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As the hart panteth after the water-brook, så Doth not each on the sabbath loose his ox panteth my soul after thee, O God. Psalms. from the stall, and lead him away to watering: Deep calleth unto deep, at the noise of thy

Lutea water-spouts.

Psalms. His horsemen kept them in so strait, that no He turneth rivers into a wilderness, and the man could, without great danger, go to rater Pater-springs into dry ground. Psalms. his horse.

Keolies. There were set six

water-pots of stone. Joba. Water him, and, drinking what he can, Hercules's page, Hylas, went with a water- Encourage him to thirst again with bran. Dryd pot to fill it at a pleasant fountain that was near. 3. To tertilize or accommodate with

Bacon.

streams. As the carp is accounted the water-fox, for

Mountains, that run from one extremity of his cunning, so the roach is accounted the water. sheep

Walton.

Italy to the other, give rise to an incredible variety of rivers that water it.

Addison, Sea-calves unwonted to fresh rivers fy; The water-snakes with scales upstanding dic.

4. To diversify as with waves.

The different ranging the superficial parts of

Moy.
By making the water-wheels larger, the mo-

velvet and watered silk, does the like. Luko tion will be so slow, that the screw will not be To WA’TER. V. n. able to supply the outward streams. Wilkins. 1. To shed moisture. Rain carried away apples, together with a

I stain'd this napkin with the blood dung-hill that lay in the wakr-course.

That valiant Clifford with his rapier's point

L'Estrange. Made issue from the bosom of the boy';. Oh help, in this extremest Reed,

And if thine eyes can water for his death, If water-gods are deities indeed.

Dryden. I give thee this to dry thy cheeks withal. Because the outermost coat of the eye might

Sbakspears be pricked, and this humour let out, therefore

Mine eyes, nature hath made provision to repair it by the Seeing those beads of sorrow stand in thine, help of certain water-pipes, or lympha-ducts, Began to water.

Sbakrbare. inserted into the bulb of the eye, proceeding The tickling of the nostrils within, doth draw from glandules that separate this water from the the moisture to the nostrils, and to the eyes by blood.

Ray.

consent; for they also will crater. Bares. The lacerta aquatica, or water-newt, when How troublesome is the least mote, or dust, young, hath four neat ramified fins, two on one

falling into the eye! and how quickly does it side, growing out a little above its forelegs, to

weep and water upon the least grievance! Seuts. poise and keep its body uprigiit, which fall off when the legs are grown.

Derbam.

To get or take in water; to be used in Other mortar, used in making water-courses,

supplying water. cisterns, and fish-ponds, is very hard and du

He set the rods he had pulled before the flocks rable.

Moxon. in the gutters in the watering troughs. Genesis, . The most brittle water-carriage was used

Mahomet sent many small boats, manned among the Egyptians, who, as Strabo saith, with harquebusiers and small ordnance, into the would sail sometimes in boats made of earthen

lake near unto the camp, to keep the christians ware.

Arbuthnot.
from watering there.

Kxelles. A gentleman watered saintsoin in dry weather 3. The mouth WATERS. The man longs; at new sowing, and, when it came up, with a

there is a vehement desire. From dogs water-cart, carrying his water in a cask, to which there was a tap at the end, which lets the

who drop their slaver when they see water run into a long trough full of small holes.

meat which they cannot get.

Mortimer. Cardinal Wolsey's teeth vrataring at the bio In Hampshire they sell water-trefoil as dear shoprick of Winchester, sent one "unto bishop as hops.

Mortimer, Fox, who had advanced him, for to move him to TO WA’TER. v.a. [from the noun.)

resign the bishoprick, because extreme age had

made him blind; which Fox did take in so ill 3. To irrigate ; to supply with moisture. part, that he willed the messenger to tell the A river went out of Eden to water the garden.

cardinal, chat, although I am blind, I bare espied his malicious unthankfulness.

Gamida. Genesis. A man's nature runs to herbs or weeds;

These reasons made bis mouth to mater therefore let him seasonably water the one, and

With amorous longings to be at ber. Hudibres. destroy the other.

Bacon,

Those who contend for 4 per cent. have se:

men's moribs e-watering for noney at that rate. Chaste moral writing we may learn from

hence, Neglect of which no wit can recompense;.

WATERCOLOURS. n. s. (water and The fountain which from Helicon proceeds,

colour.) That sacred stream, should never water weeds.

