There falling out at tennis A. S. P. C. L. 1 Henry vi. 47) 564|1|| Titus Andronicus.1 2836123 Prol. to Troilus and Creff. Tennis balls. The old ornament of his cheek hath already stuff'd tennis-balls He therefore fends you meeter for your spirit this tun of treasure Tenor. Letters of ftrange tenor Henry uni. I Hamlet. 2 M. A.Ab. N. 8 85111 3 6771 5 Henry v.1 Tenour. By the ftern brow, and waspish action which she did ufe as fhe was writing of it, it bears an 'angry tenour." of the proclamation As You Like It. 4 3 243255 Troil, and Creff2| 1866 146 Cor. 19710239 Ibid. 3 2 721234 Ibid. 3 2 724 123 Tent. Well might they fester 'gainst ingratitude, and tent themselves with death 'Tis a fore upon us you cannot tent yourself The fmile of knaves tent in my checks. The tent that fearches to the bottom of the worst Troi. and Cre2 2866251 Ibid. 5884133 Who keeps the tent now?-The furgeon's box, or the patient's wound I'll obferve his looks; I'll tent him to the quick Coftly apparel, tents, and canopies Cymbeline. 3 4 910 156 Hamlet. 2 2 1C16221 Taming of the Shrew. 2 1263135 Troilus and Creff. 3 2 873126 Tercel. The faulcon as the tercel, for all the ducks i' the river Ibid. 2 5 841131 And treats of Tereus' treafon, and his rape; and rape, I fear, was root of thine annoy Ib. 4 1 She hath been reading, late, the tale of Tereus Termagant. Hot termagant Scot I would have such a fellow whipp'd for o'er-doing Termagant Terminations. If her breath were as terrible as her terminations Terms. Were I under the terms of death Cymbeline. 2 8452 4 290224 1 Henry iv.5 4 471239 Mu. Ado Ab. Notb. 2 I I like not fair terms, and a villain's mind With many holiday and lady terms he question'd me So, like grofs terms, the prince will in the perfectness of time caft off his followers 3 202 2 I Will you vouchsafe to teach a foldier terms, fuch as will enter at a lady's ear A fifter driven into desperate terms Love's Lab. Loft. 4 Terrefirial. Give me thy hand terrestrial, so:—give me thy hand celestial, fo M. W. of W.3 I 2 933110 Meaf. for Meaf.1| 761 I All's Well. 2 3 285251 Hence is it that we make trifles of terrors Teft. Let there be some more test made of my metal Teftament. Cymbeline. 42 915248 Meaf. for Meaf.1 I 76134 "Poor deer," quoth he, "thou makest a testament as worldlings do, giving thy fum of more to that which had too much" Teftimonied. Let him be but teftimonied in his own bringings forth Teftiness. But my mother having power of his teftiness, shall turn all into my commen dations Teftril. There's a teftril of me, too Cymbeline. 314233 Tefly. Lead thofe tefty rivals fo aftray, as one come not within another's way M. N. Dr. 2 188151 Catesby hath founded Haftings in our business; and finds the testy gentleman fo hot ➡ Must I stand and crouch under your testy humour 1666 Tetchy and wayward was thy infancy Tether. With a larger tether may he walk, than may be given you The rivell'd fee-fimple of the tetter A. S. P. C.L Richard .44 660253 Hamlet. 3100520 Coriolanus.3 I 720 1 Troil. and Creff51 884146 A moft inftant tetter bark'd about, most lazar like, with vile and loathfome cruft, all my smooth body Terkfbury. Text. Where lies your text?-in Orfino's bofom You are now out of your text No more; the text is foolish Hamlet. 151007 3 Henry vi. 53 629 Twelfth Night.15 3122 Ibid. 15 31226 Lear. 4 2 95415 Thames. I believe, as cold a night as 'tis, he could wish himself in the Thames up to the Hey v.41 5282 Macbeth.1 2 354 Ibid. 1 2 364 Romeo and Juliet. 3 5 988: Much Ado Ab. Noth. 4 Thanklefs child. How sharper than a ferpent's tooth it is to have a thanklefs child When a man thanks me heartily, methinks, I have given him ders me the beggarly thanks 1 1371 Lear.1 4 937 235 Two Gent. of Verona. 