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Show t e b t f c e e t t g o Confine the t Pa'LrrEY. 2. /[ [ palefroy, French. fmall horfe fit tor ladies: it is alway diftinguithed in the old books from war horfe h a d l t r w o l p And keep them in th pale i g E r b t b There is no par i r f e g i o f f t e g which the Irifh kave not th di o n h t t i m a p e i t j Tl lor l p t i t w o g l r yers noblemen of tha Clarendon 4. The pale is the thir par middl an the chief to the bafe or nether part o s n l the fcutc t a @ E @y Pav o c i S of th The diamete " foot hill of twent Th Such dir Of palfrey' fpells Whate'er the ocean pales, or {ky inclips Shake[peare's Ante and Cleopatra - Is thine The Englith beec Palis in the flood with men, with wives and boys Shake[peare Will you pale your head in Henry's glory And rob his temples of the diadem Shake[peare's Henry IV Now in his life I have faid nothin No niightly trance, or breathed fpell Infpires the paleey'd prieft from the prophetic cell Milion Shrines, where their vigils palecy'd virgins keep And pitying faints, whofe ftatues learn toweep. Pope Hav PaLera'CED. adj. [ pale and face. ing the face wan Pa'LinoDE Pa‘LinoDY. 1. Wannefs of colour wan wan o frethnefs ; fickly whitenefs of look Her blood durft not yet eome to her face, to tak away the name of palenefs from her moft pur Sidney whitenefs The blood the virgin's check forfook Alivid paleriefs fpreads o'er all her look Pope 2, Want of colour Knolles's Hiftory This attraction we tried in ftraw and palcou adj n. [ boar o roaunis B o B French. [palette whic a painter hold is colours when he paints Let the ground of the piCture be of fuch m 3 lx.tme,A as there may be fomething in it of ever comr pofes you urnts thaoft yo czoni ‘,')a./‘;fr‘; cantation Sandys's Par. on Fob French h; fro ali Jésads, Sp i ni Pales {et by way of in clofure or defence The Trojans round the place a rampire cait Dryd And palifades about the trenches plac'd Th i woo ufefu for fortifica for palifadse Mortimer tions, being very hard and durable The city is furrounded with a.ftrong wall, an Broome that wall guarded with pa/ifades 7o Pavisa'pE. w. 2. [fro To inclofe with palifades Pa'visu. adj. [from pale. pale th noun. Somewha Spirit of nitre males with copper A i fpirit of urine a deep blue ‘ Pavrvr. #n. /. [ pallium, Latin. 1. A cloak or mantle of ftate ‘With princely pace As fair Aurora in her purple pe// Out of the Eaft the dawning day doth calk So forth {the comes Let gorgeous traged In fcepter'd pall come fiveeping by work, as it were th D ryd:‘u T 2 chbifhop ought to be confecrated an and after confecration he fhall have 1Tth him Aylifje @ a. [fro cloak ; toinveft Come the noun. 7o Part. @. a mologifts giv Lo/ DALL U 1. To mzke infipid or vapid Reafon and refleCtion, reprefenting perpetuall to the mind the meannefs of all fentual gratifica tions, blunt the edge of his keeneft defires, and pal Atterbury all his enjoyments Wit, like wine, from happler climates brought Dafh' z. To impair {pritelinefs ; to difpirit A miracl Their joy with unexpeéted forrow pall'd [Of this word the ety4account 1 no reafonabl Drydens Ungrateful man Bafe barbarous man the more we raife our love and cool, and kill his ardour Diryden The more we pal/ 3. To weaken ; to impair For this Pl never follow thy pall'd fortunes more., Shakefp 4. To cloy Palled appetite is humourous, and muft be gratified with fauces rather than food Fatler Pa'rvreT. 2.f. [ paillet, in Chaucer ; whic was probably the French word fro paille, ftraw, and fecondarily, a bed. 1 A {fmall bed; a mea bed ‘Why rather, fleep, lieft thou in fmoaky cribs Upon uneafy pallets ftretching thee And hufht with buzzing night flies to thy flumber Than in the perfum'd chambers of the great Under the canopies of coftly ftate And lull'dwith founds of fweeteft melody? Shat His: fecretary was laid-in a pal/er near him fo ventilation.of his thoughts. 