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A. S. P. C. L.

Darnel. Her fallow leas the darnel, hemlock, and rank furmitory doth root upon H. v.15 2 538|2|17 It was full of Darnel, do you like the taste

Darraign your battle, for they are at hand

Hen. vi. 3 2 Lear.4 4 3 Henry vi. 22

557 42 955 236 6121 8

Darts. Shall I do that, which all the Parthian darts, though enemy, loft aim, and could{

not

Dafe. To dash it like a Christmas comedy

Antony and Cleopatra. 4 12
Love's L. Loft.5 2

793213

170220

- Now, had I not the dash of my former life in me, would preferment drop on my head

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She takes upon her bravely at first dash
Daf'd. A foolish mild man, an honest man, look you, and soon dash'd Love's L. Loft. 5 2
This hath a little dafh'd your spirits

Daftard. With pale beggar-face impeach my height before this out-dar'd dastard R..
What men have I?-dogs! cowards! dastards!—
And then will try what daftard Frenchmen dare
You are all recreants and daftards

Like a daftard, and a treacherous coward
Datchet's-mead. Carry it among the whitsters in Datchet's-mead Merry W.of Windf.3
Date. Your date is better in your pye and your porridge, than in your cheek All's W
Dates.

Winter's Tale 4 2 349

- To be baked with no date in the pye, for then the man's date is out Troi, and Greff. - The date is out of fuch prolixity

Romeo and Juliet.

They call for dates and quinces in the pastry
Datelefs. The Aly-flow hours fhall not determinate the datelefs limit of thy dearexile R.ii.
Daub. Poor Tom's a-cold-I cannot daub it further
Daub'd. So fmooth he daub'd his vice with fhew of virtue

2861151 3 972110 Ibid. 4 4 99219 3417226 Lear.49532 9 Richard iii.35 653126 M.W. of W.2 67117 Love's Lab. Loft. 2 1592 9 Mer. of Venice. 2 3 204 230 Ibid. I 2091 3 1/ 209/158

Daubery. She works by charms, by spells, by the figure, and fuch daubery
Daughters. If their daughters be capable, I will put it to them

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ears

I am all the daughters of my father's houfe, and all the brothers too

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Ibid.

As You Like It. 12 2272 S
Tw. Night. 2 4 317217

- I have three daughters; the eldest is eleven, the second and the third nine, and fome

five
Winter's Tale. 21340147
For my daughters, Richard, they shall be praying nuns, not weeping queens R. 4 4 661136
I have used it, nuncle, ever fince thou mad'ft thy daughters thy mothers Lear.14 936217
What, have his daughters brought him to this pafs

Ibid. 3 4 948212 11045

- Fathers, from hence truft not your daughters' minds by what you see them act Othello. Daunt. Let not discontent daunt all your hopes

Dauphin. D. P.

Davy. D. P.

Titus Andronicus.

Henry v. 2 Henry iv.

Dew. Juft as much as you may take upon a knife's point, and choak a daw withal

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2 8341 25

509

473

Much Ado About Nothing 2 3 131225

Othello. 1 11044139 Coriolanus. 4 5 728243

dawning as we do H. v.37 526217 Cymbeline. 2 2 90327

Two Gent. of Verona. 24

30/1/49

58151 110146

Merry Wives of Windfor. 3 1
Com. of Errors.3 1
Ibid. 5 1 118115

Much Ado About Nothing. 2 1341

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Ibid. 5 4 1462 19

Midf. Night's Dream.23 181260

Ibid. 411902 20 Ibid. 4 2 191 258 Merch. of Venice. 51220149 12201 53

-We should hold day with the Antipodes, if we should walk in abfence of the fun 16.5

Alas the day! what fhall I do with my doublet, and hose?

As You Like It.3 2 236216

-I am not a day of feason, for you may fee a funshine and a hail in me at once

All's Well. 53 302248 Winter's Tale.33 347 235 Macbeth. 24 37245

- "Tis a lucky day, boy; and we'll do good deeds on't
-By the clock, 'tis day, and yet dark night strangles the travelling camp
4 S

Day

Day. Good things of day begin to droop and drowze

Who dares not ftir by day, muft walk by night

· Commander of this hot malicious day

A.S. P. C.L.

