A 1 Stumbling night 1 340|2|33 5 989 122 11043 2 2 I 122119 Romeo and Juliet. 2 3 978128 Stumbling-blocks. Were I a man, a duke, and next of blood, I would remove these tedious ftumbling-blocks Strumpet. The strumpet wind K. Jobu. 5 5 410163 Stupified. If you or stupified; or feeming fo in skill cannot, or will not relish as truth, like In the ftye of this moft bloody boar my fon George Stanley is frank'd up in hold R. .45 6642 36 Honeying, and making love over the nasty stye Hamlet. 3 4 1024223 Stygian banks. Like a strange foul upon the Stygian banks ftaying for waftage T.&C.32 872 2 38 Style. Whofe ftyle agrees not with the leannefs of his purse Styx. Why fuffer'ft thou thy fons, unbury'd yet, to hover on the dreadful fhore of Styx Fly not; for, fhould'st thou take the river Styx, I would swim after Troil. and Cre: 5 Sub-contracted. 'Tis the is fub-contracted to this lord, and I her husband, contradict your banes Subduements. Defpifing many forfeits and fubduements Lear. 5 3 The beafts, the fishes, and the winged fowls, are their males' fubject He is our fubject, Mowbray, so art thou; free speech and fearless I to thee allow I am a fubject and challenge law My fubjects, for a pair of carved faints Richard ii. 1 1414 2 42 Ibid. 2 3 425150 Ibid. 3 3 429252 What fubject can give sentence on his king, and who fits here that is not Richard's Ibid. 4 1 432|2|30 And drive all thy fubjects afore thee like a flock of wild geefe Henry iv. 2 4 452248 Henry v. 41 529 2 Henry vi. 13 575210 To-day fhalt thou behold a subject die, for truth, for duty, and for loyalty We must not rend our fubjects from our laws and stick them in our will Henry viii. 1 267519 Ibid. 1 2 675151 Lear. 5 3 962 253 Hamlet. 1 310042 Submerg'd. So half my Ægypt were submerg'd, and made a cistern for feal'd fnakes 2 Submiffion! 'tis a mere French word; we English warriors wot not what it means 1 Henry vi. 5 1 1 Henry iv. 13 Suborn'd. Thou haft fuborn'd the goldsmith to arrest me Comedy of Errors. 4 4 But now I find, I had fuborn'd the witness, and he's indited falfely For Hector, in his blaze of wrath, fubfcribes to tender objects his power! confin'd to exhibition All cruels elfe fubfcrib'd Subscription. You owe me no subscription 564 155 446 2 28 5842 35 115256 1066 137 86119 Much Ado About Nothing. 5 4 144 242 Troil. and Creffida. 4 5 882137 All's Well. 5 These are his substance, finews, arms, and ftrength with which he yoketh your re- 1646 Subftitute. How would you do to content this fubftitute Our fubftitutes in absence well invested Subftitution. A. S. P. C. L Meaf. for Meaf-1311 89/1534 Subtle. What fubtle hole is this, whose mouth is cover'd with rude growing briars 2 H. iv. 4 4 497 212 3126 Titus Andronicus. 24 8392 52 20153 3 308 2 Twelfth Night. My fpeech fhould fall into such vile fuccefs as my thoughts aim not at Succeffive title Succeffors gone before him Ant. and Cleop. Othello. 3 254 749 2 17 495 149 612111 3771213 3 10621 6 1831112 I 452 3 T. of Atb.1 Merry W. of Windfor. I 5 Suck. I can fuck mélancholy out of a fong, as a weazel fucks eggs 231 236 368 212 Henry v.4 2 5302 3 Ibid. 4 4 53316 2750258 864|1|52 752 131 11054 125 64157 As I fuck blood I should some mercy show Othello. z Merry W. of Wind). 4 Julius Cæfar.2 Julius Cæfar. 31 1 Mu Ado Abt. Noth. 3 3 A noble fhip of Venice hath feen a grievous wreck and sufferance Sufficient. You'll never meet a more sufficient man Suffering. Wifer than the judge, if wisdom be in fuffering 3 Henry vi. 1 1 60617 Henry viii. 5 1 697147 Coriolanus.3 1 719 133 Timon of Atb. 4 3 822233 Otbello. 