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Show GL GL Can we imagine that neither the ambition of princes, or intereft, or gain in private perfons, or curiofity and the defire of knowledge, or the glovy o difcoveries, could ever move them in thatendlefs tim Burnet to try their fortunes upon the fea Your fex's glory 'tis to thine unknown Yowrng Of all applaufe, be fondeft of your own 4. Splendour; magnificence Solomon, in all his glory, was not arrayed lik Matt, vi. 29 one of thefe Treated fo ill, chas'd from your throne Returning, you adorn the town And with a brave revenge do tho Waller Their glory went and came with you Pope The moon, ferene in glory, mounts the fky From opening fkies may ftreaming glories fhine And faints embrace thee with a love like mine Pope 6. A circle of rays which furrounds the head of faints in picture It is not a converting but a crowning grace ; fuc an one as irradiates, and puts a circle of g/ory abou South the head of him upon whom it defcends A fmile plays with a furprifing agreeablenefs in th eye, breaks out with the brighteft diftinction, and fit like a glory upon the countenance Collier of the Afpeét boaftfulnefs ; arrogance By the vain glory of men they entered into th therefore fhall they come fhortly to a Wifd. xiv. 14 end On death-beds fome in confcious g/ory lie Since of the door in the mode they die Young 8. Generous pride The fuccels of thofe wars was too notable to b ugknown to your ears, to which all worthy fam Sidney hath g/s1y to come unto boaftin w. 'T [glorior, Latin. With Jike judgment g/orping when he had happened to do a thing well, as when he had performe Sidney fome netable mifchief wont in th pride of their ow ceedings, to glory, that wherea away the roof, and Zuingliu of popifh fuperftition, the laf all remained,.which was to raz and' foundation of popery pro Luther did but blo batter but ‘the wall and hardeft work o up the very groun Hooker Let them look they gfry pot in mifchief Nor build theit evils on the graves of great men Yor tlien my guiitlefs blood muft cry againft them Shake/p 1 Cor. v. 6 Your glorying is not goed hatt feen mount Atlas Tho ‘While fiorms and tempefts thunder on its brow And oceans break their billows at its fect Tt {tands unmov'd, and gleries in.its height Addif. Cato This title. of Freeholder is what 1 moft glor in, and what moft effeGtually calls tc my min the happinefs of that government under which Addifon's Freebolder hye If othicrs ma g/ory in their birth why may no we, whefe parents were called by God: to attend o Arterbury him at his altar No one is out of the reach of misfortune; no on Clariffa thesefore fhould glory in his profperity w. a. To flatter To Grost to collogue Zlanmer See 70 GrozE GLOSS #. /o [yraoce; ghfe, French. 1. A {cholium a comment They mnever hear fentence, which mentionet the word or fcripture, but forthwith their g/offe upon it are the word preached, the feripture exHocker plain'd, ordelivered unto us in fermons 1t then all‘fouls, both good and bad, do teach With gen'ral voice, that fouls can never die *Ths not man's flatt'ring g6, but nature's fpeech Which In many places he has perverted my meanin by his g/s/fes, and interpreted my words into blafphemy and bawdry, of which they were not guilty Gro'ssary. m [0 [gloffarium, Latin; lof Jaire, French. A ditionary of obfcur or antiquated words According to Varro, when delubrum was applie to a place, it fignified fuch a one, iz quo dei fimu lachrum dedicatum ¢ft; and alfo in the old glofaries Stilling flect I could add another word to the gloffary. Baker Dryden's Fables, Preface They give the fcandal, and the wife difcern Their glo/fes teach an age too apt to learn. Dryden Explaining the text infhort g/o/fes, was Accurfius' method Baker on Learning Indentures cov'nants articles they draw | GLOSSA'TOR. 7. /. [ gly"m‘" French, fro glfs.] A writer of gloffes;.a commentator like God's oracies, can aever lie Whofe gliftering g/o/s dark'ned with filthy duft Spenfer You are a fe@tary That's the plain truth: your painted g/o/s difcovers To men that underftand you, words and weaknefs Shakefp Golden opinions from all forts of people Which would be worn now in their neweft g/ofs Shakefp The doubt will be whether it will polith f well; for fteel g/offes are more refplendent tha plates of brafs - Bacon Weeds that the wind did tof The virgins wore: the youths, woyen coats, tha caft a faint dim g/ofs Like that of oil Chapman's liads It was the colour of devotion, giving a luftre t reverence, and a g/o/5 to humility South Groves Dawies fields an meadows caufe his office is to pronounce judgment, .and not t become an evidence : but why may not the fame b GLO'ssER. 7. f. [gloffarius, Latin, 1. A fcholiaft; a commentator 2. A polifher Gro'ssiness. # /. [from