Obrázky na stránke
PDF
ePub

To all yet, he his challenge made at every martiall feate,
And easily foild all since with him Minerva was so great.
Chapman. Homer. Iliad, b. iv.

Soon after this so fierce conflict was done,
Another challenger straight steppeth out,
With whom Martano was required to runne,
But he (whose heart was ever full of doubt)
With fende excuses sought the same to shunne,
And shew'd himselfe a faint and dastard lout.

Harrington. Orlando, b. xvii. s. 63.

Now, at the time and in th' appointed place,
The challenger and challeng'd, face to face,
Approach; each other from afar they knew,
And from afar their hatred chang'd their hue.

Drayton. Palamon & Arcite.

This duelling] seems to have begun upon the famous caliege that passed between Charles V. and Francis I. which though without effect, yet it is enough known and lamented, how much of the bravest blood in Christendom Las been spilt by that example.

Sir W. Temple. Of Heroic Virtue.

My second excepted against it, and advised me to match my own, and send him the choice, which I obeyed; it being, Ju know, the challenger's privilege to elect his weapon. Guardian, No. 133.

I claim, not the letter, but the spirit of the old English that is, to be tried by my peers. I decline his grace's jurisdiction as a judge. I challenge the Duke of Bedford, as ajror to pass upon the value of my services.

Burke. Letter to a Noble Lord.

When any of them chooses to wrestle, he gets up from me side of the ring, and crosses the ground in a sort of measured pace, clapping smartly on the elbow joint of one which is bent, and produces a hollow sound: that is reckoned the challenge.-Cook. Voyage, vol. v. b. ii. c. 7.

Yet I am far from thinking this tenderness universally for he that writes may be considered as a kind Decessary; of general challenger, whom every one has a right to attack: ince he quits the common rank of life, steps forward beyond the lists, and offers his merit to the public judgment. Rambler, No. 93.

His hour is come.

The impious challenger of pow'r divine
Was now to learn, that heav'n, though slow to wrath,
Is never with impunity defied.-Cowper. Task, b. vi.
CHALYBEAN. Fr. Chalibe.

Chalybs, a kind of very hard iron, received its name from the Chabians, a nation of Pontus or Scythia, (Vossius: and see Virg. Geo. i. 58.)

Who tare the lion as the lion tears the kid,

Ran on embattell'd armies clad in iron,

And weaponless himself,

Made arms ridiculous, useless the forgery

Of brazen shield and spear, the hammer'd cuirass,
Chalybean temper'd steel, and frock of mail—
Milton. Samson Agonistes.

Adatmantean proof.

CHAMBER, v.

CHAMBER, R.

CHAMBERER.

CHAMBERING.
CHAMBERLAIN.
CHAMBERLAINSHIP.

And ye schulen seye to the housebondeman of the hous, the mayster seyth to thee, where is a chamber where I schal ete pask with my discipilis ?-Wiclif. Luke, c. 22.

And say vnto ye good ma of the house. The master saieth vnto the where is the gest chamber, where I shal eate myne ester lambe with my disciples ?-Bible, 1551. Ib.

Fr. Chambre; It. and Sp. Camera; Ger. and Dut. Kamer; Lat. Ca

mera;

Gr. Kauapa, fornix, tectum arcuatum, opus fornicatum, aut similis

structura. An arched covering, a vault, or similar stracture. This, says Wachter, is the first signification of the word, which afterwards was applied, privately, to all (enclosed) parts or apartments of a house, cellas, coenacula, dormitoria, and publicly, ad conclavia rationum, et tribunalia principum.

This miller to the toun his doughter send
For ale and bred, and rosted hem a goos,
And bond her hors, he shuld no more go loos:
And in his owen chambre hem made a bedde.

Chaucer. The Reves Tale, v. 4137.

And but thou do to my norice honour,
And to my chamberere within my bower.

Id. The Wif of Bathes Prologue, v. 5882.
And shortly of this matere for to sayn,
He fell in office with a chamberlain,
The which that dwelling was with Emelie.

Id. The Knightes Tale, v. 1420.

[blocks in formation]

For there is none so litell page,
Ne yet so symple a chamberere,
That I ne make hem all chere.
Contecke, as the bokes saine,
Foole hast hath to his chamberlaine.

Id. Ib. b. iv.

Id. Ib. b. iii. And soo she and he wente thyder all alone, and nother chamberer nor varlet entred with them, for the lady had noo mistrust in hym of ony dyshonoure.

Berners. Froissart. Cronycle, vol. ii. c. 61.

This Persiuall came to Jhon Ward, a secrete chamberer to the Duke of Gloucester.-Hall. Edw. V.

Let vs walke honestly as it were in the day lyght: not in eatyng and drynckyng; neither in chamburynge and wantones.-Bible, 1551. Romaynes, c. 13.

To chamber, is merely, to enclose, shut up. A chamberer is applied by Shakespeare to those whose pleasures are in chambers; who are lascivious, wanton, intriguing. And so also chambering in the Bible. Chamber is much used-prefixed,

33 chamber-maid.

Any arch, or vault; any hollow, or cave or Cavity: a protected, or secluded,

or retired room

The hard ground is his feather bed, and some block or stone his pillow; and as for his horse, he is as it were a chamber-fellow with his master, faring both alike. Hackluyt. Voyages, vol. i. p. 250.

The Lord Lisle was made Earl of Warwick, and the Lord Great Chamberlainship was given to him; and the Lord Sudley made Admiral of England: all these things were done, the King being in the Tower.

Burnet. Records. K. Edward's Journal.

I interchangeably hurl down my gage
Vpon this ouer-weening traitor's foote
To prove myself a loyall gentleman,
Euen in the best blood chamber'd in his bosome.
Shakespeare. Richard II. Act i. sc. 1.

Nor in a secret cloister doth he keep

Satan may looke in at my doors by a tentation; but he shall not have so much as one chamber-room set apart for him to sojourne in.-Bp. Hall. Medit. & Vows, cent. 1. § 5.

About twelve o'clock we went to take our places in the house; Mr. Lenthal our Speaker leading the way, and the officers of the army lining the rooms for us, as we passed through the painted chamber, the court of requests, and the lobby itself; the principal officers having placed themselves nearest to the door of the Parliament-house; every one seeming to rejoice at our restitution, and promising to live and die with us.-Ludlow. Memoirs, vol. ii. p. 186.

Those virgin-spirits, till their marriage day :
Nor locks them up in chambers, where they sleep,
Till they awake within these beds of clay.
Davies. Of the Creation of Souls.
Haply, for I am blacke,
And haue not those soft parts of conuersation
That chamberers haue.-Shakespeare. Othello, Act iii. sc. 3.
Nor in the house with chamber-ambushes
Close-banded durst attaque me, no not sleeping,
Till they had hir'd a woman with their gold
Breaking her marriage faith to circumvent me.
Milton. Samson Agonistes.

I grieve not court-ling thou art started up
A chamber-critick and dost dine and sup
At madam's table, where thou makst all wit
Goe high, or loe, as thou wilt value it.

I shall say nothing of those silent and busy multitudes that are employed within doors. in the drawing up of writings and conveyances; nor of those greater numbers that palliate their want of business with a pretence to such chamber practice.-Spectator, No. 21.

