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Sundry church-offices, dignities, and callings, for which they found no commandment in Scripture, they thought by the one onely stroke of that axiome to haue cut off. Hooker. Eccl. Politie, b. iii. § 5.

If I were covetous, ambitious, or peruerse,
As he will have me: how am I so poore?
Or tow haps it, I seeke not to aduance

Oz rayse myselfe? but keep my wonted calling.
Shakespeare. 1 Part Hen. VI. Äct iii. sc. 1.
Orl. I am more proud to be Sir Roland's sonne,
His yongest sonne, and would not change that calling
To be adopted heire to Fredericke.

Id. As You Like It, Act i. sc. 2. Neither yet need those, who are designed to divinity itself, fear to look into those studies, or think they will engross their whole time, and that no considerable progress can be rse therein, unless men lay aside and neglect their ordiBary callings and necessary employments.

Ray. On the Creation, pt. i.
There is a call upon mankind to value and esteem those
who act a moderate price upon their own merit.
Spectator, No. 206.

How often have I stood,

A rebel to the skies,

The calls, the tenders of a God,
And mercy's loudest cries.

Watts. Confession & Pardon.

66

CALLET, v. Į Mulier impudica. "PerCA'LLET, n. haps," says Skinner, "from Fr. Calotte;" which Cotgrave explains to be, a coife ar half kerchief for a woman; also a little light cap or night cap, worn under a hat." Perhaps, at some period, particularly used by low and mean, by lewd and riotous characters: and thus applied to such persons.

And eke a calot of leude demeaning.

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Leo. A callet

Of boundlesse tongue, who late hath beat her husband,
Id. Winter's Tale, Act ii. sc. 3.

And now bayts me.

Mos. What is the injurie, lady?
Led. Why the callet,

You told me of, here I have tane disguis'd.

B. Jonson. The Fox, Act iv. sc. 3. CALLIDITY. Lat. Callidus; and this from Cellus, from Calr or Calcare. Callus is properly that hardness of the foot which is caused by walking or treading. And Callere (met.) is to be wise, or skilful, or crafty by much practice or experience." Callidos, quorum, tamquam manus opere, sic animus usu concaluit," (Cic. de Nat. Deorum,

10.) So far the Lat. etymologists. Tooke has no doubt that the A. S. Scylan, to divide, to separate, to discern, to skill; is the true logy. And hence Callidity is-Discernment, discrimination, skill.

Tiberius, the Emperor, being troubled with a fellow that wittily and boldly pretended himself to be a prince, at last when he could not by questions, he discovered him to be a mean person by the rusticity and hardness of his body: not by a callousness of his feet or a wart upon his fingers, but his whole body was hard and servile, and so he was discovered.-Bp. Taylor. On Repentance, s. 7. c. 8.

Moreover a common thing it is and ordinarie, to replant and recover many trees that have been blown downe and laid along: for they will rejoine, knit againe, and revive, by meanes of the earth, even as a wound doth unite by the solder of a callous cicatrice.-Holland. Plinie, b, xvi. c. 31.

If they let go their hope of everlasting life with willingness and joy; if they entertain the thoughts of final perdition with exultation and triumph; ought they not to be esteemed notorious fools, even destitute of common sense, and abandoned to a callousness and numness of soul?

Bentley, Ser. 1.

Sometimes also this oke engendereth certain hard callosities, like pumish stones; yea and other round balls made of the leaves folded one within another.-Id. Ib. b. xvi. c. 7.

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moved; without storm, without surges."
"Calme, still, quiet, peaceable, fair; gentle, un-
See

BECALM.

etymo-minde calm and quiet in prayer, from all mocions of fleshly
If he wyll saye that the fastyng serueth but to kepe the
lustes, yt els might trouble the mynde: to this I say that
the hunger itselfe may trouble the mynde & make it lesse
quiete, then yf the flesh wer in temperate rest without it.
Sir T. More. Workes, p. 372.
And therefore the same sea that harboureth these fowles
thus sitting vpon their egges wil be so cawme and still to her
giftis for 14 dayes that men may sewerly sayl without perel
vpon her.-Joye. Exposicion of Daniel, Ded. pt. ii.

For as the wylde wode rage

Of wyndes maketh the sea sauage,

And that was caulme bryngeth to wawe,
So for defaut and grace of lawe

The people is stered all at ones.-Gower. Con. A. b. vii.

He an only daughter rear'd,
Roxena, matchless maid! nor rear'd in vain,
Her eagle-ey'd callidity, deceit,

And fairy faction rais'd above her sex,
And furnished with a thousand various wiles.
Smart. The Hop Garden.
CALLOUS, adj. Lat. Callus. (See CAL-
CALLOUSNESS.
LIDITY.) Callousness is
CALLO'SITY.
That hardness, which is
contracted in calce by walking or treading; after-
wards extended to the hands or other parts of the
body, (Vossius.) And then (met.) applied
To the hardness, numbness, insensibility of the pardy, so often as Jesus slepeth in our mides, let vs with

So often therefore as it shall fortune vs also to be in ieor

mind.

godly desires pluck him by ye sleue, let vs with our conti-
nual praiers awake him, and reise him: & immediately
shall the tempeste be tourned into caimnesse.

We gaue the headland a birth of 3 miles, notwithstanding there lay two rockes two miles to sea boord of vs, so that we were inclosed with them, and sate vpon the highest of them, but it pleased God to make it calme and giue vs the day also, or else we had miscarried.

Hackluyt. Voyages, vol. i. p. 366.

Udal. Luke, c. 8.
Theres stormy warre, and caulmie peace,
whiche (passyng as a blaste,
And flotynge on, in blynde successe)
who seeketh to make feaste,
Shall take in hande, an harde attempt.

Drant. Horace, b. ii. Sat. 3.

You heare this new alarme from yonder part,
That from the towne breakes out with so much rage,
Vs needeth much your valour and your art
To calme their fury, and their heat to swage.
Fairefax. Godfrey of Bovlogne, b. ix. s. 44.

A pilot's part in calms can not be spy'd,
In dangerous times true worth is onely tri'd.

