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Show deftru@ive; procuring death Commne all you {pirit That tend on mortal thoughts, unfex me here And fill me from the crown to th' toe, top ful ortaleft poifons pralifed by th hav 1. Irrecoverably fom mixtur o th Weft Infat, blood Bacon h of man The frui Of that forbidden tree, whofe mortal taft Brought death into the world, and all our woe Milton Some «circumftances bave been great difcouragers of trade, and others are abfolutely mortal to it Temple Hope not, bafe man! unqueftion'd hence to go Dryden For 1 am Palamon, thy mortal foc 3. Bringing death Safe in the hand of one difpofing pow'r Or in the natal 4. Inferrin Pope or the mortal hour divin condemnation no venial Though every fin of itfelf be mortal, yet all ar not equally morzal ; but fome more, fome lefs Perkins 5. Human ; belonging to man They met me in the day of fuccefs; and I hav learned by the perfected report, they have more i them ‘than morral knowledge. Shakefpeare's Macb Macbet Shall live the leafe of nature, pay his breat To time and mortal cutom. Shakefpearc's Macketh The voice of Go To mortal ear is dreadful ; they befeech That Mofes might reportto them his will Milton's Paradife Loff And terror ceafe Succefs, the mark no mortal Wit ButlerOr fureft hand can always hit No one enjoyment but is liable to be loft by te thoufan vent 6 accidents, out of all mortal power to preSouth's Sermons Extreme violent The birds were in a mortal apprehenfion of th becties, till the fparrow reafoned them into underL' Eftrange ftanding The nymph grew pale and in a mortal fright Spent with the labour of fo long a flight And now defpairing, -caft a mournful loo Upon the ftreams Dryden Mo'rTAL. 7. / 1. Man ; human being Tickel Warn poor mortals left behind 2. Thi uage is ofte ufe i ludicrou lan For what's an eye without a brow Prior MortA'LiTY. %. /. [from smortal. 1. Subjeétion to death; ftate of a being fuble&t to death When I faw her die Carew 1 then did think on your mortality 1 point out miftakes in life and religion, tha we might guard againft the fprings of error, guilt and forrow, which furround us in every ftate o mortality Watts's Logick 2. Death I beg mortality Rather than life preferv'd with infamy Shakefpeare Gladly would I mee Milton's Paradife Loft Mortality my fentence . Power of deftru&ion Shakefpeare 4. Frequency of death The rife of keeping thofe accounts firft began i the year 1592, being a time of great mortality ‘Graunt ¢. Human nature vp the happinefs of their lives; mortality canno Dryden bear it often An _a& may pafs for publick regiftries of 1 by which all purchafers or mortgagees my lng cured of all monies they lay out. Tmfle':;ze; 7. /. [from "'"fgag'e;} that gives a mortgage Know all, who wou'd pretend to my good grace Granwville 1 piortally diflike a damning face ORTI FEROUS RTAR. 7. f. [mortarium, Lat. mortier e Mo % RTGAGER Bacon's Effays aa‘//‘ foraicl ['"mifer » Laatin Fé\lflt/il; _d{fadb]y; deftructiv French. 1. A flrong veflel in which materials ar broken by being pounded with a peftle at is i but a continne tuated from heaven, to give men no rff;fi :]:ivflte no quiet from Chrift's importunity, till the}'?mké from the lethargick fleep, and arife from f gy {o mortiferous a fate, and permit him togive t e Except you could bray Chriftendom in a mortar life and mould it into a new pafte, there is no poffibilit Bacon of an holy war The aétion of the diaphragm and mufcles ferve for the comminution of the meat in the ftomac by their conftant agitation upwards and downwatds refembling the pounding of materials in a mortar Ray on Creation Thefe murmrings, like a mortiferos hmfl' m)r poifonous even in their firft {pring . Governiient of the Tm French ; from mortify. 