3131 3441 A.S. P. C Expoznd. And to expound his beastly mind to us Cymbeline. 17] 900,2 Twelftb Nigbr.2 i Hen. vi. 3/ 3/ 55811 Exquifite. The most exquisite Claudio M. Ado About Noibing. 1 3/ 1251 Thy exquifite reason Twelftb Nigbr. 2 31 316 1 Is your Englishman so exquisite in drinking Orbellv. 2 3 10551211 Exfuffolare. When I Hall turn the business of my soul to such exsuffolate and blown surmises Ibid. 3) 3)106112 Extempore. Sure the gods do this year connive at us, and we may do any thing extempore Winter's Tale.41 3 3561138 Ezremporal. Affist me some extemporal god of rhime Love's Labor Loft. 2 1511255 Will you hear an extemporal epitaph on the death of the deer Ibid. 41 2 159133 Extend. I do extend him, fir, within himself Cymbeline. I 1893214 Those, that weep this lamentable discourse under her colours are wonderfully to extend him Cymbeline.1 5 896 2 26 Extended. Labienus (this is stiff news) hath, with his Parthian force, extended Alia Ant. and Cleop. I 21 769159 Extent. Make an extent upon his house and lands As You Like It. 3 1 234 143 In this unusual and unjust extent Twelfth Nigbr.14 I 3271119 Extenuate. The law of Athens yields you up, which by no means we may extenuate Midf. Night's Dream. 1 1 1762 25 Cleopatra, know, we will extenuate rather than enforce Ant. and Clevp. 52 799|2|56 Nothing extenuate, nor set down aught in malice Orbello. 5 2 10792/21 Extenuated. His glory not extenuated, wherein he was worthy Julius Cæjar. 3 27551/45 Merry W. of Windsor. 1 3 As You Like It.131 5 241/1/20 Orbella 1 1/10441137 Extinled. Give renew'd fire to our extincted spirits 11052136 Extirp. It is impossible to extirp it quite Mel. for Meal.3 2 Extirped. Nor should that nation boast it so with us, but be extirped from our provinces i Henry vi. 3) 3) 558) 1/60 Exocment. In the verity of extolment Hamlet. 5 2/1038/2/16 Twelftb Nigbr. 51 Orbello. 1 1/10451/21 Exiraugbi. Sham'st thou not, knowing whence thou art extraught 3 Henry vi. 2 21 6122 45 Extreme. Be not as extreme in submission, as in offence Merry W. of Windsor. 41 41 671247 To chide at your extremes it not becomes me Winter's Tale. 4) 3) 3492142 Time force and death, do this body what extremes you can Troil. and Cred: 41 2 8792 12 "Twixt my extremes and me this bloody knife Mall play the umpire Rom. and Jul.4.1990 - 50 Extremilies. When extremities speak, I have heard you say, honour and policy, like unsever'd friends i' the war, do grow together Coriolanus. 3) 2 723:48 Merry W. of. Windfor.141 2 Ibid. 41 2 6712 Till this afternoon, his passion ne'er brake into extremity of rage Comedy of Errors. 511171/38 You were us'd to say, extremity was the trier of spirits Coriolanus. 4 1 7261/27 Will you the knights hall to the edge of all extremity pursue each other Troil and Cred: 5881257 Thy tongue may take off some extremity, which to read would be even mortal to Cymbeline. 