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Show G L GL Tor theire no twilight of the fun's dull ra Cowley Glimmers upon the pure and native day Oft in glimmering bowers and gla He met her Milton See'ft thou yon' dreary plain, forlorn and wild The feat off defolation, void of light in my foul Some feeds of light at length began to roll "The rifing motion of an infant ray Shot g/immering through the cloud, and promls'i)d'fxy 7o Oft by the winds, extin& the fignal lies Or {fmother'd in the glimm'ring focket dies Gay's Trivia When rofy morning glimmer'd o'er the dales Pope He drove to pafture all the lufty males 2. To be perceived imperfectly; to appea faintly On the way the baggage poft-boy, who had bee Whotton got a glimmering who they were at court The Pagan priefthood was always in the druids wa ther an a perceivabl o glimmerin th Swift Jewith rites in it, though much corrupted GrUMMER. 7 /. [from the verb. 1. Faint fplendour; weak light 2. A kind of foffil of foffil a wer to give thof inducemen bodie writer to th the name of mic Woodward on Folfils and glimmer Stones which ate compofed of plates, that ar "generally plain and parallel, and that are flexibl and elaftick talc, catfilver of whic or glimmer there are three forts, the yellow or golden, the whit Woodward or filvery, and the black Grimpse # [glimmen t Dutch glow. 1. A weak faint light which return Milton Light back to them Thoufands of things, which now eithér wholl sicape our apprehenfions, or which our fhort-fighte reafon having got fome faint g/imp/e of, we, in th Locke dark, grope after 2. A quick flathing light Light as the lightning g/imp/e they ran Milton My thoughtlefs youth was wing'd with vain defires My manhood, long mifled by wand'ring fires % Follow'd falfe lights; and when theirg/impfe was gone My pride ftruck out new fpangles ot her own Dryden . Tranfitory luftre There no dear glimpfe of the fun's lovely fac Strikes throngh the folid darknefs of the place Cowley To fhine; to fparkle with light The bleating kin Eye the bleak heaven One glimpfe of glory to my iflue give Grac'd for the little time he has to live 4. Short fleeting enjoyment glifferen [glittan w. # T Dutch, German Dryden 1§ haply be thy will that I fiould kno Glimpfe of delight, or paufe from anxious woe {rom inftant now, great fire, difpe bright The wars flame moft in Summer, and the helmet gliffer brighteft in the faireft funfhine Spenfer >Tis better to be lowly born And range with humble livers in content Than to be perk'd up in a gliffering grief Shakefpeare And wear a golden forrow The golden fu Gallops the zodiack in his g/if'ring coach gifrin Shakefpeare Shakefpeare All that g/iffers is not gold You were more the eye and tal Of the court to-day, than al Elfe that g/iffer'd in Whitehall Be Fonfon When the fun fhone upon the fhields of gold an like lamps of fire L Mac. vi. 39 It confifted not of rubies, yet the fmall piece of it were of a pleafant redith colour, and g/i/ tered prettily Bayle Prior ¢. A fhort tranfitory view O friends! I hear the tread of nimble fee Hafting this way, and pow by glimp/e difcer Tthuriel, and Zephon, through the {hade. ~ Mitton Some God punitheth exemplarily in this world that we might have a tafte or g/imp/fe of his prefen Jjuftice Hakewill A man ufed to fuch fort of refle@ions, fees as muc difcourfe t lay before another, and make out in one entire an gradual deduction Locke be ignorantl writte for ghar. 'T Teach every grace to fmile in your behalf And her deluding eyes to gloat for you Rowe caft fide glances as a timorous lover Gro'Barp z [from glow. A glow Gro'saTep. adj, [from glbe.] Forme in fhape of a globe; fpherical; fpheroidical GLOBE. = [ [glbe, French; glibus Latin. 1. A fphere; a ball; a round body: a bod of which every part of the furface is a the fame diftance from the centre 2. 'The terraqueous ball "The youth, whofe fortune the vaft glibe obey'd Finding his royal enemy betray'd Wept at his fall Stepne Where God declares his intention to give dominion, he meant that he would make a fpecies o creatures that fhould have dominion over the othe fpecies of this terreftrial glode Locke 3. A fphere in which the various region of the earth are geographically depicted or in which the conftellations are lai down according to their places in the fky The aftrologer who fpells the ftars Miftakes his g/obe, and in her brighter ey Interprets heaven's phyfiognomy Cleaveland Thefe are the ftars Gri'ster. 2 f. [Properly written clyffer, | But raife thy thought from fenfe, nor think to fin Suc figure a ar i globe defign Creech d from xavlw.] See CLysTER. It is writte 4 bod o foldi draw