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Show er Devoid of autward fenfe and native firength He was chofen, though he ftood low upon th s\ Coverd with charmed cloud from view of day {ay roll, by a very unufual concurrence of providentia events, happened to be fped Fairy Queen " Doyou think meafwallow, an arrow, or a bullet 'Have I, in my poo « dition of thought an col motion . extremeft inch of poflibility If pray'r the expe Earth receive As tribute, fuch a fumlefs journey brough Skakefpeare Of incorporeal fpeed, her warmt 'Could alter high decrees, I to that plac ] Would fpeed before thee, and be louder heard. A/ A . [rpeoran, to grow rich 24+ have good fuccefs Philips Saxon. T .....Jn his bad errand a fparrow flying them wha Of the queen's fpeed, is gone Shakefpeare O Lord, I pray thee (end me good fpecd Gen. XXiva 19 an offence it wa Ser'eprry. adv hafte; quickly i Shew him this letter Not to proceed To have any condition, good or bad t awa The tyrant's felf, a thing unus'd, bega To feel his heart relent with meer compaffion Led hither by pure love Shakefpeare's AIl's avell that ends avell Satan, tow'rd the coaft of earth beneath , Down from th' ecliptick fped with hop'd fuccefs 4 Throws his fteep flight in many an airy wheel Milto The prieft replied no more Cam to deftroy; to kill; t ¢ The lukewarm blood came rufhing thro' the wound Dryden Adire dilemma | either way I'm fped ) 3f foes they write, if fricnds they read, me dead Poflis Pope which relate to judicial proceedings Shakefpeare's Winter's Tale You kill her double Some have delivered the polity of fpirits, tha Ayliffe's Parcrgon they ftand in awe of charms, fpe/ls, and conjura L Toaffift; to help forward. tions, letters, charaéters, notes, and dathes Brown's Fulgar Errours Thou durft not thus difparage glorious arms Had not Jpell Lucin Reach'd her midwife hands to Jpeed the throes Dryden And black enchantments, fome magician's art AMilr. Aganift Arm'd thee or charm'd thee ftrong . Topitious Neptune fteer'd their courfe by nigh ith rifing gales, that fped their happy flight Begin, begin; the myttick [pe// prepare. Milton Y ourfelf you fo excel When you vouchfafe to breathe my thought Dryden Speed the foft intercourfe from foul t foul, "1 r'l‘_‘ Waft a figh from Indus to the pole To make profperous ; to mak ceed E";C:; intf)f any bring not this doctrine Pope That, like a fpirit, with this fpe/ to fuc Of my own teaching I am caught , o QLEre Mild Lucin Then reach'd her widwife handstofpeed the throes receive him no Your houfe, neither bid him God Jpeed Vou, II to be with 7, and not with y ; and if this be o, the And fpoke th difclofe St. Paul pow'rful [pe//s that babes to birt Dryden 1 Dryden's Juv. Ded it is falfe fpelled throughout 2. To read by naming letters fingly I never yet faw man How wife, how noble, young, how rarely featur'd But fhe would fpe/l him backward ; if fair fac'd She'd fwear the gendeman fhould be her fifter Shakefpeare 3. To charm 1 have you faft Unchain your fpirits now with pe/ling charms And try if they can gain your liberty. Sbgh. H. V1 This, gather'd in the planetary hour With noxious weeds,and fpel/'d with words of pow'r Dire ftepdames in the magic bowl infufe. Dryder 7o SpeLL, V. 7 1. To form words of letters And he a god, who could but read or fzell. Dryden By pafting on the vowels and confonants on th fides of four dice, he has mad children, whereby his eldeft fo himfelf into fpelling The Latin being written o with the mother tongue, b this.a play for hi in coats has playe Locke the fame charatte the afiitance of Jpelling book it s legible Spezator Another caufe, which hath maimed our language, is a foolith opinion that we ought to fpo/ exaétly as we fpeak Savift 2. To read 1fI read aught in heaven Or heav'n write aught of fatg, by what the ftars Voluminous or fingle chatacters In their conjun&ion met, give me to fpell Sorrows and labours, oppofition, hate Attend thee Milton's Paradife Loft ‘When gowns, not arms, repell' The fierce Epirote, and the African bold ‘Whether to fettle peacey or to unfol The drift of hollow ftates, hard to be fpel'd. Ail And may at laft my weary ag Find out the peaceful hermitage Where I may fit and rightly fpel Of every ftar that heav'n doth fhew And every herb that fips the dew Aittorn unfkilfully 3. Torea As to his underftanding, they bring him in voi of atl notion; a rude unwritten blank, fent int the world only to read and fpel out a God in th works of creation Soutl To SreLT w. n Tofplit bad word SPe'LTER and are fpe ;:rgpen cowit at the inftance of one or both of th REACS In the criticifm of fpelling, the word fatire ough to break Feed geefe with oats, fpelted beans, bailey meal or ground malt mixed with beer. Mort. Hufbardry Start not; her actions fhall be holy You hear my Jpe// is lawful: do not fhua her Until you fee her die again; for the ludicial ats are all thofe writings and matter [ fpellen, Dutch. 