117 
OUT 
re&or of St. Margaret’s. He died in 1679. He had ac¬ 
quired celebrity by bis fkill in rabbinical learning, as well 
as by his acquaintance with the fathers and the facred 
fcriptures. Hewasaconflantand much-admired preacher. 
As a writer, he is entitled to the praife of nervoufnefs, 
precifion, and accuracy. He was author of a learned 
work on facrifices, entitled “ De Sacrificiis Libri duo; 
quorum altero explicantur omnia Judseorum, nonnulla 
Gentium profanarum Sacrificia ; altero Sacrificium Chrifti. 
Utroque Ecclefite Catholicae his de rebus Sententia con¬ 
tra Fauftum Socinum, et ejus Seftatores defenditur;” 
1677. After his death, a volume of his Sermons was pub- 
lifiied, which are good fpecimens of pulpit compofitions. 
OUTRAN'CE, J'. [French.] Deftru&ion ; extremity. 
An old word. 
OUTRE, adj. [French.] Extravagant; over-ftrained. 
A molt affe&ed and needlefs introdu&ion of modern 
times. Todd. — Although this panegyric be fomewhat 
outre, I am willing to fubfcribe to it. Dr. Geddes's Lett, 
to the Bp. of London, 1787. 
OUTRE-CUI'DANCE, f. [French.] Preemption.— 
God doth often punifh fuch pride and outre-cuidance with 
fcorn and infamy. B. Jonfon. 
OUTREDROO'G, a fortrefs of Hindooftan, in Myfore, 
taken by the Britifh forces in December 1792 : twelve 
miles weft of Saverndroog. 
OUTRI'GHT, adv. Immediately; without delay.— 
When thefe wretches had the ropes about their necks, 
the firft was to be pardoned, the laft hanged outright. 
Arbuthnot. —Completely: 
By degrees accomplifh’d in the beaft, 
He neigh’d outright, and all the fteed expreft. Addifon. 
OU'TSET, f. Opening; beginning.—Thefe mafters, at 
lead in the outfet of their drains, were careful to preferve 
air. Mafon on Ch. Mufic. —A balance ; an acquittance for 
fomething previoufly received ; as, I fent him thofe goods 
by way of outfet for the money I owed him. In this fenfe 
it is'accented rather on the laft fyllable. 
OUT'SHI-FER'MAN, a town of Little Bukharia: 130 
miles eaft of Kafhgar, and 120 north-eaft of Yarcan. 
QUTSHOU', a towm of Little Bukharia: thirty miles 
fouth of Kalhgar. 
OUTSI'DE, f. Superficies; furface ; external part.— 
What pity that fo exquifite an outfide of a head iliould 
not have one grain of fenfe in it. L'Ef range. 
The leathern outfide , boifterous as it was, 
Gave way and bent. Dryden. 
Extreme part; part remote from the middle.—Hold an 
arrow in a flame for the fpace of ten pulfes ; and, when it 
cometh forth, thofe parts which were on the outfules of 
the flame are blacked and turned into a coal. Bacon. —Su¬ 
perficial appearance.—Created beings fee nothing but our 
outfide, and can therefore only frame a judgment of us 
from our exterior adtions. Addifon's Spectator. 
You ftiall find his vanities forefpent 
Were but the outfide of the Roman Brutus, 
Covering difcretion with a coat of folly. Shakefpeare. 
The utmoft. A barbarous vfe. —Two hundred load upon 
an acre, they reckon the outfide of what is to be laid. 
Mortimer's Hvjbandry. — Perfon ; external man. — Your 
outfide promifeth as much as-can be expefted from a gen¬ 
tleman. Bacon. 
What admir’d: Ihou, what tranfports thee fo ? 
An outfide ? fair, no doubt, aUd worthy well 
Thy cherilhing and thy love. Milton's P. L. 
Outer fide; part not inclofed.—I threw open the door of 
my chamber, and found the family Handing on the out¬ 
fide. Spectator. 
OUTSI'DE, adj. Belonging to the fuperficies; confid¬ 
ing in (how. 
