A. S. P. C. L. Darnel. Her fallow leas the darnel, hemlock, and rank furmitory doth root upon H. v.15] 2| 53812|17 It was full of Darnel; do you like the taste This hath a little dash'd your spirits Darraign your battle, for they are at hand Darts. Shall I do that, which all the Parthian darts, though enemy, loft aim, and could not Dab. To dash it like a Christmas comedy Now, had I not the dash of my former life in me, would preferment drop on my head Dafb'd. A foolish mild man, an honest man, look you, and foon dafh'd Daftard. With pale beggar-face impeach my height before this out-dar'd daftard 1 Henry vi. 1 2 545 228 Ibid. 1 You are all recreants and daftards 2 Henry vi. 4 Like a daftard, and a treacherous coward 3 Hen. vi. 2 2612210 Datchet's-mead. Carry it among the whitsters in Datchet's-mead Date. Your date is better in your pye and and your porridge, than in your cheek All's Well. Merry W. of Wind 3 Winter's Tale. 4 2 To be baked with no date in the pye, for then the man's date is out Troi. and Creff: They call for dates and quinces in the pastry Though I am a daughter to his blood, I am not to his manners I would my daughter were dead at my foot, and the jewels in her ears I am all the daughters of my father's house, and all the brothers too 2 972 110 992 19 417 2 26 9532 9 653126 Ibid. 3 1209 158 Daw. Juft as much as you may take upon a knife's point, and choak a daw withal Much Ado About Nothing.2 I will wear my heart upon my sleeve for daws to peck at 3131225 Othello. 1 I 1044 1 39 Coriolanus. 4 5 728 243 Darning. Alas, poor Harry of England, he longs not for the dawning as we do Hen. v. 37 526 217 We should hold day with the Antipodes, if we should walk in abfence of the fun Ib. 5 I 220 153 Alas the day! what fhall I do with my doublet, and hofe? As You Like It. 13 I am not a day of season, for you may see a sunshine and a hail in me at once "Tis a lucky day, boy; and we'll do good deeds on't By the clock, 'tis day, and yet dark night strangles the travelling camp 2236 216 All's Well 53 3022/48 Winter's Tale. 3 3 347 236 Macbeth. 2 4 372145 Day. Day. Good things of day begin to droop and drowze Who dares not ftir by day, muft walk by night A. S. P. C.L. Macbeth. 3 2 374249 This day, all things begun come to ill end What hath this day deserved, what hath it done, that it in golden letters should be fet, among the high tides in the kalender K. Jcbn.1 1389140 2393 214 Ibid. 3 1396258 Ibid. 3 I 3971 6 And the proud day, attended with the pleasures of the world, is all too wanton and Men judge by the complexion of the sky, the state and inclination of the day 2 476249 Ibid. 4 4 498 153 Hen. v.2 4519231 We fee yonder the beginning of the day, but, I think we shall never fee the end of it Yield day to night These seven years day The gaudy blabbing, and remorseful day is crept into the bofom of the fea Ibid. 41 528135 1 Henry vi. 1 1543111 2 Henry vi.2| 1578130 Ibid. 4 I 591131 Richard .41 656141 Ibid. 14 4 663 133 Each following day became the next day's mafter, 'till the last made former wonders it's Many days fhall fee her, and yet no day without a deed to crown it The bright day is done, and we are for the dark are waxed fhorter with him night, are they not but in Britain 's pathway Jocund day ftands tiptoe on the misty mountain's top O hateful day! never was feen fo black a day as this Day-bed. Having come from a day-bed Henry vini.1 1 672113 He is not lolling on a lewd day-bed, but on his knees at meditation Romeo and Juliet.2 3 9771 50 Ibid. 3 5 987142 Twelfth Night.25 318,121 Day of doom. This is the day of doom for Baffianus; his Philomel must lofe her tongue to-day Better be with the dead, whom we to gain our place, have fent to peace, than on the torture of the mind to lie in reftlefs ecftasy I had a mighty caufe to wish him dead, but thou hadst none to kill him What! is the old king dead, as nail in door Though we feem'd dead, we did but fleep Would I were dead! if God's good will were fo When I am dead, good wench let me be us'd with honour And the fheeted dead did fqueak and gibber in the Roman street Be thus when thou art dead, and I will kill thee, and love thee after Macbeth. 