Knowledge. By some apparent sign let us have knowledge 1 Henry vi.121 | 5501 po the wing wherewith we fly to heaven 2 Henry vi. 41 71 5962 5 When poisoned hours had bound me up from mine own knowledge Ant. and Cleop.12 2 7751/33 Known. So soon as I can win the offended king, I will be known your advocate Cym. 1) 2 8941157 Orbello. 51 2 10772126 I'll make thee known, though I lost twenty lives Kybe. If it were a kybe, 'twould put me to my lipper Tempeft. 2 101 I L 1 1123 12 2134 1 1 I 6961247 1 4711134 2 Troil. and Cref: 512 886 Coriolanus. Il 31 7072135 Tr. and Cr.31 1 8712155 Nay that shall not serve your turn; that shall it not, in truth, la Label. Ere this hand, by thee to Romeo seald, Mall be the label to another deed Romeo and Juliet. 41 1 9901145 Temper. 1 I Labour. You mar our labour Ibid. 3 1 made easy by doing it with a good will Two Gent. of Verona. 1 23 A grievous labour won 17 Mu. Ado About Notb.3) 2 1332 3! ill bestow'd Macbetb. 23371115 The labour we delight in, phyficks pain And labour shall refresh itself with hope Henry v. 2) 516/1/24 in thy vocation : which is as much to say as, let the magistrates be labouring 2 Henry vi. 4 2 59311 7 men - And of our labours thou might'st reap the gain 3 Henry vi. 5171 6322121 For he bewept my fortune, and hugg'd me in his arms, and swore with sobs, that he would labour my delivery Richard ii. | 41 6432115 - 'Tis sweating labour, to bear such idleness fo near the heart, as Cleopatra this Ant. and Cleop. 31 771 21 6 Now all labour marrs what it does Ibid.412 7951141 The queen’s in labour, they say, in great extremity; and fear'd me'll with the labour end Henry viii. 5 All's Well. 2 Timon of Atbens. 31 41 8151113 Labra. Word of denial in thy Labra's here Merry Wives of Windsor. 1 868 Labyrinth. What, lost in the labyrinth of thy fury 19 Winter's Tale. Lace. O, cut my lace; left my heart, cracking it, break too 3 2 3452127 Cut my lace asunder, that my pent heart may have some scope to beat Ricb.iri. 4 1 656 2136 What envious streaks do lace the severing clouds in yonder east Romeo and Juliet. 5 987 1 41 Lac'd mutton Two Gent. of Verona. 24124 White and azure! lac'd with blue of heaven's own tinet Cymbeline. 2 2 902 1136 Lack. They lack no direction Mer. W.of Windsor. 33 6 - You shall not lack a priest - Who in his office lacks a helper Meas. for Meaf. 4. 21 932122 Let all my sins lack mercy Mu. Ado About Norb. I 13812153 Nor doth this wood lack worlds of company, for you, in my respect, are all the world Mid. Night's Dream. 2 2) 1811 18 Let his lack of years, be no impediment to make him lack a reverend estimation Mer. of Venice. 4 1 2161/22 Rosalind lacks then the love, that teacheth thee that thou and I am one AsT.L.I.1 31 2282/16 Alas, dear love, I cannot lack thee two hours 1 243 137 She says, I am not fair; that I lack manners Ibid. 41 31 243259 They, that least lend it you, shall lack it first All's Well. 11 2 2801151 A little thing would make me tell them how much I lack of a man Tw. Nigbr.31 41 325|2|11 Our lack is nothing but our leave Macbetb. 41 3 382 2155 Though abundantly they lack discretion, yet are they passing cowardly Coriolanus. 1 1 705 2 2 Am To near the lack of charity, (to accuse myself) I hate you Cymbeline. 2 31 903-31 Hamlet.12 2 1012 2121 Orbello. I 2 10452 34 Lack-beard. For my Lord Lack-beard there, he and I Mall meet M«. Ado About Notb. 5142 257 Lack-brain. What a lack-brain is this 1 Henry iv. 2 31 450215 Lack-love. She durft not lye near to this lack-love-this kill-courtesy Midf. Night's Dr.2 3 1821 41 Lack-luftre eye As You Like It. 2 7 232 2116 Lack'd. I Thall be lov'd when I am lack'd Coriolanus. 