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Show ¥ A e B A fale'ner Henry is, when Emma hawksy If one fhould be a prey, how much the bete . With her of tarfels, and of lures he tallcs Prilor Fa'vconer. w fi [ falconette, French. « {ort of ordnance, whofe diameter at th bore is four inches and a quarter, weigh four hundred pounds, length fix foot, loa . one pound and a quarter, {hot fomethin more than two inche diameter and on pound and a quarter weight Harris Mahomet fent janizaries and nimble footmen, wit certain fa/conets and other fmall pieces, to take th ftreights Knolles ¥a'voace. #n [ [ fuldagium, barbarou Latin.]: A privilege which anciently feveral lords referved to themfelves of fetting up folds for fheep, in any field within their manors, the better to manur them; and this not only with their own but their tenants fheep. 'This fa/dage i fome places they call a foldcourfe or freehold Fa'LpFEE Harris 7. [ [f2ld and fee. A com pofition paid anciently by tenants for th privilege of faldage Dis ¥Fa'uping. # /. A kind of coarfe cloth Dia Fa'vpstoor. #. /[ [fald or fold and ftool. A kind of ftool placed at the fouth fid of the altar, at which the kings of Englan kneel at their coronation Yo FALL. @w. » pret. I fell; compoun pret. o hawv Jfalle or fa/fl [jeallan Saxon; fallen, German. a battlemen for thy roof tha thou bring not blood upon thine houfe, if any ma Jfall from thence Deut 1 thall ful Like a bright exhalation in the evening And no man fe= me more Shakefp. Henr VIII 2. To drop from an erec to a prone pofture Saul fe// all along on the earth. 1 Sam. xxviii. 20 Thatis a ftep On which I muft fz// down, or elfe o'erleap; For in my way it lies Shakefp. Macheth 3+ To drop; to be held oradhere no longer His chains fell off from his hands 4~ To move down any defcent Aéts, i glide and fa//off any way, as gravity and the ai prefleth them Burnet 5. 'To drop ripe from -the tree As the leaf falleth off from the vine, and asa fa/ If. xxxiv. 4 6. To pafs at the outlet: as'a river Ceefar therefore gave orders to build his gallie on the Loir, and the rivers that fa// into it. Arbuih 7. To be determined to fome particular direftion. Birds and fowls that reft one foot to eafe the other naturally lay their heads under their wings, that th centre of gravity may fa// upon the foot they ftan on Cheyne 8. To apoftatife goodnefs Labou to depar fro to enter into that reft, left an faith o man fu/ after the fame example of unbelief. © Heb: iv. 11 They. brought fcanda To Ifrael, diffidence of God, and doub In feeble hearts, propenfe enough befor To waver or fa//off; and join with idols Milton Whether fome {pirit on holy purpofe bent "Or fome fa/l'n angel from below broke loofe Who comes wit enviou eyes and curft intent To view this world and its created Lord Dryden 9. To die by violence :€od and good angels fight on Richmond's fide ~And Richard fa// in heightof all his pride. = Shak Mogni In fweet mufick is fuch art Killing care and grief of heart Fall afleep, or hearing die Shakefpeare What other oath Than honefty to honefty engag'd Shake/p A thoufand fhall fa// at thy fide, and ten thoufand at thy right hand; but it fhall not come nig thee Shakefp chafed with the lofs of his gallies an Solyman That this fhall be, or we will fa// for it. e Ye fhall chafe your enemies, and they fhall fa/ beft foldiers and wit the double injury done unt When about twenty upon the falfenefs of a lover him by the Venetians, fe// into fuch a rage that h curfed Barbaroffa Knolles To be degraded from an high ftation to fink into meannefs or difgrace; to b the fe// diftraced Temple A fpark like thee of the man-killing trade Fel/ fick, and thus to his phyfician faid Methinks I am not right in ev'ry part I fecl a kind of trembling at my heart My pulfe unequal, and my breath is ftrong Befides a filthy furr upon my tongue. Dryden's Perf And you have known none in health who h.v pitied you? and behold, they are gone before you even fince you e/ into this diftemper Wake He died calmly, and with all the eafinefs ofa ma Malling afleep Atterbury Portius himfelf oft fa//s in tears before me As if he mourn'd his rival's ill fuccefs Addifon For as his own bright image he furvey'd He fe/l in love with the fantaftick thade Addifon I' fell in love with the charaéter of Pomponiu Atticuss I longed to imitate him. Blount to Pope What can be their bufinef With a poor weak woman fa//'7 from favour! Shak 22. To fink into an air of difcontent or deje€tion of the look before you by the fword They not obeying Leve xxvi. 7 Incurr'd, whatcould they lefs? the penalty And manifold in fin, deferv'd to.fa// Almon fa/ls, old Tyrrheus' eldeft care Milton Pierc'd with an arrow from the diftant war. Dyyden 10. 