144. E Y L 
Cyclop, if any pitying thy difgrace, 
Afk who disfigur’d thus that eyelefs face. Pope. 
F,Y'.ELET,yi [ceilet, Fr. a little eye.] A hole through 
which light may enter ; any fmall perforation for a lace 
to go through.—Slitting the back and fingers of a glove, 
1 made eyelet holes to draw it clofe. Wifeman. 
EY'ELID,/’, The membrane that (huts over the eye.— 
On my eyelids is the fhadow of death. Job xvi. 1 6. 
Mark when (he fmiles with amiable cheer, 
And tell me whereto can ye liken it f 
When on each eyelid fweetly do appear 
An hundred graces as in (hade to (it. Spenfer. 
EY'ERLANDT, an ifland at the entrance into the 
ZuyderSea from the German Ocean, north of the Texel, 
about two miles and a half in length, and about half a 
mile wide ; joined to the ifland of Texel by a bank of 
fand, and overflowed only at high-water. 
EYESER' VANT, f. A fervant that works only while 
watched. 
EYESER'VICE, f. Service performed only under in- 
fpection.—Servants obey in all things your matters ; not 
with eyefervice as men-pleafers, but in finglenefs of heart. 
Col. iii. 
EY'ESHOT,yi Sight; glance; view.—I mud not 
think of (haring the booty before I am free from danger, 
and out of eyefhot from the other windows. Dryden. 
EY'ESIGHT, f. Sight of the eye.—The Lord hath 
recompenfed me according to my cleannefs in his eyefight. 
2 Sam. 
Though fight he loft. 
Life yet hath many folaces, enjoy’d 
Where other fenfes want not their delights, 
At home in leifure and domeftic eafe, 
Exempt from many a care and chance, to which 
Eyefight expofes daily men abroad. Milton. 
EY'E SO RE,/". Something offend ve to the fight.—Mor- 
decai was an eyefore to Hainan. L'EJlrange. —.He’s the bed 
piece of man’s flefli in the market; not an eyefore in his 
whole body. Dryden. 
EYESPOT'TED, adj. Marked with fpots like eyes: 
Nor Juno’s bird, in her cyefpotted train 
So many goodly colours doth contain. Spenfer. 
EY'ESTRING, f. The firing of the eye ; the tendon 
by which the eye is moved.—To know whether (beep are 
found or not, fee that their gums be red, and the eycf rings 
ruddy. Mortimer. 
EY'ETOOTH,yi The tooth on the upper jaw next on 
each fide to the grinders ; the fang.—The next tooth on 
each fide (tronger and deeper rooted, and more pointed, 
called canini, in Englifh eyeteeth, to tear the more tough 
fort of aliments. Ray. 
EY'EWINK, /. A wink, as a hint, or token.—They 
would have won any woman’s heart ; and, I warrant you, 
they could never get an eyezuink of her. Shakcfpearc. 
EYEWIT'NESS, f. An ocular evidence ; one who 
gives teflimony to fabts feen with his own eyes.—We 
made known unto you the power and coming of our Lord 
Jefus Chrift, and were eycwitncjjes of his majefty. i Pet. 
EYGALIE'RES, a town of France, in the department 
of the Mouths of the Rhone, and chief place of a canton, 
in the diftribf of Tarafcon : twelve miles eaft of Tarafcon. 
EYGUIE'RES, a town of France, in the department of 
the Mouths of the Rhone, and chief place of a canton, in 
the diflridt of Tarafcon : five leagues and a half eaft-fouth- 
eaft of Tarafcon. 
EY'LA, a river of Germany, in the circle of Upper 
Saxony, which runs into the Wichra : two miles north of 
Borna, in the margraviate of Meiflen. 
EY'LA, a town of Sicily, in the Valley of Mazara : 
twenty-five miles eaft-fouth-eaft of Palermo. 
EY'LAU DEUTSCH, a town of Prufiia, in the pro. 
vince of Oberland : leventy-eight miles fouth-fou til-weft 
of Konigfberg. 
E Z A 
EY'LTAD,/. [ cdllade , Fr. ] Glance of the eye.—-Who 
examined my parts with mod judicious eyliads. Shakfpeare. 
