For what is he they follow? truly, gentlemen, a bloody tyrant, Homo. Go to, bomo is a common name to all men Honeft. If I find her honest, I lose not my labour; if the be otherwise, 'tis labour well bestowed - in nothing but in his cloaths -, as the skin between his brows As honest as any man living, that is an old man, and no honester than I Ibid. 3 'Tis pity she's not honest, honourable No less honeft than you are mad - Though I am not naturally honest, I am so sometimes by chance If I had a mind to be honest, I see, fortune would not fuffer me Winter's Tale. 2 I 339218 Ibid. 2 3 Ibid. 4 3 35723 - Would you were half so honest! men's prayers then would seek you, not their fears Where I could not be honest, I never yet was valiant Henry viii. 5 2 6992 38 To be honest, as this world goes, is to be one man pick'd out of ten thousand Otbello. 4 - as fummer flies are in the shambles, that quicken even with blowing 2 10112 54 2 1071113 1501 154 3 577 113 1 687 120 31229 5 Two Gent. of Ver. 2 If it stand with honesty, buy thou the cottage, pasture, and the flock As You Like It. 2 4 23129 -, coupled to beauty, is to have honey a fauce to fugar To cast away honesty upon a foul flut, were to put good meat into an unclean dish Ib. 3 3 238 241 Rich honesty dwells like a miser, sir, in a poor house; as your pearl, in your foul oyster Ibid. 54 248 26 - Though honesty be no puritan, yet it will do no hurt; it will wear the furplice of humility over the black gown of a big heart All her deferving is a referved honesty, and that I have not heard examined honest man should have, he has nothing - As my honesty puts it to utterance A note infallible of breaking honesty If therefore you dare truft my honesty, that lies enclosed in this trunk, which you Ibid. 1 2 3382 18 If I thought it were not a piece of honesty to acquaint the king withal, I would do't Ibid. 4 3 355142 - What a fool honesty is! and trust, his sworn brother, a very fimple gentleman Ibid. 4 3 Mine honesty shall be my dower Mine honesty shall not make poor my greatness, nor my power work without it His honesty rewards him in itself, it must not bear my daughter Honey. That being daily fwallowed by men's eyes, they surfeited with honey Otbello. 3 3 1063237 1 Hen.vv. 3 2 46027 Henry v.4 152724 -The king hath found matter against him, that for ever mars the honey of his language Henry viii. 3 2 68828 Antony and Cleop. 2 2 775140 Honey. You have the honey still, but these the gall The sweetest honey is loathsome in its own deliciousness Death that hath suck'd the honey of thy breath Honey-bags. The honey-bags steal from the humble bees A.S, P. C. L. Troil. and Cref. 2286814- Midf. Night's Dream. 3 1 184236 Kill me a red-hip'd humble bee on the top of a thistle, and good monsieur bring me the honey-bag Honcy breath. Ibid. 4 1 189 158 Titus Andronicus. 25 841 130 Honey-derw. Then fresh tears stood on her cheeks; as doth the honey-dew upon a gather'd lily almost wither'd Honey-feed. O thou honey-feed rogue! thou art a honey-feed; honey-stalks to sheep Winter's Tale. 22 341138 Romeo and Juliet. 2 5980227 2 Henry iv. 2 1480 1 3 baits to fish, or Tit. Andron. 44 85017 Honey-fuckles. Where honey-fuckles ripen'd by the fun, forbid the fun to enter M. Ado About Noth. 3 I 131155 O thou honey-fuckle villain; wilt thou kill God's officers and the king's 2 Hen. iv. 2 14801 I Honey-frweet husband Henry v. 2 3 517 2 24 Troil. and Cref. 3 1 871245 - queen Honey words. Even in so short a space, my woman's heart grossly grew captive to his - It is as much as I can do, to keep the terms of my honour precife - Hiding mine honour in my neceffity M. W. of Windfor. 2 2 Ibid. 2 2 - Now doth thy honour stand, in him that was of late an heretic, as firm as faith Ibid. 44 But it would better fit your honour to change your mind Mu. Ado Abt. Notb. 32 Two of them have the very bent of honour - Receive such welcome at my hand, as honour without breach of honour, may make And that clear honour were purchas'd by the merit of the wearer - One in whom the ancient Roman honour more appears, than any in Italy Tam. of the Sbrew. 