Head. I'll lay my head against any good man's hat 111 of Holofernes in the character of Judas compared ironically And stick musk roses in thy fleek smooth head Your falt tears head A. S. P. C.L. Love's Lab. Lof.|I| 1591136 Ibid. 5 2 1721 29 Midf. Night's Dream. 4 1 18 48 He means to recompenfe the pains you take by cutting off your heads To fave our heads by raising of a head Richard ii. 21 1 Henry iv. 42118 447 240 5262 24 For if their heads had any intellectual armour, they could never wear such heavy head pieces I'll fee if his head will stand steadier on a pole, or no That head of thine doth not become a crown Henry v.3 2 Henry vi47596227 Ibid. 5 16001 16 - They took his head, and on the gates of York they fet the fame Not that our heads are fome brown, fome black, fome auburn, fome bald Ibid. 2 3 71617 For that good hand, thou fent'it the emperor, here are the heads of thy two noble fons Titus Andronicus. Troi. and Cre Our head fhall go bare, till merit crown it 1945 24 2 873 Lear. 4 93216 Ibit. 46 959 64 Beat at this gate and let thy folly in, and thy dear judgment out - That eyelefs head of thine was first fram'd flesh to raise my fortunes Head army.] Three times hath Henry Bolingbroke made head against my power 1 H.314520 And a head of gallant warriors, noble gentlemen Ibid. 4 4 46715 We were enforc d, for fafety fake, to fly out of your fight, and raise this prefent head Ibid. 1468135 Hen. v.2 2 515250 3 Henry vi. 21 6134 Coriolanus.3 171917 Doing the execution and the act for which we have in head affembled them - Tullius Aufidius then had made new head Headier. And am fallen out with my more headier will Lear. 2 4 943250 2 Henry vi. 2574217 Titus Andronicus. 2 833162 2 Henry vi. 410 599/26 Lear.42 9542 1 Ibid. 2 947 2 Taming of the Shrew.3 2 265134 owe their lords and Head-piece. He that has a houfe to put's head in, has a good head-piece Head-frong. Tell these head-strong women what duty they do Ibid. 5 2 276165 2 991116 Romeo and Juliet. Canst thou when thou command'st the beggar's knee, command the health of it It gives me an eftate of seven year's health - Brutus is wife, and, were he not in health, he would embrace the means to come by it Timon, thofe healths will make thee, and thy ftate, look ill to you, valiant fir, during all queflion of the gentle truce · Of healths five fathom deep No jocund health, that Denmark drinks to day, but the great cannon to the clouds fhall tell For on his choice depends the fafety and the health of the whole state Hamlet. I 749 44 2 80142 1877246 4 973 2 21002238 3/10042 5 Romeo and Juliet.4 3 991|2|37 4 Twe Gent. of Verona. 2 4 Lay thine ear clofe to the ground, and lift if thou canst hear the tread of travellers Say how he dy'd, for I will hear it all Hear-fay. Wounds by hear-fay Hearing. Make paffionate my fenfe of hearing Sweet royalty, bestow on me the fenfe of hearing 1 Henry iv. 22 449 210 3 Henry vi. 21 609 260 Mu. Ado Abt. Noth. 31131253 Love's Labor Loft. 311541 46 Ibid. 5 172226 Hearing Unfit to live, or die: Oh, gravel heart My heart is ready to crack with impatience Hearing improved by the want of fight 'Tis a good hearing, when children are toward,—But a harsh hearing, when women are froward Heart. The cry did knock against my very heart Piteous heart Inward joy enforced my heart to smile as far from fraud as heaven from earth He grieves my very heart-strings If you knew his pure heart's truth as full of forrows as a fea of fands Here is the heart of my purpose Midf. Night's Dream. A. S. P. C. L. 21 186/235 Taming of the Shrew. 5 2 276254 Tempest. 2 2134 I am pale at my heart to fee thine eyes fo red: thou must be patient Ibid. 4 96252 In the lawful name of marrying, to give our hearts united ceremony M. W. of Wind. 4 Nature never formed a woman's heart of prouder stuff than that of Beatrice Ibid. 3 I 132123 1 132237 Ibid. 3 21331 5 By the heart's still rhetorick disclosed with eyes O God that I were a man! I would eat his heart in the market-place Ibid. 4 I 1401 3 - A light heart lives long A heavy heartbears not an humble tongue Ibid. 5 2 173438 My heart is true as fteel Midf. Night's Dream. 