Hawk. Thou haft hawks will foar above the morning lark_Induc. to Tam. of the Shrew.| My lord protector's hawks do tower fo well, they know, their master loves to be A. S. P. C. L. Hamlet. 2 2 1014129 Hay. Methinks I have a great defire to a bottle of hay, good hay, fweet hay, hath no fellow Cold biting winter mars our hop'd-for hay Ah, the immortal paffado! the punto reverfo! the hay Thou this to hazard, needs must intimate skill infinite, or monstrous Henry v. 21 2532/45 7 525 53 4 55221 2 Henry vi. 2 I 578 1 39 As You Like It. 5 3 247162 Lear. 3 4 948155 Midj. Night's Dream. 4 3 Henry vi. 4 Romeo and Jul. 2 Meaf. for Meaf 4 2 95111 Mercb. of Venice. 2 I desperate All's W. 2 2022 19 284 2 47 345220 - Who will go to hazard with me for twenty English prisoners Coriolanus. 3 3 724243 Two Gent. of Verona. 1 I Comedy of Errors. 5 I Haply, my prefence may well abate the over-merry (pleen Induc. to Tam. of the Shrew. May, haply, purchase him a box o' the ear The commons haply rife to fave his life Who, haply may, mifconftrue us in him, and wail his death Henry v.4 7 2 Henry vi. 3 1 585214 Richard .3 5 Cymbeline. 3 3 908150 Ibid. 3 5 911251 I Tempeft. 5 21233 Taming of the Shrew. 4 1420 138 4 272 226 2694 225 Ibid. 5 - Tell me how he dy'd: if well, he ftepp'd before me, happily, for my example Hen. viii. 4 I am glad, I came this way fo happily Happiness. He hath a great outward happiness Much Ado About Nothing. 2 3 130245 O, how bitter a thing it is to look into happiness through another man's eyes As Y. L. It. 5 5292 7 Romeo and Jul. 3 3 9862 7 M. Ado. About Noth. 2 I 128 116 Lear. 5 3 9622 21 Comedy of Errors. 3 2 1102 30 Midj. Night's Dream.3 2 1882 14 Macbeth. 1 4 3662 7 Ibid. 5 6 3852 33 2 111261 Comedy of Errors. Timon of Athens.5 6 829115 2 Henry iv. 392 240 473 662 3 2) 226 225 Hard. My mind's not on't, you are too hard for me He was ever too hard for him Caius Ligarius doth bear Cæfar hard Ibid. 51 697135 Coriolanus. 4 5 730117 1748 252 Julius Cæfar. 2 If you bear me hard, now, whilft your purpled hands do reek and smoke, fulfill your pleasure He is at fome hard point I did full hard forbear him Hard by. Be ready here hard by in the brewhoufe Herne's oak Hard bearts. Is there any cause in nature, that makes these hard hearts Much Ado About Nothing. 511442 8 Hard boufe. Repose you there: while I to this hard houfe, more hard than is the ftone whereof 'tis raised Lear.3 2 947143 Hardiment. He did confound the best part of an hour in changing hardiment 1 Hen. iv.13 Hardness. We will afk; that, if we fail in our request, the blame may hang upon your hardness ever of hardinefs is mother Cymbeline. 3 913117 Hard-rul'd king Hare. Such a hare is madness the youth, to skip o'er the meshes of good counfel the cripple Her love is not the hare that I do hunt As You Like It.4 3 2431 I More a coward than a hare You are the hare of whom the proverb goes, whofe valour plucks dead lions by the beard Melancholy as a hare Like a brace of greyhounds having the fearful flying hare in fight If I fly, Marcius, halloo me like a hare And fnatch them up as we take hares behind Hare-bell. Nor the azur'd hare-bell, like thy veins Twelfth Night. 3 3262 20 Hare-finder. Cupid a good hare-finder Much Ado Abt. Nothing. 