I CONCORDANCE TO TENNYSON'S WORKS CONCORDANCE TO THE WORKS OF ALFRED TENNYSON POET LAUREATE STRAHAN & CO., PUBLISHERS 56 LUDGATE HILL, LONDON 1870 (x r K s^ JOHN CHILDS AND SON, PRINTERS. CONCORDANCE. - — ( - A. Says that I moant 'a naw moor yaale — as I 'a done by the lond An' I thowt a said whot a owt to 'a said — 'a bean, mayhap, for she wur a bad un — an' I 'a stubb'd Thornaby waaste — an' I mean'd to 'a stubb'd it at fall Or a mowt 'a taaken Robins A mowt 'a taaken Joanes And I 'a monaged for Squoire — summun I reckons 'ull 'a to wroite 'AAPOTH. — as 'ant a 'a. o' sense 'AASTE. — thof summun said it in 'a. ABADDON and Asmodeus caught at me ABASE those eyes that ever loved to meet ABASH'D. For Enid all a. she knew not why IK. 41 Page E. A. 128 E. A. 129 E. A. 130 E. A. 131 E. A. 131 E. A. 133 E. A. 134 E. A. 134 E. A. 134 E. A. 133 E. A. 134 E. A. 131 Poems 242 Pr. 51 A. Lavaine, whose instant reverence /. K. 169 —half a. him ; yet unask'd E. A. 16 ABATE the stride, which speaks of man Pr. 51 ABBESS. Our simple-seeming A. and her /. K. 241 Dwelt with them, till in time their A. died /. K 261 Was chosen A., there, an A., lived /. K. 261 For three brief years, and there, an A., past /. K. 261 ABBEY. 'To the A. : there is Aunt Elizabeth Pr. 4 — we went back to the A., and sat on Pr. 182 ABBEY-RUIN. Carved stones of the A. Pr. 2 ABBEY-WALLS. I see the moulder'd A. Poems 245 ABBOT. An a. on an ambling; pad Poems 6-» ABDIEL. — Titan angels, Gabriel, A. E. A. 174 ABE AN. — whoy, Doctor's a. an' agoan E. A. 128 ABEAR. —for I couldn a. to see it E. A. 136 A-BEGGING. I never came a. for myself Poems 219 ABEYANCE. — winters of a. all worn out Pr. 97 ABHORR'D. —they fell and made the glen a. /. K. 149 ABHORRENT of a calculation crost E. A. 26 ABIDE. ' Trust me, in bliss I shall a. Poems 113 Tho' much is taken, much abides Poems 267 In whose least act abides the nameless charm Pr. no You draw from, fight : 3-ou failing, I a. A. : thy wealth is gather'd in A. a little longer here Dare I bid her a. by her word ? And shalt a. her judgment on it ; next ' I will a. the coming of my Lord Whom he knows false, a. and rule the house /. K. "2^2, ABIDEST. Than beasts, a. lame and poor Pms 298 ABIDING with me till I sail In M. 194 That a. phantom cold Ma. 98 ABLE-BODIED. Grew plump and a. Poems 185 ABLER. — quarter-sessions chairman, a. none Pr. 181 And many an a. voice than thou In M. 57 ABOARD, —casks were fill'd they took a. E.A. 35 ABODE. With farmer Allan at the farm a. Poems 214 So those four a. Poems 220 Wherein the younger Charles a. Poems 237 And she a. his coming, and said to him /. K. 53 So the stately Queen a. /. K. 232 The mightiest of my knights, a. with me /. K. 247 Clave to him, and a. in his own land /. K. 248 ABODEST. While thou a. in the bud Poems 296 ABOLISH. Caught at the hilt, as to a. him /. K. 12 Pr. 128 In M. 74 In M. fr. Ma. S4 I.K. 31 IK. 52 Page ABOMINABLE. The A., that uninvited came Pms 106 — shatter it, hold it a. E. A. 172 ABROAD. — bravely furnish'd all a. to fling Poems 39 But at night I would roam a. and play Poems 58 And none a. : there was no anchor, none Poems 190 — he 's a. : the place is to be sold Poems 225 For ever slaves at home and fools a. ' Pr. 101 — they are coming back from a. Ma. 9 Dying a. and it seems apart Ma. 66 A., at Florence, at Rome Ma. 67 — often a. in the fragrant gloom Ma. 67 — the woodbine spices are wafted a. Ma. 76 And made him like a man a. at morn /. K. 18 They ride a. redressing human wrongs /. K. 129 Then shook his hair, strode off, and buzz'd a. /. K. 184 Blurr'd by the creeping mist, for all a. I. K. 225 To ride a. redressing human wrongs /. K. 249 — a. on wrathful seas E. A. 6 —send a. a shrill and terrible cry E. A. 42 To rush a. all round the little haven E. A. 47 He woke, he rose, he spread his arms a. E.A. 50 ABRUPTLY, as a man upon. his tongue I. K. 48 ABSENCE. — mourn'd his a. as his grave E. A. 14 ABSENT. And on the slope, an a. fool Poems 87 ABSOLUTER. Should have in it an a. trust /. K. 209 ABSOLUTION. A sort of a. in the sound E.A. 99 ABSORBS. Till in its onward current it a. Poems 8 ABSTRACTION. They do so that affect a. Pr. 47 ABUSE. — ' lest from the a. of war Pr. 113 No more shall wayward grief a. hi M. 161 And thus he bore without a. In M. 173 ABUSED. God's great gift of speech a. Poems 51 ABYSMAL. The a. deeps of Personality Poems 122 ABYSS. Of that a., or scornful pride Poems 294 Two plummets dropt for one to sound the a. Pr. 38 The secular a. to come In M. 105 O, from the distance of the a. In M. 137 ACACIA. Was lispt about the acacias Pr. 170 The slender a. would not shake Ma. 79 ACADEME. The softer Adams of your A. Pr. 39 Your own work marr'd : for this your A. Pr. 41 ACADEMIC. She brought us a. silks, in hue Pr. 30 ACANTHUS-WREATH, —a wov'n a. divine Pms 148 ACCENT. — an a. very low Poems 8 She replies, in accents fainter Poems 358 With nearing chair and lower'd a., E. A. 65 ACCEPT, —do a. my madness, and would die Ma. 61 God a. him, Christ receive him Ma. 152 ACCEPTANCE, —would her brother's a. be Ala. 37 ACCESS. — her a. to the wealthier farms E. A. 77 ACCLAIM. — the tumult of their a. is roll'd Poems 48 — follow'd with acclaims Poems 345 Is wrought with tumult of a. In M. 104 In full a. Ma. 145 ACCOMPANIED. Wander'd at will, but oft a. E.A. 58 ACCOMPANYING, the sad chariot-bier /. K. 206 ACCOMPLICE. The a. of your madness Pr. 150 ACCOMPLISH. Which did a. their desire Poems 299 A. thou my manhood and thyself Pr. it6 ACCOMPLISH'D. —by right of full-a. Fate Poems 121 V ACCOMPLISH'D Page ACCOMPLISH'D. How modest, kindly, all-a., /. K. vi. — thro' their own desire a. E. A. 91 ACCOMPLISHMENT. — all eyes with'all a. Select. 196 ACCORDED with his wonted courtesy /. K. 180 ACCORDING. That mind and soul a. well In M. vi. —the a. hearts of men E. A. 74 ACCOUNT, —be glad, for I a. you mine ' I. K. 80 Then of the crowd you took no more a. /. K. 152 He dodged me with a long and loose a. E. A. 104 — a hard friend in his loose accounts E. A. 104 ACCOUNTED. — blamelessness a. blame ! ' I.K. 135 ACCOUTREMENTS, —arms and rough a. Pr. no ACCRUE. Delight a hundredfold a. In M. 182 ACCURATE. Is a. too, for this full love /. A.'. 121 ACCURST. Thro' you, my life will be a.' Ma. 133 ACCUSATION. Like bitter a. ev'n to death Pms 261 And a. of uxoriousness I. K. 5 ' You breathe but a. vast and vague /. K. 130 ACCUSE, —for Blanche to a. her face to face Pr. 87 A. her of the least immodesty /. K. 51 ACHE. 'You would not let your little finger a. Pms 286 In coughs, aches, stitches Poems 236 ACHIEVABLE. Oh if our end were less a. Pr. 69 ACHIEVING calm, to whom was given Poems 299 ACHILLES. And see the great A., whom Poems 267 ACHING. To lull with song an a. heart In M. 57 Better the King's waste hearth and a. heart /. K. 252 ACKNOWLEDGE. I did a. nobler /. K. 210 ACORN. An a. in her breast Poems 254 Thine a. in the land Poems 256 ACORN-BALL. Alternate leaf and a. Poems 257 ACRE. To the men of many acres Ma. 73 While Harry is in the five-acre E. A. 124 ACREAGE, —and blockish God of a. E. A. 85 ACRIMONIES. — flow'd in shallower a. E. A. 80 ACT. A saying, hard to shape in a. Poe??ts 181 An a. unprofitable, against himself Poems 194 In a. to throw : but at the last it seem'd Poems 193 In a. to render thanks Poems 209 — flash'd thro' me which I clothed in a. Pr. 25 In a. to spring Pr. 52 But little : wherefore up and a., nor shrink Pr. 68 By slow approaches, than by single a. Pr. 69 One a. a phantom of succession : thus Pr. 71 And all creation is one a. at once Pr. 71 Such head from a. to a., from hour to hour Pr. 98 In whose least a. abides the nameless charm Pr. no Like creatures native unto gracious a. Pr. 158 How much of a. at human hands In M. 120 For who can always a. ? but he Bi M. 172 And a. and love, a closer link In M. 210 To dream she could be guilty of foul a. /. K. 7 To noble hearts who see but acts of wrong I. K. 24 So splendid in his acts and his attire /. K. 33 ACTED. If more and a, on, what follows? Pr. 41 — ever weaker grows thro' a. crime Ma. 166 And after madness a. question ask'd /. K. 89 ACTING the law we live by without fear Poems 103 ACTION. ' Which in all a. is the end of all Poems 102 Sinew'd with a. Poems 104 We have had enough of a., and of motion Poems 148 I myself must mix with a. Poems 276 A life in civic a. warm In M. 175 His a. tike the greater ape In M. 186 ACTIVE. Losing his fire and a. might Poems 82 When all his a. powers are still In M. 90 'AD. -'-but I thowt a 'a. summut to saay E. A. 130 ADAIR. " Ellen A. she loved me well Poems 337 When Ellen A. was dying for me Poems 337 Speak a little, Ellen A. Poe?ns 338 ' Here lies the body of Ellen A. Poems 338 Till Ellen A. come back to me Poems 338 There lies the body of Ellen A. Poems 338 ADAM. For since the time when A. first Poems 324 The softer Adams of your Academe Pr. 39 Since A. left his garden yet In M. 41 ADD. — take the broidery -frame, and a. Poems 312 Nor a., and alter many times Poems 339 So pray you, a. my diamonds to her pearls /. K. 211 — will a. themselves and make the years /. K. 257 ADDED. And a., "This was cast upon the Poems 101 I set the words, and a. names I knew Poems 223 Then a., all in heat, ' What stuff is this Poems 264 ' Are you that Psyche ' Florian a., 'she Pr. 42 He a., 'lest some classic Angel speak _ Pr. 58 She paused, and a. with a haughtier smile Pr. 66 Put on more calm and a. suppliantly Pr. 147 Had surely a. praise to praise In M. 50 When weight is a. only grain by grain /. K. 28 AFFAIR Page ADDED. In their own tinrt, and a., of her wit /. K. 147 His you can have.' Then a. plain Sir Tcrre /. K. 157 ' A fair large diamond,' a. plain Sir Torre /. K. 159 Of glory, and has a. wound to wound /. K. 176 And a., 'our true Arthur, when he learns And a., ' Sire, my liege, so much I learnt Were a. mouths that gaped, and eyes Is a. to the griefs the great must bear — when the Queen had a., ' Get thee hence ' /. K. 244 * Swear,' a. Enoch sternly, 'on the book E. A. 46 ' Take it,' she a. sweetly ; 'tho' his gift E. A. 64 ADDING, —she had thanked him, a., 'Yea /. K. 80 And ask no kiss ; ' then a. all at once /. K. 106 , He a. /. k. 215 ADDRESS. — to a. us, and was moving on Pr. 34 ADDRESS'D. —broad faces toward us and a. Pr. 103 That stood the nearest— now a. to speech Pr. 182 ADDREST. Then suddenly a. the hoary Earl/. K. 22 /. K. i 77 I. K. 184 /. K. 212 . /• K. 235 Poems 33 Poems 33, 34 Poems 34 Poems 34, 35 Poems 35 Poems 165 Poems 261 InM. 82 In M. 191 Ma. 158 ADELINE. Faintly smiling A. Shadowy, dreaming A. Who talketh with thee, A. Spiritual A. Thou faint smiler, A. Than your twin-sister, A. ADIEU. — bade a. for ever ' Adieu, adieu,' for evermore For tho' my lips may breathe a. What more ? we took our last a. ADIT. Free a. : we will scatter all our maids Pr. 152 ADJUST. But languidly a. Poems 252 ADMIRE. All the more do I a. Poe-ms 373 — not to desire or a., if a man could learn it Ma. 20 ADMIRED, —him, which when now a. E. A. 63 ADMIRING him, and thought within herself /. K. 5 Were turning and a. it, the work /. K. 34 ADMISSION. May beat a. in a thousand years Pr. 62 ADMITS. Nor other thought her mind a. InM. 51 The time a. not flowers or leaves In M. 165 ADO. —why make we such a. Poems 141 ADORATION, —a. to my household gods Poems 266 And flutter'd a., and at last ADORE. How may measured words a. To stand apart, and to a. Her feet on the meadow grass and a. Strong in the power that all men a. ADORED. — old bedridden palsy, — was a. ADORING, —and came near, lifted a. eyes ADOWN. —charmed sunset linger'd low a. Poem's 143 ADRIFT. And turn'd the cowls a. Poems 247 A-DROOP1NG. While his locks a. twined Poems 35 ADULATION, —amorous a., till the maid /. K. 181 ADULTERIES, —mother of the foul a. E. A. 70 ADVANCE. I said, ' The years with change a. P. 291 I.K. 102 Poems 80 Poems 81 Ma. 24 Ma. 37 E.A. 60 I.K. 62 In M. 208 Ma. 4 Ma. 163 I.K. 30 /• K. 173 Ma. 152 IK. 75 /. K. 92 Let all my genial spirits a. — days of a., the works of the men of mind How gain in life, as life advances ' A. and take as fairest of the fair His party cried, ' A., and take your prize ADVANCED. Something far a. in State But left two brawny spearmen, who a. A. to greet them, and beholding her ADVANTAGE, —took a. of his strength to be Pr. 37 Forbore his own a. and the King /. K. 242 Forbore his own a., and these two /, K. 242 ADVENT. — Wink at our a. ; help my prince Pr. 62 An a. to the throne Pr. 89 Expecting still his a. home hi M. 7 ADVENTURE, —bold a., dungeon, wreck E. A. 56 ADVERSARIES, —her tumultuous a. E. A. 173 ADVERSARY. — mock at a barbarous a. E. A. 170 ADVICE. — he wouldn't take my a. E. A. 114 ^EOLIAN. Like an JE. harp that wakes Poems 310 yEON. And the great JE. sinks in blood In M. 196 IONIAN. Draw down JE. hills, and sow In M. 54 JE. music measuring out In M. 141 AERIAL. The light a. gallery, golden-rail'd Pms 114 AERIALLY. And less a. blue Poems 165 AERY. Whence that a. bloom of thine Poems 33 AES. — mouthing out his hollow oes and a. Poems 191 AFAR. Sometimes a. and sometimes anear Poems 48 — the wave would make music above us a. Poems 59 ' Glory to God,' she sang, and past a. Poems 160 And whirl the ungarner'd sheaf a. In M. 100 And last, returning from a. In M. 132 O'erlook'st the tumult from a. In M. 197 So— from a.,— touch as at once? or why E. A. 81 — sheet-lightnings from a., bu fork'd E. A. 88 AFFAIR. I never whisper'd a private a. Ma. 105 His kinsman travelling on his own a. /. K. 131 AFFECT Page AFFECT. They do so that a. abstraction here Pr. 47 AFFECTION. The still a. of the heart Poems 94 Part banter, part a. Pr. 10 An old and strange a. of the house Pr. 15 He cared not for the a. of the house Pr. 16 — like a flash the weird a. came Pr. 131 Or keeps his wing'd affections dipt with crime Pr. 174 My old a. of the tomb In M. 121, 122 With what divine affections bold In M. 138 Of overstrain'd a. it may be I. K. 120 ' Stabb'd through the heart's affections /. K. 139 Approach'd him, and with full a. flung I. K. 218 AFFECTIONATE, —the fat a. smile E. A. 104 AFFIANCE, —when I dwelt upon your old a. Pr. 61 Most love and most a., for I know I. K. 218 AFFIANCED. Your countryman a. years ago Pr. 40 A., Sir? love-whispers may not breathe Pr. 40 With mine a. Many a little hand Pr. 73 AFFIRM'D. Or Psyche, shea, not, or denied Pr. 86 AFFIRMING that his father left him gold /. K. 24 AFFIRMS vour Psyche thieved her theories Pr. 59 AFFLUENCE. Heart-a. in discursive talk In M. 168 AFFLUENT. Stood up and spake, an a. orator />r. 89 — a. Fortune emptied all her horn Ma. 148 AFFRIGHT, —there her maiden grace a. Ma. 62 AFFRIGHTED. Round a. Lisbon drew Ma. 143 AFIELD. If any man that day were left a. I. K. 171 AFLOAT. Which upon the dark a. Paeans 18 With silver anchor left a. Poems 23 Beneath a willow left a. Poems 70 The high masts flicker'd as they lay a. Poems 155 AFRESH. — and ever a. they seeni'dto grow Ma. 86 And make all clean, and plant himself a. I. K. 93 Slipt and uncoil"d itself, she wept a. I. K. 140 AFTER. Whither in a. life retired Poems 30 Thy feet have stray'd in a. hours In M. 155 For fuller gain of a. bliss In M. 182 AFTER-BEAUTY, —while that a. makes Pr. 98 AFTER-DAYS. It grows to guerdon a. Poei?is 180 AFTER-DINNER. It seems in a. talk Poetns 86 'Twas but an a. -dinner's nap Poems 319 AFTER-FORM. Come, beauteous in thine a. In M. 135 AFTER-HANDS, —one POU STO whence a. Pr. 68 AFTER-HEAT. It might have drawn from a.' In M. 112 AFTER-LIFE. — she will pass by me in a. Pr. in For my dead face would vex her a. E. A. 48 AFTERMATH. — meadow smooth from a. Poems 221 AFTER-MORN. Which left my a. content In M. 157 AFTERNOON. — the a. they came unto a land Pms 142 — it seemed always a. Poems 142 ' That a. the Princess rode to take Pr. 63 That a. a sound arose of hoof Pr. 156 Or in the all-golden a. In M. 131 But in the falling a. return'd I. K. 77 It made the laughter of an a. I. K. 102 For brief repast or a. repose I. K. 246 Bright was that a. E. A. 37 Half-sickening of his pension'd a. E. A. 75 AFTERTIME. In a., this also shall be known Pms 192 Should be to a., but empty breath Poems 194 So might some old man speak in the a. Poems 195 The first fruits of the stranger : a. Pr. 31 The sole men we shall prize in the a. Pr. 128 AFTERWARDS. — but a moment a. Poems 207 You should have seen him blush ; but a. I. K. 118 AGAPE. A rabbit mouth that is ever a. Ma. 38 AGARIC. — names of a., moss and fern Poems 230 AGATE. Turkis and a. and almondine Poems 59 As bottom agates seen to wave and float Pr. 46 AGAVE. One tall A. above the lake Ma. 158 AGE. And makes me talk too much in a. Poems 93 And the great ages onward roll Poems 174 Now the most blessed memory of mine a. Poems 213 — thrirty too beyond her a. Poems 214 Of a. to heip us ' Poems 218 The same old sore breaks out from a. to a. Poems 22S Of different ages, like twin-sisters grew Poems 231 For ages and for ages ! ' Then they prate Poems 239 — float about the threshold of an a. Poems 262 You most, that in an a., when every hour Poems 264 Old a. hath yet his honour and his toil Poems 267 thou wondrous Mother-A. Poems 277 — thro' the ages one increasing purpose runs Pins 279 Mother-A (for mine I knew not) help me Poems 283 1 the heir of all the ages . Poems 283 I know that a. to a. succeeds Poems 299 As all were order'd, ages since Poems 315 'Tis vain ! in such a brassy a. Poems 329 Poems 352 brassy a My spirits in the golden a. AIM Page AGE. —on the tables every clime and a. Pr. 2 ' The climax of his a. ! as tho' there were Pr. 32 As emblematic of a nobler a. Pr. 56 First in the field ; some ages had been lost Pr. 37 The second-sight of some Astrasan a. Pr. 52 With reasons drawn from a. and state Pr. 125 — had you got a friend of your own a. Pr. 149 In endless a. ? It rests with God hi M. 101 — golden a. — why not? I have neither hope Ma. 5 — of ages have gone to the making of man Ma. 19 Wretchedest a., since Time began Ma. 103 A tonsured head in middle a. forlorn Ma. 127 To such a name for ages long Ma. 141 For many and many an a. proclaim Ma. 150 — tho* the Giant Ages heave the hill Ma. 151 Minutes an a. : but in scarce longer time /. K. 51 Would flatter his own wish in a. for love /. K. 103 Who paced it, ages back : but will you hear /. A'. 122 To one more fitly yours, not thrice your a. /. K. 196 The vintage — when this Aylmer came of a. E. A. 72 — huge cathedral fronts of every a. E. A. 107 Only at your a., Annie E. A. 116, 126 And a. is a time of peace E. A. 126 Immortal a. beside immortal youth E. A. 140 Milton, a name to resound for ages E. A. 174 AGED. Three silent pinnacles of a. snow Poems 142 Long labour unto a. breath Poems 147 Match'd with an a. wife, I mete and dole Poems 265 AGENTS. Thro' many a. making strong Poems 180 AGHAST. — glared upon the women, and a. Pr. 155 No, not a word ! ' and Enid was a. /. K. 46 Were men and women staring and a. /. K. 88 From Guinevere, a. the maiden rose I. K. 244 Retreated half-a. E. A. 68 AGINCOURT. — ' was Hugh's at A. Pr. 2 AGITATED. — around the royal chariot a. E. A. 173 AGLAIA. A. slept. We sat : the Lady glanced Pr. 35 My babe, my sweet A., my one child . Pr. 112 Came Psyche, sorrowing for A. Pr. 137 AGNED. And up in A. Cathregonion too /. K. 163 AGO. ' — Legend of Good Women ' long a. Pms 150 Above the river, and, but a month a. Poems 225 Nor cared to hear? perhaps : yet long a. Poems 235 Have faded long a. Poems 248 I mention'd half an hour a.' Poems 319 Your countryman affianced years a. Pr. 40 ' O long a.,' she said, ' betwixt these two Pr. 58 Did I dream it an hour a. Ma. 31 About these meadows, twenty years a. Ma. 129 Here on this beach a hundred years a. E. A. r -who left you ten long years a. E. A. 23 Once with this kinsman, ah, so long a. E. A. 61 Seventy years a., my darling, seventy E. A. 117, 121 — one I loved two and thirty years a. E. A. 151 AGOAN. Whoy, Doctor's abean an' a. E. A. 128 AGONIES. With a., with energies In M. 176 — multitudinous a. E. A. 170, 173 AGONY. — of an inward a. Poems 3 — as it were one voice, an a. Poems 198 Till, kill'd with some luxurious a. Poems 367 For a., who was yet a living soul /. K. 160 He up the side, sweating with a., got I. K. 173 Brain-feverous in his heat and a., seem /. K. 191 In a., she promised that no force E. A. 72 Christ ere his a. E. A. 92 A-GOOIN'. —my yaale, for I beant a. E. A. 128 AGREED. And so it was a. when first Pr. 56 A. to, this, the day fled on thro' all Pr. 63 Bearing his wish, whereto the Queen a. /. K. 208 And then they were a. upon a night /. K. 230 Tho' Leolin flamed and fell again, a. E. A. 72 AGRIN. His visage all a. as at a wake Pr. 134 AGRIPPINA. Of A. Dwell with these Pr. 33 AGROUND. My craft a., and heard with Pms 234 AHEAD. — and led her forth, and far a. I. K. 245 AID all this foolish people : let them take Poems 244 So a. me Heaven when at my uttermost I. K. 27 Death-pale, for lack of gentle maiden's a. I. K. 187 A little longer ! a. me, give me strength E. A. 43 AIDING. — two will serve them both in a. her Pr. 171 AIDLESS, alone, and smitten thro' the Poems 192 AIL'D. What a. him, hardly knoAving it I. K. 72 What a. her then, that ere she enter'd E. A. 29 AILETH. What a. thee? Whom waitest Pms 35 AILING. To a. wife or wailing infancy E. A. 60 AILS. My mother thought, What a. the boy Pms 89 What a. us, who are sound Poems 229 AIM. Embrace our aims : work out 3-oar Pr. 34 For fear our solid a. be dissipated Pr. 63 AIM Page AIM. Without a conscience or an a. In M. 53 When one would a. an arrow fair hi M. 127 —it go or stay, so I wake to the higher aims Ma. 114 — since he kept his mind on one sole a. /. K. 126 Serving his traitorous end ; and all his aims I. K. 226 AIM'D at the helm, his lance err'd; but /. K. 54 A flight of fairy arrows a. E. A. 56 AIMING, —and a. at his head E. A. 88 AIMLESS. That nothing walks with a. feet In M. 76 AIR. The living airs of middle night Poems 22 The a. is damp, and hush'd, and close Poems 32 Or when little airs arise Poems 34 With melodious airs lovelorn Poems 35 Life in dead stones, or spirit in a. Poems 36 Wide, wild, and open to the a. Poems 47 Nor first reveal'd themselves to English a. Poems 78 Of fragrant trailers, when the a. Poems 79 The very a. about the door Poems 89 AH earth and a. seem only burning fire' Poems 108 — from the dry dark wold the summer airs Poems 135 — the languid a. did swoon Poems 142 Falls and floats a-down the a. Poems 145 — while warm airs lull us, blowing lowly Poems 147 — no motion in the dumb dead a. Poems 153 And round them sea and a. are dark Poems 181 To one that travels quickly, made the a. Poems 205 This murmur broke the stillness of that a. Poems 208 Felc earth as a. beneath me, till I reach'd Poems 211 The deep a. listen'd round her as she rode Poems 287 Like soften'd airs that blowing steal Poems 308 No certain a., but overtakes Poems 310 I yearn to breathe the airs of heaven Poems 335 Are touch'd, are turn'd to finest a. Poems 336 — clouds are highest up in a. Poems 354 From draughts of balmy a. Poems 362 And sweet as English a. could make her, she Pr. 9 With the a. of the trumpet round him Pr. 115 Gather'd by night and peace with each light a. Pr. 119 * Yea,' answer' d I, ' for this wild wreath of a. Pr. 123 The enamour'd a. sighing, and on their curls Pr. 140 Steps with a tender foot, light as on a. Pr. 141 To the same sweet a., and tremble deeper Pr. 161 Naked, a double light in a. and wave Pr. 166 — like a broken purpose waste in a. Pr. 168 In that fine a. I tremble, all the past Pr. 176 All night no ruder a. perplex In M. 12 Calm and deep peace in this wide a. In M. 16 And circle moaning in the a. In M. 18 Was as the whisper of an a. In M. 28 As light as carrier-birds in a. hi M. 42 Mays t seem to have reach'd a purer a. In M. 52 The slightest a. of song shall breathe hi M. 71 Sweet after showers, ambrosial a. In M. 125 To drink the cooler a., and mark hi M. 130 And shook to all the liberal a. In M. 130 The memory like a cloudless a. hi M. 138 With summer spice the humming a. In M. 153 Not all : the songs, the stirring a. hi M. 181 Thy voice is on the rolling a. In M. 201 — of the ruin'd woodlands drove thro' the a. Ma. 2 She is singing an a. that is known to me Ma. 23 But his essences turned the live a. sick Ma. 46 But while I past he was humming an a. Ma. 47 — with honey'd rain and delicate a. Ma. 59 — the sweet half-English Neilgherry a. Ma. 118 Of tender a. made tremble in the hedge Ma. 128 A black yew gloom'd the stagnant a. Ma. 131 Thro' the long-tormented a. Ma. 144 — snowy dells in a golden a. Ma. 157 Flash'd as they turn'd in a. Ma. 169 No diamonds ! forGod's love, a little a. /. K. 173 —a. the nuns had taught her ; ' late, so /. K. 233 Fails in mid a., but gathering at the base /. K. 256 I thought I could not breathe in that fine a. /. K. 258 — a touch of light, an a. of heaven E. A. 51 —the rush of the air in the prone swing E. A. 55 — his books, to flush his blood with a. E. A. 75 Drank the large a. E. A. 98 A soft a. fans the cloud apart E. A. 141 Like Fancy made of golden a. E. A. 148 Clash, ye bells, in the merry March a. E. A. 165 All the a. was torn in sunder Select 38 AIR'D. And a. him there : his nearer E. A. 75 AIRING a snowy hand and signet gem Pr. 21 AIRY, fairy Lilian Poems 5 A. Lilian Poems 6 And a. forms of flitting change Poems 15 Piling sheaves in uplands a. Poems 66 The a. hand confusion wrought Poems 122 ALL-GRACEFUL Page AIRY. Twilights of a. silver, till we Poems 224 —climbing up into my a. home Poems 244 From the nations a. navies grappling Poems 278 — those three stars of the a. Giants' zone Pr. 120 — follow'd up by a hundred a. does Pr. 141 Were it ever so a. a tread Ma. 80 A wreath of a. dancers hand-in-hand /. K. 238 And singing a. trifles this or that Select. 196 Steps from her a. hill, and greens Select. 220 AISLE. — broad ambrosial aisles of lofty lime Pr. 5 ' Dark porch,' I said, 'and silent a. Ma. 134 —sombre old colonnaded aisles Ma. 156 — but in the middle a. E.A. 93 AJALON. —like Joshua's moon in A. Poems 283 AKIN. No longer half-akin to brute In M. 210 Maud to him is nothing a. Ma. 48 Are scarcely even a. ■. Ma. 108 AKROKERAUNIAN. The vast A. walls Poems 352 A-LAAID. — fo' they fun un theer a. on 'is E. A. 132 ALARMS. — kiss when fresh from war's a. Poems 156 I shook her breast with vague a. Ma. 133 ALBEIT. Was longer ; ana a. their glorious Pr. 37 4 A. so mask'd, Madam, I love Pr. 40 A. I give no reason but my wish /. K. 41 A. I know my knights fantastical I. K. 178 Beneath a moon unseen a. at full /. K. 225 ALBERT. — with him A. came on his Poems 249 Hereafter, thro' all times, A. the Good /. K. vii. ALDER. And alders, garden-isles Poems 234 Came wet-shod a. from the wave Poems 328 —here will sigh thine a. tree Poems 364 ALE. — he mellow'd all his heart with a. Ma. 125 A mockery to the yeomen over a. E. A. 77 A-LEANING. Weak Truth a. on her crutch Pms 14 ALE-HOUSE. Jack on his a. bench Ma. 16 ALEXANDRA. Alexandra! £".^.164,165 ALFRED. Truth-teller was our England's A. Ma. 147 ALICE. My own sweet A., we must die Poems 86 Pray, A., pray, my darling wife Poems 86 But, A. , what an hour was that Poems 87 Sweet A., if I told her all ' Poems go But, A., you were ill at ease Poems 91 Go fetch your A., here,'" she said Poems 91 I'gave you, A., on the day Poems 92 — fair as little A. in all the land, they say Poems 130 In there came old A. the nurse Poems 354 4 O God be thank'd ! ' said A. the nurse Poems 354 4 Nay now, my child,' said A. the nurse Poems 355 4 Nay now, what faith?' said A. the nurse Poems 356 ALIEN — a. shores : and if his fellow spake Poems 143 To a. ears, I did not speak to these Poems 260 —with great eyes, and laugh'd with a. lips Pr. 80 By having look'd too much thro' a. eyes /. K. 93 ALIGHT. The fourscore windows all a. Poems 24 ALIGHTED, —just a. from the boat Poems 221 ALIVE. Joying to feel herself a. Poems 120 — to pass away before, and yet a. I am Poems 138 A. with fluttering scarfs and ladies' eyes Pr. 133 To keep so sweet a thing a.' hi M. 54 Dark bulks that tumble half a. In M. 97 Should Nature keep me a. Ma. 27 not always certain if they be a. or dead E. A. 124 — there's none of them left a. E. A. 125 'ALL. — Squoire sin fust a corned to the 'A. E. A. 135 ALL. He, They, One, A. ; within, without hi M. 192 ALL-ACCOMPLISH'D. —kindly, a., wise /. K. vi. ALL-AMOROUS. — bow'd the a. Earl /. K. 65 ALLAN. — A. call'd his son, and said, 4 My Pms 214 With farmer A. at the farm abode Poems 214 — when the bells were ringing A. call'd Poems 215 4 And did I not,' said A. Poems 217 And A. said, ' I see it is a trick Poems 217 From Allan's watch, and sparkled by the fire Pms 219 And A. set him down, and Mary said Poems 219 ALL-ARM'D I ride, whate'er betide Poems 336 ALL-ASSUMING, —a. months and years In M. 121 ALL-COMPREHENSIVE tenderness In M. 120 ALLEGIANCE. — and a. till thy hand Poems 103 ALLEGORY. I send you here a sort of a. Poems in ALLEN'S. — A. on the Christmas-eve Poems 189 ALLEY. From the long alley's latticed shade Pms 23 With plaited alleys of the trailing rose Poems 30* Long alleys falling down to twilight grots Poems 30 — hollow cave and a. lone Poems 148 And alleys, faded places Poems 329 And linden a., then we past an arch Pr. 26 ALL-FRAGRANT, —slip at once a. into one Pr. 161 ALL-GOLDEN. Or in the a. afternoon In M. 131 ALL-GRACEFUL head, so richly cuil'd Pms 324 ALLIANCE Page ALLIANCE and allegiance, till thy hand Poems 103 ALLIED. However she came to be so a. Ma. 48 ALL-IN-ALL. Is a. to all Poems 343 Was a. : they had but been, she thought Pr. 22 — whole and one : and take them a. Pr. 117 Of ' trust me not at all or a.' /. K. 113 And trust me not at all or a.' /. K. 114 So trust me not at all or a. ' /. K. 117 Philip was her children's a. E. A. 20 — her good Philip was her a. E. A. 29 ALL-KINDLED by a still and sacred fire E. A. 5 ALLU rS. The spuere tuy iac ... a t,t//w 34^ ALLOTTED. All its a. length of days Poems 145 And show'd an empty tent a. her /. K. 92 ALLOW. To one of less desert allows Poems v. Will then a. your pretext, O my knight /. K. 155 A. him: but Lavaine, my younger, here /. K. 158 Will well a. my pretext, as for gain /. K. 177 ALLOWANCE. To make a. for us aU In M. 73 That much a. must be made for men E. A. 72 —more a. for his talk E. A. 100 ALLOW'D. To see the hunt, a. it easily I. K. 9 But now my loyal worship is a. /. K. 153 Lightly, her suit a., she slipt away /. K. 187 Scorn was a. as part of his defect /. K. 227 For beingf thro' his cowardice a. /. K. 252 ALLOWING it, the Prince and Enid rode /. K. 3 With half-a. smiles for all the world E. A. 57 ALL-PERFECT, finish'd to the finger nail Poems 231 ALL-PUISSANT. 'O noble breast and a. arms /. K. 5 ALL-SHAMED. —I rode a., hating the life /. K. 91 ALL-SILENT. Sigh full}-, or a. gaze upon /. K. 103 ALL-SUBTILISING intellect * In 31. 120 ALL-TOO-FULL. Strait-laced, but a. in bud Pms 247 ALLURED him, as the beacon-blaze allures E. A. 40 ALLUSION. And far a. till the gracious dews Pr. 45 ALL-WEARY. — pensive tendance in the a. Pr. 162 ALLY. — with those self-styled our lords a. Pr. 32 ALMESBURY. —in the holy house at A. /. K. 225 Back to his land, but she to A. I. K. 231 And when she came to A. she spake /. K. 232 As even here they talk at A. /. K. 236 ALMIGHTY. O God A., blessed Saviour E. A. 43 Sir Aylmer Aylmer, that a. man E. A. 52 ALMOND-BLOSSOM. The sun-lit a. shakes Pms vi. ALMONDINE. Turkis and agate and a. Poems 59 ALMOST. I'd a. live my life again Poems 86 Although myself could a. take Poems 174 Should a. choke with golden sand Poems 176 — a. ere I knew mine own intent Poe?ns 208 — column's base, and a. blind Poems 237 And a. my half-self, for still we moved Pr. 18 A. at naked nothing ' Pr. 23 The trash that made me sick, and a. sad ? ' Pr. 49 While the great organ a. burst his pipes Pr. 53 Boy, when I hear you prate I a. think Pr. 114 You talk a. like Ida : she can talk Pr. 117 A. our maids were better at their homes Pr. 129 The life that a. dies in me In M. 30 I a. wish'd no more to wake In M. 45 I a. fear they are not roses, but blood Ma. 107 A. beyond me : yet I would obey ' /. K. 68 Should do and a. overdo the deeds /. K. 171 With deaths of others, and a. his own /. K. 208 I, whose vast pity a. makes me die /. K. 253 A. as neat and close as Nature packs E. A. 10 And a. hoped herself; but when he turn'd E. A. 12 And a. overwhelm'd her, yet unvext E. A. 29 A. to all things could he turn his hand E. A. 44 L°olin, I a. sin in envying you E. A. 69 Or a. all that is, hurting the hurt E. A. 80 ALMS. Scorning an a. E. A. 44 — free of a. her hand E. A. 87 ALMSDEED. — wear out in a. and in prayer /. K. 260 ALOAN. — 'ud nobbut let ma a. E. A. 133 — and mea liggin' 'ere a. E. A. 128 ALOE. Of olive, a., and maize, and vine Ma. 153 ALOFT. — dewy-dark a. the mountain pine Pms 100 A. the mountain lawn was dewy-dark Poems 100 One arm a. Poems 207 — statues, borne a., the three: but come Pr. 140 A knot beneath of snakes, a., a grove 1. K. 18 ALONE. And looketh down a. Poems 3 A., and warming his five wits Poems 17 Gazed on the Persian girl a. Poems 24 My friend, with you to live a. Poems 30 For sure thou art not all a. Poems 34 Death, walking all a. beneath a yew Poe?ns 52 A. I wander to and fro Poems 53 ALONE Page ALONE. Singing a. Poems 58, 60 Sitting a. Poejjis 58 Springing a. Poems 60 And ' Ah,' she sang, 'to be all a. Poems 73, 74 And 'Ah,' she said, 'but I wake a. Poems 74 ' Sweet mother, let me not here a. Poems 75 She thought, ' My spirit is here a. Poejns 75 And day and night I am left a. Poems 76 ' But thou shalt be a. no more ' Poems 76 So be a. for evermore ' Poems 76 Is this the end, to be left a. Poems 76 When I shall cease to be all a. Poems -jj A glorious child, dreaming a. Poems 79 Fed thee, a child, tying a. Poems 79 Have lived and loved a. so long Poe?ns 86 And you and I were all a. Poems 90 True love interprets — right a. Poems 93 Is lily-cradled : I a. awake Poems 99 Came up from reedy Simois all a. Poems 100 I sat a. : white-breasted like a star Poems 100 These three a. lead life to sovereign power Poejns 103 And I shall be a. until I die Poems 105 — from that time to this I am a. Poei?is 105 I was left a. within the bower Poejjis 105 I will not die a. : for fiery thoughts Poejns 107 Hear me, O earth. I will not die a. Poems 108 My soul would live a. unto herself Poejns 112 And some one pacing there a. Poems 115 Nor these a., but every landscape fair Poems 116 Nor these a. : but every legend fair Poems 118 To sing her songs a. Poejns 119 Her low preamble all a. Poejjzs 120 Flash'd thro' her as she sat a. Poejjis 122 And all a. in crime Poejns 124 But I shall lie a., mother Poejjis 135 — why should we toil a. Poejjis 144 Let us a. Time driveth onward fast Poems 146 Let us a. What pleasure can we have Poems 146 Let us a. What is it that will last Poems 146 ' Not so, nor once a. : a thousand times Poejjis 158 That standeth there a. Poems 170 Falls off, and love is left a. Poems 171 His memory long will live a. Poejns 173 Aidless, a., and smitten thro' the helm Poejns 192 We took them all, till she was left a. Poejjts 228 I spoke her name a. Poejjis 232 ' Friend Edwin, do not think yourself a. Poejjis 233 — not a. this pillar-punishment Poems 238 Not this a. I bore : but while I lived Poejjis 238 Knowest a. whether this was or no Poejjis 239 — that I might be more a. with thee Poems 219 Mere highway dust ? or year by year a. Poejjis 258 In which we sat together and a. Poejjis 260 That loved me, and a. ; on shore, and when Pjjis 265 About the hall, among his dogs, a. Poejjis 285 So left a. ; the passions of her mind Poejns 286 A. might hint of xsxy disgrace Poems 306 She lying on her couch a. Poenis 315 Ah, let the rusty theme a. Poejns 346 — glisten'd — here and there a. Poems 352 And maiden fancies ; loved to live a. Pr. 17 Of art and science : Lady Blanche a. Pr. 52 Disorderly the women. A. I stood Pr. 83 Nor found ray friends : but push'd a. on foot Pr. 84 Clomb to the roofs, and gazed a. for hours Pr. 159 Lean-headed Eagles yelp a. Pr. 168 — but work no more a. Pr. 171 ' A.,' I said, ' from earlier than I know Pr. 173 Of equal : seeing either sex a. Pr. 173 Gray halls a. among their massive groves Pr. 179 By faith, and faith a. embrace Iji M. v, A., a., to where he sits Iji M. 39 When I contemplate alia. hi M. 11^ I :'-,lt and feel, tho' left a. Iji M. 120 And dwells not in the light a. Iji M. 144 Our father's dust is left a. In M. 161 No dance, no motion, save a. In M. 162 I will not eat my heart a. In M. 167 Which not a. had guided me In M. 175 Who grewest not a. in power Iji M. 178 • Upon me, while I muse a. Iji M. 181 — am I raging a. as my father raged in his Ma. 8 — fatter game on the moor : she will let me a. Ma. r 10 Singing a. in the morning of life Ma. 23 For am I not, am I not, here a. Ma. 29 Living a. in an empty house Ma. 2q And sat by a pillar a. Ma. 33 That she warbled a. in her joy Ma. 39 I am here at the gate a. Ma. 76 ALONE Page ALONE. When will the dancers leave her a. Ma. 77 That thou art left for ever a. Ma. 94 -not to myself in the closet a. Ma. 105 Henceforth I trust the man a. Ma. 133 — ill and weary, a. and cold Ma. 159 Leading- the horse, and they were left a, I. K. 58 But Enid left a. with Prince Geraint I. K. 65 Were left a. together, and he said /. K. 84 Strange chances here a ;' that other flush'd I. A". 88 For once, when Arthur walking all a. /. K. 101 And found a fair young squire who sat a. I. K. 118 Who lived a. in a great wild on grass I. K. 126 What is he? I do not mean the force a. I. K. 171 Crept to her father, while he mused a. /. K. 186 Far into the rich city, where a. I. K. 193 So in her tower a. the maiden sat I. K. 198 That I was all a. upon the flood /. K. 201 And therefore let our dumb old man a. /„ K. 206 By God for thee a., and from her face I. K. 218 Fled frighted. Then that other left a. /. K. 244 A. at home, nor ventured out a. E. A. 29 Sun-stricken, and that other lived a. E. A. 31 Lets none, who speaks with Him, seem all a. E. A. 34 — left a. he pluck'd her dagger forth E. A. 75 — when sitting all a., his face E. A. 96 The form, the form a. is eloquent Select. 196 All a. she sits and hears Select. 207 ALOOF. Which to the wooing wind a. Poems 12 Thy smile and frown are not a. Poems 15 Upon the mooned domes a. Poems 24 Of purple cliffs, a. descried Poems 28 —stood a. from other minds Poems 37 But kept myself a. till I was changed I. K. 92 — having kept a. so long E. A. 16 — good things have not kept a. Select. 191 ALOUD the hollow bugle blowing Poems 53 I cry a. : none hear my cries Poems 56 — if I should carol a. from aloft Poems 62 She howl'd a., 'I am on fire within Poems 125 His palms together, and he cried a. Poems 194 — he took the boy, that cried a. Poems 217 With heated faces : till he laugh'd a. Poems 222 Then she stretch'd out her arms and cried a. I. K. 256 ALPINE. In gazing up an A. height Poems 306 Love, like an A. harebell hung with tears Pr. 163 ALPS. Sun-smitten A. before me lay Ma. 157 ALRASCHID. — Haroun A. Pms 19,20,21,22,23,24,25 ALREADY. But he, ' I die a. with it : draw /. K. 174 Were dead to him a. ; bent as he was' E. A. 74 ALTAR. From her isle-a. gazing down Poems 177 Leads her to the village a. Poems 358 Of lands in which at the a. the poor bride Pr. 126 — saw the a. cold and bare Ma. 131 " Cold a., Heaven and earth shall meet Ma. 131 That burn'd as on an a. E. A. 5 Burnt and broke the grove and a. E. A. 169 ALTAR-CLOTH. Fair gleams the snowy a. Pms 334 ALTAR-FIRE. — mounts the heavenward a. In M. 62 ALTAR-FLAME. — my life a perfumed a. Ma. 59 ALTAR-STAIRS, —the great world's a. In M. 78 ALTER. — guerdon could not a. me Poevzs 104 Nor add and a., many times Poems 339 — as the fiery Sirius alters hue Pr. 120 Persuasion, no, nor death could a. her E. A. 72 ALTER'D. For I was a., and began Poems 89 You scarce have a. : I am sad and glad Pr. 45 Tho' always under a. skies hi M. 59 ALTERNATE leaf and acorn-ball Poems 257 ALUM — a. and plaster are sold to the poor Ala. 6 ALWAYS. Hard by a poplar shook alway Poems 11 — it seem'd a. afternoon Poems 142 A land where all things a. seem'd the same Poems 143 You are the evening star, alway Poems 164 But gentle words are a. gain Poems 180 He had been a. with her in the house Poems 214 Her voice fled a. thro' the summer land Poems 232 — a. roaming with a hungry heart Poems 265 Falls off, but cycles a. round Poems 305 He a. made a point to post with mares Pr. 25 Were a. friends, none closer, elm and vine Pr. 46 Flatter myself that a. everywhere Pr. 50 Defect in each, and a. thought in thought Pr. 173 That rises upward a. higher In M. 25 Or that the past will a. win In M. 41 ■ Tho' a. under alter'd skies In M. 59 His night of loss is a. there In M. 92 For who can a. act ? but he In M. 172 A. I long to creep Ma 101 A. about to fall, grasping the pews E. A. 93 6 ANA Page ALWAYS. — not a. certain if they be alive E. A. 124 AMARACUS. Violet, a., and asphodel Poems 102 AMARANTH. — on beds of a. and moly Poems 147 AMARYLLIS. A milky-bell'd a. blew Ma. 154 A-MAYING. — their wont, a. and return'd I. K. 226 AMAZE. — went the hush'd a. of hand and eye Pr. 61 In much a. he stared Ma. 128 Suddenly honest, answer'd in a. I. K. 67 AMAZED. — he stared, replying, half-a. Poems 286 Took half-a., and in her lion's mood Pr. 94 a. he fled away Pr. 109 — said Blanche ' A. am I to hear Pr. 153 — common men with rolling eyes : a. Pr. 155 And ride with me ? ' And Enid ask'd a. I. K. 8 At this the armourer turning all a. I. K. 15 Till the great plover's human whistle a. I. K. 48 — when he found all empty, was a. /. K. 57 By dressing it in rags? A. ami /. K. 81 Nearer and stood. He look'd, and more a. I. K. 165 ' And where is Lancelot ? ' then the queen a./. K. 177 How fares my lord Sir Lancelot ? He a. I. K. 188 A. and melted all who listen'd to it E.A. 36 Whom Averill solaced as he might, a. E. A. 69 As half a. half frighted all his flock E. A. 83 AMAZEMENT. Stock-still for sheer a. Poems 344 AMAZON. Glanced at the legendary A. Pr. 36 AMBASSADOR, —sent ambassadors with furs Pr. 17 Sir Lancelot went a. at first I. K. 134 A., to lead her to his lord I. K. 245 AMBASSADRESSES, —she cried, 'are you a. Pr. 65 AMBER. What time the a. morn Poems 29 — the lights, rose, a., emerald, blue Poems 120 — dream, like yonder a. light Poems 146 Like the tender a. round Poems 163 Of sandal, a., ancient rosaries Pr. 2 Fruit, blossom, viand, a. wine, and gold Pr. 76 AMBITION. Down with a., avarice, pride Ma. 39 Of wing'd ambitions . I. K. vi. AMBITIOUS. Yet clearest of a. crime Ma. 139 AMBLING. An abbot on an a. pad Poems 67 AMBROSIA. Hebes are they to hand a., mix Pr. 60 AMBROSIAL. Thick-leaved, a. Poems 3 With ciuster'd flower-bells, and a. orbs Poems 8 Comes out thy deep a. smile Poems 81 A., golden round her lucid throat Poems 105 — broad a. aisles of lofty lime Pr. 5 Dropt thro' the a. gloom to where below Pr. 75 Sweet after showers, a. air In M. 125 Immantled in a. dark hi M. 130 Streams o'er a rich a. ocean isle E. A. 175 That smelt ambrosially, and while I look'd Poems 100 AMBUSCADE. — every wavering brake an a. I. K. 48 AMBUSH. Lances in a. set Poems 151 — crowded lilac-a. trimly pruned Poems 207 AMEN. A strange one ! yet I take it with A. /. K. 211 AMEND. I might a. it by the grace of heaven I. K. 48 AMENDS. She made me divine a. Ma. 26 A. hereafter by some gaudy day I. K. 44 Thy beauty, make a. E. A. 140 AMIABLE. — high thought, and a. words I. K. 250 AMISS. There's somewhat in this world a. Poems 86 Kind to Maud? that were not a. Ma. 69 And pray you check me if 1 ask a. I. K. 242 — my doubts and fears were all a. E. A. 161 AMITY. By the rough a. of the other E.A. 81 AMMON. — A., hip and thigh, from Aroer Poems 160 AMMONITES. —A. and the first bones of Time Pr. 2 AMOIGHTY. — A.'s a taiikin o' you to E. A. 129,131 AMOROUS, and lashes like to rays Poems 24 While the a., odorous wind Poems 83 Of temper a., as the first of May Pr. 15 High nature a. of the good In M. 168 And a. adulation, till the maid I. K. 181 AMOROUSLY, —shall we dandle it a. E. A. 171 AMPHION. In days of old A. Poems 326 AMPLE. Proffer of royal power, a. rule Poems 102 — of classic frieze, with a. awnings gay Pr. 30 — labour'd down within his a. lungs Pr. 121 But every page having an a. marge I. K. 128 AMPLER. Upon an a. dunghill trod Poems 344 Are breathers of an a. day In M. 183 Voice in the rich dawn of an a. day I. K. vii. Being but a. means to serve mankind I. K. 119 AMPLEST. Mourn for the man of a. influence Ma. 139 AMULET, —a. drew her down to that old oak E.A. 77 AMY. — cousin A., speak, and speak the truth Pms 270 O my A., mine no more Poems 271 AMYGDALOID and trachyte, till the Sun Pr. 73 ANA. Ere days, that deal in a., swarm' d Poems 347 ANADEMS Page A N ADEMS. Lit light in wreaths and a. Poems 120 A N AK I M. I felt the thews of A. In M. 158 ANATHEMA, —thunder ' A.,' friend, at you Ma. 161 ANATOMIC. One a.' ' Nav, we thought Pr. 70 ANCESTORS. — fixt eyes of painted a. E. A. 94 ANCHOR. With silver a. left afloat Poems 23 And none abroad : there was no a., none Poems 190 To a. by one gloomy thought Poems 311 At a. in the flood below hi M. 158 Anchors of rusty fluke E. A. 2 — that a. holds E. A. 13 Nor a. dropt at eve or mom E. A. 149 ANCHOR'D. — a. to the bottom, such is he' Pr. 87 A tawny pirate a. in his port /. K. 122 ANCIENT. If aught of a. worth be there Poems v. With an a. melody Poejjis 3 Weeded and worn the a. thatch Poems 9 Can do away that a. lie Poe?ns 13 Uncomforted, leaving my a. love Poems 108 She mix'd her a. blood with shame Poems 109 A haunt of a. peace Poems 116 —a lamentation and an a. tale of wrong Poems 149 Those far-renowned brides of a. song Poems 151 A light of a. Erance Poems 161 Not clinging to some a. saw Poems 180 Where lay the mighty bones of a. men Poems 193 — new-comers in an a. hold Poems 230 They set an a. creditor to work Poe?ns 235 Looking a. kindness on thy pain Poems 275 A. founts of inspiration well thro' all my fancy Pins 283 The city's a. legend into this Poejns 285 Remembering its a. heat Poejns 309 For we are Ancients of the earth Poems 323 A. homes of lord and lady Poejns 359 She is of an a. house Poejns 371 Of sandal, amber, a. rosaries Pr. 2 There lived an a. legend in our house Pr. 15 Of a. influence and scorn Pr. 38 Kiss'd her pale cheek, declared that a. ties Pr. 43 Yet I bore up in part from a. love Pr. 90 That Nature's a. power was lost Iji M. 95 Again our a. games had place In M. 107 For who would keep an a. form In M. 162 And a. forms of party strife Iji M. 163 Of a. fable and fear Ma. 90 In an a. mansion's crannies and holes Ma. 106 The glory of manhood stand on his a. height Ma. 112 Betwixt a people and their a. throne Ma. 146 Then riding close behind an a. churl I. A. 14 He found an a. dame in dim brocade /. K. 20 The Prince had found her in her a. home /. K. 35 And robed them in her a. suit again /. K. 41 ' Sir King, mine a. wound is hardly whole /. K. 152 Seam'd with an a. sword-cut on the cheek I. K. 160 Howbeit I know, if a. prophecies /. K. 248 —throve an a. evergreen E. A. 40 The one transmitter of their a. name E. A. 66 — a. name \ they jnight be proud ; its worth E. A. 70 I their guest, their host, their a. friend E. A. 92 ANEAR. Dark-brow'd sophist, come not a. Pms 41 Sometimes afar and sometimes a. Poejjis 48 ANEMONE. The red a. Poems 153 Crocus, a., violet Ma. 164 ANEW. I would mock thy chaunt a. Poems 18 — took root, and springing forth a. Poejns 39 Had man to learn himself a. Iji M. 67 Whence he issued forth a. Ma. 143 The magic cup that fill'd itself a. E. A. 58 'ANG'D. Noaks wur 'a. for it oop at 'soize E. A. 132 ANGEL. Like that strange a. which of old Poems 14 Of angels to the perfect shape of man Poems in An a. look'd at her Poems 116 And angels rising and descending met Poejjts 118 I heard the angels call Poejns 139 An a. stand and watch me Poems 237 A flash of light. Is that the a. there Poejjis 243 Than angels. Cease to wail and brawl Poejjis 298 Three a. bear the holy Grail Poejjis 335 — stricken by an angel's hand Poejns 336 So sweet a face, such a. grace Poejns 365 He added, ' lest some classic a. speak Pr. 58 Brothers, the woman's A. guards you Pr. 128 With books, with flowers, with A. offices Pr. 158 In A. instincts, breathing Paradise Pr. 174 No A., but a dearer being, all dipt Pr. 174 My guardian a. will speak out Iji M. 66 I found an a. of the night hi M. 95 An a. watching an urn Ma. 33 I pray him, send a sudden A. down /. K. 221 ANNIE Page ANGEL. "W hich then was as an angel's, but /. K. 256 — as God's good a. in our house " E. A. 24 Fair as the A.that said 'hail' she seem'd E. A. 86 — were that great A. E. A. 97 His a. broke his heart E.A.in A devil in man, there is an a. too E. A. in Whose Titan angels, GabrieL Abdiel £. A. 174 Rings to the roar of an a. onset E. A. 174 ANGELO. The bar of Michael A. In M. 128 ANGER. Delicious spites and darling angers Poems 15 Then wax'd her a. stronger Poejjis 185 — his a. reddens in the heavens Pr. 94 — a. most it seem'd, while now her breast Pr. 94 The bitter springs of a. and fear Ma. 39 Till I with as fierce an a. spoke Ma. 86 — feeble vassals of wine and a. and lust Ma. 87 In a., wheel'd on Europe-shadowing wings Ma. 144 Against his a. in him, while he watch'd /. K. 51 God's curse, with a. — often I myself /. K. 80 As some wild turn of a., or a mood /. K. 120 Might feel some sudden turn of a. born /. K. 121 And Vivien, frowning in true a., said /. K. 129 White was her cheek ; sharp breaths of a. /. K. 138 In silence, while his a. slowly died /. K. 140 For a. : these are slanders : never yet /. K. 204 And traitress.' When that storm of" a. brake /. K. 244 As with a kind of a. in him E. A. 22 Troubled, as if with a. or pain E. A. xqz These have told us all their a. E. A. 170 Wherefore in me burns an a. E. A. 172 ANGER'D. The flush of a. shame Poems 16 Haifa, with my happy lot Poems 93 Those dragon eyes of a. Eleanor Poems 160 Which a. her. Who a. James ? I said Ma. 122 ANGERLY. Again thou blushest a. Poems 16 ANGLED. But a. in the higher pool Poems 87 And a. with them for her pupil's love Pr. 59 ANGLES. We rub each other's angles down In M. 132 ANGRIER. I never ate with a. appetite /. K. 58 ANGRY. — her snow-cold breast and a. cheek Pjjis 103 I beheld great Here's a. eyes Poems 105 One show'd an iron coast and a. waves Poejjis 115 I have but an a. fancy Poejns 276 A dozen a. models jetted steam Pr. 5 Hungry for honour," a. for his king Pr. 123 — fired an a. Pallas on the helm Pr. 155 Hortensia pleading ; a. was her face Pr. 164 For often a man's own a. pride Ma. 29 Peace, a. spirit, and let him be Ma. 48 Waving an a. hand as who should say /. K. 69 I know the tale. An a. gust of wind /. K. 131 After an a. dream this kindlier glow E. A. 72 Bore down in flood, and dash'd his a. heart E. A . 84 — it makes me a. now E. A. 119 ANGUISH. Life, a., death, immortal love Poejjis 2c Suffer endless a., others in Eh/sian valleys Poenis 149 Beauty and a. walking hand in hand Poejns 150 She loveth her own a. deep Poejns 173 Thine a. will not let thee sleep Poems 291 Or that this a. fleeting hence Poems 300 My deeper a. also falls In M. 32 My a. hangs like shame Ma. 100 Rose the pale Queen, and in her a. found /. K. 255 Shall I heed them in their a. E. A. 169 ANIGHT my shallop, rustling thro' Poems 19 ANIMAL. The single pure and perfect a. Pr. 173 ANKLE. From head to a. fine Poejns 254 One praised her ankles, one her eyes Poejjis 365 At last I hook'd my a. in a vine Pr. 88 Behind his a. twined her hollow feet /. K. 105 ANKLE-BELLS, —her smile, her golden a. /. K. 123 ANKLE-BONES. — unmortised from their a. I.K. 122 ANKLE-DEEP. And brushing a. in flowers In M. 132 ANNALS. Holding the folded a. of my youth Pjjis 212 Blanch'd in our a., and perpetual feast Pr. 139 Told him, with other a. of the port E. A. 38 ANNE. — is gone, you say, little A. E. A. 114 I had not wept, little A. E. A. 122 ANNIE. Three children of three houses, A. E. A. 1 While A. still was mistress E. A. 2 For A. ; and so prosper'd that at last E. A. 3 For A., neat and nestlike, half-way up E. A. 4 Enoch and A., sitting hand-in -hand E. A. 5 — set A. forth in trade E. A. 8 To A., till the morrow, when he spoke E. A. 9 A. fought against his will E. A. 9 — came on A. pale E. A. 9 Who needs would work for A. to the last E. A. 10 Bought A. goods and stores E. A. 10 7 ANNIE • - Page ANNIE, —while A. seem'd to hear E. A. 10 All his Annie's fears E. A. n ' A., this voyage by the grace of God E. A. n Save as his Annie's, were a laughter to him E. A. n Come, A., come, cheer up before I go' E. A. n A., the ship I sail in passes here E. A. 12 1 A., my girl, cheer up, be comforted E. A. 13 A. from her baby's forehead dipt E. A. 13 When A. would have raised him Enoch said.fi'. A. 13 A. buried it £. A. 15 ' A., I came to ask a favour of you " E. A. 16 A. seated with her grief E. A. 16 Like colts about the waste. So, A., now E. A. 17 A.— for I am rich and well-to-do E. A. 18 ' Then you will let me, A. ? " E. A. 18 A. with her brows against the wall E. A. 18 — not fathom Annie's mind E. A. 19 Made himself theirs ; and tho' for A's. sakei?. A. 19 And A. would go with them E. A. 20 — one evening Annie's children long'd E. A. 20 For was not A. with them ? and they went E. A. 21 Lifting his honest forehead, ' Listen, A. E. A. 22 ' Tired, A.? ' for she did not speak E. A. 22 I know that it will out at last. O A. E. A. 22 ' A., there is a thing upon my mind E. A. 22 — make them orphans quite?' And A. said E. A. 22 Then answer'd A.: tenderly she spoke E. A. 24 ' A., as I have waited all my life E. A. 24 Saying gently. ' A., when I spoke to you E. A. 25 A. weeping answer'd, * I am bound " E. A. 25 At Annie's door he paused E. A. 25 ' Take your own time, A. E.A. 26 A. could have wept for pity of him E. A. 26 That A. could not sleep E. A. 27 — never merrily beat Annie's heart E.A. 26 The babes, their babble, A., the small house E. A. 33 Where A. lived and loved him E. A. 37 A later but a loftier A. Lee £. A. 41 His gazing in on A., his resolve E.A. 47 And tell my daughter A., whom I saw E. A. 48 For, A., you see, her father E. A. 115 I cannot cry for him, A. E. A. 116 Why do you look at me, A. ? E. A. 116 I mean your grandfather, A. E. A. 117 But soiling another, A. E. A. 118 Shadow and shine is life, little A. E. A. 121 A., they're all about me yet E. A. r^ — my own little A., an A. like you E. A. 124 Pattering over the boards, my A. E. A. 124 Only at your age, A. E. A. 116, 126 —in this Book, little A. E.A. 126 Get me my glasses, A. E. A. 127 ANNIHILATE, —beak and talon a. us E. A. 169 ANNOUNCED the coming doom E. A. 97 ANNULET, —into many a listless a. /. K. 59 ANON her awful jubilant voice Poems 48 The light white cloud swam over us. A. Poems 159 — one green sparkle ever and a. Poems 224 Half-dipt in cloud : a. she shook her head Poems 286 — a. to meet us lightly pranced Pr. ieo At distance follow'd : so they came : a. Pr. 140 A., she heard Sir Lancelot cry in the court /. K. 165 As on a thing miraculous, and a. I. K. 170 Our son is with him, we shall hear a. /. K. 180 Bide,' answer'd he, ' we needs must hear a. /. K. 186 In vast sea-cataracts— ever and a. E. A. 99 ANOTHER, —the world hath not a. Poems 8 From one a. Poems 15 Until a. night in night Poems 20 To one a., even as tho' Poems 80 — not fret for me, mother, you have a. child Poems 136 Still from one sorrow to a. thrown Poems 144 At college : but a. which you had Poems 190 Went forward, Mary took a. mate Poems 220 A. slid, a sunny fleck Poems 254 —the wanton lapwing gets himself a. crest Poems 269 Roll'd in one another's arms, and silent Poems 273 Is like a., all in all ' Poems 290 O love, for such a. kiss ' Poems 320 ' I'd sleep a. hundred years Poems 320 A. said : ' The crime of sense became Poems 375 Clang'd on the bridge ; and then a. shriek Pr. 83 A. kind of beauty in detail Pr. 97 When comes a. such ? never, I think Pr. 170 A. answers, ' Let him be In M. 35 Or but subserves another's gain In M. 76 That warms a. living breast In M. 123 A. name was on the door In M. 127 They mix in one another's arms In M. itf ANSWER ANOTHER. And roll it in a. course In M. 175 — a., a statesman there, betraying Ma. 104 —a., a lord of all things, praying Ma. 104 She comes from a. stiller world of the dead Ma. 106 —underneath a. sun Ma. 143 This nurseling of a. sky Ma. 159 Coursed one a. more on open ground /. K. 28 A nobler friend? A. thought 1 had /. K. 42 Who knows? a. gift of the' high God /. K. 44 Then with a. humourous ruth remark'd I. K. 59 A. flying from the wrath of Doorm /. K. 73 A. hurrying past, a man-at-arms J. K. 73 Who feels no heart to ask a. boon /. K. 113 A. sinning on such heights with one /. K. 160 He seem'd to me a. Lancelot /. K. 175 A. world for the sick man ; but now /. K. 192 So she, like many a. babbler, hurt /. K. 243 Nor Lancelot, nor a. Leave me that /. K. 254 The shadow of a. cleaves to me /. K. 257 Not Lancelot, nor a. Is there none /. K. 258 Not Lancelot, nor a.' /. K. 2^9 A. hand crept too across his trade E.A. "7 Bore him a. son, a 9ickly one E.A. 7 Till half a. year had slipt away E. A. 26 Came suddenly to an end. A. ship E.A. 34 One look'd all rosetree, and a. wore E. A. 59 Sacred to one a.' So thev talk'd E. A. 73 Will not a. take their heritage? E.A. 91 He also sleeps— a. sleep than ours E. A. 113 But soiling a., Annie E. A. 118 I shall see him a. morn E. A. 122 — with what a. heart E. A. 142 ANSWER O will she a. if I call Poems 90 To which my soul made a. readily Poems 11^ She render'd a. high Poejns 158 — a. made the bold Sir Bedivere Poems 193, 195, 196 Not rendering true a., as beseem'd Poems 194 And a. made King Arthur, breathing hard Poems 197 And I made a., ' Were there nothing else Poe?ns 207 For some sweet a., tho' no a. came Poer,ts 209 And let me have an a. to my wish Poems 215 * You will not, boy ! you dare to a. thus ! Poe?ns 215 My work shall a., since I knew the right Poems 259 — a. to the purpose, easy things to understand Pms 272 He answers not, nor understands Poems 300 Or a. should one press his hands? Poems 300 The sullen a. slid betwixt Poems 300 There must be a. to his doubt Poems 303 ' But thou canst a. not again Poems 304 Or thou wilt a. but in vain Poe?ns 304 I spoke, but a. came there none Poems 309 Scarce a. to my whistle Poems 329 When they a. to his call Poems 560 To which an a. peal'd from that high land Poems 375 And therewithal an a. vague as wind Pr. 17 In this report, this a. of a king Pr. 18 No, not to a., Madam, all those hard things Pr. 47 —you should a., vue would ask) Pr. 4j Her a. was, ' Leave me to deal with that ' Pr. t*& And told me she would a. us to-day Pr. 63 And a., echoes, a., dying, dying, dying Pr. 74 Blow, bugle ; a., echoes, dying, dying, dying Pr. 74 — with honey'd a. as we rode Pr. 119 An a. which, half-muffled in his beard Pr. 119 I lagg'd in a. loth to render up Pr. 122 — you shall have her a. by the word ' Pr. 124 Last, Ida's a., in a royal hand Pr. 126 Ask me no more : what a. should I give? Pr. 157 Another answers, ' Let him be In M. 35 A. each other in the mist In M. 45 And Love would a. with a sigh In M. 54 Grave doubts and answers here proposed hi M, 70 What hope of a., or redress ? In M. 81 But Death returns an a. sweet In M. 112 A faithful a. from the breast In M. 118 The other answers, ' Yea, but here In M. 155 An a. from my lips, but he hi M. 159 And Echo there, whatever is ask'd her, a.s Ma. x Make a., Maud my bliss Ma. 6r Life of my life, wilt thou not a. this ? Ma. 62 Made a. sharply that she should not know I. K. 11 So moving without a. to her rest /. K. 29 Made a. groaning, ' Edyrn, son of Nudd ! /. K. 31 He made a wrathful a., ' Did I wist I.K. 49 To which he flung a wrathful a. back /. K. 53 — it shall a. for me. Listen to it /. K. 113 Made a. , either eyelid wet with tears /. K. 113 But shall it ? a. darling, a., no /. K. 114 Is that an a. for a noble knight? /. K. 157 ANSWER Page ANSWER. Full simple was her a., 'What /. K. 182 No a., by and by began to hum /. A'. 233 Made a. sounding like a distant horn /. A". 238 To which a mournful a. made the Queen I. A". 243 Rejoicing at that a. to his prayer E. A. 8 Came from his county, or could a. him E. A. 36 Made such a voluble a. promising all E. A. 49 Slight was his a. E. A. 63 Leolin*s horror-stricken a. E. A. 67 Hopeless of a. E. A. 79 — then before thine a. given E. A. 141 Bark an a., Britain's raven E. A. 170 Thy voice, and a. from below Select. 191 ANSWER'D. I a. free ; and turning I Poems 154 — slowly answer'd Arthur from the barge Poems 199 And Juliet a. laughing, ' Go and see Poems 204 — in that time and place she a. me Poems 211 William a. short Poems 215 William a. madly : bit his lips Poems 215 — a. softly, ' This is William's child ! ' Poems 217 — a. Mary, * This shall never be Poems 218 And his first passion : and he a. me Poems 231 Give all thou art,' he a., and a light Poems 232 And a. with a voice Poems 246 ' Ah, folly ! ' in mimic cadence a. James Poems 264 He a., 'Ride you naked thro' the town Poems 286 To which he a. scoffingly Poems 291 She a. to my call Poems 343 Echo a. in her sleep Pr. 4 Quick a. Lilia, 'There are thousands now Pr. 8 la.,' each be hero in his turn ! Pr. 13 She a., ' then ye know the Prince ? ' and he Pr. 32 'No plot, no plot,' he a. ' Wretched boy Pr. 39 ' And if I had,' he a., ' who could think Pr. 39 She a., 'peace ! and why should I not play Pr. 43 But ' Thanks,' she a.,' go : we have been Pr. 47 ' Ungracious ! ' a. Florian, ' have you learnt Pr. 49 She a. sharply that I talk'd astray Pr. 61 la.,' but to one of whom we spake Pr. 65 I a. nothing, doubtful in myself Pr. 68 She a., 'but it pleased us not in truth Pr. 70 She a., 'or with fair philosophies Pr. 72 A. the Princess. ' If indeed there haunt Pr. n She ceased : the Princess a. coldly, ' Good Pr. 93 — sharp I a., touched upon the point Pr. 122 * Yea,' a. I, ' for this wild wreath of air Pr. 123 Rang ruin, a. full of grief and scorn Pr. 153 O too fond, when have I a. thee ? Pr. 157 The high Muse a. : ' Wherefore grieve In M. 83 Stood up and a., ' I have felt ' In M. 192 The ' wUt thou ' a., and again In M. 206 She a., ' ever longing to explain Ma. 123 ' Yes,' a. she. ' Praj' stay a little ; pardon Ma. 128 Of womanhood and queenhood, a. him /. K. 10 ' Yea, noble Queen,' he a., ' and so late /. K. 10 — who a. as before ; and when the Prince /. K. 11 ' Farewell, fair Prince,' a. the stately Queen /. K. 12 — who a. gruffly, ' Ugh ! the sparrow-hawk ' /. K. 15 And a., ' Pardon me, O stranger knight /. A". 16 And a., ' Graver cause than yours is mine I. K. 17 And Yniol a., ' Arms, indeed, but old /. K. 26 And a., 'Yea, I know it ; your good gift I. K. 37 He a. ; 'Earl, entreat her by my love /. K. 41 The giant a. merrily, ' Yea, but one ? I. K. 52 She a., ' Thanks, my lord; ' the two remain 'd /. AT. 59 — a. with such craft as women use /. K. 64 Suddenly honest, a. in amaze /. A". 67 And Enid a., ' Yea, my lord, I know /. K. 68 ' No, no, not dead ! ' she a. in all haste /. K. 74 a. Li low voice, her meek head 3-et I. K. 79 She a. meekly, ' How should I be glad /. K. 80 And eat with me.' 'Drink, then,' he a. I. K. 80 The truest eyes that ever a. heaven I. K. 90 Love most, say least,' and Vivien a. quick I. K. 106 And Vivien a. smiling saucily I. K. 107 And Vivien a. smiling mournfully /. K. 109 And yet he a. half indignantly /. K. 114 And Vivien a. smiling mournfully /. K. 116 And Vivien a. smiling as in wrath /. K. 121 Then the great Master merrily a. her /. K. 122 He a. laughing, ' Nay, not like to me I. K. 125 And Vivien a. smiling saucily /. K. 127 On all things all daylong ; he a. her /. K. 128 Then a. Merlin, ' Nay, I know the tale I. K. 130 And Vivien a. frowning wrathfully /. K. 130 Then a. Meriin, careless of her words /. K. 130 And Merlin a., ' Overquick are you I. K. 131 And Merlin a., careless of her charge I. K. 133 And Vivien a., frowning yet in wrath I. AT. 133 APART Paere ANSWER'D. To which he a. sadly, 'Yea, I. K. 134 She a. with a low and chuckling laugh /. K. 134 Of worship — I am a., and henceforth I. A". 139 ' Then will you miss,' he a., 'the great I. K. 151 Then a. Lancelot, the chief of knights I. K. 154 Then a. Lancelot, the chief of knights I. K. 157 ' So you will grace me,' a. Lancelot I. K. 159 And ever well and readily a. he I. K. 161 And a. him at full, as having been I. K. 162 And found it true, and a., ' true, my child I. A". 166 ' Yea, so,' she a., ' then in wearing mine I. K. 166 She a., ' twice to-day. I am your Squire ' I. K. 167 At last he got his breath and a., ' One /. K. 169 Then Lancelot a. young Lavaine and said /. K. 170 The diamond ; ' but he a., ' diamond me I. K. 173 And right was I,' she a. merrily, 'I I. K. 181 Bide,' a. he, ' we needs must hear anon I. K. 186 She a., ' and find out our dear Lavaine ' I. K. 186 And in her heart she a. it and said I. K. 188 Beam'd on his fancy, spoke, he a. not /. K. 193 'Ah, sister,' a. Lancelot, 'what is this?' I. K. 195 And Lancelot a., ' Had I chos'n to wed /. K. 195 And Lancelot a., ' Nay, the world, the world I. K. 196 ' Nay, noble maid,' he a., 'ten times nay I. K. 196 Sweet sister,' whom she a. with all calm I. K. 199 ' Highest ? ' the father a., echoing, ' highest? /. K. 203 He pausing, Arthur a., ' O my knight I. A". 210 He a. with his eyes upon the ground I. K. 218 — a. Lancelot, ' Fair she was, my King I. K. 219 And Lancelot a. nothing, but he went /. K. 220 — he was a. softly by the King I. K. 227 She a., ' Lancelot, wilt thou hold me so ? I. AT. 231 — openly she a., ' must not I I. A". 236 — the pale Queen look'd up and a. her I. K. 242 Farewell ? I should have a. his farewell /. K. 257 A., ■ I cannot look you in the face E. A. 18 ' I am content,' he a., 'to be loved E. A. 24 Then a. Annie ; tended}' she spoke E. A. 24 Philip a., ' I will bide my year' E. A. 24 Annie weeping a., ' I am bound' E. A. 25 ' Then for God's sake,' he a. E. A. 28 Slowly and sadly Enoch a. her E. A. 46 A. all queries touching those at home E. A. 75 — in his arms, and a., ' No, love, no ' E. A. 121 ' Fool,' he a., 'death is sure E. A. 156 Doubt not ye the Gods have a. E. A. 170 ANSWERING. — Star-sisters a. under crescent Pr. 51 — a. not one word, she led the way /. K. 72 ANTAGONISMS. — in the teeth of clench'd a. Pr. 98 And toppling over all antagonism /. K. 27 — toppling .over all antagonism /. K. 90 ANTHEMT — a. sung, is charm'd and tied •the sound of the sorrowing a. roll'd ANTHERS. With a. and with dust Poems 158 Ma. 141 Poems 252 ANTIBABYLONIANISMS. — lung'd A. E. A. 109 ANTIQUITY. A front of timber-crost a. E. A. 38 ANTONY. Where is Mark A. ? Poems 156 My Hercules, my Roman A. Poems 156 ANVIL. On silver an%-ils, and the splash and stir Pr. 26 Shock'd like an iron-clanging a. bang'd Pr. 133 ANYONE. — Enoch spoke no word to a. E. A. 36 No shadow past, nor motion : a. E. A. 39 ANYTHING. Behold, we know not a. In M. 76 Nor can see elsewhere, a. so fair /. K. 27 Henceforth in all the world at a. /. K. 80 ANYWAY. How should I sooth j t ou a. Poems 173 ANYWHERE. No comfort a. Poems X24 ' For on this little knoll, if a. /. K. 10 APART from place, withholding time Poems 22 To stand a., and to adore Poems 81 As near this door you sat a. Poems 91 The gorges, opening wide a., reveal Poems 98 Somewhat a., her clear and bared limbs Poems 103 ' Reign thou a., a quiet king Poems 112 (With that she tore her robe a., and half Poems 156 For oft I talk'd with him a. Poems 246 In palace chambers far a. Poems 316 The quiet chamber far a. Poems 318 (Her mother's colour) with her lips a. Pr. 46 Like a spire of land that stands a. Pr. 89 Saw that they kept a., no mischief done Pr. 92 He put our lives so far a. In M. 113 For which be they that hold a. hi M. 123 Her life is lone, he sits a. In M. 146 And I myself, who sat a. In M. 158 While I, thy dearest, sat a. In M. 170 Dying abroad and it seems a. Ma. 66 A. by all the chamber's width, and mute /. K. 60 To your good damsel there who sits a. /. K. 9 APART Page APART. You sit a., you do not speak to him I. K. 62 — went a. with Edyrn, whom he held A A". 92 O tell us— for we live a., you know A A'. 162 Grant me, I pray you : have your joys a. A A". 210 Who mark'd Sir Lancelot where he moved a. I. K. 217 A soft air fans the cloud a. E. A. 141 APARTMENTS. Of fright in far a. Pr. 155 APATHETIC, —set gray life, and a. end Poems 258 APE. —monstrous apes they crush'd my chest Pms 242 We shudder but to dream our maids should a. Pr. 70 As I could a. their treble, did I sing Pr. 79 — let the a. and tiger die In M. 184 His action like the greater a. In M. 186 APHRODITE. Pallas and A., claiming each Poems 101 Idalian A. beautiful Poems 104 APOCALYPTIC. The a. millstone E. A. 97 APOLLO, —strange song I heard A. sing E. A. 142 APOLOGY, —ended with a. so sweet /. K. 66 APPALL'D. —cliff-side, a. them, and they I. K. 212 APPAREL, —suit of bright a. which she laid /. AT. 36 With store of rich a., sumptuous fare I. K. 38 In such a. as might well beseem /. K. 41 — clothed her in a. like the day /. K. 96 APPEAL. — lazy lingering fingers. She the a. Pr. 143 ' Thou makest thine a. to me In M. 80 Yea, tho' it spake and made a. In M. 136 A face of sad a., and spake and said I. K. 105 APPEAL'D —free ; and turning I a. Poems 154 — with a larger faith a. Poems 245 APPEALING to the bolts of Heaven Pr. 93 APPEAR. Shadows of the world a. Poems 67 To left and right, and made a. Poems 74 Thy marble bright in dark appears In M. 93 Which makes a. the songs I made In M. 205 Shall I a., O queen, at Camelot, I I. K. 154 Falling had let a. the brand of John E. A. 77 APPEAR'D. — he blew and blew, but none a. Pr. 124 The very graves a. to smile Ma. 134 To both a. so costly, rose a cry I. K. 34 —that shadow of mischance a. E. A. 8 APPEARING ere the times were ripe In Jll. 211 APPERTAINS. That a. to noble maintenance A K. 38 APPETITE. I never ate with angrier a. A K. 58 APPLAUDED, and the spiteful whisper died I.K. 96 APPLAUSE. Not void of righteous self-a. Poems 296 Tho' she perhaps might reap the a. of Great Pr. 68 Shall he for whose a. I strove In M. 73 To laughter and his comrades to a. A K. 61 APPLAUSIVE. Greet her with a. breath Poems 371 APPLE The full-juiced a., waxing over-mellow Pms 14s There swung an a. of the purest gold A K. 10 APPLE-BLOSSOM. Fresh a. blushing for a Ma. 122 APPLE-CHEEK'D. But a bevy of Eroses a. E. A. 158 APPLICATIONS, —liberal a. lie Poems 322 APPOINTED. Its range of duties to the a. hour Pr. 63 APPRAISED the Lycian custom, spoke of Pr. 36 A. his weight, and fondled fatherlike E. A. 9 APPREHEND, —thro' thick veils to a. Poems 303 APPROACH, and lean a ladder on the shaft Pms 244 A. and fear not : breathe upon my brows Pr. 176 Preserve a broad a. of fame Ma. 142 The boat that bears the hope of life a. E. A. 45 APPROACH'D. —watch the dancing bubble, a. Pr. 55 A. them : then the Lord of Astolat I. K. 156 A. him, and with full affection flung I. K. 218 APPROACHES. By slow a., than by single act Pr. 69 APPROACHING, press'd you heart to heart Pms 91 The long line of the a. rookery swerve Pr. 182 And glance about the a. sails In M. 21 A. thro' the darkness, call'd ; the owls I. K. 199 APPROVE, —wishes me to a. him Ma. 68 APPROVED. She wore the colours I a. Ma. 132 A. him, bowing at their own deserts Ma. 124 APPROVEN. Till he by miracle was a. king A K. 240 APPROVINGLY, and prophesied his rise E. A. 75 APRIL. ('Twas A. then,) I came and sat Poems 87 And April's crescent gliminer'd cold Poems 89 When A. nights began to blow Poems 89 A. hopes, the fools of chance Poems 372 Her maiden babe, a double A. old Pr. 35 That clad her like an A. daffodilly Pr. 46 To rain an A. of ovation Pr. 140 From A. on to A. went In M. 37 Make A. of her tender eyes In M. 60 Can trouble live with A. days In M. 114 Thro' all the years of A. blood In M. 168 Becomes an A. violet In M. 180 That keenlier in sweet A. wakes hi M. 181 It might be May or A., he forgot Ma. 125 ARK Page APRIL. The last of A., or the first of May Ma. 125 To Britain, and in A. suddenly I. K. 18 For all an A. morning, till the ear I. K. 193 Of A., and could hear the lips that kiss'd E. A. 142 APT. Strong, supple, sinew-corded, a. at arms Pr. 134 Who being a. at arms and big of bone I. K. 26 APTEST. In fitting a. words to things In M. 103 APTLY. Of many changes, a. join'd Poems 182 AQUILINE. — a. curve in a sensitive nose Ma. 12 ARAB. From the delicate A. arch of her feet Ma. 54 ARABIAN. In some A. night Ma. 31 ARAC. Not ev'n her brother A., nor the twins Pr. 23 With rumour of Prince A., hard at hand Pr. 112 And speak with A. : Arac's word is thrice Pr. 118 A. : all about his motion clung Pr. 120 The genial giant, A., roll'd himself Pr. 121 Said A., 'worthy reasons why she should Pr. 123 Your prowess, A., and what mother's blood Pr. 128 From those two bulks at Arac's side Pr. 132 From Arac's arm, as from a giant's flail Pr. 132 Thrust in between: but A. rode him down Pr. 134 Then A. ' Ida — 'sdeath ! you blame the man Pr. 148 Nor A., satiate with his victory Pr. 162 AR.B ACES, and Phenomenon, and the rest Ma. 126^ ARBITRARY. To shift an a. power In M. 199 ARBOURS. They read in a. dipt and cut Poems 329 ARC. Her murder'd father's head, or Joan of A. Pms 161 Rose with you thro' a little a. Poems 172 Thro' a great a. his seven slow suns Pr. 85 Of sine and a., spheroid and azimuth Pr. 149 Run out your measured arcs, and lead In M. 162 ARC AD Y. To many a flute of A. In M. 40 ARCH. So innocent-a., so cunning-simple Poems 5 Many an a. high up did lift Poems 118 — flashing round and round, and whirl'd in an a. P. 196 Yet all experience is an a. wherethro' Poems 265 And linden alley : then we past an a. Pr. 26 ARCH'D. High-a. and ivy-claspt Pr. 6 From over her a. brows, with every turn Pr. 31 ARCHES. Thro' little crystal a. low Poems 21 From shadow'd grots of a. interlaced Poems 114 Barge-laden, to three a. of a bridge Poems 204 Or under a. of the marble bridge Pr. 52 — bloom profuse and cedar a. E. A. 175 ARCHING. The a. limes are tall and shady Poems 165 ARCHIVES. My mortal a. Poems 242 ARCHWAY, —thro' the Gothic archways Poems 287 Here stood a shatter'd a. plumed with fern A AT. 17 ARDEN. Enoch A., a rough sailor's lad E. A. 2 'You, A., you ! nay — sure he was afoot E. A. 46 ' Did you know Enoch A. of this town V E. A . 46 Eh, let me fetch 'em, A.,' and arose E. A. 47 Proclaiming Enoch A. and his woes E. A. 47 ARDENT. All other, when her a. gaze In M. 51 That a. man? 'to pluck the flower in season' A K. 131 ARGENT. The polish'd a. of her breast Poems 156 To yonder a. round Poems 331 ARGENT-LIDDED. Serene with a. eyes Poems 24 ARGIVE. On A. heights divinely sang In M. 40 ARGOSIES. — a. of magic sails Poems 278 ARGUING. As a. love of knowledge Pr. 32 A. boundless foibearance E. A. 67 ARISE. Come forth, I charge thee, arise Poems 28 Or when little airs a. Poems 34 I feel the tears of blood a. Poems 56 Many suns a. and set Poems 93 A., and let us wander forth Poems 95 I will a. and slay thee with my hands' Poems 196 Expecting when a fountain should a. Poems 366 The thoughts that a. in me Poems 378 A. to thee : the children call, and I Pr. 169 1 A., and get thee forth and seek In M. 122 To shape and use. A. and fly hi M. 184 And ah for a man to a. in me Ma. 40 A., my God, and strike, for we hold Thee just Ma. 87 — that a war would a. in defence of the right Ma. 112 Till I saw the dreary phantom a. and fly Ma. 113 Till yonder man upon the bier a. A K. 80 Until my lord a. and look upon me V I. K. 80 Till my dear lord a. and bid me do it A K. 81 Until himself a. a living man I. K. 83 — yearning for thy yoke, a. E. A. 141 ARISEN. — that mountains have a. since A K. 128 —came upon him half-a. from sleep E. A. 81 ARISES. — wind a., roaring seaward, and I go Pms 284 Morning a. stormy and pale Ma. 25 ARISING, did his holy oily best E. A. 106 ARISTOCRAT, democrat, autocrat— one Ma. 40 ARK. Who sought'st to wreck my mortal a. Poems 307 ARK Page ARK. I leave this mortal a. behind In M. 18 ARM. Than arms, or power of brain, or birth Pms v. —with a sweeping- of the a. Poems 36 Of wrath her right a. whirl'd Poems 40 Sweet faces, rounded arms Poems 43 Fold thine arms, turn to thy rest Poems 49 A glowing a., a gleaming neck Poems 88 When, a. in a., we went along Poems 92 The woven arms, seem but to be Poems 94 Round my true heart thine arms entwine Poems 94 Puts forth an a., and creeps from pine to pine Pms 98 Paris had raised his a. Poems 105 Ah me, my mountain shepherd, that my arms Pms 106 Sat smiling, babe in a. Poems 116 Is worth a hundred coats-of-arms Poems 126 And once my a. was lifted to hew down Poems 152 — humid arms festooning tree to tree Poe??is 153 My mailed Bacchus leapt into my arms Poems 156 Who kneeling, with one a. about her king Poems 161 He held a goose upon his a. Poems 184 He took the goose upon his a. Poenis 186 In those old days, one summer noon, an a. Poe?ns 192 Some one might show it at a joust of arms Poems 195 — ere he dipt the surface, rose an a. Poems 196 Slowly, with pain, reclining on his a. Poems 197 — when I look'd again, behold an a. Poe?ns 197 One a. aloft Poems 207 Between us, in the circle of his arms Po*.ms 211 Who thrust him in the hollows of his a. Poems 219 To Francis, with a basket on his a. Poe;us 221 Sleep, Ellen, folded in thy sister's a. Poems 223 — sleeping, haply dream her a. is mine Poems 223 Sleep, Ellen, folded in Emilia's a. Poems 223 I broke a close with force and arms Poems 235 — in my weak lean arms I lift the cross Poems 240 Leg and a. with love-knots gay Poems 248 She sank her head upon her a. Poems 253 Then close and dark my arms I spread Poems 254 Roll'd in one another's arms, and silent Poeyns 273 Glows forth each softly-shadow*d a. Poems 316 — on her lover's a. she leant Poems 320 Her arms across her breast she laid Poems 365 — forefathers' arms and armour hung Pr. 2 Of sunrise, her a. lifted, ej T es on fire Pr. 3 To lash offence, and with long arms and hands Pr. 16 In the arms of leisure, sacred from the blight Pr. 38 By Florian ; holding out her lily arms Pr. 45 Herself and Lady Psyche the two arms Pr. 56 My burthen from mine arms Pr. 84 Oaring one a., and bearing in my left Pr. 84 A Niobean daughter, one a. out Pr. 93 She stretch'd her arms and call'd Pr. 100 — wakes : ' and one, that clash'd in arms Pr. 107 Among piled arms and rough accoutrements Pr. no The horses yell'd : they clash'd their arms Pr. 119 Of arms : and standing like a stately Pine Pr. 125 Since cur armsfail'd — this Egypt-plague of men Pr. 129 From Arac's a., as from a giant's flail Pr. 132 Strong, supple, sinew-corded, apt at arms Pr. 134 With Psyche's babe in a. : there on the roofs Pr. 138 A thousand arms and rushes to the Sun Pr. 138 The glittering axe was broken in their arms Pr. 139 — them more in their behoof, whose arms Pr. 139 —arms were shatter'd to the shoulder-blade Pr. 139 She spoke, and with the babe yet in her arms Pr. 140 Its body, and reach its fading innocent arms Pr. 143 Fix'cTin yourself, never in your own arms Pr. 145 The breast that fed or a. that dandled you Pr. 146 — back I fell, and from mine arms she rose Pr. 165 And moves his doubtful arms, and feels In M. 20 When Science reaches forth her arms In M. 36 Laid their dark arms about the field hi M. 139, 141 They mix in one another's arms In 31. 156 To find the arms of my true love Ma. 95 We rush'd into each other's arms Ma. 133 Roll of cannon, and clash of arms Ma. 144 So dear a life your arms enfold Ma. 159 ' O noble breast and all-puissant arms /. K. 5 —arms on which the standing muscle sloped /. K. 5 Not to be folded more in these dear arms /. K. 6 To find, at some place I shall come at, arms /. K. 12 Arms ? truth ! I know not : all are wanted /. K. 16 Claspt the gray walls with hairy-fibred arms /. K. 18 Where I can light on arms, or if yourself /. K. 23 Arms in your town, where all the men are /. K. 23 Your feats of arms, and often when I paused /. K. 24 Who being apt at arms and big of bone /. K. 26 — true heart,' replied Geraint, ' but arms /. K. 26 Yniol answerd, ' Anns, indeed, but old /. K. 26 ARMOURER Page ARM. The chair of Idris. Yniol's rusted arms /. K. 29 I will not fight my way with gilded arms /. K. 46 Three horses and three goodly suits of arms /. K. 52 Two sets of three laden with jingling arms / K. 55 A horse and arms for guerdon ; choose the /. K. 57 —one with arms to guard his head and yours /. K. 68 Down by the length of lance and a. beyond / K. 70 Was honest — paid with horses and with arms /. K . 71 —loosed the fastenings of his arms /. K. 72 Another hurrying past, a man at arms I. K. 73 — kiss'd her climbing, and she cast her arms /. K. 86 With woven paces and with waving arms /. K. 104 Together, curved an a. about his neck /. K. 105 — then was painting on it fancied arms /. K. 118 She ceased, and made her lithe a. round /. K. 125 Her arms upon her breast across, and stood /. K. 141 The gentle wizard cast a shielding a. /. K. 141 Now guess'd a hidden meaning in his arms /. K. 148 In use of arms and manhood, till we drive /. K. 150 In silence while she watch*d their arms far /. K. 167 Arms for his chair, while all the rest of them /. K 170 — earth shake, and a low thunder of arms /. K. 171 Whom glittering in enamell'd arms the maid /. K. 179 His battle-writhen arms and mighty hands /. K. 189 —innocently extending her white arms /. K. 195 An armlet for the roundest a. on earth /. K. 209 An armlet for an a. to which the Queen's /. K. 211 One a. about his neck, and spake and said /. K. 218 As a king's son, and often in her arms /. K. 221 There with her milkwhite arms and shadowy/. K. 247 —I, while yet Sir Lancelot, my right a. /. K. 247 Then she stretch'd out her arms and cried /. K. 256 — the feeble infant in his arms E. yi. 9 Cast his strong arms about his drooping E. A. 13 — who rear'd his creasy arms E. A. 41 He woke, he rose, he spread his arms E. A. 50 Once grovelike, each huge a. a tree E. A. 77 —his long arms stretch'd as to grasp a E. A. 81 — sideways up he swung his arms E. A. 97 'You raised your a. E. A. 103 — waved my a. to warn them off E. A. 103 — one soft a., which, like the pliant bough E. A. in — and Jenny hung on his a. £. A. 119 —he turn'd and claspt me in his anus E. A. 121 I wither slowly in thine arms E. A 139 Mute with folded arms they waited Select. 38 ARM-CHAIR. Her father left his good a. Poems 249 Shrinks in his a. while the fires of Hell Pr. 130 When asleep in this a. Ma. 31 ARMED. Rings ever in her ears of a. men Poems 108 Must ever shock, like a. foes Poems 182 Sharp-smitten with the dint of a. heels Poe??is 198 All-a. I ride, whate'er betide Poems 336 — mixt with these, a lady, one that a. Pr 3 A plump-a. Ostleress and a stable wench Pr. 27 At the a. man sideways, pitying as it seem'd Pr. 144 — Sleep must lie down a., for the villainous Ma. 6 On horseback wholly a., behind a rock /. K. 48 Three other horsemen waiting wholly a. /. K. -2 —each of them is wholly a., and one' /. K. 53 Till issuing a. he found the host and cried /. K. 67 There two stood a., and kept the door /. K. 212 Stiff-stricken, listening ; but when a. feet /. K. 246 There rode an a. warrior to tne doors /. K. 246 — in the darkness heard his a. feet /. K. 247 Listening till those a. steps were gone /. K. 255 ARMIES. — compass'd by two a. and the noise Pr. 124 — a. weaned, for magnet-like she drew /. K. 123 ARMLET. — a. for the roundest arm on earth /. K. 209 An a. for an arm to which the Queen's /. K. 211 ARMORIAL. — purple blazon'dwith a. gold Poems 287 With a. bearings stately Poems 359 ARMOUR. And as he rode his a. rung Poems 69 This mortal a. that I wear Poe??is 336 — forefathers' arms and a. hung Pr. 2 Your very a. hallow'd, and your statues Pr. 128 When a. clash'd or jingled, Avhile the day Pr. 155 His master's a. ; and of such a one /. K. 14 — a., and your damsel should be theirs?' /. K. 49 — a., and his damsel shall be ours ' /. K. 49 The three gay suits of a. which they wore /. K. 50 Of a. on their horses, each on each /. K. 51 Their three gaj- suits of a., each from each /. K. 55 The pieces of his a. in one place /. K. 65 — glimmer'd on his a. in the room /. K. 66 Five horses and their armours ; ' and the host/. K. 67 To bear his a. ? Shall we fast, or dine ? /. K. 71 Bled underneath his a. secretly I. K. 72 ARMOURER, —the a. turning all amazed /. K. 13 Ma. 90 Ma. 126 I.K. 29 I.K. 96 I.K. 176 E.A. 47 E.A. 58 E.A. 68 Poems 3 2 3 I.K. 230 E.A. 78 InM. 165 Ma. 163 Pr. 5 Pr. 106 E.A. 55 Pms 115 I. K. 106 Ma. 23 I.K. 2 I.K. 8 I.K. 45 I.K. 83 ARMOURER Page i ARMOURER. Then riding- further past an a. /. K. 15 ARMOURIES. — from Jehovah's gorgeous a.E. A. 174 ARM'S-LENGTH. Out at a. Poems 103 ARMY. — crying there was an a. in the land Pr. 99 To preach our poor little a. down Ma. 38 Charging an a., while Ma. 169 ARNO. — unfamiliar A. and the dome Ma. 127 ARNON. On A. unto Minneth' Poems 160 AROER. — Ammon, hip and thigh, from A. Poems 160 AROSE. Lotos and lilies : and a wind a. Poems 102 And I a. and I released Poems 308 The rain had fallen, the Poet a. Poems 379 A wind a. and rush'd upon the South Pr. 20 Remembering his ill-omen'd song, a. Pr. 144 That afternoon a sound a. of hoof Pr. 156 Star after star, a. and fell Pr. 160 Two grand designs : for on one side a. Pr. 163 Thro' four sweet years a. and fell In M. 37 Till at the last a. the man In M. 183 — a., and all by myself in my own dark garden Ma. 14 Nor ever a. from below Till, not to die a listener, I a. To quicken to the sun, a. and raised Enid the Good ; and in their halls a. At Arthur's right, with smiling face a. Eh, let me fetch 'em, Arden,' and a. — a. the labourers' homes The footstool from before him, and a. AROUSED. So sleeping, so a. from sleep 'Traitor, come out, ye are trapt at last,' a. A. the black republic on his elms ARRANGE the board and brim the glass Dispute the claims, a. the chances ARRANGED a country dance A. the favour, and assumed the Prince Made blossom-ball or daisy-chain, a. ARRAS. — were hung with a. green and blue In Arthur's a. hall at Camelot ARRAY. Singing of men that in battle a. ARRAY'D and deck'd her, as the loveliest She took them, and a. herself therein And took it, and a. herself therein And there the Queen a. me like the sun ARRAYING. — by morn a. her sweet self ARRIVALS. The fresh a. of the week before Pr. 34 ARRIVE at last the blessed goal In M. 117 ARRIVED, and found the sun of sweet Ma. 126 ARRIVING ail confused among the rest Pr. 86 ARROW. The viewless arrows of his thoughts Pms 38 The false, false a. went aside Poems 54 The bitter a. went aside Poems 54 The damned a. glanced aside Poems 54 Within thy heart my a. lies Poems 56 Arrows of lightnings Poems 62 A random a. from the brain Poems 305 Fly twanging headless arrows at the hearts Pr. 50 When one would aim an a. fair In M. 127 Or into silver arrows break hi M. 153 Before an ever-fancied a., made I. K. 73 — a flight of fairy arrows E. A. 56 ARROW-SEEDS. — the a. of the field ftowzxPoems 39 ARROW-SLAIN, —loss of half his people a. /. K. 123 ARROW-WOUNDED, —days, your a. fawn Pr. 43 ARSENIC, arsenic, sure, would do it Ma. 106 ART. — newness of thine a. so pleased thee Poems 29 — for a while, the knowledge of his a. Poems 150 Because all words, tho' cull'd with choicest a. Pms 162 Brothers in A. : a friendship so complete Poems 203 — said he, "Will you climb the top of A. Poe?ns 209 In A. like Nature, dearest friend Poems 322 At wine, in clubs, of a., of politics Pr. 9 With woman ; and in arts of government Pr. 37 Elizabeth and others ; arts of war Pr. 37 The peasant Joan and others ; arts of grace Pr. 37 Of a. and science : Lady Blanche alone Pr. 52 Two great statues, A. Pr. 85 And owning but a little a. In M. 57 From a., from nature, from the schools In M. 71 Of youthful friends, on mind and a. In M. iq.'j The graceful tact, the Christian a. In M. 170 That all, as in some piece of a. In 31. 199 — dear to Science, dear to A. /. K. vii. Merlin, who knew the range of all their arts /. K. 102 And since you seem the Master of all A. /. K. 118 Her a., her hand, her counsel all had wrought E.A. 59 Horticultural a., or half coquette-like E. A. 176 ARTEMISIA. The Carian A., strong in war Pr. 33 ARTHUR. — his King A., some twelve books Pms 190 King A. : then, because his wound was deep Pms 191 /. K. 194 ASCETIC Page ARTHUR. King Arthur's table, man by man Poems 191 Then spake King A. to Sir Bedivere Poems 191, 193 To him replied King A., faint and pale Poems 193 To whom replied King A., much in wrath Poems 195 Saying, ' King Arthur's sword, Excalibur Poems 195 Then spoke King A., breathing heavily Poems 195 Then spoke King A., drawing thicker breath Pms 196 And answer made King A., breathing hard Poems 197 Poems 197 Poems 198 Poems 199 Poems 199 Poems 199 Poems 201 Poems 20X Poems 202 In M. 12 In M. 13 In M. in In M. 130 3* 32 87 96 But as he walk'd, King A. panted hard — murmur'd A., ' Place me in the barge' — slowly answer'd A. from the barge Lord A., whither shall I go — that A. who with lance in rest King A., like a modern gentleman —sail with A. under looming shores ' A. is come again : he cannot die ' With my lost Arthur's loved remains My A., whom I shall not see That holy Death ere A. died My A. found your shadows fair To show Sir Arthur's deer. In copse and fern Ala. 124 The brave Geraint, a knight of Arthur's court /. K. Weeping for some gay knight in Arthur's hall'/. K. For A. on the Whitsuntide before I. K. King Arthur's hound of deepest mouth /. K. That eat in Arthur's hall at Camelot /. K. Shalt ride to Arthur's court, and being there /. K. Of Modred, Arthur's nephew, and fell at last /. K. And rising up, he rode to Arthur's court /. K. A knight of Arthur's court, who laid his lance I. K. Now, made a knight of Arthur's Table Round /. K. To A., then will A. come to you' /. K. With A. to Caerleon upon Usk /. K. For once, when A. walking all alone /. K. 101 The wily Vivien stole from Arthur's court /. K. 101 — leaving Arthur's court he gain'd the beach /. K. 103 In Arthur's arras hall at Camelot /. K. 106 And then I rose and fled from Arthur's court /. K. 108 Of Arthur's palace : then he found a door /. K. 132 In Arthur's casement glimmer'd chastely down/. K. 132 For A., blameless King and stainless man' /. K. 134 Which A. had ordain'd, and by that name /. K. 148 And A. came, and labouring up the pass /. K. 149 For A. when none knew from whence he came /. K. 149 And largest, A., holding then his court /. K. 151 Has A. spoken aught? or would yourself /. K. 153 'A., my lord, A., the faultless King /. K. 153 Not Arthur's, as you know, save by the bond /. K. 154 After the king who eat in Arthur's halls /. A". 157 'Known am I, and of Arthur's hall, and known /. K. 157 Of Arthur's glorious wars.' And Lancelot /. K. 162 Dull days were those till our good A. broke W T ith A. in the fight which all day long While A. to the banquet, dark in mood At Arthur's right, with smiling face arose And added, ' our true A. when he learns Where Arthur's wars were render'd mystically /. K. 188 Vine-clad, of Arthur's palacetoward the stream/. K. 208 In which as Arthur's Queen 1 move and rule /. K. 211 /. K. 162 /. K. 162 /. K 176 /. K. 176 /. K. 177 /. K. 213 /. K. 213 /. K. 213 /. K. 214 /. K. 216 /. K 216 So A. bad the meek Sir Percivale For some do hold our A. cannot die But A. spied the letter in her hand ' My lord liege A., and all ye that hear Was richest, A. leading, slowly went He pausing, A. answer'd, 'O my knight Then A. spake among them, ' Let her tomb /. K. 217 But A., who beheld his cloudy brows /. K. 218 Alas for Arthur's greatest knight, a man /. K. 221 Not after Arthur's heart ! I needs must break /. K. 221 Of A., and to splinter it into feuds /. K. 226 No knight of Arthur's noblest dealt in scorn /. K. 227 Which good King A. founded, years ago /. K. 236 And that was A. ; and they foster'd him /. K 240 Sang Arthur's glorious wars, andsangthe King /. K. 240 The silk pavilions of King A. raised /. K. 245 A., and led her forth, and far ahead /. K. 245 How sad it were for A., should he live /. K. 251 ' Oh A. ! ' there her voice brake suddenly /. K. 256 ARTIST. Well hast thou done, great a. Poems 29 A more ideal A. he than all Poems 204, 209 Of sovereign artists ; not a thought, a touch Pr. 117 — an unknown artist's orphan child E.A. 96 ARTIST-LIKE, —first-born of thy genius, A. Pms 30 ASCALON. —that was old Sir Ralph's at A. Pr. 2 ASCEND. Take wings of fancy, and a. In M. 105 ASCENDING. And with the dawn a. lets /. K. 82 A. tired, heavily slept till morn E. A. 10 ASCENSION. And right a., Heaven knows Pr. 149 ASCETIC. But touch'd with no a. gloom In M. 168 ASH Page ASH. Delaying- as the tender a. delays Pr. 80 Xor hoary knoll of a. and haw In if. 151 ASHAMED. Shall I believe him a. to be seen Ma. 47 A. am I that I should tell it thee /. K. 31 ASH BUDS. More black than a. in the front Pms 204 ASHEN". By a. roots the violets blow In M. x~9 ASHEN-GRAY. But an a. delight Ma. 26 ASHES. And heap their a. on the head Poems 182 Young a. pirouetted down Poems 327 Who will not let his a. rest Poems 351 And from his a. may be made In M. 30 And dust and a. all that is In M. 53 — and die : who knows? we are a. and dust Ma. 5 A. to a., dust to dust Ma. 152 Had left in a. ; then he spoke and said /. K. 106 Siipt into a. and was found no more E. A. 51 And all I was, in a. E. A. 140 ASHY. With a. rains, that spreading made E. A. 147 ASIDE. — quick !' and here she shook a. Pr. 8 Till one of" those two brothers, half-a. Pr. 122 Rear'd, sung to, when, this gad-fly brush'd a. Pr. 128 I glanced a., and saw the palace-front Pr. 133 And put thy harsher moods a. In M. 84 He stood on the path a little a. Ma. 46 Who moving cast the coverlet a. /. K. 5 (No reason given her) she could cast a. /. K. 43 As you that not obey me. Stand a. /■ K- 53 And Enid stood a. to wait the event /. K. 54 Against the pavement, cast his lance a. /. K. 77 And this poor gown I will not cast a. /. K. 83 Of diamonds one in front, and four a. /. K. 149 Received at once and laid a. the gems /. K. 210 ASK. When I a. her if she love me Poems 5 ■ I had great beauty : a. thou not my name Poems 154 You a. me, why, tho' ill at ease Poems 175 — he has a mint of reasons : a. Poe??ts 190 Asks what thou lackest, thought resignd Poems 293 That Sheba came to a. of Solomon Pr. 47 Tho', madaxn,you should answer, -o.-e would a. Pr. 47 ' O a. me nothing,' I said : ' and she knows too Pr. 57 1 Your brother, Lady, — Florian, — a. for him Pr. 152 A. me no more : the moon may draw the sea Pr. 157 A. me no more Pr. 157 I a. you nothing ; only, if a dream Pr. 165 I would but a. you to fulfil yourself Pr. 165 And a. a thousand things of home In M. 2.2 Let no one a. me how it came to pass Ma. 61 If one should a. me whether Or if I a. thee why Ma. 94 I will not a. thee why Ma. 94 Or to a. her, 'take me, sweet Ma. 101 But he, ' I charge you, a. not, but obey ' /. K. 8 • Then will I a. it of himself,' she said 1. K. 11 I swear I will not a. your meaning in it /. K. 85 — a. no kiss ; ' then adding all at once /. K. 106 For these your dainty gambols : wherefore a. I. K. 109 — a. your boon, for boon I owe you thrice /. K. 109 Why will you never a. some other boon ? /. K. 112 Who feels no heart to a. another boon /. K. 113 Your tongue has tript a little : a. 3-ourself /. K. 124 — never could undo it : a. no more /. K. 129 I a. you, is it clamour'd by the child /. K. 134 At Camelot for the diamond, a. me not /. K. 157 Why a. you not to see the shield he left /. K. 181 That she should a. some goodly gift of him /. K. 194 Receive, and yield me sanctuary, nor a. I. K. 232 — pray you check me if I a. amiss /• K- 242 ' Annie, I came to a. a favour of you E. A. 16 — the favour that I came to a. E. A. 18 — what is it that you a. ? ' E. A. 24 — to a. her of my shares, I thought E. A. 102 ASKANCE. — turn'da. a wintry eye Pr. 153 ASK"D. With all men ; for I a. him, and he said Pms 219 —once I a. him of his early life Poems 231 I a. him half -sardonically Poems 232 A. Walter, patting Lilians head (she lay Pr. 7 In laurel : her we a. of that and this Pr. 27 ' Are you that Psyche '?' Florian a., ' to whom Pr. 43 My mother knows ; and when I a. her ' how ' Pr. 55 He scarce would prosper. ' Tell us,' Florian a. Pr. 58 That will be.' ' Dare we dream of that,' I a. Pr. 70 We twain, with mutual pardon a. and given Pr. 109 She a. b::t space and fairplay for her scheme Pr. 121 The ' wilt *-hou ' a., till out of twain In M. 206 — Echo there, whatever is a. her, answers Ma. 1 Unclaim'd, in flushing silence, till I a. Ma. 122 To learn the price, and what the price he a. Ma. 124 -wondering, a. her, ' Are you from the Ma. 128 And ride with me.' And Enid a., amazed /. K. 8 ASTOLAT Page ASK'D. Made sharply to the dwarf, and a. /. A'. 11 A. yet once more what meant the hubbub I. K. 14 — a., ' What means the tumult in the town? ' /. K. 14 Hath a. again, and ewr loved to hear /. K. 24 Then, when the Prince was merry, a. Limours /. K. 61 And after madness acted question a. /. K. 89 Tho' pale, yet happy, a. her not a word /. K. 92 Whenever I have a. this very boon /. K. no Now a. again : for see you not, dear love /. K. no That proof of trust — so often a. in vain /. K. 141 Thrice than have a. it once — could make me /. K. 141 And much they a. of court and Table Round/. K. 161 Then when he saw the Queen, embracing a. /. K. 177 A letter, word for word ; and when he a. /. K. 205 — added mouths that gaped, and eyes that a. /. K. 212 — might she follow me thro' the world, she a. /. K. 216 And would if a. deny it E. A. 3 And Philip a. E. A. 18 * Is it a year?' she a. E. A. 25 1 — would it be more gracious ? ' a. the girl E. A. 63 And a. ; but not a word E. A. 102 I wonder'd at her strength, and a. her of it E. A. xv2 That which I a. the woman in my dream E. A. 104 I met him suddenly in the street, and a. E. A. 104 I a. thee, ■ Give me immortality ' E. A. 140 ASKEW. — conscience and one eye a.' E. A. 105, 106 ASKING. — and therefore at your a. yours /. K. 26 ' O not so strange as my long a. it I. K. 109 She braved a riotous heart in a. for it /. K. 166 Nor a. overmuch, and taking less E. A. 14 — grant mine a. with a smile E. A. 140 ASLEEP. — folded over thought, smiling a. Poems 81 As half-a. his breath he drew Poems no All night I he awake, but I fall a. at morn Poems 137 And deep a. he seem'd, yet all awake Poems 143 Falling a. in a half-dream Poems 146 Since that dear soul hath fall'n a. Poems 172 To fall a. with all one's friends Poe?ns 322 If e'er when faith had fall'n a. In M. 192 When a. in this arm-chair Ma. 31 — come to her waking, find her a. Ma. 93 And the gay court, and fell a. again /. K. 35 And half a. she made comparison /. K. 35 He fell a., and Enid had no heart /. K. 6s But fast a., and lay as tho' she smiled /. K. 207 ASMODEUS. Abaddon and A. caught at me Pms 242 ASPASIA'S. No, not for ah A. cleverness Pr. 47 ASPECT. Of pensive thought and a. pale Poems 163 More bounteous aspects on me beam Poems 334 ASPEN. Willows whiten, aspens quiver Poems 65 — here thine a. shiver Poems 364 ASPEN-TREES, —tremulous a.-trees /. K. 168 And ever-tremulous a., he lay /. K. 174 ASPHODEL. Violet, amaracus, and a. Poems 102 Resting weary limbs at last on beds of a. Poems 149 ASPICK'S. Showing the a. bite Poems 156 ASSAIL. To a. this gray pre-eminence of man Pr. 66 ASSAIL'D. They that a., and they that held I. K. 171 ASSASSINS, and all flyers from the hand /. K. 3 ASSAY it on some one 'of the Table Round /. K. 129 ASSAYE. Against the myriads of A. Ma. 143 ASSEMBLE. And phantom hopes a. Poems 340 ASSEMBLED, —in to where they sat a. Poeyns 366 ASSENT, —the men, the women : I gave a. Pr. 177 ASSENTED. And Enoch all at once a. to it E. A. 7 ASSERT. — their necks from custom, and a. Pr. 36 The tyrant, and asserts his claim Ma. 141 ASSES. That whisper'd 'a. ears' among the Pr. 35 ASSIGN'D. — purpose of God, and the doom a. Ma. 115 That does the task a., he kiss'd her face 7". K. 190 A. to her not worthy of it, she knelt /. K. 190 ASSOCIATION. A fresh a. blow In M. 154 ASSUME. — the}- must lose the child, a. Pr. 22 ASSUMED. — the favour, and a. the Prince Pr. 106 A. from thence a half-consent involved Pr. 161 A. that she had thank'd him, adding, ' yea /. K. 80 ASSUMING. The all-a. months and 3-ea.rs In M. 121 ASSUMPTIONS. In its a. up to heaven In M. 88 ASSURANCE only breeds resolve ' Poems 304 ASSURE. — you prattle, may now a. 3-ou mine I. K. 122 ASSYRIAN. That oil'd and curl'd A. Bull Ma. 28 ASTOLAT. Elaine, the lily maid of A. /. K. 147 Ran to the Castle of A., he saw I. K. 156 And issuing found the Lord of A. /. K. 156 Then said the Lord of A., ' Here is Torre's I. K. 157 And came at last, tho' late, to A. /. K. 179 To whom the Lord of A., ' Bide with us I. K. 180 The Lord of A. out, to whom the Prince I. K. 180 About the maid of A., and her love I. K. 184 13 ASTOLAT Page ASTOLAT. —Lancelot loves the maid of A.* /. K. 185 ' The maid of A. loves Sir Lancelot /. K. 185 But far away the maid in A. /. K. 186 To A. returning rode the three /. K. 194 Then spake the lily maid of A. /. K. 204 So that day there was dole in A. /. K. 206 Whereon the lily maid of A. I. K. 212 I, sometime call'd the maid of A. /. K. 213 ASTR^EAN. The second-sight of some A. age Pr. 52 ASTRAY. — answer'd sharply that I talk'd a. Pr. 61 ASTROLOGY. A sad a. Ma. 60 ASUNDER. And order'd words a. fly Poems 313 A-TAAKIN' — a's doing a-taakin'o'mea? E. A. 134 ATE. They let the horses graze, and a. /. K. 57 A. all the mowers' victual unawares /. K. 57 I never a. with angrier appetite /. K. 58 And a. with tumult in the naked hall I. K. 77 That ever among ladies a. in Hall /. K. 160 ATHLETE. Until she be an a. hold Poems 14 Here rose, an a., strong to break or bind Poems 119 ATHOS. Tomohrit, A., all things fair Poems 352 ATHWART. I look'd a. the burning drouth Pms 96 A. a plane of molten glass In M. 24 A. the ledges of rock Ma. 90 ATLANTIC. I wish they were a whole A. Pr. 180 ATMOSPHERE. Floating thro' an evening a. Pms 82 For love possess'd the a. Poems 89 Cold in that a. of Death In M. 33 ATONEMENT. So rich in a. as this Ma. 64 ATTAIN the wise indifference of the wise E. A. 166 ATTAIN'D. Of the half-a. futurity Poems 27 Only, are likest gods, who have a. Poems 103 ATTEMPER'D. A man of well-a. frame Ma. 141 ATTEMPT. —Vivien should a. the blameless I. K. 102 ATTEND, '—while each ear was prick'd to a. Pr. 151 And in his presence I a. In M. 195 ATTENDANCE. — make her dance a. Poems 328 You come with no a., page or maid /. K. 63 ATTENDED. So she goes by him a. Poems 359 ATTEST their great commander's claim Ma. 145 ATTICS. And round the a. rumbled Poems 186 ATTIRE. She in her poor a. was seen Poems 365 ATTIRED, —the women who a. her head /. K. 4 More than Geraint to greet her thus a. /. K. 41 ATTRIBUTES. Or crown'd with a. of woe In M. 184 — all the gentle a. E. A. 89 ATWAIN. Edged with sharp laughter, cuts a. Pms 13 AUBREY. 'Sleep, Ellen A., sleep, and Poems 223 AUDIBLY. Half inwardly, half a. she spoke I. K. 6 AUDIENCE of Guinevere, to give at last /. K. 208 AUDLEY. At A. Court Poems 221 I spoke, while A. feast Poems 221 'AUF. Wi' 'a, the cows to cauve E. A. 134 AUGER and saw, while Annie seem'd to hear E. A. 10 AUGHT. If a. of ancient worth be there Poems v. If a. of prophecy be mine Poems 13 As wild as a. of fairy lore Poems 323 In honour — what, I would not a. of false Pr. 127 Fairer than a. in the world beside Ma. 106 If a. of things that here befall Ma. 145 Unfaith in a. is want of faith in all /. K. 113 Has Arthur spoken a. ? or would yourself /. K. 153 If his old prowess were in a. decay 'd I. K. 177 If question'd, a. of what he cared to know E. A. 36 AUGUR-HOLE. Boring a little a. in fear Poe?ns 287 AUGURIES. Britain light upon a. happier E. A. 171 AUGUST. By shaping some a. decree Poems vii. Freedom rear'd in that a. sunrise Poems 39 AUNT. Trustees and Aunts and Uncles Poems 235 ' To the Abbey : there is A. Elizabeth Pr. 4 And here we lit on A. Elizabeth Pr. 6 And there we join'd them : then the maiden A. Pr. 6 Said Lilia ; ' why not now,' the maiden A. Pr. 12 Hid in the ruins ; till the maiden A. Pr. 12 A showery glance upon her a., and said Pr. 178 AURELIAN. That fought A. and the Roman Pr. 33 AUSONIAN. — stay'd the A. king to hear Poems 117 AUSTRALASIAN, —the long wash of A. seas Ma. 127 AUTHENTIC. Some say the third— the a. Pr. 62. — prize the a. mother of her mind Pr. 129 AUTHORITY forgets a dying king Poems 195 — see that some one with a. Pr. 148 All people said she had a. Pr. 149 AUTOCRAT. Aristocrat, democrat, a. — one Ma. 40 AUTUMN. Youngest A., in a bower Poems 79 — fruitful kisses, thick as A. rains Poems 106 Drops in a silent a. night Poems 145 Her beauty grew : till A. brought an hour Poe?ns 210 With all her a. tresses falsely brown Pr. 52 U AWE Page AUTUMN. Of A., dropping fruits of power Pr. 139 —as the golden A. woodland reels Pr. 176 That sweeps with all its a. bowers In M. 16 And A., with a noise of rooks In M. 121 And A. laying here and there In M. 149 By a. nutters haunted E. A. 1 — a golden a. eventide E. a'. 4 —a. into a. flash'd again E. A. 25 In A., parcel ivy-clad E. A. 59 Autumn's mock sunshine of the faded woods E. A. 82 And after A. past— if left to pass E. A. 166 His Autumn into seeming-leafless days E. A. 166 AUTUMNAL. To slant the fifth a. slope In M. 37 AUTUMN-FIELDS, —looking on the happy A.fr. 76 AUTUMN-SHEAF. Than of the gamer'd A. Pms 294 AVAIL. Let this a., just, dreadful Poems 236 Nor branding summer suns a. - hi M. 2 Crying, ' I count it of no more a. /. K. 83 AVALON. Lay, dozing in the vale of A. Poems 117 AVARICE. Down with ambition, a., pride Ma. 39 — all her pitiless a. E. A. 173 AVE. But ' Ave Mary ' made she moan Poems 73 And ' Ave Mary ' night and morn Poems 73 And ' Ave Mary' was hei moan Poems 74 And ' Ave, Ave, Ave,' said In M. 82 AVENGE. Peace ! there are those to a. us Pr. 100 1 1 will a. this insult, noble Queen /. K. 12 AVENGED. Of sense a. by sense that wore Poems 374 AVENGING. Or whether war's a. rod Ma. 163 A. this great insult done the Queen ' /. K. 23 AVENUE. — ever-echoing avenues of song Ma. 142 Thro' cypress avenues, at our feet Ma. 156 — far end of an a. E. A. 20 A lily-a. climbing to the doors E. A. 59 AVER. And but for fancies which a. I?i M. 24 I, clasping brother-hands, a. In M. 123 AVERILL. — an Aylmer-A. marriage once E. A. 53 And might not A., had he will'd it so E. A. 53 And A. A. at the Rectory E. A. 53 With A., and a year or two before E. A. 54 1 Some other race of A.'s '— prov'n or no E. A. 54 ' Not proven,' A. said, or laughingly E. A. 54 Since A. was a decad and a half E. A. 55 He wasted hours with A. E. A. 56 By A. : his, a brother's love, that hung E. A. 58 To let that handsome fellow A. walk E. A. 65 — foam'd away his heart at A.'s ear E. A. 69 Whom A. solaced as he might, amazed E. A. 69 Wept like a storm : and honest A. seeing E. A. 72 Forbad her first the house of A. E. A. 77 — then tho' A. wrote E. A. 79 A. went and gazed upon his death E. A. 82 Long o'er his bent brows linger'd A. E. A. 83 AVERRING it was clear against all rules Pr. 24 AVERSE. — with sick and scornful looks a. Poems 154 AVI LION. — island valley of A. Poems 200 AWAIT thee : azure pillars of the hearth Pr. 169 A slow-develop'd strength awaits Poems 181 Some draught of Lethe might a. Poems 305 A. them. Many a merry face In M. 207 Yea, let all good things a. Ma. 148 AWAITING. Beheld her first in field, a. him I. K. 29 AWAKE. Is lily-cradled : I alone a. Poei?is 99 All night I lie a., but I fall asleep at morn Poems 137 For lying broad a. I thought of you Poems 139 And deep-asleep he seem'd, yet all a. Poems 143 Fell in a doze : and half-a. I heard Poeyns 189 That I might kiss those eyes a. Poems 323 I have walk'd a. with Truth Ma. 64 — the rose was a. all night for your sake Ma. 79 The lilies and roses were all a. Ma. 79 Or hardly slept, but watch'd a. Ma. 158 And shook his drowsy squire a. and cried I. K. 7 To get her well a. ; and in her hand I. K. 36 Might strike it, and a. her with the gleam I. A". 747 Held her a. : or if she slept, she dream'd I. K. 229 AWAKED. — myself have a., as it seems Ma. 115 AWAKEN'D. Slowly a., grow so full and deep Pms 8x The earliest pipe of half-a. birds Pr. 77 AWARD. — would seem to a. it thine Poems 101 AWARE. —Enid was a. of three tall knights I. K. 48 And she by tact of love was well a. I. K. 193 — ere she was a. E. A. i$ AWE. — most shall hold a fretful realm in a. Poems 279 The springs of life, the depths of a. Poems 295 My heart beat thick with passion and with a. Pr. 64 To feel once more, in placid a. In M. 189 He spake and parted. Wroth but all in a, /. K". 184 For loyal a., saw with a sidelong eye I. A'. 208 Page Pms 9, 10, ii, 12 Poems 12 Poems 99 E.A. 47 E. A. 107 E. A. 109 J/a. 37 AWEARY AWEARY. She said, « I am a., a. She wept, ' I am a., a. And I am all a. of my life AWED and promise-bounden she forbore It a. me' — my dream a. me AWE-STRICKEN breaths at a work divine AWFUL. But anon her a. jubilant voice Poems 48 A gentle sound, an a. light Poems 335 God made himself an a. rose of dawn Poems 368, 375 The woman : then, Sir, a. odes she wrote Pr. 22 But all she is and does is a. ; odes Pr. 22 Too a., sure, for what they treated of Pr. 22 An a. voice within had wa'rn'd him thence Pr. 124 An a. thought, a life removed In AI. 20 Of gladness, with an a. sense In AI. 48 A princely people's a. princes Ala. 155 And every square of text an a. charm I. K. 128 An a, dream : for then she seem'd to stand I. K. 229 Broke, mixt with a. light E. A. 107 — mixt with a. light, and show'd their eyes E. A. 108 AWHILE. Was but to rest a. within her court /. K. 91 Should I flounder a. without a tumble E. A. 175 AWNINGS. — classic frieze, with ample a. gay Pr. 30 AWOKE. Last with these the king a. Poems 319 A desire that a. in the heart of the child Ala. 67 And these a. him, and by great mischance Refused her to him, then his pride a. And strongly striking out her limbs a. A. me.' AWRY. To woman, superstition all a. AXE. Just ere the falling a. did part His a. to slay my kin Nor wielded a. disjoint The woodmen with their axes : lo the tree I.K. I. K. 24 I.K. 66 E. A. 101 Pr. 36 Poems 164 Poetns 255 Poems 256 " Pr. 138 The glittering a. was broken in their arms Pr. 139 BABIES Page AXE. A train of dames : by a. and eagle sat Pr. 104 Shaking their pretty cabin, hammer and a. E. A. 10 Bloodily fall the battle-a. E. A. 172 AXELIKE. That a. edge unturnable Pr. 39 AYE. Wherein at ease for a. to dwell Poems 112 AYLMER. So Lawrence A., seated on a style Ma. 127 Sir A. A., that almighty man Where A. follow'd A. at the Hall He, like an A. in his Aylmerism Sir A. half forgot his lazy smile — and had Sir A. heard My Peter first ; ' and did Sir A. know ' Why then I love it : ' but Sir A. past And did Sir A. (deferentially Sir A. A. slowly stiffening spoke They parted, and Sir A. A. watch'd Things in an A. deem'd impossible Sir A. reddening from the storm within To shame these mouldy A.s in their graves E. A. 71 The vintage — when this A. came of age E. A. 72 The watcher, and Sir A. watch'd them all E. A. 79 — with her the race of A. past E. A. 81 AYLMER-AVERILL. — A. marriage once E. A. 53 AYLMERISM. He, like an Aylmer in his A. E. A. 57 AZIMUTH. Of sine and arc, "spheroid and a. Pr. 149 AZURE. Ring'd with the a. world, he stands Pms 376 For a. views : and there a group of girls Pr. 4 — the glens are drown'd in a. gloom Pr. ior — a. pillars of the hearth Pr. 169 In a. orbits heavenly -wise hi M. 128 Half-lost in the liquid a. bloom Ma. 15 Her eyes a bashful a. Ma. 121 On eyes a bashful a., and on hair Ma. 128 A., an Eagle rising or, the Sun /. K. 118 Sir Lancelot's a. lions, crown'd with gold /. K. 181 In letters gold and a.,' which was wrought I. K. 217 E.A. 52 E.A. S3 E.A. E.A. 61 E. A. 64 E.A. 64 E.A. 64 E.A. 65 E.A. ts E.A. 65 E.A. 67 E.A. 68 B. BAAL, —priest, and honour thy brute B. E. A. 84 Then came a Lord in no wise like to B. E. A. 84 BABBLE. She woke : the b. of the stream Poe??ts 75 Howe'er you b., great deeds cannot die Pr. 67 The brook shall b. down the plain In M. 153 In b. and revel and wine Ma. 78 But b., merely for b. Ma. 105 I b. on the pebbles Ma. 119 Began to scoff and jeer and b. of him /. K. 4 — all because you dream they b. of you ' I. K. 129 The babes, their b., Annie, the small house E. A. 33 BABBLED for the golden seal, that hung Poe>ns 219 I b. for you, as babies for the moon Pr. 96 Had b. ' Uncle ' on my knee In M. 115 He moving homeward b. to his men I. K. 65 While thus they b. of the King, the King I. K. 213 BABBLER. A b. in the land " Poems 246 So she, like many another b., hurt /. K. 243 BABBLING. The b. runnel crispeth Poems 4 And runlets b. down the glen Poetfis 75 — by denial flush her b. wells Pr. 124 A blind and b. laughter, and to dance Pr. 143 And hushes half the b. Wye hi M. 12 ' b. brook ' Ma. 118 — of his wheat-suburb, b. as he went Ma. 123 Thro' either b. world of high and low Ala. 147 Who pleased her with a b. heedlessness I. K. 232 BABE. Sat smiling, b. inarm Poems 116 Her maiden b., a double April old Pr. 35 Father will come to his b. in the nest. Pr. 54 Not vassals to be beat, nor petty babes Pr. 82 'Ah me, my b., my blossom, ah my child Pr. in My b., my sweet Aglai'a, my one child Pr. 112 With Psyches'!?., was Ida watching us Pr. 133 AVith Fsyche's b. in arm : there on the roofs Pr. 138 She spoke, and with the b. yet in her arms Pr. 140 A little nearer, till the b. that by us Pr. 143 BABE. The laces toward her b.: but she nor Pr. 144 Laid the soft b. in his hard-mailed hands Pr. 147 Not tho' he built upon the b. restored Pr 161 — bring her b., and make her boast In M. 6x From youth, and b., and hoary hairs In M. 95 When a Mammonite mother kills her b. Ala. 7 — the red man's b. Ala. 57 Except that now we poison our babes, poor Ala. 106 As clean as blood of babes, as white as milk I. K. 111 — two fair babes, and went to distant lands I. K. 130 A seven months' b. had been a truer gift /. K. 130 — with his first babe's first cry E. A. 5 Nursing the sicklyb. E.A. 9 Pray'd for a blessing on his wife and babes E.A. 11 Look to the babes E. A. 13 — his babes a better bringing-up E.A. 17 — know his babes were running wild E.A. 17 A gilded dragon, also, for the babes E. A. 30 The babes, their babble, Annie, the small E. A. 33 — Annie lived and loved him, and his babes E. A. 37 The mother glancing often toward her b. E. A. 41 To tempt the b., who rear'd his creasy armsi?. A. 41 — with his b. across his knees E. A. 41 His wife no more, and saw the b. E. A. 41 My b. in bliss E. A. 49 The b. shall lead the lion E. A. 84 — sometime thro' the doorwa}-? whose the b.E. A. 86 At this the b. E. A. 99 ' Here's a leg for a b. of a week ' E. A. 115 — for the b. had fought for his life E. A. 122 One b. was theirs, a Margaret, three years £.. A. 96 Clasp thy little babes about thy knee Select. -2orj BABE-FA'CED. He came with the b. lord Ala. 86 BABEL. Their cancell'd B.s : tho' the rough Pr. 78 As of a new-world B.. woman-built Pr. 99 BABIES. — b. rolled about Pr. 5 I babbled for you, as b. for the moon Pr. 96 15 BABIES Page BABIES. I knew them all as b. E. A. 125 BABY. Moulded thy b. thought Poems 78 —in her bosom bore the b., Sleep Poems 213 As ruthless as a b. with a worm Poems 229 B. fingers, waxen touches Poems 275 B. lips will laugh me down Poems 275 — round these halls a thousand b. loves Pr. 49 Of b. troth, invalid, since my will Pr. 127 The b. new to earth and sky In M. 67 • — lightly rocking baby's cradle E. A. 11 Annie from her baby's forehead dipt E. A. 13 His baby's death, her growing poverty E. A. 39 —she sang this b. song E. A. 112 — what does little b. say E. A. 112 B., sleep a little longer E. A. 112 B. too shall fly away E. A. 112 B. says, like little birdie E. A. 112 A b.-germ, to when Poems 248 BABYISMS. In b., and dear diminutives E. A. 79 BABYLON. Shall B. be cast into the sea E. A. 97 BABYLONIAN. The foundress of the B. wall Pr. 33 BABY-OAK. The b. within Poems 255 BABY-ROSES. The b. in her cheeks Poems 5 BABY-SOLES, —tender pink five-beaded b. E. A. 60 BACCHUS. My mailed B. leapt into my arms Pms 156 BACK on herself her serpent pride had curl'd Pms 123 And the swallow 'ill come b. again Poems 135 For nature brings not b. the Mastodon Poems 190 So strode he b. slow to the wounded Poems 193, 195 That's nothing ! ' drew a little b. Poems 201 Holding the bush, to fix it b., she stood Poems 207 But if he will not take thee b. again Poems 218 And I will beg of him to take thee b. Poems 218 His father's memory ; and take Dora b. Poems 219 — all his love came b. a hundredfold Poems 220 — but I remember, ten years b. Poems 227 I wear an undress'd goatskin on my b. Poems 240 Old writers push'd the happy season b. Poems 264 Whistle b, the parrot's call Poems 282 The woman of a thousand summers b. Poems 285 Then she rode b., clothed on with chastity Poems 287 Falls b., the voice with which I fenced Poems 304 Roll b., and far within Poems 332 Cruelly come they b. to-day Poems 338 Till Ellen Adair come b. to me Poems 338 How she mouths behind my b. Poems 370 Will never come b. to me Poems 378 This -were a medley ! we should have him b. Pr. 13 —jewels, gifts, to fetch her : these brought b. Pr. 17 To hear my father's clamour at our backs Pr. 20 Long summers b., a kind of ceremony Pr. 21 Many a long league b. to the North Pr. 24 Dismissal : b. again we crost the court Pr. 34 B. started she, and turning round we saw Pr. 45 Above the fountain-jets, and b. again Pr. 52 Her b. against a pillar, her foot on one Pr. 63 They bore her b. into the tent Pr. 84 — partly that I hoped to win you b. Pr. 90 — we will do it, unless you send us b. Pr. 96 — now will cruel Ida keep her b. Pr. 111 Who gave me b. my child?' ' Be comforted* Pr. 112 He comes b. safe), ride with us to our lines Pr. 118 B. rode we to my father's camp, and found Pr. 124 She shall not have it b. : the child shall grow Pr. 129 Made at me thro' the press, and staggering b. Pr. 134 — b. I fell, and from mine arms she rose Pr. 165 — comes the statelier Eden b. to men Pr. 173 Giv'n b. to life, to life indeed, thro' thee Pr. 175 — we went b. to the Abbey, and sat on Pr. 182 The daily burden for the b. In M. 42 — they are coming b. from abroad Ma. 9 B. to the dark sea-line Ma. 91 B. from the Breton coast Ma. 91 Not that gray old wolf, for he came not b. Ma. 105 For here I came, twenty years b.— the week Ma. 121 — you not heard?' said Katie, 'we came b. Ma. 129 — gave my letters b. to me Ma. 132 B. to France with countless blows Ma. 143 B. to France her banded swarms Ma. 143 Then they rode b., but not Ma. 169 B. from the mouth of Hell Ma. 170 Who with b. turn'd, and bow'd above /. K. 15 Thou shalt give b. their earldom to thy kin /. K. 31 ' This noble prince who won our earldom b. /. K. 33 Because we have our earldom b. again /. K. 38 Not beat him b., but welcomed him with joy /. K. 40 Invaded Britain, ' but we beat him b. /. K. 40 ' I will go b. a little to my lord /. K. 49 Then she went b. some paces of return /. K. 49 16 BALEFUL Page BACK. To which he flung a wrathful answer b. /. K. 53 — if it were so do not keep it b. /. K. 62 For I know men : nor will you win him b. /. K. 63 Once she look'd b., and when she saw him /. K. 69 As if he heard not, moving b. she held / K. 69 But coming b. he learns it, and the loss /. K. 72 Till Enid shrank far b. into herself /. K. 77 That settles, beaten b., and beaten b. /. K. 112 Her own claw b., and wounded her own heart/. K. 119 Without the full heart b. may merit well /. K. 121 Unbidden, and the brutes of mountain b. / K. 123 To keep the list low and pretenders b. /. K. 124 Tighten, and then draw b., and let her eyes /. K. 125 Went b. to his old wild, and lived on grass /. K. 127 Came to her old perch b., and settled there /. K. 141 That follow'd, flying b. and crying out /. K. 143 In earnest, let me bring your colour b. /. K. 167 Far o'er the long backs of thebushless downs/. K. 168 B. to the barrier, then the heralds blew /. K. 173 Rode o'er the long backs of the bushless downs/. K. 188 ' What matter, so I help him b. to life ? ' /. K. 188 Unclasping flung the casement b., and look'd/. K. 198 ' Is this Elaine ? ' 'till b. the maiden fell /. K. 201 With all their dewy hair blown b. like flame /. K. 240 Kill'd in a tilt, come next, five summers b. /. K. 242- Went slipping b. upon the golden days /. K. 245 Read rascal in the motions of his b. E. A. 105 BACKBITERS. Face-flatterers and b. are /. K. 136 BACKWARD the lattice-blind she flung Poems 76 With rosy slender fingers b. drew Poems 105 From off her shoulder b. borne Poems 117 The plunging seas draw b. from the land Poems 123 Ah, b. fancy, wherefore wake In M. 117 Push'd from without, drave b. to the wall I. K. 60 Their plumes driv'n b. by the wind they made /. K . 172 BAD. Imade a feast : I b. him come Poems 109 I b. thee, watch, and lightly bring Poems 194 — b. adieu for ever Poems 261 — b. him cry, with sound of trumpet Poems 286 I fear to slide from b. to worse Poejns 300 It is not b. but good land Poems -526 base and b. ! what comfort ? none for me ' Pr. in What is she now? My dreams are b. Ma. 10 — here beneath it is all as b. Ma. 103 He b. you guard the sacred coasts Ma. 147 Thro' which he b. her lead him on, they past /. K. 47 — into b. hands fall'n, and now so long /. K. 56 According to his fashion b. the host /. K. 61 In this poor gown he b. me clothe myself /. K. 83 Nor b. farewell, but sadly rode away /. K. 198 Gawain, who b. a thousand farewells to me /. K. 202 Lancelot, who coldly went nor b. me one /. K. 202 So Arthur b. the meek Sir Percivale /. K. 213 1 left her and I b. her no farewell /. K. 215 He, reverencing king's blood in a b. man /. K. 227 — b. him with good heart sustain himself E. A. 79 Never since our b. earth became one sea E. A. 84 Mowt 'a bean, for she wur a b. un, shea E. A. 131 BADON. — Pagan yet once more on B. hill /. K. 162 Of B. I myself beheld the King /. K. 163 BAFFLING. Then b., a long course of them/?. A. 30 (She wanted water) blown by b. winds E. A. 34 BAG. His hand into the b.; but well I knowPoems 264 — with b., and sack, and basket E. A. 4 BAGDAT. By Bagdat's shrines of fretted Poems 19 In inmost B., till there seem'd Poems 24 BAILIFF. — near him, when his b. brought Poems 227 — how he sent the b. to the farm Ma. 124 — how the b. swore that he was mad Ma. 125 He met the b. at the Golden Fleece Ma. 125 He found the b. riding by the farm Ma. 125 BAIRNS. ' See your b. before you go ! E. A. 47 BAIT. — net made pleasant by the baits E. A. 76 Christ the b. to trap his dupe and fool E. A. 106 BAKES, —whose brain the sunshine b. Poems 242 BALA, —the south-west that blowing B. lake /. K. 95 BALANCE. — would cast and b. at a desk Poems 222 Like souls that b. joy and pain Poems 362 As the wind-hover hangs in b. E. A. 67 BALANCED. — justlier b., scale with scale ' Pr. 32 For ever.' Well, she b. this a little Pr. 63 Self-balanced on a lightsome wing In M. 91 BALCONY. Under tower and b. Poems 71 — lean'd upon the b. Poems 76 BALD. I, whose b. brows in silent hours Poems 242 On the b. street breaks the blank day hi M. 9 BALDNESS, —to wag their b. up and down Pr. 108 BALDRIC, —from his blazon'd b. slung Poems 68 BALEFUL, —rather seem'd a lovely b. star /. K. 106 BALES Page BALES. — dropping down with costly b. Poem* 278 As tho' they brought but merchant's b. In M. 21 BALK'D. — with a worm I b. his fame Poems 156 BALL. Alternate leaf and acorn-b. Poems 257 ' No compound of this earthly b. Poems 290 Is to be the b. of Time Poems 370 Or steep-up spout whereon the gilded ball Pr. 4 Flung b., flew kite, and raced the purple fly Pr. 42 In the orange thickets : others tost a ball Pr. 52 Quoit, tennis, b. — no games ? nor deals in that Pr. 65 To him who grasps a golden b. In M. 172 — day comes, a dull red b. Ma. 99 Shore thro' the swarthy neck, and like a b. /. K. 84 Made blossom-b., or daisy-chain E. A. 55 Had tost his b., and flown his kite, androll'dZf. A. 55 BALLAD. From time to time, some b. or a Pr. 13 — something in the ballads which they sang Pr. 177 A b. to the brightening moon In M. 131 A passionate b., gallant and gay Ma. 23 To the b. that she sings Ma. 98 A true-love b., lightly rode away /. K. 183 Like b. -burthen music, kept * Ma. 158 BALLOON. A petty railway ran : a fire-b. Pr. 5 BALM. — our brows in slumber's holy b. Poe>ns 145 — vague desires, like fitful blasts of balm Poe?ns 205 Sweet ! sweet spikenard, and b., and Poetns 243 The ringlet's waving b. Poe?ns 252 Beat b. upon our eyelids. Hither came Pr. 60 The b. -cricket carols clear Poems 51 BALM-DEWS to bathe thy feet Poems 256 BALMIER. Kisses b. than half-opening E. A. 142 BALMY. Upon her b. bosom Poems 92 The b. moon of blessed Israel Poems 158 Drew forth the poison with her b. breath Poems 161 — the b. glooming, crescent-lit Poems 212 From draughts of b. air Poe?ns 362 — b. drops in summer dark hi M. 28 — who wakenest with thy b. breath hi M. 149 BALTIC, —the side of the Black and the B. Ma. 115 shaker of the B. and the Nile Ma. 145 BALUSTER, —on those balusters, high Pr. 60 BALUSTRADE. Ran up with golden b. Poems 23 BAND. A single b. of gold about her hair Pr. 133 Where once we held debate, a b. In M. 127 No spirit ever brake the b. In M. 137 — to divide in a dream from a b. of the blest Ma. in A b. of pain across my brow Ma. 131 — if he live, we will have him of our b. /. K. 75 When sleep had bound her in his rosy b. Select. 196 BANDAGE, —the blinding b. from his eyes Pr. 28 BANDED. Or the yellow-b. bees Poems 79 Should b. unions persecute Poems 176 The snowy-b., dilettante Ma. 33 Back to France her b. swarms Ma. 143 BAN DIED by the hands of fools Poe??is 370 BANDIT. — were b. earls, and caitiff knights I. K. 3 ' My lord, I saw three bandits by the rock /. K. 49 — down upon him bare the b. three /. K. 50 Struck thro' the bulky bandit's corselet home/. K. 54 By bandits groom'd, prick'd their light ears /. K. 56 Rode on a mission to the b. Earl /. K. 73 1 took you for a b. knight of Doorm I. K. 87 Right in the gateway of the b. hold /. K. 87 Was half a b. in my lawless hour I. K. 88 One from the b. scatter'd in the field /. K. 89 --broke the b. holds and cleansed the land /. A". 95 — redden'd with no bandit's blood E. A. 82 The marches, and by b. -haunted holds I. K. 47 BANE. Became her b. ; and at the last /. K. 229 The mockery of my people, and their b.' /. K. 252 BANG'D. —palace b. and buzz'd and clackt Poems 319 Shock'd, like an iron-clanging anvil b. Pr. 133 BANK. In cool soft turf upon the b. Poems 23 — the wave-worn horns of the echoing b. Poems 48 From the b. and from the river Poems 69 The broad stream in his banks complaimngPoe??is 70 Shadow forth the banks at will Poems 82 The little life of b. and brier Poems 351 In the hollow b. One reaching forward drew Pr. 84 -shadowing bluff that made the banks hi M. 158 Behind a purple frosty b. hi M. 165 Full to the banks, close on the promised good Ma. 58 With many a curve my banks I fret Ma. 119 Parts from a b. of snow, and by and by /. K. 39 Tho' happily down on a b. of grass /. K. 72 Beside the river-b. E. A. 74 B ANNER. Here droops the b. on the tower Poems 313 The hedge broke in, the b. blew Poems 319 To unfurl the maiden b. of our rights Pr. 100 BARE Page BANNER. The b. : anon to meet us lightly Pr. 120 March with b. and bugle and fife Ma. 23 — hail once more to the b. of battle unroll'd Ma. 114 With b. and with music, with soldier and Ma. 142 BANQUET. Each baron at the b. sleeps Poe7?is 314 They harp'd on this ; with this our banquets Pr. 22 With.b. in the distant woods In M. 131 To deck the b. Fiercely flies In M. 165 Spice his fair b. with the dust of death Ma. 6t The b., and concourse of knights and kings I. A". 176 While Arthur to the b., dark in mood I. K. 176 Beneath the b., where the meats became I. K. 185 Till ev'n the knights at b. twice or thrice A K. 185 For banquets, praised the waning red E. A. 72 — distant blaze of those dull banquets E. A. 76 BANQUET-HALL, —the fair Peleian b. Poems 106 BANTER. — solemn gibe did Eustace b. me Poems 209 Part b., part affection Pr. 10 They hated b., wish'd for something real Pr. 178 BANTER'D. — for I b. him, and swore Poems 262 With which we b. little Lilia first Pr. 177 BANTLING. — the b. scald at home, and brawl Pr. 130 Lo their precious Roman b. E. A. 170 BAPTISMAL. Entwine the cold b. font In M. 47 BAR. — salt pool, lock'd in with bars of sand Poems 123 -it came, and close beside the window-bars Poems 140 Sang looking thro' his prison-bars Poems 164 —letting wide the doors that b. Poems -zi-2 — stream'd thro' many a golden b. Poems 320 My spirit beats her mortal bars Poems 335 High over roaring Temple-b. Poems 342 And he had squeezed himself betwixt the bars Pr. 7 You worthiest : and howe'er you block and b. Pr. 98 Who breaks his birth's invidious b. hi M. 89 The b. of Michael Angelo hi M. 128 Unloved, by many a sandy b. In M. 153 Whistling a random b. of Bonny Doon Ma. 121 I linger by my shingly bars Ma. 126 Low breezes fann'd the belfry bars Ma. 134 Save for the b. between us, loving her E. A. 48 Cali'd to the b., but ever call'd away E. A. 54 No b. between them E. A. 57 Not she at least, nor conscious of a b. E. A. 58 Shot o'er the seething harbour-b. E. A. 155 BARBARIAN. — I count the gray b. lower Poems 282 ' Who ever saw such wild barbarians Pr. 56 Barbarians, grosser than your native bears Pr. 102 BARBAROUS. As yet we find in b. isles Pr. 35 These women were too b., would not learn Pr. 44 Against the sons of men, and b. laws Pr. 170 Too much the sons of men and b. laws Pr. 171 And b. opulence jewel-thick Ma. 46 Britain's b. populaces E. A. 169 — mock at a b. adversary E. A. 170 — writhing b. lineaments # E. A. 173 BARD. Than b. has honour'd beech or lime Poems 257 Was also B., and knew the starry heavens /. K. 102 Her seer, her b., her silver star of eve I. K. 143 Of all men ; many a b., without offence /. K. 153 ' Yea, one, a b. ; of whom my father said /. K. 239 So said my father — and that night the b. /. K. 240 s BARE. Falsehood shall b. her plaited brow Poems 13 The plain was grassy, wild, and b. Poems 47 God, before whom ever he b. Poems 122 —strip a hundred hoilows b. of Spring p r . 139 Laid b. Thereto she pointed with a laugh Poems 156 The b. black cliff clang'd round him Poe?ns 198 — our long walks were stript as b. as brooms Pr. 11 — galloping hoofs b. on the ridge of spears Pr. 132 — us they hfted up, dead weights, and b. Pr. 154 B. of the body, might it last hi M. 65 Nor blame I Death, because he b. In M. 113 And meadow, slowly breathing b. In M. 125 To b. the eternal Heavens again In M. 189 — saw the altar cold and b. Ma. 131 Flash'd all their sabres b. Ma. 169 B. to the sun, and monstrous ivy-stems I. K. 17 A youth, that following with a costrel b. I. K. 21 And down upon him b. the bandit three I. K. 50 And he, she dreaded most, b. down upon him I. K. 54 B. victual for the mowers ; and Geraint I. K. 56 And b. her by main violence to the board I. K. 80 The great and guilty love he b. the Queen I. K. 160 In battle with the love he b. his lord I. K. 160 B., as a wild wave in the wide North-sea I. AT. 172 Then came the hermit out and b. him in I. K. 174 She b. me, pacing on the dusky mere I. K. 221 On the b. coast /. K. 228 Stunn'd, and his creatures took and b. him off I. K. 23a BARE Page BARE. — love and reverence left them b. ? E. A. 91 But the first that ever I b. was dead E. A. 121 BARED. — her clear and b. limbs Poems 103 Yea, tho' it spake, and b. to view In M. 136 And b. the knotted column of his throat /. K. 5 Had b. her forehead to the blistering- sun /. K. 73 BARE-FOOTED came the beggar maid Poems 365 BARE-GRINNING. Flash'd the b. skeleton /. K. 138 BARE-HEADED. Some cowl'd, and some b. Pr. 140 BARENESS. To make old b. picturesque In M. 199 BARGAIN. May rue the b. made.' And Pr. 19 Until they closed a b., hand in hand Ma. 125 BARGE. Slide the heavy barges trail'd Poems 66 Then saw they how there hove a dusky barge Pms i< And to the b. they came — murmur'd Arthur, ' Place me in the b — slowly answer'd Arthur from the b. — the b. with oar and sail To take me to the river, and a barge Full-summer, to that stream whereon the b, Where these had fallen, slowly past the b. To weep and wail in secret ; and the b. And saw the b. that brought her moving down /. K. 220 BARGE-LADEN, to three arches of a bridge Pms 204 BARK. All silver-green with gnarled b. * Poems 11 — came a b. that, blowing forward, bore Poems 201 Could slip its b. and walk Poems 253 Of vapour buoy'd the crescent -b. Poems 321 I find a magic b. I sit within a helmless b. Confused me like the unhappy b. Mid-ocean, spare thee, sacred b. Poems 198 Poems 198 Poems 199 Poems 200 /. K. 205 /. K. 206 /. K. 212 /. K. 212 Poems 334 InM. 4 In M. 26 InM. 28 Whose b. had plunder'd twenty nameless isles /. K. 122 Down on a b., and overbears the b. /. K. 172 — lading and unlading the tall barks E. A. 45 — this frail b. of ours, when sorely tried E. A. 88 How swiftly stream'd ye by the b. E. A. 147 — b. and blacken innumerable E. A. 170 B. an answer, Britain's raven E. A. 170 BARKING. — cunning eyes to see : the b. cur Pms 287 — b. dogs and crowing cocks Poems 318 — b. for the thrones of kings Ma. 144 BARLEY. Long fields of b. and of rye Poems 65 In among the bearded b. Poems 66 — raked in golden b. Poems 344 BARLEY-SHEAVES, —rode between the b. Pms 68 BARMAID. Bitter b., waning fast Poems 368 BARN. — 'boot Bessy Marris's b. E. A. 130 Bessy Marris's b. ! tha knaws she E. A. 131 BARON. Each b. at the banquet sleeps Poems 314 The barons swore, with many words Poems 319 (The gaunt old B. with his beetle brow Pr. 41 The huge bush-bearded Barons heaved and Pr. 108 Heard from the B. that, ten years before /. K. 161 Count, b. — whom he smote, he overthrew /. K. 171 BARONET. No little lily-handed B. he Pr. 181 The hoar hair of the B. E. A. 53 — the B. yet had laid E. A. 57 BARR'D. All b. with long white cloud the Poems 116 Every door is b. with gold Poems 276 Keep within, door shut, and window b. Poems 286 But now fast b. : so here upon the flat Pr. 126 That eastern tower, and entering b. her door/. K. 148 They b. her : yet she bore it : yet her cheek E. A. 77 BARREN. — the wandering fields of b. foam Poems 143 The Lotos blooms below the b. peak Poems 148 — on a dark strait of b. land Poems 191 — b. chasms, and all to left and right Poems 198 By this still hearth, among these b. crags Poems 265 O the b., b. shore Poems 271 To commune with that b. voice Poems 311 But it is wild and b. Poems 326 And b. common-places break Poems 340 This b. verbiage, current among men Pr. 32 Thy helpless warmth about my b. breast Pr. 147 From b. deeps to conquer all with love Pr. 166 That makes the b. branches loud In M. 24 For private sorrow's b. song In M. 35 The soil, left b., scarce had grown In M. 75 Or underneath the b. bush hi M. 135 What profit lies in b. faith hi M. 167 BARREN-BEATEN. He left the b. /. K. 155 BARRICADES. Should pile her b. with dead In M. 196 BARRIER. At the b. like a wild horn in a land Pr. 132 All barriers in her onward race In M. 177 Back to the b. ; then the heralds blew /. K. 173 BARRING. No graver than a schoolboy's b. Pr. 180 BARROW. With Danish barrows E. A. 1 Danish b. overhead E, A. 25 18 BATTLE Page BARROW. — grassy barrows of the happier E. A. 143 BARTER. To b., nor compensating the wanti;". A. 14 BASE. Of him that utter'd nothing b. Poems v. —column's b., and almost blind Poems 237 Wrapt in dense cloud from b. to cope Poems 298 He has a solid b. of temperament Pr. 87 O b. and bad ! what comfort? none for me ' Pr. 111 The roar that breaks the Pharos from his b. Pr. 154 As are the roots of earth and b. of all Pr. 130 —great the crush was and each b. Pr. 155 — is first ? but is he the last ? is he not too b. Ma. 19 And myself so languid and b. Ma. 24 And therefore splenetic, personal, b. Ma. 38 Nor know I whether I be very b. /. K. 25 And lash'd it at the b. with slanting storm /. K. 126 How, in the mouths of b. interpreters /. K. 135 Not only to keep down the b. in man /. K. 250 Fails in mid air, but gathering at the b. /. K. 256 ' Ungenerous, dishonourable, b. E. A. 66 The broken b. of a black tower E. A. 77 Count the more b. idolater of the two E. A. 85 — slandering me, the b. little liar E. A. 117 It sees itself from thatch to b. E. A. 154 Counts nothing that she meets with b. Select. 220 BASED. Broad-b. upon her people's will Poems vii. Broad-b. flights of marble stairs Poems 23 — bare black cliff clang'd round him, as he b. Pms 198 BASEMENT. His creatures to the b. of the /. K. 230 BASENESS, —equal b. lived in sleeker times Pr. 127 He knows a b. in his blood Poems 303 Is there no b. we would hide ? In M. 73 She finds the b. of her lot hi M. 85 To leave an equal b. ; and in this /. K. 137, BASER. Or b. courses, children of despair Pr. 65 BASES. From level meadow-b. of deep grass Pms 112 -the hidden b. of the hills Poe?ns 195 Upon a pillar'd porch, the b. lost Pr. 27 — move the stony b. of the world Pr. 139 The b. of my life in tears In M. 71 BASEST. Altho' I be the b. of mankind Poems 236 BASHFUL. Her eyes a b. azure Ma. 121 On eyes a b. azure, and on hair Ma. 128 But could not out of b. delicacy /. K. 4 BASHFULNESS. His b. and tenderness at E. A. 16 BASIS. All but the b. of the soul Poems 181 BASK'D. And b. and batten'd in the woods In M. 55 BASKET. To Francis, with a b. on his arm Poems 221 His b., and dismounting on the sward /. a^. 57 Clung but to crate and b., ribs and spine /. K. 126 With bag and sack and b. E. A. 4 —half embraced the b. cradle-head E. A. in BASKING. Of little Monaco, b., glow'd Ma. xs^ BASSA. Of Duglas ; that on B. ; then the /. A'. 162 BASSOON. Make liquid treble of that b. Pr. 51 The flute, violin, b. Ma. 77 BASTION. A looming b. fringed with fire hi M. 25 But all was quiet : from the bastion'd walls Pr. 20 BAT. After the flitting of the bats Poems 10 Mock-Hymen were laid up like winter bats Pr. 82 Blacken'd about us, bats wheel'd, and owls Pr. 183 And bats went round in fragrant skies In M. 139 For the black b., night, has flown Ma. 76 BATHE. Balm-dews to b. thy feet Poems 256 Soft lustre bathes the range of urns Poems 313 She bows, she bathes the Saviour's feet In M. 51 — rosy shadows b. me, cold E. A. 143 BATHED. — new-b. in Paphian wells Poems 105 Laid it on flowers and watch'd it lying b. Pr. 20 That Vivien b. your feet before her own /. K. 108 BATHS, —beyond the sunset, and the baths Poems 267 And dipt in baths of hissing tears In M. 184 His wife a faded beauty of the Baths E. A. 52 BATTEN 'D. And bask'd and b. in the woods In M. 55 BATTENEST. Thou b. by the greasy gleam Pms 348 BATTER. — one batters at the dovecote-doors Pr. 83 BATTER'D. — flints b. with clanging hoofs Poems 151 He b. at the doors : none came Pr. 124 Beside us, Cyril, b. as he was Pr. 144 And b. with the shocks of doom hi M. 184 BATTERING the gates of heaven with storms Pms 236 BATTERY-SMOKE. Plunged in the b. Ma. 169 BATTLE. We heard the steeds to b. going Poems 53 The b. deepen'd in its place Poems 55 — all day long the noise of b. roll'd Poems 191 — drunk delight of b. with my peers Poems 265 — in wild Mahratta-b. fell my father Poems 281 The distant b. flash'd and rung Poems 295 For them I b. till the end Poems 333 That beat to b. where he stands Pr. 105 BATTLE Page RATTLE, —gives the b. to his hands Pr. 105 Your knight, and fight your b. ; what for me ' Pr. 106 Breathing and sounding beauteous b., comes Pr. 115 — doing b. with forgotten ghosts Pr. 131 Your b. : kiss her : take her hand, she weeps Pr. 148 War with a thousand battles, and shaking a Ma. 7 Singing of men that in b. array Ma. 23 — as months ran on and rumour of b. grew Ma. 113 Far into the North, and b., and seas of death Ma. 113 With a loyal people shouting a b. cry Ma. 113 — hail once more to the banner of b. unroll'd Ma. 114 From talk of battles loud and vain Ma. 151 Some ship of b. slowly creep Ma. 163 And ride with him to b. and stand by /. K. 6 ■ Do b. for it then,' no more ; and thrice I. A". 30 In the great b. fighting for the king /. A". 32 His voice in b., and be kindled by it /. K. 55 In b. fighting for the blameless King I. A". 97 As after furious b. turfs the slain I. A'. 127 In b. with the love he bare his lord I. K. 160 And in the four wild battles by the shore /. A". 162 What thou hast been in b. by my side /. K. 218 In open b. or the tilting-field /. K. 242 In twelve great battles ruining overthrown /. K. 247 Far down to that great b. in the west /. A". 254 Now — ere he goes to the great B. ? none /. K. 259 Of b., bold adventure, dungeon, wreck E. A. 56 And gives the b. to his hands Select. 207 Beat to b. where thy warrior stands Select. 207 BATTLE-AXE. —bloodily fall the b. E. A. 172 BATTLE-BOLT, —the rushing b. sang from Ma. 7 BATTLE-CLUBS. —Malayan crease and b. Pr. 2 BATTLED. Beneath the b. tower Poems 159 Who b. for the True, the Just In M. 81 BATTLE-FIELD. Be shot for sixpence in a h.Pms 222 BATTLE-FLAGS, —the b. were furi'd Poems 278 BATTLE-SONG. The chivalrous b. Ma. 39 BATTLE-THUNDER, —thine the b. of God' E. A. 171 BATTLE-WRITHEN. His b. arms and /. K. 189 BAWL. — throats would b. for civil rights Pr. 127 BAY. — the spangle dances in bight and b. Poems 44 In glassy bays among her tallest towers ' Poems 102 Not less tho' dogs of Faction b. Poems 182 — where the b. runs up its latest horn Poems 221 The b. was oily calm Poems 224 The farmer's son, who lived across the b. Poems 224 That he sings in his boat on the b. Poems 378 — long waves that roll in yonder b. Ma. 62 I bubble into eddying bays Ma. 119 Where he greatly stood at b. Ma. 143 By bays, the peacock's neck in hue Ma. 154 The noble hart at b., now the fax horn /. K. 13 In caves about the drear}' b. E. A. 156 BAYING, —chiefly for the b. of Cavall I. K. 10 BAY-WINDOW. With Ho ! from some b. shake Pr. 20 BEACH. — watch the crisping ripples on the b. Pms 146 — rounded by the stillness of the b. Poe»is 221 Here about the b. I wander'd Poems 269 The breaker breaking on the b. In M. 98 — scream of a madden'd_b. Ma. 14 From the longshore-cliffs windy walls to the b. /. A". 54 Leaving Arthur's court he gain'd the b. /. K. 103 As tremulously as foam upon the b. /. K. 244 Here on this b. a hundred years ago E. A. 1 — here and there, on sandy beaches Ma. 154 BEACON. Not in vain the'distance beacons Poems 283 — like a b. guards thee home In M. 28 BEACON-BLAZE, —as the b. allures E. A. 40 BEACON-STAR, —with a b. upon his head /. K. 237 BEACON-TOWER, —like a b. above the waves Pr. 100 BEAD. — number'd b. and shrift Poe?ns 247 BEADED. Glancing with black-b. e5*es Poems 5 — woolly breasts and b. eyes In M. 139 The tender pink five-b. baby-soles E. A. 6o BEAK. The vulture, b. and talon, at the heart Pr. 127 — wild hawk stood with the down on his b. Poems 379 Must their ever-ravening eagle's b. E. A. 169 BEAK'D. —shallop of crystal ivory-b. E. A. 158 BEAKER. — b. brimm'd with noble wine Poems 314 BEAM. — did gird their orbs with beams Poems 39 — beams of Love, melting the mighty hea.rtsPoems 157 — the deep blue gloom wi:h beams divine Poevts 158 —the white dawn's creeping beams Poe??is 161 Smote by the fresh b. of the springing east Poems 199 -like a lane of beams athwart the sea Poems 264 Or will one b. be less intense Poems 291 The beams, that thro' the Oriel shine Poems 314 More bounteous aspects on me b. Poems 334 Pure spaces clothed in living beams Poems 336 BEARING Page BEAM. — then commenced the dawn : a b. Pr. 36 Fresh as the first b. glittering on a sail Pr. 76 TJie shadow of his sister, as the b. Pr. 120 —shape it plank and b. for roof and floor Pr. 138 A b. in darkness : let it grow In M. vi. A chequer-work of b. and shade In M. 99 Pale with the golden b. of an eyelash Ma. 13 Like a b. of the seventh Heaven Ma. 50 Who smitten by the dusty sloping b. /. K. 14 The roof so lowly but tha't b. of Heaven E. A. 86 BEAM'D. —joyful note of all things joyful, b. E. A. 54 B. thro' the thicken'd cedar in the dusk Poems 209 B. on his fancy, spoke, he answer'd not /. K. 193 BEAMING. — brake a sudden-b. tenderness /. A". 164 BEAR. — how canst thou b. my weight Poems 107 I know you proud to b. your name Poems 126 B. seed of men and growth of minds Poems 180 As we b. blossoms of the dead Poems 183 I will not b. it longer ' Poems 185 — b. me to the margin : yet I fear Poems 197 Less burthen, by ten hundred-fold, to b. Poems 237 B. witness, if I could have found a way Poems 238 And I in truth (thou wilt b. witness here) Poems 240 Fly, happy happy sails and b. the Press Poems 263 — cherish that which bears but bitter fruit Poems 273 That bears relation to the mind Poe?ns 297 — wisdom lingers, and heb.s a laden breast Poems 280 His sons grow up that b. his name Poems 301 Three angels b. the holy Grail Poe?ns 335 Which bears a season'd brain about Poems 342 Ah b. me with thee, smoothly borne Poevts 377 The king would b. him out ;' and at the last Pr. 24 Should b. a double growth of those rare souls Pr. 38 Nor think I b. that heart within my breast Pr. 46 Pent in a crevice : much I b. with her Pr. 58 I paced the terrace, till the B. had wheel'd Pr. 85 — hear me, for I b. Pr. 96 Barbarians grosser than your native bears Pr. 102 — if thou needs must b. the yoke, I wish it Pr. 147 Help thy vain worlds to b. thy light In M. vi. — help thy foolish ones to b. . In M. vi. To b. thro' Heaven a tale of woe In M. 18 Come then, pure hands, and b. the head In M. 30 I loved the weight I had to b. In M. 42 A life that bears immortal fruit In M. 61 To that ideal which he bears ? In M. 74 She often brings but one to b. In M. 78 He bears the burthen of the weeks In M. in — fading and growing till I could b. it no more Ma. 14 To b. his armour ? Shall we fast, or dine ? /. K. 71 — b. him hence out of this cruel sun /. K. 74 Here, take him up, and b. him to our hall /. K. 75 — glimmering toward the summit, bears with /. K. 172 Then will I b. it gladly ; ' she replied /. A'. 205 But I myself must b. it.' Then he wrote /. K. 205 To seize me \>y the hair and b. me far I. K. 221 Is added to the griefs the great must b. /. A'. 235 B. with me for the last time while I show I. K. 249 — beseech }-ou by the love you b. E. A. 17 — hard to b. ! why did they take me thence E. A. 43 The boat that bears the hope of life E. A. 45 — thought to b. it with me to nvy grave E. A. 49 Wrongs himself more, and ever bears about E. A. 105 Like the skater on ice that hardly bears him E. A.. 175 BEARD, —chatter with the cold, and all my b. Pms 237 His b. a foot before him, and his hair Poems 285 My b. has grbwn into my lap ' Poems 319 ' By holy rood, a royal b. Poems 319 — p'aw'd* his b. and muttered 'catalepsy' Pr. 16 An answer which, half-muffled in his b. Pr. 119 The haggard father's face and reverend b. Pr. 141 Broad-faced with under-fringe of russet b. /. A". 74 — took his russet b. between his teeth /. A". 83 The lists of such a b. as youth gone out I. K. 1:6 The vast and shaggy mantle of his b. I. K. 106 With no more sign'of reverence than a b. /. K. 107 BEARD-BLOWN, —mosaic, and the b. goat Pr. 78 BEARDED. In among the b. barley Poevts 66 Some b. meteor, trailing light Poevts 69 On the chalk-hill the b/grass Poems 95 The stern black-b. kings with wolfish eyes Poems 154 The b. Victor of ten thousand hymns Pr. 72 The huge bush-b. Barons heaved and blew Pr. 108 — overborne by all his b. lords Pr. 125 The russet-b. head roll'd on the floor /. K. 84 — parcel-b. with the traveller's-joy E. A. 59 BEARERS. Save under pall with b. E. A. 94 BEAREST. With thee unto the love thou b. Pms 29 BEARING. Ridged the smooth level, b. on Poems 20 *9 BEARING Page BEARING. Oaring- one arm, and b. in my left Pr. 84 The b. and the training- of a child Pr. 131 To change the b. of a word In M. 198 —viler, as underhand, not openly b. the sword Ma. 4 Princeiike his b. shone ; and errant knights /. K. 29 B. his wish, whereto the Queen agreed /. K. 208 B. a lifelong hunger in his heart E. A. 5 Her all of thought and b. hardly more E. A. 52 Pain'd, and, as b. in myself the shame E. A. 69 With armorial bearings stately Poems 359 BEAST. The people here, a b. of burden Poems 119 Of great wild beasts Poems 124 Were not his words delicious, lab. Poems 233 — and even beasts have stalls Poems 240 — a b. with lower pleasures, like a b. with Poems 282 Than beasts, abidest lame and poor Poems 298 The many-headed b. should know ' Poems 351 — biting laws to scare the beasts of prey Pr. 127 I envy not the b. that takes In M. 44 Move upward, working out the b. In M. 184 Like Paul with beasts, I fought with Death In M. 186 That skins the wild b. after slaying him I. K. 50 Where first as sullen as a b. new-caged /. K. 91 — should have done it ; but the beauteous b. /. K. 115 The sick weak b. seeking- to help herself /. K. 119 — beasts themselves woufcl worship ; camels /. K. 123 His nephew, ever like a subtle b. /. K. 225 She half-foresaw that he, the subtle b. /. K. 228 — like a b. hard-ridden, breathing hard E. A. 66 — there surely lives in man and b. E. A. 99 BEAT. Brow-beats his desk below Poems 62 B. time to nothing in my head Poe?ns 88 — her heart would b. against me Poems 92 And I should know if it b. right Poems 92 — dog howl, mother, or the death-watch b. Poems 139 The wind, that beats the mountain, blows Poems 171 — deep heart of existence b. for ever like Poems 279 Orient, where my life began to b. Poems 281 From winter rains that b. his grave Poems 301 My frozen heart began to b. Poems 309 Beats quick and quicker, till he find Poe??ts 318 My spirit beats her mortal bars Poems 335 Had b. her foes with slaughter Pr. 3 Such women, but convention beats them down Pr. 8 B. balm upon our eyelids. Hither came Pr. 60 May b. admission in a thousand years Pr. 62 My heart b. thick with passion and with awe Pr. 64 Not vassals to be b., nor petty babes Pr. 82 That b. to battle where he stands Pr. 105 The child is hers : and they will b. my girl Pr. in B.: merrily-blowing shruTd the martial fife Pr. 119 One pulse that beats true woman Pr. 145 A greater than all knowledge, b. her down Pr. 170 Beats with his blood, and trust in all things Pr. 174 To dance with death, to b. the ground In M. 1 Beats out the little lives of men In M. 2 ' What is it makes me b. so low?' In M. 4 Hath still'd the life that b. from thee In M. 6 Doors where my heart was used to b. In M. 9 A flower b. with rain and wind In M. 10 The darken'd heart that b. no more In M. 32 Of hearts that b. from day to day hi M. 83 He plays with threads, he beats his chair In M. 92 My pulses therefore b. again In M. 121 That beats within a lonely place In M. 123 But seeks to b. in time with one # I?i M. 123 That crash'd the glass, and b. the floor In M. 127 At last he b. his music out hi M. 143 Their hearts of old have b. in tune In M. 145 But let no footstep b. the floor In M. 162 Doors, where my heart was used to b. In M. 185 — suddenly, sweetly, my heart b. stronger Ma. 33 B. with my heart 'more blest than heart can Ma. 63 B., happy stars, timing with things below Ma. 63 B. to the noiseless music of the night Ma. 63 My heart would hear her and b. Ma. 81 My dust would hear her and b. Ma. 81 Is it gone? my pulses b. Ma. 87 — the broad light glares and beats Ma. 101 —hoofs of the horses b., b. Ma. 102 B. into my scalp and brain Ma. 102 — the heart of a people b. with one desire Ma. 114 In that fierce light which beats upon a throne I. K. vi. B. thro' the blindless casement of the room I. K. 4 Invaded Britain, ' but we beat him back I. K. 40 Not b. him back, but welcomed him with joy I. K. 40 B., till she woke the sleepers, and return' d I. K. 67 But while the sun yet b. a dewy blade I. K. 69 —never merrily b. Annie's heart E. A. 28 BEAUTY Page BEAT, —beats out his weary life E. A. 40 May b. a pathway out to wealth and fame E. A. 74 Her heart had b. remorselessly E. A. 92 — b. me down and marr'd and wasted me E. A. 140 — b. the twilight into flakes of fire E. A. 141 — b. with rapid unanimous hand E. A. 173 B. to battle where thy warrior stands Select. 207 B. upon his father's shield Select. 207 Saying* b. quicker, for the time Select. 220 BEATEN. Denying not these weather-b. limbs Pms 237 B. with some great passion at her heart Pr. 94 —who seems no bolder than a b. hound I. K. 49 Then forward by a way which, b. broad /. K. 69 That settles, b. back, and b. back /. A'. 