- Alas! poor hurt fowl Foul. For nothing can feem foul to those that win -If you grow foul with me, Pistol, I will scour you with my rapier AS. P: C. L. 1 Henry iv. Tam. of the Shrew. 5 Feally. Doft thou defire her foully for those things that make her good Meaf. for Meaf. 2 Foulness. Who loved her fo, that speaking of her foulness wash'd it with tears - Praised be the gods for thy foulness! fluttishness may come hereafter As You Like It. 3 3 - He's fallen in love with her foulness Founded. A man that all his time, hath founded his good fortunes on your love Othello. 3 Founder'd. I have founder'd nine fcore and odd posts Fount. Confecrated fount -Strange fowl light upon neighbouring ponds 2 Henry iv. 5 3 7941 7 21004 131 2 276 127 2 842 9 Mcaf.for Meaf. 4 3 96152 3 Henry vi. 4 8 627242 Henry viii. 1 Midf. Night's Dream. 2 Richard ii. 5 3 437159 Fox. Thou haft entertained a fox to be the fhepherd of thy lambs Two Gent.of Verona. 4 3 41125 · I'll warrant, we'll unkennel the fox;—let me stop this way first-so now uncape -And were't not madness then, to make the fox,furveyor of the fold Ibid. 3 4 53224 1583255 585229 M. Ado About Noth. 2 2 Henry iv.1 1 283 235 5311136 3462239 2 469 2 9 477 2 I 3 129/2/18 I I 1942 4 263 240 -Let him die in that he is a fox, by nature proved an enemy to the flock, before his chops be ftain'd with crimson blood -But when the fox has once got in his nose, he'll foon find means to make the body follow This holy fox, or wolf, or both, for he is equal ravenous as he is fubtle - He that trufts in you, where he should find you lions, finds you hares; geefe Foxfbip. Hadft thou foxship to banish him that struck more blows for Fogns, Ch' ill pick your teeth; zir: come; no matter vor your foyns Scotland hath foyfons to fill up your will, of your mere own Fragil. Nature's fragil vessels A.S. P. C. L. Timon of Athens.15 3 82712136 Fragments. The body of your difcourfe is fometime guarded with fragments Mu, Ado Ab. Noth.1 1124116 Frailty. Tho' Page be a fecure fool, and stand so firmly on his wife's frailty I 705227 1884130 18124 Merry W. of Windfor. 2 1 53235 63237 9223 3 314 35 Meaf. for Mcaf3 2 Alas, our frailty is the caufe, not we -, thy name is woman Is't frailty, that thus errs;-it is fo too King John. 57411131 Meaf. for Meaf.3 1 Frame. The maid will I frame and make fit for his attempt Chid I for that at frugal Nature's frame Whofe fpirits toil in frame of villainies your mind to mirth and merriment your manners to the time 89243 98162 Now were I happy, if his going I could frame to ferve my turn I never yet could frame my will to it: and therefore frame the law unto my will By wicked means to frame our fovereign's fall But you frame things, that are known alike But thou wilt frame thyfelf, forfooth, hereafter theirs If he can thereto frame his fpirit Thou art my warrior; I holp to frame thee Though I cannot make true wars, I'll frame convenient peace That the preparedly may frame herfelf to the way the 's forc'd to the business after your own wisdom Our state to be disjoint and out of frame Put your difcourfe into fome frame Framed. I framed to the harp many an English ditty For thou art fram'd of the firm truth of valour -- to make women false 1 Henry vi.2459227 Coriolanus. 2 7232 39 Ant. and Cleop.5798131 1 Henry iv. 3 145125 Merry Wives of Windfor. 2 53124 1051211 54237 Frampold. She leads a very frampold life with him France? In her forehead; arm'd and reverted, making war against her hair Com. of Err. 2 114:31 is a dog-hole is a ftable; we that dwell in 't, jades 3 All's Well. 2 2881 54 Ibid. 2 3 2882 3 2404136 There is no bar to make against your highness claim to France but this, which they produce from Pharamond If that you will France win, then with Scotland firft begin being ours, we'll bend it to our awe, or break it all to pieces K. John. 4 For I love France fo well that I will not part with a village of it Ibid. 2539238 1 Henry vi. 1560259 and let her Ibid. I forefee with grief the utter lofs of all the realm of France Ibid. 3 Henry vi 566116 5 568 2/28 1604259 stoop His father revell'd in the heart of France, and tam'd the king, and made the dauphin 'Tis better ufing France, than trufting France I'll win our ancient rights in France again , princefs of. D. P. Love's Labor Loft. p. 147. —, king of. D. P. Franchifed. But still keep my bofom franchis'd and allegiance clear 277 - Whose frank heart gave you all - Bearing with frank appearance their purposes toward Cyprus - Tis a good hand, a frank one - Do the old bear feed in the old frank All's Well.2 Lear. 3 4 948123 Othello. 1 3104751 Ibid 41065128. 2 Henry iv. 2 2 482219 Frank'd. As for Clarence he is well repay'd, he is frank'd up to fatting for his pains Richard i3 64c247. - In the flye of this most bloody boar my fon George Stanley is frank'd up in hold Ib. 4 5 Franker fpirit Franklins. Let boors, and franklins fay it, I'll fwear it There's a Franklin, in the wild of Kent, hath brought three hundred marks with him in gold Othello. 