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Show A Of heav®n fet open, on the carth (hall pou Rain, day and night three miles from Rome, fuppofed to b -the caves and cells where the primitiv schriftians hid and aflembled themfelves and where they interred the martyrs Torrents and loud impetuous cararacis Through roads abrupt, and rude unfathion'd tra ts Run down the lofty mountain's channel'd f des which are accordingly vifited with devotion Bat, anciently, the word cara Blackmore -comb was only underftood of the tomb of St. Peter and St. Paul Chambers And to the vale convey their foaming tides Ca"raract muft have been full of ftench, if the dea bodie light has no admittance [vavaypa, a frac Saladine hath a yello tare.] 'That which has the quality o -confolidating the parts I puton a catagmatick emplafter, and, by th ufe of a laced glove, fcattered the pituitous fivel ling, and ftrengthened it clean.sh data import.tsv out README Wifeman's Surgery CATA'RRH tions urine Shakefpeare's Macheth Addifon The bright Taygete, and the fhining Bears With-all the failors catalgue of ftars a cat Th black princ fide wer fee of Monomotapa the glarin catamountain by whof an th -quill-darting porcupine Arbutbnot and Popé's Mart. Scriblerus Axchers and flingers, cataphraéés and fpears Miltor's Sampfon Agoniffes Ca‘Tarrasm n / [ravdmraopa.] = poultice ; a foft and moift application I bought an unétion ofa mountebanlk So mortal, that but dip a knife in i L Where it draws blood, no cataplafm {o rare "Collected from all fimples that have virtu ‘Under the moon, can fave Shakefpeare's Hamlet Ca'rarverr. n. [ [catapulta, Lat.] A engine ufed anciently to throw ftones The balifta violently fhot great fones an q a =riés, as alfo the catapylts Camden's Remains the difcharg of the fkin. Qutncy Cata'rruous [ fro Relatm proceeding from a catarrh cipal charaers Impendent horrours 2 A final event ; a conclufion unhappy No fooner he, with them of ma and beaf Seleét for life, fhall in the ark b lodg'd #nd fhelter'd round ; but all th catgrag A young lady, at the theayi trse, concei.ved a paffio for a notorious rake that headed a party of ~ carcals Spectator Three catcals be the brib Of him, whofe chatt'ring fhames the monke trite Pope whe he arofe againft me, I caught hi 1.Sam. xvils 33 z, ‘Lo ftap any thing flying ; to receiv any thing in the paffage Others, to catch the breeze of breathing air To Tufculum or Algido repair Addifor on Italy S i Sam. xyiiiv 19 W u d th y li e icB n a a b t e onts catch hold of every a able exprsefli" on Decay of Piety To catch fomething out of his mouth, that the might accufe him 9 Luke, xi. 54 that bufy curiofity, and unfatisfactory inquifitive D T've perus'd her well Beauty and honour in her are fo mingled That they have canght the king Shakefpeare's Henry VIIT 10 To pleafe ; to {feize the affetions t charm For I am young, a novice in the trade The fool of love, unpracis'd to perfuade And want the foothing arts that cazch the fair But, caught myfelf, lie ftruggling in the fnare Diyden 11. To receive any contagion or difeafe I cannot name the difeafe, and it is cangh Of you that yet are well Shakefp. Winter's Tale Thofe meafles Which we difdain fhould tetter us, vet fee The very way to cazch them Shakefp. Coriolanus In footh I know not why I am fo. {ad It wearles me;5 you fay it wearies you But how I caught it, found it, or came by it I am to learn "Shakefpeare's Merchant of Venice The foftet of our Britith ladies expofe thei necks and arms to the open air; which the me coul no do without carckin being accuftomed to it cold, for wan o Addifor's Guardian i (3;2 ;1«_:111 thc] wu;i (;is thrcir2 long_ arc;d Y s to roar 12 ' To feize eagefly They have caught up every. thing e iympit nefs, which Sencca calls the difeafe of the Greeks generall by his beard, and fmote him, and flew him Here was a mighty revolution, the moft horribl and portentous cataftrophe that nature ever yet faw an elegant and habitable earth_quite fhattered Wovdward's Natural Hifiory An Milter's Paradife Loft The mule went under the thick boughs of great oak, and his head caught hold of the oak Dennis Ca'TarRACT. 2 /, [raraganrn.] fall of T0o CATCH «. a. preter. 