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Show UN Uspeni‘aBLY.adv. So plainly, as t admit no contradiction Thefe men of forehead love to infure a caufk and feldom talk wnder certainty and demonftration It is undeniably founded in the exprefs affirma - tions of ho'}y writ Brozon I grant that nature all poets ought to ftudy There are feveral hundred parifhes in Englan #nder twenty pounds a year, and many under t n Sawift 8. By the fhow of ‘That which fpites me more than al) the wants He does it under name of perfect love this alfo undeniably follows, that thof "T'is hard to bin things which delight all ages, muft have been a "imitation of nature Dryd UnDEPLORED adj Not lamented 9 Rife, wretched widow ! rife 5 nor undeplor' ", Permit my ghoft to pafs the Stygian ford adj a light in the fun; it is now hidden in us like fpark in a flint Glanwille UxpePR1VED adj Not divefted by au thority ; not firipped of any pofleflion He, undepriv'd, his benefice forfook U/'nDER prepofition [undar unben, Saxon; ozder, Dutch. 1. In a ftate of {fubjetion to When good Saturn, banith' Dryden Gothick Dyyden Every man is put under a neceflity, by his con ftitution, as an intelligent being, to be determine by hisown judgment, what is beft for him to doj elfe he would be under the determination of fom other than himfelf, which is want of liberty. Locke 2. In the ftate of pupillage to "To thofe that liv i Guardian 3. Beneath; {0 as to be covered, or hid den; not over not above Fruit put in bottles, aa the bottles let dow into: wells under water; will keep long If it ftood always under this form, it would hay ‘been wndsr fire, if it had not been under water Burnet Thy bees lodge under covert of the wind. Dryd Many a good poetick vein is buried under a trade and never produces any thing for want of improvement 4 Below in place ; not above Locke This i the fenfe of wnder fail 5 that is > bavin - the Juils {pread aloft As they went under Jail by him, they held u their hands and made their prayers Sidney By that fire that burn'd the Carthage queen Whep the falfe Trojan under fail was feen. Shak Miffeltoe hath been found to put forth under th boughs, and not only above. the boughs; fo it canno be any thing that falleth upon the bough Bacon's Natural Hiffory Be gatherd now, ye waters, yader heav'n Milt 5+ Inalefs degree than Medicines take effet fometimes under and fome mes above, the natural proportion of their virtue Hooker I you write in your ftrength, you ftan reveale a . % 11. In a flate of being loaded with ./1'«!4.;'9‘071 firfii and fhould you write wnde ity you canBot avoid fome peculiar graces 6. For lefs than Dryden's Dedication to Fuwenal We are thrifty enough not to p rt with an th ing ferviceab) € to our bodies, under a good c nfations but make ljttle accou t of what'i moft beneficial to our fouls Ray 7+ Lefs than ; belo o> 0nce fallen, was nothing t t ti n a d not 4 0ew ereation VO ) II an gLany thi:n Ufurp'd the throne during their pupillage. Spenfer 19. Reprefented by Morpheus is reprefente aries under the figure of a boy afleep, witha bundl of poppy in his hand Addiforn zo. In a ftate of protetion Unde He holds the peopl Of no more foul, nor fitnefs for the wor Than ca nels in their war; who have For finking unde them 12. In a ftate of oppreflio Shakefp 22. Attefted by After all, they have not been abl confiderable comfort to the mind, #nde effures of this life At any rate, we defire to be rid o evil, which we are apt to think nothin unde g,c,u,; under th prefen has left us an evidence w Nor longe ger un und err talf falfe re re ro roach chess gr grieev ve. T 13. In a ftate in whic overborne The prince an amazement 'yl‘hat whic tion's fake we mov anfwer fumingly Ve chole in' them lef Pope the in this their mood the caft forth fomewhat wherewith, znder pain"' o greater difpleafure, we muft reft contented. Hovker The greateft part of mankind is flow o henfion;. and "therefore, in many cafes, ynder neceflity of feeing with other men's eyes South A generation fprung up amongft us, that flattered princes that they have a divine right to abfolut power le th law an condition wnde which they enter upon their authority be what the will Locke Itis not ftrange to find a country half unpeopled where fo great a proportion of both fexes €S 1Si tie under fuch vows of chaflity Addifon on Italy Things of another world are xnder-the difadvantage of being diftant, and therefore operate bu faintly Atterbury 15. In a ftate of depreflion or dejectio by ; in a ftate of inferiority