5672 37 A, S. P. C. L. Ruminate. Then she plots, then the ruminates, then the devises Merry Wives of Wind.122 And inly ruminate the morning danger Henry v. 41cb 527 1 16 I may resolve and ruminate my grief i Henry vi. 5| 6570126 'Twas dangerous for him to ruminate on this so far Henry vii.fi 2 67611 32 Strange plots of dire revenge Titus Andronicus. 5. 2 851 2158 likes an hostess, that hath no arithmetic but her brain, to set down her reckoning Troilus and Crefida. 3 3 877 112 As thou doft ruminate; and give thy worst of thoughts the worst of words Dibello. 3 3 106012150 Ruminated. But what I know is ruminated, plotted, and set down i Henry iv. 1 31 447 228 'Tis a studied, not a present, thought by duty ruminated Ant. and Cleop. 21 21 77512 33 Rumination. My often rumination wraps me in a most humourous sadness As You L. 11.41 1 2411253 Rumour. I will be gone; that pitiful rumour may report my flight, to consolate thine ear Ail's Well. 31 2 29.112132 But this from rumour's tongue I idly heard K. Jobr. 4 2 4041131 painted full of tongues, D. P. Induc. to 2 Henry iv. 473 characterized Ibid.) 473 11 2 doth double, like the voice and echo, the numbers of the fear'd 2 Henry iv. 31 1 48812 45 Let every feeble rumour Thake your hearts Coriolanus. 3 31 725256 Rump-fed. Aroint thee, witch! the rump-fed ronyon cries Macbeth. 1 3 364/25 Run. I will run no bare humour Merry W. of Windsor. 3 1912 19 If I serve not him, I will run as far as God has any ground Mercb. of Venice. 2 2 203 219 I would give a thousand pounds I could run as fast as thou canst i Henry iv. 2 41 453115 That runs o' horse-back up a hill perpendicular Ibid.2.4) 454 2 46 What need's thou ran so many miles about, when thou may'st tell thy tale the nearest way Ricbard iii. 41 41 663/247 We may out-run, by violent (wistness, that which we run at, and lose by overrunning Henry viii, 1 1 673)2 8 I am sorry, that the Duke of Buckingham is run in your displeasure Ibid. 11 2 67512 10 Runagate. White-liver'd runagate Ricbard in. 41 4663 2,53 More noble than that runagate to your bed Cymbeline. 1 7900219 Run-a-tilt at death within a chair i Henry vi. 3. 2 5571 Runaway. Thou runaway, thou coward, art thou fed Mids. Nigłe's Dr.3/ 2 188 2 46 Spread thy close curtain, love-performing night! that runaway's eyes may wink Rom. ard Jui. 3 2 9832737 Runner. 'Tis sport to maul a runner Ant. and Cleop.41 7 792 2:46 Running. And, starting fo, he seem'd in running to devour the way 2 Hiri, iv. 1 1 474 151 Running banquet . Some of these should find a running banquet ere they rested H. viii. 11 41.6771214 Rupture. It is a rupture that you may easily heal Mias. for Meaf:31 Troilo and Crell. s I Tam. of the Sbrew.4 126712 31 All's Will.2 22851 51 Something rare, even then will rush to knowledge Winter's Tale.31 1344 1 12 A rush will be a beam to hang thee on K. Joon. 431 406|2 39 She bids you upon the wanton rulhes lay you down 1 Henry iv. 31 459L14 More rushes 2 Henry iv. 5 5 506I's Our gates, which yet seem fut, we have but pinn'd with rushes Corislonus.1 41 708 1136 And spurns the rush that lies before him Ant. and Cleep. 31 51 784.236 Our Tarquin thus did softly press the rulhes, ere he waken’d the chastity he wounded Cymbeline. 21.2902 1,27 Let wantons, light of heart, tickle the senseless rushes with their heels Rom. & Fuld 1 4 972 1:52 Man but a rush against Othello's breast, and he retires Oibells. 