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النشر الإلكتروني

1674

Tinte. Now he weighs time, even to the utmost grain

Were growing time once ripen'd to my will

Of one or both of us the time is come

Henry's foliloquy on the divifion and employment of time

Oh heavy times begetting fuch events

Sent before my time into this breathing world

Mellow'd by the stealing hours of time

A. S. P. C.L,

Henry v. 24 519/2/31 Henry vi. 24 553 149 2 Henry vi. 5 2 60121 3 Henry vi. 25 614 130 Ibid. 2 5 614 2 10 Richard iii. 116341 6 Ibid. 3 7 655 212

- And when old Time shall lead him to his end, goodness and he fill up one monument

For holy offices I have a time; a time to think upon the past of the
I bear i' the state; and nature doth require her times of prefervation
Will the time serve to tell

The dust on antique time would lie unswept

If the time thrust forth a cause for thy repeal

-'s state made friends of them

Every time ferves for the matter that is then born in it

Henry viii. 2 1 680111

business, which

Ibid. 3 2 689 258

Coriolanus. 16 709 2/22

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Be you not troubled with the time, which drives o'er your content these

ceffities

- With news the time's with labour; and throws forth each minute fome And time is at his period

And canst use the time well if the time use thee well

Strange times, that weep with laughing, not with weeping

muft friend or end

When time is old and hath forgot itself

Ibid. 2 2 774143

strong ne

Ibid. 3 6 785125

Ibid. 3 7 786 134

Ibid. 4 12 796 18

Tim. of Atb. 3 1 813121

Ibid. 51 82512

Troi. and Creff. 12 859 233

hath, my lord, a wallet at his back, wherein he puts alms for oblivion
is like a fashionable host, that flightly shakes his parting guest by the hand

Ibid. 3 2 874153

Ibid. 3 3 876 113

Ibid. 3 3 876 134 cha

Ibid. 3 3 876142

- For beauty, wit, high birth, vigour of bone, defert in fervice, love, friendship,
rity, are subjects all to envious and calumniating time
Injurious time now, with a robber's haste, crams his rich thievery up, he knows not

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The end crowns all; and that old common arbitrator, Time, will one day
It is my mistress: fince the is living, let the time run on, to good or bad
The time will not allow the compliments which very manners urge

be thine, and thy best graces spend it at thy will

-The time is out of joint

- For who would bear the whips and scorns of time
Time-bewafted light

Tim'd. Whose every motion was tim'd with dying cries
Time's flies.

Time-boncur'd. Old John of Gaunt, time-honour'd Lancaster
Timeless. Who perform'd the bloody office of his timeless end
- Must I behold thy timeless cruel death

- Poifon, I sce, hath been his timeless end

What a devil haft thou to do with the time of the day

Timeher. And thanks to you that call'd me, timelier than my purpose,
Timely. He did command me to call timely on him; I have almeft flipt
Time of day.
Time-pleafer. The devil a Puritan that he is, or any thing constantly

By time to come, that thou bath wronged in the time

Time to come.
Timon. And critic Timon laugh at idle toys
TIMON OF ATHENS.

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[Timon of Athens, let it be remembered that some editions of Shakspeare, begin
the 5th Act, with what is here called the second Scene of Act 5, fo that the refe-
rence to act and scene, after A. 4, S. 3. will not answer to all editions.]

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Tindt. Plutus himself that knows the tinct and multiplying medicine - And there I fee such black and grained spots, as will not leave their tinct Tinflure. Go and fee: if you can bring tincture, or luftre, in her lip, her eye W.'s Tale. 3 2 345261

Merry W. of Winds. 1 3 49 115
F.C. 2 2 750/260
Coriolanus. 2 1 712156
Twelfth Night. 2 3 315 1343
Tinkers

- And that great men shall prefs for tinctures, stains, relicks, and cognizance
Tinder-box. I am glad, I am fo acquit of this tinder-box
Tinder-like. Hafty and tinder-like, upon too trivial motion
Tinkers. To gabble like tinkers at this time of night

:

"

Tinkers. I am so good a proncient in one quarter of an hour, that I can drink with any

tinker in his own language, during my life
The lord ambassador, sent from a fort of tinkers to the king
the misty mountains' tops tip-toe on

Tip-toe.

