Henry IV, part 1 - Results found: 68
And whatsoever cunning fiend,
it was that Wrought upon thee so,
preposterously Hath
got the Voice in Hell for Excellence: And other devils that suggest
by treasons
do botch, & bungle
up Damnation with patches, col our s,
and with forms being fetched from glist'ring semblances of piety. But he that tempered thee
bade thee stand up, Gave thee no instance why thou shouldst do treason Unless to dub thee with the name of traitor.
By Prince Hal,
in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN740-749),
William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 101
Diseased Nature oftentimes breaks forth
In strange Eruptions, oft the teeming Earth
is with a kind of colic pinched and vexed
by the Imprisoning of unruly wind
with in her womb, which for enlargement striving
shakesshakes the old beldam Earth, & topples down
steeples and moss-grown towers:
By Hotspur,
in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN1551-1554),
William Shakespeare
in British Library Additional MS 64078, f. 47v rev.
a valiant man taxed of feares
Do me no slander,
Douglas. By my life -- And I dare well maintain it with my life --
If well respected honor bid me on
I hold as little counsel with weak fear
as you
, my lord, or any Scot that this day lives.
Let it be seen tomorrow in the battle
By Vernon,
in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN2471-2476),
William Shakespeare
in British Library Additional MS 64078, f. 47r rev.
/ This is like upon
the same foundation with Bruyere who says that Men
in good full Health and affluent circumstances will laugh at
a dwarf Monkey or a wretched Tale. Men less happy
never laugh but to the pupose-
O it is much that a lie (with a slight Oath) and a
Jest with a sad countenance will do with a fellow that
never had the Ache in his shoulders.
By Falstaff,
in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN2870-2872),
William Shakespeare
in British Library Lansdowne MS 1185, f. 6r
The rogues slighted me into the River with
as little Remorse
as they would have drowned a blind bitch's puppies fifteen i' the mitter and you may know by my size that I have a kind of alacrity in sinking—— if the bottom were as deep as Hell I should down. I had been drowned but that the shore was shelvy and shallow a death that I abhor for the water swells a man and what a thing should I have been when I had been swelled!
By Falstaff,
in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN1688-1696),
William Shakespeare
in British Library Lansdowne MS 1185, f. 23
To be stopped in like a strong distillation with stinking
clothes that fretted in their owne greases think of that
a man of my Kidney;
think of that, that am as subject to heat as
butter; a man of continual dissolution, and thaw: it was
a miracle to scape suffocation.
By Falstaff,
in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN1780-1785),
William Shakespeare
in British Library Lansdowne MS 1185, f. 23