EYME, a town of Germany, in the circle of Lower 
Saxony, and principality of Calenberg : fixteen miles eaft 
of Hameln. 
EY'MET, a town of France, in the department of the 
Dordogne, and chief place of a canton, in the diftrict of 
Bergerac : four leagues fouth of Bergerac. 
EY'MOUTH, a (ea-port town of Scotland, on the eaft 
coaft of the county of Berwick, with a fmall harbour, 
principally for fifhing-veflels. Lat. 55. 46. N. Ion. 2. 10! 
W. Greenwich. 
EYMOUTIE'RS, a town of France, in the department 
of the Upper Vienne, fituated on the Vienne ; containing 
about 2000 inhabitants, with a confiderable trade in (kins, 
leather, and rags : fix leagues north of Limoges. 
EYMOUTIE'RS, a town of France, in the department 
of the Dordogne : five leagues north of Perigueux. 
EYND'HOVEN, a town of Brabant, fituated on the 
Dommel : feventeen miles fouth of Bois le Due, and 
twenty-five weft of Venlo. 
EYNEZA'T, a town of France, in the department of 
the Pny de Dome : five miles eaft of Riom. 
EY'NON, a river of Wales, which runs into the Dovie, 
about three milesbelow Machynleth, inMontgomeryfhire. 
EYN'SHAM, a fmall town in Oxfordfhire, diftant from 
London fixty miles ; from Oxford, Woodftock, and Wit¬ 
ney, five miles each ; fituated on the great road from 
London to Cheltenham and Gloucefter, and near the na¬ 
vigable river Ifis, by which river coals are brought from 
the Oxford and Coventry canal to a wharf within half 
a mile of the town. The poor are employed in (pinning 
of Yarn for the Witney blanket manufafturers. 
EY'OTT,/. [French.] A little ifland.—Itfeemsjuft, 
that the eyotts or little iflands, ariling in any part of the 
river, (hall be the property of him who owneth the pif- 
cary and the foil. Blackfone. 
EY'PEL, a town of Bohemia, in the circle of Konig- 
ingratz : three miles fouth-fouth-eaft of Tratenau. 
EYPOL'TAN, a town of Germany, in the archduchy 
of Auftria, on the north fide of the Danube : five miles 
north of Vienna. 
EYR A'GUES, a town of France, in the department of 
the Mouths of the Rhone, and chief place of a canton, 
in the diftribt of Tarafcon : eight miles eaft-north-eaft of 
Tarafcon. 
EYRE,yi [eyre, Fr. iter, Lat.] The court of juftices 
itinerants; and juftices in eyre are thofe only, which 
Bract on in many places calls jvfiiciarios ilineranles. The 
eyre alfo of the foreft is nothing but the juftice-feat, 
otherwife called ; which is, or (hould, by ancient cuftom, 
be held every three years by the juftices of the foreft, 
journeying up and down to that purpofe. Cowel. 
EY'RE, a town of United America, in the ftate of 
North Carolina : forty-eight miles weft of Halifax. 
EY'RECOURT, a town of Ireland, in the county of 
Galway : thirty-four miles eaft of Galway. 
EY'RY, f. [from ey, an egg.] The place where birds 
of prey build their nefts and hatch : 
Some haggard hawk, who had her eyry nigh, 
Well pounc’d to faften, and well wing’d to fly. Dryden. 
EYS'DALE, or Esdale, a fmall ifland, near the weft 
coaft of Scotland, celebrated for its quarries of excellent 
(late: fevertmiles fouth-eaft from Mull. 
EY'SACH, a river which rifes in the county of Tyrol, 
and runs into the Adige, near Bolzano. 
EYT'JOU-LIOTUN; a town of Afia, in the kingdom 
of Corea: 380 miles eaft of Peking. 
E'ZA, a town of Piedmont, in the county of Nice : four 
miles eaft of Nice, and four weft of Monaco. 
EZA'GEN, a town of Africa, in the kingdom of Fez : 
fixty miles fouth of Tetuan. 
E.ZARDAR', f. [Indian.] A farmer or renter of land 
in the new diftribis of Hindooltan. 
EZE'KJEL, 
