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Sayenge, that they wold not maculate the honour of theyr people wyth suche a reproche, to be saide, that they had made aliaunce with disars.

Sir T. Elyot. The Governour, b. i. c. 26.
O vouchsafe

With that thy rare green eye, which never yet
Beheld things maculate, look on thy virgin.

Beaum. & Fletch. The Two Noble Kinsmen, Act iii. sc. 1.

I speake not, be thou true, as fearing thee:

For I will throw my gloue to death himselfe
That there's no maculation in thy heart.

Shakespeare. Troil. & Cress. Act iv. sc. 4.

MAD,. Skinner says, Gemaad, gemad, MAD, adj. insanus, vecors. It. Matto, stulMADDEN, v. tus. The older etymologists MA'DDISH. refer our Eng. Mad to the MA'DDINGLY. Greek; but do not agree upon MA'DLY. the specific source. Serenius, MA'DMAN. from the Goth. Mod, anger. MADNESS. Tooke, from the A. S. Met-an, somniare, to mete, to dream; past part. Matt, and Tooke also disputes the Greek origin ascribed to the It. Matto. The Greek derivatives The observes) in the Italian proceed through the Latin; and in the Latin, there is nothing which

resembles Matto.

'Twas then, the madding Monarchs to compose,

The Pylian Prince, the smooth-speech'd Nestor rose,
His tongue dropp'd honey.-Tickell. Homer. Iliad, b. i.
Calm, on the beach while maddening billows rave,
He gains Philosophy from every wave;
Science, from every object, round, he draws;
From various Nature, and from Nature's laws.

Savage. To John Powell, Esq.

Her mien, her shape, her temper, eyes, and tongue,
Are sure to conquer-for the rogue is young;
And all that's madly wild, or oddly gay,
We call it only pretty Fanny's way.

Parnell. An Elegy to an Old Beauty.
And Madness laughing in his ireful mood.

Dryden. Palamon & Arcite.
Herein seems to lie the difference between idiots and
madmen, That madmen put wrong ideas together, and so
them, but idiots make very few or no propositions, and
make wrong propositions, but argue and reason right from
reason scarce at all.-Locke. Hum. Underst. b. ii. c. 2. s. 13.
Far from the madding crowd's ignoble strife,
Their sober wishes never learn'd to stray.

Gray. Elegy.
The legislature, to prevent all abuses incident to such
private custody, hath thought proper to interpose its autho-
rity, by statute 14 Geo. III. c. 49. (continued by 19 Geo. III.
15.) (16.) for regulating private mad-houses.

c.

Blackstone. Commentaries, b. i. c. 8.

Is it because Liberty in the abstract may be classed among

Madness is popularly applied to such a disorder the blessings of mankind that I am seriously to felicitate a
or disorganization, such an insanity or unsound-mad-man, who has escaped from the protecting restraint
ness of the mental faculties, as disables a man from and wholesome darkness of his cell, on his restoration to
the government of himself, or the management of the enjoyment of light and liberty.
Burke. On the French Revolution.

his own affairs.

Mad-insane, or unsound of understanding, Esordered or distracted to the loss of reason, to a olent, furious excess; to frenzy or delirium; farious, frantic, delirious. See the quotations

from Drummond and Gray.
And manye of hem seiden, he hath a deuel, and maddith;
what heren ye him?-Wiclif. Jon, c. 10.

And these wordis were seyn bifore hem as madnesse and the bileueden not to hem.-Id. Luke, c. 24.

Festus seide with greet voice, Poul, thou maddest, many tres turnen thee to woodnesse. And Poul seide, I madde to thou best Festus, but I speke out the wordes of treuthe and sobrenesse.-Id. Dedis, c. 26.

Festus said we a lowde voyce. Paule, yu arte besydes thy Muche learninge hath made ye mad. And Paul said: not mad, most dere Festus: but speake ye woordes of traeth and soberness.-Bible, 1551. Ib.

Saffireth thee, but if thy wittes madde,
To have as gret a grace as Noe hadde.

Chaucer. The Milleres Tale, v. 3555.
For John Baptist (as they thought) was to mad to lyue so
strapte a life, and to refuse to be iustified therby.
Tyndall. Workes, p. 232.
But what wyl ye say if ye see me that are taken and re-
Futed wise, laugh much more maddelye than he?
Sir T. More. Workes, p. 73.
Like as a madde man yt casteth fyre brandes and shotteth
dye arrowes and dartes oute of a preuye place, euen so
Geetha dissembler wyth his neyghboure.
Bible, 1551. Prouerbes, c. 26.

But now from me his madding mind is start,
And wooes the widdowes daughter of the glenne.
Spenser. Shepheard's Calender. April.

What sweet delight a quiet life affords,
And what it is to be from bondage free,
Far from the madding worldlings hoarse discords,
Sweet flow'ry place, I first did learn of thee.

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"Certes, madame," quath thys other, "so ne may yt nogt
be,"
Id. p. 289.

Madame, I am a man of thyne,

That in thy courte haue long serued.-Gower. Con. A. b. i.

In which [a chariot] they mean to Paris him to bring,
To make sport to their madams and their boys.

Drayton. The Battle of Agincourt.

In the colleges many of the young divines, and those in next aptitude to divinity, have been seen, prostituting the shame of that ministry, which either they had, or were nigh having, to the eyes of courtiers and court-ladies, with their grooms and madamoisellaes.-Milton. Apol. for Smectym.

MA'DDER. A. S. Madre; Dut. Meed; It. Madera; which latter, Skinner thinks, may be, q. d. materia tinctoria. Minshew,-from Dut. Meeden, tingere, to tinge, to dye; but there appears no authority for such a word.

MADRIGAL. Fr. and Sp. Madrigale, It. Madriale, madrigale; also more anciently written mandriale, (Menage,) from the It. and Sp. Mandra; Fr. Mandre; Lat. Mandra, a sheepfold, or any place for sheep and shepherds to take shelter in; and thus madrigal was originally applied to chanson de berger, the shepherd's song. See Menage's French and Italian Etymologies; he derives the Lat. Mandra, from the Gr. Avтро, a cave.

While shaggy satyres, tripping o'er the strands,
Stand still at gaze, and yeeld their sences thrals,
To the sweet cadence of your madrigals.

Browne. Britannia's Pastorals, b. i. s. 4.
The madrigal may softer passions move,
And breathe the tender ecstacie of love.

Dryden. Art of Poetry, c. 2.
And thoughtful lovers to the winds complain,
To mitigate the madness of their pain,
Now warbling madrigals so light and gay,
Now pale and pensive the long summer's day.
Fawkes. Gawin Douglas. Description of Winter.
MAFFLE, v. Į Dut. Maffelen. Balbutire, et
MA'FFLER. buccas movere. Ang. Maffle,
(Kilian.) The Dut. is also written Muffelen, and
Skinner thinks,-omnia a sono ficta; but see
MUFFLE.

To stutter, or stammer.

Yet notwithstanding he deliuered his speeches by reason of his palseie, in such staggering and mafling wise, &c. Holinshed. Ireland, an. 1532.

The familiar friends and schollers (by report) of Plato did imitate him in stooping forward: and those of Aristotle in his stammering and maffling speech. Holland. Plutarch, p. 74.

They also abuse their power, and go too far in their commandements, (for so they be called at the wine) who enjoyne stutters, stammerers, and mafflers to sing, or bald-pates to kembe their heads, or lame creeples to go upright on their feet without halting.-Id. Ib. p. 535.

