Imatges de pàgina
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Head. I'll lay my head against any good man's hat

- of Holofernes in the character of Judas compared ironically

And stick musk rofes in thy fleek smooth head
Your falt tears head

A.S. P. C. L.

Love's Lab. Loft. 1 1 150136

Ibid. 5 2 172 129

Mids. Night's Dream. 41 189 148

He means to recompense the pains you take by cutting off your heads

All's Well. 1 3 282 123

K. Jobn. 5 4 409 249

This tongue, that runs fo roundly in thy head, should run thy head from thy un-
reverend shoulders

- To save our heads by raising of a head

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-For if their heads had any intellectual armour, they could never wear such heavy
head pieces

- I'll fee if his head will stand steadier on a pole, or no

That head of thine doth not become a crown

- They took his head, and on the gates of York they set the same

Henry v. 3 7 526 224

a Henry vi. 47 596 2 27

Ibid. 5 1 600 126

3 Henry vi. 2 1 610116

- Until my misshap'd trunk, that bears this head, be round impaled with a glorious

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Not that our heads are some brown, some black, some auburn, some bald
For that good hand, thou sent'st the emperor, here are the heads of thy two noble
fons

Our head shall go bare, till merit crown it

- Beat at this gate and let thy folly in, and thy dear judgment out

That eyeless head of thine was first fram'd flesh to raise my fortunes

716 217

Titus Andronicus. 3 1 843 224

Troil. and Creff. 3 2 8732 9

Head [army.] Three times hath Henry Bolingbroke made head against my power

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Lear. 14 937 2 16

Ibid. 4 6 959 134

1 H.iv. 3 1 457 220

Ibid. 4 4 467 215

- We were enforc'd, for safety fake, to fly out of your fight, and raise this present
head

- Doing the execution and the act for which we have in head assembled them
- Making another head to fight again

Tullius Aufidius then had made new head

Headier. And am fallen out with my more headier will

Headless. And smooth my way upon their headless necks
- And help to fet a head, on headless Rome

Headlorg. Hence will I drag thee headlong by the heels

Ibid. 51 468 135

Hen. v. 2 2 515260 3 Henry vi. 2 1 610234 Coriolanus. 3 1 71917 Lear. 2 4 943250 2 Henry vi. 1 2 5742 17 Titus Andronicus. 12 833 162 2 Henry vi. 410 59926 Lear. 4 2 9542 1 Ibid. 3 2 94712

Head-lugg'd. Whose reverence the head-lugg'd bear would lick
Head-piece. He that has a house to put's head in, has a good head-piece
Head-ftail. And a head-stall of sheep's-leather

Head-ftrong. Tell these head-strong women what duty they do
husbands

- How now, my head-strong? where have you been gadding
Heady rafh. Nor heady rath provok'd with raging ire

Health shall live free and fickness freely die

Tam. of the Sbrew. 32 265 234

owe their lords and

Ibid. 5 2 276 165

Romeo and Juliet. 4 2 991116
Comedy of Errors. 51 118241

All's Well. 2 1 284 230

- Canst thou when thou command'st the beggar's knee, command the health of it

- It gives me an estate of seven year's health

Henry v. 4 1 529235 Coriolanus. 2 1713 114

-Brutus is wife, and, were he not in health, he would embrace the means to come

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-No jocund health, that Denmark drinks to day, but the great cannon to the clouds
shall tell

-For on his choice depends the safety and the health of the whole state
Healths me. To whose foul mouth no healthsome air breathes in

Heap. How prove you that, in the great heap of your knowledge

A blessed labour, my most sovereign liege-among this princely heap

Heapest. 1 hou heapest a year's age on me

Hear. We look to hear from you

-To spy if I can hear my Thisby's face

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-Lay thine ear close to the ground, and lift if thou canst hear the tread of travellers

-Say how he dy'd, for I will hear it all

Heur-Jay. Wounds by hear-fay

Hearing. Make paffionate my sense of hearing

- Sweet royalty, bestow on me the sense of hearing

1 Henry iv. 2 2 4492 19

3 Henry vi. 2 1 609 260

M. Ado Ab. Nab. 3 1 131 253

Love's Labor Left. 3 1154146

Ibid. 5 2 172/2/26

Hearing

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271

A. S. P. C. L.

Hearing improved by the want of fight

Mid. Night's Dream. 3 2186 2/35

- 'Tis a good hearing, when children are toward,-But a harsh hearing, when women

are froward

Taming of the Sbrew. 52 276,254

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Tempeft. 1 2

2134

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40124 561 12 56219 96 114 96252

