OCR Text |
Show HE canno at all reafo to-da ‘about others f th 6. From this caufe ; from this ground By too ftrong a projeile motion the aliment tend 7. Fro In har ,':%"lfid‘ an this original Suck/ing hence 15 a vicious expreffion Hr~cero'rTH. adv. [henonpop's, Saxon. From this time forward the female pofleflive. 1. Belonging to a female Shakefp Till up in arms my paflion rofe And caft away ber yoke One month Henceforward will T bea Upon my target three fair thining funs. Shake/peare Pardon, I befeech you Shakefpeare He/ncaman man 7 /. [pync He a fervant, an Ob Why fhould Titania crofs her Oberon 1 do but beg a little changeling boy To be my henchman Shakefpeare Three henchmen were for ev'ry knight affign'd All in rich livery clad, and of a kind T crowd t furround following paflage 1s corrupt, an be read bemmed or i may mea th thoul o lak 29 7 fion ‘T'he generousand gravef citizen Have hent the gates, and very near upo The duke isentering Shakefpeare Hewnor/cacon, z [ [Bdxa and yayia. A figure of eleven fides or angles HenNs-FET, 70 /. fumaria fepinmg Hedg fumitory In fuch a nigh Medea gather'd the enchanted berd Shakefpeare That did renew old /Efon With {weet-fmelling berd Efpoufed Eve deck'd firft her nuptial bed. ~ Miltan like it Cowley Unhappy 1f the leave Watts's Logick HerB Chriffopher, or bane-berries. n fo plant Herea'crous. adj. [from berba, Latin, 1. Belonging to herbs "Ginger is the root of ncither tree nor trunk bu an berbaceous plant, refembling the water flower-deluce Browwn 2. Feeding on vegetables; perhaps not pro- erly Dryden *Shak cal Herb-eating animals, which don't ruminate, hav ftrong grinders, and chewshuch. Arbuthnot on Alinz Cowley This pride of Aers Their teeth are fitted to their food; the rapa cious to catching, holding, and tearing their prey the berbaceous to gathering and comminution of vege tables Derbani | Hu'RBAGE. . /. [herbage, French. 1. Herbs colle@ively; grafs ; pafture Rocks lie cover'd with eternal fnow Will ftill that thou art mine not Aers confefs Cowley Some fecret charm did all her as attend And what his fortune wanted, Aers could yaend LDvyden 1 bred you up to arms, rais'd you to power Indeed to fave a crown, not bers but yours, Dryden. HERALED. n. / German. Cowley are of chief ufe to us, then w them herbs; as fage and mint to a fubftantive going before: as, fuch are ber charms, fuch charms as|Aers from whom ftill conceal'd does li Of berds and roots the harmlefs luxury 'This is ufed when it refer ‘Thine own unworthinefs Perhap Locke Shakefpeare's Henry V Upon advice, hath drawn my love from. her Cleave Herbs are thofe plants whofe ftalks are foft, an have nothing woody in them ; as grafs and hemlock fceptre {o fantaftically -borne That bury'd Aer I loy'd, fhould bury me band or hond, Teutonick. 1. To feize ; to lay hold on HERB. 7. /. [herbe, French ; kerba, Latin. England is o idly king'd Hers. pronoun Makes pearls and planets humble beraldry of Should I be left, and thou be loft, the fea To Hewv. . a. [Penban, Saxon, from kends low Latin, which feems borrowed fro 2 3. Blazonry With Jer they rife, with Aer they fet again. Cowvley Diyden With that the {ergeants bent the young man fout And bound him likewife in a worthlefs chain. Fairf *Twas no falfe heraldry when madnefs dre Her pedigree from thofe who too much knew Denkam She cannot feem deform'd to me And I would have Aer feem to others fo Cowley The moon arofe clad o'er in light With thoufiihd ftars attending on her train Skinner; Pengyz, a horfe, and man Spelman.} © A page ; an attendant folete three days, and half an hour That fear attends her not Dryden 2. Regiftry of genealogies 2. The oblique cafe of /Ze The royal academy will admit benceforaward onl fuch who are endued with good qualiries Dryden befides, of noble blood that ra In ancient veins, ere heraldry began Drydern of a fhe Judith held the fov'reign pow'r Wond'rous beautiful er face But fo weak and fmall ber wit That fhe to govern were unfit And fo Sufanna took Aer place From this time to all futarity Peachar Metals may blazon common beauties; fh The opening of his mouth Shakefp. As yo Still new favourites the chofe [hence and ™ for Henceforward1 am ever rul'd by you Grant her A green and gilded fnake had wreath'd itfelf Who with fer head, nimble in threats, approach' *Till day droop.Milton If we treat gallant foldiers in this fort Who then benceforth to our defence will come Dyyden French I am writing of