OCR Text |
Show o care of There is no 1ion living; an ‘Who knock ZLook to the doo o to tak To watch #0 5o, To Loo s a more fearful wild fowl than you we ought to /uok fo it. Shake[peare fo loud at door Shakefpeare there, Francis Let this fellow be /loked to: let fome of m Shake[peare people have a fpecial care of him Uncleanly feruples fear not you; ook ¢o't Shake[peare Know the ftate of thy flocks, and /eok well #o th Proverbsy xxviis 33 herds When it came once among our people, that th ftate oftered conditions to firangers that would ftay we had work enough to get any of our men t Bacon Zok to our fhip If any took fan€uary for cafe of tieafon, th king might appoint him keepers to /k to him i Bacon fanctuary The dog's running away with the flefh, bids th L'Eftrange ecook ook better zo it another time For the truth of the theory I am in no wife coneerned; the compofer of it muft /sk 7o that Wodward To behold 27, T 1LOOK f0 a o o R o Look., w. a 3, To feek; to fearch for Lusking my love, 1go from place to place Like a young fawn that late hath loft the hind Spenfer And feek each where "™ 2. To turn the eye upon Let us /ok one another in the fase 2 Kings, xive 8 % 4. To influence by looks Such a fpirit muft be left behind Dryden's Cleomenes And ook the world to law 'To difcover by fearch 4. 7o Look out Sfing " Cafting my eye upon fo many of the general bill as next came to hand, I found encouragement fro Graunt shem to ook out all the bills I could Whoever has fuch treatment, when he is (UEeE wan, will ook ot other company, with whom h Locke can be at eafe wms ook, 7nterj. [properly the imperativ mood of the verb: it is fometimes /Joo ava ye. See behold ! obferve lo Look, where he comes, and my good man too he's as far from jealoufy as I am from giving hi caufe Shake[peare k Look you, h muf feem thus to the workd $ear not your advancement Look 4 k Y. .unw 1 pog SI whe th worl Shake[peare hat fewef barbarou people, but fuch as will not marry, except the know means to live, as it is almoft every wher at this day, except Tartary, there is mo danger o inundations of people Bacon's Effays Lok you! we that pretend to be fubjeét to conftitution, muft not carve out our own quality for at this tate a cobler may make himfelf a lord Collicr on Pride ® Lioox. 7. #%° 1. Air of the face; mien calt of th countenance Thou cream-fac'd loon Where got'ft thon that goofe /osk Shake[peare Thou wilt fave the aflicted people, but wil bring down high /s Plal. xviii. 27 Them gracious Heav'n for nobler ends defign'd "Their /ooks ere€ted, and their clay refin'd Fe Dryden, jun And though death be the king of terrors, ve pain, difgrace, and poverty, have frightful Zoks, abl (@ todifcompofe moft men Locke ~ 2. The a& of looking or feeing Then on the croud he caft a furious /oc? And wither'd all their firength ‘Whe 1.O Lo"okER n. /. [from Josk. Make me to fee't, or at leaft fo prove it 1. One that looks 2, LOOKER ox Spetator not agent Shepherds poor pipe, when his harfh found teftifies anguifh, into the fair Jooker on, paftime no paflion enters Sidney Such labour is then more neceffary than pleafant, both to them which undertake it, and fo the lockers on Hooker My bufinefs in this ftat Made me a /uker on here in Vienna Where I have feen corruption boil and bubbl Till it o'er-run the few. Shakefp. Meaf. for Meaf Did not this fatal war affront thy coaft Yet fatteft thou an idle /ooker on Fairfasx The Spaniard's valour lieth in the eyes of th losker on3 but the Englith valour licth about th foldier's heart: a valour of glory and a valour o natural courage are two things Bacon ‘I he people love him The lookers on, and the enquiring vulgar Will talk themfelves to action Denbam's Sophy He wifh'd he had indeed been gone And only to have ftood a looker on. Addifor's Ovid LookiNG-GLASS. 7. /. [look and glafs. Mirror; a glafs which fhews forms refleéted Command a mirror hither ftraight That it may thew me what a face 1 have - Go fome of you and fetch a loking-glafs. Shak There is none fo homely but loves a/ooking-glafs South. We fhould make no other ufe of our neighbour faults, than of a logking-glafs to mend our ow manners by L'Efirange Dryden they met they made a furly ftand And glard, like angry lions, as they pafs'd And wifh'd that ev'ry Jook might be their laft Bryden with the leat breath of wind, which perhaps, together with the clearnefs of its waters, gave i formerly the name of Diana's koking-glafs. Addifon Loom. #. /. [from glomus, a bottom o