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Show Wher 1. To come into life Dryden Wor nature's law with fruitlefs forrow mourn Butdie, O mortal man! for thou wat born. Prior All that are dors into the world are furrounde with dodies them. that perpetuall an diverfl as he was dor to be tenants, naturally murmur at the payment o rents, as a {ublerviency they were not born to of land places where this cuftom holds, land and tenements defcend to the youngef fon or if th owne hav n 9 BO'RROW. «. g4 bopgian, Sax. [bargen Spenfer Dutch 1. To take fomething from another upo credit : oppofed to fend. He borrowwed a box of the ear of the Englifhman and fwore he would pay him again when he wa able Shake[peare We have borrowed money for the king's tribute and that upon our lands and vineyards. Nebemiah 2. To alk of another the ufe of fomethin for a time Lamentation No further feek his virtues to difclofe For a dark hour or twain Shakefpeare But you invert the cov'nants of her truft If I covered my tranfgreffion as Adam, by hidb in my bofom ing my iniquit 9. Th dark Bo'sxy adj 7./ [borme Being the bofom-lover of my lord, Mauft needs be like my lord Sax. The breaft ; the heart Our good old friend Lay comforts to your bofom; and befto Your needful counfel to our bufineffes Shakefp 3. The folds of the drefs that cover- th breaft Put now thy hand into thy dofor; and he pu his hand into his bofom : and when he took it out, behold his hand was leprous as fnow. Exedis, iv, 6 2 Shakefpeare Thofe domeftick traitors, boforn-thieves Whom cuftom hath call'd wives; the readieft help To betray the heady hufbands, rob the eafy Ben Jonfon He fent for his bofom-friends, with whomhemol confidently confulted, and fhewed the paper them ; the contents whereof he could not conceive 1 Clarendon The fourth privilege of friendfhip is that yvhlc is here fpecified in the text, a communication Bacon 1. 'The embrace of the arms holding an thing to the breaft 2 This Antonio an Woody boyom Not vfed Our bofom-intereft5 go, pronounce his death, Sha Milton And with each end of thy blue bow doft crow My bo/ky acres, and my unfhrubb'd down Shak I know each land, and every alley green Dingle, or buthy dell, of this wild wood And every bofky bourn from fide to fide. Milton BO'SOM No more that Thane of Cawdor fhall deceiv Wotton [&ofgue, Fr. o. Inclination ; defire confidence ; fondnefs fecrets A bofom-fecret, and a bofom-fricnd, ar ufually put together .Sflflfb' She, who was a bofom- _friend of her royal miftrefs he calls an infolent woman, the worft of her fex in open terraces, o fummer houfes You fhall" have your bofom on this wretch, Shak Bosow, in compofition, implies intimacy which made it fhew the mor and fuch wild works If you can pace your wifdom In that good path that I could wifh it go Cheerful paintings in feafting and banquetin rooms; graver ftories in galleries; landfkips an bofeage kindnefs; fa O Son, in whom my foul hath chief delight Son of my bofom, Son who art alon My word, my wifdom, and effe¢tual might Paradife Lof 1 2. The reprefentation of woods affetions Whofe age has charms in it, whofe title more To pluck the common bofoms on his fide Skat To whom the great Creator thus reply'd We bent our courfe thither, where we faw th appearance of land ; and, the next day, we migh plainly difcern that it was a land flat to our fight and full of bofcage tende vour Some fay, thatI am a great orrower; however, none of my creditors have challenged m for it Pope Bo'scaGE. n. /. [bofeage 1. Wood, or woodlands bofom of the earth ; the bofom of the deep With that which you receiv'd on other terms is another's "". 8. Any receptacle clofe or fecret; as, th And barfhly deal, like an ill dorrozver 2. He that takes wha ufes it as his own There they alike in trembling hope repofe, Th Neither a borrower nor a lender be For loan oft lofes both itfelf and friend And borrowing dulls the edge of hutbandry. Shak Go not my horfe the better I muft become a borrower of the nigh Or draw his frailties from their dread abode Sidney Siker thou fpeal'ft like a lewd forrel Of heaven to deemen fo Howbe I am but rude and borrel Yet nearer ways I know boforn His talk is of nothing but of his poverty, for fea belike left T fhould have proved a young borrowver iffue to his youngeft brother Cowel] Bo'rRREL. 