Jocund day

stands

A. S. P. C. L.

1 Henry iv. 24451229

2 Henry vi. 3 2 589 2 13

Tire. The shop-tire, the tire-valiant, or any other tire of the Venetian admittance

I like the new tire within excellently

- And, like an empty eagle, tire on the flesh of me and of my fon

Romeo and Juliet. 35 987 143

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Then put my tires and mantles on him, whilst I wore the sword Tir'ft. When thou shalt be disedg'd by her that now thou tir'ft on Tiring. Upon that were my thoughts tiring

Tirra-lirra. The lark, that tirra-lirra chaunts

Tirrits. I'll forswear keeping house, before I'll be in these tirrits and frights 2 Henry iv. 24
Titan. Didst thou never fee Titan kiss a dish of butter, pitiful hearted Titan, that melted
at the sweet tale of the fun

Whose virtues will, I hope, reflect on Rome, as Titan's rays on earth

Yet do thy cheeks look red as Titan's face

Let Titan rise as early as he dare, I'll through and through you
Alack, no remedy to the greedy touch of common kiffing Titan
And flecked darkness, like a drunkard, reels from forth day's
Titan's wheels

Titania. D. P.

Titus Andron. 12

Ibid. 2 5

8412 5

Troil. and Creffida. 5 11 89116
Cymbeline. 3 4 910255

-, I am a fpirit of no common rate, the summer still doth tend upon my state, and I

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path-way, made by

Romeo and Juliet. 2 3 977 1 50

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Tithe. No Italian priest shall tithe or toll in our dominions
- Every tithe foul, 'mongst many thousand dismes, have been as dear as Helen's T.&C. 2 2
Titinius. D. P.

Title. And feal the title with a lovely kiss

'Tis only title thou disdain'st in her, the which I can build up
O that I had a title good enough to keep his name company

Now does he feel his title hang loose about him, like a giant's robe upon a dwarfish

thief

Barely in title, not in revenue, -richly in both if justice had her right

Macbeth. 4 2 384 111 Richard ii. 2 1 421258

And, withal, to pry into his title, the which we find too indirect for long continuance

1 Henry iv. 43 46717

The feverals, and unhidden passages, of his true titles to fome certain dukedoms Η.ν. 1
Will you, we shew our title to the crown? if not, our fwords shall plead it in the

field

Under what title shall I woo for thee

You may wear her in title yours

All thy other titles thou hast given away; that thou waft born with Title-leaf. Yea, this man's brow, like to a title-leaf, foretells the nature of lume

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Title-tattle. There is no tittle-tattle, no pibble-pabble, in Pompey's camp

Henry v. 4

1

528 1 12

Titus. D. P.

Timon of Ath.

803

TITUS ANDRONJČUS.

831

To-and-fro-conflitting wind and rain

Lear. 3

1 946 126

To be, or not to be, that is the question

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Toad. Which, like the toad, ugly and venomous, wears a precious jewel in his head

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Let thy spiders, that fuck up thy venom, and heavy gaited toads, lie in their way

To help thee curse this poifonous bunch-back'd toad

Richard ii. 3 2 426 223 3 Henry vi. 2 612 241 Richard ii. I 636 243

2

2

Ibid. 1 3

64125

Ibid. 44 66017

Ibid. 4 4 660223

Troi. and Creff.33 870111

But the, good foul, had as lieve fee a toad, a very toad, as see him Romeo and Juliet. 2 4 980148

Ibid. 3 3 98728

Toad

1676

A. S. P. C. L

Toad. I had rather be a toad, and live upon the vapour of a dungeon, than keep a corner! in the thing I love, for others' uses

Or keep it as a cistern, for foul toads to knot and gender in

Toad-fputted. A most toad-fpotted traitor

Toats-ftool.

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Toaft. Either to harbour fled, or made a toast for Neptune
Toafts and butter. I prest none but such toasts and butter, with hearts in their bellies no

bigger than pins' heads

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Tod. Every 'leven wether tods; every tod yields pound and old shilling Winter's Tale. 4 2 3482 46

Toe. Why the great toe?-For that being one o' the lowest, basest, poorest, of this most wife re ellion, thou goest foremost

- The man that makes his toe, what he his heart should make, shall of a corn cry, woe

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Farewel, Lavinia, my noble sister; O, 'would thou wert as thou 'tofore hast been Toged confuls

Toil. They have pitch'd a toil; I am toiling in a pitch

Titus Andron. 3
Othello. I

110432 13 160 160

Love's Lab. Loft. 4 3

Why do you go about to recover the wind of me, as if you would drive me into a

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Hamlet. 3 2 1022 123 Two Gent. of Verona. 4 3 4114 Love's Labor Loft. 5 2 170 1 31

That what in time proceeds, may token to the future our past deeds

Do you not read fome tokens of my fon, in the large composition of this
That all their eyes may bear those tokens home, of our restored love and

This token serveth for a flag of truce betwixt ourselves
By wounding his belief in her renown with tokens thus and thus
Send the token of reprieve