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As when a spark

Lights on a heap of nitrous powder, laid
Fit for the sun som magazin to store
Against a rumor'd warr, the smuttie graine
With sudden blaze diffus'd, inflames the aire:
So started up in his own shape the fiend.

Milton. Paradise Lost, b. iv.

Thus useful arms in magazines we place,
All rang'd in order, and dispos'd with grace,
But less to please the eye, than arm the hand,
Still fit for use, and ready at command.

Pope. Essay on Criticism. We essayists who are allowed but one subject at a time are by no means so fortunate as the writers of magazines, who write upon several. If a magaziner be dull upon the Spanish war, he soon has us up again with the ghost in Cock-lane.-Goldsmith, Ess. 9.

The first is madder, (rubia,) in great request among diers and curriers for to set a colour upon their wooll and leather, right necessarie. The best of all and most commended is our madder of Italie, principally that which groweth about vilages neare unto our citie of Rome. Holland. Plinie, b. xix. c. 3. Urban or Sylvan, or whatever name Madder also afforded something peculiar and very differ- Delight thee most, thou foremost in the fame ing from what we have newly mentioned. Of magazining chiefs, whose rival page Boyle. Works, vol. i. p. 750. With monthly medly, courts the curious age. Byrom. The Passive Participle's Petition. The cultivation of madder was, for a long time, confined Gent. [Such a one] I much mistake else, by the tythe to the United Provinces, which, being PresbyMAGGOT. Goth. and A. S. Matha; Dut. Was sent in th' other night, a little maddish. terian countries, and upon that account exempted from this MA'GOTTY. Made, made, maeye, which latter Beaum. & Fletch. The Pilgrim, Act iv. sc. 1. dying drug against the rest of Europe. destructive tax, enjoyed a sort of monopoly of that useful Kilian (as Junius adds) derives from Maeyen, Smith. Wealth of Nations, b. v. c. 2. metere, depascere; to feed upon. The Dut. MADEFA'CTION. Fr. Madéfier; Lat. Ma-Mayen is from the Goth. Mat-yan or mat-gan, the defieri, madefacere, madefactum; to moisten, to third person of which is matgith, that which eateth. become moist. Lat. Mad-ere; Gr. Mud-av; to wet, to soak.

Drummond, pt. i. son. 49.

I maddingly affrighted through the villages.

Id. Women Pleased, Act iv. sc. 1.

Put as to him who Cotis did upbraid,

A call'd his rigour madness, raging fits:

Catent thee, thou unskilful man, he said;

My madness keeps my subjects in their wits.

Daniel. Civil Wars, b. vii.

Others sent messengers & tokens, which very many of the

With-Stow. The West Saxons.

A wetting, making or being wet. ged yong men accepted and beleeued, for good eneth it not, except it vapour. The cause is, for that heat Water, being contiguous with aire, cooleth it, but moistand cold have a virtual transition, without communication of substance; but moisture not: and to all madefaction there is required an imbibition.-Bacon. Nat. Hist. § 865. MADGE-HOWLET. In French called Ma

Dor. And is your hate so mortal?

Mary. No not to his person,

Bot to his qualities, his mad-cap follies,

Which still like Hydras' heads grow thicker on him.

And see MOTH.

Your worm is your onely emperour for diet. We fat all creatures else to fat vs, and we fat ourselfe for magots. Shakespeare. Hamlet, Act iv. sc. 3.

Out of the sides and back of the most common caterpillar, which feeds upon cabbage, cole-wort, and turnep-leaves, which we have described in the catalogue of Cambridge plants, we have seen creep out small maggots to the number sometimes of threescore or more, which so soon as ever they came forth, began to weave themselves silken cases of a came out thence in the form of small flies with four wings. Ray. On the Creation, pt. ii.

Beaum. & Fletch. Monsieur Thomas, Act 1, sc. 2. chette, whence, or from Madge, for Margaret, and yellow colour, wherein they changed, and after some time

La Out you mad-headed ape, a weazell hath not such a tee of spleene, as you are tost with.

VOL II.

Shakespeare. 1 Pt. Hen. IV. Act ii. sc. 3.

howlet, Skinner forms the word. See OWL.

I'le sit in a barn with Madge-howlet, and catch mice first.
B. Jonson. Every Man in his Humour, Act ii. sc. 2.

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MA'GIC, adj. MAGIC, n.

MA'GICAL.

MAGICALLY.

Fr. Magique It. Magica; Sp. Magica: Lat. Magica; Gr. Μαγική, μαγεια, from μα and this from the Persian. yos, The first quotation from Ralegh explains the ancient usage of the word by the Persians, and the second, the common modern application.

MAGICIAN.

MA'GI.

But thurgh his magike for a day or tway,

It semed all the rockes were away.

Here is the deficience-Physicians have not set down and delivered over certain experimental medicines for the cure of particular diseases, besides their own conjectural and magisterial descriptions.-Bacon. On Learning, b. ii.

I finde a vast chaos of medicines, a confusion of receipts and magistrals, amongst writers, appropriated to this disease, some of the chiefest I will rehearse.

Burton. Anatomy of Melancholy, p. 382.

Let it be some magistrall opiate.

Bacon. History of Life and Death, p. 29. What a presumption is this for one, who will not allow Chaucer. The Frankeleines Tale, v. 11,606. liberty to others, to assume to himself such a licence to controul so magistrally.-Bishop Bramhall against Hobbes. The physicians have frustrated the fruit of tradition and Id. The Monkes Tale, v. 14,214. experience by their magistralities, in adding, and taking out, and changing quid pro quo, in their receipts, at their pleasures.-Bacon. On Learning, b. ii.

In al that lond magician was non,
That could expounen what this lettre ment.
But Daniel expounded it anon

Jason, whiche sigh his fader olde,
Upon Medea made hym bolde

Of art magike, whiche she couth,
And praieth hir, that his father's youth

She wolde make ayenewarde newe.-Gower. Con. A. b. v.
The gods and thee, dere sister, now I call,
In witnes, and thy hed to me so sweete,
To magike arts against my will I bend.

Surrey. Virgile. Eneis, b. iv.
Untill the hardy mayd (with loue to frend)
First entering, the dreadfull Mage there found
Depe busied 'bout worke of wondrous end,

And writing straunge characters on the grownd,
With which the stubborne feendes he to his service
bownd.
Spenser. Faerie Queene, b. iii. c. 3.

It is confessed by all of understanding, that a magician (according to the Persian word) is no other than Divinorum cultor et interpres, a studious observer and expounder of divine things and the art itself (I mean the art of natural magick) no other, Quam naturalis philosophiæ absoluta consummatio, than the absolute perfection of natural philosophy. Ralegh. History of the World, b. i. c. 11. s. 3.

And that distill'd by magicke flights,
Shall raise such artificial sprights,
As by the strength of their illusion,
Shall draw him on to his confusion.

Shakespeare. Macbeth, Act iii. sc. 3.
Ven. Ile humbly signifie what in his name,
That magicall word of warre, we haue effected.

Id. Antony & Cleopatra, Act iii. sc. I.

Medicines were called pharmaca, which anciently signified poysons; because it was believed, that unless they were magically used, they would do more hurt than good." Grew. Cosmo. Sacra, b. iv. c. 8. He is called a magician now-a-days who having entered league with the devil, useth his help to any matter.

Ralegh. History of the World, b. i. c. 11. s. 2.

They by the altar stand, while with loose hair
The magic prophetess begins her prayer.

