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Shall we their fond pageant fee

As it were the pageants of the fea

M. W. of Wind. 1 3 49/2/27

T. of the Sbrew.

Rom. and Jul.

251

697

1 Henry iv. 4 3 466235

Tim. of Atb. 4 3 822 139

Henry viii. 1 6721 18

Tempest. 4

17247

Two Gent. of Verona. 4 3 41232

Mid. Night's Dream. 3 2

186 127

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This wide and universal theatre presents more woful pageants than the scene wherein we play in

If you will fee a pageant truly play'd

A woeful pageant have we here beheld

As You Like It. 2 7 2332 16

Being a woman, I will not be flack, to play my part in fortune's pageant

The flattering index of a direful pageant

Thou haft feen these signs; they are black vesper's pageants

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With ridiculous and awkward action (which, slanderer, he imitation calls) he

pageants us

Let Patroclus make demands to me, you shall fee the pageant of Ajax

'Tis a pageant, to keep us in false gaze

Paid. He is well paid that is well fatisfy'd

- Sorry that you have paid too much, and forry that you are paid too - And, though he came our enemy, remember he was paid for that

Pain. Accounted to the law upon that pain

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Kind gentlemen your pains are register'd where every day I turn the leaf to read

them

'Tis time to speak, my pains are quite forgot

Thank you for your pains and courtesy

Yet may your pains, fix months, be quite contrary

Macberb. 1 3 3662

Richard iii. 1 3 639 1 1

Julius Cæfar. 2 2 751130

Timon of Athens. 4 3 821142

And her prefence shall quite strike off all fervice I have done, in most accepted pain

You lay cut too much pains for purchasing but trouble

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How light and portable my pain seems now, when that which makes me bend, makes the king bow

One pain is lessen'd by another's anguish

I would not have thee linger in thy pain

Pain'd. I your vassal have employ'd, and pain'd your unknown

Paint. Yea, or to paint himfelf

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Lear. 3 6 951136

Romeo and Juliet. 1 2 9702 1

Othello. 5 2 1076240

sovereignty M. for Meas. 5 1 1012 3

Much Ado About Nothing. 3 2 133 147

Ibid. 3 2 133 2 40

Tim. of Athens. 4 3 821148

Much Ado About Notb. 1 1 1232 57

Is not more ugly to the thing that helps it, than is my deed to my most painted word

Hamlet. 3 1 1017 127

Fainted-cloth. But I answer you right painted-cloth, from whence you have studied your questions

Painted tyrant. As a painted tyrant, Pyrrhus ftood

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- Ay, a tailor, Sir; a stone-cutter, or a painter could not have made him fo ill Lear. 2 2 941 115

- And the painter with his nets

Painting. Reechy painting

Much Ado About Nothing. 3 3 1351 26
Love's L. Loft. 3 1 1542/50

- Your hands in your pocket, like a man after the old painting

The madams too, not us'd to toil, did almost sweat to bear the pride upon them,

that their very labour was to them as a painting

If any fuch be here that love this painting wherein you

I have heard of your paintings too, well enough

Palabras, neighbour Verges

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Falates. Gorgeous palaces

- My gorgeous palace, for a hermitage

- Reproach and beggary is crept into the palace of our king, and all by thee

The palace full of tongues, of eyes, of ears

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A.S. P. C. L.

Tempeft. 4 1 17/2/46 Richard ii. 3 3 429248 2 Hen. vi. 4 1592150

Titus Andronicus. 2 1 837220

Lear. I 4 937142

Romeo and Juliet. 5 3

- As where's that palace, whereunto foul things sometimes intrude not Othello. 3

Palating. (Not palating the taste of her dishonour)

Pale. For fear, I promise you, if I look pale

996 1 7 3 1061 13 878 139

Troilus and Cref. 4 1

Taming of the Shrew. 2 1

- Why should we, in the compass of a pale, keep law, and form, and due proportion R. ii. 3 4 - Behold, the English beach pales in the flood with men, with wives and boys Henry v.5 ch - And will you pale your head in Henry's glory

- Look I so pale, lord Dorfet, as the rest

261 151

430 253

356258

3 Henry vi. 14 608 224

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I

Othello. 5 2 1078251

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- Whate'er the ocean pales, or sky inclips, is thine if thou wilt have it Ant. and Cleop. 27 7811

- as thy smock

Pale-fac'd. Frighting her pale-fac'd villages with war

Palestine. I know a lady in Venice, would have walk'd bare-foot to Palestine, for a touch of his nether lip