glyly. polith ; fuperficial luftre There came towards us a perfon of place; he ha on hima gown with wide fleeves, of a kind of water camblet GLOVE Hookery Preface ford He feems with forged quaint concei Ta fet a g/ofs upon his bad intent T he common glof Of theologians 7o Gross White gloves were on his hands, and on his hea A wreath of laurel 7o GrLovE. w. a Ar noun. 1. To comment 7o GLosS Prior Donne ' 2. To palliate by {pecious expofition or reprefentation Is this the paradife. in.defcription whereoffo muc gloffing.and deceiving eloquence hath been fpent Hooker's Sermons Do L not teafon wholly on your conduct You have the art to g/o/s the fouleft caufe. Philips 3. To embellifh with fuperficial luftre But thou, who lately of the common ftrai Wert one of us, if ftill thou doft retai The (ame ill babits, the fame foliies too Giofs'd ayer only with a faint-like {how therefore Tender as twere a jelly glov'd. large as the fields, he draws big as g/o/s'd civil laws henc thou nice So foft, 'tis air but once remov'd 1. 'To explain by comment Affurances thrice themfelves crutch A fcaly gauntlet now, with joints of fteel Muft glove this hand Shakefpeare's Henry IV¥ The next he preys on is her palm That alm'ner of tranfpiring balm Dryd @. a In parchment then [from the noun.] " T My limbs Weaken'd with grief, being now enraged with grief @. n. [glofer, French, from th Her equals firft obferv'd her growing zeal And laughing g/o/s'd, that Abra, ferv'd fo well Dryden cover as with a glove. Milton 2. To make {ly remarks D"-fl_ylofl Shakefpeare Thou detain'ft Brifeis in thy bands By pricftly g/¢/ing on the gods commands Ceover of the hands. Some could not ftay their g/oves to find than the naked truth doth af caufe any fairer g/o/ Dilton They flew about like chaff i' th' wind For hafte fome left their matks behind the face of thi or to fet upo Bacon 2. /. [zlore, Saxon, from klaffue Danifh, to divide. Sidney 1t is no part of -my fecret meaning to draw yo hatred far mor Myfelf will fearch our planted grounds at home; . For downy peaches and the g/o/fy plum. - Dryden Which breeds nought elfe but gloffes of deceit int colour His hair hung long behindy.and g/g/fy ravenblack Drydin feems to partake of both the former hereb azur His furcoat was a-bearfkin on his back; fenf To fill the world with ftrange but vain conceit One brings the ftuff; the other ftamps the coin an excellen Shone with a g/offy fcurf {fpecious; Poor painters oft with filly poets join o g/offy than ours The reft entir Addifon's Spectator 'Thi Smocs GLO'SSOGRAPHER. 2. f [yrdooe an vge@e. A {choliaft ; a commentator GLO/ISSOGRAPHY 7 f [yréceew - and v¢#¢w. The writing of commentaries Gro'ssy. adj. [from glyfs] Shining fmoothly polifhed frefh, with their firlt g/o/s upon them reprefentation Their furfaces had a fmoothnefs and gloffinef much furpafling whatever I had obferved in marin or common falt " Boyle are at any feafo artfull The reafon why the affert does not prove the Z:xifl:ence ;?;'):digai.fggf iJsugg pleafant to look upon; but never fo much asin th opening of the Spring, when they are all new an 3. An interpretatio faid of two judges? ‘Therefore, in this refpec the g/o/fator's opinion muft be falfe Ayli e, Was underneath enveloped with gold fpeciou to be proud of "They wer Hudibras He could unriddle in a moment Still thou art bound to vice, and ftill a (lave Diyden's Perf His iron coat all over-grown with ruft Now fleeping flocks on their foft fleeces lie To GLo'RY putting ill g/offes upon the text, and taking with Howe/ the left hand what 1 offer with the right All this, without a g/o/5 or comment Then 1 refume the freedom which Lgwe b fome aflinity to glow 5. Luftre; brightnefs world, an certain paffages therein a Large as the fields themfelves, and larger fa a man under groun Than civil codes with all ‘their g/g/fés are. Pope be afterwards brough In this {fenfe it feem the feveral glories of | 2. Superficial luftre pronounce them th to have another derivation; it has perhap Addifon's Speciator Ariftotle fays, that {houl converfe with works of art, an up into the open day, and fe the heaven and earth, he woul works of God sr.> Pride mutte Som Cleaveland | GLo'veR. #. /. [from glove.] One whof trade is to make or fell gloves Does he not wear a great round beard like glover's paring knife Shakefp GLouT. w. 7 [A low word of whic I find no etymology. To pout; t look fullen. It is fill ufed in.Scotland She lurks in midft of all her den, and ftreaks From out a ghafily whirpoo}t all her necks Where, glowtizg round her rock, to fith fhe falls Chapman Glowting with fullen fpight, the fury fhoo Her clotted locks, and blatted with each look. Garth To GLOW Dutch. . 2. [slopan, Saxon; gleyen ‘1. To be heated fo as to thine without flame Bnt |