4 As You Like It.2 penny, and he ren Such thanks I give as one near death to thofe that wish to live Richard ii. 2) 3 424/2/39 pay 7. N.33322146 Ibid.23 424235 3 Henry vi.5 4 630143 I fhall live, my Lord, to give them thanks, that were the cause of my imprisonment -, to men of noble minds, is honourable meed Richard iii. I 1 635111 Titus Andron. 2 83313 The thanks I give, is telling you that I am poor of thanks, and scarce can spare them My thanks are too dear at a halfpenny That that is, is Why do you pity me ?-that others do That-way-accomplished. A cunning thief, or a that-way-accomplished hazard the winning of both first and last Thatch. And thatch your poor thin roofs with burdens of the dead Thaw. - The oufel cock, fo black of hue-forg. Theam. Part of his theam, but nothing of his ill-ta'en fufpicion Theatre. Cymbeline 1 7 900114 courtier, would Ibid. 1 5 897149 821/144 Timon of Aibens.4 3 'M.W. of Windfor.3 5 M. Ado About Noth. 2 Midf. Night's Dream. 6424 I 127215 1 184 143 Winter's Tale.1) 2338242 As in a theatre, the eyes of men, after a well-grac'd actor leaves the ftage, Rich..52 435261 Theft. There's warrant in that theft which steals itself, when there's no mercy left O theft most bafe; that we have ftolen what we do fear to keep Theme. To me the fpeaks, the moves me for her theme Macbeth. 2 3 372131 For in a theme fo bloody fac'd as this, conjecture, expectation, and furmife of aids 7137 2 Henry iv.1) 3 478/2 Henry viii. 2 It will in time win upon power, and throw forth greater themes for infurrections And have hearts to honour and advance the theme of our affembly And their conteftation was theme for you Here he comes, and I must ply my theme She is a theme of honour and renown Name her not now, fir, fhe's a deadly theme Coriclanus. 683210 1705 Ibid. 2 2 715 Antony and Cleop. 22 774239 Titus Andronicus.5 His gentle lady, big of this gentleman, our theme, deceas'd as he was born Then. But in fuch a then I write a never Theorice Unless the bookish theoric 8522 2 868159 Ibid. 4 8831 $94 Cym. 11 10361 Ham.5 1 All's Well. 3 2 291 Orbello.1 11043 Theorique. He had the whole theorique of war in the knot of his fearf A. S. P. C. L. All's Well. 4 3 298131 51029 857 Henry v.1) 1 D. P. Cymbeline. 4 Mid. Night's Dream. The bouncing amazon, your buskin'd mistress, and your warrior love, to Thefeus must be wedded Knowing I know thy love to Thefeus Thetis. Let the ruffian Boreas once enrage the gentle Thetis 3 862156 2 91153 175 Ibid. 2 2 170 2 32 179 2 36 Thewes. Care I for the limb, the thews, the ftatue, bulk, and big affemblance of aman 2H.iv.3 2 401149 J. Cafar.13 4752 59 Hamlet. 1 31004153 Jul. Cajar.5 3 763217 Romans now have thews and limbs like to their ancestors For nature, crefcent, does not grow alone in thews, and bulk Thick. My fight was ever thick Thick-coming Not fo fick, my Lord, as fhe is troubled with thick-coming fancies Mac. 5 3 384217 Thicken. And this may help to thicken other proofs, that do demonftrate thinly Orbello. 3 31064129 Thick fight. He was fo forlorn, that his dimensions to any thick fight were invifible 2 H. iv. 3 2 491 252 Thick ĺkin. What would'st thou have, boor? What, thick skin The fhalloweft thick skin of that barren fort Thieves. Stale to catch thieves M.W. of Winaf. 4 5 68235 185130 18131 I had rather truft a thief with my ambling gelding, than my wife with herself for their robbery have authority when judges fteal themselves man What a deform'd thief this fashion is When you shall pleafe to play the thieves for wives, I'll watch as long for you then are not judg'd, but they are by to hear Merchant of Venice. 2 6 205261 Richard .4 1432232 So defperate thieves, all hopeless of their lives, breathe out invectives 'gainst the Ibid. 51 6 631222 Tim. of Athens. 803 Ibid. 4 3 824123 Cymbeline.17 899 18 38129 Two Gent, of Ver.4 6 1031121 1 992 5 thill-horfe has on his Winter's Tale. 2 133235 2 2012 2 271 237 King John. 5 2 409 134 Winter's Tale. 4 Taming of the Shrew. 