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Made. And all the unlawful issue, that their lust fince then hath made between them

you no more offence

And too foon marr'd are those too early made

Made up. Scarce half made up

A. S. P. C. L.

Antony and Cleop.3 6 784158
Lear. 2 4 943 53

Romeo and Juliet. 2 970124
Richard iii. 1 163417

Madman. One fees more devils than vast hell can hold; that is, the madman

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Midf. Night's Dream. 5
Twelfth Night. 1 5
Ibid. 51
2 H. iv. 13
Julius Cafar. 4
Lear. 3

And fo with great imagination proper to madmen, led his powers to death
Shall I be frighted when a madman stares

Tell me, whether a madman be a gentleman or a yeoman

O, then I fee that madmen have no ears

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Romeo and Juliet. 3 3

985 226

Ibid. 5 3

9952 zo

Tempeft. 3 3

15213

Comedy of Errors. 5 1

117139

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's. Live, and hereafter say-a madman's mercy bade thee run away Madness which occafions men to hang and drown themselves

fome of the causes of

Improper methods used by Adrian for the recovery of fuppofed madness in Antipholis exposed

Fetter strong madness in a filken thread This is a very midfummer madness - I have reafon; if not, my fenfes, better pleas'd with madness, do bid it welcome

No fettled fenfes of the world can match the pleasure of that madness
What madness rules in brain-fick men

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Like madness is the glory of this life

To define true madness, what is't but to be nothing else but mad

Polonius' account of Hamlet's progress to madness

Hamlet. 2 2 10111 8

Ibid. 2 2 10112 10

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Hamlet's opinion on acts done in madness

Madonna. Two faults, Madonna, that drink and good counsel will amend
Maggots. For if the sun breeds maggots in a dead dog, being a god, kissing

We fat all creatures else to fat us; and we fat ourselves for maggots Magick garment

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If this be magick, let it be an art lawful as eating

And that distill'd by magic flights, shall raise such artificial sprights Magic of bounty! all these spirits thy power hath conjur'd to attend Magic verfes. By magic verfes have contriv'd his end

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Magician. A magician most profound in his art, and yet not damnable
What black magician conjures up this fiend, to stop devoted charitable deeds R. iii. 1
Magiftrates. Labour in thy vocation: which is as much to fay as-let the magif-
trates be labouring men

2156

19223

362 212

Timon of Arb. 1

377 119 1803115

1 Henry vi. 1

1

544 114

As You Like It.5

2

246239

2 63523

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You should discover a brace of as unmeriting, proud, violent, testy magistrates, (alias, fools;) as any in Rome

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Magnify' ft. Him that thou magnify'st with all these titles, stinking, and here at our feet

Magot pies. Augurs, and understood relations, have by magot pies, and rooks, brought forth the secret'st man of blood

Mabomet. Was Mahomet inspired with a dove

fly blown, lies

1 Henry vi. 51564 240 choughs, and Macbeth. 3 4

Mabu. The prince of darkness is a gentleman; Modo he's call'd, and Mahu (Fiend of stealing)

Maid. No wonder, fir, but certainly a maid

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376 2 20

1 Henry vi. 1 2 546 248 Lear. 3 4 949 4 Ibid. 4 I 953 220

Ibid. 31

Tempeft.

2

6150

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25210 35238

54131

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M. W. of Wind. 2 2

with maid by him Measure for Measure. 1 Much Ado About Notb.:

I 125 254

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Ibid. 4 1

137 1 59

Would you not fwear, all you that fee her, that she were a maid by these exterior fhews

Ibid. 4 1

137 2 19

You must put in the pikes with a vice-they are dangerous weapons for maids Ibid. 5
I am a right maid for my cowardice
Mid. Night's Dr. 3
Silence is only commendable in a neat's-tongue dried, and a maid not vendible

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Merch. of Venice. 1

1982 19

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Eleven widows and nine maids, are but a fimple coming in for one man
What danger will it be to us, maids as we are, to travel forth fo far As You Like It. 1 3
are May when they are maids, but the sky changes when they are wives
Mafter, your love must live a maid at home

Ibid. 2 2

204 116 2282 28

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I am a fimple maid; and therein wealthiest, that I proteft, I fimply am a maid All's W.2 3 286 158

The honour of a maid is her name; and nó legacy is fo rich as honesty
I am either maid, or else this old man's wife

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Talks as familiarly of roaring lions, as maids of thirteen do of puppy-dogs
Pale-vifag'd maids
For maids, well fummer'd and warm kept, are like flies at Bartholomew tide, blind

So the maid, that stood in the way for my wish, shall shew me the way to my will It. 52
There fhall not a maid be married, but she shall pay to me her maidenhead ere they

have it

540 258 541117

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She that's a maid now, and laughs at my departure, shall not be a maid long, unless things be cut shorter

