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Lacquey. I will speak to him like a faucy lacquey, and under that habit play the knave
with him

His lacquey, for all the world caparison'd like the horse
Lad. This pretty lad will prove our country's blifs

Ladder, made of cords

With a corded ladder fetch her down

A ladder, quaintly made of cords

As You Like It.
Taming of the Shrew.

3 Henry vi.

Northumberland, thou ladder where-withal the mounting Bolingbroke ascends my

throne

– Northumberland, thou ladder, by the which my cousin Bolingbroke afcends the
throne

Ladies attending on the queen. D.P.

A.S. P. C. L.

2 Henry iv. 3
Richard ii.
Coriolanus. 1

237139 265142 6 62612

Two Gent. of Verona. 2
Ibid. I
Ibid. 3

4

31152

3

I

33 245 342 I

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When ladies fhall be frighted, and, gladly quak'd, hear more

Timon of Athens.1

413 9 71024 805250

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Ladies' flefo. If you buy ladies' flesh at a million a dram, you cannot

preferve it from

Cymbeline. 1 5 897234

Hamlet.

Laertes. D. P.

999

1

Lafer, D. P.

All's Well.

277

Lag. Some tardy cripple bore the countermand, that came too lag to fee him buried R. iii. 2)

-

The common lag of people

Timon of Athens. 3
Lear. I

1644 2 50 6818117

2932234

O, they eat lords; fo they come by great bellies

tainting

For that I am fome twelve or fourteen moonshines lag of a brother
Lag-end. I could be well content to entertain the lag-end of my life with quiet hours

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Tut! fhe's a lamb, a dove, a fool to him
I'll facrifice the lamb that I do love, to spight a raven's heart within a dove Tw. N. 5
We were as twinn'd lambs that did frisk i' the fun, and bleat the one at the other

Tam. of the Shrew. 3

2

2661 34

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To offer up a weak, poor innocent lamb, to appeafe an angry God
And the poor ftate efteem him as a lamb, being compar'd with my confineless
harms

Is he a lamb? his kin is furely lent him

Such fafety finds the trembling lamb environed with wolves
purfu'd by hunger-starved wolves

When the lion fawns upon the lamb, the lamb will never cease to follow him Ibid. 8627234
Wilt thou, O God, fly from fuch gentle lambs, and throw them in the entrails of the
wolf

O Caffius, you are yoked with a lamb, that carries anger, as the flint bears fire 7. Caf. 4
If thou wert the lamb the fox would eat thee

The cloy'd will ravening first the lamb, longs after for the garbage
·P'ythee, difpatch: the lamb entreats the butcher

Timon of Athens. 4
Titus Andronicus. 4
Cymbeline.

Ibid.

Lambert, St. Be ready, as your lives shall answer it, at Coventry, upon St. Lambert's day

Lambkin. Sir John, thy tender lambkin now is king

Let us condole the knight, for, lambkins, we will live

Lame. Lame me with reafons

Henry v.2
As You Like It.x

Lament. Farewel, my blood, which if to day thou shed, lament we may, but not revenge thee dead

If you will live, lament; if die, be brief

But yet let reafon govern thy lament

Lamentation. Raining the tears of lamentation
Moderate lamentation is the right of the dead

Richard ii.

Richard iii. 2

Titus Andronicus.31843 24 Love's Labor Loft. 5 2 173 251 12781 5

All's Well. I

Lamp. I know not what use to put her to, but to make a lamp of her, and run from

her by her own light

My wafting lamps fome fading glimmer left

My oil dry'd lamp

Our lamp is spent, is out

Comedy of Errors. 3 2 1112 5

Ibid. 5
I 1192 23

Richard ii. 1 3 418 140
Ant. and Cleop. 413 7972/21

Macbeth.

3

380 2 27

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Romeo and Juliet 3

4659 158 1712115 3 7604 3 823143 2 8472 20 7 899213 4940132 2 9842 2

Richard ii.
2 Henry iv. 5

14152 5 505134 1515230 3227,2 34

3416243 2 645 240

Lamps.