int circle r wrong even by Brews Him roun Now enters Bufh with new ftate airs A globe of fiery feraphim inclos'd His lordfhip's premier minifter And who With bright imblazoning, and horrent arms in all profound affairs Swift Is held as needful as his g/iffer Choler is the natural gliffer, or one excretio whereby nature excludeth another ; which, defcendin th bowels extimulates thofe parts, an Brown + Steel gloffes are more refplendent than the lik plates of brafs, and fo is the glizzering of a bladg Bacon's Phyf. Rem Before the battle joins, from afa The field yet glitters with the pomp of war Dryden's Virgil Scarce had'ft thou time t" unfheath thy conqu'rin blade 1t did but glitter, and the rebels fled 2. 'To be {pecious to be ftriking Granuville On the one hand fet the moft glitzering tempta tions. to difcord and on the other the difmal effeét Decay of Piety of it In glitt'ring {cenes, o'er her own heart fevere In crowds colleted; and in courts fincere Youzg Gri/TTER. 7. /. [from the verb. bright thow; {plendour Was left him Luftre Milton Flourifh not too much upon the g/itter of fortune for fear there fhould be too much alloy in it Collier on Pride Take away this meafure from our drefs an habits, and all is turned into fuch paint and glirter and ridiculous ornaments, as are a real fhame to th Law Gri/tTerAND. Shining; f{parkling participle ufed by Chaucer and tlge ol Englith poets. This participial termination is #ill retained in Scotland GrLi'TTERINGLY adv. [from glitter. With fhining luftre 70 GLoAR. @. a. [gloeren, Dutch. 1. To {quint; to look atkew. Skinuer gloa2. In Scotland, to ftare: as, wha rand gucan GLoB n. / Milter Amaranth, or everlafting. fower [amaranthoides.] A flower Miller GroBE Daify. n. /. A kind of flower GrosE Fyb. n.f. A kind of orbicular fith GroBE Ranunculus. n. [ [belleboro-ranunculus,] A plant Miller GrosE Thiftle. n. f. carduus orbiculains.] lant Miller SpheGLOBO'SE. adj. [globofus, Latin. rical; round Regions, to whic All thy dominion, Adam, is no mor Than what this garden is to'all the earth And all the fea; from one entire globsfe Stretch'd into longitude Milton's. Paradife Loff Then form'd the moo Globofe, and ev'ry magnitude of ftars Groso'siTY. 7 f. [from globofe. clean.sh data import.tsv out README ricity; {phericalnefs Milton Sphe Why the fame eclipfe of the fun, which is fee to them that live more eafterly, when the fun is ele or falfe glirter wearer The clouds that prefs my foul a lon b t fhine With what permiffive glory fince his fal 1f, while this wearied flefh draws fleeting breath Not fatisfy'd with life, afraid of death requir and next the gliftening earth ZThomfun's Winter With looks of dumb defpair The ladies eyes g/iftencd with pleafure Richardfon's Pasela 7o Guri'sTER -To GLOAT. . #. [This word I conceive t worms Cla If 1, celeftialfire, in augh Have fery'd thy will, or gratified thy thought at one glimpfe as woul German. To GLI'TTER. @. 7. [glizinian, Saxon. 1. 'To fhine; to exhibit lufire; to gleam Each orb a glimpfe of light, convey'd fo fa now [glittan excites them unto expulfion Only to fhine, yet fcarce to contribut Fro @ To GrLisTEN daily unt Such vaft room in nature Down to this habitable No man hath avirtue that he has not a glimpfe of brafs, the mountains g/iffered therewith, and fhine THe lefler mafles that are lodged in fparry an ftony bodies, difperfedly, from their fhining an glimmering Dryden No glimpfe of godlike liberty remain'd 6. The exhibition of a faint refemblance Shakefpeare Save what the glimmering of thefe livid flame Milton's Paradife Lofs Cafts pale and dreadful The facred influenc Of light appears, and from the walls of heav' Shoots far into the hofom of dim nigh Milton's Paradife Loft A glimmering dawn Through thefe fad fhades this chao What thould Tdo! while here T was enchain'd vated fix degrees above the horizon, fhould be fee to them that live one degree more wefterly, wher the fun is but five degrees above:the horizon, and f lower and lower proportionably, 'till at laft it appea not at.all: noaceount can be given, but the globg/it of the earth Gro'Bous. adj. [glbofus Ra on the (.srmti:m Latin Whe the accent 1s intended to be on the laf fyllable, the word fhould be writte globofe, whe on the firft globous: 1 hav transferred hithe a paflage of Milton in which this rule has been neglefted. Spherical ; round Wide over all the plain, and wider fa Than all this glebofe earth in plain outfpread Such are the courts of God Miltor The brazen inftruments of death difcharg Horrible flames, and turpid ftreaming clouds Large globous irons fly, or dreadful hifs Singeipg the air Philip Gro'BULAR |