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Show A1l feed on one vain patron, and enjo Th' extenfive bleffing of his luxury 3. To pafture; to place cattle to feed Pope put in his beaft, and fhall feed in another man' B, xxii, V field, he fhall make reftitution 4. To grow fat or plump. A provincia ufe ¥rep. # /. [from the verb. that which is eaten A fearful deer then looks moft about when h comes to the beft feed, with a fhrugging kind o Sidney tremor through all her principal parts their feed is muc as a young one as wel An old worked ox fat becaufe they ecat n cheaper DMortimer's Hu/b oats 2. Pafture Befides his cote, hisflocks and bounds of fee Shakefpeare's As you like it Are now on fale at of eating 3. Meal Plenty hun Tempting fo nigh, to pluck and eat my fil I fpared not: for fuch pleafure till that hou Mi/ton At feed or fountain never had I found Fe'epEr. 2 /. [from feed. 1. One that gives food The bealt obeys his keeper, an looks up hand Denbham to his mafter's, but his feeder' No 2. An exciter an encourager I am as I have been When thou do'ft hea Approach me, and thou fhalt be as thou was't "The tutor and the feeder of my riots. Shake/p 3. One that eats ‘With cager feeding, food doth choak the feeder Shakefp But that our feaft In every mefs have folly, and the feeder I4{hould bluf Jeft with it as a cuftom Shakefpeare To fee you fo attired. of thrufh in Ariftotle with one kin mee ‘W called the miffel thrufh, or feeder upon miflelto Brown's Vidgar Errours 4. One that eats in a certai nice feeder, a grofs feeder mode Riot agrees not with frugality Then, that unfathionable man am I pret. felt; part. pafl. felt. v, # [pelan, Saxon. of things by th 3. To have perceptio touch The fenfe of feelizg can give us a notion of exten fion, fhape, and all other ideas that enter at the eye Addifon's Speét except colours 2, To fearch by feeling See FerrLr They fhould feek the Lord, if happily they migh feel after him and find him A 3, To have a quick fenfibility of good o evil, right or wrong Man, who fee/s for all mankind Pope 4. To appear to the touch Blind men fay black fee/s rough, and white fee/ Dryd {mooth Of thefe tumours one fee/s flaccid and rumpled the other more even, flatulent and fpringy. Shbarp 9o FreL. w. a 1. To perceive by the touch 3. To have perception of hernll by to be acquainted with His overthrow heap'd happinefs upon him For then, and not till then, he fe/z himfelf And found the bleffedne(s of being little Shake[peare Henry VIIL Frrr. # /. [from the verb. feeling ; the touch The fenfe o The difference of thefe tumours will be diftinSharp's Surgery _guifhed by the feel Fe'sLer. z /o [from fecl. 1. One that feels 2. 'The horns or antennz of infects Infes clean their eyes with their forelegs as wel as antennz; and as they are perpetually feeling an before them with their fee/ers or antennze I am apt to think that befides wiping and cleanin the eyes, the ufes here named may be admitted Derham's Phyfico-Theology Fr'eL1NG. participial adj. [from feel. O wretched ftate of man in felf-divifion O well thou fay'ft a fee/ing declaratio Thy tongue hath made of Cupid's'deep incifion Sidney Thy wailing words do much my fpirits moye They uttered are in fuch a feeling fathion Sidney ~ Write 'till your ink bedry, and with your tear Moift it again; and frame fome feeling line Shakefp That may difcover fuch integrity Who ‘moft peor man made tame to fortune's blows by the art of known and feeling forrows Shakefpcare pregnant to good pity 1 had a feeling fenf Of all your royal favours; but this laf Southerne Strikes through my heart Fr'svine. 7 /. [from feel. 1. The fenfe of touch through all parts diffus'd That fhe might look at will through every pore Milton 2. Power of a&ion upon fenfibility The apprehenfion of the good Gives but the greater feeling to the worfe Shakefpeare's Richard 11 3. Perception; fenfibility Their king, out of a princely feeling, was {parin Bacon and compaflionate towards his fubjects Great perfons had need to borrow other men's opinions to think themfelves happy; for if they judg Bacon by their own feeling, they cannot find it Shakefpeare refiftance of air to moun RL:/('/g/ 4. Tohave fenfe of external pain of pleafure Nor did they not perceive the evil pligh In which they were, or the fierce pains not fee/ Milto But why fhould thofebe thought to *{cape, who fee "Ehofe rods of &orplons and thofe whips of fleel Creech of fenfe fo w learn wha belongs to th foul by an inward confcioufnefs, which may be calle a fort of internal feeling Fe/ELINGLY: adv. [from fieling. Watts. Pope fears Fe'eTvess out feet adj [from feet. Being with Geoffrey of Boulloin broched three feet/efs birds call‘ed Allerions, upo I‘EIGN . a his arrow Camdeng [ feindre French; Jngo, Latin. 