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

The Little French Lawyer - Results found: 42

3. – If thou dost thou seest my Myrmidons; he let ym loose—
By La-Writ, in The Little French Lawyer (4.2.28-29), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 2
 
--a 100 bastinado’s, 3 broken pates, his teeth knockt out,
By La-Writ, in The Little French Lawyer (4.2.17-18), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 2
 
his
small gutts ꝑ isht,
By La-Writ, in The Little French Lawyer (4.2.24), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 2
 
his arms, & legs beaten to pouldesses
By La-Writ, in The Little French Lawyer (4.2.19), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 2
 
3
— Shee’s all Innocent. for her a dove would assume ye
courage of a daring Eagle.
By Champernel, in The Little French Lawyer (3.1.29-30), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 4
 
3.
– as men transformed wth ye sade tale I told, they stood amaz’d
By Dinant, in The Little French Lawyer (5.1.148-149), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 5
 
3
–but for Cleremont, ye bold, & undertaking Cleremont ---
By Dinant, in The Little French Lawyer (1.1.41-2), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 11
 
--thou art all hon or, thy resolution would steele a coward
By Dinant, in The Little French Lawyer (1.2.82-3), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 11
 
Name yt danger, be it of wt horrid shape soev wth I will shrink fro
By Dinant, in The Little French Lawyer (1.3.52-4), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 11
 
- I disclaim thee. My brother yt kept fortune bound, & left
conquest hereditary to his issue could not beget a coward –
By Champernel, in The Little French Lawyer (3.3.2-6), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 11
 
--one soe excellent in all yt ’s noble. Whose only weakness
is excesse of courage. yt knows noe enemies yt he cannot
mast, but his affections.
By Lamira, in The Little French Lawyer (3.1.57-60), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 11
 
3.
– Peace, touch wood.
By Cleremont, in The Little French Lawyer (2.3.142), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 13
 
3.
– two edg’d words.
By Dinant, in The Little French Lawyer (5.3.37), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 16
 
–such scabbs of nature.
By Annabell, in The Little French Lawyer (5.1.74), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 16
 
– 3.
I will make
ye on thy knees, bite out ye tongue yt wrongd me.
By Champernel, in The Little French Lawyer (1.1.230-31), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 17
 
3
– wth so full a sorrow yt men frō those rude eyes, yt nev
knew wt pitty means, or mercy, there stole down soft relentings
By Dinant, in The Little French Lawyer (4.1.143-45), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 19
 
--I am girt round wth sorrow hell’s about me
By Dinant, in The Little French Lawyer (5.2.268), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 19
 
– 3
yor psents. courtship, yt s too good a
name, yor slavelike sevices yor morn̄ musick, yor walking
3 howers in ye raine at midnight To see her at her window,
sometimes laught at, sometimes admitted, & vouchsaf’d to
kisse her glove, her skirt, nay I’ve heard her slippers. How yn
you triumpht?
By Cleremont, in The Little French Lawyer (1.1.101-7), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 21
 
3
– evy bone about you shakes you good Almanack makers to
foretell wt weather wee shall have.
By Champernel, in The Little French Lawyer (1.1.280-82), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 22
 
– Ovid’s afternoone.
By Cleremont, in The Little French Lawyer (4.7.67), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 22
 
-- ye spring of chastity.
By Dinant, in The Little French Lawyer (5.1.246), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 22
 
She did defile wth mud, ye mud of lust,
& made it lothsom even to goats—
By Dinant, in The Little French Lawyer (5.1.248-49), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 22
 
3
– wt an alphabet of faces he puts on? or) runs through?
By Dinant, in The Little French Lawyer (2.3.24), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 23
 
-- ye dry bisket rogue
By Dinant, in The Little French Lawyer (2.3.58), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 23
 
– a bedrid winter hang upon y or
cheeks, & blast, blast, blast those buds of pride yt paint you—
By Dinant, in The Little French Lawyer (3.5.58-60), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 23
 
3
– faire orb of beauty.
By Chorus, in The Little French Lawyer (1.1.142), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 24
 
3.
– ye soft-plum’d god
By Dinant, in The Little French Lawyer (5.1.147), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 25
 
– licks his fingers, kneeling, &
whining like a boy new breacht To get a toy forsooth not worth
an apple—
By Dinant, in The Little French Lawyer (5.1.254-56), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 25
 
3
– already one foot in ye grave, yet study pfit, as if you were
assur’d to live heere ev.
By Dinant, in The Little French Lawyer (1.1.161-62), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 27
 
- All this was purchast by
lawlesse force, & so you but revell in The teares, & grones
of such as were ye owners
By Dinant, in The Little French Lawyer (1.1.213-215), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 27
 
3. –
R.
did he not take measure of my sheets?
By Champernel, in The Little French Lawyer (81-82), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 28
 
3.
How ye thing lookes!
By Beaupre, in The Little French Lawyer (2.1.80), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 33
 
3.
– R.
–As you had a mother
By Lamira, in The Little French Lawyer (5.1.62-64), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 36
 
3
yt daring vice for wch ye whole age suffers. The blood or bold
youth yt heeretofore was spent in hoble action Or to defend or
to enlarge ye kingd.. Poures its. out wth Odd p abbreviation: check MUFI pdigall expence upō or
mothers lap ye earth, yt bred us, for evy trifle.
By Cleremont, in The Little French Lawyer (1.1.12-15), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 37
 
And I have heard
yt some of or late Ks (of France Sr) For ye wearing of a Mistris
feathers, a cheat at cards, or dice Have lost as many gallt gentle
men, as might have mett ye great Turk in ye feild, wth confidence
of a glorious Victory.
By Cleremont, in The Little French Lawyer (1.1.29-35), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 37
 
‘Tis banisht frō all civill govnemts
scarce 3 in Venice in as many years, in Florence they are rarer
& in all ye faire dominions of ye Sp. K. They’re nev heard of—
By Cleremont, in The Little French Lawyer (1.1.22-26), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 37
 
 
flesht & enterd bravely at 15.
By Dinant, in The Little French Lawyer (1.1.49-50), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 37
 
Chosen to compound quarells, as pore men seek arbitrators
By Dinant, in The Little French Lawyer (1.1.55-56), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 37
 
– studied in all ye criticismes of contention
By Dinant, in The Little French Lawyer (1.1.60-61), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 37
 
—Mine is noe Helens beauty, to be purchast wth blood—
By Lamira, in The Little French Lawyer (1.3.58), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 37
 
--was there noe tree, to for or riv to force thy life out
backward or to drowne it, but yt thou must survive thy
infamy? & kill me wth ye sight of one I hate, & gladly
would forgett.
By Champernel, in The Little French Lawyer (3.1.11-17), Francis Beaumont
in Bodleian Library MS Sancroft 29, p. 38