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Show SITII o 1 1 Take on you the charg i To STrck. w. n 1. To adhere; to unite itfelf by its tena N And Xingly government of this your land Not as protector, fleward, fubftitute XVi we are but few Ne/fon of them lord, he muft conwhile they are fol fath intrufted us with, becauf grds, and muft give an accoun When aflcward defrauds hi | nive at the reft of the fervant What can be a greater honour, than to be chofe ane of the flewards and difpenfers of God's bount to mankind? What can give a generous fpirit mor 5 Thoug 2 T any thing 2 Shakefpeare The office of a fteward The ear , 7,1 Hath broke his ftaff Shew u 1% | That hath difmifs' d of Worcefte refign'd his fewardfbip Shake[peare's Richard I1 the hand of Go us from our fewvard/pip Shakefpeare If they are not employed to fuch purpofes, w the Jrewoardfbi Yare falfe to our truft, an com :.mitted to us, and fhall be one day feverely accountcable to Go for it Calamy's Sermons "tE'wran. #. [ [from few and pan. "H57A pan ufed for ftewing S MBIAL. ad. [from fibium, Lat.] An timonial The former depen i upo a corrupt incinerate zmelancholy, and the latter upon an aduft Jfibial o _.eruginous fulphur « This flibiarian preflet royal throne and afte audacioufl fom upo th facrification ten ¥dereth a bitter pill of facrilege and cruelty; but J#When the fame was rejected becaufe it was violent /then he prefents his antimonian potion hire "m'capos. u. /. [ ficadis, Lat.] An herb @4TICK. 7. [0 [eicca Jieck, Dutch. Ainfworth Saxon ; Srecea, Ital wil fhoot forth, an f " will the herb orpin, with which in the comntr 7 they trim their houfes, binding it to a lath or flic 14" det againgt a wall Bacon's Natural Hiftory Some ftrike from clafhing flints their fiery feed 7 _Some gatherflick: the kindled flames to feed Dryden J» Many inftruments long and flender ar called Jicks {0 STICK. «. a, preterite fuck 5 particifpk}. pafl. fuck [yreican Saxon. aften on {6 as that it may adhere T Two troops in fair artay one momént thow'd he next, a field with fallen bodies ftrow d € points of fpears are ffuck within the fhield he fict:ds without their riders fcour th field ' The knights unhors'd yden Would our ladies, inftead of ficking on D a patc I :gafn{t their country ; + 353kt the commo facrific enemy thei necklace what decrees ough - notto be made in their fayour Addifon Oh for fome pedant reign . T Som p gentle James to blefs the land agai And we'll not fail all fzck in the lord To ftop ; to lofe motion None of thofe, who fick at this impediment have any enemies fo bitter and implacable as the found theirs Kettleapell I thudder at the name My blood runs backsward, and my fault'ring tongu Sticks at the found. Smith's Phedra and Hippolitus The firft contains a flicking faft to Chrift whe the Chriftian profeflion is perfecuted; and th fecond a rifing from fin, as he rofe to a new Chriftian life Hammond Some flick to you, and fome to t'other fide. Dry They could not but conclude that to be their intereft; and, being fo eonvinced, purfue it and flic to it Tillotfon Weare your only friends ; fick by us, and we wil fRick by you Dawenant The advantage will be on/ our fide, if we fick t its effentials Addifor's Frecholder that Ve aw to words, or war with words alone. Pope or, II 8. To remain Proverbia m time, rathe Pope's Letters not to be loft fentence ar forme int whereby they ffick upon the memory 9. To dwell upon not to forfake a verfe Watts If the matter be knotty, the mind muft ftop an buckle to it, ‘and fick upon it with labour an thought, and not leave it till it has maftered th difficulty Locke Ever man befide occafiona affeftions ha beloved ftudies which the mind will more clofel Sick to Locke i0. To caufe difficulties or fcruple This is the difficulty that flicks with the mof 11 Savift To fcruple ; to hefitate It is a goo the anfwer h propofitions Jefs The churc pointof cunning for a man to fhap would have in his own words an for it makes the other party fick th Bacon of Rome, under pretext of expoi tion of feripture, doth n #ick to add and alter Bacon to one mor exercifed is as vifibl a an Lockg take in th connexion of 2 few propofitions 5 bt if th~ chai be puolix, here they ffick and are confounded 14. 7o Stic out Watts on the 3ind T with deformity be prominent His flefh is confumed away that it cannot k feen, and his bones that were not feen fick cut Foby xxxiiie 21 15. ¥0 STrck our. Te refufe compliance 7o ST1CK. w. a. [yucian, Saxon ; feken Dutch. 