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Now all this provision of foyle, fencing, stoning, planting, were nothing without a continuall over-sight.

Bp. Hall. Sermon, at a Publick Feast, an. 1628. And now, when the fence-fabrickes and all devices else requisite for a siege, were in readinesse, toward the end of the second watch, when the night happening to be very light with the moon shine, shewed all thinges evidently to those that stood upon the bulwarkes, suddenly a multitude gathered together in one plumpe, opened the gates at once, and sallied foorth.-Holland. Ammianus, p. 253.

And if some that have bin good at the foils, have proved cowardly at the sharp, yet on the contrary, who ever durst point a single combat in the field, that hath not bin somewhat trained in the fence-schoole. Bp. Hall. Heaven upon Earth, s. 11.

Eug. You little think he was at fencing-school
At four o'clock this morning.
Sim. How at fencing-school!

Massinger. The Old Law, Act iii. sc. 2.

Your son and t' please you, sir, is new cashier'd yonder, Cast from his mistress favour: and such a coil there is, Such fending, and such proving.

Beaum. & Fletch. Humourous Lieutenant, Act v. sc. 4.

And to explain what your forefathers meant,

By real presence in the sacrament,

After long fencing push'd against a wall,
Your salvo comes, that he's not there at all.

Dryden. The Hind and the Panther.

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A man, in his full tide of youthful blood,
Able for arms, and for his country's good;
Urg'd by no pow'r, restrain'd by no advice,
But following his own inglorious choice:
'Mongst common fencers practices the trade,
That end debasing for which arms were made.
Congreve. Juvenal, Sat. 11.

ix. That all the fencible men in the nation [Scotland], betwixt 60 and 16, be armed with bayonets and firelocks, all of a caliver; and continue always provided in such arms and ammunition suitable.

Parliamentary History, an. 1705. App. No. 1.

When he [the Marquis of Northampton] was crossed, or contentious with any, he never replied to any answer; which, he said, was a manifest sign of no strong spirit. It

was a manifest sign indeed of no contentious spirit, and that delighted not in fending and proving, as we say. Strype. Memorials, vol. iii. b. ii. c. 28.

He fends his flock, and clad in homely frize, In the warm cot the wintry blast defies.-Philips, Past. 6. The moderns, on the contrary, have their guards and fences about them; and we hold it an incivility to approach them without some decent periphrasis, or ceremonial titlegaudent prænomine molles

Auricula.

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Where, then, ah! where shall poverty reside,
To 'scape the pressure of contiguous pride?
If to some common's fenceless limits stray'd,
He drives his flock to pick the scanty blade,
Those fenceless fields the sons of wealth divide,
And e'en the bare-worn common is deny'd.

Goldsmith. Deserted Village. The most prominent of these objectionable estimates, he agreed with the honourable gentleman, was that of the Manx fencibles.

Windham. Speech. Army Estimates, Feb. 26, 1806. the American war the fencible regiments received aigher bounties for limited service, than others did unnited, and yet there was no complaint on the part of the atter. Id. Ib. April 3, 1806.

FENERATION. "Fr. Fénération,—usury or the practice thereof," (Cotgrave.) Fenerator a fenore est cognominatus; fenus autem dictum a fetu, et quasi a feturâ quâdam pecuniæ parientis atque increscentis, (Varro.) The product or increase of money."

To fenerate, Cockeram explains, " To put money to usury."

And what vices therein it [the Hare] figured, that is, not only pusillanimity and timidity from its temper, feneration of usury from its fecundity and superfetation; but, &c. Brown. Vulgar Errours, b. iii. c. 17.

FENESTRE.Sw. Fanster; It. Fenestra;

Dut. Venster; Ger. Fenster;

FENE'STRAL.

Sp. Hemestra; Fr. Fenestre; Lat. Fenestra; perhaps arо Tov pair-ei, (q.) Phænestra, that through which light is admitted. (See Vossius, and Wachter, in v. Fenster.) Among the ancient Romans,

Openings in the wall to admit the light; (perhaps-air, vent-us ;)—a wind-ow.

He let caste thys traytor in the euenynge late
At fenestre in Temese.
R. Gloucester, p. 312.

Low how men wryten
In fenestres at the freres.-Piers Plouhman, p. 262.
Then was Faith in a finestre. cryde o fili David,
As doth an heraud of armes.-Id. p. 339.

Of castell Angell the fenestrall
Glittryng and glistring and gloriously glased
It made some mennes eyen dasyld and dased.
Skelton. The Crowne of Laurell.
After his [Dugdales] death, Lord Fairfax took into his
possession not only all the old MSS. but also his collections
of monumental and fenestral inscriptions, &c.
Wood. Fasti Oxon. vol. ii.

FE/NIGREEK. Fænogræcum; Fr. Fenugrec. See the quotation.

Fenigreeke commeth not behind the other hearbs before specified, in credit and account for the vertues which it hath: the Greeks call it Telus and Carphos: some name it Buceras and Agoceras, for that the seed resembleth little horns: wee in Latine tearme it Silicia or Siliquia. Holland. Plinie, p. 207.

FENNEL. A. S. Fenol; Fr. Fenouil; Dut. Venckel; Ger. Fencher; all, says Skinner, from the Lat. Faniculum, which Vossius thinks may be from Fenum, quia ubi exaruit, feno similis sit. Isidorus, from Paweσbai, because its juice sharpens the sight.

See the quotation from Pliny.

A ferthing worth of fynkel-sede, for fastynge daies. Piers Plouhman, p. 106. Fenell being eaten, the sede or rote maketh abundance of mylke.-Sir T. Elyot. The Castel of Helth, b. ii.

As for fenell, the serpents have woon it much credit, and brought it into name, in this regard, that by tasting thereof juice that it yeeldeth doe cleare their eyes: whereby we also (as I have already noted) they cast their old skin, and by the are come to know that this hearb hath a singular propertie to mundifie our sight and take away the filme or web that overcasteth and dimmeth our eyes. Holland. Plinie, b. xx. c. 23.

The seed of ferula or fennell-geant is counted good meat in Italie: for it is put in pots of earth well stopped, and will continue a whole yeare.-Id. Ib. b. xix. c. 9. The most friendly to the stomach, is fennel. Arbuthnot. On Aliments, c. 3.

You can by no culture or art extend a fennel-stalk to the stature and bigness of an oak.-Ray. On the Creation, pt. i. The species of caterpillar which eats the vine, will starve upon the elder; nor will that which we find upon fennel, touch the rose bush.-Paley. Natural Theology, c. 26.

FE'NNOW, or In Kent, Junius says, is FINNOW. Smucidus, mouldy, from the

A. S. Fynig-ean, mucescere, to be mouldy; Somner says, to wax fennewed; and fynig, finnewy. (See FEN.) Mr. Justice Blackstone has remarked, that in "the Preface to King James's Bible, the translators speak of fenowed," i. e. vinewed or Note on Shakespeare, mouldy translations. Troilus & Cressida, Act ii. sc. 1. See VINEW.

