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Show L B The relfe B . op ef re r [ / { a u n b musco N - Jongt ing to a telefcope ; feeing at a difance f a y‘,th t D e l t e c t n x S 1old. [cellan alens Danifh. 1, To utter3 to exprefs ; to fpeak TELLTALE 7. /2 [2el] and tale.] One wh gives malicious information ; one wh carries officious intelligence What, fthall thefe papers lie like tefltales here *Tisdone he worfhipped Fudges, vii. 13 He longer will delay to hear thee ze/ Before I 2/l my fatal fory out ~ And not a man appears to z¢// their fate Pope's Odyfiy to inform . 3. Toteach He gently afk'd, where all the people be Which in that ftately building wont to dwell TemERA'RIOUS merarius, Lat. Shakefp. Antony and Cleopatra Tell me now, what lady is the fame To whom you fiwore a fecret pilgrimage That you to-day promis'd to te// me of? Shake/p The fourth part of a fhekel of filver willI giv to the man of God to r¢// us our way. 1 Sam. ix. 8 Saint Paul telleth us, we muft nceds be fubje not only for fear, but alfo for confcience fake Bifbop Sanderfon ~ T&lme how may X -know him, how adore. 2ifr 4 To difcover; to betray They will ze//it to theinhabitants. Nym. xive 1 5. To count; to number, Here lies the learned Savile's heir, < So early wife, and lafting fair Numerous fails the fearful only 7e// 2 Dryden 6. To make excufes A low word 7o TE'MPER Fr. I fhall zemper f Juftice with mercy, as-may illuftrate mof Milton Them fully fatisfied, and Thee appeafe 2. To compound ; to form b to qualify as an ingredient Prior Soon fleep in quist the ther and mafter of the fam after his own affairs with kind queftions r to themfelves ful phrafe bl'_Davi.d _faved neither ma A doubt nor woman alive t mmg _;_ldx.ngs to Gath, faying, Left they fhould re/ Us, faying, So did Dayid 1 Same XXVile 11 'ELLER, 7, /] [from ¢zell %, One who tells or elate]s 8 Xnelwhg numbers ; a numberer 3 whfg h/er 18 an officer of the exchequer, o t}gere ar four in number: thei s to receive all monies due t 4 2. Middle courfe ; mean or medium If the eftates of fome bifhops wereexorbitant before the reformation, the prefent clergy's withesreac An 3. Conftitution of body Swift's Mifcellaniese plied from above and below ; and having done growing, it would become more dry by degrees, and o a temper of greater confiftency and firmnefs Burnet's Theory of the Earth 4. Difpofition of mind This, I fhail call it evangelical, temper is farfro being: natural to any corrupt child of Adam Hammonds Remember with what mil And gracious temper he both heard and judg'd Without wrath or reviling. - Milton's Paradife Lof This will keep- their thoughts -eafy ‘and free the only temper wherein the mind is capable of receiving new. informationse Locke on Education All irregulas tempers in tradeand bufinefs are bu like irregular tempers in eating and drinking, Lao 5. Conflitutional frame of mind The brain may deyife laws for the blood, but hot zemper leaps o'er a cold decree Shakefpeare's Merchant of Venices GOur he Of brother The potter, tempering foft earth; fafhioneth ever wWifd. xv. 7 vefiel with much labour Wit 6 Thy fuftenance ferving to the appetite of th eater, tempered itfelf to every man's liking Wild. xvi.21 6. To bring to due proportion ; to moderate excefs "Thefe foft fires with kindly hea Of various influence fomént and warm Milton 7. To foften 5 to mollify; to afluage foot ; to calm t all kin temper, do receive you i love Shakefpeare's Fulius-Cfar Calmnefs of mind ; moderation Reftore yourfelves unto yous zempers, fathers And without perturbation hear me fpeak. B. Fonfs Teach me, like thee, in various nature wife . To accommodate ; to modify Temper or nourifh fo quick "This body would be increafed daily, being fup uncivil kerns o temper clay with no further than that fome reafonable rempe had been ufed, inftead of paring the To beat together t Th the excellency of thi foil and temper, than the abundant growing of th palm frees Raleigh Health itfelf is but a kind of temper, gotten an preferved by a convenient mixture of contrarieties Arbuthuotes Prepare the fixth part of an ephah and ‘the thir part of an hin of oil, to remper with the fine flour Ezek. xlvi. 14 L To give an account ; to make report Tell, i€ ye faw, how came 1 thus, how here? Ailt Nothing better provet Shakefpeare The good old'knight, with a mixture of the f Spenfer Te'MPER. 7. /. [from the verb. 1. Due