240 226 Much Ado About Nothing. 4 1 138 132 1 1542 42 21002 130 Eye-balls. Your bugle eye-balls Upon thy eye-balls murderous tyranny fits in grim majesty to fright the world Do not for ever with thy vailed lids feek for thy noble father in the duft Eye-wink. They could never get an eye-wink of her Eyne. Upon our watery eyne Romeo and Juliet. 4 1 990 229 Merry Wives of Windfor. 2 2 To what, my love, shall I compare thine eyne? crystal is muddy - While counterfeit supposes blear’d thine eyne Ibid. 1 3 542 18 491 I Love's Lab. Loft.5 2 167263 Midf. N.'s Dr. 3 2 186156 Taming of the Sbrew.51 274252 Fabulous ftory. That former fabulous story, being now seen poffible enough, got His heart's meteors to cling in his face Saffron face And with no face, as it were, outfacing me This grained face of mine be hid in fap-confuming winter's fnow Predeftinate scratch'd face Coriolanus. 1 307 561243 23382/10 1 7042 19 credit H.viii. 1 1672 133 Ibid. 2113213 Mu. Ado Abt. Noth. 1 I 121210 It is a witness still of excellency to put a strange face on his own perfection February face Vouchsafe to fhew the funshine of your face, that we, like favages, may worship it A. S. P. C. L. Face. Your face hath got five hundred pound a year, yet fell your face for five pence, and 'tis dear Then call them to our prefence, face to face K. John. I Was this the face, that, like the fun, did make beholders wink Was this face, the face that every day, under his houfhold roof, did keep ten thoufand men I never fee thy face, but I think upon hell-fire, and Dives, that liv'd in purple 1 H.iv. 3 3 461255 476 122 - His face is full of bubukles, and whelks and knobs, and flames of fire But that thy face is, vizor-like, unchanging For by his face straight shall you know his heart Had their faces been loose, this day they had been lost How long her face is drawn When my face is fair, you shall perceive whether I blush or no I knew by his face there was fomething in him Thinking, by this face, to faften in our thoughts that they have courage 1 Henry vi. 54 Ibid. 4 2 695|2|27 Coriolanus. 19711127 Ibid. 4 5 7291 5 Jul. Cæfar. Round to a faultinefs,—for the most part too, they are foolish that are fo God hath given you one face, and you make yourselves another Faced. Thou haft fac'd many things cas'd, or Tam. of the Shrew. 4 3 271 212 274 256 Love's Labor Loft. 4 2 158243 286 118 Otbello. I 31047 133 All's Well. 2 3 Fact. As you are past all shame, (those of your fact are fo) fo past all truth Wint.Tale.32 Faction. I will bandy with thee in faction Their fraction is more our wish, than their faction Factionary. Always factionary on the party of your general - Not as protector, steward, substitute, or lowly factor for another's gain 344 248 Coriolanus. 5 2 734127 Julius Cafar. 13 746 136 1 Henry iv. 3 2 461134 Richard iii. 3 7 655141 fouls Ib.44659 257 Ant. and Cleap. 2 6 778254 Henry v.1 1 510/2/24 Hamlet. 11001136 Love's Labor Loft. 5 1 165257 Tw. Night. 2 2314137 Winter's Tale. 4 3351221 Mid. Night's Dream. 2 1 1792 13 Titus Andronicus. 3 1 842136 Lear. 2 4 944 1 34 Mu. Ado About Noth. 1 11241 7 Cymbeline. 3 4 909253 Com. of Er. 31| 110 1 Fail. I cannot think, my fifter in the least would fail her obligation Goodly and gallant shall be false and perjur'd by thy great fail Fain. Here is neither cheer, fir, nor welcome; we would fain have But you have that in your countenance, which I would fain call master Faint. Why faint you, lords? my title's good - It faints me to think what follows I have perceived a most faint neglect of late - prayer = 3 Henry vi. 4 7 585 218 626 2 19 Lear. 14 935 118 I 3 Henry vi. 1 1 605 Henry viii. 23 683222 Lear. 14 93528 1bid. 1 2934153 Midf. Night's Dr.3 2 1891 19 Two Gent. of Verona. 