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Show GL GL r f n e e f l But fithence filenc o g e d i e d h a e t told it fla B r f d f y a w a v r 1 wil His goodly eyes On each fide he Spenfer Wit her innocency, di divers colour'd fans My love and fear g/u'd many friends to thee Shak. H. V1 whofe wind did fee To glow the delicate cheeks which they did cool Shakefp r M e no a p k l ' o g ' Hav t o f w t o u c f o i h " wif T fear thy overthro More than my body's parting with my foul Stood pretty dimpled boys, like fmiling Cupids w t o e f m a l f t e o a T Kunigund Whofo teacheth a fool is as one that glueth a pote bend, nowakefturn Grow » / [fro th verb. Sh p 1 Shinin heat o t t to the emperor Heqry 1 2 Vehemenc o paffion a o s o i z v o g v take f ter another, in her bare hands, and had thereby no Hakewill harm Not all parts like, but all alike inform' Blufhing in bright diverfities of day The fcorching fire that in their entrails g/ows grave How op'ning heay'ns their happy regions thow And yawning gulphs with flaming vengeance g/ow totally miftaken Addif. Ovid Fires that glow Th In the fame fultry winds and fcorching heats 4. 'Fo exhibit a ftrong bright colour 1. To flatter; to wheedle Into the heart of Eve his words made way. Miltan A falfe glozing parafite would call his foothardinefs valour, and then he may go on boldly, becauf blindly, and by miftaking himfelf for a lion, com South to perifh like an-afs Pope Not the fair fruit that on yon branches glows With that ripe red th' autumnal fun beftows Now for a-glozing {peech Fair prateftations, fpecious marks of friendfhip Philips Pope Each pleafing Blount fhall endlefs fmiles beftow Fope Here clearer ftars gow round the frozen pole Pope 2 To comment This thould be glsf Which Salique land the French unjuftly g/oz To be the realm of France Shake/peare or a&ivity o Grozr. 7 /. [from the verb. 1. Flattery ; infinuation You ftrive in vai T'o hide your thoughts from him, who knew too wel The inward glowings ofa heart in love Addiforn's Cato Forc'd compliments and formal bow Will fhew thee juft above neglect The fire with which thy. lover.glows, Will fettle into cold refpe Prior Did Shadrach's zeal my glowing breaft infpir To weaty tortures, and rejoice in fire Let the gay conftience of a life well fpen Prior -€alm ev'ry thought, infpirit ev'ry grace, Glowin thy heart, and fmile upon thy face With furies furrounded Pope Defpairing, confounded ‘He trembles, he glows Amidft Rhodope's fnows Pope So perifh all, whofe breafts ne'er learn'd. to glo For other§ good, or melt at others woe Pope To praife is always hard en real virtue fires the glowing bard 6. To rage or burn-as a paflion Lewis A fireiwhich every windy ;vafl'lon blows and with revenge it glowws Dryden Eove flowly burns, and long remains ; t glows, and with a fullen heat Shadwell To Grow, v. a. To make hot fo as t fhine,. Not in ufe, 3. To join Now to plain dealing ; lay thefe g/oxes by Shakefpeare 2. Specious thow; glofs And round thy phantom g/ze my clafping arms Pope. GLU'eBOILER: 7. /.. [glne and boil.| Onewhofe trade is to make glue GLu'er. 7 /. [from glue.] One who ce-ments with glue GLuM adj. [A lo by corrupting gloom. Some, when they heaa ftory cry, Well, what then Frenchj yailw. Miltosn to fate; to difguft The ambafladory makin nify- the king and queen his oration did {o mag- as was enough to g/uz the hearers Dove breaks friendfhip, whofe delight Feed, but not g/ut our.appetites Bacon Denbarnis. What way remov His fettled hate, and reconcile his love, That he may look propiticus on our toils, And hungry graves nomore be g/«zted with our {poils made by boiling the fkins of animals-to gelly; any vifcous or tenacious matter b No more my friend Dryd Fer let our glutted execution end to.another 1 foun Byydert 2z The fickle ear{oon glutred with the found, Condemn'd eternal changes to purfue Fir'd with the/laft, and eager of the new. Brior 3. To feaft or delight even to fatiety With death's carcafe g/uwr the grave Miltor. His faithful heart, a.blocdy facrifice Torn from his breaft, to g/u the tyrant's eyes Moxon To build the earth did chance materials chufe 7o GLUE. w. a. [from the noun, 1, To join with a vifcous cement [englutir 2. To cloy; to fill.beyond fufficiency GLUE. 7. /. [glz, ¥rench, gluter, Latin A vifcous-body commonl glud, Welfh. And through the parts cementing g/ze diffufe Blackmore The fowers.of grains, mixed with: water, wil Arbuthnot on Aliments make a fors.of glue a. glum, and Guardian. >Till cram'd and gorg'd, nigh burf With fuck'd and g/utted offal