The old moth-eaten leaden legend, and the foisty and fenowed festival are yet secretly laid up in corners. Dr.Favour. Antiquities. Triumph over Novelty, (1619,) p. 334. FE'OD. See FEUD.

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Godlinesse can give wisdome to the foole, eyes to the blind, life to the dead; it can eject Devils, change the course of nature, create us anew, free us from evill, feoffe us in good, honour, wealth, contentment, everlasting happinesse. Id. b. xxiv. c. 19. The IIypocrite.

And though his majesty came to them by descent, yet it was but in nature of the heire of a feoffee in trust, for the use and service of the kingdome; as a king in his politicke; not as a man or proprietor in his natural capacity.

Prynne. Treachery and Disloyalty, &c. pt. ii. p. 12. He ha's a quarrell to carry, and ha's caused A deed of feoffment, of his whole estate, To be drawne yonder.

B. Jonson. The Divell is an Asse, Act iv. sc. 6. The iurisdiction as touching feofments upon trust, [Jurisdictionem de fidei commissis,] which was wont yeere by yeere trates, hee ordained to hold by patent for ever. and onely within the citie to be committed unto the magis

Holland. Suetonius, p. 165.

But the voyce went, and rumours ran abroad, that Constantius in his time had made his last will and testament, heire, and gave to those whom he loved, feoffments upon wherein he did set downe, as I said before, Julian to be his trust, and legacies.-Id. Ammianus, p. 185.

A chamber of dependencies was fram'd,
(As conquerours will never want pretence,
When arm'd, to justify th' offence)

And the whole fief in right of Poetry, she claim'd.

Dryden. To the Pious Memory of Mrs. Anne Killgrew. She [Spain] is a province of the Jacobin empire, and she must make peace or war according to the orders she receives from the Directory of assassins: in effect and substance, her crown is a fief of regicide.-Burke. On a Regicide Peace, Let.2. FERA'CIOUS. Į Lat. Ferax, acis, bearing; from ferre, to bear. See

FERA CITY. FERTILE.

Bearing, producing, fruitful.

This firm Republic, that against the blast Of opposition rose; that (like an oak, Nurs'd on feracious Algidum, whose boughs Still stronger shoot beneath the ridged axe) By loss, by slaughter, from the steel itself, Ev'n force and spirit drew.-Thomson. Liberty, pt. iii. Such writers, instead of brittle, would say fragile, instead of fruitfulness, feracity.

Beattie. Elements of Moral Science, pt. iv. c. 1. s. 3. FERAL. Feralia ab inferis, et ferendo; quod ferunt tum epulas ad sepulcrum, quibus jus ibi parentare, (Varro, lib. v.) Vossius thinks from the Eolic accus. npa, feram: quæ enim fera magis effera est morte?

Of or appertaining to funerals; deadly.

Mars and Hercules, and I know not how many besides of old were deified, went this way to heaven, that were indeed bloudy butchers, wicked destroyers and troublers of the world, prodigious monsters, hel-hounds, feral plagues, devourers, comon executioners of humane kind, as Lactantius

truly proves.-Burton. Democritus to the Reader, p. 33.

FERDNESS, i. c. fearfulness. Ferdly is st used, Jamieson says, as fearfully.

In the Glossary of obsolete words in Wielif's! New Testament we find, ferdful, fearful, terrible; but the reference is to Jer. xvii. Cant. vi. (which remain in MS.)

And that innocence sikerly withouten tenefull annoy among shrewes safely might enhabite by protection of safe conduct, so that shrewes harm for harm by bridle of ferdnesse shoulden restraine.-Chaucer. Test. of Loue, b. iii.

This ielousye in ful thought, euer shuld be kept for ferdnes to lese his loue by miskeping thorowe his owne doing in lewdnesse, or els thus.-Id. Ib.

FERE.

FERINE. FE'RINENESS. FERITY.

Lat. Ferinus, from fera, &npa: Eolic accus. for Onpa: from Oe-ev, currere, to run, so called from its speed, (says Lennep :) ab impetu fervidiori quo ruit, (Scheidus.)

Of or pertaining to a wild beast; wild, savage, ferocious.

4. The only difficulty that seems to remain, is touching those ferine, noxious, and untameable beasts, as lions, tigers, wolves, boars, and foxes with which that continent abounds: for it is not probable that these should be transported by shipping.-Hale. Origin. of Mankind, p. 202.

A ferine and necessitous kind of life, a conversation with those that were fallen into a more barbarous habit of life and manners, would easily assimilate, at least, the next generation to barbarism and ferineness.-Id. Ib. p. 197.

(Also written Phere.) A. S. Fera, FE'REHEAD.ge-fera: Socius, comes, sodalis; a fellow, a companion, a mate. We as yet sometimes say a feer in the same sense, (Somner.) Perhaps (says Skinner) from A. S. Far-an, ire, proficisci; (q. d.) itineris particeps; a fellow-paкTIKOU (his practical as well as judicative faculty, quite traveller.

A fellow, a mate, an associate, a companion: also, company, fellowship.

A dogter ich haue of gret prys, & noble & god al so,
Y geue here the to thi wyf, &, gef thou wolt by leue here,
The thridde del my kyndom y geue to be my fere.
R. Gloucester, p. 12.
Eldol Erl of Gloucestre, as he wende in this ferhede
Toward the batail, to the kyng these wordes he seyde.

Godwyn, an Erle of Kent, met with Alfred, Him & alle his feres vntille prison tham led.

Id. p. 138.

R. Brunne, p. 52.

If he be not absolutely arrived to Arrian's απολίθωσις του quarr'd and petrified within him) to that wрwors in the Gospel, that direct ferity and brutality, in comparison of which, the most crest-fal'n numness, palsie or lethargy of soul, were dignity and preferment.

Hammond. Works, vol. iv. p. 576.

And though the blindness of some ferities have savaged on the bodies of the dead, and been so injurious unto worms, as to disenter the bodies of the deceased, yet had they therein no design upon the soul.-Brown. Vulg. Err. b. vii. c. 19. They who use to eat or drink blood are apt to degenerate into ferily, and cruelty, and easiness of revenge.

Bp. Taylor. Rule of Conscience, b. ii. c. 2. Rule 2. FE'RLY, n. I A. S. Farlic, ferlic, repentinus, FE'RLY, adj. suddain, unlooked for, (Somner;) which Dr. Jamieson says is undoubtedly formed from A. S. Faer, subitus, and lic, (like,) having the Tyll y saw the wyth syght. Lybeaus Disconus. Ritson, vol. ii. appearance of suddenness,-i. e. of coming from

What wendest thou, fendes fere? Uncrystenede that were

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And right anon she for her conseil sente,
And they ben comen, to know what she mente;
And whan assembled was this folk in fere,
She set hire doun, and sayd as ye shal here.

