OCR Text |
Show EM PV'I: No weeping orphan faw his fathet's ftore difcourfes of thofe that underftood the att of fpeak- ing, are not the art and {kill of {peaking well. Locke That which was once the moft beautiful fpot o Ttaly, covered with palaces, embellifbed by emperors, and celebrated by poets, has now nothing t Addifor on Italy fhew but ruins E'mpErING. 2. fi 'The ember days. word ufed by old authours, now obfolete Yor caufes good fo many ways Keep emd'rings-well, and fafting days What law commands, we ought to obey E'mBERS. 7. /. without a fingular [2mypia Saxon athes einmyria Hlandick athes or cinders. Hot cinders not yet extinguifhed To EmBra'zoN r. T ho afhe . a. [blafonner, French figure adorn wit to of heraldry grace with enfigns armorial 2. To deck in glaring colours; to fet ou pompouily to fhew W With bright emblazonry and horrent arms E'VIBLEM. 7 o ['e/‘wg)m//ma. embe Gentl in Lent, the feat of Pentecoft, September 14 Detember 13 Common Prayer ‘Stated times appointed ‘for fafting are Lent, an the four feafons of the year called emberavechs Ayliffe's Parergon o EMBE'ZZLE: @. a. [This word feem corrupted by an ignorant pronunciatio from imbecil. *. To appropriate by breach of truft; t tarn what is intrufted in his hands to hi own ulfe 2 to fwallow u When thou hal Emsr'zzrement 1. The aét of appropiiating to himfelf tha which is received in truft for another 2. The thing appropriated 9o EMBLA'2E. . a. [blafinner, French. 1, To adorn with glittering embellithments Th' unfought diamond Would fo emblaxe the forehead of the deep And fo"beftu with ftarg that they belo Would grow inur'd to light /lezkefp, Tine Shakef Kin Le Botches and blains muft all his fle{h{mfalfigbm And ajl his peopl Milton's Pa; Eo All crowd in ‘heaps, as at'a night-alar The bees drive out upon each other's back embofs their hives in clufters. Dryd. D;}"Sez‘zfli 2. To engrave with relief, or rifing work,Then o'er the lofty gate his art embofi' Androgeo's death, and off'rings to his ghoft .Dtyd.'}"f 3+ [from emboiffer, French, to inclofe as (he did weep and wail, Fairy Queen 'To inclofe in thicket. Like that felf-begotten bird = In th' Arabian woods emboffe, Milton's Agoniffe hav almoft embofé him you fhall fe Shakefpear EmBo'ssMENT, 7. /. [fromembofs 1. Any thing ftanding out from the ref jut; eminence Addifon I with alfo, in the vegy middle, a fair moun with three afcents and alleys, enough for four walk a-breaft; which I would have to be perf circles, without any bulwarks or embo/fments Bacon's Effays 2. Relief; rifing work They -are at a lofs about the word pende fome fancy it expreffes only the great emba/fn E,;; of the figure, others believe it hung off the?}elm€§ and hiero -gliphically, as to the Egyptians; and the pheni was the hierogliphick of the fun. Brown's Fulg. Er He took a great ftone, and put it up under th Addifon on Tialy in alto relievo To Emeo'TT1E. . @ [bouteille, French. To include in bottles; to bottle oak, emblematically joining the two great element of mafonry Sawif ( Stirom, firmeft frui Evere'MarisT. . [ [fromemblem.] Writers or inventers of emblems L Embottled, long as Priamean Tro :?bz% Withftood the Greeks; endure 7o EMBO'WEL. w. .. [from' bowel.]' ‘?‘O Thefe fables are ftill maintained by fymbolica writers, cmblematifts, and heralds. Brown's Vul, Er E'viBoLism. o /. [eubonopls. 1. Intercalation; infertion of days or year to produce regularity and equation o m tfime Milton In my corrupted blood fall to-night Emprema'ricarry. adv. [from emblematical.] Inthe manner of emblems; allufively; with occult reprefentation Dryden's Perf 2. /i [from embezzle. A plague fore, or emboffed carbuncle W By tongue and pudding to our friends explai What does your emblematick worthip mean Prior 1n riot Obh, he is more ma A Than Telamon for his fhield; the boar of Theffa Was never fo ¢mbg/t Shakefp ufing emblems emblematicall a-t{lay, with his embgffed frot is ftrained with hard tunning, efpecially upon ha ground, will have his knees {welled, and then he faid to be embgft, from boffe, Erench; a tumour Where gates thould open, or where walls fhould compafs Prior The poets contribute to the explication of reverfe purely emblematicaly or when the perfons are alle have fpoke When a deer is hard run, and foams at t mouth, he is faid to be embof: a dog alfo, when rife embexzl'd all thy ftore Where's all thy father left Which ‘ 5. To hunt hard With emblematick 1kill and myftick