Code |
Play |
Character |
Lines |
First Line |
|
M-303 |
Troylus and Cressida |
Aeneas | 28 |
Trumpet blow loud, (If there be one among’st the fayr’st of Greece,) |
|
M-713 |
The First Part of Henry the Fourth |
King Henry )IV) | 33 |
So shaken as we are, so wan with care, (To chace these Pagans in those holy Fields,) |
|
M-755 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
Westermerland | 27 |
O my good Lord Mowbray, (You speak (Lord Mowbray) now you know not what.) |
|
M-796 |
The first Part of Henry the Sixt |
Mortimer | 32 |
I will, if that my fading breath permit, (I was the next by Birth and Parentage:) |
|
M-797 |
The first Part of Henry the Sixt |
Mortimer | 29 |
Kind Keepers of my weake decaying Age, (Poore Gentleman, his wrong doth equall mine.) |
|
W-790 |
The first Part of Henry the Sixt |
Countesse | 27 |
The Plot is layd, if all things fall out right, (It cannot be, this weake and writhled shrimpe) |
|
M-540 |
Titus Andronicus |
Aaron | 29 |
For shame be friends, and joyne for that you jar: (NULL) |
|
M-541 |
Titus Andronicus |
Aaron | 21 |
I, that I had not done a thousand more: (NULL) |
|
M-542 |
Titus Andronicus |
Aaron | 24 |
Indeede, I was their Tutor to instruct them (NULL) |
|
M-543 |
Titus Andronicus |
Aaron | 25 |
Now climbeth Tamora Olympus toppe, (NULL) |
|
M-544 |
Titus Andronicus |
Aaron | 24 |
Sooner this sword shall plough thy bowels up. (My mistris is my mistris: this my selfe,) |
|
M-545 |
Titus Andronicus |
Aaron | 28 |
’Twas her two Sonnes that murdered Bassianus, (Indeede, I was their Tutor to instruct them) |
|
W-140 |
The Comedie of Errors |
Abbesse (Æmilia) | 19 |
And thereof came it, that the man was mad. (The venome clamors of a jealous woman,) |
|
M-300 |
Troylus and Cressida |
Achilles | 20 |
What am I poore of late? (NULL) |
|
W-141 |
The Comedie of Errors |
Adriana | 37 |
I, I, Antipholus, looke strange and frowne, (NULL) |
|
W-142 |
The Comedie of Errors |
Adriana | 25 |
May it please your Grace, Antipholus my husband, (NULL) |
|
W-500 |
Othello |
Æmilia | 20 |
Yes, a dozen: and as many to'th'vantage, as (But I do thinke it is their Husbands faults) |
|
M-301 |
Troylus and Cressida |
Agamemnon | 27 |
Heare you Patroclus: (If you doe say, we thinke him over proud,) |
|
M-302 |
Troylus and Cressida |
Agamemnon | 30 |
Princes: What greefe hath set the Jaundies on your cheekes? (NULL) |
|
M-560 |
Tymon of Athens |
Alcibiades | 19 |
My Lords, then under favour, pardon me, (NULL) |
|
M-180 |
Measure, For Measure |
Angelo | 26 |
From thee: even from thy vertue. (What's this? what's this? is this her fault, or mine?) |
|
M-181 |
Measure, For Measure |
Angelo | 29 |
When I would pray, and think, I thinke, and pray (NULL) |
|
M-182 |
Measure, For Measure |
Angelo | 17 |
Who will beleeve thee Isabell? (NULL) |
|
W-880 |
King Henry the Eight |
Anne Bullen | 24 |
Not for that neither; here’s the pang that pinches. (I sweare, tis better to be lowly borne,) |
|
M-200 |
The Merchant of Venice |
Anthonio | 18 |
But little: I am arm'd and well prepar'd. (NULL) |
|
M-201 |
The Merchant of Venice |
Anthonio | 19 |
I pray you thinke you question with the Jew: (I am a tainted Weather of the flocke,) |
|
M-320 |
Twelfe Night |
Anthonio | 24 |
Orsino: Noble sir, (NULL) |
|
M-610 |
The Tempest |
Anthonio | 18 |
I Sir: where lies that? If 'twere a kybe (NULL) |
|
M-360 |
Anthonie, and Cleopatra |
Anthony | 22 |
Ah, thou Spell! Avaunt. (NULL) |
|
M-361 |
Anthonie, and Cleopatra |
Anthony | 21 |
All is lost, (This foule Egyptian hath betrayed me:) |
|
M-362 |
Anthonie, and Cleopatra |
Anthony | 24 |
Hearke, the Land bids me tread no more upon't, (I have fled my selfe, and have instructed cowards) |
|
M-363 |
Anthonie, and Cleopatra |
Anthony | 32 |
I will o’re-take thee Cleopatra, and (I have liv’d in such dishonour, that the Gods) |
|
M-364 |
Anthonie, and Cleopatra |
Anthony | 19 |
If that thy Father live, let him repent (NULL) |
|
M-365 |
Anthonie, and Cleopatra |
Anthony | 22 |
No more light Answeres: (The cause of our Expedience to the Queene,) |
|
M-366 |
Anthonie, and Cleopatra |
Anthony | 22 |
Sometime we see a clowd that’s Dragonish, (I made these warres for Egypt, and the Queene,) |
|
M-367 |
Anthonie, and Cleopatra |
Anthony | 27 |
We have beate him to his Campe: Runne one (Mine Nightingale, We have beate them to their Beds.) |
|
M-630 |
The Winters Tale |
Antigonus | 44 |
Come, poore babe; (NULL) |
|
M-590 |
Pericles |
Antiochus | 16 |
He hath found the meaning, (NULL) |
|
M-140 |
The Comedie of Errors |
Antipholus of Ephesus | 40 |
My Liege, I am advised what I say, (NULL) |
|
M-141 |
The Comedie of Errors |
Antipholus of Siracuse | 24 |
Sweete Mistris, what your name is else I know not; (NULL) |
|
M-142 |
The Comedie of Errors |
Antipholus of Siracuse | 11 |
There's not a man I meete but doth salute me (NULL) |
|
M-440 |
Julius Cæsar |
Antony | 35 |
Friends, Romans, Countrymen, lend me your ears: (NULL) |
|
M-441 |
Julius Cæsar |
Antony | 21 |
Good Friends, sweet Friends, let me not stirre you up (NULL) |
|
M-442 |
Julius Cæsar |
Antony | 29 |
If you have teares, prepare to shed them now. (NULL) |
|
M-443 |
Julius Cæsar |
Antony | 16 |
O mighty Cæsar! Dost thou lye so lowe? (NULL) |
|
M-444 |
Julius Cæsar |
Antony | 22 |
O pardon me, thou bleeding peece of Earth: (NULL) |
|
M-760 |
Henry the Fift |
Archbishop of Canterbury | 63 |
Then heare me gracious Soveraign, and you Peers, (No Woman shall succeed in Salike Land:) |
|
M-761 |
Henry the Fift |
Archbishop of Canterbury | 38 |
Therefore doth heaven divide (Without defeat. Therefore to France, my Liege,) |
|
M-730 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
Archbishop of Yorke | 24 |
Let us on: And publish the occasion of our Armes. (Past, and to Come, seemes best; things Present, worst) |
|
M-731 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
Archbishop of Yorke | 35 |
Wherefore doe I this? so the Question stands. (Wee see which way the streame of Time doth runne,) |
|
G-610 |
The Tempest |
Ariel | 25 |
All haile, great Master, grave Sir, haile: I come (NULL) |
|
G-611 |
The Tempest |
Ariel | 30 |
You are three men of sinne, whom destiny (NULL) |
|
M-160 |
Loves Labour's lost |
Armado | 18 (prose) |
I doe affect the very ground (which is base) (NULL) |
|
M-202 |
The Merchant of Venice |
Arragon | 34 |
And so have I addrest me, fortune now (NULL) |
|
G-650 |
King John |
Arthur | 17 |
Mercie on me: (NULL) |
|
G-651 |
King John |
Arthur | 20 |
Must you with hot Irons, burne out both mine eyes? (Have you the heart? When your head did but ake,) |
|
G-570 |
Cymbeline |
Arviragus | 24 |
Feare no more the heate o'th'Sun, (chant) (NULL) |
|
G-571 |
Cymbeline |
Arviragus | 25 |
The Bird is dead (NULL) |
|
M-570 |
Cymbeline |
Arviragus | 25 |
The Bird is dead (NULL) |
|
M-380 |
Coriolanus |
Auffidius | 30 |
All places yeelds to him ere he sits downe, (So hated, and so banish’d: but he ha’s a Merit) |
|
M-381 |
Coriolanus |
Auffidius | 35 |
Oh Martius, Martius; (Each word thou hast spoke, hath weeded from my heart) |
|
M-203 |
The Merchant of Venice |
Bassanio | 27 |
O sweet Portia, (Heere are a few of the unpleasant'st words) |
|
M-204 |
The Merchant of Venice |
Bassanio | 35 |
So may the outward showes be least themselves (NULL) |
|
M-650 |
King John |
Bastard (Philip) | 40 |
A foot of Honor better then I was, (Well, now can I make any Joane a Lady,) |
|
M-651 |
King John |
Bastard (Philip) | 32 |
By all the bloud that ever fury breath'd, (To whip this dwarfish warre, this Pigmy Armes) |
|
M-652 |
King John |
Bastard (Philip) | 24 |
By heaven, these scroyles of Angiers flout you kings, (Be friends a-while, and both conjoyntly bend) |
|
M-653 |
King John |
Bastard (Philip) | 21 |
Go, beare him in thine armes: (NULL) |
|
M-654 |
King John |
Bastard (Philip) | 38 |
Mad world, mad kings, mad composition: (NULL) |
|
M-655 |
King John |
Bastard (Philip) | 31 |
So on my soule he did, for ought he knew: (But wherefore doe you droope? why looke you sad?/A cockred-silken wanton brave our fields,) |
|
W-260 |
Much adoe about Nothing |
Beatrice | 17 (prose) |
Is a not approved in the height a villaine, that (Princes and Counties! surelie a Princely testi-) |
|
W-261 |
Much adoe about Nothing |
Beatrice | 10 |
What fire is in mine eares? can this be true? (NULL) |
|
M-571 |
Cymbeline |
Belarius | 30 |
How hard it is to hide the sparkes of Nature? (These Boyes know little they are Sonnes to’th’King,) |
|
M-572 |
Cymbeline |
Belarius | 21 |
So sure as you, your Fathers: I (old Morgan) (Heere are your Sonnes againe, and I must loose) |
|
M-260 |
Much adoe about Nothing |
Benedicke | 28 (prose) |
I know that, but I would have thee hence, and (NULL) |
|
M-261 |
Much adoe about Nothing |
Benedicke | 24 (prose) |
This can be no tricke, the conference was sadly (NULL) |
|
M-520 |
Romeo and Juliet |
Benvolio | 23 |
Heere were the servants of your adversarie, (Madam, an houre before the worshipt Sun) |
|
M-521 |
Romeo and Juliet |
Benvolio | 24 |
Tybalt here slaine, whom Romeo's hand did slay, (NULL) |
|
M-161 |
Loves Labour's lost |
Berowne | 39 |
But Love first learned in a Ladies eyes, (NULL) |
|
M-162 |
Loves Labour's lost |
Berowne | 24 |
Honest plain words, best pierce the ears of griefe (NULL) |
|
M-163 |
Loves Labour's lost |
Berowne | 23 |
Neither of either, I remit both twaine. (I see the tricke on’t: Heere was a consent,) |
|
M-164 |
Loves Labour's lost |
Berowne | 34 |
Now step I forth to whip hypocrisie. (Not you by me, but I betrayed to you.) |
|
M-165 |
Loves Labour's lost |
Berowne | 33 |
O, and I forsooth in love, (NULL) |
|
M-166 |
Loves Labour's lost |
Berowne | 39 |
O 'tis more then neede. (Have at you then affections men at armes,) |
|
M-167 |
Loves Labour's lost |
Berowne | 20 |
This fellow pickes up wit as Pigeons pease, (He is Wits Pedler, and retailes his Wares,) |
|
M-168 |
Loves Labour's lost |
Berowne | 22 |
Thus poure the stars down plagues for perjury. (NULL) |
|
M-169 |
Loves Labour's lost |
Berowne | 22 |
Why? all delights are vaine, and that most vaine (NULL) |
|
M-100 |
All's Well, that Ends Well |
Bertram | 19 |
My wife my Leige? I shal beseech your highnes (Pardon my gracious Lord: for I submit) |
|
M-101 |
All's Well, that Ends Well |
Bertram | 24 |
They told me that your name was Fontybell. (But give thy selfe unto my sicke desires,) |
|
G-280 |
The Taming of the Shrew |
Biondello | 25 (prose) |
Why Petruchio is comming, in a new hat and (NULL) |
|
M-280 |
The Taming of the Shrew |
Biondello | 25 (prose) |
Why Petruchio is comming, in a new hat and (NULL) |
|
M-682 |
Richard the Second |
Bishop of Carlile | 36 |
Mary, Heaven forbid. (NULL) |
|
M-240 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Bottome | 18 (prose) |
When my cue comes, call me, and I will answer. (NULL) |
|
M-170 |
Loves Labour's lost |
Boyet | 20 |
If my observation (which very seldome lies (Why all his behaviours doe make their retire,) |
|
M-171 |
Loves Labour's lost |
Boyet | 30 |
Under the coole shade of a Siccamore, (NULL) |
|
G-760 |
Henry the Fift |
Boy | 26 (prose) |
As young as I am, I have observ’d these three (NULL) |
|
M-500 |
Othello |
Brabantio | 21 |
Oh thou foule Theefe, (NULL) |
|
M-382 |
Coriolanus |
Brutus | 18 |
All tongues speake of him, and the bleared sights (NULL) |
|
M-445 |
Julius Cæsar |
Brutus | 34 (prose) |
Be patient till the last. (Romans, Countrey-men, and Lovers, heare mee) |
|
M-446 |
Julius Cæsar |
Brutus | 25 |
It must be by his death: and for my part (NULL) |
|
M-850 |
Richard the Third |
Buckingham | 26 |
Hastings, and Edwards children, Gray and Rivers, (Why then Al-soules day, is my bodies doomsday) |
|
M-851 |
Richard the Third |
Buckingham | 24 |
Know then, it is your fault, that you resigne (In this just Cause come I to move your Grace.) |
|
M-852 |
Richard the Third |
Buckingham | 28 |
My Lord, this argues Conscience in your Grace, (Refuse not, mightie Lord, this proffer’d love.) |
|
M-880 |
King Henry the Eight |
Buckingham | 26 |
All good people, (I have this day receiv'd a Traitors judgement,) |
|
M-881 |
King Henry the Eight |
Buckingham | 37 |
Nay, Sir Nicholas, (Let it alone; my State now will but mocke me.) |
|
M-882 |
King Henry the Eight |
Buckingham | 26 |
Pray give me favour Sir: This cunning Cardinall (Does buy and sell his Honour as he pleases,) |
