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Show BL ( And behold feven thin ears, and ‘#lafied wit Genefis ‘the eaft wind, {prung up after them. Thou thalt live, till we can find 2 tim To blaze your marriage, reconcile your friends Beg pardon of thy prince, and call thee back. Shak She, that like lightning fhin'd while her fac Th lafted oak no blafted refembles whic lightning ha Waller When beggars die, there are no comets fee The heav'ns themfelve princes To his green years your cenfures you would fuit Not blaft that bloffom, but expect the fruit and to blazevabroad the matter Such mufick worthieft were to slaz Dryd The peerlefs height of her immorta if he will take m licious, if he knows I deferve credit, and yet goe Stilling fleet 4. To cut off ; to hinder from coming t maturity This commerce Jehofhaphat king of Judea endeavoured to renew; but his enterprize was blafte by the deftruction of veffels in the harbour, Arbuth 2. To blazon With brazen din b/aff you the city's ears Meke mingle with your ratt'ling tabourines. Shak Bra"zer BLASTMENT. #. /. [from é/ajf.] Blaft fedden ftroke of infettion. Not no in ufe Speafer To Bra"zon. @. a. [blajonner, Fr. 1. To explain, in proper terms, the fi To Bua'tTER. w. #, [from blatero, Lat. To roar; to make a fenfelefs noife. I is a word not now ufed ~ One that excels the quirk of blaxoning pens And, in th' eflfential vefture of creation Does bear all excellency 5. To blaze about Shakefpeare to make publick. ‘What s this but libelling againft the fenatg And blazoning our injuftice every where? Shakefp Bra"zow,#. /. [from the verb. 1. The art of drawing or explaining coat 2, Publication ; wide diffufion of report For what is glory but the blaze of fame The people's praife, if always praife unmixt? Ai/t of arms Proceed unto beafts that are given in arms, an 3. Blaze is a white mark upona horfe, defcending from the forehead almoft to th teach me what I ought to obferve in their &lazion Peacharm 2. Show Farrier's Di& 96 BLazE. v. 7. [from the noun. 1. To flame; to thew the light of a flame divulgation; publication But this eternal 4/a2i0n muft not b To ears of fleth and blood Shakefpeare 3 Thus you-may long live an happy inftrumen for your king and country; you thall not be a meteor, or a-blazing ftary but flella fixa; happy here -and more happy.hereafter Bacon Celebration; proclamatio quality of fom I am a gentleman.-I'l]be fworn thou art Th The third faiz morn now é/az'd upon the main Pope tongue {pirit th face, th limbs a&ion an Do give I;hce five-fold ‘blazon Shakefpeare Men con over ‘their pedigrees, and obtrude th blazon of their exploits upon the company. Co/fer 2. To be confpicuous To BLAZE. @, a 1."To publifh; to make known; to fprea far and wide BrLa"zonRrY. 7. /. [from blazon.] The ar of blazoning Giv The noife of this fight, and iffue thereof, being blazed by the country people to fome nobleme certain rules as to the principles of b/a Zonry Peacham on Drawing 7o BLeacH.. v, a. [bleechen, Germ. T whiten ; commonly to whiten by expo thereabouts, they came thither Sidney My words, in hopes to blazie a ffedfaft mind tofet tofhow Garth 4. To celebrate ; to fet out would make it flarne again Shakefp. Coriolanus Thy throne is daerknefs in th' abyfs of light A blaze of glory that forbids the fight Dryden ‘What groans of men fhall fill the martial field How fierce a blaze his flaming pile fhall yield ‘What fun'ral pomp fhall floating Tiber fee! Dryd NG in dread {miiles her hideous for Thou divine nature! how thyfelf thou 4lazon'f In thefe two princely boys! they are as gentl As zephyrs blowing below the violet Not wagging his fweet head. Shakefpeare blaze of it is paft; but a fmall thin "This marble chofe, as of like temper known, Sidn to embellith ; to adorn O thou goddefs BLAZE. #. /. [blaye, atorch, Saxon. 1. A flame; the light of the flame: &/az 4implies more the light than the heat Addifon 3. Todifplay wver fith; called alfo a bleak The white fheet bleaching inthe open field. Shak For there are various penances enjein'd And fome are hung to bleach upon the wind Dryden Some plung'd-in waters The deadly winter feizes; fhuts up fenfe Lays him along the fnows a fiffen'd corfe Stretch'd out, and bleaching in the northern blaft T honfon BLEAX adj [blac, blzc, Saxon. 