554 
JUS 
Propagation and Culture. All thefe are propagated by 
feeds, which fiiould be Town early in the fpring, in pots 
filled with a foft loaniy foil, and plunged into a moderate 
hot-bed ; but, as thefe feeds often lie a whole year in the 
ground before they vegetate, the earth muft be kept moift, 
and the glafies of the hot-bed (haded in the heat of the 
day; by this method the feeds may be brought foon to 
vegetate. When the plants come up, and are fit to re¬ 
move, they fhould be each planted into a final! feparate 
pot, filled with light loamy earth, and plunged into a hot¬ 
bed of tanners’ bark, where they (hould be (haded from 
the fun till they have taken new root; after which they 
(hould have free air admitted to them every day, in pro¬ 
portion to the warmth of the feafon ; they muft alfo be 
frequently refrefhed with water, but it muft not be given 
to them in too great plenty. When the roots of the plants 
have filled thefe (mall pots, the plants (hould be removed 
into others a iize larger; and, if the plants are too tall to 
•ftand under the frames of the hot-bed, they (hould be re¬ 
moved into the bark-ftove, where they may remain to 
flower and perfeft their feeds; for, when the plants rife 
early in the fpring, and are brought forward in hot-beds, 
all the forts will flower and perfedi their feeds the fame 
year, which is better than to have them to keep through 
the winter. See Iatropha. 
JUSS'ULENT, adj. [from jus, Lat. broth.] Sodden ; 
fie wed in broth. 
JUSS'Y, a town of France, in the department of the 
Yonne : five miles louth of Auxerre. 
JUSS'Y, a town of France, in the department of the 
Leman : fix miles eaft of Geneva. 
JUST, adj. \_jujlc, Fr. juflus, Lat ] Upright; incor¬ 
rupt; equitable in the diftribution of juftice.— Men are 
commonly fo jujl to virtue and goodnefs, as to praife it in 
others, even when they do not praflife it themfielves. 
Tillotfon. 
Take it, while yet ’tis praife, before my rage 
Unfafely jujl , break loole on this bad age. Dryden. 
Honed:; without crime in dealing with others.— Jujl ba¬ 
lances, jujl weights, and a jujl ephah. Lev. xix.—Some¬ 
times with of: 
Jujl of thy word, in ev’ry thought fincere, 
Who knew no wi(h but what the world might hear. Pope. 
ExacV; proper; accurate.—Soileau’s numbers are excel¬ 
lent, his expreflions noble, his thoughts his language 
pure, and his fenle clofe. Dryden. 
Once on a time La Mancha’s knight, they fay, 
A certain bard encount’ring on-the way, 
Difcours'd in terms as jujl, with looks as fage. 
As e’er could Dennis of the laws o’ th’ ftage. Pope. • 
Virtuous; innocent; pure.—How (hould man bejufl with 
God ? Job. —A jujl man falleth feven times, and rifeth. 
Proverbs. —He (hall be recompenfed at the refurreftion of 
the jujl. Matt/i. —True ; not forged..—Crimes were laid to 
his charge too many, the lead whereof, being jujl, had be¬ 
reaved him of eftimation and credit. Hooker.— Grounded 
on principles of juftice; rightful: 
Me though jujl right 
Did (irft create your leader. Milton. 
Equally retributed.—He received a jujl recompenle of re¬ 
ward. Heb. ii. 2. 
As Hefiod fings, fpread water o’er thy fields. 
And a moft jujl and glad increafe it yields. Denham. 
Complete without fuperfluity or defeat.-—He was a comely 
perfonage, a little above jujl ftature, well and ftraight 
limbed, but (lender. Bacon's Henry VII.—Regular; or¬ 
derly : 
When war (hall ftand rang’d in its jufl array, 
And dreadful pomp, then will I think on thee. Addifon. 
Exactly proportioned ; 
JUS 
The prince is here at hand : pleafeth your lord(hip 
To meet his grace, jujl diftance ’tween our armies ? 
Sliakejpcare. 
Full ; of full dimenfions.—His foldiers had flcirmifties 
with the Numidians, fo that once the (kirmifh was like to 
have come to a jujl battle. Knolles. —There is not any one 
particular above-mentioned,but would take up the bufmefs 
of a jujl volume. Hale's Origin of Mankind. —There feldom 
appeared a jujl army in the civil wars. Duchcfs of New- 
cafle,, 
JUST, adv. Exactly; nicely; accurately.—A few 
underftand him right; jufl as when our Saviour (aid, in 
an allegorical fenfe. Except ye eat the fielh of the foil of 
man, and drink his blood, ye have no life in you. Bentley. 
’Tis with our judgments as our watches ; none 
Go jujl alike, yet each believes his own. Pope. 
Merely ; barely.—It is the humour of weak and trifling 
men to value themlelves upon jufl nothing at all. L'E- 
Jlrange. _ 
The Nereids fwam before 
To fmooth the feas; a foft Etefian gale 
But jujl infpir’d and gently fwell’d the fail. Dryden. 
Give me, ye gods, the product of one field. 
That fo I neither may be rich nor poor ; 
And, having jujl enough, not covet more. Dryden. 
Nearly ; almoft ; tantum non. —Being fpent with age, anti 
jufl at the point of death, Democritus called for loaves of 
new bread to be brought, and with the fteam of them un¬ 
der his nofe prolonged his life. Temple 
JUST, f. [By Come derived from the French joujle, of 
the Latin juxta, becaufe the combatants fought near one 
another; Salmafius derives it from the modern Greek 
zoujlra, or rather which is. ufed in this fenfe by 
Nicephorus Gregorius; others derive it from jujla, which 
in the corrupt age of the Latin tongue was ufed for this 
exercife, by realon it Was fuppofed a more ju(t and equal 
combat than the tournament.] A fportive kind of com¬ 
bat on horfeback, man againft man, armed with lances or 
l'words, or both.—None was either more grateful to the 
beholders, or more noble in itfelf, than jujls, both with 
fvvord and launce. Sidney. 
Among themfelves the tourney they divide. 
In equal fquadrons rang’d on either fide ; 
Then turn’d their horl'es heads, and man to man, 
And deed to fteed oppos’d, the jujls began. Dryden. 
The difference between jufts and tournaments confifts 
in this, that the latter is the genus, of which the former 
is only a fpecies. Tournaments included all kinds of 
military (ports and engagements made out of gallantry 
and diverfions: jufts were thofe particular combats where 
the parties were near each other, and engaged with lance 
and fword. Add, that the tournament was frequently 
performed by a number of cavaliers, who fought in a 
body : the juft was a (ingle combat of one man againft 
another. Though the jufts were ufually made in tourna¬ 
ments after a general rencounter of all the cavaliers, yet 
they were fometimes Angle, and independent of any tour¬ 
nament. See Tournament. 
To JUST, v.n. To engage in a mock fight; to tilt. To 
pufh ; to drive ; tojuftle. 
JUS'TABAS, a town of South-America, in the pro¬ 
vince of Tucuman: forty-five miles north-weft of St. 
Fernando. 
JUS'TELL (Chriftopher), counfellor and fecretary to 
the king of France, and eminent for his acquaintance with 
ecclefialtLal antiquities, was born at Paris in the year 
1530. He poflefled excellent natural abilities, and a 
ftrong inclination for literature, which-he cultivated with 
great fuccefs. Soon after lie quitted college he applied 
to the ftudy of ecclefiaftical hiltory, and of the councils; 
and was perfuaded by his friends to gratify the public 
with 
