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Show ‘BE that part that is dathed by the waves See Baize Bavze BDELLIUM. n. /. [Bdanwvs n%12.] A aromatick gu the {trand brought from the Le vant, ufed as a medicine Appear like mice a per an "This bdellium is a tree of the bignefs of an olive Zo BE. @. #. [This word is fo remarkabl irregular, that it is neceflary to fet dow many of its terminations Prefent. I am, thow arty beis, e are, &c eom eapc 1 apon, Sax per be q,za.r Preter tho waf o wert xpe awe fwfre, &c par Be‘acHED. adj. [from beach. Timon hath made his everlafting manfio Upon the beached verge of the falt flood ‘Which, once a day, with his embofied frot The turbulent furge fhall cover Shakefpeare Be'acuy beaches Therefore be fure when the bridegroom with his feaftfu friend Pafles to blifs at the mid hour of night Send forth their flames Fairy Queen Modeft doubt is call' The beacon of the wife Shakefpeare The king feemed to account of Perkin asa Maygame3 yet had given order for the watching o beacons upon the coafts, and ereéting mor they ftood too thin No flaming beacons caft their blaze 1far The dreadful fignal of invafive war 2. Mark Macbeth Shall fooner e T be, contents his natural defire He afks no angel's wing, nor feraph's fire Rowe Pope 4. 'To have fomething by appointment o rule If all political power be derived only from Adam and be to defcend only to his fucceflive heirs, b -the ordinance of God, and divine inftitution, thi is a right antecedent and paramount to all go vernment §. Let 5 Locke untouched BEACH Do not meddle with; leav Let be, faid he, my prey #. /i Th Dryden fhore, pasticularl Gay in th t dire® navigator i fro thei beads, or to be at one's deads, 1s to be a prayer That aged dame, the lady of the place Who all this while was bufy at her beads. Fairy 9 Thy voice I feem in every hymn to hear With ev'ry bead I drop too foft a tear Pope 2. Little balls worn about the neck for ornament Wit fcarfs and fans, and double charge o brav'ry With amber bracelets, beads, and all fuch knav'ry Shakefpeare 3. Any globular bodies Thy fpirit within thee hath been fo at war That beads of fweat have ftood upon thy brow Here ceafe, ye pow'rs, and let your vengeance end Troy is no more, and can no more offend. Dryden All th' impoffibilities, which poet Count to extravagance of loofe defcription Bacon and ufed by the Romanifts to count thei prayers ; from whence the phrafe to ze/ Shakefpeare die or lights mad wher or other {ubftance, ftrung upon a thread The wine of life is drawn, and the meer lee That when the brains were out the man woul abroad, di uf t hav the curfe by nam amongft the beadroll of the king's enemies Bacon's Henry V1l Brapsman. # /. [from bead and man. A man employed in praying, generall in praying for another An holy hofpital In which feven beadfiner, that had vowed al Q Their life tofervice of high heaven's king. Fair In thy danger Commend thy grievance to- my holy prayer Shakefp Be'acLE. 7. /. [bigle, Fr.] A fmall houn with which hares are hunted The reft were various huntings The graceful goddefs was array'd in green About her feet were little beagles feen That watch'd with upward eyes the motions o Dryden's Fables their queen To plains with well-bred beagles we repair Pspe And trace the mazes of the circling hare BEAK. . [ [bec, Fr. pig, Welih. 1. The bill or horny mouth of a bird His royal bir Prunes the immortal wing, and cloys his beak Shakefp. Cymbeline As when his god is pleas'd He faw the ravens with their horny beak Food to Elijah bringing Milton's Paradife Reg The magpye, lighting on the ftock Stood chatt'ring with inceflant din And with her beak gave many a knock Swift z. A piece of brafs like a beak, fixed a th th o en wit gallies ancien Beap. #. /. [beabe, prayer, Saxon. 1. Small globes or balls of glafs or pearl Locke The times have been The king, for the better credit of his efpial With boiling pitch another near at hand From friendly Sweden brought, the feams inftops ‘Which, well laid o'er, the falt fea waves withftand clear idea of the number of the fands, who know 3. To exift ; to have exiftence Be'aprOLL. 