1. To write with the proper letters Dryden SPEIGHT. n fi [picus martius, Lat. bird SPELL. ./ [ypel, Saxon, a word. 1. A charm confiting of fome words o occult power. Thus Horace ufes words Sunt verba & voces quibus hunc lenir dolore Dryden « To execute; to difpatch Milton's Paradife Lofi The fpeedy could outfly, or valiant meet With a fpeeding thruft his heart he found flying part. pafl an pret @. a Jpelled or fpelr With poifon'd darts, which not the good could fhun mifchief; to ruin to be oni Let it be enough what thou haft done When fpotted deaths ran arm'd through ev'ry ftreet . But fped his fteps-along the hoarfe refounding fhore To difpatch foun How near's the other army ~Near, and on fpeedy foot : the main defcr Stands on the hourly thought Shak, King Lear Back with fpecdieft fai Zophiely of cherubim the fwifteft wing She "Hearing fo much, will [pecd her foot again To furnifh in hafte millet feed 5 but it wa SPE‘ED Y. ad;. [from fpeed.] Quick; fwift nimble; quick of difpatch _Tohatten; to put into quick motien Dryden's Spanifb Friar the feeds of the ivy-leaved Jpeedavell, or fmall henbit Derbam's Phyfico-Thelogy But, not difpos'd to ruth or mercy then "He fped him thence home to his habitation. Fairf Shakefpeare's King Lear In afearcity in Silefia a rumour was fpread of it rainin Their toil is fo extreme as they cannot endur it above fouf hours in a day, but are fucceeded b Jpells: the refidue of the time they wear out a CW‘L'W coytes and kayles What fmall knowledge was, in them did dwell SPe'EDINESS. #. [ [from /pecdy.] Th quality of being fpeedy Spe'EpWELL. #. /. [weronica, Latin. Fluellin A plant Waller {en Wit Send fpeedily to Bertran 5 charge him ftrictl South 1. Ships heretofore in feas like fithes fped clean.sh data import.tsv out README The mightieft fill upon the fmalleft fed [from Jpeedy. Poft fpeedily to your hufband " Sever fo well Knolles Thefe were violators of the firft temple; an 2% thofe that profaned and abufed the fecond, fped n e ISPEED. . a wow 10 difpatch in hafle quigkly Shakefpeare's Henry IV The prince your fon, with mere conceit and fea ‘rafhly to depart out of the city, which might b .ento them dangerous, although they fhould fpee b mbetter More 4- Succefs ; event of any ation or incident By my regard, but kill'd none fo. Shak. Wint, Tale fhewe the highway, his docible He that rides at high fpecd, and with a-piftol kill . I've look'd on thoufands, who have fped the bette Macicau his fpeed upo 3. The courfe or pace of a horfe Make me not fighted like the bafilifk horfe's patient fervice at th When they ftrain to their utmoft fpecd, there i ftill the wonted diftance between them and thei aims: all their eager purfuits bring them no acquefts Decay of Piety Milton "+. To fucceed well or ill and light 2. Hafte ; hurry ; difpatch "1 told you then he fhould prevail, and fpee iy th nefs, and defire of glory iy :":.And he, that 's once denied, will hardly fpeed Shakefpeare .+ Now if this fuit lay in Bianca's pow'r "'x. How quickly fhould you fpeed Shakefpeare " When firft thistempter crofs'd the gulph from hell obferv plopgh Timon is thrank, indeed s W 2. A turn of work ; a viciffitude of labout A low word 7o SPeLL Speed! to deferibe whofe fwiftnefs sumber fails Milton See where Idwall fpeeds ! a trufty foldier Fell SPEED. . /. [ poed, Dutch. I. Quicknefs ; celerity 1 fpeeded hither with the ver 3P 8P 2. /i A kind of fenrimetal Metals in fufion do not flame, for want of CO pious fume; except (pelter, which fumes copioufly and thereby flames Newton Z0 SPEND. @. a. [ypendan, Saxon ; /peydere, Ttalian. 1. To confume to exhauft to wa Our _cannons malice vainly fhall be Againft th® invulnerable clouds I will very gladly /pend and be fpent f 2 Cor. xii. 15 There is oil in the dwelling of the wife, but Prov. xxi. 20 foolith man [pendeth it up Ve muit exafperat The almighty Vicor to fpead all his rage M7 Mone is brought into Englan Jpending here lefs of foreig w carr to aarke ca bu commodities than wha pa by nothin for Lacke 2. T |