3 3 664 237 1061 2 20 361153 And provide me, presently, a riding fuit; no costlier than would fit a Franklin's housewife 1 Henry iv. 21 448 219 Men and men's fortunes, could I frankly use Frankly. Very frankly he confefs'd his treasons If ever any malice in your heart were hid against me, now to forgive me frankly Timon of Athens. 2 2 812111 Cymbeline. 3 2 9081 6 4 366119 Henry viii. 2 1 679 254 Troil, and Cref. 3864111 Hamlet. 5 21040 127 Comedy of Errors. 4 4 116128 Lear. 3 6 95c128 - He was a frantick fool, hiding his bitter jests in blunt behaviour Tam. of the Shrew. 3 2 264249 - If, after this command, thou fraught the court with thy unworthiness, thou dy'st I would make ufe of that good wisdom whereof I know you are fraught - Swell bofom with thy fraught Fraughtage. Our fraughtage, fir, I have convey'd aboard To the latter end of a fray, and the beginning of a feaft, fits a dull fighter, and a keen Frayed. Fetches her wind fo fhort, as if he were frayed with a sprite - 'Till the injurious Roman did extort this tribute from us, we were free Freedom, the foppery of 5 12. 906245 3 77251 Meaf. for Meaf Romeo and Juliet. I 1968 238. Freeze. Nay, you must not freeze; two women plac'd together make cold weather H. viii. 1 4 677 226. Freezing bours. How in this our pinching cave, fhall we difcourfe the freezing hours away Cymbeline.33 9082 7 Freighting Thofe girls of Italy, take heed of them; they say, our French lack language to deny, Sure they are baftards to the English; the French ne'er got them Number kill'd and taken prisoners at the battle of Agincourt That English may as French, French Englishmen, receive each other French language. Scene in the French language between Catherine and an woman Frenchman to-morrow 21 2 199 138 277 Ibid. 2 1 283130 Ibid. 2 3 286 2 28 King Fobn. 313997 Henry v.4 8 536134 Ibid. 5 2 541218 1 Henry vi. 2 Henry vi. 4 2 591 56 Cymbeline. old gentle 893 Done like a Frenchman, turn and turn again Jul. Cafar. 21747 246 - Call me what inftrument you will, though you can fret me, you cannot play upon You dare cafier be friends with me than fight with my enemy Much Ado Ab. Noth. 4 - It is a hard matter for friends to meet 139156 As You Like It. 3 2236 Ibid. 5 1 329 9 Both he, and they, and you, yea, every man, fhall be my friend again, and I'll be his) 1 Henry iv. 51 468 217 2 Henry iv. 1 473 2 52 Make friends with speed never fo few, and never yet more need Ibid. 4 4 500 219 A friend i' the court is better than a penny in purfe Wolfey's obfervations on the falling off of friends who have been made confidants Ib. 2 I 680151 Coriolanus's reflections on the ficklenefs of friends and foes Come, poor remains of friends, reft on this rock Coriolanus. 4 4 728133 Julius Cafar 4 2 758 210 Ibid. 5 5 764241 How had you been my friends elfe? why have you that charitable title from thoufands, did you not chiefly belong to my heart Timon of Athens.1 2 807 225 2 807/238 What need we have any friends, if we thould never have need of them A. S. P. C. L. Frid. Happier is he that has no friend to feed, than fuch that do even enemies exceed Timon of Athens. I 2 -Thou disease of a friend, and not himself 809 1 Ibid. 1813141 - All gone! and not one friend to take his fortune by the arm But only painted, like his varnish'd friends Ibid. 4 2 819 122 ends fhould affociate friends in grief and woe Ibid. 51 824 241 Titus Andronicus.5 3 855135 897 2 2 965227 – What viler thing upon the earth, than friends, who can bring noblest minds to basest Hamlet. 1 31004251 Had I admittance, and opportunity to friend All friends shall tafte the wages of their virtue -The friends thou hast, and their adoption try'd, grapple them to thy foul with hoops of fteel Friended. Not friended by his wish, to your high perfon his will is most malignant H. viii. 21 675 2 44 - Be friended with aptness of the season Friending. To exprefs his love and friending to you Friendfbip. That which I would discover, the law of friendship bids Has friendship fuch a faint and milky heart, it turns in less than two nights In the beaten way of friendship - If I do vow a friendship, I'll perform it Frieze. No jutty frieze Frighted. Thou haft frighted the word out of its right sense What frighted with false fire Frippery. We know what belongs to a frippery 33139 127 19 187|1| [ 201216 335128 526 146 775 2 4 809 212 813142 Hamlet. 2 2 1013115 Much Ado Ab. Noth. 5 2 144238 Fritters. Have I lived to stand in the taunt of one that makes fritters of English 18 2 20 72238 72 2 33 11052234 Macbeth. 4 I 3781 I 5722x Merry W. of Wind. 2 3 - That, from the sense of all civility, I should thus play and trifle with your reverence Fronts. Why ftands these royal fronts amazed thus And front but in that file where others tell steps with me Othello. 11045116 mine own peace 3 2 775 3 445: SI Lear. 1 4 Frontier. Majefty might never yet endure the moody frontier of a fervant brow 1 H. iv. Mu. Ado Abt. Noth. 5 infants of the fpring Love's Labor Loft.1 1148153 Mid. Night's Dream. 2 2 180117 Measure for Measure. 75 471 35 As You Like It. 4 I 49 3 19154 242 2 Tam. of the Shrew. - Say, that she frown; I'll fay, she looks as clear as morning roses newly wafh'd with dew 261221 Frown. |