment, Isabel 19 She replies, in as fainter, L. of Burleigh 5 With nearing chair and lower'd a) Aylmefs Field 267 Accept God a him, Christ receive him. Od-e. on Well. 281 do a my madness, and would die Maud I xviii 44 to a this cloth of gold, Gareth aiid L. 398 that I a thee aught the more ,, 766 a thee aught the more. Scullion, ,, 839 a this old imperfect tale. To the Qiteen ii 36 dark lord a and love the Sun, Derfieter and P. 137 Acceptance Blithe would her brother's a be. Maud I x 27 Access closed her a to the wealthier farms, Aylmer's Field 503 down the lane of a to the King, Gareth and L, 661 Acclaim tumult of their a is roU'd Vying Swan 33 And foUow'd with a's, Will Water. 138 let a people's voice In full a, Ode on Well. 143 Is wrought with tumult of a. In Mem. Ixccv 20 Accompanied and oft a By Averill : Aylmer's Field 137 Accompanying brethren slowly with bent brows .1, Lancelot and E. 1139 Accomplice The a of your madness unforgiven. Princess vi 276 Accomplish ' Which did a their desire, Tiw Voices 217 ,1 thou my manhood and thyself ; Princess vii 365 .i that blind model in the seed, Pnui. of Spring 114 Accomplish'd {See also All-accomplish'd, Full-accomplished) Who, thro' their own desire a I have a what I came to do. My mission be a ! ' Accomplishment win all eyes with all a : Miss the full flower of this a.' Accord (S) when both were brought to full a, Faith and Work were bells of full u, Accord (verb) I a it easily as a grace ' Accorded Prince A with his wonted courtesy, According That mind and soul, a well, would work a as he will'd. lady's love, -1 to her promise, >I to the Highest in the Highest, for my sake, .1 to my word '( ' To pray, to do a to the prayer. Account (s) dodged me with a long and loose a. EL hard friend in his loose a'Sj of the crowd you took no more a Account (verb) Eat and be glad, for I a you mine ' whataoever he a's Of all his treasures Accounted Is thy white blamelessneis a blame ! ' Accoutrement Among piled arms and rough a's, Accrue Delight a hundredfold a, Accurate your fine epithet Is a too, Accurst-Accursed Thro' you, my life will be accurst. Accursed, who from the wrongs Accursed, who strikes nor lets the hand Accursed were she ! ' (repeat) Accusation Like bitter (( ey'n to death, people's talk And a of uioriousness breathe but a vast and vague. Accuse sent for Blanche to a her A her of the least immodesty : Accused You never once a me, Achaean nor join'd The A's— Ache (s) {See also Finger-ache, Haache) In coughs, a's, stitches, St. S. Stylites 13 And ills and a's, and teethings, Holy Grail 654 Ache (verb) would not let your little finger a Godiva 22 The sight that throbs and a's Lover's Tale i 33 It's in the grasp of an idiot power. Despair 43 Achievable if our end were less a Princess Hi 283 A;hieve Gone ! He will a his greatness Tiresias 16S spoken true Of all we shall a, Mechanophilus 26 Aehieved sword and golden circlet were a. Pelleas and E. 170 «, The loneliest ways are .-nfe Last Tournament 101 Achieving some have striven, A calm, Two Voices 209 Achilles see the great A, whom we knew. Vlysses 64 Then rose .1 dear to Zeus ; Achilles over the T. 2 Acknowledge in my heart of hearts I did a nobler. Lancelot andE. 1211 Aylmer's Field 776 Columlns 65 A Khar's Dream 199 The form, tlie for?n 4 (htnih and L. 1297 Last Tournament Til In Mem. W. 6. Ward 2 Gareth and L. 975 Lancelot and E. 638 In Mem., Pro., '21 Rob, a rail 784 Pelleas' and E. 162 Ancient Sage 90 Romney's R. 130 Akhar's Dream 8 Sea Dreams 149 162 Lancelot and E. 105 Geraint and E. 647 Locer's Tale iv 233 Merlin and V. 799 Princess r 55 III Metn. cxvii 8 Merlin and V, 533 Tlu! Letters 36 Gareth and L. 347 435 Kapiolani2\, 24 /.we and Duty 81 Marr. of Geraint 83 Merlin and V. 701 Princess iv 239 Geraint and E. Ill Ha-ppy 69 Achilles over the T. 16 A-cleanin' as we was «-<■ the floor. Aconite Their rich ambrosia tasted it. Acorn An a in her breast. nor yet Thine a in the land. Acorn-ball wear Alternate leaf and a-h Acquiescing the Queen But coldly «, A-crawin' (crowing) cocks kep a-c an' crawin' Acre (See also Five-acre, Haacre) dinner To the men of many as. Acreage No coarse and blockish God of a A-creeapin (creeping) wur a-c about my waaist Acrimony llow'd in shallower acrimonies : A-cryin' then I seed 'er a-c, I did. Act (s) A saying, hard to shape in a ; swift mind, In a to throw : king demand An a unprofitable, In rt to render thanks. which I clothed in a, a tiger-cat In a to spring by single a Of immolation And all creation in one a at once, One a a phantom of succession : makes Such head from a to a, least a abides the nameless charm creatures native unto gracious a, How much of a at human hands bold in heart and a and word was he, graced the lowliest a in doing it. dream she could be guilty of foul a, hearts who see but as of wrong ; So splendid in his a's and his attire, Balin grasjit, but while in a to hurl. From noiseful arms, and a's of prowess one last a of knighthood shalt thou see. the swift mind. In a to throw : king demand An a unprofitable, lieautiful in Past of a or place, with her highest a the placid face power on thine own a and on the world. .1 first, this Earth, a stage may show In some fifth A Act (verb) up and a, nor shrink For fear For who can always a ? be born and think, And a and love, Not he, not yet ! and time to a — Acted weaker grows thro' a crime. If more and a on, what follows i after madness a question ask'd : thro' the journey home, .1 her hcst. Acting (Nn- "/sii Over-acting) .1 the law wo live by without fear ; Action ' Which in all a is the end of all ; until endurance grow Sinew'd with it, enough of a, and of motion we, I myself must mi.x with a, A life in civic a warm, shape His a like the greater ape, unfathom'd woe Reflex of a. mould it into tt pure as theirs. Acton (Sir Roger) See Roger Acton Actor let the dying " mouth his last Adair (Ellen) Ser Ellen Adair A-dallackt (overdrest) An' hallus a-d au' dizen' Adam The gardener .1 and his wife when .1 first embraced his Eve The softer A's of your Academe, there be Two .\'s, two mankinds, Adam's wine I a' nowt but A v : an' a beslings-puddin' an' .1 ?'■ ; Add « A crimson to the quaint Macaw, Nor ft and alter, many times, a my diamonds to her pearla ; mouths will tt themselves and make Added set the words, and a names I knew. 'Swear' a Enoch sternly 'on the book.' Spinster's S's. 49 Demeter and P. 105 Talking Oak 228 „ 260 287 Last Tournament 23 Oud Ron 106 Maud I xxS2 Aylmer's Field 651 ; .'Spinster's Ss. 26 Aylmer's Field 563 Ou-d Rod 80 Lore thou thy land 49 M. d' Arthur 61 „ 96 Gardener's D. 162 Princess i 195 „ ii 451 ,, i/t284 325 329 „ iv 452 „ '"70 ,, vii 27 In Mem. Ixxxv 38 Com. of . 1 rthur 176 Gareth and L. 490 Marr. of Geraint 120 438 620 Balm and Balan 368 Holy Grail 1 Pass, of Arthur 163 „ 229 264 Lover's Tale i 135 216 Dc Prof. Two G. 56 The Play 1 " i Pmicfss in 265 In Mem, cxi 9 „ Con., 127 The Flight 73 wai 12 princess ii 229 Geraint and E. 813 Pdlctts and E, 203 (Enane 148 „ 122 „ 165 Lotos-Eaters, C. S., 105 Loci-slcy Hall 98 In Mem. cxiii 9 ,, ccx 11 Li/ver's Tale i 747 Tiresias 129 Lochsley II., Sixty, 152 d out, Milage Wife 37 L. V. V.'de l'ifre51 Day-Dui., L' Envoi 41 Princess ii 197 Columhiui 54 Xorth. Cobbler 5 „ 112 Day-Dm., Pro., 15 Will Water. 15 Lancelot and E. 1224 Guinevere 625 Avdley Court 61 Enoch Ardeii 842 y Added Afiie Added(tf'«'''«"''<^) Put in more calm and a upjiliantly : Hfld surely a praise to praise. fai'h, 1 fain had a — Knight, weght is a only grain by grain, ThJn Balan a to their Order a, ii her wit, A border fantasy a jlain Sir Torre, ' Yea, since I cannot A fair large diamond, re plain Sir Torre, (I vound to wound, And ridd'n away Were a mouths that gaped, rt tJ the griefs the great must bear, e.';.h other They should have d Mod 80 Spitisler's S's. 79 ir. in Marie Alex. 17 Oil. Ji'h. Q. Victoria'. 61 Akbar's Dream 101 PHncess iv 451 Love them thy lii.nel 27 Miller's D. 31 Day-I)m., Revival 24 Luver's Tale i 146 Princess Hi 26-3 In Mein. Ixxxi 12 Mnuch Arden 891 Princess v 91 Wiudmc, No Aiiswer 25 Avdley Court 14 In Mem. ciii 4 Epiloriue 73 Lvtos-Haters 3 4 Enoch A rdcn 669 Aylmer's Field 461 Princess Hi 169 „ vi 379 7ftjl/c/rf. A7-,r.,-,V,--25 Geraint and E. 591 Merlin and V. 163 Last Tourndriient 584 Guinmere 395 Akba/r's Dream, 169 M. d' Arthur 35 99 ,107 Princess ii 44 „ V 412 Pass, of Arthur 20Z 267 275 Com. of Arthur 158 Maud I X 31 Oareth and L. 1306 Edwin Mi.m'is 17 liareth and L. 7i7 The Merman 32 Priiicess ii 327 The Daisy 84 N. Farmer, 0. S., 4 Nmih. Cobbler 81 There The Kraken 11 Two Voices 205 Miller's D. 194 To J. & 72 Gardener's D. 279 Dora 16 ,,127 Walk, to tlie Mail 79 Edwin Mtyrris 32 St. S. Stylites 100 Golden Year 16 68 H'lysses 50 Tithonvs 22 Locksley Ball 137 178 Day-Dm., Sleep. P., 54 Aniphion 65 To E. L. 12 The Brook 200 Aylmei-'s Field 407 Sea Dreams 218 Lucretins 155 Princess, Pro., 16 Age (rnntiniird) 'The climax of his a 1 Amazon As emblematic of a nobler « ; some a's had been lost ; second-sight of some Astncan a, reasons drawn from a and state, you got a friend of your own a, To such a name for a's long, For many and many an a proclaim tho' the Giant A's heave the hill at your a, Annie, I could have wept (repeat) And a is a time of peace, I hear the roll of the a's. Milton, a name to resound for a's ', to-morrow, And that's an a away.* left for human deeds In endless d ? take the print Of the golden a — many a million of a's have gone Wretchedest a, since Time began. His a hath slowly droopt, sadder a begins To war against ill uses suffering thus he made Minutes an a : flatter his own wish in « for love, Who paced it, a's back : more fitly yours, not thrice your a : Built by old kings, a after a, I found Only one man of an exceeding a. In the white winter of his a, weight as if of a upon my limbs, she, my love, is of an a with me poisons of his heart In his old a.' the fool this A that doubts of all — in that flight of a's which are God's but thine a, by a as winter-white And oldest a in shadow from the night, and the human heart, and the -1. For these are the new dark a's. And caj) our a with snow 'i * The poet whom his A would quote well might fool a dotard's a. Some thro' a and slow diseases, ' - 1 '.s after, while in Asia, an a of noblest English names. When was a so cramm'd with menace ? Bring the old dark a's back without the faith, well, it scarce becomes mine a — Gone at eighty, mine own a, tho', in this lean a forlorn. Light among the vanish'd a's ; May we find, as a's run, Ojieu Princess, Pro., ii 50 Princessii 127 ., 153- „ 443 „ V 357 „ ct'251 ikk on McU. 76 „ !B6 „ 259 Grandmother TO, 100 97 Sp'iiefiU tMer 8 Milton 4 ^\'i«dml, When 14 In Mcti. Ixxiii 12 Xaml I i 30 „ iv 35 .„ llvil O'areiii and L. 79 . ' " ,"29 Geraint and E. 115 Merlin and V. 185 553 Lancelot and Ii. 963 llobi Grail 340 431 J 'ass. of . I rthur 4 Lover's Tale i 125 „ 196 357 Sisters (E. ami E.)lil Columbus 202 Tiresias 19 „ 104 Despair 40 „ 88 A ncient iSage 98 „ 146 Locksley U., Sixty, 10 46 81 83 108 137 151 281 E/idoflue 71 To Virgil 25 I. aud f. Exhih. 11 Un Jub. Q. Victoria 71 The Ring 77 „ 160 „ 289 Happy 46 Romney's R. 64 Parnassus 3 Dy an Evolution. 9 17 St. Tdcmarhus 41 Making of Man 3 The Dreamer 7 Poets and Critics 2 darkness Dawns into the Jubilee of the A the morning when you came of a girls of equal a, but one was fair, My ring too when she comes of a, For A will chink the face, gloom of ^1 And suffering cloud And over the flight of the A's ! What hast thou done for me, grim Old A, I have climb'd to the snows of ^1, all Ijut deaf thro' a and weariness, and ere the crowning -I of a's. When I make for an .1 of gold, Helter-skelter runs the a ; Agent (•*<■«/'!" Agint) Thro' many o's making sitrong, Lore thou thy land S9 Aghast (*(• also Half-Aghast) all that mark'd him were a. Gareth and L. 1399 not a word ! ' and Enid was a ; Geraint and E. 18 men and women staring and a, „ 804 a the maiden rose. White as her veil, Guinevere 362 Agincourt ' this,' he said, * was Hugh's at -1 ; Princess, Pro., 25 Agint (Agent) Yer Honour's own a, he says to me Tomorrow 63 Agitated people around the royal chariot n, Boiidicea 7S Aglaia a double April old. A slept. Princess ii 111 my sweet .1, my one child : ,, » 101 Came Psyche, sorrowing for .1. ,, vi29 A-glare alltho Hells a-g in either eye, Akbar's Dreman slaugliter, in iltitudinoiis agonies. With uguiiii's, with saergies, Travail, and throes and ugonits of the life, into wastes and 8(>!iVwftfB Kor rt, up the side, s\»6ifting with «, Bniin-feveruus in his heat and a, ore voice, an a Of lamentiition, All joy, to whom my a was a joy. aud in his a conceives A shameful sense these in ray (( Did I make bare my dull (/, Ideally to her transferr'd, Dead of some inward a — is it so ? T'visted hard in mortal a A-grawin' (growing) h !s now be a-g sa howd. Agreed a That much allowance must be made so it was a when first they came ; A to, this, the day fled on his wish, whereto the Quee*" a then they were a upon a nij, it he sent, an' the father a ; An' Molly an' me was a, Agrin His visage all a as at a wake, Agrippina and the Rouian brows Of A Agypt (Egypt) Thim ould blind nagers in .1, A-hawking We ride a-h with Sir Lancelot Ahead he rode on a, as he waved his blade Aid (s) knew not whither he should turn for a. for lack of gentle maiden's a. He needs no a who doth his lady's will.' following thy true counsel, by thine a, Aid (verb) Us, who stand now, when we should a the right— Lord, A all this foolish people ; a me, give me strength Not to tell her, a me Heaven when at mine uttermost, Aiding serve them both in a her — ■ Aidless to leave thee thus, .1, alone, to leave thee thus, .1, alone, Aldoneus car Of dark .1 rising rapt thee Ail mother thought. What u'.s the boy V What (I's us, who are sound, Ail'd What a her then, that ere she enter'd, told his ^'entle wife What a him, Aileth What II thee .' whom waitest thou Ailing 'Anything <>,' I aik'd her, 'with baby?' only — you Were always a. Ailment Yours has been a slighter «, Aim (s) Embrace our a's : work out your freedom Fc.r fear our solid a be dissipated works Withtiut a conscience or an a, so I wake to the bight r a's he kept his mind on o le sole rt, a's Were sharpen 'd by, strong hate Because all other Hope liad lower a ; Ready ! take rt at their loaders — Ixjok to your butts, and tjike good a's ! Aim (verb) one would i an arrow fair, Aim'd fairy arrows a All at one mark, Nay, but she a not at glory, A at the helm, his lani-;o err'd ; better a are your flank fusillades — • Aiming near storm, and « at his head, In a at an all but hopeless mark Aimless three days, ft about the land. Air (atmosphere) 'fill the Ci And the ground Or breathe into the hollow a, Ixnses on the T. 3 Lancelot and E, 300 N, F&rmer, 0. S., 2 Clarihd 7 M, d' Arthur 200 Vision of Sin 43 Aylmer's Field 417 793 Boadicca 26 In Mem, cxiii 18 Com. of Arthur 76 Lancelot aiul F, 253 494 854 Pass, of Artliitr S6S Lover's Tale i 656 793 , , ii 47 136 To W, H. Brookfidd 10 Locksley 11,, Sixtii, 98 Village Wife 107 Aglmer's Field 409 Princess Hi 36 176 Lancelot ami E. 1169 Guinevere 96 First Quarrd 18 Spinste'r's S's. 49 Princess v 521 , , ii 85 Tmnorroto 69 Merlin and V. 95 Heavy Brigade 9 Com. of Arthur 40 Lancelot and E. 765 Pelleas and E. 281 A kbar's Dream 154 Poland 13 St. S. Stylites 223 Enoch Arden 785 Man; of Geraint 502 Princess rii 268 M. d' Arthur 41 Pass, ff Arthur 209 Deineter and P. 39 Miller's 1). 93 Walk, to the Mail 105 Enoch Arden 518 Geraint and E. 504 Adeline 45 The 1IV«*61 The Ring 311 Locksley II., Sixty, 17 Princess ii 89 ,, m266 In Mem. xxxiv 8 Maud III viSS Merlin and V. 626 Guinerere 19 Lorers Tale i 455 lief, of Luckncmr 42 Hijlenu'ufonn I 16 III Mem. hacxpii 25 Aylmer's Field 94 Wages 4 Geraint and E. 157 Uef. of Liicknow 57 Aylmer's Field 727 The Ring 346 Pelleas and E. 391 Nothing irlll iJie 27 .^ifjtjj. Confessions 58 Air (atmosphere) {enntinued) fires and fluid range Of lawless a's, The living a's of middle night a is damp, and hush'd, and close, Life in dead stones, or spirit in a ; Wide, wild, and open to the a, Or when little a's arise, With melodious a's lovelorn, reveal'd themselves to English a, a Slecpeth over all the heaven, Like softened a's that blowing steal, The very a about the door earth and n. seem only burning fire.' the summer a's blow cool the languid a did swoon. Falls, and floats adown the a, warm a's lull us, lilowing lowly) was no motion in the dumb dead a, round them sea and a are dark made the a Of Life delicious, murmur broke the stillness of that a Felt earth as a beneath me, A soft a fans the cloud apart ; deep a listen'd round her as she rode, I yearn to breathe the «'s of heaven Are toueh'd, are turn'd to finest a. And clouds are highest up in a. All the a was torn in sunder. Like Fancy made of golden a, green From draughts of balmy a, black yew gloom'd the stagnant a, sweet half-English Neilgherry a breath Of tender a made tremble at a touch of light, an a of heaven, rush of the a in the prone swing, to flush his blood with a, Drank the large a, and saw, towering o'er him in serenest a, flushing the guiltless a, Spout soul flies out and dies in the a.