I never gave him token

All's Well. 4 2 2962 47

man K. 7.11 388 2 7 amity 2 H. iv. 4 2 4952 6 1 Henry vi. 3 1556141 Cymbeline. 5 5 925243 Lear. 53 96519 Otbello. 5 2 1076 160 Ant. and Cleo. 38 786 2 16

Token'd. On our fide like the token'd pestilence, where death is sure
Tolerable. For the watch to babble and talk is most tolerable and not to be endured

Much Ado About Nothing. 3 3 13445

Toll. I will buy me a fon-in-law in a fair, and toll him: for this, I'll none of him

All's Well. 5 3 3032/60 2 Henry iv. 44 4992 6

Tolling. When like the bee tolling from every flower the virtuous sweets
Tomb. In a tomb where scandal never fslept, save this of hers, fram'd by thy villainy

- Hang her an epitaph upon her tomb, and fing it to her bones

M. Ado Ab. Noth. 5 1 141 247
Ibid. 5 1 143 237

If a man do not erect in this age his own tomb, ere he dies, he shall live no longer

in monument, than the bell rings and the widow weeps

A tomb must cover thy sweet eyes
Gilded tombs do worms infold

of orphan's tears

Methinks,

I fee thee, now thou art so low, as one dead in the

Ibid. 5 2 145 17 1 195151 7 207 18 2 692 163

Mids. Night's Dream. 5
Mer. of Venice. 2
Henry viii. 3
bottom of a tomb

Romeo and Juliet. 35987239

Sweet tomb, that in thy circuit dost contain the perfect model of eternity R.&7.5 3 9551 14

Cymbeline. 1 7 900151

Tomboys. To be partner'd with tomboys
Tom o Bedlam. My cue is wond'rous melancholy, with a figh like Tom o' Bedlam Lear. I
To-morrow creeps in this petty pace from day to day, to the last syllable of recorded

time

2

934 1 11

Macbeth. 5 5 385141

Tongs and bones. I have a reasonable good ear in mufic, let us have the tongs and the

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Mids. Night's Dream. 4 1189253

Mortality and mercy in Vienna live in thy tongue and heart
If you should need a pin, you could not with more tame a tongue

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Tempeft. 2

7155

Ibid. 2 2

112 10

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Oh, time's extremity! haft thou so crack'd and splitted my poor tongue in

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a

Tongue. If thou be'st so shrewd of thy tongue
-All hearts, in love, use their own tongues

I cannot endure my Lady Tongue

- And his tongue is the clapper

What pace is it thy tongue keeps

Men are only turn'd into tongue, and trim ones too

A. S. P. C. L.

Much Ado Abt. Norb. 2 1 125/1/56

No woman shall come within a mile of my court, on pain of lofing her tongue

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Love's Lab. Loft. 1 1 148222

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Which his fair tongue (conceit's expositor) delivers in such apt words

His tongue all impatient to speak and not fee

Lend me the flourish of all gentle tongues

:

His tongue filed

You have a double tongue within your mask

Rein thy tongue

Ibid. 4 3 163 1 I

Ibid. 5 1 164149

Ibid. 5 2 168 158

Ibid. 5 2 1722 18

The world's large tongue proclaims you for a man replete with mocks
Man's tongue is not able to conceive what my dream was

Ibid. 52

Mids. Night's Dream. 4 1

Silence is only commendable in a neat's tongue dry'd

Finds tongues in trees

I'll hang on every tree

Mer. of Ven. 1 1

As You Like It. 2 1

229 1 24

Ibid. 3 2 235 234

174 125 1912 18 1982 19

With my tongue in your tail

Only fin and hellish obstinacy tie thy tongue

I find my tongue is too fool-hardy

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I must put you into a butter woman's mouth, and buy another of Bajazet's mule

Ere my heart durft make too bold an herald of my tongue

- Let my tongue blister; and never to my red-look'd anger be the trumpet any more

I have deserv'd all tongues to talk their bitterest

And make reply without a tongue

Oh that my tongue were in the thunder's mouth

Cut out my tongue so I may keep mine eyes

What my tongue speaks, my right drawn fword may prove

The bitter clamour of two eager tongues

Now my tongue's use is to me no more than an unstringed viol

K. John. 3 3 399250

Ibid. 3 4 40026

Ibid. 4 1 402 243

Richard ii. 1 1 414 1 26

Ibid. 1 1 414130

Ibid. 1

-Within my mouth you have engoal'd my tongue, doubly portcullis'd with my teeth and lips

of dying men inforce attention like deep harmony

3 417 2 36

Ibid. 1 3 417241

Ibid. 2 1 419 252

This tongue, that runs fo roundly in thy head, should run thy head from thy unre-
verend shoulders