31 4 909457 Why thou wert better in thy grave, than to answer with thy uncover'd body this 49/2/ 6 Ibid. 2 97/1/12 337/2/22 661 26 me 8/2156 extra Υ 31 1 Ibid. 3 Ibid.41 3 2 Ibid. 41 3 1 Ibid. 2 I E Y A.S. P. C. L. 27/2132 -. Not an eye that sees you, but is a physician to comment your malady Two Gent. of Ver.12, 3 Ibid. 2) 4 3이리 13 Love hath twenty pair of eyes Ibid. 24 3012164 Love hath chased Neep from my enthralled eyes Ibid. 2 9 I read your fortune in your eye 34 134 Sun-bright eye Ibid. 4| 3 421) S are grey as glass : and so are mine I would have scratched out your unseeing eyes The appetite of her eye did seem to scorch me up like a burning-glass M.W.of Wind. 3 Ibid. 31 2 59|2|35 He has eyes of youth Ibid. 602) 8 I see how thine eye would emulate the diamond Measure for Measure. 2 2 842114 Feaft upon her eyes Ibid. 43 92 1156 Those eyes the break of day, lights that do milead the moon 962/44 Command those fretting waters from your eyes Ibid. 51 1 1022 13 Methinks I see a quick’ning in his eye Com. of Errors.12 106 2145 I know his eye doth homage other-where Ibid. 511 117|1|40 Hath not else his eye stray'd his affection in unlawful love Much Ado About Norbing. 1 1232 44 Pick out mine eyes with a ballad-maker's pen Ibid. 1 1 124 130 I lock'd upon her with a soldier's eye 127 III Let every eye negociate for itself, and trust no agent Ibid. 3 Il 1321 24 Ibid.41 133812134 Ibid. 41 1 1391144 143/210 Ibid. 51 41 1451246 I do with an eye of love requite her Ibid.'s 4 145 248 While truth the while, doth falsely blind the eye-light of his look Love's Lab. Loft. 1 i 148 124 1 1541/32 In his eye pride expressed Ibid. 2 1 15412 I only have made a mouth of his eye 154|2|19 With two pitch-balls stuck in her face for eyes Ibid. 31 1 1562140 The heavenly rhetorick of thine eye Ibid. 4) 3) 161 114 Ibid. 41 3 162246 If the treets were paved with chine eyes, her feet were too much dainty for such Ibid. 4) 3) 163 1146 Where is any author in the world, teaches such beauty as a woman's eye? Ibid. 4) 3 1632129 Ibid. 51 1 164 1150 Once to behold with your sun-beamed eyes Ibid. 51 21 1672 19 - You were beft call it daughter-beamed eyes Ibid. 51 21 1672 23 - The virtue of your eye must break my oath Ibid. 51 21 16912 3 There's an eye-wounds like a leaden (word 170/2140 I would, my father look'd but with my eyes Midf. Night's Dream.si 11 176/1/21 I could well beteem them from the tempest of mine eyes 17612138 11 177134 Haft thou yet latchd the Athenian's eyes with the love-juice Ibid. 131 2 185 1155 1861248 - Sometimes from her eyes I did receive fair speechless messages Ibid. 51 1 1951158 - I would outstare the sterneft eyes that look Mer. of Venice. 1991117 202 1148 - My eye Thall be the stream and death-bed for him an eye Ibid. 204122 My eyes, my lord, can look as swift as yours; you say the miltrere Ibid.31 2 Ibid. 15 Be buried in thy eyes of favour To the court of his eye Ibid. 2 Ibid. 2 1 2101129 maid A. S. P. C.L. Winter's Tale. 4) 348 1143 Ibid. 5 358;2158 Macb. 2 1 36912) 3 Ibid. 5) 1 3831130 K. Jobr. 2 2 395 123 Ibid. 2 Ibid. 4 2 Ibid. Henry v.3 Eyes. I have eyes under my service, which look upon his removedness Stars, stars, and all eyes else dead coals 21 3951 28 Why holds thine eye that lamentable rheum, like a proud river peering o'er its bounds Ibid. 3) 1 396) 140 Muft you with hot irons burn out both my eyes 1402 1136 Will you put out mine eyes? These eyes that never did, nor never shall, so much as frown on you Ibid. 4 1 402 757 A fearful eye thou haft Ibid. 4 2 404112 With eyes as red as new enkindled fire Ibid. 404214 Or turn'd an eye of doubt upon my face 41 21 