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Show LA LA Then he lays by the publick care Tt feemed good to /ay upon you no greater burden Aétsyxv. 2.8 ‘Whilft you ay on your friend the fayour, acqui Wycherley him of the debt A prince who never difobey'd Wot when the moft fevere commands were /aid Nor want, nor exile with his duty weigh'd. Dryd You fee what obligation the profefiion of ChuiffiTillotfon anity /ays upon us to holinefs of life Negle& the rules each verbal critick /ays Pope For not to know fome trifles is a praife 28 to offer To exhibit It is not the manner of the Romans to delive any man to die, before that he which is accufe have the accufers face to face an have licence t anfwer for himfelf concerning the crime /zid againf xxve 16 Aéfts him Till he /ayshis indi¢tment in fome certain country Arrerb we do not think ourfelves bound to anfwer 29. To throw by violence He bringeth down them that dwell on high; th lofty city he Jayeth it Jow, even to the ground Ifa. xxvis § Brave Caneus Jaid Ortygius on the plain Dryden The vitor Caneus was by Turnus flain He tooly the quiver and the trufty bo Where Dzedalus his borrow'd wings /aid by To that obfcure retreat 1 chufe to fly Dryden My zeal for you muft /ay the father by And plead my country's caufe againft my fon. Dryd Fortune, confcious of your deftiny E'en then took care to /ay you foftly by And wrapp'd your fate among her precious things Kept frefh to be unfolded with your king's. Dryden and /ay your weapons by KnowI proteét them, and they fhall notdie. Dryd ‘When their difpleafure is once declared, they ough not prefently to /zy by the feverity of their brows but reftore their children to their former grace wit fome difficulty 37. 70 La doawn 'T pledge, equivalent depofit as or fatisfa&tion I /zy down my life for the fheep For her, my lord I dare my life /ay dowvn Locke Fobn, %s 15 and will do't, Sir Pleafe you t" accept it, that the queen is fpotlef Shakefpeare I' th' eyes of Heaven To Lay down To quit to refign S[Mflfcr's Ireland Lay apart all filthinefs 32: 7o Lay afide retain Fames 1. 21 To put away not t Let us /ay afide every weight, and the fin whic . doth fo eafily befet us Heb. xii. ‘1 Amaze us not with that majeftick frown But lay afide the greatnefs of your crown. Waller Rolcommon firft, then Mulgrave rofe, like light The Stagyrite and Horace, /aid afide Inform'd by them, we need no foreign guide Granville Retention is the power to revive again in our mind thofe ideas which, after imprinting, have difappeared or have been /aid afide out of fight Locke When by juft vengeance guilty mortals perith The gods behold their punithment with pleafure And /ay the uplifted thundet-bolt afide. ~ Addifon 23. 7o Lay away To put from one ; no to keep Queen Efther lzid weway her glorious apparel, an Efther, xiv. 2 clean.sh data import.tsv out README put on the garments of anguith 34. To Lay before. To expofe to view to fhew ; to difplay I cannot better fatisfy your piety, than by layin befere you a profpect of your labours ake That treaty hath been /aid before the commons Sawift Their office it is to /ay the bufinefs of the natio before hira Addifon 35. Zo Lay &y. » To referve for fome future time Let every one /zy by him in ftore, as Go ‘profpered him 86. 90 Lay by difmifs hat 1 Core Xvie 2 T put fro one; t "Let brave fpirits that have fitted themfeives fo «command eithe by fea or land, not be /aid by a perfons unneceffary for the time Bacon Genefis She went away, and /zid by her veil Did they not fwear to live and di ‘With Effex, and ftraight /aid him by? Hudibras For that look, which does your people awe ‘When in your throne and robes you give 'em law Waller Lay it by here, and give a gentler {mile Darknefs which faireft nymphs difarms Defends us ill from Mira's charms Mira can /ay her beauty by ‘Take no advantage of the eye Quit all that Lely's art can take And yet a thoufand captives malke " Vor. II ftored up and then delivered out in proBacon A veflel and provifions /zid in larg For man and beaft An equal ftock of wit and valou He ha The though happy Milton /aid in, by birth a taylor Hudibras faw the happinefs of a private life, but the they had not yet enough to make the they would have more, and /zid in to mak their folitude luxurious Dryden Readers, who are in the flower of their youth fhould labour at thofe accomplithments which ma fet oft their perfons when their bloom is gone, an t /a in timel provifion fo manhoo age 46. 70 La lence an ol Addifor's Guardian on 'T appl wit vio We make no excufes for the obftinate: blows ar the proper remedies; but blows /zid on in a way difLocke on Education ferent from the ordinary ‘To thew ; to expofe 47. To Liay open Lay cpen to my earthy grofs conceit Smother'd in errours weak fhallow feeble The folded meaning of your word's deceits Shaks/p Prove xiii. 16 A fool /ayeth open his folly to cover 48. Zo Liay ower. Toincruft to decorate fuperficially ‘Wo unto him that faith to the wood, Awake to the dumb ftone, Arife, it fhall teach: behold it is /aid over with gold and filver, and there is n Ambitious conquerors, in their mad career Check'd by thy voice, /ay down the fword an Blackmore's Creation fpear breath at all in the midft of it Habb ii 19 The ftory of the tragedy is purely fiction; for 'To expend take it up where the hiftory has laid it dowon." Dryd. i 49. 