Painters make colours into a soft consistence

Waller. with water or oil; those they call raistolours, Could tears water the lovely plant, so as to

and these they term oil colours.

Barle. make it grow again after once 'uis cut down,

Less should I dawb it o'er with transitory your friends would be so far from accusing your

praise, passion, that they would encourage it, and share

And watercolours of these days:
Temple.

These days! where e'en the extravagance of You may water the lower land when you will.

poetry Mortimera

Is at a loss for figures to express 2. To supply with water for drink.

Men's folly, whimsies, and inconstancy. Swift. Now 'gan the golden Phæbus for to steep

WATERCRESSES, n. s. (sisymbrium, Lat.] His fiery face in billows of the west,

A plant.

Miller. And his faint steeds waterd in ocean deep, The nymphs of floods are made very beautie Whilst from sheir journal Labours they did rest. ful; upon their boads are garlands of wierSfensar. crunt.

Pparecen

Lees.

it.

1

water.

tica.)

WAT ATERER. M. s. [from water.] One WATERMARK. n. s. [water and mark.} who waters.

The utmost limit of the rise of tha This ill weed, rather cut off hy the ground flood. than plucked up by the root, twice or thrice

Men and beasts grew forth again; but yet, maugre the warmers Were borne above the tops of trees that grew and waterers, hath been ever parched up. Qo th' utmost margin of the watermark. Dryd.

Carer.

WATERME'LON. n. 5. A plant. WATERFALL. *. s. [water and fall.]

It hath trailing branches, as the cucumber or Cataract; cascade.

melon, and is distinguished from other cucurbiI have seen in the Indies far greater water- taceous plants, by its leaf deeply cut and jagged, fells than those of Nilus.

Raleigh. and by its producing uneatable fruit, Miller Not Lacedæmon charms me more

WA’TERMILL. n. s. Mill turned by
Than high Albana's airy walls,
Resounding with her waterfalls.

Addison.
water,

Forth flowed fresh
WA’TERFLAG. 1. s. (from water and

A gushing river of black gory blood, flag; iris aquatica, Latin.) Water That drowned all the land whereon he stood flower-de-luce.

The stream thereof would drive a watermill, WATERFOWL. n. s. Fowl that live or

Spenser. get their food in water.

Corn ground by windinills, erected on hills,

or in the plains where the watermills stood. Waterfowl joy most in that air which is likest

Mortimer. Bacon.

Wa’TERMINT. n. s. (mentha aquatica.) Waterfowls supply the weariness of a long flight by taking water, and numbers of them are

A plant. found in islands, and in the main ocean. Hale. WaterRA'DISH. n.s. A species of wa.

Fish and-waterfowl, who feed of turbid and tercresses. muddy slimy water, are accounted the cause of WA’TERRAT, n. s. fmus aquaticus.) A phlegm.

Floyer:

rat that makes holes in banks. WATERGRU’El. n. s. [water and gruel.)

There be land-rats, and water-rats. Sbaksp. Food made with oatmeal boiled in

The pike is bold, and lies near the top of the water.

water, watching the motion of any frog, or For breakfast, milk, milk-pottage, watergruel, wat:r-rat, or mouse.

Walton, and flunumery, are very fit to make for children. WATERROCKET. n. S.

Locke.

1. A species of watercresses. [eruca aquaThe aliment ought to be slender, as watergruel acidulated.

Arbutbnot.

2. A kind of firework to be discharged in WATERHEN. 8. s. [from water and ben;

the water. filica, Lat.) A coot; a waterfowl.

WATERVI’Olet. n. so' (bottonia, Latin.} WA'TERINESS. n. s. [froin watery.]

A plant,

Miller, Humidity; moisture.

WATERSA'PPHIRE, 1.5. A sort of stone. The forerunners of an apoplexy are dulness, nightmares, weakness, wateriness, and turgidity

Watersapphire is the occidental sapphire, and Arbutbnot,

is neither of so bright a blue, nor so hard, as the oriental.

Woodwarda WA’TERISH. adj. [from water. ] WATERWI'llow. n. s. [fron water and 1. Resembling water. Where the principles are only phlegm, what

willow; lysimachia, Lat.) A plant. can be expected from the watcrisb matter, but

Ainsworth, aq insipid manhood, and a stupid oid infancy?