* sweet as English a could make her, each light a On our mail'd heads : ' for this wild wreath of a, went The enamour'd a sighing with a tender foot, light as on a, shake To the same sweet «, Naked, a double light in a and wave, like a broken purpose waste in a : In that fine a I tremble. Thro' the long-tormented a Heaven Flash'd as they turn'd in a Clash, ye bells, in the merry March a ! diviner a Breathe thro' the world And snowy dells in a golden a. bird in a, and fishes turn'd eloud in my heart, and a storm in the a ! no ru''s Field i6S Airing A a snowy hand and signet gem. Princess i 121 Airm (arm) blacksmith 'e strips me the thick ov 'is «, North, Cobhler 85 Airth But a was at pace nixt mornin'. Tomorrow 25 Aisle ' Dark porch,' I said, ' and silent «, The Letters 47 but in the middle a Reel'd, Aylmer's Fi^td 818 ambrosial a's of lofty lime Princess, Pro., 87 giant a's, Rich in model and design ; Ode Inter. Exhib. 12 sombre, old, colonnaded a's. The Daisg 56 often I and Amy in the mouldering a have stood, Locksley H., Sixty, 31 Ajalon like .Joshua's moon in A ! Locksley Hall ISO Ajar They have left the doors a ; Sisters (E. and E.) 1 A-joompin' (jumping) An' hallus a-f about ma Spinster's S's. 89 Akbar (Mogul Emperor) ask'd his Chronicler Of A Akhar's Dream 2 turning slowly toward him, A said ,, 4 Akin (.Sec n/sii Half-akin) Maud to him is nothing a : Maad I xiii SS lawful and lawless war Are scarcely even «. ,, JI v 95 swallow and the swift are near a. Com. of Arthur 313 Akrokeraunian The vast .1 walls, To E. L. 4 A-laiid (lying) fun 'um theer a-l on 'is faace N. Farmer, 0. S., 33 Alarm when fresh from war's a's, D. of F. Women 149 Alarm (coiitinved) I shook her breast with vagu our sallies, their lying a's, a's Sounding ' To arms ! to arms ! ' Alas with many a vain ' A ! ' Albert ' And with him .1 came on his. Albert (Prince Consort) Hereafter, thro' all times, .1 the Good. Albion laborious, Patient children of A Alcestis The true A of the time. Alchemise a old hates into the gold Of Love, Alcor Red-pulsing up thro' Alioth and A, Alder blowing over meadowy holms And a's. Came wet-shod a from the wave. But here will sigh thine a tree, Balin's horse Was fast beside an a. ,te Le'ters 38 of Lucknmi! 75 g. (f Spr'ng 103 jjouht and Prayer 2 Talking l)ak 105 Ded. of Idylls 43 On Jul. Q. Virtoria 59 Rom Tiey's R.91 Akhar's Dream 163 Last Tournament 480 Edwin Morris 96 Ampkion 41 A Farevell 9 Balin and lialan 29 Ale {See also Aale) mellow'd all his heart witl «, The Brook 155 A mockery to the yeomen over a, Aylmer's Field 497 A-leaning Weak Truth a-l on her crutch, Clear-headed friend 18 Ale-house Jack on his a-h bench Maud I iv 9 Alexandra Sea-king's daughter from over the sea, A ! 11'. to Alexandra 2 Danes in our welcome of thee, .1 ! ,, 5 all Dane in our welcome of thee, A \ ,, 34 Alexandrovna {See also Marie, Harie Alexandrovna) Prince his own imperial Flower, .1. IT. to Marie Alex. 5 sultry p.alms of India known, .1. ,, 15 gives its throne a wife, .4 ! ,,25 thy young lover hand in hand A ! ,, 35 and change the hearts of men, ^1 1 ,, 45 Alfred— .1 ! „ 50 Alfred (King of England) Truth-teller was o>ir England's .1 named ; Ode on Well. 188 Alfred (Duke of Edinburgh, 1844-1900) A— Alexandrovna ! . W. to Marie Alex. 50 Alice My own sweet A, we must die. Miller's D. 18 Pray, ^1, pray, my darling wife, ,, 23 But, .4 , what an hour was that, ,, 57 Sweet .-), if I told her .all? ' ,, 120 Go fetch your -1 here,' she said : ,, 143 But, .1 , you were ill .at ease ; ,, 146 foolish song I gave you, ,1, on the day ,, 162 none so fair as little .1 May Queen 7 In there came old A the nurse. Lady Clare 13 said ^4 the nurse, (repeat) Lady Clare 17, "23, 33, 41, 45 Alien I am but an a and a Genovese. ■ Columbus 243 Alif The .4 of Thine alphabet of Love.' Akhar's Dream 31 A-liggin' (lying) wheere thou was a-l, my lad, Ou-d Rod 87 Alighted (See tilso Lighted) To Francis just « from the boat, Audley Court 7 Alioth Ked-pulsing up thro' .-1 and Alcor, Last Toatrnmnent 480 Alive That thou, if thou wert yet n, Supp. Confessions 100 Joying to feel herself a, Palace of Art 178 pjiss away before, and yet a 1 am ; May Queen, Coji., 1 ptilace-front .1 with fluttering scarfs Princess v 509 not always certain if they be a O'randiuother 84 there's none of them left a; ,,85 strive To keep so sweet a thing a : ' In Mein. xxxv 7 Dark bulks that tumble half a, ,, Ixx 11 at fifty Should Nature keep me a, i Maud I vi 32 with beatings in it, as if a. Holy Irrail 118 marvel among us that one should be left a Def. of Luckaow 78 And doom'd to burn «. , finish 'd to the finger n.ail. Edwin Morris 22 All-puissant noble breast and a-jj arms, Marr. of Geraint 86 All-seeing or of older use A-s Hyperion — All-shamed I rode a-s, hating the life All-silent Sigh fully, or a-s gaze upon him All-subtilising -l-s intellect : All-too-full CI -I-/' in bud For puritanic stays : Allure beacon-blaze a's The bird of passage, Allured A him, as the beacon-blaze allures (/ The glance of Gareth the sweet name A him first. Allusion phrases of the hearth. And far a. Lucretius 126 Geraint and E. 852 Merlin and V. 182 In Mem. Ixxxv 48 Talking Oak 59 Enoch Arden 728 728 Gareth and L. 1315 Last Tournament 399 Pri7icess ii 316 Ally (Alfred) Golden-Hair'd .1 whose name is one To A. Tennyson 1 Ally (s) True we have got— suxh a faithful a Rifl.einenform I 24 Ally (verb) a Your fortunes, justlier b.alanced. Princess ii 65 Almesbury sat There in the holy house at .1 Gninevere 2 she to .-1 Fled all night long 127 when she came to ,1 she spake 138 As even here they talk at A ,, 208 saw One lying in the dust at A, Pass, of Arthur 77 Almighty (.Sec (i/syi Amoighty) God .4 , blessed Saviour, Thou Enoch Arden 782 Sir Aylmer-Aylmee, that a man, Aylmer's Field 13 Almond-blossom Tlte sunlit a-b shakes— To the Queen 16 Almondine Turkis and agate and a : The Merman 32 Alms set himself. Scorning an a, to work Enoch Arden 812 free of a her hand — The hand that Aylmer's Field 697 life of prayer. Praise, fast and a ; Holy Grail 5 She gave herself, to fast and a. „ 77 cripple, one that held a hand for a — Pelletis atul E, 542 fling free a into the beggar's bowl, A mient Sage 260 From the golden li of Blessing Locksley II., Sixty, 87 Almsdeed wear out in a and in prayer Guineoere 687 Aloan (alone) an' if Sally be left a. North. Cobbler 105 Hallus a wi' 'is boooks. Village Wife '21 one night I wur sittin' a, (jwd Rod 29 Aloe Of olive, a, maize and vine. Tiie Daisy 4. Alone {See also Aloan) moon cometh. And looketh down a. Clnribei 14 While I do pray to Thee a, Sujip. Coufessions 12 A and warming his five wits, (repeat) Tlie Owl, I. 6, 13 My friend, with you to live a, Ode to Alem&ry 119 Death, walking all a beneath a yew, Love and Death 5 A I wander to and fro, Onana 8 A merman bold, Sitting a, Singing a Tlie Merman 3 mermaid fair. Singing a. The Mermaid 3 Springing a With a shrill inner sound, ,, 19 For sure thou art not all «. Adeline 25 broad river rushing down a. Mine be the strength 2 ' Ah,' she sang, ' to be all a, (repeat) Mariana in the S. 11, 23 'but I wake a, I sleep forgotten, ,, 35 She thought, ' My spirit is here a, ,, 47 ' Sweet Mother, let me not here a „ 59 So be a for evermore.' ,, 68 Is this the end to be left a, ,, 71 ' But thou shalt be a no more.* ,, 76i And day and night I am left a ,, 83 When I shall cease to be all a, „ 95 And you and I were all a. Miller's B. 136 Came up from reedy Simois all a. (Enone 52 from that time to this I am a, ,, 193 And I shall be a until I die. ,, 194 I will not die a, (repeat) CEnone 246, 257 some one pacing there a. Palace of Art 66 Nor these a, but every landscape fair, ,, 89 Nor these a ; but every legend , , 125 prolong Her low preamble all a, ,, 174 Flash'd thro' her as she sat a, ,, 214 And all a in crime ; ,, 272 But I shall lie a, mother, May Queen, N. Y's. E. 20 why should we toil a, Lotos-Eaters, C. S., 15 Let us a. Time driveth onwax'd ,, 43 Let us a. What is it that will last ? „ 45 Let us a. WTiat pleasure can we have ,, 48 ' Not so, nor once a ; B. of F. Wmnen 203 That standeth there a, B. of the 0. Year 50 Falls off, and love is left a. To J. S. 16 leave thee thus, Aidless, a, M. d' Arthur 41 Alone Ambassador Alone {nnilinva/) For not« this pillar- punishment, Not this a I might be more a with thee, In which we sat together and a, both with those That loved me, and a ; About the hall, among his dogs, a, She lying on her couch a, Ah, let the rusty theme a ! fell Sun-stricken, and that other lived a who speaks with Him, seem all a, 'u4,' I said, 'from earlier than I know, When ill and weary, a and cold, A, a, to where he sits. When I contemplate all a light Went out, and I was all a, Which not a had guided me, she will let me a. For am I not, am I not, here a I am here at the gate a ; When will the dancers leave her a ? That thou art left for ever a ; a And all the world asleep, sought The King a, and found, and told and they were left a, endured Strange chances here a ; ' I was all a upon the flood, shaped, it seems, By God for thee a, leave me all a with Mark and hell. leave thee thus, Aidless, a, didst sit a in the inner house. To me a, Push'd from his chair Our general mother meant for me a, They tell me we would not be a, — many weary moons I lived a — A, day waned ; A I sat with her : I will be all a with all I love. Found, as it seem'd, a skeleton a, dark eyes ! and not her eyes «, I am all a in the world, go, go, you may leave me a— 1 was there a : The phantom I lying here bedridden and «, when I left my darling a.' a on that lonely shore — I am left a on the land, she is all a Nor canst not prove that thou art body «, Nor canst thou prove that thou art spirit a, when I Sat all a, revolving Ijut we were left a : sitting on the wreck a. Thou a, my boy, of Amy's kin wearying to be left «, first dark hour of his last sleep a. gazing from this height a, he dash'd up a Thro' the great gray slope Or Might most rule a ; And he sung not a of an old sun set, To forage for herself a ; 1 parted from her, and I went a. would he live and die a '( but I wept a, and sigh'd Listen ! we three were a in the dell of that Power which a is great. Along six tjill men haling a seventh i(. Alongside if t'one stick « father A-loving When I was a-l you all along Alphabet The Alif of Thine a of Love.' Alphabet-of-heaven-inman A-c-h-i-m Made Alpine In gazing up an .1 height, an .1 hareliell hung with tears Alps Sun-smitten A before me lay. Alraschid 'See Haroun AlrascMd Altar (>*«■ a/sii Isle-altar, Mountain-altars) to the village a, And saw the a cold and bare. St. S. Slylites 60 85 Lmie and Duty 60 Ulysses 9 Gndiva 17 Day -Dm., Sleep. B., 2 Will Water. 177 Enoch Arden 570 620 Princess vii 311 T/ie Daisy 96 In Mem. xxiii 3 ,, Ixxxiv 1 „ xcv 20 ,, cxlii 3 Maud I i 74 ,, i)i 65 ,, xxii 4 21 ,, II tii 4 Ccm. of Arthur US Oareth and L. 541 Geraint and E. 244 810 Lancelot and E. 1046 1367 Last Tournament 636 Pais, of Arthur 209 Lcner's Tale i 112 117 245 252 ii-l 140 ,, iv 47 1.39 166 First Quarrel 8 Rizpah 79 Sisters (E. and E.) 113 Columhus 164 The Wreck 97 Despair 33 „ 63 A ncient Sage 59 60 „ 230 Tlie Flight 77 Locksley H,, Sixty, 16 56 .57 238 Pro. to Gen. Ramley 9 Heavy Brigade 16 Epiioiiuc 29 Dead Pnph.i 41 Olieu. I. andC. Kxhih. 29 The liiiiij 437 Ilappil 5 Bandit's Death 19 God and the Cnie. 5 Gareth and L. 811 Church-warden, etc., 10 First Qicarrel 65 Akbar's Dream 31 vocal — ,, 136 Two Voices 362 Prineess vii 115 The Daisij 62 Leads her L. ,f Bmleigh 11 The Letters 4 Altar {eiinliii iied) ' Cold a. Heaven and earth shall meet tire. That burn'd as on an a. at the a the poor bride Gives her harsh groom The Priest in horror about his a Burnt and broke the grove and a s.icred a blossom 'd white with May, Beheld before a golden a lie from the a glancing back upon her, to pray Before that a — bo I think ; There, brooding by the central a, Tower and « trembling . . . fire from off a pure Pierian «, Altar-cloth Fair gleams the snowy a-c, as thine a-e From that best blood Altar-fashion'd smooth rock Before it, a-f. Altar-fire As mounts the heavenward a-f, Altar-flame made my life a perfumed (t-f; Altar-shrine before The stateliest of her a-!< Altar-stairs Upon the great world's a-s Altar-stone To the ei-s she sprang alone, Alter Sequel of guerdon could not a me Nor add and a, many times. Persuasion, no, nor death could a her : as the fiery Sirius a*s hue, Alter'd For I was a, and began tho' you have grown You scarce have a : Alum chalk and a and plaster are sold Amaracus Violet, a, and asphodel, Amaranth propt on beds of a and moly, in heaven With Milton's a. Amaryllis A milky-bell'd a blew. A-maying Had been, their wont, a-rn Amaze ('See also Half-amaze) In much a he stared On eyes Up went the hush'd a of hand and eye. Suddenly honest, answer'd in a, sister's vision, fill'd me with a ; And some of us, all in a, a Our brief humanities ; set the mother waking in a Amazed {'See also Half-amazed, Part-amazed) A and melted all who listen'd Averill solaced as he might, c, : half a half frighted all his Hock : A he fled .away Thro' the dark land, ' A am I to hear Your Highness : rt They glared upon the women, brake on him, till, a, He knew not those who went with Garuth were a, and all hearers were a. Enid ask'd, a, ' If Enid errs, the armourer turning all tf. plover's human whistle (( Her heart, when he found all empty, was a ; A am I, Beholding how ye butt He much a us ; after, when we sought .1 were these ; ' Lo there ' she cried — ■ more a Than if seven men had set the Queen a, ' Was he not with you ? He a, ' Torre and Elaine ! why here '! So that the angels were a, ye look a, Not knowing they were lost babble about his end .1 me ; I sware. Being a : but this went by — dead world's winter dawn .4 him, nor lights nor feast Dazed or ((, mask that I .saw so a me, I stood there, naked, a still in her cave, A, Amazement stood Stock-still for sheer a. all the guests in mute a rose — which made the a more, Amazing 'See Maazin' Amazon Glanced at the legendary .4 Ambassador My father sent a's with fura The Letters 7 Enoch Arden 72 Princess v 377 The Victim 7 BoiUlicea 2 Cmn. of Arthur 461 Balin and Balan 410 Sisters {E. and E.) 210 „ 239 A ncient Sage 33 Forrlom 34 Parnassus 17 Sir Galahad 3.3 Gareth dnd L. 599 Tiresias 147 In Mem. xli 3 Maud I .vein 24 Com. of Arthur 455 in Mem. Iv 15 The Victim. 67 (Enone 153 Wdl Water. 15 Aylmer's Field 418 Princess w 262 Miller's D. 94 Princess ii 306 Maud I i 39 (Enone 97 Lutos-Eaters, C. S., 88 Ilomney's Ii. Ill The Daisy 16 Guinevere 23 Tlie Brook 205 Princess Hi 138 Geraint and E. 410 Holy Grail 140 Heavy Brigade 35 Epilogue 56 Demeter and P. 57 Enoch Arden. 649 » Aylmer's Field 343 „ 631 Princess v 48 „ W324 360 Com. tf Arthur 39 Gareth and L. 197 6.55 Marr. of Geraint 131 283 Geniiul and Ii. 49 216 676 Balin and Balan 115 465 Lancelot and E. 3.50 572 795 Holy Grail 451 f.nxl Tiiurnaiuent 41 671 674 Pass.„fAnhurU3 Lover's Talc ie 311 The Wreck 117 Desjjair 77 Death of QSmme 70 Will Water. 136 Lmer's Tale iv 305 334 Princess :i 126 /42 Ambassador Angel Ambassador ((■"«//« "C'O Sir Lancelot wont t^?, at first, Merlin and F. 774 J, to lead her to his lord (Ivinetere 383 Ambassadress ' are you «Vs From him to me ? Piihi'Vs Hi 203 Amber (adj.) lights, rose, c, emerald, blue, I'tihirr nf Art ItiO Piirple or «, dangled a hundred fathoms ]', oj Mai:}iiiint 56 Like the tender a round, MarfiarH 19 and the « eves When thou and I, Camilla, Lover's Tale i 52 Ran '/ towards the west, and nigh the sea ,, 432 Amber (s) fans Of sandal, a, ancient rosaries. Princess, Pro., 19 Ambition No madness of n, avarice, none : Lucretius 'ZV2 lawless perch Of wing'd a's, Ded. e;f Idtjlls 23 Down with f, avarice, pride, Maud I x 47 Ambrosia Hebes are thej' to hand a, Princess Hi 113 Their rich a tasted aconite. Demeter and P. 105 Ambrosial oak-tree sigheth, Thick-leaved, «, Clarihel 5 her deep hair .1, golden (Enoue 178 Sweet after showers, ct air. In Mem, Ix.r.eri 1 Ambrosially fruit of pure Hesperian gold. That smelt «, (Euune 67 Ambrosius fellow-monk among the rest, .1, Holy Grail Q monk .1 que.stion'd Percivale: ,, 17 Then spake the monk A , a.sking him, , , 203 I told him all thyself hast heard. A, ,, 737 Ambuscade In every wavering brake an a. Geraint and E. 51 Ambush (.SVc trfso Lilac-ambush) Lances in « set ; 1). of F. Wmnen'2?i Ambush'd meanings a under all they saw, Tiresias 5 Ambushing poisonous counsels, way.side «'s — Gareth and L. 432 Amen yet I take it with ^1. Lancelot a lul E. V££i A ! Nay, I can burn, Sir J. Oldcastle 172 Amend might a it by the grace of Heaven, Geraint and E. 53 Amends Can thy love, Thy beauty, make a, Titkunus 24 She made me divine a Maud I vi 13 Well, we will make a.' Gareth and L. 300 .4 hereafter by some gaudy-day, Man: of Geraint 818 Courteous — a for gauntness — Merlin and V. 104 our a for all we might have done — C'uluvihus 34 Amethyst chrysoprase, Jacynth, and a — ,, 86 Amid gap they had made — Four a thousands ! Heavy Brigade 24 Golden branch a the shadows. To Virgil 27 Why not bask a the senses By an Evolution. 