Obrázky na stránke
PDF
ePub

C

[ocr errors]
[blocks in formation]

Ac these eremytes that edefyen. thus by the hye weyes
Wylen were workmen.-Id. p. 75.

For he that profecieth spekith to men to edificacioun and monestyng and comfortyng; he that spekith in tunge edifieth himself, but he that profecieth edifieth the chirche of God, and I wole, that alle ghe speken in tungis, but more that ghe profecie.-Wiclif. 1 Cor. c. 14.

But he that prophecieth, speaketh vnto men, to edifynge, to exhortacion, and to comforte. He that speaketh with tongues, profiteth hymselfe: He that prophesieth, edifieth the congregation. I would that ye all spake wyth tongues; but rather that ye prophesyed.-Bible, 1551. Ib.

Therefore sue we tho thingis that been of pees, and keep we togidre tho thingis that ben of edificatioun. Wiclif. Romaynes, c. 14. Let us folowe those thinges whyche make for peace, and thynges wherwith one maye edifie another.-Bible, 1551. Ib.

Wherefore in youth I rede you edifie
The house of vertue in such a manere,
That in your age may you kepe and gie
Fro the tempest of worldes wawes here.

Chaucer. To the Lords and Gentilmen.

Warnestoring (quod she) of heighe toures and grete edifices, is with grete costages and with grete travaille; and whan that thei ben accompliced, yet ben they not worth a stre, but if they ben defended by trewe frendes, that ben olde and wise.-Chaucer. Tale of Melibeus.

God sent them hir Aungel Cryste to helpe them whylis thei were content the Jewes to edifye their temple. Joye. Exposicion of Daniel, c. 11.

He neithere wisheth nor desyreth any thinge more earnestly, then to be in that company and assembly of the people of God, wherein he may declare his faithe, and may cofirme and edefye himselfe, by the holy sacraments and the holsome doctryne there preached.

Caluine. Foure Godlye Sermons, Ser. 3.

So your maiestie more graciously hath by your most godly injunctions willed to bee read, used and studied by enery curate and priest, to the undoubted edyfying as wel of them as of all other that with a desire to know God shall eyther reade or heare the same.

Udal. Preface unto the King's Maiestie.

The 18 [November, 1553] by meanes of a friend we were licenced to enter the castle or fortresse of Corfu, which is not onely of situation the strongest I haue seene, but also of edification.-Hackluyt. Voyages, vol. ii.

Separate the stones, and the wall openeth, and leat the ciment faile, and the edifice falleth.-Golden Boke c. 17.

At last, as nigh out of the wood she came,

A stately castle far away she spyde,

To which her steps directly she did frame,
That castle was most goodly edyfied,
And plac't for pleasure nigh that forest side.

Spenser. Faerie Queene, b. iii. c. 1.

A heape of earth he hoorded vp on hie,
Enclosing it with banks on euerie side,
And thereupon did raise full busily

A little mount, of greene turfs edifide.-Id. Virgil's Gnat. Now men are edified, when eyther their understanding is taught somewhat whereof in such actions it behoueth all men to consider; or when their hearts are moued with any affliction suteable thereunto, when their minds are in any sort stirred vp vnto that reuerence, deuotion, attention, and due regard which in those cases seemeth requisite.

Hooker. Ecclesiasticall Politie, b. v.

That unblemisht reputation here, when it is to be had, is a pretions blessing, very instrumental to the edifying of others, and is a kind of coronet here in this life, preparatory to that crown hereafter.-Hammond. Works, vol. iv. p. 547.

What hither hath been spoke upon the law of God, touching matrimony or divorce, he who will deny to have been agru'd [argu'd] according to reason and all equity of Scripture, I cannot edify how, or by what rule of proportion, that man's virtue calculates, what his elements are, nor what his analytics.-Milton. Tetrachordon.

By his blessed influences guide and governe this sacred meeting, and happily direct all our councels and endeavours to the glory of his owne great name, the salvation of our soules, and the assured edification of his church, through Jesus Christ.-Bp. Hall. Noah's Dove.

Where these gifts of interpretation, and eminent endowments of learning are found, there can be no reason of restraining them from an exercise so beneficially edificatory

VOL. I

[blocks in formation]

And as his pen was often militant
Nor less triumphant; so edificant

It also was, like those blessed builders, who
Stood on their guard, and stoutly builded too.
Dugard. Verses on Gataker, (1655,) p. 75.
He will discourse unto us edifyingly, and feelingly, of the
substantial and comfortable doctrines of religion.
Killingbeck. Sermons, p. 324.

The bookful blockhead, ignorantly read,
With loads of learned lumber in his head,
With his own tongue still edifies his ears,
And always listening to himself appears.

Pope. Essay on Criticism. Devout people may fancy what they please about all our speeches tending to edification; but in truth it is all speculation.-Sharp, vol. vi. Ser. 13.

They scorn their edifiers to own,
Who taught them all their sprinkling lessons,
Their tones and sanctify'd expressions.

Hudibras, pt. iii. c. 2. If a country gentleman appear a little curious in observing the edifices, signs, clocks, coaches and dials, it is not to be imagined how the polite rabble of this town, who are acquainted with these objects, ridicule his rusticity.

Spectator, No. 354.

There are mansions, which, without any striking edificial attraction, have a certain air of appropriate hospitality and provincial dignity.

History of the Rivers of Great Britain, b. i. p. 232. No doubt 'tis edifying stuff, (For gentle ears are cannon-proof,) And wise the doctrines which you teach.

Whitehead. The Goat's Beard.

But the minister of the Gospel does not go in quest of such occasions: [in which he may exert his abilities:] he only adapts himself to them, when they come in his way; and then pursues them no farther than the end he has in view, the edification of others, not his own credit, demands from him.-Hurd. Works, vol. vi. Ser. 1.

Behold (says he) [Rufinus] in the night, the last preceding the day for laying the foundation, a prodigious earthquake arises, by which, not only the stones of the foundations are cast abroad and dispersed, but almost all the edifices that were about the place are thrown down and levelled. Warburton. Julian's Attempt to Rebuild, &c. b. ii. c. 3.

[blocks in formation]

As put case some well-minded printer (as one of the Stephens,) is willing to be at an excessive charge in the fair publication of a learned and useful work, for the benefit of the present and following ages; it is most just that he should from the hands of princes or states receive a priviledge for the sole impression; that he may recover with advantage the deep expence he hath been at; otherwise some interloper may perhaps underhand fall upon the work at a lower rate, and undo the first editor; whose industry, care and cost shall be thus recompenced with the ruine of himself and his posteritie.

Bp. Hall. Cases of Conscience, Dec. 1. Case 5.

As to the larger additions and alterations, I have obliged him, and he has promised me to print them by themselves, so that the former edition may not be wholly lost to those who have it, but by the inserting in their proper places the passages that will be reprinted alone, to that purpose, the former book may be made as little defective as possible. Locke. Hum. Underst. To the Reader.

Mr. Norden maketh his complaint in that necessary Guide, added to a little but not much augmented, by the late Editioner.-Gregory. Posthuma, p. 321.

I must confess, I was much surprised to see a great body of editors, criticks, commentators and grammarians meet with so very ill a reception.-Tatler, No. 100.

641

Still, all editions verbally contain
The simple necessary truths and plain
Of Gospel doctrine; and the Spirit's aid,
Which is the chief, is not at all decay'd.

