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>2,-V"Ji S-^.5
HARVARD COLLEGE
LIBRARY
THE BEQUEST OF
EVERT JANSEN WENDELL
(CLASS OF ISiJi
OF NEW YORK •
1918
r
»«>
(JlC^U-.iu <K«^t (fti <> 'Uyj •£,,: : /-w , / /;■<,,,
If'.
« *.
c
CON C O U I ) A N C; E
TO
SHAKESPEARE'S POEMS:
AN INDEX
TO EVERY WORD THEREIN CONTAINED
BY
MRS HORACE HOWARD FURNESS
* TO YOUR AUDIT CX>MRS
Their distract parcrls ik combined suns.'
ISECOND EDITION]
PHILADELPHIA
J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY
LONDON: 15 RUSSELL STREET, COVENT (iARDKN
I
HAHVARD COLLEGE LIBRARY
FROM
I --; .- o <.' n . — • THE BEQUEST OF
> o -r : O. ^^ ^ cvERT JAN8EN WENDELL
Entered accord log to Act of Congress, in the year 1874, bj
H. H. FURNESS,
In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington.
WKSTTorr A Tno¥i«0!», Lipimucott'h Press.
aierfctypers and Elfctrotijjter*, Phitada. Philada.
■\
PREFACE
As it is impossible to limit the purposes for which the lan^age of
Shakespeare may be studied, or to say that the time will not come, if it
has not already, when his use of every part of speech, down to the hum-
blest conjunction, will be criticised with as much nicety as has been
bestowed upon Greek and Latin authors, it seems to me that, in the selec-
tion of words to be recorded, no discretionary powers should be granted to
the * harmless drudge ' compiling a Concordance. Within a year or two a
German scholar has published a pamphlet of some fifty pages on Shake-
speare's use of the auxiliary verb to do^ and Abbott's Orammar shows with
what success the study of Shakespeare's language in its minutest particu-
lars may be pursued. I h&ve therefore cited in the following pages every
word in his Poems.
I would not have it thought that any imperfection is hereby imputed to
Mrs Clarke's invaluable Concordance of the Dramas. The bulk of that
work was a sufficient bar to the plan I have been enabled to follow in the
lesser task which was before me.
Having adopted the rule of recording every word, I thought it a need-
less expenditure of space to insert in every instance the entire line in
which a word occurs. I have given the clause in which the word stands
and the number of the line, and then, that nothing may be wanting to the
convenience of the student, the Poems themselves are reprinted at the end.
If in any case the citations appear meagre, the original is instantly ac-
cessible.
Compound words, such as seal-nianualj are entered under each word ; but
not compounds without a hyphen, such as eyelid; nor words not separated
by a hyphen from their prefixes.
Such words as *8t<mi8?ied, ^mongstj etc. are given under their unabbreviated
forms also.
Where the same word has two or more meanings, such as He, lights wish^
etc., an Italic catchword indicates the change from one sense to another.
I have not thus subdivided words when there were less than half a dozen
instances of the word; nor have I thought it necessary to indicate purely
iU
IV PREFACE
grammatical distinctions. Such an attempt seems not properly to belong
to a mere Verbal Index, and would, moreover, to be thorough, demand a
familiarity with Shakespeare's use of language to which I can lay no claim.
I have not placed under a separate catchword the third person singular
of verbs, lest I should be introducing subdivisions that would not com-
pensate for the confusion that might arise, especially where there is a
difference of spelling; and for the same reason I have not separated the
singulars and plurals.
Where and is used as a copula of two nouns, both nouns are given.
I have followed the text of the Cambridge Edition, with the exception of
some trifling deviations in punctuation.
As the pages are stereotyped, corrections can be made at any time of mis-
prints, against which it seems that no human vigilance can guard, and I
shall be grateful to the kindness that will notify me of them.
My special thanks are gladly given to Mr W. A. Wheeler, of The Boston
Public Library f for the handsome way in which he placed at my disposal
his MS. Concordance of these Poems. As my work was well advanced
when his offer came, I have not availed myself of his kindness, yet it is
none the less felt. The motto on the title-page is his witty suggestion.
H. K. F.
CONCORDANCE
TO
SHAKESPEARE'S POEMS
A— 4ike a bold-faced suitor VA ..... 6
more lorely than a man " ..... . 9
A thousand honey secrets ** ..... 16
A summer's day will seem " ..... 23
to do a goddess good ^ ..... 28
in a dull disdain " ..... 33
on a ragged bough " »... 37
murders with a kias " ..... 54
as on a prey *' ..... 63
bow a bird lies tangled in a net " ..... 67
Bain added to a rirer " ~... 71
For to a pretty ear " 74
with a more delight " w... 78
Like a dire-dapper peering through
aware " 86
but a kiss I beg '* ..... 96
In a red-rose chain *' 110
like a fairy, trip " 146
Like a nymph, with long *' 147
a spirit all compact of fire " 149
with a lazy spright " 181
and with a heary, dark '* 182
made a shadow for thee " ~... 191
Art thou a woman's son *' 2U1
borne so hard a mind "^ »... 203
Thing like a man " ..... 214
of a man's complexion " 215
Doth proToke a pause " 218
infold him like a band " ..... 225
I'll be a park *' ..... 231
I am such a park " ^... 239
though a thousand bark *' ~... 240
appears a pretty dimple " 242
in a tomb so simple " 244
needs a second striking *' ^... 250
To loTe a cheek that smiles *' 252
from forth a copse " 259
A breeding Jennet *' ..... 260
tied unto a tree " 263
As from a furnace "^ ..... 274
Look, when a painter " 289
a well-proportion'd steed " 290
excel a common one " ..... 293
Look, what a horse should have *' ..... 299
Bare a proud rider on so proud a
back " ..... 800
Btirring of a feather ** .... 802
To bid the wind a base ** ..... 803
A— like a melancholy malcontent VA .... 818
like a falling plume " .... 814
Eren as a dying coa} " .... 838
O, what a sight it was " 843
like a lowly lorer " 850
O, what a war of looks " 855
A lily prison'd in a gaol of snow '* .... 862
So white a friend engirts so white
a foe '* .... 864
And I a man " .... 868
Affection is a coal " .... 887
How like a Jade he stood " .... 391
a leathern rein " 892
a whiter hue than white " .... 398
Unless it be a boar ^ .... 410
it is a life in death '' .... 418
and all but with a breath " .... 414
* Who wears a garment " 415
where a heart is hard " .... 426
* hast thou a tongue " 427
Like a red mom ** .... 458
deadly bullet of a gun ** 461
A smile recures the wounding of a
fh)wn " .... 465
'A thousand kisses buys " 517
Such a trouble " .... 622
you shall have a kiss " 536
his neck, a sweet embrace " 639
a desperate courage " 554
Like a wild bird " .... 660
like a pale-faced coward " 569
not repel a lover " 573
Whereat a sudden pale " 589
deserved a greater fee ** 609
A churlish swine to gore " 616
Like to a mortal butcher *' 618
he hath a battle set " 619
And in a peaceful hour " 652
with a thousand doubles " .... 682
Are like a labyrinth " .... 684
among a flock of sheep " .... 685
with a herd of deer " .... 689
far off upon a hill ** 697
and hear a little more " .... 709
rob thee of a kiss ** .... 723
Steal a kiss, and die forsworn " .... 726
but a swallowing grave " 757
So fair a hope is slain " ..... 762
k—h mischief worae
VA
M**«
7&4
A false sound enter there
M
mm—
780
like a glutton dies
a
•••••
803
how a hright star
u
•••••
815
a late-embarked friend
«
•*•«■
81S
dropp'd a precious jewel
M
••••■
8-24
begins a wailing note
M
•••••
835
a woeful ditty
u
— •••
836
There lives a son
u
»•*••
863
hasteth to a myrtle groTe
M
•■••■
865
Like a milch doe
M
•••••
875
hounds are at a bay
U
••■••
877
in a trembling ecst'uiy
M
mm»mm
895
'tis a causeless fantasy
U
• •«••
897
A second fear through all
a
•••••
903
A thousand spleens bear her a thoa-
sand ways
u
•••••
907
of a drunken brain
<t
•••••
910
in a brake she finds a hound
u
• ••••
913
bid thee crop a weed, thou pluck's!
a ilower
u
•••••
946
may a heary groan
M
•••••
950
like a stormy day
(«
»••••
965
A nurse's song ne'er pleased
(I
•••••
974
felt a kind of fear
u
•••••
998
'how mudh a fool was I
<«
•••••
1015
a weak and silly mind
t(
•••••
1016
a merry horn
M
1025
Who, like a king
((
•••••
1043
giTes a deadly groan
M
•••••
1044
looketh for a grare
U
••«••
1106
But by a kiss
U
•••••
1114
in his ears a heavy tale
U
•••«•
1125
A thousand times
«<
•••••
1130
in a breathing while
M
• ••••
1142
the old become a child
.!(
•••••
1152
melted like a rapour
M
«•••«
1166
A purple flower sprung up
«(
•••••
1168
a more sweet-smelling sire
It
•••«•
1178
to such a peerless dame
BL
•••••
21
enjoy'd but of a few
M
•••«•
22
from a world of harms
U
•••■•
28
proud issue of a king
U
•••••
37
of so rich a thing
u
•••••
39
in so false a foe
M
•••••
77
to find a stranger Just
II
••■••
159
on a flint he softly smiteth
U
•■•«•
176
Whereat a waxen torch
II
••«••
178
to so pure a shrine
II
•••••
194
A martial man to be
II
••••«
200
a true respect should hare
II
•••••
201
A dream, a breath, a fh>th of fleet-
ing
II
212
a minute's mirth to wail a week
II
•••*•
213
to get a toy
II
•••••
214
and in a desperate rage
II
•■•••
219
with so black a deed
u
•••••
226
Who fears a sentence
II
•■•••
244
8haU by a painted cloth
fl
•«•••
245
Which in a moment
•1
••«••
250
like a Yirtuous deed
u
•••••
252
with so sweet a cheer
II
•••••
264
That now he vows a league
II
»••••
287
Unto a view so false
II
»••••
292
But with a pure appeal
il
•••••
293
Who with a lingering stay
«l
•««••
828
To add a more rejoicing
II
•••••
a-n
Which with a yielding latch
II
•••«•
839
Rushing from forth a cloud
M
•■•••
873
A— with a greater light E L — . 375
of a lawful kiss '* .... 387
Where like a virtuous monument " ~... 391
A pair of maiden worlds " ~... 408
like a foul usurper ** »... 412
Unto a greater uproar ** ,»... 427
such a dignity " ~... 437
in a thousand fears " .... 456
Like to a new-kiU'd bird " ..... 457
First, like a trumpet " ..... 470
To sound a parley •* ~... 471
guarded with a sting " 493
Which, like a falcota " .... 5U6
is as a thought unacted " .... 527
A little harm done to a great good " .... 528
In a pure compound ** 531
Worse than a slavish wipe " .... 5!X1
Here with a cockatrice' dead-kill-
ing eye " 540
and makes a pause " .... 541
Like a white hind " 543
Pleadtt, in a wilderness " .... 544
But when a black.faced cloud " .... 547
A swallowing gulf ** .... 557
a poor unseasonable doe " 581
Myseir a weakling " 584
like a troubled ocean *' .... 589
than a stone thou art " .... 593
a god, a king " .... 601
once thou art a king " .... 606
but a bawd ** .... 623
From a pure heart *' .... 625
how vile a spectacle ** .... 631
pay a daily debt " 649
'a sea, a sovereign king " .... 652
Thy sea within a puddle " .... 657
so pure a bed *' .... 684
lost a dearer thing " .... 687
force a further strife " .... 689
Till, Uke a Jade " .... 707
Like to a bankrupt ** .... 711
A captive victor " .... 730
of a guilty mind ** .... 735
He like a thievish dog " .... 736
She like a wearied lamb " .... 737
a heavy convertite " .... 743
remains a hopeless cast-away ^ .... 744
with a cunning brow " .... 749
so pure a mind " .... 761
be made a theme " .... 822
a drone-like bee ** .... 836
a wandering wasp " .... 839
in such a devil " .... 847
to a public fast " .... 891
to a ragged name " .... 892
A thousand crosses " .... 912
Sin ne'er gives a fee " .... 913
of a lawful bed *' — 938
the child a man, the man a child " .... 954
a thousand thouHand friends " .... 963
a hideous shapeless devil " .... 973
to live a loathed slave ** — 984
a beggar's orts to cravo " .... 985
dcathsman to so base a slave " .... 1001
coming from a king ** .... 1002
force not argument a straw " .... 1021
to end a hapless life *' .... 1045
seek a knife " .... 1047
I was a loyal wife ** — 1018
k — A badge of fime
AdirlDcllle
■mwinUia iprlng Ibit fe
(cMr u » cbiM
Id ■ H of an
And wbile* igalnM > tborn
WIllBiiiihirpknira
vllbB winding mue
A pKltj wbiia
■BDbUDCeof ftd«Tlt
lite gooMr cbvu pn^im pl*ln
la ■ rough-growu grore
nbuiie ■ bodf dad
Till aAer A diwp jrddB
Al<:IU'rtaiii;lonl
( pnu of people U ft door
■ part or Toc
TIs tut Apart
wltba
« kJnd of bcaTj faar
To Slid a (kco
Id a bod; dead
trojiiti
• fUsibould tnai
tear he tti\
eM vcqaali
Acrvvping creoti:
OD(I.^«..
Wbu. Jlkc a lale acli'd Uand ■•
■ iraury ri«ot«t^
Bboni nifl ■ birE-boned death ■■
nanaCollaHiicaifrumadnam ■■
mU, Hippoacd a fuol
lojri"lbj-*'1(nbl')''.
KaklaitifjuiiJiie
Wi-beatattnUmed
A liquid prl»D«
to wel a wIdoir'B er«.
YoDhadal^lber
It li but a« a tomb
bo term'd a poct'i rage
ll.«loa<>ummer'.da]F
A iroman'i gcnUa
A mm In bus
And fur ■ >oman
Bilrr'd by i pilnl.
burLb.-q"f nfiiraiiTCbUd
• UhlkLiickoELnllook
For ■iich a tima
ThI) thought li aa a death
A erov (hat flics
a puri? ii7i^LEi1ned prima
grace a double miijiiil^
4 — ^travail of a worthier pen San
knowing a better spirit doth qm **
I am a worthless boat **
but a common grare **
a limit past my praise
tender of a poet's debt
How far a modem quill
and bring a tomb
And such a counterpart
beauteous blessings add a curse
AboTe a mortal pitch
as a dream doth flatter
In sleep a king
I can set down a story
will be a gainer too
To set a form
of a conquer'd woe
a windy night a rain j morrow
out a purposed orerthrow
a Joy abore the rest
I see a better state
O, what a happy title
Like a deceived husband
Which, like a canker
but in a kind of praise
O, what a mansion
finger of a throned queen
If like a Umb
Uow like a winter
'tis with so dull a cheer
Uath put a spirit
A thind nor red nor white
A Tengcful canker eat him up
be a satire to decay
outlive a gilded tomb
a scope to show her pride
and there appears a face
like a dial-hand
in a wondrous excellence
Even such a beauty
forfeit to a confined doom
a motley to the view
A god in love
my name receives a brand
like a willing patient
bad a perfect best
Love is a babe
found a kind of meetness
medicine a healthful state
you've pass'd a hell of time
And I, a tyrant
now becomes a fee
dressings of a former sight
Hence, thou subom'd informer ! a
true soul
with a bastard shame
with a false »teem "
in a waste of shame "
as a swallow'd bait
A bliss in proof, and proved, a very
woe
Before a Joy proposed, behind, a
dream
a far more pleasing sound
never saw a goddess go
A thousand groans
A torment thrice threefold
And sue a friend
Among a number
M
(I
U
l(
««
U
U
U
<t
U
«(
((
U
U
U
l(
M
(I
(I
(«
u
u
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u
u
u
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u
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U
%t
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It
((
U
u
(t
M
u
u
M
M
M
M
«l
<(
4(
<(
t(
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U
U
79
6
80
2
80
11
81
7
82
6
83
4
83
7
83
12
84
11
84
13
86
6
87
13
87
14
88
6
88
9
89
6
90
6
90
7
90
8
91
6
92
7
92
11
93
2
95
2
93
7
95
9
96
5
96
10
97
1
97
13
96
3
99
10
99
13
100
11
101
11
103
2
io:{
6
104
9
105
6
106 •
8
107
4
110
2
110
12
111
5
111
9
114
7
115
13
118
7
118
11
120
6
120
7
120
13
123
4
125
13
127
4
127
12
129
1
129
7
129 11
129
12
130
10
130
11
131
10
133
8
134
11
186
8
A— a something sweet to thee Son 136 13
think that a several plot *' 137 9
upon so foul a face ** 137 12
a thousand errors note " 141 2
the likeness of a man ** 141 11
as a careful housewife ** 143 1
la a man right fair " 144 3
a woman coloured ill ** 144 4
my saint to be a devil " 144 7
who, Uke a fiend " 145 11
having so short a lease " 146 6
My love is as a fever " 147 1
BO foul a Ue " 152 14
A maid of Dian's this ** 153 2
In a cold valley-fountain " 153 4
A dateless lively heat *' 153 6
And grew a scetliing bath " 153 7
maladies a sovereign cure " 153 8
a sad distemper'd guest " 153 12
by a virgin hand disarm'd '* 154 8
quench in a cool well " 154 9
a bath and healthful remedy " 154 11
From ofl* a hill whoso concave L C 1
A plaintful story from a sistering ** m... 2
espied a fickle maid " ~... 5
a platted hive of straw " w... 8
The carcass of a beauty ** »... 11
a careless hand of pride " ~... 30
A thousand favours from a raaund " 86
she in a river threw " 38
had she many a one " 43
Crack'd many a ring " ~... 46
A reverend man that grazed " .... 57
Sometime a blusterer " ..... 58
injury of many a blasting " .... 72
have been a spreading flower " «... 75
A youthful suit " .... 79
Love lack'd a dwelling " .... 82
was he such a storm " .... 101
falseness in a pride of truth " .... 105
And controversy hence a question '* 110
The one a palate hath " .... 167
from many a several fair " .... 206
was sent me from a nun ** .... 232
to charm a sacred nun '* ' .... 260
a river running from a fount " .... 283
what a hell of witchcraft " .... 288
a plenitude of subtle matter " 302
That not a heart which ** .... 309
the garment of a Grace " 316
Which, like a cherubin " — 819
do again for such a sake *' 322
pervert a reconciled maid *' .... 829
is a soothing tongue P P 1 11
angel is a man right fair "23
a woman colon r'd ill "24
my saint to be a devil ** . 2 7
A woman I forswore "85
Thou being a goddess "86
thou a heavenly love "87
and breath a vapour in "89
to win a paradido " 8 14
sitting by a brook "41
with many a lovely look "43
A lunging tarriance "64
osier growing by a brook "65
A brook where Adon used "66
' why was not I a flood " 6 14
Mild as a dove "72
ACCIDENT
A— A Iflj pftle, with damask PP 1 5
Was tbU a lorer or a lecher " 7 17
a yoangster proud and wild "94
upon a steep-up hill "95
*did I see a fair sweet youth "99
deep-wounded with a boar " 9 10
a spectacle of ruth " 9 II
a ^reen pi um that hangs upon a tree "10 5
under a myrtle shade " 11 2
Beauty is but a vain " 13 1
A shining gloss " 13 2
A Bower that dies " 13 3
A brittle glass that's broken " 13 4
A doubtful good, a gloss, a glass, a
flower " 13 5
dafTd me to a cabin " 14 3
* Wander/ a word for shadows " 14 11
each minute seems a moon " 15 15
It was a lording's daughter " 16 ■ 1
alas, it was a spite " 16 7
Which by a gift of learning " 16 14
On a day, alack the day " 17 1
Spied a blossom passing fair " 17 8
80 apt to pluck a sweet " 17 14
There a nay is placed " 18 12
like a thousand vanqulsh'd men " 18 36
For a sweet content " 18 51
A cripple soon can find a halt " 19 10
A woman's nay doth stand " 19 42
make thee a bed of roses " 20 9
With a thousand fragrant ' " 20 10
A cap of flowers and a kirtle " 20 11
A belt of straw and ivy buds " 20 13
it fell upon a day " 21 1
Sitting in a pleasant shade " 21 3
Which a grove of myrtles made " 21 4
her breast up-till a thorn " 21 10
bat he were a king " 21 42
He with thee doth bear a part " 21 56
In a mutual flame P T 24
But in them it were a wonder " 32
How true a twain " 45
For these dead birds sigh a prayer " .... 67
Abate — Air and water do ... . VA 054
Akettor— Thou foul . . . RL 886
Abhor— why dost .... me VA^... i:)8
humanity abhor the deed R L »... 195
to whom I pray abhor this fact " 349
what others do abhor Son 150 11
shouldst not abhor my state " 150 12
Age, I do abhor thee PP 12 9
Abldch-
With patience must my will .... RL -... 486
huge fires abide " „... 647
still doth red abide " ..... 1749
from far where I abide Son 27 5
wherever I abide " 45 2
in his fair parts she did abide L C 83
A-bUUag^-doves that sit ... . VA ..... 366
Abl»— that .... spirit affords Son 85 7
Ab«nilMittoii— see his own .... RL 704
of incest, that abomination " 921
saffer these abominations " 18^)2
Abe«t— goeth .... to Uke htm VA 319
some twine about her thigh " ..... 873
about he walks R L 367
a foul usurper went about " 412
Knit poisonous clouds about his
golden bead « 777
I Abont — ■ . . . him were a press R L 1406
throws her eyes about the paint-
ing round " 1499
about her tear-dlstained eye " ..... 1586
About the mourning " »... 1744
governs me to go about Son 113 2
Above — Sweet .... compare VA 8
Above a mortal pitch Son 86 6
a Joy above the rest " 91 6
but, by all above "110 6
above that idle rank " 122 3
above them hover'd L C 319
Abridgement-This brief ... RL 1198
Abroad— which they find L C 137
offences that abroad you see " 183
Absence — O . . . ., what a torment Son 39 9
the bitterness of absence " 57 7
absence of your liberty " 58 6
hath ray absence been " 97 1
Though absence seem'd " 109 2
makes her absence valiant L C 245
Absent — .... from thy heart Son 41 2
These present-absent with swift
motion slide " 45 4
Be absent from thy walks " 89 9
have I been absent " 98 1
Absolute— perfection is so ... . R L 853
Absolution— is clear'd with .... " 354
Abstaining—
hoiH^s persuade him to ... . " 130
Abnndanre— where .... lies Son 1 7
whose strength's abundance " 23 4
That I in thy abundance " 37 11
And in abundance addeth " 1.35 10
Abnndant— Yet this issue " 97 9
Abase —
themselves are growth's .... VA 16
bawd to lust's abuse " ..... 792
remorse in poor abuses R L 269
this false night's abuses " 1075
With men's abuses " 1259
her own gross abuse " 1315
stain'd with this abuse " ..... 1655
At my abuses reckon up Son 121 10
through my unkind abuse " VA 12
Abuse — do presently abuse it R L 864
abuse a Ixnly dead " 1267
why dost thou abuse Son 4 5
even so doth she abuse me " 42 7
Abased-
some shape in Sinon's was ... . RL 1529
in thee it is abused Son 82 14
Abasing- wail the .... of his time R L 994
Abysm- In so profound .... Sor, 112 9
Accent— so her .... breaks R L 566
many accents and delays " 1719
In other accents do this praise Son 69 7
Acceptable —
What audit can'st thou " 4 12
Acceptance— no fair .... shine " 13.3 8
Their kind acceptance L C 207
Accessary— An .... by thine inclina-
tion R L 922
Toacoessaryyioldings but still pure " 1658
That I an accessary Son 85 18
Accident-
Time, whose million 'd " ILI 5
builded far from accident " 124 5
The accident which brought me LC ..... 247
ACCIDENTAL
ADVANTAGE
RL
• ••»•
826
LC
• ••••
116
RL
716
LC
• ••••
3
Stm
80
11
u
ff8
8
(1
62
6
(1
136
10
RL
• •••«
1245
u
• ••••
1662
Aeeldeotel— . . . . things of trial
Aeeompllthed— . ... in himself
Aeeonpllshment— Who this ....
