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Show T e TH The fires but faintly lick'd their prey com All the worl Then loath'd their impious food, and would hav Dryden brunk away To kifs this fbrinc, this mortal breathing fwint Shakefpeare Dryden And the vile huntfmen /rink Inuring children to fuffer fome pain, withou Jhrinking, is a'way to gain firmnefs and courage Lacke Q‘bz!»{:fi)z‘t"‘fl often plac' ‘Within his fanuary itfelf their fhrines Abominations! and with curfed thing His holy rites profan'd Falling on his knees before her fbrine He thus implor'd her pow'r What happier natures fbrink at with affright Pope is right The hard inhabitant contend Milton Dryden Lovers are in rapture at the name of. their fai idol; they lavith out all their incenfe upon tha fbrine, and cannot Lear the thought of admitting Watts blemifh therein 7o Sur1Nk. . a. participle pafl. frunk Jbrank, or fbrunken. T'omake to fhrink Not in ufe T contra lef itfelf int Are 21l thy conquefts, glories, triumphs, fpoils Shakefpeare Shrunk to this little meafure The fixth age fhift Into the lean and flipper'd pantaloon His youthful hofe, well fav'd, a world too wid Shakefpeare For his /brunk thanks If he lefiens the revenue, he will alfo fbrink th Taylor neceffity Keep it from coming too long, left it fhoul t room fhrivel ; to be drawn together by fom internal power But to be fill hot fummer's tantlings, an Shak. Cymbeline The fbrinking flaves of winter I am a fcribbled form, drawn with a pe "Upon a parchment, and againft this fir Shakefpeare's King Fobn Do 1 fbrink up I have not found that water, by mixture o iathes, will fbrink ox draw into lefs room Bacon's Natural Hiftory Ill-weav'd ambition how much art thou /brunk WWhen that this body did contain a fpirit A kingdom for it was too fmall a-bound SurRINK. # / pafs There is in this a crack, which feems a_fbrink or contra@ion in the body fince it was firt formed Woodavard 2, Contraltion of the body from fear o horrour This publick death, receiv'd with fuch a chear As not a figh, a look SuRI'NKER Shrinks back in danger, and forfakes my mind Dryden Nature ftands aghaft And the fair light which gilds this new-made orb Shorn of his beams, fbrink in » Dryden Suari'varty. #. /. Corrupte RIFFALT Not in ufe Elfe ne'er could he fo long protract his fpeech Shakefpeare If he had the condition of a faint, and the com to her hidden caufe, and is no more plexion of adevil, I had rather he fhould brive m than wive me Shake[peare Pope 3. To, exprefs fear, horrour, or pain, b Shrive but their title, and their monies poize A laird and twenty-pence pronounc'd with noife ‘When conftrued but for a plain yeoman go And a good fober two-pence, and well fo, Cleavel fhrugging, or contraéting the body There is no particular objet fo good, but i may have the thew of fome difficulty or unplea 4. To fall back as from danger T He fbriwes this woman Philofophy, that touch'd the heav'ns before 70 SHR1'VEL. w. n. [ fchrompelen, Dutch. To contrat itfelf into wrinkles Leaves if they fbriwel and fold up, give the drink Ewelyn If fhe fmelled to the frefheft nofegay it woul fbrivel and wither as it had been blighted 7 SHRI'VEL V a T Arbuth contrac int wrinkles He burns the leaves, the fcorching blaft invade Many /brink, which at the firtt would dare And be the foremoft men to execute Daniel's Civil War T laugh, when thofe who at the fpear are bol And vent'rous, if that fail them, fbrink and fea To endure exile, ignominy, bords Milton If2 man accuftoms himfelf to flight thofe firf motions to good, or fbrinkings of his confcienc from evil, confcience will by degrees grow dull an unconcerned South's Sermons The fky fbrunk upward with unufual dread And trembling Tyber div'd beneath his bed Dryden The gold-fraught veffel, which mad tempefts beat He fees now vainly make to his retreat And, when from far the tenth wave does appear Shrinks up in filent joy, that he 's not there Dryden Th tender corn, and fbriwels up the blades Dryden When the fiery funs too fiercely play And fbrivel'd herbs on with'ring ftems decay The wary ploughman, on the mountain's brow Undams his wat'ry ftores Dryden SHRI'VER. z. [ [from fbrive. feflor. *Not in ufe A con ' The ghoftly father now hath done his fhrif When he was made a _fbriver'twas for fhift Shakefpeare Suroub. z /. [yepud, Saxon. 