A. S. P. C. L. Mu. Ado About Noth. 31 31 13511|39 2 Henry iv. 1 I 4751 59 Leans. She leans me out at her mistress's chamber window What fhalt thou expect, to be depender on a thing that leans For every thing is feal'd and done that elfe leans on the affair Leander. How young Leander crofs'd the Hellefpont -, the good fwimmer Julius Cæfar.1 He would have liv'd many a fair year, though Hero had turn'd nun Lean'd. "Twere good, you lean'd unto his fentence, with what patience may inform you Leannefs. Whofe large ftyle agrees not with the leanness of his purfe Leap. How will he triumph, leap, and laugh at it Love's Labor Loft. 4 3 Our king being ready to leap out of himself for joy of his found daughter I fhould quickly leap into a wife 27441 6 6 898 227 310272 6 I 2323 144 2 11 242 215 2 894159 I 572 2 32 I 4211 I 1621 8 360 159 44718 539 163 Ant. and Cleop. 311 1 Henry iv. 13 If Cæfar please, our master will leap to be his friend Leaped. He parted frowning from me, as if ruin leap'd from his eyes Leaping time. And turn'd my leaping time into a crutch, than have seen this -'s imprecation on Gonerill Learn. Are you yet to learn, what late misfortune hath befallen king Edward 3 H. vi. 4 Love's Lab. Loft.4 3 Here let us breathe, and happily institute a course of learning, and ingenious ftudies O this learning! what a thing it is 1632 30 Taming of the Shrew.1 1 255114 a mere hoard of gold kept by a devil; till fack commences it, and fets in act and ufe I did enquire it; and have my learning from fome true reports Winter's Tale. 4 3 1 Henry iv. 2 4 451 216 Hen. v.1cb. 50917 Twelfth Night.15 311154 Coriolanus. 5 2 734118 Leafbed like hounds, fhould famine, sword and fire, crouch for employment Comedy of Errors. 2 1106225 Leather jerkin. A plague of opinion! a man may wear it on both fides like a leather jerkin Leave us alone Good leave, good Philip 1 Henry v.24 4523 24 Much Ado About Noth. 3 131161 King Jbn.113891 6 Think, I am dead; and that even here thou tak't as from my death-bed, my laft living leave You bade me ban, and will you bid me leave For you will have leave till youth take leave, and leave you to your crutch off to wonder I would, your grace would leave your griefs Bid the mufick leave, they are harsh and heavy to me 8761 I Ibid. 5 1 I will rather leave to fee Hector, than not to dog him Leaven. Speak then, thou unfalted leaven So thou Pofthumus, wilt lay the leaven on all proper men Leaven'd. We have with a leaven'd and prepared choice proceeded Leavy. Since fummer first was leavy Le Beau. D. P. Lecker. I will now take the lecher Macbeth. 2 3 372130 Troi. and Creff 2 1865146 Cymbeline 3 4 909251 to you Mea. for Mea. 1 I 76138 Mu. Ado About Notb. 2 As You Like It. You, like a lecher, out of whorish loins are pleas'd to breed out your inheritors 3 129254 Troilus and Crefida. 4 Now a little fire in a wild field, were like an old lecher's heart Meaf. for Meaf. 3 2 223 64 2 30 1 878143 94916 957 240 911 5 91110 We have recover'd the most dangerous piece of lechery that ever was known in the commonwealth - I defy lechery Effect of drinking on lechery described - A man can no more separate age and covetousness, than he can part young limbs and lechery Ibid. 5 2 887146 Tam. of the Shrew.1 888 256 2258239 M. W. of Wind. 5 5 71147 Henry v.4 1 527251 Ibid. 5 1 537 2 24 Merry W. of Windfor. 1 I will no more trust him when he leers, than I will a ferpent when he hiffes Here is a young lad fram'd of another leer Leet. And fay you would prefent her at the leet 242 141 506 112 Troilus and Cref51885126 Induc. to Tam. of the Shrew. - Who has a breast so pure, but some uncleanly apprehensions keep leets and law days Left. Search for a jewel, that too cafually hath left mine arm Ligerity. And newly move with cafted flough and fresh legerity 2254132 Legion. If all the devils in hell be drawn in little, and Legion himself poffeft him, yet I will fpeak to him Legitimate. I will prove it legitimate, fir, upon the oaths of judgment and reafon Ibid. 3 2 321212 King John. 1 I 388236 Ibid. 2 2. 11126 11158 All's Well. 2 2285241 Four legs and two voices My legs do better understand me, fir, than I understand what you mean by bidding If your leisure served - I am forry, that your leifure ferves you not Legs. Why have those banish'd and forbidden legs, dar'd once to touch a duft of England's ground Make a leg, and Bolingbroke fays-ay I thought, upon one pair of English legs did march three Frenchmen Thy leg a stick compared with this truncheon Your legs did better service than your hands I came hither on my legs They have all new legs, and lame ones My legs, like loaded branches, bow to the earth, willing to leave their I doubt, whether their legs be worth the sums that are given for 'em Leicester. At laft with easy roads he came to Leicester Leiger. Where you shall be an everlasting leiger Which if he take, shall quite unpeople her of leigers for her fweet Leifure. Pick'd leifure Wait for no man's leisure A. S. P. C.L Richard ii. 2 3 425|1| 6 2 Henry iv. 2 4 4861 39 Mu. Ado About Notb. 1 3 124249 5251 539222 2 Henry vi. 4 10 598 2 39 6121 52 4 642121 Tempeft. 