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Show RE Shakefpeare for his honour' What needs m bones The labour of an age in piled ftones Or that his hallow'd religues fhould be hi Milton Under a ftar-ypointed pyramid In peace, ye thades of our great grandfires, reft Tternal {pring, and rifing flow'rs ador Dry5 de of each venerable urn Shall our relicks fecond birth receive Th relick {tone he lics Beneath a rude and namelef w e Po s ey in ui en d gu fha to th c wh T That which is kept in memcry of another, with a kind of religious veneration From thy growing ftore Now lend affitance, and refiewe the poot A pittance of thy land will fet him fice Honeft foldier, who hath relieved you ~Bernardo has my place, give you good night Shake[peare Reliewe the centuries that have watch'd all night Diyden 4. To right by law .J To recommend by the interpofition o fomething diffimilar As the great lamp of day Throngh diff'rent regions does his courfe purfue And leaves one world but to revive a new While, by a pleafing change, the queen of nigh Stepney Relicves his luftre with a milder light Since the inculcating precept upon precept wil prove tirefome, the poet muft not encumber his poe with too much bufinefs; but fometimes refiewe th Addifon fubjeét with a moral reflection Italy, that have not a tooth or @ bone of this faint Addifon on Italy ufed A word no manner of relicks nor elegantly formed 6. To fupport; to afliit to attention Of wafting candles, which in thifty yea Relickly kept, perhaps buys wedding cheer n f Donne re old French [relicte lifta, Latin.] A widow; a wife defolate by the death of ‘her hufband If the fathers and hufbands were of the houthol of faith, then certainly their re/iés and childre cannot be ftrangers in this houfehold. Sprate's Serm Chafte relié Honour'd on earth, and worthy of the lov Garth Of fuch a fpoufe as now refides above ReL1e'F. 7. /. [relief, French. 1. Alleviation of calamity; mitigation o pain or forrow Thoughts in my unquiet breaft are rifen Milton "Tending to fome relief of our extremes 2. That which frees from pain or {orrow He found his defigned prefent would be a relief and then he thought it an impertinence to confide Fell what it could be called befides So fhould we make our death a glad relie Dryden's Knight's Tale From future fhame Nor dar'd I to prefume, that prefs'd with grief My flight fhould urge you to this dire refief' Dryden's ZEneis Stay, ftay your fteps He is the proteftor of his weaknefs liewer of his wants RELIE'VO. n. /. [Italian. To RELI'GHT His pow'r can heal me, and re/ight my eye. Pope #./ RELUGION religio, Latin. manner as we conceive moft agreeable to his will Wilkins fo as to procure his favour and blefling If we confider it ac direted againft Gad, it is breach of religion againft morality Addifon expofur fuch bold reficf of an or conqu'ring chief thing proximity of fomething different Rerie'vasre. adj pable of relief b [from relieve. th Ca Neither can they, 2s te reparation, hold plea o things whetein the party is reliewable by commo faw 7o RELIE'VE Jever, Fr. Hale @. a. [relevo, Latin; re if as to men it is a oftenc South By her inform'd, we beft religion learn Tts glorious object by her aid difcern Blackmore Religion ov virtue, in a large fenfe, includes dut to God and our neighbour; but in a proper fenfe virtue fignifies duty towards men, and re/igion dut to God Watts I never once in my life confidered, whether was living as the laws of religion dire&t, or whethe my way of life was fuch, as would procure me th mercy of God at this hour Laaw 6. Th French He that is void of fear, may foon be juft And no religion binds men to be traitors. B. Fonfon One (pake muth of right and wrong Of juftice, of religion, truth, and peac Milton And judgment from above By religion, I mean that general habit of reverenc towards the divine nature, whereby we are enable and inclined to worfhip and ferve God after fuch dern; the face finking by degrees in the fevera declenfions of the empire, till about Conftantine' time, it lies almoft evén with the furface of th In polifh'd verfz, the manners, and the mind. Pape [religion i. Virtue, as founded upon reverence o God, and expectation of future reward and punithments The figures of many ancient coins rife up in much more beautiful re/icf than thofe on the mo as in verfe have fhin'd @. a. [re and light. T light anew picture #'er fwell'd on marble Rogers's