6 bracken a the gloom of the heather. June Bracken^ etc., 9 Amiss There's somewhat in this world a Miller's D. 19 Kind to Maud i that were not a. Maud I xix 82 pray you check me if I a.sk a — Guinevere 324 Amity idioted By the rough a of the other, Ayhnei's Field h9\ Ammon my race Hew'd .!, hip and thigh, D, of F. Wmnen 238 Ammonian .4 Oasis in the waste. AlemnderS Ammonite Huge .1 's, and the first bones of Time ; Princess^ Pro., 15 Amo ' lo t'rt ' — and these diamonds — The Ping 70 This very ring lo tVi ? ,, 134 This ring ' lo t'a ' to his best beloved, ,, 210 cried ' I see him. To t'a, lo t'«.' ,, 223 call thro' this ' lo t'(f ' to the heart Of Miriam ; ,, 234 ' lo t'(f, all is well then.' Muriel tied. ,, 271 You love me still ' lo t'<(.' — ,, 291 ' lo t'a, lo t'(t' ! ' Hung herself ,, 397 even that ' In t'a,' those three sweet Italian words, ,, 406 Amoighty (Almighty) ' The a's a taakin o' you to 'issen, (repeat) N. Farmer, 0. .S'., 10, 26 Amorous (See idso All-amorous, Human-amorous) with argent-lidded eyes A, Arabian Niqhls 1.30 Of temper ((, as the first of May, Princess i 2 High nature a of the good. In Mem. cix 9 Amorously kiss Thy taper fingers a, Madeline 44 shall we dandle it a '/ Boddicea 33 A-mountin' we 'eiird 'im a-m oop 'igher an' 'igher, NurtJi. Cobbler 47 Amourist your modern a is of easier, earthlier make. Lockshnj //., Si.rly, 18 Amphion In days of old .1, Amjuhimi 10 Amuck Ran a Malayan a against the times, Aylmer's Field 463 Amulet What a drew her down ,, 507 kept it as a sacred a About me, — The Ring 442 Amurath (Turkish Emperor) Or .1 of the East? Sir J. Uldmstle 97 Amy I said, ' My cousin .1, speak, Locksley Hall 23 my ,1, mine no more ! ,, 39 A's arms about my neck— Locksley II., Si.ciy, 13 Amy [continved) A loved me, .1 fail'd me, .1 was a timid child ; Locksley II., Sixty, 19 often I and A in the mouldering aisle have stood, ,, 31 Lies my . I dead in child-birth, ,, 36 Here to-day was .1 with me, ,, 53 of -4 'a- kin and mine art left to me. ,, 56 our latest meeting — A — sixty years ago^ ,, 177 Amygdaloid trap and tuff, ,1 and trachyte. Princess Hi S63 Ana Ere days, that deal in a, Will ]Vater. 199 Anadem Lit light in wreaths and a's. Palace of Art 186 A-naggin ' Moother 'ed beiin a-n about the gell 0ml Roa 69 Anakim I felt the thews of ,1, In Mem. ciiiSl Analyse and a Oor double n.ature, Supp. Confessions 174 Anarch wearied of Autocrats, A's, and Slaves, The Dreamer 10 Anathema Thunder ',!,' friend, at you ; To F. D. Maurice?: Anatolian Ghost Crag-cloister ; A G \ To Ulysses 43 Anatomic not found among them all One «.' Princess Hi 307 Ancestor those fixt ayes of painted a's Aylwer's Fieid 8.32 Anchor (s) with silver a left aHoat, Arabian Nights 93 there was no a, none. To hold by.' The Epic 20 Nor a dropt at eve or morn ; The Voyage 82 A's of rusty fluke, and boats Enoch Arden 18 Cast all your cares on God ; that a holds. ,, 222 lay At a in the Hood below ; In Mem. ciii 20 my love Waver'd at a with me, Loivr's Tale i 65 Anchor (verb) Why not yet -1 thy frailty there, Supp. Confessions 124 To « by one gloomy thought ; Two Voices 4.59 Anchor'd Tho' a to the bottom, such is he.' Princess iv 257 A tawny pirate a in his port. Merlin and V. 5.58 Half-swallow'd in it, a with a chain ; Holy Grail 803 AnchoTite a Would haunt the desolated fane, St. Telemachiis 12 Ancients (s) For we are .I'i' of the earth, Day-Dm., L' Envoi 19 Ancle *(■ Ankle 'And (hand) an' thy muther coom to 'a, K. Fanner, iV. ,S., 21 But I puts it inter 'er 'a's NortJi. Cobbler 72 an" poonch'd my 'a wi' the hawl, ,, 78 Fur I couldn't 'owd 'a's off gin, ,, 84 An" 'e spanks 'is 'a into mine, ,, 92 new S and sail and a's blowing on it : a's of our Lord's report. I pray him, send a sudden .1 down So that the a's were amazed, a'Sy awful shapes, and wings and eyes. I, and Arthur and the a's hear, ■we are not a's here Nor shall be : face, Which then was as an a's, I to her became Her guardian and her a, (.'ome like an a to a damned soul, like the waft of an A 's wing ; Till you tind the deathless .1 mountain-walls Young a's pass. hear a death-bed .1 whisper 'Hope.' Angelo The bar of Michael ,1. Anger (s) Delicious spites and darling a's, Then wax'd her a stronger. as with a kind of a in him, his a reddens in the heavens ; their ravening eagle rose In a, troubled, as if with a or pain : all their a- in miraculous utterances, an a, not by blood to be satiated. The bitter springs of a and fear ; Till I with as fierce an a spoke, vassals of wine and a and lust, strength of a thro* mine arms, And when his a tare him, ruth began to work Against his a or hot, God's curse, with a — beast, whose a was his lord. As aome wild turn of a, turn of a born Of your misfaith ; Vivien, frowning in true a, breaths of a jjuff'd Her fairy nostril his a slowly died Within him, too faint and sick am I For a : first her a, leaving Pelleas, storm of a brake From Guinevere, as a falls aside And withers so fiuster'd with a were they and in a we sail'd away. great God, Ares, burns ia a still climbing from the bath In a ; And a's of the Gods for evil done and quench The red God's a, And who, when his a was kindled, moment's a of bees in their hive 'i — sound of a like a distant storm. wild horse, a, plunged To fling me, Rolling her a Thro' blasted valley Anger (verb) A's thee most, or as thee at all ? Anger-charm'd Sat «-<• from sorrow. Anger'd (adj.) {See also Half-anger'd) The flush of a shame O'erflowa Those dragon eyes of a Eleanor Gareth spake A , * Old Master, Sick ? or for any matter a at me ? * most of these were mute, some a, I was jealous, a, vain, Anger'd (verb) jealousies Which a her. Who a James ? ' So Merlin riddling a me ; a saying that a her. But he a me all the more, an' he a me more and more. Eh ! how I a Arundel asking me Angerly Again thou blushest a ; Angle (comer) We rub each other's a's down, Angle (race of people) Saxon and A from Over the broad billow Mil/nn 5 I/i Mem. xlrv 15 „ Ixix 14 Maud I via 3 Balin and Balan 365 Merlin and V. 16 Lancelot and E. 1424 Holy Grail 451 848 Last Tmtrnament 350 698 Guinevere 596 Lover's Tale i 393 „ 673 In tlie Child. Hosp. 38 Locksley H., Sixty, 278 Early Spriiifj 12 Roniney's R. 148 /« Mem. LclxtH 40 Madeline 6 The Goose 30 Enoch Arden 392 Princess iv 386 Ode on Well, VJO Qrandinotlwr 05 lioddicea 23 Maud /x 49 „ // 07 43 Gareth and L. 948 „ 1340 Geraint and E. 102 661 Balin and Balan 488 Merlin and V. 521 531 „ 691 848 891 Lancflot and E, 10S7 Pdletts and E. 289 Guinevere 361 Lover's Tale i 9 T'. of Maeldune 25 54 Tiresias 11 „ 41 „ 62 ,, 1.58 The Wreck 17 Vastness 35 The Ring 119 Akhar's Dream 118 Kapiolani 11 Lucretius 75 Aylnier's Field 728 Madeline 32 D. of F. Wmien 255 Gareth and'L. 280 Balin and Balan 276 Last Tournament 210 Happy QQ The Brook 100 Com. of Arthur A12 Last Tournament 628 First Quarrel 64 ,, 66 Sir J. Oldcustle 135 Madeline 45 In Menu Ixxxix 40 Batt. of Brunanhurh 118 Angled But a in the higher pool. a with them for her pupil's love : Angling loft That « to the mother. Angrier I never ate with a appetite Angry Hungry for honour, a for his king. Hortensia pleading : a was her face. — it makes me a now. makes me a yet to speak of it — Anguisant (King of Erin) With -1 of Erin, Morgan ore, Anguish Life, a, death, immortal love, ' Thine a will not let thee sleep, ' Or that this a fleeting hence, down in hell Suffer endless a, Bea^lty and a walking hand in hand She loveth her own a deep Shall I heed them in their a'i My deeper a also falls, My a hangs like shame. in her a found The casement : Sweat, writhings, a, labouring in the sudden a of her heart became A intolerable. Life with its a, and horrors, and errors — Animal (adj.) With a heat and dire insanity ? Animal (s) The single pure and perfect «, Animalism Hetairai, curious in their art, Hired a's, Ankle-Ancle From head to ancle fine, One praised her ancles, one her eyes, At last I hook'd my anile in a vine, Behind his ankle twined her hollow feet Ankle-bells To make her smile, her golden a-b. Ankle bones feet unmortised from their a-b Ankle-deep An9 69 „ 138 149 „ me lf.8 169 174 180 „ 183 190 •200 ■214 218 232 235 271 280 285 305 311 3U 323 334 Annie 11 Answer'd Annie {coHlimiei/) Philip did not fathom A's mind : one evening A's children long'd To go And A would go with them ; For was not A with them 'i ' Listen, A , How merry they are Tired, A ? ' for she did not speak And ,1 said ' I thought not of it : '.1, there is a thing uixjn my mind, A, It is beyond all hope, answer'd .1 ; tenderly she spoke : ' -1, as I have waited all my life fearing night and chill for Aj At A 's door he paused and gave 'A, when I spoke to you, A weeping answer'd ' I am bound.' 'Take your own time, J, take A could have wept for pity of him ; chanced That .4 could not sleep, never merrily beat A 's heart. The babes, their babble, A , home Where ,1 lived and loved him, His gazing in on ^-1 , his resolve, tell my daughter .4 , whom I saw For, -4, you see, her father was not the man 1 cannot cry for him, .4 : Why do you look at me, A ? at your age, .4 , I could have wept (repeat) I mean your grandfather, ^4 : But soiling another, .4, Shadow and shine is life, little .4 , children, ^4, they're all about me yet. my .4 who left me at two, my own little .4 , an ,4 like you : in this Book, little .4 , the message Get me my glasses, A : Hall but Miss .4, the heldest, hut Miss ^4 she said it wur draains, Hoanly Miss .4 were saw stuck oop, An' es for Miss ^4 es call'd me afoor taake it kindly ov owd Miss .4 0,4, what shall I do?' A consider'd. ' If I,' said the wise little .4, That was a puzzle for -4 . Annie Lee (&e alsu Annie) -4 L, The prettiest damsel A later but a loftier ..4 L, Annihilate eagle's beak and talon a us ? Announced .1 the coming doom, and fulminated Annulet And into many a listless a. Answer (s) Our thought gave o each to each, The sullen « slid betwixt : There must be a to his doubt, I spoke, but a came there none : To which ray .soul made a readily : Not rendering tnie «, some sweet a, tho' no a came, let me have an a to my wish ; before thine a given Departest, an a peal'd from that high land, Rejoicing at that a to his prayer. such a voluble a promising all, And Leolin's horror-stricken a, hush'd itself at last Hopeless of a : therewithal an a vague as wind : In this report, this a of a king, Her a was ' Leave me to deal with that.' rt which, half-muffled in his beard, oozed All o'er with honey'd a I lagg'd in c loth to render up shall have her a by the word. ' Last, Ida's a, in a royal hand, what a should I give ? The noblest a unto such Is perfect it seem'd that an a came. EnocJi A rchn 344 362 364 371 388 „ • .390 395 399 402 422 43.'-, „ 443 447 448 4.51 466 467 490 513 606 685 „ 863 882 Qrandmother 5 15 17 100 23 36 60 76 77 78 96 106 Villaije ir,/,' 8 11 20, 105 109 In the Child. Hasp. 47 48 65 little Enoch Ardeii 11 748 Boadicea 11 Sea Dreams 22 Oeraint and E. 258 Sunnet To 10 Twu rOTces226 309 425 Palace' of Art \1 M. d' Arthur 74 Gardener's I). 159 Dma 30 Tithnnns 44 Vision of Sin 221 Enoch Arden 127 903 Aylmer's Field 318 543 Princess i 45 70 „ Hi 149 „ 1)234 „ 242 „ 299 „ 327 „ 371 ,, VI i 6 Lit. Squabbles 19 TJie Victim 24 Answer (s) [amtinved) Bark an «, Britain's doubts and a's here proposed, What hope of «, or redress ? But Death returns an a sweet : A faithful a from the breast, win An a from my lips, Make (/, Maud my bliss, old 8eer made a playing on him said your say ; Mine a was my deed. being still rebuked, would a still Made (t sharply that she should not So moving without a to her rest He made a wrathful a : ' Did I wish he flung a wrathful a back : Made a, either eyelid wet Is that an a for a noble knight ? Full simple was her a, ' What know I ? all their as were as one : And when his a chafed them, Percivale made a not a word. Well then, what a 'i ' voice about his feet Sent up an a when she drew No a, by and by a mournful a made the Queen : Not rendering true rt, Had made a silent a : to that passionate a of full heart an a came Not from the nurse — all the night an a shrill'd. Answer (verb) And a's to his mother's calls I shall know Thy voice, and a Or a should one press his hands? He a's not, nor understands. ' But thou canst a not again. Or thou wilt a but in vain. O will she a if I call 'i you dare to a thus ! To that man My work shall «, He will (( to the purpose, Scarce a to my whistle ; in gentle miu'mur, When they a could a him, If question'd, to rt, Madam, all those hard things Madam, you should a, we would ask) told me she would a us to-day, «, echoes, dying, dying, dying, (repeat) a, echoes, a, dying, dying, dying. (,-1, O a) We give you his life.' ' wife, what use to a now ? A each other in the mist. Love would a with a sigh, whatever is ask'd her, a's 'Death.' wilt thou not a this ? musing * Shall I a yea or nay ? ' but a scorn with scorn. it shall a for me. Listen to it. But shall it? «, darling, «, no. To a that which came : he had Scarce any voice to «, Doth question'd memory a not, if my neighbour whistle a's him — Highlanders a with conquering cheers. Who then will have to «, 'give it to me,' but he would not a me — Answer'd To which he a scoffingly ; in that time and place she a me. But William a short ; William a madly ; bit his lips, he a me ; And well his words plagiarised a heart. And a in mimic cadence a James — She a to my call, .4 all queries touching those at home Echo a in her sleep From hollow fields : a sharply that I talk'd astray. raven ! Boadicea 13 In Mem, xlvHi 3 „ Im 27 ,, l:co:xi 9 ,, Ixxxv 14 ,, ciii 50 Maud I xinii lu aareth aiul L. 252 1175 1249 Marr. ofaeraint'i%6 „ 530 Geraint and E. 76 146 Meiiin and V. 379 Lancelot and B. 201 671 Holy Grail 284 „ 673 Pclleas and E. 534 JmsI Tournament 713 761 Guinevere 162 341 Pass, of Arthur '2i2 Lover's Tale iv 96 Sisters {E. and E.) 259 The Wreck 143 Deyneter and P. 61 Sitjjjj. Confessions 1.59 Afy life is full 10 Two Voices 245 246 „ 310 312 Miller's Z». 118 Dora 26 Love and Duly 29 Locksley Hall ,55 ^4 mphion 68 L. of Burleigh 50 Enoch Ardeii 653 Princess ii 345 353 „ 441166 ,, iv6, 12 ,, iv 18 Tlie Victim 15 „ 55 In Mem. xxmii 4 ,, XXXV 13 Maud Hi ,, xviii59 Com. of Arthur 426 Oareih and L. 953 Merlin and V. 386 397 Holy Grail 12 434 Lin-er's Tale i 277 iv 161 Def. of Lucknmo 99 Columbus 213 Bandit's Death 27 Two Voices 37 Gardener's D. 231 Dma 22 „ 33 Edwin Morris 24 Talking Oak 20 Golden Year 53 Will Water. 106 Aylmer's Field 465 Princess, Pro., 66 Hi 140 Answer'd 12 Approved Answer'd {conrmvcil) I a nothing, doubtful in when have I a thee ? Gods have a ; We p:ivc them the wife ! ' Doubt not ye the Gods have o^ The * wilt thou ' *-(, and again and a me In riddling triplets Gareth a them With laughter, Sir Gareth (/, laughingly, thou hast ever o. courteously, reviled, hast a graciously, A Sir Gareth graciously to one ask'd it of him, Who a as before ; a with such craft as women use, not dead ! ' she a in all haste. Enid «, harder to be moved truest eyes that ever o. Heaven, I am «, and henceforth ever well and readily n he : Lancelot spoke And a him at full, in her heart she a it and said, he a not, Or short and coldly, whom she a with all calm. He a with his eyes upon the ground, Lancelot a nothing, but he went, a not, but, sharply turning, she «, and she laugh'd, Gawain a kindly tho' in scorn, a them Even before high God. he a not, * Or hast thou other griefs ? was a softly by the King I should have a his farewell. To all their queries a not a word, Julian, sitting by her, a all : he a her wail with a song — Answering a under crescent brows ; (I. now my random stroke a not one word, she led the way. to the court of Arthur (( yea. Ant one whose foot is bitten by an «, What is it all but a trouble of iCs Antagonism in the teeth of clencli'd cCs And toppling over all a And, toppling over all «, Anthem « sung, is charm 'd and tied sound of the sorrowing a roU'd Anther With a's and with dust : Antibaby Ionian! sm And loudlung'd A's Antichrist He leans on A ; or that his mind, Tliat mock-meek mouth of utter .1, Antiquity A front of timher-crost <(, Anton (a knight) This is the son of A, not the Arthur born of Gorlois, Others of .1 i And gave him to Sir A, else the child of .1, ami no king, Antony (Mark) iSee Mark Antony Anvil silver hammers falling On silver «X iron-clanping a bang'd With hammers ; Anything He never meant us a t but good. fiehold, we know not a ; can see elsewhere, a so fair. Henceforth in all the world at <(, Apartment died Of fright in far a's. Ape (s) In bed like monstrous «'s And let the a and tiger die. His action like the greater a, moods of tiger, or of a ? Ape (verb) should a Those monstrous males as far As I could a their treble, Aphrodite Here comes to-day, Pallas and -1, Idalian A beautiful, Apocalyptic as if he held The A millstone, Apollo strange song I heard A sing, another of our Gods, the Sun, A , Apologry But ended with « so sweet, No less than one divine ff. myself Pi'iiicess in 272 ,, vil 4 The Virtbn 78 Boadicea 22 III Mem. Con., 54 Com. of Arthur AOl Gareth and L. 208 1007 1167 1269 1414 of aeraiiit 2Qr^ Ueraint ami E. 352 542 694 842 879 269 286 786 iln Merh'it and V, Laiu'i'lfit and E. King. 997 „ 1352 1387 nohj arail 739 Pdleas mid E. 132 333 462 598 Guinevere 44 „ 615 Lover's Tale iv 333 340 Tfie Dreamer 16 Princess a 428 In Mem. ccccxix 2 Geraint and E. 495 Vmn, of Arthur 446 Pelletis and E. 184 Vustness 4 Princess iv 465 Mitrr. of Geraint 491 Gerai'iit and E. 834 D.ofF. Wonmi 193 Ode OH Well. 60 Talk-in;/ Oak 184 Sea ij-reaim 252 Sir J. Oldcastle 74 170 Enoch Arden 692 Coin, of Arthur 74 171 222 233 Princess i217 „ I' 504 Enoch Arden 887 In Mem. liv 13 Marr. of Geraint 499 Geraint and E. 649 PrinrnK e! 371 St. S. ,s/„/i/,:, 174 In Mem. c.rclii 2S „ c:cx 11 Making of Man 2 Princess Hi 309 ,, «i92 GEmme 86 „ 174 Sea Dreams 26 Titlutniis 62 Lncretius 125 Geraint and E. 394 Lm-er's Tale iv 169 Apostle .shrive myself No, not to .an .1.' Apothegm My curse upon the Master's a, Appal -1 luo from the quest.' Appall'd eliffside, a them, and they said. In our most need, a them, Apparel in her hand A suit of bright a, store of rich a, sumptuous fare, a as might well beseem His princess, clothed her in a like the day. Appeal (s) She the a Brook'd not, ' Thou makest thine a to me : tho' it spake and made a she lifted up A face of sad a, Appeal (verb) a Once more to France or England Appeal'd « To one th.at stood beside. And with a larger faith a Appealing .1 to the bolts of Heaven ; Appear Shadows of the world a. made » Still-lighted in a secret shrine. Falling had let a the brand of John — things " the work of mighty Gods. Thy marble bright in dark a'.s, Which m.akes a the songs I made Shall I o, Queen, at Camelot, beauties of the work a The darkest faults : and now the morn a's, Miriam your Mother might a to me. Appear'd The very graves a to smile, now that shadow of mischance a blew and blew, but none a : the work To both a so costly, rt, low-built but strong ; never yet Had heaven a so blue. Appearing -1 ere the times were ripe, chirk in the golden grove -1, Appeased holy Gods, they must be a, Appertain all That a'.