Aeoorded — this double voice ....
Aeeomitr-
The sad .... of forebemoaned
the account of hours to craye
no truth of such account
Though in thy store's account
Aecowited— shall be . . . evil
Aeron — and wretched arms ....
iecamvlate—
on Just proof surmise .... Son 117 10
Aecamt — the more am I ... . VA 1120
Aeeme— .... me thus iSbn 117 1
breach do I accuse thee " 152 6
Aceiisi09— Without jou *' 58 8
Ache — whose swelling dugs do ... . VA 87.5
make the wound ache more R L ...-. 1116
Achieve — advantage should .... Son 67 8
Aehlllet— That for image R L 1424
Acknowledge— evermore .... thee Son 36 9
Aoqvalntenoe— old .... in a trance R L 1995
To take a new acquaintance Son 77 12
I will acquaintance strangle ** 89 8
of our old acquaintance tell *' 89 12
Aeqiuiinted— but not ** 20 8
being best acquainted " 88 5
Aeqaltr— . ... my forced offence R L 1071
acquit me from this chance *' ~... 1706
Act— had his ... . made plain VA 359
0, impious act including all foul R L 199
assist me in the act " 350
The loathsome act of lust *' 1636
this act will be " -... 1637
with the foul act dispense " 1704
For his foul act " 1824
In act thy bed-vow broke Son 152 8
Adr-l did but act VA 1006
on his did act the seizure P P 11 10
Aetlo0—
till .... might become them better R L ..... l.%23
•uch sober action with his hand " 1403
they such odd action yield " ..... 1433
Whose action is no stronger Son 65 4
Islustinactiou; and till action, lust " 129 2
Active— To see his ... . child " 87 2
Actor— From vassal actors R L 608
As an imperfect actor Son 23 1
Actore— with .... they may be LC 185
Add — Now she adds honours VA 994
To add a more rejoicing R L 832
her oratory adds more grace " 564
Add to his flow " „... 651
add the rank smell Son 69 12
blessings add a curse " 84 13
add something more " 85 10
'Will 'add to thy •Will' " 135 11
Added— Rain .... to a river VA 71
Have added feathers Son 78 7
my added praise beside " 103 4
minutes added to the hours P P 15 14
Adder— one that spies an ... . VA ~... 878
The adder hisses R L 871
that my adder's sense Son 112 10
Addeth— . ... to his store *' 135 10
Addict— be to vice P P 21 43
Addlng^-By. ...one thing to my pur-
nose Son 20 12
Addition— And by ... . Son 20 11
making addition thus ** 135 4
came for additions LC 118
Addrened — . ... to answer R L ..... 1606
Adien — and, ere he says, .... VA ..... 537
bid your servant once adieu Son 57 8
Adjvnct— Though death be ... . RL ..... 183
hath his adjunct pleasure Son 91 5
To keep an adjunct " 122 13
Admiration— than .... he admired R L 418
Admire — and therefore we ... . Son 123 5
I thy parts admire PP 5 10
Admired— To be .... of lewd ** 392
than admiration he admired ** ..... 418
style admired everywhere Son 84 12
Admiring— have given .... praise " 59 14
Admit— His ear her prayers admits R L 558
admit impediments San 116 2
Admitted— is .... there *' 136 8
Ado-
With much .... the cold fault VA ..... 694
Adon — ' Nay, then,' quoth .... " ~... 769
* behold two Adons dead " ..... 1070
Adon used to cool bis spleen PP 6 6
For Adon's sake "94
Adonis— Ro»*M?heek'd ... hiedhlin K^ 3
in her arms Adonis lies *' 68
Wishing Adonis had " ..... 179
and now Adonis " ..... 181
At this Adonis smiles " -... 241
Adonis' trampling courser " 261
and left Adonis there " «... 822
down Adonis sits " ..... 325
Because Adonis' heart " 878
it is Adonis' voice ** ..... 978
Adonis lives, and Death " ^2
that Adonis is alive " 1009
But when Adonis lived " «... 1085
then would Adonis weep " 1093
thus was Adonis slain ** «... 1111
to her Adonis' breath '• 1172
I>escribo Adonis Son 53 5
With young Adonis PP 4 2
tarriancc for Adonis made "64
Anon Adonis conies "96
Venus with young Adonis " 11 1
she clipp'd Adonis in her arms " 11 6
Adore— the capitol that we ... . RL 1835
adore his beauty still Son 7 7
youth, I do adore thee P P 12 9
Adored—. ... by this devil R L . 85
Adorn— open to .... the day " 399
A-doting—
as she wrought thee, fell .... iSbn 20 10
Adulterate —
The .... death of Lucrece R L 1645
false adulterate eyes ^Swi 121 5
his foul adulterate heart L C «... 175
Advance-
low declined honour to ... , RL 1705
all my art, and dost advance Son 78 13
O, then advance of yours L C 225
Advantage— let not .... slip VA 129
to take advantage " «... 405
Advantage on the kingdom Son 64 6
advantage should achieve " 67 3
this advantage found " 153 2
For this advantege still L C «... 123
Advantage— f^TOSJi advantage thee VA .... 950
ADVERSE
AGAINST
Thy .... party lathy adrocate Son 85 10
Adrlec — . . . . ia aporting while infec-
tion hreeda £ L ~... 907
awmllow np his aonnd adriM " . 1409
adrioe ia often aeen L C »... 160
liTlacd— O. be .... ; tbou know'at VA ~... 615
avom to this adviaod doom R L 1849
by adriaed reapects Son 49 4
AiTlaedly— ....ahemarketh VA 457
thoa apeaka adyiaedJy B L ~... 180
ahe advisedly perused '* ..... 1527
ajid arm lUa long-hid wits advisedly " ..... 1816
Airoeate-^rerse party is thy .... Son 35 10
Mtmm — ^Aa smoke from .... £ L ~... 1042
Afkr— may read the mot .... " ...„ 830
chaae thee alar behind Son 143 10
AflMrd— And wast .... to scratch H L ..... 1035
Affable— That .... familiar ghost Son 96 9
Allkira— His honour, his ... . R L . 45
or your afTairs suppoee Son 57 10
To stand in thy afi'airs " 151 12
Aflteted— to thine own face .... VA 157
Affwtedly— aUk feat and ... . LC 48
AffMtlOB— . ... is a coal VA ..... 887
AflRiction faints not *' ..... 569
himself Affection's sentinel " ..... 650
AilbcUon is my captain JB L ..... 271
affection's course control *' ..... 500
wrong thy true affection so *' ..... 1060
Made old offences of affections new Son 1 10 4
And niee affections wavering stood LC ...^ 97
Throw my affections in lUs charmed
power " ..... 146
myaffection put to the smallest teen ** . 192
trophies of affectiona hot " 218
him in his bed RL 975
-. . . . lancy lastly drew L C ..... 61
AAird— too much talk .... R L 1106
next vouchsafe t' afford " 1305
In thy cheek : he can afford Son 79 11
that able spirit affords " 85 7
which wondrous weofe affords '* 105 12
Aflaat— will hold me op . . . . " 80 9
AftaM— that they are ... . VA 898
of my holy vows afraid L C . 179
but seems afraid PP 18 30
Afrtah— And weep .... Son 30 7
AflHirhi— his lewd eyes .... RL ...~ 971
to affright mine eye " ...~ 1138
After— like sunshine .... rain VA 799
tempest after sun " .... 800
Which after him she darU ** ..... 817
And would say after her " ..... 852
Long after fearing " ..... 1036
after supper long he questioned R L 122
Till after a deep groan " . 1276
<M Priam aOer slew ^ ..... 1522
alter many accents and delays " ~... 1719
aAer yourself 's decease Son 13 7
After a thousand victories " 25 10
imitated after you '* 53 6
after I am gone " 71 14
After my death, dear love " 72 3
As after sunset Csdeth " 73 6
alter their lord's decease " 97 8
I>rawn after >ou, you pattern " 98 12
alter that which iUea ** 148 9
afler new love bearing " 152 4
After-loea— drop in for an ... . Son 90 i
Afterwards— should .... bum clearer "115 4
Again — them dry ..... she seeks VA 52
to kiss? then wink again " ..... 121
I'll give it thee again " 209
and forth again " ..... 273
never lost again " 408
breatheth life in her again *• ..... 474
kill me once again " ..... 499
' you will fall again " 769
she untreads again " ..... 908
And, sighing it again <* ..... 930
opens them again '* „... 960
make them wet again " ..... 966
chaos comes again " 1020
creep forth again *• ..... 1086
wound the heart with looks again " ..... 1042
whet his teeth at him again " 1118
return again in haste R L ..... 821
Then CoUatine again, by Lucrece " ~... 381
what he would lose again " ..... 688
should not peep again " ..... 788
till he return again " ..... 1859
Retire again, till meeting " ..... 1441
his breath drinks up again *' 1666
fountain clears itself again " ..... 1707
Lucrece, live again and see " 1770
He doth again repeat " ..... 1848
Yourself again, after yourself 's Son 13 7
not to give back again " 22 14
come back again, assured " 45 11
I send them back again " 45 14
To-morrow see again " 56 7
Spending again what Is " 76 12
and pays it thee again '^ 79 8
back again is swerving " 87 8
Comes home again, on better Judg-
ment " 87 12
I return again " 109 6
Ho again desires her L C ..... 66
do again for such a sake " 322
Would yet again betray " 828
and come again to-morrow P P 14 5
again to make me wander " 14 10
Agalnstr— strive the stream VA 772
'gainst venora'd sores •* 916
Against the welkin volleys out " «... 921
Against the golden splcpdour R L ..... 25
Against love's fire fear's frost hath " 355
against long-living laud '* 622
For now against himself " 717
Against the unseen secrecy " 763
against proportion'd course " 774
against himself to rave " 982
And whiles against a thorn " 1135
well, against my heart " 11,37
against the wither'd flower " ..... r2.>4
against my heart he set " ..... 1640
That 'gainst thyself thou stick'st Son 10 r>
Nothing 'gainst Time's scythe " 12 13
Against this coming end " 13 3
Against the stormy gusts " 13 11
'gainst myself a lawful plea com-
mence " 33 11
stand against thy sight " 38 6
Against that time, if ever " 49 1
Against that time when thou " 49 5
Against that time do I ** 49 9
against myself uprear " 49 11
AGAINST
8
ALAS
-'Gainst death and all-obliv-
ious enmity Son 65 9
eclipses 'gainst bis glorj flght " 60 7
Against my love shall be ** 63 1
Against confounding age's cruel
knife " 63 10
Against the wreck fUl siege ** 65 6
vhich shake against the cold ** 73 8
against myself Fll fight " 88 8
Against thy reasons ** 89 4
against myself I'll vow <* 89 13
Potions of eisel 'gainst my atroDg
infection " 111 10
When I against myself ** 149 2
against the thing they see " 152 12
To swear against the truth ** 152 14
Against strange maladies ** 158 8
examples 'gainst her own content L C ~... 157
*gainst rule, 'gainst sense, 'gainst
shame " »... 271
that you make 'gainst mine " »... 277
Against the thing he sought " 313
'Gainst whom the world P P Z 2
Age — Thy mark is feeble .... VA^... 941
Teaching decrepit age " »... 1148
the golden age to gild R L 60
ease in waning ago *' ~... 142
wait on wrinkled age *' 275
be seeded in thine age *' ~... 603
minute in an age " »... 962
of the worn-out age '* 1350
my old age new born *' ~... 1759
of thine age shalt see Son 3 11
youth in his middle age "76
Like feeble age, he reeleth ** 7 10
age and cold decay '* 11 6
The age to come would say '* 17 7
yellowed with their age " 17 9
grown with this growing age " 82 10
Painting my age with beauty ** 62 14
to age's steepy night " 63 5
Against confounding age's " 63 10
of outworn buried age " 64 2
Doubting the filching age " 75 6
And to be praised of ages " 101 12
hear this, thou ago unbred " 104 13
olives of endless age ** 107 8
dust and injury of age ** 108 10
In the old age " 127 1
And age in love ** 138 12
through lattice of scar'd age L C 14
And, privileged by age " -... 62
in the charity of age " ..... 70
Not age, but sorrow *' ..... 74
And age, in love PP \ 12
Crabbed age and youth " 12 1
age is full of care ** 12 2
age like winter weather " 12 3
age like winter bare ** 12 4
age's breath Is short " 12 5
age is lame " 12 6
age is weak and cold " 12 7
and age is tame " 12 8
Age, I do abhor thee ** 12 9
Age, I do defy thee ** 12 11
When time with age *' 19 46
Aged— The .... man that coflTers R L 855
of time in aged things " ...» 941
AfOit— His other agunt« aim VA ..... 400
Agyrarate— to thy store ^SSim 146 10
Airree— with his proud sight agrees F^ ..... 288
his mood with nought agrees R L ~... 1095
and sweet poetry agree PP % 1
Afreelsg^with his gust is 'greeing Son 114 11
Agve — agues pale and faint
Ah—. . . . ! if thou issueless
Ah, but those tears
But, ah, thought kills mc
Ah, wherefore with infection
Ah, do ncit, when my heart
Ah, yet doth beauty
ah, my love well knows
But, ah, whoever shunu'd
ah, fool too froward
Ah, that I had my lady
Ah, neither bo my share
Ah, thought I, thou mourn 'st
Aid — by whose swift ....
keep them from thy aid
began to promise aid
in his poor heart's aid
did call upon thy aid
Giving him aid, my verso
All aid, themselves made fairer
Aidaace — the .... of the tongue
Aim — His other agents ....
Mistakes that aim, and cleaves
The aim of all
And in this aim
End thy ill aim
of his all-hurting aim
Air — moisture, .... of grace
His nostrils drink the air
As air and water
ravish the morning air
that in air consumes
The dispersed air
That heaven's air
fix'd in heaven's air
slight air and purging fire
in heaven's sweetest air
in the wanton air
•Air,' quoth he
Air, would I mi((ht
Airy— the .... scale of praise
AJax — In .... and Ulysses
In AJax' eyes blunt rage
Alabaster— in an .... band
her alabaster skin
Alack — ' ....', what were it
But, out, alack I he was
meditation ! where, alack
Alack, what poverty
alack, too timely shaded
On a day, alack the day
Vow, alack ! for youth unmeet
Alarm — To love's alarms
Gives false alarms
rash alarm to know
Alsmm — Anon their loud alarums
heart, alarum striking
Alas — '. . . ., he nought esteems
'Alas, poor world
Alas, how many bear
From that, alas, thy Lucrece
Alas, 'tis true I have gone
Alas, why, fearing
alas, it was a spite
VA 739
Son 9 Z
" 34 13
" 44 9
" 67 1
" 90 5
" 104 9
•' 139 9
LC^... 155
PP 4 14
" 11 13
" 14 1
" 21 19
VA ...~ 1190
R Ij ...m 912
" 1696
«. ..... 1784
San 79 1
" 86 8
LC ...^ 117
VA 330
»•■•• 4\^l
• •••• aF4«
R L ~... 141
" ..... 579
LC 310
" 273
R Jj »•••• 778
" 1042
" -... 1805
iSiM 21 8
" 21 12
" 45 1
" 70 4
PP 17 4
" 17 9
" 17 10
LC 226
R L I.'t94
" -... 1398
VA „... 36.1
R L 419
" 11.%
iSm 33 11
" 65 9
" 103 1
PP 10 3
" 17 1
" 17 13
VA 424
" 651
RL .... 473
VA 700
R L 433
VA «... 631
" 1075
R L 832
" 1624
Son 110 1
" 115 9
PP 16 7
ALAS
9
ALL
llw— . . . ., she coaU not help it
PP
16
12
Bat,mlu! mj hand
a
17
11
ll«k«By— with heaTenly ....
am
8S
4
taught It this alchemy
u
114
4
llie»— As erery .... pen
u
78
S
lllfht— to .... thy steed
VA
*••••
13
Alike— Since all ... . my songs
am 105
3
lUre-stiUisleft....