WA’TERWITH. n. s. [water and with.} Dryden.

A plant. 2. Moist; boggy.

The water witb of Jamaica, growing on dry Some parts of the earth grow moorish or wa

hills in the woods, where no water is to be met terish, others dry.

Hale. with, its trunk, if cut into pieces two or three WA'TERISHNESS. 1. s. [from cucterisb.]

yards long, and held by either end to the mouth, Thinness; resemblance of water.

affords so plentiful a limpid, innocent, and reA pendulous sliminess answers a pituitous

freshing water, or sap, as gives new life to the. state, or an acerbi:y, which resembles the cartar

droughty traveller or hunter. Derbam, of our humours; or waterishness, which is like WA’TERWORK. n. s. [water and work.] the serosity of our blood.

Floyer. Play of fountains; artificial spouts of WATERLEAF. n. s. A plant. Miller,

water; any hydraulick performance. Wa'TERLILLY. n. s. (nymphea, Latin.) Engines invented for mines and waterworbs A plant.

Miller, often tail in the performance. Wilkins. Let them lie dry twelve months to kill the

The French took from the Italians the first water-weeds, as wutcrlillies and bull-rushes. plans of their gardens, as well as waterworks. Walton.

Adilisong WATERMAN. n. s. [water and man.] A WA'TERY. adj. [from water.] ferryman ; a boatman.

1. Thin ; liquid; like water.
Having blocked up the passage to Greenwich, Quicksilver, which is a most crude and watery
they ordered the watermen to let fall their oars body, heated, and peat in, hath the like forcé
more gently.

Dryden.
with gunpowder.

Bacon,
Bubbles of air working upward from the very

The bile, by its saponaceous quality, mixeth bottom of the lake, the watermen told us that the oily and watery parts of the aliment togethey are observed always to rise in the same

ther,

Arbutbnosa places.

Addison. 2. Tasteless; ipsipid; vapid ; spiritless. The rraterman forlorn, along the shore,

We'll use this unwholesome humidity, this Pensive reclines upon his useless, oar, Gay,

gross, watery pumpiche

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of the eyes.

he cat.

No heterogeneous mixture use, as some 1. To play loosely; to float.
With watery turneps have debas'd their wines.

I may find

Pbilips. Your warlike ensigns waving in the wind. 3. Wet; abounding with water.

Dryden When the big lip, and wat'ry eye,

Messapus' helm Tell me the rising storm is nigh;

He laces on, and wears the waving crest. Dryd. Tis then thou art yon angry main,

2. To be moved as a signal. Deform'd by winds, and dash'd by rain. Prior.

A bloody arm it is, that holds a pine 4. Relating to the water.

Lighted above the capitol, and now On the brims her sire, the pat'ry god,

It waves unto us.

Ben Jonser Rolựd from a silver urn his crystal flood. Dryd. 3. To be in an unsettled state; to fuc3. Consisting of water.

tuate; to waver. The wat'ry kingdom is no bar

They wave in and out, no way sufficiently To stop the foreign spirits; but they come, grounded, no way resolved, what to think, speak, As o'er a brook, to see fair Portia. "Sbakspeare. or write, more than only that, because they Those few escap'd

have taken it upon them, they must be opposite. Famine and anguish will at last consume,

Header. Wand'ring that wat'ry desart. Milton.

If he did not care whether he had their love Betwixt us and you wide oceans flow,

or no, he waved indifferently betwixt doiaz And wat'ry desarts.

Dryden.
them neither good nor harm. Sbakspesta

. Perhaps you'll say, That the attracted wai'ry vapours rise

TO WAVE. v. a. (from the noun.] From lakes and seas, and fill the lower skies. 1. To raise into inequalities of surface.

Blackmore.

He had a thousand noses, WATTLE. 1. s. [from wagbelen, to shake,

Horns welk'd and wav'd like the enridged ser. German. Skinner.]

Slakspeare

. 1. The barbs, or loose red flesh, that 2. To move loosely. hangs below the cock's bill.

They wav'd their fiery swords, and in the air

Made horrid circles. The loach is of the shape of an eel, and has a

Æneas wav'd his fatal sword beard of wattles like a barbel.

Walton,
High o'er his head.

Dryder. The barbel is so called, by reason of his barb, He beckoned to me, and by the waging of his or wattles, at his mouth, which is under his nose

hand, directed me to approach the place where or chops. Walton.

