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Doing. And to fuch wondrous doing brought his horfe

Doit John Doit, of Staffordshire

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A. S. P. C. L. Hamlet. 4 71032119 2 Henry iv. 3 2 48932

Supply your prefent wants, and take no doit of usance for my monies Mer. of Ven 3 201225 Irons of a doit

On diffention of a doit

Coriolanus. 5 70854
Ibid. 4 4

This morning, for ten thousand of your throats I'd not have given a doit Ibid. 5 4

Dolabella, D. P.

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Happy man be his dole

Ant. and Cleop.
Merry Wives of Windfor. 3 4
Midf. Night's Dream. 5 I
over them As You Like It.1 2
Taming of the Shrew.1

It was your pre-furmife, that in the dole of blows your fon might drop 2 Henry iv. I

In equal fcale weighing delight and dole

Dolour comes to the entertainer of grief
An ending anthem of my endless dolour
From one fign of dolour to another

- Yell'd out like fyllable of dolour

728139 737 225 767

62248 194259

226.29

125642

All's Well. 2 3

2850

Winter's Tale. 1

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1 Henry iv. 2

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Hamlet.
Tempeft. 2

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Two Gent. of Verona. 3 1
Winter's Tale. 5 2

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Macbeth. 4 3

380117

- To breathe the abundant dolour of the heart How poor Andromache thrills her dolours forth

Richard i3

41816

Troilus and Creffid. 5 3

888138

Thou shalt have as many dolours from thy dear daughters as thou canst tell in a year

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Like Arion, on the dolphin's back, 1 faw him hold acquaintance with the waves

- or dog-fish

Dolphin-like. His delights were dolphin-like
Dolphin, my boy, boy, Seffy; let him trot by

Dolts. Moft monfter-like, be fhewn for poor'ft diminutives to dolts

- Affes, fools, dolts! chaff and bran

O gull! O dolt !

Twelfth Night.1
2 308 22
1 Henry vi. 454920
Ant. and Cleop. 52 79929
Lear.3 4 948253
Ant, and Cleop.410 794 140
Troil, and Cre2 861133
Othello. 5 21077224

Dombledon. What faid mafter Domblédon about the fattin for my fhort cloak and flops

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Dominator. The welkin's vice-gerent, and fole dominator of Navarre Love's Labor Loft. 1
Though Venus govern your defires, Saturn is dominator over mine Tit. Andronicus. 2
Domineer. Go to the feast, revel and domineer
Don. What! should I don this robe, and trouble you?
Donalbain. D. P.

Donation. I would have put my wealth into donation, and the best
return'd to him

It was wife nature's end in the donation, to be his evidence now Done. What has he done?-a woman

half should have
Timon of Athens.

2 814132 Cymbeline 5 5 92724 Meaf. for Meaf 2 77153 Macbeth. 1 7367251 Coriolanus.19 710221 Titus Andronicus. 4 2 847118 2 Henry vi. 3 2 589137

If it were done, when 'tis done, then 'twere well it were done quickly
I have done as you have done; that's, what I can
Villain, I have done thy mother

Done to death.

Don'd. I did not think this amorous furfeiter would have don'd his helm, for fuch a petty war

Then up he rofe, and don'd his cloaths

Doom. I was, and held me glad of fuch a doom

Ant. and Cleop.2] 17741 S Hamlet 4 510282 48 Two Gent. of Verona.4 1 38121

– Firm and irrevocable is my doom, which I have pafs'd upon her, the is banish'd

Up, up, and fee the great doom's image!

What will the line ftretch out to the crack of doom
Alter not the doom fore-thought by heaven

Norfolk, for thee remains a heavier doom

-I come to change blows with thee for our day of doom

As You Like It.1 3 228 159
Macbeth. 2 3 3711 52

Ibid. 41 379112
K.John. 3 I 3982 57
Richard ii.1 3417223
Ibid. 428132

-That, in his fecret doom, out of my blood he'll breed revengement, and a fcourge

for me

This is the law, and this duke Humphrey's doom

1 Henry iv. 3

2 Henry vi.

2 459 240 31 577/1122 Doom.

