GLOSSARY. 373 
to suffer’: p. 189; 1 12. Comp. Colours of Good and Evil, p. 262; ‘Yet 
you shall Saabine see them complaine, but fo set a good face upon it.’ 
Tongue, sb. Language: p. 17,1, 19. 
Touch, sb. ‘To give a touch of’=to allude to, mention slightly: p. 96, 
1,12. Testing, examination, p. 153, 1. 11, as of gold by the touch-stone. 
Touching, prep. Concerning: p. 59, 1. 22; p. 88, l. 25. 
Tractate, sb. A treatise: p. 245, 1. 17.- 
Tradition, sb. The delivery of knowledge: p. 166, 1. 8; p. 170, 1. 53 
p. 176, 1. 28. 
Traduced, p.p. In the passage in which this word occurs, p. 20, 1. 25, 
‘traduce’ appears to be used with a distinct reference to its original mean- 
ing ‘to lead along, lead in procession,’ and so ‘to parade. Hence 
‘traduced to contempt’ would mean ‘ paraded contemptuously, or so as to 
excite contempt.’ 
Traducement, sb. Misrepresentation, calumny: p. 38, 1.1; p. 43, 1. 31. 
‘*T were a concealment 
Worse than a theft, no less than a ¢raducement, 
To hide your doings,’ Shakespeare, Cor. i, 9. 22. 
Translation, sb. A metaphor: p. 61, 1.29. See note. 
Travail, v.i. To labour: p. “act 7; p. 80, |. 31. 
Travail, sb. Labour: p. Io, |. 27; p. 28, 1. 23, &c. Travails=pains: 
p- 208, 1. 22. See Num. xx. 14, Lam. iii. 5. 
Treacle, sb. p. 140, 1. 31. Formerly ¢riacle from Gk. Onpiaxn, an antidote 
to the viper’s poison. ‘‘‘ Treacle,” or “ triacle,” as Chaucer wrote it, was 
originally a Greek word, and wrapped up in itself the once popular belief 
(an anticipation, by the way, of homeeopathy), that a confection of the 
viper’s flesh was the most potent antidote against the viper’s bite... 
Expressing first this antidote, it then came to express any antidote, then 
any medicinal confection or sweet syrup; and lastly that particular syrup, 
namely, the sweet syrup of molasses, to which alone it is now restricted.’ 
Trench, English Past and Present, fourth ed. p. 188, Coverdale’s version 
of Jer. viii. 22 is—‘ 1 am heuy and abashed, for there is no more Triacle 
at Galaad;’ and of Jer. xlvi. 11—‘ Go vp (o Galaad) and bringe ¢riacle 
vnto the doughter off Egipte.’ 
Trepidation, sb, Trembling; used in a literal sense: p. 94, |. 19. 
Triplicity, sb. A threefold combination or nature: p. 4, 1. 5; p. 188, 1, 18. 
Trivial, adj. rite, commonplace: p. 174, 1. 17. 
Trope, sb. A figure, generally of speech; here applied to music: p, 107, 
4,392, 33. 
Tutor, = A guardian: p, 21,1. 11; p, 184,1. 1. See Gal. iv. 2. 
Typocosmy, sb. p. 176, ]. 21. Defined by Blount and others ‘a figure 
or type of the world.’ But this does not appear to me satisfactory. 
Among ‘the means that help the understanding and faculties thereof’ 
Bacon enumerates ‘Lullius Typocosmia.’ ‘To reduce surnames to a 
Methode, is matter for a Ramist, who should happly finde it to be a T'ypo- 
cosmie.’ Camden, Remaines, p. 95, ed. 1605. It seems rather to mean 
an orderly arrangement of the figures or types which play such an im- 
portant part in the Art of Lullius, 
Tyrannous, adj. Tyrannical: p. 61, I. 30. 
Tyranny, sb. Absolute power: p. 241, 1. 8; p. 202, 1, 8, 