Id. The Man of Lawes Tale, v. 4748.

Fidelia and Speranza virgins were,
Though spousd, yet wanting wedlock's solemnize;
But faire Charissa to a louely feere
Was linked, and by him had many pledges deere.

Spenser. Faerie Queene, b. i. c. 10.

In which regards, she both delighted me, and also yeelded no small testimony of rare debonairity that nature had endued her withal; for she would make prety meanes to her nurse, and seem (as it were) to entreat her to give the brest or pap, not onely to other infants, like herselfe, her playfeeres, but also to little babies and puppets, and such like gawds as little ones take joy in, and wherewith they use to play.-Holland. Plutarch, p. 439.

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Weaver says expressly that the abbat brought back with him from Rome workmen and rich porphyry stones for Edward the Confessor's feretory; and for the pavement of the chapel-Walpole. Anecdotes of Painting, vol. i. e. 1.

In 1163, Hen. III. lodged his [Edward the Confessor's] body in a costly ferelry, translating it from its pristine place. Pennant. London, p. 84. FERIE, n. Lat. Feria (Vossius) was oriFE'RIAL. ginally Fesie, for which FERIA'TION. FESTIVAL. The Glossarist to Wiclif says, "Feries, Lat. feasts, holydays. Levit. xiii. fairs."

see

They did learn to dance, and to sing, and to play on instruments on the ferial days.-Dugdale. Orig. Judic. c. 55. Why should the Christian church have lesse power than the Jewish synagogue? here was not a meere feriation, but a feasting; they must appeare before God cum muneribuswith gifts.-Bp. Hall. The Poole of Bethesda.

Brown has words still more extraordinary, as feriation, for keeping holiday, dedentition, for falling the teeth, &c. Beattie. Moral Science, pt. iv. c. 1. s. 3.

afar; for faer, subitus, is from A. S. Far-an, ire; and thus, ferly, (sometimes written, farly,) is— Any thing foreign, strange, and therefore, surprising, wonderful; surprise, wonder.

Bot I haf grete ferly, that I fynd no man,
That has writen in story, how Hanelok thys lond wan.
R. Brunne, p. 25.
Ther speres poynt ouer poynt, so sare & so pikke,
& fast togidere joynt, to se it was ferlike.-Id. p. 305.
Many ferlies han fallen.-Piers Plouhman, p. 4.

And ferliche me thynketh.-Id. p. 291.

A wilde fire upon hir bodies falle,
Wha herkned ever slike a ferly thing?
Ye, they shall have the flour of yvel ending.

Chaucer. The Reves Tale, v. 4171.

My father hight Sir Edmund Mortimer,
The Earle of Marche, whence I was after earle,
By just descent these two my parents were
Of which the one of knighthood bare the fearle,
Of womanhood the other was the pearle.

FERMENT, v. FERMENT, n. FERMENTAL. FERMENTATION,

Mirrour for Magistrates, p. 273. Fr. Fermenter; It. Fermentare; Sp. Fermentar; Lat. Fermentum, q. fervimentum, a fervendo, quia massam in quâ continetur, quasi fervefacit, et attollit, turgidamque reddit; Vossius, from Isidorus; (because it raises and swells the mass in which it is contained.)

FERMENTATIVE.

To raise, to swell, (sc.) by the motion or action of internal parts; to cause or have, an internal commotion or tumult, an internal heat.

And eke of our materes encorporing,
And of our silver citrination,
Our cementing and fermentation.

Chaucer. The Chanones Yemannes Tale, v. 16,260. It is not more naturall for the sun, when it looks upon a moist, and well fermented earth, to cause vapours to ascend thence, then it is for greatnesse, and goodnesse, when they both meet together upon an honest heart, to draw up holy desires of gratulation.-Bp. Hall. A Sermon, 29 Jan. 1625.

To which I add, (4.) That the familiar doth not only suck the witch, but in the action infuseth some poisonous ferment into her, which gives her imagination and spirits a magical tincture, whereby they become mischievously influential; and the word venefica intimates some such matter.

Glanvill, Ess. 6.

That containing little salt or spirit, they [cucumbers] may also debilitate the vital acidity and fermental faculty of the stomack, we readily concede. Brown. Vulgar Errours, b. ii. c. 7.

Some used to put thereunto [the juice out of mulberries] myrrhe and cypresse, setting all to frie and take their fermentation in the sun, untill it grew to hardnesse in the foresaid vessell. stirring it thrice a day with a spatula. Holland. Plinie, b. xxiii c. 17

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Raven. This blood, I think, my lord, must be extravasated by the violence of his gripes, for it is proved he drank a great quantity of claret, and afterwards of small-beer, which set the blood upon a fermentation, that set him a vomiting. State Trials. Earl of Pembroke. an. 1668. Compound aromatical spirits destroy, first, by their fermentative heat. Secondly, &c.-Arbuthnot. Aliments, c. 5. But I had to do with another class of men, with holy in. quisitors of sordid minds, and sour spirits; priestly reformers, whose sense was noise, and religion fanaticism, and that too fermented with the leven of earthly avarice and ambition.

Hurd. Dial. On Sincerity in the Commerce of the World. We can easily conceive how that high ferment, by which lightning is formed, may produce a natural phosphorus, in the same manner as a long process by fire makes the artificial.-Warburton. Of Julian's Attempt to Rebuild the Tem ple, b. ii. c. 3.

It is not a fermentative process; for the solution begins at the surface, and proceeds towards the centre, contrary to the order in which fermentation acts and spreads. Paley. Natural Theology, c. 10. FERMILLET. Fr. Fermaillet,—a small buckle or clasp, (sc.) to hold firmly or fast. Those stones were sustained or stayed by buckles and fermillets of gold for more firmness. Donne. History of the Sept. p. 49.

FERN. From A. S. Fearn; Dut. Vaeren FERNY.kruyd; Ger. Faren-kraut, from A. S. Faran; Dut. Vaeren; Ger. Fahren, to go; because this plant everywhere meets the traveller or way-faring man, (Skinner.)

There is a change in the bread, saith M. Harding, but not In like in the accidentes thereof; ergo, in the substance. order of reason he might haue said, it is not a fearn-bushe. Jewell. Defence, pt. ii. p. 255.

When they far'd best, they fed on fern and brack,
Their lean shrunk bellies cleav'd up to their back.
Drayton. The Moon-Calf.

As still this goodly train yet every hour increas'd,
And from the Surrian shores clear Wey came down to meet
His greatness, whom the Thames so graciously doth greet,
That with the fern-crown'd flood he minion-like doth play.
Id. Poly-Olbion, s. 17.

The seeds of fern, which by prolific heat
Cheer'd, and unfolded, form a plant so great,
Are less a thousand times than what the eye
Can, unassisted by the tube, descry.

