Tho the messager wyth the tydyng to kyng Howwel com, R. Gloucester, p. 169. Id. p. 129. p. 177. Richard was hastif, & ansuerd that stund, Praying the chambereres for Goddes sake Id. The Clerkes Tale, v. 8854. And from his courser, with a lusty herte Into the grove ful hastily he sterte. Id. The Knightes Tale, v. 1516. This Palamon answered hastily, And saide: Sire, what nedeth wordes mo? We have the deth deserved bothe two.-Id. Ib. v. 1716. And, sire, ye must also drive out of your herte hastinesse: r certes ye ne moun not deme for the best a soden thought at falleth in your herte, but ye must avise you on it ful te: for as ye have herde herebeforn, the commune prorbe is this: He that sone demeth, sone repenteth. Id. The Tale of Melibeus. For eche of hem in hastihede Gower. Con. A. b. i. Id. Ib. b. v. Shal other slea with deathes wounde. To or verye good lorde th' Erle of Shrewsberie, the kinge's ates lieutenant generall in the North. Hast post, hast, st wt diligence-Lodge. Illustrations, vol. i. p. 58. From ards of the Council, (1544.) These tidynges anon came to Sir Loyes of Spaine; than drewe togyder all his company, and withdrue backe warde hys shyppes in great hast, and encountred one of ye ree batayls.-Berners. Froissart. Cronycie, vol. i. c. 84. I found a sayinge of Socrates to be most trewe, "that ill en be more haslie, than good men he forwarde, to proseite their purposes."-Ascham. The Schole-master, b. i. Thus ye see the time of mariage was not so hastely looked r, as it is nowe.-Wilson. Arte of Logike, fol. 58. is The vndiscrete hastinesse of the emperor Claudius, caused m to be noted for foolyshe. Sir T. Elyot. The Governor, b. ii. c. 6. Zelots took upon them to be the saviours and preservers of the city, but as it prov'd, the hastners and precipitators of the destruction of that kingdom. Hammond. Works, vol. iv. p. 595. The hasty multitude Admiring enter'd, and the work some praise And some the architect.-Milton. Paradise Lost, b. i. Thus as he spake, lo! far away they spyde A varlet running towardes hastily, Whose flying feet so fast their way applyde, That round about a cloud of dust did fly. Spenser. Faerie Queene, b. ii. c. 4. To be patient in afflictions:-and longanimity is referred hither, or long-sufferance, which is the perfection and perseverance of patience, and is opposed to hastiness and weariness of spirit.-Bp. Taylor. Holy Dying, s. 8. As for that heat and hastiness (quoth he) which was in him misliked and offensive, age and time would daily diminish, and bereave him of it: grave and sage counsell which now was wanting, would come on apace everie day more than other.-Holland. Livivs, p. 96. Proverb. He is none of the Hastings. Men commonly say they are none of the Hastings; who, being slow and slack, go about business with no agility. Fuller. Worthies. Sussex. See Nature hastes her earliest wreaths to bring, Rowe. Lucan, b. vi. I should rather imagine the great fallacy to be in this, that we too often mistake our conceptions for the things themselves, and too hastily put an imagination for intuitive knowledge.-Law. Enquiry, c. 1. The turns of his [Virgil] verse, his breakings, his propriety, his numbers, and his gravity, I have as far imitated, as the poverty of our language and the hastiness of my performance would allow.-Dryden. Preface to Second Miscellany. As loud as one that sings his part Hudibras. An Heroical Epistle to Sidrophel. But haste to Ascalon, and seek the shores, Where to the sea a stream its tribute pours: There shall a sage, the Christian's friend, appear; Attend his dictates, and his council hear. Hoole. Jerusalem Delivered, b. xiv. Homer himself, as Cicero observes above, is full of this kind of painting, and particularly fond of description, even in situations where the action seems to require haste. Goldsmith, Ess. 15. I arrived in this province on the last of July, and, as the season of the year rendered it necessary for me to hasten to the army, I continued only two days at Laodicea, four at Apamea, three at Synnada, and as many at Philomelum. Melmoth. Cicero, b. v. Let. 1. Nor did Statius, when he considered himself as a candidate for lasting reputation, think a closer attention unnecessary, but amidst all his pride and indigence, the two great hasteners of modern poems, employed twelve years upon the Thebaid, and thinks his claim to renown proportionate to his labour.-Rambler, No. 169. Haply some hoary-headed swain may say, HAT. HATTER. HATTED. } Gray. Elegy written in a Country Church yard. But Epiphanius was made up of hastiness and credulity, and is never to be trusted where he speaks of a miracle. Jortin. Remarks on Ecclesiastical History Wachter, from Ger. Hüten, tegere. Ihre from A. S. Hydan, to hide. Skinner says,-A. S. Hæt; Ger. Hut; Dut. Hoed; Sw. Hatt; from the Ger. Huten; Dut. Hoeden; to guard, to protect; because it protects from wind, sun, and rain.-Hoved, or Hov'd, the past part. of Heave, (A. S. Heaf-an,) Shakespeare. Coriolanus, Act i. sc. 5. has, in Tooke's opinion, formed Hood, Hat and But at these things the Muse must only glance, And with our fair intreaties haste them on. Her golden lockes, that late in tresses bright Sorowe ne neede be hastened on, Hut. And thus Hat will be the past tense, or past part. of the same verb, as Head itself is: and mean, as Head does, something, any thing heaved or raised, as the head upon the shoulders, the hat upon the head. Something raised or heaved, (sc.) upon the Id. Shepheard's Calender. May. head; a cover for the head. Ac yf the marchaunt make hus way overe menne cornne Chaucer. The Sompnoures Tale, v. 7358. The prouost then assembled a great nombre of commons of Parys, suche as were of his opynion, and all they ware hattes of one colour, to thentent to be knownen. Berners. Froissart. Cronycle, c. 179. When hatters vse, to bye none olde cast robes. Gascoigne. The Steele Glas. Oh! monstrous, superstitious puritan So high or low, dost raise thy formal hat.