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Show LA With everlaiting oil, to give due ligh Milton To the mifled and lonely traveller In lamp furnaces I ufed {pirit of wine inftead of oil -and the {ame flame has melted foliated golds Boy/e 1. To pierce real or metaphorical Th* infernal minifter advanc'd Seiz'd the due vi&tim, and with fury-/anc' Her back, and piercing through her inmoft heart . Dryden Drew backward Thy gentle eyes fend forth & quick'ning fpirit And.feed the dying /amp of life within me. Rowe Cynthia, fair regent of the night Q may thy filver /amp from heaven's high bow'r Gay Direct my footiteps in the midnight hour 2. To open chirurgically; to cut in orde A lamp o fleth, about the bignefs of a nut, in th roof of a horfe's mouth, which rife Farrier's Dict above the teeth His horfe poficft with the glanders, troubled wit Shakefp the Zampafs, infefed with the fafhions as it is furre ftriking it with a feather into fome fhell and grinding it with gum water Peacham on Drawing Shining La'mMrinG. adj. [ryuwdaws. {parkling. Not ufed Itimports, /e s drink, from the old French Zamper, an A perfonal fanot to re They fay my talent is fatire 5 if fo, it is a fruitful age: they have fown the dragon's teeth them- felves, and it is but juft they fhould seap eac Dryden other in lampoons Pope Make fatire a lampaon 75 Lampo'on. @.a. [from the noun. abufe with perfonal fatire LavmpoONER. 2. /. [from Jampoen. {cribbler of perfonal fatire T La'~cerT. n. f. [lancette, Fr.] A fmal pointed chirurgical inftrument I gave vent to it by an apertion with a Jancet and difcharged white matter. clean.sh data import.tsv out README Wifeman's Surgery A vein, i body, and i emitteth a re Hippocrate broa an apparent blue runneth along th dexteroufly pricked with a /lancet drop Brown's Vulgar Errours faith, blood-letting fhould be don /Jancets or fwords in order to make large orifice : the manner of opening a vein then was by ftabbing or pertufion, as in horfes. .Arbuth tick, as the ladies are with a Jampooner, becaufe w Dryden are bitten in the dark The fquibs are thofe who are called libellers Tatler lampooners, and pamphleteers 70 LaxcH. . a. [lancer, Fr. This wor is too often written Jaunch: it is only vocal corruption of lamce. 'To dart La'MerEY. 7. f. [damproye, Fr. lampreye to caft as a lance ; to throw ; to let fly Dutch. Sce whofe arm can lanch the furer bolt And who's the better Jove Many fith much like the cel frequent both the fe and freth rivers; as, the lamprel, /amprey, and lamWalron perne La vpron. #./ Unbleft to tread that interdi¢ted thore When Jove tremendous in the fable deeps Launch'd bis red lightning at our fcatter'd fhips A kind of fea fith 7. /. [lance, Fr. lancea, Lat. Popz‘ Lancina'rion. 2. /. [from lancino, Lat. Tearing; laceration o LA'NcINATE long fpear, which, in the heroick ages feems to have been generally throw from the hand, as by the Indians a thisday. Inlatertimes the combatant throft them againft each other on horfeSpear; javelin back [lancino Lat.] Saxon and fo all the Teutonick dialects. I. A country; a region other countries diftin fro The nations of Scythia, like a mountain flood, did overflow all Spain, and quite wathed away what Sidney 7 foever relique people Plate fin with gold And the ftrong lance of juftice hurtlefs breaks Arm it in rags, a pigmy's firaw doth pierce it Shakefpeare fhall hold the bow and the lance @w. a To tear; to rend; to lacerate LAND. #. /. [landb, Gothick He carried his Zances, which were ftrong, to giv 2 lancely blow Dryd. and Lee's Ocdip Me, only me, the hand of fortune bore Thefe rocks are frequented by Zamprons, an greater fifhes, that devour the bodies of the drowned Broome on the Ody/fey The LaNcerE'sADE. #n. /. [lance fpexzate, Fr. The officer under the corporal: not no in ufe among us wit ‘We are naturally difpleafed with an unknown cri LANCE Sidney To th' Indies of her arm he flies Fraught both with eaft and weftern prize Which, when he had in vain effay'd Arm'd like a dapper /ancepefad With Spanith pike, he broach'd 2 pore. Cleaveland ‘was repeated at the end of each couple tire; abufe; cenfure writte form but to vex Suitabl a Jancely blow [Railey derives it fro Zrew. And cut the head ; for till the core is foun Dryden The fecret vice is fed "The fhepherd ftands -there were left of the /and-bre Spenfer's State of Ireland ‘Thy ambition Thou fcarlet fin, ‘robb'd this bewailing Jan Feremiaby te 424 He&or beholds his jay'lin fall in vain Nor other /ance, nor other hope remain He calls Deiphobus, demands