Fatter. 'Would he were fatter:-but I fear him not With purple faulchion, painted to the hilt A. S. P. C.L. Julius Cæfar. 2744|1|10 Love's Lab. Loft. 5 2 I have feen the day, with my good biting faulchion I would have made them skip Lear. 5 3 Faulcon. Follies doth emmew as falcon doth the fowl 172 133 3 Henry vi.14 As the faulcon hath her bells, so man hath his defires Meaf. for Meaf. 3 607 243 965 146 88137 23 1 29 - I blefs the time when my good falcon made a flight across thy father's ground Tam. of the Sbrew. 4 1 269115 Winter's Tale. 4 3 349 2 52 A faulcon, tow'ring in her pride of place, was by a mousing owl hawk'd at, and kill'd As confident as is the faulcon's flight, against a bird, do I with Mowbray fight R. 1 3 The faulcon as the tercel, for all the ducks i' the river O, for a faulconer's voice, to lure this taffel-gentle back again We'll e'en to 't like French falconers, fly at any thing we fee Faulconbridge. The beauteous heir of Jaques Faulconbridge the young Baron of England, defcribed by Portia - D. P. Robert. D. P. 3 Henry vi. 1 3 2 372 25 416 47 608 115 873125 571 2 2 Love's Labor Loft.2 152150 2 199 2 51 Lady. D. P. K. Jobn. 387 -'s execration of Hubert, on the death of Arthur Ibid. 4 Merry W. of Wind. I 50 121 O, what a world of vile ill-favour'd faults look handsome in three hundred pounds a year Every one fault seeming monftrous, 'till his fellow fault came to match it As Y. Like It. 3 2 Pity was all the fault that was in me His faults lie open to the laws; let them, not you, correct him He hath faults, with furplus, to tire in repetition 1388 239 Ibid. 4 2 403 234 Henry v.2 2 516 142 517 141 2 Henry vi. 31 5842 14 691 243 Coriolanus.1 And all his faults to Marcius fhall be honours, though indeed, in aught he merit not He's poor in no one fault, but stor❜d with all What faults he made before the last, I think might have found easy fines I would it were my fault to fleep fo foundly A friendly eye would never fee fuch faults. A flatterer's would not Ibid. 694 248 17032 23 1706 143 Ibid. 2 1 712 122 Jul. Cæfar, 2 17461 53 blackness Our faults can never be fo equal, that your love can equally move with them Every man has his fault, and honesty is his Gods! if you should have ta'en vengeance on my faults, I never had liv'd to put on this Cymbeline. 51 9201 26 You fnatch from hence for little faults; that's love, to have them fall no more Ibid. 5 1920 131 Favour. Methinks my favour here begins to warp To alter favour, even is to fear But let my favours hide thy mangled face Here, Fluellen; wear thou this favour for me, and stick it in thy cap A. S. P. C. L. Winter's Tale. | 2 337|2|42 The common people favour him, calling him Humphrey, the good duke Since I am crept in favour with myself, I will maintain it with some little -Your favour is well appear'd by your tongue That by no means I may difcover them by any mark of favour Ideots, in this cafe of favour, would be widely definite Julius Cæfar. 2 1 705136 3 727 223 1747 1 12 Ant. and Cleop. 2 Ibid. 3 7 951243 Many dream not to find, neither deferve, and yet are steep'd in favours To dismantle fo many folds of favour Ibid. 5 4 9237 - With robbers hands, my hospitable favours you should not ruffle thus My imagination carries no favour in it, but Bertram's As You Like It. 5 4 248|1|12 1278 138 I know your favour well, though now you have no fea cap on your head Tw. Night. 3 4 325243 As well as I do know your outward favour Richard .4433119 1 Henry iv. 3 2 461123 Jul. Cafar.1 And the complexion of the element, it favours like the work we have in hand Ibid. 1 3 2743 121 7462 4 859 250 883138 Ibid. 4 5 - Let her paint an inch thick, to this favour she must come Defeat thy favour with an ufurped beard Nor should I know him, were he in favour, as in humour, alter'd Favourites. Like favourites made proud by princes Employ the countenance and grace of heaven, as a falfe favourite doth his prince's name in deeds difhonourable Fauftus, Dr. Three German devils, three Dr. Fauftus's Farun. I am too old to fawn upon a nurse Much Ado Abt. Nothing. 