I have upon my chamber-walls, drawn at full length, the figures of all sorts of men, from eight foot to three foot two inches.-Tatler, No. 93.

The day after, the Dutchess of Somerset was also sent to the Tower, with one Crane and his wife, that had been much about her, and two of her chamber-women.

B. Jonson. To Court-ling.

Burnet. Hist. of the Reformation, b. i. pt. ii. an. 1551. With nobler gifts of native worth adorn'd, The heroic maid her sex's softness scorn'd; The silken indolence, and soft fatigue, The chamber'd spleen and closeted intrigue. Brookes. Jerusalem Delivered, b. ii. The most magnificent and costly dome Is but an upper chamber to a tomb.-Young. Last Day, b. ii. CHAMELEON. Gr. Χαμαιλεων, from χαμαι, humi; and λewv, leo; humilis, sive pumilus leo: a low or little lion-creeping on the ground. Xauai, Vossius remarks, in composition, diminishes.

Maid. I'll conduct ye
Even to her chamber-door, and there commit ye.
Beaum. & Fletch. Mons. Thomas, Act iii. sc. 8.
Auerring notes

Of chamber-hanging, pictures, this her bracelet.
Shakespeare. Cymbeline, Act v. sc. 5.

And the said chamberlains and factors to be appointed by the Queene's Majestie, shall have sufficient power to intro

or apartment; whether for lodgment, or council. mit and uptake the fruits and profits aforesaid, in such fulprivate deliberation or converse-as a bed-chamber, granted to them thereupon.-Knox. Hist. Reform. p. 323.

nesse as if speciall letters of factory and chamerlancie were

a council-chamber.

[blocks in formation]

Plinie calls it a kind of crocodile. The modern animal is a kind of lizard of a very harmless character.

Discourses so weigh'd as might have serv'd of old
For schools, when they of love and valour told.
B. Jonson. Answer to an Ode by O. Feltham.

There is not a creature in the world thought more fearfull than it; which is the reason of that mutabilitie whereby it turneth into such variety of colours: how beit of exceeding great power against all sorts of hawkes or birds of prey; for by report, let them flie and soare never so high over the chameleon, there is an attractive vertue that will fetch them down.-Holland. Plinie, b. xxviii. c. 8.

Though the cameleon loue can feed on the ayre, I am one that am nourish'd by my victuals; and would faine haue meate.-Shakes. Two Gentlemen of Verona, Act ii. sc. 1.

And yet Appollo is much more ridiculous, if it be so, that he sits, giving answers and oracles as touching golden chamber-pots, gards and fringes of gold, yea, and tripping and stumbling of the foot.-Holland. Plutarch, p. 878.

But that in his chamber-pray'rs,
Persuade they would the multitude
This king too holy is and good.

He could frame altogether with [men's] manners and fashions of life, transforming himself more easily to all manner of shapes, then the camelion. For it is reported, that the camelion cannot take white colour: but Alcibiades could put upon him any manners, customs, or fashions, of what nation soever, and could follow, exercise, and counterfeit them when he would, as well the good as the bad.-North. Plutarch, p. 175.

Drummond. An Anti-Covenanter.

Here in the court, camelion- like I fare,
And as that creature, only feed on air.

Drayton. England's Heroical Epistles.
As the camelion, who is known,
To have no colour of his own;
But borrows from his neighbour's hue
His white or black, his green or blue;
And struts as much in ready light
Which credit gives him upon sight,
As if the rainbow were in tail,
Settled on him and his heirs male;
So the young 'squire.

Prior. The Camelion. CHAMFER, v. Į Fr. " Chanfrain. A chanCHA'MFER, N. Sfering, or a channel, furrow, hollow gutter, or streak, in stone-work," &c. (Cotgrave.) From the Fr. Chambre, cambrè, Curvatus, fornicatus, striatus, sulcatus, curved, vaulted, furrowed, (Skinner.) And thus of the same origin as chamber, though so differently applied.

To form or cut furrows, grooves, channels, wrinkles; to furrow, to groove.

But eft, when ye count you freed from feare
Comes the breme Winter with chamfered browes,
Full of wrinckles and frosty furrowes.

Spenser. Shepherd's Calendar. February. The cornell tree is of a deep yellow, whereof are made the faire bore-speare staves, which shine againe, and bee studded (as it were) with knots and chamfred betweene, both for decencie and handsomenesse.

Holland. Plinie, b. xvi. c. 38.

CHAMLET, n. Į See CAMEL. A kind of CHA'MLETINGS. stuff made of camel's hair; a stuff made to resemble it. Chamletings, is applied to the waving pattern or figures upon it.

All the strete of Saint Denyce was couered ouer with clothes of sylk and chamlet, suche plentie, as though suche clothes shulde cost nothing.

Berners. Froissart. Cronycle, vol. ii. c. 157.

No man that is not worth 2001. or else 201. in living certain, to wear any kind of chamblet.

Strype. Memorials. Edw. VI. an. 1551.

That [vesture] seem'd like siluer sprinkled here and there
With glittering spangs, that did like starres appeare,
And wav'd vpon, like water chamelot,

To hide the metall, which yet euery where

Bewrayd itselfe.-Spenser. Faerie Queene, b. iv. c. 11.

The same chameletings and undulations we may observe from a like cause in the grains of timber, shapes of plants and flowers, variegations of stones, and some minerals. Boyle. Works, vol. vi. p. 401. Beale to Mr. Boyle.

[blocks in formation]

CHAMOIZE.

A word coined by Shelton.
Made of the hair of the Chamois.

Don Quixote left his soft bed, and nothing lazy put on his chamoiz'd apparel, and his boots, to hide the hole in his stocking. Shelton. Don Quixote, vol. iv. c. 5.

CHAMP, v. I know not, says Skinner, CHAMPER. whether from the Fr. Champayer, depascere, vel depasci, (as Cotgrave explains it, to run, feed, graze or pasture in fields,) or from the Gr. KaTTE, to devour greedily.

To champ seems to be distinguished from to chaw; the latter being applied to the grinding action of the chaws or jaws; the former to the compression of the teeth, unaccompanied by the grinding motion of the jaw.

In chamber long she staies, and redy brydled best beseene The palfrey standes in gold, attired riche, and feerce he stampes

For pride, and on the fomy bit of gold with teeth he champes.-Phaer. Virgill. Eneidos, b. iv.

After whose [Ialycus] example, Nealces, another painter, did the like, and sped as well in making froth falling naturally from the horses mouth; namely, by throwing his sponge against the table before him, at what time as he painted a horse-rider cheering and chirking his horse, yet reigning him hard as he champed upon his bit.

Holland. Plinie, b. xxxv. c. 10.

Psyche observ'd how they this serious bit
Into their mouths like sullen horses took;
How mutinously they foam'd and champed it,
And in their hearts the reins aforehand broke.
Beaumont. Psyche, c. 20. s. 249.
The courser paw'd the ground with restless feet,
And snorting foam'd, and champ'd the golden bit.
Dryden. Palamon & Arcite.

One day, playing with a tobacco pipe between my teeth, it happen'd to break in my mouth, and the spitting out the pieces left such a delicious roughness on my tongue, that I could not be satisfied till I had champ'd up the remaining part of the pipe.-Spectator, No. 431.

