850 L L O 
upon Daniel’s Seventy Weeks. 6. A Letter upon the 
fame Subject, printed in the Life of Dr. Prideaux. 7. 
Sermons, preached on public occafions. He alfo left fe- 
veral pieces behind him, in an unfiniflied ftate; particu¬ 
larly, 8. A Syftem of Chronology, out of which his chap¬ 
lain, Benjamin Marlhal, is faid to have compofed his 
Chronological Tables, printed at Oxford in 1712 and 
1713. He is fuppofed to have had a principal hand in 
the Series Chronologica Olympiadum, Ifthmiadum, Ne- 
meadum. Sec. publilhed by his fon at Oxford in 1700. 
He engaged bifliop Burnet to undertake his Hiftory of 
the Reformation, furniftied him with a curious collection 
of his own obfervations, and corrected it with the moil 
critical exactnefs. He allifted Dr. Wilkins in compofing 
his Effay towards a real Character and a philofophical 
Language} and he added the chronology, and many of 
the references, and parallel places, printed in molt of our 
Englifh Bibles, particularly the quarto editions. Gen. Did. 
Burnet's Hijl. of his own Times. 
LLOYD (Nicholas), an Englifh divine, who was rector 
of St. Mary Newington, Surrey, where he died in 1680, 
at the age of 49. He compiled an hiftorical, geographical, 
and poetical dictionary, which was printed at Oxford in 
1670, in folio; and in 1695, in 4to. 
LLOYD (Robert), fon of Dr. Pierfon Lloyd, was one 
of the ufliers of Weftminfter-fchool. We have already, 
under the article Churchill, vol. iv. p. 585, referred to 
this unfortunate young man, who is known chiefly as an 
author by a poem entitled The ACtor, which not only 
exhibited proofs of great judgment in the fubjeCt he was 
treating of, but had alfo the merit of fmooth verfification 
and ftrength of poetry. He was fome time at the univer- 
fity of Cambridge, where he took the degree of M. A. 
After he quitted his place as uflier at Weftminfter-fchool, 
he relied entirely on his pen for fubfiftence; being of a 
thoughtlefs and very extravagant difpofition, he got deeply 
into debt, and was in confequence thrown into the Fleet 
prifon, where he depended almoft wholly on the bounty 
of his friend Churchill, whole kindnefs to him continued 
undiminilhed during all his neceflities. On the death of 
his benefaffor, Mr. Lloyd funk into a ftate of defpon- 
dency, which put an end to his exiftence in 1764. Mr. 
Wilkes fays, that “Lloyd was mild and affable in private 
life, of gentle manners, and very engaging converfation. 
He was an excellent fcholar, and an eafy natural poet. 
His peculiar excellence was the drefling up an old thought 
in a new, neat, and trim, manner. He was contented to 
icamper round the foot of Parnaffus on his little Wellh 
poney, which feems never to have tired. He left the fury 
of the winged Iteed, and the daring heights of the facred 
mountain, to the liiblime genius of his friend Churchill.” 
His works w'ere pubJilhed in 2 vols. 8vo. in 1774. 
LLOYD (General), the author of fome ufefui works 
upon military affairs, was by birth an Englilhman, but 
affively employed during the feven-years’ war in the ar¬ 
mies of Auftria and Pruflia. His works, forming an in- 
exhauftible fource of moral, political, and military, infor¬ 
mation, conflft : ilt, cf his Introduction to the Hiftory 
of a Seven Years’ War, entitled “Memoirs Military and 
Political which was translated into French by an offi¬ 
cer named Saint-Memon. 2dly, the Hiftory itfelf, in two 
volumes; the firft of which, containing the campaigns of 
1756-7, was tranflated into French by Rouz-Fazillac. 
3dly, his Memoir on the Invafion and Defence of Great 
Britain, tranflated by Imbert. The Hiftory of the Seven 
Years’ War, in plan and execution, prefents an invalua¬ 
ble model to other writers. It contains general remarks 
on the art of war, according to the exifting fyftem; he 
traces a brief fketch of the relative fituations, political 
and military, of the belligerent powers, and developes the 
operations of each campaign. He gives us a general view 
of the theatre of war, but particularizes the feenes of the 
principal aCtions ; all which he narrates with a coirectneis 
and ability attributable folely to experience and fuperior 
judgment. Mr. Lloyd died in the year 1783, at the mo¬ 
ment he had it in contemplation to compofe a general 
L O 
hiftory of the wars in Flanders, Germany, and Italy, for 
the two foregoing centuries. Andreoffi's Obfervations on the 
Art of War. 