1 1 123136 Hare-lip. He makes the hare-lip Lear. 3 4 949 112 Harfleur, Governor, of. D. P. Henry v. 509 I will not leave the half atchiev'd Harfleur till in her afhes the lie buried Ibid. 3 3 521251 Go you and enter Harfleur; there remain and fortify it strongly 'gainst the French 16.3 3 522134 Harlock. Harlots. Whilft fhe with harlots feafted in my house Harlotry. A peevish felf-will'd harlotry, one that no perfuafion can do good upon 1 II. iv. 3 1 Rom. and Jul. 4 2 919112 Harm. And often times, to win us to our harm, the inftruments of darknefs tell us truths Macbeth.13 365226 Ibid. 4 2 380147 2380149 I am in this earthly world; where, to do harm, is often laudable Thou haft done much harm upon me, Hal,-God forgive thee for it Nor will do none to-morrow, he will keep that good name still K. John. 3 1 396 156 1 Henry iv.1 2 444 110 Henry v.3 7 526131 Ibid. 71 526132 Harm Harm. But none can cure their harms by wailing them A. S. P. C. L. Richard iii. 2 2 646,145 2 646 215 As well the fear of harm, as harm apparent, in my opinion, ought to be prevented Ib. 2 not yourself with your vexation Good mafters harm me not That I suffer'd was all the harm I did Cymbeline. 2 8951 7 Lear. I 2 934 59 Whose nature is so far from doing harms, that he suspects none Let me ftill take away the harms I fear I faw no harm; and then I heard each fyllable, that breath made up between them Harm-doing. By my life she never knew harm-doing Harmful pity But not without that harmful stroke, which fince hath pluck'd him after Ibid. 1 4 938131 Troilus and Creffida. 5 1 8712 32 385217 79311 2807135 Like a cunning inftrument put into his hands that knows no touch to tune the harmony He is full of harmony Harness. At leaft we'll die with harness on our backs Leap thou, attire and all, through proof of harness to my heart Harpy. Rather than hold three words conference with this harpy Mu. Ado Abt. Noth. 2 It harrows me with fear and wonder Harry'd. I repent me much that I fo harry'd him Coriolanus. 5 3 7351 52 11000121 I 1761 2 2 404 160 Ant. and Cleop.3 3 783216 Troil. and Cref. 2 38711 4 Much Ado About Noth. 1 3 124 2 59 - When wit and youth is come to harveft, your wife is like to reap a proper man Tw. N. 1321120 And reap the harvest which that rascal fow'd I'll blaft his harvest, if your head were lay'd - 2 Henry vi. 31 586244 3 Henry vi. 5 7 632222 Though we have spent our harveft of this king, we are to reap the harveft of his fon Richard iii. 2 2 646 157 To reap the harvest of perpetual peace by this one bloody trial of sharp war Harveft-bome. There's my harvest-home Ibid. 5 2 6652 2 Cymbeline. 1 1894 116 Merry W. of Wind. 2 2 562 6 Harveft-man. Like to a harvest-man, that's task'd to mow or all, or lofe his hire Cor. 1 3 707131 - Your falt tears head He means to recompenfe the pains you take by cutting off your heads Dream.41 189 18 All's Well. 13 282123 K. Jobn. 5 4 409249 This tongue, that runs fo roundly in thy head, should run thy head from thy unreverend fhoulders To fave our heads by raifing of a head Richard ii. 21 42118 3447 240 1 Henry iv. 1 For if their heads had any intellectual armour, they could never wear such heavy| head pieces I'll fee if his head will stand steadier on a pole, or no That head of thine doth not become a crown They took his head, and on the gates of York they fet the fame Henry v.37 526 224 2 Henry vi. 4 7 596227 Ibid. 5 1600 126 3 Henry vi. 21 610116 Until my mishap'd trunk, that bears this head, be round impaled with a glorious crown Ibid. 3 2 619 19 Coriolanus. 1 704215 The kingly crown'd head Our head fhall go bare, till merit crown it Titus Andronicus. 