Waller. Virgil. Æneis, b. iv.

Some have fancied that envy has a certain magical force in it, and that the eyes of the envious have by their fascination blasted the enjoyments of the happy.-Spectator, No.19.

There dire magicians threw their mists around,
And wise men walk'd as on enchanted ground.
Dryden. The Hind and the Panther.

We read, in the Book of Exodus, of an express trial of skill, if we may be allowed the expression, between Moses

and the magicians of Egypt, in the exercise of miraculous powers; in which the magicians were completely foiled,not because their feats were not miraculous, but because their power, as they were at last driven to confess, extended not to those things which Moses did.-Horsley, vol. i. Ser.11.

The arts of magic were equally condemned by the public opinion and by the laws of Rome; but as they tended to gratify the most imperious passions of the heart of man, they were continually proscribed, and continually practised. Gibbon. Roman Empire, c. 25.

These mighty piles of magic-planted rock,
Thus rang'd in mystic order, mark the place
Where but at times of holiest festival
The Druid leads his train.

MAGISTERY. MAGISTE RIAL. MAGISTERIALLY. MAGISTE RIALNESS. MAGISTRALL. MAGISTRALLY. MAGISTRALITY.

Mason. Caractacus.

Magistery, as used by
Chemists, is explained in
the quotation from Boyle.
And see MAGISTRACY.
Magisterial,

master

like, with the authority of a master, in the manner of a master; authoritative, domineering; powerful, efficacious, of sovereign or supreme power or efficacy. Upon this ground Paracelsus, in his Archidoxis, extracteth the magistery of wine; after four monthes digestion in horse-dung, exposing it unto the extremity of cold; whereby the aqueous parts will freeze, but the spirit retire, and be found uncongealed in the center.

Brown. Vulgar Errours, b. ii. c. 1.

Your assertion of the originall of set forms of liturgy. I justly say is more magistrall, than true, and such as your own testimonies confute.

Bp. Hall. Answer to the Vindication of Smectymnuus, s. 2.

Although majestery be a term variously enough employed by chymists, and particularly used by Paracelsus to signify

very different things; yet the best notion I know of it, and that which I find authorized even by Paracelsus in some passages, where he expresses himself more distinctly is, that it is a preparation whereby there is not an analysis made, of the body assigned, nor an extraction of this or that principle, but the whole, or very near the whole body, by the help of some additament, greater or less, is turned into a body of another kind.-Boyle. Works, vol. i. p. 637.

Those who have fairly and truly examin'd, and are thereby got past doubt in all the doctrines they profess and govern themselves by, would have a juster pretence to require others to follow them: but these are so few in number, and

find so little reason to be magisterial in their opinions, that nothing insolent and imperious is to be expected from them.

Locke. Of Human Understanding, b. iv. c. 16. s. 4.

I have of late years met with divers such vain pretenders, who blush not to talk of rhetorick more magisterially than Aristotle or Tully would.-Id. Ib.

He [Dr. Tully] chargeth him [Bull] with too much precipitancy and magisterialness in judging.

Nelson. Life of Dr. George Bull, s. 40. Acanthe here, When magisterial duties from his home Her father call'd, had entertain'd the guest.

Glover. The Athenaid, b. xv. The claim of infallibility, or even of authority to prescribe magisterially to the opinions and consciences of men, whether in an individual, or in assemblies and collections of men, is never to be admitted.-Bp. Horsley, vol. ii. Ser. 15.

MAGISTRACY. Fr. Magistrat, magisMAGISTRATE. trature; It. Magistrato; MAGISTRA'TICK. Sp. Magistrado; Lat. Magistratus, from magistrare, regere, temperare, to rule; and this from magister, which (says Vossius) is either from magis, greater, as minister from minus, or rather from the Gr. MeyOTOS, the greatest, whence magistrates are by the Greeks called μεγιστάνες. But see MAGNIFY.

Magistracy. the office or station of magistrate, i. e. of one greater than, or superior to, placed over or above, in power or authority over, others in society, or social body, in a state; one appointed or invested with authority to interpret and execute the laws or some portion of them. And Pilat clepide togidere the princis of prestis and the magestratis of the puple.-Wiclif. Luke, c. 23.

They which haue such auctorities to them comitted, may be called inferiour gouernors, hauynge respect to theyr office or dueties, wherin is also a representation of gouernance: all be it they be named in Latine magistratus. And herafter I intende to cal them magistrates, lackynge an other more conuenient worde in Euglyshe.

Sir T. Elyot. The Governour, b. i. c. 3.

not of the internal and essential glory which is in magistra tick or ecclesiastick power and order, (which are both divine,) yet are so far not only convenient, but almost necessary, as they help to keep both laws and religion from -1 contempt, and from that vulgar insolence to which seditious and atheistical humours are subject.

Bp. Taylor. Artificial Handsomeness, p. 169. Magistrates are to govern according to those instructions of Job, c. xxix. 14. I put on righteousness, and it clotheth me; my judgment was as a robe and a diadem. I was eyes to the blind, and feet was 1 to the lame. I was a father to the poor, and the cause which I knew not, I searched out. Clarke, vol. i. Ser. 49. J

Of magistrates some also are supreme, in whom the sovereign power of state resides: others are subordinate, deriving all their authority from the supreme magistrate, accountable to him for their conduct, and acting in an inferior secondary ■ sphere.-Blackstone. Commentaries, b. i. c. 2.

Thus far hath been considered chiefly the power of kings and magistrates; how it was and is originally the people's, and by them conferr'd in trust only to be employ'd to the common peace and benefit; with liberty therfore and right remaining in them to reassume it to themselves, if by kings or magistrates it be abus'd: or to dispose of it by any alteration, as they shall judge most conducing to the public good. Milton. The Tenure of Kings and Magistrates.

In all tyrannical governments the supreme magistracy, or the right both of making and of enforcing the laws, is vested in one and the same man, or one and the same body of men. Id. Ib.

MAGNALITY.

Low Lat. Magnalis, magna

lia, from the Lat. Magnus, great.
Something great; greater than ordinary or

So long therefore (for the resemblance which dominion hath) do those that are powerful retain the image of God, as according to his commandments they exercise the office or magistracy to which they are called.

usual.

Although perhaps too greedy of magnalities, we are apt to make but favourable experiments concerning welcome truthes, and much desired verities.

Ralegh. History of the World, b. i. c. 2. s. 2. Both civil and religious acts study to conciliate to themselves a majesty and reverence, by habits and ornaments; by comely robes and costly vests; which, though they are

Brown. Vulgar Errours, b. ii. c. 3. Though honest minds do glorifie God hereby; yet do they most powerfully magnifie him, and are to be looked on with another eye, who demonstratively set forth its magnalities, who not from postulated or precarious inferences, intreat a courteous assent; but from experiments and undeniable effects, enforce the wonder of its maker.-Id. Ib. b. ii. c. 4

MAGNANIMITY. Fr. Magnanime; It. MAGNA'NIMOUS. Magnanimo; Sp. MagMAGNA'NIMOUSLY. nanimo; Lat. Magnanimus, i. e. .e. magnus animus; of or pertaining to, having or possessing, a great mind. See MAGNIFY. Greatness of mind; loftiness of thought, feeling, or sentiment: opposed to pusillanimity, and mean spiritedness. See the quotation from Sir T. Elyot. Right so men gostly, in this maiden free Sawen of faith the magnanimitie.

