Baring. Or the baring of my beard All's Well 41 Bark. Would bark your honour from that trunk you bear, and leave you naked Sailing and return defcribed Though his bark cannot be loft, yet it fhall be tempeft-toft Even as a splitted bark, fo funder we All these the enemies to our poor bark A. S. P. C. L. 295/2/30 88 115 Meafure for Meafure. 31 And I in such a bay of death, like a poor bark, of fails and tackling reft Macbeth1 3 364223 2 Henry vi. 3 2 590 2 50 Timon of Athens. 4 Romeo and Juliet. 3 5 988221 Ibid. 5 Hamlet. 4 3 1027150 Midf. Night's Dream. 2 Barklugbly-caftle call you this at hand Barley-broth. Can fodden water, a drench for fur-reyn'd jades, their barley-broth, de Barns. If your husband have stables enough, you'll look he fhall lack no barns Much Ado About Nothing. 3 4 1361 8 Barne. Mercy on's a barne! a very pritty barne! Barn.. He loves his own barn better than he loves our house 1 Henry iv.23 4502 Barony. If my young lord your fon have not the day, upon mine honour, for a filken point I'll give my barony Barrabas. I have a daughter; would, any of the stock of Barrabas had been her hufband, rather than a chriftian! 8.3 3 Pitying the pangs of barr'd affections Hamlet,1 110012/20 Twelfth Night. 5 1 332213 Richard iii. 2 Our elders fay, the barren, touched-in this holy chase, shake off their fterile curfe 2 646 12 1703222 Barren-fpirited. A barren-fpirited fellow; one that feeds on objects, arts, and imitations Barrful. A barrful ftrife Barr ft. Thou barr'ft our prayers to the gods Barricado. Man is enemy to virginity; how may we barricado it against him All's Well.1 Twelfth Night.42 327216 Bartholomew. Go you to Bartholomew my page, and fee him drefs'd in all fuits like Court, where kings grow bafe to come at traitors' calls, and do them grace Rich. 3 3 430123 [Music] The mean is drowned with your unruly bale Bid the bafe The bafe is right; 'tis the bafe knave that jars 2 Gent. of Verona. 1 2 25257 Taming of the Skrew. 3 Bofe court. My lord, in the bafe court he doth attend to speak with you Ibid. 1 2 25258 1 264 143 3 430115 Bafo Baft. He, with two ftriplings, lads more like to run the bafe, than to commit fuch flaughter You bafe foot-ball-players Bafelefs fabrick of a vision A. S. P. C. L. 6 Cymbeline. 5 3 921 Bafe men being in love, have then a nobility in their natures more than is native to them Bafenefs. Thou unconfinable baseness 17/245 110532 23 2 54113 330132 1 Othello. 2 Merry Wives of Wind) r.2 It is the bafeness of thy fear, that makes thee ftrangle thy propriety Tw. Night. 5 And, by my body's action, teach my mind a moft inherent bafenefs Coriolanus 3 2 Fly, damned baseness, to him that worships thee Timon of Athens 3 1 813134 From whofe fo many weights of bafenefs cannot a dram of worth be drawn Cym. 3 5 912126 My noble Moor is true of mind, and made of no fuch bafenefs as jealous creatures are 724131 Othello 3 4 1065) 3 Much Ado About Nothing 4 11372 36 Bashfull. As à brother to his fifter fhew'd bafhfull fincerity and comely love Taming of the Shrew.1 256 252 Meafure for Mcafure. 3 2 91126 Comedy of Errors. 4 3 bastards he would have Sure, they are baftard to the English; the French ne'er got them The baftard's brains with thefe my proper hands fhall I dash out For 'tis a bastard, fo fure as this beard's grey You had a baftard by Polixenes, and I but dream'd it Love's Labor Luft. 5 1 165144 Merchant of Venice. 