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Cor. 5 3 736 130 768 242 768 248

Palliament. This palliament of white and spotless hue: and name thee in election for the empire

- And bear the palm, for having bravely shed thy wife and childrens blood

- Nay, if an oily palm be not a fruitful prognostication, I cannot scratch mine ear Ib. 1 2

You shall fee him a palm in Athens again, and flourish with the highest T. of Atb. 52 815233 What he shall receive of us in duty gives us more palm in beauty than we have

Lime kilns i' the palm

As love between them like the palm might flourish

- He takes her by the palm

Palmers. And palin to palm is holy palmers' kiss

- Where do the palmers lodge

Palmer's walking-staff. My fceptre, for a palmer's walking-ftaff
Palmer's staff. That hand is made to grafp a palmer's staff

Palmy. In the most high and palmy ftate of Rome

Palpable. This palpable gross play

- A very palpable hit

Troil. and Creff. 3 1 872222 Ibid. 5 1 884 145 Hamlet. 5 2 1037 2 10 Othello. 2 11053 124 Romeo and Juliet. 15 974 143 All's Weli. 35292226 Richard i. 3 3 429251 2. Henry vi. 5 1 600 127 Hamlet. 1 1/1000243

Palfy. How quickly should this arm of mine, now prisoner to the palsy, chastise thee R.1.23 425 121

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- And with a palsy fumbling on his gorget, shake in and out the rivet
Palter. Be these juggling fiends no more believ'd that palter with us in a double sense

- What other bond, than fecret Romans, that have spoke the word, and will not palter

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Midf. Night's Dream. 51 195233

Hamlet.5 2/10402

5

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Paly afbes. The roses in thy lips and cheeks shall fade to paly ashes
Pancakes. That swore by his honour they were good pancakes

I'll stand to it that the pancakes were naught, and the mustard

Pandar. To whom you would have been a pandar

- Troilus the first employer of pandars

- Camillo was his help in this, his pandar

422

Pandar. With his cap in hand, like a base pandar, hold the chamber door

A. S. P. C. L., Henry v.14 5 533 242

Let all pitiful goers-between be call'd to the world's end after my name, call them all pandars

As many as be here of Pandar's hall, your eyes, half out, weep out at Pandar's fall Ib. 511 8912 13

Thou art the pandar to her dishonour

And reason Pandar's will

Pandarly rascals

Pandarus of Troy

Troil. and Creff. 2 8742 11

Cymbeline. 3 4 909 2 14
Hamlet. 3 4 1024 215

M. W. of Windfor. 4 2

66216

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- I would play lord Pandarus of Phrygia, Sir, to bring a Crossida to this Troilus T. Night. 3 1

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Pang. Say, that fome lady, as, perhaps there is, hath for your love as great a pang of

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Pannel. Then one of you will prove a shrunk pannel, and, like green timber, warp,

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Pantheon. And in the facred pantheon her espouse
Panther. To hunt the panther and the hart with me with horn and hound, we'll give
your grace bon-jour

Ibid. 2 2 838 261

- 1 have dogs, my lord, will rouse the proudest panther in the chafe Straight will I bring you to the loathsome pit, where I espied the panther fast asleep Ib. 2 4 839246

Panthino. D. P.

Tiwo Gent. of Verona.

23

Pantingly. She heav'd the name of father' pantingly forth, as if it press'd her heart Ledr. 4 3 955 149 Pantler, butler, cook, both dame and fervant

He would have made a good pantler; he would have chipp'd bread -A hilding, for a livery, a squire's cloth, a pantler, not fo eminent Pap. Thou hast thump'd him with thy bird-bolt under the left pap Paper. 'Till the have writ a sheet of paper

Now you talk of a sheet of paper

She found Benedick and Beatrice between the sheets

He hath not eat paper, as it were, he hath not drunk ink - Here is a letter, lady; the paper as the body of my friend, and gaping wound, iffuing life blood

Winter's Tale. 4 3 350 145
well 2 Henry iv. 2 4 4861-32
Cymbeline. 2 3 903247
Love's Lab. Loft. 4 3 160224

Mu. Ado Ab. Noth. 2 3 1301SS
Ibid. 2 3 130 157
Ibid. 2 3 1302 1

Love's Lab. Loft. 4 2 1582-54

every word in it a
Merch. of Venice. 3 2

212 1 19

paper flow Rich. ii. 1 3 4182 9

- What prefence must not know, from where you do remain, let
- Thou givest so long, Timon, I fear me thou wilt give thyfelf away in paper shortly

- O damned paper, black as the ink that's on thee

Timon of Athens. 1 2 8092-21
Cymbeline. 3 2 907151

What shall I need to draw my sword? the paper hath cut her throat already Ibid. 3 4 9092 16

-Shut your mouth, dame, or with this paper shall I stop it
Paper-bullets of the brain awe a man from the career of his humour
Paper-fac'd villain.

