Hanging. Marry, a good hanging prevents a bad marriage Beating and hanging are terrors to me A. S. P. C. L. Twelfth Night 5310230 - Thou old traytor, I am forry, that by hanging thee, I can but shorten thy life one Some dreadful story hanging on thy tongue Ibid. 4 3 3 Henry vi. 21 Tam. of the Shrew. 2 1 353143 609 2 54 263132 And like rich hangings in a homely house, so was his will in his old feeble body ➡'s the way of winking Hangman. Your hangman is a more penitent trade than your bawd 2 Henry vi. 5 2 602218 Meaf. for Meaf. 4 2 - Some hangman must put on my shrowd, and lay me where no priest shovels in duft 9418 133 4. -Winter's Tale. 4 3 354121 2 443225 Coriolanus. 2 1712246 Thou shalt have the hanging of the thieves, and fo become a rare hangman 1 H. iv. To be ftil'd the under hangman of his kingdom; and hated for being preferr'd fo Cymbeline. 2 3 903254 - But a man that were to fleep your sleep, and a hangman to help him to bed, I think Hangman's boy. Hannibal. O, thou wicked Hannibal - A witch, by fear, not force, like Hannibal drives back our troops Hafle. Our hafte from hence is of quick condition that it prefers itself 81233 1 Henry vi. 1 5 5492 4 Meaf. for Meaf 76140 Tam. of the Shrew. 3 2 2662 8 All's Well. 21 2841 6 364 23 419 244 1 Henry iv.1 Ibid. 510071/18 Hafty. Is he fo hafty, that he doth fuppofe my fleep my death - But as the fathion of his hat Mer. of Venice. 2 Much Ado About Noth.1 With your hat pent-houfe-like o'er the shop of your eyes Cockle hat Hatch. In at the window, or elfe o'er the hatch Coriolanus 2 3 717152 K. Jobn. - That hand, which had the strength, even at your door, to cudgel you, and make you take the hatch And, I do doubt, the hatch, and the disclose, will be fome danger Hatched. And fo in progrefs to be hatch'd and born Hatchet. Ye shall have a hempen caudle then, and the help of a hatchet -The love of wicked friends converts to fear, that fear, to hate, and hate turns one, Richard iii. 2 & 644'1'15 Richard ii. 51 435147 Hate A. S. P. C. L. Hate. He feeks their hate with greater devotion than they can render it him Coriolanus12 21 7142155 - in Cymbeline. 2 5 906 216 Romeo and Juliet. 3 3 986 140 honour Othello.5 210791 21 Ant. and Cleop. 1 3 7711 2 Mid Night's Dream. 2 2 18116 An honourable murderer, if you will; for nought I did in hate, but all I'll in to urge his hatred more to Clarence with lies well steel'd with weighty argu ments - Dissemble not your hatred, fwear your love What his high hatred would effect, wants not a minister in his power Haud credo. 'Twas not a haud credo, 'twas a pricket - 1 faid the deer was not a haud credo Have. To have what we would have we speak not what we mean Is have, however, men do catch You have me, have you not I will have my lord and you again as friendly as you were Have after. Have done. To have done, is to hang quite out of fashion, like a rusty mail in monumental mockery Have with you. Troi. and Creff. Haven. And happily I have arriv'd at laft unto the wished haven of my blifs T. of the Sb. - All places that the eye of heaven visits, are to a wise man ports and happy havens R. ii. Ha'rford-weft. Haught. And the queen's fons and brothers haught and proud The haught Northumberland The haught protector - No lord of thine, thou haught infulting man Haughty. Valiant and virtuous, full of haughty courage 3 876 1 20 2 6511 21 1274263 3418236 Richard iii.45 664241 Ibid. 2 3 647121 3 Henry vi. 21 61112 2 Henry vi. 3 575 229 Richard ii.41 433249 1 Henry vi.41 500 4 59 240 - My noble partner you greet with prefent grace, and great prediction of noble hav But par'd my present havings to beflow my bounties upon you Haviour. I will keep the haviour of reputation Having. The gentleman is of no having A high hope for a low having My having is not much Your names, your ages, of what having Merry W. of Windfor.3 2 With the fame haviour that your paffion bears, goes on my master's grief Trv. Night. 3 4 Exempt from public haunt My name is Douglas; and I do haunt thee in the battle thus, that thou art a king 2 Henry iv. 4 4 Midf. Night's Dream. 