1. vestryman — council member of the local parish
Caught in flagrante delicto, as it were, Humber cooly placed the rubber balls in his trouser pockets and wished the vestrymen a good day.
2. ghyll — [UK] ravine, gully
Few go to Piers Ghyll now for the hiking, though once this was an important stop in the ‘English Switzerland’.
3. mereological — of or related to the study of relations between the whole and its component parts
This sort of mereological analysis can be useful in limited cases, as when the dissected parts reveal the paucity of ideas which gave rise to a movement such as that we have been considering.
4. bromide — chemical compound based upon bromine; medicament from such a compound, esp. lithium bromide, formerly used as antidepressant at beginning of 20th C.; platitude; dullard
But these are just the bromides of our modern age, on everyone’s lips and meaning almost nothing.
5. lenify — to soothe; to soften
Thus a kind word gently offered may lenify the searing pain of loss and mollify the injured heart.
6. foreland — headland, promontory; land adjacent to mountains where material has been deposited from the peaks by action of plate tectonics
His first major contract was for the construction of warning lights to be placed upon the foreland of the Presompter Peninsula, twenty miles south of Barnhumble.
7. chouse — [obsolete] to cheat, to swindle
It’s all very well and good to say that the whole rigamarole was jolly fun, but the fact remains that I’ve been choused out of two horses, a rooster, and a pot of my best marmalade.
8. scammony — bindweed of eastern Mediterranean; resin made from its root, used as a purgative
Though of course scammony can be dangerous in high doses, it is singularly effective against roundworm, exhibiting anthelmintic powers against tapeworm as well.
9. rorqual — baleen whale of the largest taxonomic family
A stately rorqual—a blue whale—swam unconcernedly next to the ice shoals, unaffected by the freezing water that had nearly ended the life of our clumsy cabin boy.
10. haviour (also haveour) — [obsolete] countenance, demeanor
Show not the haviour of your desperate need, but resolve right well to unconcerned appear.
11. venifice — [obsolete] poisoning
Because the murder was attempted by venefice it was felt to be particularly heinous.
Bonus Vocabulary
(Latin)
deus otiosus — deity which no longer interacts at all with humans after once creating the world and starting it in motion
But Staney’s argument is merely the same idea of a deus otiosus who has left the field for other, lesser divinities—’divinities’ which may, as he expresses it, merely be human-created facets of hopes for the divine, rather than any overarching power itself.