Imágenes de páginas
PDF
EPUB

One face, one voice, one habit, and two persons, a natural perspective that is, and is not.. Du. a. 5 s. 1

So full of shapes in fancy, that it alone is high fantastical.. Du. a. 1 s. 1

Sure you have some hideous matter to deliver, when the courtesy of it is so fearful.. Olivia a. 1 s. 5

She bore a mind, that envy could not but call fair.. Seb. a. 2 s. 1

She made good view of me, indeed so much, that sure me thought her eyes, had lost her tongue, for she did speak in starts distractedly.. Viola

a. 2 s. 2

Some are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon them.. Mal. a. 2 s. 5

There is a fair behaviour

in you Captain, and though that nature, with a beauteous vale, doth oft close in pollution, yet of thee I will believe, thou hast a mind, that suits, with this thy fair and outward character.. Viola a. 1 s. 2

There is no slander in an allow'd fool, though he do nothing but rail: nor no railing in a known discreet man

though he do nothing but reprove.. Olivia a. 1 s. 5

'Tis beauty truly blest, whose red and white, nature's own sweet and cunning hand laid on.. Viola a. 1 s. 5

The parts that fortune hath bestowed upon her, tell her I hold as giddily as fortune, but 'tis that miracle and queen of gems, that nature pranks her in, attracts my soul.. Du. a. 2 s. 4

There is no woman's sides can bide the beating of so strong a passion, as love doth give my heart; no woman's heart so big to hold so much, they lack retention.. Du. a.

2 s. 4

This fellow's wise enough to play the fool, and to do that well, craves a kind of wit .. Viola a. 3 s. 1

The clock upbraids me with the waste of time..

Olivia a. 3 s. 1

They have been grand jury man, since before Noah was a sailor.. Sir Toby a. 3 s. 2

The double guilt of this opportunity, you let time wash. off, and you are now sailed to the north of my lady's opinion.. Fab. a. 3 s. 2

Taunt him with the licence ofiak.. Sir Toby a. 3 s. 2

TWELFTH NIGHT.

There's something in me that reproves my fault, but such a headstrong, potent fault it is, that it but mocks reproof.. Olivia a. 3 s. 4

There is no darkness but ignorance, in which thou art more puzzled than the Egyptians in their fog.. Clown a. 4 s. 2

Virtue is beauty, but the beauteous evil, are empty trunks o'erflourished by the Devil.. Antonio a. 3 s. 4

Wit, an't be thy will, put me into good fooling; those wits that think they have thee, do very oft prove fools, and I that I am sure to lack thee, may pass for a wise man.. Clown a. 1 s. 5

Was not this love indeed?

we men may say more, swear more, but indeed our shows are more than will, for still we prove much in our vows, but little in our love.. Viola a. 2 s. 4

[blocks in formation]

When wit and youth is come to harvest, your wife is like to reap a proper man.. Olivia a. 3 S. 1

What a deal of scorn looks beautiful, in the contempt and anger of his lip!.. Olivia a. 3 s. 1

We'll whisper o'er a couplet or two, of most sage saws ..Sir Toby a. 3 s. 4

What shall ask of me,

you

that I'll deny, that honour saved, may upon asking give .. Olivia a. 3 s. 4

We intended to keep in darkness, what occasion now reveals before 'tis ripe.. Olivia a. 5 s. 1

You must confine yourself, within the modest limits of order..Maria a. 1 s. 3

Young as thou art, thine eye has stayed upon some favour, that it loves.. Du. a. 2 s. 4

Youth is bought more oft, than begg'd or borrow'd.. Olivia a. 3 s. 4

A woman that bears all down with her brain, and this her son, cannot take two from twenty, for his heart, and leave eighteen!..2 Lord a. 2 s. 1

A women's fitness, comes by fits.. Clo. a. 4 s. 1

A thing more slavish, did I ne'er, than answering a slave without a knock.. Gui. a. 4 s. 2

All solemn things, should answer solemn accidents.. Gui. a. 4 s. 2

And now our cowards, like fragments in hard voyages, become the life of the needy

Post. a. 5 s. 3

A nobler sir, ne'er lived, 'twixt sky and ground. . Iach. a. 5 s. 5

But not a courtier, altho' they wear their faces to the bent of the King's looks, hath a heart, that is not glad at the thing they scowl at..1 Gent. a. 1 s. 1