Not half fo big as a round little worm, prick'd from the lazy finger of a maid

Maidens. When maidens fue, men give like gods

Yet a maiden hath no tongue but thought

-If the quick fire of youth light not your mind, you are no maiden,

If your pure maidens fall into the hands of hot and forcing violation Maidenbead. Carouze full measure to her maidenhead

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What I am, and what I would, is as fecret as maidenhead
If there come a hot June, and this civil buffeting hold, we shall buy maidenheads as
they buy hob-nails, by the hundreds

Taming of the Shrew. 3 2
Twelfth Night.1|

266 249

1 31229

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If that the devil and mischance look big upon the maidenhead of our affairs Ibid. 4 1 464149

By my troth and maidenhead I would not be a queen

How go maidenheads

Ay, the heads of the maids, or their maidenheads
Now, by my maidenhead, at twelve years old

Henry viii. 23
Troil. and Creff4 2

878 235

Rom. and Jul.1968 17
Ibid. 3 971 7

Ibid. 3 2 98519

I'll to my wedding bed; and death, not Romeo, take my maidenhead Maidenbocd. Orleans-that drew blood from thee, my boy, had the maidenhood of thy first fight

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1 Henry vi. 4 6 563215 And learn me how to lose a winning match, play'd for a pair of stainless maidenhoods Romeo and Juliet. 3 2 983 244 Maidenlieft ftar. Tut, I fhould have been that I am, had the maidenliest star in the firmament twinkled on my bastardizing

Maidenly. "Tis not maidenly: our fex, as well as I, may chide you for it

What a maidenly man at arms are you become

Lear. 1 2 934 16 Midf. Night's Dream. 3 2 187115 2 Henry iv. 2 248214

Maiden modefty. If I know more of any man alive than that which maiden modefty doth warrant, let all my fins lack mercy

Muiden pride adieu

Maiden truth.

Maiden-widowed. But I a maid, die maiden-widowed

Maid-pale. Change the complexion of her maid-pale peace to scarlet

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Majeftick, A man of fuch a feeble temper should fo get the start of the

majestick world

Julius Cæfar 1|2| 743|1|59

Majefty.

Majefty. Thou whorefon mad compound of majesty

A. S. P. C. L.

2 Henry iv. 24] 486j2|46 Ibid. 5 2 502 2 5

This new and gorgeous garment majesty, fits not so easy on me as you think
Your majefty came not like yourself: you appear'd to me but as a common man

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Henry v.4 8 536 16 2 Henry vi. 2 4 582 213 Coriolanus. 1 3 707130 1 Henry iv. 4464132 Coriolanus. 4 572913 Hamlet. 510352 35

And ftop thofe maims of shame seen through thy country Maimed. Who is this they follow? and with fuch maimed rites Main. He might, at some great and trusty business, in a main danger fail you All's Well. 3 6 2932 17 Our main confents are had

Ibid. 5 3 303130

To fet fo rich a main on the nice hazard of one doubtful hour? it were not good

1 Henry iv. 4 1 464137 What cross devil made me put this main fecret in the packet I fent the king H. viii. 3 2 6902 22 Quite from the main opinion he held once

Stands up for the main foldier

1748232

Julius Cæfar. 2
Antony and Cleop.1 2 770 43
Troil. and Creff.23 8711 r

We must with our main of power stand fast - Bids the wind blow the earth into the fea, or fwell the curled waters 'bove the main

Lear. 3946|1|2#

- I doubt, it is no other but the main; his father's death, and our o'er hafty marriage

Maine. Duchies of Anjou and Maine surrendered to the King of Naples
Unto the main! oh father, Maine is loft; that Maine which by main
Warwick win

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Mainly. In this I do not call your faith in queftion, fo mainly as my merit Tr. and Cref. 4 4 880 215

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Main-top. From this most bravest vessel in the world, struck the main-top Cymbeline. 4
Make, I will make her come

2

918 125

Much Ado About Notb. 3 1

131243

Love's Labor Loft. 4

3

162 156

What makes treafon here

What make you here?-Nothing: I am not taught to make any thing As You Like It. 1
And hither make as great ambassadors from foreign princes

1223 212 Henry viii. 14 678119

You speak of him when he was lefs furnish'd than he now is, with that which makes him both without and within

But what, in faith, make you from Wittenberg

What make you at Elfinour

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Make-peace. To be a make-peace shall become my age

Maket. What mak’st thou in my fight

Makings. She had all the royal makings of a queen: as holy oil, &c.

