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Show SP %yith what a fpring his furious foul broke loofe Where there is a continued endeavour of th And left the limbs #till quivering on the ground Addifor's Cato parts of a body to put themfelves into anothe ftate, the progrefs may be much more flow ; fine .1 Aleak; a ftart of plank it was a great while before the texture of the corpufcles of the fteel were fo altered as to make the Each petty han " Can fteer a fhip becalm'd ; but he that wil Govern, and carry her to her ends, muf ‘em lofe their former fpringinefs Boyle The air is a thin fluid body, endowed with elafticity and [pringinefs, capable of condenfation an rarefa&ion Bentley kno His tides, his currents; how to fhift his fails Where her fprings are, her leaks, and how to fto Ben Fonfon's Cataline .., A fountain ; an iflue of water from th clean.sh data import.tsv out README earth Now ftop thy /prings ; my fea thall fuck them dry X And fwell fo much the higher by their ebb SPRINGHALT. #. /. [ /pring and halt. A lamenefs by which the horfe twitche up his legs Springs on th Dawies He adds the running [prings and ftanding lakes 2 And bounding banks for winding rivers makes Dryden Nile hears him knocking at his fevenfold gates " And feeks his hidden /pring, and fears his nephew e take it That never faw them pace before, the fpavi And fpringbalt reign'd among them Shakefpeare's Henry VIII tops of hills pafs through a grea . deal of pure earth, with lefs mixXture of other wa- terse Bacon's Nat. Hiftory When in th' effe@s fhe doth the caufes know T, And feeing the ftream, thinks wher thef/.»ring dot rife And feeing the branch, conceives the root below . Thefe things fhe views without the body's eyes They've all new legs, and lame ones; one woul Shakefpeare's Henry VI SEP 5 SPRUNGLE. 7./ [from fpring.] A fpringe an elaftick noofe Woodcocks arrive firft on the north coaft, wher every plath-fhoot ferveth for fpringles to take them 70 SPr1'NGLE. @, a pofe, for /prinkle Carew Mifprinted, I fup This is Timon's laft Who, ftuck and fpangled with your flatteries Wafhes it off, and fpringles in your face Your reeking villany. - Shakefp. Timon of Athens fates Dryden He bathed himfelf in cold Jpring water in th midft of winter Locke SPRUNGTIDE. 7z [ [/pring and tide.) Tide at the new and full moon; hig tide ¥/t ing into beds of rock or clay, breaks out in fprings Love, like fpringtides, full and high Swells in every youthful vein But each tide does lefs fupply Till they quite fhrink in again If a flow in age appear *Tis but rain, and runs not clear Dryden's Tyransick Love " The water that falls down from the clouds, fink 7 commonly at the bottom of hilly ground = Locke .+ A fource; that by which any thing i fupplied ‘Lo that great {pring which doth great kingdom move The facred pring whence right and honour ftreams Diftilling virtue, fhedding peace and lov « In every place, as Cynthia theds her beams. Daw I'move, I fee, I fpeak, difcourfe, and know .., [ Though nowI am, I was not always fo g bns Then that from which I was muft be before - Whom, as my fpring of being, I adore. Dryden Rolling down through fo many barbarous ages _ from the fpring of Virgil, it bears along with i the filth of the Goths and Vandals Dryden He has a fecret [pring of fpiritual joy, and th continual feaft of a goo ¢ confcience within forb.ids him to be miferable it clean.sh data import.tsv out README tha Bentley Rife ; beginning About the fpring of the day, Samuel called Sau to the top of the houfe 1 Sam. ix. 26 lo. Caufe ; original . The reafon of the quicker or flower termina, tion of this diftemper, arifes from thefe thre A fprings Blackmore The firft fprings of great events, like thofe o great rivers, are often mean and little Sering 1 P RT NG AL, }fl A youth Sawift Obfolete Before the bull fhe pi&tur'd winged love With his young brother fport, light flutterin Upon the waves as each had bee a dove Thevone his bow and fhafts, the other Jprin A burning tead about his head did move As in their fire's new love both triumphing. Spen/ /SPRINGE, 7. /. [from Jpring.] A gin; noofe which, faflened to any elaftic body, catches by a {pring or jerk ! As a woodcock to my own fpringe, Ofrick P'm juitly kill'd with mine own trcachery Shak Let goats for food their loaded udder lend But neither fpringes, nets, nor fnares e ploy Dryden ~Wlth hairy j};ringes we the bird betray Sl‘g},lt Anes of hair furprife the finny prey. Pope SPRI'N2 GER. « » 2. /s [fr fro /pr3ing. roufes game . / J r vg: i e wh O { SPRUNGINESs. 