OCR Text |
Show HA' Barte » [abe Saxon. Malignity Hate to Mezentius, arm'd five hundred more Th 70 Have Whatowe I to his command Who hates me, and hath hither thruft me down To fitin Aateful office here confin'd Inhabitant of heav'n, and heav'nly born Milten I hear the trea Pope Dryden H wit Odi | world quarrel Sometime A maker o Locke I can bearmy part; 'tis my occupation: Aave a Shatkefpeare it with you I never was out at a mad frolick, though this:i the maddeft I ever undertook: bawe with you, lad mine wa his coufin threatene bhavre, and promifed to him as both the tempef and and Aaver of their Order for fea is given They have put forth the bawer Dryden Sidney Shake[peare Afteran hour and a half failing, we entered intoa good hawver, being the port of a fair city Bacon. The queen beheld, asfoon as day appear'd The navy under fail, the-bawen clear'd Denbaim . We may be fhipwreck'd by her breath i Shak ooker Dutch a ftation for fhips beft years ment If we maintain things that are eftablithed, we Aav to ftrive with a number of heavy prejudices, deepl [haven 1. A port; a harbour 16. 'To be engaged, as in a tatk or employ rooted in the hearts of men #. / French. Lov Drydena I take you at your word HA'VEN 15. To be a hufband or wife to another woman's apparel, I would not have Aad him Shak let him lend me the money, and have at him 14. To require; to claim for all he wa de He that will caper with rae for a thoufand marks, I will never truft a man again for keeping his fwor clean ; nor believe he can have every thing in hi by wearing his apparel neatly Shakefpeare is an expreflio elliptical ; as, we will have a trial az #2, or at him Shake[peare been married to him or with at him, which muft be confidered as mere You have of thefe pedlars that Aave more in *e If T ha in its ow have this at you; let this reach you, or tak thisy have «with you; take this awith you; but this will not explain Aave at it, or hav 13. Fo contain What would thefe madmen have Firft they would bribe us without pence Deceive us without common fenfe And without pow'r enflave will ~noting refolution to make fome attempt. They feem to be imperative expreffions to be natura than you'd think, fifter a# 20. HAV the tangible parts, whereas they are things by themfelves Bcon 30 do them all the kindnefs you are able Wake She is a Prefbyterian of the moft rank and virulen kind, and confequently has an inveterate hatred t 2. f [from hat. by the rules o will Azwve the and habit of virtu nature, produce the heaven, or a ftate of happinefs, Addifon. in him whofhall hereafter pra&tice. it. fometimes they will sawe them to be the qualities o Retain no malice nor Aatred againit any : be read Ha'tTer hats. to me that tongue heat, whereas fome of them are crude and cold ; an th Dryden ticular cufto to regard the ~ Addifor malice, and revenge There torments Aave already taken root in them Addifon That excellent author Azs fhewn how every par- 12, To maintain ; to hold opinion Locke He's hatter'd out with penance luft and fenfuality Of the maid fervants fhall I be 4ad in honour 2. San "The proud have had me greatly in derifion. £/alms thin from bazter.] 'To harafs ; to weary ; t wear out with fatigue This obfervation we have made on man. Addifor Evil fpirits Aave contratted in the body habits o That done, goand cart it, and bave it away. Tu/fer 11. Tohold been datre the church Sawift Hatred has in it the guilt of murder, and luft th guilt of adultery Sherlock To Hanrer, @5 a: [Perhaps corrupte The gods sawve placed labour before virtue. = 4ddif I cannot fpeak; if my heart be not ready t burft! Well, {weet Jack, bawe a care of thyfelf. Shak Yourplea is good 5 but ftill I fay beware Laws are explain'd by men; fo Aeve a care Pope there is i fopher muft fzve drawn from the obfervation I hav Addifon. enlarged upon thatye have brought thi 1 Sam. xxi. 18 10. Not to neglect ; not to omit Shakefpeare propogate is called curisf That admirable precept which Pythagoras-is {a@d to have given to his difciples, and which that philo Dryden to take an Addifor to receive grammar proper object South Hatreds are often begotten from flight and almof an 8. Toput delightful xvii. 5 Fobn that one can fpeak as he fhould do edious, it would have aled within the compafs of it occafions fclf the though others hzve made the fame refle&ions, it i poffible they may not Aawve drawn thofe ufcs from i I would bave any one nam kind of averfation and hoftility included in its ver annocen thine ow things eafy,, but as it render 9. To procure; to find Locke an Exod. xvi. 18 the glory which I Aad with thee before th HaveI need of madmen fellow love there was fcarc polite ftudies of antiquity, affure me, upon his bein obliged to fearch into records, that he at