|
M-680 |
Richard the Second |
Bullingbrooke | 17 |
Noble Lord, (Goe to the rude Ribs of that ancient Castle,) |
|
M-681 |
Richard the Second |
Bullingbrooke | 30 |
Noble Lord, (Extended) (Goe to the rude Ribs of that ancient Castle,) |
|
M-762 |
Henry the Fift |
Burgogne | 45 |
My dutie to you both, on equall love. (Why that the naked, poore, and mangled Peace,) |
|
M-810 |
The second Part of Henry the Sixt |
Cade | 23 (prose) |
Well, hee shall be beheaded for it ten times: (I am the Beesome that must sweepe the Court cleane of such filth as thou art:) |
|
M-449 |
Julius Cæsar |
Cæsar | 30 |
I must prevent thee Cymber: (I could well be mov'd, if I were as you,) |
|
M-450 |
Julius Cæsar |
Cæsar | 21 |
Let me have men about me, that are fat, (NULL) |
|
M-368 |
Anthonie, and Cleopatra |
Cæsar (Octavius) | 22 |
Anthony, Leave thy lascivious Vassailes. When thou once (NULL) |
|
M-369 |
Anthonie, and Cleopatra |
Cæsar (Octavius) | 28 |
You may see Lepidus, and henceforth know, (His vacancie with his Voluptuousnesse) |
|
M-611 |
The Tempest |
Caliban | 17 |
All the infections that the Sunne suckes up (NULL) |
|
M-612 |
The Tempest |
Caliban | 19 |
As wicked dewe, as ere my mother brush'd (I must eat my dinner: This Island's mine by Sycorax my mother,) |
|
M-613 |
The Tempest |
Caliban | 19 |
Beate him enough: after a little time (Why, as I told thee, ’tis a custome with him) |
|
M-614 |
The Tempest |
Caliban | 16 |
Within this halfe houre will he be asleepe, (Be not affeard, the Isle is full of noyses,) |
|
M-631 |
The Winters Tale |
Camillo | 28 |
My gracious Lord, (If ever I were wilfull-negligent,) |
|
M-480 |
Macbeth |
Captaine | 26 |
Doubtfull it stood, (NULL) |
|
M-522 |
Romeo and Juliet |
Capulet | 21 |
Gods bread, it makes me mad: (NULL) |
|
M-523 |
Romeo and Juliet |
Capulet | 27 |
When the Sun sets, the earth doth drizzle daew (How now? Chopt Logicke? what is this?) |
|
M-883 |
King Henry the Eight |
Cardinal Wolsey | 30 |
Cromwel, I did not thinke to shed a teare (Cromwel, I charge thee, fling away Ambition,) |
|
M-884 |
King Henry the Eight |
Cardinal Wolsey | 22 |
I do professe (I have no Spleene against you, nor injustice) |
|
M-885 |
King Henry the Eight |
Cardinal Wolsey | 23 |
So farewell, to the little good you beare me. (Farewell? A long farewell to all my Greatnesse.) |
|
M-886 |
King Henry the Eight |
Cardinal Wolsey | 25 |
What should this meane? (Farewell? A long farewell to all my Greatnesse.) |
|
M-501 |
Othello |
Cassio | 22 |
The Riches of the Ship is come on shore: (The Riches of the Ship is come on shore:) |
|
M-447 |
Julius Cæsar |
Cassius | 42 |
I know that vertue to be in you Brutus, (NULL) |
|
M-448 |
Julius Cæsar |
Cassius | 27 |
Why man, he doth bestride the narrow world (NULL) |
|
W-120 |
As you Like it |
Celia | 30 |
Why should this Desert bee, (poem) (NULL) |
|
M-790 |
The first Part of Henry the Sixt |
Charles (Dolphin) | 22 |
Divinest Creature, Astrea’s Daughter, (’Tis Joane, not we, by whom the day is wonne:) |
|
M-656 |
King John |
Chattilion | 25 |
Then turne your forces from this paltry siege, (NULL) |
|
M-732 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
Chief Justice | 29 |
I then did use the Person of your Father: (NULL) |
|
G-761 |
Henry the Fift |
Chorus | 42 |
Now all the Youth of England are on fire, (NULL) |
|
G-762 |
Henry the Fift |
Chorus | 53 |
Now entertaine conjecture of a time, (NULL) |
|
G-763 |
Henry the Fift |
Chorus | 34 |
O For a Muse of Fire, that would ascend (NULL) |
|
G-764 |
Henry the Fift |
Chorus | 14 |
Thus farre with rough, and all-unable Pen, (NULL) |
|
G-765 |
Henry the Fift |
Chorus | 35 |
Thus with imagin'd wing our swift Scene flyes, (NULL) |
|
G-766 |
Henry the Fift |
Chorus | 45 |
Vouchsafe to those that have not read the Story, (NULL) |
|
M-830 |
The third Part of Henry the Sixt |
Clarence (George) | 22 |
Father of Warwicke, know you what this meanes? (NULL) |
|
M-853 |
Richard the Third |
Clarence (George) | 30 |
No, no, my Dreame was lengthen’d after life. (Ah Keeper, Keeper, I have done these things) |
|
M-854 |
Richard the Third |
Clarence (George) | 31 |
O, I have past a miserable night. (Me thoughts that I had broken from the Tower,) |
|
M-262 |
Much adoe about Nothing |
Claudio | 27 |
Sweet Prince, you learn me noble thankfulnes: (Give not this rotten Orenge to your friend,) |
|
M-183 |
Measure, For Measure |
Claudio | 19 |
I, but to die, and goe we know not where, (NULL) |
|
M-591 |
Pericles |
Cleon | 47 |
My Dyonisia, shall we rest us here, (This Tharsus, ore which I have the government,) |
|
M-592 |
Pericles |
Cleon | 29 |
This Tharsus, ore which I have the government, (Would now be glad of bread, and beg for it:) |
|
W-360 |
Anthonie, and Cleopatra |
Cleopatra | 33 |
Give me my Robe, put on my Crowne, I have (NULL) |
|
W-361 |
Anthonie, and Cleopatra |
Cleopatra | 27 |
I dreampt there was an Emperor Anthony (His legges bestrid the Ocean, his rear'd arme) |
|
W-362 |
Anthonie, and Cleopatra |
Cleopatra | 19 |
No more but in a Woman, and commanded (NULL) |
|
W-363 |
Anthonie, and Cleopatra |
Cleopatra | 17 |
O Cæsar, what a wounding shame is this, (NULL) |
|
W-364 |
Anthonie, and Cleopatra |
Cleopatra | 17 |
Oh Charmion. Where think'st thou he is now? (NULL) |
|
W-365 |
Anthonie, and Cleopatra |
Cleopatra | 17 |
Where art thou Death? (Sir, I will eate no meate, Ile not drinke sir,) |
|
M-811 |
The second Part of Henry the Sixt |
Clifford | 27 |
What say ye Countrimen, will ye relent (Is Cade the sonne of Henry the fift,) |
|
M-831 |
The third Part of Henry the Sixt |
Clifford | 29 |
Heere burnes my Candle out; I, heere it dies, (NULL) |
|
M-832 |
The third Part of Henry the Sixt |
Clifford | 34 |
My gracious Liege, this too much lenity (The smallest Worme will turne, being troden on,) |
|
M-573 |
Cymbeline |
Clotten | 24 (prose) |
I am neere to’th’place where they should meet, (NULL) |
|
M-574 |
Cymbeline |
Clotten | 28 (prose) |
I love, and hate her: for she’s Faire and Royall, (Ile have this Secret from thy heart, or rip) |
|
M-632 |
The Winters Tale |
Clowne | 22 (prose) |
Hilloa, loa. (I have seene two such sights, by Sea and by Land:) |
|
M-321 |
Twelfe Night |
Clowne (Feste) | 20 |
When that I was and a little tine boy, (song) (NULL) |
|
M-205 |
The Merchant of Venice |
Clowne (Launcelet) | 28 (prose) |
Certainely, my conscience will serve me to run (NULL) |
|
M-102 |
All's Well, that Ends Well |
Clowne (Lavatch) | 32 (prose) |
I have beene Madam a wicked creature, as you (Y'are shallow Madam in great friends, for the) |
|
M-120 |
As you Like it |
Clowne (Touchstone) | 29 (prose) |
Upon a lye, seven times removed: (beare your (NULL) |
|
M-383 |
Coriolanus |
Cominius | 41 |
I shall lacke voyce: the deeds of Coriolanus (NULL) |
|
W-650 |
King John |
Constance | 27 |
A wicked day, and not a holy day. (You have beguil'd me with a counterfeit) |
|
W-651 |
King John |
Constance | 29 |
Doe childe, goe to it grandame childe, (Now shame upon you where she does or no;/Thou monstrous Injurer of heaven and earth,) |
|
W-652 |
King John |
Constance | 26 |
Gone to be married? Gone to sweare a peace? (NULL) |
|
W-653 |
King John |
Constance | 23 |
If thou that bidst me be content, wert grim (NULL) |
|
W-654 |
King John |
Constance | 20 |
No, I defie all Counsell, all redresse, (No, no, I will not, having breath to cry:) |
|
W-655 |
King John |
Constance | 23 |
No, no, I will not, having breath to cry: (I am not mad: this haire I teare is mine,) |
|
W-656 |
King John |
Constance | 38 |
Thou art holy to belye me so, (I am not mad: this haire I teare is mine,/Yes that I will: and wherefore will I do it?) |
|
W-657 |
King John |
Constance | 22 |
Yes that I will: and wherefore will I do it? (Greefe fils the roome up of my absent childe:) |
|
W-658 |
King John |
Constance | 31 |
You have beguil’d me with a counterfeit (War, war, no peace, peace is to me a warre:) |
|
W-460 |
King Lear |
Cordelia | 22 |
I yet beseech your Majesty. (The Jewels of our Father, with wash'd eies) |
|
W-461 |
King Lear |
Cordelia | 14 |
O my deere Father, restauratian hang (NULL) |
|
W-462 |
King Lear |
Cordelia | 16 |
O thou good Kent, (NULL) |
|
M-384 |
Coriolanus |
Coriolanus (Caius Martius) | 32 |
Come leave your teares: a brief farwel: the beast (I shall be lov'd when I am lack'd. Nay Mother,) |
|
M-385 |
Coriolanus |
Coriolanus (Caius Martius) | 22 |
He that will give good words to thee, wil flatter (NULL) |
|
M-386 |
Coriolanus |
Coriolanus (Caius Martius) | 20 |
Most sweet Voyces: (NULL) |
|
M-387 |
Coriolanus |
Coriolanus (Caius Martius) | 37 |
My name is Caius Martius, who hath done (NULL) |
|
M-388 |
Coriolanus |
Coriolanus (Caius Martius) | 25 |
Shall remaine? (Shall? O God! but most unwise Patricians: why) |
|
M-389 |
Coriolanus |
Coriolanus (Caius Martius) | 29 |
This last old man, (My wife comes formost, then the honour’d mould) |
|
M-390 |
Coriolanus |
Coriolanus (Caius Martius) | 16 |
You common cry of Curs, whose breath I hate, (NULL) |
|
W-100 |
All's Well, that Ends Well |
Countesse | 23 |
Ah what sharpe stings are in her mildest words? (What Angell shall; My heart is heavie, and mine age is weake,) |
|
W-101 |
All's Well, that Ends Well |
Countesse | 19 |
Yes Hellen, you might be my daughter in law, (NULL) |
|
W-102 |
All's Well, that Ends Well |
Countesse | 34 |
You know Hellen I am a mother to you. (Nay a mother, why not a mother? when I sed a mother) |
|
W-143 |
The Comedie of Errors |
Courtizan | 16 |
Now out of doubt Antipholus is mad, (NULL) |
|
M-887 |
King Henry the Eight |
Cranmer | 43 |
Let me speake Sir, (This Royall Infant, Heaven still move about her;) |
|
M-888 |
King Henry the Eight |
Cranmer | 29 |
My good Lords; Hitherto, in all the Progresse (Lay all the weight ye can upon my patience,) |
|
W-300 |
Troylus and Cressida |
Cressida | 24 |
Boldnesse comes to mee now, and brings mee (Hard to seeme won: but I was won my Lord) |
|
W-301 |
Troylus and Cressida |
Cressida | 15 |
By the same token, you are a Bawd. (Words, vowes, gifts, teares, and loves full sacrifice,) |
|
W-302 |
Troylus and Cressida |
Cressida | 20 |
Perchance my Lord, I shew more craft then love, (If I be false, or swerve a haire from truth,) |
|
M-575 |
Cymbeline |
Cymbeline | 22 |
O rare instinct! (And when came you to serve our Romane Captive?) |
|
M-241 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Demetrius | 17 |
My Lord, faire Helen told me of their stealth, (NULL) |
|
M-242 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Demetrius | 16 |
O Helen, goddesse, nimph, perfect, divine, (NULL) |
|
W-501 |
Othello |
Desdemona | 17 |
Alas Iago, (What shall I do to win my Lord againe?) |
|
W-502 |
Othello |
Desdemona | 20 |
He saies he will returne incontinent, (My Mother had a Maid call'd Barbarie) |
|
W-590 |
Pericles |
Dionisia | 31 |
Thy oath remember, thou hast sworn to do it, (NULL) |
|
W-730 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
Doll (Teare-sheet) | 20 (prose) |
Charge me? I scorne you (scurvie Companion) (Away you Cut-purse Rascall, you filthy Bung/Captaine? thou abhominable damn’d Cheater,) |
|
M-656 |
King John |
Dolphin (Lewis) | 29 |
A noble temper dost thou shew in this, (Let me wipe off this honourable dewe,) |
|
M-657 |
King John |
Dolphin (Lewis) | 31 |
Your Grace shall pardon me, I will not backe: (NULL) |
|
M-263 |
Much adoe about Nothing |
Don Pedro | 18 |
Thou wilt be like a lover presently, (What need the bridge much broder then the flood?) |
|
M-143 |
The Comedie of Errors |
Dromio of Siracuse | 47 (prose) |
Doe you know me sir? Am I Dromio? Am I (Marry sir, she's the Kitchin wench, and al grease,) |
|
M-144 |
The Comedie of Errors |
Dromio of Siracuse | 32 (prose) |
Doe you know me sir? Am I (Edited version)Dromio? Am I (NULL) |
|
W-680 |
Richard the Second |
Duchesse of Gloucester | 28 |
Findes brotherhood in thee no sharper spurre? (NULL) |
|
W-681 |
Richard the Second |
Duchesse of Gloucester | 29 |
Why then I will: farewell old Gaunt. (Desolate, desolate will I hence, and dye,) |
|
W-682 |
Richard the Second |
Duchesse of Yorke | 25 |
Why Yorke, what wilt thou do? (Have we more Sonnes? Or are we like to have?) |
|
W-850 |
Richard the Third |
Duchesse of Yorke | 25 |
Ah so much interest have I in thy sorrow, (NULL) |
|
W-851 |