2 2 180 251 One heart, one bed, two bofoms and one troth Ibid. 2 3 1821 4 Pierc'd through the heart with your stern cruelty Ibid. 3 2 185223 Man's heart is not able to report what my dream was The virtue of my heart, the object and the pleasure of mine eye, is only Helena 16.41 1911 30 Ibid. 4 1 1912 19 That left pap where heart doth hop Ibid. 5 1 1951 20 - Let my liver rather heat with wine, than my heart cool with mortifying groans I thought thy heart had been wounded with the claws of a lion wounded it is but with the eyes of a lady Too capable of every line and trick of his fweet favour My heart hath the fear of Mars before it If my heart were great 'twould burst at this Ibid. 2 7207115 Ibid. 4 I 215 5 As You Like It. 5 2 2461 59 Ibid. 4 3 299250 O, fhe, that hath a heart of that fine frame, to pay this debt of love but to a brother Twelfth Night. 1 I will on with my speech in your praife, and then shew you the heart of my meffage 13072 16 Ibid I 5 312138 I have faid too much unto a heart of stone Who could refrain, that had a heart to love, and in that heart cour ag to make his Macbeth. 2 3 371249 -I would not have fuch a heart in my bofom for the dignity of the whole bo dy My heart hath one poor string to stay it by which it holds but till thy news be utter ed A. S. P. C. L. Heart. My heart is great, but it must break with filence, ere't be disburden'd with a liberal tongue Richard ii. 21 421 Shew me thy humble heart, and not thy knee, whofe duty is deceivable and falfe Swell'st thou proud heart, I'll give thee scope to beat Your heart is up, I know, thus high at least, although your knee be low 421/160 Ibid. Ibid. 2 3 424 262 Ibid. 3 3 429 2 39 3 4301 41 1 Henry iv.4 Each heart being fet on bloody courfes, the rude scene may end My heart bleeds inwardly, that my father is fo fick 2 Henry iv.1 Ibid. 2 We carry not a heart with us from hence, that grows not in a fair confent with ours Henry v.2 251615 But a good heart, Kate, is the fun and the moon Your hearts I'll flamp out with my horfe's heels Ibid. 5 2 5392.25 I Henry vi. 544121 Ibid. 5 4 566159 A pure unspotted heart never yet tainted with love I fend the king My heart is drown'd with grief, whofe flood begins to flow within mine And even now my burden'd heart would break, should I not curse them My heart for anger burns Ibid 5 4 567 214 2 Henry vi. 3 584 48 eyes Ibid. 3 585150 Hath thy fiery heart fo parch'd thy entrails 3 Henry vi. And I will fpeak, that fo my heart may burst Richard iii. 2 635212 - We know each other's faces; for our hearts,-he knows no more of mine, than 1 of yours You fcarcely have the hearts to tell me fo, and therefore cannot have the hearts to do it Ibid. 4 642 254 Ibid. 4 651 254 -The murderous knife was dull and blunt, 'till it was whetted on thy ftone-hard heart - Send to her by the man that flew her brothers a pair of bleeding hearts Ibid. 4 4 6621 I 664130 Ibid. 5 665223 669125 - Leave behind your fon George Stanley: look your heart be firm, or elfe his head's affurance is but frail My heart is ten times lighter than my looks A thousand hearts are great within my bofom Cold hearts freeze allegiance in them Ibid. Henry viii. 2 675116 Do my fervice to his majefty: he has my heart yet; and fhall have my prayers while Ibid. 1 688130 268926 I would 'twere fomething that would fret the ftring, the master cord of his heart I. Bear witness, all that have not hearts of iron, with what a forrow Cromwell leaves his lord · Now put your shields before your hearts, and fight with hearts more proof than shields His heart's his mouth I 704/2/16 Ibid. 4 708145 · Meatureless liar, thou haft made my heart too great for what contains it Julius Cafar 2 2 752 8 2 750 210 Ibid 31 753 233 755158 My heart is in the coffin there with Cæfar, and I must pause till it come back to me 76.32 Ibid. 4 3 759 250 - His captain's heart, which in the scuffles of great fights hath burst the buckles on his breast reneges all temper But my full heart remains in ufe with you And, for his ordinary, pays his heart, for what his eyes eat only Ant. and Cleep. 1 767111 Ibid. 3 770255 Ibid. 2 2 776 My heart was to thy rudder ty'd by the strings, and thou should it tow me after Ibid.39 787 This blows my heart; if swift thought break it not - Once be stronger than thy continent, crack thy frail cafe Cut my heart in fums beats in this hollow prifon of my flesh A. S. P. C. L. Tim. of Athens.4 2.819136 Titus Andronicus. 