Now Mr. Spec. I desire you would find out some name for these craving damsels, whether dignified or distinguish'd under some or all the following denominations, (to wit) trash-eaters, oatmeal chewers, pipe chumpers.-Id.

[blocks in formation]

As you travel on the left hand of Arabia, (famous for plenty of sweet odours,) there lieth a champaign country placed between Tigris and Euphrates.

Ralegh. History of the World, b. i. c. 3. s. 12.
Where delicious paradise,

Now nearer, crowns with her enclosure green,
As with a rural mound the campain head
Of a steep wilderness, whose hairie sides
With thicket overgrown, grotesque and wilde
Access deni'd.
Milton. Paradise Lost, b. iv.

So let them be, and, as I was saying,
They their live engines play'd, not staying
Until they reach'd the fatal champaign
Which th' enemy did then encamp on.-Hudibras, pt.i.c.2.
-Far beyond

That Malian champain, stretching wide below, Beyond the utmost measure of the sight From this aspiring cliff, the hostile camp Contains yet mightier numbers.-Glover. Leonidas, b. iii. CHAMPERTY. Į Fr. Cham-parter, to divide CHAMPERTOR. Ja field into even or due parts, (Cotgrave.) See the example from Blackstone, and an example from Milton under the word CHAPLAIN.

Thus may ye seen, that wisdom ne richesse,
Beaute ne sleighte, strengthe ne hardinesse,
Ne may with Venus holden champartie,
For as hire liste the world may she gie.

Chaucer. The Knightes Tale, v. 1951. Champarty, campi-partitio, is a bargain with a plaintiff or defendant campum partire, to divide the land or other matter sued for between them, if they prevail at law; whereupon the champertor is to carry on the party's suit at his own expence.-Blackstone, b. iv. c. 10.

[blocks in formation]

God is hymselfe the champion-Gower. Con. A. b. vii. Then these two champyons were set one agaynst another, and so mounted on theyr horses, and behaued them nobly, for they knewe what perteyned to deades of armes.

Berners. Froissart. Cronycle, vol. ii. c. 61. Rather then so, come fate into the lyst, And champion me to th' vtterance.

Shakespeare. Macbeth, Act iii. sc. 1. Dear country, O I have not hither brought These arms to spoil, but for thy liberties; The sin be on their head that this have wrought, Who wrong'd me first, and thee do tyrannize, I am thy champion, and I seek my right: Provok'd I am to this by others spite.

Daniel. Civil Wars, b. i. Then laid the noble championesse strong hond Upon th' enchaunter, which had her distrest So sore, and with foule outrages opprest.

Spenser. Faerie Queene, b. iii. c. 12. Next march'd the brave Orsin, famous for Wise conduct, and success in war; A skilful leader, stout, severe,

Now marshal to the champion bear.-Hudibras, pt. i. c. 2. When the tongue-battle was over, and the championess had harness'd her peacocks, to go for Samos, and hear the prayers that were made to her.

Dryden. Amphitryon, Act i. sc. 1.

In a battle, every man should fight as if he was the single champion; in preparations for war, every man should think as if the last event depended on his counsel.-Idler, No. 8. CHANCE, v. Chance, ("high Arbiter," as CHANCE, n. Milton calls him,) and his CHANCE, adj. twin brother "Accident," are CHANCEABLE. merely the participles of CHANCEABLY. Echeoir, cheoir, and cadere. To say, "It befel me by chance or

CHANCEFUL.

But when th'approaching foes still following he perceives by accident," is absurdly saying, " It fell by falling."

That he his speed must trust, his usual walk he leaves:
And o'er the champain flies: which when th'assembly find,
Each follows, as his horse were footed with the wind.
Drayton. Poly-Olbion, s. 13.

All night the dreadless angel unpursu'd
Through heav'ns wide champaign held his way, till mern,
Wak't by the circling hours, with rosie hand
Unbarr'd the gates of light.-Milton. Paradise Lost, b. vi.

(See Tooke.)

[blocks in formation]

Toward the south side turned thie thar flete Thar fader & thei a chance togider gan mete.

R. Brunne, p. 59.

Bote throw a charme hadde ich a chaunce. and my chief hele. Piers Plouhman, p. 91.

Seven is my chance, and thin is cink and treye.
Chaucer. The Pardoneres Tale, v. 12,587.

O thou Cupide, O thou Venus,
Fortuned by whose ordinance
Of loue, is euery man's chance

Ye knowen all myn hole herte.-Gower. Con. A. b. ir. As they joygned themselfe togyders, they came to fight hande to hande, and enforcedde themself to enter the one into the ships of the othere, whyche thynge chancedde in many of them, for that the place was narrowe.

Nicolls. Thucydides, fol. 192. Commonly one vnhappines chaunceth not, but another foloweth.-The Golden Boke, c. 27.

-The floods fell from the hils: Dido a den, the Troyan prince the same Chaunced vpon.

Surrey. Virgile. Eneis, b. iv. For that is chanceable which happeneth; and if it happen, there was a time before it happened, when it might haue not happened or else it did not happen, and so if chanceable, not eternal.-Sidney. Arcadia, b. iii.

And he hath not appointed vs, an vncertaine and chanceable coflict, but doth promise such a reward, to the which we ought to confer all the couseills, studies, and desyres of our lyfe.-Caluine. Foure Godiye Sermons, Ser. 2.

For to put our lyfe in danger, without any cosideratio vnaduisedly, and chaunceably, is most against nature.-Id. Ib..

Those accidents are called things chauncing, which chaunce about a thing, so that whether these things chaunce, or no, the thing itselfe may be, or though the thing be not, these may so chaunce to be. As for example, palenesse may chaunti before sicknesse, and the same also may chaunce, though man be not sicke, and a man may be also sicke, and yet no thing pale at all.

Wilson. Logike. Things Chauncing called Contingentia Till on a day roaving the field, I chanc'd A goodly tree farr distant to behold, Loaden with fruit of fairest colours mixt, Ruddie and gold. Millon. Paradise Lost, b. ix. Chaos umpire sits, And by decision more imbroiles the fray By which he reigns: next him high arbiter Chance governs all. Id. Ib. b. ii. All which kinds of lots] howsoever they may seem chance ful, are yet ordered by God, as in the Proverb: The lot i cast into the lap, but the whole disposition is of the Lord. Ralegh. Hist. of the World, b. ii. c. 16. s.2 About that time I chanced to go to the Prince after supper and found him in the worst humour that I ever saw him.

Sir W. Temple. Memoirs, 1672-78

It is not, I say, merely in a pious manner of expression that the Scripture thus ascribes every event to the prov dence of God; but it is strictly and philosophically true i nature and reason, that there is no such thing as chance accident; it being evident that these words do not sign any thing really existing, any thing that is truly an agent the cause of any event; but they signify merely men's igu rance of the real and immediate cause.

Clarke, vol. i. Ser. 9 Yet besides chance ships of other nations, there com hither a Portuguese ship or two every year in their way Brazil.-Dampier. Voyages, an. 1699.