4051/32 Thou art come to set mine eye Ibid. 51 71 411 1164 Securely I espy, virtue with valour, couched in thine eye Ricbard i. 1 31 4171/26 Even in the glasses of thine eyes I fee thy grieved heart Ibid. 31 4181 26 Behold, his eye, as bright as is the eagle's; lightens forth controlling majesty Ibid. 3 3 4291 26 Get thee gone, for I do fee danger and disobedience in thine eye i Henry iv. 1 3 445 1148 A villainous trick of thine eye Ibid. 2) 41 455155 Their eyes of fire sparkling through fights of steel 2 Henry iv. 41 ? 493 2136 - Lend the eye a terrible aspect, let it pry through the portage of the head, like the brass cannon il 52011134 - His eyes are humbler than they usid to be Ibid. 41 7 5342160 - A full eye will wax hollow Ibid. 5l 2 539/2124 - His sparkling eyes, replete with wrathful fire, more dazzled and drove back his cnemies than mid-day sun 1 Henry vii1 il 543210 One eye thou hast to look to heaven for grace 41 54812154 Fain would mine eyes be witness with mine ears Ibid. 2) 3) 551234 These eyes-like lamps whose wasting oil is spent 51 5532/45 I'll prepare my tear-ftain'd eyes to see her miseries 2 Henry vi. 21 41 582 153 Beaufort's red sparkling eyes blab his heart's malice 1 58412144 Mine cyes should sparkle like the beaten flint Ibid. 13 2 598113 Oppose thy stedfart gazing eyes to mine Ibid. 41 6 5982/35 With fiery eyes, sparkling for very wrath 3 Henry vi. 21 51 615-131 Thefe eyes, that now are dimm'd with death's black veils have been as piercing as the mid-day fun Ibid. 51 262911138 These eyes, which never shed remorseful tear 21 6362153 Your eyes drop mill-stones, when fools eyes drop tears Ibid. 1 3 641 1140 The vigilant eye 1 704|215 Such eyes the widows in Corioli wear, and mothers that lack sons 1 713231 And turns up the white o' the eye to his difcourse Ibid. 51 31 735157 It is no little thing, to make my eyes to sweat compassion Ibid. 51 31 736 2158 Jul. Cafar. The eye fees not itself, but by reflection 2 742 2/39 And that same eye, whose bend doth awe the world, did lose his lustre 21 7431153 Pays his heart, for what his eyes eat only 2] 776 2118 I'll never fee it; for, I am sure, my nails are stronger than my eyes Ibid. 5 2 801 1110 What mental power this eye thoots forth 1 804113 But we worldly men have miserable, mad, mistaking eyes and ears, two traded pilots 'twixt the dangerous shores of will and judgement 2 8671141 Lend me ten thousand eyes, and I will fill them all with prophetic tears 2) 86712/21 Nor doth the eye itself (that most pure spirit of sense) behold itself Ibid, And let thy eyes fpout blood Ibid. I Ibid. 2 Ibid. 3 Ricbard mi. I Coriolanus.lt Ibid.12 These eyes are not the same I wore in Rome Ibid. I Timon of Albens. I Troilus and Creffida. 2 Ibid. 2 88 Ibid. 4 A.S. P. C. Le Lear. Eges. Wantest thou eyes at trial 1950-150 Ibid.31 71 952119 Upon these eyes of thine I'll set my foot Methought, his eyes were two full moons 957137 Her eye discourses, I will answer it Romeo and Julier. 2 2 975|213 Men's eyes were made to look, and let them gaze Ibid. 3) 1982 135 To prison, eyes! ne'er look on liberty Ibid. 31 2 984144 For still thy eyes, which I may call the sea, do ebb and flow with tears Ibid. 3) 519881219 Hamlet. 