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Show DR' H An Th nought DR is content to be their drudge on their errands gladly trudge Hudibras hard mafer makes men ferve him fo who rewards his drudges and flaves wit This feems :the meaning DrUMMARER. 7 6 He who deals in c{x:ugns.u ™ and inak 4. A drudge here Thro' {fweet degrees that.this brief world afio:‘ds, To fuch as may the paffive drugs of i ‘Shakefpeare Freely command nothing but fhame, and forrow, and mifery Tillotfo Dru'pcEr. 2 £ [from drudge! 7o Druc. v. a. [from the noun. X, A mean labourer 1. To {eafon with ingredients, .commonl 2. The drudging-box ; the box out o medicinal which flower is thrown on roaft meat The furfeited groom Dry'pcery Di& n /. [from drudse. M old dam hufbandr *Wer wel will b undone for one. to .do he and her dru .{s‘rr‘v'_\,' ther no Shakefpeare 2. To tinure with fomething offenfrve Oft they affay'd Shakef inftrument "fo as offices of drudgery # Wer Hunger and'thirft conftraining 5 drugg'd as of ‘With hatefuleft difrelith, writh'd their jaw With foot and cinders fill'd Milton's Par. Lof drud there not peo ple toreceive orders, as well as ot authorize them iv You do not know the heavy gr The toils, the labours, weary dru Which they impofe Southerr's Grovnoko To thee that dradgery of pow'r I give Cares.be thy lot Do mock their charge with fnores.-I've drugg' their pofiets That death and nature do contend about them Mea rlabour ; ignoble toil ; difhoneurabl work ; {ervile occupation reign thou, and let me live i Dru'ceET ftudf tality, without drudgery, and without forrow Locke. Even Drudgery himfelf As at.the car he fweats, or dufty hew The palace frone, looks gay Thomfon's Summer It is now: handled. by every .dirty weach, an condemned to do her drudger FUGELI Swwift's WMeditations on a Broomflick 2./. Alight kind of woolle In druggets dreft, of thirteen pence a-yard Sce Philip's fon amidft his Perfian guard Dru'cerst Sawvift . /. [from drug.] One wh fells phyfica Drvde Paradife was a place of blifs, as well as immo drugs Drv'csrEr Commo oil of turpentin I *bough at th drugfer's Boyle Theyéfet the clergy bélow their apothecaries the phyfician of the foul below the drugflers o the body DRUM Azzerbury . /. '[tromme, Danith; drumme hoop o Micks Kings Cookery drudging. ferveth the foun of tumultuous rage In the names of drugs and plants Pope's Odyffey the miftak in a word may endanger life Baker's Reflections on Learning z. It is ufed fometimes for poifon Mortal drugs I have; but Mantua's la Is death to any he that utters them Shakefpeare And yet no doubss the poor man's draught controll He dreads no-poifon in his homely bowl Thenfear the deadly drug, when gems divin Enchafe the cup, and fparkle in the wine 3. An thin withou wort Diyd or value any thing of which no purchafer can b foand Each noble vic Shall bear a price And virtue fhall a druzg become An empty name Was‘all her fame But now fhe fhall be dumb 7 Dryden's Albion wit fro difpetfing maket th dow thei Bacen breaft bede th ground And drums and trumpets mix their mournful found Dryden dicinal fimple Temper'd with drugs of fov'reign ufe, taffuag beate fkin extended in'the open air 1. An ingredient ufed in phyfick; a me Bright Helen mix'd a mirth-infpiring bowl an noife come forth at the drum-hole far more lou and ftrong than if you fhouid ftrike upon the lik Tears tricklin A fleet defcrie Hangs in the clouds, by equinoétial wind Clofe failing from Bengala, or the ifle Of Ternate and Tidore, whence merchants brin Their fpicy drugs Milton's Paradife Lof Judicious phyfick's noble art to gain He drugs and plants explor'd, alas! in vain Swmiith fide march without the noife of threatenin drms Shake[peare ‘In drams, the clofenefs round about, that pre 7. /. [drogue, French. ‘The boiling bofo eac ‘Let' He does row all the meaneft and -triflingef things himfelf drudzingly, withont making" ufe o any inferiour or {ubordinate minitter Ray.onthe Creation DRUG office it is to beat the drum Now no more the dru Drummer, ftrike up,y.and let u march away Affrights the wives, and chills the virgin's blood Philips The tympanu membrane whic tion of the air of the ear, or th perceives the vibra 7o DRUM. v. 7 1. To beat a drum ; to bea a tune on dram 2. To beat with a pulfatory motion Aad with their vellum- thunder fhaks e gthe pilL&e Dru'MsTICK ttick with which a drum is beaten DRrUNK. adj. [from drink. 