Richard the Third |
Duchesse of Yorke | 26 |
No by the holy Rood, thou know’st it well, (Either thou wilt die, by Gods just ordinance) |
|
M-340 |
The Two Gentlemen of Verona |
Duke (of Milan) | 34 |
How shall I fashion me to weare a cloake? (’Tis so: and heere’s the Ladder for the purpose.) |
|
M-341 |
The Two Gentlemen of Verona |
Duke (of Milan) | 25 |
Nay then no matter: stay with me a while, (No, trust me, She is peevish, sullen, froward,) |
|
M-325 |
Twelfe Night |
Duke (Orsino) | 22 |
If Musicke be the food of Love, play on, (NULL) |
|
M-326 |
Twelfe Night |
Duke (Orsino) | 15 |
Why should I not, (had I the heart to do it (NULL) |
|
M-121 |
As you Like it |
Duke Senior | 17 |
Now my Coe-mates, and brothers in exile: (NULL) |
|
M-184 |
Measure, For Measure |
Duke (Vincentio) | 28 |
Be absolute for death: either death or life (NULL) |
|
M-185 |
Measure, For Measure |
Duke (Vincentio) | 19 |
Of Government, the properties to unfold, (NULL) |
|
M-186 |
Measure, For Measure |
Duke (Vincentio) | 38 |
So then you hope of pardon from Lord Angelo? (Be absolute for death: either death or life) |
|
M-460 |
King Lear |
Edgar | 21 |
I heard myselfe proclaim'd (NULL) |
|
M-461 |
King Lear |
Edgar | 19 |
List a breefe tale, (Met I my Father with his bleeding Rings,) |
|
M-462 |
King Lear |
Edgar | 23 |
Sit you downe Father: rest you. (NULL) |
|
M-463 |
King Lear |
Edmond (Bastard) | 27 |
Perswade me to the murther of your Lordship, (When I disswaded him from his intent,) |
|
M-464 |
King Lear |
Edmond (Bastard) | 24 |
The Duke be here to night? The better best, (In cunning, I must draw my Sword upon you:) |
|
M-465 |
King Lear |
Edmond (Bastard) | 19 |
The Enemy’s in view, draw up your powers, (To both these Sisters have I sworne my love:) |
|
M-466 |
King Lear |
Edmond (Bastard) | 19 (prose) |
This is the excellent foppery of the world, that (NULL) |
|
M-467 |
King Lear |
Edmond (Bastard) | 22 |
Thou Nature art my Goddesse, to thy Law (NULL) |
|
M-833 |
The third Part of Henry the Sixt |
Edward (King Edward) | 24 |
A wispe of straw were worth a thousand Crowns, (For what hath broach’d this tumult but thy Pride?) |
|
M-834 |
The third Part of Henry the Sixt |
Edward (King Edward) | 30 |
Once more we sit in Englands Royall Throne, (Come hither Besse, and let me kisse my Boy:) |
|
M-243 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Egeus | 24 |
Full of vexation, come I, with complaint (NULL) |
|
W-810 |
The second Part of Henry the Sixt |
Elianor | 38 |
Come you, my Lord, to see my open shame? (Ah Gloster, teach me to forget my selfe:) |
|
W-811 |
The second Part of Henry the Sixt |
Elianor | 27 |
Why droopes my Lord like over-ripen'd Corn, (NULL) |
|
M-370 |
Anthonie, and Cleopatra |
Enobarbus | 30 |
I will tell you, (The Barge she sate in, like a burnisht Throne) |
|
G-730 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
Epilogue | 26 |
First, my Feare: then, my Curtsie: last, my Speech. (NULL) |
|
M-763 |
Henry the Fift |
Exeter | 26 |
In which array (brave Soldier) doth he lye, (Suffolke first dyed, and Yorke all hagled over) |
|
M-220 |
The Merry Wives of Windsor |
Falstaffe | 18 (prose) |
Go, fetch me a quart of Sacke, put a tost in't. (Come, let me poure in some Sack to the Thames water:) |
|
M-221 |
The Merry Wives of Windsor |
Falstaffe | 15 (prose) |
I went to her (Master Broome) as you see, like a (NULL) |
|
M-222 |
The Merry Wives of Windsor |
Falstaffe | 34 (prose) |
Nay, you shall heare (Master Broome) what I (NULL) |
|
M-223 |
The Merry Wives of Windsor |
Falstaffe | 20 (prose) |
The Windsor-bell hath stroke twelve: the Minute (For me, I am heere a Windsor Stagge,) |
|
M-700 |
The First Part of Henry the Fourth |
Falstaffe | 20 (prose) |
I am accurst to rob in that Theefe company: that (NULL) |
|
M-701 |
The First Part of Henry the Fourth |
Falstaffe | 37 (prose) |
If I be not asham’d of my Souldiers, I am a (NULL) |
|
M-702 |
The First Part of Henry the Fourth |
Falstaffe | 17 (prose) |
Imbowell’d? If thou imbowell mee to day, Ile (NULL) |
|
M-703 |
The First Part of Henry the Fourth |
Falstaffe | 36 (prose) |
Peace good Pint-pot, peace good Tickle-braine. (A goodly portly man yfaith, and a corpulent,) |
|
M-704 |
The First Part of Henry the Fourth |
Falstaffe | 14 (prose) |
Tis not due yet: I would bee loath to pay him (Honor prickes me on.) |
|
M-733 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
Falstaffe | 30 (prose) |
Fare you well, gentle Gentlemen. On Bardolph, (How subject wee old men are to this vice of Lying?) |
|
M-734 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
Falstaffe | 39 (prose) |
I would you had but the wit: 'twere better (They are generally Fooles, and Cowards;) |
|
M-735 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
Falstaffe | 25 (prose) |
Ile follow you, good Master Robert Shallow. (I will devise matter enough out of this Shallow, to) |
|
M-736 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
Falstaffe | 24 (prose) |
Men of all sorts take a pride to gird at mee: the (keepe Prince Harry in continuall Laughter,) |
|
M-737 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
Falstaffe | 23 (prose) |
Not so (my Lord) your ill Angell is light: but I (My Lord, I was borne with a white head, and somthing a round belly.) |
|
M-145 |
The Comedie of Errors |
Father (Egeon) | 64 |
A heavier taske could not have beene impos’d, (NULL) |
|
M-146 |
The Comedie of Errors |
Father (Egeon) | 39 |
Oh had the gods done so, I had not now (NULL) |
|
M-224 |
The Merry Wives of Windsor |
Fenton | 37 |
From time to time, I have acquainted you (NULL) |
|
M-615 |
The Tempest |
Ferdinand | 27 |
Admir'd Miranda, (Indeede the top of Admiration, worth/I am, in my condition;) |
|
M-616 |
The Tempest |
Ferdinand | 25 |
No, noble Mistris, 'tis fresh morning with me (Admir'd Miranda,) |
|
M-617 |
The Tempest |
Ferdinand | 15 |
There be some Sports are painfull; and their labor (NULL) |
|
M-172 |
Loves Labour's lost |
Ferdinand (King of Navarre) | 20 |
Come sir, you blush: as his, your case is such, (NULL) |
|
M-173 |
Loves Labour's lost |
Ferdinand (King of Navarre) | 23 |
Let Fame, that all hunt after in their lives, (Our Court shall be a little Achademe,) |
|
M-174 |
Loves Labour's lost |
Ferdinand (King of Navarre) | 28 |
Madame, your father heere doth intimate, (NULL) |
|
M-175 |
Loves Labour's lost |
Ferdinand (King of Navarre) | 21 (prose) |
So it is besieged with sable coloured melancholie, I (letter) (NULL) |
|
M-176 |
Loves Labour's lost |
Ferdinand (King of Navarre) | 19 |
So sweete a kisse the golden Sunne gives not, (NULL) |
|
W-240 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
First Fairy | 23 |
Over hil, over dale, through bush, through briar, (Either I mistake your shape and making quite,) |
|
M-122 |
As you Like it |
First Forrest Lord | 38 |
Indeed my Lord The melancholy Jaques grieves at that, (NULL) |
|
W-489 |
Macbeth |
First Witch | 38 |
Thrice the brinded Cat hath mew'd. (Double, double, toile and trouble;) |
|
M-631 |
The Winters Tale |
Florizell | 17 |
What you do, (Still betters what is done. When you speake (Sweet)) |
|
M-252 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Flute | 16 |
Asleepe my Love? What, dead my Dove? (NULL) |
|
M-468 |
King Lear |
Foole | 20 |
He that has and a little-tyne wit, (This is a brave night to coole a Curtizan:) |
|
M-469 |
King Lear |
Foole | 32 |
Sirha, Ile teach thee a speech. (Marke it Nuncle;/Why after I have cut the egge i'th'middle and) |
|
M-470 |
King Lear |
Foole | 16 |
This is a brave night to coole a Curtizan: (NULL) |
|
M-225 |
The Merry Wives of Windsor |
Ford | 18 (prose) |
Has Page any braines? Hath he any eies? Hath he (NULL) |
|
M-226 |
The Merry Wives of Windsor |
Ford | 26 (prose) |
Sir, I heare you are a Scholler: (I will be briefe (I have long lov’d her, and I protest to you, bestowed) |
|
M-227 |
The Merry Wives of Windsor |
Ford | 25 (prose) |
What a damn'd Epicurian-Rascall is this? my (NULL) |
|
M-264 |
Much adoe about Nothing |
Frier Francis | 15 |
Heare me a little, for I have onely bene silent so (NULL) |
|
M-265 |
Much adoe about Nothing |
Frier Francis | 43 |
Pause awhile: (Marry this wel carried, shall on her behalfe,) |
|
M-524 |
Romeo and Juliet |
Frier Lawrence | 32 |
Hold then: goe home, be merrie, give consent, (NULL) |
|
M-525 |
Romeo and Juliet |
Frier Lawrence | 27 |
Hold thy desperate hand: (NULL) |
|
M-526 |
Romeo and Juliet |
Frier Lawrence | 51 |
Hold thy desperate hand: (Extended) (NULL) |
|
M-527 |
Romeo and Juliet |
Frier Lawrence | 30 |
The gray ey'd morne smiles on the frowning night, (NULL) |
|
M-705 |
The First Part of Henry the Fourth |
Gads-hill | 18 (prose) |
Sirra, if they meete not with Saint Nicholas Clarks, (What talkest thou to me of the Hangman? If I) |
|
M-683 |
Richard the Second |
Gaunt | 38 |
Me thinkes I am a Prophet new inspir'd (This royal Throne of Kings, this sceptered Isle) |
|
M-684 |
Richard the Second |
Gaunt | 29 |
This royal Throne of Kings, this sceptered Isle (NULL) |
|
M-791 |
The first Part of Henry the Sixt |
Generall | 27 |
Thou ominous and fearefull Owle of death, (NULL) |
|
M-402 |
Hamlet |
Ghost | 48 |
I that incestuous, that adulterate Beast (NULL) |
|
M-471 |
King Lear |
Gloucester | 18 (prose) |
He cannot bee such a Monster. Edmond seeke (These late Eclipses in the Sun and Moone) |
|
M-792 |
The first Part of Henry the Sixt |
Gloucester (Duke Humfrey) | 19 |
Presumptuous Priest, this place comands my patience, (Thy lewd, pestiferous, and dissentious prancks,) |
|
M-812 |
The second Part of Henry the Sixt |
Gloucester (Duke Humfrey) | 30 |
Ah gracious Lord, these dayes are dangerous: (Vertue is choakt with foule Ambition,) |
|
M-813 |
The second Part of Henry the Sixt |
Gloucester (Duke Humfrey) | 29 |
Brave Peeres of England, Pillars of the State, (To you Duke Humfrey must unload his greefe:) |
|
W-463 |
King Lear |
Gonerill | 19 |
Did my Father strike my Gentleman for chiding (By day and night, he wrongs me, every howre) |
|
W-464 |
King Lear |
Gonerill | 18 |
Not only Sir this, your all-lycenc’d Foole, (NULL) |
|
W-465 |
King Lear |
Gonerill | 18 |
This admiration Sir, is much o'th'savour (NULL) |
|
G-590 |
Pericles |
Gower | 40 |
Here have you seen a mighty King (His child, I wis, to incest bring:) |
|
G-591 |
Pericles |
Gower | 52 |
Imagine Pericles arriv’d at Tyre, (Now to Marina bend your minde,) |
|
G-592 |
Pericles |
Gower | 18 |
In Antiochus and his daughter, you have heard (Of monstrous lust, the due and just reward:) |
|
G-593 |
Pericles |
Gower | 24 |
Marina thus the Brothel scapes, and chances (NULL) |
|
G-594 |
Pericles |
Gower | 20 |
Now take we our way (No vizor does become black villany,) |
|
G-595 |
Pericles |
Gower | 60 |
Now ysleep slaked hath the rout, (And so to Sea; their vessell shakes,) |
|
G-596 |
Pericles |
Gower | 42 |
To sing a song that old was sung, (And her to incest did provoke.) |
|
G-597 |
Pericles |
Gower | 50 |
Thus time we waste, and longest leagues make short, (Let Pericles believe his Daughter’s dead,) |
|
M-593 |
Pericles |
Gower | 40 |
Here have you seen a mighty King (His child, I wis, to incest bring:) |
|
M-594 |
Pericles |
Gower | 52 |
Imagine Pericles arriv’d at Tyre, (Now to Marina bend your minde,) |
|
M-595 |
Pericles |
Gower | 18 |
In Antiochus and his daughter, you have heard (Of monstrous lust, the due and just reward:) |
|
M-596 |
Pericles |
Gower | 24 |
Marina thus the Brothel scapes, and chances (NULL) |
|
M-597 |
Pericles |
Gower | 20 |
Now take we our way (No vizor does become black villany,) |
|
M-598 |
Pericles |
Gower | 60 |
Now ysleep slaked hath the rout, (And so to Sea; their vessell shakes,) |
|
M-599 |
Pericles |
Gower | 42 |
To sing a song that old was sung, (And her to incest did provoke.) |
|
M-600 |
Pericles |
Gower | 50 |
Thus time we waste, and longest leagues make short, (Let Pericles believe his Daughter’s dead,) |
|
M-206 |
The Merchant of Venice |
Gratiano | 26 |
Let me play the foole, (There are a sort of men, whose visages) |
|
M-281 |
The Taming of the Shrew |
Gremio | 23 |
Tut, she's a Lambe, a Dove, a foole to him: (NULL) |
|
G-880 |
King Henry the Eight |
Griffith (Gentleman Usher) | 21 |
This Cardinall, (Though from an humble Stocke, undoubtedly) |
|
M-889 |
King Henry the Eight |
