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Show ger unto his progeny Broawn's Vulgar Errours Chrift has condefcended to a cognation/and con Janguinity with us war b inflav' an aifo conguer Th 3. T t b overcome Whe A critick that attacks authors in reputation, i as the flave who called out to the congueror, Re th Addifs Guard Deferving freedom mor Nothing but ruin wherefoe'er they rove No Miiton's Paradife Regaincd n. / Prior [conquefle, French. 1, The act of conquering ; fubjeétion 2. Acquifition by viftory; thing gained More willingly I mention air This our old congueft ;5 than remember-hell Our hated habitation. Milton's Paradife Regained And, fill'd with England's glory, fmiles in death Addifon [confangui of the fam blood; related by birth, not affined Am 1 not confanguineon Am I not of herblood Shakejpeare Consancvir'NiTy. a. [0 [confanguinitas Lat.] Relation by blood ; relatio defcent from on commo b progenitor ; nearnefs of kin : diftinguifhed from afiaity, or relation by marriage Pve forgot my father I Ienow no touch of confanguinity Shakefpeare's Troilus and Creffida There is the fupreme and indiffoluble confunguinity and fociety between ‘men in general; o which the heathen poet, whom the apoftle calis t witnefs, faith, We are all his.generation Vo I Bacow's Holy WWar Co'wscrovs. adj. [confeius, Latin.] = 1. Endowed with the power of knowin one's own thoughts and a&tions you require cannot, in confcience, be de Matter hath no life nor perception, and is no confcions of its own exiftence Bentley's Sermoas Among fubftances, fome are thinking or zon Jeious beings, or have a power of thought Watts's Logick z. Knowing from memory; bhaving th Merit, and good works, is the end of man' knowledge of any thing without an motion5 and confeience of the fame is the accom- ne informati n plifhment of man's reft Bacon The damfel then to Tancred fent The reafon why the fimpler fort are moved wit authority, is the confcience of their own ignorance Hooker ‘Who, confeious of th® occafion, fear'd th' event Dryden 3. Admitte The fweeteft cordial we receive at laft 4 Real fentiment thoughts veracity Pope privat Rofes or honey cannot be thought to fmell o tafte their own fweetnefs, or an organ be confcicu toits mufick, or gunpowder foits flathing or noife Bentley's Sermons do abufe their hufband 4. Bearing witnefs by the di&tate of con{cience to any thing The queen had been folicitous with the king o his behalf, being confeious to herfelf that he ha been encouraged by her Clarendon 5. Scruple ; principle of aétion muft make a cosfcienc in keeping-the juf laws of fuperiours Taylor's Holy Living ‘Why fhould not the one make as much confeienc of "betraying for gold, as the other of doing it fo a cruft L' Efirange Children are travellers newly arrived in a ftrang Co'~scrovusty country; we fhould therefore malke confeience no to miflead them Locke Co'nsCioUsNESS con tious. z /i [from .confeious. 1. The perception of what pafies in man's own mind Locke Why doft thou weep? Can'ft thou the confeienc Shakefp, Timo [fro If thefe perceptions, with the'r confcioufnefs always remained ‘in the mind, the fame thinkin thing would be always confeioufly prefent Locke ablenefs To think I fhall lack friends adv With knowledge of one's own actions 6. In ludicrous language, reafon; reafonlack of an Atneas only, confcious to the fign Prefag'd th' event Dryden's Aneid In fuch grofs kind Shakefpeare's Othello They did in their confciences know, that he wa not able to fend them any part of it Clarendon W knowledg The reft ftood trembling, ftruck with awe divine Doft thou in confeience think, tell me, A milia That there be wome to th thing: with 7o Is confcience of our virtuous a&tions paft. Deshan Hector wasin an abfolute certainty of death, an depreffed with the confeience of being in an ill caufe Than all the conguefis former kings did'gain, Dryd In joys of congue he refigns his breath A prince muft be ufed confrionably as well as common perfon Taylor's Holy Living 3. Confcioufnefs; knowledge of our ow thoughts or aétions Not to be o'ercome, was to do mor Near of kin Co'NsCIONABLENESs. 