Ere I tafte bread, thou art in nothing less than I have here proclaim'd thee Lear. 53 963 142 Bread and cheese. I love not the humour of bread and cheese Then, after to her father will I break I am to break with thee of fome affairs I would not break with her for more money than I'll speak of 2317 Merry W. of Windfor. 2 Ibid. 1 I 52243 124 141 124 159 2 Gent. of Verona. 3 Merry W. of Wind. 3 A man may break a word with you, fir; and words are but wind, ay, and break it in your face, fo he break it not behind Comedy of Errors.3 2 59223 Much Ado About Notb. 2 Tam. of the Shrew. 4 Winter's Tale. 3 3 346216 Breakfast. Read o'er this; and, after, this: and then to breakfast, with what appetite you have Eight wild boars roafted whole at a breakfast You had rather be at a breakfast of enemies, than a dinner of friends Who has a breast so pure, but some uncleanly apprehensions keep leets, and lawdays 3 314219 381 219 615112 7222 6 Art thou the flave, that with thy breath hath kill'd mine innocent child Here are fever'd lips, parted with fugar breath 3130239 Ibid. 5 1 143/2/14 Mid. Night's Dream. 3 2 I think thou was created for men to breathe themfelves upon thee All's Well. 1852 7 2 210 248 2 288133 3 Winter's Tale 5 3 362 139 Who, almost dead for breath, had scarcely more than would make up his message The latest breath that gave the found of words Macbeth. 1 5 36718 King John. 3 1 398136 Holding the eternal spirit, against her will, in the vile prison of afflicted breath Ibid. 3 4 400145 It was my breath that blew this tempeft up Your breath first kindled the dead coal of wars 'Tis breath thou lack'ft, and that breath wilt thou lofe And figh'd my English breath in foreign clouds Hold hard the breath, and bend up every spirit to his full height -Give me fome breath, fome little paufe, dear lord, before I pofitively His celeftial breath was fulphurous to fmell My fhort date of breath is not fo long as is a tedious tale If words be made of breath, and breath of life, I have no life to breath Breath'd. Breath'd, as it were, to an untirable and continuate goodness This day I breathed first: time is come round A. S. P. C. L. Tim. of Athens. 1| 1| 803 120 Breather. I will chide no breather in the world, but myself, against whom I know most faults She fhews a body rather than a life; a ftatue, than a breather Breathing. You shake the head at so long a breathing - Courtesy I am forry to give breathing to my purpose As You Like It. 3 2 237123 Ant. and Cleop.33 783146 Much Ado About Norb. 2 1 1282 7 Mer. of Venice.5 1 2202 7 Ant. and Cleop. 1 3 770217 - Like the tyrannous breathing of the North, fhakes all our buds from growing Cymbeline. 14 896149 Antony and Clep.22 7762 26 3 2 Henry vi5 2 Gent. of Verona. 2 6 18051 5 630244 3 371247 Ibid. 2 7 339 Taming of the Shrew. 3 1 264111 Breeds. She fpeaks, and 'tis such sense that my fenfe breeds with it Which may, if fortune please both breed thee pretty, and still reft thine Winter's Tale. 3 Timon of Athens. 5 6 829225 My fon Edgar! had he a hand to write this? a heart and brain to breed it in Lear.1 2 933138 Breeding. I do in birth deserve her, and in fortunes, in graces, and in qualities of So leaves me, to confider what is breeding, that changes thus his Much is breeding, which like the courfer's hair, hath yet but life Brefs. That is the brefs and the long Bretagne. The Bretagne navy is difpers'd by tempeft Brevity is the foul of wit Ibid. 4 Ant. and Cleop.1 2 770145 Henry v.3 2 521214 Richard iii. 4 4 664210 Hamlet. 2 210111 5 Brew. If I could temporize with my affection, or brew it to a weak and colder palate Brewage. I'll no pulletsperm in my brewage Brew'd. Even then that fun-fhine brew'd a fhower for him Troilus and Creffid. 