H A R 
‘210 
Truth and peace, and love, fhall ever ftiine 
About the fuprem.e throne 
Of him, t’ whole happy ft ate alone, 
Our heav’nly guided foul ftuill climb. Milton. 
Lucky ; fuccefsfbl ; fortunate 
Yet in this agony his fancy wrought, 
And fear fupply’d him with this happy thought. Dryden. 
Addrefsful; ready.—One gentleman is happy at a reply, 
andj another excels in a rejoinder. Swift. 
HAPS'BURG. See Habs'burgh. 
HAPSICO'RIA, [from »v|/ixogo;, Gr. faftidious.] A 
loathing of food. 
H^QUE, f. A fort of hand gun. An old word. 
H A'QUETON, f. A coat of mail. Spenfcr. 
HAR-EL', [Heb. fhe mountain of God.] Mentioned 
Ezeh. x-liii. 15. 
HA'RA, a city of AlTyria, fituated near the ri-ver Go- 
zan, to which part of the Reubenites, Gadites, and half 
tribe of Manafieh, were led. captive by Tilgath-pilefer. 
1 Ckron. v. 26. 
HA'RA, a river of Chinefe Tartary, which runs into 
the Orgon in lat.49. 35. N. Ion. 123. 23. E. Ferro. 
HA'RA, a lake of Afia, in Thibet. Lat. 36. 42. N. 
Ion. 115. 5. E. Ferro. 
HA'RA-OSO, a town of Afia, in Thibet: forty-eight 
miles weft-north-weft of Cha.tcheou. 
HA'RA-PALG A'SON, a town of Afia, in Thibet: 
twenty-five miles fouth-eaft of Oramtchi-Hotun. 
HA'RA-TOU'BE, a town of Afia, in Thibet: thirty- 
feven miles welt of Hami. Lat. 42. 53. N. Ion. no. 30. 
E. Ferro. 
HARACHAR'-HO'TUN, a town of Afia, in Thibet: 
160 miles weft of Tourfan. Lat. 43.. 4. N. Ion. 104. 3. 
E. Ferro. 
HAR'ADAH, the twentieth encampment of the If- 
raelites in their journey from Egypt to Canaan. Numb. 
xxxiii. 24, 25. 
HARAFO'RAS, a wandering tribe of Indians, fup- 
pofed to have been the primitive inhabitants of Come of 
the,Manilla iflands, and driven from their native home 
by the Spaniards, foon after their conqueft of the Philip¬ 
pines. They employ themfelves chiefly in cultivating, 
efculent vegetables; and live in trees, which they af- 
cend by means of a pole cut with notches on its fides,- 
and which they draw up after them, to prevent furprize. 
HAR'AKER, a town of Sweden, in the province of 
Weftmanland : twelve miles north of Wefteros. 
FIARA'LIUM, f. In old records, a breed or ftud of 
horfes. 
HAR'ALOPE-PAI-HO'TUN, a town of Afia, in Thi¬ 
bet : 370 miles weft of Tourfan. Lat. 42. 55. N. Ion. 
101. 25. E. Ferro. 
HAR'AN, or Char'ran, or Na'hor, a city of Me- 
fopotamia, or Padan-aram, where Terah the father of 
Abraham fettled, after his departure from Ur of the 
Chaldees ; and where he alfo died. As he was proba¬ 
bly the founder of this place, he might name it after 
his fon Haran who died in Ur ; and its being ftiled the 
city of Nahor, might arife from the., permanent efta- 
blilhment of that houfe here, after the departure of 
Abraham from hence. It was the birth-place of Re¬ 
becca, wife of the patriarch Ifaac, alfo of Leah and Ra¬ 
chel, the wives of the patriarch Jacob, who fled hither 
to avoid the fury of his brother ETau; and where 
he ferved his uncle Laban (who was alfo a native of 
this place) twenty-one years. It is mentioned as a place 
of confequence in the days of Hezekiah", being at that' 
time, it ftiould feem, but recentlyfubdued by Aflyria; 
and is noticed by Ezekiel, as having been a place of 
great trade. In hiftory it is alfo .memorable for the de¬ 
feat and death of Craflus, and for the murder of Cara- 
calla. Gen. xi. 28. 32. xii. 4. xxiv. 10, &c.xxvii.43. xxix. 