3 2374211 K. Jabn. 4 2 4051 2 2 Henry iv. 5 3 505139 Henry v.3 6 524226 2 Henry vi. 2 5 614,124 Henry viii. 4 2 696,226 Hamlet. 1 11000 245 Othello. 5 2 1076.1 2 Richard iii. 4) 1656.2 38 Ibid. 4 4 659 2 3 Deadly life. If I did love you in my master's flame with such a suffering, fuch a deadly life Deaf. Wrath makes him deaf Deafness. Your tale would cure deafness Deal. Let me deal in this But God above deal between thee and me I Twelfth Night. 1 5 313 1 Much Ado About Noth. 51 I will deal with him, that henceforth he shall trouble us no more Macbeth.43 And my sweet fleep's disturbers, are they that I would have thee deal upon Rich.. 4 He privily deals with our cardinal I could deal kingdoms to my friends 142 1/22 381228 2 Henry vi. 31 536146 2 658124 Henry viii. 1 1673253 Timon of Athens. I 2 809126 Cymbeline.5 5 928111 Deal. Shall it not grieve thee dearer than thy death Coriolanus. I 703 125 Timon of Atb. 5 3 8281 8 Titus Andronicus.3 843 246 3 8872 4 3 887 225 Lear. I 1931 2 Ibid. 4 3 9552 23 Romeo and Juliet. 3 3 985153 994 245 31049 240 Ibid. 5 2 Ibid. 5 3 995|1|36 Othello. Ant. and Cleap.1 4 7721 22 Lear. I I 930 113 9 Julius Cæfar.3754 Deareft. He hath no friends, but who are friends for fear; which, in his deareft need A man that apprehends death no more dreadfully, but as a drunken sleep 512 88211 942 57 95237 32232 Coriolanus. 1 1704126 2 14221 34 256 5 64 34 I Ibid. 4 2 3 Much Ado About Norb.z 2 128255 Ibid. 4 1 138146 Love's Labour Loft. 1 11471 7 7 2071 2 6 232141 - A carrion death, within whose empty eye there is a written fcroll fhould have play'd for lack of work All's Well. Would, for the king's fake, he were living! I think, it would be the death of the king's disease Have I not hideous death within my view, retaining but a quantity of life And blindfold death, not let me fee my fon - More are mer's ends mark d, than their lives before Though death be poor, it ends a mortal woe 3 343 16 Ibid. 4 3 353244 Ibid. 51 King John. Ibid. 2 359 226 3932 54 4 400 153 Ibid. 2 499 59 Ibid. 5 4 400 255 Richard 1 3 41843 Ibid. 2 I Did. 2 419 261 1421143 Ibid.3 2 427 2 2 Ibid. 3 2 427 255 And fight and die, is death destroying death, where fearing dying, pays death fervile Death. Where hateful death put on her ugliest mask to fright our party Signs of approaching death recited, by Quickly in her account of the death 485227 of Falstaff Henry v. 2 3 517 235 For in the shade of death I shall find joy Ah, what a sign of evil life, when death's approach is seen so terrible So bad a death argues a monftrous life I am refolv'd for death or dignity Away! for death doth hold us in pursuit Dark cloudy death o'ershades his beams of life Ibid. 3 3 591213 3 Henry vi. 25 615226 - hath snatch'd my husband from my arms, and pluck'd two crutches from my feeble hands In fuch a defperate bay of death, like a poor bark, of fails and tackling reft Brave death outweighs bad life — Present me death on the wheel, or at wild horses heels; or pile ten hills on the Tarpeian rock Ibid. 3 2 7222 54 7502 2 753120 It feems to me most strange that men should fear; seeing that death, a neceifary Ant. and Cleop. 311 7902 15 of one perfon can be paid but once; and that she hath discharg'd is the key to unbar these locks Your death has eyes in's head then Death will feize the doctor too Your's in the ranks of death Then love devouring death do what he dare And with a martial scorn, with one hand beats cold death afide Cymbeline. 