blow to swell:
“ blown Jack,”
1 HENRY IV., iv. 2. 47
;
“the blown tide”
CORIOLANUS, v. 4. 46
; (wrongly explained “the tide driven by the wind
),”
“blown ambition,”
KING LEAR, iv. 4. 27
;
“a vent of blood, and something blown,”
ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA, v. 2.
346
;
“our blown sails,”
PERICLES, v. 1. 253
;
“how imagination blows him,”
TWELFTH NIGHT, ii. 5. 40
;
“This blows my heart,”
ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA, iv. 6.
34.

