For ftill thy eyes, which I may call the fea, do ebb and flow with tears With one aufpicious, and one dropping eye Make thy two eyes, like ftars, start from their spheres 952119 9571 37 2975213 Ibid. 3 1 982135 Hamlet. 1 21001217 2 1015121 Ibid. 2 Ibid. 3 4 1024 142 Ibid. 3 41024 26 Othello. 2 3 10551 7 Ibid. 2 3 105519 Ibid. 5 Eye-balls. Your bugle eye-balls Upon thy eye-balls murderous tyranny fits in grim majesty to fright the world As You Like It.3 2 1076|1|27 5240226 And on my eye-lids fhall conjecture hang Do not for ever with thy vailed lids feek for thy noble father in the dust Eyes' windows. Thy eyes' windows fall, like death, when he shuts up the day of life Much Ado About Nothing. 4 1 Love's Labor Loft. 3 1 Hamlet. 1 138 132 1542 42 21002130 990 229 Fabulous ftory. That former fabulous ftory, being now feen poffible enough, got His heart's meteors to cling in his face Saffron face 307 1 Henry vi. 4 2 561243 Winter's Tale. 2338210 Coriolanus. 1 1 704219 credit H.viii. 1 1672 133 Com. of Err.3 1 109 112 Ibid. 4 2 113213 And with no face, as it were, outfacing me Ibid. 5 1 1191 9 This grained face of mine be hid in fap-consuming winter's snow Ibid. 5 1 1192 24 Mu. Ado Abt. Noth. 11 121210 It is a witness still of excellency to put a strange face on his own persection Ibid. 3 129 223 Ibid. 3 2 133 159 Ibid. 5 4 146 19 Vouchsafe to fhew the funshine of your face, that we, like savages, may worship it There's no art, to find the mind's conftruction in the face Your face, my Thane, is as a book, where men may see strange matters Ibid. 5 1 331113 Winter's Tale. 4 3 350149 Macbeth. 1 4 366 127 Ibid. 1 5 367141 K. Jobn.11 3891 6 Face. Face. Your face hath got five hundred pound a year, yet fell your face for five pence, and 'tis dear Then call them to our prefence, face to face A. S. P. C. L. K. Jobn. 1 1389117 Richard ii. 1 Was this face, the face that every day, under his houshold roof, did keep ten thoufand men Was this the face, that, like the fun, did make beholders wink I never fee thy face, but I think upon hell-fire, and Dives, that liv'd in purple His face is full of bubukles, and whelks and knobs, and flames of fire But that thy face is, vizor-like, unchanging For by his face straight shall you know his heart Had their faces been loose, this day they had been loft How long her face is drawn When my face is fair, you shall perceive whether I blush or no I knew by his face there was something in him 2 41327 Ibid. 41 434 119 Ibid. 4 1 1 H. iv. 3 3 434122 4612 55 Henry iv. 1 Ibid. 4 2 695227 Coriolanus. 19711127 Ibid. 4 5 7291 5 Thinking, by this face, to faften in our thoughts that they have courage Jul. Cæfar. 5 1 762 115 All mens faces are true, whatfoe'er their hands are Ant. and Cleop.2 6 779243 Round to a faultinefs,-for the most part too, they are foolish that are so - God hath given you one face, and you make yourselves another Ibid. 5 2 7991 54 Tam. of the Sbrew. 4 3 2712 12 Facile. So may he with more facile question bear it Facinorous. He is of a moft facinorous spirit Fact. As you are past all shame, (those of your fact are so) so past all truth Wint. Tale. 3 2 Love's Labor Loft. 4 2 158 243 Othello. 1 3 1047133 All's Well. 2 3 286118 344248 246 121 8692 4 7341 27 746 136 461|1|34| 655141 to 659 2 57 Not as protector, steward, substitute, or lowly factor for another's gain Faculty. Unfeen, yet crescive in his faculty Fadge. We will have, if this fadge not, an antick Julius Cæfar. 1 3 Love's Labor Loft. 5 1 165257 Mid. Night's Dream. 