H A V 
237 
order of privy council in 1797, the corn-returns are or¬ 
dered to be delivered at tins market inftead of at Gof- 
port. Nearly oppofite Havant lie two romantic i(lands, 
the larger called Hayliog, the other Thorriey ; each of 
■which has its parilh-church. The hills leading from 
Havant to Portfmouth afford a mo.ft unbounded, view of 
the fea and the 1.(1 e of Wight, for miles together. 
On the north-eaft fide/of Havant is Rowland-caftle, 
where two fairs are held annually: one on the 12th of 
May, reforted to by the gentry many miles round ; the 
other on the 12th of November, for corn and cattle. 
This place is beautifully fituated ; being bounded by 
woods on the north, fouth, and weft, and on the eaft by 
a view of that rich and extenfive lawn (about one hun¬ 
dred yards broad and two miles in length) leading to 
the magnificent feat called Stanftead, in S.uffex, for¬ 
merly belonging to lord Halifax ; and lince to Richard 
Baryvell, efq. It is four miles from Havant, and fix 
frosi Chichefter. 
HAV'ASH, or Hawasch, a river of Africa, which 
riles in Abylfinia, and runs into the Arabian fea. Lat. 
19. N. Ion. 44. 55. E. Greenwich. 
HAU'BAN, a mountain of Arabia Felix : twelve- 
miles eaft of Taas. 
HAU'BERG, /.' A hauberk. Obfokte. 
HAU'BERGETS, f. In old records, haberjefits, a 
kind of coarfe cloth. . 
HAU'BERK,/ lhauberg , old Fr.] A coat of mail; 
a breaft-plate : 
Hauberks and helms are hew’d with many a wound ; 
The mighty maces with fuch hafte defcend, 
They break the bones, and make the armour bend. Dryd. 
HAU'BO, a town of Sweden, in the province of Weft 
Gothland: feven miles north-north-weft of Gotheborg. 
HAU'BOURDIN, a town of France, in the depart¬ 
ment of the North, and chief place of a canton, in the 
diftriitfof Lille: one league fiouth-weft of Lille, and 
four and a half north-eaft of Betluine. 
HAUD, a town of Arabia Felix, in the province of 
Yemen: fifty-lix miles fouth of Saide. 
To H A VE, v. a. injfhe prelent I have, thou hajl, he hath: 
we, ye, they, have ; pret. and part. pall’, had-, [haban, Go¬ 
thic; hah ban, Sax. hebbetf, Dut. avoir, Fr. avcre, Ital.J 
Not to be without.—I have brought him before you, 
that after examination had, I might have forriething to 
write. AEls xxv. 26.—To carry ; to wear.'—Upon the 
mail they faw a young man, who fat as on horfeback, 
having nothing upon him. Sidney. —To make ufe of.—I 
have no Levite to my prieft. Judges. —To poffefs.—He 
that gathered much had nothing over, and lie that ga¬ 
thered little had no lack. Exod. xvi, 18.—To obtain; to 
enjoy ; to poffefs.—Now, O Father, glorify me with thine 
own felf, with the glory which I had with thee before 
the world was. John xvii. 5.—To take; to receive.—A 
fecret happinels in Petronius is called curiofafclicitas, and 
which I luppofe he had from t\\ofdicker audereoi Horace. 
Dryden. —To be in any ftate ; to be attended with or 
united to as accident or concomitant.— Have I need of 
madmen, that ye have brought this fellow ? 1 Sam. xxi. 
15.—To put; to take.—That done, go.and cart it, and 
have it. away. TuJJer. —To procure : to find.—I would 
have any one name to me that tongue, that one can fpeak 
as he ihould dp, by the rules of grammar. Locke. —Not 
tonegleft; not to omit: 
Your plea is good; but ftill I fay beware : 
Laws are explain’d by men, fo have a care. Pope. 
To hold; to regard.—Of the maid-fervants fliall I be 
had in honour. 2 Sam. —The proud have had me greatly 
in derifion. Pfalms .—To maintain; to hold opinion.— 
Sometimes they will have them to be natural heat, whereas 
fome of them are crude and cold ; and fometimes they 
will have them to be 1 the qualities of tangible parts, 
whereas they are things by themfelves. Bacon,—' To con- 
Vol. IX. No, 582. 