Macbeth.132 37412:49

K. Jobn. 11389140
Ibid. 2 2 39324

- What hath this day deferved, what hath it done, that it in golden letters should be fet, among the high tides in the kalender

This day, all things begun come to ill end

Ibid. 3 1 396 258
Ibid. 31397

And the proud day, attended with the pleafures of the world, is all too wanton and

too full of gawds to give me audience

In defpite of broad-ey'd watchful day
How goes the day with us

The day fhall not be up fo foon as I

Ibid. 3 3 399234
Ibid.

Men judge by the complexion of the sky, the state and inclination of the day R..
God give your lordthip good time of day

Sings the lifting up of the day

Between the promife of his greener days, and thefe he masters now -We fee yonder the beginning of the day, but, I think we shall never

of it

Yield day to night

Thefe feven years day

2

3 399252

Ibid 5 3 4092 7 Ibid. 5 5 410 4 24281 38 Henry iv. 12 476249 Ibid. 4 4 4981 53 Hen. v. 2 4 519231

see the end

Ibid. 41528135

1 Henry vi. 154311 2 Henry vi. 21578130

The gaudy blabbing, and remorseful day is crept into the bofom of the fea Ibid. 4 1 591131

God give your graces both a happy and a joyful time of day

yield me not thy light; nor, night, thy reit

Each following day became the next day's mafter, 'till the last made

ders it's

Many days fhall fee her, and yet no day without a deed to crown it -The bright day is done, and we are for the dark

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He is not lolling on a lewd day-bed, but on his knees at meditation

910225

Romeo and Juliet. 2 3 97150

Ibid. 3 5 9871
Ibid. 4 5 9922

Twelfth Night. 2 5 318 20
Richard iii. 37 654232

Day of doom. This is the day of doom for Baffianus ; his Philomel must lofe her tongue to-day

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Better be with the dead, whom we to gain our place, have fent to peace, than on the torture of the mind to lie in restlefs ecftafy

- I had a mighty cause to with him dead, but thou hadst none to kill him

What! is the old king dead, as nail in door

Though we feem'd dead, we did but fleep

Would I were dead! if God's good will were fo

When I am dead, good wench let me be us'd with honour

And the theeted dead did fqueak and gibber in the Roman street

Be thus when thou art dead, and I will kill thee, and love thee after

Dead-killing news

Dead life

793

2 69253

I 1951 22

3 357128

Macbeth. 2374211
K. Jeba. 4 2 4051
2 Henry iv. 5 3 505139
Henry .3 524/2/26

2 Henry vi. 2 5 614124
Henry viii. 4
2 6962 26
Hamlet. I 11000245
Othello.

Richard iii.

5

2107612

41

1656238 Ibid. 4 6592 3

Deadly life. If I did love you in my master's flame with such a suffering, such a deadly

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And my sweet sleep's disturbers, are they that I would have thee deal upon Rich.iii. 4

He privily deals with our cardinal

I could deal kingdoms to my friends
Live and deal with others better

586146

6581/24

Henry v.673253

Timon of Athens. 2809 120

Cymbeline. 55 9281!!!

Deal

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- A ring, that I muft ufe in dear employment

- And I a heavy interim fhall fupport by his dear abfence

Deared. Come dear'd, by being lack'd

Derer than eye-fight, fpace and liberty

Shall it not grieve thee dearer than thy death

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Lear. I 1931 5

Ibid. 4 3 955222

Romeo and Juliet. 3 3 985135 Ibid. 5 2 994 245 Ibid. 5 3 995136 Othello. 1 31049240 Ant. and Cleop. 1 4 7721 22 Lear. I 1930112

Julius Cafur 31 7541 9

Dear. He hath no friends, but who are friends for fear; which, in his deareft need

will fly from him

- Would I had met my dearest foe in heaven

Dearly. My father hated his father dearly

Which held thee dearly, as his foul's redemption

- And greets your highness dearly

- grieve

Dearness of heart hath holp to effect your enfuing marriage Dearth. Pity the dearth that I have pined in

For the dearth, the gods, not the patricians, make it

Death. He that dies, pays all debts

-to die, is to be banished from myfelf

-I fuffer'd the pangs of three several deaths

- characterized

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Richard ii. 52 6652 9 Hamlet. I 21003155

2

As You Like It.13 2281
3 Hen. vi. 2 I 610157
Cymbeline. 7 8991 19
Hamlet. 4 31027146