1 21001 2117 With one auspicious, and one dropping eye Ibid. 1 Make thy two eyes, like stars, start from their spheres 1007 1 4 Their eyes purging thick amber, and plum-tree gum Ibid. 21 210121119 Then I have an eye of you Ibid. 2) 21013739 Ibid. 2 like carbuncles 2 1015121 An eye like man to threaten and command Ibid. 31 4 10242 42 without feeling Ibid. 3 4 10242 6 What an eye The has; methinks it sounds à parley of provocation Orbello. (2 31055'| 7 Ibid. 2 3.10551" An inviting eye, and yet methinks right modeft 9 For you are fatal then, when your eyes roll so Ibid. 5 2 1076 1127 As You Like It. 3) S 2402/26 Eye-balls. Your bugle eye-balls Upon thy eye-balls murderous tyranny fits in grim majesty to fright the world 2 Henry vi. 3 2 5871154 Eye-glass. Your eye-glass is thicker than a cuckold's horn Winter's Tale. 1 2 33612150 Lear. Ey-less rage 3) 1 9461 24 Eye-lids. The fringed curtains of thine eyes advance Tempef. 1 2 advanced Tempel. 41 18 119 And on my eye-lids Thall conjecture hang Much Ado About Nothing. 4 7 138 132 Humour it with turning up your eye-lids Love's Labor Loft. 3 1 1542 42 Hamlet. I 2 1002 130 Eyes' windorus. Thy eyes' windows fall, like death, when he shuts up the day of life Romeo and Julie:. 41 1 99012129 Eye-wink. They could never get an eye-wink of her Merry Wives of Windsor. 2 Eyliads. Examined my parts with most judicious eyliads 490 1 Eyne. Upon our watery eyne Love's Lab. Luft. 5 2 167 2163 To what, my love, shall I compare thine eyne? crystal is muddy Midf. N.'s Dr. 3 2 186 1156 While counterfeit supposes blear'd thine eyne Taming of the Sbrew. 512742152 611123 2 54/2/18 Ibid. 1 3 F 56112 43 1 1212 10 Fabian. D. P. Twelfib Nigbr. 307 Fables. He fables not, I hear, the enemy i Henry vi. 41 Fabrick. Shake the fabrick of his folly Winter's Tale. 1 2 338 2 10 With other muniments and petty helps in this our fabrick Coriolanus. 11 11 704219 Fabulous fory. That former fabulous story, being now seen po.Tible enough, got credit H.viii. 1 1 672133 Face. Here's a villain that would face me down, he met me on the Mart Com. of Enr. 3! 1 1091112 His heart's meteors to cling in his face Ibid. 41 21 113213 Saffron face Ibid. 4 41 115|230 And with no face, as it were, outfacing me Ibid. 5 2 1191119 This grained face of mine be hid in fap-consuming winter's snow Ibid. s 1 1192/24 Mu. Ado Abt. Norb. I Ibid. 1 1 1222 43 Ibid. 2) 3) 12912123 - She shall be buried with her face upwards Ibid. 3) 2 133 1159 February face Ibid. 51 4 1461119 Vouchsafe to Thew the sunshine of your face, that we, like savages, may worship it Luove's Labour Loft. 51 2 1671257 Ibid. 51 21 1722 4 I am marvellous hairy about the face Mid. Night's Dream. 41 1 1892 48 To gaze on christian fools with varnish'd faces Mer. of Venice. 2 5 205 4 Do all they can to face me out of my wits pw. Nigbr. 41 2 328713 One face, one voice, one habit, and two persons Ibid. 51 1 33111113 Winter's Tale. 41 31 3501149 Her face o'fire with labour Macbeti. 