Plays

⊕    A Christian turned Turk
⊕    A Game at Chess: A Later Form
⊕    A Mad World, My Masters
⊕    A Maidenhead Well Lost
⊕    A Midsummer Night's Dream
⊕    A Yorkshire Tragedy
⊕    Aglaura
⊕    Albumazar: A Comedy
⊕    All Fools
⊕    All's Well that Ends Well
⊕    Antonio and Mellida
⊕    Antonio's Revenge
⊕    Antony and Cleopatra
⊕    As You Like It
⊕    Bartholomew Fair
⊕    Bird in a Cage
⊕    Brennoralt
⊕    Bussy d'Ambois
⊕    Caesar and Pompey
⊕    Campaspe
⊕    Catiline
⊕    Cleopatra
⊕    Comus
⊕    Contention for Honour and Riches
⊕    Coriolanus
⊕    Cymbeline
⊕    Cynthia's Revels
⊕    Dutch Courtesan
⊕    Epicoene
⊕    Every Man in his Humour
⊕    Every Man out of his Humour
⊕    Hamlet
⊕    Henry IV, part 1
⊕    Henry IV, part 2
⊕    Henry V (Q1)
⊕    Henry VI, part 1
⊕    Henry VI, part 2
⊕    Henry VI, part 3
⊕    Henry VIII
⊕    Hyde Park
⊕    Hymen's Triumph
⊕    Jack Drum's Entertainment
⊕    Julius Caesar
⊕    King John
⊕    King Lear
⊕    Locrine
⊕    Love In its Ecstasy: Or, the large Prerogative
⊕    Love Tricks, or The School of Compliments
⊕    Love's Labour's Lost
⊕    Loves Metamorphosis
⊕    Macbeth
⊕    Measure for Measure
⊕    Merry Wives of Windsor
⊕    Much Ado About Nothing
⊕    Mustapha
⊕    not in source
⊕    Othello
⊕    Pericles
⊕    Philaster
⊕    Philotas
⊕    Poetaster
⊕    Richard II
⊕    Richard III
⊕    Romeo and Juliet
⊕    Satiro-mastix: or, The Untrussing of the humorous poet
⊕    Sejanus His Fall
⊕    Sir Giles Goosecap
⊕    Sophonisba
⊕    Taming of the Shrew
⊕    The Atheist's Tragedy
⊕    The Blind Beggar of Alexandria
⊕    The Bondman
⊕    The Case is Altered
⊕    The Changes, or Love in a Maze
⊕    The Comedy of Errors
⊕    The Conspiracy and Tragedy of Byron
⊕    The Custom of the Country
⊕    The Devil's Law Case
⊕    The Elder Brother
⊕    The Fancies, Chaste and Noble
⊕    The Fawn
⊕    The Goblins
⊕    The Golden Age
⊕    The Grateful Servant
⊕    The Great Duke of Florence
⊕    The Gypsies Metamorphosed
⊕    The Honest Whore, Part I
⊕    The Insatiate Countess
⊕    The Lady of May
⊕    The Little French Lawyer
⊕    The Mad Lover
⊕    The Maid of Honour
⊕    The Malcontent
⊕    The Martyred Souldier
⊕    The Merchant of Venice
⊕    The Miseries of Inforc't Marriage
⊕    The Nice Valour
⊕    The Phoenix
⊕    The Puritan Widow
⊕    The Raging Turk
⊕    The Rival Friends
⊕    The Royal Master
⊕    The Royal Slave
⊕    The Sophy
⊕    The Spanish Curate
⊕    The Staple of News
⊕    The Tempest
⊕    The Tragedy of Nero
⊕    The Traitor
⊕    The Valiant Scot
⊕    The Virgin Widow
⊕    The Wedding
⊕    The White Devil
⊕    The Widow
⊕    The Wonder of a Kingdom
⊕    Timon of Athens
⊕    Titus Andronicus
⊕    Troilus and Cressida
⊕    Twelfth Night
⊕    Two Gentlemen of Verona
⊕    Volpone
⊕    What You Will
⊕    Winter's Tale

Henry IV, part 1 - Results found: 68

one that makes fritters of English
By Falstaff, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN2629), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 86
 
She bears the purse too; she is a Region in Guiana.
By Falstaff, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN359-360), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 86
 
They two shall be
Excherquers to me, they shall be my East & West Indies.
By Falstaff, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN361-362), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 86
 
You, & y our coach fellow Nym, or else you had looked through the grate, like a Geminy of Baboons
By Falstaff, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN778-779), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 86
 
--Like women in men's apparel, & smell
Like Bucklersbury in simplingsimple time.
By Falstaff, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN1415-1417), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 86
 
They threw him in; & you may know by my size that I
have a kind of alacrity in sinking.
By Falstaff, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN1690-1692), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 86
 
Since I plucked Geese, played truant, whipped Top
By Falstaff, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN2425-2426), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 86
 
-- as will serve to be prologue to an Egg, & Butter.
By Falstaff, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN135-136), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 99
 
