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Show B . ‘The hive of a city or kingdom }s in beft cond. tion when there is leaft noife or bizx in it. Bacon ~Where I found the whole outward room in ~bura of politicks Bu'zzarp. u [ [bufard, F1 ¥. A degenerate or mean {pecies of hawk More pity that the eagle thould be mawl'd While kites and buzzards prey at liberty Shak The noble buzzard ever pleas'd me beft Ot fmall renown, 'tis true: for, not to lye We call him but a hawk by courtefy ~ Dryden 2. A blockhead; a dunce Thofe blind buzzards, who, in late years, o - wilful malicioufnefs, would neither learn them Lelves, nor could teach others, any thing at all Afcham buzz. whifperer fecre And wants not buzziers to infeft his ea With petulant fpeeches of his father's death Shakefpeare prep [by, big, Saxon. 4. It notes the agent The Moor is with child 4y you, Launcelot Sbakcj;;ware The grammar of a language is fometimes to b ..carefully ftudied %y a grown man Locke ¥Death s what the guilty fear, the pious crave Sought by the wretch, and vanquifh'd y the brave Garth 2 It notes the inftrument, and is commonly ufed after a verb neuter, wher avith woul he kille by a fword be put after an altive her avith a fword fh a die But by Pelides® arms when Hector fell He chofe Aneas, and he chofe as well. -~ Dryden 3. It notes the caufe of any effet I view, by no prefumption led Parnel Your revels of the night By woe the foul to daring a&ion fteals By woe in plaintlefs patience it excels Sawage 4 It notes the means by which any thin is performed, or obtained You muft think, if we give you any thing, w hope to gain £y you Shakefpeare Happier ! had it fuffic'd him fo have know Good by itfelf, and evil not at all Milton The heart knows that by itfelf, which nothin in the world befides can give it any knowledge of South ‘We obtain the knowledge of a multitude of pro pofitions by fenfation and refle¢tion Watts's Logick 5. Itfhews the manner of an action I have not patience Seize her &y force, and bear her hence unheard Dryden ‘This fight had ‘more weight with him, as & good luck not above two of that venerable bod Addifon By chance, within a neighbouring brook He faw his branching horns, and alter'd look Addifon %. It has a fignification, noting the method in which any fucceflive action 1i performed wigh regard to time or quantity bef for you Others will foon take pattern and encouragement by your building; and fo houfe 4y houfe ftreet by fireet, there will atlaft be finifhed a mag is to re-examine the caufe 2nd to try it even point by point, argument by arHooker gument, with all the exactnefs you can ‘We are not to ftay all together, but to come b So rude a gripe had left a livid mark behind Dryden Till once, *twas on the morn of chearful May T'll gaze for ever on thy godlike father by twos Shakefpeare threes He calleth them forth &y one, and 4y one, b Bacon be inverted The captains were obliged to break that picc due .LOC/\T Let the blows/be by paufes laid on Ferdinand an of Grenada fro 16. As {oon as ; not later than : noting time By this, the fons of Conftantine which fled Ambrife angl Uther, did ripe years attain Fairy Queen Heéor, by the fifth hour of the fun Will with a trumpet, "twixt our tents and Troy To-morrow morning call fome knight to arms Shakefpeare He err'd not; for, by this, the heav'nly band We fee the great cffe@s of battles by fea; th Pown from a fky of jafper lighted no In Paradife battle of Aétium decided the empire of the world Arms, and the man, I fing ; who, forc'd by fate By morrow ev'ning Expell'd and exil'd, left the Trojan fhore Long labours both 4y fea and land he bore. Diryd 1 would have fought &y land, where I wa By that time a fiege is carried on two or thre days, I am- altogether loft and bewildered in it 9. According to ; noting permiffion tions, and by the law divine, which is the perfection of the other two Bacon's Holy War 17. Befide: noting paffage The prefent, or like, {fyftem of the world cannot poflibly have been eternal, &y the firft propofi Many beautiful places, ftanding al'long'nthe' fez fhore, make the town appear longer than it is t not naturally defire bein infinite 18 &y th accordin tion or conformity to notin imita That good man fit down by him Stay by me Diryden The fon of Hercules he juftly feems By what has pafs'd Dryden z.lton Dry i i e k f e t o f e r b f i m h 19 notes the abfence of all others ‘When noble wits a hunting g after a peace Ben _‘fonfi thou art refolute and faithful I