1. The ftate of corrupting or lofisgt vital qualities; gangrene Thofe arms which for nine centuries had brav' It appeareth in the gangrene, or mortifiati fhort wid canno o ou bombs are thrown The wiath of time on antique ftonc engrav'd flefh, either by opiates, or intenfe colds Now torn by mortars frand yet undefac' On nobler trophies by thy valour rais'd. Granwille Nor lefs than wounds immedicable Mo'rTAR. #. [ tier, French. [morter Cemen and fand with water ftones or bricks Inquire what gives impediment to unionorrefi tution, which is called mortification; as when quick 3. The a& of fubduing the body byhad thips and macerations tha A diet of fome fifh is more rich and alkalfea than that of flefh, and therefore very improper fo hands when rubbed, yet not earthy, fo as to fou the water it is wathed in : he alfo finds fault wit mafons and ‘brickiayers as committing a great error but a little at a time 4. Humiliation ; fubje@ion of the pafioms Th eminent charity, no profound humility, no hearely affetion, no true contempt of the worh1 Chriftia Mo'rRTGAGE. #. /. [mort and gage, Fr 1. A dead pledge; a thing put into th hands of a creditor Th' eftate runs out, and morzgages are made Their fortune ruin'd, and their fame betray'd Dryden The Romans do not feem to have known th fecret of paper credit, and fecurities upon mortgages Arbutbnot The broker Bent on fome muortgage, to avoid reproach He fecks bye-ftreets, and faves th' expenfive coach Gay . The land is given in mortgage only, with ful intention to be redeemed within one year. Bacon 70 MO'RTGAGE. @. a. [from the noan. To pledge; to put to pledge; to mak over to a creditor as a fecurity contriv ho mortgaged fouls They mak 1'6"3) th widew' the difentangl thei Decay of Piety morzgag' ox thei Sandys weaknefs no fincere z.ca!, or emitet Lest piety, in the common lives of Chriftians an better mortar tha Mortimer Tilljn able You fee no real mortification, or .felf-de_fllal) Gen.xie 3 Lime hot out of the kiln mixed foft with water putting fand to it, will mak other mortification of our lufts has (on.xefluugm'l that is troublefome, yet nothing that is unte that the morra may not lie long before it be ufed I will tread this unbolted villain into mortar Arbuths on Alm fuch as pra&ife mortification in letting their lime flacken and cool before the make up their mortar, and alfo in letting thei mortar cool and die before they ufe it; therefor he advifes, that if you expe&t your work to be wel done, and to continue long, to work up the lim an By filver is mortified with turpentine the fand fhould be dry and tharp, fo as to prick th quick 2. Deftruétion of aétive qualities ufed to joi Wolfius obferves Rankle and fefter, and gangrene Miltor's Agua‘(a To black mortification Mortar, in architefure, is a preparation of lim and fand mixed up with water, ferving as a cement and ufed by mafons and bricklayers in building o of ftone and brick Buy My griefs ferment and rage Dutch ; mormade of lim an [mort':‘fim},- 2. / MorTiFICA'TION whic z. Let me A fingle vifion fo tranfports them, that it make that takes or receives a morrgf Adrian mortally envied poets, painters, and artificers, in works wherein he had a vein to excel M unmanur'd by us, and o o'et MoRTGAGE'E. 2. / A low lu 2. The ftate of being pledged clean.sh data import.tsv out README Mortality and mercy in Vienn Live in thy tongue and heart but, in all appearance, mortally wounded Dryden daub the wall of a jakes with him. Shak [p. K. Lear They had brick for ftone, and flime for mortar I can bekold no mortal now Land dicrous word wall A low word to death 2. Extremely ; to extremity forced them to urtg Some have his lands, but none h e histr In the battle of Landen you were not only dan geroufly not abating of their ex, 1 iving, ha manors [from mortal. Mo rRTALLY. adv SI.YMZ,('{'/}"HI‘:,"S Macheth eity c O ; Thei Take thefe tears, mortality's relief And till we fhare your joys, forgive our grief. Pofe 2. Deadly M O . Vexation ; trouble It is one of the vexatious mortificararions of afie dious man, to have his thoughts dlford'e"d bys LEfi;‘;f: tedious vifit We had the mortification to lofe the fi'ght ¥ I nich, Augfburg, and Ratifbon. ./Y(II«'JJZHW»'?]‘ To Mo'RTIFY. w. a. [mortifer, French] 1. ‘To deftroy vital qualities 2. To deftroy altive powers, or e qualities What gives impedi ment to uni is called mortification, as when qu aci tified with turpentine or fpittle ' h ‘ n d a He mortified pearls in vinegar Hakestilie S up Oil of tartar per deliquium hasa gat f0 to find out and mortify acid {pints . To fubdue inordinate pafions The breath no fooner left his father's WY"- 0‘ H , :; hl i i i r m f n l w hi a But t Seem'd to die too Sbak‘.'ffi art Supprefs thy knowing pride Mor».fy thy learned luft Vainja.re thy thoughts, while thou thyfelf & i He modeftly conjetures His pupil might be tir'd with ke&"res e i p b i r m t ' l h i W 1 i 4. To macerate or harafs; 10 OF% gy |