7o Lay out Father ar won t la up fo thei fons 39. Zo Lay doawn. To commit to repofe I will /ay me dozwn in peace and fleep. Pfal. xlviii And they /ay themfelves down upon cloaths lai Amosy 11e 8 to pledge by every altar We lay us down, to fleep away our cares; nigh Glanville's Scepfis fhuts up the fenfes Some god conduét me to the facred fhades Or lift me high to Hemus' hilly crown Dryden Or in the plains of Tempe /ay me dozwn 40. 7o Lay down To advance as a pro pofition I have /aid down, in fome meafure, the deferipAbbot tion of the old known world Kircher /ays it down as a certain principle, tha there never was any people fo rude, which did no acknowledge and worfhip one fupreme deitye Stilling flect I muft /ay down this for your encouragement that we are no longer now under the heavy yoke o Wake a perfeét unfinning obedience Plato lays it dozun as a principle, that whatever i permitted to befal a juft man, whether poverty o ficknefs, fhall, either in life or death, conduce t Addifon his good From the maxims /zid dozwn many may conclude that there had been abufes Sawwift 41. To Lay for. To attempt by ambufh or infidious pratices He embarked, being hardly /zid for at fea b Knalles Cortug-ogli, a famous pirate 42. To Lay forth To diffufe; to expa tiate O bird! the delight of gods-and of men! an fo he Jays himfelf forth upon the gracefulnefs o L Efirange the raven 43. To Liax forth. To place when dea in a decent pofture Embalm me Then /ay me forth3 although unqueen'd, yet lik A queen, and daughter to a king, inter me Shakefpeare 44+ To Lay hold of. 'To feize ; to catch Then fhall bis father and his mother /ay bold o Deut. xxi. 19 him, and bring him out Favourable feafons of aptitude and inclination, b heedfully /aid hold o Locke 45. To Lay in. To flore; to treafure Waller in, an portion Teach me, dear creature, how to think and fpeak Lay down by thofe pleafures the fearful and dan 31. ToLax apart. Torejelt; to putaway ifhmen Dryd The foldier being once brought in for the fervice I will not have him to /ay dowvn his arms any more gerous thunders and lightnings, and then there wil Raleigh be found no comparifon Laid by thelance, and took him to the fling Dryd 30. To place in comparifon ipesr Denbam The Tufcan kin Difmifs your rage gardens or corn be to a common ftock; and /a7 Thinks of providing for an heir Learns how to get, and how to fpare 38 Achates us'd to bear; the leaders firf He /aid along, and then the vulgar pierc'd Let the main part of the ground employed t Thou for thy fon art bent to lay out all Milton Tycho Brahe /aid out, befides his time and induftry, much greater fums of money on inftrument *ian any man we ever heard of Boyle The blood and treafure that's /aid out rown away, and goes for nought. = Hudilbras If you can get a good tutor, you will never repen the charge; but will always have the fatisfattio I to think it the money, of all other, the beft /zi out Locke I, in this venture, double gains purfue And /aid out ail my ftock to purchafe yous Drydert My father never at a time like thi Would /ay out his'great foul'in words, and waft Such precious moments Addifon's Cato A melancholy thing to fee the diforders of houthold that is under the condu& of an angr ftatefwoman, who /Zays out all her thoughts upo the publick, and is only attentive to find out mifcarriages in the miniftry Addifon's Freeholder ‘When a man fpends his whole life among th ftars and planets, or /ays out a twelve-month on th {pots in the'fun, however noble his {peculations ma be, they are very apt to fall into burlefque. Addifon Nature has /zid out all her art in beautifying th face; fhe has touched it with vermilion, planted i it a double row of ivory, and made it the feat o fmiles and bluthes Addifor 50. 7o Lay out. Todifplay todifcover He was dangerous, and takes occafion to /ay ou bigotry, and falfe confidence, in all its colours Atterbury 51. Zo Lay out 'To difpofe; to plan The garden is /aid ont into a grove for fruits, vineyard, and an allotment for olives and herbs §2. To La pronoun oxt Notes on the Ody/fey Wit th reciproca to exert; to put forth No feifith man will be concerned to /ay ozt himfelf for the good of his country 53. Yo Lay #0 Sm..rizig: To charge upon ‘When we began, in courteous manner, to /ay Li unkindnefs #nto him, he, fecing himfelf confronte by fo many, like a refolute orator, went not to denial but to juftify his cruel falthood Sidney 54. 7o Lay to 'To apply with vigour Let children be hired to /ay ¢o their bones From fallow as needeth, to gather up ftones. Tufir W |