7z /. [from conJcionable.] Equity; reafonablenefs. Dis Co'NSCIONABLY adv [from confcion able.] In a manner agreeable to confcience ; reafonably; juftly ho Swift I muft yield my body to the earth And, by my fall, the congueft to my foe Shakefpeare's Henry V1 T'll lead thy daughter to a conqueror's bed To whom I will retail my congueft won And the fhall be fole victrefs, Shake Richard 111 neus, Latin. Weotton of confcience this by her authority, as much as by her praétice 3. Viéory ; fuccefs in arms adj humane feeming Shake[pearc Let my debtors have confcionable fatisfaction ferred beyond this time DMiiton Her majefty is obliged in confcience to endeavou A perfect congueft of a country reduces all th people to the condition of fubjeéts Dawvies on Ireland CONSANGUI'NEQUS A knave, very voluble; no farther conftionabl than in putting on the meer form of civil an is Cupid a child of confience; he make Wha in them Co'nscroNABLE. adj. [from confcience. Reafonable; juft; according to confcience reftitution, Shakefpeare's Merry Wives of Windfor He had, againft right and confcience, by thamefu treachery, ‘intruded himfelf into another man' Kingdom Kilolles That tyrant god, that reftlefs congueror confcientioufref if they will content themfelves with lefs profit tha they can make Locte Dryden's Ovid of coniciénce confcientionfly did belong to it. L'Effran is the erroneous as well as the rightl confcience; and, if the confcience hapdeluded, fin does not therefore ceafc ( It will be a wonderfu This is thank-worthy, ifa man, for confcienc toward God, endure grief 1 Peter, 1is 19 Than thofe their conguerors, who leave behin Co'~veuesT determinatio According to the dire@ion o ConscIE'NTIOUSNESS, 7. L [from conJeientions.] Exacnefs of juftice ; tendernefs of confcience nefty. This is fometimes a ferious, an fometimes a ludicrous fenfe 2. One that fubdues and ruins countries May quit his pleafure to affert his pow'r eflimat confei South hath of his own thoughts and ations; and becaufe, if a man judgeth fairly of his actions b comparing them with the law of God, his mind wil approve or condemn him, this knowledge or conJeience may be both an accufer and a judge. Swift 2. Juftice; th [fro be fin, becaufe a man committe it confcientionfly Confcience fignifies that knowledge which a ma Cozvley member, Sir, that you are a man law, tha Ther informe pens to b Milton's Paradife Loft Bound with triumphant garlands will I come And lead thy daughter to a congueror's bed Shakefpeare's Richard 111 The gain of civil wars will not allo Bags for the congueror's crew a people have no touch of confcience, n Creech's Fuvenal Which confcience fhakes No courts created yet, nor caufe was heard But all was fafe, for confcience was their guard South adv More ftrefs bas been laid upon the friénefs o fee Thofe rods of fcorpions, and thofe whips of fteel While the heap is fmall, and the particular Co'NQuUEROR. 7. /i [from conguer. 1. A man that has obtained a victory victor confcience But why muft thofe be thought to "fcape, tha Poflibie to be overcome few, he will find it eafy and conguerable entions. Confcierice has not been wanting to itfelf in endeavouring to' get the cleareft information about th South will of God conguer. to make good the chaL'Efirange Conscie''nTIoUSLY fenfe of their evil doings, it is bootlefs to think t Spenfer reftrain them Who againft faith and cosfeience can be hear fword has no pro- Decay of Picty [ fro adj Dis Infallible a life in fo confcientions a probity, as i thought, word, and deed raéter of an honeft man 1. The knowledge or faculty by which w judoe of the g voodnefs or wickednefs o jud ourfelves Ever to conguer and to have his wor Shake[peare's Coriolanus Off contradiétion Equal fuccefs had fet thefe champions bigh And both refolv'd to conguer or to die Waller Co'NQUERABLE Lea CO'NSCIENCE. . /. [confcientia, Lat. Put him to choler ftraight: he hath been us' The logick of a conguerin priety confar ing together conquered his reluétance 70 Co'NQuER. w. n. To get the victory . t conicience cino, Laatin, to piece.] The aét of patch Wilton Smith as 7. /[, [fro Swift Coxscre'nrrovs. adj. [from confiience. Scrupulous; exaltly juft; regulated b Sout Consarcina‘TiON Shall, with their freedom loft, all virtue lof overcome as you fhould require lived all terms of confanguinity, and became a ftran Both tugging tobe victors, breaft to breaft Vet neither conqueror; nor conguered s Henry V Shakefpeare And fear of God Anna conguers but to fave And governs but to blefs Half a dozen fools are, in all confiience, as man The ficft original would fubfift, though he out 2. To ovércome ; to fubdue; to vanquith farmount CO CO CO If fpirit be without thinking, I have no idea o any thing left; therefore confeivufne/s muft be it Wites's Logick eflential attribute 3 2, 30 |