4 4 879248 Merry Wives of Wind. 3 5 632 19 3 Henry vi. 2 26131 6 Lear. 3 2 947|| 8 Brewer's bucket. Come off, and on, swifter than he that gibbets on the brewer's bucket 2 Henry iv.3 2 491155 Brewer's-berfe. An I have not forgot what the infide of a church is made of, I am a pepper corn, a brewer's horse When briars shall have leaves as well as thorns, and be as sweet as fharp Ail's Well. 4 4 Bribe you, with such gifts, that heaven shall share with you 300 141 4 Titus Andronicus. 2 840254 Meafure for Meafure. 2 2 84133 But cannot make my heart confent to take a bribe, to pay my fword Coriclanus. 9 710248 - You have condemn'd and noted Lucius Pella, for taking bribes here of the Sardians Shall we now contaminate our fingers with base bribes Bribe-buck, Divide me like a bribe-buck each a haunch 4 E 2 Julius Cæfar. 4 3 758258 Merry Wives of Windfor.[5] 5] 71|2|11 Briber. To ride on a bay trotting horse over four-inch'd bridges Briber. His fervice done at Lacedæmon, and Byzantium, were a sufficient briber for his Bricks. And the bricks are alive at this day to testify it Let fweet Bianca practise how to bride it A. S. P. C.L Timon of Athens.3 5 816245 2 Henry vi. 4 2 594 136 Meafure for Meafure. 3 1 88129 Taming of the Shrew. 3 2 2672 9 K. Jebn. 31398112 The devil tempts thee here in likeness of a new untrimmed bride 3 Henry vi. 4 1 622225 Othello. 2 3 1056 217 - in quarter, and in terms like bride and groom divesting them for bed But I will be a bridegroom in my death, and run into 't as to a lover's bed Ant. and Cleo. I will die bravely like a bridegroom Bridge. What need the bridge much broader than the flood - Taming of the Shrew. 3 Troilus and Creffida. 4 Lear. 4 How her bridle was burft Taming of the Sbrew. 4 1 2681 6 68 5 35 2 Ibid. 3 I 89 127 Brief, fhort, quick, fnap authority The goodness, that is cheap in beauty, makes beauty brief in goodness A tedious brief scene of young Pyramus and his love Thisbe Whose ceremony shall seem expedient on the new born brief The hand of time shall draw this brief into as huge a volume Bear this fealed brief with winged hafte, to the lord Mareshal --- If thou wilt live, lament; if die, be brief We must be brief when traitors brave the field To make it brief wars This is the brief of money, plate, and jewels, I am poffefs'd of It were a grief, fo brief to part with thee 'Tis brief, my lord, Briefly we heard their drums as woman's love Troilus and Creffida. 4 2 Briefness. I hope, the briefnefs of your anfwer made the speediness of your return Cym. 2 4 90429 Bright. She is too bright to be look'd against 1 939125 2 I will be bright, and shine in pearl and gold Brim. To make the coming hour o'erflow with joy, and pleasure drown the brim All's Well. 2 4 289110 And he will fill thy wishes to the brim with principalities Brifile. I will not open my lips fo wide as a briftle may enter in by way of excufe thy courage up; for Falstaff he is dead Twelfth Night 15 310212 Henry 2 3 517229 2 715230 before him Cor. 2 Richard iii. 2 2 4241 9 Brifled lips. When with his Amazonian chin he drove the bristled lips Rich.ii. 5 3 66919 Cymbeline. 2 4 904155 1 906145 Ibid. is a world by itself; and we will nothing pay for wearing our own nofes Britain. Hath Britain all the fun that fhines? day, night, are they not, but in Britain?| I'the world's volume our Britain feems as of it, but not in it; in a great pool a fwan's neft A. S. P. C. L. Cymbeline. 3 4 910225 Ant. and Cleop.38 786222 Trei. and Cref.1 3 862126 1 Henry vi. 34 559226 Henry viii. 2 4 685 151 Mid. Night's Dream.5 11932 26 Breached. With blade, with bloody blameful blade he bravely broach'd his boiling bloody breast Brave thee? ay, by the best blood that ever was broach'd For what hath broach'd this tumult, but thy pride The bufinefs you have broach'd here cannot be without you Breaches Bread Achilles Henry v. 5 ch 537 121 2 Henry vi. 410 3 Henry vi. 2 Ant. and Cleop.1 598226 2 6131 9 3 613159 2 770125 1837 113 4 484114 3 8632 2 Bread-fronted Cæfar Bread-gate. And they'll be for the flowery way, that leads to the broad-gate, and the Broad-geofe. Which added to the goofe, proves thee far and wide a broad-goofe Rom. and Jul. 2 Ant. and Cleop. 