Much Ado About Noth. 3 2 133229

Two Gent, of Verona. 2 7

32232

Coriolanus 1704126

Tempeft. 3 2

14221

Tavo Gent. of Verona. 3 I

34256

Merry Wives of Wind. 3 5
Meafure for Meafure. 31

64134

88211

Ibid. 4 21 Ibid. 4 3

942 57

95237

Ibid. 4

-A man that apprehends death no more dreadfully, but as a drunken fleep

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Much Ado About Noth. 2 128 255

-A carrion death, within whofe empty eye there is a written fcroll

Hold death a while at the arm's end

-fhould have play'd for lack of work

1138146

Love's Labor Loft.1 I 1471 7
Mer. of Ven. 2 7 2071

2

As You Like It. 2 6 232141
All's Well. I
I 2771 28

Would, for the king's fake, he were living! I think, it would be the death of the

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- Have I not hideous death within my view, retaining but a quantity of life

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Ibid. 4

Ibid. 5

343/2/16

3 353 244 1 359 2 26

K. John. 2 2 393 254

Ibid. 3 4 400 153 Ibid. 5 2 409159 Ibid. 5 4 409255 Richard ii.1 3 418143

Ibid 2

1419261

Ibid 2 I 421143

Ibid.

24272 2

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And fight and die, is death destroying death, where fearing dying, pays death servile breath

I know his death will be a march of twelve fcore

-Why, thou oweft heaven a death

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1 Hen. iv.1 344627

Ibid. 2 4 456252
Ibid.S 468/2/38

Death.

A. S. P. C.L.

4743|16

2 Henry iv.
Ibid. 2 4 485227

Death, Where hateful death put on her ugliest mask to fright our party
Then death rock me afleep, abridge my doleful days
Signs of approaching death recited, by Quickly in her account of the death of Falstaff

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Henry v2 3 5172 35
Ibid. 4 8 536218

1 Henry vi. 2 5 554113
Ibid. 4 5

5631 5

2 Henry vi. 1

Ibid. 4 7 564211 1572234

Ibid. 2 4 582127

Ibid. 3 2 587159

Ibid. 3 3 591 4

Ibid. 3 3 591213

Ibid. 5 1 601116

3 Henry vi. 25 615226 Ibid. 2 6 615252

hath fnatch'd my husband from my arms, and pluck'd two crutches from my feeble hands

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In fuch a desperate bay of death, like a poor bark, of fails and tackling reft
Brave death outweighs bad life

Present me death on the wheel, or at wild horses heels; or pile ten hills on the Tar-
peian rock

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It seems to me most strange that men should fear; feeing that death, a neceffary end, will come, when it will come Julius Cafar. He that cuts off twenty years of life, cuts off fo many years of fearing death Ibid. 31 75320 - The next time I do fight, I'll make death love me; for I will contend even with his peftilent scythe

·

of one perfon can be paid but once; and that the hath discharg'd Then is it fin to rush into the fecret house of death, ere death dare come to us Ibid. 413 797216 - The stroke of death is as a lover's pinch, which hurts and is defir'd fo

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Ibid. 5 2 801233

He had rather groan so in perpetuity, than be cur'd by the fure physician death, who is the key to unbar thefe locks

Your death has eyes in's head then

Death will feize the doctor too

Your's in the ranks of death

Then love devouring death do what he dare

And with a martial fcorn, with one hand beats cold death afide
World's exile is death

Cymbeline. 5 4 921248
Ibid. 5 4 9232 1
Ibid. 5 5 924 19
Lear. 4
2 954 35

Romeo and Juliet. 2 6 98126
Ibid. 31 98342
Ibid. 3 3 98545

And in this borrow'd likeness of shrunk death thou shalt remain full two and hours

lies on her, like an untimely frost upon the sweetest flower of all the field O fon, the night before thy wedding day hath death lain with thy bride

— is my fon-in-law, death is my heir; my daughter he hath wedded

-

- How oft when men are at the point of death, have they been merry

's pale flag is not advanced there

This fight of death is as a bell that warns my old age to a fepulchre
The king's obfervation on the commonnefs of death

- As this fell ferjeant, death, is strict in his arrest

forty

Ibid. 4 1 990233

Ibid. 4 5 992227

Ibid. 4 5 9922 39

Ibid. 4 5 9922 4!

