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Show we thought an hour fpent with him was wort Bacon's New Atlantis years of our former life In the midft of this darknefs they faw fo muc Yight, as to believe thar when they died they wen Teyly H imuaiediately to the ftars 1 have thewed before, rhat a mere pofiibility t the contrary can by no means hinder a thing fro Wilkins. ing highly credible 4 Noting a final end at leaft with us to ftay Cowley TaaTcH.n/. [Bace, Saxon, fraw, Skinner, from dac, a rogf5 in Iflandick, zhak Straw laid upon the top o Mr. Lye. My love is thaw'd Which, like a waxen image 'gainft a fire a houfe to keep out the weather Dryden Granwville Taaw. . /. [from the verb. 1. Liquefattion of any thing congealed A ‘man of my kidney, that am as fubjeét t heat as butter; a man of continual diffolution an Shakefpeare thaw More harden' Milton after thaww 2. Warmth fuch as liquifies congelation Dywels Obloquy, who in her early day Bafkets of fith at Billingfgate did watch I was the prince's jefter, and duller than a grea Cod, whiting, oyfter, mackrel, fprat, or plaife Pope A plough-boy, who has never feen any thing bu thatched houfes, nasurally imagines that thatch belongs to the very of a houfe Watts Shakefpeare's Much ado about nothing cold country where difcourfe doth freez thazv Tha in the air all winter, and may be heard in the nex or at a great thaw fummer Wilkins's Math. Mag When fharp frofts had long conftrain'd the carch A kindly thaw unlocks it with cold rain came rofy Health from her cottage o thatch Firft the tender blade peeps R T . Wher neve phyfician had lifted the latchs Smart. | T'uE, article. [zz':, Dutch. The . a. [Bacaan, Saxon. Y "1 QA Z You and # burthen Dryden To | 1. The article noting a particular thing cover as with ftraw Make falfe hair Your poor thin roofs wit theatre beholding this light Hardens his ftubborn heart, but ftill as ic Hard bya ftye, beneath a roof of thatch 7o TrATCH they might go about, fo as they all food ay iy Shakefp Bears no imprefiion of the thing it was She can unloc The clafping charm, and thaw the numbing fpell Milton Burnifh'd fleel, that caft a glar From far, and feem'd to thaw the freezing air Her icy heart is thaw'd Treat it kindly, that it ma W TH TIHE TIEHE fon has paid a foldier's debt He oaly liv'd but till he was a man of the dead The which nc fooner had his prowefs confirm'd Shake[peare In the unthrinking ftation where he fought Slwa/c(;f}‘mn"s Macbeth But like a man he dy'd or thatched. Bacon's Natural Hiftory Then Rome was poor, and there you might behol The palace thatch''d with firaw Dryden Sonnets or elegies to Chlori Might raife a houfe above two ftories A lyrick ode would flate, a catc He put him in mind of tbe long pretence he ha to be groom of the bed-chamber, for the which h could not chufe but fay, that he had zbe queen' Clarendon promife Unhappy flave, and pupil toa bell Unhappy till the laft, the kind releating knell Cowley Mofs groweth chiefly upon ridges of houfes tile VYould tile, an epigram would thatch Swvift Tua'TcHER. 7. /. [from thatch. On whofe trade is to cover houfes with ftraw You merit new employments daily Our thatcher, ditcher, gard'ner, baily Afh is univerfal timber; it ferves th Swift foldier feaman, carpenter, thatcher, and hufbandman Mortimer Zo Teaw. v. n. [Bapan, Saxon ; degen Dutch. 1. To grow liquid after congelation ; t melt May my name ftep in It on firm lan Thaws not, but gathers heap, and ruin feem thing Boyle O Solitude romantic maid 2. Before a vowel ¢ is commonly cut off i verfe Or, ftarting from a half year's fleep From Hecla view the thawing deep Or Tadmor's marble waftes furvey Or in yon rooflefs cloifter play "Thee, fond nymph ! again 1 woo And again thy fteps purfue Grainger To melt what was con Bring me the faireft creature northward born ‘Where Phebus' fire fcarce thaws the ificles Shakefpeare Think not that Czfar bears fuch rebel blood That will be thaw'd from the true qualit With that which melteth fools Shakefpeare's Fulins Ceefar In the midft of this fair valley ftoo A native rheatre, which, rifing flow By juft d=grees o'erloolc'd the ground below, Dry No the.tres of caks around him rife Whofe roots earth's centre touch, whofe