442 
U N D 
U N D 
Not treated with any particular respect. 
Sad chance of war! now destitute of aid. 
Falls undistinguish'd by the victor spade. Pope. 
UNDISTI'NGUISHING, adj. Making no difference.— 
Undistinguishing complaisance will vitiate the taste of the 
readers. Garth. 
UNDISTO'RTED, adj. Not distorted; not perverted.—■ 
The undistorted suggestions of his own heart, these easy 
hints, will be found no fallacious directions. More. 
UNDISTRA’CTED, adj. Not perplexed by contrariety 
of thoughts or desires.—When Enoch had walked with God, 
he was so far from being tired with that lasting assiduity, that 
he admitted him to a more immediate, and more undis¬ 
tracted communion with himself. Boyle. 
UNDISTRA'CTEDLY, ado. Without disturbance from 
contrariety of sentiments.—St. Paul tells us, that there is 
difference betwixt married and single persons ; the affections 
of the latter being at liberty ,to devote themselves more 
undistract edit/ to God. Boyle. 
UNDISTRA'CTEDNESS, s. Freedom from interrup¬ 
tion by different thoughts.—The strange confusions of this 
nation disturb that calmness of mind, and undistractcdness 
of thoughts. Boyle. 
UNDIST'URBED, adj. Free from perturbation ; calm ; 
tranquil; placid. 
To our high-rais’d phantasy present 
That undisturbed song of pure content. Milton. 
Not interrupted by any hindrance or molestation. 
Nature stints our appetite, 
And craves no more than undisturb'd delight; 
Which minds, unmix’d with cares and fears, obtain; 
A soul serene, a body void of pain. Dryden. 
Not agitated.—A good conscience is a port which is land- 
lock’d on every side, where no winds can possibly invade. 
There a man may not only see his own image, but that of 
his Maker, clearly reflected from the undisturb'd and silent 
waters. Dryden. 
UNDISTU'RBEDLY, adv. Calmly; peacefully.—Our 
minds are so weak, that they have need of all the assistances 
can be procured, to lay before them undisturbedly the thread 
and coherence of any discourse. Locke. 
UNDISTU'RBEDNESS, s. State of being undisturbed. 
—Your Lordship plainly opposes heat and flame to that 
calmness and undisturbedness, with which you would have 
our addresses to God accompanied. Dr. Snape. 
UNDIVE'RTED, adj. Not amused ; not pleased.—The 
reader, however, may not be undiverted with its unaffected 
simplicity and pathos. Wakeficld. 
UNDIVl'DABLE, adj. Not separable; not susceptive 
of division—The best actors in the world for tragedy, pas¬ 
toral, seen e undividab/e, or poem unlimited. Shakspeare. 
UNDIVIDED, adj. Unbroken; whole; not parted. 
He extends through all extent; 
Spreads undivided, operates unspent. Pope. 
UNDIVI'DEDLY, adv. So as not to be parted.—Crea¬ 
tion, nature, religion, law, and policy, make them undivi- 
dedly one. Feltham. 
UNDIVO'RCED, adj. Not divorced; not separated; 
not parted. 
These died together. 
Happy in ruin, undivorc'd by death. Young. 
UNDIVU'LGED, adj. Secret; not promulgated. 
Let the great gods 
Find out their enemies now. Tremble, thou wretch, 
That hast within thee undivu/ged crimes. 
Unwhipp’d of justice. Shakspeare. 
To UNDO, v. a. preterite undid; participle passive un¬ 
done. To ruin; to bring to destruction.—As this immo¬ 
derate favour of the multitude did him no good, so will it 
undo so many as shall trust unto it. Hayward. 
When I behold the charming maid, 
I’m ten times more undone; while hope and fear. 
With variety of pain distract me. Addison. 
To loose; to open what is shut or fastened; to unravel. 
We implore thy powerful hand, 
To undo the charmed band 
Of true virgin here distress’d. Milton. 
To change any thing done to its former state; to recall, 
or annul any action. 
It was a torment 
To lay upon the damn’d, which Sycorax 
Could not again undo. 
When in time the martial maid 
Found out the trick that Venus play’d, 
She shakes her helm ; she knits her brows, 
And, fir’d with indignation, vows, 
To-morrow ere the setting sun, 
She’d all undo, that she had done. 
UNDO'ER, s. One who ruins or brings to destruction. 
Obsolete. 
UNDO'ING, adj. Ruining; destructive.—The great and 
undoing mischief which befalls men, is by their being mis¬ 
represented. South. 
UNDO'ING, s. Ruin; destruction; fatal mischief.— 
False lustre could dazzle my poor daughter to her undoing. 
Addison. 
UNDONE, adj. Not done; not performed. 
Do you smell a fault ? 
I cannot wish the fault undone, the 
Issue of it being so proper. Shakspeare. 
Ruined; brought to destruction. 
Already is the w'ork begun ; 
And w e rest all undone, till all be done. Daniel. 
UNDO'UBTED, adj. Indubitable; indisputable; un¬ 
questionable. 
Made the world tremble with a num’rous host, 
And of undoubted victory did boast. Waller. 
UNDOUBTEDLY, adv. Indubitably ; without question; 
without doubt. 
This cardinal, undoubtedly 
Was fashion’d to much honour. Shakspeare. 
UNDO'UBTFUL, adj. Not doubtful; plain; evident.— 
His fact—came not to an undoubtful proof. Shakspeare. 
UNDO'UBTING, adj. Admitting no doubt.—They to 
whom all this is revealed, and received with an undoubting 
faith, if they do not presently set about so easy and so happy 
a task, must acknowledge themselves in the number of the 
blind. Hammond. 
UNDRA'VVN, adj. Not pulled by any external force. 
Forth rush’d 
The chariot of paternal deity undrawn. 
Flashing thick flames, wheel within wheel; 
Itself instinct with spirit, but convoy'd 
By four cherubic shapes. Milton. 
Not pourtrayed. 
The death-bed of the just is yet undrawn 
By mortal hand. Young. 
UNDRE'ADED, adj. Ndt feared. 
Better far, 
Than still at hell’s dark threshold to have sat watch, 
Unnam’d, undreaded, and thyself half starv’d. Milton. 
UNDRE'AMED, adj. Not thought on. 
A course more promising. 
Than a wild dedication of yourselves 
To unpath’d waters, undream'd shores; most certain 
To miseries enough. Shakspeare. 
To UNDRE'SS, v. a. To divest of clothes; to strip.-— 
Undress you, and come now to bed. Shakspeare. —To 
divest of ornaments, or the attire of ostentation. 
Undress'd at evening when she found 
Shakspeare. 
Swift: 
Their 