< to noble maintenance. Appetite I never ate with angrier a Applauded mildly, that all hearts .1, Applause {See also Self-applause) might reap the a of Great, the Trojans roar'd a ; Shall he for whose a I strove, To laughter and his comrades to a. Apple full-juiced «, wa.\ing over-mellow, swiing an a. of the purest gold, «'»■ by the brook Fallen, and on the lawns. and ate The goodly a*s, The warm white a of her throat, peak of the mountain was a's, Apple-arbiter beardless a-a Decided fairest. Apple-blossom Fresh a-li, blushing for a lioon. cheek of a-li. Hawk-eyes ; Apple-cheek'd a bevy of Eroses a-c, Apple-tree and o'er the brook Were a-t's, Appliances With half a night's a, Application And liberal a's lie In Art Appraised .1 his weight, and fondled .1 the Lycian custom, Apprehend And thro' thick veils to a Approach (s) less achievable By slow a'es, Preserve a broad tf of fame. Approach (verb) and let him presently .1, (' To save the life despair'd of, - 1 and fear not ; Morning-Star, n. Arm nie,' ' - 1 and arm me ! ' Approach'd a Melissa, tinged with wan J between them toward the King, us the great knight A them ; .1 him, and with full affection said, Approaching A, press'd you heart to heart. .! thro" the darkness, call'd ; Approve And wishes me to a him, Approved ^lie wore the ooloiu's 1 a. Sir .J. Oldcastle 147 Homnei/s H. 37 Gareth and L. 1331 Lancelot and E. 1253 Columlnis 71 Marr. of Geraint 678 709 758 Geraint and E. 948 Princess m 139 In Mem. hi 5 ,, Cecil 4 Merlin and V. 234 ; Columhus 57 D. ofF. Women ^9 Talking Oak 15 Princess iv 372 L. ofSludottiiVi. Mariana in the S. 17 Aylmer's Field 509 Lucretius 102 In Mem. Ixeii 5 „ Con., 21 Imhcj-IoI and E. 142 Sisters (E. and E.) 105 The Fliglit 18 T/ie Ming 137 The Letters 45 Enoch Arden 128 Princess v 336 Man: of Geraint 638 Balin and Balan 333 Holy Grail 365 In Mrm. Con., 139 Last Tournament 380 The Victim 47 Marr. of Geraint 712 Geraint and E. 233 „ 958 Princess Hi 262 Spec, of Iliad 1 In Mem. li 5 Geraint and E. 296 lAitos-Eaters, C. S., 33 Murr. of Geraint 170 Holy Grail 384 388 Lust Tuurnament 717 V. tf Maeldune aZ Lucretius 91 T/te Brook 90 Gairth and L. 589 The Islet 11 Holy Grad 384 Ltm-r's Tale iv 93 Dai/-Hm., Moral 13 Ennrh Arden 154 Princess ii 128 Two Voices 296 Princess Hi 284 Odr on Well. 78 St. S. Sli/lilcs 216 Eniieh Arden 830 Princess vii 353 Gareth and L. 924 1112 Princess Hi 24 Gareth and L. 441 Lancelot and E. 180 13,55 Miller's D. 160 Lancelot and E. 1000 Maiidl.cijjTl Tlie Letters 16 Approved 13 Aristocrat Approved [rontimLcil) A him, bowing at their own deserts and all the knights .1 him, Approven he by miracle was cr. King : Approvingly often talk'd of him ^1, 'Appy (happy) as 'a as 'art could think, I l(jovs tha to raaiike thysen 'f/, maako 'is owd aiige as \i as iver I can, A-preachin' Fur the}j\'G bin a-^t mca down, d Apricot blanching a like snow in snow. April (adj.) When .1 nights began to blow, ^1 hopes, the fools of chance ; And breathes in A autumns. clad her like an .1 daffodilly Can trouble live with A days, Thro' all the years of A blood ; and my regret Becomes an .1 Wolet, For all an .1 morning, till the ear gustful .1 morn That puff 'd Green prelude, A promise, glad new-year April (s) ('Twas ,1 then), I came and sat And A's crescent glimmer'd cold, balmier than half-opening buds Of -I, May or ,1, he forgot, The last of .1 Her maiden babe, a double -1 old, To rain an .1 of ovation round Their sUitues, From .1 on to .1 went, Make A of her tender eyes ; That keenlier in sweet -I wakes, (For then was latter .1 ) in .1 suddenly Breaks from a coppice With .1 and the swallow. Apt supple, sinew-corded, a at arms ; at arms and big of bone A-raagin' (raging) fire was (i-r an' raavin' Arab delicate .1 arch of her feet Arabi (Leader of Egyptian Revolt, 1882) And Wolseley overthrew .1, / Arabian nodding together In some .1 night ? 1 know not, your A sands ; plunge old Merlin in the -1 sea : Arac (Prince) Not ev'n her brother J, rumour of Prince .1 hard at hand, speak with -1 : A's word is thrice midmost and the highest Was .1 : The genial giant, .1 , roll'd himself but we will send to her,' Said .1, whereas I know Your prowess, ,1, Down From those two bulks at A's side. From -I's arm, as from a giant's flail, but .1 rode him down : ,1, satiate with his victorj'. Arbaces ^1 , and Phenomenon, and the rest, Arbiter Set- Apple-arbiter Arbitrate to-morrow, a the field ; Arbitration Before his throne of a Arbour They read in «'5 dipt and cut, Arbutus there ? yon a Totters ; Arc thro' a little a Of heaven, Bear had wheel'd Thro' a great a sine and o, spheroid and azimuth, Run out your measured cCsj bridge of single o Took at a leap ; Arcady To many a tlute of A. Arch (s) {Sr,' also Innocent-arcli, Portal-arch) little crystal c'es low shadow'd grots of acs interlaced, Many an a high up did lift, round and round, and whirl'd in an a, to three o'i'S of a bridge Crown'd Yet all experience is an a wherethro' Gleams we past an f, Whereon a woman-st^itue Or under a'es of the marble bridge bloom profuse and cedar a'es Charm, the delicate Arab a of her feet ThrJJrookVIS BcUn and Balan- 210 Guinevere 296 Aylttier's Field 474 'North, CohUer 15 Spinster's S's. 57 Oicd Rod 3 '/nirch-icnrdt)i, etc., 53 rroff. of Sprinrf 30 'Miller's n. 106 Vision of Sin 164 The Brook 196 Princess ii 324 In Mem. Ixx.riii 7 ,, cic 12 „ cxv 19 Lancelot and E. 897 Holy avail 14 Lover's Tale i 281 Mdler's U. 59 ,, 107 Tiihoniis 60 Thr nronk 151 Prina'ss it 110 , , vi 66 In Menu vxii 7 „ .r/ 8 ,, cxvi 2 Com, of Arihv.r 451 Mart, of Geroitit 338 Tli^ Ring 60 Prin^:ess v 535 Marr. nf Geraini 489 ' Owd Rod no Mand I xvi 15 '•». to Grn. Ilamh'i/ 31 Maud I vii 12 To Cl)/sses 35 Gareih and L. 211 Princess i 153 „ V 112 „ 226 257 ■■^74 32-i 404 499 500 532 „ vii 90 The lirouk 162 Lust Ti'vrnmneni 104 „ 162 A mjihiiiii 85 Lucretius 184 Tu J. S. 26 Princess iv 213 „ vi 256 In Mem. n^ 27 aareth and L. 908 In Mem. xxiii 24 Thro' Arahinn Nights 49 Palace nf Art 51 142 M. (V Arthur 138 Oardener's I). 43 Ulysses 19 Princess i 209 „ u 458 Milton 11 Maud I xvi 15 Arch (b) [rontiiiiicd) round and round, and whirl'd in an a^ Straining his eyes beneath an a of hand, thro' the a Down those loud waters. Arch (verb) fires that a this dusky dot — Archbisliop -I, Bishop, Priors, Canons, Arched .~^ < High-arched Arching (S)-f n/sn Slow-arching) now a, leaves her bare To breaths Architect You, the Patriot A, Archives of crimeful record all My mortal <^. Arch'way Gleam thro' the Gothic n in the wall, so thou pass Beneath this «, a shatter'd a plumed with fern ; While I shelter'd in this a Arctic would dare Hell-heat or -I cold, Arden (surname) (*t' a/sn Enoch, Enoch Arden) 'You .1, you ! naj', — sure he was a foot Higher Eh, let me fetch 'em, .1,' Arden (forest) face again. My Rosalind in this .1 — 'Are (hare) An' 'e niver not shot one 'a, Ares great God, ^I, burns in anger still hail of .1 crash Along the sounding walls. yesternight, To nie, the great God .1, Argent The polish'd a of her breast To yonder a round ; Argent-lidded Serene with a-I eyes Amorous, Argive On .1 heights divinely sang. Argosy arifost'-.^ of magic sails. Arguing .1 boundless forbearance: seem As n love of knowledge and of power ; Argument Half-buried in some weightier ff, A-rilin' thowt she was nobhut a-r ma then. Arimathsean Joseph .*f Joseph A-ringing we heard them "-/• the bell, Arise Scarce outward signs of joy a, Come forth, I charge thee, «, I feel the tears of blood « Or when little airs «, Many suns a and set. ,1, and let us wander forth, I will a and slay thee with my hands.* yearning for thy yoke, ", mighty wind n's, roaring seaward. Expecting when a fountain should a : The thoughts that a in me. pillars of the hearth .1 to thee ; • A, and get thee forth and seek ^4 and fly The reeling Faun, Morning a's stormy and pale. And ah for a man to n in mo, .1, my God, and strike, for we hold war would a in defence of the right, saw the dreary phantom '/ and fly saying, '-I , and help us thou ! .1 And quickly pass to Arthur's hall, these from all his life ii, and cry. Until ray lord a and look upon me ? ' Till yonder man upon the bier o, my dear lord o and bid me do it. Until himself (/ a li\ing man. And by the great Queen's name, a .1, go forth and comjuer as of old.' I will n and slay thee with my hands.' A in open prospect — heath and hill, .1, my own true sister, come forth ! Arisen (>V<' "'«" Half-arisen) mountains have a since With cities Arising at Bible meetings, o'er the rest .1, from the floor. Tusklike, a, horse, A wearily at a fallen oak, goblet with a priceless wine .!, Ilion falling, Rome a, Aristocrat what care I, .1, democrat, autocrat — Pass, of Arthur 306 464 Lover's Tale i 58 Epiloijiie 52 Sir J. (Jldcastlc 159 Prom. Sleep. B. 13 ,, Depart. 1 The Cajitain 39 Beggar Maid 1 the Letters 40 Enoch Arden 152 228 751 912 A i/tmei-'s Field 510 „ 588 Sea Breams '2A ., 132 „ 141 „ 290 Lucrctii's 82 Prlneess, Pro., 41 „ i 28 ,, il 168 303 ,, lii 35 „ to 183 192 371 496 „ V 500 „ vi 31 :: II ;: n 138 177 181 Ann (fl) {confinned) from mine a's she rose Glo\\-ing and Jenny hung on his a. he turn'd and claspt me in his a's^ So dear a life your a's enfold She cast her a's about the child. He stay'd his a's upon his knee : And moves his doubtful «'a-, and feels When Science reaches forth her a's Laid their dark a's about the tield. (repeat) They mix in one another's a's That watch'd her on her nurse's «, To tind the a's of my true love So well thine a hath wrought for me to-day.' o's Stretch'd under all the cornice with a kindly hand on Gareth's a bears a skeleton figured on his as, lifted either «, ' Fie on thee, King ! His a's, the rosy raiment, and the star. Sun Heaved up a ponderous a writhed his wiry a's Around him, Lifted an a. and softly whisper'd, a's on which the standing muscle sloped, ' noble breast and all-puissant o's, Not to be folded more in these dear o's, Claspt the gray walls with hairy-fibred o's, Down by the length of lance and a and she cast her a's About him. His a half rose to strike again, but fell : If a of flesh could lay him.' either lock'd in cither's a. woven paces and with waving o's, curved an o about his neck, made her lithe a round his neck Tighten, gentle wizard cast a shielding a. rose. Her o's upon her breast across, sloping down to make A's for his chair, battle- wri then a's and mighty hands innocently extending her white o.'s, armlet for the roundest o. on earth, an « to which the Queen's Is haggard, Caught from his mother's a's — often in her as She bare me, milky a Red-rent with hooks of bramble, she rose Opening her a's to meet me, Open'd his o's to embrace me as he came, every moment glanced His silver o's Hold her a wealthy bride within thine a's, in her white o's Received, Why ye not wear on (/, or neck, or zone Right ft of Arthur in the battlefield, wert lying in thy new leman's o's.' For feel this o of mine — milkwhite as and shadowy hair while yet Sir Lancelot, my right o. Then she stretch'd out her «'s and cried an a Rose up from out the bosom rose an o Clothed in white samite, behold an r/. Clothed in white samite, with pain, reclining on his o, on one o The flaxen ringlets of our infancies Rent o'er me, and my neck his o upstay'd. Love's a's were wreath"d about the neck of Hope, I wound my as About her : softly put his o. about her neck Holding his golden burthen in his o's, To greet us, her young hero in her o's ! bearing high in o's the mightly babe, bearing on one o the noble babe, sisters closed in another's o's, ' Emmie, you put out your a's, It's the little girl with her a's lying out little a's lying out on the counterpane ; I spread mine a's, God's work, I said, As I lean'd away from his a's — Princess vii 159 O'ratidnwtlier 42 55 The Daisif 93 The VidikZ2 In Mem, xiii 3 „ xxi 18 III Mem. xcv 16, 52 III Mem. cii 23 ,, Cott, 46 Maud II iv 3 Cum. nf Arthur 127 l/areth and L. 218 ,, 578 640 657 938 1045 1150 1361 Marr. of G'craint 76 ,, 323 Gerv.inl and E. 463 761 Baliii and Balan 223 299 632 Merlin and V. 207 241 614 908 910 Luncelot and E. 438 812 932 1183 „ 1226 „ 1405 .,. 1410 Holy Grail 210 395 417 „ 493 621 La!. Confessions 65 Morning-star, approach, A me,' Oareth and L. 925 * Approach and (/ me ! ' ,, 1112 Arm-chair Her father left his good a-e. Talking Oak 103 small goodraan Shrinks in his a-c Princess v 454 When asleep in this a-c ? Maud I vii i So I sits i' ray oan a-c Spinster's Ss. 9 Arm'd {See alsn All-axm'd, FuU-arm'd, Plump-armed) one that a Her own fair head, Princess, Pro., 32 Sleep must lie down a, for the villainous Maud 1 i 41 fair, strong, a — But to be won by force — Gareth and L. 104 who alway rideth a in black, ,, 636 These a, him in blue arms, and gave ,, 931 damsel came. And « him in old arms, ,, 1115 wholly a, behind a rock In shadow, Geraini and E. b7 horsemen waiting, wholly «, ,, 1*21 And each of them is wholly a., ,, 143 issuing a he found the host and cried, ,, 407 he a himself and went, Balin aiid Balan 22 There two stood a, and kept the door ; Lancelot and E. 1247 and we ride, A as ye see, Pelleas and E. 65 knights .1 for a day of glory before the King. Last Tournament 55 a by day and night Against the Turk ; Montenegro 3 Armlet a for the roundest arm on earth, Lancclul and E. 1183 a for an arm to which the Queen's ,, 1226 Armour And as he rode his a rung, L. of SImlott Hi 17 This mortal a that I wear, Sir Galalmd 70 His own forefathers' arms and « hung. Princess, Pro., 24 Your very a hallow'd, and your statues ,, v 413 When a clash'd or jingled, ,, vi 363 he had ask'd For horse and a : Gareth and L. 474 so ye cleave His « off him, ,, 1095 hew'd great pieces of his a off him, ,, 1142 youth who scour'd His master's a ; Man: of Geraini 258 slay him and will have his horse And a, Geraini and E. 63 and possess your horse And ft, ,, 75 three gay suits of ft which they wore, ,, 95 bound the suits Of a on their horses, ,, 97 Their three gay suits of a, each from eachj ,, ISl heap'd The pieces of his ft in one place, ,, 374 glimmer'd on his a in the room. ,, 3S6 ' Take Five horses and their a.'s ;' ,, 409 palfrey heart enough To bear his ft ? ,, 490 Bled underneath his ft secretly, ,, 502 A light of ft by him flash, Balin. ami Ikilan 326 moved Among us in white ft, Galahad. Jlohj Grail 135 one that on me moved In golden ft ,, 410 horse In golden ft. jewell'd everywhere : ,, 412 In silver ft suddenly Galahad shone ,, 458 In silver-shining ft starry-clear ; ,, 511 Wherefore now thy horse And ft : Pelleas and E. 355 Behold his horse and ft. ,, 373 he that hath His horse and ft- : ,, 378 In blood-red a sallying, Last Tournament 443 And all her golden a on the grass, Tiresias 45 Armour'd And a all in forest green, Last Tournament 170 Armourer riding further past an a's. Who, Marr. of Geraini 266 Whereat the a turning all amazed ,, 283 Armoury from Jehovah's gorgeous amwuries, Milton 6 Arms (weapons) «, or jKocer of hrain, or birth To the Queen 3 Those men thine « withstood, England and Amer. 7 one might show it at a joust of a, M. d' Arthur 102 broke a close with force and ft : Erlwin Morris 131 His own forefathers' a, and armour hung. Princess, Pro., 24 Arms (weapoas) (contin-ucd) clash 'd in a, By glimmering lanes Princess, Pro., v 5 piled ft and rough accoutrements, „ 55 horses yell'd ; they clash 'd their ft ; ,, 250 two armies and the noise Of a ; „ 346 none to trust Since our ft fail'd — ,, 427 supple, sinew-corded, apt at ft ; ,, 535 whose ft Champion'd our cause and won it ,, vi 61 Roll of cannon and clash of ft. Ode on Well. 116 Arthur yet had done no deed of ft. Com. of Arthur 46 many of these in richer ft than he, ,, 52 Closed in her castle from the sound of ft. Garetll and L. 163 his ft Clash'd ; and the sound was good ,, 311 A for her son, and loosed him from his vow. ,, 530 Gareth ere he parted Hash'd in a. ,, 689 Mounted in ft, threw up their caps ,, 697 ' Bound upon a quest With horse and ft — ,, 709 few goodlier than he) Shining in a, „ 745 These arm'd him in blue ft, ,, 931 strength of anger thro' mine ft, ,, 948 and take his horse And ft, ,, 956 Hath overthrown thy brother, and hath his o,.' „ 1037 damsel came. And arm'd him in old ft, ,, 1115 His ft are old, he trusts tho harden'd skin — ,, 1139 on a nightblack horse, in nightblack ft, ,, 1381 ft On loan, or else for pledge ; Marr. of Oeraint 219 ft, ft, ft to fight my enemy '! ,, 282 A ? truth ! I know not: ,, 289 thought to find ^1 in your town, ,, 418 if ye know Where I can light on ft, ,, 422 heard me praise Your feats of ft, ,, 435 true heart,' replied Geraint, 'but ft, ,, 474 '.t, indeed, but old And rusty, ,, 477 Who being apt at ft and big of bone ,, 489 Yniol's rusted a Were on his princely person, ,, 543 will not light my way with gilded a, GeroAut and E. 21 Three horses and three goodly suits of ft, ,, 124 Two sets of three laden with jingling ft, , , 188 take A horse and ft for guerdon ; ,, 218 one with a to guard his head and yours, ,, 427 paid with horses and with a ; ,, 486 loosed the fastenings of his ft, ,, 511 grow In use of a and manhood, Lancelot and E. 64 while she watch'd their ft far-off Sparkle, ,, 395 earth shake, and