2 11051159 Ibid. 3 4 1065|2|27 5 816234 Sufficiency. Then no more remains but that your sufficiency, as your worth is able, and Timon of Atb. 3 Sufficient. In faying he is a good man, is to have you understand me, that he is fufficient 2 Henry iv. 32 4901 Othello. 4 110701 9 Antony and Cleop. 412 796124 Mu. Ado Abt. Norb. 3 4 136 259 2 H. vi. 1 1572245 Suffocate. May he be fuffocate that dims the honour of this warlike ifle Troil. and Creff. 3862253 2 Henry vi. 571 Henry viii. 671 2 Henry vi. 1 4 577 230 Ibid. 3 2 589|1|34 Ibid. 3 2 Ibid. 41 589|2|24 592238 Henry viii. 41 693124 Richard .23 42435 1 H.iv. 2 4 452 With devotion's visage, and pious action, we do fugar o'er the devil himself 12 Hamlet.3 11017121 Sugar'd. Your grace attended to their fugar'd words, but look'd not on the poison of their Sugar-fop A. S. P. C. L. Richard iii. 3 1 648133 6481 Timon of Arbens. 4 3 822 223 648 133 Tam. of the Shrew. 4 1 268 115 Sugar-touch. There is more eloquence in the fugar-touch of them, than in the tongues of the French council Suggeft. I give thee not this to fuggeft thee from thy mafter thou talk'ft of; If good, why do I yield to that fuggeftion, whofe horrid image doth unfix my hair And pardon abfolute for yourself, and thefe led on by your suggestion Suicide. Brutus' arguments against it The more pity, that great folk should have countenance in this world to drown or hang themfelves, more than their even chriftian Suit. Haft thou no fuit against my knight The fuit is impertinent to myself, as your worship shall know by this honeft old We will make it our fuit to the Duke, that the wrestling might not go forward I will believe, thou hast a mind that fuits with this thy fair and outward character Ibid. 1 If it be a fuit from the count, I am fick, am not at home, or what you will to difmifs it Ibid. 1 5 3112 7 Would you undertake another fuit, I had rather hear you folicit, than mufick of the spheres If it be in man, befides the king, to effect your fuits, here is man fhall do it Yea, for obtaining of fuits; whereof the hangman hath no lean wardrobe 1 H. iv. 1 2 443230 2 Henry iv. 5 1 501225 And in no worldly fuit would he be mov'd, to draw him from his holy exercife afk'd Richard The emperor pay'd ere he promis'd; whereby his fuit was granted ere it was Henry viii. 37 654221 673255 Suit. Half your fuit never name to us, you have half our power: the other moiety, ere My lord of Canterbury, I have a fuit which you must not deny me A. S. P. C Henry viii. 2 674 2 700 Julius Cæfar. O, Cæfar, read mine first, for mine's a fuit that touches Cæfar nearer Suited. By my troth, there's one meaning well fuited Timon of Athens.2 round hofe in The four winds blow in from every coast renowned fuitors are already come Ibid. 1 Are you a fuitor to the maid you talk of, yes, or no Of all thy fuitors, here I charge thee, tell whom thou lov❜st best When she was young, you woo'd her; now, in age, is she become the fuitor W.Tale.5 31 362 3:5) -They say, poor fuitors have strong breaths; they shall know, we have strong arms Meaf. for Meaf. 22 831 Love's Labor Loft.2 11521 1991 2 199 Why are thine eyes fix'd on the fullen earth 2 Henry vi. 1 574 11009 17 It should seem by the fum, your mafter's confidence was above mine Summer news. If it be fummer news, smile to 't before Sumpter. Perfuade me rather to be slave and sumpter to this detested groom Then did the fun on dunghill shine the Richard ii. 1 3| 416|1|49| Lear. 2 4 945 1 14 Tempeft. 