Home1810 Edition

LEAVEN

Volume 11 · 171 words · 1810 Edition

piece of four dough, used to ferment and render light a much larger quantity of dough or paste. See Bread, Barm, and Baking.

Leaven was strictly forbidden by the law of Moses during the seven days of the passover; and the Jews, in obedience to this law, very carefully purified their houses from all leaven as soon as the vigil of the feast began. Nothing of honey or leaven was to have place in any thing presented to the Lord, upon his altar, during this solemnity. If, during the feast, the least particle of leaven was found in their houses, they imagined the whole was polluted, for a little leaven leavens the whole lump. Leaven, in its figurative sense, signifies the bad passions of envy and malice, and rancour, which sour the temper, and extend their ferment over the social affections; whereas unleavened bread implies sincerity and truth. It is frequently used for any kind of moral contagion.

Leaves of plants. See Leaf.

Colours extracted from Lilies. See Colour-Making, No. 37.