Byrom. On the Disposition of Mind, &c.

After you shall have repeatedly read, marking the pauses, examining the rhythmus, and pronouncing aloud, at least a hundred times over, the few orations of Demosthenes, which Monteney has edited; I would put into your hand, as a convenient book, the edition of Lucchesini, published in London by Allen.-Knox. Letters to a Young Nobleman.

Though his [Fanshawe's] Lusiad, by the dedication of it to William, Earl of Strafford, dated May, 1655, seems as published by himself, we are told by the editor of his letters, that, "during the unsettled time of our anarchy, some of his MSS. falling by misfortune into unskilful hands, were printed and published without his consent or knowledge, and before he could give them his last finishing strokes." Mickle. Dissertation on the Lusiad, &c. Note.

[blocks in formation]

But by educing, the affirmers only mean a producing in it, with a subjective dependance on its recipient a very fine signification of eduction; which answers not the question whence 'tis derived, but into what it is received. Id. The Vanity of Dogmatizing, c. 16.

I will not resist, therefore, whatever it is, either of divine or human obligement, that you lay upon me; but will forthwith set down in writing, as you request me, that voluntary idea, which hath long in silence presented itself to me, of a better education, in extent and comprehension far more large, and yet of time far shorter, and of attainment far more certain, than hath been yet in practice.

Milton. Of Education.

And it is plain that the human body hath a receptive power in reference to the human soul, which yet themselves confesse both to be a substantial form, and not to be educed out of the power of matter.-Boyle. Works, vol. iii. p. 39.

I need not tell you, that among the Peripateticks, the disputes are many and intricate about matter, privation, substantial forms, and their eduction, &c.

Id. Ib. vol. iv. p. 69.

Indeed, if they would admit the form of a natural body to be but a more fine and subtile part of the matter, as spirit of wine is of wine, which upon its recess remains no longer wine, but phlegm or vinegar, then the eductive power of matter might signify something.-Id. Ib. vol. iii. p. 39.

With glewy wax some new foundations lay
Of virgin-combs, which from the roofs are hung:
Some arm'd within-doors, upon duty stay,
Or tend the sick, or educate the young.

Dryden. Annus Mirabilis, s. 145.

[blocks in formation]
[blocks in formation]

Go. hymn the Fount of Mercy, who, from ill
Educing good, makes e'en a death like his,
A life surcharg'd with tender woes like thine,

The road to joys eternal.-Mason. English Garden, b. iv.

It looks so like that good old grove
Where Adam once to Eve made love,
That any soul alive would swear
Your trees were educated there.

Whitehead. Answer to the Epistle, &c.

As Puffendorf very well observes, it is not easy to imagine or allow, that a parent has conferred any considerable benefit upon his child by bringing him into the world, if he afterwards entirely neglects his culture and education, and suffers him to grow up like a mere beast, to lead a life useless to others, and shameful to himself.

Blackstone. Commentaries, b. i. c. 16.

EDULCORATE, v. From Lat. Dulcis, sweet. To sweeten, to purify.

Succory, a little edulcorated with sugar and vinegar, is by some eaten in the summer, and more grateful to the stomach than the palate.-Evelyn. Acetaria.

And I would the rather have experiments tried again in other places with colcothar, not calcined to the utmost, nor yet so exquisitely edulcorated, but that some saline particles should be left in it for future encrease.

Boyle. Works, vol. iv. p. 99. The copious powder, that results from their union, is, by that union of volatile parts, so far fixed, that, after they have edulcorated it with water, they prescribe the calcining of it in a crucible for five or six hours.-Id. Ib. vol.iv. p.311.

EDULE. Lat. Edulium. Any thing eaten; EDU'LIOUS. from Ed-ere, to eat. See EDIBLE. Eatable, edible, esculent.

There's need of all the senses to determine analogically concerning the vertues and properties even of the leaves alone of many edule plants.-Evelyn. Acetaria. The husks of pease, beans, or such edulious pulses. Sir T. Brown. Miscellany, p. 13.

[blocks in formation]

EEL. A. S. El; Ger. Ahl; Dut. Œel; Sw. El. Ihre and Serenius think from Sw. Hal; Ger. Hal; lubricus, so called from its slipperiness. In A. S. El is also oil, and El-an, to oil.

It is agreed, by most men, that the eel is a most dainty fish: the Romans have esteemed her the Helena of their feasts; and some, the queene of palate-pleasure. Walton. Angler, pt. i. c. 23.

Among reptiles that have a strange faculty to shift for food, &c., may be reckoned eels, which, although belonging to the waters, can creep on the land from pond to pond, &c. Derham. Physico-Theology, Note.

Thy stumbling founder'd jade can trot as high
As any other Pegasus can fly:

So the dull eel moves nimbler in tne mud
Than all the swift-finn'd racers of the flood.

Dorset. To Mr. E. Howard.

EFFABLE. Lat. Effabilis, from Effari, to speak out, to utter.

That may be spoken or uttered; utterable. He did, upon his suggestion, accommodate thereunto his universal language, to make his character effable.

Wallis. Defence of the Royal Society, (1678.) p. 16. EFFACE, v. Fr. Pristinam faciem auferre. Effacer, to efface, deface, raze, blot, rub out, wipe away; to abolish, (Cotgrave.) See to DEFACE.

Thus the ideas, as well as children, of our youth often die before us and our minds represent to us those tombs, to which we are approaching; where tho' brass and marble remain, yet the inscriptions are effaced by time. and the imagery moulders away.-Locke. Hum. Und. b. ii. c. 10. Away; my Muse

Though yet the prospect pleases, ever new
In vast variety, and yet delight

The many-figur'd sculptures of the path,
Half beauteous, half effaced.-Dyer. Ruins of Rome.
EFFASCINATION. Lat. Effascinari, to be-
witch. See to FASCINATE.

St. Paul sets down the just judgment of God against the receivers of Anti-christ, which is effascination, or strong delusion.-Shelford. Learned Disc. (Camb. 1635.) p. 317.

EFFECT, v. EFFECT, n. EFFECTIBLE. EFFECTION. EFFECTIVE. EFFECTIVELY. EFFE CTLESS. EFFECTOR. EFFECTUAL. EFFECTUALLY. EFFECTUALNESS. EFFECTUATE. EFFECTUOUS. EFFECTUOUSLY. EFFICACY. EFFICACIOUS. EFFICACIOUSLY. EFFICACITY. EFFICIENT, adj. EFFICIENT, n. EFFICIENCY.

EFFICIENTLY.

Fr. Effectuer; Sp. Efetuar; It. Effettuare; Lat. Efficere, effectum; e, and facere, to do or make.

To do or make, (emphatically, and thus,) to bring to pass, to bring to an end, to attain, to perform, to accomplish, to complete, to achieve, to consummate.

Effects, in the plural,things attained, acquired, possessed.

Efficacious, able to ef fect; able or having power to bring to pass, &c. Efficient, bringing to pass; bringing to an end,

&c.

Effectuous, (sometimes written affectuous,) and effectuously, were used by our old writers, as equivalent to effectual, and effectually. See AFFECT.

See the quotation from Locke. And see CAUSE.

Gret was the strif, and long betwix hem twey,
If that I hadde leiser for to sey:

But to th' effect. It happed on a day,
(To tell it you as shortly as I may.)