7% stoir's. Buckingbam If your ftray attendance be yet-lodg'd Or fhroud within thefe limits, T fhall know Ere morrow wake, or the low-roofted lar From her thatcht pal/ct roufe 2 [Palette formerl French. A fmall meafure ufed by chirurgeons A furgeon drew from a patient in four days twenty-feven pailets, every pallet containing thre ounce Hakewill 3 [In heraldry; palus minor, Latin. little poft Parima'Li. . [ [pila and malleus, Lat pale maille, French. A play in whic the ball is ftruck with a mallet throug an iron ring Pa'trtament. 2z A drefs; a robe the b m Latin. [pallium T'he people < t hite and i .LIARDISE #. / [paillia Fornication 5 whoring Obfolcte Zo PA'LI:IATE. @. a from pallium, a cloak ; palizer 1. To cover with excufe thick night commo Englif rogues, turn thef b draught They pall Moliere's and Lopez' {prightly frain Savift To extenuar reprefentations Th fe That my kee k Q Beauty foon grows familiar to the lover Fades in the ey , and palls upon the fenfe. Addifon 2 T And pall tl thee in the dunneft fmoak of hell Bacone They never hide or pallia pofe them freely to view - fide of the pall old Egeus kept e y D p w e e T y r t f l t o An Parr left th pa Sen a d t e 2.J° The coveringSNthrown g o 7 drin fwiftly one bottle into anothe Empt Spenfer mantle of an archbifthop Hufky hlgh re PALISA'DO palus, Lat. 7. /. A kind of coafting vef [palea, Latin. A],LETTE a.f. [ palifade want of luftre t}}e people and the cattie Pbodics [ch?\svw.;\{a. PALISA'DE. 501)'m;m fent over light-hotfemen in great dars, which running all along the fea coaft, carrie chafty f In duft and athes mourn fel.. Obfolete A LEOUS n that bave difpleas'd my God Abhor myfelf The palencfs of this flow' B,ewray'd the faintnefs of my mafter's heart. Shake PA'LENDAR when w Wotton by Vitruvius I of thy excellence have oft been told But now my ravifht eyes thy face behold Who therefore in this weeping palino Let palefacd fear keep with the mean-born man And find no harbour in a royal heart. Shake/peare Wanly o a rudibus So many miles upon her peacefut bofom Erighting her pal.fac'd villages with war 2 Shake/p [from pale. » PALELY. adv y i fh d r no fr no Py'Lexess. # /. [from pale. or pilin [wanndpopbe, man Pa'LINDROME. 7. and duuéw.] A word or fentence whic is the fame read backward or forwards as, madam; or this {entence, Subi dur Why bave they dar'd to marc of pelificatio the groundplot commande build upon a moift foil Havin . .. PALEEYED. adj. [paleand eye. eyes dimmed svements fings the bard that tell dames, bold knights, and magic Tickel firm with piles d o b o f o a d t e be paled in with t , To inclofe; to encompafs Rid Pavirica'tion., #. /. [palus, Latin. The a& or praftice of making groun ma Mortimer fmiths and armorers on palfreys ride. Dryd PA'LFREYED. adj. [from palfrcy. ing on a palfrey fro being derive of the fcutcheon Her wanton pa/frey all was overfprea With tinfel trappings, woven like a wave, Spenfer The damfel is mounted on a white pai a x an emblem of her inno nce 'dc Iy 9' npe tato Laaifon' Dunciad o r f d A Gay Where fhining colours were in order plac'd l w f o t l v r n d a f a e He:hqth propo f l e n ‘b l o f i a onfirmed by miracles, t a o for t y :o rl'cur to the u r t A t n i f r c o l p bérn within t grow vapid ; to become infipid T 3. T to foften by favourabl fault is to extenuate, cur imperfe@l 1 not radically; to eafe >ALLIATION, Zutfor from palliate t e a c f a r w va;mncs of th ---------------------------- Thy carelefs chalk has half atchiev'd thy art And her juft image makes Cleora ftart Tickel When fage Minerva rofe From her fweet lips fmooth elocution flows Hen fkilful hand an iv'ry palerze grac'd and was applied originally to colours. e e perhaps it is only a corruption of pale Erc yet thy pencil tries her nicer toils Or on thy palette lie the blended oils i f v n Let my due fee ' e f o c u i u f t To o l M o r And love th t o i p t i t w r b e b n v H g .d fo bro up in the Chriftian religion, b a u i e p o t o e a r p :\'Hch we have bee Duty of Man ¥ A PA PAE pal/iate o and temporarily not cut ‘ |