41 7261 Lackying the varying tide Ant. and Cleopeli 4' 772 1124 Lacques Ibid. 41 601128 7012125 Ibid. 4 34/2 I 64412150 2 A.S. P. C. L. Lacquey. I will speak to him like a faucy lacquey, and under that habit play the knavej As You Like It. 3] 2 237139 Tam. of tbe Sbrew. 3 2 2651/42 3 Henry vi.141 66261 Lad. This pretty lad will prove our country's bliss Two Gent. of Verona, 24 311152 Ibid. 31 1 33|245 Ibid. 31 1 Richard ii. 5) 1 435|1|34 2 Henry iv.3) 1 4882 16 Richard ü. 413 Ladies attending on the queen. D.P. Coriolanus.11 91 71012 4 Timon of Atbens. 11 1 805250 Cymbeline. 1 5 897234 Hamler. Laertes. D.P. 999 277 Timon of At bens. 31 6818117 Lear. I 932 2134 1 Henry iv. 5 1 467 2 53 Tempeft. 3 3 14248 Meas. for Meas. 5 1 1001218 Mu. Ado About Notb. I Mercb. of Venice. Il 31 2011 30 Tam. of tbe Sbrew. 31 2 266 134 Winter's Tale. 1 2 3342129 Macbeth. 41 31 3802127 Macbetb.41 31 381114 Ricbard ii. 2 피 42기 4 2 Henry vi. 3) 1 5841120 3 Henry vi.fi Ibid. 1 4 607 2 36 Richard iii. 41 41 659158 Coriolanus. 2 Il 712115 Timon of Atbens.41 3 8231 43 Titus Andronicus. 4) 2 847 220 Ibid. 3 41 940132 Romeo and Juliet.3) 2 984 21 2 Ricbardi. I Il 41525 2 Henry iv. 5 31 5051134 Henry v.2 1 121119 Il 606 1 15 81 627 2 34 Lament, Farm 51312130 Ibid. 12 C I 682 24 A. S. P. C.L Lamps. We waste our lights in vain, like lamps by day Romeo and Juliet. 1| 4| 9721210 Lampass. Troubled with the lampass Tam. of the Sbrew. 2 7 2651 28 Richard ii. Lancaster, John of Gaunt, Duke of. D. P. 4131 My answer is to Lancaster, and I am come to seek that name in England Ibid. 2 3 424 246 John, Duke of. D.P. i Henry iv. 44 1 Richard i. 5 4 6692 27 Lancafter and York, union of the houses of, Mu. Ado About Notb.3) 1 132 138 Lance. If tall, a lance ill-headed Our lances are but straws Tam. of tbe Sbrew. 512 2762/45 Their neelds to lances K. John. 5 2 409135 Ricbard ii. 1 Receive thy lance, and heaven defend the right 31 41711129 Go bear this lance to Thomas, duke of Norfolk Ibid. 1 3 417131 We do lance diseases in our bodies Ant. and Cleop. 5798 Lanc'd. Whose hands foever lanc'd their tender hearts, thy head, all indirectly, gave direction Richard iii. 41 41 66112 Lancelot. D.P. Mer. of Ven. 197 His soliloquy, whether he should run away from his master or not 21 2022 27 Lands. I fear you have sold your own lands, to see other men's As You Like It. 41 1 24112157 My love, more noble than the world, prizes not quantity of dirty lands Tw. Nigbt. 2 4 307 136 This land of such dear souls, this dear dear land Ricbard ii.2 11 4201 46 That power I have, discharge, and let them go to ear the land that hath some hope to grow Ibid. 3 2 428157 You may buy land now as cheap as stinking mackerel 1 Henry iv. 21 41 455 1 3 - The land is burning; Percy stands on high; and either they, or we, must lower lie Ibid. 3 3 4632138 Of all my lands, is nothing left me, but my body's length 3 Henry vi. 5 2 629145 His land's put to their books Timon of Albens. 1 2 8091 Lear.1 If not by birth, let me have lands by wit 2 93412) 3 Land-carrack. He to-night hath boarded a land-carrack Otbello. 