Stirling. Doomes-day. The Fifth Houre.
Infernal ghosts, and hellish furies, round
Environ'd thee, some howl'd, some yell'd, some shriek'd,
Some bent at thee their fiery darts, while thou
Sat'st unappall'd in calm and sinless peace.

Milton. Paradise Regained, b. iv. He [Sir Hy. Wotton] would say, "It was an employment for his idle time, which was not then idly spent;" for angling was, after tedious study, "a rest to his mind, a cheerer of his spirits, a diverter of sadness; a calmer of unquiet thoughts, a moderator of passions, a procurer of contentedness."-Walton. Angler, pt. i. c. 1.

Bishop Godwin saith, it doth not appear that he [Rd. Scroope] desireth to be tried by his peers; and I believe it will appear, that nothing was then calmly or judiciously transacted, but all being done in a hurry of heat, and by martiall authority.-Fuller. Worthies. Yorkshire.

But the Græcians, whom learning had made more substantial in their worship, required moreover an habituate temper of passions that the inward calmness and serenity of the affections might perform the promises of the outward purity.-Hammond. Workes, vol. iv. p. 619.

For Jove, who might have us'd his thundering power,
Chose to fall calmly in a golden shower!

Cowley. On the late Civil War.

The affairs of Turkey were thus in great disorder: the Grand Seignior died soon after: and his successor in that empire gave his subjects such hopes of peace, that they were calmed for the present.-Burnet. Own Time, an. 1694.

The seventh [book P. L.] affects the imagination like the ocean in a culm, and fills the mind of the reader without producing in it any thing like tumult or agitation.

Spectator. No. 339. For I cannot but think all controversies in matters of religion are then best handled, and with the greatest probability of success, when they are managed calmly without all particular resentments, and with all the tenderness that is possible towards those persons, whom we are endeavouring to reclaim into the way of truth.-Nelson. Life of Bp. Bull.

For sure the happiest meed,
To favour'd man by smiling heaven decreed,
Is, to reflect at ease on glorious pains,
And calmly to enjoy what virtue gains.
Lyttelton. To Mr. Poyntz
Here greatness, wearied with its rooms of state,
Finds oft the secret charms of a retreat;
Within the soft recess reclines its head,
And feels the calmness of the peaceful shade.
Boyse. Nature.
See
Lat. Calor, heat.

CALORIFICK, adj.

CALEFY.
Able to make hot; having the power to heat.

If cold be not a positive quality, but the absence of heat, the removing of the calorifick agents will in many cases suffice to produce cold.-Boyle. Works, vol. ii. p. 594.

CALTROP, or In A. S. the Carduus stelCA'LTHORP. Slatus, or star-thistle, is called Coltræppe. The same plant in Fr. is Chaussetrape, (Chausse, the hose,) with a manifest reason for the denomination, says Junius. Chausse-trape is explained by Cotgrave also to be

"A caltrop, or iron engine of war, made with four pricks or sharp points, whereof one, howsoever it is cast, ever stands upwards."

The Irishmen had strawed all alongest the shore a great number of caltrops of iron, with sharp pricks standing up to wound the Danes in the feet.

Holinshed. Chron. Invasions of Ireland.

Lord, what a chaunge was here at Rome since the dayes of Cato the censor, who thought it meet and requisite, yea and gave advice that the said forum or great hall of common pleas should be paved and laid all over with caltraps under foot, to keep out lawyers and busie pleaders from thence.-Holland. Plinie, b. xix. c. 1.

CALVE, v. In Luke, xv. 27. A. S. "Thin CALF, n. fæder of sloh an fætt celf;" in CA'LVISH. Wielif, "Thi fadir slough a fatt CALVING, n. calf." A. S. Cealf, celf, calf, cealfian, vitulum parere. Somner explains Calfian; -fetare, vitulum edere. Kilian; the Dut. Kalven, fœtare, fætum edere, fortificare. Wachter,the Ger. Kalben, fæetare, fætificare; and remarks, that fatare, (to bear or bring forth,) is the primary and general signification; other usages are

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Thereto she coude skip, and make a game,
As any kid or calf folowing his dame.

Chaucer. The Miller's Tale, v. 3260.
Ful longe were his legges, and ful leaue,
Ylike a staff, there was no calf ysene.-Id. Prol. v. 594.
Their bullocke gendreth, and that not oute of tyme: their
cowe calueth, and is not vnfruitfull.-Bible, 1551. Job, c.21.
Like as an hynde, whose calfe is falne vnwares
Into some pit, where she him heares complaine,
An hundred times about the pit side fares,
Right sorrowfully mourning her bereaved cares.
Spenser. Faerie Queene, b. iv. c. 12.
When bright noone did flame
Forth from the sea, in sholes the sea calues came,
And orderly, at last, lay downe and slept
Along the sands. And then th' old sea-god crept
Fourth from the deeps; and found his fat calues there.
Chapman. Homer. Odyssey, b. iv.

The cattel in the fields and meddowes green;
Those rare and solitarie, these in flocks
Pasturing at once, and in broad herds upsprung;
The grassie clods now calv'd.-Milton. Par. Lost, b. vii.

I heard of late of a cow in Warwikshire, which in six yeeres had sixteen calfes; that is, foure at once in three calvings, and twise twins; which, unto manie, may seeme a thing incredible.-Holinshed. Descript. of Engl. b. iii. c. 1.

CAM

Ye see them confounded in the bokes writen ayenst them of the lerned, answering to their calumpniouse false lyes. Joye. Exposicion of Daniel, c. 11. The bitterness of my stile was plainness, not calumniousness.-Bp. Morton. Discharge of Imputations, &c. p. 159.

You seem like to Waltham's calf, that went nine miles to suck a cow; and when he came hither, the cow proved a bull: perhaps in your calvish meditation you thought, for your pains in advertising the picture-mother, to have sucked her dug.-Sheldon. Miracles of Antichrist.

Then, while calves-leather-binding bears the sway,
And sheep-skin to its sleeker gloss gives way;
So long shall live thy praise in books of fame,
And Tonson yield to Lintott's lofty name.-Gay, Ep. 14.
I hate sly, sneaking, worming souls,
Whom friendship scorns and fear controuls;
Who praise, support, and help by halves,
Like heifers, neither bulls nor calues.

