VISITATION. c 1430 Lvoa Min. Potms (E.E.T.S.)79 Whan Abaclcuk.. Broughle potage in to Babyloun, . . Affter figure this mater to convej'e. How almesse-dede and vysylacyoun Grctly avaylleth to sowlys whan they deye. 1474 Caxton Cheat llu V. (1883) IM And as to them that ben seke contynuell \i-iitacion of them. 1S4»-S (Mar.) Bk. Com. Prayer, Offices 18 The Order for the visitacion of the sicke. 1583 in Wedrmi Sx. Afisc. (1844) 460 As tuitchin? the Visitatioun of the seik, he declairit he was . . glad to wissie the puirest creatour. 1777 Bkand Pe>*. AnHg. 379 I" I'erforining. the Service appropriated to the Visitation of the Sick with one of these Men (who died a few Days after). 179S P^i-ey C/ert?""- Cum/. Pref., The offices of Public and Private Baptism, though no ways relating to the visitation of the Sick, are retained. i86a Ckamiers's EncvcL III. 180 The Church of Enjland.. retains private confession in the rubric for visitation of the sick. i8S« Kington Oliphant Neiu Englisk I. 160 An office for ihe Visitation of the sick, which dates from about 139a b. The action of pastoral visiting on the part ot a clergyman. iS46V
VISITED. 255 VISITOR. 185J ^MEDLEY L. Arumiel xxxvi. 303 A visite^ of light blue^/oc/ silk. 1864 Daily Til. x July, She wore a white dress with a black >ilk vi^^ite, and a white bonnet. 1885 Fall Mall G. 11 May 4/2 We have a ' visite ' without arms or any proper accommodation for those useful iippeiidages. 2. Short forCAiiTE-DE-visiTE, in attrib. use. 1891 Anthony's Photo^. Bull. IV. 302 A stereoscope camera which can be used to maKe..24 visite negatives. Visited (vi-zited), ///. a. Also 6 vysset, vysyted. [f. Visit vS\ + 1. Afflicted with illness ; attacked by plague or other epidemic, Obs. 1537 Notiinzham Rec. Ml. 375 This towne, the wheche dothe kepe the vysset folke at Bradmar. 1553 S. Cabot Ordinances in Hakluyt Voy. (1589) 261 The sicke, diseased, weake, and visited person within boord to be,, comforted and holpeii. 1575 Nottingham Rec. (i88g) IV. 159 Payd more for the charges of the vysyted woman at Hye Crosse xxiij d. 1604 F. Herring Mod. Defence B 2, He will not rush rashly into euery infected and visited house. 1640 SoMNER Antiq, Canterb. 16 Convenient Pesthouses, and Receptacles for the poore visited people of the City. 171a De Foe /*/«^tf (i80) 33 If any person visited do fortune . . to come . . from a place infected to an y other place. 2. That is the object of a visit or visits. O. Walker Educ. n. i. 223 In receiving visits,, the 167J GeniTemen meet them at the bottom. It is alwaies observed that the visited^ Gentlemen attend one degree at least further then the Patron. 1754 World No. 62 Pg The Visited in these cases., have invented on their parts several curious hints towards shortning the length of a Visitation. 1873 Smilfis Huguenots France \\\. i. {1881) 383 Dauphiny is one uf the least visited of ail the provinces of France. Visitee (vizitr)* [f- Visit z'. + -ee.] The I>erson to whom a visit is paid. i8as Ne7v Monthly Mag. XVI. 181 A very necessary con* venance interposed between visitor and visitee in those numerous calls of etiquette, 184a Mrs. Carlvle Lett, (1883) I. 174 To suit the more fashionable hours of our visitees. \fSi6Cornh. Mag. July 39, I should think that angels (and their visitees) were very lucky. Visiter (vizitai). Now rare. Also 6 vycytar. [f. Visit v-v -er.] 1. = Visitor 2 a and 2 b. 1383 Wyclif 3 Mace. iii. 39 He that in heuens hath dwellyng, is visiter and helper of that place. 1608 Willet Hexapla Exoil. 822 He is also a visiter and punisher of sinne vpon the wicked. 