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Show i U , interjeld Any of thefe, without regarding the pains o churg:hmcn, grudge or upbraid to them thofe fmal f r t remains of antient piety fome ages has fcarce left Ups up! cries gluttony, 'tis break of day Go drive the deer, and drag the fil.m-y prey. Pope U Melpomene then th mournfu muf o b)‘:':idings of his own confcience Dryden u On ev'ry trifle If any lack wifdom Us. prep. From a lower to a higher part not down In going #p a hill, the knees will be moft weary Bacon upbore part Th 6. To treat with contempt Start from the goal, and vanifh o'er the ftrand Pope That name of native fire did foul upbraid And would, as Ammon's fon, be magnify'd. Spenf This with pray'r UrBRA‘IDER. 7. /. [from upbraid. that reproaches Or one fhort figh of human breath, upbor Ev'n to the feat of God Milton's Paradife Loft A monftrous wave upbor UrBrAIDINGLY The chief, and dafh'd him on the craggy fhore Vital pow'rs 'gan wax both weak and wan For want of food and fleep 5 which two upbear Spenf [upgebpcedan up awith, fometimes of, before the thing im The fathers, when they were upbraidedawith tha defe@, comforte themfclves wit the meditatio Shake/p. Henry IV If you refufe your aid, yet do no Upbraid us with our difirefs A palace rear U'rcast #. / Wa ha fuch luck? whe kiffed the jack,upon an upcaf} to be hit away o UpGA'THER To contra& v. a Shakefpeare's Cymbeline [up and gasher. Himfelf he clofe upgather'd more and mor Into his den, that his deceitful train Spenfer By his there being might not be bewraid Ne any noife, ne any queftion made Thofe that have been bred together, are mor "pbraid unto them their own fortunes, and point uphand i fledge is ufed by underworkmen &th at them. There is du the hand raifed: for it dot Th when the work is pot o Bagon from the judge to the advocate fome commendation, where caufes are fair pleaded for that zpkolds in the client the reputation of hi counfel, and beats down in him the conceit of ki caufe Bacon Never was a time, when the interpofition of th magiftrate was more neceflary, to fecure the honou of religion, and uphold the anthority of thofe grea principles by which his own authority is beft #pbeid Arterbury -1 the largeft, yet require Raleigh to uphold themfelves to keep. from defeat Divers, although peradventure not willing to b yoked with elderfhips, yet were contented to uphol oppofition againft bifhops, not without greater hur Hooker. to the courfe of their whole proceedings 6. To keep from being loft Faulconbridge Addifon b te Li d. ha an [# adj Upna'Np whe 3. To keep from declenfion In fpite of fpite, alone upholds the day 7. 'To continue withou mng A deaf perfon, by obferving the motions of:another man's mouth, knows what he fays, and upho/dsa current communication of difcourfe with him Holder there ever ma Dryden's Dufrefncy 5. To continue A term of bowling ; throw ; a caft 3, To obje&t as matter of reproach: wit apt to envy their equal of imagination mean Beafts with upcaft eyes forfake their thade Dryden And gaze, as ifI were to be obey'd Old Saturn here, w'lt.h upcaft eyes Beheld his abdicated fkies Daw. Irel Poetry and painting were upbeld by the firengt U'pcast. [Participle from 7o caffup. Th verb Zo upcaf? is not in ufe,] Throw upwards Blackmore 12 before the perfon of, the barbarous cuftoms of the Irith Many younger byothers have neither lands no And with the crew of blefled faints zpbrought Each of which did her with her gifts adorn. Spen/ And, like the roaring of a furious wind You may the world of more defeéts upbraid That other works by nature are unmade That fhe did never at her own expenc This arm upholds the houfe of Lancafter. Shakeft This great man found no means to continu and upho/d his ill-purchafed greatnefs, but by rejecting the Englith law, and affuming, in lieu there 4. To fupport in any ftate of life Divinely wrought And of the brood of angels, heav'nly born Vain man ! how long wilt thou thy God upbraid *Tis a general complaint againft you, and I muf up{araid you aith it, that, becaufe you need no write, you will not Dryden falling Spenf Ursro'ucHT. part. pafl. of upbring. Educated ; nurtured Shaksfp. Coriolanus Thus vent the vilediftemper of thy mind ? Sandys How cunningly tne { orcerefs difplay Her own tranfgreflions, to upbraid me mine. Milt 2. 