A S. P. C. L. 212271144 Overthrown. You have wrestled well, and overthrown more than your enemies As Y.L. It.|| - O poor Orlando! thou art overthrown, or Charles, or fomething weaker, masters thee Ibid. 1 Ought. Said this other day, you ought him a thousand pound 2 227153 Winter's Tale. 2 2 Henry iv. 4 I Titus Andronicus. 2 I 494 836234 Richard ii. I 415 Richard iii. 5 3 669| Romeo and Juliet. 5954135 1 Henry iv. 3 3 463 7 Ovidius Nafo was the man; and why, indeed, Nafo, but for smelling out the odoriferous flowers of fancy Love's Labor Loft. 4 Ovid. I am here with thee and thy goats, as the moft capricious poet, honeft Ovid, was among the Goths 2 1601 7 with it boldly, man - But, out, alas! we bodg'd again -, devil! I remember them too well -I honour him even out of your report Out-crafted. That drug-damn'd Italy hath out-crafted him Out-dares. O noble fellow! who, fenfible, out-dares his senseless sword Out of door. All of her, that is out of door, moft rich Winter's Tale. 4 Richard ii. 2 3 Henry vi.14 Cymbeline.1 1894126 Coriolanus. 4 708226 Cymbeline.1 Out-face. We shall have old fwearing, that they did give the rings away to men; but we'll out-face them, and out-fwear them too Mer. of Venice. 4 Out-fuc'd. Then did we two fet on you four; and with a word, out-fac'd you from your prize Out-paramour'd. And in woman out-paramour'd the Turk Outrages. You do no outrages on filly women or poor paffengers Two Gent. of Verona. 4 Two Gent. of Verona. 1 Henry iv. Comedy of Errors. 4 4 116142 Lear. 3 4 948244 913247 38 Uncivil outrages Ibid. 5 4 4342 -She will do defperate outrage on herself - O, prepofterous and frantick outrage, end thy damned spleen Ricbard iii. 2 4 647260 From every one the beft the hath, and the of all compounded, out-fells them all Ib. Out-peaks, Which I find at fuch proud rate, that it out-fpeaks poffeffion of a subject H.viii. 3 2 689233 Out-fare. He's gone to the king; I'll follow, and out-ftare him Out-flood. I have out-flood my time Ibid. I 1 673159 Cymbeline. 1 Out-firetch'd. With an out-ftretch'd throat, I'll tell the world, aloud, what man thou art Out-frip all praife, and make it halt behind her 7 901 212 Meaf. for Meaf 2 4 Tempeft. 41 86237 16129 Richard iii. 4 1656245 If thou wilt out-ftrip death, go cross the feas Othello. I Taming of the Shrewv. 2 Out-vied. By your firm promife; Gremio is out-vied All's Well. 3 290/1136 Outward Outward. I do not think fo fair an outward, and fuch stuff within, endows a man but| Out-wear. Come, come away! the fun is high, and we outwear the day Oruches. Ow'dft. Shall ever medicine thee to that sweet fleep which thou ow'dft - 1 yesterday Othello. To parley with the fole inheritor of all perfections that a man may Much Ado About Noth. 3 3 1542 54 Better 'twere that all the miferies which nature owes were mine at once The fervice and the loyalty I owe, in doing it, pays itself Well, fee to live: I will not touch thine eye, for all the treasure that thine What is the grofs fum that I owe thee?-Marry if thou wert an honest and the money too I owe them fill my life and fervices One time will owe another Bear our hack'd targets like the men that owe them What a full fortune does the thick lips owe, if he can carry 't thus man, thy felt Ant. and Cleop48 793 Ow'd. Befeech you, Sir, remember fince you ow'd no more to time than I do now To throw away the dearest thing he ow'd as 'twere a careless trifle W's Tale. 5 1 359 That blood which ow'd the breadth of all this ifle, three foot of it doth hold K. Jubr. 4 2 44 4 Ow'. Thou doft here ufurp the name thou ow'st not Some keep back the