-Donne, Sat. 1 These men erre not by chance, but knowingly and willingly; they are like men that affect a fashion for themselves, have some singularity in a ruffe, cloake, or hal-band. B. Jonson. Discoveries. It is as easy way unto a dutchess, Tourneur. The Revenger's Tragedy, Act i. The Chinese have no hats, caps, or turbans; but when they walk abroad, they carry a small umbrello in their hands, wherewith they fence their head from the sun or rain, by holding it over their heads.-Dampier. Voyages, an. 1687. Room for the noble gladiator! see His coat and hatband show his quality. Stepney. Imitation of Juvenal. He [Charles Collins] drew a piece with a hare and birds and his own portrait in a hat. Walpole. Anecdotes of Painting, vol. iv. c. 3. Whether he [Lord Hervey] or Pope made the first attack, perhaps, cannot now be easily known: he had written an invective against Pope, whom he calls "Hard as thy heart, and as thy birth obscure;" and hints that his father was a hatter.-Johnson. Life of Pope. } HATCH, v. Minshew, from Ger. Hacken, HATCH, n. to cut or hack to pieces; because HA'TCHER. birds, when they exclude their eggs, hack and break the shells with their beaks. Junius says, to hatch chickens, est excludere pullos, because the hen breaks the shell, (sc. to set the chick at liberty.) Skinner and Wachter,-from Ger. Hecken, fætificare, incubare; and this from A. S. Eg, ovum, with the addition of the aspirate. Egg and hatch may both be from the A. S. Egg-ian, to sharpen, to quicken; to foster, to cherish: To quicken (sc. into life) by incubation; to foster; to cherish; to brood over; to give birth to. Other mennes swette hatched vp you. Other mennes hunger and thurste made you fatte.-Udal. James, c. 5. Be ready euery man lawefully in his vocation, to beate downe blasphemie againste God, and to suppresse the broode of sedition in the shell before it be hatched readye to flye. Bale. Pageant of Popes, fol. 198. For the seas wil not for that tyme of these birdis [halcyons] sitting and hatching decease [dis-ease] her geistis. Joye. Exposicion of Daniel, Ep. Ded. But fayling of her end by his strange absence, - There's something in his soule? Beaum. & Fletch. The Spanish Curate, Act iii. The calme time in winter affords the sea-fowles, called alcyones, a safe cooving, sitting and hatching of their eggs. Holland. Plutarch, p. 505. alone, besides the suddaine revolt of the Lucanes, together The same yeare, whiles the Samnites warre of it selfe with the Tarentines the hatchers thereof, held the senators of Rome in care and perplexitie ynough.-Id. Livivs, p. 302. Open your bee-hives, for now they hatch. Evelyn. Kalendarium Hortense. April, But so may he live long, that town to sway, Behold a fourth; a man ever in haste, a great hatcher and breeder of business, and excellent at the famous art of whispering. Swift. Tale of a Tub. A Digression concerning Madness. In the same ode, celebrating the power of the muse, he gives her prescience, or, in poetical language, the foresight of events hatching in futurity; but, having once an egg in his mind, he cannot forbear to show us, that he knows what an egg contains.-Johnson. Life of Cowley. Insects which do not sit upon their eggs, deposite them in those particular situations, in which the young, when hatched, find their appropriate food. Paley. Natural Theology, c. 18. HATCH, v. "A. S. Hæca, pessulus, a barre HATCH. n. for bolt of a door; whence hatch, as buttery hatch: because usually barred or bolted. Belgis, Heck," (Somner,) from the Dut. Heckten, apprehendere, tenere; to hold fast. The hatches of a ship, (Minshew,) so called, "because they fall to like the hatch of a door." Hatch is commonly applied to The fastened half or part of the door, the other part being thrown open: the door (which shuts down) in the deck of a ship, communicating from deck to deck, or deck to hold. To be under hatches, (met.)—to be put down low, under cover. He poureth peesen upon the hatches slider. Chaucer. The Legend of Cleopatra. But shall directly saile and come to the port of the citie of London, the place of their right discharge, and that no bulke be broken, hatches opened, &c. Hackluyt. Voyages, vol. i. p. 261. If in our youths we could pick up some pretty estate, 'twere not amiss to keep the door hatched. Shakespeare. Pericles, Act iv. sc. 3. Yielding at length the waters wide gave way And fold her in the bosom of the sea; Then o'er her head returning rolls the tide, And covering waves the sinking hatches hide. Row. Lucan. Pharsalia, b. iii. We hoysed out our boat, and took up some of them; as also a small hatch, or scuttle rather, belonging to some bark. Dampier. Voyages, an. 1688. He assures us, how this fatherhood began in Adam, continued its course, and kept the world in order all the time of the patriarchs, till the flood; got out of the ark with Noah and his sons, made and supported all the kings of the earth, till the captivity of the Israelites in Egypt; and then the poor fatherhood was under hatches, till "God, by giving the Israelites kings, re-established the ancient and prime right of lineal succession in paternal government." Locke. Of Government, b. i. c. 2. If by the dairy's hatch I chance to hie, Gay, Past. 5. Fr. Hâcher, to hack, or cut. To cut or carve, to grave. And such againe As venerable Nestor (hatch'd in siluer) Should with a bond of ayre, strong as the axletree Shakespeare. Troyl. & Cress. Act i. sc. 3. When thine own bloudy sword, cryed out against thee, Hatcht in the life of him? yet I forgave thee. Beaum. & Fletch. Custom of the Country, Act v. Why should not I Doat on my horse well trapt, my sword well hatcht? Id. Bonduca, Act ii. To discern an original print from a copy print (not to speak of such plates as have been retouch'd and therefore of little value) is a knack very easily attain'd; because 'tis almost impossible to imitate every hatch, and to make the stroaks of exact and equal dimensions.