3 5 2132 55 3286 2 28 All's Well. 2 Winter's Tale. 2 3 342|1|48| Ibid. 2 3 34513 Ibid. 2 3 343 30 Ibid. 2 3 343137 Ibid. 3 2 344|2|46 For he is but a bastard to the time, that doth not fmack of observation King John. 1 1389 2 29 Thy baftard fhall be king Nature's baftards: of that kind our ruftick garden's barren; and I care not to get flips of them 32 Winter's Tale. 4 3 350212 Then make your garden rich in gilli-flowers, and do not call them bastards Ibid 4 3 350 [Wine] We shall have all the world drink brown and white bastard Meaf. for Meaf 3 2 Score a pint of bastard in the half moon Why then your brown baftard is your only drink Baftardy. Infer the baftardy of Edward's children Touch'd you the bastardy of Edward's children? Bafted. The guards are but flightly bafted on Baffinado. I will deal in poifon with thee, or in baftinado, or in fteel He gives the bastinado with his tongue Bafting. The meat wants, that I have Left it make you cholerick, and purchafe me another dry-bafting Bar. Ere the bat hath flown his cloifter'd flight D 2 Comedy of Errors. 2 1 246120 2394 251 2 1072 2 Ibid. 2 210729 Macbeth. 32 3742135 Bate of threescore He fhews me where the batchelors fit 125 256 When I said, I would die a batchelor, I did not think I should live to be married Ibid. 2 3 Batchelorship. She was the first fruit of my batchelorship Bate. Rather than fhe will bate one breath of her accustom'd crossness 1 Henry vi. 55 Mu. A. A. Noth. 2 3 131213 567 248 130238 1 Henry iv. 3 3 461223 2 Henry iv. 2 4 486145 Timon of Athens. 1 2 80917 I 177 141 Bated. Were the world mine, Demetrius being bated, the rest I'll give to be to you tranflated Midf. Night's Dream. 1 These griefs and loffes have fo 'bated me, that I shall hardly spare a pound of flesh Merchant of Venice. 3 3 212263 1 Henry iv. 4 1 464243 Hamlet. 5 Henry v. Tim. of Athens. 3 Bating. Hood my unmann'd blood, bating in my cheeks, with thy black mantle Battalia. Our battalia trebles that account Romeo and Juliet. 3 Batten. Follow your function, ge, and batten on cold bits 2 1037 125 509 3 814223 1753 124 2 983245 Richard iii. 5 3 665234 Hamlet. 3 41024 153 Tempeft. 3 2 14139 Macbeth. 4 3 382138 Meaf. for Meaf.2 1 81234 1 326 256 3 Henry vi. 3 I 616244 Ant. and Cleop. 2 7 7812 9 Ibid. 4 12 795 132 Cym. 15896 227 The seven-fold shield of Ajax cannot keep the battery from my heart This feaft of battle with mine adversary What may the king's whole battle reach unto Taming of the Shrew. 1 2 259 141 Richard .1 3 417 120 1 Henry v.4 1 465122 We would not feek a battle as we are, nor as we are, we say, we will not fhun it - When all those legs, and arms, and heads, chopp'd off in a battle, shall join Many a battle have I won in France, when as the enemy hath been ten to one Batty wings. 'Till o'er their brows, death counterfeiting sleep, with leaden legs and batty wings doth creep For this driveling love is like a great natural, that runs lolling up and down to hide his bauble in a hole Romeo and Juliet 2 4 979|1|26| Bauble. Hither comes the bauble A. S. P. C. L. Othello. 4 11068|2|31 Bavin. The skipping king, he ambled up and down with shallow jesters, and rash bavin wits Baulk'd. This was look'd for at your hand, and this was baulk'd 1 Henry iv. Twelfth Night 3 2 Ibid. 5 1 2 Barocock. Why, how now, my bawcock? how doft thou chuck Ibid. 3 4 Winter's Tale. 1 2 323235 335142 Henry v.3 Bawd. If it be not a bawd's house, it is pity of her life, for it is a naughty house If your worship will take order with the drabs and the knaves you need not fear the bawds -Thy fin's not accidental, but a trade, mercy to thee would prove itself a bawd Poor rogues and usurers men! bawds between gold and want One that would'st be a bawd, in way of good fervice Yet, the 's a fimple bawd that cannot say as much Barody-boufe. Went to a bawdy-house, not