3 1 131156 If you know that I do fawn on men, and hug them hard, and after scandal them Fawning. And base spaniel fawning Fay. By my fay Induc. to Tam. of the Shrew. Fealty. She hath enfranchis'd her eyes upon fome other pawn for fealty G Our fealty, and Tenantius' right with honour to maintain Fear. To give fear to use and liberty Julius Cæfar. 1 2 7431 3 Two Gent. of Ver.2 4 3027 Meaf. for Meaf.1 We must not make a scare-crow of the law; fetting it up to fear the birds of prey 51 16. 2 I 79 2 21 801 6 Midf. Night's Dream. 3 2 185144 Enfconcing ourselves into seeming knowledge, when we should submit to an unknown fear All's Well 2 3 285254 And mak'st conjectural fears to come into me, which I would fain shut out I am question'd by my fears, of what may chance or breed upon our abfence o'erfhades him Prefent fears are lefs than horrible imaginings Oh, thefe flaws and ftarts, (impoftors to true fear) My ftrange and felf abufe, is the initiate fear that wants hard ufe That I may tell pale hearted fear, it lies, and fleep in fpite of thunder Ibid. 5 3 303218 Ibid. 3 4 375258 Fear A. S. P. C. L. Macbetb.15 31 384150 Ibid. 4 3 384 213 Ibid. 5 5 385 1 30 For I am fick and capable of fears; opprefs'd with wrongs, and therefore full of fears; a widow, husbandless, fubject to fears; a woman naturally born to fears K. Jobn. 31396130 Let not the world see fear, and sad distrust, govern the motion of a kingly eye Ibid. 51 407216 My teeth fhall tear the flavish motive of recanting fear This ague-fit of fear is over-blown The love of wicked friends converts to fear, that fear, to hate Richard ii. 1 1415157 Richard ii. 3 2 428 133 Shall we buy treafon and indent with fears There is not fuch a word spoke of in Scotland, as this term of fear 1 Henry iv. Ibid. 4 1 464 225 If well-refpected honour bid me on, I hold as little counsel with weak fear, as you my lord, or any Scot that this day lives He that but fears the thing he would not know, hath, by instinct, knowledge from others eyes No man fhould poffefs him with any appearance of fear, left he, by fhewing it, fhould dishearten his army When he fees reafon of fears, as we do, his fears out of doubt, be of the fame relifh as ours are Let pale-fac'd fear keep with the mean born man, and find no harbour in a royal heart 2 Henry vi. 31 586 159 Thou feeft what's past, go fear thy king withal 3 Henry vi. 3 3 621214 Ibid. 4 6 625255 For, 'till I fee them here, by doubtful fear my joy of liberty is half eclips'd To purge his fear I'll be thy death His phyficians fear him mightily What do I fear? myfelf? there's none else by If any fear leffer his person than an ill report Yet have I a mind, that fears him much Near him thy angel becomes a fear Ibid. 5 632145 Richard in. 1 1635122 Ibid. 5 3 6671 27 Ibid. 5 3 667 223 Coriolanus. 709 2 50 Julius Cafar. 31 753211 Thou can'ft not fear us, Pompey, with thy fails She had a prophefying fear of what hath come to pafs For ne'er till now was I a child to fear I know not what makes devils of cherubims Ant. and Cleop. 2 3 777114 Ibid. 4 12 796130 Titus Andronicus. 2 4 840118 Troilus and Creffida. 3 2 873145 - Blind fear, that seeing reason leads, finds fafer footing than blind reason stumbling, without fear Nothing routs us but the villainy of our fears Some falling merely through fear Well, you may fear too far. Safer than trust too far Almoft fears me to think of Ibid. 3 2 873147 Cymbeline. 5 2 920229 Ibid. 5 3 920256 Lear. 14 938 29 Ibid. 3 5 949245 I have a faint cold fear thrills through my veins, that almost freezes up the heat of life What fear is this, which startles in our ears Thrice he walk'd by their oppreft and fear-furprized eyes For we will fetters put upon this fear, which now goes free-footed The people's hearts brimful of fear Fear'd. This afpect of mine hath fear'd the valiant Fearful. He's gentle, and not fearful Romeo and Juliet.3 3 9851 24 It was the nightingale, and not the lark, that pierc'd the fearful hollow of thine ear I. 3 5 987136 Fearful bravery. Julius Cæjar. 