1 41 366127 Ibid. 1 5 367141 K. John.fil il 389/11 6 Face, Face. Your face hath got five hundred pound a year, yet sell your face for five pence, A. S. P. C.L. and 'tis dear Then call them to our presence, face to face K. John. 1 1 389117 Ricbard ü. 1 41327 Ibid. 141 1434 1 19 I never see thy face, but I think upon hell-fire, and Dives, that liv'd in purple Ibid.41 434 122 Yet he will not stick to say, his face is a face-royal i H.iv. 3) 31 461 255 His face is full of bubukles, and whelks and knobs, and flames of fire 2 Henry iv.1 21 4761 22 I will trot to-morrow a mile, and my way shall be paved with English faces Henry v.3) 652426 Fair Margaret knows, that Suffolk doth not flatter, face, or feign Ibid. 31 7 526112 Hath his lovely fáce ruld, like a wand'ring planet over me i Henry vi. 5) 41 5671 29 But that thy face is, vizor-like, unchanging 2 Henry vi.141 41 5951 2 For by his face straight shall you know his heart 3 Henry vi. 1 41 6082 38 Ricbard ii. 31 41 652144 Henry vii. 4 11 694 1114 Ibid. 4) 2 695 2 27 When my face is fair, you mall perceive whether I blush or no Coriolanus. 1 9 711 1 27 Thou hast a grim appearance, and thy face bears a command in't Ibid.41 5 729" Ş I knew by his face there was something in him Ibid. 41 51 729 2 46 Thinking, by this face, to faften in our thoughts that they have courage Jul. Cæsar. 511762115 All mens faces are true, whatsoe'er their hands are Ani. and Cleop: 2 6 779243 There is never a fair woman has a true face Ibid. 2 61 77912 45 Round to a faultiness,--for the most part too, they are foolish that are so Ibid. 3) 3) 78312) 3 Ilid. 5 2 7991154 Cymbeline. 51 31 92117 Hamler. 31 11018117 Faced. Thou haft fac'd many things Tam. of tbe Sbrew. 4) 3) 271 2 12 That fac'd and brav'd me in this matter so Ibid. 5 2742 56 Facere, as it were, replication · Love's Labor Loft. 41 2 158243 Facile. So may he with more facile question bear it Orbello. Il 310471133 Facinorous. He is of a moft facinorous spirit All's Well. 21 31 2861-18 Fall. As you are part all Mame, (those of your fact are so) fo pait all truth Wint. Tale. 3) 3442 48 Faktion. I will bandy with thee in fa&tion As You Like It. 5 1 246 121 Their fraction is more our wish, than their faction Troil. and Cred: 21 31 86924 Faftionary. Always factionary on the party of your general Corinlanus. 5 2 Fattious. Be factious for redress of all these griefs Julius Cæfar. 11 31 7461 36 Fattor. Percy is but my factor i Henry iv. 3 2 4611 34 Not as protector, steward, substitute, or lowly factor for another's gain Ricbard iii. 31 71 655 141 Richard yet lives, hell's black intelligencer; only reserv'd their factor, to buy fouls 16.41.41 659 2157 The senators alone of this great world, chief factors for the gods Ant. and Cleap. 26 77812154 Faculty. Unseen, yet crescive in his faculty Henry v.1 Hamle. I Love's Labor Loft. 51 1652 57 Tw. Nigbl. 2 21 314 137 Fadings. With such delicate burdens of dil-do's and fadings Winter's Tale./41 31 3511221 Faery. Mid. Nigbe's Dream. 2 Tirus Andronicus. 31 1 842 136 Fuggot. Or brought a faggot to bright burning Troy Lear.2 41 944 1134 Fail. I cannot think, my sister in the least would fail her obligation Mu. Ado Abou? Notb. I Cymbeline. 31 41 909253 Com. of Er.3 Fain. Here is neither cheer, fir, nor welcome; we wou'd fain have either Much Ado Ab. Norb. 2 I would rain have it a match 2 Henry vi. 2 Yea, man and birds are fain of climbing high Ibid. 3 No man alive so fain as I 626/2119 3 Henry vi. 41 7 734/127 1 51012 24 1 1001 1 36 17912 13 1 124 17 1 IIOI I 1 128/2 12 Il 5781137 1 5852 18 all were well |