2 3 839143 Ibid. 3 I 843 231 Ibid. 3 2 844 145 My heart is not compact of flint, nor steel; nor can I utter all our bitter grief Ibid. 5 3854214 When my heart as wedged with a sigh would rive in twain Troil. and Greff of our numbers Ibid. I 31 1858130 862136 Ibid. 3 But even the very middle of my heart is warm'd by the rest Cymbeline. 2 8731 7 89935 -Take it and hit the innocent manfion of my love, my heart: fear not: 'tis empty Ibid. 3 4 909 258 of all things but grief - But his flaw'd heart (alack too weak the conflict to support) 'twixt two extremes of paffion, joy and grief, burft fmilingly O ferpent heart, hid with a flowering face - No, my heart is turn'd to stone; I ftrike it, and it hurts my hand Heart-blood. Thy heart-blood I will have for this day's work of beauty Lear. 5 3 964 Romeo and Juliet 3 2 984160 1 Hen. vi. I 3 5481 S Troilus and Creffida. 3 1 871 154 Heart-break Better a little chiding, than a great deal of heart-break Merry W. of Wind. 5 Heart's-eafe. Such men as he be never at heart's ease - O, an you will have me live, play-heart's ease Heart-beaviness. Shall I to-morrow be at the height of heart-heaviness 1 Henry iv. 3 3 71116 1125141 3 4621 22 Heart's-table. To fit and draw his arched brows, his hawking eye, his curls, in our heart's-table All's Well. Ibid. 3 31064150 4 62239 Coriolanus. 45 728223 Merry Wives of Wind. Two Gent. of Ver Or why upon the blasted heath you stop our way with fuch prophetic greeting Macb. 1 Heave. And with a great heart heave away this storm 2 Ibid. 4 5 729 124 Ibid. 5 5 738123 erona. 2 4 312 2 Henry iv. 4 3 496153 Lear. 1932 222 21046 225 Tempeft.1 K. John. 5 Henry v.5 ch. 536 256 2 Henry vi.51 599 245 Henry viii. 2 2 681 239 eftimation and Coriolanus. 2 2 7151 4 780146 Bonnetted, without any further deed to heave them at all into their report · 1 had as lief have a reed that will do me no fervice as a partizan I could not heave - I cannot heave my heart into my mouth Begin to heave the gorge Heav'd thence One heav'd a high, to be hurl'd down below Ant. and Cleop.2 O would the viands had been poifon'd, or at least thofe I heav'd to head Lear.11 930150 Othello. 2 11053242 Tempeft. 2 2243 Richard iii. 660113 Cymbeline. 5 5 925153 Merry Wives of Wind. 2 2 54115 I 76117 83225 Shall we ferve heaven with leis refpect than we do minister to our grofs felves Ibid. 2 2 hath my empty words Ibid. 2 3 85114 Comedy of Errors. 32111 85132 My fole earth's heaven and my heaven's claim 30 181138 - If e'er the Jew her father come to heaven it will be for his gentle daughter's fake Heaven. Now heaven walks on earth Twelfth Night. What heaven more will, that thee may furnish, and my prayers pluck down, fall on thy head All's Well. We should have answer'd heaven boldly, not guilty; the impofition clear'd, heredi- A. S. P. C. L. Ibid. 5 Nor heaven peep through the blanket of the dark, to cry, hold, hold Macbeth Thou feeft, the heavens, as troubled with man's act, threaten his bloody ftage Ibid. 2 Guard my mother's honour, and my land - Father Cardinal I have heard you say, that we shall fee and know our friends in heaven 32912134 1278 119 2334 237 Ibid. 3 3346 152 Ibid. 5 357 158 When I fhall meet him in the court of heaven I fhall not know him Ibid. 3 4 4 400 246 400 256 -If ever I were traitor, my name be blotted from the book of life, and I from heaven banish'd If heaven would, and we would not heaven's offer, we refuse the proffer'd means of fuccour and redrefs Ibid. 3 2 426 239 - The heavens are o'er your head,-I know it, uncle, and oppofe not myself againft their will Ibid. 33 428 229 Ibid. 4 1432132 As falfe, by heaven, as heaven itself is true The heavens were all on fire, the earth did tremble Employ the countenance and grace of heaven, as a false favourite doth his prince's name, in deeds dishonourable And not we, have fafely fought to-day Ibid. 4 Ibid. 4 2 496 120 O for a mufe of fire that would afcend the brightest heaven of invention Henry v.cb. - is above all yet; there fits a judge, that no king can corrupt That when I am in heaven, I shall defire to fee what this child does By the fires of heaven Hark, Tamora,-the empress of my foul, which never hopes more heaven than refts in thee When heaven doth weep, doth not the earth o'erflow - That heaven fhould practise stratagems upon fo foft a fubject as myself Ibid. 5 9892 9 Ibid. 45 995159 Leave her to heaven, and to thofe thorns that in her bofom lodge, to prick and fling her And bowl the round nave down the hill of heaven, as low as the fiends Hamlet. 51007221 |