1. Intoxicated with ftrong liquor; in briated b 4 To Dru'msLE fluggifh no more w. 7 To drone Dryden to b Hanmer Take up thefe cloaths here quickly: where' the cowlftaff? Lock, how you drumble ! carr them to the landrefs in Datchet Mead Shake[peare's Merry Wiwes of Windfor Dru'mrisH. z./. The name ofa fith The under-jaw of the drumfi/e from Virginia Woodavard Drumma'jor. #. /. [drum and major. The chief drommer of a regiment Such company mday chance to fpoil the fwearing And the drummajn's oaths, of bulk unruly May dwindle to a feeble Cleaveland s g This was the morn when iffuing on t g é Drawn u in rank and file, they ftood prepar'd Of feeming arms to make a fhort affay Then haften to be.drunk, the bufinefs o the.d'ay We generally conclude that ma takes pains to be thought fober dfl;g'l}'fi Spectatar 2. Drenched or faturated with moifture I will make mine arrows drunk with blood Deut #- /. [from drunk.] On given to excellive ule of ftrong liquors one addicted to habitual ebriety Some blood drawn on me would beget opinion Of m more fierce endeavour 1 I've feen drukard Do more than this in fport Shakifp. King Lear My bowels cannot hide her woes But, like a drunkard, I muft vomit them Shap adj. [from drink their place, and fometimes they fee things double Bacon 4. Done in a ftate of inebriation Shakefpeare - We fhould for honour tak The drunken quarrels of a rake DRU'NKENLY. adw. [from drunken a drunken manner Savift I Dru'~NkENNESS. 7. /. [from drunken. 1. Intoxication with ftrong liquor Every going off from our natural and commo temper, ard our ufual feverity of bebaviour, isa degree of drupkennefs. Taylor's Rule of Liniing doly = Lacedemonians trained up their childre by bringing a drunken ma Watts on the I'lltml or inebriation of any kind 3. Intoxicatio Paffion is the drunkennefs of the mind, an therefore in its prefent workings not controllable by reafon DRY. 4dj. [onig, Saxon. 1. Arid not wet not moif Iti Au ; ad fo 4 A When your carters, or your waiting vaffals Have done a drunken flaughter, and defac' The precious image of our déar Redeemer You ftraight are on your knees forpardon, pardon Shakefpeare diforder of the faculties o ph into their company Tha To Then let the earth be drunken with our bloed. . to hate drunkennefs s A thnf o rad Drunken men imagine every thing turnet round : they imagine that things come upo them ; they fee not well things afar off; thofe things that they fee near hand, they fee out o Th yiino %5 Shake[peare z. Habitual ebriety It O monftrous beaft! how like a fwine he lies Sirs, ¥ will practife on this drunken man 2. Given to habitual ebriety 3. Saturated with moifture fpi 1. Intoxicated with liquor; inebriated Sfiflff erloo t b God will not take the drunkard's excufe; tha he has fo long accuftomed himfelf to intemperat drinking, that now he cannot leave it off South, DrU'NKEN Mheie Their ¥ 7 Shakefpeart take thy reft within the quiet cell Haft thou tapt out, and.drunkenly carous'd. Set ope thy fluices, fend the vigorous bloo Through every active limb for my rel'ef For thou fhalt dru n. fo [dram andfiick.] %:; My blood already, like the pelican Mow, heart The Shakefpears Here rows of drummers fand in m Provokes to arms, or trumpet's clangor fhril 2 One who | Dru'NKARD 2. /. [from drug. fells phyfical fimples But if it lies too long,gthe crackling's pall'd Not by the drudgingbox to be recall'd Drv'peiNcLY. adv. [fro Laborioudly; toilfomely Dru'mMmER. 7. /. [from dram.] Hlélmimr Crmmon nitre we bought at thedruggifF's. Boyle Dru'pGciINGBOX. 7. [, [drudging and box. E!‘fe.: The box out of which flower 1s {prinkled i. "An inftrament of military mufick, conupon roaft meat |7 fifting of vellum ftrained over a broa The drummaker ufes ity nd the cabinetmaker He from his firft fwath proccede L |