a low thunder of a. ,, 460 glittering in enamell'd ft the maid ,, 619 From noiseful a, and acts of prowess fjoli/ Grail 1 ft Hack'd, and their foreheads grimed ,, '264 Lend me thine horse and ft, Pelleas and E. 345 Pelleas lent his horse and all his ft, ,, 358 one might show it at a joust of a, Pc(ss. of Arthur 270 Gold, jewels, ft, whatever it may be. Lorer's Tale iv 235 and shoutings and soundings to a, Lef. of Lucknow 76 The warrior hath forgot his ft. Ancient Sage 138 alarms Sounding ' To ft. ! to ft ! * Prog, of Sjmng 104 clatter of ft, and voices, and men passing Bandit's Deoih 24 Arms (ensigns armorial) His o. were carven only ; but if twain His ft were blazon'd also ; Gareth and L. 41*2 then was painting on it fancied ft, Merlin and V, 474 guess'd a hidden meaning in his a, Lancelot and E. 17 i|uartering your own royal ft of Spain, Columliua 115 Arm's-length Paris held the costly fruit Out at ft-/, (Enunc 136 Army crying there was an a in the land. Princess iv 484 compassed by two ft/v»('(V and the noise ,, i' 345 Charging an ft, while All the world Light Brigade 30 To preach our poor little ft. down, Maud J x 38 councils thinn'd. And a/ruiies waned. Merlin and V, 573 Earls of the a of Anlaf Fell Batt. of Brunanburh 53 nor had Anlaf With ftrw/fts so broken ,, 82 Her dauntless a scatter'd, and so small, Tlie Fleet 11 glorious annals of ft and fleet, Vastness 7 Amo unfamiliar A, and the dome The Brook 189 Amon from Aroer On vl unto Minneth." D. of F. H'ome/t 239 Aroer from ,1 On Arnon unto Minneth.' ,, 238 Aromat from the blessed land of A — Holy Grail 48 Arose 16 Arthur Arose ", and I releas'd The casement, a wind a. And overhead the wandering ivy The rain had fallen, the Poet a, and a Eager to bring them down, not to die a listener, I a, a the labourers' homes, footstool from before him, and a ; wind a and rush'd upon the South, « Once more thro' all her height. That afternoon a sound n of hoof And chariot, Star after st;ir, o and fell ; on one side a The women up in wild revolt. Then thorpe and byre a in tire, Thro' four sweet years a and fell, Since our first Sun a and set. Till at the last a the man ; till I could bear it no more. But a. Nor ever a from below, on the further side .1 a silk pavilion, «, and raised Her mother too, in their halls a The cry of children, damsel bidden a And stood with folded hands with smiling face a, and all the knights o. And staring King a and went To smoke the words of Arthur flying shriek'd, a, She clear'd her sight, she f , call'd n, and, slowly plunging down from the ruin a The shriek and curse Aroused So sleeping, so a from sleep A the black republic on his elms, (/. Lancelot, who rushing outward Arrange Dispute the claims, a the chances ; .1 the board and brim the glass ; Arranged ^' Her garden, sow'd her name men and maids ^1 a country dance, A the favour, and assumed the Prince. Arras (adj.) In Arthur's n hall at C'amelot : Arras (s) hung with o. green and blue, Array (s) Singing of men that in battle a, Array'd with her own white hands .1 took them, and a herself therein, took it, and a herself therein. there the Queen a me like the sun : Arraying morn by morn, " her sweet self Arrival will harangue The fresh n's of the week Arrive .1 at last the blessed goal. Arrived ^1 and found the sun of sweet content n, by Dubric the high saint. Arriving A all confused among the rest ..1 at a time of golden rest. Arrogance They said with such heretical a Arrow viewless a's of his thoughts were headed The l)itter a went aside. The false, false a went aside. The damned a glanced aside. Within thy heart my a lies, shoot into the dark A 's of lightnings. A random a from the brain. look'd a flight of fairy a's aim'd Fly twanging headless a's at the hearts. When one would aim an a fair. Or into silver a's break The sailing Before an ever-fancied «, made a whizz'd to the right, one to the left, lest an a from the bush Should leave me jingle of bits. Shouts, u's, Struck by a poison'd a in the fight. Arrowing " light from clime to clime, Arrowlet blows a globe of after o's. Arrow-seed like the a-s's of the field flower. Arrow-slain With loss of half his people a-s ; Arrow-wounded your «-«• fawn Came flying Arsenic -1, «, sure, would do it. Art discovery And newness of thine a so pleased Tim Vnices 403 (Jinoue 98 Poet's tSiiiiff 1 Ennch Arden 871 Tlie Brook 163 Aybner's Field 147 „ 327 Princess i 97 „ vi\b9 „ 379 ,, vii 50 „ 122 Tlie Victim 3 In Mem., xxii 3 ,, xxiv 8 ,, cri-iii 12 ilavd I Hi 10 „ //it. 36 Gare-tJi and L. 910 Marr. of Gerainl 535 Gcrnint and E, 964 Merlin and V. 68 Lancelot and E. 552 JIoli/ Grail 192 213 Last Tournament 139 Dead Prophet 31 «. Telemaclws 28 Akbar's Dream. 189 Day- Dm., L' Envoi 21 Ai/lmer's Field 529 Guinevere 106 To F. D. Maurice 31 In Mem., cvii 16 Aylmer's Field 87 Princess, Pro., 84 „ iv 602 Merlin and V. 250 Palace of Art 61 Maud IvS Marr. of Geraint 17 „ 139 849 Geraint and E. 701 Lancelot and E. 906 Princess ii 96 In. Mem. lx.e.riv 41 The Brook 168 Com. (f Arthur 453 Princess iv ^2i Merlin and V. 142 Sir J. Oldcnstle 15 The Poet 11 Orieina 37 „ 39 „ 41 „ 80 To J. M. K. 14 Two Voices 345 Ayimer's Field 94 Princess ii 402 In Mem. lxx.evii 25 „ ci 15 Geraint and E. 531 Bidin and. Balan 419 Last Tournament 535 Tiresias 94 Death of (Enone 26 Akbar's D, Hymn 5 Gareth and L. 1029 The Poet 19 Merlin and V. 565 Priiieess ii 270 Maiid II V 62 Ode to Memory 88 Art (continued) knowledge of his re Held me words, tho' cuU'd with choicest «, I and he. Brothers in A ; ' will you climb the top of A . liberal applications lie In ^4 like Nature, Her re, her hand, her counsel Hetairai, curious in their a, At wine, in clubs, of a, of politics ; in a's of government Elizabeth and others ; a's of war The peasant Joan and others ; a's of grace Sappho and others with inmost terms Of a and science : Two great statues, .1 And Science, Science, A, and Labour have outpour'd shapes and hues of A divine ! piece of inmost Horticultural a, And owning but a little a From n, from nature, from the schools, on mind and «, And labour. The graceful tact, the Christian a ; That all, a-s in some piece of «, letters, dear to Science, dear to .1, served King Uther thro' his magic a, ; Knowing all a's, had touch 'd, knew the range of all their o's. since ye seem the Master of all .1, Or A with poisonous honey stol'n from France, Heirlooms, and ancient miracles of -1, Repell'd by the magnet of ..1 with the living hues of .4. A and Grace are less and less : And here the Singer for his A You see your A still shrined in a nation purer through their a. the fault is less In me than .1. ^1 ! Why should I so disrelish seem'd my lodestar in the Heaven of .1, Of ancient .1 in Paris, or in Rome. This . I , that harlot-like I replied 'Nay, Lord, for .1,' 'Art (heart) as 'appy as 'a could think, Artemisia (Carian) *f Carian Artemisia Arthur (Epic poem) ' he burnt His epic, his King , I Arthur (King) Until King ^l'* table, man by man, fallen in Lyonnesse about their Lord, King .1 : spake King .1 to Sir Bedivere : (repeat) replied King A , faint and pale : 'King ,4 's sword, Exc.alibur, spoke King A , breathing heavily : replied King .4 , much in wrath : Then spoke King .1, drawing thicker breath : answer made King .1, breathing hard: as he walk'd. King A panted hard, murmur'd A, ' Place me in the barge,' like that A who, with lance in rest, my Lord .1, whither shall I go? slowly answer'd A from the barge : sail with A under looming shores. King .4 , like a modern gentleman cried ' A is come again ; he cannot die.* For many a petty king ere A came man was less and less, till A came. after these King .4 for a space, for he heard of A newly crown'd, -1 yet had done no deed of arms, .1 , looking downward as he past, -1, passing thence to battle. When A reach'd a field-of-battle till .1 by main might, And mightier A call'd to stay the brands in the heart of A joy was lord. A said, ' Man's word is God in man : ' Knowest thou aught of A's birth V ' learn the secret of our .1 's birth >. ' By this King .4 as by thee to-day, D. of F. Women, 9 „ 285 Gardener's D. 4 169 Day-Dm. Moral 14 Ayimer's Field 151 Lucretius 52 Princess, Pro., 161 ,, ii 161 447 „ t» 200 Ode Inter. Exhib. 5 22 Ilendeeasyllabics 20 In Mem. xxxvii 14 ,, xlix 1 ,, /xxxvii 22 ,, ex 16 ,, cx.xviii 23 Ded. of Idylls iO Com. of Arthur 152 Gareth and L. 307 Merlin and V. 167 468 To the Queen ii 56 Lover's Tale iv 192 The Wreck •^i Liicksley II., Sixty, 140 '245 Epilogue 79 Poets and their B. 11 To W. C. Maercady 8 Bomnei/'s Ii. 9 10 39 87 „ 115 131 Sorlh. Cobbler 15 Tlie Epic 28 M. d' Arthurs 5 „ 13, 66 72 103 113 118 148 „ 162 „ 176 „ '204 ,, •2'22 „ 227 „ 239 ,, £p. 17 22 24 Com. of Arthur 5 12 16 41 46 55 ',', 96 109 1-20 124 133 147 ,, 159 162 Arthur 17 Arthur Arthur (King) {continued) A born of Gorlois, Others of A nton ? Hold ye this - 1 for King Uther's son ' ' Knighted by .4 at his crowning, like a loyal sister cleaved To vl, — before his time Was .1 born, Brought A forth, and set him in the hall, clamour'd for a king, Had ,1 crown'd ; A were the child of shamefulness, Ye come from A 's court, and A sat Crown'd on the dais, from the casement over .1, smote Flame-colour, friends Of ^4, gazing on him, A row'd across and took it — sad was A 's face Taking it, therefore ^4'* sister?' ask'd the King, when did A chance upon thee first i ' Back to the court of A answering yea. .1 charged his warrior whom he loved -4 said, ' Behold, thy doom is mine, -l'*" knighthood sang before the King; — Rome or Heathen rule in A's realm ? A spake, ' Behold, for these have sworn and .4 strove with Rome. .4 and his knighthood for a space knight of ^4, working out his will, .4 gave him back his territory, both thy brethren are in A's hall, thou shalt go disguised to .4 's hall, -4 '5 wars in weird devices done, three Queens, the friends Of A, Merlin's hand, the Mage at A's court, everywhere At A's ordinance, heard A voice, the voice of ^4, Said .4, ' AVhether would ye? A, 'Have thy pleasant field again, A, '"We sit King, to help the wrong'd heard that A of his grace Had made A cried To rend the cloth, (repeat) this was -I's custom in his hall ; .4 mightiest on the battle-field — 'Comfort thyself,' said A, A mindful of Sir Gareth ask'd, and .4 glancing at him. Brought without the door King .4 's gift, most ungentle knight in .4'6haII. ' -I's men are set along the wood ; a stalwart Baron, A's friend. ' I well believe You be of A's Table,' being .I's kitchen-knave ! — this morn I stood in A's hall, A all at once gone mad replies, champion thou hast brought from A^s hall ? And quickly pass to A's hall, ' Here is a kitchen-knave from A's hall ' No star of thine, but shot from .1 's heaven meek withal As any of .1 's best, knight of .1, here lie thrown by whom I know not on the day when ^1 knighted him.' truth if not in .I's hall, In .I's presence ? A's harp tho' summer- wan, challenge the chief knight Of A's hall ? ' Geraint, a knight of As court. Weeping for some gay knight in A's hall.' For ,4 on the Whitsuntide before Cavall, King -I's hound of deepest mouth, That eat in .4 's hall at Camelot. Shalt ride to A's court, rising up, he rode to .4 's coiu't, A knight of A's court, who laid made a knight of A's Table Round, will not go To .4, then will .4 come to you,' past With .4 to Caerleon upon Usk. wherefore A call'd His treasurer, A laugh'd upon him. 'Old friend, C'uin. of Ai-th (,• 170 )» 172 t; 175 )) 192 212 229 236 " 239 249 »> 257 )) 274 278 "^ 298 305 ,, 317 ,, 338 446 '^' 447 ,, 467 481 485 )j 507 514 i; 515 GareUi and L. 24 ,^ 78 ,, 82 ,, 152 '' 2'25 '' 2:30 306 ,, 308 318 ,, 340 343 ,, 371 393 ,',' 400, 417 j^ 410 |j 496 ,1 601 " 624 652 677 'j 757 '1 788 818 836 838 855 )j 863 916 j' 984 " 1036 " 1100 1169 ! W 1'233 II 1240 1254 1314 ,, 1417 Mnrr. of Geraint 1 j^ lis II 145 1, 186 432 )) 582 591 Geraint and E, 11^ II 793 815 ,, 946 Balin and BoAan 4 )] 16 Arthur (King) {continued) spirit of hiy youth return On A's heart ; ' Fair Sirs, ' said A , ' wherefore sit we be mightier men than all In A's court ; ' I too, ■ said A , ' am of ^4 's hall, -I lightly smote the brethren down, A seeing ask'd 'Tell me your names ; Said -4 ' Thou hast ever spoken truth ; A's host Proclaim'd him Victor, Then ^4, ' Let who goes before me, learn what .4 meant by courtesy, -4, when Sir Balin sought him, all the kindly warmth of .4's hall (for A's knights Were hated strangers thou from .1*5 hall, and yet So simple ! ye men of .1 be but babes.' to thy guest. Me, me of A's Table, some high lord-prince of A's hall, if from A's hall. To help the weak. ,4 the blameless, pure as any maid, The slights of A and bis Table, foUow'd, Sir, In yl's household I' — A bound them not to singleness * This .4 pure ! If I were .1, I would have thy blood. Perchance, one curl of A's golden beard. ^4, him Ye scarce can overpraise, .4 in the highest Leaven'd the world, While all the heathen lay at A's feet, wily Vivien stole from ^4 's coiu-t. .4 walking all alone, Vext leaving -4 "5 court he gain'd the beach ; In ^4 '5 arras hall at Camelot : I rose and fled from .4 "s court many-corridor'd complexities Of ^4 '5 palace: the royal rose In A^s casement ^4, blameless King and stainless man ? ' jousts, Which ,4 had ordain'd, .1, long before they crown'd him King, A came, and labouring up the pass, .1, holding then his court Hard Has -4 spoken aught ? '-4, my lord, .4, the faultless King, I am yours, Not A's^ as ye know, After the King, who eat in A's halls. ' Known am I, and of -4 '5 haU, and known, till our good -4 broke The Pagan you know Of A's glorious wars," ha^aug been With A in the fight where he sat At -I'.s^ right, with smiling face arope, .1 to the banquet, dark in mood, ' Our true .4 , when he learns, A's wars were render'd mystically, of A's palace toward the stream, In which as A's Queen I move and rule : For some do hold our *4 cannot die, So .4 bad the meek Sir Percivale But A spied the letter in her hand, ' My lord liege .4, and all ye that hear, A answer'd, ' my knight, A leading, slowly went The marshall'd Then .4 spake among them, * Let her tomb A^ who beheld his cloudy brows, Alas for .4 '.5 greatest knight, a man Not after .4's .4 and his knighthood call'd The Pure, one of those who eat in .4 '5 hall ; Sin against .1 and the Table Round, when King .1 made His Table Round, not ,.4 '5 use To hunt by moonlight ; ' Said .4, when he dubb'd him knight ; Did .4 take the vow ? " For dear to -4 was that hall of ours, Which Merlin built for A long ago ! statue in the mould Of ^4, made by Merlin, twelve great windows blazon .4 '5 wars, Baliii and Btdan 22 jj 31 )) 34 >» 37 )) 41 49 73 )) 89 J) 134 158 ][ 198 ,j 236 351 i> 357 361 [| 380 466 )) 472 479 Merlin and V. 7 ' 20 28 1 49 1 53 1 58 , 91 , 140 ' 144 149 1 152 1 197 1 250 , 297 733 1 740 1 779 Lancflot a) id E. 32 n 34 n 47 74 il 117 Ji 121 135 184 '1 188 ,, 279 285 ,, 287 " 552 564 '1 585 ,1 801 1178 11 1221 ,} 1258 1264 '1 1270 II 1290 1326 1331 1339 II 1354 heart ! I| 1419 Holy Grail 3 24 79 ,1 89 „ 110 , 137 , 204 222 , 226 , 239 , 248 Arthur 18 A-singeiii' Arthur (King) {rnnliimcd) A finds the brand Excalibur. Holy Grail 253 ' Lo now,' said yl, * have ye seen a cloud ? ,, 286 voice Shrilling along the hall to A^ caU'd, ' But I, Sir J, saw „ 289 the great table of our . I closed „ 329 Had Camelot seen the like, since -1 came ; ,, 332 ^ I \^ wars are render'd mystically, ,, 359 the gate of -^'5 wars.' ,, 539 I remember'd .I's warning word, ,, 598 thou shalt be as ^1 in our land.' ,, 606 follow'd — almost .1 's words — ,, 669 seven clear stars of .I's Table Round — ,, 681 Or was there sooth in A 's prophecy, ,, 709 there sat .1 on the dais-throne, ,, 721 and A turn'd to whom at first He saw not, ,, 751 A kept his best until the last ; ,, 763 King A made new knights to fill I'cllcas and E. 1 and .1 made him knight. ,, 16 I will be thine .1 when we meet.' ,, 47 .1 made vast banquets, and strange knights ,, 147 For -4, loving his young knight, ,, 159 A had the jousts I>own in the Hat field ,, 163 our - 1 made Knight of his table ; ,, 319 ' Gawain am I, Gawain of A's court, ,, 371 he, Gasping, ' Of -I's hall am I, ,, 514 Had made raock-knight of .I's Table Round, Lout Touriiaiiient 2 For A and Sir Lancelot riding once ,, 10 brought A maiden babe ; which A pitying took, ,, 21 So she, delivering it to -4, .said, ,, 30 A turn'd to Kay the seneschal, ,, 89 A rose and Lancelot follow'd him, ,, 112 words of .4 flying .shriek'd, arose, ,, 139 Right arm of J in the battlefield, ,, 202 Dagonet, skipping, * .4, the King's; ,, 262 so thou breakest .!'