OCR Text |
Show HE He1NOUSNESS . /. [from beinons. He'tnroin Parabola, in mathematicks, or th Atro parabolick fpiral, is a curve which arife from the fuppofition of the axis of th common Apollonian parabola's being ben cioufnels; wickednefs. He who can treat offences, provoking God, a jefts and trifles, muft have little fenfe of the Aeinou/. uefs of them Rogers round into the periphery of a circle, an is a line then pafling through the extre hwres French ol [beire Heir. 7 f Latin. mities of the ordinates 1. One that is inheritor of any thing afte An heir fignifies the eldeft, who is, by the law Locke of England, to have all his father's land What lady is that Refaline her name Shak YiRel Sunk is the hero, and his glory loft Pope And 1 his Aeir in mifery alone The Aeirs to titles and large eftates have a weaka tendernefs in their conftitu nefs in their eyes, an were fixed in its centre to look on the body of the fun, withou offence to the eyes Harris He'L1oTrROPE. 2. /. [;fi,')\f@" and reemw ; helio An inheritrix He'irzss. 7 /. [from ber. a woman that inherits An beirefs fhe, while yet alive All that was her's to him did give thoug Apeas h crown, yet claimed no title to it during the life o . Diyden his father-in-law plan tha mor particularl heliotropium turn toward th Latin. fun bu o fun th turnfol He'LispHERICAL. adj. [helix and fphere. The helifpherical line is the rhomb line in navigation, and 1s fo called becaufe on the globe it wind roun the pole fpirally, and ftill comes nearer an nearer to it, but cannot terminate in it HE/LIX . / {piral line Hr'irvEss. adj. [from heir.] Without a - heir; wanting one to inherit after him French >Tis an obfervation of flatterers, that they are lik the beliotrope; they open only towards the fun, bu fhut and contrat themfelves at night, and in cloud weather Government of the Tongue Waller married the Aeirefs of th trope flower To in His fon in blooming youth was fnatch'd by fate One only daughter heir'd the royal ftate. Dryden Harris Hr'Lioscore. z /o [beliofeope, Fr. 52~ an croriw. | A fort of telefcope fitted fo a ‘The young extravagant 4eir had got a new fteward Savift and was refolved to look into his eftate the noun. [heliocentrique, Fr The beliocentrick place of a planet is faid to b fuch as it would appear to us from the fun, if our ey 2, One newly inheriting an eftate Tp Heir. v. a. [fro herit Harris Hevioce/NTrICK. adf W@ and xereer. Savift tions do no circle That 'll give my voice on Richard's fide To bar my maiter's Ae/is in true defcent Shakefpeare God knows, I will not do it Being Aeirs together of the grace of life whic converge towards the centre of the fai the prefent poffeffor . The heir of Alanfon LT HEI Fin th [helice, Fr. exé. Harris Par of a circumvolution true inclinatio of th fcrew togethe with the quantity of water which every be/ix doe contain Wilkins. I ftill think o The wrong I did myfelf; which was fo much Sbake/p That heirlefs it hath made my kingdom HELL. 7. /. [pelle, Saxon. 1. The place of the devil and wicked fouls Hre'irsuip, #. /. [from heir.] The ftate .character, or privileges of an heir For it is a knel That fummons thee to heaven, or to bell Shakefp If a man were a porter of he// gates, he fhoul A layman appoints an heir or an executor in hi will, to build an hofpital within-a year, under pai of being deprived of his Aeir/bip. Ayliffe's Parergon ‘Hi'trLooM. #. /. [keir and geloma, goods Saxon.| Amy furniture or moveable decreed to defcend by inheritance, and therefore infeparable from the freehold Achilles' feeptre was of wood Tranfmitted to the hero's line Came an heirloom, as Homer fings Th preterit Saift and part pafl o A rich man beginning to fall, is Ae/d up of friends E‘l'n'.‘/{:'/ If Minerva had not appeared and Ae/d his hand he had executed his defign Dryden HELI'ACAL. adj [heliague, French fro 2248,] - Emerging from the luftre of th fun, or falling into it Had they afcribed the heat of the feafon to thi ftar, they would not have computed from its beliaca afcent Brown He'tacavvy. adv. [from heliacal. From th rifing of this ftar not cofmically puted their canicular days tha Brown Ie is tempeftuous in the Summer whe beliacally; and rainy in the Winter he rife whe he rife Dryden . He'vicar. adw. [belice, French, from 14 Spiral; with many circumvolutions . The ferew is a kind of wedge, multiplied or continued by a belical revolution about a cylinder, recelving.its motion not from any ftroke, but from vectis at oneend of it Let none admir That riches grow in Ae// Deferve the precious bane that {oil may bef Milion Hel/l's black tyrant trembled to behol The glorious light he forfeited of old 2 'Th plac o feparat fouls Cowley whethe good or bad 3. Temporal death Th pains of Ae// came about me Wilkins the fnares o Pfaln wviii. 