Addison The cock's comb and wattles are an ornament becoming his martial spirit,

More.

3. To waft; to remove any thing floating: 3. A hurdle.

Ainsworth.

Some men never conceive how the motion of

the earth below should wave one from a knock TO WATTLE. v. a. (patelar, Sax. twigs.] perpendicularly directed from a body in the air To bind with twigs; to form by plat- above.

Brewr. ting twigs one within another.

4. To beckon; to direct by a waft or moMight we but hear

tion of any thing. The folded flocks penn'd in their wattled cotes, Look with what courteous action Or sound of pastoral reed with oaten stops. It waves you to a more removed ground: Milton. But do not go with it.

Sbakspeare A plough was found in a very deep bog, and a hedge wattled standing,

5. (guesver, Fr. Skinner.] To put off ; to

Mortimer. WAVE. n. s. [pæge, Sax. waech, Dutch;

quit; to depart from.

He resolved not to wave his way upon this vague, Fr.]

reason, that if he should but once, by such a 1. Water raised above the level of the diversion, make his enemy believe he were surface ; billow; water driven into ine- afraid of danger, he should never live without.

I'etis. qualities. The shore, that o'er his wave-worn basis

These, waving plots, found out a better way; bow'd.

Sbakspeare.

Some god descended, and presery'd the play, The waves that rise would drown the highest 6. To put aside for the present.

Dryden. But at thy check they flee, and when they hear

I have wav'd the subject of your greatness, to Thy thund'ring voice, they post to do thy will.

resign myself to the contemplation of what is Wotton. more peculiarly yours.

Dryder. Amidst these toils succeeds the balmy night;

Since she her interest for the nation's cruodo Now hissing waters the quench'd guns restore;

Then I, who sav'd the king, the nation sav'd. And weary waves withdrawing from the tight,

Drydes. Are lulld, and pant upon the silent shore.

If any had a better right, they were content Dryden.

to wave it, and recognize the right ot the other. The wave behind impels the wave before.

Lady. Pope.

TO WA'VER. V. n. (pafian, Sax.] Luxuriant on the wave-worn bank he lay 1. To play to and fro; to move loosely. Stretch'd forth and panting in the sunny ray. I look two triangular glasses, and one of them

Pope. being kept fixt in the same posture, that the ins 2. Unevenness; inequality.

it projected on the floor might not waver, I cast Thus it happens, if the glass of the prisms be on the same floor another iris, with another free from veins, and their sides be accurately prism, moving it to and fro.

Bogle plane and well polished, without those number

The whitening shower descends less waves, or curls, which usually arise from At first thin wavering.

Toenses, sand-holes a little smoothed in polishing with 2. To be unsettled; to be uncertain or putty.

Newton, WATE. V. n. [from the noun.]

inconstant ; to fuctuate; not to be dee termined,

hill;

In which amazement when the miscreant

Wax consists of an acid spirit of a nauseonie Perceived him to waver, weak and frail,

taste, and an oil, or butter, which is emollient, Whilst trembling horror did his conscience laxative, and anodyne.

Arbutbnot. daunt,

They gave us food which may with nectar vie; And hellish anguish did his soul assail. Spenser. And wax, that does the absent sun supply. Remember where we are;

Roscommon. In France, among a fickle wavering nation. All the magistrates, every new or full moon,

Sbakspeare. give honour to Confucius, with bowings, wax Thou almost mak'st me waver in my faith, candles, and incense.

Stilling fleet, To hold opinion with Pythagoras,

While visits shall be paid on solemn days, That souls of animals infuse themselves

When num'rous wax lights in bright order blaze; Into the trunks of men.

Sbakspeare. So long my honour, name, and praise shall live. Hold fast the faith without wavering. Heb.

Papua The wav'ring faith of people vain and light. 2. Any tenacious mass, such as is used to

Daniel. fasten letters. Faith as absolutely determines our minds, and

We soften the wax before we set on the seal. as perfectly excludes all wavering, as our know

More, ledge isself; and we may as well doubt of our

3. A kind of concretion in the flesh. own being, as we can whether any revelation

A fontanel in her neck was much infiamed, from God be true.

Locke. What if Hospinian should have said, that Lu

and many w.x-kernels about it.

Wiseman. ther wavered in the point of the sacrament? To Wax. v. a. (from the noun.] To does it follow that he really did so? Atterbury. smear; to join with wax.