Blackmore. Creation, b. x.

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prey,

The host, like dogs contending o'er their
With curs'd ferocity their comrades slay.
Then leave on earth their mangled trunks behind.
Like pines or oaks uprooted by the wind.

Fawkes. Apollonius Rhodius, b. iv. It [Christianity] has abated the ferociousness of war. Blair, vol. i. Ser. 6. To this ferocity there is joined not one of the rude, unfashion'd virtues, which accompany the vices, where the whole are left to grow up together in the rankness of uncultivated nature.-Burke. On a Regicide Peace, Let. 1.

FERREOUS. Lat. Ferreus, from Ferrum, FERRUGINOUS, or iron; which Vossius thinks FERRUGINEOUS. may be so called—a feritate. Having the properties of iron, irony.

But this upon enquiry, and as Ċebeus hath also observed, is nothing else but a weak and inanimate kind of loadstone, veyned here and there with a few magnetical and ferreous lines. Brown. Vulgar Errours, b. ii. c. 3.

And if we yet make a more exact enquiry, by what this salt of vitriol more peculiarly gives this colour, we shall find it to form a metalline condition, and especially an iron property or ferreous participation.-Id. Ib. b. vi. c. 12.

By a diligent enquiry, there may be discovered in England (and in divers other countries too) a far greater number than is yet imagined, of mineral waters, especially ferruginous ones.-Boyle, Works, vol. iv. p. 798.

By this means I found the German spa to retain a little acidity, even here at London; but more than one of our

own ferruginous springs did not, even upon this trial, appear to have any.-Id. Ib. vol. iv. p. 814.

Hence they are cold, hot, sweet, stinking, purgative, diuretick or ferrugineous.-Ray. On the Creation, pt. i. FERRET, v. I Fr. Furet; It. Fierretto; Lat. FERRET, n. Viverra. Junius says, they are thought to be called from wp, fur, whence name them furunculi, because they are animals of wonderful subtilty in thieving stores. "Fr. Fureter,-to ferret, to search, hunt, boult out; pry, look, spie narrowly into every corner of," (Cotgrave.)

some

And when young men were forbidden boules, and suche other games: some fell to drinkyng, and some to feretlyng of other mennes conies, and stealyng of dere in parkes, and other vnthriftines-Hall. Hen. VIII. an. 18.

Con. Make fast the doors, for fear they do escape, Let's in, and ferret out these cheating rake-hells.

Cartwright. The Ordinary, Act v. sc. 4.

Ferrets are in great account for chasing and hunting of connies; the manner is to put them into their earths, which within ground have many waies and holes like mines, and thereupon these creature are called Cuniculi: and when they are within, they so course the poore connies from out of their earth, that they are soon taken above ground at the mouth of their holes.-Holland. Plinie, b. viii. c. 55.

I am a Lord of other geere! this fine
Smooth Bawson Cub, the young Grice of a Gray ;
Twa tynie Urshins, and this ferret gay.

B. Jonson. The Sad Shepherd, Act ii. sc. 2.

I know many of those that pretend to be great Rabbies in these studies, have scarce saluted them from the strings,

and the title-page; or to give them more, have bin but the

ferrets and mouse hunts of an index.

Millon. Of Reformation in England, b. i.

Has light legs eise I had so ferret-claw'd him.

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Beaum. & Fletch. Women Pleas'd, Act iii. sc. 4.

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The fingers' ends are strengthened with nails, as we fortifie the ends of our staves or forks with iron hoops or ferules.-Ray. On the Creation, pt.il.

FE'RRY, v. A. S. Faru; Ger. Fære; Dut.
FERRY, n.
Vaer, veer; Sw. Faria. From
FERRYAGE. A. S. Faran, to go. See FORD.

A passage, (sc.) by water.

Blow but gently, blow fayre winde,
From the forsaken shore,
And be as to the halcyon kind,
Till we have ferry'd o're.

Browne. Britannia's Pastorals, b. ii. s. 5.

But that a book in worse condition than a peccant soul, should be to stand before a jury ere it be born to the world, and undergo yet in darkness the judgment of Radamanth and his colleagues ere it can pass the ferry backward into light, was never heard before.

Milton. Of Unlicensed Printing.

A number of horses swam after the ships, haled by the bridle raines which were tied to the poupes, beside those, which being sadled and bridled, and fitted to serve the men of armes so soon as they were landed, were bestowed in barges and ferry-botes.-Holland. Livivs, p. 408.

So forth they rowed; and that ferry-man
With his stiffe oars did brush the sea so strong,
That the hoare waters from his frigot ran,
And the light bubles daunced all along,
While the salt brine out of the billows sprong.

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

Physic, journeying, ferriage, carriage, &c.

Strype. Life of Parker, b. iv. c. 25. But no one seems to have been the object of her admiration so much as the accomplished Phaon, a young man of Lesbos; who is said to be a kind of ferry-man, and thence fabled to have carried Venus over the stream in his boat, and to have received from her as a reward, the favour of becoming the most beautiful man in the world. Fawkes. The Life of Sappho.

The next thing observable is the ferry-man, Charon; and he the learned well know, was a man of this world, an

Egyptian of a well-known character.

Warburton. The Divine Legation, b. ii. s. 4.

FERTILE, adj. FERTILENESS.

Fr. Fertile; It. Fertile; Sp. Fertil; Lat. Fertilis, (from ferre, to bear;) by corrupt usage, that can or may bear; properly, that Feltham uses fertile as a

FERTILITATE. FERTILITY. FERTILIZE, v. can or may be borne. verb. That can or may bear or produce; productive; generally, with a subaudition of abundance or plenteousness.

For neyther was the ayre more temperate in all the plentie of fayre and pleasaunt cyties. world than in Asia. nor the soyle more fertile, nor more Goldyng. Justine, fol. 160.

He, according to the fertileness of the Italian wit, did not only afford us the demonstration of his practice, but sought to enrich our mind with the contemplation therein. Sidney. The Defence of Poesy.

The Belgies for the most part were desceded of Germanes, who passing the Rhine time out of mind, and setling themselves there bycause of the fertillitye of the soyle, draue out ye Galles that dwelt there before.

Goldinge. Cæsar, fol. 46. Now to certifie you of the fertililie and goodnesse of the countrey, you shall vnderstand that I haue in sundry places sowen wheate, barlie, rie, oates, beanes, pease, and seedes of herbs, kernels, plumstones, nuts, all which haue prospered as in England.-Hackluyt. Voyages, vol. iii. p. 132.

But then again, he that hopes too much, shall cozen himself at last: especially, if his industry goes not along to fertile it.-Feltham, pt. i. Res. 81.

We may say of this unhappy fecundity, that our earth needs no rain to fall upon it, that is, no external provocation to fertilize it, there riseth a mist out of itselfe that watereth it, to wit, our innate perversity.