*• music too.' ,, 266 thank the Lord I am King .I's fool. ,, 320 call the harp of ,4 up in heaven '? ' ,, 333 With .4 's vows on the great lake of fire. ,, 345 I, and ..4 and the angels hear, ,, 350 .1 with a hundred spears Rode far, ,, 420 ' Lo there,' said one of .4 's youth, ,, 429 But -1 waved them back. ,, 437 He ended : A knew the voice ; ,, 455 A deign'd not use of word or sword, ,, 458 in the heart of ^4 pain was lord. ,, 486 other was the Tristram, ^4 '5 knight! ,, 634 Had .4 right to bind them to himself ? ,, 684 A make me pure As any maiden child ? ,, 692 That night came .4 home, and while ,, 755 disruption in the Table Round Of A, Guiiiecere 18 knight of ,4 's noblest dealt in scorn ; ,, 40 Which good King ^1 founded, years ago, ,, 221 the bard Sang ^I's glorious wars, ,, 286 And that was .4 ; and they foster'd him ,, 295 to lead her to his lord ^4 , ,, 384 silk pa vilions of King .4 raised , , 394 think How sad it were for .4, should he live, ,, 496 ' Oh ^1 ! ' there her voice brake suddenly, ,, 607 There came on .4 sleeping, I'liss. of . I lihur 30 A woke and call'd, ' Who spake ? „ 45 Then spake King A to Sir Bedivere : (repeat) /'ass. of Arthur 65, 136, 181, 234 ever yet had ^1 fought a fight Like this i'ass. if Arthur 93 and ev'n on .1 fell Confusion, ,, 98 while ..1 at one blow. Striking ,, 167 Until King .4 's Table, man by man, ,, 172 fall'n in Lyonnesse about their lord, King ,1. ,, 174 replied King yl , faint and pale : ,, 240 ' King yl's sword, Excalibur, ,, 271 spoke King .1, breathing heavily : ,, 281 replied King -1, much in wr.ath : ,, 286 Then spoke King -1, drawing thicker breath ; ,, 316 answer made King ,4, breathing hard : ,, 330 as he walk'd. King .1 panted hard, ,, 344 murmur'd J, 'Place me in the barge.' „ 372 Arthur (King) {(■(oitimicd) like that A who, with lance in rest, I'uss. of A rthur 390 my Lord -1, whither shall I go? ,, 395 slowly answer'd , I from the barge : ,, 407 friends Of -1, who should help him ,, 456 city and palace Of .4 the king ; Merlin and the G. 66 on the forehead Of .1 the blameless ,, 73 .1 had vanish'd I knew not whither, ,, 77 Arthur (Sir, a local magnate) To show Sir A'x deer. The JSrook 133 Arthur (A. H. Hallam, 1811-1833) With luy lost J 's loved remains. In item, i.c 3 My vl, whom I shall not see ,, 17 That holy Death ere A died ,, Ixxx 2 My .1, found your shadows fair, ,, Ixxxix 6 Artificer .1 and subject, lord and slave, fyirer's Tale, « 103 Artist Well hast thou done, great a Memory, Ode In Memory 80 A more ideal A he than all, (repeat) Oo.rdeuer's JJ. 25, 173 wife, an unknown a's orphan child— iSea Dreams 2 golden moods Of sovereign a's ; /'rince^s, t'. 195 portrait of his friend Drawn by an a. Sisters (i!. and E.) 135 What ^1 ever yet Could make pure light Rwmnefs R. 9 wife and children drag an .1 down ! ,, 38 ' This model husband, this fine ^1 ' ! ,, 124 Artist-like . 1 -?, Ever retiring thou dost gaze Ode to Memnry 92 Arty (hearty) glad to seeii tha sa 'n an' well. North. Cobbler 2 Arundel (Archbishop of Canterbury) (.s^ <• olso Caiaphas- Arundel) Against the proud archbishop -I— Sir./. VldcnsflelS this mitred -1 Dooms our unlicensed preacher „ 104 how I anger'd .4 asking me To worship ,, 135 Arviragus there the heathen Prince, .1, Holy Grail 61 A-sailing n-s with wind an' tide. First Quarrel 42 Ascalon that was old Sir Ralph's at .1 : J'rincess, Pro. 26 Ascend Take wings of fancy, and «, Jn Mem. Lr.rvi 1 thy deeds in light, A's to thee ; iJed. Pnein. Prin. Alice 10 Ascended shouts .4, and there brake Gareth a nd L. 801 as Kapiolani a her mountain, Kapi^ilani 28 Ascending .1 tired, heavily slept till morn. Enoch ArdenlSl with the dawn « lets the day Strike Gerainl and E. 692 with slow sad steps .1, fill'd Lii^t Tournament 144 Ascension spheroid and azimuth. And right a. Princess ri 257 Ascent in steepnuss overcome. And victories of a. Lover's Tale i 387 Ash (tree) (.Sc 0/50 Esh) Young «'« pirouetted down Aniphion27 Delaying as the tender a delays J'rinee.is, ir 106 Nor hoary knoll of « and haw In Mem. c 9 Ashaamed (ashamed) an' I wur dreadful a \ North. Cobbler 40 Ashamed (•^'ft' ntej Ashaamed, Half-ashamed, Shaiimed) Shall I believe him a to be seen i Maud I. xiii 25 ' A boon, Sir King (his voice was all c), Gareth and L. 44*2 ,1 am I that I should tell it thee. Marr. (f Gerainl 577 Your hand shakes. I am a. Ronmey's R. 25 A-shawin' (showing) mun be fools to be hallus a-s your claws. Spinster's S's. 61 Ashbud hair More black than a's in the front of March.' Gardener's l>. 28 Ashen-gray seems But an rt-f/ delight. Mo ml 1. ri 22 Ashes And heai* their a on the head ; Love thou thy land 70 And all 1 was, in a. Tithonus 23 Who will not let his a rest ! I'ou might have won 28 Slipt into a, and was found no more. Aylmer's Field 6 ^4 to fi, dust to dust ; Ode on Well. 270 And from his a may be made In Mem. ■.eviii 3 And dust and a all that is ; „ xxxiy 4 who knows ? we are a. and dust. Maud Ii'd2 I spring Like flame from ri.' Gareth and L. 546 champion from the of his hearth.' ,, 899 who lay Among the a and wedded ,, 904 youth gone out Had left in a : Merlin and V. 246 dead n and all fire again Thrice in a second, Lin'er'.i Tale iv 323 but now to silent re fall'n away. Lochley H. , Sis-ti/, 41 Had the fierce a of some fiery peak St. Telemarhiis 1 Ashore I've ninety men and more that are lying sick a. The Rerenge 10 And a day less or more At sea or a, ,, 87 But the blind wave cast me n, De.yxiir 61 Ashy quivering brine With rt rains. The Voyage iZ Asia Ages after, while in .1, Lochdey H., Si.cty, 81 A-singeiu' Fur 'e smell'd like a herse a-», Oiod Rod 110 A-singin' 19 Asmodeus A-singin' Theer wur a lark as 'is best Aflk -I the sea At midnight, When I a her if she Jove me, A's what thou lackest, o, thou not my name : You a me, why, tho' ill at ease, he has a mint of reasons : a. ' Annie, I came to o a favour of you,' This is the favour that I came to a.' what is it that you a 'i ' then to c her of my shares, That Sheba came to a of Solomon.' l/oii should answer, wc would a) * a me nothing,' I said : a for him Of your great head — -1 me no more : (repeat) Princess would V.)ut a you to fulfil yourself : 1 a you nothing : onl}', if a dream, .i her to marry me by and by ? And a a thousand things of home ; Let no one ". me how it came to pass ; If one should a me whether The habit, I will not a thee why Or if I a thee why, Or to a her, ' Take me, sweet, Before thou a the King to make thee knight, and loathe to a thee aught. I scarce can a it thee for hate, or thyself be mad, I a not : * So this damsel a it of me Good — * I charge thee, a not, but obey.' 'Then will I a it of himself,' I swear I will not a your meaning in it : 1 am silent then, And a no kiss ; ' a your boon, for boon I owe you wherefore a ; And take this boon will ye never a some other boon? Who feels no heart to a another boon, has tript a little : a thyself, never could undo it : a no more : I a you, is it clamour'd by the child, a me not Hereafter ye shall know me — a you not to see the shield he left, should a some goodly gift of him ' .1 me not, for I may not speak of it : yield me sanctuary, nor a Her name and they spared '1 o a it, pray you check me if 1 a amiss — Ye a me, friends, When I began to love. Ye know not what ye «. I a you now, should this first master let me a you then, Which voice Edith wrote : ' My mother bids me a ' Did he believe it ? did j'ou a him i a ' Why left you wife and children ? Ask'd {. of F. Women 93 Ton ask me^ ichy^ 1 T]ie Epic 33 Enoch Arden *285 313 Sea Breams 115 I'rincess ii 346 „ 353 ,, lit 59 „ CT313 tU 1, 5, 6, 9, 10, 11, 15 Princess vii 146 148 }yiHdow, Letter 6 In Mem. xiv 12 Maud I xviii 49 ,, x.r. 17 ,, // iii 2 « ir 87 Gnrelh and L. 145 356 » ytJl 877 974 ilarr. nf Ueralnt 133 „ 197 Geraint and B. 743 Merlin and V. 254 „ 306 309 „ 375 382 602 686 771 Lancelot and E. 191 „ 653 912 Holy Grail 758 Guinevere 141 145 „ 324 Lover's Tate i 144 150 ,, iv 2H5 Sisters (E. and £.) 29 181 Tlie Ring 225 Roviiiey's R. 128 iJora 145 Edwin Morris 23 59 Enoch Ardeti 44 Tlie Brook 105 „ 142 „ 209 Sea Dreams 113 116 146 Princess i 231 „ iii 29 „ 76 ,, V 46 282 Windo^i% Leiti^r 9 In Mem. Con. 55 Maud I i 4 Com. of Arthur 317 398 Ask'd {rontinj'o/) A me to tilt with him, he had a For horse and armour : 1 a for thy chief knight, bound to thee for any favour a ! ' a it of him. Who answer'd as before ; after madness acted question a : a her not a word, But went apart A rthur seeing a ' Tell me your names ; Balin was bold, and a To bear at feast Sir Galon likewise a a this very boon. Now a again : died Thrice than have ft it once — proof of trust — so often a in vain ! they a of court and Table Round, when he a 'Is it for Lancelot, and eyes that o. ' What is it ! ' a us, knight by knight, if any Had seen it, ' brother,' a Ambrosiua, — 'for in sooth then he a, ' Where is he ? scarce had pray'd or a it for myself — sharply turning, a Of Gawain, Lancelot,' a the King, ' my friend, ' Dead, is it so ? ' she a. ' Ay, ay,' said he, ' Have ye fought ? ' She a of Lancelot. a, ' Why skipt ye not. Sir Fool '! ' she r(, 1 know not what, and a, and a If I would see her burial : in his fantasy, 1 never a : she rais'd an eye that a ' Where ? ' then he suddenly a her if she were. once my prattling Edith a him ' why ? ' ' Anything ailing,' I a her, ' with baby ? ' a the waves that moan about the world and I a About my Mother, ' Why weird ? ' I a him ; Had a us to their marriage, paused — and then a Falteringly, a ' Is earth On fire to the West ? of the nations ' a his Chronicler Of Akbar her name ? what was it ? la her. Askew all his conscience and one eye a ' — (repeat) Oareth and L. 27 473 658 977 Man: of Geraint 204 Geraint and E. 813 „ 880 Balin and Balan 49 199 347 Merlin and V. 323 919 920 Lancelot and E. 268 1104 1249 IIvlij Grail 283 540 638 691 739 764 /••'lleas and E. 384 „ 593 Last Tournament 256 Lover's Tale i 706 ,, ii 70 „ iv 13 94 328 Sisters (E. and E.) 58 The Wreck 61 Dcmeler a.nd P. 64 Tlie Ring 102 „ 197 „ 430 Death of (Enone 94 St. Telemachus 18 Akhar's Dream 1 Clmrity 35 Sea Dreams 180, 184 Asking {See also Haxin') grant mine a with a smile, Tit/wnus 16 Nor « overmuch and taking less, Enoch Arden 252 a. one Not fit to cope your quest. Gareth and L. 1173 therefore at thine «, thine. Marr. of Geraint 479 not so strange as my long a it, Merlin and V. 312 braved a riotous heart in a for it. Lancelot and E. 359 a him, ' What said the King ? Hob/ Grail 203 a whence Had Arthur right to bind Last Tournament 683 Arundel a me To worship Holy Cross I Sir J. Oldcastle 135 A-sleeapln' (sleeping) cat wur as alongside Roaver, Oivd Rod 33 Asleep (See als,, Deep-asleep, Half-asleep, Warm-aBleep) smiling a, Slowly awaken'd, but I fall a at morn ; Falling « in a half-dream ! Since that dear soul hath fall'n a. To fall a with all one's friends ; If e'er when faith had fall'n ff. When a in this arm-chair ? But come to her waking, find her «, himself alone And all the world n. Text his day, but blesses him « — half a she made comparison fell a again ; And dreamt herself He fell a, and Enid had no heart not seem as dead, But fast «, when they fall a Into delicious dreams. First falls a in swoon, wherefrom awaked, I have done it, while you were a — we believed her a again — ere the dotard fall a ? fall of water lull'd the noon a. But such a tide as moving seems «, A-smilin' An' Squire wur hallus rt-s, Asmodeus Abaddon and A caught at me. EUanore 84 May Queen, N. l"s. E. 50 Lotos-Eaters, C.S. 56 To J. S. 34 Day-Din., L'Envoi 4 In Mem. cxxiv 9 Maud I vii 4 „ 7/n81 Com. of Arthur 119 Gareth and L. 1286 Marr. of Geraint 651 653 Geraint and E. 369 Lancelot and E. 1161 Lover's Tide i 161 791 Rizpah 19 hi the Child. Husp. 69 Locksley H., Sixty, 153 Romney's Ii. 83 Cri'ssinij the Bar 5 Villaqe WifeZi St. S. Stylites 172 Aspasia 20 A-tuggin' Aapasia not for all A's cleverness, Princess ii 344 Aspect Of pensive thought and a pale, _ Margaret 6 More bounteous a's on me beam, Sir Galahad 21 Under the selfsame a of the stars, Lover's Tute i 199 Aspen {.S'lr ((/so Aspen- tree) Willows whiten, «'« quiver, L.nf Shalott iW And here thine a shiver ; A Farewell 10 Aspen-tree in the meadows tremulous a-Vs Lancelot and E. 410 showers, And ever-tremulous a-Vs, ,, 524 Asphodel Violet, amaraous, and a, (Enotie 97 weary limbs at last on beds of «. Lolos-Hatej-s, 0. S. 125 Along the silent field of -1. Ueiiieter atid P. 153 Aspick Showing the a's bite.) U. (f F. Women 160 A-squealin' an' a-s, as if tha was bit, Oied Hod 89 and thou was as' thysen, ,, 107 Ass (an animal) whisper'd ' A'es' ears,' among the sedge. Princess ii 113 one of thy long a'es' ears, Last Towrnament 273 swine, goats, a'es, rams and geese ,, 321 ' Then were swine, goats, a'es, geese ,, 325 Ass (a stupid fellow) Sam, thou's an a for thy paains : N. Farmer, X.S. 3 we boiith on us thinks tha an a. (repeat) ,, 12, 38 an a as near as mays nowt — ,, 39 Assail To a this gray preeminence of man 1 Princess Hi 234 Assail'd brother king, Urien, a him : Coin, of Arthur 36 They that «, and they that held Lancelot and E. 455 Assassin earls, and caitiff knights, , I 's, Marr. of Geraint 36 Sanctuary granted To bandit, thief, a— Sir J. Oldcasth 113 Assault Sharp is the fire of o, Def. of Lucknoio fu_ Ever the mine and «, our sallies, „ 75 Assay ' I shall «,' said Gareth Gareth and L. 783 .1 it on some one of the Table Round, Merlin and V. 689 Assaye Against the myriads of .1 Ode on Well. 99 Assemble plans, And phantom hopes a ; Will Water. 30 Assembled Narrowing in to where they sat a Vision of Sin 16 Assent I gave a : Yet how to bind Princess, Con. 7 Assented Enoch all at once o to it, Enoch Arden 126 Assert a None lordlier than themselves Princess ii 143 «'s his claim In that dread sound Ode on Well. 70 Assign'd purpose of God, and the doom a. Maud III vi 59 quest .1 to her not worthy of it, Lancelot and E. 825 kiss the child That does the task a, „ 829 Assize •'^x 'Seize Association A fresh a blow. In Mem. a 18 Assoil'd And the Holy man he a us, V. of Maetdune 126 Assume law The growing world a, England and Amer. 17 lose the child, a The woman : Princess i 137 Assumed Arranged the favour, and « the Prince, ,, n- 602 ,1 from thence a half-consent ,, vii S2 A that she had thank'd him, Geraint and E. 646 Assuming ,svp All-assuming Assumption heart In its a's up to heaven ; In Mem. Lcm 4 quench'd herself In that a of the bridesmaid— tiisters {E. and E). 234 Assurance ,1 only breeds resolve,' Two Voices Z\b Assure may now a you mine ; Merlin and V. 549 Assured fief Half-assured Assyrian oil'd and curl'd ^4 Bull Smelling of musk 3Iand I vi 44 A kings would flay Captives Lorksleij H., Si.di/, 79 A'Stanning (standing) ' What's i' tha bottle a's theer ? ' Xorth. Cobbler 7 A-steppin' yon laiidy a-s along the streeat, ,, 107 Astolat (See alsn Lord of Astolat, Maid of Astolat) Elaine, the lily maid of -1 , Lancelot and E. 2 Ran to the Castle of A, ,,167 And issuing found the Lord of .1 ,, 173 then the Lord of .1 : ' Whence coniest thou, „ ISO said the Lord of .1, ' Here is Torre's : „ 195 And came at last, tho' late, to .4 : ,, 618 came The Lord of .1 out, to whom the Prince ,, 627 the Lord of A, 'Bide with us, ,, 632 About the maid of A, and her love. ,, 723 ' The maid of A loves Sir Lancelot, ,, 725 Sir Lancelot loves the maid of <4.' ,, 726 But far away the maid in A, ,, 745 To A returning rode the three, ,, 905 Then spake the lily maid of -,-1 : ,, ■ 1085 So that day there was dole in .!. ,, 1136 the lily maid of -1 Lay smiling, „ 1242 Astolat (oih/('«i'o/) I, sometime call'd the maid of ^1, Lancelot and E. 1273 Astride men and boys a On wy vern. Holy Grail 349 A-stroakin' (stroking) as I be a-s o' you, Spinster's S's. 19 Aatrsean second-sight of some A age, Princess ii 443 Astrology brought to understand A sad «, Maud I xviii Z6 Astronomy their cosmogonies, their astronomies : Columbus 42 Dead the new a calls her . . . Locksley H., Sixty, 175 ,1 and Geology, terrible Muses ! Parnassus 16 Asunder each as each, Not to be pluck'd a ; Holy Grail 777 They might be pluck'd a. „ 780 save they could be pluck'd rt, ,, 782 To tear the twain a in my heart, ,, 786 As if 'twere drawn a by the rack. Lover's Tide ii 57 shook us a, as if she had struck The Wrecl 108 'At (hat) doesn not touch thy 'a to the Squire ; ' Iforth. Cobbler 25 says Parson, and laays down 'is 'a, ,, 89 A-taakin' (taking) what a's doing a-t o' meii '! iV. Farmer, O.S. 45 A-talkin' Me an' thy muther, Sammy, 'as beiin «-( o' thee ; ,, N.S. Q Atar infuse Rich (/ in the bosom of the rose. Linker's Tale i 270 Ate .4 with young lads his portion Gareth and L. 480 Sat down beside him, a and then began. ,, 872 Sir Gareth drank and a, and all his life ,, 1280 let the horses graze, and a themselves. Gemini and E. 211 Geraint A all the mowers' victual ,, 215 I never a with angrier appetite ,, 233 ft with tumult in the naked hall, ,, 605 That ever among ladies a. in hall, Lancelot and E. 255 drank the brook, and a The goodly apples. Holy Grail 387 our solemn feast — we « and drank, Lover's Tale iv 221 Atheist Authors — essayist, «, Luchsley H. , Sixty , 139 On whom the women shrieking M ' Akbar's iJreain 91 Atheling (.S'ee nto Edmund Atheling) Also the brethren. King and .1, Batt. of Brunanburh 100 Athelstan (King of England) .4 King, Lord among Earls, ,, 1 Athene (Pallas) See Pallas, Pallas Athene Athens when -1 reign'd and Rome, Freedom 9 Athlete Until she be an a bold. Clear-headed friend 21 an ((, strong to break or bind Falaee cf Art 153 Athos Tomohrit, -1, all things fair, to E. L. 5 Atlantic waste .1 roU'd On her and us Third (f Feb. 21 I wish they were a whole .4 broad.' Princess, Con. 71 same bones back thro' the ^4 sea, Columbus 214 Atmosphere Floating thro' an evening «, KleUnore 100 For love possess'd the a, Miller's Ii. 91 Cold in that a of Death, //( Mem. xx 14 Atom If all be a.'s, how then should the Gods Lua-etius 114 Vanishing, a and void, a and void, ,, 258 Boundless inward, in the a, Locl:sley H., Sixty, 212 Atomic Being a not be dissoluble, Lua-etius 115 Atom-stream I saw the flaring a-s's And torrents ,, 38 Atomy Crowded with driving atomies, Lover's Tale ii 174 Atonement morning shine So rich in a as this Maud I xix 6 Attach phantasm of the form It should a to ? Lover's Tale i 647 Attain .1 the wise inditference of the wise ; A Dedication 8 Attain'd (.S'('«/«j Half-attained) haven Rest in a happy place CEnoael'iO Attempt Vivien should a the blameless King. Merlin and V. 164 Attend e.ach ear was prick'd to a A tempest, Princess vi 280 And in his presence I a To hear In Mem. exxri 2 Attendance And make her dance a : Am/thiioi 62 Yciu come with no a, page or maid, Geraint aud E. 322 Attended So she goes by him a, L. tf Burleigh 25 Attest .1 their great commander's claim Ode on Well. 148 Attic And round the a's rumbled. The Gnosc 46 single sordid a holds the living and the dead. Locksley II., Sixty, 222 Attire She in her poor a was seen : Beggar Maid 10 So splendid in his .acts and his a, Marr. of Geraint 620 Attired women who a her head, ,, 62 than Ger.aint to greet her thus n ; ,, 772 Attorney Sec 'Tumey Attracted a, won. Married, made one with. Lover's Tide i 133 Attribute all the gentle a's Of his lost child, Aylmer's Field 730 Or, crown'd with a's of woe In Mem. cxriii IS A-tuggin' Roiiver a-t an' tearin' my slietive. Owd Hud 60 A-tuggin' 21 Awake A-tuggin' {cojitinved) a-l an' tearin' me wuss nor afoor, Owd Roa 66 A-tumin ' be n-< ma hout upo' Christmas Eave ' ? ,, 59 A-twizzen'd (twisted) Wi' haafe o' the chimleys at ,, 22 Aubrey (Ellen) .