VA
•••••
174
that Adonis is alire
M
•«•••
1009
What face remains alire
M
•••••
1076
faltering feeble soah alire
RL
•••••
1768
of yours alire that time
am
17
13
nor I to none alire
u
112
7
None alire will pity me
PP
21
28
All— Stain to ... . nymphs
VA
••••■
9
derooring all in haste
M
•••••
57
making her cheeks all wet
U
•■*••
83
all compact of fire |
U
•••••
149
All swoln with chafing
M
•«•••
325
For all askance he holds
M
•••••
342
And all this dumb play
U
•••••
359
Ail whole as thine
u
•«•••
370
For all my mind
M
•••••
383
And all but with a breath
M
414
And all amazed brake off
U
•••••
469
and all the earth
U
•••••
484
borrowed all their shine
U
•••••
488
she takes all she can, not all she
listeth
U
•••••
564
and picks them all
U
•■•••
576
All is imaginary
M
•••••
507
Bat all in rain
U
^••«
607
all the world amazes
U
•••••
631
all stain*d with gore
M
•••••
664
desire sees best of all
M
•••••
720
And all is but to rob
(1
•••••
723
of all these maladiea
a
•••••
745
And all in rain
U
•••••
772
Lore is all truth
M
804
That all the neighbor cares
U
•»•••
830
they answer all
M
•••■•
851
patron of all night
M
••••*
860
And all in haste
«(
••«••
870
all strain courtesy
M
•••••
888
her senses all dismay'd
U
•••••
896
hepainted all with led
U
•••••
901
through all her sinews
U
•••••
903
nought at all respecting
l«
•••••
911
In hand with all things, nought
at
all aflTectlng
u
•••••
912
all other eyes to see
u
•••••
952
All entertain'd each passion
u
mmmmm
969
join they all together
u
•»•••
971
called him all to nought
M
•••••
993
of all mortal things
4«
•••••
996
And there all sraother'd
(1
•••••
1035
That all lore's pleasure
U
•••«•
1140
to all discontents
M
•••••
1161
all in post
RL
•••••
1
Neglected all with swift Intent
%i
•••••
46
Which, haring all, all could not
satisfy
14
•••••
96
The aim of all
U
•••••
141
That one for all or all Ibr one
U
•••••
144
the death of all, and all t<>gether "
•••••
147
all for want of wit
U
•••••
153
foeloding all foul harms
U
•••••
199
All pure effects
U
•••••
251
All orators are dumb
«
•••••
268
AU— they .... rate his ill RL — SM
But all these poor forbiddings " . S2S
heart of aU her land '* — 439
with all my might *" _. 488
All this beforehand " ~... 4»4
all the power of both ** ..... 572
*AU which together ** — 589
To all the host " _. 598
all that brood to kill ** .... 627
If all these petty lib *' _. 656
Feebk> I>esin>, all recreant ** ~... 710
That ail the faults ** — 804
all sin.n pa8t and all that are *' — . 923
Thou nursest all and niurder'st all " ..... 929
My tongue shall utter all ** ~... 1076
to all fair eyes « ..... 1083
And to herself all sorrow ** ..... 1102
And all my fame " ~... 1203
all the little worms ** ..... 1248 •
through all her budy spread "* ~... 1266
smeared all with dust " ..... 1381
his beard all silrer white " ~... 1405
All Jointly listening ** ....1410'
all boirn and rvd " .... 1417
where all distress is stclPd " 1444
all distress and dolour dwelled ** .... 1446
Of all the (ireeks " .... 1470
Here, all enragL-d " 1562
Which all this time " 1576
To tell them all '* .... 1617
all the task it hath to say " .... 1618
unless 1 took all patiently " 1641
Comes all too late " .... 1686
they all at once began " .... 1709
and all his lordly crew ** .... 1731
all the beauty of my glass " 1763
By all our country righU ** ....1838
where all thy beauty lies Som 2 5
Where all the treasure "26
Who, all in one '' 8 12
If all were minded so " 11 7
sable curls all silrer'd o'er '^ 12 4
all girded up in shcares ** 12 7
And all in war with Time " 15 13
number all your graces '* 17 6
hath all too short a date ** 18 4
and all her fading sweets " 19 7
all 'hues' in his euntrolling " 20 7
and all things rare ** 21 7
For all that beauty " 22 5
And all the n>8t forgot " 25 12
all naked, will l»estow it " 26 8
I all alone beweep " 29 2
All lossei are restored * 80 14
endeared with all hearts ** 31 1
and all love's loving parts " 31 8
And all those friends ** 31 4
who all their parts " 31 11
thou, all they, hast all the all of me " 31 14
ransom all ill deeds '* 34 14
All men make faults and " 35 5
Take all my comfort " 37 4
these all, or all or more " 37 6
of all thy glory live " 37 12
art all the better ftart of me " 89 2
Take all my loves, my lore, yea
take them all " 40 1
all mine was thine " 40 4
steal thee all my porerty " 40 10
ADVERSE
AGAINST
Thy .... party is thy adrocate Son 35 10
Adriec — . ... is sportiog while infec-
tion breeds £ L «... 907
twallow up his lonnd adyiee " ^... 1409
adrice is often seen L C 160
IdTlwd— O. be .... ; thou know'st VA ..... 615
iwom to this advised doom B L 1849
by adrised respects Son 49 4
AdTfaedly— . . . . she marketh VA ^... 457
thus speaks advisedly J2 L 180
she advisedly perused ** 1527
and arm his long-hid wits advisedly " 1816
Advoeate— adverse party is thy ... . Son 35 10
JBtaa— As smoke from .... H L ..... 1042
Afkr— may read the mot .... " 830
chase thee a&r behind Son 143 10
Aftard — ^And wast .... to scratch H L ...~ 1035
Affiable— That .... familiar ghost Snn 9^ 9
AlDaira— His honour, his ... . RL 45
or your alTairs suppoee Son 57 10
To stand in thy affairs " 151 12
AffiBcted— to thine own face .... VA 157
AfTBctedly— silk feat and ... . LC 48
AActlon— . ... is a coal VA 887
AfTectlon faints not " 569
himself Affection's sentinel " ..... 650
Affection is my captain R L ...~ 271
affection's course control " .... 500
wrong thy true affection so " ..... 1060
Made old offences of affections new Son 1 10 4
And nice affections wavering stood L C ..... 97
Throw my affections in his charmed
power " ..... 146
my affection put to the smallest teen " ..... 192
trophies of affections hot " 218
-. . . . him in his bed RL 975
-. . . . fancy fastly drew L C ..... 61
Aflbrd— too much talk .... iS X »... 1106
next vouchsafe t' afford " 1305
in thy cheek : he can afford San 79 11
tbatable spirit affords " 85 7
which wondrous scope affords ** 105 12
AflUal— wUl hold me up . . . . " 80 9
Aflrald--that they are ... . VA 898
of my holy vows afraid L C ...~ 179
but seems afraid PP 18 30
Afr«tli — And weep .... Son 30 7
AArlirht— his lewd eyes .... RL 971
to affrtght mine eye " 1138
After— like sunshine .... rain VA 799
tempest after sun " ..... 800
Which after him she darts " 817
And would say after her " 852
Long after fearing " 1036
after supfier long he questioned R L 122
Till after a deep groan " 1276
old Priam after slew '* ..... 1522
after many accents and delays " ~... 1719
after yourself's decease Son 13 7
After a thousand victories " 25 10
imitated after you " 53 6
after I am gone " 71 14
After my death, dear love " 72 3
As after sunset fadeth " 73 6
after their lord's decease " 07 8
Drawn after >ou, you pattern " 98 12
after that which flies " 143 9
after new love bearing ** 152 4
After-loss— drop in for an ... . Son 90 i
Afterwarda— should .... bum clearer "115 4
Again— them dry . . . ., she seeks VA 52
to kiss 7 then wink again " ...„ 121
I'll give it thee again <* 209
and forth again " ..... 273
never lost again " 408
breatheth life in her again *• ..... 474
kill me once again " 499
' you will fall again " 769
she untreads again " 908
And, sighing it again " ...„ 930
opens them again " 960
make them wet again " ...» 966
chaos comes again " ..... 1020
creep forth again '* 1036
wound the heart with looks again " ~... 1042
whet his teeth at him again " 1118
return again in haste R L ..... 821
Then Collatlne again, by Lucrcce " 381
what he would lose again " ..... 688
should not peep again " ..... 788
till he return again " 1359
Retire again, till meeting " ..... 1441
his breath drinks up again ** 1666
fountain clears itself again " ..... 1707
Lucrcce, live again and see " 1770
He doth again repeat " 1848
Yourself again, after yourself 's Son 13 7
not to give back again " 22 14
come back again, assured " 45 11
I send them back again " 45 14
To-morrow see again " 56 7
Spending again what Is " 76 12
and pays it thee again " 79 8
back again is swerving " 87 8
Comes home again, on better Judg-
ment " 87 12
I return again " 109 6
He again desires her L C ..... 66
do again for such a sake " 822
Would yet again betray " „... 828
and come again to-morrow P P 14 5
ag^in to make me wander " 14 10
Against— strive .... the stream VA «... 772
'gainst venoni'd sores " 916
Against the welkin volleys out " .... 921
Against the golden splepdour R L .... 25
Against love's fire fear's frost hath " ~... 355
against long-living laud " 622
For now against himself " 717
Against the unseen secrecy " 76^1
against proportion'd course " .... 774
against himself to rave " 982
And whiles against a thorn " US.*)
well, against my heart " 1137
against the wither'd flower " 12.>4
against my heart he set " .... 1640
That 'gainst thyself thou stick'st Son 10 r>
Nothing 'gainst Time's scythe " 12 13
Against this coming end " 13 3
Against the stormy gusts " 13 11
'gainst myself a lawful plea com-
mence " 35 11
stand against thy sight '* 38 6
Against that time, if ever " 49 1
Against that time when thou " 49 5
Against that time do I ** 49 9
against myself uprear " 49 11
AGAINST
8
ALAS
AfilBitr-^Gftinst death and all'4>bliT-
lou8 enmity Son 65 9
eclipses 'gainst bia glorj flght *< 60 7
Against my love shall be ** 63 1
Against confounding age's cruel
knife " 63 10
Against the wreck ful siege ** 65 6
which shake against the cold ** 73 8
against myself I'll fight ** 88 8
Against thy reasons ** 88 4
against myself I'll tow " 89 13
Potions of eisel 'gainst my itroDg
infection " 111 10
When I against myself " 149 2
against the thing they see " 152 12
To swear against the truth ** 152 14
Against strange maiadiee " 153 8
examples 'gainst her own content L C ~... 157
'gainst rule, 'gainst sense, 'gainst
shame ** »... 271
that you make 'gainst mine " »... 277
Against the thing he sought " 313
'Gainst whom the world PP Z 2
Age— Thy mark is feeble .... VA 941
Teaching decrepit age " «... 1148
the golden age to gild R L 60
ease In waning age " 142
wait on wrinkled age " ..... 275
be seeded in thine age ** 603
minute in an age " »... 962
of the worn-out age " ~... 1350
my old age new born " «... 1759
of thine age shalt see Son 8 11
youth In his middle age ** 7 6
Like feeble age, he reeleth ** 7 10
age and cold decay " 11 6
The age to come would say " 17 7
yellowed with their age " 17 9
grown with this growing age " 82 10
Painting my age with beauty " 62 14
to age's steepy night " 63 5
Against confounding age's " 63 10
of outworn burled ago " 64 2
Doubting the filching age " 75 6
And to be praised of ages " 101 12
hear this, thou age unbred ** 104 13
olives of endless age "107 8
dust and injury of age *' 108 10
In the old age ** 127 1
And age in love ** 138 12
through lattice of sear'd age L C ..... 14
And, privileged by age " -... 62
in the charity of age " «... 70
Not age, but sorrow " «... 74
And age. In love PP \ 12
Crabbed age and youth " 12 1
age is full of care ** 12 2
age like winter weather ** 12 3
age like winter bare " 12 4
age's breath Is short " 12 5
age Is lame " 12 6
age is weak and cold " 12 7
and age is tame " 12 8
Age, I do abhor thee " 12 9
Age, I do defy thee " 12 11
When time with age " 19 46
Aged— The .... man that coffers R L «... 855
of time in aged things " ...« 941
Agtmt— His other agents aim F A ».« 400
AggraTate— to .... thy store Skm 146 10
Agree— with his proud sight agrees VA 288
his mood with nought agrees R L 1090
and sweet poetry agree PP B 1
Agreeing— with his gust is 'greeing Son 114 11
Agve — agues pale and faint
Ah—. . . . ! if thou issueless
Ah, but those tears
But, ah, thought kills me
Ah, wherefore with infection
Ah, do not, when my heart
Ah, yet doth beauty
ah, my love well knows
But, ah, whoever shunu'd
ah, fool too froward
Ah, that I had my lady
Ah, neither be my share
Ah, thought I, thou mourn'st
Aid — by whose swift ....
keep them from thy aid
began to promise aid
in his poor heart's aid
did call upon thy aid
Giving him aid, my verse
All aid, themselves made fairer
Aidance — the .... of the tongue
Aim— His other agents ....
Mistakes that aim, and cleaves
The aim of all
And in this aim
End thy ill aim
of his all-hurting aim
Air— moisture, .... of grace
His nostrils drink the air
As air and water
ravish the morning air
that in air consumes
The dispersed air
That heaven's air
fix'd in heaven's air
slight air and purging fire
In heaven's sweetest air
In the wanton air
•Air,' quoth he
Air, would I might
Airy- the .... scale of praise
AJax — In .... and Ulysses
In Ajax' eyes blunt rage
Alabaster — In an ... . band
her alabaster skin
Alack-' ....', what were It
But, out, alack ! he was
meditation ! where, alack
Alack, what poverty
alack, too timely shaded
On a day, alack the day
Vow, alack ! for youth unmeet
Alarm — To love's alarms
Gives false alarms
rash alarm to know
Alsmm— Anon their loud alarums
heart, alarum striking
Alas—'. . . ., he nought esteems
'Alas, poor world
Alas, how many bear
From that, alas, thy Lucrece
Alas, 'tis true I have gone
Alas, why, fearing
aiaS| it was a spite
VA — 739
<Sim 9 8
" 84 13
" 44 9
" 67 1
" 90 6
" 104 9
'* 139 9
L C 155
PP 4 14
" 11 13
" 14 1
" 21 19
VA ...« 1190
R Ij ...« 912
" 1696
" . «... 1784
Stm 79 1
" 86 8
LC...^ 117
VA 330
••■•• nN^#
••••• «f4«
R L «... 141
" 143
" 579
LC 810
VA 64
" «... 273
R L 778
" 1042
" «... 1805
Son 2\ 8
" 21 12
" 45 1
" 70 4
PP 17 4
" 17 9
" 17 10
LC 226
R L 1894
" «... 1398
r A «... oD.}
R L 419
" 1156
iSm 33 11
" 65 9
" 103 1
PP 10 3
** 17 1
" 17 13
VA 424
" 651
RL .... 473
VA «... 700
R L 433
VA 631
" 1075
R Ij «... 832
" 1624
Son 110 1
" 115 9
PP 16 7
AM
12
AND
((
It
(t
ft
(I
i(
«(
149
14
l.'S2
1
152
6
*«•••
73
1
10
8
U
5
•••••
634
• ••M
684
• ••M
469
• ••••
823
• «•••
925
• »•••
446
•»•••
1356
•■•••
1591
20
8
26
8
Am— thou lorest, and I . . . . blind Skm
thoa know'st I am forsworn
I am perjured most
tell your judgement I am old L C
say not I that I am old P P
in deep delight am chiefly drown'd "
Amaio — ^Venus makes .... unto him VA
Amaae — all the world amazes **
to amaze his foes **
AmaMd— And all ... .
amazed, as one that unaware
poor people are amazed
She, much amazed JR L
make him more amazed
Amaaedly — . ... in her sad face
Anaaeth— and women's souls .... Son
Ambauagt — this written .... . *"
Amber—
Of . . . ., crystal, and of beaded Jet L C ..... 37
With coral clasps and amber studs P P 20 14
Ambition— Yet their .... BL ~... 68
in Tarquin new ambition bred " ~... 411
Ambitioat—
And this . . . .foul infirmity " . 150
Ambush— Or lain in ... . " .... 233
the ambush of young days Son 70 9
Amen— still cry 'Amen " 85 6
Amend— return to make amends JB L 961
what shall be thy amends Son 101 1
sickly radiance do amend L C ...» 214
Amended— that cannot be ... . BL ...~ 578
Amending— can give the fault .... " ..... 1614
Amid—
famish them .... their plenty VA ..... 20
Amist— salving thy .... Son 35 7
for invention, bear amiss " 59 8
urge not my amiss " 151 3
All is amiss PP 18 4
Among—. ... a flock of sheep VA ...~ 685
among the wastes of time Son 12 10
Weeds among flowers "124 4
Among a number " 136 8
Among the many L C ...~ 190
pour your ocean all among *' ..... 256
Amongst^ Mongst our mourners
Shalt thou go P T ~... 20
Amorous — and his ... . spoil L C ...~ 154
Amoronsly — ^metal .... impleach*d " 205
Amplify— sonnets that did .... " ..... 209
An— .... hour but short VA 23
Even as an empty eagle " ~... 55
An oven that is stopp'd " ~... 331
in an alabaster band " 863
like an earthquake ** ..... 648
an angry-chafing boar ** »... 662
an image like thyself " ..... 664
suck'd an earthly mother " ~... 863
one that spies an adder ** ....... 878
cleaves an infant's heart " «... 942
an orient drop beside ** »... 981
one minute in an hour " ..... 1187
An expired date B L ~... 26
men without an orator " 30
And be an eye-sore " ~... 205
bear an ever-during blame " ..... 224
or an old man's saw " ..... 244
Show'd like an AprU daisy *' 895
batter such an ivory wall " ..... 464
Only he hath an eye '* .... 496
An— enters at ... . iron gate B L ...» 095
When wilt thou sort an hour " .... 899
An accessary by thine " ..... 922
Onepoor retiring minute in an age " ..... 962
would such an office have " ~... 1000
with an infringed oath *' 1061
Like an unpractised swimmer ** ..... 1098
These means as frets upon an in-
strument " «... -1140
an eager combat fight " „... 1298
Griped in an armed hand " 1425
An humble gait, calm looks " l.M)8
As through an arch " 1667
Were an all-eating shame Soi% 2 8
Look, what an unthrift "99
in the world an end " 9 11
metre of an antique song " 17 12
An eye more bright " 20 5
As an unperfect actor " 23 1
Then can I drown an eye " 30 5
That I an accessary needs must be " 3!i 18
proud as an enjoyer " 75 5
And do not come in fur an after-loss " 90 4
thy name blesses an ill report " 95 8
as an idol show " 105 2
to try an older friend " 110 11
it is an ever-fixed mark " 116 5
To keep an adjunct " 122 13
she alter'd with an end " 145 9
but an art of craft L C 295
To break sn oath PP 3 14
with such an earthly tongue " 5 14
Under an osier "65
dead within an hour " 13 6
Till looking on an Englishman " 16 3
Juno but an Ethiope were " 17 16
with an outward show " 19 38
Anatomized—
In her the painter had ... B L 1450
Anchored— Be anchor'd in the bay Son 137 6
Anclentr—
from .... ravens' wings B L 949
And—. . . . like a bold-faced suitor VA 6
more white and red " 10
And rein his proud head " ..... 14
Here come and sit " 17
And being set I'll smother " 18
And yet not cloy " 19
Making them red and pale " 21
of pith and livelihood " 26
And, trembling in her passion " 27
Who blush'd and pouted " ..... 83
red and hot as coals " 85
stalled up, and even now " 39
And govem'd hira " 42
on their elbows and their hips " ~... 44
And 'gins to chide " ..... 46
And kissing speaks " ..... 47
sighs and golden hairs " »... 51
fan and blow them dry " 52
feathers, flesh and bone "..... 56
And where she ends " ~... 60
and breatheth in her face " ~... 62
And calls it heavenly " «... 64
shame and awed resistance " ~... 69
and prettily entreats " -... 73
he lours and frets " .... 75
shame and anger ashy-pale " ~... 76
and being white " .... 77
Awl bc«K'd far thai
And for mj' »ke balti taan'd
And ». la iplte -uf d«th
And TlMn, Urol
Aad rorlli the nwbca, •norti
Ddclu Aloud
■nd l<i bcr HnlKht
Aad now ii[a wuvcu girth*
AJiir*«F lod liU hlgb dr
•tprld*
■nd^ap*
JaIocIu ibag -ind loDg
pals, and by and by
And like a lout; lonr
And all thii dumb pltj
iiuKl»,aiia*ivpa,aiidall but
I flairi to herdmen
ALLAYED
11
AM
lIlAyed— by feedipg is ... . Son 56 3
All-MitlBf— Were an .... shame "28
Allege— lean .... no cause ** 49 14
lll-htdlog^-thjr black .... cloak R L ^... 801
All*kartl09— of his ... . aim L C 310
AU-ohllrlOM— and .... enmity Son 55
Allotted— reproach to him .... Ji L 824
Allow— did his words .... "..... 1845
untainted do allow Sm 19 11
my bad, my good allow "112 4
All-too-tiaeleM— His .... speed Ji L 44
All-blvrnphant —
With .... splendour Son 83 10
Allare— favours to ... . his eye PP 4 6
Almighty— by high .... Jove B L 568
Almost— Is .... choked " 282
almost hid behind " 1413
myself almost despising Son 29 9
doth almost tell my name " 76 7
And almost thence ray nature "111 6
Almo— that by ... . doth live R L »... 986
AJoo— The aloes of all forces L C 273
Alofl^
shakes .... his Roman blade R L 505
ignorance aloft to fly Son 78 6
Aloae — but the eye .... VA ..... 213
leare me here alone * " 382
while now it sleeps alone " 786
But I alone alone must sit R L 795
alone committed, light alone " 1480
traffic with thyself alone Son 4 9
I all alone bewcep my outcast state " 29 2
now is thine alone " 31 12
by me be borne alone " 36 4
which thou deservest alone " 39 8
then she loves but me alone " 42 14
being made of four, with two alone " 45 7
I leave my lore alone " 66 14
Then thou alone kingdoms of hearts
sbouldstowe " 70 14
to be with you alone " 75 7
Whilst I alone did call upon thy aid " 79 1
My vene alone had all thy gentle
grace " 79 2
Than this rich praise that you alone
are you " 84 2
Wretched in this alone " 91 13
hare often lived alone " 105 13
But all alone stands hugely politic " 124 11
Although I swear it to myself alone " 131 8
Is *t not enough to torture me alone " 133 3
To any sensual feast with thee alone " 141 8
9 14
18 53
21 8
and left her all alone P P
Must live alone "
Save the nightingale alone "
AlOBg — So soon was she .... as he
was down VA 43
the lion walk'd along " 1093
Aloof-from Judgement stand .... L C ..... 168
Alosd — snorts and neighs .... VA ~... 202
dogs exclaim aloud " 886
Already — to those .... spent R L 1589
what is already spent Son 76 12
Altar— Over my altars hath he hung r^ 103
Since I their altar L C 224
Alter— but .... not his taste R L 6G1
mod alter their contents " 948
Which though it alter not love's
sole effect Son 36 7
Alter— Which alters when it altera^
tion finds Son 116 8
Love alters not with his brief hours "116 11
Alteration— when it .... finds " 116 8
Alter'd— though alter'd new " 93 3
'Ihate'shealter'd withancnd " 145 9
Altering^-to the course of ....things " 115 8
Althoiigh — . ... he mount her VA »... 598
Although our undivided loves are
one Son 36 2
Although thou steal thee " 40 10
although my foot did stand ** 44 5
although to-day thou fill " 56 5
although their eyes were kind " 69 11
Although in me each part " 81 4
although his height be taken "116 8
Although T swear it to myself alone " 131 8
Although she knows my days " 1.38 6
Although I know my years P P \ 6
Altogether— or .... balk R L 696
Always— doth .... fresh remain V A ..... 801
I always write of you Son 76 9
Serve always with assured trust P P 19 31
Am— What I that thou VA 205
I am such a park " 239
thou wert as I am " ..... 369
I am bereft him so " »... 381
O, where am I ' " 493
' I am,' quoth he " ..... 718
more am I accurst " ..... 1120
Under that colour am I come R L ~... 481
Yet am I guilty " ..... 841
So am I now " 1049
I am the mistress of my fate " 10C9
shall not persuade me I am old Son 22 1
I that love and am beloved " 25 13
That am debarr'd the benefit " 28 2
then I am not lame " 37 9
I in thy abundance am sufficed " 37 11
When I am sometime absent " 41 2
I am not thought " 44 9
And I am still with them " 47 12
So am I as the rich " 52 1
I am to wait though waiting so " 58 13
O, sure I am the wits of former days " 59 13
my love shall be as I am now " 6:) 1
mourn for mc when I am dead " 71 1
Give warning to the world that I
am fled " 71 3
I perhaps compounded am with
cloy " 71 10
after I am gone " 71 14
For I am shamed " 72 13
I am a worthless boat " 80 11
When I in earth am rotten "81 2
wherein I am attainted " 88 7
To whom I am confined " 110 12
No, I am that I am " 121 9
I am forsaken " 133 7
Perforce am thine " 133 14
And I myself am mortgaged " 134 2
And yet am I not free " 134 14
More than enough am I that vex
thee still " 135 3
And wherefore say not I that I am
old " 138 10
but since I am near slain " 139 13
Past cure I am " 147 9
Am of myself, all tyrant " 149 4
AM
12
AND
(t
II
u
u
II
II
II
II
II
II
Am— thou loyest, and I . . . . blind Sen
thou know'st I am forsworn
I am perjured most
tell your judgement I am old LC
say not I that I am old P P
in deep delight am chiefly drown'd '*
Imaio— Venus makes .... unto him VA
Amaxe— all the world amazes
to amaze his foes
Amaaed— And all ... .
amazed, as one that unaware
poor people are amazed
She, much amazed R L
make him more amazed
Amaaedly — . ... in her sad face
Amaseth — and women's souls .... Son
Ambaaiage this written .... . **
Amber—
Of . . . ., crystal, and of beaded Jet L C
With coral clasps and amber studs P P
Ambition— Yet their ....
in Tarquin new ambition bred
Ambltioat—
And this . . . .foul infirmity
Ambmih — Or lain in ... .
the ambush of young dajrs
Amen— still cry 'Amen
Amend — return to make amends
what shall be thy amends
sickly radiance do amend
Amended — that cannot be ... .