1 catehed o water from on high; a fhoot of wate c n h h ve catchedor caught, [4etfen a cafcade Dutch. Blow, winds, and crack your cheek ; rage, blow 1. To lay hold on with the hand: intiYou.cazarafts and hurricanes, fpou Till'youhave drench'd our ftecples mating the fuddennefs of the a&ion Shakefpeare What if al Her ftores were open'd, and th firmamen Of hell thould fpout her cararast of fire: 7+ To faften fuddenly upon ; to feize. to a catarrh cataftropbes are unhappy, with relation to the prin words xii. 13 are mor than t Lockz The curling fmake mounts heavy from the fires At length it catches flame, and in 2 blaze expires Dryden But ftopp'd for fear, thus violently driv'n The fparks thould catch his axletree of heav's Dryden Shakefpeare declares for tragedies, whof 6. To receive fuddenly Pat!-He comes like the cataftropheof the ol comedy That philofophe tofling u Speétator and of the Herodians, to carch him in hi Mark Thefe attificial methods of reafonin adapted to catch and entangle the mind inftrut and inform the underftanding catarrh. Cata'stroPuE. 7 /. [raradigopn. 1. The change, or revolution, which produces the conclufion or final event of dramatic piece and And they fent unto him certain of the Pharifee pesit The catarrbal fever requires evacuations. Floyer Old age attended with a glutinous, cold, catarrhous, leucophlegmatick conftitution "Arbuthnot on Dict butterfly To enfnare; to entangle in a fnare ; t 8. Tlo {eize unexpectedly Al fev'rous kinds } adj a gilde take or hold in a trap b houfe to condemn play -conW finr rm tlclae catapZfilafms;gfii- dififccufu s,5"; bu2 t :/fctiali dil;g/{}/?kz. m £xy 5 of ferum Ca'rcavr. n f [from car and call.] {queaking inftrument, ufed in the play pore On each fide went armed guards before him and behind th CAta RRH AL ~ Ca'raruracrt. n 4 [caraphraita, Lat. A horfe-man in complete armour Eoth horfe and foot hinder afte A thepherd diverted himfelf wit eggsy and catching them again what{oever occaPR or‘confumptions Addifon"s Oid Caramo'unrain. n./ [from car an mountain.] A fierce animal, refemblin _ Neither was the body then fubjeét to die b piecemeal, and languith under coughs, cart{rrbs 15 ftheflibragy of manufcnpts belonging to St with that of the Vatican de wo.] Convulfions, epilepfies, fierce catarrbs. Parad. Lof} "fons, and I believe they will be repeated fooner tha the alphabe:t South antiquit an ar a quantit Make a catalogue of profperous facrilegious per ;I‘;;l(reglfzq, Ot] W{‘;.Ch _tl:hen}:lllshad%pntted watelogye, U o0ked tnto th Virgil, whic difputes.it [warajiée caufe whatfoeve Showghes, water rugs, and demy wolves, are clepe All by the name of dogs Th fions too grea g thmgs one by one In the catalogue ye go for men n. f ru 4. To ftop any thing falling ; to intercep falling hath like upon thofe glands, and occafions irrita R 7 La T‘A‘It‘ioc zf Zré‘cglc:::?\o:?ilfi]: - f;nre enu- whic defluxion of a fharp ferum from th glands about the head and throat, generally occafioned by a diminuation o infenfible perfpiration, or cold, wherei what fhould pafs by the fkin, oozes ou " There is a difeafe called a catalepfis, wherein th - patieat is fuddenly feized without fnfe or motion -and remains in the fame pofture in which th difeafe feizeth him Arbuthnot milk hi when he canghe it, he let it 80 again; and afte i again ; and over and over he comes, and up agai and caughe it.again Shakefpeare's Coriclanis Quincy wife much acrimony ; for it cleanfeth the eyes: i is good alfo for catarafts, Bacon's Natural Hifiory CaTaLe'psis. ./t [xardrmbic.] A lighte Apecies of the apoplexy, or epilepfy HEtaieon of "ter o eye is ei 1 fa ther wholly, or in part, covered an fhut up with a little thin fkin, fo that th Addifon adj A fuffufio confirmed, the pupil of th that lay in them were left to rot in open nitches Caragma'rTicK [In medicine. of the eye, when little clouds, motes, an flies feem to float about in the air; whe On the (ide of Naples are the catacombs, whic Milton's Pavadife Loft 3. To feize any thing by purfuit 5 "which there are a great number abou B il rou to catch col at a Venetian Yo catch at. T'oendeavou lay hold on door Pope fuddenly t Saucy liGor Will catch at us like Rrumpets, and fea r i e Bal ad us out of tune. Skas. Antony en Cleopatra Make them catch at all opportunitie of fubvert. ing the ftate o Carcu Addifon's State of the War v. 1. To be contagious ; to {pread nfetion or mifchief *Tis time to give them phyfick, their d feafe Are grown fo catching Shakefpeare's Henry VI Sicknefs is catching5 oh, were favour f Yours weuld I carch, fair Hermia, ere go. Shat Confidering it with-all its malignity and cat hin nature it ma epidemicles be enumerate Nng wit the worft: o Harvey Th ~ CTHAA |