Reproof. In the reproof of this lies the jeft A. S. P. C. L. 1 Henry iv. Thofe enemies of Timon's and mine own, whom you yourselves shall fet out fort reproof, fall, and no more Reprove. 'Tis fo, I cannot reprove it Timon of Athens. 5 Reprovable. A provoking merit, set a-work by a reprovable badness in himself Reju ation. Of very reverent reputation Slender reputation You may conceal her, (as beft befits her wounded reputation) 1161 59 26155 1 Henry vi. 41560213 139156 294 2 28 Turn then my freshest reputation to a favour, that may strike the dullest nostril W. T. 1 2 - The purest treasure mortal times afford is-fpotlefs reputation, that away, men are but gilded loom or painted clay Wherein thou lieft in reputation fick But answer in the effect of your reputation, and fatisfy the poor woman I have offended reputation Seeing his reputation touch'd to death, he did oppofe his foe - I have lost the immortal part, sir, of myself, and what remains is tation, lago, my reputation Richard ii. 1 1 415|||40 Ibid. 2420237 2 Henry iv. 2 1 480235 Ant. and Cleop.39 787151 Timon of Athens. 3 5 816158 bestial.-My repu Othello. 2 3 10571 53 - is an idle and most false imposition; oft got without merit, and lost without deferving Ibid. 2 3 105:58 Repute. In my conscience do repute his grace the rightful heir to England's royal feat Reputing. Yet, by reputing of his high defcent Requet. 'Tis in request, I can tell you 2 Henry vi. 5 1 Ibid. 31 Winter's Tale. 4 3 At your request, my father will grant precious things, as trifles Or came it by request, and such fair queftion as foul to foul affordeth 600260 583248 3522 5 Ibid. 5 2 359|2|5r Coriolanus. 4 3 727251 Tr. Cr. 2 3 8701 23 Othello. 1310481 26 Hamlet. 510352 55 Require. He will require them, as if he did contemn what he requested should be in them Requiring. Anfwer his requiring with a plausible obedience You do fo grow in my requital, as nothing can unroot you Good people, bring a rescue or two.-Thou wo't, wo't thou Refemblance. What likelihood is in that? not a refemblance, but a certainty Referable as much as an apple doth an oyster, and all one Eefembled. Had he not resembled my father as he flept, I had done't Refervation. And that he will'd me in heedfulleft refervation to bestow them All's W.1| 3| – I most unfeignedly befeech your lordship to makesome refervation of your wrongs Ib. 2 288 3 Refign. He bids you then refign your crown and kingdom Henry V. 2 45191 28 Reff. I fee a woman may be inade a fool, if she had not spirit to resist T. of the Shr. 3 2 266244 Rejelves. How yet refolves the governor of the town Henry v. 3 3 521 243 3 Henry vi. 3 2 617213 Winter's Tale. 5 3 362149 a dew Ham. 1 21002245 3 Henry vi. 2 2 612224 Thid. 5 5 630 241 Julius Cafar. 3 753156 May it please your highness to refolve me now yourself for more amazement - O, that this too too folid Aefh would melt, thaw, and resolve itself into Refelo'd. I am refolv'd that Clifford's manhood lies upon his tongue Ah, that thy father had been fo refolv'd - And be refolv'd how Cæfar hath deferv'd to lie in death Left refolution drop out of mine eyes in tender womanish tears I should be fick, but that my resolution helps me I would unftate myself to be in a due refolution - Do thou but call my resolution wife, and with this knife I'll help it presently Romeo and Juliet.'4 1990 41 -Thus the native hue of refolution is fickly'd o'er with the pale caft of thought Refort Timon of Athens Refort. Join with me to forbid him her refort I would have daff'd all other refpects AS P. C.L. 42/1 Two Gent. of Verona. You have too much refpect upon the world, they lose it that do buy it with much care Merchant of Venice |1| 1| 198| - And therefore lost that title of refpect which the proud foul ne'er pays but to the proud 1 Henry v.1 1475 For the gain propos'd choak'd the respect of likely peril fear'd Thou art a fellow of a good refpect He doth deny him, in respect of his, what charitable men afford to beggars You know me dutiful; therefore, dear fir, let me not fhame refpect of thrift Refpected. First, an it pleafe you, the house is a respected houfe, next this is a refpected | fellow, and his mistress a refpected woman Refpective. Though not for me, yet for your vehement oaths, you fhould have been respective -lenity Refpectively. You are very respectively welcome, fir, Refpice finem. Meaf. for Meaf 2 1 Refpite. This, this All-fouls' day to my fearful foul, is the determined reipite of my wrongs This refpite fhook the bofom of my comfcience