Deom. It kills not greatly who impugns our doom

2 Henry i.

- The tender love I bear your grace, my lord, makes me moit forward in this noble prefence to doom the offenders

- Tell him, from his all-obeying breath I hear the doom of Ægypt The death of Antony is not a fingle doom

Then, dreadful trumpet, found the general doom

What is the prince's doom

A. S. P. C. L. 585259

Richard iii. 3 4 652156
Ant. and Cleop|11|| 789|1|23
Ibid. S1
797 244
Romeo and Juliet. 3 2 984153
Ibid. 3 3 985127

Deomftay. If the lives 'till Doomsday, the will burn a week longer than the whole world

I'll prove her fair or talk till doomsday here

is near; die al!, die merrily

Why then All Soul's day is my body's doomsday

Comedy of Errors. 3 2 11128 Love's Labor Lofi. 4 3 163149 1 Henry v.41 465128 Richard is 1 665|1|17|

Men, wives, and children, stare, cry out, and run, as it were doomsday Jul. Cæfar. 3 1 753116

- What lefs than doomiday is the prince's doom?

- The world's grown honeft.-Then is doomiday near

Door. I will peat the door for mafter Page

Romeo and Juliet. 3 3 985133

Hamlet. 2 21012223

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- Since my own doors refufe to entertain me, I'll knock elfewhere

Door-keeper of the council chamber. D. P.

Dorcas. D. P.

Henry viii.
Winter's Tale.

Doricles. They call him Doricles; and he boasts himself to have a worthy feeding

Dormouse. To awake your dormouse valour

Dorfet, Marquis. D. P.

Dotage. I would fhe had beftow'd this dotage on me
When they hold an opinion of one another's dotage
Her dotage now I do begin to pity

- This dotage of our general's o'erflows the measure

Win'er's Tale. 4 3 351152 Twelfth Night

2 321217

Richard iii. 633

Much Ado About Nothing. 23130230

Ibid. 2 3 131118

Mid. Night's Dream. 4 1 190114
Ant. and Cleop. 1176715
Ibid. 2 769 229
5 81728

-Thefe ftrong Egyptian fetters I must break, or lose myself in dotage
Banish your dotage

Tim. of Athens.3
Lear. 1 4 937241
2 73444

Much Ado About Nothing.5
Taming of the Sbrew.5

Let his difpofition have that fcope that dotage gives it
Detant. Or with the paliy'd interceffion of fuch a decay'd dotant as you feem to be Cori.
Dotard. Ifpeak not like a dotard, or a fool
Away with the dotard; to the jail with him
Thou dotard, thou art woman-tyr'd, unroofted by dame Partlet here Winter's Tale. 2
And to the graver, a child that guided dotards

Dote. I never knew a woman fo dote upon a man
Unless the fear of death doth make me dote
Thy age and dangers make thee dote

If he do not dote on her upon this

For none offend where all alike do dote

1 141236

I 274237 3 342150 Cymbeline. 1894120 Merry Wives of Windf 2 2 551 2 Com. of Errors.

1 118217 Teids I 119242

Mu. Ado About Noth.
Love's Lab. Lefl.4

She, fweet lady, dotes, devoutly dotes, dotes in idolatry, upon this spotted and inconftant man

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- Not fo young, fir, to love a woman for finging; nor fo old, to dote on her for any thing

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— A lady fo fair, and faften'd to an empery, would make the greatest king double

Double-damn'd. Therefore be double damn'd, fwear thou art honest
Double-dealer. To make thee a double-dealer

Double-dealing. But that it would be double-dealing

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Doublenefs. The doublenefs of the benefit defends the deccit from reproof Meaf. for Meaf. 1 89246

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Doublet. What a pretty thing man is, when he goes in his doublet and hofe, and leaves off his wit

Mu. Ado About Noth.

A. S. P. C. L.

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Ibid. 3

2

Induc. to Tam. of the Shrew.

236|2|16 225325

As doublet and hefe ought to fhow itfelf courageous to petticoat As You Like It.
What fhall I do with my doublet and hofe

I have no more doublets than backs

Unie's you give me your doublet, and stuff me out with straw that hangmen would bury with thofe that wore them Doubling. For he is honourable, and, doubling that, most holy

Doubt. Out of doubt

From hence I go to make thefe doubts all even

Hang no more in doubt

Urge doubts to them that fear

2 Henry iv. 5 5 506236
Coriolanus.! 5 708254
Cymbeline. 3 4 911112
191 231
2481 9

Midf. Night's Dream. 4 2
As You Like It. 5 4
K. John. 31
Richard ii. 2 1 422225

To end one doubt by death, revives two greater in the heirs of life
But modelt doubt is call'd the beacon of the wife