*■ Ellen, Ellen Aubrey Audacious .St r Outdacious Audible Shaped liy the a and visible, Moulded the a and visible ; Lover's Tale ii 104 Audibly Half inwardly, half a she spoke, Marr. of Geraint 109 Audience at the palace craved A of Guinevere, Lancelot, and E. 1163 Audley J feast Humm'd like a hive Avdley Court i Audley Court Let us picnic there At ^4 C' ,, 3 Auger hammer and axe, .1 and saw, Enoch Arden 174 Auger-hole Boring a little n-/i in fear, Godiva 68 Aught — what, I would not a of false — Princess v 402 Unfaith in a is want of faith in all. Merlin and V. 389 less than swine, A naked « — Last Tournament 309 Augury how shall Britain light upon auguries happier ? Boddicea 45 Now with prosperous auguries • and Uncles. Edioin Morris 121 maiden A Took this fair day for text. Princess, Pro., 107 ' Why not now r the maiden .1. ,, 208 the maiden -4 (A little sense of wrong ,, 218 She fixt a showery glance upon her (^/, ,, CW. 33 Aurelian (Roman Emperor) the Palmyrene That fought .1, ,, ii 84 Aurelius (King of Britain) -1 lived and fought and died, Com. of Arthur 13 A Emrys would have scourged thee dead, Gareih and L. 375 Auricula among the gardens, o',s, anemones, City Child 4 Ausonian stay"d the A king to hear Palace of Art 111 Austerely master took Small notice, or a, Lucretius 8 Australasian the long wash of .1 seas Far off, Tlte Brook 194 Indian, .1, African, Ou Juh. Q. Victoria'. 61 Australian black A dying hopes he sh.all return, Loclsley H., Sixty, 70 Author A's — essayist, atheist, ,, 139 Authority ^1 forgets a dying king, M. d' Arthur 121 see that some one with a Be near her Princess vi 236 All people said she had a — ,, 238 And simple words of great a, Com. of Arthur 261 .1 forgets a dying king, Pass, of Arthur 289 Autocrat Aristocrat, democrat, a — Maud I x 65 wearied of -I's, Anarchs, and Slaves, Tlie Dreamer 10 Autumn (adj.) then one low roll Of A thunder. Last Tournament 153 Autumn (s) (*»' also Fall) .1 and summer Are gone long ago ; Nothing will Die 18 ^ , in a bower Grape-thicken'd Elearuyre 35 Till A brought an hour For Eustace, Gardener's D. 207 That (/ into a flash'd again, Enoch Arden 456 And breathes in April a's. The Brook 196 parcel-l)earded with the traveller's-joy In A, Aylmer's Field 154 .r.s- mock sunshine of the faded woods ,, 610 breadth Of .1, dropping fruits of power: Princess vi 55 after A past — if left to pass His a A iJedicatioa 9 And A, with a noise of rooks, Tn Mem. Ix.cxv 71 A laying here and there A fiery finger ,, (ccix 11 storms Of A swept across the city, Demeter a7td P. 71 and bless Their garner'd A also, ,, 147 Spring and Summer and .1 and Winter, Vastness 29 like May-blossoms in mid (/ — Tlie Ring 2.55 mist of a gather from your lake, ,, 329 Autumn-changed Then ; and then .1-c, The Oak & Autumn-dripping in a death-dumb a-d gloom. Last Tournament 756 Autumn-fields In looking on the happy .1;/', Princess ivi2 Autumn-sheaf Than of the garner'd J-s. Two Voices Wi Autumn-tide High over all the yellowing .l-<, I^ad Trook shall b down the plain, Di Mem. ci 10 Began to scoff and jeer and 6 of him Marr. of Geraint 58 because ye dream they b of you.' Merlin and V. 690 ye set yourself To b about him, Last Tournament 340 Babbled A for the golden se,al, that hung Dora\Z5 b for you, as babies for the moon, Princess iv 428 Had b ' Uncle ' on my knee ; In Mem. Ixxxiv 13 He moving homeward b to his men, ' (Jeraint and E. 362 While thus they b of the King, Lancelot and E. 1260 their tongues may have b of me — The Wreck 41 I myself have often b doubtless Locksley II., Sixty, 7 she s.aid, I b. Mother, Mother— 'The Ring 115 Babbler garrulously given, A t in the land. Talking Oak 24 she, like many another b, hurt Guinevere 354 mothers with their b's of the dawn, Tiresias 103 Babbling runlets }> down the glen. Mariana in the S. 44 his wheat-suburb, b as he went. The Brook 123 My words are like the b's in a dream Of nightmare, when the b's break the dream. Ancient Sage 106 Babby (See also Babe, Baby) An' then the b wur burn. North. Cobbler 16 an' she an' the b beal'd, ,, 37 An' the lis faitce wurn't wesh'd ,, 42 Thou's rode of 'is back when a b, Owd Roa 5 Babe (See al.^n Babby, Baby) Sat smiling, b in arm. Palace of Art 96 With his first b's first cry, Enoch Arden 85 Nursing the sickly b, her latest-born. ,, 150 Pray'd for a blessing on his wife and Ij's ,, 188 be comforted. Look to the b's, ,, 219 To give his i's a better bringing-up ,, 299 know his b's were running wild Like colts ,, 304 A gilded dragon, also, for the (I'.v. ,, .540 The b's, their babble, Annie, ,, 606 lived and loved him, and his 6's ,, 685 rosy, with his ?t across his knees ; ,, 746 and a ring To tempt the b, ,, 751 mother glancing often toward her /j, ,, 754 saw the /( Hers, yet not his, ,, 7.59 Babe 23 Baffle Babe {conthmed) I shall see him, My h in bliss : Enoch Arden 898 The h shall lead the lion. Aybnei's Field 648 the h Too ragged to be fondled ,, 685 One h was theirs, a Margaret, Sea. Dreains 3 the h. Their Margaret cradled near ,, 56 Her maiden h, a double April old, Princess ii 110 Father will come to his b in the nest, „ m 13 vassals to be beat, nor pretty b's ,, iv 146 my h, my blossom, ah, my child, ,, v 82 My h, my sweet Aglaia, my one child : ,, 101 With Psyche's &, was Ida watching us, ,, 512 Ida stood With Psyche's h in arm : ,, vi 31 with the b yet in her arms, ,, 74 h that by us, Half-Iapt in glowing gauze ,, 133 burst The laces toward her h ; ,, 149 Laid the soft b in his hard-mailed hands. ,, 208 Not tho' he built upon the b restored ; ,, mi 75 * Here's a leg for a b of a week ! ' Grandinother 11 for the b had fought for his life. „ 64 bring her b, and make her boast. In Mmn. xl 26 From youth and b and hoary hairs : ,, Ixix 10 Mammonite mother kills her b for a burial fee, Maud I i 45 red man's b Leap, beyond the sea. ,, xvii 19 now we poison our b's, poor souls ! ,, // 1' 63 in the tlame was borne A naked &, and rode to Merlin's feet, Who stoopt and caught the b. naked ?», of whom the Prophet spake, lad and girl — yea, the soft b ! ye men of Arthur be but b's,' As clean as Ijlood of 6's, his wife And two fair //s, seven-months' b had been a truer gift, broken shed, And in it a dead b ; brought A maiden h ; which Arthur pitying took, But the sweet body of a maiden b. cursed The dead b and the follies In honour of poor Innocence the b, bearing high in arms the mighty 6, And over all her b and her the jewels bearing on one arm the noble /*, Whereat the very b began to wail ; a truth the b Will suck in with his milk b in lineament and liml) Perfect, and the wail Of a beaten b, Saving women and their b's, a cotter's b is royal-born by right divine ; many a time ranged over when a b. senseless, worthless, wordless b, all her talk was of the // she loved ; She used to shun the wailing i. In your sweet b she finds but you — bending by the cradle of her b. linger, till her own, the b She lean'd to found Paris, a naked b, among the woods I was lilting a song to the 6, Screams of a i in the red-hot palms and Rome was a 6 in arms, Babe-faced He came with the b-f lord ; Babel let be Their cancell'd B's\ clamour grew As of a new-world B, Baby (adj.) Moulded thy b thought. Baby (s) in her bosom bore the />, Sleep. As ruthless as a b with a worm, Then lightly rocking b's cradle from her b's forehead dipt A tiny curl, His Us death, her growing poverty, What does little b say, B says, like little birdie, By sleep a little longer, B too shall fly away. babies roU'd about Like tumbled fruit Vtabbled for you, as babies for the moon, I knew them all as babies, Coin, of Arthur SSi Gareth and L. 501 „ 1341 Balin and Balan 361 Merlin and V. 344 707 711 Holy Grail 399 Last Tournament 21 48 163 292 Lover's Tale iv 295 298 370 375 Colifiuhi's 37 De Prof. Two G. 11 The Wreck 123 Lochsley H., Sixty, 64 125 The Ring 151 304 353 358 365 „ 415 483 Death of (E}wnp 54 Bandifs Death 20 The Dami 2 9 Maud II i 13 Princess iv 77 487 Mea?im-e 5 Gardener's D. 268 Wcdk. til the Mail 108 JH'itoch Arden 194 235 705 .Sea Dreams 301 303 305 308 Princess, Pro., 82 „ iv 428 (t'lUitdmuther 88 Baby (s) (contitmed) The h new to earth and sky, In. Mem. xlv 1 I cannot bide Sir B. Pelleas and E. 190 I have gather'd my h together — Rizpah 20 My b, the bones that had suck'd me, , , 53 kill Their haliles at the breast Oolumbtis 180 'Anything ailing,' I asked her, 'with I/!' The Wreck 61 Baby-germ gamboU'd on the greens A h-i/. Talking Oak 78 Baby-girl a b-g, that had never look'd on the light : Despair 71 Babyism In li's, and dear diminutives Aylmer's Field 539 Babylon Shall B be cast into the sea ; Hea Dreams 28 and life Pass in the fire of B ! Sir J. Oldcastle 124 For B was a child new-born, Tlie Dawn 9 Babylonian The foundress of the B wall, Princess ii 80 Baby-oak magnetise The b-o within. Talking Oak 256 Baby-rose The b-r's in her cheeks ; Lilian 17 Baby-sole tender pink five-beaded b-s's, Aylmer's Field 186 Baby-wife nor wail of b-w. Or Indian widow ; Akbar's Dream 196 Bacchanal like wild B's Fled onward Lmxr's Tale Hi 25 Bacchante B, what you will ; Romney's R. 6 Bacchus mailed B leapt into my arms, D. nf F. Women 151 Back wear an undress'd goatskin on my b ; St. S. Slylites 116 How she mouths behind my b. Vision of Sin 110 Read rascal in the motions of his b Sea Dreams 167 hear my father's clamour at our b's Princess i 105 Her b against a pillar, her foot ,, Hi 180 Them as 'as coiits to their 6'5 an' taakes iV, Farmer, N. S, 46 The daily burden for the b. In Mem., xxv 4 h turn'd, and bow'd above his work, Marr. of Geraiyit 267 brutes of mountain b That carry kings Merlin and V. 576 long b's of the bushless downs, (repeat) Lancelot and F. 400, 789 Look at the cloiiths on 'er b. North. Cobbler 109 Backbiter Face-flatterer and b are the same. Merlin and V, 824 Back d See Bow-back'd Bacon (Francis) See Verulam Bacon See Baacon Bad (adj. ) base and b ! what comfort ? Princess v 78 for she wur a 6 un, shea. N. Fanner, O.S. 22 the poor in a loomp is i. ,, N.S. 48 What is she now '! My dreams are b. Maud I i 73 And here beneath it is all as b, ,, II v H good ye are and b, and like to coins, Holy Grail 25 Ya was niver sa b as that. Church-warden, etc. 26 Bad (b) I fear to slide from b to worse. Two Voices 231 sa o' coorse she be gone to the b ! Village Wife 98 I wur gawin' that waiiy to the b, Oicd Roa 71 Bad-bade (verb) I made a feast : I bad him come ; The Sisters 13 and do the thing I /«'(/thee, M. d' Arthur 81 utter'd it, And l>udc adieu for ever. Love and Daly 83 bade him cry, with sound of trumpet, Godiva 36 bad him with good heart sustain himself — Aylmer's Field 544 He bad you guard the sacred coasts. Ode an Well. 172 my three brethren bad me do it, Gareth and L. 1410 ' Fair Sir, they bad me do it. ,, 1417 Thro' which he liad her lead him on, Oeraint and E. 29 6(((^ the host Call in what men ,, 285 Prince iiirf him a loud good-night. ,, 361 In this poor gown he bad me clothe myself, ,, 702 Nor waved his hand, Nor bad farewell, Lancelot U'nd E. 987 who i«rf a thousand farewells to me, ,, 1056 Lancelot, who coldly went, nor bad me one : ,, 1057 So Arthur 6«rf the meek Sir Percivale ,, 1264 I left her and I bad her no farewell ; ,, 1304 when he saw me, rose, and bad me hail, Holy Grail 725 and do the thing I bade thee, Pass, of Arthur 249 bail them to a banquet of farewells. Lover's Tale iv 186 bad his menials bear him from the door, ,, 260 We bad them no farewell, ,, 386 bad them remember my father's death, V. of Maeldune 70 bad his trumpeter sound To the charge, Heavy Brigade 8 I t)ad her keep, Like a seal'd book. The Ring 122 had tho man engrave ' From Walter' on tlie ring, ,, 235 Badger live like an old b in his earth. Holy Grail 629 Badon broke the Pagan yet once more on D hill.' Lancelot ami E. 280 on the mount Of B I myself beheld „ 303 Baffle ' Thy glory b's wisdom. Akbar's Dream 28 Baffled 24 Band Baffled Havelock h, or beaten, Dp/, nf Lnchimr 91 B her priesthood, Broke the Taboo, Kapiolani 29 Baffling winds variable, Then b, a long course of them ; Enoch Arden 546 blown by b winds, Like the Good Fortune, , , 628 Bag not plunge His hand into the b : Golden Year 72 with b and sack and basket, Enoch Arden 63 Bagdat By B's shrines of fretted gold, Arabian Nights 7 mooned domes aloof In inmost £, ,, 128 Bagpipe i's, revelling, devil's-dances, Sir J. Oldcastk U9 Bailey-gate storm at the £-17 ! storm, Def. of Lm-know S7 Bailiff his b brought A Chartist pike. Walk, to the Mail 70 how he sent the /) to the farm The Brook 1-11 how the 6 swore that he was mad, >■ 143 He met the b at the Golden Fleece, ,, 146 He found the b riding by the farm, ,■ 153 Bairn (See also Bame) ' See your b's before you go ! Enoch Arden 870 But fur thy b's, poor Steevie, Spinster's Ss. 82 thou was es fond o' thy b's m 83 wi' my b u" 'is mouth to the winder Owd Rod 92 Bait the b's Of gold and beauty, Aylmer's Field 486 Christ the b to trap his dupe and fool ; Sea Breoms 191 hinted love was only wasted b, The Ring 360 Baited so spurn'd, so b two whole days— Sir J. Oldcastle lt)3 Bake whose brain the sunshine b's ; St. S. Stylites 164 Baked {See also Baaked) Over all the meadow b and bare, Siste-rs {E. and E.) S Baking not earn'd my cake in i of it ? Gareth and L. h1^ Bala south-west that blowing B lake Geraint and E. 929 Balau Balin and B sitting statuelike, BaJin and Balan 24 on the lef t Of /J /J's near a poplartree. ,, 30 Balin and S answer'd ' For the sake , , 32 Then Balin rose, and B. ,.43 and my better, this man here, B, ,,55 fury on myself, Saving for B : ,,63 Than twenty Balins, £ knight. ., 69 Then B added to their Order „ 91 Said jB ' I '! So claim 'd the quest .. 137 B warn'd, and went ; Balin remain'd : ,, 153 He took the selfsame track as 5, ,, 290 and B lurking there (His quest was unaccomplish'd) ,, 546 shield of B prick'd The hauberk ,, 559 had chanced, and B moan'd again. ,, 604 Balance (equipoise) As the wind-hover hangs in b, Aylmer's Field .321 Balance (verb) who would east and 6 at a desk, A udley Court ii Like souls that b joy and pain, Sir L. and Q. G. 1 Balanced (* also Earth-baldness) Began to wag their b up and down. Princess v 19 Baldric from his blazon'd i slung L. of Shalott Hi 15 Bale dropping down with costly b's ; Lockdey Hall 122 tho' they brought but merchants' b's, In Mem. xiii 19 Balin B and Balan sitting statuelike, Balin and Balan 24 on the right of B B's horse W.as fast ,, 28 B and Balan answer'd ' For the sake ,, 32 Then B rose, and Balan, „ 43 B the stillness of a minute broke „ &1 i{, ' the Savage '—that addition thine — ,, 53 Than twenty B's, Balan knight. „ 69 Thereafter, when Sir B enter'd hall, ,, 80 heretofore with these And jB, , , 93 Embracing 5, ' Good my brother, ,, 139 Balan warn'd, and went ; B remain'd : ,, 153 B marvelling oft How far beyond „ 171 Arthur, when Sir B sought him, said ,, 198 B was bold, and ask'd To bear „ 199 ' No shadow' said Sir B ' my Queen, „ 206 B bare the crown, and all the knights ,, 209 chanced, one morning, that Sir B sat ,, 240 Balin [confin vcd) FoUow'd the Queen; Sir B heard her Balin and Balan 250 and B started from his bower. ,, 280 B cried ' Him, or the viler devil ,, 299 B answer'd him ' Old fabler, ,, 306 Said B ' For tho fairest and the best ,, 339 B said ' The Queen we worship, ,, 348 A goblet on the board by iJ, ,, 362 This B graspt, but while in act to hurl, ,, 368 Sir B with a fiery ' Ha ! „ 393 B by the banneret of his helm ,, 398 B drew the shield from off his neck, , , 429 And B rose, ' Thither no more ! ,, 483 Said B to her ' Is this thy courtesy — ,, 494 Sir B spake not word, But snatch'd ,, 553 B's horse Was wearied to the death, ,, 560 they clash'd. Rolling back upon B, ,, 562 £ first woke, and seeing that true face, ,, 590 ■0 B, B.l that fain had died To save ,, 599 B told him brokenly, and in gasps, ,, 603 * brother ' answer'd B ' woe is me ! ,, 618 is answer'd low ' Goodnight, ,, 627 and slept the sleep With /5, ,, 632 Balk'd with a worm I b his fame. D. of F, Wermen 155 Ball (globe) ' No compound of this earthly b Two Voices 35 Ball (game) Had tost his b and flown his kite, Aylmer's Field 84 Flung b, flew kite, and raced the purjjle fly, Pnncess ii 248 others tost a b Above the fountain-jets, „ 461 Quoit, tenuis, b — no games ? ,, Hi 215 And we took to playing at b, V. of Alaeldune 94 Ball (round object) whereon the gilded li Danced Princess, Pro., 63 like a b The russet-bearded head roll'd Geraint and E. 728 he made me the cowslip b. First Quarrel 13 Ball (orb) To him who grasps a golden b. In Mem. ad 3 Ball (the sun) The day comes, a dull red b Maud II iv 65 Ball (the heel) Dagonet, turning on the b of his foot, last Tournament 329 Ball (entertainment of dancing) But I came on him once at a b, Tlie Wreck 47 Ball (plaything) Is to be the 6 of Time, Vis'iun