Lamps. We wafte our lights in vain, like lamps by day

Lampafs. Troubled with the lampafs

Lancafler, John of Gaunt, Duke of. D. P.

--

My anfwer is to Lancaster, and I am come to seek that name in England

- John, Duke of. D. P.

Lancaster and York, union of the houses of,
Lance. If tall, a lance ill-headed

Our lances are but straws

- Their neelds to lances

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Richard ii.

Lanc'd. Whofe hands foever lanc'd their tender hearts, thy head, all indirectly, gave direction

Lancelot. D. P.

His foliloquy, whether he should run away from his master or not Lands. I fear you have fold your own lands, to fee other men's My love, more noble than the world, prizes not quantity of dirty lands - This land of fuch dear fouls, this dear dear land - That power I have, discharge, and let them go to ear the land that hath to grow

You may buy land now as cheap as ftinking mackerel

A. S. P. C. L.

Romeo and Juliet.|1| 4
Taming of the Shrew. 21

972210 2651 28

413

Ibid. 2 3

424246

1 Henry iv
Richard iii. 5 4

441

669227

Much Ado About Noth. 3 1

1321 38

Tam. of the Shrew. 5 2

276245

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- The land is burning; Piercy ftands on high; and either they, or we, must lower lie

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Merry Wives of Wind. 4 4
Troil. and Cre3 3
K. John. 11
Richard ii. 2 I

Land-fifb. He is grown a very land-fish, languagelefs, a monster
Landlefs. A landlefs knight makes thee a landed fquire
Landlord of England, art thou now not king
Land-rakers. I am join'd with no foot land-rakers, no long staff, fixpenny ftrikers 1 H.iv. 21
Lane. And turn preordinance, and first decree, into the lane of Children Julius Cafar.3
Langton, Stephen. Keep Stephen Langton, chofen archbishop of Canterbury, from that
holy fee

K. John. 3

1

Language. You taught me language: and my profit on't is, I know how to curfe Tempeft.
They have been at a great feaft of the languages, and ftol'n the fcraps Love's L. Loft.5 116515
in their very gesture
Winter's Tale. 5 2 360 18
now I must
Richard ii.
Troi. and Creff. 45 881
Ant. and Cleop. 52 799

The language that I have learn'd these forty years, my native English, forego

- There's language in her eye, her cheek, her lip, nay, her foot fpeaks Languifb. What, of death too, that rids our dogs of languith

3417234

43

Nay, let her languish a drop of blood a day; and, being aged, die of this folly Cym. 2 895 Languifees. A man that languishes in your difpleasure Othello 3 3159248 Languifement. A fpeedier courfe than lingering languishment must we purfue Titus And 2 837 23 Lantborn. Therefore bear you the lanthorn Much Ado About Noth 3 3 134 33

One must come in with a bufh of thorns and a lanthorn, and fay he comes to disfigure,
or present the perfon of moon-fhine

All thefe fhould be in the lanthorn, for they are in the moon
Thou beareft the lanthorn in the poop,-'but 'tis in the nofe
He cannot fee, though he have his own lanthorn to light him
God fhall be my stay, my hope, my lanthorn to my feet
A grave? O, no; a lanthorn, flaughter'd youth

Cap. Die in thy lap

Lap'd. He, fir, was lap'd in a moft curious mantle
Lapland forcerers inhabit here

Lapfe. To lapfe in fullness is forer than to lye for need

Lapfed. For which, if I be lapfed in this place, I fhall pay dear in time and paffion

of thee

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Ibid. 5 1 1942 35

1 Henry iv.3

3

461 2 49

2 Henry i

2

476 49

58155

995239

1451 33

Cymbeline. 5 5

9271 57

2 Henry vi 23 Romeo and Juliet. 5 3

Much Ado About Noth.52

Comedy of Errors. 4 3 114150
Cymbeline. 6 9131 7
Twelfth Night. 3 3 3222 9

Lapfing. With all the size that verity would without lapfing fuffer Laps. Till that Bellona's bridegroom, lapt in proof, confronted him parifons

