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Show EYF Poor eyelefs pilgrim Philips Pope EY'eLET. 2 /. [@illet, French, a little eye. A hole through which light may enter any {mall perforation for a lace to g through bac and fingers of a glove eyelet holes to draw it clofe T mad Wifeman's Surgery Ev'evip. # /. [¢pe and /id. brane that thuts over the eye Mark whe 'The mem fhe fmiles with amiable cheer And tell me whereto can ye liken it When on each eye/id{weetly do appea An hundred graces as in fhade to fit. Spenfer's Sonn On my eyelids is the fhadow of death. Fob. xvi. 16 Fetch me that flower; the herb I fhew'd thee once "The juice of it, on fleeping eyelids laid Will make or man or woman madly doa Upon the next live creature that it fees. Shakefpeare The Turks have a black powder, made of a mi neral called alcohol, which with a fine long penci they lay under their eye/ids, which doth colou black, whereby the white of the eye is fet off mor white Bacon's Natural Hiftory Atlength the crackling noife and dreadful blaz Call'd up fome waking lover to the fight And long it was ere he the reft could raife Whofe heavy eyelids yet were full of night. Dryden Evese'rvant. 7 [0 [egpe and fervant. fervant that works only while watched Evzse/rvicE. 7. /. [ge and ferwice.] Service performed only under infpeion Servants, obey in all things your mafters; no with eyefervice, as men-pleafers, but in finglenef of heart Col. iii Ev'snot. . /. [eye and fbor.] Sight; glance view I muf {ree fro windows 1 hav eyefbor b ead in the botto ‘Cyclop, if any pitying thy diferace Afk who disfigur'd thus that eyele/s face Slitting th The next tooth on each fide ftronger and deepe Methinks 1 fee thee, now thou art below not think of tharing the booty before I a danger, and out of eye/bot from the othe Dryden preferved many a young man from he this means Spectator Ev'esicuT. 7. /. [eye and fight. the eye Sight o The Lord hath recompenfed me according to m cleannefs in his eyefight 2 Sam rooted, and more pointed eyeteeth, to tear the mor ofa tomb fight fails, or thou look'ft pale, Shak Though fight be loft Life yet hath many folaces, enjoy' Where other fenfes want not'their'delights Ex'rsorEs 7 /. [eye-and fore. offenfive to the fight Somethin Hath the church of IChrift, from the firft beginning, by a fecret univerfal inftinét. of God's goo fpirit, always tied itfelf to end neither fermon, no almoft any fpeech of moment, which hath concerned matters of God without fom fpecia word of honourand glory to the Trinity, which we al adore; and is the like conclufion of pfalms becom now, at length, an eyefore, or agalling to the ear Hooker that hear it Fy, doff this habit fhame to your eftate And eyefore to our folemn feftival Shake/p As foon as the two lords came thither they covered to the trouble of the other; but having prefently t fpeak, they were quickly freed from that eyefore Clarendon Mordecai was an eyefore to Haman L'Efirange He's the beft piece of man's fleth in the market not an eyefore in his whole body. Dryd. Don Seb Evespo/tTED. adj. [eye and fpor. with {pots like eyes Marke Nor Juno's bird, in her eyefpotted train Spenfer So many goodly colours doth contain EvestrinG¥7. /[. [eye and flring.] 'Th ftring of the eye; the tendon by whic the eye is moved 1 would have broke mine eyeffrings; crackt them, bu Shakefp. Cymbeline To look upon him To know whether the fheep are found or not fee that their gums be red and the eyeffrings ruddy Mortimer Th Exv/eToorH. # f. [eye and zoorh. tooth on the upper jaw next on each fid to the grinders; the fang A wink Ev'ewing. #. /. [eye and wink. as a hint or token At home in leifure and domeflick eafe Exempt from many a care and chance, to whitch Eyefight expofes daily men abroad. Milion's Agon Jofephus fets this down from his own eye/ight being himfelf a chief captain at the fiege of Jopata Wilkins where thefe events happened He blinds the wife, gives eyefightgto the blind And molds and ftamps anew the lover's mind. Dryd called canini, in Englif tough fort of aliments Ray on the Creation They would have won any woman's heast; and clean.sh data import.tsv out README T warrant you, they could never get an eycwvink of her qu/eq/'pem‘e Evewi'tyess A z f. [¢pe and awitnefs. ocular evidence; one who gives teftimony to faéts feen with his own eyes ‘We mad known unto you the power and comin of our Lord Jefus Chrift, and were eyewitneffes o 2. Pet his majefty To meet him all his faints, who filent ftoo Eycwitnéffes of his almighty ats Milton's Paradife Lof? With jubilee advanc'd The curious, by laying together circumitances atteftations and charaéters of thof ar wh con cerned in them, either receive or reje¢t what at firf but eyewirneffes could abfolutely believe or difbe Addifon on the Chriftian Religiorn lieve EYRE. 7 /. [eyre, French; iter, Latin.] Th court of juftices itinerants; and jufticesi eyre are thofe only, which Braton in man places calls jafficiarios itinerantes. 'The eyr alfo of the foreft is nothing but th juftice-feat, otherwife called; which is or fhould b be hel ancient cuftom every thrée years by the juftices of th foreft, journeying up and down to tha Cowel purpofe Ev/rY. 7. /. [from ¢y, an egg.] The plac where birds of prey build their nefts an hatch But I was born fo high Our eyrie buildeth in the cedars top And dallies with the wind, and fcorns the fun, Shak The eagle, and the ftork On cliffs and cedar-tops their eyries build. Miltor Some haggard hawk who had her eyzy nigh Well pounc'd to faften, and well wing'd to fly D?:yd" F A confonant generally reckoned b authors, and admitted by Scaliger 9 among the femi-vowels, and according to that opinion diftinguifhed in the enumeration of the alphabe by a name beginning with a vowel, whic yet has fo far the nature of a mute, tha it is eafily pronounced before a liquid i the fame f{yllable. It has in Englith a jnvariable found, formed by comprefiio of the whole lips and a forcible breath 4t kindre lette FA FA is V which in th iflandick alphabet, is only diftinguifhe fro it by a point in the body of th letter FaBa crus. adj.] fabacens, Latin.] Havin the nature o a bean Dis FA'BLE. #. /. [ fable, French; fabula, Lat. r n t i e w m f di t n m c i a Pal o n k m f gi t e f m part of Britain hav t h k m a t e b f o t t n n t cou Lloyd lived many years among the Scots phi 3. A vitious or foolifh fiction iv m T e b f e wi ol an a But refufe pro 1. A feigned ftory intended to enforce fome | 4. 'The feries or contexture of events whic o i e moral precept conftitute a p of the poet: tb} Jotham's. fable of the trees is the oldeft extant and as beautiful as any made fince. Addifon's Speét 2, A fition in general Triptolemus, fo fung the nine Strew'd plenty from his cart divine But fpite of all thofe falle-makers He never fow'd op Almaign acres Dryden Th bein mora formed is the firft bufinef z fi d c f v r n c h r ; j y D l r m t t l a i f f as may be m The firft thing to be confidered in an eP't_c &P is the fable whic is pgric& or Impertett cording as the action, wh lefs fo r i c Addif s |