Mountague. Devoute Essayes, pt. i. Treat. 2. s 1. Superstition may seem in the name (saint-foim, or holy, hay) but I assure you there is nothing but good husbandry in the sowing thereof, as being found to be a great fertilizer of barren ground.-Fuller. Worthies, Kent.

Her [Mantua] mighty walls, illustrious founders grace,
Of diff'rent countries, and a different race,
Three tribes distinct possess her fertile lands,
And four fair cities every tribe commands.

Pitt. Virgil. Eneid, b. x. The quickness of the imagination is seen in the invention; the fertility in the fancy; and the accuracy in the expression.-Dryden. Letter to Sir R. Howard.

Thou art the garden of the world, the home
Of all Art yields, and Nature can decree;
Even in thy desert, what is like to thee?
Thy very weeds are beautiful, thy waste
More rich than other climes' fertility.

Byron. Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, c. 4.
The foe, the victim, and the fond ally
That fights for all, but never fights in vain,
Are met as if at home they could not die-
To feed the crow on Talavera's plain,

And fertilize the field that each pretends to gain.

FE'RULE. FE'RULA.

FE'RULAR.

Id. Ib. c. 1.

Lat. Ferula, a feriendo, from beating or striking.

The eye of the parent, and the ferule of the master, is all too little to bring our sonnes to good.

Bp. Hall. A Censure of Travel. What advantage is it to be a man, over it is to be a boy at school, if we have only escap'd the ferular, to come under the fescue of an imprimatur.-Milton. Unlicensed Printing.

The generous nature likes himself then the worst, when he must appear a pedagogue with a rod or ferula ever in his hand, the good inclination is soonest wonne by fair and civill dealings.-Feltham, pt. ii. Resolve 40.

If I had leisure, or that if it were worth my while, I could reckon up so many barbarisms of yours in this one book, as if you were to be chastiz'd for them as you deserve, all the school-boys' ferulas in Christendome would be broken upon you.-Milton. A Defence of the People of England.

It may be he thinks of those ancient ferule-fingred boypopes; one of the Benedicts, a grave father of tenne yeeres old; or John the thirteenth, an aged stripling of ninteene. Bp. Hall. The Honour of the Married Clergie. Fr. Fervent ; It. Fervente; Sp. Herviente; Lat. Fervens, from Fervere, to warm, to be or cause to be warm; (of acertain origin.)

FERVENT. FE'RVENCY. FERVENTLY. FE'RVENTNESS. FE'RVID. FERVIDNESS. FE'RVOUR.

Warm, glowing, burning, ardent.

What euer it be, yt me hath thus purchased
Wening hath not deceiued me certain
But feruent loue, so sore hath me ychased
That 1 vnware, am casten in your chaine.

Chaucer. La Belle Dame sans Mercie.

Min hart welkneth thus sone, anon it riseth
Now hotte, now cold, and eft in feruence.

Id. Boecius, b. I.

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The yuer of Cydnus spoken of before, dyd runne through thys cytte where the kynge arryued about myddaye, y: Their bounty falls like rain, and fertiles all that's under beynge in the sommer season, what time the heat ys no them.-Id. pt. ii. Res. 39. where more feruent than in that countrey.

And in the stead of their eternal fame
Was the cool stream that took his endless name,
From out the fertile hoof of winged steed.

Bp. Hall, b. i. Sat. 2.

A cock will in one day fertilitate the whole racemation or cluster of eggs, which are not excluded for many weeks after.-Brown. Vulgar Errours, b. iii. c. 28.

Whence notwithstanding we cannot infer a fertilitating condition or propertie of fecundation.-Id. Ib. b. vii. c. 7. The fields, which answer'd well the ancient's plough, Spent and out worn, return no harvest now; In barren age wild and unglorious lie And boast of past fertility: The poor relief of present poverty.

Cowley. To Mr. Hobbs.

Brende. Quintus Curtius, fol 27. For those Christians, that were conuerted fro the heathe, in the whole world, dyd imbrace & receyue the Gospel, very desyrously & feruently framing theyr lyues in euery condicion ther after.-Udal. Reuelation, c. 7.

Come vnto me with fayth and aske in the feruentnesse of soule.-Bale. Image, pt. i. sig. G 3.

Our lorde then, as he sometime dydde in other thingis, touche and temper the zeale of Peter thorow feruoure and hete somwhat vndiscrete.-Sir T. More. Workes, p. 1316.

Where the mind was to be edify'd with solid doctrine, there the fancy was sooth'd with solemn stories: with less forvency was studied what Saint Paul or Saint John had written than was listen'd to one that could say here he taught, here he stood, this was his stature.

Milton. Of Prelutical Episcopacy.

Ev'n at the point of parting they unfold
With fervant zeal, how only he rely'd
Upon the merits of the precious death
Of his Redeemer.

Daniel. On the Death of the Earl of Devonshire.

Even so many there be who conceive pleasure in philosophy, and make semblance as if they had a ferrent desire to the study thereof; but if it chance that they be a little retired from it by occasion of other businesse and affaires, the first affection which they tooke unto it vanisheth away, and they can well abide to be without philosophy.

Holland. Plutarch, p. 204.

They were cloyed with God, while he was perpetually resident with them, now that his absence had made him dainty, they cleave to him fervently, and penitently in his returne.-Bp. Hall. Cont. The Remove of the Ark.

While she seemed to hang upon a cross as it were by the feruentnesse of hir praier, she much comforted the rest of the saints.-Fox. Martyrs, p. 43. The first Persecutions.

For Chaos heard His voice: Him all His traine
Follow'd in bright procession to behold
Creation, and the wonders of His might.

Then staid the fervid wheels.-Milton. Par. Lost, b. vii.

And whilst together merry thus they make,
The sun to west a little 'gan to lean,
Which the late fervour soon again did stake,
When as the Nymphs came forth upon the plain.
Drayton. Pastorals, Ecl. 9.

Consulting secret with the blue-ey'd maid,
Stil in the dome divine Ulysses stay'd:
Revenge mature for act inflam'd his breast,
And thus the son the fervent sire address'd.

Pope. Homer. Odyssey, b. xix.

Even David himself was fain to call upon his soul with repeated fervency, and excite every faculty within him, "to bless the Lord, who had forgiven his iniquities, and redeemed his life from destruction, and crowned him with loving kindness and tender mercies."

Bates. Mr. D. Clarkson's Funeral Sermon.

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For though the person [Malchus] was wholly unworthy of
so gracious a cure, yet in the account of the meek Lamb of
God it was a kind of injury done to him by the fervidness
of St. Peter, who knew not yet what spirit he was of, and
that his master's kingdom was not of this world.
Bentley, Ser. 6.

As down the hill I solitary go,
Some power divine, who pities human woe,
Sent a tall stag, descending from the wood,
To cool his fervour in the crystal flood..