'To come to a fudden end The greatne(s of thefe Irith lords fuddenly fe/ an vanithed whe their oppreffions and extortion were taken away Davies He firft the fate of Caefar did foretell And pity'd Rome when Rome in Cefar f2// Iniron clouds conceal'd the publick light And impious mortals fear'd eternal night Dryden 11 plunge into fudden mifery 12. To decline from power or empire to b overthrown What men could do Is done already: heaven and earth will witnefs If Rome muft fz//, that we are innocent. Addifon 13. Toenter into any ftate worfe than th former He fe// at difference with Ludovico Sfortia, wh carried the keys which brought him in, and fhut hi have fallen thereby into great inconveniences. Dryd 4+ To come into any ftate of weaknefs, terrour, or mifery Thefe, by obtruding th the entire work of new life mer guilt One would wonder ho could full into fo great a beginning of a change fo will fa// under the forHammond fo many learned me abfurdity, as to believ this river could preferve itfelf unmixed with the lake Addifon on Italy The beft men fz// under the feverett preflures. #ake 15. To decreafe weight 7 Allliquid bodies are diffufive; for their parts bein -4n motion, have no connexion one with another, bu Jing fig from the fig-tree To fall before the lion than the wolf out Bacon's Henry VI1I1 Some painters taking precepts in too literal a fenfe 1. To drop from a higher place Thou fhalt mak ¥ A to b diminithed as i From the pound weight, as Pliny tells us, th As fell to two ounces in the firft Punick war: whe Hannibal invade Papirian law 16 Italy to one ounce then, by th to half an ounce To ebb Arbuthnot to grow fhallow as, zhe rive falls 17. 'To decreafe in value; to bear lefs price Whe break n the price of corn fal/eth mor ground tha me generall will fupply their ow turn Carew But now her price is fa/l'». Shake/p. King Lear Rents will fa//, and incomes every day leffen *till induftry and frugality, joined to a well ordere trade, fhall reftore to the kingdom the riches it ha formerly 18 T Locke fink not to amount to the full The greatnefs of an eftate, ‘in bulk and territory doth fu// under meafure; and the greatnefs of fi nances and revenue doth fa// under computation 19. Te be rejected; to become null Bacon This book muft ftand or fa// with thee; not b any opinien 20 I have of it, but thy own To declin Locke from viclence to calmnefs from intenfenefs to remiffion He was ftirr'd And fomething fpoke in choler, ill and hafty But he f¢// to hiumfelf again, and {weetl In all the reft hew'd 2 moft noblepatience. Shake/p At length her fury fe//, her foaming ceas'd And cbbing in her foul, the god decreas'd. Dryden 21. 'To enter into any new.ftate of the bod or mind If thou perfuade thyfelf that they fhall not b taken, let not thy countenance fa//. Fudith, vi. g If you have any other requeft to make, hide i not; for ye'fhall find we will not make your countenance to_fi/ by the anfwer ye fhall receive. Bacon I have obferv'd of late thy looks are fallen O'crcaft with gloomy cares and difcontent Addifon 3. To fink below fomething in comparifon Fame of thy beauty and thy vouth Among the reft me hither brought Finding this fame fa// thort of truth Made me ftay longer than I thought Waller 24. To happen; to befal For fuch things as do fa// fcarce once in man ages, itdid fuffice to take fuch order as was requifit Hooker when they fe/l Oft it fall out that while one think too mue of his doing, heleaves to do the effect of this thinking Sidney A long advertent and deliberate connexing of confequents which fa//s not in the common road of orHafe dinary men Since this fortune fa//s to you Shakefp Be content and feek no new If the wortt fa/l that ever fe// make fhift to go without him O, how feeble is man's power 1 hope I fhal Shakefp That if good fortune fa// Cannot add another hour Nor a loft hour recall Donne Since both cannot poffefs what both purfue I'm griev'd my friend, the chance thould fa// on you D"JII'HI ha mor leifure an difpofition tha Sawifi fince fallen to my {hare 25 hav To come by chance to light on I have two boy Seek Percy and thyfelf about the field But{eeing thou fz//'/# on me fo luckily Shaksfpeare's Henry 1V 1-will affay thee The Romans fe// upon this model by chance, bu Swift the Spartans by thought and defign 26. 'To come to a ftated method The odd hours at the end of the folar year, ar not indeed fully fix, but are deficient 1044" which deficiency, in 134 years, colle®ted, amount to 2 whol day why the verna and hence may be fecn the reafo equinox whic Nicene council fe// upon th now about ten days fooner a the tim of th 21ft of March, jall Halder on Time It does not fa// within my fubje& to lay down th rules of odes Felto on the Clafficks 27. To come unexpectedly I am fallen upon the mention of mercuries. Boyle It happened this evenihg that we 7e// into a ver pleafing walk, at a diftance from his houfe. Addifen 28. T begin any thiag with ardour an vehenience 5 Thk 4R |