Aeraldry About his nec Milton Shagelpeare Hr'RavLory. n fo [heraulderie from herald 1. The art or office of a herald woman Tafte this, and be benceforth among the gods award. Not pay thee HERr. pron. [Pena, Pen, in Saxon, ftood fo their, or of them, which at length becam Happier thou may'ft be, worthier can'ft not be adv We are fent from our royal mafter Only to herald thee into his fight were extant before, namely, under the hepiarchy Hale's origin of Mankind The next returning planetary hou Shakefpeare's Macbeth Never benceforth thall T joy again L never from thy fide bernceforth will ftray Hav His fteps bold Arcite to the temple bent Shakefp 7o He'raLD. w. a. [from the noun.] T introduce as by an herald. A word no ufed reduced it into a monarchy ; for the materials therco Tharies and kin{men Henceforthy be earls Thyfelf a goddefs But/fuch an honeft chronicler as Griffith Of Mars, who fhar'd the epfarchy of pow's Sidney Hexcero'RwaRrD A figure with feven fides o albeit the Germans, of whom they defcended, ufe fhields Camden England began not to be, a people, ‘when Alfre Go, bawling cur ! thy hungry maw go fil On yon foul flock, belonging not to me With that his dog he Aexzc'd, his flock he curs'd fhall I fee more joy After my death I wifh no other berald No other fpeaker of my living actions In the Saxon beprarchy 1 find little noted of arimns To Hence, @.a. [from the adverb.] T fend off; to difpatch to a diftance. Ob{olete Such dreadful Aeralds to aftonifh us Shke/p Lt was thelark, the erald of the morn. Séaksfs 3. A proclaimer; a publifher Hre'erarcuy. n [ [ heptarchie, French exraand dexn] A fevenfold government 1his An ancient author prophefy'd from Aence Behold on Latian {hores a foreign prince Diyden oh never txr Fr odj. {from heptagon. ing feven angles or fides crept into ufe even among good authors as the original force of the word Aence wa gradually forgotten. Heuce fignifies fro Dryder It s the part of men to fear and trembie When the moft mighty gods, by tokens, fen angles Herra'coNar whic Where thou fhalt find thy fasnous pedigree 2. A precurfor, a forerunner; a harbinger Bacon and ywiz, All other faces borrowed Abexc Drydesn Pleafe thy pride and fearch the ferald's roll preferve the fmall birds fro if peace you chufe Or hevald-of a war, if you refufe on Aliments Hzrraca'psuLaR. o). [#le and capfula. My Flora was my fun; for a One fun, fo but one Flora was Never which time fhall ferve let but the Aerald cry Embaflador of peace winters there is obferved great plenty o haws Ben Sonfon And 'l appear again. = Shakefpeqre's King Lear commonl Aiyfavorth Havin {eve cavitie o cells I3 [heptagone #. HEPTAGON Their light and grace as ftars do thence Whe sz.r-:/riy it is bepatick ftarving from this flore 8. Fro it is ftomac florid | Heps, # f. Hawthorn-berrie written hips Arbuthnot on Alim this fource; fro b Avbuthna to putrefadtion : Aence may be deduced the force o exercife in helping digeftion bloo And I a poet here, no berald am The cyftick gall 1s thick, and intenfely bitter the bepatiok gall is more fluid, andinpt fo bitter -in confequence of thi Flence perhaps it is, that Solomon calls the fea of the Lord the beginning of wifdom Tilloffor evacuate blood5 if red and copious truth in the voluminous annals of pedants. . Aréuih For this reafon *'Dis 'gainft the manners of 2n epigram Belonging to the liver though perhaps a year fence he may Locke Let not pofterity a thoufand years hewce look fo ¢ For (trick degrees of rank or title look tigue, French, fromyzxe. He who can reafon well to-day about one fort of | Hepa/T1cK H.E May nong, whofe fcatter'd names honour my book Hzva'ricar,) adj. [bepaticus, Latin; bepa 4. From this time; in the future matters E: " [kerault, French; herald 1. An officer whofe bufinefs it is to regifter genealogies, adjuft enfigns armorial, regulate funerals, and anciently to carry meffages between princes, and proclamm war and peace Thin berbage in the plains, and fruitlefs fields . Drydern At the time the deluge came with berbage, an the earth was loade thronged wit animals #oodw z. The tythe and the right of patture, dinf He'rBaL: 7. /. [from &erd.] A beook containing the names and defcription o plants We leave the defcription of plants to Aerdals, an other like books of natural hiftory Bacon Such a plant will not be found in the Aerdal o nature A for-the ‘medicima ufe Brown of plants, the larg berbals are'ample (eftimonies thereof Mg'u |