A man that is out of humour when an unexpected gue breaks in upon him, and does not care for sacrificing afternoon to every chance comer; that will be the master his own time, and the pursuer of his own inclination makes but a very unsociable figure in this kind of life. Spectator, No. 13

If chance, by lonely contemplation led,
Some kindred spirit shall inquire thy fate.

Gray. Elegy in a Country Church-yar The superiority of which manner is never more strikin than when in a collection of pictures we chance to see a po trait of Titian's hanging by the side of a Flemish pictur (even though that should be of the hand of Vandyke.) whi however admirable in other respects, becomes cold and gr in the comparison.-Sir Joshua Reynolds, Disc. 8.

Our studies will be for ever, in a very great degree, und the direction of chance; like travellers we must take wh we can get, and when we can get it.-Id. Disc. 12. CHANCE-MEDLEY, properly CHAUD-MEDLEY.

Fr. Chaudemel caude mellée; M Lat. Calida melle (See Du Cange.) Chaude or Caude, from Cal or Calidus, hot, and Mellée, a squabble, a confli from Meler, to mix. See the quotation fr Blackstone.

wilfully, wee make much more adoe, than if it were chun If the offence be committed vpon a prepensed minde, medly.-Wilson. The Arte of Rhetorike, p. 135.

[blocks in formation]

But the self-defence, which we are now speaking of, is that whereby a man may protect himself from an assault, or heike, in the course of a sudden brawl or quarrel, by killag him who assaults him. And this is what the law expresses by the word chance-medley, or, (as some rather choose write it chaud-medley, the former of which in its etymoagy snifies a casual affray, the latter an affray in the heat Ad or passon; both of them of pretty much the same -Blackstone. Commentaries, b. iv. c. 14.

CHANCEL. From the Franco-Norman Chancd from the Lat. Cancelli. (See CANCEL.)

A part of a church, so called, because formerly separated from the rest of the church a cancels, by bars or lattice-work, (Skinner.)

And thus lith Alison, and Nicholas,

In the besinesse of mirthe and in solas,

Ta that the bell of laudes gan to ring,

And freres in the chancel gon to sing.

Cardinal, to meddle more in his office of chancellorship, than he could well suffer, resigned up the seal, which the King presently gave to Wolsey.-Baker. Hen. VIII. an. 1516.

For else how should his sonne maintained be
At inns of court or of the chancery:
There to learn law, and courtly carriage,
To make amends for his mean parentage.

Bp. Hall, b. iv. Sat. 2. In April 1692, he [Treby] with others, being called to the degree of serjeants at law, were sworne at the chancery-bar on the 27th of the said month.-Wood. Athena Oxon.

The Lord Sommers was made a Baron of England; and as he was one of the ablest and most incorrupt judges that ever sat in chancery; so his great capacity for all affairs made the King consider him beyond all his ministers. Burnet. Own Time, an. 1698.

He professed to speak from the records of chancery; and he added another very striking fact, that on the property actually paid into his court, (a very small part, indeed, of the whole property of the kingdom,) there had accrued in that year a net surplus of 800,000l. which was so much new capital.-Burke. On a Regicide Peace, Let. 3.

CHANDLER, n. CHANDLERLY. CHANDLERY. CHA'NDRY, n.

Fr. Chandelier, (q. d.) Candelarius. (Skinner.) "Chandelier, a candlestick; also a chandler, a candlemaker," (Cotgrave.) "A chaundler,--a candle

Chaucer. The Milleres Tale, v. 3656. stick. Sheffield," (Ray.)

From thence, into the sacred church he broke,

And rob'd the chancell, and the deskes downe threw,

And stars fouled, and blasphemy spoke;
And th' images, for all their goodly hew,
Did cast to the ground.

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

Now did Ridley, Bishop of London, by his injunctions, order the altars in his diocese to be taken down, as occasions of great superstition and error, and tables to be set in their room in some convenient places of the chancel or choir. Strype. Memoirs. Edw. VI. an. 1550.

Whoever gives a pair of velvet shoes

Toth holy rood, or liberally allowes

But a new rope to ring the curfew bell,

But he desires that the great deed may dwell,

Or graven on the chancel-window-glasse,

CHANCELLOR, R.

Or in the lasting tombe of plated brasse?-Bp. Hall. Sat. 4. Sir Edward Coke CEA'SCELLERY. says, he has his name CHANCELLORSHIP. of Chancellor from the CHANCERY. highest point of his jurisdiction; viz. a cancellando; that is, from canceling the King's letters patents, by drawing strokes through it like a lattice. But it is well known, as Hobbs observes, that cancellarius was a at officer under the Roman Empire, whereof this island was once a member, and that the office came into this kingdom, either with, or in imitation of, the Roman government. (Hobbs's Dialogue on the Common Law of England.) This officer appears at first to have been a mere clerk, appointed to receive petitions addressed to the Emperor, and to breviate the matter of them; and because he sat, (for whatever purpose,) within a room partitioned off by certain bars or latticeturk, cancelli, he was called Cancellarius. Spelman and Menage, Junius and Skinner.) Chanry seems to be an abbreviation of chancellery.

Some serven the kynge. and hus selver tellen

(See

la the chekkere and the chauncelrie. chalengynge hus

destes-Piers Plouhman, p. 5.

In what thinge it maie amount,

[ocr errors]

thilke ende of our accompte,

che Christ bym selfe is auditour,

Wiche taketh none hede of vein honour, The office of the chancellerie.-Gower. Con. A. b. v. And he tolde me that it was wel and clerelye proued that celer and hys kepers had kylled the man fyrst, and aged him after.-Sir T. More. Workes, p. 235. the tyre of hys hyghe chauncellourshippe, beynge but bar's sonne of Londo, Johan Caygraue sayth, that he kerte toke vpon him as he had ben a prince. Bale. Votaries, pt. ii.

We these two kynges, theyr sonnes and counsailours Calais, there was dayly commonynge, and newe ares deuysed and confermed to ratifye the peace, nat Sage per brekynge the first letters: for they were euer ale beryage one date, to be ye more suretie: of the whiche Then the copy of the regestres in the chaunceryes of kyngea-Berners. Froissart. Cronycle, vol. i. c. 213. After which Dr. Warham, Archbishop of Canterbury, and La Chancellor of England, finding Wolsey, being no

The word is not now limited to a maker and seller of candles, but is applied to dealers in various articles of household consumption. Also to dealers in corn, as a corn-chandler.

Oh-Ruby lips,

Love hath to you been like wine-vinegar,
Now you look wan and pale, lips ghosts ye are,
And my disgrace sharper than mustard-seed.

Cra. How like a chaundler he do's vent his passions. Beaum. & Fletch. Queen of Corinth, Act iv. sc. 1. They would bear us in hand that we must of duty still appear before them once a year in Jerusalem, like good circumcis'd males and females, to be tax'd by the poll, to be scons'd our head money, our two-pences in their chaunlerly shop-book of Easter.-Millon. Of Reformation in England.

The serjeant of the chandlery was ready at the said chamber door to deliver the tapers. Strype. Memorials. Edw. VI. an. 1557. Forty other devices I had, of wyre-men and the chaundrie, and I know not what else, but all succeeded alike. B. Jonson. Masques. Love freed, &c.

