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Show Vi ¥o The gods are deaf to hot and peevith woaws Shakefpeare ‘Where honour or where confcience does not bind No other law fhall thackle me Slave to myfelfI will no Nor fhall my future a&tion By my own prefent mind Who by refolves or wozv For days that yet belong t be be confin' engag'd does ftan fate Does, like an unthrift, mortgage his eftat Before it comes into his hand ‘The bondman of the cloifter f All that he does receive does always ow And fill, as time comes in, it goes away Not to enjoy, but debts to pay Unhappy flave, and pupil to a bell Which his hour's work, as well as hours, doe tell Unhappy till the laft, the kind releafing knell Coavley If yo take that wow and that wit one, you are miftaken to be al a with is a far lower de gree than a wew Hammond She wozws for his return with vain devotion pays Dryden 9- In a ftate of climbing long woyage5 contente 10. In a flate of infurrettion Courfe; attempt; undertaking By all the weaws that ever men have broke In number more than ever woman fpoke. Shakefp Thofe who wear the woodbine on their brow ‘Were knights of love, who never broke their wow Firm to their plighted faith Zo Vow Dryden w. a. [wouer, Fr. woweo, Latin. 1. To confecrate by a folemn dedication to give to-a divine power David often wowerh unto God the facrifice o praife and thankfgiving in the congregation. Hook Fow and pay unto the Lord ‘When we have not only wowed Pfaln 1xxvi but deliyere them over into the poffeflion of Almighty God for the maintenance of his publick worfhip, an the minifters thereof they are not now arbitrable nor to be revoked Spelman ‘Whoever fees thefe irreligious men ‘With burden of a ficknefs, weak and faint But hears them talking of religion then And wowing of their foul to ev'ry faint Dawies This plant Latinus, when his town he wall'd Then found, and from the tree Laurentum call'd And laft, in honour of his new abode He wonv'd the laurel to the laurel's god Dryden 2. To devote : a ceremonial phrafe To Maft® Harvey, upon fome fpecial confideration, I have wowed this my labour. 9o Vow. @w. n promifes Spenfer 'To make vows or folem Difdain not in thy conftant travellin To do as other woyagers, and mak Some turns into lefs creeks, and wifely tak Frefh water at the Heliconian fpring Donpe How comfortable this is, woyagers can beft tell Cheyne Deny your veffels, ye deny in vain A private woyager I pafs the main. Pope's'Ody/ffey Ue. adv. [up, Saxon; op, Dutch and Da nifh. 1. Aloft ; on high ; not down From thofe two brethren, admire the wonderfu changes of worldly things; now zp, now down, a if the life of man were not of much more certaint than a ftage play Knolles Thither his courfe he bends 5 but #p or down By center, or eccentrick, hard to tell Or longitude Milton 2. Out of bed ; in the flate of being rife from reft Helen was not #p, was fhe Shakefpeare His chamber being commonly ftived with fuiters he was up, he gave his legs, arms, and breaf to his fervants to drefs him, his eyes to his letters and ears to petitioners Wotton A letter which can be uttered by itfelf 1 diftinguifh letters into woewels and confonants vet not wholly upon their reafon, that a wowe/ ma be founded alone, a confonant not without a wowe/ which will not be found all true; for many of th confonants may be founded alone, and fome joine together without a wozvel, as bl, ft ; and as we pronounce the latter fyllable of people, riffle. Holder Virgil makes the two wowels meet without a Broome elifion Vowre"LLow, 2. /. [vow and fellow.] On bound by the fame vow Who are the votarie That are wowfellrwws with this virtuous king Shakefpeare VO'YAGE. 7. /. [vopage, French. 1. A travel by fea Guyon forward gan his woyage make With his black palmer, that hipa guided fill. Spez/ 5. In a ftate of being built tp with my tent ; here will I lie to-night But where to-morrow P-=well, all 's on¢ for that Shakefpeare As foon as the fun is up, fet up®n the city Fudges, ix Now morn with rofy light had ftreak'd the fky Up rofe the fun, and #p rofe Emily Addrefs'd her eatly fteps to Cynthia's fane. Dryd 7. To a ftate of proficiency Till we have wrought ourfelves up into this degree of chriftian indifference, we are in bondage Atterbury 8. In a ftate of exaltation Thofe that were up themfelves kept others low Thofe that were low themfelves held others hard Ne fuffer'd them to rife, or greater grow. Spenfer Henry the Fifth is crown'd; up, vanity Down, royal {tate | all youfage counfellors, hence Shakefpear mans each part about