Lloyd. Charity. A Fragment.

Mr. Of unknown etymology. CALVER. Gifford thinks calvered salmon differed little from what is now called pickled salmon, as the directions for preparing it are" to boil it in vinegar with oil and spices."

My foot-boy shall eat pheasants, calverd salmons, knots, godwits, lampreys.-B. Jonson. The Alchemist, Act ii. sc. 2. Gasp. Did I ever think

That my too curious appetite, that turn'd

At the sight of godwits, pheasant, partridge, quails,
Larks, woodcocks, calver'd salmon as coarse diet,
Would leap at a mouldy crust?

Massinger. The Maid of Honour, Act iii. sc. 1. Pisc. Oh no! assure yourself a grayling is a winter-fish; but such a one as would deceive any but such as know him very well indeed: for his flesh, even in his worst of season, is so firm, and will so easily calver, that in plain truth he is very good meat at all times.-Walton. Angler, pt. ii. c. 6.

CA'LUMNY, n.
CALUMNIATE, v.
CALUMNIA'TION.

CALUMNIATor.

CALUMNIATORY.

It. Calumniare; Sp. Calumniar; Fr. Calomnier; Lat. Calumniari, which Vossius affirms is from Calutum, the (unused) supine of Calvor; i. e. CALUMNIOUSLY. frustrari aut decipere, to CALUMNIOUSNESS. frustrate or deceive. Of Calvor the etymology is unsettled. Cotgrave copiously sets forth the present usage-

CALUMNIOUS.

To calumniate, to slander, detract from; to reproach unjustly, accuse falsely, charge maliciously, appeach wrongfully; to impeach the credit, blemish the fame, indanger the fortune of another, by forged imputations.'

Leo. Prayse her but for this her without dore forme
(Which on my faith deserues high speech) and straight
The shrug, the hum, or ha (those petty brands
That calumnie doth use; oh, I am out

That mercy do's, for calumnie will seare
Vertue it selfe.) These shrugs, these hums, these ha's,
When you have said shee's goodly, come betweene,
Ere you can say shee's honest.

Christ could eate and drinke, but he was counted a frende to synners and publicans: so that hatred unto the trewth dyd alwayse falsly reporte, and calumniate all godly mens doinges.-Strype. Records, an. 1554, No.24. A breuje Treatise.

Shakespeare. Winter's Tale, Act iii. sc. 1.
-A man's tongue is voluble, and pours
Words out of all sorts, every way; such as you speake
you heare,

What then need we vie calumnies, like women that will

weare

[He is] interested, if desiring to carry an ill matter, and knowing that a bad cause will not bear a good speach, he go about to deter his opposers and hearers by a good calumniation.-Hobbes. Thucydides, b. iii.

Their tongues out.-Chapman. Homer. Iliad, b. xx.
Nor was it modest in thee to depart
To thy eternal home, where now thou art,
Ere thy reproach was ready; or to die
Ere custom had prepar'd thy calumny.

Corbet. Elegy on Baron Effingham. kyngdom of hevones.-Wiclif. Matt. c. 19.
Sith yet there is a credence in my heart:
An esperance so obstinately strong,
That doth inuert th' attest of eyes and eares;
As if those organs had deceptious functions,
Created only to calumniale.

Shakespeare. Troil. & Cress. Act v. sc. 2.
-For beautie, wit,
High birth, vigour of bone, desert in seruice,
Loue, friendship, charity, are subjects all
To enuious and calumniating time.-Id. Ib. Act iii. sc. 6.
The new regent with eight thousand souldiers arrived at
Harfleur, and from thence marched to Roan; where he won
the reputation of justice and uprightness, notwithstanding
all the calumniations of the Duke of Somerset.
Baker. Chronicle, an. 1336.

CAMEL, n.
CAMELOT, or
CA'MLET, n.
CA'MLET, v.
CA'MELIN.
Leg. 1. 4.)

Camelot, or Cameline; Fr. Camelot; It. Ciam-
bello; Dut. Kamelot; Sw. Kamlot; vestis undu-
lata. "A word," says Kilian, "common to the
French, Italian, Spanish, and other nations; so
called because it is made of the hair of the camel
For a consequent
and the goat interwoven."
application of the word,-to any thing waved or
undulated, see the example from Bacon.

Thinking, belike, that as the immediate invectives against her majesty, do best satisfy the malice of the foreigner, so the slander and calumniation of her principal counsellors agreed best with the humours of some male-contents within the realm.-Bacon. Observations on a Libel, 1592.

This by the calumniators of Epicurus's philosophy, was objected as one of the most scandalous of all their sayings; which, according to my charitable understanding, may admit a very virtuous sense, which is, that he thanked his own belly for that moderation, in the customary appetites of it which can only give a man liberty and happiness in this world.-Cowley. Ess. on Liberty.

Upon admission of this passage, as you yourselves have
related it in your calumniatory information.
Mountagu. Appeal to Cæsar, p. 17.
For thither he assembl'd all his train,
Pretending so commanded to consult
About the great reception of thir king,
Thither to come and with calumnious art
Of counterfeted truth thus held their eares.
Millon. Paradise Lost, b. v.
The odious aspersion whereof, Binius, (from the false in-
telligence of some of our own,) calumniously throwes upon
our Wickliffe, whom he slanders for his missing the Bishop-
ricke of Worcester, to have fallen upon that successefule con-
tradiction.-Bp. Hall. The Peace Maker.

CAM

Guard well thy pocket, for these Syrens stand
To aid the labours of the diving hand;
Confederate in the cheat, they draw the throng,
And cambric handkerchiefs reward the song.

This then seems to be our Saviour's sense; verily I say unto you, that for every slander or calumny that ye vent against any man, ye shall be called to a severe account; and, therefore, much more may ye expect to be so, when ye calumniate and slander the Holy Ghost, by ascribing his works to Beelzebub.-Sharp, vol. iii. Ser. 11.