31 843 224 Troil. and Creff328732 9 Beat at this gate and let thy folly in, and thy dear judgment out We were enforc'd, for fafety fake, to fly out of your fight, and raise this Doing the execution and the act for which we have in head affembled them Tullius Aufidius then had made new head Headier. And am fallen out with my more headier will Headlefs. And fmooth my way upon their headless necks And help to fet a head, on headless Rome Headlung. Hence will I drag thee headlong by the heels Lear. 14 937 2 16 prefent 3 Henry vi. Lear. 2 468 135 2 515260 I 610234 7 4 943 250 Canft thou when thou command'st the beggar's knee, command the health of it It gives me an estate of seven year's health Henry v.41 529235. Coriolanus. 2 1713 114 Brutus is wife, and, were he not in health, he would embrace the means to come by it Jul. Caf. 2 1 749 144 Tim. of Athens. 1 2 807142 Tr. and Creff 4 1 877 246. Romeo and Juliet. 1 497312 No jocund health, that Denmark drinks to day, but the great cannon to the clouds For on his choice depends the fafety and the health of the whole state Hear. We look to hear from you To fpy if I can hear my Thifoy's face Hamlet.I 21002238 Ibid. 1 310042 5 Rom. and Jul. 43 991237 As You Like It. 1 2 225 229 Richard iii. 2 1 644 2 10 Cymbeline. 1 2 89514 Two Gent. of Verona. 2 4 302 45 Mid. Night's Dream. 5 1 1941 20 Lay thine ear clofe to the ground, and lift if thou canst hear the tread of travellers A. S. P. C. L. Hearing improved by the want of fight 'Tis a good hearing, when children are toward,-But a harsh hearing, when women are froward Heart. The cry did knock against my very heart Piteous heart Inward joy enforced my heart to smile as far from fraud as heaven from earth He grieves my very heart-strings If you knew his pure heart's truth as full of forrows as a fea of fands Here is the heart of my purpose Taming of the Sbrew. 5 2 276 2 54 2134 2 2.141 25218 Ibid. 2 33 211 My heart is ready to crack with impatience In the lawful name of marrying, to give our hearts united ceremony M. W. of Wind. 4 Nature never formed a woman's heart of prouder stuff than that of Beatrice O God that I were a man! I would eat his heart in the market-place A light heart lives long Ibid. 31 132 123. Ibid. 3 1 132 2 37. Ibid. 3 2 1331 5. 11401 3 Love's Labor Loft. 2 11541 24. Ibid. 5 2 166 130 Ibid. 5 2 173138 Midfummer Night's Dream.2 2 180251 Ibid. 2 3 1821 4 Ibid. 3 2 185223 Ibid. 2 7 207 115 The virtue of my heart, the object and the pleasure of mine eye, is only Helena Ib. 4 1 191130 Man's heart is not able to report what my dream was That left pap where heart doth hop Ibid. 4 1 191|2|19 1951 20 Let my liver rather heat with wine, than my heart cool with mortifying groans 246 161 Too capable of every line and trick of his sweet favour Ibid. 4 1 2151 5. As You Like It.5 2 2461 59 Ibid. 5 2 All's Well. I I 278 150 O, fhe, that hath a heart of that fine frame, to pay this debt of love but to a brother ➡ I will on with my speech in your praise, and then shew you the heart of my meffage I have faid too much unto a heart of stone He started one poor heart of mine in thee Ibid. 1 5 312138 Do't and thou haft the one half of my heart; do't not, thou split'st thine own W. T.I 2 Ibid. 1 2 338230 Who could refrain, that had a heart to love, and in that heart courage to make his love known Macbeth. 2 3 371249 I would not have such a heart in my bosom for the dignity of the whole body Ibid. 5 1 383 The tackle of my heart is crack'd and burnt You lose a thousand well difpofed hearts 4 R 4 |