G O L 
inclines to red'on the rump and tail; the bread: is rufous 
grey, and the belly rufous, both tranfverfely ftriped with 
brown; the tail is green, and greatly cuneiform, like 
that of the others; the two middle feathers are eight 
inches and a half in length. This is likewife found in 
the neighbourhood of the Cape of Good Hope. 
5. Colius Panayenfis, the Panayan coly: it has a black 
Hill; the head is creded; the neck, and upper parts of 
the body, are cinereous grey, with a yellowilh tinge ; 
bread: the fame, eroded with tranfverfe lines of black; 
the lower part of the belly, and upper part of the tail, 
are rufous; the wings reach very little beyond the bale 
of the tail, which is greatly cuneiform, like the others; 
the legs are of a pale film-colour. It is a native of Pa- 
nay, one of the Philippine Illands. 
To COLL, <u. a. [ accoler , Fr.] To embrace round the 
neck: 
So having faid, her ’twixt her armes twain 
She draightly drain'd, and colled tenderly. Spenfer. 
COLLABAU'G, a town of Hindoodan, in the Malwa 
country : forty-four miles wed of Chandaree. 
COLLA'ERT (Adrian), an eminent engraver, who 
fiouihhed about the year 1550, was born at Antwerp. 
After having learned the fird principles of engraving, he 
went into Italy to perfect himfelf in drawing. He worked 
entirely with the graver, in a firm dyle, but rather did' 
and dry. The vad number of plates executed by his 
hand lulficiently evince the facility with which he en¬ 
graved ; and though exceedingly neat, they are feldom 
highly finidted. 
COLLA'ERT (Hans, or John), fon to the foregoing, 
and alfo an excellent artilt. He drew and engraved in 
the dyle of his father, and was equal to him in merit. 
He mud have been very old when he died, for his prints 
are dated from 1555 to 1622. He abided his father in all 
his great works, and engraved befides a prodigious num¬ 
ber of plates of various fubjefts. One of his bed prints 
is Moles driking the rock, from Lambert Lombard. A 
great number of fmall figures are introduced into this 
print, and they are admirably well executed ; the heads 
are fine, and the drawing correct. 
COLLAL'TO, a county or didrift of Maritime Auf- 
tria, containing the three important cables, Collalto, St. 
Salvatore, and St. Lucia, together with their appurte¬ 
nances. Collalto is an -old cable on a delightful emi¬ 
nence, on the ealt bank of the Soligo, which, at no great 
diltance, difeharges itfelf into the Piave ; it is provided 
with drawbridges, and is in a fiourilhing condition. The 
church of St. Profdocimo, was built in the fourteenth 
century ; and there is a monadery without 'the walls of 
the cable. The villages are Falze di Piave, Barbifano, 
and Sarnaglia. St. Salvatore, another cable, built on a 
high mountain, with thick walls, has a fine beeple, and 
an old chapel, containing fine paintings and pendulous 
gardens, kept in order at a very conliderabie expence. 
Its principal town is Sufegani, the church of which pol- 
fefi'es an altar-piece by Titian. St. Lucia, a cable and 
large village, with fine buildings, of which the villages 
Calfofco and Refrantolo are deditute. Ray is an old 
cable, dedroyed by the Audrians in 1415. The monal- 
tery of the Carmelites, now fupprefi'ed, was built on the 
ruins of this cable. 
To COLLAP'SE, tv. n. [collabor , collapfus, Lat.J To fall 
together ; to clofe lb as that one fide touches the other.— 
In confumptions and atrophy the liquids are exhaubed, 
and the fides of the canals collapfe ; therefore the attrition 
is increafed, and conlequently the heat. Arbuthnot. 
COLLAP'SION, f. The aft of doling or collapfing. 
The date of velfels doled. 
COL'LAR, /. [collare , Lat.J A ring of metal put 
round the neck : 
Ten brace and more of greyhounds; 
With golden muzzles all their mouths were bound, 
And collars of the fame their necks furround. Dryden. 
Vol. IV. No. 237. 
C O L 775 
The part of the harnefs that is fadened about the horfe’s 
neck: 
Her waggon fpokes made of long fpinners legs, 
The traces of the fmalied fpider’s web, 
The collars of the moonlhine’s watry beams. Shakefpeare. 
The part of the drefs that furrounds the neck. An en- 
fign of dignity. The Collar of the order of the garter 
conlids of S.S. with roles enamelled red, within a garter 
enamelled blue, and the George at the bottom. The 
lord-mayor’s Collar is more ufually called a chain. 
To flip the Collar. To get free ; to efcape ; to dif- 
entangle himfelf from any engagement or difficulty: 
When, as the ape him heat'd fo much to talk 
Of labour, that did from his liking baulk, 
He would have flipt the collar handlomely. Hub herd, 
A Collar of Brawn, is the quantity bound up in one 
collar or bandage. 
Knights of the Collar, a military order in the re¬ 
public of Venice, called alfo the order of St. Mark, or 
the medal. 
To COL'LAR, aj.a. To feize by the collar; to take 
by the throat. 
To Collar Beef, or other meat; to roll it up, and bind: 
it hard and clofe with a collar or bandage. 
COL'LAR-BONE, /. The clavicle; the bones on each 
fide of the neck.—A page riding behind the coach fell 
down, bruifed his face, and broke his right collar-bone, 
Wifeman. 
COLLARE'DO, a town of Italy, in the duchy of Tuf- 
cany: four miles wed of Parana. 
COLLA'RES, a town of Portugal, in the province of 
Edramadura : fix miles north of Cafcaes. 
To COLLA'TE, no. a. [ confero , collatum, Lat.J To com¬ 
pare one thing of the fame kind with another.—They 
could not relinquilh their Judaifm, and embrace Chridi- 
anity, without confidering, weighing, and collating, both 
religions. South. —To collate books; to examine if no¬ 
thing be wanting. Tobedow; to confer.—The fignifi- 
cance of the lacrament difpofes the fpirit of the receiver 
to admit the grace of the fpirit of God, there condgned, 
exhibited, and collated. Taylor. —With to. To place in 
an ecclefiadical benefice.—If a patron {hall negleft to pre- 
fent unto a benefice, void above fix months, the bilhop 
may collate ^hereunto. Ayliffe. 
COLLA'TERAL, adj. [con and latus, Lat.J Side 
to fide: 
Thus faying, from his radiant feat he rofe 
Of high collateral glory. Milton. 
Running parallel. Diffufed on either fide: 
But man by number is to manifed 
His fingle imperfeftion 5 and beget 
Like of his like, his image multiply’d 
In unity defeftive, which requires 
Collateral love and deared amity. Milton. 
Not direft ; not immediate: 
They {hall hear and judge ’twixt you and me; 
If by direft of by collateral hand 
They find us touch’d, we will our kingdom give 
To you in fatisfaftion. Shakefpeare. 
Concurrent.—Ail the force of the motive lies within it¬ 
felf : it receives no collateral drength from external confi- 
derations. Atterbury. 
COLLA'TERAL, [collateralis, from later ale, Latin.] 
In law, that which cometh fideways, not direft: as col¬ 
lateral adurance is that which is made over and above 
the deed itlelf: collateral fecurity, is where a'deed is 
made of other land, befides thofe granted by the deed of 
mortgage ; and if a man covenants with another, and 
enters into bond for the performance of his covenant, 
the bond is a collateral adurance ; becauie it is externa), 
9 L and 