[blocks in formation]

Tib. Dangers, that we see
To threaten ruin, are with ease prevented:
But those strike deadly that come unexpected:
The lightning is far off, yet soon as seen,
We may behold the terrible effects

That it produceth.-Massinger. Duke of Milan, Act i. sc.l.
It is very true, that the angelick natures have a very great

knowledge of natural efficacies and virtues, and a great power of transporting, uniting, and applying actives to passives; whatsoever, therefore, is effectible by the most congruous and efficacious application of actives to passives, is effectible by them.-Hale. Origination of Mankind, p. 338.

But going further into particulars, [Plato] falls into conjectures, attributing the effection of the soul unto the Great God, but the fabrication of the body to the Dii ez Dio, or Angels, it seems according to the tradition of the Egyp

tians.Id. Ib. p. 290.

That the world had an inception, and had an inception from God, is a truth that, by the diligent improvement of natural light and reason, is attainable; but the manner and order of this effection is, as before is said, discoverable only by divine revelation.-Id. Ib. p. 291.

The use of these rules is not at all effective upon erring consciences, while the error remains: for the advices supChaucer. The Knightes Tale, v. 1191. posing the error are not applicable to them who will not suppose themselves in error.

[blocks in formation]

Id. The Freres Tale, v. 7033. For sire and dame trusteth me right wel, Our orisons ben more effectual, And more we seen of Christes secree thinges, Than borel folk, although that they be kinges. Id. The Sompnoures Tale, v. 7452. From the natural working cause, the effect must needes follow, as thus: If the sunne shine, the day must needes

be, which is the effect or workmanship of the sunne.

Wilson. The Arte of Logicke, fol. 42.

whiche ye vse in the lande of Israell, sayinge: Tushe,

Thou sonne of man, what maner of by-worde is that,

seynge that the dayes are so slacke in comminge, all the visions are of none effecte.-Bible, 1551. Ezek. c. 12.

And in the mistery of this supper, was written, made, and sealed a moste perfyte testimonie, for an effectuall memorye of Christes offeryng of himselfe to his father, and of his death and passion with the fruite therof.

Bp. Gardner. On the Presence in the Sacrament, p. 31. Forasmuche as this saying of our Sauiour Christ, Oportet semper orare, A man must always pray, written in the Gospell of Saint Luke, appertaineth generally vnto all Christian men who seeth not howe profitable and necessary it is for euery man, diligently and effectually to apply hymselfe to prayer. Fisher. On Prayer, c. 1.

For the contempt of the Gospell, shall the wrath of God suffer the Turke and the Pope with strong delusions and effectuouse errors to destroye many soulis and bodys, but it shall dure no longer then that his wrath consumed, shall cease, and their wykednes be rype.

Joye. Exposicion of Daniel, c. 12.

Which thinge, though it be partely done by the prechynge Godes wordes and frutefull exhortacyons, yet doth that vysible token and sacramente (yf a man vnderstand what is ment therby,) more effectuously worke in them both fayth and thankesgeuinge, then doth the bare worde.

A Boke made by John Fryth, p. 11. Therfore we knowyng the vertue and effycacy of these holy psalmes, let vs vse them in our like besines, and doubt not to haue forgyuenes, yf we do it so louingly as he did in this time.-Fisher. On the Seven Psalmes, Ps. 38.

Honey, as welle in meate as in drynke, is of incomparable efficacy, for it not onely clenseth, altereth, and nourisheth, but also it long time preserueth that vncorrupted which is put into it.-Sir T. Elyot. The Castel of Helth, b. ii. c. 22.

The power of whiche sacramentes is of suche effycacite, that cannot be expressed.-A Boke made by J. Fryth, p. 10.

The efficient cause is the working cause, by whose meanes thinges are brought to passe.-Wilson. Arte of Logicke, fol.43.

And that thyng which maketh a man loue the law of God, doth make a man righteous, and iustifieth him effectiuely and actually, and maketh hym alyue as a woorkeman and cause efficient.-Tyndall. Workes, n. 335.

Bp. Taylor. Rule of Conscience, b. i. c. 2.

As the first [Mark, ix. 40] enjoyns us to the labour of love. and an active will, and an effective zeal, and a religion pro ductive of permanent effects; so the latter [Luke, ix. 50] seems to be content with negative measures, to approve of an indifferent will, to allow a neutrality, and that not only many single actions, but that a whole state of life may have negative indifference and indetermination.

Id. Ib. b. iv. c. 1.

In bootelesse prayer haue they bene held vp,
And they haue seru'd me to effectlesse vse.

Shakespeare. Titus Andronicus, Act iii. sc. 1.
Hel. Sure, all's effectless, yet nothing we'll omit
That bears recovery's name.-Id. Pericles, Act v. sc. I.
That yet effectless, this enchanting witch,
Bred baneful jealousie against my lady,
My most immaculate lady, which seiz'd on her
Almost to death.

Beaum. & Fletch. The Knight of Malta, Act iv. se. 1.
I must begin with rudiments of art,
To teach you gamoth in a briefer sort,
More pleasant, pitny, and effectuall,
Then hath been taught by any of my trade.

Shakespeare. Taming of the Shrew, Act iii. sc. I.
And if he stand in hostage for his safety,
Bid him demaund what pledge will please him best.
Emill. Your bidding shall I do effectually.

Id. Titus Andronicus, Act iv. se.. For which [his intercession] he being his natural son, so neerly allyed to him, would transcendantly fit him, and give such an omnipotent prevalencie and effectualnesse to his requests, that he would be the most absolute perfect pricat for ever, (in this respect,) that could be.

Goodwin. Triumph of Faith, s. 5.
Where such an unexpected face appears
Of an amazed court, that gazing sat
With a dumb silence, (seeming that it fears
The thing it went about t' effectuate,)
As if the place, the cause, the conscience gave
Bars to the words their forced course should have.

Daniel. Civil War, b. vii. O Saviour, I do rather more adore thee, on the Calvary of thy passion, than on the Tabor of thy transfiguration, or the Olivet of thine assension; and cannot so effectuously blesse thee for, Pater clarifica, Father glorifie me, as for, my Go my God, why hast thou forsaken me.

Bp. Hall. Sermon preached to his Majesty, March 50.

To the blanc moone
Her office they prescrib'd, to th' other five
Thir planetarie motions and aspects
In sextile, square, and trine, and opposite,
Of noxious efficacie.-Milton. Paradise Lost, b. x.

[Those hands] were cloven and rent upon the crosse till the wounds became (after the resurrection) so many rituall, and efficacious benedictions. transparencies and glorious instruments of solemn, sp

Bp. Taylor. The Great Exemplar, pt. i. s. 5. In a glass of water the etherial substance, which he sup poses to run through all bodies, is more efficaciously moves than in air.-Digby. Of Bodies, c. 13.

12.

For it is a true sentence, that of nothing cometh nothing, which aone of the Ancients denied, though they held not that principle of the efficient cause, but of the materiall subiect that is of the nature of all formes.

Boetius, translated by J. P., 1609. p. 121.

So then, since there's so much dissimilitude between cause and effect in the more palpable phænomena, we can expect no less between them, and their invisible efficients.

Glanvill. Vanity of Dogmatizing, c. 21. Religion has descended to the securing of these fearthly blessings and temporal rewards,] and that not only by moral designation, but a proper and natural efficiency; so that we cannot better prosecute our present interest, than by the methods of religion.