112 To bitter weeping like a b. child I. K. 138 Of every dint a sword had b. in it /. K. 148 He left the barren-b. thoroughfare I. K. 155 — that breaker-b. coast E. A. 4 His large gray eyes and weather-b. face E. A. 5 BEATING. Do b. hearts of salient springs Poems 34 — music in his ears his b. heart did make Poems 143 — and heard with b. heart Poems 234 The two-cell'd heart b., with one full stroke Pr. 173 B. from the wasted vines Ma. 143 B. it in upon his weary brain E. A. 43 — b. up thro' all the bitter world E. A. 44 — bosom b. with a heart renew'd E. A. 141 BEAUTEOUS. The reflex of a b. form Poems ~ Breathing and sounding b. battle, comes Pr. 115 In whispers of the b. world In M. 109 Come ; b. in thine after form In M. 135 And should have done it ; but the b. beast I. K. 115 — when the b. hateful isle E. A. 34 To find my heart so near the b. breast Select. 197 BEAUTIES. Of b., that were born Poems 247 With b. every shade of brown and fair Pr. 51 Tho' having seen all b. of our time /. K. 27 BEAUTIFUL. — thrilling eyes so keen and b. Pms 27 And said the earth wasb. Poems 36 Her b. bold brow Poems 39 B. Paris, evil-hearted Paris Poe?ns 100 B.-brow'd GEnone, my own soul Poems 101 Idalian Aphrodite b. Poems 104 How b. a thing it was to die Poems 159 Twin-sisters differently b. Poems 231 ' She is more b. than day ' Poems 365 His darkness b. with thee hi M. 102 Perfectly b. ; let it be granted her Ma. 11 — fire of a foolish pride flash'd over her b. face Ma. 17 Silence, b. voice Ma. 24 b. creature, what am I Ma. 53 Not b. now, not even kind Ma. 106 He had not dream'd she was so b. I. K. 165 And his own children tall and b. E. A. 42 — ever thus thou growest b. E. A. 141 Look b., when all the winds are laid E. A. 177 BEAUTIFULLY. So lightly, b. built Poems 125 To dress her b. and keep her true /. K. 47 Who loves that beauty should go b. /. K. 82 1 love that beauty should go b. /. K. BEAUTY. He spake of b. : that the dull Poems 36 ' But now thy b. flows away Poems 76 I see thy b. gradually unfold Poems 81 But I loved his b. passing well Poems no Good only for its b., seeing not Poems in — B., Good, and Knowledge, are three sisters Pms in That did love B. only,(B. seen Poems in And Knowledge for its b, ; or if Good Poems 111 B. and anguish walking hand in hand Poems 150 I had great b. : ask thou not my name Poems 154 And B. such a mistress of the world Poems 205 Her b. grew : till Autumn brought an hour Poems 210 Her constant b. doth inform Poems 316 Came murmurs of her b. from the South Pr. 17 All b. compass'd in a female form Pr. 31 Full of all b. ' O how sweet,' I said Pr. 72 — brief the moon of b. in the South Pr. 80 Another kind of b. in detail Pr. 97 — master'd, while that after-b. makes Pr. gC We hunt them for the b. of their skins Pr. 11. Her former b. treble Pr. 158 Fantastic b. ; such as lurks In M. 53 Against her b. ? May she mix In M. 177 —know not whence, of the singular b. of Maud Ma. 9 Done but in thought to your b. Ma. 13 O child, you wrong your b. Ma. 17 Man in his pride, and B. fair in her flower Ma. 18 —dream of her b. with tender dread Ma. 54 To know her b. might half undo it Ma. 54 BEAUTY Page BEAUTY. The b. would be the same Ma. 89 Remembering all the b. of that star /. K. vii. To make her b. vary day by day /. K. 1 The prize of b. for the fairest there /. K. 26 Your b. is no b. to him now /. K. 63 Who put your b. to this flout and scorn /. K. 81 I love that b. should go beautifully /. K. 82 Who loves that b. should go beautifully /. K. 82 The pearl of b. : and our knights at feast /. K. 153 Your b. is your b., and I sin /. K. 209 To tell you:' and her b., grace, and power /. K. 232 — b. such as never woman wore /. A". 253 His wife a faded b. of the Baths E. A. 52 Edith, whose pensive b., perfect else E. A. 55 Of gold and b. wooing him to woo E. A. 76 Willy, my b., my eldest-born E. A. 115 So Willy has gone, my b. E. A. 127 So glorious in his b. and thy choice E. A. 140 Thy b., make amends E. A. 140 — renew thy b. morn by morn E. A. 143 But now they live with'B. less and less Select. 196 Light Hope at Beauty's call would perch Select. 196 BECAME an outward breathing type Poems 94 Therefore revenge b. me well Poems 109 I heard Him, for He spake, and grief b. Poems 159 — well his words b. him Poems 231 Tho' all experience past b. Poems 306 And one b. head-waiter Poems 345 Another said: 'The crime of sense b. Poe?ns 375 B. her golden shield, I stole from court Pr. 20 To gather light, and she that was, b. Pr. 158 Thro' memorj- that which I b. In M. 141 B. a crystal, and he saw them thro' it I. K. 126 Beneath the banquet, where the meats b. I. K. 183 B. her bane ; and at the last she said I. K. 229 ' Sir Lancelot, as b. a noble knight /. K. 242 — grayer, till himself b. as mist /. K. 256 With rumour, and b. in other fields E. A. 76 Never since our bad earth b. one sea E. A. 84 Began to droop, to fall ; the man b. E. A. 94 BECK. Within the dark and dimpled b. Poems 88 At no man's b., but know ourself and thee Pr. 66 BECKON'D. She ended here, and b. us Pr. 38 BECKONING. — b. unto those they know In M. 22 BECOME. — all passion becomes passionless Pms 82 All things are taken from us, and b. Poems 146 I, whose bald brows in silent hours b. Poems 242 — oxv\y he, this wonder, dead, b. Poems 258 I am b. a name Poons 263 Becomes dishonour to her race Poems 301 Becomes a cloud : for all things serve their Pr. 78 — it becomes no man to nurse despair Pr. 98 Becomes on Fortune's crowning slope In M. 89 The lark becomes a sightless song In M. 179 Becomes an April violet In M. 180 Becomes the sea-cliff pathway broken short I. A". 139 Becomes a wonder and we know not why /. A". 200 B. the master of a larger craft E. A. 8 BECOMING as is meet and fit In M. 60 B., when the time has birth In M. 175 BED. Upon her b., across her brow Poems 11 Thou wilt not turn upon thy b. Poems 50 Soft are the moss-beds under the sea Poems 59 The river-b. was dusty-white Poems 75 And after supper, on a b. Poems 109 But sit beside my b., mother Poems 139 I blest him, as he knelt beside my b. Poems 139 — that it was fancy, and I listen'd in my b. Pms 140 — propt on beds of amaranth and moly Poems 147 Resting weary limbs at last on beds of Poems 149 Among the bulrush-beds, and clutch'd the Poems 196 — feels a night-mare on his b. Poems 197 — to b. ; where yet in sleep I seem'd Poe?ns 201 The farmer vext packs up his beds and Poems 226 — pack'd the thing among the beds Poems 226 From her warm b., and up the corkscrew stair Pms -2.2.2, In b. like monstrous apes they crush'd my Poems 242 See that sheets are on my b. Poems 368 — then to b., where half in doze I seem'd Pr. 28 The long hall glitter'd like a b. of flowers Pr. 51 Half-naked as if caught at once from b. Pr. 89 I took it for an hour in mine own b. Pr. 129 When on my b. the moonlight falls In M. 93 From off my b. the moonlight dies In M. 93 — tends upon b. and bower Ma. 49 Hung over her dying b. Ma. 66 On a b. of daffodil sky Ma. 76 Were it earth in an earthy b. Ma. 81 By the curtains of my b. Ma. 98 BEGAN Page BED. Where oleanders flush'd the b. Ma. 155 At this he hurl'd his huge limbs out of b. /. K. 7 As of a broad brook o'er a shingly b. I. A". 14 — twice, and thrice : now get you hence to b.'/. K. 167 Full lowly by the corners of his b. I. K. 190 Then take the little b. on which I died I. A". 205 — on the black decks laid her in her b. I. K. 207 Started from b. E. A. 27 Stiller, with yet a b. for wandering men E. A. 38 —kept the house, his chair, and last his b. E. A. 45 — then homeward and to b. E. A. 98 In her b. at peep of day E.A.112. — they hover about my b. E. A. 124 — an' a sittin 'ere o' my b. E. A. 129 — down thy rocky b. E. A. 151 BEDDED. — its casements b., and its walls Poems 222 BEDIVERE. The bold Sir B. uplifted him Pms 191 Sir B., the last of all his knights Poems 191 Then spake King Arthur to Sir B. Poems 191, 193 To him replied the bold Sir B. Poems 192 — answer made the bold Sir B. Poems 193, 195, 196 Then went Sir B. the second time Poems 194 Then quickly rose Sir B., and ran Poe??is 196 As in a picture. Him Sir B. Poe?ns 197 Long stood Sir B. Poems 200 BEDRIDDEN. Or old b. palsy E. A. 60 BEE. At noon the wild b. hunimeth Poems 3 Chaunteth not the brooding b. Poems 50 Or the yellow-banded bees Poems 79 With the hum of swarming bees Poems 79 The purple flowers droop : the golden b. Poems 99 Not less the b. would range her cells Poems 292 With all her bees behind her Poems 327 — here by thee will hum the b. Poems 364 The swallow stopt as he hunted the b. Poems 379 Made noise Avith bees and breeze Pr. 5 Sweet thoughts would swarm as bees about Pr. 17 — murmuring of innumerable bees' Pr. 169 As we shake off the b. that buzzes at us I. K. 188 — the working b. in blossom-dust E. A. 21 BEECH. Moving in the leavy b. Poems 165 Like a gurple b. among the greens Poems 233 I wish'cT myself the fair young b. Poems 251 Than bard has honour'd b. or lime Poems 257 We paused : the winds were in the b. hi M. 48 Unloved that b. will gather brown In M. 153 — seated on a serpent -rooted b. Ma. 124 Are pleasant, and the b. and lime Select. 220 Coquetting with young beeches Poems 327 BEE-LIKE. Than b. instinct hiveward Pr. 84 BEtSWING. — richest b. from a bin reserved^". A. 72 BEETLE. At eve the b. boometh Poenu 3 (The gaunt old Baron with his b. brow Pr. 41 BEETLING —the b. crag to which he clung E. A. 63 BEEVES. — in whole hogs and quarter b. I. K. 77 BEFALL. — mother's heart. Shame might b. Pr. 62 I hold it true, whate'er b. hi M. 44 If aught of things that here b. Ma. 143 BEFITS. A Tale for summer as b. the time Pr. 12 As b. a solemn fane Ma. 151 BEFOOL'D. —much b. and idioted E. A. 81 BEFORE. Or see (in Him is no b.) In M. 43 BEG. And I will b. of him to take thee back Poe??is 218 I cannot steal or plunder, no nor beg I. K. 71 BEGAN. When April nights b. to blow Poems 89 For I was alter'd, and b. Poems 89 B. to chime Poems 119 The trees b. to whisper, and the wind Poems 139 She, flashing forth a haughty smile, b. Poems 155 At this a hundred bells b. to peal Poems 202 — when my passion first b. Poems 245 Orient, where my life b. to beat Poems 281 I said, ' When first the world b. . Poems 290 Before the little ducts b. Poems 304 The sweet church bells b. to peal Poems 308 My frozen heart b. to beat Poems 309 The gouty oak b. to move Poems 327 So fares it since the years b. Poems 346 — drooping chestnut- buds b. Poems 362 And Walter nodded at me : ' He b. Pr. 11 So I b. Pr. 14 B. to mellow, ' If the king,' he said Pr. 24 B. to glitter firefly-like in copse Pr. 26 Said Cyril, ' O hush, hush ! ' and she b. Pr. 35 B. to address us, and was moving on Pr. 38 'Are you that Lady Psyche,' I b Pr. 42 B. to glisten and to fall ; and while Pr. 45 B. to burn and burn, and her lynx eye Pr. 56 Or master'd by the sense of sport, b. Pr. 82 BEGAN Page BEGAN. — was clutch'd : but lb. Pr. 88 — came.your new friend : you b. to change Pr. 90 B. to wag their baldness up and down Pr. 108 Uncared for, spied its mother and b. Pr. 143 They sang, they read: till she not fair, b. Pr. 158 What seem'd my worth since I b. In M. vii. But where the path we walk'd b. In M. 37 The total world since life b. In M. 65 Whose life in low estate b. In M. 89 A breeze b. to tremble o'er In M. 141 And while the wind b. to sweep In M. 159 B. to foam, and we to draw In M. 159 In tracts of fluent heat b. In M. 183 Wretchedest age, since Time b. Ma. 103 The greatest sailor since our world b. Ma. 142 B. to scoff and jeer and babble of him /. K. 4 And when the pale and bloodless east b. /. K. 29 He follow'd nearer : ruth b. to work /. K. 51 Of tenderest courtesy, that I b. /. K. 91 B. to break her sports with graver fits /. K. 103 No sooner gone than suddenly she b. /. K. 152 Then the rough Torre b. to heave and move /. K. 202 And save it even in extremes, b. /. K. 228 No answer, by and by b. to hum /. K. 233 Sigh'd and b. to gather heart again /. K. 244 — the prone edge of the wood b. E. A. 4 — prone edge of the wood b. E. A. 21 B. to chafe as at a personal wrong E. A. 26 B. to droop, to fall E. A. 94 — b. to bloat himself, and ooze E. A. 104 Till she b. to totter E. A. 109 I b. to be tired a little E.A.123 The boy b. to leap and prance Select. 207 BEGET. Many a chance the years b. Poems 93 BEGETTERS. Her worldly-wise b. E. A. 76 BEGGAR. Are there no beggars at your gate Pins 129 ' If I'm a b. born,' she said Poems 355 I am a b. born,' she said Poems 357 ' ' This b. maid shall be my queen ! ' Poems 365 Bare-footed came the b. maid Poems 365 Yea, tho' she were a b. from the hedge /. K. 13 And her, he loved, a b. *£. A. 7 BEGGAR-WOMAN'S, —rag, this b. weed /. K. 81 BEGG'D. — would go with them ; then they b. E. A. 20 They mastered me. At last she b. a boon Pr. 22 BEGGING. I never came a-b. for myself Poe?ns 219 BEGIN. — when the day begins to break Poems 130 O look ! the sun begins to rise, the heavens Poems 141 B. to feel the truth and stir of day Poems 201 The lights b. to twinkle from the rocks Poems 267 That to b. implies to end Poems 305 When meres b. to uncongeal Poems 308 Begins to move and tremble Poems 340 Begins the scandal and the cry Poems 351 And the dead b. to dance Poems 372 Till the graves b. to move Poems 372 The little boy? b. to shoot and stab Pr. 180 The noise oflie begins again In M. 9 To-night the winds b. to rise In M. 24 From whence clear memory may b. In M. 67 • Begins the clash and clang' that tells In M. 207 Which made a selfish war b. Ma. 163 B. to slay the folk, and spoil the land ' /. K. 232 Thy cheek begins to redden thro' the gloom E. A. 141 BEGINNING. The end and the b. vex Poems 303 The low beginnings of content In M. 117 B., and the wakeful bird In M. 187 B. to faint in the light that she loves Ma. 76 And be the fair b. of a time /. K. 249 BEGONE. 'You must b.,' said Death Poems 52 B. : we will not look upon you more Pr. 103 BEGOTTEN. Nor any want-b. rest In M. 44 BEGUILE. To d. her melancholy Ma. 71 BEGUILED. Ah, well, well, well, I may be b. Ma. 30 BEGUN. — help me as when life b. Poems 283 Day, when my crown'd estate b. hi M. 99 BEHELD. I b. great Here's angry eyes Poems 105 Since I b. young Laurence dead Poems 127 ■ — ere a star can wink, b. her there Poems 207 As I b. her ere she knew my heart Poems 213 — but when the boy b. Poems 219 The soldier? I b. her, when she rose Pr. 116 And what I am b. again In M. 193 — I look'd and-round, all round the house I b. Ma. 51 B. the long street of a little town /. K. 13 B. her first in field, awaiting him /. K. 29 Turn'd and b. the four, and all his face I. K. 30 And issuing under open heavens b. /. K. 56 I never yet b. a thing so pale /. K. BELIEVABLE Page BEHELD. Have I b. a lily like yourself I. K. 78 B. the man you loved (I speak as one /. A'. 90 Of Badon I myself b. the King /. K. 163 But Arthur who b. his cloudy brows /. K. 218 Himself b. three spirits mad with joy /. K. 238 B. at noon in some delicious dale /. K. 245 Then glancing up b. the holy nuns /. K. 259 B. the dead flame of the fallen day E. A. 25 -when the dead man come to life b. E. A. 41 Turning b. the Powers of the House E. A. 66 BEHEST. Then not to disobey her lord's b. /. K. 69 BEHOLD. Where'er they fell, b. Poems 39 Receive it ; and in me b. the Prince Poems 40 B. this fruit, whose gleaming rind ingrav'n Poems 101 Mayst well b. them unbeheid, unheard Poems 101 — when I look'd again, b. an arm Poems 197 Is come to raise the veil. B. her there Poems 213 They shout, ' B. a saint ! ' Poems 241 —crying, l Who is this? b. thy bride' Poems 260 ' B., it is the Sabbath morn ' Poems 308 Then some one spake : *B. it was a crime Poems 374 B. your father's letter' Pr. 98 O maids, b. our sanctuary Pr. 139 ' B. the man that loved and lost In M. 1 B. me, for I cannot sleep In M. 9 B., ye speak an idle thing In M. 36 B. a man raised up by Christ In M. 50 An inner trouble I b. In M. 63 B., we know not anything In M. 76 B. their brides in other hands In M. 133 B. I dream a dream of good In M. 200 happy hour, b. the bride In M. 207 In the shuddering dawn, b. Ma. 98 And a reverent people b. Ma. 140 Pauses, did Enid, keeping watch, b. /. K. 52 B. me overturn and trample on him I. K. "90 Not used mine own : but now b. me come /. K. 93 Sweet father, I b. him in my dreams /. K. 187 — gave the verse ' B. E. A. 83 In such a shape dost thou b. thy God E. A. 85 — left their memories a world's curse — ' B. E. A. 92 BEHOLDEN. But being so b. to the Prince I. K. 33 To whom we are b. ; but 1 know /. K. 39 BEHOLDING one so bright in dark estate /. K. 42 B. how you butt against my wish /. K. 81 B. how the years which are not Time's E. A. 82 B. it was Edyrn son of Nudd /. K. 87 Advanced to greet them, and b. her /. K. 92 BEHOOF. — them more in their b. whose arms Pr. 139 To mask, tho' but in his own b. Ma. 28 BEING. Our b., lest we rust in ease Poems 181 — cousin, all the current of my b. sets Poems 270 No Angel, but a dearer b., all dipt Pr. 174 And all the wheels of B. slow In M. 72 His b. working in mine own In M. 120 And strike his b. into bounds In M. 210 Her peaceful b. slowly passes by E. A. 154 BEL. Till the face of B. be brighten'd E. A. 170 BELABOUR'D. —so b. him on rib and cheek Pr. 124 BELAUD. Since I blush to b. myself E. A. 176 BELFRY. The white owl in the b. sits Poems 17 Low breezes fann'd the b. bars Ma. 134 BELIED, —clamour of liars b. in the hubbub Ma. 21 BELIEF. Beyond mine old b. in womanhood /. K. 196 ' It may be I am quicker of b. /. K. 210 BELIEVE. But I b. she wept Poems 252 1 b. it. Not one word ? not one Pr. 148 I heard a voice ' b. no more ' In M. 192 B. me, than in half the creeds In M. 143 — b. it, in being so proud Ma. 17 Shall I b. him ashamed to be seen Ma. 47 Being here, and we b. him Ma. 152 I do b. yourself against yourself /. K. 85 The world will not b. a man repents /. K. 93 And half b. her true : for thus at times /. K. 103 I well b. that all about this world /. K. 121 I find with grief; I might b. you then /. K. 142 I do b. she tempted them and fail'd /. K. 136 I well b. , the noblest — will you wear /. K. 166 For if I could b. the things you say /. K. 204 I may not well b. that you b.' /. K. 209 Than you b. me, Lancelot of the Lake /. K. 210 But I should all as soon b. that his /. K. 243 I b., if you were fast my wife E. A. 23 All at one mark, all hitting: make-believes E. A. 56 Save Christ as we b. him E. A. 80 Wherefore slight me not wholly, nor b. me E. A. 176 BELIEVABLE. And that he sinn'd, is not b. / K. 133 — many a scarce-b. excuse E. A. a6 BELIEVED Page BELIEVED, —often she b. that I should die Pr. 162 I b. that in the living world Pr. 165 The woman cannot be b. Ma. 133 Not less Geraint b. it; and there fell /. A'. 2 So wax'd in pride, that I b. myself I. A'. 90 He spoke, and Enid easily b. /. A". 92 And Merlin look'd and half b. her true /. A'. 114 For ease of heart, and half b. her true /. K. 140 Be wealthy still, ay, wealthier. He b. E. A. 70 —when he came again, his flock b. E. A. 82 Drank the large air, and saw, but scarce b. E. A. 98 BELIEVING where we cannot prove In M. v. B. ' lo mine helpmate, one to feel I. A". 250 BELIKE. The castle-well, b.; and then I said /. K. 158 BELL. — flower-bells and ambrosial orbs Poe??is 8 Some dropping low their crimson bells Poems 21 — thick with white bells the clover-hill Poems 43 The bridle bells rang merrily Poems 68 — in the towers I placed great bells Poems 118 —and those great bells Poems 119 When midnight bells cease ringing Poems 160 Toll ye the church-b. sad and slow Poe?ns 168 — church-bells ring in the Christmas morn Poems 202 At this a hundred bells began to peal Poems 202 In sound of funeral or of marriage bells Poems 204 — bells : we listen'd : with the time we play'd P?ns 211 — the bells were ringing, Allan call'd Poems 215 I do not hear the bells upon my cap Poe>?is 232 The sound of minster bells Poejns 256 The foxglove cluster dappled bells ' Poe??is 252 The sweet church-bells began to peal Poems 308 The shrill b. rings, the censer swings Poems 334 Will wonder why they came : but hark the b. Pr. 51 — then day droopt ; the chapel bells Pr. 53 Lily of the vale ! half open'd b. of the woods Pr. 146 Ida, with a voice that like a b. Pr. 153 Who 'lights and rings the gateway b. In M. 10 I hear the b. struck in the night In M. 14 The Christmas bells from hill to hill In M. 45 Before I heard those bells again In M. 45 The merry merry bells of Yule In M. 46 One set slow b. wiB seem to toll In M. 82 That these are not the bells I know In M. 160 A single peal of bells below In M. 160 Ring out, wild bells, and let him die In M. 163 Ring, happy bells, across the snow In M. 163 Ring out Avild bells to the wild sky In M. 163 The dead leaf trembles to the bells hi M. 207 Is cap and bells for a fool Ma. 29 Not a b. was rung, not a prayer was read Ma. 103 The fragile bindweed bells and briony rings Ma. 128 There comes a sound of marriage bells Ma. 134 Let the b. be tolTd Ma. 140, 141 To make her smile, her golden ankle-bells I. K. 123 —these were wed, and merrily rang the bells E. A.$, 28 Merrily rang the bells and they were wed E. A. 28 He heard the pealing of his parish bells E. A. 34 Clash, ye bells, in the merry March air E. A. 165 BELLEROPHON. —White Rose. B., the iilt Ma. 12 BELL-LIKE. — many a deep-huedb. flower Poems 79 BELL-MOUTH'D. —with whom the b. glass Pr. 82 BELLOW'D the tempest, and the rotten I. K. 143 BELLOWING. — rock-thwarted under b. Poems 115 — a million horrible b. echoes broke Ma. £6 B. victory, b. doom Ma. 141 The hollower-b. ocean E. A. 33 BELONGING. The things b. to thv peace E. A. 89 BELOVED. Revered, b. — O you that hold Poems v. O this world's curse, — b. but hated — came Poems 260 And he the much-b. again In M. 64 For love reflects the thing b. In M. 74 We leave the well-b. place In M. 155 Maud the b. of my mother Ma. 10 When first the liquid note b. of men I. K. 18 BELT, —the woods that b. the gray hill-side Poems 28 Unclasp'd the wedded eagles of her b. Poems 286 A gleaming crag with belts of pines Poems 298 Above the garden's glowing blossom-belts Pr. 125 — in belts of hop and breadths of wheat Pr. 179 From b. to b. of crimson seas hi M. 125 By summer belts of wheat and vine Iji M. 147 — at his b., and hurl'd it toward the squire I. K. 47 That seem a sword beneath a b. of three I. K. 120 Went faltering sideways downward to her b /. K. 138 — the broad b. of the world E. A. 32 Of breaker issued from the b. E. A. icj Living within the b. ) E. A. 107 A b., it seem'd, of luminous vapour £. A. 107 — past into the b. and swell'd again E. A. 108 BETHOUGHT Page BELTED. — with puff'd cheek theb. hunter Poems 115 BENCH. Jack on his ale-house b. Ma. 16 BENCH'D crescent-wise. In each we sat, we Pr. 48 BENCHERS, —wrinkled b. often talk'd of E. A. 75 BEND, —yet it chafes me that I could not b. Pms 1^6 How sweet are looks that ladies b. Poems 333 Is oftener parted, fathers b. In M. 147 On me she bends her blissful eyes I;i M. 205 — an iron tyranny now should b. or cease Ma. 112 BENDING.'— and erect, but b. from his E. A. 57 BENGAL. — which, in branding summers of B. Ma. 118 BENT. On thy pillow, lowly b. Poems 35 From yon blue heavens above us b. Poems 128 Nor b., nor broke, nor shunn'd a soldier's Pr. 3 The seal was Cupid b. above a scroll Pr. 27 B. their broad faces toward us and address'd Pr. 103 Her head a little b. : and on her mouth Pr. 150 But thrice as large as man he b. hi M. 159 So b. he seem'd on going the third day I. K. 32 B. as he seem'd on going this third day I. K. 34 — those two brethren slowly with b. brows I. K. 206 When round him b. the spirits of the hills I. K. 240 — dispersed and b. or broke E. A. 21 Were dead to him already : b. as he was E. A. 74 Long o'er his b. brows linger'd Averill E. A. 83 BEREAVE. Gone : but nothing can b. him M. 152 BERGS. — issue, goes, like glittering b. of ice Pr. 78 BERKSHIRE, —white horse on the B. hills I. K. 95 BERRIED. The b. briony fold ' Poems 251 BERRY. With bunch and berry and flower Poems 102 BESEECH. — b. you by the love you bear E. A. 17 BESEEM. In such apparel as might well b. I. K. 41 BESIEGED. ' O noble heart who, being strait-b. Pr. 3 BESOTTED. A drowning life, b. in sweet self Pr. 1-4 BESOUGHT. But when the knight b. him I. K. 88 B. Lavaine to write as she devised I. K. 204 B. me to be plain and blunt, and use I. K. 215 B. him, supplicating, if he cared E. A. 9 BESS. Wild Will, Black B., Tantivy, Tallyho Ma. 125 BESSY, —'boot B. Marris's barn E. A. 130 B. Marris's barn : tha knaws she E. A. 131 BEST. — That only silence suiteth b. Poetrs 173 Kind nature is the b. : those manners next Poems 227 -put your b. foot forward, or I fear Poe?ns 229 No certain clearness, but at b. Poe?ns 305 The pint you brought me was the b. Poems 342 His worst he kept, his b. he gave Poems 351 He gave the people of his b. Poems 351 To keep the b. man under the sun Poems 355 B. so, perchance, for us, and well for you Pr. 44 And thinking ' this will please him b.' hi M. 7 'Twere b. at once to sink to peace hi M. 53 And cancell'd nature's b. hi M. 100 B. seem'd the thing he was, and join'd hi M. 172 — the fiend b. knows whether woman or man Ma. 10 Too fresh and fair in our sad world's b. bloom Ma. 129 How b. to help the slender store Ma. 163 Adored her as the stateliest and the b. I. K. 2 Except the lady he loves b. be there I. K. 26 And b. by her that bore her understood I. K. 28 When my dear child is set forth at her b. I. K. 39 The being he loved b. in all the world I. K. 51 That pleased him b., and drew from those I. K. 55 — and arms for guerdon ; choose the b.' I. K. 57 But now desired the humbling of their b. I. K. 79 To these my fists with him whom b. you loved I. K. 90 Had b. be loosed for ever : but think or not I. K. in But women, worst and b. as Heaven and Hell I. K. 136 Win shall I not, but do va.y b. to win I. K. 159 Young as I am yet would I do mj- b. ' I. K. 159 Whom they with meats and vintage of their b. I. K. 161 Lives for his children, ever at its b. I. K. 164 Of man and woman when they love their b. I. K. 192 In that whereinshe deem'd she look'd her b. I. K. 194 Not all unhappy, having loved God's b. I. K. 204 What should be b. , if not so pure a love I. A". 219 ' Let love be free ; free love is for the b. I. K. 219 And saw the Queen, who sat betwixt her b. I. K. 226 Reputed the b. knight and goodliest man I. K. 245 You chose the b. among us E. A. 17 Their b. and brightest, when they dwelt on E. A. 54 Is it so true that second thoughts are b. E. A. 99 — did his holy oily b. E. A. 106 I could have wept with the b. E. A. n6, 126 B.-natured?' ' Ladv Psyche.' ' Hers are we' Pr. 27 BESTRODE. — heb.'my Grandsire, when he fell Pr. 41 BETHINK thee, Lord, while thou and all P??is 240 BETHOUGHT. Then she b. her of a faded silk /. A". 8 Woke and b. her of her promise given I. K. ^2 23 BETHOUGHT Page BETHOUGHT. And last b. her how she used /. K. 35 BETIDE. All arm'.d I ride, whate'er b. Poems 336 BETRAY. Thou wouldst b. me for the precious P. 195 Simpler than any child, betrays itself I. K. 244 I should b. myself E. A. 43 Break lock and seal: b. the trust Poems "g^t BETRAY'D. 'Thou hast b. thy nature and Poems 193 B. my secret penance Poems 238 Parted from her — b. her cause and mine Pr. in Nor let them know themselves b. E. A. 78 BETRAYING, —a statesman there, b. Ma. 104 BETROTH'D. Lovers long-b. were they Poems 354 While life was yet in bud and blade, b. Pr. 16 And my b., 'You do us, Prince,' he said Pr. 21 B. us over their wine . Ma. 66 Her and her far-off cousin and b. Ma. 121 BETROTHMENT. —the strange b. was to end Pr. 131 BETTED. They rode ; they b. ; made a Pr. 9 BETTER. Were how much b. than to own Poems 31 I loved you b. for your fears Poems 91 She'll be a b. child to you than ever I Poems 137 'Twere b. I should cease Poems 174 Mere chaff and draff, much b. burnt ' Poems 190 B. to leave Excalibur conceal'd Poems 193 — are men b. than sheep or goats Poems 200 Thou knowest I bore this b. at the first Poems 237 B. the narrow brain, the stony heart Poems 258 B. thou wert dead before me, tho' I slew thee Pms 272 Something b. than his dog Poems 272 B. thou and I were lying, hidden - Poems 273 — rather held it b. men should perish one by one P?ns2%3 B. fifty years of Europe than a cycle of Cathay Pms 283 Were it not b. not to be ? ' Poems 289 Is boundless b., boundless worse Poems 290 Surely 'twere b. not to be ■ Poems 291 'Twere b. not to breathe or speak Poems 293 A murmur, ' Be of b. cheer ' Poems 309 B. to me the meanest weed Poems 330 Go, therefore, thou ! thy betters went Poems 347 Thine elders and thy betters Poems 347 Take me : 1*11 serve you b. in a strait Pr. 19 And slander die. B. not be at all Pr. 34 B. to clear prime forests ; heave and thump Pr. 61 Those lilies, b. blush our lives away Pr. 57 Methinks he seems no b. than a girl Pr. 65 That practice betters ? ' ' How,' she cried, ' you Pr. 70 Of b. ; and Hope, a poising eagle, burns Pr. 78 You hold the woman is the b. man Pr. 95 B. have died and spilt our bones in the flood Pr. 102 Almost our maids were b. at their homes Pr. 129 'Tis b. to have loved and lost hi M. 44 But b. serves a wholesome law In M. 70 'Tis b. to have loved and lost In M. 118 — gain, in the spirit of Cain, is it b. or worse Ma. 4 As when it seem'd far b. to be born Ma. 60 — b. to fight for the good, than to rail at the ill Ma. 115 — have awaked, as it seems, to the b. mind Ma. 115 Far b. were I laid in the dark earth /. K. 6 Danced in his bosom ; seeing b. days /. K. 27 So clothe yourself in this, that b. fits /. K. 38 Constrain'd us, but a b. time has come /. K. 38 And if I fall cleave to the b. man ' /. K. 54 Then said Geraint, ' I wish no b. fare /. K. 58 By striking at her b., miss'd, and brought /. K. 119 In truth, but one thing now — b. have died /. K. 141 Saying, his knights are b. men than he /. K. 163 B. the King's waste hearth and aching heart /. K. 252 A b. bringing-up E. A. 5 I love him all the b. for it E. A. 11 — his babes a b. bringing-up E. A. 17 That which he b. might have shunn'd E. A. 40 Like his have worse or b. E. A. 40 Thy b. born unhappily from thee E. A. 86 Nor ever cared to b. his own kind E. A. jo6 BETTERING, —for him who, b. not with time Ma. 165 BEVY. But a b. of Eroses apple-cheek'd E. A. 158 BEWAIL'D their lot ; I did them wrong In M. 159 BEWARE. — you the hearts of women : and b. Pr. 145 BIBLE, —at Bible meetings, o'er the rest E. A. 106 BICKER. — bickers into red and emerald Pr. 120 To b. down a valley Ma. 118 Tho' men may b. with the things they love I. K. 63 Dust, and the points of lances b. in it /. K. 69 BID. Ask me no more, lest I should b. thee live Pr. 157 Dare I b. her abide by her word Ma. 54 Till my dear lord arise and b. me do it /. K. 81 And b. me cast it. I have griefs enough /. K. 83 I b. the stranger welcome. Thanks at last ! /. K. 107 She needs must b. farewell to sweet Lavaine /. K. 165 24 BIRD Page BID. Sweet father, and b. call the ghostly /. K. 204 Friends, I was b. to speak of such a one E. A. 86 And one— of him I was not b. to speak E. A; 87 BIDDEN. I knock'd and, b., enter'd ; found her/V. 61 BIDDING. — King is close behind me) b. him /. K. 88 BIDE by this issue : let our missive thro' Pr. 123 Were this not well, to b. mine hour Poems 292 ' Well— if I b., lo, this wild flower for me ' /. K. 180 To whom the lord of Astolat, ' B. with us /. K. 180 B.,' answer'd he : 'we needs must hear anon /. K. 186 And b. my doom.' So Lancelot got her horse I. K. 231 — b. your year as I b. mine?' E. A. 24 Philip answer'd, ' I will b my year' E. A. 24 BIDED. That ever b. tryst at village stile /. K. 113 BIER, —truth came borne with b. and pall In M. 118 Yet raised and laid him on a litter-b. /. K. 75 And cast him and the b. in which he lay /. K. 76 Till yonder man upon the b. arise /. K. 80 And let there be prepared a chariot-b. /. K. 205 Accompanying, the sad chariot-b. /. K. 206 BIG. Who being apt at arms and b. of bone /. K. 26 Cried out with a b. voice, ' What, is he dead VI. K. 74 BIGGER. With me, Sir, enter'd in the b. boy Pr. 50 No b. than a glowworm shone the tent Pr. 75 BIGHT, —spangle dances in bight and bay Pms. 44 BILL. With that cold dagger of thy b. Poems 166 A golden b. ! the silver tongue Poems 166 — heard it was this b. that past Poems 227 My lord, and shall we pass the b. Poems 319 (A b. of sale gleam'd thro' the drizzle) E. A. 38 BILLOW. — night to the b. the fountain calls Pms 43 As when a b., blown against Poems 304 BILLOWING. Enring'd a b. fountain in the Pr. 30 — his river b. ran Ma. 19 BIND. The wounding cords that b. and strain Pms 13 Here rose, an athlete, strong to break or b. Poems 119 With Life, that,working strongly, binds Poems 180 The woodbine wreaths that b. her Poems 327 Faster binds a tyrant's power Poems 371 Binds me to speak, and O that iron will Pr. 39 That Psyche, wont to b. my throbbing brow Pr. 42 — howj:o b. the scatter'd scheme of seven Pr. 177 Which he may read that binds the sheaf In M. 56 As thro' the frame that binds him in In M. 67 I took the thorns to b. my brows In M. 95 May b. a book, may line a box In M. 106 That service done so graciously would b. /. K. 42 Could b. him, but free love will not be bound' I. K. 219 She fail'd to b., tho' being, as I think /. K. 219 That Love could b. them closer E. A. 53 BINDWEED, —fragile b.-bells and briony Ma. 128 BINE. When burr and b. were gather'd E. A. 57 BINN. — richest beeswing fronTa b. reserved E. A. 72 In musty bins and chambers Poems 343 BIRD. The wild-bird's din Poems 42 —heart of the garden the merry b. chants Poems 42 Nor b. would sing, norlamb would bleat Poems 74 Not any song of b. or sound of rill Poems 153 And singing clearer than the crested b. -Poems 157 The lusty b. takes every hour for dawn Poems 201 Sang loud, as tho' he were the b. of day Poems 206 These birds have joyful thoughts Poems 206 Slides the b. o'er lustrous woodland Poems 281 Every b. of Eden burst Poems 324 Like long-tail'd birds of Paradise Poems 325 And fly, like a b.,from tree to tree Poems 338 The b. that pipes his lone desire Poems 351 The star, the b., the fish, the shell, the flower Pr. 49 As flies the shadow of a b. she fled Pr. 59 The b. of passage flying south but long'd Pr. 65 The earliest pipe of half-awaken'd birds Pr. 77 Glares ruin, and the wild birds on the light Pr. 100 — birds that piped their Valentines Pr. 119 Was lispt about the acacias, and a b. Pr. 170 As light as carrier-birds in air In M. 42 Like birds the charming serpent draws In M. 53 Wild b. whose warble, liquid sweet In M. 129 Flits b}' the sea-blue b. of March In M. 135 So loud with voices of the birds In M. 149 The low love language of the b. In M. 155 The happy birds, that change their sky In M. 179 I hear a chirp of birds ; I see hi M. 185 Beginning, and the wakeful b. hi M. 187 Birds in the high Hall-garden Ma. 43 Birds in our wood sang Ma. 43 And the b. of prey will hover Ma. 72 Till a silence fell with the waking b. Ma. 77 My b. with the shining head Ma. 98 Philip chatter'd more than brook or b. Ma. 120 BIRD Page BIRD. Moves him to think what kind of b. I. K. 18 Singing ; and as the sweet voice of a b. /. A". 18 — by the bird's song you may learn the nest ' /. A". 20 Among the dancing shadows of the birds /. K. 32 That all was bright ; that all about were birds /. K. 35 And we will live like two birds in one nest /. K. 78 I took his brush and blotted out the b. /. K. 118 Of that foul b. of rapine whose whole prey /. A". 131 Then as a little helpless, innocent b. /. K. 193 Like the caged b. escaping suddenly E. A. 15 The lightning flash of insect and of b. E. A. 32 The b. of passage, till he madly strikes E. A. 40 1 The birds were warm, the birds were warm E. A. 64 Returning, as the b. returns, at night E. A. 98 — every b. that sings E. A. 101 — one b. with a musical throat E. A. 158 Make music, O b., in the new-budded bowers E. A. 164 BIRDIE. Without her 'little b. ' ? well then E. A. m Sleep, little b., sleep! E. A. in And I will sing you ' b.' E. A. in Baby says, like little b. E. A. 112 What does little b. say E. A. 112 B., rest a little longer E. A. 112 Let me flv, says little b. E. A. 112 BIRDS-EYE-YIEW. A b. of all the ungracious Pr. 35 BIRK. Shadows of the silver b. Poems 49 BIRTH. Than arms, or power of brain, orb. Poems v. At the moment of thy b. Poems 79 Would God renew me from my b. Poe?ns 86 And slew him with your noble' b. Poems 12a Thou hadst not between death and b. Poems 297 From that first nothing ere his b. Poems 305 Titanic forces taking b. Poems 323 ' He does not love me for my b. Poems 354 The b. of light : but we that are not all Pr. " 71 The time draws near the b. of Christ In M. 45 Beyond the second b. of Death In M. 67 Who breaks his birth's invidious bar In M. 89 The b., the bridal ; friend from friend In M. 147 Memories of bridal, or of b. hi M. 149 The time draws near the b. of Christ In M. 160 Becoming, when the time has b. In M. 175 — shaping an infant ripe for his b. Ma. 19 Mine, mine by a right, from b. till death Ma. 66 By the home that gave me b. Ma. 95 As creatures voiceless through the fault of b. /. K. 60 From all men, like his b. ; and could he find /. K. 240 Her slow consent, and marriage, and the b. E. A. 39 BIRTH-DAY. Each month, a b. coming on Poems 343 Before my Enid's b., sacked my house /. A". 25 Before her b., three sad years ago /. A". 34 BISCAY. The B., roughly ridging eastward E. A. 29 BIT. William answer'd madly : b. his lips Poems 215 — lie down arm'd, for the villainous centre-bits Ma. 6 — crack'd the helmet thro', and b. the bone /. K. 31 — clench"d her fingers till they b. the palm /. A". 179 Nobbut a b. on it's left E. A. 133 BITE. Showing the aspick's b. Poems 156 — bites-it for true heart and not for harm Pr. 10 BI i ING. — b. laws to scare the beasts of prey Pr. 127 BITTER. The b. arrow went aside Poems 54 Indeed I heard one b. word Poems 127 Failing to give the b. of the sweet Poems 162 Dropping b. tears against his brow Poems 198 Like b. accusation ev'n to death Poems 261 — cherish that which bears but b. fruit Poems 273 The dull and b. voice was gone Poems 309 B. barmaid, waning fast Poems 368 As a b. jest is dear Poetns 374 Sent out a b. bleating for its dam Pr. 94 According to your b. statute-book Pr. 98 You saved our life : we owe you b. thanks Pr. 102 No more : at which the king in b. scorn Pr. 142 Of Fancy, and the b. close of all Pr. 142 ' Ay so,' said Ida with a b. smile Pr. 153 O sweet and b. in a breath In M. 3 My own less b. rather more hi M. 6 This b. seed among mankind hi M. 133 A b. day that early sank hi M. 165 Some b. notes my harp would give hi M. 194 Sent forth a sudden sharp and b. cry I. K. 84 She is so b. : for fine plots may fail I. K. 136 To b. weeping like a beaten child I. K. 138 Love, thou art b. : sweet is death to me I. K. 199 ' Love, art thou sweet ? then b. death must be I. K. 199 A little b. pool about a stone I. K. 227 From waging b. war with him : and he I. K. 248 Then the world were not so b. Ma. 27 If I find the world so b. Ma. 27 BLADE Page BITTER. Then the world were not so b. Ma. 30 The b. springs of anger and fear Ma. 39 I turn'd and humm'd a b. song Ma. 132 The b. east, the misty summer Ma. 159 — beating up thro' all the b. world E. A. 44 The rain of heaven, and their own b. tears E. A. 73 Found for himself a b. treasure-trove E. A. 77 A breaker of the b. news from home E. A. 81 BITTERER. Yet b. from his readings E. A. 79 BITTERLY weeping I turn'd away Poems 337, 338 B. wept I over the stone Poei?is 333 Then spake the Queen and somewhat b. I. K. 239 — about the forest, long and b. meditating E. A. 171 BITTERNESS, —fretted all to dust and b.' Pr. 150 The old b. again, and break In M. 117 BLABBING. — j r onder a vile physician, b. Ma. 104 Prophet, curse me the b. lip Ma. 105 BLACK. And o'er b. brows drops down Poems 16 B. the garden-bowers and grots Poems 22 The b. earth with brilliance rare Poe?ns 27 In the yew-wood b. as night Poems 54 His coal-b. curls as on he rode Poems 69 With one b. shadow at its feet Poems 73 The one b. shadow from the wall Poems 76 — a foreground b. with stones and slags Poe??is 116 There's many a b., b. eye, they say Poems 130 — with swarthy cheeks and bold b. eyes Poe??is 155 The bare b. cliff clang'd round him Poems 198 Look'd one b. dot against the verge of dawn Poems 201 More b. than ashbuds in the front of March ' P?ns 204 Which charts us all in its coarse blacks or Poems 229 The maiden's jet-b. hair has grown Poe??is 315 Her full b. ringlets downward rolTd PoejJis 316 To plunge in cataract, shattering on b. blocks Pr. 69 Bow'd toward her combing out her long b. Pr. 88 O'er land and main, and sees a great b. cloud Pr. 159 The streets were b. with smoke and frost In M. 95 To b. and brown on kindred brows hi M. 109 Betwixt the b. fronts long-withdrawn hi M. 185 For the b. bat. night, has flown Ma. 76 — by the side of the B. and the Baltic deep Ma. 115 Wild Will, B. Bess, Tantivy, Tallyho Ma. 125 A b. yew gloom"d the stagnant air Ma. 131 The b. earth yawns ; the mortal disappears Ma. 152 Borne on a b. horse like a thunder-cloud I. K. 70 And pushing his b. craft among them all I. K. 122 That carry kings in casties, bow'd b. knees I. K. 123 Or some b. wether of St Satan's fold I. K. 132 Had found a glen, gray boulder and b. tarn I. K. 149 — might she mean by that ? his large b. eyes I. K 190 — spake, to whom thro' those b. walls of yew I. K. 197 Be ready on the river, cloth'd in b. I. K. 205 And on the b. decks laid her in her bed I. K. 207 Wear b. and white, and be a nun like you I. A'. 260 The broken base of a b. tower E. A. 77 Aroused the b. republic on his elms E. A. 78 B. velvet of the costliest E. A. 92 BLACK-BEADED. Glancing with b. eyes Poems 5 BLACK-BEARDED. — b. kings with wolfish P??is 154 BLACKBIRD. — the b. on the pippin hung Poems 222 O b., sing me something well Poems 166 BLACK'D with thy branding thunder Poems 239 BLACKEN. And blackens every blot I. K. vi. — pierces the liver and blackens the blood E. A. 159 — bark and b. innumerable E. A. 170 B. round the Roman carrion E. A. 170 BLACKEN'D. — A sluice with b. waters slept Poems 10 — b. all her world in secret, blank Pr. 159 B. about us, bats wheel'd, and owls whoop'd Pr. 183 BLACKENING over heath and holt _ Poems 284 And b., swallow 'd all the land, and in it I. K. 229 BLACKER. Gone to a b. pit, for whom Ma. 36 BLACKEST. With b. mossthe flower-plots Poems 9 Pall'd all its length in b. samite, lay I. K. 207 Lay smiling like a star in b. night I. K. 212 — half a truth is ever the b. of Ties E. A. 118 BLACK-HEARTS. The unnetted b. ripen Poems 166 BLACK-HOODED. — b., like a dream Poems 198 BLACKNESS. With b. as a solid wall Poems 124 The b. round the tombing sod Select. 221 BLACKSMITH-BORDER. — b. marriage E. A. 64 BLACK-STOLED, black-hooded, like adream/'ww 198 BLACKTHORN. The blossom on the b. Pms 134 BLADE. — varying year with b. and sheaf Poems 313 In bud or b. or bloom may find Poems 322 My good b. carves the casques of men Poems 333 While life was yet in bud and b. betroth'd Pr. 16 Till I struck out' and shouted : the b. glanced Pr. 135 Their arms were shatter 'd to the shouider-b. Pr. 139 25 BLADE Page BLADE. — Geraint's, who heaved his b. aloft /. K. 31 But while the sun y-et beat a dewy b. I. K. 69 When its own voice clings to each b. of grass /. K. 153 — playing with the b. he prick'd his hand E. A. 63 1 From Edith' was engraven on the b. E. A. 82 She bore the b. of Liberty E. A. 148 BLAME. You must b. Love. His early rage Pms 93 Joyful and free from b. Poems 153 Shall smile away my maiden b. . Poems 159 —been to b., to b. I have kill'd my son Poems 220 May God forgive me ! — I have been to b. Poems 220 Lay it not to me. Am I to b. for this Poems 240 But he is chill to praise or b. Poems 301 The crime of malice, and is equal b. Poems 375 But then she had a will ; was he to b. 1 Pr. 17 -yet I b. yo\i not so much for fear Pr. xoo ' Ida — 'sdeath ! you b. the man Pr. 148 C B. not thyself too much,' I said, 'nor b. Pr. 171 But b. not thou the winds that make In M. 71 I had such reverence for his b. In M. 73 ' Yet b. not thou thy plaintive song ' In M. 74 Nor b. I Death, because he bare In M. 113 Nor count me all to b. if I In M. 208 She did not wish to b. him Ma. 71 Which he has worn so pure of b. Ma. 141 Then, if I tried it, who should b. me then? ' I. K. 128 Is thy white blamelessness accounted b.!' I. K. 135 'To b., my lord Sir Lancelot, much to b. I. K. 152 —yours the b. — for who beside your hearths E. A. 89 They are all to b., they are all to b. E. A. 156 I count you much to b. E. A. 163 B LAMED. Shall love be b. for want of faith In M. 73 She b. herself for telling hearsay tales I. K. 143 BLAMELESS. Most b. is he, centred in the Pms 266 Wearing the white flower of a b. life /. K. vi. Fearing the mild face of the b. King I. K. 89 Yourself were first the b. cause to make /. K. 89 The b. King went forth and cast his eyes /. K. 95 In battle, fighting for the b. King /. K. 97 That Vivien should attempt the b. King I. K. 102 For Arthur, b. King and stainless man I. K. 134 BLAMELESSNESS. —white b. accounted /. K. 135 BLANCH. — boom and b. on the precipices E. A. 173 BLANCHE, —widows, Lady Psyche, Lady B. Pr. 22 And who were tutors. ' Lady B.,' she said Pr. 27 • I brought a message here from Lady B.' Pr. 45 The Lady Blanche's daughter where she stood/V. 45 Of art and science Lady B. alone Pr. 52 She sent for B. to accuse her face to face Pr. 87 Melissa knelt : but Lady B. erect Pr. 89 Slided, they moving under shade : but B. Pr. 140 With kisses, ere the days of Lady B. Pr. 142 The Lady B.: much profit ! Not one word Pr. 149 — said B., ' Amazed am I to hear Pr. 153 Melissa came : for B. had gone Pr. 160 At first with Psyche. Not tho' B. had sworn Pr. 161 BLANCHED. Blanch'd in our annals, and Pr. 139 How blanch'd with darkness must I grow ! In M. 86 Blanch'd with his mill, they found " E. A. 21 — here was one that summer-blanch'd E. A. 59 Upon the b. tablets of her heart Poems 7 BLANCHING. As chanted on the b. bones Pr. 39 Or scatter'd b. on the grass Poems 317 BLAND. Beside him Shakespeare b. and Poe??is 118 But b. the smile that like a wrinkling wind Pr. 21 And bless thee, for thy lips are b. In M. 185 Like the bountiful season b. Ma. 15 BLANDISHMENT. In b., but a most silver Poems 8 BLANK. Sponged and made b. of crimeful Poems 242 As b. as death in marble ; then exclaim'd Pr. 24 — blacken'd all her world in secret, b. Pr. 159 On the bald street breaks the b. day In M. 9 And so, God wot, his shield is b. enough I. K. 157 B., or at least with some device not mine." I. K. 157 Yet b. from sleep, she started to him, saying I. K. 189 BLANKET. When a b. wraps the day Poems 369 BLANKLY. Had gazed upon her b. and I. K. 102 BLARE. With b. of bugle, clamour of men Ma. 144 To b. its own interpretation — nay I. K. 196 Warble, O bugle, and trumpet, b. E. A. 164 BLAR'D. Opposed to fifty, till the trumpet b. Pr. 132 BLASPHEME. So they b. the muse ! But Pr. 81 BLASPHEMY, —troops of devils, mad with b.Pms 236 BLAST, —burst thro' with heated blasts Poems 151 The b. was hard and harder Poems 186 — sent a b. of sparkles up the flue Poems 201 — vague desires, like fitful blasts of balm Poevis 205 He spoke ; and high above I heard themb. Poems 264 — the b. before it, in its breast a thunderbolt Poems 284 26 BLESSED Page BLAST. Brake with a b. of trumpets Pr. 3 — the b. and bray of the long horn Pr. 120 With blasts that blow the poplar white In M. 99 The b. of North and East, and ice hi M. 165 To Como ; shower and storm and b. Ma. 157 To break the b. of winter, stand Ma. r62 -like the b. of doom E. A. 42 For blasts would rise and rave and cease E. A. 149 BLASTED. ' My youth,' she said, ' was b. Poems 154 To glide a sunbeam by the b. Pine Pr. 168 Had b. him — that many thousand days E. A. 82 BLATANT. — still strong man in a b. land Ma. 40 O b. Magazines, regard me rather E. A. 176 BLAZE. Her shadow on the b. of kings In M. 14S And watch'd the sun b. on the turning I. A'. 59 — the smouldering scandal break and b. I. A'. 229 B. by the rushing brook or silent well I. K. 246 B. , making all the night a steam of fire I. A". 256 The b. upon his island overhead E. A. 33 The b. upon the waters to the east E. A. 33 The b. upon the waters to the west E. A. 33 — as the beacon-b. allures E. A. 40 — distant b. of those dull banquets E. A. 76 — fifty in theb. of burning fire E. A. 178 BLAZED. But when the thing wasb. about I. A". 132 B. the last diamond of the nameless king I. K. 170 Till all her heart's sad secret b. itself I. K. 190 Sat glorying : many a fire before them b. E. A. 177 — b. before the towers of Troy . E. A. 178 BLAZING. Far beneath a b. vault Ma. 166 Far-b. from the rear of Philip's house E. A. 40 Whose b wyvern weathercock'd the spire E. A. 52 BLAZON your mottos of blessing and ' E. A. 164 BLAZON'D. And from his b. baldric slung Poems 68 Betwixt the slender shafts were b. fair Poems 119 In purple b. with armorial gold Poems 287 Sweat on his b. chairs Poems 228 No b. statesman he, nor king Poems 351 — sphere lamps b. like Heaven and Earth Pr. 26 These monsters b. what they were Pr. 92 From b. lions o'er the imperial tent Pr. 107 The prophets b. on the panes In M. 126 Bright let it be with its b. deeds Ma. 140 The giant windows' b. fires Ma. 157 All the devices b. on the shield A K. 147 For all true hearts be b. on her tomb I. K. 217 BLAZONINGS. The silken case with braided b. I. K. 207 BLEACH'D. — wizard brow b. on the walls I. K. 124 And there they lay till all their bones were b. I. K. 149 BLEA i . Round mine ears the livelong b. Poe?ns 28 Nor bird would sing nor lamb would b. Poems 74 BLEATING, —round I hear the b. of the lamb Pms 138 Sent out a bitter b. for its dam Pr. 94 BLED underneath his armour secretly I. K. 72 BLEEDETH for both : yet it may be Poems 173 BLEEDS. The heart until it b. Poems 13 BLEMISH. Some stain or b. in a name of note I.K. 137 BLENCH. — make thee somewhat b. or fail In M. 87 BLENT. — hatred of herweakness.b. with shame/V. 158 BLESS. — God b. thee, dear — who wrought Poems 95 — b. him for the sake of him that's gone ' Ptns 216, 217 ' God b. him,' he said, ' and may he never Poems 219 Sneeze out a full God-b.-you right and left Poems 233 — b. me, mother, ere I go ' Poems 356 God b. the narrow sea which keeps her off Pr. 179 God b. the narrow seas Pr. 180 O for thy voice to soothe and b. In M. 81 And b. thee, for thy lips are bland In M. 185 That which we dare invoke to b. In M. 192 God b. him, he shall sit upon my knees E. A. n God b. you for it, God reward you for it E. A. 24 Heard the good mother softly whisper, ' B. E. A. 60 God b. 'em ; marriages are made in Heaven 'if. A. 61 And forty blest ones b. him E. A. 70 A curse in his God-b.-you E. A. 104 — with God-b.-you went E. A. 104 BLESSED, —at first, mother, to leave the b. Poems 138 The b. music went that way Poems 140 For ever and for ever, all in a b. home Poems 141 The balm)' moon of b. Israel Poems 158 Sleep, holy spirit, b. soul Poems 174 And b. herself, and cursed herself Poems 184 Now the most b. memory of mine age Poems 213 Come, b. brother, come Poems 243 Deliver me the b. sacrament Poems 244 — b. forms in whistling storms Poems 335 Ah, b. vision ! blood of God Poems 335 Arrive at last the b. goal In M. 1x7 In circle round theb. gate In M. 119 BLESSED Page BLESSED. And b. be the King, who hath /. A'. 258 O God Almighty, b. Saviour, thou E. A. 43 Huzzin' an' maazin' the b. fealds E. A. 136 BLESSEDNESS. Or is there b. like theirs? In M. 51 BLESSING. With blessings beyond hope Poems 95 With blessings which no words can find Poems 95 O blessings on his kindly heart Poems 139 blessings on his kindly voice Poems 139 And blessings on his whole life long Poems 139 My b. ! Should myshadow cross thy thoughts Pms 261 God's b. on the day Poems 354 And blessings on the falling out Pr. 29 A b. on her labours for the world Pr. 53 For ever b. those that look on them Pr. 67 My b. , like a line of light' hi M. 28 We yield all b. to the name In M. 56 When crown'd with b. she doth rise In M. 60 Why do we prate of the blessings of Peace ? Ma. 4 To b. or to cursing save from one I. K. 76 Pray'd for a b. on nis wife and babes E. A. 11 — ab. on his head E. A. 18 And tell my son that I died b. him E. A. 48 Was spent in b. her and praying for her E. A. 48 B. her, praying for her, loving her E. A. 48 Blazon your mottos of b. and prayer E. A. 164 BLEST. A thousand times I b. him, as he knelt Pins 139 As when a soul laments, which hath been b. Poems 162 This fruit of thine by Love is b. Poems 255 1 b. them, and they wander'd on Pcems 309 As if the quiet bones were b. In M. 30 Nor, what may count itself as b. In M. 44 Thrice b. who'se lives are faithful pra3^ers In M. 51 — to divide in a dream from a band of the b. Ma. 111 Beat with my heart more b. than heart can tell Ma. 63 B., but for some dark undercurrent woe Ma. 63 As she looks among the b. Ma. 100 They might as well have b. her : she was deaf/. K. 76 Perceived the waving of his hands that b. /. K. 255 And say to Philip that I b. him too E. A. 48 My fancy made me for a moment b. Select. 197 BLEW. — the breeze of a joyful dawn b. free Poems 19 B. his own praises in his eyes Poems 37 — with puff'd cheek the belted hunter b. Poems 115 Her cap b. off, her gown b. up Poems 186 The glass b. in, the fire b. out Poems 186 — one warm gust, full-fed with perfume, b. Poems 207 The hedge broke in, the banner b. Poems 319 A light wind b. from the gates of the sun Poems 379 And b. the swoll'n cheek of a trumpeter Pr. 48 The huge bush-bearded Barons heaved and b. Pr. 108 The first, he b. and b., but none appear'd Pr. 124 — all the bugle breezes b. In M. 94 Altho' the trumpet b. so loud In M. 144 — stood four-square to all the winds that b. Ma. 139 Last, the Prussian trumpet b. Ma. 144 A milky -bell'd amaryllis b. Ma. 154 O'er the four rivers the first roses b. I. K. 86 The trumpets b. ; and then did either side /. K. 171 Back to the barrier ; then the heralds b. I. K. 173 Ear off a solitary trumpet b. I. A*. 252 Or from the tiny pitted target b. E. A. 56 Poor children, for their comfort : the wind b. E. A. 73 BLIGHT. — arms of leisure, sacred from the 1>. Pr. 38 Which would b. the plants Poenis 42 B. and famine, plague and earthquake Poems 149 Shall sharpest pathos b. us Poems 261 — her brother comes like a b. Ma. 70 The b. of low desires E. A. 86 BLIND. All night long on darkness b. Poems 35 Backward the lattice-b. she flung Poems 76 Sometimes your shadow cross'd the b. Poe?ns 90 Lo, parch'd and wither'd, deaf and b. Poems 96 From those, not b., who wait for day Poems 179 Should b. my purpose, for I never saw Poems 196 — nourish a b. life within the brain Poetns 200 — column's base, and almost b. Poems 237 Maybe for months, in such b. lethargies Poems 240 Like those b. motions of the Spring Poems 252 For some b. glimpse of freedom work itself Poems 258 In one b. cry of passion and of pain Poe?ns 261 Light horrors thro' her pulses : the b. walls Poe?ns 287 Much less this dreamer deaf and b. Poems 297 — men, whose reason long was b. Poems 306 To b. the truth and me : for her, and her Pr. 60 To nurse a b. ideal like- a girl Pr. 65 She wept her true eyes b. for such a one Pr. 81 — b. with rage she miss'd the plank Pr. 83 Tore open, silent we with b. surmise Pr. 94 Dazed me half-b. : I stood and seem'd to hear Pr. 107 BLOOD Page BLIND, —felt the b. wildbeast of force Pr. 120 A b. and babbling laughter, and to dance Pr. 143 He shall not b. his soul with clay ' p r . 174 Like yonder morning on the b. half-world Pr. 176 And shall I take a tiling so b. In M. 3 And dance and song and hoodman-b. In M. 107 He would not make his judgment b. hi M. 143 The b. hysterics of the Celt hi M. 168 But that b. clamour made me wise hi M. 193 The b. wall rocks, and on the trees In M. 207 Yet Maud, altho' not b. Ma. 68 Her b. and shuddering puppies, naming each Ma. 124 The b. wave feeling round his long sea-hall /. K. 105 But that where b. and naked Ignorance /. K. 128 By which the good king means to b. himself I. K. 134 And blinds himself and all the Table Round /. K. 134 He will be there — then were I stricken b. /. K. 169 — compass'd round by the b. wall of night E. A. 27 — for he groped as b. E. A. 93 And I cried mysel%vell-nigh b. £. A. 119 Ere yet they b. the stars E. A. 141 But b. or lame or sick or sound E. A. 150 Now mate is b. and captain lame E. A. 150 BLINDED. — those whom passion hath not b. Pms 30 While blissful tears b. my sight Poems 54 Grape-thicken'd from the light, and b. Poems 79 Droops b. with his shining eye Poems 97 I, b. with my tears Poems 154 Not with b. eyesight poring Poems 282 ' Self-b. are you by your pride Poems 290 BLINDER. Nature made them b. motions Poems 280 BLINDFOLD. Drug down the b. sense In M. 98 BLINDING. Struck up against the b. wall Poems 75 Dash'd together in b. dew Poems 367 And raised the b. bandage from his eyes Pr. 28 — suck the b. splendour from the sand Pr. 159 BLINDLESS. Beat thro' the b. casement I. K. 4 BLINDLY. That read his spirit b. wise Poems 302 — while now she wonders b. Poems 360 'The stars,' she whispers, 'b. run In M. 3 And staggers b. ere she sink In M. 26 Whose muffled motions b. drown hi M. 71 And b. rush'd on all the rout behind I. K. 70 BLINDNESS. That in this b. of the frame In M. 137 BLISS. Then in madness and in b. Weak symbols of the settled b. Above the thunder, with undying b. 'Trust me, in b. I shall abide Me from my b. of fife, that Nature gave Poems 16 Poems 94 Poems 103 Poems 113 Poems 159 Full of his b., and following her dark eyes Poems 210 A man had given all other b. Poems 363 A central warmth diffusing b. In M. 115 I triumph in conclusive b. In M. 122 b., when all in circle drawn In M. 131 With gods in unconjectured b. In M. 137 A wither'd violet is her b. In M. 146 For fuller gain of after b. hi M. 182 Nor have I felt so much of b. In M. 204 Make answer, Maud my b. Ma. 61 My dream ? do I dream of b. Ma. 64 My babe in b. E. A. 49 BLISSFUL. — are the b. downs and dales Poems 44 While b. tears blinded my sight Poems 54 — sweet sleep down from the b. skies Poe?ns 144 As from some b. neighbourhood Poetfis 309 With b. treble ringing clear Poems 363 And b. palpitations in the blood Pr. 75 On me she bends her b. eyes In M. 205 And led him thro' the b. climes In M. 119 B. bride of a b. heir E. A. 165 BLISTERING, —her forehead to the b. sun I. K. 73 BLITHE. And the New-year b. and bold Poems 169 B. would her brother's acceptance be Ma. 37 BLOAT — began to bloat himself, and ooze E. A. 104 BLOATED. Down in the cellars merry b. I. K. 239 BLOCK. — cataract, shattering on black blocks Pr. 69 You worthiest ; and howe'er you b. and bar Pr. 98 — all her labour was but as a b. Pr. 169 — huge stumbling-blocks of scorn E. A. 79 BLOCK'D. — b. them out: but these men came Pr. 153 BLOCKISH. — coarse and b. God of acreage E. K. 85 BLONDE. A rosy b., and in a college gown Pr. 46 BLOOD. And leave us rulers of 3-our b. Poems vi. There was &o b. upon her maiden robes Poems 40 1 feel the tears of b. arise Poems 56 Till her b. was frozen slowly Poems 71 From my swift b. that went and came Poe?ns 96 — my vigour, wedded to thy b. Poems 104 She mix'd her ancient b. with shame Poems 109 BLOOD Page BLOOD. — phantasms weeping tears of b. Poems 123 And simple faith than Norman b. Poems 128 The guilt of b. is at your door Poems 128 The ever-shifting currents of the b. Poems 155 That Principles are rain'd in b. Poe?ns 182 Striped with dark b. Poems 198 Vex'd with a morbid devil in his b. Poems 226 The slight she-slips of loyal b. Poems 247 It was the stirring of the b. Poems 296 He knows a baseness in his b. Poems 303 The prudent partner of his b. Poems 309 Here stays the b. along the veins Poems 313 — grapes with bunches red as b. Poems 315 Ah, blessed vision ! b. of God Poems 335 Let Whig and Tory stir their b. Poejns 341 To make my b. run quicker Poems 343 And I,' said he, ' the next in b. Poems 357 "We are men of ruin'd b. Poems 370 Dying, that none of all our b. should know Pr. 15 And blissful palpitations in the b* Pr. 75 — whose thoughts enrich the b. of the world ' Pr. 38 And sobb'd and you sobb'd With it and the b. Pr. 43 That was favvn's b., not brother's, yet you wept Pr. 43 Your prowess, Arac, and what mother's b. Pr. 128 The brethren of our b. and cause Pr. 140 Of grisly twine, all dabbled with the b. Pr. up ' I've heard that there is iron in the b. Pr. 148 Beats with his b., and trust in all things high Pr. 174 I seem to fail from out my b. In M. 2 Or crush her, like a vice of b. hi M. 3 Moved in the chambers of the b. In M. 40 Oh, sacred be the flesh and b- hi M. 52 This use may lie in b. and breath In M. (yj When the b. creeps, and the nerves prick In M. 72 Defects of doubt, and taints of b. In M. 76 Sorrow, wilt thou rule my b. hi M. 84 Delayest the sorrow in my b. hi M. 114 Thy b., my friend, and partly mine hi M. 115 On all the branches of thy b. hi M. 115 My b. an even tenor kept In M. 119 Ring out false pride in place and b. In M. 164 Thro' all the years of April b. In M. 168 By b. a king, at heart a clown In M. 172 Till all my b., a fuller wave In M. 189 And the great ^Eon sinks in b. In M. 196 Remade the b., and changed the frame In M. 204 —ledges drip with a silent horror of b. Ma. 1 To the sweeter b. by the other side Ma. 48 And never yet so warmly ran my b. Ma. 58 The household Fury sprinkled with b. Ma. 66 — the true b. spilt had in it a heat Ma. 66 — the soul of the rose went into my b. Ma. 78 A cry for a brother's b. Ma. 87 Am I guilty of b. Ma. 92 1 almost fear they are not roses, but b. Ma. 107 Mourn for the man of long-enduring b. Ma. 139 Shall lash all Europe into b. Ma. 163 The Prince's b. spirted upon the scarf /. K. 11 The quiet night into her b., but lay /. K. 29 The dew of their great labour, and the b. /. K. 31 They understand : no ; I do not mean b. /. K. 63 Then, fearing for his hurt and loss of b. /. K. 87 My nature's prideful sparkle in the b. /. K. 89 Of b. and custom wholly out of him /. K. 93 Fill'd all the genial courses of his b. /. K 94 As clean as b. of babes, as white as milk /. K. 111 Less old than I, yet older, for my b. /. K. 122 The sin that practice burns into the b. /. K. 133 The pale b. of the wizard at her touch /. K. 143 Red as the rising sun with heathen b. /. K. 163 For any maiden living, 'and the b. /. K. 166 — half his b. burst forth, and down he sank /. K. 174 For twenty strokes of the b., without a word /. K. 184 His own far b., which dwelt at Camelot /. K. 189 For when the b. ran lustier in him again /. K. 193 Even to the death, as tho' you were my b. /. K. 197 Was rather in the fantasy than the b. /. K. 206 — but how pale ! what are they ? flesh and b.? /. K. 212 He, reverencing king'-s b. in a bad man I. K. 227 To save his b. from scandal, let's the wife /. K. 252 He like a lover down through all his b. E. A. 36 And now there is but one of all my b. E. A. 48 A distant kinship to the gracious b. E. A. 54 After his books, to flush his b. with air E. A. 75 — redden'd with no bandit's b. E. A. 82 Runs in a river of b. to the sick sea E. A. 90 The men of flesh and b., and men of stone E. A. 108 — and felt my b. E. A. 142 —pierces the liver and blackens the b. E. A. 159 BLOSSOM'D Page BLO )D. —not by b. to be satiated E. A. 172 Burnt in each man's b. Select. 37 B. and brains of men Select. 39 In their b. as they lay dying Select. 39 BLOODIER. Were b., and the according E. A. 74 BLOODILY flow'd the Tamesa rolling ' E. A. 170 B., b. fall the battle-axe, unexhausted E. A. 172 BLOODLESS. — the pale and b. east began /. K. 29 And now, the b. point reversed E. A. 148 BLOOD-RED. —are dabbled with b. heath Ma. 1 — b. blossom of war with a heart of fire Ma. 115 Ran to her, and lo ! the b. light of dawn /. K. 200 BLOODY. To take such b. vengeance on you Pr. 102 — shovell'd up into a b. trench Poems 222 Should see the raw mechanic's b. thumbs Poems 228 Where the b. conduit runs Poems 372 BLOOM. Of braided blooms unmown Poems 20 Of overflowing blooms, and earliest shoots Poems 27 Whence that aery b. of thine Poems 33 To throng with stately blooms Poems 39 She saw the water-lily b. Poems 69 The Lotos blooms below the barren peak Poems 148 — blooms the garden that I love Poems 204 Her violet eyes, and all her Hebe b. Poems 208 In bud, or blade, or b. mayJfind Poems 322 — many a slope was rich in b. Poems 353 — cheek and bosom brake the wrathful b. Pr. 94 not for thee the glow, the b. In M. 2 That if it can it there may b. In M. 11 And every spirit's folded b. In M. 65 But clear from marge to marge shall b. In M. 68 Which sicken'd every living b. In M. 99 Will b. to profit, otherwhere In M. 113 Of evening over brake and b. In M. 125 And passion pure in snowy b. In M. 168 And hearts are warm'd and faces b. In M. 208 Half-lost in the liquid azure b. Ma. 15 One long milk-b. on the tree Ma. 79 Too fresh and fair in our sad world's bestb. Ma. 129 — that islet in the chestnut-b. E. A. 54 — each a nest in b. E.A. 59 And b. profuse, and cedar arches E. A. 175 — the bud ever breaks into b. on the tree E. A. 159 BLOOMED. The low and b. foliage, drove Poems 19 BLOOMING. The maid-of-honour b. fair Poems 314 By Cupid-boys of b. hue Poems 325 With hollow watch, her b. mantle torn Pr. 144 BLOSSOM. The sun-lit almond-b. shakes Poems vi. Bursts into b. in his sight Poems 97 He prest the b. of his lips to mine Poems 101 The b. on the blackthorn, the leaf upon Poems 134 — the b. fades, and they that loved Poems 227 The maiden blossoms of her teens Poems 248 A little garden b. Poems 330 In full and kindly b. Poems 340 And caught the b. of the flying terms Pr. 9 Perch'd on the pouted b. of her lips Pr. 11 Fruit, b., viand, amber wine, and gold Pr. 76 1 Ah me, my babe, my b., ah my child : Pr. in -lay my little b. at my feet Pr. 112 From the high tree the b. wavering fell Pr. 140 The tender b. flutter down In M. 153 And buds and blossoms like the rest In M. 180 The white lake-b. fell into the lake Ma. 79 — b. in purple and red Ma 81 — blood-red b. of war with a heart of fire Ma. 115 With here a b. sailing Ma. 120 Fresh apple-b., blushing for a boon Ma. 122 In lands of palm, of orange-b. Ma. 153 Or rosy b. in hot ravine Ma. 155 And near her, like a b. vermeil-white /. K. 20 I fear me, that will strike my b. dead /. K. 197 Of b., over sheets of hyacinth /. K. 245 Her b., or her seedling, paused E. A. 10 Made b.-ball or daisy-chain E. A. 55 Gather'd the b. that rebloom'd E. A. 58 The wilderness shall b. as the rose E. A. 84 — a land all sun and b. E. A. 101 Scatter the b. under her feet E. A. 164 BLOSSOM-BALL. Made b. or daisy-chain E. A. 55 BLOSSOM-BELTS, —the garden's glowing b. Pr. 125 BLOSSOM-DUST. Foot-gilt with all the b. /. K. 108 — the working bee in b. E. A. 21 BLOSSOM'D/— with still rains and daisy-b. Poems 57 Droops the heavy-b. bovver Poems 281 About him, and betwixt them b. up Pr. 45 — whirl'd her white robe like a b. branch Pr. 83 On the b. gable-ends Ma. 25 —when the wreath of March has b. Ma. 164 BLOSSOM'D Page BLOSSOM'D. And b. in the zenith E. A. 32 BLOSSOM-FRAGRANT. — b. slipt the heavy Pr. 119 BLOSSOMING, —and the happy b. shore? Poems 43 — many-b. Paradises E. A. 171 BLOT out the slope of sea from verge to shore Pr. 159 'Tis the b. upon the brain Ma. 99 And blackens every b. /. K. vi. A square of text that looks a little b. /. K. 128 Far-off, a b. upon the stream, and said /. K. 220 A b. in heaven, the Raven, flying high /. K. 232 With blots of it about tjiem. ribbon, glove E. A. 83 BLOTTED. I took his brush and b. out the /. K. 118 — a great mist-b. light E. A. 37 BLOW. Round thee b., self-pleached deep Poems 50 And loud the Norland whirlwinds b. Poems 53 cursed hand ! O cursed b. Poems 56 Gazing where the lilies b. Poems 65 When April nights began to b. Poems 89 Sweet gales, as from deep gardens, b. Poems 97 When the wind blows the foam Poems 100 And by the meadow-trenches b. Poems 132 — the summer airs b. cool Poems 135 — the land about, and all the flowers that b. Poems 138 The Lotos blows by every winding creek Poems 148 The wind, that beats the mountain, blows Poems 171 Nor ever wind blows loudly : but it lies Poe??is 200 Your own Olivia b. Poems 248 -light as any wind that blows Poetns 250 The full south-breeze around thee b. Poe?7is 256 As winds from all the compass shift and b. Poems 286 That all about the thorn will b. Poems 292 The wildweed-flower that simply blows ? Poems 321 B. , flute, and stir the stiff-set sprigs Poems 328 That blows upon its mountain Poems 330 The violet of a legend b. Poe?ns 345 It was the time when lilies b. Poevis 354 Come from the dying moon, and b. Pr. 54 B. him again to me Pr. 54 Low, low, breathe and b. Pr. 54 B. , bugle ; answer, echoes, dying, d}-ing, dying Pr. 74 B. , let us hear the purple glens replying Pr. 74 B., bugle, blow, set the wild echoes 'flying Pr. 74 A moment, while the trumpets b. Pr. 105 — red-hot iron to be shaped with blows Pr. 117 A taunt that clench'd his purpose like a b. Pr. 122 The large blows rain'd, as here and everywhere Pr. 133 With their own blows they hurt themselves Pr. 139 And make them pipes whereon to b. In M. 35 And breasts the blows of circumstance hi 31. 89 With blasts that b. the poplar white In M. 99 But in the present broke the b. In 31. 120 In ripples, fan my brows and b. In 31. 125 The blows of Death. At length nry trance In M. 141 A fresh association b. In 31. 154 There in due time the woodbine blows In 31. 161 By ashen roots the violets b. In 31. 179 And all the breeze of Fancy blows In 31. 190 Myriads b. together Ma. 43 That must have life for a b. Ma. 86 That b. by night, when the season is good Ma. 107 —the red life spilt for a private b. Ma. 108 — let the mournful martial music b. Ma. 138 Back to France with countless blows Ma. 143 — watch his mightful hand striking great blows /. K. 6 Then the good king gave orders to let b. /. K. 9 So often and with such blows, that all the /. K. 30 Kill'd with a word worse than a life of blows /. K. 139 And each had slain his brother at a b. /. K. 149 Hard-won and hardly won with bruise and b. /. K. 208 1 hro' the thick night I hear the trumpet b. /. K. 254 To b. these sacrifices thro' the world E. A. 90 I stood like one that had received a b. E. A. 104 Phantom sound of blows descending E. A. 170 And the wind did b. Select. 38 Lady, let the trumpets b. Select. 207 BLOWING, —deep myrrh-thickets b. round Poems 23 Aloud the hollow bugle b. Poems 53 Winds were b., waters flowing Poems 53 The wind is b. in turret and tree Poems 109, no — (while warm airs lull us, b. lowly) Poems 147 — came a bark that, b. forward, bore Poems 201 — a broad and equal-b. wind Poems 206 — soft wind b. over meadowy holms Poems 234 Knit land to land, and b. havenward Poems 263 B. a noise of tongues and deeds Poems 299 Like soften'd air's that b. steal Poems 308 Summer woods, about them b. Poems 359 B. the ringlet from the braid Poems 363 And vines, and b. bosks of wilderness Pr. 21 BLUNT Page BLOWING. The horns of Elfland faintly b. /V. 74 — merrily-b. shrill'd the martial fife Pr. 119 O'er the b. ships 31a. 56 No joy the b. season gives In 31. 59 As the south-west that b. Bala lake /. A". 95 Such trumpet-blowings in it, coming down /. K. 115 1 Fear not, isle of b. woodland E. A. 171 BLOWN. — reeds b. from his silver tongue Poems 38 Not thrice your branching limes have b. Poems xzj — petals from b. roses on the grass Poems 144 The yellow Lotos-dust is b. Poems 148 And trumpets b. for wars Poems 151 Of Death is b. in every wind ' Poems 173 And b. across the walk Poems 207 As when a billow, b. against Poems 304 Full-b., before us into rooms which gave Pr. 27 That b. about the foliage underneath Pr. 60 The starr'd Mosaic, and the beard-b. goat Pr. 78 — b. to inmost north : at eve and dawn Pr. 97 The rooks are b. about the skies In 31. 24 Be b. about the desert dust In 31. 81 Nor harp be touch'd nor flute be b. In 31. 162 — far-off sail is b. bythe breeze ofa softer clime 31a. 15 Has a broad-b. comeliness 31 a. 46 — the musk of the roses b. 31a. 76 His Briton in b. seas and storming showers 31a. 146 Had b. the lake beyond his limit Ma. 157 Then Yniols nephew, after trumpet b. /. K. 30 Her bright hair b. about the serious face /. K. 167 This night, a rumour wildly b. about /. K. 233 With all their dewy hair b. back like flame /. K. 240 (She wanted water) b. by baffling winds E. A. 34 — b. across her ghostly wall E. A. 36 BLOWZED. Huge women b. with health Pr. 89 BLUE. The b. fly sung in the pane Poems n The citron -shadows in the b. Poems 19 Dark-b. the deep sphere overhead Poems 22 Thy rose-lips and full b. eyes Poems 33 And a lack-lustre dead-b. eye Poems 36 Some b. peaks in the distance rose . Poems 47 And sometimes thro' the mirror b. Poems 67 All in the b. unclouded weather Poems 69 A faint-b. ridge upon the right Poems 73 Were glistening to the breezy b. Poems 87 I found the b. Forget-me-not Poems 93 High over the b. gorge Poems 106 For some were hung with arras green and b. Pms 115 —sweet Europa's mantle b. unclasp'd Poems 117 — the lights, rose, amber, emerald, b. Poems 120 From yon b. heavens above us bent Poems 128 Vaulted o'er the dark-b. sea Poems 145 Hateful is the dark-b. sky Poe?ns 145 Shook in the stedfast b. Poems 152 Floods all the deep-b. gloom with beams divine P?ns 158 Look down, and let your b. eyes dawn Poems 165 And less aerially b. Poems 165 While yon sun prospers in the b. Poems 167 — looking wistfully with wide b. eyes Poems 197 — airy navies grappling in the central b. Poevis 278 B. isles of heaven laugh'd between Poems 362 That breath'd beneath the Syrian b. In M. 74 The little speedwell's darling b. hi 31. 114 Flits by the sea-b. bird of March In 31. 135 Sweet-hearted, you, whose light-b. eyes hi 31. 143 And drown'd in yonder living b. In 31. 179 A light-b. lane of early dawn In 31. 185 In violets b. as your e3'es 3 fa. 79 —sweet the vapour-braided b. Ma. 134 Nor let her true hand falter, nor b. eye /. K. 72 Where like a shoaling sea the lovely b. /. K. 82 Yet not so misty were her meek b. eyes /. K. 86 And there, poor cousin, with your meek b. eyes /. K. 90 O damsel, in the light of your b. eyes /. K. 181 Philip, his b. eyes E. A. 3 The warm-b. breathings of a hidden hearth E. A. 59 Blues and reds E. A . 64 They talk'd of: blues were sure of it, he E. A. 64 — a star of morning in their b. E. A. 87 BLUEBELL. How the merry b. rings Poems 34 The frail b. peereth over Poems 51 BLUE-EYED. A Prince I was, b. and fair Pr. 15 BLUFF Harry broke into the spence Poems 2^j — buffet round the hills from b. to b. Poems 264 And shadowing b. that made the camps In 31. 158 BLUNDER'D. Some one had b. Ma. 168 BLUNT. So b. in memory, so old at heart Poe-ms 205 She felt so b. and stupid at the heart /. K. 85 To b. or break her passion ' /. K. 197 Besought me to be plain and b., and use /. K. 215 29 BLURR'D Page BLURR'D. And b. the splendour of the sun In M. 99 And one was patch'd and b. and lustreless /, K. 35 B. by the creeping mist, for all abroad /. K. 225 BLUSH. The b. is fix'd upon her cheek Poems 314 Those lilies, better b. our lives away Pr. 57 ' What pardon, sweet Melissa, for a b. ?' Pr. 57 Said Cyril : ' Pale one, b. again : than wear Pr. 57 — b. and smile, a medicine in themselves Pr. 160 Pass and b. the news Ma. 56 B. it thro' the West Ma. 57 B. from West to East Ma. 57 B. from East to West Ma. 57 You should have seen himb. ; but afterwards I. A'. 118 And the sick man forgot her simple b. I. K. 192 Since I b. to belaud myself a moment E. A. 176 BLUSH'D. —suddenly, sweetly, strangely b. Ma. 33 Katie laugh'd, and laughing b. Ma. 128 She neither b. nor shook, but deathly-pale I. K. 197 She b. a rosy red E. A. 162 Her blushing was, and how she b. again Pr. 59 BLUSHES. 'Suffused with b.— neither Poems 208 As it were with shame she b. Poems 360 A flying charm of b. o'er this cheek Pr. 51 BLUSHEST. Again thou b. angerly Poems 16 BLUSHING. Her b. was, and how she blush'd/V. 59 On a b. mission to me Ma. 75 Fresh apple-blossom, b. for a boon Ma. 122 B. upon them b., and at once I. K. 132 BLUSTER the winds and tides the self-same Poems 151 Well— 'tis well that I should b. Poems 273 And b. into stormy sobs and sav I. K. 202 BLUSTERING, —maids, b. I know not what Pr. 127 BOADICEA. Far in the East B. E. A. 169 So the Queen B. E. A. 172 BOANERGES. Our B. with his threats E. A. 109 BOARD. ' This was cast upon the b. Poems 101 And cast the golden fruit upon the b. Poevis 106 I leap on b. : no helmsman steers Poems 334 I pledge her silent at the b. Poems 340 There at a b. by tome and paper sat Pr. 31 We enter'd onthe boards : and ' Now,' she cried Pr. 33 And on the b. the fluttering urn In M. 139 Arrange the b. and brim the glass hi M. 165 — pushes us off from the b. Ma. 18 Am I so like her? so they said on b. Ma. 129 — kitchen, boil'd the flesh, and spread the b. I. K. 21 Struck with a knife's haft hard against the b. I. K. 77 — bare her by main violence to theb. I. K. 80 On b. a merchantman, and made himself E. A. 4 For cups and silver on the burnish'd b. E. A. 41 Pattering over the beards, my Annie E. A. 124 BOAST. To shame the b. so often made Poe7?is 182 — talents, I — you know it — I will not b. Pr. 92 The long result of love, and b. In M. 1 — bring her babe, and make her b. In M. 61 Not the dipt palm of which they b. Ma. 155 Waiting to fall on you, and heard them b. I. K. 49 BOASTFUL, —seeming b. ; so when first E. A. 61 BOAT. So, leaping lightly from the b. Poems 22 Down she came and found a b. Poems 70 To Francis, just alighted from the b. Poems 221 B., island, ruins of a castle, built Poems 230 That he sings in his b. on the bay Poems 378 In gratulation, till as when a b. Pr. 39 — boats and bridges for the use of men Pr. 138 The b. is drawn upon the shore In M. 187 The market b. is on the stream In M. 187 She took the helm and he the sail ; the b. /. K. 103 There found a little b., and stept into it /. K. 103 He saw two cities in a thousand boats /. K. 122 Up the great river in the boatman's b. /. K. 201 — boats updrawn E. A. 2 To purchase his own b. E. A. 3 He purchased his own b., and made a home E. A. 4 To sell the b. E. A. 8 The horse he drove, the b. he sold, the chill E. A. 33 The b. that bears the hope of life E. A. 45 BOATED. I b. over, ran Poems 234 They b. and they cricketed ; they talk'd Pr. 9 BOAT-HEAD. The b. down a broad canal Poems 20 — as the b. wound along Poems 71 BOATMAN. — great river in a boatman's hut I. K. 162 Up the great river in the boatman's boat /. K. 201 — make the boatmen fishing nets E. A. 44 BOBOLI. —walks in Boboli's ducal bowers Ma. 156 BODE, —wending there that night they b. I. K. 168 Lancelot b. a little, till he saw I. K. 171 There b. the night : but woke with dawn I. K. 191 — b. among them yet a little space I. K. 195 30 BOND Page BODIED. Is b. forth the second whole Poems 182 BODIES. The b. and the bones of those Poems 317 Of their strong b., flowing, drain'd their I. A". 31 — let the b. lie, but bound their suits /. K. 50 B., but souls— thy children's— thro' the smokeii. A. 86 —phantom b. of horses and men E. A. 170 BODILY, —felt, were she the prize of b. force I. K. 29 BODY. I wrapt his b. in the sheet Poems no A b. slight and round, and like a pear Poems 227 To touch my b. and be heal'd Poems 239 — strong and hale of b. then Poems 237 ' Here lies the b. of Ellen Adair Poe'ms 338 There lies the b. of Ellen Adair ! Poems 338 Bore to earth her b., drest Poems 361 — grovell'd on ray b., and after him Pr. 137 Its b., and reach its fatling innocent arms Pr. 143 To where the b. sits, and learn In M. 19 1 The cheeks drop in ; the b. bows In M. 54 Bare of the b. , might it last hi M. 65 — in the ghastly pit long since a b. was found Ma. 2 All this dead b. of hate Ma. 70 — being weak in b. said no more I. K. 190 Like that long-buried b. of the King E. A. 51 That saturate soul with b. E. A. 70 His b. half flung forward in pursuit E. A. 81 — b. that never had drawn a breath E. A. 122 I look'd at the still little b. E. A. 122 There lay the sweet little b. E. A 122 He cast his b., and on we swept E. A. 149 BOGGLE. Theer wur a b. in it E. A. 132 BOIL. Made me b. over Poems 242 BOIL'D. — burn'd in fire or b. in oil Poems 238 For kitchen, b. the flesh, and spread the I. K. 21 BOLD. Until she be an athlete b. Poems 14 Her beautiful b. brow Poevu 39 Flow'd forth on a carol free and b. Poems 48 I would be a merman b. Poems 58 A merman b. Poems 58 Of the b. merry mermen under the sea Poems 6t Of b. Sir Lancelot Poems 68 Like some b. seer in a trance Poems 70 — the island princes over-b. Poems 147 — with swarthy cheeks and b. black eyes Poems 155 —the New-year blithe and b., my friend Poems 169 A man more pure and b. and just Poems 172 The b. Sir Bedivere uplifted him Poems 191 To him replied the b. Sir Bedivere Poems 192 — answer made the b.Sir Bedivere Poems 193, 195, 196 — loudly cried the b. Sir Bedivere Poems 199 — wide in soul and b. of tongue Poems 295 You are b. indeed ; we are not talk'd to thus Pr. 67 — many a b. knight started up in heat Pr. 125 With what divine affections b. hi M. 138 The faith, the vigour, b. to dwell In M. 140 Among the wise and the b. Ma. 140 Am I so b., and could I so stand by I. K. 6 Half-b. , half-frighted, with dilated eyes I. K. 77 I must die for want of one b. word ' /. K. 195 Of battle, b. adventure, dungeon, wreck E. A. 56 — tho' keen and b. and soldierly E. A. 61 Sailors b. and true Select. 37 BOLDER. There's many a b. lad '11 woo me Pms 131 And me this knowledge b. made Poems 171 W T ho seems no b. than a beaten hound I. K. 49 A luckier or a b. fisherman E. A. 3 BOLDEST. Or b. since, but lightly weighs Poems 29 BOLDLY. Myself for such a face had b. died 'Pms 154 b. ventured on the liberties Pr. 25 I offer b. : we will seat you highest Pr. 62 B. they rode and well Ma. 168 Brightly and b. All his Annie's fears E. A. ir BOLDNESS. Should licensed b. gather force InM. 175 BOLE. Enormous elm-tree boles did stoop Pms 152 About my ' giant bole ' Poems 250 — double in and out the boles, and race Pr. 88 In every b., a song on every spray Pr. 119 BOLT. — lie beside their nectar, and the bolts Pms 148 Appealing to the bolts of Heaven Pr. 93 — battle-b. rang from the three-decker Ma. 7 — had she ceased, when out of heaven a b. I. K. 142 BOND. All force in bonds that might endure Pms 119 Seeing obedience is the b. of rule Poems 194 Unmanacled from bonds of sense Poems 303 Seal'd not the b. — the striplings ! Pr. 127 Together, dwarf d or godlike, b. or free Pr. 171 Sweet Lovewere slain : his dearest b. is this Pr. 172 Has broke the b. of dying use In M. 161 Than some strong b. which is to be hi M. 1S1 To dissolve the precious seal on a b. Ma. 66 BOND Tage I ). — me most indignant ; then our b. /. A', m —brute world howling forced them into bonds /. A'. 132 Not Arthur's, as you know, save by the b. /. A". 154. Not violating the b. of like to like*' /. A". 160 From bonds or death, and dwelt among the /. A'. 161 Our b., as not the b. of man and wife /. A". 2C9 Our b. is not the b. of man and wife /. A". 210 These bonds that so defame me : not without /. A'. 221 Then broke all bonds of courtesy E. A. 68 Which breaks all bonds but ours E. A. 73 — broke the b. which thev desired to break E. A. 91 BONDSMAN. Mv will is'b. to the dark In M. 4 BONDSLAVE. Your bride, your b. ! not tho' Pr. 102 BONES. Where lay the mighty b. of ancient Poems 193 — burn a fragrant lamp before my b. Poems 243 To feed thy b. with lime, and ran Poems 3:4 The bodies and the b. of those Poems 317 N'o caned cross-b., the types of Death Poems 349 You are b. , and what of that ? Poems 373 From the fashion of your b. Poems 373 —the first b. of Time Pr. 2 As chanted on the blanching b. of men ? ' Pr. 39 — cut this epitaph above my b. Pr. 40 The b. of some vast bulk that lived and roar'd Pr. 69 ' As these rude b. to us are we to her Pr. 70 Better have died and spilt our b. in the flood Pr. 102 Thy roots are wrapt about the b. In M. 2 As "if the quiet b. were blest In M. 30 —grins on a pile of children's bones Ma. 7 My b. are shaken with pain Ma. 102 He has gather'd the b. for his p'ergrown whelp Ma. 105 Echo round his b. Ma. 138 Be glad, because his b. are laid by thine Ma. 145 Who being apt at arms and big of bone I. K. 26 — crack'd the helmet thro', and bit the bone I. K. 31 To lose his bone, and lays his foot upon it I. K. 75 Each growling like a dog when his good bone I. K. 75 The feet unmortised from their ankle-b. I. K. 122 —there they lay till all their b. were bleach'd I. K. 149 — green Christmas crams with weary b. Select, igj BONNET. Or the frock and gipsy b. Ma. 72 BONNY. Whistling a random bar of B. Doon Ma. 121 BOOK. Take, Madam, this poor b. of song Poems vi. Remodel models ? these twelve books of Poems 190 — his King Arthur, some twelve books' Poems 190 His books — the more the pity, so I said Poems 223 Their faces grow between me and my b. Poems 212 — poring over miserable books Poems 282 O'er books of travell'd seamen Poems 329 Nor yet the fear of little books Poems 347 As the priest, above his b. Poems 370 * O miracle of women,' said the b. Pr. 3 (I kept the b. and had my finger in it) Pr. 4 My b. to mind : and opening this I read Pr. 7 Or b. or lute ; but hastily we past Pr. 31 — boy, 'she said, 'can he not read — no books?' Pr. 65 According to your bitter statute-b. Pr. 98 The b. of scorn, till all my little chance Pr. 114 Brake on us at our books, and marr'd our Pr. 127 With books, with flowers, with Angel offices Pr. 158 — she was cramm'd with theories out of books Pr. 179 In M. ic6 lu M 109 In M. 131 In M. 166 In M. 2iD Ma. 50 Ma. 159 I. K. 126 /. K. 127 May bind a b., may line a box One lesson from one b. we learn'd Discuss'd the books to love or hate With books and music, surely we Is Nature like an open b. She sits by her music and books Still in the little b. you lent me Read but one b., and ever reading grew — venish'd, and his b. came down to me ' ' You have the b. : the charm is written in it I. K. 127 With cities on their flanks— you read the b. ! I. K. 128 ' You read the b. , my pretty Vivien ! I. K. 128 — bought them needful books E. A. 19 — desperately seized the holy B. E. A. 27 — she closed the B. and slept E. A. 28 ' Swear,' added Enoch sternly, ' on the b. ' E. A. 46 Before I tell you — swear upon the b. E. A. 46 — on the b., half-frighted, Miriam swore E. A. 46 Then to his books again E. A. 75 After his books, to flush his blood with air E. A. 75 ' The books, the books :' but he, he could E. A. 104 ' Show me the books ! ' E. A. 104 When the great Books (see Daniel seven E. A. 104 — in this B., little Annie E. A. 126 BOOKLESS, —flight from out your b. wilds Pr. 32 BOOM. His captain's-ear has heard them b. Ma. 141 — b. and blanch on the precipices E. A. 173 Crashing went the b. Select. 38 BORN Page BOOMETH. At eve the beetle b. Poems 3 BOON. Such b. from me Poems 103 They mastered me. At last she begg'd a b. Pr. 22 I-re-'h apple-blossom, blushing for a' b. Ma. 122 Fled all the b. companions of the Earl I. K. 71 ' To what request for what strange b.,' he I. K. 107 B., yes, there was a b., one not so strange I. K. 108 — ask your b., for b. I owe you thrice I. K. 109 — take this b. so strange and not so strange ' I. K. 109 Whenever I have ask - d this very b. I. K. 11; If I be such a traitress. Yield my b. I. K. in Why will you never ask some other b. ? I. A". 112 Who feels no heart to ask another b. I. K. 113 Increasing gave me use. Lo, there my b. I. K. 119 Not ever be too curious for a b. I. A". 119 To snare her royal fancy with a b. I. K. 151 The tale of diamonds for his destined b.) I. A". 152 BOOT. Leisurely tapping a glossv b. Ma. 47 BOOTH. With sport and song, in b. and tent In M. 148 BOOTLESS. — proxy -wedded with a b. calf Pr. 16 BOOTY. Their chance of b. from the I. K. 75 BORDER. Morn broaden'd on the borders Poems 161 Close on the borders of a territory IK. 3 A b. fantasy of branch and flower I. K. 147 Low on the b. of her couch they sat I. A". 230 This blacksmith-b. marriage E. A. 64 From out the borders of the morn Select. 221 BORDER'D with palm Poems 143 BORE. — vagrant melodies the winds which b. Pms 39 The broad stream b. her far away Poems 70 Branches the}- b. of that enchanted stem Poems 143 That b. a lady from a leagur'd town Poems 152 — b. him to a chapel nigh the field Poe?ns 191 — rising b. him thro' the place of tombs Poems 197 — came a bark that, blowing forward, b. Poetns 201 — in her bosom b. the baby, Sleep Poems 213 But Dora b. them meekly Poems 215 Thou knowest I b. this better at the first Poems 237 Not this alone I b. : but while I lived Poe?ns 238 I b., whereof, O God, thou knowest all Poe??ts 238 — love her for the love she b. Poems 274 Not less thro' all b. up, till, last, she saw Poems 287 B. and forbore and did not tire Poems 299 Right down by smoky Paul's they b. Poems 345 Three fair children first she b. him Poe??is 361 B. to earth her bod}', drest Poems 361 A light-green tuft of plumes she b. Poems 363 Yet I b. up in part from ancient love Pr. 90 Yet I b. up in hope she would be known Pr. 91 Among the thickest and b. down a Prince Pr. 133 — me they b. up the broad stairs Pr. 156 — b. thee" where I could not see In M. 38 — thus he b. without abuse In M. 173 To be the ghost of one who b. your name Ma. 129 — best by her that b. her understood I. K. 38 — on Geraint, who closed with him, and b. I. K. 70 — b. him to the naked hall of Doorm I. K. 76 He b. a knight of old repute to the earth I. K. 173 Sent, that he b. the prize and could not find I. K. 180 — thus they b. her swooning to her tower I. K. 197 reverenth/ they b. her into hall I. K. 213 B. him another son, a sickly one E. A. 7 So grieving held his will, and b. it thro' E. A. 10 The thing'he will'd and b. it thro' E. A. 17 The dead weight of the dead leaf b. it down E. A. 37 Enoch b. his weakness cheerfully E. A. ^.3 They barr'd her : yet she b. it : yet her E. A. 77 B. down in flood, and dash'd his angry heart 'E. A. 84 — her own people b. along the nave E. A. 93 — hedgehog underneath the plantain bores E. A. 95 B. thro' the cave, and I was heaved upon it E. A. 101 The motion of the great deep b. me on E. A. 102 She b. the blade of Liberty E. A. 148 BORING a little augur-hole in fear Poems 287 BORN. The first-b. of thy genius Poems 30 The poet in a golden clime was b. Poems 38 Two children in one hamlet b. and bred Poems 57 Thou wert b., on a summer morn Poe?ns 78 — Heaven's Queen, Paris, to thee king-b. Poems 103 A shepherd all thy life but yet king-b. Poems 103 Ere it is b. : her child : — a shudder comes Poems 108 — never child be b. of me Poe?ns 108 Fell on her, from which-mood was b. Poems 122 — sweet mother, call me before the day is b. Poems 137 I would be b. and die Poems 158 Was never b. into the earth Poems 172 B. out of everything I heard and saw Poems 205 Love at first sight, first-b., and heir to all Poems 210 — days went on, and there was b. a boy Poems 216 31 BORN Page BORN. A sinful man, conceived and b. in Poems 240 Of beauties, that were b. Poems 247 1 But I was b. too late : the fair new forms Poems 262 Cry, faint not : either Truth is b. Poems 297 — thought and time be b. again Poems 315 As any, b. of woman Poems 345 ' If I'm a beggar b.,' she said Poems 355 I am a beggar b.,' she said Poems 357 ' If you are not the heiress b. Poems 357 Unto which she was not b. Poems 361 Every moment one is b. Poejns 370, 371 On the first-b. of her sons Poems 372 —chiefly you were b. for something great Pr. 90 Ere you were b. to vex us Pr. 149 The linnet b. within the cage In M. 44 The light that shone when Hope was b. In M. 49 If these brief lays, of Sorrow b. In M. 70 In that dark house where she was b. In M. 85 You tell me, doubt is Devil-b. In M. 143 It is the day when he was b. In M. 165 b. of love, the vague desire In M. 171 But I was b. to other things In M. 186 Result in man, be b., and think In M. 210 -far better to be b. Ma. 60 On the day when Maud was b. Ma. 66 Rivulet b. at the Hall Ma. 75 Is a juggle b. of the brain Ma. 90 To tickle the maggot b. in an empty head Ma. 104 — from the three dead wolves of woman b. I. K. 50 —they themselves, like creatures gently b. /. K. 56 Might feel some sudden turn of anger b. /. K. 121 Spleen-b., I think, and proofless. If you /. K. 130 The gentler-b. the maiden, the more bound I. K. 187 These, as but b. of sickness, could not live /. K. 193 B. to the glory of thy name and fame /. K. 219 Well is it that no child is b. of thee I. K. 247 The children b. of thee are sword and fire /. K. 247 Nursing the sickly babe, her latest-b. E. A. 9 — was sickly-b. and grew E. A. 15 — when her child was b. E. A. 29 In those far-off seven happy years were b. E. A. 37 — eldest-b. of rank or wealth E. A. 76 B. of a village girl, carpenter's son E. A. 85 Thy better-b. unhappily from thee E. A. 86 A city-clerk, but gently b. and bred E. A. 96 Willy, my eldest-b., is gone E. A. 114 Willy, my beauty, my eldest-b. E. A. 115 — that ever I bare was dead before he was b. E. A. 121 — the child that was dead before he was b. E. A. 122 Willy, my eldest-b., at nigh E. A. 125 — my eldest-b., my flower E. A. 127 — naw, naw, tha was not b. then E. A. 132 A glimpse of that dark world where I was b. E. A. 141 With that fair child betwixt them b. Select. 221 BORNE. Adown the Tigris I was b. Poems 19 From off her shoulder backward b. Poems 117 Patient on this tall pillar I have b. Poevts 236 1 think that I have b. as much Poems 239 — many a merry wind was b. Poems 320 When on my goodly charger b. Poems 335 Ah, bear me with thee, smoothly b. Poems 377 — statues, b. aloft, the three : but come Pr. 140 B. down by gladness so complete lit M. 51 This truth came b. with bier and pall In M. 118 That a calamity hard to be b. Ma. 46 Now to glorious burial slowly b. Ma. 148 B. on a black horse, like a thunder-cloud /. K. 70 Likewise for the high rank she had b. /. K. 261 — that is b. in on me E. A. 18 I have b. it with me all these years E. A. 49 The woman should have b., humiliated E. A. 69 BOROUGH, —neighbouring b. with their Pr. 1 BORROW'D. A cap of Tyrol b. from the hall Pr. 106 B. a glass, but all in vain E. A. 14 BOS. —the thundering shores of Bude and B. /. A". 240 BOSKAGE, —the sombre b. of the wood Poems 160 BOSKS. — and blowing b. of wilderness Pr. 21 BOSOM, —rounded arms, and bosoms prest Poems 43 From brow and b. slowly down Poems 73 — rising from her b. drew Poems 75 Upon her balmy b. Poems 92 From her warm brows and b. Poems 105 P ose up from out the b. of the lake Poems 192 —in her b. bore the baby, Sleep Poems 213 — on thy b. (deep-desired relief !) Poevts 259 — her b. shaken with a sudden storm of sighs Poevts 270 — pluck it from my b., tho' my heart be at the Pms 273 Within the b. of the rose Poems 321 I will not vex my b. Poevts 330 BOUND Page BOSOM. That in my b. lies Poems 331 New lifeblood warm the b. Poems 340 That sun their milky bosoms on the thatch Pr. 34 Lost in her b. : but with some disdain Pr. j 7 —lay me on her b., and her heart Pr. 79 — cheek and b. brake the wrathful bloom Pr. 94 The sacred mother's b., panting, burst Pr. 144 —hid her b. with it Pr. 147 Into my b., and be lost in me ' Pr. i6j — slips into the b. of the lake Pr. 167 The b. with long sighs labour'd Pr. 169 Slide from the b. of the stars In M. 28 My b. -friend and half of life In M. 84 Danced in his b., seeing better days /. A". 27 Across her neck and b. to her knee /. K. 106 Him, to her meek and modest b. prest E. A. 72 Warm'd at her b. ? E. A. 86 — b. beating with a heart renew'd E. A. 141 BOSS. Or flying shone, the silver b. E. A. 146 BOSS'D. — with lucid marbles, b. with lengths Pr. 30 BOTANIC. They read Botanic Treatises Poevts 329 BOTH. Droops b. his wings, regarding thee Poevts 83 I pray'd for b., and so I felt resign'd Poevts 140 Charged b. mine eyes with tears Poevts 150 Bleedeth for b. : yet it may be Poems 173 B. are my friends, and my true breast Poems 173 — b. his eyes were dazzled Poevts 193 — with b. hands I flung him, wheeling him Poe?ns 196 O'er b. his shoulders drew the languid hands Poevts 197 Enwound us b. : and over many a range Poevts 211 — b. my thighs are rotted with the dew Poems 237 — praise thee more in b. Poems 257 — more fools they, — we forward : dreamers b. Pms 264 — one dark tress ; and all around them b. Pr. 17 — forth again with b. my friends. We rode Pr. 23 That brother-sister Psyche, b. in one ? Pr. 42 Slew b. his sons : and I, shall I, on whom Pr. 44 Took b. his hands, and smiling faintly said Pr. 45 — where are Psyche, Cyril ? b. are fled Pr. 87 To take such bloody vengeance on you b. Pr. 102 We two will serve them b. in aiding her Pr. 171 I, betwixt them b., to please them b. Pr. 178 Let Love clasp Grief lest b. be drown'd In M. 1 He on whom from b. her open hands Ma. 148 To b. appear'd so costly, rose a cry /. K. 34 Her by b. hands he caught, and sweetly said/. K. 42 That morning, when they b. had got to horse /. K. 46 — made a pretty cup of b. my hands I. K. 107 The charm so taught will charm us b. to rest /. K. no Perchance, we b. can pardon : but, my Queen /. K. 209 'Yea,' said the little novice, 'I pray for b. /. K. 243 — would be little wife to b. E. A. 3 Here b. were mute E. A. 24 Nor mine the fault, if losing b. of these E. A. 88 B. crown'd with stars E. A. 109 Went b. to make your dream E. A. 109 BOTTOM. Beyond the b. of his eye Poevts 36 As b. agates seen to wave and float Pr. 46 Tho' anchor'd to the b., such is he' Pr. 87 To the b., and dispersed E. A. 21 In such a b. :' Peter had the brush E. A. 64 BOUGH. Of hollow boughs.— A goodly time P?ns 21 Ran riot, gananding the gnarled boughs Poevts 102 — thick mysterious boughs in the dark morn Pvts 106 To rest beneath thy boughs Poems 246, 251 To sport beneath thy boughs Poevts 249 Spread upwards till thy boughs discern Poems 255 — grasping down the boughs I gain'd the shore Pr. 84 Yet go, and while the holly boughs In M. 47 I found a wood with thorny boughs In M. 95 — sow the sky with flying boughs In M. 100 Unwatch'd, the garden b. shall sway hi M. 153 The lithe reluctant boughs to tear away E. A. 21 -one soft arm, which, like the pliant b. E. A. in BOUGHT. A great and distant city— have b. Pms 46 A b. commission, a waxen face ' Ma. 38 B. ? what is it he cannot buy? Ma. 38 We b. the farm we tenanted before Ma. 129 — which being sold and sold had b. them bread /. A". 34 B. Annie goods and stores E. A. 10 — b. them needful books E. A. 19 There Enoch traded for himself and b. E. A. 30 She that gave you 's b. and sold E. A. 162 BOULDER, —a glen, gray b. and black tarn /. A". 149 BOUND. The bounds of freedom wider yet Poevts vi. —wild winds b. within their cell Poems n Two lives b. fast in one Poems 57 In front they b. the sheaves Poems 115 Brow-b. with burning gold Poems 155 BOUND Page BOUND. B. by gold chains about the feet Poems 200 Beyond the utmost b. of human thought Poems 266 Do men love thee ? Art thou so b. Poe?ns 294 — mete the bounds of hate and love Poems 295 Which only to one engine b. Poems 305 With fair horizons b. Poems 342 —confess with right) you think me b. Pr. 23 'Had given us letters was he b. to speak? Pr. 24 /wed with thee ! / b. by precontract Pr. 102 — dared to break our b. , and gull'd Pr. 102 I have lost the links that b. In M. 62 As, unto vaster motions b. In M. 83 — music in the bounds of law In M. 127 —strike his being into bounds In M. 210 B. for the Hall, I am sure was he Ma. 37 Had b. us one to the other Ma. 66 — let the bodies lie, but b. their suits /. K. 50 — b. them on their horses, each on each /. K. 55 B. on a foray, rolling eyes of prey /. K. 74 Made but a single b., and with a sweep of it /. K. 84 They b. to holy vows of chastity I I. K. 129 — with pearls,' and brought it : then he b. /. K. 166 The gentler-born the maiden, the more b. /. K. 187 Would shun to break those bounds of courtesy /. K. 211 Free love, so b. were freest,' said the King /. K. 219 Could bind him, but free love will not be bV /. K. 219 ' I am b. : you have my promise E. A. 24 Annie weeping answered, ' I am b.' E. A. 25 I am always b. to } r ou E. A. 25 — she knew that she was b. E. A. 26 B. in an immemorial intimacy E. A. 53 B., but an immemorial intimacy E. A. 58 — seaward-b. for health E. A. 97 B. on a matter he of life and death E. A. 104 ' Was he so b. , poor soul V E. A. 105 — says doctor ; and he would be b. E. A. 115 — each beside his chariot b. his own E. A. 177 When sleep had b. her in his rosy band Select. 196 BOUNDARY. Close at the b. of the liberties Pr. 24 BOUNDED. — motions b. in a shallower Poems 280 A b. field, nor stretching far In M. 68 — a spirit b. and poor Ma. 19 BOUNDEN. —heard them talking, his long-b. E. A. 35 — awed and promise-b. she forbore E. A. 47 BOUNDING. All my b. heart entanglest Poems 16 To mingle with the b. main In M. 16 Thro' circles of the b. sky I?i M. 28 Bevond the b. hill to stray In M. 131 BOUNDLESS. In glowing health, with b. Poems 128 That in a b. universe Poems 290 Is b. better, b. worse Poems 290 — lazy lengths on b. shores In M. 97 To broaden into b. day In M. 142 A sad astrology, the b. plan Ma. 60 Of b. love and reverence and regret Ma. 146 To please her, dwelling on his b. love /. K. 4 — full heart and b. gratitude E. A. 20 Arguing b. forbearance E. A. 67 — the b. outer deep E. A. 100 — the motion of the b. deep E. A. 101 Across the b. east we drove E. A. 146 BOUNTEOUS. — b. forehead was not fann'd Pms 78 — the b. wave of such a breast Poems 208 I wonder'd at the b. hours Poems 310 More b. aspects on me beam Poems 334 — everywhere the broad and b. earth Pr. 38 — all the train of b. hours In M. no BOUNTEOUSLY, —wherefore; b. made E. A. 55 BOUNTIFUL, —like the b. season bland Ma. 15 BO UN pr. God only thro' his b. hath thought Pms 243 Here he lives in state and b. Poems 360 Or Heav'n in lavish b. moulded E. A. 56 BOURG. — think the rustic cackle of your b. /. K. 15 They take the rustic murmur of their b. /. K. 23 BOURN. Beyond the b. of sunset : O, a shout Pr. 182 BOW. Lit up a torrent-b. Poejns 113 While this great b. will waver in the sun Poems 114 A cavalier from off his saddle-b. Poems 152 B. down one thousand and two hundred Poems 240 Bows before him at the door Poe??is 360 Bows all its ears before the roaring East Pr. 27 She bows, she bathes the Saviours feet In M. 51 1 The cheeks drop in ; the body bows In M. 54 — every dew drop paints a b. In M. rg : — the ripple feathering from her bows E. A. 30 BOW-BA'CK'D with fear Pr. 155 BOW'D. A group of Houris b. to see Poems 117 That b. the will Poems 195 — all the things that had been. She b. down Pms 218 3 BOY Page BOW'D. At Dora's feet. She b. upon her Poems 2"i8 — more distant. She b. down her head Poems 218 My knees are b. in crypt and shrine Poems 334 — b. her state to them that they might grow Pr. 56 She b. as if to veil a noble tear Pr. 69 B. toward her, combing out her long black hair Pr. 88 B. on her palms and folded up from wrong Pr. 89 She b., she set the child on the earth Pr. 142 Thy sailor, — while thy head is b. In M. 6 —with her brother, but not to her brother I b. Ma. 16 I b. to her father, the wrinkled head of the Ma. 16 I b. to his lady-sister Ma. xj — the budded peaks of the wood are b. Ma. 25 When I b. to her on the moor Ma. 68 Low b. the tributary Prince, and she /. K. 10 — with back turn'd, and b. above his work /. K. 15 B. at her side and utter'd whisperingly /. K. 62 Brushing his instep, b. the all-amorous Earl /. K. 65 So spake the King ; low b. the Prince, and /. K. 94 That carry kings in castles, b. black knees /. K. 123 Must hate me,' and b. down upon her hands /. K. 233 To play upon me,' and b. her head nor spake /. K. 241. B. himself down, and in that mystery E. A. n Enoch was so brown, so b. E. A. 38 ' My God has b. me down to what I am £. A. 47 BOWER. Was sloping toward his western b. Poems 12 Black the garden-bowers and grots Poems 22 Dwelling amid these yellowing bowers Poems 31 Youngest Autumn, in a b. Poems 79 Naked they came to that smooth-swarded b. Pms 101 Then to the b. they came Poems 101 I was left alone within the b. Poems 105 — round the porch has wov'n its wavy bowers Pms 132 Leaving the promise of my bridal b. Poems 159 — mellow brickwork on an "isle of bowers Poems 230 Pursue thy loves among the bowers Poems 253 Droops the heavy -blossom'd b. Poei7is 281 — fled she to her inmost b. Poems 286 Her b. : whence re-issuing, robed and crown'd P??is 288 The peacock in his laurel b. Poems 313 — gloom'd : and broader grown the bowers Pr. 159 Dies off at once from b. and hall hi M. 10 That sweeps with all its autumn bowers In M. 16 Ere these have clothed their branchy bowers InM. 105 With thy lost friend among the bowers In M. 155 Of Eden on its bridal b. In M. 205 — tends upon bed and b. Ma. 49 To meet me, winding under woodbine bowers Ma. 121 — walks in Boboli's ducal bowers Ma. 155 — in thy bowers of Camelot or of Usk /. K. 251 — a b. of vine and honeysuckle E. A. 59 From havens hid in fairy bowers E. A. 147 Through my garden-b. E. A. 152 O bird, in the new-budded bowers E. A. 164 BOWER'D. Or a garden b. close Poems 30 BOWER-EAVES. A bow-shot from her b. Poems 68 Look out below your b. Poe?ns 165 BOWERY. Above through many a b. turn Poerns 21 It springs on a level of b. lawn Poems 42 — b. hollows crown'd with summer sea Poems 200 Me rather all that b. loneliness E. A. 175 BO WE i H. Earthward he b. the heavy stalks Pms 31 BOWING. She spoke, and b. waved Pr. 34 Approved him, b. at their own deserts Ma. 124 Old waifs of rhyme, and b. o'er the brook Ma. 127 Across her mind, and b. over him /. K. 5 BOWL. — host, and I sat round the wassail-b. Pms 189 ' And I, ' quoth Everard, ' by the wassail-b.' Poems 190 Nor robb'd the farmer of his b. of cream Pr. 118 Nor b. of wassail mantle warm hn M. 162 BOWL'D. — a herd of bovs with clamour b. Pr. 5 BOWMAN, —last the master-b. he In M. 127 BOW-SHOT. A b. from her bower-eaves Poems 68 BOW-STRING. His b. slacken'd, languid Poems 83 BOX. Of the fading edges of b. beneath Poems 32 A Long green b. of mignonette Poems 88 About the parlour-window and the b. of Poems 137 May bind a book, may line a b. In M. 106 BOXES. Old b., larded with the steam Poejns 348 Shall call thee from the b. Poems 349 BOY. To be the long and listless b. Poems 86 My mother thought, what ails the b. Poe?ns 89 Oh I teach the orphan-b. to read Poe?ns 129 And I went mourning, ' No fair Hebrew b. Poe?ns 159 'You will not, b. ! 3-ou dare to answer thus ! Pms 215 Of the full harvest, he maj- see the b. Poems 216 — look'd with tears upon her b. Poems 216 — days went on,, and there was born a b. Poems 216 So full a harvest : let me take the b. Pce?ns 216 33 BOY Page BOY. —slight it. Well— for I will take the b. Poems 217 — he took the b., that cried aloud Poems 217 And Dora said, ' My uncle took the b. Poems 218 And I will have my b., and bring him home Poems 218 — the boy's cry came to her from the field Poems 218 Upon the threshold. Mary saw the b. Poems 218 — now I think, he shall not have the b. Poems 218 — let me have my b. Poems 219 The b. set up betwixt his grandsire's knees Poe?ns 219 — all his household stuff ; and with his b. Poems 226 —but when the b. beheld Poems 219 A Tory to the quick, was as a b. Poems 228 So seems she to the b. Poems 249 Eager-hearted as a b. when first he leaves Poems 277 — of existence beat for ever like a boy's Poems 279 A merry b. in sun and shade ? Poems 304 A merry b. they called him then Poe?ns 304 By Cupid-boys of blooming hue Poems 325 A something-pottle-bodied b. Poems 344 well for the fisherman's b. Poems 378 —a herd of boys with clamour bowl'd Pr. 5 Some b. would spy it ' Pr. 9 — daughter and his housemaid were the boys Pr. 25 ' No plot, no plot,' he answer'd. ' Wretched b. Pr. 39 With me, Sir, enter'd in the bigger b. Pr. 50 ' Poor b.,' she said, * can he not read— no books 1 Pr. 65 — when a b., you stoop'd to me Pr. 96 Than growing boys their manhood Pr. 98 As boys that slink Pr. 109 B., when I hear you prate I almost think Pr. 114 B., there's no rose that's half so dear to them Pr. 115 Where idle boys are cowards to their shame Pr. 123 1 Boys ! ' shriek'd the old king, but vainlier than Pr. 124 — till a rout of saucy boys Pr. 127 — twins may weed her of her folly. B. Pr. 131 The little boys begin to shoot and stab Pr. 180 Among six boys, head under head, andlook'd Pr. 181 For they contrcll'd me when a b. In M. 46 A sober man, among his boys In M. 75 When he was little more than b. In M. 87 Of mine own house, and boys of thine In M. 115 Of songs, and clapping hands, and boys In M. 127 — like an inconsiderate b. In M. 189 Read with a boy's delight Ma. 31 ■ Well, if it prove a girl, the b. Ma. 31 To take a wanton dissolute b. Ma. 39 Prattling the primrose fancies of the b. Ma. 118 God-father, come and see your b. Ma. 161 ' I take it as free gift ! then,' said the b. /. K. 57 1 B.,' said he, ' I have eaten all, but take /. K. 57 Wove and unwove it till the b. return'd /. K. 59 Seems to be pluck'd at by the village boys /. K. 75 — two years after came a b. E. A. 6 — let me put the b. and girl to school E. A. 18 Philip put the b. and girl to school E. A. 19 For one, the youngest, hardly more than b. E. A. 31 So like her mother, and the b., my son ' E. A. 43 So much the b. foreran : but when his date E. A. 55 The girl and b., Sir, know their differences ! E. A. 65 The b. might get a notion into him E. A. 65 ' B., mark'me ! for your fortunes are to make E. A. 66 ' B., should I find you by my doors again E. A. 68 — twenty boys and girls should marry on it E. A. 70 'Ob., tho' thou art young and proud E. A. 155 Cut the Roman b. to pieces E. A. 172 The b. began to leap and prance Select. 207 BOYHOOD, —in the b. of the year Poems 363 Sweet love on pranks of saucy b. Pr. 175 One whispers, here thy b. sung In M. 155 BOYISH. My b. dream involved and dazzled Pr. 98 — b. histories E. A. 56 BRACE. — suffers change of frame. A lusty b. Pr. 131 — out beyond ; and then against his b. /. K. 50 BRACELET. — bracelets of the diamond Poems 316 BRACKEN. — the b. rusted on their crags Poems 234 Nowt at all but b. an' fuzz E. A. 133 BRAGGART. O shall the b. shout Poems 258 BRAID. Her looser hair in b., and stirr'd Poems 209 — fire-flies tangled in a silver b. Poems 269 Forth streaming from a b. of pearl Poems 316 Blowing the ringlet from the b. Poems 363 The snake of gold slid from her hair, the b. /. K. 140 BRAIDED. Of b. blooms unmown Poems 20 — sweet the vapour-b. blue Ma. 134 A case of silk and b. thereupon /. K. 147 The silken case with b. blazonings /. K. 207 With moss and b. marish-pipe Select. 220 BRAIN. Than arms, or power of b., or birth Poems v. Right to the heart and b. Poems 8 34 BRANCH'D Page BRAIN. From the b. of the purple mount. Poems 42 From some odd corner of the b. Poems 88 In my dry b. my spirit soon Poems 97 A glorious Devil, large in heart and b. Poems in — when a great thought strikes along the b. Poems 152 Stol'n to my b., dissolved the mystery Poems 161 The burning b from the true heart Poems 164 Drawn from the spirit thro' the b. Poems 172 — nourish a blind life within the b. Poems 200 I, Simeon, whose b. the sunshine bakes Poems 242 Better the narrow b., the stony heart Poems 258 Upon my b., my senses, and my soul ! Poems 259 — lord is weary, that his b. is overwrought Poems 272 — blinder motions bounded in a shallower b. Poems 280 A random arrow from the b. Poems 305 On secrets of the b., the stars Poems 323 Which bears a season'd b. about Poe?ns 342 For any man to go, but as his b. Pr. 24 Besides the b. was like the hand, and grew Pr. 37 Then while I dragg'd my brains for such a song Pr. 82 Whose brains are in their hands and in their Pr. 101 — for the unquiet heart and b. In M. 5 — marvel what possess'd my b. Pi M. 22 I make a picture in the b. In M. 11 1 As but the canker of the b. In M. 136 — some wild Pallas from the b. In M. 177 I think we are not wholly b. In M. 186 — life is darken'd in the t>. In M. 187 — not marvel at either, but keep a temperate b. Ma. 20 What was it ? a lying trick of the b. Ma. 87 Is a juggle born of the b. Ma. 90 'Tis the blot upon the b. Ma. 99 Beat into my scalp and b. Ma. 102 For one, upon whose hand and heart and b. Ma. 150 Perchance, to charm a vacant b. Ma. 160 So dark a forethought roll'd about his b. /. K. 105 My scheming b. a cinder, if I he ' /. K. 142 Beating it in upon his weary b. E. A. 43 — dash the brains of the little one out E. A. 172 Blood and brains of men Select. 39 BRAIN-FEVEROUS in his heat and agony /. K. 191 BRAIN-LABOUR, —prodigal of all b. E. A. 74 BRAINLESS. — oft some b. devil enters in Poems 121 — loth by b. war Pr. 122 Confused by b. mobs and lawless Powers Ma. 146 Insolent, b., heartless ! heiress, wealth E. A. 70 BRAINPAN. Than if my b. were an empty Pr. 49 BRAKE. — at their feet the crocus b. like Poems 101 Close-matted, bur and b. and briar Poems 315 B. with a blast of trumpets Pr. 3 B . as she smote me with the light of eyes Pr. 64 — cheek and bosom b. the wrathful bloom Pr. 94 A strangled titter, out of which there b. Pr. 108 B. on us at our books, and marr'd our peace Pr. 127 In a still water : then b. out my sire Pr. 150 Of evening over b. and bloom In M. 125 No spirit ever b. the band In M. 137 —bristles all the brakes and thorns In M. 165 The fires of Hell b. out of thy rising sun Ma. 85 They clash'd together, and thrice they b. /. K. 30 In every wavering b. an ambuscade /. K. 48 — b. short, and down his enemy roll'd /. K. 54 B. from the nape, and from the skull the /. K. 149 There b. a sudden-beaming tenderness /. K. 164 — seeing I must go to-day : ' then out she b. /. K. 195 — when the next sun b. from under-ground /. K. 206 B. from the vast oriel-embowering vine /. K. 209 — people, from the high door streaming, b. /. K. 217 No silence, b. it, uttering ' Late ! so late ! /. K. 233 When that storm of anger b. /. K. 244 ' Oh Arthur ! ' there her voice b. suddenly /. K. 256 BRAMBLE. B. -roses, faint and pale Poems 50 BRAMBLY. In b. wildernesses Ma. 126 BRANCH. Like to some b. of stars we Poems 68 With winds upon the b. Poems 145 — dropt the b. she held, and turning Poems 209 — from thy topmost b. discern Poems 249 Long may thy topmost b. discern Poems 251 From spray and b. and stem Poems 253 — whirl'd her white robe like a blossom'd b. Pr. 83 — o'er the friths that b. and spread In M. 209 Bellow'd the tempest, and the rotten b. I. K. 143 A border fantasy of b. and flower /. K. 147 — holding the b. and fear'd E. A. 42 BRANCH'D. Of cloisters, b. like mighty Poems 113 Who throve and b. from clime to clime hi M. 183 All b. and flower'd with gold, a costly gift /. K. 34 The moving whisper of huge trees that b. E. A. 32 Sprinkled about in gold that b. itself E. A. 62 BRANCHES BRANCHES, —the wile Page r-b. hoar and dank Poems 4^ B. they bore of that enchanted stem Poems 143 — broa'd curved b., fledged with clearest Poems 152 Whose topmost b. can discern Poems 246 — b. current yet in kindred veins Pr. 42 Had sprouted, and the b. thereupon Pr. 85 — shook the b. of the deer Pr. 182 That makes the barren b. loud In M. 24 On all the b. of thy blood In M. 115 Here will I lie while these long b. sway Ma 60 BRANCHING. — b. jaspers under the sea Poems 62 Not thrice vour b. limes have Poems 127 BRANCH-WORK. Beneath b. of costly Poems 116 BRANCHY. The fat earth feed thy b. root Poems 256 No b. thicket shelter yields Poems 335 Ere these have clothed their b. bowers In M. 105 BRAND. — take my b. Excalibur Poems 192 There drew he forth the b. Excalibur Poems 193 And if, indeed, I cast the b. away Poems 194 So flash'd and fell the b. Excalibur Poems 196 — wheel" d and threw it. The great b. Poems 196 The b., the buckler, and the spear Poems 295 The hard brands shiver on the steel Poe??is 333 — ringing, springs from b. and mail Poems 335 — all the plain, — b., mace, and shaft and Pr. 133 Cold fires, yet with power to burn and b. Ma. 60 Nor weapon save a golden-hilted b. I. K. 9 Swung from his b. a windy buffet out /. K. 50 Will b. us, after, of whose fold we be /. K. 133 Falling had let appear the b. of John E. A. 77 BRANDING. Black'd with thy b. thunder Poems 239 Nor b. summer suns avail In M. 2 For which in b. summers of Bengal Ma. 118 BRANDISH'D. —by the hilt and b. him Poems 196, 197 Low at leave-taking, with his b. plume I. K. 65 BRANDISHING in her hand a dart E. A. 172 BRASS. — platform, smooth as burnish'd b. Poems 112 — handfuls of white dust, shut in an urn of b. Poems 146 A flying splendour out of b. and steel Pr. 155 BRASSES, —the knightly b. of the graves I. K. 133 BRASSY. 'Tis vain ! in such a b. age Poems 329 BRAVE. I b. the worst ; ' and while we stood Pms 234 However we b. it out, we men are a little breed Ma. 18 Follow'd by the b. of other lands Ma. 148 The b. Geraint, a knight of Arthur's court /. K. 1 Not even Lancelot b., nor Galahad clean I. K. 135 All b. and many generous, and some chaste I. K. 136 Yet Enoch as a b. God-fearing man E. A. 11 Brave the Captain was : the seamen Select. 37 BRAYED. She b.a riotous heart in asking for it I.K. 166 BRAVERY. Lancelot, the flower of b. /. K. 153 BRAWL. I care not what the sects may b. Poems 12.-L Than angels. Cease to wail and b. Poems 298 To b. at Shushan underneath the palms ' Pr. 66 That let the bantling scald at home and b. Pr. 130 A creature wholly given to brawls and wine I. K. 24 BRAWLER. What fear ye brawlers ? Am not Pr. 100 BRAWLING. From b. storms Poe?ns 30 My heart an eddy from the b. hour Pr. 153 The} 1, pleased him, fresh from b. courts In M. 130 As half but idle b. rhymes — b. memories all too free B.. or like a clamour of the rooks Delivers b. judgments, unashamed — not with b. opposition she A haunt of b seaman BRAWNY. — left two b. spearmen, who He spoke : the b. spearman let his cheek BRAY. Loud, loud rung out the bugle's brays Pins 55 — the blast and b. of the long horn Pr. 120 BRAZEN From fluted vase and b. urn Poems 21 — flamed upon the b. greaves Poenss 68 Squadrons'and squares of men in b. plates Poeyjis 151 Across the b. bridge of war Poe7?is 182 — heard thee, and the b. fool In M. ito In another month to his b. lies Ma. 28 BRAZEN-HEADED. O'erthwarted with the b. Pms 103 BREAD. I speak the truth, as I live by b. Poe?ns 355 — alum and plaster are sold to the poor for b. Ma. 6 — in her veil enfolded, manchet b. 7. K. 21 Which being sold and sold had bought them b. I. K. 34 Taking her b. and theirs E. A. 7 — b. from out the houses brought E..A. 177 BREADTH. Breadths of tropic shade and Poems 281 A b. of thunder. O'er it shook the woods Pr. 69 More b. of culture : is not Ida right Pr. 116 A night of Summer from the heat, a b. Pr. 139 She mental b., nor fail in childward care Pr. 172 — belts of hops and breadths of wheat Pr. 179 In M. 205 Ma. 151 I. K. 1- I. K. 128 E.A. 9 E. A. 33 I. K. 75 I. K. 79 BREAK Page BREADTH, —thou, wi'h all thy b. and In M. 130 left but narrow b. to left and right E. A. 37 BREAK. About thee breaks ;.nd dances Poems 16 breaking heart that will not b. Poems 55 Here rose, an athlete, strong to b. or bind Poems 119 1 No voice breaks thro' the stillness of this Poems 123 Nor would I b. for your sweet sake Poems 126 You thought to b. a country heart Poems 126 — call me loud when the day begins to b. Poems 130 Should b. his sleep by night Poems varj — old sore breaks out from age to age Poems 228 Faltering, would b. its syllables, to keep Poems 259 He breaks the hedge : he enters there Poems 317 But b. it. In the name of wife Poems 324 B. up the heavens, O Lord ! and far Poems 332 — barren commonplaces b. Poems 340 B. lock and seal : betray the trust Poe??is 351 B.,b.,b. Poems 378 — In iron gauntlets : b. the council up ' Pr. 19 — those fancies ? Wherefore b. her troth ? Pr. 20 At b. of day the College Portress came Pr. 30 To b. my chain, to shake my mane : but thou Pr. 51 Kill us with pity, b. us with ourselves Pr. 68 Their cancel!' d Babels : tho' the rough kex b. Pr. 78 The child of regal compact, did I b. Pr. 96 On me, me, me the storm first breaks : I dare Pr. 100 — dared to b. our bound, and gull'd Pr. 102 ■ — b. her : strongly groom'd and straithy curb'd Pr. 130 On a wood, and takes, and breaks, and cracks Pr. 134 — b. them more in their behoof, whose arms Pr. 139 B. from a darken'd future, crown'dwith fire Pr. 145 —your Highness breaks with ease Pr. 153 We b. our laws with ease Pr. 153 The roar that breaks the Pharos from his base Pr. 154 Went sorrowing in a pause I dared not b. Pr. 170 B., thou deep vase of chilling tears hi M. 4 To evening, but some heart did b. In M. 6 On the bald street breaks the blank day In M. 9 Breaks hither over Indian seas In M. 43 — that my hold on life would b. In M. 45 The seeming-wanton ripple b. In M. 71 That breaks about the dappled pools In M. 71 Who breaks his birth's invidious bar In M. 89 The old bitterness again, and b. hi M. 117 — b. the livelong summer day In M. 131 — wheels the circled dance, and breaks In M. 148 — into silver arrows b. In M. 153 That breaks the coast In M. 165 Will let his coltish nature b. In M. 172 — every thought breaks out a rose hi M. 190 A million emeralds b. Ma. 15 Can b. her word were it even for me Ma. 54 — b. the shore, and evermore Ma. 151 Make and b., and work their will Ma. 151 I climb'd the roofs at b. of day Ma. 157 To b. the blast of winter, stand Ma. 162 B. not, O womaxfs-heart, but still endure I. K. vii. B. not, for thou art Royal, but endure I. X. vii. Running too vehemently to b. upon it I. K. 5 Here often they b. covert at our feet' I. K. 10 Then will I fight him, and will b. his pride I. K. 12 Breaks from a coppice gemm'd with green I. K. 18 That lightly breaks a faded flower-sheath I. K. 20 That I will b. his pride and learn his name I. K. 23 —fight and b. his pride, and have it of him I. K. 23 In next day's tourney I ma}- b. his pride' I. A". 26 Which if he spoke at all Avould b. perforce I. K. 46 Ma}' b. it, when his passion masters him I. K. 48 That breaks upon them perilously, and said I. K. 64 B. into furious flame ; being repulsed I. K. 89 Began to b. her sports with graver fits I. K. 103 To b. the mood. You follow'd me unask'd I. K. 108 Glass'd in the slippery sand before it breaks ? I. K. 108 You seem'd that wave about to b. upon me I. K. 109 The tiny-trumpeting gnat can b. our dream I. K. 154 — break them ; and I saw him, after, stand /. K. 163 Would he b. faith with one I may not name ? I. K. 1S2 To blunt or b. her passion ' I. K. 197 (He meant to b. the passion in her) ' nay I. A". 223 — would shun to b. those bounds of courtesy I. K. 211 To b. her passion, some discourtesy I. K. 215 Not after Arthur's heart ! I needs must b. I. A'. 221 — make the smouldering scandal b. and blaze I. K. vs*) Stands in a wind, ready to b. and fly I. K. 244 To b. the heathen and uphold the Christ I. K. 249 — no heart to b. his purposes E. A. 9 — your kindness breaks me down E. A. 18 Across a b. on the mist-wreathen isle E. A. 35 Help me not to b. in upon her peace E. A. 43 35 BREAK Page BREAK. Which breaks all bonds but ours E. A. 73 A trifle makes a dream, a trifle breaks ' E. A. 103 — for I beant a-gooin' to b. my rule E. A. 128 I weant b. rules for Doctor E. A. 136 — bud ever breaks into bloom on the tree E. A. 159 — b. the works of the statuary E. A. 172 B. open to their highest £. A. 177 BREAKER. — those horn-handed breakers Pr. 37 The mellow b. murmur'd Ida Pr. 97 The b. breaking- on the beach In M. 98 Tumbles a b. on chalk and sand Ma. 162 — flying the white b. E. A. 2 — that b. -beaten coast E. A. 4 Till hard upon the cry of ' breakers' came E. A. 30 A b. of the bitter news from home E. A. 81 Of b. issued from the belt E. A. 107 —long swells of b. sweep E. A. 146 Roar'd as when the rolling breakers E. A. 173 BREAKING. Until the b. of the light Poems 14 My heart is b., and my eyes are dim Poems 99 They say his heart is t>., mother Poems 131 The thunders b. at her feet Poems 177 — while on all sides b. loose Poems 186 Streaming eyes and b. hearts ? Poems 258 Just b. over land and main ? Poems 293 Old elms came b. from the vine Poems 328 Or b. into song by fits In M. 39 Reveillee to the b. morn In M. 94 The breaker b. on the beach In M. 98 — heard an ever-b. shore In M. 192 — b. let the splendour fall In M. 210 B. a slumber in which all spleenful folly was Ma. 13 B. up my dream of delight Ma. 64 With a nation weeping, and b. on my rest Ma. 142 The world's loud whisper b. into storm /. K. 2 — b. his command of silence given I. K. 66 Whose skirts are loosen'd by the b. storm /. K. 70 Vivien b. in upon him, said /. K. 124 Red ruin, and the b. up of laws /. K. 247 Long fines of cliff b. have left a chasm E. A. 1 Nor let him be, but often b. in E. A. 38 An end, a hope, a light b. upon him E. A. 76 — b. that, you made and broke your dream E. A. 103 — came but from the b. of a glass E. A. 109 BREAST. — wealth into my open b. Poems 27 Take the heart from out my b. Poems 33 Fold thy palms across thy b. Poems 49 — fill'd the b. with purer breath Poems 89 I crush'd them on my b., my mouth Poems 96 Over her snow-cold b. and angry cheek Poems 103 His ruddy cheek upon my b. Poems no A hundred winters snow'd upon his b. Poems 118 —within the fight of God, as I lie upon your b. Pms 141 The polish'd argent of her b. Poems 156 Both are my friends, and my true b. Poems 173 So muscular he spread, so broad of b. Poems 203 — the bounteous wave of such a b. Poems 208 Sleep, breathing health and peace upon her b. Pms 223 An acorn in her b. Poems 254 — a fuller crimson comes upon the robin's b. Poems 269 — press me from the mother's b. Poems 275 — wisdom lingers, and he bears a laden b. Poeins 280 Cramming all the blast before it, in its b. Poems 284 Dominion in the head and b.' Poems 290 His palms are folded on his b. Poems 301 A vague suspicion of the b. Poems 305 The old Earl's daughter died at my b. Poeins 355 Her arms across her b. she laid " Poems 365 Nor think I bear that heart within my b. Pr. 46 Rest, rest on mother's b. Pr. 54 My secret seem'd to stir within my b. Pr. 56 Then from my b. the involuntary sigh Pr. 64 I smote him on the b. : he started up Pr. 83 — anger most it seem'd, while now her b. Pr. 94 Her noble heart was molten in her b. Pr. 142 The b. that ted or arm that dandled you Pr. 146 Thy helpless warmth about my barren b. Pr. 147 Sent from a dewy b. a cry for fight Pr. 170 — something wild within her b. Pr. 170 — dead calm in that noble b. In M. 17 — onward drags a labouring b. In M. 25 Be tenants of a single b. In M. 26 Against the circle of the b. hi. M. 67 — breasts the blows of circumstance In M. 89 A faithful answer from the b. In M. 118 That warms another living b. In M. 123 They haunt the silence of the b. In M. 138 — woolly breasts, and beaded eyes In M. 139 A single murmur in the b. In M. 160 36 BREATHE Page BREAST. From land to land ; and in my b. In M. 180 — enter in at b. and brow In M. 189 A warmth within the b. would melt In M. 192 Sunn'd itself on his b. and his hands Ma. 46 Lord of the pulse that is lord of her b. Ma. 54 — glow'd like a ruddy shield on the Lion's b. Ma. 112 I shook herb, with vague alarms Ma. 133 The massive square of his heroic b. /. K. 5 ' O noble b. and all-puissant arms /. K. 5 True tears upon his broad and naked b. /. K. 7 Right thro' his manful b. darted the pang /. K. 7 Sank her sweet head upon her gentle b. /. K. 29 — fell'd him, and set foot upon his b. /. K. 31 Drave the long spear a cubit thro' his b. /. K. 50 Her arms upon her b. across, and stood /. K. 141 A silent court of justice in his b s E. A. 105 Chop the breasts from off the mother E. A. 172 To find my heart so near the beauteous b. Select. 197 BREAST-DEEP, —all night long b. in corn Pr. 49 BREASTED, —strong man-b. things stood /. K. 238 BREATH. And the b. Poems 32 Hast thou look'd upon the b. Poems 34 There is frost in your b. Poems 41 I lose my colour, I lose my b. _ Poems 84 — fill'd the breast with purer b. Poems 89 As half-asleep his b. he drew Poems no Long labour unto aged b. Poems 147 Dan Chaucer, the first warbler, whose sweet b. Pms 150 Drew forth the poison with her balmy b. Poems 161 Should be to aftertime, but empty b. Poems 194 Then spoke King Arthur, drawing thicker b. Pms 196 Clothed with his b., and looking, as he walk'd Pms 197 Her lightest breaths Poems 232 The grim Earl's gift : but ever at a b. Poems 286 No life that breathes with human b. Poems 308 My b. to heaven like vapour goes Poems "331 Greet her with applausive b. Poems 371 While we keep a little b. Poems 374 — out of b., as one pursued Pr. 94 The b. of fife ; O more than poor men wealth Pr. 98 sweet and bitter in a b. hi M. 3 — scarce endure to draw the b. In M. 33 — so the Word had b., and wrought In M. 56 This use may lie in blood and b. In M. 67 The spirit does but mean the b. In M. 80 Sleep, Death's twin-br other, times my b. In M. 94 The full new life that feeds thy b. In M. 125 East and West, without a b. In M. 142 To where he breathed his latest b. In M. 147 Who wakenest with thy balmy b. In M. 149 1 trust I have not wasted b. In M. 186 Be quicken'd with a livelier b. hi M. 189 Awe -stricken breaths at a work divine Ma. 37 Prickle my skin, and catch my b. Ma. 51 Catch not my b. Ma. 55 — live a life of truest b. Ma. 61 Seal'd her mine from her first sweet b. Ma. 66 I stood on a giant deck and mix'd my b. Ma. 113 Mused, and was mute. On a sudden a low b. Ma. 128 Here ceased the kindly mother out of b. I. K. 39 Short fits of prayer, at every stroke a b. /. K. 54 Sweet lady, never since I first drew b. /. K. 78 Her constant motion round him, an-' the b. I. K. 94 White was her cheek ; sharp breaths of anger /. K. 138 At last he got his b. and answer'd, ' One /. A'. 169 Hurt in the side,' whereat she caught her b. /. K. 179 She felt the King's b. wander o'er her neck /. K. 255 The b. of heaven came continually E. A. 29 Drew in the dewy meadowy morning-b. E. A. 36 So like her mother, that my latest b. E. A. 48 Made by a b. E. A. 6-2 — body that never had drawn a b. E. A. 122 BREATH'D. —he had b. the Proctor's dogs Pr. 7 BREATHE. Breathes low between the sunset Pms 83 I least should b. a thought of pain Poems 86 — the wind breathes low with mellower tone Poems 148 How hard he breathes ! over the snow Poems 169 To walk, to sit, to sleep, to wake, to b. Poems 231 take the meaning, Lord : I do not b. Poeins 237 — that, which breathes within the leaf Poems 253 As tho' to b. were life. Life piled on fife Poems 266 'Twere better not to b. or speak Poems 293 ' To b. and loathe, to live and sigh Poems 294 No life that breathes with human breath Poems 308 1 yearn to b, the airs of heaven Poems 335 Affianced, Sir ? love-whispers may not b. Pr. 40 Low, low, b. and blow Pr. 54 Yet let us b. for one hour more in Heaven ' Pr. 53 ' Alas your Highness breathes full East,' I said Pr. 06 BREATHE Page BREATHE. Where shall I b. ? why kept ye Pr. m May b. himself, and quick ! by overthrow Pr. 123 Approach and fear not : b. upon my brows Pr. 176 To let the people b. Pr. 182 To b. thee over lonely seas In M. 28 That b. a thousand tender vows In M. 33 The slightest air of song shall b. In M 71 • — breathes a novel world, the while In M. 87 — while we b. beneath the sun In M. 103 To b. my loss is more than fame hi M. 106 May b., with many roses sweet In M. 135 I find no place that does not b. InM. 151 Nor landmark breathes of other days In M. 160 Thro* which the spirit breathes no more In M. 162 For tho' my lips may b. adieu In M. 191 — breathes in converse seasons. All are gone ' Ma. 127 Not dare to watch the combat, only b. /. K. 54 ' You b. but accusation vast and vague /. K. 130 No keener hunter after glory breathes /. K. 155 — knights and kings, there breathes not one /. K. 175 1 thought I could not b. in that fine air /. K. 258 A carefuller in peril, did not b. E. A. 4 — b. it into, earth and close it up Select. 197 BREATHED. She b. in sleep a lower moan Poe?ns 75 Rose slowly to a music slowly b. Poems 99 B., like the covenant of a God, to hold Poems 210 — we closed, we kiss'd, swore faith, I b. Poems 234 I b. upon her eyes Poems 254 — the low wind hardly b. for fear Poems 287 — look on Spirits b. away In M. 60 That b. beneath the Syrian blue In M. 74 Where all things round me b. of him In M. 119 To where he b. his latest breath In M. 147 He b. the spirit of the song hi M. 194 B. in her ear. The ring is on hi M. 206 — while I b. in sight of haven Ma. 125 So twice they fought, and twice they b., and /. K. 31 Before the Queen's fair name was b. upon /. K. 96 Of silver rays that lighten'd as he b. /. K. 162 His former talks with Edith, on him b. E. A. 74 BREATHERS. Are b. of an ampler day In M. 183 BREATHING Light against thy face Poems 35 To throng with stately blooms the b. spring Poe?ns 39 Old letters, b. of her worth Became an outward b. type B. like one that hath a weary dream Then spoke King Arthur, b. heavily — answer made King Arthur, b. hard — b. of the sea. ' With all my heart ' Sleep, b. love and trust against her lip Sleep, b. health and peace upon her breast Poems 223 — shall have scope and b. -space Poems 282 A hint, a whisper b. low Poems 309 She sleeps : her breathings are not heard Poems 316 To give us b.-space ' Pr. 13 —so much grace and power, b. down Pr. 31 B. and sounding beauteous battle, comes Pr. 115 In Angel instincts, b. Paradise Pr. 174 A Spirit, not a b. voice hi M. 20 Would b. thro' his lips impart In M. 30 The mimic picture's b. grace In M. 107 — meadow, slowly b. bare In M. 125 By meadows b. of the past hi M. 149 Bright English lily, b. a prayer Ma. 67 — hear him b. low and equally /. K. 65 Among the heav)- breathings of the house /. K. 67 Beside the placid breathings of the King /. K. 228 The warm -blue breathings of a hidden E. A. 59 —like a beast hard ridden, b. hard E. A. 66 Except when for a b. -while at eve E. A. 74 BREATHLESS burthen of low-folded E. A. 82 BRED. — children in one hamlet born and b. Pms 57 — b. this change Poems 107 In foreign lands : but for his sake I b. Poe?ns 215 B. will in me to overcome it or fall Pr. 125 Our home-b. fancies : O to us In M. 14 From out the doors where I was b. hi M. 157 —throve not in her trade, not being b. E. A. 14 A city clerk, but gently born and b. E. A. 96 BREDE. — in glowing gauze and golden b. Pr. 143 BREED. — They graze and wallow, b. and Poejjis 121 Like men, like manners : like breeds like Poems 227 Assurance only breeds resolve ' Poems 304 He looks not like the common b. Poems 344 (Pardon me saying it) were much loth to b. Pr. 23 — b. up warriors ! . See now Pr. 129 May b. with Mm, can fright my faith In M. 113 — we men are a little b. Ma. 18 j Nor could he understand how money breeds Ma. 117 | Poems 75 Poems 94 Poems 142 Poems 195 Poems 197 Poems 221 Poems 223 BRIDE Page BREEDERS. These partridge-b. of a E. A. 71 BREEZE. The breezes pause and die Poems 3 When the b. of a joyful dawn Poems 19 Little breezes dusk and shiver Poems 65 — heard her native breezes pass Poems 75 With breezes from our oaken glades Poems 78 Coming in the scented b. Poems 79 The full south-b. around thee blow Poems 256 A b. thro' all the garden swept Poems 318 Made noise with bees and b. Pr. 5 Came in long breezes rapt from inmost south Pr. 97 — music in the growing b. of Time Pr. 139 Thou comest, much wept for : such a b. In M. 28 — all the bugle breezes blew hi M. 94 — round thee with the b. of song hi M. 103 A b. began to tremble o'er In M. 141 — all the b. of Fancy blows In M. 190 The joy to every wandering b. In M. 207 — far-off sail is blown by the b. of a softer Ma. 15 In the long b. that streams to thy delicious Ma. 59 For a b. of morning moves Ma. 76 Low breezes fann'd the belfry bars Ma. 134 — the soft river-b. E. A. 74 Warm broke the b. against the brow E. A. 145 BREEZY. Were glistening to the b. blue Poems 87 BRETHREN. My b. marvell'd greatly Poems 238 — of her b., youths of puissance Pr. 17 Her b.j tho' they love her, look upon her Pr. 23 The b. of our blood and cause Pr. 140 To where her wounded b. lay Pr. 141 O let me have him with my b. here Pr. 142 Thy b. with a fruitless tear In M. 83 111 b.,let the fancy fly In M. 125 Among his burnish'd b. of the pool /. K. 35 My b. have been all nry felloAvship /. K. 182 Then came her b. saying, ' Peace to thee /. K. 198 — those two b. slowly with bent brows /. K. 206 So those two b. from the chariot took I. K. 207 Her b., and her father, who himself /. K. 215 BRETON. B., not Briton Ma. 90 Here on the B. strand Ma. 90 Back from the B. coast Ma. 91 — touching B. sands, they disembark'd /. K. 103 BREWER. In which the gloomy brewer's Poems 247 BRIBE. We rustled : him we gave a costly b. Pr. 25 Or guilty, which for b. had wink'd at wrong /. K. 95 BRIBED with large promises the men who /. K. 25 BRICKS. When we made b. in Egypt Pr. 81 BRICKWORK. — mellow b. on an isle of Poems 230 BRIDAL. With b. flowers — that I may seem Poems 92 Leaving the promise of my b. bower Poems 159 A b. dawn of thunder-peals Poems 181 Unseen, is brightening to his b. morn Poe?ns 206 — secret b. chambers of the heart Poems 212 ' That on her b. morn before she past Pr. 42 — the world's great bridals, chaste and calm Pr. 173 The birth, the b. ; friend from friend In M. 147 Memories of b., or of birth In M. 149 — where is she, the b. flower In M. 205 Of Eden on its b. bower In M. 205 — touch with shade the b. doors hi M. 210 — twelve sweet hours that past in b. white Ma. 62 Will clothe her for her bridals like the sun* /. K. 13 —clothed her for her bridals like the sun /. K. 45 Gives her harsh groom for b.-gilt a scourge Pr. 126 BRIDE, —like a b. of old Poems 29 For merry brides are we Poems 44 ■ — pierced thy heart, my love, my b. Poems 54 Thy heart, my life, my love, my b. Poems 54 — down I went to fetch my b. Poems 91 Those far-renowned brides of ancient song Poems 151 — gain her for my b. Poems 257 —crying, ' Who is this ? behold thy b. Poems 260 The Bridegroom with his b. Poems 332 Draw me, thy b., a glittering star Poems 332 Or may be, I myself, my b. once seen Pr. 19 — chafing me on fire to find my b.) Pr. 23 His rightful b., and here I promise you Pr. 62 Your b., your bondslave ! not tho' a'il the gold Pr. 102 To fight in tourney for my b. , he clash'd Pr. 125 Of lands in which at the altar the poor b. Pr. 126 I waste my heart in signs : let be. My b. Pr. 176 Behold their brides in other hands In M. 133 Be cheer'd with tidings of the b. In M. 61 Be sometimes lovely like a b. hi M. 84 I must give away the b. In M. 206 O happy hour, behold the b. In M. 207 As drinking health to b. and groom In M. 208 Bound for the Hall, and I think for a b. Ma. 37 37 BRIDE Page BRIDE. My b. to be, my evermore delight Ma. 62 He linkt a dead man there to a spectral b. Ma. 107 — ere you wed with any, bring your b. /. K. 13 Our mended fortunes and a Prince's b. /. K. 38 — sweeter than the b. of Cassivelaun /. K. 40 Made promise that whatever b. I brought /. A'. 42 — did her honour as the Prince's b. /. K. 45 — found his own dear b. propping his head I. K. 76 Speak for her, glowing on him, like a bride's I. K. 125 Is man's good name : he never wrong'd his b. I. K. 131 Sees what his fair b. is and does, and winks ? /. K. 134 Blissful b. of a blissful heir E. A. 165 B. of the heir of the kings of the sea E. A. 165 Come Hope and Memory, spouse and b. Select. 221 BRIDEGROOM, —me the Heavenly B. waits Pms 332 The B. with his bride Poems 332 —learning this, the b. will relent /. K. 234 ' Have we not heard the b. is so sweet? /. K. 234 BRIDGE. Where from the frequent b. Poems 30 Or from the b. I lean'd to hear Poems 87 But Robin leaning on the b. Poems 131 Across the brazen b. of war Poems 182 Barge-laden, to three arches of a b. Poems 204 — half has fall'n and made a b. Poems 226 See here, my doing : curves of mountain, b. Poems 230 I hung with grooms and porters on the b. Poems 285 By b. and ford, by park and pale Poems 336 Or under arches of the marble b. Pr. 52 — o'er a b. of pinewood crossing, came Pr. 72 Clang'd on the b. ; and then another shriek Pr. 83 — boats and bridges for the use of men Pr. 138 The cataract flashing from the b. In M. 98 — many a b. , and all about In M. 126 And half a hundred bridges Ma. 118 Travelling to Naples. There is Darnley b. Ma. 119 By that old b. , which, half in ruins then Ma. 121 Beyond a b. that spann'd a dry ravine I. K. 14 Across the b. that spann'd the dry ravine /. K. 16 It may be, at Earl Yniol's, o'er the b. I. K. 16 — after went her way across the b. I. K. -zl I saw you moving by me on the b. I. K. 23 Like him who tries the b. he fears may fail I. K. 62 Flash from the b. E. A. 90 — these all night upon the b. of war E. A. 177 BRIDLE. The gemmy b. glitter'd free Poems 68 The b. bells rang merrily Poems 68 With jingling b. -reins Poems 363 — tied the b. -reins of all the three I. K. 51, 55 And sadly gazing on her b. -reins /. K. 71 BRIEF. For ah ! my friend, the days were b. Pms 253 In that b. night : the summer night, that Poems 260 In endless time is scarce more b. Poems 294 — b. the sun of summer in the North Pr. 80 — b. the moon of beauty in the South Pr. 80 tell her, b. is life but love is long Pr. 80 If these b. lays, of Sorrow born In M. 70 1 said to the rose, ' The b. night goes Ma. 78 For b. repast or afternoon repose /. K. 246 For three b. years, and there, an Abbess, past I. K. 261 His b. prayer-prelude E. A. 83 BRIER. Close-matted, bur and brake and b. Pms 315 The little life of bank and b. Poems 351 — was drench'd with ooze and torn with briers Pr. 108 BRIGADE. ' Forward the Light B. ! Ma. 167, 168 Honour the Light B. Ma. 170 BRIGHT. Eyes not down-dropt nor over b. Poems 7 The intuitive decision of a b. Poems 7 Of dark and b. A lovely time Poems 22 A million tapers flaring b. Poems 24 B. as light and clear as wind Poems 41 Clear and b. it should be ever Poems 41 Below the starry clusters b. Poems 69 In glaring sand and inlets b. Poems 73 There all in spaces rosy-b. Poems 77 They met with two so full and b. Poems 88 I made my dagger sharp and b. Poems no The ranged ramparts b. Poems 112 — they say, but none so b. as mine Poems 130 To watch the long b. river drawing slowly Poems 147 The b. death quiver'd at the victim's throat Poems 155 Remaining betwixt dark and b. Poems 164 Make b. our days and light our dreams Poems 178 A length of b. horizon rimm'd the dark Poems 209 With bracelets of the diamond b. Poems 316 O by the b. head of my little niece Pr. 43 That b. and fierce and fickle is the South Pr. 79 —here and there the small b. head Pr. 160 Melts mist-like into this b. hour Pr. 176 Thy sliding keel, till Phosphor, b. In M. 12 33 BRING Page BRIGHT, —see the cabin-window b. In M. 14 Thy marble b. in dark appears In M. 93 The voice was low, the look was b. In M. 95 Of this flat lawn with dusk and b. In M. 130 — b. the friendship of thine eye In M. 185 B. Phosphor, fresher for the night In M. 187 To-day the grave is b. for ine In M. 207 I know it the one b. thing to save Ma. 54 To the grace that, b. and light as the crest Ma. 54 —soft splendours that you look so bright Ma. 63 B. English lily, breathing a prayer Ma. 67 dawn of Eden b. over earth and sky Ma. 85 —in a weary world my one thing b. Ma. 112 B. let it be with its blazon'd deeds Ma. 140 In b. vignettes, and each complete Ma. 156 To whom Geraint with eyes all b. replied /. K. 27 Of that strange b. and dreadful thing a court /. K. 33 That all was b. ; that all about were birds I. K. 35 A suit of b. apparel which she laid /. K. 36 Beholding one so b. in dark estate /. K. 42 Than to cry ' Halt,' and to her own b. face /. K. 51 To keep him b. and clean as heretofore /. K. 95 — forces ; often o'er the sun's bright eye /. K. 126 Her b. hair blown about the serious face I. K. 167 She with a face, b. as for sin forgiven /. K. 204 The letter — all her b. hair streaming down /. K. 207 B. was that afternoon E. A. 37 — thro' the b. lawns to his brother's ran E. A. 69 — a weird b. eye E. A. 81 B. with the sun upon the stream beyond E. A. 101 BRIGHTEN, —seem to b. as they pass Poe?ns 132 — b. like the star that shook In M. 205 Thy sweet eyes b. slowly close to mine E. A. 141 BRIGHTEN'D. — b. as the foam bow brightens Pms 100 Your pretty sports have b. all again I K. 109 For so mine own was b. . E. A. 86 Till the face of Bel be b. E. A. 170 BRIGHTENING. Ever b. Poems 42 B. the skirts of a long cloud Poems 193 Unseen, is b. to his bridal morn Poems 206 A ballad to the b. moon In M. 131 And Enid listen'd b. as she lay /. K. 39 BRIGHTER. The prelude to some b. world Poems 32^ BRIGHTEST. Their best and b. when they E. A. 54 BRIGHTLY and boldly. All his Annie'sfears E. A. n BRIGHTNESS. Vague b. : when a boy, you Pr. 96 Of my contrasting b., overbore /. K. 43 BRILLIANCE. The black earth withb. rare Poems 27 BRIM. By garden porches on the b. Poems 20 He froth'd his bumpers to the b. Poems 169 1 b. with sorrow drowning song In M. 32 Arrange the board and b. the glass hi M. 165 New stars all night above the b. E. A. 146 BRIMFUL of those wild tales Poems 150 BRIMM'D with delirious draughts of warmest Pms 84 — beaker b. with noble wine Poems 314 This broad-b. hawker of holy things Ma. 38 BRIMMING. I loved the b. wave that swam Pms 89 To join the b. river Ma. 119, 120, 127 BRINE, —hear and see the far-off sparkling b. Pms 148 Should gulf him fathom-deep in b. In M. 15 To darken on the rolling b hi M. 165 Gloom'd the low coast and quivering b. E. A. 147 BRING. Music that brings sweet sleep Poems 144 — in its season b. the law Poems 180 Certain, if knowledge b. the sword Poems 182 For nature brings not back the Mastodon Poems 190 — what thou seest, and lightly b. me word ' Poems 192 I bad thee watch, and lightly b. me word * Poems 194 A word could b. the colour to my cheek Poems 210 I will have my boy, and b. him home Poems 218 — b. me offerings of fruit and flowers Poems 240 Low thunders b. the mellow rain Poems 256 Wait, and Love himself will b. Poems 259 The slow sad hours that b. us all things ill Poems 260 The slow sweet hours that b. us all things good Pms 260 — my latest rival brings thee rest Poems 275 —but Nature brings thee solace Poems 275 — b. the fated fairy Prince Poems 315 B. truth that sways the soul of men Poems 315 ' B. the dress and put it on her Poems 361 B. me spices, b. me wine Poems 369 — b. her in a whirlwind : then he chew'd Pr. 18 That brings our friends up from the under world Pr. 76 The seasons b. the flower again hi M. 2 — b. the firstling to the flock In M. 2 So b. him : we have idle dreams In M. J4 —not the burthen that they b. In M. 21 If one should b. me this report In M. 2a BRING Page BRING, —all was good that Time could b. In M. 40 They b. me sorrow touch'd with joy /;/ M. 46 Which brings no more a welcome guest hi M. 47 — b. her babe, and make her boast In M. 61 She often brings but one to bear In M. 78 I b. to life ; I b. to death In M. So Then b. an opiate trebly strong /;; M. 98 In verse that brings myself relief In M. 103 B. orchis, b. the foxglove spire In M. 114 Demanding, so to b. relief In M. 118 Ah, take the imperfect gift I b. /;/ M. 124 B. in great logs and let them lie In M. 166 Which every hour his couriers b. hi M. 195 She may b. me a curse Ma. 10 — of the world, how God will b. them about Ma. 20 — ere you wed with any, b. your bride /. K. 13 — traitors. Call the host and bid him b. /. K. 67 — charged by Valence to b. home the child /. K. 131 — not the one dark hour which brings remorse /. K. 133 Joust for it, and win and b. it in an hour /. K. 158 In earnest, let me b. your colour back /. K. 167 — b. us what he is and how he fares /. K. 175 Will b. fair weather yet to all of us E. A. 11 I warrant, man, that we shall b. you round' E. A. 46 Eager to b. them down, for Enoch hung E. A. 47 — thro' their own desire accomplish'd b. E. A. 91 — an' doesn b. ma the yaale ? E. A. 136 BRIXGER. A b. of new things ; and vile it Poe?ns 266 BRINGEST. Thou b. the sailor to his wife hi M. 14 Come quick, thou b. all I love In M. 28 BRINGING. — b. me down from the Hall Ma. 75 It is but b.-up ; no more than that Pr. 8 -a better b.-up E. A. 5 — his babes a better b.-up E. A. 17 BRINK. — the green b. and the running foam Pms 43 — from the b., like some full-breasted swan Poe?ns 200 Leapt fiery Passion from the brinks of death Pr. 165 — voices hail it from the b. hn M. 187 — if a man who stands upon the b. /. K. 70 — the woman walk'd upon the b. E. A. 102 — now shake hands across the b. Select. 191 BRIONY. The berried b. fold ' Poems 251 — b.-vine and ivy -wreath Poems 327 The fragile bindweed-bells and b. rings Ma. 128 BRISTLE. — bristles : half has fall'n and made Pms -22.6 — bristles all the brakes and thorns In M. 165 The hoar hair of the Baronet b. up E. A. 53 BRISTLED. — her b. grunters in the sludge ' Pr. 108 BRITAIN. The name of B. trebly great Poems 176 And keeps our B., whole within herself Pr. 179 Nor Britain's one sole God be the millionnaire Ma. 112 To B., and in April suddenly /. K. 18 Invaded B., ' but we beat him back /. K. 40 — dread Pendragon, Britain's king of kings /. K. 169 Of B. ; so she did not see the face /. K. 256 Tear the noble heart of B. E. A. 169 Britain's barbarous populaces E. A. 169 Girt by half the tribes of B. E. A. 169 Bark an answer, Britain's raven E. A. 170 B. light upon auguries happier E. A. 171 BRITISH. With a stony B. stare Ma. 47 — curse me the B. vermin, the rat Ma. 105 BRITON. Breton, not B. Ma. 90 His B. in blown seas and storming showers Ma. 146 Up, my Britons, on my chariot E. A. 172 BRITONESS. —haled the vellow-ringleted B. E. A. 172 BRITTLE. An idle signal, for the b. fleet E. A. 103 BROACH. Pull off, pull off, the b. of gold Poems 355 A golden b. : beneath an emerald plane Pr. 70 BROAD. The boat-head down a b. canal Poems 20 Heavily hangs the b. sunflower Poems 31, 32 On the b. sea-wolds in the crimson shells Poems 61 His b. clear brow in sunlight glow'd Poems 69 The b. stream in his banks complaining Poems 70 The b. stream bore her far away Poetns 70 That lent b. verge to distant lands Poems 113 For, lying b. awake, I thought of you Poe??ts 139 Grows green and b., and takes no care Poems 145 — b. curved branches, fledged with clearest Poems 152 As one that museth where b. sunshine Poe??is 158 Make b. thy shoulders to receive my weight Poe??is 197 So muscular he spread, so b. of breast Poems 203 A league of grass, wash'd by a slow b. stream Pms 204 — a b. and equal-blowing wind Poems 206 B. Oak of Sumner-chace Poetns 246 Alas, I was so b. of girth Poems 251 That makes thee b. and deep! Poems 256 There gloom the dark b. seas. My mariners Pms 266 Nor for my lands so b. and fair Poems 354 BROKE Page BROAD, —b. lawns until the set of sun Pr. 1 — b. ambrosial aisles of lofty lime Pr. 5 — everywhere the b. and bounteous Earth Pr. 38 Bent their b. faces toward us and address'd Pr. 103 — three b. sons ; with now a wandering hand Pr. 120 —me they bore up the b. stairs Pr. 156 I wish they were a whole Atlantic b.' Pr. 180 By that b. water of the west In M. 93 —that old man, now lord of the b. estate Ma. 3 —the b. light glares and beats Ma. 101 Preserve a b. approach of fame Ma. 142 True tears upon his b. and naked breast /. K. 7 As of a b. brook o'er a shingly bed /. K. 14 Then forward by a way which, beaten b. /. K. 69 Endow you with b. land and territory /. K. 196 —the b. belt of the world E. A. 32 — that saunter in the b. E. A. 89 — the b. woodland parcell'd into farms E. A. 95 The b. seas swell'd to meet the keel E. A. 145 — b. water sweetly, slowly glides E. A. 154 BROAD-BASED upon her people's will Poems vii. B. flights of marble stairs Poems 23 BROAD-BLOWN. Has a b. comeliness Ma. 46 BROAD-BRIMM'D. This b. hawker of holy Ma. 38 BROADCAST. Of freedom b. over all that Pr. 128 BROADEN. To b. into boundless day In M. 142 BROADENED. Mornb. on the borders of the Pms 161 BROADENING, —name flow on with b. time Pr. 63 When lo ! her own, that b. from her feet /. K. 229 BROADENS. Where Freedom b. slowly down Pms 175 BROADER. Grew b. toward his death Pr. 73 BROADER-GROWN. — gloom'd : and b. the Pr. 159 BROAD-FACED with under-fringe of /. K. 74 BROAD-FLUNG. — tide in its b. shipwrecking Ma. 14 BROAD-LIMB'D. The b. Gods at random Poems 352 BROAD-SHOULDER'D. A great b. genial Pr. 181 BROCADE. — an ancient dame in dim b. /. K. 20 That stood from out a stiff" b. E. A. 61 BROCELIANDE. —the wild woods of B. /. K. 101, 104 BROIDER'D. — b. sofas on each side Poems 20 The silk star-b. coverlid Poems 316 There leaning deep m b. down we sank Pr. 75 Laid from her limbs the costly -b. gift /. K. 41 B. with pearls,' and brought it : then he /. K. 166 A sleeve of scarlet, b. with great pearls /. K. 178 BROIDERY-FRAME, —take the b., and Poems 312 BROIDRY. Rare b. of the purple clover Poems 51 BROKE. — wavering lights and shadows b. Poems 142 Would love the gleams of good that b. Poems 1S3 This murmur b. the stillness of that air Poetns 208 — b. away. The more he look'd at her Poems 215 Was not with Dora. She b. out in praise Poe?ns 218 I b. a close with force and arms Poe??is 235 Bluff Harry b. into the spence Poems 247 — b. it, — James, — you know him, — old, but Poems 264 What time the foeman's line is b. Poems 296 B., like the rainbow from the shower Poems 310 The hedge b. in, the banner blew Poems 319 The linden b. her ranks and rent Poems 327 — nor b., nor shunn'd a soldier's death Pr. 3 — when the council b. , I rose and past Pr. 20 Our dances b. and buzz'd in knots of talk Pr. 22 — she b. out interpreting my thoughts Pr. 68 I b. the letter of it to keep the sense Pr. 92 Nor in the furrow b. the ploughman's head Pr. 118 B. from their lips, and, ere the wind}' jest Pr. 121 A tempest, thro' the cloud that dimm'd her b. Pr. 151 Deepening the courts of twilight b. them up Pr. 183 Who b. our fair companionship In M. 37 — falling, idly b. the peace In M. 83 — in the present b. the blow In M. 120 — strangely on the silence b. In M. 140 Has b. the bond of dy ing use In M. 161 — the sunlight b. from her lip Ma. 30 — a million horrible bellowing echoes b. Ma. 86 With some long-winded tale, and b. him short Ma. 123 For ever silent; even if they b. Ma. 147 Right thro' the line they b. Ma. 169 — there he b. the sentence in his heart /. K. 47 — b. the bandit holds and cleansed the land /. K. 95 B. on the mountain and I cared not for it /. K. 119 B. the strong lance, and roll'd his enemy down /. K. 148 She b. into a little scornful laugh /. K. 153 Dull days were those till our good Arthur b. /. K. 162 — when'the next da}' b. from underground /. K. 168 The}' rose, heard mass, b. fast, and rode away /. K. 169 Flying, and link'd again, and wheel'd and b. /. K. 238 — flickering fairy-circle wheel'd and b. /. K. 238 — after tempest, when the long wave b. /. K. 243 33 BROKE Page BROKE. — me then, that wicked one, who b. /. K. 259 — my sorrow b. me down E. A. 18 — dispers'd, and bent or b. E. A. 21 B. from their elders E. A. 21 B. with a phosphorescence cheering- even E. A. 57 B. from a bower of vine and honeysuckle E. A. 59 Then b. all bonds of courtesy E. A. 68 B. into nature's music when they saw her E. A. 87 — b. the bond which they desired to break E. A. 91 — you tumbled down and b. E. A. 103 B., mixt with awful light E. A. 107 — ever when it b. E. A. 108 B., mixt with awful light, and show'd their E. A. 108 His angel b. his heart E. A. in Warm b. the breeze against the brow E. A. 145 Burnt and b. the grove and altar E. A. 169 A nobler yearning never b. her rest Select. 