have employment worthy of thy arm Thus, 4y the mufick, we may know By what he has done, before the war in whic he was engaged, we may expe& what he will d Of cattle grazing or comparifon Waller A fpacious plain, whereo r h r w o { 4 e h o r v o Were ten of judgment Through groves that on Parnaffus grow lies by a beggat If he be worth any man's good voice diverfity of matter Locke This fhip, by good luck, fell into their hands a laft; and ferved as a model to build others by . Arbuthnot groun fay, the kin Here he comes himfelf In the divifions* I have made, I have endeavoured, the beft I could, to govern myfelf by th notin proximity of place Shakefpeare Tillotfon From in prefence: noting if a beggar dwell near- him; or the church ftand h chur th b ftan tabo th i r tabo th b The gofpel gives us fuch laws, as every man that underftands himfelf, would chufe to live &y 12z Befide ; near to So thou may' preceding propofition, may contain or receive bot thefe Cheyne After Addifon thofe that fail &y it nor fortuitoufly, emerge out of chaos, oy the thir propofition Bentley o Swift far, as to accufe and fine the confuls 10. According to; noting proof faculty Addifor By this time, the very foundation was removed Swifts By the beginning of the fourth century fro the building of Rome, the tribunes proceeded f It is lawful, both Ay the laws of nature and na Th Milton 110 You hinder'd.it; yet, when I fought at fea . Forfook me fighting Dryden By land, by water, they renew their charge. Pope it coul The angelic guards afcended, mute and fa For man : for of his ftate by this they knew. God Milton Thefe have their courfe to finifh round the eart Bacon withou Ifabella recovered the kingdo the Moors5 having been in pofaconts nant of a meaning now little known. B once exprefled fituation ; as by awefl weftward tion; and feflion thereof &y the fpace of feven hundred }em 'This feems a rem ftronger Loacke 15. For: noting continuance of time, Thi {enfe is not now in ufe perhaps only ufed before the words fea or water, and Jand By her he had two children at one birth, Sha no noting place: it i 8. At, or in .4. It notes co-operation Bullion will fell 4y the ounce for fix fhillings an Locke five pence unclipped money What we take daily by pounds, is at leaft of a much impertance as what we take feldom, an Arbuthnot only 4y grains and fpoonfuls The North by myriads pouts her mighty fons Great nurfe of Goths, of Alans, and of Huns Pope the name, as he pleafeth, though feldom the orde &y ones By giving the denomination to lefs quantities o filver by one twentieth, you take from them the Tranfplanting one &y one into my lif His bright perfe@ions, till I fhine like him. Addif Who s that ftranger? By his warlike port His fierce demeanour, and ereéted look He's of no vulgar note Dryden Judge the even he ftands Her brother Rivers Ere this, lies thorter by the head at Pomfret, Ryyy Dryden By his broad fhoulders and gigantick limbs. Dryd wher Meantime fhe ftands provided ofa Laius More young and vigorous too by twenty fprings Thus year by year they pafs, and day &y day The young A mili Suwi 13. It notes the fum of the difference pe tweea two things compared Explor'd her limb 2y limb, and fear'd to fin and b hi the ftrength of a natione Spratt nificent cify 11 In idle talk, and owns her falfe belief Th By your defctiption of the town, I img fn to liec under fome great enchantment gp By what I have always heard and read, I ¢ apl: them all out, and examine them one by one. Boyle fhe confumes the tim were fallen afleep oppofition it carries, and ftands in, to thar s éé and fubmiffion that is due to the father LAP‘ Knolles to tak prudence would dire&t m Commo greatnefs or {malinefs of the matter, byt 5 t 7. It notes the quantity had at one time Her brother is in fecret come from France BY The' punifiment is not to be meafured Ly"me of-ordnance, and fo by pieces to catry it away that the enemy fhould not get fo great a fpoil Addifon Bu'zzer. n fi [fro 1 B B nftr h le e m h b e a Sitting in fome p ham Al o f l e r f late into Englith hi Solyman refolved to affanlt 1the bredaCh, afte walke u o m l h n l m i imfel ha and'd?vsi"i£ }}::;s tent Knolles's Hift of the Tur kl{ l) :l dx h n a l w h h I know not whe al a o l f i & i i b p o i to his appen Boy[lf z l ; m h a n k t He will imagine, tha fat down and mad them &y themfelve fent them to their allies to fign an u c n i f e More pleas'd to keep it till t come Than eat the fivecteft 8y themfelves at h.qfl;;.P‘fi |