Griffith (Gentleman Usher) | 25 |
Noble Madam: Mens evill manners, live in Brasse, their Vertues (This Cardinall, Though from an humble Stocke,) |
|
G-570 |
Cymbeline |
Guiderius | 24 |
Feare no more the heate o'th'Sun, (chant) (NULL) |
|
M-403 |
Hamlet |
Hamlet | 32 |
Extasie? My Pulse as yours doth temperately keepe time, (O throw away the worser part of it,) |
|
M-404 |
Hamlet |
Hamlet | 34 |
I so, God buy'ye: Now I am alone. (Oh what a Rogue and Pesant slave am I?) |
|
M-405 |
Hamlet |
Hamlet | 57 |
I so, God buy'ye: Now I am alone. (Extended) (Oh what a Rogue and Pesant slave am I?) |
|
M-406 |
Hamlet |
Hamlet | 18 (prose) |
I will tell you why; so shall my anticipation (What a piece of worke is a man!) |
|
M-407 |
Hamlet |
Hamlet | 26 |
Ile be with you straight, goe a little before. (Quarto speech) (How all occasions doe informe against me,) |
|
M-408 |
Hamlet |
Hamlet | 27 |
Looke heere upon this Picture, and on this, (NULL) |
|
M-409 |
Hamlet |
Hamlet | 22 |
Now might I do it pat, now he is praying, (NULL) |
|
M-410 |
Hamlet |
Hamlet | 20 |
Oh all you host of Heaven! Oh Earth; what els? (NULL) |
|
M-411 |
Hamlet |
Hamlet | 31 |
Oh that this too, too solid Flesh would melt, (NULL) |
|
M-412 |
Hamlet |
Hamlet | 34 (prose) |
Speake the Speech I pray you, as I pronounc'd (NULL) |
|
M-413 |
Hamlet |
Hamlet | 42 (prose) |
Speake the Speech I pray you, as I pronounc'd (Extended) (NULL) |
|
M-414 |
Hamlet |
Hamlet | 35 |
To be, or not to be, that is the Question: (NULL) |
|
M-855 |
Richard the Third |
Hastings | 25 |
Woe, woe for England, not a whit for me, (O bloody Richard: miserable England,) |
|
W-480 |
Macbeth |
Hecat | 28 |
Have I not reason (Beldams) as you are? (NULL) |
|
M-304 |
Troylus and Cressida |
Hector | 31 |
Paris and Troylus, you have both said well: (If Helen then be wife to Sparta’s King) |
|
M-305 |
Troylus and Cressida |
Hector | 20 |
Why then will I no more: (Be drained. Let me embrace thee Ajax:) |
|
W-103 |
All's Well, that Ends Well |
Helena | 25 |
Inspired Merit so by breath is bard, (NULL) |
|
W-104 |
All's Well, that Ends Well |
Helena | 20 |
O were that all, I thinke not on my father, (NULL) |
|
W-105 |
All's Well, that Ends Well |
Helena | 14 |
Our remedies oft in our selves do lye, (NULL) |
|
W-106 |
All's Well, that Ends Well |
Helena | 26 |
Then I confesse, (Here on my knee, before high heaven and you,) |
|
W-107 |
All's Well, that Ends Well |
Helena | 31 |
Till I have no wife I have nothing in France. (Who ever shoots at him, I set him there.) |
|
W-241 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Helena | 13 |
Cal you me faire? that faire againe unsay, (NULL) |
|
W-242 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Helena | 22 |
Have you not set Lysander, as in scorne (I, doe, persever, counterfeit sad lookes,) |
|
W-243 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Helena | 26 |
How happy some, ore other some can be? (NULL) |
|
W-244 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Helena | 19 |
I pray you though you mocke me, gentlemen, (Good Hermia, do not be so bitter with me,) |
|
W-245 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Helena | 28 |
Loe, she is one of this confederacy, (NULL) |
|
W-246 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Helena | 15 |
O I am out of breath, in this fond chace, (NULL) |
|
W-247 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Helena | 17 |
O spight! O hell! I see you are all bent (NULL) |
|
W-248 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Helena | 26 |
You draw me, you hard-hearted Adamant, (The wildest hath not such a heart as you;) |
|
W-249 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Hermia | 12 |
Helpe me Lysander, helpe me; do thy best (NULL) |
|
W-250 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Hermia | 23 |
Now I but chide, but I should use thee worse. (Out dog, out cur, thou driv'st me past the bounds) |
|
W-251 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Hermia | 10 |
Puppet? why so? I, that way goes the game. (NULL) |
|
W-252 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Hermia | 20 |
What, can you do me greater harme then hate? (Puppet? why so? I, that way goes the game.) |
|
W-630 |
The Winters Tale |
Hermione | 18 |
More then Mistresse of, (NULL) |
|
W-631 |
The Winters Tale |
Hermione | 33 |
Since what I am to say, must be but that (NULL) |
|
W-632 |
The Winters Tale |
Hermione | 26 |
Sir, spare your Threats: (NULL) |
|
M-415 |
Hamlet |
Horatio | 28 |
Season your admiration for a while (Two nights together, had these Gentlemen) |
|
M-416 |
Hamlet |
Horatio | 40 |
That can I, At least the whisper goes so: Our last King, (Ile crosse it, though it blast me. Stay Illusion:) |
|
W-731 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
Hostesse (Mistresse Quickly) | 17 (prose) |
I am undone with his going: I warrant he is an (NULL) |
|
W-732 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
Hostesse (Mistresse Quickly) | 25 (prose) |
Oh my most worshipfull Lord, and't please your (make mee my Lady thy wife. Canst thou deny it?) |
|
W-760 |
Henry the Fift |
Hostesse (Mistresse Quickly) | 16 (prose) |
Nay sure, hee's not in Hell: hee’s in Arthurs Bosome, (NULL) |
|
M-706 |
The First Part of Henry the Fourth |
Hotspurre (Percie) | 33 |
But soft I pray you; did King Richard then (Nay then I cannot blame his Cousin King) |
|
M-707 |
The First Part of Henry the Fourth |
Hotspurre (Percie) | 41 |
My Liege, I did deny no Prisoners. (NULL) |
|
M-708 |
The First Part of Henry the Fourth |
Hotspurre (Percie) | 24 |
Revolted Mortimer? (Three times they breath’d, and three times did they drink) |
|
M-709 |
The First Part of Henry the Fourth |
Hotspurre (Percie) | 38 |
The King is kinde: And well wee know, the King (NULL) |
|
M-658 |
King John |
Hubert | 21 |
My Lord, they say five Moones were seene to night: (Old men, and Beldames, in the streets) |
|
M-659 |
King John |
Hubert | 33 |
That daughter there of Spaine, the Lady Blanch (NULL) |
|
M-814 |
The second Part of Henry the Sixt |
Hume | 21 |
Hume must make merry with the Duchesse Gold: (Dame Elianor gives Gold, to bring the Witch:) |
|
M-576 |
Cymbeline |
Iachimo | 41 |
All too soone I shall, (Your daughters Chastity, (there it beginnes)) |
|
M-577 |
Cymbeline |
Iachimo | 20 |
Thankes fairest Lady: (What are men mad? Hath Nature given them eyes) |
|
M-578 |
Cymbeline |
Iachimo | 41 |
The Crickets sing, and mans ore-labor'd sense (NULL) |
|
M-502 |
Othello |
Iago | 29 |
And what's he then, (That saies I play the Villaine?) |
|
M-503 |
Othello |
Iago | 19 |
How poore are they that have not Patience? (NULL) |
|
M-504 |
Othello |
Iago | 27 |
O Sir content you. (NULL) |
|
M-505 |
Othello |
Iago | 27 |
That Cassio loves her, I do well beleev't: (NULL) |
|
M-506 |
Othello |
Iago | 22 |
Thus do I ever make my Foole, my purse: (NULL) |
|
M-507 |
Othello |
Iago | 14 (prose) |
Vertue? A figge, 'tis in our selves that we are (NULL) |
|
W-570 |
Cymbeline |
Imogen | 15 |
Away, I do condemne mine eares, that have (NULL) |
|
W-571 |
Cymbeline |
Imogen | 33 |
False to his Bed? What is it to be false? (NULL) |
|
W-572 |
Cymbeline |
Imogen | 27 |
I see a mans life is a tedious one, (NULL) |
|
W-573 |
Cymbeline |
Imogen | 21 |
Oh for a Horse with wings: Hear'st thou Pisanio? (NULL) |
|
W-574 |
Cymbeline |
Imogen | 23 |
Thou should'st have made him (I would have broke mine eye-strings;) |
|
W-575 |
Cymbeline |
Imogen | 28 |
Thou told'st me when we came from horse, the place (NULL) |
|
W-576 |
Cymbeline |
Imogen | 16 |
True honest men being heard, like false Æneas, (NULL) |
|
W-577 |
Cymbeline |
Imogen | 35 |
Who, thy Lord? That is my Lord Leonatus? (Oh for a Horse with wings: Hear'st thou Pisanio?) |
|
W-578 |
Cymbeline |
Imogen | 25 |
Why, I must dye: (And if I do not by thy hand, thou art) |
|
W-579 |
Cymbeline |
Imogen | 42 |
Yes sir, to Milford-Haven, which is the way? (NULL) |
|
W-180 |
Measure, For Measure |
Isabella | 27 |
Most strange: but yet most truely wil I speake, (Oh Prince, I conjure thee, as thou beleev'st) |
|
W-181 |
Measure, For Measure |
Isabella | 17 |
Oh you beast, (NULL) |
|
W-182 |
Measure, For Measure |
Isabella | 21 |
So you must be the first that gives this sentence, (Could great men thunder) |
|
W-183 |
Measure, For Measure |
Isabella | 17 |
To whom should I complaine? Did I tell this, (NULL) |
|
W-184 |
Measure, For Measure |
Isabella | 21 |
Too late? why no: I that doe speak a word (NULL) |
|
M-123 |
As you Like it |
Jaques | 23 |
A Foole, a foole: I met a foole i'th Forrest, (NULL) |
|
M-124 |
As you Like it |
Jaques | 28 |
All the world's a stage, (NULL) |
|
M-125 |
As you Like it |
Jaques | 18 |
Why who cries out on pride, (NULL) |
|
G-790 |
The first Part of Henry the Sixt |
John Talbot | 20 |
Is my name Talbot? and am I your Sonne? (NULL) |
|
M-793 |
The first Part of Henry the Sixt |
John Talbot | 20 |
Is my name Talbot? and am I your Sonne? (NULL) |
|
W-340 |
The Two Gentlemen of Verona |
Julia | 27 |
And she shall thanke you for't, if ere you know her. (A vertuous gentlewoman, milde, and beautifull.) |
|
W-341 |
The Two Gentlemen of Verona |
Julia | 18 |
How many women would doe such a message? (NULL) |
|
W-342 |
The Two Gentlemen of Verona |
Julia | 25 |
Now (by my modesty) a goodly Broker: (And yet I would I had ore-look'd the Letter;) |
|
W-343 |
The Two Gentlemen of Verona |
Julia | 21 |
Oh, know'st thou not, his looks are my soules food? (The more thou dam'st it up, the more it burnes:) |
|
W-344 |
The Two Gentlemen of Verona |
Julia | 23 |
She hath bin fairer (Madam) then she is, (Therefore I know she is about my height,) |
|
W-345 |
The Two Gentlemen of Verona |
Julia | 21 |
That is the least (Lucetta) of my feare: (But truer starres did governe Protheus birth,) |
|
W-346 |
The Two Gentlemen of Verona |
Julia | 30 |
This babble shall not henceforth trouble me; (Oh hatefull hands, to teare such loving words;) |
|
W-520 |
Romeo and Juliet |
Juliet | 35 |
Farewell: God knowes when we shall meete againe. (NULL) |
|
W-521 |
Romeo and Juliet |
Juliet | 45 |
Farewell: God knowes when we shall meete againe. (Extended) (NULL) |
|
W-522 |
Romeo and Juliet |
Juliet | 35 |
Gallop apace, you fiery footed steedes, (NULL) |
|
W-523 |
Romeo and Juliet |
Juliet | 16 |
O Romeo, Romeo, wherefore art thou Romeo? (NULL) |
|
W-524 |
Romeo and Juliet |
Juliet | 30 |
Shall I speake ill of him that is my husband? (NULL) |
|
W-525 |
Romeo and Juliet |
Juliet | 22 |
Thou knowest the maske of night is on my face (NULL) |
|
W-280 |
The Taming of the Shrew |
Katherine | 25 |
Fie, fie, unknit that thretaning unkinde brow, (NULL) |
|
W-281 |
The Taming of the Shrew |
Katherine | 44 |
Fie, fie, unknit that thretaning unkinde brow, (Extended) (NULL) |
|
W-282 |
The Taming of the Shrew |
Katherine | 14 |
No shame but mine, I must forsooth be forst (NULL) |
|
W-283 |
The Taming of the Shrew |
Katherine | 25 |
The more my wrong, the more his spite appears. (NULL) |
|
M-472 |
King Lear |
Kent | 22 (prose) |
Fellow I know thee. (A Knave, a Rascall, an eater of broken meates, a/What a brazen-fac’d Varlet art thou, to deny) |
|
M-417 |
Hamlet |
King (Claudius) | 14 |
Laertes, I must common with your greefe, (NULL) |
|
M-418 |
Hamlet |
King (Claudius) | 37 |
Oh my offence is ranke, it smels to heaven, (NULL) |
|
M-419 |
Hamlet |
King (Claudius) | 25 |
Though yet of Hamlet our deere Brothers death (NULL) |
|
M-856 |
Richard the Third |
King Edward (IV) | 33 |
Have I a tongue to doome my Brothers death? (NULL) |
|
M-710 |
The First Part of Henry the Fourth |
King Henry (IV) | 36 |
For all the World, (Why, Harry, doe I tell thee of my Foes,) |
|
M-711 |
The First Part of Henry the Fourth |
King Henry (IV) | 64 |
Heaven pardon thee: (Thy place in Councell thou hast rudely lost/He was but as the Cuckow is in June,) |
|
M-712 |
The First Part of Henry the Fourth |
King Henry (IV) | 30 |
Lords, give us leave: (Thy place in Councell thou hast rudely lost,) |
|
M-714 |
The First Part of Henry the Fourth |
King Henry (IV) | 26 |
Yea, there thou mak'st me sad, and mak'st me sin, (That some Night-tripping-Faiery, had exchang'd) |
|
M-738 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
King Henry (IV) | 31 |
Goe call the Earles of Surrey, and of Warwick: (How many thousand of my poorest Subjects) |