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Chaucer. The Second Nonnes Tale, v. 15,578. Magnanimitie is a vertue moche commendable, and may be in this wyse defyned, that it is an excellencie of mynde, concernynge thinges of great importaunce or estimation, doinge al thynge, that is vertuous, for the acheuinge of honour.-Sir T. Elyot. The Governour, b. iii. c. 13.

I seeme to see a farre off (for my comfort) the highe and triumphant vertue called magnanimity accompanied with industrious diligence.-What shal I do then? Shall I yeid to miserie as iust plague appointed for my portion? Magnanimity saith no, and industry seemeth to be of the verie same opinion.-Gascoigne. The Steele Glas.

Never had worthy man for any fact,

A more fair, glorious theatre than we; Wheron true magnanimity might act Brave deeds, which better witnessed could be. Daniel. Civil Wars, b. vi. Both striv'd for death; magnanimous debate! Whilst with religion, vertue emulous stood: They generously devout, devoutly brave, Taught Gentiles worth, true zele to Christians gave. Stirling. Domes-day. The Ninth Houre. Who first from death by deeds redeem'd their names, And eminent magnanimously grew, They onely praise, not profit did pursue.

Id. Ib. The Fourth Houre

But before I descend to particulars, it will not be amiss to take notice of one consideration, that may in genera make it probable that the Christian Religion is rather favourable, than opposite to true magnanimity.

Boyle. Works, vol. v. p. 552 Lives there on earth, almost to Greece unknown, A people so magnanimous, to quit Their native soil, traverse the stormy deep, And by their blood and treasure spent for us, Redeem our States, our liberties, and laws!

Thomson. Liberty, pt. ii In the height of his agonies, with a magnanimity not les extraordinary than his patient endurance of pain and co tumely, he accepted the homage which in that situation w offered to him as the King of Israel; and, in the highe tone of confident authority, promised to conduct the penite companion of his sufferings that very day to Paradise. Horsley, vol. i. Ser. 1 With Hannibal at her gates, she [Holland] had nobly a magnanimously refused all separate treaty.

Burke. Letters on a Regicide Peace, Let

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MAGNETICK.

MAGNE TICKNESS.

MAGNETISM.

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And thus where he so highly magnifieth the beliefe of God's promises only, setting all other articles of the faithe

Having the powers of as thingis of a second sorte, him selfe belieueth as ye see the magnet; attractive.

On th' other syde an hidious rock is pight

Of mightie magnes-stone.

Spenser. Faerie Queene, b. ii. c. 12.

Dinocrates began to make the arched roofe of the temple of Arsinoe all of magnet, or this loadstone, to the end, that within that temple the statue of the said princesse made of yrus, might seeme to hang in the aire by nothing.

Holland. Plinie, b. xxxiv. c. 14. The honour of that inuention, as touching the propertie of the magnetical needle in pointing towards the poles, is Eributed by Blondus to the citizens of Amalfe.

Stow. Q. Elizabeth, an. 1602.

There is an opinion, that the moon is magnetical of heat, s the sun is of cold and moisture.-Bacon. Nat. Hist. § 75. [We see] many greene wounds by that now so much used aguentum armarium, magnetically cured.

Burton. Anatomy of Melancholy, p. 96.

It related not to the instances of the magneticalness of lightning-History of the Royal Society, vol. iv. p. 253.

The magnetic poles are also a great secret; especially now they are found to be distinct from the poles of the earth. Grew. Cosmo. Sacra, b. i. c. 2.

The magnetickness of their external success.
Waterhouse. Comm. on Fortescu, (1663) p. 187.

Men that ascribe thus much unto rocks of the North, rust presume or discover the like magneticals in the South. Fr. in the Southern Seas and far beyond the Equator vafates are large, and declinations as constant as in the Northern Ocean-Brown. Vulgar Errours, b. ii. c. 3.

They must, obedient to mechanic laws.
Assemble where the stronger magnet draws;
Whether the Sun that stronger magnet proves,
Or else some Planet's orb that nearer moves.

Blackmore. The Creation, b. i.

Who can enough magnetic force admire.-Id. Ib.

Many other magnetisms may be pretended and the like
attractions through all the creatures of nature.
Brown. Vulgar Errours, b. ii. c. 3.

But magnetism is so fertile a subject, that if I had now the leisure and conveniency to range among magnetical riers. I should scarce doubt of finding, among their many experiments and observations, divers, that might be added those above delivered, as being easily applicable to the present argument.-Boyle. Works, vol. iv. p. 345.

Thas safe thro' waves the sons of Israel trod;
Their better magnet was the lamp of God.

Harte. Thomas à Kempis. A Vision.
power of

The virtue of his death, and the consequent "

b resurrection" (as the apostle styles it), compose a divine tical influence (if one may use the expression), which act upon the mass of mankind and draw them upwards

fre the earth.-Horne. Works, vol. v. Dis. 3.

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the promises as lyttell as the tother.

Sir T. More. Workes, p. 562. And Dauid said Solomon my sonne is yong and tender, and we must buylde an house for the Lord, magnifical, excellent and of great fame and dignitie throughout all countreis.-Geneva Bible, 1561. 1 Chron. xxii. 5.

He spake in all points as their prince; modestly indeed of his owne person, and of the weale-publicke magnifically. Savile. Tacitus. Historie, p. 139.

Salamon was in a greate deale lesser tyme builded, than This I dare boldly affirme that that magnificent temple of this Isopes crow was decked with hys borrowed fethers. Barnes. Workes, p. 357.

The least error in a small quantity, as in a small circle, be proportionally magnified.-Grew. Cosmo. Sacra, b. ii. c. 5. will, in a great one, as in the circles of the heavenly orbs,

Dread soveraine goddesse, that doest highest sit
In seate of iudgement in th' Almightie's stead,
And with magnificke mighte and wondrous wit,
Doest to thy people righteous doome arede.
Spenser. Faerie Queene, b. v. c. 1.

And this is the full and plain meaning of those words so often used in Scripture for the magnification of faith, The just shall live by faith.-Bp. Taylor, vol. iii. Ser. 3.

Far distant he descries
Ascending by degrees magnificent
Up to the wall of heaven a structure high.
Milton. Paradise Lost, b. iii.

A Prince is never so magnificent
As when he's sparing to enrich a few
With the injuries of many.

Massinger. The Emperor of the East, Act ii. sc. 1.

A domineering pedant o're the boy, [Cupid]
Than whom no mortall so magnificent.

Shakespeare. Love's Labour Lost, Act i. sc. 1.

What ark, what trophy, what magnificence
Of glory, Hotspur, hadst thou purchas'd here;
Could but thy cause as fair as thy pretence,
Be made unto thy Country to appear.

Sperone Speroni replied to [Francis Maria II. Duke of Rovere] "that he preferred to live for one day like a man [rather] than for a hundred years like a brute, a stock or a This was thought and called, a magnificent answer, down to the last days of Italian servitude.

stone.'"

Byron. Childe Harold, c. 4. s. 31. Note.

[Verona] can boast of possessing one of the noblest monuments of Roman magnificence now existing; I mean its amphitheatre, inferior in size, but equal in materials and in solidity to the Coliseum.-Eustace. Italy, vol. i. c. 2.

We commonly find in the ambitious man a superiority of parts, in some measure proportioned to the magnitude of his designs. Bp. Horsley, vol. i. Ser. 4.

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MAG-PIE.