4 death overtook me 4. The place at a running play to whic thofe who are caught are carried Then couples three be ftraight allotted there They of both ends the middle two do fly "The two that in mid-place, Ae// called were Muft ftrive with waiting foot and watching eye T'o catch of them, and them to Ae// to. bear That they, as well as they, se// may fupply. Sidney . "The place into whic his fhreds This trufty fquire 15, with the fun, but heliacally, that is, its emerfion from 1he rays of the fun, the ancients com achronically Shakefpeare's Macbeth I will go down to my fon mourning to se/l. Genefis Apofiles Creed He defcended into be// Thence through a long defcent of king ‘Hrip hold have old turning the key the taylor throw In bell-black night endur'd would have boil'd up And quench'd the ftelled fives. Shakefp. King Lear Hecvr-prED. adj. [hell and bred.] Produce in hell Heart cannot think what conrage and whatcries With foul enfouldred fmoak and flafhing fire The hell-bred beatt threw forth into the fkies. Spen/ Hevr-eroTH. 7. /i [hell and broth.] compofition boiled up for infernal purpofes Adder's fork, and blind worm's fting Lizard's leg, and owlet's wing Yor a charm of powerful trouble Like a bell-broth boil and bubble Shakefp. Mach Hrri-poomen. adj. [hell and dosm. figned to hell Con And reckon'ft thou thyfelf with fpirits of heay'n Hell-doom'd! and breath'it defiance here and fcorn Where I reign'd king HevLt-goverwep Milton adj. - Dire&ed by hell Earth gape open wide and ate him quick As thou doft fivallow up this good king' Which his be//-govern'd arm hat HeLr-maTep adj HeLr-HAUNTED Haunte blood wr'd. Shak Abhorred like hell Back do I tofs thefe treafons to th With the he//-hated lie o'erwhelm th adj heart [/f‘z'// an Shak /;mz;z/. by the devil. Fierce Ofmond clos'd me in the bleeding bark And bid me ftand expofed to the bleak winds Bound to the fate of this be//-haunted grove \I‘iELL-HOUND. 7z f 1. Dog of hell Dryd. [pelle puno, Saxon. From forth the kennel of thy womb hath crep A hell hound that doth hunt us all todeath. Shakofp Now the heli-hounds with {uperior fpee Had reach'd thedame, and, faftning on her fide The ground with iffuing fireams of purple dy'd Drydern 2, Agent of hell I call' My hell-hounds tolick up the draff, and filth Which man's polluting fin with taint had (he On what was pure Milton HEerv-x1Te. 7 fi [hell and Aite.] Kite o infernal breed The term e/l prefixed t any word notes deteftation Did you fay all 2 What all > Oh, Aell-kite! all What, all my pretty chickens, and their dam At one fell fwoop He'LLEBorE. 7 / mas flower He'LLesorE White A plant Shakefp. Macbet [ belleborus, Lat.] Chrift n. f. [weratram, Lat. There sre great doubts whether any of its fpecie be the true Aellebore of the ancients Hr'LLenis idiom o /; [éaaviops. He'rrLisHa. adj. [from kell. 1. Sent from hell Miller A Gree Ainfworth belonging to hell O thou celeftial or infernal fpirit of love, or wha other heavenly or Ae//ifh title thou lift to have, fo effects of both I find in myfelf, have compaflion o me Sidney Vicory and triumph to the Son of God Now entering his great duel, not of arms But to vanquifh by wifdom be//j/b wiles. z. Havin he had as wel As the bold Trojan knight feen Ae// Not with a counterfeited paf Of golden bough, but true gold-lace The fea, with fuch a ftorm as his bare hea Milton the qualities of hell; infernal wicked; deteftable Hudibras In Covent-garden did a taylor dwell Who might deferve a place in his own Ze/ Kirig's Cookery 6. The infernal powers Much danger firft, much toil did hefuftain While Saul and Ae// croft his ftrong fate in vain Coawlry 7. It is ufed in compofition by the ol writers more than by the modern HELL-BLACK, 4df, Black as hell N benefits fhall ever allay that diabolical ranco that ferments in fome £e/li/b breafts, but that it wil foam out at its foul mouth in flander South ds'LLisuLY nally wickedly Hr/vrisungss ednefs @dv [fro helliyp. Infer deteitably . /. [from kellyh. Wick abhorred qualities He'LLwaRrD hell adv [fro kell. Be next thy care the fable fheep to plac Towar Full o'ex the pit, and Ael/avard tura their face. Po Heiw |