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Show GU I am in this commanded to delive The noble duke of Clarence to your hands and fighs fhe did abhor Spenfer I will not reafon what is meant hereby When I have moft need to employ a friend Deep, hollow, treacherous, and full of guile Be he to me! This do I beg of heav'n W wit may Milton Nor thou his malice and falfe guile comtemn Subtile he needs muft be swho could feduc Miiton's Paradife Lof? Angels Gur'LeruL.gt adj. [guileoand full. fu ar ul ev ch mi ou id in y y 1. Wi The way not to be inveigled by them that are f giileful through {kill, is thoroughly to be‘m‘.'(rut"te in that which maketh fkilful againft guile Hooker Without expence at all By guileful fair words peace may be obtain'd Shak. H. V1 He faw his guileful a By Eve, though all unweeting, feconde Milton's Paradife Loft Upon her hutband The guileful phantom now forfook the {hrowd And flew fublime and vanifh'd in a cloud Dryden's Zin 2. Treacherous; fecretly mifchievous I train'd thy brethren to that guilefu/ hole Shakefp Where the dead corps of Baffianus lay GUI'LEFULLY. adv. [from guileful. fidioufly; treacheroudly "To whom the tempter guilefully reply'd In Milzon Gui'LEFULNESS, 7 [ [from guileful. cret treachery Se tricking cunning Fre adj. [from guile. Gut'Leress from deceit; void of infidioufnefs; fimply honett See BeGuiLer., n /. [from guile One that betrays into dange curLe. by infidious practices But he was wary wife in all his way And well perceived his deceitful fleight Ne fuffered luft his fafety to betray So goodly did beguile the guiler of the prey : GUILT 7 [z Spenfer and afterward the offence itfelf. 1. The ftate of a man juftly charged wit a.crime; the contrary to innocence of ftate that could quench the enyy that was upon the kin Bacon's Henry V11 for this execution When thefe two are taken away, the poffibilit of guilt, and the poffibility of innocence, wha reftraint can the belief of the creed lay upon an Hammond on Fundamentals man 2. A crime; an offence Clofe pentyup guilt Rive your concealing continents Gui'LtiLy Shakefp innocence Withou adv. [from guilty. without clearnef of confci ence And in a bloody battle end thy days Think on lord Haiftings, and defpair, and die Shak. R, T11 # Jf. [from guilty.] "Th Gurtrivess ftate of being guilty; wickednefs; con{fcioufnefs of crime He thought his flight rather to proceed ofa fearfu 1 fhould be guiltier than my gwiltinefs Thine be my kingdom Fairfax Guiltnefs of greatnefs, thus he always pray'd Nor knew nor wilh'd he that thofe vows he mad On his own head fhould be at laft repaid. Drydern The teeming earth yet guiltlefs of the plough And unprovok'd did fruitful ftores allow. ~ Dryder Thou know'ft how guiltlefs firft I met thy fame When Jove approach'd me under friendihip's nar};e ope guiltlefs [fro adv Without guilt; innocently Guri/LTLEssNEss. 7. /o [fro Gur'LTLESSLY guiltlefs. freedom from crime Innocence A good number, trufting to their number more tha to their value, and valuing money higher than equity felt that guilile(fnefs is not always with eafe opprefSidney fed I woul no have ha any hand in his death o whofe guiltleffnefs 1 was better affured than any ma King Charles living could be GUI'LTY [glug adj one con Saxon demned to pay a fine for an offence. 1. Juftly chargeable with a crime ; not in Sidney Is there not a ballad of the king and the beggar - The world was guilty of fuch a ballad fome thre Shakefpeare's Love's Labour's Lof? ages fince Mark'd you no How that the guilty kindred of the quee Look'd pale, when they did hear of Clarence death Shak We are verily guilty concerning our brother, i that we faw the anguifh of his foul when he befough Gen. xlile 21 Nor he, nor you, were gui/ty of the firife Nor I, but as I lov'd ; yet all combin'd Your beauty and my impotence of mind Dryden Farewel the ftone And threfhold, gui/ty of my midnight moans Dryden There is no man, thatis knowingly wicked, buti guilty to himfelf; and there is no man, that carrie guilt about him, but he receives a fting into his foul Tillotfon 2. Wicked corrapt All the tumult of a guilty world Toft by ungenerous paflion, finks away Thonfon Guinea a coun GUINEA [fro #. / try in Africa, abounding with gold. A gold coin valued at one and twent By the word gold I muft be underftood to defign particular piece of matter; that is, the lalt guine Locke that was coined Ladies, whofe love is conftant as the wind Young Cits, who prefer a guizea to mankind Shake/p 7 &[vuinea and drop One who cheats by dropping guineas