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Minshew and Sherwood,-a MA'GOT-PIE. Magatapie. Magot-pie (says Steevens) is the original name of the bird: magot being the familiar appellation given to pies, as we say Robin to a red-breast, Tom to a titmouse, Philip to a sparrow, &c." It is not unusual to call this bird also Madge. See PIE.

Augures, and vnderstood relations haue,
By maggot pyes, and choughes, and rookes brought forth
The secret'st man of blood.

Shakespeare. Macbeth, Act iii. sc. 4.

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Where the fond ape himselfe uprearing hy
Upon his tiptoes, stalketh stately by
As if he were some great magnifico.

Spenser. Mother Hubberd's Tale.
Be assur'd of this
That the magnifico is much belou'd.

Shakespeare. Othello, Act i. sc. 2. Mens hilaris, requies, moderata dieta is a great magnifier of honest mirth, by which (saith Gornesius) we cure many passions of the minde, in ourselves, and in our friends. Burton. Anatomy of Melancholy, p. 298.

And fast by hanging in a golden chain
This pendant world, in bigness as a star
Of smallest magnitude, close by the moon.
Milton. Paradise Lost, b. ii.

Number, though wonderful in itself, and sufficiently mag

Fr. Magnifier; It. Mag- nifiable from its demonstrable affection, hath yet received

nificare; Sp. Magnificar; Lat. Magnificare, q. d. magnum facere, to make

or cause to be great: magnificus, qui magna facit, who does great things. A. S. Mag-en; Lat. MagnSee MAY, and MIGHT. To enlarge, to amplify,

us.

to augment, to aggran

Magnificence, greatness or grandeur; but appd rather to the splendour, the splendid pomp, e sumptuousness, of grandeur, than to simple

randeur itself.

Magnificent,-in Shakespeare, pretending to

Seatness.

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adjections from the multiplying conceits of men.
Brown. Vulgar Errours, b. iv. c. 12.
Then too the pillar'd dome, magnific heav'd
Its ample roof; and luxury within
Pour'd out her glittering stores.-Thomson. Autumn.
Methinks I see a pompous tomb arise,
Beauteous the form, magnificent the size.

Yalden. On Sir Willoughby Aston.

Where's now the vast magnificence, which made
The souis of foreigners adore

Thy wond'rous brightness, which no more
Shall shine, but lie in an eternal shade?

Pomfret. Eleazar's Lamentation over Jerusalem.

4. The denial of this assistance seems to take off from the

energy of prayer in general, and from the virtue of prayer
for the Holy Spirit in particular, and so to make men slight
and neglect that duty of which the scripture speaketh so
Dr. Whitby. Five Points, Dis. 3. c. 1. s. 2.

magnificently, and to which it so frequently exhorts us.

One of our microscopes has been counted by several of the
curious as good a magnifier, as perhaps any is in the world.
Boyle. Works, vol. ii. p. 543.

To these thy naval streams,
Thy frequent towns superb of busy trade,
And ports magnific add, and stately ships,
Innumerous.
Dyer. The Fleece, b. i.

disused.

For the sacrifices which God gave Adam's sonnes, were no dumme popetrie or superstitious Mahometrie, but signes of the testament of God.-Tyndall. Workes, p. 257.

So did the squire, the whiles the carle did fret And fume in his disdainefull mynd the more, And oftentimes by Turmagant and Mahound swore. Spenser. Faerie Queene, b. vi. c. 7.

My mighty Mahound kinsman, what quirk now? Beaum. & Fletch. Rule a Wife and have a Wife, Act iv. sc.1.

All of this kindred are called Emyri, that is, Lords, cloathed with (or at least, wearing turbants of) greene, which colour the Mahumetans will not suffer other men to weare.-Purchas. Pilgrimage, b. iii. c. 6.

The Mahometans make it a part of their religion to propagate their sect by the sword; but yet still by honourable wars, never by villanies and secret murders.

Bacon. Charge against Mr. Owen.

In the Catecheses Mystagogicæ or instructions of Peter Guerra de Lorca, concerning conuerting and keeping from Mahometisme, are rehearsed and refuted a great part of their superstitions.-Purchas. Pilgrimage, b. iii. c. 5.

There is extant a constitution of Methodius, Patriarke of Constantinople, touching the diuersities of penances (according to the diuersitie of the offence) to bee performed by such as haue reuolted from the faith to Mahumetisme.-Id. Ib.

In the East, where the warmth of the climate makes cleanliness more immediately necessary than in colder countries, it is made one part of their religion: the Jewish law, and the Mahometan, which in some things copies after it, is filled with bathings, purifications, and other rites of the like nature.-Spectator, No. 632.

Mr. Gibbon comes forward with all the rancour of a renegado, against christianity. He tramples upon it at first, with a cloven-foot of heathenism. He dungs upon it at last, from the dirty tail of Mahometanism. Whitaker. Review of Gibbon's History, p. 256. From all those differential marks, I am inclined to suspect that our old structures have been new-named, and Mahometanised without sufficient proof of their Arabic origin. Swinburne. Spain, Let. 44.

MAID, n. Goth. Magath; A. S. MAIDEN, adj. Mag-den, mad-en, madenMA'IDEN, n. man, and also mageth; Dut. MA'IDEN, v. Maged, maegd. Skinner deMAIDENHEAD, or rives from the Goth. and MA'IDENHOOD. A. S. Mag-an, posse, q. d. MA'IDENLY, adj. viripotens. (Vir-go, see MA'IDENLY, ad. VIRGIN.) Junius is struck MA'IDHOOD. by the manifest affinity between the Goth. Magath, and the Gr. Meyebos, greatness, dignity, majesty; and enlarges upon the dignity and majesty which has been attributed to a state of pure virginity or maidenhood. But it is remarkable that the A. S. Mag, maga, was a name applied to a father and to a son, and in general to relations and kindred. Maid is in old authors written, as in the extracts from R. Brunne, Chaucer, and Gower, maie: thus following the same course of corruption as the verb mag, (i. e. may,) and probably derived from it. (See MAN.) The word is applied to

A female child; to a female who has preserved her chastity; a virgin; to a female servant.

Maiden, adj.-pure, unsullied, unstained, unpolluted; unsullied by use or abuse, untouched, untaken; unspotted, unused.

Maiden. Warton says, "Surrey speaks loosely and poetically in making the maiden tower, the residence of the women. The maiden-tower was common in other castles, and means the principal tower, i. e. the tower of the greatest strength and defence." He produces several instances of this use of maiden, and asserts it to be a corruption of the old Fr. Magne, or mayne, great. The principal tower was also named the master-tower. MASTER.

See

Is it a tyme to receaue silver, & receaue garments, oliue trees, vyne yards, oxen, shepe, menseruants, and mayde

seruants?-Bible, 1551. 4 Kings, c. 5.

She found at last, by very certain signes

And speaking markes of passed monuments,
That this young mayd, which chance to her presents,
Is her owne daughter, her owne infant dere.
Spenser. Faerie Queene, b. iv. c. 12.
For had I mayden'd it, as many use;
Loath for to grant, but loather to refuse.

Bp. Hall, b. iii. Sat. 3.
Wherefore blush you now? what a maidenly man at armes
are you become?-Shakespeare. 2 Pt. Hen. IV. Act ii. sc. 2.
The ireful bastard Orleance, that drew blood
From thee my boy, and had the maidenhood
Of thy first fight, I soone encountred.

Id. 1 Pt. Hen. VI. Act iv. sc. 6.
Ten thousand bloady crownes of mothers sonnes,
Shall ill become the flower of England's face,
Change the complexion of her maid-pale peace
To scarlet indignation, and bedew
Her pastors grasse with faithfull English blood.
Id. Rich. II. Act iii. sc. 3.

