He, but a duke, would have his fon a king, and raise his issue, like a loving fire 3 Hen. vi. 2 2 According to the fool's bolt, Sir, and fuch dulcet diseases His jarring concord, and his difcord dulcet To hear by the nose is a dulcet in contagion Dull. D. P. 223 6112 17 573225 3 Henry vi. 51 628 131 Midf. Night's Dream. 2 2 180 2 3 Induc, to Tam. of the Shrew. Unless some dull and favourable hand will whisper music to my weary fpirit 2 Hen. iv. 4 4 Dumbed. Who neigh'd so high, that what I would have spoke was beastly dumb'd by 15241 Dung. Which fleeps, and never palates more the dung, the beggar's Dungbill. Theu haft it ad dungbill, at the fingers' ends, as they fay Dun's. Dun's the mouse If thou art dun, we'll draw thee from the mire Dunneft (moak of hell Tam. of the Shrew.2 Romeo and Jul.45 nurse and Cæfar's Romeo and Jul.14 97223 Macbetb. 1 5 367 126 3 Henry vi. 51 627 258 i Henry iv. 1 Make duft our paper, and with rainy eyes write forrow on the bofom of the earth Rich.ii. 32 427 249 436 16 Ant. and Cleop. 3 6 784 246 You are not worth the dust which the rude wind blows in your face Lear. 4 2 95344 Dutchess. What think you of a dutchefs? have you limbs to bear that load of title H. viii. 23 682 2 46 Dutchman. To be a Dutchman to day Much Ado Ab. Nothing. 3 2 133126 Dutchman's beard. You will hang like an icicle on a Dutchman's beard Twelfth Night. 3 2 321226 Duties. Your highness' part is to receive our duties: and our duties are to your throne and state I return thofe duties back as are right fit, obey you, love you, honour you Lear. 1 1 930158 Duty never yet did want his meed Duty pricks me on to utter that which else no worldly good should draw from me I owe you all duty A. S. P. C. L. Two Gent. of Verona. 3 1 33143 1 1231-8 Ibid. 5 1 Taming of the Shrew. 4 1 I 125260 193 19 193130 267 221 It is my cousin's duty to make a curtly The more fool you for laying on my duty Such duty as the subject owes the prince, even fuch, a woman oweth to her husband My mother did but duty; fuch, my lord, as you owe to your wife Ibid. 5 2 276|2|27 All's Well. 4 2 296|1|47| Richard ii. 2 1 421155 Ibid. 3 4 431117 They might have liv'd to bear and he to tafte their fruits of duty Henry viii. 3 Ibid. I Think'ft thou that duty fhall have dread to speak, when power to flattery bows Lear. 1 Aftirring dwarf we do allowance give before a sleeping giant Dull of tongue and dwarfish Dwell. I'll rather dwell in my neceffity 49352 5 210102 II Dwindle. Weary seven-nights, nine times nine, fhall he dwindle, peak and pine Macbeth. 13 1881 6 869 245 187 241 783140 364 222 674 127 371217 Ibid. 4 3 3812/17 Dying. Oh, but they say the tongues of dying men inforce attention, like deep har It doth poffet and curd, like eager droppings into milk Eagerness. Madding my eagerness with her restraint Eagle. Like an eagle o'er his airy towers, to souse annoyance that comes His eye, as bright as is the eagle's, lightens forth controlling majesty Thou with an eagle art inspired 3 Henry vi. 2 6 615258 Hamlet. 1 510072 3 All's Well. 5 3 304213 near his neft King John. 5 2 409127 2 512 213 1 Henry vi. 1 2 546 249 2 Henry vi. 31 3 Henry vi. 1 the fun Ibid. 2 585223 1606145 1610143 An empty eagle were fet to guard the chickens from a hungry kite Wrens may prey where eagles dare not perch Often to our comfort shall we find the fharded beetle in a safer hold than is the full Forthwith they fly chickens, the way which they stoop'd eagles An eagle, madam, hath not fo green, fo quick, fo fair an eye as Paris hath Rom. and Jul. 3 5 Eagle-fighted. What peremptory eagle-fighted eye Eagle's-talon. When I was about thy years, Hal, I was not an eagle's-talon in the waist Eagle-winged. Eagle-winged pride lambs Eandings. That all the canlings, which were streak'd and py'd should fall as Jacob's hire A. S. P. C. L. 1 Henry iv. 2 4 4542 31 34172 3 Mer. of Venice. 