-Evelyn. Sculptura, c. 5. Therefore hatchings express'd by single strokes are ever the most graceful and natural; though of greater difficulty to execute, especially being any wayes oblique; because they will require to be made broader and fuller in the middle, then either at their entrance, or exit. HATCHEL, v. HA'TCHELLING, n. Evelyn. Sculptura, c. 5. Also written Hetchel and Hitchell. See HACKELl. The Russians do spin and hachell it, and the English tarre it in threed and lay the cable. Hackluyt. Voyages, vol. i. p. 364. But what shall bee done with the hard refuse, the long buns of the stalkes, the short shuds or shives, which are either driven from the rest in the knocking, or parted in the helchelling?-Holland. Plinie, b. xix. c. 1. HATCHET. And yet the same must bee better kembed with hetchellteeth of yron, [pectitur ferreis hamis untill it be cleansed from all the grosse barke and rind aniong.—ld. Ib. Fr. Hache, hachette; Ger. Hatsche. Brunne has the old word Hache, from A. S. Haccan, to hack or cut. See To HACK. That which (a tool, which) hacks, cuts, or chops. Ther he slouh Colibrant with hache Daneis. R. Brunne, p. 32. The Indian sayde vnto vs, if wee would see them, wee should giue him some hatchets, and he would bring vs of those eagles.-Hackluyt. Voyages, vol. iii. p. 665. Moreover, there ought a little hatchet to hang evermore fast to the plough beame before, therewith to cut through roots within the ground, that might breake or stay the plough.-Holland. Plinie, b. xviii. c. 18. After supper we agreed with one of the Indians to guide us a day's march into the country, towards the north side; he was to have for his pains a hatchet, and his bargain was to bring us to a certain Indian's habitation, who could speak Spanish.-Dampier. Voyages, an. 1681. This their digging or hatchet-work they help out by fire; whether for the felling of the trees, or for the making the inside of their canoe hollow.-Id. Ib. an. 1683. Next morning I made the natives another visit, accompanied by Mr. Forster and Mr. Hodges, carrying with me various articles which I presented them with, and which they received with a great deal of indifference, except hatchets and spike nails; these they most esteemed. Cook. Second Voyage, b. i. c. 4. HATCHMENT. See ATCHIEVEMENT, ACHIEVEMENT, of which word Hatchment is a corruption; and is applied to or Any sign, ensign, or monument, of achievements performed; and commonly to the coat of arms suspended in the front of a deceased person's house. No trophee, sword, nor hatchment, o're his bones, Shakespeare. Hamlet, Act iv. sc. 5. Let there be deducted out of our main potation Five marks in hatchments to adorn this thigh, Crampt with this rest of peace, and I will fight Thy battels.-Beaum. & Fletch. The Scornful Lady, Act ii. For as I am condemn'd, my naked sword Stands but a hatchment by me; only held To shew I was a souldier. Id. Valentinian, Act iv. Here, in a heap of confus'd waste, I found Otway. Windsor Castle. His [W. Dugdale's] care was also manifested in defacing such tablets of arms, as he found in any publick places which were fictitious, and by pulling down several atchievements (commonly called Hatchments) irregularly and against the law of arms hung up in any churches or chapels within the precincts of his province.-Wood. Fasti Oxon. HATE, v. HATEFULLY. HATEFULNESS. HA'TELESS. Goth. Hatjan; A. S. Hatan, hat-ian; Dut. Haeten; Ger. Hagsen; Sw. Hata; which some etymologists derive from the Lat. Od-isse. The A. S. Hat-ian, is to heat and to hate; and Junius says, "from Hat, (hot,) calidus, (whence I think Hat-ian formed,) the A. S. have taken their Hete, odium, rancor, malitia, and also Hatheort, iracundus, and Hatheortnys, iracundia, excandescentia." By the same metaphor, are the words incense, inflame, &c. applied to the human passions. It is applied as the Fr. Haïr, HA'TRED. "To loath, detest, abhor, spight, malice, repine at, bear ill-will unto," (Cotgrave.) If the world halith ghou, wite ghe that it hadde me in in rathere than ghou.-Wielif. Jon, c. 15. If the world hate you, ye know that he hated me before hated you. Bible, 1551. Ib. Greet Babiloyne is maad the abitacioun of denelis, and t keping of ech uncleene spirit, and the keping of ech uncles foul and hateful.-Wiclif. Apocalips, c. 18. Greate Babylon is become the habitacion of deuils, a the holde of all fowle spirytes, and a cage of all vncirane a hateful byrdes.-Bible, 1551. Ib. This hete draweth the herte of man to God, and deth 11 hate his sinne.-Chaucer. The Persones Tale. And Goddes peple had he most in hate, Id. The Monkes Tale, v. 14.3 To ben a murdrour is an hateful name. Id. The Clerkes Tale, v. 56 It were no token of no brothered Lidgate. The Story of Thebes, b For he with God hym selfe debateth, Gower. Con. A. b. The cruell hate which boyles within thy burning brest And seekes to shape a sharpe reuenge, on thera that the best; May warne all faithfull friendes, in case of leopardie Howe they shall put their harmless hands, between: barck and tree. Gascoigne. The Fruite Not Helen's beautie hatefull unto thee, Nor blamed Paris yet, but the gods wrath Reft you this wealth, and ouerthrew your town. Surrey. Virgile. Encis, b For yf this were treue, that they reporte of me. th preache, and set furth circumcision, what cause is there? whye vntyl this daye the Jewes so maliciously and hate a persecute me.-Udal. Galathians, c. 5. But Amphialus perceiving it, and weighing the m hatefulness of their quarrel, with the worthiness of the ki desired him to take pity of himself.-Sidney. Arcadia, b. Phalantus of Corinth, to Amphialus of Arcadia, send the greeting of a hateless enemy. Id. Ib. Hannibal being as yet skarse manne growen, was captaine of Carthage, not because there was skarsity of of more yers and experience, but for the natural hatred t was knowen to be rooted in him, againste the Bea euen from his verye childhode.