Imatges de pàgina
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Appendix. To bid the priest be ready to come against you come with your appendix

A. S. P. C. L.

Taming of the Shrew. 4 4 273 III

Appertaining. The reason that I have to love thee doth much excufe the appertaining
rage to fuch a greeting

Appertainments. We lay by our appertainments vifiting of him
Appertinent. As an appertinent title to your old time

Romeo and Juliet. 3 1982147
Troi. and Cre2 3 869144
Love's Lab. Loft. 2 150,2
M. W. of Wind.1
more to bread than stone
Meifure for Meafure. 1 4

Appetite of her eye did feem to scorch me up like a burning glafs
Scarce confeffes that his blood flows, or that his appetite is

Fit thy confent to my sharp appetite-lay by all nicety
Doth not the appetite alter

3

492 7

78260 Ibid. 2 4 86246

Much Ado About Nothing. 2

11312 7

Mer. of Venice. 2 6 205245

Who rifeth from a feast with that keen appetite that he fits down — Alas, their love may be call'd appetite,—no motion of the liver, but the palate

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-Dexterity fo obeying appetite, that what he will he does
-I am weak with toil, yet ftrong in appetite

Twelfth Night. 2 4 317152 2 Henry iv. 22 481159 Richard iii. 3 5 653218 Ant. and Cleop. 2 1 773 2 50 Troilus and Creffida 13 862249 "Ibid. 55 889129 Cymbeline. 3 6 913137

She would hang on him, as if increase of appetite had grown by what it fed on

- Even as her appetite shall play the god with his weak function Applaud the name of Henry with your leader

Apples. There's a small choice in rotten apples

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1 Henry iv. 3 3

701153 938 215 461225

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Apple-jobn. I am wither'd like an old apple-john

The prince once set a dish of apple-johns before him, and told him, there were five more Sir Johns

Apple-tart. Carv'd like an apple-tart

Appliances. Thou art too noble to conferve a life in bafe appliances
I come to tender it, and my appliance, with all bound humbleness
With all appliances and means to boot, deny it to a king?
—- Ask God for temperance; that's the appliance only, which your disease requires

2 Heary iv.

I 284126 1488 121

1673144

Henry viii.
Hamlet. 4 310271 7

- Diseases defperate grown by defperate appliance, are relieved
Appoint. Doft think, I am so muddy, so unfettled, to appoint myself in this vexation

Winter's Tale.1 2 337 57 125615

Appointed. What, shall I be appointed hours; as though, belike, I knew not what to
take or what to leave
Taming of the Shrew.1
Winter's Tale. 43 355161

It fhall be fo my care to have you royally appointed
- Suppose, that you have seen the well-appointed king at Hampton pier embark his
royalty

The Dauphin, well appointed, stands with the fnares of war to tangle thee

Henry v.3 ch.5191 57

1 Henry vi. 4 2 561 221 Meaf. for Meaf31 may be well

Appointment. Therefore your best appointment make with speed
That from the caftle's totter'd battlements our fair appointments
perus'd

87253

7

Richard ii. 3 3 4291
Henry viii. 2 2 682141

-That good fellow, if I command him, follows my appointment
- Where their appointment we may best discover, and look on their endeavour

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Apprenticehood. Must I not serve a long apprenticehood to foreign paffages Richard ii.|1|3| 418|2|31|
Approach. He comes not like to his father's greatnefs: his approach, fo out of circum-
Itance
Winter's Tale. 5

358222 Henry v.4 530223 Cymbeline. 2 4 904222

For our approach shall so much dare the field, that England fhall couch down in fear
and yield

Approached. He was expected then, but not approach'd
Approbation. Which was as grofs as ever touch'd conjecture, that lack'd fight only,
nought for approbation

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Winter's Tale. 2 1 340226

How many now in health, shall drop their blood in approbation of what your re-
verence fhall incite us to

And with most profperous approbation

Henry v.1
Coriolanus. 2

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'Would I had put my eftate, and my neighbour's on the approbation of what I have

5

Measure for Measure. 2
All's Well.