Pleydell. Sermon at the Funeral of Mr. Jos. Glanvill. He [God] did it, after our forefathers were reduced to extremities, and had tired themselves by various attempts to bring this great end about, and had been baffled in all of them, and sat down at last in despair of effecting it. Atterbury, vol. i. Ser. 7.

Power being the source from whence all action proceeds, the substances wherein these powers are, when they exert this power into act, are called causes; and the substances, which thereupon are produced, or the simple ideas which are introduced into any subject by the exerting of that power, are called effects.-Locke. Hum. Underst. b. ii. c. 22.

Indeed he that would effectually persuade the undertakIng of any enterprise, must either suppose it, or prove it efectible.-Barrow, vol. iii. Ser. 17.

The King of France having drawn together 120,000 effective men, divided them into three bodies.

Ludlow. Memoirs, vol. iii. p. 198.

This sanctification, and blessing the seventh-day, was setting it apart from the rest of the week-days, and appropriating it to holy uses, and purposes, namely, the commemoration of that great work of the creation, and paying homage and worship to that infinite being, who was the effector of it.-Derham. Physico-Theology, b. xi. c. 6.

God hath so contrived things, that if I do but love myself heartily, and out of that self-love do endeavour all the ways CSI can to promote my own future happiness; this very selflove, and this endeavour to do myself good, shall be the most efectual way, nay the only way to promote and advance his Har glory.-Sharp, vol. iii. Ser. 12.

2. From the effectualness of it in order to that end, it is the power of God to salvation.-Stillingfleet, vol. i. Ser. 4.

For the effectuating this gratious intent, suppose that he should appoint and commissionate messengers, impowering and charging them to divulge the purport of this act of grace to all the people of that kingdom. Barrow, vol. iii. Ser. 41.

The eficacy whereby the new substance or idea is produe'd, is call'd, in the subject exerting that power, action; but in the subject wherein any simple idea is chang'd or produc'd, it is called passion: which efficacy, however various, and the effects almost infinite, yet we can, I think, conceive it in intellectual agents, to be nothing else but modes of thinking and willing; in corporeal agents, nothing else but modifications of motion.

Locke. Hum. Understanding, b. ii. c. 22.

But you will ask then, upon what account is it, that prayer becomes prevalent and efficacious with God, so as to procure us the good things we pray for? I answer upon this; That it is the fulfilling of that condition, upon which God has freely promised to convey his blessings to man. South, vol. ii. Ser. 3. The same judgments that in the hand of God are sovereign means to polish and improve a well-disposed mind, are as cficaciously used by him to inflame the accounts of the wicked and the obdurate; who take occasion from thence to make themselves ten times more the sons of reprobation than they were before.-Id. vol. ix. Ser. 2.

If a man has not within himself a principle of self motion, or a power of beginning motion; then, being no agent at all, (notwithstanding his perception or intelligence,) any more than a clock or a watch, his motions must all be owing to the eficient impulse of some extrinsick cause, and the motions of that to the efficiency of some other cause; and so on. Clarke. Remarks on a Philosophical Enquiry.

Among men, a son does not, properly speaking, derive his being from his father: Father, in this sense, signifies merely an instrumental, not an efficient cause: but God, when He is stiled Father, must always be understood to be [airia] a true and proper cause, really and efficiently giving life.

Id. On the Trinity, pt. ii. s. 13. Note.

A subject or utensil of so various and inexplicable use, who could have invented and formed, but an infinitely wise and powerful efficient?-Ray, On the Creation, pt. i.

You see, then, that, to argue upon Gospel principles, (and the fair enquirer can argue upon no other,) the Christian dispensation was necessary to fulfil the purposes of God to man, and to effect that which the divine counsels had decreed in relation to him.-Hurd. Works, vol. vi. Ser. 4.

Happy the man who sees a God employ'd

In all the good and ill that checker life!

Resolving all events, with their effects

And manifold results, into the will

The House of Commons will lose that independent cnaracter which, inseparably connecting the honour and reputation with the acts of this house, enables us to afford a real, effective, and substantial support to his government.

Burke. A Representation to his Majesty.

The extreme dishonour and even peril of this situation
roused her old age, at length, to the resolution of taking
some effectual measures.-Hurd. Works, vol. iii. Dial. 4.

Cicero had imbibed a strong relish for the frank and liber-
tine wit of the old comedy, as best suited to the genius of
popular eloquence; which, though it demands to be temper'd
with some urbanity, yet never attains its end so effectually
as when let down and accommodated, in some certain de-
gree, to the general taste and manners of the people.
Id. Notes on the Art of Poetry.

The same intention is mechanically effectuated; but by a
mechanism of a different kind.
Paley. Natural Theology, c. 16.

Rules themselves are, indeed, nothing else but an appeal
to experience; conclusions drawn from wide and general
observation of the aptness and efficacy of certain means to
produce those impressions.

Hurd. Notes on Horace's Epistle to Augustus.

All this is in the hand of Providence: yet now, even now, I should confide in the prevailing virtue, and efficacious operation of lenity, though working in darkness, and in chaos, in the midst of all this unnatural and turbid combination.-Burke. On American Taxation.

So that when I speak of cause, and efficient cause, I only mean certain affections of the mind, that cause certain changes in the body; or certain powers and properties in bodies. Id. On the Sublime & Beautiful

The church was not impaired. Her estates, her majesty, her splendour, her orders and gradations continued the She was preserved in her full efficiency, and cleared only of a certain intolerance, which was her weakness and disgrace.-Id. Substance of Speech on Army Estimates.

same.

EFFE/MINATE, v.
EFFEMINATE, adj.
EFFE'MINATE, n.
EFFEMINATELY.
EFFEMINATENESS.
EFFEMINA'TION.
EFFE/MINACY.

Fr. Efféminer;_Sp.
Efeminar; Lat. Effe-
minare ; from ex, and
fæmina; e masculo fœ-
minam facere.
To be or cause to be
feminine, womanish; to
pursue or indulge in feminine or womanish habits,
amusements, occupations; to be or cause to be
weak, tender, cowardly.

He was girte effeminately with a gyrdle of golde, and the
swoorde yt hong therevpon had the scabard made of a pearl.
Brende. Quintus Curtius, fol. 24.

Is not that white rochette that the byshops and chanons weare so like a nunne, and so effeminatly, a false sign? Tyndall. Workes, p. 143.

How many brave hopes have we known dashed with
youthly excesse? how many high and gallant spirits effemi-
nated? Hannibal could complain that he brought men into
Campania, but carried women out again.

Bp. Hall. Christian Moderation, b. i. s. 10.
And thou dost nourish him a lock of hair behind like a
girle, effeminating thy son even from the very cradle.
Evelyn. Golden Book of Chrysostome.

And must we leave him here, whom here were fit
We should retain, the pillar of our state?
Whoce virtues well deserve to govern it,
And not this wanton young effeminate. (R. 2.)
Daniel. Civil War, b. i.

[The Angles] did now learn from the stranger Saxons an
uncivil kind of fierceness, of the Flemings effeminacy, of the
Danes drunkenness, and such other.

Selden. On Drayton's Poly-Olbion, s. 10.

