Doing. And to fuch wondrous doing brought his horfe Deit. John Doit, of Staffordshire -Supply your prefent wants, and take no doit of ufance for my monies A. S. P. C.L. Hamlet.14 7/103211119 2 Henry iv.3 2 489132 Mer. of Ven. 13 2012 25 Coriolanus. 5 708254 Ibid. 4 4 728 139 This morning, for ten thousand of your throats I'd not have given a doit Ibid. 5 4 737225 What dreadful dole is here The poor old man, their father, making fuch a pitiful dole Happy man be his dole! he that runs fastest gets the ring Why happy man be his dole! Happy man be his dole Hamlet.I Tempeft. 2 14752 S 11001 2 19 1 7150 3229 It was your pre furmife, that in the dole of blows your fon might drop 2 Henry iv. 1 Two Gent. of Verona. 31 Thou shalt have as many dolours from thy dear daughters as thou canst tell in a year, Dolorous. You take me in too dolorous a fenfe Dolphin. And heard a mermaid on a dolphin's back Why, your dolphin is not luftier Lear.24 543 144 Ant. and Cleop.4 2.791123 21802 2 3286 1 14 Like Arion, on the dolphin's back, I faw him hold acquaintance with the waves Midf. Night's Dream. 2 O gull! O dolt! Dominator. The welkin's vice-gerent, and fole dominator of Navarre Love's Labor Left. Denation. I would have put my wealth into donation, and the best half should have re- It was wife nature's end in the donation, to be his evidence now Done. What has he done?-a woman If it were done, when 'tis done, then 'twere well it were done quickly Done to death. 2 Henry vi. 3 Don'd. I did not think this amorous furfeiter would have don'd his helm, for fuch a petty war Then up he rofe, and don'd his cloaths Doom. I was, and held me glad of fuch a doom Titus Andronicus. 4 2 2 589137 Firm and irrevocable is my doom, which I have pass'd upon her, the is banish'd As You Like It. 1 K. John. That, in his fecret doom, out of my blood he'll breed revengement, and a fcourge for me - This is the law, and this duke Humphrey's doom 1 3982 57 34172 23 2 428 132 A. S. P. C. L. 5852159 Doom. It skills not greatly who impugns our doom 2 Henry vi. 3 -The tender love I bear your grace, my lord, makes me most forward in this noble prefence to doom the offenders Tell him, from his all-abeying breath I hear the doom of Ægypt Then, dreadful trumpet, found the general doom What is the prince's doom Richard iii. 34 652156 Romeo and Juliet.3 2984153 Doomsday. If the lives 'till Doomsday, fhe will burn a week longer than the whole world I'll prove her fair or talk till doomsday here is near; die all, die merrily Why then All Soul's day is my body's doomsday 1112 8 Comedy of Errors. 3 2 1 Henry iv. 4 1 465128 Men, wives, and children, ftare, cry out, and run, as it were doomsday Jul. Cæfar. 31753116 What less than doomsday is the prince's doom? Since my own doors refuse to entertain me, I'll knock elsewhere Comedy of Errors. 3 Dar-keeper of the council chamber. D. P. Dorcas. D. P. Pericles. They call him Doricles; and he boasts himself to have a worthy feeding Thefe ftrong Ægyptian fetters I must break, or lose myself in dotage Let his difpofition have that scope that dotage gives it Tim. of Athens. 3 5 817128 Lear. 1 4 937241 Cori. 5 2 7341 44 Much Ado About Nothing.5 1 141|2|36 Taming of the Sbrew. 5 1 2742 37 Detant. Or with the palfy'd interceffion of fuch a decay'd dotant as you feem to be Thou dotard, thou art woman-tyr'd, unroosted by dame Partlet here Winter's Tale. 2 3 342150 She, fweet lady, dotes, devoutly dotes, dotes in idolatry, upon this spotted and inconftant man As you on him, Demetrius dote on you There is not one amongst them, but I dote on his very abfence Merchant of Venice. 1 2 As You Like It. 1 2 226 140 Not fo young, fir, to love a woman for finging; nor fo old, to dote on her for any — A lady fo fair, and faften'd to an empery, would make the greatest king double Double-damn'd. Therefore be double damn'd, swear thou art honest Double-dealer. To make thee a double-dealer Double-dealing. But that it would be double-dealing Mu. Ado About Nothing.5 4 146241 Twelfth Night. 51 329121 Doubienes. The doubleness of the benefit defends the deceit from reproof Meaf. for Meaf.3 1 89/2/46 Doublet. My jerkin is a doublet Doublet. What a pretty thing man is, when he goes in his doublet and hofe, and leaves off his wit A. S. P. C. L. Much Ado About Notb. 5 1 As doublet and hofe ought to show itself courageous to petticoat I have no more doublets than backs Induc. to Tam. of the Shrew. 2 Unless you give me your doublet, and ftuff me out with straw - 2 Henry iv. 5 5 506236 Midf. Night's Dream. 4 2 To end one doubt by death, revives two greater in the heirs of life 911112 191 231 248 19 This is, fir, a doubt, in such a time, nothing becoming you, nor fatisfying us Cym. 4 4 Ibid. 17 900 120 Macbeth. 1 236324 I have here a dish of doves, that I would bestow upon your worship Mer. of Venice. 