Paper-mill. And, contrary to the king, his crown, and dignity,
paper-mill

Parable. Thou shalt never get a fecret from me but by a parable
Parcelfus

Paradise. What fool is not fo wife to lose an oath to win a paradife
- You would for paradife break faith and troth

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- No, no, although the air of paradife did fan the house, and angles offic'd all: I will

be gone

,demy-paradice

All's Well. 3 2 2912-30
Richard i. 2 1 420 131

Paradox. You undergo too strict a paradox striving to make an ugly deed look fair - What is, or is not, serves as stuff for these two to make paradoxes Troil. and Creffida. 3 863 156

I

Timon of Atb. 3 5 81624 Orbello. 2 1 1052-49 - These are old fond paradoxes 8111 Paragon. Tunis was never grac'd before with such a paragon to their queen Tempeft. 2 - An earthly paragon Two Gent. of Verona. 24 311 12 - You must fay a paragon; a paramour is, God bless us! a thing of nought Mid. Night's Dr.14 2 191/2/41

Paragon

Paragon. Hath he too expos'd this paragon to the fearful usage (at least ungentle) of the dreadful Neptune

- If thou with Cæfar paragon again my man of men

- By Jupiter, an angel! or, if not, an earthly paragon

That paragon, thy daughter

- The paragon of animals

He hath atchieved a maid that paragons description

Parallels. As near as the extremest ends of parallels

A. S. P. C.L.

Winter's Tale. 5

I 359133

Antony and Cleop. 157732 17

Cymbeline. 3 6 913146

Ibia. 5 5 925142
Hamlet. 2 2 101326

Orbello. 2 110521 13

Troil. and Greff

- How am I then a villain, to counsel Caffio to this parallel course, directly to his good

Paramour. He is a very paramour for a sweet voice

- A paramour is, God bless us! a thing of nought

3863140

Othello. 2 3 1058125

Midf. Night's Dream. 4 2

1912 40.

Ibid. 4 2 191241

- Fitter is my study and my books than wanton dalliance with a paramour 1 Henry vi. 5 2 565131 - The lean abhorred monster keeps thee here in dark to be his paramour Rom.and J.5 3 996 1 5 Paraquito. Come, come, you paraquito, answer me directly to the question that I afk

Parafite. Hope, he is a flatterer, a parafite, a keeper back of death

1 Henry iv. 2 3 4511 32
Richard ii. 2 2 423 160
Henry v. 51 53726

Parca's. Doft thou thirst, base Trojan, to have me fold up Parca's fatal web
Parcels. There be some women, Silvius, had they mark'd him in parcels as I did,

would have gone near to fall in love with him

-His eloquence, the parcel of a reckoning

- No parcel of my fear

- 'Tis, as it were, a parcel of their feaft

Parcel-bawd. A tapster, Sir, a parcel-bawd, one that ferves a bad woman
Parcell'd. Their woes are parcell'd, mine are general

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Parchment. I have your hand to shew: if the skin were parchment, and the blows you gave were ink

- I am a fcribbled form drawn with a pen upon a parchment; and against this fire do I shrink up

King John. 57 411142

Is not this a lamentable thing, that of the skin of an innocent lamb should be made
parchment

-That parchment being scribbled o'er should undo a man
Pard.

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- I do think you might pardon him, and neither heaven, nor man, grieve at the mercy Ib. 2 2 - I humbly do defire your grace of pardon

goddess of the night, &c.

