Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82 - Results found: 131

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Compiler: Edward Pudsey
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Online: CELM

Plays. Romeo & Juliet. King Richard 2 Shakespeare King Richard 3
Austere
Though news be sad yet tell them merrily, If good thou shamest the music of sweet news, By playing it to me with so sour a face.
By Juliet, in Romeo and Juliet (TLN1334-1336), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1
 
Violence
These violent delights have violent ends, And in their triumph die like fire and powder, Which, as they kiss, consume.
By Friar Laurence, in Romeo and Juliet (TLN1401-1403), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1
 
Conceit
Conceit, more rich in matter than in words, Brags of his substance, not of ornament. They are but beggars that can count their worth, But my true love is grown to such excess, I cannot sum up some of half my wealth .
By Juliet, in Romeo and Juliet (TLN1423-1427), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1
 
Darkness
Lovers can see to do their amorous rites By their own beauties ,
By Juliet, in Romeo and Juliet (TLN1652-1653), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1
 
"
Was ever book containing So vile matter so fairly bound?
By Juliet, in Romeo and Juliet (TLN1735-1736), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1
 
"
Upon his brow shame is ashamed to sit
By Juliet, in Romeo and Juliet (TLN1745), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1
 
Weeping
"
What, wilt thou wash him from his grave with tears? And if thou couldst,thou couldst not make him live.
By Lady Capulet, in Romeo and Juliet (TLN2106-2107), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1
 
"
some grief shows much of love, But much of grief shows still some want of wit.
By Lady Capulet, in Romeo and Juliet (TLN2108-2109), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1
 
In one little body Thou counterfeits a bark, a sea, a wind, For still thy eyes, which I may call the sea, Do ebb and flow with tears; the bark thy body is, Sailing in this salt flood; the winds, thy sighs, Who, raging with thy tears and they with them, Without a sudden calm will overset Thy tempest-tossèd body
By Capulet, in Romeo and Juliet (TLN2169-2176), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1
 
Do not deny to him that you love me.
By Paris, in Romeo and Juliet (TLN2319-2320), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1
 
And ere this hand by thee to Romeo's sealed, Shall be the label to another deed
By Juliet, in Romeo and Juliet (TLN2351-2352), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1
 
King Richard the Second
Woe doth the heavier sit, Where it perceives it is but faintly born
By John of Gaunt, in Richard II (TLN557.13-557.14), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1
 
"
"
For gnarling sorrow hath less powe r to bite, The man that mocks it, & sets it light.
By John of Gaunt, in Richard II (TLN557.25-557.26), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1
 
"
The apprehension of the good Gives but the greater feeling to the worse.
By King Henry IV, in Richard II (TLN564-565), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1
 
Ere furth r leisure yield them furth r means
By Green, in Richard II (TLN614-615), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1
 
Attention
The tongues of Dying men Enforce attention.
By John of Gaunt, in Richard II (TLN647-648), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1
 
secrecy
Let us share thy thoughts, for thy words shall be as thoughts then
By Willoughby, in Richard II (TLN923), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1
 
greef
each substance of a grief hath twenty shadows, Which shows like grief itself but is not so, For sorrow's eyes glaz’d with blinding tears, Divides one thing entire to many objects
By Bushy, in Richard II (TLN966-969), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1
 
our nearness to the King in love Is near the hate of &c
By Green, in Richard II (TLN1079-1080), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1
 
King Richard the Third
"
Naught to do &c
By Richard III, in Richard III (TLN103), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1
 
a lump of foul deformity.
By Anne, in Richard III (TLN234), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1
 
"
Teach not thy lips such scorn for they were made for &c
By Anne, in Richard III (TLN363), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1
 
With what a sharp -provided wit he reasons &c
By Buckingham, in Richard III (TLN1716), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1
 
"
If he be leaden, icy cold unwilling.
By Buckingham, in Richard III (TLN1764-1765), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1
 
"
Made him my book wherein my soul recorded
The history of all her secret thoughts, So smooth daub'd, his vice with show of v r tue That
By Richard III, in Richard III (TLN2113-2115), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1
 
Aged "
yet so much is my poverty of spirit that &c
By Richard III, in Richard III (TLN2380), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1
 
- Be brief, lest that the process of thy kindness Last longer in telling than thy kindness.
By Queen Elizabeth, in Richard III (TLN3033-3034), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1
 