2 / [it is explained by Funiu without etymology. A mean fellow The breaft, as the feat of tendernefs Their foul was poured out into their mother' Bo'rRrOWER. #. /i [from dorreav. i. He that borrows; he that takes mone upon truft : oppofed to lender Pope or tenements, whereby, in al 6 Yet of your royal prefence I'll adventur The borrow of a week Shake[peare Tatler Bo'rovwcu Englifh, is a cuftomary defcen the verb. b And ftifled groans frequent the ball and Pla}"yflflng In lorrozv'd fhapes, and his embrace to thun. Dryd z. A town with a corporation And if a borough chufe him not undone When firlt thou faw'(t thy braveft troops repellg Addif Here a&ling bofoms wear a vifage gay Unkind and cruel, to deceive your fo pledge or furety: and yet it is fo ufed with us i fome fpeeches, as Chaucer {aith, St. Fobn to Boroh that is, for affurance and warranty Spenfer The bofom of his father and his God 4. To ufe as one's own, though not beGrfay longing to one ‘ 7. The breaft, as the receptacle of fecrets Bo'rrow. #. /£ [fro thing borrowed W That with mix'd tumult in thy bofom fwell'd Some perfons of bright pasts have narrow re- membrance; for, having riches of their own, the are not folicitous to borrow Watts Shall harm Macbeth Shake[peare I being born of my father's firft wife, and fh A borough, as 1 here ufe it, and as the old law {till ufe, is not a borough town, that is, a franchife town; but a main pledge of an hundred frec perfons, therefore called a free borough, or, as you fay Sfrancplegium. For borth, in old Saxon, fignifieth For ever be thy bofom freed P i y Unfortunate Tallard! O, who can nam The pangs of rage, of {orrow, and of thame others, and fometimes make themfelves; as on may obferve among the new names children giv Locke to things Be bloody, bold, and refolute; laugh to fcor The pow'r of man ; for none of woman bor or Eelef From jealoufy's tormenting ftrif whom I have borrowved only two months. Dryden Thefe verbal figns they fometimes dorroww fro mother Bo'rovucH. # /. [bophoe, Saxon. a. It fignified anciently a furety man bound for others refteth in the bofoms of fools I was engaged in the tranflation of Virgil, fro 3. It has ufually the particle of before th daughter than a fiter 5. The breaft, as the feat of th paffion Ange Dryden They may borrowv fomething of inftruction eve from their paft guilt Decay of Picty Savift of his third, fhe converfes with me rather lik Haak‘z,-,‘ yield, or not to yield, obedience Shakefpeare greatne(s : that is, formed at the birth Their lands ave let to lords, who, never defigne conquef A borro'd title haft thou bought too dear Why didft thou tell me that thou wert a king he was dorn to empire : he was born fo Two rifing crefts his royal head adorn Born from a god, himfelf to godhead born. Dryden Both muft alike from heaven derive their light "Thefe born to judge, as well as thofe to write. Pope For all mankind alike require their grace 1t born to want; a miferable race Pope I was born to a good eftate, although it no turneth to little account Saoift mad 3. To take fomething belonging to another a prince &orn for adverfity Proverbs Either of you knights may well deferv A princefs born5 and fuch is fhe you ferve. Dryd furpriz And ftruck a random blow affed Locke ‘The ftrangesy that dwelleth with you, fhall b unte you as one born among you, and thou fhal love bim as thyfelf Lewiticus, Xix. 34 Yetman is born unto trouble, as the fparks fl upward Fob A friend loveth at all times, and a brother i an Unto laws thus received by a whol chu they which live within the boj%m of that :g%z% muft not think it a matter indifferent, effihért Where virtue borrowed the arms of chance - 1t is ufually fpoken with regard to circumftances darknef cheap When we are born, we cry, that we are com To this great ftage of fools Shake[peare The new bornbabe by nurfes overlaid 4+ Inclofure; compafs; embrace Then he faid, go, borrow thee veffels abroa 2 Kings "of all thy neighbours years ago ; or, I was bors twenty year Bped, Bo' B O BO 7o Bo'soM @. a. [from the nour. Addifim . To inclofe in the bofom Boforn up my counfel You'll find it wholefome. = Shiakefpeares I do.not think my fifter fo-to feek Or fo unprincipled in virtue's book And the fweet peace that bofoms goodnefs e;;;; { 2. To conceal in privacy The groves, the fountains, and the flow's That open now their choiceft bofor'd fmells Referv'd for night, and kept for thee in ftore Paradife Lo Towers and battlements it fees Bofor'd high in tufted trees Where perhaps fome beauty lies The. cynofure of neighbouring eyes To happy convents, doferm'd decp in vines Milsene Where flumber abbots, purple as their wines. Pepe B 0SON 7 /. [corrupted from &m{f??ffi |