43 - His honour, clock to itself, knew the true minute when exception bid him speak Ibid. 41 54114 54 116 67244 133247 138 260 Ibid. 5 I 212 152 Till honour be bought up, and no fword worn, but one to dance with I 283 124 Ibid. 2 I 283 147 All the honours that can fly from us, shall on them fettle It is in us to plant thine honour, where we please to have it grow Ibid. 2 Ibid. 2 3 287 137 A scar nobly got, or a noble scar, is a good livery of honour Whence honour but of danger wins a scar; as oft it loses all Ibid. II 290 1 47 Ibid. 32 291226 For honour, 'tis a derivative from me to mine More it would content me to have her honour true, than your suspicion Winter's Ibid. 45 301 218 Tale. 21 A foot of honour better than I was. Your honour not o'erthrown by your defires, I am friend to them and you Ibid. 32 344 2 2 359262 New made honour doth forget men's names If guilty dread hath left thee so much strength as to take up mine honour's pawn, Ibid. I I defcribed Mine honour is my life; both grow in one 415 141 His honour is as true, in this appeal, as thou art all unjust 415145 High sparks of honour in thee have I seen Thou map of honour, thou king Richard's tomb, and not king Richard Ibid. 4 I 432 111 Mine honour lives, when his dishonour dies. Ibid. 56 436255 Ibid. 5 3 43727 4S3 Honour Honour. Methinks, it were an easy leap, to pluck bright honour from the pale fac'd A. S. P. C.L. 1 Henry iv. 1 3 447 19 Ibid. 3 2 460 244 -If well-refpected honour bid me on, I hold as little counsel with weak fear as you, my lord, or any Scot that this day lives Falstaff's catechism of honour I like not fuch grinning honour as Sir Walter hath Give me life: which if I can save, fo; if not, honour comes unlook'd for Ibid. 4 3 466 127 Ibid. 5 1 468 243 Ibid. 5 3 47026 Ibid. 5 3 47028 And all the budding honours on thy creft I'll crop, to make a garland for my head Ib. 5 4 471 148 My honour is at pawn; and, but my going, nothing can redeem it It feem'd in me, but as an honour snatch'd with boisterous hand -'s thought reigns folely in the breaft of every man 2 2 Henry iv. 23 483 17 Ibid. 4 4 500 26 Ibiu. 5 502 138 Henry v. 2 ch. 514 15 523 127 531141 to the field And with fpirit of honour edg'd, more sharper than your words, hie And not deface our honour with reproach From top of honour to difgrace's feet But thou preferr'st thy life before thine honour 'Tis the more honour, because more dangerous If honour may be shrouded in a hearse As I belong to worship, and affect in honour honesty Thus the cardinal does buy and fell his honour as he pleases Whofe honour heaven fhield from foil Ib. 3 5 Ibid. 4 3 Ibid. 4 3 1 Henry vi. 56 532 18 56429 2 Henry vi. 1 2 574 162 All men's honours lie like one lump before him, to be fashion'd into what pitch he pleafe Honour's train is longer than his fore-skirt Ibid. 2 2 681144 Ibid. 2 3 683215 - Too much honour: O, 'tis a burden, Cromwell, 'tis a burden too heavy for a man that hopes for heaven Half all Coninius' honours are to Marcius, though Marcius earn'd them not By deed-atchieving honour newly nam'd Ibid. 3 2 692 143 From whom I have receiv'd not only greetings, but with them change of honours Ib. 2 1 713258 He hath so planted his honours in their eyes If it be honour, in the wars, to feem the fame you are not I rais'd him, and I pawn'd mine honour for his truth Let the gods so speed me, as I love the name of honour more than I fear death We lay these honours on this man, to ease qurselves of divers slanderous loads Ibid. 4 1 758 1 14 And fell the mighty space of our large honours, for so much trash as may be grafped thus Icid. 4 3 759 118 Your honour calls you hence; therefore be deaf to my unpitied folly Ant. and Cleo. 1 3 771 2 11 Or I will live, or bathe my dying honour in the blood shall make it live again liid. 4 2 7902.39 - To-day, how many would have given their honours to have sav'd their carcases 16.15 3 921158 Honoura Her honour is an effence that's not feen Honour. To plainness honour's bound, when majesty stoops to folly A.S. P. C.L. Lear. 1 1 930/2158 But greatly to find quarrel in a straw, when honour's at the stake -But why should honour out-live honesty? let it go all M - Nought I did in hate, but all in honour Honour [Female] She's but the sign and semblance of her honour M. Ado Abt. Notb. 4 Ibid. 4 By my maiden honour, yet as pure as the unsully'd lily Love's Labour Loft. 5 2 139 14 All's Well. 4 2 296 2 26 I would, I were so sure to win the king, as I am bold, her honour will remain her's - Let there be no honour, where there is beauty Honcurable. Let her descend, bully, let her descend: my chambers are honourable Winter's Tale. 1 2 337 113 - I would, thou hadst been son to some man else, the world esteem'd thy father ho nourable As You Like It. I 2 227 15 Honourable-dangerous. An enterprize of honourable-dangerous consequence J. Cafar. 1 Mer. of Venice. 2 2 204 153 6 206 132 All hoods make not monks - My unmann'd blood bating in my cheeks with thy black mantle Hooded. You must be hooded, must you Romeo and Juliet. 