OCR Text |
Show cow Compa'rrivenT French. fign CO 2. [ compariiment A divifion of picture, or de Tlxc circumference is divide into twelve core _ Partiments, each containing a complete picture Pope Comrarrti'rioN. 7 /£ [from compars. 1. The a& of comparting or dividing . ¥ooms of office and entertainment bot fo Wotton 2. The parts marked out, or feparated ; feparate part "Their temples and amphitheatres needed no com partitions Wotton's Architeciure Comra'RTMENT. . [ [ compartiment French.] Divifion; feparate part of defign The fquare will make you ready for all manne of compartments, bafes, pedeftals, and buildings Peacham on Drawing. 72 CO'MPASS. v. a. [compayfer, Fr. compaljare, 1tal. paffibus metiri, Latin. 1. To encircle ; to environ; to furround to inclofe: it has fometimes around, o about, added A darkfome-way That deep defcended through the hollow ground And was with dread and horrour compaffed around Fairy Queen 1 fee thee compafs'd with thy kingdom's peers ‘That fpeak my falutation in their minds Shakefpeare's Macbeth Now all the blefling Of a gl=d father compafs thee about! Shak. Tempeft The fhady trees cover him with their fhadow the willows of the brook coripafs him about Obfrv Feby xl 22 the crowds that compafs him around Dryden's Virgil To dare that death, I will approach yet nigher Thus wert thou compaffed with circling fire. Dryd 2. To walk round any thing Old Chorineus compajs'd thrice the crew And dipp'd an olive-branch in holy dew Which thrice he fprinkled round. Dryden's Zn 3. To beleaguer tuibefiege ; to block Thine enemies fhall cafta trench about thee, an compafs thee round, and keep thee if on évery fide Luke, xixs 4 4. To gralp ; to inclofe in the arms Afeize 5. To obtain ; to procure ; to attain have in the power t t That which by wifdom'he faw to be requifite fo that people, was by as great wifdom compaffed Hooker's Preface His mafter being one of great regard In court to compafs any fuit not hard Hubberd's Tale IfT can check my erring love, I will If not, to compafs her I'll ufe my fkill Shakefp How can you hope to compafs your defigns And not diffemble them Denbam's Sophy He had a mind to ‘make himfelf mafter o Weymouth, if he could compalfs it withou engaging his army before it Clarendon The church of Rome createth titular patriarch of Conftantinople and Alexandria; 4o lot is th pope to lofe the remembrance of any titl that h hath once compalfed Brerewwood Invention is the firft part, and abfolutel neceffary to them both ; yet no rule ever was, or eve can be given, how to compafs it. Dryden's Difref The knowledge of what is good and what j evil, what ought and what ought not to be done is a thing too large to be compafled, and too hard t be maftercd, without brains and ftudy, parts an contemplation South and card, whereby mariners fteer Pope The breath of religion fills the-failg: prape the compafs by which fagtious fim"fc e.;:" 6, [Inlaw.] To take meafures preparatory to any thing ; as, o compals zb death of the king Co'mpass. z./i [from the verb. Rude as their thips was navigation the No ufeful compafs or meridian known: Coafting they kept the land within thejr And lenew no north but when the. i)o?e-fi'ax? é&fié This day I breathed firft; time is come round And where I did begin, there fhall I end My lifeis run its compafs z. Extent; reach; grafp With equal force the tempeft blows ,by m?gd Shakefp. Fulius Cafar From ev'ry corner of the feaman's compafy It ftrains me paft the compafs of my wits. Shokefp That which is out of the compafs of any man' power, is to that man impoflible. South's Sermons How few there are may be juftly bewailed, the | 1o compafs of them extending but from the time compaf b difpatche of twelv book i i COMPA'SSION thort compal Atterbury This pleads compalfiony and repents the falt Dryden's Fables Th' imperial palace; compafs huge, and hig The good-natured man is apt to be move compaffion for thofe misfortunes or infirmities which another would turn into ridicule The firu&ure Miiton's Paradife Regained. Old Rome from fuch a race deriv'd her birth ‘Which now on feven high hills triumphant reigns And in that compafs all the world contains To pity ; to compaflionate; to commi Dryden's Virgil ferate . A departure from the right line; a indire& advance; as, #o_fetch a compaf {pace; moderation ; due li Shakefpeare's Titus Andronicus Comra'sstonaTE. adj. [from compaffin Incline Certain it 1s, that in two hundred years befor (I fpeak within' compafs) no fuch commiffion ha been executed in either of thefe provinces Dawics on Ireland Nothing is likelier to keep,a man within com#4fs, than the having conftantly before his eyes th ftate of his affairs, in a regular courfe of account. Locke 7. The power of thie voice to exprefs the notes of mufick A word {carcely ufed O heavens ! can you hear a good man groan And not relent, or not compaffion him round the camp mits My brothets Hold, -and vesgéance il S a i And their mount Palatine 6. Moderat Otgef "i Painful ff}fmp & t}g' Borrd e compaffionof me 2 Y Hebrd:z'us Thelt dter Hn within the compafs of one year, and towa@; th 4. Enclofure; circumference to compaffion inclined to pity ; merciful ; tender; melting ; foft eafily affe@ted with forrow by the mifer P of others There never was: any heart truly great and ge nerous, that was not alfo tender and compaffionate Sermons South' 7 ComMPA'SSIONATE @. 'fl"{ [from the pity ; to commiferate T noun. Expcx;'ience la};et}}x' p;inces torn eftates before thei You would found me from my loweft note t the top of my compafs Shake[peare's Hamlet From harmony, from heavenly harmony themfelves This univerfal frame began What is compaflion, when 'tis void of love From harmony to harmon Through all the compufi of the notes it ran The diapafon clofing full in man Dryden 8. [This is rarely ufed in the fingular. The inftrument with which circles ar drawn If they be two, they are two f Donnes He took the golden compaffes, prepar' withal perfuade the tq cmfiqfiflf" Compalfionates my pains, and pities me Raleigh Addifor's Cate CoMPA"sSTONATELY. adfué.[{rom compafMercifully; tenderly. tonate. lehe fi]nes were affigned to the rebuilding St Paul's, and thought therefore to be the moreie c d r % e 1 a o f a m c f l t d a f i p verely i ‘Gllar.mb tas, Latin. l y a o t b Gofliprled,ffiornitcyo;mpaanted a juror that wasg Pav a fpiritua either of the partics might, in former mixi In God's eternal ftore, to circumfcrib ‘This univerfe, and all created things Miltorn's Paradife Loft " 'To fix one foot of their compafs wherever they think fit, and extend the other to fuch tetribl lengths, without defcribing any circumference a all, is tg leave us and themfelyes in a very uncertai an CoMPATE RNITY. 7. fo [con and paterni In his han {tate eyes and excufed As ftift twin compaffes are two Thy foul, the fixt foot, makes no tho To move; but doth, if th' other de [50771154_1_"1'0,{:,,; " from con and patior, Lat.] Pity; commiferation ; forrow for the {ufferin gf time Addifor's Freebolder You have heard what hath been here done fo the poor by the five hofpitals and the workhoufe end of a long, expenfive war ‘ kerff;) tv;lrn in taken up in thefe. Pope's Effay on Homer's Bateles. The hEcr}lg"fll are gc;)gd CO}?IéderateS {1;]1 an enterfrize which ma edge .of i i fo thin, tha ts offic is to c muft be made broad and the back thin, that the back may ha th as other faws have; but th made {o broad, and the bac eafily follow the broad edge round; and the_g.efore the edg 3. Space; room; limits, either of time or tha y f ro ghfi"@ CoMPAss-SAW. 7. / a4 The compafs-faww thouldot h?ve.l_t few particulars, and lies in a very narrow compafs Addifon's Speator This author hath tried the force and compafs o our language with much fuccefs Swift lef In old ‘Ianguag P g th'_ex:e was a Phrafe to come in compa/i, to be brough Hippocrates to thatof Marcus Antoninus. Temple Animals in their generation are wifer than th fons of men; but their wifdom is confined to N Rowe's Fane Shyys He that firft difcovered the ufe of the compa ‘ ying and .increafe of 'ufefi did more A for the fupp commodities, than thofe who built workhoufes O Juliet, I already know thy grlef. pr&CC mggéa ‘@ courfe 1. Circle 3 round I will come to the compartition, by which th authors of this art underftand a graceful and ufeful diftribution of the whole groundplot 9. The inftrument compofed of 5 In ev'ry work regard the writer's end Since none can compafs more than they intend S-u)lfz. e b e f d i n a bee r fi " z t J s i a D CompaTiBt LITY. 2 /. [frOm ffl?'ff"{f& C with fomething clfe; agreemeCnOt MPA& any thing e |