Even in the afternoon of her best days &c
By Buckingham, in Richard III (TLN2407), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1
 
he hath indeed better bettered expectac[ion] then you must expect of me to tell you how.
By Messenger, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN19-20), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
tears
There are no faces truer then those that are so washed, for better
is it to weep at joy then to joy at weeping.
By Leonato, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN29-31), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
stuffed with all honourable virtues
By Messenger, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN54-55), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
Entertainment
You are come to meet your trouble the fashion of the wo r ld is to avoid cost & you
encounter it.
By Don Pedro, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN93-95), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
A talker
I would my horse had the speed of [your] tongue & so good a continuer
By Benedick, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN138-139), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
She's too low for a high praise too brown for a fair praise & too little for a great praise
By Benedick, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN167-169), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
I can see yet with out spectacles and I see no such matter.
By Benedick, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN184-185), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
And never could maintain his part.
but in the force of his will.
By Claudio, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN229-230), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
will
Take the present time by the top
By , in not in source (TLN331-332), not in source
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
if I can cross him any way I bless myself every way
By DonJohn, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
Beatrice that puts the world into her person, & so,
gives me out well &c
By Benedick, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN612-613), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
O she misused me past the endurance of a block an oak but with one green leaf on it would have answered her; my very visor &c
By Benedick, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN642-644), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
I were but little happy if I could say how much.
By Claudio, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN405), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
I give away myself fo r you, & dote upon the exchange
By Claudio, in Much Ado About Nothing (707-708), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
my it keeps on the windy side of care
By Beatrice, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN712-713), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
 
time goes on crutches till
love &c.
By Claudio, in Much Ado About Nothing (752-753), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
strang
it is the witness of his excellency to put a strange face on his own perfection
By Don Pedro, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN880-881), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
I pray god his bad voice bode no mischief, I had as lief have heard the night raven &
By Benedick, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN917-919), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
 
writ a letter of a sheet of pap r perform
By Leonato, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN965), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
 
it is no addition to h r wit nor no great argument of her folly
By Benedick, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN1056-1057), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
how worthy soev r she would spell him backward &c
By Hero, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN1150-1151), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
plarines
A heart as sound as a Bell.& his tongue is the Clapper for what his heart thinks his tongue speaks
By Don Pedro, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN1219-1221), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
 
my heart is exceeding heavy r
By Hero, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN1524-1527), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
how long have you professed apprehension.
By Beatrice, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN1564-1565), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
 
Discourse
ha r ty Love
maintaind the change of words.
By Hero, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN1846), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
I love [you] with so much of my heart that none
ys left to protest with.
By Beatrice, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN1949-1950), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
Will you not eat [your] word.
By Beatrice, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN1941-1942), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
Cease thy counsel which falls into my ears as [ protest ] as wate r into a syve.
By Leonato, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN2082-2084), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
I know them yea & what they weigh
even to the utmost scruple, scrambling, out-facing, fashion-monging boys
By Antonio, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN2179-2181), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
we are high [ proof ] melancholy & would fain have it beaten away wilt you use thy witt.
By Claudio, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN2213-2214), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
I said you hadst a fine wit true said she a fine little one, no said I a
great wit, right says she a great gross one nay said I a good wit
just said she it hurts nobody, nay said I the gentleman is wise, certain said she
a wise gentleman nay said I he hath the tongues [that[ I believe said she for he
swore a thing to me on monday night, which he forswore on tuesday
morning, theers a double toung thers 2 toungs
By Don Pedro, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN2248-2255), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
what a pretty thing man is when he goes in his doublet & hose & off his wit
By Don Pedro, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN2284-2285), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
Deserve well at my hands by helping me to &c
By Benedick, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN2424-2425), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
Suffer love a good epithet, for I love thee against my will
By Benedick, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN2484-2485), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
marraige
To bind me or undoe me one of them
By Benedick, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN2574), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
 
 
A College of wit-crackers
cannot flout me out of my humour, if a man will be beaten with
brains a' shall wear nothing handsome about him.
By Benedick, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN2659-2663), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
to make thee a double-dealer; which, out of question,thou wilt be, if my cousin do not look exceedingly narrowly to thee
By Claudio, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN2672-2673), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
Get thee a wife. there is no staff more reverend than one tipped with horn.
By Benedick, in Much Ado About Nothing (TLN2679-2680), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.1v
 