Ther is none but he Whofe being I do fear, andig~der hi My genius is rebulc'd, as Antony's was by Caefar Shake 16 I the ftate of bearing or bein known by ‘This faction,, under the name of Puritan, became very turbulent during the reign of Eliza beth Th raifin of filver coi ha Savift been only b coining it with lefs filver in it, #ider the fame de nomination Lacks it wa neceffar a fault to be in that poem, which lay fo long unde Virgil's correction, and had his laft hand put to it flt[(/g',/;fl 24. In the next ftage of fubordination This is the only fafe-guard, under the {pirit o for our better inftruc turneth unt of nature, will re diftin¢tions, ferve to clear any thing in the fubjeé under confideration Locke I rather fufpet my own judgment, than believ one is feized o by revolution to have a repofitory to lay them up Locke "The thing suder proof is not capable of demonftration, and muft be fubmitted to the trial of pro babilities Locke Diftinét conceptions, that anfwer their verba 14. In a ftate of being liable to, or limite th many ideas ander view at once Collier princefls muft be under n defcrib "quire a fteady eye; efpecially fo to conneét th parts, and prefent them all znder one view Burnet's Theory of the Earth Memory is the ftorehoufe of our ideas. = For th narrow mind of man, not being capable of havin fin _4d 4ddi his own hand, ho Subjected to ; being the fubje& of not ourfelves capable of any the leaf degree of hap Ilufirious parent! now fome token g That I may Cly y ene's I proud boaft b #zde much he was verfed in country affairs Locke on Education to give an any of Lil the abfent ca pain #nder the doubl Felton on the Claff the feveral conand the fecula Lefley Cato Major, who had with great reputatio borne all the great offices of the commonwealth by, or fubjec tion to there are other materials fo befides ftark love and kindnefs Collier z1. With refpeét to; referred to [peare's Coriolanus Sha favour fav commonwealth He fhall but bear them as the afs bears gold To groan and fweat under the bufinefs by the ancient ftatu- Mr. Duke may be mentione capacity of a poet and a divine Under this head may come i tefts and wars bewwixt pope princes provements #nder him, that they were inftruéte F(..'.'r ih duke to By means whereof, their uncle Vortiger It was too great an honour for any man #nder pinefs Laocke Women and children did not fhew the leaf figns of complaint, under the extremity of torture The door had before him the barbarous ufag of his brethren, clapped on fhipboard under hatches i Under thy care, good rules and patterns give, Denb Bacon's Natural Hiftory 10. In the flate of inferiority to; notin rank or order of precedence equal ; becaufe ! Theprinces refpected Helim, and made fuch im With lefs than fome plauBaker or arrive Three fons he dying left under age Only for bear Was driven to hell, the world was under Jove unde from above learning 18. Not having reache noting time Shakefp under half a dozen conceits Not corrupted Knowledge dwelt in our undepraved natures If they can fucceed without blood, as under th prefent difpofition of thing s very pof may, it is to be hoped they will be fa Swift any fyllogifm fo clofe upo the mind, as not to be evade fible diftin&ion. of 17. In the &at Several young men could never leave the pulpi But rife prepar'd to mourn tlz_\_r perith'd lord. Dy NDEPRAVED Collier on Confidente Hammond This account was differently related by the an cients ; that is undeniably reje€ted by the moderns but the U o God, that ditate be relied on thefe facred writings, that ca Locke 25. In a ftate of relation that claims protection 26. Tt is generally oppofed to adowe or ove U'NDER adv 1. In a ftate of fubjection, or inferiority Ye purpofe to keep #nder the children of Juda for bond-men and bond-women. 2 Chroz.xxviii10 2. Below 3 Lefs not above oppofed to ower or more He kept the main ftock without alteration, unde or over Addifor's Spetator 4. It has a fignification refembling that o an adjective; lower in place; inferiour fubje&t ; fubordinate But perhaps, i this {enfe it fhould be confidered as unite to the following word I will figh Againft my canker'd country with the fplee Ofall the under fiends Shakefpeare's Coriolanus 5. It is muc ufe in compofition in {e veral fenfes, which the following exam ples will explain Unpera'cTioN. # /. Subordinate action ; aétion not effentia ftory to th mai The leaft epifodes, or underations, interwove in it, are part neceflary, or convenien on the main defign 3 to carr Dryde T |