thread. Minfbew Lome is a genera name fora tool or inftrument. Funius. The frame in which the weavers wor their cloth He muft leave no uneven thread in his Zom o by indulging to any one fort of reproveable difcourfe himfelf, defeat all his endea vours againf the reft Government of the Tongue Minerva, ftudious to compof Her twifted threads, the web the ftrung And o'er a Joum of marble hung Addifon A thoufand maidens ply the purple /o To weave the bed,and deck the regal room. Prior 7o Loom. w. 7. [leoman, Saxon. appear at fea Séinner Loom z./ T A bird A loom is as big as a goofe; of a dark colour dappled with white fpots on the neck, back, an wings; each feather marked near the point wit two fpots : they breed in Farr Ifland. Greww's M Loow. #./. [This word, which is no ufed only in Scotland, is the Englit word Jown. A forry fellow; a fcoundrel arafcal Thou cream-fac'd Joon Where got'ft thou that goofe look? Shake/p. Mas ‘The falfe /oon, who could not work his wil By open force, employ'd hig flatt'ring fkill I hope, my lord, faid he, I not oftend Are you afraid of me thatare your friend ? Dryden This young lord had an old cunning rogue, or as the Scots call it, a falfe /on ofa grandfather that one might call a Jack of all trades Arbutbnot's Hiftory of Fobn Bull LOOQP. z. /. [from /sgper Dutch, to run. A double through which a ftring o lace is drawn; an- ornamental doubl or fringe Nor any {kill'd in Jeops of fing'ring fine Might in their diverfe cunning ever dar That the probation bear no binge, ncx /op Shakefpeare's Othello To hang a doubt on Bind our crooked legs in hoop Ben Fonforn Made of thells, with filver /oops An old fellow fhall wear this or that fort of cu in his cloaths with great integrity, while all th reft of the world are degencrated into buttons Addifon pockets, and /ogps Full of holes Loo pED. adj. [from loop. Poor naked wretches, wherefoc er you are That *bide the pelting of this pitilefs frorm Ho fhall your houfelefs heads and unfed fides Your losp'd and window'd raggednefs, defend yo From feafons fuch as thefe? Shakefp. King Lear Lo‘orHOLE. #. /. [loop and hole. 1. Aperture; hole to give a paffage. The Indian herdfman fhunning heat Shelters in cool, and tends his pafturing herds At loopholes cut through thickeft fhade Milton Ere the blabbing Eaftern fcout The nice morn on the Indian fteep From her cabin'd /osphole peep Miltort Walk not near yon corner houfe by night; fo there are blunderbuffes ‘planted in every /ogphole that go off at the fqueaking of a fiddle Dryden's Spanifly Fryar z. A fhift; an evafion Needlefs, or needful, I not now contend The furface of the lake of Nemi is never ruffle A fpirit fit to ftart into an empire " LO LO With this, fo eurious networks, to compare. Spenfer Dryden For ftill you have a /ogphole for a friend LoorroLED adj. [from Joophole. Ful of holes ; full ot openings, or void fpaces This uneafy /oophol'd gaol In which y* are hamper'd by the fetlock Hudibras Cannot but put y' in mind of wedlock Loorp #. f French o [loerd lurdan witlef Dutch Erfe fellow rives lourdan fro lourdant aheavy ftupid D. Trevou Lord o de Lourde a village in Gafcoigny, the inhabitant of which were formerly noted robbers fay they But dexterity in robbin implies fome degree of f{ubtilty, fro which the Gafcoigns are {o far removed that they are awkwar an heavy to proverb. - The Erfe imports fome degree of knavery, but in-a ludicrou fenfe, as in Englifh, you pretty rogue though in general it denotes reproachful heavinefs, or ftupid lazinefs,- Spenfer's Scholiaft fays, loord was wont among the old Britons, to fignify a lord and therefor thei the Danes tyrann her i that ufurpe Britain wer called, for more dread than dignity lurdans, i. e. lord Danes, whofe info lence and pride was fo outrageous i this realm that if it fortuned a Brito to be going over a bridge, and faw th Dane fet foot upon the fame, he muf return back till the Dane was clea over elfe h muf abide no lefs tha prefent death: but being afterwards expelled, the name of /zrdane became f odious unto the people whom they ha long opprefled, that, even at this day they ufe for more reproach to call th quartan ague the fever /zrdane So far the Scholiaft bu erroneoufly Fro Spenfer's own words, it fignifies fomething of ftupid dulnefs rather than magifterial arrogance. Macbean.] A drone Siker, thou's but a lazy /loord And rekes much of thy fwinke That with fond terms and witlefs word To bleer mine eyes do'fk thinks Spenfer's Pafforals I T |