order Thou fhew'dft where tow'rs on battlements fhoul Other Upon the beached verge of the falt gfi‘omo?fio Glanville's Scepfis 2. Dealing in emblems o Timon hath made his everlafti 4o [embofeare, Ttalian, Addifon's Guard gorical into Tamn A knight her met, in mighty arms embof'd In the well fram'd models He had embexzled the king's treafure, and extorted money by way of loan from all men. Hayw To wafte bunehes And in the way EmBLEMATICAL adj [fro emblem. EmBremA/TICK 1. Comprifing an emblem; allufive; occaltly reprefentative Friday, and Saturday after the firft Sunda rifin The knight his thrillant fpear againaffay' In his brafs-plated body to embgfi Spenfer The primitive fight of elements doth fitly enble day falls fomethin § f 1 box.] - To inclofe; to include; to cov Not ufed that of opinions a protube 70 E'MBLEM. w. 2. [from the noun.] T reprefent in an occult or illufive manner The ember days at the four feafons are the Wednefdey wit Thames attion, being all head and paws Wt ( [fromboff, a protghe 1 T 0 fi;zm W x_th,prqtuberz{ncesv; to cove Milion Thy mighty mafter's emblem, in whofe fac Sate meeknefs, heighten'd with majeftick grace Denpam He is indeed a proper emblem of knowledge an he trac'd too well @,«. a. a rance, French: Peachan on Drawing Milton While thus heav'n's highelt counfels, by the lo E'MBeRWEER, 7 /. [The original of thi word has been much controverted: fom derive it from embers or athes ftrewed b penitent on their heads; but Ne/fon de‘cides in favour of Marefihal, who derives it from ymbren or embren, a courfe o circumvolution. A week in which "a 75 EMBOSSS . The turbulent furge fhall cover. Thougart a bile landf{cape of the country natural to the beaft He toft his troubled eyes, embers that glo Now with new rage, and wax too hot for hell Crafbaw He faid, and rofe, as holy zeal infpires He rakes hot embers, and renews the fires Dryden's Virgil like'the heart 1. Inlay; enamel; any thing inferted int the body of another Some ftill removed place will fit While glowing embers through the roo Teach light to counterfeit'a gloom mblmg b)ma‘; o b Y an emboly; is driven through ‘elattick channel Pic 2. An occult reprefentation; an allufiv Take hot embers, and put them about a bottl filled wich new beer, almoft to the very neck: le pifture; a typical defignation the bottle be well ftopped, leftit fiy out; and con- She had all the royal makings ofa queen tinue it, renewing the embers every day for th The rod, and bird of peace, and all fuch emblems fpace of ten days Bacon's Nat, Hifp Laid nobly on her Shakefp. Henry VILI It the air will not permit If,you draw your beaft in an emblem, thew Footfteps of their effe@s members make a'fort of an gine, inwhich a chemical tiquor, refe ydraulick ¢p Hakewill on Prcfuia'w{a Him roun A globe of firey. feraphim inclos' Ou blazoned by the poets to the higheft pitch Emera'zoNRrY. 7. /. [from emblazon. tures upon fhields eqations in a pump petty c_onquei't, ent for fom find Auguftus E'mBorus. fl.f:']:'&//aGaAaq.] An i t a n i r ferted and actin Milton's Par. Loft Seraphick arms and trophies 5 lde 2. 'The time inferted; mterca]a:ogr agz?e T? emblaze the honour which thy mafter got. Shak He from the glittering ftaff' unfurl' Th' imperial enfign, ftreaming to the wind With gems and golden luftre rich emblaz'd Tuffer Yor Friday, Saturn, and Wedne(day as even as they could But thou fhalt wear 1t as a herald's coat Ornament; adventitious beauty; decoration; adfcititious grace; any thing tha confers the power of pleafing between thé dead and the living, are the frequen and familiar embellifbments of the legends of th Romifh.church Atterbury to paint with enfigns armo Nor fhall this blood be wiped from thy point EmBr'LrisamMeNT. 2. /0 [from embelljp. Cultivate the wild licentious favag With wifdom, difcipline, and liberal arts Addifor's Cato "The embellifbments of life Apparitions, vifions, and intercourfes of all kind Pope Our fhrines irradiate, or emblaze the floors 2. To blazon rial f n year, but in divers faff;ion ing the moon, finding out em 3 an bofi even to the addition ogf whole fmo;{:fi ° 2 "The civil conftitutions of the year were after dif exenterate The fehogls A i The danger toitfelfee = = Shakif Embowelled will 1 fee t{lg% b a!}dg}i T ( e FI Embowelled of their dotrine, have left of *Till then, in blood,by noble Ferc ‘erent manner in feveral nationsy fome ufing th evifcerate; to deprive of tl}fi Qm{afl*‘ lyc A |