Gay. Trivia, b. iii. 1. $3. Fr. Chameau; It. Camelo ; Sp. Camello; Sw. Kamel ; Dut. Kemel; Gr. Καμηλος. Camelus suo nomine Syriaco de in Latium venit, (Varro,

And eftsoone I seye to you, it is lighter a camel to passe thorough a nedlis yghe than a riche man to entre into the

Therefore, Sir, I hope you will allow a person, that is
much more concerned to keep his religion, than himself,
from being endangered by this accusation, to give you a
righter apprehension than our calumniators have done of
the innocentest, as well as the truest, religion in the world.
Boyle. Works, vol. v. p. 284.
When party rage shall droop through length of days,
And calumny be ripen'd into praise,
Then future times shall to thy worth allow
That fame, which envy would call flattery now.
Young. An Epistle to Sir Robert Walpole.
CAMBRICK. So called from Cambray, fa-
Fr.
mous for this kind of very fine white linen.
Toile de Cambray; It. Tela di Cambrai, (Junius.)
Dut. Kammeruck, Ger. Kammerich.

And moreouer I saye vnto you: it is easyer for a camell to go throughe the eye of a nedle, than for a riche manne to enter the kyngdome of God.-Bible, 1551. Ib. Ye archewives, stondeth ay at defence, Sin ye be strong, as is a great camaille, Ne suffreth not that men do you offence.

Chaucer. The Clerkes Tale, v. 9072. Take on a robe of cameline. Id. Rom. of the Rose. As for camels, they are nourished in the Levant, or east Two kinds parts, among other heards of great cattaile. there be of them, the Bactrians, and the Arabicke; and herein they differ: the Bactrians haue two bunches upon their backes; the other, but one apeece there, but they haue another upon their breast, whereupon they rest and lie. Holland. Plinie, b. viii. c. 18.

Val. Come, I would your cambrick were sensible as your

finger, that you might leaue pricking it for pitie.
Shakespeare. Coriolanus, Act i. sc. 3.
Here you might see the finest laces held up by the fairest
hands; and there, examined by the beauteous eyes of the
buyers, the most delicate cambricks, muslins, and linens.
Spectator, No. 552.

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It seem'd like silver sprinkled here and theare
With glittering spangs that did like starres appeare,
And wav'd upon, like water chamelot.

Spenser. Faerie Queene, b. iv. c. 11. The Turks have a pretty art of chamoletting of paper, which is not with us in use. They take divers oiled colours; and put them severally (in drops) upon water and stirre the water lightly; and then wet their paper, (being of some thicknesse) with it; and the paper will be waved, and veined, like chamolet, or marble.-Bacon. Nat. Hist. § 741.

To-morrow I shall be in your livery, and perhaps try whether your Brussels camlet will resist Irish rain, as I have known it to do that of Flanders.

Sir W. Temple. Works. Lett. from the D. of Ormond, vol. i.
Rather let him his active limbs display
In camlet thin, or glossy paduasoy,
Let no unwieldy pride his shoulders press,
But airy, light and easy be his dress.

Jenyns. The Art of Dancing, c. 1.
CAMERADE. See COMRADE.
CAMERA'TION. See CONCAMERATE.
Forming or constructing an arch: arching.

Mensula, which, quasi ueca, seems to be locked to the pennants in guize of a wedge, and therefore by our artists nam'd the key-stone: we have shewed their use where two arches intersect, which is the strongest manner of cameration.-Evelyn. On Architecture.

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CAMP, v. CAMP, R. CAMPAIGN.

A. S. Campian, præliari, bellare, belligerare, castrametari; to fight, to make or wage war; CA'MPER. to encamp, (Somner.) Ger. Kampfen; Dut. Kampen; Fr. Camper; It. Campeggiare Sp. Campar. As in the Gr. (says Wachter,) Mapvauai, dimico, is formed from Mapn, manus, and in Lat. Pugnare, from Pugnus; so in the Ger, from Kam, the hand or fist, is well deduced Kampfen, pugnandi et certandi significatu, in the signification of fighting or contending. Ray says, to camp, is to play at football. Camp is striving, and Campian, to strive, to contend. This word for this exercise, he adds, extends over Essex, as well as Norfolk and Suffolk. And see Moor's Suffolk Words.

Sax.

In A. S. is also found Camp-stede, castra, locus prælii, the place of encamping or fighting. Junius says, manifestly, and Skinner, perhaps, from the Lat. Campus. Vossius presents four different etymologies of Campus; three of which he rejects, and the fourth, which he adopts from Joseph Scaliger, is aro Tns kaμans, i. e. equorum flexu, whence the goals, meta ipsa, were called κаμлTapes. According to the etymology of Wachter, Camp, in its first step, from Kam, the hand,

would be

It is very certain that the Spanyards have refused batel,
and
neerer unto
in

the night, from the place where they were encamped within

In meadow or pasture (to grow the more fine)
Let campers be camping in any of thine;
Which if ye do suffer, when low is the spring,
You gain to yourself a commodious thing.
Tusser. December's Husbandry.
For they departed from Raphidim and came to the desert
of Sinai and camped in the wildernes,-euen there Israel
camped before the mount.-Geneva Bible, 1561. Exod. xix. 2.
VOL. I.

haulf a mile of tharmy of Mouns.

Strype. Records, No. 23. The King's Ambass. to Wolsey.
Had our great pallace the capacity
To campe this hoast, we all would sup together,
And drinke carowses to the next day's fate.

Shakespeare. Antony & Cleopatra, Act iv. c. 9.
Fabius camped always in the strong and high places of the
mountains, out of all danger of his enemies horsemen, and
coasted still after the enemy: so that when Hannibal stayed
in any place, Fabius also stayed.-North. Plutarch, p. 152.
They by faint flashes of exhausted fires,
There spyde a camp, as if from danger farre,
Well serv'd with all to which rich peace aspires,
As if for pleasure coin'd, to sport with warre,
They softly lay, (as at adorn'd retires,)

Where, (all commodious,) nought their rest might marre.
Stirling. Jonathan, b. i.

The trials of camp-fight were performed by single combat, in lists appointed for that purpose between the accuser and accused, and were usual in actions both real and criminal, where no evident proof of fact appeared from witnesses, or other circumstances: the victor was acquitted, and the van

quished, if not killed upon the field, was condemned.