Amondin^— can give the fault ....
Amid—
fkroish them .... their plenty
Amim — salving thy ....
for invention, bear amiss
urge not my amiss
All is amiss
Among — . ... a flock of sheep
among the wastes of time
Weeds among flowers
Among a number
Among the many
pour your ocean all among
Amongst-' Mongst our mourners
149
152
152
1
8
14
1
6
73
10
11
5
..... 634
...- 684
..... 4o«f
446
..... 1591
20 8
26 3
20
37
14
68
411
II
II
Son
II
RL
Son
LC
RL
II
VA
Sw
II
II
PP
VA
Son
II
u
LC
II
150
233
9
6
961
1
...- 214
678
..... 1614
70
85
101
35
59
151
18
12
124
136
20
7
3
3
4
685
10
4
8
190
256
shalt thou go
AmoroM — and his ... . spoil
Amoronsly- metal .... impleach'd
Amplify— sonnets that did ....
An — . . . . hour but short
Even as an empty eagle
An oven that is stopp'd
in an alabaster band
like an earthquake
an angry-chafing boar
an image like thyself
8uck*d an earthly mother
one that spies an adder
cleaves an infant's heart
an orient drop beside
one minute in an hour
An expired date
men without an orator
And be an eye-sore
bear an ever-during blame
or an old man's saw
Show'd like an April daisy
batter such an ivory wall
Only he hath an eye
PT
LC
u
VA
11
11
II
M
«l
II
II
II
II
RL
II
II
II
II
M
M
20
...- 154
205
..... 209
..... iMt
M... OOl
363
.... 648
M... 662
..... DO^
M... IMkS
M... oio
M... V4^
«... 1187
..... 26
80
205
.... 224
..... 244
M... 895
..... 404
w... Vtfu
An— enters at ... . iron gate R L .... 095
When wilt thou sort an hour " ..... 899
An accessary by thine " ~... 922
Onepoor retiring minute in an age " ..... 962
would such an office have " ..... 1000
with an infringed oath " 1061
Like an unpractised swimmer " ~... 1098
These means as firets upon an in-
strument " ..... 1140
an eager combat fight " ..... 1298
Griped in an armed hand " 1425
An humble gait, calm looks " 1508
As through an arch " 1667
Were an all-eating shame Sov% 2 8
Look, what an unthrift "99
in the world an end " 9 11
metre of an antique song " 17 12
An eye more bright " 20 5
As an unpcrfect actor " 23 1
Then can I drown an eye " 30 5
That I an accessary needs must be " &*$ 13
proud AS an enjoycr " 75 6
And do not come in for an after-loss " 90 4
thy name blesses an ill report " 95 8
as an idol show " 105 2
to try an older friend " 110 11
it is an ever-fixed mark "116 5
To keep an adjunct " 122 13
she altcr'd with an end " 145 9
but an art of craft L C 295
To break an oath PP 3 14
with such an earthly tongue " 5 14
Under an osier "66
dead within an hour " 13 6
Till Irxiking on an Englishman " 16 3
Juno but an Ethiope were " 17 16
with an outward show " 19 38
Anatomized—
In her the painter had ... R L ..... 1450
Anchored — Be anchor'd in the bay Son 137 6
Ancient —
from .... ravens* wings R L ..... 949
And— .... like a bold-faced suitor VA ^... 6
more white and red " ..... 10
And rein his proud head " ..... 14
Here come and sit " 17
And being set I'll smother " 18
And yet not cloy " 19
Making them red and pale " ..... 21
of pith and livelihood " 26
And, trembling in her passion " 27
Who blush'd and pouted " 83
red and hot as coals " ..... 35
stalled up, and even now " ..... 89
And govern'd him " ..... 42
on their elbows and their hips " ..... 44
And 'gins to chide " 46
And kissing speaks " ..... 47
sighs and golden hairs " ..... 51
fan and blow them dry " «... 62
feathers, flesh and iKine " ~... 66
And where she ends " «... 60
and brcatheth in her face " ..... 62
And calls It heavenly " 64
shame and awi'd resistance " «... 69
and prettily entreats " ~... 73
he lours and frets " ~... 75
shame and anger ashy-pale " 76
and being white " ..» 77
And bvgg'd fbr tUt "
And fat my uka bath iMrn'd to
llgblaDdirlUiuiilrc
And died 1o ki»
And nsv Adunla
And altb ■ htnj
Alid,io,IUetKtwMi
Ib!t Ik
eoU «nd ■eUEliaii
^r^s Liu'J blgh deUglillUl
cofirAge aud hU high duLn
tattfiy >ihI modiM prlda
Aodtbti do
C«lwir.p4f e. uu] bODB
feUockiahA^-Knd Lonf
■uiU held ■Ddiiwt rill aids
Hnlsbt 1^ uid pudDf rtiODt
BDd bitruiTWUuiiiiiiB«l
•ndltfl Aclonlilhirrj
pHiV) upd by iind bj
And like a lowly laier
And ill tbla dumb piny
■ ilfiiliiiiJuii*aibg
■nd I a man
and thou ihult bare It
AodbiaSiupU'Ian
and all tha varth
ulckly KDDS
Id Kuud nigbt
itton-likuabetHdi
Amd-Foulwoid*...
rrow
Ukd pkki Lhem lU
Hut
■ltd look weU lo he
haut
ADdonbliiMck
uuItolwlcbetJOT
kodldattlMmiw
«-ed
AiKl*hflmh<;gtrili
ti«
.w«tlip.»Qdcry.
^«ri.
.ndmrJalnil.JI.1.
and bll not down
right
brkti,*ad lukciliu
real
AudlnBpoac.-Ml;
.Tir
Andnoirhlagrirf
Turn, and rclurn
And being loir
Illi>tothjlt.»d9U
BDdlheatheuorjr
■pll^nda
Andnow'tlidntk,
.nd going I .fa.!
A>^d.i]1U)..>tInr
b
claudf ind forlorn
8(«lmki«,i>nddiaK>nwatR
i»idl.i.rl.yol^hl
And puis p«Tfectluii
ud much mLKTT
UUl'JJliilautidful
grief >.»ld^u'd
i«p.it
hUCHDaqU-HLI™
VUUd, Ihiw'd. 1
ldon<
.nd^^lMotlngnii
And barren dc«.T-
b of danghUn
•nd of »ns
And mil In tiln
liksroun.(,TV.nd»o«e
And eiery longus
And ■111 not kt
And then UT mil
bnrt
ttulDianil MWU bi
mughihcduk
tnficilvuandi>ll<
ifulBbt
Al..l(»rnll«lii-
AndsUi«1«l-.>in>
mlly
And itUllbd Choi
■naoulvoRthenlgbt
and patron of all llgbt
iDd— ■hinlngMudo
and ret she h«n
and for bla horn
And lU lo bute
and
larv
otiUy
An.
wilh
mill
UldblOl
and
lewlU
Am
■ika
And
Ilion
anolhe
And not
I>ealh'iebonda
Andwli
1 hi, Wrong coo
howli.^i
y^auudlcirsd
andflDltcnhcritli
■ndfct
00 credulooi
T>-'fa\r
andLopo
vr., mid Death
o for king!
bI>Iri<i]»|<l)«9n<n.>.-<;:lorlL'a
j.wfgk=id.l.mj„i!nd
1<T« and mnst not die
And beauty dead
And In her bute
Andtbor«iilliniollirr-d
tb I- i r office »iid 1 h ci r lig ht
and nerer «ound the heart
and being open'd
andiecni'diiithhl'ii
And thcreforfl vould b«
and. bolDg gone
Anditralght,lnpltr
and genilr bear him
And nciir fright
And erorj beaut j
Aad-Ani] by chiule Liier««
uiA h; Ihtfl bloocif knlfa
And kua'd ibe r*M kolO
AndtuhitpnteiUdOD
Alld tllM dMp to*
Andu
It they n
by ilio gmvt ond Ihee
£11111111; mill LliHItli-ni pnlM
w thy bl
■ mndldllhefa
thy niuChei'B g\m itnd ibe lu tb
I>ie iln^e, nnd ibliie lnia«?<li«
And bclDg fmnk. sbc li'Vdii
And ttut unfilr kUcL Iklcly
liideoua ■blccand tootaaai»h
IVuia ud ]iuty luvu
IdT tract, and look nothi^r way '
I
11
And [,ula Bi.j.iiTrl
aire lod child and happy nwiher "
will b. widow and atmw«-p
9
bi-a.il.'ou>.i.,.ai.<rro1drauenew
And kiTl iiniMwl, Ihe uwr
9
Furiln.vaudrurm.vm')
pKllfrllM lagrnolQimad kind
10
Bill liny hy iiinht. mid nJgbtby day
ADdtb,t(».llU01Hl
wlidi>>Ii,lKauIy,>odin<:rpaw
And d.alhliii grace
Iblly, *{(C, and cold 4«cir
And night doibulBhtly make
ADdlhmwon jMr w.-uld maks ■
fbi hnaeal, and ninant thereby "
Ai»il.,.,k>L|.,nii.j.,-lf andcuTW
And«M litbrateday
11
1
ibl>i.iiiiiM.rl iiilKiuimBD-aKope
And ..blc mrl. all Mnfa o'pr "
lb™, and then my dale
And lummer'Hifnen all glided up "
Whlt*sndbri«1ybeitJ
u
And w«p aftcah
Blnco Bwecta »nd bcQuUea do
11
And moantlicviprDH!
And tlic a> hat oa heym
And boTtly /mm <rue to woe
Andnothlnji'lailortllnic'iacyths •
rmlun.'d and aorrswi end
13
And.)i..n.iTl=n.l«E.andallloT«'i
And burrcn nigp ,.t dnilK'i eternal "
AndyHiu:i(l,ii.k»I1.ave
hoiyjii^J"' "11=
bi! Ibundcr, mill, nnd wind
And tboii.mlllhey
And.cui>at>iil3tiir!i,ln Ili«n I retd '
Aa irulli alid licalllf shall logi^IbiT
And lliiiii^h llii.y l„. (nililriiip'J
thrive
di1.1l, Slid [mi'ls tii-tlor prore
truth'a and b»u(y'a doom and date '
M
H
And ftuimhi: fiirU.rn world
Andallin wtf wlihTlino "
ADd/ortlfyyonracIf Jn fourdeoy "
Anduiany maiden j;ardf-na ^
AndBlroUhed mrlre "
Ike twin, Id It aul In my rhyma "
And ■umucr'a li'aac bath all
And uOen d> Ilia soM LiiinpliiiloD "
And «TCTy Iklr A'odi Air "
Bo1ongliY«llil>,andih[>glic«U[e "
And make (ho rarlfa demur
And bum thclong-lirnlplHsnIx "
Make glad and aorry aoaKma "
Aad-Anddo-hat.
■urki and all her
iiTCn.aDdall tblngara
Auddl
play
look for rcMinpchie
.nd pcrapoctlve It ig b«l palate
niwr Iby 8bii[w and Iblne for n
.nd ill ibi.-iii«'lvi!»
,nd«1llb«Tx.3lf,.rc(.t
faulu, and i>t(h !
And'galnitrayK
wonhnndlrulh
And by a part
l^"!"'!l""r'lu"
lHLiLliilim;un.lih.jiigbiii»o»weetly "
Andvfi, luitliinjwii
Thy beauty and thy yean "
Imd-Br h«Tni ....
uidlfthewDii
Add will Ifaoutw
tec thT'lalDnaa ]ili; iniii
Andvllblljovlnd
.And.Hlhcn fills
.And nnUho |.U(UU
■ndlhoii tbeliiUva
■ nd Ihejr thy fouler giiTg
For lighl (Ud Imt
■cd mads her Ihrall
deilb and pain
BeKDvls,>Dd1iDle<faiinHlf
He mm, and cliidn
And m; trvB eje»
And therefore would ther
AlHlKravi>,1]kr>»lllerI1i>tdaUl«
■galuttt repose and rent
And bida her eyea
And hlda It leap
I)tm rvgiilL-r Itid notarj
tr<«edl« and murders
TaporouB and togtsy XEbI*^
And let tli j laiiljr fapoun
•od >Dklii>|-?r|i«tuBl night
And fellowship Id WM
Aod leivn It lo be a
And lothj shady ce
auddlsplacmtlaud
Andl.rlngbiiuwhp
perJUTT and suborDItlon
forgery and shift
all sJu past and all Ibat an
Aud U't mild women
And time lo see
And merry taoiM to mock
ind as one ■bins
And Iben they drown
And therefore are Ibey rorm'
and sharue that might ensue
Conceit and griot
this blunt aud ill
And— «f TO lift lirfngatai
And iui]K ft muutcrpnrt
And precLona ]ibrBAe
And, like vnktUfdclcTk
And to (bo moM a[ pnJM
And like CDOUEb
And (ot thit richea
And-u ray pat^mbb^lr ftgml
And i.I*u- mr merit
And pnvt lb« vitiKooi
And 1jy ibts vill bo A galni
And *il] camDK'i.l
Ismi'nw, and slm^j^hl nil.
wrelched nuillo "
And busi
onlT live
il»t*d nn.l for true Ihlngt
yrt Ihi- lime
ms and unlklhec'd frull
imr BDd in hne
IT Mill snd )™i iirsr
bads <ir nH[jnr»Mi
And make Tliqv'g ipolia
•cylhc lucl drook«l kulfe
Balh irulh uiid brHuly
and IheMn dignified
And lo br pralsfd
«ii«bow «nd thRii bat In Ilie ip
Andstupalisr plpo
ta grown
ifJKl
mj Ifnu mod doing mo dl»-
And liUM proclslmi oIItw
dull Afid ■i>eecblev (rlbea
liiirstWIn
AndBlckorwoKare
And liruuiilil tu niallFlne
Ivu-n, and And the Icswa
lU bruin tindlirg
■ud llK'rciorc -wi
Andrpttiernink
.Isndec'd
D vith UiOM 'dtticiDg
■Dil Kce thy blood wiinu
Look In thj g1*w Miil tfll ibc fu
1h]r mblbtir't uliM nDd she la 111!
DlciiDiile, nnil llilii<<lin>i»dJa
Anil being frank, .te Ji'ndi.
Aiid that uiiflilr uhlck Ailrl;
And bBvli
sirt iiHl child and
wUI be viduv und
Auilht
Aai thii fcuili tiloud
ind Isrrnm
nnolhi'r wiy
.■PI>T lu'Xher
iH-d. Ihg UKI
Aillr.i.
Jbrher
«ol<ld«i
.ed.j
nl Iherobr
ADd nhlr cvrl> all •Uim'da-er
And tunimer'B Kr«a bII giidisl np "
Whiu uldbrlillF ln'iid "
Since nwniti aod bisutles do "
AndDOIhlBii'giiliiillinic'iRrlhs "
And TbUI- neet •miblaiice "
And J
Andwi
1 Bud beaulf thall together
Lnd beaut y'l doom and date "
r thdi
Ih Tiiiii
And toitilJJ(
And nianr maidea Ranleni '
And tM mnit liic, idra* o '
WliiehhldajourllOandiliDwaDot '
And Id rmh sunibeia '
AnajcnrtniBrfuht.