398123

2 Henry iv. 41|| 494|2|17| Troil. and Gre] 2 2 866250

This is, fir, a doubt, in such a time, nothing becoming you, nor fatisfying us Cym. 4 4 919|2|32 Doubting things go ill, often hurts more than to be fure they do Doubtful it ftood, as two spent fwimmers

Dove. I will tear you as gently as any fucking dove

The dove purfues the griffin

Who will not change a raven for a dove

What dead, my dove

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I have here a difh of doves, that I would beftow upon your worship

For fhe's not froward, but modeft as the dove
Thou wilt be as valiant as the wrathful dove

Was Mahomet infpired with a dove

So doves with noisome stench are from their houses driven away

Seems he a dove? his feathers are but borrow'd

So doves do peck the faulcon's piercing talons

And doves will peck, in fafeguard of their brood

- He eats nothing but doves, love; and that breeds hot blood

So fhews a fnowy dove trooping with crows

- Therefore do nimble-pinion'd doves draw love

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- Anon, as patient as the female dove, when that her golden couplets are difclos'd Ham 51036220 Dove-drawn.

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My cake is dough

Doughty-banded. I thank you all, for doughty-handed are you
Douglas. Archibald, Earl of. D. P.

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At my tent the Douglas is; and I beseech your grace I may difpofe of him
Go to the Douglas, and deliver him up to his pleature, ranfomlefs and free
Dower. He of both that can affure my daughter greatest dower, shall have Bianca's love

Doz

Tam. of the Shrew. 2

Pafs my daughter a fufficient dower, the match is made
Virtue, and the, is her own dower; honour, and wealth, from me
Doubt not but heaven hath brought me up to be your daughter's dower
A dower, my lords! difgrace not fo your king.

Dover'd with our curie

Derulas. Filthy dowlas; I have given them away to bakers wives
Dorule, that's in my plume

Down unthrubb'd

Down-gyved. His flockings foul'd, ungarter'd, and down-gyved to his ancle

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Dorun-trad. But I will lift the down-trod Mortimer as high i' the air as this ungrateful king

Dorny windows, clofe

1 Henry v.13 446.158 Antony and Cleop. 2 80213

Dozories. I never read but England's kings have had large fums of gold, and dowries with their wives

Dewry. Will you, upon good dowry, marry her

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Dowry. Often known to be the dowry of a fecond head, the fcull that bred them in the fepulchre

Well, that is the dowry of his wife

A. S. P. C. L.

Merchant of Venice. 3 2 21023
As You Like It 3 3 2391

But I had as lief take her dowry with this condition,-to be whipp'd at the high crofs every morning

Tam. of the Shrer.

2

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Twelfth Night 2 5
King John. 2 2
Toid. 2 2

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Another dowry to another daughter, for fhe is chang'd, as he had never been Ibid. 5 2
And afk no other dowry with her, but fuch another jest
Give with our niece a dowry large enough
Her dowry thall weigh equal with a queen

She is herself a dowry

If thou doft marry, I'll give thee this plague for thy dowry

Dowfabel. Where Dowfabel did claim me for her husband

Drabs. If your worship will take order for the drabs and knaves

With die, and drab, I purchased this caparifon

- Ditch-deliver'd by a drab

-Doft thou deny thy father, curfed drab

- Follow the knave, and take this drab away

- They fay, he keeps a Trojan drab

Lear. 1931257

Hamlet. 1101819

Comedy of Errors.4 1113159

Meaf. for Meaf. I

82132

Winter's Tale 42

348 239

Mareth. 41

378118

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The parrot will not do more for an almond than he for a commodious drab Ibid. 2 887145 Back to the diflembling luxurious drab of a fleeveless errand

- Like a very drab, a fcullion

Drabbing.

Ibid. 5 4 883225 Hamlet. 2 210162 8

Ibid. 2 11009121

Drachm. See here thefe movers, that do prize their hours at a crack'd drachm Coriol. 5 708 253 Drachmas. To every Roman citizen he gives, to every feveral man, feventy-five drachmas

Dragons. For night's fwift dragons cut the clouds full faft

-

Stale of dragon

Julius Cæfar. 32 7573 Mid. Night's Dream 2 188213 Macbeth.41 378,19

- Rash, inconfiderate, fiery voluntaries, with ladies faces, and fierce dragon's spleens

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Fair Saint George, infpire us with the spleen of fiery dragons
Like to a lonely dragon, that his fen makes fear'd and talk'd of more than feen Cor. 41
This Marcius grown from man to dragon