2. ^ Visitor i. 161S Brerewood /,a«^. 4- ^^//^. 185 These Jacobites.. be esteemed to make about 160000 families, or rather 50000, as Leonard the bishop of Sidon, the popes visiter in thosfc parts hath recorded. 1691 Baxter Nat. Ch. v. 21 The Scots had at first a General visiter, that was really a General Bishop. 1830 Di- Quincey Bentley Wks. 1863 VI, 75 Her Majesty was the true visiter of Trinity College. 3. = Visitor 3. 1591 Greene Conny Catch, iii. 30 Country Gentlemen haue many visiters both with neere dwelling neighbours, and frccnds that iourney from farre. 1638 Junius Paint. Ancients 13 We doe moreover shorten our own lime, fooling the greatest part of our best houres away among a company of pratlin^ visiters. 1668 Lady Chaworth in 12//* Rep. Hist. M'yS. Comm. App. V. 10 She yesterday.. kept her bed yet admitted visiters in the afternoone. 1717 Swift What passed in LomL Wks. 1755 III. 1. 184 It was observed too, that he had few visirers that day. X7 me chastyst fore my lenyng, I t^onkc my god my grace treuly Of his gracious vesityng. 1645 Caryl Expos. Job I.,63.7 We may apply it. .either to Gods visiting of us in afflictions, or in mercies. 2. On the part of persons, in various senses of the verb; esp. the action of calling upon others in a social or friendly way, c 1374 Chaucer Troylus \\. 41 Yn some lond were al the game yshcnt, I f that men ferd with love as men do here, . . In visityng, in forme, or scying here sawis. 1377 Langl. P% PL B. II, 176 Denes and suddenes, drawe ^ow togideres,.. To here bischopes aboute, abrode in visytynge. c t^fio Antecrist in Todd Three Treat. Wycli/{iZ$i) 140 J>ei discouinforten treu men & putten hem in prison for visityngof cristen men. 1497 Ace. Ld. High Treat. Scot. I. 344 Item, toane cowpar for mending and visiting of thirpipis,.,viijd. 1530 Palsgk. 285/1 Vysityng, uisitance, uisitation. 1565 Cooper Thesaurus, Visitatio, a visitynge, or commyng to see.^ 1617 MoRVsoN (tin. \. 234 Our Consuls burning with desire of returning homeward, appointed the next day for the visiting of tiie Sepulciier. 1658 Whole Duty Man xvi. 137 Visiting the sick and imprisoned ; by which visiting is meant.. so coming as to comfort and relieve them, 17*7 Swift To Veiy Yng. Lady Wks. 1755 II. n. 43, 1 hope your husband will interpose his authority to limit you in the trade of visiting. 1749 Fielding Tom Jones xiii. iv, Mr?;. Fitzpatrick,. .though it was a full hour earlier than the decent time of visiting, received him very civilly. 1806 H. K. White Let. 6 Jan., Visiting and gayety are very well by way of change, but there is no enjoyment so lasting as thnt of one's own family. iSao Hyron Blues 11. 8 What with driving and visiting, dancing and dining. 1890 .SV«H£^f Gossip XXVI. 68/2 It requires great care before any one can assert that a plant has disappeared, and some years' visiting of the station. 1911 Act i 3 Mrs. Hemans Siege 0/ Valencia iv. (1823) 160, 1 have swept o'er the mountains of your land, Leaving my traces, as the visitings Of a i8s» Moir Hymn Night Wind Poet. Rtorni-s, upon them I Wks. (1852) II. 379 But not alone to inland solitudes, ..Are circumscribed thy visitings. b. Of inlluences affecting the mintl, c 1449 Pfxock Repr. i. xvii, 96 Thei mowe be verrified in nianye othere wisis and for manye other visitingis, than ben the visitingis and the ^iftis of Kunnyng. 1605 Shaks. Macb. I. V. 46 Stop vp th'accesse and passage to Remorse, That no compunctious visitings of Nature Shake my fell purpose. 