mixture of contrary qualities 3. To mingle To inform of mixture Locke all thy wondrous worls Plalm xxvi. 7 Ye that live and move, fair creatures! z¢// And furies rules, and Tartare tempereth 1. To mix.fo as that one part qualifies th other As if the ftrings were thine, fhouldft know of this Shakefpeare 2% T0 TeLs 01 w. a. [tempero, Lat. temperer A latini{m. With which the damned ghofts he governeth Cowley 1f you could find out but a ma To bear a poifon, I would temper it That Romeo fhould upon receipt thereo T will compafs thine altar, O Lord, that I ma publith with the voice of thank{giving, . and ze// o 9. To govern Carelefs ; heedlefs ; done at random The figures are bold even to temerity Tuth, never sel/ me 5 I take it much unkindly That thou, Tago, who haft had my purf 7o TELL.!I Diryden TeME R1TY. 7. /. [temeritas, Lat.] Rafh. nefs; unreafonable contempt of danger , A childican telltwenty before he has any idea o infinite She doubts if two and two make four Though the has #5/d them: ten times o'cr ing of fteel, by holding it but minute or two longer or leffer in the other competent heat, gives it very different tempers as t Boyle brittlenefs or toughnefs Repeated peals they hear And, in aheav'n ferene, refuigent arms appear Redd'ning the fkies, and glitt'ring all around The temper'd metals clath, and yield a filver found to Should he find upen one fingle fheet of parchment an oration written full of profound fenfe adorned with elegant phrafe, the wit of man coul not perfuade him that this was done by the temerarious dafhes of an unguided pen Ray Paller Courage from hearts, and not from numbers, grows [temeraire, Fr Refolution without forefight is but a temerariou folly 5 and the confequences of things are the firf point to be taken into confideration L'Eflrange That none, except her years they #0/d Though;~her a child, or thought her old adj Miltort refift that edge Nor folid migh Milton 1. Rafh; heady; unreafonably adventurous ; unreafonably contemptuous o danger Who anfwer'd him full foft, he could notzell. Spen 1 ts/d him of myfelf ; which was as muc As to have afk'd him pardon Was given him temper'd fo, that neither kee Eurydice and he are prifoners here But will not long be {o: this rel/tale ghof Perhaps will clear them both Dryder and Lee A telltale out of {choo Is of all wits the greateft fool Savift Milton O break my heart e y D f w m i n r t m o . Th ufurp M0 The reft are vanifh'd, nene repafs'd the gate Of Michael from the armoury of Go report difplays bher telltale wings Our conceal'd folemnity o degre The fword And to each ear the news and tidings brings. Fairf And to the relitale fun defcr and the interpretation a prope t hardnefs Let not the heavens hear thefe te/ftale wome Rail on the Lord's anointed Shake[peare 1 x l ? d h fathers, and have no When Gideon heard the telling of the dream butbreak 8. To form metal Shakefpeare e t o f / # v h m f w a w a c d T wil His generation You muft know and to fuch a ma T lmt‘ 18 no flearing relltale. Shakefp. Fulius Cafar Gen. XX1Ve 3 Thy meffage might in te//ing wound Milton And in performing end us temper their warlike courage with fweet delights of learning and fciences ¢ fo that as much as the on excelled in arms, the other exceeded in knowledge Spenfer on Ireland With this fhe wonts to temper angry jove When all the gods he threats with thund'ring dart Spenfer Now will I to that old Andronicus Shakefp And remper him with all the art I have Woman! Nature made the To temper manz we had been brutes without you Otoay books of receipts and payments, whic t'hcy deliver to the lord treafurer. Cowel _You fpeak to Cafca 2, To relate 5 to rehearfe Solots, in hislaws to the Athenians, laboured to a rblll to charge him therewith: the allo pay all perfons any money payabl to them by the king, by warrant fro the auditor of the receipt : theyal{o mak . n r c n m l t v h ti e n ) 1 wil T E. mekmgnmdgwemedukofmepa o difcovers to us diftant wonders i th an wa l m th w fh an the heavens co I;/ b t fk da ve i ts fp ud cl righ s at s fa l jetion of lit Ry lf T To fall with dignity, with temper rife 7 Pope State to which metals are reduced, par- ticularly as to hardnefs Here draw I A fword, whofe teazper 1 intend to ftai With the beft blood that I can meet withak SZa3 Ithuriel with his fpea Touch'd lightly; for no falthood can endur Touch of celeftial semper; but yeturn o |