a fpea Pope. in vain, for no Deiphobus way there Of noble Buckingham Skakefpcarc's Henry VII . What had he done to make him fly the laxd though the government was monarchical, it wa not defpoticik Broame's Notes on the Odyffey My foul ev'n then, my fears would be the lofs But, ah The be warn'd to thun the wat'ty way Dryd turn their heads to fea, their fterns to land And greet with greedy joy th' Italian ftrand Dryd 3. It is often ufed in compofition pofed to fea as op The princes delighting their conceits with con firmin their knowledge fecing wherei the fea difcipline differed from the /and-fervice, they ha pleafing entertainment Sidney He to-night hath boarded a /and-carrack If it prove lawful prize, he's made for ever Shag With eleven thoufand land-foldicrs, and twentyfix fhips of war, we within two months have wo one town Bacon Neceflity makes men ingenious and hardy; an if they have but /and-roo or fea-room they fin fupplies for their hunger Hale's Orig. of Mankind I writ not always in the proper terms of naviga tion, or land-fervice Dryden's Aneid The French are to pay the fame duties at the dr ports through which they pafs by land-carriage, a we pay upon importation or exportation by fea Addifon's Frecholder The Pheniciaus carried on a land-trade to Syri and Mefopotamia, and ftopt not fhort, withou puthing their trade to the Indies. Arbuth. on Coins The fpecies brought by land-carriage were muc better than thofe which came to Egypt by fea Arbutbnot 4. Ground furface of the place. Unufual Beneath his fteely cafque he felt the blow And roll'd with limbs relax'd, along the /and Popr 5. An eftate real and immoveable To forfeit all your goods, /ards, and tenements Cattles, and goods whatfoever, and to b Out of the king's prote€tion Skakep. Henry VIII He kept himfelf within the bounds of Toyalty and enjoyed certain Jands and towas in the border of Polonia Knolies This man is freed from fervile hands Of hope to rife, or fear to fall Lord of himfelf, though not of /ands And having nothing, yet hath all Wottor 6. Nation people the inkabitants o the land Thefe anfwers in the filent night receiv'd The king himfelf divulg'd, the /and believ'd 7. Urine Probabl [plond Saxon, Dryd A /and-dams was a coarfe expreffion i the cant #train, formerly in common ufe, but finc laid afide and forgotten, which meant the takin away a man's life For /and or /ant is an old wor for urine, and to ftop the commo functions of nature is to kill paffag-e an Hanmer You are abufed, and by fome putter on That will be damn'd for't; would I kne villain T would land-damn him th Shakefp. Winter's Tale 7o Laxp. @. a. [from the noun. To fe on thore : ; he legions, now in Gallia, fooner Jande Britain Sbakefpeare's Cymbeline He who rules the raging wind,'/‘ To thee, O facred fhip, be kind Thy committed pledge reftore And /and him fafely on the thore. Dryd. Horace Another Typhis fhall new feas explore Another Argo /and the chiefs upon th' Iberian fhore 70 L.axp. v. a. To come to thore Dryden Let him /and And folemnly fee him fet on to London. Shakefp Land ye not, none of you, and provide to b gone from this coat within fixteen days Sbllkl{/‘]')c'tll' The chicf men of the /and had great authority diftin@® from water. By land they found that huge and mighty coin try . Abbot Yet, if thou go'ft by Jand, tho' grief pofiefs Lance the fore He carried his lances, which were ftrong, to giv Spenfer at caroufals Decay of Picty an adverfary La'wcELY. adj. [from lance. Not in ufe to a lance Thofe lamping eyes will deign fometimes to look lampons, a drunken fong ‘We do lanc Shakefpeare Difeafes in our bodies Fell forrow's tooth doth never rankle mor Shak Than when it bites, but Janceth not the fore That differs as far from our ufual feverities, a And when the Jancing knife requires his hands Vain help, with idle pray'rs, from heav'n demands Dryden Happy lines, on which with ftarry ligh LAMPO'ON. 2. / to a cure the /ancings of a phyfician do from the wounds o La'mpBLack. n. /. [lamp and black.] I s made by holding a torch under th an tocut - With his prepared fword he charges hom Sbakv[fy My unprovided body, /anc'd my arm Tn their cruel worfhip they lance themfelves wit Glanwille's Scepfis knives «. Anykind of light, in poetical language La'mrpass. #. /. [lampas, Fr. 2. Farth 7o Lance. v.a. [from the noun. "S'hat nature hung in heaven, and fill'd their famp bottom of a bafon L A LA Bacon's New Atlantis 1 land, with lucklefs omens: then ador Their gods Dryden's Aneid La'~pep adj. [from land. Havin fortune |