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Show W S0 a C\O'VEREIGNTY. 7. [0 [ fouveraineté, Fr. Supremacy highef place 7 { Shak ‘don malefactors; to have the fole authority o 3 Before the Lord 7% Or from heav'n, claiming fecond fow'reignty There is-fome fou/ of goodnefs in things evil Would men obfervingly diftil it out. Shakefpeare as in defpite of heav'n Ny 6. A familiar appellation expreflin qualities of the mind Mitton Nothing does fo gratify a haughty humour a ¢¢ Alas, good foul Government of the Tongue b Sandrocottus; Seleucu dUGH. #. [ [from Jfous, French. fubterraneous drain 7. Human being. © 0" and charges, if at all, be wronght thedelfs woul be fo flown with waters, it being impoflible t itimake any addits or foaghs to drain them, that n = gins or machines could fuffice to lay and keep the Ray on the Creation 72 dry Another was found in finking a fough-pit ‘oucHr Waoodzvard The preterite and participl pafl. of fees Lam fught of them that afked not for me . 1am found of them that foxght me not. Ifa. 1xv. 1 4O0UL. 7. /. frapel, Saxon ; fae/, Danifh fual, Wlandick ; fel, Dutch. #. The immaterial and immortal {pirit of . man (8 When death was overcome, he opened heaven a well to the believing Gentiles as Jews : heaven til ¢ then was no receptacle to the fouls of either. Hooker o _ Perhaps, for want of food, the foul may pine But.that were ftrange, fince all things bad and good _Smce all God's creatures morta and divine Since God himfelf, is her eternal food Dawies He remembered them of the promifes, feals aed oaths, which by publick authority had pafie f:or_ concluding this marriage; that thefe, being re 4 ligious bonds betwixt God and their fou/s, could no by any politick ack of ftate be diffolved Hayward ~ So natural is. the knowledge of the JouFs immortality, and of fome ubi for the-future receptio of it, thatwe find fome- trat or other of it in mof barbarous. nations Heylyn Intellectual principle Eloquence the Joul, fong charms the fenfe Milton The eyes of our fou/s only then begin to fee Wwhen our bodily eyes are clofing 3. Vital principle The moral is the cafe of every foul of us. L'Eftr It is a republick ; thereare in it a hundred boutgeois, and about a thoufand fouls. Addifon's Ttaly Af Yet could not fuch mines, without great pain Law " Thou almoft mak't me waver in my. faith 'r§ hold opinion with Pythagoras : at fouls of animals infufe themfelye nfi{ the trunks of men Shak. Merch. of Penice hou fun, of this great world both eye and foul Milton 3 of the microfcope, difcovering animals which equa not a peppercorn Watts % matkigrecovered the fovereignty in fome degree, but wa forced to abandon to: him the country along th [ Sl Indus Arbuthnot on Coins "and fhe fays, up an Unenlarged fouls are difgufted with the wonder Rogers exterminate Let my heart be found in thy ftatutes Pfalm cxix. 80. Sound, and yet not trivial, catechetick inftitu tion Felton The rules are found and ufeful, and may ferve your devotion Wake My ftate of health none care to learn My life is here no foul's concern Saift 8. Adive power fire grandeur of mind ‘That he wants caution, he muft needs confefs But not a fou/, to give our arms fuccefs Young whole and found to themfelves New wak'd from foundef} lleep Soft on the flow'ry herb I found me lai SounD. adv pletely faft heartily ; com- But his wafte words return'd*to hi in vai So. found he flept that nought might him awakes SouND. 7 [ [ fonde, French. fea, fuch as may be founded Fairy Queens. A fhallow The found of Denmark, where {higs pay toll CamdenyWake Behold T come, fent from the Stygian found As a dire vapour that had cleft the ground T ingender with the night,.and- blaft the day Ben Fonfon Him young Thoofa bore, the bright increaf Of Phorcys, dreaded in the founds and feas. Pope. Sounbp. n. f. [ fonde, French. A probe, an inftrument ufed by chirurgeons to feel what is out of reach of the fingers Should give the prizes they had gain'd before Dryden Sou'LLEss. adj. [from foul.] Mean; low The patient being laid on a table, pafs the found {piritlefs till it meet with fome refiftances Sharp's Surgery. Slave, foullefs villain, dog, O rarely bafe ! Shak Sou'LsHOT. #. [ [ foul and shot.] Something paid for a foul's requiem amon the Romaniits In the Saxon times there was a funeral duty t be paid, called pecunia [epulchralis & [ymbolu Ayliffe's Parergon anima, and in Saxon foulfhot SouND. adj. [yund no morbid no difeafed ; not hurt 1 T fearc with: a plummet depth In this fecret there is a gulf, which whil