-Goldyng. Justine, fol. Whom mortally he hated evermore, Both for his worth, that all men did adore. And eke because his love he wonne by right. Spenser. Faerie Queese, b. iv. ec But cruelty and hardnesse from you chace, That all your other praises will deface, And from you turne the love of men to hate. Id. Ib. b. vi. c. Their malice hath no end, But t'end us all, and to undo the land; (For which the hateful French gladly attend, And at this instant have their swords in hand.) Daniel. The Civil War, b. 1 But Ulysses not only brideled and repressed his own ewhen he was chafed, but also perceiving by some Telemachus his son, that he was angry and hatefella against lewd persons, he laboured to appease and mit his mood.-Holland. Plutarch, p. 34. The Jews were so great haters of swine upon preten of the Mosaick rites, that they would not so much as swine.-Bp. Taylor, vol. iii. Ser. 1. Fred. A month or two, it shall be carried still As if she kept with you, and were a stranger, Rather a hater of the grace I offer. Beaum. & Fletch. A Wife for a Moneth, Art What shall the ashes of my senselesse urne Need to regard the raving world above! Sith afterwards I never can returne, To feel the force of hatred or of love. Bp. Hall, b. ir. Sat... But I, who all punctilios hate, Though long familiar with the great, Nor glory in my reputation, Am come without an invitation. Swift. Verses by Dr. J. Sican to the Dean. Strange rules for constancy your priests devise, Lansdowne. The British Enchantress, Act i. sc. 2. Dryden. The Wife of Bath's Tale. There was not the pains taken to inform the people of the hatefulness of vice, and the excellency of holiness, or of the wonderful love of Christ, by which men might be engaged to acknowledge and obey him. Burnet. Hist. of the Reformation, an. 1542. And therefore, they wished any man, who did withdraw, and hide himself in such a debate and controversy, to conider whether he were or not a hater of his bretheren, against Christian and common charity; an hater of himself and his osterity, against the law and light of nature; an hater of he king and his kingdoms, against loyalty, and common uty; a hater of God, against all religion and peace. Clarendon. Civil Wars, vol. ii. p. 445. Hatred being too active and mercurial a passion to lie till, never takes up with the bare theory of mischief, with luggish thoughts and secret grudges, but, as opportunity erves, will certainly be doing; and till such opportunity falls 1 with it (which frequently it does not) it must needs afflict, nd grate, and feed upon the man himself, and make him as iserable, as he wishes others.-South, vol. v. Ser. 10. Indeed the affection of hatred is of so unpleasant a nature, at the being who could hate every thing would be his own rmentor.-Cogan. On the Passions, c. 1. § 3. He can't a foe, though most malignant, hate, Young. The Complaint, Night 8. His Court, the dissolute and hatefull school Of wantonness, where vice was taught by rule, Swarm'd with a scribbling herd, as deep inlaid With brutal lust as ever Circe made.-Cowper. Table Talk. The true object of hatred is alone some particular and artial evil, which we experience or dread; some incidental terruption to the usual tenour of our feelings; or some ernicious quality which may threaten this interruption. Cogan. On the Passions, c. 1. § 2. Tho kyng Arture yt yuelde, [felt] and ysey al so ys blod Chaucer. The Knightes Tale, v. 2433. And on the hauberk strooke the prince so sore, And pearced to the skin but bit no more, It hit the knight the buckels rich among, Fairefax. Godfrey of Bovlogne, b. vii. s. 103. Ere the ruddy sun be set, HAVE, v. HA'VELESS. HA'VER. Gray. The Fatal Sisters. Goth. Haban; A. S. Habban, haban; Ger. Haben; Dut. Hebben; Sw. Hafwee; Fr. Avoir ; HAVING, n. It. Avere; Sp. Haber. he etymologists) from the Lat. Hab-ere. Tooke,hat the Lat. is from the Gothic. Has, contraction of hav-es. Hath, contraction of hav-eth. Han, contraction of hav-en. All (say To hold or keep; to possess or obtain; to enby the tenure or possession; to take or receive t; to attain or procure the possession; to seek or require. Have after him, at him, with him; are elliptical expressions, equivalent to-I will have, or, Let us have or keep after him; i.e. follow, pursue. will have, or, Let us have,-a blow, a hit, an aim, a trial at him or it. I will have, or, Let us have, or keep (in company) with him; attend him. For my god heo louede me, & now he habbeth euery del, Bi the first had he Suane, he was eldest brother. R. Brunne, p. 50. The conquerour is laid at Kame dede in graue, The Courthose befor said Normundie salle haue. Id. p. 85. And bere hit in thy bosom, abowte wer th" wendest Shal never barne be abaisshed. that hath this a boute. Piers Plouhman, p. 251. He that hath eeris of heryng; here he. Wiclif. Matthew, c. 11. He yt hath eares to heare let him heare.-Bible, 1551. Ib. Moyses seide if any man is deed, not harunge a sone: that his brother wed his wyf and raise sed to his brothir.The firste weddide a wyf and is deed and hadde no seed.In the risynge agen to lyf, whos wyf of the sevene schal sche be? for alle hadden hir.-Wiclif. Matthew, c. 22. Moses bade, yf a man dye hauynge no children, that the brother mary his wyfe, and reyse vp sede vnto his brother.The first maried and deceased without issue.-Nowe in ye resurrection whose wyfe shal she be of the seuen? For al had her.-Bible, 1551. Ib. And whanne wijn failide, the modir of Jhesus seide to him, thei hau not wijn.-Wiclif. Jon, c. 2. And when the wyne fayled the mother of Jesus sayde vnto him: They haue no wyne.