4 3 Meaf. for Meaf. 41/2/22 51 792/28 Fair. 276 143 befal thee -I will buy me a fon-in-law in a fair; and toll him : for this, I'll none of him All's Well. 5 3 303 2 59 - is foul, and foul is fair - So foul and fair a day I have not seen Health and fair time of day And fair be all thy hopes Macbeth. 1 Ibid. I Henry v. 5 2 1 Henry vi. 25 Have you laid fair the bed Furnish you fairly for this interchange black, grey, green, and white Our radiant queen hates fluts and fluttery Their employment -continue their gambols until the fun-rifing Now fair befal thee and thy noble house She would be as fair on Friday, as Helen on Sunday - leave - be it to you, my lord, and to all this fair company Entreat her fair Fair bour. Take thy fair hour Faire-bading dreams. The sweetest sleep, and fairest-boding dreams Fairly. To be faid, an honest man, and a good house-keeper, goes as And find a way out to let the troop pass fairly They are fairly welcome Fairness. To the fairness of my power Fair-play. According to the fair-play of the world Fairies. Like urchins, ouphes, and fairies, green and white Fairy-like, to pinch the unclean knight Where is Nan now, and her troop of fairies Their employments · A fiend, a fairy, pityless and rough D. P. - I never may believe thefe antique fables, nor these fairy toys That fome night-tripping fairy had exchang'd in cradle clothes our children 1 H.iv. Ibid. 5 1 Winter's Tale. 3 3 547 216 From fairies, and the tempters of the night, guard me Antony and Cleop. 48 With female fairies will his tomb be haunted But that it eats our victuals, I should think here were a fairy Cymbeline. 22 7931 8 902121 913 43 and gods profper it with thee - Then no planets strike, no fairy takes, nor witch hath power to charm Fairy dances green four ringlets Ibid. 4 2 917111 Lear. 4 6 956244 11001 142 Hamlet. 1 Fairy revel. Faith. Thou haft no faith left now, unless thou hadst two, and that's far worse than none-better have none than plural faith He wears his faith but as the fashion of his hat In faith, fhe's toe curst 19163 68 143 43216 Two Gent. of Verona. 5 4 - Beauty is a witch, against whofe charms faith melteth into blood - Never faith could hold, if not to beauty vow'd Bearing the badge of faith to prove them true Betake thee to thy faith, for feventeen poniards: Love's Labor Loft. 4 2 159 240 1861 42 All's Well. 4 I 295 260 Twelfth Night.1 5 311229 Ibid. 2 3 316 110 Ibid. 5 1 330211 Macbeth.52 3841 9 For truft not him that once hath broken faith This fecret is so weighty, 'twill require a strong faith to conceal it Few words to fair faith Henry v. Which to believe of her, must be of faith, that reason, without miracle, should never plant in me Faith'd. Would the repofal of any truft, virtue, or worth, in thee, make thy words faith'd? Faithfully. If his occafion were not virtuous, I would not urge them half so faithfully 3 Henry vi. 4 4 624|2|64 680 2 11 2 2 7582 13 873213 Merchant of Venice. 3 As You Like It.1 All's Well. 3 2272 55 1290149 Falls. As the matter falls You will try in time in defpight of a fall And the foul of every man prophetically does forethink thy fall I know thee not, old man; fall to thy prayers I can give you inkling of an ensuing evil, if it fall greater than this 1 Henry iv. 3 I fhall fall like a bright exhalation in the evening, and no man see me more 692 126 Coriolanus. 31 719151 Julius Cæfar. 5 1 754161 Fall of man. I will weep for thee; for this revolt of thine, methinks, is like another fall of man I am a poor fallen man, unworthy now to be thy lord and master Fallen-off Britons Othello. 2 31057116 Falling-from. The meer-want of gold, and the falling-from of his friends, drove him into this melancholy Falling man. O, my lord, prefs not a falling man too far Timon of Atbens. 