72656

Ibid. 5 4 737132

Swift, fwift, you dragons of the night! that dawning may bear the raven's eye Cym. 22 90227

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Dragon's tail. My father compounded with my mother under the
Dragon wing. The dragon wing of night o'erfpreads the earth
Draught. Drown them in a draught

Drasu. They will draw you, maiter Froth, and you will hang them
A hound that runs counter, and yet draws dry-foot well
Leave you your power to draw, and I will have no power to follow
Go wash thy face, and draw thy action

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Very true, fir, and I come to draw thee out by the ears
Are we certainly refolv'd to draw conditions of a friendly peace
What can you lay to draw a third, more opulent than your fifters

- This feems a fair deferving, and mult draw me that which my father lofes
I dare draw as foon as another man, if I fee occafion

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Romeo and Juliet.

Merry Wives of Wind.

2 Henry iv
I Henry iv.

478 4 451216

- Put on two leather jerkins, and aprons, and wait upon him at his table as drawers

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Dream. Four nights will quickly dream themselves away

A. S. P. C.L.

Midf. Night's Dream |1| 1| 175|1|14 Think no more of this night's accidents, but as the fierce vexation of a dream Ibid. 41 190136 - I have had a dream-paft the wit of man to say what dream it was: man is but an afs, if he go about to expound this dream Following darkness like a dream

Thefe fifteen years you have been in a dream
And fits as one new-rifen from a dream

For ne'er was dream fo like a waking

Ibid. 4 1
Ibid. 5 2

191 210

195 256

Induc. to Tam, of the Shrew. 2254123
Ibid 41 26 1 10
Winter's Tales 33462 7

Dreams are toys; yet, for this once, yea, fuperftitiously I will be squared by this 16.33 3462 28

- This dream of mine,-being now awake, I'll queen it no inch farther And wicked dreams abufe the curtain'd fleep

- Glofter's dream

Eleanor's dream

I did dream to-night, the Duke was dumb
My dream was lengthen'd atter life

But with his timorous dreams was ftill awak'd

Let not our babbling dreams affright our fouls

My dreams will fure prove ominous to-day

I talk of dreams, which are the children of an idle brain
My dreams prefage fome joyful news at hand

(Strange dream! that gives a dead man leave to think)

The thadow of a dream

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This accident is not unlike my dream, belief of it oppreffes me already

Dream'd. I have long dream'd of fuch a kind of man

Dreamer. Thou idle dreamer, wherefore didft thou fay fo

Havalet.2

Otbello 11C045

2 Henry iv. 5 5 5ut: K. Jobny 2 404

Julius Cafar
Romeo and Juliet

Troi. and CrefS

Dreamt. For I have dreamt of bloody turbulence, and this whole night hath nothing

Dreg. What too curious dreg efpies my fweet lady in the fountain of our love

Ibid.

Ibid
Ibid.

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I Henry iv.

the capitol

Ant, and Cleop.

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3 2

Dreffings. Even fo may Angelo, in all his dreffings, characts, titles, forms, be an arch villain

Dreft him with our love

Measure for Measure. 51

Ibid. 1

With purpose to be drest in an opinion of wildom, gravity, and proud conceit M. of Ven1| 1| 198||51| Dribbling. Believe not that the dribbling dart of love can pierce a compleat bosom M. for M.

Drift. As thou haft lent me wit to plot this drift

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Our thunder from the fouth, fhall rain their drift of bullets on this town K. Jabn
My free drift halts not particularly

Be plain, good fon, and homely in thy drift

I

12 2 354

Tim. of Atb.
Romeo and Juliet. 239744

1 804 | Ibid. 4

551

Against thou fhalt awake, fhall Romeo by my letters know our drift And can you by no drift of conference get from him why he puts on this confufion Ham.sort 44 And that our drift look through our bad performance, 'twere better not allay'd Ibid. 47103242 Drink the air Tempelt.5 1 20150 Merry Wives of Wind 1 47418

down all unkindness

I pr'ythee take the cork out of thy mouth, that I may drink thy tidings Asloa L.It.|3|2|23|158
- Thou art a tall fellow; hold thee that to drink
Tam, of the Shree. 4 4 27:15t
And drink,fir, is a great provoker of three things-nofe-painting, fleep, and urine M23 37 43
Lechery, fir, it provokes and unprovokes

- Drink may be faid to be an equivocator with lechery

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