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Show I IM Ag excufe for uncharitablencfs, drawn from pre " ‘tended inability is of all other the moft gencra ‘prevailing i/ufion Atterbury Many are the i//ufions by which the enemy en‘deavours to cheat men into {ecurity, and defeat thei It is ufed commonly, in compofition for i before mute letters. What is i in Latin, when it is not negative, i often ez i French and our writers, a falvation Rogers. the t occ Fr o r La nc th i To dream once more I clofe my willing eyes mi ds uf i o em fo me l i wa Ye foft il/uffons, dear'deceits, arife Pope more common and now ez feem t We muft ufe fome i//»fiox to render a paftoral de fightful; and this confifts in expofing the beft fid prevail only of a fhepherd's life, and in concealing its miI'M A GI #. f [image French; 1mago feries Pope Xuov'sive. adj [from illufus Deceiving by falfe thow Latin, Jllufive dreams in myftick forms expreft Blackmore While the fond fou dLLvu'sory adi Latin; illufoire fraudulent Thomfon's Spring [from i ¥rench. and luforius "Decetving Subtilty, in thofe who make profeffion to teac or defend truth, hath pailed for a virtue: a virtu indeed, which, confifting for the moft part in no‘thing but the fallacious and i/ifory ufe of obfcur or deceitful terms, is only fit to make men mor Locte conceited in their ignorance ‘To ILLUSTRATE w. #. [illuftro, Latin illufirer, ¥r. 1. To brighten with light 2. To brighten with honour _ Matter to me of glory ! whom their hat Illuftrates, when they fee all regal pow' Milton Giv'n to me to quell their pride Thee fhe enroll'd her garter'd knights among {lluftrating the noble lift Phillips 3. To explain; to clear; to elucidate Authors take up popular conceits, and from tradition unjuftifiable, or falfe, i//#/frate matters of unBrown deniable truth IsvystrA'"TtON 2 f from illuftrate. tion; expofition its origina brightnefs [Hlufration Fr Explanation; elucidaIt is feldom ufed i fignificatio fo materia Whoever looks about him will find many livin L' Efirange clean.sh data import.tsv out README #luftrations of this emblem Space and duration, being ideas that have fome<thing very abftrufe and peculiar in their nature, th ~comparing them ong with another may perhaps b of ule for their i//ufiration Locke Irriv'sTrRATIVE adj. [from illuftrate. Having the quality of elucidating o clearing They play much upon the fimile, or i/lzftrativ argumentation, to induce their enthymemes unt Brownn the people ArLu'sTRATIVELY. adv. {fro #ive.] By way of explanation ilufira ‘Things are many times delivered hieroglyphically ‘metaphorically, i//zffratively, and not with reference to action Brown [#luftris, Latin adj JLLU'STRIOUS Confpicuous; noble " #llupre, French. .eminent for excellence In other languages the mott #//ufirious title are derived from things facred South Of ev'ry nation, each i/luftrious name .Such toys as thofe have cheated into fame Dryd Arrv'sTtrRioUsLY, adv. [from illnftrious. Confpicuouily; nobly; eminently He difdained no to appear at fettiva enter tainments, that he mighit more 7/i/?rioryly manifef Arrerbury his charity You carrying with you all the world can boalt To all the world i//uftrionfly are loft ALvu'strrousnEss L's Pope 7./ [from Zlufirions, Eminence; nobility grandeur Contracted from J az corporea reprefentation gene a ftatue; a picture Whofe is this image and fuperfeription Mart The one is too like an izzage, and Tays nothing and the other too lik m lady' oldef more talking Wheapt in gay vifions of unreal blifs Still paints th' i/ifive form 1. An rally ufed of ftatues The heathen bards, who idle fables dreft . Latin. fon, ever Shakefpeare Thy brother I Even like a ftony image, cold and numb Shakefp The /mage of a deity may be a proper objeét fo that which is but the image of a religion Sewt/ Still muft I be upbraided with your line But your late brother did not prize me lefs Becaufe I could not boaft of images Dryden 2. An idol a falfe god Manaffeh fet the carved image in God's houfe 3. A copy reprefentation likenefs Chron Long may'ft thou live To bear his image and renew his glories Shake/p 1 have bewept a worthy hufband's death And liv'd by looking on his inzages But now two mirrours of his princely femblanc Are ¢rack'd in pieces by malignant death Shak He made us to his image all agree Dryden fhow ; appearance Deny to fpeak with me? They're fick, they'r weary They have travell'd all night! Mere fetches Shake[peare's King Lear The /mages of revolts This is the man fhould do the bloody deed The image of a wicked heinous faul Shakefpeare's King Fobxu Lives in his eye The face of things a frightful