1807 Wordsw, White Doe i. 332 A Spirit, . . In soft and breeze-like visitings, Has touched thee. 1834J.H.NEWviKH Far. Serm. I.ix. 141 Let not those visitings pass away. 1836 Ibid. III. i. 6 They cannot be * as the heathen ' : they are pursued with gracious visitings, as Jonah when he fled away. 1867 Parkman Jesuits N. A mer.\\\. (1875) 81 Some of them seemed to have visitings of real compassion. 4. atlrib.y as visiting acqtutinlance^ dress y rela- lions, terms f way ; f visiting-bell, ? a bell used in visiting a sick person ; visiting-book, a book containing tlie names of persons to be visited; visiting-card, a small card bearing a person's name, to be left or presented on paying a visit ; f visiting-day, a day set apart for receiving visitors ; an at-home day; visiting-list, a list of persons to be visited ; visiting-society, a society formed for the purpose of visiting the poor or sick ; f visiting-ticket, a visiting-card. 1775 Sheridan Rivals iv. i, But ttiey are the last people I should choose to have a "visiting acquaintance with. 1808 Scott Marm. 11. xix. note^ His [St, Cuthbert's] carrying on a visiting acquaintance with the Abbess of Coldingham. 1559-3 Inv. Ch. Goods, Staffs, in Ann. Lichfield (1863) IV. 41 It(e]ni a'vesetingbell, and a peare of sensors of brasse. x8i8 Lady Morgan Autobiog. (iS.sg) 157 AH my great and small names in my old French *visiting-book. 18^ Thackeray Van. Fair Ix, Before long Emmy had a visiting- book, and was driving about regularly in a carriage, calling upon tetc]. 178a Miss Burni:y Cctr/Y/Vi i. iii, Why, a ticket [for an assembly] is only a *visiting card with a name upon it. i8ao Lady Gkanvilt.e Lett. (1894) I. 158 The Duke of Beaufort's pocket was picked of. . his vbiiingcards, 1859 All Year Round No. 30. 79 People are photographed on their visiting cards. 1899 Daily Ne^vs 26 Jan. 5/3 The New Year's visiting-card . . is one of the survivals of old-fashioned French politeness. 1709STEELE Tatlerlio.Zo P3, I had the Misfortune to drop mat my Lady Haughty's upon her *Visiting-Day. 1717 Prior Dove ix, With one great Pea! They rap the Door, Like Footmen on a Visiting- Day. 1768 (^/V/i-), The Visiting Day: a Novel. jZ^ Habits Gd. Society iv. (new ed.) 177 Shawls,, .belong rather to the carriage or "visiting dress. 1815 Lady Granvillk Lett. (1894) I. 368 Sitting in judgment over a *visiting list. 1870 Miss Brii>gman R.Lynne IL iii. 66 Who woulahave been unexceptionable wives as regarded their dress and their visiting'list. 1884 Yates Recoil. L 279 '"Visiting relations had, in the mean time, been established between us and the Dickens family. 1844 [W. Harness] {title), 'Visiting Societies and Lay Readers. 1876 Lowell Among my Bks. Scr. 11. 301 No one had stood on these *visiting terms with heaven. 1770 Cumberland West Indiani. vi, <strong>Here</strong>, give me your direction ; write it upon the back of this *visiting ticket—Have you a pencil? 1824 Miss L. M. Hawkins Mem, II. 253 Finding the visiting-ticket of Mr. Harris on his return home one morning. x8^ Thackeray Virgin. Ixxxiii, A gigantic footman .. delivered their ladyships' visiting tickets at our door. 1779 T. Hutchinson Diary 26 Feb., Called on Mrs. Burnet and Colonel Lcland—which is doing a great deal for me in the "visiting way. Visiting (vi-zitii)),///. a, [f. Visit v."] 1. That visits ; that pays visits or is engaged in visiting. 1606 Shaks. Ant. ^ CI. iv, xv. 68 There is nothing left remarkeablc Beneath the visiting Moone. ijpio Steele TatlerNo. 151 P 2 The Memory of an old Visiting-Lady is so filled with Gloves, Silks, and Ribands. 1807 J. Harriott Struggles through Life II. 41 Should any visiting company wish to see the infant. . I have known the child brought to the door of the apartment. 