2 I Fail. I cannot think, my sister in the leaft would fail her obligation Goodly and gallant shall be false and perjur'd by thy great fail Yea, man and birds are fain of climbing high No man alive fo fain as I Lear. 2 4 1792 13 842136. 944 134 1241 7 909253 1101 1 3 Henry vi. 47 1 128 212 1578 1 37 585 218 626219 935118 3 Henry vi. 1 The good old man would fain that all were well But you have that in your countenance, which I would fain call master Faint. Why faint you, lords? my title's good Lear.1 3683222 49352 8 Ibid. 1 2934153 Midj. Night's Dr. 3 2 1891 19 Two Gent. of Verona. 4 3 412/22 Meaf. for Meaf. 51 79228 Fair. Quibbling on different meanings of that word I am compared to twenty thousand fairs A. S. P. C. L. Love's Labor Loft.14 11571/18 — Call you me fair? that fair again unsay. Demetrius loves your fair: O happy fair! Midf. Night's Dream. 1 1 177 1 32 213152 Ibid. 4 1 217125 As You Like It. 3 2 235 154 Taming of the Sbrew. 2 1260 122 I will buy me a fon-in-law in a fair; and toll him: for this, I'll none of him is foul, and foul is fair Fair-fac'd league Ibid. 52 276143 All's Well. 5 3 303 259 363|1|15 Ibid. 1 1364 238 Henry v.5 2 538 135 5542 42 2 Henry vi. 3 587 Richard ii. 1 3 640214 Trail. and Creff:1 1 858 215 Ibid. 1 3 863|2|37 Ibid. 3 1 871 222 Fairly. To be faid, an honest man, and a good house-keeper, goes as fairly as to fay a Henry viii. 5 3 Troilus and Creffida. 3 3 Coriolanus. 1 9 King John. 5 2 Merry Wives of Wind. 4 4 68 142 Ibid. 4 4 Where is Nan now, and her troop of fairies Ibid. 5 3 71118 black, grey, green, and white Their employments Ibid. 5 5 712 34 Our radiant queen hates sluts and fluttery Ibid. 5 5 71237 A fiend, a fairy, pityless and rough Comedy of Errors. 4 2 113249 D. P. Midf. Night's Dream. 175 Their employment That fome night-tripping fairy had exchang'd in cradle clothes our children 1 H.iv. 11442221 With female fairies will his tomb be haunted Winter's Tale. 3 3 547216 Antony and Cleop.48 7931 8 Then no planets strike, no fairy takes, nor witch hath power to charm Fairy dances green four ringlets Cymbeline. 2 2 902121 Ibid. 3 913143 Ibid. 4 2 917111 Lear. 4 6 956244 11001 142 19163 Hamlet. I Fairy revel. Afk him, why that hour of fairy revel, in their fo facred paths he dare to tread in fhape prophane Merry Wives of Windfor. 4 4 Faith. Thou haft no faith left now, unless thou hadst two, and that's far worse than none-better have none than plural faith 68 143 43216 122135 Ibid. 2 1 125 158 Ibid. 2 1 127 113 Love's Labor Loft. 4 2 159 40 Mid. Night's Dream. 3 2 1861 42 All's Well. 4 1 295260 Twelfth Night. 1 5 311229 Ibid, 2 3 316110 Ibid. 5 1330 211 Macbeth.15 2 384|1| 9 Faith and need contrafted - Play fast and loose with faith? So jest with heaven Unfwear faith fworn So mak'st thou faith an enemy to faith And welcome home again, discarded faith There is my bond of faith, to tie thee to my strong correction Men's faiths are wafer cakes Falfe king! why haft thou broken faith with me For truft not him that once hath broken faith This fecret is fo weighty, 'twill require a strong faith to conceal it There are no tricks in plain and fimple faith Few words to fair faith Which to believe of her, must be of faith, that reason, without miracle, should never plant in me Lear. I 518122 My husband is on earth, my faith in heaven But what, in faith, make you from Wittenburgh ? Romeo and Juliet. 3 19312 36 5 9892 5 21003 39 Faith'd. Would the reposal of any trust, virtue, or worth, in thee, faith'd? Faithfully. If his occasion were not virtuous, I would not urge them half fo faithfully You will try in time in defpight of a fall I can give you inkling of an ensuing evil, if it fall greater than this I fhall fall like a bright exhalation in the evening, and no man fee me more When he falls, he falls like Lucifer, never to hope again Stop, or all will fall in broil Coriolanus. 