|
M-739 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
King Henry (IV) | 30 |
Nothing but well to thee, Thomas of Clarence. (How chance thou art not with the Prince, thy Brother?) |
|
M-740 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
King Henry (IV) | 45 |
O my Sonne! Heaven put it in thy minde to take it hence, (To thee, it shall descend with better Quiet,) |
|
M-741 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
King Henry (IV) | 31 |
Oh Heaven, that one might read the Book of Fate, (This Percie was the man, neerest my Soule,) |
|
M-742 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
King Henry (IV) | 24 |
The Prince hath ta’ne it hence: (How quickly Nature falls into revolt,) |
|
M-743 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
King Henry (IV) | 46 |
Thy wish was Father (Harry) to that thought: (Do’st thou so hunger for my emptie Chayre,) |
|
M-764 |
Henry the Fift |
King Henry (V) | 16 |
Call in the Messengers sent from the Dolphin. (NULL) |
|
M-765 |
Henry the Fift |
King Henry (V) | 28 |
God quit you in his mercy: Hear your sentence (NULL) |
|
M-766 |
Henry the Fift |
King Henry (V) | 43 |
How yet resolves the Governour of the Towne? (What Reyne can hold licentious Wickednesse,) |
|
M-767 |
Henry the Fift |
King Henry (V) | 37 |
I pray thee beare my former Answer back: (Marke then abounding valour in our English:) |
|
M-768 |
Henry the Fift |
King Henry (V) | 61 |
Indeede the French may lay twentie French (And what art thou, thou Idoll Ceremonie?/Upon the King, let us our Lives, our Soules,) |
|
M-769 |
Henry the Fift |
King Henry (V) | 36 (prose) |
Marry, if you would put me to Verses, or to (NULL) |
|
M-770 |
Henry the Fift |
King Henry (V) | 27 (prose) |
Now fye upon my false French: by mine Honor (in true English, I love thee Kate; by which Honor,) |
|
M-771 |
Henry the Fift |
King Henry (V) | 18 |
O God of Battailes, steele my Souldiers hearts, (NULL) |
|
M-772 |
Henry the Fift |
King Henry (V) | 35 |
Once more unto the Breach, (NULL) |
|
M-773 |
Henry the Fift |
King Henry (V) | 66 |
The mercy that was quicke in us but late, (If that same Daemon that hath gull’d thee thus,) |
|
M-774 |
Henry the Fift |
King Henry (V) | 27 |
This day is call'd the Feast of Crispian: (We few, we happy few, we band of brothers:) |
|
M-775 |
Henry the Fift |
King Henry (V) | 28 |
Thou doo’st thy Office fairely. Turne thee backe, (Goe therefore tell thy Master, heere I am;) |
|
M-776 |
Henry the Fift |
King Henry (V) | 31 |
Upon the King, let us our Lives, our Soules, (And what art thou, thou Idoll Ceremonie?) |
|
M-777 |
Henry the Fift |
King Henry (V) | 30 |
We are glad the Dolphin is so pleasant with us, (NULL) |
|
M-778 |
Henry the Fift |
King Henry (V) | 49 |
What's he that wishes so? (This day is call'd the Feast of Crispian:/We few, we happy few, we band of brothers:) |
|
M-794 |
The first Part of Henry the Sixt |
King Henry (VI) | 40 |
Come hither you that would be Combatants: (NULL) |
|
M-795 |
The first Part of Henry the Sixt |
King Henry (VI) | 23 |
Whether it be through force of your report, (NULL) |
|
M-815 |
The second Part of Henry the Sixt |
King Henry (VI) | 25 |
I Margaret: my heart is drown'd with griefe, (NULL) |
|
M-816 |
The second Part of Henry the Sixt |
King Henry (VI) | 17 |
What, doth my Lord of Suffolke comfort me? (NULL) |
|
M-835 |
The third Part of Henry the Sixt |
King Henry (VI) | 24 |
Hadst thou bin kill'd, when first thou didst presume, (NULL) |
|
M-836 |
The third Part of Henry the Sixt |
King Henry (VI) | 27 |
My Queene and Son are gone to France for aid: (NULL) |
|
M-837 |
The third Part of Henry the Sixt |
King Henry (VI) | 54 |
This battell fares like to the mornings Warre (NULL) |
|
M-890 |
King Henry the Eight |
King Henry (VIII) | 56 |
My Lord Cardinall, (I doe excuse you; yea, upon mine Honour,) |
|
M-891 |
King Henry the Eight |
King Henry (VIII) | 43 |
Pray you arise (What manner of man are you? /Your Enemies are many, and not small; their practises) |
|
M-892 |
King Henry the Eight |
King Henry (VIII) | 26 |
You were ever good at sodaine Commendations, (No Sir, it doe’s not please me,) |
|
M-660 |
King John |
King John | 28 |
For our advantage, therefore heare us first: (The Canons have their bowels full of wrath,) |
|
M-661 |
King John |
King John | 26 |
Good friend, thou hast no cause to say so yet, (I had a thing to say, but let it goe:) |
|
M-662 |
King John |
King John | 32 |
Oh, when the last accompt twixt heaven and earth (Had’st thou but shooke thy head, or made a pause) |
|
M-663 |
King John |
King John | 25 |
Why seek'st thou to possesse me with these feares? (Extended) (It is the curse of Kings, to be attended) |
|
M-103 |
All's Well, that Ends Well |
King (of France) | 25 |
I would I had that corporall soundnesse now, (NULL) |
|
M-104 |
All's Well, that Ends Well |
King (of France) | 28 |
Tis onely title thou disdainst in her, the which (NULL) |
|
M-664 |
King John |
King Philip | 29 |
Good reverend father, make my person yours, (NULL) |
|
M-665 |
King John |
King Philip | 32 |
When I have saide, make answer to us both. (We will beare home that lustie blood againe,) |
|
M-685 |
Richard the Second |
King Richard (II) | 30 |
A King of Beasts indeed: if ought but Beasts, (NULL) |
|
M-686 |
Richard the Second |
King Richard (II) | 26 |
Discomfortable Cousin, knowest thou not, (NULL) |
|
M-687 |
Richard the Second |
King Richard (II) | 29 |
I have been studying, how to compare (NULL) |
|
M-688 |
Richard the Second |
King Richard (II) | 65 |
I have been studying, how to compare (Extended) (NULL) |
|
M-689 |
Richard the Second |
King Richard (II) | 17 |
Mowbray, impartiall are our eyes and eares, (Wrath-kindled Gentlemen be rul'd by me:) |
|
M-690 |
Richard the Second |
King Richard (II) | 23 |
Needs must I like it well: I weepe for joy (Deere Earth, I doe salute thee with my hand,) |
|
M-691 |
Richard the Second |
King Richard (II) | 34 |
No matter where; of comfort no man speake: (NULL) |
|
M-692 |
Richard the Second |
King Richard (II) | 29 |
Wee are amaz'd, and thus long have we stood (NULL) |
|
M-693 |
Richard the Second |
King Richard (II) | 33 |
What must the King doe now? must he submit? (NULL) |
|
W-852 |
Richard the Third |
Lady Anne | 28 |
And I with all unwillingnesse will goe. (NULL) |
|
W-853 |
Richard the Third |
Lady Anne | 32 |
Set downe, set downe your honourable load, (NULL) |
|
W-854 |
Richard the Third |
Lady Anne | 25 |
What do you tremble? are you all affraid? (Foule Divell, For Gods sake hence, and trouble us not,) |
|
W-526 |
Romeo and Juliet |
Lady Capulet | 17 |
What say you, can you love the Gentleman? (NULL) |
|
W-659 |
King John |
Lady Faulconbridge | 15 |
Where is that slave thy brother? where is he? (King Richard Cordelion was thy father,) |
|
W-481 |
Macbeth |
Lady Macbeth | 23 |
Glamys thou art, and Cawdor, and shalt be (NULL) |
|
W-482 |
Macbeth |
Lady Macbeth | 40 |
Glamys thou art, and Cawdor, and shalt be (Extended) (NULL) |
|
W-483 |
Macbeth |
Lady Macbeth | 15 |
That which hath made them drunk, hath made me bold: (NULL) |
|
W-484 |
Macbeth |
Lady Macbeth | 22 |
The Raven himselfe is hoarse, (NULL) |
|
W-485 |
Macbeth |
Lady Macbeth | 24 |
Was the hope drunke, (What Beast was't then) |
|
W-486 |
Macbeth |
Lady Macbeth | 41 |
Was the hope drunke, (Extended) (What Beast was't then) |
|
W-487 |
Macbeth |
Lady Macbeth | 24 |
Who was it, that thus cry'd? why worthy Thane, (Give me the daggers: the sleeping, and the dead,/My Hands are of your colour: but I shame) |
|
W-488 |
Macbeth |
Lady Macbeth | 19 (prose) |
Yet heere's a spot. (NULL) |
|
W-700 |
The First Part of Henry the Fourth |
Lady Percie | 28 |
O my good Lord, why are you thus alone? (NULL) |
|
W-733 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
Lady Percie | 37 |
Oh yet, for heavens sake, go not to these Warrs; (NULL) |
|
M-420 |
Hamlet |
Laertes | 35 |
Thinke it no more: (Feare it Ophelia, feare it my deare Sister,) |
|
M-342 |
The Two Gentlemen of Verona |
Launce | 33 (prose) |
Nay, 'twill bee this howre ere I have done (NULL) |
|
M-343 |
The Two Gentlemen of Verona |
Launce | 37 (prose) |
When a mans servant shall play the Curre with (NULL) |
|
W-540 |
Titus Andronicus |
Lavinia | 31 |
Oh Tamora, thou bear'st a woman face. (Doe this, and be a charitable murderer.) |
|
M-473 |
King Lear |
Lear | 34 |
Blow windes, and crack your cheeks; Rage, blow (Rumble thy belly full: spit Fire, spowt Raine:) |
|
M-474 |
King Lear |
Lear | 22 |
Howle, howle, howle: O you are men of stones, (NULL) |
|
M-475 |
King Lear |
Lear | 20 |
I, every inch a King. (NULL) |
|
M-476 |
King Lear |
Lear | 17 |
Ile tell thee: Life and death, I am asham'd (Blastes and Fogges upon thee:) |
|
M-477 |
King Lear |
Lear | 22 |
O reason not the need: our basest Beggers (NULL) |
|
M-478 |
King Lear |
Lear | 25 |
Returne to her? and fifty men dismiss’d? (I prythee Daughter do not make me mad,) |
|
M-479 |
King Lear |
Lear | 20 |
The King would speake with Cornwall, (Fiery? The fiery Duke, tell the hot Duke that—) |
|
M-481 |
Macbeth |
Lenox | 25 |
My former Speeches, (NULL) |
|
M-266 |
Much adoe about Nothing |
Leonato | 30 |
I pray thee cease thy counsaile, (NULL) |
|
M-267 |
Much adoe about Nothing |
Leonato | 24 |
Wherefore? Why doth not every earthly thing (NULL) |
|
M-632 |
The Winters Tale |
Leontes | 25 |
Ha' not you seene Camillo? (Is whispering nothing?) |
|
M-633 |
The Winters Tale |
Leontes | 18 |
How blest am I (With violent Hefts: I have drunke, and seene the Spider.) |
|
M-634 |
The Winters Tale |
Leontes | 29 |
To your owne bents dispose you: you'le be found (Ynch-thicke; knee-deepe; o're head and eares a fork'd one.) |
|
M-635 |
The Winters Tale |
Leontes | 21 |
Too hot, too hot: (I'fecks: Why that's my Bawcock: what? has't snatch'd thy Nose?) |
|
G-120 |
As you Like it |
Le Beau | 22 |
Good Sir, I do in friendship counsaile you (NULL) |
|
M-126 |
As you Like it |
Le Beau | 22 |
Good Sir, I do in friendship counsaile you (NULL) |
|
M-817 |
The second Part of Henry the Sixt |
Lieutenant | 34 |
Poole, Sir Poole? Lord, (Now will I dam up this thy yawning mouth,) |
|
M-744 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
Lord Bardolfe | 34 |
It was (my Lord) who lin’d himself with hope, (Hope gives not so much warrant, as Dispaire) |
|
M-207 |
The Merchant of Venice |
Lorenzo | 20 |
Let's in, and there expect their comming. (How sweet the moone-light sleepes upon this banke,) |
|
M-282 |
The Taming of the Shrew |
Lucentio | 23 |
Oh Tranio, till I found it to be true, (I found the effect of Love in idlenesse) |
|
W-144 |
The Comedie of Errors |
Luciana | 28 |
And may it be that you have quite forgot (NULL) |
|
M-187 |
Measure, For Measure |
Lucio | 26 |
This is the point. (The Duke is very strangely gone from hence;) |
|
M-546 |
Titus Andronicus |
Lucius | 23 |
This Noble Auditory, be it knowne to you, (And they it were that ravished our Sister,) |
|
M-244 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Lysander | 20 |
A good perswasion; therefore heare me Hermia, (Helen, to you our mindes we will unfold,) |
|
M-245 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Lysander | 27 |
And run through fire I will for thy sweet sake. (NULL) |
|
M-482 |
Macbeth |
Macbeth | 27 |
Bring them before us. (To be thus, is nothing, but to be safely thus:) |
|
M-483 |
Macbeth |
Macbeth | 14 |
Fled to England? (Time, thou anticipat'st my dread exploits:) |
|
M-484 |
Macbeth |
Macbeth | 34 |
Goe bid thy Mistresse, when my drinke is ready, (Is this a Dagger, which I see before me,) |
|
M-485 |
Macbeth |
Macbeth | 26 |
Hang out our Banners on the outward walls, (She should have dy'de heereafter;/To morrow, and to morrow, and to morrow,) |
|
M-486 |
Macbeth |
Macbeth | 17 |
I, in the Catalogue ye goe for men, (NULL) |
|
M-487 |
Macbeth |
Macbeth | 28 |
If it were done, when 'tis done, then 'twer well, (NULL) |
|
M-488 |
Macbeth |
Macbeth | 23 |
Me thought I heard a voyce cry, Sleep no more: (NULL) |
|
M-489 |
Macbeth |
Macbeth | 12 |
She should have dy'de heereafter; (To morrow, and to morrow, and to morrow,) |
|
G-480 |
Macbeth |
Malcolme | 29 |
Be not offended: (I thinke our Country sinkes beneath the yoake;/I grant him Bloody,) |
|
G-481 |
Macbeth |
Malcolme | 24 |