lire twIfe.luJl nd Inniy rhjms '
Aul ■umDier'n IvatD liulb jll
•iiitlrilUQ
AMd— And do vhau'er thon
irurUI and all her fading ■
inen'i cyei and wduwo'i •
And all tho tnA furifot
li.TF and am beluinl
And |>ul«*pp*n'l
Airil kerp inf drooping pfe>IJda
And ihsll by fonune
And lUou^h Ihcy bi> Diitilripp'
dk4» and poetJt better proro
And Tium Ihe /iirlorn wsrld
And innkc! me iraiel
And they art Tkh and noann
And loalbKDic canker
fault., and even
And thai Ihuu Ivachat
Thy beauty and Ihj ytan
AND
22
AND
And — And so much less of shame L C ~... 188
And reign'd, commanding " 196
and rubies red as blood " ^... 198
Of grief and blushes *' .... 200
and the encrimson'd mood " «... 201
terror and dear modesty " ..... 202
And, lo, behold these talents " 2(Hl
And deep-brain'd sonnets " ~... 209
worth and quality " ~... 210
'twas beautiful and hard " ~... 211
sapphire and the opal blend " ..... 215
Of pensived and subdued desires " 219
my origin and ender " 222
and to your audit comes " ~... 230
and did thence remove ** ~... 237
And makes her absence " 245
And now she would *' ~... 249
And now, to tempt all " ~... 252
And mine I pour " 256
o'er them, and you o'er me " 257
TOWS and consecrations " 263
thou art all, and all things " ..... 266
And sweetens, in the suffering pangs" 272
forces, shocks, and fears " 273
And supplicant their sighs " 276
And credent soul to that strong-
bonded oath " 279
prefer and undertake my troth " »... 280
and chUl extincture hath " 294
sober guards and civil fears " — 298
and mine did him restore " 301
and he takes and leaves " 805
and swound at tragic shows " — 308
is both kind and tame " 311
And, veil'd in them " ..... 312
and praised cold chastity " ..... 815
naked and concealed fiend " ~... 317
Who, young and simple " «... 320
I fell and yet do question make " 322
And new pervert a reconciled maid " — 329
And wherefore say not I P P 1 10
And age, in love " 1 12
I'll lie with love and love with me " 1 13
of comfort and despair "21
And would corrupt my saint "27
And whether that my angel "29
and breath a vapour is "89
lovely, fresh, and green "42
she touch'd him here and there "47
But smile and jest " 4 12
fair queen, and toward " 4 13
He rose and ran away " 4 14
bias leaves, and makes his book "55
is music and sweet fire " 6 12
And scarce the herd "62
and throws his mantle by "69
And stood stark naked " 6 10
Brighter than glass and yet as glass "73
Softer than wax, and yet as iron "74
her tears, and all were Jestings " 7 12
and yet she foil'd the framing " 7 15
and yet she fell a-tuming " 7 16
If music and sweet poetry agree "81
the sister and the brother "82
'twixt thee and me "83
the one and I the other "84
And lin deep delight " 8 11
and both in thee remain " 8 14
a youngster proud and wild "94
w
it
u
((
And — with horn .... hounds P P
And blushing fled and left her "
and vaded in the spring "
And falls through wind
and yet no cause I have
And yet thou lelt'st me more
And as he fell to her
And then she clipp'd Adonis
And with her lips on his
And as she fetched breath
And would not take her meaning
To kiss and clip me
Crabbed age and youth
Youth is hot and bold, age is weak
and cold
i'outh is wild %nd age is tame
a vain and doubtful good
And as goods lost
painting, pain, and cost
And dafl''d me to a cabin
and come again to-morrow
sits and sings I sit and mark
And wish her lays
And drives away dark dreaming
night
and eyes their wished sight
and solace mix'd with sorrow
and bade mo come to-morrow
and length thyself to-morrow
And deny himself for Jove
And stall'd the deer
And when thou comcst
And set thy person forth to sell
And then too late she will repent
And twice desire, ere it be day
And ban and brawl, and say thee
nay
And to her will frame all thy ways
Spare not to spend and chiefly there
castle, tower, and town
And in thy suit be humble true
wiles and guiles that women
The tricks and toys that in them
To sin and never for to saint
Live with me and be my love
And we will all the pleasures prove
hills and valleys, dales and fields
And all the craggy mountains yields
And see the shepherds feed
A cap of flowers, and a kirtle
A belt of straw and ivy buds
With coral clasps and amber studs
And if these pleasures
Then live with me and be my love
the world and love were young
And truth in every shepherd's
To live with thee and be thy love
Beasts did leap and birds did sing
Trees did grow and plants did spring
And there sung the dolefull'st ditty
* Tereu, Tereu I' by and by
Thou and I were both beguiled
And with such-like flattery
Herald sad and trumpet be
And thou treble-dated crow
breath thou givest and takest
Love and constancy is dead
Phoenix and the turtle fled
Distance, and no space was seen
((
u
((
(I
M
U
It
M
It
II
It
It
If
II
If
11
II
II
II
It
ft
II
U
It
It
It
11
tl
tl
II
II
II
II
tl
tl
II
II
it
It
It
it
11
II
9
9
10
10
10
10
11
11
11
11
11
11
12
12
12
13
13
14
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
17
19
19
19
19
19
19
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
21
21
21
21
21
21
6
14
2
6
7
9
4
6
10
11
12
14
1
7
8
1
7
13 12
14 8
5
5
6
8
10
11
12
IS
17
2
7
12
15
17
19 20
19 25
19 26
19 29
19 3tl
19 87
19 89
PT
u
tl
II
il
tl
44
1
2
8
4
6
11
13
14
15
16
17
18
20
5
6
11
14
80
41
3
17
19
22
23
80
lis pelt RL-... HIS
OBBanpilliiinutbeT'iliel]
Dijbad nngcl flmnjj;i»d oDcoiit *'
laRfr— and uby-palu VA
foriQgcrniakn lhc]tl> pslo B L
in^r Itiruid JDIa bli litda &ii
Which, not it Bogtt boot *• Ji
i«(r|— beiuly in hii ...ejtt VA
his ridei'i iliglj lUr
1iidi« bli iDfirr bruw "
■DitCT tliil lIiD cretilj'fnilil (hoir "
lould debate vLlh Khgrf IwonU "
tcnich out Ihc uiifr? efts "
Angrj tb«l hb prm-rlpiIaDa jb*
i»«IT-*"''«Hllg—
Th.?pltlurc«rim..,,bo«i V,»
UDMitlont of lUr gent £ C
exed Oppoitu-
nUr
u'd tliT bicsth
For mlnb do
of UDdr
doud-kl^ng
krcb ths bottom
Rl
with iniHir
thr pr««nt1rfflpuain anoth^f
k,.ll.L,-.u.,lh..r.L.lf
Ln
bcBulT'a dund lli-WD mid
horgay
-In
,siv,>.n«lli.T|,k™
.' My iinrt Bnotb>?r routb
■Dgil 111 i>noth.-r-a hell
angsl in .nother's hell
IIl
..r -;. .,■.-.>. r-,]„.,.,«lf
toannrorhiidnilre
Xtke ani'cr, Uuko
AB.«r'J-An.w*fd IhDlf crl«
ihuugh dBlai'd ansvci'd must b«
tapnen iners call
AithM~Hcrh«ivr....
\Un ibo •nth.:uidc.lii commeuct
Anile— (Juio»-.h mi ng ■niloi
knllrlpate— Inlore.lo ..
Lntlq..-
auUnuo
RL—. 433
VA -,..
Antlqiify— Tu tpoll nnilgiiittea
BeaMd and cbupp'd wllh M
anilqulljr
Makun aiitlqullr tot tje hit pi
Any— anu«lDki->.... dint
beanyjutdlmialili'd
Ifjin.-
V.4 ..
Ibyanr - ....
Aj.han,iog nyi-ye RL ....
JliiTau)-lerin.»cqiiflmB •■
Oi^ny thai ihuu Iwar'at loie tu aD; Son
a.ilhtr'
;bl]d
11
inr fear from
ertstflrytoll "
Aianyeh'^ Veiled vl
To any acnsual r«u
APACE
24
ARE
ipaee —
through the dark laund runs.... VA ~... 813
downward flow'd apace L C ~... 284
Appftld— thou art well .... ML ..... 914
Appal— Appals her senses VA . 882
Appalled — Property was thus .... P T — . 87
Apparel— And puts .... on my tat-
tered loving Son 26 11
Apparition— At apparitions, signs VA 92C
Appeal— Since my .... says Son 117 13
But with a pure appeal Jt L ~... 293
my heaved-up hands appeal " ..... 638
Appear— in each cheek appears VA 242
and in the breach appears " 1175
in his fair welkin once appear B L ..... 116
yet winking there appears " ..... 458
faults do seldom to themselves ap-
pear ** «... 633
of Troy there would appear " ..... 1382
their light Joy scem'd to appear " ..... 1434
As interest of the dead which now
appear Son 31 7
your bounty doth appear " 53 11
doth wilfully appear ** 80 8
though less the show appear *' 102 2
and there appears a face " 103 6
began but to appear X C ..... 93
Appear to him as he to mo appears " ..... 299
Appearanee— in him thy fair ....
lies Son 46 8
Appearing— homage to his new-ap-
pearing sight *' 7 3
Appertaining- To appertainings and
to ornament LC 115
Appetite— With leaden ... . VA ^.,. 34
edge on his keen appetite E L 9
Nor aught obeys but his foul appe-
tite " «... 646
Thy edge should blunter bo than
appetite Son 66 2
Mine appetite I ^evcr more " 110 10
to make our appetites more keen " 118 1
sickly nppctitc to please " 147 4
appetite from judgement L C ..... 166
Apple— How like Eve's .... iSSm 93 13
Applied — being so ... . ML ~... 531
there may be aught applied L C ~... 68
if I had self-applied " ..... 76
Applied to cautels ** ~... 303
Applying— Applying this to that VA ..... 713
Applying fears to hopes Son 119 8
applying wet to wet L C ..... 40
Approach — Welcomes the warm .... VA 886
For his approach that often there P P ..... 68
Approve — for my sake to ... . her Son 42 8
slander doth but approve " 70 6
1 desperate now approve " 147 7
Apology — Apologies be made R L ..... 81
April— Show'd like an daisy " ..... 895
calls back the lovely April of her
prime Son 3 10
With April's first-born flowers " 21 7
When proud-pied April dress'd in " 98 2
Three April perfumes ** 104 7
'twixt May and April is to see LC 102
Apt— As .... as new-fall'n snow V A ..... 354
Youth so apt to pluck P P VJ 14
Aptly — the story .... ends VA ..... 716
to do will aptly find L C — 88
Aptly — blushes, .... understood LC 200
Aptnesa— In cither's .... *' ..... 306
Arabian— tW sole .... tree P T 2
Arbitrator^-Uuprofltable sounds,
weak arbitrators M L 1017
Arch— As through an ... . " ..... 1667
Ardea-From the besieged ... . " ..... 1
At Ardea to my lord " 1332
Are— doves or roses ... . V A ^... 10
yet are they red " 116
there are but twain " ~... 123
flowers that are not gathor'd " 131
Mine eyes are grey " 140
Torches are made to light " 163
are growth's abuse " ~... 166
Her words are done " ..... 254
proud, as females are " 809
beams upon his hairless face are
flx'd " 487
Are they not quickly " 520
sheep are gone to fold " 632
Her lips are conquerors " ~... 549
Things out of hope are compass'd oft " 567
Are better proof " 626
Are like a labyrinth " 684
bounds are driven to doubt " 692
Are on the sudden " ..... 749
night- wanderers often are " ~... 825
hours are long " 842
and are never done " ~... 846
bounds are at a bay " 877
that they are afraid " 898
poor people are amazed " 925
are both of them extremes " »... 987
her eves are fled " 1037
m
Her eyes are mad " 1062
My sighs are blown away " 1071
Mine eyes are turn'd to fire " 1072
The flowers are sweet " ..... 1079
and they are pale " 1123
Are weakly fortress'd R L ~... 28
Those that much covet are with
gain so fond " 134
The things we are for that which " 149
pure thoughts are dead and still " 167
All orators are dumb " 268
Our mistress' ornaments nre chaste " 322
Thoughts are but dreams " ~... 353
But blind they are " ..... 378
Are by luit flaming torch " 448
Such shadows arc the weak brain's " 460
Are nature's faults " 539
in a wilderness where are no laws " 544
pity-pleadiug eytnj are sadly flx'd '* 561
mouarchs still are feared for love *' 611
For princes are the glass " 615
0, how are they wrapp'd " 6:W
Small lights are soon blown out *' 647
light and lust are deadly enenilc>s " 674
faults which in thy reign arc made " 804
branches of another root are rotted " 823
all that are to come " 923
and murder'st all that are " 929
grooms are sightless night " 1013
Gnats are unnoted " 1014
eyes that are sleeping " 1090
Sad souls are slain ** ~... 1110
Their gentle sex to weep are often
willing " ..... 1237
AND
22
AND
And— And so much less of shame L C ..... 188
And rcign'd, commanding ** 196
and rubies red as blood ** ..... 198
Of grief and blushes ** ..... 200
and the encrimson'd mood " ~... 201
terror and dear modesty " ..... 202
And, lo, behold these talents " 2(Hl
And deep-braiu'd sonnets " ..... 209
worth and quality " 210
'twas beautiful and hard " 211
sapphire and the opal blend " ..... 215
Of jiensivcd and subdued desires " 219
my origin and endcr " 222
and to your audit comes " ~... 230
and did thence remove ^ 237
And makes her absence " ..... 245
And now she would *' ..... 249
And now, to tempt all " ~... 252
And mine I pour '* ..... 256
o'er them, and you o'er me " 257
TOWS and consecrations " 263
thou art all, and all things " ..... 266
And sweetens, in thesufferiug pangs" 272
forces, shocks, and fears " »... 273
And supplicant their sighs " ..... 276
And credent soul to that strong-
bonded oath '* 279
prefer and undertake my troth " ..... 2S0
and chill extincture hath " 294
sober guards and civil fears " ~... 298
and mine did him restore " 301
and he takes and leaves " 303
and Bwound at tragic shows " 308
is both kind and tame " 311
And, veil'd in them " 312
and praised cold chastity " ..... 315
naked and concealed fiend " ~... 317
Who, young and simple " 820
I fell and yet do question make " 322
And new pervert a reconciled maid " 329
And wherefore say not I P P 1 10
And age, in love " 1 12
ril lie with love and love with me " 1 13
of comfort and despair "21
And would corrupt my saint "27
And whether that my angel "29
and breath a vapour is "39
lovely, fresh, and green "42
she touch'd him here and there "47
But smile and jest " 4 12
fair queen, and toward " 4 13
Ue rose and ran away " 4 14
bias leaves, and makes his book "55
is music and sweet fire " 5 12
And scarce the herd "62
and throws his mantle by "69
And stood stark naked " 6 10
Brighter than glass and yet as glass "73
Softer than wax, and yet as iron "74
her tears, and all were Jcstings " 7 12
and yet she foil'd the framing " 7 13
and yet she fell a-tuming " 7 16
If music and sweet poetry agree "81
the sister and the brother "82
'twixt thee and me "83
the one and I the other "84
And I in deep delight " 8 11
and both in thee remain " 8 14
a youngster proud and wild "94
M
U
U
U
U
II
It
U
II
II
II
u
M
II
II
II
II
U
II
II
II
And — with horn .... hounds P P
And blushing fled and left her
and vaded in the spring
And falls through wind
and yet no cause I have
And yet thou lefl'st me more
And as he fell to her
And then she clipp'd Adonla
And with her lips on his
And as she fetched breath
And would not take her meaning
To kiss and clip me
Crabbed age and youth
Youth is hot and bold, age is weak
and cold
Youth is wild and age is tame
a vain and doubtful good
And as goods lost
painting, pain, and cost
And dafl''d me to a cabin
and come again to-morrow
sits and sings I sit and mark
And wish her lays
And drives away dark dreaming
night
and eyes their wished sight
and solace mix'd with sorrow
and bade me come tonniorrow
and length thyself to-morrow
And deny himself for Jove
And stali'd the deer
And when thou comcst
And set thy person forth to sell
And then too late she will repent
And twice desire, ere it be day
And ban and brawl, and say thee
nay
And to her will frame all thy ways
Spare not to spend and chiefly there
castle, tower, and town
And in thy suit be humble true
wiles and guiles that women
The tricks and toys that in them
To sin and never for to saint
Live with me and be my love
And we will all the pleasures prove
hillH and valleys, dales and fields
And all t he craggy mountains yields
And see the shepherds feed
A cap of flowers, and a klrtle
A belt of straw and ivy buds
AVith coral clasps and amber studs
And if these pleasures
Then live with nic and be my love
the world and love were young
And truth in every shepherd's
To live with thee and be thy love
Beasts did leap and birds did sing
Trees did grow and plants did spring "
And there sung the dolefull'st ditty "
' Tereu, Tereu I' by and by
Thou and I were both beguiled
And with such-like flattery
Herald sad and trumpet be
And thou treble-dated crow
breath thou givest and takest
Love and constancy is dead
Phoenix and the turtle fled
Distance, and no space was seen
II
II
II
II
II
II
u
II
II
II
II
II
II
11
II
II
II
II
II
11
II
II
II
II
9
9
10
10
10
10
11
11
11
11
11
11
12
12
12
13
13
13
14
14
15
16
15
15
13
15
15
17
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
21
21
21
21
21
6
14
2
6
7
9
4
6
10
11
12
14
1
7
8
1
7
12
3
5
6
6
8
10
11
12
13
17
2
7
12
15
17
19 20
19 25
19 26
19 29
19 32
19 87
89
44
1
2
8
4
6
11
13
14
15
16
17
18
20 20
21 5
PT
II
II
II
II
6
11
14
30
41
3
17
19
22
2S
80
AND
23
ANY
Twixt the turtle his queen P T ~... 31
To the phoDDix and the dove ** 50
Co-eupremes and stars of lore " ~... 51
Beauty, truth, and rarity " ~... 68
And the turtle's loyal breast " ~... 57
Truth and beauty buried be ** ~... 64
iBew— she doth .... begin VA 60
enforced to seek anew Sun 82 7
when it is built anew ** 119 11
And taught it thus anew to greet " 145 8
Press never thou to choose anew P P 19 31
▲■gel— The better is a man right
fair &m 144 3
my better angel from ray side " 144 6
my angel be turn'd fiend " 144 9
one angel in another's hell " 144 12
my bad angel fire my good one out " 144 14
My better angel is a man right fair P P 2 8
my better angel from my side "26
my angel be turn'd fiend "29
one angel in another's hell " 2 12
my bad angel fire my good one out " 2 14
An^er — and .... ashy-pale VA^... 76
for anger makes the lily pale Ji L ~... 478
anger thrusts into his hide Son. 50 10
Which, not to anger bent PP 5 12
AMn7— beauty in his ... . eyes V A ..... 70
his rider's angry stir " 2H3
bides his angry brow " 339
Who, therefore angry, seems R L 388
angry that the eyes fly from their " 461
would debate with angry swords ** ..... 1421
scratch out the angry eyes " 14C9
Angry that his prescriptions Son 147 6
AB|pry-«hBflB9—
The picture of an ... . boar V A 662
Aanexatloii —
annexations of fftir gems L C 208
Aanexed— But ill-annexed Opportu-
nity R L 874
had anncx'd thy breath Son 99 11
Aanoy— life was death's .... VA 497
Tantalus* is her annoy " 599
For mirth doth search the bottom
of annoy R L 1109
ekHid-kissing Dion with annoy " 1370
reccirest with pleasure thine annoy iSi»n 8 4
AaoB— . ... he rears upright VA ~... 279
Anon he starU at stirring *' 302
Anon their loud alarums ** ~... 700
Anon she hears them " ..... 869
Anon bis beating heart R L ..... 433
Anon permit the basest clouds Sun 33 5
Now proud as an onjoyer, and anon '* 75 5
anon their gazes lend L C ~... 26
Anon he comes PP 6 9
Anon Adonis comes '^ 9 6
ABotker— bis lips .... way VA ..... 90
As if another chase ** 69Q
And there another " 915
another sadly scowling " 917
Another flap-mouth'd mourner " 920
Another and another answer " 922
Puffs forth another wind R L 315
thy present trespass in another ** 632
The branchea of another root ** ..... 823
another straight ensues ** ..... 1104
Isan'd on another's head *' ..... 1415
Aaother—
Another smother'd seems to pelt R L ~... 1418
to speak another word ** ..... 1642
Another power; no flood by raining " ..... 1677
that face should form another Son 3 2
to breed another thee "67
and look another way " 7 12
sweet husband to another "89
Make thee another self " 10 13
Another time mine eye " 47 7
Ere beauty's dead fleece made an-
other gay " 68 8
no summer of another's green " 68 11
doth give anuthiT place " 79 4
another white despair " 99 9
gave my heart another youth " 1 10 7
One on another's neck " 131 11
one angel iu another's hell " 144 12
one angel in another's hell P P 2 12
One woman would another wed " 19 48
Answer — she answers him, as if VA 308
echoes answer so " ~... 840
they answer all ' Tis so " 851
Another and another answer " ..... 922
Tarquin answers with surmise R L 83
to answer her but cries " -... 1459
to answer his desire " 16t)6
If thou could'st answer Son 2 10
be answers with a groan " 50 11
answer not thy show " 93 14
Answer — that stops his .... so R L 1664
Make answer, Muse Son 101 5
Answered— Answer'd their cries R L 1806
though dclay'd auswer'd must be Son 126 11
Answering—
taiMtcrs .... every call VA ~... 849
Anthem — Her heavy .... " ...„ 839
Hero tlie antliem doth commence P T ~... 21
459
9
12
10
7
9
7
951
Antle— Quick-shilHing antics
Anticipate— iu love, to ... .
Antlqne — metre of an .... song
with thine antique pen
in some antique book
those holy antique hours
I see their antique pen
Antiquity — To spoil antiquities
RL
M...
