A R R 
no fuch motion made, as the court will not fuffer any one 
to tell them that the judgment they gave on mature deli¬ 
beration is wrong. It is otherwise indeed in the cafe of 
judgment by default, for that Is not given in fo folenm a 
manner; or if the fault arifes on the writ of inquiry or 
verdidt, for then the party could not allege it before. 
Str. 425. It may be made after motion for a new trial 
difcharged, Dcugl. 716. 1 Burr. 334. and, it arretted, each 
party pays his own colls. Cowp. 407. After verdidt, a man 
may allege any thing in the record, in arrelt of judgment, 
which may be afltgned for error after judgment. 1 Roll. 
Air. 716. And judgment after verdidt lhall not be ar¬ 
retted for an objection that would have been good on de¬ 
murrer. 3 Burr. 1725. 
Arrest of Enqjjest is to plead in arrelt of taking 
the enqueft, upon the former iffue, and to (hew caufe why 
an enqueft fhould not be taken. Bro. tit. Replead. 
To Arrest, v. a. ['arrejler , Fr. to Hop.] To feize by 
a mandate from a court or officer of jultice. To feize any 
thing by law.—He hath enjoyed nothing of Ford’s but 
twenty pounds of money, which mult be paid to mailer 
Brook; his horfes are arrejled for it. Shakefpeare. To 
feize ; to lay hands on ; to detain by power.—Age itfelf, 
which, of all things in the world, will not be baffled or 
defied, (hall begin to arrejl, feize, and remind us of our 
mortality. South. To withhold; to hinder: 
Nor could her virtues, nor repeated vows 
Of thoufand lovers, the relentlefs hand 
Of death arrejl. Philips. 
To tlop motion.—To nlanifelt the coagulative power, we 
have arrefled the fluidity of new milk, and turned it into 
curdled jubilance. Boyle. Toobltruci; to flop.—Afcrib- 
ing the caufes of things to fecret proprieties, hath arrejled 
and laid afleep all true enquiry. Bacon. 
ARRESTAN'DIS bonis ne dissipentur, a writ 
which lay for a man whofe cattle or goods are taken by 
another, who during the conteft doth or is like to make 
them away, not being of ability to render fatisfadlion. 
ARREST AN'DO ipsum-qui pecunxam recepit, 
&c. is a writ that lay for apprehending a perfon who hath 
taken the king’s preft-money to ferve in wars, and hides 
himfelf when he (hould go. Reg. Orig. 24. 
ARRES'TO facto super bonis mercatorum 
iLiENiCENORUM, a writ that lay for a denizen againft 
the goods of aliens found within this kingdom, in recom- 
pence of goods taken from him in a foreign country, af¬ 
ter denial of reftitution. Reg. Orig. 129. This the an¬ 
cient civilians called clarigatio ; but by the moderns it is 
termed reprifalia. 
ARRES'TS, f. in farriery, mangy tumours upon a 
horfe’s hinder legs, between the ham and the pattern. 
ARRE'TED, adj. \_arreElatus, low Lat.] He that is 
convened before a judge, and charged with a crime. It 
is ufed fometimes for imputed or laid unto ; as, No folly 
may be arreted to one under age. Cowell. 
ARRE'TIUM, one of the twelve ancient towns of 
Tufcany, near the Arnis and Clanis, lituated in a pleafant 
valley. Now Arezzo, forty-two miles eaft of Florence. 
Lat. 43. 15. Ion. 13.18. E. 
ARRHABONA'RII, a fe£t of Chriftians, who held 
that the eucharift is neither the real flelh and blood of 
Chrift, nor yet the fign of them, but only the pledge or 
earned thereof. 
ARRHEPHO'Rl A, f. a feaft among the Athenians 
inftituted in honour of Minerva, and Herfe, daughter of 
Cecrops. The word is compofed of app» 1 ov, myflery, and 
$£[(*>, I carry ; on account of certain myfterious things 
which were carried in proceffion at this folemnity. Boys, 
or, as fome fay, girls, between feven and twelve years of 
age, were the minifters that allifled at this feafl, and were 
denominated pogoi. This feaft was alfo called Herji- 
phoria, from the daughter of Cecrops, already mentioned. 
