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Show DR DR a picture, s, in the language of poets, to draww u the fcenery of a play Dryden A paper may be drawn up, and figned by two o three hundred principal gentlemen Saift 4+ Evifceratedi. Draw. n. /. [from the verb. heifer which hath not been wrought wit and whichhath not draws in the yoke. Deut. xxi. DRrA'WBRIDGE. 7. / Think every bearded fellow, that's but yok'd May draw with you Shakefpeare's Otbello to fhrink greffio 1 Sam Let the drawer glafles how willing they are to fe And draw together in a globofe form 6. To draw a fword Dra'wing. n [ [from draw. tion; reprefentation t Dra'winGroom 'To form troops 1nt it i rieties of ufe, fome fhade of its origina meaning, 7o pull. It evprefles an action nature of ‘the elephant and the drayborfe Thus we forge a fword by blows, but w draws 1t by a continued line We pou We avrite a letter with what Tatler On Have not coblers, drapmen, and mechanick governed as well as preached ? Nay, have not the by preaching come to govern South DrAYPLOUGH. . /. [dray and plough A plough of a particular kind The drayplough is the beft plough in winter fo miry clays Blortimer's Hufbandr A low, mean, worthlefs wretch Delinea Pope DRIAD. 7. /. [bpadb, Saxon. 1. Fear ; terrour ; affright ; horrour ei 7. /. [from draw an ther felt or imprefled Think'ft tho at court What you heard of the words fpoken of yo in the drawingroom was not true: the fayings o princes are generally as ill related as the fayings o wits Pope 1f we mak When pow'r to flatt'ry bows> To plainnefs honou Is bound, when majefty to folly falls Shakefpeare's King Lear Jobe Let not thy dread make me afraid Was ever any wicked man free from the fting of a guilty confcience, from the fecret dread o divine difpleafure, and of the vengeance of another Tillotfon world If our fears can be awakened with the dread o evil, he has arme eternal mifery What ar hindsd thou draw Thl thofe heartlefs Shakejpeare be 3 hafte, but we Zraw a bill with lo e put afide, ¥ or unclofed. A curtain drawp preicnted to our-vie fcrupulofity towa befieg'd Dryder's Tyrannic Love .A fear of you an the drcad of you, fhal Gens nx.z be upon every beaft of the earth 3. The perfon or thing feared ; the caui of fear Addifon amon his laws with the terrour o Rogers 2. Habitual fear ; awe but moderate advantages, every Britifh heart muf 2. With a fword drawn that duty fhall have dread t fpeak a drazon game of it, or procur tremble As the devil ufes witches To be their cully for a fpace That, when the time's expir'd, the drazcl Hudibra For ever may become his vaflals 1. Equal ; where each party takes his ow ftake leifurely tinied ftream We force compliance b threats, but we draw it by gradual pre is illuftrated by a difcourfe on th A brace of draymen bid God fpeed him well And had the tribute of his fupple knee Shakefp An army was drawn together of near fix thoufand horfe Clarendon So lofty was the pile, a Parthian bow With vigour drawwn, muft put the fhaft below Dryden's Fables retains, through all its va draww it in a con trut Dra'yman. # /i [dray and man. that attends a dray or cart 2. "The company aflembled there Drawn. [participle from draw. "The lord Bernard, with the king's troops, feein there Was no enemy left on that fide, drew up in large field oppofite to the bridge Clarcndon eve | 1. The room in which company affemble The fatal day draws on, when I muft fall, Dryd batw Thi 70078 1. 70 Dr aw on. To advance; to approach. an # /i [dray and forfa] horfe which draws a dray up in on or underLocke taken off room And of onle beauty many blunders make Dryden Collier, continuous be brought into the field of ele@io Dra'vuorse They random drawings from your fheets fhall take not to.come to a rUPtUrC on which beer j Where bubbling yeft is blown by gufts of wind Gay fhirt or draavers, till they are ten years old. Locke When the engagement proves unlucky, the wa an ca Sax.] Tfi The lower part of Dra'zer. a. /. [perhaps corrupted fro droffél th {cu o drof o huma na- The Maltefe harden the bodies of their chilture ; or from drofle/fe, French, a whore. dren, by making them go ftark naked, withou 9. To make a fore run by attraion 10. Yo Draw of. To retire; to retreat is to draw of by degrees n. /. {opag upon his draycart, and I will meet him there in triumphant chariot Addifin When drays bound high, then never crofs behind Addifon on Medals 5. [In the plural. man's drefs So much infight into perfpe@ive, 2nd fkill i drawing, as will enable him to reprefent tolerabl on paper any thing he fees, thould"be got. ~ Zocke He¢ has drawwn a black, and fmiles out of whic ledge, or apprehenfion, as a worm, fhu drazver of a cabinet, hath of the fenfe ftanding of a man We will fuppofe the China dithe and a drawer of medals fupplying thei Shake[p out of the pack Let hi There may be other and different intelligen beings, of whofe faculties he has as little know 7. 