372 GLOSSARY. ; 
Taint, v.¢. To sully, tarnish: p. 27,1. 28. With the use of ‘blemish and 
taint’ in this passage, compare Macbeth, iv. 3. 124: 
‘The taints and blames I laid upon myself.’ 
Take up, v.refl. To check oneself: p. 65, 1. 23. 
Take upon. To arrogate, assume to oneself: p. 65, 1. 31. . 
Tax, v.t. To censure: p. 24,1. 4; p.135, 1.14. In the former passage 
the Latin translation takes the word in the modern sense. See note, 
‘They tax our policy and call it cowardice,’ 
Shakespeare, Tr. and Cr. i. 3. 197. 
Taxation, sb, Censure, reprehension: p. 62, 1, 17; p. 103, 1. 27. * You'll 
be whipped for ¢axation one of these days.’ Shakespeare, As You Like 
It, i.:2.'9f. 
Temperature, sb. Temperament: p. 21,1. 26; p. 59, 1.2. ‘The best 
composition, and temperature is, to have opennesse in fame and opinion; 
secrecy in habit; dissimulation in seasonable use; and a power to faigne, 
if there be no remedy.’ Essay vi. p. 22. 
Tenderness, sb. Sensitiveness: p, 192, 1. 29. ‘Tenderness of coun- 
tenance’=bashfulness: p. 208, 1. 31. 
‘Lest I give cause 
To be suspected of more tenderness 
Than doth become a man.’ 
Shakespeare, Cymb, i. 1. 94. 
Term, sb, Limit, termination: p. 129, 1. 14. 
Terrene, adj, Earthly: p. 48, |. 13. 
‘ Alack, our éerrene moon 
Is now eclipsed.’ Shakespeare, Ant. and Cl. iii. 13. 153. 
That, pron, That which: p. 66,1. 30; p. 110, 1. 8; p. 112, 1. 9; p. 155, 
1, 2. 
The, used for thé possessive pronoun ‘its’: p. 27, 1. 26. Compare the 
version in the Bishops’ Bible of Lev. xxv. 5: ‘ That which groweth of 
the owne accord of thy haruest, thou shalt not reape.’ And also Holland’s 
Plutarch, p. 812 (ed. 1603): ‘ Aristotle and Plato doe holde, that matter 
is corporall, without forme, shape, figure and qualitie, in she owne nature 
and propertie,’ 3 
The, redundant. ‘At the first: p.37, Il. 7,11. ‘ The which:’ p, 37,1. 313 
p- 234, 1. 10. ‘Other ¢he heathen gods’: p. 38, 1. 25. 
Theomachy, sb. A battle with the gods: p. 194, l. 18. 
Theory, sb. Speculation: p. 111, 1. 33. 
Think much. To take ill, grudge: p, 88, 1. 30. 
Through-lights, sb. Lights or windows on both sides of a room: P- 97, 
1. 25. Comp. Essay xlv. p. 183. 
Throughly, adv. Thoroughly; p. 67, 1. 28; p. 86, 1. 19, See Matt. 
iii. 12. 
Through-passage, sb. Transit, traversing: p. 98, 1. 15. 
Thwart, adj. Perverse: p. 17, 1. 10. 
‘Create her child of spleen; that it may live, 
And be a ¢hwart disnatured torment to her’ 
Shakespeare, K. Lear, i. 4. 305. 
To, prep. ‘Designed to’= designed for: p. 234, 1. 31. Comp. ‘ gain fo,° 
Pp. 43, l. 25; ‘employ fo,’ p. 252, 1. 20. ‘To’ redundant in ‘rather than 