Is there not charmes
By which the propertie of youth and maid-hood
May be abused.
Id. Othello, Act i. sc. 1.
He liv'd with all the pomp he could devise,
At tilts and tournaments obtain'd the prize;
But found no favour in his lady's eyes:
Relentless as a rock, the lofty maid,
Turn'd all to poison, that he did or said.

Dryden. Theodore & Honoria.

Behold
Those damsels pure, whose maidenly reserve
Forbids such rapture; they in smiles, in tears
Of gratitude and gladness, on the heads
Of gallant youths triumphant garlands place.

MAJESTY.
MAJESTICK.

MAJESTICKNESS.
MAJE'STICAL.
MAJESTICALLY.
MAJESTA TICK.
MAJESTA TICAL.

Glover. The Athenaid, b. vi. Fr. Majesté; It. Maestà, magestà; Sp. Maistad, magestad; Lat. Majestas, from the old majus, i. e. magnus, great. See MAGNIFY. Greatness, grandeur ;action or conduct suiting greatness of station, bespeaking greatness of mind: worthy of greatness; a dignified stateliness or R. Gloucester, p. 13. loftiness. See the quotations from Elyot and Clarke.

Mr. Nares suggests a different origin: that the tower was so called because never touched or taken; and Beauvais, he adds, on the Oise, is for that reason named La Pucelle. And, in confirmation of this, see the quotation from Hall. And this mayde y spoused was of so riche blode.

And somme to lese here maidenhed, wyues for to be.

Id. p. 95.
The next Sonenday after the assumpcioun of Mari
Moder & may Sir Edward had the coroun.
R. Brunne, p. 235.
Philip for that may [i. e. Margaret] mad perueiance redy.
Id. p. 307.
The aungel Gabriel was sent from God: into a cytee of
Galilee whos name was Nazareth. To a maydun weddid to
a man.-Wiclif. Luke, c. 1.

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The name or title by which persons of the rank of kings and queens are addressed.

Whanne mannes sone schal come in his maieste, and alle
hise aungelis with him, thanne he schal sitte on the sege of
his majestee, and alle folkis shulen be gederid bifore him.
Wiclif. Matthew, c. 25.

And God that siteth hie in magestee
Save all this compagnie.-Chaucer. Reves Tale, v. 4320.

And hadde lyued with hir housbond sevene yeer fro hir greatte authoritie, the fountayne of all excellent manners is maydenhod.-Id. Ib.

Thou glory of womanhed, thou faire may.

Chaucer. The Man of Lawes Tale, v. 5271.

But truely Creseide sweet maie,
Whom I have with all my myght iserved,
That ye thus done, I have it nat deserved.

Id. Troilus & Creseide, b. v.

I redy how whilom was a maide
The fairest, as Ouide saide,-
This faire fresshe lustie maie
Alone as she went on a daie-

There came Neptunus

And in his herte suche plesance
He toke, whan he this maiden sigh,

That all his herte aros on high.-Gower. Con. A. b. v.

She wolde hym prey,

That forty daies of respite

He wolde hir graunt, vpon this plight,
That she the while maie bewepe
Hir maydenhode.

Id. Ib. b. iv.

The large grene courtes where we were wont to hove,
With eyes cast vp into the mayden tower,
And easie sighes, such as folk drawe in loue.

Surrey. Prisoner in Windsour.

I cannot too much prayse your treuth and fidelite to your souereigne Lord the Kynge of Fraunce, considerynge how manfully you haue defended this Cytee [Tournay] sythe the beginnynge of this siege, but alas, although it be wrytten on the gates, grauen in stone, Iammes ton ne a perdeu ton pucellage, that is to say, thou haste neuer lost thy maidenhed; yet yf thys Cytee had not ben well furnished and euer at the day appoyncted suer of restreue, it could not haue contynued.-Hall. Hen. VIII. an. 5.

Lyke to Aryna maydenly of porte.

In a gouernour or man, hauing in the publike weale some maiestie, whiche is the holle proportion and fygure of noble estate, and is proprelye a beautie or comelynesse in his countenance, langage, and gesture, apt to his dignite, and accommodate to tyme, place, and company.

Sir T. Elyot. The Governor, b. ii. c. 2.

The king our master hath a purpose and determination,
to make warre vpon the kingdome of Naples: being now in
the possession of a bastardship of Arragon, but appertayning
vnto his maiestie by cleare and vndoubted right.
Bacon. Hen. VII. p. 87.

A crown of such majestic towers doth grace
The gods' great mother, when her heavenly race
Do homage to her.

Denham. Cooper's Hill.

Such a serene, soft, rigorous, pleasing, fierce,
Lovely, self-arm'd, naked majestickness,
Compos'd of friendly contraries, do young
Poetique princes shape.

the supereminent glory and majesty of God. It sets forth
to us in such a sense, the singular and transcendent glory
of the divine majesty; as that, comparatively speaking,
there is no other majesty but his.-Clarke, vol. i. Ser. 83.
But in the midst was seen

A lady of a more majestic mien;
By stature and by beauty mark'd their sovereign queen.
Dryden. The Flower and the Leaf.
Silent they move; majestically slow,
Like ebbing Nile, or Ganges in his flow.

Id. Virgil. Eneis, b. x.

The expression is so majestic, yet familiarized with such easy simplicity, that the more we read and study these writings with pious dispositions and judicious attention, the more we shall see and feel of the hand of God in them. Secker, vol. v. Ser 6. MAIEUTICAL. Gr. MateVTIKOS, obstetricius. Cudworth uses this Græcism. See OBSTETRI

CIOUS.

MAIL, n. Fr. Maille; It. Maglia; Sp.Malla; MAIL, v. tunica ferrea reticulata, (says Skinner,) from the Fr. Maille, macula retis, from its manifest resemblance to the meshes of a net; and to the same effect, Menage. Mail, then, is strictly

The mesh, singly; but applied to the coat
formed of meshes, collectively. To mail-
To cover or protect; to cover or envelope.
For though thin husbond armed be in maille,
The arwes of thy crabbed eloquence

Shal perce his brest.-Chaucer. The Clerkes Tale, v. 9078.
For in tellyng of his tale

No more his herte than his male
Hath remembrance of thilke fourme.

Gower. Con. A. b. iv.

Ne plate, ne male, could ward so mighty throwes,
But yielded passage to his cruel knife.

Spenser. Faerie Queene, b. ii. c. 5.
Perseuerance, deere my lord,
Keeps honour bright, to haue done, is to hang
Quite out of fashion, like a rustie male,
In monumentall mockrie.

Shakespeare. Troyl. & Cress. Act iii. sc. 3.
Wheras those warlike lords
Lay mail'd in armour, girt in ireful swords.

Drayton. The Barons' Wars, b. ii.
Me thinks I should not thus be led along,
Mayl'd vp in shame, with papers on my back,
And follow'd with a rabble, that rejoice
To see my teares, and heare my deep-fetch'd groanes.
Shakespeare. 2 Pt. Hen. VI. Act ii. sc. 4.
Some wore coat armour, imitating scale:
And next their skins were stubborn shirts of mail.
Dryden. Palamon & Arcite, b. iii.
He in his hand restrains
The hostile courser by his straiten'd reins.
He whirls him round, and stands with point addrest
To pierce the mailed side or plated breast.