-Bible, 1551. Ib. And therfore, sire, the best rede that I can, Chaucer. The Marchantes Tale, v. 9548. This maketh Emelie han remembrance Id. The Knightes Tale, v. 1048. Id. The Sompnoures Tale, v. 7581. And therof cometh it, that if thou see a wight that would getten yt hee may not getten, thou maiest not dout that power ne faileth him to hauen that he would. Id. Boscius, b. iv. And if I se some have their most desired sight, It is held Shakespeare. Coriolanus, Act ii. sc. 2. But I pardon you for that, for simply your hauing in beard, is a yonger brother's reuennew. Id. As You Like It, Act iii. sc. 2. The gentleman is of no hauing, hee kept companie with the wilde Prince, and Pointz. Id. Merry Wives of Windsor, Act iii. sc. 2. Mat. Lye in a water-bearer's house! A gentleman of his havings! Well, I'le tell him my mind. B. Jonson. Every Man in His Humour, Act i. sc. 4. Hor. He waxes desperate with imagination. Mur. Let's follow; 'tis not fit thus to obey him. Hor. Haue after, to what issue will this come. Shakespeare. Hamlet, Act i. sc. 4. And he that will caper with mee for a thousand markes, let him lend me the money, and have at him. Id. 2 Pt. Hen. IV. Act i. sc. 2. What, shall we toward the tower? the day is spent. Hast. Come, come, haue with you. Id. Richard III. Act iii. sc. 2. We are in thus holding, or thus spending, truly, λeoverTai, not only covetous, but wrongfull, or havers of more than our own, against the will of the right owners. Barrow, vol. i. Ser. 31. Dut. Haven; Ger. Hafen; Fr. Havre; A. S. Hæf-en; from habban; to have or hold, to contain: quod (says Junius) ingentem navium numerum capiat ac teneat. That which holds or contains; (sc.) ships: a port, a harbour. HAVEN. HA'VENER. HA'VENET. HA'VEN-LESS. Byuore Lammasse the tuelfte day at an hauene ther by Southe Myd hys ost he aryuede, that me clupeth Portesmouthe. R. Gloucester, p. 423. Thei failed of ther pray, to hauen gan thei hie, Where I sought hauen, there found I hap, Vncertaine Auctors. The Louer Disceiued, &c. Where is there haven found, or harbour, like that road, Int' which some goodly flood his burthen doth unload? Drayton. Poly-Olbion, s. 15 Rest, royal dust! and thank the storms that drove, Against its will, you to your haren above. Brome. On the Death of King Charles These earls and dukes appoynted to this end their special officers as receyuer, hauener, and customer, &c. Carew. Suruey of Cornwall, fol. 79. From Langunda to Fischard at the Gwerne mouth foure miles, and here is a portlet or hauenet also for ships. Holinshed. Description of Britaine, c. 14. On the left hand the haven-lesse and harbourlesse coasts of Italie, and on the right, the Illyrians, Liburnians, and Istrians, fierce nations, and for the most part, reputed infamous, for roving and robbing by the sea-side, put him in exceeding feare.-Holland. Livivs, p. 352. As for mee, my intent and purpose was, to goe against Ephesus with the whole armada, and thither to bring with me the vessels of burden charged with heavie ballace of gravel and sand, and to sinke them in the verie hauenmouth, for to choke it up.-Id. Ib. p. 953. Having now found a haven-town, the soldiers were desirous to take shipping, and change their tedious landjourneys into an easy navigation. Ralegh. History of the World, b. iii. c. 10. s. 13 And now the surrender of Dorchester (the magazine from whence the other places were supplied with principles of rebellion) infused the same spirit into Weymouth, a very convenient harbour and haven. Clarendon. The Civil War, vol. ii. p. 355. Bear up, my friend, HAVERSACK. Walls. True Courage. Fr. Havre-sac, a bag of strong coarse linen, used mostly to carry provisions on a march. A long sword lay by him on the grass, with an havresack, of which he had unloaded his shoulders; and though he was poorly clothed, he discovered a good shape and mien. Smollett. Gil Blas, b. ii. c. 8. HAUGHT. HAUGHTINESS. Written anciently hautein and hautain. Fr. Haultain, ; It. AL tivo; from Fr. Hault, haut; It. and Sp. Alto: and these from the Lat. Altus, high. High; lofty; high-minded, proud, disdainful. R. Brunne, p. 219. Lordings, quod he, in chirche whan I preche, I peine me to have an hautein speche. Chaucer. The Pardoneres Tale, v. 12,264. For they are cruel and hautain.-Id. The Rom. of the R. The spirite of the deuil, and the worlde maketh and Loueth such myndes as are haute, puffed vp with pryde, and suche as are fierce; but that heauenly spyrite loueth those which are lowlye, meke, and peasible.-Udal. Mark, c. 1. The hearte of this vergen dyd not throughe these so high promises of the aungell, weaxe any whit the more hault to take highly upon her.-Id. Luk, c. 1. In her estate there sate the noble quene If yelding feare, or cancred villanie, Gascoigne. Memorica. The which were so planted in his person, that in haulinesse of courage, in knowledge of philosophy, and in strength of body, he farre excelled all them by whom the East was conquered.-Goldyng. Justine, fol. 77. His courage haught Desir'd of forraine foemen to be knowne, And farre abroad for strange adventures sought. Spenser. Faerie Queene, b. i. c. 6. North. My lord. Rich. No lord of thine, thou haught insulting man: No, nor no man's lord.-Shakes. Rich. II. Act iv. sc. 1. Attend me lords,-the proud insulting queene, Milton, Ps. 80. Who thereat wondrous wroth, the sleeping sparke And at his haughtie helmet making mark, So hugely strooke, that it the steele did riue, And cleft his head.-Spenser. Faerie Queene, b. i. c. 2. But bootlesse on a ruthles god I see my prayers spent, As haughtely doest thou reuenge Warner. Albion's England, b. iii. c. 16. The pride and peevish haughtiness of some factious people that contemn their bishops is the cause of all heresie and schism.-Bp. Taylor. Episcopacy Asserted, § 46. But herein appeared his true haughtinesse [sublimitas] of mind indeed, and that unmatchable spirit of his, that when upon the battell at Pharsalia, as wel the cofers and caskets with letters and other writings of Pompey, as also those of Scipio before Thapsus, came into his hands, he was most true unto them, and burnt al, without reading one script or scroll.-Holland. Plinie, b. vii. c. 25. Had he [Daniel] been sharp and peremptory, Belshazzar, a prince of that haughty and arrogant spirit, would never have sent him out of his presence clothed with scarlet, and with a gold chain about his neck.