Son 118
ti
17
t(
19
(1
59
II
69
II
106
R L —'
Beated and chopp'd with tann'd
antiquity Son 62 10
Makes antiquity for aye his page " 108 12
Any — snow takes .... dint VA...^ 3.'i4
beanyjotdiminish'd " ..... 417
if any love you owe me " 52:1
never relieved by any " 708
or any thing ensuing " 1078
As shaming any eye RL 1143
May any terms acquit mo " 1706
deny that thou bear'st love to any Son 10 1
As any mother's child " 21 11
Or any of these all " 37 6
lock'd up in any chest " 48 9
Though you do any thing " 57 14
I was not sick of any fear from
thence " 86 12
make mo any summer's story tell " 98 7
If time have any wrinkle graven " 100 10
If any, be a satire to decay "100 11
As any she belied with falsecompare " 130 14
To any sensual feast " 141 8
Or any of my leisures L C ~... 193
APACE
24
ARE
II
II
LC
ipace—
th rough the dark laund runt.... VA ~... 813
downward flow'd apace LC ^.^ 284
Appald— thou art well .... RL ..... 914
Appal— Appals her senses VA 882
Appalled— Property was thus .... P T 87
Apparel— And puts .... on my tat-
tered loving Son 26 11
Apparition— At apparitions, signs VA 926
Appeal— Since my .... says San 117 13
But with a pure appeal R L ..... 293
my heaved-up hands appeal " ..... 638
Appear— in each cheek appears VA 242
and in the breach appears " 1175
in his fair welkin once appear R L 1 16
yet winking there appears " 458
faults do seldom to themselves ap-
pear " «... 633
of Troy there would appear " «... 1382
their light joy soem'd to appear ** «... 1434
As interest of the dead which now
appear Sen
your bounty doth appear "
doth wilfully appear
though less the show appear
and there appears a face
began but to appear
Appear to him as he to mo appears **
Appearanee — in him thy fair ....
lies Son
Appearlngr— bomage to his new-ap-
pearing sight *'
Appertaiaing- To appertainings and
to ornament L C
Appetite— With leaden .... VA
edge on his keen appetite R L
Nor aught obeys but his foul appe-
tite "
Thy edge should blunt«r be than
appetite Son 56 2
Mine appetite I Qevcr more " 110 10
to make our appetites more keen *' 118 1
sickly appetite to please " 147 4
api^etite from Judgement X C «... 166
Apple— How like Eve's .... Son ^'6 \Z
Applied — being so ... . R L 531
there may be anght applied L C 68
if I had self-applied " «... 76
Applied to cautels ♦* 303
Applying— Applying this to that VA 713
Applying feani to hopes Son 119 3
applying wet to wet L C «... 40
Approaeh — Welcomes the warm.... V^ 886
For his approach that often there P P 68
Approve — for my sake to ... . her Son 42 8
slander doth but approve " 70 5
1 desperate now approve " 147 7
Apology— AiK>lagios be made R L «... 81
April— Show'd like an ... . daisy " «... 895
calls back the lovely April of her
prime Son 3 10
With April's first-born flowers " 21 7
When proud-picd April dress'd in " 98 2
Three April perfumes *' 104 7
'twixt May and April is to see L C 102
Apt — As .... as new-fair n snow VA X>i
Youth so apt to pluck PP 17 14
Aptly— the story .... ends VA «... 716
to do will aptly find L C ..... 88
31
7
53
11
80
8
102
2
103
6
•••••
93
•••••
299
46
8
7
8
115
•••••
34
•••■•
9
•••••
646
Aptiy— blushes, .... understood L C ^... 200
Aptnew— In cither's .... '* «... 306
Arabian — the sole .... tree P T . 2
Arbitrator— Unprofitable sounds,
weak arbitrators R L «... 1017
Arch— As through an ... . " 1667
Ardea— From the besieged ... . " 1
At Ardea to my lord " 1332
Are— doves or roses ... . Fil «... 10
yet are they red " 116
there are but twain " «... 123
flowers that are not gather'd " 131
Mine eyes are grey " «... 140
Torches are made to light " «... 163
are growth's abuse " «... 166
Her words are done " 254
proud, as females are " «... 309
beams upon his hairless face are
flx'd " 487
Arc they not quickly " 620
sheep are gone to fold '* 582
Her lips are conquerors " «... 649
Things out of hope are compaas'd oft " «... 567
Are better proof ** 626
Are like a labyrinth " «... 684
hounds are driven to doubt " «... 692
Are on the sudden " «... 749
night-wanderert often are " «... 825
hours are long " «... 842
and are never done " 846
hounds are at a bay " «... 877
that they are afraid " 898
poor people are amazed " «... 925
are both of them extremes " «... 987
her eyes are fled " 1037
Her eyes are mad " «... 1062
My sighs are blown away " «... 1071
Mine eyes are turn'd to fire " «... 1072
The flowers are sweet " «... 1079
and they are pale " «... 1123
Are weakly fortreas'd R L «... 28
Those that much covet arc with
gain so fond " «... 134
The things we are for that which " «... 149
pure thoughts are dead and still " 167
All orators are dumb " «... 268
Our mistress' ornaments are chaste " «... 322
Thoughts are but dreams " 853
But blind they are " «... 378
Are by hi» flaming torch " 448
Such shadows are the weak brain's " 460
Are nature's faults " 539
in a w^ildorness where arc no laws " 544
pity-pleading eyes are sadly fix'd " «... 561
monarehs still are feared fur love " 611
For princes are the glass ** 615
0, how are they wrapp'd " 636
Small lights are soon blown out " 647
light and lust are deadly enemies " 674
faults which in thy reign are made '* 804
branclu's of another root are rotted ** «... 823
all that are to come " «... 923
and niunler'st all that are " «... 929
grooms arc sightless night " 1013
Gnats arc unnoted " «... 1014
eyes that are sleeping *' «... 1090
Sad souls are slain '* «... 1110
Their gentle sex to weep are oft«n
willing " — 1237
ARE
26
ARM
Are— And therefore .... thej fonn'd E JD»... 1241
Poor women's faces are their own
foaits* books ** 12f>3
that they are so fulfilPd '* 1258
that down thy cheeks are raining '* ~... 1271
Hy woes are tedious, though my
words are brief ** ~... 1309
Greeks that are thine enemies ** 1470
Are balls of quenchless fire " ~... 1S54
words are now depending ** 1615
We are their offspring " 1767
As silly Jeering idiots are with kings " ~... 1812
•he lends to those are free Son 4 4
The eyes, 'fore-duteous, now con-
verted are " 7 11
were yourself! but, love, you are " 18 1
youth and thou are of one date " 22 2
Are windows to my breast " 24 11
Let those who are in favour " 25 1
All losses are restored " 30 14
Ah, but those tears are pearl '* 84 13
And they are rich and ransom " 84 14
Excusing thy sins more than thy
sihs are " 35 8
our undivided loves are one '* 86 2
my friend and I are one ** 42 13
darkly bright, are bright in dark *' 43 4
All days are nights to see till I see " 43 13
Are both with thee " 45 2
For when these quicker elements
are gone " 46 6
Mine eye and heart are at a mortal
war " 46 1
48 5
60 4
62 6
M
((
II
II
it
II
II
II
II
my Jewels trifles are
Thus far the miles are measured
Therefore are feasts so solemn and
Like stones of worth they thinly
placed are
Blessed are you, whose worthiness
whereof are you made
And you in Grecian tirea are
painted new
Of their sweet deaths are sweetest
odours mode
where you are how happy you
how are our brains beguiled
Whether we are mended
Are vanlKhing or vanished
When rocks impregnable are not
•o stout
those holy antique hours are seen
8o are you to my thoughts
sweet'^eason'd showers are to the
And you and Icve are still my ar-
gument
my gracious numbers are decayed
breathers of this world are dead
praise that you alone are you
That you are you
My bonds in thee are all
these particulars are not my
Who, moving others, are themselves
as stone
They are the lords and owners
Both grace and faults are loved
8o are those errors that in thee are
seen
the very birds are mute
I saw yoa f^esh which yet are green **
u
62
62
63
H
14
II
II
II
II
II
M
II
It
II
II
II
II
7
13
1
53 8
54
12
57
12
69
2
59
11
63
7
65
7
68
9
75
1
75
2
76
10
79
8
81
12
84
2
84
8
87
4
91
7
94
3
94
7
96
8
96
7
97
12
104
8
Are — praises .... but prophecies Son 106 9
crests and tombs of brass are spent " 107 14
You are my all the world " 112 5
To critic and to flatterer stopped are "* 112 11
You are so strongly in my purpose " 112 13
That all the world beside methinks
are dead " 112 14
Or on my frailties why are frailer
spies " 121 7
All men are bad *' 121 14
Thy gift, thy tables are within " 122 1
To me are nothing novel " 123 8
They are but dressings " 123 4
Our dates are brief " 123 6
my mistress' eyes are raven black " 127 9
saucy Jacks so happy are in this " 128 13
my mistress* eyes are nothing like
the sun " 130 1
her breasts are dun " 130 8
are they now transferred *' 13^ 14
my days are imst tlie best " 138 6
Nor are mine ears " 141 6
prescriptions are not kept " 147 6
and my discourse as madmen's are " 147 11
my vows are oaths *' 152 7
their poor balls are tied L C »... 24
Are errors of the blood " ~... 184
How mighty then you are " ~... 233
all things else are thine " 266
what are precepts worth " 267
Love's arms are peace " ~... 271
goods lost are seld or never found P P 13 7
now are minutes added " 15 14
All my merry jigs ure quite forgot " 18 9
friends are lapp'd in lead *' 21 24
Words are easy, like the wind " 21 33
Faithful friends are bard to find " 21 34
These are certain signs to know " 21 57
That are either true or fair P T -... 66
Aright— what they see ... . Son 148 4
Arise — What following sorrow may
on this arise B L ..... 186
quoth he, 'arise " 1818
so, till the Judgement that yourself
arise Son 55 13
Arlseth—
The sun in his majesty VA 856
Arising — ^at break of day .... Son 29 11
Argned — Argued by beauty's red Ji L 65
Argument — I force not .... a straw "' w... 1021
Thine own sweet argument Son 38 3
And you and love are still my ar-
gument " 76 10
I grant, sweet love, thy lovely ar-
gument " 79 6
both skill and argument " 100 8
The argument, all bare, is of more
worth " 103 8
is all my'argument *' 105 9
All kind of arguments L C 121
could not hold argument P P Z 2
Arm — Over one .... the lusty V A ..... 31
fastcn'd in her arms " ..... 68
my arms his field " .... 108
her arms infold him " ..... 225
in her anns be bound " .... 226
twining arms doth urge *' .... 256
Her arms do lend " .... 589
yoking arms she throws ** ..» 602
AS
29
AT
u
l(
u
(I
M
(I
u
l<
<l
II
LC
u
II
u
(I
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a
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li
li
PP
A«— then .... well beieein thy heart Son
that him as fast doth bind '*
B« wise as thou art cmel
As testy sick men when their death
false bonds of love as oft as mine
I love thee as thou lorest those
thine eyes woo as mine importune
as a careful housewife
That follow'd it as gentle day
My lore is as a ferer
My thoughts and my discoarse as
madmen's are
Who art as black as hell, as dark as
night
so true as all men's
As his triumphant prize
As often shrieking
As they did battery
hours, observed as they flew
I might as yet have been
If best were as it was
Hb qualities were beauteous as his
form
As oft 'twixt May and April
as some my equajs did
heart so much as warmed
rubies red as blood
As compound love to physic yonr
cold breast
Appear to him as he to me appears "
as it best deceives
&Dch looks as none could look
Celestial as thou art
wistly as this queen on him
but not so fair as fickle
Mild as a dove
and yet, as glass la, brittle
and yet as iron rusty
as straw with fire flameth
as soon as straw out-bumeth
As they must needs
Aa passing all conceit
When as himself to singing
god of both, as poets feign
And as he fell to her
As if the boy should use
And as she fetched breath
And as goods lost are seld or never "
As vaded gloss no rubbing
As flowers dead lie wither'd
As broken glass no cement
As take the pain
as well as well might be
When ss thine eye hath chose
As well as fancy
Had women been so strong as men
As it fell upon a day
poor bird, as all forlorn
Whilst as fickle Fortune smiled
So they loved, as love In twain
Aa chorus to their tragic scene
A*«luikiBf— sets every joint ....
Askased— Art thou .... to kiss
Like stars ashamed of day
As]ies~8o of shame's .... shall my
fame be bred R L
That on the ashes of his youth Son
I'd forth their .... lighU R L
132
134
140
140
142
142
14?
143
145
147
147
148
151
It
u
M
M
II
«
U
II
tl
M
(4
U
M
U
M
M
U
U
CI
It
II
II
u
u
II
4
6
6
7
7
7
7
7
7
8
8
8
8
11
11
11
13
13
13
13
14
16
19
19
21
21
21
10
8
1
7
7
9
10
1
10
1
147 11
PT ^
II
RL
VA
u
14
8
10
20
23
60
75
98
99
102
148
191
198
259
299
806
4
13
12
1
2
3
4
13
14
2
8
12
13
4
8
11
7
8
9
10
12
2
1
4
19 23
1
9
29
25
... 52
... 452
... 121
... 1032
-... 1188
73 10
«... 1S78
Ashy-pale— and anger .... VA^.» 76
Kor ashy-pale the fear R L ..... 1512
Ailde—
sees the lurking serpent steps .... ** ..... 862
do I not glance aside Son 76 8
to glance thine eye aside *' 139 6
Ask— And asks the weary caitiff VA 914
To ask the spotted princess R L 721
Butdurst not ask of her audaciously " ..... 1228
to ask her how she fares " ..... 1594
Aakanee— all .... he holds her VA ..... 842
That from their own misdeeds
. askance their eyes R L ..... 637
Askance and strangely Son 110 6
Asked— Then being ask'd where all
thy beauty lies "25
Ask'd their own wills and made
their wills obey L C 133
Aileep— and fell .... Son 153 1
Love-god lying once asleep " 154 1
Aipeet— With pure aspects did him
peculiar duties R L ..... 14
Whose grim aspect sets every joint
a-shaklng « „... 452
graciously with fair aspect Son 26 10
Aspire— but light and will .... VA 150
in pale embers hid lurks to aspire RL 6
Aipirlng—
the .... mountains hiding ** ..... 548
Aaaail— such passion her assails " ..... 1562
when they to assail begun L C «... 262
Aaaalled— When shame assall'd R L ..... 63
Assail'd by night with circum-
stances " 1262
therefore to be assailed Son 41 6
Either not assail'd or victor " 70 10
Aaaaaltr-by strong it is bereft R L ...« 835
Assay— sick and short assays •* „... 1720
she must herself assay £ C 156
Assayed— Sh& hath assay'd as much V A -... 608
Assemble — objects to his beams .... ^Siim 114 8
Aaslgned— theirs in thought asslgn'd L C 138
Aanistr— they then .... me In the act J2 Zr »... 850
Aasistanee— fair .... in my verse Son 78 2
Aasoage— love's fire doth .... VA 834
woe doth woe assuage R L 790
suffering ecstasy assuage L C 69
Aanoaged— his fury was .... VA ..... 818
Aasure— I would .... thee " ..... 871
dear friend, and I assure ye iSim 111 13
Aasured— come back again .... '* 45 11
thou art assured mine ** 92 2
now crown themselves assured " 107 7
grew to faults assured " 118 10
always with assured trust P P 19 31
Astonished —
'stonish'd as night wanderers VA ~... 825
astonish'd with this deadly deed R L 1730
my verse astonished Son 86 8
Astronomy— methinks I have .... " 14 2
Arander— girths he breaks VA ..... 266
Hearts remote, yet not asunder P T ~... 29
At— with herself strife VA 11
stone at rain relenteth " 200
At this Adonis smiles " ..... 241
Struck dead at first " „... 250
that smiles at thee " ..... 252
workmanship at strife " ..... 291
Anon he starts at stirring ** ..... 802
AT
30
ATTIRED
At— Spams .... his love VA ..... Sll
other agents aim at like delights '* ..... 400
And at his look " ..... 463
at thy leisure, one hy one " ..... 518
And yields at last " ~... SCA
picks them all at last ** ..... 676
trcrahles at his tale " ..... 591
having thee at vantage ** 6-35
Knocks at my heart " ..... 6.>9
tremble at the imagination " 6G8
at the timorous flying hare " ..... 674
Or at the fox " 675
Or at the roe " ..... 676
hounds are at a bay " ..... 877
nought at all respecting " ~... 911
nought at all eflfeeting ** ..... 912
At apparitions, signs " ~... 92f>
at these sad signs ** ~... 929
thou should'st strike at it " ~... 938
at random dost thou hit " ..... 940
at him should have fled ** 947
Even at this word " -... 1025
So, at his bloody view " «... 1037
melt at mine eyes' red fire " 1073
whet his teeth at him again " ~... 1113
at such high-proud rate R L ~.'.. 19
When at Collutium this proud lord
arrived " 50
ere rich at home he lands " ..... 336
Lies at the mercy of his mortal sting " ..... 364
blush at her own disgrace " ~... 479
hang their heads at this disdain " ~... 521
Beat at thy rocky and wreck-
threatening heart " . 590
Melt at my tears " 594
enters at an iron gate " 595
wither at the cedar's root " ..... 665
May set at noon ** 784
that spum'st at right, at law, at
reason " ..... 880
to mock at him " ..... 989
At his own shadow " ..... 997
I rail at Opportunity " 1023
At Time, at Tarquin " 1024
I spurn at my confirm'd despite " ~... 1026
why quivcr'st thou at this decree *' 1030
at least I give " 1053
Nor shall he smile at thee " ~... 1065
Nor laugh with his companions at
thy state " 1066
grieves most at that would do it good " ~... 1117
weeps at thy languishment " »... 1130
So I at each sad strain " ..... 1131
frighted deer that stands at gace " .....1149
to guess at others' smarts " ..... 1238
a press of people at a door " ..... 1301
At last she thus begins ** »... 1303
At Ardea to my lord " 1332
At last she calls to mind " ..... 1366
•hoot their foam at Simois' banks " ~... 1442
At last she sees a wretched image " ..... 1501
At last she smilingly with this
gives o'er " 1567
At last he takes her " 1597
At length address'd '* 1606
Or, at the least " ..... 1654
At this request, with noble disposi-
Uon " «... 1695
all at once began to say ** m^ 1709
u
u
t(
u
l(
(i
II
II
if
II
If
t<
II
If
I*
If
ff
II
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1750
*• *••
1790
M«»«
1845
10
12
15
7
25
6
25
8
29
11
29
12
.30
9
35
1
46
1
48
12
57
3
58
3
58
5
59
8
90
12
98
9
117
12
119
12
121
10
122
5
123
10
127
11
128
8
147
12
151
9
153 9
27
At — blushing .... that which is so
putrifled R L
At last it rains, and busy winds give "
Who, wondering at him "
to thyself at least kind-hearted
prove Son
at height decrease
as the marigold at the sun's eye
at a frown they in their glory die
to the lark at break of day arising
sings hymns at heaven's gate
grieve at grievances foregone
Ko more be grieved at that which
are at a mortal war
From whence at pleasure
no precious time at all to spend
Or at your hand the account of
hours to crave
being at your beck
Since mind at first in character
At first the very worst
wonder at the lily's white
shoot not at me
Grows fairer than at first
At my abuses reckon up their own
Or, at the least so long as brain
Not wondering at the present
At such who, not bom fair
At the wood's boldness
At random from the truth
But rising at thy name
But at my mistress' eye Love's
brand ncw-fircd
To every place at once L C
To blush at speeches rank, to weep
at woes " ~... 807
swound at tragic shows ** ..... 308
Jest at every gentle offer PP 4 12
I had ray lady at this bay " 11 13
Yet at my parting " 14 7
to jest at my exile " 14 9
Plays not at all " 18 30
will yield at length " 19 21
They have at commandment " 21 46
Attaint— sickness, whose .... VA 741
from this attaint of mine R L 825
poison thee with my attaint " ..... 1072
mayst without attaint or look Son 82 2
age shall them attaint PP 19 46
Attainted— wherein I am .... Son 88 7
Attempt—
I see crosses my .... will bring R L 491
Attend— hereafter shall ... . VA 1136
these lets attend the time R L 830
tie the hearers to attend each line " 818
The post attends, and she delivers it " lat:)
thy Lucrece now attend me " 1682
I must attend time's leisure Son 44 12
to attend this double voice L C ..... 3
Attended — to your wanton talk .... VA 809
too early I attended L C 78
Attendeth— Which speechless woe of
his poor she .... R L 1674
Attending— Attending on his golden
pilgrimage Son 7 8
captive good attending captain ill " 66 12
Attention— that it beguiled .... RL ..... 1404
With sad attention '* .... 1610
Attired—. ... in discontent ** ..... 1601
ATTORNEY
31
BACK
Attomej— heart's .... once is mute VA ^.. 335
PP
LC
RL
VA
LC
canst
8tm
7 16
16 4
...• 6
.... 1223
.... 1346
« ■ • • 0*tO
.... 278
u
u
4 12
49 4
126
LC
RL
Son
LC
RL
mock
Son
PT
RL
VA
RL
u
CI
38
125
107
11
230
546
5
1
68
154
Son
LC
Son
l-tambig^-and yet she fell . .
Her fancy fell a-tuming
l-twala — breaking rings ....
Avdadovsly— ask of her ....
Indaeity — life and bold ....
lidiene^— End without ....
Lending soft audience
Ivdit— What acceptable ....
thou leave
Call'd to that audit by advised re-
spects
Her audit, though delay'd, answer'd
must be
and to your audit comes
Aaght— Nor .... obeys
if aught in me
Were *t aught to me
there may be aught applied
logaeBtf ng^-nothing by .... it
lagar— And the sad augurs
their own presage
Augur of the fever's end
Aaspteioas— stand .... to the hour
Aa^r^-. ... of thy slander
author of their obloquy
the authors of their ill
Aathorlty— ... for sin
tongue-tied by authority
Aithorised — with his ... . youth
Aathoriaing^. . . . thy trespass
Aataain— The teeming .... big with
rich increase "
to 3wUow autumn turn'd "
Avail— it small avails my mood R L
Avaaat— chi Idish fear .... "
Awake — Awake, thou Roman dame **
Awakes my heart Son
keeps mine eye awake "
Awaketk — frenzy thus .... R L
Award — ^That she that makes me sin
awards me pain Son 141 14
Away— her object will .... VA -... 255
Away he springs '* ~... 258
thyself art made away ** ~... 763
now I will away " -... 807
away she flies '* ~... 1027
My sighs are blown away ** ~... 1071
away she hies " ~... 1189
away by brainnsick rude desire R L 175
the roses took away " ..... 259
Away he steals " 283
can be wiped away " ~... 608
Bearing away the wound ** ~... 731
remains a hopeless caitt-away " 744
fly with the filth away " ~... 1010
the treasure stol'n away " 1056
her hark being peel'd away " ..... 1169
was Tarquin gone away *' 1281
The grief away that stops ** 1664
with a Joyless smile she turns away " 171 1
do not take away " 1796
would make the world away Son 11 8
To give away yourself " 16 13
Thyself away art present ** 47 10
Stealing away the treasure ** 63 8
and take my love away ** 64 12
The right of sepulchres, were shorn
away " 68 6
6
7
••••• 0*wf
••••• 1006
••••• ulSS
..... 620
66 9
104
35 6
97 6
104 5
..... 1273
«... 274
..... 1628
47 14
61 10
~... 1675
Away- black night doth take .... Son 78 7
shall carry me away " 74 2
on all, or all away " 75 14
and I be cast away " 80 13
All this away and me '* 91 14
to steal thyself away " 92 1
roight'st thou lead away " 96 11
And, thou away, the very birds " 97 12
winter still, and you away '* 98 13
feathcr'd creatures broke away "143 2
to hell is flown away " 145 12
'I hate' from hate away she threw "145 18
He rose and ran away
away he skips
till I run away
that kept my rest away
And drives away
did bear the maid away
with scorn she put away
Awe — be kept in ....