2 2 As You Like It. 2 1 because some tell me Dido and her Æneas fhall want troops, and all the haunt be ours You told-how Diomed a whole week by days, did haunt you in the . We talk here in the publick haunt of men 1 Henry iv. Ant. and Cleop.412 field Tr. and Cr. 41 Romeo and Juliet.3 1982 130 - Whose providence should have kept short, restrain'd, and out of haunt, this mad young man She haunts me in every place Haunted. Our court, you know, is haunted with a refined traveller of Spain Hamlet. 4110261 25 Othello. 411068 2 28 Love's L. Loft. 1 1491 S Cymbeline. 4 2 917|1;17 1 Henry iv. 31 458 133 King John. 2 2 3932 59 Coriolanus.317221 29 Jul. Cafar. *7542 32 2 Henry iv.3 2 4922 3 Merry W. of WindforNo33 621.18 Haunting. The least of which, haunting a nobleman, lofeth mens hearts Hautbey. The cafe of a treble hautboy was a manfion for him, a court My lord protector's hawks do tower fo well, they know, their master loves to be aloft Hamlet. Hawk. Thou haft hawks will foar above the morning lark A. S. P. C. L. When I beftride him, I foar, I am a hawk, he trots the air Induc. to Tam. of the Shrew. 2 Henry v. 37 1 Henry vi. 2 253 2145 525 153 455-21 2 Henry vi. 2 1578 139 I know a hawk from a hand-faw Lear. 3 4 948 155 Hawking. Without hawking or fpitting, or faying we are hoarfe As You Like It.. Hay. Methinks I have a great defire to a bottle of hay, good hay, fweet hay, hath no fellow Cold biting winter mars our hop'd-for hay - Ah, the immortal palado! the punto reverfo! the hay - After dinner your hazard shall be made Thou this to hazard, needs must intimate fill in finite, or monftrous - To the certain hazard of all uncertainties himself commended hazard 1 202219 12842 47 2345 2 20 Henry v.12 513152 Ibid. s 7526116 Who will go to hazard with me for twenty English prifoners Hazle. Kate, like the hazle twig, is strait, and flender; and as brown in hue as hazle, nuts, and fweeter than the kernels Haply, my prefence may well abate the over-merry fpleen Induc.to Tam. of the Shrew. May, haply, purchafe him a box o' the ear -The commons haply rife to fave his life Who, haply may, mifconftrue us in him, and wail his death Henry v. 4 7 335 2 Henry vi. 31 585214 Richard iii. 3 5 653157 Cymbeline. 3 3 908 50 Ibid. 3 5 911251 Tempeft 51 21233 Richard ii. 21 4201 38 Taming of the Shrew. 4 4 272226 Tell me how he dy'd; if well, he stepp'd before me, happily, for my example Hen. viii. 4 2 694 225 I am glad, I came this way fo happily Happiness. He hath a great outward happiness Ibid. 5 2 6982/24 Much Ado About Nothing. 2 3 130 245 O, how bitterathing it is to look into happiness through another man's eyes As Y.L. It. 5 2 246221 Each day ftill better others happiness of kings compared with that of other men courts thee in her best array Happy. I were but little happy, if I could fay how much How happy fome, o'er other fome can be About it; and write happy when thou haft done In that we are not over happy Harbinger. Apparel vice like virtue's harbinger I'll be myfelf the harbinger - Thofe clamorous harbingers of blood and death Harbour. 1 will not harbour in this town to-night All thy powers fhall make thy harbour in our town Harbour age. Crave harbourage within your city walls Harcourt. D. P. Hard. Your mafter is hard at door - Į beseech you, punish me not with your hard thoughts 5 K Hard. What at your book so hard Hearts of most hard temper melt and lament for her My mind's not on't, you are too hard for me He was ever too hard for him Caius Ligarius doth bear Cæfar hard 3. Henry vi5 6 63129 Henry viii. 23 682211 Ibid. 5697135 Coriolanus 4 5 739117 Julius Cafar. 21 7482 52 — If you bear me hard, now, whilst your purpled hands do reek andsmoke, fulfill your pleasure He is at fome hard point I did full hard forbear him Hard by. Be ready here hard by in the brewhoufe Herne's oak -- He attendeth here hard by Hard-favour'd. Is she not hard-favour'd Richard that makes thefe hard hearts Hard-banded. Hard-handed men, that do work in Athens Lear. 3 Much Ado About Nothing.5 Troilus and Cre4 Richard iii. 2 Hardness. We will afk; that, if we fail in our request, the blame may hang upon your hardinefs 1 1644213 Cymbeline. 