702 22

Ibid. 2 2

Measure for Measure. 4 3

- I am pale at my heart to fee thine eyes so red: thou must be patient

Ibid. 4 3

In the lawful name of marrying, to give our hearts united ceremony M.W. of Wind. 46
Of his heart's meteors tilting in his face

My heart prays for him, though my tongue do curse

One whose hard heart is button'd up with steel

That I had not a hard heart

- But prays from his heart

In her bosom I'll unclasp my heart

- All hearts in love, use their own tongues

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You have a merry heart

Nature never formed a woman's heart of prouder stuff than that of Beatrice Ibid. 3 1 132 123

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- The virtue of my heart, the object and the pleasure of mine eye, is only Helena Ib. 4 1

Man's heart is not able to report what my dream was

- That left pap where heart doth hop

Ibid. 3 1 132237

Ibid. 3 2 13315

Ibid. 4 1 140 13

Ibid. 5 2 166130

Ibid. 52 173 138

Midsummer Night's Dream. 2 2 180251

Ibid. 2 3 182 14

Ibid. 3 2 185223

191 130

Ibid. 4 1

1912 19

Ibid. 5 1

195 120

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- Let my liver rather heat with wine, than my heart cool with mortifying groans

- Outbrave the heart most daring on the earth

- My confcience hanging about the neck of my heart

- I have too griev'd a heart to take a tedious leave

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All's Well. 1 1 278 150

of that fine frame, to pay this debt of love but to a brother

1 295153

Twelfth Night. 1 1 3072 16

in your praise, and then shew you the heart of my mef

I have faid too much unto a heart of stone

- He started one poor heart of mine in thee

Do't and thou hast the

one half of my heart; do't not, thou split'st thine own

I faw his heart in his face

Who could refrain, that had a heart to love, and in that heart courage to

love known

I would not have fuch a heart in my bosom for the dignity of the whole
The heart I bear shall never fagg with doubt, nor shake with fear

And their gentle hearts

-The tackle of my heart is crack'd and burnt

to fierce and bloody inclinations

My heart hath one poor string to stay it

Ibid. 1 5 312 1 38
Ibid. 3 4 324 2 13
Ibid. 4 1 327 125
337 221
Ibid. 1 2 3382 30

W.T.

make his

2

body Ibid. 5

Macbeth. 2 3 371249 13832 10

Ibid. 5 3 384 138

K. John. 5 2 409135

Ibid. 5 7 411165

by which it holds but till thy news be uttered

-You lose a thousand well disposed hearts

Ibid.5 7 41121

Richard ii. 2! 14212 37
Heart.

$4

A.S. P. C. L.

Heart. My heart is great, but it must break with filence, ere't be disburden'd with a liberal tongue

Richard ii. 2

Shew me thy humble heart, and not thy knee, whose duty is deceivable and false

- Swell'ft thou proud heart, I'll give thee scope to beat

-

Your heart is up, I know, thus high at least, although your knee be low

With hearts in their bellies no bigger than pins' heads

Each heart being fet on bloody courses, the rude scene may end

My heart bleeds inwardly, that my father is so fick

1421260

Ibid. 2 3 424262
Ibid. 3 3 4292 39

Ibid. 3 3 430141

1 Henry iv. 4 2 4652 1 2 Henry iv. 1 1 475153

Ibid. 2 2 481235

We carry not a heart with us from hence, that grows not in a fair consent with ours

But a good heart, Kate, is the fun and the moon

Your hearts I'll stamp out with my horse's heels

My hand would free her, but my heart says no

A pure unspotted heart never yet tainted with love I fend the king

A heart unfpotted is not easily daunted

Henry v.2 2 516 15
Ibid. 5 2 539225

1 Henry vi. 14 549 121

1 Hetry vi. 5 4 566 159

Ibid. 54 5672 14

2 Henry vi. 3 1584148

My heart is drown'd with grief, whose flood begins to flow within mine eyes
What stronger breaft-plate than a heart untainted

