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Show SH not fee the fandy hour-glafs run ¥ houl thame than by confcience, when they find them 1‘3{;%"3212 think of fallows and of flat felves fooled and fbammed into a conviction L'Efirange Andfee my wealthy Andrew dock'd in fand 'Veilin-g her high top lower than her ribs, o kifs her burial Sbalgefpeare's Coriolanus A fwift ftream is not heard in the channel, bu , n fballows of gravel. Bacon's Natural Hiflory o Then all your wits that fleer and fham Down from Don Quixote to Tom Tram clean.sh data import.tsv out README Jearn a few words with lamcn}ablc conftruétion ! and now on the fudden tran{ported, to be tof . yith their unballafted wits in mthomlc{s and unI W Suam Milton And fathom'd all his thoughts, that know the deep o And fiallo'-ws of his heart, fhoul " ment The wary Dutc Dall'd on the fhallozvs of the moving fand And in mid ocean left them moor'd a-land Believe who will the folemn fbam, not I. Addifon Dryden's Aneid SHaM In arms of the fea, and among iflands, there i Burnet With the ufe of diligence, and prudent conduét ho may decline both rocks and fballcavs Norris The fea could not be much narrower than it is now have an ocean of mere flats and fhallows, t the utter ruin of navigation Bentley 2. It is here improperly ufed When the perfon is made the jeft of the mob or his back the fbambles of the executioner, ther is no more convition in the one than in the other SHA'LLowLY. adv. [from Joallow. - L With no great depth The load lieth open on the grafs, o lewly covered Watts bu Careaw - 2. Simply5 foolifhly SHA'MBLING. adj. [See ScamMBLING. Moving awkwardly and irregularly. low bad word /bal Mo&jballww/y did you thefe arms comm nce By that fbamiling in his walk, it fhould be m rich banker, Gomez, whom I lznew at Barcelona Dryden's Spanifb Friar So when nurfe Nokes to a& young Ammon tries With /bambling legs, long chin, and foolith eyes With dangling hands he ftrokes th® imperial robe And with a cuckold's air commands the globe Smith + Fondly brought herey and foolifhly fent henc u SEALL. owngss n. 7. /. /o |[frotmrom /b fhlal}logbw.m j‘w ?fi‘;;fif 1. Want of depth .' Z-"Want o{ thought; want of underf and‘In: ;.fuuhty 5 fillinefs ; emptine s Weyn do all things live their meafu 'd hour l cannot afk the thing which is not the e aming the Shallownefs of our requeft mP:;;mot wonder enough at the Sha efs an nent zeal of the vulgar fort in Dr ina, wh e Carried away with fuch a ; ¥ f:lr {' norant devotio Herbert fuccefles, when it little concerne Ly o an, "‘f [Ger fiALM‘ cal Pipe Hoavel inefs to fet forward upo the fig . Bken ; Which wag by the f und of a Jb 7 hokag J VSHALT. Secon perfon of /pail 40 HAM . l o Knolles's Hiffory of the Turks v To mc"r'{ :1 [ fbommi, Welh, to cheat. i to cheat; to fool wit 5 otol delude € wit wit Mentfiga tenge;d "fimc £ fe pretences: fa point of honour, and yet w't tuthy are fooner wrought 1 pou by The feheme of all our happinefs deftroy Pope's Odyffey 3. Reproach ; infliction of fhame Ecclus. Vo 14 A toul fhame is upon the thicf Applauf Turn'd to exploding hifs, triumph to fbane Caft on themfelves from their own mouths Milton 7o SHAME. v. a. [from the noun. 1. To make athamed to fill with fhame To tell thee of whe deriv'd Were fhame enough to fbame thee, wert thou no Shakefpeare fhamelefs If thou haft power to raife him, bring him hitkier And I've power to fhame him hence Oh, while you live, tell truth and fhame the devil Shakefpeare Cleavel The oftracifm, and fhan'd it out of ufe Defpoil' Of all our good, fham'd, naked, miferable. Miltor What hurt can there be in all the flanders an difgraces of this-world, if they are but theartsan Were there but one righteous man in the world nour; he would /bame the world, and not the worl bim Soutbe He, in a loathfome dungeon doom' to lie In bonds retain'd his birthright liberty And fban'd oppreffion, till it fet him free Dryd The coward bore the man immortal fpite Who fham'd him out of madnefs into flight Dryden ‘Who fhamesa feribbler, breaksa cobweb through He fpins the flight felf-pleafing thread anew, Pope 2. To difgrace Certes, Sir knight, ye been too much to blame Thus for to blot the honour of the ded And with foul cowardice his carcafs fbasie Fairy Queen 70 SEAME. @. zn. To be athamed Great fhame it is, thing fo divine in view Made for to be the world's moft ornament To make the bait her gazers to embrew Good fhames to be to.ill an inftrument Spenfer Sham'ft thou not, knowing whence thou art extraught 1. The paflion felt when reputation i fuppofed to be loft; the paffion exprefle fometimes by blufhes tude Peace, peace, for fbame, if not