2 Anon, as patient as the female dove, when that her golden couplets are difclos'd Ham. 511036220 Dove-drawn. At my tent the Douglas is; and I beseech your grace I may difpofe of him Go to the Douglas, and deliver him up to his pleasure, ransomless and free Ibid. 5 5 472 2 31 Dower. He of both that can affure my daughter greatest dower, shall have Bianca's love Pafs my daughter a sufficient dower, the match is made Tam. of the Shrewv.2 1 263126 Virtue, and the, is her own dower: honour, and wealth, from me Down-gyved. His stockings foul'd, ungarter'd, and down-gyved to his ancle We fhall chide downright, if I longer stay It rains downright 1 Henry iv. 3 3 462 143 Tempeft. 3 3 15221 Meaf. for Meaf.3 2 17 115 Ibid. 4 I 91114 Mid. Night's Dream. 2 2 180 156 Romes and Juliet. 3 5 988 215 Down-tred. But I will lift the down-trod Mortimer as high i' the air as this ungrateful king Downy windows, clofe 1 Henry iv. 13 Antony and Cleop.5 Dowries. I never read but England's kings have had large sums of gold, and dowries with their wives Derry. Will you, upon good dowry, marry her The plea of no lefs weight than Aquitain, a dowry for a queen Merry W. of Windfor.1 1572 250 48110 1 152114 Dowry. Dewry. Often known to be the dowry of a second head, the fcull that bred them in the fepulchre A. S. P. C. L. Merchant of Venice. 3 2 210223 - But I had as lief take her dowry with this condition,-to be whipp'd at the high crofs every morning Tam. of the Shrew. 1 1256 134 Another dowry to another daughter, for fhe is chang'd, as she had never been Ibid. 5 — And ask no other dowry with her, but such another jest Twelfth Night.2 King John. 2 2 3942 57 Ibid. 2 2 395111. The parrot will not do more for an almond than he for a commodious drab Like a very drab, a fcullion Drabbing. 568 1579 259. 885133 Ibid. 2 887145 Ibid. 5 4 888 225 Hamlet. 2 2 10162 8 Ibid.a 11009121 Coriol. I 5 708 253 Drachm. See here these movers, that do prize their hours at a crack'd drachm • Rash, inconfiderate, fiery voluntaries, with ladies faces, and fierce dragon's fpleens Fair Saint George, infpire us with the spleen of fiery dragons This Marcius is grown from man to dragon Ibid. 5 4 737132 Swift, swift, you dragons of the night! that dawning may bear the raven's eye Cym. 2 2 9022 7 Come not between the dragon and his wrath · Did ever dragon keep so fair a cave Dragonifh. Sometime, we see a cloud that's dragonish Dragon's tail. My father compounded with my mother under the Drazu. They will draw you, master Froth, and you will hang them Troi. and Craff5 9 8902 7 Timon of Athens. 5 2 8262 24 821 I 1132 54 you M. N. Dr. 2 2 180 2 52 2 Henry iv. 2 480 255 Ibid. 2 4 486|2|40 - Very true, fir, and I come to draw thee out by the ears I dare draw as foon as another man, if I fee occafion Drawer. Give us leave, drawer 1 Henry vi. 5 2 565148 Put on two leather jerkins, and aprons, and wait upon him at his table as drawers Cymbeline. 5 4 923146 Richard ii. 1 4 4192 8 Lear 4 7 960 140 Hamlet. 1 21003 224 2 2221 Two Gent. of Verona. 151 41 43/15 A. S. P. C. L. Thefe fifteen years you have been in a dream Dream. Four nights will quickly dream themselves away 1751114 Midf. Night's Dream.[1] Think no more of this night's accidents, but as the fierce vexation of a dream Ibid. 4190 136 I have had a dream-paft the wit of man to say what dream it was: man is but an afs, if he go about to expound this dream Following darkness like a dream Ibid. 4 1 1912 10 Ibid. 52 1952 56 2254 1 23 Ibid. 4269 110 Induc. to Tam. of the Shrew. For ne'er was dream fo like a waking Winter's Tale. 3 3 346 27 Dreams are toys; yet, for this once, yea superstitiously I will be squared by this Ib. 3 3 This accident is not unlike my dream, belief of it oppreffes me already Dream'd. I have long dream'd of fuch a kind of man Ibid. S 1 993 256 Hamlet. 2 2 10131 3 2 Henry vi.i 2 574 136 574 48 Ibid. 32 587 1 32 Richard . 4 641234 657 26 Dreamt. For I have dreamt of bloody turbulence, and this whole night hath nothing Dreg. What too curious dreg efpies my fweet lady in the fountain of our love Drench'd me in the fea Tr. and Cref. 1 3 865 9 If the dull brainless Ajax come safe off, we'll dress him up in voices Dreffings. Even fo may Angelo, in all his dreffings, characts, titles, forms, be an arch villain Drift him with our love With purpose to be drest in an opinion of wisdom, gravity, and proud conceit M. of Ven. 1 1 Dribbling. Believe not that the dribbling dart of love can pierce a compleat bofom M. for M.14 Drift. As thou haft lent me wit to plot this drift Much Ado Ab. Norb. 2 Our thunder from the fouth, fhall rain their drift of bullets on this town Be plain, good fon, and homely in thy drift Ibid. 41 990 243 Against thou shalt awake, shall Romeo by my letters know our drift - down all unkindness Tempeft. 5 - I pr'ythee take the cork out of thy mouth, that I may drink thy tidings As You L. It.3 Drink may be faid to be an equivocator with lechery An 'twere not as good a deed as drink, to break the pate of thee Between the armies, let's drink together friendly, and embrace 3 370 2 42 Ibid. 23 370 247 Ibid. 2 3 37049 1448 136 1 Henry iv. 2 4 455 21 4 484 2 37 249512 5 |