-South, vol. vii. Ser. 7. Shall she, that very Parthia, see thee now, Rowe. Lucan, b. viii. This won my love, a love for ever true, Fawkes. Apollonius Rhodius. Argonautics, b. iii. [Leontius] sent word to the Empress Eusebia, who is said to be haughty, that he would not comply with her request, and pay her a visit, unless she would promise to bow down before him and receive his blessing, and then to stand up, whilst he sat, till he should give her leave to sit down; which put the lady into a violent rage. Jortin. Remarks on Ecclesiastical History. Those high and haughty sentiments, which are the great support of independence, were to be let down gradually. Burke. On the Present Discontents. Vice has many advocates on her side within our own bosoms, and when she finds wit and ridicule called in as her auxiliaries, she no longer hides her head in shame, but walks in the broad sunshine, and haughtily triumphs over the modesty of virtue.-Knox. Winter Evenings, Even. 54. As many more can discover that a man is richer than that he is wiser than themselves, superiority of understanding is not so readily acknowledged as that of fortune; nor is that haughtiness, which the consciousness of great abilities incites, borne with the same submission as the tyranny of affluence.-Johnson. The Life of Savage. I had a sword-and have a breast That should have won as haught a crest Of all these sovereign sires of thine. Lord Byron. Parisina. One Stafford of a noble house, Warner. Albion's England, b. xi. c. 64. Their artificers wrought their occupations in their shops, the men of haviour and honest citizens walked in the market place in their long gowns, and the officers and governors of the city went up and down to every house. North. Plutarch, p. 129. For to that seminary of fashion vain HAUL, i. e. to hale, (qv.) or pull. For sothly, a prentis, a revelour, That hanteth dis, riot and paramour, His maister shal it in his shoppe abie, Al have he no part of the minstralcie. Chaucer. The Cekes Tale, v. 4830. In Flandres whilom was a compagnie Id. The Pardoneres Tale, v. 12,398, Of cloth making she hadde swiche an haunt, Chaucer. The Prologue, v. 419. Tell in what place is thine haunting.—Id. Rom, of the R. Foure famous wayes there be spoken of to those fruitful and wealthie islands, whiche we do vsually call Moluccas continually haunted for gaine, and daily trauell'd for riches therein growing.-Hackluyt. Voyages, vol. iii. p. 24. For euery daie laied they him forth for their owne adtage at the Temple gate, which the vulgare people ca Beautifull (for that was most haunted) to the entent that he shoulde there aske, as in a place most frequented, mernes Haul appears to have been used as a noun in almes, whiche wente into the Temple.-Udal. Actes, e. 3. some editions of Thomson, (Autumn, v. 547.) Then we halled into the shoare, within two English miles of Don John's towne, and there ankered in seuen fadome water.-Hackluyt. Voyages, vol. ii. pt. ii. p. 32. The quick dice, In thunder leaping from the box, awake I immediately hauled up for it, and found it to be an island of an oval form, with a lagoon in the middle, which occupied much the larger part of it.-Cook. First Voyage, b. i. c. 7. HAUNCE. See HANCE, and ENHANCE. Udal seems to apply this word to-the raised or upright post of the door. He ordeyned the annual vse or ceremonie to eate the Paschall Lambe, with whose bloude they sprynkeled the thrasholde and haunse of the dore.-Udal. Hebrues, c. 11. HAUNCH. Fr. Hanche; It. and Sp. Anca; Dut. Hancke. Junius says,-from the Gr. Ayxwv, which signifies any flexure or bend of the limbs and Menage,αγκη for αγκων. Tooke, that it is the past part. of hang-an, to hang; meaning, simply, hanged, and applied to That part by which the lower limbs are hanked or hanged upon the body or trunk. Used, as in Shakespeare, met. 1 Wood. That's a firker I'faith boy: there's a wench will ride her haunces as hard after a kennel of hounds, as a hunting-saddle.-Beaum. & Fletch. Philaster, Act iv. Brother, why are women's hanches only limited, confin'd, hoop'd in, as it were with these same scurvy vardingales. Id. The Martial Maid, Act ii. Each man I met hath filled up his panch, Sir J. Harrington, b. ii. Epig. 51. Shakespeare. 2 Pt. Hen. IV. Act iv. sc. 4. I fret to death when I hear him find fault with a dish that is not dressed to his liking, and instructing his friends that dine with him in the best pickle for a walnut, or sawce for an haunch of venison.-Spectator, No. 483. The haunches of the goat are frequently salted and dried, and supply all the uses of bacon; this by the natives is called coch yr wden, or hung venison. HAUNT, v. HAUNT, n. HA'UNTER. HA'UNTING, n. Pennant. British Zoology. Goat. Fr. Hanter. Skinner,—from the A. S. Hent-an; to pursue, to hunt. Junius,-immediately from the Eng. verb, to hunt. To pursue, to follow after, to keep in the steps of or in company with; to keep in or frequent the HAVIOUR, i. e. behaviour, (qv.) manner of same place, by habit or custom; and thus to having, holding, or keeping; conduct: consequentially, good conduct, good manners. It is now only used by imitators of antiquity. Some other persones, whiche were of small hauoure, shuld be fyned by discrecion of the Kynges counsayle. Fabyan, an. 1267 Tell me, have ye seene her angelike face, Her heavenly haveour, her princely grace, Spenser. The Shepheard's Calender. April. habituate, to accustom, to practise. Haunt, n. (in Chaucer,)-practice, practical skill. Errid myslyuyng, haunted Maumetrie.-R, Brunne, p. 320. I do not meene, by all this my taulke, that yong gende men should alwaies be poring on a booke, and by using good studies, should leave honest pleasure, and brant na good pastime. I meane nothing lesse. Ascham. The Scholemaster, b. i. Me Utopie cleped antiquity, More. Utopia, by Robins panion among ruffians.