1 210461138 Land-damn. Would I knew the villain, I would land-damn him Winter's Tale. 2 I 3401/46 Landed. Slender, though well landed, is an ideot Mer. Wives of Windl: 414 Land-figh. He is grown a very land-fish, languageless, a monster Troil, and Crel|31 31 877 123 Landless. A landless knight makes thee a landed squire King Jobn. 1 1 389 1 46 Landlord of England, art thou now not king Ricbard ii. 2 I 42012 54 Land-rakers. I am join'd with no foot land-rakers, no long staff, fixpenny strikers 1 H. iv. 2 1 44812140 Lane. And turn pre-ordinance, and first decree, into the lane of Children Julius Cafar. 3) 1752121 1 Langton, Stephen. Keep Stephen Langton, chosen archbishop of Canterbury, from that K. Jebn. 3 1 397121 1 Language. You taught me language: and my profit on't is, I know how to curse Tempeft. 1 51230 They have been at a great feast of the languages, and stol'n the scraps Love's L. Loft. 5) 1 165)11 5 in their very gesture Winter's Tale. 512 360 118 The language that I have learn’d these forty years, my native English, now I mus forego Richard ii. 11 31 417|234 There's language in her eye, her cheek, her lip, nay, her foot speaks Tr. and Cr. 41 51 881 241 Languish. What, of death too, that rids our dogs of languith Ant. and Clesp. 5 2 799|1| 4 Nay, let her languish a drop of blood a day; and, being aged, die of this folly Cym. 1 2 8951143 Languishes. A man that languishes in your displeasure O:bello. 31 31059 2 48 Languishment. A speedier course than lingering languishment must we pursue Tirus And. 2 183713 3 Lantborn. Therefore bear you the lanthorn Mu. Ado About Notb. 3) 3 134 133 One must come in with a hush of thorns and a lanthorn, and say, he comes to disfigure, or present the person of muon-line Mid. Night's Dream. 3) 1 18312/24 All these should be in the lanthorn, for they are in the moon Midf. Night's Dr. 5111941235 Thou bearest the lanthorn in the poop,—'but 'tis in the nose of thee i Hero iv. 3 31 461 249 He cannot see, though he have his own lanthorn to light him 2 Henry iv. 1 2476149 God shall be my stay, my hope, my lanthorn to my feet 2 Henry vi. 21 31 58111155 A grave? O, no; a lanthorn, naughter'd youth Romeo and Juliet. 5 3 9952 39 Lap. Die in thy lap Mucb Ado Ab. Norb. 5) 2 145133 Lap'd. He, sir, was lap'd in a most curious mantle Cymbeline. 5 51 92757 Lapland sorcerers inhabit here Comedy of Errors. 4 3 114 1150 Lapse. To lapse in fullness is forer than to lye for need Cymbeline. 3 913 17 Lapsed. For which, if I be lapsed in this place, I Mall pay dear Twelfth Nigbt. 31 31 322 29 in time and passion Hamlet. 3 4 10243/45 Lapling. With all the size that veríty would without lapsing suffer Coriolanus. 51 1 7341115 Lapt. "Till that Bellona's bridegroom, lapt in proof, confronted him with self comparisons Macbetb. 21 354/1/34 Lupe holy see 2 C 6 2 113238 Larder. 533/28 818157 Larger. 220120 A.S. P. C. L. 51 7911143 Lapwing. With maids to seem the lapwing and to jest, tongue far from heart M. for M. 1 Comedy of Errors. 4 Far from her neft the lapwing cries away Much Ado Abt. Nib. 3 1311256 Like a lapwing, runs close by the ground Hamlet. 5 2 1039 138 This lapwing runs away with the hell on his head 2 450 1152 Lards. Falstaff sweats to death, and lards the lean earth as he walks along Henry iv. 2 Merry Wives of Wind. 41 6 7이지II Larded. The mirth whereof's so larded with the matter Troil. and Cref: 5 8841237 Wit larded with malice Hamlet. 4 5 1028 2 33 all with sweet flowers Henry viii. 51 3 700251 Henry v. 4 Tim.of Atb.41 3 821 122 Troil, and Cref. 1 3 863 133 Achilles on his press'd bed lolling Ibid. I 38632137 security Timon of Athens. 4 Large-banded robbers your grave masters are, and pill by law Troil, and Crelli 3) 861 244 Largeness. Fails in the promis’d largeness Antony and Cleop. 