Macduff, this Noble passion (NULL) |
|
M-490 |
Macbeth |
Malcolme | 29 |
Be not offended: (I thinke our Country sinkes beneath the yoake;/I grant him Bloody,) |
|
M-491 |
Macbeth |
Malcolme | 24 |
Macduff, this Noble passion (NULL) |
|
M-322 |
Twelfe Night |
Malvolio | 37 (prose) |
M,O,A,I. This simulation is not as the former: (NULL) |
|
M-323 |
Twelfe Night |
Malvolio | 17 |
Madam, you have done me wrong, (Lady you have, pray you peruse that Letter.) |
|
M-324 |
Twelfe Night |
Malvolio | 19 (prose) |
Oh ho, do you come neere me now: no worse (NULL) |
|
M-547 |
Titus Andronicus |
Marcus | 28 |
Princes, that strive by Factions, and by Friends, (Chosen Andronicus, Sur-named Pious,) |
|
M-548 |
Titus Andronicus |
Marcus | 47 |
Who is this, my Neece that flies away so fast? (NULL) |
|
M-549 |
Titus Andronicus |
Marcus | 29 |
You sad fac’d men, people and Sonnes of Rome, (Let Rome herselfe be bane unto herselfe,) |
|
W-262 |
Much adoe about Nothing |
Margaret | 14 (prose) |
Get you some of this distill’d carduus benedictus (NULL) |
|
W-185 |
Measure, For Measure |
Mariana | 32 |
My Lord, I doe confesse I nere was married, (NULL) |
|
W-591 |
Pericles |
Marina | 19 (prose) |
Neither of these are so bad as thou art, since (NULL) |
|
M-666 |
King John |
Meloone | 27 |
Have I not hideous death within my view, (NULL) |
|
M-391 |
Coriolanus |
Menenius | 19 (prose) |
I am knowne to be a humorous Patritian, (NULL) |
|
M-528 |
Romeo and Juliet |
Mercutio | 32 |
Nay, Ile conjure too. (Romeo, Humours, Madman, Passion, Lover,) |
|
M-529 |
Romeo and Juliet |
Mercutio | 35 (prose) |
O then I see Queene Mab hath beene with you: (NULL) |
|
W-610 |
The Tempest |
Miranda | 25 |
I do not know (One of my sexe; no womans face remember,) |
|
W-611 |
The Tempest |
Miranda | 20 |
If by your Art (my deerest father) you have (NULL) |
|
W-220 |
The Merry Wives of Windsor |
Mistresse Ford | 17 (prose) |
Wee burne day-light: heere, read, read: (NULL) |
|
W-221 |
The Merry Wives of Windsor |
Mistresse Page | 29 |
There is an old tale goes, that Herne the (As Falstaffe, she, and I, are newly met,) |
|
W-222 |
The Merry Wives of Windsor |
Mistresse Page | 25 (prose) |
What, have scap'd Love-letters in the (NULL) |
|
W-223 |
The Merry Wives of Windsor |
Mistresse Quickly | 31 |
Fairies blacke, gray, greene, and white, (About, about: Search Windsor Castle (Elves) within, and out.) |
|
W-224 |
The Merry Wives of Windsor |
Mistresse Quickly | 27 (prose) |
Marry this is the short, and the long of it: you (Marry, she hath receiv’d your Letter: for the) |
|
M-208 |
The Merchant of Venice |
Morrocho | 48 |
Some God direct my judgement, let me see, (NULL) |
|
M-745 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
Morton | 31 |
I am sorry, I should force you to beleeve (So did our Men, heavy in Hotspurres losse,) |
|
M-306 |
Troylus and Cressida |
Nestor | 27 |
With due Observance of thy godly feat, (How many shallow bauble Boates dare saile) |
|
M-307 |
Troylus and Cressida |
Nestor | 24 |
Yes, ’tis most meet; who may you else oppose (Yet in this triall, much opinion dwels.) |
|
M-893 |
King Henry the Eight |
Norfolke | 26 |
Then you lost (The view of earthly glory: Men might say) |
|
M-746 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
Northumberland | 25 |
For this, I shall have time enough to mourne. (And darknesse be the burier of the dead.) |
|
M-747 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
Northumberland | 28 |
Yea, this mans brow, like to a Title-leafe, (How doth my Sonne, and Brother?) |
|
W-527 |
Romeo and Juliet |
Nurse | 36 (prose) |
Even or odde, of all daies in the yeare come (NULL) |
|
W-528 |
Romeo and Juliet |
Nurse | 14 |
Faith here it is, (Romeo is banished, and all the world to nothing,) |
|
M-246 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Oberon | 20 |
I pray thee give it me. (I know a banke where the wilde time blowes,) |
|
M-247 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Oberon | 29 |
Wel, go thy way: thou shalt not from this grove, (My gentle Pucke come hither; thou remembrest) |
|
M-248 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Oberon | 31 |
Welcome good Robin: (NULL) |
|
W-366 |
Anthonie, and Cleopatra |
Octavia | 16 |
Oh my good Lord, (Beleeve not all, or if you must beleeve,) |
|
M-127 |
As you Like it |
Oliver | 23 |
When last the yong Orlando parted from you, (NULL) |
|
W-320 |
Twelfe Night |
Olivia | 18 |
O by your leave I pray you. (Give me leave, beseech you: I did send,) |
|
W-321 |
Twelfe Night |
Olivia | 30 |
O by your leave I pray you. (Extended) (Give me leave, beseech you: I did send,/The clocke upbraides me with the waste of time:) |
|
W-322 |
Twelfe Night |
Olivia | 12 |
O what a deale of scorne, lookes beautifull? (NULL) |
|
W-323 |
Twelfe Night |
Olivia | 22 |
What is your Parentage? (Above my fortunes, yet my state is well;) |
|
W-402 |
Hamlet |
Ophelia | 24 |
Alas my Lord, I have beene so affrighted. (My Lord, as I was sowing in my Chamber,) |
|
W-403 |
Hamlet |
Ophelia | 12 |
O what a Noble minde is heere o're-throwne? (NULL) |
|
W-404 |
Hamlet |
Ophelia | 26 |
They bore him bare fac'd on the Beer, (There's Rosemary, that's for Remembraunce.) |
|
M-128 |
As you Like it |
Orlando | 24 (prose) |
As I remember Adam, it was upon this fashion (NULL) |
|
M-129 |
As you Like it |
Orlando | 23 |
I almost die for food, and let me have it. (NULL) |
|
M-508 |
Othello |
Othello | 23 |
Behold, I have a weapon: (NULL) |
|
M-509 |
Othello |
Othello | 23 |
Had it pleas’d Heaven, (I heere looke grim as hell.) |
|
M-510 |
Othello |
Othello | 43 |
Her Father lov'd me, oft invited me: (NULL) |
|
M-511 |
Othello |
Othello | 23 |
It is the Cause, it is the Cause (my Soule) (NULL) |
|
M-512 |
Othello |
Othello | 20 |
Soft you; a word or two before you goe: (I have done the State some service, and they know't:) |
|
M-513 |
Othello |
Othello | 22 |
That’s a fault: That Handkerchiefe (’Tis true: There’s Magicke in the web of it:) |
|
M-514 |
Othello |
Othello | 22 |
This Fellow’s of exceeding honesty, (Must be to loath her. Oh Curse of Marriage!) |
|
M-515 |
Othello |
Othello | 17 |
Why? why is this? (Think'st thou, I'ld make a Life of Jealousie;) |
|
M-308 |
Troylus and Cressida |
Pandarus | 21 |
A goodly medecine, for mine aking bones: oh world, (NULL) |
|
M-667 |
King John |
Pandulph | 20 |
O Sir, when he shall heare of your approach, (NULL) |
|
M-668 |
King John |
Pandulph | 35 |
So mak'st thou faith an enemy to faith, (NULL) |
|
M-105 |
All's Well, that Ends Well |
Parrolles | 28 (prose) |
Ten a clocke: Within these three houres ’twill (What the divell should move mee to undertake) |
|
M-106 |
All's Well, that Ends Well |
Parrolles | 27 (prose) |
There is none: Man setting downe before you, (Virginity beeing blowne downe, Man will) |
|
W-633 |
The Winters Tale |
Paulina | 26 |
I dare be sworne: (These dangerous, unsafe Lunes i'th'King, beshrew them:) |
|
W-634 |
The Winters Tale |
Paulina | 27 |
I say she's dead: Ile sweare't. If word, nor oath (NULL) |
|
W-635 |
The Winters Tale |
Paulina | 28 |
What studied torments (Tyrant) hast for me? (NULL) |
|
W-636 |
The Winters Tale |
Paulina | 55 |
What studied torments (Tyrant) hast for me? (Extended) (NULL) |
|
W-637 |
The Winters Tale |
Perdita | 30 |
Ile not put The Dible in earth, to set one slip of them: (NULL) |
|
M-601 |
Pericles |
Pericles | 23 |
An Armor, friends, I pray you let me see it. (NULL) |
|
M-602 |
Pericles |
Pericles | 40 |
Great King, Few love to hear the sins they love to act, (How curtesie would seem to cover sin,/By your untimely claspings with your child,) |
|
M-603 |
Pericles |
Pericles | 34 |
Let none disturb us: (Here pleasures court mine eyes, and mine eyes shun them,) |
|
M-604 |
Pericles |
Pericles | 26 |
Like a bold champion I assume the listes, (NULL) |
|
M-605 |
Pericles |
Pericles | 30 |
See where she comes, apparell’d like the Spring, (To taste the fruite of yon celestiall tree,) |
|
M-606 |
Pericles |
Pericles | 34 |
Thou speak’st like a Physician, Hellicanus, (The rest (hark in thine ear) as black as incest,) |
|
M-283 |
The Taming of the Shrew |
Petruchio | 20 |
Be patient gentlemen, I choose her for my selfe, (And kisse me Kate, we will be married a sonday.) |
|
M-284 |
The Taming of the Shrew |
Petruchio | 18 |
They shall goe forward Kate at thy command, (I will be master of what is mine owne,) |
|
M-285 |
The Taming of the Shrew |
Petruchio | 24 |
Thus have I politickely begun my reigne, (NULL) |
|
W-121 |
As you Like it |
Phebe | 20 |
I would not be thy executioner, (NULL) |
|
W-122 |
As you Like it |
Phebe | 27 |
Thinke not I love him, though I ask for him, (NULL) |
|
M-579 |
Cymbeline |
Pisanio | 23 |
How? of Adultery? Wherefore write you not (NULL) |
|
M-580 |
Cymbeline |
Pisanio | 26 |
Well then, heere's the point: (You must forget to be a Woman: change) |
|
M-400 |
Hamlet |
Player King (First Player) | 29 |
Anon he findes him, (NULL) |
|
M-401 |
Hamlet |
Player King (First Player) | 45 |
Anon he findes him, (Extended) (NULL) |
|
M-421 |
Hamlet |
Polonius | 22 |
My Liege, and Madam, to expostulate (Madam, I sweare I use no Art at all:) |
|
M-422 |
Hamlet |
Polonius | 41 |
My Liege, and Madam, to expostulate (Extended) (Madam, I sweare I use no Art at all:) |
|
M-423 |
Hamlet |
Polonius | 27 |
Yet heere Laertes? Aboord, aboord for shame, (NULL) |
|
M-492 |
Macbeth |
Porter | 19 (prose) |
Here's a knocking indeede: if a man were (NULL) |
|
M-894 |
King Henry the Eight |
Porter Man | 20 (prose) |
The Spoones will be the bigger Sir: There is (Fire-Drake did I hit three times on the head,) |
|
W-200 |
The Merchant of Venice |
Portia | 23 |
Away then, I am lockt in one of them, (NULL) |
|
W-201 |
The Merchant of Venice |
Portia | 24 |
I pray you tarrie, pause a day or two (NULL) |
|
W-202 |
The Merchant of Venice |
Portia | 29 |
Is your name Shylocke? (The quality of mercy is not strain'd,) |
|
W-203 |
The Merchant of Venice |
Portia | 22 |
The quality of mercy is not strain'd, (NULL) |
|
W-204 |
The Merchant of Venice |
Portia | 24 |
What, no more? (Pay him sixe thousand, and deface the bond:) |
|
W-205 |
The Merchant of Venice |
Portia | 26 |
You see my Lord Bassiano where I stand, (NULL) |
|
W-440 |
Julius Cæsar |
Portia | 62 |
Brutus, my Lord. (Nor for yours neither. Y'have ungently Brutus/Is Brutus sicke? And is it Physicall;/I graunt I am a Woman;) |
|
W-441 |
Julius Cæsar |
Portia | 21 |
I should not neede, if you were gentle Brutus. (I graunt I am a Woman;) |
|
W-442 |
Julius Cæsar |
Portia | 27 |
Is Brutus sicke? And is it Physicall (NULL) |
|
W-443 |
Julius Cæsar |
Portia | 39 |
Is Brutus sicke? And is it Physicall (Extended) (I graunt I am a Woman;) |
|
W-444 |
Julius Cæsar |
Portia | 20 |
Nor for yours neither. Y'have ungently Brutus (NULL) |
|
M-581 |
Cymbeline |
Posthumus | 38 |
Close by the battell, ditch’d, and wall’d with turph, (NULL) |
|
M-582 |
Cymbeline |
Posthumus | 35 |
Is there no way for Men to be, but Women (NULL) |
|
M-583 |
Cymbeline |
Posthumus | 27 |
Most welcome bondage; for thou art a way (NULL) |
|
M-584 |
Cymbeline |
Posthumus | 33 |
Yea bloody cloth, Ile keep thee: for I am wisht (NULL) |
|
W-160 |
Loves Labour's lost |
Princesse | 25 |
A time me thinkes too short, (NULL) |
|
W-161 |
Loves Labour's lost |
Princesse | 22 |
Good Lord Boyet, my beauty though but mean, (NULL) |
|
G-850 |
Richard the Third |
Prince Edward | 21 |
Good Lords, make all the speedie hast you may. (NULL) |
|
M-857 |
Richard the Third |
Prince Edward | 21 |
Good Lords, make all the speedie hast you may. (NULL) |
|
M-530 |
Romeo and Juliet |
Prince (Eskales) | 23 |
Rebellious Subjects, Enemies to peace, (NULL) |
|
M-715 |
The First Part of Henry the Fourth |
Prince Hal | 31 |
Doe not thinke so, you shall not finde it so: (NULL) |
|
M-716 |
The First Part of Henry the Fourth |
Prince Hal | 24 |
For Wormes, brave Percy. Farewell great heart: (NULL) |
|
M-717 |
The First Part of Henry the Fourth |
Prince Hal | 23 |
I know you all, and will a-while uphold (Yet heerein will I imitate the Sunne,) |
|
M-718 |
The First Part of Henry the Fourth |
Prince Hal | 27 (prose) |
With three or foure Logger-heads, amongst 3 (when I am King of England, I shall command al the good Laddes in East-cheape) |
|
M-748 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