Not let belief take hold of him.
By Marcellus, in Hamlet (TLN33), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2r
 
Once again assail [your] ears that are so fortified &c
By Barnardo, in Hamlet (TLN41-42), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2r
 
A moth it is to trouble the minds eye.
By Horatio, in Hamlet (TLN124.5), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2r
 
Against that season wherein our savi our s birth is Celebrated the bird of dawning singeth all night long. And then they say no spirit dare stir abroad; the nights are wholesome. then no planets strike, no fairy takes, nor witch hath power to charm
By Marcellus, in Hamlet (TLN157-162), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2r
 
holding a weak supposal of our worth.
By King Claudius, in Hamlet (TLN196), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2r
 
Let [your] haste commend your duty
By King Claudius, in Hamlet (TLN218), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2r
 
To persever in obstinate condolement of the impious stubbornness, 'Tis unmanly grief, it shows a will most incorrect in heaven a heart unfortified a mind impatient.
By King Claudius, in Hamlet (TLN275-278), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2r
 
She wold hange on him as if increase of appetite had grown by what it fed on.
By Hamlet, in Hamlet (TLN327-329), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2r
 
we did think it writ down in our duty to let [you] know of it.
By Horatio, in Hamlet (None), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2r
 
Yf you have hith r to concealed this sight let it be tenable in [your] silence still.
By Hamlet, in Hamlet (TLN447-448), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2r
 
Give thy thoughts no tongue nor any unproportioned thought his act, Be thou familiar but by bo means vulgar, those friends thou hast & their adoption tried grapple them unto thy soul with hoops of steel, But do not dull thy palm with entertainment Of each new-hatched, unfledged courage. Beware of entrance into a quarrel but being in Bear't that th'oppsed may beware of thee give ev r y man thy ear but few thy voice take each mans Censure but reserve the judgment.
By Polonius, in Hamlet (TLN524-534), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2r
 
That you have ta'en these tenders for true pay
By Polonius, in Hamlet (TLN572), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2r
 
response
You are keen, my lord, you are keen
By Ophelia, in Hamlet (TLN2117-2118), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
by thees pickers &
By Hamlet, in Hamlet (TLN2206-2209), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
his sense is apoplexed
By Hamlet, in Hamlet (TLN2455.1-2455.2), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
if my duty be too bold my love is too unmannerly
By Guildenstern, in Hamlet (TLN2219), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
At y our age the heyday in the blood is tame,. it's humble, and waites upon the
By Hamlet, in Hamlet (TLN2452-2454), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
conceit in weakest bodies strongest works.
By Ghost, in Hamlet (TLN2494-2495), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
And for my means, I'll husband them so well thethey shall go far with little.
By Laertes, in Hamlet (TLN2886-2887), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
Dipping all his in their affection
By King Claudius, in Hamlet (TLN3027), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
A very ribbon in the cap of youth yet needful for youth no less becomes the light & careless liv r y that it wears, than settled age his Sables & his weeds.
By King Claudius, in Hamlet (TLN3078.12-3078.15), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
The brooch & gem of all the nation
By Laertes, in Hamlet (TLN3092-3093), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
was the first gentleman because he first bare arms.
By Clown, in Hamlet (TLN), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
This age is grown so picked that the toe of the peasant comes so near the heel of the Courtier he galls his kibe
By Hamlet, in Hamlet (TLN3331-3333), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
with all Diligence of Spirit. Put [your] bonnet to his right use tis for the head
By Hamlet, in Hamlet (TLN3597-3598), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
And that our drift look through our bad performance.
By King Claudius, in Hamlet (TLN3143), William Shakespeare
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
Send hence y our mild r spirits. let wrath join in confederacy with y our weapons points if he proceed to vex us, let your swords Seek out his bowels.
By Duke, in The Honest Whore, Part I (TLN23-26), Thomas Dekker
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
the sea of lov r s rage Comes rushing with so strong a tide it beats & bears down all respects of life of honour, of friends &c..
By Duke, in The Honest Whore, Part I (TLN65-67), Thomas Dekker
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
 