5 1 7621 16 Fearful king. 3 Henry vi. 1 6032 19 Fearful man. For, did I but fufpe&t a fearful man, he fhould have leave to go away betimes We had much more monftrous matter of feast, which worthily won, faft-loft But that our feasts in every mess have folly The feast is fold that is not often vouch'd Macbetk 3 4 375222 What, fhall our feast be kept with slaughter'd men K. Jobn. 3 1 398 247 As at English feafts, so I regreet, the daintiest last, to make the end more sweet R. ii. 1 3 416253 Ibid. 13 4182 57 light Rom. and Jul. 5 Mu. Ado About Noth. 1 yourself hardly one Winter's Tale. 2 3 By his gates of breath there lies a downy feather, which stirs not Love's Lab. Loft.|4 All's Well. 4 5 301224 Winter's Tale. 2 3 343129 There's not a piece of feather in our hoft, (good argument, I hope, we shall not fly) Ib. 4 Was ever feather fo lightly blown to and fro, as this multitude Lightness of men compared to a feather Leave these remnants of fool and feather, that they got in France I am not of that feather to shake off my friend when he must need me Tim. of Atb. 1 1 804229 Foreft of feathers Feather-bed. To be in peril of my life with the edge of a feather-bed Lear. 53 9651|32 Hamlet. 3 2 1021 2 I Mer. of Venice. 2 2 204118 Romeo and Juliet. 1 Tempeft. 1 2 1969 2 1 5253 8 Winter's Tale. 4 33512 Hamlet. 4 71031145 As You Like It.33 238 Twelfth Night. 3 4 326 128 Richard iii. I 16341 5 Ant. and Cleop. 2 5 778225 Cymbeline. 55 925160 Mu. Ado Abt. Noth. 3 1 132 134 Ibid. 5 4 1461 9 His confeffor; who fed him every minute with words of fovereignty him with his prophecies They n urish'd disobedience, fed the ruin of the state Federary. She's a traitor; Camillo is a federary with her Tam. of the Shrew. 4 3 27029 Fec. So fhould I rob my fweet fons of their fee: no, let them fatisfy their luft on thee 209 A. S. P. C.L. Hamlet. 2 21010 2|44 Fee-fimple. For a quart d'ecu he will fell the fee-fimple of his falvation Troilus and Creffida. 3 2 873123 3822 2 299156 'Tis not enough to help the feeble up, but to support him after To be abus'd by one that looks on feeders -But I must alfo feel it as a man Now I feel of what coarse metal ye are moulded,-envy He hath writ this to feel my affection An I were fo apt to quarrel as thou art, any man should buy the fee-fimple of my life for an hour and a quarter Feeble. D. P. All our officers have been opprest with riotous feeders Feed'. Thou false deluding slave, that feed'ft me with the very name of meat Feeding. He boasts himself to have a worthy feeding Feel. Spake he so doubtfully, thou could'st not feel his meaning Yet let me weep for fuch a feeling lofs That will not fee because he doth not feel Ibid. Feeling. Haft thou that holy feeling in thy foul, to counsel me to make my peace with ➡ And have ingenious feeling of my huge forrows -Hath this fellow no feeling of his business? he fings at grave-making 19532 30 Lear. 4 6 958129 Hamlet. 5 2 10382 8 Feert. And fwear with me, as with the woeful feere, and father of that chafte difhonour'd dame For fome of them had in them more feet than the verfes would bear As You Like It. 3 2 - Yet are these feet whose strengthless stay is numb, unable to support clay Feign. If I do feign, O let me in my present wildness die this lump of Merry Wives of Wind. 3 1 58 112 As You Like It. 3 Tw. Night. 3 1 320 240 1930133 Midf. Night's Dream. 2 Twas never merry world, fince lowly feigning was call'd compliment Felicitate. I am alone felicitate in your dear highness' love Fell. For Oberon is paffing fell and wroth I 179 125 Ibid. 1.5 1194160 Macbeth. 15 367 119. Ibid. 4 2 380 141 ➡ forrow's tooth doth never rankle more, than when it bites, but lanceth not the fore Ib. 1 3 Ibid. 4 3 382233 Richard ii. 1 2 416 1 3 419 I 1 Henry vi. 5 4 Ibid. 3 2 5892 I Ibid. I 600 225 3 Henry vi. 14 609 111 - Clifford Ibid. 2 5 614118 Ibid. 2 6 615264 Ibid. 4 4 624244 Henry viii. 21 679 148 Ibid. 5 1 697 1 24 Julius Cæfar.31754228 ➡ Canidius and the reft that fell away, have entertainment, but no honourable truft But all, fave thee, I fell with curfes Out of this fell devouring receptacle Antony and Cleop. 4 6732159 Fell |