'To {upport; to fuftain; to keep fro of re With filly, weak, old women thus to fight fore the lefs accept of their hearty affeftion. Hooker Which daily grew to quarrel The mournful train with groans, and hands zp.held Befought his pity Dryden And thew'ft th' enfaitiple of thy childith might of God's moft gracious nature, who did not there It feem'd in m But as an honour fnatch'd with boift'rous hand AndI had many living to upbrai My gain of it by their affiftances 7o UrHO'LD. @. a. preter. upheld5 part pafl. upheld, and upholden. [up and hold. 1. To lift on high bray fometimes the perfon without the thing Shakefpeare Speak of it That knights and knighthood doft with fhame zp in Milton 5 an S]Jflfllr. of earth Extorted treafure in the wom Vile knight it has only an accu or the thing without the perfon wa 70 Upera'y. @. a. [A word formed fro upbraid by Spenfer, for the fake of rhyming termination.] To fhame L To charge contemptuoufly with an thing difgraceful. = It has commonl a B a learner While life upholds this arm The time was when men would learn and fiud good things, not envy thofe that had them. The men were had in price for learning; now letter only make men vile. He is uplraidingly called poet, as if it were a contemptibie nick-name Ben Fonfon 3. 'To fupport from falling Like weighty pillars, this frail life of man adv On t Have marr'd the face of goodly poefie And made a monfter of their fantafie If'thou haft uphoarded in thy lif proach Pope fative of the thing Not in ufe it b Heaps of huge words uphoarded hideoufl With horrid found, though having little fenfe They think to be chief praife of poetry And thereby wanting due intelligence There alfo was that mighty monarch laid Low under all, yet above all in pride », To raife aloft puted; fometime T cannot take Inftead of healing, but upbraids my weaknefs. Add Rang'd in a line the ready racers ftand ToUrera'1D. @. 2 Zebpedan, Saxon. counfel whic thy kindnefs upbrai Sidney muf 70 Ursoa RD. w. a. [upand hoard.] Totreafure ; to ftore ; to accumulate in pri-vate places Ah, my fon, how evil fits it me to have fuc dot an uphill labou who has thofe firft rudiments to mafter at twent years of age, which others are taught at ten. Clariffa Yet, as immortal, in our zphill chac We prefs coy fortune with unflacken'd pace. Young by being in a ftate of comparifon Milton Swift as on wings of wind #pborn they fly And drifts of rifing duft involve the tky Shakefpeare's King Lear let him afk of God tha Wha Ecclus. xli. 22 afon! and how muc my wickednefs Milton Urui'Lr. adj. [up and Aill] Difficult like the labour of climbing an hill 5. To bring reproach upon ; to thew fault pafl. upborn. [up and bear. 1. To fuftain aloft ; to fupport in elevation Upborn with indefatigable wings Decay of Picty He who reign Monarch in heav'n, till then, as one fecure and after thou haft given, upbraid not pret. and part. pafl. of uphold Maintained; {uftained giveth liberally, and wpbraideth not. Fames, i. 5 Be athamed of upbraiding {peeches before friends in going down, the thighs: for that in lifting th feet, when a man goeth #p the hill, the weight o the body beareth moft upon the knees, and in goin preter Urure'Lp feldom lift their hammer highe Moxon's Mechanical Exercifess Sat on his throne, upheld by old repute Ev'ry hou He flathes into one grofs crime or other His knights grow riotous, and he himfelf upbraid you w. a before them, an than their head 4+ To reproach on account of a benefit received from the reproacher Butup, and enter now jnto full blifs Milton Up, up, for honour's fake; twelve legions wai qo UpBE'AR rapacity o Sprat I have too long bor Your blunt upbraidings, and your bitter fcoffs. Sha He that knowingly commits an ill, has the u Matter of mirth now fhalt thou have no more Spenfer down, upon the thighs th ‘They ufe it with both their hand help to batter 3. 'T'o urge with reproach nine Such caufe of mourning never hadft afore Up, grifly ghofts5 and up, my rueful rim And long to call you chief whic May they not juftly 7 our climes upbrai Shortnefs of night, and penury of fhade Prior 2. A word of exhortation, exciting or rouf ing to action W P 8 To-continu A in being. Nebuchodnofo liveth wh hat for the upholding of every living thing. Fu fen the A due proportion is held betwixt th ts, a well in the natural body of man, as the body politick of the ftate, for the #pholding of the whole }1.1.{':"1:,‘:"'4 UruO'LDER. 7. Jfi [from uphold. 1. A {upporter Suppofe then Atlas ne'er fo wife: Yet when the weight of kingdoms lie Te |