Which “Loose-Coat Field” is called e’en to this day.
Drayton, Polyolbion, xxii. (1622).
Lo´pe de Vega (Felix), a Spanish poet born at Madrid. He was one of those who came in the famous “Armada” to invade England[England]. Lope (2 syl.) wrote altogether 1800 tragedies, comedies, dramas, or religious pieces called autos sacramentales (1562-1635).
Her memory was a mine. She knew by heart
All Calderon and greater part of Lopé.
Byron, Don Juan, i. 11 (1819).
Lopez, the “Spanish curate.”—Beaumont and Fletcher, The Spanish Curate, (1622).
Lopez (Don), a Portuguese nobleman, the father of Don Felix and Donna Isabella.—Mrs. Centlivre, The Wonder (1714).
Lord, a hunchback. (Greek, lordos, “crooked”).
Lord Peter. The pope is so called in Dr. Arbuthnot’s History of John Bull. Swift, in his Tale of a Tub, introduces the three brothers, Peter, John, and Martin, meaning the pope, Calvin, and Luther.