1 3 2011 29 Ears. He that ears my land, fpares my team, and gives me leave to inn the crop That power I have, discharge, and let them go, to ear the land that hope to grow 428 1 57 Make the fea ferve them; which they ear and wound with keels of every kind You cram these words into mine ears against the ftomach of my fenfe · Pricked their ears Much Ado About Notb. 3 1 Meafure for Meafure. 1 4 Ibid. 3 1 Comedy of Errors. 5 1 Ibid. 5 78221 89145 1192 30 132232 114415 Love's Labor Loft. 21 152227 173 154 Mid. Night's Dream. 4 1 189149 1912 17 Her ear is ftopt with duft My face fo thin, that in mine ear 1 durft not stick a rofe • Hear me without thine ears Quick is mine ear, to hear of good towards him -Stopping my greedy ear with their bold deeds: but in the end to ftop mine ear indeed - Mine ears against your suits are stronger, than your gates against my force Cor. 5 O that men's ears fhould be to counsel deaf, but not to flattery - Eyes and ears two traded pilots, 'twixt the dangerous fhores of will and judgment K. John. 1 272 224 13891 6 Light of ear Look with thine ears Lear. 3 4 948245 - Holding thine ear close to the hollow ground; so shall no foot upon the church-yard tread, but thou shalt hear it Give every man thine ear, but few thy voice And with a greedy ear devour up my difcourfe Ear-kiffing. They are yet but ear-kiffing arguments Ear-wax. But he hath not fo much brain as ear-wax Romeo and Juliet. 5 3 9951 6 Hamlet. 1 310042 57 Lear. 2 1939113 Troi. and Cref51 884|2|32 Earis. My Thanes and kinfmen, henceforth be earls, the first that ever Scotland in fuch an honour nam'd Earn. His excellency did earn it ere he had it Earneft. Did you perceive her earnest Macbeth. 5 7 386246 Mu. Ado Abt. Notb. 3 1 132 221 Two Gent. of Ver.2 1 28239 Therefore I will even take fixpence in earnest of the bear-herd and lead his apes into hell He is in moft profound earnest M. Ado About Netb. 2 I 1252 49 There is too great testimony in your complexion, that it was a passion of earnest Pleads he in earnest? look upon his face And from his coffers receiv'd the golden earnest of our death Earth difdain to root the fummer fwelling flower, and make rough More than earth divine I'll put a girdle round the earth in forty minutes Midf. Night's Dream. 2 2180228 Ibid. 3 2 185 216 226 242 369 215 Earth. Macbeth. 2 1 Earth. The earth had not a hole to hide this deed We are on the earth, where nothing lives, but crosses, care and grief At my birth, the frame and the foundation of the earth shak'd like a coward 3 A.S. P. C.L. K. John. 4 3 405|2|56 Ricbard ii. 22 42327 Ibid. 3 2 426 214 1 Hen. iv. 2 4 457122 Richard iii. 1 2 635258 Ibid. 4 4 660251 7 5371 47 Are you not mov'd, when all the sway of earth shakes like a thing infirm J. Cæfar. 13745135 Ant. and Cleop. 1 1 768 1 1 Timon of Athens. 4 3 821239 The earth's a thief, that feeds and breeds by composture ftolen from general ex Ibid. 4 3 824215 Titus Andronicus. 3 1 843 215 The earth hath swallow'd all my hopes but she, she is the hopeful lady of my earth The earth, that's nature's mother, is her tomb Vile earth, to earth refign This goodly frame, the earth, feems to me a steril promontory Romeo and Juliet. 