There was good sport at his making

Malady. Their malady convinces the great affay of art

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Malady of France. News have I, that my Nell is dead I' the spital, of malady of France

Malapert. I must have an ounce or two of this malapert blood from you

Untutor'd lad, thou art too malapert

Peace, mafter marquis, you are malapert

Malcbus. King Malchus of Arabia

Malcolm.

D. P.

Henry v.5 538 117 Tw.Night. 41 3271 7 3 Henry vi. 55630255 Richard iii. 13 640136 Ant. and Cleop.3 6 785113

Macbeth.

Males. The beafts, the fishes, and the winged fowls are their males' subject C. of Err. 2 I
No falve in the male

363

106 19

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1552 2

27147

How like you our choice, that you stand pensive, as half male-content

Alas, poor Clarence! is it for a wife, that thou art male-content

Male-content. To wreath your arms like a male-content

Maledictions against king and nobles

Malefactions. That presently they have proclaim'd their malefactions

3 Henry vi. 41

49 249 622 120

Ibid. 4 1 622231 Lear. I 2934123 Hamlet. 2 21016215

Male green-fickness. Thin drink doth so overcool their blood, and making many fish meals, that they fall into a kind of male green-fickness

2 Henry iv. 4 3 497|1|11 Male-iffue.

Male-iffue. For her male-iffue or dead where they were made, or shortly after this world
had air'd them

Male varlet. Thou art thought to be Achilles' male varlet
Malicbo. This is miching Malicho

Malice. Thou but lead'ft this fashion of thy malice to the laft hour of act

On my life, his malice 'gainst the lady will fuddenly break forth
While our poor malice remains in danger of her former tooth
Deep malice makes too deep incifion

A. S. P. C. L.

Henry viii. 24 685242 Troilus and Cref51884137

Left, by a multitude, the new-heal'd wound of malice fhould break out
You are potently oppos'd, and with a malice of as great a fize
(God turn their hearts: I never fought their malice)

Hamlet. 3 2 1020 118

Mer. of Ven. 4 1

214 2 54

As You Like It. 1

2

2272 16

Macbeth. 3 2

3742 5

Richard ii. 1

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Ricb.iii. 2

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Men, that make envy and crooked malice nourishment, dare bite the best
More out of malice than integrity

And with the deepeft malice of the war, deftroys what lies before 'em
Our arms in strength of malice, and our hearts, of brothers temper
And spend my malice in my breath

No levell'd malice infects one comma in the course I hold

'Tis in the malice of mankind, that he thus advises us

She looks as like a thing more made of malice than of duty

The malice towards you is to forgive you

Put on the vouch of very malice itself

Nothing extenuate, nor fet down aught in malice

Coriolanus. 4 6
Jul. Cæfar. 31
Coriolanus. 2

Tim. of Athens. 1 1 804119
Ibid. 4 3 824228
Cymbeline. 3 5 911215
Ibid. 5 5 928110
Othello. 2 11052259
Ibid. 5 21079223
Lear. 3 5 949|2|52
friends

Malicious. How malicious is my fortune, that I must repent to be just
Malignant. His will is most malignant; and it stretches beyond you to your

Henry viii. 1 2 675245
Coriol. 2 1 714113

Twelfth Night. 1 3
A. & Cle. 3

Malkin. The kitchen malkin pins her richest lockram 'bout her recky neck
Mall, Miftrefs. Are they like to take duft like Mistress Mall's picture
Mallard. Like a doating mallard, leaving the fight in height, flies after her
Mallet. There is no more conceit in him, than is in a mallet
Malmsey-butt. And then throw him into the malmsey-butt, in the next room
I'll drown you in the malmsey-butt within

Malmfey-nofe knave. That arrant malmsey-nose knave, Bardolph
Malt-borje.

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Malt-worms. None of these mad, mustachio, purple hu'd malt-worms
Malvolio. D. P.

Mamillius. D. P.

2

309 244 8 786229

Henry iv. 2 4 486 137
Rich. iii. 1 4 642231
Ibid. 1 4 6432/42

2 Henry iv. 21| 479|2|49| Comedy of Errors.3 1 109150

Tam. of the Sbrew. 4 1 268158

Mammering. I wonder in my soul, what you could ask me, that I should fo mammering on

Mammets. This is no world to play with mammets, and to tilt with lips

A whining mammet, in her fortune's tender

1 Henry iv. 2

Twelfth Night.
Winter's Tale.
deny, or stand

1448 242

307

333

Orbello. 3 31060121

1 Henry iv. 23 451139 Romeo and Juliet. 3 5 989|1|25 Coriolanus. 1 3 7072 5 Tempeft. 2 2

Mammock'd. O, I warrant, how he mammock'd it
Man. As proper a man as ever went upon four legs
dewlapped like bulls, whose throats had hanging at 'em wallets of flesh-or whofe
heads stood in their breasts