Pope. Homer. Odyssey, b. ix.

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Their fescennin and Atellan way of wit was in early days pronibited, and laws made against it, for the publick's sake, and in regard to the welfare of the community: such licentiousness having been found in reality contrary to the just liberty of the people.

Shaftesbury. Advice to an Author, pt. ii.

Besides these hymns, the Romans had their fescennine verses, so called from a town of that name in Campania. They were a kind of impromptu's, and made up of low wit,

and scurrilous jests, such as the ignorant clowns and common
people may be imagined capable of making, at their feasts,
upon getting in their harvest.
Crusius. Lives of the Roman Poets, Introd.
Satire, in its origin, I mean in the rude fescennine farce,
from which the idea of this poem was taken, was a mere
extemporaneous jumble of mirth and ill-nature.
Hurd. On Epistolary Writings.

FE'SCUE. See FESTUE.
FE'STAL.
FESTIVAL, N.
FESTIVAL, adj.
FE'STIVE.
FESTIVITY.

Fr. and Sp. Festival; Lat.
Festus, festivus. See FEAST.
Mr. Gifford thinks that in
the expression festival ex-
ceedings, Massinger alludes

to a dish in addition to the regular dinner, which
at the Middle Temple still retains the name of
Exceedings.

How many festiuall hygh dayes to worship saints haue
thei made themselues to call poore men from their daily
labours and lucre to serue their idle belys.
Joye. Exposicion of Daniel, c. 7.
Aristomenes of Messene, a good and iust man, when he
had conquered the Lacedemonians, on a time as they kept
a festiuite in the night, called Hyacynthina, tooke away
fifteen maidens, that were playing in company there, &
fled away by night with them.

Vives. The Instruction of a Christian Woman, b. i. c. 11.
Thence she them brought into a stately hall,
Wherein were many tables faire dispred,
And ready dight with drapets festiuali
Against the viands should be ministred.

Spenser. Faerie Queene, b. fi. c. 9.
Mess. Occasions drew me early to this city,
And as the gates I enter'd with sun rise,
The morning trumpets festival proclaim'd,
Through each high street.-Milion. Samson Agonistes.

Thou unthankful wretch,

Did our charity redeem thee out of prison,
(Thy patrimony spent,) ragged and lousy,
When the sheriff's basket, and his broken meat,
Were your festival-exceedings! and is this
So soon forgotten.

Massinger. The City Madam, Act i. sc. 1.

Looks thou shouldst wear more grave and sad
Than Hector's wife or mother had:
Never at Comedies appear;

All festive jollities forbear,

And whate'er else doth laughter cause,
And the clos'd lips asunder draws.

Much the same may be observed of the Roman drama, which, we are told, had its rise in the unrestrained festivity of the rustic youth.-Hurd. Notes on the Art of Poetry FE'STER, v. Of unknown etymology. PerFE'STRY, adj. haps connected with the Fr. Flaistrir, which Cotgrave interprets, to burn in the hand or eare, to brand on the forehead, to mark for a rogue, with a hot iron.

To putrefy, to suppurate; to generate corrupt or virulent matter; (met.) any virulent sensations.

O calcars dreaming heads: what helps her vows, and pilgrim deedes,

What helps her temples sought? whan soking flame her mary feedes,

This while, and festring deepe in brest her wound the
faster breedes.-Phaer. Virgill. Eneidos, b. iv.
But, for excuse hereof, somewhat to salue a festry mater,
yee tel vs a longe tedious tale, without heade, or foote.
Jewell. Defence, p. 622.

One day as he was searching of their wounds,
He found that they had festred privily;
And rankling inward with unruly stounds,
The inner parts now gan to putrify,
That quite they seem'd past help of surgery.
Spenser. Faerie Queene, b. vi. c. 6.

Now many a wounded Briton feels the rage
Of missive fires that fester in each limb,
Which dire revenge alone has pow'r t' assuage;
Revenge makes danger dreadless seem.
Congreve. To the King. On the Taking of Namur.
Yet since he learn'd to wing th' unerring dart;
Much cause has man to curse his fatal art:
But most have I; the sun has wheel'd his round
Since first I felt the deadly festering wound
Yet, yet, I fondly, madly, wish to burn,
Abjure indifference, and at comfort spurn.

Granger. Tibullus, b. ii. E. 5.

If your peace be nothing more than a sullen pause from arms; if their quiet be nothing but the meditation of revenge, where smitten pride smarting from its wounds, festers into new rancour, neither the act of Henry VIII. nor its handmaid of this reign, will answer any wise end of policy or justice.-Burke. Letter to the Sheriffs of Bristol.

FE/STINATE. Lat. Festinare, festim sive FE'STINATELY. fertim progredi; hoc est, FEFTINATION. fertis sive densis gressibus, (Vossius ;) to proceed with thick or close steps;

Sherburne. Martial, lib. i. Epig. 41. with steps closely, quickly following. And thus

In the ancient Church when on days of festivities men began to adorn themselves sumptuously to show their pride, not to honour the day, and fared deliciously to surfeiting and drunkenness, the fathers did not thereupon forbid what before they allowed, but thought to reduce them from that pride and luxury.-Hammond. Works, vol. i. p. 654.

Hence Theodoret writes, that the Christians of his time
instead of solemnizing the festivals of Love and Bacchus,
did celebrate the festivities of Peter, and Paul.

Prynne. Histrio-Maslix, pt. i. Act viii. sc. 3.
Whether your life in sorrows pass
And sadly joyless glide away;
Whether reclining on the grass
You bless with choicer wine the festal day.

Francis. Horace, b ii. Ode 3.
The Romans also, as nature is the same in all places,
though they knew nothing of these Grecian demi-gods, nor
had any communication with Greece, yet had certain young
men, who, at their festirals, danced and sung after their
uncouth manner to a certain kind of verse, which they called
Saturnian.-Dryden. On the Origin and Progress of Satire.
When the day crown'd with rural chaste delight,
Resigns obsequious to the festive night;
The festive night awakes th' harmonious lay.
Somervile. The Chase.
The king also ordered his [Beckett's] name to be struck
out of the kalendar, and the office for his festivity to be
dashed out of all breviaries.

Burnet. History of the Reformation, an. 1538.

For them the voice of festal mirth
Grows hush'd, their name the only sound:
While deep remembrance pours to worth
The goblet's tributary round.

Byron. On the Death of Sir Peter Parker.
He hears

The merry voice of festival delight
Saluting the return of morning bright
With matin-revels, by the mid day hours
Scarce ended.

Imagination fondly stoops to trace

West. Education.

The parlour splendours of that festire place;
The white-wash'd wall, the nicely sanded floor,
The varnish'd clock that click'd behind the door.

Quick, hasty, speedy.

Aduice the Duke where you are going, to a most festinate preparation: we are bound to the like.