51 2107812 47 Rush-candie. If you please to call it a rulh-candle, henceforth I vow it Mall be so for Tam. of ibe Shrew.41 5 27311 3.6 Romico and Juliel. 3 31 98511'51 Ibid. 5 2 36912,17 2 Henry iv. 1 21 4781 13 Ruftically. He keeps me ruftically at home As You Like It. I 1223 1.12 Ruftick revery Ibid. si 41 24)* 39 Rubiing, 8912,23 88411 41 me 8111'44 Hamlet. 2) 21013 A.S. P. Rustling The taylor stays thy leisure, to deck thy body with his rulling treasure Tam. of rbe Sbrew.41 31 271 - in unpaid for filk Cymbeline. 31 31 908 Troi. and Crep 11 31 864 Cor. 11 11 705 3 Henry vi. 25 614 Villanies ruthful to hear, yet piteously perform'd Titus Andronicus. 511 851 Spur them to ruthful work, rein them from ruth Troilus and Crer 51 31 887 Rutblejs Naughters i Henry vi. 5 5 569 The ruthless flint doth cut my tender feet 2 Henry vi. 21 41 582 3 Henry vi. 14) 609 queen And what is Edward but a ruthless fea 630 butchery Richard üi. 4 3 658 Titus Andronicus. 2 1 837 Ibid.41 11 845 3 Henry vi. бо Merry W. of Windsor. 51 51 ?! Rut-time. Send me a cool rut-time All's Well. 4) 3) 29€ Ruttish. Count Roufillon, a foolish idle boy, but for all that very ruttish Tempert. 41 1 17 Ibid. 51 Rye-straw hats Mercb. of Venice. 411 Hamki. 3) 2101 21 Ibid. 1 Ibid.31 51 i Henry iv. 2 Ibid. 2) 4145 Ibid. 1 Henry vi. 312 55 72 SABBATH. And by our holy sabbath have I sworn Sables. Then let the devil wear black, for I'll have a suit of fables Merry Wives of Wind. 3) 1 5 That huge bombard of sack 4) 45 5) 31 47 I'll either make thee stoop, and bend thy knce, or fack this country with a mutiny Ibid. 3 22 55 And fack great Rome with Romans If fack and sugar be a fault, God help the wicked 4 45 Sackerson. I have seen Sackerson loose twenty times, and have taken him by the chain Sacrament. I'll take my facrament on't May know wherefore we took the sacrament 41. 43 A dozen of them here have ta’en the facrament, and interchangeably set down their hands, to kill the king at Oxford 43 As we have ta'en the facrament, we will unite the ruhite rose, and the red Ricb.i.pf 2 66 3 Henry iv. Coriolanus. 3 i Henry iv. 1 Ibid. 2 Coriolanus. 51 41 73 2 44 I 4 Merry Wives of Windjor. 1 All's Well. 41 31 24 King Jobr. 5/ 2 Ricbard ii. 1) 40 C Ibid. 1 C A.S. P. C.L. Sacrifcers. Let us be facrificers, but not butchers Julius Cæfar.2 2 7471154 Sacrificial whisperings. Rain sacrificial whisperings in his ear Timon of Arbens. 1 80412 5 Sacring-bell. I'll startle you worse than the sacring-bell Henry viii. 3 21 6911154 Sad talk Two Gent. of Verona. 1 3 26148 Why are you thus out of measure fad M. Ado About Nothing. 11 31 12412135 Hand in hand in sad conference Ibid. 1 3 12527 Ibid. 2 She is never fad but when she sleeps 1 1281152 - First were we sad, fearing you would not come, now fadder, that you come so unprovided Tam. of tbe Sbrew. 3) 2 265|224 Winter's Tale.41 31 35212 25 My father and the gentlemen are in sad talk He was not fad; for he would thine on those that make their looks by his Ant. & Cleo. 1 51 773125 And when you would say something that is sad, speak how I fell Henry viii. 2 1 68011160 You sad-fac'd men, people and sons of Rome, by uproar sever'd like a night of fowl| scatter'd by winds and high tempestuous gusts Titus Andronicus. 51 31 854 155 hours seem long Romeo and Juliet. 