1 2970125 This folidity and compound mass,with tristful visage, as against the doom, is thoughtfick at the act Earthquake. I look for an earthquake too then Mountains may be remov'd with earthquakes, and so encounter 2 408 137 1 Henry iv. 3 1 457 137 Romeo and Juliet. 1 3 971135 3 Henry vi. 5 5 631141 Ibid. 5 3 629 2/24 Ant. and Cleop. 773113 Cymbeline. 4 2 9172 2 1 Henry iv. 1 2 444150 Winter's Tale. 5 3 362 1 57 584|2|22 All the east fay thou, fhalt call her mistress Eaft-cheap. I have bespoke supper to-night in Eastcheap Ealy. 'Tis as easy to make her speak, as move Thefe faults are easy, quickly answered Eafy-melting king Mu. Ado Abt. Noth. 5 3 145211 Sir Robert might have eat his part in me, upon Good-Friday, and ne'er broke his faft If the wars eat us not up, they will King Jobn.1 1 390 111 O you gods! what a number of men eat Timon, and he sees them not Tim. of Atb. 1 2 807 121 The ocean, over-peering of his lift, eats not the flats with more impetuous Eater. An eater of broken meats Eating the air on promise of supply hafte Ham. 451029152 Lear. 2 2 940218 3 478 223 2 Henry iv. Eaves. If nothing steads us, to chide him from our eaves; for he perfists, as if his life Eaves-dropper. Under our tents; I'll play the eaves-dropper Ebon-colour'd. That draweth from my fnow-white pen the ebon-colour'd ink Love's L. Loft.11 149233 Ebony. By heaven, thy love is black as ebony Ibid. 4 3 163110 And the clear ftones to the South-North are as luftrous as ebony Twelfth Night. 4 2 327217 Echo. Mark the musical confufion of hounds and echo in conjunction Midf. Night's D.4 1190226 I 252 118 If Echo were as fleet I would esteem him worth a dozen fuch Ind. to Tam. of the Sb. - I would applaud thee to the very echo, that should applaud again A. S. P. C. L' Echo. Do but start an echo with the clamour of thy drum, and even at hand a drum is] ready brac'd - Whilst the babling echo mocks the hounds, replying thrilly to the well tun'd horns, as if a double hunt was heard at once Elfe would I tear the cave where Echo lies He echoes me, as if there were some monster in his thought Eclipfe. Born to eclipfe thy life this afternoon 409 150 King Jobn. 51 Etfiacy. Hinder them from what this ecstacy may now provoke them to Mercb. of Venice. 3 2 162 7 115219 130 213 2102 39 3742 14 Ibid. 4 3 382125 Titus Andronicus. 4 1 846 136 That unmatch'd form and feature of blown youth, blasted with ecstasy I shifted him away, and laid good, fcufe upon your ecstasy Eden. This other Eden, demy paradife Edgar. D. P. Edge. To the extremeft edge of hazard -Abate the edge of traitors Thy years want wit, thy wit wants edge Give him a further edge It would cost you a groaning, to take off my edge 929 All's Well. 3 3 291247 Richard iii. 5 4 669243 1836164 Titus Andronicus. 2 Hamlet. 3110162 53 Edifies. My love with words and errors still she feeds: but edifies another with her deeds feven fons, whereof thyself art one, were as feven phials of his facred blood Rich. ii. 1 2 415225 Eels. Cry to it, nuncle, as the cockney did to the eels when she put them in the pafte alive 633 Lear. 2 4 94418 K. John. 1 138916 I 2 Henry iv. 32 4922 Effigies. As mine eye doth his effigies witness, most truly limned and living in your face Effufe. And much effuse of blood doth make me faint 538 245 Ibid. 5 21011119 210372 6 Titus Andronicus.3 1 842 143 Truly thou art damn'd; like an ill-roasted egg, all on one fide Yet, they fay, we are almost as like as eggs Midf. Night's Dream. As You Like It. 3 2 234251 |