Haralet. 341024241 Coriolanus. 51 734115

with felf com

Macbeth. 12 364 1134

Lap

A. S. P. C. L.

Lapwing. With maids to feem the lapwing and to jeft, tongue far from heart M. for M.|1| 51
Far from her neft the lapwing cries away

Like a lapwing, runs clofe by the ground

This lapwing runs away with the hell on his head
Lards. Falstaff fweats to death, and lards the lean earth as he walks along 1 Henry iv. 2
Larded. The mirth whereof's fo larded with the matter

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Merry W. of Windf 4 6 7011
Troil. and Creff51

79,143

Comedy of Errors. 4 2 113238
Much Ado About Nothing 3
Hamlet. 5

1 131256 210391 38 2 450152

884237

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Larding. In which array, brave foldier, doth he lie larding the plain
Large. There's gold to pay thy foldiers; make large confufion
Achilles on his prefs'd bed lolling

- fecurity

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Large-banded robbers your grave masters are, and pill by law

Largenefs. Fails in the promis'd largeness

Larger. What may follow to try a larger fortune

Hamlet. 4 S10282 33

Timon of Athens. 41

Troil, and Creffi 3 861244
Ant. and Cleop. 26779121

Largefs. Over and befide Signior Baptifta's liberality, I'll mend it with a largess

Taming of the Shrew. 1 2 258242 Macbeth. 2 1369121 419221

And fent forth great largefs to your officers Our coffers, with too great a court, and liberal largefs, are grown fomewhat light R..14 A largefs univerfal, like the fun, his liberal eye doth give to every one Henry v. CD. 14 527435 Lark. More tuneable than lark to shepherd's ear The crow doth fing as fweetly as the lark, when neither is attended

- I took this lark for a bunting

The lark, that tirra-lirra chaunts

For night-owls fhriek, where mounting larks should fing

Stir with the lark to-morrow, gentle Norfolk

Let his grace go forward, and dare us with his cap, like larks

Hark! hark! the lark at heaven's gate fings

- The fhrill-gorg'd lark

It was the lark, the herald of the morn, no nightingale

Midf. Night's Dream.I

177135 Mer of Ven.s I 220120 All's Well. 2 5289132 Winter's Tale. 4 2 348219 Richard .33 4301 27 Richard .53 666132 Henry vii. 3 2 691138 Cymbeline. 2 3 902240 Lear.4 6 957123 Romeo and Juliet. 3 5 987139

Nor that is not the lark, whofe notes do beat the vaulty heaven fo high above our heads

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Lafcivious meeters, to whofe venom'd found the open ear of youth doth always liften R. ii. 2
Laf. How fmart a lafh that speech doth give my confcience
Lafb'd. Head-ftrong liberty is lafh'd with woe

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1420

1101

746

Comedy of Errors. 2 I 10616
Tempeft. 4

24

I 170 I

Merchant of Venice. 3
Julius Cæfar 3

2

211217

2

1754 T 1851 55 I 20 225 649131

Lateb'd. Haft thou yet latch'd the Athenian's eyes with the love juice Mid. Night's Dr. 3
Late. As great to me, as late

- too late he died

Lated. I am fo lated in the world, that I have loft my way for ever

Lath. A king's fon! If I do not beat thee out of thy kingdom with

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Tempeft. 5
Richard iii. 31
Ant. and Cleop. 3 9 787
a dagger of lath

I Henry iv. 2
Titus Andronicus. 2
Henry viii. 3

Merry Wives of Windfor. I
All's Well. 5

4 452247 1836 247 1686251

I 4733

2

301 261 876146 263131 374226

Laud. And thew to duft that is a little gilt, more laud than gilt o'er-dufted Tr. and Cr. 3 3
Lave. Bafons and ewers to lave her dainty hands

Taming of the Shrew. 2

Unfafe the while, that we muft lave our honours, in these flattering ftreams Mach 3 Laugh at nothing

- Angels with all our fpleens would all themselves laugh mortal

- when I am merry

- Nor a man cannot make him laugh

Much

— O, you shall see him laugh 'till his face be like a wet cloak ill laid up
- The world may laugh again