They, who at this distance from the first rise He form'd the reeds, proportion'd as they are, of the gospel, after weighing the several evi- Unequal in their length, and wax'd with care; dences of it, waver in their faith, would have They still retain the name of his ungrateful fair wavered though they had seen the first pro

Dryden. nulgers work wonders.

Atterbury. Ta WAX. v.n. pret. wox, waxed; part. 8. To totter; to be in danger of falling. pass. waxed, waxen. [peaxan, Saxon ;

Has any disloyalty dared to feign that religion wachsen, German.] waters? They foully mistake; as commonly they do, that are more cunning in other men's 3. Ta grow; to increase ; to become big. lives than in their own; 'tis not religion wavers, ger, or more.

Used of the moon is but their loyalty.

Holyday. opposition to wane, and figuratively of WA'VERER. M. s. [from waver.] One things which grow by turns bigger and unsettled and irresolute,

less, Come, young waverer, come, and go with me;

The husbandman in sowing and setting, upon In one respect I'll thy assistant be.

Sbalsp.

good reason, observes the waxing and waning of WA'vy, adj. [from wave. ]

the moon.

Hakowill. 1. Rising in waves.

They wax and wane 'Twixt thrift and penury.

Carew. In safe conduct of these Did thirtie hollow-bottom'd barkes divide the 2. To pass into any state ; to become; to wavie seas.

Chupman. grow. It is in either sense now almost For thee the ocean smiles, and smooths her

disused. wavy breast; And heav'n itself with more serene and purer

Where things have been instituted, which,

being convenient and good at the first, do afterlight is blest.

Dryden.

ward in process of time wax otherwise, we 2. Playing to and fro, as in undulations.

make no doubt but they may be altered, yea, Where full-ear'd sheaves of rye

though councils or customs general have received Grow wavy on the tilth, that soil select

them.

Hooker, For apples.

Pbilips. Careless the man soon wax, and his wit weak Let her glad vallies smile with w.zvy corn; Was overcome of things that did him please. Ler fleecy Hocks her rising hills adorn. Prior.

Spenser. WAWES, or Waes. n.s. A word used by

Art thou like the adder waxen deaf? Shaks. Spenser, according to the Saxon pro

We will destroy this place; because the cry of them is waxen great before the Lord.

Gen. nunciation.

Flowers removed wax greater, because the 1. For waves.

nourishment is more easily come by in the loose Another did the dying brands repair

earth.

Bacon, With iron tongs, and sprinkled oft the same This answer given, Argantes wild drew near, With liquid wees.

Spenser. Trembling for ire, and waxing pale for rage : 2. In the following passage it seems to be Nor could he hold.

Fairfa.. for woes. [pa, Saxon.]

If I wax but cold in my desire, Whilst they fly that guiph's devouring jaws,

Think heav'n hath motion lost, and the world They on this rock are rent, and sunk in helpiess

fire.

Donne, Spenser.

Their manners wax more and more corrupt,

in proportion as their blessings abound. Atterb. TOWAWL. v. n. (pa, grief, Saxon.) To cry; to howl.

WA'XCHANDLER. 1. s. [from wax and The first time that we smell the air,

chandler.] A maker of wax candles. We wawle and czy,

Shakspeare. WA'xen. adj. [from wax.] Made of wax. WAX. n.s. (paxe, Saxon; wex, Danish;

Swarmiog next appear'd wacks, Dutch.)

The female bee, that feeds her husband drone 1. The thick tenacious matter gathered

Deliciously, and builds her waxen cells,
With honey stor'd.

Milton. by the bee, and formed into cells for

I can yet shoot beams, whose heat can melt the reception of the honey.

The wirin wings of this ambitious boy. Deale.

Vuwes.

in.

So weary bees in little cells repose;

prisons, but by degrees, as the earth and water But if night-robbers life the well-stor’d hive, above would give way.

Burad. An humming through their waxen city grows, As a soldier, foremost in the fight, And out upon each others wings they drive. Makes oviy for others.

Dryden. Dryden. Some make themselves way, and are sugWAY. n. s. [pez, Sax. weigh, Dutch] gested to the mind by all the ways of sensation 1. The road in which one travels. This and reflection.

Locke. word is applied in many relations which 7. Vacancy made by timorous or respectseem unlike one another, but have all

ful recession.