Prince Hal | 25 |
I know thee not, old man: Fall to thy Prayers: (NULL) |
|
M-749 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
Prince Hal | 41 |
O pardon me (my Liege) (NULL) |
|
M-750 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
Prince Hal | 18 |
This new, and gorgeous Garment, Majesty, (NULL) |
|
M-751 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
Prince Hal | 28 |
Why doth the Crowne lye there, upon his Pillow (NULL) |
|
M-752 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
Prince Hal | 44 |
You are right Justice, and you weigh this well: (So shall I live, to speake my Fathers words:) |
|
G-652 |
King John |
Prince Henry | 19 |
It is too late, the life of all his blood (Oh vanity of sicknesse: fierce extreames) |
|
M-669 |
King John |
Prince Henry | 19 |
It is too late, the life of all his blood (Oh vanity of sicknesse: fierce extreames) |
|
M-753 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
Prince John | 30 |
You are wel encountred here (my cosin Mowbray) (Chearing a rowt of Rebels with your Drumme,) |
|
G-300 |
Troylus and Cressida |
Prologue | 31 |
In Troy there lyes a Scene: From Isles of Greece (NULL) |
|
G-881 |
King Henry the Eight |
Prologue | 32 |
I Come no more to make you laugh, Things now, (NULL) |
|
M-618 |
The Tempest |
Prospero | 30 |
A solemne Ayre, and the best comforter, (Holy Gonzallo, Honourable man,) |
|
M-619 |
The Tempest |
Prospero | 23 |
As great to me, as late, and supportable (In this last Tempest. I perceive these Lords) |
|
M-620 |
The Tempest |
Prospero | 20 |
Now my Charmes are all ore-throwne, (NULL) |
|
M-621 |
The Tempest |
Prospero | 28 |
This blew ey’d hag, was hither brought with child, (NULL) |
|
M-622 |
The Tempest |
Prospero | 25 |
Ye Elves of hils, brooks, standing lakes and groves, (NULL) |
|
M-623 |
The Tempest |
Prospero | 18 |
You doe looke (my son) in a mov'd sort, (Our Revels now are ended: These our actors,) |
|
M-344 |
The Two Gentlemen of Verona |
Protheus | 20 |
As much as I can doe, I will effect: (Say that upon the altar of her beauty) |
|
M-345 |
The Two Gentlemen of Verona |
Protheus | 31 |
I, I: and she hath offered to the doome (Cease to lament for that thou canst not helpe,) |
|
M-346 |
The Two Gentlemen of Verona |
Protheus | 24 |
I will. Even as one heate, another heate expels, (NULL) |
|
M-347 |
The Two Gentlemen of Verona |
Protheus | 28 |
My gracious Lord, that which I wold discover, (Know (noble Lord) they have devis’d a meane) |
|
M-348 |
The Two Gentlemen of Verona |
Protheus | 43 |
To leave my Julia; shall I be forsworne? (NULL) |
|
W-791 |
The first Part of Henry the Sixt |
Pucell (Joan) | 34 |
Brave Burgonie, undoubted hope of France, (Looke on thy Country, look on fertile France,) |
|
W-792 |
The first Part of Henry the Sixt |
Pucell (Joan) | 21 |
Dolphin, I am by birth a Shepheards Daughter, (NULL) |
|
W-793 |
The first Part of Henry the Sixt |
Pucell (Joan) | 24 |
First let me tell you whom you have condemn'd; (Extended) (NULL) |
|
W-794 |
The first Part of Henry the Sixt |
Pucell (Joan) | 29 |
The Regent conquers, and the Frenchmen flye. (NULL) |
|
G-240 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Pucke (Robin) | 16 |
If we shadowes have offended, (NULL) |
|
G-241 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Pucke (Robin) | 29 |
My Mistris with a monster is in love, (NULL) |
|
G-242 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Pucke (Robin) | 20 |
Now the hungry Lyons rores, (NULL) |
|
G-243 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Pucke (Robin) | 31 |
The King doth keepe his Revels here to night, (I am that merrie wanderer of the night:) |
|
G-244 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Pucke (Robin) | 18 |
Through the Forrest have I gone, (NULL) |
|
W-580 |
Cymbeline |
Queene | 20 |
That opportunity (And Britaines strut with Courage.) |
|
W-581 |
Cymbeline |
Queene | 38 |
Weepes she still (saist thou?) (NULL) |
|
W-683 |
Richard the Second |
Queene | 19 |
Oh I am prest to death through want of speaking: (Why do'st thou say, King Richard is depos'd,) |
|
W-684 |
Richard the Second |
Queene | 24 |
This way the King will come: this is the way (NULL) |
|
W-855 |
Richard the Third |
Queene Elizabeth | 18 |
Ah! who shall hinder me to waile and weepe? (To make an act of Tragicke violence.) |
|
W-856 |
Richard the Third |
Queene Elizabeth | 20 |
Heavens wrong is most of all: (NULL) |
|
W-400 |
Hamlet |
Queene (Gertrude) | 16 |
Alas, how is't with you? (This is the very coynage of your Braine,) |
|
W-401 |
Hamlet |
Queene (Gertrude) | 18 |
There is a Willow growes aslant a Brooke, (NULL) |
|
W-881 |
King Henry the Eight |
Queene Katherine | 29 |
In which I have commended to his goodnesse (The Modell of our chaste loves: his yong daughter,) |
|
W-882 |
King Henry the Eight |
Queene Katherine | 17 |
My Lord, My Lord, I am a simple woman, much too weake (NULL) |
|
W-883 |
King Henry the Eight |
Queene Katherine | 45 |
Sir, I desire you do me Right and Justice, (In what have I offended you? What cause) |
|
W-884 |
King Henry the Eight |
Queene Katherine | 24 |
To betray me. (That any English man dare give me Councell?) |
|
W-885 |
King Henry the Eight |
Queene Katherine | 22 |
Would I had never trod this English Earth, (You know I am a Woman, lacking wit) |
|
W-886 |
King Henry the Eight |
Queene Katherine | 29 |
Ye turne me into nothing. Woe upon ye, (Put my sicke cause into his hands, that hates me?) |
|
W-812 |
The second Part of Henry the Sixt |
Queene Margaret | 49 |
Be woe for me, more wretched then he is. (NULL) |
|
W-813 |
The second Part of Henry the Sixt |
Queene Margaret | 17 |
Beside the haughtie Protector, have we Beauford (As that prowd Dame, the Lord Protectors Wife:) |
|
W-814 |
The second Part of Henry the Sixt |
Queene Margaret | 38 |
Can you not see? Or will ye not observe (NULL) |
|
W-815 |
The second Part of Henry the Sixt |
Queene Margaret | 22 |
Enough sweet Suffolke, thou torment’st thy selfe, (Oh, let me intreat thee cease, give me thy hand,) |
|
W-816 |
The second Part of Henry the Sixt |
Queene Margaret | 23 |
My Lord of Suffolke, say, is this the guise? (NULL) |
|
W-830 |
The third Part of Henry the Sixt |
Queene Margaret | 43 |
Brave Warriours, Clifford and Northumberland (What, was it you that would be Englands King?) |
|
W-831 |
The third Part of Henry the Sixt |
Queene Margaret | 27 |
Enforc't thee? Art thou King, and wilt be forc't? (NULL) |
|
W-832 |
The third Part of Henry the Sixt |
Queene Margaret | 38 |
Great Lords, wise men ne'r sit and waile their losse, (NULL) |
|
W-833 |
The third Part of Henry the Sixt |
Queene Margaret | 24 |
King Lewis, and Lady Bona, heare me speake, (Peace impudent, and shamelesse Warwicke,) |
|
W-834 |
The third Part of Henry the Sixt |
Queene Margaret | 30 |
Looke Yorke, I stayn'd this Napkin with the blood (NULL) |
|
W-835 |
The third Part of Henry the Sixt |
Queene Margaret | 28 |
No, mightie King of France: now Margaret (But now mischance hath trod my Title downe,) |
|
W-836 |
The third Part of Henry the Sixt |
Queene Margaret | 28 |
Oh Ned, sweet Ned, speake to thy Mother Boy. (Nay, never beare me hence, dispatch me heere:) |
|
W-837 |
The third Part of Henry the Sixt |
Queene Margaret | 38 |
Who can be patient in such extreames? (Enforc't thee? Art thou King, and wilt be forc't?) |
|
W-857 |
Richard the Third |
Queene Margaret | 19 |
And leave out thee? stay Dog, for thou shalt heare me. (NULL) |
|
W-858 |
Richard the Third |
Queene Margaret | 18 |
Beare with me: I am hungry for revenge, (Richard yet lives, Hels blacke Intelligencer,) |
|
W-859 |
Richard the Third |
Queene Margaret | 34 |
I call'd thee then, vaine flourish of my fortune: (NULL) |
|
W-860 |
Richard the Third |
Queene Margaret | 27 |
What? were you snarling all before I came, (NULL) |
|
M-249 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Quince | 35 |
If we offend, it is with our good will. (NULL) |
|
W-466 |
King Lear |
Regan | 24 |
I pray you Father being weake, seeme so. (I dare avouch it Sir, what fifty Followers?) |
|
W-467 |
King Lear |
Regan | 19 |
Why should she write to Edmund? (I know your Lady do’s not love her Husband,) |
|
M-838 |
The third Part of Henry the Sixt |
Richard | 72 |
I, Edward will use Women honourably: (Would he were wasted, Marrow, Bones, and all,) |
|
M-839 |
The third Part of Henry the Sixt |
Richard | 33 |
What? will the aspiring blood of Lancaster (NULL) |
|
M-858 |
Richard the Third |
Richard | 37 |
A thing devised by the Enemy. (March on, joyne bravely, let us too't pell mell,) |
|
M-859 |
Richard the Third |
Richard | 21 |
As I entend to prosper, and repent: (NULL) |
|
M-860 |
Richard the Third |
Richard | 30 |
Give me another Horse, bind up my Wounds: (NULL) |
|
M-861 |
Richard the Third |
Richard | 23 |
Goe after, after, Cousin Buckingham. (Tell them, how Edward put to death a Citizen,) |
|
M-862 |
Richard the Third |
Richard | 18 |
He cannot live I hope, and must not dye, (NULL) |
|
M-863 |
Richard the Third |
Richard | 37 |
I cannot tell, if to depart in silence, (Alas, why would you heape this Care on me?) |
|
M-864 |
Richard the Third |
Richard | 46 |
Looke what is done, cannot be now amended: (And by that losse, your Daughter is made Queene.) |
|
M-865 |
Richard the Third |
Richard | 39 |
Now is the Winter of our Discontent, (NULL) |
|
M-866 |
Richard the Third |
Richard | 31 |
Those eyes of thine, from mine have drawne salt Teares; (Loe heere I lend thee this sharpe-pointed Sword,) |
|
M-867 |
Richard the Third |
Richard | 37 |
Was ever woman in this humour woo'd? (NULL) |
|
M-868 |
Richard the Third |
Richmond | 27 |
Interre their Bodies, as become their Births, (We will unite the White Rose, and the Red.) |
|
M-869 |
Richard the Third |
Richmond | 35 |
Why then ’tis time to Arme, and give direction. (More then I have said, loving Countrymen,) |
|
M-516 |
Othello |
Rodorigo | 21 |
Sir, I will answere any thing. But I beseech you (To the grosse claspes of a Lascivious Moore:) |
|
M-531 |
Romeo and Juliet |
Romeo | 25 |
Alas that love, whose view is muffled still, (NULL) |
|
M-532 |
Romeo and Juliet |
Romeo | 24 |
He jeasts at Scarres that never felt a wound, (But soft, what light through yonder window breaks?) |
|
M-533 |
Romeo and Juliet |
Romeo | 16 |
What Ladie is that which doth inrich the hand (O she doth teach the Torches to burne bright;/If I prophane with my unworthiest hand,) |
|
M-534 |
Romeo and Juliet |
Romeo | 22 |
Tis Torture and not mercy, heaven is here (NULL) |
|
M-535 |
Romeo and Juliet |
Romeo | 24 |
Well Juliet, I will lie with thee to night: (NULL) |
|
W-123 |
As you Like it |
Rosalind | 18 |
Alas, what danger will it be to us, (NULL) |
|
W-124 |
As you Like it |
Rosalind | 29 |
And why I pray you? who might be your mother (NULL) |
|
W-125 |
As you Like it |
Rosalind | 21 (prose) |
It is not the fashion to see the Ladie the Epilogue: (NULL) |
|
W-126 |
As you Like it |
Rosalind | 14 (prose) |
No faith, die by Attorney: the poore world is (NULL) |
|
W-127 |
As you Like it |
Rosalind | 26 (prose) |
There is none of my Unckles markes upon you: (NULL) |
|
W-162 |
Loves Labour's lost |
Rosaline | 26 |
Oft have I heard of you my Lord Berowne, (NULL) |
|
G-731 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
Rumour | 40 |
Open your Eares: For which of you will stop (NULL) |
|
G-200 |
The Merchant of Venice |
Salerio (Salarino) | 22 |
Marry well remembred, (A kinder Gentleman treads not the earth,) |
|
G-201 |
The Merchant of Venice |
Salerio (Salarino) | 26 |
Your minde is tossing on the Ocean, (My winde cooling my broth,) |
|
M-209 |
The Merchant of Venice |
Salerio (Salarino) | 22 |
Marry well remembred, (A kinder Gentleman treads not the earth,) |
|
M-210 |
The Merchant of Venice |
Salerio (Salarino) | 26 |
Your minde is tossing on the Ocean, (My winde cooling my broth,) |
|
M-670 |
King John |
Salisbury | 20 |
Therefore, to be possess’d with double pompe, (To gilde refined Gold, to paint the Lilly;) |
|
M-818 |
The second Part of Henry the Sixt |
Salisbury | 25 |
Pride went before, Ambition followes him. (Warwicke my sonne, the comfort of my age,) |
|
M-819 |
The second Part of Henry the Sixt |
Salisbury | 28 |
Sirs stand apart, the King shall know your minde. (NULL) |
|
M-550 |