LLOYD’S LA'KE, a bay on the fouth coaft of Eaft 
Florida. Lat. 25. 18. N. Ion. So. 50. W. 
LLUCH MAYO'R, a town of the ifland of Majorca: 
fifteen miles eaft-fouth-eaft of Palma. 
LLU'E, a river of North Wales, which runs into Pent- 
ble Meer in the county of Merioneth. 
LLU'E, or Thlu'e, a river in Caernrarthenftiire, which 
runs into the Llogher near Llogher-Caftle. 
LLUL'LA and CHIL'LARS, a jurildifftion of Peru, in 
the bilhopric of Truxillo. The principal commerceTs in 
tobacco and almonds. 
LLYN SAV'ATHAN, a lake of South Wales, In Breck- 
nocldhire : four miles eaft of Brecknock. 
LLY'NAN, a river of North Wales, which runs into 
the Irifli Sea about five miles fouth of Caernarvon. 
LLY'WARCH, a Welfti bard, who fiouriflied from 
about 1160 to i22o. Many of his pieces are intheWelfh 
Archaiology, and contain feveral hiftorical notices of value. 
LO, interjcCt. [la, Sax.] Look; fee; behold. It is a 
word ufed to recall the attention generally to fome objeft 
of fight; fometimes to fomething heard, but not properly ; 
often to fomething to be underftood.— Lo! within ken 
our army lies. Shakefpeare. 
Now mult the world point at poor Catharine, 
And fay, Lo! there is mad Petruchio’s wife. Shakefpeare. 
To LO, v. n. [chiefly ufed in the imperative mode.] 
Look, fee, behold ; to exprefs furprife by crying lo. —Why 
lo you now ! Shakefpeare. 
LO, f. An exclamation, a note of attention; as, You 
introduce that fentence with a lo and behold. 
LO, a river of China, which rifes in Chen-fi, and runs 
into the Hoang twelve miles fouth-eaft of Tong. 
LO, a river of China, which rifes feven miles fouth of 
Sin-nhing, in Hou-quang, and runs into the Heng near 
Siang-yn. 
LO, a river of England, which rifes in Cornwall, and 
runs into the fea below Helftone. 
LO, in France. See Saint Lo. 
LO-AM'MI, [Heb. not my people.] The name of a 
man. Hofea. 
LO-DE'BAR, [Hebrew.] The name of a place. 
LO-HOE'I, a town of China, of the third rank, on the 
eaft coaft of the ifland of Hainan : forty-two miles fouth- 
eaft of Kiong-tcheou. 
LO-KIANG', a town of China, of the third rank, in 
Se-tchuen : feventeen miles fouth-weft of Mien. 
LO-KIANG-SO', a town of China, in Quang-tong: 
fifteen miles fouth-weft of Lao-ting. 
LO-NAN', a town of China, of the third rank, in the 
province of Chen-fi : fifteen miles north of Chang. 
LO-PE', a town of China, of the third rank, in Quang- 
fi: feven miles eaft ofTa-ping. 
LO-PING', a town of China, of the third rank, in Ki- 
ang-fi : thirty miles eaft of Yao-tcheou. 
LO-PING', a town of China, of the third rank, in 
Chan-fi: fifteen miles fouth of Ping-ting. 
LO-PING', a city of China, of the lecond rank, in Yun- 
nan -. 1112 miles fouth-fouth-vveft of Pe-king. Lat. 25. N. 
Ion. 103.55. E. 
LO-TCHANG', a town of China, of the third rank, in 
Quang-tong : twenty miles north-weft of Chao-tcheou. 
LO-TCHE'OU, a town of Corea: twenty-two miles 
weft-fouth-welt of Koang-tcheou. 
LO-TCHING', a town of China, of the third rank, in 
Quang-fi : forty-two miles north-weft of Lieou-tcheou. 
LO-TCHU'EN, a town of China, of the third rank, in 
the province of Quang-fi: feventeen miles fouth-fouth- 
eaft of Ouei-ling. 
LO-TCHU'EN, a town of China, of the third rank, in 
the province of Chen-fi : twelve miles fouth-eaft of Fon. 
LO-TI'EN, a town of China, of the third rank, in 
Hou-quang ; forty miles north-eaft of Hoang tcheou. 
3 LO- 