Squires of the Nights Body.
By Falstaff, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN138-139), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 99
 
Diana's
Foresters. Gentlemen of the Shade. Minions of the Moon, and let men say we be men of good government, being governed as the sea is, by our noble and chaste mistress the moon,
under who's countenance they steal.
By Falstaff, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN139-142), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 99
 
Resolution thus fubbed as it is with the rusty Curb of old Father Antic the Law.
By Falstaff, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN171-172), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 99
 
--as melancholy as a Gib Cat, or a Lug'd Bear,
By Falstaff, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN185-189), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 99
 
If Men were to be saved by merit, what hole in
Hell were hote enough for him?
By Falstaff, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN215-216), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 99
 
And for whose dead we in the World's wide Mouth
lives scandalized & foully spoken of
By Worcester, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN215-216), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 99
 
we have the recipe of Ferneseed; we walk invisible.
By Gadshill, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN721), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 99
 
I well believe, thou wilt not utter, What thou dost not know;
And so far will I trust thee gentle Kate
By Hotspur, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN955-957), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 99
 
They call Drinking deep Dying scarlet; & when you breath in y our watering, they cry hem; & bid you play it off.
By Prince Hal, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN979-980), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 99
 
-- that Reverend Vice, that gray Iniquity, that Faker Ruffian
By Prince Hal, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN1411-1412), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 99
 
that old white-bearded Satan
By Prince Hal, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN1420-1421), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 99
 
Heigh! Heigh! the devil rides upon a Fiddlestick.
By Prince Hal, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN1448), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 100
 
Reply.
At my Birth the Frame, & huge Foundation of the Earth shaked
like a coward.
By Glendower, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN1538-1542), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 100
 
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 shakes the the old beldam earth.
By Hotspur, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN1552-1556), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 100
 
I am not in the Roll of common men.
By Glendower, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN1568), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 100
 
He is as tedious as a tired Horse; a railing Wife;
Worse than a smoky House. I'd rather Live with
Cheese, & garlic in a Windmill far than feed on Cates
& have him talk to me in any summer house in Christendom
By Hotspur, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN1690-1695), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 100
 
-- trimmed up y our praises with a princely tongue;
spoke y our Deservings, like a chronicle.
By Vernon, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN2842-2843), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 100
 
When the Fight was done
By Hotspur, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN352), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 100
 
came there a certain Lord neat, & trimly
dressed, Fresh as a Bridegroom; & his chin new reaped,
Showed like a stubble land at Harvest-home. He
was perfumed like a Milliner.
By Hotspur, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN355-358), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 100
 
Still he smiled & talked
By Hotspur, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN364), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 100
 
with many Holiday & Lady-terms.
By Hotspur, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN368), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 100
 
he made me mad,
to see him shine so brisk, & smell so sweet, & talk
so like a waiting Gentlewoman Of guns, and drums & wounds.
By Hotspur, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN375-378), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 100
 
Reply.
Will your Lordship lend me a thousand pound, to furnish me forth?
By Falstaff, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN472-477), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 101
 
No Remedy aḡstagainst this Consumption of the purse:
borrowing only lingers it out; but, the Disease is incureable
By Falstaff, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN485-486), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 101
 
N ever any of these demure boys come to any proof. for thin drink so over-cool their blood, and making many fish meals, that they fall into a kind of Male Greensickness
and then, when they marry they get Wenches. They are generally fools, and cowards
By Falstaff, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN2327-2332), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 101
 
I am Fortune's Steward.
By Falstaff, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN3156), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 101
 
Y our own Reasons turn into y our Bosoms, as Dogs upon
their masters, worrying you.
By Prince Hal, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN711-712), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 101
 
That knew'st the very bottom of my soul; That almost mightst have coined me into gold, wouldst thou have
practiced on me, for thy use.
By Prince Hal, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN726-728), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 101
 
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
 
There's not a piece of Feather in our Host:
By Prince Hal, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN2359), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 102
 
-- that being dead, like to the bullets crazing, Break
out into a second course of mischief.
By Prince Hal, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN2352-2353), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 102
 
Let now be sung, Non Nobis, & Te Deum.
By Prince Hal, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN2844), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 102
 
If thou canst love a fellow of this temper Kate, whose Face is not worth
sun burning; that never looks in his glass for Love of
any thing he sees there let thine eye be thy cook; I speak to thee plain
soldier) If thou canst love me for this Take me.
By Prince Hal, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN3135-3140), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 102
 
For these Fellows of
infinite tongue, that can rhyme themselves into ladies' favours.
By Prince Hal, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN3145-3146), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 102
 
A speaker is but a prater, a Rhyme but a ballad.
a good leg will fall, a straight back will stoop.
a black beard will turn white. a curled pate will
grow bald. a fair face will wither. a full Eye
will wax hollow: But a good Heart ---
By Prince Hal, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN3148-3151), William Shakespeare
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 102
 
Which makes him prune himself & bristle up
the Crest of youth against your dignity
By Westmoreland, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN101-102), William Shakespeare
in British Library Additional MS 64078, f. 47v rev.
 