69.3117 268159 Henry viii. 3 Hure. Such a hare is madness the youth, to skip o'er the meshes of good counsel the cripple You are the hare of whom the proverb goes, whofe valour plucks dead lions by the| beard Melancholy as a hare Like a brace of greyhounds having the fearful flying hare in fight Hare-bell. Nor the azur'd hare-bell, like thy veins - If I fly, Marcius, halloo me like a hare And fnatch them up as we take hares behind 7 792245 Hare-finder. Cupid a good hare-finder Much Ado Abt. Nothing.1 Hare-lip. He makes the hare-lip Lear. 3 4 94 I will not leave the half atchiev'd Harfleur till in her ashes she lie buried Harfleur, Governor, of. D. P. 505 Henry v Go you and enter Harfleur; there remain and fortify it strongly 'against the French 16.3 3 522 34 Hirlock. Harlots. Whilft she with harlots feasted in my house Harlotry. A peevith felf-will'd harlotry, one that no persuasion can do good upon 1 H. iv. 3 1 458252 A peevish telf-will'd harlotry it is ·5 Rom. and Jul. 42 919112 Harm. And often times, to win us to our harm, the inftruments of darkness tell us truths Macbeth.1 3365226 I am in this earthly world; where, to do harm, is often laudable done Thou haft done much harm upon me, Hal,-God forgive thee for it Nor will do none to-morrow, he will keep that good name ftill by others 1356156 K. John. 3 1 Henry iv. 1 24441 10 Henry v.37 526131 Ibid 7 525/132 Harm Harm. But none can cure their haims by wailing them A. S. P. C. L. Richard iii. 21 21645145 As well the fear of harm, as harm apparent, in my opinion, ought to be prevented Ib. 2 2 646 215 not yourself with your vexation Good mafters harm me not That I fuffer'd was all the harm I did Cymbeline.1 2 8951 7 Whofe nature is so far from doing harms, that he suspects none I faw no harm; and then I heard each fyllable, that breath made up between them Harmful pity - But not without that harmful stroke, which since hath pluck'd him after Harmony. How ftill this evening is, as hushed on purpose to grace harmony M. Ado A. Noth. 2 - When love speaks, the voice of all the Gods makes heaven drowsy with the harmony - Soft ftillnefs and the touches of the night become sweet harmony, Mer. of Venice. 5 1 Ibid. 51 1641 7 219 235 219241 Like a cunning inftrument put into his hands that knows no touch to tune the harmony Harness. At least we'll die with harness on our backs Leap thou, attire and all, through proof of harness to my heart Great men fhould drink with harness on their throats Harp. Gracious duke, harp not on that; nor do not banish reafon for inequality - I framed to the harp many an English ditty -not on that string, madam, that is past Coriolanus. 2 3 718 248 Macbeth. 1378 219 Ant. and Cleop. 311 789 2 42 Hamlet. 2 210121 7 Harry'd. I repent me much that I fo harry'd him K. John. 4 2 Julius Cafar.3 1754 117 Troil, and Cre2 3 871 When wit and youth is come to harvest, your wife is like to reapa proper man Tw. N. And reap the harvest which that rascal fow'd Much Ado About Neth. 1 2 Henry vi. 3 3 Henry vi. 5 1 586 244 7 632222 Though we havefpent our harveft of this king, we are to reap the harvest of his fon Richard iii. 2 2 646157 To reap the harvest of perpetual peace by this one bloody trial of sharp war Ibid. 5 2 6652 2 And in his fpring became a harvest Harveft-bome. There's my harvest-home 562 6 Harvest-man. Like to a harvest-man, that's task'd to mow or all, or lose his hire Cor. 1 3 707131 He. But He, that hath the steerage of my courfe, direct my fail Rom. and Jul. 1 4 973132 Head. I'll yield him thee afleep, where thou may'st knock a nail into his head Tempeft. 3 2 unmellow'd, but his judgment ripe Two Gent. of Verona. 2 4 - Can you cut off a man's head? If the man be a batchelor, Sir, I can; but if he be a married man, he is his wife's head, and I can never cut off a woman's head Meaf.for M. 4 2 To the head of Angelo accufe him home and home From the crown of his head, to the fole of his foot, he is all mirth M. Ado A. Noth. 2 1332 2 Know Claudio, to thy head |