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Show L O LO 1.O fru& him, which yet he may never take the pain Lacke to /Jook into t i o r v b e p c i p h welng frugal i ne effeéts thence arifing but Jook with a friendly regard o r a a 8. To hav n e a f n p a f n g b n Nay, lo Addifon's Freebolder vice A folid and fubftantial greatnefs of foul /ooks dow with a gencrous negleét oz the cenfures and ap e a p e a S n o n m i a w o Y will be mafte What hafte looks through his eyes e n r f g i t e f t e f a t o So fhould h plaufes of the multitude l w / y m u t a n h u Give me y 1 n H p e a S l w r v a y u and bear y u t d a a b c f o e e t C Lask they as they were built to fhake the world Towards thofe who communicate their thought in print I canno provided there is no tendency in their writings t Addifon I have nothing left but to gather up the relique of a wreck, and /wk about me to fee how fe Pope to Swift friends I have left The optick nerves of fuch animals as /osk th fame way with both eyes, as of men, meet befor they come into the brainj but the optick nerve of fuch animals as do not ok the fame way wit both eyes, as of fithes, do not meet. Newton's Opt 2. To have power of feeing And Jooks it through, but to it cannot pafs. Dryd 3. To dirett the intelle€lual eye In regard of our deliverance paft, and our dange an Go t u /oc u le e co t an prefe every man reform his own ways. Bacor's New Atl ‘We are not only to ook at the bare action, but a Stilling flect the reafon of it The man only faved the pigeon from the hawk that he might eat it himfelf; and if we /ook wel us, we fhall find this to be the cafe of mof abou L Eftrange mediations They will not /ook beyond the received notion of the place and age, nor have fo prefumptuous thought as to be wifer than their neighbours Locke Every one, if he would /oot into himfelf, woul find fome defeét of his particular genius Change a man's view of things Locke let him Joo dato the future ftate of blifs and mifery, and fe the righteou God Judge, read man according to his deeds to render ever Locke 4. To expett if he long deferred the march, he muft /o to fight another battle befor¢ he could reach OxClarendon ford 5. To take care; to watch Shake[peare Look that ye bind them faft He that gathered a hundred bufhels of apples had thereby a property in them: he was only t look that he ufed them before they fpoiled, elfe h Locke " robbed others e dt Let thine eyes ok right on, and let thine eye dids Jook firaight before thee Provs 1¥. 235 7. To bave any particular appearance t {eem T took the wa Which through a path, but fearcely printed, lay And look'd as lightly prefs'd by fairy feet. Dryden That fpotlefs modefty of private and public life, that generous fpirit, which all other Chrifiian ought to labour after, fhould /wk in us as if the Spratt were natural Piety, as it is thought a way to the favour o God; and fortune, as it Jooks like the effe¢t eithe of that, or at leaft of prudence and courage, bege authority. Lemple Cowards are offenfive to my fight Nor fhall they fee me do an aét that /ok Below the courage of a Spartan king Dryden To complain of want, and yet refufe all offer of afupply, Jogks very fullen o Burnet Should T publit an favour done mé; by you Yordfhip, T am afraid it would /ok moze like vanit than gratitude flddifo;; Something very noble may be difcerned, bu it Jooketh eumberfome Felton on the Clafficks Late, afad fpe€iacle of woe, Le tro The defart fands, and now he /ools agod Pope From the vices and follies of others, obferve ho fuch a praétice /ooks in another perfon, and reember that it /ocks as ill, or worfe, in yourfelf Watts This mgakes it /Zok the more like truth, natur His nephew's levies to him appear' To be a preparation 'gainft the Polack But better /ok'd into, he truly foun It was againft your highnefs. Shakefpeare's Hapy The more frequently and narrowly we jy} iim the work If yo fin Ambitiou if they be checked in the If a harmlefs mai Should ere a wife become a nurfe Her friends would /wk oz her the worfe 15. 70 Look on 'To confider ceive of; to think perfons infinitely prou impartial confideratio nothing but felf-denia Do we not all profef 12 70 Look for Phalantus' difgrac To expett wa engrieved, in licu o comfort, of Artefia, who telling him fhe neve Iooked for other, bade him feek fome other mifrefs Being a labour of fo great difficulty, the exaé performance thereof we may rather wifh than / Sor Hooker Tho Shalt feel our juftice, in whofe eaficft pafiag Look for no lefs than death. Shakefp- Winter's Tale 1f we fin wilfully after that we have received th knowledge of the truth, there remaineth no mor facrifice for fins, but a certain fearful loking for o judgment Heb. x In dealing with cunning perfons, it is good t i;xy little to them, and that which they leaft /oc or =3 Bacon's Effays This miftake was not fuch as they /Zoked Sor and, though the error