5 4 921248 Ibid. 5 4 9232 1 Ibid. 5 5 9241 19 Lear. 42 954 135 6 98126 Romeo and Juliet. Ibid. 3 1 983142 And in this borrow'd likeness of shrunk death thou shalt remain full two and forty hours lies on her, like an untimely frost upon the sweetest Aower of all the field O fon, the night before thy wedding day hath death lain with thy bride is my fon-in-law, death is my heir; my daughter he hath wedded How oft when men are at the point of death, have they been merry -'s pale flag is not advanced there This fight of death is as a bell that warns my old age to a fepulchre The king's obfervation on the commonness of death As this fell ferjeant, death, is strict in his arrest Ibid. 4 1 990|2|33 Ibid. 4 5 992227 Ibid. 4 5 992|2|39 Ibid. 4 5 992|2|41 Ibid. 5 3 995244 Ibid. 5 3 9952 52 Ibid. 5 3 997 118 Hamlet. 1 21002 2 1 Ibid. 5 2 1041123 Death's-bead. I had rather be married to a death's-head with a bone in his mouth Death-practis'd. With this ungracious paper, strike the fight of the death-practis'd duke Debafe. Thus we debase the nature of our feats Debile. In a moft weak and debile minifter, great power, great tranfcendence All's Well. 2 Debonair. Courtiers as free, as debonair, unarm'd, as bending angels and debility 3 As You Like It. 2 3 2301 53 Debora Foo little payment for so great a debt 1 Henry vi Who ftudies, day and night, to answer all the debt he owes to you These debts may be well call'd desperate ones, for a madman owes 'em ➡ In like manner was I in debt to my importunate business No fquire in debt, nor no poor knight Debtor. A prifon for a debtor that not dares to stride a limit What comfort to this great decay may come, fhall be apply'd Deceit. The folded meaning of your word's deceit What fays fhe, fair one? that the tongues of men are full of deceits For that is good deceit which mates him first, that first intends deceit - Ah, that deceit should steal fuch gentle shapes, and with a virtuous vizor hide deep vice -If that be call'd deceit, I will be honest O, that deceit should dwell in such a gorgeous palace Deceive. What in the world should make me now deceive, fince I must lose the ufe of all deceit With beft advantage will deceive the time Hector, I take my leave: thou doft thyself and all our Troy deceive December. Men are April when they woo, December when they wed He makes a July's day fhort as December - When we shall hear the rain and wind beat dark December Deck. The king was flily finger'd from the deck Lear. 3 2 947 2 14 Cymbeline. 3 3 9082 2 Mer. of Venice. 5 1 Comedy of Errors. 3 2 1102 56 539140 2 Henry vi. 3 1 584 122 585 240 Decked the fea with drops full falt I thought thy bride-bed to have deck'd, fweet maid Hamlet. 5 11056110 Decline. And to decline upon a wretch whose natural gifts were poor to those of mine Ib. 1 3 Henry vi. 5 1 628 146 2 3226 What the declin'd is, he shall as foon read in the eyes of others, as feel in his own Decypher'd. I fear, we should have feen decypher'd there more rancorous spight 1 Hen. vi. 4 1 A course more promifing than a wild dedication of yourselves to unpath'd waters, undream'd fhores If the deed were ill, be you contented, wearing now the garland, to have a fon fet your decrees at nought Thy deed inhuman and unnatural, provokes this deluge most unnatural And with his deed did crown his word upon you - The deeds of Coriolanus should not be utter'd feebly 169251 561148 846158 Meafure for Measure. 2 2 84 140 900 2 8 9201 49 Timon of Atb. 4 2 819 129 Twelfth Night. 5 1 329 217 Winter's Tale. 4 3 Miercb. of Venice. 4 1 355127 216 213 2 3351 Ibid. 1 2337 23 6 |