Who now the guincadropper's bait regards Trick'd by the fharper's dice, or juggler's cards Ga Gui'NeadEN z /. A fowl, fuppofed be of Guinea 7. [ [capficum, Latin. GuiNEAPEPPER A plant Gut{~earic Shakefp Guise. # /. [The fame with wife, guife French; piyra, Saxon, the p or w bein changed, a5 is comman, into g. 1. Manner; mien; habit; caft of beha viour His own fire, and mafter of his guife Did often tremble at his horrid view Thus women know pig' fnout iller z f A fmall animal with brought Afric I believe fro lS"gen/;,,- and thus they ufe the guife T' enchant the valiant and beguile the wife Lairf Lo you! here fhe comes: this.is. her very guife and, upon my life, faft afleep: obferve her, ftan clofe, Shakefp. Macbeth They ftand a horrid fron Of dreadful length, and dazzling arms, in guif Gf warriors old, with order'd fpear and fhield Awaiting what command their mighty chie Had to impofe Miltor's Paradife Loft By their guif Juft men they feem, and all their ftudy ben To worthip Ged a-right Milton's Paradife Loff k, fhepherds, back Here be without duck or nod Othe trippings to be trod Of lighter toes and fuch court guif As mercury did firft devife Miltor Their external fhapes are notorioufly accommodated to that law or gwifeof life that nature has de figned them 2. Pratice; cuftom Mere property I have drunke wine paft my ufual gz//e Strong wine commands the foole, and moves the wife Chap This would not be flept Old gzife muft be kept Ben Fonforn The fwain reply'd, it never was our gui/ To flight the poor, or aught humane defpife Pope 3. External appearance; drefs When I was very young, nothing was fo much talk nocent Gui'NEAPROPPER Bloody and guilty; guiliily awake wiltinefs than of an humble faithfulnefs The laft was I that felt thy tyranny 0, in the battle think on Buckingham And die in terrour of thy guiltinefs And never willeft aught but what is right Preferve this gui/t/efs blood they feek to fpiil fhillings and af Thefe dreadful fummoners grace Thou With mortal hatred I purfu'd his life nified the fine or mulé paid for an offence nor reafo who do'ft all thou wifhcit at thy will us, and we would not hear Saxon; originally fig 1t was neitlier guilt of crime Then fhall the man be guiltlefs from iniquity and this woman fhall bear her iniquity. Nuzz. v. 3 refolv To wage by force or guile eternal war Shalef Becaufe I will be guiltlefs of the meaning Many worthy and chafte dames thus All guiltlefs, meet reproach. Shakefpeare's Q[bq[lo Shak When I am cold in zeal to j:'ou or yours fuccefsful hope gusilr.] -Inno cent ; free from crime Her conftant heart did court with divers guil mor m{j.' [fro "Gur'LTLEss Vith fawning words he courted her awhile And looking lovely, and oft fighing fore ut words and looks GU G*U' e of as rickets among children and confumption among young people: after thefe the fpleen came i play an the th fcurvy which wa the genera *complaint, and both were thought to appear in man various guifes Temple The Hugonots"were engaged in a civil war, b th fpeciou pretence o fome who guife of religion, facrificed fo man their ow unde th thoufands t Swift ambition Gurta'rR. 7 [, [ghitara, Italian; guiterre French. A firinged inftrument of mu fick Sallads and eggs, and lighter fare Tune the Italian fpark's guizrar GuLCH 7. / Prior [from gulo, Latin. Skinzer Gu'rcuiw. [ little glutton GuLres. adj. [perhaps from goule, th throat.] Red: a barbarous term of heraldry Follow thy drum With man's blood paint the ground: gules, gules Religious canons, civil law Thén what thould war be are cruel Sbakt_'f])care': Timornt He whofe fable arms Black as his purpofé, did the knight refemble When he laid couched in the ominous horfe Hath now his dread and black complexion fmear' With heraldry more difmal; head to foot Shake[peare Now he is total gz/es GULF. #. /. [golfo, Italian. 1. A bay; an opening into land The Venetian admiral withdrew himfelf farther of fro the iflan Curfu into the ga/f of the Adria Kanolles tick 2. An abyfs; an unmeafurable depth Thence turning back, in filence foft they ftole And brought the heavy corfe with eafy pac "To yawning gulph of deep Avernus® hole. Speznf I know thou'd'ft rathe Follow thine enemy in a fiery gu/ph Shakefpeare Than flatter him in a bower This is the gu/f through which Virgil's Alect fhoots herfelf into hell the fall of waters, the wood that encompafs it, are all in the defeription Th fea coul Addif not be much narrower than it is without a great lofs to the world; and muft we no have an ocean of mere flats and fhallows, to th utte |