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Show WR followed by auith Ipcrfuadcd them, if they l.ov‘:l Benedick To wifh him avreftle with atteétion Shakefp And never to let Beatrice know of it a e f d i a t e w t ames knew not h contingencies, and fo abhorred to be entangled i Clarendon fuch . l f r a / AWRESTLER l e o p o 1. One who wreftle the athletick art Whe the youn warm wrefler at their fport gre Denbam ©0ld Milo wept, to fee his naked arm >Tis not from whom, but where we live The place does oft thofe graces give Great Julius, on the mountains bred A flock perhaps, or herd, had led He, that the world fubdued, had bee .5 he Tt But the beft awrefiler on the green W, aller 2, One who conténds in wreftling So earneft with thy God, can no new care No fenfe of danger, interrupt thy prayer The facred avreftler, till a blefling giv'n Quits not his hold, but halting conquers heav'n Waller Two svreflers help to pull each other down clean.sh data import.tsv out README YRETCH #. /. [pnecca, Saxon. Dryden Accidence She weeps, and fays her Henry is depos'd He {miles, and fays his Edward is inftall'd ‘That fhe, poor wwretch, for grief can fpeak no more Shake[peare The butcher takes away the calf And binds the wretch, and beats it when it ftrives Shakefpeare lluftrious wvretch! repine not, nor reply Vie not what heav'n ordains wit reafon's eye For bright the object is, the diftance is too high et s Prior w2 =% 9, A worthlefs forry creature R Bafe-minded wvretches deeply bemired in the trad as for refpe€t of gain fom you, to let fo much tim perfetly her eftate He no are your thoughts f of ordinary worldlings paultry wool may yiel pafs without knowin Sidney Has thefe poor men in queéftion : never faw Weretches fo quake 5 they kneel, they kifs the earth Forfwear themfelves as often as they fpeak Shakefpeare Title of honour 1 worth and virtue's right Should not be given to a wwretch fo vile o 5 g Daniel's Civil War When theyare gone; acompany of ftarved hungr L' Eftrange wretches fhall take their places & ¢ 3. It 16 uled by way of {light, or ironica '~ pity, or contempt When foon away the wafp doth go Poor awretch was never frighted fo He thought his wings were much too flow O'erjoy'd they fo were pavted. Drayte Nymphid Then, if the fpider find him faft befet She iffues forth, and runs along her loom She joys to touch the captive in her net And drags the little wrerch in triumph home Dryden 4 It 15 fometimes 2 word of tendernefs " aswe now fay poor thing Excellent cvrefcp 2 / Shakefpeare Qha('rened but thus, and thus his lefion taught The'happy avretch fhe put into her breaft. Sidncy WrE'TCHED. adj. [from avretch. 4% Miferable unhappy . . Thefe we fhould judge to be mo@t miferable, bu { that a avretchedcr fort there are, on whom wherea nature hath beftowed ripe capacity, their evil dif.iofitlon ferioufly goeth about therewith to apprev Bfld GQd, as being not God Hooker O cruel death ! to thofe you are more Kin Than to the avrerched mortals left behind. #aller Yo, 11 To bed went the bridegroom and the brid 2. Calamitous ; afflitive 3. Sorry; pitiful5 paltry ; worthlefs When God was ferved with legal facrifices, fuc was the miferable and zwretched condition of fom men's minds, that the beft of every thing they ha bcn{ag culled out for themfelves, if there were i their flocks any poor, ftarved, or difeafed thing not worth the keeping, they thought it good enoug for the altar of God Hooker Affected noife is the moft wwretched thin That to contempt can empty feribblers bring Rofcommon Forgive the many failings of thofe who, wit t!\cnr woretched art, cannot arrive to thofe height that you pofiefs Dryden 4. Defpicable; hatefully contemptible An adventare worthy to be remembered for th unufed examples therein, as well of true natura good'ncfs as of wuretched ungratefulnefs Sidney WRErcHBEDLY. adv. [from wretched. 1. Miferably ; unhappily Wa never fuch an ill-pai wwriggle in their feats as long as the cufliion To Wr1'cGLE w.4 Werr'cererair. m f See WR1GGLE up, an laid open, how poorly an avretch edly muft that man fneak, who finds himfelf guilt and baffled too Soutd WRETCHEDNESS. 7. /. [from awretched. 