-Wilson. Arte of Rhetorique, p. 13 Whether he be a gamester, an alehouse haunter, or a estar And thou Camill knowest well, not beyng content wit thin owne nacion, but by reason of the greatte haustyth thou hadst with straungers, thou canst speake all mater languages.-Golden Boke, Let. 14. Who thenceforth fared as the knight Warner. Albion's England, b. vii. c. Drummond. Tears on the Death of Mast We have argument enough at this day to conclude the ancient Grecians an ingenious people; of whom the sort, such as were haunters of theatres, took pleasure in conceits of Aristophanes.-Wotton. Remains, p. 84. It [true happiness] loves shade and solitude, and nati rally haunts groves and fountains, fields and meadowa short, it feels every thing it wants within itself. Spectator, No Me, to thy peaceful haunts, inglorious bring, Where secret thy celestial sisters sing. Fast by their sacred hill, and sweet Castalian saring, Rowe. To the Earl of Geoph O goddess, haunter of the woodland green, To whom both heaven, and earth, and seas are seen. Dryden. Palamen & Arca Know, mighty prince, those venerable woods, Of old, were haunted by the Silvan gods, And savage tribes, a rugged race who took Their birth primeval from the stubborn oak. Pitt. Virgil. Eneid, b. vi The malignant passions of pride, envy, and rere estrange man from man, and convert the Aaunts of bu creatures into dens of foxes and wolves. HA'VOCK, v. I HA'VOCK, n. Knox. Christian Philosophy, s Skinner and Junius-free "that cruel and rapaci bird," the hawk, (qv.) in A. S. called hafes. Th words may have a common origin. To destroy, to desolate, to waste or lay waste. And do the beggars wrong-Drant. Horace, b. ii. St For there can no concorde nor quietnes possibly be, wh all is hauocke without ordre.-Udal. Ephesians, C. 6. So doth he intende by colour of the same to subdat laws to his will, and to geue skope to all raskall and for persones to make generall hawock and spoyle of your Grafton. Queen Mary, an i The weazell [Scot] Shakespeare. Hen. F. Act 1 s.2 If their first charge could be supported, they [elephants] were easily driven back upon their confederates; they then broke through the troops behind them, and made no less bacock in the precipitation of their retreat, than in the fury of their onset.-Rambler, No. 21. HAUTBOY. Fr. Haultbois, an hobois, or hoboy, (Cotgrave.) Skinner,-hoboies, a musical nstrument, from the Fr. Haultbois, q.d. ligna alta, vel altum, sonantia; and Salmasius is to the same effect. (See in Menage.) The natural treble in music) to the bassoon, as the names imply, laut bois, high wood, bas son, low sound. The hau'boy [tibia], not as now with latten bound, B. Jonson. Horace. Arte of Poetrie. In the Ovation Triumph, the party to whom it is granted loth march on foot with a pair of slippers on his feet, having lutes and howbowes playing before him, and wearing a arland of fir-tree upon his head.-North. Plutarch, p. 265. For the Parthians do not encourage their men to fight rith the sound of a horn, neither with trumpets nor howowes, but with great kettle-drums hollow within, and about hem they hang little bells and copper rings, and with them hey all make a noise every where together.-Id. Ib. p. 477. Besides those ornaments, that are kept in the churches;ipes, hautboys, drums, vizars, and perrukes, for their rereation at solemn times.-Dampier. Voyages, an. 1676. A boxen hautboy, loud and sweet of sound, All varnish'd, and with brazen ringlets found, I to the victor give. Philips, Past. 6. HAUT-GOUT. A word, says Skinner, lately estowed upon us, from the Fr. Un haut goust, apor altus, i.e. vehemens; a high or strong (gust) aste or savour, accompanied by an odour ascendng from the palate to the nose. Sure I am, our palate-people are much pleased therewith garlick], as giving a delicious hault-gust to most meats they at. as tasted and smelt in their sauce, though not seen herein.-Fuller. Worthies. Cornwall. HAW. A. S. Hagan; the fruit or HAW-THORN. berry of the haw-thorn tree, A. S. Hæg-thorn;) so called, says Somner, from its isually growing in hedges, or its use in the making of hedges. From the A. S. Heg-ian. sepire, to edge, or enclose with a hedge. A haw (A. S. Haga,) is also a place hedged round, or enclosed, (so also a hay, qv.) and is applied by Chaucer to a farm-yard, a church-yard. But all for nought, I sette not an hawe Chaucer. The Wif of Bathes Prologue, v. 6241. Id. The Pardoneres Tale, v. 12,789. Spiritual theft is sacrilege, that is to say, hurting of holy hinges or of thinges sacred to Crist, in two maners; by eson of the holy place; as chirches or chirches hawes. Id. The Persones Tale. By aventure his way he gan to hold, Id. The Knightes Tale, v. 1510. In somer he lyveth by hawys, Sir Orpheo. Ritson, vol. ii. And in the drye I set fyrre trees, elmes, and hawthornes ogether.-Bible, 1551 Esaye, c. 41. I, sely haw, whose hope is past, In faithful, true, and fixed minde, Vncertaine Auctors. Testament of the Hawthorne. It is an observation amongst countrey people, that years of store of hawes and hips do commonly portend cold winters; and they ascribe it to God's providence, that, as the Scripture saith, reacheth even to the falling of a sparrow; and much more is like to reach to the preservation of birds in such season.