4

897 2 20 8718

spoke

Approof

So in approof lives not his epitaph, as in your royal speech
Of very valiant approof

- As my furthest band shall pass on thy approof

Appropriation. He makes it a great appropriation to his own good parts
Approve. To approve Henry of Hereford, Lancaster, and Derby, to God,
and to him, difloyal

I am full forry, that he approves the common liar

And that my fword upon thee fhall approve

Which must approve thee honeft

This approves her letter, that she would foon be here

Cymbeline.

2280131 Ibid. 2 5 289128 Ant. and Cleop.3 2 782215 Mer. of Ven. 2199225 his fovereign,

Richard ii. 3 417141 Ant. and Cleop.1 1768133 Titus Andronicus. 2 1 836240 Cymbeline. 5 5 926133 Lear. 2 4 944 228 Ibid. 3 5 9501 I 110001 I

Which approves him an intelligent party to the advantages of France

He may approve our eyes

If you did, it would not much approve me

But the main article I do approve in fearful sense

Hamlet. 1

Ibid. 5 21038235 Othello. 1 31047117

My love doth fo approve him, that even his stubbornnefs, his checks, and frowns,
have grace and favour in them

Approved. Oh, 'tis the curfe of love, and still approv'd

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And he that is approv'd in this offence, though he had twinn'd with me, both at a
birth, fhall lofe me

Approvers. Their difcipline (now mingled with their courages) will make
their approvers, they are people, fuch that mend the world

Appurtenance. The appurtenance of welcome is fashion and ceremony

Apollo. Now, by Apollo, king, thou fwear'ft thy gods in vain

Apoplexed. But, fure, that fenfe is apoplex'd; for madnefs would not err
Apothecary. D. P.

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Go, bind thou up yon dangling apricocks, which, like unruly children, make their
fire ftoop with oppreffion of their prodigal weight

April. Spungy April

He smells April and May

I

Richard ii. 3 4 430 242
Tempeft. 4
Merry Wives of Windfor. 32

A day in April never came fo fweet, to fhew how coftly fummer was at hand, as this
fore-fpurrer comes before his lord

16248 59236

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- I told him what I thought; and told no more than what he found himself was apt

and true

Ibid. 52107712141
Apter.

Apter. Which I warrant fhe is apter to do, than to confefs she does
Apteft. Counfel every man the apteft way for safety and revenge
Aptnefs. That they are in a ripe aptnefs, to take all power from the
And be friended with aptnefs of the seafon

Aqua-vite

Like aqua-vitæ with a midwife

-Some aqua-vitæ, ho!— ·

Aquilon. Puff'd Aquilon

Aquitain. About furrender up of Aquitain

A plea of no lefs weight than Aquitain a dowry for a queen

people

A. S. P. C. L.

As You Like It.|3| 2381111
Henry vi. 1 475 251
Cor. 4 3 727237
Cymbeline. 2 3 903114
Comedy of Errors. 1113137
Twelfth Night.25 319231
Romeo and Juliet.45 9922 9
Troi. and Cref. 4 5 881144

Love's Labour Loft 148236
Ibid. 2 1152114

– Speech on Aquitain being bound by the king of France to the king of Navarre for

100,000 crowns

-I'll give you Aquitain, and all that is his, an you give him for my fake but one
loving kifs

Arabia. The Hyrcanian deferts, and the vastly wilds of wide Arabia
-I would my fon were in Arabia, and thy tribe before him
Arabian bird. O Antony! O thou Arabian bird

If the be furnish'd with a mind fo rare, fhe is alone the Arabian bird
Arabian-trees. Drop tears as fast as the Arabian trees their med'cinable
Arachne. Admits no orifice for a point, as fubtle as Arachne's broken woof, to enter

Arbitrate. But certain issue stroke must arbitrate

Troi. and Cref
Macbeth

Ibid. 2

1 153137

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4385115

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- Can arbitrate this caufe betwixt us twain - There shall your fwords and lances arbitrate Arbitrating that, which the commiffion of thy years and art could to no iffue of true honour bring Arbitrator. But now, the arbitrator of despairs, just death, kind umpire of men's miferies

Arbitrement. The knight is incens'd against you even to a mortal arbitrement

- We of the offering side must keep aloof from strict arbitrement And put thy fortune to the arbitrement of bloody strokes