7 /. [from bead and roll.] ~catalogue of thofe who are to be mentioned at prayers rocks It is not eafy to difcern what fuch men would b at Stilling flect To fay a man has a clear idea of quantity, without knowing how great it is, is to fay, he has th Is left this vault to brag of ereted courfes, and warn the fhallows, and fandbanks Milton 2. It is the auxiliary verb by which th verb paflive is formed The beadle's lath ftill flagrant ontheir back. Prior I which they pierced their enemies can now be ufed only for the fore par of a fhip night Haft gain'd thyentrance, virgin wife and pure niot how many they e eminence, t Did burn with wrath, and fparkled living fire As two broad beacons fet in open field Be what thou hop'ft to be, or what thou art *Tis pity fhe is not honeft, honourable Shake/p Let them thew the former things what they be that we may confider them Ifaiab on a beckon His blazing eyes, like two bright fhining fhields By their profcriptions, Cicero being one Shakefp He hath to-night beez in unufual pleafure. Shak The juftice of your hearts will add thereto raife whenc be fired on the approach of an enemy, t alarm the country as, the man Refign to death, it s not worth enjoying. Shake/p Be but abou To fay fhe is a goodly lady, an Havin Their common loves, a lewd abandon™d pack, For I will be thy beadfman, Valentine 1. Somethin Seventy fenators die Thou beach. a fignal, and becnan I be thou beet bhe be ave be, &c beo bz beo beon, Sax. 1. To have fome certain ftate, condition or accident [fro The beachy girdl of the ocea Too wide for Neptune's hips Shakefpeare Be'acon. n. /. [beacon, Sax. from becn The conjunétive mood quality wife adj to make a fignal. panon, Sax Expofe to the waves yieldet bitter i take th Raleigh whereof Arabia hath great plenty, whic a certain gum, fweet to fmell to, bu tafte, called alfo bdeflium The Hebrew load ftone for bdellium Shakefpeare's King Lear Deep to the rocks of hell the gather'd beac They faiten'd, and the mole immenfe wrought o Over the foaming deep Milton They find the wathed amber further out upo the beaches and fhores, where it has been longe expofed Wodward be the fame with the modern kind Chambers The fithermen, that walk upon the beach fume. Bdellium is mentioned both b the ancient naturalifts and in Scripture but it is doubtful whether any of thef I was BE B. B Several yellow lump of amber beads, with one fide flat, ha to the bottom faftene Shakefpeare almott like themfelve Boyle Beap Tree. [azedarach.] . A plant Be'apLE. 2. /. [bybel, Sax. a2 meffenger bedean, Fr. bedel, Span bedelle, Dutch. And fhake them from the rifing beak in drops Dryden 3. A beak is a little thoe, at the toe abou an inch long, turned up agd faftene upon the fore-part of the hoof 4. An Farrier's Dil2 thing ending in a poin beak as th {pou Spetator like of a cup a pro minence of land Cuddenbeak, from a well advanced promontory which entitled it beak, taketh a profpeét of th Carew's Survey river Br'akep adj [fro beat. Having beak; having the form of a beak And queftion'd every guft of rugged winds That blows from off each beaked promontory Milton Be'akER, # /. [from beak.] A cup wit a fpout in the form of a bird's beak And into pikes and mufgueteer Stampt beakers, cups, and porringers Hudibras With dulcet bev'rage this the beaker crown'd Fair in the midft, with gilded cups around Pope's Ody/ffey Beav. o /o [bolla, Ital, 1. A meflfenger or fervitor belonging to pimple Cowell court 7o BEAL. @w. a. [from th 2. A petty officer in parifhes, whofe bufiripen; to gather matter nefs it is to punifh petty offenders head a for does A dog's obey'd in office BEAM 7 /. [beam, Sax. han blood th hol beadle Thou rafca Shake[peare. 1. The main piece of timbe Why doft thou lath thatwhore They ought to be talen care of in this condithe houfe tion, cither by the beadie or the magifirate i A whel o noun.] T or come to tree, that {upport A beam is the largeft piece of weod in a building, which always lies crofs the building or th walls, |