1. To ftab; to pierce with a pointed inftrument The Heruli, whe their old kindre Stuck them with a dagger fell fick Grew 2. To fix upon a pointed body : as, h Suck the fruit upon his knife 3. To faften by transfixion Her death T'll ftand betwixt ; it firft fhall pierce my heart We will be fuck together on his dart Dryder's Tyrannick Love 4. To fet with fomething pointed A lofty pile they rear The fabrick's front with cyprefs twigs they firew And flick the fides with boughs of baleful yew Drydern STr'ckiNess. . /[ [from ficky. ‘Adhefive quality; vifcofity; glutinoufnefs tenacity 7o STI'CKLE. @. a. [from the praic of prizefighters, who placed feconds wit ftaves or fticks to interpofe occafionally. 1. To take part with one fide or other Fortune, as fhe s wont reafonable of thofe who, from confcience, refufe t join with the revolution upon finding it out themLocke thing Souls a little more capacious ca by or to I am fatisfied to trifle awa than let it flick by me To be embarrafied; to be puzzled They will fick long at part of a demonftration for want of perceiving the connexion of two ideas I can affure the he will not out, he is true bred Shakefpeare's Henry 1V Dryden zled by putting the felves Wherefore could I not pronounce amen I had moft need of bleffing, and ame Stuck in my throat Shakefpeare's Macbeth that and defired the name Where they fick, they are not to be rarther puz 5. To refift emiffion The knave will fick by thee houfe lords and commons Clarendon He threw : the trembling weapon pafs' Through nine bull-hides, cach under 0. + plac' On his broad ihieid, and JSuck within the laft 13 6. To be conftant to; to adhere with firmnefs : fometimes with 70, and fometime with &y the commons; but hear of thofe who hindered the agreement betweei th "The going away of that which had ftaid fo long doth yet ffick with me Bacon's Natural Hiftory 4 Shakefpeare's Macheth They never doubte 7. To be troublefome by adhering: wit "4 A piece of wood {mall and long « Onions, as they hang If we fhould fail -We fail But ferew your courage to the flicking place 3. To reft upon the memory painfully Harwey TIBIA‘RIAN. 7. [, [from pibinm. violent man : from the violent operatio of antimony Obfolete Generally in an ill fenfe He is often ftigmatized with it, as a note o infamy, to ffick by him whilf the world lafteth Sanderfon In their quarrels they proceed to. calling names tili they light upon one that is fure to fick. Swift The duke of Suffolk is the ficlt, and claim [ from feward. united wit 12. To be ftopped; to be unable to pioceed Shakefpeare's Macbeth . An officer of ftate 7. / to b 51 Some flick not to fay, that the parfon and attor ney forged a will Arbuthnot Now does he fee His fecret murthers flicking on his hands Savift ') good condud of their lives clean.sh data import.tsv out README Juft fleward of the bounty he receiv'd Harte " And dying poorer than the poor reliev'd i TEWARDSHIP. be infeparable for the publick in teprefented as the refined part of the Venet'an wifdom Addifon on Italy Raleigh If on your fame our fex a blot has thrown *Twill ever flick, thro" malice of your own. Young Lock: To ftick at nothin to ruft, or flick fo faft a need requires "\ owe to him, under God, their {fubfiftence, and th .. To be high fleavard to be, and not to be that we thail not be able to draw it readily whe ~ " complacency, than to confider that great number this maxim, that it is impoffible for the fame thin the fword be put into the fheath, w muft not fuffer it ther Swvift " lowing the fame practice a truth that no body any more'flicks at, than a parts of rofes not blown, where the dew Sficketh Bacon Improve all thofe talents the providence of Go " Luk corruption, we do not fick to arraign providenc itfelf L' Eftrange Every one without hefitation fuppofes eternity and ficks not to afcribe infinity to duration. Locke That two bodies cannot be in-the fame place, i I will caufe the fifh of thy rivers to fFick unto th {cales Ezek The green caterpillar breedeth in the inwar \ geeount of thy ftewardfhip, for thou mayeft be n 1ongqr/}e‘ward Rather than impute our mifcarriages to our owr City or penetrating power | Orlowly fadtor for another's gain. Shak. Rich. T1I How is it that I hear this of thee? Give a S turn'd fickle And for the foe began to ffickle Hudibras 2. To conteft; to altercate; to conren rather with obftinacy than vehemence Let them go to't, and fickle A Whethe a conclave or conventicle Heralds fickle, who got who So many hundred years ago 3 T trim to pla faf an all a part between oppofites B Cleaveland Hudibras loofe t Whe |