Sir W. Temple. Introd. to the Hist. of England.
He sent every day very liberal supplies to the prisoners;
which was indeed done by the whole town in so bountiful a
manner, that many of them, who being shut up had neither
than they had been by all their unhappy campaign.
air nor exercise, were in greater danger by their plenty,

Burnet. Own Time, an. 1666.

The first time I saw him, [De Witt,] he told me I came
upon a day he should always esteem very happy, both in
respect of his Majesty's resolutions, which I brought, and of
those which the States had taken about the disposal of the
chief command in their army, by making Prince Maurice
and Monsieur Wurtz Camp-masters general.

Sir W. Temple. To Sir George Savile.
No more of victory the joyful fame
Shall from my camp to haughty Carthage fly;
Lost, lost are all the glories of her name!
With Asdrubal her hopes and fortunes die.
Lyttelton. Horace, b. iv.

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CAMPAIGN.
CAMPHIRE, v. Fr. Camphre; Lat. Cam-
CA'MPHIRE, N. phora, which Vossius thinks
CA'MPHORATE, or
is from the Hebrew: he
CA'MPHORATED. calls it-
The gum of an Indian tree, like a nut (nuci
similis.)

And albeit the people are most lewd, yet the coûtry is exceeding good, abounding with all comodities, as flesh, corne, rice, siluer, gold, wood of aloes, camphire, and many other things.-Hackluyt. Voyages, vol. ii. p. 56.

And eats chaste lettice, and drinks poppy-seed,
And smells at camphire fasting.-Bp. Hall. b. iv. s. 4.
Or live, like a Carthusian, on poor John,
Then bathe myself night by night in marble dew,
And use no soap but camphire-balls.

Massinger. The Guardian, Act iii. sc. 1.
Wash-balls perfumed, camphired, and plain, shall restore

complexions to that degree, that a country fox-hunter who
affable paleness, without using the bagnio or cupping.
uses them, shall in a week's time look with a courtly and
Tatler, No. 101.
Then having formerly tried that oil of vitriol would easily

mix with common oil, we tried also, by shaking the saline

and camphorate liquors together, to unite them, and easily
confounded them into one high coloured liquor, which seemed

many hours.-Boyle. Works, vol. i. p. 433.

The fight, the battle itself; then, the Camp-very uniform, and continued so (at least as to sense) for stede, or place of fighting; then, (as Cotgrave expresses it,) an hoast or army lodged; (sc. prepared and awaiting the fight ;) and now also, the mere lodgment itself. See ENCAMP, DECAMP. Campaign, the period of encampment or of lodgment in camp; of active operations (sc.) without quitting the field. Camper, see in v. COMBAT, the quotation from Verstegun.

CAN, v. Goth. Kunnan; A. S. Can, cennan ; Sw. G. Kanna; Dut. & Ger. Kennen. Ihre says, to experience by the senses, to feel; sensibus experiri, sentire: it is spoken of all the senses, imprimis, of the smell, as the Fr. Sentir. Wachterfirst, scire, nosse, (to know, to understand,) sive valere, to be able; a sense, (or signification,) he intellectu, sive usu et experientiâ: second, posse, remarks, transferred from knowledge to power.

KEN.) In English, can is now used merely as a grammatical auxiliary.

To know, to feel, to see, to perceive; to understand; to know (sc.) how to do any thing; to be able, to have the ability or power.

See CUNNING.

In Scotch, to ken is still in common use. (See

Know hym wel yf thow kanst. and kep the fro hem alle
That lovyeth hure lordships.-Piers Plouhman, p. 26.

I can rimes of Robin Hood and Randal earl of Chester.
Id. In Ritson's Metrical Romances.
But Chaucer (though he can but lewedly
On metres and on riming craftily)
Hath sayd hem, in swiche English as he can,
Of olde time, as knoweth many a man.

Chaucer. The Man of Lawes Prologue, v. 4467.

Hir name is murmure and compleint,
There can no man hir chere peint,

To sette a glad semblant therin.-Gower. Con. A. b. i. For this seedetyme lasteth euen tyl the worldes ende : and they also as helpers of Jesu Christe, be sowiers, saue al onelye that they sowe not their owne sede, but suche as Christe deliuered vnto them. And because that sede is celestiall, it can in no wyse be ouerlayed or oppressed.

Udal. Mark, c. 4.

appereth of hys wyse wordes he neyther canneth anye skill
But than he speaketh so sauorlie thereof, that it well
thereof, nor neuer cãe in the house.-Sir T. More, p. 301.
What knowest thou yt we know not? What knowest thou
but we can the same.-Bible, 1551. Job, c. 15.
The elf was so wanton and so wood,
(But now I trowe can better good,)
She mought ne gang on the greene.

Spenser. Shepherd's Calendar. March, 1. 56
Instead thereof he kist her wearie feet,
And lickt her lilly hands with fawning tongue,
As he her wronged innocence did weet.

O! how can beauty master the most strong,
And simple truth subdue avenging wrong.

Id. Faerie Queene, b. i. c. 3. s. 6. In place, there is licence to do good and evil, whereof the latter is a curse; for in evil, the best condition is not to will, the second not to can.-Bacon. Essays. Of Great Place.

And moreouer sayd, Sir, besyde God, I ought to canne you the moost thanke of any creature lyuyng.-Ïd. Ib. c. 226. CAN. Often used for gan or began, in old writers.