Shakespeare. Lear, Act iii. sc. 7.
Take this key, giue enlargement to the swaine, bring him
festinatly hither.-Id. Love's Labour Lost, Act iii. sc. 1.
Syn. But sweet Frank, when shall my father
Security present me?

Quick. With all festination.

Chapman. Eastward Hoe, Act ii. sc. 1. FESTO ON. Fr. Feston, (q.d.) sertum festum seu festivum, a festal or festival garland, (Skinner.) Generally, "a garland, bundle or border of fruits, and flowers; especially in graven or imbossed works," (Cotgrave.)

What adds much to the pleasure of the sight is that the vines, climbing to the summit of the trees, reach in festoons and fruitages from one tree to another planted at exact distances, forming a more delightful picture than painting can describe.-Evelyn. Memoirs. Naples, Jan. 1645.

Here is a vista, there the doors unfold,
Balconies here are baliustred with goid;
Then counts the rounds and ovals in the halls,
The festoons, friezes, and the astragals.

Dryden. The Art of Poetry.
But the most superb monument of his [Gibbon's] skill is a
large chamber at Petworth, enriched from the ceiling, be-
tween the pictures, with festoons of flowers and dead game,
&c. all in the highest perfection and preservation.
Walpole Anecdotes of Painting, &c. vol. iii. c. 2.
FE'STUE, or Dut. Vaese; Fr. Festu; Lat.
FE'SCUE.
"Fr.
Festuca, a stalk or stem.
FE/STUCINE. Festu, a feskue; a straw, rush,
FESTU COUS. little stalk or stick, used for a

feskue," Cotgrave.

A stalk or straw, and hence used for a wire or stick employed by schoolmasters in pointing out letters to children learning to read; also for the gnomon of a sun-dial, as in the quotation below

Goldsmith. The Deserted Village. from an old Play.

But I shall afterward anon lay it afore him agayne, and Bette him to it with a festue, that he shal not say but he saw it-Sir T. More. Workes, p. 1102.

And with thy golden fescue, plaidst upon

Thy hollow harp.-Chapman. Homer. Hymne to Apollo.

What advantage is it to be a man, over it is to be a boy at school, if we have only escaped the ferula, to come under the jescue of an imprimatur -Mitton. Unlicens'd Printing. The fescue of the dial is upon the Christ-cross of noon. Anonymous. The Puritan, Act iv. sc. 2.

Herein may be discovered a little insect of a festucine or pale green, resembling in all parts a locust, or what we call a grasshopper.-Brown. Vulgar Errours, b. v. c. 3.

But we speak of straws or festucous divisions lightly drawn over with oyl, and so that it causeth no adhesion; or if we conceive any antipathy between oyl and amber, the doctrine is not true. Id. Ib. b. ii. c. 5.

FET, i. e. Feat, (qv.)

For Jamys the gentel suggeth in hus bokes
That feith with oute fet ys feblere than nouht
And ded as a dore nayle.-Piers Plouhman, p. 22.

The Pope after certain communications, perceyuyng hym in all poyntes fyt for his purpose sent him anon into Germanye wyth hys ful auctoritye (as afore is specyfyed) to do bys false fets there, and to bryng that styffe necked people vnder hys wicked obedyence, whome they call the holy Christian beleue.-Bale. English Votaries, pt. i.

And told me, That the bottom clear,
Now laid with many a fet

Of seed pearl, ere she bath'd her there
Was known as black as jet.

FETCH, v.
FETCH, п.
FETCHER.
FETCHING, n.

Drayton. The Quest of Cynthia.

In old authors also written
Fet; A. S. Feccan, fet-ian; Dut.
Vat-en, adducere, afferre, to
bring or bear to.

Fetch, the noun, is applied to any thing fetched, or sought for, fraudulently. And thus, a deceitful trick or artifice.

To fetch, implies to go or send for, and bring or carry to, back to. And, generally,

To draw or derive; to deduce, educe or produce; and thus, to effect, to perform, to reach, to arrive at, to attain, to acquire.

For in the farreste stude of Affric geandes while fette,
Thike stones for medycine, & in Yrlond hem sette.
R. Gloucester, p. 146.
Bcke ther was non fette, ne non ther after fore,
Hubert his croice doun sette, & William theron suore.
R. Brunne, p. 208.
And fetcheth away this frut some tyme byfore both myn
eyen.
Piers Ploukman, p. 306.
And thereupon the win was fette anon.
Chaucer. The Prologue, v. 821.

And right, this cursed irous wretche
This knightes sone before him fetche.

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Thus fortune chaunged her copy in such wyse, that they fetched in on euery side and slew those that stoode in good hope and possibility of wynnyng theyr campe. Goldinge. Cæsar, fol. 68.

Than he sayd to the two hurt Scottes, go your wayes, and say to your king, that Wyllyam of Montague hath thus passed through his hoost, and is goyng to fetche ayde of the

King of Englonde.-Berners. Froissart. Cron. vol. i. c. 77.

He fell to perswading with the princes of Gallia, calling them backe one by one, and exhorting the to tary still in the maine land, and putting them in feare it was done for some further fetch that Gallia was thus robbed of all her nobilitie at once.--Goldinge. Cæsar, fol. 112.

And now, thou threatst to force from me, The fruit of my sweat, which the Greekes gave all, and though it be

(Compar'd with thy part, then snatcht up) nothing: nor

ever is

At any sackt towne; but of fight (the fetcher in of this)
My hands have most share.-Chapman. Homer. Iliad, b. i.

First the kyng with her had not one penny, and for the fetching of her the Marquis of Suffolke demaunded a whole 1ftene in open parliament.-Hall. Hen. VI. an. 18.

Al hardy youth, from valiant fathers sprung,
Whom perfect honour he so highly taught,
That th' aged fetch'd examples from the young,
And hid the vain experience which they brought.

VOL I.

Next, the word politician is not used to his maw, and
thereupon he plays the most notorious hobby-horse, jesting |
and frisking in the luxury of his nonsence with such poor
fetches to cog a laughter from us, that no antic hobnail at a
morris, but is more handsomely facetious.
Millon. Colasterion.

How strange a rescue from the sackage of an enemy had
that city, that by the leaders crying, back, back, when he
wanted room for the fetching of his blow, to break a chain
that hindered him, was by misapprehending the word, put
back in a violent flight.-Feltham, pt. i. Res. 79.

This gentleman thinks he has a felch for that; he sub-
scribes not to the truth of every particular, but to the use
only, and that "it contains nothing contrary to the word of
God."-Waterland. Works, vol. ii. p. 243.