Ibid. 5 3 995244 Ibid. 5 3 995252 Ibid. 5 3 997118 Hamlet.I

Death's-bead. I had rather be married to a death's-head with a bone in his mouth

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210022 1

Ibid. 5 2104123

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Death-practis'd. With this ungracious paper, strike the fight of the death-practis'd duke

Debafe. Thus we debafe the nature of our feats
Debate. Nature and sickness debate it at their leisure
Debatement. After much debatement

Lear. 4 6 959236 Coriolanus.3 I 720214 All's Well. 228c27 98246 3286123

Meaf. for Meaf

Debile. In a moft weak and debile minifter, great power, great tranfcendence All's Well.
Debility. Nor did with unbashful forehead woo the means of weakness

Debonair. Courtiers as free, as debonair, unarm'd, as bending angels

and debility

I

As You Like It 2 3 230153
Troi. and Creff1 3 863249

Debora.

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- Who ftudies, day and night, to answer all the debt he owes to you

1 Henry iv.

3

446251

-

- These debts may be well call'd desperate ones, for a madman owes 'em Tim. of Atb. 3 4

816113

- In like manner was I in debt to my importunate business

Ibid. 3 6

8172 7

- No fquire in debt, nor no poor knight

Lear. 3 2

947214

Cymbeline. 3

3

9082 2

Mer. of Venice. 5

1219 242

Lear. 5

3 965220

Comedy of Errors. 3
Henry v.5

2 110256

2

2 Henry vi

539 140 15841 22

- For that is good deceit which mates him first, that first intends deceit

Ibid. 31

585 240

Debtor. A prifon for a debtor that not dares to ftride a limit
Decay. This muddy vefture of decay

-

What comfort to this great decay may come, fhall be apply'd

Deceit. The folded meaning of your word's deceit

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- What fays fhe, fair one? that the tongues of men are full of deceits

- Who cannot steal a shape that means deceit

Ah, that deceit should steal such gentle fhapes, and with a virtuous vizor hide deep

vice

- If that be call'd deceit, I will be honest

Richard iii. 2 2 645220

Titus Andronicus.3 1 843132
Romeo and Jul. 2 984210

- O, that deceit should dwell in fuch a gorgeous palace Deceive. What in the world should make me now deceive, fince I must lose the ufe of all deceit

- With beft advantage will deceive the time

Hector, I take my leave: thou doft thyself and all our Troy deceive December. Men are April when they woo, December when they wed

- He makes a July's day fhort as December

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When we fhall hear the rain and wind beat dark December
Decerns. I would have fome confidence with you that decerns you nearly M. Ado Ab. Noth. 3
Decimation. By decimation, and a tithed death

Cymbeline 3

3

9082 6

5

1362 8

Timon of Athens.5

6

828242

Deck. The king was flily finger'd from the deck

3 Henry vi.5

1 628 146

I thought thy bride-bed to have deck'd, sweet maid

Decked the fea with drops full falt

Hamlet. 5 11056110

Decline. And to decline upon a wretch whose natural gifts were poor to thofe of mine Ib. 1 51007139

Far more, to you do I decline

Comedy of Errors. 3 2 111144

Richard iii. 4 4 660125

Tempe

2

3226

- All this, and fee what now thou art

I'll decline the whole question

Declin'd. Answer me declin'd, fword against sword

- What the declin'd is, he fhall as foon read in the eyes of others, as feel in his own fall

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Troi, and Gre2

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Ant. and Cleop 311

788210

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Decypher'd. I fear, we fhould have feen decypher'd there more rancorous fpight 1 Hen. vk4561148

-That you are both decypher'd, that's the news

Titus Andronicus. 4 2 846158

Dedicate. Prayers from fafting maids whofe minds are dedicate to nothing temporal

-I dedicate myself to your sweet pleasure

To the face of peril myself I'll dedicate

Dedicated. A dedicated beggar to the air

Dedication. All his in dedication

84140

Meafure for Meafure. 2 2
Cymbeline. 790028
Ibid. 5 1920 149
Timon of Ath. 4 2 819129
Twelfth Night. 5 1 329 217

A courfe more promising than a wild dedication of your felves to unpath'd waters, undream'd fhores

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- If the deed were ill, be you contented, wearing now the garland, to have a fon fet your decrees at nought

-Thy deed inhuman and unnatural, provokes this deluge most unnatural

- He that fets you on to do this deed, will hate you for the deed

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- 'Tis a kind of good deed, to fay well and yet words are no deeds -And with his deed did crown his word upon you

-The deeds of Coriolanus fhould not be uttered feebly

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