Awed—
.... resistance made him fret
Awhile — Counsel may stop ....
A-work — So Lucrece set ... .
Ay — 'Ay me,' quoth Venus
'Ay me,' she cries
ay, if the fact be known
Ay mo ! the bark
Ay me ! but yet thou might'st
Ay, fill it full with wills
ay, dieted in grace
Ay me! I fell
Aye — antiquity for ... . his page
Aanre — Her .... veins
PP 4 14
" 11 11
" 11 14
" 14 2
" 15 8
" 16 14
" 19 18
R L 245
VA ..... 69
L C M... 169
R L 1496
VA ~... 187
" 833
R L »... 239
•• 1167
Son il 9
" 136 6
L C ..... 261
" 821
Son 108 12
R L ~... 419
Babe — ne'er pleased her .... so well VA ..... 974
fright her crying babe with Tar-
quin's name R L 814
Who, having two sweet babes " 1161
nurse her babe frpm faring ill Son 22 12
Ix)ve is a babe "115 13
Sets down her babe " 143 3
Whilst I thy babe chase thee " 143 10
Back— on so proud a . . . . VA 300
his back, his breast " ..... 396
she on her back " 594
On his bow-back " ..... 619
on his back doth lie " 663
upon her back " 814
Then fell she on her back P P 4 13
i?ac/^— beating reason .... VA 557
But back retires " 906
I could not put him back R L 843
would'st thou one hour come back " 965
bears back all boll'n and red " 1417
mindful messenger come back " ..... 1583
Back to the strait " 1670
and back the same grief draw " 1673
Held back his sorrow's tide " 1789
Calls back the lovely April Son 3 10
not to give bctck again " 22 14
now come back again a^ured " 45 11
I send them back again " 45 14
can hold his swift foot back " 65 11
And so ray patent back ag^n is
swerving " 87 8
still will pluck thee back " 126 6
turn back to me " 143 11
If thou turn back " 143 14
AS
29
AT
ti
i(
«i
It
II
II
II
LC
It
11
II
II
II
11
II
It
u
11
pp
Aft— then .... well beseem th j heart <Sbii
that him as fast doth hind "
Be wise as thou art cmel "
As testy sick men when their death
false bonds of love as oft as mine
I lore thee as thou lorest those
thine eyes woo as mine importune
as a careful housewife
That foUow'd it as gentle day
My love is as a fever
My thoughts and my discourse as
madmen's are
Who art as black as hell, as dark as
night
so true as all men's
As his triumphant prize
As often shrieking
As they did battery
hours, observed as they flew
I might as yet have been
If best were as it was
His qualities were beauteous as his
form
As oft 'twixt May and April
as some my equals did
heart so much as warmed
rubies red as blood '*
As compound love to physic your
cold breast
Appear to him as he to me appears "
as it best deceives
Such looks as none could look
Celestial as thou art
wistly as this queen on him
but not so fair as fickle
Mild as a dove
and yet, as glass is, brittle
and yet as iron rusty
as straw with fire flameth
as soon as straw out-burneth
As they must needs
As passing all conceit
When as himself to singing
god of both, as poets feign
And as he fell to her
As if the boy should use
And as she fetched breath
And as goods lost are scld or never
As vadod gloss no rubbing
As flowers dead lie wither'd
As broken glass no cement
As take the pain
as well as well might be
When as thine eye hath chose
As well as fancy
Had women been so strong as men
As it fell upon a day
poor bird, as all forlorn
Whilst as flckle Fortune smiled
So they loved, as love in twain
As chorus to their tragic scene
A*«hakinf — sets every Joint ....
Athaaed — Art thou .... to kiss
Like stars ashamed of day
Ashes— So of shame's .... shall my
fame be bred R L
That on the ashes of his youth Son
iaky-
gkam'd forth their .... lights R L
132
134
140
140
142
142
14?
143
140
147
147
148
151
It
11
II
u
11
11
II
II
II
11
M
II
II
M
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
11
10
8
1
7
7
9
10
1
10
1
« 147 11
PT
II
14
8
10
20
RL
VA
•••••
60
■••••
75
•••••
98
•«•••
99
•••••
102
•••••
148
•«•••
191
•«■••
198
•••••
259
•••••
299
•«•••
806
4
4
5
13
6
12
1
2
3
4
13
14
8
2
8
8
8
12
8
13
11
4
11
8
11
11
13
7
13
8
13
9
13
10
14
12
16
2
19
1
19
4
19
23
21
1
21
9
21
29
•• •••
25
•«•••
52
452
CI
~... 1032
~... 1188
78 10
lshy«p«le— and anger ... . VA . 76
Kor ashy-pale the fear R L ..... 1512
Aside—
sees the lurking serpent steps .... '* ..... 862
do I not glance aside Son 76 3
to glance thine eye aside " 139 6
Ask—And asks the weary caitiff* F^ ..... 914
To ask the spotted princess R L 721
Butdurst not ask of her audaciously " ..... 1223
to ask her how she fares " ..... 1594
Askanee— all .... he holds her VA ..... 842
That Irom their own misdeeds
. askance their eyes R L »... 637
Askance and strangely Son 110 6
Asked— Then being aak'd where all
thy beauty lies "26
Ask'd their own wills and made
their wills obey L C 138
Asleep— and fell ... . iSm 153 1
Love-god lying once asleep " 154 1
Aspeet — With pure aspects did him
peculiar duties R L ..... 14
Whose grim aspect sets every Joint
a-shaking *' ..... 452
graciously with fair aspect Son 26 10
Aspire— but light and will .... VA 150
in pale embers hid lurks to aspire R L »... 6
AsplrlBg^-
the .... mountains hiding '* »... 548
Assail— such passion her assails " ~... 1562
when they to assail begun L C ~... 262
Assailed— When shame aitsail'd R L ^... 63
Assail'd by night with circum-
stances " 1262
therefore to be assailed Son 41 6
£Iither not assail'd or victor " 70 10
Asaaalt— by strong .... it is bereft R L 835
Assay— sick and short assays " 1720
she must herself assay L C 156
Assayed— Sh& hath assay'd as much F^ ..... 608
Assemble — objects to his beams .... Son 114 8
Assigned— theirs in thought assign'd L C »... 138
Assist— they then .... me in the wci RL 350
Asslstanee — fair .... in my verse Son 78 2
Assuage— love's fire doth .... VA 834
woe doth woe assuage R L 790
suffering ecstasy assuage L C 69
Assuaged- his fury was .... V A 318
Assure — I would .... thee " ..... 871
dear friend, and I as.Huro ye Son 111 13
Assured— come back again .... '* 45 11
thou art assured mine " 92 2
now crown themselves assured " 107 7
grew to faults assured " 118 10
always with assured trust P P 19 31
Astonished-
'stonish'd as night wanderers VA 825
astonish'd with this deadly deed R L 1730
my verse astonished Son 86 8
Astronomy — methinks I have .... " 14 2
Asunder- girths he breaks .... VA 266
Hearts remote, yet not asunder P T «... 29
At^with herself strife VA 11
stone at rain relenteth " 200
At this Adonis smiles '* ..... 241
Struck dead at first " 250
that smiles at thee " 2.'32
workmanship at strife " «... 291
Anon he starts at stirring ** ..... 802
BASE
33
BE
Am— dwthaman to so .... » ilave R L 1001
to let base clouds o'ertake me Sm 34 S
Too base of thee to be remembered " 74 12
with base infection meet ** 94 11
to lend base subjects light " 100 4
to base touches prone ** 141 6
Baielj— Thej .... fly, and dare not VA ..... 894
they basely dignified B L ..... 660
Basely with gold *' ..... 1068
Bit The baser is he, coming fh>m
a king " ~... 1002
BMMt— Anon permit the .... clouds
to ride Son 33 6
The basest weed oatbniTes his dig-
nity " 94 12
The basest jewel will be well e»-
teem'd "^ 96 6
BiahfU— He bums with .... shame Ki^ 49
with bashful innocence doth hie B L ..... 1341
Baatard— This .... graff shall never
come to growth '* 1062
Before these bastard signs • Son 68 8
Fortune's bastard be unfather'd ** 124 2
slander'd with a bastard shame ** 127 4
bastardsof hisfouladuIterateheartZ C 175
BacUrdy— Thy issue blurr'd with
nameless .... B L 622
Bai— upon his grained .... L C 64
Bate-hreedtng — this .... spy VA 655
Bateltii This .... edge on his keen
appetite B L ^... 9
Bath— And grew a seething .... S(m 153 7
the help of bath desired "153 11
the bath for ray help lies " 153 13
Growing a bath and healthful rem-
edy " 154 11
Bathe She bathes in water VA »... 94
The crow may bathe his coal-black
wings in mire B L »... 1009
bathes the pale fear *' 1775
Bathed — . . . . she in her fluxlTO eyes L C ..... 50
Bailer— Rude ram, to .... such an
ivory wall B L 464
Baller'd— His batter'd shield VA ~... 104
Have batter'd down her conse-
crated wall BL ^... 723
Hermansion batter'd by the enemy " ..... 1171
Batlerlnsr— «iege of ... . days Son 65 6
Battery— they make no ... . VA 426
As they did battery L C 23
To leave the battery " 277
Battle— in ne'er did bow VA ^... 99
he hath a battle set " ~... 619
in fell battle's rage B L ..... 145
to imiUte the battle sought " ~... 1438
Th« scars of battle L C 244
Bawd— the .... to lust's abuse VA ..... 792
fair reputation but a bawd B L ~... 623
BUnd muffled bawd " ..... 768
thou notorious bawd ** ~... 886
Bay — the hounds are at a ... . VA ~... 877
Be anchor'd in the bay where all
men rkle Son 137 6
Ah, that I had my lady at this bay PP 11 13
Be— she would .... thrust VA 41
TDl cither gorge be stnflTd or prey
begone " ..... 58
O, be not proud *' 113
mine be not so fkir " «... 116
3
Be— shall .... thine own VA 117
Be bold to play '* ..... 124
mayst thou well be tasted " 128
sweet boy, and rosy it be " 155
be of thyself rejected " 159
with thy increase be fed " 170
makest thou to be gone " 188
or else be mute " ..... 208
in her arms be bound " 228
Struggles to be gone " ..... 227
ril be a park, and thou shalt be my
deer " «... 231
if those hills be dry ** ..... 238
Then be my deer " ..... 239
Ho might be buried " «... 244
by pleading may be blest " ~... 328
sorrow may be said " ..... 333
coal that must be cool'd " ~... 887
Though thy horse bo gone " ..... 890
dares not be so bold " ..... 401
Unless it bo a boar " ..... 410
be any jot dimlnish'd " ..... 417
should I be in lore " ..... 438
my lore to thee be still " 442
still to be scaling " ..... 612
can be well contented " ~... 513
good queen, it will not be " 607
much as may be proved " ..... 608
O, be advised " ..... 615
cannot be easily harm'd ** 627
be ruled by me " 673
may be compared well *• 701
nature be coudomn'd of treason " 729
Be prodigal: the lamp " 755
to be barr'd of rest " 784
ere summer half be done ** 802
to be so curst " 887
If he be dead,— O no, it cannot be " 937
Be wreak'd on him *' ..... 1004
To be of such a weak " 1010
where no breach should be " 1066
The tiger would be tame " 1096
should yet be light " ..... 1134
shall be waited on " 1137
It shall be fickle " 1141
Bud, and be blasted " ..... 1142
It shall be sparing " ..... 1147
it shall be raging-mad " 1151
It shall be merciful " 1155
Perverse it shall be " 1157
shall be cause of war *' ..... 1159
There shall not be " 1187
and not be seen " ..... 1194
king^ might be espoused to more
fame B L 20
What needeth then apologies bo
made " 31
by our ears our hearts oft tainted
be " 38
between them both it should be
kill'd " ..... 74
Though death be adjunct " 13;{
So that in venturing ill we leave
to be " «... 148
if there be no self-trust " 158
Which roust be lodo-star to his
lustful eye " „... 179
A martial man to be soft fancy's
slave " .... 200
ATTORNEY
31
BACK
Attorney— heart's .... once Is mute VA ».. 835
▲•tmnihig^-ond yet she fell ... . PP 7 16
Her fancy fell a^tuming ** 19 4
l*twalB — breaking rings .... LC ~... 6
ladadoasly— ask of her .... R L ^... 1223
▲ndarity— life and bold .... " 1346
▲MiieBe^— End without.... VA ~... 846
Lending soft audience L C 278
lidit— What acceptable .... canst
thou leave Son 4 12
Caird to that audit by advised re-
specU '* 49 4
Her audit, though delay'd, answer'd
must be ** 126 11
and to your audit comes L C 230
li^kt— Nor .... obeys R L 546
if aught in me Son ^ 5
Were 'taught to me " 125 1
there may be aught applied L C 68
AamneBtlng^nothing by .... it RL 154
layar— And the sad augurs mock
their own presage Son 107 6
Augur of the fever's end P T ~... 7
^... 347
.... 1006
••••• Aa>*s4
»... 620
66 9
II
(I
II
(I
35
6
97
6
104
5
•• •••
1273
••■••
•274
•«• ••
1628
47
14
61
10
*••••
1675
ABspido«s— stand .... to the hour R L
Aathor^-. ... of thy slander V A
author of their obloquy R L
the authors of their ill
Aathorlty— • ... for sin
tongue-tied by authority Son
Aathorlxed— with his ... . youth L C
Aathoriaing— . . . . thy trespass Son
Aatama — ^The teeming .... big with
rich increase "
to yellow autumn tnm'd "
ATail— it small avails my mood R L
ATaaat— childish fear ....
Awake — Awake, thou Boman dame
Awakes my heart Son
keeps mine eye awake "
Awaketh — frensy thus .... R L
Award— That she that makes me sin
awards me pain Son 141 14
Away — her object will .... VA ~... 255
Away he springs ** ~... 258
thyself art made away " ..... 763
nowIwUlaway " ~... 807
away she flies " ~... 1U27
My sighs are blown away " 1071
away she hies " 11$9
away by brainHsick rude desire R L 175
the nncs took away ** ~... 259
Away he steals " 283
can l>e wiped away " 6<)8
Bearing away the wound " ..... 731
remains a hopeless caxt-away " 744
fly with the filth away " 1010
the treasure stol'n away " ~... 1056
her bark being peel'd away " ~... 1169
was Tarquin gone away " ~... 12H1
The grief away that stops " 1664
with a joyless smile she turns away " 1711
do not Uke away *' 1796
would make the world away Son 11 8
To give away yourself " 16 13
Th3rself away art present " 47 10
Stealing away the treasure " 63 8
and take my love away " 64 12
The right of sepulchres, were shorn
away " 68 6
Son
II
11
II
II
44
II
il
It
11
II
(I
73
7
74
2
75
14
80
18
91
14
92
1
96
U
97
12
98
13
143
2
145
12
145
18
4
14
11
11
11
14
14
2
15
8
16
14
19
18
»••••
245
Away- black night doth take ....
shall carry me away
on all, or all away
and I be cast away
All this away and me
to steal thyself away
roif^ht'st thou lead away
And, thou away, the very birds
winter still, and you away
fcather'd creatures broke away
to hell is flown away
*I hate' from hate away she threw "
lie rose and ran away P P
away he skips "
till I run away
that kept my rest away
And drives away
did bear the maid away
with scorn she put away
Awe— be kept in ... . R L ^
Awed —
.... resistance made him fret VA 69
Awhile— Counsel may stop .... L C ..... 159
A-work— So Lucrece set ... , R L 1496
Ay— 'Ay rae,' quoth Venus VA 187
•Ay me,' she cries " 833
ay, if the fact be known R L 239
Ay me! the bark " 1167
Ay me! but yet thou might'st Sun 41 9
Ay, fill it full with wills " 136 6
ay, dieted in grace L C ..... 261
Ay me! I fell ♦* 821
Aye— antiquity for his page Son 108 12
Aanre — Her .... veins R L ~... 419
Babe — ne'er pleased her .... so well VA 974
fright her crying babe with Tar-
quin's name R L 814
Who, having two sweet babes " ~... 1161
nurse liur b:i1>e frpm faring ill Son 22 12
Love irt a bal>o ** 115 13
Sotji down her babe *' 143 3
Whilst I thy babe chase thee " 143 10
Back— on so proud a . . . . V A 300
his back, his breast " ..... 396
she on her back " ..... 594
On bis bow-back " ..... 619
on his back doth lie " 663
upon her back " »... 814
Then fell she on her back P P A 13
i?arit— beating reason ... . V A ^... 557
Rut back retires " 906
I could not put him back R L 843
would'st thou one hour come back " 965
boars back all boll'n and red " ..... 1417
mindful messeuKer come back *' ..... 1583
Boik to the strait " 1670
and back the same grief draw " .... 1673
Held back his sorrow's tide " ..... 1789
Calls back the lovely April Son Z \Q
not to give back again " 22 14
now conic back again assured " 45 11
I send them l>aek again " 45 14
can hold his swift foot back ** 65 11
And so my patent back again is
swerving " 87 8
still will pluck thee back " 126 6
turn back to me '* 143 11
If thou turn back " 143 14
BACK
32
BASE
ti
u
ffodb— Nymphs .... peeping P P
though she put thee back **
BMk'd— The colt that's back*d and
burden'd VA
Mj will is bftck'd with resoluUon R L
Back'str-Thou .... reproach "
Backward-
Backward she push'd him VA
and backward drew
Shrinks backward in his shelly
dire
O, that record could with a back-
ward look Son
Bad— Being so ...., such numbers
seek for thee R L
that to bad debtors lends
O Time, thou tutor both to good and
bad
before these last so bad Sim
So you o*er-green my bad, my good
allow "
Creating every bod a perfect best **
count bad what I think good
All men are bad and in their bad-
ness reign
world is grown so bad
Till my bad angel fire my good one
out
Till my bad angel fire my good one
out PP
Bad in the best "
Bade— She .... love last "
She bade good night "
bade me come to-morrow "
Badge— A .... of fame R L
But heavy tears badges of cither's
M
a
K
u
M
U
18 48
19 86
.... 852
..... 622
641
..... 1084
59 5
•••«• OirD
••••• SrO'B
••••• V»rV
67 14
112 4
114 7
121 8
121 14
140 11
144 14
2
7
7
14
15
14
18
16
2
12
reign
..it
Son
It
RL
Son
II
RL
Son
PP
..... 1054
44 14
121 14
-... 1725
74 2
133 10
~... 103
129 7
4 11
••••• 0«fO
..... 1554
••••• mrW
•m •■• mt f
..... 1466
107 9
woe
Badnesa— in their . .
Ball— That blow did
Without all ball
let my poor heart bail
Bait-
She touch'd no unknown baita
as a swallow'd buit
would not touch the bait
Balk— Make slow pursuit, or alto-
gether .... R L
Ball— Are balls of quenchless fire *'
their poor balls are tied L C
Balm — in her pu.ssion calls it ... . V A
And drop sweet balm R L
Balmy^f thi» most .... time Son
Ban — And bitter words to .... her
cruel foes R L ~... 1460
And ban and brawl P P 19 20
Band—
her arms infold him like a. ... V A m,.,. 225
Or ivory in an alabaster band " ..... 803
news from the warlike band R L — 255
Bane —
my body's .... would cure thee VA «... 372
Banish— Every thing did moan PP 21 7
BanlHh*d—
the plague is .... by thy breath VA 510
Banishment—
Tarquin's everlaMi UK banishment i2 L 1855
Bask- force it overflow the ... . VA 72
this primrose bank whi>rt>on I lie " «... 151
the bounding banks o'erfiows R L ^... 1119
VA
RL
«i
Son
u
u
u
Bank— To Simois' reedy banks
Shoot their foam at Simois* banks
Come daily to the banks
Bankniptr— But blessed ....
bankrupt in this poor-rich gain
Like to a bankrupt beggar
now Nature bankrupt is
Banner-
when his gaudy .... is displayed
Banning— Banning his boisterous
unruly beast VA
Banqoetr-But, 0, what .... "
to the painted banquet bids Son
Bar— Or as those bars which stop the
hourly dial R L
Whilst I whom fortune of such tri-
umph bars Son
thy picture's sight would bar "
under truest bars to thrust **
Bare—
What .... excuses makest thou
On her bare breast
Bare and unpeopled
May make seem bare
Uttering bare truth
Bare ruin'd choirs where late the
The argument all bare
Whose bare out-bragg'd the web L C
age like winter bare P P
Bare-boned— Shows me a ... . death R L
Bareness — and .... everywhere Son
December's bareness everywhere "
Bargain—
AVhat bargains may I make VA
Bark- though a thousand .... **
the bark peol'd from the lofty pine R L
her iMirk being peel'd away "
My suucy bark, inferior far to his Son
to every wandering bark "
Barketh—
wolf doth grin before he ... . VA
Bam— And useless barns the harvest
of his wits R L
Barr'd- When it is ... . VA
to be barr'd of rest "
barr'd him from the blessed thing R L
Barren—
— , lean, and lacking Juice
barren dearth of daughters
his barren skill to show
trees I see barren of leaves
barren rage of death's etecual cold "
than my barren rhyme "
so barren of new pride "
The barren tender of a poet's debt *'
Barrenly — featureless and rude, ....
perish **
Base— To bid the wind a . . . . VA
Or laid great bases for eternity Son
5<Me— Throwing the base thong VA
llidiug base sm i n plaits of nu^esty £ Zr
digression is so vile, so base
Thou nobly base, they basely digni-
fied
to the base shrub's foot "
Vmo the base bod "
Base watch of woi'S "
For who so base would such an of-
fice have
R L
1437
ti
.....