2 6 77911 21 What may follow to try a larger fortune Largess . Over and beside Signior Baptista's liberality, I'U mend it with a largess Tam. of the Sbrew. I 2 2582/42 Macbeth. 2 1 36911 21. 4] 41912121 A largess universal, like the sun, his liberal eye doth give to every one Henry v. 4|ch5271135 Lark. More tuneable than lark to thepherd's ear Mids. Night's Dream. I 177 135 The crow doth fing as sweetly as the lark, when neither is attended Mer. of Ven. 51 1 All's Well. 2 I took this lark for a bunting 5) 289132 Winter's Tale. 41 21 3481219 Ricbard ii. 31 31 4301127 Richard iii. 51 3 6661132 Henry viii. 3 2 691138 Hark! hark! the lark at heaven's gate sings Cymbeline. 2 3 902 24.0 The shrill-gorg'd lark Lear. 41 6 957 1123 It was the lark, the herald of the morn, no nightingale Romeo and Juliet.3 5 98711139 Nor that is not the lark, whose notes do beat the vaulty heaven fo high above our heads Ibid. 31 5 987 155 It is the lark that fings so out of tune, straining harsh discords Ibid. 31 5 98712 5 Some say the lark and loathed toad change eyes Ibid. 3 5 98712 8 Lartius, Titus. D. P. Coriolanus. 703 Lascivious meeters, to whose venom'd found the open ear of youth doth always listen R.. [2] 1 42017 Lash. How smart a lash that ipeech doth give my conscience Hamlet. 3 11017|1|24 Lash'd. Head-strong liberty is lath'd with woe Comedy of Errors. 2 10616 Lass-lora Tempeft. 4 171 Laft. At last, if promise last Mercb. of Venice. 3 2 211217 Though last, not least in love Jul. Cafar. 31 1 7541 Larcb'd. Hast thou yet latch'd the Athenian's eyes with the love juice Mid. Night's Dr.3 2 18511155 Late. As great to me, as late Tempeft. 5 2012125 - too late he died I 649 131 Lated. I ain so lated in the world, that I have lost my way for ever Ant. and Cleop. 31 9 7871 Latb. A king's fon! If I do not beat thee out of thy kingdom with a dagger of lath i Henry iv. 2 41 452 2147 Go to; have your lath glu'd within your Meath Titus Andronicus. 2 18361247 Henry viii. 3 I 686 2150 M.Wives of Wind. 1 4711 33 All's Well. 5/ 2 3012161 Taming of tbe Sbrew. 2 il 263 1131 Laugb at nothing Angels with I I I Ricbard iii. 3 2 Tomcat I Ibid. 51 Ibid. 512 Ibid. 14 A.S. Laugb’d. They laugh'd not fo much at the hair, as at his pretty answer Tr. and Cr.(112 so heartily, that both mine eyes were rainy like to his Titus Andronicus.) 5 1 You were wont when you laughed to crow like a cock Two Gent. of Verona. (2 11 Laugber. Were I a common laugher Julius Cæfar. 1) 2 Laughing. Dreamed of unhappiness, and wak’d herself with laughing M. Ado Ab. Not. 2/1 Went they not quickly, I should die with laughing Tam. of the Sbrew.312 Love's Lab. Loft:52 Midj. Night's Dream. 5) = All's Well. 31 € Stopping the career of laughter with a figh Winter's Tale. Il Making that ideot laughter keep men's eyes, and strain their checks to idle merri-) ment King Febn.lol Cymbeline. Titus Andron. Two Gent. of Verona. Ibid. 2 Mercbant of Venice. 3 Henry vi. 3 M.W. of Windsor. Troilus and Cressida. 4 Henry v. 3 Romeo and Juliet. 2 Two Gent. of Verona. (5 Meas. for Meas. Ibid. Ibid. 2 Ibid. 2 Ibid.2 Ibid. 2 Comedy of Errors. 4 Mercb. of Venice. 3 Induc. to Tam.of the Sbrew. Ibid. 1 K. Gobr. 3 Ricbard i. 2 i Henry iv.si The laws of England are at my commandment 2 Henry iv.15 I never yet could frame my will to it; and therefore, frame the law unto my will i Henry vi. The law I bear no malice for my death Henry viii. 2 Coriolanus. Tim. of Arb. 3 Ibid. Ibid.lt Titus Andronicus. Cymbeline. Lear. Ibid. Ibid. 3 C |