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Show SO SO How, Didius, fhall a Roman, fore repuls'd \ -Greet your arrival to this diftant ifle How bid you welcome to thefe fhatter'd legions R A. Philips So'RefON. ) . /- [Irifh and Scottith. "kin JORN o arbitrar or fervile tenure, formerly in Scotland "u. a9 likewife in Ireland Whenever "%, chieftain had a mind to revel, he cam % down among the tenants with his fol..\ lowers, by way of contempt called in th Jowlands giliwitfirts, and lived on fre quArters ; fo that ever fince, when "k .. perfon obtrudes himfelf upo o "y So'RRILY, adv. [from forry.] Meanly Pg?rly; defpicably; wretchedly ; piti71/ So'RRINESS The W exaé upo the all kin yea, and the very wild exactions, . and forehon 5 by which the livery 4.1, the poor tenants and freeholdérs under them B [diminutive of fore. ‘The buck is calle Spenfer's Ireland 0'REL. 7. / the firft yea fecond, a pricket; the third, a forel a fawn Here's the fmell of the blood fill . fumes of Arabia will not fweeten thi _ . Oh! oh! oh!-What a figh is there . Jarely overcharged Lament nor forrow at Shakéfpeare all the perlittle hand the hearti Shakefpeare Sor1‘TES. #. [ [owpeirne.] Properly a propofion wher n argum A heap i Bea ( ¢ tlonis accumulated on another ment Dryden which is called forites, or a heap Sorites is when feveral middle terms are chofe to conne& one.another fucceffively in feveral progofitions, till the laft propofition conneés its pre dicate with the firft fubject Thus, All men of re venge have their fouls often uneafy uneafy foul are a plague to themfelves; now to be one's ow Watts's Logick Plague is folly in the extreme 'SQ_RO'RICI BE. [ foror and cedo.] The mur| derof a fifter '80'RRa gz, 7 /. The blades of green whea Dié or barley An ORRANCE. # /. [In farriery. Di difeafe or fore n horfes /08 REL, 1. /0 [yupe, Sax. forel, French exalic, Lotin, This plant agrees wit 1. A kind A fubftantial and unaffetted piety not only give a man a credit among the fober and virtuous, bu Tillotfon even among the vicious fort of men Walfb numbers, defigns, and every thought Endeavouring to make the fignification of fpe- cifick names clear, they make their fpecifick idea of the forts of fubftances of a few of thofe fimpl Lockeo ideas found in them 2. A manner; a form of being or acting Flowers, in fuch fort. worn, an neither be {mel Hooker nor feen well by thofe that wear them That I may laugh at her in equal for As fhedothlaughat me, and makes my pain herf{port Spenfer's Sonnets To Adam in what [or¢ fhall T.appear? « Milton 3. A degree of any quality 1 have written the more boldly unto you,in fom Remans, XV 15 Jort, as putting you in mind The one being a thing that belongeth generall unto all 5 the other, fuch as none but the wifer an wful fpirit ‘the Lord 3. Expreffin grief The thing as my forrowfu So'RrY adj lord, I a a woma 1 have bough w any ; a knot of people of [yamg, ‘Sa:;on. greater things 7z of lufty fhepherd 7 Shakefpeare fure We are firry for the fatire interfperfed in fo of thefe pieces, upon a few people, from whom th Sawift highe& provocations have been received Bacon the fun Acid auftere vegetables contra@ and ftrengthe the‘ fibres; as all kinds of Jorrel, the victues o 2 I know none of tha fuch in the ar ofpeare [ forts Br. forte Qu An Dra I'm forry for thee, fiiend ; 'tis the duke's plea [ from jaur, filth, Ifandick. worthlefs ; vexatious Vile alott'r Mak long continuance of grief Mattheawy X1v. 9 of ufe It does not imply an What we are jorry for ourfeives in thee Timon of Athens The king was forry : neverthelefs, for the oath' fake, he commanded the Bapti ift's head to be give fee er blinds them net fo much a fort of traitors here O, forge I camno s are full of tears that my foul refufed to touch, ar Foby vi. 7 meat Itis ge"I. Grieved for fomething paft nerally ufed of flight or cafual mifcarriages Or vexations, but {ometimes o her own fuggeftion fell. Milron rty and chanty to th r exercifed fo well a y accompany each other. Atterd. Sermonz wit accompanie Shakefp Golden opinions from all forts of pecnle 1 have poured cut my foul befor 1 Samuel grief Hooker more judicious [orz can performe Not in ufe m Drydena. 