1. Pale 2. Cold ; chill ; cheerlefs Intreat the Nort - To make his bleak winds kifs my parched lips Shakefpeare And comfort me with cold The goddefs that in rural fhrin Dwell'ft here with Pan, or Sylvan, by bleft fon Yorbidding every bleak unkindly fo To touch the profperous growth of this tall wood Milton Her defolation prefents us with nothing bu Addifon bleak and barren profpeés Say, will ye blefs the bleat Atlantick fhore Pape Or bid the furious Gaul be rude no more [alburnus, fro »n / Breax or bleat colour. hi whit = A {mall river fifh tain fuow 8o lightning gilds the unrelenting ftorm A {mall white ri t o Bueacu. v. n. To grow white grow white in the open air King Edward gave to them the coat of arms which ¥ am not herald enough to bldzon int She blazon Noife ; fenfelefs roar Dyyden gures on enfigns armorial 2. To deck BLATTERA'TION, n./. [blatteratio, Lat, And maidens bleach their fummer fmocks. §kat Should I not fee The clemency of fome more temp'rate clime To purge my gloomj and, by the fun refin'd Bafk in his beams, and bleach me in the wind The. bleak, or'frefhwater fprat, is ever in motiva, and therefore called by fome the river fwallow. #His back is of a pleafant, fad fea wate Englith She rode at peace, through his only pains and excellent endurance, however envy lift to blatzer againf him Spenfer When turtles tread, and rooks and daw His larum-bell might loud and wide be heard When caufe requir'd, but never out of time Early and late it rung,' at evening and at prime Bellow Then glofly fmooth lay all the liquid plain Oune tha Utterers of {ecrets he from thernice debarr'd Babblers of Tolly, and blazers of crime You learn this language from the blgrant beaft Dryden nofe ». /. [from blaze. {preads reports In the morn, and liquid dew of youth Contagious blaftments are moft imminent. Shakefp The mai This i This, in ancient times, was called a fieree 5 an you fhould then have blazed it thus: he bears fierce, fable, between two fierces, or Peacham T'rumpeters Brax. n /. Jalbursus. to give an account of en figns armorial in proper terms not now ufed 5. To confound ; to ftrike with terrour Bra'rant. adj. [blattant, Fr. ing as a calf Miltow Far beyon The fons of Anak, famous now and blzz'd Fearlefs of danger, like a petty go Milton I walk'd about Whofe follies, blax'd about, to all are known And are a fecret to himfelf alone Granville But, mortals, know, 'tis ftill our greateft prid To blaxe thofe vittues which the good would hide Pope word when he thinks I deferve no credit; or ma o ' Mark peaife Whofe luftre leads us 3. Toinjure; to invalidate; to make in‘famous about to blaf? it blaze forth the death o Shake[peare But he went out, and began to publifh it much Agony unmix'd, inceffant gal «Corroding every thought, and blafling al Thomfon Love's paradife He fhews himfelf weak BL fure to the open air green 3 his belly white and thining like the moun- Bleaks are excellent meat, and in bef feafon in Auguit Walton BLe ak N Ess. z./. [from bleak.] Coldnels chilnefs The inhabitants of Nova Zembla go naked without complaining of the Jleaknefs of the-zir; as the armies of the northern nations keep th field all winter Addifon Bre'axy. adj. [from blegk.] Bleak; cold chiil On fhrubs they browze, and, on the bleaky to Of rugged hills, the thorny bramble crop. Diyden BLEAR adj [Jlaer, a blifter, Dutch. 1. Dim with rheum or water rheum fore wit It is a tradition that blear eyes affect found eyes Bacon It is no more in the power of calumny to blat the dignity of an honeft man, than of the dlea eyed owl 1o caft fcandal on the fun L' Eftrange His blear eyes ran in gutters to his chin His bear was ftubble and his cheeks were thin Dryden Whe thou fhalt {ee the Slear eyed fathers reac Their fons this harfh and mouldy fort of fpeech Dryden 2. Dim obfcur i which makes dimnefs general o tha Thus I hur My dazzling {pells inzo the fpongy air Of power to cheat the eye with blear illufion And give it falfe prefentments MMilton 7o BLEAR. @. . [from the adjective. 1. To make the eyes watry, or fore wit rheum All tongues fpeak of him, and the bleared fight Are fpettacled to fee him The Dardanian w With bleared vifages, come forth to ke The iffue of th' exploi Whe Averi 1 was you t Skakef |