ARRHOE'A,/! [a^oia, from a neg. and §ew, to flow.] 
The fuppreffion of any natural flux, as the menfes. 
A R R 215 
ARRHO'STIA, f. from « neg. and 
to (Lengthen.] Infirmity; ill health. 
AR'RIAN, a famous philofopher and hiftorian under 
the emperor Adrian and the two Antonines, was born at 
Nicomedia in Bithynia. His great learning and eloquence 
procured him the title of The fecond Xenophon ; and railed 
him to the ntofl conliderable dignities at Rome, even the 
confulfhip itfelf. We have four books of his “ Differta- 
tions upon Epifletus,” whofe fcholar he had been ; and 
his “ I-liftory of Alexander the Great,” in feven books, is 
greatly admired by the bell judges. 
ARRI'AN A, a village of Africa, in which remain fome 
ruins of ancient Carthage. 
To ARRI'DE, v. a. [ arridco, Lat.] To laugh at. To 
fmile; to look pleafantly upon one. 
ARRIE'GE, a river of France, which rifes in the Py¬ 
renees, pafles by Foix, Pamiers, Savarden, St. Gabelle, 
&c. and joins the Garonne about two miles from Touloufe. 
Gold is found in feveral parts of this river, particularly 
near Pamiers. It gives name to one of the departments 
in the new divifion of France. 
ARRIE'NES, a mountain of France, in the depart¬ 
ment of the Calvados, remarkable for the refort of birds 
of prey, fuch as eagles, falcons, kites, See. one league 
from Falaife. 
ARRI'ERE, f . [French.] The laft body of an army, 
for which we now ufe rear. —The horfemen might ilfue 
forth without difturbance of tire foot, and the avant-guard 
without fhufliing with the battail or arriere. Hayward. 
Arriere-Ban, f. [Cafleneuve derives this word from 
arriere and ban ; ban denotes the convening of the noblelie 
or valfals, who hold fees immediately of the crown ; and 
arriere, thofe who only hold of the king mediately. ] A 
general proclamation, by which the kings of France for¬ 
merly fnmmoned to the war all that held of them, both 
their own valfals, or the noblelie, and the valfals of their 
valfals. 
Arriere Fee, or Fief, is a fee dependant on a fu- 
perior one. Thefe fees commenced, when dukes and 
counts, rendering their governments hereditary, diftribu- 
ted to their officers parts of the domains, and permitted 
thofe officers to gratify the foldiers under them in the 
fame manner. Arriere Vassal, the valfal of a valfal. 
ARRI'GNO, a town in the illand of Corfica, eight 
miles eaft of Calvi. 
AR'RION, a town of Perlia, in the province of Adir- 
beitzan, thirty leagues fouth-eaft of Tauris. 
Arrion, or Carrion, a river of Spain, which runs 
into the Pifuerga, near its union with the Duero. 
AR'RIPHE, one of Diana’s nymphs of great beauty, 
who was raviffied by Tmolus, king of Lydia, at the foot 
of one of Diana’s altars ; upon which fhe killed herfelf. 
ARRI'SION, f . \_arriJio, Lat.} A fmiling upon. 
ARRI'VAL,_/l [from arrive. ] The act of coming to any 
place ; and, figuratively, the attainment of any purpofe. 
ARRI'VANCE, f. Company coming: not in ufe. 
To ARRl'VE, v. n. [ arriver , Fr. to come on fhore.] 
To come to any place by water : 
At length arriving on the banks of Nile, 
Wearied with length of ways, and worn with toil, 
She laid her down. Dryden. 
To reach any place by travelling. To reach any point.— 
The bounds of all body we have no difficulty to arrive at;, 
but when the mind is there, it finds nothing to hinder its 
progrefs. Locke. To gain any thing by progreflive ap¬ 
proach.—It is the higheft wifdom by defpiling the world 
to arrive at heaven ; they are blelled who converfe with 
God. Taylor. —The virtuous may know in [peculation, 
what they could never arrive at by practice, and avoid 
the fnares of the crafty. Addifon. The thing at which 
we arrive is always fuppofed to be good. To happen : 
with to before the perfon. This fenfe feems not proper £ 
Happy! to whom this glorious death arrives , 
More to be valued than a thoufand lives. Waller. 
AR'RO, 