Our house , my sovereign liege, little deserves The scourge of greatness
of the same greatness to be used on it, And that same greatness too which our own hands Have holp to make so portly
By Worcester, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN331-334), William Shakespeare
in British Library Additional MS 64078, f. 47v rev.
 
"at hand, quoth the chamberlain," for thou variest no more from
picking of purses than as giving direction doth from labouring
By Gadshill, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN686-687), William Shakespeare
in British Library Additional MS 64078, f. 47v rev.
 

for they pray continually to their saint the commonwealth; or rather, not pray to her, but prey on her; for they ride up and down on her and make her their boots
By Gadshill, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN716-722), William Shakespeare
in British Library Additional MS 64078, f. 47v rev.
 
At my nativity The front of heaven was full of fiery shapes, Of burning cressets, and at my birth The frames and huge foundation of the earth Shaked like a coward
By Glendower, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN1540-1543), William Shakespeare
in British Library Additional MS 64078, f. 47v rev.
 

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.
 
Nothing so much as mincing poetry. 'Tis like the forced gait of
a shuffling nag
By Hotspur, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN1662-1663), William Shakespeare
in British Library Additional MS 64078, f. 48r 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.
 
Give me your thoughts Do you not think the power we bear with us will make us conquerors in the field of France
By Prince Hal, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN644-645), William Shakespeare
in Folger MS V.a.87, f. 5v
 
Prince Henry excusing himself for taking the Crown
95
But if it did infect my blood with Joy, Or swell my thoughts to any strain of Pride If any Rebel or vain spirit of mine Did with the least affection of a welcome Give Entertainment to the might of it &c
By Prince Hal, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN2704-2708), William Shakespeare
in British Library Lansdowne MS 1185, f. 5v
 
Of Drinking Falstaffe says
H.4. p.92—
If I had a thousand sons the first humane principle I would teach
them should be to forswear thin Potations and to addict
themselves to Sack
By Falstaff, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN2359-2361), William Shakespeare
in British Library Lansdowne MS 1185, f. 6r
 
/ 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
 
I do mean to make love to Fords Wife: I spy entertainment in her: she discourses: she carves: She gives the leere of Invitation: I can construe the Action of her familiar style and the hardest /
By Falstaff, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN337-340), William Shakespeare
in British Library Lansdowne MS 1185, f. 21v
 
I do mean to make love to Fords Wife: I spy entertainment in her: she discourses: she carves: She gives the leere of Invitation: I can construe the Action of her familiar style and the hardest /
By Falstaff, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN337-340), William Shakespeare
in British Library Lansdowne MS 1185, f. 21v
 
I have writ me here a letter to her and here another to Pages wife who even now gave me good eyes too: examined my parts with most judicious oeillades / Sometimes the beam of her view gilded my foot, sometimes my portly belly.
By Falstaff, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN349-353), William Shakespeare
in British Library Lansdowne MS 1185, f. 21v
 
O she did course ore my exteriors with such a gready intention that the appetite of her eye did seem to scorch me up like a burning glass. –
By Falstaff, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN156-358), William Shakespeare
in British Library Lansdowne MS 1185, f. 22r
 
They shall be my East and West Indies and I will trade to them both: Go bear thou this letter to Mistress Page; and thou this to Mistress Ford: by We will thrive Lads we will thrive. –
By Falstaff, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN361-365), William Shakespeare
in British Library Lansdowne MS 1185, f. 22r
 
Rogues hence avaunt, vanish like hailstones, go. Trudge plod away o’th’horse seek shelter, pack!
By Falstaff, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN372-373), William Shakespeare
in British Library Lansdowne MS 1185, f. 22r
 
When Mistress Bridget lost the handle of her fan I took't upon my honour Thou hadst it not –
By Falstaff, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN781-785), William Shakespeare
in British Library Lansdowne MS 1185, f. 22v
 
The Incoherance False English Breaks and Repetition –gloriously natural
Well on. Mistress Ford you say.
By Falstaff, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN817-846), William Shakespeare
in British Library Lansdowne MS 1185, f. 23
 
Master Brook: thou shalt know I will predominate over the peasant, and thou shalt lie with his wife—
By Falstaff, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN1034-1035), William Shakespeare
in British Library Lansdowne MS 1185, f. 23
 
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
 
rammed me in with foul shirts and smocks, socks, foul stockings greasy napkins that Master Brook then was the rankest compound of villanous smell that ever offended nostril.-----
By Falstaff, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN1757-1761), 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
 
Mistress Ford your sorrow hath eaten up my sufferance I see you are obsequious in your love and I profess requital to a hairs breadth not only Mistress Ford in the simple office of Love but in all the accoutrement complement and ceremony of it.
By Falstaff, in Henry IV, part 1 (TLN1902-1906), William Shakespeare
in British Library Lansdowne MS 1185, f. 23