-Bacon. Naturall Historie, § 737. Wil. Seest thou not thilke same hawthorne studde Spenser. Shepheard's Calender. March. The hawthorn bush, with seats beneath the shade, For talking age and whisp'ring lovers made. Goldsmith. The Deserted Village. HAW-HAW. Said to be a reduplication of haw, a hedge or fence, though none is visible. | Walpole gives the following account of the origin of the word. The capital stroke, the leading step to all that followed, was (I believe the first thought was Bridgman's) the destruction of walls for boundaries, and the invention of fossés, an attempt then deemed so astonishing, that the common people called them Ha! Ha's! to express their surprise at finding a sudden and unperceived check to their walk. Walpole. On Modern Gardening. A. S. Haf-oc; Dut. Havick; Ger. Habich; It Sw. Hoek. seems (says Wachter) to have its name from having or holding, ut accipiter ab accipiendo, and thus to be from the A. S. Habban; Ger. Hab-en; to have or hold. Vossius (in v. Accipiter) derives the Ger. Habbik, from Ger. Happen, (itself probably from Hab-en, arripere, apprehendere, to seize, to seize hold. HAWK, v. HAWK, n. HAWKER. HAWKING, n. To hawk, To hold, or seize hold, (as the hawk does,) to hunt with the hawk. And hauckes and hondes, as mony as he wolde. Chaucer. The Clerkes Tale, v. 7957. pleased hym and diuers other of the great lordes had houndes and hawkes as wel as the kyng. Berners. Froissart. Cronycle, vol. i. c. 210. As for haukynge, I can finde no notable remembrance, that it was vsed of auncient tyme amonge noble pryncis. Sir T. Elyot. The Governour, b. i. c. 18. Crokyng or bowyng inwarde, like as the bil of an egle, or of an hauke, and such we call in scorne or derision haukenoses.-Udal. Flowers for Latine Speakyng, fol. 192. In all that long space of 300 yeares, they intermingled very few French-Norman words, except some termes of law, hunting, hawking, and dicing.-Camden. Rem. Languages. Ste. Nay, looke you now, you are angrie, uncle: why yo know, an' a man have not skill in the hawking and hunting languages now a dayes, I'll not give a rush for him. B. Jonson. Every Man in his Humour, Act i. sc. 1. Ne is there hauke which mantleth her on pearch, Whether high tow'ring or accoasting low, But I the measure of her flight doe search, And all her pray and all her diet know. Spenser. Faerie Queene, b. vi. c. 2. Thus flat noses seem comely unto the Moor, an aquiline or hawked one unto the Persian, a large and prominent nose unto the Roman -Brown. Vulgar Errours, b. vi. c. 11. On the other side, the hawkers and foulers when they have caught the foule, divide the bootie with the hawkes. Holland. Plinie, b. x. c. 8. Now during that ninth yeare (whiles the inundation of the lake continueth) these canes prove so bigge and strong withall, that they serve for hawking-poles, and fowlers' pearches.-Holland. Plinie, b. xvi. c. 36. He fled in feare the hand Of that feare master, who hawk-like, ayres swiftest passenger, That holds a timorous dove in chace, and with command doth beare His fierie onset: the dove hastes, the hawke comes whizzing on, This way, and that, he turnes and windes, and cuffes the pigeon; And till he trusse it, his great spirit lays hot charge on his wing. Chapman. Homer. Iliad, b. xxii. But if it should prove (as I find some men think) that we live only by the day; and content ourselves to patch up things as they break out, and to fly at the game as it rises: it is at the best but like birding or hawking, which may furnish a dish or two, but can never keep the house. Sir W. Temple. To my Lord Arlington, Dec. 1669. I remember at one time the taking of tobacco, at another the drinking of warm beer, proved for universal remedies; then swallowing of pebble stones, in imitation of falconers curing hawks.-Id. Of Health & Long Life. At that rate your pretensions would parallel his mirth, who boasted a descent from the first Cæsars barely upon his being (like the most of them) almost deformedly hawk-nosed, deriving his interest in their blood, only from his sympathy with their defects.-Boyle. Works, vol. vi. p. 14. The Earl of Pembroke hath been forgotten, who abhorr'd the war as obstinately as he loved hunting and hawking, and so was like to promote all overtures towards accommodation with great importunity. Clarendon. The Civil War, vol. i. p. 122. In the 34 of Edward III. it was made felony to steal a hawk; to take its eggs, even in a person's own ground, was a fine at the King's pleasure. punishable with imprisonment for a year and a day, besides Pennant. British Zoology. Falconry. The hooked beak of the hawk-tribe separates the flesh from the bones of the animals which it feeds upon, almost with the cleanness and precision of a dissector's knife. HAWK, v. HAWKER. Paley. Natural Theology, c. 12. Hawkers (says Skinner) are so called, because like hawks, wan dering about, they hunt for gain or prey. The Ger. Hoker, Wachter calls propola, a retailer, and derives it from Ger. Auchen; A. S. Eacan, augere, to increase, because he sells for more than the first traders, or vendors. As hawkers carry their wares from place to place, and cry them for sale, to hawk is, consequentially, To carry about, from place to place; to expose to sale, to public view. To hawker is used by Butler. That [Act] against pedlars and hawkers, &c. will have its second reading to-morrow.-Marvell. Works, vol. i. p. 230. But was implacable and awkward Hudibras, pt. iii. c. 3. They seem, indeed, to have been a very poor mean set of people, who seemed to travel about with their goods from place to place, and from fair to fair, like the hawkers and pedlars of the present times. Smith. Wealth of Nations, b. iii. c. 3. These people are like the hawkers in the street, they disperse whatever comes to their hand, good or bad; if it be but news, it is all one to them, by which means they often do a great deal of mischief, without being chargeable with any formed malice or design to injure.-Sherlock, Dis. 36. HAWK, v. Hawk, Skinner thinks, from the and Wachter agree is, vox a sono ficta; a word formed from the sound. To force up or eject any thing noisily from the throat. 1 Pa. Shal we clap into 't roundly, without hauking, or spitting, or saying we are hoarse, which are the onely prologues to a bad voice. Shakespeare. As You Like It, Act v. sc. 3. As, when shall I enjoy God as I used to do at a conventicle? when shall I meet with those blessed breathings, those heavenly hummings, and hawings, that I used to hear at a private meeting, and at the end of a table. South, vol. i. Ser. 8. |