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Show S T You excel in the art of JSifling an your refentment ¢concealin \ STI'GMA. . /. [ figma, Latin. w 1. Abrand; a mark with a hot iron ‘2. A mark of infamy ST16MA'TICAL. ) adj $TI'GMATICK [ fro Brande Swift STiLL, adj. We do not aét, that often jeft and laugh *Tis old but true, Sl fwine eat all the draugh marke Shake[peare Your wife Oétavia, with her modeft eyes And fill conclufion, fhall acquire no honour Demuring upon me Shake[p. Antony and Cleop The ftorm was laid, the winds retir' Obedient to thy will Thou art like a foul miflmpcnfiigmmirk Mark'd by the deftinies to be avoided Shakefp He is deformed, crooked, old, and e'e Vicious, ungentle, foolith, blunt, unkind Stigmatical in making, worfe in mind Men of learning, who take to bufinefs, difcharg it with greater honefty than men of the world becaufe the former, in reading have bee ufed t find virtue extolled and vice fHgmatized; whil thelatter have feen vice triumphant, and virtu difcountenanced Addifon Sour enthufiafts affe@ Yo fligmatize the finef and moft elegant authors, both ancient and modern a5 dangerous to religion Addifon's Freebolder The privileges of juries fhould be afcertained and whoever violates them figmatized by public cenfure Savift $11LAR. adj. [from filke. the ftile of a dial A don' to th a lin Belonging.t fifty-one and a half degrees, which is Lonlatitude, make a mark; and, laying a rule center of the plane and to this mark, dra for the filar line Moxon StivLe. # /. [yrugele, from reigan, Sax to climb. 1. A fet of fteps to pafs from one enclofur to another There comes my mafter, and another gentlema from Frogmare, over the f#ile this way Shakefp If they draw feveral ways, they be ready to han themfelves upon every gate or ffile they come at The little frutting pile You fee juft by the church-yard file L' Eftrange Savift + [ file, Fr.] A pin to caft the fhadow i afan-dial. This fhould rather be fy/ Ere&t the flile perpendicularly over the fubitilar line, fo as to make an angle with the dial plan equal to the elevation of the pole of your plac Moxon's Mechanical Exercifes STILETTO n. /. [Italian ; @iler, Fr. fmall dagger, of which the blade is no edged but round, with a fharp point Whae fenator fhould be torn in picces, he hire one, who., entering into the fenate-houfe, fhoul a{lault'hlm as an enemy to the ftate; and, ftab bing him with filetoes, leave him to be torn b others Hakewill on Providence 2o STIL L. . 4. [rallan, Saxon; fillen Dutch. /3. To filence; to make filent Is this the Icourge of France Is this the Talbot fo much fear'd abroad "That with his'name the mothers /#// their babes Shake[peare The third fair morn now blaz'd upon the mdin Then glafly fmooth lay all the liquid plain he winds were hufh'd, the billows fcarcely curl'd And a dead filence f#i/l'd the wat'ry world 2. To quiet; to appeafe In all refrainings of anger Pope it is the beft remed 3 To make motionlefs himfelf in th mea Bacon Hg having a full fway over, the water, had powe fo Jlill apd. compofe it, as well as te move and dif turh it Waodzvard Addifon At thy command was ffill 2 uiet calm Atin when he fpie Thus in f#il/ waves of deep delight to wade Fiercely approaching to him, loudly cried. Spenfe From hence my lines and I depart I to my foft fli/l walks, they to my heart I to the nurfe, they to the child of art Donne Religious pleafure moves gently, and therefor conftantly It does not affe€t by rapture, but i like the pleafure of health, which'is f#i// and fober Hop keep South. quickens all the fi// parts of life; an the mind awake in her moft remifs and in dolent hours Addifon Silius Italicus has reprefented it as a very gentl and fill river, in th beautiful defcriptio he ha given of it Addifon How all things liften, while thy mufe complains Such filence waits on Philomela's ftrain In fome fi/l ev'ning, when the whifp'ring breez Pants on the leaves, and dies upon the trees. Pope 3. Motionlefs Gyrecia fit f#i/l, but with no ftill penfivenefs Sidney Though the body really moves, yet not changin perceivable diftance wit the ideas of our mind othe bodies as faft a follow in train, the thin feems to ftand f#i/l, as we find in the hands o clocks Locke That, in this ftate of ignorance, we fhort-fighte creatures might not miftake true felicity, we ar endowed with a power to fufpend any particula defire. This is ftanding f#i// where we are not fufficiently affured Locke Thy ftone, O Sifiphus, ftands fill Ixion refts upon his wheel StrLL . / Pope Calm ; filence Herne the hunter Sometime a keeper here in Windfor foreft Doth all the winter time, at i/ of midnight ‘Walk round about an oak with ragged horns. Shak He had never any jealoufy with his father, whic might give occafion of altering court or council upon the change; but all things paffed in a fi// Bacow's Henry VII Stivr adwv. [palle, Saxon. 