above once in a quarter-of an hour 1 Hen. iv. 3 3 -- - Ibid. For we cannot lodge and board a dozen or fourteen gentlewomen, that live honestly by the prick of their needles, but it will be thought we keep a bawdy-house straight| 33 90225 239 147 336 130 461239 462 224 - I had rather be a dog and bay the moon, than fuch a Roman. Brutus, hay not me, I'll not endure it 275237 425145 561 253 Baying. He leaves his back unarmed, the French and Welsh baying him Baynard's Caftle. If you thrive well, bring them to Baynard's Castle Bay-trees. The bay-trees in our country all are wither'd to be or not to be, that is the question Julius Cafar 3 at the heels Richard ii. 2 4 425243 Twelfth Night. 4 2 327215 Beach. Which can distinguish 'twixt the fiery orbs above, and the twinn'd ftones upon Thou rascal beadle hold thy bloody hand: why doft thou lash that whore Beads. Oh, for my beads! I crop me for a finner I'll give my jewels for a fet of beads D 3 Beads. That beads of sweat have stood upon thy brow, like bubbles in a late disturbed] A. S. P. C. L. - 1 Henry iv. 2 3 450 260 of Sorrow Of her view Richard iii. 3 Julius Cæfar. 3 Two Gent. of Ver.1 Beads-men. Thy very beads-men learn to bend their bows of double-fatal yew against thy state Bead's-man Beam. You found his mote: the king your mote did fee, but I a beam do find in each of three When holy and devout religious men are at their beads, 'tis hard to draw them thence Thy very beams will dry thofe vapours up Whose bright faces caft thousand beams upon me, like the fun Stands Coloffus-wife, waving his beam Bear. How I may bear me here thou this letter to Mrs. Page me to the prifon She bears fome breadth then them to my house They fay I will bear myfelf proudly thee well in it to Athens will I bear my folly back Let me the knowledge of my fault bear with me Merry Wives of Windfor.1 3 Comedy of Errors. 3 2 Much Ado About Nothing.2 Ibid. Midf. Night's Dream. 3 - I had rather bear with you than bear you: yet I should bear no crop, if I did bear you your body more feeming She bears me fair in hand We'll direct her how 'tis beft to bear it 77 234 1112 21 117 120 3131128 1131161 2 187262 3228118 Ibid. 2 4 230 241 Taming of the Shrew. 4 2269|1|44 Behold thine indignation, mighty heaven, and tempt us not to bear above our power King John. 5 5 410 257 ← Bear you well in this spring of time, left you be cropt before you come to prime What else more serious importeth thee to know this [letter] bears Ant, and Cleop. 1 He bears him like a portly gentleman How ftrange or odd foever I bear myfelf [Animals] Be there bears i' the town You are afraid if you fee the bear loofe, are you not Merry Wives of Windfor. 1 I have feen Sackerfon loose twenty times, and have taken him by the chain S As from a bear a man would run for life Then the two bears will not bite one another 5 97413 51008 225 I 48/2 I Ibid. 1 I 48/2 6 9 48 13 Comedy of Errors.3 2 112 I Much Ado About Nothing-3 2 1332-8 I ain as ugly as a bear, for beafts that meet me, run away for fear Midf, N.'s Dr.23 1822 In a wood they bay'd the bear with hounds of Sparta I Ibid. 4 1 190 228 Ibid. 5 1 192 143 I 202150 Tw. N.2 5 3172 37 Ibid. 3 4 3252 3 In the night, imagining fome fear, how easy is a bush suppos'd a bear Mer. of Venice. 2 To anger him, we'll have the bear again; we will fool him black and blue wolves, and bears, they fay, cafting their favageness afide, have done like offices of pity To fee how he bear tore out his fhoulder bone Winter's Tale. 2. 3343 2 19 I'll go fee if the bear be gone from the gentleman, and how much he hath eaten 16.3 3 347 227 Bear. |