1. A fhelter; a cover It would warm his fpirits To hear from me you had left Antony And put yourfelf under his' /broud, the univerfa landlord By mé invefted with a veil of clouds, And {waddled, as new-born, in leblejbmfl ¥ For thefe a receptacle I defign'd, 3:],}.‘ The wind Blow moift and keen, fhattering the pr Of .thefe fair fpreading ‘trees; :vhicilgbifiesfll‘lz%?la Some better fbroud, fome better warmth, to chesif Miltow's P"mdifiLgI}. Our limbs benumb?d 2. The drefs o fheet th dead a wind Now the wafted brands do glow Whilft the fcreech-owl, fcrccching loud Puts the wretch that lies in wo In remembrance of fhroud Shake They drop apace; byfl:r'xature fome decayj,‘t-m And forne the blafts of fortune fweep away Till naked quite of happinefs, alou g u Y i t e t We call for death, an 3. The fail-ropes. It feems to be take fometimes for the fails I turned back to the maft of the fhip; there found my fword among fome of the fbrouds. Sidn The tackle of my heart is cracktand burnt And all the fprouds wherewith my life fhould fai Are turned to one little hair Shakefpeare A weather-beaten veffel hold Gladly the port, tho' fbrouds and tackle torn Milto .S Bk b brn All judg'd a wreck could no proportion bear lent Dryden, S He fummons ftraight his denizens of air The lucid fquadrons round the fails repair Soft o'er the fhrowds agrial whifpers breathe That fzem'd but zephyrs to the crowd beneath Pope The flaming fbrouds fo dreadful did appear 72 SarROUD. v. a. [from the noun. 1. To fhelter ; to cover from dangerasa agent Under your beams I will me fafely /broud "What, talking with a prieft, lord chamberlain Your honour hath no fbriving work in hand Shakefpeare 4rb fant quality annexed to it, in refpe¢t whereof th will may fbrink and decline it Hooker The morning cock crew loud And at the found it frunk in hafte away And vanifh'd from our fight Shakefp. Hamler P'll embrace him with a foldier's arm That he fhall fbrink under my courtefy. Shakefp When he walks, he moves like an engine, an the ground fbrinks before his treading Shakefp for SHE ; which fee hear,at confeflion All fibres have a contraétile power, whereby the fhorten; as apears if a fibre be cut tranfverfely Shrink He wh 7o, iRIVE. w. a. [yenipan, Saxon. Granwille the wound gape 2./ [from fbrink. thrinks Love is a plant of the moft tender kind That fbrinks and fhakes with ev'ry ruffling wind the ends /brink, and mak a fbrink bewray The leaft felt touch of a degenerous fear Daniel's Civil War 2. To withdraw as from danger now I fin [from the verb. 1. Corrugation ; contrattion into lefs com Shakefpeare The noife increafes She comes, and feeble natur Mortimer fhrink the corn in meafure But now two paces of the vileft eart Is room enough doft thou lie {o low O mighty Cefar Zo SuriNk. w. #. preterite [ fbrunk, o Jbrank ; participle /brunken. [ycpincan Saxon. 3 behold a noble beaft at bay Fall'on Come offer at my /brize and I will help thee The SSEHFERE SH Shakefp dntony and Cleopatra Fairy Quee R werh He got himfelf to Mege, in hope to fbroud Hadlsof himfelf until fuch time as the rage of the peopl Knolles was appeafed The governors of Corfu caufed the fuburbst ( be plucked down, for fear that the TFurks, forouding themfelves in them, fhould with more eafe beSktKrnolles fiege the town Befides the faults men commit, wn'tlg this im mediat avowe afpect upon their religion, ther are others which flily /broud themfelves under'thfi Decaj qf Puljc ikirt of its mantle T 2. 'To fhelteras the thing covering g One of thefe trees, with al} his young ones, ma Raleig ' fbroud four hundred horfemen 3. Todrefs for the grave If I die before thee, jhroud m In one of thefe fame fheets Shakefpeare's Otbeg l The ancient Egyptian mummies were fbriu in a number of folds of linen, befmeared wit Bac gums, like ferecloth Whoever comes to fhroud me, do not harm That fubtile wreath of hair about min¢ alE 4. To clothe; to drefs 5. To cover or concea ded were V ou /b al wh g ni ev That fam fea o ca ho wi al ep fl f el ca I Spanfer ck fl th up They fel OUF forou 1 w k br w Under this thick-gr felves e d t For through this la V a ' ' o l w And in this cov e princ Culling t tem m . f Moon, {li es fk h t g l a t a f t And blow out a de Dr 2 fbroud my fhame T ' ; ‘ o s r d { \ the loud tumultu 'I[f\ithe u r t i b e t And on the mountain it frouds That in thic fhow'rs her rocky r"mmx:l/\fi Cl t w e v e o b t And darkens al {4 To |