196 BROKEN. The'b. sheds look'd sad and strange Pms 9 Each morn my sleep was b. thro' Poems 86 Let what is b. so remain Poems 147 A b. chancel with a b. cross Poems 191 — silver fragments of a b. voice Poems 211 Heart-b., and his father help'd him not Poems 216 — all the man was b. with remorse Poems 220 Oh, his. He was not b. Poems 225 Half shown, are b. and withdrawn Poems 303 The clouds are b. in the sky Poe?ns 336 Old wishes, ghosts of b. plans Poems 340 Ten thousand b. lights and shapes Poems 341 — as in dreams, I could not. Mine was b. Poems 368 A b. statue propt against the wall Pr. 6 The first, a gentleman of b. means Pr. 18 Till like three horses that have b. fence Pr. 49 Your oath is b, : we dismiss you : go Pr. 93 Half -turning to the b. statue, said Pr. 105 Is violate, our laws b. : fear we not Pr. 139 The glittering axe was b. in their arms Pr. 139 Her iron will was b. in her mind Pr. 142 Of traitorous friend and b. system made Pr. 146 ' Our laws are b. : let him enter too ' Pr. 153 —like a b. purpose waste in air Pr. 168 They are out b. lights of thee In M. vi. — when the wind like a b. worldling wail'd Ma. 2 It will never be b. by Maud Ma. 11 My life has crept so long on a b. wing Ma. in Of b. fortunes, daily fronted him /. K. 1 Of sprouted thistle on the b. stones /. K. 17 Because my means were somewhat b. into /. K. 25 My pride is b. : men have seen my fall ' /. K. 31 Is b. down, for Enid sees my fall ! ' I. K. 32 Of comrades, each of Avhom had b. on him /. K. 50 Nor cared a b. egg-shell for her lord /. K. 65 From which old fires have b., men may fear /. K. 89 There was I b. down ; there was I saved /. K. 91 For these have b. up my melancholy ' /. K. 107 — her false voice made way b. with sobs /. K. 138 Becomes the sea-cliff pathway b. short /. K. 139 ' They are b., they are b.' for the King /. K. 163 It can be b. easier. I for you /. K. 210 Shape to their fancy's eye from b. rocks /. K. 212 A limb was b. E. ^4. 7 I seem so foolish and so b. down E. A. 18 — a b. word to thank him with E. A. 20 ■ — floating tackle and b. spars E. A. 30 The sunrise b. into scarlet shafts E. A. 33 So b. — all the story of his house E. A. 38 My grief and solitude have b. me E. A. 47 The tented winter-field was b. up E. A. 57 — nor by plight or b. ring E. A. 58 Like b. music, written as she found E. A. 75 The b. base of a black tower E. A. 77 A creeper when the prop is b. E. A. 93 — the great Hall was wholly b. down E. A. 94 The b. vision E. A. 102 Spars were splinter'd, decks were b. Select. 39 BROKENLY, that she knew it, she had fail'd Pr. 169 — there the tale he uttered b. E. A. 35 BRONZE. — great b. valves, emboss'd with Pr. 126 — burst the great b. valves, and led Pr. 140 BRONZED, —bruised and b., she lifted up /. K. 161 BROOD. To muse and b. and live again in Poems 146 That broods above the fallen sun Poe?ns 173 About him broods the twilight dim Poems 301 If there were many Lilias in the b. Pr. 9 O tell her, Swallow, that thy b. is flown Pr. 80 He sees his b. about thy knee Pr. 105 Because her b. is stol'n away In M. 36 O sound to rout the b. of cares In M. 131 To build and b. ; that live their lives In M. 179 BROTHER Page BROOD. — law that I made, nevermore to b. Ma. 8 Heathen, the b. by Hengist left ; and sought /. K. 226 BROODED. Which b. round about her Poems 208 BROODETH. —the sunbeam b. warm In M. 135 BROODING. Chaunteth not the b. bee Poems 50 Close-latticed to the b. heat Poems 73 The ragged rims of thunder b. low Poems 115 Sit b. in the ruins of a life Poe?ns 258 Across my fancy, b. warm Poems 312 Not ever would she love : but b. turn Pr. \x\ — wordless broodings on the wasted cheek Pr. 163 — b. on the dear one dead In M. 58 Look also, Love, a b. star In M. 68 — over all things b. slept In M. 107 —felt that tempest b. round his heart /. K. 46 With wings of b. shelter o'er her peace E. A. 58 BROOK. Past Yabbok b. the livelong night Poems 14 — chiefly from the b. that loves Poems 28 The deep b. groan'd beneath the mill Poems 90 1 thirsted for the brooks, the showers Poems 96 The long b. falling thro' the clov'n ravine Poems 98 — cold crown'd snake ! O mountain brooks Poems 99 forth with life, I would not b. my fear Poems 156 The torrent brooks of hallow'd Israel Poems 157 —leap the rainbows of the brooks Poems 282 — drown'd within the whirling b. Pr. 3 We b. no further insult, but are gone ' Pr. 154 I scarce could b. the strain and stir In M. 24 Spring that swells the narrow brooks In M. 121 The b. alone far-off was heard In M. 139 On yon swoll'n b. that bubbles fast In M. 149 The b. shall babble down the plain ht M. 153 ' Here by this b., we parted Ma. 117 — nothing perfect ; yet the b. he loved Ma. 118 To me that loved him ; for, * O b.,' he says Ma. 118 * Whence come you ? ' and the b., why not ? Ma. 118 ' O babbling b.' Ma. 118 Stands Philip's farm where b. and river meet Ma. 119 Philip chatter'd more than b. or bird Ma. 120 Beyond the b., waist-deep in meadow-sweet Ma. 123 Old waifs of rhyme, and bowing o'er the b. Ma. 127 As slopes a wild b. o'er a little stone /. K. 5 As of a broad b. o'er a shingly bed /. K. 14 That listens near a torrent mountain-b /. K. 55 — at the in-running of a little b. /. K. 220 Blaze by the rushing b. or silent well /. K. 246 Little about it stirring, save a b. E. A. 53 For out beyond her lodges, where the b. E. A. 58 Cataract brooks to the ocean run E. A. 158 — shall I b. to be supplicated E. A. 169 The brooks of Eden mazily murmuring E. A. 175 BROOK'D not, but clamouring out, ' Mine Pr. 143 Silent, until the little maid, who b. /. K. 233 B. not the expectant terror of her heart E. A. 27 Ended he had not, but she b. no more E. A. 92 BROOMS. — walks were stript as bare as b. Pr. it BROTHER, —eddies of its wayward b. Poems 8 Each to each is dearest b. Poems 15 — b. mariners, we will not Avander more Poems 149 I knew your b. : his mute dust Poems 172 Who miss the b. of your youth ? Poems 173 Thy brothers and immortal souls Poe?ns 179 Brothers in Art : a friendship so complete Poems 203 She is my brother's daughter Poems 214 Come, blessed b., come Poems 243 The Sun flies forward to his b. Sun Poems 263 Men, my brothers, men, the workers Poems 278 His brothers of the weather stood Poems 344 Hob-and-nob with b. Death Poems 374 Not ev'n her b. Arac, nor the twins Pr. 23 ' My b. !' 'Well, my sister.' ' O,' she said Pr. 39 Here lies a b. by a sister slain Pr. 40 A prince, a b. ? a little will I yield Pr. 44 My b. ! it was duty spoke, not I Pr. 45 Till one of those two brothers, half aside Pr. 122 'Ob., you have known the pangs we felt Pr. 126 Brothers, the woman's Angel guards you Pr. 128 ' He saved my life : my b. slew him for it ' Pr. 142 'Your b., Lady, — Florian,— ask for hiin Pr. 152 Help, father, b\, help : speak to the king Pr. 152 Like mine own b. For my debt to him Pr. 152 Her b. came : the king her father charm'd Pr. 154 — those twin brothers, risen again and whole Pr. 162 My friend, the b. of my love In M. 12 More than my brothers are to me In M. 13 ' Where wert thou, b., those four days?' In M. 50 Roves from the living brother's face In M. 51 Sleep, Death's twin-b., times my breath In M. 94 Sleep Death's twin-b., knows not Death In M. 94 BROTHER Page BROTHER, —than my brothers are to me Tn M. 109 I, clasping- b. -hands, aver In M. 123 — to-day with her b., but not to her b. Ma. 16 — chuckle and grin at a brother's shame Ma. 18 Her b. from whom I keep aloof Ma. 28 Blithe would her brother s acceptance be Ma. 37 All, all upon the b. Ma. 48 — her b. lingers late Ma. 50 Her b. is coming back to-night Ma. 64 When only Maud and the b. Ma. 66 This b. had laugh'd her down Ma. 67 — her b. comes like a blight Ma. 70 When her b. ran in his rage to the gate Ma. 85 A cry for a brother's blood Ma. 87 All gone. My dearest b., Edmund, sleeps Ma. 127 My b. James is in the harvest-field Ma. 129 — each had slain his b. at a blow I. K. 149 For here two brothers, one a king, had met I. K. 149 Yet rosy-kindled with her brother's kiss I. K. 167 His brother's ; which he gave to Lancelot I. A". 167 Sir Modred's b., of a crafty house I. A". 176 Came on her b. with a happy face I. K. 188 Hull ill then should I quit your brother's love I. K. 196 That shook her tower, the brothers heard I. K. 200 At last she said, ' Sweet brothers, yesternight I. K. 201 ' Fret not yourself, dear b. , nor be wroth I. K. 203 But Leolin, his b., living oft E. A. 54 — his, a brother's love, that hung E. A. 58 Than b., let me tell you E. A. 69 — thro' the bright lawns to his brother's ran E. A. 69 1 B., for I have loved you more as son E. A. 69 She must prove true : for, b., where two fight E. A. 70 ' O b., I am grieved to learn your grief E. A. 71 How low his brother's mood had fallen E. A. 72 Sent to the harrow'd b. E. A. 82 Thee shall thy b. man, the Lord from E. A. 85 BROTHER-LIKE, —with all pureness, b. I. A". 92 BROTHER-OAK. Thy famous b. Poems 257 BROTHER-SISTER. That b. Psyche, both Pr. 42 BROUGHT, —the outward to the inward b. Poems 78 The oriental fairy b. Poems 78 — slowly was my mother b. Poems 91 Although the loss that b. us pain Poems 94 — light-foot Iris b. it yester-eve Poems 101 I won his love : I b. him home Poems 109 —rounded, smooth'd, and b. Poems 152 lb. calamity' Poe?ns 154 Love thou thy land, with love far-b. Poems 179 He b. it : and the poet little urged Poems 191 — every morning b. a noble chance Poems 199 — every chance b. out a noble knight Poems 199 Her beauty grew : till Autumn b. an hour Poems 210 B. out a dusky loaf that smelt of home Poems 222 I once was near him, when his bailiff b. Poems 227 — all good things from evil, b. the night Poems 260 Upon his town, and all the mothers b. Poe7ns 285 I marvell'd how the mind was b. Poems 311 The pint you b. me was the best Poems 342 Lord Ronald b. a lily-white doe Poems 354 The lily-white doe Lord Ronald had b. Poems 356 —which he b., and I Pr. 2 The feudal warrior lady-clad : which b. Pr. 7 —jewels, gifts, to fetch her : these b. back Pr. 17 He b. it, and himself, a sight to shake Pr. 25 She b. us Academic silks, in hue Pr. 30 ' I b. a message here from Lady Blanche ' Pr. 45 — from the Queen's decease she b. her dp Pr. 58 She would not love :— or b. her chain'd, a slave Pr. 114 Home they b. her warrior dead Pr. 136 Ai tho' they b. but merchants' bales In M. 21 Such precious relics b. by thee In M. 29 —he that b. him back is there In M. 51 He b. an eye for all he saw In M. 130 Or here she b. the harp and flung In M. 131 — b. a summons from the sea In M. 157 Large elements in order b. In M. 174 Enid b. sweet cakes to make them cheer I. K. 21 Yea, and he b. me to a goodly house I. K. 38 — like a madman b. her to her court I. K. 39 Made promise that whatever bride I b. I. AT". 42 Then b. a mantle down and wrapt her in it I. K. 44 —when the Prince had b. his errant eyes I. AT. 59 Such as they b. upon their forays out I. K. 75 — men b. in whole hogs and quarter beeves /. K. 77 By striking at her better, miss'd, and b. I. AT. 119 He lightly scatter'd theirs and b. her off I. AT 123 He b. , not found it therefore : take the truth ' I. K. 131 What I by mere mischance haveb., my shield I. A". 157 Broider'd with pearls,' and b. it : then he I. AT 166 BROWN Tage BROUGHT. Returning b. the yet-unblazon'd A A". 167 — b. his horse to Lancelot where he lay /. AT 173 — when the shield was b., and Gawain saw I. K. 181 Who might have b. thee, now a lonely man I. A'. 219 — saw the barge that b. her moving down I. AT 220 A madness of farewells. And Modred b. I. A". 230 None knows it, and my tears have b. me good I. AT 235 — yet to sell her— then with what she b. E. A. 8 — brought the stinted commerce of those E. A. 45 The letter which he b., and swore besides E. A. 78 She b. strange news E. A. no — bread from out the houses b. E. A. 177 They b. him home at even-fall Select. 207 Home they b. him slain with spears Select. 207 BROW. This laurel greener from the brows Poe??is v. Upon her bed, across her b. Poems n Falsehood shall bare her plaited b. Poems 13 Frowns perfect-sweet along the b. Poems 15 — o'er black brows drops down Poems 16 — a b. of pearl Poems 24 Even as a maid, whose stately b. Poems 26 With thy soften'd, shadow'd b. Poems 35 Her beautiful bold b. Poems 39 His broad clear b. in sunlight glow'd Poems 69 From b. and bosom slowly down Poems 73 Before him, striking on my b. Poems 97 — the charm of married brows Poems 101 From her warm brows and bosom Poe??is 105 Nor steep our brows in slumber's holy balm Poems 145 Whereto the other with a downward b. Poems 155 Me lying dead, my crown about my brows Poe?ns 157 — dropping bitter tears against his b. Poems 198 — the full day dwelt on her brows, and sunn'd Poems 208 —Love with knit brows went by Poeitis 212 I, whose bald brows in silent hours become Poems 242 My brows are ready. What ! deny it now? Poems 243 Look up, the fold is on her b. Poems 298 — gain'd a laurel for your b. Poems 350 Her sweet face from b. to chin Poems 360 A sleepy light upon their brows and lips Poems 366 Of that cap upon her brows Poems 371 From over her arch'd brows, with every turn Pr. 31 That fought Aurelian, and the Roman brows Pr. 33 (The gaunt old Baron with his beetle b. Pr. 41 That Psyche, wont to bind my throbbing b. Pr. 42 Star-sisters answering under crescent brows Pr. 51 The lilylike Melissa droop'd her brows Pr. 83 His rash intrusion, manlike, but his brows Pr. 85 With hooded brows I crept into the hall Pr. 86 — made the single jewel on her b. Pr. 88 Regarding, while she read, till over b. Pr. 94 — raised the cloak from brows as pale and Pr. no She veil'd her brows, and prone she sank Pr. 112 A feeling finger on my brows, and presently Pr. 142 With b. to b. like night and evening mixt Pr. 143 — and fear not : breathe upon my brows Pr. X76 The purple brows of Olivet In M. 50 Urania speaks with darken'd b. hi M. 57 I took the thorns to bind my brows In M. 95 Lift as thou may'st thy burthen'd brows In M. 100 So, dearest, now thy brows are cold In M. 102 To black and brown on kindred brows In M. 109 In ripples, fan my brows and blow In M. 125 Be large and lucid round thy b. hi M. 135 — enter in at breast and b. In M. 189 A band of pain across my b. Ma. 131 Then seeing cloud upon the mother's b. I. AT 41 — many a wizard b. bleach'd on the walls I. AT 124 — those two brethren slowly with bent brows I. AT 206 — kiss'd her quiet brows, and saying to her I. AT 207 But Arthur who beheld his cloudy brows I. AT 218 Annie with her brows against the wall E. A. 18 Long o'er his bent brows linger'd Averill E. A. 83 —placed upon the sick man's b. E. A. 87 From thy pure brows, and from thy shoulders E. A. 141 Warm broke the breeze against the b. E. A. 145 BROW-BEATS his desk below Poems 62 BROW-BOUND with burning gold Poems 155 BROW'D. Dark-b. sophist, come not anear Poems 41 Plato the wise, and large-b. Verulam Poems 119 BROWN. Her streaming curls of deepest b. Poems 73 A single stream of all her soft b. hair Poems 208 With beauties every shade <;f b. and fair Pr. 51 With all her autumn tresses falsely b. Pr. 52 To black and b. on kindred brows In M. 109 By park and suburb under b. hi M. 148 Unloved that beech will gather b. In M. 153 I watch the twilight falling b. Ma. 162 In the b. wild, and mowers mowing in it I. AT 56 4i BROWN Page BROWN. B., looking hardly human E. A. 35 Enoch was so b., so bow'd E. A. 38 BROWSED. — b. by deep-udder'd kine Poems 205 BRUISE. — and hardly won with b. and blow /. K. 208 BRUISED. Tho' cursed and scorn'd, and b. Poems 299 Lie b. and maim'd, the tender ministries Pr. 140 Had b. the herb and crush'd the grape In M. 55 — b. and bronzed, she lifted up her eyes /. K. 161 BRUNELLESCHI. Of B. ; sleeps in peace Ma. 127 BRUNETTE. A quick b., well-moulded Pr. 34 BRUSH. I took his b. and blotted out the bird /. K. 118 In such a bottom : 'Peter had the b. E. A. 64 BRUSH'D. —sung to, when, this gad-fly b. aside Pr. 128 Sweeping the frothfly from the fescue b. E. A. 78 BRUSHING. — b. ankle-deep in flowers In M. 132 B. his instep, bow'd the all-amorous Earl /. K. 65 BRUSHWOOD, —the dusky b. underneath Poems 152 BRUTAL. With a glassy smile his b. scorn Ma. 28 BRUTE. Take my b., and lead him in Poems 368 Thou madest Life in man and b. lit M. v. The b. earth lightens to the sky In M. 196 No longer half-akin to b. In M. 210 — if he had not been a Sultan of brutes Ma. 107 —keep it ours, O God, from b. control Ma. 146 Then strode the b. Earl up and down his hall /. K. 83 Unbidden, and the brutes of mountain back /. K. 123 The b. world howling forced them into bonds/. K. 132 ' Gash thyself, priest, and honour thy b. Baal E. A. 84 BRUTUS. The Lucius Junius B. of my kind? Pr. 44 BUBBLE. Or seem'd to watch the dancing b. Pr. 55 On yon swoll'n brook that bubbles fast In M. 149 — yet bubbles o'er like a city Ma. 16 I b. into eddying bays Ma. 119 BUBBLED the nightingale and heeded not Pr. 8S The milk that b. in the pail In M. 132 BUCKET. The rope that haled the buckets Poems 238 BUCKLED with golden clasps before Poems 363 BUCKLER. — brand, the b., and the spear Poems 295 Clash the darts and on the b. E. A. 173 BUD. From under my starry sea-b. crown Poems 60 Below the chestnuts, when their buds Poems 87 — gather knots of flowers, and buds and Poems 131 The folded leaf is woo'd from out the b. Poems 145 Sweet as new buds in Spring Poems 161 Strait-laced, but all-too-full in b. Poems 247 1 — the times, when some new thought can b. Poems 263 While thou abodest in the b. Poems 296 In b. or blade or bloom may find Poems 322 In carol, every b. to flower Poems 324 — drooping chestnut-buds began Poe?ns 362 While life was yet in b. and blade, betroth'd Pr. 16 Full on the child : she took it up : ' Pretty b. Pr. 146 That longs to burst a frozen b. In M. 114 — buds and blossoms like the rest In M. 180 O when her life was yet in b. In M. 205 — kisses balmier than half-opening buds E A. 142 — the b. ever breaks into bloom on the tree E. A. 159 — out of tyranny tyranny buds E. A. 173 BUDDED. Rings Eden, thro' the b. quicks In M. 129 — emeralds break from the ruby-b. lime Ma. 15 — the b. peaks of the wood are bow'd Ma. 25 O bird, in the new-b. bowers E. A. 164 BUDE. All down the thundering shores of B. /. K. 240 BUFFET. Strove to b. to land in vain Pr. 84 Swung from his brand a windy b. out /. K. 50 BUFFETED. Tempest-b., citadel-crown'd Ma. 165 BUGLE. Aloud the hollow b. blowing Poems 53 Loud, loud rung out the bugle's brays Poems 55 A mighty silver b. hung Poems 69 — sound upon the b. horn Poems 268 Blow, b. ; answer, echoes, dying, dying, dying Pr. 74 Blow, b., blow, set the wild echoes flying Pr. 74 — serpent-throated b., undulated Pr. 120 — all the b. breezes blew In M. 94 March with banner and b. and fife Ma. 23 With blare of b., clamour of men Ma. 144 Warble, O b.,and trumpet, blare E. A. 164 BUGLE-HORN His wreathed b. Poems 115 — comrades call me, sounding on the b. Poems 280 BUILD. Hear me, for I will speak, andb. up Poems 99 AVhen men knew how to b. Poems 230 That I were some great Princess, I would b. Pr. 8 —man. She had founded ; they must b. Pr. 36 —lent my life to b. up yours Pr. 92 — who knows? we four may b. some plan Pr. 118 Or builds the house, or digs the grave In M. 56 To b. and brood ; that live their lives In M. 179 On God and God-like men we b. our trust Ma. 152 BUILDED. The house was b. of the earth Poems 46 BURN Page BUILDING. The b. rook 'ill caw Poems 135 BUILT. Or even a sand-b. ridge Poems 30 Which had b. up everywhere Poems 47 I b. my soul a lordly pleasure-house Poems 112 Thereon I b. it firm. Of ledge or shelf Poems 112 In this great mansion, that is b. for me Poems 113 ' My spacious mansion b. for me Poems 122 So lightly, beautifully b. Poems 125 Boat, island, ruins of a castle, b. Poems 230 — b. herself an everlasting name Poems 288 B. for pleasure and for state Poems 359 The Rhodope that b. the pyramid Pr. 33 B. to the Sun : ' then, turning to her maids Pr. 72 ' The plan was mine : I b. the nest,' she said Pr. 93 We, conscious of what temper you are b. Pr. 95 As of a new-world Babel, woman-b. Pr. 99 Far off from men I b. a fold for them Pr. 127 Not tho' he b. upon the babe restored Pr. 161 — towers fall'n as soon as b. In M. 43 Who b. him fanes of fruitless prayer In M. 80 The storm their higb-b. organs make In M. 126 New as his title, built last year Ma. 37 B. that new fort to overawe my friends /. K. m 25 Had b. the King his havens, ships, and halls /. K. 102 — b. their castles of dissolving sand E. A. 2 They b., and thatch'd with leaves of palm E. A. 31 BULBUL. Died round the b. as he sung Poems 22 'OB., any rose of Gulistan Pr. 81 BULGE with the unswallow'd piece, and /. K. 79 BULK. — lived the Hills — a Tudor-chimnied b.Pms 230 The bones of some vast b. that lived and roar'd Pr. 69 From those two bulks at Arac's side Pr. 132 Has risen, and cleft the soil, and grown a b. Pr. 138 Dark bulks that tumble half alive In M. 97 BULK'D. — like an old-world mammoth b. in ice Pr. 114 BULKY. Struck thro' the b. bandit's corselet /. K. 54 BULL. The mild bull's golden horn Poems 117 ' The Bull, the Fleece are cramm'd Poems 221 With Edwin Morris and with Edward B. Poems 230 — said the fat-faced curate Edward B. Poems 231, 233 That oil'd and curl'd Assyrian B. Ma. 28 — whom his shaking vassals called the B. /. K. 69 BULLET. — cannon-b. rust on a slothful shore Ma. 113 Bullets fell like rain Select. 38 BULRUSH, —the b. inthe pool Poems 135 Among the b.-beds, and clutch'd the sword Poems 196 BULWARK, —they saw their b. fallen, stood /. K. 54 BUMMIN'. — 'eerd un a b. awaay E. A. 130 BUMP'D. I b. the ice into three several stars Pins 189 BUMPERS. — froth'd his b. to the brim Poems 169 BUNCH. With b. and berry and flower Poems 102 Of rich fruit-bunches leaning on each other Poems 8 — the shadows of the vine-bunches Poems 105 — grapes with bunches red as blood Poems 315 BUNDLE. His b., waved his hand, and E. A. 14 BUOY. — bay was oily calm : the harbour-b. Poems 224 We left behind the painted b. E. A. 144 BUOY'D. Of vapour b. the crescent-bark Poems 321 B. upon floating tackle and broken spars E. A. 30 BURDEN. The people here, a beast of b. Poems 119 The daily b. for the back In M. 42 BURGEON, —leave her space to b. out of all Pr. 171 Now burgeons every maze of quick In M- 179 BURGHER. Knight and b., lord and dame Poems 71 BURIAL. That hears his b. talk'd of by his Pr. 165 — mother kills her babe for a b. fee Ma. 7 Now to glorious b. slowly borne Ma. 148 Pray for my soul, and yield me b. /. K. 214 Fresh from the b. of her little one E. A. 16 A summer b. deep in hollyhocks E. A. 59 BURIED. Half-b. in the Eagle's down Poems 117 I b. her like my own sweet child Poems 355 Is it, then, regret for b. time In M. 181 Sad Hesper o'er the b. sun . In M. 187 — why have they not b. me deep enough Ma. 108 To see that she be b. worshipfully ' - /. K. 216 The maiden b. , not as one unknown /. K. 217 — when Annie b. it E. A. 15 — when they b. him the little port E. A. 50 Like that long-b. body of the King E. A. 51 Old scandals b. now seven decads deep E. A. 74 BURLEIGH. Lord of B., fair and free Poems 360 Deeply mourn'd the Lord of B. Poems 361 B. -house by Stamford town Poems 361 BURLESQUE, —ever seem'd to wrestle with b. Pr. 178 BURN. — cricket chirps : the light burns low Poems 169 While the stars b., the moons increase Poems 174 — b.a fragrant lamp before my bones Poems 2.A3 Began to b. and b., and her lynx eye Pr. 56 BURN Page BURN. — and Hope, a poising- eagle, burns Pr. 78 B. like the mystic fire on a mast-head Pr. 88 — with the thought her colour burns In M. 7 — calm that let the tapers b. hi M. 139 This maple b. itself away In M. 153 Cold fires, yet with power to b. and brand Ma. 60 Made her cheek b. and either eyelid fall /. K. 41, 68 Made my tears b. — is also past, in part /. K. 253 The sin that practice burns into the blood /. K. 133 — b. the threshold of the night E. A. 145 B., b. E. A. 163 B., you glossy heretic, b. E. A. 163 Burst the gates and b. the palaces E. A. 172 Wherefore in me burns an anger E. A. 172 BURN'D like one burning -flame Poems 69 — at the root thro' lush green grasses b. Poems 153 — b. in fire, or boil'd in oil Poems 23a Ere that, which in me b. Poems 245 — b. upon its object thro' such tears Poems 260 Last night, when the sunset b. Ma. 25 A novice : one low light betwixt them b. /. K. 225 That b. as on an altar is.. A. 5 At times the whole sea b. E. A. 147 BURNING. A love still b. upward Poems 7 When rites and forms before his b. eyes Poems 39 I look'd athwart the b. drouth Poems 96 All earth and air seem only b. fire Poems 108 She died : she went to b. flame Poems 109 Peopled the hollow dark, like b. stars Poems 151 Brow-bound with b. gold Poems 155 As once they drew into two b. rings Poems 157 The b. brain from the true heart Poems 164 Larger constellations b. Poems 281 The tapers b. fair Poems 334 Athwart the smoke of b. weeds Pr. 176 — heated hot with b. fears In M. 184 With life-long injuries b. unavenged /. K. 82 Sat fifty in the blaze of b. fire E. A. 178 BURNISH. To tramp, to scream, to b. and Pr. 101 BURNISH'D. On b. hooves his war-horse Poems 69 A huge crag-platform, smooth as b. brass Poems 112 — a livelier iris changes on the b. dove Poems 269 — sitting, b. without fear Poei?is 295 — glitter b. by the frosty dark Pr. 120 Among her b. sisters of the pool /. K. 35 Among his b. brethren of the pool /. K. 35 — cups and silver on the b. board E. A. 41 BURNT like a fringe of fire Poems 114 'You know,' said Frank, ' he b. Poems 190 For which the good Sir Ralph had b. them Pr. 13 Some sorcerer, whom a far-off grandsire b. Pr. 15 Nor b. the grange, nor buss'd the Pr. 118 B. in us, when we saw the embattled squares Pr. 119 I remember'd that b. sorcerer's curse Pr. 131 So b. he was with passion, crying out _ /. K. 30 — smoulder'd wrong that b. him all within /. K. 51 Far cities b., and with a cry she woke /. K. 229 Were living nerves to feel the rent ; and b. E. A. 79 B. and broke the grove and altar E. A. 169 B. in each man's blood Select. 37 BURR. Close-matted, b. and brake and Poems 315 When b. and bine were gather'd E. A. 57 — like a wall of burs and thorns E. A. 102 BURST. Bursts into blossom in his sight Poems 97 Preluded those melodious bursts Poems 150 — shrine-doors b. thro' with heated blasts Poems 151 — all at once the old man b. in sobs Poems 219 They b. my prayer Poems 242 Or to b. all links of habit Poems 281 — every bird of Eden b. Poems 324 All heaven bursts her starry floors Poems 332 Her stature more than mortal in the b. Pr. 3 — father's fault) but given to starts and bursts Pr. 18 While the great organ almost b. his pipes Pr. 53 Shall b. her veil ; marsh-divers, rather, maid Pr. 81 Ready to b. and flood the world with foam Pr. 99 — clad in iron b. the ranks of war Pr. 100 The sacred mother's bosom, panting, b. Pr. 144 Bursts of great heart, and slips in sensual Pr. 117 Thrice in the saddle, then b. out in words Pr. 121 — b. the great bronze valves, and led Pr. 140 That longs to b. a frozen bud In M. 114 Of Demons ? fiery-hot to b. In M. 177 — yearn'd to b. the folded gloom In M. 189 Ready to b. in a colour'd flame Ma. 26 — b. and drown with deluging storms Ma. 87 No hand but hers, should make your Enid b. /. K. 42 — heel against the pavement echoing b. /. K. 60 That b. m dancing, and the pearls /. K. 117 BYWORD Page BURST. Till now the storm, its b. of passion /. K. 144 — half his blood b. forth, and down he sank /. K. 174 — the wild Queen, who saw not, b. away /. K. 212 They sent a crew that landing b. away E. A. 35 Caught in a b. of unexpected storm E. A. 66 Burst his own wyvern on the seal E. A. 77 Now high on waves that idly b. E. A. 148 B. the gates and burn the palaces E. A. 172 BURSTING, —find the stubborn thistle b. Ma. 149 BURTHEN, —they shriek'd the b. ' Him ! ' Poems 235 Less b., by ten-hundred-fold, to bear Poems 237 — seem to lift a b. from thy heart Poems 261 With the b. of an honour Poems 361 My b. from mine arms Pr. 84 — not the b. that they bring In M. 21 He bears the b. of the weeks . In M. in — turns his b. into gain In M. 111 Like ballad-b. music, kept Ma. 158 Again and like a b., ' him or death ' /. K. 194 No b., save my care for you and yours E. A. 23 As tho' it were the b. of a song E. A. 44 A breathless b. of low-folded heavens E. A. 82 Oneb., and she would not lighten it? E. A. 87 — weep their b. to the ground E. A. 139 BURTHEN'D. Lift as thou may'st thy b. In M. 100 BURY. You'll b. me, my mother Poems 136 For warning : b. me beside the gate Pr. 4c I will b. myself in myself Ma. 10 So now I have sworn to b. Ma. 70 They cannot even b. a man Ma. 103 To b. me, b . me Ma. 108 B. the Great Duke Ma. 137 BURYING. Driving, hurrying, marrying, b. Ma. 102 BUSH. — a rose-b. leans upon Poems 33 — when I'm gone, to train the rose-b. that Poems 137 — will not leave the myrrh-b. on the height Poems 146 Beneath the sacred b., and past away Poems 189 * Hear how the bushes echo ! Poems 206 Holding the b., to fix it back, she stood Poems 207 Or underneath the barren b. In M. 135 — whit, whit, whit, in the b. beside me E. A. 119 The huge b. -bearded Barons heaved and blew Pr. 108 He dragg'd his eyebrow bushes down, and /. K. 136 BUSHLESS. Whether the high field on the b.Poems 30 Far o'er the long backs of the b. downs /. K. 168 Rode o'er the long backs of the b. downs /. K. 188 BUSHY. The mountain stirr'd its b. crown Poems 327 BUSINESS. Two in the tangled b. of the world Pr. 38 — b. often call'd her from it E. A. 15 BUSS me, thou rough sketch of man Poems 373 BUSS'D. Nor burnt the grange, nor b. the Pr. 118 BUST. Greek, set with busts Pr. 2 There stood a b. of Pallas for a sign Pr. 26 BUSTLING. — b. whistle of the youth who /. K. 14 BUSY. The b. wrinkles round his eyes? Poems 85 Not wholly in the b. world Poems 204 But if I praised the b. town In M. 132 BUSYING themselves about the flowerage E. A. 61 BUTLER. Here sits the b. with a flask Poems 314 The b. drank, the steward scrawl'd Poems 319 BUTT. A woman like a b., and harsh as Poems 227 — from butts of water on the slope Pr. 4 Beholding how you b. against my wish /. K. 81 Shoulder'd the spigot, straddling on the butts /. K. 239 BUTTER-BUMP Moast loike a b. E. A. 132 BUTTERFLIES. Hast thou heard the b. Poems 34 BUTTERFLY. Like a golden b. Poems 254 BUTTON'D. I turn'd once more, close b. Poems 235 BUXOM. Then stept a b. hostess forth Pr. 27 You cage a b. captive here and there /. K. 121 BUY. Bought ? what is it he cannot b. ? Ma. Go to the town and b. us flesh and wine /. K. B. goods and stores E. A. To b. strange shares in some Peruvian mine E. . BUYING, —gave in b. what she sold E . A. BUZZ. — down the middle b. ! she went Poems 327 May b. so loud— we scorn them, but they /. K. 154 BUZZARD-CLOCK. Loike a b. ower my E. A. 130 BUZZED. Our dances broke and b. in knots Pr. 22 The palace bang'd and b. and clackt Poems 319 — shook his hair, strode off, and b. abroad /. K. 184 BUZZES. Itb. wildly round the point; and /. K. 116 As we shake off the bee that b. at us /. K. 188 BUZZINGS. — b. of the honied hours In M. 132 BYE. At first with all confusion : by and b. Pr. 158 BYGONE, —a b. Rector of the place E. A. 51 — trim our sails, and let old bvgones be Pr. 78 BY-LANE. Till the filthy b. rings to the yell Ma. 6 BYWAY. Is yon plantation where this b. Poems 225 BYWORD. The fatal b. of all years to come Poems 2S7 43 38 97 15 CABIN Page CABIN. Shaking their pretty c. E. A. 10 CABIN-WINDOW. I see the c. bright In M. 14 CABINET. And moving toward a cedarn c. /. K. 8 CACKLE. With c. and with clatter Poems 184 Ye think the rustic c. of your bourg /. K. 15 The c. of the unborn about the grave /. K. 120 CACKLED. It clack'd and c. louder Poems 185 CADENCE. — in perfect c.,and a skin Poems 227 ' Ah, folly ! ' in mimic c. answer'd James Poems 264 — the preacher's c. flow'd E. A. 88 CAERLEON. Held court at old C. upon Usk /. K. 8 When late I left C. our great Queen /. K. 42 And all that week was old C. gay /. K. 45 Than at C. the full-tided Usk /. K. 52 With Arthur to C. upon Usk /. K. 96 That at C. ; this at Camelot /. K. 148 And at C. had he help'd his lord /. K. 163 CAERLYLE. —back ; this dealt him at C. /. K. 148 CAESAR. That dull cold-blooded C. Poems 156 Flur, for whose love the Roman C. first /. K. 40 CAGE. Lay silent in the muffled c. of life Pr. 159 The linnet born within the c. In M. 44 You c. a buxom captive here and there /. K. 121 CAGED. Like some wild creature newly-c. Pr. 44 Where first as sullen as a beast new-c. /. K. 91 Like the c. bird escaping suddenly E. A. 15 CAGELING. And asthe c. newly flown returns/. K. 140 CAIN. And the lust of gain, in the spirit of C. Ma. 4 CAIRN'D. — the c. mountain was a shadow /. K. 126 CAITIFF. — were bandit earls, and c. knights /. K. 3 At caitiffs and at wrongers of the world /. K. 6 That I would track this c. to his hold /. K. 23 In shadow, waiting for them, caitiffs all /. K. 48 CAKES. And Enid brought sweet c. to make /. K. 21 CALAMITY. I brought c. Poems 154 That a c. hard to be borne Ma. 46 Nor all Calamity's hugest waves confound Ma. 165 His heart foreshadowing all c. E. A. 37 CALCULATION. Abhorrent of a c. crost E. A. 26 CALENDAR'D. — register'd andc. for saints Poems 241 CALF. Was proxy-wedded with a bootless c. Pr. 16 CALIPH AT. Pavilion of the C. Poems 23 CALL, — thro' wild March the throstle calls Poems vi. — and night to the billow the fountain calls Poems 43 She saw me fight, she heard me c. Poems 54 C. to each other and whoop and cry Poems 59 We would c. aloud in the dreamy dells Poems 59 But if any came near I would c, and shriek Poems 61 will she answer if I c. Poems 90 — c. me loud when the day begins to break Poems 130 You must wake and c. me early Poems 130, 133 They c. me cruel-hearted, but I care not Poems 131 If you're waking, c. me early Poems 134 — sweet mother, c. me before the day is born Poems 137 1 heard them c. my soul Poems 139 I heard the angels c. Poems 139 At length I saw a lady within c. Poems 153 I am that Rosamond, whom men c. fair Poems 160 — themselves and those who c. them friend Poems 200 Or change a word with her he calls his wife Poems 215 ' O Father ! — if you let me c. you so Poems 219 ' They c. me what they will,' he said Poems 262 — as of old, the curlews c. Poems 268 Hark, my merry comrades c. me Poems 280 Whistle back the parrot's c. Poems 282 Yet say the neighbours when they c. Poems 326 She answer'd to my c. Poems 343 Shall c. thee from the boxes Poems 349 — when he calls, and thou shalt cease Poems 349 When they answer to his c. Poems 360 No critic I — would c. them masterpieces Pr. 22 Came running at the c, and help'd us down Pr. 27 Him you c. great : he for the common-weal Pr. 44 44 CALL'D Page CALL. — not c. her wise who made me wise 1 Pr. 49 The work of Ida, to c. down from Heaven Pr. 53 She calls her plagiarist ; I know not what Pr. 59 ' There sinks the nebulous star we c. the Sun Pr. 75 — c. her hard and cold, which seem'd a truth Pr. 162 — c. her Ida, tho' I knew her not Pr. 162 — c. her sweet, as if in irony p r . 162 Arise to thee : the children c, and I .. Pr. 169 And gather dust and chaff, and c. hi M. 79 To clap their cheeks, to c. them mine hi M. 116 In vain shalt thou, or any, c. In M. 138 To whom a thousand memories c. In M. 172 But trust that those we c. the dead hi M. 183 — underlip, you may c. it a little too ripe Ma. ' 12 A martial song like a trumpet's c. Ala. 23 Whatever they c. him, what care I Ma. 40 Scarcely, now, would I c. him a cheat Ma. 47 Who shall c. me ungentle, unfair Ma. 47 That heard me softly c. Ma. 100 What do they c. you ?' ' Katie.' ' That were Ma. 128 And tho' I heard him c. you fairest fair /. K. 38 C. herself false : and suffering thus he made /. K. 51 C. for the woman of the house,' to which /. K. 59 C. in what men soever were his friends /. K. 61 Yet fear me not : I c. mine own self wild /. K. 62 For,c. it lovers' quarrels, yet I know /. K. 63 But Enid, whom her ladies loved to c. /. K. 96 The people c. you prophet : let it be /. K. 109 Take Vivien for expounder ; she will c. /. K. 109 I c. it, — well, I will not c. it vice /. K. 112 Know well that Envy calls you Devil's son /. K. 118 And then did Envy c. me Devil's son /. K. 119 Master, shall we c. him overquick /. K. 131 Could c. him (were it not for womanhood) /. K. 134 Could c. him the main cause of all their /. K. 135 For fear our people c. you lily maid /. K. 167 ' Me you c. great : mine is the firmer seat /. K. 170 ' Father, you c. me wilful, and the fault I. K. 186 — would c. her friend and sister, sweet Elaine /. K. 192 1 needs must follow death, who calls for me /. K. 200 C. and I follow, I follow ! let me die ' /. K. 200 Daughter, I know not what you c. the highest /. K. 203 Sweet father, and bid c. the ghostly man /. K. 204 To this I c. my friends in testimony /. K. 215 My own true Lord ! how dare I c. him mine ? /. K. 257 Nor shun to c. me sister, dwell with you /. K. 260 — no prophet but the voice that calls E. A. 89 ' So are we all : but do not c. him, love E. A. 105 C. it but a weed E. A. 153 They that scorn the tribes and c. us E. A. 169 Light Hope at Beauty's c. would perch and Select. 196 CALL'D. Old voices c. her from without Poems 12 Far-off the torrent c. me from the cleft Poems 100 — c. him by his name, complaining loud Poems 198 C. to me from the years to come Poems 209 When Allan c. his son, and said, ' My son Poems 214 — when the bells were ringing, Allan c. Poems 215 I c. him Crichton — for he seem'd Poems 231 There, enter'd an old hostel, c. mine host Pr. 24 Above an entry : riding in, we c. Pr. 27 C. us : we left the walks ; we mixt with those Pr. 53 Girl after girl was c. to trial . Pr. 86 For Psyche, but she was not there ; she c. Pr. 86 She stretch'd her arms and c. Pr. 100 — feigning pique at what she c. Pr. 105 C. him worthy to be loved Pr. 136 Their hands, and c. them dear deliverers Pr. 141 Throbb'd thunder thro' the palace floors, or c. Pr. 162 They c. me fool, they c. me child hi M. 95 They c. me in the public squares In M. 95 — in I went, and c. old Philip out Ma. 123 And c. her like that maiden in the tale /. K. 40 Woke where he slept in the high hall, and c. /. K. 40 CALL'D Page CALL'D. Or hasty judger would have c. her /. A'. 68 Doonn, whom his shaking- vassals c. the Bull /. A". 69 And c. for flesh and wine to feed his spears I. K. 77 They c. him the great Prince and man of men /. A'. 96 Without one word. So Vivien c. herself I. K. 106 And c. herself a gilded summer fly /. K. 106 Who c. her what he c. her — all her crime /. K. 139 C. her to shelter in the hollow oak /. K. 140 Since, if 1 be what I am grossly c. /. A". 141 Of petulancy : she c. him Lord and Liege /. A'. 143 And c. him dear protector in her fright /. K. 143 Would, tho' he c. his wound a little hurt /. A". 191 — c. her song ' The Song of Love and Death ' I. K. 199 Approaching thro' the darkness, c. ; the owls I. A". 199 That ever shrieks before a death,' and c. I. K. 200 I, sometime c. the maid of Astolat I. K. 213 C. me polluted : shall I kill myself? I. K. 257 His hope he c. it ; but he never mocks I. K. 258 And c. him Father Philip E. A. 20 For Father Philip (as they c. him) E. A. 21 After the Lord has c. me she shall know E. A. 44 He c. aloud for Miriam Lane and said E. A. 46 C. to the bar, but ever c. away E. A. 54 C. all her vital spirits into each ear E. A. 61 A merry boy they c. him then Poems 304 CALLEST thou that thing a leg ? Poems 369 CALLING. To hear the dewy echoes c. Poems 148 C. thyself a little lower Poems 298 They were crying and c. Ma. 43 And chafing his faint hands, and c. to him I. K. 76 Moaning and c. out of other lands I. K. 144 But he pursued her c. ' Stay a little I. K. 182 — c. down a blessing on his head E. A. 18 — c. } here and there, about the wood E. A. 21 There came so loud a c. of the sea E. A. 49 CALLOW. The c. throstle lispeth Poems 4 Foster'd the c. eaglet Poems 106 CALM. The summer c. of golden charity Poems 7 No tranced summer c. is thine Poems 15 My shallop thro' the star-strown c. Poems 20 With his large c. eyes for the love of me Poems 61 ■ There is no joy but c.' Poems 145 The bay was oUy c. Poems 224 Achieving c, to whom was given Poems 299 Put on more c. and added suppliantly Pr. 14.7 — the world's great bridals, chaste and c. Pr. 173 C. and deep peace in this wide air In M. 16 C. and still light on yon great plain hi M. 16 C. and deep peace on this high wold In M. 16 C. as to suit a calmer grief hi M. 16 And in my heart, if c. at all In M. 16 If any c, a c. despair In M. 16 C. is the morn without a sound In M. 16 C. on the seas, and silver sleep hi M. 17 And dead c. in that noble breast In M. 17 Can c. despair and wild unrest In M. 26 The touch of change in c. or storm In M. 26 Imaginations c. and fair In M. 138 And c. that let the tapers burn hi M. 139 And tracts of c. from tempest made In M. 174 And moulded in colossal c. In M. 204 Long have I sigh'd for a c. Ma. 11 His eye was c, and suddenly she took I. K. 138 Sweet sister,' whom she answer 'd with all c. I. K. 199 Then follow'd calms E. A. 30 CALMED. Your spirit is the c. sea Poems 164 CALMER. O'erflows thy c. glances Poems 16 For c. hours to Memory's darkest hold Poems 261 CALMING itself to the long-wished-for end Ma. 58 CALMLY. And c. fell our Christmas-eve hi M. 107 CALPE. From C. unto Caucasus they sung Poems 38 CALUMETS —together : celts and c. Pr. 2 CALUMNY. Sweeter tones than c. Poems 50 CAMA. The throne of Indian C. slowly sau"d/V?2.r 117 CAME to her : without hope of change Poems 10 In marvel whence that glory c. Poems 23 Emerged, I c. upon the great Poe?ns 23 It would shrink to the earth if you c. in Poems 42 It would fall to the ground if you c. in Poems 42 But if any c. near 1 would call, and shriek Poems 61 C. two young lovers lately wed Poetns 68 The sun c. dazzling thro' the leaves Poems 68 Down she c. and found a boat Poems 70 Out upon the wharfs they c. Poems 71 There c. a sound as of the sea Poems 76 ('Twas April then,) I c. and sat Poems 87 That went and c. a thousand times Poems 88 From my swift blood that went and c. Poems 96 Hither c. at noon Poems 98 CAxME Page CAME. C. down upon my heart Poems 100 C. up from reedy Simois all alone Poems 100 Went forth to embrace him coming ere he c. Pms 100 Then to the bower they c. Poems 101 Naked they c. to that smooth-swarded bower Pms 101 The Abominable, that uninvited c. Poems 106 The panther's roar c. muffled Poems 106 They c, they cut away my tallest pines Poems 106 On corpses three-months-old at noon she c. Poems 123 Too proud to care from whence I c. Poems 126 As I c. up the valley whom think ye Poems 131 Till Charles's Wain c. out Poems 134 To die before the snowdrop c. Poems 138 There c. a sweeter token Poems 139 — up the valley c. again the music on the wind Pms 140 And up the valley c. a swell of music Poems 140 — again it c, and close beside the window-bars Pms 140 In the afternoon they c. unto a land Poems 142 The mild-eyed melancholy Lotos-eaters c. Poems 143 Many drew swords and died. Where'er I c. Poe?ns 154 Strength c. to me that equall'd my desire Poems 159 You c. to us so readily Poems 168 C. rolling on the wind Poems 177 What came of that ? ' ' You know,' said Frank Pms 190 C. on the shining levels of the lake Poems 193 And to the barge they c. Poems 198 — c. a bark that, blowing forward, bore Poems 201 C, drew your pencil from you, made those Poems 204 C. voices of the well-contented doves Poems 206 For some sweet answer, tho' no answer c. Poems 209 More musical than ever c. in one Poems 211 —while I mused c. Memory with sad eyes Poems 212 — which c. between, more sweet than each Poems 212 Then there c. a day Poems 214 This evil c. on W T illiam at the first Poems 216 Far off the farmer c. into the field Poems 216 To W T illiam : then distresses c. on him Poems 216 Dora c. and said Poems 216 — c. and said, ' Where were you yesterday Poems 217 — the morrow c, she rose and took Poems zij Remembering the day when first she c. Poems 218 — the boy's cry c. to her from the field Poems 218 — c. in : but when the boy beheld Poems 219 I never c. a-begging for myself Poems 219 — all his love c.^ back a hundredfold Poems 220 — c. again together on the king Poems 222 C. to the hammer here in March Poems 223 I went and c. Poems 232 And poodles yell'd within, and out they c. Poems 234 There c. a mystic token from the king Poems 235 — the spare chance-gift of those that c. Poems 239 As fair as my Olivia, c. Poems 246 Declare when last Olivia c. Poetns 249 — with him Albert c. on his Poems 249 — here she c. and round me play'd Poems 250 When last with throbbing heart I c. Poems 251 — c. a colour and a light Poems 270 C. out clear plates of sapphire mail Poems 289 Or if thro' lower lives I c. Poems 306 I spoke, but answer c. there none Poems 309 C. little copses climbing Poems 327 C. wet-shot alder from the wave Poems 328 C. yews, a dismal coterie Poe^ns 328 Old elms c. breaking from the vine Poe?ns 328 Cruelly c. they back to-day Poems 338 That ever c. from pipe Poems 342 — since I c. to live and learn Poems 342 I think he c. like Ganj-mede Poems 344 C. crowing over Thames Poems 345 Long since, and c. no more Poems 347 In there c. old Alice the nurse Poems 354 — he c. to look upon her Poems 361 C. in a sunlit-fall of rain Poems 362 Bare-footed c. the beggar maid Poems 365 A youth c. riding toward a palace-gate Poems 366 — from the palace c. a child of sin Poems 366 C. floating on for many a month and year Poe?ns 368 The voice grew faint : there c. a further change Pms 374 C. murmurs of her beauty from the South Pr. 17 And on the fourth I spake of why we c Pr. 21 C. running at the call, and help'd us down Pr. 27 For when we c. where lies the child Pr. 29 At break of day the College Portress c. Pr. 30 With much contempt, and c. to chivairy Pr. 36 And thus (what other way was left) I c' Pr. 40 C. flying while you sat beside the well? Pr 43 You perish) as you c, to slip away Pr. 44 They stood, so rapt, we gazing, c. a voice Pr. 45 Less welcome find among us if you c. Pr. 47 CAME C A ME. That Sheba c. to ask of Solomon ' Will wonder why they c. : but hark the bell Sat muffled like the Fates : and often c. C. furrowing all the orient into gold And so it was agreed when first they c. Page Pr. 47 Pr. Pr. Pr. Pr. Then c. these dreadful words out one by one Pr. But when your sister c. she won the heart Pr. Beat balm upon our eyelids. Hither c. Pr. And why we c. ? I fabled nothing fair Pr. He ceasing, c. a message from the Head Pr. I gazed. On a sudden my strange seizure c. Pr. And up we c. to where the river'sloped Pr. For many weary moons before we c. Pr. And o'er a bridge of pinewood crossing, c. Pr. The rosy heights c. out above the lawns Pr. How c. you here?' I told him Pr. — as we c, the crowd dividing clove Pr. 89 — c. your new friend : you began to change Pr. 90 What student c, but that you planed her path Pr. 91 — c. these wolves ; they knew her ; they endured Pr. 91 I c. to tell you ; found that you had gone Pr. 92 We gazed upon her c. a little stir Pr. 94 C. all in haste to hinder wrong Pr. 95 A man I c. to see you Pr. 97 C. in long breezes rapt from inmost south Pr. 97 Yet that I c. not all unauthorized Pr. 98 The voices murmuring. While I listen'd, c. Pr. 103 As strangely as it c. and on my spirits Pr. 104 — the touch of all mischance but c. Pr. 104 — morions, wash'd with morning as they c. Pr. 120 C. sallying thro' the gates, and caught his hair Pr. 124 He batter'd at the doors : none c. Pr. 124 With message and defiance went and c. Pr. 126 — c. a postscript dash'd across the rest Pr. 129 Like a flash the weird affection c. Pr. 131 — stroke on stroke the horse and horseman c. Pr. 134 Like summer tempest c. her tears Pr. 136 C. Psyche, sorrowing for Aglaia Pr. 137 At distance follow'd": so they came : anon Pr. 140 Some cowl'd, and some bare-headed, on they c. Pr. 140 When first she c, all flush'd you said to me Pr. 149 — but these men c. to woo Pr. 153 Her brother c. : the king her father charm'd Pr. 154 Hung round the sick : the maidens c. Pr. 158 — waste it seem'd and vain : till down she c. Pr. 159 Melissa c. : for Blanche had gone Pr. 160 When Cyril pleaded, Ida c. behind Pr. 161 Then c. a change : for sometimes I would catch Pr. 162 C. round my wrist, and tears upon my hand Pr. 164 Than in her mould that other, when she c. Pr. 166 — c. a minute's pause, and Walter said Pr. 177 And looking back to whence I c. In M. 39 The path we c. by, thorn and flower In M. 68 AH winds that roam the twilight c. In M. 109 This truth c. borne with bier and pall In M. 118 And c. on that which is, and caught In M. 141 And laid them : thus he c. at length In M. 143 And out of darkness c. the hands In M. 193 Some thrice three years : they went and c. In M. 204 TiD at last when the morning c. Ma. 26 C. out of her pitying womanhood Ma. 29 She c. to the village church Ma. 33 Last week c. one to the county town Ma. 38 However she c. to be so allied Ma. 48 The snow-limb'd Eve from whom she c. Ma. 60 Let no one ask me how it c. to pass Ma. 61 — at last, when each c. home Ma. 67 He c. with the babe-faced lord Ma. 86 That never c. from on high Ma. 90 C. glimmering thro' the laurels Ma. 100 Not that gray old wolf, for he c. not. back Ma. 105 Everything c. to be known Ma. 105 I know not whether he c. in the Hanover ship Ma. 106 For here I c, twenty years back — the week Ma. 121 ■ — evermore her father c. across Ma. 123 ' Have you not heard?' said Katie, ' we c. back Ma. 129 Remember how we c. at last C. thro' the jaws of Death Before him c. a forester of Dean Remembering when first he c. on her C. quickly flashing thro' the shallow ford And thither c. Geraint, and underneath And out of town and valley c. a noise C. forward with the helmet yet in hand Yet spoke together, c. again with one And thither c. the twain, and when Geraint And ladies c, and by and by the town There c. a clapping as of phantom hands And therewithal one c. and seized on her 46 Ma. 157 Ma. 170 I.K. 8 I.K. 8 I.K. 9 I.K *3 I.K. 14 I.K. 16 I.K. 21 I.K. 29 I.K. 3° I.K. 3i I.K. 36 CAME CAME, —thought, * they will not see me,' c. /. C. one with this and laid it in my hand /. I c. among you here so suddenly I. Remembering how first he c. on her /. There c. a fair-hair'd vouth, that in his hand /. /. /. /. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. Page K. 36 *". 37 He, when the fair-hair'd youth c. by h Betwixt them, c. upon him, and he sigh'd Crost and c. near, lifted adoring eyes I thought, but that your father c. between Suddenly c, and at his side all pale She rested, and her desolation c. But ere he c, like one that hails a ship C. riding with a hundred lances up And out of her there c. a power upon him Neigh'd with all gladness as they c, and C. purer pleasure unto mortal kind I should not less have killed him. And you c. /. Have turn'd to tyrants when they c. to power)/. They said a light c. from her when she moved /. And vanish'd, and his book c. down to me ' /. C. to her old perch back, and settled there /. Her eyes and neck glittering went and c. /. How c. the lily maid by that good shield? 'I. And Arthur c.,.and labouring up the pass /. — Arthur, when none knew from whence he c. /. Then c. an old, dumb, myriad-wrinkled man /. Died from his lips, across him c. a cloud /. Past inward, as she c. from out the tower /. Then c. on him a sort of sacred fear /. C. round their great Pendragon, saying to /. Then c. the hermit out and bare him in /. C. not to us, of us to claim the prize /. And, while he gazed wonderingly at her, c. /. And c. at last, tho' late, to Astolat /. C. suddenly on the Queen with the sharp I. C. on her brother with a happy face /. She c. before Sir Lancelot, for she thought /. Then c. her father, saying in low tones /. Then c. her brethren, saying, ' Peace to thee /. Then c. the fine Gawain and wonder'd at her /. C. girt with knights : then turn'd the /. And Lancelot later c. and mused at her I. In the dead night, grim faces c. and went /. And when she c. to Almesbury she spake I. C, that Sir Modred had usurp'd the realm /. Her thought when first she c.,wept the sad /. And when at last he c. to Camelot /. For there was no man knew from whence he c. /. There c. a day as still as heaven, and then /. In which she saw him first, when Lancelot c. /. C. to that point, when first she saw the King 7". Pause by her ; then c. silence, then a voice /. Then c. the sin of Tristram and Isolt /. Then c. thy shameful sin with Lancelot /. Until it c. a kingdom's curse with thee /. — two years after c. a boy E. Then c. a change, as all things human change E. C, for he knew the man and valued him E. — c. on Annie pale . E. Whatever c. to him : and then he said E. But when the last of those last moments c. E. — the day that Enoch mentioned c. E. —news which never c. E. ' Annie, I c. to ask a favour of you ' E. 'I c. to speak to you of what hewish'd E. — the favour that I c. to ask ' E. — the woman when he c. upon her E. • — no news of Enoch c. E. I know not when it first c. there E. Up c. the children laden with their spoil E. The breath of heaven c. continually E. — the new mother c. about her heart E. Till hard upon the cry of ' breakers ' c. E. The sunny and rainy seasons c. and went E. C. suddenly to an end E. C. from his county, or could answer him E. Flared on him, and he c. upon the place E. c. out upon the waste E. There c. so loud a calling of the sea E. C. from a grizzled cripple E. With half a score of swarthy faces c. E. And most on Edith : like a storm he c. E. The next day c. a neighbour E. Like echoes from beyond a hollow, c. E. The vintage — when this Aylmer c. of age E. C. at the moment Leolin's emissary E. But passionately restless c. and went E. — c. upon him half-arisen from sleep E. And when he c. again, his flock believed E. K. K. K. K. K. K. K 62 K. 72 45 56 56 59 73 74 74 78 86 K. K. K. K. K. K. K. 90 K. 17.0 K. 123 K. 127 K. 141 K. 144 K. 148 K. 149 K. 149 ^.156 K. 164 K. 165 K. 165 ^.174 K. 174 K. 175 £179 K. 179 K. 185 K. 188 K. 194 K. 198 K. 198 K 213 K. 213 K. 213 K. 228 K. 232 K- 233 K. 234 ^.238 K. 240 K. 240 K. 245 K. 246 ^.247 K. 250 K 250 K. 253 A. 6 A. 6 A. 7 A. 9 A. 11 A. 12 A. 14 A. 15 A. 16 A. 17 A. 18 A. 19 A. 20 A. 22 A. CAME Page CAME. — c a Lord in no wise like to Baal E. A. 84 — when the second Christmas came E. A. 94 C, with a month's leave given them E. A. 96 — forth they c. and paced the shore E. A. 97 Said ' trust him not ; ' but after, when I c. E. A. 100 ' It c.,' she said, ' by working- in the mines ' E. A. 102 C. men and women in dark clusters E. A. 108 — c. but from the breaking of a glass E. A. 109 We c. to warmer waves, and deep E. A. 146 Again to colder climes we c. E. A. 150 Up their c. a flower E. A. 152 Wheresoe'er he c. Select. 37 Joyful c. his speech Select. 38 And Fancy c. and at her pillow sat Select. 196 A moment c. the tenderness of tears Select. 197 CAMELOT. Flowing down to Camelot Poems 65 To many-towered C. Poe??is 65 Skimming down to C. Poems 66 Down to tower'd C. Poems 66 To look down to C. Poems 67 Goes by to tower'd C. Poems &j Winding down to C. Poems 67 And music, went to C. Poems 68 As he rode down to C. Poems 68, 69 Did she look to C. Poems 70 Over tower'd C. Poems 70 She look'd down to C. Poems 70 Turn'd to tower'd C. Poems 71 She floated down to C. Poems 71 Silent into C. Poems 71 All the knights at C. Poems 72 Of C, as in the days that were Poems 192 Shot thro' the lists at C. Poe?ns 199 That eat at Arthur's hall at C. /. K. 24 A-down the crystal dykes at C. /. K. 70 In Arthur's arras hall at C. /. K. 106 That at Caerleon ; this at C. /. K. 148 At C, and when the time drew nigh /. K. 151 Shall I appear, O queen, at C, I /. K. 154 At C. for the diamond, ask me not /. K. 157 To ride to C. with this noble knight /. K. 158 Not far from C, now for forty years /. K. 168 By C. in the meadow, let his eyes / K. 169 Glanced at and cried ' What news from C. /. K. 179 To C. , and before the city-gates /. K. 188 His own far blood, which dwelt at C. /. K. 189 At C, ere the coming of the Queen ' /. K. 236 And when at last he came to C. /. K. 238 And in thy bowers of C. or of Usk /. K. 251 CAMELS. — themselves would worship ;c.knelt/. K. 123 CAMEST. — thou c. with the morning mist Poems 26 Whilome thou c. with the morning mist Poems 27 O friend, who c. to thy goal Pa M. 178 CAMP. — the courts, the camps, the schools Poems 370 — at her head a follower of the c. Pr. no Thro' all the c. and inward raced the scouts Pr. 112 Back rode we to my father's c, and found Pr. 124 ' See that there be no traitors in your c. Pr. 129 King, c, and college turn'd to hollow shows Pr. 131 Prince, to the c, and in the Kings own ear /. K. 88 — when they reach'd the c. the King himself /. K. 92 CAMPAXILI. What slender c. grew Ma. 154 CAMULODUXE. —near the colony C. E. A. 169 Roman bantling, to the colony C. E. A. 170 — to their colony C. E. A. 170 London, Verulam, C. E. A. 173 C AX. 'Tis but a steward of the c. Poems 345 The truth, that flies the flowing c. Pee-:: $46 Fill the cup, and fill the c. Poems 370, 371, 374 Fill the c, and fill the cup Poems 371, 373 CAXAL. The boat-head down a broad c. Poems 20 Still onward ; and the clear c. Poems 21 CAXCELL'D. — c. a sense misused Poems 287 Is c. in the world of sense ? ' Poems 291 Their c. Babels ; tho' the rough kex break Pr. 78 And c. nature's best In M. 100 Was c, stricken thro' with doubt In M. 141 CAXCERS Cured lameness, Daisies, c. Poems 239 CAXDLE-LIGHT. —with solemn rites by c. Pr. 122 CANE. — court-Galen poised his gilt-head c. Pr. 16 CANKER. Xo lapse of moons can c. Love In M. 43 As but the c. of the brain In .11. 136 CAXKER'D. — from some worm-c. homily Poems 62 CANNING Or stow'd (when classic C. died) Pms 343 CAXXOX. A c. : Echo answer'd in her sleep Pr. 4 — cobweb woven across the cannon's throat Ma. 113 Nor the c. -bullet rust on a slothful shore Ma. 113 — the volleying c. thunder his loss JIa 141 Roll of c. and clash of arms Ma. 144 CARE Page CAXXOX. Your cannons moulder on the Ma. 147 C. in front of them Ma. i63 C. to left of them Ma. 168, 169 C. to right of them Ma. 168, 169 C. behind them Ma. 170 CANONIZED. Half-c. by all that look'd on Pr. 16 CAXOPUS. Lamps which outburn'd C. Poems 156 CAXOPY. And in the costly c. o'er him set /. K. 170 CAXTIXG. Let the c. liar pack Poems 370 CAXVAS. — lanes and walls of c, led Pr. 107 Compell'd thy c, and my prayer In M. 28 In the north her c. flowing Select. 38 CANVASS. — our narrow world must c. it E. A. 91 And so last night she fell to c. you Pr. 56 CAXYASSD. He c. human mysteries Poems 37 CAXZOXET. A rogue of canzonets and Pr. 81 CAP. Her c. blew off, her gown blew up Poems 186 I do not hear the bells upon my c. Poents 232 Of that c. upon her brows Poems 371 A c. of Tyrol borrow'd from the hall Pr. 1:6 He, knightlike in his c. instead of casque Pr. 106 Is c. and bells for a fool Ma. 29 CAPABILITIES. My c. of love In M. 118 CAPABLE, —neither c. of lies E. A. 14 CAPACIOUS. —God— in whose c. hall E. A. 52 CAPE. By grassy capes with fuller sound Poems 362 — over lake and lawn, and isles and capes Poems 366 With fold to fold, of mountain or of c. Pr. 157 That haunt the dusk, with ermine capes In M. 139 Or olive-hoary c. in ocean Ma. 155 Only 3 r ou would not pass beyond the c. /. K. 201 — a long tumble about the C. E. A. 29 We past long lines of Xorthern capes E. A. 146 So they past by capes and islands Select. 38 CAPER. Making a roan horse c. and curvet /. K. 188 CAPTAIX. Of captains and of kings The c. of my dreams Communing with his captains of the war The fresh young captains flash'd their Three captains out : nor ever had I seen More, more, for honour : every c. waits To a lord, a c, a padded shape Foremost c. of his time With those deep voices our dead c. taught His captain's-ear has heard them boom He got it ; for their c. after fight — without the captain's knowledge Now mate is blind and c. lame Seem'd the Captain's mood Brave the C. was : the seamen Then the Captain's colour heighten'd Crew and C. lie CAPTIVE. Your c, yet my father wills not The c. void of noble rage You cage a buxom c. here and there CAR. The towering c, the sable steeds Stood by their cars, waiting the throned CARC AX'ET. Make a c. of rays CARCASE. — make the c. a skeleton CARD. Insipid as the Queen upon a c. CARE. And should your greatness and the c. Pms v. Thee nor carketh c. nor slander Poe?ns 49 And little other c. hath she Poe?ns 67 I c. not what the sects may brawl Poems 121 Too proud to c. from whence I came Poe?ns 126 — cruel-hearted, but I c. not what they say Poems 131 I c. not if I go to-day Poems 140 Grows green and broad, and takes no c. Poe??is 145 ' Alas ! alas ! ' a low voice full of c. — took with c, and kneeling on one knee — if 3 t ou c. indeed to listen, hear — be happy ! Wherefore should I c. Come, C. and Pleasure, Hope and Pain To choose your own you did not c. And that for which I c. to live Thy c. is, under polish'd tins What c. I for any name ? I c. no longer, being all unblest And takes a lady's finger with all c. We rose, and each by other drest with c. She had the c. of Lady Ida's youth Their monstrous idols, c. not while we hear — either she will die from want of c. — 'sdeath ! myself, what c. I, war or no — right or wrong, I c. not — out of long frustration of her c. Or foxlike in the vine : nor cares to walk She mental breadth, nor fail in childward c. Which once she foster'd up with c. 47 Poems 157 Poems 161 Pr. 18 Pr. i:3 Pr. T20 Pr. 123 Ma. 139 Ma. 141 Ma. 141 E. A. 63 E. A. 88 E. A. 150 Select. 37 Select. 37 Select. 38 Select. 39 Pr. 12X I. K. 121 Ma. 140 E. A. 178 Poems 35 E. A. 170 E. A. Poems 160 Poems 197 Poems 262 Poems 276 Poems 315 Poems 323 Poems 324 Poems 348 Poems 369 Poems 376 Pr. 10 Pr. 55 Pr. 58 Pr. 78 Pr. in Pr. 121 Pr. 122 Pr. 162 Pr. 168 Pr. 172 In M. 10 CARE CARE. Is this the end of all my c. ?' Nor cares to fix itself to form If any c. for what is here Her c. is not to part and prove And falling with my weight of cares I c. for nothing, all shall go I c. not in these fading days sound to rout the brood of cares A song that slights the coming c. Let cares that petty shadows cast Ring out the want, the c, the sin And if the song were full of c. Shall I not take c. of all that I think But now shine on, and what c. I C. not thou to reply Him who cares not to be great Come, when no graver cares employ Forgetful of his princedom and its cares And then he thought, ' In spite of all my c. ' And c. not for the cost ; the cost is mine ' Nor did I c. or dare to speak with you He cares not for me : only here to-day However mild he seems at home, nor cares Told him that her fine c. had saved his life 'No, no,' she cried, ' I c. not to be wife 1 c. not howsoever great he be That I the King should greatly c. to live Not greatly c. to lose ; but rather think Cast all vour cares on God With all a mother's c. — no kin.no c. — save my c. for you and yours * His head is low, and no man cares for him But if my children c. to see me dead Would c. no more for Leolin's walking with Slight was his answer, ' Well — I c. not for it ' I c. not for it either ; ' and he said The common c. whom no one cared for —the shallow cares of fifty years And what do I c. for Jane — wealthy men who c. not how they give — shall we c. to be pitiful? Nor cares to lisp in love's delicious creeds She still would take the praise and c. no Nor c. to sit beside her where she sits CARED. Which you had hardly c. to see — nor c. to hear Nor c. for seed or scion He c. not for the affection of the house — some they c. not : till a clamour grew The laces toward her babe ; but she nor c. Which little c. for fades not yet Nor c. the serpent at thy side Now I thought that she c. for me Nor c. a broken egg-shell for her lord Was c. as much for as a summer shoAver Broke on the mountain and I c. not for it I c. not for it : a single misty star Besought him, supplicating, if he c. — mother c. for it C. not to look on any human face If question'd, aught of what he c. to know Held his head high, and c. for no man What c. he ? what, if other or the same ? I c. not for it. O pardon me Nor greatly c. to lose, her hold on life The common care whom no one c. for Nor ever c. to better his own kind CAREFUL. But these, tho' fed with c. dirt So c. of the type she seems 'So c. of the type?' but no At you, so c. of the right Help'd by the mother's c. hand and eye As c. robins eye the delver's toil As c. robins eye the delver's toil Till this was ended, and his c. hand All in quantity, c. of my motion CAREFULLER. A c. in peril CARELESS tenants they ! — like Gods together, c. of mankind — for some three c. moons Rapt in her song, and c. of the snare To troll a c, c. tavern-catch So c. of the single life I seem to cast a c. eye And uses, c. of the rest ; but Fame Then answer'd Merlin c. of her words And Merlin answer'd c. of her charge And Enoch's comrade, c. of himself CASEMENT Page InM. 18 In M. 52 In M. 59 In M. 70 InM. 78 InM. 80 In M. 103 In M. 131 In M. 149 hi M. 161 hi M. 164 In M. 194 Ma. 52 Ma. 60 Ma. 94 Ma. 148 Ma. 161 I.K. 4 I.K. 7 I.K. 61 /. K. 92 /. K. 154 /. K. 163 /. K. 192 /. K. 195 /. K. 203 /. K. 248 /. K. 251 E. A. 13 E. A. 15 E. A. 23 E. A. 23 E.A. 46 E. A. 48 E.A. 57 E.A. 63 E.A. 64 E.A. 86 E.A. 93 E. A. 120 E. A. 140 E. A. 170 Select. 196 Select. 197 Select. 197 Poenis 127 Poems 235 Poejns 326 Pr. 16 Pr. 99 Pr. 144 hi M. 11 In M. 170 Ma. 50 I.K. 65 I.K. 73 /. K. 119 /. K. 120 E.A. 9 E.A. 15 E.A. 16 E. A. 36 E. A. 46 E.A. 54 E.A. 63 E. A. 80 E. A. 86 E. A. 106 Poems 330 InM. 78 InM. 80 Ma. 162 I.K. 39 /. K. 41 I.K. 68 E. A. 10 E. A. 175 E.A. 4 Poems 45 Poems 148 Poems 203 Pr. 26 Pr. 82 In M. 78 In M. 174 /. K. 117 /. K. 130 /. K- 133 E.A. 31 Page E - A ; 73 E. A. 80 Ma. 162 Poems 252 /. K. 113 Poems 260 Ma. CARELESS. Tears, and the c. rain of Where c. of the household faces near All round a c.-order'd garden CARESS. Thrice-happy he that may c. C. her : let her feel herself forgiven To those caresses, when a hundred times Or for chilling his caresses CARESS'D, or chidden by the dainty hand Select. 106 CAREWORN. C. and wan E. A. 27 CARIAN. The C. Artemisia strong in war Pr. 33 CARING. No longer c. to embalm In M. 204 He not for his own self c. but her E. A. 10 C ARKETH. Thee nor c. care nor slander Poems 49 CARNATION. And many a rose-c. feed hi M. 153 CARNIVAL. Held c. at will, and flying struck Pr. 161 Poems Poems 48 Poems 51 Poems 62 Poems 71 Poems 73 Poems 160 Poems 200 Poems 324 In M. 157 Poems 130 44 85 42 CAROL, —merrily c. the gales Flow'd forth on a c. free and bold The balm-cricket carols clear And if I should c. aloud from aloft Heard a c, mournful, holy She, as her c. sadder grew Losing her c. I stood "pensively — fluting a wild c. ere her death In c, every bud to flower The hall with harp and c. rang CAROLINE, —there's Kate and C. CAROLLING — his horse, and c. as he went /. K. 183 CAROUSE. — ' O Soul, make merry and c. Poems 112 Where long and largely we c. Poems 343 CARP. Near that old home, a pool of golden c. /. K. 35 CARPENTER. Cooper he was and c. E.A. ' Born of a village girl, carpenter's son E. A. CARRIAGE. — as I found when her c. past Ma. CARRIER. As light as c. -birds in air In M. CARRIED, —you see me 0. out from the Poems 137 CARRION. For whom the c. vulture waits Poems 351 And many weeks a troop of c. crows /. K. 124 Blacken round the Roman c. E. A. 170 CARRY. — the king of them all would c. me Poems 61 That c. kings in castles, bow'd black knees /. K. 123 CART. — in the go-c. Patience ! Give it time Pr. 181 CARVE. — may c. a shrine about my dust Poems 243 As far as might be, to c. out Poems 295 My good blade carves the casques of men Poems 333 — monstrous males that c. the living hound Pr. 70 — Love, tho' Love were of the grossest, carves /. K. 117 CARVED out of Nature for itself Poems 118 A million wrinkles c. his skin Poems 118 Who'd serve the state ? for if I c. my name Poems 223 Say thou, whereon I c. her name Poems 246 But thou, whereon I c. her name Poems 249 I c. with many vows Poejns 251 But c. cross-pipes, and underneath Poems 349 No c. cross-bones, the types of Death Poems 349 C. stones of the abbey-ruin in the park Pr. 2 Wept over her, c. in stone Ma. 33 Had c. himself a knightly shield of wood /. K 118 C. of one emerald center'd in a sun I. K. 162 Tho' c. and cut, and half the pearls away /. K. 189 CARVEN. Right to the c. cedarn doors Poems 23 Make prisms in every c. glass Poems 314 Set in the heart of the c. gloom Ma 50 So saying from the c. flower above /. K 176 Be c, and her lily in her hand /. K. 217 At times a c. craft would shoot E. A. 147 And from the c.-work behind him crept /. A". 170 CARYATIDS. And science, C, lifted up Pr. 85 CASCINE. What drives about the fresh C. Ma. 156 CASE. And warm'd in crystal cases Poems 329 An idle c. ? If Death were seen In M. 55 The c. of his patient Ma. 104 A c. of silk, and braided thereupon /. K. 147 Stript off the c, and read the naked shield /. K. 148 His very shield was gone ; only the c. I. K. 198 Stript off the c, and gave the naked shield I. K. 198 The silken c. with braided blazonings I. K. 207 CASEMENT. Or at the c. seen her stand? Poems 66 And all the c. darken'd there Poems 90 And fires your narrow c. glass Poejns 95 — chancel-c, and upon that grave of mine Poejns 135 As one that from a c. leans his head Poems 160 — its casements bedded, and its walls Poenis 222 Many a night from yonder ivied c. Poems 268 The c, and the light increased Poenis 308 Flew over roof and c. Poejns 344 The c. slowly grows a glimmering square Pr. 77 All night has the c. jessamine stirr'd Ma. 77 — he clamour'd from a c. 'run ' Ma. 121 Beat thro' the blindless c. of the room /. A". 4 CASEMENT Page CASEMENT. Clear thro' the open c. of the A A'. 18 In Arthur's c. glimmer'd chastely down I. A". 132 Unclasping flung the c. back, and look'd I. A". 198 And, thro' the c. standing wide for heat A A'. 211 The c. ; ' peradventure ' so she thought /. K. 255 CASEMENT-CURTAIN. — drew her c. by Poems 10 CASEMENT-EDGE, —morning, on the c. Poems 88 CASK. — casks were fill'd they took aboard E. A. 35 CASQUE. — loosed the shatter'd c. Poems 198 My good blade carves the casques of men Poems 333 He, knightlike in his cap instead of c. Pr. 106 In on the lists, and there unlaced my c. Pr. 137 But touch'd it unawares : jangling, the c. I. K. 66 Led to the caves : there first she saw the c. I. K. 189 CASSANDRA. Talk with the wild C. Poems 108 CASSIA, —-turning round a c, full in view Poems 52 CASSIOPEIA, —with C, or the enthroned Pr. 97 CASSIVELAUN. —than the bride of C. A A'. 40 —hear it, Spirit of C. E. A. 170 CAST. About a stone-c. from the wall Poems 10 Low on her knees herself she c. Poems 74 I c. me "down, nor thought of you Poems 87 ' This was c. upon the board Poems 101 And c. the golden fruit upon the board Poems 106 That are c. in gentle mould Poems 171 C. down her eyes, and in her throat Poems 173 'And if indeed I c. the brand away Poems 194 So Dora c. her eyes upon the ground Poe?ns 217 -who would c. and balance at a desk Poems 222 — since I first could c. a shade Poems 248 ' Let me not c. in endless shade Poe?ns 289 Had c. upon its crusty side Poems 343 Because he c. no shadow, had foretold Pr. 15 Ladies, in entering here, to c. and fling Pr. 32 And eddied into suns, that wheeling c. Pr. 35 For Psyche's child to c. it from the doors Pr. 86 Half-drooping from her, turn'd her face and c. Pr. 93 Or c. as rubbish to the void In M. 76 And if thou c. thine eyes below hi M. 86 Tho' if an eye that's downward c. In M. 87 To chances where our lots were c. In M. 136 Let cares that petty shadows c. In M. 161 I seem to c. a careless eye In M. 174 Not only cunning casts in clay In M. 186 Who, moving ,c. the coverlet aside /- K. 5 At this she c. her eyes upon her dress I. K. 33 And c. it on the mixen that it die ' /. K. 36 (No reason given her) she could c. aside /. AT". 43 And ever in her mind she c. about I. K. 48 And c. him and the bier in which he lay I. K. 76 Against the pavement, c. his lance aside I. K. 77 And this poor gown I will not c. aside /. K. 83 —bid me c. it. I have griefs enough I. K. 83 And kiss'd her climbing, and she c. her arms /. K. 86 — blameless King went forth and c. his eyes /. AT. 95 — children c. their pins and nails, and cry I. K. 116 The gentle wizard c. a shielding arm I. K. 141 For if his own knight c. him down, he laughs A K. 163 And stay'd ; and c. his eyes on fair Elaine I. K. 180 Leaf after leaf, and tore, and c. them off I. K. 209 And c. him as a worm upon the way I. K. 227 C. all your cares on God E. A. 13 C. his strong arms about his drooping wife E. A. 13 Repeated muttering ' c. away and lost ' E. A. 39 ' Enoch, poor man, was c. away and lost ' E. A. 39 Which Leolin open'd, she c. back upon him E. A. 66 — they that c. her spirit into flesh E. A. 76 — c. the curtains of their seat aside E. A. 92 Lies the hawk's c. E. A. 95 Shall Babylon be c. into the sea E. A. 97 He c. his body, and on we swept E. A. 149 I c. to earth a seed E. A. 152 Wan Sculptor weepest thou to take the c. Select. 197 CAST A LIES. I led you then to all the C. Pr. 89 CASTE. Which stamps the c. of Vere de Vere Pms 127 CASTING. — sunders ghosts and shadow-c. I. AT. 126 CASTLE. She stood upon the c. wall Poems 54 Atween me and the c. wall _ Poems 54 Boat, island, ruins of a c, built Poems 230 See the lordly castles stand Poems 358 The lady of three castles in that land Pr. 19 Shall those three castles patch my tatter'd coat?/V. 50 For dear are those three castles to my wants Pr. 50 Are castles shadows ? Three of them? Is she /V. 50 The splendour falls on c. walls Pr. 74 Seeing his gewgaw c. shine Ma. 37 To that fair port below the c. Ma. 158 And on one side a c. in decay I. K. 13 Then rode Geraint into the c. court I. K. 17 4 CAUGHT Page CASTLE. And while he waited in the c. A A". 18 And keeps me in this ruinous c. here I. K. 25 That carry Kings in castles, bow'd black knees A K. 123 Ran to the C. of Astolat, he saw I. K. 156 Moving to meet him in the c. court I. K. 156 By c. Gurnion where the glorious King A A". 162 And fly to my strong c. overseas A K. 231 Round that strong c. where he holds the I. K. 235 — castles of dissolving sand E. A. 2 The c.-well, belike; and then I said I. K. 158 CASUAL. No c. mistress, but a wife In M. 84 CASUALTY. Howbeit ourself, foreseeing c. Pr. 71 CAT. When cats run home and light is come Poems 17 Then yelp'd the cur and yawl'd the c. Poems 185 At first like dove and dove, were c. and dog Poems 227 Shot sidelong daggers at us, a tiger-c. Pr. 52 Her gay-furr'd cats a painted fantasy Pr. 64 Ida by the throne : the two great cats Pr. 155 Within the hearing of c. or mouse Ma. 105 CATACOMBS. In vaults and c, they fell In M. 83 CATALEPSY, —his beard and mutter'd ' c.' Pr. 16 CATAPULTS. Your cities into shards with c. Pr. 114 CATARACT. — c. seas that snap Ma. 90 In c. after c. to the sea Poems 98 The snowy peak, and snow-white c. Poems 106 — ocean-ridges roaring into cataracts Poems 268 Dash'd downward in a c. Poems 319 Beyond the darkness and the c. Poems 368 To plunge in c, shattering on black blocks Pr. 69 And the wild c. leaps in glory Pr. 74 The c. and the tumult and the kings Pr. 103 Set in a c. on an island-crag Pr. 125 The c. flashing from the bridge In M. 98 All thro' the crash of the near c. hears A K. 55 — vast sea-cataracts E. A. 99 C. brooks to the ocean run _ E. A. 158 CATCH. "Whereof I c. the issue, as I hear Poems 107 C. me who can, and make the catcher Poems 262 C. the wild goat by the hair Poems 282 To troll a careless, careless tavern-c. Pr. 82 To c. a dragon in a cherry net Pr. 115 Then came a change : for sometimes I would c. Pr. 162 Or reach a hand thro' time to c. In M. 1 And c. at every mountain head In M. 209 Prickle my skin and c. my breath Ma. 51 C. not my breath Ma. 55 To c. a friend of mine one stormy day Ma. 107 To c. a lothly plume falln from the wing A K. 131 CATCHER. — can, and make the c. crown'd Poems 262 CATCHING. Seem'd c. at a rootless thorn A K. 66 CATERPILLAR, —the colewort a green c. A K. 227 CAT-FOOTED thro' the town and half in dread Pr. 20 CATHAY, —of Europe than a cj^cle of C. Poems 283 CATHEDRAL, —by some c, thro' the door Pms 158 Of waning lime the gray c. towers Poems 211 — in the vast c. leave him Ma. 152 — huge c. fronts of every age E. A. 107 CATHREGONION. And up in Agned C. too A AT. 163 CATIEUCHLANIAN. Shout Icenian, C. E. A. 172 Hear Icenian, C. E. A. 169 — the Gods have answer'd, C, Trinobant E. A. 170 CATO. A dwarf-like C. cower'd Pr. 164 CATSPAW. Made Him his c. and the Cross E. A. 106 CATTLE. The c. huddled on the lea In M. 24 CATULLUS. Thro' this metrification of C. E. A. 173 All composed in a metre of C. E. A. 175 CAUCASIAN. — the supreme C. mind Poems 118 — our Caucasians let themselves be sold E. A. 69 CAUGHT. The eddying of her garments c. Poems 27 And there a vision c. my eye Poems 88 C. in the frozen palms of Spring Poems 167 She c. the white goose by the leg Poems 184 She dropt the goose, and c. the pelf Poems 184 — c. him by the hilt and brandish'd him Poems 196, 197 — flowering high, the last night's gale had c.Poems 207 — he c. the younker tickling trout Poems 226 C. injla^rante — what's the Latin word ? Poems 226 Thou wouldst have c. me up into thy rest ' Poejns 236 Abaddon and Asmodeus c. at me Poems 242 C. up the whole of love and utter'd it Poems 261 Like truths of Science waiting to be c. Poems 262 The page has c. her hand in his Poems 314 C. each other with wild grimaces Poems 367 C. the sparkles, and in circles Poems 367 And c. the blossom of the flying terms Pr. 9 Mid-channel. Right on this we drove and c. Pr. 84 — the flood drew : yet I c. her Pr. 84 — falling on my face was c. and known Pr. 88 Half-naked as if c. at once from bed Pr. 89 49 CAUGHT Page CAUGHT. Kneeling-, I gave it, which she c. Pr. 99 Like tender things that being c. feign death Pr. 112 -c. within the record of her wrongs Pr. 114 Came sallying thro' the gates, and c. his hair Pr. 124 They made him wild : not less one glance he c. Pr. 124 And Fancy light from Fancy c. In M. 39 And c. once more the distant shout In M. 126 And came on that which is, and c. In M. 141 C. and cuff'd by the gale Ma. 25 heart of stone, are you flesh, and c. Ma. 30 — how often I c. her with eyes all wet Ma. 65 Old Philip ; all about the fields you c. Ma. 120 C. at the hilt, as to abolish him /. K. 12 To follow, strode a stride, but Yniol c. /. K. 21 And Edyrn's men hade, them in their flight I. K. 34 Her by both hands he c, and sweetly said I. K. 42 C. in a great old tyrant spider's web I. K. 106 "Where one of Satan's shepherdesses c. I. K. 133 — down the shingly scaur he plunged and c. I. K. 150 The heathen c. and reft him of his tongue I. K. 161 — my house, and him they c. and maim'd I. K. 161 Hurt in the side,' whereat she c. her breath I. K. 179 Thro' all his future : but now hastily c. E. A. 14 C. at his hand and wrung it passionately E. A. 19 C. at and ever miss'd it, and they laugh d E. A. 41 That great pock-pitten fellow had been c. 2 E. A. 64 C. in a burst of unexpected storm E. A. 66 C. the shrill salt, and sheer'd the gale E. A. 145 And reach'd the ship and c. the rope E. A. 155 CAUSE. To embattail and to wall about thy c. Pms 62 This woman was the c. Poems 154 That only love were c. enough for praise ' Poems 207 In some good c, not in mine own Poems 296 Nor in a merely selfish c. Poems 296 The woman's c. ' Not more than now,' she said Pr. 62 — falling, protomartyr of our c. Pr. 100 — twice I sought to plead my c. Pr. 103 Parted from her — betray'd her c. and mine Pr. 111 Stood for her c, and flung defiance down Pr. 116 Our own detention, why, the causes weigh'd Pr. 118 No more, and in our noble sister's c? *" Pr. 123 The sole men to be mingled with our c. Pr. 108 Is not our c. pure ? and whereas I know Pr. 128 — when our side was vanquish'd and my c. Pr. 137 Champion'd our c. and won it with a day Pr. 139 The brethren of our blood and c. Pr. 140 — dream thy c. embraced in mine Pr. 146 She pray'd me not to judge their c. from her Pr. 170 The woman's c. is man's : they rise or sink Pr. 171 With such compelling c. to grieve In M. 47 Ring out a slowly dying c. In M. 163 Whether war be a c. or a consequence? Ma. 38 1 cleaved to a c. that I felt to be pure and true)Ma. 113 We have proved we have hearts in a c. Ma. 115 What c. of quarrel? None, she said, no c. Ma. 122 James had no c; but when I prest the c. Ma. 122 Am I the c, I the poor c. that men I. K. 5 I am the c. because I dare not speak I. K. 5 And answer'd,' Graver c. than yours is mine I. K. 17 ' Fair and dear cousin, you that most had c. I. K. 89 Yourself were first the blameless c. to make /. K. 89 — made her good man jealous with good c. I. K. 125 Some c. had kept him sunder'd from his wife I. K. 131 Could call him the main c. of all their crime I. K. 135 But little c. for laughter : his own kin I. K. 178 No a, not willingly, for such a love I. K. 215 For hither had she fled, her c. of flight I. K. 225 — most have c. to sorrow for her E. A. 86 His object lives : more c. to weep have I Select. 197 CAUVE. Wi'auf the cows to c. E. A. 134 CAVALIER. A c. from off his saddle-bow Poems 152 CAVALL. And chiefly for the baying of C. I. K. 10 CAVE. — sweet is the colour of cove and c. Poems 44 Hear me, O Earth, hear me, O Hills, O Caves Pms 99 Thou, withm the c. Poems 101 — roar rock-thwarted under bellowing caves Pm* 115 — hollow c. and alley lone Poems 148 From c. to c. thro' the thick-twined vine Poems 148 Dry clash'd his harness in the icy caves Poems 198 When Lazarus left his charnel-c. In M. 50 As on a dull day in an Ocean c. /. K. 105 But into some low c. to crawl, and there /, K. 140 On massive columns, like a shorecliff c. I. K. 168 And shot red fire and shadows thro' the c. I. K. 168 — the caves : there first she saw the casque I. K. 189 Thence to the c. : so day by day she past I. K. 191 A narrow c. ran in E. A. 2 The broken base of a black tower, a c. E. A. 77 All sand and cliff and deep-inrunning c. E. A. 97 So CELL Page CAVE, —the long sea-framing caves E. A. 98 — the landward exit of the c. E. A. 101 Bore thro' the c. , and I was heaved upon it E. A. 101 —dark caves that run beneath the cliffs E. A. 101 — by rock and c. and tree E. A. 151 In caves about the dreary bay E. A. 156 CAVERN. Of c. pillars ; on the swell Poems 353 Into some still c. deep Ma. 101 Half hut, half native c. E. A. 31 CAW. The building rook 'ill c. Poems T35 CEASE. When I shall c. to be all alone Poems 77 And the wicked c. from troubling Poems 141 And c. from wanderings Poems 144 In silence : ripen, fall, and c Poems 146 When midnight bells c. ringing suddenly Poems 160 'Twere better I should c. Poems 174 Nor yet the wise of heart would c. Poems 182 Shall I c. here ? Is this enough to say Poems 211 I will not c. to grasp the hope I hold Poems 236 — c. I not to clamour and to cry Poems 237 A wither'd palsy c. to shake ? Poems 291 Than angels. C. to wail and brawl ! Poems 298 Not make him sure that he shall c. ? Poems 302 I muse on joy that will not c. Poems 336 — when he calls, and thou shalt c. Poems 349 I cannot c. to follow you, as they say Pr. 98 Nor did her father c. to press my claim Pr. 162 C. to move so near the Heavens, and c. Pr. 168 They have their day and c. to be , In M. vi. Of vacant darkness and to c. In M. 53 And those cold crypts where they shall c. In M. 83 That the man I am may c. to be 1 Ma. 40 Pass and c. to move about Ma. 99 — an iron tyranny now should bend or c. Ma. 112 And c. not from your guest, until you find' I. K. 175 I should but die the sooner ; wherefore c. I. K. 204 — is the Judge of us all when life shall c. E. A. 126 For blasts would rise and rave and c. E. A. 149 Her quiet dream of life this hour may c. E. A. 154 CEASED. She c, and Paris held the costly Poems 103 Here she c. Poems 104 But all these things have c. to be Poevis 141 She c. in tears, fallen from hope and trust Poems i6x He cried ' Look ! look ! ' Before he c. I Poems 207 A little c, but recommenced Poems 304 I c, and sat as one forlorn Poems 308 I c, and all the ladies each at each Pr. 80 Scarce had I c. when from a tamarisk near Pr. 88 She c. : the Princess answered coldly ' Good Pr. 93 I c. ; he said: ' Stubborn, but she may sit Pr. 129 C. all on tremble : piteous was the cry Pr. 144 The words are mostly mine : for when we c. Pr. 177 We c. : a gentler feeling crept In M. 49 From him who had c. to share her heart Ma. 66 Here c. the kindly mother out of breath I. K. 39 She c, and made her lithe arm round his neck I. K. 125 Scarce had she c, when out of heaven a bolt /. K. 142 He spoke and c. : the lily maid Elaine /. K. 160 She c. : her father promised ; whereupon I. K. 206 Then, when he c, in one cold passive hand I. K. 210 He c; and Miriam Lane E. A. 49 — the motion of the current c. E. A. 102 — not one moment c. to thunder E. A. 102 CEASING not, mingled, unrepress'd Poems 22 He c, came a message from the Head Pr. 63 CECILY, —with white roses, slept St C. Poems 116 CEDAR. The stately c. , tamarisks Poems 23 A c. spread his dark-green layers of shade Poems 207 Beam'd thro' the thicken'd c. in the dusk Poems 209 Of Lebanonian c. : nor should you Pr. 47 A voice by the c. tree Ma. 23 Dark c. Ma. 59 By his red c. tree Ma. 57 And bloom profuse and c. arches E. A. 175 CEDARN. Right to the carven c. doors Poems 23 And moving toward a c. cabinet I. K. 8 CEDAR-WOOD. A mile beneath the c. Poems 78 CEDE. To learn if Ida yet would c. our claim Pr. 124 CEILING. Above, the fair hall-c. stately-set Pms 118 CELEBRATE. To c. the golden prime Poems 24 CELEBRATED, —thine the deeds to be c. E. A. 171 CELIDON. Of C. the forest ; and again I. A'. 162 CELL. And wild winds bound within their c. Pms n Not less the bee would range her cells Poems 292 From cells of madness unconfined Poems 306 And weave their petty cells and die In M. 72 Suggestion to her inmost c. In M. 140 The" tiny c. is forlorn Ma. 89 —cells of madness, haunts of horror and fear Ma. in CELL Page CELL. And c. and chambers ; all were fair I. K. 168 — when thev gain'd the c. in which he slept /. K. 189 CELLARS, —in the c. merry bloated things /. K. 239 CELL'D. — two-c. heart beating, with one full Pr. 173 CELT. Jumbled together; celts and calumets Pr. 2 The blind hysterics of the C. In M. 168 Teuton or C, or whatever we be E. A. 165 CENSER. From one c, in one shrine Poems 80 The shrill bell rings, the censer swings Poems 334 CENT. And mellow metres more than c. for c. Ma. 117 CENTER'D. —of one emerald, c. in a sun /. K. 162 CENTRAL. Down from the c. fountain's flow Pms 21 From his coiled sleeps in the c. deeps Poems 61 The c. wish, until we settled there Poems 211 — nations' airy navies grappling in the c. blue Pms 278 A c. warmth diffusing bliss In M. 115 But iron dug from c. gloom In M. 184 The stillness of the c. sea In M. 191 In streaming London's c. roar Ma. 138 Now for the c. diamond and the last I. K. 151 Lightens from her own c. Hell E. A. 90 CENTRE. — toward the c. set the starry tides Pr. 35 On you, their c. : let me say but this Pr. 97 Bow-back 'd with fear : but in the c. stood Pr. 155 Whose faith has c. everywhere In M. 52 The c. of a world's desire In M. 89 And graceful. In the c. stood In M. 157 CENTRE-BITS. — arm'd, for the villainous c. Ma. 6 CENTRED. — they find a music c. in a doleful Pins 149 Most blameless is he, c. in the sphere Poems 266 My c. passion cannot move In M. 84 CENTURIES. When the c. behind me Poems 269 — thro' the c. let a people's voice Ma. 145 The years will roll into the c. I. K. 257 CENTURY. Had I lain for a c. dead Ma. 81 A maiden of our c, yet most meek Ma. 120 CEREMONY, —summers back, a kind of c. Pr. 21 Once fit for feasts of c.) and said : I. K. 16 And there be wedded with all c. I. K. 33 They twain were wedded with all c. /. K. 45 — at the mystical c. E. A. 171 CERTAIN. And with the c. step of man Poems 89 She spake some c. truths of you Poems 127 C, if knowledge bring the sword Poems 182 A c. miracle of symmetry Poems 203 No c. clearness, but at best Poems 305 Yet how should I for c. hold Poems 305 No c. air, but overtakes Poems 310 Among her women ; c. would not wed Pr. 17 A c. summer-palace which I have Pr. 22 The dip of c. strata to the North Pr. 63 A prophet c. of my prophecy /. K. 43 I am not always c. if they be alive or dead E. A. 124 CHACE. That stand within the c. Poems 245 Made-ripe m Sumner-c. Poems 246 Broad Oak of Sumner-c. Poems ztfi — overlook the c. Poems 249 — shadow Sumner-c. Poems 251 Look further thro' the c. Poems 255 CHAFE. ' Nay— yet it chafes me that I Poems 156 Began to c. as at a personal wrong E. A. 26 CHAFED, —loosed the shatter'd casque, and c. Pms 198 CHAFF. Mere c. and draff; much better Poems 190 Divorced from my experience, will be c. Pr. 93 — vacant c. well meant for grain In M. 6 —gather dust and c, and call In M. 79 CHAFING. — c. me on fire to find my bride) Pr. 23 C. his shoulder: then he cried again I. K. 47 — c. his pale hands, and calling to him I. K. 76 Now c. at his own great self defied E. A. 79 CHAIN. She loosed the c. and down she lay Poems 70 Bound by gold chains about the feet Poems 200 Link'd month to month with such a c. Poems 297 —dallied with his golden c. Poems 319 To break my c. , to shake my mane : but thou Pr. 51 — chains regret to his decease In M. 47 Two-footed, at the limit of his c. E. A. 57 CHAIN'D. My right leg c. into the crag Poems 238 She would not love : — or brought her c, a slave Pr. 114 CHAIR. In yonder c. I see him sit • Poems 85 — the long shadow of the c. Poems 90 Two years his c. is seen Poems 172 She shifted in her elbow-c. Poems 185 The farmer Vext packs up his beds and chairs Pms 226 Sweat on his blazon'd chairs Poems 228 Her father left his good arm-c. Poems 249 And in his c. himself uprear'd Poems 319 Shrinks in his arm-c. while the fires of Hell Pr. 130 To see the vacant c, and think In M. 34 4 * CHANCE-GIFT Page CHAIR, —chairs and thrones of civil power? In M. 35 He plays with threads, he beats his c. In M. 92 When asleep in this arm-c. ? Ma. 31 Why sits he here in his father's c. ? Ma. 47 The c. of Idris. Yniol's rusted arms I. K. 29 — in their chairs set up a stronger race /. K. 95 Arms for his c, while all the rest of them /. K. 170 — kept the house, his c, and last his bed E. A. 45 With nearing c. and lower'd accent) E. A. 65 I cry to vacant chairs and widow'd walls E. A. 88 They come and sit by my c. E. A. 124 CHAIRMAN. A quarter-sessions c, abler Pr. 181 CHAISE. Within the low-wheel'd c. Poems 249 CHALICE. The c. of the grapes of God In M. 14 CHALK. Are full of c. ? but let me live my Poems 223 — c. and alum and plaster are sold to the poor Ma. 6 Tumbles a breaker on c. and sand Ma. 162 GHALK'D. Stared in her eyes, and c. her face Pr. 94 CHALK-HILL. On the c. the bearded grass Poems 95 CHALK-QUARRY. The white c. from the Poems 90 CHAMBER. In vacant chambers, I could Poems vi. Athwart the c, and the day Poems 12 —secret bridal chambers of the heart Poems 212 In palace chambers far apart Poems 316 The quiet c. far apart Poems 318 In musty bins and chambers Poems 343 To one deep c. shut from sound Pr. 156 The field, the c, and the street In M. 10 The chambers emptied of delight In M. 10 Moved in the chambers of the blood In M. 40 About its echoing chambers wide Ma. 29 In the c. or the street Ma. 100 — hire us some fair c. for the night /. K. 58 — told them of a c, and they went /. K. 59 Apart by all the chamber's width, and mute /. K. 60 High in her c. up a tower to the east I. K. 14.J — cells and chambers : all were fair and dry /. K. 168 Moved to her c, and there flung herself I. K. 179 — till the comrade of his chambers woke E. A. 81 As lightly as a sick man's c. -door E. A. 42 CHAMPAIGN. — river-sunder d c. clothed Poems 102 Above the empurpled c, drank the gale Pr. 60 CHAMPAIN. —shadowing down the c. till it Pr. 134 CHAMPING golden grain, the horses stood E. A. 178 CHAMPION'D our cause and won it with a day Pr. 139 CHANCE. Many a c. the years beget Poems 93 For that is not a common c. Poems 173 —every c. brought out a noble knight Poems 199 — every morning brought a noble c. Poems 199 I shut my life from happier c. Poems 291 Drink to Fortune, drink to C. Poems 374 — yet, to speak the trutn, I rate your c. Pr. 23 With open eyes, and we must take the c. Pr. 61 His wildness, and the chances of the dark' Pr. 87 For every gust of c, and men will say Pr. 93 The book of scorn, till all my little c. Pr. 114 They say she's comely : there's the fairer c. Pr. 130 — whether moved by this, or was it c. Pr. 141 — grasps the skirts of happy c. In M. 89 To chances where our lots were cast In M. 136 The steps of Time— the shocks of C. In M. 141 — leaps into the future c. In M. 177 Why should I stay ? can a sweeter c. ever Ma. 9 For a c. of travel, a paleness, an hour's defect Ma. 12 He gave them line ; and how by c. at last Ma. 125 Dispute the claims, arrange the chances Ma. 163 There is good c. that we shall hear the I. K. 10 What c. is this ? How is it I see you here? I. K. 62 A common c. — right well I know it — pall'd I. K. 63 Guilty or guiltless, to stave off a c. I. K. 64 Their c. of booty from the morning's raid I. K. 75 Strange chances here alone ; ' that other /. K. 88 Ready to spring, waiting a c. : for this I. K. 225 — if we meet again, some evil c. I. K. 229 It is beyond all hope, against all c. E. A. 23 CHANCE-COMERS. You set before c. Poems ^39 CHANCED. Now it c. that I had been Pr.~i6 It c, her empty glove upon the tomb Pr. 106 At last it c. that on a summer morn /. K. 4 It c. the song that Enid sang was one /. K. 19 She with her mind all full of what had c. I. K. 87 Speak what has c. ; you surely have endured I. K. 88 — as it c. they are happy, being pure ' I. K. 132 Saying'these jewels, whereupon I c. I. K. 150 Till he should learn it, and one morn it c. I. K. 195 For thus it c. one morn when all the court I. K. 226 It c. one evening Annie's children long'd E. A. 20 At last one night it c. E. A. 27 CHANCE-GIFT, —spare c. of those that came Pms 239 CHANCEL Page CHANCEL. A broken c. with a broken cross Pms 191 I peer'd athwart the c. pane Ma. 131 CHANCEL-CASEMENT. — c, and upon that Pms 135 CHANCELLOR. The c, sedate and vain Poems 319 C, or what is greatest would he be E. A. 71 CHANCE-MET. —cross-lightnings of four c. E. A. 57 CHANGE. — without hope of c. Poems 10 —airy forms of flitting c. Poems 15 — bred this c. Poems 107 — c. of my still soul Poems 115 Full-welling fountain-heads of c. Poems 119 — but all hath suffer'd c. Poems 147 I I govern'd men by c. Poems 155 From tone to tone, and glided thro' all c. Poems 157 Lie still, dry dust, secure of c. Poej/is 174 Not swift nor slow to c, but firm Poems 180 Meet is it changes should control Poems 181 So let the c. which comes be free Poems 181 Of many changes, aptly join'd Poems 182 — c. a word with her he calls his wife Poems 215 ' It cannot be : my uncle's mind will c. !' Poems 216 — sick of home went overseas for c. Poems 226 — fear of c. at home, that drove him hence Poems 227 — some full music seem'd to move and c. Poems 231 -the varied changes of the dark Poems 231 Ran shrivelling thro' me, and a cloudlike c. Poems 243 — a livelier iris changes on the burnish'd dove Pms 269 — down the ringing grooves of c. Poevts 283 I said, ' The years with c. advance Poems 291 — comes the check, the c, the fall Poems 297 — rapt thro' many a rosy c. Poems 321 The flower and quintessence of c. Poems 323 She changes with that mood or this Poems 343 ' C, reverting to the years Poems 372 The voice grew faint : there came a further c. Pms 374 If our old halls could c. their sex, and flaunt Pr. 8 — dismal 13-rics, prophesying c. Pr. 22 — came your new friend : you began to c. Pr. 90 Like one that wishes at a dance to c. Pr. 105 — suffers c. of frame. A lusty brace Pr. 131 When your skies c. again Pr. 151 Then came a c. : for sometimes I would catch Pr. 162 Till notice of a c. in the dark world Pr. 170 My haunting sense of hollow shows : the c. Pr. 175 This truthful c. in thee has kill'd it Pr. 175 Some patient force to c. them when we will Pr. 180 I perceived no touch of c. In M. 23 The touch of c. in calm or storm In M. 26 Nor c. to us, although they c. hi M. 49 Each voice four changes on the wind In M. 45 Will c. my sweetness more and more In M. 54 No more partaker of thy c. • In M. 62 Thy changes ; here upon the ground In M. 62 — every winter c. to spring In M. 76 Thy ransom'd reason c. replies In M. 86 Of men and minds, the dust of c. In M. 98 There cannot come a mellower c. In M. 112 For changes wrought on form and face In M. 113 Recalls, in c. of light or gloom In M. 121 Or touch'd the changes of the state In M. 131 Whatever c. the years have wrought In M. 134 When summer's hourly-mellowing c. In M. 135 Of tenfold-complicated c. In M. 137 Was love's dumb cry defying c. In M. 140 For c. of place, like growth of time In M. 161 The happy birds, that c. their sky In M. 179 O earth, what changes hast thou seen In M. 191 To c. the bearing of a word In M. 198 — therefore, and the wine will c. your will /. K. 81 His very face with c. of heart is changed /. K. 93 Above them ; and in c. of glare and gloom /. K. 143 Must our true man c. like a leaf at last ? I. K. 182 The twain together well might c. the world I. K. 241 Then came a c, as all things human c. E. A. 6 — such a c. — a month E. A. 26 About him, and the c. and not the c. E. A. 94 If this can c, why so can I E. A. 161 This cannot c, nor yet can I * E. A. 161 If this can c, why so can I ' E. A. 163 — run thro' every c. of sharp and flat Select. 196 CHANGED. Till all the crimson c. and past Poems 74 ' O cruel heart,' she c. her tone Poems 76 You c. a wholesome heart to gall Poeins 128 C, I was ripe for death Poeins 158 Now thy flute-notes are c. to coarse Poems 167 We are all c. by still degrees Poeins 181 — drooping flowe* of knowledge c. to fruit Poems 259 — her spirit c. within Poems 360 Moved with violence, c. in hue Poems 367 52 CHARGER Page CHANGED, —tost on thoughts that c. from Pr. 85 Our mind is c. : we take it to ourself ' Pr. 93 A shadow, and her hue c, and she said Pr. 142 Walk'd at their will, and everything was c. Pr. 156 — one is sad ; her note is c. In M. 36 — crying, ' how c. from where it ran In M. 39 A grief, then c. to something else In M. 106 grief, can grief be c. to less? In M. 107 Thy place is c. ; thou art the same In M. 188 Remade the blood, and c. the frame In M. 204, Of her whose gentle will has c. my fate Ma. 59 My mood is c. Ma. in — being young, he c. himself, and grew /. K. 32 To fear me, fear no longer, I am c. /. K. 89 — fear not, cousin ; I am c. indeed ' /. K. 92 — kept myself aloof till I was c. /. K. 92 His very face with change of heart is c. /. K. 93 At Edyrn ? Have you seen how nobly c. ? /. K. 93 -c. itself and echoed in her heart /. K. 188 1 doubt not that, however c, you keep /. A". 210 —judgment, but tho' c. the King's /. K. 247 — that name has twice been c. E. A. 47 —now my mind is c, for I shall see him E. A. 49 C. with thy mystic change E. A. 142 C. every moment as we flew E. A. 146 CHANGEFUL. Our c. equinoxes Poems 349 CHANGELING. Orsorrowsuchac.be? In M. 26 CHANGEST. Who c. not in any gale In M. a CHANGETH. ' The old order c, yielding Poems 199 CHANGING. — labour, and the c. mart In M. 127 CHANNEL. Tho' every c. of the State Poems 176 Mid-c. Right on this we drove Pr. 84 —further on, the hoary C. Ma. 162 CHANT, —garden the merry bird chants Poems 42 C. me now some wicked stave Poems 372 — one would c. the history In M. 158 CHANTED. C. loudly, c. lowly Poems 71 C. from an ill-used race of men Poems 149 — c. a melody loud and sweet Poems 379 As c. on the blanching bones of men?' Pr. 39 Are c. in the minster, worse than all /. K 133 She c. snatches of mysterious song /. K. 220 Had c. on the smoky mountain-tops /. K. 240 So they c. : how shall Britain E. A. 171 So they c. in the darkness E. A. 171 CHANTING. — mine own phantom c. hymns In M. i&j Milan, O the c. quires Ma. 157 CHAPEL. — bore him to a c. nigh the field Poems 191 That harm'd not : then day droopt ; the c. bells Pr. 53 In the white rock a c. and a hall /. K. 168 To c. : where a heated pulpiteer E. A. 97 CHAPEL- YARD, —in the precincts of the c. I. K. 133 —paced for coolness in the c. /. K. 133 CHAP-FALLEN. The c. circle spreads Poems 373 CHAR. Nor ever lightning c. thy grain Poems 256 CHARACTER'D. The laws of marriage c. in Pms 7 How dimly c. and slight In M. 86 CHARADES and riddles as at Christmas here Pr. 11 CHARGE. Come forth, I c. thee, arise Poems 28 1 c. thee, quickly go again Poems 194 Redeem'd it from the c. of nothingness Poems 201 — surging charges foam'd themselves away Ma. 144 * C. for the guns ! ' he said Ma. i&] Honour the c. they made ! Ma. 170 the wild c. they made ! Ma. 170 ' I c. you, ask not but obey ' /. K. 8 — in my c, which was not render'd to him IK. 25 Let them be gold ; and c. the gardeners now I. K. 36 1 c. you, on your duty as a wife I. K. 46 'Not at my side, I c. you ride before /. K. 46 — all in c. of whom? a girl : set on ' /. K. 52 To c. you) that you speak not but obey ' /. K. 67 I c. you, Enid, more especially /. K. 67 On whom his father Uther left in c. /. K. 95 Set up the c. you know, to stand or fall ! ' IK. 130 Merlin answer'd careless of her c. /. K. 133 C. at the head of all his Table Round /. K. 163 Hence will I and I c. you, follow me not' I. K. 173 I c. you that you get at once to horse /. K. 175 Modred whom he left in c. of all /. K. 235 I c. thee, my last hope. Now must I hence I. K. 254 Stood, and he gave them c. about the Queen /. K. 255 While I have power to speak. I c. you now E. A. 48 — if he did that wrong you c. him with E. A. in CHARGED both mine eyes with tears Poems 150 Shot thro' the lists at Camelot, and c. Poems 199 — down we swept and c. and overthrew Ma. 144 Was c. by Valence to bring home the child /. K. 131 CHARGER. When on my goodly c. borne Poems 335 CHARGER Page CHARGER. ' My c. and her palfrey,' then to /. K. 7 His c trampling many a prickly star /. K. 17 So Enid took his c. to the stall /. K. 21 C. and palfrey.' So she glided out /. K. 67 Who saw the chargers of the two that fell I. K. 71 While the great c. stood, grieved like a man /. K. 74 To hide him. See ye take the c. too /. K. 75 (His gentle c. following him /. K. 76 1 slay you ; fly, your c. is without /. K. 85 When Edyrn rein'd his c at her side /. K. 89 Sir Lancelot and his c, and a spear /. K. 172 Down-glancing lamed the c, and a spear /. K. 172 There from his c. down he slid, and sat /. K. 174 — on my chargers, trample them under us' E. A. 172 CHARGING an army, while Ma. 169 — at the midmost c. Prince Geraint /. K. 50 CHARIER of sleep, and wine, and exercise E. A. 74 CHARIOT. — c., many a maiden passing home Pr. 156 The double tides of chariots flow In M. 148 So those two brethren from the c. took /. K. 207 —the lychgate, where his c. stood E. A, 93 Up mj' Britons, on my c. E. A. 172 Till her people all around the royal c. E. A. 173 — each beside his c bound his own E. A. 177 Hard by their chariots, waiting for the dawn E. A. 17S — let there be prepared a c-bier /. K. 205 Accompanying, the sad c.-bier /. K. 206 CHARIOTED, —standing loftily c. E. A. 169, 172 CHARIOTEER. — daffodil dies, and the C. Ma. 111 CHARITABLE. To save the offence of c. E. A. 19 Her c. use, and face to face E. A. So CHARITIES, —up whole ; and those fair c. A zy.rr. tfsome thirty z. Pr. 181 CHARITY. The summer calm of golden c. Poems 7 — thou of God in thy great c Poe?ns 8 Of gentle satire, kin to c, Pr. 53 In reverence and in c. In M. 178 Valour and c. more and more Ma. 163 CHARLATAN. Defamed by every c. In M. 173 CHARLES. Till Charles's Wain came out Poems 134 Wherein the younger C. abode Poems 257 CHARLIE. — little King C. is snarling Ma. 45 Harry and C, I hear them too E. A. 124 C. ploughing the hill E. A. 124 CHARM. More purely, when thej^wish to c. Pot — the c. of married .: Poem s 101 A heart that doats on truer charms Poems 126 For all his life the c. did talk Poems 318 A touch, a kiss ! the c. was snapt Poems 318 Until the c. have power to make Poems 340 A flying c. of blushes o'er this cheek Pr. 51 hose least act abides the nameless c. Pr. no Felt at my heart, and seem'd to c. from thence Pr. 129 To feel from world to world, and charms In M. 36 Perchance, to c. a vacant brain Ma. : : : N r could he see but him who wrought the c. /. K. 1 : _ For Merlin once had told her of a c. /. K. 104 Vivien ever sought to work the c. /. K. 104 — make me wish still more to learn this c. /. K. : : : The c. so taught will c. us both to rest I. K. no -^hen I told you first of such a c. I. K. 112 I felt as tho' you knew this cursed c. I. K. 116 Should try this c. on whom you sa3 T 5 7 ou love ' /. K. 120 —some vast c. concluded in that star /. K. 120 jag you power upon me thro' this c /. X. 123 Was this fair c. invented by- yourself? /. K. 121 I needed then no c. to keep them mine I. K. 122 —many tried and fail'd because the c. I. K. 124 Some c, which being wrought upon the /. K. 124 At last they found — his foragers for charms /. K. 125 — then he taught the King to c. the Queen I. K. 127 — saw she save the King, who wrought the c. /. K. 127 ' You have the book : the c. is written in it /. K. 127 — every square of text an awful c. /. K. 128 To dig, pick, open, find, and read the c. /. K. 128 — in the comment did I find the c. /. K. 129 — mutter'd in himself, ' tell her the c. ! I. K 136 Had yielded, told her all the c, and slept /. J', :__ — in one moment, she put forth the c. /. K. 144 Wrought as a c. upon them, and they spared /. K. 232 Each, its own c. ; and Edith's everywhere E. A. 59 C, as a wanderer out in ocean E. A. 175 CHARMED. My heart a c. slumber keeps Poems 83 The c. sunset linger'd low adown Poems 143 — anthem sung, is charm'd and tied Pa Love-charm'd to listen Poems 261 That he upon her c. heart Poems 316 -the king her father charm'd Pr. 154 So much the gathering darkness charm'd Pr. 18a CHEEK Page CHARMED. —Charm'd him thro' every labyr./T. A. 76 Sat anger-charm'd from sorrow ' E. A. 88 CHARMING, —birds the c. serpent draws In M. 53 CH ARNEL-C AVE. When Lazarus left his c. In M. 50 CHARNELS. Ev'n in the c. of the dead Poems 299 CHARR'D. A c. and wrinkled piece of Pr. no CHARTIST. A C. pike Poems 227 CHARTS. Which c. us all in its coarse Poems 229 CHASE. To c. the deer at five Poems 247 — in the c. grew wild Poems 2- : think vou of it, Florian? do I c. Pr. 33 The sleek and shining creatures of the c. Pr. 1:5 — crost the common into Darnley c. Ma. 124 — being ever foremost in the c. /. K. 96 To c. a creature that was current then /. K. 114 ' C.,' he said : the ship flew forward Select. 38 CHASED. So shape c. shape as swift Poems 151 How curiously and strangely c Poems 194 A light wind c. her on the - Poems 250 We did not know the real light, but c. Pr. 93 — close beneath, a meadow gemlike c. /. K. 56 — c. the flashes of his golden horns /. K. 115 — c. away the still-recurring gnat Select. 196 CHASING itself at its own wild will Poems 48 C. each other merrily Poems 58 CHASM. — barren chasms, and all to left Poems 198 Heaven opens inward, chasms yawn Poems 303 Thro' one wide c. of time and frost Pr. 6 Bv every coppice-feather'd c. and cleft Pr. 75 To which the little elves of c. and cleft /. K. 238 — in the c. are foam and yellow sands E. A. 1 — -'.; 1:- ±3 ::' ----'. '..v ::'.:::. h is : it:": s :, -.--'. 1 — till drawn through either c. E. A. 37 — the gaps and chasms of ruin left E. A . ro8 CHASTE. — world's great bridals, c. and calm Pr. 173 All brave, and man5" generous, and some c. /. K. 13 5 CHASTELY. — casement glimmer'd c. down I. K. 132 CHASTENT). Of such a finish'd c. purity Poems 8 CHASTENS, —love the Heaven that c. us I. K. 87 CHASTISEMENT, —earthly c. suffice E. A. 9 r CHASTITY. — the clear-pointed flame of c. Poems 7 — she rode forth, clothed on with c. Poems 287 Then she rode back, clothed on with c. Poems 2S7 They bound to holy vows of c. ! /. K. 129 To lead sweet lives in purest c /. K. 250 CHATELET. The last wild thought of C. Poems 164 CHATTELS. Live c, mincers of each other's Pr. 1 ra CHATTER. — c. with the cold, and all my Poems 237 ' The crane,' I said, 'may c of the crane Pr. 39 — to hear a dead man c. Ma. 103 I c. over stony ways Ma. 119 I c, c, as I flow Ma. 119 CHATTER'D. They c. trifles at the door Ir. _ Philip c. more than brook or bird Ma. 120 CHATTERING, —clinking, c. stony names CHAUCER. Dan C, the first warbler Poems 150 CHAUNT. I would mock thy chaunt anew Poems 18 —= : it: £. thaunts resound between Poems 334 Z H A UN TETH not the brooding bee Poe??is '5 CHEAT. — you love to c. yourself with words Pr. 175 C. and be cheated, and die: who knows? Ma. 5 Yet, if she were not a c. Yet, if she were not a c. Ma. 30 Scarcelv, now, would I call him a c. CHEATED, —she rose, half-c. in the thought/. K. 165 CHEATING. — c. the sick of a fe~ . Ma. 6 CHECK. — comes the c., the change, the fall Pms 297 With motions, checks, and counter-checks Poems 303 — good nuns would c. her gadding tongue /. K. 241 " .:: :h my good father told, c. me too /. K. 241 — pray you c. me if I ask amiss 71 K. 242 CHEEK. The baby^roses in her cheeks Poei?is 5 — then the tears run down my : , Poems 55 Lea nin g his c. upon his hand Poems 83 Your ripe lips moved not, but your c. Poems 90 Her c. had lost the rose Poenis 98 Over her snow-cold breast and angry c. Poems 103 — his c. brighten'd as the foam-bow brightens Pms 100 His ruddy c. upon my breast Poems no — with pufFd c. the belted hunter blew Poems 115 ~r ■:---;:. : a.r. i. :>_:: a: ar_ 1 :hi- Poems 118 —with swarthy cheeks and bold black eyes Poems 155 Tit st ii—zlesycur trar.s-tarettt c. Poems 163 Tie up the ringlets on your c. Poe?ns 165 A word could bring the colour to my c. Poe?ns 210 — clapt him on the hands and on the cheeks Poems 219 Laughter dimpled in his swarthy c. Poe?ns 232 The girls upon the c. Poem r 247 — r_5h'd her c. with rosy light :s 252 53 CHEEK Page CHEEK. Then her c. was pale and thinner Poems 270 On her pallid c. and forehead came Poems 270 Made her c. flame : her palfrey's footfall shot Pms 287 Tho' one should smite him on the c. Poems 301 While, dreaming on your damask c. Poems 312 The blush is fix d upon her cheek Poems 314 The colour flies into his cheeks Poems 317 C. by jowl, and knee by knee Poems 369 On glassy water drove his c. in lines Pr. Kiss'd her pale c, declared that ancient ties Pr. — blew the swoll'n c. of a trumpeter A flying charm of blushes o'er this c. —oh, Sirs, could I help it, but my c. Engirt with many a florid maiden-c. — c. and bosom brake the wrathful bloom — my Sire, his rough c. wet with tears — so belabour'd him on rib and c. — turn'd each face her way : wan was her c. I love not hollow c. or faded eye — wordless broodings on the wasted c. ' The cheeks drop in ; the body bows A touch of shame upon her c. Come ; let us go : your cheeks are pale To clap their cheeks, to call them mine The fever from my c, and sigh — beam of an eyelash dead on the c Roses are her cheeks Of my mother's faded c. — this was what had redden'd her c. Struck at him with his whip, and cut his c. 43 Pr. 48 Pr. 51 Pr. 56 Pr. 72 Pr. 94 Pr. 108 Pr. 124 Pr. 144 Pr. 157 Pr. 163 In M. 54 In M. 57 InM. 82 In M. 116 In M. 125 Ma. 13 Ma. 56 Ma. 65 Ma. 68 I.K. Whom first she kiss'd on either c, and then /. K. Made her c. burn and either eyelid fall I. AT. 41 Made her c. burn and either eyelid fall /. K. 68 — there lived some colour in your c. ' 7. K. 78 He spoke : the brawny spearman let his c. I. K. 79 However lightly, smote her on the c. I. K. 84 White was her c. ; sharp breaths of anger I. K. 138 Seam'd with an ancient swordcut on the c. I. K. 160 Flamed in his c. ; and eager eyes E. A. 54 Cooling her false c. with a feather-fan E. A. 66 They barr'd her : yet she bore it : yet her c. E. A. 77 Thy c. begins to redden thro' the gloom E. A. 141 — thy tears are on my c. E. A. 141 CHEEK'D. — a bevy of Eroses apple-c. E. A. 158 CHEEP — c. and twitter twenty million loves Pr. 79 CHEER- —flowers would faint at your cruel c. Pms 41 Died the sound of royal c. Poe7ns 72 Naked I go, and void of c. Poems 300 A murmur ' Be of better c.' Poe?ns 309 We keep the day. With festal c. In M. 166 I make myself such evil c. Ma. 52 Enid brought sweet cakes to make them c. I. K. 21 Then cried Geraint for wine and goodly c. I. K. 60 The lily maid had striven to make him c. I. K. 164 Come, Annie, come, c. up before I go ' E. A. 11 ' Annie, my girl, c. up, be comforted E. A. 13 Welcome her, thundering c. of the street ! E. A. 164 CHEER'D. — he c. her soul with love Poems 360 — we with singing c. the way In M. 37 Be c. with tidings of the bride In M. 61 — he c. me, my good man E. A. 123 CHEERFUL. He shall have a c. home Poems 359 Draw forth the c. day from night In M. 49 It well nigh made her c. ; fill Geraint I. K. 69 She grew so c. that they deem'd her death I. K. 206 I pledge her not in any c. cup Select. 197 CHEERFULLY. Enoch bore his weakness c. E. A. 45 CHEERFUL-MINDED. Be c.,talk and treat In M. 166 CHEERING. — a phosphorescence c. even E. A. 57 CHEERLY. Hear a song that echoes c. Poems 66 CHEMIC. Electric, c. laws, and all the rest Pr. 49 CHEQUER'D. — many a shadow-c. lawn Poems 23 CHEOUER-WORK. A c. of beam and shade In M. 99 CHERISH. Am I mad, that I should c. Poems 273 The love of all Thy daughters c. Thee I. K. viii. CHERRY. To catch a dragon in a c. net Pr. 115 CHESS. — our wine and c. beneath the planes Pr. 149 CHEST. — monstrous apes they crush'd my c. Pms 242 Live long, nor feel in head or c. Poems 349 She took the little ivory c. Ma. 132 For keep it like a puzzle c. in c. I. K. 127 — each c. lock'd and padlock'd thirty-fold I. K. 127 CHESTNUT.— the chestnuts, when their buds Pms 87 Or those three chestnuts near, that hung Poems 87 While those full chestnuts whisper by Poems 92 The day, when in the c. shade Poems 93 Parks with oak and c. shady Poems 359 The c. pattering to the ground In M. 16 In gloss and hue the c, when the shell Ma. 121, 128 54 CHILD Page CHESTNUT-BLOOM, —that islet in the c. E. A. 54 CHESTNUT-BUDS, —drooping c. began Poems 362 CHEW'D. — her in a whirlwind: then he c Pr. 18 CHID. — and be friends: like children being c. ! Pr. 151 C. her, and forbid her to speak Ma. 67 CHIDDEN. Of such a love as like a c. child E. A. 79 Caress'd or c. by the dainty hand Select. 196 CHIDING. From ferule andthetrespass-c. eye Pr. 109 CHIEF. O friends, our c. state-oracle is mute Ma. 139 In dexter chief; the scroll ' I follow fame ' I. K. 118 Then answer'd Lancelot, the c. of knights I. K. 154 —presence I might guess thee c. of those I. K. 156 Then answer'd Lancelot, the c. of knights I. K. 157 The heads of chiefs and princes fall so fast E. A. 90 CHIEFEST. Our c. comfort is the little child Pr. 129 CHIEFLY from the brook that loves Poems 28 — c. you were born for something great Pr. 90 By which our lives are c. proved In M. 161 C. for the baying of Cavall I. K. 10 CHILD. Fed thee, a c, lying alone Poems 79 A glorious c. , dreaming alone Poems 79 Conjectures of the features of her c. Poems 107 — her c. ! — a shudder comes Poems 108 — never c. be born of me Poems 108 —mother, you have another c. Poems 136 —a better c. to you than ever I have been Poems 137 Of c, and wife, and slave Poems 143 And Dora took the c. and went her way Poems 216 ' Do with me as you will, but take the c. Poems 217 — answer'd softly, ' This is William's c. 1 ' Poems 217 Dare tell him Dora waited with the c. Poems 217 Whose c. is that ? What are you doing Poems 217 The c. once more, and sat upon the mound Poems 217 — work for William's c, until he grows Poems 218 Or William, or this c. : but now I come Poems 219 — three hours he sobb'd o'er William's c. Poems 220 About the darling c. Poems 250 the c. too clothes the father with a Poems 275 — barbarian lower than the Christian c. Poems 282 One walk'd between his wife and c. Poems 308 — and that child's heart within the man's Poems 340 — put my c. in her stead ' Poems 355 ' Nay now, my c.,' said Alice the nurse Poems 355 1 I speak the truth : you are my c. Poems 355 I buried her like my own sweet c. Poems 355 Alas, my c, I sinn'd for thee ' Poems 356 — from the palace came a c. of sin Poems 366 C. , if it were thine error or thy crime Poems 376 His tenants, wife and c. Pr. 1 Half c. , half woman as she was Pr. 6 As children ; they must lose the c, assume Pr. 1 About this losing of the c. ; and rhymes P*. 22 Your language proves you still the c. Indeed Pr. 32 Of twenty summers. At her left, a c. Pr. 35 As I might slay this c, if good need were Pr. 44 We turn'd to go, but Cyril took the c. Pr. 48 While Psyche watch'd them, smiling, and the c. Pr. 48 For Psyche's c. to cast it from the doors Pr. 86 The lily-shining c. : and on the left Pr. 89 For this lost lamb (she pointed to the c.) Pr. 93 The c. of regal compact, did I break Pr. 96 Take comfort : live, dear lady, for your c. ! ' Pr. 111 * Ah me, my babe, my blossom, ah my c. Pr. 111 My one sweet c, whom I shall see no more ! Pr. 11 1 The c. is hers : and they will beat my girl Pr. 111 The c. is hers — for every little fault Pr. in My babe, my sweet Aglaia, my one c. Pr. 112 You have spoilt this c. : she laughs at you Pr. 113 She shall not have it back : the c. shall grow Pr. 1-29 Our chiefest comfort is the little c. Pr. 129 The bearing and the training of a c. Pr. 131 Set his c. upon her knee Pr. 136 ' Sweet my c, I live for thee ' Pr. 136 Knelt on one knee,— the c. on one,— and Pr. 141 She bow'd, she set the c. on the earth Pr. 142 It is not yours, but mine : give me the c.' Pr. 143 The mother, me, the c. : but he that lay Pr. 144 Give her the c. ! O if, I say, you keep Pr. 145 — would you more ? give her the c. ! remain Pr. 145 Give her the c. ! or if you scorn to lay it Pr. 146 Full on the c. : she took it : ' Pretty bud ! Pr. 146 Ida spoke not, rapt upon the c. Pr. 148 Her c. among us, willing she should keep Pr. 160 This fine old world of ours is but a c. Pr. 181 Poor c. that waitest for thy love ! In M. 7 They call'd me fool, they call'd me c. In M. 95 They would but find in c. and wife In M. 133 In such a sort, the c. would twine In M. 169 Half-grown as yet, a c, and vain In M. 177 CHILD Page CHILD. With wisdom, like the younger c. In M. 178 No, like a c. in doubt and fear In M. 193 Then was I as a c. that cries hi M 193 I play'd with the girl when a c. Ma. 9 c., you wrong your beauty Ma. 17 1 have play'd with her when a c. Ma. 30 For then, perhaps, as a c. of deceit Ma. 48 Made her only the c. of her mother Ma. 48 A desire that awoke in the heart of the c. Ma. 67 ' O darling Katie Willows, his one c. ! Ma. 120 Had married Enid, Yniol's only c. /. K. 1 For this dear c. hath often heard me praise /. K. 24 For this dear c, because I never saw /. K. 27 * See here, my c, how fresh the colours look /. K. 36 Look on it, c, and tell me if you know it ' /. K. 37 My faded suit, as you, my c. , have yours /. K. 38 When my dear c. is set forth at her best /. K. 39 When your fair c. shall wear your costly gift /. K. 44 Why wail you for him thus ? You seem a c. /. K. 74 But neither eyes nor tongue — O stupid c. ! /. K. 106 My use and name and fame Your pardon, c. /. K. 109 In you, that are no c, for still I find /. K. 112 O, the results are simple ; a mere c. /. K. 129 Was charged by Valence to bring home the c. /. K. 131 One c. they had ; it lived with her : she died /. K. 131 I ask you is it clamour'd by the c. /. K. 134 To bitter weeping like a beaten c. /. K. 138 ' A moral c. without the craft to rule /. K. 155 And found it true, and answer'd, ' true, my c. I. K. 166 1 Do me this grace, my c. , to have my shield /. K. 167 ' Ay, Ay, the diamond : wit you well, my c. /. K, 187 Her face was near, and as we kiss the c. /. K. 190 Meeker than any c. to a rough nurse /. K. 191 Milder than any mother to a sick c. /. K. 191 ' Peace,' said her father, ' O my c, you seem /. K. 202 Yet, seeing you desire your c. to live /. K. 204 She kiss'd me saying thou art fair, my c. /. K. 221 ' Will the c. kill me with her innocent talk ? ' I. K. 236 1 Will the c. kill me with her foolish prate?' /. K. 237 They found a naked c. upon the sands I. K. 240 Simpler than any c, betrays itself /. K. 244 Saying in herself ' the simple fearful c. /. K. 244 Well is it that no c. is born of thee /. K. 247 4 Liest thou here so low, the c. of one /. K. 247 And give his c. a better bringing-up E. A. 5 —1st him sleep ; how should the c. E. A. 13 — third c. was sickly-born and grew E. A. 15 — her new c. was as herself renew'd E. A. 29 Being with c. : but when her c. was born E. A. 29 Of Philip's c. E. A. 59 His only c, his Edith, whom he loved E. A. 52 Nursing a c, and turning to the v/armth E. A. 60 Raw from the nursery — who could trust a c. ? E. A. 65 Theirc' 'Our c. !'' Our heiress!' 'Ours !' .£. ^4. 66 They loved me, and because I love their c. E. A. 73 Writhing, a letter from his c. E. A. 78 Of such a love as like a chidden c. E. 4. 79 He seldom crost his c. without a sneer E. A. 80 To speak before the people of her c. E. A. 82 The poor c. of shame E. A. 86 —our own c. on the narrow way E. A. 89 Of his lost c. E. A. 89 Till she began to totter, and the c. E. A. 109 ' C. ? No ! ' said he, ' but this tide's roar, and E. A. 109 By wife and c. : nor wanted at his end E. A. 94 The childless mother went to seek her c. E. A. 94 — an unknown artist's orphan c. E. A. 96 — mine but from the crying of a c' E. A. 109 The Virgin Mother standing with her c. E. A. 109 Good man, to please the c. E. A. no (You spoke so loud) has roused the c. E. A. in But I wept like a c. for the c. E. A. 122 But I wept like a c. that day E. A. 122 With that fair c. betwixt them born Select. 221 CHILDHOOD, —childhood's flaxen ringlet In M. 109 Hereafter, up from c. shape In M. 186 — the dawn of rosy c. E. A. 3 CHILDISH. And, flattering thy c. thought Poems 78 — climbings and tumbles and c. escapes Ma. 10 CHILDLESS. The c. mother went to seek E. A. 94 CHILDLIKE. Nor lose the c. in the larger Pr. 172 CHILDLY. A c. way with children E. A. 60 CHILDREN. May c. of our c. say Poems vi. Two c. in two neighbour villages Poems 57 Two c in one hamlet born and bred Poems 57 Kiss me, my c. ' Then they clung about Poejns 220 Not in our time, nor in our children's time Poems 264 Their c, clamouring, 'If we pay, we starve). Poems 285 Three fair c. first she bore him Poems 361 CHIRP Page CHILDREN That love to keep us c. ! 1 Pr. 8 As c. ; they must lose the child, assume Pr. 22 Or baser courses, c. of despair ' p r . 65 But c. die ; and let me tell you, girl Pr. 67 Yet will we say for c, would they grew Pr. 67 Love, c, happiness?' Pr. 67 C.» that men may pluck them from our hearts Pr. 68 0-c.— there is nothing upon earth Pr. 68 Whose name is yoked with children's Pr. 128 Kiss and be friends : like c. being chid ! Pr. 151 Arise to thee : the c. call, and I Pr. 169 For by the hearth the c. sit In M. 33 Who takes the c. on his knee In M. 92 — Timour-Mammon grins on a pile of children's Ma. 7 Late the little c. clung Ma. 150 And all the c. in their cloth of gold /. K. 36 And c. of the king in cloth of gold /. K. 36 The cry of c, Enids and Geraints /. K. 96 In c. a great curiousness be well /. K. 112 Where c. cast their pins and nails, and cry /. K. 116 To one at least, who hath not c, vague /. K. 120 Lives for his c, ever at its best /. K. 164 The c. born of thee are sword and fire /. K. 247 Who either for his own or children's sake /. K. 251 Three c. of three houses E. A. 1 — the c. play'd at keeping house E. A. 2 With c. ; first a daughter E. A. 5 To see his c. leading evermore E. A. 7 When he was gone — the c. — what to do? E. A. 8 Her and her c, let her plead in vain E. A. 10. For her or his dear c. , not to go E. A. 10 • Him and his c. not to say me nay E. A. 17 Gifts by the c. E. A. 19 — one evening Annie's c. long'd E. A. 20 Philip was her children's all-in-all E. A. 20 — the c. pluck'd at him to go E. A. 21 A father to your c. E. A. 23 — c. laden with their spoil E. A. 25 -his own c. tall and beautiful E. A. 42 Lord of his rights, and of his children's love E. A. 42 My c. too ! must I not speak to these ? . E. A. 43 But if my c. care to see me dead E. A. 48 A childly way with c. E. A. 60 Poor c, for their comfort : the wind blew E. A. 73 — but souls — thy children's — thro' the smoke E. A. 86 — children's laughter in their hall E. A. 91 — all my c. have gone before me E. A. 116 — as to the c, Annie E. A. 123 Phantom wail of women and c. E. A. 170 CHILDWARD. —breadth, nor fail in c. care Pr. 172 CHILL. Shrill, c. , with flakes of foam Poems 193 — the c. stars sparkle : I am wet Poems 240 — he is c. to praise or blame Poems 301 As wan, as c, as wild as now In M. 100 ' — late, so late ! and dark the night and c. ! /. K. 233 ' — so late ! and dark and c. the night J /. K. 234 — fearing night and c. for Annie E. A. 25 The horse he drove, the boat he sold, the c. E. A. 33 Sunny but c. ; till drawn thro' either chasm E. A . 37 CHILL'D. — c. the popular praises of the King/. K. -2.2.5 Stifled and c. at once : but every roof E. A. 82 CHILLING. — thou deep vase of c. tears In M. 4 Or for c. his caresses Ma. 71 Then never c. touch of Time E. A. 160 Now never c. touch of Time E. A. 161 CHILLY. Over its grave i'the earth so c. Poems 31, 32 CHIME. Began to chime Poems 119 —and chimes, like silver hammers falling Pr. 26 Set her sad will no less to c. with his E. A. 14 CHIMERAS, crotchets, Christmas solecisms Pr. n CHIMING. Fall'n silver-c, seem'd to shake Poems 21 CHIMNEY, —half the chimneys tumbled Poems 186 —chimneys muffled in the leafy vine Poems 222 For now her father's c. glows In M. 7 — came out above the tall white c.-tops Poems 134. CHIN. — smooth'd his c. and sleek'd his hair Poems 36 His double c, his portly size Poems 85 From cheek and throat and c. Poems 118 Close up his eyes : tie up his c. Poems 170 Her sweet face from brow to c. Poems 360 — reddening in the furrows of his c. Pr. 148 — many-winter'd fleece of throat and c. /. K. 137 CHINA. — little-footed C, touch'd on Mahomet Pr. 36 CHINA-BOUND. Reporting of his vessel C. E. A. 7 CHINK. Were full of chinks and holes Poems 287 Even in dreams to the c. of his pence Ma. 38 CHIRP. — cricket chirps ; the light burns low Poems 169 — when the first low matin-c. hath grown Poems 261 I hear a c. of birds ; I see In M. 185 55 CHIRPING Page CHIRPING. His weary daylong c. Ma. iso CHIRR'D. Unwavering : not a cricket c. In M. 139 CHIRRUP. The sparrow's c. on the roof Poems 12 With his c. at her ear Ma. 72 CHIRRUPT. —beside me c. the nightingale E. A. 119 CHISELL'D. With c. features clear and "sleek Pms 37 Stiller than c. marble Poems 153 CHIVALROUS. The c. battle-song Ma. 39 CHIVALRY. — much contempt, and came to c. Pr. 36 CHOICE. — with c. paintings of wise men Poems 118 — told him of my c. Poems 246 — wherefore rather I made c. Poems 311 — you have made the wiser c. Poems 350 Which weep the comrade of my c. In M. 20 For your sweetness hardly leaves me a c. Ma. 24 So glorious in his beauty and thy c. E. A. 140 Teach that sick heart the stronger c. Select. 221 CHOICELY. Below was all mosaic c. Poems 119 CHOICEST. The c. wealth of all the earth Poems 79 Because all words, tho' cull'd with c. art Poems 162 CHOKE. Should almost c. with golden Poems 176 ' A quinsy c. thy cursed note ! ' Poems 185 — the yellow vapours c. Ma. 99 CHOKED. I c. Again they shriek'd the Poems 235 That Heaven, and Earth, and Time are c. Poems 240 C, and her forehead sank upon her hands Pr. 170 * Your hopes are mine, " and saying that she c. /. K. 178 His mercy c. me. Gone, my lord the King /, K. 257 CHOLER. Of force and c, and firm upon Poems 264 CHOORCH. An' I hallus corned to 's c. E. A. 130 — voated wi' Squoire an c. an' staate E. A. 130 CHOOSE. To c. your own you did not care Pms 323 'Twere hardly worth my while to c. In M. 53 A horse and arms for guerdon, c. the best ' /. K. 57 CHOP. His proper, c. to each ( Poems 344 Among the chops and steaks ! ' ' Poems 345 C. the breasts from off the mother E. A. 172 CHOP-HOUSE. Head-waiter of the c. here Poems 348 CHORAL. A star that with the c. starry Poems 123 CHORD. — clear twang of the golden chords Poems 44 — smote on all the chords with might Poems 271 — c. of Self, that, trembling, pass'd in music Pms 271 — touch upon the master-c. Poems 340 Consonant chords that shiver to one note Pr. 59 The deepest measure from the chords In M. 70 Will flash along the chords and go In M. 129 ' Screw not the c. too sharply lest it snap ' E. A. 75 CHORUS. ' Go ' (shrill'd the cottonspinning c.) Pms 235 O you c. of indolent reviewers E. A. 175 All that c. of indolent reviewers E. A. 176 CHOSE. I c. The ranged ramparts bright Poems 112 That sober-suited Freedom c. Poems 175 — for your sake, the woman that he c. Poems 216 Long ere the people c. him for their king /. K. 149 C. the green path that show'd the rarer foot /. K. 155 You c. the best among us -E. A. 17 CHOSEN. Lancelot answer'd, ' Had I c. to /. K. 195 Was c. Abbess, there, an Abbess, lived /. K. 261 Who madest him thy c. E. A. 140 CHRIST. To C, the Virgin Mother, and the Pms 240 So I clutch it. C. ! Poems 243 The time draws near the birth of C. In M. 45 Behold a man raised up by C. ! In M. 50 The time draws near the birth of C. In M. 160 Ring in the C. that is to be In M. 164 Ah C, that it were possible • Ma. 96 As the churches have kill'd their C. Ma. 103 God accept him, C. receive him Ma. 152 The saintly youth, the spotless lamb of C. /. K. 132 — all his legions crying C. and him /. K. 163 Have everywhere about this land of C. /. K. 247 To break the heathen and uphold the C. /. K. 24.9 —so thou lean on our fair father C. I. K. 254 Save C. as we believe him E. A. 80 C. ere his agony E. A. 92 Not preaching simple C. to simple men E. A. 97 C. the bait to trap his dupe and fool E. A. 106 CHRISTIAN, —barbarian lower than the C. Poems 282 The graceful tact, the C. art In M. 170 — who kept a tender C. hope E. A. 98 CHRISTLESS. —up into Heaven the C. code Ma. 86 CHRISTMAS, —old honour had from C. gone Pms 189 The clear church-bells ring in the C. morn Poems 202 The cock crows ere the C. morn Poems 335 We seven stay'd at C. up to read Pr. 10 Chimeras, crotchets, C. solecisms Pr. n As here at C Pr. n Charades and riddles as at C. here Pr. 11 The C. bells from hill to hill In M. 45 56 CIRCUMSTANCE Page CHRISTMAS. The holly round the C. In M. 48 The holly round the C. hearth hi M. 107 Again at C. did we weave In M. 107 At C. : ever welcome at the Hall E. A. 57 — when the second C. came E. A. 94 Which some green C. crams with weary Select. 197 CHRISTMAS EVE. —Allen's on the C. Poems 189 How dare we keep our C. In M. 47 — sadly fell our C. In M. 48 — calmly fell our C. In M. 107 — strangely falls our C. In M. 161 CHRONICLE. — good knight he I we keep a c. Pr. 2 — the gallant glorious c. Pr. 4 The total chronicles of man, the mind Pr. 48 — ran thro' all the coltish c. Ma. 125 Into the c. of a deedful day E. A. 61 CHRYSALIS. —St Simeon ! This dull c. Poems 241 Or ruin'd c. of one In M. 113 CHUCKLE. We whisper and hint and c. Ma. 18 CHUCKLED. It clutter'd here, it.c. there Poems 185 CHUCKLING, —with a low and c. laugh /. K. 134 CHURCH. — sweet c. bells began to peal Poems 308 — in the dark c. like a ghost In M. 93 A single c. below the hill In M. 160 She came to the village c. - Ma. 33 — the churchmen fain would kill their c. Ma. 103 As homeward by the c. I drew Ma. 134 In cluster : then a moulder'd c. E. A. 1 Or kerchief ; while the c, — one night, excepts. A. 83 — pious variers from the c. E. A. 97 CHURCH-BELL. Toll ye the c. sad and slow />ns 368 Pr. 73 Pr. 74 Pr. 101 InM. 18 InM. 80 I.K. 17 /. K. 139 r. k. 239 /. K. 256 Poems 265 : Pr. 32 Poems 115 Poems 209 The long day wanes : the slow moon climbs pGems 267 Cry, faint not, c. : the summits slope Poems 298 — he with matter, should she c. Poetns 307 I leave the plain, I c. the height Poems 335 Set forth to c. ; then, climbing, Cyril kept Pr. 72 - -she as one that climbs a peak to gaze Pr. 159 Be near us when we c. or fall In M. 73 C. thy thick noon, disastrous day In M. 100 I c. the hill : from end to end In M. 151 C. in her throat, and with her feet unseen /. K. 185 To which I would not or I could not c. /. K. 258 A long street climbs to one tall-tower'd miL E. A. 1 CLIMB'D. Of college : he had c. across the Pr. 7 So I and some went out to these : we c. Pr. 179 — thither I c. at dawn Ma. 49 /have c. nearer out of lonely Hell Ma. 63 I c. the roofs at break of day Ma. 157 — c. upon a fair and even ridge /. K. 13 — thrice that morning Guinevere had c. /. K. 44 Leaving her household and good father c. A K. 148 She set her own and c. ; he turn'd his face /, K. 86 Then to h^r tower she c, and took the shield I. K. 168 C. to the high top of the garden-wall /. K. 226 —as he c. the hill E. A. 4 I c. to the top of the garth E. A. 119 They c. as quickly, for the rim E. A. 146 CLIMBING. In ever c. up the c. wave ? Poems 146 — ever c. higher Poems 151 — c. up into" my airy home Poems 244 Came little copses c. Poems 327 Set forth to climb ; then, c, Cyril kept Pr. 72 — with her venturous climbings and tumbles Ma. 10 — kiss'd her c, and she cast her arms I. K. 86 The c. street, the mill, the leafy lanes E. A. 33 A lily-avenue c. to the doors E. A. 59 Was c. up the valley E. A. 63 CLIME. The poet in a golden c. was born Poems 38 Thrill'd thro' mine ears in that unblissful c. Poems 153 — what to me were sun of c. ? Poems 283 In divers seasons, divers climes Poems 323 — on the tables every c. and age Pr. 2 —led him thro' the blissful climes In M; 119 CLOSE Page CLIME, —throve and branch'd from c. to c. In M. 183 — sail is blown by the breeze of a softer c. Ma. 15 — many a time in many a c. Ma. 141 O hundred shores of happy climes E. A. 147 Again to colder climes we came E. A. 150 Put forth and feel a gladder c. ' Select. 220 CLING. As close as might be would he c. Poems 250 On the little flower that clings Ma. gy When all night long a cloud clings to the hills /. K. 82 — its own voice clings to each blade of grass /. K. 153 They c. together in the ghastly sack E. A. 90 My mother clings about my neck E. A. 156 CLINGING. Not c. to some ancient saw Poems 180 Unshaken, c. to her purpose, firm Pr. 124 CLINK, —coin, the tinsel c. of compliment Pr. 32 Thou hear'st the village hammer c. In M. 187 CLINK'D. Touch'd, c, and clash'd E. A. 103 CLINKING. Unlifted was the c. latch Poems 9 Hammering and c, chattering stony names Pr. 73 Lancelot knew the little c. sound I. K. 198 CLIP. Tho' fortune c. my wings Poeitis 341 CLIPT. They read in arbours c. and cut Poems 329 Or keeps his wing"d affections c. with crime Pr. 174 Not the c. palm of which they boast Ma. 155 Annie from her baby's forehead c. E. A. 13 Were c. by horror from his term of life E. A. 82 She c. you from her head E. A. 162 CLOAK. — the red cloaks of market girls Poems 67 — raised the c. from brows as pale and smooth Pr. no Pitiful sight, wrapp'd in a soldier's c. Pr. no — she cloaks the wounds of loss with lies /. K. 136 Wrapt in a c, as I saw him Ma. 8 CLOAK'D. The Shadow c. from head to foot/;; M. 39 CLOCK. The slow c. ticking, and the sound Poems 12 The wind} r clanging 01 the minster c. Poems 204 — heavy clocks knolling the drowsy hours Poems 210 — rose a noise of striking clocks Poems 318 Of clocks and chimes, like silver hammers Pr. 26 — watches in the dead, the dark, when clocks Pr. 162 — in the dusk of thee, the c. In M. 2 — hark the c. within, the silver knell Ma. 62 CLOCK-WORK. A little c. steamer Pr. 5 CLOG. — lighten this great c. of thanks Pr. 143 — fulsome Pleasure c. him, and drown Ma. 53 A c. of lead was round my feet Ma. 131 CLOISTER. Of cloisters, branch'd like Poems 113 For while our cloisters echo'd frosty feet Pr. 10 Walk your dim c, and distribute dole /. K. 260 CLOMB. — sweets, which as they c. Poems 20 Up-c. the shadow)' pine above the woven Poems 142 C. to the roofs, and gazed alone for hours Pr. 159 CLOSE. Or a garden bower d c. Poems 30 The air is damp, and hush'd, and c. Poems 32 In love with thee forgets to c. Poems 34 C. the door, the shutters c. Poem's 45 I'd clasp it round so c. and tight Poems 92 -c.to thine in that quick-falling dew Poems 106 Making sweet c. of his delicious toils Poems 120 -it came, and c. besidethe window-bars Poems 140 C. up his eyes : tie up 'his chin Poems 170 To c. the interests of all Poe??is 180 — this be true, till Time shall c. Poems 182 Into the world without : till c. at hand Poems 208 The c.,' Your Letty, only yours ' Poe-ms 234 I broke a c. with force and arms Poems 235 Pent in a roofless c. of ragged stones Poems 238 As c. as might be would he cling Poems 250 Her kisses were so c. and kind Poems 252 Then c. and dark my arms I spread Poer/is 254 Of love that never found his earthly c. Poe??is 258 Death closes all : but something ere the end Poems 267 Are wither'd in the thorny c. Poe-ms 317 More c. and c. his footsteps wind Poe-ms 318 C. to the sun in lonely lands Poems 376 C. at the boundary of the liberties Pr. 24 — some clear planet c. upon the Sun Pr. 31 As if to c. with Cyril's random wish Pr. 59 Damp from the river : and c. behind her stood Pr. 89 You lying c. upon his territory Pr. 95 Of Fancy, and the bitter c. of all Pr. 142 — hugg'd and never hugg'd it c. enough Pr. 147 C. by her, like supporters on a shield Pr. 155 So gentle, so employ'd, should c. in love Pr. 160 Last I woke sane, but well-nigh c. to death Pr. 163 Or all, they said, as earnest as the c. ? Pr. 178 — drove us, last, to quite a solemn c. Pr. 178 Pull sideways, and the daisy c. In M. 99 Until we c. with all we loved In M. 202 Not c and darken above me Ma. 41 59 CLOSE Page CLOSE. Full to the hanks, c. on the promised Ma. 58 — even then I heard her c. the door Ma. 59 Such a war had such a c. Ma. 144 Love of self, before his journey closes Ma. 148 — c. upon the shining- table-lands Ma. 149 C. to the ridge of a noble down Ma. 162 Which shone so c. beside Thee /. K. vii. And seeing them so tender and so c. /. K. 2 C. on the borders of a territory /. K. 3 Then riding c. behind an ancient churl /. K. 14 — c. beneath, a meadow gemlike chased /. K. 56 To c. with her lord's pleasure ; but Geraint /. K. 57 Last, coming up quite c, and in his mood /. K. 83 (The King is c. behind me) bidding him /. K. 88 Down, down, and c. again, and nip me flat I. K. 111 To such a stern and iron-clashing c. /. K. 115 (For now the storm was c. above them) struck/. K. 142 Yet save me ! ' clung to him and hugg'd him c. /. K. 143 —wrought upon his mood and hugg'd him c. /. K. 143 — c. behind them stept the lily maid /. K 156 A little ere I die, and c. the hand /. K. 205 C. underneath his eyes, and right across /. K. 212 The sombre c. of that voluptuous day /. K. 260 Almost as neat and c. as Nature packs E. A. 10 Death dawning on him, and the c. of all E. A. 45 Sear'd by the c. ecliptic, was not fair E. A. 61 C, crashing with long echoes thro' the land E. A. 68 The cordon c. and closer toward the death E. A. 77 Then conies the c.' E. A. 97 At c. of day E. A. 97 — found, for it was c. beside E. A. in C. over us, the silver star E. A. 140 Thy sweet eyes brighten slowly c. to mine E. A. 141 A thousand on the plain: and c. by each E. A. 178 —breathe it into earth and c. it up Select. 197 With one wide will that closes thine Select. 221 CLOSE-BUTTON'D. —more, c. to the storm P?ns 235 CLOSED. A thousand claims to reverence c. Poems vi. Half-c, and others studded wide Poems 21 Sir King, I c. mine eyelids, lest the gems Poems 196 Summ'd up and c. in little : — Juliet Poems 203 She turn'd, we c. , we kiss'd, swore faith Poems 234 — hoped that ere this period c. Poems 236 — to all the present for the promise that it c. Poems 269 C. in a golden ring Poems 363 — thus our conference c. Pr. 48 — riders front to front, until they c. Pr. 132 Flow'd from me : darkness c. me : and I fell Pr. 135 My spirit c. with Ida's at the lips Pr. 165 So c. our tale, of which I give you all Pr. 177 — there rose a shout : the gates were c. Pr. 179 Who spoke few words and pithy, such as c. Pr. 182 — where warm hands have prest and c. In M. 20 Were taken to be such as c. In M. 70 Were c. with wail, resume their life In M. 133 — my pulses c. their gates with a shock on my Ma, * 3 The gates of Heaven are c, and she is gone Ma. 59 —by this my love has c. her sight Ma. 62 Until they c. a bargain, hand in hand Ma. 125 Dash'd on Geraint, who c. with him /. K. 70 C. in the four walls of a hollow tower /. K. 104 C. in the four walls of a hollow tower Z, K. 121 The slow tear creep from her c. eyelid yet /. K. 141 A down the forest, and the thicket c. /. K 144 — c. the hand upon it, and she died /. K. 206 ' O c. about by narrowing nunnery -walls /. K. 243 — she c. the Book and slept E. A. 28 Less than the teller : only when she c. E. A. 39 Crept to the gate, and open'd it, and c. E. A. 42 Then c. her access to the wealthier farms E. A. 77 — fain had she c. them now E. A. 92 CLOSE-LATTICED to the brooding heat Poems 73 CLOSELIER. — once mine, now thine, is c. /. K. 116 CLOSE-MATTED, bur and brake and briar Poems 315 CLOSER. Nor finds a c. truth than this Poems 324 Were always friends, none c, elm and vine Pr. 46 Was silent : c. prest, denied it not Pr. 86 — loved me c. than his own right eye Pr. 134 — a c. interest flourish'd up Pr. 163 — act and love, a c. link In M. 210 That Love could bind them c. E. A. 53 Philip coming somewhat c. spoke E. A. 22 CLOSE-SET. A c. robeof jasmine sown with E. A. 59 CLOSEST. In c. coverture upsprung Poems 22 Where truth in c. words shall fail In M. 56 C. and sweetest, and had died the death I. K. 192 CLOSET. — not to myself in the c. alone Ma. 105 CLOSETED, —with that woman c. for hours Pr. 57 Long-c. with her the yestermorn Pr. 91 60 InM. 5 I. K. 13 I.K. 33 I. K. 39 I.K. 42 I.K. 83 I. K. 106 E. A. 3'5 CLOUD Page CLOSING, —at the c. of the day Poems 70 — c. like an individual life Poems 261 — c. eaves of wearied eyes In M. 93 The c. cycle rich in good In M. 162 Thou listenest to the c. door In M. 187 CLOT. Is a c. of warmer dust Poems 370 CLOTH.. — inwrought flowers, a c. of gold Poems 25 Fair gleams the snowy altar-c. Poems 334 Took the face-c. from the face Pr. 136 — all the children in their c. of gold /. K. 36 —children of the king in c. of gold /. K. 36 — all the coverlid was c. of gold /. K. 207 The white mist, like a face-c. to the face /. K. 225 CLOTHE. That c. the wold and meet the sky Pms 65 — wear warm clothes Poems 240 O the child, too, clothes the father with Poems 275 Clothes and reclothes the happy plains Poems 313 Why lingereth she to c. her heart witn love Pr. 80 To c. herself, when all the woods are green? Pr. 80 Like coarsest clothes against the cold Will c. her for her bridals like the sun,' So c. yourself in this, that better fits She is not fairer in new clothes than old Herself would c. her like the sun in Heaven In this poor gown he bade me c. myself ' And lo, I c. myself with wisdom,' drew — clothes thej'- gave him and free passage — toil'd to c. your little ones E. A. 87 CLOTHED. — river-sunder'd champaign c. Poems 102 C. in white samite, mystic, wonderful Pms 192,196,197 C. with his breath, and looking, as he walk'd Pms 197 — c. on with chastity Poems 287 Pure spaces c. in living beams Poeyns 336 A thought flash'd thro' me which I c. in act Pr. 25 Ere these have c. their branchy bowers In M. 105 C. with my gift, and gay among the gay ' I. K. 40 — c. her for her bridals like the sun /. K. 45 — c. her in apparel like the day /. K. 96 Be ready on the river, c. in black /. K. 205 C. in so pure a loveliness ? yet thee /. K. 219 For with thy worst self hast thou c. thy God E. A. 84 CLOTHING the stem which else had fallen Poems 8 CLOTTED. — c. into points and hanging Poems 199 CLOUD. Like little clouds sun-fringed Poetns 15 — with the evening c. Poe?us 27 Forth gushes from beneath a low-hung c. Poems 29 Nor any c. would cross the vault Poems 74 Slowly, as from a c. of gold Poems 81 As thunder-clouds that, hung on high Poems 82 A c. that gather'd shape Poems 99 It was the deep midnoon : one silvery c. Poems 101 — o'er him flow'd a golden c. Poems 102 As she withdrew into the golden c. Poems 105 — narrow moon-lit slips of silver c. Poems 106 —death, death, death, thou ever-iioating c. Poems 107 A c. of incense of all odour steam'd Poems 114 — barr'd with long white c. the scornful crags Pms 116 — and the clouds are lightly curl'd Poems 148 Hold swollen clouds from raining ' Poems 150 The light white c. -swam over us Poems 159 Brightening the skirts of a long c. Poems 193 Smelt of the coming summer, as one large c. Pms 206 A sign betwixt the meadow and the c. Poems 236 The light c. smoulders on the summer crag Poems 235 Half-dipt in c. : anon she shook her head Poems 286 Wrapt in dense c. from base to cope Poems 298 Embracing c, Ixion-like Poems vcfi That every c, that spreads above Poems 310 The clouds are broken in the sky Poems 336 — clouds are highest up in air Poems 354 That made the wild-swan pause in her c. Poems 379 Becomes a c. : for all things serve their time Pr. 78 As of some fire against a stormy c. Pr. 94 Settled a gentle c. of melancholy Pr. 104 As comes a pillar of electric c. Pr. 134 A tempest, thro' the c. that dimm'd her broke Pr. 151 The c. may stoop from heaven and take the Pr. 157 O'er land and main, and sees a great black c. Pr. 159 Such clouds of nameless trouble cross In M. 4 Would dote and pore on yonder c. In M. 24 A rainy c. possess'd the earth In M. 48 Thro' clouds that drench the morning star hi M. 100 And I, ' Can clouds of nature stain In M. 122 —in the darkness and the c. In M. 144 We steer'd her toward a crimson c. In M. 159 The flying c, the frosty light In M. 163 Like clouds they shape themselves, and go In M. 191 —high in heaven the streaming c. In M. 209 —each man walks with his head in a c. Ma. 21 CLOUD Page CLOUD. In fold upon fold of huelessc. Ma. 25 in a c, it faded, and seems Ma. 26 Betwixt the c. and the moor Ma. 34 — thy wild wheel thro' sunshine, storm, and c. /. K. 19 Thy wheel and thou are shadows in the c. /. K. Slips into golden c, the maiden rose Then seeing a upon the mother's brow Sunlike from c. — and likewise thought Borne on a black horse like a thunder-c Hung like a c. above the gateway towers Drew the vast eyelid of an inky c. Died from his lips, across him came a c. Dispersed his resolution like a c. Silence, they cannot weep behind a c. —some little c. Sailing along before a gloomy c. A soft air fans the c. apart I.K. 39 /. K. 41 /. K. 42 /. K. 70 /. K. 124 /. K. 126 /. K. 164 /• K. 193 /. K. 236 E. A. 8 E. A. 102 E. A, CLOUDED. So spake he, c. with his own Poems 195 — all my mind is c with a doubt) Poems 200 As shines the moon in c. skies Poems 365 A doubtful smile dwelt like a c. moon Pr. 150 "What stays thee from the c. noons hi M. 114 I forgot the c. Forth Ma. 159 —till beneath a c. moon E. A. 36 CLOUDLESS. The memory like acair In M. 138 CLOli DLETS. From little c. on the grass In M. 208 CLOUDLIKE. — thro' me, and a c. change Poems 243 CLOUD-TOWERS by ghostly masons In M. 97 CLOUDY. The c. porch oft opening on the Poems 258 From many a c. hollow Poems 328 Which made him look so c. and so cold /. K. 48 Would fain have wrought upon his c. mood /. K. 101 But Arthur, who beheld his c. brows /. K. 218 —a c. gladness lightened Select. 38 CLOVE. The fragrant, glistening deeps, and c. Pms 19 — as we came, the crowd dividing c. Pr. 89 The nutmeg rocks and isles of c. E. A. 146 CLOVEN. Was c. with the million stars Poems 27 The long brook falling thro' the clov'n ravine Pms g3 — huddling slant in furrow-c. falls Pr. 168 That not a worm is c. in vain In M. 70 CLOVER. Rare broidry of the purple c. Poems 51 To rest beneath the c. sod In M. 14 CLOVER-HILL. — bells the o-hill swells Poems 43 CLOWN. — thou art mated with a c. Poems 272 Hereafter, neither knave nor c. Poems 350 My Shakespeare's curse on c. and knave Poems 351 Tho' smock'd, or furr'd and purpled, still the c. Pr. 87 —this is proper to the c. Pr. 87 Full of weak poison, turnspits for the c. Pr. 101 Glorifying c. and satyr Pr. 116 By blood a king, at heart a c. In M. 172 Not quite mismated with a yawning c. /. K. 68 CLUBS. — cursed Malavan crease and battle-c. Pr. 2 At wine, in c, of art, of politics Pr. 9 CLUMSY. Could give it a c. name Ma. 88 C LUNG. You should have c. to Fulvia's waist Pms 161 Kiss me, my children.' Then they c. about Poems 220 C. to the lake Poems 234 When I c. to all the present Poems 269 His forehead, then, a moment after, c Pr. 45 Arac -. all about his motion c. Pr. 120 Late the little children c. Ma. 150 Strike where it c. : so thickly shone the gems /. K. 82 He waver'd; but that other c. to him /. K. 103 Than hid her, c. about her lissome limbs /. K. 105 C. like a snake ; and letting her left hand /. K. 105 C. but to crate and basket,' ribs and spine /. K. 126 -:ave me ! ' c. to him and hugg'd him /. K. 143 Since to his crown the golden dragon c. /. K. 170 C. to the dead earth, and the land was still /. K. 225 To which for crest the golden dragon c. /. K. 256 — in whom all evil fancies c. E. A. 27 — the beetling crag to which he c. E. A. 63 C. to their fancies) E. A. 98 C. to the mother, and sent out a cry E. A. 109 CLUSTER. Below the starry clusters bright Poem s 69 Breadths of tropic shade and palms in c. Poetns 281 1 he foxglove c, dappled bells ' Poems 292 In c. : then a mcuider'd church E. A. 1 Their tawny clusters . E. A. 21 Came men and women in dark clusters E. A. 108 CLUSTER'D. With c. flower-bells and Poems 8 The c. marlsh-mosses crept Poems 10 C. about his temples like a God's Poems 100 CLUTCH. SoIc.it. Christ! Poems 243 — lives to c. the golden keys In M. 89 CLUTCH'D. Among the bulrush-beds, and c. Pms 196 He stoop'd and c him, fair and good Poems 344 j COLD Page CLUTCH'D. —she conceals it' So my mother c. Pr. 57 He, standing still, was c. : but I began p r 88 CLUTTER'D. It c. here, it chuckled there Poems 185 COAL. On the coals I lay Poems 242 And left his c. all turn'd into gold Ma. 36 COAL-BLACK. His c. curls as on he rode Poe?ns 69 COARSE. — been some maiden c. and poor! Poems 160 Now thy flute notes are changed to c. Poems 167 Which charts us all in its c. blacks or whites Pms 229 My sense of touch is something c. Poems 252 — growing c. to sympathise with clay Poems 272 Let them not He in the tents with c. mankind Pr. 140 A daughter of our meadows, yet not c. Ma. 120 My lord eat also, tho' the fare is c. /. K. 57 Half whistling and half singing a c, song /. K. 73 No c. and blockish God of acreage E. A. 85 — wove c. webs to snare her purity E. A. 91 COARSENESS. According to the c. of their Pr. 52 COARSEST. Like c. clothes against the cold In M. 5 Or in his c. Satyr-shape In M. 55 COAST. One show'd an iron c. and angry Poems 115 All round the c. the languid air did swoon Poems 142 A lucid veil from c. to c. In M. 93 That breaks the c. In M. 165 Like a shipwreck'd man on a c. Ma. 90 Back from the Breton c. Ma. 91 He bad you guard the sacred coasts Ma. 147 A moulder'd citadel on the c. Ma. 155 A province with a hundred miles of c. /. K. T2± The province with a hundred miles of c. /. K. 12J On the bare c. /. K. 228 After the sunset, down the c. he heard /. K. 237 All down the lonely c. of Lyonnesse /. K. 257 — that breaker-beaten c. E. A. 4 Then moving up the c. they landed him E. A 36 — seaward bound for health they gain'd a c. E. A. 97 Of that same c. E. A. 107 Gloom'd the low c. and quivering brine E. A. 147 COAT, —three castles patch mv tatter'd c? Pr. 50 C0ATS-0F-ARM5. Is worth a hundred c. Poems 126 COBWEB. — c. woven across the cannon's Ma. 113 The petty cobwebs we have spun /;: M. 192 I well could wish a c for the gnat /. A". 