346- GLOSSARY. 
Disallowed, p.p. Disapproved: p. 27,1.13; p. 41, 1.31. See 1 Pet. 
a 4:7." 
Discern, v.¢. To distinguish between, recognize: p. 136, 1. 20. ‘To 
discern of’: p. 203, 1. 18. Comp. ‘accept of,’ ‘ define of.’ 
Discharge, sb. The phrase ‘ discharge of cares’ signifies delivery from the 
charge or burden of cares: p. 77, 1. 20. 
Discharged, p.p. Dismissed, got rid of: p. 187, 1. 30. 
Disclaim in. To disclaim all share in, renounce: p. 73, 1. 15. ‘You 
cowardly rascal, nature disclaims in thee: a tailor made thee.’ Shake- 
speare, Lear, ii. 2. 59. 
Discontents, sb. Causes of disaffection: p. 58, 1. 23. 
‘His discontents are unremoveably 
Coupled to nature.’ Shakespeare, Tim. of Ath. v. 2, 227. — 
Discontinuation, sb. A solution of continuity: p. 139, 1. 11. 
Discourse of reason. The power of inferring one thing from another; 
the reasoning faculty, as distinguished from reason: p. 28, 1, 13. Com- 
pare Shakespeare, Haml. i. 2. 150: 
‘A beast, that wants discourse of reason, 
Would have mourn’d longer,’ 
And Troilus and Cressida, ii. 2. 116: 
‘Or is your blood 
So madly hot that no discourse of reason 
Nor fear of bad success in a bad cause, 
Can qualify the same?’ 
Shakespeare uses ‘ discourse’ alone in the same sense, Haml. iv. 4. 36: 
‘Sure, he that made us with such large discourse, 
Looking before and after, gaye us not 
That capability and godlike reason 
To fust in us unused.’ 
Discoursing, adj. Discursive, shifting: p. 119, 1. 9. The figure is 
evidently taken from a sandbank, See p, 120, Il. 1-5. 
Discover, v.¢. To uncover, lay bare: p. 9, 1.10, Comp. Ps. xxix. 9. . 
Disesteem, v.t. To depreciate, undervalue: p. 20, 1. 28. ‘ Disestimer. To 
disesteeme, neglect, contemne, set naught by, make no reckoning of.’ 
Cotgrave, Fr. Dict. 
Disguisement, sb. A disguising, disguise: p. 123, I. 19. 
Disincorporate, adj. Disincorporated, dissevered: p. 258, I. 32. 
Dismantled, p. p. Unmasked, stripped of disguise: p. 238, 1.19, Com- 
pare Shakespeare, Lear, i, I. 220: 
SD RAG Pee {his ico gl reh bap gie fra oe 
. « + « Should in this trice of time 
Commit a thing so monstrous, to dismantle 
So many folds of favour.’ 
Dispose, v.¢. To arrange: p. 44, l. 23; p. 81, 1. 25. 
Disposition, sb. Arrangement: p. 44, 1. 27. Of studies, says Bacon, 
their chief use ‘for ability, is in the iudgement and disposition of busi- 
nesse.”’ Essay 1. p. 204. 
Distaste, sb. Disgust: p. 8, 1. 8. ‘ Prosperity is not without many feares 
and distastes.’ Essay v. p. 17. 
Distemper, v.t. To derange, disorder: p. 134, 1. 28, * The malignancy 
