v. [f. BE- pref. 2 + MOCK v.] trans. To mock at, flout; to delude mockingly. Hence Bemocked ppl. a.

1

1607.  Shaks., Cor., I. i. 261. He will not spare to gird the Gods—Bemocke the modest Moone. Ibid. (1610), Temp., III. iii. 63. Or with bemockt-at-Stabs Kill the still closing waters.

2

1798.  Coleridge, Anc. Mar., IV. xi. Her [the moon’s] beams bemock’d the sultry main.

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1870.  Morris, Earthly Par., II. III. 427. Why was I then bemocked with days of bliss?

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