112 COBWEB'D. The dusky rafter'd many-c Hall /. K. 20 COCK. The c. sung out an hour ere light Poems 10 And the c. hath sung beneath the thatch Peer At midnight the c. was crowing Poems 53 Before the red c. crows from the farm upon Poems 135 I heard just now the crowing c Poems 169 The c. crew loud ; as at that time of year Poems 201 — barking dogs and crowing cocks Poems 318 The c. crows ere the Christmas mom Poems 335 O plump head-waiter at The C. Poems 339 The C. was of a larger egg Poems 344 Which was the red c. shouting to the light /. K. 66 COCKNEY-EAR. (Look at it) pricking a c. Ma. 37 COCO. The slender coco's drooping crown E. A. 32 COCOON. Spins, toiling out his own c. Poems 297 And we as rich as moths from dusk cocoons Pr. 30 CODE. — up into Heaven the Christless c. Ma. 86 CODtLESS. That c. mvriad of precedent E. A. 73 COGOLETTO. I stay'd'the wheels at C. Ma. 1^4 COIL. Hard coils of cordage E. A. 2 COIL'D. From his c. sleeps in the central Poems 61 That c. around the stately stems E. A. 32 COIN. Light c, the tinsel clink of compliment Pr. 32 Of Him that made them current c. In M. =;6 COINAGE. With gold and scattered c, and /. K. 47 Ringing like proven golden c. true E. A. 60 COLD. Till c. winds woke the sp-ay-eyed Poems 10 And dew is c. upon the ground Poems 17 Ere the placid lips be c. ': Poems 34 Quiet, dispassionate, and c. Poa . Nothing but the small c. worm Poems 49 And April's crescent glimmer'd c. Poems 89 That house the c. crown'd snake ! Poems 99 Upon her pearly shoulder leaning c. Poems 103 Walking the c 'and starless roadof Death Poeyns 108 Is not more c. to you than I Poems 127 — our household hearths are c. Poems 147 I I would the white c. heavy-plunging foam Poems 155 C. February loved, is dry Poems 166 C. that dagger of thy bill Poe?ns 166 The night is starry and c, my friend Poems 169 For Nature also, c. and warm Poems 180 So keep you c. or keep 3-ou warm Poems 186 My wound hath taken c. Poems 197 Ruffles her pure c. plume Poems 200 In hungers and in thirsts, fevers and c. Poems 236 61 COLD Page COLD. — chatter with the c, and all my Poems 237 Or make that morn, From his c. crown Poems 293 Because my memory is so c. Poems 305 Shy she was, and I thought her c. poems 337 But round him ere he scarce be c. Poems 351 Flow down, c. rivulet, to the sea Poems 364 A vapour heavy, hueless, formless, c. Poems 368 — c. vapour touch'd the palace gate Poems 368 On thy c. gray stones, O Sea Poems 378 The loyal warmth of Florian is not c. Pr. 42 To meet a c. ' We thank you, we shall hear Pr. 91 With some c. reverence worse than were she Pr. in C. ev'n to her, she sigh'd ; and when she saw Pr. 141 — call her hard and c, which seem'd a truth Pr. 162 By some c. morning glacier ; frail at first Pr. 163 In height and c, the splendour of the hills? Pr. x&j Like coarsest clothes against the c. In M. 5 C. in that atmosphere of Death In M. 33 And spread his mantle dark and c. In M. 37 Entwine the c. baptismal font In M. 47 A spectral doubt which makes me c. In M. 63 And those c. crypts where they shall cease In M. 83 How dwarf d a growth of c. and night In M. 86 So, dearest, now thy brows are c. hi M. 102 Is c. to all that might have been In M. 103 For us the same c. streamlet curl'd In M. 109 He looks so c. : she thinks him kind In M. 146 By each c. hearth, and sadness flings In M. 148 — c. and clear-cut face, as I found when her Ma. 11 Passionless pale c. face Ma. 13 C. and clear-cut face, why come you so cruelly Ma. 13 And smile as sunny as c. Ma. 26 Only because she was c. Ma. 50 C. fires, yet with power to burn and brand Ma. 60 In a c. white robe before me Ma. 96 That abiding phantom c. Ma. 98 * C. altar, Heaven and earth shall meet Ma. 131 — saw the altar c. and bare Ma. 131 Full c. my greeting was and dry Ma. 132 We loved that hall, tho' white and c. Ma. 155 — ill and weary, alone and c. Ma. 159 Which made him look so cloudy and so c. /. K. 48 And by the c. Hie Jacets of the dead I ' I. K. 133 Then, when he ceased, in one c. passive hand /. K. 210 Till in the c. wind that foreruns the morn /. K. 231 — done, glanced at him, thought him c. /. K. 246 — you think I am hard and c. E. A. 116 — rosy shadows bathe me, c. E. A. 143 — c. my wrinkled feet E. A. 143 Till all the comets in heaven are c. E. A. 160 COLD-BLOODED. That dull c. Caesar Poems 156 COLDER. The freezing reason's c. part In M. 192 Again to c. climes we came E. A. 150 COLDLY, —the Princess answer'd c. 'Good Pr. 93 Or short and c, and she knew right well /. K. 193 Lancelot, who c. went nor bad me one I. K. 202 C. thy rosy shadows bathe me cold E. A. 143 COLDNESS. The faithless c. of the times In M. 164 By the c. of their manners Ma. 71 COLD-WHITE. And white against the c. sky Pms 47 COLEWORT. —the c. a green caterpillar /. K. 227 COLLAR. A grazing iron c. grinds my neck Pms 240 COLLEGE. — I remember'd Everard's c. fame Pms 190 At c. : but another which you had Poems 190 I was at school — a c. in the South Poems 228 By night we dragg'd her to the c. tower Poems 228 My c. friendships glimmer Poems 340 From c, visiting the son Pr. 1 Of c. : he had climb'd across the spikes Pr. 7 Far off from men a c. like a man's Pr. 8 And swore he long'd at c, only long'd Pr. 9 A talk of c. and of ladies' rights Pr. 13 And rode till midnight when the c. lights Pr. 26 At break of day the C. Portress came Pr. 30 A rosy blonde, and in a c. gown Pr. 46 Her c. and her maidens, empty masks Pr. 64 King, camp, and c. turn'd to hollow shows Pr. 131 So their fair c. turn'd to hospital Pr. 158 ' Look there, a garden ! ' said my c. friend Pr. 179 And heard once more in c. fanes In M. 126 Should eighty-thousand c. -councils Ma. 161 And thus together, save for c. times E. A. 56 COLONNADED, —sombre old c. aisles Ma. 156 COLONY, —near the c. Camulodune E. A. 169 — c. half-defended ! lo their c. Camulodune E. A. 170 Roman bantling, lo the c. Camulodune E. A. 170 Then a phantom c. smoulder'd E. A. 170 Lo the c, there they rioted E. A. 172 So the silent c. hearing E. A. 173 62 COME Pago COLONY. Fell the c, city, and citadel E. A. 173 COLOSSAL. And moulded in c. calm In M. 204 C, seen of every land Ma. 149 COLOUR. — sweet is the c. of cove and cave Poems 44 A magic web with colours gay Poems 66 I lose my c. , I lose my breath Poems 84 A word could bring the c. to my cheek Poems 210 — came a c. and a light Poems 270 The c. flies into his cheeks Poems 317 All at once the c. flushes Poems 360 With c.) turn'd to me with ' As you will Pr. 12 (Her mother's c.) with her lips apart Pr. 46 In colours gayer than the morning mist Pr. 51 And danced the c, and, below, stuck out Pr. 69 * Sir Ralph has got your colours : if I prove Pr. 105 With Psyche's c. round his helmet, tough Pr. 134 — such as gather'd c. day by day Pr. 163 And with the thought her c. burns In M. 7 Be all the c. of the flower In M. 65 The colours of the crescent pzime 2 In M. 181 Saying in odour and c, ' Ah, be Ma. 75 She wore the colours I approved Ma. 132 But distant c, happy hamlet Ma. 155 1 See here, my child, how fresh the colours look /. K. 36 How fast they hold like colours of a shell /. K. 36 And made it of two colours ; for his talk /. K. 61 And so there lived some c. in your cheek /. K. 78 In c. like the satin-shining palm /. K. 105 With colours of the heart that are not theirs /. K. 136 Took gayer colours, like an opal warm'd /. K. 143 And lichen'd into c. with the crags /. K. 149 The low sun makes the c. : I am yours /. K. 154 The shape and c. of a mind and life I. K. 164 In earnest, let me bring your c. back /. K. 167 But did not love the c. ; woman's love /. K. 190 In the heart's colours on her simple face /. K. 190 I wanted warmth and c. which I found /. K. 258 Of early rigid c. E. A. 65 Kept c. : wondrous ! but, O mystery! E. A. 77 Then the captain's c. heighten'd Select. 38 COLOUR'D. — the topmost Oriels' c. flame Poems 119 — the emerald-c. water falling Poems 148 Ready to burst in a c. flame Ma. 26 — low moan of leaden-c. seas E. A. 34 COLOURLESS, and like the wither d moon Poems 198 COLT. Then ran she, gamesome as the c. Poems 250 Mix with his hearth : but you — she's yet a c. Pr. 130 Of how the Squire had seen the c. at grass Ma. 124 He pointed out a pasturing c. Ma. 124 He knew the man ; the c. would fetch its price Ma. 125 Like colts about the waste E. A. 17 COLTISH. Will let his c. nature break In M. 172 — ran thro' all the c. chronicle Ma. 125 COLT-LIKE. — c. whinny and with hoggish Poems 242 COLUMBUS. How young C. seem'd to rove Ma. 154 COLUMN. Six columns, three on either side Pms 25 So like a shatter'd c. lay the King Poems 199 — column's base, and almost blind Poems 237 The watcher on the c. till the end Poems 242 — the columns, pacing staid and still Pr. 51 — tall columns drown'd Pr. 155 — bared the knotted c. of his throat I. K. 5 — massive columns, like a shorecliff cave /. K. 168 COLUMN'D. Troas and Ilion's c. citadel Poems 98 A c. entry shone and marble stairs Pr. 126 And I saw crowds in c. sanctuaries Poems 151 COMB. With a c. of pearl I would c. my hair Pms 60 — with a c. of pearl Poems 60 — would c. my hair till my ringlets would fall Pms 60 Made with her right a c. of pearl to part /. K. 106 COMBAT. And when the tide of c. stands Poems 333 To prick us on to c, ' Like to like ! Pr. x-2-2 — sware to c. for my claim till death Pr. 125 Not dare to watch the c, only breathe /. K. 54 In c. with the follower of Limours /. K. 72 COMB'D. —still as I c. I would sing and say Poems 60 I curl'd and c. his comely head Poems no COMBING her hair Poems 60 Bow'd toward her, c. out her long black hair Pr. 88 COME. He will not c.,' she said Poems 12 C. not as thou earnest of late Poems 26 C. forth, I charge thee, arise Poems 28 C. from the woods that belt the gray hill-side Poe?ns 28 Dark-brow'd sophist, c. not anear Poems 41 C. not here Poems 41 — c. hither to me and to me Poems 43 — c. hither and furl your sails Poems 43 — c. hither and be our lords Poems 44 — c. hither and frolic and play Poems 44 COME Page COME. — c. hither and see Poems 44 C. away : for Life and Thought Poems 46 C. away : no more of mirth Poetns 46 How could I rise, and c. away Poems 55 I dare not die and c. to thee Poems 56 The knights c. riding two and two Poems 67 ' The curse is c. upon me,' cried Ppems 70 ' The night comes on that knows not morn Poems 77 Comes out thy deep ambrosial smile Poems 81 Thought seems to c. and go Poems 82 Elected umpire, Here comes to-day Poems 101 Would come uncall'd for) Poems 103 — c. most welcome, seeing men, in power Poems 103 —sounds at night c. from the inmost hills Poems 107 — into Troy, and ere the stars c. forth Poems 108 —her child ! — a shudder comes Poems 108 Lest their shrill happy laughter c. to me Poems 108 I made a feast : I bade him c. Poems 109 There comes no murmur of reply Poems 125 For the shepherd lads on every side 'ill c. Poems 132 The night-winds c. and go, mother Poems 132 — to live till the snowdrops c. again Poems 135 When the flowers c. again, mother Poems 135 — and the sun c. out on high Poems 135 And the swallow 'ill c. back again Poems 135 If I can I'll c. again, mother Poems 136 And you'll c. sometimes and see me Poems 136 Don't let Effie c. to see me till my grave Poems 137 sweet is the new violet, that comes Poems 138 And if it comes three times, I thought Poems 140 — we should c. like ghosts to trouble joy Poems 147 — I heard a voice that cried, ' C. here Poems 155 C. to you, gleams of mellow light Poems 164 -c. down, and hear me speak Poems 165 Comes up to take his own Poems 169 And gently comes the world to those Poems 171 Nothing comes to thee new or strange Poems 174 The Spirit of the years to c. Poems 181 So let the change which comes be free Poems 181 -keep a thing : its use will c. Poems 190 Tho' Merlin sware that I should c. again Poems 192 Or hath c, since the making of the world Poems 198 — in a waste land, where no one comes Poe?ns 198 — further inland, voices echoed, — ' c. Poems 202 ' Arthur is c. again : he cannot die ' Poems 202 Repeated — ' c. again, and thrice as fair ' Poems 202 News from the humming city comes to it Poems 204 Nor heard us c, nor from her tendance Poems 208 Call'd to me from the years to c. Poems 209 Is c. to raise the veil Poems 213 — for this orphan, I am c. to you Poems 216 Or William, or this child : but now I c. Poems 219 His mother, he cried out to c. to her Poems 219 1 go to-night : I c. to-morrow morn Poems 223 And when does this c. by ? Poe??is 225 — shall miss the mail : and here it comes Poems 229 — the evil ones c. here and say Poems 239 That here c. those that worship me ? Ha I Poems 240 But that a time may c. — yea, even now Poems 243 C, blessed brother, c. Poems 243 — slow and sure comes up the golden year Poems 263 And down the way you use to c. Poems 250 might it c. like one that looks content Poems 261 Spun round in station, but the end had c. Poems 261 Moans round with many voices. C, my Poems 267 — a fuller crimson comes upon the robin's Poems 269 — summers to such length of years should c. Poems 273 Slowly comes a hungry people, as a lion Poems 279 Knowledge comes, but wisdom lingers Poems 280 Never comes the trader, never floats an Poems 281 Comes a vapour from the margin Poems 284 The fatal byword of all years to c. Poems 287 C. from the wells where he did lie Poems 289 — comes the check, the change, the fall Poems 297 In days that never c. again Poems 304 Faint murmurs from the meadows c. Poems 313 C, Care and Pleasure, Hope and Pain Poems 315 He comes, scarce knowing what he seeks Poems 317 The flashes c. and go Poems 332 Till Ellen Adair c. back to me Poems 338 Love may c, and love may go Poems 338 1 pledge her, and she comes and dips Poems 340 Comes out, a perfect round Poems 342 To c. and go, and c. again Poems 348 ■ That all comes round so just and fair Poems 354 Why c. you drest like a village maid Poems 356 • If I c. drest like a village maid Poems 357 When beneath his roof they c. Poems 359 Here is custom c. your way Poems 368 Page Poems 37z M. 134 C, wear the form by which I know In M. 135 C. ; not in watches of the night In M. 135 C, beauteous in thine after form In M. 135 But he, the Spirit himself, may c. In M. 137 The violet comes, but we are gone In M. 161 With thousand shocks that c. and go In M. 176 1 c. once more ; the city sleeps In M. 185 Behind thee comes the greater light In M. 187 With faith that comes of self-control In M. 202 And back we c. at fall of dew hi M. 209 — should I stay ? can a sweeter chance ever c. Ma. 9 — clear-cut face, why c. you so cruelly meek Ma. 13 C. sliding out of her sacred glove Ma. 30 Then let c. what c. may Ma. 41 One is c. to woo her Ma. 44 That old man never comes to his place Ma. 47 — my heart to think she comes once more Ma. 59 — her brother comes like a blight Ma. 70 C. out to your own true lover Ma. 73 — then, oh then, c. out to me Ma. 73 C. into the garden, Maud Ma. 76 C. hither, the dances are done Ma. 79 — c. to her waking, find her asleep Ma. 93 63 93 COME Page COME. Get thee hence, nor c. again Ma. 98 — day comes, a dull red ball Ma. 99 Has c. to pass as foretold Ma. 104 She comes from another stiller world of the Ma. 106 When he comes to the second corpse in the Ma. 107 -somebody, surely, some kind heart will c. Ma. 108 I c. to be grateful at last for a little thing Ma. in I c. from haunts of coot and hern Ma. 118 For men may c. Ma. 119, 120, 127 Yes, men may c. and go ; and these are gone Ma. 127 But she — you will be welcome— O, c. in ! ' Ma. 129 That most she loves to talk of, c. with me Ma. 129 There comes a sound of marriage bells ' Ma. 134 To thee the greatest soldier comes Ma. 142 C, when no graver cares employ Ma. 161 God-father, c. and see your boy Ma. 161 (Take it and c.) to the Isle of Wight Ma. 162 C., Maurice, c. : the lawn as yet Ma. 164 Nor pay but one, but c. for many Ma. 164 That I but c. like you to see the hunt /. K. 10 To find, at some place I shall c. at, arms /. K. 12 Comes flying over many a windy wave /. K. 18 Constrain'd us, but a better time has c. /. K. 38 By the flat meadow, till she saw them c. I. K. aa Here comes a laggard hanging down his /. K. 48 C, we will slay him and will have his horse /. K. 49 Nay,' said the second, 'yonder comes a /. K. 52 And if he want me, let him c. to me I. K. 58 You c. with no attendance, page or maid /. K. 63 And do not practise on me, c. with morn /. K. 64 C. slipping o'er their shadows on the sand /. K. 70 And now their hour has c. ; and Enid said /. K. 82 I c. the mouthpiece of our King to Doorm /. K. 88 To Arthur, then will Arthur c. to you ' /. K. 89 I lived in hope that sometime you would c. I. K. 90 Not used mine own : but now behold me c. /. K. 93 C. from the storm ' and having no reply /. K. 140 In keeping- till I c' 'A grace to me ' /. K. 167 Now crescent, who will c. to all I am /. K. 170 Past, thinking 'is it Lancelot who has c. /. K. 176 This will he send or c. for : furthermore . /. K. 180 So when the ghostly man had c. and gone /. K. 204 Or c. to take the King to fairy land? /. K. 213 C, for you left me taking no farewell /. K. 213 ' Traitor, c. out, ye are trapt at last,' aroused /. K. 230 And all was still : then she, ' the end is c. /. K. 230 For if there ever c. a grief to me /. K. 235 C. dashing down on a tall waj^side flower /. K. 238 Kill'd in a tilt, c. next, five summers back /. K. 242 And knowest thou now from whence I c. /. K. 248 I did not c. to curse thee, Guinevere /. K. 253 • Yet think not that I c. to urge thy crimes /. K. 253 But hither shall I never c. again /. K. 255 ' Save them from this, whatever comes to me'£. A. 7 (Sure that all evil would c. out of it) E. A. 9 C, Annie, c, cheer up before I go' E. A. n — make him merry, when I c. home again E. A. n Look to the babes, and till I c. again E. A. 13 For, if you will, when Enoch comes again E. A. 17 —if he c. again, vext will he be E. A. 17 ' C. with us, Father Philip,' he denied E. A. 21 If Enoch comes — but Enoch will not c. E. A. 24 C. out and see ' E. A. 26 —the dead man c. to life E. A. 41 Who hardly knew me living, let them c. E. A. 48 I am their father ; but she must not c. E. A. 48 Cries ' c. up hither,' as a prophet to us? E. A. 89 -link'd their race with times to c. E. A. 91 Then comes the close ' E, A. 97 — then comes what comes E. A. 105 ' His deeds yet live, the worst is yet to c. E. A. 113 For Jenny, my cousin, had c. to the place E. A. 117 They c. and sit by my chair E. A. 124 —she comes and goes at her will E. A. 124 Often they c. to the door E. A. 124 And the neighbours c. and laugh E. A. 125 But Parson a comes an' a goos E. A. 131 — c. Michaelmas thirty year E. A. 134 But summun 'ull c. ater mea mayhap E. A. 136 Man comes in and tills the field E. A. 139 A soft air fans the cloud apart : there comes E. A. 141 ■ — a doubt will only c. for a kiss E. A. 161 • C, kiss it, love, and put it by E. A. 163 C. to us, love us, and make us your own E. A. 165 Look, I c. to the test, a tiny poem E. A. 175 —every height comes out, and jutting peak E. A. 177 Now thy face across his fancy comes Select. 207 Comes Faith from tracts no feet have trod Select. 2,-2.-1 C. Hope and Memory, spouse and bride Select. 221 64 COMING Page COMED. — to 'a said an* I c. awaay E. A. 130 An' I hallus c. to 's choorch E. A. 130 Doon i' the woild 'enemies afoor I c. E. A. 132 — to Squoire sin fust a c. to the ' All E. A. 135 COMELINESS. Has a broad-blown c. Ma. 46 COMELY. I curl'd and comb'd his c. head Poems no 'My sister.' ' C. too by all that's fair ' Pr. 35 They say she's c. : there's the fairer chance Pr. 130 Yet.since the face is c— some of you /. K. 75 You mar a c. face with idiot tears /. K. 75 And when the knights had laid her c. head /. K. zzj COMERS. — new-c. in an ancient hold Poems 230 New-c. from the Mersey, milhonaires Poems 230 You set before chance-c. Poems 339 COMEST. 'Whence c. thou, my guest, and /. K. 156 Thou c. not with shows of flaunting vines Poems 28 Thou c. atween me and the skies Poems *6 Thou c, much wept for : such a breeze In M. 28 COMETH. At midnight the moon c. Poems 3 He c. not,' she said Poems 9, 10, 11, 12 He c. quickly : from below Poems gj Who is he that c. like an honour'd guest Ma. 142 — there c. a victory now E. A. 171 COMETS. Till all the c. in heaven are cold E. A. 160 COMFORT. The c, I have found in thee Poems 94 No c. anywhere Poems 124 But, Effie, you must c. her when I Poems 140 It comforts me in this one thought to dwell Poems 160 C. thyself: what c. is in me ? Poems 200 — follow'd counsel, c, and the words Poems 260 Where is c. ? in division of the records of Poems 274 C. ? c. scorn'd of devils Poems 274 Take c. : five, dear lady, for your child ' Pr. m O base and bad ! what c. ? none for me ! ' Pr. 111 Our chiefest c. is the littlexhild Pr. 129 Sole c. of m}' dark hour, when a world Pr. 146 That out of words a c. win In M. .33 Of c. clasp'd in truth reveal'd In M. 58 Reach out dead hands to c. me In M. in And find his c. in thy face In M. 169 And c. her tho' I die Ma. 93 C. her, c. her, all things good Ma. 93 The love of all Thy people c. thee /. K. viii. That c. from their converse which he took /. K. 96 Because I saw you sad, to c. you /. K. 116 • Have c.,' whom she greeted quietly /. K. 198 C. your sorrows ; for they do not flow /. K. 235 May be some little c' E. A. 16 Why, that would be her c' E. A. 44 Take, give her this, for it may c. her E. A. 49 Of c. and an open hand of help E. A. 60 Poor children, for their c. : the wind blew E. A. 73 — the kindly wife to c. him E. A. 103 COMFORTABLE, —in the shade of c. roofs Poems 240 Nor wholly c. Poems 345 The ruddy square of c. light E. A. 40 COMFORTED. — your prince : look up : be c. Pr. no * Be c. : have I not lost her too Pr. no Who gave me back my child? ' 'Bee' Pr. 112 ' Annie, my girl, cheer up, be c. E. A. 13 COMFORTING. An image c. the mind In M. 120 COMIC. Too solemn for the c. touches in them Pr. 180 Too c. for the solemn things they are Pr. 180 COMING in the scented breeze Poems 79 Flush'd like the c. of the day Poems 90 Went forth to embrace him c. ere he came Poems 100 C. thro' Heaven, like a light that grows Poems 102 And the New-year's c. up, mother Poems 134 A noise of some one c. thro' the lawn Poems 157 Smelt of the c. summer Poems 206 -large excitement that the c. years would Poems 277 Each month, a birth-day c. on Poems 343 Where they like swallows c. out of time Pr. 51 The green malignant light of c. storm Pr. 61 A fact within the c. year hi M. 136 A song that slights the c. care In M. 149 -they are c. back from abroad Ma. 9 And I see my Oread c. down Ma. 53 Her brother is c. back to-night Ma. 64 She is c, my dove, my dear Ma. 80 She is c, my life, my fate Ma. 80 She is c, my own, my sweet Ala. 80 — spoke of a hope for the world in the c. wars Ma. 112 If James were c. 'C. everyday' A a. 123 Had told her, and their c. to the court /. K. 8 She lock'd on ere the c. of Geraint /. K. 33 Had toid her, and their c. to the court /. K. 45 ' I will abide the c. of my lord /. K. 52 And she abode his C, and said to him /. K. 53 COMING Page COMING. But c. back he Iearnc it, and the /. K. 72 And c. up close to her, said at last I. A". 81 Last, c. up quite close, and in his mood /. A'. S3 Which sees the trapper c. thro' the wood /. A". 84 A storm was c, but the winds were still /. K. 101 C. and going, and he lay as dead /. A'. 104 Such trumpet-blowings in it, c. down /. A". 115 And watch the curl'd white of the c. wave /. A". 108 C. and going, and she lay as dead /. A'. 127 "Would listen for her c and regret /. K. 192 At Camelot, ere the c. of the Queen ' /. K. 236 And wonders ere the c of the~Oueen /. A'. 237 Before the c. of the sinful Queen ' 1. K. 239 Rang c, prone from off her seat she fell /. K. 247 To guard thee in the wild hour c. on /. K. 248 Philip c. somewhat closer spoke E. A. 22 I mind him c. down the street E. A. 46 His wreck, his lonely life, his c. back E. A. 47 And Leolin, c. after he was gone E. A. 63 Tho" far between, and c. fitfully E. A. 75 Narrow' d her goings out and comings in E. A. 77 A crippled lad, and c. turn'd to fly E. A. 78 Announced the c. doom, and fulminated E. A. 97 And she to be c. and slandering me E. A. 117 COMMAND. — he obey when one commands? Pms 300 Man to c. and woman to obey Pr. 130 He, that ever following her commands Ma. 149 I cannot all c. the strings In M. 129 On knowledge ; under whose c. In M. 210 And gave c. that all which once was ours I. K. 37 Your warning or your silence ? one c ' I. K. 49 Debating his c. of silence given /. K. 65 Then breaking his c. of silence given /. K. 66 "Wroth chat the king's c. to sally forth /. AT. 176 COMMANDER. — great commander's claim Ma. 145 COMMEASURE perfect freedom ' Poems 104 COMMENCED. However then c. the dawn Pr. 36 Like some Avild creature newlv-caged, c. Pr. 44 COMMENT. For wholesale c' Pardon, I am Pr. 57 Their lavish c when her name was named /. K. 101 With c, densest condensation, hard /. K. 129 And none can read the c. but myself /. A". 129 And in the c. did I find the charm /, A. 129 COMMERCE and conquest, shower the fiery Pr. 128 Saw the heavens fill with c Poems 278 So hold I c. with the dead In M. 122 No more shall c. be all in all Ma. 113 Traitor or true ? that c. with the Queen /. K. 134 —brought the stinted c. of those davs E. A. 45 COMMERCING, —and c. with himself Poenis 226 COMMINGLED with the gloom of imminent /. A", v. COMMISSION. A bought c, a waxen face Ma. 38 COMMISSIONERS, —harping on church-c. Poems 189 COMMON. — that to me, by c. voice Poei7is 101 Was c. clay ta'en from the c. earth Poems 111 For that is not a c. chance Poems 173 The c. month Poems 205 — mix'd with shadows of the c. ground Poems 208 May not be dwelt on by the c. day Poe?ns 213 Of c. duties, decent not to fail Poems 260 The c. sense of most shall hold a fretful Poems 279 He looks not like the c. breed Poems 344 One shade more plump than c. Poems 345 Into the c. da .? Poems 345 Discuss'd his tutor, rough to c. men Pr. 7 All for the c. good of womankind' Pr. 40 Him you call great: he for the c. weal Pr. 44 From out a c. vein of memory Pr. 45 Torn from the lintel, — all the c. wrong Pr. 113 A c. light of smiles at our disguise "" Pr. 121 That swallow c. sense, the spindling king Pr. 130 The c. hate with the revolving wheel Pr. 145 — where you seek the c. love of these Pr. 145 The c. men with rolling eyes : amazed Pr. A55 That, having seen, forgot? The c. mouth Pr 205 And c. is the commonplace In M. 6 Too c ! Never morning wore In M, 6 That ' Loss is c. to the race In M. 6 That loss is c. would not make In M. 6 To this which is our c. grief hi M. 118 Ring in the c. love of good In M. 164 — crost the c. into Darnley chase Ma. 124 W r hole in himself, a c. good Ma. 139 Long in their c love rejoiced Geraint /. K. 2 To cleanse this c. sewer of all /. A" 3 He sow'd a slander in the c. ear / K. 24 A c. chance— right well I know it— pall'd I. A'. 63 To cleanse this c. sewer of all my realm /. K. 93 Than Lancelot told me of a c. talk /. K. 177 CONCEAL Page COMMON. Most c. : yea I know it of mine I. A'. 196 Grieve with the c. grief of all the realm?' I. K. 236 — doubts and fears were c. to her state E. A. 29 The c. care whom no one cared for E. A. 86 COMMONPLACE. — commonplaces break Poems 340 And common is the c. In M. 6 COMMON-SENSE. Rich in saving c. Ma. 139 COMMUNE. To c. with that barren voice Poems 311 For days of happy c. dead In M. 181 Held c. with herself, and while she held I. K. 65 COMMUNED. But c. only with the little maid /. A'. 232 COMMUNICATE. We two c. no more ' In M. 122 COMMUNING with herself: ■ All these are Poems 120 C. with his captains of the war Pr. 18 COMMUNION. An hour's c. with the dead In M. 138 COMO. To C. ; shower and storm and blast Ma. 157 From C, when the light was gray Ma. 158 COMPACT, —low churl, c. of thankless earth Pms 287 He said there was a c, that was true Pr. 17 In our sweet youth, there did a c. pass Pr. 21 Our formal c, j-et,not less (all frets Pr. 23 C. with lucid marbles, boss'd with lengths Pr. 30 The child of regal c. Pr. 96 My father 'that our c. be fulfill'd Pr. 113 Her c' ■ 'Sdeath ! but we will send to her Pr. 123 COMPANION. From all her old companions Pr. 42 Too harsh to your c. j-estermorn Pr. 64 — wine and free companions kindled him /. K. 61 Fled all the boon companions of the Earl I. K. 71 Meanwhile the new companions past awav /. K. 168 COMPANIONLESS. I, the last, go forth c. Poems 199 COMPANIONSHIP. Who broke our fair c. In M. 37 COMPANY. Where sat a c. with heated eyes Pms 366 A glorious c, the flower of men I. K. 249 — would weep for c. E. A. 3 COMPARISON. And half asleep she made c. A A". 35 COMPASS, —in the c. of three little words Poems 211 As winds from all the c. shift and blow Poems 286 To c. our dear sisters' liberties ' Pr. 69 To c. her with sweet observances /. K. 47 Might he within their c. E. A. 76 — his c. is but of a single note E. A. 158 COMPASS'D. And c. by the inviolate sea' Poems vii. C, how eagerly I sought to strike Poems 161 All beauty c. in a female form Pr. 31 Sat c. with professors : they the while Pr. 52 — c. by two armies and the noise Pr. 124 And c. by the fires of Hell In M. 197 That, c. round with turbulent sound Ma. 165 He c. her with sweec observances I. K. 3 — c. round by the blind wall of night E. A. orj COMPEL. I c. all creatures to my will I. A". 79, 81 COMPELL'D thy canvasiand my prayer In M. 28 COMPELLING. — such c. cause to grieve In M. 47 COMPENSATED. For often fineness c. size Pr. 37 COMPENSATING, —nor c. the want E. A. 14 COMPETENCE. — years of health and c. E. A. 5 COMPLAINING. — stream in his banks c. Poems 70 C, ' Mother, give me grace Poems 74 — call'd him by his name, c. loud Poems 198 COMPLAINT. Not whisper, any murmur of c. Pms 237 What end is here to my c. ? In M. 112 COMPLETE. — in Art : a friendship so c. Poems 203 Borne down by gladness so c. In, M. 51 "When God hath made the pile c. In M. 76 Her mother has been a thing c. Ma. 48 In bright vignettes, and each c. Ma. 156 ( However much he yearn'd to make c. I. K. 152 COMPLETER. Be the neater and c. Ma. 72 COMPLETION in a painful school Poems 181 Merged in c. ? Would you learn at full Poe??is 211 COMPLEXITIES. And many-corridor'd c. I. K. 132 COMPLICATED. Of tenfold-c. change In M. 137 COMPLIMENT, —coin, the tinsel clink of c. Pr. 32 COMPOSED. All c. in a metre of Catullus E. A. 175 COMPOUND. ' No c. of this earthly ball Poems 290 COMPREHENSIVE. All-c. tenderness In M. 120 COMPREST. —raised her head with lips c. Ma. 132 COMRADE. Comrades, leave me here a Poems 268 Hark, my merry comrades call me Poems 280 Which weep the c. of my choice In M. 20 Is c. of the lesser faith In M. 198 Of comrades, each of whom had broken on him /, K. 50 -comrades, making slowlier at the Prince I. K. 54 To laughter and his comrades to applause I. K. 6r And Enoch's c, careless of himself E. A. 31 His comrades having fought their last below E. A. 63 — till the c. of his chambers woke E. A. 81 CONCEAL. And she conceals it.' So my Pr. 57 .65 CONCEAL Page CONCEAL. And half c. the Soul within In M. 5 CONCEAL'D. Better to leave Excalibur c. Poems 193 CONCEALMENT : she demanded who we were Pr. 61 CONCEIT. — spake lie, clouded with his own c. Pms 195 A touch of something false, some self-c. Poems 233 CONCEIVED. A sinful man, c. and born in Poems 240 CONCLUDED, and we sought the gardens Pr. 52 Of some vast charm c. in that star /. K. 120 CONCLUSIONS. To those c. when we saw In M. 127 CONCLUSIVE. I triumph in c. bliss In M. 122 CONCOURSE, —banquet, and c. of knights /. K. 176 CONCUBINE. Sent like the twelve-divided c. E. A. 90 CONDEMN'D. The prisoner at the bar, ever c. E. A. 105 CONDENSATION. With comment, densest c. /. K. 129 CONDITION. The hard c. : but that she Poems 286 Hear my conditions : promise (otherwise Pr. 44 CONDITIONING. Have ebb and flow c. their Pms 263 CONDUCT by paths of growing powers In M. 116 CONDUIT. Where the bloody c. runs Poems 372 CONES. In masses thick with milky c. Poems 87 CONFEDERACY, —daughters o'er a wild c. E. A. 169 CONFERENCE. And thus our c. closed Pr. 48 ■ CONFESS. As I c. it needs must be In M. 84 (And I c. with right) you think me bound Pr. 23 CONFLICT. Inc. with the crash of shivering Pr. 132 CONFOUND. The poplar made, did all c. Poems 12 Nor all Calamity's hugest waves c. Ma. 165 On whom the victor, to c. them more /. K. 54 CONFOUNDED. And worse-c: high above Pr. 99 Shame and wrath his heart c. Select. 39 CONFUSE. Nor thou with shadow'd hint c. In M. CONFUSED. Makes thy memory c. Poems 51 Remaining utterly c. with fears Poems 124 Arriving all c. among the rest Pr. 86 C. me like the unhappy bark In M. 26 Thro' all that crowd c. and loud Ma. 99 C. by brainless mobs and lawless Powers Ma. 146 And Enid look'd, but all c. at first /. K. 37 Those twelve sweet moons c. his fatherhood ' /. K. 130 CONFUSION. The airy hand c. wrought Poems V22. Is there c. in the little isle t Poems 147 There is c. worse than death Poems 147 Unsubject to c. Poems 342 All else c. Look you ! the gray mare Pr. 130 At first with all c. : by and bye Pr. 158 Confusions of a wasted youth In M. vii. C. worse than death, and shake In M. 134 Once for wrong done you by c, next /. K. 109 Hath wrought c. in the Table Round /. K. 236 CONIES. Or c. from the down E. A. 19 CONJECTURAL. — tripton such c. treachery /. K. 111 CONJECTURE. Conjectures of the features Poems 107 C. of a stiller guest In M. 208 C. of the plumage and the form /. K. 18 CONJECTURING when and where: this cut is/. K. 148 CONQUER. From barren deeps to c. all with Pr. 166 Is rack'd with pangs that c. trust In M. 72 This conquers : hide it therefore ; go /. K. 155 CONQUER'D. — woman-conqueror ; woman-c. Pr. 72 A cry above the c. years In M. 202 At last she let herself be c. by him /. K. 140 C. ; and therefore would he hide his name /. K. 177 CONQUEROR. The woman-c. ; woman Pr. 72 CONQUEST. Commerce and c, shower the Pr. 128 CONSCIENCE. A little grain of c. made him Pijzs 375 My c. will not count me neckless, yet Pr. 44 To whom a c. never wakes hi M. 44 Without a c. or an aim In M. 53 The c. as a sea at rest In M. 138 ' Who reverenced his c. as his king /. K. v. Their c, and their c. as their King /. K. 249 Who wast, as is the c. of a saint /. K. 258 'With all his c. and one eye askew' E. A. 105, 106 CONSCIOUS. Half-c. of the garden-squirt Poems 330 At those high words, we c. of ourselves Pr. — partly c. of my own deserts Pr. 90 We, c. of what temper you are built Pr. 95 Half-c. of their dying clay In M. 83 Not she at least, nor c. of a bar E. A. 58 — c. of the rageful eye E. A. 68 CONSECRATE. I dedicate, I c. with tears /. K. v. CONSENT. To yield c. to my desire Poems 91 Assumed from thence a half-c. involved Pr. 161 Her slow c, and marriage, and the birth E. A. 39 CONSEQUENCE. —duty, clear of consequences /V. 62 Whether war be a cause or a c. ? Ma. 38 CONSIDER, William: take a month to think Poems 215 * C. well,' the voice replied Poems 300 CONSIDERING. That I, c. everywhere In M. 78 66 COOLEST Page CONSISTENT ; wearing all that weight In M. 206 CONSOLABLE. Along, long weeping, note. /. K. 138 CONSOLIDATE in mind and frame Poems 306 CONSONANT chords that shiver to one note Pr. 59 CONSORT. — a gentle c. made he Poems 360 CONSTANCY. The praise that comes to c.' In M. 35 CONSTANT. Lo, falling from my c. mind Poems 96 Her c. beauty doth inform Poems 316 Her c. motion round him, and the breath /. K. 94 CONSTELLATION, —constellations burning Pms 281 With c. and with continent Pr. 26 CONSTRAIN'D us, but a better time has come /. K. 38 CONSUMED, —utterly c. with sharp distress Pms 144 CONSUMES : I wither slowly in thine arms E. A. 139 CONTAIN'D. High self-c, and passionless /. K. 246 CONTEMPLATE. When I c. all alone In M. 115 C. all this work of Time In M. 183 CONTEMPLATING. Bute, all Poems 121 C. her own unworthiness /. K. 29 CONTEMPLATION. And luxury of c. Poems 82 CONTEMPT. Perish in thy self-c. ! Poems 276 With much c, and came to chivalry Pr. 36 CONTEND for loving masterdom In M. 155 CONTENT. — meditative grunts of much c. Poems 228 might it come like one that looks c. Poems 261 1 had been c. to perish, falling on the foeinans Pms 276 The low beginnings of c. In M. 117 Of lustier leaves ; nor more c. In M. 148 Which left my after-morn c. In M. 157 Arrived, and found the sun of sweet c. Ma. 126 He rested well c. that all was well /. K. 96 Nor rested thus c, but day by day /. K. 147 ' Queen, she would not be c. /. K. 216 Philip rested with her well-c. E. A. 21 ' I am c.,' he answer'd, ' to be loved E. A. 24 Dwelt with eternal summer, ill-c. E. A. 31 That once had power to rob it of c. Select. 197 CONTENTED there to die ! Poems 156 Came voices of the well-c. doves Poems 206 CONTINENT. With constellation and with c. Pr. 26 The dust of continents to be In M. 54 CONTINUALLY, —of heaven came c. E. A. 29 CONTRACT. Cleave to your c. : tho' indeed Pr. 95 CONTRACTING. — Philip 's rosy face c. grew E. A. 27 CONTRADICTION. A c. on the tongue In M. 194 CONTRASTING. Of my c. brightness /. K. 43 CONTRIVANCES. With great c. of Power Poems 181 CONTRIVED, —two c. their daughter's good E.A. 95 CONTRIVING. — c. their dear daughter's E. A. 91 CONTROL, —self-knowledge, self-c. Poems 103 Meet is it changes should c. Poems 181 friendship, equal-poised c. In M. 119 With faith that comes of self-c. hi M. 202 -keep it ours, O God, from brute c. Ma. 146 CONTROLL'D. For they c. me when a boy In M. 46 CONTROLLETH all the'soul and sense , Poems 83 CONTUMELIOUS. And curving a c. lip Ma. 47 CONVENT. In the white c. down the valley Pms 238 Or tower, or high hill-c, seen Ma. 155 CONVENTION, —women, but cheats them Pr. 8 C, since to look on noble forms Pr. 33 We hold a great c Pr. 101 CONVENT-ROOFS. Deep on the c the Poems 331 CONVENT-TOWERS. The shadows of the c Pms 331 CONVERSE. We may hold c with all forms Poems 30 Some honey-c feeds thy mind Poems 34 Hears him lovingly c. Poems 359 But open c is there none In M. 34 Thy c drew us with delight In M. 170 — breathes in c seasons. All are gone ' Ma. 127 And he suspends his c with a friend /. K. 18 And told her all their c in the hall /. K. 28 In c for a little, and return'd /. K. 92 That comfort from their c. which he took /. K. 96 CONVOLUTION. Thro' every c Poems yz CONVOLVULUSES, —lustre of the long c E. A. ' 32 COO K'D. —cud of wrath, and c his spleen Pr. 18 COOL, in c soft turf upon the bank Poems 23 — round the c green courts there ran a row P?ns 113 —the summer airs blow c. Poems 135 Here are c mosses deep Poems 144 — as we enter'd in the c Poems 207 Drink to loft}'- hopes that c. Poems 372 1 saw it and grieved — to slacken and to c. Pr. 90 — while she wept, and I strove to be c. Ma. 86 COOL'D. Or c. within the glooming wave In M. 132 C. it, or laid his feverous pillow smooth ! E.A. 87 COOLER. To drink the c air, and mark In M. 130 COOLEST. — fresh-wash'd in c dew Poems 152 COOLING Page COOLING her false cheek with a featherfan B. A. 66 COOLNESS. Then paced for c. in the I. A'. 133 COOPER he was and carpenter E. A. 44 COOPERANT. Is toil c. to an end In M. 199 COOT. I come from haunts of c. Ma. 118 COPE. — of thy great presence ; and the c. Poems -27 Wrapt in dense cloud from base to c. . Poe?>is 298 COPHETUA. Before the King C. Poems 365 C. sware a royal oath Poems 365 COPPICE. Breaks from a c gemnf d with /. A'. 18 And scour'd into the coppices and was lost I. A". 74 COPPICE-FEATHERD. By every c. chasm Pr. 75 COPSE. — the may-pole and in the hazel c. Poems 134 — the shadowy pine above the woven c. Poems 142 — moorland did we hear the copses ring Poems 271 Came little copses climbing Poems 327 Then move the trees, the copses nod Poe??is 336 Began to glitter firefly-like in c. Pr. 26 About the cliffs, the copses, out and in Pr. 73 To show Sir Arthur's deer. In c. and fern Ma. 124 COQUETTE. For ah! the slight c, she Select. 197 COQUETTE-LIKE, —art, or half c. E. A. 176 COOUETTING with young beeches Poems 327 COQUETTISH. —some c. deceit Ma. 26 By some c. deceit Ma. 30 CORAL. In roarings round the c. reef In M. 56 CORD. The wounding cords that Dind and Poems 13 Lower'd softlv with a threefold c. of love Poe?ns 159 CORDAGE. Hard coils of c. E. A. 2 CORDED. Strong, supple, sinew-c, apt at Pr. 134 CORDON. The c. close and closer toward E. A. 77 CORE. Else earth is darkness at the c. In M. 53 To make a solid c. of heat In M. 166 CORINNA'S. With fair C. triumph ; here Pr. 72 CORITANIAN. —hear C, Trinobant E. A. 169 — the Gods have heard it, O Icenian, O C. E. A. 170 — hear C, Trinobant E. A. 171 — shout C, Trinobant E. A. 172 CORKSCREW, —bed, and up the c. stair Poems 228 CORN. — champaign clothed with c. Poems 102 In such a hand as when a field of c. Pr. 27 And glutted all night long breast deep in c. Pr. 49 Went sweating underneath a sack of c. /. K. 14 Take him to stall, and give him c, and then I. K. 20 Like flaws in summer laying lusty- c. I. K. 41 A land of hops and poppy-mingled c. E. A. 52 Fairer than Ruth among the fields of c. E. A. 86 CORN-BIN. That hears the c. open Poems 190 CORNELIA. Clelia, C, with the Palmyrene Pr. 33 CORNER. From some odd c. of the brain Poems 88 — in dark corners of her palace stood Poems 123 Sometimes a little c. shines Poems 298 The corners of thine eyes Poems 349 Who shines so in the c. ; yet I fear Pr. 8 And my own sad name in corners cried Ma. 29 Found Enid with the c. of his eye /. K. 60 A damsel drooping in a c. of it I. K. 78 Or whisper'd in the c. ? do you know it ? ' I. K. 134 Full lowly by the corners of his bed I. K. 190 With shelf and c. for the goods and stores E. A. 10 — corners of the street they ran E. A. 20 CORNICE. — watching high on mountain c. Ma. 154 CORNISH, —dark Diindagil by the C. sea I. K. 240 CORN-LAWS, —struck upon the c, where Poems 222 CORONACH, —in weakness, the c. stole Poems 48 CORONET. — hearts are more than coronets Poe?ns 128 CORPSE. On corpses three-months-old at Poei?is 123 Step from the c, and let him in Poems 170 Corpses across the threshold ; heroes tall Poems 151 When he comes to the second c. in the pit? Ma. 107 CORRESPOND, —years to c. with home Pr. 33 CORRIDOR'D. And many-c. complexities I. K. 132 CORRIDORS. Full of long-sounding c. it Poei?is 114 CORRUPT. Plenty corrupts the melody Poems 166 Lest one good custom should c. the world Poems 200 Corrupts the strength of heaven-descended Ma. 165 CORSELET, —thro' the bulky bandit's c. I. K. 54 COSSACK and Russian Ma. 169 COST. * And care not for the c. ; the c. is I. K. 61 — that c. me many a tear E. A. 117 — it c. me a world of woe E. A. 117 But a c. oop, thot a did E. A. 130 COSTLIER. And serve you c. than with I. K. 58 Had seldom seen a c. funeral E. A. 50 COSTLIEST. To hold the c. love in fee In M. 109 Black velvet of the c. E. A. 92 COSTLY. The c. doors flung open wide Poems 20 I drink the cup of a c. death Poems 84 —and Paris held the c. fruit Poems 103 5* COUNT Page COSTLY. Beneath branch-work of c. Poems 116 — dropping down with c. bales Poems 278 And evermore a c. kiss Poems 324 We rustled : him we gave a c. bribe Pr. 25 With c. spikenard and with tears hi M. All branch'd and flowerd with gold, a c. gift I. K. To both appear'd so c, rose a cry I. K. 34 Laid from her limbs the c. broider'd gift I. K. 41 — when 3-our fair child shall wear your c. gift I. K. 44 And, in the c. canopy o'er him set I. K. 170 The price of half a realm, his c. gift /. K. 208 Be c, and her image thereupon /. K. 217 At once the c. Sahib yielded to her E. A. 63 — drank his c. wines E. A. 100 COSTLY-MADE. And, half-cut-down, apastyc.Pms 222 COSTREL. A youth, that following with a c. I. K. 21 COT. Remember this?' Andkiss'dhiminhisc. E. A. 13 COTERIE. Came yews, a dismal c. Poems 328 COTTAGE. — a lowly c. whence we see Poems 30 1 Make me a c. in the vale ' Poems 125 Love will make our c. pleasant Poems 358 On that c. growing nearer Poems 359 Fair is her c. in its place E. A. 154 COTTAGER, —the daughter of a c. Poems 22-7 COTTAGE-WALLS, —that robed your c. E. A. 87 COTTON. Whose ear is cramm'd with his c. Ma. 38 COTTON SPINNING. Go ' (shrill'd the c. Poems 235 COUCH. Kings have no such c. as thine Poe??is 51 She lying on her c. alone Poe??ts 315 A light of healing, glanced about the c. Pr. 160 And Enid woke and sat beside the c. /. K. 5 Flat on the c, and spoke exultingly I. K. 36 And left her maiden c, and robed herself I. K. 39 And wearied out made for the c. and slept I. K. 132 Down on the great King's c, and writhed I. K. 179 Low on the border of her c. they sat I. K. 230 — flung her down upon a c. of fire E. A. 80 COUCHANT. Lay c. with his eyes upon I. K. 225 COUCH'D-tame leopards c. beside her throne Pr. 31 — c. behind a Judith, underneath Pr. 86 The wine-flask lying c. in moss In M. 132 From knoll to knoll, where c. at ease In M. 139 The knolls once more, where c. at ease In M. 141 They c their spears and prick'd their steeds I. K. 172 Spied where he c, and as the gardener's I. K. 226 COUCHES. Rolling on their purple c. E. A. 172 COUGHS. In c, aches, stitches Poems 236 COUNCIL —statesmen at her c. met Poems vi. — manners, climates, councils, governments Poems 265 In iron gauntlets : break the c. up -when the c. broke, I rose and past To c, plied him with his richest wines Two heads in c, two beside the hearth Great in c. and great in war Should eighty-thousand college-councils On all the youth, they sicken'd ; councils COUNCIL-HALL, —voice is silent in your c. Ma. 147 COUNSEL. Of subtle-paced c. in distress Poems 8 — follow'd c, comfort, and the words Poems 260 Like sleepy c. pleading- Poems 329 You prized my c, lived upon my lips Pr. 89 — ill c. had misled the girl Pr. 170 Good : take my c. : let me know it at once /. K. vzrj Her c. up and down within his mind Her art, her hand, her c. all had wTOught Nor dealing goodly c. from a height A man is likewise c. for himself COUNSELLORS. Heplay'd ate. and kings In M. 90 COUNT. I can but c. thee perfect gain Poems 121 ' Heaven heads the c. of crimes Of pension, neither c. on praise Cram us with all,' but c. not me the herd 1 But 1 c. the gray barbarian lower Half legend, half-historic, counts and kings My conscience will not c. me fleckless yet Pr. Pr. 20 Pr. 24 Pr. 38 Ma. 139 Ma. 161 /. K. 123 /. K. 166 E.A. 59 E. A. 60 E. A. 105 90 Poems 121 Poems 158 Poems 180 Poems 262 Poei?is 282 Pr. 3 Pr. 44 Meanwhile, what every woman coimts her due Pr. 67 Nor, what may c. itself as blest In M. 44 Shall c. new things as dear as old hi M. 61 I woo your love : I c. it crime I?i M. 121 To c. their memories half divine In M. 133 Thy likeness, I might c. it vain In M. 136 To-day they c. as kindred souls In M. 150 Nor c. me all to blame if I In M. 208 Or fancy (tho' I c. it of small use I. K. 67 — be he dead, I c. you for a fool I. K. 74 Crying ' I c. it of no more avail I. K. 83 C, baron — whom he smote, he overthrew I. K. 171 C. the more base idolater of the two E.A. 85 I c. you much to blame E. A. 163 COUNT Page COUNT. Deep as Hell I c. his error Select. 37 Counts nothing that she meets with base Select. 220 COUNTED. — EarlDoormbyhimhec. dead I.K. 84 — only Queens are to be c. so /. K. 159 COUNTENANCE. With a glassy c. Poems 70 If 1 make dark my c. Poems 291 Then her c. all over Poems 360 She sets her forward c. In M. 177 Of Philip's child ; and o'er his c. £-. A. 39 Else I withdraw favour and c. E. A. 67 COUNTER. The c. side ; and that same song Poems 262 — rogue would leap from his c. and till Ma. 7 Withdrawing by the c. door to that E. A. 65 COUNTERCHANGE. —that c. the floor In M. 130 COUNTERCHANGED. —interspaces, c. Poems 22 And c. with darkness? you yourself I. K. 117 COUNTERCHARM. The c. of space and Ma. 61 COUNTERCHECKS, —checks, and c. Poems 303 COUNTERGALE. —to and thro' the c! E. A. 149 COUNTERMARCH, —and march and c. Poems 222 COUNTER-SCOFF, —fiery-short was Cyril's c. Pr. 122 COUNTEST. See thou, that c. reason ripe In M. 52 COUNTING the dewy pebbles Poems 194 COUNTLESS, —loved, who suffer'd c. ills In M. 81 Back to France with c. blows Ma. 143 COUNTRY. You thought to break a c. heart Poems 126 His country's war-song thrill his ears Poems 296 Arranged a c. dance Pr. 5 ' O Sir, O Prince, I have no c. ; none Pr. 40 If love of c. move thee there at all Ala. 145 That neither court nor c, tho' they sought /. K. 39 COUNTRYMAN. Your c. affianced years ago Pr. 40 COUNTRY-SIDE. The c. descended Poems 328 COUNTRYWOMAN, A foreigner, and I your c. Pr. 91 COUNTRYWOMEN. Her c. ! she did not envy Pr. 56 That gives the manners of your c. ? ' Pr. 82 COUNTY. — Not the C. Member's with the vane Pms 225 Not a lord in all the c. Poems 360 Last week came one to the c. town Ma. " 38 Came from his c, or could answer him E. A. 36 The c. God — in whose capacious hall E. A. 52 COUPLE. Or Temple-eaten terms, a c, fair E. A. 56 COURAGE. A c. to endure and to obey Poems 8 ' C. The said, and pointed toward the land Poems 142 C, St Simeon ! This dull chrysalis Poems 241 Till thy drooping c. rise Poems 372 C, poor heart of stone ! Ma. 94 C, poor stupid heart of stone Ma. 94 COURIERS. Which every hour his c. bring In M. 195 By c. gone before ; and on again /. K. 246 COURSE. The tangled water-courses slept Poems 48 Poems 128 Poems 304 Pr. 65 In M. 168 In M. 175 In M. 182 In M. 184 In M. 198 I.K. 94 /. K 139 E. A. 30 You held your c. without remorse Their c, till thou wert also man Or baser courses, children of despair The hearer in its fiery c. — roll it in another c. — all the courses of the suns Like glories, move his c, and show That sees the c. of human things Fill'd all the genial courses of his blood The c. of life that seem'd so flowery to me Then baffling, a long c. of them Like the Good Fortune, from her destined c. E. A 35 COURSED. — other things : we c. about Poems 211 C. one another more on open ground I. K. 28 COURT. Her c. was pure : her life serene Poems vi. Four courts I made, East, West, and South Poems 113 — the cool green courts there ran a row Poems 113 At Audley Court ' Poems 221 ' O seek my father's c. with me Poems 321 Or old-world trains, upheld at c. Poems 325 Till in a c. he saw Thro' the courts, the camps, the schools ' I have a sister at the foreign c. Became her golden shield, I stole from c. In masque or pageant at my father's c. All round with laurel, issued in a c. •We of the c.,' said Cyril. 'From the c.' Dismissal : back again we crost the c. Groaning for power, and rolling thro' the c Descended to the courts that lay three parts So saying from the c. we paced, and gain'd A hubbub in the c. of half the maids — push'd us, down the steps, and thro' the c, — the courts of twilight broke them up — pleased him, fresh from brawling courts Within his c. on earth, and sleep The brave Geraint, a knight of Arthur's c, Next after her own self, in all the c. 68 Poems 344 Poems 370 Pr. 19 Pr. 20 Pr. 25 Pr. 30 Pr. 3 2 Pr. 34 Pr. 53 s Pr. 55 Pr. 60 Pr. 99 . Pr. 103 Pr. 183 In M. 130 In M. 195 I. K. 1 I.K 2 COUSIN Page COURT. — her, and their coming to the c. /. K. 8 Held c. at Old Caerleon upon Usk /. K. 8 So with the morning all the c. were gone I. K. 9 Then rode Geraint into the castle c. / K. ly And while he waited in the castle c. /. K. 18 —the good knight's horse stands in the c. /. K. 20 —ride to Arthur's c, and being there /. K. 31 And rising up, he rode to Arthur's c. /. K. 32 —strange, bright, and dreadful thing a c. /. K. 33 To ride with him this morning to the c. /. K. 33 And the gay c, and fell asleep again /. K. 35 And lords and ladies of the high c. went /. K. 35 And like a .madman brought her to the c. I.K. 39 That neither c. nor country, tho' they sought /. K. 39 And I can scarcely ride with you to c. ' /. K. 40 And such a sense might make her long for c. I. K. 43 Had told her, and their coming to the c. /. K. 45 In this poor gown I rode with him to c. /. K. 83 A knight of Arthur's c, who laid his lance /. K. 87 Was but to rest awhile within her c. /. K. 91 The wily Vivien stole from Arthur's c. /. K. 101 And leaving Arthur's c. he gain'd the beach /. K. 103 And then I rose and fled from Arthur's c. /. K. 108 But when the thing was blazed about the c. /. K. 132 — the c. , the king, dark in your light /. K. 139 And largest, Arthur, holding then his c. /. K. 151 Moving to meet him in the castle c. /. K. 156 Then the great knight, the darling of the c. /. K. 161 And much they asked of c. and Table Round /. K. 161 Anon, she heard Sir Lancelot cry in the c. /. K. 165 Above her, graces of the c, and songs /. K. 181 May meet at c. hereafter there, I think /. K. 183 So you will learn the courtesies of the c. /. K. 183 — to the c, he past : there told the King /. K. 184 So ran the tale like fire about the c. /. K. 185 And all the gentle c. will welcome me /. K. 202 I go in state to c. to meet the Queen /. K 206 I hear of rumours flying thro' your c. /. K 209 Queen Guinevere had fled the c. and sat I. K. 225 For thus it chanced one morn when all the c. I. K. 226 Enid, and lissome Vivien, of her c. /. K. 226 Lured by the crimes and frailties of the c. /. K. 23Z A silent c. of justice in his breast E. A. 105 — that silent c. of yours E. A. 106 I earth in earth forget these empty courts E. A. 143 COURTED. — a well-worn pathway c. us Poems 207 COURTEOUS. In c. words return'd reply Poems 319 Sir, I was c, every phrase well-oil'd Pr. 61 Gawain, surnamed The C, fair and strong /. K. 176 Needs must we hear ! ' To this the c. Prince I. K 180 ' Too c. truly ! you shall go no more I. K 184 Too c. are you, fair Lord Lancelot I. K. 197 — mighty c. in the main E. A. 57 COURTEOUSLY, —fears— you used us c. Pr. 118 COURTESIES. — garrulous ease and oily c. Pr. 23 ' Girl, for I see you scorn my c. /. K. 81 So you will learn the c. of the court /. K. 183 And loved thy c. and thee, a man /. K. 218 And trustful c. of household life /. A". 229 COURTESY. — greet the sheriff, needless c. \Poems 235 For a c. not returned Ma. 26 Geraint, from utter c. forbore /. A". 21 ' Fair Host and Earl, I' pray your c. /. K. 22 Drooping, ' I pray you of your c. /. K. 79 Of tenderest c, that I began I.K. 91 C. with a touch of traitor in it I. K. 180 Accorded with his wonted c. I. K. 180 Deeming our c. is the truest law /. K. 184 Obedience is the c. due to kings' /. K. 184 Would shun to break those bounds of c /. K. 211 And of the two first-famed for c. /. K. 242 Had yet that grace of c. in him left /. K. 248 Then broke all bonds of c. E. A. 68 COURT-FAVOUR : here and there the small Pr. 160 COURT-GALEN. Our great c. poised his Pr. 16 COURT-LADY. And should some great c. /. K 39 COURTLINESS, —moving up with pliant c. /. K. 60 And c, and the desire of fame /. K. 250 COURTLY. Not her, who is neither c. nor Ma. 24 Full c. , yet not falsely, thus return'd /. K. 159 And parted, laughing in his c. heart I. K. 208 COURTSEY. —made me a mocking c. and E. A. 120 COURTSHIP. Discussing how their c. grew In M. 209 COUSIN, —a silent c. stole Poems 234 And I said, ' My cousin Amy, speak Poems 270 — c, all the current of my being sets to thee ' Pms 270 Saying, ' Dost thou love me, c. 2 ' Poems 270 O my'c, shallow-hearted ! Poems 271 4 It was my c.,' said Lady Clare Poems 354 COUSIN Page COUSIN. To give his c, Lady Clare Poems ; 354 — had a c. tumbled on the plain Pr. 153 Her and her far-otf c. and betroth'd ' O c, slay not him who gave you life ' /. fC 87 Fair and dear c, you that most had cause /. K. 89 And there, poor a, 'with your meek blue eyes /'. And fear not, c. ; I am changed indeed' /. A". 92 My lady's c. E. A. 75 For Jenny, nvy c, had come to the place E. A. 117 COVE. Or dimple in the dark of rushy coves Pms 28 — sweet is the colour of c. and cave ms 44 — shadow'd coves on a sunny shore As waves that up a q Poems 82 Thro' all his eddying coves ; the same In The sailing moon in creek and c. In M. 153 ring, now, from a purple c. Ma. 154 Sat by the river in a c. and watch'd I. A". r.23 CO VEX AX T. Breathed, like the c. of a God Pms 210 COVENTRY. I waited for the train at C Pot In C. : for when he laid a Pot COVER. Ha . all my sin Poevis 259 I slide by hazel c COVERLET. Across the purpled c :s 315 Who moving cast the c. aside /. K. 5 COVERLID. The silk star-broider'd c Pot — all the c. was cloth of gold /. K. 207 COVERT. Rode thro' the coverts of the deer i Here often they break c. at our feet ' /. A'. 10 COVERTURh. ' In closest c. upsprung Poems 22 COW. He praised his ploughs, his cows, his Ma. 124 — theer warn't not fead for a c. E. A. 133 Wf anfthe cows to cauve E. A. 134 COWARD. The fear of men, a c. still Poems 294 Where idle boys are cowards to their shame Pr. 123 On doubts that drive the c- back In .'.'. :_ : Yea. rown'd king, c, and fool' /. A". 135 COWARDICE, —full of c. and guilty shame Pr. 92 For being thro' his c. all : /. IT. 2 - : COWER'D. A dwarf-hke Cato c. COWERIXG. Low-c. shall the Sophist sit Poems 13 COWL. And turn'd the cowls adrift COWL'D. Some c, and some bare-headed Pr. 140 COWSLIP. Letters cowslips on the hill Poems 55 And the c. and the cr : : . : : Pot . 132 As c. unto oxlip is Poems 249 The little dells of c. E. A. 56 CRABB'D. — solid opposition c. and gnarl'd Pr. 61 CRAB S. A woman like a butt and harsh asc. / CRACK. Cracks into shining wings, and F:. The splinter'd spear-shafts c. and fly Poems 533 — living hearts that c. within the fire" Pr. 126 On a wood, and takes, and breaks, and cracks Pr. 134 — the bones for his o'er ^rown whelp to c. Ma. 105 C. them now for yourself, and howl, and die Ma. 105 — deafen'd with the stammering cracks and I. K. 143 CRACK'D. The mirror c. from side to side Pot His name was Gama ; c. and small his voice Pr. 21 The forest c, the waters curl'd In M. 24 C. the helmet thro,' and bit the bone /. K. 31 CRACKLES. The tempest c. on the leads Pot CRACKLIXG. — dews, or stitt with c. frost Poems 24c His hair as it were c. into flames E. A. 81 CRADLE. To deck thy cradie, Eleanore Poems 79 For on my c. shone the Xorthern star Pr 15 . rock the snowy c. till I died Pr. 79 itly rocking baby's c. E. A. 11 The c, while she sang this baby song E. A. 112 CRADLED / .ret c. near them E. A. 99 CRADLE-HEAD, —embraced the basket c. E. A. 111 CRAFT. My c. aground, and heard with Poems 234 This c. of healing ickc trself Pr. 71 Across the woods, and less from Indian c. Pr. 84 — answer 1 i with such c, as women use I. A. 64 Nor left untold the c. herself had used /. K. 66 — pushing his black c. among them ail /. K. 122 : A moral child without the c. to rule /. K. 155 The c. of kindred and the Godless hosts /. K. 247 Become the master of a lar E. A. 8 At times a carven c. would shoot CRAFTY. Up thro' gilt wires a a loving eye Pr. 10 Sir Modred's brother, of a c. house I. K. z-o Made wet the c. crowsfoot round his eye E. A. 106 CRAG, —the c. that fronts th Poems 80 A huge c-platform, smooth as burnish'd brass P??is 112 —with long white clc u . th s sc : rnful crags Poems 116 — the splinter'd crags that wall the dell Poet — water lamping on the c. is 193, 195 His:-, slippery c that rang Pot —the bracken rusted on their crags Pec CREATURE CRAG, —cloud smoulders on the summer c. Pms 23s My right leg chain'd into the c. Poei By this still hearth among these barren c. — sv.ings the trailer from the c. ts 280 A gleaming c. with belts of pines Poe?ns 293 He clasps the c. with hooked hands Poems 376 At the foot of thy crags, O Sea '. *j 378 On flowery levels underneath the c. Pr. 72 In the dark c. : and then we turn'd, we wound Pr. 73 Set in a cataract on an island-c. Pr. 125 They tremble, the sustaining crags In M. 196 — find the toppling crags of Duty scaled — Like a c. was gay with wilding flowers _ I. A". 17 Whole, like a c. that tumbles from the cliff /. K. 17 — lichen'd into colour with the crags /. A". 149 — the beetling c to which he clung E. A. 63 CRAGGY. — pines, that plumed the c. ledge Poems 106 — from the c. ledge the poppy hangs in sleep Pms 144 From c. hollows pouring strikes by night a*c. shelf f. 26 CRAKE. — croak thee sister, or the meadow c. / — flood the haunts of hern and c. M. 153 CRAM us with ali,' but count no 1 * me the herd : Pms 262 — c. him with the fragments of the grave Pr. 70 ::eeds it we should c. our ears with wool Pr. 77 Which some green Christinas crams with Select. 107 CRAMM'D. 'The Bull, the 1 — c. a plumper crop Poem N : : iike your Princess c with erring pride Pr. "59 At the Oppian law. Titanic shap 2s, they : — she was c, with theories out of books Pr. 179 Whose ear is c. with his cotton, and rings Ma. 38 — jvery margin scribbled, crost, and c. I. K. 128 CRAMMING all the blast before it, in its Poem : 5 " _ CRAMP. — ulcerous throes and cramps'- Poems 236 So 'twere to c. its use, if I Poems 322 I will not a my heart, nor take . Pec To c. the student at his desk hi M. 199 CRAMP'D. There the passions c. no longer Poems 282 C. under worse than South-sea-isle taboo Pr. 69 — those that iron-c. their women's feet Pr. 120 CRAMPT UP. — c. soi E. A. 92 CRAXE. 'The c.,' I said, 'may cl : : : :" the c. Pr. 59 CRANNIES. In an ancient mansion's c. and Ma. 106 CRASH. In: the c of shivering Pr. 1^2 All thro' the c. of the near cataract hears " I. K. 5- Tne c. of ruin E. A. 30 — at his right with a sudden c. E. A. 157 CRASH'D. That c. the glass, and beat the In. M. 127 H ES, I he fortress c. from on high In .'.' CRASHIXG. — c. with long echoes thro the E. A. 68 C. went the boom Select. 38 CRATE. Clung but to c and basket, ribs and /. K. 126 CRAVE. Nor, moaning, household shelter c. P?>is 301 I c. your pardon, O my friend I;i M. 123 C. pardon for that insult done the Queen I. K. 31 CRAVED. He c. a fair permission to depart I. K. 3 That da}- Sir Lancelot at the palace c. I. K. 208 CRAVtX. — pure as he from taint of c. guile Ma. 145 : .ird, 'Ac; how he hangs his head ' /. A". 52 So iay the man transfixt. His c. pair I. K. ^4 CRAWL. Why inch by inch to darkness c. ? Poems 298 The wrinkled sea beneath him crawls Pec —into some low cave to c. and there /. A'. 140 CRAZY. Whatever c. sorrow saith Poems 308 CREAK'D. The doors upon their hinges c. Poems 11 CRtAKIXG. — doubtful noise of c. doors /. K. 229 CREAM. — my city-rccms : or fruits and c. Poems 210 Norrobb'd the farmer :f his I >wl of c. Pr. n3 CREAM-WHITE. Her c. mule his pastemset A CREAMY. Tender curving iir.es of c spray P E.A. 41 Poems - 5 Pr. 117 / • M. ■ : 1 71 M. 211 fierce \ SE. The cursed Ma] CREASY. — who rear'd his : CREATION". Yet could not all — all c. is one act at once C. minted in the golden moods — love Creation's final law To which the whole c moves CREATURE. Like some Did never c. pass — not a c. was in sight The c. laid his muzzle on your lap So stood that same fair c. "at the door —sleek and shining creatures of the chase The lovely, lordly c. floated on zreatures native un:o gracious act ■ hom I found so fan- As with the c. of my love O beautiful c, what am I id c, new!y-caged Pr. 44 Pec; _; Pr. 46 Pr. 115 Pr. 141 In M. vii In M. S4 69 CREATURE Page CREATURE. A c. wholly given to brawls /. K. '24 To pick the faded c. from the pool /. K. 36 —they themselves like creatures gently born /. K. 56 As creatures voiceless thro' the fault of birth /. K. 60 I compel all creatures to my will ' /. K. 79 To chase a c. that was current then /. K. 114 There sat the life-long c. of the house /. K. 207 Stunn'd, and his creatures took and bare him /. K. 230 His creatures to the basement of the tower /. K. 230 Had I but loved thy highest c. here ? /. K. 259 To any of His creatures E. A. 23 As hunters round a hunted c. draw E A. 77 —the gentle c. shut from all E. A. 80 CREDIBLE. That idiot legend c. Pr. 115 CREDIT. Hadst thou such c. with the soul tin M. 98 The world which credits what is done In M. 103 His c. thus shall set me free In M. 111 CREDITED. Scarce-c. at first, but more E. A. 35 CREDITOR. They set an ancient c. to work Pms 235 CREDULOUS. Like simple noble natures, c. /. K. 92 CREDULOUSNESS. —as he cursed his c. E. A. 97 CREED. The knots that tangle human creeds Pms 13 — other than his form of c. Poe7ns 37 I sit as God holding no form of c. Poems 121 A dust of systems and of creeds Poems 299 Who keeps the keys of all the creeds In M. 39 With human hands the c. of creeds In M. 56 With ravine, shriek'd against his c. hi M. 80 Believe me, than in half the creeds In M. 143 To cleave a c. in sects and cries In M. 198 — scarlet woman and her c. E. A. 97 Nor cares to lisp in love's delicious creeds Select. 196 CREEK, —desolate creeks and pools among Pms 48 The Lotos blows by every winding c. Poems 148 The sailing moon in c. aiid cove In M. 153 CREEP. These in every shower c. Poems 50 — a languid fire creeps Poems 83 Puts forth an arm, and creeps from pine to Poems 98 — thro' the moss the ivies c. Poems 144 Stream'd onward, lost their edges, and did c. Pms 152 Creeps to the garden water-pipes Poe?ns 158 Waves all its lazy lilies, and creeps on Poems 204 — like a guilty thing I c. In M 9 — the blood creeps, and the nerves prick In M. 72 — c to the hollow and dash myself down and Ma. 8 Felt a horror over me c. Ma. 51 Always I long to c. Ma. 101 Some ship of battle slowly c. Ma. 163 The slow tear c. from her closed eyelid yet /. K. 141 Creeps, no precaution used, among the /. K. 252 The slow-worm creeps and the thin weasel E. A. 95 CREEPER. A c. when the prop is broken E. A. 93 CREEPING, —the c. mosses and clambermgPoems 48 Upon the tortoise c. to the wall Poeifis 151 -the white dawn's c. beams Poems 161 Science moves, but slowly, slow-ty, c. on Poems 279 — comes a hungry people, as a lion, c. mgher Pms 279 Stole on : and, like a c. sunbeam, slid Poems 287 — crystal silence c. down Poems 293 All c. plants, a wall of green Poems 315 Still c. with the c. hours Poems 331 Until the forward-c. tides In M. 159 Blurr'd by the c. mist, for all abroad /. K. 225 CREPT. The cluster'd marish-mosses c. Poems 10 Of braided blooms unmown, which c. Poems 20 — out I stept, and up I c. : she moved Poems 234 — down my surface c. Poems 252 From grave to grave the shadow c. Poems 302 With hooded brows I c. into the hall Pr. 86 — we ceased : a gentler feeling c. In M. 49 Wrought, till he c. from a gutted mine Ma. 36 My life has c. so long on a broken wing Ma. 111 As on The Lariano c. Ma. 158 — from the earven-work behind him c. /. K. 170 C. to her father, while he mused alone /. K. 186 He paused, and in the pause she c. an inch /. K. 252 C. down into the hollows of the wood E. A. 5 Another hand c. too across his trade E. A. 7 He c. into the shadow E. A. 22 (A bill of sale gleam'd thro' the drizzle) c. E. A. 38 C. to the gate and open'd it, and closed E. A. 42 CRESCENT. Hundreds of crescents on Poems 24 April's c. glimmer'd cold Poems 89 In c. , dimly rain'd about the leaf Poems 224 — the c. promise of my spirit hath not set Poems 283 When down the stormy c. goes Poems 334 As when the sun, a c. of eclipse Poems 366 Star-sisters answering under c. brows Pr. 51 To which thy c. would have grown In M. 115 70 CRIED Page CRESCENT. To yon hard c, as she hangs In M. 105 The colours of the c. prime? In M. 181 Liquid azure bloom of a c. of sea Ma. 15 Now c, who will come to all I am /. K. 170 May not your c. fear for name and fame /. K. 220 A downward c. of her minion mouth E. A. 78 CRESCENT-BARK, —vapour buoy'd the c. Poems 321 CRESCENT-CURVE, —in a gleaming river's c. Pr. 24 CRESCENT-LIT. —the balmy glooming, c. Pms 212 CRESCENT-WISE. Bench'dc. In each we Pr. 48 CRESSES. I loiter round my c. Ma. 126 CRESSY. Betwixt the c. islets white in flower /. K. 70 CREST. She watch'dmy c. among them all Poems 54 —wanton lapwing gets himself another c. Poems 269 -the grace that bright and light as the c. Ma. 54 — giant tower, from whose high c, they say /. K. 44 — stormy crests that smoke against the skies /. K. 172 To which for c. the golden dragon clung /. K. 256 CRESTED, —tree-tops a c. peacock fit Poems 102 — singing clearer than the c. bird Poems 157 CRETE. Had rest by stony hills of C. Select. 221 CREVICE. Or from the c. peer'd about Poe?ns 12 Pent in a c. much I bear with her Pr. 58 CREW. — cock c. loud ; as at that time of year Pms 201 — ever as he mingled with the c. E. A. 35 They sent a c. that landing burst away E. A . 35 — half the c. are sick or dead E. A. 150 — c. that is neither rude nor rash E. A. 157 Made a gallant c. Select. 37 C. and Captain lie Select. 39 CRICHTON. I call'd him C— for he seem'd Pms. 231 CRICKET. The balm-c. carols clear Poems 51 The c. chirps : the light burns low Poems 169 Unwavering : not a c. chirr'd In M. 139 Than of the myriad c. of the mead /. K. 152 CRICKETED. They boated and they c. Pr. 9 CRIED. ' The curse is come upon me,' c. Poems 70 Paris ponder'd, and I c. Poems 104 — heaven ; and clapt her hands and c. Poems 120 Sudden I heard a voice that c, ' Come here Poems 155 His palms together, and he c. aloud Poems 194 —loudly c. the bold Sir Bedivere Poems 199 Of stateliest port : and all the people c. Poems 202 He c, ' Look ! look ! ' Before he ceased Poems 207 — he took the boy, that c. aloud Poems 217 His mother, he c. out to come to her Poems 219 Upon us and departed : ' Leave,' she c, Poe?ns 234 ' Hard task, to pluck resolve,' I c. Poems 294 ' What is it thou knowest, sweet voice? ' I c. Pms 310 One voice, we c. ; and I sat down and wrote Pr. 27 We enter'd on the boards ; and ' Now,' she c. Pr. 33 Faltering and fluttering in her throat, she c. Pr. 39 ' And fly,' she c, ' O fly, while yet you may \ Pr. 55 Cyril, and yawning ' O hard task,' he c. Pr. 60 'Again?' she c, ' are you ambassadresses Pr. 65 That practice betters?' ' How,' she c, 'you Pr. 70 ' Forbear,' the Princess c. ; ' Forbear, Sir,' I Pr. 83 —they c. ' she lives ' Pr. 84 — clapt her hands and c. for war Pr. 105 — she lifted up her voice and c. Pr. in — the gray kings at parle : and ' Look you,' c. Pr. 113 *Yea, but Sire,' I cried Pr. 115 Psyche,' she c. out, 'embrace me, come Pr. 151 To let the people breathe? So thrice they c. Pr. 182 — my own sad name in corners c. Ma. 29 And shook his drowsy squire awake and c. /. K. 7 ' Nay, by my faith, thou shalt not,' c. the /. K. 11 Then c. Earl Yniol. ' Art thou he indeed /. K. 23 Chafing his shoulder : then he c. again /. K. 47 'You will be all the wealthier,' c. the Prince /. K. 57 Then c. Geraint for wine and goodly cheer /. K. 60 Till issuing arm'd he found the host and c. /. K. 67 C. out with a big voice, ' What, is he dead ? ' I. K. 74 Here the huge Earl c. out upon her talk /. K. 80 ' Not so,' she c, 'by Heaven, I will not drink /. K. 81 C. the wan Prince ; ' and lo the powers of /. K. 88 Then, had you c, or knelt, or pray'd to me /. K. 90 — seeing me, with a great voice he c. /. K. 163 His party, c. ' Advance, and take your prize /. K. 173 Glanced at, and c. ' What news from /. K. 179 And whom he loves.' 'So be it,' cried /. K. 182 — when she saw, ' Lavaine,' she c. ' Lavaine /. K. 188 'No, No,' she care, 'I c not to be wife I. K. 195 And yet I c. because you would not pass /. K. 201 Fired all the pale face of the Queen, who c. /. K. 244 Then she stretch'd out her arms and c. aloud /. K. 256 1 well may wait a little.' ' Nay,' she c. E. A. 24 A little after Enoch.' ' O,' she c E. A. 24 — happy people str owing c. E. A. 28 CRIED Page CRIED. But Leolin c. out the more upon E. A. 70 Of One who c. ' Leave all and follow me ' E. A. 85 —the father suddenly c. E. A. 99 And I c. mvself well-nigh blind E. A. 119 Till all the people c. ' E. A. 153 CRIES. I cry aloud: none hear my c. Poems 56 Forgive these wild and wandering c. In M. vii. "With morning- wakes the will, and c. In M. 4 She c. ' a thousand types are gone In M. 80 That c. against my wish for thee In M. 134 With overthrowings, and with c In M. 176 Then was I as a child that c In M. 193 To cleave a creed in sects and c In M. 198 The red rose c. , ' She is near, she is near ' Ma. 80 Then shudder'd, as the village wife who c /. K. 228 Here looking down on thine polluted, c. /. K. 254 - the younger ones with jubilant c. E. A. 21 U. ' come up hither,' as a prophet to us? E. A. 89 A music harmonizing our wild c. E. A. ico CRIME. Error from c. Poems 7 — all alGne in c. Poeyyts 124 ' Heaven heads the count of crimes Poems 158 When single thought is civil c. Poeyyts i;5 Then some one spake : ' Behold ! it was a c. Poems 374 Another said : ' The c. of sense became Poems 375 The c. of malice, and is equal blame - r . 5-5 Child, if it were thine error or thy c. Poems 376 Or keeps his wing'd affections cllpt with c. Pr. 174 er"d by the sense of c. /;.' M. jj. Day, mark"d as with some hideous c. In M. roc I v.oo your love : I count it c. hi M. 121 Perhaps from madness, perhaps from c. Ma. 54 Yet clearest of ambitious c. Ma. 139 — ever weaker grows thro' acted c. Ma : : 5 Could call him the main cause of all their c. /. K. 135 — thej', sweet soul, that most impute a c. /. K. 136 Who call'd her what he call'd her — all her c. /. K. 139 Lured by the crimes and frailties of the /. K. 232 — think not that I come to urge tlty crimes /. K. 253 CRIMEFUL. — and made blank of c. record Poems 242 CRIMSON, —dropping low their c. bells Poeyyts 21 Some spirit of a c. rose Poems 34 They freshen the silvery-c. shells Poe?ns 43 On the broad sea-wolds in the c. shells Poems 61 Or long-hair'd page in c. clad Poems 67 Till all the c. changed and past Poems -_ Crimsons over an inland mere Poems 80 Would seem slow-flaming c. fires Poems 114 One sitting on a c. scarf unroll'd Poeyyts 155 In the Spring a fuller c. comes upon r:::: zzz A c. to the quaint Macaw Poems 312 ' Now sleeps the c. petal, now the white Pr. 166 Before a tower of c. holly -oaks Pr. 181 Her c. fringes to the shower In M. 99 From belt to belt of c. seas In M. 125 Of c. or in emerald rain hi M. 148 We steer'd her toward a c cloud In M. 159 To pestle a poison'd poison behind his c. lights Ma. 6 In crimsons and in purples and in gems /. K. £ CRIMSON-CIRCLED. Before the c. star In M. 132 CRIMSON'D. —the glow that slowlv c. all E. A. 142 CRIMSON-HUED the statelv palm-woods E. A. 175 CRIMSON-ROLLING, —when the c. eve Pr. 100 CRIMSON-THREADED. When from c. lips Pms 6 CRIPPLE. Came from a grizzled c. E. A. 51 CRIPPLED. A c. lad, and coming turn'd to E. A. 78 CRISP foam-flakes scud along the level sand Poems 151 .tttner c. with shining woods Poems 312 :he locks are c. and curl'd Poc ms 374 To make the sullen surface c. hi M. 71 CRISPETH. The babbling runnel c. Poems 4 CRISPING. To watch the a ripples on the Poems 146 CRITIC. No c. I— would call them masterpieces Pr. 22 Musician, painter, sculptor, c, more Pr. 38 The c. clearness of an eve In M. i63 CRITIC-PEN. Unbodingc. Poems 341 CROAK. Shall c. thee sister, or the meadow Pr. 81 CROAK'D, and she thought 'he spies a field /. K. 232 CROCODILES wept tears for thee Poems 50 CROCUS. — at their feet the c. brake like fire Poems 101 From one hand droop'd a c Poems 117 C, anemone, violet Ma. 164 CROFTS. Thro' c. and pastures wet with devr'Pms 289 CROOKED. — shot from c lips a haggard smile Pr. 93 CROF — cramm'd a plumper c Poems 344 To c. his own sweet rose before the hour ? ' /. K. 131 CROSS. A red-c. knight for ever kneefd Poems 68 Nor any cloud would c. the vault Poems 74 A broken chancel with a broken c Pcems 191 CROWD Page CROSS, —wrong to c. his father thus Poems 219 — in my weak lean arms I lift the c. Poc 1 I smote them with the c. Poems 242 Should it c. thy dreams Fly happy with the mission of the C. Poems 263 Not for three years to c. the liberties Pr. 33 The}' mark'd it with the red c. to the fall Pr. 138 Such clouds of nameless trouble c. hi M. 4 Under the c. of gold Thro' the dome of the golden c. Ma. 141 That never shadow of mistrust can c. /. K. 43 That shadow of mistrust should never c. /. K. 59 ' Your leave, my lord, to o. the room, and /. K. 61 He shall not c us more ; speak but the word /. K. 64 That I forbear you thus : c. me no more I. K. 81 To c. our mighty Lancelot in his loves ! /. K. 183 — to the market-c. were known E. A. 6 Made Him his catspaw and the C. his tool E. A. 106 CROSS-BONES, —carved c, thetypes of DeathPyyts 349 CROSS'D. — they c. themselves for fear Poems 72 Sometimes your shadow c. the blind Poeyyts 90 — c. the garden to the gardener's lodge Poeyyts 221 We c. the street, and gain'd a petty mound Pr. 103 CROSSES. It c. here, it c. there Ma. 99 And the lonely sea-bird c. Select. 39 CROSSING, —a bridge of pine-wood, c. came Pr. 72 I past him, I was c. his lands Ma. 46 Rivulet c. my ground Ma. 75 — c., oft we saw the glisten Ma. 155 CROSSINGS. Who sweep the c. wet or dry Poems 341 CROSS-LIGHTNINGS of four chance-met E. A. --- CROSS-PIPES. — carved c., and, underneath Poems 349 CROST. — him in Llanberis : then we c. Poems 262 — flying reach'd the frontier, then we c. Pr. 21 Dismissal : back again we. c the court Pr. 34 The shade by which my life was c In M. 92 — where the waters marry — c. Ma. 121 Before I parted with poor Edmund ; c Ma. 121 — c. the common into Darnley chase Ma. 124 But when we c. the Lombard plain Ma. 156 That c. the trencher as she laid it down /. K. 22 C. and came near, lifter, aitrittg eyes I. K. 62 — even- margin scribbled, c, and cramm'd /. K. 128 — seldom c. her threshold E. A. 19 Abhorrent of a calculation c. E. A. 26 A front of timber-c antiquity E. A. 38 The harlot of the cities : nature c. E. A. 70 He selrirttt :. his child without a sneer E. A. 80 CROTCHETS. Chimeras, c, Christmas Pr. 11 CROUCH'D fawning in the weed Poeyns 106 — twice three years I c on one that rose Poems 239 CROW. Waking she heard the night-fQwl c. Poeyyts 10 — red cock crows from the farm upon the hill Poeyyts 135 Perch'd like a c upon a three-legg'd stool Poeyyts 222 — many-winter'd c. that leads the clanging Poeyyts 273 The cock crows ere the Christmas morn Poeyyts 335 Long, ere the hateful c. shall tread Poems 349 — many weeks a troop of carrion crows /. K. 124 CROWD lustier late and early Poems 344 That ever c. for kisses ' Pr. 43 CROWD. And I saw crowds in column'd Poeyyts 151 The crowds, the temples, waver d Poeyyts 155 — methcught, who waited with a c. Poeyyts 201 A c. of hopes Poems 205 To tear his heart before the c. ! Poeyyts 351 The park, the c, the house Pr. 6 An universal culture for the c. Pr. 7 —as we came, the c. dividing clove Pr. 89 '.'::. : z i -.':. f : ■ t r. tit e : Pr. 101 — ending, waved her hands : thereat the c Pr. 101 At stinset, and the c. were swarming now Pr. 179 Some civic manhood firm against the c. Pr. 180 For me, the genial day, the happy c. Pr. 1S1 — crowds that stream from yawning doors hi M. 97 He told me, lives in any c. /// M. 14S To fool the c with glorious lies In M. 198 Thro' all chat c. confused and loud Ma. 99 — those that held their heads above the c. Ma. rt- — let the sorrowing c. about it grow — crowds at length, be sane and crowns be just Ma. 147 —dark c. moves, and there are sobs and tears Ma. 152 ' Turn, turn tby wheel above the staring c. /. K. 20 So often and with such blows, that all the c. /. K. 30 Are harlots like the c, that if the}- find /. K. 137 Then of the c. 3-ou took no more account /. K. 152 Are half of them our enemies, and the c /. K. 152 Creeps, no precaution used 4 among the c. /. K. 252 — the honest shoulders of the c. E. A. 105 Returning, while none mark'd it, on the c. E. A. 108 7i CROWDED Page CROWDED. — c. lilac-ambush trimly pruned Poems 207 — c. farms and lessening towers ' In M. 16 — as a footsore ox in c. ways E. A. 93 CROWDING. Fantastic gables, c., stared Poems 287 CROWING. At midnight the cock was c. Poems 53 I heard just now the c. cock Poems 169 — barking dogs and c. cocks Poems 318 Came c. over Thames Poems 345 CROWN. Revered Isabel, the c. and head Poems 7 A c, a sceptre, and a throne ! Poems 31 — with a c. of gold Poems 58 From under my starry sea-bud c. Poems 60 The c. of Troas Poe?ns 98 — of wisdom — from all neighbour crowns Poems 103 The heads and crowns of "kings Poems 119 Last May we made a c. of flowers Poei?is 134 — we only toil, the roof and c. of things ? Poe}ns 145 Me lying dead, my c. about my brows Poems 157 And, King-like, wears the c. Poems 177 Three (Jueens with crowns of gold Poems 198 The c. of all, we met to part no more ' Poems 233 — this high dial, which my sorrow ci - owns Poems 239 That holds a c. ? Come, blessed brother Poems 243 'Tis gone: 'tis here again : the c! tne c! Poems 243 — a sorrow's c. of sorrow is remembering Poems 274 Or make that morn, from his cold c. Poems 293 The mountain stirr'd its bushy c. Poems 327 Is it the weight of that half-c. Poems 345 Of those that wear the Poet's c. Poems 350 In robe and c. the king stept down Poems 365 — so she wears her error like a c. Pr. 60 — veins the world were pack'd to make your c. Pr. 102 I wore them like a civic c. In M. 95 The fool that wears a c. of thorns In M. 95 He look'd upon my c. andsmiled In M. 95 — ill for him that wears a c. In M. 196 And yon fair stars that c. a happj'- day Ma. 60 — starry Gemini hang like glorious crowns Ma. 111 — one that sought but Duty's iron c. Ma. 144 Till crowds at length be sane and crowns be Ma. 147 — that he wears a truer c. Ma. 152 The C. a lonely splendour /. K. vii. Brake from the nape, and from the skull the c. /. K. 149 And he, that once was king, had on a c. /. K. 149 Pluck'd from the c, and show'd them to his /. K. 150 Since to his c. the golden dragon clung /. K. 170 — drooping c. of plumes E. A. 32 C. thyself, worm E. A. 84 — he gave the ringers a c. E. A. 121 It wore a c. of light E. A. 153 CROWN'D Isabel, through all her placid life Pms 8 Of c. lilies, standing near Poems 30 That house the cold c. snake ! Poe??is 99 C. dying day with stars Poems 120 A name for ever ! — lying robed and c. Poems 157 — bowery hollows c. with summer sea Poems 200 C. with the minster-towers Poems 205 Yea, c. a saint Poems 241 Catch me who can, and make the catcher c. Pms 262' Her bower : whence reissuing, robed and c. Pms 28S The simple senses c. his head Poems 302 The soft white vapour streak the c. towers Pr. 72 — ever following those two c. twins Pr. 128 Break from a darken'd future, c. with fire Pr. 145 — c. with all the season lent In M. 37 A solemn gladness even c. hi M. 50 When c. with blessing she doth rise hi M. 60 Day, when my c. estate begun In M. 99 I see thee sitting c. with good hi M. 115 O solemn ghost* O c. soul ! In M. 119 His own vast shadow glory-c. In M. 145 Or c. with attributes of woe hi M. 184 Tempest-buffeted, citadel-c. Ma. 165 — rested in her fealty, till he c. /. K. 97 Yea, were he not c. king, coward, and fool' /. K. 135 Her godlike head c. with spiritual fire I. K. 137 Had trodden that c. skeleton, and the skull /. K. 149 Sir Lancelot's azure lions, c. with gold /. K. 181 That c. the state pavilion of the King /. K. 24.6 C. after trial E. A. 56 Both c. with stars E. A. 109 Like Heavenly Hope she c. the sea E. A. 148 CROWNING. Shone out their c. snows Poems 47 —springs the c. race of humankind Pr. 173 Becomes on Fortune's c. slope In M. 89 The c. cup, the three-times-three hi M. 209 Betwixt us and the c. race hi M. 210 — felt himself in his force to be Nature's c. race Ma. 19 CROWSFOOT. —the cowslip and the c. Poems 132 72 CRY Page CROWSFOOT. Made wet the crafty c. E. A. 106 CRUCIFIED, —were stoned or c. Poems 238 CRUCIFIX. Or the maid-mother by a c. Poems 116 CRUDE. Nor feed with c. imaginings Poems 179 CRUEL, little Lilian Poems 5 The flowers would faint at your c. cheer Poems 41 — c. love, whose end is scorn Poems 76 'O c. heart,' she changed her tone Poems 76 They call me c. -hearted, but I care not Poems 131 As c. as a schoolboy ere he grows Poems 229 C, c. the words I said 1 Poems 338 — the tyrant's c. glee Poems 371 A stroke of c. sunshine on the cliff Pr. 101 —now will c. Ida keep her back Pr. in Too hard, too c. : yet she sees me fight Pr. 133 O sorrow, c. fellowship In M. 3 — flee from the c. madness of love Ma. 22 He laid a c. snare in a pit Ma. 107 — all thro' that young traitor, c. need /. K. 38 — bear him hence out of this c. sun /. K. 74 O c, there was nothing wild or strange I, K. 138 Me onhy c. immortality E. A. 139 Day by day more harsh and c. Select. 37 CRUELLER. ' O c. than was ever told in tale /. K. 138 C. : as not passing thro' the fire E. A. 86 CRUELLY came they back to-day Poems 338 — clear-cut face, why come you so c. meek Ma. 13 CRUET. That trifle with the c. Poems 348 CRUMBLED. Till public wrong be c. into Ma. 146 CRUMBLING. Shut up as in a c. tomb Poems 124 CRUMPLED. More c. than a poppy from the Pr. 108 CRUPPER. The c, and so left him stunn'd /. K. 70 CRUSH. Like a rose-leaf I will c. thee Poems 6 Will c. her pretty maiden fancies dead Pr. 19 — great the c. was and each base Pr. 155 Or c. her, like a vice of blood In M. 3 CRUSH'D. I c. them on my breast, my mouth Pms 96 -lead-like tons of sin, that c. Poems 237 -like monstrous apes they c. my chest Poems 242 The Princess : Lady Psyche will be c. Pr. 57 The plaintive crj' jarr'd on her ire : she c. Pr. 95 — c. to death : and rather, Sire, than this Pr. 114 The forum, and half-c. among the rest Pr. 164 Had bruised the herb and c. the grape In M. 55 Mangled, and flatten'd, and c, and dinted into Ma. 2 Slight, to be c. with a tap Ma. 89 — c. in the clash of jarring claims Ma. 114 I found, tho' c. to hard and dry Ma. 159 C. the wild passion out against the floor I. K. 185 CRUSHING. Raw from the prime, and c. down Pr. 35 CRUST. From scalp to sole one slough and c. Pms 236 Thee woman thro' the c. of iron moods Pr. 175 CRUSTED. Were thickly c, one and all Poems 9 CRUSTY. Had cast upon its c. side Poems 343 CRUTCH. Weak Truth a-leaning on her c. Poems 14 CRY. I c. aloud: none hear my cries Poems 56 Call to each other and whoop and c. Poems 59 Of rocks thrown down, or one deep c. Poems 124 We did so laugh and c. with you Poems 169 He heard the deep behind him, and a c. Poems 197 A c. that shiver'd to the tingling stars Poems 198 — the boy's c. came to her from the field Poems 218 A mark for all, and shudder'd lest a c. Poems 227 — cease I not to clamour and to c. Poems 237 In one blind c. of passion and of pain Poems 261 C, like the daughters of the horseleech Poems 262 — for a tender voice Avill c. Poems 275 C. down the past, not only we, that prate Poems 285 — bade him c, with sound of trumpet Poems 286 Than c. for strength, remaining weak Poems 293 C, faint not : either Truth is born Poems 297 C, faint not, climb : the summits slope Poems 298 Who hold their hands to all and c. Poems 341 Begins the scandal and the c. Poems 351 C. to the summit, ' Is there any hope ?' Poems 375 There let the wind sweep and the plover c. Poems 376 Moreover 'seize the strangers' is the c. Pr. 86 The plaintive c. jarr'd on her ire Pr. 95 To lag behind, scared by the c. they made Pr. 112 With clamour : for among them rose a c. Pr. 119 His iron palms together with a c. Pr. 125 Reels, and the herdsmen c. : for everything Pr. 134 She nor swoon'd nor utter'd c. Pr. 136 For ever lost, there went up a great c. Pr. 137 Ceased all on tremble : piteous Avas the c. Pr. 144 She stoop'd : and out of languor lapt a c. Pr. 165 Sent from a dewy breast a c. for light Pr. 170 From out waste places comes a c. In M. 3 — c, 'how changed from where it ran In M. 33 CRY Page CRY —with no language but a c. In M. 77 To raise a c. that lasts not long In M. 103 Was love's dumb c. defying change In M. 140 The roofs that heard our earliest c. In M. 155 C. thro' the sense to hearten trust In M. 181 A c. above the conquer'd years In M. -zvz A wounded thing with a rancorous c. Ma. 38 I to c. out on pride Ma. 44 — there rises ever a passionate c. Ma. 85 — on a sudden a passionate c. Ma. 87 A c. for a brother's blood Ma. 87 — rings on a sudden a passionate c. Ma. 98 I will c. to the steps above my head Ma. 108 With a loyal people shouting a battle c. Ma. 113 Whose crying is a c. for gold Ma. 159 But either's force was match'd till Yniol's c. /. K. 31 To both appear'd so costly, rose a c. /. K. 34 Than to c. ' Halt,' and to her own bright face I. K. 51 Spurr'd with his terrible war-c. ; for as one /. K. 54 Sent forth a sudden sharp and bitter c. /. K. 84 The c. of children, Enids and Geraints /. K. 96 —children cast their pins and nails, and c. /. K. 116 Anon, she heard Sir Lancelot c. in the court /. K. 165 Utter'd a little tender dolorous c. /. K. 189 Far cities burnt, and with a c. she woke /. K. 229 I c. my c. in silence, and have done /. K. 235 Then on a sudden a c, ' the King.' She sat /. K. 246 With his first babe's first c. E. A. 5 — she started with a happy c. E. A. 9 Till hard upon the c. of ' breakers ' came E. A. 30 — send abroad a shrill and terrible c. E. A. 42 — half -incredulous, half-hysterical c. E. A. 46 Nor knew he wherefore he had made the c. E. A. 81 I c. to vacant chairs and widow'd walls E. A. 88 — if echoing me you c. E. A. 89 Must c. to these the last of theirs, as cried E A. 92 Clung to the mother, and sent out a c. E. A. 109 I cannot c. for him, Annie E. A. 116 He heard a fierce mermaiden c. E. A. 155 CRYING. — c, 'Who is this? behold thy bride' Pms 260 Two Proctors leapt upon us, c. ' Names ' Pr. 88 Some c. there was an army in the land Pr. 99 An infant c. for the light In M. 77 An infant c. in the night In M. 77 But, c, knows his father near In M. 193 They were c. and calling Ma. 43 Whose c. is a cry for gold Ma,. 159 So burnt he was with passion, c. out /. K. 30 Ran to her c. , 'if we have fish at all /. K. 36 W T hen c. out ' Effeminate as I am /. K. 46 And heard one c. to his fellow, ' Look /. K. 48 And shook her pulses, c. ' Look a prize /. K. 52 — thrust the dish before her, c, ' Eat ' /. K. 80 C. ' I count it of no more avail /. K. 83 Till Edyrn c, 'If you will not go I. K. 89 — while she kiss'd them, c. ' Trample me /. K. 105 That follow'd, flying back and c. out /. K. 143 Then c. ' I have made his glory mine ' /. K. 144 — all his legions c. Christ and him /. K. 163 Untaken, c. that his prize is death ' /. K. 175 For testimony ; and c. with full voice /. K. 230 Whereat the novice c, with clasp'd hands /. K. 241 Meek maidens, from the voices c. ' shame ' /. K. 260 Their tawny clusters, c. to each other E. A. 21 C. with a loud voice ' a sail ! a sail ! E. A. 50 —broke all bonds of courtesy, and c. E. A. 68 — c. upon the name of Leolin E. A. 81 Some c. ' Set them up ! they shall not fall ! ' E. A. 108 — mine but from the c. of a child ' E. A. 109 My sisters c, 'stay for shame ' E. A. 156 CRYPT. My knees are bow'd in c. and shrine Pms 334 — fall'n into the dusty c. Poems 346 -those cold crypts where thev shall cease In M. 83 CRYSTAL. Thro' little c. arches low Poems 21 Flowing like a c. river Poems 41 He flash'd into the c. mirror Poe7?is 69 In c. eddies glance and poise Poems 87 — c. silence creeping down Poems 293 — warm'd in c. cases Poems 329 In c. vapour everywhere Poems- 362 In c currents of clear morning seas Pr. 46 — down the streaming c. dropt Pr. 166 Adown the c. dykes at Camelot /. K. 70 Became a c, and he saw them thro' it /. K. 126 — shallop of c. ivory -beak"d E. A. 158 CUBE. The hard-grain'd Muses of the c. and Pr. 10 CUBIT. Six cubits, and three years on one Poems 239 — numbers forty cubits from the soil Poems 239 Drave the long" spear a c. thro" his breast /. K. 50 CURL'D Page CUCKOO. The c. told his name to all the Poems 206 To hatch the c. Rise ! ' and stoop'd to updrag Pr. 93 CUCKOO-FLOWER, —faint sweet c. -flowers Pms 132 As perfume of the c. ? Poems 163 CUD. The thrice-turn'd c. of wrath, and Pr. 18 CUFF'D. Caught and c. by the gale Ma. 25 CUIRASS. Had on his c. worn our Lady's /. K. 162 Prick'd sharply his own c, and the head' /. K. 172 CUISSES. — greaves and c. dash'd with drops Pms 199 CULL'D. — whitest honey in fairy gardens c. Poems 79 Because all words, tho' c. with choicest art Poems 162 One rose, but one, by those fair fingers c. Poems 208 In mine own lady palms 1 c. the spring /. K. 107 CULMINATE. The new light up, and c. in Pr. 47 CULMINATION. All starry c. drop Poems 256 CULTIVATION, —years of c. Poems -^o CULTURE. An universal c. for the crowd Pr. 7 More breadth of c: is not Ida right? Pr. tio CUNNING. Shot thro' and thro' with c. words Pms 13 Had c. eyes to see : the barking cur Poems 287 Mix'd with c. sparks of hell Poems 370 Joints of c. workmanship Poe?ns 373 Not only c. casts in clay In M. 186 CUNNING-SIMPLE, —innocent-arch, so c. Poems 5 CUNOBELINE. —rioted in the city of C. E. A. 172 CUP. I drink the c. of a costly death Poems 84 Three fingers round the old silver c. Poems 85 From out a golden c. Poems 114 — the last drop in the c. of gall Poems 227 In tea-c. times of hood and hoop Poems 247 My little oakling from the c. Poems 254 Will haunt the vacant c. Poems 346 Fill the c, and fill the can Poems 370, 371, 374 Fill the can, and fill the c. Poems 371, 373 The crowning c, the three-times-three In M. 209 — made a pretty c. of both my hands /. K. 107 Except indeed to drink : no c. had we /. K. 107 For cups and silver on the burnish'd board E. A. 41 The magic c. that fill'd itself anew E. A. 58 There they drank in cups of emerald E. A. 172 I pledge her not in any cheerful c. Select. 197 CUPID. The rentroll C. of our rainy isles Poems 234 The modest C* of the day Poems 248 The seal was C. bent above a scroll Pr. 27 CUPID-BOYS. By C. of blooming hue Poems 325 CUPLIKE. — c. hollow of the down E. A. 1 CUR. Then yelp'd the c. and yawl'd the cat Pms 185 Had cunning eyes to see : the barking c. Poems 287 CURATE. The c. : he was fatter than his cure Pms 230 — said the fat-faced c. Edward Bull Poems 231, 233 CURB'D. — her : strongly groom'd and straitly c. Pr. 130 CURBS. Wild natures need wise c. Pr. 116 CURDLED. — the wolf's milk c. in their veins Pr. 164 CURE. — trusted any c. Poemsug The curate : he was fatter than his c. Poems 230 CURED lameness, palsies, cancers Poems 239 — c. some halt and maim'd Poems 241 CURIOUS. All subtle thought, all c. fears In M. 51 Too c. Vivien, tho' you talk of trust /. K. 112 Not ever be too c. for a boon /. K. 119 I seem'd a c. little maid again /. K. 201 CURIOUSLY. How c. and strangely chased Pms 194 There the manorial lord too c. E. A. 77 CURIOUSNESS. —children a great c. be well /. K. 112 CURL. In many a dark delicious c. Poems 24 In a golden c. Poems 60 Would c. round my silver feet Poems 62 His coal-black curls as on he rode Poems 69 Her streaming curls of deepest brown Poems 73 — the light and lustrous curls Poems 199 — moves not on the rounded c. Poems 316 —took him \yy the curls, and led him in Poems 366 — that play'dthe patron with her curls Pr. 8 Melissa shook her doubtful curls, and thought Pr. 58 From the flaxen c. to the gray lock a life Pr. 96 The enamour'd air sighing, and on their curls Pr. 140 — down dead-heavy sank her curls, and half Pr. 144 — winds their curls about his hand In M. 92 May serve to c. a maiden's locks In M. 106 — out, little head, sunning over with curls Ma. 80 A tiny c. and gave it E. A. 13 The dim curls kindle into sunnv rings E. A. 142 CURL'D. His dusty forehead drily c. Poems 85 I c. and comb'd his comely head Poe?ns no Back on herself her serpent pride had c. Poems 123 —and the clouds are lightly c. Poems 148 Faint shadows, vapours lightly c. • Poems 313 All-graceful head, so richly c. Poems 324 When the locks are crisp and c. Poems 374 73 CURL'D Page CURL'D. The forest crack'd, the waters c. In M. 24 For us the same cold streamlet c. In M. 109 That oil'd and c. Assyrian Bull Ma. 28 — watch the c. white of the coming wave /. K. 108 CURLEWS, —as of old, the c. call Poems 268 CURLY. Sometimes a c. shepherd-lad Poems 67 — singer shaking his c. head E. A. 157 CURRENT. Till in its onward c. it absorbs Poems 8 — those four jets four currents in one swell Poems 113 The ever-shifting currents of the blood Poems 155 Watch what main-currents draw the years Poems 180 ■ — cousin, all the c. of my being sets to thee Poetns 270 The c. of my days Poems 340 This barren verbiage, c. among men Pr. 32 But branches c. yet in kindred veins Pr. 42 In crystal currents of clear morning seas Pr. 46 You turn'd your warmer currents all to her Pr. 90 Of Him that made them c. coin In M. 56 To chase a creature that was c. then /. K. 114 The c. of his talk to graver things E. A. 12 Fast flow'd the c. of her easy tears E. A. 47 — the motion of the c. ceased E. A. 102 CURSE. A c. is on her if she stay Poems 66 She knows not what the c. may be Poems 67 'The c. is come upon me,' cried Poems 70 — youth,' she said, ' was blasted with a c. Poetns 154 This is the c. of time Poems 172 this world's c, — beloved but hated Poems 260 1 said, ' I toil beneath the c. Poems 300 My Shakespeare's c. on clown and knave Poems 351 I remember'd that burnt sorcerer's c. Pr. 131 — even when she turn'd the In M. 8 I c. not nature, no, nor death In M. 101 — of Peace? We have made them a c. Ma. 4 —She may bring me a c. Ma. 10 Prophet, c. me the blabbing lip Ma 105 — c. me the British vermin, the rat Ma. 105 To c. this hedgerow thief, the sparrow-hawk /. K. 17 My c, my nephew— I will not let his name /. K. 24 God's c, it makes me mad to see you weep /. K. 78 God's c. , with anger — often I myself /. K. 80 ' That is love's c. ; pass on, my Queen /. K. 218 Until it came a kingdom's c. with thee /. K. 253 I did not come to c. thee, Guinevere /. K. 253 — left their memories a world's c. E. A. 92 A c. in his God-bless-you E. A. 104 CURSED. O c. hand ! O c. blow ! Poems 56 And bless'd herself, and c. herself Poetns 184 ' A quinsy choke thy c. note ! ' Poems 185 C. be the gold that gilds the straiten'd Poetns 273 C. be the social lies that warp us Poems 273 C. be the social wants that sin Poetns 273 C. be the sickly forms that err Poems 273 Tho' c. and scorn'd, and bruised with Poems 299 The c. Malayan crease Pr. 2 I have c. him even to lifeless things) Ma. 65 I felt as tho' you knew this c. charm /. K. 116 That c. France with her egalities ! E. A. 65 — as he c. his credulousness E. A. 97 C. me and my flower E. A. 152 CURSING. With Florian, c. Cyril, vext at Pr. 83 — I was c. them and my doom Ma. 67 To blessing or to c. save from one /. K. 76 And c. their lost time, and the dead man /. K. 76 CURTAIN. She drew her casement-c. by Poems 10 In the white c, to and fro Poems 11 His curtains, wasting odorous sighs Poems 35 The curtains, whined in lobbies, tapt at Poems 226 The death-white c. drawn Ma. 51 By the curtains of my bed Ma. 98 —cast the curtains of their seat aside E. A. 92 CURTSEYING. She, c. her obeisance, let us Pr. 30 CURVE. — the rainbow lives in the curves Poetns 44 See here, my doing : curves of mountain Poems 230 In curves the yellowing river ran Poems 362 Set in a gleaming river's crescent-c. Pr. 24 To left and right thro' meadowy curves In M. 151 — least little delicate aquiline c. in a sensitive Ma. 12 With many a c. my banks I fret Ma. 119 —out again I c. and flow Ma. 127 CURVED. A sudden-c. frown Poems 16 —broad c. branches, fledged with clearest Poetns 152 CZAR Page CURVED. — c. an arm about his neck /. K. 105 CURVET. — a roan horse caper and c. /. K. 188 CURVING. — tender c. lines of creamy spray Ptns 146 — c. a contumelious lip Ma. 47 CUSHIONS. On silken c. half reclined Poems 83 The c. of whose touch may press Poetns 252 CUSTOM. Lest one good c. should corrupt Poetns 200 Here is c. come your way Poetns 368 Appraised the Lycian c, spoke of those Pr. 36 Disyoke their necks from c, and assert Pr. 36 —moved beyond his c. , Gama said Pr. 148 — reverencing the c. of the house /. A". 21 Of intermitted c. ; then I felt /. K. 43 Of blood and c. wholly out of him /. K. 93 CUSTOMARY. No c. honour : since the /. K. 175 CUT. Edged with sharp laughter, cuts atvvain Ptns 13 -they c. away my tallest pines Poetns 106 I was c. off from hope in that sad place Poetns 154 C. Prejudice against the grain Poems 180 — where the hedge-row cuts the pathway Poems 206 — half-cut-down, a pasty costly-made Poems 222 They read in arbours dipt and c. Poems 329 And c. this epitaph above my bones Pr. 40 What is she, c. from love and faith In M. 177 — cold and clear-c. face, as 1 found when her Ma. 11 Cold and clear-c. face, why come you so Ma. 13 Jealousy, down ! c. off from the mind Ma 39 Struck at him with his whip, and c. his cheek /. K. 11 Conjecturing when and where : this c. is fresh /. K. 148 Tho' carved and c, and half the pearls away /. K. 189 Cuts off the fiery highway of the sun E. A. 8 C. off the length of highway on before E. A. 37 This hair is his : she c. it off and gave it E. A. 49 C. the Roman boy to pieces E. A. 172 CUTTING. With c. eights that day upon Poems 189 CYCLE. With cycles of the human tale Poem's 119 Better fifty years of Europe than a c. of Poems 283 Young Nature thro' five cycles ran Poems 290 Falls off, but cycles always round Poems 30^ The closing c. rich in good In M. 162 CYCLIC. The seeming prey of c. storms In M. 183 CYGNET. Is tawnier than her cygnet's /. K. 209 CYMBAL'D. Between a c. Miriam and a Jael Pr. 133 CYMBALS. With shawns, and with c. Poems 48 CYPRESS. With c. promenaded Poems 327 Nor waves the c. in the palace walk Pr. 166 Made c. of her orange flower In M. 115 Thro' c. avenues, at our feet Ma. 156 A c. in the moonlight shake Ma. 158 CYRIL. With C. and with Florian, my two Pr. 17 -C. whisper'd : ' Take me with you too ! Pr. 19 With C. and with Florian, unperceived Pr. 20 We of the court,' said C. ' From the court Pr. 32 Said C. ' O hush, hush ! ' and she began Pr. 35 ' Let me die too,' said C, ' having seen Pr. 40 'You are that Psyche,' C. said, 'for whom Pr. 42 'You are that Psyche,' C. said again Pr. 43 Said C. , ' Madam, he the wisest man Pr. 47 We turn'd to go, but C. took the child Pr. 48 ' They hunt old trails,' said C, 'very well Pr. 49 Said C. : ' Pale one, blush again : than wear Pr. 57 As if to close with Cyril's random wish Pr. 59 C, and yawning, ' O hard task,' he cried Pr. 60 Set forth to climb; then, climbing, C. kept Pr. 72 C, with whom the bell-mouth'd glass had Pr. 82 With Florian, cursing C, vext at heart Pr. 83 That which he says he loves : for C, howe'er Pr. 87 — where are Psyche, C. 1 both are fled Pr. 87 -Here C. met us Pr. 109 Go : C. told us all ' Pr. 109 To whom remorseful C, ' yet I pray Pr. 11 1 Said C, 'you shall have it' Pr. 112 To such as her ! if C. spake her true Pr. 115 — fiery-short was Cyril's counter-scoff Pr. 122 And C., one. Yea, let me make my dream Pr. 133 -C. seeing it, push'd against the Prince Pr. 134 Beside us, C., batter'd as he was Pr. 144 — the king replied not : C. said Pr. 152 When C. pleaded, Ida came behind Pr. 161 CYRUS, —what she did to C. after fight Pr. 126 CZAR. — has as many lies as a C. Ma. 16 D. DABBLED Page DABBLED, —grisly twine, all d. with the blood Pr. 142 — the held above are d. with blood-red heath Ma. 1 DABBLING a shameless hand with shameful Pr. 70 d. in the fount of fictive tears Ma. 122 DAFFODIL. The shining d. dead Ma. 14 On a bed of d. sky — the shining d. dies, and the Charioteer Ma. 111 DAFFODILLY. That clad her like an April d. Pr. 46 DAGGER. I made my d. sharp and bright Poems no The d. thro" her side"' Pee), is 161 With that cold d. of thy bill Poems 166 Shot sidelong daggers at us, a tiger-cat Pr. 52 Makes daggers at the sharpen'd eaves In M. 165 And feeling ; had she found a d. there I. A". 138 A d., in rich sheath with jewels on it E. A. 62 This d. with him, which when now admired E. A. 63 —left alone he pluck'd her d. forth E. A. 75 — the d. which himself E. A. 82 DAILY and hourly, more and more Poems 81 He lost the sense that handles d. life Poems 226 — but for d. loss of one she loved Poems 228 — d. hope fulfill'd, to rise again Poems 231 — seas, that d. gain upon the shore Poems 263 Maiden, I have watch'd thee cL Poems 35S The cL burden for the back In M. 42 As d. vexes household peace In M. 47 Of broken fortunes, d. fronted him /. K. 1 My d. wonder is, 1 love at all /. K. 121 — stanch'd his wound, and there, in d. doubt /. K. 174 The little footprint d. wash'd away E. A. 2 And flying the white breaker, d. left E. A. 2 And heaps of living gold that d. grow E. A. 85 DAILY-DWINDLING— d. profits E. A. 38 DAINTIER. Where could be found face d. ? /. K. 180 DAINTILY. — with Lilia's. D. she shriek'd Pr. 10 DAINTY. About her d. d. waist Poems 92 Of d. sorrow without sound Pvems 163 The rein with d. finger-tips Poe?ns 363 For these your d. gambols : wherefore ask /. K. 109 So fantastical is the d. metre E. A. 176 Caress'd or chidden by the cL hand Select 196 DAINTY- WOEFUL. Of d. sympathies Poems 165 DAIS. The roval d. round Poems 118 DAISIES. And left the d. rosy Ma, 44 DAIS-THRONE. High from the d. Poems 199 DAISY. — d. slept, and Love's white star Poems 209 Touch'd by his feet the d. slept Poe}?ts 302 Pull sideways, and the d. close In M. 99 I pluck'd ad., I gave it you Ma. 158 DAISY-BLOSSOM'D. —still rains and d. Poems 57 DAISY-CHAIN. Made blossom-ball or d. E. A. 53 DALE. — here are the blissful downs and dales Pms 44 And long purples of the d. Poems 50 And the rivulet in the flowery d. Poems 132 — thro' mountain clefts the d. Poems 143 She went by d., and she went by down Poems 356 Till over down and over d. In M. 209 That all in loops and links among the dales /. A". 156 Beheld at noon in some delicious d. /. A'. 245 — on fire was rising over the d. E. A. 119 DALLIANCE. In Egypt ! O the d. and Poems 156 DALLIED. But d. with his golden chain Poe-ms 319 DALLY. That with the napkin d. Poems 344 DALLYING. In lieu of idly d. with the truth /. A'. i 7 B DAM. The sleepy pool above the d. Poems 89 Sent out a bitter 'bleating for its d. Pr. 94 As waits a river level with the d. Pr. 99 DAMASK Ad. napkin wrought with horse Poems 222 While, dreaming on your d. cheek Poems 312 Was d.-work, and deep inlay Poems 20 DAME. Kn'ght and burgher, lord and d. Poems 71 — a d. indoors, that trims us up Poems 232 Then Florian, but no livelier than the d. Pr. 35 DANCERS Page DAME. Like that great d. of Lapidoth she sang Pr. 133 — dames and heroines of the golden year Pr. 139 A train of dames : by axe and eagle sat Pr. 164 He found an ancient d. in dim brocade I. K. 20 But that old d., to whom full tenderly /. A". 28 — own good gift ! ' ' Yea surety,' said the d. /. K. 37 D. , to be gentle than ungentle with you /. K. 83 And lived there neither d. nor damsel then I. K. 125 Sir Valence wedded with an outland d. /. K. 131 Predoom'd her as unworthy. One old d. /. K. 185 And ever in the reading, lords and dames I. K. 214 — but when now the lords and dames I. AT. 217 DAMNED. The d. arrow glanced aside Poems 54 DAMP. The air is d., and hush'd, and close Poems 32 — hail, d., and sleet and snow Poems 236 Sucking the damps for drink Poems 239 D. from the river : and close behind her stood Pr. 89 DAMSEL. Sometimes a troop of damsels glad Pms i~ And armour, and your d. should be theirs ' I. K. 49 And armour, and his d. shall be ours ' /. K. 49 ' Friend, let her eat ; the d. is so faint V I.K. 56 While your good d. rests, return, and fetch /. K. 57 To your good d. there who sits apart /. K. 61 A d. drooping in a corner of it /. K. 78 And lived there neither dame nor d. then /. K. 125 And set it in this damsel's golden hair /. K. 158 d., in the light of your blue eyes I. K. 181 And, d., for I deem you know full well I. K. 183 This will I do, dear d., for your sake I. K. 197 And pointed to the d. , and the doors I. K. 213 Tho', had I dreamt the d. would have died /. K. 215 You loved me, d , surely with a love /. K. 220 The prettiest little d. E. A. 2 DAN Chaucer, the first warbler Poems 150 DANAE. Now lies the Earth all D. to the stars Pr. 167 DAN AID. The D. of a leaky vase, for fear Pr. 46 DANCE. About thee breaks and dances Poems 16 And the spangle dances in bight and bay Poems 44 A fire dances before her, and a sound Poems 108 A star that with the choral starry d. Poems 123 Leaving the d. and song Poems 159 — make her d. attendance Poe??is 328 And the dead begin to d. Poe-ms 372 Arranged a country d. Pr. 5 Our dances broke and buzz'd in knots.of talk Pr. 22 -fit to flaunt, to dress, to d., to thrum Pr. 101 Like one that wishes at a d. to change Pr. 105 A blind and babbling laughter, and to d. Pr. 143 -let the torrent d. thee down Pr. 16S To d. with death, to beat the ground hi M. 1 In d., and song, and game, and jest In M. 47 And d., and song, and hoodman-blind In M. 1:7 And wheels the circled d., and breaks hi M. 148 No d., no motion, save alone In M. 162 Now d. the lights on lawn and lea In M. 179 And last the d. ; till I retire In M. 209 A dinner and then a d. She is weary of d. and play ' Ma. 77 Come hither, the dances are done Ma. 79 1 make the netted sunbeam d. Ma. 126 Than but to d. and sing, be gaily drest Select. 196 DANCED. And we d. about the may-pole Poems 134 Till all the tables d. again Poems 186 — ere it touch'd a foot that might have d. Poe?ns 208 D. into light, and died into the shade Poejns 210 D. like a wisp Pr. 4 And d. the colour, and, below, stuck out Pr. 69 For I that d. her on my knee In M. 206 D. in his bosom, seeing better days I. jST. 27 — madly d. our hearts with joy E. A. 144 DANCERS. When will the d. leave her alone?Afa. 77 To the d. dancing in tune A wreath of airy d. hand-in-hand /. A'. 238 75 DANCING Page DANCING. — d. after Letty Hill Poems 232 By d. rivulets fed his flocks Poems 353 Or seem'd to watch the d. bubble Pr. 55 A thousand pulses d., fail In M. 194 When the shiver of d. leaves is thrown Ma. 29 Till the d. will be over Ma. 73 To the dancers d. in tune Ma. 77 To the sound of d. music and flutes Ma. 107 Among- the d. shadows of the birds /. K. 32 That burst in d., and the pearls were spilt /. K. 117 DANDLE. — shall we d. it amorously : E. A. 171 DANDLED. To be d., no, but living wills Pr. 82 The breast that fed or arm that d. you Pr. 146 DANDY-DESPOT. What if that d. Ma. 27 DANE. Saxon and Norman and D. are we E. A. 164- For Saxon or D. or Norman we E. A. 165 We are each all D. in our welcome of thee E. A. 165 DANGER. Dangers and deeds, until Poems 104 Her household fled the d. Poems 186 I see the d. which you cannot see /. K. 68 Of d. on the roaring sea E. A. 156 DANGEROUS. ' They were d. guides the Poems 276 -letting a d. thought run wild Ma. 67 And all its d. glories ; and I thought /. K. 43 DANGLED, —when my father d. the grapes Ma. 10 D. a length of ribbon and a ring E. A. 41 DANGLING. — wreaths of d. water-smoke Pr. 168 DANIEL. — Books (see D. seven and ten) E. A. 104 DANISH. With D. barrows E. A. 1 D. barrow overhead E. A. 25 DANK. — willow-branches, hoar and d. Poems 48 DANTE. — world-worn D. grasp'd his song Poems 118 DANUBE. The D. to the Severn gave In M. 32 Let her great D. rolling fair In M. 147 DAPPLED. Behind the d. grays Poems 249 The foxglove cluster d. bells ' Poems 292 That breaks about the d. pools In M. 71 DARE. If my lips should d. to kiss Poems 16 I d. not die and come to thee- Poe?ns 56 I walk, I d. not think of thee Poems 56 'You will not, boy ! you d. to answer thus ! Poems 215 D. tell him Dora waited with the child Poems 217 Then not to d. to see ! when thy low voice Poems 259 The doubt would rest, I d. not solve Poems 304 ' I will speak out, for I d. not lie Poems 355 But I must go : I d. not tarry,' and light Pr. 59 That will be. ' * D. we dream of that V I ask'd Pr. 70 On me, me, me the storm first breaks : I d. Pr. 100 As he that does the thing they d. not do Pr. 115 What dares not Ida do that she should prize Pr. 116 How d. Ave keep our Christmas-eve In M. 47 Nor d. she trust a larger lay hi M. 70 And d. we to this fancy give In M. 75 By which we d. to live or die In M. 120 I shall not see thee. D. I say In M. 137 That which we d. invoke to bless In M. 192 Who can rule and d. not lie Ma. 40 That I d. to look her way Ma. 53 D. I bid her abide by her word? Ma. 54 Who dares foreshadow for an only son /. K. vi. I am the cause because I d. not speak /. K. 5 -yet not d. to tell him what I think /. K. 6 How should I d. obey him to his harm? /. K. 53 Not d. to watch the combat, only breathe /. K. 54 Nor did I care or d. to speak with you /. K. 92 ' What d. the full-faced liars say of me ? /. K. 129 And no man there will d. to mock at me /. K. 202 My Own true lord ! How d. I call him mine? /. K. 257 DARED. But when at last I d. to speak Poems 90 Or else I had not d. to flow Poems 171 You knew my word was law, and yet you d. Poems 217 ' He d. not tarry,' men will say Poems 294 Their debt of thanks to her who first had d. Pr. 36 — d. to break our bond, and gull'd Pr. 102 Went son-owing in a pause I d. not break Pr. 170 D. not to glance at her good mother's face /. K. 41 Nor d. to waste a perilous pity on him /. K. 73 And since she thought ' he had not d. to do /. K. 84 Yet d. not stir to do it E. A. 92 DAREST. Who scarcely d. to inquire In M. 4 DARING. ' They perish'd in their d. deeds ' Poems 317 But now it were tood. Ah! my God /. K. 259 DARK. From the d. fen the oxen's low Poems 10 When thickest d. did trance the sky Poems 10 Which upon the d. afloat Poems 18 Of d. and bright. A lovely time Poe?ns 22 The hollow-vaulted d., and stream'd Poems 24 In many a d. delicious curl Poems 24 Or dimple in the d. of rushy coves Poems 28 70 DARK Page DARK. Over the d. dewy earth forlorn Poems 29 — thro' the wreaths of floating d. upcurl'd Poems 39 Of the d. deserted house Poems 45 All within is d. as night Poems 45 Ere the light on d. was growing Poems 53 Mounted in heaven wilt shoot into the d. Poems 62 Thy d. eyes open'd not Poems 78 Within the d. and dimpled beck Poems 88 The d. round of the dripping wheel Poems 89 Whose thick mysterious boughs in the d. Poems 106 My d. tall pines Poems 106 One seem'd all d. and red— a tract of sand Poems 115 — in d. corners of her palace stood Poems 123 When from the dry d. wold the summer airs Pms 135 — the moon was setting, and the d. was over Pins 139 D. faces pale against that rosy flame Poems 143 Give us long rest or death, d. death Poems 146 Beneath a heaven d. and holy Poems 147 Peopled the hollow d., like burning stars Poems 151 — long, rank, d. wood-walks drench'd in dew Pms 153 Morn broaden'd on the borders of the d. Poems 161 Remaining betwixt d. and bright Poems 164 The unnetted black-hearts ripen d. Poems 166 Shot on the sudden into d. _ Poems 172 And round them sea and air are d. Poems 181 — on a d. strait of barren land Poems 191 Striped with d. blood Poems 198 D. as a funeral scarf from stem to stern Poems 198 — sitting muffled in d. leaves, you hear Poems 204 Dream 'd by a happy man, when the d. East Poems 206 A length of bright horizon rimm'd the d. Poems 209 — the sun fell and all the land was d. Poems 217, 218 — the varied changes of the d. Poems 231 Then close and d. my arms I spread Poems 254 — the d. was worn, and overhead Poems 260 The d. Earth follows wheel'd in her ellipse Poems 263 There gloom the d. broad seas. My mariners Pms 266 — spirit deeply dawning in the d. of hazel Poems 270 If I make d. my countenance Poems 291 ' If all be d., vague voice,' 1 said Poems 301 Could his d. vision find it cut Poems 303 By making all the horizon d. Poems 307 How d. those hidden eyes must be ! ' Poems 318 ' Love, if thy tresses be so d. Poems 318 The twilight died into the d. Poems 321 As these white robes are soil'd and d. Poems 331 Between d. stems the forest glows Poems 334 I float till all is d. Poems 334 As down d. tides the glory slides Poems 335 But o'er the d. a glory spreads Poems 335 One her d. hair and lovesome mien Poems 363 Till over thy d. shoulder glow Poems 377 And one d. tress; and all around them both Pr. 17 From four wing'd horses d. against the stars Pr. 26 On some d. shore just seen that it was rich Pr. 28 Or in the d. dissolving human heart Pr. 70 In the d. crag : and then we turn'd, we wound Pr. 73 Ah, sad and strange as in d. summer dawns Pr. 76 And d. and true and tender is the North Pr. 79 — drench his d. locks in the gurgling wave Pr. 84 His wildness, and the chances of the d. ' Pr. 87 Slipt round and in the d. invested you Pr. 93 Thro' the d. land, and later in the night Pr. 109 — glitter burnish'd by the frosty d. Pr. 120 Suck'd from the d. heart of the long hills roll Pr. 125 The lirtle seed they laugh'd at in the d. Pr. 138 Their d. and gray, while Psyche ever stole Pr. 143 Sole comfort of my d. hour, when a world Pr. 146 — after that d. night among the fields Pr. 161 — watches in the dead, the d., when clocks Pr. 162 Till notice of a change in the d. world Pr. 170 — so thro' those d. gates across the wild Pr. 176 My will is bondsman to the d. In M. 4 D. house by which once more I stand In M. 9 And all the place is d., and all In M. 10 For all is d. where thou art not In M. 10 And thy d. freight, a vanish'd life In M. 14 And balmy drops in summer d. In M. 28 And spread his mantle d. and cold In M. 37 And on the low d. verge of life In M. 72 In that d. house where she was born In M. 85 Thy marble bright in d. appears In M. 93 And in the d. church like a ghost In M. 93 D. bulks that tumble half alive In M. 97 When the d. hand struck down thro' time In M. 100 Immantled in ambrosial d. In M. 130 Laid their d. arms about the field In M. 139, X41 Tho' rapt in matters d. and deep In M. 1:46 Since that d. day a day like this In M. 204 DARK Page DARK. A shade falls on us like the d. /;/ M. 208 The d. old place will be gilt by the touch of a Ma. g — and all by myself in my own d. garden Ma. 14 For the drift of the Maker is d. Ma. 20 Thro' the livelong hours of the d. Ma. 26 Over the d. moor land Ma. 34 Then returns the d. Ma. 35 Running down to my own d. wood Ma. 51 So d. a mind within me dwells Ma. 52 D. cedar Ma. 59 Blest, but for some d. undercurrent woe Ma. 63 That Maud's d. father and mine Ma. 66 Back to the d. sea-line Ma. 91 Shall I nurse in my d. heart Ma. 91 'D. ponch,' I said, 'and silent aisle Ma. 134 D. in its funeral fold . Ma. 141 The d. crowd moves, and there are sobs and Ma. 152 Yet here to-night in this d. city Ma. 159 Far better were I laid in the d. earth I. K. 6 — tho' she lay d. in the pool, she knew /. K. 35 Beholding one so bright in d. estate /. K. 42 Clear'd the d. places and let in the law /. K. 95 With d. sweet hints of some who prized him /. K. 102 So d. a forethought roll'd about his brain /. K. 105 D. in the glass of some presageful mood /. K. 108 Nor half so strange as that d. mood of yours /. K. 109 And not the one d. hour which brings remorse /. K. 133 — knights, the court, the king, d. in your light /. K. 139 — the d. wood grew darker toward the storm /. K. 140 The d. earth round. He raised his eyes and /. K. 142 While Arthur to the banquet, d. in mood /. K. 176 —late, so late ! and d. the night and chill ! /. K. 233 No light : so late : and d. and chill the night ! /. K. 234 Of d. Dundagil by the Cornish sea /. K. 240 Had his d. hour unseen E. A. 5 — remember'd one d. hour E. A. 22 The d. retinue reverencing death E. A. 94 — dark caves that run beneath the cliffs E. A. 101 Came men and women in d. clusters E. A. 108 High up on one of those d. minster-fronts E. A. 109 A glimpse of that d. world E. A. 141 In days far-off, on that d. earth, be true? E. A. 142 With wakes of fire we tore the d. E. A. 147 Where yon d. valleys wind forlorn Select. 221 13 ARK-BLUE the deep sphere overhead Poems 22 Vaulted o'er the d. sea Poems 145 Hateful is the d. sky Poems 145 DARK-BROW'D sophist, come not anear Poems 41 DARK-DAWNING. For my d. youth Ma. 64 DARKEN. — days d. round me, and the years Pms 199 — never more d. my doors Poems 215 To d. on the rolling brine In M. 165 Not close and d. above me Ma. 41 Tho' many a light shall d. Ma. 114 And sorrow darkens hamlet and hall Ma. 137 —just heaven, that darkens o'er me, send /. K. 142 Was but the flash of youth, would d. down /. K. 216 — d. with the gathering wolf E. A. 90 Would d., as he cursed his credulousness E. A. 97 DARKEN'D. And her eyes were d. wholly Poems 71 And all the casement d. there Poems 90 Or, from the d. glen Poems 159 Of d. forms and faces Poems 346 You stood in your own light and d. mine Pr. 90 Break from a d. future, crown'd with fire Pr. 145 All night below the d. eyes In M. 4 The d. heart that beat no more In M. 32 Urania speaks -with d. brow In M. 57 And d. sanctities with song.' In M. 58 But what of that? My d. ways In M. 106 To wander on a d. earth In M. 119 And life is d. in the brain In M. 187 D. watching a mother decline Ma. 64 He had d. into a frown Ma. 67 And d. from the high light in his eyes /. K. 6 Till his eye d. and his helmet wagg'd /. K. 72 That d. all the northward of her Hall E. A. 72 — the sails were d. in the west E. A. 98 DARKENING. I watch the d. droves of swine Pms 121 D. her female field : void was her use Pr. 159 Thy spirits in the d. leaf In M. 129 From underneath in the d. land Ma. 85 D. the world /. K. vi. The blight of low desires — d thine own E. A. 86 DARKER. Grew d. from that under-flame Poems 22 Touch'd with a somewhat d. hue Poems 165 Your hair is d., and your eyes Poems 165 D. than darkest pansies, and that hair Poe?ns 204 Oft lose whole years of d. mind Poems 306 DASH'D Page DARKER. When fall'n in d. ways' Pr. 110 Who loved to make men d. than they are /. A". 139 And the dark wood grewd. toward the storm I. K. 140 — a d. isle beyond the line E. A. 33 Am lonelier, d., earthlier, for my loss E. A. 90 DARKEST. — hours to Memory's d. hold Poems 261 DARK-GREEN. — spread his d. layers Poems 207 DARKLIER. Loved deeplier, d. understood InM. 200 DARKLING. Who tremblest thro' thy d. In M. 149 And d. felt the sculptured ornament /. K. 132 DARKLY. Tho' truths in manhood d. join InM. 56 She d. feels him great and wise In M. 146 And fixt the Sabbath. D. that day rose E. A. 82 DARKNESS. The d. of the world, delight Poems 22 Of d., and a brow of pearl Poems 24 All night long on d. blind Poems 35 Howling in outer d. Poems in Gross d. of the inner sepulchre Poeins 153 Had wink'd and threaten'd d. Poems 2or The pilot of the d. and the dream Poems 223 Were shrivell'd into d. in his head Poems 287 Why inch by inch to d. crawl ? Poems 298 And d. in the village yew ♦» Poe?ns 302 Beyond the d. and the cataract Poems 368 Above the d. from their native East Pr. 55 Flow'd from me : d. closed me : and I fell Pr. 135 So much the gathering d. charm'd Pr. 182 A beam in d. : let it grow In M. vi. Let d. keep her raven gloss In M. 1 Of vacant d. and to cease In M. 53 Else earth is d. at the core In M. 53 That slope thro' d. up to God hi M. 78 How blanch'd with d. must I grow ! In M. 86 His d. beautiful with thee hi M. 102 The d. of our planet, last In M. 105 Which makes the d. and the light In M. 144 But in the d. and the cloud In M. 144 A treble d., Evil haunts In M. 147 Ring out the d. of the land In M. 164 The Power in d. whom we guess In M. 192 And out of d. came the hands hi M. 193 And over whom thy d. must have spread Ma. 59 — man}- a d. into the light shall leap Ma. 114 And counterchanged with d. ? you yourself /. K. 117 Approaching thro' the d., call'd ; the owls /. K. 199 And in the d. heard his armed feet /. K. 247 She made her face a d. from the King /. K. 247 And, in the d. o'er her fallen head /. K. 255 In d., and above them roar'd the pine E. A. 73 — worshipt their own d. as the Highest \ E. A. 84 Pharaoh's d., folds as dense as those E. A. 91 In d. : then I saw one lovely star E. A. 101 — shake the d. from their loosen'd manes E. A. 141 There I heard them in the d. E. A. 171 So they chanted in the d. E. A. 171 DARK-PURPLE. —Eden lying in d. spheres Pms 281 DARK-SPLENDID, speaking in the silence /. K. 165 DARLING. Delicious spites and d. angers Poems 15 Pray, Alice, pray, my d. wife Poems 86 The d. of my manhood Poe?ns 213 About the d. child Poems 250 The little speedwell's d. blue In M. 114 Her feet, my d., on the dead hi M. 206 —the moon-faced d. of all Ma. 10 You are not her d. Ma. 45 All homage to his own d. Ma. 74 ' O d. Katie Willows, his one child ! Ma. 120 But shall it ? answer, d., answer, no /. K. 114 Then the great knight, the d. of the court /. K. 161 D., to-night ! they must have rated her E. A. 71 Seventy j'ears ago, my d., seventy years E. A. 117, 121 DARNLEY— Naples. There is D. bridge Ma. 119 — crost the common into D. chase Ma. 124 DART. — fires Love tipt his keenest darts Poems 157 And forward d. again, and play hi M. 19 Brandishing in her hand a d. E. A. 172 Clash the darts and on the buckler E. A. 173 Madly dash'd the darts together E. A. 173 DARTED, —manful breast d. the pang /. K. 7 With d. spikes and splinters of the wood /. K. 142 DARTING. Of d. fish, that on a summer /. K. 70 DASH themselves dead Pr. 100 — creep to the hollow and d. myself down Ma. 8 Waves on a diamond shingle d. E. A. 158 — d. the brains of the little one out E. A. i^z DASH'D. — his greaves and cuisses d. with Poems 199 D. downward in a cataract Poems 319 As d. about the drunken leaves Poems 328 D. together in blinding dew Poe?ns 367 77 DASH'D Page DASH'D. —hymns, or into rhythm have d. Pr. 81 Kneeling-, I gave it, which she caught and d. Pr. 99 What were ] nigher this aitho' we d. Pr. 114 Flatter'd and fluster'd, wins, tho' d. with death Pr. 115 The torrents, d. to the vale : and yet her will Pr. 125 — came a postscript d. across the rest Pr. 129 And wildly d. on tower and tree In M. 24 Is d. with wandering isles of night In M. 41 That life is d. with flecks of sin In M. 74 Deep tulips, d. with fiery dew In M. 114 D. on every rocky square Ma. 144 D. on Geraint, who closed with him, and /. K. 70 Tho' seeming boastful ; so when first he d. E. A. 61 Bore down in flood, and d. his angry heart E. A. 84 Again we d. into the dawn ! E. A. 145 Roll as a ground-swell d. on the strand E. A. 165 Madly d. the darts together E. A. 173 DASHING. Come d. down on a tall /. K. 238 DAUGHTER. It is the miller's d. Poems 92 I am the d. of a River-God Poems 99 We were two daughters of one race Poems 109 The d. of a hundred Earls Poems 126 A d. of the gods, divinely tall Poems 153 The d. of the warrior Gileadite Poems 158 To see the Gardener's D. Poems 203 The Gardener's d. : trust me, after that Poems 204 Of Rose, the Gardener's d. ? Poems 205 The daughters of the year Poems 210 She is my brother's d. Poems 214 A labourer's d. , Mary Morrison Poems 215 His d. Dora : take her for your wife Poems 215 -the d. of a cottager Poems 227 Cry, like the daughters of the horseleech Poems 262 — preaching down a daughter's heart Poems 276 His little d., whose sweet face Poems 301 The old Earl's d. died at my breast Poems 355 To hear them : knowledge, so my di held Pr. 22 His d. and his housemaid were the boys Pr. 25 The Lady Blanche's d. where she stood Pr. 45 Eight daughters of the plough Pr. 89 A Niobean d., one arm out Pr. 93 * Fair d., when we sent the Prince your way Pr. 95 —those eight mighty daughters of the plough Pr. 103 I would he had our d. : for the rest Pr. 118 — and those eight daughters of the plough Pr. 124 To her false daughters in the pool Pr. 124 A d. of our house ; nor proved In M. 204 A d. of our meadows, yet not coarse Ma. 120 — how it was the thing his d. wish'd Ma. 124 The love of all Thy daughters cherish Thee /. K. viii. And I, were she the d. of a king /. K. 13 The voice of Enid, Yniol's d., rang /. K. 18 Her d. In a moment thought Geraint /. K. 20 Who after turn'd her d. round and said /. K. 40 Elaine, his d., mother of the house I. K. 156 But I, my sons, and little d. fled /. K. 161 D. I know not what you call the highest /. K. 203 With children ; first ad E. A. 5 -the d. prest upon her E. A. 27 And tell my d. Annie, whom I saw E. A. 48 Daughters of God E. A. 53 So freely with his d. ? people talk'd E. A. 65 Pale as the Jephtha's d. E. A. 65 He never yet had set his d. forth E. A. 69 — contriving their dear daughter's good E. A. 91 — devising their own daughter's death! E. A. 91 — the two contrived their daughter's good E. A. 95 Sea-kings' d. from over the sea E. A. 164 The sea-kings' d. as happy as fair E. A. 165 Yell'd and snriek'd between her daughters E. A. 169 Yell'd and shriek'd between her daughters E. A. 173 DAUNTLESS. — deep mind of d. infancy Poems 27 DAW. And haunted by the wrangling d. In M. 151 And all the windy clamour of the daws /. K. 59 DAWES. — as with his tenant, Jocky D. Poems 226 DAWN. When the breeze of a joyful d. Poems 19 The dew-impearled winds of d. Poems 26 Thou dewy d. of memory Poems 26, 28, 31 Fronting the d. he moved Poems 100 The tearful glimmer of the languid d. Poems 153 That claps his wings at d. Poems 157 —the white dawn's creeping beams Poems 161 Look down and let your blue eyes d. Poems 165 He will not see the d. of day Poems 168 A bridal dawn of thunder-peals Poems 181 Look'd one black dot against the verge of d. Poems 201 The lusty bird takes every hour for d. Poems 201 Point after point : till onto d., when dreams Poems 201 -light of London flaring like a dreary d. Poems 277 78 DAY Page DAWN. Vast images in glimmering d. Poems 303 God made himself an awiul rose of d. Poems 368, 375 I gave the letter to be sent with d. Pr. 28 ' However then commenced the d. : a beam Pr. 36 Ah, sad and strange as in dark summer dawns Pr. 76 —blown to inmost north : at eve and d. Pr. 97 In that deep d. behind the tomb In M. 68 Thy tablet glimmers to the d. In M. 93 Risest thou thus, dim d., again In M. 99 ■ The d., the d.,' and died away hi M. 142 Risest thou thus, dim d., again In M. 149 A light-blue lane of early d. In M. 185 And thither I climb'd at d. Ma. 49 Now and then in the dim-gray d. Ma. 51 They sigh'd for the d. and thee Ma. 79 d. of Eden bright over earth and sky Ma. 85 In the shuddering d., behold Ma. 98 Voice in the rich d. of an ampler day /. K. vii. As the gray d. stole o'er the dewy world I. K. 66 And with the d. ascending lets the day /. K. 82 And passing one, at the high peep of d. /. K. 122 There bode the night : but woke with d. /. K. 191 Till the high d. piercing the royal rose /. K. 132 Ran to her, and lo ! the blood-red light of d. /. K. 200 — the d. of rosy childhood E. A. 3 Faint as a figure seen in early d. E.A. 20 November dawns and dewy-glooming downs E. A. 33 —the mate had seen at early d. E. A. 35 Such dear familiarities of d.? E. A. 58 The father panting woke, and oft as d. E. A. 78 Again we dash'd into the d ! E. A. 145 He rose at d., and, fired with hope E. A. 155 Hard by their chariots, waiting for the d. E. A. 178 DAWN'D. — twilight d. : and morn by morn Pr. 159 D. sometime thro' the doorway? E. A. 86 DAWNING. I waited underneath the d. hills Poems 100 — spirit deeply d. in the dark of hazel eyes Poe7ns 270 With freshness in the d. east Poems 308 Rewaken with the d. soul In M. 65 For my dark-d. youth Ma. 64 All in a fiery d. wild with wind /. K. 200 — thro' that d. gleam'd a kindlier hope E. A. 45 Death d. on him, and the close of all E. A. 45 DAY. As noble till the latest d. ! Poems vi. She only said, ' The d. is dreary Poems 10 All d. within the dreamy house Poems 11 Athwart the chambers, and the d. Poems 12 Wears all d. a fainter tone Poems 18 On the white d. Poems 26 — the prime labour of thine early days Poems 30 Looking at the set of d. Poems 33 All d. and all night it is ever drawn . Poems 42 D. and night to the billow the fountain calls Poems 43 We will sing to you all the d. Poems 44 It was the middle of the d. Poems 47 Now is done thy long day's work Poems 49 How could I look upon the d. ? Poems 55 1 would sit and sing the whole of the d. Poems 58 I would sing to myself the whole of the d. Poe?ns 60 There she weaves by night and d. Poems 66 And at the closing of the d. Poems 70 But d. increased from heat to heat Poems 74 ' The d. to night,' she made her moan Poems 76 And d. and night I am left alone Poems 76 From heat to heat the d. decreased Poems 76 ' The d. to night, the night to morn Poems 76 But sometimes in the falling d. Poems 76 That we may die the self-same d. Poems 86 Flush'd like the coming of the d. Poems 90 For hid in ringlets d. and night Poems 92 I gave you, Alice, on the d. Poems 92 And all d. long to fall and rise Poems 92 The d. f when in the chestnut shade Poems 93 — wheresoe'er I am by night and d. Poems 108 — the livelong d. my soul did pass Poems 114 — while d. sank or mounted higher Poems 114 Crown'd dying d. with stars Poems 120 —call me loud when the d. begins to break Pms 130 — a bolder lad 'ill woo me any summer d. Poems 131 — mother, the maddest merriest d. Poems 130, 133 — a drop of rain the whole of the livelong d. Pms 132 — we had a merry d. Poems 134 I long to see a flower so before the d. I die Poems 135 — sweet mother, call me before the d. is born Pms 137 — strange it seems to me, that ere this d. is Poems 141 All its allotted length of days Poems 145 Eating the Lotos d. by d. Poems 146 All d. the wind breathes low with mellower Poems 148 Do hunt me, d. and night' Poems 160 DAY Page DAY. Lull'd echoes of laborious d. Poe>ns 164 Where all d. long you sit between Poems 165 He will not see the dawn of d. Poems 16S Make bright our days and light our dreams Pms 178 From those, not blind, who wait for d. Poems 179 It grows to guerdon after-days Poems 180 With cutting eights that d. upon the pond Poems 189 Looks freshest in the fashion of the d. Poems 190 — all d. long the noise of battle roll'd Poems 191 Of Camelot, as in the days that were Poems 192 In those old days, one summer noon, an Poems 192 — the days darken round me, and the years Poems 199 Rise like a fountain for me night and d. Poems 200 Begin to feel the truth and stir of d. Poems 201 This morning is the morning of the d. Poems 203 For ever in itself the d. we went Poems 206 Sang loud, as tho' he were the bird of d. Poems 206 -the full d. dwelt on her brows, and sunn'd Poems 208 I, that whole d. Poems 209 Or seem'd to touch her, so that d. by d. Poems 210 Let in the d. Here then my words have end Poems 212 May not be dwelt on by the common d. Poems 213 Then there came a d. Poems 214 For I have wish'd this marriage night and d. Poems 215 — days went on, and there was born a boy Poems 216 — d. by d. he pass'd his father's gate Poems 216 Remembering the d. when first she came Poems 218 — either twilight and the d. between Poems 231 Thrice-happy days ! Poems 232 She seems a part of those fresh days Poems 235 The modest Cupid of the d. Poems 248 ' 'Tis little more : the d. was warm _ Poems 253 For ah ! my friend, the days were brief Poems 253 Some happy future d. Poems 255 — staring eye glazed o'er with sapless days Poe?ns 258 Old James was with me : we that d. had been Pms 262. A tongue-tied Poet in the feverous days Poems 262 But he not less the eagle. Happy days Poems 263 — not now that strength which in old days Poems 267 The long d. wanes : the slow moon climbs Poems 267 — thou shalt lower to his level d. by d. Poems 272 — turn to, lighting upon days like these? Poems 276 When I heard my days before me Poems 277 — island unto island at the gateways of the d. Pms 281 — we sweep into the younger d. > Poems 283 How grows the d. of human power? ' Poems 292 Would sweep the tracts of d. and night Poems 292 One hope that warm'd me in the days Poems 295 In days that never come again Poems 304 Whose troubles number with his days Poems 304 Stillness with love, and d. with light Poems 316 That strove in other days to pass Poems 317 — deep into the dying d. Poems 320 Beyond the night, across the d. Poems 321 In days of old Amphion Poems 326 The current of my days Poems 340 Each month, a birth-d. coming on Poems 343 Into the common d. ? Poems 345 Ere days, that deal in ana, swarm'd Poems 347 Thy latter days increased with pence Poems 348 God's blessing on the d. ? Poems 354 Where they twain will spend their days Poe?ns 359 ' She is more beautiful than d.' Poems 365 When a blanket wraps the d. Poems 369 But the tender grace of a d. that is dead Poems 378 Sir Walter Vivian all a summer's d. Pr. 1 Took this fair d. for text, and from it preach'd Pr. 6 On a sudden in the midst of men and d. Pr. 15 But when the days drew nigh that I should wed Pr. 17 Not like a king : three days he feasted us Pr. 21 At break of d. the College Portress came Pr. 30 In gentler days, your arrow-wounded fawn Pr. 43 To-d. , to-morrow, soon : it shall be said Pr. 44 For half the d. thro' stately theatres Pr. 48 That harm'd not : then d. droopt , the chapel Pr. 53 Agreed to, this, the d. fled on thro' all Pr. 63 The woman to the fuller d.' Pr. 71 And thinking of the days that are no more Pr. 76 So sad, so fresh, the days that are no more Pr. 76 O Death in Life, the days that are no more' Pr. 77 So sad, so strange, the days that are no more Pr. 77 ' It was not thus. O Princess, in old days Pr. 89 - this d. (tho' you should hate me for it) Pr. 92 — make a wild petition night and d. _ Pr. 112 Champion d our cause and won it with a d. Pr. 139 With kisses, ere the days of Lady Blanche Pr. 142 — held them up : she saw them, and a d. Pr. 142 When armour clash'd or jingled, while the d. Pr. 155 To incense the Head once more : till on a d. Pr. 161 DAY Page DAY. — out of memories of her kindlier days Pr. 163 — such as gather'd colour d. by d. Pr. 163 His nights, his days, moves with him to one Pr. iji Indeed I love : the new d. comes, the light Pr. 175 For me, the genial d., the happy crowd Pr. 181 Our little systems have their d. In M. vi. They have their d. and cease to be In M. vi. On the bald street breaks the blank d. In M. 9 And roar from yonder dropping d. In M. 24 Week after week : the days go by In M. 28 Is on the waters d. and night In M. 28 There twice a d. the Severn fills In M. 32 And was the d. of my delight In M. 41 The very source and fount of D. In M. 41 And then, as now, the d. prepared In M. 42 Old sisters of a d. gone by In M. 47 Draw forth the cheerful d. from night hi M. 49 — wert thou, brother, those four days ? ' In M. 50 A life that leads melodious days In M. 52 As on a maiden in the d. In M. 60 A link among the days, to knit In M. 60 The days have vanish'd, tone and tint In M. 66 But he forgets the days before hi M. 66 Days order'd in a wealthy peace In M. 68 The twilight of eternal d. In M. 72 Of hearts that beat from d. to d. In M. 83 And tease her till the d. draws by hi M. 85 She sighs amid her narrow days In M. 85 His inner d. can never die In M. 92 The days that grow to something strange In M. 98 D., when my crown'd estate begun In M. 99 Climb thy thick noon, disastrous d. hi M. 100 D., mark'd as with some hideous crime In M. 100 I care not in these fading days , In M. 103 Can trouble live with April days In M. 114 For now the d. was drawing on In M. 115 And sun by sun the happy days In M. 116 Whatever way my day's decline In M. 120 And break the livelong summer d. In M. 131 And will not yield them for a d. hi M. 133 Together in the days behind In M. 136 The spirits from their golden d. In M. 138 To broaden into boundless d. In M. 142 The days she never can forget In M. 145 D., when I lost the flower of men In M. 149 And each reflects a kindlier d. In M. 152 These two have striven half the d. hi M. 156 Nor landmark breathes of other days hi M. 160 A bitter d. that early sank hi M. 165 It is the d. when he was born In M. 165 W r e keep the d. With festal cheer In M. 166 For days of happy commune dead hi M. 181 days and hours, your work is this hi M. 182 Are breathers of an ampler d. ■ In M. 183 And think of early days and thee In M. 185 Since that dark d. a d. like this In M. 204 In that it is thy marriage d. In M. 204 We wish them store of happy days In M. 208 But these are the days of advance Ma. 4 — her olive, and slurring the days gone by Ma. 5 — walk all d. like the sultan of old Ma. 20 And riding at set of d. Ma. 34 1 shall have had my d. Ma. 41 I shall have had my d. Ma. 42 But this is the d. when I must speak Ma. 53 this is the d. ! Ma. 53 Go not, happy d. Ma. 56 And you fair stars that crown a happy d. Ma. 60 — the fragments of the golden d. Ma. 62 On the d. when Maud was born Ma. 66 Sat with her, read to her, night and d. Ma. 68 And half to the rising d. Ma. 77 — d. comes, a dull red ball Ma. 99 — paid our tithes in the days that are gone Ma. 103 To catch a friend of mine one stormy d. Ma. 107 If James were coming. ' Coming every d.' Ma. 123 He gave them line ; and five days after that Ma. 125 My mother, as it seems you did, the days Ma. 129 Sir, if you knew her in her English days Ma. 129 Warring on a later d. Ma. 143 A d. of onsets of despair 1 Ma. 144 Peace, it is a d. of pain Ma. 150 1 climb 'd the roofs at break of d. Ma. 157 — in my head, for half the d. Ma. 158 Voice in the rich dawn of an ampler d. /. K. vii. To make her beauty vary d. by d. I K. \ And d. by d. she thought to tell Geraint /. K. 4 There on a d. he sitting high in hall /. K. 8 First seen tha. d. ; these things he told /. K. 9 79 DAY Page DAY. And on the third d. will again be here /. K. 12 — next day's tourney Lmay break his pride ' /. K. 26 Danced in his bosom, seeing better days /. K. 27 But when the third d. from the hunting-morn /. K. 32 So bent he seem'd on going the third d. /. K. 32 Bent as he seem'd on going this third d. /. K. 34 Yet if he could but tarry a d. or two /. K. 34 Amends hereafter by some gaudy-d. /. K. 44 But when the fourth part oAhe d. was gone /. K. 48 In former days you saw me favourably /. K. 62 By that day's' grief and travel, evermore /. K. 65 And then to Enid, ' Forward ! and to-d. /. K. 67 And with the dawn ascending lets the d. /. K. 82 Than hardest tyrants in their d. of power /. K. 82 Fills all the sacred Dee. So past the days /. K. 95 And clothed her in apparel like the d. /. K. 96 As on a dull d. in an Ocean cave /. K. 105 Had I for three days seen, ready to fall /. K. 108 — three-days-long presageful gloom of yours /. K. no Thro* the dim land ; and all d. long we rode /. K. 115 Sweet were the days when I was all unknown /. K. 119 — those were not our days: but did they find /. K. 125 On all things all d. long ; he answer'd her /. K. 128 Nor rested thus content, but d. by d. /. K. 147 With Arthur in the fight which all d. long /. K. 162 — days were those, till our good Arthur broke /. K. 162 But when the next d. broke from underground /. K. 168 If any man that d. were left afield /. K. 171 But on that d. when Lancelot fled the lists /. K. 174 Sire, our knight thro' whom we won the d. /. K. 175 And, after two days' tarriance there, return d /. K. 177 Fire in dry stubble a nine days' wonder flared /. K. 185 The one-d.-seen Sir Lancelot in her heart /. K. 186 Gliding, and every d. she tended him /. K. 191 Thence to the cave ! So d. by d. she past /. K. 191 Seeing I must go to-d. : ' then out she brake /. K. 195 Alas for me, then, my good days are done ' /. K. 196 And there that d. remain'd, and toward even /. K. 197 And in those days she made a little song /. K. 199 So that d. there was dole in Astolat /. K. 206 That d. Sir Lancelot at the palace craved /. K. 208 — knightly without scorn ; for in those days /. K. 227 As the sharp w r ind that ruffles all d. long /. K. 227 There came a d. as still as heaven, and then /. K. 240 And on from hill to hill, and every d. /. K. 245 "Went slipping back upon the golden days /. K. 245 As in the golden days before thy sin /. K. 251 The days will grow to weeks, the weeks to /. K. 257 The sombre close of that voluptuous d. /, K. 260 Enoch was host one d. E. A. 2 Many a sad kiss by d. by night renew'd E. A. 9 — pass his days in peace E. A. 9 So all d. long till Enoch's last at home E. A. 10 (He named the d. ) E. A. 12 She when the d. that Enoch mention'd came E. A. 14 — days of difficulty E. A. 14 — dead flame of the fallen d. E. A. 25 — a fair sea-circle, d. by d. E. A. 30 No sail from d. to d., but every d. E. A. 32 As down the shore he ranged, or all d. long E. A. 32 Ther~ Enoch rested silent many days E. A. 38 At evening when the dull November d. E. A. 39 Roll'd itself round again to meet the d. E. A. 45 — the stinted commerce of those days E. A. 45 -I have not three days more to live E. A. 46 Thinn'd, or would seem to thin her in a d. E. A. 55 Into the chronicle of a deedful d. E. A. 61 Stept thro' the stately minuet of those days E. A. 62 The next d. came a neighbour E. A. 64 As into sleep again. The second d. E. A. 81 Had blasted him — that many thousand days E. A. 82 Darkly that d. rose E. A. 82 At close of d. E. A. 97 In her bed at peep of d. ? E. A. 112 In her nest at peep of d. ? E. A. 112 — been down to the farm for a week and ad. E. A. 118 But I wept like a child that d. E. A. 122 In days far-off, and with what other eyes E. A. 142 In days far-off, on that dark earth, be true? E. A. 142 Down the waste waters d. and night E. A. 148 — the d. that follow'd the d. she was wed E. A. 157 To kiss it night and d. E. A. 160 I kiss'd you night and d. E. A, 162 His autumn into seeming-leafless days E. A. 166 D. by d. more harsh and cruel Select. 37 On a d. when they were going Select. 38 My fife is full of weary days Select. 191 DAYLIGHT. Flood with full d. glebe and Poems 293 DAYLONG. His weary d. chirping Ma. 120 80 DEAD Page DAZED. With d. vision unawares Poems 23 D. me half-blind : I stood and seem'd to Pr. 107 DAZZLED. Faints like a d. morning moon Poems 97 — both his eyes were d. Poems 193 The rhymes are d. from their place Poems 313 My boyish dream involved and d. down Pr. 98 Be d. by the wildfire Love to sloughs Pr. 130 And d. by the livid-flickering fork /. K. 143 DAZZLING. The sun came d. thro' the Poems 68 DEAD. I would that I were d. ! ' Poems 9, to, ii I would that I were d. Poems 12 Oh God, that I were d. ! ' Poems 12 Life in d. stones, or spirit in air Poems 36 D. sounds at night come from the inmost Poems 107 He look'd so grand when he was d. Poems no And of the rising from the d. Poems 121 Since I beheld young Laurence d. Poems 127 — with d. lips smiled at the twilight plain Poems 152 — no motion m the dumb d. air Poems 153 Me lying d., my crown about my brows Poems 157 And the old year is d. Poems 160 But he'll be d. before Poems 169 As we bear blossoms of the d. Poems 183 -I see the true old times are d. Poems 199 — talk'd old matters over : who was d. Poems 2.-2-2 And only he, this wonder, d., become Poems 258 Better thou wert d. before me, tho' I slew Poems 272 In the d. unhappy night, and when the Poems 274 Can I think of her as d. Poems 274 Ev'n in the charnels of the d. Poems 299 Nor canst thou show the d. are d. Poems 301 ' We find no motion in the d. ' Poems 302 He gazes on the silent d. Poems 317 ' O love, thy kiss would wake the d. ! ' Poems 320 And the d. begin to dance Poems 372 Come not, when I am d. Poems 376 But the tender grace of a day that is d. Poems 378 Will crush her pretty maiden fancies d. Pr. 19 We touch on our d. self, nor shun to do it Pr. 66 I loved her. Peace be with her. She is d. Pr. 81 In the d. hush the papers that she held Pr. 94 Dash themselves d. Pr. 100 Sat watching like a watcher by the d. Pr. no — cold reverence worse than were she d. Pr. 111 I would the old God of war himself were d. Pr. 114 Where smoulder their d. despots Pr. 126 Home they brought her warrior d. Pr. 136 * O Sire,' she said, ' he lives : he is not d. Pr. 142 Orb'd in your isolation : he is d. Pr. 145 Or all as d. : henceforth we let you be Pr. 145 In the d. prime : but may thy mother prove Pr, 147 — us they lifted up, d. weights Pr. 154 — watches in the d. , the dark, when clocks Pr. 162 Till the Sun drop d. from the signs ' Pr. 170 -lift thine eyes : my doubts are d. Pr. 175 Of their d. selves to higher things In M. 1 That name the under-lying d. In M. 2 — d. calm in that noble breast In M. 17 In her deep self, than some d. lake In M. 26 And hear the ritual of the d. In M. 30 Where lies the master newly d. In M. 33 But, he was d., and there he sits In M. 51 Half-d. to know that I shall die ' In M. 54 But brooding on the dear one d. In M. 58 How fares it with the happy d. ? In M, 66 Do we indeed desire the d. In M. 73 The d. shall look me thro' and thro' In M. 73 Eternal greetings to the d. In M. 82 Nor can I dream of thee as d. In M. 94 As sometimes in a d. man's face In M. 102 Reach out d. hands to comfort me In M. tii Or so methinks the d. would say In M. 122 So hold I commerce with the d. In M. 122 That could the d., whose dying eyes In M. 133 An hour's communion with the d. In M. 138 The d. man touch'd me from the past In M. 140 The noble letters of the d. In M. 140 And woodlands holy to the d. In M. 149 I dream'd a vision of the d. In M. 157 For days of happy commune d. In M. 181 But trust that those we call the d. In M. 183 Should pile her barricades with d. In M. 196 In dying songs a d. regret In M. 204 Regret is d., but love is more In M. 205 Her feet, my darling, on the d. In M. 206 The d. leaf trembles to the bells In M. 207 By a shuffled step, by a d. weight trail'd, by a Ma. 3 D. perfection, no more ; nothing more, if it Ma. 11 Pale with the golden beam of an eyelash d. Ma. 13 DEAD Page DEAD. The shining daffodil d. Ma. 14 jre I hear the a. at midday moan Ma. 29 — that d. man at her heart and mine M.i. 64 All this d. body of hate Ma. 70 By the loss of that d. weight Ma. 70 Had I lain for a century d. Ma. 81 Striked the whole weak race of venomous Ma. 87 Who knows if he be d, ? Ma. 92 She is but d. and the time is at hand Ma. 94 There is some one dying or d. Ma. 98 D., long d. Ma. 102 — to hear a d. man charter Mu. 103 Ever about me the d. men go Ma. 103 — makes us loud in the world of the d. Ma. 103 -I thought the d, had peace, but it is not so Ma. 103 For it is but a world of the d. Ma. 104 She comes from another stiller world of the d. Ma. 106 He linkt a d. man there to a spectral bride Ma. 107 Maybe still I am but half-d. Ma. 108 Of his d. son, I look'd on these Ma. 132 She talk'd as if her love were d. Ma. 133 With those deep voices our d. captain taught Ma. 141 Hush, the D. March wails in the people's ears Ma. 152 — wrens, and all wing'd nothings peck him &.I. K. 15 — from the three d. wolves of woman born /. K. 50 At once without remorse to strike her d. I. K. 51 — and drew from those d. wolves . /. K. 55 The crupper, and so left him, stunn'd or d. /. K. 70 And be he d. I count you for a fool I. K. 74 Then said Earl Doorm : ' Well if he be not d. /. K. 74 Most sure am I, quite sure he is not d.' /. K. 74 Cried out with a big voice, ' What, is he d. ? ' /. K. 74 1 No, no, not dead ! ' she answer'd in all haste /. K. 74 Fearing to lose, and all for a d. man /. K. 75 And yet lay still, and feign'd himself as d. /. K. 76 And cursing their lost time, and the d. man /. K. 76 For were I d. who is it would weep for me? /. K. 78 Take warning : j^onder man is surely d. /. K. 81 Rose when they saw the d. man rise, and I. K. 84 Except he surety knew my lord was d. ' So died Earl Doorm by him he counted d. ' Enid, I have used you worse than that d. Shriek'd to the stranger, ' Slay not a d. man!'/. K. Coming and going, and he lay as d. Coming and going, and she lay as d. And by the cold Hie jacets of the d. ! ' And in the hollow oak he lay as d. I fear me, that will strike nty blossom d. Give me good fortune, I will strike him d. Was lovely, for she did not seem as d. Then rose the dumb old servitor, and the d. If one may judge the living by the d. Not rather d. love's harsh heir, jealous pride?