4 3 82416 Falling fickness. No, Cæfar hath it not; but you, and I, and honest Cafca, we have the falling fickness Fallow. The bare fallow brings to teeming foyfon Henry viii. 3 2 691 242 Her fallow leas the darnel, hemlock, and rank fumitory, doth root upon Henry v.5 2 5382 16 Ibid. 3 2 521133 Meaf. for Meaf. 24 871 3 Falorous. Captain Jamy is a marvellous falorous gentleman Falfe. My falfe overweighs your true - - If it be ne'er fo falfe, a true gentleman may swear it, in the behalf of his friend If fhe did play falfe, the fault was her's I never was, nor never will be falfe to his bed! What is it to be false ? 361 155 13882 38 Winter's Tale. 5 2 True to thee, were to prove false, which I will never be, to him that is most true to thy gods, thy brother, and thy father Heaven truly knows that thou art falfe as hell She was falfe as water Ib. 3 5 912249 Lear. 5 3 963|2|42 Othello. 4 21070235 Ibid. 5 21076|1|39 Falfe Falle face muft hide what the falfe heart doth know Macbeth. Falfebood, cowardice, and poor descent, three things that women highly hold in hate O, what a goodly outfide falfehood hath A. S. P. C. L. 368/2/46 Two Gent. of Verona. 3 2 Make Creffid's name the very crown of falsehood, if ever the leave Troilus Ibid. 4 2 is worse in kings, than beggars This bait of falfehood takes this carp of truth Falstaff, Sir John. D.P. Merry W. of Wind. p. 45• 2 H.iv. Cymbeline. 3 6 2 Comedy of Errors. 2 2 107 241 1 H. iv. p. 441. 61137 His adventure in the old woman of Brentford's cloaths His adventures at Herne's Oak in Windfor Forest - characterized by himself in the character of Henry IV. - characterized by Prince Henry in the character of Henry IV. -'s account of his foldiers delineation of counterfeit Ibid. 5 5 1 Henry iv. 2 Ibid. 2 4 455218 Jack, now Sir John, was then a boy, and page to Thomas Mowbray duke of Norfolk Go, carry Sir John Falstaff to the Fleet -'s death 2 Henry iv. 3 2 489140 Let fame, that all hunt after in their lives, live registered upon our brazen tombs cannot be better held, nor more attain'd, than by a place below the first -Out-live thy father's days, and fame's eternal date, for virtue's praife Here none but foldiers and Rome's fervitors repofe in fame He lives in fame, that dy'd in virtue's cause Familiar. Tis my familiar fin Away with him! he has a familiar under his tongue 3 Henry vi. 3 Titus Andron. 1 Ibid. 2835110 Ibid. I 283557 5 Measure for Measure. 1 We have been familiar, ingrate forgetfulness shall poison, rather than pity much Familiarity. I hope, upon familiarity will grow more contempt 79141 596240 Coriolanus. 5 2 7342 33 Merry W. of Windjor. 1 I 481 Macbeth. 5 5 2 Henry iv. 32 6 2 Henry vi. 4 10 Cymbeline. 3 Rom. and Jul.5 1 Tam. of the Shrew. 4 3 2 Henry vi. 410 Fau. Diftinction, with a broad and powerful fan, puffing at all, winnows the light away - Even in the fan and wind of your fair sword, you bid them rise, and live The love I bear him, made me to fan you thus - Do, good Peter, to hide her face; for her fan's the fairer of the two 385124 491253 598 251 913115 9942 3 270 2 598146 Troil. and Cref.1 3 86215 before go An old hat, and the humour of forty fancies prick'd in't for a feather T. of the Shrew. 3 9S02 2 Two Gent. of Verona. 3 Much Ado About Notb.3 I 1322 17 Look you arm yourself to fit your fancies to your father's will Mid. Night's Dream.I In maiden meditation, fancy free All fancy-fick fhe is, and pale of cheer Fair Helena in fancy following me If ever you meet in fome fresh cheek the power of fancy Chewing the food of sweet and bitter fancy My idolatrous fancy muft fanctify his relicts We must every one be a man of his own fancy As all impediments in fancy's course, are motives of more fancy 4 N As You Like It. 3 5 Ibid. 4 Ibid. 4 I 2402) 6 3 244 230 278152 295 139 |