- is like to be bloody

Arbour. I will hide me in the arbour

Arch. And the wide arch of the rang'd empire fall

Which like an arch reverberates the voice again

Lear.4 7 961 4

Much Ado About Nothing. 2 3 129110

Ant. and Cleop

- The noble duke my master, my worthy arch and patron comes to night

Arch-mock. O, 'tis the fpight of hell, the fiend's arch-mock
Arch. Watery arch

Arch-beretic. Let go the hand of that arch-heretic

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1767223

Troi. and Cref3 3 875246

Lear. 2 1 9392 23
Othello. 4 11068110
Tempeft. 4 I 171 4
K. John 3
Henry viii. 51

Arch-villain. All fingle and alone, yet an arch-villain keeps him company Tim. of Ath. 5 2

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Arebite. Chief architect and plotter of these woes

Arde. When those fons of glory, those two lights of men met in the vale of Arde

Argal, the drown'd herself wittingly
Argier

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397 2 52 6971 20 8262 31

Ant. and Cleop.3 6

785110

Much Ado About Nothing.

I

128230

Richard ii. 5

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Ibid. 5

3

665 116

Winter's Tale.
Titus Andronicus. 5

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Argues. Your mind is toffing on the ocean: there, where your argofies with portly

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Taming of the Shrew. 2 1

As doth a fail, fill'd with a fretting guft, command an argosy to stem the waves

Argue. Her looks do argue her replete with modefty

So bad a death argues a monftrous life

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3 Henry vi 2 6

Ibid. 3 2 618140 2 Henry vi. 3 3 591413 Richardiii. 37 655-10

Romeo and Juliet.2 39771-21
Arguing

A. S. P. C.L.

Arguing. If arguing makes us fweat, the proof of it will turn to redder drops Jul. Caf||5| 1| 762|2|| 7 Argument. Become the argument of his own fcorn

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-

If thou wilt hold longer argument do it in notes
For fhape, for bearing, argument and valour
Love doth approach difguis'd armed in arguments

Much Ado About Nothing.2 3 12945

Ibid. 2 3 129 230 Ibid. 3 1 132 218 Love's Labor Loft.5 2 166245

If you have any pity, grace, or manners, you would not make me fuch an argu

ment

An abfent argument of my revenge, thou prefent
The argument of time

Midj. Night's Dream. 3 2 187140
As You Like It. 3 1 234127
Winter's Tale. 41 347259

- It would be argument for a week, laughter for a month, and a good jest for ever

And fheath'd their fwords for lack of argument
Where is your argument?-here, in my scabbard
And try the argument of hearts by borrowing

1 Henry iv. 2 45C130 Henry v.3 I 520146 1 Henry vi. 24 5531 4 Tim. of Athens. 2 2 812110

I cannot fight upon this argument; it is too farved a fubject for my sword

All the argument is-a cuckold and a whore

Then will Ajax lack matter if he have loft his argument
He is his argument, that has his argument

I had good argument for killing once

Ear-kiffing arguments

Have you heard the argument? Is there no offence in't? - Rightly to be great is not to ftir without great argument Argus. Though Argus were her eunuch and her guard Purblind Argus, all eyes, and no fight

Ariadne, paffioning for Thefcus

Ariel. D. P.

How releafed from Sycorax

Appears like a water nymph

Like a harpy, her addrefs to Alonzo and others

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Aries. The bull being gall'd, gave Aries fuch a knock that down fell both the rams horns in the court

Titus Andronicus. 4

Arion. Like Arion on the Dolphin's back, I saw him hold acquaintance with the waves

Ariftotle's. Or fo devote to Ariftotle's cheeks
Arithmetick. But now 'tis odds beyond arithmetick

Twelfth Night
Taming of the Shrew.

Spare your arithmetick; never count the turns; once, and a million
Of memory

240

136 1528 3 848228

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Coriolanus.
Cymbeline. 2 4 905238
Hamlet. 21038214

Ark. There is, fure, another flood toward, and thefe couples are coming to the ark

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For I come hither arm'd against myfelf: ftay not, be gone
Arm-gaunt. So he nodded, and foberly did mount an arm-gaunt fteed
Armigero. Who writes himself armigero
Armipotent. The armipotent Mars

1

The armipotent foldier

Armour.

armour

I have known when he would have walked ten miles a foot to fee a good
Much Ado About Nothing.