Dal. The king is angry.
Craw. And the passionate duke,
Effeminately dolent.-Ford. Perkin Warbeck, Act iii. sc. 4.
And what vices therein [in the law] it [the hare] figured,
that is, not only pusillanimity and timidity from its temper,
feneration or usury from its fecundity and superfetation;
but from this mixture of sexes, unnatural venery and de-
generous effemination.-Brown. Vulg. Errours, b. viii. c. 17.

But would the young effeminate gallant, that never knew
what it was to want his will, that every day clothes himself
with the riches, and swims in the delights of the world;
would he, I say, choose to rise out of his soft bed at mid-
night, to begin a hard and a long march, to engage in a
crabbed study, or to follow some tedious, perplexed business?
South, vol. iv. Ser. 2.

I find the name of a minister of state, in one part of their history, who was fined for appearing too frequently in clean linen; and of a certain great general, that was turned out of his post for effeminacy, it having been proved upon him, by several credible witnesses, that he washed his face every

And arbitration wise of the Supreme.-Cowper. Task, b. ii. morning.-Spectator, No. 433.

But now, conspicuous from afar,
He rides triumphant in his car;
With golden pendants in his ears,
Aloft the silken reins he bears,
Proud, and effeminately gay.

Fawkes. Of Anacreon, Ode 69.

For pride, envy, covetousness, gluttony, intemperance, effeminateness, oaths, idleness, and I know not how many other sins, contrary to the laws of nature, and of Christ, are so little provided against by human sanctions, that one may be a bad Christian, and a bad man, without being a bad citizen.-Boyle. Works, vol. ii. p. 439.

Fair, female minstrels charm the sight and ear: Effeminating measures on their lutes Dissolve the soul in languor, which admits No thought but love.-Glover. The Athenaid, b. xxi. Even in the instance your lordship puts, a young man may be polished indeed out of his rusticity; yet if he have no better rule to go by, than the fashion of the place where he lives, he may easily wear himself into the contrary defect, an effeminate and unmanly foppery. Hurd. Works, vol. iv. Dial. 8.

Where will those, who inveigh against the education of our universities, recommend a more improving one? The indulgent softness of the parent's family is apt, at best, to give young persons a most unhappy effeminateness.

Secker, vol. i. Ser. 1.

A mediocrity of virtues and of talents is the iot of the great majority of mankind: and even this mediocrity, if cultivated by a liberal education, will infallibly secure its possessor against those excesses of effeminacy which are really culpable.-Mickle. Introduction to the Lusiad.

EFFERVESCE, v.
EFFERVESCENT.
EFFERVESCENCE.

Lat. Effervescere, (e, and fervescere, to become hot;) from fervere, to be hot, to heat; which Vossius thinks is from the Gr. Bpas-ew, fervere, tollere.

To grow or become hot; to be agitated; to hiss or bubble, (sc.) as if by the action of heat. Effervescent is now in common use.

The compound spirit of nitre, put to oil of cloves, will effervesce, even to a flame.-Mead. On Poisons.

I am not sure, but there may be effervescences, (and perhaps periodical ones,) in the blood and other juices of the body without fermentation properly so called.

Boyle. Works, vol. ii. p. 83.

The wild gas, the fixed air, is plainly broke loose but we ought to suspend our judgment until the first effervescence is a little subsided, till the liquor is cleared, and until we see something deeper than the agitation of a troubled and frothy surface.-Burke. On the French Revolution.

EFFE/TE. Lat. Effetus, (e, and fetus;) which Scaliger thinks is from the Gr. PoIT-a, coire; Vossius from the ancient Lat. Feo, fetum.

Unproductive, barren; without power to generate or produce.

Nature is not effoete, as he saith, or so lavish, to bestow all her gifts upon an age, but hath reserved some for posterity, to shew her power, that she is the same, and not old or consumed.-Burton. Anatomy of Melancholy, p. 370.

It is to me highly probable, that the females, as well of beasts as birds, have in them from their first formation the seeds of all the young they will afterwards bring forth, which when they are all spent and exhausted by what means soever, the animal becomes barren and effete.

Ray. On the Creation, pt. i.

It seems to me made appear, that the atmosphere which we breathe is a mixture of two kinds of air; one pure and vital, the other, for the purposes of life, effete, foul, and noxious.-Paley. Natural Theology, c. 10.

EFFICACY. EFFICIENT, &c., see EFFECT.
EFFIERCE, v. Į Fr. Fier; It. Fiero; Sp.
Feroz, Lat. Ferus, qui feri-

E'FFEROUS.
num animum habet; one who has the disposition
See FIERCE.
of a wild beast.

That with fell woodnesse he effierced was,
And wilfully him throwing on the grass,

Did beat and bounce his head and breast full sore.
Spenser. Faerie Queene, b. iii. c. 11.

From the teeth of that efferous beast, from the tusk of the wild boar, O thou, that art the root and generation of David, preserve our root and all his generation.

Bp. King. Vine Palatine, (1614.) p. 34. EFFIGY. Fr. It. & Sp. Effigie; Lat. EFFIGIATE, V. Effingere, e, and fing-ere, i. e. exprimere imitatione veram rem; to express, delineate or describe a reality by imitation. Efigier,

Fr.

To figure, draw, picture, portray, counterfeit, express the form; represent the shape; make a

true resemblance of, (by painting, carving, or
otherwise,) Cotgrave.

Duke Sen. If that you were the good Sir Rowland's son,
As you haue whisper'd faithfully you were,
And as mine eye doth his effigies witnesse
Most truly limn'd, and liuing in your face,
Be truly welcome hither.

Shakespeare. As You Like It, Act ii. sc. 7.

In which art that famous Pyrgoteles did so excell, as made
Alexander the Great ordain that none should presume to
carve his effigies save him only.
Evelyn. Sculptura, b. i. c. 3.
But this I mean, that he who means to win souls, and
prevail to his brother's institution, must, as Saint Paul did,
effigiate and conform himself to those circumstances of
living and discourse, by which he may prevail upon the
perswasions, by complying with the affections and usages of
men.-Bp. Taylor, vol. i. Ser. 25.

No longer shall dramatics be confin'd
To draw true images of all mankind;
To punish in effigie criminals,

Reprieve the innocent, and hang the false.

Butler. Upon Critics. And thus the man [Francisco de Gama] who despised the wreath with which Camoens crowned his grandfather, brought that grandfather's effigies to the deepest insult that can be offered to the memory of the deceased.

Mickle. Life of Camoens.

He [Thomas à Kempis] lived chiefly in the monastery of Mount St. Agnes; where his effigy, together with a prospect of the monastery, was engraven on a plate of copper, that lies over his body.-Harte. Thomas à Kempis, Note.

EFFLATE, v. Lat. Efflare, atum, to breathe
EFFLATION. fout, (e, and flare, to breathe.)
To breathe out, to blow out; (met.) to puff

out.

Yet notwithstanding all these things, his greatness and learning, he was so far from being efflated with pride, that he [Reynold Pole] retired to his old habitation at Suene. Wood. Athena Oxon.

Our common spirits, efflated by every vulgar breath upon every act, deify themselves; and conceit all great additions of honour below their merits. Sir T. Herbert. Travels, p. 179. Where, at the rosy spring of cheerful light, (If pious fame record tradition right,) A soft efflation of celestial fire Came, like a rushing breeze, and shook the lyre.

Parnell. The Gift of Poetry.