/. K. 220 Clung to the d. earth, and the land was still /. K 225 In the d. night, grim faces came and went /. K. 228 I honour'd, happy, d. before thy shame ? /. K. 247 — mine, and strike him d., and meet myself /. K. 255 — d. flame of the fallen day E. A. 25 The d. weight of the d. leaf bore it down E. A. 37 Still downward thinking ' d. or d. to me ! ' E. A. 38 — the d. man come to life E. A. 41 If you could tell her you had seen him d. E. A. 44 ' D.,' clamour'd the good woman E. A. 46 Not to reveal it till you see me d.' E. A. 46 But if my children care to see me d. E. A. 48 For my d. face would vex her after-life E. A. 48 Were d. to him already ; bent as he was E. A. 'jit Found a d. man, a letter edged with death E. A. 82 — as the d. we weep for testify E. A. 89 D. for two years before his death was he E. A. 94 D. claps of thunder E. A. 99 We -must forgive the dead ' E. A. no ' D. : who is d. ? ' E. A. no ' D. ? he? of heart-disease E. A. in — dropt d. of heart-disease ' E. A. in And all things look'd half-d. E. A. 118 But the first that ever I bare was d. E. A. 121 — the child that was d. before he was born E. A. 122 — not always certain if they be alive or d. E. A. 124 — to's choorch afoor moy Sally wur d. E. A. 130 — toner 'ed shot un as d. as a naail E. A. 132 — grassy barrows of the happier d. E. A. 143 And half the crew are sick or d. E. A. 150 — living voice to me was as the voice of the d. E. A. 151 The voice of the d. was a living voice to me E. A. 151 Falling on the d. Select. 39 Of those d. lineaments that near thee lie - ; Select. 197 In painting some d. friend from memory ? Select. 197 And strikes him d. for thine and thee Select. 207 6 I.K. 84 I.K. 84 I. K. 85 'I.K. 87 I.K. 104 I.K. 127 I.K. i33 I. K 144 I.K. 197 I.K. 203 I.K. 207 I. K. 2 '7 I. K. 218 DEAR ■ Pago DEAD. That once at d. of night did greet Select. 221 DEAD-BLUE. And a lack-lustre d. eye Poems 36 DEADEN. For the right, and learns to d. Ma. 148 DEAD-HEAVY. — down d. sank her curls Pr. 144 DEADLY. Is not so d. still Poems 153 I think no more of d. lurks therein Pr. 41 But when Sir Lancelot's d. hurt was whole /. K. 194 Till himself was d. wounded Select. 39 DEAD-PALE between the houses high Poems 71 DEAF. — parch'd and wither'd, d. and blind Poems 96 I hope my end draws nigh : half d. I am Poems 237 Much less this dreamer d. and blind Poems 297 — might as well have blest her : she was d. /. K. 76 DEAFEN'D. And d. with the stammering /. K. 143 DEAL. You know so ill to d. with time Poe?ns 128 Nor d. in watch-words overmuch Poems 180 Ere days, that d. in ana, swarm'd Poems 347 Her answer was ' Leave me to d. with that ' Pr. 62 euoit, tennis, ball — no games ? nor deals in that Pr. 65 ut deals with the other distance and the hues Pr. 78 He d. in frolic, as to-night — the song Pr. 87 With whom they d., dismiss'd in shame to live Pr. 101 Shall we d. with it as an infant ? E. A. iyi DEALING, —full of dealings with the rsoTldfPoems 85 For memory d. but with time Poe?ns 307 Nor d. goodly counsel from a height E. A. 60 DEALT. Oh I deathful stabs were d. apace Poems 55 My nerves have d. with stiffer Poems 342 Dived in a hoard of tales that d. Pr. 2 For Wisdom d. with mortal powers In M. 56 — ten years back: this d. him at Caenyle /. K. 148 No knight of Arthur's noblest d. in scorn /. K. 227 DEAN. Before him came a forester of D. /. K. 8 With prudes for proctors, dowagers for deans Pr. 8 — lost their weeks, they vext the souls of deans Pr. 9 DEAR. And she is grown so d., so d. Poems 92 D. eyes, since first I knew them well Poems 94 But that God bless thee, d. — who wrought Poems 95 D. mother Ida, harken ere I die Poems 99 — 105 D. soul for all is well ' Poems 112 — call me early, mother d. Poems 130, 133 — call me early, call me early, mother d. Poems 134 The good old year, the d. old time Poems 134 -I thought of you and Effie d. Poems 139 D. is the memory of our wedded lives Poems 147 — d. the last embraces of our wives Poems T47 Since that d. soul hath fall'n asleep Poems 172 As thou art lief and d. Poems 194 — kill'd him — but I loved him — my d. son Poe??ts 220 — for her own d. sake but this " Poems 235 Like Death betwixt thy d. embrace and mine P??is 260 I too must part : I hold thee d. Poe?ns 348 ' Yet give one kiss to 3-our mother d. ! Poems 350 My mother d., if this be so Poems 356 Yet here's a kiss for my mother d. Poems 356 As a bitter jest is d. Poems 374 Would still be d. bej'ond the southern hills Pr. 43 And two d. things, are one of double worth Pr. 50 And d. is sister Psyche to my heart Pr. 50 For d. are those three castles to my wants Pr. 50 To compass our d. sisters' liberties' Pr. 69 D. as remember'd kisses after death Pr. 77 Take comfort : live, d. lad\-, for your child ! ' Pr. in B03-, there's no rose that's half so d. to them Pr. 115 — and right well : strike and strike home. O d. Pr. 128 Their hands, and call'd them d. deliverers Pr. 141 D. traitor, too much loved Pr. 151 That have no links with men. Ah false but d. Pr. 151 No more, d. love, for at a touch I yield Pr. 157 ' D. but let us type them now p r . 1-3 This truthful change in thee has kill'd it. D. Pr. 175 D. as the mother to the son In M. 13 (And d. to me as sacred wine In M. 58 But brooding on the d. one dead In M. 58 Shall count new things as d. as old I;i M. 6r At one d. knee we proffer'd vows hi M. 109 But in d. words of human speech In M. 122 Knowing the primrose yet is d. hi M. 124 Ah d., but come thou back to me In M. 134 And this hath made them trebly d. ' In M. 155 And that d. voice I once have known hi M. 181 While thou, d. spirit, happy star In M. X97 D. friend, far off, my lost desire hi M. 200 D. heavenly friend, that canst not die hi M. 200 If / be d. to some one else Ma. 52 That if / be d. to some one else Ma. 52 If I bed. Ma. 52 — d. Love's tie, makes Love himself more d. ' Ma. 62 D. heart, I feel with thee the drowsy spell Ma. 62 81 DEAR Page DEAR. She is coming, my dove, my d. Ma. 80 — but a dream, yet it yielded a d. delight Ma. 112 — in that hope, d. soul, let trouble have rest Ma. 112 -So d. a life your arms enfold Ma. 159 D. to the man that is d. to God Ma. 163 For those are few we hold as d. Ma. 164 These to His Memory— since he held them d. t. K. v. — d. to Science, d. to Art /. K. vii. D. to thy land and ours, a Prince indeed /. K. vii. And see my d. lord wounded in the strife / K. 6 Not to be folded more in these d. arms /. K. 6 For this d. child hath often heard me praise /. K. 24 For this d. child, because I never saw /. K. 27 Ah,d.,he took me from a goodly house /. K. 38 When my d. child is set forth at her best /. K. 39 A splendour d. to women, new to her /. K. 43 Upon a head so d. in thunder, said /. K. 46 To save her d. lord whole from any wound /. K. 48 Far liever by his d. hand had I die /. K. 49 Yea, yea, the whole d. debt of all you are I. K. 62 And found his own d. bride propping his /. K. 76 Till my d. lord arise and bid me do it I. K. 81 ' In this poor gown my d. lord found me /. K. 83 ' Fair and d. cousin, you that most had /. K. 89 D. feet, that I have follow'd thro' the world /. K. 105 Now ask'd again : for see you not, d. love I. K. no And call'd him d. protector in her fright /. K. 143 ' You will not lose your wits for d. Lavaine /. K. 186 She answer'd, ' and find out our d. Lavaine ' /. K. 186 This will I do, d. damsel, for your sake /. K. 197 -Fret not yourself, d. brother, nor be wroth /. K. 203 ' Is it for Lancelot, is it for my d. lord ? /. K. 205 For her or his d. children, not to go E. A. 10 — ' d. Philip, wait awhile E. A. 24 To wed the man so d. to all of them E. A. 27 By one low voice to one d. neighbourhood E. A. 54 Such d. familiarities of dawn ? E. A. 58 They hate me : there is war between us, d. E. A. 73 In babyisms, and d. diminutives E. A. 79 — contriving their d. daughter's good E. A. 91 Remembering her d. Lord who died for all E. A. 98 — discords d. to the musician E. A. no He can do no more wrong: forgive him, d. E. A. 113 — a quarrel I had with your father, my d. E. A. 117 — my d., the tongue is a fire E. A. 117 His d. little face was troubled E. A. 122 — sa mad an' all— a' d., a' d. ! E. A. 134 — that exquisite isle, my d. E. A. 158 D., near and true — no truer Time himself E. A. 166 DEARLR and nearer, as the rapid of life E. A. 166 My other d. life in life Poems 94 — a little d. than his horse Poems 272 All he shows her makes him d. Poems 359 No Angel, but a d. being, all dipt Pr. 174 D. for night, as d. thou for faults Pr. 175 Our wood, that is d. than all Ma. 78 Till you should turn to d. matters Ma. 163 Yet therefore tenfold d. by the power /. K. 43 And therefore d. ; or if not so new 3 /. K. 43 I save a life d. to me than mine ' /. K. 53 D. to true young hearts than their own /. K. 169 DEAREST. Each to each is d. brother Poems 15 ' O leave me !' ' Never, d., never Poems 234 — like Nature, d. friend Poems 322 But d. Lady, pray you fear me not Pr. 46 Let not your prudence, d., drowse or prove Pr. 46 — speak to her, your d., her one fault Pr. 146 So fold thyself, my d., thou, and slip Pr. 167 Sweet Love were slain : his d. bond is this Pr. 172 So, d., now thy brows are cold In M. 102 While I, thy d., sat apart In M. 170 Oh wast thou with me, d., then In M. 189 Our d. faith; our ghastliest doubt In M. 192 All gone. My d. brother, Edmund, sleeps Ma. 127 — denied his heart his d. wish E. A. 19 — ' My d. friend E. A. 104 •Ah, d., if there be E. A. in DEARLY. Needs must thou d. love thy first Pms 29 Old year, we'll d. rue for you Poems 169 DEARNESS. —clothes the father with a d. Poems -27$ A distant d. in the hill In M. 90 DEARLY. Which all too d. self-involved Poems 324 DEATH. A gentler d. shall Falsehood die Poems 13 Life, anguish, d., immortal love Poems 22 An hour before d. Poems 32 He saw thro' life and d., thro' good and ill Poems 38 In your eye there is d. Poems 41 Life eminent creates the shade of d. Poems 52 1 You must begone,' said D. Poems 52 DEATH Page Poems 52 Poems 84 Poems 89 Poe?ns 107 Poems 108 Poems 124 Poems' 138 Poems 145 Poems 146 Poems 147 Poems 150 DEATH, walking all alone beneath a yew I drink the cup of a costly d. That I should die an early d. — d., thou ever-floating cloud — the cold and starless road of D. And d. and life she hated equally And sweeter far is d. than life to me D. is the end of life Give us long rest or d., dark d. There is confusion worse than d. The downward slope to d. The bright d. quiver'd at the victim's throat Pms 155 Changed, I was ripe for d. Poems 158 Or her, who knew that Love can vanquish D. Pms 161 Once thro' mine own doors D. did pass Poems 172 — of D. is blown in every wind' — fluting a wild carol ere her d. But Dora lived unmarried till her d. My suit had wither'd, nipt to d. by him For did not all thy martyrs die one d. ? To-day, and whole years long, a life of d. Cracks into shining wings, and hope ere d. Poems 241 Like D. betwixt thy dear embrace and mine Pms 260 Like bitter accusation ev'n to d. _ Poems 261 Must sweat her sixty minutes. to the d. Poems 264 D. closes all : but something ere the end Poems 267 Thou hadst not between d. and birth Know I not D. ? the outward signs? Has ever truly long'd for d. Oh life, not d., for which we pant Till mellow D., like some late No carved cross-bones, the types of D. Pale again as d. did prove A gray and gap-tooth'd man as lean as d. Let us hob-and-nob with D. D. is king, and Vivat Rex ! Hob-and-nob with brother D. ! — nor broke, nor shunn'd a soldier's d. That's your light way ; but I would make it d. As blank as d. in marble ; then exclaim'd LET NO MAN ENTER IN ON PAIN OF D. ? To see you, Florian. I give thee to d. To give three gallant gentlemen to d. ' I spoke of war to come and many deaths Your purport, you will shock him ev'n to d. Of immolation, any phase of d. Grew broader toward his d. and fell, and all Dear as remember'd kisses after d. D. in Life, the days that are no more ' Melissa clamour'd, * Flee the d. ;' 'To horse — clamouring etiquette to d. As those that mourn half-shrouded over d. Like tender things that being caught feign d. Pr. — crush'd to d. : and rather, Sire, than this Pr. 114 Flatter'd and fluster'd, wins, tho' dash'd with d. Pr. 115 Gagelike to man, and had not shunn'd the d. Pr. 116 — sware to combat for my claim till d. 1 trust that there is no one hurt to d. — you might mix his draught with d. Last I woke sane, but well-nigh close to d. Leapt fiery Passion from the brinks of d. With D. and Morning on the silver horns — pines in sad experience worse than d. Thou madest D. ; and lo, thy foot To dance with d., to beat the ground Priestess in the vaults of D. No hint of d. in all his frame Cold in that atmosphere of D. At first as D., Love had not been An idle case? If D. were seen To that vague fear implied in d. If Sleep and D. be truly one (If D. so taste Lethean springs) There must be wisdom with great D. 1 bring to life, I bring to d. Sleep, Death's twin-brother, times my breath In M. Sleep, Death's twin-brother, knows not D. In M. 94 Sleep, kinsman thou to d. and trance In M. 98 I curse not nature, no, nor d. In M. 101 Nor speak it, knowing D. has made In M. 102 That holy D. ere Arthur died In M. 111 But D. returns an answer sweet In M. 112 For this alone on D. I wreak In M. 113 I wage not any feud with D. In M. 113 Nor blame I D., because he bare In M. 113 Throughout my frame, till Doubt and D. In M. 125 Confusion worse than d., and shake In M. 134 The blows of D. At length my trance In M. 141 Mixt their dim lights, like life and d. In M. 142 Poems 173 Poems 200 Poems 220 Poems 234 Poems 238 Poems 238 Poems 297 Poems 302 Poems 308 Poems 308 Poems 349 Poems 349 Poems 360 Poems 368 Poems 369 Poems 373 Poems 374 Pr. 3 Pr. 9 Pr. 24. ' Pr. Pr. Pr. Pr. Pr. Pr. Pr. Pr. Pr. ' Pr. Pr. 108 Pr. m Pr. 125 Pr. 149 Pr. 151 Pr. 163 Pr. 165 Pr. 168 Pr. 174 In M. v. In M. 1 In M. InM. InM. InM. In M. InM. InM. InM. 66 In M. InM. 73 DEATH Page i DEATH. On Lethe in the eyes of D. In M. 147 And unto myriads more, of d. In M. 149 As one would sing the d. of war In M. 158 Or dive below the wells of D. 1 In M. 167 And on the depths of d. there swims In M. 167 She cannot fight the fear of d. hi M. 177 Like Paul with beasts, I fought with D. In M. 186 I slip the thoughts of life and d. In M. 189 Unpalsied when he met with D. In M. 198 — there, whatever is ask'd her, answers ' D ' Ma. 1 To the d.,for their native land Ma. 23 Singing of D., and of Honour that cannot die Ma 24 — thought like a fool of the sleep of d. Ma. 51 Spice his fair banquet with the dust of d.? Ma. 61 — for sullen-seeming D. may give Ma. 61 — given false d. her hand Ma. 62 The dusky strand of D. inwoven here Ala. 62 Mine, mine by a right, from birth till d. Ma. 66 Far into the North, and battle, and seas of d. Ma. 113 All in the valley of D. Ma. 167 Into the valley of D. Ma. 167, 168 Into the jaws "of D. Ma. 169 Came thro' the jaws of D. Ma. 170 Or may be pierced to d. before mine eyes I. K. 6 Where doubtless he would put me soon to d. /. K. 25 Long for my life, or hunger for my d. I. K. 50 Flying, but overtaken, died the d. I. A". 55 Leave me to-night : I am weary to the d. ' I. K. 64 So pains him that he sickens nigh to d. I. K. 72 And were himself nigh wounded to the d.' I. K. 94 A happy life with a fair d., and fell I. K. 97 The Fame that follows d. is nothing to us I. K. 117 Flash'd the bare-grinning skeleton of d. ! I. K. 138 From bonds or d. , and dwelt among the woods I. K. 161 Prize me no prizes, for my prize is d. I I. K. 173 * Untaken crying that his prize is d.' I. K. 175 ' Yea, by God's d.,' said he, 'you love him well/. K. 182 Closest and sweetest, and had died the d. I. K. 192 Again and like a burthen, 'him or d.' I. K. 194 And ' him or d.,' she mutter'd ; ' d. or him ' I. K. 194 Ev'n to the d., as tho' you were my blood /. K. 197 And sweet is d. who puts an end to pain /. K. 199 Love, thou art bitter ; sweet is d. to me /. K. 199 D., like a friend's voice from a distant field /. K. 199 — call'd her song' The Songof Love and D. I. K. 199 Love, if d. be sweeter, let me die I. K. 199 ' Love, art thou sweet? then bitter d.. must be /. K. 199 That ever shrieks before a d.' and call'd I. K. 200 1 needs must follow d., who calls for me /. K. 200 Sweet d., that seems to make us loveless clay /. K. 200 Upon it ; I shall guard it even in d. /. K. 205 She grew so cheerful that they deem'd her d. /. K. 206 With deaths of others, and almost his own /. K. 208 And therefore nry true love has been my d. /. K. 214 Know that for this most gentle maiden's d. /. K. 214 — lord, as would have help'd her from her d.' /. K. 215 And, after heaven, on our dull side of d. /. K. 219 To help it from the death that cannot die /. K. 228 — and she thought ' he spies a field of d. I. K. 232 And many a mystic lay of life and d. /. K. 240 Fear not : thou shalt be guarded till my d. /. K. 248 The doom of treason and the flaming d. /. K. 253 D. . or I know not what mysterious doom /. K. 255 In those two deaths h 2 read God's warning E. A. 31 His baby's d., her growing poverty E. A. 39 D. dawning on him, and the close cf all E. A. 45 — peace which each had prick'd to d. E. A. 54 Persuasion, no, nor d. could alter her E. A. 72 The cordon close and closer toward the d. E. A. 77 Averill went and gazed upon his d. E. A. 82 Yet the sad mother, for the second d. E. A. 82 — a letter edged with d. E. A. 82 And double d. were widely murmur'd E. A. 83 Is wounded to the d. that cannot die E. A. 85 Ere the great d. E. A. 91 — devising their own daughter's d. '. ±1. A. 91 Stumbling across the market to his d. E A. 93 Dead for two years before his d. was he E. A. 94 The dark retinue reverencing d. E. A. 94 Bound on a matter he of life and d. E. A. 104 — the first time, too. that ever I thought of d. E. A. 122 My father raves of d. and wreck E. A. 156 'Fool,' he answer'd,' d. is sure E. A. 156 Far worse ihan any d. to me ' E. A. 156 With secret d. for ever, in the pits Select. 197 DEATH-BED. Kind ? but the d. desire Ma. 68 DEATHFUL. — d. stabs were dealt apace Poe?ns 55 DEATHFUL-GRIXXIXG. d. mouths of the Ma. 115 DEATH-HYMN, —swan's d. took the soul Poems 48 6 * DEED DEATH-IN-LIFE, —a three-years' d. E. A?% DEATHLESS. The d. ruler of thy dying E. A. 85 In d. marble, ' Her,' she said, 'my friend Pr. in DEATHLIKE, —gemlike, ghostlike, d. Ma. 14 Pass, thou d. type of pain Ma. 99 DEATH-PALE, for lack of gentle maiden's /. K. 187 DEATHLY-PALE, —nor shook, but d. /. K. 197 DEATH-SCAFFOLD. Her own d. raising E. A. 10 DEATH'S-HEAD. Of promise, not a d. at the Pr. 78 DEATH-WATCH, —mother, or the d. beat Poems 139 DEATH-WHITE. The d. curtain drawn Ma. 51 DEBATE. Where once we held d. , a band In M. 127 DEBATING his command of silence given I. K. 65 DEBT. Love the gift is Love the d. Poems 93 Their d. of thanks to her who first had dared Pr. 36 Like mine own brother. For my d. to him Pr. 152 Vext with lawyers and harass'd with d. Ma. 65 I feel I shall owe you a d. Ma. 69 That I owe this d. to you Ma. 69 We have a voice, with which to pay the d. Ma. ii,S Yea, yea, the whole dear d. of all you are /. K. 62 DEBTOR. Among us, debtors for our lives Pr. 47 DECAD. Thro' sunny decads new and strange Pms 323 (Since Averill was a d. and a half E. A. 55 Old scandals buried now seven decads deep E. A. 74 Poems 189 /. K. 13 E. A. 139 E. A. 160 /. K. 177 Pr. 58 In M. 47 59 30 48 DECAY. Upon the general d. of faith And on one side a castle in d. —the woods d. and fall And all her stars d. ' DECAY'D. — old prowess were in aught d. DECEASE. And from the Queen's d. she And chains regret to his d. DECEASED, —be when our summers have d. Ma. DECEIT. Of some coquettish d. Ma. By some coquettish d. Ma. For then, perhaps, as a child of d. Ma. DECEIVED. I never will be twice d. Ma.^133 DECEMBER. The gloom often Decembers P?ns 343 Their meetings made D. June In M. 145 DECENT. Of common duties, d. not to fail Poems 266 DECIDE. I recommenced, ' D. not ere you Pr. 62 D. it, 'sdeath ! against my father's will ' - ■/■ Pr. 122 ' D. it here : why not? we are three to three' Pr. 123 DECISION. The intuitive d. of a bright Poems 7 Kept watch, waiting d. Poe??zs 103 Since, what d. ? if we fail, we fail Pr. 123 DECK. To d. thy cradle, Eleanore Poems 79 — the decks were dense with stately forms Poems 198 Shall glimmer on the dewy decks hi M. 12 The man we loved was there on d. In M. 159 To d. the banquet. Fiercely hies In M. 165 I stood on a giant d. and mix'd my breath Ma. 113 — Lancelot's love ; and d. it like the Queen's /. K. 205 And on the black decks laid her in her bed /. K. 207 Loyal, the dumb old servitor, on d. /. K. 2oy D. her with these ; tell her, she shines me /. K. 211 — while he stood on d. E. A. 14 Spars were splinter'd, decks were shatter'd Select. ^8 On the decks as they were lying Select. Over mast and d. were scatter'd Select. Spars were splinter'd, decks were broken Select. DECK'D. — her Graces, where they d. her out Pr. 106 A life that all the Muses d. hi M. 120 Array'd and d. her, as the loveliest I. K. 2 DECKER. — from the three-d. out of the foam JIa. 7 The three-decker's oaken spine Ma. 90 DECLARE when last Olivia came Poems 249 Such as no language may d.' ^ Poe?ns 307 DECLARED, —cheek, d. that ancient ties Pr. 43 DECLINE. Looks thro' in his sad d. Poems 33 — wish thee happj^? — having known me, to d. Pms 271 The sap dries up, the plant" declines Poems 302 Whatever way my days d. In M. 120 Darken'd watching a mother d. Ma. 64 DECLINED. — more like some sick man d. Poems 119 And thou, as one that once d. hi M. 87 DECREASE. That now dilate, and now d. In M. 45 DECREASED. From heat to heat the day d. Pms 76 DECREE. By shaping some august d. Poems vii. To mould a mighty state's decrees hi M. 89 DEDICATE. I d., I consecrate with tears /. K. v. Some image of himself, I d. I. K. v. DEE. —all the sacred D. So past the days /. K. 95 DEED. Dangers and deeds, until endurance Pms 104 ' I take possession of man's mind and d. Poems 121 — our great deeds, as half-forgotten things Poems i^j Would serve his kind in d. and word Pcems 182 Delight our souls with talk of knightly deeds Pms 192 On noble deeds, cancell'd a sense misused Poems 287 39 39 39 DEED Page DEED. Fruitful of further thought and d. Poems 256 Blowing a noise of tongues and deeds Poems 299 ' They perish'd in their daring deeds ' Poems 317 'For I am yours in word and in d. Poe?ns 357 —only Fame for spouse and your great deeds Pr. 67 Howe'er you babble, great deeds cannot die Pr. 67 Foam of men's deeds— this honour, if ye will Pr. 123 In loveliness of perfect deeds In M. 56 Her secret meaning in her deeds In M. 78 What fame is left for human deeds hi M. 101 On songs, and deeds, and lives, that lie hi M. 106 O true in word, and tried in d. hi M. 118 Perplext in faith, but pure in deeds In M. 143 Flow thro' our deeds and make them pure In M. 202 Divorce the Feeling from her mate the D. Ma. 122 Bright let it be with its blazon'd deeds Ma. 140 For noble deeds ? and truly I, when first /. K. 23 So grateful is the noise of noble deeds /. K. 24 — I knew my deeds were known, I found /. K. 91 And each incited each to noble deeds /. K. 115 And noble deeds, the flower of all the world /. K. 115 — you miss,' he answer'd, ' the great deeds /. K. 151 Should do and almost overdo the deeds /. K. 171 Were fill'd with rapine, here and there a d. /. K. 249 And worship her by years of noble deeds /. K. 250 And miss to hear high talk of noble deeds /. K. 251 — she for her good deeds and her pure life /. K. 261 Nor deeds of gift, but gifts of grace E. A. 106 c His deeds yet live, the worst is yet to come E. A. 113 — thine the deeds to be celebrated E. A. 171 DEEDFUL. A d. life, a silent voice Poems 350 Into the chronicle of a d. day E. A. 61 DEEM, —judgment then, who d. this maid /. K. 159 Will d. this prize of ours is rashly given /. K. 175 And, damsel, for I d. you know full well /. K. 183 DEEM'D. — she d. no mist of earth could dull Pms 27 — peace, that I d. no peace, is over and done Ma. 114 In that wherein she d. she look'd her best /. K. 194 She grew so cheerful that they d. her death /. K. 206 —well had d. he felt the tale E. A. 39 Things in an Aylmer d. impossible E. A. 67 DEEMING. But Vivien d. Merlin overborne /. K. 135 D. our courtesy is the truest law /. K. 184 DEEP. Revealings d. and clear are thine Poems 15 The fragrant, glistening deeps Poems 19 Was damask-work, and d. inlay Poems 20 Dark-blue the d. sphere overhead Poems 22 And d. myrrh-thickets blowing round Poems 23 Thereon, his d. eye laughter-stirr'd Poems 25 Tho' d. not fathomless Poems 27 O'er the d. mind of dauntless infancy Poems 27 Round thee blow, self-pleached d. Poems 50 From his coiled sleeps in the central deeps Poems 61 Into d. orange o'er the sea Poems 74 And seem'd knee-d. in mountain grass Poems 75 Slowly awaken'd, grow so full and d. Poems 81 Drawn from each other mellow-d. Poems 81 Comes out thy d. ambrosial smile Poems 81 The languors of thy love-d. eyes Poems 81 So full, so d., so slow Poems 82 The d. brook groan'd beneath the mill Poems 90 Sweet gales, as from d. gardens, blow Poems 97 It was the d. midnoon : one silvery cloud Poems 101 From her warm brows and bosom, her d. hair P?ns 105 From level meadow-bases of d. grass Poems 112 And drives them to the d. ' Poems 121 D. dread and loathing of her solitude Poems 122 The abysmal deeps of Personality Poems 122 One d., d. silence all ! ' Poems 123 Of rocks thrown down, or one d. cry Poems 124 Here are cool mosses d. Poems 144 Than labour in the d. mid-ocean Poems 149 — roaring deeps and fiery sands Poems 149 Whirl'd by the wind, had roll'd me d. below Poems 155 No memory labours longer from the d. Poei?is 161 Full knee-d. lies the winter snow Poems 168 She loveth her own anguish d. Poems 173 King Arthur : then, because his wound was d. Pms 191 What harm, undone? d. harm to disobey Poems 194 — years she wrought it, sitting in the deeps Poems 195 He heard the d. behind him Poems 197 For Eustace, when I heard his d. ' I will ' Poems 210 O flourish, hidden d. in fern Poems 253 That makes thee broad and d. I Poems 256 — day wanes : the slow moon climbs : the d. Poe?ns 267 Hide me from my d. emotion Poems 277 Tho' the d. heart of existence beat for Poems 279 D. in yonder shining Orient Poems 281 The d. air listen'd round her as she rode Poems 287 84 DEEPER Page DEEP. D. in the garden lake withdrawn Poems 313 — d. into the dying day Poems 32c D. on the convent-roof the snows Poems 331 One sabbath d. and wide Poems 332 Or, elbow-d. in sawdust, slept Poems 343 From d. thought himself he rouses Poems 359 — far, in forest-deeps unseen Poefns 362 However d. you might embower the nest Pr. 9 But d. in shadow : further on we gain'd Pr. 26 Drink d. , until the habits of the slave Pr. 34 Of promise, fruit would foliow. D., indeed Pr. ~6 And glutted all night long breast-d. in corn Pr. \-j There leaning d. in broider'd down we sank Pr. -,5 D. as first love, and wild with all regret Pr. 77 On lips that are for others ; d. as love Pr. 77 Robed in the long night of her d. hair Pr. 100 To one d. chamber shut from sound Pr. 156 Drag inward from the deeps, a wall of night Pr. 159 From barren deeps to conquer all with love Pr. 166 D. in the night I woke : she, near me, held Pr. 166 Break, thou d. vase of chilhng tears In M. 4 So seems it in my d. regret In M. 11 Should gulf him fathom-d. in brine In M. 15 Calm and d. peace in this wide air In M. 16 Calm and d. peace on this high wold In M. 16 Which heaves but with the heaving d. In M. 17 In her d. self, than some dead lake In M. 26 Then one d. love doth supersede hi M. 51 D. folly ! yet that this could be In M. 62 That stir the spirit's inner deeps In M. 64 In that d. dawn behind the tomb In M. 68 A higher height, a deeper d. In M. 88 Up the d. East, or, whispering, play'd In M. 99 Her d. relations are the same hi M. 108 A grief as d. as life or thought In M. 111 D. tulips, dash'd with fiery dew hi M. 114 Or d. dispute, and graceful jest In M. 116 And brushing ankle-d. in flowers In M. 132 The d. pulsations of the world In M. 141 Tho' rapt in matters dark and d. In M. 146 That landlike slept along the d. In M. 159 Fom d. to d. , to where we saw In M. 159 There rolls the d. where grew the tree In M. 191 That tumbled in the Godless d. In M. 192 To seek thee on the mystic deeps In M. 194 In the d. night, that all is well In M. 195 Womanlike, taking revenge too d. Ma. 13 Powers of the height, Powers of the d. Ma. 93 Into some still cavern d. Ma. 101 — why have they not buried me d. enough ? Ma. 108 —by the side of the Black and the Baltic d. Ma. 115 Beyond the brook, waist-d. in meadow-sweet Ma. 123 — he with those d. voices wrought Ma. 141 With those d. voices our' dead captain Ma. 141 Glimmer away to the lonely d. Ma. 163 In the first shallow shade of a d. wood /. K. 52 Drave with a sudden wind across the deeps /. K. 103 D. meadows we had traversed, did you know /. K. 108 /. K. 127 /. K. 191 /. K. 221 /. K. 238 E. A. 37 59 74 96 100 On some wild down above the windy d. Did kindlier unto man, but her d. love And fling me d. in that forgotten mere And sent a d. sea-voice thro' all the land Where either haven open'd on the deeps A summer burial d. in hollyhocks Old scandals buried now seven decads d. — perilous places o'er a d. — the boundless outer d. — the motion of the boundless d. The motion of the great d. bore me on To the waste deeps together We came to warmer waves and d. D. as Hell I count his error Of that d. grave to which I go DEEP-ASLEEP. And d. he seem'd, yet all Poems 143 DEEP-BLUE. Floods all the d. gloom with Pms 15S DEEP-CHESTED music, and to this result Poems 191 DEEP-DESIRED. — thy bosom (d. relief !) Poems 259 DEEP-DOMED, —as the d. empyrean E. A. 174 DEEPEN. And deepens on and up ! the Poems 332 Ay me, the sorrow deepens down — rut would d. year by year DEEPEN'D. The battle d. in its place DEEPENING. And d. thro' the silent D. the courts of twilight broke them up D. thy voice with the d. of the night DEEPER, —may wander from its d. woe No d. than the skin Step d. yet in herb and fern A d. tale my heart divines E.A. E.A. E.A. E.A. E. A. 102 E. A. 108 E. A. 146 Select. 37 Select. 191 hi M. 71 E.A. 53 Poems 55 Poems 77 Pr. 183 E. A. 151 Poems 99 Poems "2^2 Poems *55 Poems 302 DEEPER Page DEEPER. To cleave the rift of difference d. Pr. 122 D. than those weird doubts could reach me Pr. 160 To the same sweet air, and tremble d. down Pr. 161 My d. anguish also falls In M. 32 Or in the light of d. eyes hi M. 87 A higher height, a d. deep In M. 88 A d. voice across the storm In M. 196 D., ever so little d. Ma. 108 — a d. knell in the heart be knoll'd Ma. 141 My malice is no d. than a moat /. K. 63 With d. and with ever d. love /. K. 95 — d. the gloom E. A. 37 — in d. inward whispers ' lost ! * E. A. 39 Lay d. than to wear it as his ring E. A. 57 To find a d. in the narrow gloom E. A. 94 And murmurs of a d. voice Select. 221 DEEPEST. — streaming curls of d. brown Poems 73 And hush'd my d. grief of all hi M. 32 The d. measure from the chords In M. 70 And lo, thy d. lays are dumb In M. 105 King Arthur's hound of d. mouth, there /. K. 10 As if in d. reverence and in love /. K. 104 DEEP-HUED. —many a d. bell-like flower Poems 79 DEEP-IXRUXXIXG. —and cliff", andd. cave E. A. 97 DEEPLIER. Loved d., darklier understood In M. 200 DEEPLY. I am so d. smitten thro' the helm Poems 192 That under d. strikes ! Poems 256 — spirit d. dawning in the dark of hazel eyes Pms 270 D. mourn'd the Lord of Burleigh Poems 361 The wizard lightnings d. glow hi M. 190 A virtuous gentlewoman d. wrong" d /. K. 141 DEEPLY-WOUXDED. — mvthicVther's d. Poems 117 DEEP-MEADOWD, happy, fair, with Poems 200 DEEP-SEATED in our mystic frame In M. 56 DEEP-SET. — the d. windows, stain'dand Poems 114 DEEP-UDDER'D. —browsed by d. kine Poems 205 DEER. Rode thro' the coverts of the d. Poems 363 . To chase the d. at five Poems 247 Betwixt the monstrous horns of elk and d. Pr. 2 — and shook the branches of the d. Pr. 182 To show Sir Arthur's d. In copse and fern Ma. 124 Like flies that haunt a wound, or d., or men E. A. 80 DEFACIXG. Defaming and d., till she left /. K. 135 DEFAME. — bonds that so d. me : not without /. K. 221 DEFAMED by every charlatan In Af. 173 DEFAMIXG and defacing, till she left /. K. 135 DEFEAT. Whether you wish me victory or d. /. K. 50 I must not dwell on that d. of fame I. K. 257 DEFECT in each, and always thought in Pr. 173 Defects of doubt, and taints of blood In M. 76 — an hour's d. of the rose Ma. 12 To make up that d. : let rumours be /. K. 209 Scorn was allow'd as part of his d. /. K. 227 DEFEXCE. — war would arise in d. of the right Ma. 112 DEFEXD. But if I grant, thou might'st d. Poems 305 And there d. his marches ; and the king /. K. 3 To move to your own land, and there d. /. K. 93 DEFEXDED. Lo their colony half-d. E. A. 170 DEFEREXTIALLY. And did Sir Aylmer (d. E. A. 65 DEFIAXCE. — her cause, and flung d. down Pr. 116 With message and d. went and came Pr. 126 With one smile of still d. Select. 39 DEFIAXT. Sullen, d., pitying, wroth E. A. 76 DEFICIEXCY. Who'll weep for thy d. ? Poems 291 DEFIED. — chafing at his own great self d. E. A. 79 DEFIXE. Hold thou the good : d. it well In M. 75 DErlXED. His isolation grows d. In M. 67 DEFORM'D. —with unworthy madness,and d. E. A. 68 DEFYIXG. We drink d. trouble Poems 343 Was love's dumb cry d. change hi M. 140 DEGRADE. And throned races ma}'- d. hi M. 198 DEGREE. — by degrees to fullness wrought Poems 175 We are all changed by still degrees Poems 181 A rugged people and thro' soft degrees Poems 266 More than is of man's d. Ma. 150 DEITY. Such is Rome, and this her d. E. A. 170 DELAY. Raw Haste, half-sister to D. Poems 183 -d, not : take Excalibur Poems 192 Delaying as the tender ash delays Pr. 80 Xo doubt, for slight d., remain'd among us Pr. 91 And said, 'D. no longer, speak your wish /. K, 195 — dull the voyage was with long delays E. A. 36 DELAYEST the sorrow in my blood In M. 114 DELAYIXG as the tender ash delays Pr. 80 O sweet new-year d. long In M. 114 D. long, delay no more In M. 114 O thou, new-vear, d. long In M. 114 DELAYIXGLY. —she held him on d E. A. 26 DELEGATED. —wrought too long with d. I. K. 93 DEMAND Page DELICACY. But could not out of bashful d. /. A". 4 DELICATE, —least little d. aquiline curve Ma. 12 And thus a d. spark Ma. 26 D. -handed priest intone Ma. 33 From the d. Arab arch of her feet Ma. 54 With honey'd rain and d. air Ma. 59 With d. spire and whorl Ma. 88 Fairilv-d. palaces shine E. A. 158 DELICATELY. Most d. hour by hour Poems 37 That sings so d. clear, and make /. K. 18 And Enid took a little d. /. K. 57 D. pure and marvellously fair /. K. 218 DELICIOUS spites and darling angers Poems 15 In many a dark d. curl Poems 24 But thou wert nursed in some d. land Poems 78 Making sweet close of his d. toils Poems 120 Of Life d., and all kinds of thought Poems 205 Were not his words A, la beast Poems 233 In the long breeze that streams to thy d. East Ma. 59 Beheld at noon in some d. dale /. K. 245 Xor cares to lisp in love's d. creeds Select. 196 Delicto : but his house, for so they say Poems 226 DELIGHT. So took echo with d. Poems 18 The darkness of the world, d. Poems 22 But in her web she still delights Poems 67 Falling into a still d. Poems 82 I die with my d., before Poems 84 My heart, pierced thro' with fierce d. Poems 97 ' I marvel if my still d. Poe?ns 120 For great d. and shuddering took hold Poems 140 When she made pause, I knew not for d. Poems 157 The senses with a still d. Poe?ns 163 Thy sole d. is, sitting still _ Poems 166 D. our souls with talk of knightly deeds Poems 192 So gross to express d., in praise of her Poems 205 — drunk d. of battle with my peers Poems 265 Some vague emotion of d. Poems 306 To shape the song for your d. Poems 325 Which men d. in, martial exercise ? Pr. 65 The chambers emptied of d. In M. 10 And was the day of my d. In M. 41 With shower'd largess of d. hi M. 47 And what delights can equal those hi M. 64 Thy converse drew us with d. hi M. 170 D. a hundredfold accrue In M. 182 Maud the d. of the village Ma. 10 But an ashen-gray d. Ma. 26 Read with a boy's d. Ma. 31 On the hasp of the window, and my D. Ma. 50 With such d. as theirs of old, thy great Ma. 59 My bride to be, my evermore d. Ma. 62 Breaking up my dream of d. Ma. 64 The d. cf early skies Ma. 97 The d. of low replies Ma. 97 The d. of happy laughter Ma. 97 — but a dream, yet it yielded a dear d. Ala. 112 He, reddening in extremity of d. /. K. 57 Inflate themselves with some insane d. /. K. 137 Sprang to her face and fill'd her with d. /. K. 167 DELIGHTED with the freshness and the sound Pms 234 And ah ! with what d. eyes Poems 245 I am all as well d. Ma. 73 DELIGHTETH. Xo nightingale d. to prolong Pms 120 DELIGHTFUL. From some d. valley Poems 344 DELIRIOUS. Brimm'd with d. draughts Poems 84 And made me that d. man In M. 27 DELIRIUM. Her hand in wild d., gripe it hard Pr. 162 DELIVER not the tasks of might " Poe?ns 179 D. me the blessed sacrament Poems 244 Thy tribute wave d. Poems 364 Delivers brawling judgments, unashamed /. K. 128 This diamond, and d. it, and return I. K. 175 DELIVERERS, —and call'd them dear d. Pr. 141 DELIVERIXG, that to me, by common voice Pms 101 D. seal'd despatches which the Head Pr. 94 DELL. — of the live-green heart of the dells Poems 43 We would call aloud in the dreamy dells Poems 59 — diamond-ledges that jut from the dells Poems 61 Sound all night long, in falling thro' the d. Poems 157 — splinter'd crags that wall the d. Poems 158 The furzy prickle fire the dells Poems 292 How richly down the rocky d. Ma. 154 — snowy dells in a golden air Ma. 157 The little dells of cowslip E. A. 56 DELUGIXG. — burst and drown with d. storms Ma. 87 DELVER. — robins eye the delver's toil /. K. 41 As careful robins eye the delver's toil /. K. 68 DEMAXD. To make d. of modern rhyme Poems v. Were it well to obey then, if a king d. Poems 194 DEMAND Page I DEMAND. The sense of human will demands In M. 120 D. not thou a marriage lay In M. 204 Her maiden to d. it of the dwarf /. K. 11 Sent her own maiden to d. the name /. K. 22 DEMANDED. Concealment: she d. who we Pr. 61 — d. if her mother knew Pr. 86 Was this d. — ifheyearn'd In M. 50 And when the king d. how she knew /. K. 177 DEMANDING. And then to me d. why? Poems 190 D., so to bring relief lit M. 118 DEMIGODS. Where paced the D. of old, and Pr. 72- DEMOCRAT. Aristocrat, d., autocrat — one Ma. 40 DEMONS. Of D. ? fiery-hot to burst In M. 177 DEMONSTRATION. With flawless d. Pr. 48 DEMUR. — wroth and red, with fierce d. Pr. 125 DEMURE. The little maiden walk'd d. Poems 309 DEN. We heard the lion roaring from his d. Poems 159 Trooping from their mouldy dens Poems 373 DENIAL. Or by d. flush her babbling wells Pr. 124 DENIED. Or Psyche, she affirm'd not, or d. Pr. 86 Was silent : closer prest, d. it not Pr. 86 D. my fancies — this, however strange /. K. 205 — d. his heart his dearest wish ■ E. A. 19 'Come with us, Father Philip,' he denied E. A. 21 DENOUNCING judgment, but tho' changed /. K. 247 DENSE. — decks were d. with stately forms Poems 198 Wrapt in d. cloud from base to cope Poems 298 Pharaoh's darkness, folds as d. as those E. A. 91 DENSEST. With comment, d. condensation /. K. 129 DENY, —brows are ready. What ! d. itnovr?Poems 243 For that which all d. them Poems 341 — hold your own, d. not her's to her Pr. 145 D. me not,' she said — ' you never yet /. K. 205 And would if ask'd d. it . E. A. 3 DENYING not these weather-beaten limbs Poems 237 DENYINGLY. How hard you look and how d.I. K. 110 DEPART, He craved a fair permission to d. I. K. 3 DEPARTED. Upon us and d. : ' Leave ' Poems 234 -James d. vext with him and her Ma. 123 And then d., hot in haste to join /. K. 76 — d. weeping for him E. A. 14 DEPARTEST, and thy tears are on my cheek E. A. 141 DEPARTING, —smile and nod d. found /. K. 28 DEPLORE. Still mine, that cannot but d. In M. 123 Where shall we lay the man whom we d. ? Ma. 138 Such was he whom we d. Ma. 140 DEPRESS'D. With lips d. as he were meek Poems 37 DEPTH. — springs of life, the depths of awe Poems 295 Tears from the d. of some divine despair Pr. 76 And on the depths of death there swims In M. 167 DERIVES it not from what we have In M. 78 DESCEND. — nurses ; but d., and proffer these Pr. 140 D. below the golden hills In M. 116 D., and touch, and enter ; hear In M. 137 Why then my scorn might well d. In M. 199 Would the happy spirit d. Ma. 100 DESCENDANT. On him their last d. E. A. 94 DESCENDED. The country-side d. Poems 328 D. to the courts that lay three parts Pr. 55 As we d. following Hope In M. 37 Corrupts the strength of heaven-d. Will Ma. 165 And so d. Never man rejoiced I. K. 41 — all d. to the port E. A. 25 DESCENDING. — angels rising and d. met Poems 118 — d. they were ware Poems 198 D. ; once or twice she lent her hand Pr. 75 D., burst the great bronze valves Pr. 140 D., struck athwart the hull, and shot Pr. 155 And then d. met them at the gates /. K. 44 Phantom sound of blows d. E. A. 170 DESCENT. Smile at the claims of long d. Poems 128 She might by a true d. be untrue Ma. 48 DESCRIED. Of purple cliff's, aloof d. Poems 28 DESCRY.— Dimly I could d. Poems 154 DESECRATED. The d. shrine, the trampled Pr. 113 DESERT. To one of less d. allows Poems v. Of that long d. to the south Poems 96 — partly conscious of my own deserts Pr. 90 And a moist mirage in d. eyes Ma. 28 Be blown about the d. dust In M. 81 Which makes a d. in the mind In M. 92 Approved him, bowing at their own deserts Ma. 124 DESERTED. Of the dark d. house Poems 45 In those d. walks — may find In M. 10 DESERVE, —world, and which might well d. Pr. 96 Ah ! what might that man not d. of me Pr. 112 DESERVED, —we d. the name of friends In M. 91 DESIGN. Two grand designs : for on one side Pr. 163 A miracle of d. Ma. 88 DESPAIR Page DESIGN. The treble works, the vast designs Ma. 143 ' He learnt and warn'd me of their fierce d. /. K. 161 The new d. wherein they lost themselves /. K. 170 The vast d. and purpose of the King /. K. 260 DESIGN'D. Not less than truth d. Poems 116 Not less than life, d. Poems 118 DESIRE. Visit my low d. I Poems 26 Of high d. Poems 39 To yield consent to my d. Poems 91 The skies stoop down in their d. Poems 97 For my d. is but to pass to Him Poems 139 — have ceased to be, with my d. of life Poems 141 Strength came to me that equall'd my d. Poems 159 Her open eyes d. the truth Poems 178 — vague desires, like fitful blasts of balm Poems 205 —my d., like all strongest hopes Poems 211 —this gray spirit yearning in d. Poems 266 Which did accomplish their d. Poems 299 The bird that pipes his lone d. Poems 351 And I d. to rest Poems 376 Our statues ! not of those that men d. Pr. 33 That lent my knee d. to kneel, and shook Pr. 64 In high d. , they know not, cannot guess Pr. 69 — every hoof a knell to my desires Pr. 83 The seal does music : who d. you more Pr. 98 D. in me to infuse my tale of love Pr. 119 That thou should'st fail from thy d. In M. 4 Do we indeed d. the dead In M. 73 That not a moth with vain d. In M. 76 The centre of a world's d. In M. 89 If any vague d. should rise In M. in I seem to meet their least d. In M. 116 And born of love, the vague d. In M. 171 Submitting all things to d. In M. 177 D. of nearness doubly sweet In M. 182 Dear friend, far off, my lost d. hi M. 200 — not to d. or admire, if a man could learn it Ma. 20 Rich in the grace ail women d. Ma. 37 Had a sudden d. Ma. 50 A d, that awoke in the heart of the child Ma. 67 Kind ? but the deathbed d. Ma. 68 —the heart of a people beat with one d. Ma. 114 But in, go in ; for save yourself d. it /. Ii. 17 Less having stomach for it than d. /. K. 57 Wanting the mental range ; or low d. /. K. 137 Suddenly flash'd on her a wild d. /. K. 166 Yet, seeing you d. your child to live /. K. 204 Thanks, but you work against your own d. /. K. 204 That howsoever much they may d. /. K. 235 And courtliness, and the d. of fame /. K. 250 The blight of low desires E. A. 86 Why should a man d. in any way E. A. 140 Melt into stars for the land's d. E. A. 165 And welcome her, welcome the land's d. E. A. 165 — thro' their own d. accomplish'd E. A. 91 DESIRED. You are not one to be d. Poems 126 The greater to the lesser, long d. Poems 203 And on thy bosom (deep-d. relief I) Poems 259 In the king's hall, d. his name, and sent /. K. 11 But now d. the humbling of their best /. K. 79 — broke the bond which they d. to break E. A. 91 Had what they d. Select. 38 DESIRING what is mingled with past years Pms 162 DESK. Brow-beats his d. below Poems 62 -who would cast and balance at a d. Poems 222 Erect behind a d. of satin-wood Pr. 34 To cramp the student at his d. In M. 199 DESKWORK. Of dust and d. E. A. 100 DESOLATE. The d. creeks and pools Poems 48 Lords of waste marches, kings of d. isles /. K. 174 Your house is left unto you d.' E. A. 83, 92 ' My house is left unto me d.' E. A. 88 ' Our house is left unto us d.' E. A. 89 — his one word was 'd.' E. A. 94 DESOLATION. She rested, and her d. /. K. 73 Against the desolations of the world E. A. 84 Nod. but by sword and fire ? E. A. 89 DESPAIR. Plagued her with sore d. Poe?ns 122 And nothing saw, for her d. Poems 124 — mix myself with action lest I wither by d. Poems 276 Whisper'd ' Listen to my d. Poems 338 The midriff of d. with laughter, holp Pr. 25 Or baser courses, children of despair ' Pr. 65 Tears from the depth of some divine d. Pr. 76 — it becomes no man to nurse d. Pr. 98 If any calm, a calm d. In M. 16 Can calm d. and wild unrest In M. 26 D. of Hope, and earth of thee In M. 115 — and madden'd, and ever wann'd with d. Ma. 2 DESPAIR Page DESPAIR, —dream, yet it lighten'd my d. Ma. 112 A day of onsets of d. Ma. 144 DESPAIR'D. To save the life d. of E. A. 45 DESPATCHES. Delivering seal'd d. which Pr. 94 DESPERATELY. Then d. seized the holy E. A. 27 DESPISE. Of sin, my flesh, which I d. and Poems 238 One whom the strong sons of the world d. Ma. 117 And I myself sometimes d. myself /. K. 25 But that his pride too much despises me I. K. 25 DESPISED, —look up, or half-d. the light /. K. 258 DESPITE the wound he spake of, all for gain /. A'. 176 This many a year have done d. and wrong I. A'. 210 DESPONDENCE. Listless in all d. E. A. 78 DESPOT. Where smoulder their dead despots Pr. 126 i. What if that dandy d. Ma. 27 And play the game of the d. kings Ma. 38 — oft from out a d. dream E. A. 78 DESTINED. — of diamonds for his d. boon /. A'. 152 Of all my heart had d. did obtain /. K "2~f> Like the Good Fortune, from her d. course E. A. 35 DESTINY. No one can be more wise than d. Pms 154 The weight of d. : so from her face Pr. 103 DESTROY'D. That not one life shall be d. In M. 76 DESTRUCTIVE, when I had not what I Poems 228 DETACHING. Unheeded ; and d., fold by Poems 368 DETAIL. Another kind of beauty in d. Pr. 97 DETENTION. — d., why, the causes weigh'd Pr. 118 DETERMINED, —in his heart d. all E. A. 9 DETESTABLE, —not rank with those d. Pr. 130 DEVELOP'D. A slow d. strength awaits Poems 181 Beyond all grades d. ? Poems 212 DEVELOPMENT. The world with some d. Pms 292 DEVICE. Of hemlock ; our d. ; wrought to the Pr. 70 All the devices blazon'd on the shield I. K. 147 Blank, or at least with some d. not mine ' I. K. 157 DEVIL. — D., large in heart and brain Poems 111 And oft some brainless d. enters in Poems 121 Quoth she, 'The D. take the goose Poems 186 Vex'd Avith a morbid d. in his blood Poems 226 But let him go : the d. goes with him Poems 226 — troops of devils, mad with blasphemy Poems 236 Devils pluck'd my sleeve Poems 242 Comfort? comfort scorn'd of devils Poems 274 —the D. may pipe to his own Ma.. 10 Know well that Envy calls you Devil's son /. K. 118 And then did Envy call me Devil's son I. K. 119 — devil's leaps, and poisons half the young /. K. 252 — by his own stale d. spurr'd E. A. 66 With nothing but the D. ! ' E. A. no True Devils with no ear E. A. no A d. in man, there is an angel too E. A. in A d. rises in my heart E. A. 156 DEVIL-BORN. You tell me, doubt is D. In M. 143 DEVISED. — Lavaine to write as she d. I. K. 204 The letter she d. ; which being writ /. K. 205 Who had d. the letter, moved again I. K. 214 DEVISING. And moist and dry, d. long Pms 180 — d. their own daughter's death E. A. 91 DEVOIR. Now weary of my service and d. /. K. 153 DEVOLVED his rounded periods Poejns 36 DEVON. A tributary prince of D., one /. K. 1 Of D. — for this morning when the Queen I. K. 22 In D. ? ' he but gave a wrathful groan I. K. 67 DEVOTION, —such a fixt d.,that the old man I. K. 103 DEW. Her tears fell with the dews at even Poems 9 Her tears fell ere the dews were dried Poems 9 And d. is cold upon the ground Poems 17 To his heart the silver dews Poems 34 Drip sweeter dews than traitor's tear Poems 50 And dews, that would have fall'n in tears Poems 91 My lips, as sunlight drinketh d. Poems 97 — slowly dropping fragrant d. Poems 102 -close to thine in that quick- falling d. Poems 106 — night-dews on still waters between walls Poems 144 — fresh-wash'd in coolest d. Poems 152 — rank, dark wood-walks drench'd in d. Poems 153 But ever trembling thro' the d. Poems 165 And tho' mine own eyes fill with d. Poe?ns 172 A thought would fill my eyes with happy d. Poems 210 — both my thighs are rotted with the d. Poems 237 With drenching dews, or stiff with Poe'ms 240 And from it rnelt the dews of Paradise Poems 243 Dropt dews upon her golden head Poems 254 —flung Ir'm in the d. Poems 254 Balm-dews to bathe thy feet Poems 256 —and there rain'd a ghastly d. Poems 278 Thro' crofts and pastures wet with d. Poems 289 Dash'd together in blinding d. Poems 367 Aad far allusion, till the gracious dews Pr. 45 DIAPER'D Page DEW. —blossom-fragrant slipt the heavy dews Pr. 119 Sweet Ida : palm to palm she sat : the d. Pr. 164 And on these dews that drench the furze In M. 16 When all our path was fresh with d. In M. 94 Deep tulips, dash'd with fiery d. In M. 114 The sweep of scythe in morning d. In M. 131 And back we come at fall of d. In M. 209 The d. of their great labour, and the blood I. A*. 31 With jewels than the sward with drops of d. I. K. 82 DEW'D. — and, d. with showery drops Poems 142 DEWDROP. — when two dew-drops on the Pr. 160 And every d. paints a bow In M. 190 DEW-FED. Nightly d.: and turning yellow Poems 145 DEW-IMPEARLED. The d. winds of dawn Poems 26 DEWLESS. Is dry and d. Let us go Poems 95 DEW-LIT. And those d. eyes of thine Poems 35 DEWY. But while the sun yet beat a d. blade I. K. 69 Thou d. dawn of memory Poems 26, 28, 31 Over the dark d. earth forlorn Poems 29 — on d. pastures, d. trees Poems 116 To hear the d. echoes calling Poems 148 Counting the d. pebbles Poems 194 The d. sister-eyelids lay Poems 312 To glass herself in d. eyes Poems 377 Or grief, and glowing round her d. eyes Pr. 55 Leapt from the d. shoulders of the Earth Pr. 109 Sent from a d. breast a cry for light Pr. 170 : Shall glimmer on the d. decks In M. 12 — a d. splendour falls Ma. 97 — face of night is fair on the d. downs Ma. in As the gray dawn stole o'er the d. world I. K. 66 The maiden standing in the d. light I. K. 165 With all their d. hair blown back like flame I. K. 240 Drew in the d. meadowy morning -breath E. A. 36 And d. Northern meadows green E. A. 146 DEAV r Y-DARK. — the mountain lawn was d. Poems 100 And d. aloft the mountain pine Poejns 100 DEWY-FRESH. Are d., browsed by Poems 205 DEWY-GLOOMING, —dawns, and d. downs .£. A. 33 DEWY-TASSELL'D. —green gleam of d. trees Pr. 20 Through all the d. wood In Af. 125 DEWY-WARM, —eyelids, growing d. E. A. 142 DEXTER. In d. chief; the scroll ' I follow I. K. 118 DIAGONAL. I moved as in a strange d. Pr. 178 DIAL. — high d., which my sorrow crowns Poems 239 DIAMOND. Of d. rillets musical Poems 21 For all the haft twinkled with d. sparks Poems 193 — fillip'd at the d. in her ear Poems 286 With bracelets of the d. bright Poems 316 Fling the d. necklace by' Poems 355 Did he stand at the d. door Ma. 89 For the great d. in the d. jousts I. K. 148 Had named them, since a d. was the prize I. K. 149 Of diamonds, one in front, and four aside I. K. 149 Had Lancelot won the d. of the year I. K. 150 Now for the central d. and the last I. K. 151 Than many diamonds,' yielded, and a heart I. K. 152 The tale of diamonds for his destined boon) I. K. 152 At Camelot for the d., ask me not I. K. 157 That some one put this d. in her hand I. K. 158 ' A fair large d.,' added plain Sir Torre I. K. 159 And you shall win this d. — as I here /. K. 159 It is a fair large d., if you may hear I. K. 159 Blazed the last d. of the nameless King /. K. 170 No diamonds ! for God's love, alitde air I. K. 173 The d.; ' but he answer'd, ' d. me /. K. 173 This d., and deliver it, and return I. K. 175 And gave, the d. : then from where he sat /. K. 176 Rode with his d., wearied of the quest /. K. 179 The d., and all wearied of the quest I. K. 183 A d. is a d. Fare you well /. K. 183 My quest with you ; the d. also : here /. K. 183 I gave the d. : she will render it /. K. 184 And with mine own hand give his d. to him /. K. 186 ' Ay, Ay, the d. : wit you well, my child I. K. 187 ' Your prize the d. sent you by the King' /. K. 189 — laid the d. in his open hand I. K. 190 Of King and Prince, the d. sent, the quest I. K. 190 The nine-years - fought - for diamonds : for I. K. 208 Diamonds for me ! they had been thrice I. K. q.t.q Diamonds to meet them and they past away /. K. 211 So pray you, add my diamonds to her pearls /. K. 211 — richer than these diamonds — hers not mine /. K. 211 Waves on a d. shingle dash E. A. 158 DIAMOND-DRIFT, —of d. and pearly hail Pms 367 DIAMOND-LEDGES, —the d. that jut from Pms 61 DIAMOND-PLOTS. The level lake with d. Pms 22 DIAN. — set a wrathful Dian's moon on flame Pr. 155 DIAPER'D. Engarlanded and d. Poems 25 DID Page DID what I would : but ere the night we rose Pms 224 And d. it : for a man is not as God Poems 259 D. more, and underwent, and overcame Poems 285 I repent me of all 1 d. Poems 338 I'll stake my ruby ring - upon it you d. ' Pr. 10 — what she d. to Cyrus after fight Pr. 126 Bewail'd their lot ; I d. them wrong In M. 159 For all we thought and loved and d. In M. 210 Sweet Katie, once I d. her a good turn Ma. 121 — see, yourself have own'd you d. me wrong I. K. 109 Poor souls, and knew not what they d. E A. 91 — if he d. that wrong you charge him with E. A. 111 But a cost oop, that a d. E. A. 130 DIE. The breezes pause and d. Poems 3 A gentler death shall Falsehood d. Poems 13 I dare not d. and come to thee Poems 56 D. in their hearts for the love of me Poems 61 Live forgotten and d. forlorn ' Poems 75 I d. with my delight, before Poems 84 That we may d. the self-same day Poems 86 My own sweet Alice, we must d. Poems 86 I watch'd the little circles d. Poems 88 That I should d. an early death Poems 89 I -will possess him or will d. Poems 97 Grow, live, d., looking on his face Poems 97 D., dying clasp'd in his embrace Poems 97 Dear mother Ida, barken ere I d. Poems 99—105 And I shall be alone until I d. Poems 105 mother, hear me yet before I d. Poems 106 — 108 "Weigh heavy on my eyelids : let me d. Poems 107 — shadow all my soul, that I may d. Poems 107 1 will not d. alone : for fiery thoughts Poems 107 Hear me, O earth. I will not d. alone Poems 108 A new land, but I d.' Poems 124 And save me lest Id.?' Poems 125 I long to see a flower so before the day I d. Poems 135 To d. before the snowdrop came Poems 138 — right up to Heaven and d. among the stars Pms 140 Waiting to see me d. Poems 154 Contented there to d. Poems 156 I would be born and d. Poems 158 How beautiful a thing it was to d. Poems 159 Old year, you must not d. Poems 168 Old year, you shall not d. Poems 168, 169 To see him d., across the waste Poems 169 Shake hands, before you d. Poems 169 I've half a mind to d. with you Poems 169 Speak out before you d. Poems 169 Old year, if you must d. Poems 169 And I will see before I d. Poems 176 Nor shall see, here or elsewhere, till I d. Poems 196 I fear it is too late, and I shall d. ' Poems 197 My wound hath taken cold, and I shall d.' Poems 197 ' Arthur is come again : he cannot d.' Poems 202 My grandchild on my knees before I d. Poems 214 For did not all thy martyrs d. one death ? Poems 238 In twain beneath the ribs : but I d. here Poems 238 And strive and wrestle with thee till I d. Poems 240 I prophesy that I shall d. to-night Poems 244 Of all the western stars, until I d. Poems 267 For such as these ? ' ' But I would d.' Poems 286 I wept, ' Tho' I should d., I know Poems 292 Than once from dread of pain to d. Poems 294 To flatter me that I may d. ? Poems 298 Not simple as a thing that dies Poems 302 When will the hundred summers d. Poems 315 The thick-set hazel dies Poems 349 — dies unheard within his tree Poems 351 For now the Poet cannot d. Poems 351 ' Tho' I should d. to-night ' Poems 356 Every moment dies a man Poems 370, 371 Yet we will not d. forlorn ' Poems 374 And slander, d. Better not be at all Pr. 34 ' Let me d. too,' said Cyril, ' having seen Pr. 40 A license : speak, and let the topic d.' Pr. 65 Howe'er you babble, great deeds cannot d. Pr. 67 But children d. : and let me tell you, girl Pr. 67 O Love, they d. in yon rich sky Pr. 74 To follow up the worthiest till he d. Pr. 98 D. : yet I blame you not so much for fear Pr. 100 A lisping of the innumerous leaf and dies Pr. 107 — either she will d. from want of care Pr. in — the question settled d.' Pr. 123 * She must weep or she will d.' Pr. 136 Till the storm d. ! but had you stood by us Pr. 154 Yet, O my friend, I will not have thee d. Pr. 157 — often she believed that I should d. Pr. 162 Stoop down and seem to kiss me ere I d.' Pr. 165 Sweet dream, be perfect, I shall d. 'to-night Pr. 165 DIED Page DIE. He thinks he was not made to d. In M. v. Dies off at once from bower and hall In M. 10 Or dying, there at least may d. In M. 11 The life that almost dies in me In M. 30 That dies not, but endures with pain In M. 31 Before their time ? They too will d. In M. 47 Once more we sang : « They do not d. In M. 49 Which telling what it is to d. In M. 50 A little patience ere I d. In M. 53 Half-dead to know that I shall d.' In M. 54 Man dies : nor is there hope in dust ' In M. 54 The purple from the distance dies In M. 59 — weave their petty cells and d. In M. 72 Yet in these ears, till hearing dies In M. 82 His other passion wholly dies In M. 87 His inner day can never d. In M. 92 From off my bed the moonlight dies In M. 93 last regret, regret can d. In M. 108 By which we dare to live or d. In M. 120 Their every parting was to d. In M. 145 1 think once more he seems to d. In M. 152 Ring out, wild bells, and let him d. In M. 163 —let the ape and tiger d. hi M. 184 — ready, thou, to d. with him In M. 187 Dear heavenly friend that canst not d. In M. 200 I shall not lose thee, tho' I d. In M. 201 Cheat and be cheated, and d. : who knows ? Ma. 5 — to the hollow and dash myself down and d. Ma. 8 — of Death, and of Honour that cannot d. Ma. 24 I must tell her, or d. Ma. 55 Not d. : but live a life of truest breath Ma. 61 — do accept my madness, and would d. Ma. 61 Would d. ; for sullen-seeming Death may give Ma. 61 Yet so did I let my freshness d. Ma. 64 To faint in his light, and to d. . Ma. 76 It will ring in my heart and my ears till I d. Ma. 87 And comfort her tho' I d. Ma. 93 When thou shalt more than d. Ma. 94 Crack them now for yourself, and howl, and d. Ma. 105 — the shining daffodil dies, and the Charioteer Ma. 111 — old hysterical mock-disease should d.' Ma. 113 Till, not to d. a listener, I arose Ma. 126 Theirs but to do and d. Ma. 168 —two things shalt thou do, or thou shalt d.' 7. K. 32 And cast it on the mixen that it d.' I. K. 36 Far liever by his dear hand had Id. I. K. 49 — if he d., why earth has earth enough I. K. 75 I will not look at wine until I d.' I. K. 81 Henceforward I will rather d. than doubt I. K. 85 And will henceforward rather d. than doubt I. K. 85 Whether to live or d., for many a week I. K. 174 ' I dread me, if I draw it, you will d.' I. K. 174 But he, ' I die already with it : draw /. K. 174 And ridd'n away to d. ? ' So fear'd the King I. K. 177 ' Being so very wilful you must d.' I. K. 188 Went half the night repeating, ' must I die V I.K. 193 He will not love me : how then ? must I d. ? ' I. K. 193 I have gone mad. I love you : let me d.' I. K. 195 -I must d. for want of one bold word ' I. K. 195 Love, if death be sweeter, let me d. I. K. 199 Call, and I follow. I follow ! let me d.' I. K. 200 — on her face, she shrilling ' Let me d. ! ' I. K. 200 1 should but d. the sooner : wherefore cease I. K. 204 Hither, and let me shrive me clean, and d.' /. K. 204 A little ere I d., and close the hand I. K. 205 For some do hold our Arthur cannot d. I. K. 213 Not knowing he should d. a holy man I. K. 222 To help it from the death that cannot d. I. K. 228 I, whose vast pity almost makes me d. I. K. 253 — let me hold my purpose till I d. E. A. 48 — left the living scandal that shall d. E. A. 74 Is wounded to the death that cannot d. E. A. 85 Tod. of? Dead!' E. A. in — 'after many a summer dies the swan E. A. 139 — happy men that have the power to d. E. A. 143 — fairer she, but ah, how soon to d. E. A. 154 No tears of love, but tears that Love can d. Select. 197 DIED round the bulbul as he sung Poems 22 Singing in her song she d. Poems 71 D. the sound of royal cheer Poems 72 She d. : she went to burning flame Poems 109 —to pass to Him that d. for me Poems 139 The dim red morn had d. Poems 152 Many drew swords and d. Pcems 154 ' Myself for such a face had boldly d.' Poems 154 And there he d. : and when I heard my name Pms 156 I d. a Queen. The Roman soldier found Poems 157 Of music left the lips of her that d. Poems 158 To whom the Egyptian : ' 0, you tamely d. Poems 16a DIED Page DIED. — on the mere the wailing- d. away Poems 201 Danced into light, and d. into the shade PoejJis 210 Had once hard words, and parted, and he d. Pms 214 Sir, when William d.. he d. at peace Poems 219 On William, and in harvest time he d. Poems 216 Farewell, like endless welcome, lived andd. Pms 260 ' His face, that two hours since hath d. Poems 300 The twilight d. into the dark Poetfis 321 Or stow'd (when classic Canning d.) Poems 343 The old Earl's daughter d. at my breast Poems 355 Then before her time she d. Poems 361 — the music touch'd the gates and d. Poems 367 When the years have d. away ' Poems 379 — laid about them at their wills and d. Pr. 3 Sits Diotima, teaching him that d. Pr. 70 Would rock the snowy cradle till I d. Pr. 79 Better have d. and spilt our bones in the flood Pr. 102 My dream had never d. or lived again Pr. 137 ' Our Ida has a heart ' — just ere she d. Pr. 148 — shuddering fled from room to room, and d. Pr. 155 That holy Death ere Arthur d. In M. in And He that d. in Holy Land In M. 117 * The dawn, the dawn,' and d. away In M. 142 So many a summer since she d. Ma. 29 Whose old grandfather has lately d. Ma. 36 — d. to live, long as my pulses play Ma. 62 * Poor lad, he d. at Florence Ma. 119 Flying, but, overtaken, d. the death /. K. 55 So d. Earl Doorm by him he counted dead /. K. 84 Applauded, and the spiteful whisper d. •/. K. 96 — child they had : it lived with her : she d. /. K. 131 In silence, while his anger slowly d. /. K. 140 In truth, but one thing now — better have d. /. K. 141 D. from his lips, across him came a cloud /. K. 164 Closest and sweetest, and had d. the death /. K. 192 Then take the little bed on which I d. /. K. 205 — closed the hand upon it, and she d. /. K. 206 Tho' ; had I dreamt the damsel would have d. /. K. 215 1 could not ; this she would not, and she d.' /. K. 216 Sir Lancelot had the noblest ; and he d. /. K. 242 Dwelt with them, till in time their Abbess d. /. K. 261 — that mysterious instinct wholly d. E. A. 29 Surely the man had d. of solitude E. A. 34 — tell my son that I d. blessing him E. A. 48 When you shall see her, tell her that I d. E. A. 48 — dimpling d. into each other E. A. 59 In other scandals that have lived and d. E. A. 74 Remembering her dear Lord who d. for all E. A. 98 (I thought I could have d. to save it) E. A. 103 Swell'd up and d. ; and, as it swell'd, a E. A. 107 — he d., and I could not weep E. A. 123 -God's will that I, too, then could have d. E. A. 123 And when the zoning eve has d. Select. 221 DIEMEN. From England to Van D. Pocjjis 329 DIEST. —shalt thou do, or else thou d. /. K. 31 DIFFER. Or do my peptics d. ? PoejJis 342 For men at most d. as Heaven and earth /. K. 136 DIFFERENCE, reconcilement, pledges Poems 212 When thy peculiar d. Poejns 291 That have as many differences as we Pr. 116 To cleave the rift of d. deeper yet Pr. 122 Not like to like, but like in d. Pr. 172 Ay me, the d. I discern ! In M. 61 — girl and boy, Sir, know their differences' E. A. 65 — heat of d. sparkled out E. A. 87 DIFFERENT. Of d. ages, like twin-sisters Poems 231 —Draws d. threads, and late and soon Poems 297 Round us, each with d. powers Ma. 152 DIFFERENTLY. Twin-sisters d. beautiful Poejns 231 — every minstrel sings it d. /. K. 117 DIFFICULTY. With d. in mild obedience /. K. 51 —days of d. E. A. 14 DIFFUSED the shock thro' all my life In M. 120 Thy God is far d. in noble groves E. A. 85 DIFFUSING. A central warmth d. bliss hi M. 115 DIFFUSIVE. — strength of some d. thought Poejns 175 To feel thee some d. power In M. 201 DIG. To d., pick, open, find and read the /. K. 128 Or builds the house, or digs the grave In M. 56 DILATE. That now d., and now decrease hi M. 45 A joyous to d., as toward the light E. A. 55 DILATED, —half-frighted, with d. eyes /. K. 77 DILATING on the future ; 'everywhere Pr. 38 DILATION, —first her eye with slow d. roll'd Pr. 146 DILETTANTE. The snowy-banded, d. Ma. 33 DIM. In the d. tract of Penuel Poems 14 Gold glittering thro' lamplight d. Poems 20 Wherefore those d. looks of thine Poems 33 —down the river's d. expanse Poems 70 DIPT Page DIM. — is breaking, and my eyes are d. Poems 99 — with d. fretted foreheads all Poems 123 — eyes grown d. with gazing on the Poems 147 The d/red morn had died PoejJis 152 But tho' his eyes are waxing d. Poems 169 You cannot fail but work in hues to d. Poejns 209 Till all the paths were-d. Poems 257 Vext the d. sea : I am become a name Poejns 265 Whose eyes are d. with glorious tears Poejns 296 About him broods the twilight d. PoejJis 301 We sung, tho' every eye was d. In M. 48 My own d. life should teach me this In M. 53 I vex my heart with fancies d. In M. 64 May some d. touch of earthly things hi M. 66 Risest thou thus, d. dawn, again hi M. 99 Is d., or will be d., with weeds In M. 101 But I remain'd, whose hopes were d. In M. 119 Mixt their d. lights, like life and death In M. 142 Risest thou thus, d. dawn, again In M. 149 Thou watchest all things ever d. In M. 187 Thro' his d. water-world ? Ma. 89 Till, in a narrow street and d. Ma. 154 He found an ancient dame in d. brocade /. K. 20 Myself would work eye d., and finger lame /. K. 34 And all the hall was d. with steam of flesh I. K. 77 Thro' the d. land ; and all day long we rode /. K. 115 Thro' the d. land against a rushing wind /. K. 115 Down thro' the d. rich city to the fields /. K. 191 Far up the d. rich city to her kin /. K. 191 Walk your d. cloister, and distribute dole /. K. 260 Perhaps her eye was d., hand tremulous E. A. 14 — the d. meadow toward his treasure-trove E. A. 78 The d. curls kindle into sunny rings E. A. 142 — d. fields about the homes E. A. 143 He saw not far : his eyes were d. E. A. 149 DIM-GRAY. Now and then in the d. dawn Ma. 51 DIMINUTIVES. In babyisms, and dear d. E. A. 79 DIM-LIT. —while he past the d. woods /. K. 238 DIMLY. Like footsteps upon wool. I d. see Poejns 107 — D. I could descry Poems 154 In crescent, d. rain'd about the leaf Poejns 224 How d. character'd and slight In M. 86 High towns on hills were d. seen E. A. 146 DIMM'D. —thro' the cloud that d. her broke Pr. 151 Be d. of sorrow, or sustain'd In M. 118 She knew not, and the sorrow d. her sight / K. 193 DIMMER. The gas-light wavers d. Poejns 340 -d., and a glory done In M. 187 She did but look thro' d. eyes hi M. 194 DIMPLE. Till the lightning laughters d. PoejJis "5 Or d. in the dark of rushy coves Poejns 28 That dimples vour transparent cheek PoejJis 163 DIMPLED. Within the dark and d. beck Poems 88 Laughter d. in his swarthy cheek PoejJis 232 The d. flounce of the sea-furbelow flap E. A. no DIMPLING. — d. died into each other Am E. A. 59 DIM-YELLOW, —fair head in the d. fight /. K. 32 DIN. The wild-bird's d. Poems 42 The dust and d. and steam of town hi M. 130 — when the heart is full of d. hi M. 138 DINE. You'll have no scandal while you d. Ma. 162 To bear his armour ? shall we fast, or d. /. K. 71 DINNER. It seems in after-d. talk PoejJis 86 'Twas but an after-dinner's nap PoejJis 319 Of thirty thousand dinners PoejJis 348 For d., let us go ! ' Pr. 51 A grand political d. Ma. 72, 73 A d. and then a dance • Ma. 73 DINNERLESS. —lusty mowers labouring d. /. K. 59 DINNING. With d. sound my ears are rife Poems 84 DINT. Of every d. a sword had beaten in it /. K. 148 Sharp-smitten with the d. of armed heels Poems 198 DINTED. — crush'd and d. into the ground Ma. 2 DIOTIMA. Sits D., teaching him that died Pr. 70 DIP. W'hile the prime swallow dips his wing PoejJis 235 Upon the teeming harvest, should not d. PoejJis 264 I pledge her, and she comes and dips Poejns 340 Dip fiprward under starry light Poejns 377 The d. of certain strata to the North Pr. 63 Short swallow-flights of song, that d. hi M. 70 D. down upon the northern shore In M. 114 — last d. of the vanishing sail E. A. 14 DIPT down to sea and sands Poems 113 — ere he d. the surface, rose an arm Poems 196 The greensward into greener circles, d. Poejns 208 D. by itself, and we were glad at heart PoejJis 224 The flower she touch'd on d. and rose Poems 230 When I d. into the future far as human eye Pocjjis 269 For I d. into the future, far as human eye Pocjjis 272 DIPT Page anon she shook her Poems 286 Pr. 48 Pr. 75 Pr. 174 In M. 93 In M. 184 /. K. 167 £.^. 55 Poems 330 DIPT. Half-d. in cloud Sparkle for ever; then we d. in all But when we planted level feet, and d. No Angel, but a dearer being, all d. I sleep till dusk is dipt in gray d. in baths of hissing tears Sparkle, until they d. below the downs His hoop to pleasure Edith, with her d. DIRT, —these, tho' fed with careful d. DISAPPEARED, —up the rocky pathway d. /. K. 58 DISAPPEARS, —earth yawns ; the mortal d. Ma. 152 DISARM'D. The proud was half d. of pride In M. 170 Who let him into lodging and d. /. K. 156 DISARRAY'D. Half d. as to her rest, the girl/. K. 28 DISASTROUS, —that d. leaguer, swarms of Pr. 159 Climb thy thick noon, d. day In M. 100 DISBAND himself, and scatter all his /. K. 88 DISCERN. Whose topmost branches can d. Poems 246 — from thy topmost branch d. Poems 249 Long may thy topmost branch d. Poems 251 Spread upwards till thy boughs d. Poems 255 Till a gateway she discerns Poems 359 Ay me, the difference I d. hi M. 61 I wake, and I d the truth In M. 94 DISCERN'D. A pleasure I d. Poems 252 DISCERNING. Well-loved of me, d. to Poems 266 DISCLAIM'D all knowledge of us Pr. 86 DISCLOSED a fruit of pure Hesperian gold Poe?ns 100 DISCOMFORT. For this d. he hath done /. K. 203 DISCONSOLATE, and thro' the dripping E. A. 37 DISCONTENT. She look'd with d. Poems 250 The pulse of hope to d. Poems 310 And muttering d. E. A. 152 DISCORD. Of D. race the rising wind Poems 182 A d. Dragons of the prime In M. 81 — discords dear to the musician E. A. no DISCOURAGED. I grew d. , Sir, but since I Pr. 62 DISCOURSE. In such d. we gaind the garden Pr. 181 DISCOURTESY, —you use some rough d. /. K. 197 This was the one d. that he used /. K. 198 To break her passion, some d. /. K. 215 DISCOVER'D. All precious things, d. late Poems 317 DISCOVERY. For the d. Poems 29 DISCREDIT, —heaven, how much I shall d. /. K. 33 Far liefer than so much d. him ' /. K. 34 DISCURSIVE. Heart-affluence in d. talk In M. 168 DISCUSS. We might d. the Northern sin Ma. 163 DISCUSS'D. — glancing thence, d. the farm Poems 222 D. his tutor, rough to common men Pr. 7 D. a doubt and tost it to and fro Pr. 52 D. the books to love or hate hi M. 131 DISCUSSING how their courtship grew In M. 209 DISCUSSION. That from Discussion's lip Poems 180 DISDAIN. — my d. is my reply Poems 127 A half-d. Pr. n With some surprise and thrice as much d. /. K. 30 Stept with all grace, and not with half-d. /. K. 161 DISDAIN'D. —that she was but half d. /. K. 103 Tolerant of what he half d. , and she /. K. 103 DISEASE. But sickening of a vague d. Poe-ms 128 Ring out old shapes of foul d. In M. 164 Ad,, a hard mechanic ghost Ma. 90 — old hysterical mock-d. should die ' Ma. 113 She like a new d., unknown to men /. K. 252 — dropt dead of heart-d.' E. A. in -' of heart-d. ? What heart had he E. A. in DISEASED, —thought my heart too far d. In M. 92 But ours he swore were all d. E. A. 149 DISEDGE. Together, served a little to d. /. K. 56 DISEMBARK'D. —Breton sands, they d. /. K. 103 DISFAME. —what is Fame in life but half-d. /. K. 117 Right well know I that Fame is haif-d. /. K. 119 DISGRACE. — hidden from the heart's d. Poems 273 Alone might hint of my d. Poems 306 Heap'd on her terms of d. Ma. 86 — why, the greater their d. ! E. A. 71 DISGUISE, —common light of smiles at our d. Pr. 121 DISGUST. —Sir Lancelot leant in half d. /. K. 212 DISH. And thrust the d. before her, crying /. K. 80 DISHELM'D and mute, and motionlessly pale Pr. 141 DISHONOUR. Doing d. to my clay ' Poems 294 Becomes d. to her race Poems 301 His honour rooted in d. stood /. K. 192 DISHONOURABLE. ' Ungenerous, d., base E.A. 66 DISHORSED. Then each, d. and drawing /. A'. 30 DISJOINT. Nor wielded axe d. Poems 256 DISK. With disks and tiars, fed the time Poems 21 Ray round with flames her d. of seed In M. 153 DISLINK'D with shrieks and laughter Pr. 5 90 DISTANT Page DISLINK'D. —she d. herself at once and /. A*. 141 DISLODGING pinnacle and parapet Poems 151 DISLOYAL. — she is woman, whose d. life I. K. 236 The most d. friend in all the world ' I. K. 243 DISMAL. — ever unrelieved by d. tears Poems 124 Came yews, a d. coterie Poems 328 — d. lyrics, prophesying change Pr. 22 Pronounced a d. sentence, meaning by it I. K. 124 D. error ! fearful slaughter ! Select. 39 DISMAY'D. Was there a man d. 1 Ma. 168 DISMEMBER. May never saw d. thee Poems 256 DISMISS me, and I prophesy your plan Pr. 92 Your oath is broken : we d. you : go Pr. 93 DISMISSAL : back again we crost the court Pr. 34 DISMISS'D. — d. in shame to live Pr. 101 DISMOUNTING. Or slew them, and d. like /. K. 50 Thereon Geraint, d., pick'd the lance I. K. 55 His basket, and d. on the sward /. K. 57 D.. loosed the fastenings of his arms /. K. 72 DISOBEY. — harm, undone ? deep harm to d. Pms 194 I needs must d. him for his good I. K. 53 Then not to d. her lord's behest I. K. 69 DISORDERLY the women. Alone I stood Pr. 83 D., as homeward each, the Queen I. K. 217 DISPARAGEMENT, —some prelude of d. Poems 191 Flush'd slightly at the slight d. I. K. 159 With silent smiles of slow d. I. K. 226 DISPASSIONATE. Quiet, d. and cold Poems 37 DISPELL'D. I loved, and love d. the fear Poems 89 DISPENSERS, —drowsy hours, d. of all good Pms 210 DISPENSING harvest, sowing the To-be Pr. xyz DISPERSED his resolution like a cloud I. K. 193 — d., and bent or broke E. A. 21 DISPERSEDLY. It lives d. in many hands I. K. 117 DISPLACED. If this false traitor have d. his I. K. 236 DISPLAY'D a splendid silk of foreign loom I. K. 82 DISPRAISE. — world that are ever hissing d. Ma. 21 In praise and in d. the same Ma. 141 DISPREAD. — locks not wide-d. Poems 7 DISPRINCED. — onerag,d. from head to heel Pr. 108 DISPROOF. To make d. of scorn, and E. A. 74 DISPUTE betwixt myself and mine : but since Pr. 23 In our d. : the sequel of the tale Pr. 178 Or deep d., and graceful jest In M. 116 D. the claims, arrange the chances Ala. 163 DISQUIET. — long d. merged in rest Poems 301 DISROBED. If gazing on divinity d. Poems 104 D. the glimmering statue of Sir Ralph Pr. 183 DISROOTED, what I am is grafted here Pr. 40 Was half-d. from his place and stoop'd Pr. 84 DISRUPTION. — d. in the Table Round /. K. 226 DISSECTING passion. Time will set me right' Pms 233 DISSIPATED. For fear our solid aim be d. Pr. 68 DISSOLUTE. To take a wanton d. boy Ma. 39 DISSOLUTELY. Femininely fair and d. pale/. K. 60 DISSOLUTION. Upon their d., we too rose Pms 261 DISSOLVE. To d. the precious seal on a bond Ma. 66 DISSOLVED, —whole ROUND TABLE is d. Poems 199 D. the riddle of the earth Poems 297 Muttering, d. : then with a smile, that look'd Pr. 101 DISSOLVING. The nerve-d. melody Poems 367 Or in the dark d. human heart Pr. 70 — castles of d. sand E. A. 2 DISSOLVTNGLY and slowly : soon Poems 83 DISTANCE. Which stands in the d. yonder Pms 42 Pome blue peaks in the d. rose Poems 47 At such a d. from his youth in grief Poems 205 Locksley Hall,that in the d. Poems 268 And a song from out the d. Poems 275 Not in vain the d. beacons Poems 283 At d. like a little wood Poems 315 But deals with the other d. and the hues Pr. 78 A trumpet in the d. pealing news Pr. 78 At d. follow'd : so they came : anon Pr. 140 Rose from the d. on her memory Pr. 142 No purple in the d., mystery Pr. 146 — see the sails at d. rise In M. 18 The purple from the d. dies In M. 59 O, from the d. of the abyss In M. 137 The d. takes a lovelier hue In M. 179 That out of d. might ensue In M. 182 At d., ere they settle for the night /. K. 14 At d., were the soldiers wont to hear /. K. 55 DISTANT, —great and d. city— have bought Pms 46 And shallows on a d. shore Poems 73 That lent broad verge to d. lands Poems 113 Her voice seem'd d., and a tear Poems 173 More and more d. She bow'd down her Poems 218 —point thee forward to a d. light Poems 261 DISTANT Page DISTANT. The d. battle flash'd and rung Poetns 295 Saw d. gates of Eden gleam Poems 299 You shadow forth to d. men Poems 352 From slope to slope thro' d. ferns * Pr. 182 A d. dearness in the hill hi M. 90 And caught once more the d. shout In M. 126 With banquet in the d. woods In M. 131 — suck'd from out the d. gloom In M. 141 And maidens with me : d. hills In M. 157 On winding stream or d. sea In M. 179 But d. colour, happy hamlet Ma. 155 And while they listen'd for the d. hunt I. K. 10 And two fair babes, and went to d. lands /. K. 130 Death, like a friend's voice from a d. field I. K. 199 Made answer, sounding like a d. horn I. K. 238 From d. corners of the street they ran E. A. 20 A d. kinship to the gracious blood E. A. 34 — d. blaze of those dull banquets E. A. 76" DISTILL'D from some worm-canker' d homily Pms 62 DISTILLING odours on me as they went Poettis 210 DISTINCT with vivid stars inlaid Poettis 22 D. in individualities Pr. 172 DISTINCTIVE. All that not harms d. Pr. 172 DISTRESS. Of subtle-paced counsel in d. Poems 8 Small thought was there of life's d. Poetns 27 — utterly consumed with sharp cL Poeins 144 Who show'd a token of d. ? In M. 107 No limit to his d. Ma. 104 DISTRESSES. To William: then d. came Poettis 216 DISTRIBUTE, —dim cloister, and d. dole /. K. 260 DISTRUST, —my shyness or my self-d. Poems 233 DISTURB. 'Woman, d. me not now at the last E. A. 48 DISTURB'D me with the doubt, 'ifthis were she' Pr. 85 DISYOKE their necks from custom, and assert Pr. 30 DIME. — supple-sinew'd, they shall d. Poems 282 Or d. below the wells of Death » In M. 167 Where now the seamew pipes or dives In M. 179 DIVED in a hoard of tales that dealt Pr. 2 DIVERS. — still sheets of water, d. woes Poems 151 In d. seasons, d. climes Poettis 323 Shall burst her veil : marsh-d. , rather, maid Pr. 81 To one clear harp_ in d. tones In M. 1 DIVERSE. In d. raiment strange Poettis 119 — d. : could we make her as the man Pr. 172 —two spirits of a d. love I-t M. 1:5 DIVIDE. Saw God d. the night with Poems 159 Two parties still d. the world Poems 228 Eternal form shall still d. In M. 69 D. us not, be with me now In M. 189 — shriek of a mother d. the shuddering night Ma. 3 She seem'd to d. in a dream from a band of Ma. in Divides threefold to show the fruit within Ma. 121, 128 Could^scarce d. it from her foolish dream /. K. 37 DIYIDJtD. Wrote 'Mene, mene,' and d. Poe?7ts 122 D. in a graceful quiet — paused Poet Sick art thou — a d. will Poems 294 I, the d. half of such In M. 121 And then they rode to the d. way I. A". 231 Of shingle, and a walk d. it E. A. 40 Sent like the twelve-d. concubine E. A. 90 DIVIDING. This way and that d. the swift Poems 193 — as we came, the crowd d. clove Pr. 89 DIVIL. —the blessed fealds wi' the Divil's oan E. A. 136 DIVINE. Light-glooming over eyes d. Poems 15 Scarce of earth, nor all d. Poems 33 Her melancholy eyes d. Poems 74 Every lineament d. Poetns 80 She — when young night d. Poems 120 — a wov'n acanthus-wreath d. Poems 148 — all the deep-blue gloom with beams d. Poetns 158 You are not less d. Poe?ns 165 Turning to scorn with lips d. Poems 178 A deeper tale my heart divines Poems 302 The long d. Peneian pass Poems 352 Nor the meaning can d. Poems 360 That my youth was half d. Poems 369 Tears from the depth of some d. despair Pr. 76 Thou seemest human and d. In M. vi The man I held as half-d. In M. 22 To which she links a truth d. I?i M. 52 —all he said of things d. In M. 58 For fear d. Philosophy In M. 75 To count their memories half-d. In M. 133 With what d. affections bold In M. 138 Known and unknown ; human, d. In M. 200 —one far-off d. event hi M. 211 She made me d. amends Ma. 26 Awestricken breaths at a work d. Ma. 37 Frail, but a work d. . Ma. 88 DODGED Page DIVINE. Small, but a work d. Ma. 09 She is not of us, as I d. Touch a spirit among things d Ma. 145 Something d. to warn them of their foes E. A. 99 DIVINELY. And most d. fair Poems 153 A daughter of the gods, d. tall Poems 153 On Argive heights d. sang In M. 40 As some d. gifted man /;.' M. 89 D. , are the kingdom's not the king's /. A'. 150 D. thro' all hindrance finds the man /. K. 104 DIVINEST. Memory' Poems 2d DIVINITY. Saw no d. in grass Poems 36 If gazing on d. disrobed Poetns 104 To lift the woman's fall'n d. Pr. 66 DIVISION, —in d. of the records of the ra'mdIPms 274 D. smoulders hidden ; tis my mother Pr. 58 DIVORCE the Reeling from her mate the Deed Ma. 122 DIVORCED from my experience, will be chaff Pr. 93 DO. Can d. away that ancient he Poetns 13 What is it we can d. for you ? Poems 169 As thou art lief and dear, and d. the thing Poems 194 ' D. with me as you will, but take the child Poems 217 Good people, you d. ill to kneel to me Poems 241 — feelings, fearing the}- should d. me wrong ' Pms 270 — angry fancy : what is that which I should d. Pms 276 — but earnest of the things that they shall d. Pttis 278 — prove me what it is I would not d. * Poetns a£6 He may not d. the thing he would Poems 303 Why not set forth, if I should d. Poettis 307 Who told the ' Winter's tale ' to d. h for us Pr. 13 And my betroth'd. ' You d. us, Prince,' he said Pr. 21 Never to wed. You likewise will d well Pr. 32 What d. you here ? and in this dress ? and Pr. 39 ' Why, Sirs, they d. all this as well as we ' Pr. 49 — we will d. it, unless you send us back Pr. 96 With many thousand matters left to d. Pr. 98 As he that does the thing they dare not d. Pr. 115 What dares not Ida d. that she should prize Pr. 116 We would d. much to gratify your Prince Pr. 118 His mother lives : yet whatsoe'er you d. Pr. 128 I should have had to d. with none but maids Pr. 151 Nor human frailty d. me wrong In M. 74 Peace ; come away : we d. him wrong In M. 82 Sweet soul, d. with me as thou wilt In M. 91 So many worlds, so much to d. Iti M. 101 Whate'er thy hands are set to d. In M. 104 If all your office had to d. In M. 198 She would not d. herself this great wrong Ma. 39 Arsenic, arsenic, sure, would d. it Ma. 106 What long-enduring hearts could d. Ma. 144 There must be other nobler work to d. Ma. 151 Theirs but to d. and die Ma. 168 'These two things shalt thou d., or else thou I. A". 31 -Edyrn answerid, ' these things will I d. I. K. 32 These two things shalt thou d., or thou shalt /. A'. 32 Young as I am, jet would I d. my best ' I. K. 159 Win shall I not, but d. my best to win I. K. 159 ' D. me this grace, my child, to have my shield /. K. 167 Should d. and almost overdo the deeds I. K. 171 But thought to d. while he might yet endure I. K. 173 His prowess was too wondrous. We will d. him I. K. 175 This will I d., dear damsel, for your sake /. K. 197 — if I d. not there is penance given /. A'. 235 Forgives : d. thou for thine own soul the /. A". 253 D. each low office of your holy house I. K. 260 When he was gone — the children — what to d.? E. A . 8 — help you as I wish to d. E. A. 23 To d. the thing he will'd and bore it thro' E. A. 17 Annie — for I am rich and well-to-d. E. A. 18 For I am well-to-d. — no kin, no care £. A. 23 Weakening the man, till he could d. no more E. A. 45 From you and yours for ever — shall you d. £. A. 67 He would not d. it ! her sweet face and faith E. A. 71 Yet dared not stir to d. it E. A. 92 — to saay the things that ad. E. A. 129 He can d. no more wrong E. A. 113 DO AT. That d. upon each other, friends to Poettis 111 A heart that doats on truer charms Poettis 126 DOCK'D. — his gains were d., however small E. A. 96 DOCTOR. By violet-hooded Doctors, elegies Pr. 48 Unmann'd one : then the Doctors ! O to hear Pr. 50 The Doctors I O to watch the thirsty plants Pr. 51 — says d. ; and he would be bound E. A. 115 — who}-, Doctor's abean an' agoan E. A. 128 Doctors, the}- knaws nowt E. A. 129 I weant break rules for D. E. A. 136 Doctor's, a 'cottier, lass E. A. 136 DOCTRINE. Oh, if we held the d. sound In M. 75 DODGED. He d. me with a long and loose E. A. 104 9i DOE Page DOE. Lord Ronald brought a lily-white d. Poems 354 The lily-white d. Lord Ronald had brought Poems 356 — follow'd up by a hundred airy does Pr. 141 DOES. — is sick and knows not what he d. Poems 194 — all she is and d. is awful ; odes Pr. 22 That d. the task assign'd, he kiss'd her face /. K. 190 Sees what his fair bride is and d., and winks /. K. 134 Like one who d. his duty by his own E. A. 19 Seldom, but when he d., Master of all E. A. 58 DOESN. —an' d. bring ma the yaale? E. A. 136 DOEST. Thou d. expectant nature wrong In M. 114 DOETH grievous wrong Select. 37 DOFF'D. Until the grave churchwarden d. Poems 185 — d. his helm : and then there flutter'd in /. K. 77 DOG. I did not hear the d. howl, mother Poems 139 Not less tho' dogs of Faction bay Poems 182 At first like dove and dove, were cat and d. Poems 227 Like a d., he hunts in dreams Poems 274 Something better than his d. Poems 272 About the hall, among his dogs, alone Poems 285 He parted, with great strides among his dogs Pins 286 — barking dogs and crowing cocks Poems 318 —he had breath'd the Proctor's dogs ; and one Pr. 7 And all the dogs ' Pr. 25 — his plough, his cows, his hogs, his dogs Ma. 124 Each growling like a d., when his good bone /. K. 75 My men shall lash you from them like ad. E. A. 68 DOING, —is that ? What are you d. here ? Poems 217 See here, my d. : curves of mountain, bridge Pms 230 'Tis their own d. : this is none of mine Poems 240 D. dishonour to my clay ' Poems 294 With all its doings had and had not been Pr. 104 — d. battle with forgotten ghosts Pr. 131 — mildew'd in their thousands, d. nothing E. A. 71 — what a 's doing a-taakin' o' mea? E. A. 134 DOLE. — with an aged wife, I mete and d. Poems 265 So that day there was d in Astolat /. K. 206 Walk your dim cloister, and distribute d. /. K. 260 DOLEFUL. Lovest thou the d. wind Poems 35 An under-roof of d. gray Poems 47 — they find a music centred in a d. song Poems 149 DOLOROUS. Some d. message knit below In M. 18 Who usherest in the d. hour In M. 99 — hovering o'er the d. strait In M. 117 Utter'd a little tender d. cry /. K. 189 — let the story of her d. voyage /. K. 217 DOME. — were stay'd beneath the d. Poems 20 Upon the mooned domes aloof _ Poems 24 Beneath the satin d. and enter 'd in Pr. 75 — unfamiliar Arno, and the d. Ma. 127 Thro' the d. of the golden cross Ma. 141 DOMED. Tower, as the deep-d. empyrean E. A. 174 DOMESTIC. Many a gallant gay d. Poems 360 The pillars of d. peace In M. 134 DOMINION in the head and breast ' Poems 290 Think I may hold d. sweet Ma. 53 DONE, —hast thou d, great artist Memory Poems 29 Now is d. thy long day's work Poems 49 — and yet His will be d. Poems 138 — it seems to me, that ere this day is d. Poems 141 — dim red morn had died, her journey d. Poems 152 Be d. — to weep or not to weep Poems 173 The game of forfeits cL Poems 189 What good should follow this, if this were d. Pms 194 ' Now see I by thine eyes that this is d. — lived my life, and that which I have d. ' What is it I can have d. to merit this ? Some work of noble note, may yet be d. — d. but earnest of the things that they Of something d., I know not where Falsely, falsely have ye done You men have d. it : how I hate you all Ere half be d. perchance your life may fail Saw that they kept apart, no mischief d. ' You have d. well and like a gentleman Sweet is it to have d. the thing one ought — have you d. but right? you could not slay As ours with Ida: something may be d. A shot, ere half thy draught be d. So kind an office hath been d. So little d., such things to be The world which credits what is d. — dimmer, and a glory d. D. but in thought to your beauty Tho" the state has d. it and thrice as well As it were a duty d. to the tomb Come hither, the dances are d. What is it, that has been d.V — that I deem'd no peace, is over and d. 92 Poems 196 Poems 200 Poems 241 Poems 267 Poems 278 Poems 307 Poems 355 Pr. 8 Pr. 66 Pr. 92 Pr. 102 Pr. no Pr. no Pr. 118 InM. 6 In M. 29 In M. 101 In M. 103 In M. .187 Ma. Ma. 38 Ma. 67 Ma. 79 Ma. 85 Ma 114 DOOR Page DONE. All is over and d. Ma. 140 Such was he : his work is d. Ma. 149 Grateful to Prince Geraint for service d. /. K. 2 D. in your maiden's person to yourself /. K. 12 Avenging this great insult d. the Queen ' /. K. 23 Crave pardon for that insult d. the Queen /. K. 31 ' Remember that great insult d. the Queen ' I. K. 31 That service d. so graciously would bind /. K. 42 Then after all was d. that hand could do /. K. 73 I will do the thing I have not d. /. K. 78 — with what himself had d. so graciously /. K. 79 D. you more wrong : we both have /. K. 85 — most in those who most have d. them ill / K. 92 Edyrn has d. it, weeding all his heart /. K. 93 Once for wrong d. you by confusion, next /. K. 109 —should have d. it : but the beauteous beast /. K. 115 Poor Vivien had not d. to win his trust /. K. 138 Saying, ' I never yet have d. so much /. K. 166 Such service have you d. me, that I make /. K. 194 Alas for me then, my good days are d.' /. K. 196 For this discomfort he hath d.'the house? ' /. K. 203 This many a year have d. despite and wrong /. K. 210 ' You might at least have d. her so much /. K. 215 — ever after, the small violence d. /. K. 227 From evil d. ; right sure am I of that /. K. 235 I cry my silence, and have d. /. K. 235 Her journey d. glanced at him, thought /. K. 246 Of prowess d. redress'd a random wrong /. K. 249 D. it ta-year I mean'd, an'runn'd E. A. 133 I d. my duty by un, as I 'ad. by the lond E. A. 129 I d. my duty by un, as I 'a d. by the lond E A. 131 I d. my duty by Squoire an' I d. my duty E. A. 135 DOOM. — you have miss'd the irreverent d. Poems 350 — lies and dreads his d. She turn'd ; she Pr. 165 — pine in that reverse of d. ' In M. 99 On souls, the lesser lords of d. In M. 174 — batter'd with the shocks of d. In M. 184 While I rose up against my d. In M. 189 -I was cursing them and my d. Ma. 67 I embrace the purpose of God, and the d. Ma. 115 Bellowing victory, bellowing d. Ma. 141 At Enid, where she droopt : his own false d. /. K. 59 — loved him, with that love which was her d. /. K. 161 — bide my d.' So Lancelot got her horse /. K. 231 Pray for him that he 'scape the d. of fire /. K. 243 — weep for her, who drew him to his d. ' /. K. 243 Have err'd not, that I march to meet my d. /. K. 248 The d. of treason and the flaming death /. K. 253 So far, that my d. is, I love thee still /. K. 254 Death, or I know not what mysterious d. /. K. 255 Before her, moving ghostlike to his d. I. K. 256 — in their eyes and faces read his d. E. A. 5 — when his lonely d. E. A. 34 —like the blast of d. E. A. 42 D. upon kings E. A. 89 Announced the coming d. E. A. 97 Our Boanerges with his threats of d. E. A. 109 I d. you to the flame E. A. 163 Roaring out their d. Select. 38 DOOM'D them to the lash Select. 37 DOOMSDAY. She look'd as grand as d. Pr. 25 DOON. Whistling a random bar of Bonny D. Ma. 121 DOOR. The doors upon their hinges creak'd Pms n Old faces glimmer'd thro' the doors Poems 12 The costly doors flung open wide Poems 20 Right to the carven cedarn doors Poems 23 That stand beside my father's d. Poems 28 — no murmur at the d. Poems 45 Close the d., the shutters close Poems 45 Leaving d. and windows wide Poems 45 An image seem'd to pass the d. Poems 76 The very air about the d. Poems 89 As near this d. you sat apart Poems 91 The guilt of blood is at your d. Poems 128 — carried out from the threshold of the d. Poems 137 — shrine doors burst thro' with heated blasts Pins 151 The lawn by some cathedral, thro' the d. Poems 158 — waiteth at the d. Poems 170 And a new face at the d., my friend Poems 170 Once thro' mine own doors Death did pass Poems 172 There strode a stranger to the d. Poems 184, 185 — setting wide the doors, that bar Poems 212 — never more darken my doors Poems 215 The d. was off the latch : they peep'd and Poems 218 — whined in lobbies, tapt at doors Poems 226 Of life — I say, that time is at the doors ' Poems 243 This same grand year is ever at the doors ' Poems 264 -keep within, d. shut, and window barr'd Poems 286 Every d. is barr'd with gold Poems 276 DOOR Page DOOR, —feet that ran, and doors that clapt Poems 318 He lifts me to the golden doors Poems 332 The stalls are void, the doors are wide Poems 334 One fix'd for ever at the d. Poems 345 From many a tavern-d. Poems 347 Bows before him at the d. Poems 360 So stood that same fair creature at the d. Pr. 46 When some one batters at the dovecote-doors Pr. 83 For Psyche's child to cast it from the doors Pr. 86 About the doors, and on a sudden rush'd Pr. 94 "I will go and sit beside the doors Pr. 112 He batter'd at the doors : none came Pr. 124 Thro' open doors of Ida station'd there Pr. 124 ' Fling our doors wide ! all, all, not one Pr. 154 Straight to the doors : to them the doors gave Pr. 154 The long-laid galleries past a hundred doors Pr. 156 To roll the torrent out of dusky doors Pr. 168 -Doors, where my heart was used to beat In M. 9 At earliest morning to the d. In M. 9 Swell out and fail, as if a d. In M. 45 Shall enter in at lowly doors In M. 56 They chatter'd trifles at the d. In M. 95 — crowds that stream from yawning doors In M. 97 Another name was on the d. In M. 127 From out the doors where I was bred In M. 157 Doors, where my heart was used to beat In M. 185 Thou listenest to the closing d. In M. 187 — touch with shade the bridal doors In M. 210 Look, a horse at the d. Ma. 45 — even then I heard her close the d. Ma. 59 Did he stand at the diamond d. Ma. 89 As when they follow'd us from Philip's d. Ma. 126 Thro' open doors and hospitality /. K. 25 Glanced at the doors or gambol'd down the /. K. 36 Their drowze; and either started while the d. /. K. 60 —thought she heard the wild Earl at the d. /. K. 66 Of Arthur's palace : then he found a d. /- K. 132 — eastern tower, and entering barr'd her d. /. K. 148 Will guide me to that palace, to the doors ' /. K. 206 There two stood arm'd, and kept the d. ; to I. K. 212 — pointed to the damsel, and the doors /. K. 213 — people, from the high d. streaming brake /. K. 217 Like to some doubtful noise of creaking doors /. K. 229 There rode an armed warrior to the doors /. K. 246 Thro' the long gallery from the outer doors /. K. 246 Then waiting by the doors the war horse /. K. "2-^z — lo, he sat on horseback at the d. ! /. K. 255 — a moment at an inner d. E. A. 16 At Annie's d. he paused E. A. 25 As lightly as a sick man's chamber-d. E. A. 42 A lily-avenue climbing to the doors E. A. 59 Withdrawing by the counter d. to that E. A. 65 — till he heard the ponderous d. E. A. 68 ' Boy, should I find you by firry doors again E. A. 68 — by month the noise about their doors E. A. 76 — oaken finials till he touch'd the d. E. A. 93 Often they come to the d. E. A. 124 DOOR'D. —rich, now poor, but ever open-d.' /. K. 16 DOORM, whom his shaking vassals call'd /. K. 69 That we may meet the horsemen of Earl D. /. K. 71 Another, flying from the wrath of D. /. K. 73 Then said Earl D. : ' Well, if he be not dead /. K. 74 — at the point of noon the huge Earl D. /. K. 74 One took him for a victim of Earl D. /. K. 73 — bore him to the naked hall of D. /. K. 76 — mingled with the spearmen : and Earl D. /. K. 77 The huge Earl D. with plunder to the hall /. K. 77 — when Earl D. had eaten all he would /. K. 78 So died Earl D. by him he counted dead /. K. 84 I took you for a bandit knight of D. /. K. 87 I come the mouthpiece of our King to D. /. K. 88 — the wan Prince ; ' and lo the powers of D. /. K. 88 DOORWAY. God shut the doorways of his In M. 66 On to the palace-d. sliding, paused /. K. 212 Dawn'd sometime thro' the d. ? E. A. 86 DOOT. Says to thessen naw d. E. A. 135 DORA. William and D. William was his son Pms 214 -look to D. : she is well Poems 214 Now D. felt her uncle's will in all Poems 214 Thought not of D. Poems 214 His daughter D. : take her for your wife Poe?ns 215 I I cannot marry D. : by my life Poetns 215 I will not marry D.' Then the old man Poems 215 And D. promised, being meek Poems 215 But D. bore them meekly Poems 215 But D. stored what little she could save Poems 216 Hard things of D. D. came and said Poems 216 Then D went to Mary Poems 216 And D. took the child and went her way Poems 216 DOUBT Page DORA. So D. cast her eyes upon the ground Poems 217 And D. would have risen and gone to him Poems 217 Dare tell him D. waited with the child Poems 217 Forbid you, D. ? ' D. said again Poems 217 Was not with D. She broke out in praise Poems 218 At Dora's feet. She bow'd upon her hands Poems 218 Then D. went to Mary's house and stood Poems 218 And D. said, ' My uncle took the boy Poems 218 His father's memory ; and take D. back Poems 219 So Mary said, and D. hid her face Poems 219 For D. : take her back ; she loves you well Poems 219 But D. lived unmarried till her death Poems 220 DOT. Look'd one black d. against the verge Poems 201 DOTE. Would d. and pore on yonder cloud In M. 24 DOUBLE. His d. chin, his portly size Poems 85 — in their d. love secure Poems 309 Where on the d. rose-bud droops Poems 324 — then we drank it d. Poe??ts 343 Her maiden babe, a d. April old Pr. 35 Should bear a d. growth of those rare souls Pr. 38 A d. hill ran up his furrowy forks Pr. 63 — d. in and out the boles, and race Pr. 88 Naked, a d. light in air and wave Pr. 166 The d. tides of chariots flow In M. 148 To flicker with his d. tongue In M. 170 Sweet Hesper-Phosphor, d. name In M. 1S8 Of words and wit, the d. health In M. 209 — d. death were widely murmur'd E. A. 83 DOUBLED. — d. his own warmth against her Poems 208 Was wroth, and d. up his hands, and said Poems 215 D. her own, for want of playmates E. A. 55 DOUBLING. — d. all his master's vice of pride /. K. 11 DOUBLY. Desire of nearness d. sweet hi ?J. 162 DOUBT. Roof'd the world with d. and fear Poems 82 The d. my mother would not see Poems 91 In d. and great perplexity Poe??is 124 — rumours of a d. ? but were this kept Poems 194 — all my mind is clouded with ad.) Poems 200 Yet I d. not thro' the ages one increasing Poems 279 Free space for every human d. Poems 293 ' These things are wrapt in d. and dread Poe7?is 301 By which he doubts against the sense 2 Poems 302 There must be answer to his d. Poems 303 The d. would rest, I dare not solve Poems 304 — wrung it. ' D. my word again ! ' he said Pr. 10 We d. not that. O yes, you miss'd us much Pr. 10 ' No d. that we might make it worth his while Pr. 24 Discuss'd a d., and tost it to and fro Pr. 52 ' No d. we seem a kind of monster to you Pr. 69 Disturb'd me with the d., ' if this were she ' Pr. 85 No d., for slight delay, remain'd among us Pr. 91 On a sudden the weird seizure and the d. Pr. 103 -I shook it off: for spite of doubts Pr. 104 Deeper than those weird doubes could reach Pr. 160 -lift thine eyes : my doubts are dead _ Pr. 175 Of your strange doubts : they well might be Pr. 173 A spectral d. which makes me cold In M. 63 turn thee round, resolve the d. In M. 66 Grave doubts and answers here proposed In M. 70 What slender shade of d. may flit In M. 70 Defects of d., and taints of blood In M. 76 Nor can my dream resolve the d. In M. 94 Throughout my frame, till D. and Death hi M. 123 — d. beside the portal waits In M. 138 On doubts that drive the coward back In M. 140 Was cancelTd, stricken thro' with d. In M. 141 There lives more faith in honest d. In M. 143 He fought his doubts and gather'd strength In M. 143 You tell me, d. is Devil-born In M. 143 To seize and throw the doubts of man In M. 168 For can I d., who knew thee keen lit M. 175 1 d. not what thou would'st have been In M. 175 Our dearest faith ; our ghastliest d. In M. 192 No d. vast eddies in the flood In M. 198 No, like a child in d. and fear In M. 193 Maud could be gracious too, no d. Ma. 37 So long, no d., no d. Ma. 91 Mix not memory with d. Ma. 98 Until we d. not that for one so true Ma. 151 For tho' I ride unarm'd, I do not d. /. K. 12 Henceforward I will rather die than d. /. K. 85 And will henceforward rather die than d.' /. K. 85 Of times to be ; nor did he d. herruore /. K. 97 — stanch'd his wound ; and there, in daily d. /. K. 174 I d. not that however changed, you keep /. K. 210 To d. her pureness were to want a heart /. K. 219 To d. her fairness were to want an eye /. K. 219 His vision ; but what d. that he foresaw /. K. 241 Yet lying thus inactive, d. and gloom E. A. 7 93 DOUBT Page DOUBT. — doubt and fears were common E. A. 29 One spiritual d. she did not soothe ? E. A. 87 — a d. will only come for a kiss E. A. 161 — my doubts and fears were all amiss E. A. 161 D. not ye the Gods have answer'd E. A. 170 DOUBTED. I d. whether filial tenderness IK. 43 DOUBTFUL. My far-off d. purpose Poems 107 Tho' sitting girt with d. light Poems 179 Melissa shook her d. curls and thought Pr. 58 I answer'd nothing, d. in myself Pr. 68 A d. smile dwelt like a clouded moon Pr. 150 — moves his d. arms, and feels In M. 20 A d. gleam of solace lives In M. 59 — d. joys the father move In M. 60 Yet turn thee to the d. shore In M. 86 Till now the d. dusk reveal'd In M. 141 Tho' d., felt the flattery, and at times /. K. 103 Like to some d. noise of creaking doors /. K. 229 DOUBTLESS. — d. unto thee is given In M. 61 Where d. he would put me soon to death I. K. 25 A woman and not trusted, d. I /. K. 121 ' O there, great Lord, d.,' Lavaine said, rapt /. K. 162 DOVE. — oft I heard the tender d. Poems 87 Came voices of the well-contented doves Poems 206 Like doves about a dovecotewheeling round Pms 2t.t At first like d. and d. , were cat and dog Poems 227 — a livelier iris changes on the burnish'd d. Poems 269 There sat along the forms, like morning doves Pr. 34 The d. may murmur of the d. , but I Pr. 59 A troop of snowy doves athwart the dusk Pr. 83 The moan of doves in immemorial elms Pr. 169 O somewhere meek unconscious d. lit M. 7 Lo, as a d. when up she springs In M. 18 For ever : then flew in a d. In M. 157 She is coming, my d., my dear Ma. 80 My own d. with the tender eye? Ma. 98 DOVECOTE-DOORS, —batters at the d. Pr. 83 DOWAGERS, —prudes for proctors, d. for Pr. 8 DOWER. Who lent you, love, your mortal d. Pms 163 DOWER'D with the hate of hate Poems 38 DOWN. — are the blissful downs and dales Poems 44 In silk-soft folds, upon yielding d. Poems 79 Half-buried in the Eagle's d. Poems 117 — far inland, and the yellow d. Poems 143 — the spicy downs the yellow Lotos-dust Poems 148 She went by dale, and she went by d. Poems 356 — wild hawk stood with the d. on his beak Poems 379 There leaning deep in broider'd d. we sank Pr. 75 When in the d. I sink my head In M. 94 — rise, O moon, from yonder d. In M. 209 Till over d. and over dale In M. 209 — on the downs a rising fire In M. 209 Down with ambition, avarice, pride Ma. 39 — face of night is fair on the dewy downs Ma. in Close to the ridge of a noble d. Ma. 162 On some wild d. above the windy deep /. K. 127 And there among the solitary downs /. K. 155 O'er these waste downs whereon I lost myself/. K. 159 Sparkle, until they dipt below the downs /. K. 167 Far o'er the long backs of thebushless downs/. K. 168 — o'er the long backs of the bushless downs /. K. 188 — high in heaven behind it a gray down E. A. 1 — cuplike hollow of the down E. A. 1 — leafy lanes behind the d. E. A. 6 Or conies from the d. E. A. 19 By ups and downs, thro' many a grassy glade /. K. 13 — scaling half the weary d. E. A. 21 November dawns and dewy-glooming downs E. A. 33 DOWNCAST. — her eyes were d., not to be Ma. n DOWN-DEEPENING from swoon to swoon Poems 97 DOWN-DROOP'D, in many a floating fold Poems 25 DOWN-DROPT. Eyes not d. nor over bright Pms 7 The streaks of virgin snow. With d. eyes Poems 100 DOWNFALL. I, 'tween the spring and d. Poems 240 DOWN-GLANCING lamed the charger, and /. K. 172 DOWN-LAPSING, —fancies, by d. thought Poems 152 DOWNRIGHT. — a d. honest meaning in her Pr. Z21. DOWN-STREAMING.— sweep of the d. seas E. A. 4 DOWNWARD. Sloped d. to her seat from Poems 99 — some, like a d. smoke Poems 142 — like a d. smoke, the slender stream Poems 142 How sweet it were, hearing the d. stream Poems 146 The d. slope to death Poems 150 Whereto the other with a d. brow Poems 155 Drew d. : but all else of Heaven was pure Poems 206 Pacing with d. eyelids pure Poems 309 Her full black ringlets d. roll'd Poems 316 Dash'd d. in a cataract Poems 319 Tho' if an eye that's d. cast In M. 87 94 DRAW Page DOWNWARD. — d. to the meadow ground /. K. 56 Went faltering sideways d. to her belt /. K. 138 Still d. thinking ' dead or dead to me 1 ' E. A. 38 A d. crescent of her minion mouth E. A. 78 Of twilight slowly d. drawn E. A. 145 DOWRIES. Large d. does the raptured eye Poems 29 DOY. Gin I mun d., I mun d. E. A. 136 —an' gin I mun d. I mun d. E. A. 136 DOZE. Fell in a d. : and half-awake I heard Pms 189 —then to bed, where half in d. I seem'd Pr. 28 Did I hear it half in a d. Ma. 31 In a wakeful d. I sorrow Ma. 97 DOZED. As the pimpernel d. on the lea Ma. 79 Then d. awhile herself, but overtoil'd /. K. 65 -Miriam watch'd and d. at intervals E. A. 49 DOZEN. A d. angry models jetted steam Pr. 5 Give up their parks some d. times a year Pr. 182 —scrapings from a d. years E. A. 100 DOZING. Lay, d. in the vale of Avalon Poems 117 DRAFF. Mere chaff and d., much better Poems 190 DRAG. — his nature will have weight to d. Poems 272 Nor like poor Psyche whom she drags in tow' Pr. 59 Should d. you down, and some great Nemesis Pr. 145 — kills me with myself, and drags me down Pr. 152 D. inward from the Creeps, a wall of night Pr. 159 — seem to keep her up tut d. her down Pr. 171 — onward drags a labouring breast In M. 25 DRAGG'D. By night we d. her to the college Pms 228 Then while I d. my brains for such a song Pr. 82 — madden'd beach d. down by the wave Ma. 14 — so by force they d. him to the King /. K. 126 He d. his eyebrow bushes down, and made /. K. 136 DRAGGING. Grimy nakedness d. his trucks Ma. 36 Of d. do\vn his enemy made them move /. K. 189 DRAGGLED. — a d. mawkin, thou Pr. 108 DRAGON. The golden gorge of dragons Poems 113 Those d. eyes of anger d Eleanor Poe?ns 160 At the D. on the heath ! Poems 369 To catch a d. in a cherry net Pr. 115 A discord. Dragons of the prime In M. 81 Two dragons gilded, sloping down to make /. K. 170 — down his robe the d. writhed in gold /. K. 170 Since to his crown the golden d. clung /. K. 170 The D. of the great Pendragonship /. K. 246, 256 To which for crest the golden d. clung /. K. 256 A gilded d., also for the babes E. A. 30 DRAGON-FLY. ' To-day I saw the d. Poems 289 To join them, glancing like a d. /. K. 10 DRAIN. — a lip to d. thy trouble dry Poems 275 Flaying the roofs and sucking up the drains Pr. 134 — where the kneeling hamlet drains In J/. 14 DRAIN'D. Between his knees, half-d. Poems 314 Ida stood nor spoke, drain'd of her force Pr. 150 — whether love for him have d. In M. 118 — a scheme that had left us flaccid and d. Ma. 3 Of their strong bodies, flowing, d. their /. K. 31 -swathed the hurt that d. her dear lord's /. K. 73 DRANK. We d. the Libyan Sun to sleep Poems 156 The butler d., the steward scrawl'd Poems 319 — then we d. it double Poems 343 Above the empurpled champaign, d. the gale Pr. 60 Nor ever d. the inviolate spring In M. 133 — d., and loyally d. to him Ma. 154 D. till he jested with all ease, and told /. K. 61 — offer'd you it kneeling ; then you d. /. K. 107 Gather'd the blossom that rebloom'd, and d. E. A. 58 Then d. and past it ; till at length the two E. A. 72 D. the large air E. A. 98 — d. his costly wines E. A. 100 — d. himself into his grave E. A. 115 There they d. in cups of emerald E. A. 172 DRAPED. — sculpture d. from head to foot Pr. no DRAPERIES. In shining d., headed like a Pr. 35 DRAUGHT. — delirious draughts of warmest Pms 84 Some d. of Lethe might await Poems 305 From draughts of balmy air Poems 362 To smoothe my pillow, mix the foaming d. Pr. 42 — you might mix his d. with death Pr. 151 A shot, ere half thy d. be done In M. 6 DRAVE. —let her see me fall ! Avith that I d. Pr. 133 D. the long spear a cubit thro' his breast /. K. 50 Push'd from without, d. backward to the /. K. 60 D. with a sudden wind across the deeps /. K. 103 To those he fought with— d. his kith and /. K. 173 — d. her ere her time across the fields / K. 193 DRAW. — the mountain draws it from Poems 42 — d. itself to what it was before Poems 82 The plunging seas d. backward from the Poems 123 To her full height her stately stature draws Poems 154 DRAW Page DRAW. Watch what main-currents d. the Poems 180 'My end draws nigh ; 'tis time that I were Poems 197 — some law that holds in love, and draws Poems 203 Now am I feeble grown ; my end draws nigh Pms 237 I hope my end draws nigh Poems 237 Nay, d., d., d. nigh. So I clutch it Poems 243 Draws different threads, and late and soon Poems 297 — draws the veil from hidden worth Poems 317 D. me, thy bride, a glittering star Poems 332 I ranged too high : what draws me down Poems 345 You d. from, fight : you failing, I abide Pr. 128 Ask me no more : the moon may d. the sea Pr. 157 —the length from languorous hours, and d. Pr. 160 So d. him home to those that mourn In M. 12 — scarce endure to d. the breath In M. 33 The time draws near the birth of Christ In M. 45 D. forth the cheerful day from night In M. 49 Like birds the charming serpent draws In M. 53 D. down /Eonian hills, and sow In M. 54 — holds it sin and shame to d. In M. 70 —tease her till the day draws by In M. 85 Your words have virtue such as draws In M. 118 Began to foam, and we to d. In M. 159 The time draws near the birth of Christ In M. 160 To d., to sheathe, a useless sword In M. 198 — they must go, the time draws on In M. 208 A soul shall d. from out the vast In M. 210 That seems to d.— but it shall not be so Ma. 63 — d. them all along, and flow Ma. 120 She found no rest, and ever fail'd to d. I. K. 29 Down, as the worm draws in the wither'd /. K. 79 Tighten, and then d. back, and let her eyes /. K. 125 ' I dread me, if I d. it, you will die ' /. K. 174 D.' — and Lavaine drew, and that other gave /. K. 174 But he ' I die already with it : d. /. K. 174 Gasping to Sir Lavaine, ' d. the lance-head ' /. K. 174 For I will d. me into sanctuary I. K. 231 Some that she but held off to d. him on E. A. 26 As hunters round a hunted creature d. E. A. 77 D. toward the long frost and longest night E. A. 166 DRAWING into his narrow earthen urn Poems 28 The herald of her triumph, d. nigh Poems 105 To watch the long bright river d. slowly Poems 147 —o'er him, d. it, the winter moon Poems 193 Then spoke King Arthur, d. thicker Poems 196 Newer knowledge, d. nigh Poems 315 From those still heights, and, slowly d. near Poems 368 For now the day was d. on hi M. 115 Then each, dishorsed and d.,Iash'd at each /. K. 30 — d. foul ensample from fair names /. K. 250 DRAWLER. — no sabbath-d. of old saws Poems 62 DRAWN. Thence thro' the garden I was d. Poe?ns 23 That all which thou hast d. of fairest Poems 29 All day and all night it is ever d. Poems 42 D. from each other mellow-deep Poems 81 — loiters, slowly d. Poems 98 D. from the spirit thro' the brain Poems 172 — the dusky highway near and nearer d. Poe?ns 277 But all my heart is d. above Poems 334 With reasons d. from age and state Pr. 125 — their foreheads d. in Roman scowls Pr. 164 — then I know the mist is d. In M. 93 It might have d. from after-heat' hi M. 112 bliss, when all in circle d. In M. 131 The silvery haze of summer d. In M. 139 The boat is d. upon the shore In M. 187 The death-white curtain d. Ma. 51 — whose souls the old serpent long had d. /. K. 79 D. to her waist, and she herself in white /. K. 207 — till d. thro' either chasm E. A. 37 — body that never had d. a breath E. A. 122 Of twilight slowly downward d. E. A. 145 DREAD. Deep d. and loathing of her solitude Pms 122 Than once from d. of pain to die Poems 294 1 These things are wrapt in doubt and d. Poems 301 Cat -footed thro' the town and half in d. Pr. 20 Resmooth to nothing : might I d. that you Pr. 67 Would rather we had never come ! I d. Pr. 87 — dreads his doom. She turn'd : she paused Pr. 165 No inner vileness that we d. ? In M. 73 Sick, am I sick of a jealous d. ? Ma. 36 In that d. sound to the great name Ma. 141 1 rather d. the loss of use than fame /. K. 120 The d. Pendragon, Britain's king of kings /. K. 169 ' I d. me, If I draw it, you will die ' /. K. 174 — the d. sweep of the down-streaming seas E. A. 4 DREADED. — d. most, bare down upon him /, K. 54 DREADFUL. — d. time, d. eternity Poems 124 Portions and parcels of the d. Past Poems 146 DREAM Page DREADFUL, —if some d. need should rise Poems 183 Let this avail, just, d., mighty God Poems 236 Then came these d. words out one by one Pr. 57 — the d. hollow behind the little wood Ala. 1 Of that strange bright and d. thing, a court /. A". 33 Sound on a d. trumpet, summoning her /. K. 66 But as a man to whom a d. loss /. A". 72 As in a d. dream, while Leolin still E. A. 68 DREAM. In sweet dreams softer than Poems 27 Heaven flow'd upon the soul in many dreams Pms 39 All evil dreams of power Poems 40 Before I dreanvd that pleasant d. Poems 87 Breathing like one that hath a weary d. Poems 142 — sweet it was to d. of Father-land Poems 143 Falling asleep in a half-d. ! Poems 146 To d. and d., like yonder amber light Poems 146 As in a d. Dimly I could descry Poems 154 -The captain of my dreams Poems 161 — no two dreams are like Poems 161 -that wondrous track of dreams again '. Poe?ns 161 Make bright our days and light our dreams Pms 178 Black-stoled, black-hooded, like a d. Poems 198 — world dreams of. Wherefore, let thy voice P?ns 200 — after point : till en to dawn, when dreams Poems 201 — verged upon them, sweeter than the d. Poems 205 — sleeping, haply d. her arm is mine Poems 223 The pilot of the darkness and the d. Poems 223 ' Sleep, Ellen Aubrey, sleep, and d. of me Poems 223 What should one give to light on such a d.f Poems 232 Or else I d. — and for so long a time Poems 239 -Should it cross thy dreams Poems 261 ' Yea ! said the voice, ' Thy d. was good Poems 296 — did not d. it was a d. Poems 299 Like a dog, he hunts in dreams Poems 274 Fool, again the d., the fancy ! Poej?is 282 Forget the d. that happens then Poems 306 ' Not with thy dreams. Suffice it thee Poems 307 Like glimpses of forgotten dreams Poems 307 She sleeps, nor dreams, but ever dwells Poems 310 Whose odours haunt my dreams Poems 335 Dreams over lake and lawn, and isies and Poems 366 — as in dreams, I could not Poe?ns 36 > Seven and yet one, like shadows in a d. Pr. ' 13 — truly waking dreams were, more or less Pr. 15 — feel nryself the shadow of a d. Pr. 16 We d. not of him : when we set our hand Pr. 32 My sickness down to happy dreams? are you Pr. 42 Intent on her, who wrapt in glorious dreams Pr. 52 -I myself the shadow of a d. Pr. 64 — had our dreams, perhaps he mixt with them Pr. 66 That will be.' ' Dare we d. of that,' I ask'd Pr. 70 We shudder but to d. our maids should ape Pr. 70 My boyish d. involved and dazzled down Pr. 98 To d. myself the shadow of a d. Pr. 132 Yet it seem'd a d. , 1 dream'd Pr. 132 And Cyril, one. Yea, let me make my d. Pr. 133 The mother makes us most, — and in my d. Pr. 133 I did but shear a feather, and d. and truth Pr. 135 My d. had never died or lived again Pr. 137 — d. thy cause embraced in mine Pr. 146 — lonely listenings to my mutter'd d. Pr. 163 I ask you nothing : only. If a d. Pr. 165 ' If you be, what I think you, some sweet d. Pr. 165 Sweet &, be perfect Pr- 165 —again sighing she spoke : 'Ad. Pr. 173 Like our wild Princess with as wise a d. Pr. 180 Of social wrong : and maybe wildest dreams Pr. 181 So bring him : we have idle dreams In M. 14 I do not suffer in a d. In M. 20 That made me d. I rank'd with him I71 M. 64 What vaster d. can hit the mood In M. 69 So runs my d.: but what am I ? In M. 77 That Nature lends such evil dreams? In M. 78 No more ? A monster then, a d. hi M. 81 Yet feels, as in a pensive d. hi M. 90 Nor can my d. resolve the doubt In M. 94 Nor can I d. of thee as dead In M. 94 Vienna : rather d. that there hi M. 147 Nor d. of human love and truth In M. 1S3 — d. my d., and hold it true In M. 191 Behold, I d. a d. of good In M. 200 What is she now? My dreams are bad Ma. 10 Kept itself warm in the heart of my dreams Ma. 26 Did I d. it an hour ago Ma. 31 Even in dreams to the chink of his pence Ma. 38 — d. of her beauty with tender dread Ma. 54 My d.? do I d. of bliss? Ma. 64 Breaking up my d. of delight Ma. 64 Half in dreams I sorrow after Ma. 96 95 DREAM Page Ma. 98 Ma. in Ma. 112 Ma. 112 Ma. 112 Ma. 128 DREAM. I wake, my d. is fled —to divide in a d. from a band of the blest — look'd, tho' but in a d., upon eyes so fair —but a d., yet it yielded a dear delight — but a d., yet it lighten'd my despair —feels a glimmering strangeness in his d. Tho' all men else their nobler dreams forget Ma. 146 Perchance, to d. you still beside me Ala. 160 To d. she could be guilty of foul act /. K. 7 —in sweet dreams, and dreaming of her love /. K. 9 All overshadow'd by the foolish d. /. K. 36 — scarce divide it from her foolish dream /. K. 37 But Yniol goes, and I full oft shall d. /. A". 40 — ears to hear you even in his dreams ' I. K. 68 Ev'n in the jumbled rubbish of a d. I. K. in — dreams of Fame while woman wakes to love' /. K. 117 — all because you d. they babble of you ' /. K. 129 The tiny-trumpeting gnat can break our d. /. K. 154 A jest, no more ; for, knight, the maiden d. /. K. 158 Sweet father, I behold him in my dreams I. K. 187 Lay naked on the wolfskin, and a d. /. K. 189 An awful d.: for then she seem'd to stand I. K. 229 Too wholly true to d. untruth in thee /. K. 253 Let no man d. but that I love thee still /. K. 254 Let no one d. but that he loves me still /. K. 260 Uncertain as a vision or a d. E. A. 20 Were open to each other ; tho' to d. E. A. 53 As in a dreadful d., while Leolin still E. A. 68 After an angry d. this kindlier glow E. A. 72 — oft from out a despot d. E. A. 78 Had you ill dreams ? ' E. A. 100 ' That was then your d.,' she said E. A. 101 My d. was Life E. A. 103 A trifle makes a d., a trifle breaks' E. A. 103 — you made and broke your dream E. A. 103 That which I ask'd the woman in my d. E. A. 104 -will you hear my d. E. A. 107 In her strange d. she knew not why E. A. 108 Went both to make your d. E. A. 109 — d. awed me -.—well— but what are dreams IE. A. 109 — in a pleasant kind of a d. E. A. 124 A white-hair'd shadow roaming like a d. E. A. 139 Her quiet d. of life this hour may cease E. A. 154 D. in the sliding tides E. A. 154 DREAM'D. Before I d. that pleasant dream Pms 87 D. by a happy man, when the dark East Poems 206 In midst of knowledge, d. not yet Poems 293 I too d., until at last Poems 312 Yet it seem'd a dream, I d. Pr. 132 I d. there would be Spring no more In M. 95 I d. a vision of the dead In M. 157 — her smile were all that I d. Ma. 27 — her smile had all that I d. Ma. 30 He had not d. she was so beautiful /. K. 165 ' And if / d.' said Gawain, ' that you love /. K. 182 —Who d. my knight the greatest knight of all ' I. K. 182 — yet you would not ; but this night I d. I. K. 201 Held her awake : or if she slept, she d. /. K. 229 As never man had d. ; for every knight I. K. 239 Was may time, and as yet no sin was d. ) /. K. 245 ' O yes,' he said, 'Id.' E. A. 100 The broken vision : for I d. that still E. A. 102 Then she told it, having d. E. A. 107 Sphere-music such as that you d. about E. A. 109 DREAMER. — we forward : dreamers both Poems 264 Much less this d. deaf and blind Poems 297 — visions in the Northern dreamer's heavens E. A. 59 DREAMFUL. Into d. slumber lull'd Poems 79 —death, dark death, or d. ease Poems 146 — d. wastes where footless fancies dwell Ma. 62 DREAMING. Shadowy, d. Adeline D., she knew it was a dream A glorious child, d. alone To see you d. — and, behind While, d. on your damask cheek Thro' d. towns I go For pastime, d. of the sky — how should England d. of his sons Lost in sweet dreams, and d. of her love DREAMLESS. Why, if man rot in d. ease Yet sleeps a d. sleep to me Thy fibres net the d. head DREAMT herself was such a faded form I never gazed upon it but I d. Tho', had I d. the damsel would have died DREAMY. All day within the d. house We would call aloud in the d. dells If such a d. touch should fall Poems 33, 34 Poems 75 Poems 79 Poems 312 Poems 312 Poems 335 In M. 92 /. K. vi. /. K. 9 Pms 302 Poems 324 In M. 2 I.K. 35 /. K. 120 /. K. 215 Poems 11 Poems 59 In M. 66 DREAR —full words sank thro' the silence d. Pms 155 DREW Page DREARY. She only said, ' My life is d. Pms 9, 11, 12 She only said, ' The night is d. Poems 10 She only said, ' The day is d. Poems 10 Then said she, ' I am very d. Poems 12 D. gleams about the moorland Poems 268 O the d., d. moorland ! Poems 271 —light of London flaring like a d. dawn Poems 277 — topples round the d. west In M. 25 Still onward winds the d. way In M. 43 Till I saw the d. phantom arise and fly Ma. 113 In caves about the d. bay E. A. 156 DREGS of life, and lees of man Poems 374 DRENCH his dark locks in the gurgling wave Pr. 84 — on these dews that d. the furze In M. 16 Thro' clouds that d. the morning star In M. 100 DRENCH'D. — dark wood-walks d. in dew Poems 153 For I was d. with ooze and torn with briars Pr. 108 So d. it is with tempest, to the sun Pr. 164 DRENCHING dews, or stiff with crackling Poems 240 DRESS. This d. and that by turns you tried Poems 91 ' Bring the d. , and put it on her Poems 361 In the d. that she was wed in Poems 361 ' What do you here ? and in this d. ? and these ? Pr. 39 And d. the victim to the offering up Pr. 81 — fit to flaunt, to d., to dance, to thrum Pr. 101 — you look well too in your woman's d. Pr. 102 -you, put on your worst and meanest d. /. K. 7 — all her foolish fears about the d. /. K. 8 Drest in that d., and how he loved her in it /. K. 8 Late also, wearing neither hunting-d. /. K. 9 (His d. a suit of fray'd magnificence I. K. 16 At this she cast her eyes upon her d. /. K. 33 The d. that now she look'd on to the d. /. K. 33 And Enid fell in longing for a d. /. K. 34 ' Put on your worst and meanest d.,' she found /. K. 45 — all her foolish fears about the d. I. K. 45 Drest in that d., and how he loved her in it /. K. 45 To d. her beautifully and keep her true ' /. K. 47 — they loved them ; and your wretched d. /. K. 63 DRESS'D. — tribe of women, d. in many hues /. K. 77 DRESSES. Nay, the plainness of herd.? Ma. 72 DRESSING their hair with the white Poems 58 By d. it in rags ? Amazed am I /. K. 81 DREST. — come you d. like a village maid Poems 356 ' If I come d. like a village maid Poems 357 Bore to earth her body, d. Poems 361 We rose, and each by other d. with care Pr. 55 'What, if you d. it up poetically ' Pr. 177 D. in that dress, and how he loved her in it /. K. 8 D. in that dress, and how he loved her in it /. K. 45 Than but to dance and sing, be gaily d. Select. 196 DREW. She d. her casement-curtain by Poems 10 Thro' rosy taper fingers d. Poems 73 — rising, from her bosom d. Poems 75 O love, O fire ! once he d. Poems 97 With rosy slender fingers backward d. Poems 105 As half-asleep his breath he d. Poems no — from her lips, as morn from Memnon, d. Poems 120 Many d. swords and died Poems 154 As once they d. into two burning rings Poems 157 D. forth the poison with her balmy breath Poems 161 There d. he forth the brand Excalibur Poems 193 Three times, and d. him under in the Poems 196, 197 O'er both his shoulders d. the languid hands Pms 197 That's nothing ! ' d. a little back Poems 201 — d. your pencil from you, made those eyes Poems 204 D. downward : but all else of Heaven was Poems 206 As never pencil d. Half light, half shade Poems 208 Light pretexts d. me : sometimes a Dutch Poems 210 — pluck'd it out and d. Poems 254 — d., from butts of water on the slope Pr. 4 — when the days d. nigh that I should wed Pr. 17 — paw'd about her sandal. I d. near Pr. 64 —the flood d. : yet I caught her Pr. 84 One reaching forward d. Pr. 84 Part roll'd on the earth and rose again and d. Pr. 132 D. from my neck the painting and the tress Pr. 142 Trail'd himself up on one knee : then he d. Pr. 144 Whence d. you this steel temper? Pr. 148 D. the great night into themselves, and Pr. 159 Thy converse d. us with delight In M. 170 D. in the expression of an eye In M. 173 — talking from the point, he d. him in Ma. 125 As homeward by the church I d. Ma. 134 O voice from which their omens all men d. Ma. 139 Round affrighted Lisbon d. Ma. 143 —up the snowy Splugen d. Ma. 158 The shadow of His loss d. like eclipse I. K. vi. That pleased him best, and d. from those I. K. 55 DREW Page DREW. Sweet lady, never since I first d. /. A". 78 ' And lo, I clothe myself with wisdom,' d. I. A'. 106 — armies waned, for magnet-like she d. I. A". 123 At Camelot, and when the time d. nigh 1. A". 151 Half-envious of the flattering hand, she d. A K. 165 Draw ' — and Lavaine d., and that other gave A A". 174 D. the vast eyelid of an inky cloud A A*. 126 D. near, and sigh'd in passing ' Lancelot A K. 217 — hour, I wonder, now*' and when she d. A A". 233 — weep for her, who d. him to his doom ' A K. 243 I was first of all the kings who d. A K. 249 — as their faces d. together E. A. 5 D. in the dewy meadowy' morning-breath E. A. 36 "What amulet d. her down to that old oak E. A. 77 —the great ridge d. E. A. 108 DRIED. Her tears fell ere the dews were d. Poei?is 9 Till all his juice is d. , and all his joints Poems 223 He d. his wings : like gauze they grew Poems 289 DRIES. The sap d. up, the plant declines Poems 302 DRIFT. Beneath its d. of smoke Poems 245 Thro' scudding drifts the rainy Hyades Poems 265 Sleet of diamond-d. and pearly hail Poems 367 Together in the drifts that pass In M. 165 For the d. of the Maker is dark Ma. 20 Wrapt in drifts of lurid smoke Ma. 99 DRIFTED. These d., stranding on an isle E. A. 30 DRIFTING. — d. up the stream E. A. 102 DRILL. — d. the raw world for the march of Ma. 14.6 DRILY. His dusty forehead d. curl'd Poems 85 DRINK. I d. the cup of a costly death Poems 84 Sucking the damps for d. Poems 239 I cannot rest from travel : I will dL Poems 265 We d. defying tsouble Poems 343 I am old, but let me d. Poems 369 D., and let the parties rave Poems 371 D. we, last, the public fool Poems 372 D. to lofty hopes that cool Poems 372 D. to heavy Ignorance Poe?ns 374 D. to Fortune, drink to Chance Poems 374 D. deep, until the habits of the slave Pr. 34 To d. the cooler air, and mark In M. 130 Will d. to him,whate'er he be In M. 166 Yea, ev'n of wretched meat and d. Ma. 52 — eat with me.' ' D., then,' he answer'd A K. 80 Not eat nor d. ? And wherefore wail for one A K. 81 — d. with me ; and if he rise no more A K. 81 D. therefore, and the wine will change y r our A K. 81 ■ Not so, 'she cried, ' by Heaven, I will not d.A K. 81 Except indeed to d. : no cup had we A K. 107 Or pinch a murderous dust into her d. A AT. 125 Forgot to d. to Lancelot and the Queen A K. 185 DRINKETH. My lips, as sunhghtTd. dew Poems 97 DRINKING. Asd. health to bride and groom In M. 208 Men were d. together Ma. 31 D. and talking of me Ma. 31 DRINKING-SONGS. —Love, like men in d. Ma. 61 DRIP sweeter dews than traitor's tear Poems 50 When the rotten woodland drips Poems 369 The red-ribb'd ledges d. with a silent horror Ma. 1 DRIPPING with Sabaean spice Poems 35 The dark round of the d. wheel Poems 89 — thro' the d. haze E. A. 37 DRIVE, -^-drives them to the deep' Poems 121 D. men in manhood, as in youth Poems 182 — shoals of pucker'd faces d. In M. 97 On doubts that d. the coward back In M. 140 Is enough to d. one mad Ma. 103 What drives about the fresh Cascine Ma. 156 Together, and said to her, ' D. them on A K. 31, 55 In use of arms and manhood, till we d. A K. 150 DRIVEN, morning d. her plow of pearl Poe?ns 261 Their plumes d. backward by' the wind they A AT. 172 DRIVETH. Time d. onward fast Poems 146 DRIVING, —gilds the d. hail Poems 335 D., hurrying, marrying, burying Ma. 102 D. them on : he fain had spoken to her A K. 51 Or in the noon of mist and d. rain A K. 126 DRIZZLE. Thicker the d. grew E. A. 37 (A bill of sale gieam'd thro' the d.) E. A. 38 DRIZZLING, —ghastly thro' the d. rain In M. 9 DRONE. — humming of the drowsy pulpit-d. Poems 62 DROOP. Fair-fronted Truth shall d, not now Poems 13 I cannot veil, or d. my sight Poems 82 Droops both his wings, regarding thee Poe?ns 83 Droops blinded with his shining eye Poe?ns 97 The purple flowers d. : the golden bee Poems 99 Droops the heavy-blossom'd bower Pvems 281 Here droops the banner on the tower Poems 313 D. sleepily : no sound is made Poems 314 7 DROVE Page DROOP. — on the double rosebud droops Poems 324 —droops the milk-white peacock like a ghost Pr. itj D. from his mighty shoulder, as a leaf A A". 106 Began to d., to fall E. A. 94 DROOP'D. Down-d., in many a floating fold P?ns 25 D. from Ins shoulder, but his sunny hair Poems 100 From one hand d. a crocus Poems 117 So she d. and d. before him Poems 361 The lily-like Melissa d. her brows Pr. £3 High in the hall : above her d. a lamp Pr. 88 — how my life had d. of late In M. 22 DROOPING. While his locks a-d. twined Poems 35 The d. flower of knowledge changed to fruit Pms 259 — d. chestnut-buds began Poems 362 Till thy d. courage rise Poems 372 Half-d. from her, turn'd her face Pr. 93 — thro' her limbs a d. languor wept Pr. 150 My d. memory- will not shun hi M. 2c 8 A damsel d. in a corner of it A K. 78 D., ' I pray you of your courtesy A K. 79 Low-d. till he well nigh kiss'd her feet A K. 208 Cast his strong arms about his d. wife E. A. 13 — d. crown of plumes E.A. 32 DROOPT. — harm'd not : then day d. ; the Pr. 53 At Enid, where she d. : his own false doom \I. K. 59 D. in the giant-factoried city-gloom E. A. 96 DROP. — o'er black brows drops down Poems 16 There will not be a d. of rain Poe?ns 132 — dew'd with showery drops Poems 142 Drops in a silent autumn night Poems 145 As thunder-drops fall on a sleeping sea Poems 155 — greaves and cuisses dash'd with drops Poems 199 — the last d. in the cup of gall Poems 227 — all my limbs d. piecemeal from the stone Poems 237 All starry culmination d. Poems 256 Than modern poultry d. Poems 344 — drops at Glory's temple-gates Poems 351 To d. thy foolish tears upon my grave Poems 376 — the lark drops down at his feet Poe?ns 379 Till the Sun d. dead from the signs ' Pr. 170 Thro' glittering drops on her sad friend Pr. 151 Drops in his vast and wandering grave In M. 6 — balmy drops in summer dark In M. 28 To d. head-foremost in the jaws I?i M. 53 1 The cheeks d. in ; the body bows In M. 54 As d. by d. the water falls In M. 83 — every dew-d. paints a bow In M. 190 —jewels than the sward with drops of dew A K. £2 DROPP'D. Her eyelids d. their silken eaves P?ns 254 DROPPING. Some d. low their crimson bells Pms 21 — slowly d. fragrant dew Poems 102 Slow-d. veils of" thinnest lawn Poems 142 — d. bitter tears against his brow Poevis 198 — d. down with costiyr bales Poems 278 Of Autumn, d. fruits of power : and roll'd Pr. 139 — roar from y r onder d. da}- In M. 24 D. the too rough H in Hell and Heaven E. A. 106 The swamp, where hums the d. snipe Select. 220 DROPPING-WELLS. Laburnums, d. of fire In M. 114 DROPT. Eyes not down-d. nor over bright Poems 7 With half-d. eyelids still Poems 147 I read, before my eyelids d. their shade Poems 150 D. on the letters as I wrote Poems 173 She d. the goose, and caught the pelf Poems 184 — d. the branch she held, and turning Poems 209 — my teeth, which now are d. away Poe?ns 237 D. dews upon her golden head * Poe??is 254 — d. before him. So the Powers, who wait Poe?ns 287 D. her head in the maiden's hand Poevis 336 — d. a fairy- parachute and past Pr. ""5 Like threaded spiders.one by one, we d. Pr. 20 Two plummets d, for one to sound the abyss Pr. 38 D. thro' the ambrosial gloom to where below Pr. 75 D. on the sward, and up the linden walks Pr. 85 — down the streaming crystal d. Pr. 166 Nor find him d. upon the firths of ice Pr. 168 — d. the dust on tearless eyes In M. 111 D. off gorged from a scheme that had left us Ma. 3 — d. dead of heart-disease ' E. A. in Nor anchor d. at eve cr morn E. A. 149 Down they 7 cL — no word was spoken Select. 39 DROPW1SE. — gather "d trickling d. from the A K. 107 DROSS. — and scurf of salt and scum of d. Poems 374 DROUGHT. On stony d. and steaming salt Poems 74 DROUTH. I look'd athwart the burning d. Poems 96 My one Oasis in the dust and d. Poems 230 — dust and d. of London life Poems 235 DROVE. The low and bloomed foliage, d. Poems 19 -I watch the darkening droves of swine Poems 121 97 DROVE Page DROVE. His own thought d. him like a Poems 197 — d. his heel into the srrioulder'd log Poems 201 — fear of change at home, that d. him hence Poems 227 That d. her foes with slaughter from her Pr. 7 On glassy water d. his cheek in lines Pr. 21 Mid-channel. Right on this we d. Pr. 84 — d. us, last, to quite a solemn close Pr. 178 — gold of the ruin'd woodlands d. thro' the air Ma. 2 Before you ; ' and she d. them thro' the waste /. K. 51 Before you,' and she d. them thro' the wood /. K. 55 He d. the dust against her veilless eyes /. K. 73 Not one of all the d. should touch me /. K. 130 — d. him into wastes and solitudes /. K. x6o — d. her under moonless heavens E. A. 30 The horse he d., the boat he sold, the chill E. A. 33 Haunted and harass'd him, and d. him forth E. A. 39 — with a sudden execration d. E. A. 68 D. in upon the student once or twice E. A. 75 Across the boundless east we d. E. A. 146 — whence were those that d. the sail E. A. 149 In haste they d., and honey-hearted wine E. A. 177 DROWN. Whose muffled motions blindly d. In M. 71 —fulsome Pleasure clog him and d. Ma. 53 — burst and d. with deluging storms Ma. 87 Might d. all life in the eye Ma. 92 DROWN'D the whoopings of the owl with Poems 237 — part were d. within the whirling brook Pr. 3 — the glens are d. in azure gloom Pr. 101 — tall columns d. Pr. 155 Let Love clasp Grief lest both be d. In M. 1 Was d. in passing thro' the ford In M. 8 — d. in yonder living blue In M. 179 — a slumber in which all spleenful folly was d. Ma. 13 Would she had d. me in it, where'er it be ! /. K. 221 DROWNING. A d. life, besotted in sweet self Pr. 174 I brim with sorrow d. song In M. 32 Are tender over d. flies In M. 143 DROWSE, —prudence, dearest, d., or prove Pr. 46 DROWSY. — humming of the d. pulpit-drone Pms 62 — heavy clocks knolling the d. hours Poems 210 The d. hours, dispensers of all good Poems 210 The d. folds of our great ensign shake Pr. 107 Dear heart, I feel with thee the d. spell Ma. 62 And shook his d. squire awake and cried /. K. 7 DROWZE. Their d. ; and either started /. K. 60 DRUG thy memories, lest thou learn it Poems 274 But he : ' What d. can make Poems 291 D. down the blindfold sense of wrong In M. 98 DRUID. Each was like a D. rock Pr. 89 — altar of the D. and Druidess E. A. 169 DRUIDESS. —altar of the Druid and D. E. A. 169 DRUM. The murmurs of the d. and fife Poems 254 Till the war-d. throbb'd no longer Poems 278 Thy voice is heard thro' rolling drums Pr. 105 — yell'd : they clash'd their arms : the d. Pr. 119 —to the roll of muffled drums Ma. 142 Lady, let the rolling drums Select. 207 DRUMMING. The d. thunder of the huger /. K. 55 DRUNK. — d. delight of battle with my peers Pms 265 Ah sweeter to be d. with loss In M. 1 D. even when he woo'd ; and be he dead /. K. 24 DRUNKARD. The drunkard's football Pr. 101 Shaking a little like a drunkard's hand E. A. 26 DRUNKEN. — pointing to his d. sleep Poems 275 As dash'd about the d. leaves Poems 328 She kept her state, and left the d. king Pr. 66 Before I well have d., scarce can eat /. K. 80 DRY. Then all the d. pied things that be Poems 62 At eve a d. cicala sung Poems 76 Is d. and dewless. Let us go Poems 95 In my d. brain my spirit soon Poems 97 Or the d. thickets, I could meet with her Poems 106 When from the d. dark wold the summer Poems 135 Cold February loved, is d. Poems 166 Lie still, d. dust, secure of change Poems 174 Keep d. their light from tears Poems 178 — moist and d., devising long Poems 180 That whistled stiff and d. about the marge Poems 193 D. clash'd his harness in the icy caves Poems 198 — a lip to drain thy trouble d. Poems 275 — my passion sweeping thro' me left me d. Poems 279 Who sweep the crossings, wet or d. Poems 341 A little d. old man, without a star Pr. 21 D. flame, she listening : after sank and sank Pr. 146 Be near me when my faith is d. In M. 72 — with long use her tears are d. In M. 108 For underfoot the herb was d. In M. 139 From household fountains never d. In M. 168 His weary daylong chirping, like the d. Ma. 120 DUPE Page DRY. Full cold my greeting was and d. Ma. 132 I found, tho' crush'd to hard and d. Ma. 159 Beyond a bridge that spann'd a d. ravine /. K. 14 Across the bridge that spann'd the d. ravine /. K. 16 — cells and chambers rail were fair and d. /. K. 168 Fire in d. stubble a nine days' wonder flared I. K. 185 —when most his heart was d. E. A. 106 D. sang the tackle, sang the sail E. A. 145 DRYAD-LIKE. She, D., shall wear Poems 257 DRY-TONGUED. — d. laurels' pattering talk Ma. 58 DUBBUT looak at the waaste E. A 133 DUBRIC. For by the hands of D., the high /. K. 45 — oft I talk'd with D. , the high saint /. K. 91 DUCAL. — walks in Boboli's d. bowers Ma. 156 DUCT. Before the little ducts began Poems 304 DUE. — with question unto whom Twere d. Poems 101 Storing yearly little dues of wheat Poems 149 — clothes the father with a dearness not his d. Pms 275 So many years from his d.' Poems 355 The poplars, in long order d. Poems 327 Meanwhile, what every woman counts her d. Pr. 67 Up in one night and d. to sudden sun Pr. 90 As dues of Nature. To our point : not war Pr. 117 To one deep chamber shut from sound, and d. Pr. 156 Why should they miss their yearly d. — render human love his dues Which else were fruitless of their d. There in d. time the woodbine blows Who but claims her as his d. Tho' I fancy her sweetness only d. Who give the Fiend himself his d. Obedience is the courtesy d. to kings ' — an's toithe were d., an' I gied it in hond DUER. Is d. unto freedom, force and growth Pr. 81 DUG. — iron d. from central gloom In M. 184 Were feeble, so that falling prone he d. E. A. 43 DUGLAS. Of D. ; that on Bassa ; then the war /. K. 162 DUKE. Bury the great D. Ma. 137 Truth-lover was our English D. Ma. 148 Of Lancelot in his glory : king, d., earl /. K. 171 DULL. — deem'd no mist of earth could d. Poems orj He spake of beauty : that the d. Poems 36 You never would hear it : your ears are so d. Pros 42 A spot of d. stagnation, without light Poems 123 — mouldering with the d. earth's mouldering Poems 124 That d. cold-blooded Caesar Poems 156 With what d. pain Poems 161 ' Weep, weeping dulls the inward pain ' Poems 172 Courage, St. Simeon ! This d. chrysalis Poems 241 How d. it is to pause, to make an end ' O d. one-sided voice,' said I The d. and bitter voice was gone Like d. narcotics, numbing pain Touch thy d. goal of joyless gray — day comes, a d. red ball As on a d. day in an Ocean cave D. days were those, till our good Arthur — after heaven, on our d. side of death — d. the voyage was with long delays At evening when the d. November day — d. and self-involved On whose d. sameness his full tide of youth E. A. — distant blaze of those d. banquets E. A. DULL'D. — d. the murmur on thy lip In M. DULLER. — something d. than at first Poems 345 Was growing d. twilight E. A. 39 DULLY. — she seem'd to hear the d. sound Poems 124 DULY. She will order all things d. Poems 359 DUMB. — the far-off stream is d. Poems 17 — in a little while our lips are d. Poems 146 — no motion in the d. dead air Poems 153 The streets are d. with snow Poems 335 Thro' lands where not a leaf was d. In M. 39 — lo, thy deepest lays are d. hi M. 105 Was love's d. cry defying change In M. 140 D. is that tower which spake so loud In M. 209 Then I cannot be wholly d. Ma. 108 Then came an old, d. , myriad-wrinkled man /. K. 156 — therefore let our d. old man alone /. K. 206 Then rose the d. old servitor, and the dead /. K. 207 Steer'd by the d. went upward with the flood /. K. 207 Loyal, the d. old servitor, on deck /. K. 207 DUMBLY. A wretched insult on you, d. speaks /. K. 63 DUN. When the long d. wolds are ribb'd Poems 53 DUNDAGIL. Of dark D. by the Cornish sea /. K. 240 DUNGEON. Of battle, bold adventure, d. E. A. 56 DUNGHILL. Upon an ampler d. trod Poems 344 DUOMO. Of tower or d., sunny-sweet Ma. 156 DUPE. Christ the bait to trap his d. and fool E. A. 106 In M. 47 hi M. 57 In M. 67 In M. 161 Ma. 71 Ma. 48 Ma. 161 /. K. 184 E. A. 129 Poems 266 Poems 298 Poems 309 In M. 5 In M. 100 Ma. 99 /. K. 105 /. K. -Lte I. K. 219 E.A. 36 E.A. 39 E.A. 57 76 37 DUSK "Page DUSK. Little breezes d. and shiver Poems 65 Beam'd thro' the thicken'd cedar in the d. Poems 209 — we as rich as moths from d. cocoons Pr. 30 A troop of snowy doves athwart the d. Pr. 83 — in the d. of thee the clock In M. 2 I sleep till d. is dipt in gray In 31. 93 Of this flat lawn with d. and bright In 31. 130 That haunt the d. , with ermine capes In 31. 139 Till now the doubtful d. reveal'd hi 31. 141 DUSKY. — the d. brushwood underneath Poems 152 Then slw they how there hove a d. barge Poems 198 Brought out a d. loaf that smelt of home Poems 222 — the d. highway near and nearer drawn Poems 277 — she shall rear my d. race Poems 282 Rose gem-like up before the d. groves Pr. 5 To roll the torrent out of d. doors Pr. 168 ' The d. strand of Death inwoven here 31a. 62 Now here, now there, about the d. hall I. A'. 22 Her fancy dwelling in this d. hall I. K. 43 She bare me, pacing on the d. mere I. K. 221 Of her own halo's d. shield E. A. 146 DUSKY-RAFTER'D. The d. many-cobweb'd /. K. 20 DUST. For tho' the faults were thick as d. Poems vi. Two handfuls of white d., shut in an urn Poems 146 —the yellow Lotos-d. is blown Poems 148 I kney 3-our brother : his mute d. Poems 172 Lie still, dry d., secure of change Poems 174 — were parch'd with d. Poems 199 The pillar*d d. of sounding sycamores Poems 221 My one Oasis in the d. and drouth Poems 230 — d. and drouth of London life Poems 235 — may carve a shrine about my d. Poems 243 With anthers and with d. Poems 252 Mere highway d. ? Poei?is 258 The right ear, that is fill'd with d. Poems 294 When, soil'd with noble d., he hears Poe?;is 296 A d. of S}-stems and of creeds Poems 299 Is a clot of warmer d. Poems 370 Are but d. that rises up Poems 371, 373 — vex the unhappy d. thou wouldstnot save Poems 376 — fretted all to d. 'and bitterness ' Pr. 150 Thou wilt not leave us in the d. In M. v. The d. of him I shall not see In 31. 29 Ye never knew the sacred d. In 31. 36 And d. and ashes all that is In 31. 53 The d. of continents to be In 31. 54 Man dies : nor is there hope in d. ' In M. 54 And Time, a maniac scattering d. hi 31. 72 And gather d. and chaff, and call hi 31. 79 Be blown about the desert d. In 31. 81 Of men and minds, the d. of change In 31. 98 To stir a little d. of praise hi 31. 103 And dropt the d. on tearless eyes In 31. in The d. and din and steam of town In 31. 130 Our father's d. is left alone In 31. 161 The life re-orient out of d. In M. 181 That we may lift from out of d. In M. 202 — and die :who knows? we are ashes and d. Ma. 5 Spice his fair banquet with the d. of death ? Ma. 61 My d. would hear her and beat 31a. 81 That sting each other here in the d. Ma. 87 — my heart is a handful of d. Ala. 102 Till public wrong be crumbled into d. Ma. 146 Ashes to ashes, d. to d. Ma. 152 D., and the points of lances bicker in it /. K. 69 Her finger up, and pointed to the d. I. K. 69 He drove the d. against her veilless eyes I. K. 73 Foot-gill with all the blossom-d. of those /. K. 108 Or pinch a murderous d. into her drink /. K. 123 Low in the d. of half-forgotten kings I. K. 217 — he knew the Prince tho' marr'd with d. I. K. 227 —the working bee in blossom-d. _ E. A. 21 D. are our frames ; and, gilded d., our pride i?. A. 51 Raking in that millenial touchwood-d. E. A. 77 Of d. and deskwork E. A. 100 DUSTED. Our d. velvets have much need Poems 62 DUSTY. And silent in its d. vines Poe/ns 73 His d. forehead drily curl'd Poems 85 And fall'n into the d. crypt Poems 346 Sun-shaded in the heat of d. fights) Pr. 41 And d. purlieus of the law In M. 130 Who smitten by the d. sloping beam /. K. 14 Lightly, to think of Modred's d. fall I. K. 228 DUSTY-WHiTE. The river-bed was d. Poems 75 DUTCH. — drew me : somerimes a D. love' Poems 210 DUTIES. Of common d., decent not to fail Poems 266 To all d. of her rank Poems 360 Its range of d. to the appointed hour Pr. 63 DUTY. Yet, for a man may fail in d. twice Poems 195 7 * DWELT Page DUTY. I must be taught my d., and by you Poems 217 To warn us off, and D. loved of Love Poe??is 259 — it is thy d. : kiss him : take his hand in thine P??is 272 hard, when love and d. clash ! I fear Pr. 44 My brother ! it was d. spoke, not I Pr. 45 And d., d., clear of consequences Pr. 62 And she replied, her d. was to speak Pr. 62 That love their voices more than d., learn Pr. 101 Some sense of d., something of a faith Pr. 180 As it were a d. done to the tomb 31a. 67 — one that sought but Duty's iron crown Ma. 144 The path of d. was the way to glory Ma. 148, 149 — find the toppling crags of D. scaled Ma. 149 1 charge 3 r ou, on your d. as a wife I. K. 46 It was my d. to have loved the highest I. K. 259 Like one who does his d. by his own E. A. 19 Swerve from her d. to herself and us E. A. 67 I done my d. by un, E. A. 129 I done my d. by un as I 'a done by the lond E. A. 131 — my d. by Squoire, an' I done my d. by all E. A. 133 DWARF. Dwarfs of the gynaeceum, fail so far Pr. 69 The dwarfs of presage Pr. 97 Made sharply to the d., and ask'd it of him I. K. 11 Whereof the d. lagg'd latest, and the knight I. K. 10 Full slowly by a knight, lady, and d. I. K. 10 Her maiden to demand it of the d. I. K. 11 ' Nay by my faith, thou shalt not, "cried the d.I. K. 11 His d.. a vicious under-shapen thing I. K. 22 First, thou thyself, thy lady, and thy d. I. K. 31 That dwarfs the petty love of one to one 7". K. 119 DWARF'D. Together, d. or godlike, bond or Pr. 171 How d. a growth of cold and hi 31. 86 DWARFISH. From Gama's d. loins Pr. 133 DWARFLIKE. A d. Cato cower'd Pr. 164 DWELL. Here no longer d. Poems 46 His light upon the letter dwells Poems 93 May those kind eyes for ever d. ! Poems 94 My Gods, with whom I d. ! Poems 121 — others in Elysian valleys d. Poems 149 It comforts me in this one thought to d. . Poe?ns 160 Where thou may'st warble, eat,' and d. Poems 166 And dwells in heaven half the night Poei?is 173 — eyes, love-languid thro' half-tears, would d. Pms 259 She sleeps, nor dreams, but ever dwells Poetns 316 Where the wealthy nobles d.' Poems 359 Of Agrippina. D. with these and lose Pr. 33 But more of reverence in us d. hi 31. vi. The faith, the vigour, bold to d. In 31. 140 And dwells not in the light alone In M. 144 She dwells on him with faithful eyes In M. 146 But in my spirit will I d. In M. 191 So dark a mind within me dwells 31a. 52 — dreamful wastes where footless fancies d. Ma. 62 And overcome it, and in me there dwells /. K. 170 As when we d. upon a word we know I. K. 200 Why did the King d. on my name to me ? I. K. 220 I must not d. on that defeat of fame I. K. 257 Nor shun to call me sister, d. with you I. K. 260 — d. in presence of immortal 3-outh E. A. 140 — there— there— they d. no more E. A. -l-,-2 DWELLETH. The clear-voiced mavis d. Poems 4 DWELLING. Unto the d. she must sway Poems 29 D. amid these 3 r ellowing bowers Poevis 31 How mend the dwellings, of the poor Ma. 163 To please her, d. on his boundless love I. K. 4 Her fancy d. in this dusky hall I. K. 43 For Philip's d. fronted on the street E. A. 40 DWELT. The fable of the city where we d. Pvis 203 — the full day d. on her brows, and sunn'd Poevis 208 — keep me from that Eden where she d. Poe?ns 210 May not be d. on by the common day Poems 213 But when I d. upon your old affiance Pr. 61 There d. an iron nature in the grain Pr. 139 — into mournful twilight mellowing, d. Pr. 146 A doubtful smile d. like a clouded moon Pr. 150 D. in her eyes, and softer all her shape Pr. 164 To see the rooms in which he d. hi 31. T26 These two — the}- d. with eye on eye hi M. 145 Methought I d. within a hall hi 31. 157 Lifted her eyes, and they d. languidly I. K. 151 — bonds or death, and d. among the woods I- K. 161 His own far blood, which d. at Camelot I. K. 189 Yet larger thro' his leanness, d. upon her I. K. 190 As happy as when we d. among the woods I. K. 201 So d. the father on her face and thought I. K. 201 D. with them, till in time their Abbess died I. K. 261 — d. a moment on his kindly face E. A. 18 — she d. upon his latest words E. A. 25 Her hand d. lingeringly on the latch E. A. 29 99 DWELT Page DWELT. D. with eternal summer, ill-content E. A. 31 — best and brightest, when they d. on hers E. A. 54 There they d. and there they rioted E. A. 172 DWINDLE. Thou shalt wax and he shall d. E. A. 171 DWINDLED. — d. down to some odd games Pms 189 DWINDLING. — daily-d. profits E. A. 38 DYEING it ; and his quick, instinctive hand /. K. 12 DYING. Adown it floated a d. swan Poems 47 I would be d. evermore Poems 84 So d. ever, Eleanore Poems 84 Die, d. clasp'd in his embrace Poeyns 97 The d. Islamite, with hands and eyes Poems 117 Crown'd d. day with stars Poems 120 - — he's d. all for love, but that can never be Poems 131 For the old year lies a-d. Poems 168 Authority forgets a d. King Poems 195 —the d. ebb that faintly lipp'd Poems 221 Where the d. night-lamp flickers Poems 274 — nods and winks behind a slowly-d. fire Poems 279 Then d. of a mortal stroke Poems 296 — deep into the d. day Poems 320 When Ellen Adair was d. for me Poems 337 D., that none of all our blood should know Pr. 15 He, d. lately, left her as I hear Pr. 19 Come from the d. moon and blow Pr. 54 EAR Page DYING. Blow, bugle ; answer, echoes, d., d., d. Pr. 74 And answer, echoes, answer, d., d., d. Pr. 74 To d. ears, when unto d. eyes Pr. 77 Than growing boys their manhood : d. lips Pr. 98 And murmurs from the d. sun In M. 3 —or d., there at least may die hi M. 11 To d. lips is all he said) In M. 58 Half-conscious of their d. clay In M. 83 O hollow wraith of d. fame hi M. 101 That could the dead,whose d. eyes hi M. 133 Has broke the bond of d. use In M. 161 The year is d. in the night hi M. 163 Ring out a slowly d. cause ' In M. 163 As d. Nature's earth and lime In M. 183 In d. songs a dead regret hi M. 204 That I felt she was slowly d. Ma. 65 Hung over her d. bed Ma. 66 D. abroad and it seems apart Ma. 66 When he lay d. there Ma. 92 There is some one d. or dead Ma. 98 With laughter d. down as the great knight /. K. 156 — the smell of d. leaves E. A. 34 The deathless ruler of thy d. house E. A. 85 In their blood as they lay d. Select. 39 DYKE. Adown the crystal dykes at Camelot /. K. 70 E. EAGER to bring them down, for Enoch hung E. A . 