in form feemed to he con fented to, yet the fubftance of the accufatio might be &ill infited on Clarendon Inordinate anxiety, and unneceffary feruples i c‘:mrcilnnfl, infread of fetting you free, which i tne benefic to be fwked for by confeffion, perple you the more Taylor and confider the lives o Tillotfon the greateft part of Chriftians In the want and ignorance of almoft all things the and fo Waodward frame their-minds toa a religien that taugh Sauth the crofs be of this excellent re t o an t thall /ook spor the aétions looking after thofe things which are coming on th retreated to co ligion? but who will believe that we do fo, tha To attend; to tak care of ; to obferve with care, anxiety or tendernefs them, that they were not ill ufed Locke My fubjeét does not oblige me to /ook after th water, or point forth the place whereunto it is no Prig, 1 lioked on Virgil as a fuecin&, majeftick writsr one who weighed not only every thought, but ever Dryde word and fyllable He /oked wupon it as morally impofible, fo 70 Look after earth Luke Politenefs of manners, and knowledge of th world, thould principally be locked after in a tutor Locke on Education A mother was went to indulge her daughters when any of them defired dogs, fquirrels, or birds but then they muft be fuce to Jok diligently afre men defires, become fecretly difcontent, and /wk upi men and matters with an evil eye. Bacon's Elays John began to think it high time ro /lok abou im Arbuthnot's Hiffory of Fobn Bull fear Addifon on Italy to regard as good or bad Decay of Piety fo Atterbyry To refpet; te efteem Harwey on Confumption John's caufe was a good milch cow, and man a man fubfifted his family out of it: however the 14. 7o Loox on a wafting of your flefh, then oo Men's hearts failin more occafion we fhal ints all that lies in his way about you, efpecially if troubled with a cough 11 th It is very well worth a traveller's whil to / lJook about them ; to enter into ferious confultation how they may avert that ruin of nature have to admire their beauty 1 welcome the condition of the time It will import thofe men who dwell carelefs To examine; to fifi! to infpec clofely; to obferve narroyly Areerb To be alarmed Lack 13. 70 Look inte 9. To form the air in any particula manner, in regarding or beholding 6. To be diretted with regard to any ob heir among the race of brutes, but will very |‘|(: contribute to the difcovery of one amongft men Tt will be his lot to ok fingular, in loofe an 10. T Look about ene to be vigilant Miln;,, Is ftill encurnber'd with fome new delay. D,y This limitation of Adam's empire to hisju" N ["kfa woul wh labou th thof will fav Collier more hideoufly on me it in my fantafy. Shakefpeare the worft now leaft affli¢ts me I fight, confus'd with fhame /s0k up, or heave the head Milton Thefe 7ok up to you with reverence, and woul be animated by the fight of him at whofe foul the Swift to Pope have taken fire in his writings e Till mine is call'd; and that long Ioolz'dfpr,d will be fincere, I may eafily know what he /ooks ‘Which cannot /w Than I have draw That which wa Blindnefs, for ha How could I onc o vol I muft with:patience all the terms art end Shakefpeare Ben Fonfo Or be 2 moment to our enterprize Though I cannot tell what a man fays; if h for no enchantin Drown'd in deep defpair He dares not offer one repenting prayer Amaz'd he lies, and fadly looks for death, fre licentious times, and to become a by-word Fate fees thy life lodg'd in a brittle glafs Che Look no /looked upon themfelve a the happieft an wifeft people of the univerfe Locke T be a mere idl Thofe prayers you make for your recovery ate t be Joked upon as beft heard by God, if they mov him to a longer continuance of your ficknefs Wake's Preparation for Death 16 T Loo oz fpe&tator I'll be a candle-holder, and /ok on.~ Shakefpeatt Some come to meet their friends, and to make erry5 others come only to-/ook on 17. 7o Loox ower one by one Bacane To examine; to tr Lok clcr the prefent and the former time; If no example of fo vile a crim Appears, then mourn Dryden's j‘xm:;f.f.'c young child, diftra@ed with the Variety o his play-games, tired his maid every day to Joo them cwer 18. 7o Loox out Loack 'To fearch. to feek When the thriving tradefan has got mor than he can well employ in trade, his next thought are to /ok our for a purchafe Latke Wher nefs, w the body is affeted with pain or fick are forwar enoug to /lock ot for reme dies, to liften to every one that fuggefts them Arterbury immediately to apply them Where a forejgn tongue is elegant, exprefiive and compad, we muft /ook cut for. words as beati tiful and comprehenfive as.can be found FEelton on the C/J_fl?‘*-‘ The curious ave /oking eut, {ome for Hattery fome for ironics, in that poem; the four @k think they have found out fome Sawift 19 Te be on the watch 7o Look out Is a man bound to /ok ¢t fhap toplague him felf Gollicr 20. |