4 3 2711 I done well, and with a care, exempt themselves from fear: Things done without example, in their iffue are to be fear'd of like value, differing in their owners, are prized by their masters 18052 7 Hamlet. 1 I 999 2 17 Mer. of Venice. 4 1 214253 -Yon Caffius has a lean and hungry look; he thinks too much; fuch men are dangerous I am wrapp'd in difmal thinkings A. S. P. C.L Ant. and Cleep-31178832 As You Like It. 5,2 24628 As though in thinking, on no thought I think, makes me with heavy nothing faint and shrink Richard ii. 2) 242311 I am afraid, his thinkings are below the moon, not worth his ferious confidering H.vili. 3 268921 There is nothing either good or bad, but thinking makes it fo Hamlet. 2 I pray thee, speak to me as to thy thinkings Othello. 3 Third. Thifee. D. P. Thong. A fhort knife and a thong Ind. to T. of the Sbr. Mid. Night's Dream.1 Thorns. Leave her to heaven, and to those thorns that in her bofom lodge, to prick and fting her This thorn doth to our rofe of youth rightly belong The woe's to come; the children yet unborn shall feel this day as fharp to them as thorns Ant. and Cle p. 3 Mid. Night's Dream. Ibid. 3 Merry W. of Wind. 2 Thorough. And if a man is thorough with them in honest taking up, then they must Never fo much as in a thought unborn, did I offend your highness Call home thy ancient thoughts from banishment Induc. to Tam. of the Shrew. Merciful powers! restrain in me the curfed thoughts, that nature gives way to in Love's Lab. Left. 4 2 1592 43 3 228 123 And like a shifted wind unto a fail, it makes the course of thoughts to fetch about Ib. 4 1 Macbeth. I 3 365249 Ibid. 2 13691 14 Ibid. 3 I 374 126 Ibid. 5 4 385114 King Jobn. 2 2 395145 Steel thy fearful thoughts, and change misdoubt to refolution Thought. But thought's the flave of life, and life time's fool Never a man's thought in the world keeps the road way better than thine 1 Henry v.54 4712 3 481246 Ibid. 1 509 211 2513243 1 Henry vi. 1 4 549 2 I 2 Henry vi. 3 1586 155 My thoughts aim at a further matter; I stay not for love of Edward, but the crown All will come to nought, when fuch bad dealing must be seen in thought Ibid. 3 6 65416 Ibid. 4 4 660135 Holy and heavenly thoughts ftill councel her Take thought, and die for Cæfar Our worfer thoughts heaven made Henry viii. 54 702 1 27 Jul. Cafar. 2 1748 2 20 Ant. and Cleop.1 Therefore be cheer'd; make not your thoughts your prisons That thought is bounty's foe; being free itself, it thinks all others fo 871225 - My thoughts were like unbridled children, grown too headstrong for their mother 16.3 2 873 2 46 Ibid. 3 3 8762 14 Even fo my bloody thoughts with violent pace, fhall ne'er look back, ne'er ebb to humble love Thrall'd. And let me be a flave, to achieve that maid whose sudden fight hath thrall'd my wounded eye Tam. of the Shrew.[1] I 257 117 4 1024 2 I Love's Labor Loft.5 1 164158 As You Like It.5224627 Nor fenfe to ecstacy was ne'er fo thrall'd, but it referv'd fome quantity of choice Ham. 3 Thrafonical. In general behaviour, vain, ridiculous, and thrafonical Cæfar's thrafonical brag, of-I came, faw, and overcame Thread. He draweth out the thread of his verbofity finer than the staple of his argument Let not Bardolph's vital thread be cut with edge of penny cord Love's Lab. Loft. 1164237 Even when the navel of the state was touch'd, they would not thread the gates Cor. I Threading dark ey'd night 720 2 Lear. 2 I 940 141 Richard .32 421149 Richard iii. 3 638 259 Ant. and Cleo.3 5 784137 Titus Andron.2 1836246 Cymbeline. 4 29161 7 King John. 51 407 219 Threaten'd. The things threaten'd me, ne'er look'd but on my back; when they hall| fee the face of Cæfar, they are vanished Threats. His liberty is full of threats to all Three. These three, three thousand confident, in act as many 503 Julius Cejar.22 750134 Tam. of the Sbrew.|4| 1| 267|1|53 |