47 Flamed in his cheek ; and e. eyes E. A. 54 But Edith's e. fancy hurried with him E. A. 62 EAGER-HEARTED as a boy when first he Poems 277 EAGERLY. Compass'd, how e. I sought to Poems 161 EAGLE. Half-buried in the Eagle's down Poems 117 But he not less the e. Happy days Poems 263 Shall eagles not be eagles? wrens be wrens IPoems 263 The wonder of the e. were the less Poems 263 Unclasp 'd the wedded eagles of her belt Poems 286 An e. clang an e. to the sphere Pr. 60 Of better, and Hope, a poising e., burns Pr. 78 A train of dames ; by axe and e. sat Pr. 164 Lean-headed Eagles yelp alone Pr. i63 Or eagle's wing, or insect's eye In M. 192 —o'er the hills her eagles flew Ma. 143 Again their ravening e. rose Ma. 144 Azure, an E. rising or, the Sun /. K. 118 Must their ever-ravening eagle's beak E. A. 169 Tho' the Roman e. shadow thee E. A. 171 EAGLET. Foster'd the callow e. Poems 106 EAR. Pour round mine ears the livelong bleat Pms 28 You never would hear it : your ears are so dull Pms 42 Hidden in sorrow : at first to the e. Poems 48 With dinning sound my ears are rife Poems 84 That trembles at her e. Poems 92 Half-whisper'd in his e. Poems 105 Rings ever in her ears of armed men Poems 108 Or hollowing one hand against his e. Poems 117 Herod, when the shout was in his ears Poems 122 — music in his ears his beating heart did Poems 143 Thrill'd thro' mine ears in that unblissful Poems 153 -the corn-bin open, prick'd my ears Poems 190 Muttering and murmuring at his e., 'Quick Poems 197 Rings in mine ears Poems 206 — my ears could hear Poems 232 Sing in mine ears. But yield not me the Poems 242 — hear me with thine ears) Poems 248 To alien ears. I did not speak to these Poems 260 — in the ringing of thine ears Poems 275 — fillip'd at the diamond in her e. Poems 286 The right e., that is fill'd with dust Poems 294 His country's war-song thrill his ears Poems 296 A second voice was at mine e. Poems 309 — whisper'd voices at his e. Poems 318 In her e. he whispers gaily Poe?ns 358 Together, twinn'd as horse's e. and eye Pr. 18 Nothing but this : my very ears were hot Pr. 22 100 EAR. Bows all its ears before the roaring East Pr. 27 And pluck'd the ripen'd ears Pr. 29 That whisper'd 'Asses' ears ' among the sedge Pr. 35 To dying ears, when unto dying eyes Pr. 77 — needs it we should cram our ears with wool Pr. 77 I heard the puff'd pursuer ; at mine e. Pr. 88 Each hissing in his neighbour's e. Pr. 107 In the old king's ears, who promised help Pr. 119 — while each e. was prick'd to attend Pr. 151 But I should turn mine ears and hear In M. 54 Not all ungrateful to thine e. hi M. 59 Yet in these ears, till hearing dies In M. 82 For now is love mature in e. ' hi M. 112 Till on mine e. this message falls In M. 119 Would cleave the mark. A willing e. In M. 127 About him heart and e. were fed In M. 131 Breathed in her e. The ring is on hi M. 206 Grind on the wakeful e. in the hush of the Ma. 6 (Look at it) pricking a cockney e. Ma. 37 Whose e. is cramm'd with his cotton and rings Ma. 38 With the evil tongue and the evil e. Ma. 39 With his chirrup at her e. Ma. 72 It will ring in my heart and my ears.till I die Ma. 87 An old song vexes my e. Ma. 91 Twinkled the innumerable e. and tail Ma. 124 His captain's-e. has heard them boom Ma. 141 — the Dead March wails in the people's ears Ma. 152 He sow'd a slander in the common e. /. K. 24 • — she could speak whom his own e. had heard /. K. 51 — groom'd, prick'd their light ears, and felt /. K. 56 — ears to hear you even in his dreams ' I. K. 68 Smote on her e., and turning round she saw /. K. 69 And makes it earth, hiss'd each at other's e. /. K. 79 — tho' mine own ears heard you yester-morn /. K. 85 Prince, to the camp, and in the king's own e. I. K. 88 That glorious roundel echoing in our ears /. K. 115 All ears were prick'd at once, all tongues /. K. 185 Her father's latest word humm'd in her e. /. K. 187 For all an April morning, till the e. /. K. 193 To interpret e. and eye, and such a tongue /". K. 196 All e. and eye, with such a stupid heart /. K. 196 That Modred still in green, all e. and eye /. K. 226 To vex an e. too sad to listen to me /. K. 241 Worried his passive e. with petty wrongs E. A. 20 — a whisper on her e. E. A. 28 — in the ringing of his ears E. A. 34 Call'd all her vital spirits into each e. E. A. 61 — foam'd away his heart at Averill's e. E. A. 69 EAR Page EAR. His message ringing in thine ears E. A. 85 Thro' the seal'd e. to which a louder one E. A. 87 True Devils with no e. E. A. no EARL. O the E. was fair to see ! Poems 109 The daughter of a hundred Earls Poems 126 Godiva, wife to that grim E., who ruled Poems 285 The grim Earl's gift : but ever at a breath Poems 286 The old Earl's daughter died at my breast Poems 355 Wherein were bandit earls, and caitiff knights /. K. 3 It may be, at E. Yniol's, o'er the bridge "" /. K. 16 There musing sat the hoary-headed E. /. K. 16 Then sigh'd and smiled the hoary-headed E. I. K. 17 — none spake word except the hoar)'- E. /. K. 20 — the town, and while the Prince and E. I. K. 21 Then suddenly addrest the hoary E. I. A". 22 'Fair Host and E., I pray your courtesy I. K. 22 Then cried E. Yniol, ' Art thou he indeed I. K. 23 So spake the kindly-hearted E., and she I. K. 28 He answer'd : ' E., entreat her by my love I. K. 41 Fresh victual for these mowers of our E. I. K. 57 — into no Earl's palace will I go I. K. 58 — feast with these in honour of their e. I. K. 61 — and food were brought, and E. Limours /. K. 61 ' E. , if you love me as in former years I. K. 64 Brushing his instep, bow'd the all-amorous E. /. K. 65 She told him all that E. Limours had said /. K. 66 Then thought she heard the wild E. at the I. K. 66 To the waste earldom of another e. I. K. 69 Fled all the boon companions of the E. I. K. jx That we may meet the horsemen of E. Doorm /. K. 71 One took him for a victim of E. Doorm I. K. 73 Rode on a mission to the bandit E. I. K. 73 — at the point of noon the huge E. Doorm I. K. 74 Then said E. Doorm : ' "Well, if he be not /. K. 74 And their own E., and their own souls, and I. K. 76 — mingled with the spearmen : and E. Doorm I. K. 77 The huge E. Doorm with plunder to the hall I. K. 77 — when E. Doorm had eaten all he would I. K. 78 Here the huge E. cried out upon her talk I. K. 80 Then strode the brute E. up and down his /. K. 83 So died E. Doorm by him he counted dead I. K. 84 How the huge E. lay slain within his hall /. K. 88 And since Iknew this E. when I myself I. K. 88 Of Lancelot in his glory : King, duke, e. I. K. 171 EARLDOM. From mine own e. foully ousted I. K. 25 ' This noble Prince who won our e. back I. K. 33 Because we have our e. back again I. K. 38 To the waste e. of another earl I. K. 69 For you shall share my e. with me, girl I. K. 78 EARLIER. I will turn that e. page Poems 277 — woman ripen'd e., and her life Pr. 37 ' Alone,' I said, 'from e. than I know Pr. 173 I had been wedded e., sweet Elaine I. K. 195 Break, happy land, into e. flowers ! E. A. 164 EARLIEST. Because they are the e. of the Pms 27 Of overflowing blooms and e. shoots Poems 27 The e. pipe of half-awaken'd birds Pr. 77 At e. morning to the door hi 31. 9 With one that was his e. mate In 31. 90 The roofs.that heard our e. cry hi 31. 135 Which first she placed where morning's e. ray I. K. 147 EARLY. — the prime labour of thine e. days Poems 30 Only, reapers, reaping e. Poems 66 That I should die an e. death Poems 89 You must blame Love. His e. rage Poems 93 Whole weeks and months, and e. and late Poems 109 You must wake and call me e. Poems 130, 133 If you're M'aking, call me e. Poems 134 In the e. e. morning the summer sun 'ill shine Pms 135 — once I ask'd him of his e. life Poems 231 — while as yet 'tis e. morn Poems 268 Make thy grass hoar with e. rime Poems 292 Crow"d lustier late and e. Poems 344 Weeping, weeping late and e. _ Poems 361 — now thus e. risen she goes to inform Pr. 57 — e. woke to feed her little ones Pr. 170 Some pleasure from thine e. years In 31. 4 As our pure love, thro' e. light In M. 12 Her e. Heaven, her happy views In 31. 52 Of e. faith and plighted vows hi M. 146 A bitter day that e. sank In 31. 165 So e., leaving me behind hi 31. 178 A light-blue lane of e. dawn hi 31. 185 — think of e. days and thee hi M. 185 The delight of e. skies Ma. 97 Enid my e. and mj r only love I. K. 62 — late and e. roses from his wall E. A. 19 Faint as a figure seen in e. dawn E. A. 20 — the mate had seen at e. dawn E. A. 35 EARTH Page EARLY. Of e. rigid colour E. A. 65 EARLY-SILVERING. —Enochs e. head E. A. 34 EARN well the thrifty months, nor wed Poems 183 Of life, shalt e. no more Poems 349 The metaphysics ! read and e. our prize Pr. 70 — pretty, popular name— such manhood earns /. K. 134 EARN'D. Has e. himself the name of sparrow- 1. K. 27 — e. a scanty living E. A. 45 EARNEST, —her full and e. eye _ Poems 103 —My words were half in e., half in jest Poems 204 One e., e. moment upon mine Poems 259 — but e. of the things that they shall do Poems 278 —take it — e. wed with sport Poems 325 The jest and e. working side by side Pr. 103 Or all, they said, as e. as the close? Pr. 178 Are e. that he loves her yet hi 31. 145 Hath e. in it of far springs to be I. K. 122 In e., let me bring your colour back /. K. 167 EARNESTLY. For at eventide, listening e. Poems 31 That Annie could not sleep, but e. E. A. 27 EARNINGS. To save all e. to the uttermost E. A. 5 EARTH. A nobler office upon e. Poems v. The black e. with brilliance rare Poems 27 — she deem'd no mist of e. could dull Poejns 27 Over the dark dewy e. forlorn Poems 29 Over its grave i' the e. so chilly Poems 31, 32 Scarce of e., nor all divine Poe?)is 33 — said the e. was beautiful Poems 36 Making e. wonder Poems 40 It would shrink to the e. if you came in Poems 42 The house was builded of the e. Poems 46 To what is loveliest upon e. ' Poems 75 The choicest wealth of all the e. Poe?ns 79 Have I not found a happy e. ? Poems 86 Hear me O E., hear me O Hills, O Caves Poems 99 There are enough unhappy on this e. Poems 107 O happy e., how canst thou bear my weighttPoems 107 Hear me, O e. I will not die alone Poe)?is 108 All e. and air seem only burning fire ' Poems 108 — common clay ta'en from the common e. Poems in Lord over Nature, Lord of the visible e. Poe?ns 120 Full oft the riddle of the painful e. Poems 122 — with the dull earth's mouldering sod Poems 124 Was never born into the e. Poems 172 —lost for ever from the e. Poems 194 — so the whole round e. is every way Poems 200 Felt e. as air beneath me, till I reach'd Poems 211 Unfit for e., unfit for heaven Poems 236 Enjo}- themselves in heaven, and men on e. Poems 240 That Heaven, and E., and Time are choked Poems 240 The fat e. feed thy branchy root Poems 256 The darkE. follows wheel'd in her ellipse Poems 263 Moved e. and heaven ; that which we are Poems 267 — the kindly e. shall slumber, lapt in Poems 279 Than that e. should stand at gaze Poems 283 — one low churl, compact of thankless e. Poems 287 Dissolved the riddle of the e. Poems 297 To that last nothing under e. ! ' Poems 305 For we are Ancients of the e. Poems 323 This whole wide e. of light and shade Poems 342 This e. is rich in man and maid Poems 342 Like ail good things on e. ! Poems 347 No public life was his on e. Poems 351 That are the flower of the e.?' Poems 356 Bore to e. her body, drest Poems 361 Move eastward, happy e., and leave Poems 377 — sphere lamps blazon'd like Heaven and E. Pr. 26 Than our man's e. ; such eyes were in her head Pr. 31 — everywhere the broad and bounteous E. Pr. 38 O — children — there is nothing upon e. Pr. 68 Leapt from the dewy shoulders of the E. Pr. 109 Of e. and heaven? and she of whom you Pr. 116 As are the roots of e. and base of all Pr. 130 Part roll'd on the e. and rose again and drew Pr. 132 — twists the grain with such a roar that E. Pr. 134 She bow'd, she set the child on the e. Pr. 142 Now lies the E. all Danae to the stars Pr. 167 Where he in English e. is laid In M. 30 This e. had been the Paradise In 31. 41 A rainy cloud possess'd the e. hi M. 48 Else e. is darkness at the core In 31. 53 The baby new to e. and sky hi 31. 67 Of Love on earth? He seeks at least In 31. 69 The silent snow possess'd the e. In 31. 107 The use of virtue out of e. hi 31. 113 No lower life that earth's embrace In M. 113 Despair of Hope, and e. of thee hi 31. 115 To wander on a darken'd e. hi 31. 119 To myriads on the genial e. hi 31. 149 101 Page In M. 175 In M. 183 In M. 183 In M. 191 hi M. 195 In M. 196 EARTH EARTH. A lever to uplift the e. 1 he solid e. whereon we tread As dying Nature's e. and lime O e., what changes hast thou seen ! Within his court on e., and sleep The brute e. lightens to the sky- Is E. and Earth's, and in their hand In M. 210 — of old the Lord and Master of E. Ma. 19 Put down the passions that make e. hell ! Ma. 38 This lump of e. has left his estate Ma. 53 Has our whole e. gone nearer to the glow Ma. 63 Were it e. in an earthy bed Ma. 81 O dawn of Eden bright over e. and sky Ma. 85 Than anything on e. Ma. 95 ' Cold altar, Heaven and e. shall meet Ma. 131 The black e. yawns ; the mortal disappears Ma. 152 The gloom that saddens Heaven and E. Ma. 159 — loveliest of all women upon e. /. K. 2 Far better were I laid in the dark e. /. K. 6 And I will track this vermin to their earths /. K. 12 — Geraint, ' I have track'd him to his e.' /. K. 14 — if he die, why e. has e. enough /. K. 75 — makes it e. , hiss'd each at other's ear /. K. 79 May this hard e. cleave to the Nadir hell /. K. 111 Merlin, may this e., if ever I /. K. in For men at most differ as Heaven and e. /. K. 136 The dark e. round. He raised his eyes and /. K. 142 For who loves me must have a touch of e. /. K. 154 Might wear as fair a jewel as is on e. /. K. 160 The hard e. shake, and a low thunder of /. K. 171 He bore a knight of old repute to the e. /. K. 173 An armlet for the roundest arm on e. /. K. 209 Clung to the dead e., and the land was still /. K. 225 — seem'd the heavens upbreaking thro' the e. /. K. 245 His fingers into the wet e. E. A. 43 — this, a milky -way on e. E. A. 59 Leolin's one strong rival upon e. E. A. 80 Never since our bad e. became one sea E. A. 84 —the tribes : but there — out yonder — e. E. A. 90 All over earthy, like a piece of e. E. A. 101 In days far-off, on that dark e., be true? E. A. 142 1 e. in e. forget these empty courts E. A. 143 I cast to e. a seed E. A. 152 — a sweet little Eden on e. that I know E. A. 158 — breathe it into e. and close it up Select. 197 EARTHEN. Drawing into his narrow e. urn Pms 28 EARTH L1ER. Am lonelier, darker, e. for E. A. 90 EARTHLY. — that never found his e. close Poems 258 ' No compound of this e. ball Poems 290 As this pale taper's e. spark Poems 331 So in mine e. house I am Poems 332 For I am but an e. Muse In M. 57 May some dim touch of e. things In M. 66 Is after all an e. song In M. 82 The head hath miss'd an e. wreath In M. 101 Till slowty worn her e. robe In M. 116 For she is e. of the mind In M. 178 Lay your e. fancies down Ma. 152 — e. chastisement suffice? E. A. 91 EARTHQUAKE. — famine, plague, and e. Poems 149 Toll'd by an e. in a trembling tower Pr. 153 In that world's-e. , Waterloo ! Ma. 145 — had flood, fire, e., thunder, wrought E. A. 84 EARTHWARD he boweth the heavy stalks Poems 31 Them e. till they lit Poems 39 EARTHY. Were it earth in an e. bed Ma. 81 All over e., like a piece of earth E. A. 101 EASE. — lives bound fast in one with golden e. Pms 57 But, Alice, you were ill at e. Poems 91 — wherein at e. for aye to dwell Poems 112 — death, dark death, or dreamful e. Poe?7is 146 You ask me, why, tho' ill at e. Poems 175 Our being, lest we rust in e. Poems 181 Why, if man rot in dreamless e. Poems 302 With garrulous e. and oily courtesies Pr. 23 —your Highness breaks with e. Pr. 153 We break our laws with e Pr. 153 And I would set their pains at e. In M. 88 From knoll to knoll, where couch'd at e. In M. 139 The knolls once more, where couch'd at e. In M. 141 —nursed at e. Ma. 60 Drank till he jested with all e., and told /. K. 61 For e. of heart, and half believed her true /. K. 140 Them surely can I silence with all e. /. K. 153 Yet with all e., so tender was the work /. K. 170 — found no e. in turning or in rest /. K. 194 EASIER. — evermore it seem'd an e. thing I. K. 51 It can be broken e. I for you /. K. 210 —lead an e. life E. A. 8 102 EATERS Page EASILY. ' Be wise : not e. forgiven Poems 21? E. gather'd either guilt Pr. 86 To see the hunt, allow'd it e. /. K. 9 About my person, the more e. /. K. 25 —there the Queen forgave him e. /. K. 32 ' Not guerdon : for myself can e. /. K. 57 He spoke, and Enid e. believed /. K. 92 Robed in red samite, e. to be known /. K. 169 Full e. all impressions from below /. K. 258 — e. forgives it as his own E. A. 72 EAST. — slowly rounded to the e. Poems 76 Four courts I made, E., West, and South Poems 113 Smote by the fresh beam of the springing e. Poems 199 To greet their fairer sisters of the East Poems 210 Dream'd by a happy man, when the dark E. Pms 206 With freshness in the dawning e. Poems 308 Bows all its ears before the roaring E. Pr. 27 — stunted squaws of West or E., but she Pr. 33 Above the darkness from their native E. Pr. 55 ' Alas your Highness breathes full E.,' I said Pr. 66 Of the E., that play'd upon them, made them Pr. 120 O Father, touch the e., and light In M. 49 Up the deep E., or, whispering, play'd In M. 99 And E. and West, without a breath In M. 142 What lightens in the lucid e. In M. 162 The blast of North and E., and ice In M. 165 Blush from E. to West Ma. 57 Blush from West to E. Ma. 57 Till the West is E. Ma. 57 —long breeze that streams to thy delicious E. Ma. 59 The bitter e., the misty summer Ma. 159 — by this brook we parted ; I to the E. Ma 117 — when the pale and bloodless e. began /. K. 29 There lived a King in the most Eastern E. /. K. 122 High in her chamber up a tower to the e. /. K. 147 The blaze upon the waters to the e. E. A. 33 — rosed in the e. E. A. 98 The ever silent spaces of the E. E. A. 139 — hold me not for ever in thine E. E. A. 142 Across the boundless e. we drove E. A. 146 Far in the E. Boadicea E. A. 169 EASTERN. In order, e. flowers large Poems 21 Below the city's e. towers Poems 96 Ruled in the e. sky Poems 161 — up the porch there grew an E. rose Poems 207 — she was sharper than an e. wind Poems 223 Beyond the fair green field and e. sea Poems 261 The foaming grape of e. France In M. 208 That e. tower, and entering barr'd her door /. K. 148 EASTWARD. Move e. happy earth, and Poems 377 happy planet, e. go Poems 377 The Biscay, roughly ridging e. E. A. 29 EAST-WIN D. In the stormy e. straining Poems 70 EASY. — answer to the purpose, e. things to Poems 272 Yet being an e. man gave it : and there Pr. 23 She told, perforce ; and winning e. grace Pr. 91 Comes e. to him, and tho' he trip and fall Pr. 174 Or e. nature, did not let itself /. K. 43 Of my long life have made it e. to me /. K. 129 Fast flow'd the current of her e. tears E. A. 47 —no false passport to that e. realm E. A. 60 — an' a says it e. an' freea E. A. 131 EAT. Have e. our substance, and the minstrel Pms 147 Where thou may'st warble, e. and dwell Poems 166 Prime, which I knew : and so we sat and e. Poems 222 — e. wholesome food Poems 240 1 will not e. my heart alone hi M. 167 ' A thousand pips e. up your sparrow-hawk ! /. K. 15 For supper, I will enter, I will e. /. K. 17 That e. in Arthur's hall at Camelot I. K. 24 ' Friend, let her e. ; the damsel is so faint ! ' I. K. 56 ' My lord e. also, tho' the fare is coarse /. K. 57 — rising on the sudden he said ' E. ! /. K. 78 E. ! Look yourself. Good luck had your good I. K. 78 And e. with me.' ' Drink, then,' he answer'd /. K. 80 E. and be glad, for I account you mine ' /. K. 80 Before I well have drunken, scarce can e; /. K. 80 And thrust the dish before her, crying, 'E.' /. K. 80 'No, no,' said Enid, vext, 'I will not e. /. K. 80 Not e. nor drink ? And wherefore wail for one /. K. 81 Who meant to e. her up in that wild wood /. K. 106 A portion from the solid present, eats /. K. 117 After the king, who e. in Arthur's halls /. K. 157 EATEN, —after all had e., then Geraint /. K. 22 And ' Boy,' said he, 'I have e. all, but take /. K. 57 — when Earl Doorm had e. all he would /. K. 78 So propt, worm-e.; ruinously old E. A. 38 Temple-e. terms E. A. 56 EATERS. The mild-eyed melancholy Lotos-e. Pms 143 EATING Page EATING the Lotos day by day Poems 146 —the ulcer, e. through my skin Poetns 238 Sucking the damps for drink, and e. not Poems 239 — a morbid e. lichen fixt Ma. 29 Who love to vex him e., and he fears /. A". 75 — e. hoary grain and pulse the steeds E. A. 178 EAVES. A bow-shot from her bower-e. Poems 68 Look out below your bower-e. Poems 165 Her eyelids dropp'd their silken e. Poems 254 — shepherds from the mountain-e. Poetns 328 Fly to her, and fall upon her gilded e. Pr. 79 — closing e. of wearied eyes In M. 93 Who murmurest in the foliaged e. In M. 149 Makes daggers at the sharpen'd e. In M. 165 — the martin-haunted e. E. A. 59 EAVEDROPS. Then I rise, the e. fall Ma. 99 EBB. According to my humour e. and flow Poems 155 —the dying e. that faintly lipp'd Poetns 221 Have e. and flow conditioning their march Poe?ns 263 When the tide ebbs in sunshine, and he said Pr. 145 That I could rest, a rock in ebbs and flows /. K. 43 EBB'D. Then half-way e. Poems 189 ' O mine have e. away for evermore /. K. 116 He flow'd and e. uncertain, to return E. A. 62 EBBING. — them slowly e., name and fame' /. K. 116 EBOXY. Tressed with redolent e. Poetns 24 — there at tables of e. lay E. A. 172 ECHO. So took e. with delight Poems 18 An e. from a measured strain Poems 88 With sounds that e. still Poems 150 ' Hear how the bushes e. ! Poems 206 The steep slate-quarry, and the great e. flap Ptns 264 The haunts of memor}' e. not Poetns 306 — E. answer d in her sleep Pr. 4 An e. like a ghostly woodpecker Pr. 12 Of lightest e. , then a loftier form Pr. 85 — now and then an e. started up Pr. 155 A hollow e. of my own In M. 3 E. there, whatever is ask'd her, answers Ma. 1 Is it an e. of something Ma. 31 — the woodland e. rings Ma. 97 E. round his bones for evermore Ma. 138 The proof and e. of all human fame Ma. 145 In words whose e. lasts, they were so sweet /. K. 42 Then made his pleasure e., hand to hand E. A. 64 ECHOED. — than my soul to hear her e. song Ptns 120 — further inland, voices e. — 'come Poems 202 For while our cloisters e. frosty feet Pr. 10 Behind her, and the forest e. ' fool ' /. K. 144 — changed itself and e. in her heart /. K. 188 ECHOES. Hear a song that e. cheerly Poetns 66 To hear the dewy e. calling Poems 148 Lull'd e. of laborious day Poems 164 Were faint Homeric e., nothing-worth Poettis 190 Like hints and e. of the world Poems 313 Blow, bugle, blow,, set the wild e. flying Pr. 74 Our e. roll from soul to soul Pr. 74 Blow, bugle, answer, e., dying, dying, dying Pr. 74 And answer, e. , answer, dying, dying, dying Pr. 74 Of e., and a moment, and once more Pr. 132 Like e. in sepulchral halls In M. 83 As e. out of weaker times In M. 205 The last wheel e. away Ma. 77 — a million horrible bellowing e. broke Ma. 86 For the great wave that e. round the world /. K. 23 Like e. from beyond a hollow E. A. 66 — crashing with long e. thro* the land E. A. 68 E. in his empty hall Select. 207 ECHOING, —with e. feet he threaded Poems 38 — the wave-worn horns of the e. bank Poems 48 E. all night to that sonorous flow Poetns 113 Illyrian woodlands, e. falls Poems 352 About its e. chambers wide Ma. 29 — ever-e, avenues of song Ma. 142 — heel against the pavement e., burst I. K. 60 That glorious roundel e. in our ears /. K. 115 ' Highest?' the Father answer'd, e. ■ highest?'/. K. 203 Or ghostly footfall e. on the stair /. K. 251 — if e. me you cry E. A. 89 ECHO-LIKE. Then e. our voices rang In M. 48 ECLIPSE. Gaiety without e. Poetns 6 As when the sun, a crescent of e. Poems 366 The shadow of His loss drew like e. /. K. vi. ECLIPTIC, —by the close e., was not fair E. A. 61 ECSTASIES. So tranced, so rapt in e. Poems 81 . EDDIED. — e. into suns, that wheeling cast Pr. 35 EDDIES. The vexed e. of its wayward Poems 8 In crystal e. glance and poise ' Poetns 87 No doubt vast e, in the flood In M. 198 E'ER EDDY. There the river e. whirls My heart an e. from the brawling hour The fancy's tenderest e. wreathe To those that e. round and round ? Page Poems 67 Pr. 153 InM. 71 In M. 75 EDDYING. The e. of her garments caught Ptns 27 Were flooded over with e. song Poems 48 Thro' all his e. coves ; the same In M. 109 I bubble into e. bays Ma. 119 EDEN. — me from that E. where she dwelt Ptns 210 Summer isles of E. lying in dark-purple Poetns 281 Saw distant gates of E. gleam Poems 299 — every bird of E. burst Poems 324 — comes the statelier E. back to men Pr. 173 Rings E., thro' the budded quicks In M. 129 Of E. on its bridal bower In M. 205 O dawn of E. bright over earth and sky Ma. 85 Like that which kept the heart of E. green /. K. 86 Set in this E. of all plenteousness E. A. 31 — a sweet little E. on earth that I know E. A. 158 The brooks of E. mazily murmuring E. A. 175 EDGE. Of the fading edges of box beneath Poetns 32 That morning, on the casement-e. Poems 88 Stream'd onward, lost their edges Poems 152 Where, three times slipping from the outer e.Pms 189 That axelike e. unturnable, our Head Pr. 39 — here and there on lattice edges lay Pr. 30 There growing longest by the meadow's e. /. K. 59 — the prone e. of the wood began E. A. 4, 21 EDGED. — thorough-e. intellect to part Poems 7 E, with sharp laughter Poetns 13 The shrill-e. shriek of a mother divide the Ma. 3 — a letter e. with death E. A. 82 EDGE-TOOLS, —ill jesting with e. ? my vow Pr. 39 EDITH. — only child, his E., whom he loved E. A. 52 That shook the heart of E. hearing him E. A. 54 — in his walks with E., claim E. A. 54 His hoop to pleasure E. E. A. 55 E., whose pensive beauty, perfect else E. A. 55 For E. and himself; or else he furged E. A. 56 — its own charm ; and Edith's everywhere E. A. 59 He but less loved than E., of her poor E. A. 59 -E. ever visitant with him E. A. 59 A frequent haunt of E. E. A. 59 — most on E. : like a storm he came E. A. 62 -Edith's eager fancy hurried with him E. A. 62 By E. whom his pleasure was to please E. A. 63 — was E. that same night E. A. 65 — Ediths. Ah how pale she had look'd E. A. 70 Labour for his own E., and return E. A. 73 His former talks with E. E. A. 74 -the keen shriek, 'Yes, love, yes, E., yes ' E. A. 81 Gave Edith, redden'd with no bandit's blood E. A. ' From E.' was engraven on the blade E. among the hamlets round EDMUND. ' — brook,' says E. in his rhyme Before I parted with poor E. ; crost All gone. My dearest brother, E., sleeps EDUCATED. — e. whisker — his pretty young ones e. EDWARD. That? Sir E. Head's With Edwin Morris and with E. Bull — said the fat-faced curate E. Bull Can touch the heart of E. Gray ' And are you married yet, E. Gray 2 ' And there the heart of E. Gray] " 82 83 E. A. E.A. Ma. 118 Ma. 121 Ma. 127 Poetns 235 E. A. 9 Poetns 225 Poettis 230 Poetns 231, 233 Poetns 337 Poems 337 Poetns 338 Poettis 338 Poetns 338 And here the heart of E. Gray EDWIN. — E. Morris, and with Edward Bull Ptns 230 But E. Morris, he that knew the names Poetns 230 ' Friend E., do not think yourself alone Poems 233 And I and E. laugh'd : and now we paused Poems 233 So left the place, left E., nor have seen Poettis 235 EDYRN. —answer groaning, ' E. , son of Nudd /. K. 31 ' Then E., son of Nudd,' replied Geraint /. K. 31 — E. answered, ' These things will I do /. K. 32 -Edyrn's men had caught them in their flight /. K. 34 — night of fire when E. sack'd their house /. K. 34 — Edyrn's men were on them, and they fled /. K. 34 — E. moving frankly forward spake Beholding it was E. son of Nudd Till E. crying, ' If you will not go When E. rein'd his charger at her side — one from E. Every now and then — went apart with E. , whom he held With E. and with others : have you look'd E. has done it, weeding all his heart At E. ? Have you seen how nobly changed ? /. K. 93 This work' of E. wrought upon himself /. K. 94 E'ER. If e. when faith had fall'n asleep In M. iq» 103 I.K. 87 I.K. £7 I.K. 89 I.K. £9 I.K. 89 I.K. 92 I.K. 93 I.K. 93 'EERD Page 'EERD. An' 'eerd un a bummin awaiiy E. A. 130 1 often 'eerd un mysen E. A. 132 — bump, for I 'eerd un aboot an' aboot E. A. 132 EERY. By night to e. warblings Poems 363 EFFECT, —the world, tho' she herself e. Pr. 68 — thine e. so lives in me In M. 91 EFFEMINACY, —in their tender e. E. A. 172 Is melted into mere e. ? I. K. 6 EFFEMINATE, —crying- out 'E. as I am I. K. 46 EFFIE. Little E. shall go with me to-morrow Pnis 131 Don't let E. come to see me till my grave Poems 137 —I thought of you and E. dear Poems 139 And E. on the other side, and I will tell Poems 139 But, E., you must comfort her when I Poems 140 —to wait a little while till you and E. come Poems 141 EFT. A monstrous e. was of old Ma. 19 EGALITIES. — cursed France with her e. ! E. A. 65 EGBERT. Since E.— why, the greater their E. A. 71 EGG. The goose let fall a golden e. Poems 184 His hens, his eggs, but there was law for us Pms 228 Roof-haunting martins warm their eggs Poems 314 The Cock was of a larger e. Poems 344 That lay their eggs, and sting and sing In M. 72 Like serpent eggs together E. A. 27 — plain eggs of the nightingale E. A. 56 EGG-SHELL, —a broken e. for her lord I. K. 65 EGLATERE. The woodbine and e. Poems 50 EGYPT. In E. ! O the dalliance and the wit Pms 156 When we made bricks inE. Knaves are men Pr. 81 EGYPT-PLAGUE. — fail'd— this E. of men '. Pr. 129 EIGHT. — cutting eights that day upon the pond Pms 189 At e. years old ; and still frqm time to time Pr. 16 E. daughters of the plough, stronger than Pr. 89 Then those e. mighty daughters of the plough Pr. 103 The third, and those e. daughters of the *" Pr. 124 And e. years past, e. jousts had been, and I. K. 150 E. that were left to make a purer world E. A.. 84 EIGHTY. Whose e. winters freeze with one Ma. 147 Should e. -thousand college-councils Ma. 161 EITHER. Madonna-wise, on e. side her head Pms 7 Six columns, three on e. side Poems 25 On e. side the river lie Poems 65 — loiters, slowly drawn. On e. hand Poems 98 From e. side, nor veil his eyes Poems 183 So sang we each to e., Francis Hale Poems 224 And e. twilight and the day between Poems 231 On e. side her tranced form Poems 316 She sleeps : on e. hand upswells Poems 316 And e. sacred unto you Poems 325 Easily gather'd e. guilt Pr. 86 Of equal : seeing e. sex alone Pr. 173 The same sweet forms in e. mind In M. 109 — not marvel at e., but keep a temperate brain Ma. 20 Than maiden Maud in e. Ma. 72 Thro' e. babbling world of high and low Ma. 147 — for groves of pine on e. hand Ma. 162 A purple scarf, at e. end whereof /. K. 9 On e. shining shoulder laid a hand I. K. 28 Whom first she kiss'd on e. cheek, and then I. K. 28 But either's force was match'd till Yniol's cry 7". K. 31 And e. slept, nor knew of other there I. K. 132 The trumpets blew ; and then did e. side I. K. 171 In e. twilight ghost-like to and fro /. K. 191 Was felt by e., e. fixt his heart E. A. 3 Would hint at worse in e. E. A. 2j — till drawn thro' e. chasm E. A. 37 Where e. haven open'd on the deeps E. A. 37 On e. side the hearth, indignant E. A. 66 — with his hopes in e. grave E. A. 83 But nevermore did e. pass the gate E. A. 93 ELABORATELY. — read me rhymes e. good Pms 231 A tent of satin, e. wrought Pr. 72 ELAINE. E. the fair, E. the loveable I. K. 147 E. , the lily maid of Astolat I. K. 147 E., his daughter : mother of the house I. K. 156 E., and heard her name so tost about /. K. 159 He spoke and ceased: the lily maid E. I. K. 160 Who parted with his own to fair E. I. K. 167 And stay'd ; and cast his eyes on fair E. I. K. 180 And whom he loves.' ' So be it,' cried E. I. K. 182 ' Torre and E. ! why here ? Sir Lancelot ! I. K. 188 Then rose E. and glided thro' the fields I. K. 191 Would call her friend and sister, sweet E. I. K. 192 I had been wedded earlier, sweet E. I. K. 195 ' Is this E. ? ' till back the maiden fell I. K. 201 ELBOW. In every e. and turn Poe?ns 28 Our elbows : on a tripod in the midst Pr. 75 ELBOW-CHAIR. She shifted in her e. Poems 185 ELBOW-DEEP. Or, e. in sawdust, slept Poems 343 104 EMBLEMATIC Page ELDER, —holy Elders with the gift of myrrh Poem s 199 Thine elders and thy betters Poems 347 The Tory member's e. son Pr. 179 Toward greatness in its e., 'you have fought I. K. 162 Broke from their elders E. A. 21 His e., and their parents underground) E. A. 55 ELDERLY. — as babies, and now they're e. E. A. 125 ELDER-THICKET. The white-flower'de. Poems 287 ELDEST-BORN. — e. of rank or wealth E. A. 76 —Willy, my e., is gone E. A. 114 Willy, my beauty, my e. E. A. 115 And Willy, my e., at nigh E. A. 125 — my e., my flower E. A. 127 ELEANOR. Those dragon eyes of anger'dE. Pms 160 ELEANORE. To deck thy cradle, E. Poems 79 E. ! Poems 80 I stand before thee, E. Poems 81 Who may express thee, E.? Poems 81 Serene, imperial E. Poems 81 In thy large eyes, imperial E. Poems 82 Serene, imperial E. Poe?ns 83 So dying ever, E. Poems 84 ELECTED umpire, Here comes to-day Poems 101 ELECTRIC. In circle waited, whom the e. Pr. 5 E., chemic laws, and all the rest Pr. 49 As comes a pillar of e. cloud Pr. 134 And this e. force, that keeps In M. 194 ELEGIES. By violet-hooded Doctors, e. Pr. 48 ELEMENTS. The e. were kindlier mix'd ' Poems 300 — in their own clear element they moved Pr. 158 Large e. in order brought In M. 174 One God, one law, one element In M. 211 I am not made of so slight e. I. K. 251 Strike thro' a finer element of her own? E. A. 8r ELEMENTAL. — their e. secrets, powers I. K. 126 ELEVENTH. — ' pick'd the e. from this Poems 190 But ten slow mornings past, and on the e. I. K. 206 ELF-GOD. ' I saw the little e. eyeless once I. K. 106 ELFIN. — she whose e. prancer springs Poems 363 ELFLAND. The horns of E. faintly blowing! Pr. 74 ELIZABETH. The spacious times of great E. Pms 150 1 To the Abbey : there is Aunt E. Pr. 4 And here Ave lit on Aunt E. Pr. 6 E. and others: arts of war Pr. 37 ELK. — monstrous horns of e. and deer Pr. 2 ELLE. — sent a note, the seal E. votes stiit Poems 234 ELLEN. Sleep, E., folded in thy sister's arm Pms 223 Sleep, E., folded in Emilia's arm Poems 223 * Sleep, E. Aubrey, sleep, and dream of me Pms 223 By Ellen's grave, on the windy hill Poems 337 When E. Adair was dying for me Poems 337 ' E. Adair she loved me well Poems 337 Till E. Adair come back to me Poems 338 ' Here lies the body of E. Adair Poems 338 There lies the body of E. Adair \ Poems 338 Speak a little. E. Adair 1 Poems 338 ELLIPSE. — Earth follows wheel'd in her e. Poems 263 ELM. The seven elms, the poplars four Poems 28 — mellow ouzel fluted in the e. Poems 206 Old elms came breaking from the vine Poems 328 Served in the weeping e. Poems 210 — always friends, none closer, e. and vine Pr. 46 As oak from e. : one loves the soldier, one Pr. 116 The moan of doves in immemorial elms Pr. 169 From the elms, and shook the branches of the Pr. 182 Witch-elms that counterchange the floor In M. 130 Rock'd the full-foliaged elms, and swung hi M. 142 Aroused the black republic on his elms E. A. 78 ELM-TREE, —caw from the windy tall e. Poems 135 The topmost e. gather'd green Poems 362 ELMTREE-BOLES. Enormous e. did stoop Pms 152 ELOQUENCE. A full-cell*d honeycomb of e. Pms 231 Sighs, and slow smiles, and golden e. I. K. 181 ELOQUENT, —the form alone is e. ! Select. 196 ELSEWHERE. Nor can see e., anything I. K. 27 Or e. , Modred's narrow foxy face I. K. 228 ELVES. To which the little e. of chasm and I. K. 238 ELYSIAN. — others in E. valleys dwell Poems 149 Are lovely, lovelier not the E. lawns Pr. 72 EMANCIPATION. The secular e. turns Pr. 44 EMBALM. No longer caring to e. In M. 204 EMBASSIES. Such touches are but e. of love Pms 204 EMBATTAIL. To e. and to wall about thy Poems 62 EMBATTLED, —when we saw the e. squares Pr. 119 EMBELLISH. Wherewith to e. state Poems 102 EMBLEM. Graven Avith emblems of the time Pms 23 Like emblems of infinity Poems 30 A Aveight of e., and betAvixt Avere valves Pr. 85 EMBLEMATIC. As e. of a nobler age Pr. 36 EMBODIED Page EMBODIED. When truth e. in a tale In M. 56 EMBOSS'D. — bronze valves, e. with Tomyris Pr. 126 EMBOWBR. However deep you might e. Pr. 9 EMBOWERING. Brake from the vast oriel-e. /. A'. 209 EMBRACE. Die, dying clasp'd in his e. Poems 97 Went forth to e. him coming ere he came Poems 100 — dear the last embraces of our wives Poems 147 Like Death betwixt thy dear e. and mine Poems 260 — one another's arms, and silent in a last e. Poems 273 He kiss'd, taking his last embrace Poems 301 Away from my embraces Poems 346 Twisted hard in fierce embraces Poems 367 E. our aims : work out your freedom. Girls Pr. 34 Before these kings we e. you yet once more Pr. 151 Psyche,' she cried out, ' e. me, come Pr. 151 By faith.and faith alone, e. In M. v. E". her as my natural good In M. 3 As parting with a long e. hi M. 60 No lower life that earth's e. hi M. 113 That yet remembers his e. hi M. 123 A little while from his e. In M. 182 We stood tranced in long embraces Ma. 95 1 e. the purpose of God Ma. 115 Who will e. me in the world-to-be E. A. 48 EMBRACED. I could not be e. Poems 251 E. his Eve in happy hour Poems 324 — dream thy cause e. in mine Pr. 146 E. her with all welcome as a friend /. K. 44 There the great Queen once more e. her /. K. 96 — half e. the basket cradle-head E. A. 111 EMBRACING, all at once a score of pugs Poems 234 E. cloud, Ixion-like Poems 298 Then when he saw the Queen, e. ask'd /. K. 177 EMERALD, —lights, rose, amber, e., blue Poems 120 A golden broach : beneath an e. plane Pr. 70 — bickers into red and e. Pr. 120 Of crimson or in e. rain In M. 148 A million emeralds break Ma. 15 A livelier e. twinkles in the grass Ma. 61 Carved of one e., center'd in a sun /. K. 162 There they drank in cups of e. E. A. 172 EMERALD-COLOUR'D. —the e. water Poems 148 EMERGED, I came upon the great Poems 23 EMILIA. — Ellen, folded in Emilia's arm Poems 223 E., fairer than all else but thou Poems 223 EMINENT. Life e. creates the shade of Poems 52 EMISSARY, —at the moment Leolin's e. E. A. 78 EMMA. ' Sweet E. Moreland, love no more Poems 337 Sweet E. Moreland spoke to me Poei?is 337 Sweet E. Moreland of yonder town Poems 337 EMOTION. Hide me from my deep e. Poems 277 Some vague e. of delight Poems 306 The Spartan mother with e., be Pr. 43 EMPANOPLIED. —were ready. E. and plumed Pr. 132 EMPEROR, Ottoman, which shall win Ma. 163 EMPEROR-IDIOT, —a gluttonous e. E. A. 170 EMPEROR-MOTH, —as rich as E.-moths Pr. 8 EMPIRE. That yokes with e., yield you time Pms v. E. for life ? but Eustace painted her Poems 204 System and e. ? Sin itself be found Poems 258 Three ladies of the Northern e. pray Pr. 27 —of e. and the woman's state in each Pr. 36 With an empire's lamentation Ma. 137 Promising e.;such as those Select. 221 EMPLOY. — radiate : fierce extremes e. In M. 129 Come, when no graver cares e. Ma. 161 EMPLOY'D. So gentle, so e., should close Pr. 160 EMPTIED. —Hebrew mothers '— e. of all joy Pms\$9 The chambers e. of delight In M. 10 —affluent Fortune e. all her horn Ma. 148 EMPTINESS. « From e. and the waste wide Pms 294 The sins of e., gossip and spite Pr. 34 EMPTY. An e. river-bed before Poems 73 Pour'd back into my e. soul and frame Poems 153 E. before us. That was he Poems 172 Should be to aftertime, but e. breath Poems 194 The summer pilot of an e. heart Poems 204 I sit, (my e. glass reversed) Poems 345 I leave an e. flask Poems 346 It is but yonder e. glass Poems 347 E. scarecrows, I and you 1 Poems 369 Hollow hearts and e. heads ! Poems 373 Than if my brainpan were an e. hull Pr. 49 Her college and her maidens, e. masks Pr. 64 It chanced, her e. glove upon the tomb Pr. 106 A hollow form witn e. hands' In M. 3 Her place is e., fall like these In M. 20 Living alone in an e. house Ma. 29 To tickle the maggot born in an e. head Ma. 104 END Page EMPTY. And when he found all e , was /. A'. 57 As all but e. heart and weariness /. K. 80 And show'd an e. tent allotted her /. K. 92 Her own poor work, her e. labour, left I. K. 198 I earth in earth forget these e. courts E. A. 143 To sit with e. hands at home E. A. 156 Echoes in his e. hall Select. 207 EMPURPLED. Above the e. champaign Pr. 60 EMPYREAL. About e. heights of thought hi M. 141 EMPYREAN, —as the deep-domed e. E. A 174 ENAMELL'D. Whom glittering in e. arms /. K. 179 ENAMOUR'D. The e. air sighing, and on Pr. 140 ENCARNALIZE their spirits: yet we know Pr. 71 ENCHANTED. — they bore of that e. stem Poems 143 Is that e. moan only the swell Ma. 62 'He is e., cannot speak— and she /. K. 212 ENCHANTER. Upon the great E. of the Time/. K. 104 ENCHANTRESS. A great e. you may be Poems 127 ENCIRCLES all the heart, and feedeth Poems 163 ENCLOSING, —shades e. hearts of flame Poems 123 And every marge e. in the midst /. K. 128 ENCOMPASS, —love of all Thy sons e. Thee/. K. viii. ENCOMPASS'D by his faithful guard In M. 195 ENCOUNTER. A little in the late e. strain'd /. K. 54 END. ' And cruel love, whose e. is scorn Poems 76 Is this the e. to be left alone Poems 76 ' Which in all action is the e. of all Poems 102 Death is the e. of life Poems 145 Until the e. of time ' Poems 153 Sleep till the e., true soul and sweet Poems 174 Love, that endures not sordid ends Poems 179 ' My e. draws nigh : 'tis time that I were Poei?is 197 Here then my words have e. Poems 2Z2 I hope my e. draws nigh Poems 237 Now am I feeble grown ; my e. draws nigh Poe?ns 237 The watcher on the column till the e. Poems 242 These heavy, horny eyes. The e. ! the e. ! Poems 243 Surely the e. What's here ? a shape, a shade Pms 243 The set gray life, and apathetic e. Poems 258 — shapes it to some perfect e. Poems 259 Spun round in station, but the e. had come Poems 261 How dull it is to pause, to make an e. Poems 266 Death closes all : but something ere the e. Poe7ns 267 A labour working to an e. Poems 303 The e. and the beginning vex Poems 303 That to begin implies to e. > Poems 305 ' I see the e. and know the good ' Poe?ns 309 Should hook it to some useful e. Poems 322 Enough if at the e. of all Poems 330 For them I battle till the e. Poems 333 A life that moves to gracious ends Poems 350 Made noise with bees and breeze from e. to e. Pr. 5 By twos and threes, till all from e. to e. Pr. 51 Oh if our e. were less achievable Pr. 69 Nor would I fight with iron laws, in the e. Pr. 78 Used to great ends : ourself have often tried Pr. 81 — some grand fight to kill and make an e. Pr. 105 What e. soever : fail you will not Pr. 128 — how the strange betrothment was to e. Pr. 131 Of female whisperers : at the further e. Pr. 155 For worship without e. ; nor e. of mine Pr. 166 Yoked in all exercise of noble e. Pr. 176 what to her shall be the e. In M. 8 ' Is this the e. ? Is this the e. ? In M. 18 Is this the e. of all my care ? ' hi M. 18 And move thee on to noble ends In M. 91 Are sharp en 'd to a needle's e. hi M. 103 What e. is here to my complaint ? In M. 112 Now looking to some settled e. In M. 123 1 climb the hill : from e. to e. hi M. 151 For ever nobler ends. They say In M. 183 Is toil cooperant to an e. In M. 199 On the blossom'd gable-ends Ma. 25 Calming itself to the long- wished -for e. Ma. 58 — never an e. to the stream of passing feet Ma. 102 A purple scarf, at either e. whereof /. K. 9 O to what e., except a jealous one /. K. 121 From all men, ev'n the king, and to this e. /. K. 177 And sweet is death Avho puts an e. to pain /. K. 199 So cannot speak my mind. An e. to this ! /. K. 211 Serving his traitorous e. ; and all his aims /. K. 2f2& And all was still : then she, 'the e. is come /. K. 230 There will I hide thee, till my life shall e. /. K. 231 — far e. of an avenue E. A. 20 Came suddenly to an e. E. A. 34 An e., a hope, a light breaking upon him E. A. 76 Had rioted his life out, and made an e. E. A. 71 -nor wanted at his e. E. A. 94 — tho' they could not e. me, left me maim'd E. A. 140 1&5 ENDEARS Page ENDEARS. That all the more e. Pr. '29 ENDED. Here e. Hall, and our last light Poems 201 Thus far he flow'd and e. Poems 264 When, ere his song was e. Poems 328 She e. here, and beckon'd us : the restl P r * 3 8 She e. with such passion that the tear Pr. 77 For when the jousts were e. yesterday /. K. 37 But e. with apology so sweet /. K. 66 Till this was e., and his careful hand E. A. 10 E. he had not, but she brook'd no more E. A. 92 Had e., forth they came and paced the E. A. 97 ENDING. — e., waved her hands : thereat Pr. 101 And e. in a ruin — nothing left /. K. 140 ENDLESS. By herds upon an e. plain Poems 115 Suffer e. anguish, others in Elysian valleys Poems 149 Farewell, like e. welcome, lived and died Poems 260 ' Let me not cast in e. shade Poems 289 In e. time is scarce more brief Poems 294 And we shall sit at e. feast In M. 69 In e. age ? It rests with God In M. 101 ENDOW you with broad land and territory /. K. 196 ENDURE. A courage to e. and to obey Poems 8 All force in bonds that might e. Poems 119 Love, that endures not sordid ends Poems 179 That dies not, but endures with pain In M. 31 And scarce e. to draw the breath In M. 33 Whose loves in higher love e. In M. 51 O living will that shalt e. In M. 202 As long as my life endures Ma. 69 Let the sweet heavens e. Ma. 41 —while the races of mankind e. Ma. 149 Break not, for thou art Royal, but e. /. K. vii. Break not, O woman's-heart, but still e. /. K. vii. Endures not that her guest should serve /. K. 21 But can e. it all most patiently ' /. K. 26 But thought to do while he might yet e. /. K. 173 But I will never more e. E. A. 156 ENDURANCE, —and deeds, until e. grow Poems 104 ENDURED. Have all in all e. as much and Poems 241 Not yet e. to meet her opening eyes Pr. 84 — these wolves ; they knew her ; they e. Pr. 91 — what has chanced : you surely have e. /. K. 88 ENDURING, —reap the harvest with e. toil Poems 149 — yet hadst thou, thro' e. pain Poems 297 Mourn for the man of long-e. blood Ma. 139 What long-e. hearts could do Ma. 144 ENEMIES. ' Our e. have fall'n Pr. 138, 139 Are half of them our e., and the crowd /. K. 152 There to the nuns, and said, ' mine e. /. K. 232 Doon i' the woild 'e. afoor I corned E. A. 132 ENEMY. For I trust if an enemy's fleet came Ma. 7 And arms, arms, arms, to fight my e. ? Speak V I. K. 15 And then brake short, and down his e. roll'd /. K. 54 Broke the strong lance, and roll'd his e. down /. K. 148 Of dragging down his e. made them move /. K. 189 Ev'n in the presence of an enemy's fleet /. K. 239 — moan of an e. massacred E. A. 170 — tho' the gathering e. narrow thee E. A. 17X — of her e. fainted away E. A. 173 ENERGIES. The full-grown e. of heaven In M. 61 — with agonies, with e. In M. 176 ENERGY. — spurr'd at heart with fieriest e. Poems 62 By its own e. fulfill'd itself Poems -211. ENFOLD. So dear a life your arms e. Ma. 159 ENFOLDED. — mutually e. ; Love, the third Pms 211 And in her veil e., manchet bread /. K. 21 ENGARLANDED and diaper'd Poems 25 ENGINE. Which only to one e. bound Poems 305 ENGIRT with many a florid maiden-cheek Pr. 72 ENGLAND, —more than E. honours that Poems 257 From E. to Van Diem en Poems 329 Of E. ; not the schoolboy heat In M. 168 E., for thy son Ma. 140 — this is England's greatest son Ma. 143 E. pouring on her foes Ma. 144 —keep our"noble E. whole Ma. 146 Truth-teller was our England's Alfred named Ma. 147 It told of E. then to me Ma. 159 — how should E. dreaming of his sons /. K. vi. Of E., blown across her ghostly wall E. A. 36 God-gifted organ-voice of E. E. A. 174 ENGLISH. — reveal'd themselves to E. air Poems 78 —an E. home — gray twilight pour'd Poems 116 For E. natures, freemen, friends Poems 179 And sweet as E. air could make her, she Pr. 9 Where he in E. earth is laid In M. 30 -feet like sunny gems on an E. green Ma. 24 Bright E. lily, breathing a prayer Ma. 67 Sir," if you knew her in her E. days Ma. 129 zo6 /. K 5 I. K. 8 I.K. 8 I.K. 18 I.K. 18 I.K. 19 I.K. 19 I. K. 20 ENJOY'D Page ENGLISH. Nor ever lost an E. gun Ma. 143 Truth-lover was our E. Duke Ma. 148 Gallant sons of E. freemen . Select. 37 ENGLISHMAN. — broad-shoulder'd genial E. Pr. 181 The last great E. is low Ma. 138 ENGRAIL'D. —over hills with peaky tops e. Poems 117 ENGRAIN'D. Wander'd e. On either side Poems 2: ENGRAVEN. « From Edith ' was e. on the E. A. 82 ENID. Had married E., Yniol's only child I.K. 1 And E., but to please her husband's eye /. K. 1 And E. loved the Queen, and with true heart /. K. 2 Allowing it, the Prince and E. rode /. K. 3 Told E., and they sadden'd her the more I. K. 4 And E. woke and sat beside the couch And ride with me.' And E. ask'd, amazed • If E. errs, let E. learn her fault ' The voice of E., Yniol's daughter, rang So the sweet voice of E. moved Geraint Of Fortune and her wheel, atid E. sang It chanced the song that E. sang was one Moved the fair E., all in faded silk He spake : the Prince, as E. pass'd him. fain /. K. ' E., the good knight's horse stands in the /. K. 20 And E. brought sweet cakes to make them /. K. 21 On E. at her lowly handmaid-work /. K. 22 Before my Enid's birthday, sack'd my house /. K. 25 And looking round he saw not E. there Across the face of E. hearing her Moved in her ivy, E., for she lay Is broken down, for E. sees my fall ! ' And E. fell in longing for a dress And E. started waking, with her heart And E. look'd, but all confused at first And E. listen'd brightening as she lay Of that good mother making E. gay For E., and when Yniol made report For E. all abash'd she knew not why To love each other ; how should E. find No hand but hers, should make your E. burst /. K. 42 But E. ever kept the faded silk No, not a word ! ' and E. was aghast ' To the wilds ! ' and E. leading down the So the last sight that E. had of home Then E. was aware of three tall knights Then E. ponder'd in her heart, and said Then E. waited pale and sorrowful And E. ponder'd in her heart and said Had ruth again on E. looking pale Pauses, did E., keeping watch, behold And h.. stood aside to wait the event And E. took a little delicately At E., where she droopt : his own false doom/. K. Found E. with the corner of his eye E. the loss of whom has turn'd me wild ' E., the pilot star of my lone life /. K. E., my early and my only love /. K. And, E., you and he ; I see it with joy /. K. Made his eyes moist ; but E. fear'd his eyes /. K. He fell asleep, and E. had no heart How E. never loved a man but him But E. left alone with Prince Geraint I charge you, E., more especially And then to E., ' Forward ! and to-day And E. answer'd, ' Yea, my lord, I know Went E. with her sullen follower on And E. heard the clashing of his fall So for long hours sat E. by her lord Till E. shrank far back into herself ' No, no,' said E., vext, ' I will not eat But E. answer'd, harder to be moved And now their hour has come ; and E. said /. K. 82 Then E., in her utter helplessness My palfrey lost.' 'Then E. shall you ride Behind me ? ' ' Yea, ' said E. , ' let us go ' And E. could not say one tender word ' E. , I have used you worse than that dead • The voice of E.,' said the knight ; but she /. K. And fear not, E., I should fall upon him But E. in their going had two fears He spoke, and E. easily believed And E. tended on him there ; and there And past to Enid's tent ; and thither came The cry of children, Enids and Geraints But E., whom her ladies loved to call E. the Fair, a grateful people named E. the Good ; and in their halls arose E., and lissome Vivien, of her court ENJOY themselves in heaven, and men on ENJOY'D. —all times I have e. I.K. 27 I.K. 28 I.K. 32 I.K. 3- I. K. 34 I. K. 36 I.K. 37 I.K. 39 I. K. 40 I.K. 40 I.K. 4i I. K. 42 I.K. 42 I K. 45 I. K. 46 I.K. 47 I.K. 47 I.K. 48 I. K. 49 I. K. 50 I.K. 52 I.K. 56 I. K. 52 I. K. 54 I.K. 57 I.K. 59 I.K. 60 I.K. 62 /. K. 65 I.K. 65 I.K. 65 I.K. 67 I. K. 67 I.K. 68 I. K. 69 I. K. 72 I.K. 76 I.K. 77 I.K. 80 I.K. 82 I.K. 82 I.K. 84 I.K. 85 I.K. 85 I.K. 85 I.K. 85 I. K. 87 I. K. 87 I. K. 89 I.K. 92 I. K. 94 I. K 94 I. K. 96 I.K. 56 I.K. 96 I. K. 96 I. K. 226 Poems 240 Poems 265 ENJOYING Page ENJOYING each the other's good In M. 69 EN JOVMENT more than in this march of Poems 282 ENLIGHTEN. Strengthen me, e. me Poems 26, 28, 31 ENN A. — Proserpine in E., gathering flowers Poems 234 ENOCH would hold possession for a week E. A. 2 When if they quarrell'd, E. stronger-made E. A. 2 And E. Arden, a rough sailor's lad E. A. 2 E. was host one day E. A. 2 But she loved E., tho' she knew it not E. A. 3 — and E. spoke his love E. A. 3 Shriek out, ' I hate you, E.' E. A. 3 And would if ask'd deny it. E. set E. A. 3 Than E. Likewise had he served a year E. A. 4 E. and Annie, sitting hand-in-hand E. A. 5 E. at times to go by land or sea E. A. 6 While E. was abroad on wrathful seas E. A. 6 Whose Friday fare was Enoch's ministering E. A. 6 Enoch's white horse, and Enoch's ocean- E. A. 6 E. had served in E. A. 7 And E. all at once assented to it E. A. 7 Would E. have the place? E. A. 7 — E. lay long-pondering E. A. 8 Whom E. took, and handled all his limbs E. A. 9 — first since Enoch's golden ring had girt E. A. 9 Thus E. in his heart determined all E. A. 9 For E. parted with his old sea-friend E. A. 10 — all day long till Enoch's last at home E. A. 10 And E. faced this morning of farewell E. A, 11 Yet E. as a brave God-fearing man E. A. 11 ' Well then,' said E., ' I shall look on yours E. A. 12 Atlength she spoke, ' O Enoch, you are wiseZT. A. 12 — when Annie would have raised him E. said-£\ A. 13 The sea is His ; He made it.' E. rose E. A. 13 — foreboding'what would E. say ? ' E. A. 14 — the day that E. mention'd came E. A. 14 Since E. left he had not look'd upon her E. A. 16 E., your husband E. A. 17 For, if you will, when E. comes again E. A. 17 But E. lives ; that is borne in on me E. A. 18 Since E. left his hearth and native land E. A. 20 — no news of E. came E. A. 20 As E. lost : for E. seem'dto them E. A. 20 If E. comes — but E. will not come E. A. 24 A little after E,' E. A. 24 AsE. was ? What is it that you ask? ' E. A. 24 — ' my E., is he gone? ' E. A. 27 — her E. sitting on a height E. A. 28 — where was E.? prosperously sail'd E. A. 29 But E. and two others E. A. 30 — E. traded for himself, and bought E. A. 30 And Enoch's comrade, careless of himself E. A. 31 Thus over Enoch's early-silvering head E. A. 34 There E. spoke no word to any one E. A. 36 There E. rested silent many days E. A. 38 — E. was so brown, so bow'd E. A. 38 ' E. , poor man, was cast away and lost ' E. A. 39 -E. yearn'd to see her face again E. A. 39 Like his have worse or better, Enoch saw E. A. 40 But E. shunn'd the middle walk and stole E. A. 40 —and E. set himself E. A. 44 On E. thinking ' after I am gone E. A. 45 -E. bore his weakness cheerfully E. A. 45 When E. had return'd E. A. 45 ' Swear,' added E. sternly, ' on the book ' E. A. 46 Slowly and sadly E. answer'd her E. A. 46 — E. rolling his gray eyes upon her E. A. 46 ' Did you know E. Arden of this town ? ' E. A. 46 — E. said again E. A. 47 Proclaiming E. Arden and his woes E. A. 47 Eager to bring them down, for E. hung E. A. 47 — E. slumber'd motionless and pale E. A. 49 ENORMOUS, —and wild the waste e. marsh P>/is 30 E. elmtree-boles did stoop and lean Poems 152 ENOUGH. There are e. unhappy on this earth Pms 107 We have had e. of action, and of motion Poems 148 It pleased me well enough ' Poems 190 That only love were cause e. for praise ' Poems 207 Shall I cease here? Is this e. to say Poems 211 E. if at the end of all Poe??is 330 Whole in ourselves and owed to none. E. ! Pr. 82 — myself were like e., O girls Pr. 100 — hugg'd and never hugg'd it close e. Pr. 147 Is e. to drive one mad Ma. 103 — why have they not buried me deep e. ? Ma. 108 Your "lover ? has your palfrey heart e. /. K. 71 And if he die, why earth has earth e. /. K. 75 And bid me cast it. I have griefs e. /. K. 83 ' E.,' he said, ' I follow,' and they went /. K. 89 And so, God wot, his shield is blank e. L K. 157 EPIC Page ENOUGH. Nay— like e. : why then, far be it /. K. 183 But she was happy e. and shook it off /. K. 1S8 — said his friend, 'but watch ! ' and he ' e.' E. A. 65 More than e., Sir ! I can guard my own ' E. A. 65 ENOW. — poor soul,' said Miriam, 'fear e. ! E. A. 44 ENRICH the markets of the golden year Poems 263 — whose thoughts e. the blood of the world ' Pr. 38 To e. the threshold of the night hi M. 47 ENRING'D a billowing fountain in the midst Pr. 30 ENROLL. — would e. them with your own Pr. 27 In many a figured leaf enrolls In M. 65 ENS AMPLE. And drawing foul e. from fair /. K. 250 ENSHROUDED. Fretteth thine e. form Poems 49 ENSIGN.. — drowsy folds of our great e. shake Pr. 107 ENSUE. This rashness, that which might e. Poems 307 That out of distance might e. In M. 182 ENSUED. — returning rose : and then e. E. A. 80 ENTANGLE. To e. me when we met Ma. 27 ENTANGLED. — might be e. ere she knew E. A. 65 ENTANGLEST. All my bounding heart e. Pms 16 ENTER. — oft some brainless devil enters in Puis 121 But e. not the toil of life Poems 164 He breaks the hedge : he enters there Poems 317 Let no man e. in on pain of death ? ' Pr. 39 ' Our laws are broken : let him e. too ' Pr. 153 Shall e., if he will. Let our girls flit Pr. 154 Shall e. in at lowly doors In M. 56 She enters other realms of love In M. 60 Descend, and touch, and e. ; hear In M. 137 Replying, ' E. likewise ye In M. 159 And e. in at breast and brow In M. 189 She enters, glowing like the moon In M. 205 Then Yniol, ' E. therefore and partake /. K. 16 For supper, I will e., I will eat /. K. 17 Said Yniol ; 'E. quickly.' Entering then I. K. 20 There will I e. in among them all /. K. 202 Late, late, so late ! but we can e. still /. K. 233 Too late, too late ! ye cannot e. now /. K. 233, 234 No, no, too late ! ye cannot e. now ' /. K. 234 Fearing to e. E. A. 29 ENTER'D. I e., from the clearer light Poems 20 — as we e. in the cool Poeitis 207 Each e. like a welcome guest Poems 308 There, e. an old hostel, call'd mine host Pr. 24 We e. on the boards : and ' Now,' she cried Pr. 33 To Lady Psyche's : as we e. in Pr. 34 With me, Sir, e. in the bigger boy Pr. 50 I knock'd and bidden, e. ; found her there Pr. 61 Beneath the satin dome and e. in Pr. 75 A stone-shot off: we e. in Pi . 109 We e. in and waited, fifty there Pr. 132 And go with us : ' they e. in hi M. 159 And e., and were lost behind the walls /. K. 14 E.,the wild lord of the place, Limours /. K. 60 E. ; but Annie, seated with her grief E. A. 16 What ail'd her then, that ere she e. E. A. 29 Swept with it to the shore, and e. one E. A. 101 ENTERING. Ladies, in e. here, to cast and Pr. 32 E., the sudden light Pr. 107 Then their eyes vext her : for on e. E. A. 92 Said Yniol ; ' Enter quickly. ' E. then /. K. 20 — e. fill'd the house with sudden light E. A. 86 That eastern tower, and e. barr'd her door /. K. 148 ENTERTAIN'D. —and minstrel melody e. /. K. 161 ENTERTAINMENT, —slender e. of a house I. K. 16 ENTHRONED. — up with Cassiopeia, or the e. Pr. 97 ENTRANCED. — e. with that place and time Poeui s 23 EXTRhAT. — answer'd 'Earl, e. her by my love/. K. 41 ENTREATIES. But manifold e., man}- a tear E. A. 9 ENTRY. Above an e. : riding in, we call'd Pr. 27 A column'd e. shone and marble stairs Pr. 126 Groaning, and in the Vestal e. shriek'd Pr. 154 ENTRY-GATES. — walls and wing'd his e. E. A. 52 ENTWINE. — my true heart thine arms e. Poems 94 E. the cold baptismal font In M. 47 ENVIOUS. Half-e. of the flattering hand, she /. K. 165 ENVY. Her countrywomen ! she did not e. her Pr. 56 I e. not the beast that takes In M. 44 I e. not in any moods hi M. 44 Know well that E. calls you Devil's son /. K. 118 And then did E. call me Devil's son /. K. 119 ENVYING. And e. all that meet him there In M. 85 Leolin, I almost sin in e. j-ou E. A. 69 ENWIND. E. her isles, unmark'd of me In M 147 ENWOUND. E. us both : and over many a Poems 211 E. him fold by fold, and made him gray /. K. 256 EPIC. His e., his King Arthur, some twelve Poems 190 Gran d,e., homicidal; and be you Pr. 13 With scraps of thundrous Epic Kited out Pr. 48 107 EPICUREAN Page EPICUREAN. A wiser E., and let the world Ma. 17 EPITAPH. And cut this e. above my bones Pr. 40 EPITHET. Of yourmisfaith ; and your fine e. /. K. 121 And pelted with outrageous epithets E. A. 66 EQUAL. Two spirits to one e. mind Poems 95 — an oath, and keep it with an e. mind Poems 148 One e. temper of heroic hearts Poems 267 The crime of malice, and is e. blame ' Poems 375 Maintaining that with e. husbandry Pr. 22 The woman were an e. to the man Pr. 22 Toward that great year of e. mights and rights Pr. 78 — e. baseness lived in sleeker times Pr. 127 — wholly scorn'd to help their e. rights Pr. 169 Of e. : seeing either sex alone Pr. 173 Nor e. nor unequal : each fulfils Pr. 173 Whereon with e. feet we fared In M. 42 And what delights can e. those In M. 64 But lives to wed an e. mind In M. 87 First love, first friendship, e. powers In M. 123 Faith and unfaith can ne'er be e. powers /. K. 113 To leave an e. baseness ; and in this /. K. 137 EQUAL-BLOWING, —broad and e. wind Poems 206 EQUALL'D. — came tome that e. my desire Poems 159 EQUALLY. And death and life she hated e. Poems 124 And hear him breathing low and e. I. K. 65 EQUAL-POISED. O friendship, e. control In M. 119 EQUINOXES. Our changeful e. Poems 349 ERECT and silent, striking with her glance Pr. 144 E. behind a desk of satin-wood Pr. 34 Melissa knelt : but Lady Blanche e. Pr. 89 Tall and e. , but bending from his height E. A. 57 E. : but when the preacher's cadence flowd E. A. 88 Tall and e., but in the middle aisle E. A. 93 Strode from the porch, tall and e. again E. A. 93 ERMINE. That haunt the dusk, with e. capes In M. 139 EROSES. —a bevy of E. apple-cheek'd E. A. 158 ERR. —forms that e. from honest Nature's rulelPms 273 My princess, O my princess ! true she errs Pr. 60 And sees him e. : nor would we work for fame Pr. 68 For nothing is that errs from law In M. 101 If Enid errs, let Enid learn her fault' /. K. 8 ERRANT. — his bearing shone ; and e. knights /. K. 29 But when the Prince had brought his e. eyes /. K. 59 The knighthood-e. of this realm and all I. K. 249 ERR'D. Aim'd at the helm, his lance e. ; but /. K. 54 Have e. not, that I march to meet my doom /. K. 248 ERRING. — your Princess cramm'dwith e. pride Pr. 59 She sang of, shook and fell, an e. pearl Pr. 77 ERROR from crime : a prudence to withhold Pms 7 Shall E. in the round of time Poems 258 Child, if it were thine e. or thy crime Poems 376 It cannot be but some gross e. lies Pr. 18 And so she wears her e. like a crown Pr. 60 Deep as Hell I count his e. Select. 37 Dismal e. ! fearful slaughter ! Select. 39 ESAU. — from a heart as rough as Esau'shand P?ns 286 ESCAPE. — and tumbles and childish escapes Ma. 10 From which was no e. for evermore /. A". 104 From which is no e. for evermore ' I. K. 121 ESCAPED. -I e. heart-free, with the least little Ma. 12 — when the second Christmas came, e. E. A. 94 ESCAPING. Like the caged bird e. suddenly E. A. 15 ESPALIERS. The e. and the standards all Poems 166 ESPECIALLY. I charge you, Enid, more e. /. K. 67 ESSAY. — must thou dearly love thy first e. Poems 29 ESSAY'D. — thrice e., by tenderest-touching I. K. 140 ESSENCE. As naked e., must I be Poems 307 But his essences turn'd the live air sick Ma. 46 O sacred e., other form In M. 119 ESTATE. Whose life in low e. began In M. 89 Day, when my crown'd e. begun In M. 99 But that old man, now lord of the broad e. Ma. 3 This lump of earth has left his e. Ma. 53 Beholding one so bright in dark e. /. K. 42 E. them with large land and territory I. K. 216 ESTEEM. — you talk kindlier : we e. you for it Pr. 117 ESTEEM'D. ' O friend, we trust that you e. us Pr. 64 ESTHER. That lighted on Queen E., has her I. K. 39 ESTUARY. — smoulder'd on the refluent e. E. A. 170 ETERNAL. Lay there exiled from e. God Poems 124 From that e. silence, something more Poems 266 Pure lilies of e. peace Poems 336 Or that e. want of pence Poems 341 The e. landscape of the past In M. 68 E. form shall still divide In M. 69 The e. soul from all beside In M. 69 The twilight of e. day In M. 72 E. greetings to the dead In M. 82 E. process moving on In M. 113 108 EVER Page ETERNAL. E., separate from fears In M. 121 To bare the e. Heavens again In M. 189 Nor palter'd with E. God for power Ma. 147 E. honour to his name Ma. 145, 150 Lo ! I forgive thee, as E. God /. K. 253 Dwelt withe, summer, ill-content E. A. 31 ETERNITY. So in the light of great e. Poems 52 But dreadful time, dreadful e. Poems 124 He names the name E. Poems 303 The sabbaths of E. Poems 332 Setting toward E. Ma. 151 O skill'd to sing of Time or E. E. A. 174 ETHEREAL. And over those e. eyes In M. 128 ETIQUETTE, —clamouring e. to death Pr. 108 EUROPA. — sweet Europa's mantle blue Poems 117 EUROPE. Better fifty years of E. than a Poems 283 Of E., keep our noble England whole Ma. 146 Once the weight and fate of E. hung Ma. 150 Shall lash all Europe into blood Ma. 163 EUROPE-SHADOWING, —on E. wings Ma. 144 EUROPEAN, —trader, never floats an E. flag Pms 281 EUSTACE. When I and E. from the city Poems 203 My E. might have sat for Hercules Poems 203 Empire for life? but E. painted her - Poems-204 And E. turn'd, and smiling said to me Poems 206 ' E.,' I said, ' this wonder keeps the house' Poems 207 With solemn gibe did E. banter me Poems 209 For E., when I heard his deep ' I will' Poems 210 EVANGELIST. The lips of that E. In M. 50 EVE. At e. the beetle boometh Poems " 3 At e. a dry cicala sung Poems 76 At Francis Allen's on the Christmas-e. Poems 189 Embraced his E. in happy hour Poems 324 From fringes of the faded e. Poems 377 As thro' the land at e. we went Pr. 29 — blown to inmost north : at e. and dawn Pr. 97 How dare we keep our Christmas-e. In M. 47 And sadly fell our Christmas-e. In M. 48 And calmly fell our Christmas-e. In M. 107 And strangely falls our Christmas-e. In M. 161 No later than last e. to Prince Geraint /. K. 32 Should now be ours again, and yester-e. /. K. 37 And yester-e. I would not tell you of it . /. K. 38 Her seer, her bard, her silver star of e. /. K. 143 Heard on the winding waters, e. and morn I. K. 221 Except when for a breathing-while at e. E. A. 74 — in my father's farm at e. E. A. 125 Nor anchor dropt at e. or morn E. A. 149 And when the zoning e. has died Select. 221 EVEN. Her tears fell with the dews at e. Poems 9 And the crag that fronts the E. Poems 80 Upon an e. pedestal with man ' Pr. 66 My blood an e. tenor kept In M. 119 And climb'd upon a fair and e. ridge /. K. 13 And there that day remain'd, and toward e. I. K. 197 Lastly yonder yester-e. E. A. 170 Whisper in odorous heights of e. E. A. 175 EVENFALL. At the quiet e. Ma. 100 They brought him home at e. Select. 207 EVENING. And with the e. cloud Poems 27 Or in stillest evenings Poetns 34 To the shepherd who watcheth the e. star Poems 48 Floating thro' an e. atmosphere Poems 82 Eyed like the e. star Poems 105 You are the e. star,alway Poems 164 Many an e. by the waters did we watch Poems 271 We dropt with e. on a rustic town Pr. 24 With brow to brow like night and e mixt Pr. 143 — it was e. : silent light Pr. 163 To e., but some heart did break In M. 6 Of e., over brake and bloom In M. 125 It leads me forth at e. Ma. 96 Of e., and the moanings of the wind /. K. 199 And still at evenings on before his horse /. K. 238 — one e. Annie's children long'd E. A. 20 At e. when the dull November day E. A. 39 — well-nigh blind, and all of an e. late E. A. 119 EVENING-LIGHTED. From the e. wood Poems 163 EVENT. And such refraction of events In M. 136 And one far-off divine e. In M. 211 And Enid stood aside to wait the e. I. K. 54 And thou remaining here wilt learn the e. /. K. 255 EVENTIDE. Either at morn or e. Poems 9 For at e., listening earnestly Poems 31 — a golden autumn e. E. A. 4 EVER. — e when the moon was low Poems n E. varying Madeline Poems 15, 16 Which e. sounds and shines Poems 28 E. retiring thou dost gaze Poems 30 EVER Page EVER. Clear and bright it should be e. Poems 41 E. brightening Poems 42 All day and all night it is e. drawn Poeyyis 42 E. the weary wind went on Poeyns 47 Light and shadow e. wander Poems 49 But I shall reign for e. over all' Poems 52 Thro' the wave that runs for e. Poeyns 65 A red-cross knight for e. kneel'd Poems 68 Mingle e. Motions flow Poems 80 So dying e., Eleanore Poems 84 May those kind eyes for e. dwell ! Poeyyis 94 Rings e. in her ears of armed men Poems 108 Who paced for e. in a glimmering land Poeyyis 115 God, before whom e. lie bare Poems 122 — e. worse with growing time Poeyyis 124 — e. unrelieved by dismal tears Poeyyis 124 It is the last New-year that I shall e. see Poeyyis 134 — a better child to you than e. I have been Poeyns 137 For e. and for e. with those just souls and Poeyns 141 For e. and for e., all in a blessed home ^Poeyns 141 Nor e. fold our wings Poems 144 In e. climbing up the climbing wave ? Poeyns 146 With half-shut eyes e. to seem Poeyns 146 And e. climbing higher Poeyns 151 A name for e. !— lying robed and crown'd Poems 157 me, that I should e. see the light .' Poems 160 — e. trembling thro' the dew Poems 165 Must e. shock, like armed foes Poems 182 — lost for e. from the earth Poems 194 Nor e. wind blows loudly : but it lies Poems 200 For e. in itself the day we went Poems 206 More musical than e. came in one Poeyns 211 He could not e. rue his marrying me Poeyns 219 — one green sparkle e. and anon Poeyns 224 If e. maid or spouse Poeyns 246 Nor e. lightning char thy grain Poeyns 256 — bade adieu for e. Poems 261 This same grand year is e. at the doors ' Poeyns 264 For e. and for e. when I move Poeyns 266 That e. with a frolic welcome took Poems z&j — for I had loved thee more than e. wife Poeyns 273 — e. reaping something new Poeyns 278 — deep heart of existence beat for e. like Poeyns 279 Let the great world spin for e. Poems 283 The grim Earl's gift : but e. at a breath Poeyns 286 Has e. truly long'd for death Poeyns 308 She sleeps, nor dreams, but e. dwells ' Poeyns 316 Languidly e., and amid Poems 316 ' O wake for e., love ' she hears Poeyns 320 That e. came from pipe Poeyns 342 Had e. half the power to turn Poeyns 342 One fix'd for e. at the door Poeyyis 345 So mix for e. with the past Poeyyis 347 For me the torrent e. pour'd Poeyns 352 Faint she grew, and e. fainter Poeyns 361 For e. and for e. Poeyns 364 1 would be that for e. which I seem Pr. 42 That e. crow'd for kisses ' Pr. 43 Sparkle for e. : then we dipt in all Pr. 48 But when did woman e. yet invent?' Pr. 49 Abase those eyes that e. loved to meet Pr. 51 ' Who e. saw such wild barbarians ? Pr. 56 Fore.' Well, she balanced this a little Pr. 63 For e., blessing those that look on them Pr. 67 — grow for e. and for e. Pr. 74 For e. slaves at home and fools abroad ' Pr. 101 Wailing for e., till they open to me Pr. 112 Not e. would she love : but brooding turn Pr. 114 Three captains out : nor e. had I seen Pr. 120 — e. following those two crowned twins Pr. 128 For e. lost, there went up a great cry Pr. 137 Their dark and gray, while Psyche e. stole Pr. 143 — tread you out for e. : but howsoe'er Pr. 145 For e. : find some other Pr. 147 Had e. seem'd to wrestle with burlesque Pr. 178 — e. met him on his way In M. 7 Which weep a loss for e. new hn M. 20 Did e. rise from high to higher In M. 62 That e. look'd with human eyes In M. 82 A gulf that e. shuts and gapes In M. 97 Nor e. drank the inviolate spring In M. 133 No spirit e. brake the band hi M. 137 — e. strove to make it true hi M. 143 For e. : then flew in a dove In M. 157 Nor e. narrowness or spite In M. 173 Sprang up for e. at a touch In M. 174 For e. nobler ends hi M. 183 Thou watchest all things e. dim In M. 187 Mine, mine, for e., e. mine In M. 200 EVER Page EVER. Far off thou art, but e. nigh In M. 201 For e., and as fair as good hi M. 205 That God, which e. lives and loves hi M. 211 And e. he mutter'd and madden'd,and e. Ma. 2 — I stay? can a sweeter chance e. come Ma. 9 — beauty, and e. as pale as before Ma. 13 — sorrow seize me if e. that light Ma. 16 — e. ready to slander and steal Ma. 17 — from the board, and others e. succeed? Ma. 18 —geese of the world that are e. hissing Ma. 21 Your father is e. in London Ma. 22 For a raven e. croaks, at my side Ma. 28 A rabbit mouth that is e. agape Ma. 38 — e. and e. by Ma. 40 More life to Love than is or e. was Ma. 61 — e. mourning over the feud Ma. 66 Than e. I have been yet » Ma. 69 And if e. I should forget Ma. 69 ' For e. and e. mine ' Ma. 78 Were it e. so airy a tread Ala. 80 — there rises e. a passionate cry Ma. 85 E. and e. afresh they seem'd to grow Ma. 86 Nor e. arose from below Ma. 90 For years, for e., to part Ma. 91 That thou art left for e. alone Ma. 94 E. about me the dead men go Ma. 103 But is e. the one thing silent here Ma. 106 Deeper, e. so little deeper Ma. 108 But I go on for e. Ma. 119, 120, 127 She answer'd, ' e. longing to explain Ma. 123 There he shall rest for e. Ma. 140 Nor e. lost an English gun Ma. 143 — e. great and greater grew Ma. 143 For e. silent ; even if they broke Ma. 147 For e. ; and whatever tempests lour Ma. 147 He, that e. following her commands Ma. 149 And Victor he must e. be Ma. 151 — e. weaker grows thro' acted crime Ma. 166 Where, thinking, that if e. yet was wife I. K. 3 Was e. man so grandly made as he? /. K. 5 Once rich, now poor, but e. open-door'd ' /. K. 16 Hath ask'd again, and e. loved to hear /. K. 24 Has e. won it for the lady with him /. K. 27 She found no rest, and e. fail'd to draw /. K. 29 But Enid e. kept the faded silk _ /. K. 45 E. a good way on before ; and this /. K. 46 For he was e. saying to himself /. K. 47 — e. in her mind she cast about /. K. 48 —she was e. praying the sweet heavens /. K. 48 The one true lover which you e. had /. K. 64 With deeper and with e. deeper love /. K. 95 — being e. foremost in the chase /. K. 96 The man so wrought on e. seem'd to he /. K. 104 I e. fear'd you were not wholly mine /. K. 109 O Merlin, may this earth, if e. I /. K. 111 Had best be loosed for e.: but think or not /. K. 111 That e. bided tryst at village stile /. K. 113 — e. widening slowly silence all /. K. 113 Not e. be too curious for a boon /. K. 119 He promised more than e. king has given /. K. 124 Nor e. touch'd fierce wine, nor tasted flesh /. K. 126 Read but one book, and e. reading grew /. K. 126 ' O crueller than was e. told in tale /. K. 138 Of her whole life ; and e. overhead /. K. 143 That e. among ladies ate in Hall /. K. 160 — e. well and readily answer'd he /. K. 161 Lives for his children, e., at its best /. K. 164 — e. labouring had scoop'd himself /. K. 168 Fled e. thro' the woodwork, till they found /. K. 170 Her guiltless rival, she that e. kept /. K. 186 Sweetly forbore him e., being to him I. K. 191 —Lancelot e. prest upon the maid /. K. 194 That e. shrieks before a death,' and call'd /. K. 200 ' Sister, farewell for e.,' and again /. K. 207 To one whom e. in my heart of hearts /. K. 210 — e. in the reading, lords and dames /. K. 214 Pure, as you e. wish your knights to be /. K. 219 His nephew, e. like a subtle beast /. K. 225 — e. after, the small violence done /. K. 227 And Lancelot e. promised, but remain'd /. K. 230 -I am shamed for e. ; ' and he said /. K. 230 — part for e. Passion-pale they met /. K. 230 For if there e. come a grief to me /. K. 235 If e. Lancelot, that most noble knight /. K. 243 For e. ! thou their tool, set on to plague /. J?£. 244 For I was e. virgin save for thee I. K. 254 — mine will e. be a name of scorn /. K. 257 1 — e. as he mingled with the crew E. A. 35 Caught at and e. miss'd it, and they laugh'd E. A. 41 109 EVER EVER. Call'd to the bar,- but e. call'd away As e. painter painted, poet sang At Christmas ; e. welcome at the Hall —Edith e. visitant with him Till Leolin, e. watchful of her eye From you and yours for e. — shall you do For e. and for e., or one stone Staring for e. from their gilded walls In vast sea-cataracts — e. and anon The prisoner at the bar, e. condemn'd Nor e. cared to better his own kind — e. in it a low musical note — e. when it broke — that sweet note ; and e. as their shrieks — half a truth is e. the blackest of lies — the first that e. I bare was dead The e. silent spaces of the East E. A. 139 — e. scare me with thy tears E. A. 141 — e. thus thou growest beautiful E. A. 141 — hold me not for e. in thine East E. A. 142 For one fair Vision e. fled E. A. 148 —the bud e. breaks into bloom on the tree E. A. 159 With secret death for e. in the pits Select. 197 EVERARD. —Holmes, the poet E. Hall Poems 189 On Everard's shoulder Poems 190 ' And I,' quoth E., ' by the wassail-bowl ' Poems 190 For I remember'd Everard's college fame Poems 190 EVER-BREAKING. And heard an e. shore In M. 192 EVER-ECHOING avenues of song Ma. 142 EVER-FANCIED. Before an e. arrow, made /. K. 73 EVER-FLOATING. O death, thou e. cloud Poems 107 EVERGREEN, —throve an ancient e. E. A 40 EVERLASTING. The marvel of the e. will Poems 38 And thunder on the e. hills Poems 159 — built herself an e. name Poems 288 EVER-LOYAL. Their e. iron leader's fame Ma. 150 EVERMORE. Smiling, frowning, e. Poems 1$, 16 So be alone for e. ' Poems 76 Of richest pauses, e. Poems 81 Gazing on thee for e. Poems 81 And so would languish e. Poems 83 I would be dying e. Poems 84 — when I have said good night for e. Poems 137 Of child, and wife, and slave : but e. Poems 143 —love is love for e. Poems 274 And e. a costly kiss Poems 324 E. she seems to gaze Poems 359 That life shall live for e. In M. 53 But e. a life behind In M. 63 ' Adieu, adieu ' for e. In M. 82 My bride to be, my e. delight Ma. 62 — e. her father came across Ma. 123 Echo round his bones for e. Ma. 138 — break the shore, and e. Ma. 151 Geraint had longing in him e. /. K. 22 But e. it seem'd an easier thing /. K. 51 By that day's grief and travel ; e. /. K. 65 From which was no escape for e. /. K. 104 And none could find that man for e. /. K. 104 ' O mine have ebb'd away for e. /. K. 116 From which is no escape for e.' /. K. 121 Betwixt us twain henceforward e. /. K. 141 Would be for e. a name of scorn /. K. 228 And I should e. be vext with thee /. K. 251 To guard and foster her for e. /. K. 256 To see his children leading e. E. A. 7 But e. the daughter prest upon her E. A. 27 The vessel scarce sea-worthy ; bute. E. A. 36 Upbore him, and firm faith, and e. E. A. 44 — we might sail for e. E. A. 144 Her face was e. unseen E. A. 148 And we may sail for e. E. A. 150 Can prove you, tho' he make vou e. E. A. 166 EVER-MURDER'D. —and e. France E. A. 90 EVER-RAVENING. Must their e. eagle's E. A. 169 EVER-SHIFTING. The e. currents of the Poems 155 EVER-TREMULOUS. And e. aspen-trees /. K. 174 EVERYTHING. ' Wilt thou make e. a lie Poems 298 Reels, and the herdsmen cry : for e. Walk'd at their will, and e. was changed E. came to be known Keep e. shipshape EVERYWAY, —but have proved him e. —bought them needful books, and e. EVERYWHERE. Which had built up e. And see the minnows e. A rolling stone of here and e. In crystal vapour e. no Pr. 134 Pr. 156 Ma. 105 E. A. 13 I.K. 94 E. A. 19 Poems 47 Poems 87 Poems 224 Poems 362 EXPERIENCE Page EVERYWHERE. Dilating on the future ; ' e. Pr. 38 And e. the broad and bounteous Earth Pr. 38 Flatter myself that always e. Pr. $0 Like field-flowers e.! we like them well Pr 67 The large blows rain'd, as here and e. Pr. 133 A kindlier influence reign'd : and e. Pr. 158 Whose faith has centre e. In M. 52 That I, considering e. In M. 78 Found every hostel full, and e, /. K. 14 Went Yniol thro' the town, and e. /. K. 37 To till the wastes, and moving e. /. K. 95 Have e. about this land of Christ /. K. 247 Her station, taken e. for pure /. K. 252 Each, its own charm ; and Edith's e. E. A. 59 EVIDENCE. That heat of inward e. Poems 302 EVIL. All e. dreams of power Poems 40 To war with e. ? Is there any peace Poems 146 Oh yet, if Nature's e. star ' Poe?ns 182 This e. came on William at the first Poems 216 — the e. ones come here, and say Poems 239 — all good things from e., brought the night Poems 260 And grapples with his e. star In M. 89 That Nature lends such e. dreams? In M. 78 A treble darkness, E. haunts - In M. 147 And I make myself such e. cheer Ma. 52 With the e. tongue and the e. ear Ma. 39 Struck for himself an e. stroke Ma. 86 That whatsoever e. happen to me I. K. 25 And if we meet again, some e. chance /. K. 229 From e. done ; right sure am I of that /. K. 235 This e. work of Lancelot and the Queen?' /. K. 241 (Sure that all e. would come out of it) E. A. 9 — in whom all e. fancies clung E. A. 27 Let us too, let us all e., sleep E. A. 113 Thought on all her e. tyrannies E. A. 173 Out of e. e. flourishes E. A. 173 EVIL-HEARTED. Beautiful Paris, e. Paris Poems 100 EVIL-STARR'D. —fell my father e. Poems 281 EWES. — snowy shoulders, thick as herded e. Pr. 99 EXAMPLE. — make me an e. to mankind Poems 243 E., pattern : lead them to thy light Poems 244 But, your e. pilot, told her all Pr. 61 Unused e. from the grave In M. in Let his great e. stand Ma. 149 EXCALIBUR. — take my brand E. Poems 192 Delay not : take E. Poems 192 There drew he forth the brand E. Poems 193 Better to leave E. conceal'd Poems 193 And hid E. the second time Poems 195 Saying, ' King Arthur's sword, E. Poems 195 But if thou spare to fling E. Poems 196 So flash'd and fell the brand E. Poems 196 EXCEEDS. On one whose rank e. her own In M. 85 EXCEEDING, —faint steps and much e. pain Pms 242 But he, from his e. manfulness /. K. 12 That each had suffer'd some e. wrong /. K. 47 With more e. passion than of old /. K. 63 E. ' poor in spirit ' E. A. 90 EXCESS. — like one that sees his own e. E. A. 72 EXCITEMENT. Yearning for the large e. Poems 277 EXCLAIM'D. —as death in marble ; then e. Pr. 24 And she e. Pr. 67 EXCLAIMING, « Surely I will learn the name '/. K. n EXCUSE. That I must needs repeat for my e. Pr. 57 Made such excuses as he might, and these /. K. 227 — a scarce-believable e. E. A. 26 EXECRATION, —with a sudden e. drove E. A. 68 EXEMPT. — feelings — she herself was not e. Poems 276 EXERCISE, —men delight in, martial e.? Pr. 65 Yoked in all e. of noble end Pr. 176 The sad mechanic e» In M. 5 Charier of sleep, and wine, and e. E. A. 74 EXIT. — the landward e. of the cave E. A. 101 EXILED. Lay there e. from eternal God Poems 124 EXISTENCE, —deep heart of e. beat for Poems 279 EXPANSE. And down the river's dim e. Poems 70 O'er the lone e. Select. 38 EXPECTS, —king e.— was there no precontract Pr. 65 EXPECTANT. Thou doest e. nature wrong In M. 114 E. of that news which never came E.A. 15 — e. terror of her heart -£". A. 27 EXPECTATION. Of shining e. fixt on mine Pr. 82 In e. of a guest In M. 7 EXPECTING when a fountain should arise Poems 366 E. still his advent home In M. 7 EXPERIENCE. Circled thro' all experiences Pms 104 The e. of the wise Poems 232 Yet all e. is an arch wherethro' Poems 265 Full of sad e. Poems 280 EXPERIENCE Page EXPERIENCE. Tho' all e. past became Poems 306 Our own e. preaches Poems 346 Of Moll and Meg-, and strange experiences Pr. 82 Divorced from my e., will be chaff Pr. 93 — pines in sad e. worse than death Pr. 174 A lord of large e., train In M. 64 EXPERIMENT. In setting round thy first e. Pms 29 And,yonder,shrieks and strange experiments Pr. 13 EXPERT. What practice howsoe'er e. In M. 103 EXPLAIN. She answer'd, 'ever longing to e. Ma. 123 EXPLAIN'D. The shame that cannot be e. /. K. 130 EXPOUND. But not of those that can e. /. K. 109 EXPOUNDER. Take Vivien for e. ; she will /. K. 109 EXPRESS. How may full-sail'd verse e. Poems 80 Who may e. thee, Eleanore ? Poems 81 So gross to e. delight, in praise of her Poems 205 With gifts of grace that might e. In M. 120 EXPRESSED. There is no other thing e. Poems 301 EXPRESSION. But beyond e. fair Poems 33 Drew in the e. of an eye In M. 173 EXPREST. In yearnings that can never be e. Pms 162 Thro' light reproaches, half e. hi M. 118 Of samite without price, that more e. /. K. 104 EXPUNGE the world : so fared she gazing Pr. 159 EXQUISITE Margaret, who can tell Poems 164 Less e. than thine ' Poems 208 Maud with her e. face Ma. 23 — that e. isle, my dear E. A. 158 EXQUISITELY. I hold them e. knit Poems 249 How e. minute Ma. 88 From foot to forehead e. turn'd /. K. 180 EXTENDING. — innocently e. her white arms/. K. 195 EXTREME. — its way with e. gentleness Poems 8 The falsehood of extremes ! ' Poems 178 But such extremes, I told her, well might harm Pr. 61 The yesternight, and storming in extremes Pr. 116 Whence radiate : fierce extremes employ In M. 129 And save it even in extremes, began /. K. 228 EXTREMITY. He, reddening in e. of delight/. K. 57 EXULT. Fade wholly, while the soul exults In M. 101 EXULTINGLY. —on the couch and spoke e. /. K. 36 EYE. Glancing with black-beaded eyes Poems 5 Eyes not down-dropt nor over bright Poems 7 Light-glooming over eyes divine Poems 15 Serene with argent-lidded eyes Poems 24 — his deep e. laughter stirr'd Poems 25 —spirit-thrilling eyes so keen and beautiful Poems 27 Thou of the many tongues, the myriad eyes \ Pms 28 Unto mine inner e. Poems 28 Large dowries does the raptured e. Poems 29 Thy rose-lips and full blue eyes Poems 33 — those dew-lit eyes of thine Poems 35 Beyond the bottom of his e. Poems 36 — a lack-lustre dead-blue e. Poems 36 Blew his own praises in his eyes Poems 37 When rites and forms before his burning eyes Pms 39 Of her keen eyes Poems 40 In your e. there is death Poems 41 listen, listen, your eyes shall glisten Poems 44 — all about him roll'd his lustrous eyes Poems 52 Up from my heart unto my eyes Poems 56 With his large calm eyes for the love of me Poems 61 And her eyes were darken'd wholly Poems 71 Her melancholy eyes divine Poems 74 To look into her eyes and say Poems 76 Thy dark eyes open'd not Poems 78 The languors of thy love-deep eyes Poems 81 In thy large eyes, imperial Eleanore Poems 82 In thy large eyes, that, overpower'd quite Poems 82 1 see his gray eyes twinkle Yet Poems 85 At his own jest — gray eyes lit up Poems 85 The busy wrinkles round his eyes ? Poems 85 — ere I saw your eyes, my love Poetns 87 — there a vision caught my e. Poems 88 — when I raised my eyes, above Poems 88 Such eyes ! I swear to you, my love Poems 88 Eyes with idle tears are wet Poems 94 Look thro' mine eyes with thine. True wife Poems 94 May those kind eyes for ever dwell ! Poems 94 Dear eyes, since first I knew them well Poems 94 Droops blinded with his shining e. Poems 97 My eyes are full of tears, my heart of love Poems 99 My heart is breaking, and my eyes are dim Poems 99 — of virgin snow. With down-dropt eyes Poems 100 —her full and earnest e. Poems 103 Thy mortal eyes are frail to judge of fair Poems 104 —I beheld great Here's angry eyes Poems 105 — with a subtle smile in her mild eyes Poems 105 —to vex me with his father's eyes j Poems 108 EYE Page EYE. My palace with unblinded eyes Poems 114 The dying Islamite, with hands and eyes Poems 117 Flush'd in her temples and her eyes Poems 120 all things fair to sate my various eyes 1 Poems 121 Oh your sweet eyes, your low replies Poems 127 The languid light of your proud eyes Poe/ns 128 There's many a black, black e., they say Poems 130 — tir'd eyelids upon tir'd eyes Poems 144 With half-shut eyes ever to seem Poems 146 — eyes grown dim with gazing on the Poems 147 Charged both mine eyes with tears Poems 150 — black-bearded kings with wolfish eyes Poems 154 The star-like sorrows of immortal eyes Poems 154 — with swarthy cheeks and bold black eyes Poems 155 — nor tame and tutor with mine e. Poems 156 Those dragon eyes of anger'd Eleanor Poems 160 What lit your eyes with tearful power Poems 163 Your hair is darker, and your eyes Poems 165 Look down, and let your blue eyes dawn Poems 165 But tho' his eyes are waxing dim Poems 169 Close up his eyes : tie up his chin Poems 170 —tho' mine own eyes fill with dew Poems 172 Cast down her eyes, and in her throat Poems 173 Her open eyes desire the truth Poems 178 From either side, nor veil his eyes Poems 183 — both his eyes were dazzled Poems 193 Which might have pleased the eyes of many Pms 194 Laid widow'd of the power in his e. Poems 195 'Now see I by thine eyes that this is done Poems 196 —looking wistfully with wide blue eyes Poems 197 Where shall I hide my forehead and my eyesfPms 199 Before the eyes of ladies and of kings Poems 199 — drew your pencil from you, made those eyes Pms 204 Her violet eyes, and all her Hebe bloom Poems 208 Full of his bliss, and following her dark eyes Pms 210 A thought would fill my eyes with happy dew Pms 210 — while I mused came Memory with sad eyes Pms 212 Make thine heart ready with thine eyes Poems 213 —I will set him in my uncle's e. Poems 216 To make him pleasing in her uncle's eyes. Poems -zij So Dora cast her eyes upon the ground Poems 217 — his nice eyes Poems 227 — modest eyes, a hand, a foot Poems 227 These heavy horny eyes. The end ! the end! Pms 243 — ah ! with what delighted eyes Poems 245 To light her shaded e. Poems 254 1 breathed upon her eyes Poems 254 Streaming eyes and breaking hearts? Poems 258 The staring e. glazed o'er with sapless days Poems 258 — eyes, love-languid thro' half-tears, would Poems 259 Gave utterance by the yearning of an e. Poems 260 —quiet eyes unfaithful to the truth Poems 261 — into the future far as human e. could see Poejns 269 — her eyes on all my motions Poems 270 — deeply dawning in the dark of hazel eyes Poems 270 — his eyes are heavy : think not they are' Poems 272 — an e. shall vex thee, looking ancient Poems 275 For I dipt into the future, far as human e. Poems 278 — left me with the jaundiced e. Poems 279 E., to which all order festers Poems 279 No e. look down, she passing Poems 286 Had cunning eyes to see : the barking cur Poems 287 Peep'd, — but his eyes, before they had Poems 287 AVhose eyes are dim with glorious tears Poems 296 He owns the fatal gift of eyes Poems 302 Nor look with that too-earnest e. Poems 313 A fairy Prince, with joyful eyes Poems 317 How dark those hidden eyes must be ! ' Poems 318 ' O eyes long laid in happy sleep ! ' Poems 320 That I might kiss those eyes awake 1 Poems 323 So much your eyes my fancy take Poems 323 What eyes, like thine, have waken'dhopes?P<9^wi- 324 This weight and size, this heart and eyes Poems 336 The corners of thine eyes Poems 349 She look'd into Lord Ronald's eyes Poe?ns 357 One praised her ancles, one her eyes Poems 365 Where sat a company with heated eyes Poems 366 Hair, and eyes, and limbs, and faces Poems 367 Glimmer in thy rheumy eyes Poems 372 In your e. — nor yet your lip Poe?ns 373 To glass herself in dewy eyes Poems 377 Of sunrise, her arm lifted, eyes on fire Pr. 3 Up thro' gilt wires a crafty loving e. Pr. 10 Together, twinn'd as horse's ear and e. Pr. 18 — raised the blinding bandage from his eyes Pr. 28 Than our man's earth ; such eyes were in her Pr. 31 A bird's-e. view of all the ungracious past Pr. 35 — all her thoughts as fair within her eyes Pr. 46 Pierced thro' with eyes, but that I kept mine Pr. 51 hi EYE Page EYE. Abase those eyes that ever loved to Pr. 51 Or grief, and glowing- round her dewy eyes Pr. 55 Began to burn and burn, and her lynx e. Pr. 56 Up went the hush'd amaze of hand and e. Pr. 61 At point to move, and settled in her eyes Pr. 61 With open eyes, and we must take the chance Pr. 61 Brake, as she smote me with the light of eyes Pr. 64 With kindled eyes : we rode a league beyond Pr. 71 Rise in the heart, and gather to the eyes Pr. 76 To dying ears, when unto dying eyes Pr. 77 Stared with great eyes, and laugh'd with alien Pr. 80 She wept her true eyes blind for such a one Pr. 81 — turned her sumptuous head with eyes Pr. 82 Not yet endured to meet her opening eyes Pr. 84 — me none told : not less to an e. like mine Pr. 91 Stared in her eyes, and chalk'd her face, and Pr. 94 — rainbow robes, and gems and gemlike eyes Pr. 99 Of tempest, when the crimson-rolling e> Pr. 100 From ferule and trespass-chiding e. Pr. 109 Alive with fluttering scarfs and ladies' eyes Pr. 133 — loved me closer than his own right e. Pr. 134 The old lion, glaring with his whelpless e. Pr. 141 Red grief and mother's hunger in her e. Pr. 144 At first her e. with slow dilation roll'd Pr. 146 — with an e. that swum in thanks Pr. 147 — turn'd askance a wintry e. Pr. 153 — common men with rolling eyes : amazed Pr. 155 I love not hollow cheek or faded e. Pr. 157 Nor knew what e. was on me, nor the hand Pr. 160 Dwelt in her eyes, and softer all her shape Pr. 164 Fixt my faint eyes, and utter'd whisperingly Pr. 165 So she low-toned : while with shut eyes I lay Pr. 169 Seem'd the full lips, and mild the luminous eyes Pr. 169 —lift thine eyes : my doubts are dead Pr. 175 ' From yearlong poring on thy pictured eyes Pr. 175 All night below the darken'd eyes In M. 4 — since it pleased a vanish'd e. In M. 11 Mine eyes have leisure for their tears In M. 20 It never look'd to human eyes In M. 41 Oh, if indeed that e. foresee In M. 43 — if that e. which watches guilt In M. 43 We sung, tho' every e. was dim In M. 48 Her eyes are homes of silent prayer In M. 51 — those wild eyes that watch the wave hi M. 56 Make April of her tender eyes In M. 60 With larger other eyes than ours In M. 73 See with clear e. some hidden shame In M. 73 Such splendid purpose in his eyes In M. 80 — if thou cast thine eyes below In M. 86 Tho' if an e. that's downward cast In M. 87 Or in the light of deeper eyes In.M. 87 — closing eaves of wearied eyes In M. 93 I find a trouble in thine e. In M. 94 To him, who turns a musing eye In M. 106 — dropt the dust on tearless eyes In M. 111 — over those ethereal eyes ' In M. 128 He brought an e. for all he saw In M. 130 That could the dead, whose dying eyes In M. 133 — woolly breasts and beaded eyes In M. 139 Sweet-hearted, you, whose light-blue eyes In M. 143 These two — they dwelt with e. on e. In M. 145 She dwells on him with faithful eyes In M. 146 On Lethe in the eyes of Death In M. 147 — each has pleased a kindred e. In M. 152 The critic clearness of an e. hi M. 168 All these have been, and thee mine eyes In M. 169 Drew in the expression of an e. In M. 173 That I, who gaze with temperate eyes hi M. 174 I seem to cast a careless e. hi M. 174 — bright the friendship of thine e. In M. 185 Or eagle's wing, or insect's e. In M. 192 She did but look thro' dimmer eyes hi M. 194 Sweet human hand, and lips, and e. In M. 200 On me she bends her blissful eyes hi M. 205 By village eyes as yet unborn In M. 207 Of those that, e. to e., shall look hi M. 210 —her eyes were downcast, not to be seen) Ma. 11 An e. well-practised in nature Ma. 19 What if tho' her e. seem'd full Ma. 27 And a moist mirage in desert eyes Ma. 28 And once, but once, she lifted her eyes Ma. 33 Innumerable pitiless passionless eyes Ma. 60 — how often I caught her with eyes all wet Ma. 65 — every e. but mine will glance Ma. 73 In violets blue as your eyes Ma. 79 Was it he lay there with a fading e. ? Ma. 86 — only moves with the moving e. Ma. 90 Might drown all life in the e. Ma. 92 For the hand, the lips, the eyes Ma. 97 112 EYE Page EYE. My own dove with the tender e. ? Ma. 98 — look'd, tho' but in a dream, upon eyes so fair Ma. 112 'It is time, O passionate heart and morbid e. Ma. 113 Her eyes a bashful azure Ma. 121 —Katie snatch'd her eyes at once from mine Ma. 122 Re-risen in Katie's eyes, and all things well Ma. 126 On eyes a bashful azure, and on hair Ma. 128 I saw with half-unconscious ei Ma. 132 O Statesmen, guard us, guard the e., the soul Ma. 146 And Enid, but to please her husband's e. /. K. 1 And this she gather'd from the peoples' eyes I. K. At Or may be«pierced to death before mine eyes /. K. 6 And darken'd from the high light in his eyes /. K. 6 And valley, with fixt e. following the three /. K. 13 Let his e. rove in following, or rest /. K. 22 To whom Geraint with eyes all bright replied /. K. 27 Nor did she lift an e. nor speak a word /. K. 29 At this she cast her eyes upon her dress /. K. 33 Myself would work e. dim, and finger lame /. K. 34 Help'd by the mother's careful hand and e. /. K. 39 As careful robins e. the delver's toil /. K. 41 — when the Prince had brought his errant eyes /. K. 59 Found Enid with the corner of his e. /. K. 60 Crost and came near, lifted adoring eyes /. K. 62 — would not make them laughable in all eyes /. A". 63 — his eyes moist ; but Enid fear'd his eyes /. K. 64 With eyes to find you out how ever far /. K. 68 As careful robins e. the delver's toil /. K. 68 Nor let her true hand falter, nor blue e. /. K. 72 Till his e. darken'd and his helmet wagg'd /. K. 72 He drove the dust against her veilless eyes /. K. 73 Bound on a foray, rolling eyes of prey I. K. 74 Half-bold, half-frighted, with dilated eyes /. K. 77 He roll'd his eyes about the hall, and found /. K. 78 But o'er her meek eyes came a happy mist /. K. 86 Yet not so misty were her meek blue eyes /. K. 86 The truest eyes that ever answer'd heaven /. K. 90 — you came, — and with your own true eyes /. K. 90 — poor cousin, with your meek blue eyes /. K. 90 By having look'd too much thro' alien eyes /. K. 93 — blameless King went forth and cast his eyes /. K. 95 With reverent eyes mock-loyal, shaken voice /. K. 102 But neither eyes nor tongue — O stupid child!/. K. 106 So sweetly gleam'd her eyes behind her tears /. K. 114 — her Queen : but those isle-nurtured eyes /. K. 123 With those fine eyes : she had her pleasure /. K. 125 Not one to flirt a venom at her eyes I. K. 125 — and then drew back, and let her eyes /. K. 125 And forces ; often o'er the sun's bright e. I. K. 126 So lean his eyes were monstrous ; while the /. K. 126 To mind and e. ; but the long sleepless /. K. 129 A snowy penthouse for his hollow eyes /. K. 136 Without the will to lift their eyes, and see /. K. 137 His e. was calm, and suddenly she took /. K. 138 — earth round. He rais'd his eyes and saw /. K. 142 Her eyes and neck glittering went and came/. K. 144 Lifted her eyes, and they dwelt languidly /. K. 151 There gleam'd a vague suspicion in his eyes /. K. 154 Then she, who held her eyes upon the /. K. 159 Lifted her eyes, and read his lineaments /. K. 160 And noblest, when she lifted up her eyes /. K. 160 — bruised and bronzed, she lifted up her eyes /. K. 161 By Camelot in the meadow, let his eyes /. K. 169 And stay'd ; and cast his eyes on fair Elaine /. K. 180 O damsel, in the light of your blue eyes /. K. 181 — the sick knight, and while he roll'd his eyes /. K. 189 — she mean by that ? his large black eyes /. K. 190 His eyes glisten'd : she fancied ' is it for me? ' /. K. 190 To interpret ear and e., and such a tongue /. K. 196* All ear and e., with such a stupid heart /. K. 196 Speaking a still good-morrow with her eyes /. K. 201 Winking his eyes, and twisted all his face /. K. 207 For loyal awe, saw with a sidelong e. /. K. 208 Close underneath his eyes, and right across /. K. 212 Shape to their fancy's e. from broken rocks /. K. 212 — mouths that gaped, and eyes that ask'd /. K. 212 From the half-face to the full e., and rose /. K. 213 He raised his head, their eyes met and hers /. K. 215 He answer'd with his eyes upon the ground /. K. 218 To doubt her fairness were to want an e. /. K. 219 The high reed wave, and lifted up his eyes /. K. 220 Lay couchant with his eyes upon the throne /. K. 225 That Modred still in green, all ear and e. /. K. -2-26 Heart-hiding smile, and gray persistent e. /. K. 228 And greeted : hands in hands, and e. to e, /. K. 230 — wicKed lightnings of her eyes, and saps /. K. 252 Grasp'd, made her vail her eyes : she look'd /. K. 259 To poor sick people, richer in his eyes /. K. 260 -Philip, his blue eyes E. A. 3 EYE Page EYE. A purpose evermore before his eyes E. A. 3 His large gray eyes and weather-beaten E. A. 5 — in their eyes and faces read his doom E. A. 5 Perhaps her e. was dim, hand tremulous E. A. 14 — not fix the glass to suit her e. E. A. 14 Then Philip with his eyes E. A. 26 His eyes upon the stones E. A. 37 — rolling his gray eyes upon her E. A. 46 — once again he roll'd his eyes upon her E. A. 49 Whose eyes from under a pyramidal head E. A. 52 Flamed in his cheek ; and eager eyes E. A. 54 — cross-lightnings of four chance-met eyes E. A. 57 Till Leolin ever watchful of her e. E. A. 62 —conscious of the rageful e. E. A. 68 — a weird bright e. E. A. 81 — her fresh and innocent eyes E. A. 87 — hid the Holiest from the people's eyes E. A. 91 Then their eyes vext her E. A. 92 — fixt eyes of painted ancestors E. A. 94 — thinking that her clear germander e. E. A. 96 — night-light flickering in my eyes E. A. 101 A curse in his God-bless-you : then my eyes E. A. 104 —his conscience and one e. askew ' E. A. 105, 106 Made wet the crafty crowsfoot round his e. E. A. 106 — as far as e. could see E. A. 107 — with awful light, and show'd their eyes E. A. 108 My wistful eyes on two fair images E. A. 109 ' The man your e. pursued E. A. no And he turn'd, and I saw his eyes all wet E. A. 120 — thank God that I keep my eyes E. A. 127 Shines in those tremulous eyes E. A. 140 Thy sweet eyes brighten slowly close to E. A. 141 In days far-off, and with what other eyes E. A. 142 He saw not far : his eyes were dim E. A. 149 In the eyes of each Select. 38 FACE Page EYE. — win all eves with all accomplishment Select 196 EYEBROW. Still makes a hoary e. for the Ma. 121 He dragg'd his e. bushes down, and made /. K. 136 EYED. — cold winds woke the gray-e. morn Poems 10 The gold-e. kingcups fine Poems 51 E. like the evening star Poems 105 On white-e. phantasms weeping tears of blood Pms 123 A Prince I was, blue-e., and fair in face Pr. 15 A quick brunette, well-moulded, falcon-e. Pr. 34 EYELASH. The lifting of whose e. is my lord Pr. 114 Pale with the golden beam of an e. Ma. 13 EYELESS. 'I saw the little elf-god e. once /. K. 106 EYELID. Ray-fringed eyelids of the morn Poems x% Her e. quiver d as she spake Poems 91 Weigh heavy on my eyelids : let me die Poems 107 I kiss'd his eyelids into rest Poems no — tir'd eyelids upon tir'd eyes Poems 144 With half-dropt eyelids still Poems 147 I read, before my eyelids dropt their shade Poems 150 1 Sir King, I closed mine eyelids, lest the gems Pms 196 Her eyelids dropp'd their silken eaves Poems 254 Pacing with downward eyelids pure Poems 309 The dewy sister-eyelids lay Poe»is 312 Beat balm upon our eyelids. Hither came Pr. 60 — on my heavy eyelids Ma. 100 A little flutter'd, with her eyelids down Ma. 122 Made her cheek burn and either e. fall /. K. 41 Made her cheek burn and either e. fall /. A". 68 Made answer, either e. wet with tears /. K. 113 Drew the vast e. of an inky cloud I. K. 126 The slow tear creep from her closed e. yet /. K. 141 — forehead, eyelids, growing dewy-warm E. A. 142 EYESIGHT. Not with blinded e. poring Poems 282 EYE-WITNESS, —against thine own e. fain /. K. 135 F. FAACE. — they fun un theer a-laaid on 'is f. E. A. 132 FABLE. The f. of the city where we dwelt Poe?ns 203 Of ancient f. and fear Ma. 90 Read my little f. E. A. 153 FABLED. — why we came? I f. nothing fair Pr. 61 FACE. Old faces glimmer'd thro' the doors Poems 12 Breathing Light against thy f. Poems 35 Sweet faces, rounded arms Poems 43 But I was down upon my f. Poems 55 O pale, pale f., so sweet and meek Poems 55 He said, ' She has a lovely f. Poems 72 The clear perfection of her f. Poems 74 To a full f., there like a sun remain Poems 82 While I muse upon thy f. Poems 83 And turning look'd upon your f. Poems 91 Grow, live, die, looking on his f. Poems 97 — to her f. how much I hate Poems 107 O happy Heaven, how canst thou see my f. Poems 107 She was the fairest in the f. Poems 109 Two godlike faces gazed below Poenis 119 O silent faces of the Great and Wise Poems 121 — see me, mother, I shall look upon your f. Poems 136 Dark faces pale against that rosy flame Poems 143 —about the keel with faces pale Poems 143 With those old faces of our infancy Poems 146 — she turning on my f. Poems 154 Myself for such a f. had boldly died ' Poems 154 My father held his hand upon his f. Poems 154 On Arnon unto Minneth.' Here her f. Poems 160 And a new f. at the door, my friend Poems 170 His f. is growing sharp and thin Poems 170 The fullness of "her f. Poems 177 —for all his f. was white Poems 198 — new men. strange faces, other minds ' Poems 199 — shouldst never see my f. again Poems 200 His f., and pass'd — unhappy that I am 1 Poems 219 So Mary said, and Dora hid her f. Poems 219 With heated faces ; till he laugh'd aloud Poems 22.-2. FACE. — the world with jaundice, hid his f. Pms 226 A pretty f. is well, and this is well Poems 232 Their faces grow between me and my book Poems 242 I know thy glittering f. Poems 243 Once more before my f. Poems 245 Fresh faces, that would thrive Poems ^j God's glory smote him on the f.' Poems 299 ' His f., that two hours since hath died Poems 300 His little daughter, whose sweet f. Poems 301 Whose wrinkles gather'd on his f. Poems 304 And I will tell it. Turn your f. Poems 313 Grave faces gather'd in a ring Poems 314 — yawn'd, and rubb'd his f. , and spoke Poems 319 There I put my f. in the grass Poems 338 Of darken'd forms and faces Poems 346 Her sweet f. from brow to chin Poems 360 So sweet a f., such angel grace Poe?7is 365 Panted hand in hand with faces pale Poems 367 Hair, and eyes, and limbs, and faces Poems 367 Every f. , however full Poems 373 With happy faces and with holiday Pr. 4 ( A. little sense of wrong had touch'd her f. Pr. 12 A Prince I was, blue-eyed and fair in f. Pr. 15 Now while they spake, I saw my father's f. Pr. 18 Together : keep your hoods about the f. Pr. 47 Push'd her flat hand against his f. and laugh'd Pr. 48 She sent for Blanche to accuse her f. to f. Pr. 87 — falling on my f. was caught and known Pr. 88 Half-drooping from her, turn'd her f. Pr. 93 Stared in her eyes, and chalk'd her f., and Pr. 94 Your faces there in the crowd Pr. 101 The weight of destiny : so from her f. Pr. 103 Bent their broad faces toward us and address'd Pr. 103 Thy face across his fancy comes Pr. 105 — every f. she look'd on justify it) Pr. 114 No woman named : therefore I set my f. Pr. 127 Took the f. -cloth from the f. • Pr. 136 The haggard father's f. and reverend beard Pr. 141 "3 FACE Page FACE, —once more she look'd at my pale f. Pr. 142 — turn'd each f. her way : wan was her cheek Pr. 144 Or self-involved : but when she learnt his f. Pr. 144 —thro' the parted silks the tender f. Pr. 160 A moment, and she heard, at which her f. Pr. 161 Mine down my f., and with what life I had Pr. 164 Hortensia, pleading : angry was her f. Pr. 164 Pale was the perfect f. Pr. 169 Whom we, that have not seen thy f. In M. v. Roves from the living brother's f. hi M. 51 And tears are on the mother's f. In M 60 And find his comfort in thy f. In M. 169 And shoals of pucker'd faces drive In M. 97 The f. I know ; the hues are faint In M. 97 Looks thy fair f. and makes it still In M. 97 As sometimes in a dead man's f. In M. 102 And in a moment set thy f. In M. 105 For changes wrought on form and f. In M. 113 I see their unborn faces shine In M. 116 The God within him light his f. In M. 127 The reflex of a human f. In M. 167 Not all regret : the f. will shine In M. 181 Many a merry f. In M. 207 And hearts are warm'd, and faces bloom _ In M. 208 — my heart as a millstone, set my f. as a flint Ma. 5 — cold and clear-cut f., as I found when her Ma. n Cold and clear-cut f., why come you so Ma. 13 Passionless, pale, cold f. Ma. 13 — foolish pride flash'd over her beautiful f. Ma. 17 Maud with her exquisite f. Ma. 23 A f. of tenderness might be feign'd Ma. 28 A bought commission, a waxen f. Ma. 38 His f., as I grant, in spite of spite Ma. 46 Last year I caught a glimpse of his f. Ma. 47 — he struck me, madman, over the f. Ma. 86 — the faces that one meets Ma. 101 — face of night is fair on the dewy downs Ma. in That makes a man, in the sweet f. of her /. K. 7 And Guinevere, not mindful of his f. I. K. n Had visor up, and show'd a youthful f. I. K. n Across the f. of Enid hearing her /. K. 28 And kept her off and gazed upon her f. I. K. 28 Turn'd and beheld the four, and all his f. I. K. 30 Dared not to glance at her good mother's f. I. K. 41 But rested with her sweet f. satisfied I. A". 41 Than to cry ' Halt,' and to her own bright f. I. A". 51 Greeted Geraint full f., but stealthily I. K. 60 Saying 'your sweet faces make good fellows I. K. 67 Yet, since the f. is comely — some of you I. K. 75 You mar a comely f. with idiot tears I. A". 75 And felt the warm tears falling on his f. I. K. 76 She set her own and climb'd ; he turn'd his f. I. A". 86 Fearing the mild f. of the blameless King I. K. 89 His very f. with change of heart is changed I. K. 93 A f. of sad appeal, and spake and said I. K. 105 Your f. is practised, when I spell the fines I. K. 112 So tender was her voice, so fair her f. I. A'. 114 For, look upon his f. ! — but if he sinn'd I. A". 133 Tho' harlots paint their talk as well as f. I. K. 136 Gazed at the heaving shoulder, and the f. I. K. 140 ' And with what f., after my pretext made I. A'. 154 Had marr'd his f., and mark'd it ere his time I. A". 160 And all night long his f. before her lived I. A". 164 As when a painter, poring on a f. I. K. 164 Behind it, and so paints him that his f. I. A". 164 And fullest ; so the f. before her lived /. A~. 165 Rapt on his f. as if it were a God's I. K. 165 Her bright hair blown about the serious f. I. K. 167 Sprang to her f. and fill'd her with delight /. K. 167 With smiling f. and frowning heart, a Prince I. A". 176 At Arthur's right, with smiling f. arose I. A". 176 And sharply turn'd about to hide her f. I. K. 179 Where could be found f. daintier ? then her I. K. 180 And lifted her fair f. and moved away I. K. 182 Some read the King's f., some the Queen's I. K. 185 Sat on his knee, stroked his gray f. and said I. K. 186 Came on her brother with a happy f. /. K. 188 That does the task assign'd, he kiss'd her f. I. A". 190 Her f. was near, and as we kiss the child I. K. 190 In the heart's colours on her simple f. I. A" 190 Full often the sweet image of one f. /. K. 193 Then like a ghost she lifted up her f. /. A". 194 But to be with you still, to see your f. I. K. 195 ' Not to be with you, not to see your f. /. A". 196 Flared on her f., she shrilling ' Let me die ! ' I. K. 200 So dwelt the father on her f. and thought I. K. 201 She with a f., bright as for sin forgiven I. A. 204 Winking his eyes, and twisted all his f. I. K. 207 All but her f., and that clear-featured f. I. K. 207 114 FADED Page FACE. As hard and still as is the f. that men /. K. 21a ' What is it ? ' but that oarsman's haggard f. I. K. 212 From the half-f. to the full eye, and rose I. K. 213 Wept, looking often from his f. who read /. K. -2\+ By God for thee alone, and from her f. I. K. 218 The white mist, like a f. -cloth to the f. I. K. 225 Or elsewhere, Modred's narrow foxy f. I. K. 228 In the dead night, grim faces came and went I. A'. 228 Till ev'n the clear f. of the guileless King I. K. 229 Fired all the pale f. of the Queen, who cried /. A". 244 And grovell'd with her face against the floor I. K. 247 She made her f. a darkness from the King I. K. 247 ' If I might see his fi, and not be seen ' /. K. 25^ Of Britain ; so she did not see the f. /. K. 256 His large gray eyes and weather-beaten f. E. A. 5 —in their eyes and faces read his doom E. A. 5 — as their faces drew together E. A. 5 In ocean-smelling osier, and his f. /;. A. 6 That I shall look upon your f. no more ' E. A. 12 Spy out my f., and laugh at all your fears' E. A. 12 — cared not to look on any human f. E. A. 16 — dwelt a moment on his kindly f. E. A. 18 — look you in the f. E. A. 18 — her f. had fall'n upon her hands E. A. 22 —he stood once more before her f. E. A. 25 Philip's rosy f. E. A. 27 — the kindly human f. E. A. 32 ' If I might look on her sweet f. again E. A. 39 Enoch yearn'd to see her f. again E. A. 39 For my dead f. would vex her after-life E. A. 48 With half a score of swarthy faces came E. A. 6i Storming with lifted hands, a hoary f. E. A. 68 He would not do it ! her sweet f. and faith E. A. 71 Upon their faces, as they kiss'd each other E. A. 73 Her charitable use, and f.-to f. E. A. 80 Where careless of the household faces near E. A. 80 His f. magnetic to the hand E. A. 83 — the wife who watch'd his f. E. A. 89 — narrow meagre f. E.A. 93 The rabbit fondles his own harmless f. E. A. 95 — when sitting all alone, his f. E. A. 96 His dear little f. was troubled E. A. 122 Her f. was evermore unseen E. A. 148 Tifi the f of Bel be brighten'd E. A. 170 See they sit, they hide their faces E. A. 171 Were their faces grim Select. 39 Now thy f. across his fancy comes Select. 207 Imitates God, and turns her f. Select. 220 FACE-CLOTH. Took the f. from the face Pr. 136 The white mist, like a f. to the face I. K. 225 FACED. Parted; and, glowing full-f. welcome Pr. 38 But red-f. war has rods of steel and fire Pr. 113 He f. the spectres of the mind In M. 143 The white-f. halls, the glancing rills In M. 209 That the smooth-f. snub-nosed rogue would Ma. 7 Until they found the clear-f. King, who sat I. K. 169 And Enoch f. this morning of farewell E. A. n Their own gray touer, or plain-f. tabernacle E. A. 83 FACE-FLATTERERS and backbiters are I. K. 136 FACETS. Of fifty f. ; thus he moved the Prince I. K. 61 The f. of the glorious mountain flash E. A. 158 FACT. Wherever Thought hath wedded F. Poems 181 Should that plain f., as taught by these Poems 302 Taught them with facts Pr. 4 A f. within the coming year In M. 136 FACTION. Where f. seldom gathers head Poems 175 Not less, tho' dogs of F. bay Poems 182 Not swaying to this f. or to.that /. A', vi. FADE. Fix'd — then as slowly f. again Poems 82 Ripens and fades, and falls, and hath no toil Poems 145 — the blossom fades, and they that loved Poems 227 — that untravell'd world, whose margin fades P?ns 266 — which little cared for fades not yet In M. n Before the spirits f. away In M. 69 Be near me when I f. away In M. 72 F. wholly, while the soul exults In M. 101 And year by year our memory fades In M. 154 Now fades the last long streak of snow In M. 179 Let it flame or f. Ma. 115 When can their glory f.? Ma. 170 ' Sweet love, that seems not made to f. away I. K. 200 FADED. Faints, f. by its heat Poems 162 Have f. long ago Poejns 248 And alleys, f. places Poems 329 From fringes of the f. eve Poems 377 Of f. form and haughtiest lineaments Pr. 52 — what was left of f. woman-slough Pr. 109 I love not hollow cheek or f. eye Pr. 157 And only thro' the f. leaf In M. 16 FADED Page FADED. In a cloud, it f., and seems Ma. 26 Qf my mother's f. cheek Ma. 65 Then she bethought her of a f. silk /. A'. 8 A f. mantle and a f. veil /. A'. 8 That lightly breaks a f. flower-sheath /. A'. 20 Moved the fair Enid, all in f. silk /. A'. 20 All staring at her in her f. silk /. A". 33 Of that and these to her own f. self /. AT. ^35 And dreamt herself was such a f. form /. A'. 35 To pick the f. creature from the pool /. K. 36 My f. suit, as you, my child, have yours /. A*. 38 That she ride with me in her f. silk ' /. A". 41 But Enid ever kept the f. silk I. K. 45 And tearing off her veil of f. silk /. K. 73 His wife a f. beauty of the Baths E. A. 52 F. with morning, but his purpose held E. A. 72 A Martin's summer of his f. love E. A. 80 Autumn's mock sunshine of the f. woods E. A. 82 FADING. Of the f. edges of box beneath Poetns 32 F. slowly from his side Poems 361 The f. politics of mortal Rome Pr. 44 And f. legend of the past hi M. 87 I care not in these f. days In M. 103 Growing and f. and growing upon me Ma. 13 Growing and f. and growing, till I could bear Ma. 14 Was it he lay there with a f. eye ? Ma. 86 FAGGOTS, —we will make it f. for the hearth Pr. 138 FAIL from the sceptre-staff Poe??is 103 So wrought, they will not f. Poems 119 Lest she should f. and perish utterly Poems 122 Yet for a man may f. in duty twice Poems 195 You scarce can f. to match hismaster-piece'Pcww 204 You cannot f. but work in hues to dim Poems 209 Who may be made a saint, if I f. here ? Poems 238 Thy leaf shall never f. Poems 256 Of common duties, decent not to f. Poems 266 I shall net f. to find her now Poems 298 /The many f. ; the one succeeds ' Poems 317 Her heart within her did not f. Poems 357 Rose again from where it seem'd to f. Poems 367 Ere half be done perchance your life may f. Pr. 66 Dwarfs of the gynaeceum, f. so far Pr. 69 Since, what decision? if wef.,we f. Pr. 123 — if we win, we f. : she would not keep Pr. 123 What end soever : f. you will not Pr. 128 She mental breadth, nor f. in childward care Pr. 172 Forgive them where they f. in truth In M. vii. 1 seem to f. from out m\ r blood In M. 2 That thou should'st f. from thy desire In M. 4 Swell out and f., as if a door In M. 45 Thou f. not in a world of sin In M. 52 Where truth in closest words shall f. In M. 56 Lest life should f. in looking back In M. 68 No life uiay f. beyond the grave In M. 78 But I shall pass ; my work will f. I?i M. 82 Could make thee somewhat blench or f. In M. 87 Thy spirit should f. from off the globe In M. 116 A thousand pulses dancing, f. In M. 194 — shall I shriek if a Hungary f. ? Ma. 20 Not f. beneath my feet Ma. 41 Like him who tries the bridge he fears may f.A K. 62 She is so bitter ; for fine plots may f. I. K. 136 Fails in mid air, but gathering at the base / K. 256 FAIL'D. — sweet incense rose and never f. Poems 114 — her heart f. her : and the reapers reap'd Poe?ns 217 I think the year in which our olives f. Pr. 21 Since our arms f. — this Egypt-plague of men ! Pr. 129 Old studies f. : seldom she spoke Pr. 159 In sweet humility ; had f. in all Pr. 169 Brokenly, that she knew it, she had f. Pr. 169 — who knows? for avast speculation had f. Ma. 2 She found no rest and ever f. to draw I. K. 29 But on all those who tried and f., the King I. K. 124 And many tried and f., because the charm I. K. 124 I do believe she tempted them and f. I. K. 136 But f. to find him tho' I rode all round I. A". 184 She f. to bind, tho' being, as I think I. K. 219 She f. and sadden'd knowing it E. A. 15 F. her ; and sighing, 'let me rest,' she said E. A. 21 — speech and thought and nature f. E. A. 43 FAILING to give the bitter of the sweet Poems 162 As if to speak, but, utterance f. her Pr. 95 You draw from, fight : you f., I abide Pr. 128 For that unnoticed f. in herself I. K. 48 FAIN. We two must part : and yet how f. was I Pr. 146 She f. would sting us too Pr. 154 —the churchmen f. would kill their church Ma. 103 He spake : the Prince, as Enid past him, f. I. K. 21 Driving them on : he f. had spoken I. K. 51 8 * FAIR Page FAIN. — f. would make you Master of all Vice' I. A". 118 — would'st against thine own eye-witness f. /. K. 135 Right f. were I to learn this knight were I. A". 187 I f. would foLow love, if that could be I. A". 200 I f. would prove E. A. 23 All these he saw : but what he f. had seen E. A. 32 And f. had haled him out into the world E. A. 75 — f. had she closed them now E. A. 92 — and f. had slept at his side E. A. 123 FAINT. I f. in this obscurity Poems 26, 28 I f. in this obscurity Poems 31 — very heart faints and my whole soul grieves Pms 32 Wherefore those f. smiles of thine Poe?ns 34 Thou f. smiler, Adeline ? Poems 35 The flowers would f. at your cruel cheer Poems 41 Bramble-roses, f. and pale Poems 50 Faints like a dazzled morning moon Poems 97 — the f. sweet cuckoo-flowers Poems 132 Faints, faded by its heat Poems 162 And f., rainy lights are seen Poejns 165 Were f. Homeric echoes, nothing-worth Poems 190 To whom replied King Arthur f. and pale Poe?ns 193 With slow, f. steps and much exceeding pain Poe?ns 242 Cry, f. not : either Truth is born Poems 297 Cry, f. not. climb : the summits slope Poems 298 F. shadows, vapours lightly curl'd Poems 313 F. murmurs from the meadows come . Poems 313 F. she grew, and ever fainter Poems 361 — grew f. : there came a further change Poems 374 They f. on hill, or field, or river Pr. 74 Fixt my f. eyes, and utter'd whisperingly Pr. 165 The face I know ; the hues are f. In M. 97 This haunting whisper makes me f. hi M. 112 To f. in the light of the sun she loves Ma. 76 Beginning to f. in the light that she loves Ma. 76 To f. in his light, and to die Ma. 76 1 Friend, let her eat ; the damsel is so f.' I. K. 56 And I -was f. to swooning, and you lay I. K. 107 ' Sweet father, all too f. and sick am I I. K. 204 F. as a figure seen in early dawn E. A. 20 — sketches rude and f. E. A. 56 FAINT-BLUE. A f. ridge upon the right Poems 73 FAINTED. — of her enemy f. away E. A. 173 FAINTER. Wears all day a f. tone Poems 18 She replies, in accents f. Poems 358 FAINTLIER. —again, but f., for indeed I. K. 228 FAINTLY. — the dying ebb that f. lipp'd Poems 221 A notice f. understood Poems 309 Took both his hands, and smiling f. said Pr. 45 The horns of Elfland f. blowing ! Pr. 74 And f. trust the larger hope In M. 79 She f. smiled, she hardly moved Ma. 132 Tho' f., merrily — far and far away E. A. 34 FAINTLY-FLUSH'D. How f., how phantom- Ma. 157 FAINTLY-SHADOWD. —traced a f. track /. A'. 156 FAINTLY- YENOM'D. —smiles, and f. points/. K. 102 FAIR. But beyond expression f. Poe?iis 33 I would be a mermaid f. Poe??is 60 A mermaid f. Poems 60 ' For the most f.,' would seem to award it thine Pms 101 Thy mortal eyes are frail to judge of f. Poems 104 Methinks I must be f., for yesterday Poems 105 — why fairest wife ? am I not f. ? Points 105 — the f. Peleian banquet-hall Poems 106 O the Earl was f. to see 1 Poems 109 !N or these alone, but every landscape f . Poej?is 116 In some f. space of sloping greens Poe??is 117 — the f. hall-ceiling stately-set Poems 118 Nor these alone ; but every legend f. Poems 11S Betwixt the slender shafts were blazon'd f. Poems 119 all things f. to sate my various eyes 1 Poems 121 — so f. as little Alice in all the land they say Poems 130 And most divinely f. Poems 153 1 No marvel, sovereign lady : in f. field Poe??is 154 And I went mourning, ' No f. Hebrew boy Poems 139 I am that Rosamond, whom men call f. Poems 160 That her f. form may stand and shine Poems 17S — happy, f. with orchard-lawns Poems 200 Repeated — ' come again, and thrice as f.' Poems 202 One rose,but by those f. fingers culTd Poems 20S Show'd like f. seraphs Poems 242 As f. as my Olivia, came Poe??is 246 yesterday, you know, the f. Poems 249 1 wish'd myself the f. young beech Poems 251 Shall grow so f. as this ' Poems 255 Beyond the f. green field and eastern sea Poems 261 'But I was born too late : the f. new forms Poems 262 The maid-of-henour blooming f. Poems 314 He trusts to light on something f. Poems 31.7 "5 FAIR FATR. What moral is in being f. ' 'What wonder if he thinks me f.?' So keep I f. thro' faith and prayer The tapers burning- f. F. gleams the snowy altar-cloth With f. horizons bound Page Poems 321 Poe??is 325 Poems 334 Poems 334 Poems 334 Poems 342 He stoop'd and clutch'd him, f. and good Poems 344 Tomohrit, Athos, all things fair Poems 352 Nor for my lands so broad and f. Poems 354 ' That all comes round so j List and f. Poems 354 Sees whatever f. and splendid Poems 359 Lord of Burleigh, f. and free Poems 360 Three f. children first she bore him Poems 361 She was more f. than words can say Poems 365 Her own f. head Pr. 3 Took this f. day for text, and from it prcach'd Pr. 6 A Prince I was, blue-eyed and f. in face Pr. 15 ' My sister.' ' Comely too by all that's f.' Pr. 35 With all f. theories only made to gild Pr. 41 And all her thoughts as f. within her eyes Pr. 46 So stood that same f. creature at the door Pr. 46 With beauties every shade of brown and f. Pr. "51 And why we came ? I fabled nothing f. Pr. 61 The head and heart of all our f. she-world Pr. 62 She answer'd ' or with f. philosophies Pr. 72 With f. Corinna's triumph ; here she stood Pr. 72 • F. daughter, when we sent the Prince your Pr. 95 From all high places, lived in all f. lights Pr. 97 All her f. length upon the ground she lay Pr. no Upon the skirt and fringe of our f. land Pr. 118 ' O f. and strong and terrible ! Lioness Pr. 145 So their f. college turn'd to hospital Pr. 158 They sang, they read : till she not f., began Pr. 158 — found f. peace once more among the sick Pr. 159 He rose up whole ; and those f. charities Pr. 160 Stays all the f. young planet in her hands Pr. 171 Thy creature, whom I found so f. In M. vii. And glad to find thyself so f. hi M. 7 F. ship, that from the Italian shore In M. 12 Who broke our f. companionship In M. 37 And all we met was f. and good In M. 40 If all was good and f. we met In M. 41 Man, her last work, who seem'd so f. In M. 80 Looks thy f. face and makes it still I?i M. 97 With promise of a morn as f. In M. 116 The great Intelligences f. In M. 119 When one would aim an arrow f. In M. 127 My Arthur found your shadows f. In M. 130 Imaginations calm and f. In M. 138 And those f. hills I sail'd below In M. 147 Let her great Danube rolling f. In M. 147 Unloved, the sun-flower, shining f. In M. 153 In that which made the world so f. In M. 181 And in the setting thou art f. In M. 201 For ever, and as f. as good In M. 205 —she promised then to be f. Ma. 9 — in his pride, and Beauty f. in her flower Ma. 18 I had fancied it would be f. Ma. 25 And f. without, faithful within Ma. 48 And lilies f. on a lawn Ma. 49 Upon a pastoral slope as f. Ma. 59 And you f. stars that crown a happy day Ma. 60 Spice his f. banquet with the dust of death? Ma. 61 — face of night is f. on the dewy downs Ma. in — look'd, tho' but in a dream, upon eyes so f. Ma. 112 Too fresh and f. in our sad world's best bloom Ma. 129 — looking at her ; ' Too happy, fresh and f. Ma. 129 How faintly-flush 'd, how phantom-f. Ala. 157 To that f. port below the castle Ma. 158 He craved a f. permission to depart I. K. 3 ' Farewell, f. Prince,' answer'd the stately /. K. 12 And climb'd upon a f. and even ridge I. K. 13 ' Whither, f. son ? ' to whom Geraint replied I. K. 16 Moved the f. Enid, all in faded silk /. K. 20 1 F. Host and Earl, I pray your courtesy /. K. 22 Nor can see elsewhere, anything so f. /. K. 27 ' Advance and take as fairest of the f. I. K. 30 With her f. head in the dim yellow light /. K. 32 And tho' I heard him call you fairest f. /. K. 38 For tho' you won the prize of fairest f. /. K. 38 Let never maiden think, however f. /. K. 39 She never yet had seen her half so f. /. K. 40 Look'd the f. Queen, but up the vale of Usk /. K. 44 When your f. child shall wear your costly /. K. 44 But hire us some f. chamber for the night /. K. 58 Femininely f. and dissolutely pale /. K. 60 ' F. and dear cousin, you that most had /. K. 89 Did her mock-honour as the fairest f. I. K. 90 Before the Queen's f. name was breathed /. K. 96 116 FAIR-HAIR'D Page FAIR. Enid the F., a grateful people named /. K. 96 A happy life with a f. death, and tell /. A". 97 Had met her, Vivien, being greeted f. I. K. 101 So tender was her voice, so f. her face /. K. 114, Is like the f. pearl-necklace of the Queen /. K. 1x7 And found a f. young squire who sat alone /. K. 118 Was this f. charm invented by yourself? /. K. 121 I mean, as noble, as their Queen was f. ? /. K. 125 And two f. babes, and went to distant lands /. K. 130 What say ye then to f. Sir Percivale /. K. 132 Sees what his f. bride is and does, and winks ? /. K. 134 Elaine the f., Elaine the loveable I. K. 147 To these f. jousts?' 'Yea, lord,' she said /. K. 151 Why go you not to these f. jousts? the knights/. K. 152 It is a f. large diamond, — if you may I. K. 159 * A f. large diamond,' added plain Sir Torre I. K. 159 ' If what is f. be but for what is f. /. K. 159 Might wear as f. a jewel as is on earth /. K. 160 ' Save your great self, f. lord ; ' and when he /. K. 164 * F. lord, whose name I know not — noble it is /. K. 166 ' F. lady, since I never yet have worn /. K. 166 Who parted with his own to f. Elaine /. K. 167 And cells and chambers : all were f. and dry /. K. 168 Gawain, surnamed The Courteous, f. and I. K. 176 And stay'd ; and cast his eyes on f. Elaine /. K. 180 And lifted her f. face and moved away /. K. 182 4 Nay, for near you, f. lord, I am at rest' /. K. 190 Too courteous are you, f. Lord Lancelot /. K. 197 as much fairer — as a faith once f. /. K. 211 Look how she sleeps— the Fairy Queen, so f. ! /. K. 212 F. lord, as would have help'd her from her /. K. 215 Delicately pure and marvellously f. I. K. 218 Then answer'd Lancelot, ' F. she was, my I. K. 219 Farewell, f. lily. ' Jealousy in love?' /. K. 220 She kiss'd me, saying, ' Thou art f., my child' /. K. 221 1 Yea,' said the maid, ' be manners such f. ,/. K. 242 And be the f. beginning of a time /. K. 249 In that f. order of my Table Round /. K. 249 And drawing foul ensample from f. names /. K. 250 And so thou lean on our f. father Christ /. K. 254 What might I not have made of thy f. world /. K. 259 ' Will bring f. weather yet to all of us E. A. 11 — frequent interchange of foul and f. E. A. 29 — a f. sea-circle, day by day E. A. 30 Or Temple-eaten terms, a couple, f. E. A. 56 Sear'd by the close ecliptic^ was not f. E. A. 61 F. as the Angel that said ' hail,' she seem'd E. A. 86 — as bv miracle, grow straight and f. E. A. 86 ' Not tearful ; f.' E. A. 100 Can make it f. E. A. 100 My wistful eyes on two f. images E. A. 109 Like Virtue firm, like Knowledge f. E. A. 148 For one f. Vision ever fled E. A. 148 F. is her cottage in its place E. A. 154 The sea-kings daughter as happy as f. E. A. 165 With that f. child betwixt them born Select. 221 FAIRER. To f. Judge thou me by what I am Pr. 104 To greet their f. sisters of the East Pr. 210 Emilia, f. than all else but thou Pr. 223 For thou art f. than all else that is Pr. 223 Where f. fruit of Love may rest Pr. 255 They say she's comely : there's the f. chance Pr. 130 Stiller, not f. than mine Ma. 106 F. than aught in the world beside Ma. 106 She is not f. in new clothes than old /. K. 39 O as much f. — as a faith once fair /. K. 211 F. his talk, a tongue that ruled the hour E. A. 61 F. than Rachel by the palmy well E. A. 86 F. than Ruth among the fields of corn E. A. 86 And f. she, but ah how soon to die ! E. A. 154 FAIREST. Tho' all her f. forms are types of Pms 8 That all which thou hast drawn of f. Poems 29 This meed of f. Poems 101 So shalt thou find me f. Poems 104 F.— why f. wife ? am I not fair? Poems 105 The f. and most loving wife in Greece Poems 105 She was the f. in the lace Poems 109 — f., laid his head upon her lap Poems 198 The prize of beauty for the f. there /. K. 26 ' Advance and take as f. of the fair /. K. 30 For tho' you won the prize of f. fair /. K. 38 And tho' I heard him call you f. fair /. K. 38 Did her mock-honour as the f. fair /. K. 90 FAIREST-SPOKEN. (That art the f. tree Poems 256 FAIR-FRONTED Truth shall droop not now Pms 13 FAIR-HAIR'D and redder than a windy morn Pr. 182 There came a f. youth, that in his hand /. K. 56 He, when the f. youth came by him, said /. K. 56 F. and tall, and from her lifted hand E. A. 41 FAIRIES Page FAIRIES. For as to f., that will flit Poems 249 FAIRILY. Made so f. well Ma. 88 FAIRILY-DELICATE palaces shine E. A. 158 FAIRNESS. To doubt her f. were to want an/. A'. 219 FAIRPLAY. She ask'd but space and f. for Pr. 121 FAIRY. Airy, f. Lilian Poems 5 Flitting, f. Lilian Poems 5 F. Lilian Poems 6 Listening, whispers ' 'Tis the f. Poems 66 The oriental f. brought Poems 78 With whitest honey in f. gardens cull'd Poe»is 79 A f. shield your Genius made Poems 164 The heavens between their f. fleeces pale Poems 212 With the f. tales of science Poems 269 — bring the fated f. Prince Poe?ns 315 A f. Prince, with joyful eyes Poems 317 As wild as aught of f. lore Poems 323 — dropt a f. parachute and past Pr. 5 A golden foot, or a f. horn Ma. 89 — many a f. foreland set Ma. 119 Until they vanish'd by the f. well I. K. 115 Her f. nostril out ; her hand half-clench'd /. A". 138 Look— how she sleeps— the F. Queen, so fair ! I. K. 212 But that he passes into f. land ' /. K. 213 Or come to take the King to f. land ? /. K. 213 — f. pines E. A. 56 Show'd her the f. footings on the grass E. A. 56 — f. palms E. A. 56 — a flight of f. arrows E. A. 56 From havens hid in f. bowers E. A. 147 And woke her with a lay from f. land Select. 196 FAIRY-CIRCLE. The flickering f. wheel'd /. K. 238 FAIRY-TALES, —told her f. E. A. 55 FAITH. And simple f. than Norman blood Poems 128 Upon the general decay of f. Poems 189 My f. beyond my practice Poems 232 She turn'd, we closed, we kiss'd, swore f. Poems 234 And with a larger f. appeal'd Poems 245 Wait : my f. is large in Time Poems 259 So keep I fair thro' f. and prayer Poems 334 If there be any f. in man ' Poems 355 " Nay now, what f. ? ' said Alice the nurse Poems 356 W T here shall I breathe? why kept ye not your f. Pr. 111 And some unworthily : their sinless f. Pr. 116 With such a mother 1 F. in womankind Pr. 174 Some sense of duty, something of a f. Pr. 180 The sport half-science, fill me with a f. Pr. 181 By £, and f. alone, embrace In M. v. We have but f. : we cannot know In M. vi. Whose f. has centre everywhere In M. 52 Her f. thro' form is pure as thine In 31. 52 This f. hath many a purer priest hi M. 57 Is f. as vague as all unsweet hi 31. 69 Be near me when my f. is dry In M. 72 Shall love be blamed for want of f. ? In M. 73 I stretch lame hands of f., and grope In M. 79 May breed with him, can fright'my f. In M. 113 The f., the vigour, bold to dwell In 31. 140 There lives more f. in honest doubt In 31. 143 Perplext in f., but pure in deeds In 31. 143 To find a stronger f. his own In 31. 144 Of early f. and plighted vows hi 31. 146 Her f. is fixt and cannot move In 31. 146 What profit lies in barren f. In M. 167 What is she, cut from love and f. I71 31. 177 Our dearest f., our ghastliest doubt In M. 192 If e'er when f. had fall'n asleep /;/ 31. 192 And all is well, tho' f. and form In 31. 196 Is comrade of the lesser f. In M. 198 With f. that comes of self-control In 31. 202 When who but a fool would have f. in a Ma. 4 ' Nay, by my f., thou shalt not, 'cried the dwarf I. K. 11 His name? but no, good f., I will not have it /. A". 22 Fixt on her f. Now, therefore, I do rest I. K. 43 F. and unfaith can ne'er be equal powers /. K ; 113 Unfaith in aught is want of f. in all I. K. 113 Would he break f. with one I may not name ? I. K. 182 And f. unfaithful kept him falsely true I. K. 192 O as much fairer — as a f. once fair /. K. 211 Upbore him, and firm f., and evermore E. A. 44 He would not do it 1 her sweet face and f. E. A. 71 Has given all my f. a turn? E. A. 163 — honouring your sweet f. in him E. A. 166 Comes F. from tracts no feet have trod Select. 221 FAITHFUL, —shaping f. record of the glance Pms 209 Lean'd on him, f., gentle, good Poe?ns 309 ' O just and f. knight of God ! Poems 336 I, falling on his f. heart hi 31. 30 Thrice blest whose lives are f. prayers hi M. 51 FALL Page FAITHFUL. A f. answer from the breast In 31. u3 She dwells on him with f. eyes hi 31. 146 Encompass'd by his f. guard In 31. 195 And fair without, f. within Ma. 48 She is not f. to me, and I see her /. A". 7 FAITHLESS. Whate'er the f. people say In M. 145 The f. coldness of the times In M. 164 Lest I be found as f. in the quest I. K. 186 FALCON. — world were falcons, what of VnaXIPoems 263 Forgetful of the f. and the hunt /. it., 3 No surer than our f. yesterday /. K. 181 FALCON-EYED, —brunette, well-moulded, f. Pr. 34 FALL. Letting the rose-leaves f. Poems 3 From the green rivage many a f. Poems 21 Place it, where sweetest sunlight falls Poems 29 It would f. to the ground if you came in Poems 42 And shall f. again to ground Poems 46 The shadow passeth when the tree shall f. Poems 52 — comb my hair till my ringlets would f. Poems 60 And all day long to f. and rise Poems 92 You seein'd to hear them clinib and f. Poems 115 To list a foot-f., ere he saw Poems 117 Of human footsteps f. Poems 124 All night I he awake, but I f. asleep at morn Poems 137 — to f. and pause and f. did seem Poenis 142 — sweet music here that softer falls Poems 144 Falls, and floats adown the air Poems 145 Ripens and fades, and falls, and hath no toil Pms 145 In silence; ripen, f., and cease Poems 146 As thunder-drops f. on a sleeping sea Poems 155 Struck by all passion, did f. down Poems 157 F. into shadow, soonest lost Poems 171 Falls off, and love is left alone Poems 171 That from Discussion's lip may f. Poems 180 The goose let f. a golden egg Poems 184 Where falls not hail, or rain, or any snow Poems -200 ' F. down, O Simeon Poems 239 Perplexing me with lies : and oft I f. Poems 239 Once more the gate behind me falls Poems 245 —when my marriage morn may f. Poems 257 — not leap forth and f. about thy neck Poe?ns 259 — and the shadows rise and f. Poems 274 — now for me the roof-tree f. Poems 284 Let it f. on Locksley Hall Poems 284 Then did my response clearer f. Poems 290 — comes the check, the change, the f. Poems 297 Falls back, the voice with which I fenced Poems 304 Falls off, but cycles always round Poems 305 Until they f. in trance again Poems 306 I'll take the showers as they f. Poems 330 To f. asleep with all one's friends Poems 322 On whom their favours f. Poems 333 Perfume and flowers f. in showers Poems 333 Swells up, and shakes and falls Poems 336 Iltyrian woodlands, echoing falls Poems 352 Came in a sun-lit f. of rain ' Poems 362 And like a thunderbolt he falls Poems 376 Should come to fight with shadows and to f. Pr. 15 When we f. out with those we love Pr. 29 Began to glisten and to f. : and while Pr. 45 Hangs silent ; but prepare : I speak ; it falls ' Pr. 40 Worth seeing ; and the river made a f. Pr. 63 The splendour falls on castle walls Pr. 74 Fly to her, and f. upon her gilded eaves Pr. 79 Rapt to the horrible f. : a glance I gave Pr. 83 Bred will in me to overcome it or f. Pr. 125 —one should fight with shadows and should f. Pr. 131 — let her see me f. ! with that I drave Pr. 133 They mark'd it with the red cross to the f. Pr. 138 — huddling slant in furrow-cloven falls Pr. 168 Comes easy to him, and tho' he trip and f. Pr. 174 These leaves that redden to the f. In 31. 16 Her place is empty, f. like these In M. 20 My deeper anguish also falls In M. 32 When fill'd with tears that cannot fall hi 31. 32 If such a dreamy touch should f. In 31. 66 The skirts of self again, should f. In M. 69 Be near us when we climb or f. In M. 73 I can but trust that good shall f. ; hi M. 76 As drop by drop the water falls In M. 83 When on my bed the moonlight falls In 31. 93 Till on mine" ear this message falls hi 31. 119 — lightly does the whisper f. hi 31. 122 And strangely falls our Christmas eve hi 31. 161 A shade falls on us like the dark In 31. 208 And back we come at f. of dew In 31. 209 And breaking let the splendour f. In M. 210 Shall I weep if a Poland f. ? Ma. 20 But to move to the meadow and f. before Ma. 24 117 FALL Page FALL. Here at the, head of a tinkling f. Ma. 75 For I heard your rivulet f. Ma. 78 It is gone : and the heavens f. in a gentle xzinMa. 87 — dewy splendour falls Ma. 97 Then I rise, the eavedrops f. Ma. 99 Mourning when their leaders f. Ma. 137 And if I I. her name will yet remain /. K. 27 While slowly falling as .a scale that falls /. K. 28 My pride is broken : men have seen my f.' /. K. 31 Is broken down, for Enid sees my fall ! ' /. K. 32 Made her cheek burn and either eyelid f . /. K. 41 Waiting to f. on you, and heard them boast /. K. 49 Before he turn to f. seaward again /. K. 52 Wait here, and when he passes f. upon him ! '/. K. 52 And they will f. upon him unawares /. K. 52 That they will f. upon you while you pass ' /. K. 53 And if I f. cleave to the better man ' /. K '. 54 The drumming thunder of the huger f. /. K. 55 Made her cheek burn and either eyelid f. /. K. 68 And Enid heard the clashing of his f. /. K. 72 Falls in a far land and he knows it not /. K. 72 In rest, and made as if to f. upon him /. K. 87 And fear not, Enid, I should f. upon him /. K. 87 Had I for three days seen, ready to f. /. K. 108 Set up the charge you know, to stand orf. ! /. K. 130 And never woman yet, since man's first f. /. K. 191 If not, the victim's flowers before he f.' /. K. 194 Lightly, to think of Modred's dusty f. /. K. 228 — seem'd to f. beside her path E. A. 28 F. back upon a name ! E. A. 71 The heads of chiefs and princes f. so fast E. A. 90 His face with the other, and, at once, as falls E. A. 93 Always about to £., grassing the pews E. A. 93 Began to droop, to f. E. A. 94 • Set them up ! they shall not f. ! ' E. A. 108 — an' I mean'd to 'a stubb'd it at f. E. A. 133 — the woods decay and f. E. A. 139 F. from his Ocean-lane of fire E. A. 145 Shoots to the f. — take this and pray that he E. A. 166 Bloodily, bloodily f. the battle-axe E. A. 172 — f. and flutter tremulously E. A. 173 Lest I f. unawares before the people E. A. 175 They brought him home at even-f. Select. 207 FALLEN. — the stem, which else had f. Poems 8 F. silver-chiming, seem'd to shake Poems 21 And dews, that would have f. in tears Poems 91 Half-f. across the threshold of the sun Poems 152 She ceased in tears, f. from hope and trust Poems 161 Since that dear soul hath f. asleep Poe??is 172 That broods above the f. sun Poems 173 — f. in Lyonness about their Lord Poems 191 — half has f. and made a bridge Poems 226 Some legend of a f. race Poems 306 And f. into the dusty crypt Poems 346 The chap-f. circle spreads Poems 373 To trample round my f. head Poems 376 The rain had f., the Poet arose Poe?ns 379 To lift the woman's f. divinity Pr. 66 When f. in darker ways ' Pr. no Our enemies have f. : they came Pr. 138 — would have strown, and are f. themselves Pr. 138 Our enemies have f. Pr. 138. 139 Lay like a new-f. meteor on the grass Pr. 143 So those two foes above my f. life Pr. 143 Had f. and her future Lord In M. 8 What words are these have f. from me? In M. 26 And towers f. as soon as built In M. 43 Had f. into her father's grave In M 132 — those f. leaves which kept their green In M. 140 If e'er when faith had f. asleep hi M. 192 There has f. a splendid tear Ma. 80 f. at length that tower of strength Ma. 139 1 have not f. so low as some would wish /. K. 7 So that I be not f. in fight. Farewell ' /. K. 12 And here had f. a great part of a tower /. K. 17 Right o'er a mount of newly -f. stones /. K. 20 And said, ' Thy name ? ' Tci whom the f. man /. K. 31 When now they saw their bulwark f., stood /. K. 54 But into bad hands f. , and now so long /. K. 56 Start from their f. lords, and wildly fly /. K. 71 To catch a lothly plume f. from the wing /. K. 131 Lay like a rainbow f. upon the grass /. K. 169 Where these had f., slowly past' the barge /. K. 212 And wonders, what has f. upon the realm ? ' /. K. 239 — pale he turn'd, and reel'd and would have f. /. K. 241 And, in the darkness o'er her f. head /. K. 255 — her face had f. upon her hands E. A. 22 — dead flame of the f. day E. A. 25 — found a f. stem E. A. 31 118 FALTER Page FALLEN. Had f. first, was Edith that same E. A. 65 How low his brother's mood had f. E. A. 72 ' Let them lie, for they have f. ! ' E. A. 108 FALLING. Long alleys f. down to twilight Pms 30 The leaves upon her f. light Poems 71 But sometimes in the f. day Poems 76 F. into a still delight Poems 82 Lo, f. from my constant mind Poems 96 The long brook f. thro' the clov'n ravine Poems 98 — closetothine in that quick-f. dew Poems 106 F. asleep in a half-dream ! Poems 146 — the emerald-colour'd water f. Poems 148 Sound all night long, in f. through the dell Poems 157 Like moonlight on a f. shov/er 1 Poems 163 Just ere the f. axe did part Poems 164 — content to perish, f. on the foeman's ground Pms 276 Rising, f., like a wave Poems 371 — f. on them like a thunderbolt Pr. 3 Of clocks and chimes, like silver hammers f. Pr. 26 And blessings on the f. out Pr. 29 Had slanted forward, f. in a land Pr. 36 — f. on my face was caught and known Pr. 88 — f., protomartyr of our cause Pr. 100 Or kill'd in f. from his horse In M. 8 I, f. on his faithful heart In M. 30 I wander, often f. lame In M. 39 And f. with my weight of cares hi M. 78 And, f., idly broke the peace In M. 83 When twilight was f. Ma. 43 We turn'd our foreheads from the f. sun Ma. 126 I watch the twilight f. brown Ma. 162 While slowly f. as a scale that falls /. K. 28 And felt the warm tears f. on his face /. K. 76 But in the f. afternoon return'd /. K. 77 There while she sat, half f. from his knees /. K. 141 And poplars made a noise of f. showers /. K. 168 Of poplars with their noise of f. showers /. K. 174 Were feeble, so that f. prone he dug E. A. 43 F. had let appear the brand of John E. A. 77 F. on the dead Select. 39 FALLOW. — plover pipe along the f. lea Poems 135 — in the f. leisure of my life Poems 224 A thousand hearts lie f. in these halls Pr. 49 By many a field and f. Ma. 119 FALSE. The f., f. arrow went aside Poems 54 A touch of something f., some self-conceit Poems 233 Hears little of the f. or just ' Poems 294 Rang f. : but smiling, ' Not for thee,' she said Pr. 80 The raillery, or grotesque, or f. sublime Pr. 105 To her f. daughters in the pool Pr. 124 In honour — what, I would not aught of f. Pr. 127 As true to thee as f., f., f. to me ! Pr. 147 That have no links with men. Ah f. but dear Pr. 151 And flashes into f. and true hi M. 27 Ring out the f. , ring in the true In M. 163 Ring out f. pride in place and blood In M. 164 — the silent thing that had made f. haste Ma. 8 — given f. death her hand Ma. 62 Or whether some f. sense in her own self /. K. 43 By taking true for f., or f. for true /. K. 46 Call herself f. : and suffering thus he made /. K. 51 And foemen scared, like that f. pair who /. K. 55 At Enid, where she droopt : his own f. doom /. K. 59 Led from the territory of f. Limours /. K. 69 To things with every sense as f. and foul /. K. 135 Then her f. voice made way broken with sobs /. K. 138 (For in a wink the f. love turns to hate) /. K. 138 If this f. traitor have displaced his lord /. K. 236 Who call'd him the f. son of Gorloi's /. K. 240 To whom my f. voluptuous pride, that took /. K. 258 Whom he knows f., abide and rule the house /. K. 252 — no f. passport to that easy realm E. A. 60 Cooling her f. cheek with a feather-fan E. A. 66 So f., he partly took himself for true E. A. 106 FALSEHOOD. A gentler death shall F. die Poems 13 F. shall bare her plaited brow Poems 13 The f. of extremes ! Poems 178 To war with f. to the knife Poems 293 Your f. and yourself are hateful to us Pr. 102 FALSELY. ' F., f. have ye done Poems 355 With all her autumn tresses f. brown Pr. 52 That you might play me f. , having power /. K. 120 Full courtly, yet not f., thus return'd /. K. 159 And faith unfaithful kept him f. true /. K. 192 FALSER than all fancy fathoms, f. than Poems 271 Her f. self slipt from her like a robe Pr. 165 FALTER. Whose spirits f. in the mist Poems 175 He to lips, that fondly f. Poems 358 Our progress f. to the woman's goal ' Pr. 143 FALTER Page FALTER. I f. where I firmly trod In M. 78 Falters from her lips Ma. 56 Nor let her true hand f., nor blue eye /. A'. 72 F. before he took it E. A. 76 FALTER'D. He f., and his hand fell from I. K. 241 FALTERETH. My tremulous tongue f. Poems 84 FALTERING, —most happy, f. ' I am thine ' Pms 211 F., would break its syllables, to keep Poems 259 F. and fluttering- in her throat, she cried Pr. 39 Went f. sidewavs downward to her belt /. K. 138 F ALTER I NGLY. —standing up said f. E. A. 16 FAME. The secretest walks of f. Poems 38 — with a worm I baik'd his f. Poems 156 I remember'd Everard's college f. Poems 190 — now much honour and much f. were lost ' Poems 195 Her f. from lip to lip. Who had not heard Poems 205 Whereof my f. is loud amongst mankind Poems 239 Name and f. ! to fly sublime Poems 370 Whate'er my grief to find her less than f. Pr. 19 With only F. for spouse and your great deeds Pr. 67 And sees him err : nor would we work for f. Pr. 68 Live chattels, mincers of each other's f. Pr. 101 hollow wraith of dying f. In M. 101 What f. is left for human deeds ht M. igi The f. is quench'd that I foresaw In Mi 101 So here shall silence guard thy f. In M. 104 To breathe my loss is more than f. In M. 106 Not he : his honest f. should at least by me Ma. 3 Preserve a broad approach of f. Ma. 142 The proof and echo of all human f. Ma. 145 Their ever-loyal iron leader's f. Ma. 150 And lost to life and use and name and f. /. K. 104, 144 My use and name and f. Your pardon, child /. K. 109 To make you lose your use and name and f. /. K. in Upon my "life and use and name and f. /. K. 112 And into such a song, such fire for f. I. A". 115 And felt them slowly ebbing, name and f.' /. AT. 116 And touching f., howe'er you scorn my song /. K. 116 For f., could f. be mine, that f. were thine /. A". 116 And uses, careless of the rest ; but F. /. K. 117 And what is F. in life but half-disfame /. K. 117 The F. that follows death is nothing to us /. K. 117 ' Man dreams of F. while woman wakes to I. K. 117 With this for motto, ' Rather use than f.' /. A". 118 In dexter chief; the scroll ' I follow f.' /. A". 118 Of him you say you love : but F. with men /. K. 119 Yet needs must work my work. That other f. A A". 119 Use gave me F. at first, and F. again I. K. 119 Right well know I that F. is half-disfame /. K. 119 To make f. nothing. Wherefore, if I fear I. K. 120 1 rather dread the loss of use than f. /. K. 120 Born to the glory of thy name and f. /. K. 219 May not your crescent fear for name and f. /. K. 220 And courtliness, and the desire of f. /. K. 250 I must not dwell on that defeat of f. I. K. 257 May beat a pathway out to wealth and f. E. A. 74 FAMED. And of the two first-f. for courtesy /. A". 242 FAMILIAR, —the Royal mind, f. with her Pr. 86 Among f. names to rest In M. 30 F. to the stranger's child In M. 154 Surely his king and most f. friend I. K. 178 — the sacred old f. fields E. A. 34 FAMILIARITIES. Such dear f. of dawn? E. A. 58 FAMILY. A fiery f. passion for the name /. K. i^z Hung with a hjndrecl shields, the f. tree E. A. 52 FAMINE. Blight and f., plague and Poems 149 FAMOUS. That made thee f. once, when Poems 166 The goodliest fellowship off. knights Poems 191 Thy f. brother-oak Poems 257 That many a f. man and woman, town Pr. 97 Thine island loves thee well, thou f. man Ma. 142 Him, the most f. man of all those times I. K. 102 FAN. To spread into the perfect f. Poe??is 362 — toys in lava, fans Pr. 2 In ripples, f. my brows and blow Iji M. 125 FANCIED. In impotence of f. power Poems 37 Beneath all f. hopes and fears In M. 71 I had f. it would be fair Ma. 25 And then was painting on it f. arms I. A". 118 His eyes glisten'd : she f. ' is it for me ? ' I. K. 190 FANCIES. All those sharp f. , by down-lapsing Pms 152 Soothe him with thy finer f. Poems 272 Set thy hoary f. free Poems 372 And maiden f . ; loved to live alone Pr. 17 Will crush her pretty maiden f. dead Pr. 19 What were those f. J wherefore break her troth Pr. 20 And so pace by : but thine are f. hatch'd Pr. 77 As f. like the vermin in a nut Pr. 150 Our home-bred f . : O to us In M. 14 FANTASY Page FANCIES. My f. time to rise on wing In M. 21 And but for f., which aver In M. 24 I vex my heart with f. dim hi M. 64 You wonder when my f. play In M. 92 — dreamful wastes where footless f. dwell Ma. 62 Prattling the primrose f. of the boy Ma. 118 Lay your earthly f. down Ma. 152 Her f. with the sallow-rifted glooms /. A". 199 Denied my f.— this, however strange /. K. 205 — in whom all evil f. clung E. A. 27 Clung to their f.) E. A. 98 FANCY. With youthful f. reinspired Poems 30 For scarce my life with f. play'd Poems 87 I thought that it was f. Poems 140 — if I said that F., led by Love Poems 205 Falser than all f. fathoms Poems 271 I have but an angry f. Poems 276 Fool, again the dream, the f. ! Poems 282 —founts of inspiration well thro' all my f. Poems 283 Across my f., brooding warm Poems 312 So much your eyes my f. take Poems 323 My f., ranging thro' and thro' Poems 324 But whither would my f. go? Poems 345 That lift the f. ; for indeed these fields Pr. 72 And sweet as those by hopeless f. feign'd Pr. 77 — melted Florian's f. as she hung Pr. 93 Thv face across his f. comes Pr. 105 Of F. , and the bitter close of all Pr. 142 — whose f. fuses old and new I?i M. 27 And F. light from F. caught In M. 39 The fancy's tenderest eddy wreathe In M. 71 And dare we to this f. give hi M. 75 I lull a f. trouble-tost hi M. 91 Take wings of f., and ascend hi M. 105 Then f. shapes, as f. can In M. in Ah, backward f., wherefore wake hi M. 117 111 brethren, let the f. fly In M. 125 Or villain f. fleering by In M. 173 And all the breeze of F. blows hi M. 190 It circles round, and f. plays In M. 208 Tho' I f. her sweetness only due Ma. 48 The f. flatter'd my mind Ma. 50 My f. fled to the South again Ma. 160 Then let her f. flit across the past I. K. 35 Her f. dwelling in this dusky hall /. A". 43 And sweet self-pity, or the f. of it /. K. 64 Or f. (tho' I count it of small use I. K. 67 Your f. when you saw me following you /. AT. no So fixt her f. on him : let him be I. K. 134 Mere matter of the f., now has grown /. K. 142 To snare her royal f. with a boon /. A". 