His [Col. Okey] parentage was as mean as his calling, having been originally as 'tis supposed to be a drayman, afterwards a stoaker in a brew-house at Islington, near London, and then a poor chandler near Lyon-key in Thamesstreet in London.-Wood. Fasti Oxon.

Such is the caprice of fortune, the grand-daughter of a man, who will be an everlasting glory to the nation, has now for some years with her husband, kept a little chandler's or grocer's shop, for their subsistence, lately at the lower

Holloway, in the road between Highgate and London, and at present in Cock-lane, not far from Shoreditch-church.

CHANGE, v. CHANGE, n. CHA'NGER. CHANGEABLE. CHANGEABLENESS. CHANGING, n. CHANGEFUL.

CHANGELESS.

CHANGELING, N.

Newton. Life of Milton.

Fr. Changer; It. Cangiare; formed, says Menage, from Cambiare; and Cambiare from the Lat. Cambire, and this from the Gr. KauжTelv, flectere, to bend.

To move from place to place; to cause to be otherwise or different from what it was; different in place, form, or colour; in any mode or manner; to alter, to vary; to exchange, or give one thing for another.

Changeling, n. See the quotation from Spenser for a particular application. An idiot is also so named. See the quotation from Locke.

Louerd, he seyde, that ech thyng madest queynte & sley, And changest poer and kynedoms al at thy nowe rede, And monne's sones wreche senst of her fader mys dede. R. Gloucester, p. 350. For fraith [fraught] with such frayltie is worldly prosperity,

That suddenly it slideth, chaunging as the moone. Id. p. 579. Appendix. Now he changes his weie, till Acres may be nought. R. Brunne, p. 159. And I wolde now be at ghou and chaunge my vois for I am confoundid among ghou.-Wiclif. Galathies, c. 4.

I would I were with you now, and could change my voyce for I stande in a doute of you.-Bible, 1551. Gal. c.4.

For what profiteth it to a man, if he wynne al the world and do peyrynge to his soule? Or what chaunging schal a man geve for his soule ?-Wiclif. Mark, c. 8.

Therefore it behovede thee to bitake my money to encrees to chaungeris that whanne I cam I schuld resseyve that that is myn with usuris.-Id. Matthew, c. 25.

Thou oughtest therefore to haue had my money to the chaungers, and then at my comynge shoulde I haue receaued myne owne with vauntage.-Bible, 1551. Ib.

For thilke time (I vnderstonde)

The lumbarde made non eschange

The bisshopriches for to change.-Gower. Con. A. Prologue. The spring is come, the goodly nimphes now daunce in euery place,

Thus hath the yere most pleasauntly of late ychaungde his face.

Vncertaine Auctors. All worldly Pleasures fade.
His fift head was lyke a leopardes head of many colours,
full of fycklenesse and chaungeablenesse.
Bale. Image, pt. ii.

Suche constaunte folke be better then
those chaunglings in and oute,
Who plunge in euery follye. whiche
theire heades can bringe aboute.

Drant. Horace, b. ii. Sat. 7.

After which they [Castor and Pollux] found
Such grace with Joue, that both liu'd vnder ground,
By change of daies: life still did one sustaine
While the other died; the dead then liu'd againe,
The liuyng-dying.

Chapman. Homer. Iliad, b. xi.

Thrones and Imperial powers, off-spring of heaven,
Ethereal vertues; or these titles now

Must we renounce, and changing stile be call'd
Princes of hell.
Milton. Paradise Lost, b. ii.

But of these things we need not here stand to argue; though such opinions be not unworthy the propounding, in this consideration, of an eternal and unchangeable cause, producing a changeable and temporal effect.

Ralegh. History of the World, Pref. 26.

Vnto such lawes it is expresly sometimes added, how long they are to continue in force. If this be no where exprest, then haue we no light to direct our iudgments concerning the changeablenesse or immutability of them, but by considering the nature and qualitie of such lawes.

Hooker. Ecclesiasticall Politie, b. iii. § 10. Besides, her face and countenance euery day We changed see, and sundry formes partake, Now horn'd, now round, now bright, now browne and gray;

So that as changefull as the moone men vse to say. Spenser. Faerie Queene, b. vii. c. 7. Troi. No, but something may be done that we will not, And sometimes we are diuels to our selues, When we will tempt the frailtie of our powers, Presuming on their changefull potencie.

Shakespeare. Troilus & Cressida, Act iv. s. 4. Vnto the cuckooe, ouerkinde To broke coriuals, she Adjudg'd a spring-time's changeles note, And whilst his young ones be By others hatcht, to name and shame' Himself in euery tree.

Warner. Albion's England, b. viii. c. 37. From thence a faery thee unweeting reft, There as thou sleptst in tender swadling band, And her base elfin brood there for thee left: Such, men do chaungelings call, so chaung'd by faries Spenser. Faerie Queene, b. i. c. 10. Changer of all things, yet immutable; Before and after all, the first and last: That moving all is yet immovable.

theft.

G. Fletcher. Christ's Triumph after Death. Still, as you rise, the state exalted too, Finds no distemper while 'tis chang'd by you: Chang'd like the world's great scene! when without noise The rising sun night's vulgar lights destroys.

Waller. To my Lord Protector.

Especially since most human acknowledgments, being of so changeable-coloured a complexion, that like pigeon's necks they have various representations, as they are variously looked on.-Boyle. Works, vol. i. p. 44.

I chuse to give an instance in the stuff I have been speaking of, because the mixture being more simple, the way whereby the changeableness is produced, may be the more easily apprehended.-Id. Ib. vol. i. p. 64.

What power but his can rule the changeful main,
And wake the sleeping storm, or its loud rage restrain.
Hughes. Ode to the Creator of the World.

Fairest, if, time and absence can incline
Your heart to wandering thoughts no more than mine;
Then shall my hand, as changeless as my mind,
From your glad eyes a kindly welcome find.

Buckinghamshire. A Letter from Sea.

Nay, some are so studiously changeling in that particular, they esteem an opinion as a diurnal, after a day or two scarce worth the keeping.-Boyle. Works, vol. i. p. 35.

It would possibly be thought a very bold paradox, if not a very dangerous falsehood, if I should say, that some changelings, who have lived forty years together without any appearance of reason, are something between a man and a beast.-Locke. On Hum. Underst. b. iv. c. 4.

I would not exclude alteration neither; but even when I changed it should be to preserve. Burke. On the French Revolution.

We all know how often those masters, who sought after colouring, changed their manner; whilst others, merely from not seeing various modes, acquiesced all their lives in that which they set out with.

Sir J. Reynolds. Works. Life, lv.

I judged that it was high water at the full and change, about one o'clock; and that the tide rises and falls upon a perpendicular about four or five feet.

Cook. Voyages, vol. iv. b. iii. c. 11.

Such are the vicissitudes of the world, through all its parts, that day and night, labour and rest, hurry and retirement, endear each other; such are the changes that keep the mind in action; we desire, we pursue, we obtain, we are satiated: we desire something else, and begin a new pursuit.-Rambler, No. 6.

In groundless hope and causeless fear,
Unhappy man! behold thy doom;
Still changing with the changeful year,
The slave of sunshine and of gloom.

CHANNEL, v. Į

Johnson. The Winter's Walk.

Lat. Canalis. See CANAL, CHANNEL, n. Sand KENNEL. To hollow out; to cut out hollow tracts or courses, in the earth, in rocks, &c.