His tongue is now a stringless instrument

Discomfort guides my tongue, and bids me speak of nothing but despair -Care-tun'd tongue

Ibid. 2 1 42118

Ibid. 2 1 421140

Ibid. 3 2 427.123

Ibid. 3 2 427 153

Ibid. 41 431 156

I know your daring tongue scorns to unfay what once it hath deliver'd
My tongue cleave to my roof within my mouth, unless a pardon, ere I rise, or speak

And gave the tongue a helpful ornament; a virtue that was never feen in you

And his tongue sounds ever after as a sullen bell

Ibid. 5 3 437 127

1

1 Henry iv. 31458 128 2 Henry iv. 1 1 474 254

- Turning your tongue divine to a loud trumpet, and a point of war
- I have a whole school of tongues in this belly of mine; and not a tongue of

speaks any other word but my name

-These fellows of infinite tongue, that can rhime themselves into ladies
they do always reason themselves out again

- My tongue is rough, coz'; and my condition is not smooth

Ibid. 4 1 4931 8

them all

Ibid. 4 3 496 146

favours,

Henry v. 5 2 539 2 18
Ibid. 5 2 540236

- Sharp Buckingham unburdens with his tongue the envious load that lies upon his

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Have I a tongue to doom my brother's death, and shall that tongue give pardon to

a flave

-spit their duties out, and cold hearts freeze

Richard iii. 2 1 645 19
Henry vii. 2 675 116

Tongue. The tongue our trumpeter

-These are the tribunes of the people, the tongues o' the common mouth

- Your good tongue, more than the instant army we can make, might stop our countryman

- This tongue had not offended so to day if Caffius might have rul'd Mince not the general tongue

- So, now go tell, an if thy tongue can speak who 'twas that cut thy tongue, and ra

vish'd thee

- O, that delightful engine of her thoughts

Speaking is for beggars, he wears his tongue in his arms

- Struck me with her tongue most ferpent-like, upon the very heart

A.S. P. C.L

Coriolanus.11 1 704/2/19

Ibid. 3 1

719135

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And that thy tongue some say of breeding breathes

Ibid. 5 3

9632 53

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Romeo and Juliet. 32

984/2/20

Tongues [Languages] I would I had bestowed that time in the tongues, that I have in

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- You might haply think, tongue-ty'd ambition, not replying, yielded

- They vanish tongue-ty'd in their guiltiness

Jul. Cafar. 1

Richard m. 3 7 655152

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- And Cupid grant tongue-ty'd maidens here, bed, chamber, Pandar to provide this

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Took. And took it on his death, that this, my mother's fon, was none of his
Tool. Or have we fome strange Indian, with the great tool, come to court, the women
so befiege us

K. John. 1

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Tooth of time. When it deserves a forted refidence 'gainst the tooth of time Meaf. for M. 5 1
Tooth-ach. This is no charm for the tooth-ach

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There was never yet philofopher, that could endure the tooth-ach patiently Ibid. 5 T
- He that fleeps, feels not the tooth-ach
Tooth-pick. Now you, traveller, he and his tooth-pick at my worship's mess K. John. 1
Tooth-picker. Fetch you a tooth-picker now from the farthest inch of Afia M. A. Ab. N. 2

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- He's a coward and a coystril, that will not drink to my niece, till his brains turn o' the toe like a parish top

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He turn'd me about with his finger and thumb, as one would fet up a top
Edmund the base shall top the legitimate

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Tup-gallant. Which to the high top-gallant of my joy must be my convoy

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Topas. Sir Topas, the curate, who comes to visit Malvolio the lunatick

Topless. Sometime great Agamemnon, thy toplefs deputation he puts on Troi. and Creff. 1 3 863123

Ibid. 5 3 9642 14

Tw. Night. 4 2 in the fecret

327/1/6z

Rom.and Jul. 2 4 980133

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- I'll look no more; left my brain turn, and the deficient fight topple down headlong

Torches. Heaven doth with us, as we with torches do

Thou haft fav'd me a thousand marks in links and torches
Here dies the dusky torch of Mortimer

Behold, this is the happy wedding torch, that joineth Roan unto her countrymen Ib. 3 2
Did defire you to burn this night with torches

-Since the torch is out, lie down, and stray no further

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Lear. 4 6 356237

Hery viii. 1

16732 18

Meas. for Meaf.

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1 Henry iv. 3
I Henry vi. 2

76117 462111

5 55425 557118

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