1 Il 9691142 Mu. Ado About Notb.13 2 133 11 9 Sadder. Methinks, you are fadder Saddles. Fallen out of their saddles into the dirt; and thereby hangs a tale T. of the Shrew. 4 1 267 2142 He comes continually to Pye-corner (saving your manhoods) to buy a saddle 2 H. iv./2 11 47012135 white Surrey for the field to-morrow Richard it. 5) 31 666142 Mu. Ado About Notb.21 3) 1311124 Sadly. The conference was Sadly borne And with his spirit sadly I survive 2 Henry iv. 512 5032 14 Mucb Ado About Notb. 11 31 124/2 38 Sadness. Therefore the sadness is without limit Such a want-wit sadness makes of me Mercb. of Venice. I 1 197110 - Causes for sadness from the confideration of wealth trusted in vefsels at sea 1 1972 1 He will prove a weeping philosopher when he grows old, because he is so full of unmannerly sadness in his youth Ibid. Il 2 19912133 Charg'd my brother on his blessing, to breed me well; and there begins my sadness As You Like It. 1 1 223 11 9 Too much sadness hath congeald your blood Induc. to Tam. of the Sbrew. 2 254|237 Brothers, you mix your sadness with some fear 2 Henry iv. 51 2 502 21 S Tell me in sadness, who she is you love Romeo and Juliet. 1 1 9691223 Safe discretion Meas. for Meal: 1 7613 Safed. Best you safed the bringer out of the host Ant. and Cleop.141 6792 219 Safer. The safer sense will ne'er accommodate his master thus Lear. 41 95712 5 Safety. The heavens give safety to your purposes Meal. for Meal: 11.1 King Jobu. 31 41 401 2110 Ibid. 41 2 404127 To seek (weet safety out in vaults and prisons Ibid. 512 409120 And, in conclufion, drove us to seek out this head of safety 1 Henry in. 41 3 46716 What I have done my fafety urg'd me to Ibid. 51 51 4722 13 Such safety finds the trembling lamb, environed with wolves 3 Henry vi. I Hamlet. 1 3 1004 2128 Saffron wings Tempeft. 41 1 17112 face Comedy of Errors. 41 4 115/230 Whose villainous faffron would have made all the unbak'd and doughy youth of a nation in his colour All's Well. 41 5 30011151 I must have saffron to colour the warden pies Winter's Tale. 41 2 34911 Sagg. Shall never sagg with doubt Macberb. 5 31 384 1139 Sagittary. The dreadful fagittary appals our numbers Trois and Cred: 51 51 8891115 Lead to the Sagittary the raised search Orbelio. I 110451 46 Send for the lady to the Sagittary Ibid. 1 31048129 Said. When I have said, make answer to us both K. Jobn. 2 39212 41 Had I but said, I would have kept my word 2 Henry vi. 31 2 589 2 32 Sails. We have laugh'd to see the fails conceive, and grow big-bellied with wanton wind Midj. Nigbt's Dream. 2 2 1801142 Will you hoist fail, Sir ? here lies your way Twelfth Nigbr. 1 5 312 1150 How many nobles then should hold their places, that must strike fail to spirits of vile sort 2 Henry iv. 5 2 502 1117 - I will keep my state, be like a king, and shew my sail of greatness, when I do rouse me in my throne of France Henry v. 1 2 5132 13 - Now Margaret must strike her fail, and learn a while to serve, where kings command Henry vi.131 3 619 142 7625 1 6061115 21 1801139 Ibid. 2 3 1043 98. 36 A, S. P. Sail. Than bear so low à fail, to strike to thee 3 Henrý vi: 51 628 how thou canst, have wind and tide thy friend Ibid. 5) 1 628 - Forgive my fearful fails Ånt, and Clep:13 9 787 Sail-maker. Thy father?-Oh, villain!