Lat. Efflorescentia, neuter pl. of Efflorescens, the pres. part. of

EFFLORESCENT.
EFFLORESCENCE.
EFFLORESCENCY.
Efflorescere, to spring or bud forth.

Fr. Efflorescence is applied to," the outward face or superficies, the utmost rind, pilling or skin of any thing," (Cotgrave.) In English it is also applied to

The springing, budding, shooting or breaking forth, (sc.) of flowers.

Yellow efflorescent sparry incrustations on stone.
Woodward. On Fossils.

In this renewed youth, of the so lately calcined and purified earth, there may be some pure efflorescences of balmy matter, not to be found now in its exhausted and decrepit age, that may be proper vehicles of life, into which souls may descend without further preparation.

Glanvill. Pre-existence of Souls, c. 14.

So men and other animals receive different tinctures from constitutional and complexional efflorescences.

Brown. Vulgar Errours, b. vi. c. 12.

He observed, that when the moist and blackish mould had been beaten upon by the sun, that here and there the superficial parts would be as it were besprinkled with a somewhat whitish saline efflorescence.

Boyle. Works, vol. v. p. 628. Two white, sparry incrustations, with efflorescencies in

form of shrubs, formed by the trickling of water.

EFFLUENT.
E'FFLUENCE.
EFFLUVIUM.
EFFLUVIATE,V.
EFFLU VIABLE.
EFFLUX, v.
E/FFLUX, n.
EFFLUXION.

Woodward. On Fossils. Lat. Effluere, effluens, ef fluxus,(e, and flu-ere, to flow;) which Vossius considers to

have the same origin with pluere, that is the Gr. BAU-ELV, manare, scaturire. Tooke thinks the A. S. Fleuw-an, to be the primitive. Flowing or issuing forth; springing or arising from; emanating.

And as they both hold and affirm, Nilus to be the effluence of Osiris, even so they are of opinion, that the body of Isis

is the earth or land of Egypt; and yet not all of it, but so
much as Nilus overfloweth, and by commixtion maketh fer-
tile and fruitfull.-Holland. Plutarch, p. 1059.

For these scintillations are not the accension of the ayr,
upon the collision of two hard bodies, but rather the in-
flamable effluencies discharged from the bodies collided.
Brown. Vulgar Errours, b. ii. c. 1.

This assertion, that Aristotle deliver'd the Digbæan doc-
trine of atomical effluvia, will alter the whole hypothesis ;
and then there will be little or nothing of Aristotle in his
schools.-Glanvill, Ess. 2.

For besides its electrick attraction, which is made by a
sulphureous effluvium, it will strike fire upon percussion
like many other stones.-Brown. Vulgar Errours, b. ii. c. 1.
Which appears in the natural production of insects out of
the finest parts and effluxes of most vegetable natures.
Hale. Origin. of Mankind, s. 4. c. 3.

It is a grace, which by virtue of the covenant consigned
in baptism does, like a centre, transmit effluxes to all the
periods and portions of our life.
Bp. Taylor. Great Exemplar, pt. i. s. 9.
And truly the doctrine of effluxions, their penetrating
natures, their invisible paths and insuspected effects, are
very considerable.-Brown. Vulgar Errours, b. ii. c. 2.
Dazzling the brightness; not the sun so bright,
'Twas here the pure substantial fount of light;
Shot from his hand and side in golden streams,
Came forward effluent horny-pointed beams.
Parnell. The Gift of Poetry.

Yet we are able only to survey
Dawning of beams, and promises of day.
Heaven's fuller effluence mocks our dazzled sight;
Too great its swiftness, and too strong its light.
Prior. Charity.

If these effluvia, which do upward tend,
Because less heavy than the air, ascend;
Why do they ever from their height retreat;
And why return to seek their central seat?
Blackmore. Creation, b. i.

The great rapidness, with which the wheels, that serve to
cut and polish diamonds, must be moved, does excite a
great degree of heat (which the senses may easily discover)
in the stone, and by that and the strong concussion it makes
of its parts, may force it to spend its effluviable matter, if I
may so call it.-Boyle. Works, vol. iv. p. 354.

And this brings into my mind what an eminent physician,
who was skilled in perfumes, affirmed to me about the dura-
bleness of an effluviating power, that was not natural to a
metal, but adventitious, and introduced by art.
Id. Ib. vol. v. p. 47.

By the erecting the barometer, and warily unstopping the
orifice of the lower leg, as much mercury as will of itself
flow out is effluxed.-Id. Ib. vol. iii. p. 222.

Five years being effluxed, he took out the tree, and weighed it.-Id. Ib. vol. i. p. 496.

Therefore it is no wonder, if God can torment, where we
see no tormenter, and comfort, where we behold no com-
forter; he can do it by immediate emanations from himself,
by continual effluxes of those powers and virtues, which he
was pleased to implant in a weaker and fainter measure in
created agents.-South, vol. viii. Ser. 14.

And yet these so incomparably little magnetical effluxions
proceeding from vigorous loadstones will be able to take up
considerable quantities of so ponderous a body as iron.
Boyle. Works, vol. iii. p. 685.

The Gods declare that thy illustrious head
Such effluent glory shall around thee shed,
As, wide dispensing its eternal rays,
Shall fill the enlightened nations with amaze.
Cambridge. The Scribleriad, b. i.
The poet's mind,
(Effluence essential of heat and light!)
Not mounts a loftier wing, when fancy leads
The glitt'ring track, and points him to the skies,
Excursive.
Thompson. Sickness, b. iv.
EFFORCE, v. Fr. Low. Lat.
E/FFORT.
Effortiare Fr. Forcer, t.
Forzare, (q. d.) fortia, fortiare, from fortis,
(Skinner,) strong, mighty. An effort,-

Fr. Effort, (q. d.) exfortia, i. e. exertio totius
roboris, (Skinner.) An exertion of the whole
strength or power. To efforce,-

To labour, to strive, to exert, to strain; to do
or commit force or violence to; to violate.
The Palmer lent his eare vnto the noyse,
To weet who called so importunely:
Againe, he heard a more efforced voice,
That bade him come in haste.

Spenser. Faerie Queene, b. ii. c. 8.
Nay, let vs first, said Satyrane, intreat
The man by gentle meanes, to let us in
And afterwards affray with cruel threat,
Ere that, we to efforce it doe begin :
Then, if all faile, we will by force it win.

Making efforts with all my puissance.

Denham. A Dialogue.

From whence it seems probable to me, that the simple
ideas we receive from sensation and reflection, are the
boundaries of our thoughts; beyond which the mind, what-
ever efforts it would make, is not able to advance one jot:
nor can it make any discoveries, when it would pry into the
nature and hidden causes of those ideas.
Locke. Hum. Understanding, b. ii. c. 23

Yet liberty, thus slighted and betray'd,
One last effort with indignation made;
One man she chose to try th' unequal fight,
And prove the power of justice against might.

Rowe. Lucan. Pharsalia, b. in.

Whether it be, that such knowledge is unattainable by our faculties, or that it was seen to be improper for cur situation to say the least, all the efforts of the ablest men to explain the peculiar fundamental doctrines of our religion, on the principles of our philosophy, have not hitherte been so successful, as to make it certain that these doctrines are indeed cognisable by human reason. Hurd. Works, vol. vi. Ser. 13.