So much mettle in him as is in a cobbl r s awle. he would ha' been a vexed thing; he and his train had blown wyou up. but that their powder has taken the wet of Cowards. You'll bleed three pottles of Alicant, by this light, if you follow 'em, and then we shall have a hole made in a wrong place, surgeons would have rould wyou to have surgeons roll thee up like a baby in swaddling clouts.
By Mattheo, in The Honest Whore, Part I (TLN95-100), Thomas Dekker
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
Here's a coil for a dead commodity! 'Sfoot women when thethey are alive are but dead Comodities, for you shall have one woman lie upon many mens hands.
By Mattheo, in The Honest Whore, Part I (TLN105-107), Thomas Dekker
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
Strange feeders they are indeed, my lord, and, like y our jest r or young courti r, will ent r upon any man's trencher with out bidding
By Mattheo, in The Honest Whore, Part I (TLN123-124), Thomas Dekker
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
Sland r the beggar's sin lies sin of fools. Or any other damned impieties, On Monday let 'em be deliverèd! I swear to thee, Mattheo, by my soul, Hereafter weekly on that day I'll glue Mine eyelids down
By Hippolito, in The Honest Whore, Part I (TLN134-135), Thomas Dekker
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
This strange monst r honesty in y our belly? why, so: jig-makers and chroniclers shall pick something out of you. But, an I smell not you and int' a tru housebawdy-house?
By Mattheo, in The Honest Whore, Part I (TLN155), Thomas Dekker
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
 
By this hand do wyou I'll discharge at my day, by this hand.
By Fustigo, in The Honest Whore, Part I (TLN203-204), Thomas Dekker
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
You ha' cast off all your old swaggering humours?
By Viola, in The Honest Whore, Part I (None), Thomas Dekker
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
I am powder and touch-box, if they put fire once into me.
By Fustigo, in The Honest Whore, Part I (TLN215-216), Thomas Dekker
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
He's a very mandrake, or else, God bless us, one o'these whiblins
By Fustigo, in The Honest Whore, Part I (TLN225-226), Thomas Dekker
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
it wants the virtue which all women's tongues have (to ang r their husbands.
By Viola, in The Honest Whore, Part I (TLN239-240), Thomas Dekker
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
Lean r then the new moone.
By Viola, in The Honest Whore, Part I (TLN258-259), Thomas Dekker
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
As secret as y our midwife or barb r surgeon
By Fustigo, in The Honest Whore, Part I (TLN267), Thomas Dekker
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
or els let me nev r know what a secret is.
By Fustigo, in The Honest Whore, Part I (TLN300-301), Thomas Dekker
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
 
 
 
you'll To hook in a kind gentleman
By Hippolito, in The Honest Whore, Part I (TLN1067), Thomas Dekker
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
wyou have no soul ;that makes you weigh so light heaven's treasure bought it & half a
crown hath sold it. For [your] body it's like the Common shore that still receives all the town's filth
the sin of many men is with in wyou,
By Hippolito, in The Honest Whore, Part I (TLN1086-1089), Thomas Dekker
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
e O, you're as base as any beast that bears,
By Hippolito, in The Honest Whore, Part I (TLN1099), Thomas Dekker
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
Like bears and apes, you're baited
By Hippolito, in The Honest Whore, Part I (TLN1134), Thomas Dekker
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
A harlot is like Dunkirk true
to none swallows both English Spanish & fulsome Dutch, Back-doored Italian, last of all the French
By Hippolito, in The Honest Whore, Part I (TLN117), Thomas Dekker
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
Methinks A toad is happier than a whore
That with one poison swells, with thousands more theother stocks her veins.
By Hippolito, in The Honest Whore, Part I (TLN1125-1127), Thomas Dekker
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 

, yt was more easie for him in one night to make fifty queans than to
make one of them honest again in fifty years.
By Mattheo, in The Honest Whore, Part I (TLN1675-1676), Thomas Dekker
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
Close, as the fist of a courtier
By Servant, in The Honest Whore, Part I (TLN1717), Thomas Dekker
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.2v
 
 
Nature thou hast to make one complete creature cheated even all mortality.
By Jupiter, in The Golden Age (4.1), Thomas Heywood
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.4
 
Women's tongues & hearts have different tunes for where they most desire, their hearts cry on when their tongues bid retire
By Jupiter, in The Golden Age (4.1), Thomas Heywood
in Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office ER 82, f.4