We are such stuff as dreams are made on

How many goodly creatures are there here.-How beauteous mankind is
Cannot be a perfect man, not being tried and tutored in the world Two Gent. of Ver.13
The loose encounters of lafcivious men

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I will exhibit a bill in the parliament for the putting down of men
like an angry ape, plays such fantastic tricks before high heaven as makes the angels

weep

They say beft men are moulded out of faults; and for the moft, become much more the better for being a little bad

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Ibid. 51
Comedy of Errors.51 117237
Mu. Ado Abt. Nothing.1 3 125 1 2
Ibid.2 I 1261 6

What a pretty thing man is, when he goes in his doublet and hose, and leaves off

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Man. Never did I know a creature, that did bear the shape of man, so keen and greedy to confound a man

Why, fhall we turn to men

A. S. P. C. L.

Mer. of Ven. 3 2 212132
Ibid. 34 213233

That man that hath no mufick in himself, nor is not moved with concord of sweet founds, is fit for treasons, ftratagems, and spoils

Ibid. 5 1 219263 - progrefs of human life characterized by Jaques "All the World's a Stage" AsY.L.I.2 7 233 2 19 As the ox hath his bow, Sir, the horse his curb, and the falcon her bells, so man hath his defires

Ibid. 3 3

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239 130

- have died from time to time, and worms have eaten them, but not for love

Ibid. 41

242 222

- are April when they woo, December when they wed

Ibid. 4 1

2431 2

A wretched ragged man, o'ergrown with hair, lay fleeping on his back
You a man?-you lack a man's heart

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This is a man, old, wrinkled, faded, withered, and not a maiden as thou fay'ft he

I write man; to which title age cannot bring thee

But like a common and an outward man

Tam. of the Shrew. 4 5 273 215
All's Well. 2 3 287 226

I dare do all that may become a man, who dares do more, is none
Ay, in the catalogue you go for men

Varieties of characters of men compared to the various breed of dogs
He is the half part of a blessed man, left to be finished by such a she
This happy breed of men, this little world

He is not the man that he would gladly make shew to the 'orld he is

What is the truft or ftrength of foolish man

their lightness compared to a feather

ne'er spend their fury on a child

Why this it is, when men are rul'd by women

No more can you diftinguish of a man, than of his outward fhew

- in his way should be most liberal, they are set here for examples Wolfey's foliloquy on the uncertain and changeable state of man But we are all men, and in our natures frail

Ibid. 31290136 Macbetb. 17 3682 a Ibid. 1373

Ibid. 31

K. Jobn. 2
Richard ii. 2

36

1373 245 2394224

I 420 134

Henry v.3 6524138
1 Henry vi. 325581 4
3 Henry vi. 3 1 617135
Ibid. 5 5 631123
Richard iii.1 1634153
Ibid. 3 1 648 129
Henry viii. 13 677146
Ibid. 3 2
Ibid. 5 2

6921 7

699119

-

all in fire walk up and down the streets

Julius Cæfar. 1

3

745 158

And the state of man, like to a little kingdom, suffers then the nature of an infurrection

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-It is the part of men to fear and tremble when the most mighty Gods, by tokens, fend fuch dreadful heralds to astonish us

There is a tide in the affairs of men

The elements fo mix'd in him, that nature might stand up and say to all the world, this was a man

Wert thou a man thou would't have mercy on me
The ftrain of man 's bred out into baboon and monkey

Do you know what a man is

Why should a man be proud

Ibid. 5 5 765229 800156

Ant. and Cleop. 5 2

Timon of Athens.|1| 1806156
Troil. and Cref. 1 2 861146
Ibid. 2 3 8701 2

I wish'd myself a man; or, that we women, had mens privilege of speaking first 16.3 2 873251 like butterflies, fhew not their mealy wings, but to the fummer

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I fee into thy end, and am almost a man already

Having more man than wit about me, I drew

Allow not nature more than nature needs, man's life is cheap as beaft's

His little world of man

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Unaccommodated man is no more but a poor, bare, forked animal as thou art
I' the last night's ftorm I fuch a fellow faw; which made me think a man, a worm
O the difference between man and man; to thee a woman's fervices are due
muft endure their going hence, even as their coming hither
Know thou this, that men are as the time is

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Rom. and Jul. 32 984213
Ibid. 3 5989 125

210032 2 Ibid. 2 21010120

He was a man, take him for all in all, I shall not look upon his like again Hamlet. 1
Nor the exterior, nor the inward man resembles that it was
What a piece of work is a man! how noble in reafon! how infinite in faculties Ib. 2 210132 2
What is a man, if his chief good, and market of his time be but to fleep and feed 76-14 410281 3

Men

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