338 GLOSSARY, 
Cc. 
Called down, p.p. Cried down, decried; p. 87, 1. rr. 
Capable, adj. In the construction ‘ capable to lodge’, instead of ‘ capable 
of lodging’: p. 125, 1. 31. 
Capable of. Able or apt to receive: p. 6, 1. 23. In a passive sense. 
: ‘ Abhorred slave, 
Which any print of goodness will not take, 
Being capable of all ill.’ Shakespeare, Tempest, i. 2. 353. 
Caption, sb. Deception, fallacy, in argument: p. 159, 1. 33. From the 
Lat. captio as used by Cicero, De Fato, xiii. 30, &c. 
Card, sb. A chart: p. 246, 1. 33. Comp. Essay xviii. p. 72: ‘ Let him carry 
with him also some card or booke describing the country, where he travelleth,’ 
Carefulness, sb, Anxiety: p. 8,1. 24. Comp. Ezek, xii. 18, 19. 
Carnosity, sb. A fleshy excrescence: p. 139, 1. 14. 
Carriage, sb. Baggage: p. 79, 1.29. See Judg. xviii. a1. 
Case, sb. ‘In some case’=in some cases, sometimes: p. 194, 1. 8. 
Cast, v.¢. To consider, plan: p. 181,1. 26. Comp. Luke i, 29, and Bacon, 
Essay xlv. p. 183: ‘ Cast it also, that you may have roomes, both for 
summer, and winter,’ 
Casual, adj. Uncertain, subject to accident: p. 241, 1. 27. Comp. Colours 
of Good and Evil, p, 248: ‘Sometimes because some things are in kinde 
very casuall, which if they escape, prove excellent.’ Having reference 
to special cases: p.-138, 1. 17. 
Casualty, sb. Uncertainty, instability: p. 23, 1.13. See Bacon’s Colours 
of Good and Evil, p. 256 (ed. W. A. Wright), ‘this colour will bee 
reprehended or incountred by imputing to all excellencies in compositions 
a kind of povertie or at least a casualty or ieopardy.’ 
Cautel, sb. Deceit: p. 200, 1. 16. 
‘And now no soil nor cautel doth besmirch 
The virtue of his will.’ Shakespeare, Hamlet, i. 3. 15. 
*Cautelle: f. A wile, cautell, sleight; a craftie reach, or fetch, guilefull 
deuise or endeuor; also, craft, subtiltie, trumperie, deceit, cousenage.’ 
Cotgrave, Fr. Dict. 
Cautionary, adj. Full of cautions: p, 196, 1. 30. 
Caveat, sb. A caution, warning: p. 22, ll. 9, 17; p. 55, 1. 7. 
Cavillation, sb. A cavil, objection: p. 33, 1.3; p. 154, 1.12. ‘Cavil- 
lation. A cauill; a wrangling proposition, ouerthwart reason; also, a 
cauilling.’ Cotgrave, Fr. Dict. 
Cease, v. ¢. To cause to cease: p. 40, 1. 8; p. 56,1. 32. 
Celsitude, sb, Loftiness, height: p. 214, 1.15. ‘Celsitude: f, Celsitude, 
highnesse, excellencie; (tearmes conferred on Princes),’ Cotgrave, Fr. 
Dict. 
Censure, v.i. To judge, give an opinion: p. 84, l. 23; p. 250, 1. 32. 
‘That I, unworthy body as I am, 
Should censure thus on lovely gentlemen.’ 
Shakespeare, Two Gent. of Ver. i. 2. 19. 