By her election, may be truly read, what kind of man he is.. 1 Gent. a. 1 s. 1 But I could then have lookupon

ed

him without the help

of admiration, tho' the catalogue of his endowments, had been tabled by his side, and I to peruse him by items.. Iach. a. 1 S. 5

Blessed be those, how mean so e'er, who have their honest wills, which season comfort.. Imo. a. 1 s. 7

Boldness be my friend! arm me audaciously from head to foot.. Iach. a. 1 s. 7

Behold divineness no elder than a boy.. Bel. a. 3 s. 6

Brothers, man and man, should be, but clay and clay, differs in dignity, whose dust is both alike.. Imo. a. 4 s. 2

Be not as is our fangled world, a garment, nobler than that it covers.. Post. a. 5 s. 4

By medicine, life may be prolonged, yet death will seize the Doctor to.. Cym. a. 5 s. 5

Briefly die their joys, that place them on the truth of girls and boys.. Luc. a. 5 s.

5

Beaten for loyalty excited me to treason.. Bel. a. 5 8. 5

Consider when you alone perceive me like a crow, that

CYMBELINE.

25

it is place, which lessens and sets off.. Bel. a. 3 s. 3

Cowards father cowards, and base things sire base.. Bel. a. 4 s. 2

Deliver with more openness your answers to my demands.. Imo. a. 1 s. 7 Discourse is heavy fasting ..Bel. a. 3 s. 6

Do not play in wench like words, with that which is so serious.. Gui. a. 4 s. 2

(Death) being an ugly monster, 'tis strange he hides him in fresh cups, soft beds, sweet words, or hath more ministers, than we that draw his knives i' the war..Post. a. 5 s. 3

Every good servant, does not all commands. . Post. a. 5 s. 1

From every one, the best she hath and she of all compounded out-sells them all.. Clo. a. 3 s. 5

Flow, flow, you Heavenly blessings on her.. Pisa. a. 3 8.5

Falsehood is worse in kings than beggars.. Imo. a. 3 s. 6

For condition, a shop of all the qualities that man

[merged small][ocr errors]

For so long as he could make me with his eye or ear distinguish him from others, he did keep the deck with glove, or hat, or handkerchief still waving, as the fits or starts of his mind could best express, how slow his soul sailed on, how swift his ship ..Pisa. a. 1 s. 4

Fold down the leaf, where I have left.. Imo. a. 2 s. 2

For there's no motion, that tends to vice in man, but I affirm it is the woman's part ..Post. a. 2 s. 5

[blocks in formation]

26

CYMBELINE.

this...Post. a. 5 s. 1

He that hath her, I mean that married her, alack good man!-and therefore banished, is a creature such as, to seek through the regions of the Earth for one his like, there would be something failing in him that should compare.. 1 Gent. a. 1 s. 1

How fine this tyrant can tickle where she wounds.. Imo. a. 1 s. 2

How worthy he is, I will leave to appear hereafter, rather than story him, in his own hearing.. Phil. a. 1 s. 5

He furnaces the thick sighs from him.. Iach. a. 1 s. 7

He sits 'mongst men like a descended God.. Iach. a. 1 s. 7

He never can meet more mischance than come to be, but nam'd of thee.. Imo. a. 2 8. 3

Her pretty action did out sell her gift, and yet enriched it too..Iach. a. 2 s. 4

Horses have been nimbler than the sands that run in the clock's behalf.. Imo. a. 3 8. 2

Haply this life is best, if quick life be best, sweeter to that have a sharper

known.. Guid. a. 3 s. 3

How hard it is, to hide the sparks of nature.. Bel. a. 3 s. 3

Hit the innocent mansion of my love-my heart-fear not 'tis empty of all things but grief.. Imo. a. 3 s. 4

Iath Britain all the sun that shines! day, night, are they not but in Britain, i' the world's volume, our Britain seems as of it, but not in it Imo. a. 3 s. 4

[ocr errors]

He cut our roots in characters, and sauced our broths, as Juno had been sick and he her dieter.. Gui. a. 4 s. 2

Herbs that have on them the cold dew of the night, are strewings fitt'st for graves.. Bel. a. 4 s. 2

Heaviness and guilt within my bosom, take off my manhood.. Iach. a. 5 s. 2

He was too good to be where ill men were, and was the best of all, amongst the rarest of good ones. . Iach. a.

5 s. 5

Hearing us praise our loves of Italy for beauty that made barren the swell'd boast of him who best could speak.. Iach. a. 5 s. 5

Hang there like fruit, my

« AnteriorContinuar »