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Show & H' GE . and fo much in fathion, that a child can fearee b kept from gettirg into it " thingss and it is lefs difhonourable to abridge a petty To Gurss. v, # charge than to ftoop to petty gettings Bacon. is by critick Locke 003 to repair The meaner families return a fmall fhare of their gettings, to be a portion for the child. & rl'r(l)]e% r;n to thfir weapons, and furioufly affaile Gr'weaw. n /. [zegap, Saxon; Joyar French.] A fhowy trifle; a toy; a bauble a fplendid plaything the Turks, now fearing no fuch mater, and wer Kuolles's Hiftory "ot as yet all got into the cattle is A knot of ladies, got together by themfelves 9 #CTY {chool of impertine_nce Swift , To put one's felf in any ftate exceflive mafs of waters, neither where to have them " for, if we had them, how to gez quit of them Burnet's Theory of the Earth Without his affiftance we can no more get qui of our affticion; than but by his permifiion we fhoul | Fare fallent into 1 There is a fort of men wh - themfelves of partiality o bot preten Wake to divef ge fides, and t © above that imperfect idea of their fubjet which licil writers fall into Pope o As the obtaining the love of valuable me " happieft end of this life, fo the next felicit Pope t rid of fools and fcoundrels Of ancient friendthip Homer is th is to ge Swift The firft images were fans and many other gewgaaws again the bathe an _ Let him that woul drink gion 12, 90 GeT 2p 'To rife from repofe fo xvi bot fom He came; Save and defend us fromoour ghg//penemies that fhe ha vil bo thei May of to-morrow's pomp: one pariappear Ghaftly with wounds, and lifelefs-on the bier . Wé-}{ofgettmg ;hacquifition. ) d de'.'xs' the principal thing, ‘theref rerget wif 3 and with alf thy getting get underftanding Prov. iv. 7 ¢ Wh"-.hath aftate to repair may not defpife {mal . Brior feems a: greate Chriftians 2.. Havin appearet wha receive al barbarit a chara&e tifa i ever ufed b King C'/)ar!z:s from. religion {pi ritual Hence will I to my ghoffy friar's clofe cell His help to crave, and my dear hap to tell. Shake/p The ghofily father now hath done his fhrift. -Shak Earth eof a GIA'LALINA. . /. [Italian.] brigirt gold colour, found in the kingdom of Naples, very fine, and much valued Gra'MBEUX Woodward's e 7. [..[ jambes, Freach. Foff Legs or armour for legs; greaves The mortal fteel difpiteoufly entail'd Deep. in their flefh, quite-through the iron walls That a large purple ftyeam adown ti8ir giambeu falls GTANT Shake/p Gr/ERKIN. 7./. [from gwrcke, German; cacumber.| ‘A {mall pickled cucumber I are fo diverfely be To deny me the ghoftly comfort of my chaplains Look you pale, miftrefs i Hocker GHas'TN Bss. 7./ [from gape, -Saxon: Ghatftlinefs; horrour of look. Not ufed Do you perceive the ghaflnefs of the eye h \Vth] times importance thaniany harm which the body fecleth by painters i an what all ftand in need of, it feldomJieth hid, Hoafiw' The graces of the {pirit are much more preciou than worldly benefits, and our ghg/t/y evils of greate I who make the triumph of to-day Y it fcldo tha ftowed Lilton Shakef Contznion Prayer and* the lack which w his fecret. wifdom féeth- meet Mangled with gha/#/y wounds through plate and mail is a very ¥ let leg argy, a getzer. of m hi" ldeaiecen 1 re baftar neceflities according to thefe degree flight 2 Onesvho begets on a' female commo Qu dreadful To be lefs thanfrod Difdain'd; - but- meaner tiroughts learn' 2./o [from ghotly.]" Spifiquality of having referenc foul [from.ghaf. 1. Spiritual;. relating to the foul;. not carnal; not fecular as if fome ghoft had met: him 2. Horrible; fhocking 1, One who procares or obtains, 2.--G3i«n-; their onc All pale and fpeechlefs Diyden's Spanifls Fryar 1.did not for thefe gha/fly vifions fend Their fudden coming doesfome ill portend Dryd Poflefles'it. So we fay she lady has go ]' E XTII:{G. 7. /.. [from gez. Julius Ceefa Wiio at Philippi the good Brutus gheffed »\'/}n,%{[pr{z»: There faw you labouring for him but with fuch alter'd looks So wild, {o ghafily 80t @ good tflate, does not always mea that b.e‘l'lila,s acquired, but barely that h ar's'a' déftroyer of men wit Sidney 70 Guost. v. @. To baunt with appari-Obfolete tions of departed men lelujahs of thrones, principalities and powers. Boyle .u{'e\ of ‘the pretetite compound, whic pften imp mere i fion : as, e ha poffef of Chrift, a few "h'ov':»' withi all have, as well of ghoftly as of earthly favouss, i in each kind {o cafily-known, but the gifts of God dies transfigured into the likenefs of his gloriou body, mingling their glad acclamations with the hal- means; except in th black eyes, merely meanin