a kind of prison, for the nightly watch in London to secure disorderly persons, till they can be carried before a magistrate.
in a ship, the uppermost room, or cabin, on the stern of a ship, where the master lies.
ROUNDELAY, a kind of ancient poem thus termed, according to Menage, from its form, because it turns back again to the first verse, and thus goes round. This poem is little known among us, but is very common among the French, who call it rondeau. It consists commonly of thirteen verses, eight whereof are in one rhyme, and five in another. It is divided into couplets, at the end of the second and third whereof the beginning of the rondeau is repeated, and that if possible in an equivocal or puzzling sense.