1859 Lever Davenport Dunn iii, To think you're a visiting governess in an Aldermans' family. 1895 Daily News 26 Oct. 3/1 None of the visiting teams were on the winning side, b. Visiting ant (see quots.). 1855 Orrs Circ. Sci., Org. Nat, II. 394 One of these specie:^, the Aiia cephaiotes, which inhabits the West Indies, is there known as the Visiting Ant. c 188a Casseil's Nat. Hist. V. 382 The Driver Ants, or Visiting Ants, of Wer.t Africa, generally referred to the species Anomma arcius. 1899 Mary Kingsley W, African .Stud. i. 27 ' These ants are sometimes also called visiting ants', from their habit of calling in quantities at inconvenient hours on humanity. 2. That visits officially for the purpose of inspection or examination. 1713 Gibson Codex xlii. viii. 1009/1 In the Council of Laodicea, ann. 360, it was Ordained, That no Bishops should be placed in Country Villages, but only.. Itinerant or Visiting Presbyters. i8oa James Milit. Dict.j Visiting Officer^ he whose duty it is to visit the guards, barracks, messes, hospital, etc. 18x8 Sir S. Romilly in Pari. Debates xo That the royal prerogative should be interposed., between them and the visiting magistrates. 182a Syd. Smith Prisons Wks. 1859 I. 361 Are visiting justices to doom such a prisoner to bread and water? 1868 ititle\ The Visiting Justices and the Troublesome Priest. Vl'Sitment. nonce-wd. [f. Visit z/.-f -ment.] A visit or visitation. 1754 World No. 62 p 9, I may very shortly send you a few necessary remarks upon each of these three Visitment?. Visitor (vi-zitoi). Also 5 visitur, -cure, 6-7 visitour (6 Sc. vesit-, veaatour). [a. AF. visitour (Gower), = OF. visileor, visitturi^. visiteur)^ f. visiter X.O visit.] 1. One who visits officially for the purpose of inspection or supervision, in order to prevent or remove abuses or irregularities ; a. An ecclesiastic, or a lay commissioner, appointed to visit religious establishments, churches, etc., for this end, either at re^nlar intervals or on special occasions, 1426 LvDG. De Guil. Filgr. 23985 Our noble Visitour, Which doth his peyne and his labour to looke for lucre and fals guerdoun. cx^oAlph. 7"«/(.S272 | e Abbott, .oppyniie in J>e chapitr..putt forth all J>ies irispas of Yis yong man, when jjer visitur was ^er. 1483 Cath, Angl. 402/2 A Visitoure, refi}rmator proprie inreligione^visitator. « 1513 Fabvan Chron. vii. 416 The maister of j« 'lemplers, with an other great ruler of the sayd ordre, which was nan;ed visitour of the same. 1550 Crowley Ep gr, jag 'Ihese visitours found many stout priestes, but chieflye one That had sondrye benefices. 1585 Holit:shed's Chron. II. Scotl. 440/1 After they had discharged bishops, they agreed to haue superintendents, commissioners, and vir.itors. 1628 Coke On Lift. 96 Where a speciall Visitor is appointed vpon the foundation, the complaint must be made to that Visitor. 1676 Decge Parson's Counsellor 11. xv. 201 The Clergy and Religious Houses came to this composition, every one to pay such a proportion to their visitors to be freed of that great oppression. 1721 in Cath. Rec. Soc. Publ. VIII. 305 Whatever the Visitor ordains, the Mother Abbesse and all her Religious shall receive and execute with respect and obedience. 1731 Neal Hist. Punt. I. 18 The management of which, was committed to the Lord Cromwcl with the title of Visitor General, 1788 Gibbon Decl.
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VACANT NichalHs altar was than yaka
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