clamorous owl that nightly hoots, and wonders at our quaint fpirits Midf. Night's Dream.23 181217 It was the owl that fhrick'd, the fatal bellman, which gives the ftein' it good night I heard the owl fecream, and the crickets cry For night-owls fhick, where mounting larks fhould fing And boding feritch owls make the concert full Our foldiers-like the night-owl's lazy flight Bring forth that fatal feritch owl to our house And like the owl by day, if he arife, be mock'd and wond'red at Out on ye, owls! nothing but fongs of death Richard 3 3 43027 1 Henry v1.4 2 561214 2 Henry vi 31 2590113 3 Henry via 610223 Ibid. 26. 615245 Ibid. 4 6:40 Ibid 5 6 631257 Richard 44 664 247 The bird of night did fit, even at noon day, upon the market place, hooting and thricking I bade the vile owl go learn me the tenour of the proclamation, and he rails upon me And we thall feed like oxen at a stall, the better cherish'd still the nearer death 1 H.iv.5 2 Ox-lips. 469114 Ox-head. I'd fetan ox-head; to your lion's hide, and make a monster of you King Jeln.2 1 393145 Ox-tips. Where ox-lips and the nodding violet grows Oxford, Earl. D. P. 3 Hensy vi. p. 603. -. D. P. A. S. P. C. L. 1811148 Midf. Night's Dream.2 Richard iii. Ever witnefs for him thofe twins of learning, which ye rais'd in you, Ipfwich and Oxford 633 Henry viii. 4 2 6951 20 - Ower. Crier Hobgoblin make the fairy o-yes Merry Wives of Windsor.5 5 71230 5 8822 20 PACK. Seek helter, pack If every one know us, and we know none, 'tis time, I think, to trudge, pack and be gone -God keep the prince from all the pack of you! a knot you are of fuckers Pour out the pack of matter to mine ear, the good and bad together - Hence, pack - Go pack with them, and give the mother gold ones 213 Ibid. 4 3 Ant. and Cleop.2 Lear 5 3 9621 54 Romeo and Juliet. And we'll wear out, in a wall'd prifon, packs and fects of great -Ere a fortnight make me older, I'll fend fome packing, that yet think not on't R..32 What are you packing, firrah? come hither - What hath been seen, either in fnuffs and packings of the dukes Pace, Dr. Cymbeline 3 5 912 Henry viii. 2 682125 If you can pace your wifdom in that good path, that I would with it go Mea. for Mea. -ladeed he has no pace, but runs where he will -I will even take my leave of you, and pace foftly towards my kinsman's - Nor bruife her flowrets with the armed hoofs of hostile paces And with modeft paces came to the altar All's Well. 3 28 st 5 301 8 Ws Tale. 4 2 349 17 1 Henry iv. I 4412 6 1 694122 -Bring me word thither, how the world goes; that to the pace of it I may fpur on my journey Their cloaths are after fuch a pagan cut too, that, fure, they have worn out chriftendom A. S. P. C. L. Page. Skirted Page - D. P. D. P. As You Like It. p. 223: -. D. P. Merry W. of Winds, 31 49,427 As pages follow'd him, even at the heels in golden multitudes - Their dwarfish pages were as cherubims, all gilt Pageant. Infubftantial pageant of delight play'd at Pentecoft - Shall we their fond pageant fee As it were the pageants of the fea Ť. of the Shrew. Romeo and Juliet. 251 697 This wide and univerfal theatre prefents more woful pageants than the scene wherein we play in I 197115 As You Like It. 2 7 23 216 If you will fee a pageant truly play'd Thou haft feen thefe figns; they are black vefper's pageants imitation calls) he - Let Patroclus make demands to me, you shall see the pageant of Ajax 'Tis a pagent, to keep us in falfe gaze Paid. He is well paid that is well fatisfy'd Ibid. 3 877132 Othello. 1104729 Merchant of Venice.4 1218152 Sorry that you have paid too much, and forry that you are paid too much Cymbeline. 