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Show A country fellow got an unlucky tumble from You muft have woollen yarn to tie'grafls with, an people wil whe 'tis, fays a paflenger Thu tree a fmall handbafket to carry them in be Joing things band over head, without either fea L' Eftrange or wit cauf Shake/p 7z Hawp 44. Hax jointly Ia Dryden the country there beftowe bee band with his own advantage o hav gone band i Swift Fit; pat iz Hawo 45. Han th to th the woul whic ca Aand to mouth even at the year's end 47. Ha'Npep and mak 'To be inti bu difh becauf Browsn our Saviour could Aaxd the fop unto him I have been fhew prophec a writte i tha .Addifon handed among them with great fecrecy 2. 'To guide or lead by the hand is the moft hazardou fte life: this therefore fhould be carefully watched i an a young man with great diligence banded over it Locke 3. To feize; to lay hands on tain To manage *Tis then that with delight I rove Upon the boundlefs depth of love I blefs my chains, I hand my oar Nor think on all I left on fhoar full of water, and kna fro the tongs together about a the bottom He could not an th foun think a ftory fo fit for ag to tal b Bacon Hudibray a bandful/ of men an Clarendon Being in poffeffion of the town, they had thei handful to defend themfelves from firing Raleigh z fi A {low and eafy galprefle the bridl to hinder increafe of fpeed Ovid wit all his fweetnefs has as little variet of numbers and founds as he: he is always upon hand-gallop, and his verfe runs upon carpet ground of Hanp-cun hand Gun 7 / have name Dyyden A gun wielded by th give them fom from fer pents or ravenrous birds, as culverines or colubrines others in other refpeéts, as cannons, demicannons hand-guns, and mufkets Camden Ha'nvicravT 7 f. [hand and craft. 1. Manual occupation bandbarrow the hand Ha'spsarrow.' z. /. A frame on whic any thing is carried by the hands of tw men, without wheeling on the ground work performed b Particular members of convents have excellent mechanical geniufes, and divett themfelves with painting A bandbarrow, wheelbarrow, fhovel, and f; pade fculpture architetture kinds of bandicrafis Tu/ffer bandbarrow, and carry them to the place you intend Mbortimer. gardening an fevera Addifun 2. A man who lives by manual labour The cov'nant HaNDICRA'RTSMA man. 2. /o [bandicraft an A ‘manufaturer; one employe in manual occupation O miferable age! virtue is not regarded in bandi craftfinen Shak He has fimply the beft wit of any bandicrafifma in Athens Shak The principal bulk of the vulgar natives are tiller of the ground, free fervants, and bandicrafifmen as {miths, mafons, and carpenters Bacoxn "The profanenef(s and ignorance of Aandicrafifmen {mall traders, fervants, and the like, are to a degre very hard to be imagined greater Swift It is the landed man that maintains the merchant and thopkeeper, and bandicraftfmen. Swift Ha'vpivy. adw. [from handy. with dexterity nefs ; dexterity Ha'vpiwork. 7 With fkill [from handy. Readi [ handy an awork produét of labour will of God, which wifheth to the works of his ow hands, in that they are his own bandiwork, all hap pinefs; although perhaps, for fome fpecial caufe i our own particular, a contrary determination hav feemed more convenient Hooker As proper men as ever trod upon neats-leathe Shakefpeare have gone upon my handiwork The heavens declare the glory of God, and th firmament theweth his bandiwork Pfalms He parted with the greateft blefling of huma nature for the bandiwork ofa taylor L'Effrange HA'NDRERCHIEF. 7. /. [hand and kerchief. A piece of filk or linen ufed to wipe th face, or cover the neck She found her fitting in a chair, in one han holding a letter, in the other her Aandkerchief which had lately drunk up the tears of her eyes Sidney He was torn to pieces with a bear: this avouche the (hepherd's fon, who has not only his innocence but a handkerchief and rings of his, that Paulin knows Shakefpeare The Romans did not make ufe of bandkerchiefs but of the lacinia or border of the garment 4. As much as can be done lop, in which the han Hanp is much ufed in compofition fo that which is manageable by the hand, a a hardfaw; or borne in the hand, as Haxp-pasker, 7 /i A portable bafket with fuc Hawp-caLror -and infancy to-hear, were incapable of being hande down to us Pope ftandeth o wil without cannon, propofe reafonably to fight a battle Aanded downwar Woodward the hiv Take one veflel of filver and another of wood, eac 3. A {mall number or quantity Prior ments, and malking them numerous enough to b handed down to future ages Addifon Arts and fciences confift of fcattered theorems an practices, which are handed about amongft the mafters, and only revealed to the