me Dr}de, are like floods raifed in littl rain; they are quickly up, an be poured unexpectedly in' upus Dryden From younger to elder years I am ready to die from my youth 1p Upon his firft rifing, a general whifper ran amon 6. Above the horizon powers Into order : as, he drew up his regi 14 ment [woyelle, Fr. wocalis, Lat. ment 3. In the ftate of being rifen from a feat Vo'wep. part. paf. [ from the verb.] Con 13 travel ; to paf One who travels by fea Asa boar was whetting his tecth, up comes a fo to him L'Eflrange over woyage. they drecv 12. From a remoter place, coming to an perfon or place To taint with deadly drugs the barbed dar Tlus refus'd t" impart the baneful truft. Pope's Ody Vo'yacer. . f. [voyageur, French ; fro well-appointe Grief and paffio brooks by a fudde if the concernmen on us, it overflow For, woyaging to learn the direful art I with pai Voyag'd th' unreal, vaft, unbounded dee Of horrible confufion Milton's Paradife Lof? 11. In a ftate of being increafed, or rai ed 7o Vo'y AGE. w. n. [woyager, Fr. from th noun.] To travel by fea 4. From a ftate of decumbiture or conceal n. / An All nations have interknowledge of one another by woyage into foreign parts, or ftrangers that com to them Bacon T And put the Englifhmen unto t e fword, Sba&e Thou haft fird me; my foul's up i arms, 3. The praice of travelling the country people, that Sir Roger was up. 4ddi/ Vo'weL Bi daies firfi‘yb'reake Rebegs there a}:'e up If you make your wsyage upon her, and prevail I am no further your enemy Shakefp. Cymbeline Suckling fecrated by folemn declaration to the city ; which he A lo Shakefpeare w. a hStrait the rumour fle it If he fhould intend his woyage towards my wife I would turn her loofe to-him; and what he get more of her than fharp words, let it lie on my head whe Doft fee how unregarded no That piece or beauty pafies There was a time, when I did wot To that alone; but mark the fate of faces WT}l:e ngntle archbifhop of York is u phrafe 2. A folemn promife, commonly ufed for 70 Vo'YAaGE a promife of love or matrimony to fit in the cabin whe the winds were allayed, but ready to refume th helm when the ftorm arofe Prior 2 Our fhips went fundry woyages, as well to th pillars of Hercules, as to other parts in the Atlantick and Mediterranean feas Bacon This great man aéted like an able pilot in They are polluted offerings Uu 15. Up and down there Plalm lxxxviii Difperfedly; here an Abundance of them are feen fcattered up an down like fo many little iflands when ‘the tide i ' Add,fi,,, low 16. Up and down Ou defir Backward and forward, is, in this prefent controverfy, no to be carried #p and down with the waves of uncertain arguments, but rather pofitively to lead on th minds of the fimpler fort by plain and ealy degrees till the very nature of the thing itfelf do makeHoker manifeft what is truth The {kipping king he rambled up and down Shakefpeare, With fhallow jefters Up and dozvn he traverfes his ground Now wards a felling blow, now ftrikes again Then nimbly fhifts a thruft, then lends a wound; Now back he gives, then rufhes on amain. Danitls Thou and deat Shall dwell at eafe, and #p and down unfee Milton Wing filently the buxom air On this windy fea of land, the fien Walle'd up and dozvon alone, bent on his prey. Milt What amiferable life doft thou lead, fays a'dog to a lion, to run ftarving up and dewon thus in woodse L'Eftrange She moves ! life wanders up and dow Through all her face, and lights up every chan:z: Addifon 17. Up zo To an equal height with Tantalus was punifhed with the rage of an efersnal thir@t, and fet zp ro the chin in water, that fle from his lips whenever he attempted to drink it flddi/flflt 18. Up 7 Adequately to The wife® men in all ages have lived up % th religion of their country, when they faw nothm fld'{'fi"‘ in it oppofite to morality They are determined to liv}e u/)‘zlo thi holyl'kru.c ke i iged f themfelves Ato wa hz e obhlgc by whici h theeyy ha tha n ii pa f th al ti mo on no We mu {olicit us, but we muft learn to do well, and a up to the pofitive precepts of our duty. R.og- Sert 19. Up wwith A phrafe that fignifies th y?bl gi t i t a i i r act o She, quick and proud, and who did Pas defpife e fa th o hi to an fif he t aw U ei wx mo om be th t qu e ti Anothe Sid ce gr l lit wi ha he Thus Pas did kif a m f n y p i r v t 20. It is adde cumulation, or increafe w} u i i o p o t # e m n If we coul i a m C t o r p e e that fettled i Rome, they would amount to morfetghaar;ae""b foun tex2 t in any fix parts of Europe o th Addifoi r on Tra Ury» |