GLOSSARY. 353 
Hardlier, adv. With more difficulty: p. 245, 1. 15. 
Hardliest, adv. With most difficulty: p. 217, 1. 5. 
' Hardness, sb. Hardiness: p. 143, l. 4. 
Harmonical, adj. Harmonious: p. 197, |. 7. 
Heat, sb. Anger: p. 221, |. 15. 
Henoch, sb. Enoch: p. 190, |. 33. This form is adopted in the older 
English versions of the Old Testament, and in the Authorized Version 
of I Chr. i. 3, while in the New Testament the Greek form Enoch is 
followed. 
Herdman, sb. A herdsman; p. 69, |. 25. See Gen. xiii. 7. 
Heroical, adj. Heroic: p. 18, 1. 6; p. 51, 1. 32, &e: 
‘But ’gainst your privacy 
The reasons are more potent and heroical.’ 
Shakespeare, Tr. and Cr. iii. 3. 192. 
Heteroclite, sb. A word irregularly declined: p. 87, 1. 4. 
His. Its: p. 89,1. 10; p. 120, 1. 31; p. 148, l. 15. 
His, used as the sign of the genitive, ‘Socrates his ironical doubting :’ 
p. 42, 1. 2. 
Historiographer, sb. Historian: p. 17, ]. 30. 
Hold, v.t. To keep to: p.141,1.7. Torestrain, withhold: p. 15, 1. 11. 
Hold of. To pertain to, have to do with: p. 2, L 32; p. 124, l. 1; 
p. 228, 1. 16. 
Holden, p.p. Held: p. 69, 1. 31. 
Holpen, p.p. Helped: p. 92, 1.22. See Ps. Ixxxiii. 8; Dan. xi. 34. 
Honesty, sb. Used to denote high and honourable character, and hence 
transferred to moral beauty and grace: p. 22, |. 8. 
Humanist, sb. A student of the humanities (litere humaniores): p. 135, 
1. 33. The term is still used in the Scotch universities. 
Humanity, sb. The knowledge of man; human philosophy, as distin- 
guished from natural theology and natural philosophy: p. 105, l. 19; 
p. 130, 1. 1. It is contradistinguished from divinity in p. 28, 1. 20; 
pe §oy 1.8. 
Humorous, adj. Fanciful, capricious: p, 18, 1.12; p. 245, 1.9. ‘As 
humorous as winter.’ Shakespeare, 2 Hen. IV, iv. 4. 34. 
Humour, sb. Caprice: p. 49, l. 32. 
‘In humours like the people of this world” 
Shakespeare, Rich. II, v. 5. to. 
I, 
Ice, sb. A flaw in a jewel: p. 197, 1. 17. Compare the Fr. glagons, 
which Cotgrave explains ‘Isicles, or flakes of yce; also, flawes in stones 
resembling flakes of yce.’ : 
Ill, adj. Bad: p.69,1.11. ‘Neither is it iJ aire onely, that maketh an il 
seat, but ii wayes, il] markets,’ Essay xlv. p. 180. 
Iilaqueation, sb. An entangling in argument, a sophism: p. 159, l. 17; 
p. 077; 1. 2% 
Illuminate, /.~. Illuminated, enlightened: p. 53, 1. 16. 
Illustrate, v.4. To render illustrious: p. 37, 1. 16. 
Illustrate, p.p. Illustrated: p. go, 1. 2, 
Aa 
