Source : Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
9. Denoting the agent, or person by whom, or thing by which,
anything is, or is done; by.
And told to her of [by] some. --Chaucer.
He taught in their synagogues, being glorified of
all. --Luke iv. 15.
[Jesus] being forty days tempted of the devil.
--Luke iv. 1,
2.
Note: The use of the word in this sense, as applied to
persons, is nearly obsolete.
10. Denoting relation to place or time; belonging to, or
connected with; as, men of Athens; the people of the
Middle Ages; in the days of Herod.
11. Denoting passage from one state to another; from. [Obs.]
``O miserable of happy.'' --Milton.
12. During; in the course of.
Not be seen to wink of all the day. --Shak.
My custom always of the afternoon. --Shak.
Note: Of may be used in a subjective or an objective sense.
``The love of God'' may mean, our love for God, or
God's love for us.
Note: From is the primary sense of this preposition; a sense
retained in off, the same word differently written for
distinction. But this radical sense disappears in most
of its application; as, a man of genius; a man of rare
endowments; a fossil of a red color, or of an hexagonal
figure; he lost all hope of relief; an affair of the
cabinet; he is a man of decayed fortune; what is the
price of corn? In these and similar phrases, of denotes
property or possession, or a relation of some sort
involving connection. These applications, however all
proceeded from the same primary sense. That which
proceeds from, or is produced by, a person or thing,
either has had, or still has, a close connection with
the same; and hence the word was applied to cases of
mere connection, not involving at all the idea of
separation.
{Of consequence}, of importance, value, or influence.
{Of late}, recently; in time not long past.
{Of old}, formerly; in time long past.
{Of one's self}, by one's self; without help or prompting;
spontaneously.
Why, knows not Montague, that of itself England is
safe, if true within itself? --Shak.