If that their water, in the poules

and cisternes closely stande: Or if it sweetly bubble throughe the silver channeld sande.

Drant. Horace. Epistle to Valla.

The floode that is in many channels take,
In eche of them shall feble streames make,
The loue that is deuided among many,
Unneth suffiseth that euery part haue any.
Sir T. More. Workes, p. 28.

And if it had not chanced that wee had fallen into a chanell of deepe water, closer by the shoare then we accompted of, wee could neuer haue gone cleare of the poynt that lyeth to the southwards of Kenrick's mounts.

Hackluyt. Voyages, vol. iii. p. 293.

Sometimes likewise, but rarely, channeled, and a little slight sculpture about the hypotrachelion or neck, under the capital.-Reliquiæ Wottonianæ, p. 24.

Thus wonne he Troy, and sacked Troy

And channels flowed blood;

Nor did he breathe whilest any part
Of all the citie stood.

Warner. Albion's England, b. i. c. 5.

The 28 day of Aprill diuers young men of ye citie picked quarrels to certaine strangers, as they passed by the streetes, some they did strike and buffeted, and some they threw into the channel.-Stow. Hen. VIII. an. 1517.

The dart fell through his channel bone,
Pierc't through his shoulders upper part; and set his
spirit gone.
Chapman. Homer. Iliad, b. xvii.

With all their mouths the nerves these spirits drink,
Which through the cells of the fine strainer sink ;
These all the channell'd fibres every way,
For motion and sensation still convey.

Blackmore. The Creation, b. vi.

Thus was the world running apace into idolatry, and ready to lose the very notion of the true God, and his worship; had he not been pleased to interpose, and take effectual care to preserve these pure in some one nation; to be kept apart from the common contagion, and made, as it were, the repository of true religion; and a channel to convey it to the rest of mankind; as soon and in as high a degree, as they should become capable of receiving it.-Law. Enquiry, pt. ii.

While those, [Naiads] who love still visible to glad
The thirsty plains from never-ceasing urns,
Assume more awfull majesty, and pour
With force resistless, down the channel'd rocks.
Grainger. The Sugar Cane, b. i.

With this squadron, together with the St. Albans and the Lark, and the trade under their convoy, Mr. Anson, after weighing from St. Helens, tided it down the channel for the first forty eight hours, and on the 20 September 1740, in the morning, we discovered off the Ram-head the Dragon, Winchester, South-sea Castle, and the Rye, with a number of merchantmen under their convoy.

Anson. Voyage round the World, b. i. c. 2.

CHANT, v. CHANT, n. CHA'NTER. CHANTERSHIP. CHANTICLEer. CHANTMENT. CHANTRESS. CHANTRY.

Fr. Chanter; Lat. Cantare, to sing.

Chantry, the place in which they chant. In Chaucer, an endowment for the payment of a priest, to sing mass agreeably to the appointment of the founder, (Tyrwhitt.) Chant is more particularly

CHA'NSON. applied to The musical modulation of voice in the recitation either of prose or verse, used in the cathedral service.

Chanticleer,-avis seu gallus clarum canens,— a bird that chants clearly, (Skinner.)

Chauntement, (R. Gloucester and Chaucer,)—
as we now use incantation. See CANT.
Merlyn with ys chauntement, and myd ys quoyntyse, ther
Sette vp the stones rygt so, as heo stode in Yrlond er.
R. Gloucester, p. 149.

The slacke skin about his necke shaketh,
While that he sang, so chanteth he and craketh.

Chaucer. The Merchantes Tale, v. 9724. How (quod I) han men to forne this tyme, trusted in writtes and chauntementes, and in helpes of spirites, that dwellen in the aire.-Id. Test. of Loue, b. i.

He sette not his benefice to hire,

And lette his shepe acombred in the mire,
And run into London, unto Seint Pouls,
To seken him a chanteric for soules.-Id. Prologue, v. 512.
In discants and in chants, I streined many a yell,
But since musicians be so madde, fansie (quoth he) fare-
well.-Gascoigne. Green Knightes Farewell to Fansie.

I haue gotten (sayth he) ye great chaunter, and a good quere man to answere hym, in the same note, and here I delyuer them to you.-Bale. English Votaries, pt. ii.

By tale we say orysons, and

To words vnknowne Amen :
The quier doth chaunt, we knock our breasts,
We bow, and crosse vs then.

Warner. Albion's England, b. v. c. 23.
But cottage, herd or sheep-cote none he saw,
Only in a bottom saw a pleasant grove.
With chaunt of tunefull birds resounding loud.
Milton. Paradise Regained, b. ii.
A shepherd sitting on a bank
Like chanty-clear he crowed crank
And pip'd full merrily.
Drayton, Ecl. 4.
Sweet bird, that shunn'st the noise of folly,
Most musical, most melancholy,

Thee chauntress, oft the woods among

I woo, to hear thy even-song.-Milton. Il Penseroso.
His chapel be a mournful cypruss shade,

And for a chantry Philomel's sweet lay,
Where prayers shall continually be made

By pilgrim lovers, passing by that way.-Drayton, Ecl. 2.
Fiue hundred poore I haue in yeerely pay,
Who twice a day their wither'd hands hold vp
Toward heauen, to pardon blood:

And I haue built two chauntries,
Where the sad and solemne priests sing still
For Richard's soule.-Shakespeare. Hen. V. Act iv. sc. 1.
Let us behind these myrtles' twining arms
Retire unseen; from thence survey her charms,
Wild as the chanting thrush upon the spray,
At man's approach, she swiftly flies away.

Gay. Dione, Act ii. sc. 2. He [Wettenhall] became first schoolmaster of the public school in Dublin, then curate of S. Warburgh's, and afterwards chantor of Christ church there.-Wood. Athene Oxon. The chanter at his early matins yawns.

Garth. The Dispensary, c. 5. In 1534, he [Richard Langrigg or Langrish] became Archdeacon of Cleveland, in the place of Dr. Will. Clyffe, promoted to the chauntorship of York.-Wood. Fasti Oxon. Within this homestead liv'd, without a peer, For crowing loud, the noble chanticleer; So hight her cock, whose singing did surpass The merry notes of organs at the mass.

Dryden. The Cock and the Fox. These [Christmasse carolles] were festal chansons for enlivening the merriments of the Christmas celebrity; and not such religious songs as are current at this day with the common people under the same title, and which were substituted by those enemies of innocent and useful mirth, the Puritans.-Warton. Hist. of England. Poetry, vol. iii. s. 26.

We observed, that they used to be well pleased with hear

ing the chant of our two young new Zealanders, which consisted rather in mere strength, than in melody of expression.-Cook. Voyage, vol. v. b. ii. c. 9.

Resume the lyre, Chauntress divine, and every Briton call Its melody to hear.

Lyttelton. On Reading Miss Carter's Poems.

O'er the sepulchre profound

E'en now, with arching sculpture crown'd,
He plans the chantry's coral shrine,
The daily dirge, and rites divine.

CHA'OS.
CHAO'TICK.

CHA'OS-LIKE.

