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Show S ‘ quence of this Thegod, though loth, yet was c.on(tr:tm'd t'obey For longer time than that no living wigh Below the earth might fufler‘_d be to ftay g, back again him brought to living light Fairy Queen Trafficke, or rove ye, and like theeves opprefi Poor ftrange adventurers ; expofingf Your foules to danger, and your lives to wo Chapman 1f he fet induftrioufly and fincerely to perfor "% " ¢he commands of Chrift, he can have no groun of doubting but it fhall prove fuccefsful to him and fo all tha he hath to d prayer, and ufe of the means & to endeavour b is to qualify himfel _ for this bleffed condition. Hammond's Fundamentals {ia Itleaves inftruétion, and fo infiruors, to th L. fobriety of thefettled articles and rule of the church Holyday Some are fall'n, to difobedience fall'n; Milton's Paradife Loff God make in his own image an intel hi le@ual creature, andfo capable of dominion. Locke ., On thefe terms; notin a conditiona niy, petition: anfwered by as O goddefs! tell what I would fay sise Thou know'ft it, and I fgel too muc_h to pray forgivenef " 180 may the guilt of all my broken vows clean.sh data import.tsv out README My perjuries to thee, be all forgotten "4 4s here my foul acquits thee of my death ¥ s here I part without an angry thought. Rozve 8o may kind rains their vital moifture yield And fwell the future haryveft of thy field Pope "F Provided that; on condition that : modo Be not fad ~ Bvil into the mind of God or ma "May come and go, [o unapprov'd, and leav "No fpot or blame behind. ~ Milton's Paradife Lof 8o the do@rine be but wholefome and edifying " thoug there thould be a want of exa&nefs in th ""I'manner of fpeaking or reafoning, it may be over2'1"looked Atterbury 1 Too.much of love thy haplefs friend has prov'd 122Too many giddy foolifh hours are gone May the remaining few know only friendfhip o thou, my deareft, trueft, beft Alicia Vouchfafe to lodge me in thy gentle heart A pattner there;- I will give up mankind Rorve «» In like manner; noting conceflion o one propofition and affumption of ano‘ther: anfivering to as sawar fhould be undertaken upon a Jjuft motive,/o a prince ought to confider the condition h g 1810 when he engers on it Swift #/+ 8 fometimes returns the fenfe of word or fentence going before, and i bed to avoid repetition : as, the rw rothers awere valiant, but the eldef more fo; that is, more waliant "f‘rench articl fame.manner 100 15 not t /1anguage, no ~mended /e is ofte This mod be ufed bu even in tha awa Th ufed in th of exprefin familia to be com The fat with plenty fils my heart Whe lean wnth'lov§ makes me too fo Ao /7 Cowley O'thmks hx_s wife is virtuous, though no /o Pleas'd and patient till the truth he know Not to admire is all the artT kno Denbam fo On mayy as well fay, tha /9.fhall by © on Creech's Horace the conflagratio national, as to fay that the deluge wa Burnet ) § 4 Iy However (ot within themfelve they are 20 you they wil} be valiant by defpair oL, II drench Many of our prince Lie drown'd and fozk'd in mercenary bloo So do our vulgar drench their peafant limb In blood of princes Shakefpeare's Henry V Their land fhall be foaked-with blood Ifa. xxxiv. 7 There deep Galefu Wormwood, put into the brine you foak you corn in, prevents the birds eating it Mortimer 2. To draw in through the pores Thou, whofe life's a dream of lazy pleafure *Tis all thy bus'nefs, bus'nefs how to fhun To bafk thy naked body in the fun Suppling thy ftifien'd joints with fragrant oil Then in thy fpacious garden walk a while a expletive, though it implies fome laten or furd comparifon. In French, / An aftringenit is not quite/o proper, where relax To fuck the moifture up and foak it in Arbuthnot 3. To drain ; to exhauft thus be it b There is Percy; if your father will do me an honour, fo3 if not, let him kill the next Perc ftiny fo ; if it be not, fo ferve his prince 17. A form of petition No man is too good t Shakefpeare However much I think, an irregular expreffion only fumptuous don This is An exclamation after fomethin o known Corrupted errone could not but foak his exchequer Wotton a lixivium of vegetable alkaline afhe I think from ceffez ufe So"aRER. #. /. [from foak. 1. He that macerates in any moifture 2. A great drinker. In low language Soar. z /. [yape, Saxon 5 fapo, Latin. A fubftance ufed in wathing, ‘made o Somuch as you admire the beauty of his verfe his profe is full as good Pope 19. So /6 term, perhap t Plants that draw much nourithment from th earth, and fozk and exhauft it, hurt all things tha grew