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Show HU H U' Wilt thou bunt the prey for the lion, or fill th Fob, xxxviii. 39 sppetite of the young lions We fhould fingle every criminal out of the herd and hunt him down, however formidable and over« grown; and, on the contrary, fhelter and defen Addifen clean.sh data import.tsv out README virtue 2. To purfue to follow clofe Evil fhall Azt the violent man to overthrow him. Bfiicxl forts of pulfes i The heart ftrikes five hundre an hour, and is bunted unto fuch continual palpitations, through anxiety that fain would it break Harvey on Confumptions 3. 'To fearch for Not certainly affirming any thing, but by conof time . ferrin and monuments 1 do Azxt out Spenfer probability All that is found in books is not rightly deduce from principles: fuch an examen every reader's min is not forward to make, efpecially in thofe who hav given themfelves up to a party, and only huns fo what may favour and fupport the tenets of it. Locke 4. 'To dire& or manage hounds in the chace He hunts a pack of dogs better than any, an Addifon is famous for finding hares Jo HunT, 0. 7 1. To follow the chafe I will not fpeak with him. Shake/peare's King Lear Efau went to the field to buzt for venifon Gen. xxvii. § One followed ftudy and knowledge, and anothe Locke hawking and bunting On the old pagan tombs, mafks, Aunting matches and Bacchanals are very common. Addifon on Italy 2, To purfue or fearch ( it A chace The hunt is up, the morn is bright and gray The fields are fragrant, and the woods are green Shakefpare 8 Pufuit I've heard myfelf proclaim'd And by the happy hollow of a tree Efcap'd the Aunt If thofe Englit Shakefpeare's King Lear lords had bee good Ausmters and reduced the mountains, boggs, and woods withi the limits of forefts chace and parks th foref law would have driven them into the plains Dawies on Ireland Down from a hill the beaft that reigns in woods Firlt hunter then, purfu'd a gentle brace Milton Goodlicft of all the foreft, kart and hind Another's crimes th' unhappy bunter bore o o Glatting his father's eyes with guiltlefs gore Dryden's &n This was the arms or device of our old Roma bunters; a paffage of Manilius lets us know the paga bunters had Meleager for their patron Addifon Bold Nimrod firft the favage chace began A mighty Aunter, and his game was man Pepe 2. A dog that fcents game or beafts of prey Of dogs, the valu'd fil Diftinguifhes the fwift, the flow, the {ubtle The houfekeeper, the bunter Shakefp. Macketh A bugle; a horn ufed to cheer the hounds Whilft a boy, Jack ran from fchool Fond of his huntinghorn and pole Hu'sTrESs, 5. /i [from Aunter. man that follows the chace Prior A wo _And thou thrice crowned queen of night, furve With thy chafte eye, from thy pale {phere above Hurling taketh its denomination from throwin of the ball, and is of two forts; to goals, and t Hence had the huntrefs Dian her dread bow for ever chatte Milton the country Let old Arcadia boaft her ample plain Th' immortal huntrefs, and her virgin train Nor envy Windfor Pope Homer reprefents Diana with her quiyer at he fhoulder; but at the fame tim an huntrefs Like as a huntfman ranks; one againft another: out of thef and fo pafs away; every of which couple are t watch one another during this play Carew Broome Hvurr Spenfer's Sonnets Knolles whilft yet the world was new The mighty Nimrod did purfue What buntfman of our feeble race Or dogs, dare fuch a monfter chace Hvu'rLBAT, 2. /. [hurl and bar.] Whirlbat Ainfavorth Hu'rLER. 7./ [from burl.] One that jdays at hurling Waller 2. The fervant whofe office it is to manag the chace Apply this moral rather to the buntfman managed the chace, than to thematter The burlers muft hurl man to man, and not two fe upon one man at once. Carew's Survey of Cornwall tha Hu'rLwinpe 7. fi [burl and awind. A whirlwind ; a violent guft. A word no in ufe L'Effrange At court your fellows every da Give the art of rhiming, buntfman/bip, or play Like'fcatter'd. down by howling Eurus blown By rapid burlwinds fromhis manfion thrown. Sandys Donne Hu'rpLE. 7 /. [hynbel, Saxon. 1. A texture of fticks woven together Dryden's Gearg Which gape and rub the elbow at the new Shakefpeare Of hurlyburly innovation Methinks, I fee this Azr/y all on fgot. Shake/p All places were filled with tumulfand Aurlyburly, every man meafured the danger by his ow fear; and fuch a pitiful cry was in every place Knolles and in cities prefently to be befieged Hvu'rricaNs.