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Show W A WA 2. /0 [from awalland gpe.] A| Wa'LTRON. 7./ WaLLEY'E The motfe, or waltron difeafe in the chryftalline humour of th eye the glaucoma To Wa'MBLE WA'LLEYED. adj. [wall and ¢ye.] Havin white eyes L'Eftrange Wan. adj. [pann, Saxon ; gwan, weakly Welfh.] Pale, as with ficknefs ; langui of look Sad to view his vifage pale and wane Who erft in flowers of frefheft youth was clad Spenfer All the charms of love Salt Cleopatra, foften thy wan lip 70 Wa'LroPp. w. 2 [pealan, to boil, Sax. Anin Let witcheraft join with beauty. Sh. Aut. and Cleop Ainfworth « » [walugan Why o pale and wan, fond lover Pr'ythee, why fo pale Go thick; palpan, Saxon. 1. To move heavily and clumfily Will, when looking well can't move ber Suckling Looking ill prevail Their courfe through thickeft conftellations held Spreading their bane; the blafted ftars look'd wan Milton How chang'd from him Companion of my arms ! how wan, how dim Part, huge of bulk Wallowing unwieldy, enormous in their gait Tempeft the ocean Milton's Paradife Loft 2. To roll himfelf in mire, or any thin filthy Gird thee with fackcloth, and wallozw thyfelf i afhes er. vi How faded all thy glories boar wa wallswin horfe was going to drink in the water whe And thofe with which th' Eubzan young ma wa Swift Atalanta, when through craft he her outran L'Eftrange Spenfer 3. Tolive in any ftate of filth or grofs vice God fees a man wallowing in his native impu1ity, delivered over as an abfolute captive to fin polluted with its guilt, and enflaved by its power and in this moft loathfome condition fixes upo him as an obje& of his diftinguifhing mercy. South Wa'Lrow. z /. [from the verb. of rolling walk A kin Th' report of his great aéts that over Europe ran In that moft famous field he with the emperor wan Drayton He wan the king with fecrecy and diligence but chiefly becaufe he was his old fervant in his lef fortuness Bacon Waxb Shakefpeare With a whip or wand if you firike the air the fharper and quicker you ftrike it, the loude found it giveth Bacon His fpear, to equal which the talleft pin Hewn on Norwegian hills, to be the maf An herb [adiantum album, Lat. Ainfworth Wa'LLworT. #. /. [ebulum, Latin. plant, the fame with dwarf-elder, o danewort Wa'L~nuT. z /. [palh hnuza, Saxon ; nu Jjuglans, Latin. 'The charaéters are, i hath male flowers, or katkins, whic are produced at remote diftances fro th fruit o th fam Of feme great admiral, were but a wand ed rather marks of fovereignty of punithment tree; the oute which is a rough hard fhell, i the fruit is inclofed, furrounde Nay, lady, fit; ifI but wave this wwand Your nerves are all chain'd up in alabafter are 1. Th commo walnut 2. The large French walnut 3. Th thin-fhelled walnut. 4.The double walnut. 5. The late ripe walnut 6. Th hard-fhelled walnut 7. The Virginia black walnut 8. Virginian black walnut, with a long furrowed fruit. 9. Th hickery, or white Virginian walnut 10. The {mall hickery, or white Virginian walnut Miller *Tis a cockle, or a walnut-fhel A knack, a toy Shakefp. Taming of the Shrew Help to fearch my houfe this one timej if find not whatI feek, let them fay of me, as jealou as Ford, that fearcheth a hollow walnut for hi wife's leman Shakefpeare Some woods have the veins fmooth, as fir an "gualnut Bacen Picus bore a buckler in his hand His other wav'd a long divining wand 7o WA'NDER avandelen fpecie Th Milton 3. A charming rod into four lobes ; and the leave of the tree are pinnated or winged than inftrument Sidney He held before his decent fteps a filver wand with a thin fkin: the kernel is deepl divide Any ftaff of authority, or ufe - Though he had both fpurs and wand, they feem cover of the fruit is very thick and green unde whic Milton A child runs away laughing with good fmar blows of a wand on his back, who would have crie for an unkind word Locke on Education 2 Let them awandes up an down for meqt P From thijs uptial bow' 7 ; ow fl;all T part, and w r wander dow nEIc:ha ower world Milton's Parad;'[e 7 i ;Y %};v; the reins to wa houghts; Th1eLr, by their own Peperrpplleexixititesies i nvoly'd, Miltyy Here thould my wonde dyell y and here m praife But my fixt thoughts my and'ring eye betrays Dtflbflfi A hundred years they wandero t re D), ' / t !d fo-gnl introduces his A nea in Cait%: y befor he brings him to Laurentum and eyen after tha he wander to the kingdom of Evander Dryden's D 2. Todeviate ; to go afl:ray. O let me not wander from t y commandments P alm cxix, To Wa'n DER. @. 