Sermons to give them more re/iewo and more ftrength. Dryd 4. [Relevium, law Latin.] Legal remed of wrongs 5. The prominence of a figure in ftgne o metal ; the feeming prominence of The forms augudt of kings and the re A convex mirrour makes the objeéts in the middl come out from the fuperficies : the painter muft d fo in refpet of the lights and fhadows of his figures Shakefpeare' s Hamlet Not with fuch majefty On The prominence of a figure or pitture For this relief; much thanks ; 'tis bitter cold medal [from relieve. RELie'veEr. 7. / that relieves 3. Difmiffion of a fentinel from his poit And I am fick at heart to recommen Parallels, or like relations, alternately relizc each other ; when neither will pafs afunder, yet ar Brown they plaufible together Thrifty wench fcrapes kitchen fruff And barreling the droppings and the {nuf Re‘Lict Dryden by placin t re a e ti fe fe T another on his poft reft, they fhow a fragment of Thomas a Becket as indeed there are very few treafuries of relicks i In th bigot to any religious perfu fio The lawfulnef 2. To fuccour by affiftance Cowls flutter'd into rags, then religues leave Bilton The fport of winds This church is very rich in relicks; among th [from relick. RELL'CIONIST. 7. /0 [from pelips 1. To eafe pa'n or forrow Prior Sleep we to wake, and only die to live Thy relicks, Rowe, to this fair {hrine we truft And facred place by Dryden's awful duft Re'rickrny: edv RE R'E‘ . A fyftem of divine faith and worfhip as oppofite to others The image of a brute, adorn' With gay religions, full of pomp and gold. Milzon i The chriftian refligion, rightly underftood the deepeft and choiceft picce of philofophy that is More The do€rine of the gofpel propofes to men fuc glorious rewards and fuch terrible punifhments as n religion ever did, and gives us far greater afluranc of their xeality and certainty than ever the world had Tillotfors of taling oaths may to the quakers, who then will ftand uay bfnw-. foot for preferment as any other full;]@&ug""d fuch.a motl adminifiration, wha emi huv;‘hng;, what a zeal and' biafs thcrguvfi?m ;, each religionift to advance h the others. 4 1 o tibend, RELI'GIOUS, adj. [religiess, Brar religiofus, Lat. 2 o 1. Pious; difpofed to the duties O.frel gion It is a matter of found confequenc duties are by fo much the bettgu;z:;:)r:;‘; how much the men are more religious, f habilities the fame proceed Whe holy and devout religion ; °mHWho che®an Areat their beads, tis hard to d%awt;:x:g::[h So fweet i3 zealous contemplation Their live Religious titled them the fonsof Go 2. Teaching religion . He God doth late and early pray More of his gxace than gifts to lend And entertains the harmlefs da Sb,,;#f Jfjm With a religious book or friend 3. Among the Romanifts, bound b vows of poverty, chaftity, and o dience Certain fryars and religious men were moved wi fome zeal, to draw the people to the chrif faith France has vaft numbers of ecclefiafticks and religious Addifon's State of the What the proteftants would call a fantick in the Roman church a re/igions of fuch an ord as an Englifh merchant in Lifbon, after f great difappointments ia the werld, refolved tot capuchin A 4. Exa&; firift 5. Appropriated to fri& obfervance hely duties Her family has the fame regulation as a rfgia houfe, and all its orders tend to the fupporof clean.sh data import.tsv out README La conftant regular devotion REL1'crousLy. adv. [from religint 1. Pioufly ; with obedience tothe dictate of religion towin ende For, who will have his work bis wif Dreg begin l religiou pray' heart wit hi Le n religi o rite th t 2. Accordin behol Goth yo who brethre Thefe are thei Alive and dead, and for their brethren flai Skakefpaar Religioufly they alk a facrifice tion vener wit 3. Reverentl Doft thou in all thy addrefles to him,and conein relrgDm 91 kneelin e reveren wit prefen hi 2 Rulest Duppa' hi bowing thyfelf befor anct obfer ftric wit 4. Exa@ly mellnpe th t du juftl es privile Th a(: relzgm{/ ar ts attenda thei houfes an tw Ji 'M maintained Rerr'crousness. #. /. [from e us religio bein o ftat o quali Th lw,'La [rnlin 2 72 RELI'NQ e a l t t rni defert ¥ n l r l t u w e t The habitatio Th Englif a colonies ht mi n w ric though for they placed T qui ed by th 2. To quit ds reie t to M ) T ; ' ‘ ; l f The ground of God' m b is, the return of it mad delivers b aé} he relinguiffes an g i t m t right to the ufe o b grante been freel 4 |