With gentle words he can her fairely greet,
And bad say on the secret of her hart
Then sighing soft, I learn that little sweet,

Oft tempre'd is (quoth she) with muchell smart.
Spenser. Faerie Queene, b. i. c. 4. s. 46.
Whom till to riper yeeres he gan [some ed. can] aspire,
Hee nursed vp in life and manners wilde,
Emongst wilde beasts and woods, from lawes of men
exilde.
Id. Ib. b. i. c. 6. s. 23.
With faire adventure, when Cambello spide,
Full lightly, ere himselfe he could recouer
From dangers dread to ward his naked side,
He can let driue at him with all his power.
Id. Ib. b. iv. c. 3. s. 20.
And more than that, she promist that she would,
In case she might finde fauour, in his eye,
Deuize how to enlarge him out of holde.
The Fairy glad to gaine his liberty,

Can yeeld great thanks for such her curtesie.
Id. Ib. b. v. c. 5. s. 55.
CAN, n. or
A. S. Canna, canne, crater, a
CANN.
can, (Lye.) Fr. Canne; Mid. Lat.
CA'NAKIN. Canna; Ger. & Dut. Kanne.
Wachter quotes from Stillerus:-Kan, any thing

Vin. Does every proud and self-affecting dame
Camphire her face for this? and grieve her Maker
In sinful baths of milk, when many an infant starves,

"}

For her superfluous outside, all for this [to become a bare hollow with some degree of length; and observes,
skull].-Tourneur. The Revenger's Tragedy. Act iii.

if this be true, can, i. e. vas oblongum, may be well
derived from it. Menage derives the word from
the Gr. Kavva, a cane or reed, and the Gr. from
the Heb.; and remarks that the word is common
to the Eastern languages. Pliny records of the
Indian reeds or canes, that "they be of such a
length, that between every joint they will yeeld
sufficient to make boats able for to receive three
men apeece for to row at their ease." Less reeds
or canes, then, may have furnished-
Drinking vessels, or vessels for liquors ;-now
made of different materials.

It is a contradiction to imagine that Omnipotence can do that, which if it could be done, would render all power insignificant.-Tillotson, vol. ii. Ser. 99.

To ascribe to God a power of doing what can't be done is not magnifying, but mocking his power. And the reason is plain because a power of causing a thing to be, at the same time that it is not, is only a power of doing that which is nothing, that is, no power at all.-Clarke, vol. i. Ser. 8.

And yf we put it in aduenture, though we fayle thereof, yet Kynge Edwarde, our mayster, woll canne vs moche thanke therfore.-Berners. Froissart. Cronycle, vol. i. c. 87.

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The canary bird is now so common, and has continued so long in a domestick state, that its native habits as well as its native country, seem almost forgotten. Goldsmith. Animated Nature, b. iv. c. 4. CANCEL, v. Fr. Canceler, cancellare; CANCELLATED, adj. It. Scancellare; Sp. CanCANCELLER, n. celarThe Lat. Cancellus, Vossius derives from KryKALS, which is itself from Kλeiew, claudere, obserare, to enclose, (sc.) with rails or bars. See the example from Blackstone for the present technical usage; and also CHANCELLOR,

To draw lines across, or over, to cross; to deface or efface, to erase, to obliterate, to blot out; and thus, to destroy or annul.

Canceleer appears to be applied by Drayton to the crossing, zig-zag, motion of a hawk, "when she turneth two or three times upon the wing, to recover herself before she seizeth her prey," (Gent. Recreation, quoted by Gifford.)

In that great booke of Joue's decrees in heau'n, Compiled ere time had any wings to moue,

The wofull wight, to whom black fate is giuen,
To cancell it in vaine doth after proue;

No change of time can change the will of Joue.
Mirrour for Magistrates, p. 632.
Thou canst not think thy flower can always flourish
And that thy beauty will be still admired;
But that those rays which all these flames do nourish
Cancell'd with time, will have their date expir'd,
And men will scorn what now is so desir'd.

Then making to the flood, to force the fowls to rise,
The fierce and eager hawks, down thrilling from the skies,
Make sundry canceleers e're they the fowl can reach.
Which then to save their lives, their wings do lively
stretch.-Drayton. Poly Olbion, s. 20.

Shake hands for ever, cancel all our vows,
And when we meet at any time again,
Be it not seen in either of our brows,
That we one jot of former love retain.-Drayton, Idea 61.

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A deed may be avoided, by delivering it up to be cancelled; that is, to have lines drawn over it in the form of lattice work or cancelli; though the phrase is now used figuratively for any manner of obliteration or defacing it. Blackstone. Commentaries, b. ii. c. 20. CANCERATE, v. A. S. Cancere ; Fr. CANCER, n. Cancre; It. Cancro; Sp. CANCEROUS. Cancer; Dut. Kancker. So called because in its rise and progress it is said to have some supposed resemblance to the motion of the cancer; or in its appearance to the cancer itself; or when touched to the feel of the cancer. See the quotation from Wiseman.

Cancer is the name of a tumour arising (as it is thought) from an adust or atrabilious humour. It is round, unequally hard, and (if not inflamed) of a livid or brown colour, with exquisite pricking pain: the veins appear turgid in the skin upon the surface of the tumour.

Wiseman. Surgery, b. i. c. 21.

Here is a gentlewoman, who hath laboured with a cancer in her right breast these eight or nine years, in the use of variety of means to small purpose; at length nature seemed to make a separation between the cancerated and sound applied.-Boyle. Works, vol. vi. p. 647. breast, such as you often see where a caustic hath been

He adds, that the beginning of these cancerous sores is so small that what produces the pain scarce equals the bigness of a pea, and yet in a few days, nay sometimes in a few hours, it spreads so, as to destroy the whole part it invades. Id. Ib. vol. ii. p. 609. As when a cancer in the body feeds, And gradual death from limb to limb proceeds, So does the chilness to each vital part, Spread by degrees and creeps into her heart.

Addison. Ovid. Met. b. ii.

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CANDID, adj. Fr. Candide; It. CanCANDIDATE, V. dida; Sp. Candido; Lat. CANDIDATE, adj. Candidus. Candidus differs CANDIDATE, n. from albus, inasmuch as it CANDIDLY. includes brightness; whence CANDIDNESS. snow recently fallen, silver CANDOUR. polished, are properly called candida. And candidus, Vossius thinks, is from candere, as lucidus from lucere. (See CANDLE.) Candid, in this primitive sense, is rare in English. (See the first quotation from Cowley.) It is applied (met.)-

Having the purity of white;-untarnished, unspotted, unsullied, sincere, innocent, upright;undesigning.

Candour is used by Brown literally to denote whiteness. Met. it is

Daniel. Complaint of Rosamond. purity of character; honour.