Refponfive. Very refponfive to the hilts Reft as wretches have o'ernight that wait for execution in the morn I have fet up my reft to run away, fo I will not reft 'till I have fome ground M. cf. 2 What I can do, can do no hurt to try, fince you fet up your reft 'gainst remedy A.W - 1 molt jocund, apt, and willingly to do you reft, a thousand deaths would die 2841 King John - Here let us reft, if this rebellious earth have any refting for her true king's queen' Left reft and lying ftill, might make them look too near into my ftate Reftoration, hang thy medicine on my lips Refiorative. I will kifs thy lips; haply, fome poifon yet doth hang on me die with a restorative Rom, and Jul.45 992 Mer. of Venice.1| 3| Othello. 131047150 them, to make Reftrained. To put metal in reftrained means to make a false one Otbella 500 649 962/237 815 246 Retires. And thou haft talk'd of fallies and retires; of trenches, tents -Ne'er may he live to fee a fun-fhine day, that cries-Retire, when him flay - He that retires, I'll take him for a Volce, and he shall feel mine edge A. S. P. C. L. 1 Henry iv. 12 31 45012152 Warwick bids 3 Henry vi. 21| 611|1|21| Coriolanus. 4 708151 - Not fate, obedience, nor the hand of Mars beckoning with fiery truncheon my retire Troilus and Creffida. 5 "Ibid. 5 4 -Thou doft mifcall retire: I do not fly Retirement. A comfort of retirement lives in this - 1 befeech your majesty, make up, left your retirement do amaze your friends Retort. And they retort that heat again 887259 888 239 Richard ii. 22 423133 1 Henry iv. 4 1 464 47 Ibid. 5 4 4702 20 Troilus and Creff 3 3 875 226 4 248 2 20 RetraЯ. And had as ample power as I have will, Paris should ne'er retract what he hath done 1 Let us make an honourable retreat, though not with bag and baggage, yet with fcrip and ferippage Retrograde. It is most retrograde to our defire Return. Let the trumpets found while we return these dukes what we - I'll pawn my victories, all my honours to you, upon his good returns Revels. I delight in masks and revels fometimes altogether 236114 210022 26 3417153 5 8171 8 3309230 Henry v.1 2 513141 Richard iii. 4 4 6612 6 Julius Cæfar. 2 2 751132 Antony and Cleop.14 771228 decree ― This heavy-headed revel, east and weft, makes us traduc'd, and tax'd of other nations -Though my revenges were high bent upon him, and watch'd the time to fhoot A.W.S3 3022 20 -His revenges mult in that be made more bitter Taming of the Shrew. 2 1260 146 - Let's make us med'cines of our great revenge, to cure this deadly grief - burn in them - Where revenge did paint the fearful difference of incenfed kings -Till I have fet a glory on this hand, by giving it the worship of revenge - Farewel my blood, which if to day thou shed, lament we may, but not dead I take thy groat, in earnest of revenge When merchant-like I fell revenge broke be my fword - Think therefore on revenge, and ceafe to weep 31 revenge thee - And you both vow'd revenge on him, his fons, his favourites, and his friends 3 H. vi. They feek revenge, and therefore will not yield - Tears, then, for babes; blows and revenge for me - Withhold revenge, dear God! 'tis not my fault I fpeak this in hunger for bread, not in thirst for revenge And vows revenge as fpacious, as between the youngest and oldest thing - Then which way fhall I find Revenge's cave Ibid. 1 Tbid. 2 2 6112 2 Coriolanus.1 I 7032 2 731156 Ibid. 2 734 23 Timon of Athens. 3 5 816222 But Ploto fends you word, if you will have revenge from hell, you shall -I am Revenge; fent from the infernal kingdom, to ease the gnawing vulture of thy mind Ibid. 5 2852123 -Tell him, Revenge is come to join with him, and work confufion on his enemies Troilus and Creff 2 2 867 31 Hope of revenge fhall hide our inward woe -The revenges we are bound to take upon your traiterous father, are not fit for your beholding Lear. -I would, revenges, that poffible ftrength might meet, would feek us through, and put us to our answer -hould have no bounds 7 951158 A.S. P. C. I.. Ibid. 21077116 Revenge. Had all his hairs been lives, my great revenge had stomach for them all Orb45 2,1076,220 Revengeful. You know his nature, that he's revengeful - Barely in title, not in revenue Cymbeline. goo 157 673120 348:240 421 458 The common curfe of mankind, folly and ignorance, be thine in great revenue Troilus and Cr2 3 868 249 Reverberate. Haloo thy name to the reverberate hills Twelfth Nights 5 313110 Reverbs. Nor are thofe empty-hearted, whofe low found reverbs no hollowness Lear. I 935 Reverence. Knavery cannot, fure, pride himself in such reverence M. Ado About Noth. 2|| 3139142 That I am forced to lay my reverence by Ibid. 511412/41 M. of Venice 2 2 203242 Richard 144193 Ibid. 3 2 4281|13 Saving your worship's reverence What reverence he did throw away on flaves Cover your heads, and mock not flesh and blood with folemn reverence - Our arms, in ftrength of malice, and our hearts of brothers temper do in, with all kind love, good thoughts and reverence receive you Julius Cefar 3 1 753245 Cymbeline. 