Mercb. of Venice. 4 1
Mu. Ado Ab. Nothing. 53

- And by the merit of vile gold, dross, dust, purchase corrupted pardon of a man K. John. 3 - And exactly begg'd your grace's pardon, and I hope I had it

37242 82225 83141 218 138 145155

I 397 2 24

Richard ii. 11414262

- me, if you please; if not, I pleas'd not to be pardon'd, am content with all Ibid. 2 1
- An if I were thy nurse, thy tongue to teach, pardon should be the first word of thy
speech

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-For they have pardons, being ask'd, as free as words to little purpose
I minded him, how royal 'twas to pardon when least it was expected
- For which myself the ignorant motive, do fo far ask pardon, as befits mine honour
to stoop in such a cafe

Pardon'd. May one be pardon'd, and retain the offence

1

Ant. and Cleop. 2 2 775 144
Hamlet. 3 3 1023 134
Richard ii. 5 3 43815

Pardonnez moy. Speak it in French, king; fay, pardonnez-mcy
- That we should be thus afflicted with these strange flies, these fashion-mongers,

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Partage. He asked me, of what parentage I was; I told him of as good as he

2

Parfeli

Parfect. For my own part, I am, as they say, but to parfect one man in one poor man

A. S. P. C. L.

Love's Labour Loft. 5 Paris. Lucentio shall make one, though Paris came in hope to speed alone T. of the Sb. 1 Governor of. D. P.

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1 Henry vi.

Ibid. 5

Romeo and Juliet.

Paris-balls. To that end, as matching to his youth and vanity, I did present him with those Paris-balls

Paris-garden. Do you take the court for Paris-garden

Parish. I'd let a parish of fuch Cloten's blood

Paritors. Sole imperator, great general of trotting paritors

Park'd. How are we park'd and bounded in a pale

Parle. That ev'ry day with parle encounter me

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Henry v. 2 4 519 226

Cymbeline. 4 2 916 2 1

Henry viii. 5 3700 248

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Taming of the Sbrew. 1

Through brazen trumpet fond the breath of parle into his ruin'd ears
Break the parle

3 428 246

Titus Andronicus. 5 3 853253

When, in an angry parle, he smote the slidded Polack on the ice Parley. What's the business, that such a hideous trumpet calls to parley of the house

-Well, by my will, we shall admit no parley

Dare any be fo bold to found retreat or parley, when I command them kill

What an eye she has! methinks it sounds a parley of provocation

Hamlet. 1 1 1000 144

the fleepers

Macbeth. 2 3 3712 3

2 Henry iv. 4 1 494133 2 Hen. vi. 4 8 597 127 Othello. 2 3 105518

Parliament. Who hath not heard it spoken, how deep you were within the books of
God? to us, the speaker in his parliament

- My mouth shall be the parliament of England

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Parmacity. Telling me the fovereign'st thing on earth was parmacity for an inward

bruife

Parolles. D. P.

I Henry iv. 13 445 234
Ail's Well.

277

Lear. 41 953 26

'Parrel. I'll bring him the best 'parrel that I have, come on't what will
Parricide. Not confeffing their cruel parricide, filling their hearers with strange inven-
tion

Macbeth. 3

But that I told him, the revenging gods 'gainst parricides did all their thunders bend

1 373 122

Lear. 2 1 93929

Parrots. Some [men] will evermore peep through their eyes, and laugh like parrots at a bag-piper

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That ever this fellow should have fewer words than a parrot, and yet the fon of a

woman

1 Herry iv. 2 4 45226

- The parrot will not do more for an almond, than he for a commodious drab Tr. & Cr.5 2 887 143

Drunk? and speak parrot
Parrot-teacher. Well you are a rare parrot-teacher

Parfon. Sometimes she comes with a tithe-pig's tail tickling a

asleep, then dreams he of another benefice

Part. In debating which was best, we shall part with neither
For which of my bad parts didst thou first suffer love for me
For which of my good parts did you first fuffer love for me
My better parts are all thrown down

Otbelic. 2 3 1057/2/10 Much Ado About Notb. 1 1 122246 122 2 parson's nose, as a 'lies

Romec and Juliet. 1 4 972 250 Comedy of Errors. 3 1 110 13 Mu. Ads Abt. Netb. 5 2 144 243 Ibid. 5 2 144 248 As You Like It.12 227 138 1 252 244

That part was aptly fitted, and naturally perform'd Induc. to Tam. of the Sbrew.
Alas, the part I had in Glofter's blood, doth more folicit me than your exclaims Rich. ü. 1 2 4152 15

This part of his conjoins with my disease, and helps to end me

It is a part that I shall blush in acting

- My train are men of choice, and rarest parts

2 Henry iv. 44 490 155 Corislanus. 2 2 716 135 Lear. 1 4 9372 8

Rich. ii. 11634222

Partake. You may partake of any thing we fay; we speak no treason man
Parted. That man-how dearly even parted, how much in having, or without, or in-

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