laft took a Addifor incredible pleafure in it I have not here confidered cuftom as it malke or united to as accident or concomitant Hatred is the thought of the pain which any thin whe Sidney 7. To be in any ftate ; to be attended wit Ha'TrED 7. /. [{rom hate.] Hate; ill-will malignity; malevolence; diflike; abhorrence ; deteftation ; abomination ; th worl who fat a ter audere of Horace "To fpend upon his Aaters Shakefpeare Anenemy to God, and a bater of all good. Brown They never wanted fo much knowledge as to inform and convince them of the unlawfulnefs of man's being a murderer, an Aater of God, and covenant-breaker South in_th If there Aad been words enow between them to hawve exprefled provocation, they Aad ‘gone togethe Congreve. by the ears I have heard one of the greatett geniufes this age has produced, who had been trained up in all th J¥icitas, and which I fuppofe he bad from the feljci e was my mafter, and I ware my lif hav hadjt the preterpluperfec Aad nothing over, an Father, glorify me wit languages, as an auxiliary verb to make the tenfes ; have, haft, and lath or has, the preterperfe@t; and bad, an Fudges A fecret happinefs in Petroniu I of her underftood of that moft noble conftancy which whofoever loves not, fhews himfelf to be if there coul 6. To take One that hates is the paffion of defiance; an 19. It is moft ufed in Englith, as in othe to enjoy; to poflefs world was abhorrer; a detefter effence3 but then that gathered muc Now thy labour, and leave thee naked and bare Exek: xxiii., 2g prefent or abfent is apt to produce in us L with T had a caufe to feek him there If thefe trifles were rated only by art and artfulnefs we fhould Aave them much cheaper Collier Aé&s, xxv. 26 he that gathered little /2d no lack bater of virtue, and unworthy to live in the fociet of mankind Sidney Whilft he ftood up and fpoke Go Europea 4+ 'To poffefs o Addifon 18. To buy. Dutch Aawvizg nothing upon him 5. To obtain To oppofe his barred fully [haban 1 hawve no Levite to my prieft Al their hearts ftood hatefully appal Jong fince Chapman They fhall deal with thee Aarefully, take away al Hatre Saxon; Aebben hed have 3. To make ufe of 2. Malignantly ; malicioufly t thick; yabban on horfeback abominably Contrar pafl Upon the maft they faw a young man And, worfe than death, to view with hateful eye paffio pret. and part 2. To carry; to wear Palamon, compell' No more to try the fortune of the field a the the choic others, or his own neceffities, may have engaged him I have brought him before you, that after examination had, 1 might Aave fomething to write 2. That which feels abhorrence ; abhorrent detefting ; malignant; malevolent Ha'ter. #. /. [from hate. ye with that kia of life or feries of a&ions, in whic 1. Not to be without Milton z /. [from hateful. I would hawe no man difcourage in the prefent I have we in a lax fenfe God, than to dwell in the tents of wickednefs, P/a/ms avoir, French ; awere, Ital. But Umbriel, hateful gnome ! forbears not {o oufnefs @. a to defire 1 bad rather be a docr-keeper in the houfe of m Dryden thou Aaft, he hath Peacham [from haseful. 17. Towifh mighty maces with fuch hafte defcend bend More bateful to mine ear Shakefpeare There is no vice more Aatefu to God and ma Ha'rerurness a breaft-plate They break the bones, and make the folid armou -The devil himfelf could not pronounce a titl 1. Cdioufly of mail Hauberks and helmsare hew'd with manya woun My name's Macbeth adv coa old French. That quite difparted all the linked frame And pierced to the {kin Fairy Queen 1. 'That which caufes abhorrence ; odious abominable; deteftable Ha'rervLry Di his foldiers pays Spenfer on Irelard Of the evils which hindered the peace and goo ordering of thatland, the inconvenience of the law was the firft which you Aad in hand Spenfer Kings hawve to deal with their neighbours, thei wives, their children, their prelates or clergy, thei nobles, their merchants, and their common. Bacon Him on the hauberk ftruck the princefs fore adj. [hate and Full. His rival's conqueft corn Nauficaa teaches, that the affiicted are not alway the obje&ts of divine bate. Brosme's Nutes on the ody/J He breaks the phial whence the forrows flow Savif Havu'Berk. 7. /f. [hauberg Dryden Of bateful feps ; 1 muftbe viewlefs now a-piece Ha'rrock. » /. [attock, Exfe.] A fhock of Speak then to me, who neither beg nor fea Your favours noryour Aate Shakefpeare than ingratitude "T'he &paniard's captain never harh to meddle witl A batter fells a dozen of hats for flve fhilling deteftation; the contrary tolove Ma'TEFUL HA s Love, favour'd once with that {weet gale, Doubles his hafte,.and fills his fail >Till he arrive, where fhe muft prov The Aawven, or the rock of love 2. A fhelter; an afylum Waller A |