OU'TSKIRT, f. Suburb; out-part.—It [the plague] 
appeared to be only in the outskirts of the town, and in the 
tnoft obfcure alleys. Ld. Clarendon. 
VOL. XVIII. No. 1228. 
O U V 
OU'TVILLE, a town of France, in the department of 
the Lower Seine: ten miles fouth-eaft of Cany, and eigh¬ 
teen north-north-weft of Rouen. 
OUTWARD, adj. [urpeapb, Sax.] Materially exter¬ 
nals—External; oppofed to inward: vifible. — His calls 
and invitations of us to that repentance, not only out¬ 
ward, in the miniftryof the word, but alfo inward, by the 
motions of the fpirit. Whole Duty of Man. 
Oh what may man within him hide, 
Though angel on the outward fide ! Shahefpeare. 
Extrinfic ; adventitious: 
Princes have their titles for their glories, 
An outward honour, for an inward toil. Shahefpeare. 
Foreign, not inteftine.—It was intended to raife an out- 
ward war to join with fome fedition within-doors. Hay- 
ivard. —Tending to the out-parts: 
The fire will force its outward way. 
Or, in the prifon pent, confume the prey. Dry den. 
[In theology.] Carnal; corporeal; not fpiritual.—We 
may alfo pray againft temporal puniftiments, that is, any 
outward affliction, but this with fubmiflion to God’s will, 
according to the example of Chrift. Whole Duty of Alan. 
OUTWARD, J. External form : 
I do not think 
So fair an outward, and fuch fluff within, 
Endows a man but,him. Shaltejpcare's Cymbeline. 
OU'TWARD, adv. To foreign parts; as,a Chip outward 
bound.—To the outer parts. 
OU'TWARDLY, adv. Externally: oppofed to in¬ 
wardly. —That which inwardly each man fhould be, the 
church outwardly ought to teftify. Hooker. 
Griev’d with difgrace, remaining in their fears : 
However feeming outwardly content, 
Yet th’inward touch their wounded honour bears. Daniel. 
In appearance not fincerely.—Many wicked men are often 
touched with fome inward reverence for that goodnefs 
which they cannot be perfuaded to pradtifenay, which 
they outwardly feem to defpife. Sprat. 
OU'TWARDS, adv. Towards the out-parts.—Do not 
black bodies conceive heat more eafily from light than 
thofe of other colours do, by reafon that the light falling 
on them is not refledfed outioards, but enters the bodies, 
and is often refledled and refradled within them until it 
be ftifled and loft ? Newton's Optics. 
OUVERTU'RE (Touflaint 1 ’), a black who deferves to 
live in the remembrance of pofterity, was born in a ftate 
of flavery in or about the year 1745, on the plantation of 
the count de Noe. His early life was marked by a fe- 
datenefs and patience of temper which nothing could 
ruffle or difturb, and by a peculiar benevolence towards 
children and the brute creation. At the age of twenty- 
five he attached himfelf to one negro w oman, by whom 
he had feveral children, and whom’he treated with the 
mod affedlionate tendernefs and regard. By the kindnefs 
of the bailiff of the plantation, M. Bayou de Libertas, as 
fome fay, but by his own unaflifted efforts according to 
others, he learned to read and write, and made fome pro- 
grefs in arithmetic. Thefe acquirements being noticed 
by M. Bayou, he took him from the field, and made him 
his poftilion. Touflaint was not ungrateful for his kind¬ 
nefs. When the infurreflion of the negroes broke out 
in 1791, he refufed, for fome time, to join in the revolt: 
the plantation, however was about to be ravaged by the 
infuriated blacks ; and Touflaint immediately fet about 
the means of refcuing his mafter from the impending de- 
ftruftion. He procured a paffage for him to North Ame¬ 
rica, embarking at the fame time a confiderable quantity 
of fugar to fupport him in his exile. He then joined his 
countrymen in arms; and, by poffeffingfome little know¬ 
ledge of fimples, was conftituted phyfician to the forces 
of the king under Jean Francois. After this he became 
aide-de-camp, then colonel, next brigadier-general, to 
H h which 