heads th ‘. fkies Harte TreeA"TRICAL. ] adj THEA'TRICK [theatrum, Latin, Scenick fuitin theatre ; pertaining to a theatre Theatrical forms frickle hard for the prize of re ligion : a diftorted countenance is made th of an upright heart De:ay o Load fome vain church with old theatric Turn arcs of triumph to‘a garden gate mar Picty ftate Pope THaEA TRICALLY. adv. [from theatrical In a manrer fuiting the ftage Dauntlefs her ook, her gefture preud Her voice theatrically loud TuEE the oblique fingular of thou Pope Poet and faint, to thee alone wete givi The two moft facred names of earth and heav'n Comwley THEFT. . /. [from thief. 1. The att of ftealing Theft is an unlawful felonious taking away o another man's goods againft the owner's knowledge or will Cozwell His thcfts were too open; his filching was like a unfkilful finger, he kept not time care's Merry Wives of Windfor S Their nurfe Euriphile for the thefr 1 wedded, frole thefe children Who Shakefpeare Deceit in trade, a fecret theftr: extortion, an im pudent thef The theft Holyday upon the public can be looked int Dawvenant thing ftolen *T'is like the pois'ning of a dart Covley apt before to kill 3. Sometimes be is cut off In this feale gold, in #* other fame does lic Cozvley 4. Tt is ufed by way of confequential reference whether ox, afs, or fheep, he fhall reftore double Exodusy xxiie 1. Of them : the pronoun poffefive, fro 7 nd worid fhould haye fhoo Lions into civil ftreets, and citizens into their dens Shake[peare For the Itilians, Dante had begun to file thei the reformatidn of their profe was whoily owing t Dr:ydfn Boccace come thin an whe ufe i 2. Their conftru@tion between the pofleffive an fubftantive in our power to beltow r k . H f f r t r e t i and they nev ) 14 o e t t m n m f t v g The ayer we alw. ays hav Duty of Man Addiforron Italy countries TrEsTRAL. adj. [theatral, Fr. theatralis Lat. If the theft be certainly found in his hand alive language in verfe before Boccace, who likewife received no lictle help from his mafter Petrarch ; bu As all the confiderable governments among th Alps are commonwealths, fo it is a conftitutio the moft adapted of any to the poverty of thef the cold which had caufe 2. a Daniel 5. In the following paffage #%e is ufed according to the French idiom Or by the Nile's coy fource abide Mi/t(m THEIR. pronoun. [Seona, of them, Saxon. the harder it will be to drive it out Or climb the Andes' clifted fide Shade above fhade, a woody theatr Of ftatelieft view Night thades ¢be groves, and all in filence lie Pope All but the mournful Philomel and I Milton Brought death into rbe world The longer fin hath kept pofieflion of the heart ‘Whether by nodding tow'rs you tread like a theatre 2. Th To Of ancient pile ; all elfe deep fnow and ice. Milt Having let that ice thaw of itfelf, and froze the liquor a fecond.time, we could not difcern an rifing by feps or gfadation and punifhed Ik' adorning thee with fo much ar Is but a barb'rous fkill Donne A plac Cowlcy Thy humble neft build on zbe ground The frui Of that forbidden tree, whofe mortal taft His fortunes up into the ftate they were If thou begin'ft to thaw for this froft To TeaW gealed The fair example of the heav'nly lark Thy fellow poet, Cowley, mark Above the ftars let thy bold mufick found Who had b efpecial engines been to rea When thy melted mai His letter at thy pillow hath laid 2. 'To remi Coavley I'll march the mufes, Hannibal 2 Bt Belonging to a theatre TrEATRE n. [theatre Fr theatrum Lat. 1. A place in which fhews are exhibited a playhoufe "This wife and univerfal theatr Prefents more woful pageants than the fcen Shakefpeare's As you like i Wherein we play When the boats came within fixty yards of th pillar, they found themfelves all bound, yet o a i l R r e t t d a t y E which th The penalty. to.thy tranfgreffion due o g wi i t o o i w And due to their Milton Nothing but the name of. zeal appear r e t o r w t a o t a *Twixt our bef Denba Vain are our neighbour cares hopes,e and vainin theithei e t a t ' g u n l e t The fault is Rofcomniott ems to fri Which cftablifhed law of thefecirsret fein rigucs al e u c e i u c b ft fi a Dryden r e t k l i d e # o t TrEM r h a n The materials o mll'fifl THEME - ‘V"‘\ |