f/ii artis, *till fom great genius appears, who colleés thefe disjointe ;})l‘cl\)ofilions, and reduces them into a regular fyftem Arbuthnot whereo a bhand's breadth; four inches For of the lower end two handfu It had devour'd, it was fo manful I know no other way of fecuring thefe monu the boar A palm The peaceful fcabbard where it dwelt The rancour of its edge had felt They had not only a tradition ofit in general, bu even of {everal the moft remarkable particular acci Se wood 5. To tranfmit in fucceflion, with dowwn to deliver from one to another +One woul mond's pond, pulling a harzdful of ocats out of hi pocket, and gathering the ducks about him. Addif more refounding from the veflel of filver than that o to move with the hand dents of it likewife, which the to the fucceeding ages I faw a country gentleman at the fide of Rofa handfu Let him, that makes but trifles of his eyes Firft hand me: on mine own accord, I'll off. Shak 4 Obfolete Ha'vorur. z. /. [hand and full. 1. As much as the hand can gripe or con Angels did hand her up, who next God dwell Donne By fafe and infenfible degrees he will pafs from boy to a man, whic Hold If that fhepherd be not in sandfa/?, let him fly Shakefpeare was fo near tha h yetgrant they wer Ha'sorasT, 7 /. [hand and fzff. cuftody Gulliver's Travels In general they are not repugnant unto the natura A right tinterpret; Or would they alone Who brought the prefent, claim ‘it for their own Dryden to fuit one another ner Work of the hand manufa&ure The handers down, can they from thence infe Judas was not far off, ndt only becaufe he dippe fam 'Tran{mit They would aflume, with wond'rous art Themfelves to be the whole who are but part 7o HaND. «@. a. [from the noun. 1. To give or tranfmit with the hand th Miltorn #. /. [from hand. Of that vaft frame the church and handierafts are managed after the fame man. Ha'vpiness. # ter; conveyor in fucceffion A rafcally yea forfooth knave, to ear in hand Shakefpear and then ftand upon fecurity i a palm adj., [from band.] Ha'nper eftation; to elude mate and familiar A {pace equal t 7. / Into their inmoft bow' Handed they went keep in ex 48. T0be HaxD and Girve Bacon 2. With hands joined L2 Eftrange T bear in Hano as i 1. Having the ufé of the hand left or right As want requires get bread fro of founds Many are right handed, whofe' livers are weakl conftituted; and ‘many ufe the left, in whom tha part is ftrongeft Brown As fair and as good, a kind of hand in han comparifon, had been fomething too fairand too goo . Shak for anylady in Britanny 46. HaxD 20 mouth ‘or foftnéf A border,of an handbreath round about Fxod The eaitern people determined their fand breadt by the breadth of barley-corns, fix making a digit, and twenty-four a hand's breadth Arbuthpot con element Marlborough' -of 'the loudnef the breadth of the hand the fea bee ha wa union I is ‘the principa of 'the percuffio ftrengt Haxvp-BREADTH That flings afar, and poinards hand to band th b ringing of a band-bell harder or fofter He iffues, ere the fight, his dread command He banifh'd from the field bell run WMertimer hand Th In fingle oppofition, band to hand He did confound the beft part of an hour 7z / Hawp-BELL Clofe fight 43. Haxp v Hanp HA HA A thou fhait teach by candle-light When puffing fmiths, and ev'iy painful trad Of handicrafts, in peaceful beds are laid. Dryden The nurferies for children of ordinary gentleme their face to wip Arbuthnot 7o HA'NDLE. w. a. [handeler, Dutch, fro hand. 1. To touch; to feel with the hand us pef mak The bodies which we daily handl ceive, that whilft they remain between them, the hinder the approach of the part of our hands tha Locke prefs them 2. To manage; to wield That fellow handles his bow {ike a crewkeeper Shake[p 3. To make familiar to the hand by frequent touching A Irif incurabl horfes an vice of th fhynefs is the genera eve is hardl fee i Flanders becaufe the hardnefs of the winters forces the breeder there to houfe and Aandle their colts fix month Temple every year 4. To treat; to mention in writing or talk He left nothing fitting for the purpof Untouch'd, or flightly Aandled in difcourfe Shak Her eyes, her hair, her cheek, her gait, her voice Shakefpeart Thou handlef? in thy difcourfe Leaving to the author the exa& bandling of ever particular .an labourin follo t th rule 2 Mac abridgment Of a number of other like inftances we fhall fpea more, when we Aazd/e the communication of founds Bacon By Guidus Ubaldus, in his treatife, for the explication of this inftrument, the fubtleties of it ar largely and excellently handled. Wilkins's Deedalus In ‘anargument, Aazdled thus briefly, every thin cannot be faid | 5+ 'To deal with ; to pratife Atterbury The |