2. £ [from fpringy.] Elaf /Wity ; power of refloring itfelf Moft people die when the moon chiefly reigns that is, in the night, or upon or near a fpringtide Grew's Cofmologia Ser1'NGY. adj. [from fpringe. 1. Elaftick; having the power of reftorin itfelf Had not the Maker wrought the fpringy frame Such as it is, to fan the vital flame The blood, defrauded of its nitrous food Arbuthnot If our air had not been a fpringy body, no animal could have exercifed the very funéion of refpiration ; and yet the ends of refpiration are no ferved by that fpringinefs, but by fome other unknown quality Bentley's Sermons 2. [from jpring.] Full of {prings or fountains Not ufed Where the fandy or gravelly lands are [pring or wet, rather marl them for grafs than corn Mortimer's Hufbandry 7o SPRI'NKLE. w. a. [ fprinkelen, Dut. 1. To fcatter ; to difperfe in fmall mafes Take handfuls of afhes of the furnace Mofes Jprinkle it towards the heaven 2. To {fcatter in drops and le Ex. ix. 8 Sprinkle water of purifying upon them Num. viil. 7 3. To befprinkle; to wath by fprinkling wet, or duf Let us draw near with a true heart His limbs and bodyj then approach'd the door D‘Q't{zn's AEncid Poffefs'd the porch 7o SprI'NKLE. v. #n. To perform the at of {cattering in {fmall drops The prieft {hall fprinkle of theoil with his finger Lev. xiv Baptifm may well enough be performed by [prin Ayliffe's Parergon kling, or effufion of water When dext'rous damfels twirlthe Jprinkling mop And cleanfe the fpatter'd fafh, and fcrub thc‘flaifs Gay's Trivia Know Saturday appears On SPRI'NKLER. 7. /. [from jprinkle. that fprinkles 7o SPr1T [rpnycean, Sax. Jpruy @.a To throw out; to ejec ten, Dutch. with force Commonly /pirt. Toads fometimes exclude or fprit out a dark an liquid matter behind, and a venomous conditio ther be perhaps therein ma but it cannot b Broqn called their urine Zo Spr1T.v. n [ypnycean, Saxon ; fpruyten, Dutch. To fhoot ; to germinate to fprout. Ufed of barley wetted fo malt SeriT. # /. [from the verb. Shoot {prout The barley, after it has been couched four days will fweat a little, and fhew the chit or fprit at th root-end of the corn Mortimer's Hufbandry Seri‘rsarv. n /o [ fprit and jail. Th fail which belongs to the boltfprit maft Dig Our men quitted themfelves of the firethip, b cutting the [pritfail tackle oft with their fhor hatchets Wileman SPRITE. 2 /. [contralted from fpiriz. fpirit an incorporeal agent The [prites of fiery termagants in flam Mount up, and take a falamander's name SPRI'TEFULLY FUuLLY. adv Pépe [See SPriGHT Vigoroully; with life and ar dour The Grecians fpritefully drew from the darts th corfe Had cool'd and languifh'd in th' arterial road While the tir'd heart had ftrove, with fruitlefs pain To puth the lazy tide along the vein Blackmore's Creation This vaft contra¢tion and expanfion feems unintelligible, by feigning the particles of air to b Jpringy and ramous, or rolled up like hoops, or b any other means than a repulfive power. Nezvton Though the bundle of fibres which conftitut the mufcles may be fmall, the fibres may be ftron and [pringy "The prince with living water [prinkled o'e in full af furance of faith, having our hearts fprinkled fro an evil confcience Hebreaws Wings he wor Of many a colous'd plume [prinkled with gold, Mils And hearft'it, bearing it to fleet. Chapman's Iiad SerI'TELY. adwv. [from fprite. Gaily You have not feene young heiffers, highly kept Fill'd full of daifies at the field, and drive Home to their hovels; all fo fprirely given That no roome can containe them Chapman. Sprong folete The preterite of /pring Ob Not miftrufting, till thefe new curiofities fprong up, that ever any man would think our labou herein mifpent, or the time waftefully confumed Haoker 7o SprOUT. w. n. [rpnycean, Saxon Jprayten, Dutch Sprout, jpri¢, and b a very frequent tranfpofition /pirc o Jpurt, are all the fame word. 1. To fhoot by vegetation ; to germinate The _/‘brmting leaves that faw you here And call'd their fellows to the fight Cowvley Try whether thefe things in the [grouting do increafe weight, by weighing them before they ar hanged up; and afterwards again, when they ar Jprouted Bacon Tha leaf faded bu th young buds Jproute on, which afterwards opened into fair leaves Bacon's Natural Hiffory We find no fecurity to prevent germination having made trial of grains, whofe ends, cut off have notwithftanding fprouted. Brown's Vulg. Er Old Baucis is by old Philemon fee Sprouting with fudden leaves of {prightly green Dryden Hence fprouting plants enrich the plain and wood; For phyfick fome; and fome defiga'd for food Blackmore Envic |