51 21 30 Ibid. 3 2 13321S Which then our leifure would not let us hear Merch. of Venice. 4 1 218143 Ibid. 1 Ibid. 5 3 Titus Andronicus.1 666 225 28342 S Lendings. Mowbray hath received eight thousand nobles, in name of lendings for your highnefs' foldiers Lenity. When lenity and cruelty play for a kingdom, the gentlest gamester is the fooneft winner Away to heaven, respective lenity, and fire-ey'd fury be my conduct now Leopards. Lions make leopards tame-yea, but not change their spots Wert thou a leopard, thou wert german to the lion Leper. I am no loathfome leper, look on me Lepidus Æmilius. D. P. 155212 197 121 333 Ibid. 5 3 145|1|45 Winter's Tale. Richard ii. 1 1415136 Tunon of Athens. 43 823155 2 Henry vi. 3 2 587220 Ant. and Cleop. 7671 J. Cafar. 41 758 1 24 Ant. and Cleop.38 786218 Tim. of Athens. 4 3 810 1 Ricbard .21 420|2|36 Leffer. 7 The lethargy must have his quiet courfe: if not, he foams at mouth Lethargy'd. Either his notion weakens, or his difcernings are lethargy'd Letbe. Let fancy still my sense in Lethe steep 1 Henry iv. 1 1 Henry v.5 2 Ibid. 4 Lear. 5 3 963|1|22 Twelfth Night.15 311224 Twelfth Night. 4 1 May this be wash'd in Lethe, and forgotten Richard iii. 4 937 125 327 128 502 235 661231 7. Cafar. 3754 120 Here thy hunters stand, fign'd in thy spoil, and crimson'd in thy Lethe Antony and Cleop. 27 78127 -Duller fhould'ft thou be than the fat weed that rots itself in ease on Lethe's wharf Letbe'd. That fleep and feeding may prorogue his honour, even 'till a Lethe'd dulnefs Hamlet. 1 51007121 773 2 52 447 2 37 241 22 Ibid. 2 1 28140 34/2/24 Comedy of Errors. 5 1 118 115 Might you not know, she would do as the has done, by sending me a letter All's W ➡ Peruse that letter, you must not now deny it is your hand, write from it if you can 34 291 262 Twelfth Night. 5332115 Othello. 1 11044 1 6 2 Henry iv. 2 2 482|2| 7| Preferment goes by letter and affection, not by the old gradation Richard iii. 4 2 I heard no letter from my mafter, fince I wrote him, Imogen was flain Level. According to my description, level at my affection I ftood i' the level of a full charg'd confederacy With fuch accommodation and befort as levels with her breeding Levers. Have you any levers to lift me up again, being down Leviathan. Be thou here again, ere the Leviathan can fwim a league As fend precepts to the Leviathan to come afhore Levies. And give away the benefit of our levies, answering us with Elfe might the world convince of levity as well my undertakings, 658 147 919156 2 Henry iv. 2 1 480216 497 213 661 137 674163 449 2 12 2 180 227 as your counfels Troilus and Creffida. 2 2 867 2 51 6382 3 3677110 Lewdly 1 Henry iv. 2 2 Midf. Night's D. 2 our charge 1 Henry iv. 1 I 442110 Richard iii. 13 Levy. Forthwith a power of English shall we levy Y 3 Henry viii. LIE Lewdly bent Lewdfters. Against fuch lewdsters and their lechery thofe that betray them do no treachery Lewis XI. D. P. 3 Henry wi. p. 603. the Dauphin, match proposed with the lady Blanch And Lewis a prince foon won with moving words Liable. And reafon to my love is liable 3 Henry vi. 3 Jul. Cafar. 2 1 616241 2 751115 Liar. I do defpife a liar as I do defpife one that is falfe, or as I despise one that is not true There are liars and fwearers enough to beat the honeft men, and hang up them Macb. 4 All liberal reafon I will yield unto To excufe or hide the liberal oppofition of our spirits Liberal-conceited. Three liberal-conceited carriages Ibid. 5 2 173134 Mer. of Ven. 2 2 204 144 Othello 2 11053121 Ibid. 5 21078143 Hamlet. 5 210391 14 Much Ado About Netb. 4 1 1381 18 Libertine. Thou thyself haft been a libertine, as fenfual as the brutish sting itself As Y. L. It. 2 7 233 - Let witchcraft join with beauty, luft with both tie up the libertine in a field of feafts Liberty. My mafter hath threat'n'd to put me into everlasting liberty; for, he fwears he'll turn me away plucks justice by the nofe A man is mafter of his liberty Head-ftrong liberty is lafh'd with woe Comedy of Errors. 2 78235 I 105261 Ibid. 2 1 10616 He that came behind you, Sir, like an evil angel, and bid you forfake your liberty Ib. 4 3 I must have liberty withal, as large a charter as the wind, to blow on whom I please Now fhew yourselves men, 'tis for liberty You are at point to lofe your liberties; Marcius would have all from you 114160 He is now as valiant as Hercules, that only tells a lie, and fwears to it Much Ado Ab. Noth. 4 1 1382/24 Saucy lictors fhall catch at us like ftrumpets Lie eredited by telling it 146 119 2132 23 Ibid. 3 4 213228 Merchant of Venice. 3 4 One that lies three thirds, and ufes a known truth to país a thousand nothings with And then to return and fwear the lies he forges That lie fhall lye fo heavy on my fword, that it fhall render vengeance and Thefe lies are like the father that begets them, grofs as a mountain 33 Ibid. 2 4 453 |