151 Rapt in this f. of his Table Round /. AT. 154 Full often lost in f., lost his way /. K. 156 Beam'd on his f. Spoke, he answer'd not /. A'. 193 For her ! for your new f. Only this /. AT. 210 Shape to their fancy's eye from broken rocks I. K. 212 His f. fied before the lazy wind E. A. 36 But Edith's eager f. hurried with him E. A. 62 In fi, till I slept again, and pieced E. A. 102 Like F. made of golden air E. A. 148 Poor F. sadder than a single star Select. 196 And F. watches in the wilderness Select. 196 And F. came and at her pillow sat Select. 196 My f. made me for a moment blest Select. 197 Now thy face across his f. comes Select. 207 FANCY-FED. And pining life be f. In M. 122 FANCY-FLIES. Rising to no f. Poems 370 FANCYING. As f. that her glory would be I. K. 104 FANE. — vestal thoughts in the translucent f. Pms 7 Who built him fanes of fruitless pra\-er In M. 80 And heard once more in college fanes In M. 126 As befits a solemn f. Ma. 151 FANGS. — shall strike from star to star, the f. Pr. 139 FANN'D. B3- veering passion f. Poems -16 Thy bounteous forehead was not f. Poems 78 A summer f. with spice Poems 117 Low breezes f. the 'belfry bars Ma. 134 Which f. the gardens of that rival rose E. A. 74 FANTASTIC gables, crowding, stared Poems 287 That lute and flute f. tenderness Pr. 81 — the long f. night Pr. 103 F. beauty; such as lurks In M. 53 F. plume or sable pine E. A. xiq FANTASTICAL. —I know my knights f. /. K. 178 So f. is the dainty metre E. A.xrS FANTASTICALLY merry Ma. 70 FANTASY. Her gay-furr'd cats a painted f. Pr. 64 A border f. of branch and flower I. K. 147 And saved him : so she lived in f. /. A". 148 119 FANTASY Page FANTASY. There kept it and so lived in f. /. K. 168 Was rather in the f. than the /. K. 206 FAR off^ and where the lemon grove Poems 22 F. off from human neighbourhood Poems 78 — and f. below them roars Poems 98 F. up the solitary morning smote Poems 100 F. as the wild swan wings, to where the sky Poems 113 F. off she seem'd to hear the dully sound Poems 124 — lads on every side 'ill come from f. away Poems 132 — with you, when you think I'mf. away Poems 136 And sweeter f. is death than life to me Poems 138 f. off, three mountain-tops Poems 142 Was seen f. inland, and the yellow down Poems 143 F. f. away did seem to mourn and rave Poems 143 Is f. beyond the wave : we will no longer Poems 143 F. below them in the valleys, and the clouds Poems 148 At last methought that I had wander'd f. Poei?is 152 Leaving the olive-gardens f. below Poems 159 Keeps real sorrow f. away Poems 164 Of heaven, nor having wander'd f. Poems 172 And fling him f. into the middle mere Poems 192 F. off the farmer came into the field Poems 216 But f. too spare of flesh Poems 249 And f. below the Roundhead rode Poems 257 F. furrowing into light the mounded rack Poems 261 Thus f. he flow'd and ended Poems 264 ' Ah, folly ! for it lies so f. away Poems 264 F. on the ringing plains of windy Troy Poems 265 — into the future, f. as human eye could see Poejns 278 F. along the world-wide whisper of the Poems 278 — all links of habit— there to wander f. away Pms 281 As f. as might be, to carve out Poems 295 F. thought' with music that it makes Poetns 310 In palace chambers f. apart Poems 316 He travels f. from other skies Poems 317 The quiet chamber f. apart Poents 318 — f. across the hills they went Poeins 320 Across the hills and f. away Poems 320 — o'er the hills and f. away Poems 321 Break up the heavens, O Lord ! and f. Poems 332 Roll back, and f. within Poems 332 — f. , in forest-deeps unseen Poems 362 I saw that every morning, f. withdrawn Poems 368 F. too naked to be shamed Poems 373 F. off from men a college like a man's Pr. 8 And f. allusion, till the gracious dews Pr. 45 Dwarfs of the gynaeceum, fail so f, Pr. 69 O sweet and f. from cliff and scar Pr. 74 Now while I sang, and maidenlike as f. Pr 79 So f. I read • — varies from the lily as f. Pr. 96, 116 F. off from men 1 built a fold for them Pr. 127 Of fright in f. apartments Pr. 155 — sought f. less for truth than power Pr. 170 Our place is much : as f. as in us lies Pr. 171 A red sail or a white ; and f. beyond Pr. 179 He is not here ; but f. away In M. 9 And learns her gone and f. from home In M. 10 A glory from its being f. In M. 41 From f. and near on mead and moor hi M. 45 At last— f. off— at last to all In M. 76 You thought my heart too f. diseased In M. 92 He put our lives so f. apart In M. 113 On leagues of <.dour streaming f. I/i M. 125 He seems so near and yet so f. In M. 146 So f., so near, in woe and weal In M. 200 Dear friend, f. off, my lost desire In M. 200 F. off thou art, but ever nigh In M. 201 Rapidly riding f. away Ma. 34 — ye meanwhile f. over moor and fell Ma. 63 That were a public merit, f. Ma. 108 F. into the North, and battle, and seas of Ma. 113 F. off, and holds her head to other stars Ma. 127 This is he that f. away Ma. 143 Thro' the long gorge to the f. light has won Ma. 149 F. on in summers that we shall not see Ma. 150 Something f. advanced in State Ma. 152 Of ice, f. up on a mountain head Ma. 155 — f. from noise and smoke of town Ma. 162 F. beneath a blazing vault Ma.. 166' F. better were I laid in the dark earth /. K. 6 F. liever had I gird his harness on him I. K. 6 The noble hart at bay, now the f. horn I. A". 13 F. liefer than so much discredit him' I. K. 34 Whereof one seem'd f. larger than her lord I. K. 52 With eyes to find you out however f. I. K. 68 ' F. other was the song that once I heard I. K. 114 Hath earnest in it off. springs to be I. K. 122 Fired from the west, f. on a hill, the towers I. K. 156 Not f. from Camelot, now for forty /. K. 168 120 FARM Page FAR. F. o'er the long backs of the bushless /. K. 168 • F. lovelier in our Lancelot had it been I. K. 178 Nay— like enough : why then, f. be it from me I. K. 183 But f. away the maid in Astolat I. K. 180 Then f. away with good Sir Torre for guide I. K. 188 His own f. blood, which dwelt at Camelot /. K. 189 Beyond it and f. up the shining flood I. K. 201 Beyond the poplar and f. up the flood I. K. 202 So f., being sick? and wherefore would you I. K. 202 F. tenderer than my Queen's. Pray for thy /. K. 220 To seize me by the hair and bear me f. I. K. 221 F. cities burnt, and with a cry she woke I. K. 229 F. on into the rich heart of the west I. K. 238 Arthur, and led her forth, and f. ahead I. K. 245 F. off a solitary trumpet blew I. K. 252 So f., that my doom is, I love thee still I. K. 254 F. down to that great battle in the west - I. K. 254 Down at the f. end of an avenue E. A. 20 F. in a darker isle beyond the line E. A. 33 Tho' faintly, merrily — f. and f. away E. A. 34 Pursued him down the street, and f. away E. A. 105 Grave, florid, stern, as f. as eye could see E. A. 107 — see him the sooner, for he lived f. away E. A. 116 F. ran the naked moon across E. A. 146 He saw not f. : his eyes weredim E. s±. 149 F. worse than any death to me ' E. A. 156 Roll'd the rich vapour f. into the heaven E. A. 177 F. within the South Select. 38 So f. — f. down, but I shall know Select. 191 For Hope is other Hope and wanders f. Select. 196 Nature so f. as in her lies Select. 220 Going before to some f. shrine Select. 221 FAR-BLAZING from the rear of Philip's E. A. 40 FAR-BROUGHT, —thy land, with love f. Poems 179 FARCE. — fool, and made myself a Queen of f. ! Pr. 170 FARE. So fares it since the years began Poe?ns 346 heart, how fares it with thee now " In M. 4 How fares it with the happy dead? In M. 66 With store of rich apparel, sumptuous f. I. K. 38 My lord eat also, tho' the f. is coarse I. K. 57 Then said Geraint, ' I wish no better f. I. K. 58 And serve you costlier than with mowers' f.' I. K. 58 And bring us what he is and how he fares /. K. 175 A diamond is a diamond. F. you well I. K. 183 How fares my lord Sir Lancelot? He amazed I. K. 188 Whose Friday f. was Enoch's ministering E. A. 6 Fares richly, in fine linen, not a hair E. A. 85 FARED. Expunge the world: so f. she gazing Pr. 159 Whereon with equal feet we f. hi M. 42 So f. it with Geraint, who thought and said /. K. 19 So f. it with Geraint, who issuing forth I. K. 46 So f. it with Geraint, who being prick'd I. K. 72 FAREWELL. — f. I am going a long way Poems 200 — tell of meetings, of farewells Poems 212 F., like endless welcome, lived and died Poems 260 — a long f. to Locksley Hall Poems 284 Of that,' she said, ' f . Sir — and to you Pr. 4r White hands off. to my sire Pr. 119 The wrath I nursed against the world : f.' Pr. 129 Pledge of a love not to be mine, f. Pr. 146 Welcome, f., and welcome for the year Pr. 182 1 F. ! Wc lose ourselves in light ' In M. 69* In those sad words I took f. In M. 83 I cannot think the thing f. In M. 191 F., we kiss, and. they are gone In M. 20S My own heart's heart and ownest own f. Ma. 62 'F., fair Prince, answer'd the stately queen I.K. 12 So that I be not fall n in fight. Farewell ' /. A'. 12 F. ; think kindly of me, for I fear I. K. 142 She needs must bid f. to sweet Lavaine /. K. 165 A thousand times !— a thousand times f. ! I. K. 183 Nor bad f., but sadly rode away ' I. K. 198 Gawain, who bad a thousand farewells to me I. K. 202 ' Sister, f. for ever,' and again I. A". 207 ' F., sweet sister,' parted all in tears I. K. 207 Come, for you left me taking no f. I. K^ 213 Hither, to take my last f. of you I- K. 214 I left her and I bad her no f. I. K. 215 Ay, that will I. F. too— now at last I. K. 220 F., fair My. 'Jealousy in love ' I. K. 220 A madness of farewells I. K> 230 Nay friend, for we have taken our farewells I. K. 231 F. ! ' A K. 255 F. ? I should have answer'd his f. I. K. 257 And Enoch faced this morning off. E. A. 11 FAR-FLEETED by the purple island-sides Pr. 166 FAR-FOLDED mists, and gleaming halls of E. A. 139 FAR-HEARD beneath the moon Poems 157 FARM. Before the red cock crows from the f. Pms 13* FARM Page FARM With farmer Allan at the f. abode Pot — set out, and reach'd the f. Poems 218 — glancing thence, discuss'd the farm P. And crowded farms, and lessening towers In M 16 To leave the pleasant fields and farms hi M. 156 Stands Philip's f. where brook and river meet Ma. 119 Till last by Philip's f. I flow Ma. 119 To show the f. : full willing!)' he rose Ma. 123 — how he sent the bailiff to the f. Ma. 124 He found the bailiff riding by the f. Ma. 125 — wondering, ask'd her ' Are you from the LVMa. 128 We bought the f. we tenanted before Ma. 129 — her access to the wealthier farms E. A. 77 And princely hails, and farms, and flowing E. A. 85 —th e broad woodland parceU'd into farms E. A. 95 Willy had not been down to the f. E. A. n3 — there past by the gate of the f. E. A. 119 — in my fathers f. at eve E. A. 125 FARMER. With f. Allan at the farm abode Poems 2Z4 Far off the f. came into the field Poems 216 — when the f. pass'd into the field Poems 217 The farmer's son who lived across the bay Poems 224 The f. vext packs up his beds and chairs Poems 226 Nor robb'd the f. of his bowl of cream Pr. 118 FARMSTEAD —he, by f, thorpe, and spire Pms 345 FAR-OFF. And the f. stream is dumb Poe?ns 17 F. the torrent call'd me from the cleft Poems 100 My f. doubtful purpose Poems 107 — to hear and see the f. sparkling brine Poems 148 Some sorcerer, whom a f. grandsire burnt Pr. 15 The f. interest of tea In M 1 The brook alone f. was heard In M. 139 And one f. divine event In M. 211 — f. sail is blown by the breeze of a softer Ma. 15 F. from the clamour of liars belied Ma. 21 Her and her f. cousin and betrothed Ma. 121 In s'lence while she watch'd their arms f. /. K. 167 N : greatness, save it be some f. touch / K. 170 Shock, that a man f. might well perceive /. A'. 171 F. , a blot upon the stream, and said / K. 220 In those f. seven happy years were born E. A. 37 In days f, and with what other eyes E. A. 142 In davs f, on that dark earth, be true? E. A. 142 FAR-REXOWXED. Those f. brides of Poems 151 FAR-SHADOWIXG from the west, a land of Pr. 179 FAR-SIGHTED summonerof War and Waste/. A', vii. FAR-SOUXDED. Geraint a name f. among I. K. 23 FARTHER. With f. lookings on. The kiss Poems 94 To yield us f. furlough : ' and he went Pr. 5S And thinner, clearer, f. going ! Pr. 74 FASHIOX. After the f. of the time Poems 24 Looks freshest in the f. of the day Poems 190 From the f. of your bones Poems 373 His want in forms for fashion's sake In M. 172 To strive, to f., to fulfil In M. 175 No more in soldier f. will he greet -V : \ : According to his f., bad the host /. K. 61 In any knightl)- f. for her sake /. A". 192 In sailor f. roughly sermonizing E. A. 12 Fire-hollowing this in Indian f., fell E. A. 31 FASHIOX'D. Then fearing rust or soilure f. /. K. 147 FAST. Two lives abound f. in one Poems 57 Time driveth onward f. Poems 146 Smite, shrink not, spare not. If it may be, f. Pms 242 As she fled f. thro' sun and shade Poems 363 Bitter barmaid, waning f. 1 Poems 368 But now f. barr'd : so here upon the flat Pr. 126 On yon swoll'n brook that bubbles :". hi M. 149 1 all the passion of a twelve hours' f.' /. K. 17 How f. they hold, like colours of a shell I. A". 36 To bear his armour ? shall we f. or dine ? /. K. 71 They rose, heard mass, broke f, and rode /. K. 169 But f. asleep, and lay as tho' she smiled /. K. 207 F. with your fasts, not feasting with your /. K. 260 I believe, if you were f. my wife E. A. 23 The heads o'f chiefs and princes fall so f. E. A. 90 As f. we fleeted to the South E. A. 144 Of mighty mouth, we scudded f. E. A. 147 My tears, no tears of love, are flowing f. Select. 197 FASTEX'D. What if she be f. to this fool lord Ma. 54 FASTEXIXG. —loosed the fastenings of his /.A". 72 FASTER binds a tyrant's power Poems 371 Two women f. welded in one love Pr. 149 FAST-ROOTED in the fruitful soil Poems 145 FAT. Old Summers, when the monk was f. Poems 247 The f. earth feed thy branchy root Poems 256 But such whose father-grape grew f. Poems 339 Padded round with flesh and f. Pee A lord of f. prize-oxen and of sheep Pr. 181 FATHER Page FAT. —the f. affectionate smile E. A. 104 FATAL. The f. byword of all years to come Pms 2S7 He owns the f. gift of eyes Poems 3-2 So sweet a voice and vague, f. to men Pr. 77 Thy spirit ere our f. loss In M. 62 That in Vienna's f. walls hi M. 119 When now we rode upon this f. quest / A". £3 FATE. As hers by right of full-accomplish'd F.Pms 121 Made weak by time and f, but strong in will Pms 267 For love in sequel works with f. Poems 317 The sphere thy f. allots Poems 348 Sat muffled like the Fates : and often came Pr. 53 Ask me no more : thy f. and mine are seal'd Pr. 157 The limit of his narrower f. hi M. 90 As link'd with thine in love and f. I?i M. 117 Of her whose gentle will has changed my f. Ma. 59 She is coming, m5 r life, mj r f. Ma. 80 Once the weight and f. of Europe hung Ma. 150 For man is man and master of his f. * /. K. 19 For, grant me some slight power upon your f. /. A", no Mv f. or fault, omitting gaver youth / A'. 142 FATED. Ill-f. that I am, w'hat'lot is mine Poems 259 — bring the f. fairy Prince Poe?ns 315 FAT-FACED, —the f. curate Edward Bull Pms 231, 233 FATHER. That stand beside my fathers door Pms 28 — to vex me with his father's eyes Poems 108 — the Ionian f. of the rest Poems 118 My f. held his hand upon his face Poe??:: 154 To save her father's vow Poe??is 158 My God, my land, nry f, — these did move Poems 159 That I subdued me to my father's will Poems 160 Her murder'd father's head, or Joan of Arc Pms i6x — in nry time a fathers word w-as law Poems 215 The month was out, he left his father's house Pms 215 Heart-broken, and his f. help'd him not Poems 216 — day by day he pass'd his father's gate Poems 216 His father's memory ; and take Dora back Poeyns 219 ' O F. ! — if you let me call 3-ou so Poems 219 — wTong to" cross his f. thus Poems 219 A flask of cider from his father's vats Poems -22-2 Her f. left his good arm-chair Poe;?ts 249 Puppet to a father's threat Poems 271 — the child, too, clothes the f. with a dearness Pms 275 — when first he leaves his father's field Poems 277 ' Where wert thou when thy f. play'd Pon' '0 seek vox father's court with me Poems 321 My f. left a park to me Poeras 326 Against her father's and mother's will Poet And they leave her father's roof Poems 358 But rm T good f. thought a king a king Pr. 16 My f. sent ambassadors with furs Pr. 17 (His father's fault) but given to starts and Pr. 18 At last I spoke, ' My f. let me go. Pr. iS Xow while they spake, I saw my father's face Pr. 18 To hear my father's clamour at our backs Pr. 20 Hard by 3-our father's frontier : I said no Pr. 23 In masque or pageant at nry father's court Pr. 25 Yet hattrs his p : rtrait in my father's hall Pr. 41 D come to thee soon Pr. 54 F. will come to his babe in the nest Pr. 54 I never knew my f., but she says Pr. 58 Into his father's'hands, who has this night Pr. 95 The second was mv father's running thus Pr. 95 Behold your father's letter ' Pr. 98 Yet since our f. — Wasps in our good hive Pr. 102 Into your father's hand and there she lies Pr. 109 My f. ' that our compact be fulalTd Pr. 113 My f., ' Tut, you know them not, the girls Pr. 114 Your captive, yet my f. wills not war Pr. 121 Decides* it, 'sdeath ! against my father's will* Pr. 122 Back rode we to my father's camp, and found Pr, :;. The Prince is slain. My father heard and ran Pr. 137 The haggard father's face and reverend beard Pr. 141 Mj- f. stoop'd, re-father"d o'er nry wounds Pr. 143 X : tho' your f. sues : see how you stand Pr. 149 Help, f, brother, help : speak to the king Pr. 132 —the king her f. charm'd Pr. 154 Xor did her f. cease to press my claim Pr. 162 — ^sidelong glances at my father's grief Pr. 163 O f., whereso'er thou be In M. 6 For now her father's clumney glows hi M. 7 O F., touch the east, and light In M. 49 And doubtful joys the f. move In M. 60 How manj- a f. have I seen In M. 75 Had fall'n into her father's grave In M. 132 Is oftener parted, fathers bend In M. 147 Our father's dust is left alone In M. 161 But, crymg, knows his f. near In M. 193 His who had given me life — O f. I Ma. a 121 FATHER Page FATHER. — am I raging alone as my f. raged Ma. 8 —when my f. dandled the grapes Ma. 10 I bow'd to her f. , the wrinkled head of the race ? Ma. 16 Your f. has wealth well-gotten Ma. 17 Your f. is ever in London Ma. 22 "Why sits he here in his father's chair? Ma. 47 Not touch on her father's sin Ma. 65 That Maud's dark f. and mine Ma. 66 Mine, mine — our fathers have sworn Ma. 66 — evermore her f. came across Ma. 123 * O would I take her f. for one hour Ma. 123 As looks a f. on the things Ma. 132 God-f., come and see your boy Ma. 161 Thou noble F. of her Kings to be I. K. vii. Affirming that his f. left him gold I. K. 24 I thought, but that your f. came between I. K. 62 And loved me serving in my father's hall /. K. 83 I should have slain your f., seized yourself I. K. 90 On whom his f. Uther left in charge I. K. 95 Leaving her household and good f., climb'd I. K. 148 Here laugh'd the f., saying, 'Fie, Sir Churl I. K. 157 But f. give me leave, an if he will I. K. 158 'Nay,?., nay, good f., shame me not I. K. 158 ' F., you call me wilful, and the fault I. K. 186 Sweet f., will you let me lose my wits?' I. K. 186 Crept to her f , while he mused alone I. K. 186 My f., to be sweet and serviceable I. K. 187 I pray you.' Then her f. nodding said I. K. 187 Her father's latest word humm'd in her ear I. K. 187 Sweet f., I behold him in my dreams I. K. 187 And your good father's kindness.' And she I. K. 196 Their talk had pierced, her f., ' Ay, a flash /. K. 197 Then came her f. , saying in low tones I. K. 198 The f., and all three in hurry and fear I. K. 200 So dwelt the f. on her face and thought I. K. 201 ' Peace,' said her f., ' O my child, you seem I. K. 202 ' Highest ? ' the f. answer'd, echoing I. K. 203 My?., howsoe'er I seem to you I. K. 204 Sweet f., and bid call the ghostly man I. K. 204 ' Sweet f. , all too faint and sick am I I. K. 204 And folded. ' O sweet f., tender and true /. K. 205 Her f. laid the letter in her hand I. K. 206 She ceased : her f. promised ; whereupon I. K. 206 Her brethren and her f., who himself /. K. 215 So said my f., and himself was knight I. K. 237 So said my f. — yea, and furthermore I. K. 238 Not even thy wise f. with his signs /. K. 239 ' Yea, one, a bard ; of whom my f. said I. K. 239 So said my f. — and that night the bard /. K. 240 Nor let me shame my father's memory, one I. K. 241 Which my good f. told, check me too I. K. 241 And so thou lean on our fair f. Christ /. K. 254 (His f. lying sick and needing him) E. A. 4 And call'd him F. Philip E. A. 20 For F. Philip (as they call'd him) E A. 21 'Come with'us, F. Philip,' he denied E. A. 21 They love me as a f. E. A. 23 A f. to your children E. A. 23 Hers, yet not his, upon the father's knee E. A. 41 And o'er her second f. stoopt a girl E. A. 41 Uphold me, F., in my loneliness E. A. 43 — no father's kiss for me — the girl E. A. 43 I am their f, ; but she must not come ^E. A. 48 He lean'd not on his fathers but himself * E. A. 54 The man was his, had been his father's, friend E. A. 69 The f. panting woke, and oft as dawn E. A. 78 — and the f. suddenly cried E. A. 99 For Annie, you see, her f. E. A. 115 — a quarrel I had with your f., my dear E. A. 117 — your f. at sixty-five E. A. 125 My f. raves of death and wreck E. A. 156 Now their warrior f. meets the foe Select. 207 Rode upon his father's lance Select. 207 Beat upon his father's shield Select. 207 FATHER-FOOLS, —by one of these old f. E. A. 71 FATHER-GRAPE, —such whose f. grew fat Ems 339 FATHERHOOD, —moons confused his f.' I. K. 130 FATHER-LAND, —it was to dream of F. Poems 143 FATHER-LIKE, —his weight and fondled f. E. A. . 9 FATHERLY fears— you used us courteously Pr. 118 FATHOM. For thou canst not f. it Poems 41 . Falser than all fancy fathoms Poems 271 ' 'Tis hard for thee to f. this In M. 122 — not f. Annie's mind E. A. 19 FATHOM-DEEP, —gulf him f. in brine In M. 15 FATHOMLESS. Tho' deep not f. Poems 27 FATLING. — and reach its f. innocent arms Pr. 143 FATTEN. In many streams to f. lower lands Pms 263 FATTER. The curate : he was f. than his cure Pms 230 FEAR Page FATTER. No, there is f. game on the moor Ma. 10 FAULT, —tho' the faults were thick as dust Poe??is vi. Proclaim the faults he would not show Poems 351 (His father's f.) but given to starts and bursts Pr. 18 * My f.,' she wept, ' my fault, and yet not Pr. 55 The child is hers — for every little f. Pr. in —speak to her, your dearest, her one f. Pr. 146 Dearer for night, as dearer thou for faults Pr. 175 —let it be granted her : where is the f. ? Ma. n To the faults of his heart and mind Ma. 68 ' The f. was mine, the f. was mine ' Ma. 85 1 The fault was mine,' he whisper'd, ' fly ! ' Ma. 86 — seeming-genial venial fault Ma. 166 'If Enid errs, let Enid learn her fault ' I. K. 8 As creatures voiceless thro' the f. of birth I. K. 60 My fate or f., omitting gayer youth I. K. 142 She shook from fear, and for her f. she wept I. K. 143 He is all f. who hath no f. at all I. K. 154 ' Father, you call me wilful, and the f. I. K. 186 Seeing it is no more Sir Lancelot's f. I. K. 203 Nor mine the f., if losing both of these E. A. 88 FAULTFUL— her great heart thro' all the f. Pr. 170 FAULTILY faultless, icily regular, splendidly Ma. n FAULTLESS, —be truer to your f. lord?' /. K. 153 ' Arthur, my lord, Arthur, the f. King I. K. 153 FAUN. The reeling F., the sensual feast In M. 184 FAVOUR. On whom their favours fall ! Poems 333 Arranged the f., and assumed the Prince Pr. 106 Court f. : here and there the small bright head Pr. 160 Who have won her f. ! Ma. 44 To seek a second f. at his hands I. K. 34 For love or fear, or seeking f. /. K. 37 That he should wear her f. at the tilt I. K. 166 F. of any lady in the lists /. K. 166 My f. at this tourney? ' ' Nay,' said he I. K. 166 F. of any lady in the lists ? /. K. 172 ' F. from one so sad and so forlorn E. A. 16 ' Annie, I came to ask a f., of you ' E. A. 16 — the f. that I came to ask E. A. 18 Else I withdraw f. and countenance E. A. 67 FAVOURABLE. In vain; a f. speed In M. 12 FAVOURABLY, —former days you saw me f. I. K. 62 FAVOUR'D. These f. lips of mine Poems 340 And those white-f. horses wait In M. 208 FAVOURITISM. 'So puddled as it is with f.' Pr. 62 FAWN. That was fawn's blood, not brother's Pr. 43 In gentler days, your arrow-wounded f. Pr. 43 Ah Maud, you milk-white f. Ma. 22 And f. at a victor's feet Ma. 27 FAWNING. Crouch'd f. in the weed Poems 106 FEAD. —an' now theer's lots o' f. E. A. 133 — theer warn't not f. for a cow E. A. 133 FEALDS. Huzzin' an' maazin' the blessed f. E. A. 136 FEALTY, —rested in her i., till he crown'd I. K. 97 Forgetful of their troth and f., clave I. K. 248 The f. of our friends, and stirs the pulse I. K. 252 FEAR. What hope or f. or joy is thine? Poems 34 Whispering to each other half in f. Poems 43 — they cross'd themselves for f. Poems 72 Roof d the world with doubt and f. Poems 82 I loved, and love dispell'd the f. Poems 89 I loved you better for your fears Poems 91 Acting the law we live by without f. Poems 103 I shut my sight for f. Poems 105 Remaining utterly confused with fears Poems 124 — yet to name my spirit loathes and fears Poems 154 Sigh'd forth with life, I would not brook my f. Pms 156 I f. it is too late, and I shall die' Poems 197 — bear me to the margin : yet I f. Poems 197 — f. of change at home that drove him hence Pms 227 — put your best foot forward, or I f. Poems 229 — the low wind hardly breathed for f. Poems 287 Boring a little augur-hole in f. Poems 287 Think you this mould of hopes and fears Poems 290 Still heaping on the f. of ill Poems 294 The f. of" men, a coward stiil Poems 294 —sitting, burnish'd without f. Poems 295 What is it that I may not f. ? ' Poems 300 I f. to slide from bad to worse Poems 300 Such hope, I know not f. Poems 335 Nor yet the f. of little books Poems 347 Hush'd all the groves from f. of wrong Poems 362 F. not thou to loose thy tongue Poems 372 Who shines so in the corner ; yet I f. Pr. 8 Let them not f. : some said their heads were Pr. 37 O hard, when love and duty clash ! I f. Pr. 44 The Danaid of a leaky vase, for f. Pr. 46 — dearest Lady, pray you f. me not Pr. 46 My honour, these their lives' 'Ah f. Pr. 47 FEAR Page FEAR. For f. our solid aim be dissipated Pr. 68 A woman-post in flying- raiment. F. Pr. 94 Six thousand years of f. have made you that Pr. 100 All these male thunderbolts : what is it ye f. ? Pr. 100 'What f. ye brawlers? Am not I your Head? Pr. 100 — yet I blame you not so much for f. Pr. ioq 'We f., indeed, you spent a stormy time Pr. 113 Fatherly fears — you used us courteously Pr. 118 Is violate, our laws broken : f. we not Pr. 139 Bow-back'd with f. Pr. 155 Sighing she spoke, ' I f. Pr. 173 Approach and f. not : breathe upon my Pr. 176 We mock thee when we do not f. hi M. vi. — but for f. it is not so hi M. 24 All subtle thought, all curious fears hi .1/. 51 To that vague F. implied in death In M. 62 Beneath all fancied hopes and fears hi M. 71 I wrong the grave with fears untrue hi M. 73 For f. divine Philosophy In M. 75 Eternal, separate from fears In M. 121 The feeble soul, a haunt of fears In M. 170 She cannot fight the f. of death In M. 177 And heated hot with burning fears hi M. 184 No, like a child in doubt and f. In M. 193 Be sunder'd in the night off. In M. 196 Wild Hours that fly with Hope and F. In M. 198 She fears not, or with thee beside hi M. 206 — me behind her, will not f. In M. 206 — I fled from the place and the pit and the f. ? Ma. 9 But, I f., the new strong wine of love Ma. 30 The bitter springs of anger and f. Ma. 39 Then some one else may have much to f. Ma. 52 Sick once, with a f. of worse Ma. 68 I should grow light-headed, I f. Ma. 70 Of ancient fable and f. Ma. 90 Sick of a nameless f. Ma. 91 Should I f. to greet my friend Ma. 100 I almost f. they are not roses, but blood Ma. 107 — cells of madness, haunts of horror and f. Ma. in me, J f. that I am no true wife ' I. K. 6 And all her foolish fears about the dress /. K. 8, 45 Rapt in the f. and in the wonder of it /. K. 29 For love or f., or seeking favour of us /. K. 37 Like him who tries the bridge he fears may /. K. 62 Yet f. me not : I call mine own self wild /. K. 62 The long way smoke beneath him in his f. /. K. 74 Who love to vex him eating, and he fears /. K. 75 — f. not, Enid, I should fall upon him /. K. 87 Enid in their going had two fears /. K. 89 — which old fires have broken, men may f. /. K. 89 To f. me, f. no longer, I am changed /. K. 89 — f. not, cousin ; I am changed indeed ' I. K. 92 Must make me f. still more you are not mine /. K. no To make fame nothing. Wherefore, if I f. /. K. 120 Farewell ; think kindly of me, for I f. /. K. 142 She shook from f., and for her fault she wept /. K. 143 Then came on him a sort of sacred f. /. K. 165 First as in f., step after step, she stole /. K. 165 For f. our people call you lily maid I. K. 167 So fine a f. in our large Lancelot /. K. 178 1 f. me, that will strike my blossom dead /. K. 197 The father, and all three in hurry and f. /. K. 200 May not your crescent f. for name and fame /. K*. 220 Before her, or a vague spiritual f. /. K. 228 F. not : thou shalt be guarded till my death /. K. 248 All his Annie's fears E. A. 11 Spy out my face, and laugh at all your fears ' E. A. 12 — f. no more for me ; or if you f. E. A. 13 — doubts and fears were common to her E. A. 29 ' Ay, ay, poor soul,' said Miriam, ' f . enow! E. A. 44 Has she no f. that her first husband lives ? ' E. A. 44 I f. you'll listen to tales, be jealous E. A. 121 — a f. to be kiss'd away ' E. A. 161 'F. net, isle of blowing woodland E. A. 171 FEAR'D. —but I thought again: If. Pr. 91 Nor tho' she liked him, yielded she, but f. Pr. 161 — still she f. that I should lose my mind Pr. 162 There sat the shadow f. of man In M. 37 — that she f. she was not a true wife /. K. 7 — heart, and glancing round the waste she f. /. K. 48 Made his eye moist ;*but Enid f. his eyes /. K. 64 I ever f. you were not wholly mine /. K. 109 — ridd'n away to die ? ' so f. the King /. K. 177 — holding the branch, and f. E. A. 42 Still so much gold was left ; and then I f. E. A. 103 FEARFUL. Too f. that you should not please Pms 91 Half f. that, with self at strife Poems 346 Saying in herself, ' the simple f. /. K. 244 Meant nothing, but my own too-f. guilt /. K. 244 FEED Page FEARFUL. ' Not f. ; fair' E. A. 100 Ruin : a f. night" E. A. 100 Dismal error ! f. slaughter ! Select. -29 FEARING. — f. they should do me wrong' Poems 270 F. to lose, and all for a dead man /. K. 75 Then f. for his hurt and loss of blood /. K. 87 F. the mild face of the blameless King /. K. 89 But Vivien, f. heaven had heard her oath /. K. 143 Then, f. rust or soilure, fashion'd for it /. K. 147 Still hoping, f. ' is it yet too late ? ' I. K. 261 Altho' a grave and staid God-f. man E. A. 7 Yet Enoch as a brave God-f. man E. A. 11 F. the lazy gossip of the port E. A. 19 — f. night and chill for Annie rose E. A. 25 F. to enter E. A. 29 — f. waved my arm to warn them off E. A. 103 FEAST. — church-harpies from the master's f. Pms 62 I made a f . : I bade him come Poems 109 Rise from the f . of sorrow, lady Poems 165 I spoke, while Audley f. Poems 221 Glow like a sunbeam : near his tomb a f. Pr. 6 Or Nymph, or Goddess, at high tide of f. Pr. 25 Blanch'd in our annals, and perpetual f. Pr. 139 — we shall sit at endless f. hi M. 69 Be neither song, nor game, nor f. hi M. 162 The reeling Faun, the sensual f. hi M. 184 Who stay to share the morning f. In M. 207 Again the f., the speech, the glee hi M. 209 Once fit tor feasts of ceremony) and said /. K. 16 — f. with these in honour of their earl /. K. 61 Moist as they were, wine-heated from the f. /. K. 64 The pearl of beauty : and our knights at f. /. K. 153 — in the hall itself was such a f . /. K. 239 — your fasts, not feasting with your feasts /. K. 260 FEASTED. Not like a king ; three days he f. us Pr. 21 F. the woman wisest then, in halls Pr. 47 FEASTFUL. — and murmuring in herf. mirth P?ns 120 FEASTING. — fasts, not f. with your feasts /. K. 260 FEATHER. The helmet and the helmet-f. Poems 69 — the large lime feathers low Poems 205 All grass of silky f. grow Poems 256 I did but shear a f., and dream and truth Pr. 135 The habit, hat, and f. Ma. 72 To f. toward the hollow E. A. 4, 21 FEATHER'D. By every coppice-f. chasm and Pr. 75 FEATHERFAN. —her false cheek with a f. E. A. 66 FEATHERING. — ripple f. from her bows E. A. 30 FEATURE. With chisell'd features clear Poems 37 Conjectures of the features of her child Poei?is 107 Reading her perfect features Poems 209 I cannot see the features right hi M. 97 FEATURED, —face, and that clear-f. face /. K. 207 FEBRUARY. Cold F. loved, is dry Poems 166 FED. —not down-dropt nor over bright, but f. Pms 7 With disks and tiars, f. the time ' Poems 21 F. thee, a child, lying alone Poetns 79 —a full-f. river winding slow Poems 115 Nightly dev.--f. : and turning yellow Poems 145 — one warm gust, full-f. with perfume blew Poems 207 — these, tho' f. with careful dirt Poems 330 By dancing rivulets f. his flocks Poems 353 They f. her theories, in and out of place Pr. 22 I f. you with the milk of every Muse Pr. 90 The breast that f. or arm that dandled you Pr. 146 — pining life be fancy-f. hi M. 122 About him, heart and ear were f. hi M. 131 From hidden summits f. with rills hi M. igy — f. on the roses, and lain in the lilies of life Ma. 22 —looking to the South, and f. Ma. 59 ' What dare the full-f. liars say of me? /. K. 129 FEDERATION. —Parliament of man, the F. Pms 278 The Federations and the Powers Poems 323 FEE. To hold the costliest love in f. hi M. 109 —mother kills her babe for a burial f. Ma. 7 FEEBLE. The herd, wild hearts and f. wings Pms 179 Now am I f. grown ; my end draws nigh Poems 237 — f., all unconscious of itself Pr. 163 The f. soul, a haunt of fears In M. 170 — f. vassals of wine and anger and lust Ma. 87 Here thro' the f. twilight of this world /. K. 46 The f. infant in his arms E. A. 9 Were f., so that falling prone, he dug E. A. 43 FEEBLER. Then comes the f. heiress of your Pr. 67 FEED. Thy kingly intellect shall f. Poems 14 Some honey-converse feeds thy mind Poems 34 Upon himself himself did f. Poems 37 Nor f. with crude imaginings Poems 179 The fat earth f. thy branchy root Poems 256 — hoard, and sleep, and f., and know not me Pms 265 123 FEED Page FEED. To f. thy bones with lime, and ran Poems 304 —early woke to f. her little ones Pr. 170 The full new life that feeds thy breath In M. 125 That f. the mothers of the flock In M. 151 — many a rose-carnation f. In M. 153 Nor f. with sighs a passing wind hi Af. 167 To f. the sudden guest, and sumptuously /. A". 61 — call'd for flesh and wine to f. his spears /. A'. 77 Feeding like horses when you hear them f. /. A'. 77 FEEDETH. Encircles aU the heart, and f. Poems 163 FEEDING the flower ; but ere my flower to Poems 15S — f. high, and living soft Poems 185 F. like horses when you hear them feed /. K. 77 FEEL. I f. the tears of blood arise Poems 56 Would f. their immortality Poems 61 Joying to f. herself alive Poems 120 — feels a nightmare on his bed Poems 197 Begin to f. the truth and stir of day Poems 201 Or when I f. about my feet Poems 251 To f. it. For how hard it seem'd to me Poems 259 That make a man f. strong in speaking truth Pms 260 That unto him who works, and feels he works Pms 264 — the guinea helps the hurt that Honour feels Pms 277 Make me f. the wild pulsation Poems 277 To f., altho' no tongue can prove Poems 310 Of all I felt and f. Poems 340 Live long, nor f. in head or chest Poems 349 — f. myself the shadow of a dream Pr. 16 To put in words the grief I f. In M. 5 — moves his doubtful arms, and feels In M. 20 I should not f. it to be strange In M. 23 To f. from world to world, and charms In M. 36 I f. it, when I sorrow most In M. 44 To what I f. is Lord of all In M. 79 Yet feels, as in a pensive dream In M. 90 I felt and f. tho' left alone In Af. 120 How is it ? Canst thou f. for me In M. 122 My Ghost may f. that thine is near In M. 137 She darkly feels him great and wise In M. 146 To f. once more, in placid awe In M. 189 loved the most, when most I f. In M. 200 To f. thee some diffusive power In M. 201 1 f . I shall owe you a debt Ma. 69 I f. so free and so clear Ma. 70 — feels a glimmering strangeness in his dream Ma. 128 Who feels no heart to ask another boon /. A". 113 Caress her: let her f. herself forgiven /. A". 113 Might f. some sudden turn of anger born /. K. 121 Not to f. lowest makes them level all /. K. 137 Believing ' lo mine helpmate, one to f. /. K. 250 — make me f. so solitary ' E. A. 22 Were living nerves to f. the rent E. A. 79 As one who feels the immeasurable world E. A. 166 Put forth and f. a gladder clime ' Select. 220 FEELING. To tamper with the feelings Poems 204 — hid my feelings, fearing they should do Poems 270 On a range of lower feelings and a narrower Pms 271 ' They were dangerous guides the feelings Poems 276 A f. finger on my brows, and presently Pr. 142 — often f. of the helpless hands Pr. 163 Who speak their f. as it is In M. 33 We ceased : a gentler f. crept hi Af. 49 Divorce the F. from her mate the Deed Ma. 122 The blind wave f. round his long sea-hall I. K. 105 I, f. that you felt me worthy trust /. K. no And f. ; had she found a dagger there /. A'. 138 — f. all along the garden-wall E. A. 42 FEET. O ! hither lead thy f. ! Poems 28 —with echoing f. he threaded Poems 38 Would curl round my silver f. Poems 62 With one black shadow at its f. Poems 73 — at theif f. the crocus brake like fire Poems 101 — laid him at his mother's f. Poems no With your f. above my head Poems 136 Sleep full of rest from head to f. Poems 174 The thunders breaking at her f. Poe?ns 177 His f. on juts of slippery crag that rang Poems 198 Bound by gold chains about the f. of God Poems 200 At Dora s f. She bow'd upon her hands Poems 218 Or when I feel about my f. Poems 251 — at my f. she lay Poems 253 Balm-dews to bathe thy f. ! Poems 256 Of force and choler, and firm upon his f. Poems 264 Thy f., millenniums hence, be set Poems 293 Touch 'd by his f. the daisy slept Poems 302 Year after year unto her i. Poems 315 — f. that ran, and doors that clapt Poems 318 — sixty f. the fountain leapt Poems 318 With folded f. , in stoles of white Poems 335 124 FELL Page FEET, —the lark drop down at his f. Poems 379 For while our cloisters echo'd frosty f. Pr. 10 — make her some great Princess six f. high Pr. 13 Inflamed with wrath : he started on his i. Pr. 18 — to her f. She rose her height, and said Pr. 31 Woman, if I might sit beside your f. Pr. 42 — when we planted level f., and dipt Pr. 75 That claspt the f. of a Mnemosyne Pr. 88 — at once the lost lamb at her f. Pr. 94 Unopen'd at her f. : a tide of fierce Pr. 99 — lay my little blossom at my f. Pr. 112 — those that iron-cramp'd their women's f. Pr. 126 Their f. in flowers, her loveliest Pr. 140 She moved, and at herf. the volume fell Pr. 171 Whereon with equal f. we fared In M. 42 She bows, she bathes the Saviour's f. In M. 51 On thy Parnassus set thy f. In M. 57 That nothing walks with aimless f. hi M. 76 Whose f. are guided thro' the land hi M. 92 Thy f. have stray'd in after hours hi M. 155 I turn to go : my f. are set In M. 156 Her f., my darling, on the dead In M. 206 — f. like sunny gems on an EngMsh green Ma. 24 — fawn at a victor's f. Ma. 27 Not fail beneath my f. Ma. 41 For her f. have touch'd the meadows Ma. 44 — six f. two, as I think, he stands Ma. 46 From the delicate Arab arch of her f. Ma. 54 He sets the jewel-print of your f. Ma. 79 Would start and tremble under her f. Ma. 81 A shadow there at my f. Ma. 87 — the rivulet at her f. Ma. 97 — never an end to the stream of passing f. Ma. 102 A clog of lead was round my f. Ma. 131 — the f. of those he fought lor Ma. 138 Thro' cypress avenues, at our f. Ma. 156 Here often they break covert at our f.' /. K. 1© Worn by the f. that now were silent, wound /. K. 17 Then rose Limours, and looking at his f. I. K. 61 At Merlin's f. the wily Vivien lay /. A\ 101 There lay she all her length and kiss'd his f. /. K. 104 Behind his ankle twined her hollow f. /. A'. 105 Dear f., that I have follow'd thro' the world /. K. 105 That Vivien bathed your f. before her own ? /. A". 108 Scared by the noise upstarted at our f. /. K. 115 The f. unmortised from their ankle-bones /. K. 122 —judge all nature from her f. of clay I. K. 137 Climb in her throat, and with her f. unseen /. K. 185 Low-drooping till he well-nigh kiss'd her f. /. K. 208 — let the shield of Lancelot at her f. /. K. 217 Whenlo ! her own, that broadening from her 1.1. K. 229 let us in, tho' late, to kiss his f. ! /. K. 234 — with a wild sea-light about his f. /. A'. 237 Stiff-stricken, listening ; but when armed f. /. K. 246 — in the darkness heard his armed f. /. A". 247 Nearer, and laid her hands about his f. /. K. 252 My pride in happier summers, at my f. /. K. 253 — while she grovell'd at his f. I. K. 255 Tumbled the tawny rascal at his f. E. A. 63 —with His light about thy f. E. A. 85 The woman shrieking at his f. E. A. 93 — with her strong f. up the steep hill E. A. 102 — cold my wrinkled f. E. A. 143 Scatter the blossom under her f. 1 E. A. 164 — if you kiss'd her f. a thousand years Select. 197 Conies Faith from tracts no f. have trod Select. 221 FEIGN. — things that being^ caught f. death Pr. 112 FEIGN'D. Sweet as those by hopeless fancy f. Pr. 77 A face of tenderness might be f. Ma. 28 — yet lay still, and f. himself as dead /. A'. 76 Sighing, and f. a sleep until he slept /. A". 191 FEIGNING pique at what she call'd Pr. 105 FELL. Her tears f. with the dews at even Poems 9 The rusted nails f. from the knots Poems 9 Her tears f. ere the dews were dried Poems 9 The shadow of the poplar f. Poems 11 Where'er they f, behold Poems 39 F., and, without, the steady glare Poems 75 1 kiss'd away before they f. Poems 91 They were together, and she f. Poe?ns 109 In misty folds, that floating as they fell Poems 113 F. on her, from which mood was born Poems 122 — on the fourth she f. Poems 122 Because the kiss he gave me, ere I fell Poems 160 F. in a doze : and half-awake I heard Poems 189 So flash 'd and f. the brand Excalibur Poems 196 — threaten'd darkness, flared and f. Poevis 201 The wreath of flowers f. Poems 217 —sun f. and all the land was dark Pms 217, 218 FELL Page FELL. — Mahratta-battle f. my father Poems 281 The silver lily heaved and f. Poems 353 We f. out, my wife and I Pr. 29 O we f. out, I know not why Pr. 29 As he bestrode my Grandsire, when he f. Pr. 41 — so last night she f. to canvass you Pr. 56 Grew broader toward his death, and f., and all Pr. 73 Stirring a sudden transport rose and f. Pr. 75 She sang of, shook and f., an erring pearl Pr. 77 Her transit to the throne, whereby she f. Pr. 94 Came all in haste to hinder wrong, but f. Pr. 95 Across the tumult and the tumult f. Pr. 100 Had come on Psyche weeping : ' then we f. Pr. 109 Flow'd from me : darkness closed me : and I f. Pr. 135 From the high tree the blossom wavering f. Pr. 140 — sadness on the soul of Ida f. Pr. 158 Star after star, arose and f. Pr. 160 — back I f., and from mine arms she rose Pr. 165 She moved, and at her feet the volume f. Pr. 171 Thro' four sweet years arose and f. In M. 37 — sadly f. our Christmas-eve In M. 48 In vaults and catacombs, they f. In M. 83 — calmly f. our Christmas-eve In M. 107 — f. in silence on his neck hi M. 159 — yet lies the rock that f. with him when he f. Ma. 2 — ye meanwhile far over moor and f. Ma. 63 Till a silence f. with the waking bird Ma. 77 The white lake-blossom f. into the lake Ma. 79 . — for it f. at a time of year Ma. in The torrent vineyard streaming f. Ma. 154 While horse and'hero f. Ma. 170 Not less Geraint believed it ; and there f. /. K. 2 Yonder.' He spoke and f. to work again I. K. 16 Of Modred, Arthur's nephew, and f. at last /. K. 32 Enid f. in longing for a dress /. K. 34 — the gay court, and f. asleep again /. K. 35 Yniol with that hard message went ; it f. /. K. 41 He f. asleep, and Enid had no heart /. K. 65 F., and he started up and stared at her /. K. 66 Who saw the chargers of the two that f. /. K. 71 The Prince, without a word, from his horse £ I. R. 72 A happy life with a fair death, and f. /. K. 97 Then f. upon him a great melancholy /. K. 103 Half-suffocated in the hoary f. /. K. 137 — down they f. and made the glen abhorr'd /. K. 149 — slipt and f. into some px>ol or stream /. K. 158 — many a heathen f. : ' and on the mount /. K. 163 — your great self, fair lord : ' and when he f. /. K. 164 ' Of all this will I nothing ; ' and so f. /. K. 19/ ' Is this Elaine ? ' till back the maiden f. ' /. K. 201 He raised his head, their eyes met and hers f. / K. 215 — him, and hurl'd him headlong, and he f. /. K. 230 He falter'd, and his hand f. from the harp /. K. 241 Rang coming, prone from off her seat she f. /. K. 247 — by mischance he slipt and f. E. A. 6 Taking her bread and theirs ; and on him f. E. A. 7 — all these things f. on her E. A. 27 Fire-hollowing this in Indian fashion, f. E. A. 31 — saved ; ' and so f. back and spoke no more E. A. 50 Tho' Leolin flamed and f. again, agreed E. A. 72 A creeper when the prop is broken, f. E. A. 93 — sheets of wasteful foam and f. E. A. 99 — the statues, king, or saint, or founder f. E. A. 108 — down their statue of Victory f. E. A. 170 F. the colony, city, and citadel E. A. 173 Bullets f. like rain Select. 38 FELL'D him, and set foot upon his breast /. K. 31 FELLOW, —shores : and if his f. spake Poems 143 —lowing to his fellows Poems 206 ' This f. would make weakness weak In M. 35 Poor f., could he help it? recommenced Ma. 125 Taller than all his fellows, milky-white /. A". 9 — heard one crying to his f., ' Look /. K. 48 — ■ Your sweet faces make good fellows fools /. K. 67 On this proud f. again, who scorns us all ? ' I. K. 202 That great pock-pitten f. had been caught? E. A. 64 To let that handsome f. Averill walk E. A. 65 FALLOW-CITIZENS. Welcome, f. Poems 373 FELLOWSHIP. The goodliest f. of famous Poems 191 sorrow, cruel f. In M. 3 Mere f. of sluggish moods In M. 55 To give him the grasp of f. Ma. i,-j Smiling a moment, ' with your f. /. K. 159 My breth-en have been all my f. /. K. 182 FELLOW-WORKER. I might your f. be Pr. 90 FELT. She f. he was and was not there Poems 75 1 pray'd for both, and so I f. resign'd Poe?ns 140 She f. her heart grow prouder Poe?ns 185 F. earth as air beneath me, till I reach 'd Poems 211 FESCUE Page FELT. Now Dora f. her uncle's will in all Poems 214 I f. a pang within Poems 255 —wild pulsation that I f. before the strife Poems 277 To search thro' all I f. or saw Poems 295 Of something f., like something here Poems 307 — round her waist she f. it fold Poems 320 I never f. the kiss of love Poems 334 Of all I f. and feel Poems 340 I read and f. that I was there Poems 352 For all things were and were not. Yet I f. Pr. 64 — f. the blind wildbeast of force Pr. 120 1 O brother, you have known the pangs we f. Pr. 126 F. at my heart, and seem'd to charm from Pr. 129 —last I spurr'd ; I f. my veins Pr. 134 I might be something to thee, when I f. Pr. 147 — f. it sound and whole from head to foot Pr. 147 The women — and perhaps they f. their power Pr. 177 I f. it, when I sorrow'd most In M. 118 I f. and feel, tho' left alone In M. 120 The whole I f. for him to you In M. 123 The same gray flats again, and f. In M. 126 I f. the thews of Anakim In M. 158 A love of freedom rarely f. In M. 168 — f. thy triumph was as mine In M. 170 Stood up and answer'd, ' I have f.' hi M. 192 Because he f. so fix'd in truth In M. 194 Nor have I f. so much of bliss In M. 204 — f. himself in his force to be Nature's Ma. 19 F. a horror over me creep Ma. 51 That I f. she was slowly dying Ma. 65 Strange, that I f. so gay Ma. 71 I cleaved to a cause that I f. to be pure and Ma. 113 I have f. with my native land Ma. 115 His love, unseen but f., o'ershadow Thee /. K. vii. F. you were somewhat, yea and by your /. K. 23 He f., were she the prize of bodily force /. K. 29 Of intermitted custom ; then I f. /. K. 43 — f. that tempest brooding round his heart /. K. 46 — groom'd, prick'd their light ears, and f. /. K. 56 — f. the warm tears falling on his face /. K. 76 She f. so blunt and stupid at the heart /. K. 85 — f. him hers again : she did not weep /. K. 86 — the King ; low bow'd the Prince, and f. /. K. 94 Tho' doubtful, f. the flatter}', and at times /. K. 103 I, feeling that you f. me worthy trust /. K. no — f. them slowly ebbing, name and fame * /. K. 116 1 f. as tho' you knew this cursed charm I. K. 116 — darkling f. the sculptured ornament /. K. 132 Thro' her own side she f. the sharp lance go /. K. 179 With lips severely placid f. the knot /. K. 185 She f. the King's breath wander o'er her /. K. 255 Was f. by either E. A. 3 — well had deem'd he f. the tale E. A. 39 — the silence which he f. E. A. 94 — he f. the silence of his house E. A. 94 — f. my blood E.A.Z42 We f. the good ship shake and reel E. A. 145 Till she f. the heart within her E. A. 173 FEMALE. — stately flower of f. fortitude Poems 7 Your finer f. sense offends Poems 322 We sent mine host to purchase f. gear Pr. 25 All beauty compass'd in a f. form Pr. 31 The circle rounded under f. hands Pr. 48 Than f., moving thro' the uncertain gloom Pr. 85 Of f. hands and hospitality ' Pr. 140, 141 Of f. whisperers : at the further end Pr. 155 Darkening her f. field : void was her use Pr. 159 Manhood fused with f. grace hi M. 169 FEMININELY fair, and dissolutely pale /. K. 60 FEX. From the dark f. the oxen's low Poejns 10 Fly o'er waste fens and windy fields Poems 335 FENCE. — three horses that have broken f. Pr. 49 — a niver mended a f. E. A. 134 FENCED. — back, the voice with which I f. Poems 304 I f. it round with gallant institutes Pr. 127 FERN. — learned names of agaric, moss, andf. Pms 230 Hail, hidden to the knees in f. Poems 246 Oh, hide thy knotted knees in f. Poems 249 O muffle round thy knees with f. Poems 251 O flourish, hidden deep in f. Poems 253 Step deeper yet in herb and f. Poems 255 From slope to slope thro' distant ferns Pr. 182 — sparkle out among the f. Ma. 118 To show Sir Arthur's deer. In copse and f. Ma. 124 — stood a shatter'd archway plumed »vith f. I. K. 17 —the palms and ferns and precipices E. A. 33 Fine as ice-ferns on January panes E. A. 62 FERULE. From f. and the trespass-chiding eye Pr. 109 FESCUE, —the frothfly from the f. brush'd E. A. 78 m FESTAL Page FESTAL. Of f. flowers Poems 29 On the hall-hearths the f. fires Poems 313 ' We keep the day. With f. cheer In M. 166 If I be loved, these are my f. robes /. K. 194 FESTERS. Eye, to which all order f. Poems 279 FESTIVAL. Two strangers meeting at a f. Poems 57 FESTOON. — and that, in many a wild f. Poems 102 FESTOONING, -^humid arms f. tree to tree Pins 153 FETCH. Go f. your Alice here,' she said Poems 91 — down I went to f. my bride Poems 91 Go f. a pint of port Poems 339 —jewels, gifts, to f. her ; these brought back Pr. 17 But f. the wine In M. 165 He knew the man ; the colt would f. its price Ma. 125 While your good damsel rests, return, and f. /. K. 57 I will f you forage from all fields /. K. 79 To f. her, and she took him for the King /. K. 134 ' Well, 1 will wear it : f. it out to me /. K. 166 Eh, let me f. 'em, Arden,' and arose E. A. 47 FETCH'D. —his brother's mood had fall'n, f. E. A. 72 FEUD. Rose f., with question unto whom Poe?ns 101 If New and Old, disastrous f. Poems 182 ' How grew this f. betwixt the right and left ' Pr. 58 — rose a little f. betwixt the two Pr. 178 I wage not any f. with Death In M. 113 Ring out the f. of rich and poor In M. 163 — ever mourning over the f. Ma. 66 Of Arthur, and to splinter it into feuds /. K. 226 — how they mar this little by their feuds E. A. 98 FEUDAL. The f. warrior lady-clad Pr. 7 A f. knight in silken masquerade Pr. 13 — tuft with grass a f. tower In M. 199 FEVER. — and in thirsts, fevers and cold Poems 236 Of f., tell me pleasant tales, and read Pr. 42 The f. from my cheek, and sigh In M. 125 — low f. ranging round to spy E. A. 80 FEVEROUS, —tongue-tied Poet in the f.days Pms 262 Brain-f. in his heat and agony, seem /. K. 191 — night of f. wakefulness E. A. 13 — hid his f. pillow smooth ! E. A. 87 FEW. Which f. can reach to Poems 243 I found him when my years were f. Poems 302 — spoke f. words and pithy, such as closed Pr. 182 —cheating the sick of a f. last gasps, as he sits Ma. 6 Clash'd with his fiery f. and won Ma. 143 —being of that honest f. Ma. 161 For those are f. we hold as dear Ma. 164 Low-spoken, and of so f. words, and seem'd /. K. 66 That has but one plain passage of f. notes /. K. 193 Thro' which a f., by wit or fortune led E. A. 74 FEWER. Were f., scatter'd stars, yet since Pr. 37 FIAT. This f. somewhat soothed himself E. A. 52 FIBRED. — the gray walls with hairy-f. arms /. K. 18 FIBRES. Thy f. net the dreamless head In M. 2 FICKLE. 'You're too slight and f,' I said Poems 338 That bright and fierce and f. is the South Pr. 79 Whatever f. tongues may say In M. 43 Rapt from the f. and the frail hi M. 49 FICTIVE. —dabbling in the fount off. tears Ma. 122 FIDDLE. — ta'en my f. to the gate Poems 326 Twang out, my f. ! shake the twigs ! Poems 328 FIDDLED. And f. in the timber ! Poems 326 FIE. — laugh'd the father saying, ' F., Sir Churl/. K. 157 O f., you golden nothing, f. E. A. 163 FIELD. Whether the high f. on the bushless Pms 30 — like the arrow-seeds of the f. flower Poems 39 Whither away from the high green f. Poems 43 — thro' the f. the road runs by Poems 65 Long fields of barley and of rye Poems 65 That sparkled on the yellow f. Poe?ns 68 The willowy hills and fields among Poems 71 — never see me more in the long gray fields Poems 135 — in the fields all round I hear Poems 138 He shines upon a hundred fields Poems 141 — the wandering fields of barren foam Poems 143 ' No marvel, sovereign lady : in fair f. Poems 154 Then stept she down thro' town and f. Poems 177 — bore him to a chapel nigh the f. Poe?ns 191 The fields between Poems 205 Leaning his horns into the neighbour f. Poems 206 — hired himself to work within the fields Poems 215 Far off the farmer came into the f. Poems 216 — when the farmer pass'd into the f. Poeins 217 — the boy's cry came to her from the f. Poems 218 Be shot for sixpence in a battle-f. Poems 222 — scarce can recognise the fields I know Poems 237 To yonder oak within the f. Poems 245 Beyond the fair green f. and eastern sea Poems 261 — when first he leaves his father's f. Poems 277 126 FIERY Page FIELD. — flower'd elder thicket from the f. Poems 287 In his free f., and pastime made Poems 304 —forth into the fields I went Poems 310 Fly o'er waste fens and windy fields Poems 335 From hollow fields : and here were telescopes Pr. 4 In such a hand as when a f. of corn Pr. 27 First in the f. : some ages had been lost Pr. 37 That lift the fancy ; for indeed these fields Pr. 72 They faint on hill or f. or river Pr. 74 In looking on the happy Autumn fields Pr. 76 — the foughten f., what else, at once Pr. 122 All on this side the palace ran the f. Pr. 125 Man for the f. and woman for the hearth Pr. 130 Thro' open f. into the lists they wound Pr. 140 Darkening her female f. : void was her use Pr. 159 — after that dark night among the fields Pr. 161 The f., the chamber, and the street In M. 10 His license in the f. of time In M. 44 — loitered in the master's f. In M. 58 My paths are in the fields I know hi M. 61 The howlings from forgotten fields In M. 62 A bounded f., nor stretching far hi M. 68 —those five years its richest f. hi M. 68 — hill and wood and f. did print hi M. 109 Laid their dark arms about the f. In M. 139, 141 To leave the pleasant fields and farms In M. 156 — f. above are dabbled with blood-red heath Ma. 1 From the shining fields Ma. 56 By many a f. and fallow Ma. 119 Old Philip ; all about the fields you caught Ma. 120 My brother James is in the harvest-f. Ma. 129 —this what knight soever be in f. /. K. 26 Beheld her first in f , awaiting him /. K. 29 I will fetch you forage from all fields /. K. 79 Are scatter'd,' and he pointed to the f. /. K. 88 One from the bandit scatter'd in the f. /. K. 89 — in the f. were Lancelot's kith and kin /. K. 171 He spoke, and vanish'd suddenly from the f. /. K. 173 So that he went sore wounded from the f. /. K. 178 — in the f., he smote his thigh, and mock'd /. K. 181 For pleasure all about a f. of flowers I. K. 188 Then rose Elaine and glided thro' the fields /. K. 191 Down thro' the dim rich city to the fields /. K. 191 — drave her ere her time across the fields Death like a friend's voice from a distant f. Past like a shadow thro' the f., that shone Croak'd, and she thought ' he spies a f. of In open battle or the tilting-f. — the sacred old familiar fields Sunning himself in a waste f. alone The tented winter-f. With rumour, and became in other fields Fairer than Ruth among the fields of corn — neglected places of the f. Follows the mouse, and all is open f. Man comes in and tills the f. — dim fields about the homes The houseless ocean's heaving f. The Sun peep'd in from open f. FIELD-FLOWERS. Likef. everywhere /. K. 193 /. K. 199 /. K. 206 /. K. 232 /. K. 242 E.A. 34 E. A. 51 E.A. 57 A. 76 A. 86 A. 87 <*- 95 E. A. 139 E. A. 143 E. A. 146 Select. 207 We /V. 67 E. E.. E. E.. FIEND, —the f. best knows whether woman or Ma. 10 Who give the F. himself his due Ma. 161 His mood was often like a f., and rose /. K. 160 FIERCE, —of so f. a flight Poems 38 My heart, pierced thro' with f. delight Poems 97 Twisted hard in f. embraces Poems 367 I urged the f. inscription on the gate Pr. 61 That bright and f. and fickle is the South Pr. 79 Unopen'd at her feet : a tide off. Pr. 99 He yielded, wroth and red, with f. demur Pr. 125 Stretch with f. heat : a moment hand to hand Pr. 134 The f. triumvirs ; and before them paused Pr. 164 Whence radiate : f. extremes employ hi M. 129 Till I with as f. an anger spoke Ma. 86 In that f. light which beats upon a throne /. K. vi. When I that knew him f. and turbulent /. K. 24 Nor ever touch'd f. wine, nor tasted flesh /. K. 126 * He learnt and warn'd me of their f. design /. K. 161 — which forced my thoughts on that f. law /. K. 253 — the f. old man E. A. 68 He heard a f. mermaiden cry E. A. 155 — in her f. volubility E. A. 169, 173 FIERCELY. To deck the banquet. F. flies In M. 165 He f. gave me the lie Ma. 86 FIERIEST. — spurr'd at heart with f. energy Pms 62 FIERY. It will not die alone : for f. thoughts Pms 107 —roaring deeps and f. sands Poems 149 Used all her f. will, and smote Poems 343 Or down the f. gulf as talk of it Pr. 6$ FIERY Page FIERY, —as the f. Sirius alters hue Pr. 120 Commerce and conquest, showerthe f. grain J Pr. 128 — into f. splinters leapt the lance Pr. 132 Leapt f. Passion from the brinks of death Pr. 165 Deep tulips, dash'd with f. dew In M. 114 A f. finger on the leaves In M. 149 The hearer in its f. course In M. 168 Clash'd with his f. few and won Ma. 143 A f. family passion for the name /. K. 172 All in a f. dawning wild with wind /. K. 200 — f. highway of the sun E. A, 8 Flash into f. life from nothing E. A. 58 FIERY-HOT. Of Demons? I to burst /;/ M. 177 FIERY-NEW. Had relish f. Poems 343 FIERY-SHORT was Cyrils counter-scoff Pr. 122 FIFE. The murmurs, of the drum and f. Poc ms 254 — merrily-blowing shrill'd the martial f. Pr. 119 March with banner and bugle and f. Ma. 23 FIFTH. ' The f. in line from that old Florian Pr. 41 To slant the f. autumnal slope In M. 37 FIFTY. Better f. years of Europe than a cycle Pvis 283 Her that talk'd down the f. wisest men Pr. 122 More, some f. on a side, that each Pr. 123 Opposed to f, till the trumpet blared Pr. 132 "We enter'd in and waited, f. there Pr. 132 — finding that of f. seeds In M. 78 With f. Mays, thy songs are vain In M. 105 Ah, what shall I be at f. ? Ma. 27 — f. knights rode with them to the shores /. K. 3, 96 Of f. facets ; thus he moved the Prince /. A'. 61 — the shallow cares off. years E. A. 93 — f. in the blaze of burning fire E. A. 178 FIFTY-FOLD. « My lord, you overpay me f.' /. K. 57 FIGHT. Ere I rode into the f. Poems 54 She saw me f., she heard me call Poems 54 Clanging fights and flaming towns Poems 149 Laid by the tumult of the f. Poems 164 ' Oh ! who would f. and march and _ Poems 222 Should come to f. with shadows and to fall Pr. 15 Sun-shaded in the heat of dusty fights) Pr. 41 Nor would I f. with iron laws, in the end Pr. 78 Or some grand f. to kill and make an end Pr. 105 Your knight, and f. your battle, what for me?' Pr. 106 She took it, and she flung it. ' F. ,' she said Pr. 106 — make yourself a man to f. with men Pr. 109 To f. in tourney for my bride, he clash'd Pr. 125 — what she did to Cyrus after f. Pr. 126 F. and f. well : strike and strike home Pr. 128 You draw from, f. : you failing, I abide Pr. 128 That one should f. with shadows and should fall Pr. 131 Too hard, too cruel : yet she sees me f. Pr. 133 'Sdeath ! I would sooner f. thrice o'er than see Pr. 148 A gallant f. , a noble princess — why Pr. 178 The king is scared, the soldier will not f. Pr. 180 She cannot f. the fear of death In M. 177 Teach true life to f. with mortal wrongs Ma. 61 — to f. for the good, than to rail at the ill Ma. 115 He that gain'd a hundred fights Ma. 143 So that I be not fall'n in f. Farewell ' /. K. 12 Then will I f. him, and will break his pride /. K. 12 — amis, arms, arms, to f. my enemy? Speak V I. K. 15 — f. and break his pride, and have it of him /. K. 23 That if, as I suppose, your nephew fights /. K. 26 — you that have no lady cannot f.' I. K. 27 I will not f. my way with gilded arms /. K. 46 My lord is weary with the f. before I. K. 52 To find him yet unwounded after f. I. K. 65 ' Lo ! I myself, when flush'd with f., or hot I. K. 80 — free to stretch his limbs in lawful f. /. K. 86 With Arthur in the f. which all day long /. K. 162 He got it ; for their captain after f. E. A. 63 — prove true : for, brother, where two f. E. A. 70 — part a truth is a harder matter to f. E. A. 118 FIGHTERS', —rustiest iron of old f. hearts /. K. 123 FIGHTING. ' No f. shadows here ! I forced Pr. 61 Of f. On his haunches rose the steed Pr. 132 In the great battle f. for the king /. K. 32 In battle, f. for the blameless king /. K. 97 All f. for a woman on the sea /. K. 122 FIGTREE. —on the shaft, and the wild f. split Pr. 78 FIGURE. Tall as a f. lengthen'd on the sand Pr. 144 Some f. like a w zard's pentagram Ma. 122 Faint as a f. seen in early dawn E. A. 20 FIGURED. In many a f. leaf enrolls In M. 65 FIGURE-HEAD, —her full-busted f. E. A. 30 FILE, —in the foremost files of time Poems 283 FILED, —down and f. away with thought /. K. 126 FILIAL. I doubted whether f. tenderness /. A'. 43 FILL. I would f. the sea-halls with a voice Poems 58 FIND Page FILL, —yet f. my glass : give me one kiss Poems 86 — those melodious bursts, that f. Poems 150 And tho' mine own e3'es f. with dew Poems 172 A thought would f. my eyes with happy dew Pms 2x0 Saw the heavens f. with commerce Poems 278 Heard the heavens f. with shouting Poems 278 F. the cup, and f. the can Poems 370, 371, 374 F. the can and f. the cup Poems 371, 373 — f. the hive ' Pr. 34 The sport half-science, f. me with a faith Pr. 181 There twice a day the Severn fills In M. 32 While now thy prosperous labour fills hi M. 116 Fills all the sacred Dee. So past the days I. K. 95 Fills him : I never saw his like : there lives I. K. 163 Musing on him that used to f. it for her E. A. 12 — tremulous eyes that f. with tears E. A. 140 Fills out the homely quickset-screens Select. 220 FILL'D the breast with purer breath Poems 89 — raised her piercing orbs, and f. with light Poems 157 f. the house with clamour Poe7ns 185 The right ear, that is f. with dust Poems 294 The woods were f. so full with song Poems 310 F. I was with folly and spite Poems 337 They are f. with idle spleen Poems 371 F. thro' and thro' with Love, a happy sleep Pr. 166 When f. with tears that cannot fall In M. 32 The streets were f. with joyful sound In M. 50 (And f. a horn with wine and held it to her) /. K. 80 F. all the genial courses of his blood I. K. 94 Sprang to her face and f. her with delight I. K. 167 Were f. with rapine, here and there a deed /. K. 249 — of stream or fount, and f. the shores E. A. 35 — when their casks were f. they took aboard E. A. 35 The magic cup that f. itself anew E. A. 58 — entering f the house with sudden light E. A. 86 FILLEST. But thou, that f. all the room In M. 174 FILLING with light Poems 38 FILLIP'D at the diamond in her ear Poems 2b6 FILM. — passing, with a grosser f. made thick Pms 243 FILMY. — wheel'd or lit the f. shapes In M. 139 FILTER'D. The f. tribute of the rough Poems 28 FILTH. — f. that floods the middle street I. K. 135 FILTHY. — f. sloughs they roll a prurient skin Pms 121 — f. by-lane rings to the yell of the trampled Ma. 6 This f. marriage-hindering Mammon made E. A. 70 FIN. Nor winks the gold f. in the porphyry font Pr. 166 There is not left the twinkle of a f. /. K. 70 FINAL. Will be the f. goal of ill In M. 76 And love Creation's f. law In M. 80 FIND. With blessings which no words can f. Pms 95 So shalt thou f. me fairest Poems 104 Some meeker pupil you must f. Poems 127 She'll f. my garden-tools Poems 137 — it can't be long before I f. release Poems 138 — they f. a music centred in a doleful song Poems 149 To strive, to seek, to f., and not to yield Poems 267 Could f. no statelier than his peers Poe?)is 290 Moreover, but to seem to f. Poems 293 And seem to f., but still to seek Poems 293 Named man, may hope some truth to f. Poems 297 I shall not fail to f. her now Poems 298 Wilt thou f. passion, pain, or pride? Poems 300 One riddle, and to f. the true Poems 300 ' We f. no motion in the dead ' Poems 302 Could his dark wisdom f. it out Poems 303 In Nature can he nowhere f. Poems 303 As here we f. in trances, men Poems 306 Beats quick and quicker, till he f. Poems 318 And if you f. no moral there Poems 321 In bud or blade or bloom may f. Poems 322 Nor finds a closer truth than this Poems 324 — if you f. a meaning there Poems 325 I f. a magic bark " Poems 334 Until I f.^the holy Grail Poems 336 Whate'er my grief to f. her less than fame Pr. 19 But chafing me on fire to f. my bride) Pr. 23 As yet we f. in barbarous isles, and here Pr. 35 ' But you will f. it otherwise,' she said Pr. 39 Less welcome f. among us if you came Pr. 47 I f. you here but in the second place Pr. 62 Would we go with her? we should f. the land Pr. 63 For ever : f. s> me other Pr. 147 Nor f. him dropt upon the firths of ice Pr. 168 To f. him in the valley : let the wild Pr. 168 And f. him ; by the happy threshold, he Pr. 168 I f. him worthier to be loved In M. vii. And f. in loss a gain to match ? In M. 1 And glad to f. thyself so fair In M. 7 In those deserted walks, may f. In M. ic 127 FIND Page FIND. So f. T every pleasant spot In M. 10 Treasuring the look it cannot f. In M. 31 ' It will be hard,' they say, ' to f. hi M. 33 Then might I f., ere yet the mom In M. 43 And finds ' I am not what I see hi M. 67 She finds the baseness of her lot In M. 85 To f. me gay among the ga.y In M. 92 I f. a trouble in thine eye In M. 94 A man upon a stall may f. hi M. 106 To works of weakness, but I f. hi M. 120 They would but f. in child and wife In M. 133 I f. not yet one lonely thought hi M. 134 To f. a stronger faith his own hi M. 144 He finds on misty mountain-ground In M. 145 I f. no place that does not breathe In M. 151 What f. I in the highest place In M. 167 And f. his comfort' in thy face In M. 169 God grant I may f. it at last Ma. n A glory I shall not f. Ma. 24 If I f. the world so bitter Ma. 27 To f. they were met by my own Ma. 33 And so that he f. what he went to seek Ma. 53 I f. whenever she touch'd on me Ma. 67 — come to her waking, f. her asleep Ma. 93 To f. the arms of my true love Ma. 95 — f. the toppling crags of Duty scaled Ma. 149 He shall f the stubborn thistle bursting Me. 149 To f. at some place I shall come at, arms /. K. 12 And all unarm'd I rode, and thought to f. /. K. 23 To love each other : how should Enid f. /. K. 42 To f. him yet unwounded after fight /. K. 65 With eyes to f. you out however far /. K. 68 And f. that it had been the wolf's indeed /. K. 91 And none could f. that man for evermore /. K. 104 In you, that are no child, for still I f. /. K. 112 Well, hide it, hide it ; I shall f. it out /. K. 121 To f. a wizard who might teach the King /. K. 123 Well, those were not our days: but did they f. /. K. 125 To dig, pick, open, f. and read the charm /. K. 128 And in the comment did I f. the charm /. K. 1-29 Are harlots like the crowd, that if they f. /. K. 137 I f. with grief ! I might believe you then /. K. 142 If I must f. you wit : we hear it said /. K. 155 * Divinely thro' all hindrance finds the man /. K. 164 My nephew, and ride forth and f. the knight /. K. 175 And cease not from your quest until you f.' /. K. 175 Sent, that he bore the prize and could not f. /. K. 180 But fail'd to f. him tho' I rode all round /. K. 184 She answered, ' and f. out our dear Lavaine ' /. K. 186 And f. that other, wheresoe'er he be /. K. 186 Until I f. the palace of the king /. K. 202 let us in, that we may f. the light ! /. K. 234 And weighing f. them less ; for gone is he /. K. 235 From all men, like his birth ; and could he f. /. K. 240 Ride toward her from the city, sigh'd to f /. K. 246 To f. the precious morning hours were lost E. A. 17 —set it wide to f. a sign E. A. 27 And after look'd into yourself, you f. E. A. 67 * Boy, should I f. you by my doors again E. A. 68 —being used to f. her pastor texts E. A. 82 To f. a deeper in the narrow gloom E. A. 94 * How many will say, forgive ! and f. E. A. 99 1 should f. he meant me well E. A. 104 In her strange dream, she knew not why, tof. E. A. 108 I f. myself often laughing at things E. A. 125 To f. my heart so near the beauteous breast Select. 197 FINDING. And f. that of fifty seeds In M. 78 Perchance as f. there unconsciously /. K. v. But f. neither light nor murmur there E. A. 38 FINE. The gold-eyed kingcups f. Poems 51 From head to ancle f. Poems 254 What is f. within thee growing coarse to Poems 272 In that f. air I tremble, all the past Pr. 176 This f. old world of ours is but a child Pr. 181 Such f. reserve and noble reticence /. K. 91 Of your misfaith ; and your f. epithet /. K. 121 With those f. eyes: she had her pleasure in it /. K. 125 So f. a fear in our large Lancelot /. K. 178 Told him that her f. care had saved his life /. K. 192 But there the f. Gawain will wonder at me /. K. 202 Then came the f. Gawain and wonder'd at he- /. K. 213 I thought I could not breathe in that f. air /. K. 258 F. as ice-ferns on January panes E. A. 62 Fares richly, in f. linen, not a hair E. A. 85 FINELY, —yet so f., that a troublous touch E. A. 55 FINENESS. For often f. compensated size Pr. 37 From over-f. not intelligible /. K. 135 —some pretext off. in the meal E. A. 19 FINER. Soothe him with thy f. fancies Poems 272 128 FIRE Page FINER. Your f. female sense offends Poems 322 And like a f. light in light hi M. 135 Who wants the f. politic sense Ma. 28 Strike thro' a f. element of her own? E. A. 81 FINEST. The f. on the tree Poems 255 Are touch'd, are turn'd to f. air Poems 336 Of f. Gothic lighter than afire Pr. 6 FINGER. And weary with a finger's touch Poems 14 Thy taper fingers amorously Poems 16 Thro' rosy taper fingers drew Poems 73 Three fingers round the old silver cup Poems 85 With rosy slender fingers backward drew Poems 105 One rose, but one, by those fair fingers Poems 208 And with a flying f. swept my lips Poems 212 All-perfect, finish'd to the f. nail Poems 231 To save her little f. from a scratch Poems 232 Baby fingers, waxen touches Poems 275 • You would not let your little f. ache Poems 286 Her gradual fingers steal Poe?ns 340 (I kept the book and had my f. in it) Pr. 4 And takes a lady's f. with all care Pr. 10 And now a pointed f., Lold them all Pr. 120 A feeling f. on my brows and presently Pr. 142 And lazy lingering fingers. She the appeal Pr. 143 With trembling fingers did we weave In M. J$y ', A fiery f. on the leaves hi M. 149 ' Of my f. -nail on the sand Ma. 89 Myself would work eye dim, and f. lame /. K. 34 He sits unarm'd ; I hold a f. up /„ K. 63 Her f. up and pointed to the dust /. K. 69 And clench'd her fingers till they bit the palm/. K. 179 Her f., Annie fought against his will E. A. 9 — put her f. on the text E. A. 27 His fingers into the wet earth E. A. 43 My lady with her fingers interlock'd E. A. 61 And on thy heart a f. laj's Select. 220 FINGER-NAIL. Of my f. on the sand Ma. 89 FINGER-TIPS. The rein with dainty f. Poems 363 FINIALS. And oaken f. E. A. 93 FINISH'D. Of such a f. chasten'd purity Poems 8 So when four years were wholly f. Poems 125 All-perfect, f. to the finger nail Poems 23Z FIRE. Thou who stealest f. Poems 26 Tho' one did fling the f. Poems 39 Losing his f. and active might Poems 82 And a languid f. creeps Poems 83 And fires your narrow casement glass Poems 95 And from beyond the noon a f. Poems 97 O Love, O f. ! once he drew Poems 97 And at their feet the crocus brake like f. Poems 101 All earth and air seem only burning f.' Poems 108 A f. dances before her, and a sound Poems 108 Burnt like a fringe of fire Poems 114 Would seem slow-flaming crimson fires Poems 114 And highest, snow and f. Poems 116 She howl'd aloud, ' I am on f. within Poems 125 — like f. in swamps and hollows gray Poems 132 That run before the fluttering tongues off. Poems 151 Still with their fires Love tipt his keenest Poems 157 A wind to puff your idol-fires Poems 182 The glass blew in, the f. blew out Poems 186 From Allan's watch, and sparkled by the f. Poems 219 — burn'd in f. or boil'd in oil Poems 238 Sit with their wives by fires Poems 240 — scrambled past those pits of f. Poems 242 — nods and winks behind a slowly-dying f. Poems 279 — Hall, with rain or hail, or f. or snow Poems 284 The furzy prickle f. the dells Poems 292 Like Stephen, an unquenched f. Poems 299 On the hall-hearths the festal fires Poems 313 The f. shot up, the martin flew Poems 319 No, I cannot praise the f. Poems 373 Of finest Gothic lighter than a f. Pr. 6 Time by the f. in winter ' Pr. 12 But chafing me on f. to find my bride) Pr. 23 Burn like the mystic f. on a mast-head Pr. 88 As of some f. against a stormy cloud Pr. 94 The next, like f. he meets the foe Pr. 105 — red-faced war has rods of s^eel and f. Pr. 113 — living hearts that crack within the f. Pr. 126 — in his arm-chair while the fires of Hell 'Pr. 130 — out of stricken helmets sprang the f. Pr. 132 Break from a darken'd future, crown'd with f. Pr. 145 A looming bastion fringed with f. In M. 25 Is shrivell'd in a fruitless f. In M. 76 Laburnums, dropping-wells off. In M. 114 Beside the never-lighted f. In M. 116 But on her forehead sits a f. hi M. 177 And compass'd by the fires of Hell In M. 197 "J" } I \ ' /*( FIRE Page FIRE. — f. of a foolish pride flash'd over her Ma. 17 Cold fires, yet with power to burn and Ma. 60 The fires of Hell brake out of thy rising sun Ma. 85 The fires of Hell and of Hate Ma. 85 — blood-red blossom of war with a heart of f. Ma. 115 But in my words were seeds of f. Ma. 133 The giant windows' blazon'd fires Ma. 157 Glow'd like the heart of a great f. at Yule /. K. 30 That night of f. when Edyrn sack'd their /. A". 34 And loosed in words of sudden f. the wrath /. A". 51 Fresh f. and ruin. He, perceiving, said /. A". 89 From which old fires have broken, men may /. K. 89 And into such a song, such f. for fame /. K. 115 Rage like a f. among the noblest names /. K. 13s Her godlike head crown'd with spiritual f. /. K. 137 Yet in this heathen war the f. of God I. K. 163 And shot red f. and shadows thro' the cave /. K. 168 So ran the tale like f. about the court /. K. 183 F. in dry stubble a nine days' wonder flared /. K. 185 Pray for him that he scape the doom of f. /. K. 243 The children born of thee are sword and f. /. K. 247 Blaze, making all the night a steam of f. /. A" 256 Of sunrise, her arm lifted, eyes on f. Pr. 3 — a still and sacred f. E. A. 5 Keep a clean hearth and a clear f. for me E. A. 11 And flung her down upon a couch of f. E. A. 80 — had flood, f., earthquake, thunder E. A. 84 — as not passing thro' the f. E. A. 86 No desolation but by sword and f. ? E. A. 89 But the tongue is a f. as you know E. A. 117 The moon like a rick on f. E. A. 119 — beat the twilight into flakes of f. E. A. 141 Fall from his Ocean-lane off. E. A. 145 With wakes of f. we tore the dark E. A. 147 Flash, ye cities, in rivers off. E. A. 165 Thunder, a flying f. in heaven E. A. 170 Sat glorying : many a f. before them blazed E. A. 177 — fifty in the blaze of burning f. E. A. 178 — many a f. between the ships and stream E. A. 178 FIRE-BALLOON. A petty railway ran : a f. Pr. 5 FIREBRAND. Worth winning : but this f. Pr. 115 FIRED. — with knobs and wires and vials f. Pr. 4 — f. an angry Pallas on the helm Pr. 155 F. from the west, far on a hill, the towers I. A". 156 F. all the pale face of the Queen, who cried /. K. 244 He rose at dawn, and, f, with hope E. A. 155 Not a gun was f. Select. 38 FIREFLIES. Glitter like a swarm of f. Poems 269 FIREFLY. The f. wakens : waken thou with Pr. 166 FIREFLY-LIKE. Began to glitter f. in copse Pr. 26 FIRE-HOLLOWING this in Indian fashion E. A. 31 FIRESIDE. How often shall her old f. In M. 61 Down too, down at your own f. Ma. 39 FIREWOOD. Their f. and the winds from off E. A. 177 FIRM. Thereon I built it f. Of ledge or shelf Pms 112 Not swift nor slow to change, but f. Poems 180 Of force and choler, and f. upon his feet Poems 264 With measured footfall f. and mild Poems 308 The Head of all the golden-shafted f. Pr. 50 Unshaken, clinging to her purpose, f. Pr. 124 Some civic manhood f. against the crowd Pr. 180 — he stood f. ; and so the matter hung Ma. 125 — keep the soldier f. , the statesman pure Ma. 149 Met his full frown timidly f., and said /. K. 49 Her low f. voice and tender government /. K. 56 Upbore him, and f. faith, and evermore E. A. 44 Like Virtue f., like Knowledge fair E. A. 148 FIRMER. Stept forward on a f. leg Poems 344 While he treads with footstep f. Poems 360 And slowly forms the f. mind In M. 31 * Me you call great, mine is the f. seat /. K. 170 FIRMLY, —strike, and f., and one stroke Poems 183 I falter where I f. trod In M. 78 FIRMNESS. — f., « Have I leave to speak? ' /. K. 53 FIRRY. In f. woodlands making moan Poems 87 FIRST. In setting round thy f. experiment Poems 29 When f. she is wed Poems 29 When the f. matin-song hath waken'd loud Poems 29 Needs must thou dearly love thy f. essay Poems 29 —talking to himself, f. met his sight Poems 52 The f. house by the water-side Poems 71 Nor f. reveal'd themselves to English air Poems 78 Dear eyes, since f. I knew them well Poems 94 Then f. I heard the voice of her, to whom Poems 102 The f. of those who knovr Poems 119 Since my f. memory? Poems 1-22. It seem'd so hard at f., mother Poems 138 We only toil, who are the f. of things Poems 144 Dan Chaucer, the f. warbler Poems 150 9 FIRST I Page FIRST. Those we love f. are taken f. Poems 171 Love at f. sight, f.-born, and heir to all Poems 210 My f., last love ; the idol of my youth Poems 213 This evil came on William at the f. Poems 216 Remembering the day when f. she came Poems 218 At f. like dove and dove, were cat and dog Poems 227 — his f. passion : and he answer'd me Poems 231 Thou knowest I bore this better at the f. Poems 237 — when my passion f. began Poems 245 — since I f. could cast a shade Poems 248 Then when the f. low matin-chirp hath grown Pms 261 — when f. he leaves his father's field Poems 277 I said, ' When f. the world began Poems 290 That I f. was in human mould ? Poems 305 From that f. nothing ere his birth Poems '305 For is not our f. year forgot ? Poems 306 Much more, if f. I floated free Poems 307 Be still the f. to leap to light Poems 323 For since the time when Adam f. Poems 324 Oh, nature f. was fresh to men Poems 328 Or this f. snowdrop of the year Poems 331 — something duller than at f. Poems 345 Three fair children f. she bore him Poems 361 Tell me tales of thy f. love Poems -^j-z — the f. bones of Time Pr. 2 Of temper amorous, as the f. of May Pr. 15 The f. , a gentleman of broken means Pr. 18 I f., and following thro' the porch that sang Pr. 30 Their debt of thanks to her who f. had dared Pr. 36 F. in the field : some ages had been lost Pr. 37 ■ I knew you at the f. ; though you have grown Pr. 45 And so it was agreed when f. they came Pr. 56 Fresh as the f. beam glittering on a sail Pr. 76 Deep as f. love, and wild with all regret Pr. 77 She, question'd if she knew us men, at f. Pr. 80 We took this palace : but ev'n from the f. Pr. 90 I spoke not then at f., but watch 'd them well Pr. 92 On me, me, me the storm f. breaks : 1 dare Pr. 100 A little shy at f. , but by and by Pr. 109 Of the f. snowdrop's inner leaves Pr. 117 I that prated peace, when f. I heard Pr. 120 The f., he blew and blew, but none appear'd Pr. 124 At f. her eye with slow dilation roll'd Pr. 146 When f. she came, all flush'd you said to me Pr. 149 At f. with all confusion : by and by Pr. 158 At f. with Psyche. Not the' Blanche had Pr. 161 — some cold morning glacier : frail at f. Pr. 163 With which we bantcr'd little Lilia f. Pr. 177 Where thy f. form was made a man In M. 86 F. love, f. friendship, equal powers In M. 123 Where nighest heaven, who f. could fling In M. 133 Where f. he walk'd when claspt in clay ? In M. 137 Who touch'd a jarring lyre at f. In M. 143 Where f. we gazed upon the sky In M. 155 She is the second, not the f. In M. 177 For what is one, the f., the last In M. i83 Since f. he told me that he loved In M. 204 He now is f. ? but is he the last? is he not too Ma. 19 To a grandson, f. of his noble line Ma. 36 Seal'd her mine from her f. sweet breath Ma. 66 The last of April, or the f. of May) Ma. 125 Who f. had found and loved her in a state I. K. x And live to wed with her whom f. you love I. K. 13 When f. the liquid note beloved of men /. K. 18 For noble deeds ? and truly I, when f. I. K. 23 Of suitors as this maiden ; f. Limours I. K. 24 Whom f. she kiss'd on either cheek, and then I. K. 28 Beheld her f. in field, awaiting him I. K. 29 F. thou thyself, thy lady, and thy dwarf I. K. 31 Enid look'd, but all confused at f. I. K. 37 Flur, for whose love the Roman Caesar f. I. K. 40 Remembering how f. he came on her I. K. 45 — was their pace at f., but slacken'd soon I. K. 47 In the f. shallow shade of a deep wood I. K. 52 When f. I parted from you, moves me yet ' I. A". 64 Your wish and would obey ; but riding f. I. K. 68 Sweet lady, never since I f. drew breath I. K. 78 * In this poor gown my dear lord found me f. I. K. 83 Yourself were f. the blameless cause to make I. K. 89 The people called him Wizard ; whom at f. I. K. 102 Thro' woman the f. hour ; for howsoe'er I. K. 112 Than when I told you f. of such a charm I. A". 112 It was the time whenf. the question rose I. K. 115 Use gave me Fame at f., and Fame again I. K. 119 — uncharm'd. For those who wrought it f. I. K. 122 On her new lord, her own, the f. of I. K. 125 Sir Lancelot went ambassador, at f. I. K. 134 Which f. she placed where morning's earliest I. K. 147 Glanced f. at him, then her, and went his I. K. 152 129 FIRST Page FIRST, —that summer when you loved me f. /. A". 152 F. as in fear, step after step she stole /. K. 165 And never woman yet. since man's f. fall /. K. 191 And peradventure had he seen her f. /. K. 192 This is not love : but love's f. flash in youth /. K. 196 This matter to the Queen, at f. she laugh'd /. K. 228 — when f. she came, wept the sad Queen /. K. 234 — she saw him f., when Lancelot came I. K. 245 Came to that point, whenf. she saw the King/. K. 246 But I was f. of all the kings who drew /. K. 249 (When f. I learnt thee hidden here) is past I. K. 253 With his f. babe's f. cry E. A. 5 — f. since Enoch's golden ring had girt E. A. 9 Scarce-credited at f., but more and more E. A. 35 Has she no fear that her f. husband lives?' E. A. 44 And these had been together from the f. E. A. 55 Leolin's f. nurse was, rive years after, hers E. A. 55 He wasted hours with Averill, there, when f. E. A. 56 My Peter, f. ; ' and did Sir Aylmer know E. A. 64 Had fallen f., was Edith that same night E. A. 65 — touch'd her thro' that nearness of the f. E. A. 82 And these had been together from the f. E. A. 88 Not f., and third, which are a riper f . ? E. A. 99 — when f. I fronted him E. A. 99 — and I was glad at f. E. A. 103 Who f. wrote satire, with no pity in it E. A. 107 But the f. that ever I bare was dead E. A. 121 That was the f. time too that ever I thought E. A. 122 FIRST-BORN. The f. of thy genius Poems 30 Love at first sight, f., and heir to all Poems 210 On the f. of her sons Poems 372 FIRST-FAMED. And of the two f. for /. K. 242 FIRST-FRUITS. The f. of the stranger Pr. 31 FIRSTLING. And bring the f. to the flock In M. 2 FIRTHS. Nor find him dropt upon the f. of ice Pr. 168 FISH. F. are we that love the mud Poems 370 The star, the bird, the f., the shell, the flower Pr. 49 Ran to her crying, ' If we have f. at all /. K. 36 Of darting f., that on a summer morn /. K. 70 FISHERMAN. O well for the fisherman's boy Pr. 378 A luckier or a bolder f. E. A. 3 FISHING-NETS, —swarthy f. E. A. 2 To make the boatmen f. E. A. 44 FIT. From living Nature, f. for every mood Pms 115 As f. for every mood of mind Poems 116 That scarce is f. for you to hear Poems 127 That f. us like a nature second-hand Poetns 227 God only thro' his bounty hath thought f. Poems 243 And in a f. of frolic mirth Poems 251 — f. to flaunt, to dress, to dance, to thrum Pr. 101 I scarce am f. for your great plans Pr. 147 Or breaking into song by fits In M. 39 Becoming as is meet and f. In M. 60 As fits an universal woe Ma. 138 Once f. for feasts of ceremony) and said /. K. 16 So clothe yourself in this, that better fits /. K. 38 Short fits of prayer, at every stroke a breath I. K. 54 Began to break her sports with graver fits /. K. 103 ^ To f. their little streetward sitting-room E. si. 10 FITFUL. — desires, likef. blasts of balm Poems 205 FITFULLY. Tho' far between and coming f. E. A. 75 FITLY. To one more f. yours, not thrice your I. K. 196 FITTED. Power f. to the season Poems 103 Gown'd in pure white, that f. to the shape Poems 207 So now 'tis f. on and grows to me Poems 243 — old and formal, f. to" thy petty part Poems 276 As his unlikeness f. mine -' hi M. no FITTING. In f. aptest words to things In M. 103 FIVE. Alone and warming his f. wits Poems 17 Lord of the senses f. Poems 120 — there has not been for these f. years Poems 216 With f. at top : as quaint a four-in-hand Poems 229 To chase the deer at f. Poems 247 F. hundred rings of years Poems 248 Could number?, from ten Poems 248 Young Nature through f. cycles ran Poems 290 How goes the time? 'Tis f. o'clock Poems 339 F. others : we were seven at Vivian-place Pr. 1 And quoted odes, and jewels f. -words-long Pr. 48 And those f. years its richest field In M. 68 When I am but twenty-f. ? Ma. 27 He gave them line ; and f. days after that Ma. 125 F. horses and their armours ; ' and the host /. K. 67 Kill'd in a tilt, come next, f. summers back I. K. 242 Leolin's first nurse was, f. years after E. A. 55 The tender pink f. -beaded baby-soles E. A. 60 While Harry is in the f.-acre E. A. 124 — your father, at sixty -f. E. A. 125 FIX. Holding the bush, to f. it back, she stood Pms 207 130 FLAME Page FIX. —all as one to f. our hopes on Heaven Pms 264 To f. and make me hotter, till she laugh'd Pr. 56 Nor cares to f. itself to form In M. 52 — f. my thoughts on all the glow In M. 115 With men and prosper ! Who shall f. In M. 177 —not f. the glass to suit her eye E. A. 14 FIXED. Were f. shadows of thy f. mood Poems 7 — f, then as slowly fade again Poems 82 Roll'd round by one f. law Poems 123 And, last, you f. a vacant stare Poems 128 True love turn'd round on f. poles Poems 179 Counting the dewy pebbles, f. in thought Poems 194 1 Not that the grounds of hope were f. Poems 500 Be f. and froz'n to permanence Poems 300 The blush is f. upon her cheek Poe7ns 314 One f. for ever at the door Poems 345 F. in yourself, never in your own arms Pr. 145 Because he felt so f. in truth In M. 194 FIXT. Of shining expectation f. on mine Pr. 82 F. like a beacons-tower above the waves Pr. 100 — topples down the scales ; but this is f. Pr. 130 From my f. height to mob me up with all Pr. 152 F. my faint eyes, and utter'd whisperingly Pr. 165 She flung it from her, thinking : last, she f. Pr. 178 Her faith is f. and cannot move In M. 146 And a morbid eating lichen f. Ma. 29 And valley, with f. eye following the three /. K. 13 Two forks are f. into the meadow ground I. K. 26 And there they f. the forks into the ground I. K. 30 F. on her faith. Now therefore I do rest I. K. 43 F. in her will, and so the seasons went I. K. 103 With such a f. devotion, that the old man I. K. 103 So f. her fancy on him : let him be /. K. 134 That has the poplar on it : there you f. I. K. 201 Either f. his heart E. A. 3 — where he f. his heart, he set his hand £. A. 17 — rose, and f. her swimming eyes upon him E. A. 18 And f. the Sabbath E. A. 82 f. eyes of painted ancestors E. A. 94 'Then I f. E. A. 109 And f. upon the far sea-line E. A. 148 FLAG, —the battle-flags were furl'd Poems 278 — the trader, never floats an European f. Pocns 281 Flags, flutter out upon turrets and towers! E. A. 164 FLAG-FLOWERS, —tall f. when they sprung Pms 87 FLAGRANTE, —vaf— what's the Latin Poems 226 FLAIL. From Arac's arm, as from a giant's f. Pr. 132 FLAKE. — foam-flakes scud along the level Poems 151 Shrill, chill, with flakes of foam Poems 193 Before me shower'd the rose in flakes Pr. 88 — f. of rainbow flying on the highest Pr. 123 The rocket molten into flakes In M. 148 — here and there a foamy f. Ma. 120 — beat the twilight into flakes of fire E. A. 141 FLAME. — the clear-pointed f. of chastity Poems 7 Nor martyr-flames, nor trenchant swords Poems 13 A subtle, sudden f. Poems 16 Grew darker from that under-f. Poems 22 As with the quintessence of f. Poems 24 — wing'd with f. Poems 38 — in her raiment's hem was traced in f. Poems 40 Burn'd like one burning f. Poems 69 A thousand little shafts of f. Poems 96 She died : she went to burning f. Poems 109 Thro' the topmost Oriels' colour'd f. Poems 119 — hollow shades enclosing hearts of f. Poems 123 Dark faces pale against that rosy f. Poems 143 Saw God divide the night with flying f. Poems 159 Made her cheek f. ; her palfrey's footfall shot Pms 287 A fragrant f. rose, and before us glow'd Pr. 76 Flames, and his anger reddens in the heavens Pr. 94 Dry f., she listening : after sank and sank Pr. 146 — set a wrathful Dian's moon on f. Pr. 155 Pierces the keen seraphic f. In M. 49 This round of green, this orb of f. In M. 53 And Life, a Fury slinging f. In M. 72 As slowly steals a silver f. In M. 93 Who might'st have heaved a windless f. . In M. 99 Ray round with flames her disk of seed In M. 153 For him did his high sun f. Ma. 19 Ready to burst in a coloured f. Ma. 26 — made my life a perfumed altar-f. Ma. 59 — grinning mouths of the fortress, flames Ma. 115 Let it f. or fade Ma. 115 — when the long-illumined cities f. Ma. 150 Break into furious f. ; being repulsed /. K. 89 To rise hereafter in a stiller f. /. K. 216 He saw them — headland after headland f. I. K. 238 With all their dewy hair blown back like f. /. K. 240 FLAME Page FLAME, —dead f. of the fallen day E. A. 25 His hair as it were crackling into flrunes E. A. 81 To f. and sparkle and stream as of old E. A. 160 I doom you to the f. E. A. 163 Flames, on the windy headland flare ! E. A. 165 FLAMED upon the brazen greaves Poems 63 F. in his cheek ; and eager eyes E. A. 54 Tho' Leolin f. and fell again, agreed E. A. 72 By peaks thatf., or, all in shade E. A. 147 FLAMING. — f. downward over all Poems 76 Would seem slow-f. crimson fires Poems 114 Clanging fights and f. towns Poems 149 The doom of treason and the f. death /. K. 253 FLANKS, —on their f.— you read the book ! /. K. 128 FLAP. — slate-quarry, and the great echo f. Poems 264 — and the slacken'd" sail flaps, all her voice Pr. 39 The dimpled flounce of the sea-furbelow f. E. A. no FLAPP'D. They f. my light out as I read Poems 242 FLARED on her face, she shrilling ' Let me /. K. 200 — threaten'd darkness, f. and fell Poems 201 Fire in dry stubble a nine days' wonder f. /. K. 185 F. on him, and he came upon the place E. A. 37 FLARING. A million tapers f. bright Poems 24 — light of London f. like a dreary dawn Poems 277 FLASH in the pools of whirling Simois Poe?ns 106 — without speaking, like a f. of light Poe?ns 131 A f. of light. Is that the angel there Poems 243 — f. the lightnings, weigh the Sun Poems 283 A living i. of light he flew ' Poems 289 And learnt ? I learnt more from her in a f . Pr. 49 — like a f. the weird affection came Pr. 131 — f. at once, my friend, to thee In M. 62 A little f., a mystic hint In M. 66 Will f. along the chords and go In M. 129 As in the former f. of joy In M. 189 — at the f. and motion of the man /. K. 70 One f., that, missing all things else, may make /. K. 142 This is not love : but love's" first f. in youth /. K. 196 Their talk had pierced, her father, ' Ay, a f. /. K. 197 Was but the f. of youth, would darken down /. K. 216 The lightning f. of insect and of bird E. A. 32 F. into fiery life from nothing, follow E. A. 58 A f. of semi-jealousy clear 'd it to her E. A. 61 F. from the bridge E. A. 90 The facets of the glorious mountain f. E. A. 158 F., ye cities, in rivers of fire ! E. A. 165 FLASH'D. He f. into the crystal mirror Poems 69 F. thro' her as she sat alone Poems 122 So f. and fell the brand Excalibur Poems 196 The distant battle f. and rung Poems 295 He f. his random speeches Poems 347 They f. a saucy message to ar.d fro Pr. 5 A thought f. thro' me which I clothed in act Pr. 25 — fresh young captains f. their glittering teeth Pr. 108 His living soul was f. on mine In M. 140 — fire of a foolish pride f. over her beautiful Ma. 17 Something f. in the sun Ma. 34 Heaven f. a sudden jubilant ray Ma. 144 F. all their sabres bare Ma. i6g F. as they turn'd in air Ma. 169 Whereat Geraint f. into sudden spleen /. K. 15 We could not keep him silent, out he f. /. K. 115 F. the bare-grinning skeleton of death ! /. K. 138 Suddenly f. on her a wild desire /. K. 166 Then f. into wild tears, and rose again I.-K. 179 Then from the smitten surface f., as it were /. K. 211 Flung them, and down they f., and smote the /. K. 211 — autumn into autumn f. again E. A. 25 The jests, that f. about the pleader's room E. A. 74 FLASHES. This proverb f. thro' his head Poems 317 The f. come and go Poems 332 These f. on the surface are not he Pr. 87 — f. into false and true In M. 27 — chased the f. of his golden horns /. K. 115 With sallying wit, free f. from a height /. K. 181 Re-makes itself, and f. down the vale /. K. 256 FLASHEST. —valley, stream that f. white E. A. 151 FLASHING. She, f. forth a haughty smile Poems 155 — f. round and round, and whirl'd in an arch Pms 196 The cataract f. from the bridge In M. 98 Came quickly f. thro' the shallow ford /. K. 9 Was all the marble threshold f., strown /. K. 47 FLASK. A f. of cider from his father's vats Poems 222 Here sits the Butler with a f. Poems 314 I leave an empty f. Poems 346 The wine-f. lying couch'd in moss In M. 132 FLAT. — glanced athwart the glooming flats Poems 10 The f. red granite Poems 221 My spirit f. before thee Poems 237 9* FLEE Page FLAT. Push'd her f. hand against his face and Pr. 48 F. to the garden-wall : and likewise here Pr. 125 — now fast barr'd: so here upon the f. Pr. 126 The same gray flats again, and felt In M. 126 Of this f. lawn with dusk and bright In M. 130 F. on the couch and spoke exultingly /. K. 36 By the f. meadow, till she saw them come /. K. 44 Take my salute,' unknightly with f. hand /. K. 84 Down, down, and close again, and nip me f. /. K. in By sands and steaming flats, and floods E. A. 147 — run thro' every change of sharp and f. Select. 196 FLATTEN'D. Mangled, and f., and crush'd Ma. 2 FLATTER. — sue me. and woo me, and f. me Pms 6r To f. me that I may die ? Poems 298 F. myself that always everywhere Pr. 50 This look of quiet flatters thus In M. 14 Would f. his own wish in age for love I. K. 103 FLATTER'D his spirit Poems 103 Be f. to the height Poems 120 F. and fluster'd, wins, tho' dash'd with death Pr. 115 The fancv f. my mind Ma. 50 FLATTERERS. Face-f. and backbiters are /. K. 136 FLATTERING. — f. the golden prime Poems 22 — f. thy childish thought Poems 78 O, I, that f. my true passion, saw I. K. 139 Half-envious of the f. hand, she drew /. K. 165 A splendid presence f. the poor roofs E. A. 60 FLATTERY. The f. and the strife Poems 156 Nor speak I now from foolish f. /. K. 24 Tho' doubtful, felt the f., and at times /. K. 103 FLAUNT. — could change their sex, and f. Pr. 8 — fit to f., to dress, to dance, to thrum Pr. 101 — a time for these to f. their pride ? E. A. 91 FLAUNTING, —with shows off. vines Poems 28 FLAW. Like f. in summer laving lust}- corn /. K. 41 FLAWLESS. With f. demonstration Pr. 48* FLAXEN. With thy floating f. hair Poems 33 From the f. curl to the gray lock a life Pr. 96 Ere childhood's f. ringlet turn'd In M. 109 FLAYFLINT. There lived a f. near Poems 228 FLAYING the roofs and sucking up the drains Pr. 134 FLEAS, —text no larger than the limbs of f. /. K. 128 FLECK. Another slid, a sunny f. Poems 254 That life is dash'd with flecks of sin In M. 74 FLECKLESS. —will not count me f. yet Pr. 44 FLED. Her household f. the danger Poems 186 Her voice f. always thro' the summer land Poejns 232 I read, and f. by night, and filing turn'd Poems 235 — f. she to her inmost bower Poems 2S6 1 O happy sleep, that lightly f. ! ' Poems 320 Thought her proud, and f. over the sea Poems 337 As she f. fast thro' sun and shade Poems 363 For maidens, on the spur she f. ; and more Pr. 23 — all else f.: we point to it and we say Pr. 41 They f., who might have shamed us ; promise Pr. 44 As flies the shadow of a bird she f. Pr. 59 Agreed to, this, the day f. on thro' all Pr. 63 Said Ida ; * home ! to horse ! ' and f. Pr. 83 — where are Psyche, Cyril ? both are f. Pr. 87 Amazed he f. away Pr. 109 — shuddering f. from room to room and died Pr. 155 Less yearning for the friendship f. In M. 181 Were it not wise if I f. from the place and Ma. 9 Whether I need have f. % Ma. 92 I wake, my dream is f. Ma. 98 My fancy f. to the South again Ma. 160 That Edyrn's men were on them, and they f. /. K. 34 F. all the boon companions of the Earl /. K. 71 — when they saw the dead man rise, and f. /. K. 84 While some yet f. ; and then he plainlier /. K. 88 And then I rose and f. from Arthur's court /. K. 108 F. like a glittering rivulet to the tarn /. K. 150 I my sons and little daughter f. /. K. 161 F. ever thro' the woodwork, till they found /. K. 170 — on that day when Lancelot f. the lists /. K. 17^ For hither had she f., her cause of flight /. K. 225 Queen Guinevere had f. the court, and sat /. K. 225 Moan as she f., or thought she heard them /. K. 231 F. all night long by glimmering waste and /. K. 231 F. frighted. Then that other left alone /. K. 244 » F. forward, and no news of Enoch came E. A. 20 His fancy f. before the lazy wind E. A. 36 For one fair Vision ever f. E. A. 148 FLEDGED, —curved branches, f. with Poems 152 — f. with music,' and a maid Pr. 76 FLEE. Melissa clamour'd ' F. the death Pr. 83 What time mine own might also f. In M. 117 — f. from the cruel madness of love Ma. 22 Parts of the morning? if I f. to these E. A. 13 I 3 I FLEECE Page FLEECE, —between their fairy fleeces pale Poems 212 ' The Bull, the F. are cramm'd Poems 221 He met the bailiff at the Golden F. Ma. 125 — many-winter'd f. of throat and chin /. K. 137 FLEECED. Of the thick. -f. sheep from Poems 29 FLEECY. Moving thro' a f. night Poems 163 FLEET. — f. I was of foot Pr. 88 — if an enemy's f. came yonder round by the Ma. 7 — light and shadow f. Ma. 97 — the shadow flits and fleets Ma. 101 Ev'n in the presence of an enemy's f. /. K. 239 — a f. of jewels under me E. A. 102 — there a f. of glass E. A. 102 — my poor venture but a f. of glass . Ex A. 103 An idle signal, for the brittle f. ' E. A. 103 Welcome her, thunders of fort and off. ! E. A. 164 With sacrifice, while all the f. Select. 221 FLEETED. Far-f. by the purple island-sides Pr. 166 As fast we f. to the South E. A. 144 FLEETER. Whether smile or frown be f. ? Poems 15 — f. now she skimm'd the plains Poems 363 FLEETING, —their mystic gulfs with f. stars Pms 212 Or that this anguish f. hence Poems 300 Or villain fancy f. by In M. 173 FLEETLY. So f. did she stir Poems 250 FLESH. Of sin, my f., which I despise and Poems 238 Your f., like me, with scourges and with Poems 242 — far too spare of f.' Poems 249 Padded round with f. and fat Poems 373 Oh, sacred be the f. and blood hi M. 52 All knowledge that the sons of f. hi M. 119 heart of stone, are you f., and caught Ma. 30 Go to the town and buy us f. and wine /. K. 20 For kitchen, boil'd the f., and spread the /. K. 21 The means of goodly welcome, f. and wine /. K. 21 • — call'd for f. and wine to feed his spears I. K. 77 — all the hall was dim with steam of f. /. K. 77 Nor ever touch'd fierce wine, nor tasted f. I. K. 126 Yea, but how pale ! what are they ? f. and /. K. 212 — in the f. thou hast sinn'd ; and mine own f. /. K. 254 My love thro' f. hath wrought into my life I. K. 254 1 cannot take thy hand ; that too is f. I. K. 254 — they that cast her spirit into f. E. A. 76 Thou wilt not gash thy f. for him E. A. 85 The men of f. and blood, and men of stone E. A. 108 FLEW. Out f. the web and floated wide Poems 70 That loosely f. to left and right Poems 71 The goose f. this way and f. that Poems 185 A living flash of light he f. ' Poems 289 The fire shot up, the martin f. Poems 319 F*. over roof and casement Poems 344 To the melody, till they f. Poems 367 Arranged a country dance, and f. thro' light Pr. 5 Flung Dall, f. kite, and raced the purple fly Pr. 42 The gust that round the garden f. In M. 131 For ever : then f. in a dove In M. 157 — o'er the hills her eagles f. Ma. 143 A ghastly something, and its shadow f. /. K. 229 Changed every moment as we f. E. A. 146 • Chase,' he said : the ship f. fonvard Select. 38 FLEXILE. So youthful and so f. then Poems 328 FLICKER. The shadows f. to and fro Poems 169 Where the dying night-lamp flickers Poems 274 The wisp that flickers where no foot can tread 'Pr. 93 To f. with his double tongue In M. 170 FLICKER'D. The high masts f. as they lay Poems 155 FLICKERING. Shot up and shrill'd in f. gyres Pr. 159 I learnt that James had f. jealousies Ala. 122 — dazzled by the livid f. fork I. K. 143 The f. fairy-circle wheel'd and broke I. K. 238 —night-light f. in my eyes E. A. 101 FLIES. Then away she f. Poems 5 — the rainbow forms and f. on the land Poems 44 To ingroove itself with that, which f. Poems 181 The Sun f. forward to his brother Sun Poems 263 Glitter like a swarm of fire-f. tangled Poems 269 The colour f. into his cheeks Poems 317 The truth, that f. the flowing can Poems 346 Rising to no fancy-f. Poems 370 As f. the shadow of a bird, she fled Pr. 59 In lieu of many mortal f., a race Pr. 68 Said Ida ; ' home ! to horse ! ' and fled, as f. Pr. 83 I grant in her some sense of shame, she f. Pr. 92 She f. too high, she f. too high ! Pr. 121 I say she f. too high, 'sdeath ! Pr. 121 As f. the lighter thro' the gross In M. 62 — men the f. of latter spring hi M. 72 Are tender over drowning f. hi M. 143 To deck the banquet. Fiercely f. In M. 165 133 FLOATING Page FLIES, —his head in a cloud of poisonous f. Ma. 21 Like f. that haunt a wound E. A. 80 Then she f. away E. A. 112 We follow that which f. before E. A. 150 FLIGHT. Broad-based flights of marble Poems 23 — of so fierce a f. Poems 38 Love wept, and spread his sheeny vans for f. Pms 52 Rapt after heaven's starry f. Poems 292 Beyond the furthest flights of hope Poems 298 — up a f. of stairs into the hall Pr. 31 Your f. from out your bookless wilds would Pr. 32 Short swallow-flights of song, that dip In M. 70 Edyrn's men had caught them in their f. /. K. 34 For hither had she fled, her cause off. I. K. 225 Flights, terrors, sudden rescues, and true E. A. 56 — a f. of fairy arrows E. A. 56 In hope to gain upon her f. E. A. 148 FLING. — bravely furnish'd all abroad to f. Poems 39 Tho' one did f. the fire Poems 39 I would f. on each side my low-flowing locks Pms 61 And f. him far into the middle mere — if thou spare to f. Excalibur Shall f. her old shoe after — f. the diamond necklace by ' Ladies, in entering here, to cast and f. Mothers, — that, all prophetic pity, f. ' F. our doors wide ! all, all, not one — f. it like a viper off, and shriek Where nighest heaven, who first could f. By each cold hearth, and sadness flings Did he f. himself down ? who knows ? — f. me deep in that forgotten mere Give me my f., and let me say my say ' Never a man could f. him' FLINGING the gloom of yesternight FLINT. — sparkling flints beneath the prow Poems 21 — clattering flints batter'd with clanging hoofs Pms 151 — own one part of sense not f. to prayer Pr. 146 Not one to spare her : out upon you, f. ! Pr. 150 — my heart as a millstone, set my face as a f. Ma. 5 — then what a f. is he ! Ma. 67 Is there no stoning save with f. and rock ? E. A. 80 FLIPPANT. The f. put himself to school FLIRT. Not one to f. a venom at her eyes FLIT. For as to fairies, that will f. Let our girls f. Or like to noiseless phantoms f. What slender shade of doubt may f. Flits by the sea-blue bird of March A shadow flits before me — the shadow flits and fleets Then let her fancy f. across the past FLITTED across into the night — soul f. away — unawares they f. off FLITTETH. The shallop f. silken-sail'd FLITTING, fairy Lilian After the f. of the bats You're f . ! ' ' Yes, we're f.,' says the ghost ' Oh well,' says he, ' you f. with us too Plagued with a f. to and fro FLOAT on to me, I would I were Floated her hair or seem'd to f. in rest Falis and floats adown the air F. by you on the verge of night — f. about the threshold of an age — the trader, never floats an European flag Poems 281 That f. thro' Heaven, and cannot light ? Poems 325 I f. till all is dark Poems 334 To f. about a glimmering night, and watch Pr. 28 As bottom agates seen to wave and f. Pr. 46 While down the streams that f. us each and all/V. 78 Floats up from those dim fields E. A. 143 FLOATED. Adown it f. a dying swan Poems 47 Out flew the web and f. wide Poems 70 She f. down to Camelot Poems 71 A gleaming shape she f. by Poems 71 F. her hair or seem'd to float in rest Poems 99 F. the glowing sunlights Poems 105 Much more, if first I f. free Poems 307 Of thunder-shower, she f. to us and said Pr. 101 The lovely, lordly creature f. on Pr. 141 FLOATING. Down-droop'd, in many a f. fold Pms 25 Stays on her f. locks the lovely freight Poems 27 With thy f. flaxen hair Poems 33 — thro' the wreaths of f. dark upcurl'd Poems 39 — f. about the under-sky Poems 48 Of lavish lights, and f. shades Poems 78 Of thy f. gracefulness Poems 80 Poems 192 Poems 196 Poems 348 Poems 355 Pr. 32 Pr. 126 Pr. 154 Pr. 162 In M. 133 In M. 148 Ma. 2 I. K. 221 E. A. 71 E. A. 115 Poevis 26 In M. 170 /. K. 125 Poems 249 Pr. 154 In M. 33 In M. 70 hi M. 135 Ma. 96 Ma. 101 /•AT. 35 Poems 90 E. A. 15 E. A. 61 Poems 66 Poems 5 Poems 10 Poems 226 Poems 226 Ma. 90 Poems 81 Poems 99 Poems 145 Poems 164 Poems 262 FLOATING Page FLOATING thro' an evening- atmosphere Poems 82 Made misty with the f. meal Poems 89 O death, death, death, thou ever-f. cloud Poems 107 In misty folds, that f. as they fell Poems 113 Came f. on for many a month and year Poems 368 — f. tackle and broken spars E. A. 30 FLOCK. By dancing rivulets fed his flocks Poems 353 — bring the firstling to the f. In M. 2 That feed the mothers of the f. In M. 151 The flocks are whiter down the vale In M. 179 — when he came again, his f. believed E. A. 82 As half amazed, half frighted all his f. E. A. 83 — mv eidest-born, the flower of the f. E. A. 115 FLOCK'D. —thither f. at noon Pr. 1 FLOOD. They past into the level f. Poems 88 A f. of fountain-foam Poems 113 Floods all the deep-blue gloom with beams Poems 158 From the westward-winding f. Poems 163 Ruffles her pure cold plume, and takes the f. Pms 200 F. with Jull daylight glebe and town ? Poems 293 —the f. drew :'yet I caught her Pr. 84 Ready to burst and f. the world with foam Pr. 99 Better have died and spilt our bones in the f. Pr. 102 Their pretty maids in the running f. Pr. 126 Thro' prosperous floods his holy urn I?i M. 12 — f. a fresher throat with song In M. 114 But Summer on the steaming floods In 21. 121 — shadowing down the horned f. InM. 125 — f. the haunts of hern and crake In M. 153 And roll'd the floods in grander space In Jlf. 15S At anchor in the f. below In M. 158 — molten up and roar in f. In M. 196 No doubt vast eddies in the f. In M. 198 As the poach'd filth that floods the middle /. K. 135 That I was all alone upon the f. /. K. 201 Beyond it and far up the shining f. /. K. 201 — when you used to take me with the f. /. K. 201 Beyond the poplar and far up the f. /. K. 202 Steer'd by the dumb went upward with the f. /. K. 207 — his passions all in f. E. A. 63 Bore down in £., and dash'd his angry heart E. A. 84 — had f.. fire, earthquake, thunder, wrought iT. A. 84 By sands and steaming flats, and floods E. A. 147 FLOODED. Were f. over with eddying song Pms 48 — f. at our nod Poems 156 — all was f. ; and how we past Ma. 157 — f. with the helpless wrath of tears E. A. 3 FLOOR. Old footsteps trod the upper floors Pms 12 Flung inward over spangled floors Poems 23 The meal-sacks on the whiten" d f. Poe??is 89 — my garden-tools upon the granary f. Poems 137 Of sound on roof and f. Poems 158 There's a new foot on the f., my friend Poems 170 As head and heels upon the f. Poems 185 All heaven bursts her starry floors Poe?ns 332 To pace the gritted f. Poems 349 —shape it plank and beam for roof and f. Pr. 138 Throbb'd thunder thro' the palace floors Pr. 162 That crash'd the glass, and beat the f. In M. 127 "Witch-elms that counterchange the f. In M. 130 — let no footstep beat the f. In M. 162 The russet -bearded head roll'd on the f. /. K. 84 Crush'd the wild passion out against the f. /. K. 185 At once she slipt like water to the f. /. K. 190 — grovell'd with her face against the f. /. K. 247 FLORA. The Titianic F. Will you match Poems 209 Lady F. , let me speak Poems 312 So. Ladv F., take mv lav Poems 321, 325 FLORENCE. Abroad, at F., at Rome Ma. 67 ' Poor lad, he died at F. Ma. 119 At F. too what golden hours Ma. 156 FLORIAN. With Cyril and with F., my two Pr. 17 Ma}' rue the bargain made.' And F. said Pr. 19 With Cyril and with F. unperceived Pr. 20 Then F., but no livelier than the dame Pr. 35 ' The fifth in line from that old F. Pr. 41 The loyal warmth of F. is not cold Pr. 42 1 Are you that Psyche ?' F. added ; 'she Pr. 42 * Are you that Psyche ? ' F. ask'd, ' to whom Pr. 43 To see you, F. I give thee to death Pr. 45 By F. ; holding out her lily arms Pr. 45 ' Ungracious '. ' answer'd F., ' have you learnt Pr. 49 "What thirk you of it, F. ? do I chase Pr. 50 He scarce would prosper. ' Tell us,' F. ask'd Pr. 58 Then murmur'd F. gazing after Pr. 50 With Psyche, with Melissa F., I Pr. 73 Unmeet for ladies. F. nodded at him Pr. 82 With F., cursing Cyril, vext at heart Pr. 83 —it was F. 'Hist, O hist," he said Pr. 85 FLOWER Page FLORIAN. — melted Florian's fancy as she Pr. 93 F. knelt, and ' Come ' he whisper'd to her Pr. no Gave way before him : only F. Pr. 134 ' Your brother, Lady, — F., — ask for him Pr. 152 Psyche tended F. Pr. 160 FLORID. Engirt with many a f. maiden-cheek Pr. 72 Grave, f., stern, as far as eye could see E. A. 107 FLOUNDER. — f. into hornpipes Poe?ns 327 Should I f. awhile without a tumble E. A. 175 FLOUNDER'D. Thev f. all together Poems 185 FLOUNDERING. — mixt with f. horses Pr. 132 FLOUR. — save the offence of charitable, f. E. A. 19 FLOURISH. O f., hidden deep in fern Poems 253 f. high, with leafy towers Poems 253 Could scarce be said to f. Ma. 118 In the mid might and f. of his Mav I. K. 176 FLOURISH'D. —a closer interest f. up Pr. 163 Thej- f. then or then - Ma. 117 F. a little garden square and wall*d E. A. 40 FLOURISHES. — autumn nutters haunted, f.E. A. 1 Out of evil evil f. E. A. 173 FLOURISHING, —with a single f. spray E. A. 77 — wasted all the f. territory E. A. 172 FLOUT. — your beauty to this f. and scorn /. K. 81 FLOW. — but a most silver f. Poems 8 Down from the central fountain's f. Poems 21 All night the silence seems to f. Poems 56 ' But now thy beauty flows away Poems 76 Mingle ever. Motions f. Poems 80 There's somewhat flows to us in life Poems 86 Echoing all night to that sonorous f. Poetns 113 — the gleaming river seaward f. Poems 142 According to my humour ebb and f. Poems 155 — so stood I when that f. Poems 158 Or else I had not dared to f. Poems 171 As f. but once a life Poems 260 Have ebb and f. conditioning their march Poems 263 F., softly f., by lawn and lea Poems 364 F. down, cold rivulet, to the sea Poems 364 — your great name f. on with broadening Pr. 63 The tide flows down, the wave again *" In M. 52 The double tides of chariots f. In M. 148 The hills are shadows, and they f. In M. 191 F. thro' our deeds and make them pure In M. 202 — all we f. from, soul in soul I?i M. 202 Till last by Philip's farm I f. Ma. 119 1 chatter, chatter, as I f. Ma. 119 — draw them all along, and f. Ma. 120 — out again I curve and f. Ma. 127 Who let the turbid streams of rumour f. Ma. 147 That I could rest, a rock in ebbs and flows /. K. 43 Comfort your sorrows ; for they do not f. /. K. 235 All along the valley, where thy waters f. E. A. 151 FLO W'D. The tide of time f. back with me Pce?ns 19 Heaven f. upon the soul in many dreams Poe?ns 39 Rare sunrise f. Poems 39 F. forth on a carol free and bold Poems 48 From underneath his helmet f. Poems 69 — o'er him f. a golden cloud Poems 102 Thus far he f. and ended Poems 264 F. from me : darkness closed me : and I fell Pr. 135 F. in, and settling circled all the lists /. K. 30 Fast f. the current of her easy tears E. A. 47 He f. and ebb'd uncertain, to return E. A. 62 The mother f. in shallower acrimonies E. A. So — the preacher's cadence f. E. A. 88 Bloodily f. the Tamesa rolling E. A. 170 FLOWER, —stately f. of female fortitude Poems 7 In order, eastern flowers large Poems 21 With inwrought flowers, a cloth of gold Poems 25 — peerless flowers which in the rudest wind Poems 27 Of festal flowers Poems 29 Of the mouldering flowers Poems 31 A f. all gold Poe7ns 39 —like the arrow-seeds of the field f. Poems 39 The flowers would faint at your cruel cheer Poems 41 Into everj r spicy f. Poems 41 — silvery marish-flowers that throng Poems 48 Dressing their hair with the white sea-f. Poems 58 Overlook a space of flowers Poems 65 — with many a deep-hued bell-like f. Poems 79 The tall flag-flowers when they sprung Poems 87 With bridal flowers — that I may seem Poems 92 I roll'd among the tender flowers Poems 96 Hang rich in flowers Poei?is 98 The purple flowers droop : the golden bee Poe??is 99 With bunch and berry and f. " Poems 102 A simple maiden in her f. Poems 126 But I must gather knots of flowers Poems 131 133 FLOWER Page FLOWER. — the faint sweet cuckoo-flowers Poems 132 Last May we made a crown of flowers Poems 134 When the flowers come again, mother Poems 135 I long to see a f. so before the day I die Poems 135 There's not a f. on all the hills " Poems 135 — all the land about, and all the flowers that Poems 138 Wild flowers in the valley for other hands Poems 141 Laden with f. and fruit Poems 143 The f. ripens in its place Poejjis 145 I knew the flowers, I knew the leaves Poems 153 Feeding the f. ; but ere my f. to fruit Poems 158 As perfume of the cuckoo-f. ? Poems 163 Pour'd on one side : the shadow of the flowers Pms 208 Each garlanded with her peculiar f. Poems 210 The wreath of flowers fell Poems 217 — made a little wreath of all the floAvers Poems 217 — clean and white as privet when it flowers Poems 227 Stored from all flowers ? Poet-like he spoke Pms 231 The f. of each, those moments when we met Poems 233 Like Proserpine in Enna, gathering flowers^wj 234 — bring me offerings of fruit and flowers Poems 240 The f. she touch'd on dipt and rose Poems 250 — drooping f. of knowledge changed to fruit Pms 259 Live happy : tend thy flowers Poems 261 Are but as poet's seasons when they f. Poems 263 About the opening of the f. Poems 296 You scarce could see the grass for flowers Poems 310 The wildweed-f. that simply blows 1 Poems 321 The f. and quintessence of change Poems 323 In carol, every bud to f. Poems 324 Perfume and flowers fall in showers Poems 333 That are the f. of the earth? ' Poems 356 What ! the f. of life is past Poems 368 Flowers of all heavens Pr. 2 The little hearth-f. Lilia Pr. 10 Laid it on flowers and watch'd it lying bathed Pr. 20 —the pillars, and with great urns of flowers Pr. 30 The star, the bird, the fish, the shell, the f. Pr. 49 The long hall glitter'd like a bed of flowers Pr. 51 Like field-flowers everywhere ! we like them Pr. 67 Fluctuated, as flowers in storm, some red Pr. 99 Remembering her mother : O my f. Pr. in — smouldering homestead and the household f. Pr. 113 —squadrons of the Prince, trampling the flowers /V. 119 I take her for the f. of womankind Pr. 121 Their feet in flowers, her loveliest Pr. 140 With books, with flowers, with Angel offices Pr. 158 — like a f. that cannot all unfold Pr. 164 The seasons bring the f. again hi M. 2 A f. beat with rain and wind In M. 10 — this poor f. of poesy , hi M. 11 From f to f, from snow to snow In M. 37 When first she wears her orange f. ! In M. 60 Be all the colour of the f. In M. 65 The path we came by, thorn and f. In M. 68 The perfect f. of human time In M. 86 Made cypress of her orange f. hi M. 115 — brushing ankle-deep in flowers In M. 132 Day, when I lost the f. of men hi M. 149 Unloved, the sun-f, shining fair hi M. 153 The time admits not flowers or leaves In M. 165 To noble manners, as the f. hi M. 172 — tho' I seem in star and f. hi M. 201 —where is she, the bridal f. In M. 205 Of learning lightly like a f. hi M. 206 That pelt us in the porch with flowers In M. 207 Of what in them is f. and fruit hi M. 210 Man in his pride, and Beauty fair in her f. Ma. 18 The honey of poison-flowers Ma. 22 He is claspt by a passion-f. Ma. 49 From the passion-f. at the gate Ma. 80 To the flowers, and be their sun Ma. 80 Plucking the harmless wild-f. on the hill ? Ma. 85 For a shell, or a f. , little things Ala. 92 On the little f. that clings Ma. 97 It is only flowers, they had no fruits Ma. 107 Wearing the white f. of a blameless life /. K. vi. — like a crag was gay with wilding flowers /. K. 17 — Gwydion made by glamour out of flowers /. K. 40 Betwixt the cressy islets white in f. /. K. 70 — noble deeds, the f. of all the world /. K. 115 That ardent man? 'to pluck the f. in season'/. K. 131 A border fantasy of branch and f. /. K. 147 Lancelot, the f. of bravery, Guinevere /. K. 153 The f. of all the west and all the world /. A". 160 So saying from the carven f. above I. K. 176 « Well— if I bide, lo ! this wild f. for me ! ' /. A". 180 For pleasure all about a field of flowers /. K. 188 If not, the victim's flowers before he fall ' I. K. 194 i34 FLUSH Page FLOWER. Hereafter when you yield your f. /. K. 196 Come dashing down on a tall wayside f. /. K. 238 A glorious company, the f. of men /. K. 249 — that robed your cottage-walls with flowers if. A. 87 — my eldest-born, the f. of the flock E. A. 115 —life, little Annie, f. and thorn E. A. 121 —my eldest-born, my f. E. A. 127 With naked limbs and flowers and fruit E. A. 147 — we nor paused for fruit nor flowers E. A. 147 Up there came a f. E. A. 152 Most can raise the flowers now E. A. 153 1 Splendid is the f.' E. A. 153 Break, happy land, into earlier flowers ! E. A. 164 —in our winter woodland looks a f. E. A. 166 FLOWERAGE. —themselves about the f. E. A. 61 FLOWER-BELLS. — f. and ambrosial orbs Poems 8 FLOWER'D. Upon the freshlv-f. slope Poems 89 The white-f. elder-thicket from the field Poems 287 All branch'd and f. with gold, a costly gift /. K. 34 FLOWERING, —garden full off. weeds Poems in — f. high, the last night's gale had caught Poems 207 About the f. squares, and thick In M. 179 So from the high wall and the f. grove /. K. 227 FLOWER-PLOTS, —blackest moss the f. Poems 9 FLOWER-SHEATH, —breaks a faded f. I.K. 20 FLOWERY, —the rivulet in the f. dale Poems 132 I turning saw, throned on a f. rise Poems 155 All the land in f. squares Poems 206 On f. levels underneath the crag Pr. 72 Thy partner in the f. walk hi M. 116 The course of life that seem'd so f. to me /. K. 139 FLOWETH ; and then, as in a swoon Poejns 83 FLOWING. — stream f. with a muddy one Poems 8 The forward-f. tide of time Poems 19 — f. rapidly between Poems 22 F. beneath her rose-hued zone Poems 24 Listening the lordly music f. Poems 28 F. like a crystal river Poems 41 Winds were blowing, waters f. Poems 53 — holding them back by their f. locks Poems 58 I would fling on each side my low-f. locks Poems 61 F. down to Camelot Foems 65 The full-f. harmony Poems 80 — o'er them many a f. range Poems 321 The truth, that flies the f. can Poems 346 The rapt oration f. free In M. 127 — their strong bodies, f., drain'd their force /. K. 3J — princely hails, and farms, and f. lawns E. A. 85 In the north her canvas f. Setect. 38 My tears, no tears of love, are f. fast Select. 197 FLOWN. — just f, that morn with all its sound Pms 206 — rode a horse with wings, that would have f. Pms 366 O tell her, Swallow, that thy brood is f. Pr. So Than in the summers that are f. In M. 205 For the black bat, night, has f. Ma. 76 — as the cageling newly f. returns I. K. 140 Had tost his ball, and f. his kite, and roll'd E. A. 55 FLOY. Doctor, a knaws naw moor nor a f. E. A. 136 FLUCTUATE. — f. all the still perfume In M. 141 FLUCTUATED, as flowers in storm, some red Pr. 99 FLUCTUATION. In silken f. and the swarm Pr. 153 — world-wide f. sway'd hi M. 174 FLUE. — sent a blast of sparkles up the f. Poejns 201 FLUENT. In tracts of f. heat began hi M. 183 FLUID. ' This world was once af/haze of light/ 3 ?-. 35 FLUKE. Anchors of rusty f. E. A. 2 FLUNG. The costly doors f. open wide Poems 20 F. inward over spangled floors Poejns 23 Backward the lattice-blind she f. Poems 76 — with both hands I f. him, wheeling him Poejns 196 — f. him in the dew Poejns 254 F. the torrent rainbow round PoejJis 367 F. ball, flew kite, and raced the purple fly Pr. 42 She took it, and she flung it. ' Fight,' she said Pr. 106 Stood for her cause, and f. defiance down Pr. 116 She f. it from her, thinking : last, she fixt Pr. 178 Or here she brought the harp and f. ■ hi M. 131 The heavy-folded rose, and f. hi M. 142 — tide in its broad-f. shipwrecking roar Ma. 14 To which he f. a wrathful answer back /. K. 53 Moved to her chamber, and there f. herself /. K. 179 Unclasping f. the casement back, and look'd /. K. 198 F. them, and down they flash'd, and smote /. A". 211 Approach d him, and with full affection f. /. K. 218 And f. her down upon a couch of fire E. A. 80 His body half f. forward in pursuit E. A. 81 FLUR, for whose love the Roman Caesar first /. K. 40 FLUSH. The f. of anger'd shame Poems 16 — by denial f. her babbling wells Pr. 124 FLUSH Page FLUSH. For here a sudden f. of wrathful /. A". 244 After his books, to f. his blood with air E. A. 75 FLUSH'D all the leaves with rich gold-green Prns 22 F. like the coming of the day Poems 90 Or else f. Ganymede, his rosy thigh Poems 117 F. in her temples and her eyes Poems 120 Stood sunset-f. Poems 142 — f. her cheek with rosy light Poems 252 1 frowning ; Psyche f. and wann'd and shook Pr. 82 When first she came, all f. you said to me Pr. 149 A little f., and she past on ; but each Pr. 161 "Where oleanders f. the bed Ma. 155 How faintly-f., how phantom-fair Ma. 157 * Lo ! I, myself, when f. with fight, or hot /. K. 80 Strange chances here alone ; ' that other f. /. K. 88 Upright and f. before him : then she said /. K. 141 F. slightly at the slight disparagement /. K. 159 FLUSHES. All at once the colour f. Poems 360 — the vitriol madness f. up in the ruffian's head Ma. 6 FLUSHING, —red f. in the northern night Poems 270 Unclaim'd, in f. silence, till I ask'd Ma. 122 FLUSTER'D. Flatter'd and f., wins, tho' Pr. 115 — once in life was f. with new wine /. K. 133 To him that f. his poor Darish wits E. A. 78 FLUTE. Blow, f., and stir the stiff-set sprigs Prns 328 That lute and f. fantastic tenderness Pr. 81 To many a f. of Arcady In M. 40 Nor harp be touch'd, nor f. be blown In M. 162 The f., violin, bassoon Ma. 77 To the sound of dancing music and flutes Ma. 107 FLUTED. From f. vase, and brazen urn Poems 21 The mellow ouzel f. in the elm Poems 206 — f. to the morning sea Poems 353 FLUTE-NOTES. Now thy f. are changed Poems 167 FLUTING. — f. a wild carol ere her death Poems 200 FLUTTER. His spirit flutters like a lark Poenis 318 Wings f., voices hover clear Poems 336 There flutters up a happy thought hi M. 91 The tender blossom f. down In M. 153 Flags, f. out upon turrets and towers ! E. A. 164 — fall and f. tremulously E. A. 173 FLUTTER'D about my senses and my soul Poems 205 A second f. round her lip Poems 254 F. headlong from the sky Poems 367 — doffd his helm : and then there f. in /. K. 77 — f. adoration, and at last /. K. 102 FLUTTERING, —the little flutterings Poems 91 That run before the f. tongues of fire Poems 151 Faltering and f. in her throat, she cried Pr. 39 Alive with f. scarfs and ladies' eyes Pr. 133 And on the board the f. urn In M. 139 FLY. The blue f. sung in the pane Poems 11 — whither away ? f. no more _-•• Poems 43 — listen and stay : mariner, f. no more Poems 44 But let her herald, Reverence, f. Poe?ns 180 F. happy happy sails and bear the Press Poems 263 F. happy with the mission of the Cross Poems 263 ' To-day I saw the dragon-f. Poems 289 Here sits he shaping wings to f. Poems 303 — order'd words asunder f. Poems 313 The splinter'd spear-shafts crack and f. Poems 333 F. o'er waste fens and windy fields Poe?ns 335 — f., like a bird, from tree to tree Poe??is 338 Name and fame ! to f. sublime Poems 370 Flung ball, flew kite, and raced the purple f. Pr. 42 F. twanging headless arrows at the hearts Pr. 50 ' And f,' she cried, ' O f. while yet you may ! Pr. 55 — you may yet be saved, and therefore f. Pr. 57 F. to her, and fall upon her gilded eaves Pr. 79 F. to her, and pipe and woo her, and make her Pr. 80 Rear'd, sung to, when, this gad-f. brush'd Pr. 128 The fire-f. wakens : waken thou with me Pr. 166 111 brethren, let the fancy f. In M. 125 In yonder greening gleam, and f. In M. 179 To shape and use. Arise and f. In M. 184 Wild Hours thai f. with Hope and Fear In M. 19S ' The fault was mine,' he whisper'd, ' f. ! ' Ma. 86 Till I saw the dreary phantom arise and f. Ma. 113 To join them, glancing like a dragon-f. /. K. 10 Start from their fallen lords, and wildly f. /. K. 71 She only pray'd him, ' F., they will return /. K. 85 And slay you ; f., your charger is without I. K. 85 — call'd herself a g'ilded summer f. /. K. 106 — since you name yourself the summer f. /. K. 112 When did not rumours £.? these as I trust /. K. 209 — f. to my strong castle overseas /. K. 231 Unwedded : yet rise now, and let us f. /. K. 231 Stands in a wind, ready to break and f. /. K. 244 A crippled lad, and coming turn'd to f. E. A. 78 FOE Pa-e FLY. Mother, let me f. away E. A. 112 Let me f., says little birdie E. A. 112 Baby too shall f. away E. A. 112 Let me rise and f. away E. A. 112 FLYER. Assassins,. and all flyers from the I. K. 3 —with the flyers. ' Horse and man,' he said /. K. 71 — his long arms stretch'd as to grasp a f. E. A. 81 FLYING. Gleam'd to the f. moon by fits Poems 90 Sole as a f. star shot thro' the sky Poems 117 Saw God divide the night with f. flame Poems 159 To follow f. steps of Truth Poems 182 Would play with f. forms and images Poems 205 And with a f. finger swept my lips Poems 212 I read, and fled by night, and f. turn'd Poe??is 235 — f. over Locksley Hall Poems 268 New men, that in the f. of a wheel Poems 285 — caught the blossom of the f. terms Pr. 9 — f. reach'd the frontier : then we crost Pr. 21 Came f. while you sat beside the well ? Pr. A f. charm of blushes o'er this cheek Pr. The bird of passage f. south but long'd Pr. Blow, bugle, blow, set the wild echoes f. Pr. O Swallow, Swallow, f., f. South Pr. Swallow, f. from the golden woods Pr. A woman-post in f. raiment Pr. — flake of rainbow f. on the highest Pr. 123 A f. splendour out of brass and steel Pr. 155 Held carnival at will, and f. struck Pr. 161 On f. Time from all their silver tongues Pr. 162 Is matter for a f. smile In M. 87 — sow the sky with f. boughs In M. 100 The f. cloud, the frosty light In M. 163 — the f. gold of the ruin'd woodlands drove Ma. 2 F. along the land and the main Ma. 90 Comes f. over many a wind}' wave /. K. 18 — white sails f. on the yellow sea /. K. 44 F., but overtaken, died the death /. K. 55 Another, f. from the wrath of Doorm /. K. 73 That follow'd, f. back and crying out /. K. 143 1 hear of rumours f. thro' your court /. K. 209 A blot in heaven, the Raven, f. high /. K. 232 F., for all the land was full of life /. K. 238 F. , and link'd again, and wheel'd and broke /. K. 238 •— f. the white breaker E. A. 2 Or f. shone, the silver boss E. A. 146 Thunder, a f. fire in heaven E. A. 170 Loosely robed in f. raiment E. A. vjz FOAM. — the green brink and the running f. Poems 43 When the wind blows the f. Poems 100 Fresh as the f. Poems 105 A flood of fountain-f. Poems 113 Rolling a slumbrous sheet of f. Poe?ns 142 Weary the wandering fields of barren f. Poems 143 ' I would the white, cold, heavy -plunging f. Poems 155 Shrill, chill, with flakes of f. " Poems 193 Ready to burst and flood the world with f. Pr. 99 F. of men's deeds— this honour, if ye will Pr. 123 Began to f., and we to draw In M. 159 —sang from the three-decker out of the f. Ma. 7 As ocean-f. in the moon Ma. 53 Should all our churchmen f. in spite Ma. 162 As tremulously as f. upon the beach /. K. 244 —in the chasm are f. and yellow sands E. A. 1 —sheets of wasteful f. E. A. 99 FOAM-BOW. — brighten'd as the f. brightens Prns 100 JrOAM'D. — chargesf. themselves away Ma. 144 — f. away his heart at Averill's ear E. A. 69 FOAM-FLAKES. Crisp f. scud along the Poems iki FOAM-FOUNTAINS, -his f. in the sea Poems 148 FOAMING. To smoothe my pillow, mix the'f. Pr. 42 The f. grape of eastern France In M. 208 FOAMY, —here and there a f. flake Ma. 120 FOE. And tho' his foes speak ill of him Poe??is 169 The land, wdiere girt with friends or foes Poems 175 Must ever shock, like armed foes Poems 182 Had beat her foes with slaughter Pr. 3 That drove her foes with slaughter from her Pr. 7 The next, like fire he meets the f. Pr. 105 The general f. More soluble is this knot Pr. 114 Truest friend and noblest f. Pr. 136 So those two foes above my fallen life Pr. 143 Whatever man lies wounded, friend or f. Pr. 154 Friend, to be struck by the public f. Ma. 107 His foes were thine ; he kept us free Ma. 142 England pouring on her foes Ma. 144 Who never spoke against a f. Ma. 147 The second was your f. the sparrow-hawk /. K. 24 Of what they long for, good in friend or f. /. K. 92 He makes no friend who never made a f. /. K. 204 135 FOE Page FOE. I hold that man the worst of public foes /. K. 251 Something- divine to warn them of their foes E. A. 99 Till she near'd the f. Select. 38 Now their warrior father meets the f. Select. 207 FOEMAN. When forth there stept a f. tall Poems 54 — falling- on the foeman's ground Poe?ns 276 What time the foeman's line is broke Poems 296 — they heard the foeman's thunder Select. 38 FOEMEN. — f. scared, like that false pair /. K. 55 FOLD. Down-droop'd, in many a floating f. Poems 25 Of the thick-fleeced sheep from wattled folds Pms 29 F. thy palms across thy breast Poems 49 F. thine arms, turn to thy rest Poems 49 Sweep the green that folds thy grave Poems 49, 50, 51 In silk-soft folds, upon yielding down Poems 79 Winds all the vale in rosy folds >••* Poems 95 I wish that somewhere in the ruin'd folds Poems 106 In misty folds, that floating as they fell Poems 113 Nor ever f. our wings Poems 144 — sure this orbit of the memory folds Poems 206 The berried briony f.' Poems 251 Look up, the f. is on her brow Poems 298 High up the vapours f. and swim Poems 301 — round her waist she felt it f. Poems 320 Unheeded ; and detaching, f. by f. Poems 368 Why who are these ? a wolf within the f. ! Pr. 39 The drowsy folds of our great ensign shake Pr. 107 Far off from men I built a f. for them Pr. 127 With f. to f. , of mountain or of cape Pr. 157 Now folds the lily all her sweetness up Pr. 167 So f. thyself, my dearest, thou, and slip Pr. 167 — wrapt thee formless in the f. In M. 37 No gray old grange, or lonely f. In M. 151 In f. upon f. of hueless cloud Ma. 25 Dark in its funeral f. . Ma. 141 With sprigs of summer laid between the folds I. K. 8 ' My lord, you over-pay me fifty-f.' /. K. 57 With each chest lock'd and padlock'd thirty-f. /. K. 127 Or some black wether of St. Satan's f. /. K. 132 Will brand us, after, of whose f. we be /. K. 133 Thro' knots and loops and folds innumerable /. K. 170 Then Lancelot's needs must be a thousand-f. /. K. 243 Enwound him f. by f., and made him gray I. K. 256 The very whitest lamb in all my f. E. A. 70 Pharaoh's darkness, folds as dense as those E. A. 91 FOLDED. Thought f. over thought, smihng Pms 81 The f. leaf is woo'd from out the bud Poems 145 Of f. sleep Poems 161 O'er the mute city stole with f. wings Poems 210 Holding the f. annals of my youth Poems 212 Sleep, Ellen, f. in Emilia's arm Poems 223 Sleep, Ellen, f. in thy sister's arm Poems 223 His palms are f. on his breast Poe?ns 301 To spirits f. in the womb Poems 313 With f. feet, in stoles of white Poems 335 In silken-f. idleness ; nor is it Pr. 77 Bow'd on her palms and f. up from wrong Pr. 89 She moan'd, a f. voice Pr. no — every spirit's f. bloom In M. 65 The heavy-f. rose, and flung In M. 142 Is pealing, f. in the mist In M. 160 — yeam'd to burst the f. gloom ; In M. 189 Not to be f. more in these dear arms /. K. 6 Wherein she kept them f. reverently I. K. 8 And f, ' O sweet father, tender and true /. K. 205 A breathless burthen of low-f. heavens E. A. 82 Far-f. mists, and gleaming halls of morn E. A. 139 Mute : with f. arms they waited Select. 38 FOLIAGE. The low and bloomed f., drove Poems 19 That blown about the f. underneath Pr. 60 Off., towering sycamore In M. 130 FOLIAGED. Rock'd the full-f. elms, and In M. 142 Who murmurest in the f. eaves In M. 149 FOLK. Begin to slay the f., and spoil the /. K. 232 As simple f. that knew not their own minds E. A. 26 FOLLIES. — others' f. teach us not Poems 346 FOLLOW. Which follows it, riving the spirit Pms 40 — because right is right, to f. right Poems 104 To f. flying steps of Truth Poems 182 What good should f. this, if this were done Poems 194 The dark Earth follows wheel'd in her Poems 263 To f. knowledge like a sinking star Poems 266 The vine stream'd out to f. Poems 328 May my soul f. soon ! Poems 331 The rest would f., each in turn ; and so Pr. n ' Then f. me, the Prince ' Pr. 13 'R, f., thou shalt win' Pr. 20, 131 Of promise ; fruit would f. Deep, indeed Pr. 36 If more and acted on, what follows ? war Pr. 41 136 FOLLY Page FOLLOW. Whence follows many a vacant Pr. 50 To f. : surely, if your Highness keep Pr. 65 Swallow, Swallow, if I could f, and light Pr. 79 —tell her, tell her, that I f. thee ' Pr. 80 1 cannot cease to f. you, as they say Pr. 98 — f. up the worthiest till he die Pr. 98 F. us : who knows? we four may build some Pr. 118 — f. ; let the torrent dance thee down Pr. 168 To f. : a shout rose again and made Pr. 182 Nor f., tho' I walk in haste In M. 38 To f, strode astride, but Yniol caught I. K. -zt When the knight besought him, ' F. me / K. 88 ■ Enough,' he said, 'If.,' and they went /. K. 89 The Fame that follows death is nothing to us /. K. 117 In dexter chief; the scroll ' I f. fame ' /. K. 118 Hence will I and I charge you, f. me not ' /. K. 173 To serve you, and to f. you thro' the world ' /. K. 196 Call and If. If! let me die ' /. K. 200 I needs must f. death, who calls for me /. K. 200 * I fain would f. love, if that could be /. K. 200 Then might she f. me thro' the world, she /. K. 216 Flash into fiery life from nothing, f. E. A. 58 Of One who cried ' leave all and f. me * E. A. 85 Follows the mouse, and all is open field E. A. 95 I f. till I make thee mine ' E. A. 148 We f. that which flies before E. A. 150 FOLLOW'D. For surer sign had f. Poems 194 — f. counsel, comfort, and the words Poems 260 The happy princess f. him Poems 320 Thro' all the world she f. him Poems 321 — f. with acclaims Poems 345 — f. her all the way Poems 356 — the rest f. : and the women sang Pr. 14 We f. up the river as we rode Pr. 26 With flawless demonstration : f. then Pr. 48 F. his tale. Amazed he fled away Pr. 109 At distance f. : so they came : anon Pr. 140 — f. up by a hundred airy does Pr. 141 F. : the king replied not ; Cyril said Pr. 152 — silence f, and we wept ' hi M. 49 In vassal tides that f. thought In M. 174 As when they f. us from Philip's door Ma. 126 F. up in valley and glen Ma. 144 F. by the brave of other lands Ma. 148 He f. nearer : ruth began to work /. K. 51 He f. nearer still : the pain she had /. K. 55 — overthrew the next that f. him /. K. 70 His lusty spearmen f. him with noise /. K. 77 — then she f. Merlin all the way /. K. 103 Vivien f, but he mark'd her not /. K. 103 Dear feet, that I have f. thro' the world /. K. 105 To break the mood. You f. me unask'd /. K. 108 That f, flying back and crying out /. K. 143 Then f. calms - E. A. 30 Where Aylmer f. Aylmer at the Hall E. A. 53 F., and under his own lintel stood E. A. 68 — for my lady f. suit E. A. 80 Who peer'd at him so keenly, f. out E. A. 93 Trod out a path : I f. ; and at top E. A. 102 — still we f. where she led E. A. 148 For still we f. where she led E. A. 150 — that f. the day she was wed E. A. 157 FOLLOWER, —at her head a f. of the camp Pr. no — the word : my followers ring him round /. K. 63 With all his rout of random followers /. K. 66 Went Enid with her sullen f. on /. K. 69 In combat with the f. of Limours /. K. 72 — thou numberest with the followers E. A. 85 FOLLOWING her dark eyes Poems 210 I first, and f. thro' the porch that sang Pr. 30 Went forth in long retinue f. up Pr. 64 — ever f. those two crowned twins Pr. 128 As we descended f. Hope In M. 37 Tho' f. with an upward mind In M. 63 — f. our own shadows thrice as long Ma. 126 He, that ever f. her commands Ma. 149 — with fixt eye f. the three /. K. 13 A youth, that f. with a costrel bore /. K. 21 Let his eye rove in f. or rest /. K. 22 (His gentle charger f. him unled) /. K. 76 — when I look'd and saw you f. still /. K. 108 Your fancy when you saw me f. you /. K. no —all thro' f. you to this wild wood /. K. 116 — f. these my mightiest knights /. K. 250 To watch them overflow'd, or f. up E. A. 2 FOLLY. 'Ah, f. ! for it lies so far away Poems 264 ' Ah, f. ! ' in mimic cadence answer'd James Poems 264 Fill'd I was with f. and spite Poems 337 —twins mayweed her of her f. Boy Pr. 131 FOLLY Page FOLLY. Deep f. ! yet that this could be— In M. 62 — a slumber in which all spleenful f. was Ma. 13 — is whirl'd into f. and vice Ma. 20 With his worldly talk and f. Ma. 71 So often, that the f. taking wings E. A. 76 FOND. O too f., when have I answer'd thee? Pr. 157 FONDER. — man of science himself is f. of Ma. 19 FONDLE. The rabbit f. his own harmless E. A. 95 FONDLED, —all this morning when I f. you /. K. 108 Appraised his weight and f. fatherlike E. A. 9 Too ragged to be f. on her lap E. A. 86 FONDLING. — f. all her hand in his he said /. K. 28 FONDLY. He to lips, that f. falter Poems 358 FONT. One rear'd a f. of stone Pr. 4 Nor winks the gold fin in the porphyry f. Pr. 166 Entwine the cold baptismal f. hi M. 47 FOOD. — eat wholesome f Poe>7is 240 — wine and f. were brought, and Earl Limours /. K. 61 FOOL. — on the slope, ah absent f. Poe?ns 87 That we should mimic this raw f. the world Poe??is 229 —while we stood like fools Poems 234 The more fools the}- — we forward : dreamers Pms ■zbi, — that gilds the straiten'd forehead of the f. Poems 273 F., again the dream, the fancy ! Poems 282 Bandied by the hands of fools Poems 370 April hopes, the fools of chance Poems 372 Drink we, last, the public f. Poems 372 (God help her) she was wedded to a f. Pr. 58 For ever slaves at home and fools abroad ' Pr. 101 1 Ah, f., and made myself a Queen of farce ! Pr. 170 We are fools and slight In M. vi. ' Thou shalt not be the f. of loss ' In M. 4 The fools of habit, sweeter seems In M. 14 They call'd me f. , they call'd me child In M. 95 The'f. that wears a crown of thorns hi M. 95 — heard thee and the brazen f. In M. 170 To f. the crowd with glorious lies In M. 198 — but a f. would have faith in a tradesman's Ma. 4 Is cap and bells for a f. Ma. 29 F. that I am to be vext with his pride ! Ma. 46 Yet I shudder'd and thought like a f. Ma. 51 What» if she be fasten'd to this f. lord Ma. 54 Struck me before the languid f. Ma. 86 His party-secret, f., to the press Ma. 104 — 'your sweet faces make good fellows fools /. K. 67 — that within her, which a wanton f. /. K. 68 — be he dead, I count you for a f. /. K. 74 — were he not crown'd King, coward, and f.' /. K. 135 Behind her, and the forest echo'd ' f.' /. K. 144 — shrieking out 'Of. ! ' the harlot leapt /. K. 144 Thwarted by one of these old father-fools E. A. 71 Not keep it noble, make it nobler? fools E. A. 71 Went further, f. ! and trusted him with all E. A. 100 Christ the bait to trap his dupe and f. E. A. 106 Ah, there's no f. like the old one E. A. 119 — but I beant a f. E. A. 128 ' A ship of fools ' he shriek'd in spite E. A. 149 * A ship of fools' he sneer'd and wept E. A. 149 'F.,' he answer'd, ' death is sure E. A. 156 — a f. may say his say E. A. 161 FOOL'D. Ah ! let me not be f., sweet saints Poems 243 — half f. to let you tend our son Pr. 150 FOOLERIES, —your pretty tricks and f. /. K. 107 FOOL-FURY. The red f. of the Seine In M. 196 FOOLISH. Ah, well— but sing the f. song Poems 92 — let the f. yeoman go Poe?ns 129 Aid all this f. people ; let them take Poems 244 — my f. passion were a target for their scorn Poems 280 To drop thy f. tears upon my grave Poems 376 Till understanding all the f. work Pr. 142 — help thy f. ones to bear Iti M. vi. W T hose youth was full of f. noise In M. 75 The f. neighbours come and go In M. 85 That f. sleep transfers to thee hi M. 94 — of a f. pride flash'd over her beautiful face Ma. 17 — all her f. fears about the dress /. K. 8, 45 Nor speak I now from f. flattery /. K. 24 Or very f., only this I know /. K. 25 All overshadow'd by the f. dream /. K. 36 Could scarce divide it from her f. dreams /. K. 37 * Will the child kill me with her f. prate ? ' I. K. 237 I seem so f. and so broken down E. A. 18 FOORTY. — ivry market-noight for f. year E. A. 129 FOOT. — frcm the violets her light f. Poems 105 There's a new f. on the floor, my friend Poe?ns 170 So light of f. , so light of spirit Poems 203 — a f., that might have danced Poems 208 — modest eyes, a hand, a f. Poems -227 — put your best f. forward, or I fear Poems 229 FORCE Page FOOT. His beard a f. before him, and his Poems 285 — till noon no f. should pace the street Poems 286 Each pluck'd his one f. from the grave Poems 328 At the f. of thy crags, O Sea Poems 378 — stared, with his f. on the prey Poems 379 She tapt her silken-sandal'd f. Pr. 9 Her back against a pillar, her f. on one Pr. 63 Man}- a light f. shone like a jewel set Pr. 73 Nor found my friends : but push'd alone on f. Pr. 84 —fleet I was of f. Pr. 88 Last night their mask was patent, and my f. Pr. 91 The wisp that flickers where no f. can tread ' Pr. 93 — sweet sculpture draped from head to f. Pr. 110 We plant a solid f. into the Time Pr. 128 Steps with a tender f., light as on air Pr. 141 See your f. is on our necks Pr. 145 — felt it sound and whole from head to f. Pr. 147 Seen but of Psyche : on her f. she hung Pr. 161 Thou madest Death ; and lo thy f. In M. v. The Shadow cloak'd from head to i. In M. 39 Gorgonised me from head to f. Ma. 47 Seem'd her light f. along the garden walk Ma. 58 Lying close to my f. Ma. 88 A golden f. Ma. 89 — sketching with her slender pointed f. Ma. 122 — fell'd him, and set f. upon his breast /. K. 31 To lose his bone, and lays his f. upon it / K. 75 Mounted, and reach*d a hand, and on his f. /. K. 86 And set his f. upon me, and give me life /. K. 90 Chose the green path that show'd the rarer f. /. K. 155 From forehead down to f. perfect — again /. K. 180 From f. to forehead exquisitely turn'd /. K. 180 ' You Arden, you ! nay, — sure he was a f. E. A. 46 FOOTBALL. — drunkard's f., laughing-stocks Pr. 101 FOOTCLOTH. —tumbled on the'purple f., lay Pr. 89 FOOTED. Cat-f. thro' the town and half in dread Pr. 20 — little-f. China, touch'd on Mahomet Pr. 36 FOOTFALL. To list a f., ere he saw Poems 117 Made her cheek flame : her palfrey's f. shot Pms 287 With measured f. firm and mild Poems 308 Or ghostly f. echoing on the stair /. K. 251 FOOT-GILT with all the blossom-dust of those /. K. 108 FOOTINGS, —the fairy f. on the grass E. A. 56 FOOTLESS, —wastes where f. fancies dwell Ma. 62 FOOTPRINT, —only make that f. upon sand Pr. 67 The sandy f. harden into stone ' Pr. 68 The little f. E. A. 2 FOOTSORE, —as a f. ox in crowded ways E. A. 93 FOOTSTEP, —footsteps trod the upper floors Pms 12 Like footsteps upon wool Poems 107 Of human footsteps fall Poems 124 — his footsteps smite the threshold stairs Poems 243 More close and close his footsteps wind Poems 318 While he treads with f. firmer Poems 360 The footsteps of his life in mine In M. 120 — at his f. leaps no more In M. 123 — let no f. beat the floor In M. 16-2 Her footsteps, moving side by side In M. 178 He seems as one whose footsteps halt Ma. 166 A f. seem'd to fall beside her path E. A. 28 FOOTSTOOL. The f. from before him, and E. A. 68 FORAGE. And I will fetch you f. from all /. K. 79 FORAGERS. At last they found— his f. for /. K. 125 FORAY. Bound on a f., rolling eyes of prey /. K. 74 Such as they brought upon their forays out /. K. 75 FORBAD her first the house of Averill E. A. 77 FORBEAR. ' F. ,' the Princess cried ; ' F., Sir ' Pr. 83 His purple scarf, and held, and said, ' F. ! /. K. 21 ' F. : there is a worthier ; ' and the knight /. K. 30 That I f. you thus : cross me no more /. K. 81 FORBEARANCE. Arguing boundless f. E. A. 67 FORBID you, Dora? ' Dora said again Poems 217 Chid her, and f. her to speak Ala. 67 FORBORE. Bore and f. ; and did not tire Poems 299 Geraint, from utter courtesy, f. /. K. 21 Sweetly f. him ever, being to him /. K. 191 F. his own advantage " /. K. 242 — awed and promise-bounden she f. E. A. 47 FORCE. Had f. to make me rhyme in youth P?ns 93 All f. in bonds that might endure Poems 119 — I broke a close with f. and arms Poems 235 Off. and choler, and firm upon his feet Poe??is 264 — shall have spent its novel f. Poems 272 Titanic forces taking birth Poems 323 Forces on the freer hour Poems 371 By this wild king to f. her Pr. 3 Is duer unto freedom, f. and growth Pr. 81 — felt the blind wildbeast of f. Pr. 120 Ida stood nor spoke, drain'd of her f. Pr. 150 137 FORCE Page FORCE. — f. to change them when we will Pr. 180 Who makes by f. his merit known In M. 89 Of f. that would have forged a name In M. 101 I know thee of what f. thou art In M. 109 Seraphic intellect and f. In M. 168 In intellect, with f. and skill In M. 175 Should licensed boldness gather f. hi M. 175 And this electric f., that keeps hi M. 194 — felt himself in his f. to be Nature's crowning Ma. 19 Frail, but of f. to withstand Ma. 89 I spoke with heart and heat and f. Ma. 133 Of the f. he made his own Ma. 152 Reproach you saying all your f. is gone ? /. K. 5 And how men slur him, saying all his f. /. K. 6 He felt, were she the prize of bodily f. /. K. 29 Of their strong bodies, flowing, drain'd their f. /. K. 31 But either's f. was match'd till Yniol's cry /. K. 31 That could I someway prove such f. in her /. K. 43 And so by f. they dragg'd him to the King I. K. 126 And forces ; often o'er the sun's bright eye /. K. 126 What is he ? I do not mean the f. alone /. K. 171 Light-headed, for what f. is yours to go /. K. 202 To feather toward the hollow, all her f. E. A. 21 In agony, she promised that no f. E. A. 72 FORCED. ' No fighting shadows here ! I f. Pr. 61 — mask'd thee from men's reverence up, and f. Pr. 175 The brute world howling f. them into bonds /. K. 132 The wrath which f. nry thoughts on that fierce /. K. 253 FORD. By bridge and f., by park and pale Poems 336 Was drown'd in passing thro' the f. hi M. 8 Came quickly flashing thro' the shallow f. /. K. 9 FORDED. Took horse, and f. Usk, and I. K. 9 FOREBODES. His heart f. a mystery Poems 303 FOREBODING. — f., 'what would Enoch say?" E. A. 14 FORECAST. But who shall so f. the years In M. 1 FOREFATHER, —forefathers* arms and Pr. 2 Forefathers of the thornless garden Ma. 60 FOREFINGER, —the stretch'd f. of all Time Pr. 48 FOREGONE. — could I, as in times f. Poems 258 FOREGROUND, —a f. black with stones and Puis 116 FOREHEAD. Thy bounteous f. was net Poems 78 His dusty f. drily curl'd Poems 85 — with dim fretted foreheads all Poems 123 — made his f. like a rising sun Poems 199 W r here shall I hide my f. and my eyes? Poems 199 Free hearts, free foreheads, — you and I are Poems 267 On her pallid cheek and f. came Poems 270 — that gilds the straiten'd f. of the fool Poems 273 /, to herd with narrow foreheads Poems 282 His f., then, a moment after, clung Pr. 45 Tortured her mouth, and o'er herf. past Pr. 142 — their foreheads drawn in Roman scowls Pr. 164 Choked, and her f. sank upon her hands Pr. 170 But on her f. sits a fire In M. 177 We turn'd our foreheads from the falling sun Ma. 126 Had bared her f. to the blistering sun /. K. 73 From f. down to foot perfect — again /. K. 180 From foot to f. exquisite-ly turn'd /. K. 180 Annie from her baby's f. "dipt E. A. 13 Lifting his honest f. E. A. -2-2 — f., eyelids, growing dewy -warm E. A. 142 FOREIGN. In f. lands : but for his sake I Poems 215 ' I have a sister at the f. court Pr. 19 And travell'd men from f. lands In M. 14 Of f. churches — I see her there Ma. 67 Display'd a splendid silk of f. loom /. K. 82 — tell him tales of f. parts E. A. 11 FOREIGNER. A f., and I your countrywoman Pr. 91 FORELAND. — many a fairy f. set Ma. 119 FORELOCK. Are taken by the f. Let it be Pms 262 FOREMOST in thy various gallery Poems 29 — in the f. files of time Poems 283 To drop head-f. in the jaws In M. 53 F. captain of his time Ma. 139 And being ever f. in the chase /. K. 96 — with ground-swell, which, on the f. rocks E. A. 98 FORERAN. So much the boy f.: but when E. A. 55 FORERUN thy peers, thy time, and let Poems 293 Till in the cold wind that foreruns the morn /. K. 231 FORESAW. The fame is quench'd that I f. In M. 101 She half-f. that he, the subtle beast /. K. 228 His vision ; but what doubt that he f. /. K. 241 FORESEE. Oh, if indeed that eye f. In M. 43 Spirits and men : could none of them f. /. K. 239 FORESEEING. Howbeit ourself, f. casualty Pr. 71 FORESHADOW. W r ho dares f. for an only I.K. vi. FORESHADOWING, —in rich foreshado wings Pr. 174 His heart f. all calamity E. A. 37 FORESHORTEN'D in the tract of time ? In M. 106 138 FORGIVEN Page FORESIGHT. Whose f. preaches peace Poems 259 Take wings of f. ; lighten thro' In M. 105 FOREST. As that wide f. Growths of Poems 153 Between dark stems the f. glows Poems 334 Better to clear prime forests, heave and thump Pr. 61 The f. crack'd, the waters curl'd In M. 24 Adown the f. and the thicket closed /. K. 144 Behind her, and the f. echo'd 'fool' /. K. 144 Of Celidon the f. ; and again /. K 162 The petty marestail f. E. A. 56 While I roved about the f. E. A. 171 FOREST-DEEPS, —far, in f. unseen Poems 362 FORESTER. Before him came a f. of Dean /. K. 8 FORETHOUGHT. So dark a f. roll'd about /. K. 105 FORETOLD, —he cast no shadow, had f. Pr. 15 He too f. the perfect rose In M. 205 Has come to pass as f. Ma. 104 FORFEITS. The game of f. done Poems 189 Than magic music, f., all the rest Pr. ir FORGAVE, —there the Queen f. him easily /. K. 32 And he f. me, and I could not speak /. K. 257 FORGE. Do f. a life-long trouble for I.K. 46 FORGED a thousand theories of the rocks Poems 231 W T ho f. that other influence Poems 302 W T e f. a sevenfold story. Kind? what kind? Pr. 11 And madness, thou hast f. at last In M. 98 Of force that would have f. a name hi M. 101 For Edith and himself ; or else he f. E. A. 56 Nor deeds of gift, but gifts of grace he f. E. A. 106 FORGET. In love with thee forgets to close Poems 34 And who that knew him could f. Poems 85 Can he pass, and we f. ? Poems 93 What is love ? for we f. Poems 94 I shall not f. you, mother, I shall hear you Poems 136 And God f. the stranger ! ' Poems 186 Authority forgets a dying king Poems 195 F. the dream that happens then Poems 306 I might f. my weaker lot Poems 306 Swear by St. something— I f. her name Pr. 122 Could we f. the widow*d hour In M. 60 But he forgets the days before In M. 66 Nor can it suit me to f. In M. 121 The days she never can f. In M. 145 And if ever I should f. Ma. 69 Tho' all men else their nobler dreams f. Ma, 146 On quest of mine, seeing that you f. /. K. 184 Perplext her, made her half f. herself E. A. 67 — ten years back, or more, if I don't f. E. A. 123 I earth in earth f. these empty courts E. A. 143 FORGETFUL. ' The sound of that f. shore In M. 54 F. of Maud and me Ma. 75 F. of his promise to the king /. K. 3 F. of the tilt and tournament /. K. 3 F. of his glory and his name /. K. 3 F. of the falcon and the hunt /. K. 3 F. of his princedom and its cares /. K. 4 For Lancelot, and f. of the hunt /. K. 9 F. of their troth and fealty, clave /. K. 248 FORGETFULNESS. And this f. was hateful /. K. 4 FORGET-ME-NOT. I found the blue F. Poems 93 I move the sweet forget-me-nots Ma. 126 FORGETTETH. The place he knew f. him ' Poems 301 FORGIVE, —mother, and f. me ere I go Poems 136 — wild and wayward, but you'll f. menow Poems 136 May God f. me ! — I have been to blame Poems 220 Athwart the smoke of burning weeds. F. me Pr. 176 F. these wild and wandering cries hi M. vii. F. what seem'd my sin in me In M. vii. F. my grief for one removed - In M. vii. F. them where they fail in truth' In M. vii. —little hearts that know not how to f. Ma. 87 Or to say ' f. the wrong ' Ma. 101 F. me; mine was jealousy in love' /. K. 217 Forgives ; do thou for thine own soul /. K. 253 Lo ! I f. thee, as Eternal God /. K. 253 And easily forgives it as his own E. A. 72 Said ' Love, f. him ' E. A. 98 ' F. ! How many will say, " f." and find E.A. 99 — neither God nor man can well f. E. A. 99 Before you prove him, rogue, and proved, f. E. A. 105 We must forgive the dead ' E. A. no He can do no more wrong : f. him, dear E. A. 113 I do f. him ! ' E. A. 113 FORGIVEN. 