492: 142 And, though he came our enemy, remember he was paid for that Pain. Accounted to the law upon that pain Kind gentlemen your pains are register'd where every day I turn the leaf to read And her presence shall quite strike off all fervice I have done, in most accepted pain You lay out too much pains for purchasing but trouble - is not more ugly to the thing that helps it, that is my deed to my most painted word Hamlet. Painted-cloth. But I answer you right painted-cloth, from whence you have studied your Painted tyrant. As a painted tyrant, Pyrrhus stood 1101127 As You Like It.3 2 237116 Hamlet. 2 2 1015127 8031 Timon of Athens. Ay, a tailor, Sir; a fone-cutter, or a painter could not have made him so ill Lear. 2 2 941 S Much Ado About Noth. 3 3 135126 - The madams too, not us'd to toil, did almoft fweat to bear the pride upon them, that their very labour was to them as a painting If any fuch be here that love this painting wherein you fee me fmear'd - I have heard of your paintings too, well enough Palabras, neighbour Verges A. S. P. C. L. Palaces. Gorgeous palaces My gorgeous palace, for a hermitage Tempest. 4 11 Titus Andronicus. 2 1 592150 837 220 Reproach and beggary is crept into the palace of our king, and all by thee 2 Henry vi. 41 - The palace full of tongues, of eyes, of ears A grac'd palace And never from this palace of dim death depart again Lear 1 4 937 42 Romeo and Jul. 3 9961 7 Othello 3 310611 3 Troi. and Creff41 878139 Tam of the Shrew. 2 1 261151 As where's that palace, whereunto foul things fometimes intrude not Palating. (Not palating the taste of her dishonour) Pale. For fear, I promife you, if I look pale Why should we, in the compafs of a pale, keep law, and form, and due proportion R. 3 4 ― Behold, the English beach pales in the flood with men, with wives and boys Henry v. 5 ch. And will you pale your head in Henry's glory Look I fo pale, lord Dorfet, as the rest Whate'er the ocean pales, or sky inclips, is thine if thou wilt have it Antony and Cleop. 2 -as thy fmock Fal-fac'd. Frighting her pale-fac'd villages with war 3 Henry vi. 430 253 356 258 608 224 1644 241 7 7811 I Othello. 5 21078251 Richard ii. 2 3 425111 4 Palatine. I know a lady in Venice, would have walk'd bare-foot to Palestine, for a touch of his nether lip Palfrey. It is the prince of Palfreys Palfry. In Cheapfide thall my palfry go to grafs Provide two proper palfries black as jet Pall. Come thick night, and pall thee in the dunneft fmoke of hell Palld. I'll never follow thy pall'd fortunes more Pallets. Upon uneafy pallets ftretching thee Palliament. This palliamhent of white and spotlefs hue: and name thee in election for the empire Palms. But to be paddling palms, and pinching fingers - As now again to fnatch our palm from palm Titus Andronicus. I 2833158 King John. 31 398 150 736130 And bear the palm, for having bravely fhed thy wife and childrens blood Palfy. How quickly should this arm of mine, now prifoner to the palfy, chastise thee R. ii. 2 3 4251 21 The palfy, and not fear, provokes me 2 Henry vi. 4 Troi, and Cre5 1 884143 And with a palfy fumbling on his gorget, shake in and out the rivet Ibid. 1 3 863146 · Cold palfies Pulter. will not palter Julius Cefar. 2 1748112 Antony and Cleop. 39 787215 Troilus and Crefida. 2 3 870235 Ibid. 5 2 Coriolanus. 31 2 Henry vi. 3 2 I'll fland to it that the pancakes were naught, and the mustard was good Pandar. To whom you would have been a pandar -Troilus the first employer of pandars - Camillo was his help in this, his pandar 885 246 2 Merry Wives of Windfor. 5 5 |