I will only add here, that I have not observed in any of
his [Chaucer's] writings a single phrase or word, which has
the least appearance of having been fetched by him from the
south, with which I was so particularly pleased, both for the
invention and the moral, that I cannot hinder myself from
recommending it to the reader.
Tyrwhit. Chaucer, App. to Pref.
Those early wise men, who fetched their Philosophy from
Egypt, brought it home in detached and independent placits;
which was certainly as they found it.
Warburton. Divine Legation, b. iii. s. 4.
How they have done it-such as have a mind
To know their fetches, if they look, may find;
And smile thereat.-Byrom. Critical Remarks on Horace.
FE/TID.
Fr. Fétide; It. Fetido; Lat.
FE'TIDNESS. Fetidus, from Fatere: and Vos-
FE'TOR. sius thinks that it may, from the
filthiness of a fatus, be thence applied to any
thing filthy or nasty.

Boyle (Works, ii. 236) has a marginal direction,
"Way of taking off the fetidness from hartshorne,
&c." but the word is not used in the text.

Filthy, nasty; having a foul smell or stench.

is sweeter: which likewise may be, because the more felide

So they have set down likewise, that a rose set by garlick

juyce of the earth goith into the garlick, and the more odorate
into the rose.-Bacon. Naturall Historie, § 481.

Dogs (almost) onely of beasts delight in fetide odours,
which sheweth there is somewhat in their sense of smell,
differing from the smells of other beasts.-Id. Ib. § 833.

They having now a congruity only to such fætid vehicles,
may be no more able to abide the clear and lightsome ayr;
then the bat or owl are able to bear the sun's noon-day
beams.-Glanvill. Pre-existence of Souls, c. 14.

The fator whereof may discover itself by sweat and urine,
as being unmasterable by the natural heat of man, not to be
dulcified by concoction beyond an unsavory condition.
Brown. Vulgar Errours, b. iv. c. 10.
From Ethiopia's poison'd woods,
From stifled Cairo's filth, and fetid fields
With locust-armies putrefying heap'd,
This great destroyer [the Plague] sprang.-Thomson. Sum.
When the symptoms are attended with a fator of any
kind, either in the urine, mouth, breath, with drought, heat,
hæmorrhage of the gums, or of any kind, such a disease will
be cured by acescent substances, and none better than whey
Arbuthnot. On Diet, c. 4.

We find amongst their [animals] secretions not only the
most various but the most opposite properties, the most
nutritious aliment, the deadliest poison; the sweetest per-
fumes, and the most fœtid odours.-Paley. Nat. Theol. c.7.

And as is credibly related of some animals, by driving away their pursuers by an intolerable fætor, or of blackening the water through which they are pursued.-Id. Ib. c. 19. FETLOCK, in a horse, the joint of the leg and foot, which locks or fastens them together, (q. d.) feetlocks. Dr. T. H. thinks from the long locks of hair that grow there.

Yet this uneasy loop-hol'd goal,

In which ye'are hamper'd by the fetlock,
Cannot but put y' in mind of wedlock.-Hudib. pt. ii. c. 2.
White were the fetlocks of his feet before,
And on his front a snowy star he bore.

Dryden. Virgil. Æneid, b. v.
But first, out-spent with this long course,
The Cossack Prince rubb'd down his horse,
And made for him a leafy bed,

And smooth'd his fetlocks and his mane,
And slack'd his girth, and stripp'd his rein,
And joy'd to see how well he fed.

FETTER, v.
FETTER, n.
FETTERING, n.
FETTERLESS.
FETTERLOCK.

Davenant. Gondibert, b. i. c. 1. generally, to bind,

Byron. Mazeppa. A. S. Feter-ian, ge-feterian; Dut. veteren, compedire, (q.d.) footer, feeter, as the Lat. Pedica, a pedibus. See ENFETTER. To bind or fasten the feet; fasten or enslave.

785

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And therefore he made a chayne or fetters of wood and put them about his necke, and prophesied agayne. and preached that they should be taken prisoners & led captiue into Babilon.-Frith. Workes, p. 167.

Some act of Love's bound to rehearse
I thought to bind him in my verse:
Which when he felt, away, (quoth he)
Can Poets hope to fetter me?

B. Jonson. Why I write not of Love.
Where wilt thou appeal? power of the courts below
Flows from the first main head, and these can throw
Thee, if they suck thee in, to misery,
To fellers, halters.

Donne, Sat. 5.

Well, this disguise doth yet afford me that
Which kings do seldom hear, or great men use,
Free speech and though my state's usurped,
Yet this affected strain gives me a tongue,
As fetterless as is an Emperor's.

Marston. The Malcontent, Act i. sc. 4.

And truly, when they are ballanced together, this order seemeth more an infranchising, than a fettering of our nature, which without it seemeth rather bound, then free in revenge, such is the dominion of our irritated passions.

Mountague. Devoute Essayes, pt. ii. Treat. 15. s. 1.
The said Edmund of Langley [Duke of York] bare also
for an imprese a faulcon in a fetter-locke, implying that hee
was locked up from all hope and possibility of the kingdome,
when his brethren began to aspire thereunto.
Camden. Remaines. Impreses,

If he call rogue and rascal from a garret,
He means you no more mischief than a parrot:
The words for friend and foe alike were made,
To fetter them in verse is all his trade.

Dryden. Absalom & Achitophel.
How shall I welcome thee to this sad place?
How speak to thee the words of joy and transport?
How run into thy arms with-held by fetters;
Or take thee into mine, while I'm thus manacled
And pinion'd like a thief or murderer?

Congreve. The Mourning Bride, Act iil. The frequent contemplation of this world, with the grace of God (always at hand to assist the honest endeavours of men,) at least enable them to break their fetters, recover their liberty, and return again into one fold, under one shepherd, Jesus Christ the righteous.

Warburton. Works, vol. x. Ser. 33.

At last men came to set me free,

I ask'd not why, and reck'd not where,
It was at length the same to me,
Fetter'd or fetterless to be,

I learn'd to love despair.-Byron. Prisoner of Chillon.

FETTLE. To set or go about any thing, to dress or prepare, (Ray.) Fettle may perhaps be considered as a diminutive of Fit, or feat, (qv.) Mr. Brocket says, that Fettle is used by Ascham in his Toxophilus as a noun.

The sturdy ploughman doth the soldier see
All scarfed with pride colours to the knee,
Whom Indian pillage hath made fortunate;
And now he gins to loath his former state:
Now doth he inly scorne his Kendall-greene,
And his patcht cockers, now despised beene,
Nor list he now go whistling to the carre,
But sells his teme and fellelh to the warre.

Bp. Hall, b. iv. Sat. 6,
When you [the footman] know your master is most busy
in company, come in, and pretend to fettle about the room;
and if he chides, say, you thought he rang the bell.
Swift. Directions to Servants, c. 3.

FEUD. A. S. Fæhth; Dut. Veete, veede; Ger. Fede. Spelman says, A. S. Fehth, inimicitia, a Fah; Ang. Foe; hostis, inimicus: and Foe, qv. (any one hated,) past part. of fian, to hate. Hatred, enmity; hostility, quarrel.

5 H

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