| 7 /o [huracan, Spanifh ouragan, ¥r. | Aviolen Hvu/rricANoO. ftorm, fuch as is often experienced in th weftern hemifphere Blow winds O, let them keep it 'till thy fins be ripe And then Aur/ down their indignatio Shakefpeare's Richard 111 He holds vengeance in his hand To hurl upon their heads that break his law. Shakef On thee I with my nails digg'd ftones out of the ground To hurlat the beholders of my fthame. Shakefpeare or Aur/ at him b Numb. xxxy. : 20 laying of wait They ufe both the right han burling frones There So Ben Ffonfon Hu'rr1ER Mars noife. v. 7 to plunder To offer fervice to yourenemy Ard wild amazemen burries up and do The littie number of your deubtful friends ‘This fenfe is not in ufe For who Spenfer. [pengian Chaprman X"o\{r nobles will not hear you; but are gon ape to make an howling or hideou He hurls out vorws One tha the verb. To haften; to put into precipitation or confufion'; to drive confufedly [Hurler The glad merchant that does vie His fhip far come from wat'ty wildernefs 7.[ [from burry. Addifen Saxon: Auss was likewife a word ufe by the old Germans in urging their horfe to {peed; but feems the imperative o And burl'd them headlong to their fleet and n;fin French waftes extend that horrid burrier of men |To Hu'rRrY Firft fet himfelf on fire, and then the world._D:ya'en Conjure him far to drive the Grecian train vehemence wide Numidia hurries; a difturber Milton Their frail original and faded blifs She ftrikes the lute; but if it found Threatens to Aur/ it on the ground Waller Corrupted light of knowledge buri' Sin, death, and ignorance, o'er all the world Denban Young Phaeton wit where.au Drydes Tear up the fands, and fweep whole plains away Hurl'd headlong to partake with us, fhall curf utte folemnly are wife Sudden th' impetuous hurricanes defcend Wheel through the air, in circling eddics play Huyur/ ink and wit 2. T in deaf murmurs Whifp'ring like winds, ere burricanes.arife and the left i Chron. xii. 2 As madmen ftones His darling fons and crack your cheeks Your catara&ks and burricanoes fpout! Shakefpeare A ftorm er hurricano, though but the force of air makes a ftrange havock where it comes Burnet A poet who had a great genius for tragedy, mad every man and woman too in his plays ftark ragin mad: all was tempeftuous and bluftering; heave and earth were coming together at every word; mere burricanefrom the beginnin to the end. Drydesn. The minifters of ftate, who gave us law In corners with felected friends withdraw If heav'ns have any grievous plagues in ftore of hatred Shakefp Poor difcontents The refufe of hemp or flax Ainfaworth hi buitle That with the hurly death itfelf awakes 70 HURL. v. a. [from huorlt, to thro down, Iflandick; or, according to Skiuzer, from awhirl. 1. To throw with violence; to drive i If he thruf commotion Winds take the ruffian billows by the top The blackfinith was hanged, drawn, and quartere at Tyburn; taking pleafure upon the burdle, t think that he fhould be famous in after-times. Bacor 7 / burlubreln, inconfider Tumult ately. The fled, the tumbril, Aurdles and the flail Hurps #. f« [from the French Hvu'rLy Hu/RLYBURLY crate Thefe all muft be prepar'd Tumult Hein the fame bxr/ murdering fuch as he though would withftand his defire, was chofen king Secing the game efcape from him away Such game z /. [from the verb. riot; commotion after weary chace Sits down to reft him ranks the match themfelves by pairs, one embracing another he defcribes her a Hu'ntsmax. n. f. [huant and man. 1. One who delights in the chace for hurling to goals there are fiftce or thirty players, more or lefs, chofen out on eac fide, who ftrip themfelves, and then join hands i Trom Eaft to North irregularly bur/'d Hu'x1incHORN. 7 /. [unting and horn. To teftity the arms of chafticy Fair filver-fhafted queen Milton 3+ To play at-a kind of game petuouily Hu/nTER. 7. /. [from bunt. 1. One who chafes animals for paftime o food i - Antiquity from the old fchools of Greece Settle your fine joints 'gainft Thurfday next Or I will drag thee on a hurdlethither. Shakefpeare The common Aunt, though from their rage reftrain' By {ov'reign pow'r, her company difdain'd Grinn'd as they pafs'd. Dryden's Hind and Panther 10 Locke Hunr. . /. [from the verb. 1. A pack of hounds fit Shall T cal 2. Grate on which criminals were dragge to execution other fide . 2 Highly they rag'd againtt the Higheft Hurling defiance towards the vaults of heav'n Shake[peare Very much of kin to this is the bunting afte arpuments to make good one fide of a queftion, an v::Eolly to neglect and refufe thofe which favour th f Thy buntre[s' name, that my full life doth fway Hu'nxrsmansare. z /. [from buntfman. The qualifications of a hunter When he returns from Ahunting fe HU all this hatt Of midnight march Shak and Avrry'd meeting here Impetuovs luft burries hi e G on to fatisfy i BT S:‘.;e.‘i' Tha |