them. Gelrrer,. a, /. [from:gez, the ghofted [gay<c and julle, Saxon. tha a love-fit her into fuc your grace fo heavily to-day jeftick thron _ative and neutral, implies theacquifitio of fomething, or the arrival at fome ftat b Law's Serious Call precipitate of Lucretia Euryalus taking leav happinefs of Feliciana Not in unfe to die yield up the ghoft So full of difimal terrour was the time Shakefp Envy quicklydifcovered in-court Solyman'schange countenance upon the. great baffa,.and began no to thew her gha/?ly face Knolles Deat Grinn'd horrible a ghafily {mile, to hea His famine- thould be fill'd Milton's Parad: Loff Thofe departed friends, whom at our laft feparation we faw disfigured by all the ghaffly horrour of death, we fhall then fee affifting about the ma- - "Get you up-from about the tabernacle of Koran wor plac look Shake/p 4. 'The third perfon 1n the adorable Trinity, called the Holy Ghoft: T 76 GuosT. w. #. [from the neun. =0, I have paft a miferable night So full of ugly fights, of gha/?/y dreams Sawift Numb adj canopy moft fatal, under whic Our army lies ready to give up the ghoft. hoft ; palenefs Wh 13. 7o GET up To rife from a feat 1. Toremove from a place 5. To get, in all its fignifications tha 1. Like a ghoit; having horrour in th countenance; pale; dreadfal; difmal Bacon's Natural Hiftory. Dathan, and Abiram GHA'STLY. ad). [xarz, ot ghoff, and bte. Sheep will get up betimes in the ‘morning to-fee "againtt rain laces GHO'sTLINESS tual tendency Gra'strLiNESs, #. /. [from ghafly.] "Horchiefly to th rour of countenance; refemblance of a GrolstLy. adj *Tis very pleafant to hear the lady propofe he »doubts, and to fee the pains he Is at to ger ove them Addifon I cannot get over the prejudice of taking fome little offence at the clergy, for perpetually reading thei {ermons :S'rw,f To remove this difficulty, Peterborough was difpatched to Vienna, and goz gver fome part of thof +difputes which lay fo thic Their thadows fee Help me, ye baneful birds, whofe flirieking foun Is fign of dreary death Spenfer's Paflorals 1.90 GET over. To conquer; to fupprefs; to pafs without being ftopped i _thinking or a&ing 3. Togive p the Guost. To die; toyield up the fpirit into the hands of: God. In ghafiful grave, 'till my laft flee Do clofe mine eyes Dryden Dryden Here will I dwell apart With that thou may'@ ges o/, tho' odds appofe thee By which fate promis'd them their Charles thould rife. Dreary; difmal; melancholy; fit for walking fpirits. Obfolete Waller The gallies, by the benefit of the fhores and fhallows,; got off Bacon's War vith Spain Whate'er thou doft, deliver not thy fword; ‘ ribbands 4 To fee this fleet among unequal*foes learn the happinefs of reli fee the poor gewwgaa GuA'sTFUL To efcape And armed Edwards look'd with anxious eyes without value Like jewels to advantage fet 10, 7o Gt gff The mighty ghoffs of our great Harrys rofe Gr'weaw. adj. Splendidly trifling; fhow Dryden Her beauty by the fhade does ger z. A {pirit appearing after death Addifon's Guardian g Tobea gainer; to receive advantage To yield the gho/t; but ftill the envious floo Shakefpeare's Richard 111 Keptin my foul Philips. the whole heart was nothing elfe buf a toyfhop <. The laughing fot, like all unthinking men ‘gers drunk filks Often did I ftriv cancel nature's law For pageantry and tawdry getwgao 8. To become by any a& what one was no . before - Bathes an Vex not hisgho/t : O, let him pafs! He hates him That would upon the rack of this rough worl Shakefpeare's King Lear, Stretch him out longer Prefer that which Providence has pronounced t be the ftaff oflife, before a glittering gewgaw tha has no other value than what vapity has fet upon it L' Eftrange As children, when they throw one toy away Straight a more foolith gewgaw comes in play Dryden A heavy gewvgaw, call'd a crown, that fprea About his temples, drown'd his narrow head And would have crufhed it Dryden's Fuvenal Some Joofe the band We can neither find fource nor iffue for fuch a 'To conjeéture vailed. GHOST. ». /. [zarz, Saxon. 1. The foul of man That metal they exchanged for the meaneft trifle and gewgawws which the others could bring. Abbot They might get over the river Avon at Stratford and get between the kingand Worcefter. Clarendon as the true or confidere but gue/s has univerfally pre thography Saift. Ghf Gurss [See T Skinner. ! Spenfer . /. [geant, Frenelt; gigas, Lat. A ‘man-of fize above the ordinar rate o men; a man-unnaturally large. Tt is ob-fervable; that-the idea of a giant is always affociated with pride, brutality, and wigk-édnefs Now-does-he feel his-asl Hangdoof about him, like a giant's rob Upon a dwarlifh thief ~5'Lu,{'c;,"j> v Mac |