3 1 719151 Julius Caefar. 51 754161 Ibid. 4 3 91914 Fall of man. I will weep for thee; for this revolt of thine, methinks, is like another fall of man Fallen. Nay, an you weep, I am fallen indeed Fallen man. I am a poor fallen man, unworthy now to be thy lord and master Falling-from. The meer-want of gold, and the falling-from of his friends, drove him into this melancholy Falling man. O, my lord, press not a falling man too far Fallow. The bare fallow brings to teeming foyfon Her fallow leas the darnel, hemlock, and rank fumitory, doth root upon Falorous. Captain Jamy is a marvellous falorous gentleman Falfe. My falfe overweighs your true If it be ne'er fo false, a true gentleman may swear it, in the behalf of his friend If she did play falfe, the fault was her's I never was, nor never will be falfe to his bed! What is it to be falfe? Winter's Tale. 5 2 361 155 True to thee, were to prove false, which I will never be, to him that is most true to thy gods, thy brother, and thy father Heaven truly knows that thou art falfe as hell She was falfe as water Ib. 3 5 912 2 49 Lear. 5 3 963|2|42 Othello. 4 2 1070 2 35 Ibid.15 21076|1|38 Falfe Falle face muft hide what the falfe heart doth know A. S. P. C. L. Macbeth. 17 368|2|46 Falsehood, cowardice, and poor defcent, three things that women highly hold in hate O, what a goodly outfide falfehood hath Two Gent. of Verona. 3|2| 371 20 Make Creffid's name the very crown of falsehood, if ever the leave Troilus Ibid. 4 2 is worse in kings, than beggars This bait of falfehood takes this carp of truth Falfing. Nay, not sure, in a thing falfing Falstaff, Sir John. D. P. Merry W. of Wind. p. 45. His adventure in the buck-basket His adventure in the old woman of Brentford's cloaths characterized by himself in the character of Henry IV. -'s account of his foldiers - delineation of counterfeit Jack, now Sir John, was then a boy, and page to Thomas Mowbray Go, carry Sir John Falstaff to the Fleet -'s death Fame. I play'd the part of Lady Fame 2011 45 874152 87210 Cymbeline. 3 6 913 1 H. iv. p. 441. 2 H.iv. 9131 8 110092 2 107 241 473 Much Ado About Nothing.2 Let fame, that all hunt after in their lives, live registered upon our brazen tombs cannot be better held, nor more attain'd, than by a place below the first Familiar. 'Tis my familiar fin Away with him! he has a familiar under his tongue Familiarity. I hope, upon familiarity will grow more contempt He was the very genius of famine; yet, lecherous as a monkey Yet famine; ere clean it o'erthrow nature, makes it valiant Famish. What, did he marry me to famish me Merry W. of Wind.11 2 Henry iv. 3 2 Even in the fan and wind of your fair fword, you bid them rife, and Do, good Peter, to hide her face; for her fan's the fairer of the two Fancy. Cannot your grace win her to fancy him Ibid. 2 4 980 2 2 Two Gent. of Verona. 3 1 34113 265146 1322 17 1762 24 An old hat, and the humour of forty fancies prick'd in't for a feather T. of the Shrew. 32 Look you arm yourself to fit your fancies to your father's will In maiden meditation, fancy free All fancy-fick fhe is, and pale of cheer Fair Helena in fancy following me If ever you meet in fome freth cheek the power of fancy We must every one be a man of his own fancy Much Ado About Noth. 3 1 As all impediments in fancy's courfe, are motives of more fancy 180217 Ibid. 2 As You Like It. 3524028 Ibid. 4 1 295 139 Fancy. 7342 33 48 121 3851 24 491253 Rom. and Jul. 51 9942 3 2702 2 598 146 5 |