Hoole. Orlando Furioso, b. xlv
Here clasping greaves, and plated mail-quills strong,
The long-bows here, and rattling quivers hung.

Mickle. The Lusiad, b. i.

MAIL, or Fr. Male; Sp. Maleta; Dut. MALE. Maele. Menage forms it thus from the Lat. Mantica, a bag. Mantica, diminutive manticula, manta, malla. It is not improbably the same word as the preceding, applied to a bag instead of a vesture, and for the same reason, because made of net-work, as those which anglers use still are, and as the modern reticule also is. It is applied not only to

The bag; but that which conveys, (boy, carCartwright. To the Countess of Carlisle.riage, &c.) or by which it is conveyed.

If I were ever to fall in love again (which is a great
passion, and therefore, I hope I have done with it) it would
be, I think, with prettiness, rather than with majestical
beauty.-Cowley. Ess. Of Greatness.

If thou do'st it halfe so grauely so majestically, both in
word and matter, hang me vp by the heeles for a rabbet
sucker, or a poulterer's hare.
Shakespeare. 1 Pt. Hen. IV. Act ii. sc. 4.

In the earth of the house of my majestatick presence.
Pococke. On Hosea, (1685,) p. 120.
He placed a great part of the glory of his majestatical
presence in the temple.
Scott. Works, (Ed. 1718,) vol. ii. p. 493.

This phrase, the majesty, used thus absolutely and inde-
finitely, without mentioning the person to whom it belongs,
Skelton. The Crowne of Laurell. is in a very sublime and emphatical manner expressive of

Inglond, Scotlond & Wales, Ireland therto was laid,
Than mot he fille his males, no man him withsaid.
R. Brunne, p. 248.
Our hoste lough and swore, "So mote I gon,
This goth aright, unbokeled is the male;
Let see now who shal tell another tale."

Chaucer. The Milleres Prologue, v. 3117.
But, sires, o word forgate I in my tale:
I haue relikes and pardon in my male,
As faire as any man in Englelond.

Id. The Pardoneres Tale, v. 12,853.
The tuisday all the day they ordered all their busynesse,
and shodde their horses, and stuffed their males, wherof they
had great plentie.-Berners. Froissart. Chron. vol. i. c. 442.
We have encountered no body but a cushion and a little
mallet, which we found not very far off from hence.
Skelton. Don Quixote, b. iii. c. 9

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This day [May 20, 1709] a mail arrived from Holland, by which there are advices from Paris, That the kingdom of France is in the utmost misery and distraction. Tatler, No. 18. (3.) By the 5 Geo. III. c. 25. and 7 Geo. III. c. 50. if any person shall rob any mail, in which letters are sent by the pest, of any letter, packet, bag, or mail of letters, such aders shall be guilty of felony, without benefit of clergy. Blackstone. Commentaries, b. iv. c. 17.

MAIM,.
MAIM, Or
MAY-HEM, n.
MAIMEDLY.
MATMEDNESS.

Skinner says, perhaps from the Fr. Maymis, mutilated, mehaing, mutilation, mehaigner, to mutilate, all from the Lat. Mancus. And Menage, the MA'YMING, n. Fr. Mehaigner; It. Magagnare, from Fr. Mancer, It. Mancare, and this from manBut Junius thinks it is clearly formed from the reduplication of mai, in maimaitun, abscindebant; from Goth. Maitan, to cut off, to amputate. To wound, so as to disfigure the appearance of, er disable from the use of; to lame by mutilation; to mutilate. Maim, noun,—

Mutilation, defect, injury, or mischief,-in some essential particular. For the legal acceptation of main, or mayhem, see the quotation from Black

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Away fro trouth it doth so varie
That to good love it is contrarie;
Ferit magneth in many wise

Sieke hertes with couetise.-Chaucer. Rom. of the Rose.

And destroy as that sect hath done many a good religious bae spoyled, meyhemed, & slaine many a good vertuous

a robbed, polluted, and pulled downe manye a goodly Church of Christ.-Sir T. More. Workes, p. 277.

But my late maymed limbs lack wonted might

To doo their kindly services, as needeth.

Spenser. Mother Hubberd's Tale.

I am to crane pardon for that I rather leaue it out altoether, then presume to doe it maymedly.

Hackluyt. Voyages, vol. i. p. 614.

Mar. If we believe, and you prove recreant, Livia, Think what a maim you give the noble cause

Te now stand up for.

Beaum. & Fletch. The Tamer Tamed, Act ii. sc. 2. was Lucullus' imperfection and maim, either by are or frowardness of fortune, that he lacked the chiefest a general should have, which was, to be beloved of his ers-North. Plutarch, p. 442.

Preedom from all defects and imperfections, diseases, and Csempers, infirmities and deformities, maimedness and monstrous shapes.

Bolton. Last and Learned Work, (1633,) p. 129.
And finally, not without shedding of bloud, and mayming
Eers citizens, the rumour was appeased.
Stow. Henry VI. an. 1456.

T'ambitious and the covetous desire

More than their worth deserves, or wants require :
Not merely for the profit things may yield,
But ah! their neighbour's pittance maims their field.
Hart. Thomas à Kempis.

By the antient law of England he that maimed any man,
Whereby he lost any part of his body, was sentenced to lose
Reke part: membrum pro membro, which is still the law
Sweden-Blackstone. Commentaries, b. iv. c. 15.

A man's limbs (by which for the present we only underthose members which may be useful to him in fight, and the loss of which alone amounts to mayhem by the comare also the gift of the wise Creator to enable him protect himself from external injuries in a state of nature. Id. Ib. b. i. c. 1.

this from Lat. Magn-us; (which is itself from
See MAGNIFY.) Lye justly observes,
mag-an.
that mag-en, in Composition, signifies great
whence the main sea, the ocean or great sea; the
main land, terra continens; and hence also the
main mast, the great, the chief, or principal mast;
the chief or principal way, road, the high road.
Main, the adj.--

Forceful, powerful, mighty; and, consequen-
tially, chief, principal. Main, the noun,-

Force, power, might, and, consequentially, the
chief, the principal; the chief or principle part;
the mass, or bulk, or gross. See By, and the
quotation below from State Trials.
The main sea, elliptically the main.
These were in this batail of mest mygt and mayn.
R. Gloucester, p. 10.
Git is Harald, I say, regnand in myght & mayn.
R. Brunne, p. 70.
& lowsed the rudder bōdes and hoysed up the mayne-saile
to the wynde & drue to lide.-Bible, 1551. Actes, c. 27.
Yet hauld I in the mayne-sheate of the minde.

Gascoigne. Dan Bartholomew of Bathe.
His eares cut from his head, they set him in a chayre,
And from a maine-yard hoisted him aloft into the ayre.
Id. A Deuise of a Masque for Viscount Mountacute.
The sunne now ginnes to slake his beames
In deawy vapours of the Westerne mayne.

Spenser. Faerie Queene, b. iii. c. 8.
You are fools, you are on the bye, Raleigh and I are on
the main; we mean to take away the king and his cubs.
State Trials. James I. 1603. Sir W. Raleigh.
Resolued to rest vpon the title of Lancaster as the maine,
and to vse the other two, that of marriage, and that of bat-
taile, but as supporters.-Bacon. Henry VII. p. 5.

Whiles his false broker lieth in the wind,
And for a present chapman is assign'd,
The cut-throat wretch for their compacted gaine,
Buyes all but for one quarter of the mayne.