EFFORM, v. Low Lat. Efformare, (e, and EFFORMATION. (forma,) from the A. S. Frem an, facere, to frame, by a common transposition of the letter r. See To DEFORM.

To frame, make or fashion.

The lawyers and physicians distinguish the time of the abor tion. If the child was efformed into a humane shape, it is capital by the laws; but not if it was inform and unshapen. Bp. Taylor. Rule of Conscience, b. iv. c. 1.

He that will reprove wisely, must efform himself into all images of things which innocently and wisely he can put cn. Id. vol. i. Ser. 25. So that, to the knowledge of the poorest simple, we must first know its efficient, the manner, and method of its efermation, and the nature of the plastick. Glanvill. Vanity of Dogmatizing, c. 22. They endeavour to evacuate and disannul our great argument, by pretending to solve all the phænomena of nature, and to give an account of the production and efformation of the universe, and all the corporeal beings therein, both celestial and terrestrial, as well animate as inanimate, 20t excluding animals themselves, by a slight hypothesis of matter so and so divided and mov'd.

Ray. On the Creation, pt.

It is strange to me, they should pretend, that nature, which they make a kind of semi-deity, should not be able to mould and fashion so small, and soft, and tractable, a portion of matter, as that, wherein the first model and eførmation of the embryo is made.-Boyle. Works, vol. v. p. .201.

EFFO'SSION. A word coined for the occasion, from Lat. Effodere, to dig out.

He [Mar. Scriblerus] had already determined to set apart several annual sums for the recovery of MSS. the effossics of coins, &c.-Mem. of Mar. Scriblerus, b. i. c. 1.

EFFRAY, i.e. to affray, (qv.) Fr. "Effrayer,to fray, skare, fear, affright," (Cotgrave.) In Spenser,

To run in disorder, confusion, or affright.
Harvey uses effraiable as equivalent to frightful
Their dam vpstart, out of her den effraid,
And rushed forth, hurling her hideous taile
About her cursed head.

Spenser. Faerie Queene, b. i. c. 1.
EFFRONTED. A word which Skinner had
EFFRO'NTERY.
seen only in an old English
dictionary. Fr. Effronterie; Lat. Effrons; which,
Skinner adds, even in the purer ages of the Latin
language, signified impudent. (Ex, and frons, the
face or countenance.) Applied to-
Hardiness of front; impudency, unshame-
facedness, shamelessness," (Cotgrave.)

[ocr errors]

Th' effronted whore prophetically showne
By holy John in his mysterious scrouls.

Stirling. Doomesday. The Second Houre. Must not one think he [Mr. Edwards] is mightily beholden to the excellency and readiness of his own nature, who is adversaries these arts of equivocation, lying and effrontery no sooner engag'd in controversy, but he finds out in his

in managing of it?

Locke. Sec. Vind. of the Reasonableness of Christianity. Vice is never so shameless as when it pretends to public spirit. Yet this effrontery is so common, that it scandalizes nobody.-Hurd. Serm. on the Gen. Fast Day in 1776. EFFU'LGE, v. EFFU'LGENT.

EFFU'LGENCE.

From Lat. E, and fulgere; Gr. Þλey-ew, to burn or blaze.

To blaze forth, to shine forth; to emit or send Id. Ib. b. iii. c. 9. forth brightness, brilliancy or splendor.

[ocr errors][ocr errors][merged small][ocr errors][ocr errors][merged small]
[ocr errors]
[blocks in formation]

Presents great Cyrus, as the Magi feign'd The snowy-vested Mithres, from the east Descending in effulgent rays of light,

To guide the virtuous to th' ethereal plains, Where joy for ever dwells.

1

Cooper. Power of Harmony, b. i.
Thee, Father! first, omnipotent, they sung!
Thee, Son, coequal! from the Father sprung!
Thee, Spirit! in whose influence both combine!
Thee, Virgin-mother of the man divine!

And you, ye leaders! who in heaven above,
Th' efulgent bands in triple circles move.

Hoole. Tasso. Jerusalem Delivered, b. ii.

And darkness and doubt are now flying away,
No longer I roam in conjecture forlorn.
So breaks on the traveller faint and astray,
The bright and the balmy effulgence of morn.

Beattie. The Hermit.

EFFUME, v. Į Lat. E, and fumus, smoke EFFUMABILITY. or vapour.

To throw forth steam or vapour, to evaporate, to reek.

Shef. I can make this dogge take as many whiffes as I list, and he shall retaine, or effume them at my pleasure.

B. Jonson. Every Man out of his Humour, Act iii. sc. 6 Paracelsus himself, and therefore, as you will easily believe, many of his followers, does somewhere call that mercury, which ascends upon the burning of wood, as the Peripatetics are wont to take the same smoke for air; and so seems to define mercury by volatility, or (if I may coin such a word) efumability.-Boyle. Works, vol. i. p. 539. Some of them ascribe to Mercury, colours; as all of them do effumability, as they speak.-Id. Ib. p. 552.

EFFUND, v. EFFUSE, U. EFFU'SE, n. EFFU'SE, adj.

EFFUSION.

EFFUSIVE.

ly, wastefully.

Lat. Effundere, effusum, to pour forth, (e, and fundere, to pour;) Fr. and Sp. Effusion; It. Effusione.

To pour forth; to shed or spill; to pour out, (sc.) lavish

Suspires which I effund in scilence.

Chaucer. The Cuckow and the Nightingale. Thou precious gem of martirs Margarite, That of thy blood dredest none effusion.

Chaucer. The Letter of Cupide. No man may doubte of this, that by the aspersion of blude of beastes before the incarnation was sygnifyed and represented the effusyon of the blude of Christe for oure redempcion.-Fisher. On the Seven Psalms, Ps. 51.

After thys went forth the seconde aungel of the seconde seale openynge, effundinge his vyall vpon the sea. Bale. Image, pt. ii.

Much sweat they spent in furious fight,
Much blood they did effund.
St. George for England. Percy, vol. iii.
If he his life effund

To utmost death, the high God hath design'd
That we both live. He in my heart shall find
A seat for his transfused soul to dwell.
More. On the Soul, pt. i. b. ii. s. 77.
Jone of Airc hath beene

A virgin from her tender infancie,
Chaste, and immaculate in very thought,
Whose maiden-blood thus rigorously effus'd,
Will cry for vengeance at the gates of heauen.
Shakespeare. 1 Pt. Hen. VI. Act v. sc. 4.
He fell, and deadly pale
Groan'd out his soul with gushing bloud effus'd.
Milton. Paradise Lost, b. xi.

The ayre hath got into my deadly wounds,
And much effuse of blood doth make me faint.
Shakespeare. 3 Pt. Hen. VI. Act ii. sc. 6.

[blocks in formation]

As the goods thence accruing to us are in multitude innumerable, in quality inestimable, in duration immense; so in some correspondence should our joy be very intense, very effuse, very stable.-Barrow, vol. iii. Ser. 43.

Th' effusive south
Warms the wide air, and o'er the void of heaven
Breathes the big clouds with vernal showers distent.
Thomson. Spring.

With thirsty sponge they rub the tables o'er,
(The swains unite the toil;) the walls, the floor,
Wash'd with th' effusive wave, are purg'd of gore.
Pope. Homer. Odyssey, b. xxii.