image bears £hd prefent death in various forms appears Dryden's Zn ¢. Anidea to th fancy a reprefentation of any thin mind in th a pifture draw Shatkefpeare Outcafts of mortal race! can we conceiv Prior Image of aught delightful, foft, or great When we fpeak of a figure ofa thoufand angles we tay have a clear idea of the number one thoyangles but the image or fenfibl idea w cannot diftinguith by fancy from the image of Watts figure that has nine hundred angles T Ty I'macE. . a. [from the nouni copy by the fancy; to imagine Ho ar immateria fubftance t inaged b which. are fuch things whercof we ca _ notion Image to thy min How our forefathers to the Styglan fhade Went quick Taylor What can.thy inagery of forrow mean Secluded from the world and all its car Hatt thou to grieve or joy 'Al th vifionar paint and imager and difappear to hope o beautie of th that attrale Prio 1;rf,v!.'pzd', our fenfes, f Rogere 3. Forms of the fancy; falfe ideas; imaginary phantafims It might be a mere dream which he faw; th imagery ofa melancholick funcy, fuch as mufin men miftake for a reality Atterbury 4. Reprefentations in writing; fac fcriptions as force the image o thing defcribed upon the mind T wifh there ma of good imagery be in this poe deth any inftanc Dryyden Ima'ciNABLE. adj. [imaginable, Fr. fro émagine. Poflible to be conceived It is not imaginable that men will be brought t obey what they cannot efteem South Men, funk into the greateft darknefs imaginalle retain fome fenfe end awe of a Deity Zillof Ima'ciNaNT @dj. [imaginant Imagining forming ideas Frenct. . We will enquire what the force of imaginatio 1s, either upon the body imaginant, or upon ancther body Bacorn Ima'ciNarY adj [imaginaive Fr fro imagine, Fancied; vifionary; exiftin only in the imagination Which for things true, weeps things imaginary Sharefpeare Expetation whirls me roun Th' imaginary relith is fo fwveet That it enchants my fenfe Shake/ Fortune is nothing elfe but a power .ima nary, to which the fuccefles of human a&ions an endeavours were for their variety afcribed Raleigh's Hiftory Why wilt thou add, to all the griefs 1 fuffer Imaginary ills and fancied tortures Addifor ImaciNa'tioN imagination 1. Fancy m f [émaginatio ¥r. from imagine. "the power of formin pictures th powe o Lat idea reprefentin Imagination 1 underftand to be the reprefentatio ZImagination is of thre of an individual thought kinds: joined with belief of that which is to comes joined with memory of that which is paft; and o things prefent, or as if they were prefent: for comprehend in this imagination feigned and a leafure as if on fhoul Pricr Pope 7. /. [from image. 1. Senfiblereprefentations ; pictures; ftatues Of marble ftone was cu An altar carv'd with cunning /magery When in thofe oratories might you fe He 2 prefent w i woul denfe if abfent a ma imagination whe peyceive a material objet, our fancie Where ev'ry figure to the life exprefs' Dryden's Knight's Tale The godhead's pow'r Dryden' in the mind idea Sometimes defpair darkens all her imaginations fometimes the ative paffion of love cheers an clears her invention Siducy Princes*have but their titles for. their glories An outward honour for an inward teil And, far unfelt imaginations They often feel a world of reftlefls cares Better I were diftract and imagery Your gift fhall two large goblets b Of filver, wrought with curious imagery irmagine fuc be in the vettments of a pope, or to have wings Bacont Our fimple apprehenfion of corporal objes, i 2. Conception; imag whole years in abfence to deplore Angd high embofs' and fantaftick imagery pat Phillips when firft it thunder'd Rich carvings, portraitures with beautie world fill the imaginativ The fight of this {o horrid fpectacle Which erft my eyes beheld, and yet behold For dire imagination {till purfues me Miltorn Where beams of wartn imagination play ‘The memory's foft figures melt away Pope And inage charms he muft behold no more I'MacerY or th prefents us with its idea Glanville O whither fhall T run, or which way fi Fate fome future bard fhall join In fad fimilitude of griefs to mine Condemn' Thing have n Diyden His ear oft frighted with the imag'd voic Of heav'n appearance things abfent to one's felf or others The image of the jef 1'11 thew you here at large fan L Falfe forrow's eye That image is the foul, and that muft be Or not the maker's image, or be free 4. Semblance z. Show N Shak So fhould my thoughts be fever'd from my griefs And woes, by wrong imaginations, lof The knowledge of themfelyes Skakefp His imaginations were often as juft as they wor bold and ftrong denais 3. Contrivange 6 k fcheme Tho |