3 120 51 Romeo and Juliet 3 985219 Meafure for Meafure.13 78152

I'll give thee armour to keep off that word
Like unfcour'd armour hanging by the wall
Tacir armeurs, that march'd hence fo filver bright, hither return all guilt with

Frenchmens blood

Add proof unto nine armour with thy prayers

Like a rich armour worn in heat of day that fcalds with fafety

The armour that I faw in your tent to-night, are thofe ftars, or funs,
Ill give thee, friend, an armour all of gold

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King John. 2 2 393 215
Richard .13 410 250

2 Henry iv. 4 4 499113 upon it Hen. v.3 7525 253 Ant. and Cleop.48 793127 Tim. of Athens. 821117 Trot and Crej.5 6 889253 Ibid 9 890|1|45 Armourers.

Henry v.2

A.S. P. C. L. 514

5

Armourers. Now thrive the armourers

The armourers accomplishing the knights, with bufy hammers closing rivets up

-Thou art the armourer of my heart
Arms [of the body] in this fad knot
-My arms fuch eel-skins stuft

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Tempeft
K. John.

1389|1| 6

Richard ii. 2
1 Henry iv.
1 Henry vi.

How quickly thould this arm of mine, now prifoner to the palfy, chaftife thee

Whofe arms were moulded in their mother's wombs
Their arms are fet like clocks, ftill to strike on

- And pithlefs arm like to a wither'd vine

This arm is for the duke of York, and this for Rutland; both bound

While life upholds this arm, this arm upholds the house of Lancaster
Mine arm is like a blafted fapling wither'd up

The arm our foldier

For he can do no more than Cæfar's arm, when Cæfar's head is off
And dare avow her beauty and her worth in other arms than hers
Strike in their numb'd and mortify'd bare arms pins, wooden pricks,
rofemary

Was he [Adam.] a gentleman ?—He was the first that ever bore arms
Arms (Coats of.) From mine own windows torn my houßkold coats

Of England's coat one half is cut away

And if no gentleman, why, then no arms

Arms (weapons.) And arms her with the boldness of a wife

And then our arms, like to a muzzled bear

Ibid. 2

to revenge
3 Henry vi. 2
Ibid.

Richard 3
Coriolanus. I

J. Cafar 2
Troil, and Cret
nails, fprigs of

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Lear 2 3 942224 Hamlet 5 11033232 Richard ii. 3 I 426130

1 Henry vit

Taming of the Shrewv.2
Winter's Tale. 2

1544212 1 262117 1336110 K. John 2 1 392 255

You came in arms to fpill mine enemies blood, But now in arms you ftrengthen it with yours

To whip this dwarfish war, these pigmy arms

- And grating fhock of wrathful iron arms

To fright our native peace with felf born arms

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The king of heaven forbid, our lord the king fhould fo with civil and uncivil arms) be rush'd upon

The arms are fair, when the intent for bearing them are just

Ibid. 3 3429 160 469 234

- Inftead of gold we'll offer up our arms; fince arms avail not, now that Henry's dead

Our bruifed arms hung up for monuments

- Our strong arms be our confcience

Come arm him

I must change arms at home and give the diftaff into my husband's hands

Army. A whole army fhooting at me

1 Henry iv.5 2

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you, I pray you to this fpeedy voyage

Much Ado About Nothing 2

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His army is a ragged multitude of hinds and peasants, rude and mercilets 2 Hen. vi. 4 Army of good words

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Merch. of Venice. 3

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Araint, thee, witch! the rump-fed ronyon cries

Macbeth 3 3642 5

A-row. Beaten the maids a-row

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Areynt thee, witch, atoynt thee

Lear.34 949|1|18

Arragon. Then go I toward Arragon

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Arragon, Prince of. D. P.

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Much Ado About Nothing 3 2132247

Othello.

Merry W. of Windfor

Much Ado About Nothing

Heat me thefe irons hot, and look thou ftand within the arras

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Taming of the Shrew. 2 1 26;134
K Jobn.41401163

1 Henry iv. 2 4 45154
Cymbeline. 2 2 90241
Hamlet.2 21011233
Ibid. 3 310231

As You Like It 43245115
Ibid 2 24625

2 Henry vi4 9 598115
Lear 3 4 9482 35

Romeo and Juliet 4 5 995|1|26

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