Warton. The Grave of King Arthur

Chaos, properly, is a vast gap, vastus hiatus; but after wards, rudis indigestaque moles (see the quotation from Sandy's Ovid,) from th ancient Xa-ew, to gape, to open.

A huge, confused or disorderly heap; a mea sureless, shapeless mass.

They breaking forth with rude vnruliment,
From all foure parts of heauen, doe rage full sore,
And tosse the deepes, and teare the firmament,
And all the world confound with wide vprore,
As if instead thereof they chaos would restore.
Spenser. Faerie Queene, b. v. C.

As yet this world was not, and chaos wild
Reign'd where these heav'ns now rowl, where earth no

[blocks in formation]

At that time (whatever it was) when the terraqued globe was in a chaotick state, and the earthy particles su sided, then those several beds were in all probability re sited in the earth, in that commodious order in which th now are found.-Derham. Phys. Theol. b. iii. c. 2.

Here hills and vales, the woodland and the plain;
Here earth and water seem to strive again;
Not chaos-like together crush'd and bruis'd,
But, as the world, harmoniously confused;
Where order in variety we see,

And where, though all things differ, all agree.

Pope. Windsor For Out of this chaos of mingled purposes and casualties, ancient poets, according to the laws which custom hady scribed, selected, some the crimes of men, and some t absurdities; some the momentous vicissitudes of life. some the lighter occurrences; some the terrours of distr and some the gaieties of prosperity.

Johnson. Preface to Shakespe In these early and unrefined ages the jarring parts certain chaotick constitution supported their several pre sions by the sword.-Burke. Vindication of Nat. Socie CHAP, v. From A. S. Yppan, ge-up CHAP, N. to open, to gape. Gap and c CHA'PLESS. vary only by pronouncing c

the one and g in the other.

To chap is to open; and is applied, particula when the cold breaks the continuity of the sk causes gaps, openings, or separations in it.

Chap, n.- -Applied to those parts of the f which, by their separation, open (sc.) the mo Also the chops or chaps of a river, of the Br Channel, &c. where the mouth or entrance o between the opposite banks or shores into the or channel.

And when he gapes full gredilie unthriftie thirst to slake,

The river wasteth speedilie,

and awaywarde goes the lake: That all the licour from his lips And dryed chaps away it slips.

Turberville. The Louer obtaining his When the heat of lust hath shriveled up the cons into wounds and clefts, (as rain on earth that's chapp pentant tears will fill up all those chasms.

Feltham, pt. ii. Reso It cureth clifts and chaps.-Holland, Plinie, b. xxii

And with my manies blood

Imbrud their fierce deuowring chappes,

And forced me to clime

This tree, where I (vnhappy man!)
On leaues haue fed long time.

Warner. Albion's England, b.
While she thus musing sat, run from the wood
An angry lion to the crystal springs,
Near to that place; who coming from his food.
His chaps were all besmeard with crimson blood.
Cowley. Pyramus &

Ham. Why e'en so: and now my Lady Wormes ch and knockt about the mazard with a sexton's spade. Shakespeare. Hamlet, Act v

Bel. Heaven further it:
For till they be key-cold dead, ther's no trusting of
Whate'r they seem, or howsoe'r they carry it,
Till they be chap-faln, and their tongues at peace.
Beaum. & Fletch. Wild-Goose Chase, Act i

Refresh'd with heat, the ladies sought around

For virtuous herbs, which gather'd from the ground,
They squeez'd the juice and cooling ointment made,
Which on their sun-burnt cheeks, and their chapt skins
they laid. Dryden. The Flower and the Leaf.

As when th' impatient grey-hound, slipt from far,
Bounds o'er the glebe, to course the fearful hare,
She in her speed does all her safety lay;
And he with double speed pursues the prey;
Oer-runs her at the sitting turn, and licks
His chape in vain, and blows upon the flix.

Dryden. Ovid. Metam. b. i.

The tumor reached to the neck, but did not seem much to well under the chap, the epiglottis with the rimula lawhich remained gaping, was protruded almost to the farther end of the nether-chap. Boyle. Workes, vol. iii. p. 357. CHAPE, n. Fr. Chappe, the chape, or CHAPEAL. locket of a scabbard, (Cotgrave.) CHAPELESS. Vagina mucro ferreus, (Skiner.) And the Fr. Chapeau, is a hat, hood, or bennet, for the head. See CAP.

He had a page that rode behynde hym, bearynge on his heed a chapeme of Montaban, bright and clere shynynge gst the sonne.-Berners. Froissart. Cronycle, c. 187.

On his hedde a chapeau Montabin with a rich coronall, the fold of the chapeau was lined with crimsen satten.

Grafton. Hen. VIII. an. 5.

This is Monsieur Parrolles, the gallant militarist, that was his own phrase-that had the whole theoricke of warre in the knot of his scarfe, and the practise in the chape of his dagger-Shakes. All's Well that Ends Well, Act iv. sc. 3.

An alle rusty sword tane out of the town armory, with a broken hit and chapelesse. Id. Taming of the Shrew, Act iii. sc. 2.

CHAPEL,

CHAPEL,.

CHAPELRY.

CHAPLAIN. CHAPLAINCY. CHAPLAINSHIP. CHAPLAINRIES. CHAPLET, R.

Fr. Chapelle; It. Capella; Sp. Capilla; Dut. Kapelle. Much has been written upon this word, especially by Du Cange and Menage; but Spelman appears to have traced it most satisfactorily. He derives it a Ciceroneano capad, (see CAPSULE,) et Pliniano capsellâ; S eliminato. Capella, pro cistâ, serinio seu repositorio— A chest, a repository, (sc.) in which the reliques of the martyrs were preserved; then for any building, in which these capella of reliques were laid; and again, for any sacred place or place of

prater.

Those, he adds, were first called Capellani or Chaplin, who had the care of these capella of reliques; then those, who had the care of the sacred place where these capella were placed or deposited; and at length, all who ministred in sacred offices; Clerici, nempe, et sacerdotes, (Spelman, Gloss. Archaiol.)

On slepe some he felle, the sueuen bifor him ran,
Him thoaht in his chapelle he was withouten man,
R. Brunne, p. 93.

Ne non he sauh no herd.

I seigh halles ful heygh and houses ful noble,
Chambres, chymeneys, and chapeles gay

They shapen her chapolories.

Piers Plouhman. Crede.
Id. Ib.

And whan he rode, men mighte his bridel here
Gingeling in a whistling wind as clere
And eke as loude, as doth the chapell belle.
Chaucer. The Prologue, v. 171.

Pasterers ben the devil's chappeleines, that ever singen

Facebo-Id. Persones Tale.

If I maie hir lede

"at: the chapel, and againe,

an is not all my wey in vayne.-Gower. Con. A. b. iv.

The weld have ben right fayne
Thane ben a chaplayn.

Skelton. Why come ye not to Court?

Vreover, her Highnesse, with the advice of the Councill hath statuted and ordained, that annuells, marles, nies within free burroughs, or other townes of this as well pertaining to chaplainries, prebendaries, as to Ten, ke-Knoz. History of the Reformation, p. 324.

Earing conversed much with a stripling divine or two of

忠號

ewly-fledg'd probationers, that usually come scouting

the university, and lie here no lame legers to pop into

Bethesda of some knight's chaplainship, where they grace to his good cheer, but no peace or benediction set his house; these made the champarty, he contried the law, and both joined in the divinity.