4. To trav l over, with out a certain courfe The nether floo Runs diverfe, wand'ring many a famous realm Mil Thofe few efcap' Famine and anguifh will at laft confum Wand'ring that wat'ry defatt Milton's Pay, Loft See harnefs'd fteeds defert the ftony town And wander roads unftable, not their own Gay WA'NDERER. #, /. [ from wander.] Rover rambler Nor for my peace will I go far As wanderers that fll do roam But make my ftrengths, fuch as they are Here in my bofom, and at home, B, %if He here to every thirfty wanderer By fly enticement, gives his baneful cup, Millon The whole people is a race of fuch merchant as are wanderers by profeflion, and at the fametim arein all places incapable of lands or offices, Spe The fkilful fhepherd peel'd me certain wands His fword-knot this, his cravat that defign'd. Dryd 5. #. f. [vaand, Danifh. 1. A {mall ftick, or twig; a long rod One taught the tofs, and one the French ne wallo WaLLrUE Dryden Wan, for aon, the old preterite of wwzn Dead bodies, in all places of the camp, wallowed in their own blood. Knolles's Hift. of the Turks It i of a wambling fromach, and an unfettled mind ‘To awallfruit and garden plants there cannot b a worfe enemy than {nails. Mortimer's Hufbandry WA'LLOW v. n. [awemmelen, Dutch. A covetous man deliberated betwixt the qualm Wa'LLrrvulT, 7 /. Fruit which to b ripened muit be planted againft a wall T _ Woodavard ufed of the ftomach Wa'LLFLOWER. m [, [parietaria, Latin. A fpecies of ftock-gilliflower fect; a bug is called the fea-horfe To roll with naufea and ficknefs Wall-eyed lave ! whither wouldft thou conve This growing image of thy fiend-like face ? Shak To boil Wa'LrLouske. #. /. [cimex, Lat. WA @. z. [panbpuan Dryden Saxon Dutch. . To rove ; to ramble here and there ; t go without any certain courfe. It ha always a fenfe either evil or flight, an imports either idlenefs, vitioufnefs, o mifery I have no will to wander forth of doors Tafte, that eternal wanderer, which flie From head to ears, and now from ears to eyes Shak 1 will go lofe myfelf And aander up and down to view the city. Shak The old duke is banithed ; four loving lords hav put themielves into exile with him, whofe revenue enrich the new duke; therefore he gives them goo leave to wander Shakefpeare Then came wand'ring b A fhadow like an angel, with bright hai Dabbled in blood, and he fhriek'd out aloud. Shak They wandered about in fheeps and goats fkins Hebrews, xi -Po;'l Ca WA'NDERING. 7. /. [from avander.] 1, Uncertain peregrination He afks the god, what new appointed hom Should end his wand'rings, and his toils relieve Addifon 2. Aberration ; miftaken way If any man's eagernefs of glory has made hi overfee the way to it, let him now recover his wari. Dewy of Piety derings 3. Incertainty; want of being fixed A proper remedy for this wandering of thought Lofkewould do great fervice to the ftudious I When a right knowledge of ourfelves enters int our minds, it makes as great a change in all ou thoughts and apprehenfions, as when we awake i from the wanderings of a dream Milz To WANE Law @. 7. [paman, to grow lefs Saxon. d i p A f e c d t f l o 1. To g the moon : oppofed to wax The hufbandman, in fowing an: fetting, upo: W l m k in a aa n x w th e r f o f e r g : fi Waning moons their fettled periods keep, p de th e r f a s o l b th e f T i Adc): z. 'To decline ; to fink A lady far more beautifu Than any woman in this waining age Sblklf I will interchang My awained ftate for Henry's regal crowne Shake Your father were a foo y}m it ok Jflfi :r" %"a:{ a i i w h i a al e To give t }l kg ;b .' e b t Set %oot under t rl lu v h i f e i n c In thef a s c i w e i e a p t n m o i i w ini t t w T A‘I" r w t e i alous than a favouri Nothini g more j y e t f o e f f a m t the wainin .D?od h o 1 y u v f h i I'm wainin = |