51 192 19 Merry W. of Windfor. 1 3 4924 Ere twice the fun hath made his journal greeting to the under generation At length the fun, gazing upon the earth Meaf. for Meaf4| 3|||96|1|43| Comedy of Errors. I I 104 129 Mid, Night's Dream. 3 2 185213 Tam. of the Shrew.45 273124 The fun was not so true unto the day, as he to me All's Well. 2 1284 23 Twelfth Night. 5 1 331215 As doth that orbed continent the fire, that fevers day from night Winter's Tale. 4 3 35414 To folemnize this day, the glorious fun stays in his courfe, and plays the alchemift King John. 3396 250 As whence the fun 'gins his reflection, fhipwrecking ftorms and direful thunders break The fun's o'ercast with blood, fair day adieu Of the old feeble and day-wearied fun Sun. Thy fun fets weeping in the lowly weft, witneffing ftorms to come, woe, and unreft A. S. P. C. L. Richard .24 425256 As doth the blushing difcontented fun from out the fiery portal of the east How bloodily the fun begins to peer above yon busky hill Ibid. 3 3 429 121 1 Henry iv. 1 2 4431.3 Ibid. 41464 246 Ibid. 5 1 467147 H. v.3 5 52315 On whom, as in defpight, the fun looks pale, killing their fruit with frowns The fun with one eye vieweth all the world Ibid. 4 1 529135 1 Henry vi. 14 548 255 566 160 2 Henry vi. 3 2 590117 1609233 Ibid. 2 3 613145 As plays the fun upon the glaffy streams, twinkling another counterfeited beam Ib. 54 3 Henry vi. 2 Ibid. 4-7 627|1|21 When the morning fun shall raise his car above the border of this horizon hay Witness my fun, now in the fhade of death; whose bright out-fhining beams thy cloudy wrath When the fun fets, who doth not look for night Then he difdains to shine; for, by the book, he should have brav'd the east an hour ago Ib. 5 3 668 214 The fun will not be seen to-day; the sky doth frown and lour upon our army As certain, as I know the fun is fire And the fhouting Romans make the fun dance Henry viii. 3 2 692212 Julius Cæfar.5 3 O fetting fun! as in thy red rays thou doft fink to-night, fo in this red blood Caffius' 764|1| 4 794 116 Ibid. 4 13 796|2|18 2808137 Ibid. 4 3 819 225 Ibid. 4 3 824211 I 836140 Timon of Athens.I Titus Andronicus. 2 And stain the fun with fog, as fometime clouds, when they do hug him in their melting bofoms Is the fun dimm'd, that gnats do fly in it What, hath the firmament more funs than one As when the fun doth light a storm The fun borrows of the moon when Diomed keeps his word By the flame of yonder glorious heaven We had many there, could behold the fun with as firm eyes as he Ibid. 3 1843 161 Troi. and Creff} 1 858133 Ibid. 5 1 885130 Ibid. 5 6 8891245 Cymbeline. 1 5 896217 If Cæfar can hide the fun from us with a blanket, or put the moon in his pocket, we will pay him tribute for light By the facred radiance of the fun Ibid. 3 1 906241 Lear. I 19302 12 An hour before the worshipp'd fun peer'd forth the golden window of the east Arife, fair fun, and kill the envious moon I am too much i' the fun Sun-burn'd ficklemen Thus goes every one to the world but I, and I am fun-burn'd Sun-fbine. Even then that fun-fhine brew'd a shower for him Romeo and Juliet. 1 1 9682 56 Ibid. 2 2 9752 4 Hamlet. 1 21002126 172 19 Tempeft. 41 M. Ado Abt. Noth. 2 I 128 127 6 3 Henry vi. 2 2 613 Much Ado About Noth. I 1 123 154 1 Henry iv.31 459215 Why fuch impress of shipwrights, whose fore task does not divide the Sunday from Than with that hand that cut thy youth in twain, to funder his that was thine enemy Sunder'd. Shall we be funder'd? fhall we part, fweet girl 5 N Romeo and Juliet.5 3 995 255 |