FUL 
His set difplealed « at the change, refufed to contribute to 
his fu By the help of friends he contrived to main- 
as him 2 he was chofen fellow of his colle ege in the. 
rience and fager 
fentiments, tar 
x egy and obliged to maintain . binfelf by de- 
n his pr 
in the capacity of chaplain to the oe ifh embaffy. Upon 
is retu 50i fter of Pembroke a ca 
> 
oO 
portant.of his works is a 
Rhein eims Tefen firft publifhed in 1 ees, and reprinted 
in 1614, with the title of «‘the Text of the 
ment of Jefus Chrift, tranflated out of the lee aan by 
tranflations : whereunto is added the of 
origin » commonly ufed in the church of England, 
with a oe of all fuch del Se pial :&C. e 
e of the fincere and true 
"Trantlation of re Holy Scripture es = ae acer 
againit the cavils of Gre “Mar Gen 
FULL is varioufly ufed, in oppoiition torempty, narrow, 
confined,? & &e. 
The oe hold, Be fe ee is full, i. é. that 
every part 
An at stor haw fall. ae given him to.at, tranfact, 
&c. Thearmy was in full march, 7. ¢. a whole army was 
in march, aie all the forces it confiite 
man is faid to bear the arms of a family full, z..¢. with- 
out any difference or diminution. 
ene Tseenene 
Furr 
her chee difk o is illuminated ; which is in the time of 
er oppofition to rae “Tan 
Eclipfes of the moon a - happen a at or near the time 
of full-moon. See Ecr 
Fut me py: a Sea “rte denoting a fituation of a fhip 
o the wi n fhe is clofe -hauled, and fail- 
Yr 
her {ai = wall eae pi render the effort of th and ne - 
rious and and in the er fhe will advance 
la 
; diftant from her real courfe. Hence, 
ina. ia. mid 
order from the pilot or other officer, to 
4¢ keep her full’ is 
w Tefta- . 
OOM; ee that phafis of the ‘moon, when 
FUL 
the helmfman, not to-incline too ‘much “to ‘windward, and 
the ereby fhake the fails fo as to: retard the courfe, Falconer, 
’ FULLER, | to 
sates 
full; mill, or feour cloths, rateens, Ge ‘and other wool- 
len huff, by ery me a mill, to render them thicker, and 
mere compact an 
; The word is pane ee ‘the Latin fuflo, which fignifies the’ 
ame thi 
The flr amongthe Romans wafhed, fcoured, and fitted 
up — their office was judged of that importance, : 
that ther fe 1] refcribed them for the mantier of 
performing it, Such was the Lex Metalla de Fullonibus. 
See alfo Pliny, lib. vii. cap. - Ulpian, leg. r2. 
lib. xiii, § 6. Locati, lib. xu. § 6 ff. &c. 
, NicnoLas, in Biography 
ee was bor orn at Southampton in the year 
he received his education. After this he was Ave into the: 
fam cae a Dr. Horne bifhop of Winchetter, and had an ample 
opportunity of purfuing his ftudies, till at length he was 
made fecretary to that prelate. Upon the death of bifhop. 
orne, he was chofen to the fame office under Dr. Watfon 
- fucceffor, pave in the courfe of a few months he determined 
o retire, in order that he a —— ear literary” 
nde irfuits, more congeni nial to his temper than a life "of active 
bufinefs 
Before his: plans were well arran od, he was in- 
vited to. bacon the tutor to the fons ofa ae aa in Hamp- 
ire, two of whom he accompanied to the univerfity re 
Oxford in the year 15%4, and matriculated, at ge fame 
aving: 
ith t 5 asa S *sco 
ent a time in this leaned aa and h ving taken 
i 
the fer: criptures, gave him confidera brity, but 
not till late in life that he obtained any fubftantial reward for 
his various meritt.. -He was at an advanced age made pre~ 
bendary of Salifbury, and i se to the re&tory of Bifhop’s 
ampfhire, which he did not long enjoy. He 
622-3, at the age o A His works 
n 
“ Critici Sacri,” an they may a found Sifperted | in Pool’s 
*¢ Synopiis Critico: was author of “¢ An Expofition 
of Rabbi Mordecai Nathan's sie Rootswith 
ico ch remain in M.S.1 
ass poesnesiea ar eceding, was 
a barriiter, who boldly refifted the oppreffion of archbifhop ~ 
Bancroft, aT his brethren of: the high-commiffion courts. 
againft a er and a merchant of the town of Yarmouth, 
who were ena for being prefent at a conventicle, as it 
was denominated. them to the 
h ; 
jOn-CoOne 
was 
affeGied to regard: Fuller as the iene n of the n 
formifts, this vindicator of the rights of the fubjeét, 
elf fhut up in clofe confinement, and there kept till the’ 
r day of his death. 
LLER, Thomas, ' of an eminent clergyman, sa 
U fon 
born at “Aldwinkle i in Northamptonfhire, in 1608. e. 
thade, under the inftru€tions of the father, fo rapid a progrefs,. 
that at twelve years of age he was deemed fitted ie teil 
2 e8 