3 2 983-45 Meas. for Meaf. 5 1 101 122 Hoodman-blind. Hood-wink. The prize I'll bring thee to, shall hood-wink this mischance - The time you may fo hood-wink Hood-wink'd. And the disorders, such as war, were hood-wink'd Hamlet. 341024 2 Macbeth. 4 3 381135 4 I 18155 2 9202 37 Hoofs. Many a nobleman lies stark and stiff under the roofs of vaunting enemies I Henry iv. 5 3 470144 Much Ado Ab. Norb. 2 3 130 130 -Will I live?-go with her, with her; hook on, hook on 2 Henry iv. 2 3 341225 1481110 Cymbeline. 5 5 92523 Hook-nos'd. That I may justly say with the hook-nos'd fellow of Rome, -I came, faw, - If I knew what hoop should hold us staunch, from edge to edge o' the world I would purfue it Hooted. That the is living, were it but told you, should be hooted at like an old tale Winter's Tale. 53 362 2 20 -Still as he refus'd it, the rabblement hooted Julius Cæfar. 1 2 7442 I Hop. Go, hop me over every kennel home, for you shall hop without my custom, fir Hope. I will put off my hope, and keep it no longer for my flatterer All the fair effects of future hopes Lear. 36 950156 14255 is the lover's staff Tavo Gent. of Verona. I Ibid. 3 I Thou hast beguil'd my hopes 35215 is a curtail dog in some affairs Ibid. 54 43234 Give him another hope, to betray him to another punishment 5216 There's fome [comfort] in hope-it is a bitter deputy baftard hope neither There is but one hope in it that can do you any good, and that is but a kind of 87 126 94142 - No other advantage in the process, but only the lofing of hope by time All's Well. Was the hope drunk, wherein you dreft yourself 4S4 5213249 277123 296 217 355 129 368 137 Hope. A.S. P. C. L. defcribed Hope. I have loft my hopes:--perchance, even there, where I did find my doubts Macbeth. 43 380237 Richard ii. 22 423128 I fee fome sparkles of a better hope, which elder days may happily bring forth Ib. 5 3 437 1 12 - By how much better than my word I am, by so much shall I falfify men's hopes -The very bottom and the foul of hope I Henry iv. 1 2 445 119 Ibid. 4 1.464 140 England did never owe so sweet a hope, so much misconstrued in his wantonness Ib. 5 2 469213 It never yet did hurt, to lay down likelihoods, and forms of hope 2 Henry iv. 13 478230 - Thus do the hopes we had in him touch ground, and dash themselves to pieces Ibid. 4 1492 143 I had hope of France, as firmly as I hope for fertile England - My hope is gone, now Suffolk is deceas'd Thus do I hope to shake king Henry's head -Such hope have all the line of John a Gaunt Our hap is lofs, our hope but fad despair 'Till then fair hope must hinder life's decay Shamefully by you my hopes are butcher'd Who builds his hope in air of your fair looks, lives like a drunken failor on a mast Ib. 34652234 True hope is swift, and flies with swallows wings; kings it makes gods, and meaner creatures kings - Farewell my hopes of court! my hopes in heaven do dwell The ample propofition, that hope makes in all defigns begun on earth below, fails in the promis'd largeness In these fear'd hopes, I barely gratify your love Ibid. 1 3 861242 Cymbeline. 2 4 904 141 - I do spy a kind of hope, which craves as defperate an execution as that is defperate which we would prevent Therefore my hopes, not furfeited to death, stand in bold care Hopeful. To the hopeful execution do I leave you of your commiffions Hopeless to find, yet loth to leave unfought Hop'A. Be that thou hop'st to be; or what thou art resign to death Hopkins, Nicholas. He was brought to this by a vain prophecy of Nicholas Ibid. 2 1 675253 679 132 Titus Andron. 4 2 846 2 13 Hamlet. 999 Merry W. of Windfor. 5 I 70144 Ibid. 5 5 712 12 85146 Much Ado Ab. Norb. 1 1 123255 Ibid. 2 1125161 Ibid. 2 3 129238 Ibid. 5 1 142 246 Ibid. 5 4 146 112 Meas. for Meaf. 24 When shall we fet the favage bull's horns on the sensible Benedick's head There's no staff more reverend than one tipt with horn A cry more tuncable was never halloo'd to, nor cheer'd with horn As You Like It. 3 3 238 255 Why horns; which fuch as you are fain to be beholden to your wives for It would do well to fet the deer's horns upon his head, for a branch of victory What woman-post is this, hath the no husband, that will take pains to blow a horn for her King John. 138924 - He hath the horn of abundance, and the lightness of his wife shines through it 2 H.iv. 1 2 476 146 - Being but the horn and noise o' the monsters Coricianus. 3 1 720 124 Thrufts forth his horns again into the world; which were in-shell'd, when Marcius ftood for Rome Coriolanus. 46 731125 - O, that I knew this husband, which, you say, must change his horns with garlands Antony and Cleop. 1 2 768146 Horn. |