1. To this time ; till now It hath been anciently reported, andis f#i// received, thatextreme applaufes of great multitudes hav {o rarified the air, that birds flying over have-falle down Bacon Thou O matron Here dying, to the fhore hat left thy name Cajeta fill the place is call'd from thee The nurfe of great AZneas' infancy. = Dryd. En 2. Neverthelefs ; notwithftanding The defire of fame betrays the ambitious ma into indecencies that leflen his reputation; he i Sl afraid left any of his ations fhould be throw away in private to make a man's felf believe, that the opportunit o'frevengc is not yet come; but that he forefees time for it, and fo to i time, and referve it The fea, that roar'd at thy command Shakefp Yo Sti'omaTizE. w. a. [ figmatifer, Fr from ftigma. 'To mark with a brand to difgrace with a note of reproach 4. Always ], Dutch. 1. Silent; uttering no noife. It is wel obferved by Funius, that/# is the foun commanding filence Sigma. o with fome kind of infamy ST 5T Addifon 3. In an increafing degree As God fometimes addrefies himfelf in this manner to the hearts of men fo, if the heart will receive fuch motions by a ready compliance, the will return.more frequently, and fi// moreand mor powerfully South The moral perfeéions of the Deity, the mor attentively we conlfider, the more perfectly fill fhal we know them Aiterbury ever; continually Unlefs God from heaven did by vifion fl/ the then) what to do, they might do nothing. Hooker My brain I'll prove the female to my foul . My foul the father; and thefe two bege ~Shakefp A generation of flill-breeding thoughts Whom the difeafe of talking f#i/l once poficfieth Ben fonfon he can never hold his peace He told them, that if their king were ffi// abfent from them, they would at length crown apes Dawies on Ireland Chymifts would be rich, if they could fi// do i great quantities, what they have fometimes don Boyle in little Trade begets trade, and people go much wher many people are already gone: fo men run fil/ t a crowd in the ftreets, though only to fee.. Temple The fewer ffill you name, you wound the moze Pope Bond is but one, but Harpax is a fcore 5. After that In the primitive church, fuch as by fear bein compelled to facrifice to ftrange gods, after repented, and kept f#i// the office of preaching the gofpel W bitgifte 6. In continuance I with my hand at midnight held your head And, like the watchful minutes to the hour Still and anon chear'd up the heavy time Saying, what want you ? Shakefpeare's King Fobn Stivv. #. /. [fro veflel fo diffil. diftillation ; an alembick Nature's confetioner, the bee Whofe fuckets are moift alchimy The fill of his refining mol Minting the garden into gold Cleaveland In diftilling hot fpirits, if the head of the i/l b taken off, the vapour which afcends out of the fi/ will take fire at the flame of a candle, and: th flame will run along the vapour from the candle t the / Neaw:on's Opticks This fragrant {pirit is obtaine in the leaft aromatick from all plant by a cold f#il/, wit not exceeding that of fummer a hea Arbutbnot on Alim ToStiLL. v.a. [fram dzfil.] Todiftil; t extract, or opgrate upon, by diftillation To StivLL. w. ui [ fillo, Latin.] Todrop Out of ufe to fall in drops His fceptre "gainft the ground he threw And tears fi//'d from him which mov'd all the crew Chapman Short thick fobs, whofe thund'ring volleys float And roul themfelves over her lubric throa In panting murmurs, f#i//'d out of her breaft Crafba That ever bubbling fpring Stivvari‘rious.adj [ fillatitius, Lat. Falling in drops; drawn by a fil Sti'vrraTory. 2 /. [from f#:/ or diftil. 1. A alembick ; a veflel in which diftil lation is performed In all fillatories, the vapour is turned back upo itfelf, by the encounter of the fides of the fillatory Bacon 2. The roo laboratory in which fills are placed All ofBices that require heat as kitchens, ffi/ lateries, ftoves, thould be meridional Wotten's Architeét UrC Thefe are nature's fillatories, in whofe cavern the afcending vapours are congealed to that uni verfal aquavitz, that good freth water More againft Atheifm N. adj. [ fill and born. Sti'LLBo lifelefs ; dead in the birth Bor Grant that our kopes, yet likely of fair birth Should be pillborn, and that we now poflef The urmoft man of expeltation, we ar A body ftrong enough to equal with the king Shakejpeare fany cafualties were but matter of fenfe ‘as whether a child were abortive or fillborn Qraunt's Biils of Mortality The pale afliftants on each other ftar'd Wish gaping mouths for ifiuing words prepar'd Bb Th |