v. [f. BE- pref. 2 + MOCK v.] trans. To mock at, flout; to delude mockingly. Hence Bemocked ppl. a.
1607. Shaks., Cor., I. i. 261. He will not spare to gird the GodsBemocke the modest Moone. Ibid. (1610), Temp., III. iii. 63. Or with bemockt-at-Stabs Kill the still closing waters.
1798. Coleridge, Anc. Mar., IV. xi. Her [the moons] beams bemockd the sultry main.
1870. Morris, Earthly Par., II. III. 427. Why was I then bemocked with days of bliss?