of Sin V& Ball (^'v nlxo Acorn-ball, Blossom-ball, Cannon-ball, Cowslip Ball, Football) Ballad time to time, some i or a song Princess, Pro., 241 something in the b's which they sang, ,, C&ti, 14 flung A i to the brightening moon : In Mem, Ixxxix 28 A passionate b gallant and gay, Maud I v i To the b that she sings. Maud II iv 43 carolling as he went A true-love b, Lancelot and E. 705 lay At thy pale feet this b Ucil. Poem Prin. Alice 20 Ballad-burthen Like b-b music, kept. The Daisy 77 Ballast we laid them on the b down below ; The Rerenge 18 Balliol loved by all the younger gown There at B, To Master of B. 3 Balloon See Fire-balloon Balm steep our brows in slumber's holy b ; Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 21 desires, like fitful blasts of b Gardener's D. 68 spikenard, and b, and frankincense. St. S. Stylites 211 caress The ringlet's waving b — Talking Oak 178 Beat b upon our eyelids. Princess Hi 123 Be thine the b of pity, Merlin and V. 80 Strowing b, or shedding poison Loclsley II., Sixty, 274 who breathe the b Of summer-winters To Ulysses 10 ' From the South I bring you b. Prog, of Spring 66 whatever herb or b May clear the blood Death of (Enime 35 Balm-cricket The b-c carols clear In the green A Dirge 47 Balm-dew drop B-d's to bathe thy feet ! Talking Oak 268 Balm'd swathed and b it for herself. Lover's Tale i 682 Balmier kisses b than half-opening buds Tithonus 59 B and nobler from her bath of storm, Lucretius 175 Baltic sliaker of the B and the Nile, Ode on Well. 137 side of the Black and the B deep, Maud III vi 51 Baluster And leaning there on those b's. Princess Hi 119 Balustrade stairs Ran up with golden b, Arabian Nights 118 Bamboo Your cane, your palm, tree-fern, b. To Ulysses 36 Band (bond, strip) bind with b's That island queen Bnonajjarte 2 Sleep had bound her in his rosy b, Caress'd or chidden 6 A b of [lain across my brow ; The Letters 6 Band 25 Bard Band (bond, strip) {coiiliiuied) single I of gold about her hair, Princess v 513 No spirit ever brake the h In Mem. xciii 2 bars Of black and h's of silver, Loverr's Tale iv 59 an' twined like a 6 o' haiiy. Oi'-d Rod 22 Band (a company) held debate, a h Of youthful friends, hi Mem. Ixxxvii 21 in a dream from a i of the blest, Maud III vi 10 if he live, we will have him of our b ; Geraint and E. 553 thanks to the Blessed Saints that I came on none of his h : Bandit's Death 40 S will be scatter'd now their gallant captain is dead, ,, 41 Bandage raised the blinding h from his eyes : Princess i 244 Banded (See also Snowy-banded, Yellow-banded) but after, the great lords B, Com. of Arthur 237 Bandied B by the hands of fools. Vision of Sin 106 Bandit redden'd ^\'ith no h's blood : Aylmer's Field 597 bridge, ford , beset By h's, Gareth and L. 595 I saw three h's by the rock Geraint and E. 72 Struck thro' the bulky 6'^ corselet home, ,, 159 now so long By h's groom'd, ,, 193 Was half a 6 in my lawless hour, ,, 795 One from the 6 scatter'd in the field, ,, 818 Scaped thro' a cavern from a b hold. Holy Grail 207 Thieves, h's, leavings of confusion, Last Tournament 95 Sanctuary granted To Ji, thief. Sir J. Oldcastle 113 tho' 1 am- the B's bride. Bandit's Death 6 But the B had woo'd me in vain, „ 10 Bandit-haunted past The marches, and by b-h holds, Geraint and E. 30 Bane courtesies of household life, Became her /) ; Guinevere 87 mockery of my people, and their h.' ,, 526 Bang Let us b's these dogs of Seville, The Revenue 30 good manners b thruf to the tip o' the taiiil. Spinster's S's. Q6 Bang'd palace b, and buzz'd and clackt, Daij-Dm., Revival, 14 iron-clanging anvil b With hammers ; Princess v 504 Banished born And h into mystery. De Prof. Two G. 42 Banishment causer of his h and shame, Balin and Balan 221 Bank (>-. c/s" River-bank, Sea-bank) In cool soft turf upon the b, Arabian Nights 96 wave-worn horns of the echoing &, Dying Swan 39 Shadow forth the b's at will : Elciinore 110 From the b and from the river L. of Slialutt, Hi 33 broad stream in his b's complaining, ,, iv 3 The little life of b and brier, Vmi might liave wmi 30 With many a curve my h's T fret The Brook 43 maidens glimmeringly group'd In the hollow h. Princess iv 191 shadowing bluff that made the h's. In Mem. ciii 22 Behind a purple-frosty /) Of vapour, ,, erii 3 Full to the Vs. close on the promised good Muiul I xviii 6 Rough-thicketed were the ^'.s' and steep ; Gareth and L. 907 star of morn Parts from a ti of snow. Mart, of Geraint 735 Tho' happily down on a h of grass, Geraint and E. 507 like a 6 Of maiden snow mingled Lust Tournament 148 leaves Low li's of yellow sand ; Lover's Tale i 535 thaw the tj's o' the beck be sa high. Village Wif- S:i Plunges and heaves at a 6 Def. of Lutknow ^19 slushin' down fro' the h to the beck, Oicd Ili>,} 41 Here on this h in souie way live the life Akhar's Drevm 144 Bankrupt b of all claim On your obedience, Romney's R. 70 Banner (.S'cc <(/»■" Flame-banner) Here droops the i on the tower, liay-Dm., Sleep. P., 13 hedge broke in, the h blew, Day-lhn. Revival 9 unfurl the maiden b of our rights, Princess iv 503 undulated The ?( ; anon to meet us ,, i' 254 With /) and with music. Ode on Well. 81 March with b and bugle and fife Maud I r 10 hail once more to the b of battle unroU'd ! Maud III ri 42 So when the King had set his h broad, C<»(i. of Arthur 101 with black li. and a long black horn Gareth and. L. 1366 h's of twelve battles overhead Stir, Balin and Balan 88 deeds Of England, and her h in the East'? Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 21 B of England, not for a season, h Def. of Liicknow 1 topmost roof our 6 of England blew, (repeat) Def. of Luelcnmo 6, .30, 45, 60, 94 topmost roof our h in India blew. Def. of Lucknmc 72 Banner (^continued) on the palace roof the old h of England blew. Thraldom who walks with the 6 of Freedom, h's blazoning a Power That is not seen Banneret a slender h fluttering. Balin by the b of his helm Dragg'd Def. if Lucknow 106 Vastness 10 Akbar's Dream 137 Gareth and L. 913 Balin and Balan 398 Banquet (*<■ also Marriage-banquet, Mid-banquet) Each baron at the ti sleeps, liay-Dm., Sleep. P., 37 beeswing from a binn reserved For h's, Aylmer's Field 406 distant blaze of those dull 6'^^, ,, 489 with this our h's rang ; Princess i 132 With h in the distant woods ; In Mem. Ixxxix 32 flowers or leaves To deck the ^^ ,, cmi6 Spice his fair b with the dust of death ? Maud I xviii 56 at the h those great Lords from Rome, Com. of Arthur 504 Faint in the low dark hall of /. : Balin and Balan 343 (She sat beside the h nearest Mark), Merlin and V. 18 made him leave The b, and concourse Lancelot and E. 562 Arthur to the h, dark in mood, ,, 564 ev'n the knights at b twice or thrice ,, 736 against the floor Beneath the h, ,, 743 While the great h lay along the hall. Holy Grail 180 Then Arthur made vast b's, Pelleas and E. 147 bad them to a ii of farewells. Lovers Tale iv 186 cries about the ?» — 'Beautiful! ,, 239 To make their b relish ? Aticient Sage 18 Banqueted Let the needy be b. On Juh. Q. Victoria 35 Banquet-hall Into the fair Pele'ian i-/(, Banter (s) he spoke. Part h, part affection. Princess, Pro., 167 They hated h, wish'd for something real, ,, Con., 18 Banter (verb) With solemn gibe did Eustace b me. Gardetier's D. 168 Banter'd 1 h him, and swore They said Golden Year 8 With which we b little Lilia first : Princess, Con., 12 Bantling Then let the b scald at home, Princess, v 458 Lo their precious Roman h, Boddicea 31 Baptis (Baptist) Fur I wur a B wonst, Clmrch-warden, etc. 11 tha ini/u speiik hout to the B'es here i' the town, ,, 51 Bar (barrier) (.S'f also Harbour-bar, Window-bars) Sang looking thro' his prison b's 'i Margaret 35 salt pool, lock'd in with b's of sand. Palace of Art 249 My spirit beats her mortal b's, Sir Galalmd 46 Low breezes fann'd the belfry h's, Tlie Letters 43 Save for the h between us, loving Enoch Arden 880 I linger by my shingly h's ; The Brook 180 Baronet yet had laid No b between them : Aylmer's Field 118 nor conscious of a 6 Between them, ,, 134 squeezed himself betwixt the b's. Princess, Pro., 112 Who breaks his birth's invidious h. In Mem. Ixiv 5 Unloved, by many a sandy h, ,, ci 9 Rave over the rocky b. Voice and the P. 6 those that hand the dish across the b. Gareth and L. 155 may there be no moaning of the h. Crossing the Bar 3 When I have crost the b. „ 16 Bar (band) long night in silver .streaks and h'.i, Lover's Tale, ii 112 //*■ Of black .and bands of silver, ,, ct 58 Bar (iron rod) casting li or stone Wa-s counted best ; Gareth and L. 518 Bar (bony ridge) The b of Michael Angelo In Mem. Ixxxvii 40 Bar (ray) stream 'd thro' many a golden h, Jkty-Dm., Depart. 15 Bar (tribunal) himself The prisoner at the b, Sea Dreams 176 Bar (body of barristers) year or two before Call'd to the h. A yluier's Field 59 Bar (division of music) Whistling a random b of Bonny Doon, The Brook 82 Bar (verb) doors that h The secret bridal chambers Gardener's IK 248 block and h Your he.art with system Princess iv 462 Thro' the gates that h the distance Faith 6 Barbarian Till that o'ergrown B in the East Poland 7 gray h lower than the Christian child. Lockslei/ Hall 174 ' Wh(^ ever saw such wild />'.s'. '? Girls ? — Princess Hi 42 Jj's, grosser than your native bears — ,, iv 537 Barbarous These women were too 'i, ,, m298 Barcelona At C— tho' you were not Columlms 8 Bard h has honour'd beech or lime. Talking Oak 291 O little ti, is your lot so hard, Spiteful Letter 5 6'i- of him will sing Hereafter ; Com. of Arthur i\i Bard Bard (contimied) not then the Riddling of the B's ? Was also B, and knew the starry heavens ; her A, her silver star of eve, Her God, many a b, without offence, all the sacred madness of the /;, thy Paynim h Had such a mastery ' Yea, one, a /< ; of whom my father said, the h Sang Arthur's glorious wars. 26 Barrier Gareth and L. 286 Merlin and V. 169 954 Lancdnt nvd E. Ill ]h>hi (i,„il 877 Last Tmiriuiment 326 Uumevere 277 285 V. o/MaeMune 90 To Victi/f Hugo 4 Parnassus 2 Ihiing S'mtil 1 Piilace ,if A rt 111 T). of F. )r.»w«159 The Letters 4 Aylmer's Field 7S5 Princess, Pro., 184 ,, I't 65 Light Brigade 27 i>i Mem. xliii 6 ,, Ixxxvi 4 Gareth and L. 414 we chanted the songs of the B's B whose fame-lit laurels glance B's, that the mighty Muses have raised Bare (adj.) plain was grassy, wild and h, tfod, before whom ever lie ti argent of her breast to sight Laid b. And saw the altar cold and 1). our love and reverence left them h ? walks were stript as 6 as brooms, strip a hundred hollows b of Spring, Flash'd all their sabres /), y> of the body, might it last, breathing b The round of space, shield was blank and /; without a .sign Worn by the feet that now were .silent, wound B to the sun, Marr. of Oeraint 322 in my agony Did I make b j^yeer's Tcde ii 48 Over al) the meadow baked and b, Sisters (E. and E ) 8 strip your own foul pa.s.sions (, ; Locksky U., Sixty 141 Hi.s friends had stript him /., Xle«4 Prophet 14 An haafe on im b as a bublin'. Qy,fi ^,j^ jo2 honest Poverty, h to the bone ; Vastiieis 19 now arching leaves her 6 To breaths Prog, of Spriun {'> Bare (to bear) hoofs b on the ridge of spears Priueess n 489 and /) Straight to the doors : „^ 3^g first that ever I b was dead Graiuinwther 59 bVhe use of virtue out of earth : /„ Mem. Ixxxii 9 1 his b a maiden shield, a casque ; Gareth and L. 680 down upon him b the bandit three. Geraint and E. 84 he, she dreaded most, b down upon him. J5g B victual for the mowers : ' ' 2()'> b her by main violence to the board. " ggj Balin h the crown, and all the knights Balin andSalan 209 I rampled ye thus on that which i the Crown?' , 602 he that always b in bitter grudge Merlin and V 6 great and guilty love he b the Queen, Lancelot and E. 245 In battle with the love he b his lord, , 246 all together down upon him ZJ, " 432 came the hermit out and b him in, " 519 often in her arms She b me, " X^iW none might see who h it, and it past. Holy Grail 190 his creatures took and b him off, Guinevere 109 Bare (to lay open) Falsehood shall b her plaited brow : Clenr-hexided fnend 11 To b the eternal Heavens again, /7t Mem. cxxii 4 Bared The rites prepared, the victim b, The Victim 65 tho' it spake and b to view /,i Mem. xcii 9 b the knotted column of his throat, Marr. of Geraint 74 b her forehead to the blistering sun, Geraint and E. 515 Barefoot For b on the keystone, Gareth and L. 214 Bare-footed B-f came the beggar maid Beggar Maid 3 Bf and bare-headed three fair girls Gareth and L. 926 Bare-grinniug Flash'd the b-g skeleton of death ! Merlin and V. 847 Bare-headed Some cowled, and .some b-h, Princess ri 77 Bare-footed and b-h three fair girls Gareth and L. 926 Bareness To make old b picturesque Jn Mem. cxxviii 19 Bargain they closed a b, hand in hand. The Brook 156 May rue the b made.' Princess i 74 Barge Slide the heavy b's trail'd L. of Shtdott i 20 Then saw they how there hove a dusky h, M.d' Arthur 193 ' Place me in the b,' And to the h they came. 204 slowly answered Arthur from the b: " 239 h with oar and sail Moved from the brink, " 265 and a i Be ready on the river, Lancelot and E. 1122 to that stream whereon the b, , 2141 slowly past the i Whereon the lily maid " 124] the b, On to the palace-doorway sliding, ' 1245 Lancelot and E. 139 Last Tmirnament 45 Pass, of A rthur 361 372 ., 407 433 Gardener's D, 43 Barge {continued) b that brought her moving down, ° that unhappy child Past in her b : Then saw they how there hove a dusky b ' Place me in the b.' So to the b they came, slowly answer'd Arthur from the 6 : ?< with oar and sail Moved from the brink, Barge-laden creeps on, B-t, to three arches Bark (vessel) (.See aho Crescent-bark) a b that blowing forward, bore ' j/. d' Arthur Ep. 21 I find a magic 6 ; Sir Galahad Z9, sw ftly stream d ye by the h ! The Vowiie 50 lading and unlading the tall b's, Enoch A rden 816 this^fraiU; ot ours, when sorely tried, Aylmer's Field 715 I sit within a helmless b ' /„ Men. iv 3 unhappy b That .strikes by night ^.to 12 spare thee, sacred b ; " ^^^ ^4 /.had plunder'd twenty namele,ss isles ; Merlin and V. 559 Down on a b, and overbears the b, Lancelot and E. 485 iSark (of a tree) silver-green with gnarled b : Mariana 4-5 And rugged b's begin to bud, Mg life is full 18 bark (verb) B an answer, Britain's raven ! b and blacken innumerable, Boadicea 13 Let the fox b. let the wolf yell. Pd/eas and E. 472 R».wv. r.°v,^T''l"'',S . , V.ofMaMmielS Barketh /.the shepherd-dog cheerly ; Leonine Eleq. 5 Barking b for the thrones of kings ; Ode on Well. 121 Bark s-bosom Borne in the h-b. Batt. of Bmnanbwrh 49 Barley Long fields of ?, and of rye, L. of Sfudott i 2 In among the bearded b, ,29 And raked in golden b. \Yill Water 128 Barley-sheaves He rode between the i-«, L. of Sludoti Hi 2 Barley-spear b-s s Were hollow-husk'd, Demeter and P. 112 Barmaid ' Bitter b waning fast ! vision of Sin 67 Bam got to the b, fur the b wouldn't burn OwdJioa 103 but the b was as cowd as owt, jji Bame (bairn) Bessy Harris's b. (repeat) iV. Farmer, o"s 14 21 Baron (title) Each 6 at the banquet sleeps, T)ay-Dm., Sleep' p' Zl The Vs swore, with many words, , , R,,^^ 23 gaunt old B with his beetle brow Pnncess ii 240 bush-bearded B s heaved and blew, „ 21 In doubt if you be of our a's' breed— Third of Feb 32 Lords and B's of his realm Com. of Arthur 65 Jj s and the kings prevail'd, J05 fought against him in the B's' war, Gareth and L. 77 A knight ot Uther in the B's war, 353 a stalwart B, Arthur's friend. " 310 /< saying, ' I well believe [' 335 the /J set Gareth beside her, " gjj Setting this knave. Lord B. at my side. " §54 His B said ■ We go but harken : Bcdin and Bcdan 9 Heard from the B that, ten years Lancelot and E. 2T2 Count, b — whom he smote, he overthrew. 4g5 Bracelet-bestower and B of B's, Bait, of Brunanburk 4 Baronet hoar hair of the B bristle up Aylmer's Field 42 /> yet had laid No bar between them : 117 Rn J^h" ""'f ,'"^:, ''f'^'''* ^ h''' , . Prince's, Con. 84 Barr d Al b with long white cloud Palace of Art 83 Lvery door is b with gold, Locksley Hall 100 door shut and window b. Godiva 41 home-circle of the poor They b her : A ylmer's Field 505 But now last b : Princess v 367 *"u} ,®"*s",ng '' ''<="■ ''oor. Lancelot ami E. 15 ribb d And b with bloom on bloom. Lover's Tale i 416 Barren But it is wild and /,, Amphion2 llie soil, left A, scarce had grown /«, Mem liii 7 Barren- beaten He left the 1,-b thoroughfare, Lancelot and E 161 Barricade Should pile her b's with dead. In Mem. exxvii 8 T!» Jit t'' °"'' f^}^ h A . .u , ^'f- "f L-uchnow 15 Barrier trumpet blared At the b Princess v 486 burst All b's in her onward race hi Mem. exiv 14 Back to the b ; then the trumpets Lancelot and E. 500 almost burst the b's in their heat, Holy Grail 336 voice that biUow'd round the b's JmsI Tournament 167 LocMey H., Sixty, 115 St. Tdeinachiis 60 Princess Con. 66 Titlwnus 71 Enoch Arden- 7 442 ■^50 To the Queen 8 On a Alourner 4 Aylnier's Field 292 Princess v 78 Mand I iv 36 „ •() 18 „ x33 Mair. of Oeraint 468 Guinevere 480 Happy 17 Barrier 27 Barrier (coiitinucd) Russia bursts our Indian ?*, ?) that divided beast from man Slipt, Barring out graver than a schoolboy's 6 o ; Barrow grassy Vs of the happier dead. behind it a gray down With Danish Vs ; Pass from the Danish h overhead ; Barter not being bred To h, Base (adj.) him tliat utter'd notlcinr/ b ; Counts nothing that she meets with h, ' Ungenerous, dishonourable, i, O h and bad ! what eoraf ort '! is he not too b ? And myself so languid and h. And therefore splenetic, personal, b, Nor know I whether I be very b Not only to keep down the I in man, spared the Hesh of thousands, the coward and the b, Base (s) {■'