The century dictionary and cyclopedia, a work of universal reference in all departments of knowledge with a new atlas of the world . re so hardy as they came close up tothem, notwithstanding their pieces. Winthrop, Hist. New England, I. not so hardy, scullion, as to slayOne nobler thau thyself. Tennyson, Gareth and Lynette. 2. Requiring or imparting courage, vigor, andendurance; that must be done boldly or ener-getically: as, a hardy exploit; hardy occupa-tions. He turned with impatience from his literary tutors tomilitary exercises and the hardiest sports. Motley, Dutch Republic, III.


The century dictionary and cyclopedia, a work of universal reference in all departments of knowledge with a new atlas of the world . re so hardy as they came close up tothem, notwithstanding their pieces. Winthrop, Hist. New England, I. not so hardy, scullion, as to slayOne nobler thau thyself. Tennyson, Gareth and Lynette. 2. Requiring or imparting courage, vigor, andendurance; that must be done boldly or ener-getically: as, a hardy exploit; hardy occupa-tions. He turned with impatience from his literary tutors tomilitary exercises and the hardiest sports. Motley, Dutch Republic, III. 368. 3. Strong: enduring; capable of resisting fa-tigue, liardship, or exposure: as, a hardy peas-ant ; a lianly plant. Lone flower, hemmed in with snows and white as hardier far. Wordmvrth, Sonnets, ii. 10. And every hardy plant could bearbocll Katrines keen and searching air. .^eolt, L. of the L., i. 26. The emigrants children have grown up. the hardy off-spring of the new clime. Eoeretl, Orations, I. Syn. 1. stout-hearted, courageous, valiant, daring. Seenote under hardihood.—Z. Hale, robust, sturdy, Heroes are always drawn bearing sorrows, struggling Ijardy^ (luivdi), r. i.; pret. and pp. Iiardicd, adversities, undergoing all kinds oi har,lshi,,s :m,\ /,,.,,,,,•„,, r< hardii, a.^ To become hardy, dar-havnu in the service of mankind a kind of appetite to ;.; .• L . ? .^-J - • ^. . , .1 „.....__ v-„ .,,.) nii(T ,,,• tll1t1;W*inilS. I I dilficulties and dangers. Spectator, } lug, or audacious. [ American Varying Hare (.Lepiis americantts). United States harbor several very large, long-eared, long-limbed hares, such as h. cavipestris (which whitens inwinter), L, callotis, and others, commonly known as jack-rabUts or jaclcass-rabbits. (See cut under jaek-rabliit.)Some hares aie partly aquatic, as L. atiualiiits of the south-ern Inited States. The hare is proverbial for its timidityandfieetness and for its instinctiv


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