GAL 
with a pe ie aaa of baptitts near i where he 
oon became a very popular preac cher 3 doétrinzs were 
liberal and fecipearal, but he thought, 
one a peas ain ative in ma’ 
dp 
doctrines ae <8 alipline of ne cine mn the ages next the 
apoftles, was highly defirable, as affordi i 
fenfe in ot oo ws sred writings were then unde 
this view he became a member of a fociety for p 
primitive Chiiniy, which met weekly at Mr. W hilton’ Sy 
for the of examining t the moft ancient pias of the 
Chriftian ees to determine w cre the oes attri- 
buted to them were, and which were not On al 
e 
ie) 
. 
jy 
and exhibited an a 
: nor was he lefs anxious to extinguifh 
urious contro- 
tral in the conteft; many of them, to their difgrace, fan- 
tioned the proceedings of the a ae intempera’ te, an 
ut Dr. G: ue, an whom no one was more 
H ‘thor 
ect mon ies parti- 
cular friends may be mentioned the lord chancellor King ; 
Dr. Hoadly, bithop of Bangor, and Dr radford, bifhop 
of Roche This worthy man, according to the ufual 
ourfe of events, might naturally have oked to a much 
farther extention o , and had accordingly projected 
many valuable defigns, of which one was an ‘ Lith 
rf 
‘Tranflation of the Sept tuagint,’ ’ according to the edition of 
r. Grabe ; and another was “* A Hiftor i 
Original Sin,”? in in which he m 
hs and good being. 
his “ Sermons”’ were publifhed which were a by 
the utility and importance of their {ubjects, and by the 
ge anaes of the reafoning contained in them. 
Bio 
Cae r Gaule, in Botany, of Dutch origin ap- 
plied to a Caen y Myrtle, “My fyrica Gale of Linnzus. 
e Myrica. 
me in Geography, a river of nie in the northern 
part of the county of Kerry, which flows into the 
Cafhin. 
Gar, in a Economy, a term fignifying a bull that 
‘has been catrat 
GALE, a oa Phrafe, for the blowing of the wind. 
GAL 
When a fea is not blown fo hard, but that a fhip ea 
carry her top-failsa oe that is, hoifted up td’the highett, 
they fay it isa loom 
When i it blows very ares ng, they fay it is a 
at lealt afre/b gale ; but v when it blows fo hard SD a 
ly, that a ae cannot bear any fail, they fay it blows a 
rim. 
hen two fhips are ne another at fea, and 
g but little ar iben. one feels more of 
they fay the flip gales away from the 
there bei 
it than aiken 
other 
s Creek, in Geography, a river of North Caro. 
lina, which runs into the Atlantic. N. lat. 34° 44, W. long. 
77 
LEA, or GaLerus, among the Romans, was a light 
cafque for the head, generally made-of- the {kin of fome 
wild beaft, in order to appear the more terrible. ‘Thus 
Virgil. 
fulvofque lupi de pelle galleros.” 
The galea was alfo a head-piece, yan down to a 
houlders, commonly of brafs, and fometimes of iro 
the aa ver part was called duceula, and on i top was he 
2 
or meer ca unning t 
bafe ; the ee ones being mich aoe dia fe 
Of this genus there are three known fpecies, viz. 
1. The {cutated headed one; which has on its f{ummit an ob- 
ield. 2. _— seein headed one 
x laurated, an 
fhewing that they have been once of ce variolated ‘cna. 
Klein’s Echinod. 
Gara, or Galiot, in Naval Tudics, a low built veflek 
= ee le of troops or ftores, having both fails 
Gaia in Surgery, fignifies a kind of bandage for the 
head 
GALEACHABAD, in ek aed a iii of *Hin- 
dooftan, in Allahabad ; 3 miles N.W. 
GALEAPOUR, a town of Bengals bo ‘eles W. N, Ww. 
of Midnapou 
GALEA NTHROPIA, 
man, in the writings of the Ancient Ph ry ficii cians, a term ul 
to exprefs a fpecies of madnefs, in which the patient ‘fancied 
himfelf a cat, and endeavoured to perform all the motions of 
that animal. 
GALEARILI, in Antiquity, helmet-bearers 3 a nam the 
Romans gave to the guards, or fervants of ihe fol- 
wie See Vegetius iti. 6. and serra fius on “the third chap- 
er of the life of Adrian by ie 
"6 LEASSE. See aes 
of yaaren, cat, 
and see 
fe 
i 
ar marck in ju, 
of ah little is known. Se 
St $2 ¢ cited by Juffieu with hefitation, feems to be very 
diftingt 
GALEETO, ja Ichthyology, the name of a fith of the 
alauda kind, called by Rondeletins alauda non eri, ee aes 