H A V 
tain.—I will never trull a man again for keeping his 
fword clean ; nor believe he can have every thing in him 
by wearing his apparel neatly . Shakefpeare. —To-require ; 
to claim : 
What would thefe madmen have? 
Firft they would bribe us without pence, 
Deceive us without common fenfe, 
And without pow’r enftaye. • Dryden. 
To.be a hulband or wife to another.—If I had been 
married to him, for all he was in women’s apparel, I 
would not have had hint. Shakefpeare. —To be engaged, 
as in a talk or employment.—Kings have to deal with 
their neighbours, their wives, their children, their pre¬ 
lates or clergyy their nobles, their merchants, and their 
commons. Bacon. —Towilli; todefire; inalax lenfe,— 
I had rather be a doorkeeper in the houfe of my God, 
than to dwell in the tents of wickednefs. Pfalms. —To 
buy.—If thefe trifles were rated only by art and artiul- 
nefs, we Ihould have them much cheaper.—It is rite ft' 
ufed in Englilli, as in other European language's, as an 
auxiliary verb to make tire tenfes ; have, hajl, and hath, 
or has, the preterperfedt; and had, and hadjl, the preter- 
pluperfett.—If there had been words enow between them 
to have expreffed provocation, they had gone together by 
the ears. Congreve. —The gods have placed labour be¬ 
fore virtue. Addifon. —That excellent author has (hewn 
how every particular cuftom and habit of virtue will, in 
its own nature, produce the heaven, or a ftate of happi- 
nefs, in him who fliall hereafter pratlife it, Addifon. 
Have, at, or with, is an expreiiion denoting resolution 
to make fome attempt. They feem to be imperative 
expreflions ; have this at you ; let this reach you, or take this ; 
have with you ; take this with you ; but this will not. ex¬ 
plain have at it, or have at him, which muft be co.niider.ed 
as merely elliptical; as,, we will have a trial at it, or at 
him .—He that will caper with me for a thoufand marks, 
let him lend me the money, and have at him. Shakefpeare . 
HAVE, a Jigh of the pajl tenfeneuter. Have now ; have 
indeed. 
To HAVE, v.n. Tobehdve. Obfolete. 
To HAVE AF'TER, v.n. To make:pi|jptit.— Have 
after. Hamlet. 
HA'VE (Le),' a fmall illand, near the fouth-eaft coaft 
of Nova Scotia.. Lat. 44.15. N. Ion, 64. /o. W. Green¬ 
wich. 
HAV'EL, a river 'of Germany, which iffues from a 
lake, in the duchy of Mecklenburg, and runs into the 
Elbe, near Werben, in the Old Mark of Brandenburg. 
HAV'ELBERG, a town of Germany, in Upper Sax¬ 
ony, and mark of Pregnitz, fituated on the Havel, which 
furrounds and forms it into an ifland. It was formerly 
the fee of a bifhop, founded in the year 946, by the em¬ 
peror Otho I. but the bilhop, Joachim Frederic, fuc- 
ceeding to the electorate in 1598, no otiier billiop has 
been fince appointed, but the chapter Hill continues. 
The principal trade is diddling brandy, and knitting 
dockings. Many velfels for the navigation of the Elbe 
are built here, and great quantities of wood are fent from 
hence' to Hamburg: twelve miels north-north.eaft of 
-Stendal, and forty-eight weft-north-weft of Berlin. Lat. 
52.51.N. Ion. 29. 49. E. Ferro. 
HA'VEN, f. [haven, Dut. havre, Fr. ] Aport; a har¬ 
bour; a ftation for Ihips.—See Harbour We enter¬ 
ed into a good haven, being the port of a fair city. Bacon. 
Love, favour’d once with that fweet gale. 
Doubles his hafte, and fills his fail, 
’Till he arrive where Ihe muft prove, 
The haven, or the rock, of love. Waller. 
A (belter; an afylum : 
All places, that the eye of heaven vifits, 
Are to a wife man ports and happy havenst Shakefpeare. 
HA'VENER,/. An overfeerof a port.—Thefe earis 
3 U and 