1. Mifery; unhappinefs ; afflicted ftate My inifery cannot be greater than it is: fea not the danger of my blind fteps, I cannot fal worfe than I am ; and do not obftinately continu to infect thee with my wretchedrefs Sidney He 'gan inquir ‘What hard mifhap him brought to fuch diftrefs And made that caitif's thrall the thrall of wwretchednefs Spenfer Clarion did at laft declin To loweft wwretchednefs 5 and is there the Such rancour in the hearts of mighty men ? Spen/f When they are weary of wars, and brought dow to extreme awretchednefs, then they creep a little and fue for grace, till they have recovered thei Spenfer ftrength again I love not to fee wretchednefs o'excharg'd Shakefpeare And duty in his fervice perifhing We have with the feeling loft the very memor of fuch awretchednefs as our forefathers endured b thofe wars, of all others the moft cruel Raleigh 2. Pitifulnefs ; defpicablenefs WRre'TcHLESS. adj. [ This is, by I kno written for reck not whofe corruption lefs. mindlefs ; heedlefs Carelefs For any man to put off his prefent repentance on contemplation of a poffibility that bis latter re pentance may ferve the turn, is the moft wrerchlef prefumption, and hath no promife of mercy anHammond nexed to it If perfons of fo circumfpeét a piety l\z\vf: bee thus overtaken, what fecurity can there be for ou Gowernment of the Longue ‘u‘)':‘f(/)]:;/.s ofcitancy WRE TCHLESSNESS. lefs. 2 / [from avretch Careleflnefs The Devil drives them into defperation, or int auretchleffuefs of unclean living 7» WRI'GGLE @ 7.z{gé,ggg,,, Dutch. with fhort motions Corriinon Prayer |pmgan Saxon To move to and fro If fheep or thy lamb fall a wriggling with tail l a e p m l h e i w it c a f b Go by a Tuffer a p n i n t e e t o i i u r p i f The b th o u a l u u p e n c a o u o tafms I l i M e i f p o w d a u glgliningg quick vrigi li th i e k t i n w f o c e l The exc e t e o i g i w o t w w f mavked to b n x M fide For awriggl o My ragged ronts all fhiver and fhake They wont in the wind wagg their wriggl Peark as a peacoke, but nought it avails WricrT 7 f. [prihza manufacturer fuch little thuffling arts come once to b b iz his body to recove aty and caft his right leg over. A flim thin-gutted fox made a har ariggle his body into a hen-rooft L Clarendon 2. Meanly ; defpicably 'To putin a quic reciprocating motion; to introduc fhifting motion A workman the duke's ruin took its date pie t Rettléfs he tofs'd, and tumbled to and fro And roll'd and wriggled farther off for woe, Dyyd How wildly will-ambition A vérmin qwriggling in th' ufurper's car And both he and his fuccefiors woul From thefe two wars, {o wvretche dly entered into rippe When I loved, I was a zorstch Why doft thou drive m 'I:O range :1.11 o'er a wafte and barren place To find a friecnd 2 The zwrerched have no friends Dryden Whe 1, A miferable mortal = W R pyphea, Saxon. an artifice s, To fruggle; to contend W R ; a maker Nor place the nci -hbour Cyclops their delight In brave vermilion prow deckt fhip P 3 nor uright Ufeful and fkilful Chapman It is impoffible duly to confider thefe things without being rapt into admiration of the infinit wifdom of the Divine Archite&, and contemnir the arrogant pretences of the world and anima awrights, and much more the productions of chance Cheyae The verb To write has the fame found wit wright, a workman; right, or cguity; and rite or ceremony; but fpelled very differently Watts's Logick 70 WRING @. a. preter. and part. pafl awringed and wryng. [pningan, Saxon. 1. T twift to turn round with violence The prieft fhall vring off his head, and burn-i on the altar Lewiticus, iz 15 2. To force by contortion: with a parti cles as sut He thruft the fleece together, and zvringed th dew out of it, a bowl full of water. Fudges, vi. 3 ‘The figure of a fturdy wontan, done by Michae Angelo, wathing and winding of linen clothes in which a€t fhe wrings out the water that mad Wotton the fountain Apply mild detergents on pledgets of lint ove it, with a comprefs wrang out Wifemar 3. To{queeze ; to prefs In fleep I heard him fay, fweet Defdemona Let us be wary, let us hide our loves And then, fir, would he gripe and wring my hand S.‘m:kg/}::an 4. To writhe The filly owner of the good Weeps over them and wrings his haplefs hands Shakelpear g. To pinch The king began to find where his fhoe did zorin him, and that it was his deprefling the houfe o York that did rankle and fefter the affections o Bacow's Henry V11 his people It he had not been too much grieved, and worun b an uneafy an hav {treight fortune, he woul been an excellent man of bufinefs Clarenden 6. To force by violence ; to extort I had rather coin my heart And drop my blood for drachmas, than to wrin From the hard hands of peafants their vile traf Shakefpeare's Fulius Cazjar By any indireion Who can be bound by any folemn vo To zuring the widow from her cuftom'd right And have no other reafon for his wrong But that he was bound by a folemn oath Shekefpeare's Henry VI Tha |