-he is a sail-maker in Bergamo T. of tbe Sb.51 11 274 D. P. Hamlet, p. 999. D. P. Orbello. Love's Labor Loft.3 11 155 Meal. for Meas:1212 84 Oh, cunning enemy, that, to catch a faint, with saints doth bait thy hook Ibid. (21 2 84 From all corners of the earth they come to kiss this frine, this mortal breathing saint Merchant of Venice.2 71 206 She call'd the saints to surety Air's Well. 5) 3) 303 Canoniz'd and worship'd as a saint, that takes away by any secret course thy hateful life K. John. 3) 1 397 My subjects, for a pair of carved saints Ricbardi. 3 3 429 And seem a faint, when most I play the devil Richard M. 1 31 649 She must die, the must, the saints must have her Henry vii. 51 41 705 For saints have hands that pilgrims hands do touch Rom. and Jul.il 5197 A damned saint Ibid. 3 2 St. Colmes' incb. Till he disbursed at St. Colmes' inch, ten thousand dollars to our general ure Macbeth.lo 2 Sainted king Ibid. 41 31 38 Salamander. I have maintain'd that salamander of yours with fire, any time this two and thirty years i Henry iv. 3 3 46 Mer. of Venice. 19 Salarino. D. P. Ibid. 19 Sale. The other is not a thing for sale, and only the gift of the gods Cymbeline. 15189 I raw him enter such a house of sale, (videlicet, a brothel) Hamlet. 2 As You Like It. 3) 5 24 Mer. of Venice. 19 - D.P. Ricbard ii. p. 413. - D.P. Hen.v. Salisbury, Lord. D.P. K. Jobn, p. 387. 50 D.P. i Henry vi. p. 543. D.P. 3 Hen. vi. 6c i Henry vi. 1 41 54 shot when overlooking Orleans, his character - honours paid to his memory Saique. Why the law Salique, that they have in France, or should, or should not, bar Henry voli 25 Ibid. 1 25 Sallads. 'Twas a good lady! we may pick a thousand sallads, ere we light on such another herb Sallad days. My fallad days, when I was green in judgment Salat . She was the sweet marjoram of the fallat, or, rather, the herb of grace All's Wel1.41 $ 3€ 2 Henry vi. 4/10 59 Sallet. I think this word fallet was born to do me good But for a fallet, my brain-pan had been cleft with a crow's-bill And now the word fallet must serve us to feed on No notes of sally, for the heavens, sweet brother we are justices and doctors, and churchmen, master Page, we have fome Ibid. 2 21 55 Ibid. I 215트 Ibid. 1 215트 All's Well. 51 51 30 Ant. and Clcop. 1 5 77 Ibid. 4/10 5 Ibid. 41105 Hamlet. 2 210 AIM's Well.41 1 Troil, and Cred: 5 31 88 2 Henry v. 41 71 5 Orbells, 2 Ilio 7612 26 A. S. P. C. L. Salt-petre. That it was great pity, so it was, that villainous falt-petre hould be digg'd out of the bowels of the harmless earth i Henry iv. 1] 3 4452 36 Troilus and Cressida. 1) 31 865113 Salt-fcorn. In the pride and salt-fcorn of his eyes Sali-water-girdle. You mall find us in our salt-water-girdle : if you beat us out of it, it is yours Cymbeline. 3 1 907|119 Winter's Tale. 41 Saltiers. They call themselves faltiers, and they have a dance 352 2:45 Salvation. It were pity but they should suffer salvation, both body and soul M. A. Áb. N. 3 3 134/11 All's Well.4) 3 29911 56 Sir, for a quart d'ecu he will sell the fee-limple of his falvation Salve. No salve in the male Love's Labor Lift. 3 1 1552, I Some salve for perjury Ibid. 4 3 1631 4 May falve, the long grown wounds of my intemperance 1 Henry iv. 31 4611 42 You may salve fo, not what is dangerous present, but the loss of what is part Cor.31 2 7232 23 Salute. There 's not a man I meet, but doth salute me Comedy of Errors. 