2,Kings xix. 12. Ezeh. xxvii. 23. 
HARAN'GUE,/ [ harangue , Fr. The original of the 
H A R 
French word is much queftioned’; Menage thinks it a cor¬ 
ruption of Hearing , En'glifti ; Junius imagines it to be dif 
cours au rang , to a circle, which the Italian arringo feems 
to favour ; perhaps it may be from orare ,, or orationare, 
crationer,. oraner, aranger, harangucr.'] A fpeech; a po¬ 
pular oration.—Nothing can better improve political 
Ichool-boys than the art of making plaulible or implau- 
fible harangues , againft the very opinion for which they 
refolve to determine. Swift'. 
Gray-headed men, and grave,, with warriors mix’d 
Aftemble, and harangues are heard, butfoon 
In factious oppolition. Milton. 
To HARAN'GUE, v. n.jharanguer, f'r.] To make a 
fpeech; to pronounce an oration. 
To HARAN'GUE,. v.a. To addrefs by an oration; 
as, he harangued the troops. 
HARAN'GUER, f. An orator; a public fpeaker : 
generally with fome mixture of contempt. 
HA'RARITE, an inhabitant of Plara. 
To HAR'ASS, v. a. \_harajfer , Fr. from haraffe , a heavy 
buckler, according to Du Cange.~\ To weary ; to fatigue ; 
to tire with labour and uneafinefs : fometimes with cut, 
which increafes the force of the verb.—Thefe troops 
came to the army but the day before, harajfed with a 
long and wearifome march. Bacon. 
Nature opprefs’d, and harajs'd out with care, 
Sinks down to reft. Adelifon. 
HAR'ASS, f. Wade ; difturbance : 
The men of Judah, to prevent 
The harafs of their land, befet me round. Milton. 
HAR'ASSING,/. The aft of tiring with labour. 
HAR'BACH, a river of Germany, which runs, into' 
the Muhr, one mile north-weft of Murhard, in Wirtem- 
berg. 
HAR'BINGER, f. Jharberger, Dut. one who goes to 
provide lodgings or an harbour for thofe that follow.] 
A forerunner ; a precurfor.—Love’s harbinger appeared, 
Milton-. 
Make all our trumpets fpeak, give them all breath, 
Thofe .clam’rous harbingers of blood and death. Shahefp. 
HAR'BO, a town of Sweden, in the province, of 
Weftmanland : twenty miles north-north-weft of Upfal. 
H ARBO'NAH, f. [Heb. deftrudiion.l A man’s name: 
HARBONNIE'RES, a town of France, in the de¬ 
partment of the Somme : five leagues eaft of Amiens, 
and four north of Montdidier. 
HAR'BOROUGH. See Market-Harborough. 
HAR'BOTTLE, [Sax. of hepie, an army, and bo?l, 
a houfe, fo called, becaufe it was a place.where foldiers 
kept their quarters.] A town in Northumberland. 
HAR'BOUR, f. [herberge, Fr. herberg, Dut. alb ergo, 
Ital.J A lodging ; a place of entertainment: 
For harbour at a thoufand doors they knock’d ; 
Not o.ne of all the thoufand but was lock’d. Dryden. 
An afylum ; a fhelter ; a place of Ihelter and fecurity : 
They leave the mouths of Po, 
That all the borders of the town o’erflow ; 
And fpreading round in one continu’d lake, 
A fpacious hofpitable harbour make. Addifon. 
By the conftitutional law of England, the king has the 
prerogative of appointing ports and harbours for per- 
fons and merchandife to pafs into and out of the realm, 
as he in his wifdom fhall feem proper. By the feodal 
law, all navigable rivers and harbours were computed 
among the regalia , and were fubjedt to the fovereign of 
the ftate. And in England it hath always been holden, 
that the king is lord of the whole fhore, and guardian 
of the ports and harbours, which are the inlets and gates 
of the realm. Dav. 9. 56. Therefore as early as the 
reign of king John, we find fhips feized by the king’s 
officers for putting in at a place that was not a legal 
3 port. 