And even now my burden'd heart would break, should I not curse them

My heart for anger burns

Even at this fight, my heart is turn'd to ftone

Hath thy fiery heart so parch'd thy entrails

My furnace-burning heart

And I will speak, that so my heart may burst

Curfed be the heart, that had the heart to do it

I would to God, my heart were fint like Edward's

Ibid. 3

1585130

Ibid. 3 2 589 1 16
Ibid. 3 2 590 1 6

Ibid. 5 2 601248

3 Henry wi. 1 2 604 143

Ibid. 14 60827
Ibid. 2 I 610131

Ibid. 5 5 631 126

Richard iii. 1 2 6352 12

Ibid. 1 3 639127

You scarcely have the hearts to tell me fo, and therefore cannot have the hearts to do it

Ibid. 1 4 6422 54

We know each other's faces; for our hearts, he knows no more of mine, than 1 of yours

-

Ibid. 3 4 651254

The murderous knife was dull and blunt, 'till it was whetted on thy stone-hard heart

Richard iii. 44 66125

Ioid. 4 4 662 1 1

Send to her by the man that flew her brothers a pair of bleeding hearts
Leave behind your fon George Stanley: look your heart be firm, or else his head's
affurance is but frail

My heart is ten times lighter than my looks

A thousand hearts are great within my bosom

Cold hearts freeze allegiance in them

Your heart is cramm'd with arrogancy, fpleen and pride

Ibid. 44 664130

Ibid. 5 3 665.223

Ibid. 5 3 669125

Henry viii. 1 2 675 116
Ieut. 3 4 68514

Do my fervice to his majcity: he has my heart yet; and shall have my prayers whole
I shall have my life

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I would 'twere fomething that would fret the string, the mafter cord of his heart Ibid. 3 2 6892 6 Bear witness, all that have not hearts of iron, with what a forrow Cromwell leaves his lord

I fpeak it with a fingle heart

The counceller heart

Ilid. 3 2 692 227

Ιδιά. 5 2 699147 Cviolarus. 117042 16

Now put your fhields before your hearts, and fight with hearts more proof than thiel

His heart's his mouthr

Ioid.14 708145 d.31 72215 Ibid. 55 738257

Meafureless liar, thou haft made my heart too great for what contains it
Plucking the entrails of an offering forth, they could not find a heart within the beaft

J. Cajar. 2 2 75028
Cafar should be a beaft without a heart, if he should stay at home to day for fear id. 2 2 7502 10
Cur hearts you fee not, they are pitiful
Ibid. 3 1 753238
My heart is in the coilin there with Cafar, and I must pause till it come back to me lb. 3 2 755,253
Within a heart dearer than Plutus' mine, richer than gold

Ibid. 43 759.250

His captain's heart, which in the souffles of great fights hath burst the buckles on his

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-viy heart was to thy rudder ty'd by the strings, and thou should'st tow me after Did. 39 78727

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A. S. P. C. L.

Timon of Athens 4 2 819 1136

Heart. Yet do our hearts wear Timon's livery

But be your heart to them, as unrelenting flint to drops of rain

And be my heart an ever-burning hell

beats in this hollow prifon of my flesh

Titus Andronicus. 2 3839 143

Ibid. 3 1 843231

Ibid. 3 2 844 145

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My heart is not compact of flint, nor steel; nor can I utter all our bitter grief

When my heart as wedged with a figh would rive in twain

- of our numbers

My heart beats thicker than a feverish pulse

But even the very middle of my heart is warm'd by the reft

Troil, and Creff. 1 1858 130

Cymbeline. 1 7 899135

Take it: and hit the innocent manfion of my love, my heart: fear not: 'tis empty of all things but grief

- But his flaw'd heart (alack too weak the conflict to support) 'twixt two extremes of

paffion, joy and grief, burst smilingly

Ibid. 3 4 909258

Lear. 5 3 964 24

- O ferpent heart, hid with a flowering face

Romeo and Juliet. 3 2 984 160

- No, my heart is turn'd to ftone; I strike it, and it hurts my hand

Heart-blood. Thy heart-blood I will have for this day's work

Othello. 4 11069 127

1 Hen. vi. 13 548 15

of beauty

Troilus and Creffida. 3 1 871154

Heart-break. Better a little chiding, than a great deal of heart-break Merry W. of Wind. 5 Heart-burn'd. I never can fee him but I am heart-burn'd an hour after M. A. A. Noth. 2 - God-a-mercy! so should I be sure to be heart-burn'd

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Heart-burning. In all compliments of devoted and heart-burning heat of duty

Love's Lab. Loft. I 11501

4

Heart's-eafe. Such men as he be never at heart's ease

- O, an you will have me live, play-heart's-eafe

Julius Cæfar. 1 2 744 121 Romeo and Juliet. 45 99324

Heart-beaviness. Shall I to-morrow be at the height of heart-heaviness As You Like It. 5

Heart of loss.