Milton. Colasterion.

Nay, as the grossest idolatry, ye set up a chaplet or shrine with an image in it, and that image the image of one of the Egyptian kings, under the title of Mars.

Hammond. Paraphrase. Acts, vii. 43.

Old Sir Harbotle Grimston lived still, to the great indignation of the court; when the fifth of November, being gunpowder treason day, came, in which we had always sermons at the chapel of the Rolls, I begged the master of the Rolls to excuse me then from preaching; for that day led one to preach against popery, and it was indecent not to do it.-Burnet. Own Time, an. 1684.

But Bishop Burnet, angry at this book, complains to the Bishop of London, that his chaplain, (R. Altham, lately Proctor of Oxon,) should license such a book full of scurrility, whereupon the said Mr. Altham was forced to make a submission or recantation.-Wood. Athena Oxon.

Through ev'ry climate, and to ev'ry gale,
They lanch the cargo, and expand the sail;
Wide, with their name, their reputation grew,
And to their mart concurring chapmen drew.

Brooke. The Man of Lawes Tale

For you are to consider these critical chaps
Do not like to be snubb'd; you may venture perhaps,
An amendment, where they can see somewhat amiss;
But may raise their ill blood if you circulate this.
Byrom. Critical Remarks, &c.
Fr. Chapitre; It. Capi-
tolo; Low Lat. Capitulum,
from Caput, the head. (See

[blocks in formation]

Before I went, Du Moulin met my chaplain in the Voor-jects; to an assembly of heads or chiefs of the church.

hout, and told him he was so ill, that he knew he had not

long to live; and that he could not die in quiet without
asking my pardon for so many false and injurious things as
he confessed to have said of me, since my last embassy in
Holland.-Sir W. Temple. Memoirs from 1672 to 1678.

Where yon old trees bend o'er a place of graves,
And, solemn, shade a chapel's sad remains,
Where yon scath'd poplar through the window waves,
And, twining round, the hoary arch sustains.
Mickle. Pollio. An Elegy.

After the restoration, he [Sprat] took orders, and by
Cowley's recommendation was made chaplain to the Duke
of Buckingham, whom he is said to have helped in writing
The Rehearsal. He was also chaplain to the King.
Johnson. Life of Sprat.

[blocks in formation]

chiefs of the church.

And he wold fecche a feined mandement,
And sompne hem to the chapitre bothe two,
And pill the man, and let the wench go.

Chaucer. The Freres Tale, v. 6943.

Vnto as little purpose he spēdeth an other peuyshe chapiter after, in whyche because he would yet faine have it seme necessary, that there should be such a feling faith, he telleth vs a long tale, that the faith which depedeth vpon another man's mouth is weake.-Sir T.More. Workes, p. 704.

Also all through the storie of the Britons, wherein he followeth Geffrey of Monmouth, I haue caused his storie to be conferred with Gefferies, and noted in the chapiters in

CHA'PLET, n. Fr. Chaplet, from the Lat. the margine, where out the matter is taken.-Fabyan, Pref.

[blocks in formation]

Cal. Christella, Philema, the chaplet! Ithocles,
Upon the wings of fame, the singular
And chosen fortune of an high attempt,
Is borne so past the view of common sight,
That I myself, with mine own hands have wrought,
To crown thy temples, this provincial garland;
Accept, wear, and enjoy it as our gift
Deserv'd, not purchas'd.

Ford. The Broken Heart, Act i. sc. 2.
Hoare-headed frosts

Fall in the fresh lap of the crimson rose,
And on old Hyems chinne and icie crowne,
An odorous chaplet of sweet sommer buds,
Is as in mockry set.

Shakespeare. Midsummer Night's Dream, Act ii. sc. 2.
Attir'd in mantles all the knights are seen,
That gratifi'd the view with cheerful green :
Their chaplets of their ladies colours were,
Compos'd of white and red, to shade their shining hair.
Dryden. The Flower and the Leaf.

Yet let not man too much presume,
Though grac'd with beauty's fairest bloom,
Though for superior strength renown'd
Though with triumphal chaplets crown'd.

[blocks in formation]

West. The Eleventh Nemean Ode.

A. S. Ceapman; Dut.
Koopman; Ger. Kaufman,
from A. S. Cyppan, to traf-
fick, bargain, buy, or sell: and man. See CHEAP.
Any one, who trafficks, bargains, buys or sells.

Chap is sometimes in common speech used
in his dealings, in his conduct.
alone; and is also applied to one who is peculiar

Yus ones quath he ich was yherborwed. wt an hep of
chapmen.

Ich aros and rifled here males.-Piers Plouhman, p. 99.

In Surrie [Syria] whilom dwelt a compagnie,
Of chapmen rich, and therto sad and trewe,
That wide were senten hir spicerie,
Clothes of gold, and satins riche of hewe.

Chaucer. The Man of Lawes Tale, v. 4535.

Now fell it, that the maisters of that fort
Han shapen hem from Rome for to wende,
Were it for chapmanhood or for disport.—Id. Ib. v. 4563.
And more yit

Of chapmenhode he fonde the waye,
And eke to coygne the money

Of sundrey metall.

Gower. Con. A. b. iv.

But is there hope, Sir,
He has got me a good chapwoman.
Massinger. The Renegado, Act iii. sc. 2.

And syr Phelyp of Maysyeres, chauncellour to Peter of
Lieseignen, kynge of Cypres, wrote on his tombe as it folow-
eth, the copy wherof is in ye chapytre house of the freer
Celestynes in Paris.
Berners. Froissart. Cronycle, vol. ii. c. 40.

At Canterbury they bring him into the chapter-house, where the Earl of Gloucester standeth forth in the midst, calls out the Earl, not by the name of King, but Richard Earl of Cornwal, who in a reverend manner coming forth, taketh his oath in these words.-Baker. Henry III.

He more than once arraigns him for the inconstancy of his judgment, and chapters even his own Aratus on the same head; shewing by many examples, produced from their actions, how many miseries they had both occasioned to the Grecians.-Dryden. The Character of Polybius. CHAR. From A. S. Cyran, acyran, to CHARCOAL. turn, to turn about, turn backwards and forwards, (Tooke.) In Chapman's Odyssey, b. iii. p. 44, we find,

Then Nestor broil'd them on the cole-turn'd wood. Char-coal is wood or other substance turned coal by fire.

The fault is hers that made me go astray;
He needs must wander that has lost his way:
Guiltless I am; she did this change provoke,
And made that charcoal which to her was oak.

Carew. The Spark.

His profession being to make chymical medicines in quantity, obliges him to keep great and constant fires, and did put him upon finding a way of charring sea-coal, wherein it is in about three hours or less, without pots or vessels, brought to charcoal; of which having, for curiositie's sake, made him take out some pieces, and cool them in my presence, I found them upon breaking to appear well charr'd. Boyle. Works, vol. ii. p. 141.

Love is a fire that burns and sparcles,
In man, as natʼrally as in charcoals,
Which sooty chymists stop in holes,
When out of wood they extract coals;
So lovers should their passions choke,
That though they burn they may not smoke.

[blocks in formation]
« PredošláPokračovať »