'Be wise: not easily f. Poems 212 Say one soft word and let me part f.' Pr. 147 Caress her : let her feel herself f. /. K. 113 She with a face, bright as for sin f. /. K. 204 ' That is love's curse ; pass on, my Queen, f.' /. K. 218 And blessed be the King, who hath f. /. K. 258 FORGIVEN Page FORGIVEN*. Yea, little maid, for am /not f. ?'/. A*. 259 FORGIVENESS. With all f., all oblivion Pr. 151 / seem no more : /want f. too Pr. 151 FORGIVING. I had set my heart on vour f. E. A. no FORGOT, —seen, f. ? The common uiouth Poems 205 The steer f. to graze Poems 206 For is not our first year f. ? Poems 306 F. his weakness in 'thy sight In M. 170 (It might be May or April, he f. Ma. 125 I f. the clouded Forth Ma. 159 Nor yet f. her practice in her fright /. K. 143 F. to drink to Lancelot and the Queen /. K. 1S5 And the sick man f. her simple blush /. K. 192 Philip sitting at her side f. E. A. 22 Sir Aylmer half f. his lazv smile E. A. 61 FORGOTTEN. To live f., and Poems 73, 74, 75. 7 6 , 77 I sleep f., I wake forlorn ' Poems 74 Live f. and die forlorn ' Poems 75 Walks f. , and is forlorn ' Poe?ns 75 — our great deeds, as half-f. things Poems 147 If not to be f. — not at once Poems 261 Not all f. Should it cross thy dreams Poems 261 Like glimpses of f. dreams Poems 307 Ere they be half-f. Poems 339 F., rusting on his iron hills Pr. 114 — doing battle with f. ghosts Pr. 131 The howlings from f. fields In M. 62 Sung by a long-f. mind In M. 106 Low in the dust of half-f. kings /. K. 217 And fling me deep in that f. mere /. K. -2-2.1 To greet her. wasting his f. heart E. A. 86 FORK. Who, God-like, grasps the triple forks Pms 177 A double hill ran up his furrowy forks Pr. 63 Two forks are fixt into the meadow ground /. K. 26 And there they fixt the forks into tne ground /. K. 30 And dazzled by the livid, flickering f. /. K. 143 FORK'D. — that are f., and horned, and soft Poems 62 No pale sheet-lightnings from afar, but f. E. A. 88 FORLORN. In sleep she seem'd to walk f. Poems 10 Over the dark dewy earth f. Poems 29 To live forgotten, and love f. Poems 73, 74. 75, 76, 77 I sleep forgotten, I wake f. Poems 74 Live forgotten and die f.' Poems 75 Walks forgotten, and is f.' Poems 75 Mournful CEnone, wandering f. Poems 98 Eeyond the polar gleam f. Poems 297 I ceased, and sat as one f. Poems 308 He set up his f. pipes Poems 327 Yet we will not die f.' Poems 374 The little village looks f. In. M. 85 I walk as ere I walk'd f. In M. 94 Of vapour, leaving night f. pa M. 165 Who am no more so all f. Ma. 60 As one scarce less f. Ma. 66 The tiny cell is f. Ma. 89 A tonsured head in middle age f. Ma. 127 —one so sad and so f. E. A. 16 Where yon dark vallej-s wind f. Select. 221 FORM. Tho' all her fairest forms are types Poems 8 And airy forms of flitting change Poems 15 We may hold converse with all forms Poems 30 And other than his f. of creed Poems -3,-j When rites and forms before his burning Poems 39 And the rainbow forms and flies on the land Pms 44 Fretteth thine enshrouded f. Poems 49 1 Is this the f.,' she made her moan Poems 74 The reflex of a beauteous f. Poe?ns 88 --and o'er her rounded f. Poems 105 I sit as God holding no f. of creed Poe»is 121 — forms that pass'd at windows and on roofs Poems 151 That her fair f. may stand and shine Poems 178 Matures the individual f. Poems 180 Phantoms of other forms of rule Poems 181 — the decks were dense with stately forms Poems 198 Would play with flying forms and images Poems 205 ' But I was born too late : the fair new forms Poems 262 Cursed be the sickly forms that err Poe?ns 273 And loosely settled "into f. Poems 312 A perfect f. in perfect rest . Poe?ns 316 On either side her tranced f. Poems 316 The Poet-forms of stronger hours Poe?ns 323 — blessed forms in whistling storms Poems 335 Of darken'd forms and faces Poems 346 And slowly quickening into lower forms Poems 374 All beauty compass'd'in a female f. Pr. 31 Convention since to look on noble forms Pr. 33 There sat along the forms, like morning doves Pr. 34 Of faded f. and haughtiest lineaments Pr. 52 Of lightest echo, then a loftier f. Pr. 85 | FORTUNE Page FORM. I was the forms : I knew not where Pr. 164 Will clear away the parasitic forms Pr. 171 A hollow f. with empty hands ' In M. 3 A late-lost f. that sleep reveals In M. 20 But knows no more of" transient f. hi M. 26 And slowly forms the firmer mind hi M. 31 Nor cares to fix itself to f . in M. 52 Her faith thro' f. is pure as thine In M. 52 Eternal f. shall still divide In M. 69 Where thy first f. was made a man In M. 86 The same sweet forms in either mind In M. 109 For changes wrought on f. and face In M. 113 O sacred essence, other f. In M. 119 And seem to lift the f., and glow In M. 128 And merge,' he said, * in f. and gloss In M. 132 Come, wear the f. by which I know hi M. 135 Come, beauteous in thine after f. In M. 135 In matter-moulded forms of speech In M. 141 For who would keep an ancient f. In M. 162 And ancient forms of party strife In M. 163 His want in forms for fashion's sake I;i M. 172 And grew to seeming-random forms In M. 183 From f. to f., and nothing stands In M. 191 And all is well, tho' faith and f. In M. 196 — other forms of life than ours Ma. 152 Conjecture of the plumage and the f. /. K. 18 And dreamt herself was such a faded f. /. K. 35 Not knowing ! O imperial-moulded f. /. K. 253 The f., the f. alone is eloquent ! Select. 196 FORMAL. O, I see thee old and f. Poems 276 Our f. compact, yet not less (all frets Pr. 23 FORM'D. —she heard him, still his picture f. /. K. 198 FORMER. Her f. beauty treble Pr. 158 Makes f. gladness loom so great ? In M. 41 As in the f. flash of joy hi M. 189 In f. days 3-ou saw me favourably /. K. 62 ' Earl, if 3'ou love me as in f . years /. K. 64 To glance behind me at my f" life /. K. 91 His f. talks with Edith E. A. 74 FORMING. The lucid outline f. round thee E. A. 142 FORMLESS. A vapour heavy, hueless, f, coldPwj 368 And wrapt thee f. in the fold In M. 37 FORSAKE. Ah yet, tho' all the world f. Poems 34X FORSAKEN. O my f. heart, with thee In M. n FORT. — that new f. to overawe my friends /. K. 23 — storming a hill-f. of thieves E. A. 62 Welcome her, thunders off. and of fleet ! E. A. 164 FORTH. Shadow f. the banks at will Poems 82 Arise, and let us wander f. Poems 95 Went f. to embrace him coming ere he came Poe??is 100 — into Troy, and ere the stars come f. Poems 108 The golden gorge of dragons spouted f. Poems 113 Is bodied f. the second whole Poems 182 There drew he f. the brand Excalibur Poems 193 Brightening the skirts of a long cloud, ran f. Poe?ns 193 Put f. their hands and took the King and wept Pms 198 — I, the last, go f. companionless Poems 199 Yes, I can heal him. Power goes f. from me Poems 241 And not leap f. and fall about thy neck Poems 259 She sent a herald f. Poems 286 — she rode f., clothed on with chastity Poems 2S7 If Nature put net f. her power Poems 296 Why not set f, if I should do Poems 307 And f. into the fields I went Poems 310 Glows f. each softly-shadow'd arm Poevis 316 F. streaming from a braid of pearl Poems 316 To those that seek them issue f. Poems 317 Went f. again with both nvy friends. We rode Pr. 23 Then stept a buxom hostess f, and saii'd Pr. 27 Stateliest, for thee ! but mute she glided f. Pr. 166 It leads me f. at evening Ma. 96 Whence he issued f. anew Ma. 143 I forgot the clouded F. Ma. 159 * I will ride f. into the wilderness /. K. 7 When my dear child is set f. at her best /. K. 39 And f. they rode, but scarce three paces on /. K. 46 So fared it with Geraint, who issuing f. /. K. 46 My nephew, and ride f. and find the knight /. K. 175 Arthur, and led her f. and far ahead /. K. 245 Put f. and feel a gladder clime ' Select. 220 FORTITUDE, —stately flower of female f. Poems 7 FORTRESS. The f. and the mountain ridge In M. 98 The f. crashes from on high In M. 196 — deathful-grinning mouths of the f. Ma. 115 White from the masons hand, a f. rose /. K. 13 And onward to the f. rode the three /. K. 14 Ride into that new f. by your town /. K. 22 FORTUNE. On Fortune's'neck : we sat as God Puis 156 Tho' f. clip my wings Poems 341 139 FORTUNE Page FORTUNE. I am but as my fortunes are Poems 357 Drink to F., drink to Chance Poems 374 Your fortunes, j ustlier balanced, scale with scale ' Pr 32 Becomes on Fortune's crowning slope In M. 89 — affluent F. emptied all her horn Ma. 148 Of broken fortunes, daily fronted him /. K. 1 Turn, F., turn thy wheel and lower the proud /. K. 19 Of F. and her wheel, and Enid sang /. K. 19 ' Turn, F., turn thy wheel with smile or frown /. K. 19 But since our f. slipt from sun to shade /. K. 38 Our mended fortunes and a Prince's bride /. K. 38 Give me good f, I will strike him dead /. K. 203 The ship ' Good F.' E. A. 29 Like the Good F., from her destined course E. A. 35 ' Boy, mark me ! for your fortunes are to make E. A. 66 Name, f. too : the world should ring of him E. A. 71 Thro' which a few, by wit or f. led E. A. 74 — slender household fortunes E. A. 96 FORTY. — numbers f. cubits from the soil Poems 239 Not far from Camelot, now for f. years /. K. 168 And f. blest ones bless him E. A. 70 FORUM. The f., and half-crush'd among the Pr. 164 FORWARD. — push thee f. thro' a life of shocks Pms 104 — came a bark that, blowing f, bore Poems 201 Went f., Mary took another mate Poems 220 — put your best foot f., or I fear Poems 229 — point thee f. to a distant light Poems 261 The Sun flies f. to his brother Sun Poems 263 The more fools they — we f. : dreamers both Pms 264 Poems 283 Poems 298 Poems 327 Poems 344 Poems 377 Pr. 36 Pr. 84 In M. 19 In M. 177 Ma. 167, 168 /. K. 16 /. K. 6 7 I. K. 69 /. K. 87 E. A. 9 E.A. 81 Select. F., f., let us range I will go f. , sayest thou Ran f. to his rhyming Stept f. on a firmer leg Dip f. under starry light Had slanted f., falling in a land One reaching f. drew And f. dart again and play She sets her f. countenance *F., the Light Brigade! Came f. with the helmet yet in hand And then to Enid, ' F. ! and to-day Then f. by a way which, beaten broad And Edyrn moving frankly f. spake F. she started with a happy cry His body half flung f. in pursuit ' Chase,' he said, the shiD flew f. FORWARD-CREEPING. Until the f. tides In M. 159 FORWARD-FLOWING. The f. tide of time Pms 19 FOSSILS. Like f. of the rock, with golden Poems 222 FOSTER. To guard and f. her for evermore /. K. 256 FOSTER'D the callow eaglet Poems 106 Which once she f. up with care In M. 10 And that was Arthur ; and they f. him /. K. 240 FOUGHT. That f. Aurelian, and the Roman Pr. 33 — nursed by those for whom you f, and served Pr. 141 I am your warrior : I and mine have f. Pr. 148 He f. his doubts and gather'd strength In M. 143 Like Paul with beasts, I f. with Death In M. 186 And the feet of those he f. for Ma. 138 — great men who f. , and kept it ours Ma. 146 Than when he f. at Waterloo Ma. 151 They that had f. so well Ma. 170 So twice they f., and twice they breathed /. K. 31 And f. together ; but their names were lost /. K. 149 That if I went and if I f. and won it /. K. 158 Toward greatness in its elder, ' You have f. /. K. 162 To those he f. with— drave his kith and kin /. K. 173 The nine-years-f.-for diamonds : for he saw /. K. 208 Of greatest knight ? I f. for it, and have it /. K. 221 Annie f. against his will E. A. 9 His comrades having f. their last below E. A. 63 F. with what seem'd my own uncharity E. A. 100 —all a lie may be met and f. with outright E. A. 118 — for the babe had f. for his life E. A. 122 FOUGHTEN. —the f. field, what else, at once Pr. 122 FOUL. Keep where you are : you are f. Poems 42 Ring out old shapes off. disease In M. 164 To dream she could be guilty off. act /. K. 7 As one that let f. wrong stagnate and be /. K. 93 Of that f. bird of rapine whose whole prey /. K. 131 To things with every sense as false and f. /. K. 135 — drawing f. ensample from fair names /. K. 250 — frequent interchange of f. and fair E. A. 29 So f. a traitor to myself and her E. A. 67 — mother of the f. adulteries E. A. 70 FOULLY, —mine own earldom f. ousted me /. K. 25 FOULNESS. And of the horrid f. that he /. K. 132 To all the f. that they work. Myself /. K. 134 FOUND. Down she came and f. a boat Poems 70 140 FOUND Page FOUND. Have I not f. a happy earth ? Poems 86 I f. the blue Forget-me-not " Poems 93 The comfort, I have f. in thee Poems 94 — then thinketh, ' I have f. Poems 124 I died a Queen. The Roman soldier f. Poems 157 Until I woke, and f. him settled down Poems 189 And would have spoken, but he f. not words Pms 197 To tamper with the feelings, ere he f. Poems 204 The wicket-gate, and f. her standing there Poems 211 I f. it in a volume, all of songs Poems 223 They f. you out ? — Poems 228 Bear witness, if I could have f. a way Poems 238 I f. him garrulously given Poems 246 — f., and kiss'd the name she f. Poems 251 She had not f. me so remiss Poems 253 System and empire ? Sin itself be f. Poems 258 Of love that never f. his earthly close Poems 258 — f. him in Llanberis : then we crost Poems 262 She sought her lord, and f. him Poems 285 —there she f. her palfrey trapt Poems 287 I f. him when my years were few Poems 302 It may be that no "life is f. Poems 305 I grew in gladness till I f. Poems 352 F. a still place, and pluck'd her likeness out Pr. 20 And in the imperial palace f. the king Pr. 21 All wild to f. an University Pr. 23 I knock'd and bidden, enter'd ; f. her there Pr. 61 ' Methinks I have not f. among them all Pr. 70 F. golden : let the past be past ; let be Pr. 78 Nor f. my friends : but push'd alone on foot Pr. 84 Than beelike instinct hiveward, f. Pr. 84 I came to tell you ; f. that you had gone Pr. 92 Made them worth knowing : but in you I f. Pr. 97 F. the gray kings at parle Pr. 113 Back rode we to my father's camp, and f. Pr. 124 — f. fair peace once more among the sick Pr. 159 I heard her turn the page : she f. a small Pr. 167 Thy creature, whom I f. so fair In M. vii. And f. thee lying in the port In M. 22 But f. him all in all the same lit M. 23 I f. an angel of the night lit M. 95 I f. a wood with thorny boughs In M. 95 My Arthur f. your shadows fair In M. 130 I f. Him not in world or sun In M. 192 — in the ghastly pit long since a body was f. Ma. 2 — cold and clear-cut face, as I f. when her Ma. 11 — by a ghastly glimmer, and f. Ma. 14 What, has he f. my jewel out? Ma. 37 What some have f. so sweet Ma. 41 Before my life has f. Ma. 41 Who in this stormy gulf have f. a pearl Ma. 60 This garden-rose that I f. Ma. 75 He f. the bailiff" riding by the farm Ma. 125 Arrived, and f. the sun of sweet content Ma. 126 I f. , tho' crush'd to hard and dry Ma. 159 Who first had f. and loved her in a state /. K. 1 On loan, or else for pledge ; and being f. /. K. 12 F. every hostel full, and everywhere /. K. 14 He f. an ancient dame in dim brocade /. K. 20 With frequent nod and smile departing f. /. K. 28 She f. no rest, and ever fail'd to draw /. K. 12.9 The Prince had f. her in her ancient home /. K. 35 He f. the sack and plunder of our house /. K. 37 1 Put on your worst and meanest dress.' She f. /. K. 45 And when he f. all empty, was amazed v?" I. K. 57 F. Enid with the corner of his eye ■•': - % I. K. 60 Till issuing arm'd he f. the host and cried /. K. 67 And f. his own dear bride propping his head/. K. 76 He roll'd his eyes about the hall, and f. /. K. 78 ' In this poor gown my dear lord f. me first I. K. 83 And moving out they f. the stately horse /. K. 85 Because I knew my deeds were known, I f. /. K. 91 He look'd and f. them wanting ; and as now /. K. 95 There f. a little boat, and stept into it /. K. 103 * What, O my Master, have you f. your voice ? /. K. 107 And f. a fair young squire who sat alone /. K. 118 And being f. take heed of Vivien /. K. 121 At last they f. — his foragers for charms I. K. 125 Was one year gone, and on returning f. / K. 130 He brought, not f. it therefore ; take the /. K. 131 Of Arthur's palace : then he f. a door /. K. 132 —have stabb'd him ; but she f. it not /. K. 138 And feeling ; had she f. a dagger there / K. 138 I should have f. in him a greater heart /. K. 139 Had f. a glen, gray boulder and black tarn /. K. 149 And issuing f. the Lord of Astolat /. K. 156 And f. it true, and answer'd, ' True, my child/. K. 166 Until they f. the clear-faced King, who sat /. K. 169 Fled eyer thro' the woodwork, till they f. /. A". 170 FOUND Page FOUND. Where could be f. face daintier? /. K. 180 Lest I be f. as faithless in the quest /. K. 186 And f. no ease in turning or in rest /. K. 194 He f. her in among the garden yews /. JC. 195 Until we f. the palace of the King /. K. 201 Would track her guilt until he f., and hers '/. K. 22S They f. a naked child upon the sands /. K. 240 Rose the pale Queen, and in her anguish f. /. K. 255 I wanted warmth and colour which I £ /. K. 258 Blanch'd with his mill, they f. E. A. 21 — f. a fallen stem E. A. 31 Lest he should swoon and tumble and be f. E. A. 42 F. lying with his urns and ornaments E. A. 51 Slipt into ashes and was f. no more E, A. 51 Like broken music, written as she f. E. A. 75 F. for himself a bitter treasure-trove E. A. 77 Save Christ as we believe him — f. the girl E. A. 80 F. a dead man, a letter edged with death E. A. 82 ' To live in 1 ' but in moving on I f. E. A . 101 If. a hard friend in his loose accounts E. A. 104 — f., (for it was close beside) E. A. 11 1 FOUNDATION. This whole f. ruin, and I Pr. 46 FOUNDATION-STONES, —strong f. were Pms 122 FOUNDED, —good King Arthur f. years ago /. K. 236 FOUNDER. The statues, king, or saint, or f. E. A. 108 FOUNDING. About the f. of a Table Round /. K. 115 Of the great Table— at the f. of it /. K. 237 FOUNDRESS. The f. of the Babylonian wall Pr. 33 Some say the third— the authentic f. you Pr. 62 FOUNT. Ancient founts of inspiration well Poems 283 There while we stood beside the f. Pr. 53 The very source and £ of Day In M. 41 — dabbling in the f. of fictive tears Ma. 122 In search of stream or f. E. A. 35 — the living f. of pity in Heaven E. A. 90 FOUNTAIN. — from the central fountain's flow Pms 21 From the fountains of the past Poems 26 In the middle leaps a f. Poems 42 Day and night to the billow the f. calls Poems 43 And I should look like a f. of gold Poems 60 — spouted his foam-fountains in the sea Poems 148 Rise like a f. for me night and day Poems 200 The f. to his place returns Poems 313 — sixty feet the f. leapt Poems 318 Beside its native f. Poems 330 Against its f. upward runs Poems 340 Expecting when a f. should arise Poems 366 Till the f. spouted, showering wide Poems 367 The f. of the moment Pr. 4 Of fountains spouted up and showering down Pr. 26 Enring'd a billowing f. in the midst " Pr. 30 Knowledge is now no more a f. seal'd Pr. 34 By all the fountains : fleet I was of foot Pr. 88 And tears that at their f. freeze In M. 33 And show'd him in the f. fresh In M. 119 From household fountains never dry In M. 168 Like fountains of sweet water in the sea E. A. 44 FOUNTAIN-FLOODS. Of spouted f. Poems 113 FOUNTAIN-FOAM. A flood of f. Poems 113 FOUNTAIN-HEAD. Full-welling f. -heads Poems 119 The murmur of the f. Poe?ns 299 FOUNTAIN-JETS. Above the f. and back Pr. 52 FOUNTAIN-URNS. By f. ;— and Naiads Poems 352 FOUR. The seven elms, the poplars f. Poems 28 F. gray walls and f. gray towers Poems 65 F. courts I made, East, West, and South and Pms 113 From those f. jets f. currents in one swell Poems 113 So when f. years were wholly finished Poems 125 So those f. abode Poems 220 From f. wing'd horses dark against the stars Pr. 26 — who knows? we f. may build some plan Pr. 118 Thro' f. sweet years arose and fell In M. 37 F. voices of f. hamlets round In M. 45 Each voice f. changes on the wind In M. 45 ' Where wert thou, brother, those f. days?' In M. 50 Tura'd and beheld the f., and all his face /. K. 30 O'er the f. rivers the first roses blew /. K. 86 Closed in the f. walls of a hollow tower /. K. 104, 121 Of diamonds one in front, and f. aside I. K. 149 And in the f. wild battles by the shore /. K. 162 — the cross lightnings of f. chance-met eyes E. A. 57 FOURFIELD. The f. system, and the price Poems 222 FOUR-IN-HAND. — five attop : as quaint a f. Pms 229 FOURSCORE. The f. windows all alight Poems 24 F. yows upon it E. A. 133 FOURSQUARE to opposition ' Pr. 118 —stood f. to all the winds that blew Ma. 139 FOURTH. — on the f. she fell Poems 122 And on the f. I spake of why we came Pr. 21 FRANCIS Page FOURTH, —the f. part of the day was gone I. K. 48 FOUR-YEAR-OLD. — f. I sold the Squire * Ma. 124 FOWL. Waking she heard the night-f. crow Poems 10 To scare the f. from fruit : if more there be Pr. 41 The myriad shriek of wheeling ocean-f. E. A. 32 FOX. The whole hill-side was redder than a f. Poems 225 And lighter-footed than the f. Poems 317 Then of the latest f.— where started— kill'd E. A. 64 FOXGLOVE. The f. cluster dappled bells ' Poems 292 Bring orchis, bring the f. spire In M. 114 FOXLIKE. Or f. in the vine : nor cares to walk Pr. 168 FOXY. Or elsewhere, Modred's narrow f. face /. K. 228 FRACTION. Some niggard f. of an hour E. A. 74 FRAGILE. As woodbine's f. hold Poems 251 1'he f. bindweed-bells and briony rings Ma. 128 FRAGMENT. — leaning on a f. twined with Poems 99 — the fragments tumbled from the glens Poems 106 But fragments of her mighty voice Poems 177 — silver fragments of a broken voice Poems 211 — cram him with the fragments of the grave Pr. 70 — the fragments of the golden day Ma. 62 He heard but fragments of her later -words /. K. 7 Among the tumbled fragments of the hills ' /. K. 221 FRAGRANT. The f., glistening deeps Poems 19 All round about the f. marge Poems 21 Of f. trailers, when the air Poems 79 — slowiy dropping f. dew Poems 102 In roses, mingled with her f. toil Poejns 208 — burn a f. lamp before my bones Poems 243 The f. tresses are not stirr'd Poems 316 A f. flame rose, and before us glow'd Pr. 76 — blossom-f. slipt the heavy dews Pr. 119 — slip at once all-f. into one Pr. 161 — bats went round in f. skies In M. 139 — often abroad in the f. gloom Ma. 67 Yet f. in a heart remembering E. A. 74 FRAIL. The f. bluebell peereth over Poems 51 Thy mortal eyes are f. to judge of fair Poems 104 Your melancholy sweet and f. Peems 163 By f. successors. Would, indeed, we had Pr. 68 — some cold morning glacier : f. at first Pr. 163 Rapt from the fickle and the f. In M. 49 life as futile, then, as f. ! I?i M. 81 F., but a work divine Ma. 88 F., but of force to withstand Ma. 89 — this f. bark of curs, when sorely tried E. A. 88 FRAILTIES, —crimes and f. of the court /. K. 232 FRAILTY. Nor human f. do me wrong In M. 74 FRAME. Thro' my veins to all my f. Poems 83 Were shiver'd in my narrow f. Poems 96 Pour'd back into my empty soul and f. Poems 153 A healthy f., a quiet mind ' Poems 293 Consolidate in mind and f. Poems 306 — take the broidery-f., and add Poems 312 The morals, something of the f., the rock Pr. 49 — suffers change off. A lusty brace Pr. 131 No hint of death in all his f. In M. 23 Deep-seated in our mystic f. In M. 5§ As thro' the f. that binds him in In M. 67 Be near me when the sensuous f. In M. 72 No — mixt with all this m3 r stic f. In M. 108 Throughout my f., till Doubt and Death hi M. 125 That in this blindness of the f. hi M. 137 Vague words ! but ah, how hard to f. In M. 141 Remade the blood, and changed the f. In M. 204 1 steal, a wasted f. Ma. 99 A man of well-attemper'd f. Ma. 141 Dust are our frames E. A. 51 FRAMED. Neither modell'd, glazed, or f. Poems 373 FRAMEWORK. — royal f. of wrought gold Poems 29 — with such a f. scarce could be Pr. 178 — all the f. of the land hi M. \-2rj FRAMING. — the long sea-f. caves E. A. 98 FRANCE. A light of ancient F. Poems 161 Imagined more than seen, the skirts of F. Pr. 179 In which we went thro' summer F. hi M. 98 The foaming grape of eastern F. In M. 208 Back to F. her banded swarms Ma. 143 Back to F. with countless blows Ma. 143 That cursed F. with her egalities ! E. A. 65 Had golden hopes for F. and all mankind E. A 75 — and ever-murder'd F. E. A. 90 Rose a ship of F. Select. 38 FRANCIS. At F. Allen's on the Christmas- Poems 189 F. , laughing, clapt his hand Poems 190 Said F., ' pick'd the eleventh from this Poems 190 F., muttering, like a man ill used Poems 201 To F. just alighted from the boat Poems 221 To F., with a basket on his arm Poems 221 141 FRANCIS FRANCIS. Said F. Then we shoulder'd — on a slope of orchard, F. laid So sang we each to either, F. Hale FRANK. ' You know,' said F., 'he burnt FRANKINCENSE, —and balm, and f. FRANKLY, —been mooted, but as f. theirs Page Poems 221 Poems 222 Poems 224 Poems 190 Poems 243 Pr. 117 And Edyrn moving f. forward spake /. K. 87 FRANTIC love and f. hate Poems 372 FRAUGHT. Strange, that the mind when f. Ma. 92 FRAY'D. (His dress a suit off. magnificence /. K. 16 FREE. — the breeze of a joyful dawn blew f. Poems 19 Over the islands f. Poems 44 Flow'd forth on a carol f. and bold Poems 48 The gemmy bridle glitter'd f. Poems 68 Like two streams of incense f. Poems 80 — when the surge was seething f. Poems 148 Joyful and f. from blame Poems 153 I answer'd f. ; and turning I appeal'd Poe?ns 154 So let the change which comes be f. Poems 181 F. hearts, f. foreheads, — you and I are old Poems 267 F. space for every human doubt Poems 295 In his f. field, and pastime made Poems 304 Much more, if first 1 floated f. Poems 307 Lord of Burleigh, fair and f. Poems 360 Set thy hoary fancies f. Poems 372 Panted from weary sides, ' King, you are f. ! Pr. 108 And Knowledge in our own land make her f. Pr, 128 F. adit : we will scatter all our maids Pr. 152 Together, dwarf d or godlike, bond or f. Pr. 171 Survive in spirits render'd f. In M. 59 Whose jest among his friends is f. In M. 92 His credit thus shall set me f. In M. in The starry clearness of the f. ? In M. 122 The rapt oration flowing f. In M. 127 Ring in the valiant man and f In M. 164 I escaped heart -f. with the least little touch Ma. 12 I feel so f. and so clear Ma. 70 His foes were thine ; he kept us f. Ma. 142 — brawling memories all too f. Ma. 151 * I take it as f. gift, then,' said the boy /. K. 57 F. tales, and took the word and play'd upon /. K. 61 When wine and f. companions kindled him /. K. 61 . And seems so lonely ?' ' My f. leave,' he said /. K. 61 — f. to stretch his limbs in lawful fight /. K. 86 With sallying wit, f. flashes from a height /. K. 181 •F. love, so bound, were freest,' said the King/. K. 219 ' Let love bei". ; f. love is for the best / K. 219 Could bind him, but f. love will not be bound '/. K. 219 I am always bound to you, but you are f.' E. A, 25 — they gave him and f. passage home E. A. 36 — f. of alms her hand E. A. 87 — so it be f. from pain E. A. 126 FREEA. — a says it easy an' f. E. A. 131 FREEDOM. The bounds of f. wider yet Poems vi. And F. rear'd in that august sunrise Poems 39 Commeasure perfect f.' Poems 104 That sober-suited F. chose Poems 175 Where F. broadens slowly down Poems 175 And individual f. mute Poems 176 Of old sat F. on the heights Poems 177 For some blind glimpse of f. work itself Poems 258 F., gaily doth she tread Poems 371 Embrace our aims : work out your f. Girls Pr. 34 Is duer unto f. , force and growth Pr. 81 Off. broadcast over all that orbs Pr. 128 Gentle as f.' — here she kiss'd it Pr. 147 A love of f. rarely felt In M. 168 Off. in her regal seat In M. 168 — save the one true seed of f. sown Ma. 146 — sober f. out of which there springs Ma. 146 FREELY. ' Pass f. thro' : the wood is all thine Pms 153 Then f. spoke Sir Lancelot to them all /, K. 214 So f. with his daughter? people talk'd E. A. 65 FREEMEN. It is the land that f. till Poems 175 For English natures, f., friends Poems 179 Gallant sons of English f. Select. 37 FREER.— thee f., till thou wake refresh'd Poems 261 — smit with f. light shall slowly melt Poems 263 Forces on the f. hour Poems 371 —noble thought be f. under the sun Ma. 114 FREEST, —so bound, were f.,' said the King/. K. 219 FREEZE. — tears that at their fountain f. In M. 33 Whose eighty winters f. with one rebuke Ma. 147 FREEZING. The f. reason's colder part In M. 192 FREIGHT, —her floating locks the lovely f. Poems 27 — thy dark f., a vanish'd life In M. 14 FREQUENCE. Not in this f. can I lend full Pr. 97 FREQUENT. Where from the f. bridge Poems 30 So f. on its hinge before Poems 45 142 FRIEND Page FREQUENT. With f. smile and nod departing /. K. 28 — f. interchange of foul and fair E. A. 29 A f. haunt of Edith E. A. 59 FRESH as the foam Poems 105 All the valley, mother, 'ill be f. and green Poems 132 — the wild kiss, when f. from war's alarms Poems 156 Smote by the f. beam of the springing east Poems 199 Are dewy-f., browsed by deep-udder'd kine Poems 205 How f. the meadows look Poems 225 My sweet, wild, f. three quarters of a year Poems 230 She seems a part of those f. days Poems 233 F. faces, that would thrive Poems 247 To make the greensward f. Poems 249 Oh, nature first was f. to men Poems 328 The f. arrivals of the week before Pr. 34 F. as the first beam glittering on a sail Pr. 76 So sad, so f., the days that are no more Pr. 76 The f. young captains flash'd their glittering Pr. 108 When all our path was f. with dew In M. 94 — show'd him in the fountain f. In M. 119 If not so f. , with love as true In M. 123 They pleased him, f. from brawling courts In M. 130 A f. association blow In M. 154 On my f. hope, to the Hall to-night Ma. 70 F. apple-blossom, blushing for a boon Ma. 122 ■ — looking at her ; ' Too happy, f. and fair Ma. 129 Too f. and fair in our sad world's best bloom Ma. 129 So f. they rose in shadow'd swells Ma. 134 What drives about the f. Cascine Ma. 156 In some f. splendour; and the Queen herself/. K. 2 ' See here, my child, how f. the colours look /. K. 36 F. victual for these mowers of our Earl /. K. 57 F. fire and ruin. He, perceiving, said /. K. 89 Conjecturing when and where; this cut is f. /. K. 148 F. from the burial of her little one E. A. 16 — her f. and innocent eyes E. A. 87 How f. was every sight and sound E. A. 144 FRESHEN. They i. the silvery-crimson Poems 43 FRESHER. — flood a f. throat with song In M. 114 Bright Phosphor, f. for the night In M. 187 FRESHEST. Looks f. in the fashion of the Poems 190 FRESH LIER. — gathering f. overhead In M. 14a FRESHLY-FLOWER'D. Upon the f. slope Pms 89 FRESHMEN. When we were F.: then at my Pms 191 FRESHNESS. Delighted with the f. and the Pms 234 With f. in the dawning east Poems 308 Yet so did I let my f. die Ma. 64 FRESH-WASH'D. — f. in coolest dew Poems 152 FRET. Love is hurt with jar and f. Poems 93 You should not f. for me, mother Poems 136 —to Robin a kind word, and tell him not to f. Pms 140 To f. the summer jenneting Poems 166 We {., -we fume, would shif: our skins Poems 348 Our formal compacts, yet, not less (all frets Pr. 23 So f. not, like an idle girl In M. 74 Is that a matter to make me f. ? Ma. 46 With many a curve my banks I f. Ma. 119 ' F. not yourself, dear brother, nor be wroth /. K. 203 FRETFUL. — shall hold a f. realm in awe Poems 279 Too jealous, often f. as the wind Pr. 58 FRETTED. By Bagdat's shrines off. gold Poems 19 — with dim f. foreheads all Poems 123 — f. all to dust and bitterness ' Pr. 150 FRETTETH thine enshrouded form Poems 49 FRETWORK, —holds a stately f. to the Sun Pr. 141 FRIDAY. Whose F. fare was Enoch's E. A. 6 FRIEND. Clear-headed f., whose joyful scorn Fins 13 My f., with you to live alone Poems 30 — doat upon each other, friends to man Poems in That dull cold-blooded Caesar. Prythee, f. Poems 156 He gave me a f., and a true true-love Poems 168 And the New-year blithe and bold, my f. Poems 169 The night is starry and cold, my f. Poems 169 He was a f. to me Poems 169 There's a new foot on the floor, my f. Poems 170 Alack ! our f. is gone Poems tjo And a new face at the door, my f. Poems 170 Both are my friends, and my true breast Poems 173 For he too was a f. to me Poems 173 The land, where girt with friends or foes Poems 175 — English natures, freemen, friends Poems 179 — for themselves and those who call them f. Poems 200 My f. ; and I, that having wherewithal Poems 224 Sets out and meets a f. who hails him Poena 226 ' F. Edwin, do not think yourself alone Poems 233 For ahl my f., the days were brief Poems 253 — round with many voices. Come, my friends Pms 267 He seems to hear a Heavenly F. Poems 303 To fall asleep with all one's friends , Poems 322 FRIEND Page FRIEND. In Art like Nature, dearest f. Poems 322 Thro* troops of unrecording friends Poems 350 Lilia with the rest, and lady friends Pr. 6 — rode ; they betted ; made a hundred friends Pr. 9 With Cyril and with Florian, my two friends Pr. 17 AVent forth again with both my friends. We Pr. 23 "Were always friends, none closer, elm and vine Pr. 46 'Of., we trust that you esteem'd us not Pr. 64 ' And as to precontracts, we move my f. Pr. 66 — brings our friends up from the underworld Pr. 76 A mere love-poem ! O for such, my f. Pr. 81 Nor found my friends : but push"d"alone on Pr. 84 — came your new f. : you began to change Pr. 90 I your old f. and tried, she new in all ? Pr. 91 In deathless marble. ' Her,' she said, 'my f. Pr. in I know not what — and ours shall see us friends Pr. 118 Truest f. and noblest foe Pr. 136 Of traitorous f . and broken system made Pr. 146 ' We two were friends : I go'co mine own land/V. 147 — had you got a f. of your own age Pr. 149 Thro' glittering drops on her sad f. Pr. 151 Kiss and be friends : like children being chid ! Pr. 151 Whatever man lies wounded, f. or foe Pr. 154 Yet, O my f., I will not have thee die ! Pr. 157 That hears his burial talk'd of by his friends Pr. 165 1 Look there, a garden \ ' said mv college f. Pr. 179 In M. 6 In M. In M. In M. In M. In M. In M. In U. In M. In M. In M. 115 In M. 121 In M. 123 In M. 127 In M. 147 In M. 151 In M. 155 In M. 178 In M. 195 In M. 2co I)i M. 200 In M. 200 In M. 211 Ma. 58 Ma. 67 Ma. 67 Ma. 68 Ma. 100 Ma. 107 Ma. 107 Ma. 124 Ma. 133 Ma. 139 Ma. 161 /. K. 15 I.K. 16 /. K. 16 I.K. 18 I.K. 25 /. K. 42 I.K. 44 I.K. 56 I.K. 61 I.K One writes that ' Other friends remain ' — unto me no second f. My f., the brother of my love — saying : ' Comes he thus, mx f. ? — flash at once, my f., to thee Methinks my f. is richly shrined My bosom-f. and half of life ' Does my old f. remember me ? " Since we deserved the name of friends Whose jest among his friends is free Thy blood, my f., and partly mine For other friends that oncel met I crave your pardon, my f. Of youthful friends, on mind and art The birth, the bridal ; f. from f. Some gracious memory of my f. With thy lost f. among the bowers f., who earnest to thy goal To hear the tidings of'm}- f. Dear heavenly f. that canst not die Dear f., far oil, nry lost desire Strange f. ; past, present, and to be That f. of mine who lives in God 1 have led her home, my love, my only f. To be friends, to be reconciled ! To be friends for her sake, to be reconciled To me, her f. of the years before Should I fear to greet my f. To catch a f. of mine one" stormy day F., to be struck by the public foe — naming those, his friends, for whom they She told me all her friends had said friends, our chief state-oracle is mute Thunder ' Anathema,' f., at }'ou ' F., he that labours for the sparrow-hawk 'Of., I seek a harbourage for the night ' Thanks, venerable f.,' replied Geraint — he suspends his converse with a f. Built that new fort to overawe my friends A nobler f. ? Another thought I "had Embraced her with all welcome as a f. ' F. , let her eat ; the damsel is so faint ' Call in what men soever were his friends ' Thy reckoning f. ? ' and ere he learnt it ' All of one mind and all right honest friends UK. . Of what they long for, good in f. or foe /. K. 92 — the great Queen once more embraced her f. /. K. g6 ' ay ; what say ye to Sir Lancelot, f. ! /. K 134 1 knew the Table* Round, my friends of old /. K. 136 To make them like himself :"buc f., to me /. K 154 Then were I glad of you as guide and f. /. K. 159 ' This shield, myf., where is it?' and Lavaine /. K. 165 Surely his king and most familiar f. /. K. 178 Marr'd her friend's point with pale tranquillity /. K. 185 — her f. and sister, sweet Elaine /. K 192 Death like a friends voice from a distant /. K. 199 He makes no f. who never made a foe /. K. 204 To this I call my friends in testim : Nay, f. . for we have taken our farewells The most disloyal f. in all the world ' The fealty of our friends, and stirs the pulse /. K. 252 As at a friend's voice, and he spake again /. K. 252 — parted with his old sea-f. E. A. 10 /. K. 215 /. K. 231 /. K. 243 FROST Page FRIEND. 'Good,' said his f., 'but watch ! ' E. A. 65 The man was his, had been his father's, f. E. A. 69 — air'd him there : his nearer f. would say E. A. 75 Friends, I was bid to speak of such a one E. A. 86 Friends, this frail bark of ours, when sorely E. A. 88 I their guest, their host, their ancient f. E. A. 92. ' My dearest f. E. A. 104 — a hard f. in his loose accounts E. A. 104 — he that wrongs his f. E. A. 105 — to 'issen, my f..' a said E. A. 129 — to 'issen, my f.,' says 'ea. E. A. 131 In painting some dead f. from memory? Select. 197 FRIEND L Y. The f. mist of morn Poems 234 FRIENDSHIP. — in Art : a f. so complete Poems 203 My college friendships gUmmer Poems 340 F. ! — to be two in one Poems 370 O f., equal-poised control In M. 119 A f. as had mastered Time In M. 121 A f. for the years to come In M. 122 First love, first f., equal powers In M. 123 Less yearning for the f. fled In M. 181 — bright the f. of thine eye In M. 185 So vanish friendships 011I3- made in wine /. K. 71 FRIEZE. — classic f., with ample awnings gay Pr. 30 FRIGHT. —Of f. in far apartments Pr. 155 May breed with him, can f. my faith In M. 113 — by a dead weight trail'd, by' a whisper'd f. Ma. 3 — call'd him dear protector in her f. /. K 143 Nor vet forgot her practice in her f. /. K 143 FRIGHTED, —bold, half-f., with dilated eyes /. K. 77 Fled f. Then that other left alone /. K. <2.\\ — half-f., Miriam swore E. A. 46 As half-amazed, half-f. all his flock E. A. 83 FRIGHTEN'D. —down, half-pleased, half-f. Poems 328 FRILL, —in a rainbow f. ? Ma. 89 FRINGE. Burnt like a f. of fire Poetns 114 Tom from the f. of spray Poe?ns 151 — tagg'd with icy fringes in the moon Poe??ts 237 From fringes of'the faded eve Poems sjj Upon the skirt and f. of our fair land Pr. 118 Her crimson fringes to the shower I>i M. 99 Broad-faced with under-f. of russet beard I.K. 74 FRINGED. Ray -f. eyelids of the morn Poems 13 Like little clouds sun-f. Poems 15 — the knightly growth that f. his lips Poettis 199 The gold-f. pillow lightly prest Poems 316 A looming bastion f. with fire In M. 25 FRITHS, —o'er the f. that branch and spread In M. 209 FROCK. Or the f. and gipsy bonnet FROLIC. — come hither and f. and play And in a fit of f. mirth That ever with a f. welcome took He deal in f., as to-night — the song FRONT, —the crag that fronts the Even Stands up and takes the mornin; In f. they bound the sheaves Ma. 72 Poettis 44 Poetns 251 Poems 267 Pr. 87 Poems 80 but in f. Poems 98 Poettis 115 Morebla"ck than ashbuds in the f. of March' Poems 204 The f. of Sumner-place Poetns 255 — some inscription ran along the f. Pr. 26 The terrace ranged along the Northern f. Pr. 60 — riders f. to f. , until they closed Pr. 132 I glanced aside : and saw the palace-f. Pr. 133 Betwixt the black fronts long-withdrawn In M. 185 — f. to f. in an hour Ave stood Ma. 86 Cannon in f. of them Ma. 168 Piaj'd into green, and thicker down the f. /. K. 82 Kiss"d the white star upon his noble f. /. K. 86 Of diamonds, one in f., and four aside /. K. 149 Henceforward rarely could she f. in Hall /. K. 228 — solitary room in f. E. A. 16 A f. of timber-crost antiquity E. A. 38 — huge cathedral fronts of even* age E. A. 107 High up on one of those dark minster-fronts E. A. 109 FRONTED. Fair-f. Truth shall droop not now Pms 13 Of broken fortunes, daily f. him I. K. x For Philip's dwelling f. on the street E. A. 40 —when first I f. him E. A. 99 FRONTIER. — reach'd the f. : then we crost Pr. 21 Hard by your father's f. — I said no Pr. 23 FRONTING the dawn he moved Poems 100 FROST. There is f. in your breath Poetns 41 The f. is on the pane Poems 135 — sparkled keen with f. against the hilt Poems 193 Rain, wind, f. , heat, hail Poetns 236 — drenching dews, or stiff with crackling f. Poems 240 Thro' one wide chasm of time and f. "~ Pr. 6 That grief hath shaken into f. ! In M. 4 The streets were black with smoke and f. In M. 95 The yule-log sparkled keen with f. In M. 107 FROST Page FROST. 'My sudden f. was sudden gain In M. 112 Draw toward the long f. and longest night E. A. 166 FROSTLIKE. — tipt with f. spires Poems 114 FROSTY. As are the f. skies Poems 331 For while our cloisters echo'd f. feet Pr. 10 —glitter burnish'd by the f. dark Pr. 120 The flying cloud, the f. light In M. 163 Behind a purple-f. bank In M. 165 Made the noise of f. woodlands E. A. 173 FROTH. Upon the topmost f. of thought hi M. 74 FROTH'D. He f. his bumpers to the brim Poems 169 — is your spleen f. out, or have ye more ? ' /. K. 133 FROTHFLY. Sweeping the f. from the E. A. 78 FROWN. Whether smile or f. be fleeter? Poems 15 Thy smile and f. are not aloof Poems 15 Frowns perfect-sweet along the brow Poems 15 Whether smile or f. be sweeter Poems 15 A sudden-curved f. Poems 16 He had darken'd into a f. Ma. 67 — Fortune, turn thy wheel with smile or f. /. K. 19 F. and we smile, the lords of our own hands I. K. 19 Met his full f. timidly firm, and said /. K. 49 — with other frowns than those E. A. 88 FROWN'D. The seldom-frowning King f. I. K. 184 FROWNING. Smiling, f, evermore Poems 15, 16 I f. ; Psyche flush'd and wann'd and shook Pr. 82 Vivien, f. in true anger, said /. K. 129 Vivien answer'd f. wrathfully I. K. 130 Vivien answer'd f. yet in wrath /. K. 133 With smiling face and f. heart, a Prince I. K. 176 The seldom-f. King frown'd and replied I. K. 184 FROZE my swift speech Poems 154 To me you f. ; this was my meed for all Pr. 90 FROZEN. Hollow smile and f. sneer Poems 41 Till her blood was f. slowly Poems 71 Caught in the f. palms of Spring Poems 167 Larger than human on the f. hills Poems 197 Be fix'd and f. to permanence Poems 300 My f. heart began to beat Poems 309 That longs to burst a f. bud In M. 114 Stiff as a viper f. ; loathsome sight I. K. 138 FRUIT. — green, giving safe pledge of fruits Poems 27 Disclosed a f. of pure Hesperian gold Poems 100 Behold this f, whose gleaming rind ingrav'n Pms 101 — and Paris held the costly f. Poems 103 ■ — cast the golden f. upon the board Poems 106 Laden with flower and f. Poems 143 Feeding the flower ; but ere my flower to f. Poems 158 To grace my city-rooms : or fruits and cream Pms 210 — we stole his f. Poems 228 — bring me offerings of f. and flowers Poems 240 Where fairer f. of Love may rest Poems 255 This f. of thine by Love is blest Poems 255 ■ — drooping flower of knowledge changed to f. Pms 259 With silks and fruits and spices, clear of toll Pms 263 — cherish that which bears but bitter f. ? Poems 273 Like tumbled f. in grass Pr. 5 The first fruits of the stranger : after-time Pr. 31 Of promise ; f. would follow. Deep, indeed Pr. 36 To scare the fowl from f. : if more there be Pr. 41 F., blossom, viand, amber wine, and gold Pr. 76 Of Autumn, dropping fruits of power : and Pr. 139 A life that bears immortal f. In M. 61 I'll rather take what f. may be hi M. 167 Of what in them is flower and f. In M. 210 It is only flowers, they had no fruits Ma. 107 Divides threefold to show the f. within Ma. 121, 128 Or little pitted speck in garner'd f. I. K. 114 ■ — sure I think this f. is hung too high /. K. 187 — said the maid, ■ be manners such fair f. ? I. K. 242 For manners are not idle, but the f. I. K. 242 — garden-herbs and fruits E. A. 19 The red f. of an old idolatry E. A. 90 —with naked limbs and flowers and f. E. A. 147 —we nor paused for f. nor flowers E. A. 147 Wearing his wisdom lightly, like the f. E. A. 166 FRUITAGE, —with f. golden-rinded Poems 79 Soft f., mighty nuts, and nourishing roots E. A. 31 FRUIT-BUNCHES. Of rich f. leaning on Poems 8 FRUITFUL. The f. wit Poems 39 — f. kisses, thick as Autumn Poems 106 Fast-rooted in the f. soil Poems 145 I keep smooth plats of f. ground Poems 166 — like a f. land reposed Poems 269 F. of further thought and deed Poems 296 The f. hours of still increase In M. 68 — f. strifes and rivalries of peace I. K. vii. FRUITLESS. Which else were f. of their In M. 67 Is shrivell'd in a f. fire In M. 76 144 FULL Page FRUITLESS. — built him fanes of f. prayer In M. 80 Thy brethren with a f. tear '( In M. 83 FRUSTRATION, —out of long f. of her care Pr. 162 FUEL. Secret wrath like smother'd f Select. 37 FULFIL. — God fulfils himself in many ways Poems 199 Well-loved of me, discerning to f. Poems 266 I would but ask you to f. yourself Pr. 165 Nor equal nor unequal : each fulfils Pr. 173 To strive, to fashion, to f. In M. 175 FULFILL'D. By its own energy f. itself Poems 211 — daily hope f, to rise again Poems 231 My father ' that our compact be f. Pr. 113 FULFILMENT. Revolving toward f. Poems 231 FULL of the city's stilly sound Poems 23 Thy rose-lips and f. blue eyes Poems 33 — tho' its voice be so clear and f. Poems 42 The warble was low and f. and clear Poems 48 — turning round a cassia, f. in view Poems 52 Slowly awaken'd, grow so f. and deep Poems 81 So f, so deep, so slow Poems 82 To a f. face, there like a sun remain Poems 82 — f. of dealings with the world Poems 85 So f. of summer warmth, so glad Poems 85 They met with two so f. and-bright Poems 88 — f. at heart of trembling hope Poems 89 While those f. chestnuts whisper by Poems 92 My eyes are f. of tears, my heart of love Poems 99 — her f. and earnest eye Poems 103 A spacious garden f. of flowering weeds Poems in F. of long-sounding corridors it was Poems 114 F. of great rooms and small the palace stood Pms 115 F. oft the riddle of the painful earth Poems 122 To her f. height her stately stature draws Poems 154 Her slow f. words sank thro' the silence Poems 155 ' Alas ! alas ! ' a low voice f. of care Poems 160 F. knee-deep lies the winter snow Poems 168 He was f. of joke and jest Poems 169 Sleep f. of rest from head to feet Poems 174 Lay a great water, and the moon was f. Poems 191 Yet I thy hest will all perform at f. Poems 192 — the f. day dwelt on her brows, and sunn'd Poems 208 F. of his bliss, and following her dark eyes Poems 210 Merged in completion? Would you learn atf. Pms -211. Of the f. harvest, he may see the boy Poems 216 So f. a harvest : let me take the boy Poems 216 Are f. of chalk ? but let me live my life Poems 223 — some f. music seem'd to move and change Poe?ns 231 To some f. music rose and sank the sun Poems 231 Sneeze out a f. God-bless-you right and left Pms 233 A vessel f. of sin : all hell beneath Poems 242 Strait-laced, but all-too-f. in bud Poems 247 The f. south-breeze around thee blow Poems 256 F. quire, and morning driv'n her plow of Poems 261 — James, — you know him, — old but f. Poems 264 F. of sad experience Poems 280 Were f. of chinks and holes Poems 287 ' Thou art so f. of misery Poems 289 ^ — my f. heart, thatwork'd below Poems 291 Flood with f. daylight glebe and town? Poems 293 — looking upward, f. of grace Poe7ns 299 The woods were fill'd so f. with song Poems 310 Her f. black ringlets downward rolfd Poems 316 In f. and kindly blossom Poetns 340 Every face, however f. Poems 373 With my f. heart : but there were widows here Pr. 21 A f. sea glazed with muffled moonlight, swell Pr. 28 — that f. voice which circles round the grave Pr. 31 1 Alas, your Highness breathes f. East,' I said Pr. 66 F. of all beauty. ' how sweet,' I said Pr. 72 — f. of cowardice and guilty shame Pr. 92 A liquid look on Ida, f. of prayer Pr. 93 Not in this frequence can I lend f. tongue Pr. 97 F. of weak poison, turnspits for the clown Pr. 101 I stored it f. of rich memorial Pr. 127 F. on the child : she took it : ' Pretty bud ! Pr. 146 Rang ruin, answer'd f. of grief and scorn Pr. 153 Seem'd the f. lips, and mild the luminous eyes Pr. 169 The two-cell'd heart beating, with one f. stroke Pr. 173 Not perfect, nay, but f. of tender wants Pr. 174 ' Have patience,' I replied, ' ourselves are f. Pr. 181 Spread thy f. wings, and waft him o'er In M. 12 Whose youth was f. of foolish noise In M. 75 The f. new life that feeds thy breath In M. 125 — when the heart is f. of din In M. 138 — if the song were-f. of care hi M. 194 — thou art worthy ; f. of power In M. 206 — you may call it a little too ripe, too f. Ma. 12 What rf tho' her eye seem'd f. Ma. 27 F. to the banks Ma. 58 FULL Page FULL. From the wilderness, f. of wolves Ma. 105 For the keeper was one, so f. of pride Ma. 107 — love of a peace that was f. of wrongs and Ma. 114. To show the farm : f. willingly he rose Ma. 123 F. cold my greeting was and dry Ma. 132 In f. acclaim Ma. 145 F. slowly by a knight, lady, and dwarf I. A'. 10 Found every hostel f., and everywhere /. K. 14 — that old dame, to whom f. tenderly I. K. 28 — Yniol goes, and I f. oft shall dream I. A". 40 Met his f. frown timidly firm, and said /. A'. 49 Greeted Geraint f. face, but stealthily I. A". 60 She, with her mind all f. of what had chanced I. K. 87 F. seldom does a man repent, or use /. K. 93 Is accurate too, for this f. love of mine /. A". 121 Without the f. heart back may merit well /. A". 121 — youth and love ; and that f. heart of yours /. A". 122 ' F. many a love in loving youth was mine /. A". 122 A league of mountain f. of golden mines I. K. 124 F. often lost in fancy, lost his way /. A". 156 He is so f. of lustihood, he will ride /. K. 158 F. courtly, yet not falsely, thus return'd /. K. 159 — answer'd him at f., as having been /. K. 162 Dark-splendid, speaking in the silence, f. /. K. 165 F. simple was her answer ' What know I ? A A". 182 — damsel, for I deem you know f. well I. K. 183 F. lowly by the corners of his bed I. K. 190 F. many a holy vow and pure resolve I. K. ig-z F. often the sweet image of one face I. K. 193 F. ill then should I quit your brother's love I. K. 196 Sent for his shield : f*. meekly rose the maid I. K. 198 From the half-face to the f. eye, and rose I. A". 213 Approach'd him, and with f. affection flung I. K. 218 Beneath a moon unseen albeit at f. I. K. 225 F. knightly without scorn ; for in those days I. K. 227 F. sharply smote his knees, and smiled /. K. 227 For testimony ; and crying with f. voice I. K. 230 Whereat f. willingly sang the little maid I. K. 233 So sang the novice, while f. passionately I. K. 234 ' Yea, but I know : the land was f. of signs A K. 237 Flying, for all the land was f. of life * /. K. 238 F. many a noble war-song had he sung /. K. 239 F. often, ' and, sweet lady, if I seem A A". 241 F. easily all impressions from below I. K. 258 F. sailor ; and he thrice had pluck'd a life E. A. 4 — f. heart and boundless gratitude E. A. 20 F. of that lifelong hunger E. A. 26 — his f. tide of youth E. A. 57 — while the two were sleeping, a f. tide E. A. 98 My life is f. of weary days Select. 191 FULL-ACCOMPLISHD. —off. Fate Poems isz FULL-BLOWN, before us into rooms which Pr. 27 FULL-BREASTED, —like some f. swan Poe??is 200 FULL-BUSTED, —her f. figure-head E. A. 30 FULL-CELL'D. A f. honeycomb of eloquence Pms 231 FULLER. In the Spring a f. crimson comes Pms 269 More life, and f., that I want' Poems 308 A f. light illumined all Poems 318 By grassy capes with f. sound Poems 362 The woman to the f. day ' Pr. 71 — ring the f. minstrel in In M. 164 For f. gain of after bliss In M. 182 Till all my blood, a f. wave In M. 189 In twos or threes, or f. companies I. K. 4 With f. profits E. A. 8 FULLEST. And f. ; so the face before her I. K. 165 FULL-FACED. When all the f. presence of Pms 101 F. above the valley stood the moon Poems 142 Parted : and glowing f. welcome, she Pr. 38 FULL-FED. — a f. river winding slow Poems 115 — one warm gust, f. with perfume, blew Poems 207 1 What dare the f. liars say of me ? /. K. 129 FULL-FLOWING. The f. harmony Poems 80 — the f. river of speech Poems 100 FULL-FOLIAGED. Rock'd the f. elms, and In M. 142 FULL-GROWN, —the f. will Poems 104 The f. energies of heaven In M. 61 FULL-JUICED. The f. apple, waxing Poems 145 FULL-LIMB'D. —whom God had made f. /. A". 227 FULLNESS. But by degrees to f. wrought Poems 175 The f. of her face Poems 177 — whisper throng'd my pulses with the f. of Poems 271 The f. of the pensive mind Poems 324 Lest of the f. of my life Poems 346 — weep the f. from the mind In M. 33 Had reach'd a thunderous f. E. A. 107 FUZZ Page FULL-SAIL'D. How may f. verse express Poems bo FULL-SUMM'D. Sit side by side, f. in all Pr. 172 FULL-SUMMER, to that stream whereon the A A". 206 FULL-TIDED. Than at Caerleon the f. Usk A A". 52 FULL-TONED. High over the f. sea Poems 4^ FULL-TUNED. My own f.,— hold passion Poems 259 FULL-WELLING fountain-heads of change Pms 119 FULLY. Sigh f, or all-silent gaze upon him A K. 10s FULMINATED, —the coming doom, and f. E. A. 97 FULMINED. — f. out her scorn of laws Salique Pr. 36 FULSOME. — f. Pleasure clog him Ma. 53 FULVI A. — should have clung to Fulvia's waist Pms 161 FUME. IVe fret, -we f, would shift our skins Pms 348 For mockery is the f. of little hearts I. K. 258 FUN. Reaper's it wur : fo' they f. un theer E. A. 132 FUNERAL. A f, with plumes and lights Poems 68 Dark as a f. scarf from stem to stern Poems 198 In sound of f. or of marriage bells Poems 204 Dark in its f. fold Ma. 141 Had seldom seen a costlier f. E. A. 50 FUR. My Father sent ambassadors with furs Pr. 17 FURBELOW. — dimpled flounce of the sea-f. E. A. no FURIES. Like to F., like to Graces Poems 367 FURIOUS. Break into f. flame ; being A K. 89 As after f. battle turfs the slain I. K. 1-21 FURIOUSLY, —in the midst, and there so f. A K. 171 — masters of his motion, f. E. A. 68 FURL. — come hither and f. your sails Poems 43 Mariner, mariner, f. your sails Poems 44 FURL'D. —the battle-flags were f. Poems 278 — never sail of ours was f. E. A. 149 FURLOUGH. To yield us farther f. : * and he Pr. 58 FURNACE, —all the f. of the light Poems 75 FURNISH'D. — bravely f. all abroad to fling Poems 39 FURR'D. Her gay-f. cats a painted fantasy Pr. 64 Tho' smock'd, or f. and purpled, still the clown Pr. 87 FURROW. The sounding furrows ; for my Poems 267 Nor in the f. broke the ploughman's head Pr. 118 — reddening in the furrows of his chin Pr. 148 A shining f, as thy thoughts in me Pr. 167 Or in the f. musing stands ' In M. 90 FURROW-CLOVEN, —huddling slant in f. falls Pr. 168 FURROWING. Far f. into light the mounded Pms -261: Came f. all the orient into gold Pr. 55 F. a giant oak, and javelining I. K. 142 FURROWY. A double hill ran up his f. forks Pr. 63 FURTHER inland, voices echoed, — ' come Poems 202 Look f. thro' the chace Poe?ns 255 Fruitful off. thought and deed Poetns 296 The voice grew faint : there came af. change Pms 374 — deep in shadow : f. on we gain'd Pr. 26 We brook no f. insult but are gone ' Pr. 154 Of female whisperers : at the f. end Pr. 155 * My love shall now no f. range In M. 112 — f. on, the hoary Channel Ma. 162 Then riding f. past an armourer's I. K. 15 FURTHERMORE, —he send or come for: f. A K. 180 So that would make you happy : f. I. K. 197 So said my father — yea and f. I, K. 238 FURTHEST. Beyond the f. flights of hope Poems 298 FURY. She struck such warbling f. thro' the Pr. 105 And Life, a F. slinging flame In M. 72 The red fool-f. of the Seine In M. 196 The household F. sprinkled with blood Ma. 66 * How then ? who then ? ' a f. seized on them /. K. 172 FURZE, —on these dews that drench the f. hi M. 16 FURZY. The f. prickle fire the dells Poems 292 FUSE. Whose fancy fuses old and new In M. 27 FUSED. — manhood f. with female grace In M. 169 FUSING. Should move his rounds, and f. all In M. 69 FUST. — to Squoire sin f. a corned to the 'All E. A. 135 FUTILE. O life as f., then, as frail In M. 81 FUTURE. Thro' f. time by power of thought Pms 179 Shall never more, at any f. time Poetns 192 Some happy f. day Poems 255 When I dipt into the f. far as human eye Poems 269 For I dipt into the f, far as human eye Poems 278 Some f. time, if so indeed you will Pr. 32 Dilating on the f. ; ' everywhere Pr. 38 Break from a darken'd f., crown'd with fire Pr. 145 Perchance upon the f. man Pr. 182 Had fallen and her f. Lord In M. 8 — leaps into the f. chance In M. 177 Thro' all his f. : but now hastily caught E. A. 14 FUTURITY, —of the half-attain'df. Poems 27 FUZZ. Nowt at all but bracken an' f. E. A. 133 GABBLE Page GABBLE. Nothing but idiot g. Ma. 104 GABLE. A score of gables Poems 225 Fantastic gables, crowding, stared Poems 287 GABLE-END. On the blossom'd gable-ends Ma. 25 GABRIEL. —Titan angels, G., Abdiel E. A. 174 GADDING. — nuns would check her g. tongue /. K. 241 GAD-FLY. —when this g. brush'd aside Pr. 128 GAFFER. Ran G, stumbled Gammer Poems 185 GAGELIKE to man, and had not shunn'd the Pr. 116 GAIETY without eclipse Poems 6 GAILY. In her ear he whispers g. Poems 358 Freedom, g. doth she tread Poems 371 Than but to dance and sing, be g. drest Select. 196 GAIN. I can but count thee perfect g. Poems 121 But gentle words are always g. Poems 180 And g. her for my bride Poems 257 — seas, that daily g. upon the shore Poems 263 — foreheads, vacant of our glorious gains Poems 282 "VVink. at our advent ; help my prince to g. Pr. 62 And play the slave to g. the tyranny Pr. 81 He g. in sweetness and in moral height Pr. 172 And find in loss a g. to match ? In M. 1 That with his piping he may g. In M. 35 Or but subserves another's g. In M. 76 But turns his burthen into g. In M. 11 1 • My sudden frost was sudden g. In M. 112 For fuller g. of after bliss In M. 182 And lust of g., in the spirit of Cain Ma. 4 Ours the pain, be his the g. Ma. 150 How g. in life, as life advances Ma. 163 I vow'd that could I g. her, our kind Queen /. K. 42 And after that, she set herself to g. /. K. 102 Despite the wound he spake of, all for g. /. K. 176 Will well allow my pretext, as for g. /. K. 177 — his gains were dock'd, however small E. A. 96 Small were his gains, and hard his work E. A. 96 His g. is loss E. A. 105 — never naming God except for g. E. A. 106 In hope to g. upon her flight E. A. 148 GAIN'D. One after one : but even then she g. Pins 288 Thou hast not g. a real height Poems 293 — g. a laurel for your brow Poems 350 We g. the mother-city thick with towers Pr. 21 But deep in shadow : further on we g. Pr. 26 So saying from the court we paced, and g. Pr. 60 Meantime be mute : thus much, nor more I g.' Pr. 63 — grasping down the boughs I g. the shore Pr. 84 We cross'd the street and g. a petty mound Pr. 103 — on they moved and g. the hall Pr. 155 In such discourse we g. the garden rails Pr. 181 A wretched vote may be g. Ma. 28 He that g. a hundred fights Ma. 143 Took horse, and forded Usk, and g. /. K. 9 Of honour, where no honour can be g. /. K. 83 And leaving Arthur's court he g. the ueach /. K. 103 And when they g. the cell in which he slept /. K. 189 G. for her own a scanty sustenance E. A. 15 — Philip g. E. A. 20 — seaward-bound for health they g. a coast E. A. 97 GALAHAD. — Lancelot brave, nor G. clean I. K. 135 And pure Sir G. to uplift the maid /. K. 213 GALAXY. Hung in the golden G. Poems 68 GALE, merrily carol the gales Poems 44 Sweet gales, as from deep gardens, blow Poems 97 Held me above the subject, as strong gales Poems 150 — the last night's g. had caught Poems 207 The Sweet-G. rustle round the shelving keel Pms 234 Storm'd in orbs of song, a growing g. Poems 367 — the empurpled champaign, drank the g. Pr. 60 Who changest not in any g. In M. 2 Caught and cuff 'd by the g. Ma. 25 — redden'd with a thousand winter gales E. A. 6 Cai/.ght the .>>hiill salt, and sheer'd the g. E. A. 145 146 GARDEN Page GALE. And to and thro' the counter-g? E. A. 149 GALEN. — court-G. poised his gilt-head cane Pr. 16 GALILEE. Who still'd the rolling wave of G. E. A. 87 GALINGALE. — meadow, set with slender g. Pms 143 GALL. — changed a wholesome heart to g. Poems 128 — the last drop in the cup of g. Poems 227 Each leaf into a g. - Poems 248 Unto me my maudlin g. Poems 374 GALLANT. Many a g. gay domestic Poems 360 — the g. glorious chronicle Pr. 4 To give three g. gentlemen to death' Pr. 46 He seems a gracious and a g. Prince Pr. 118 I fenced it round with g. institutes Pr. 127 A g fight, a noble princess — why Pr. 178 Who pledgest now thy g. son In M. 6 A passionate ballad g. and gay Ma. 23 Made a g. crew Select. 37 G. sons of English freemen - Select. 37 GALLERIES. The long-laid g. past a hundred Pr. 156 In those long g., were ours Ma. 156 GALLERY. — foremost in thy various g. Poems 29 By garden-wall and g. Poems 71 And round the roofs a gilded g. Poems 113 The light aerial g. , golden-raii'd Poems 114 Run thro' the peopled g. which half round I. K. 169 Thro' the long g. from the outer doors /. K. 246 GALLOPADED! By rivers g. Poems 327 GALLOP'D. Behind them, and so g. up the /. K. 9 Sway'd round about him, as he g. up /. K. 10 GALLOPING. — g. hoofs bare on the ridge Pr. 132 The sound of many a heavily -g. hoof /. K. 69 GAM A. — was G. ; crack'd and small his voice Pr. 21 Then G. turn'd to me Pr. 113 Said G. ' We remember love ourself Pr. 117 This G. swamp'd in lazy tolerance Pr. 130 From Gama's dwarfish loins 1 Pr. 133 — moved beyond his custom, G. said " ' Pr. 148 GAMBOL. — your dainty gambols: wherefore/. K. 109 In gambols; for her fresh and innocent eyes/i. A. 87 GAMBOLL'D. — when she g. on the greens Poems 248 We g., making vain pretence In M. 48 Glanced at the doors or g. down the walks /. K. 36 GAMBOLLING. — shower the g. waterfalls Poems 43 GAME. — dwindled down to some odd games Pms 189 The g. of forfeits done Poems 189 — touch'd upon the g., how scarce it was Poems 222 A pleasant g., she thought : she liked it more Pr. 11 Quoit, tennis, ball — no games ? nor deals in that Pr. 65 Man is the hunter ; woman is his g. Pr. 115 In dance and song and g. and jest In M. 47 Again our ancient games had place In M. 107 Poor rivals in a losing g. In M. 156 Be neither song, nor g., nor feast In M. 162 No, there is fatter g. on the moor Ma. 10 — or are moved by an unseen hand at a g. Ma. 18 And play the g. of the despot kings Ma. 38 At civic revel and pomp and g. ' Ma. 145, 150 GAMESOME. Then ran she, g. as the colt Poems 250 GAMMER. Ran Gaffer, stumbled G. Poems 185 GAMUT. Ran highest up the g. E. A. 108 GANYMEDE. Or else flushed G. his rosy Poems 117 I think he came like G. Poems 344 In scorn of us, ' they mounted, Ganymedes Pr. 58 GAP. —from the gaps and chasms of ruin left E. A. 108 GAPE. A gulf that ever shuts and gapes In M. 97 For any mouth to g. for save a Queen's I. K. 187 GAPED. — man.' And Lavaine g. upon him /. K. 170 Were added mouths that g., and eyes that /. A'. 212 GAPING. The passive oxen g. Poems 329 Who was g. and grinning by Ma. £6 GAP-TOOTH'D. —and g. man as lean as death Pms 368 GARDEN. High-walled gardens green Poems 19 By g. porches on the brim -s. Poems 20 GARDEN Page GARDEN. Thence thro' the g. I was drawn Poetns 23 When rooted in the g. of the mind Poems 27 Or a g. bower'd close Poems 30 Like one great g. show'd Poems 39 In the heart of the g. the merry bird chants Poems 42 With whitest honey in fairy gardens cull'd Poems 79 Sweet gales, as from deep gardens, blow Poems 97 A spacious g. full of flowering weeds Poems in — they are hers : I shall never g. more Poems 137 Creeps to the g. water-pipes Poems 158 Leaving the olive-gardens far below Poems 159 All thine, against the g. wall Poems 166 Walking about the gardens and the halls Poems 192 Although between it and the g. lies Poems 204 — blooms the g. that I love Poc?ns 204 The g. stretches southward Poems 207 One after one, thro' that still g. pass'd Poems 210 — sat we down upon a g. mound Poems 211 ifUr-cross'd the g. to the gardener's lodge Poems 221 1 Deep in the g. lake withdrawn Poems 313 A breeze thro' all the g. swept Poems 318 A g. too with scarce a' tree Poems 326 A little g. blossom Poe??is 330 Parks and order'd gardens great Poems 359 The sward was trim as any^g. lawn Pr. 6 A little street half g. and half house Pr. 26 Concluded, and we sought the gardens ; there Pr. 52 The g. portals. Two great statues, Art Pr. 85 Above the garden's glowing blossom-belts Pr. 125 To take their leave, about the g. rails Pr. 179 1 Look there, a g. !' said my college friend Pr. 179 In such discourse we gain'd the g. rails Pr. 181 Since Adam left his g. yet In M. 41 So that still g. of the souls In M. 65 The gust that round the g. flew In AI. 131 Unwatch'd, the g. bough shall sway In AI. 153 Till from the g. and the wild In M. 154 — and all by myself in my own dark g. -ground Ala. 14 — up in the high Hall-g. Ma. 16 — in a g. of spice Ma. 20 Birds in the high Hall-g. Ma. 43 Maud has a g. of roses Ma. 49 Seem'd her light foot along the g. walk Ala. 58 — thornless g. Ma. 60 For I know her own rose-g. Ma. 73 Come into the g., Maud Ma. 76 — long by the g. lake I stood Ma. 78 Queen rose of the rosebud g. of girls Ma. 79 In the g. by the turrets Ma. 100 — I know where a g. grows Ma. 106 On g. gravel, let my query pass Ma. 122 All round a careless-order'd g. Ala. 162 But this was in the g. of a king /. K. 35 And oft they met among the g. yews /. K. 180 He found her in among the g. yews /. K. 195 Flourish'd a little g. square and wall'd E. A. 40 » Her g., sow'd her name and kept it green E. A. 55 — the gardens of that rival rose E. A. 74 Kept to the g. now, and grove of pines E. A. 79 GARDEN-BOWER. Black the g. -bowers Poems 22 Thro' mj' g. E. A. 152 GARDENER . The grand old g. and his wife Pms 128 The Gardener's daughter : trust me, after that Pms 204 Of Rose, the Gardener's daughter ? Poems 205 — cross'd the garden to the gardener's Poems 221 Let them be gold ; and charge the gardeners /. K. 36 And made a G. putting in a graff /. K. 118 — he couch'd, and as the gardener's hand /. K. 226 GARDEN-GATE. And stood by her g. Ala. 49 Upon Maud's own g. Ala. 50 — push'd at Philip's g. Ma. 121 GARDEN-GLASS. — garden-glasses shone Poems 207 GARDEN-HERB, —garden-herbs and fruits E. A. 19 GARDENING. And Works on G. thro' there Pms 329 GARDEN-ISLE. And alders, garden-isles Poems 234 GARDEN-ROSE. This g. that I found Ala. 75 All volu tuous g. -roses Ma. 149 GARDEN-SQUARE, —sultry garden-squares Pms 167 GARDEN-SOUIRT. Half-conscious of the g. Pms 330 GARDEN-TOOL —find my garden-tools Poems 137 GARDEN-WALK, —down 'the garden-walks Ik AI. 155 GARDEN-WALL, —held the pear to the g. Pms 9 By g. and gallery Poems 71 Flat to the g. : and likewise here Pr. 125 Climb'd to the high top of the g. /. K. 226 — feeling all along the g. E. A. 42 GARGARUS. Behind the valley topmost G. Pms 98 GARLAND. Do make a g. for the heart Pms 93 — knots of flowers, and buds and garlands gay P?ns 131 GATEWAY Page GARLAND. That soon should wear the g. E. A. 57 GARLANDED. Each g. with her peculiar Poems 210 GARLANDING. Ran riot, g. the gnarled Poems 102 GARMENT. The eddying of her garments Poems 27 The woman's g. hid the woman's heart ' Pr. 122 GARNER. — wrath that garners in my heart In M. 113 GARNER'D. Than of the g. Autumn-sheaf Pms 294 Or little pitted speck in g. fruit /. K. 114 GARNET. Each like a g. or a turkis in it /. K. 35 GARRULITY. Shame on her own g. /. K. 241 GARRULOUS. With g. ease and oily courtesies Pr. 23 G. under a roof of pine Ala. 162 But Miriam Lane was good and g. E. A. 38 GARRULOUSLY. I found him g. given Poems 246 To whom the little novice g. /. K. 237 To whom the novice g. again /. K. 239 Shame on her own garrulity g. /. K. 241 GARTH. Than in a clapper clapping in a g. Pr. 41 — the little g. beyond -E. A. 19 I climb'd to the top of the g. E. A. 119 ' GASH thyself, priest, and honour thy brute E. A. 84 Thou wilt not g. thy flesh for him E. A. 85 GAS-LIGHT. The g. wavers dimmer Poems 340 GASP. — cheating the sick of a few last gasps Ala. 6 GASPING to Sir Lavaine, ' draw the lance- /. K. 174 GATE. Thro' the open gates ot the city afar Pms 48 — and look in at the g. Poems 61 The lion on your old stone gates Poems 127 Are there no beggars at your g. Poe??is 129 From Mizpeh's tower'd g. with welcome light Pms 158 The wicket-g. , and found her standing there Pms 211 — day by day he pass'd his father's g. Poems 216 The griffin-guarded gates, and pass'd thro' all Pms 221 Battering the gates of heaven with storms of Pms 236 Once more the g. behind me falls Poems 245 Her mother trundled to the g. Poems 249 Every g. is throng'd with suitors Poems 276 Saw distant gates of Eden gleam Poems 299 — ta'en my fiddle to the g. Poems 326 And deepens on and up ! the gates Poems 332 — drops at Glory's temple-gates Poems 351 — beneath the g. she turns Poe?ns 359 A youth came riding toward a palace-g. Poems 366 The music touch'd the gates and died Poetns 367 — cold vapour touch'd the palace-g. Poems 368 A light wind blew from the gates of the sun Pms 379 — sallying thro' the g. Pr. 3 — a blast of trumpets from the g. Pr. 3 How saw you not the inscription on the g. Pr. 39 For warning : bury me beside the g. Pr. 40 I urged the fierce inscription on the g. Pr. 61 And paint the gates of Hell with Paradise Pr. 81 Spread out at top, and grimly spiked the gates Pr. 85 — with grim laughter thrust us out at gates Pr. 103 Here, push them out at gates ' Pr. 103 Came sallying thro' the gates, and caught his Pr. 124 He thrice had sent a herald to the gates Pr. 124 — so thro' those dark gates across the wild Pr. 176 But that there rose a shout : the gates were Pr. 179 In circle round the blessed g. In AI. 119 They can but listen at the gates hi AI. 138 And my pulses closed theirgates with a shock Ala. 3 And stood by her garden-g. Ala. 49 Upon Maud's own garden-g. Ma. 50 The gates of Heaven are closed, and she is Ala. 59 I am here at the g. alone Ma. 76 From the passion-flower at the g. Ala. 80 When her brother ran in his rage to the g. Ala. 85 —push'd at Philip's garden-g. The g. Ala. 121 And then descending met them at the gates /. K. 44 Their heads should moulder on the city gates /. K. 124 Then made a sudden step to the g. and there /. K. i6j To Camelot, and before the city-gates /. K. 188 Left them, and under the strange, statued g. /. K. 188 And past beneath the wildly -sculptured gates/. K. 191 With one small g. that open'd on the waste E. A. 40 Crept to the g., and open'd it, and closed E. A. 42 — from his walls and wing'd his entry-gates E. A. 52 Stands at thy g. for thee to grovel to E. A. 85 But nevermore did either pass the g. E. A. 93 —and stood by the road at the g. E. A. 119 —there past by the g. of the farm E. A. 119 Burst the gates and burn the palaces E. A. 172 GATEWAY. — at the gateways of the day Poems 281 The g. : there she found her palfrey trapt Poems 287 Or in the gateways of the morn Poems 297 Till a g. she discerns Poems 359 Who 'lights and rings the g. bell In AI. 10 Right in the g. of the bandit hold /. K. 87 147 GATEWAY Page GATEWAY, —like a cloud above the g. I. K. 124 Thither lie made and wound the %. horn A K. 156 ■ Paused in the g., standing by the shield A K. 167 GATHER, —words did g. thunder as they ran Pms 40 But I must g. knots of Mowers Poems 131 To g. and tell o'er Poems 161 Where faction seldom gathers head Poems 175 Rise in the heart, and g. to the eyes Pr. 76 To g. light, and she that was, became Pr. 158 But as he grows he gathers much hi M. 67 And g. dust and chaff, and call In M. 79 Shall g. in the cycled times hi M. 119 That g. in the waning woods hi M. 121 Unloved, that beech will g. brown hi M. 153 Should licensed boldness g. force hi M. 175 ' I sit and g. honey ; yet, methinks A AT. 124 Sigh'd, and began to g. heart again I. K. 244 GATHER'D. From beneath her g. wimple Poems 5 A cloud that g. shape Poems 99 Self-g. in her 'prophet-mind Poems 177 When I am g. to the glorious saints Poems 243 Have suck'd and g. into one Poems 253 Whose wrinkles g. on his face Poems 304 Grave faces g. in a ring Poems 314 Till they be g. up Poems 346 The topmost elmtree g. green Poems 362 Easily g. either guilt AV. 86 G. together : from the illumined hall Pr. 99 G. by night and peace, with each light air Pr. 119 — such as g. colour day by day Pr. 163 With g. power, yet the same hi M. 49 Abide : thy wealth is g. in hi M. 74 He fought his doubts and g. strength hi M. 143 The maidens g. strength and grace In M. 158 He has g. the bones for his o'ergrown whelp Ma. 105 And this she g. from the people's eyes A AT". 4 That g. trickling dropwise from the cleft A K. 107 When burr and bine were g. E. A. 57 G. the blossom that rebloom'd E. A. 58 GATHERING. — mighty moon was g. light Poems 52 Like Proserpine in Enna, g. flowers' Poems 234 G. up from all the lower ground Poems 366 So much the g. darkness charm'd Pr. 182 And g. freshlier overhead In M. 142 G. woodland lilies Ma. 43 A g. of the Tory Ma. 73 But Vivien, g. somewhat of his mood I. K. 137 Fails in mid air, but g. at the base A K. 256 — darken with the g. wolf E. A. 90 — tho' the g. enemy narrow thee E. A. 171 GAUDY. Showing a g. summer-morn Poems 115 GAUDY-DAY. Amends hereafter by some g. A A". 44 GAUNT. (The g. old Baron with his beetle Pr. 41 G. as it were the skeleton of himself I. K. 187, 189 GAUNTLET. In iron gauntlets : break Pr. 19 GAUZE. — his wings : like g. they grew Poems 289 Purple gauzes, golden hazes, liquid mazes Poems 367 Half-lapt in glowing g. and golden brede Pr. 143 GAVE. God g. her peace : her land reposed Pms vi. I g. you, Alice, on the day Poems 92 — sharp look, mother, I g. him yesterday Poems 131 Laden with flower and fruit, whereof they g. Pms 143 Because the kiss he g. me, ere I fell Poems 160 And g. you on your natal day Poems 164 He g. me a friend, and a true true-love Poems 168 ' Hast thou perform'd my mission which I g. Pms 193 This, yielding, g. into a grassy walk Poems 207 Kissing the rose she g. me o'er and o'er Poems 209 — The trance g. way Poems 260 G. utterance by the yearning of an eye Poems 260 She g. him mind, the lordliest Poems 290 He g. the people of his best Poems 351 His worst he kept, his best he g. Poems 351 G. his broad lawns until the set of sun Pr. 1 Thro' one wide chasm of time and frost they g. Pr. 6 Yet, being an easy man, g. it : and there Pr. 23 We rustled ; him we g. a costly bribe Pr. 25 Full-blown, before us into rooms which g. Pr. 27 I g. the letter to be sent with dawn Pr. 28 Rapt to the horrible fall : a glance I g. Pr. 83 Kneeling, Ig. it, which she caught, and dash'd/V. 99 Who g. me back my child ? ' 'Be comforted ' Pr. 112 Let so much out as g. us leave to go Pr. 119 G. way before him : only Florian Pr. 134 Was it for this we g. our palace up Pr. 149 Straight to the doors: to them the doors g. way Pr. 154 Refuse her proffer, lastly g. his hand Pr. 154 So pray'd the men, the women : I g. assent Pr. 177 148 GAZE Page GAVE. The Danube to the Severn g. hi M. 32 And g. all ripeness to the grain hi M. 112 Received and g. him welcome there hi M. 119 With him to whom her hand I g. hi M. 207 He fiercely g. me the lie Ma. 86 By the home that g. me birth Ma. 95 He g. them line ; and five days after that Ma. 125 — g. the trinkets and the rings Ma. 132 — g. my letters back to me Ma. 132 I pluck'd a daisy, I g. it you Ma. 158 Then the good king g. orders to let blow I. A". 9 And g. command that all which once was ours I. K. 37 In Devon ? ' he but g. a wrathful groan A K. t-j ' O cousin, slay not him who g. you life ' /. K. 87 He g. me, meaning to be rid of it A A'. 91 And knew no more, nor g. me one poor word A K. 107 Increasing g. me use. Lo, there my boon ! A K. 119 Use g. me Fame at first, and Fame again A K. 119 His brother's ; which he g. to Lancelot A A". l6jt Draw' — and Lavaine drew, and that other g. A A". 1^ And g., the diamond; then from where he sat/. A'. 176 And slightly kiss'd the hand to which he g. A A". 1^3 I g. the diamond : she will render it I. K. 184 Stript off the case, and g. the naked shield I. K. 198 Then g. a languid hand to each, and lay I. K. 201 I swear by truth and knighthood that I g. I. K. 215 — and he g. them charge about the Queen I. A". 255 A tiny curl and g. it E. A. 13 Than what she g. in buying E. A.. 15 At Annie's door he paused, and g. his hand E. A. 25 Pitying the lonely man, and g. him it E. A. 36 — clothes they g. him, and free passage home E. A. 36 — at which the woman g. E. A. 46 This hair is his : she cut it off and g. it E. A. 49 But scared with threats of jail and halter g. E. A. 78 G. Edith, redden'd with no bandit's blood E. A. 82 — g. the verse ' Behold E. A. 83 — and he g. the ringers a crown E. A. 121 She that g. you 's bought and sold E. A. 162 She g. you me, and said E. A. 163 GAWAIN. He must not pass uncared for. G. I. A". 175 G., surnamed The Courteous, fair and strong I. K. 176 G the while thro' all the region round I. K. 179 And when the shield was brought, andG. saw A K. 181 • And if / dream'd,' said G., ' that you love A K. 182 G. , who bad a thousand farewells to me A A". 202 But there the fine G. will wonder at me A A". 202 Then came the fine G. and wonder'd at her A K. 213 GAY. A magic web with colours g. Poems 66 A pensive pair, and you were g. Poems 92 Or g., or grave, or sweet, or stern Poems 116 Knots of flowers, and buds and garlands g. Poems 131 — leg and arm with love-knots g. Poems 248 — g. quinquenniads would we reap Poems 323 With many kinsmen g. Poems 343 Many a gallant g. domestic Poems 360 But never a one so g. Poems 379 As g. as any. Lilia, wild with sport Pr. 6 Of classic frieze, with ample awnings g. Pr. 30 And one is glad ; her note is g. In M. 36 To find me g. among the g. In M. 92 When all is g. with lamps, and loud In M. 148 Like things of the season g. Ma. 15 Where if I cannot be g. Ma. 21 A passionate ballad gallant and g. Ma. 23 Strange, that I felt so g. Ma. 71 With whom she has heart to be g. Ma. 77 Weeping for some g. knight in Arthur's hall ' A K. 7 And seeing one so g. in purple silks A K. 15 And like a crag was g. with wilding flowers A K. 17 And the g. court, and fell asleep again A K. 35 Clothed with my gift, and g. among theg.' A K. 40 Of that good mother making Enid g. A K. 40 And all that week was old Caerleon g. A K. 45 How g., how suited to the house of one A K. 82 Lest the g. navy there should splinter E. A. 103 That look so golden-g. E. A. 160 That art so golden-g. E. A. 161 You still are golden-g. E. A. 162 GAYER. In colours g. than the morning mist Pr. 51 My fate or fault, omitting g. youth A K. 142 Took g. colours like an opal warm'd A K. 143 GAY-FURR'D. — g. cats a painted fantasy Pr. 64 GAZE. Ever retiring thou dost g. Poems 30 Ev'n w hile we g. on it Poems 82 So that she thought, ' And who shall g. upon Pms 114 Than that earth should stand at g. Poems 283 He gazes on the silent dead Poems 317 GAZE Page GAZE. Evermore she seems to or. Poems 359 — as one that climbs a peak to g. Pr. 159 All other, when her ardent g. hi M. 51 That I, who g. with temperate eyes In M. 174 Sigh fully, or all-silent g. upon him /. A". 103 But who can g. upon the Sun in heaven? /. A". 153 GAZED on the Persian girl alone Poems 24 Two godlike faces g. below Poems 119 — He g. so long Poems 193 — long we g., but satiated at length Pr. 6 I g. On a sudden my strange seizure came Pr. 64 Before man was. She g. awhile and said Pr. 70 We g. upon her, came a little stir Pr. 94 Clomb to the roofs, and g. alone for hours Pr. 159 Where first we g. upon the sky In M. 155 And kept her off and g. upon her face I. K. 28 Had g. upon her blankly and gone by /. K. 102 I never g. upon it but I dreamt I. K. 120 G. at the heaving shoulder, and the face I. K. 140 And, while he g. wonderingly at her, came /. K. 179 — Averill went and g. upon his death E. A. 82 GAZER. With lifted hand the g. in the street Ma. 139 GAZEST. When thou g. at the skies ? Poems 35 GAZING where the lilies blow Poems 65 G. on thee for evermore Poe?ns 81 — G., I seem to see Poems 81 Of Passion g. upon thee Poems 83 If g. on divinity disrobed Poems 104 — eyes grown dim with g. on the pilot-stars Poems 147 From her isle-altar g. down Poems 177 In g. up an Alpine height Poems 306 They stood, so rapt, we g., came a voice Pr. 45 Then murmur'd Florian g. after her Pr. 59 All open-mouth'd, all g. to the light Pr. 99 — ida spoke not, g. on the ground Pr. 148 Expunge the world : so fared she g. there Pr. 159 And g. on thee, sullen tree In M. 2 And sadly g. on her bridle-reins I. K. 71 — a seaward-g. mountain-gorge E. A. 31 Sat often in the seaward-g. gorge E. A. 32 There he sat down g on all below E. A. 39 His g. in on Annie, his resolve E. A. 47 GtLAR. — sent mine host to purchase female g. Pr. 25 GEESE. — long-neck'd g. of the world Ma. 21 He praised his hens, his g., his guinea-hens Ma. 124 GEM. In hollow'd moons of gems Poems 120 — I closed mine eyelids, lest the gems Pms 196 Airing a snowy hand, and signet g. Pr. 21 — rainbow robes, and gems and gemlike eyes Pr. 99 Feet like sunn}' gems on an English green Ma. 24 How like a g., beneath, the city Ma. 153 In crimsons and in purples and in gems /. AT. 1 Was wont to glance and sparkle like a g. /. K. 61 — where it clung : so thickly shone the gems /. K. 82 Thereafter, when a king, he had the gems I. K. 150 Received at once and laid aside the gems /. A". 210 GEMINI. — starry G. hang like glorious crowns Ma. in GEM-LIKE. Rose g. up before the dusky Pr. 5 — rainbow robes, and gems and g. eyes Pr. 99 Luminous, g., ghostlike, deathlike Ma. 14 And close beneath, a meadow g. chased /. K. 56 GEMM'D. — from a coppice g. with green /. K. 18 GEMMY. The g. bridle glitter'd free Poems 68 Gt-N ERAL. Upon the g. decay of faith Poems 189 The g. foe. More soluble is this knot Pr. 114 Remerging in the g. Soul In M. 69 GENERATION. — mould a g. strong to move Pr. 128 The generations each with each In M. 60 GENEROUS. — having sown some g. seed Poems 296 All brave, and many g., and some chaste /. AT". 136 GENIAL. With peals of g. clamour sent Poems 347 The g. giant, Arac, rolTd himself Pr. 121 A g. warmth and light once more Pr. 151 For me, the g. day, the happy crowd Pr. 181 A great broad-shoulder'd g. Englishman Pr. 181 Of letters, g. table-talk In M. 116 And g. warmth ; and o'er the sky In M. 139 To myriads on the g. earth In M. 149 The g. hour with mask and mime In M. 161 Let all my g. spirits advance I?i M. 208 — seeming-g. venial fault Ma. 166 Fill'd all the g. courses of his blood /. K. 94 Sparkled and shone : so.g. was the hearth E. A. 41 GENIUS. The first-born of thy g. Poems 30 A fairy shield your G. made Poems 164 GENOVESE. The grave severe G. of old Ma. 155 GENTLE. That are cast in g. mould. Poems 171 But g. words are always gain Poems 180 Lean'd on him, faithful, g., good Poems 309 GERAINT 25 GENTLE. A g. sound, an awful light ! And they speak in g. murmur — her g. mind was such — a g. consort made he — of g. satire, kin to charity Settled a g. cloud of melancholy G. as freedom ' — here she kiss'd it So g., so employ'd, should close in love Sleep, g. heavens, before the prow Sleep, g. winds, as he sleeps now As g. ; liberal-minded, great My mother who was so g. and good ? Of her whose g. will has changed my fate To g. Maud in our walk Was it g. to reprove her It is gone : and the heavens fall in a g. rain A horror on him. lest his g. wife Am much too g., have not used my power Sank her sweet head upon her g. breast That tho' her g. presence at the lists And so rode on, nor told his g. wife (His g. charger following him unled) Pray you be g., pray you let me be Dame, to be g. than ungentle with you I thought that he was g., being great The g. wizard cast a shielding arm Some g. maiden's gift ' Death-pale, for lack of g. maiden's aid And all the g. court will welcome me To which the g. sister made reply Know that for this most g. maiden's death Unbound as yet, and g./as I know' Before high God. Ah great and g. lord The g. shower, the smell of dying leaves — g. sickness, gradually — the g. creature shut from all — all the g. attributes GENTLE-HEARTED. The g. wife GENTLEMAN. — Arthur, like a modern g. The first, a g. of broken means ' You have done well and like a g. The grand old name of g. O selfless man and stainless g. GENTLEMEN. — watch'd by silent g. To give three gallant g. to death ' GENTLENESS. — its way with extreme g. Poems By g. than war. 1 want her love Pr. 114 Worth winning : but this firebrand— g. Pr. 115 The g. he seem'd to be In M. 172 Yea, God, I pray you of your g. /. K 83 Subdued me somewhat to that g. /. K. 91 GENTLER. A g. death shall Falsehood die Pms 13 In g. days, your arrow-wounded fawn Pr. 43 We ceased : a g. feeling crept In M. 49 The g.-born the maiden, the more bound /. K. 187 GENTLEWOMAN, —at this reverend g. A virtuous g. deeply wrong'd GENTLEWOMEN. — not one among my g. For see you not my g. here He spoke, and one. among his g. GENTLIER. Music that g. on the spirit lies Pins 144 GENTLY. And g. comes the world to those Pms 171 That all thy motions g. pass In M. 24 And they themselves like creatures g. born /. K. 56 Saying g. ' Annie, when I spoke to you E. A. 25 GEOLOGY. Now hawking at G. and schism Pms 189 GERAINT. — and trembling stars, so loved G. /. A". 1 The brave G., a knight of Arthur's court I. K. 1 Long in their common love rejoiced G. /. K. 2 Not less G. believed it ; and there fell Grateful to Prince G. for service done And day by day she thought to tell G. A sudden sound of hoofs, for Prince G. Indignant to the Queen ; at which G. And Prince G., now thinking that he heard /. K. And thither came G., and underneath ' So,' thought G., 'I have track'd him to his /. AT". Whereat G. fiash'd into sudden spleen 'Thanks, venerable friend,' replied G. ' Whither, fair son '? ' to whom G. replied Then rode G., a little spleenful yet Then rode G. into the castle court So the sweet voice of Enid moved G. So fared it with G., who thought and said Her daughter. In a moment thought G. G., from utter courtesy, forbore But after all had eaten, then G. G. had longing in him evermore From his own lips to have it. I am G. Page Poems 335 Poej/is 360 Poe?ns 360 Poems 360 Pr. 53 Pr. 104 Pr. 147 Pr. 160 In M. 12 InM. 12 In M. 206 Ma. 29 Ma. 59 Ma. 65 Ma. 71 Ma. 87 I.K. 2 /. K. I.K. I.K. 42 I.K. 72 I.K. 76 I.K. 83 I.K. 83 /- K. 139 /. K 141 /. K. i 7 3 /. K. 187 I. K. 202 /. K. 203 /. K 214 I. K. 219 /. K. 258 E.A. 34 E.A. 45 E. A. 80 E. A. 89 E. A. 97 Poems 201 Pr. 18 Pr. 102 In M. 173 /. K. 135 Poems 348 Pr. 46 Pr. I. K. 141 /. K. 78 I.K. 82 I.K. 82 /. K. 2 I.K 2 I.K. 4 I.K. 9 I.K. 11 I.K. 13 I.K. 13 I.K. 14 I.K. 15 I.K. 16 I.K. 16 I.K. 16 I.K. 17 I.K. 1 3 I.K. 19 I.K. 20 I.K. 21 I. K. 22 I.K. 22 I.K. 22 GERAINT Page GERAINT. G. a name far-sounded among / K. 23 And rusty, old and rusty, Prince G. /. K. 26 Well said, true heart,' replied G., ' but arms /. K. 26 To whom G. with eyes all bright replied /. K. 27 And waited there for Yniol and G. /. K. 29 And thither came the twain, and when G. /. K. 29 Increased Geraint's, who heaved his blade /. K. 31 ' Then, Edyrn, son of Nudd,' replied G. /. K. 31 No later than last eve to Prince G. /. K. 32 She look'd on ere the coming of G. /. K. 33 But while the women thus rejoiced, G. /. K. 40 More than G. to greet her thus attired /. K. 41 So fared it with G., who issuing forth /. K. 46 And at the midmost charging Prince G. /. K. 50 — at the helm, his lance err'd ; but Geraint's /. K. 54 Thereon G., dismounting, pick'd the lance /. K. 55 Bare victual for the mowers ; and G. /. K. 56 To close with her lord's pleasure ; but G. /. K. 57 Then said G., ' I wish no better fare /. K. 58 Greeted G. full face, but stealthily /. K. 60 Then cried G. for wine and goodly cheer /. K. 60 Her suitor in old years before G. /. K. 60 But Enid lefc alone with Prince G. /. K. 65 And G. look'd and was not satisfied /. K. 68 It wellnigh made her cheerful ; till G. /. K. 69 Dash'd on G., who closed with him /. K. 70 Then like a stormy sunlight smiled G. /. K. 71 So fared it with G., who being prick'd /. K. 72 This heard G., and grasping at his sword /. K. 84 Glad also ; then G. upon the horse /. K. 86 ' My lord G. I greet you with all love I. K. 87 Then when G. was whole again, they past /. K. 95 But while G. lay healing of his hurt /. K. 95 And tho' G. could never take again /. K. 96 The cry of children, Enids and Geraints /. K. 96 And after Lancelot, Tristram, and G. /. K. 176 GERM. A baby-g. , to when Poems 248 And in it is the g. of all Poems 326 GERMANDER, —that her clear g. eye E. A. 96 GET. — third time may prosper, g. thee hence Pms 196 The lark could scarce g. out his notes for joy Pms 206 Girl, g. you in.' She went — and in one month P?ns 235 — wanton lapwing gets himself another crest Pms 269 — g. thee to thy rest again Poems 275 ' Arise, and g. thee forth and seek hi M. 122 G. thee hence, nor come again Ma. 98 Where can I g. me harbourage for the night?/. K. 15 To g. her well awake ; and in her hand /. K. 36 ' G. her to speak : she does not speak to me' /. K. 61 — twice, and thrice : now g. you hence to bed /. K. 167 I charge you that you g. at once to horse /. K. 175 Nay, I mean nothing : so then g. you gone /. K. 187 Lancelot, g. thee hence to thine own land /. K. 229 ' O Lancelot, if thou love me g. thee hence ' /. K. 230 — when the Queen had added ' g. thee hence ' /. K, 244 — g. you a seaman's glass E. A. 12 The boy might g. a notion into him E. A. 65 G. me my glasses, Annie E. A. 127 GEWGAW. Seeing his g. castle shine Ma. 37 GHASTLIEST. — dearest faith, our g. doubt In M. 192 GHASTLY. — and there rain'd a g. dew Poems 278 And g. thro' the drizzling rain In M. 9 — in the g. pit long since a body was found Ma. 2 Walk'd in a wintry wind by a g. glimmer Ma. 14 The g. Wraith of one that I know Ala. 86 A marvellous great shriek and g. groan /. K. 174 A g. something, and its shadow flew /. K. "2-29 They cling together in the g. sack E. A. 90 GHOST. He thought I was a g., mother Poems 131 — we should come like ghosts to trouble joy Poems 147 — haunted with a jolly g, that shook Poems 226 —flitting ! ' 'Yes, we're flitting,' says the g. Poems 226 For by the warning of the Holy G. Poems 244 Old wishes, ghosts of broken plans Poems 340 1 seem'd to move among a world of ghosts Pr. 16, 103 — doing battle with forgotten ghosts Pr. 131 —droops the milk-white peacock like a g. Pr. 167 And like a g. she glimmers on to me Pr. 167 —in the dark church like a g. In M. 93 O solemn g., O crowned soul hi M. 119 My G. may feel that thine is near In M. 137 Spirit to Spirit, G. to G. hi M. 137 Like a glorious g., to glide Ma. 50 A disease, a hard mechanic g. Ma. 90 To be the g. of one who bore your name Ma. 129 — sunders ghosts and shadow-casting men I. K. 126 Then like a g. she lifted up her face /. K. 194 —like a g. without the power to speak /. K. 195 Monotonous and hollow like a Ghost's /. K. 247 150 GILDED Page GHOST. A g. of passion that no smiles Select. 197 GHOSTLIKE. — gemlike, g, deathlike Ma. 14 In either twilight g. to and fro /. K. 191 Before her, moving g. to his doom /. K. 256 GHOSTLY. An echo like a g. woodpecker Pr. 12 No g. hauntings like his Highness. I Pr. 50 — sudden g. shadowings * Pr. 104 Cloud-towers by g. masons wrought hi M. 97 Then if the maiden, while that g. grace /. K. 193 So when the g. man had come and gone /. K. 204 Sweet father and bid call the g. man /. K. 204 Or g. footfall echoing on the stair I. K. 251 —blown across her g. wall E. A. 36 GIANT. About my ' g. bole ' Poems 250 Of giants living, each, a thousand years Pr. 68 — those three stars of the airy Giant's zone Pr. 120 The genial g., Arac, roll'd himself Pr. 121 From Arac's arm, as from a giant's flail Pr. 132 The g. labouring in his youth In M 183 — I stood on a g. deck and mix'd my breath Ma. 113 — God's just wrath shall be wreak'd on a g. liar Ma. 114 —tho' the G. Ages heave the hill Ma. 151 The g. windows' blazon'd fires Ma. 157 The g. tower, from whose high crest, they /. K. 44 The g. answer'd merrily, ' Yea, but one ? /. K. 52 Furrowing a g. oak, and javelining /. K. 142 Who seem'd the phantom of a G. in it /. K. 256 — near the lig'ht a g. woman sat E. A. 101 GIANT-FACTORIED. Droopt intheg. E. A. 96 GIBE. With solemn g. did Eustace banter vn&Pms 209 GIDDIEST. Ran into its g. whirl of sound Poe?ns 367 GIDDILY. — yester-even, suddenly g. E. A. 170 GIDDY. Valuing the g. pleasure of the eyes Poems 195 GIED. — toithe were due, an I g. it in hond E. A. 129 GIFT. God's great g. of speech abused Poems 51 Love the g. is Love the debt Poems 93 * I woo thee not with gifts Poejns 104 A sinful soul possess'd of many gifts Poems 111 With interchange of g. Poems 118 — ' we knew your g. that way Poems 190 The holy Elders with the g. of myrrh Poems 199 Requiring at her hand the greatest g. Poems 211 — the spare chance-g. of those that came Poe??is 239 — yet it was a graceful g. Poejns 255 The grim Earl's g.: but ever at a breath Poems 286 He owns the fatal g. of eyes Poems 302 — they saw the king : he took the gifts Pr. 17 —jewels, gifts to fetch her : these brought Pr. 17 Gives her harsh groom for briclal-g. a scourge Pr. 126 With gifts of grace, that might express In M. 120 Ah, take the imperfect g. I bring In M. 124 She keeps the gift of years before hi M. 146 My gifts, when gifts of mine could please Ma. 132 — branch'dand Hower'd with gold, a costly g. /. K. 34 —own good g. !' 'Yea surely,' said the dame/. K. 37 — answer'd, ' Yea I know it ; your good g. /. K. 37 Clothed with my g., and gay among the gay' /. K. 40 Laid from her limbs the costly broider'd g. /. K. 41 — your fair child shall wear your costly g. /. K. 44 Who knows ? another g. of the high God /. A". 44 ' I take it as free g., then,' said the boy /. K. 57 A seven months' babe had been a truer g. /. K. 130 Some gentle maiden's g.' /. K. 178 That she should ask some goodly g. of him / K. 194 The price of half a realm, his costly g. /. K. 208 To loyal hearts the value of all gifts /. K. 210 Being your g., had you not lost your own /. K. 210 I guard as God's high g. from scathe and /. K. 251 Gifts by the children E. A. 19 His oriental gifts on every one E. A. 62 Among the gifts he left her E. A. 62 ' Were I to give this g. of his to one E. A. 63 ' A gracious g. to give a lady E. A. 63 ' Take it,' she added sweetly, 'tho' his g. E. A. 64 Nor deeds of g., but gifts of grace E. A. 106 — Let me go : take back thy g. E. A. 140 — Gods themselves cannot recall their gifts' E. A. 142 GIFTED. As some divinely g. man In M. 89 God-g. organ-voice of England E. A. 174 GIGANTESQUE. The sort of mock-heroic g. Pr. 177 GILD. — the gold that gilds the straiten'd Poems 273 And gilds the driving hail Poems 335 With all fair theories only made to g. Pr. 41 GILDED. — round the roofs a g. gallery Poems 113 Near g. organ-pipes, her hair Poems 116 — turrets lichen-gilded like a rock Poems 23.0 The parrot in his g. wires Poems 313 Or steep-up spout whereon the g. ball Pr. 4 Fly to her, and fall upon her g. eaves Pr. 79 GILDED Page GILDED. — with laughter, roll*d the g. Squire Pr. 108 At seasons thro' the g. pale In M. 172 Sweet nature g. by the gracious gleam /. A", vii. Of sunny-plume in g. trellis-work I. K. 35 I will not fight my way with g. arms /. K. 46 — call'd herself a g. summer-fly /. A". 106 Set every g. parapet shuddering /. A'. 163 Two dragons g., sloping down to make I. K. 170 A g. dragon, also, for the babes E. A. 30 — g. dust, our pride E.A. 51 Staring for ever from their g. walls E. A. 94 GILEADITE. —daughter of the warrior G. Pms 158 GILLYFLOWER, —sea of gilly-flowers E. A. 59 GILT. Up thro' g. wires a crafty loving eye Pr. 10 — place will be g.by the touch of a inillionnaire Ma. 9 Foot-g. with all the blossom-dust of those I. A". 108 GILT-HEAD. — court-Galen poised his g. cane Pr. 16 GIN I mun doy, I mun doy E. A. 136 GIPSY. Or the frock and g. bonnet Ma. 72 GIRD, —minds did g. their orbs with beams Pms 39 Uncared for, g. the windy grove In M. 153 Ear liever had I g. his harness on him I. K. 6 GIRDLE. And 1 would be the g. Poeins 92 Would twist his g. tight, and pat Poems 247 GIRDLED. — houses, g. with the gleaming Poems 148 Than thus man-g. here : indeed I think Pr. 129 — g. her with music. Happy he Pr. 174 GIRL. Gazed on the Persian g. alone Poems 24 — the red cloaks of market girls Or teach the orphan-g. to sew — the girls all kiss'd Either from lust of gold, or like a g. — niece, and said, ' My g., I love you well Poems 215 G., get you in.' She went — and in one month Pins 235 The girls upon the cheek Poems 247 This g., for whom your heart is sick Poems 248 For azure views : and there a group of girls Pr. 4 In wassail ; often, like as many girls Pr. 11 With lengths of yellow ringlets, like a g. Pr. —our aims : work out your freedom. Girls Pr. — girls, like men ! why, if the}' had been men Pr. Girls? — more like men ! ' and at these words Pr. To nurse a blind ideal like a g. Methinks he seems no better than a g. As girls were once, as we ourself have been — children die, and let me tell you, g. G. after g. was call'd to trial — myself were like enough, O girls The child is hers : and they will beat my g. With our strange g. : and yet they say that still/'?'. 113 My father, ' Tut, you know them net", the girls Pr. 114 Let our girls flit Pr. 154 — ill counsel had misled the g. Pr. 170 To vex true hearts : yet was she but a g. Pr. 170 ' So fret not, like an idle g. In M. 74 Like some poor g. whose heart is set I play'd with the g. when a child Well, if it prove a g., the boy — soften as if to a g., and hold — save from some slight shame one simple g. gueen rose of the rosebud garden of girls alf-disarray'd as to her rest, the g. — all in charge of whom ? a g. : set on ' For you shall share my earldom with me, g. I. K 1 G., for I see you scorn my courtesies I. K. But Philip loved in silence ; and the g. E. A. On that one g. E. A. For I'll be back, my g., before you know it'/:. A. Heard and not heard him ; as the village g. E. A. ' Annie, my g., cheer up, be comforted E. A. — let me put the boy and g. to school — Philip put the boy and g. to school — o'er her second father stoopt a g. — no father's kiss for me — the g. — with Leolin at her side the g. — would it be more gracious,' ask'd theg. The g. might be entangled ere she knew The g. and boy, Sir, know their differences £. A — twenty boys and girls should marry on it E. A Save Christ as we believe him — found the g. E. A Born of a village g., carpenter's son E. A. «5 — a lad may wink and a g. may hint E. A. 161 GIRL-GRADUATES in their golden hair Pr. 8 GIRT. — up as in a crumbling tomb, g. round Pms 124 The land, where g. with friends or foes Poeins 175 Tho' sitting g. with doubtful light Poems 179 That g. th£ region with high cliff and lawn P??is 368 Came g. with knights : then turn'd the I. A'. 213 —first since Enoch's golden ring had g. E. A. 9 Poems 67 Poems 129 Poems 189 Poems 195 15 34 56 56 Pr. 65 Pr. 65 Pr. 66 Pr. 67 Pr. 86 Pr. 100 Pr. in In M. Ma. 9 Ma. 31 Ma. 37 Ma. 61 Ma. 79 I.K. 28 /. K. 52 E.A. E.A. E.A. E.A. E.A. E.A. E. GIVE GIRT. G. by half the tribes of Britain GIRTH. Alas, I was so broad of g. Of spanless g. , that lays on every side GIT ma my yaale, for I beiint a-gooin' — at 'soize — but git ma my yaale G. ma my yaale, I tell tha GIVE. Could g. the warrior kings of old Complaining, ' Mother, g. me grace Yet fill my glass : g. me one kiss O would she g. me vow for vow ' G. it to Pallas ! ' but he heard me not G. us long rest or death, dark death Failing to g. the bitter of the sweet God gives us love Page E. A. 109 Poe?ns 251 Pr. 138 E. A. 128 E. A. 132 E. A. 136 Poems v. Poems 74 Poems 86 Poems 90 Poems 104 Poems 146 Poems 162 Poems 171 What should one g. to light on such a dream Ptns 232 I ask'd him half-sardonically. ' G. ? Poems 232 G. all thou art,' he answer'd and a light Poems 232 — like the daughters of the horseleech, ' G. Poems 262 And in the rights that name may g. Poetns 324 To g. his cousin, Lady Clare Poems 354 ' Yet g. one kiss to your mother dear Poems 356 Little can I g. my wife Poems 358 To g. us breathing-space ' Pr. 13 —here I g. the story and the songs Pr. 14 In some sort, I can g. you letters to her Pr. 23 * We g. you welcome : not without redound Pr. 31 To see you Florian. / g. thee to death Pr. 45 To g. three gallant gentlemen to death ' Pr. 46 From him to me ? we g. you, being strange Pr. 65 If we could g. them surer, quicker proof Pr. 69 — gives the manners of your country-women Pr. 82 Render him up unscathed : g. him your hand Pr. 95 — gives the battle to his hands Pr. 105 You love her. G. us, then, your mind at large Pr. 113 Gives her harsh groom for bridal-gift a scourge Pr. 126 It is not yours, but mine : g. me the child ' Pr. 143 G. her the child ! O if, I say, you keep Pr. 145 What would you more ? g. her the child ! Pr. 145 G. we it : / will g. it her ' Pr. 146 G. her the child ! or if you scorn to lay it Pr. 146 Ask me no more : what answer should I g. ? Pr. 157 To g. or keep, to live and learn and be Pr. X72 The men required that I should g. throughout Pr. 177 So closed our tale, of which I g. you all Pr. 177 — to g. the story as it rose Pr. 178 Yet in the go-cart. Patience ! G. it time Pr. 181 G. up their parks some dozen times a year Pr. 182 No joy the blowing season gives hi M. 59 Gives out at times (he knows not whence) In M. 66 — dare we to this fancy g. In M. 75 Hath power to g. thee as thou wert ? In M. 103 — meets the year, and gives and takes In M. 181 Some bitter notes my harp would g. In M. 194 And I must g. away the bride In M. 206 To g. him the grasp of fellowship Ma. 47 — for sullen-seeming Death may g. Ma. 6x Our ponderous Squire will g. ' Ma. 72 Could g. it a clumsy name Ma. 88 O g. him welcome, this is he Ma. 142 Who g. the Fiend himself his due Ma. 161 — one lay-hearth would g. you welcome Ma. 162 Take him to stall, and g. him corn, and I. K. 20 Thou shalt g. back their earldom to thy kin I. K. 31 Albeit I g. no reason but my wish I. K. 41 Then not to g. you warning, that seems hard/. K. 68 I.K. 69 I.K. 90 /. K. 112 /. K. 119 /. K. 153 /. K 183 3 g. him warning, for he rode t his foot upon me, and g. me life — since I will not yield to g. you power Because I wish'd to g. them greater minds But father g. me leave, an if he will For if you love, it will be sweet to g. it — with mine own hand g. his diamond to him /. K. 186 Being our greatest : yea, and you must g. it /. K. 187 G. me good fortune, I will strike him dead /. K. 203 Audience of Guinevere, to g. at last /. K. 208 — g. his child a better bringing-up E. A. 5 — g. his babes a better bringing-up E. A. 17 G. her a month E. A . 26 A little longer ! aid me, g. me strength E. A. 43 Take, g. her this, for it may comfort her E. A. 49 ' A gracious gift to g. a lady, this ! ' E. A. 63 * Were I to g. this gift of his to one E. A. 63 G. me my fling, and let me say my say ' E. A. 71 G. me your prayers E. A. 90 — thot a weiint niver g. it to Joiines E. A. 135 I ask'd thee, ' G. me nnmortality ' E. A. 140 — wealthy men who care not how they g. E. A. 140 If you will g. me one, but one E.A. 160 And gives the battle to his hands Select. 207 J 5i GIVEN Page GIVEN. — reconcilement, pledges g. Poems 212 I found him garrulously g. Poems 246 Achieving calm, to whom was g. Poems 299 A maiden knight — to me is g. Poems 335 A man had g. all other bliss Poems 363 (His father's fault) but g. to starts and bursts Pr. 18 ' Had g. us letters, was he bound to speak? Pr. 24 We twain, with mutual pardon ask'd and g. Pr. 109 G. back to life, to life indeed, thro' thee Pr. 175 Is g. in outline and no more In M. 5 Or has the shock, so harshly g. In M. 26 — doubtless, unto thee is g. I?i M. 61 His who had g. me life— O father ! O God ! Ma. 2 Had g. her word to a thing so low Ma. 54 — g. false death her hand Ma. 62 For the prophecy g. of old Ma. 104 A creature wholly g. to brawls and wine /. K. 24 Woke and bethought her of her promise g. /. K. 32 He would not leave her, till her promise g. /. K. 33 Of her good mother g. her on the night /. K. 34 * And gladly g. again this happy morn /. K. 37 (No reason g. her) she could cast aside /. K. 43 Debating his command of silence g. /. K. 65 Then breaking his command of silence g. /. K. 66 O no more thanks than might a goat have g. I. K. 107 He promised more than ever king has g. /. K. 124 Will deem this prize of ours is rashly g. /. K. 175 ' Sweet is true love tho' g. in vain, in vain /. K. 199 — if I do not there is penance g. /. K. 235 — with a month's leave g. them E. A. 96 — then before thine answer g. E. A. 141 Has g. all my faith a turn ? E. A. 163 GIVER. Render thanks to the G. Ma. 140 Must vary as the giver's. Not for me ! /. K. 210 GIVING. A love still burning upward, g. Poems 7 Of orient green, g. safe pledge of fruits Poems 27 — graced the g. — such a noise of life Poems 209 — part it, g. half to him In M. 42 G. you power upon me thro' this chaim /. K. 120 GLACIER. — some cold morning g. : frail at Pr. 163 GLAD. Sometimes a troop of damsels g. Poems 67 So full of summer warmth, so g. Poems 85 —happiest time of all the g. New-year Poems 130, 133 — see the sun rise upon the g. New-year Pins 134, 137 Among the wheat : that when his heart is g. Pms 216 Dipt by itself, and we were g. at heart Poems 224 I'm g. I walk'd. How fresh the meadows Poems 225 You scarce have alter'd : I am sad and g. Pr. 45 And g. to find thyself so fair In M. 7 And one is g. ; her note is gay In M. 36 And g. at heart from May to May In M. 37 Of that g. year which once had been In M. 140 Be g., because his bones are laid by thine Ma. 145 'Yea, my kind lord,' said the g. youth, and /. K. 58 Eat and be g., for I account you mine ? ' IK. 80 She answer'd meekly, ' How should I be g. /. K. 80 G. also ; then Geraint upon the horse /. K. 86 Then were I g. of you as guide and friend /. K. 159 While the wine ran : so g. were spirits and /. K. 239 ' Were they so g. ? ill prophets were they all /. K. 239 Or what seem'd gold : and I was g. at first E. A. 103 GLADDEN. — the shepherd gladdens E. A. 177 GLADDER. Put forth and feel a g. clime ' Select. 220 GLADE. With breezes from our oaken glades Pms 78 His wonted glebe, or lops the glades In M. 154 By ups and downs, thro' many a grassy g. /. K. 13 — glades high up like ways to Heaven E. A. 32 GLADLIER. — no g. does the stranded wreck E. A. 45 GLADLY. ' And g. given again this happy /. K. 37 Then will I bear it g. ; ' she replied /. K. 205 GLADNESS. I grew in g. till I found Poems 352 Makes former g. loom so great ? In M. 41 Of g., with an awful sense In M. 48 A solemn g. even crown'd In M. 50 Borne down by g. so complete In M. 51 Neigh'd with all g. as they came, and stoop'd I. K. 86 — a cloudy g. lighten'd Select. 38 GLAMOUR. Whom Gwydion made by g. /. K. 40 GLANCE. Roof not a g. so keen as thine Poems 13 Sudden glances, sweet and strange Poems 15 O'erflows thy calmer glances Poems 16 With a half-g. upon the sky Poems 36 Every turn and g. of thine Poems 80 In crystal eddies g. and poise Poems 87 — in the flowery dale 'ill merrily g. and play Poems 132 Struck by all passion, did fall down and g. Poems 157 — shaping faithful record of the g. Poems 209 Rapt to the horrible fall : a g. I gave Pr. 83 — play'd upon them, made them g. Pr. 120 152 GLASSY Page GLANCE. They made him wild : not less oneg. Pr. 124 Erect and silent, striking with her g. Pr. 144 — sidelong glances at my father's grief Pr. 163 A showery g. upon her aunt, and said Pr. 178 — g. about the approaching sails In M. 21 Let random influences g. In M. 71 In g. and smile, and clasp and kiss In M. 115 — every eye but mine will g. Ma. 73 I slip, I slide, I gloom, I g. Ala. 126 Dared not to g. at her good mother's face /. K. 41 — from the rock, sideways he let them g. /. K. 59 Painted, who stare at open space, not g. /. K. 60 Was wont to g. and sparkle like a gem /. K. 61 To g. behind me at my former life /. K. 91 Of the pure heart, nor seem to g. at thee ? /. K. 251 A piteous g., and vanish'd E. A. 66 — rolling glances lioness-like E. A. 172 GLANCED. — g. athwart the glooming flats Poems 10 The damned arrow g. aside Poems 54 She g. across the plain Poems 252 Aglaia slept. We sat : the Lady g. Pr. 35 G. at the legendary Amazon Pr. 36 G. like a touch of sunshine on the rocks Pr. 73 I g. aside, and saw the palace-front Pr. 133 Till I struck out and shouted : the blade g. Pr. 135 A light of healing, g. about the couch Pr. 160 Nor g. behind her, and I sank and slept Pr. 166 Whereat we g. from theme to theme In M. 131 G. at the doors or gambol'd down the walks /. K. 36 G. first at him, then her, and went his way /. K. 152 But Lancelot, when they g. at Guinevere /. K. 161 G. at, and cried, ' What news from Camelot /. K. 179 — yet he g. not up, nor waved his hand /. K. 198 Her journey done, g. at him, thought him /. K. 246 GLANCING with black-beaded eyes Poems 5 This season : g. thence, discuss'd the farm Poems 222 The white-faced halls, the g. rills In M. 209 To join them, g. like a dragon-fly /. K. 10 — g. all at once as keenly at her /. K. 41 Her heart, and g. round the waste she fear'd /. K. 48 — g. for a minute, till he saw her /. K. 92 Of slander, g. here and grazing there /. K. 102 Down-g. lamed the charger and a spear /. K. 172 Then g. up beheld the holy nuns /. K. 259 — till Philip g. up E. A. 24 The mother g. often toward her babe E. A. 41 GLARE. Fell, and, without, the steady g. Poems 75 Glares at one that nods and winks Poems 279 Glares ruin, and the wild birds on the light Pr. 100 No sun, but a wannish g. Ma. 25 — the broad light glares and beats Ma. 101 Above them.; and in change of g. and gloom /. K. 143 GLARED. — g. upon the women, and aghast Pr. 155 GLARING. In g. sand and inlets bright Poems 73 The old lion, g. with his whelpless eye Pr. 141 Him g., by his own stale devil spurr'd E. A. 66 G., and passionate looks E. A. 108 GLASS. Then looking as 'twere in a g. Poems 36 — yet fill my g. : give me one kiss Poems 86 — fires your narrow casement g. Poems 95 The g. blew in, the fire blew out Poems 186 Love took up the g. of Time Poems 270 Make prisms in every carven g. Poems 314 Go, look in any g., and say Poems 321 whisper to your g., and say Poems 325 1 sit, (my empty g. reversed) Poems 345 It is but yonder empty g. Poems 347 Of water, sheets of summer g. Poems 352 To g. herself in dewy eyes Poems 377 — with whom the bell-mouth'd g. had wrought Pr. 82 — having left the g. she turns In M. 7 Athwart a plane of molten g. In M. 24 That crash'd the g., and beat the floor In M. 127 Arrange the board and brim the g. In M. 165 Dark in the g. of some presageful mood /. K. 108 — get you a seaman's g. E. A. 12 —not fix the g. to suit her eye E. A. 14 Borrow'd a g. ; but all in vain E. A. 14 — there a fleet of g. E. A. 102 — my poor venture but a fleet of g. E. A. 103 The g. with little Margaret's medicine E. A. 103 —came but from the breaking of a g. E. A. 109 GLASS'D in the slippery sand before it breaks?/. K. 108 GLASSES. The garden-g. shone, and Poems 207 Get me my g., Annie E A. 127 GLASSY. With a g. countenance Poems 70 In g. bays among her tallest towers ' , Poems 102 On g. water drove his cheek in lines Pr. 21 With a g. smile his brutal scorn Ma. 28 GLASSY-HEADED Page GLASSY-HEADED. A little g. hairless man /. A'. 125 GLAZED. The staring eye g. o'er with sapless Pms 258 — think not they are g. with wine Poems 272 Neither modell'd, g., or framed Poejns 373 A full sea g. with muffled moonlight, swell Pr. 28 GLEAM. Come to you, gleams of mellow light Pms 164 Would love the gleams of good that broke Poems 183 Gleams that untravell'd world, whose margin Pjjis 266 Dreary gleams about the moorland Poems 268 G. thro' the Gothic archways in the wall Poems 287 Beyond the polar g. forlorn Saw distant gates of Eden g. That touches me with mystic gleams Fair gleams the snowy altar-cloth Thou battenest by the greasy s In the green g. of dewy-tassell'd trees Poems 297 Poems 299 Poems 307 Poems 334 Poems 348 Pr. 20 InM. 59 In M. 1-7 In M. 179 Ma. 121 /. K. vii. /. K. 105 /. K. 147 Poems 90 Ma. 134 /. K. 114 /• K. 154 E. A. 38 E.A. 45 #. A. 148 Poems 71 Poems 88 Poems 1 01 Poems 142 Poems 144 A doubtful g. of solace lives No livelier than the wisp that gleams In yonder greening g. and fly Still makes a hoary ej'ebrowfor the g. Sweet nature gilded by the gracious g. On sallows in the windy gleams of March Might strike it, and awake her with the g. GLEAM'D to the flying moon by fits We parted : sweetly g. the stars So sweetly g. her eyes behind her tears There g. a vague suspicion in his eyes (A bill of sale g. thro' the drizzle) — thro' that dawning g. a kindlier hope — now we lost her, now she g. GLEAMING. A g. shape she floated by A glowing arm, a g. neck — whose g. rind ingrav'n — the g. river seaward flow Of shadowy granite, in a g. pass — golden houses, girdled with the g. world Poejns 148 A g. crag with belts of pines Poems 298 Set in a g. river's crescent curve Pr. 24 Here half-hid in the g. wood Ma. 29 — g. halls of mom E. A. 139 GLEAN. And g. 3 r our scatter 'd sapience ' Pr. 42 GLEANED. Showering thy g. wealth Poems 27 GLEBE. Flood with full daylight g. and town ? Pjjis 293 Nor those horn-handed breakers of the g. Pr. 37 His wonted g. or lops the glades In M. x~x Sons of the g. E.A. 88 GLEE, —the tyrant's cruel g. Poems 371 Again the feast, the speech, the g. hi M. 209 GLEM. — by the white mouth of the violent G. /. K. 162 GLEN. — runlets babbling down the g. Poems 75 The swimming vapour slopes athwart the g. Pms 98 Of this long g. Poems 101 — the fragments tumbled from the glens Poems 106 Or, from the darken'd g. Poejjis 159 That watch me from the g. below Poems 377 — snared the squirrel of the g. ? are 3-ou Pr. 42 Blow, let us hear the purple glens replying Pr. 74 — the glens are drown'd in azure gloom Pr. 101 Follow'd up in valley and g. Ma. 144 — down they fell and made the g. abhorr'd /. K. 149 Had found a g., graj'- boulder and black tarn /. K. 149 GLIDE. To g. a sunbeam by the blasted Pine Pr. 168 — like a glorious ghost, to g. Ma. 50 Thy shadow still would g. from room to room/. K. 251 — -veetly would she g. between your wraths E. A. 87 Where yon broad water sweetly slowly glides E. A . 134 GLIDED. From tone to tone, and g. thro' all Poems 157 Stateliest, for thee \ but mute she g. forth Pr. 166 We g. winding under ranks In M. 13S Then g. out of the joyous wood Ma 85 Charger and palfrey.' So she g. out 1. K. 67 Then rose Elaine and g. thro' the fields I. K. 191 GLIDING, and every day she tended him /. K. 191 GLIMMER. The tearful g. of the languid Poems 153 Across a hazy g. of the west Poejns 211 A third would g. on her neck Poems 254 My college friendships g. Poems 340 G. in tlry rheumy eyes Poems 372 — like a ghost she glimmers on to me Pr. 167 Shall g. on the dewy decks In M. 12 Thy tablet glimmers to the dawn In M. 93 Walk'd in a wintry wind \>y a ghastly g. Ma. 14 — by a red rock, glimmers the Hall Ma. 16 In gloss of satin and g. of pearls Ma. 80 G. awa3'to the lonely deep Ma. 163 — the old mvsterious g. steals E. A. 141 GLIMMER'D. Old faces g. thro' the doors Poems 12 And April's crescent g. cold Poems 89 —taper g. in the lake below Poems 235 GLOOM Page GLIMMER'D. The white kine g., and In M. 139, 141 — g. on his armour in the room /. K. 66 In Arthur's casement g. chastely down /. K. 132 GLIMMERING. Who paced for ever in a g. Pjjis 115 Poems 151 Poems 303 Poems 353 Poe7ns 363 Poems 375 /V. 28 Pr. 77 /V. 107 Pr. 183 A/a. 100 Afo. 128 /. A". 172 /. A'. 231 E. A. 83 P. A. 143 Ranges of g. vaults with iron grates Vast images in g. dawn A g. shoulder under gloom When all the g. moorland rings — on the g. limit far withdrawn To float about a g. night, and watch The casement slowly grows a g. square By g. lanes and walls of canvas, led Disrobed the g. statue of Sir Ralph Came g. thro' the laurels — feels a g. strangeness in his dream Green-g. toward the summit, bears, with all Fled all night long by g. waste and weald For greenish ghmmerings thro' the lancets Upon thy g. thresholds GLIMMERINGLY. —her maidens g. grouped Pr. 84 GLIMPSE. That glimpses, moving up, than Poe?ns 161 For some blind g. of freedom work itself Poems 258 Like glimpses of forgotten dreams Poems 307 Yet glimpses of the true Poejns 341 The shimmering glimpses of a stream ; the Pr. 179 Last year, I caught a g. of his face Ma. 47 He never had a g. of mine untruth I. K. 153 A g. of that dark world E. A. 14.1 GLIMPSING. — g. over these, just seen Poems 315 GLISTEN. O listen, listen, your eyes shall g. Pms 44 Began to g. and to fall : and while Pr. 45 — crossing, oft we saw the g. Ma. 155 GLISTEN D. — g. — here and there alone Poejns 352 His eyes g. : she fancied ' is it for me '1 ' I. K. 190 GLISTENING. The fragrant, g. deeps Poems 19 Were g. to the breezy blue Poems 87 GLITTER like a swarm of fire-flies tangled Poe??is 269 His mantle glitters on the rocks Poems 317 Began to g. firefly-like in copse Pr. 26 — g. burnish'd by the frosty dark Pr. 120 GLITTER'D. The gemmy bridle g. free Poems 68 Large Hesper g. on her tears Poems 77 The long hall g. like a bed of flowers Pr. 51 Or palace, how the citv g. Ma. 1^6 GLITTERING. Gold g. thro' lamplight dim Pjjis 20 I know thy g. face Poejns 243 Draw me, thy bride, a g. star Poejns 332 Fresh as the first beam g. on a sail Pr. 76 To the issue, goes, like g. bergs of ice Pr. 78 The fresh joung captains flash'd their g. teeth Pr. 108 The g. axe was broken in their arms Pr. 139 Thro' g. drops on her sad friend Pr. 151 Then, as the white and g. star of morn /. K. 39 Her eyes and neck g. went and came I. AT. 144 Fled like a g. rivulet to the tarn I. K. 150 Whom g. in enamell'd arms the maid I. K. 179 GLOBE. — about the circles of the globes Poems 40 Thro' the shadow of the g. we sweep PoejJts 283 Thy spirit should fail from off the g. In M, 116 As thro' the slumber of the g. E. A. 145 GLOBED. — stars that g. themselves in Heaven E. A. 33 GLOOM. Flinging the g. of yesternight Poejns 26 That over-vaulted grateful g. Poems 114 Floods all the deep-blue g. with beams divine />?;? s 158 A motion toiling in the g. Poems 181 Reading her perfect features in the g. Poejns 209 There g. the dark broad seas. My mariners Pjjis 266 The g. of ten Decembers Poems 343 A glimmering shoulder under g. Poejns 353 Dropt thro' the ambrosial g. to' where below Pr. 75 Out I sprang from glow to g. Pr. 83 Than female, moving thro' the uncertain g. Pr. 85 — the glens are drown'd in azure g. Pr. 101 To touch thy thousand years of g. In M. 2 Thro' all its intervital g. I?i M. 65 When on the g. I strive to paint In M. cj Recalls, in change of light or g. In M. 121 That rollest from the gorgeous g. In M. 125 — suck'd from out the distant g. In M. 141 — touch'd with no ascetic g. In M. 168 — iron dug from central g. In M. 184 — yearn'd to burst the folded g. In M. 189 With tender g., the roof, the wall Iji M. 210 — face, star-sweet on a g. profound Ma. 13 — laying his trams in a poison'd g. A/a. 36 Set in the heart of the carven g. Ma. 50 — often abroad in the fragrant g. Ma. 67 I slip, I slide, I g., I glance Ma. 126 The height, the space, the g., the glory ! Ma. 157 i;3 GLOOM Page GLOOM. — g. that saddens Heaven and Earth Ma. 159 Commingled with the g. of imminent war /. A", v. Before a g. of stubborn-shafted oaks /. A". 52 So thro' the green g. of the wood they past /. A". 56 That three-days-long presageful g. of yours I. K. no The tree that shone white-listed thro' the g. I. K. 142 Above them ; and in change of glare and~g. /. K. 143 Her fancies with the sallow-rifted glooms I. K. 199 Yet lying thus inactive, doubt and g. E. A. 7 — deeper the g. E. A. 37 To find a deeper in the narrow g. E. A. 94 Droopt in the giant-factoried city-g. E. A. 96 Thy cheek begins to redden thro' the g. E. A. 141 GLOOM'D. — twilight g. : and broader-grown Pr. 159 A black yew g. the stagnant air Ma. 131 That such a mood as that, which lately g. I. K. no G. the low coast and quivering brine E. A. 147 GLOOMING, —glanced athwart the g. flats Poems 10 Lig-ht-g. over eyes divine Poems 15 — the balmy g., crescent-lit Poems 212 From rock to rock upon the g. quay Poems 224 Or cool'd within the g. wave In M. 132 November dawns and dewy-g. downs E. A. 33 GLOOMY. In which the g. brewer's soul Poems 247 To anchor by one g. thought Poems 311 That thunder'd in and out the g. skirts /. K. 162 Sailing along before a g. cloud 'E. A. 102 GLORIES. — the long g. of the winter moon Pms 198 Like g., move his course, and show In M. 184 — all its dangerous g. : and I thought I. K. 43 — g. of the broad belt of the world E. A. 32 We loved the g. of the world E. A. 149 GLORIFY. To g. the present : oh, haste Poems 26 GLORIFYING clown and satyr Pr. 116 GLORIOUS, —in a city g. * Poems 46 A g. child, dreaming alone Poe?ns 79 A g. Devil, large in heart and brain Poems in When I am gather'd to the g. saints Poems 243 — narrow foreheads, vacant of our g. gains Poems 282 Whose eyes are dim with g. tears Poems 296 — the gallant g. chronicle Pr. 4 — albeit their g. names Pr. 37 Intent on her, who wrapt in g. dreams Pr. 52 On g. insufficiencies /« M. 174 To fool the crowd with g. lies /« M. 198 Like a g. ghost, to glide Ma. 50 ■ — starry Gemini hang like g. crowns Ma. in Lo, the leader in these g. wars Ma. 148 Now to g. burial slowly "borne ylAz. 148 That g. roundel echoing in our ears I. K. 115 By castle Gurnion where the g. King /. K. 162 Of Arthur's g. wars.' And Lancelot spoke I. K. 162 Sang Arthur's g. wars, and sang the King /. K. 240 A g. company, the flower of men I. K. 249 So g. in his beauty and thy choice E. A. 140 The facets of the g. mountain flash E. A. 158 GLORY. In marvel whence that g. came Poems 23 * G. to God ' she sang, and past afar Poems 160 God's g. smote him on the face ' Poe?ns 299 As down dark tides the g. slides Poems 335 — o'er the dark a g. spreads Poems 335 — thro' a kind of g. Poems 342 — drops at Glory's temple-gates Poems 351 Of use and g. to yourselves ye come Pr. 31 — the wild cataract leaps in g. Pr. 74 Like a Saint's g. up in heaven Pr. 133 A g. from its being far In M. 41 The mystic g. swims away /« M. 93 There comes a g. on the walls /« M. 93 He reach'd the g. of a hand /« M. 96 The g. of the sum of things I?i M. 129 — dimmer, and a g. done /?« /kf. 187 — man of science himself is fonder of g. Ma. 19 A g. I shall not find Ma. 24 At Maud in all her g. Ma. 73 Your g. also, and render Ma. 74 — g. of manhood stand on his ancient height Ma. 112 The path of duty was the way to g. Ma. 148, 149 The height, the space, the gloom, the g. Ma. 157 When can their g. fade ? Ma. 170 Whose g. was, redressing human wrong I. K. v. Forgetful of his g. and his name I. K. 3 As fancying that her g. would be great I. K. 104 Then crying ' I have made his g. mine ' I. K. 144 As all for g. ; for to speak him true /. K. 155 No keener hunter after g. breathes /. K. 155 Of Lancelot in his g. : King, duke, earl I. K. 171 Of Lancelot, and a g. one with theirs I. K. 172 Of g., and has added wound to wound /. K. 176 154 GO Page GLORY. Of purer g. I. K. 177 But now it is my g. to have loved /. K. 204 Born to the g. of thy name and fame I. K. 219 —greater g. varying to and fro E. A. 55 Thine the liberty, thine the g. E. A. 171 Yet he hoped to purchase g. Select. 37 GLORY-CROWN'D. —own vast shadow g. In M. 145 GLORYING. Sat g. ; many a fire before E. A. 177 GLOSS. Stole all the golden g. Poems 208 Let darkness keep her raven g. In M. r ' And merge,' he said, ' in form and g. In M. 132 In g. of satin and glimmer of pearls Ma. 80 In g. and hue the chestnut, when the Ma. 121, 128 GLOSSY. Leisurely tapping a g. boot Ma. 47 Into g. purples, which outredden Ma. 149 The g. shoulder, humming to himself I. K. 165 Burn, you g. heretic, burn E. A. 163 GLOVE. It chanced, her empty g. upon the Pr. 106 Come sliding out of her sacred g. Ma. 30 Were fit to wear your slipper for a g. /= K. 78 With blots of it about them, ribbon, g. E. A. 83 GLOW. — the steady sunset g. Poems 80 — the heavens are in a g. . Poems 141 The valleys of grape-loaded vines that g. Poems 159 Glows forth each softly-shadow'd arm Poems 316 Between dark stems the forest glows Poems 334 Had yet their native g. Poems 347 Till over thy dark shoulder g. Poems 377 G. like a sunbeam ; near his tomb a feast iV. 6 Out I sprang from g. to gloom Pr. 83 not for thee the g., the bloom In M. 2 For now her father's chimney glows In M. 7 — reach the g. of southern skies In M. 18 — fix my thoughts on all the g. In M. 115 — seem to lift the form, and g. In M. 128 The wizard lightnings deeply g. In M. 190 Has our whole earth gone nearer to the g. Ma. 63 Ev'n to the limit of the land, the glows E. A. 32 After an angry dream this kindlier g. E. A. 72 G. with the g. that slowly crimson'd all E. A. 142 — a satin sail of a ruby g. E. A. 158 GLOW'D. — broad clear brow in sunlight g. Pms 69 — on the liquid mirror g. Poems 74 G., as I look'd at her Poems 160 A fragrant flame rose, and before us g. Pr. 76 — g. like a ruddy shield on the Lion's breast Ma. 112 Of little Monaco, basking, g. Ma. 153 G. like the heart of a great fire at Yule /. K. 30 G. for a moment as we past E. A. 147 GLOWING. A g. arm, a gleaming neck Poems 88 Floated the g. sunlights Poems 105 In g. health, with boundless wealth Poems 128 — turn'd it in his g. hands Poems 270 - ». Parted ; and g. full-faced welcome, she Pr. 38 Or grief, and g. round her dewy eyes Pr. 55 Above the garden's g. blossom-belts Pr. 125 Half-la pt in"g. gauze and golden brede Pr. 143 G. all over noble shame Pr. 165 She enters, g. like the moon In M. 205 Of g. and growing light Ma. 26 Speak for her, g. on him, like a bride's I. K. 125 GLOW-WORM, —the g. of the grave Poems 372 No bigger than a g. shone the tent /V. 75 Now poring on the g., now the star /V. 85 — lapt in wreaths ot g. light Pr. 97 GLUTTED. And g. all night long breast-deep Pr. 49 GLUTTONOUS, —a g. emperor-idiot E. A. 170 GNARLED. All silver-green with g. bark Pms 11 Ran riot, garlanding the g. boughs Poems 102 Thro' solid opposition crabb'd and g. /V. 61 GNARR at the heels of men, and prey In M. 148 GNAT. Not even of a g. that sings Poems 314 1 well could wish a cobweb for the g. I. K. 112 The tiny -trumpeting g. can break our dream/. K. 154 — chased away the still recurring g. Select. 196 GNAW'D. Now g. his under, now his upper I. K. 81 GNAWING and growling : so the ruffians I. K. 75 GO. A weary weary way I g. Poems 56 And up and down the people g. Poems 65 Thought seems to come and g. Poems 82 G. fetch your Alice here,' she said Poems 91 Is dry and dewless. Let us g. Poems 95 I will rise and g. Poems 108 And let the foolish yeoman g. Poems 129 Little Effie shall g. with me to-morrow Poems 131 The night-winds come and g., mother Poems 132 — my own mother, and forgive me ere I g. Poe?ns 136 — far is death than life to me that long to g. Poems 138 I care not if I g. to-day Poems 140 GO Page GO. Then seem'd to g. right up to Heaven Poems 140 — went that way my soul will have to g. Poems 140 Slow-dropping- veils of thinnest lawn, did g. Poems 142 Old year, you shall not g. Poems 168 Old year, you must not g. Poems 168 1 G., take the goose, and wring her throat Poems 185 — I charge thee, quickly g. again Poems 194 — Lord Arthur, whither shall I g. ? Poe?ns 199 With these thou seest — if indeed I g. Poems 200 And Juliet answer'd laughing, ' G. and see Poems 204 — g. you hence, and never see me more Poems 217 His mother : therefore thou and I will g. Poems 218 I g., but I return : I would I Avere Poems 223 I g. to-night : I come to-morrow morn Poems 223 But let him g. ; his devil goes with him Poems 226 ' G.' (shrill'd the cotton-spinning chorus) Poe?ns 235 Again with hands of wild rejection, ' G.I' Poems 235 G. to him : it is thy duty ; kiss him Poems 272 — wind arises, roaring seaward, and I g. Poems 284 G., vexed Spirit : sleep in trust Poems 294 I will g. forward, sayest thou Poe?ns 298 For I g., weak from suffering here Poems 300 Naked I g., and void of cheer Poems 300 G., look in any glass, and say Poems 321 The flashes come and g. Poems 332 Thro' dreaming towns I g. Poems 335 Love may come, and love may g. Poems 338 G., fetch a pint of port Poems 339 And all the world g. by them Poems 341 But whither would my fancy g. ? Poems 345 'Tis gone, and let it g. Poems 346 G., therefore, thou ! thy betters went Poems 347 G. down among the pots Poems 348 To come and g., and come again Poems 348 — bless me, mother, ere I g. ' Poems 356 Let her g. ! her thirst she slakes Poems 372 G. by, g. by Poe?ns 376 But thou. g. by Poems 376 happy planet, eastward g. Poe?ns 377 And the stately ships g. on Poems 378 At last I spoke, ' My father let me g. Pr. i3 For any man to g. : but as his brain Pr. 24 Than not be noble. Leave us : you ma}' g. Pr. 34 1 shudderat the sequel but I g." Pr. 41 But ' Thanks,' she answer'd 'g. : we have Pr. 47 We turn'd to g., but Cyril took the child Pr. 48 For dinner, let us g. ! ' Pr. 51 Over the rolling waters g. Pr. 54 But heal me with your pardon ere you g.' Pr. 57 But I must g. : I dare not tarn-,' and light Pr. 59 Would we g. with her ? we should And the land Pr. 63 Your oath is broken : we dismiss you : g. Pr. 93 G. : Cyril told us all' Pr. IC9 — I will g. and sit beside the doors Pr. 112 — I will take her up and g. my way Pr. 112 A smoke g. up thro' which I loom to her Pr. 113 Let so much out as gave us leave to g. Pr. 119 1 We two were friends : I g. to mine own land Pr. 147 'All good g. with thee ! take it, sir ' Pr. 147 I g. to plant it on his tomb In M. 11 Like her I g. ; I cannot stay hi M. 18 Week after week : the clays g. by In M. 28 The path by which we twain did g. In M. 37 Yet g., and while the holly boughs In M. 47 G. down beside thy native rill In M. 57 And look thy look, and g. thy way In M. 71 J care for nothing, all shall g. In M. 80 To sing so wildly : let us g. In M. 82 Come ; let us g. : your cheeks are pale In M. 82 The foolish neighbours come and g. In M. 85 Will flash along the chords and g. In M. 129 When I was there with him ; and g. hi M. 147 We g., but ere we g. from home In M. 155 I turn to g. : my feet are set In M. 155 And when they learnt that I must g. In M. 138 ' And g. with us ; ' they enter'd in In M. 159 The year is going, let "him g. In M. 163 With thousand shocks that come and g. In M. 176 Like clouds they shape themselves, and g. In M. 191 But they must g., the time draws on hi M. 208 As nine months g. to the shaping an infant Ma. 19 What matter if I g. mad Ma. 41 G. back, my lord, across the moor Ma. 45 G. not, happy day Ma. 56 G. in and out as if at merry play Ma. 60 It is but for a little space I g. Ma. 62 Let me and my passionate love g. by Ma. 93 Me and my harmful love g. by Ma. 93 — wheels g. over my head Ma. 102 GOD Page GO. Ever about me the dead men g. Ma. 103 Let it g. or stay, so I wake to the higher aims Ma. 114 For men may come, and men may g. Ma. 119, 120, 127 But I g. on for ever Ma. 119, 120, 127 — men may come and g. ; and these are gone Ma. 127 Let the long long procession g. Ma. 138 love, we two shall g. no longer Ma. 159 But in, g. in ; for save yourself desire it /. K. 17 With that wild wheel we g. not up or down /. K. 19 G. to the town and buy us flesh and wine /. K. 20 G. thou to rest, but ere thou g. to rest /. K. 28 Who loves that beauty should g. beautifully /. K. 82 ' It is not worth the keeping : let it g. /. K. 114 Why g. you not to these fair jousts? /. K. 112 — men g. down before your spear at a touch /. K. 155 This conquers : hide it therefore ; g. /. K. 155 But since I g. to joust as one unknown /. K. 157 He seem'd so sullen, vext he could not g. /. K. 158 Thro' her own side she felt the sharp lance g. /. K. 179 ' Too courteous truly ! you shall g. no more /. K. 184 Being so very wilful you must g.' /. K. 187 Seeing I must g. to-day : ' then out she brake /. K. 195 Light-headed, for what force is yours to g. /. K. 202 And let the younger and unskill'd g. by /. K. 218 Enoch at times to g. by land or sea E. A. 6 And wanting }^et a boatswain. Would he g. ? E. A. 7 Should he not trade himself out yonder? g. E. A. 8 For her or his dear children, not to g. E. A. 10 Come Annie, come, cheer up before I g.' E. A. 11 Keep everything shipshape, for I must g. E. A. 13 Can I g. from Him? and the sea is His E. A. 13 — g. this weaiy way E. A. 17 To g. with others, nutting to the wood E. A. 20 And Annie would g. with them E. A. 20 —the children pluck'd at him to g. E. A. 21 1 See your bairns before }*ou g. ! E. A. 47 He, passionately hopefuller, would g. E. A. 73 ' Let not the sun g. down upon your wrath E. A. 98 I, too, shall g. in a minute E. A. 127 To hear me? Let me g. E. A. 140 — O whither love shall we g. ? ' E. A. 157 — O thither, love, let us g. E. A. 158 — mock me not '. love, let us g.' E. A. 159 Of that deep grave to which I g. Select. 191 GOAD. — prick'd with goads and stings Poems 119 His own thought drove him like a g. Poems 197 GOAL. Making for one sure g. Poems 123 Our progress falter to the woman's g.' Pr. 143 His nights, his days, moves with him to one g. Pr. 171 Will be the final g. of ill In M. 76 Touch thy dull g. of joyless gray hi M. 100 Arrive at last the blessed g. In M. 117 O, friend, who earnest to thy g. hi M. 178 Or pass beyond the g. of ordinance E. A. 140 GOAT. Leading a jet-black g. white-horn'd Poe?ns 100 — what are men better than sheep or goats Poems 200 Catch the wild g. by the hair Poems 282 The starr 'd mosaic, and the beard-flown g. Pr. 78 no more thanks than might a g. have given /. K. 107 GOATSKIN. — an undress'd g. on my back Poems 240 GO-BETWEEX. To play their g. E. A. 78 GOBLIN. You did but come as goblins in the Pr. 118 GO-CART. Yet in the g. Patience ! Give it Pr. 181 GOD gave her peace : her land reposed Poe?ns vi. And thou of G. in thy great charity) Poems 8 Oh G, that I were dead' Poems 12 He spake of virtue : not the gods Poems 36 God's great gift of speech abused Poems 51 Half God's good sabbath, while the worn-out Pms 62 G. in his mercy lend her grace Poems 72 Would G. renew me from my birth Poe?ns 86 But that G. bless thee, dear — who wrought Poems 95 Cluster'd about his temples like a God's Poe?ns 100 — see thy Paris judge of Gods Poems 101 When all the full-faced presence of the Gods Ptns 101 — with one mind the Gods Poems 102 Only, are likest gods, who have attain'd Poe?ns 103 Shall strike within thy pulses, like a God's Poems 104 Her presence, hated both of Gods and men Poems 107 Moulded by G., and temper'd with the Poems 111 My Gods, with whom I dwell Poems 121 1 sit as G. holding no form of creed Poems 121 G., before vrhom ever lie bare Poe?ns 122 Lay there exiled from eternal G. Poems 124 To lie within the light of G, as I he upon Poems 141 The Gods are hard to reconcile Poems 147 On the hills like Gods together Poems 148 A daughter of the gods, divinely tall Poems 153 — we sat as G. by G. Poems 156 155 GOD Page GOD. For G. and for my sire Poems 159 My G.. my land, my father— these did move Pms 159 Saw G. divide the night with flying flame Poems 159 ' Glory to G.' she sang, and past afar Poems 160 G. gives us love Poems 171 I will not say, • God's ordinance Poems 173 And G. forget the stranger ' Poems 186 ' G. knows : he has a mint of reasons Poems 190 — G. fulfils himself in many ways Poems 199 Bound by gold chains about the feet of G. Poems 200 If, knowing G., they lift not hands of prayer Pms 200 Breathed, like the covenant of a G., to hold Pms 210 To G., that help'd her in her widowhood Poems 218 ' G. bless him,' he said, ' and may he never Poems 219 May G. forgive me ! — I have been to blame Poems 220 * I take it, G. made the woman for the man Poems 232 G. made the woman for the use of man Poe?ns 233 That was a G., and is a lawyer's clerk Poems 234 Let this avail, just, dreadful, mighty G. Poems 236 — not stinted practice, O my G. Poems 238 Cured lameness, palsies, cancers. Thou, O G. Pms 239 — and more and more, that G. hath now Poems 241 — in your looking you may kneel to G. Poems 241 G. reaps a harvest in me Poems 241 G. only thro' his bounty hath thought fit Poems 243 Speak, if there be a priest, a man of G. Poems 244 — for a man is not as G. Poems 259 Live on, G. love us, as if the seedsman, rapt Pms 264 Meet adoration to my household gods Poems 266 Not unbecoming men that strove with Gods Pms 267 Would to G. — for I had loved thee more Poems 273 God's glory smote him on the face ' Poems 299 On to God's house the people prest Poems 308 Ah, blessed vision ! blood of G. Poems 335 ' O just and faithful knight of G. ! Poems 336 Sipt wine from silver, praising G. Poems 344 The broad-limb'd Gods at random thrown Poems 352 God's blessing on the day Poems 354 'OG.be thank'd ! ' said Alice the nurse Poe?ns 354 ' As God's above,' said Alice the nurse Poems 355 G. made Himself an awful rose of dawn Poems 368, 375 Lo ! God's likeness — the ground-plan Poems 373 (G. help her) she was wedded to a fool Pr. 58 What ! tho' your Prince's love were like a God's Pr. 67 I would the old G. of war himself were dead Pr. 114 Interpreter between the Gods and men Pr. 174 G. bless the narrow sea Pr. 179, 180 Strong Son of G., immortal Love In M. v. mother, praying G. will save hi M. 6 The chalice of the grapes of G. In M. 14 What then were G. to such as I ? In M. 53 G. shut the doorways of his head In M. 66 Ye watch, like G., the rolling hours hi M. 73 When G. hath made the pile complete In M. 76 The likest G. within the soul ? In M. 78 Are G. and Nature then at strife hi M. 78 That slope thro' darkness up to G. In M. 78 Who trusted G. was love indeed In M. 80 In endless age ? It rests with G. In M. 101 But stay'd in peace with G. and man In M. in God's finger touch'd him, and he slept In M. 11* The G. within him light his face In M. 127 With gods in unconjectured bliss In M. 137 While Israel made their gods of gold In M. 144 Where G. and Nature met in light In M. 173 Tho' mix'd with G. and Nature thou hi M. 201 "—-That G., which ever lives and loves In HI. 211 ^One G., one law, one element In M. 211 That friend of mine who lives in G. hi M. 211 His who had given me life — O father ! O G. ! Ma. 2 —rave at the lie and the liar, ah G., as he used Ma. 8 G. grant I may find it at last Ma. it — the ways of the world, how G. will bring Ma. 20 Ah G. for a man with heart, head, hand Ma. 39 May G. make me more wretched __ Ma. 69 Arise, my G., and strike, for we hold Thee just Ma. 87 And as long, O G., as she Ma. 91 Nor Britain's one sole G. be the millionnaire Ma. 112 —God's just wrath shall be wreak'd on a giant Ma. 114 1 embrace the purpose of G. Ma. 115 — keep it ours, O G. , from brute control Ma. 146 Nor palter'd with Eternal G. for power Ma. 147 To which our G. Himself is moon and sun Ma. 149 On G. and Godlike men we build our trust Ma. 152 G. accept him, Christ receive him Ma. 152 Dear to the man that is dear to G. • Ma. 163 Till God's love set Thee at his side again /. K. viii. — by God's grace, is the one voice for me ' /. K. 19 156 GOES Page GOD. — by God's rood is the one maid for me' /. K. 20 Who knows? another gift of the high G. /. K. 44 I know, G. knows, too much of palaces! /. K. 58 God's curse, it makes me mad to see you weep /. K. 78 God's curse, with anger— often I myself /. K. 80 Yea, G., I pray you of your gentleness /. K. 83 ' I saw the little elf-g. eyeless once /. K. 106 Yea, by God's rood, I trusted you too much' /. K. 112 That was to be, for love of G. and men /. K. 115 O G., that I had loved a smaller man ! /. K. 139 Her G., her Merlin, the one passionate love /. K. 143 — ah God's mercy what a stroke was there ! I. K. 148 —here a thrust that might have kill'd, but G. /. K. 148 Hereafter, which G. hinder.' Thus he spoke /. K. 150 As if it were his God's ' /. K. 154 And so, G. wot, his shield is blank enough /. K. 157 Yet in this heathen war the fire of G. " /. K. 163 Rapt on his face as if it were a God's /. K. 165 No diamonds ! for God's love, a little air ! /. K. 173 — God's death,' said he, ' you love him well /. K. 182 Not all unhappy, having loved God's best /. K. 204 By G. for thee alone, and from her face /. K. 218 Made to be loved — but now I would to G. /. K. 218 Who knows? but if I would not, then may G. /. K. 221 — whom G. had made full-limb'd and tall /. K. 227 — G., that thou could'st hide me from myself! /. K. 231 — as God's high gift from scathe and wrong /. K. 251 Lo ! I forgive thee, as Eternal G. /. K. 253 We two may meet before high G., and thou /. K. 254 Before high G. Ah great and gentle lord /. K. 258 But now it were too daring. Ah my G. /. K. 259 G. bless him, he shall sit upon my knees E. A. n — this voj^age by the grace of G. E. A. n Cast all your cares on G. E. A. 13 — be still as happy as G. grants E. A. 23 G. bless you for it, G. reward you for it E. A. 24 — as God's good angel in our house E. A. 24 ' Then for God's sake,' he answer'd E. A. 28 — he read God's warning ' wait ' E. A. 31 O G. Almighty, blessed Saviour, thou E. A. 43 ' My G. has bow'd me down to what I am E. A. 47 The county G. — in whose capacious hall E. A. 52 Daughters of G. E. A. 53 G. bless 'em ; marriages are made in Heaven' E. A. 61 — those who knew the living G. E. A. 84 — with thy worst self hast thou clothed thy G. E. A. 84 Wonderful, Prince of Peace, the Mighty G. E. A. 85 No coarse and blockish G. of acreage E. A. 85 Thy G. is far diffused in noble groves E. A. 85 In such a shape dost thou behold thy G. E. A. 85 — ' O pray G. that he hold up,' she thought E. A. 89 A rushing tempest of the wrath of G. E. A. go Their own traditions G. E. A. 92 That neither G. nor man can well forgive E. A. 99 But I wish'd it had been God's will E. A. 123 And G., not man, is the Judge of us all E. A. 126 — thank G. that I keep my eyes E. A. 127 To his great heart none other than a G. E. A. 140 — Gods themselves cannot recall their gifts ' E. A. 142 G. help ine ! save I take my part E. A. 156 Doubt not ye the Gods have answer'd E. A. 170 ' Hear it, Gods ! the Gods have heard it E. A. 170 — and thine the battle-thunder of G.' E. A. 171 Imitates G., and turns her face Select. 220 And Virtue, like a household g. Select. -22.x GODAMOIGHTY — g. an' parson 'ud nobbut^. A. 133 But g. a moost taake mea E. A- *34 Do g. knaw what a's doing E. A. 134 G*OD-BLESS-YOU. —full G. right and left Poems 233 With G., went E. A. 104 A curse in his G. E. A. 104 GODDESS. —Nymph, or G., at high tide of feast Pr. 25 GOD-FATHER, come and see your boy Ma. 161 . GOD-FEARING. — a grave and staid G. man E. A. 7 Yet Enoch as a brave G. man E. A. n GOD-GIFTED organ-voice of England E. A. 174 GOD-IN-MAN. — G. is one with man-in-God E. A. n GO DIVA, wife to that grim Earl, who ruled Poems 285 GODLESS. That tumbled in the G. deep hi M. 192 — of kindred and the G. hosts /. K. 247 GODLIKE. Two g. faces gazed below Poems 119 O G. isolation which art mine Poems 121 Who G. , grasps the triple forks Poems x'jj — most G. being most a man Poe?ns 259 Together, dwarf 'd or g., bond or free Pr. 171 On God and G. men we build our trust Ma. 152 Her g. head crown'd with spiritual fire /. K. 137 GOES. And the whirring sail g. round Poems 17 GOES Page GOES. G. by to tower'd Camelot Poevis 67 -I can heal him. Power g. forth from me Poems 241 Poems 331 Poems 334 Poems 339 Poems 359 Pr. 57 Pr. 78 Pr. 107 Ma. 78 Ma. 118 /« X. 40 /. A-. 259 E. A. 124 Z?. ^/. 124 GOEST. — whither g. thou, tell me where 1 'Poems 321 My breath to heaven like vapour g When down the stormy crescent g. How g. the time? 'Tis five o'clock So she g. by him attended And now thus early risen she g. to inform To the issue, g., like glittering bergs of ice — ' Stand, who g. ? ' ' Two from the palace ' I said to the rose, ' The brief night g. On such a time as g. before the leaf But Yniol g., and I full oft shall dream Now — ere he g. to the great Battle ? none Patter she g.,my own little Annie -she comes and g. at her will GOING. We heard the steeds to battle g. Poems 53 — farewell. I am g. a long way Poems 200 They by parks and lodges g. Poems 358 And thinner, clearer, farther g.! Pr. 74 The year is g., let him go In M. 163 In nature : wherefore g. to the king /. K. 2 So bent he seem'd on g. the third day /. K. 32 Bent as he seem'd on g. this third day /. A'. 34 But Enid in their g. had two fears /. K. 89 Coming and g., and he lay as dead /. K. 104 Coming and g., and she lay as dead /. K. 127 ' G.? and we shall never see you more I. K. 195 G. we know not where E. A. 20 Narrow'd her goings out and comings in E. A. 77 On a day when they were g. Select. 38 G. before to some far shrine Select. 221 GOLD. — laws of marriage character'd in g. Poems 7 By Bagdat's shrines of fretted g. Poems 19 G. glittering thro' lamplight dim Poems 20 With inwrought flowers, a cloth of g. Poems 25 — royal frame-work of wrought g. Poems 29 A flower all g. Poems 39 To little harps of g. Poems 43 — and with cymbals, and harps of g. Poe?ns 48 — with a crown of g. Poems 58 And I should look like a fountain of g. Poems 60 Slowly, as from a cloud of g. Poems 81 Disclosed a fruit of pure Hesperian g. Poems 100 Brow-bound with burning g. Poems 155 Either from lust of g., or like a girl Poems 195 Three Queens with crowns of g. Poems 198 Bound by g. chains about the feet of God Poems 200 Cursed be the g. that gilds the straiten'd Poems 273 Every door is barr'd with g. Poems 276 In purple blazon'd with armorial g. Poems 287 Pull off, pull off, the broach of g. Poems 355 And zoned with g., and now when these were Pr. 30 Came furrowing all the orient into g. Pr. 55 Fruit, blossom, viand, amber wine, and g. Pr. 76 — g. and golden heads : they to and fro Pr. 99 Your bride, your bondslave ! not tho' all the g.Pr. 102 A single band of g. about her hair Pr. 133 Nor winks the g. fin in the porphyry font Pr. 166 That twinkle into green and g. In M. 16 While Israel made their gods of g. In M. 144 And the flying g. of the ruin'd woodlands Ma. 2 And left his coal all turn'd into g. Ma. 36 — a land that has lost for a little her lust of g. Ma. 114 Under the cross of g. Ma. 140 Whose crying is a cry for g. Ma. 159 There swung an apple of the purest g. /. K. 10 Affirming that his father left him g. /. K. 24 — branch'd and flower'd with g., a costly gift /. K. 34 And children of the king in cloth of g. /. K. 36 And all the children in their cloth of g. /. K. 36 Let them be g. ; and charge the gardeners /. K. 36 With g and scatter'd coinage, and the Squire I. K. 47 A twist of g. was round her hair : a robe /. K. 104 The snake of g. slid from her hair, the braid /. K. 140 And down his robe the dragon writhed in g. /. K. 170 Sir Lancelot's azure lions, crown'd with g. /. K. 181 And all the coverlid was cloth of g. I. K. 207 In letters g. and azure !' which was wrought I. K. 217 — a manelike mass of rolling g. E. A. 54 Sprinkled about in g. that branch'd itself E. A. 62 Of g. and beauty, wooing him to woo — heaps of living g. that daily grow Not by the temple but the g. —a gulf of 1 uin, swallowing- g. — a long reef of g. Wreck'd on a reef of visionary g.' Still so much g. was left Or what seem'd g. E. E. A. 85 E. A. 92 E. A. 100 E. A. 103 E. A. 103 E. A. 103 E. A. 103 GOLDEN GOLD, —then shall I know it is all true g. E. A. 160 I that took you for true g. ' E. A. 162 GOLDEN. The summer calm of g. charity Poems 7 Thou art not steep'd in g. languors Poems 15 For it was in the g. prime Poems 19, 20, 21, 22 With odour in the g. prime Poems 21 But flattering the g. prime Poems 22 Ran up with g. balustrade Poems 23 So worthy of the g. prime Poems 23 In honour of the g. prime Poems 23 To celebrate the g. prime Poems 24 Well worthy of the g. prime Poems 24 And humour of the g\ prime Poems 24 I saw him — in his g. prime Poems 25 With g. stars above Poems 38 The poet in a g. clime was born Poems 38 — the sharp clear twang of the g. chords Poems 44 Two fives bound fast in one with g. ease Poems 57 In a g\ curl Poems 60 Hung in the g. Galaxy Poems 68 On g. salvers, or it may be Poems 79 Grow g. all about the sky Poems 82 The purple flowers droop : the g. bee Poems 99 And o'er him flow'd a g. cloud Poems 102 As she withdrew into the g. cloud Poems 105 — g. round her lucid throat Poems 105 And cast the g. fruit upon the board Poems 106 The g. gorge of dragons spouted forth Poems 113 From out a g. cup Poems 114 The mild bull's g. horn Poems 117 —g. houses, girdled with the gleaming world Pms 148 A g. bill ! the silver tongue Poems 166 Should almost choke with g. sand Poems 176 The goose let fall a g. egg Poems 184 Stole all the g. gloss Poems 208 Swarm'd in the g. present, such a voice Poems 209 — babbled for the g. seal, that hung Poems 219 Like fossils of the rock, with g. yolks Poems 222 Dropt dews upon her g. head Poe7ns 254 Like a g. butterfly Poems 254 — slow and sure comes up the g. year Poems 263 Enrich the markets of the g. year Poems 263 Move onward, leading up the g. year Poe?ns 263 Thro' all the season of the g. year Poems 263 Thro' all the circle of the g. year ? Poems 264 As on this vision of the g. year ' Poems 264 —lightly shaken, ran itself in g. sands Poems 270 — and opens but to g. keys Poems 276 The mantles from the g. pegs ' Poems 314 But dallied with his g. chain Poems 319 — stream'd thro' many a g. bar Poe??is 320 He lifts me to the g. doors Poems 332 — raked in g. barley Poems 344 My spirits in the g. age Poems 352 Buckled with g. clasps before Poems 363 Closed in a g. ring Poems 363 Purple gauzes, g. hazes, liquid mazes Poems 367 And sweet girl-graduates in their g. hair Pr. 8 Became her g. shield, I stole from court Pr. 20 A g. broach : beneath an emerald plane Pr. 70 Found g. : let the past be past ; let be Pr. 78 O swallow, flying from the g. woods Pr. 80 — led by g. wishes, and a hope Pr. 96 —gold and g. heads ; they to and fro Pr. 99 To sheathing splendours and the g-. scale Pr. 109 Creation minted in the g. moods Pr. zzj — dames and heroines of the g. year Pr. 139 Half-lapt in glowing gauze and g. brede Pr. 143 Reels, as the g. Autumn woodland reels Pr. 176 That sittest ranging g. hair In M. 7 And lives to clutch the g. keys In M. 89 Descend below the g. hills In M. 116 The promise of the g. hours? In M. 123 Or in the all-g. afternoon In M. 131 The spirits from their g. day In M. 138 Of iris, and the g. reed j n M. 158 To him who grasps a g. ball In M. 172 Of the g. age— why not ? I have neither hope Ma. 5 Pale with the g. beam of an eyelash Ma. 13 —the fragments of the g. day yk/iz. 62 A g. foot 3/