4. A clafs or order of perfons Bleffed are they which have been forrozuful fo for' thee all thy feourges; for they fhall rejoic Tob. xiii. 14 when they have feen all thy glory {a1d, No a {pecies Disfigur'd more than fpirit of happy fort. Milton So'RROWF UL. adj. [ forrow and full. 1. Sad for fomething paft ; mournful grieving Hanna [ forte, French. Jort 1 have copied his ftile And fends forth us to make their forroved tender Shakelteare 2. Deeply ferious n. f I fhall not be wholly without praife, if in fom Of its own fall, reftraining aid to-Timon is not much drawn b which lie in acid aftringent falt, a fovereign antidote again the putrefcent bilious alkali Arbutbnes on dliments SorT Play the recanter, feeling in itfel A lack of Timon's aid, hath fenfe witha £ all roots of herbs the root of forrel goeth th f?rrlmeft into the earth, It isa cold and acid herb an might be leavened into an animal. Bentley's Sermonss. Now the publick body, which doth feldo the dock in ail its charadters, and onl differs in having an acid tafte Miller that loveth the earth produce one organical body, one might reafonabl expeé, that now and then a dead lump of doug Pope So'RROWED. adj. [from forrow.] Accompanied with forrow. Out of ufe Chryfippus the Stoick invented a kind of arguconfifting of more than three propofitions Hayaard fhores for fin, prefently concludes repentance hath had it Temple If fuch a flight and firry bufinefs as that coul Sad the prince explore The neighb'ring main, and forrewing treads th Gl #:% confcience remains, finds himfelf a little indifpofe Dryden taining the reader Send them forth, though forrowing, yet in peace Milten the flv/:"r.'g,"s of his late pangs o fuffer the clothes of my bed the poet might have found fome for7y excufe for de 2 Cor, vii. to forrow for me ... Of which T do accufe myfelf fo forely Shakefpeare ' ThatI will enjoy no more Decay of Piety periect work My foot began to fwell, and the pain aflwaged though it left fuch a forenefs, that I could hardl 1f this innocent had any relation to his ‘2 hebais Thele three forts of poems fhould differ in thei I neither fear t> die, nor defire to live; an having maftered all grief in myfelf, I defire no ma 1 have done ill He that, whilf could not fupport him againft one flighting look o L' Itrange a forry flave Now I rejoice, not that ye were made forry, bu ", With vehemence dangerous or afliétive . /. [from fore.] Tendernef Milton How vain were all the enfigns of his power, tha Shake[peare that ye furrowed to repentance Glanwille And cheeks of forry grain, will ferve to pl The fampler, and to teize the houfewife's wool Shakefp. Antony and Cleop Were both extermin'd and Bajazet's cag had been but a forzy prifon Coarfe complexions Wherever forrow is, relief would be If youdo forreaw at my grief in love By giving love, your {orrow and my grie Dryden :.30'RENESS [ jaurgan, Gothick To grieve ; to b thofe thoughts which fhould indeed have die them they think on. Shake[peare's Macbeth the union of the parts confift only in reft, i feem that a bag of duft would be of as fir a confiftence as that of marble The miferable change, now at my end th Of the warrior train Though moft were forely wounded, none were flain i So'RrROW. w. n yopgian, Saxon. fad; to be dejected emmio'RELY. adv. [from fore. Ui With a great degree of pain or diftrefs i Mean Sorrew is uneafinefs in the mind, upon th thought of a good loft, which might have bee enjoyed longer; or thefenfe ofa prefent evile Locke Sorrow on thee, on all the pack of you That triumph thus upon my mifery ! Shakefpeare A world of woe and [orrow Milton Some other hour I'will to tears allow ‘But, having you, can thow no forrow now. Dryd of fervices poll and utterly und [from forry. cablenefs So'rRrOW. 7. /. [ forg, Danifh.] Grief; pai for fomething paft ; fadnefs ; mourning Sorrow is not commonly underftood a the effect of prefent evil, but of loft good another coignie 2. / Sidney nefs; wretchednefs ; pitiablenefs; defpi Macbean be a forner Ufin Wit I woul _Thy pipe, O Pan, fhall help, though I fing for luy ftays at his houfe, and hangs upon hi "4, for bed and board, he is faid to Jorz, o How now, why do you keep alone Of forrieft fancies your companions making ably " exaltio SO }~y decre the fort to fight with He&or 8. A pair To SorT Italian. 1 T le a fet; a fuit w.a. [fortiri, Latin deparat into diftin& and :prope I come to thee for charitable licence Shak A piece of cloth made of white and black threaas though the whole appear neither white nor blacl but grey, yet each remains what it was before, i the threads were pulled afundery and ferte To fort our nobles from our commo colour by itfelf men |