41 31 114140 'Would I had no being, if this salute my blood a jot Henry vii. 21 31 683222 As You Like II. 2481125 Salutation and greeting to you all Lear. 41 Samphire. Half way down hangs one that gathers samphire ; dreadful trade 956228 Samingo 2 Henry iv. 51 3 504 2137 Sample. A sample to the youngest Cymbeline. 1 894118 Sampler. Both on one sampler, fitting on one cushion, both warbling of one song, both in one key Midf. Night's Dream. 3) 2187113 Sampson. What great men have been in love ? Sampson Love's Lab. Loft.1 2 1511 - O well-knit Sampson ! strong jointed Sampson Ibid. 11 21 1511 5 For none but Sampsons, and Goliafles, it fendeth forth to firmith i Henry vi. 1 2 5452138 - I am not Sampfon, nor Sir Guy, nor Colbrand, to mow 'em down before me H. viii. 5 31 701112 D. P. Rcineo and Jul! 967 Coriclanus. 41 5 739130 Sanerifies himself with 's hand Sanétimonicus. Thou concludelt like the sanctimonious pirate Meal. for Mol. 2 Sanctimor.y. If fan&imony be the god's delight Troilus and Cril: 5 2 886 2145 If sanctimony and a frail vow, betwixt an erring Barbarian and a fuper-subtle Otbello. 1 3.10501245 Venetian Sanctity. In pure white robes, like very fanctity, she did approach my cabin where I Winter's Tale. 3! 3) 346/212 lay Sanktuarize. No place, indeed, mould murder sanctuarize Hamlet. 41 7103212 15 Mu. Ado About Notb.2 1 127 2130 Sanétuary. A man may live as quiet in hell as in a sanctuary • The queen your mother, and your brother York, have taken fanctuary Rietardi. 3 | 6481156 - God in heaven forbid we should infringe the holy privilege of bleffed sanctuary 16. 3 23 648 Oft have I heard of fanctuary men; but fanctuary children, ne'er till now 2 37 Sand. Stairs of land Merebant of Venice. 3 2 - Alas, poor duke, the task he undertakes, is-numbering sands, and drinking oceans Richard ii. 2 dry 2 424 1 21 The funds are number'd, that make up my life 3 Henry vi. 1 4 607 2 57 - One land another not more refembles Cymbeline. 5 5 9251 Sands, Lord. D. P. Henry viii. p. 671. — Sir William. D. P. 671 Sanguine. This fanguine coward i Henry iv. 21 4 4532152 Tirus Andronicus. 41 2 847 1 39 - Ye sanguine shallow hearted boys Sanguine fiar. Guiderius had upon his neck a mole, a fanguine Atar Cymbeline. 5 5 927 7162 Love's L. Lift. 41 1 158 2131 Sanguis. The deer was, as you know fanguis, in blood Sans fable, me herself revil'd you there Comedy of Errors. 414 1152 45 -, I pray you Love's Lab. Loft. 5 2 1701123 intermiffion As You Like It.271 232 227 - teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, fans every thing Ibid. 2 7 2332146 Sap. There is some fap in this Winter's Tale: 41 31 355 1125 of reafon Henry vini. I Sapient. Thou, fapient fir, fit here Lear. 31 6 9501147 Suples age 1 Herry vi.41 5 56311 2 Sapling. Mine arm is like a blasted fapling, wither'd up Richard ii. 31 41 6522 1 · Peace, tender fapling Titus Andronicus.31 2 844 225 Sappbires. Comedy of Errors. 3 2 Sarcenet. And givest fuch farcenet surety for thy oaths, as if thou never walkidit further than Finthury 1 Henry iv. 3 1 459 2110 Satan, avoid ! I charge thee, tempt me not Comedy of Errors. 4 31 1141229 Master, is this mistress Satan Ibid. 41 31 1141230 Talk'd of Satan, and of limbo, and of furies All's Well.. 30515 Falstaff, that old white-bcarded Satan Hežry iv. 21 41 455 11 9 Sa:cbd. 1 648 Ibid.31 1 210 2 12 Ibid. 1 673/2/14 1112144 |