Should tempting Novelty thy cell refrain,
And Sloth effuse her opiate fumes in vain;
Yet hope not life from grief or danger free,
Nor think the doom of man revers'd for thee.
Johnson. Vanity of Human Wishes.

"Twas here, in many an early strain
Dryden first try'd his classic vein,
Spurr'd his strong genius to the distant goal,
In wild effusions of his manly soul.

Lloyd. Ode Spoken at Westminster. Of degree The least and lowliest, in the effusive warmth Of colours mingling with a random blaze, Doth beauty dwell.-Akenside. Pleas. of Imagination, b. i. EFT, or An eft or evet. "A. S. Efete, an eft, EFF. Sa newt, a lizard," (Somner.) "I know not," says Skinner, "whether from A. S. Ef-an, equalis, from the evenness or smoothness of the skin."

We included in a receiver, whose globular part was about the bigness of an orange, one of that sort of animals that they vulgarly call effs.-Boyle. Works, vol. iii. p. 385. Around the tomb, in mystic lore, Were forms of various mien,

Almighty God, that saved all mankind,
Have on Custance and on hire child som mind,
That fallen is in hethen hond eftsone,
In point to spill, as I shal tell you sone.

Chaucer. The Man of Lawes Tale, v. 5329.
What? quod my lord, ther n'is no more to don,
Of thise perils I wool beware eftsone.

Id. The Chanones Yemannes Tale, v. 16,401. With that she swouneth nowe and eft. Gower. Con. A. b. vin.

He himself also holding vp his hands to heauen, bewailed eft his own misfortune, and eft the misfortune of his countrye.-Goldyng. Justine, fol. 92.

Moyses eftsones resorting to Demasco the natyue country of his ancestors, went vp into the mountain Synai. Id. Ib. fol. 125

Though at midnight he would barke and ball,
(For he had eft learned a curres call,)
As if a wolfe were among the sheepe.

Spenser. Shepheards Calendar. September.
You must call forth the watch that are their accusers.
Kemp. Yes, marry, that's the eftes't way; let the watch
come forth.
Shakespeare. Much Adoe about Nothing, Act iv. sc. 2.

Eftsoone there stepped forth

A goodly lady, clad in hunter's weed, That seem'd to be a woman of great worth, And, by her stately portance, born of heauenly birth. Spenser. Faerie Queene, b. ii. c. 3.

Whereupon the tribune chafed, and set into an heat, sendeth an officer to the consull: the consull likewise, a lictor to the tribune, crying eftsoones alowd, that he was but a privat person without command, without magistracie. Holland. Livivs, p. 83.

And eft his lathy falchion brandish'd,
As if he meant fierce battle to darrain,
And like a wanton ape eft skipp'd he on the plain.
West. On the Abuse of Travelling.

Eftsoons the father of the silver flood,
The noble Thames, his azure head uprais'd,
And shook his dewy locks, worthy a God!
Thompson. Epithalamium on the Royal Nuptials.
E'GAL, and
i. e. equal, and equality, (qv.)
EGA'LITY.
EGE'ST, v.
EGE'STION.

d}

Lat. Egerere, egestum; (e, and gerere, manum administrare, q.d. to handle, formed from xЄp-os genitive of Xep, the hand.)

To bear or carry out; to throw out, emit or

eject.

There be divers creatures that sleep all winter, as the

And efts, and foul-wing'd serpents, bore The altar's base obscene.-Mickle. Wolfwold & Ulla. EFT. "A. S. Eft, postea, porro, iterum, E/FTSOON. afterwards, furthermore, again. Eft-soon, denuo, iterum, rursus, identidem, de integro. Eft-soones, forthwith or again," (Somner.) Skinner remarks that eft (or aft) signifies post, and also (parum deflexo sensu) statim. Eftsoones, is soon aft, or after, (cito post,) instantly, immediately, after; and eft, alone, is used in the tions of the belly.-Brown. Vulgar Errours, b. iii. c. 13. same manner. Eftest, soonest, quickest.

Of efters, in Rom. of the Rose, Skinner says, perhaps from the A. S. Efter, post, (q.d.)

cum ædium.

bear, the hedgehog, the bat, the bee, &c. these all wax fat when they sleep, and egest not.

Bacon. Naturall History, § 899. It is confounded with the intestinal excretions and eges

For he that does not love to sing, avia Pieridum peragro loca nullius ante trita solo, but permits his memory to be so stiff, as to give us the same (though from the best inspired posti-writers) rather than the result from his own alembic, his stomach is bad, and his egestions nauseous.

And suor he wolde rather dye than euer eft to flie R. Gloucester, p, 222. Vor myd ssypes and gret poer as prest efsone hii come. Id. p. 260. And eft aryued on this lond with fulle grete nauie. R. Brunne, p. 24. Henry chaced his sonne thorgh force fro toun to toun, The kyng of France eftsoune left tent and pauilloun. Id. p. 133. Piers Plouhman, p. 250. And eft Jhesus bigan to teche at the see and myche puple was gaderid to him.-Wiclif. Mark, c. 4.

And gif hym eft and eft. evere at hus neede.

Jhesus dide efte this secounde tokene, whanne he cam fro Judee into Galilee.-Id. Jon, c. 4..

Eftsoone Jhesus seide to hem, it is written thou schalt not tempt thi Lord God. Eftsoone the feend tok him into a ful high hil and schewide to him alle the rewmes of the world and the joie of hem.-Id. Matthew, c. 4.

Eftsoone I seye to you that if twene of you consente on the erthe, of every thing whatever thei axen, it schal be don to hem of my fadir that is in hevens.-Id. Ib. c. 18. Where I unbounden, all so mote I the,

I wolde never eft comen in the snare.

Chaucer. The Marchantes Prologue, v. 9103.

I went on right honde and on lefte
About the place, it was not lefte
Till I had all the garden bene

In the efters that men might seen.-Id. Rom. of the Rose.

Boyle. Works, vol. vi. p. 333. EGG. A. S. Eg; Ger. Ey; Dut. Ei, eye; Sw. Egg Fr. Euf; It. Ovo, uovo; Sp. Huevo ; Lat. Ovum. Written ay by Robert of Brunne; ey by Chaucer; and eie by Gower.

;

An ay bi it selue for fiue schillynges was bouht,
A pere for penyes tuelue, or thei had it nouht.
R. Brunne, p. 175.

Menye of the bryddes
Hudden and heleden. durneliche here egges
For no foul sholde hem fynde.-Piers Plouhman, p. 223.
Or if he axe an eg: whether he schal areche him a scor-
pioun ?-Wiclif. Luk, c. 11.

Or yf he aske an egge: wyll he offer him a scorpion?
Bible, 1551. Ib.
Hire bord was served most with white and black,
Milk and broun bred, in which she fond no lack,
Seinde bacon, and sometime an ey or twey.

Chaucer. The Nonnes Preestes Tale, v. 14,851.
And polished was eke so clene,
That no signe of the sculle was sene,
But as it were a grips eie.
Gower. Con. A. b. i.
Cob. Nay, soft and faire, I have eggs on the spit; I can-
not goe yet, sir.

B. Jonson. Every Man in his Humour, Act iii. sc. 6. So rides he mounted on the market-day, Upon a straw-stufft pannell all the way, With a maund charg'd with houshold merchandize. With eggs, or white meate, from both dayries,

Bp. Hall, b. iv. Sat. 2.

« PredošláPokračovať »