1. T invent to image by a mind a& of th Abominable, inutterable, and worf Than fables yet have feign'd, or fear conceiv'd Gorgons, and hydras, and chimeras dire AZi/tor Nt'bn V 2. To make a fhow of The princes might judge that he meant himfelf Sidney who fpake fo feelingly He would not have talked fo fee/ingly of Codrus' bed, if there had been room for a bedfello in it Pope Here feel'we but the penalty of Adam The feafon's difference; as the icy phang And churlifh chiding of the Winter's wind Which when it bites and blows upon my bedy Evn il 1 fhriwk with gold, I {mils and fay 80 Both his hands, moft filthy feculent Above the water were on high extent F.Q: And feigned towafh themfelves inceffantly 3. T mak a fhew of to do upon fom falfe pretence Me gentle Delia beckons from the plain Then hid in thades eludes her eager fwain But feigns a laugh to fee me fearch around 4. To diffemble ; to conceal {olete Prpe Now ob Each trembling leaf and whiftling wind they hear As ghaftly bug their hair on end does rear Yet both do ftrive their fearfulnefs to feigs Fairy Queen 7o Fricn. @, #n. - To relate falfely; toimage from the invention ; to tell fabuloufly Therefore the poe Did feign that Orpheus drew trecs, ftones, and floods Since nought fo ftockifh hard and full of rage But mufick for the time doth change his nature Shakefpeare Fe'toNEDLY. adv. [from feign.] In fiction not truly Such is found to have been falfely and feignedl in fome of th Bacon heathens Inventer And thefe three voices differ; all the things done the doing and the doer; the thing feigned, th feigning and the feigner; fo the poem, the pocty Ben Fonfon and the poet Frint. participial adj. [from fegn, fo feigned 5 or funt, Fr.] Counterfeit feeming The min by degrees lofes its natural relifh o real, folid truth, an is reconciled infenfibly to an thing that can be but drefled up into any feizt a Lacke pearance of it Frint. 7. /. [ feint, French. 1. A falfe appearance; an offer of fomethin no 1intended to be Courtly's letter is but a feint to getoff Specfato 2. A mock affault; an appearance of aimin at one part, when another is intended t be ftruck But, in the breaft encamp'd, prepare For well-bred feizts and future wars 1. With expreflion of great fenfibility 2, So as tobe fenfibly felt His brother's image to his mind appears Inflames his heart with rage, and wings his feez with Fe'towER. 7 /. [from feign. contriver of a fiction Why was the figh To fuch a tender ball as th' eye confin'd So obvious and {o eafy to be quench'd And not, as feeling 'The plural of fot And b)'l that laugh the willing fair is found 1. Expreflive of great {enfibility #. / Jeigned)? them out of thine own hear Whofe ev'ry touch would force the feeler's fou To th? oath of loyalty. Shakefpeare's Cymbeline fearchin FEET No fuch things are done as thou fayeft, but thoy This hand, whofe touch denc The air is {o thin, thata bird has therein no fee/ing of her wings, or an 6. To know As we learn what belongs to the body by the evi Suffer me that I may fee/ the pillars. Fudges 2, 'To try; to found He bath writ this to fee/ my affe@ion to you honour Shakefpeare Henry VII1 The well-fung woes fhall footh my penfive ghoft He beft can paint them who can fee/ them moft Pope Not youthful kings in battle feiz'd alive E'er felt fuch grief, fuch terrour, anhd defpair Lope A With methey'd ftarve for wantof ivory. Diyden qo FEEL This is no flattery: thefe are counfellord, That feelingly perfuade me what I am, Shake/n He feelingly knew, and had trial of the lat good, and of the new purchafed evil. Raleigh Would 1 had never trod this Englith ecarth e is not fufficifen Th fel l fi Se 2 as, ently analogical But fuch fine _feeders are no guefts for me 5. 'To be affe@ed by; to perceive mentally Or felt the flatteries that grow upon it and fhal f a man fhall caufe a field to be eaten 1. Food FEL FE FE Fe/LanpErs z Worm Prior in hawks Ainfaorth To FELICITATE. . a. [ feliciter, French felicito, Lat. 1. To make happy 1 profef Myfelf an enemy to all other joys And find 1 am alone felicitat In your dear highnefs' love Shakefpearc Wha |