Purity, fairness, sincerity, in mind or deed;

Romans wore a white garment in common, (alt toga,) but, when seeking or standing for offices. was usual "to weare it more white than ordinari and to refresh the bright hew of it." A law wa made forbidding this practice, "ne cui album i vestimentum addere liceret," (Holland, Livy p. 155.)

A Candidate was so called, because, when soliciting for office or honour, he wore a garment "more white than ordinarie,” (candida toga.) The

Ah mild and gall-less dove,
Which dost the pure and candid dwellings love,
Canst thou in Albion still delight?
Still canst thou think it white.

Cowley. Upon His Majesty's Restoration His candid style like a clean stream does slide And his bright fancy, all the way, Does, like the sun-shine, in it play.

Id. To the Royal Society. Without quarrelling with Rome, we can allow this pur gatory, to purify and cleanse us, that we may be better can didated for the court of heaven and glory.

Feltham, pt. ii. Resolve 57.

Though there are some in your free state,
Some things in you, who're candidate,
That he who is, or loves himself, must hate;
Yet I'll not therefore slight you.

Brome. Song. The Indiferent.

Id. The Guardian, Act iii. sc. 1. In 1560 he [John Rastell] left his Coll. (wherein he had Of always been accounted an excellent disputant,) his friends, and native country and went to Lovain, where and at Antwerp, he published certain books against B. Jewell, being then a candidate of the Fac. of Theology.

Wood. Athena Oxon,

Titus Andronicus, the people of Rome,
Whose friend in iustice thou hast euer bene,
Send thee by me their tribune and their trust,
This palliament of white and spotless hue,
And name thee in election for the empire,
With those our late deceased Emperours sonnes-
Be Candidatus then and put it on,
And help to set a head on headless Rome.

Shakespeare. Titus Andronicus, Act i. sc. 2. Most plants, though green above ground, maintain their original white below it, according to the candour of their seminal pulp, and the rudimental leaves do first appear in that colour.-Brown. Cyrus' Garden, c. 4.

Suppose the Spaniard for his advantage, treated of peace at Borbourg, not so fairly and candidly as he ought; we in like manner may now without hurt to ourselves treat with swords in our hands.-Camden. Elizabeth, an. 1598.

No man drench't in hate, can promise to himself the candidness of an upright judge; his hate will partialize his opinion.-Feltham, Resolve 62.

Writing thyselfe, or judging others writ,

I know not which th' hast most, candour or wit:
But both th' hast so, as who affects the state
Of the best writer, and judge, should emulate.
B. Jonson, Epigram 123.
Might I but persuade you to dispense
A little with your candour.

Massinger. The Parliament of Love, Act. iv. sc. 3.

For I'll be useful; and, ere I see thee perish, Dispensing with my dignity and candour,

I will do something for thee, though it savour Of the old squire of Troy.

Cato on the contrary told them. he presented himself as a candidate, because he knew the age was sunk in immorality and corruption; and that, if they would give him their votes, he would promise them to make use of such a strictof it.-Tatler, No. 162. ness and severity of discipline, as should recover them out

It [conscience] presently sees the guilt and looks through all the flaws and blemishes of a sinful action: and on the other side, observes the candidness of a man's very principles, the sincerity of his intentions, and the whole carriage of every circumstance in a virtuous performance.-Souin, vol. ii. Ser. 12.

If our modern infidels considered these matters with that candour and seriousness which they deserve, we should not see them act with such a spirit of bitterness, arrogance, and malice.-Spectator, No. 187

Ye martial breasts! the pride of Scotia's plain!
On this your fair revolving annual day,
Candid receive the Muse's faithful strain,
Who thus her tribute to your worth would pay.
Boyse. On the Royal Company of Archers.
Here pause, my friend, and with due candour own
Affliction's cup not mixt for thee alone;
Others, like thee, its dire contents must drain,
And share their full inheritance of pain.

Blacklock. To the Rev. Mr. Jameson.

CANDLE, n. Fr. Chandelle; It. and Sp. Candela; Lat. Candela, from Candere, to burn, savs Vossius, as Suadela from Suadere. But Candere is of unsettled etymology. Candle, in A. S. Candel, is in the ancient Danish language, Kindil. And

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He was to weet a man of full ripe yeares, That in his youth had been of mickle might, And born great sway in armes among his peares, But now weak age had dim'd his candle-light. Spenser. Faerie Queene, b. vi. c. 3. s. 3. The same [Maidenhaire] beeing incorporat with the funrous excrescence growing about the candlesnuffe, as also with the soot found sticking to the sockets of lamps and candlestickes, causeth the haire of the eyelids to come thicke. Holland. Plinie, b. xxviii. c. 11. Here we may take notice of the candletrees of the West ladies, out of whose fruit, boiled to a thick fat consistence, are made very good candies.-Ray. On the Creation, pt. ii.

By candle-light we could see little in the bottom of these eyes but lucid objects, such as the flame of the candle, which appeared tremulous, though inverted; but by daylight we could manifestly discern in them, both the motions of every neighbouring object, and the more vivid of their colours-Boyle. Works, vol. ii. p. 53.

When he is dress'd he goes to court, comes into the drawing-room, and walking bolt upright under a branch of candlesticks, his wig is caught by one of them, and hangs dangling in the air.-Spectator, No. 77.

Tom, a pert waiter, smart and clever,
Adroit pretence he wanted never,
Curious to see what caus'd this rout,
And what the doctors were about,
Slily stepped in to snuff the candles,
And aske whate'er they pleas'd to want else.
Cawthorn. The Antiquarians.

CANDY, v. Fr. "Se candir, to candy, to grow candid, as sugar after boiling," (Cotgrave.) The Italians, (says Menage) call sugar-candy, Zucchiero di Candia; as if made and imported from Candia or Crete. If this be the origin, the usages by Drayton, Carew, and Browne, will be consequential.

To give certain appearances resembling those of sugar-candy; to form or congeal into (white or) glistening substances ;-into icicles.

In Beaumont ;-to cover over, to overspread; as with sugar-candy.

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In winter's time when hardly fed the flockes,
And isicles hung dangling on the rockes;
When Hyems bound the floods, in silver chaines,
And hoary frosts had candy'd all the plaines.