Heart-forrowing peers

Heart's-table. To fit and draw his arched brows, his hawking eye, his curls, in our heart's-table

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1 278 150

- We must do fomething, and i' the heat

It is a business of fome heat

Heath. Long heath

Two Gent. of Verona. 2 4

312 2

2 Henry iv. 4 3 496 153

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- Or why upon the blasted heath you ftop our way with fuch prophetic greeting Mach. 1 3 365126

Heave. And with a great heart heave away this storm

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- I had as lief have a reed that will do me no service as a partizan I could not heave

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I cannot heave my heart into my mouth

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Begin to heave the gorge

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Heav'd thence

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- One heav'd a-high, to be huri'd down below

Richard ii. 44 660 113

Heaven. How he folicits heaven, himself best knows

O would the viands had been poifon'd, or at least those I heav'd to head

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Leaving the fear of heaven on thy left hand

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doth with us as we with torches do

Meaf. for Meas.

I

76 117

- hath my empty words

Shall we ferve heaven with less respect than we do minister to our gross selves Ibid. 2
Shewing, we would not spare heaven, as we love it, but as we stand in fear

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I'll follow thee, and make a heaven of hell

My fole earth's heaven and my heaven's claim

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If e'er the Jew her father come to heaven it will be for his gentle daughter's fake

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Heaven. Now heaven walks on earth

A. S. P. C. L. Tw. Night. 5 1 329234

- What heaven more will, that thee may furnish, and my prayers pluck down, fall on thy head

All's Well. 1 - We should have answer'd heaven boldly, not guilty; the impofition clear'd, hereditary

ours

1 278 1 19 Winter's Tale. 1 2 334237 The heavens with that we have in hand are angry and frown upon us Ibid. 3 3 346/152 Do as the heavens have done; forget your evil; with them forgive yourself Ibid. 5 1 357 158

- "Tis your counsel, my lord should to the heavens be contrary, oppose against their wills

Nor heaven peep through the blanket of the dark, to cry, hold, hold

Ibid. 5 1 358127

Macbeth. 5 367 128

Thou seest, the heavens, as troubled with man's act, threaten his bloody stage -Guard my mother's honour, and my land

Ibid. 2 4 372 143

King Jobn. 1 1 388144

- Father Cardinal I have heard you say, that we shail see and know our friends in heaven

When I shall meet him in the court of heaven I shall not know him

Ibid. 3 4 400 246

Ibid. 3 4 400/2/56

Makes me more amazed than had I seen the vaulty top of heaven, figur'd quite o'er with burning meteors

To heaven, the widow's champion and defence

And so defend thee heaven, and thy valour

in thy good cause make thee profperous

Ibid. 5 2 408 147

Ibid. 1 2 4152/60

Ibid. 1 3 416156

Ibid. 1 3 41714

-If ever I were traitor, my name be blotted from the book of life, and I from heaven banish'd

Ibid. 1 3 418120

If heaven would, and we would not heaven's offer, we refuse the proffer'd means of fuccour and redress

Ibid. 3 2 426 239

The heavens are o'er your head, I know it, uncle, and oppose not myself against their

will

As false, by heaven, as heaven itself is true

Ibid. 3 3 4282/29

Ibid. 4 1 432132

- Heaven hath a hand in these events, to whose high will we bound our calm contents

The heavens were all on fire, the earth did tremble

Let heaven kiss earth

Ibid. 5 2 436 1 13

1 Henry iv. 31 457132

2 Henry iv. 1 1 475148

- Employ the countenance and grace of heaven, as a false favourite doth his prince's

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-Hark, Tamora,-the empress of my soul, which never hopes more heaven than refts

in thee

-When heaven doth weep, doth not the earth o'erflow

Titus Andronicus. 2 3 838155 1 84327

Ibid. 3

The luftre in your eye, heaven in your cheek, pleads your fair usage Troil. and Creff. 44 880,254 The heavens still must work

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That heaven should practise stratagems upon so soft a fubject as myself
The heavens do lour upon you for fome ill

Leave her to heaven, and to those thorns that in her bosom lodge, to prick and

-And bowl the round nave down the hill of heaven, as low as to the fiends

sting her
Hamlet. 151007/2/21
Ibid. 2 2/10157.53
Heaven.

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