I durft not laugh for fear of opening my lips, and receiving the bad
Pompey doth this day laugh away his fortune

Laughed. Queen Hecuba laugh'd, that her eyes ran o'er

Tempeft. 2

I 94 Meaf. for Meaf. 2 8415 Ado About Noth. 1 3 124251 2 Henry iv. 4 3 497 7 Ibid. 51501240

air

7

2 Henry vi. 2 4 583 7. Cafur. 1 2 744 2 7 Ant. and Cleop. 2 6 779 250 Troil, and Cre1 2 860143 Laughed.

Laugh'd. They langh'd not fo much at the hair, as at his pretty answer

fo heartily, that both mine eyes were rainy like to his You were wont when you laughed to crow like a cock Laugher. Were I a common laugher

-

Laughing. Dreamed of unhappiness, and wak'd herself with laughing
Went they not quickly, I fhould die with laughing

Laughing fogs. Let us not be laughing-ftogs to other men's humours
Laughter. O, I am stabb'd with laughter

With fuch a zealous laughter, fo profound

To move wild laughter in the throat of death? It cannot be
More merry tears the paffion of loud laughter never thed
For the love of laughter let him fetch his drum

Stopping the career of laughter with a figh

A.S. P. C.L.

Tr. and Cr.1.2 8601154

Titus Andronicus. 51
Two Gent. of Verona. 2 1
Julius Cefar.
M. A. Ab. Not. 2
Tam. of the Shrew. 3
M. W. of Wind.
Love's Labor Loft. 5

851156

271 54

2

742 2 59

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128 155

2

26718

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58/232

2

166 240

Ibid. 5 2

167126

Ibid. 5

2

1741 38

Midf. Night's Dream. 5
All's Well. 3 6
Winter's Tale.1 2337112

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293 2 39

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Making that ideot laughter keep men's eyes, and strain their cheeks to idle merri

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Merchant of Venice.
3 Henry vi.3

Merry W.of Wi

197

1 616137

2 48 235

Troilus and Crefida. 4 4 880116 Henry v.35 523121 Romeo and Juliet. 2 4 978 225 Two Gent. of Verma.5 443138

Ibid. 2 2

Meaf. for Meaf

4

78225

Ibid. 15

792/22

Ibid. 2 2

83/2/19

Ibid. 2 2

83/2/34

83/234 86124

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Ibid. 2 4

Has he affections in him, that thus can make him bite the law by the nofe, when he would force it

Sir, I fhall have law in Ephefus

Ibid.

In law, what plea so tainted and corrupt, but being season'd with a gracious voice, obfcures the fhow of evil

210 2 3 25214 Ibid. 1 2 259 259 K. Jabn.3 1397 2 46

Third, fourth, or fifth borough, I'll answer him by law Induc. to Tam. of the Shrew.
Do as adverfaries in law, ftrive mightily, but eat and drink as friends
When law can do no right, let it be lawful, that law bar no wrong
- Thy state of law is bond-flave to the law

Richard ii. 2

Refolution thus fobb'd as it is, with the rusty curb of old father antick the law

1420 255

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I never yet could frame my will to it; and therefore, frame the law unto my will

1 Henry vi

The law I bear no malice for my death

-- He hath refifted law, and therefore law fhall fcorn him further trial Pity is the virtue of the law, and none but tyrants use it cruelly

4 552 2

Henry viii. 21 679 232
Coriolanus. 17221

119

Tim. of Atb. 5816 147

Who in hot blood hath stept into the law, which is past depth to those that without heed plunge into it

Ibid. 5 816151

The laws, your curb and whip, in their rough power have uncheck'd theft Ibid. 43 824 219 -There nought hath past but even with law, against the wiltul fons of old Andronicus

Mulmutius made our laws

When every cafe in law is right

- The laws are mine, not thine: who fhall arraign me for't

- Let us take the law on our fides; let them begin

-The bloody book of law you fhall yourself read in the bitter letter

Lew of arms. I crave the benefit of law of arms

Lawlessly. He will not ufe a woman lawlessly

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Lawyers. The first thing we do, let's kill all the lawyers