Browne. Britannia's Pastorals, b. i. s. 4. This solace's divine contagion spread Upon all contraries its conquering might; With honor, this disgrace, imbellished: This candied bitterest tortures with delight. Beaumont. Psyche, c. 16. s. 198. Here I say nothing of Eringo roots growing in this county, the candying of them being become a staple commodity at Colchester. These are soveraign to strengthen the nerves; and pity it is, that any vigour acquired by them should be otherwise employed then to the glory of God! Fuller. Worthies. Essex.

CANE, v. Fr. Canne; It. and Sp. Canna; CANE, n. and Lat. Canna, which Menage CA'NY. derives from the Gr. Kavva, and the Gr. from the Heb.; and remarks that the word is common to the eastern languages. See CAN, n. See the quotation from Pliny.

To cane, to make of, do any thing with, to strike or beat with, a cane.

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But yet ere long againe he doth returne, And brings with him his iron cane and fire, Wherewith he doth beate down and burne All those whom he to mischiefe doth desire. Harrington. Orlando, b. ix. s. 67. As well reeds as canes, spread their leaves like wings round one after another, on either side upon the very joynts, and that in alternative course alwaie verie orderly, so as if one sheath come foorth of the right side, the other at the next knot or ioynt above it putteth out on the left, and thus it doth throughout by turnes.-Holland. Plinie, b. xvi. c. 36. I caned this fellow for ill work he had done for me, and he swore he would be revenged on me.

Parliamentary History, an. 1690. But in his way lights on the barren plaines Of Sericana, where Chineses drive With sailes and wind thir canie waggons light. Milton. Paradise Lost, b. iii. As the Roman censors used to punish knights or gentlemen of Rome, by taking away their horses from them, so I have seized the canes of many criminals of figure, whom I had just reason to animadvert upon.-Tatter, No. 162.

The great prince who, some years ago, caned a general officer at the head of his army, disgraced him irrecoverably. The punishment would have been much less had he shot him through the body. By the laws of honour, to strike with a cane, dishonours; to strike with a sword, does not. Smith. Moral Sentiments, pt. i. s. 2. Caspian ranks

From barren mountains, from the joyless coast
Around the stormy lake, whose name they bore,
Their scimitars upheld, and cany bows.

Glover. Leonidas, b. iv.
The first of these writers [Lucan] in enumerating Pom-
pey's eastern auxiliaries, describes a nation who made use
of the cane-juice as a drink.
Indians
That sucke sweete liquor from their sugar canes.
May. Lucan, b. iii.
Grainger. Sugar Cane, b. i. note.

CANICULAR, adj. Į Lat. Canis; Gr. Kvwv,

CA'NINE.

kiss, to lick. See Vossius.

The Canicular days are the dog-days. Canine, of or pertaining to a dog.

Now as touching grape verjuice, it should be made of the vine Psythia or Amminea, and before the canicular daies, when as the grapes be but new knit, and no bigger than cich pease.-Holland. Plinic, b. xii. c. 27.

Some latitudes have no canicular days at all; as namely all those which have more than 73 degrees of northern elevation; as the territory of Nova Zembla, part of Greenland and Tartary; for unto that habitation the dog-star is invisible, and appeareth not above the horizon.

Brown. Vulgar Errours, b. iv. c. 13

A third kind of women were made up of canine particles; these are what we commonly call scolds, who imitate the animals out of which they were taken; that are always busy and barking; that snarl at every one who comes in their way; and live in perpetual clamour.-Spectator, No. 209. As churchmen wrangle not with jarring spite, Nor statesmen-like caressing whom I bite; View all the canine kind with equal eyes, I dread no mastiff, and no cur despise.

Hamilton. On a Dog.

CANISTER, n. Lat. Canistrum, so called because made (originally) of split canes or reeds. See Vossius.

-Her princely guest Was next her side, in order sate the rest, Then cannisters with bread are heap'd on high; Th' attendants water for their hands supply. Dryden. Virgil. Eneid, b. i. Here loaves in canisters are pil'd on high, And there in flames the slaughtered victims fly. Pope. Thebais of Statius, b. i.

CANKER, n. CANKER, V. CA'NKERED, adj. CANKEREDLY. CA'NCARDNESS. CANKEROUS, adj. CA'NKERY, adj. Canker by Sandys. applied

To any thing that eats, gnaws, corrodes, consumes, devours, or destroys. To any thing that has the malignant, corrupt, infectious, virulent, envenomed qualities of a cancer.

Grose says that in Gloucestershire a poisonous fungus resembling a mushroom is called canker; in some counties the caterpillar; in Devonshire the dog-rose, the canker-rose; and in the North, canker'd, Scotch, cankert, is cross, ill-conditioned. Canker is used prefixed to bloom, worm, &c.

Canker is Cancer differently written; and -so written-much more variously applied. Malum im.. medicabile, cancer. Ovid, Met. ii. 825, is rendered Cancer by Addison, and (See CANCER.) Canker is

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And, as with age, his body ouglier growes,

So his mind cankers.-Shakespeare. Tempest, Act iv. sc. 1.
Cauils breake forth, enuie rouz'd vp from hell,
Creepes into false King Philip's cankred brest,
Who with old hate of my good hap possest,
Doth by his plots the Austrian Duke excite,
To ioyne with him to worke vs all dispight.
Mirrour for Magistrates, p. 671.
And as a canker, slighting helplesse arts,
Creeps from th' infected to the sounder parts:
So by degrees the winter of wan death
Congeales the path of life and stops her breath.
Sandys. Ovid. Metam. b. ii.
The Earl of Warwick was a pransing courser,
The hauty heart of his could beare no mate:
Our wealth through him waxt many a time the worser,
So cankardly he had our kin in hate.

Mirrour for Magistrates, p. 401

It [dissimulation] causeth him turne tyrant to his owne,
And to his state workes swift confusion,
Aboue his cedars top it high doth shoot,

And canker-like deuoures it to the root.-Id. Ib. p.

704.

First take the glass, the god replies;
Man views the world with partial eyes.
Good gods exclaims the startled wight,
Defend me from this hideous sight!
Corruption with corrosive smart,

Lies cankering on his guilty heart.-Gay, pt. ii. Fable 7

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