'To pradtife the art of delineation a car Shakefpeare's Henry IV be ready with wine and fret 4. A box in a cafe drawn at pleafure Blackmore Dreaw to defend him, when he was befet DRA'YCART. carried Love is a flame, and therefore we fay beauty i attractive, becaufe phyficians obferve that fire is great drazer Swift For his fak Did I expofe-myfelf, pure; for his lov valence 3 Was" Then mount the clerks, and in one lazy ton Through the long heavy page draw! on Poge 3. That which has the power of attra&ion They mufter thererand round the centre fwarm liquor quick tend* ing to a watc drawavell: the people of old were wont o ly t let down a pitcher with a handcord, for as muc water as they could eafily pull up Grew and makes the drazvers abroad, and his footme at home, know he is not to be provoked TL'U/:,‘!' come together o The firr ft conceit Carew's Surwey of Cornwall Let the waiters have eyes, though their tongue muft be tied Ben Fonfon's Tavern Acad A man of fire is a general enemy to all waiters 5. To draw together; to be colle@ed; t gradua drawn by a long cord Stand in fome bye room, while I queftion m puny drawer to what end he gave me the fugar themfelves upon the wing, taking every occafio of drawing upward to the fun. Dryd. Don Sebaft Now nearer to the Stygian lake they draw Whom from the fhore the furly boatman faw blerv'd their paflage through the fhady wood And mark'd their near approaches to the flood. Dry And now I faint with grief; my fate drawws nigh In all the pride of blooming youth I die. .4dd. Ovid 70 Dra Dra'WWELL. 7. /. [draw and well.] deep well ; a well out of which wate i DRAY Ambitious meteors 33 Hayward from the cafk They returned to the camp where the king was and the Scots drew a little back to a more convemient poft for their refidence Clarendon regular order to hin durabl than was the fear 2. One whofe bufinefs is to draw liquor He ended; and th' archangel foon dreaw nigh Not in his thape celeftial, but as ma Clad to meet man Milton's Paradife Lofs 12. 70 Draw- up [draw and bridge. to move; to make pro ope Spenfer on Ireland 7o DrawL. @. . [from draw.] To utte any thing in a flow, driveling way Draw ye near hither all the chief of the people take a lot Enghlh the well. From the hewer of thy wood unto the drawe of thy water Deute xxix. 11 any way tak 22 1. One employed in procuring water fro You were, Jupiter, a fwan, for the love of Leda: Oh, omnipotent love ! how near the god dre 2o the complexion ofa goofe Shake[peare 8. T Sha svate itfelf, by mixture of afhes, or duft, will thrink o draw intza lefs room Baconw's Natural Hiffory 4. To advance The Irith will better be dragon to t than the Englifh to the Irifh government, Dra'WER. 2. /. [from draw. 1 have not yet found certainly, that th 5‘",{,3" 5. Induced as from fome motive Half the buildings were raifed on the continent and the other half on an ifland, contineed toge ther by a drawbridge no more truth in thee tha fox der or admit communication at pleafure They fhould keep a watch upon the particula biasin their minds, that it may not dracw too much Addifon's Spectator a As this friendfhip was draqon togeth b f a on both fides, fo it was not like t be mor A bridge made to be lifted up 2. To adt as a weight 3. To contra& 'Erunc my rent In poundage and drawbacks I lofe hal Whatever they give me, I muft be content. :S'w_lfl dad ett There is no more faith in thee tha 1. Thea& of drawing 2. The lot or chance drawn 2o Draw. @, n DRrA'WBACK. 7. /i [draw and back.] Mo1. To perform the office of a beaft o ney paid back for ready payment, o draught any other reafon A Let him be your dread . Ifflflb To thee, of all our good the facred {pring T thee, our deareft dread kingg DRrEAD to thee, our 10{‘\ adj. [onab, Saxon. 1. Terrible ; frightful a |