Titus Andronicus |
Saturninus | 27 |
Why Lords, What wrongs are these? was ever seene (NULL) |
|
M-820 |
The second Part of Henry the Sixt |
Say | 28 |
Heare me but speake, and beare mee wher’e you will: (Tell me: wherein have I offended most?) |
|
M-870 |
Richard the Third |
Scrivener | 14 |
Here is the Indictment of the good Lord Hastings, (NULL) |
|
G-320 |
Twelfe Night |
Sebastian | 24 (prose) |
By your patience, no: my starres shine darkely (NULL) |
|
G-321 |
Twelfe Night |
Sebastian | 21 |
This is the ayre, that is the glorious Sunne, (NULL) |
|
M-327 |
Twelfe Night |
Sebastian | 24 (prose) |
By your patience, no: my starres shine darkely (NULL) |
|
M-328 |
Twelfe Night |
Sebastian | 21 |
This is the ayre, that is the glorious Sunne, (NULL) |
|
G-121 |
As you Like it |
Second Brother | 16 |
Let me have audience for a word or two: (NULL) |
|
M-130 |
As you Like it |
Second Brother | 16 |
Let me have audience for a word or two: (NULL) |
|
M-551 |
Titus Andronicus |
Second Goth | 20 |
Renowned Lucius, from our troups I straid, (I heard a childe cry underneath a wall:) |
|
M-211 |
The Merchant of Venice |
Shylocke | 28 |
I have possest your grace of what I purpose, (NULL) |
|
M-212 |
The Merchant of Venice |
Shylocke | 18 |
If everie Ducat in sixe thousand Ducates (What judgement shall I dread doing no wrong?) |
|
M-213 |
The Merchant of Venice |
Shylocke | 23 |
Signior Anthonio, many a time and oft (NULL) |
|
M-214 |
The Merchant of Venice |
Shylocke | 19 (prose) |
To baite fish withall, if it will feede nothing (Hath not a Jew eyes?) |
|
W-347 |
The Two Gentlemen of Verona |
Silvia | 17 |
Had I beene ceazed by a hungry Lion, (When Protheus cannot love, where he’s belov’d:) |
|
W-348 |
The Two Gentlemen of Verona |
Silvia | 26 |
Oh Eglamoure, thou art a Gentleman: (NULL) |
|
M-131 |
As you Like it |
Silvius | 19 |
Oh Corin, that thou knew'st how I do love her. (Thou hast not lov'd) |
|
M-329 |
Twelfe Night |
Sir Toby | 21 (prose) |
Go sir Andrew: scout mee for him at the corner (Now will not I deliver his Letter: for the behaviour) |
|
M-840 |
The third Part of Henry the Sixt |
Son | 22 |
Ill blowes the winde that profits no body, (Who’s this? Oh God! It is my Fathers face,) |
|
G-340 |
The Two Gentlemen of Verona |
Speed | 22 (prose) |
Shee that your worship loves? (Marry by these speciall markes: first, you have) |
|
M-349 |
The Two Gentlemen of Verona |
Speed | 22 (prose) |
Shee that your worship loves? (Marry by these speciall markes: first, you have) |
|
M-871 |
Richard the Third |
Stanley (Derby) | 21 |
Fortune, and Victory sit on thy Helme. (NULL) |
|
M-798 |
The first Part of Henry the Sixt |
Suffolke | 31 |
A Dowre my Lords? Disgrace not so your King, (NULL) |
|
M-821 |
The second Part of Henry the Sixt |
Suffolke | 26 |
A plague upon them: wherefore should I cursse them? (NULL) |
|
M-822 |
The second Part of Henry the Sixt |
Suffolke | 25 |
Thus is poore Suffolke ten times banished, (If I depart from thee, I cannot live,) |
|
M-895 |
King Henry the Eight |
Surveyor | 31 |
Not long before your Highnesse sped to France, (The Monke might be deceiv’d, and that ’twas dangerous) |
|
M-799 |
The first Part of Henry the Sixt |
Talbot | 21 |
My thoughts are whirled like a Potters Wheele, (NULL) |
|
M-800 |
The first Part of Henry the Sixt |
Talbot | 41 |
Saint George, and Victory; fight Souldiers, fight: (When from the Dolphins Crest thy Sword struck fire,/Thou Icarus, thy Life to me is sweet:) |
|
M-801 |
The first Part of Henry the Sixt |
Talbot | 21 |
Shame to the Duke of Burgundy, and thee: (When first this Order was ordain’d my Lords,) |
|
M-802 |
The first Part of Henry the Sixt |
Talbot | 25 |
What chance is this, that suddenly hath crost us? (NULL) |
|
M-803 |
The first Part of Henry the Sixt |
Talbot | 31 |
Where is my other Life? mine owne is gone. (O thou whose wounds become hard favoured death,) |
|
W-541 |
Titus Andronicus |
Tamora | 25 |
Have I not reason thinke you to looke pale. (NULL) |
|
W-542 |
Titus Andronicus |
Tamora | 26 |
King, be thy thoughts Imperious like thy name. (NULL) |
|
W-543 |
Titus Andronicus |
Tamora | 21 |
My lovely Aaron, (NULL) |
|
W-544 |
Titus Andronicus |
Tamora | 30 |
My worthy Lord if ever Tamora, (The Gods of Rome for-fend,) |
|
M-309 |
Troylus and Cressida |
Thersites | 20 (prose) |
How now Thersites? what lost in the Labyrinth of thy (NULL) |
|
M-310 |
Troylus and Cressida |
Thersites | 18 (prose) |
With too much bloud, and too little Brain, these (NULL) |
|
M-250 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Theseus | 20 |
More strange then true. I never may beleeve (Lovers and mad men have such seething braines,) |
|
M-251 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Theseus | 17 |
The kinder we, to give them thanks for nothing (NULL) |
|
M-896 |
King Henry the Eight |
Third Gentleman | 33 |
As well as I am able. The rich streame (At length, her Grace rose, and with modest paces) |
|
G-791 |
The first Part of Henry the Sixt |
Third Messenger | 37 |
My gracious Lords, to adde to your laments, (NULL) |
|
M-804 |
The first Part of Henry the Sixt |
Third Messenger | 37 |
My gracious Lords, to adde to your laments, (NULL) |
|
G-630 |
The Winters Tale |
Time | 32 |
I that please some, try all: both joy and terror (NULL) |
|
W-253 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Titania | 26 |
Out of this wood, do not desire to goe, (NULL) |
|
W-254 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Titania | 17 |
Set your heart at rest, (NULL) |
|
W-255 |
A Midsommer Nights Dreame |
Titania | 37 |
These are the forgeries of jealousie, (NULL) |
|
M-552 |
Titus Andronicus |
Titus | 40 |
Come, come Lavinia, looke, thy Foes are bound, (NULL) |
|
M-553 |
Titus Andronicus |
Titus | 23 |
Come Marcus, come, kinsmen this is the way. (Ah Rome! Well, well, I made thee miserable,) |
|
M-554 |
Titus Andronicus |
Titus | 42 |
Faint-harted boy, arise and looke upon her, (Thou hast no hands to wipe away thy teares,) |
|
M-555 |
Titus Andronicus |
Titus | 27 |
Haile Rome: (These that Survive, let Rome reward with Love:) |
|
M-556 |
Titus Andronicus |
Titus | 26 |
Heare me grave fathers, noble Tribunes stay, (Be pittifull to my condemned Sonnes,) |
|
M-557 |
Titus Andronicus |
Titus | 25 |
O heere I lift this one hand up to heaven, (If there were reason for these miseries,) |
|
M-558 |
Titus Andronicus |
Titus | 43 |
So, so, now sit, and looke you eate no more (Thou shalt not sighe nor hold thy stumps to heaven,) |
|
M-559 |
Titus Andronicus |
Titus | 22 |
Why I have not another teare to shed: (Beare thou my hand sweet wench betweene thy teeth:) |
|
M-286 |
The Taming of the Shrew |
Tranio | 25 |
I pray sir tel me, is it possible (Nay, then ’tis time to stirre him from his trance:) |
|
M-624 |
The Tempest |
Trinculo | 24 (prose) |
Here's neither bush, nor shrub to beare off any (NULL) |
|
M-311 |
Troylus and Cressida |
Troylus | 19 |
And sodainely, where injurie of chance (Our lockt embrasures; strangles our deare vowes,) |
|
M-312 |
Troylus and Cressida |
Troylus | 36 |
I take to day a Wife, and my election (NULL) |
|
M-313 |
Troylus and Cressida |
Troylus | 24 |
This she? no, this is Diomeds Cressida: (NULL) |
|
M-314 |
Troylus and Cressida |
Troylus | 20 |
You understand me not, that tell me so: (Goe in to Troy, and say there, Hector’s dead:) |
|
M-561 |
Tymon of Athens |
Tymon | 41 |
Let me looke backe upon thee. Oh thou Wall, (NULL) |
|
M-562 |
Tymon of Athens |
Tymon | 49 |
O blessed breeding Sun, draw from the earth (NULL) |
|
M-563 |
Tymon of Athens |
Tymon | 24 |
That by killing of Villaines (NULL) |
|
M-564 |
Tymon of Athens |
Tymon | 21 |
That Nature being sicke of mans unkindnesse (NULL) |
|
M-872 |
Richard the Third |
Tyrrel | 22 |
The tyrannous and bloudie Act is done, (NULL) |
|
M-315 |
Troylus and Cressida |
Ulysses | 29 |
Give pardon to my speech: (What glory our Achilles shares from Hector,) |
|
M-316 |
Troylus and Cressida |
Ulysses | 30 |
I doe not straine it at the position, (NULL) |
|
M-317 |
Troylus and Cressida |
Ulysses | 64 |
Troy yet upon his basis has bene downe, (Quite from their fixure? O, when Degree is shak’d,/This Chaos, when Degree is suffocate,) |
|
M-318 |
Troylus and Cressida |
Ulysses | 45 |
Time hath (my Lord) a wallet at his backe, (NULL) |
|
M-319 |
Troylus and Cressida |
Ulysses | 43 |
The great Achilles, whom Opinion crownes, (From his deepe Chest, laughes out a lowd applause,) |
|
M-350 |
The Two Gentlemen of Verona |
Valentine | 18 |
And why not death, rather then living torment? (NULL) |
|
M-351 |
The Two Gentlemen of Verona |
Valentine | 16 |
I Protheus, but that life is alter'd now, (NULL) |
|
M-352 |
The Two Gentlemen of Verona |
Valentine | 17 |
What would your Grace have me to do in this? (Win her with gifts, if she respect not words,) |
|
W-324 |
Twelfe Night |
Viola | 32 |
Good Madam, let me see your face. (If I did love you in my masters flame) |
|
W-325 |
Twelfe Night |
Viola | 25 |
I left no Ring with her: what meanes this Lady? (NULL) |
|
W-326 |
Twelfe Night |
Viola | 13 |
If I did love you in my masters flame (Make me a Willow Cabine at your gate,) |
|
W-327 |
Twelfe Night |
Viola | 15 |
There is a faire behaviour in thee Captaine, (NULL) |
|
W-380 |
Coriolanus |
Volumnia | 23 (prose) |
I pray you daughter sing, or expresse your selfe (To a cruell Warre I sent him, from whence he return’d, his browes bound with Oake.) |
|
W-381 |
Coriolanus |
Volumnia | 25 |
If it be Honor in your Warres, to seeme (Now it lyes you on to speake to th’people:) |
|
W-382 |
Coriolanus |
Volumnia | 51 |
Nay, go not from us thus: (That if thou conquer Rome, the benefit) |
|
W-383 |
Coriolanus |
Volumnia | 32 |
Should we be silent and not speak, our Raiment (Alas! how can we, for our Country pray?) |
|
M-754 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
Warwicke | 24 |
There is a Historie in all mens Lives, (Rumor doth double, like the Voice, and Eccho,) |
|
M-823 |
The second Part of Henry the Sixt |
Warwicke | 24 |
As surely as my soule intends to live (I do beleeve that violent hands/See how the blood is setled in his face.) |
|
M-841 |
The third Part of Henry the Sixt |
Warwicke | 24 |
Ah, who is nigh? come to me, friend, or foe, (NULL) |
|
M-842 |
The third Part of Henry the Sixt |
Warwicke | 37 |
Ten dayes ago, I drown'd these newes in teares. (NULL) |
|
M-843 |
The third Part of Henry the Sixt |
Warwicke | 24 |
Then gentle Clarence, welcome unto Warwicke, (NULL) |
|
M-844 |
The third Part of Henry the Sixt |
Warwicke | 29 |
Why therefore Warwick came to seek you out, (For King of England shalt thou be proclaim'd) |
|
M-756 |
The Second Part of Henry the Fourth |
Westmerland | 28 |
Then (my Lord) Unto your Grace doe I in chiefe addresse (Into the harsh and boystrous Tongue of Warre?) |
|
M-719 |
The First Part of Henry the Fourth |
Worcester | 42 |
It pleas’d your Majesty, to turne your lookes (For you, my staffe of Office did I breake) |
|
M-694 |
Richard the Second |
Yorke | 23 |
Heav'n for his mercy, what a tide of woes (NULL) |
|
M-824 |
The second Part of Henry the Sixt |
Yorke (Richard Plantagenet) | 46 |
Anjou and Maine are given to the French, (A day will come, when Yorke shall claime his owne,) |
|
M-825 |
The second Part of Henry the Sixt |
Yorke (Richard Plantagenet) | 19 |
How now? is Somerset at libertie? (False King, why hast thou broken faith with me,) |
|
M-826 |
The second Part of Henry the Sixt |
Yorke (Richard Plantagenet) | 24 |
Now Yorke, or never, steele thy fearfull thoughts, (NULL) |
|
M-845 |
The third Part of Henry the Sixt |
Yorke (Richard Plantagenet) | 41 |
Shee-Wolfe of France, (NULL) |
|
M-846 |
The third Part of Henry the Sixt |
Yorke (Richard Plantagenet) | 26 |
The Army of the Queene hath got the field: (NULL) |
|
G-830 |
The third Part of Henry the Sixt |
Yorke Messenger | 21 |
Ah, one that was a wofull looker on, (By many hands your Father was subdu’d,) |
|
M-847 |
The third Part of Henry the Sixt |
Yorke Messenger | 21 |
Ah, one that was a wofull looker on, (By many hands your Father was subdu’d,) |
|
G-810 |
The second Part of Henry the Sixt |
Young Clifford | 35 |
Shame and Confusion all is on the rout, (NULL) |
|
M-827 |
The second Part of Henry the Sixt |
Young Clifford | 35 |
Shame and Confusion all is on the rout, (NULL) |
|