by them Bacon A te fparer than a faver; for though h had fuch means to accumulate, yet his forts, an his garrifons, and his feaftings, wherein he wa Shake[peare if it be my de The armourer and his man, to enter the lifts S9 pleafe your highnefs to behold the fight. Shak So much as a can Dryden Thisfeem oufly for fuck Ready are th' appellant and defendant 18 foaks the yellow fands Dryden was your fpeaker, Madam Ben Fonfon's Cataline him{elf. I will never bear a bafe mind fee that his health decays, hi to keep wet till moifture is imbibed; t O, fo, and had you a counci A word of aflumption Woodward 70 Soak. w. a 1. To macerate in any moifture; to fteep well 16 eftate waftes, yet the habitual thirft after his cup drives him to the tavern, though he has in his vie the lofs of health and plenty ; the leaft of which h confeffes is far greater than the tickling of hi palate with a glafs of wine, or the idle chat of Joaking club Locke 14. It notes a kind of abrupt beginning ing the urinary paffages is neceflary bears with it all fuch moveable matter a Let a drunkar And on it faid a century of prayers Such as I can, twice o'er, I'll weep and figh And, leavingfo his fervice, follow you. Shakefp tha Baccn 3. Todrink gluttonoufly and intemperately. This 1s a low term grave mor occurs at this time is littl mak it wil through ice in the veflel, and lefs apt to diflelve furface Whe With wild wood-Jeaves and weeds I ha' frew'd hi 15, It fometime and pour wate Rain, foaking into the ftrata which lie near th it is ; this is the ftate Of ladies too ? Wh as to Joa than ordinarily How forrow fhakes him So, now the tempeft tears him up by th' roots Anrd on the ground extends the noble ruin. Dryd 1,80 grant my fuit, as I enforce my might . In love to be thy champion. Dryd. Knight's Tale Here then exchange we mutuall harde As tohis ufing ludicrous expreflions, my opinio is, that they are not fo Pope The bleft to-day is as completel/2 As who began a thoufand years ago Pope Thu it, f upo Common-place books have been long ufed b induftrious young divines, and ftill continue /5 Swift 12 veflel, putting a canvafs between He was great ere fortune made him fo. Dryden I laugh at every one, faid an old cynick, wh laughs at me. Do you fo 2 replied the philofopher then you live the mexrieft life of any man in Athens Addifon They are beautiful in themfelves, and muc morefo in the noble language peculiar to that grea poet Addifon 13. At this point Une.. And fo from heav'n to deepeft hell For having once been guilty, well they know To a revengeful prince they ftill are fo Dryden and any unétuous {ubftance I would not have thee linger in thy pain So fo Shake[peare's Othello So fo; it works: now, miftrefs, fit you fat. Dry Soap is a mixture of a fixed alkaline falt-and oil its virtues are cleanfing penetrating attenuating and refolving; and any mixture of any oily fubftance with falt may be called a foap Arbutbnot on Aliments 20. S0 /0. [ cofs, cofz, Ttalian.] Indifferently not much amifs nor well He 's not very tall, yet for his years he's tall His leg is but /o fo, and yet 'tis well. Shakefpeare Z;': a ./Ill C.‘fi - A bubble blown with water, firft made tenaciou by difiolving a little /oap in it, after a while will appear tinged with a great variety of colours Deliver us from the naufeous repetition of A and So, which fom /5 fo writers, I may call the fo, are continually founding in our ears Felton on the Clafficks 21. So then fore Thus then it is that Nezwton's Opticks Soap-earth is found in great quantity on the lan there nea So then the Volfcians &and but as at firf Ready, when time thall prompt them t make roa Upon 's again Shakefpea ialanuis To a war are required a juft quarrel; ‘fifficien forces, and a prudent choice of the defigns: f then,I will firfk juftifv the quarrel forces, and propound defigns 70 Soak @. [yocian, Saxon. feve mile Woodward As rain-water diminifhes their fait, fo the moiftening o balance th Bacon them with chamber-lee or Joap-fuds add Mortime thereto S0'aPBOILER. 7. /i [ foap and boil. whofe trade is to make foap ipboiler condoles with me o in _/ba.([rg will draw i More than the common blocks river Hermus Soap-athe are much commended, after the foapboilers have done with themy for cold or four lands Mortimer 1. Tolie fteeped in moifture For thy concei the banks of th from Smyrna Shakefpeare On the duties o Addifon's Spesiator RT. 7. Jo [ japonaria, Lat. I a {pecies of campion Mi2IiEl 2. To enter by degrees into pores Lay a heap of earth in greas fiofts upon a hollo Y . Therefore; for this reafon; in confe. $ 6LOA |