Bp. Hall, b. iv. Sat. 5.
And now that current with main fury ran
(The stop remov'd that did the course defend)
Unto the full of mischief.-Daniel. Civil Wars, b. v.
2 Cap. Still she eyes him mainlie.

Beaum. & Fletch. The Mad Lover, Act iii. sc. 1.
For he by wordes could call out of the sky
Both sunne and moone, and make them him obay;
The land to sea, and sea to maineland dry,
And darksom night he eke could turne to day.
Spenser. Faerie Queene, b. iii. c. 3.
Now the shippe boaring the moon with her maine mast
and anon swallowed with yest and froth.

Shakespeare. Winter's Tale, Act iii. sc. 3.

Their mightie puissance in mainrent, lands, and great possessions at length was (through suspicion conceiued by the kings that succeeded) the cause in part of their ruinous decay.-Holinshed. Historie of Scotland, an. 1308.

Damn'd Pisanio,

Hath with his forged letters (damn'd Pisanio)
From this most brauest vessell of the world
Strooke the main-top.-Shakes. Cymbeline, Act iv. sc. 2
When a vessel from the main arrives in that island [Bar-
badoes] it seems the planters come down to the shoar where
there is an immediate market of the Indians and other
slaves, as with us of horses and oxen.-Spectator, No. 11.
The morn they look'd on with unwilling eyes,

Till from their main-top joyful news they hear.
Of ships, which by their mould bring new supplies,
And in their colours Belgian lions bear.

Dryden. Annus Mirabilis.
To this I shall answer in two words. First, the testimony
of Scripture makes God in all his actions to intend and
design his own glory mainly, Prov. xvi. 4.
Ray. On the Creation, pt. i.
There is scarce any instance of the history of the same per-
son being written by four different contemporary historians

MAIN, (at Cards,) lit. a hand; (Fr. Main; Lat.
Me) the dice or cards held in the hand; (met.) all perfectly agreeing in the main articles, and differing only

good, the prize in hand, in possession.

Were it good to set the exact wealth of all our states

Al at one cast! To set so rich a mayne

On the nice hazard of one doubtfull houre,

were not good. Shakes. 1 Pt. Hen. IV. Act iv. sc. 1.

14 pass our tedious hours away,

We throw a merry main;

Greise at serious ombre play.

MAIN, adj.

MAIN,

MAINLY.

Dorset. Song written at Sea, 1665.

in a few minute particulars of no moment.

Porteus, vol. i. Lect. 2.
By order of the New River Company in London, a watch-
man is nightly fixed at such a height, near the river head,
as to be able to overlook the whole town, and, on the
momentary appearance of any conflagration, to turn the
water full on the mains leading to the respective quarter,
however remote the situation. Jan. 1781.
Horne. Essays & Thoughts, § 15.

MA/INOUR. See the quotations.

Main, with all his might and main-from the A. S. Magen, force, power, from the A. S. verb, Mom, posse, to may, or be able. The adj. immediate pursuit after the act is done. er derives from the Fr. Magne, great; and

All offenders against vert and venison: who may be attached by their bodies, if taken with the mainour, (or mainoeuvre, a manu,) that is, in the very act of killing venison or stealing wood, or preparing so to do, or by fresh and Blackstone. Commentaries, b. iii. c. 6.

A thief taken with the mainour, that is with the thing stolen upon him in manu, might, when so detected flagrante delicto, be brought into court, arraigned, and tried, without indictment.-Blackstone. Commentaries, b. iv. c. 23.

MAINPRISE.) From the Fr. Main, the MA'INPERNOUR. hand, and prise, captus, from prendere, capere, to take, q. d. manu-captio. See the quotations from Blackstone.

Yf he may amendes do. let maynpryse hym have.
Piers Plouhman, p. 68.

And whilest he yet remained in Mounster, he deuised waies how to haue the earle of Desmond apprehended: which being brought to passe, he afterward deliuered him vpon mainprise of these suerties whose names ensue. Holinshed. Ireland, an. 1343.

And because he made default, the lord iustice verelie tooke the aduantage of the bond against the mainpernours. Id. Ib.

He therefore, judging it below him
To tempt a shame the devil might owe him,
Resolv'd to leave the squire for bail

And mainprize for him to the gaol.-Hudibras, pt. iii. c. 1. I. The writ of main-prize, manucaptio, is a writ directed to the sheriff (either generally, when any man is imprisoned for a bailable offence, and bail hath been refused, or specially, when the offence or cause of commitment is not properly bailable below,) commanding him to take sureties for the prisoner's appearance; usually called mainperners, and to set him at large.-Blackstone. Comment. b. iii. c. 8.

MAINTAIN, v.
MAINTAINABLE.
MAINTAINER.
MAINTENANCE.

Fr. Maintenir; It. Man-
tenere; Sp. Mantener; manu
tenere, to hold with the hand,
and, consequentially--
To uphold, to support; to hold firmly, to hold
or keep safe or secure, to preserve, to defend.
Eldolf, bisshop of Bath, the pes mayntend & helde.

R. Brunne, p. 60.
Than said Isaac tille him, "ert thou his mayntenour."
Id. p. 166.
Your richesses, ne sufficen not werres to main teine.
Chaucer. The Tale of Melibeus.

O ye traitours and maintainers of madnesse,
Unto your folly I ascribe all my paine.

Id. The Lamentation of Mary Magdalen.

Id. Dreame.

She had so stedfast countenaunce,
So noble porte, and maintenaunce.
So that I maie by reason call
Humilitee most worth of all,
And lest it costeth to mainteine
In all the worlde, as it is seine.
Myne hert loueth the maynteners of ye lawe in Israel, that
are wyllinge amōg the people.-Bible, 1551. Judges, c. 5.

Gower. Con. A. b. i.

We must haue a schole to teache God's worde in (though it needed not to bee so costly) and therefore it is lawfull to vow vnto the building or maintenace therof, & vnto the helping of all good workes.-Tyndall. Workes, p. 20.

In the later end of thys yere came the thyrde cappe of maynlenaunce from the pope.-Fabyan, vol. i. an. 1506.

The xix daye of May was receyued into London a capp of mayntenaunce and a swerde sent from Pope July, with a great compaignye of nobles and gentlemen which was presented to the kyng on the Sonday then next ensuyng with great solempnytie in the Cathedrall church of Sainct Paul. Hall. Hen. VIII. an. 6.

When Bedford (who our only hold maintain'd)
Death takes from us, their fortune to advance.
Daniel. Civil Wars, b. v.
Whil'st old (and poore perchance) with toil and strife,
Glad (by his labour) to maintaine his life.
Stirling. Doomes-day. The Eighth Houre.
They perhaps, if they were urged, could say little else,
than that without such a second voyage their opinion were
not maintainable.-Ralegh. Hist. of the World, b. ii. c. 1. s. 3.
The right worshipful Maister Philip Sidney, a special
favourer and maintainer of all kinds of learning.

Spenser. Epistle to Master Harvey, signed E. K.
So every where they rule and tyrannize,
For their usurped kingdomes maintenaunce.
Id. The Teares of the Muses.
Judge Anderson who sate at the assizes in the county of
Suffolk did adjudge it not maintainable, because it was not
spoken maliciously.
Wood. Athena Oxon. vol. i. (Henry Morgan.)
Whoever doth so much as communicate with the main-
tainers of them, [the doctrines of equivocation, breach of
faith with heretics, &c.] according to the principles of ancient
Christianity, are guilty of the same crimes.

Barrow. Of the Pope's Supremacy

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