Grd'zex. n. f. [from gloze.] . A flatterer fo that, as it was well' faid by one of the ancients o earthly and watery fubftances, one is'a g/xe to anoBacon's Natural Hiffory ther The drieft and moft tranfparent glue is the beft w loo glutzo, Latin, to fwallow ‘1.. To fwallow; to devour Shall fuch morning dews be an eafe to the heat of Sidney. love's fire dies, on the other fide, drink in waters and liquors GLUT T If then a bodily evil in a bodily g/oxe be not hidden, Water, and all liquors, do haftily receive dry an more terreftial ‘bodies proportionable; and dry bo cant word formed Sullen ; ftubbornl grave Not uvfed are held on to umite; to invifcate. Drydens I hear thee, view thee, gaze o'er all thry:charms, Precious couches full oft are fhaked with a fever which bodie a cement Neavton's Opt Thofe wafps in a honeypot are fenfual me plunged in their Iufls and pleafures; and when the are once glued to them, 'tis a very hard matter t work themfelves out L' Effrange Intemperance, fenfuality; and flefhly lufts, d debafe mens minds and clog their fpirits; fink usdown into fenfe, and g/xe us to thofe low and infe-rior things Tillotfon She curbid a groan, that elfe had come And paufing, view'd.the.prefent in the tomb Then to the heart ador'd devoutly g/z' Her lips, and, raifing it;. her fpeech renew'd t Milton's Paradife Lof: And eafily tranfgrefs So gloz'd the tempter, and his proem tun'd Sawvage Like fire in logs, it warms us long to infinuate fawn Addiforn Amidft the foft variety I'm loft Like th? ethereal g/ow'd the green expanfe . And fair Belinda's blufh for ever glow ther by nothing who firft upon the groun Man will hearken to his glozing lies Can move the god tion; and others tell us their bodies are glued together by reft;. that is, by an occult quality, or ra. To Grozs. v. #. [gleran, Saxon. So warm with life his blended colours gZowv, When crept into aged veins Reynolds A glowworm {py'd, fuppofing he had foun A moving diamond, a breathing ftone For life it had, and like thofe jewels thone He held it dear,, 'till by the {pringing da Informed; he threw the worthlefs worm away Waller Such heay'nly figures from his pencil flow . With pride it mounts ar honey bags fteal from the humble bees The man Strike in the Sketch, or in the pi@ure glow fully, touch one another, ftick together very ftrongly and for explaining how. this may be, fome have invented hooked atoms, which is begging the quef And 'gins to pale his ineffeGtual fire. ~ Shakefpeare A great light drowneth a fmaller that it cannot b feen5 as the fun that of a glowworm Bacon [Z}' Fair ideas flow The parts of all homogeneal hard bodies, which. The glowworm thews the mattin to be near Addif. Cata The cord flides fwiftly through his glowing h:uG1ds From the mingled ftrength of fhade and light A new creation rifes to my fight 2. To hold together majeftic dignity of Raffaclle could unit And for night-tapers crop their waxen thighs And light them at the fiery glowworm's eyes Shakefpeare Did not his temples glo §. To feel paffion of mind fancy an the flefh will g/ue together with its own native balm Devham Gro'wworM. 7 fo [glhw and aworm.] {mall creeping grub with a luminous tail 3. To feel heat of body With fmile that glow' Milton Celeftial rofy red, love's proper hue Clad in a gown that g/owws with Tyrian rays Dryden A malicious joy Whofe red and fiery beams caft through your vifag Dryden and Lee's Oedipus A glowing pleafure of ftars, glued to the canyafs over the head of th figure Addifon on Italy Moft wounds, if kept clean, and from the air Pope with the g/ow and buftle of a Paulo, or Tintoret Pope Shrieks of woe Such as fuppofe that the great ftile might happil be blended with the ornamental, that the fimple their noftrils flow Smith feg:s in their churches a little tinfel crown, or a circl A waving glow his bloomy beds difplay Nor would you find it eafy to compof fro The cuftom of crowning the Holy Virgin is f much in vogue among: the Italians, that one ofte Shakefpeare 2. To burn with vehement heat whe Ecclef. xxii. 7 3. Brightnefs or vividnefs of colour The pale complexion of true love And the red g/ow of fcorn and proud difdain With radiant light, as glowing iron with fire Milton The mettled fteeds therd together A-fylvan{cene, which, rifing by degrees, Leads up the eye below, nor g/uze the fight Eiyde ,‘r":"ixhl one full profpedt ; but invites by many, Fo view at l:'..t‘ the whole 4 Dryden, To overfill ;- to load H attribute th ill fuccef the mavket a bad commo 1ty at once of either part to and retailing too much o I LA Lsderiot &5 La |