-Crack the lawyer's voice, that he may never more falfe title plead

A. S. P. C. L.

2 Henry vi.14 2 5931213 82125 Timon of Ath. 4

-I will make one of her women lawyer to me; for I yet not understand the cafe myfelf

Cymbeline. 23 903147 Lear. 14936|1|24 Romeo and Juliet. 14 972 243 Hamlet. 5 110342 2

It is like the breath of an unfee'd lawyer; you gave me nothing for❜t
O'er lawyer's fingers, who straight dream of fees
Why may not that be the fcull of a lawyer? Where be his quiddits now
Lays. That the will light to listen to their lays, and never mount to trouble you again

A dreadful lay!-addrefs thee instantly

3 57611

2 Henry vi.
Ibid. 5 2 6012/20

On him I lay what you would lay on me, the right and fortune of his happy stars

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I will have it no lay

My fortune against any lay worth naming

Lay-by. Got with fwearing-lay by; and spent with crying-bring in
Lay'd. All the country is lay'd for me

Lay-thoughts. Had my lord Cardinal but half my lay-thoughts in him
Lazar, Fetch forth the lazar kite of Creffid's kind

She never fhrowded any but lazars

For I care not to be the loufe of a lazar, fo I were not Menelaus Lazar-like.

Richard iii. 37 655215 Henry viii. 3 2 689 220 Timon of Athens. 3 5 817146 Cymbeline.15 897245

Othello. 2 31057259 1 Henry iv. 1 244332 2 Henry vi. 410 598148 Henry viii. 4 677213 Henry v. 2 1515131 Troil. and Creff2 3 868254 Ibid. 51884 246 Hamlet. 510072 7

Lazarus. Slaves as ragged as Lazarus in the painted cloth, where the glutton's dogs

lick'd his fores

Lazy-pacing clouds

Leach. Make each prefcribe to other, as each other's leach
Leacheries. He is full of leacheries and iniquity

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Lead. In God's name, lead; your king's name be obey'd

3 Henry vi. 3

61751

'Tis beft to give him way; he leads himself

Lear. 4 9452 53

Ibid. 4 4 9552 53

Left his ungovern'd rage diffolve the life that wants the means to lead it

Lead. [metal.] As swift as lead, fir

Love's Labor Loft. 3155 30

Thou meagre lead, which rather threat'nest, than doft promife aught Mer. of Ven.3 2 2102 32
I am as hot as molten lead, and as heavy too; Heaven keep lead out of me

- All the reft turn'd on themselves like dull and heavy lead
Let us be lead within thy bofom, Richard, and weigh thee down to ruin,
death

Swims with fins of lead
Feather of lead

1 H.iv. 5 3 479 33 1475 12

2 Henry iv.
fhame, and
Richard iii. 5
Coriolanus.

Romeo and Juliet.1

Leaden. In leaden contemplation, have found out such fiery numbers Love's Labor Loft. 4

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- Then leaden age, quicken'd with youthful fpleen, and warlike rage

- If he be leaden, icy, cold, unwilling; be thou fo too

-To you our fwords have leaden points

I have this while with leaden thoughts been prefs'd

Leaden flumber. Left leaden flumber poize me down to-morrow

1 Henry vi
Richard ii.

Julius Cæfar.

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Othello. 3 4 1066 2 18 Richardiii. 5 3 6662 33

Leading. I wonder much, being men of fuch great leading as you are, that you fee not

what impediments drag back our expedition

Leaf. Why wither not the leaves, that want their fap

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Now princely Buckingham feal thou this league, with thy embracement to my wife's allies

Ibid. 2 1644139

Now has he crack'd the league between us and the Emperor, the queen's great nephew

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Henry viii 2
Cymbeline.

2 681117

2 917 5

Leaguer. He fhall suppose no other but that he is carried into the leaguer of the adver-
faries

Leak. They will allow us ne'er a jourdan, and then we leak in your chimney
Her boat hath a leak

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