for charity -Urge neither charity nor fbame to me Uncharitably with me have you dealt And fhamefully my hopes by you are butcher'd My charity is outrage, life my fbame And in my fhame ftill lives my forrow's rage Shakefpeare's Richard 111 Hide, for fame a For "twere a fbame a poet fhould be kill'd Drydett Under the fhelter of fo broad a fhield O fhame to manhood ! fhall one daring bo SHAME. . /. [yceam, Saxon; fchaemte Dutch.] Spenfer to have his fol And, five times tried, has never fail'd of taking To let thy tongue dete& thy bafe-born heart Lamenting forrow did in darknefs lie And fhame his ugly face did hide from living eye A kind of mu dieErys?g cag:;alm Was comman e thei South are the fbame of religion This jeft was firft of th' other houfe's making he would hold up his head with confidence and ho That quicken ev'n with blowing. Shakefp. Othells He warned a flock of fheep, that were drivin to the /bambles, of their danger; and, upon uttering fome founds, they all fled Arbutbnot good men, to fee a company of lewd fpallozvbraine + hufls making atheifm, and contempt of religion -+ the fole badge of wit Scuth wh fuch guides Shakefpeare's Henry V1 ~-Oh, ay, as fummer flies are in the fhambles It cannot but be matter of juft indignation to al the world fro Far be the thoughts of this from Henry's heart I hope my noble lord efteems me honeft «i SEALLOWBRAINED. adj. [ Pallow an " clean.sh data import.tsv out README brain.] Foolifh; futile ; trifling; emp Shake[p methods of providence, to fhame us into the glorie of the next Soutlr To make a fhambles of the parliament-hcufe ~ without a great lofs to the world; and muft w Gay Saa'MBLES. #. /. [of uncertain etymology 5 jeannaglia, Ital. 1. The place where butchers kill or fel their meat ; a butchery Ray on the Creation The more fbame for him that he fends it me For 1 have heard him fay, a thoufand times Hyperbolus by fuffering did traduc Never join the fray Where the fbam quarrel interrupts the way Their fpawn being lighter than the water, ther it would not fink to the bottom, but be buoye up by it, and carried away to the fhallozvs adj. Falfe; counterfeit; fictitious pretended 70 great depth, and fome places are plain fballowvs im thole ideas he made it ftand for Locke That in the {acred temple needs would tr Without a fire th' unheated gums to fry Three more fierce Eurus in his angry moo pretence He that firft brought the fbam, wheedle, o banter in ufe, put together, as he thought fit Behind their treach'rous /bd/io'w: now withdraw Andthere lay fnares to catch the Britith hoft Dryden Fraud It goes a great way when natural curiofity an vulgar prejudice fhall be affifted with the fhams o aitrological judgments. L'Eftrange Dryden's Sparifh Friar the verb. L'Eftrange He founds and fathoms him, to fin A [fro man, that is pragmatical and inquifitive Denbam The jballo«w: of his foul z. No fbam fo grofs but it will pafs upon a wea nced no inftru To advance your ends a care that we do not, for wan trick ; delufion ; falf pofture A low word = You that {o oft have founde muft hav of laying things and things together, fham fallacies upon the world for current reafon. L' Eftrange . quict deeps of controverfy, they do grow into hatre of learning Prior 2. To obtrude by fraud or folly grace ; ignominy God delive And flily put them off for mine Fond to be thought a country wit fpallows, where they ftuck unreafonably, t 2. Th dif of thame caufe or reafo His Julia gave it him at his departure From whom I jefts and puns purloin " Having but newly left thofe grammatick flat " an SH SH Romans, your grandfires images That bluih at their degenerate progeny Dryden In the fchools men are allowed, without /hame, t deny the agreement of ideas ; or, out of the fchools from thence have learned, without jbame, to den the connedtion of ideas Locke anl}a_r?:rd!‘t' To the trunk of it authors give fuch a magnias.I bam to repeat.. Ral. Hiffeof the World Cruel Aufter thither hied him And, with the rufh of one rude blaft, Sham'd not fpitetully to waft All his leaves fo freth, fo fweet, And lay them trembling at his feet Sua'MEFACED. adj Modeft ; bafhful Crafhamw [ /hame and face. eafily put out .o countenance Philoclea, who blufhing, and withal fmiling makin f{hamefacednefs pleafing, and pleafur Jpamefaced, tenderly moved her feet, unwonted.t e feel the naked ground Confcience is a bluthing famsfac'd {pirit, tha mutinies in a man's bofom= it fills one full of ob ftacles Shake[peare's Richard 111 A man may be fbamefaced, and a woman modeft to the degree of icandalous L Efirange Your fhamefac'd virtue fhunn'd thepecple's pr;uwi': And fenatg's honours Dryden Fro |