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Show ST i . which refpeé makes the fate of apoftates defperatel Hammond gogh,e moft ung:cufable, fo the mof 11. Solemn pomp ; appearance of greatnefs dangerous fta Thus have his prayers for others altered an Relate what Latium wa Ther g i t o t fl e e p a pa Declase th i p i i c Stationary point r i x n t from wh reflion anid having but two more to run through, that is Brown's Vulgar Errours clean.sh data import.tsv out README jts flate and declination Tumours have their feveral degrees and times , a5 beginning, augment, ffare, and declination Wifeman il 1 [eftat, French. feflion whetein any part of the body of thofe imperial laws hath the juft force of law, otherwife than as cuftom hath particularly inriinal@, Th communit 1t Ji Puth th Wer I'll be alone Dryden To appear in their robes would be a troublefom Collicr piece of flate At home furrounded by a fervile crowd Prompt to abufe, and in detraction'loud necefiity of prayer, and confef not afk in the fume form To fate it fairly, imitatio tageous way for a tranflator t the greateft wrong which ca STA'TELINESS 1 er than his brethren Grandeur ; majemck appearance gu& manner : di(rnir_y au More's Antidote againfp Arbeifm of pride ; affected dignity Agenor punétual ready blif! glad fuc 1 R REnSAobtrude 5 BERO Did on his own defign itfel Stwell'd his aft Tobks to bigger! fateline[s a fho or remove him fro "'_/-‘_["'Oln Srately. a horfe 2. Appearanc weh st Sy s - Mg noi the fame God, ma Decay of Piety is the moft advanfhew himfelf, bu be done to the me We e may colleét thes excellency of the under ftanding then by the glorious remainders of it now and guefs at the fateling/s of the building by th v magnificence of its ruins For fatelinefs and majefty what is comparable t o not what arts, eor e methods He will confider wirh i o S lobv o i ARPACALIQUINIIIROUS acknowledge th Dryden mory of the dead I pretended not fully to fate, much lefs demonftrate, the truth contained in the text. Atterbury Though I don't pretend to flate the exact degre of mifchief that is done by it, yet its plain and natural tendency to do harm is fuflicient to juftif Law the'mufl abfolute condcrm:/;.xi] n of it Pope's Statius th Is cafe fated to any fober heathen, h would never guefs why they wh (.:""‘ ul"_s ymperious lord forget to 1eign Quit all his fate, defcend, and ferve again commonwealti ou ‘Where leaft of flate;~there moft of love is thown ySpiden ; it to be what it no Hale oary feet, Milton The fwan rows] her ffat aEC wit He was ftaid, and in his gai Butler Preferv'd a grive majeftick fiate Such cheerful modefty, fuch humble fate Waller Moves certain love Strong was their plot Its prefent ftate fatet and yet with a modeft fenfe of his misfortunes Bacon's Henry V11 Mode of government izl duced i of fov'reig She inftructed him how he fhould keep fate Eftate; figniory; pof No ffate can be name the mark Abroad begirt with men, and {words, and fpears Prigr His very flate acknowledging his fears It God has delivered me up to evil {pirits, to b dragged by them to places of torments, could i be any comfort to me that they found me upon Law bed of flate 12. Dignity; grandeur Their flates far off; and they of wary wit. Danicl receiy' Let my attendants wait Keep the flate of the queftion in your eye. Boyle king The awful axes and the rods before. Dryden's Ain g i t a o o t c f d M g TFhe deer, that endureth the womb but eigh months, and is complete at fix years, cannot liv much more than thirty, as having paflfed two general motions, that is, its beginning and increafe Many other inconveniences are confequent < this flating of this queftion; and particularly that by thofc which thus ffateit, there hath never ye been affigned any definite number of fundamentals Hammond on Fundamentals pow'r In flate the monarchs march'd j the lictors boi Dryden's Zneid Like the papifts is your poet's ffate Pope Poor and difarm'd . ."