There would be left no difference between the original of road or travel, noting

truth and falsehood, if what we certainly know either progression, or the mode of progression, local or intellectual.

give way to what we may possibly be mistaken

Locke. 1 am amaz'd, and lose my way

Nor was he satisfied, unless he made the pure Among the thorns and dangers of this world. profession of the gospel give way to superstition

Sbakspeare. and idolatry, wherever he had power to expel You cannot see your way.

the one, and establish the other. Atterbary: I have no way, and therefore want no eyes: The senate, forced to yield to the tribunes of I stumbled when I saw.

Sbakspeare. the people, thought it their wisest course is To God's eternal house direct the way, give way also to the time.

Swift. A broad and ample road.

Milton. I would give way to others, who might argue Flutt'ring the god, and weeping said,

very well upon the same subject. Swift Pity poor Cupid, generous maid?

8. Course; regular progression. Who happen'd, being blind, to stray,

But give me leave to seize my destin'd prey, And on thy bosom lost his way. Prior. And let eternal justice take ti.. way. Drydens 2. Road made for passengers. Know'st thou the way to Dover?-

9. Course or progress considered as ob-Both stile and gate, horse-way, and foot path.

structed or hindered. Shakspeare.

The imagination being naturally tumultuous, Attending long in vain, I took the way

interposeth itself without asking leave, casting Which through a path but scarcely printed lay.

thoughts in our way, and forcing the underDryden.

standing to reflect upon them. Duppen 3. A len th of spice.

10. Tendency to any mear ng, or act. Birnbaumer forest extends a great way,

There is nothing in the words that sounds wherein are many deer, wild boars, foxes,

that way, or points particularly at persecution. wolves, and bears. Brown.

Atterbury An old man, that had travelled a great way

ul. Access; means of ad inittance. under a huge burden, found himself so weary, Being once at liberty, 'twas said, having made that he called upon death to deliver him.

my way, with some foreign prince, I would eura L'Estrange, pirate.

Raleigh. 4. Course ; direction of motion ; local 12. Sphere of observation. tendency.

These inquisitions are never without base. I now go toward him, therefore follow me,

ness, and very often useless to the curious ina And mark what way I make. Sbakspeare.

quirer. For men stand upon their guards Come a little nearer this way, I warrant thee

against them, laying all their counsels and seno body hears.

Sbakspeare.
crets out oi their way.

Taylor. He stood in the gate, and ask'd of ev'ry one

The general officers and the publick ministers Which way she took, and whither she was gone.

that fell in my way, were generally subject to Dryden.

Tepl. With downward force he took his way,

13. Means; mediate instrument ; interAnd roll'd his yellow billows to the sea. Dryd.

merliate step. My seven brave brothers, in one fatal day, By noble ways we conquest will prepare; To death's dark mansions took the mournful First offer peace, and that refus'd, make war. way. Dryden.

Dryden. To observe every the least difference that is What conceivable ways are there, whereby in things, keeps the understanding steady and we should come to be assured that there is such right in its way to knowledge. Locke. a being as God?

Tillotsen. $. Advance in life.

A child his mother so well instructed this way The boy was to know his father's circum

in geography, that he knew the limits of the

Lecte stances, and that he was to make his wa; by bis

four parts of the world. own industry,

Spectator.

It is not impossible to God to make a creature 6. Passage ; power of progression made

with more ways to convey into the understand

ing the notice of corporeal things, than those or given.

five he has given to man.

Lecka Back do I toss these treasons to thy head: 14. Method ; scheme of management, This sword of mine shall give them instant way, He durso not take open way against them, Where they shall rest for ever. Sbakspeare

and as hard it was to take a secret, they being Th’angelick choirs,

so continually followed by the best, and every On each hand parting, to his speed gave way, way ablest, of that revion.

Sidney. Through all th' empyreal road. Milton.

A physician unacquainted with your body, Youth and vain confidence thy life betray: may put you in a way for a present cure, but Through armies this has made Melantius way. overthroweth your health in some other kind. Walter.

Baren. The reason may be, that men seldom come Will not my yielded crown redeem my breach? into those pests till after forty; about which time the natural heat beginning to decay, makes way

Still am I fear’d? is there no way bur death? for those distempers.

Temple. As by calling evil good, a man is misrepreThe air could not readily get out of those sented to himself in the way of flattery; so by

the gout.

Dasida

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