4 2 917143 Yet reverence (that angel of the world) doth make distinction of place 'twixt high and low -Let this kifs repair thofe violent harms, that my two fifters have in thy reverence made Lear 47965 M. Ado About Noth. 5 4 146250 Comedy of Errors.5 111659 1 Henry vi. 3 15554 1 Ibid. 5 4 366|44 7899227 Revives. We must away; our waggon is prepar'd, and time revives us Lead me to the revolts of England here Cymbeline All's Well.44 300143 fingers ends of King John 34 4013: Ibid. 440939 Richard iii.4 4 664|1||| - If I revolt, off goes young George's head; the fear of that withholds my prefent aid Should all defpair, that have revolted wives, the tenth of mankind would hang themfelves - To ranfom home revolted Mortimer Winter's Tale.12 336128 1 Henry 13 446|1|10| - Mortimer! he never did fall off, my fovereign liege, but by the chance of war Ibid. 3 4461|11 Revolue. If this fall into thy hand, revolve Save fuch as do revolve and ruminate himself And you may then revolve what tales I have told you Twelfth Night.2 5 319114 Troil, and Creff23 8743 Cymbeline 3908|1|34 Antony and Cleop|1| 2769|2|32| Henry v. 4472241 Richard 14 6422:60 Revolution. The prefent pleasure, by revolution lowering, does become the oppofite of itfelf Rewards. He that rewards me, heaven reward him I will reward thee, once for thy sprightly comfort, and ten fold for thy valour 4.C.4 7 792247 Reynaldo. D. P. For it is a figure in rhetorick, that drink, being poured out of a cup into a glass, by filling the one, doth empty the other - And practice rhetorick in your common talk As You Like It. Taming of the Shrew. Rheum. A widow weeps an hour in clamour, and a quarter in rheum M. Aáo Ab. N.5 2465 255 2 145 Merchant of Venice. 3 396 Ibid 41402 4 419 26 How now, foolish rheom! turning difpiteous torture out of doors tear -At a few drops of woman's theum, which are as cheap as lies, he fold the blood and labour of our great action Coriolana Rheum. I have a falt and fullen rheum offends me A. S. P. C. L. Othello.13 411065,1 38 58151 Rheumatick. In your doublet and hofe this raw rheumatick day Merry Wives of Wind. -- You are both in good troth as rheumatic as two dry toasts 2 Henry iv. 2 4 484123 Henry v 23 5181 8 Midf. Night's Dream. 2 2180114 But then he was rheumatic; and talk'd of the whore of Babylon Rheumatifm attributed to the influence of the moon Rheumy. And tempt the rheumy and unpurged air to add unto his sickness Jul. Cafar. 2 I 749 452 Rhinoceros. The arm'd rhinoceros Rhodes. The Turkish preparation makes for Rhodes Rhodope. Macbeth. 3 4 376145 Rhimes. Thou hast given her rhimes, and interchang'd love-tokens with my child 1 Henry vit 31047123 t 549253 It is the first time that ever I heard breaking of ribs was sport for ladies As Y. L. It. Troil, and Creff. Antony and Cleop. 38 786 217 But that the bufy day, wak'd by the lark, has rouz'd the ribald crows Troil, and Cre487 217 Ribands. With ribands pendant, flaring 'bout her head -New ribbons to your pumps Or elfe a feast, and takes away the stomach.-Such are the rich, that have abun yet lives, black heaven's intelligencer; only referv'd their factor to buy fouls R. i.44 655 256 disturbed in his fleep by the ghosts of those whom he had murder'd -foliloquy after being disturbed by the ghofts - A bard of Ireland told me once, that I should not live long after I faw Richmond 16.4 2 6582 Ibid. aims at young Elizabeth, my brother's daughter, and, by that knot, looks proudly on the crown Ibid. 4 4 6642 24 - The Earl of Richmond is with a mighty power landed at Milford -'s addrefs to God the night before the battle of Bosworth encouraged in his fleep by the ghofts of those who had been murder'd by Richard 76.5 3 666 249 -'s addrefs to his troops before the battle of Bosworth Ibid. 5 3 668122 I think, there be fix Richmonds in the field; five have I flain to-day, instead of him Richmond, Countefs. Ibid. 5 4 6691 49 Rid. This Glofter fhould be quickly rid the world, to rid us from the fear we have of him |