1 5 772 25% Brogues. And put my clouted brogues from off my feet Broil. It seems then that the tidings of this broil brake off our bufinefs for the holy land Twelfth Night. 2 5 318227 Broken-joint. This broken-joint, between you and her husband, intreat her to splinter Orbel. 2 - 2 Gent. of Verona. I You shall give me leave to play the broker in mine own behalf Brokes. And brokes with all that can in fuch a fuit, corrupt the tender honour of a maid 2 874 215 11 891 118 All's Well. 35293111 Richard ii. 2 1 422 219 Love's Lab. Loft.5 2 172135 Ibid. 5 2 172 136 All's Well. 1278258 Winter's Tale. 4 3 3552 7 Richard ii. 5 5 439 3 Hamlet. 4 71032128 Brooch'd. Not the imperious fhew of the full fortun ́d Cæfar ever shall be brooch'd with me Brood. Why what a brood of traitors have we here Ant. and Cleop. 437962 36 2 Henry vi. 51 600 220 Hamlet. 311018 145 -There's fomething in his foul, o'er which his melancholy fits on brood This fhadowy defert, unfrequented woods, I better brook than flourishing peopled Ibid. 5 3 Brook Brook. My business cannot brook this dalliance Many can brook the weather, that love not the wind A. S. P. C. D. Comedy of Errors.|4| 1| 1131 4 Love's Labour Loft. 4 2 159110 How brooks your grace the air, after your late toffing on the breaking feas Richard ii. 3 2 4262 8 The quality and hair of our attempt brooks no divifion 1 Henry iv. 4 1 464153 Ibid. 5 4 471150 I can no longer brook thy vanities I better brook the loss of brittle life, than those proud titles thou haft won of me Ib. 5 4 471158 1 Henry vi. 1 3 546142 - Let him perceive, how ill we brook this treason Ibid. 4 1 560 152 This weighty bufinefs will not brook delay For he is fierce, and cannot brook hard language Ibid. 4 9 598 134 Knowing how hardly I can brook abuse I cannot brook delay My breast can better brook thy dagger's point, than can my ears that tragic hiftory Ib. 56 631239 In that you brook it ill, it makes him worfe Being a bark to brook no mighty fea I do wonder, his infolence can brook to be commanded Richard iii. 1 3 637259 There was a Brutus once, that would have brook'd the eternal devil to keep his ftate in Rome as easily as a king Timon of Athens.35 817148 And cannot brook competitors in love Titus Andronicus. 2 1.837 125 Whofe warlike ear could never brook retreat 3 Henry vi. 1 1603112 Brooked. Though the nature of our quarrel never yet brook'd parle How hath your lordship brook'd imprisonment Tam. of the Shrew.1 Brooks. And then his state empties itself, as doth an inland brook into the main of waters You are the fount, that makes fmall brooks to flow I am fent, with broom, before, to sweep the duft behind the door Mid. Night's Dream. 5 2 Whom to call brother would even infect my mouth I know you are my eldest brother, and, in the gentle condition of fo know me Orlando did approach a man, and found it was his brother, his For the king's fon took me by the hand, and call'd me brother; For he to day that sheds his blood with me, fhall be my brother I have no brother, I am like no brother But for my brother not a man would speak The brother blindly fhed the brother's blood Lear. 3 4 948 249 You a brother of us, it fits we thus proceed, or elfe no witness would come against you Brotherhood. Finds brotherhood in thee no fharper spur Brotherhoods in cities Henry v.51 697239 Brought. How far brought you high Hereford on his way 4 419118 6 913139 3 346261 4 136218 Love's Lab. Loft.41 157125 Mid. Night's Dr. 5 I 1951 23 As You Like It.3 2 236212 As You Like It.3 5 240 225 Winter's Tale. 12 335138 I find it, and that to the infection of my brains, and hardening of my brows You look, as if you held a brow of much distraction Ibid. 1 2335216 2 335 2 22 33912 Brow. |