™, W 2. To reprefent in all the circumftances o modification i When in triumphant fate the Britith mufe True to herfelf, (hall barb'rous aid refufe Rofecommon Law amended the flate of his own heart S ST If any thing more than your fpor Begumont's Pfyche e confi wil bu re pleaf an flat o lif t flate nobl kne Did move your greatnefs, and thi ; but wifel She hated fatelinef her title due ( wa fegar 4 Wiha ca atio appli wha s metho wha arts wha Betterton To call on him, he hopes it is no ‘othe Q God t abl accep mof f bufin world mak But for your health's fake. Shak. Troilusand Cref] [ ‘Omfi"te‘ 36 E LAU devofs holin o lif trad o lif mak an A flate's ange maate ele loft ufi gra 'Au. o piety an tion yoLas Should not take knowledge either of fools or wot fice c Jeft magn y dlgm o fea 13 Fonfon Be men A flatelier pyramid to her T'll rear This chair fhall be my fate, this dagger m @ Thear her talk of flate matters and the fenate was is eve Memp o pe' Rhod Tha crown m cufhio thi an fceptre Fonfon Be Shakefpeare's Henry V1 Shake[peare''s Hepry 1 What he got by fortune Thefe regions have abundance of high cedars It was the flate that now muft make his right As fhe affeCted not the grandeur of a flate wit and other fately trees cafting a fhade Daniel a canopy, fhe thought there was no offence in a ry Hift gh' Rale hnot Arbu r -cha elbo The flate hath given you licence to ftay on fan Th rOOMm Bacon for the fpace of fix weeks Itis better the kingdom fhould be in good eftate with particular lofs to many of the people, tha o that all the people fhould be well, and the fat 14. Grauut. | 15 Thefe‘are the realms of unrelenting fate And awful Rhadamanthus rules the Jate Drydep's Zneid He hears and judges ical fantaf isbu ye murthe whof though M fingle ffate of man, that funétio Sh?'kes fo.m Shakefpeare's Macketh i republick 5 a governmen narchical They feared nothing from a JSate fo narrow i Temple ough in your flate of honour 1 am perfeét Shake[peare High flate the bed is where misfortune lics, £airf Vou. II Dryden houfe goVernIflent It looks grave enoug Fonfor Be an To feem a flatcf The corruption of a poet is the generation of fatefman One employed in publick affairs Pope If fuch a¢tions may have paflage free The fcavengers that fweep fate nuifances And are themfelves the greatefte Dryd. Clesmenes I am accufed of refle€ting upon great ffates-folls Sawift To STATE. v. 4. [607{/111116'1', French. Bond-flaves and pagans fhall Uf"'fi_fmjr'"f'f be Skakefpeare's Othello It is a weaknefs which attends high and low =i hol wikio s:farelin tlj"4f/""/'"'I"'"l‘\fl"{'. 1; -‘)1~3] t}f«}] helm, as well 3'5 Yl/l all cafuifts pref Decay of Picty grow x a ple t that willil gmn\l\‘!i' ng‘:(t)l{0\;lt]; 1:2\\::‘ Li;anoé l.1£>;'l. 1 o frreng th FAL tha weak an Jand o :fi"_‘?af arm ei es has ever been made up of foreig 10, Rank ;5 condition ; quality Fa T air dame, I am not to you known of LLucan Sta'TEROOM. 7. /. [from fate and room. A magnificent room in a palace or grea Council! What's that? a pack of bearded flaves, | pardoned by the fate, yet cenfured by the church V Bacon church, and condemned by the flate; abfolved o Lefley not mo He maintains majefty in the midft of plainnefs and is ffarely without ambition,, which is the vic StaTEs. 7 /. pl. [from fate.] Nobility STtA'TESMAN. 7. /. [ fate and man. Milton. | 1. A politician; one verfed in the arts o The bold defig Milton Ye that farely tread or lowly creep r word, it fignifie anoth wit Join btidl PULECE Miltorn 2. Elevated in mien or fentiment life hath rather been contemplative than active al. d by th iatti eccle no power Cuvi The fame criminal may be abfolv + Of flatelicf covert, cedar, pine, or palm 1 am no courtier, nor verfed in ffaze affairs : m Civi 8 Obfol'ete Pleas'd highly thofe infernal fates mdmduahty He many a walk travers' jon dignity o a is coverin 4" flate ?uadc 1"%"1 S vy A perfon of }ugh rank ment Trut}l, like a ffately dome, will not fhew herfel South at the firft vifit the heart her fat Arbuthnot ftudy Latymer She is a dutchefs; -a great flate 16. The pr'mcipal perfons in the govern ST .He_nce Jingle ftate, in Shakepeare, fo Is fmother'd in furmife can thcpg;n,i 6 he fomewhat whiter than ours; and the flaze is curi Devit e e B P ‘Bato acon filk an filve wit wrough oufl His high throne, under ffat Of richeft L'cx?urc fpread, at th' upperen Milton's Paradife Lofi Was plac'd 'Ha_y‘wara' th(}k.lnngm altogether loft tisa bad-exchange to wound a man's own con & Tt o thore Ring/Goaries hyibhlalse fuseifores Tifio:flyou e Aayid, a5 did they Gregian flas Waller Prapder.all came S ince:the live by begging, it were better fo e flate to keep them brain wa ; to l'egU1ate fettl T This is fo ffated a rule, tha it in all cafes of damage This is to flate accounts an look mor lik merchandize than friendthip. Collier of Fricnd/bip He is capable of corruption who receives mor than what is the ffated and unqueftioned fee of hi Addifon office this foil; and fiatefmen, who have attempted t cultivate it here, have pulled on their own and thei mafter's ruin A Britith minifte muf friends fall off;. who he cannot gratify; fince, t expe Dawenant to fee man ufe the phrafe of a late ffatefman, the pafture is no large enough Addifon A Her |