He hath a heart as found asa bell, and his tongu hi hear thinks hi Shake[peare tongue fpeaks He hath received him fafe and found Luke, xv. 27 ‘We can preferv Unhurtour minds, and underftanding found. Miit The king vifits all around Comforts the fick, congratulates the found Honours the princely chicfs w live we fhall never found Hogker You are, Haftings, much too fhallo To found the bottom of the after-times 2. To try ; to examine. Has he never before founded you in this bufinefs ? Shakefpeare's King Lear for wha to tr Shake[peare Invites:thefe loxrds, and thofe he meant to Joumd. I am fall'n out with my more headier will To take the indifpos'd and fickly fi For the found man 7o SouND. . a Shake[peare's Henry TV Saxon. 1. Healthy ; hearty is the clapper Soundly The meflenger approaching to him fpake; Furnithe Joul'd filton's Paradife Lofts In balmy fieat Every fox/ in heav'n fhall bend the knee. Milton Griping, and fill tenacious of thy hold Wouldft thou the Grecian chiefs, though largel Spenfer's Ircland. It isapplied to fleep. 5. Faft 5 hearty. 10. Intelligent being in general Sou'LpiER See SOoLDIER Sou'LEDp. adj. [from foul. with mind They referved their tit.es, tenures,- and figniories rowl 9. Spirit ftreng ; luity 4. Valid; not failing= Earth, air, and feas through empty fpace woul And heav'n would fly before the driving fou/ Dryden Stout The men are very ftrong and able of body; and therefore either give found ftrokes with their club wherewith they fight, or elfe fhoot firong fhots wit their bows Abbat Diyden Alexander's Grecian colonies in the Indies wer malmof Shakefpeare's Fulius Ceefar Shakefpeare Keep the poor fox/ no longer in fufpenfe Your charge is fuch as does not need defence 104, That I my much-lov'd fov'reignty fhall want . And her new beauty may thy heart invade. Dryd i Let us above all things poffefs our fouls wit ~awful apprehenfions of the majefty and fovercignt be life, and joy t ledge is to know that we know him not as indee he is, neither can know him ; and our fafeft elo Hogkeroquence concerning him is filence Sing all a green willow Her hand on her bofom, her head on her knee S0 low his roots to hell's dominion tend. Dryden 1 well forefee, whene'er thy fuit I grant to kno make mention of his name; yet our foundeft know The poor fou/ fat finging by a fycamore tree to heav'n afcend not erroneous; orthodox althoug Who down the town, that her eldeft fon is like you Shakefpeare's Henry IV &4, That holds the woods in awful fow'reignty Requires a depth of lodging in the ground of God 2. Right th This is a poor mad foz/ Jove's own tree 21, High as his topmoft bough this is by way of refemblance to health, and th Watts's Logick words are metaphorical Three wenches where I ftood, cry'd "this piece of ufurped fO'vtr'eigflf_y over our brethren if you fpeak of found do&rine, or found fpeech Shake[peare Milton 5. Interiour power 3 Dawvies A mighty hunter thence he:thall be fil' Watts He has the very fou/ of bounty Chari-(y, the fuul of all the reft "%making war and peace, are the true marks of fovereignty Or to the deep ! ‘Df)'d""- When a word, which originally fignifics an particular object, is attributed to feveral other obje€ls, on account of fome evident reference or relation to the eriginal idea, this is peculiarly calle an analogical word ; fo a found or healthy pulfe, Jound' digeftion, found {leep, are all fo called, wit reference to a found and healthy conftitution5 but pal part ‘trates and officers over them5 to punifh and par The fatal prefent to the flames defign'd 4. Spirit ; eflence ; quinteffence ; princi magif to inftitut But Capys, and the reft of foundér mindy make the'word fou/ ferve for all thefe principles Happy were England, wou!d this virtaous princ To give laws unto 2 people Joln voices, all ye living fouls ! ye birds Bear on your wings, and in your notes, his praife Milton In common difcourfe and writing we leave ou the words vegetative, fenfitive, and rational; an Give me pardon That I, your vaffal, have employ'd and pain' "\ Your unknown fovereignty Shakefpeare "SiTake on his grace the foc'reignty thereof SO That finging up to heaven-gate afcend fuprem power; highelt degree of excellence ¥ SO0 Dryden I.was in jeft, And by that offer meant to found your breaft Dirydens I've founded my Numidians, man by man And find 'em ripe for/a revolt Addifor's Cates 7o SouND..v ing-line Th fhipme 'To try with the found deeme tha they dre nea t fome country, and Jounded, and found it near twenc fathoms 5155 XXVit Beyond |