1442
Son 56
U
r ^X M...
466
R L ~...
140
fi
711
Son 67
9
R L «... 272
.... 826
.... 445
47 6
827
25 8
46 8
48 2
«... Jc^S
«... 49v
«... 1741
26 6
69 4
73 4
103 8
12 4
— 1761
5 8
97 4
«... 512
240
«... 1167
1169
80 7
116 7
836
• ••• #OV
VA
14
RL
Son
12
13
16
76
88
186
754
81
5
12
4
1
4
11
u
<l
11 10
«... 909
125 8
••••• Sro
••••• w
— 202
«... 6wU
KAA.
«... vDS
«... 671
«... K6B
«... 1001
BE
36
BEATEN
Be — with acture thej may .... LC ~... 185
these, of force, muat your oblations
be " ..... 223
Not to be tempted, would she be
immured ** ~... 251
Who, young and simple, would not
be so lover'd " ..... 320
Although I know my years be past
the best PP \ 6
our faults in love thus smother'd be " 1 14
would corrupt my saint to be a devil " 2 7
And whether that my angel be
turn'd fiend "29
If knowledge be the mark "57
Then must the love be great 'twlxt
thee and me "88
before the fall should be " 10 6
Ah, neither be my share " 14 1
»T may be, she joy'd to jest " 14 9
'T may be again to make " 14 10
as well as well might be " 16 2
But one must be refused " 16 9
That nothing could be used " 16 10
What though her frowning brows
be bent " 19 l.i
twice desire, ere it be day " 19 17
And in thy suit be humble true " 19 32
be thou not slack " 19 So
To teach my tongue to be so long " 19 52
here be it said " 19 53
Live with me and be my love " 20 1
Then live with me and be my. love " 20 16
To live with thee and be thy love " 20 20
Every man will be thy friend " 21 35
But if store of crowns be scant " 21 37
If that one be prodigal " 21 89
If he be addict to vice " 21 43
If to women he be bent " 21 45
Herald sad and trumpet be P T 3
Be the death-divining swan " 15
Truth may seem, but cannot be " ..... 62
Truth and beauty buried be " 64
Beaded— and of .... jet LC 37
Beak— Tires with her V A 56
Whose crooked beak R L 508
Beam — Whose beams upon his hair-
less face VA 487
Mock with thy tickling beams R L 1090
to his beams assemble iStm 114 8
Bear — rough , or lion proud V A 884
^«ar— and sappy plants to bear " 165
bear her a thousand ways " 907
to Collatium bears the llghtiess
fire RL 4
Whoso crime will bear an ever-
during blame " 224
thou perforce must bear " 612
I mean to bear thee " 670
She bears the load of lust " «... 7.^
how many bear such shameful blows " 8.32
infant sorrows, bear them mild " ..... 1096
with deep groans the diapason bear " 1132
let beasts boar gentle minds " 1148
with greater patience bear it " ~... 1158
be ready by and by to bear " 1292
From that suspicion which the
world might bear her " 1321
a part of woe doth bear " «.... 1327
b(M&rs back «U boll'n and red " ..... 1417
Bear—^igxa of rage they .... R L ..... 1419
burning Troy doth bear " -... 1474
such a face should bear a wicked
mind " 1540
that map which deep impression
bears " «... 1712
and help to bear thy part " ..... 1830
conclude to bear dead Lucrece " 1050
His tender heir might bear his
memory Son 1 4
parts that thou shouldst bear "88
your sweet form should bear " 13 8
would bear your living flowers " 16 7
to him that bears the strong of-
fence's cross " 84 12
To bear love's wrong " 40 12
The beast that bears me " 50 5
to bear that weight in me " SO 6
Which, laboring for invention, bear
amiss " 59 3
thy mind's imprint will bear " 77 3
as the proudest sail doth bear " 80 6
myself will bear all wrong " 88 14
But boars it out even to the edge " 116 12
One on another's neck, do witness
bear " 131 11
Bear thine eyes straight " 140 14
reading what contents it bears L C ~... 19
What unapproved witness dost thou
bear " 68
in the suffering pangM it bears " 272
did bear the maid away PP 16 14
He with thee doth bear a part " 21 56
Beard— his .... all silver white R L 1405
with white and bristly beard Son 12 8
Bearer— Of my dull " 61 2
Bear'st— against a thorn thou . . . .thy
part R L 1135
deny that thou bcar'st love to any Son 10 1
Bearing— The .... earth with his
hard hoof he wounds VA 267
now press'd with bearing " 430
no bearing yoke they knew R L ..... 409
Bearing away the wound " 731
quick bearing and dexterity " «... 1389
Bearing thy heart,which I will keepiStm 22 11
Bearing the wanton burthen of the
prime " 97 7
after new love bearing " 152 4
Beast— boisterous and unruly .... VA 326
that bloody beast " «... 999
to the rough beast R L 545
since men prove beasts, let beasts
bear gentle minds " 1148
The beast that bears me Son 50 5
will my poor beast then find " 51 5
Beasts did leap P P 21 5
Ruthless beasts they will not cheer
thee " 21 22
Beat — beats, and takes no rest VA 647
now she beats her heart " 829
beats these from the stage R L ..... 278
reproof and reason beat it dead " 489
Beat at thy rocky and wreck-threat-
ening heart " «... 690
The golden bullet beats it down P P 19 30
Beated— Bcated and chopp'd Son 62 10
Beaten— Beaten away by brain-alck
rude desire R L «... 175
BEATEN
37
BEAUTY
B««t«B— quite .... from her breast R L 15G3
the rain on mj storm-beaten face Son m 6
BeatlB9—
Beating his kind embracements F^ ..... 312
beating reason back " M?
Anon his beating heart Ji L ~... 433
BeaUng her bulk " .... 467
beating on her breast " 759
Beaiteoaa— This combat VA 365
The beauteous influence " ~... 8G2
Ne'er saw the beauteous livery " ~... 1107
possession of his beauteous mate R L ..... 18
Then, beauteous niggard Son 4 5
Seeking that beauteous roof " 10 7
Makes black night beauteous *' 27 12
promise such a beauteous day " 34 1
Beauteous thou art, therefore to be
assailed " 41 6
doth beauty beauteous seem " 54 1
beauteous and lovely youth '* 54 13
You to your beauteous blessings " 84 13
Three beauteous springs ** 104 5
beauteous as his form L C »... 99
Bcaatifkl — making .... old rhyme Son 106 3
why 'twas beautiful and hard LC 211
Bcaatlfy— themselTcs so ... . R L 404
•eaaty— Which bred more .... VA «... 70
there thy beauty lies " 119
Beauty within itself " ..... 130
My l)eauty as the spring '* 141
fresh beauty for the use *' ..... 164
beauty breedeth beauty " 167
That iuward beauty " 434
Were b«iuty under twenty " ..... 675
Would root these beauties " ..... 636
Beauty hath nought to do *' 638
To mingle beauty " «... 735
brings beauty under " ..... 746
Tpon fre:»h beauty " ..... 796
To stifle beauty and to steal " 9:^
his breath and beauty set " ..... 935
Seeing bis beauty ** „... 938
beauty may the better thrive " ..... 1011
with him is beauty slain " ..... 1019
And, beauty dead ** 1020
But true-sweet beauty " ..... 1080
every beauty robb'd " .... 11.32
as bright as heaven's beauties RL 13
Honour and beauty " 27
Beauty itself dot h of itself " ..... 29
beauty and virtue strived " ..... 52
beauty would blush for shame " ~... 54
When beauty boasted blushes " ..... 55
But beauty, in that white intituled ** «... 57
virtue claims from beauty beauty's
red " 59
Argued by beauty's red " 65
In that high task hath done her
beauty wrong " «... 80
All orators are dumb when beauty
pleadeth " ..... 268
bcmaty my prize " ~... 279
Thy beauty hath ensnared thee *' . 485
By thy bright beauty " .... 490
an eye to gaze on U»uty ** .».. 496
Time's ruin, beauty's wreck " ...» 1451
her beauty I may tear ** .... 1472
That my poor beauty had purloin'd
his eyes •* 1661
<i
ti
It
«
It
(I
i<
It
Beaaty—
shiver'd all the of my glass R L
That thereby beauty's rose might
never die Son
dig deep trenches in thy beauty's
field
being ask'd where all thy beauty
lies
how much more praise deserved thy
beauty's use
Proving his beauty by succession
thine
Upon thyself thy beauty's legacy
Thy unused beauty miutl be tomb'd
with thee
Beauty o'ersnow'd and bareness
every where "
Beauty's effect witli beauty were
bereft "
With beauty's treasure, ere it be "
mortal hmka adore his beauty still "
But beauty's waste hath in the
world an end
That beauty still may live
wisdom, beauty, and increase "
of thy beauty do I question make "
Since sweets and beauties do them-
selves forsake *♦
that beauty which you hold in lease "
As truth and beauty shall together
thrive
Thy end is truth's and beauty's
doom
If I could write the beauty of your
eyes
For beauty's pattern to succeeding
men
Siirr'd by a painted beauty
For all that beauty that doth cover
thee
Thy beauty's form in table of my
heart
For whether beauty, birth, or wealth "
Thy beauty and thy years full well
befits
And chide thy beauty
Hers, by thy beauty tempting her
to thee
Thine, by thy beauty being false to
me
On Helen's check all art of beauty
set
doth shadow of your beauty show "
O, how much more doth beauty
beauteous seem
delves the parallels in beauty's
brow
Painting my age with beauty of
thy days
all those beauties whereof now he's
king "
My sweet love's beauty "
' Ilisbcauty shall in those black lines "
How with this rage shall beauty
hold a plea "
who his spoil of beauty can forbid "
Why should poor beauty indirectly
seek
When beauty lived and died "
-... 1763
<i
t<
II
11
fi
II
II
II
II
II
II
<i
II
II
II
u
1
2
2
2
2
5
2
9
2
12
4
2
4
13
5
8
5
11
6
4
7
7
9
11
10
14
11
6
12
9
12
11
13
5
14
11
14
14
17
5
19
12
21
2
22
24
2
87
5
41
8
41
10
41
13
41
14
53 7
53 10
54 1
60
10
62
14
63
6
63
12
63
13
65
3
65
12
67
7
68
2
BEAUTY
38
BEEN
Beaoty— Ere beauty's dead fleece
made another gaj Son 68 8
to dress his beauty new " 68 12
To show false art what beauty was
of yore " 68 14
They look Into the beauty of thy
mind " 69 9
The ornament of beauty is suspect " 70 3
Thy glass will show thee how thy
beautit^ wear " 77 1
beauty doth he give " 79 10
I impair not beauty being mute " 83 11
like Eve's apple doth thy beauty
grow " 93 13
]>oth spot the beauty of thy bud-
ding name " 95 3
Where beauty's veil doth cover
every blot " 95 11
thy neglect of truth in beauty died " 101 2
Both truth and beauty on my love
depends " 101 3
Beauty no pencil, beauty's truth to
lay " 101 7
8uch seems your beauty still " 104 3
yet doth beauty, like a dial-hand " 104 9
Ere you were born was beauty's
summer dead ", * 104 14
beauty making beautiful old rhyme " 106 3
iu the blazon of sweet beauty's best " 106 5
Even such a beauty as you master
now " lOG 8
Tan sacred beauty " 115 7
it bore not beauty's name "127 2
now isblack beauty's successive heir " 127 3
And beauty slandcr'd with a bas-
tard shame " 127 4
Sweet beauty hath no name " 127 7
who not born fair, no beauty lack " 127 11
every tongue says beauty should
look 80 " 127 14
those whose beauties proudly make
them cruel " 131 2
will I swear beauty herself is black " 132 13
The statue of thy beauty thou wilt
take " 134 9
They know what beauty is " 137 3
The carcass of a beauty L C 11
Some beauty peep'd through lattice
of sear'd age " 14
Such looks as none could look but
beauty's queen P P A 4
If not to beauty vowed "52
Beauty is but a vain and doubtful
good " 13 1
So beauty blemish'd once 's forever
lost " 13 11
Beauty, truth, and rarity P T 53
Beauty brag, but 'tis not she " -... 63
Truth and beauty burled be " 64
Became —
the horse by him .... his deed LC Ill
Becaoae — Because Adonis' heart hath
made mine hard VA 378
Because the cry remaineth " 885
Because he would not fear him " 1094
because it is his own R L 35
because thou know'st I love her Son 42 6
Because he needs no praise " 101 9
Because I would not dull you "102 14
Becanse —
Because thou lovest the one P P 8 4
Bechance — Let there .... him pitiful
mischances R L 976
Beck — ^being at your .... Son 58 5
Become —
who should best .... her grief VA -... 968
the old become a child " ..... 1152
With words, till action might be-
come them better R L ~... 1323
Become the public plague " 1479
your trespass now becomes a fee Son 120 13
Better becomes the gray cheeks of
the east " 132 6
As those two mourning eyes be-
come thy face " 132 9
Becoming—. ... of their woe " 127 13
this becoming of things ill " 150 5
Bed— his tent my VA 108
in her naked bed " 397
from their dark beds " ..... 1050
Here was thy father's bed " 1183
is Tarquin brought unto his bed R L 120
this lustful lord leap'd from his bed " 169
The Boman lord marcheth to Lu-
crece'bed " 301
on her yet unstained bed " 366
In his clear bed " .... 382
Without the bed her other fair
hand was " 393
For in thy bed I purpose to destroy
thee " 514
That to his borrow'd bed he make
retire " -... 573
the base bed of some rascal groom " 671
lust should stain so pure a bed " 684
yet ere he go to bed " 776
Not spend the dowry of a lawful bed " 938
AfMict him in his bed " 975
In the interest of thy bed " 1619
I haste me to my bod Son 27 1
As the death-bed whereon it must
expire " 73 11
Robb'd others' beds' revenues " 142 8
Were kisses all the joys in bed P P 19 47
There will I make thee a bed of
roses " 20 9
Bedabbled—
the dew-bedabbled wretch VA 703
Bedchamber— In his ... . " ..... 784
Bedrid— Afflict him in his bed with
.... groans R L 975
Bed-TOW— In act thy .... broke Son 152 3
Bee— and I a drone-like R L 836
the honey which thy chaste bee
kept " 840
The old bees die " 1769
Been— I have .... woo'd VA 97
Yet hath he been my captive " 101
Thou hadst been gone " 613
Had I been tooth'd " 1117
For it had been dishonour R L 844
Troy had been bright with fame " 1491
Hath been before Son 59 2
like a winter hath ray absence been " 97 1
From you have I been absent " 98 1
I have frequent been with unknown " 117 6
mine eyes out of their spheres been
fitted "119 7
BE
36
BEATEN
Be — with acture they may .... LC ~... 185
these, of force, must your oblations
be " 223
Not to be tempted, would she be
immured " 251
Who, young and simple, would not
be so lover*d " 820
Although I know my years be past
the best PP \ 6
our faults in love thus smother'd be " 1 14
would corrupt my saint to be a devil "27
And whether that my angel be
turn'd fiend "29
If knowledge be the mark "57
Then must the love be great 'twixt
thee and me "88
before the fall should be "10 6
Ah, neither be my share " 14 1
*T may be, she joy'd to jest " 14 9
'T may be again to make " 14 10
as well as well might be " 16 2
But one must be refused " 16 9
That nothing could be used " 16 10
What though her frowning brows
be bent " 19 13
twice desire, ere it be day " 19 17
And in thy suit be humble true " 19 32
be thou not slack " 19 35
To teach my tongue to be so long " 19 52
here be it said " 19 53
Live with me and be my love " 20 1
Then live with me and be my. love " 20 16
To live with thee and be thy love " 20 20
Every man will be thy friend " 21 35
But if store of crowns be scant " 21 37
If that one be prtxligal " 21 39
If he be addict to vice " 21 43
If to women he be bent " 21 45
Herald sad and trumpet be P T 3
Be the death-divining swan " ..... 15
Truth may seem, but cannot be " ..... 62
Truth and beauty buried be " ~... 64
Beaded— and of .... jet L C 37
Beak— Tires with her VA 56
Whose crooked beak R L 508
Beam— Whose beams upon his hair-
less face VA 487
Mock with thy tickling beams R L 1090
to his beams assemble Son 114 8
Bear— rough . . . ., or lion proud V A 884
^ear— and sappy plants to bear " ..... 165
bear her a thousand ways " 907
to Collatium bears the lightiess
fire R L . 4
Whose crime will bear an ever-
during blame " ..... 224
thou perforce must bear " ..... 612
I mean to bear thee " ..... 670
She bears the load of lust " ..... 734
how many bear such shameful blows " 832
infant sorrows, bear them mild " 1096
with deep groans the diapason bear " ~... 1132
let bu'asts bear gentle minds " 1148
with greater patience bear it " ~... 1158
Ih) ready by and by to bear " 1292
From that suspicion which the
world might bear her " ..... 1321
a part of woe doth bear " ..... 1327
b(M&n back «U boU'n and red " ^... 1417
RL
u
«
tl
his
Son
(I
t(
It
u
M
tl
ft
ft
II
II
li
U
It
PP
11
^eor— signs of rage they ....
burning Troy doth bear
such a face should bear a wicked
mind
that map which deep Impression
bears
and help to bear thy part
conclude to bear dead Lucrece
His tender heir might bear
memory
parts that thou shouldst bear
your sweet form should bear
would bear your living flowers
to him that bears the strong of-
fence's cross
To bear love's wrong
The beast that bears me
to bear that weight in me "
Which, laboring for invention, bear
amiss "
thy mind's imprint will bear "
as the proudest sail doth bear
myself will bear all wrong
But bears it out even to the edge
One on another's neck, do witness
bear
Bear thine eyes straight
reading what contents it bears L C
What unapproved witness dost thou
bear
in the suffering pangs it bears
did bear tlic maid away
He witli thee doth bear a part
Beard- his .... all silver white
with white and bristly beard
Bearer — Of my dull ....
Bear'st — against a thorn thou ... .thy
part R L
deny that thou bear'st love to any Son
Bearing— The earth with his
hard hoof he wounds VA
now press'd with bearing
no bearing yoke they knew
Bearing away the wound
quick bearing and dexterity
Bearing tiiy heart, which I will keep Slon
Bearing the wantun burthen of the
prime
afi«r new love bearing
Beast— boisterous and unruly .... V A
that bloody beast "
to the rough beast R L
since men prove beasts, let beasts
bear gentle minds "
The beast that bears me Son
will my poor beast then find "
Beasts did leap P P
Ruthless beasts they will not cheer
thee "
Beat/— beats, and takes no rest VA
now she beats her heart "
beats these from the stage R L
reproof and reason beat it dead "
Beat at thy rocky and wreck-threat-
ening heart "
The golden bullet beat« it down P P
Beated- Beatcd and chopp'd Son
Beaten— Beaten away by brain-dck
rude desire R L
1419
— 1474
" 1540
«... 1712
.... 1830
J
1
4
8
8
18
8
16
7
84
12
40
12
50
5
00
6
59
8
77
80
6
88
14
116
12
131
11
140
14
19
RL
Son
II
M... A f A
16 14
21 06
„... 1405
12 8
01 2
.... 1185
10 1
R Tj ^
II
tl
II
II
267
430
409
... 731
... 1389
22 11
97 7
152 4
326
••••• yif«f
545
.... 1148
50 5
51 5
21
21 22
••••• Irs/
.... 829
.... JSiio
.... 4oSf
.... OWI
19 80
62 10
■...• 170
BEHIND
40
BEING
It
u
<«
9 6
50 14
129 12
143 10
Behind—
no form of thee hast left .... Son
grief lies onward, and mj Joy be-
hind
behind, a dream
I thy Imbe chase thee afar behind
Behold— Who doth the world so glo-
riously.... K^ ..... 857
behold two Adons dead " ~... 1070
That eye which him beholds as
more divine R L ..... 291
this tumult to behold " „... 447
she never may behold the day " 746
which Ihey themselves behold " 751
Let not the jealous Day behold that
face " ~... 800
And scarce hath eyes his treasure
to behold " 857
any eye should thee behold " 1143
The heavy motion that it doth be-
hold " ..... 1326
every eye beholds their blame " 1343
You might behold " ..... 1388
Of physiognomy might one behold " 1395
the eye that doth behold his haste " 1668
that beholds her bleed *' ..... 1732
T often did behold " 1758
When I behold the violet Son 12 3
in thee time's furrows I behold ** 22 8
As to behold desert a beggar born " 66 2
That time of year thou mayst in
me behold '* 73 1
now behold these present days " 106 13
Yet, in good faith, some say that
thee behold ** 131 5
That they behold, and see not " 137 2
though in me you behold L C ~... 71
behold these talonts " ..... 204
Beholding— that pines .... food R L 1115
her sad-beholding husband saw " 1590
Behoof-
harms that preach in our .... L C 165
Being— set, ril smother VA 18
Being wasted in such ** 24
Being so enraged " ..... 29
Being red, she loves him best ; and
being white " 77
Who being look'd on " 87
Being Judge in love " 220
Being mad before " 249
being tied unto a tree " 263
Being proud, as females are " 309
And being steel'd '• 376
the weather being cold " ~... 402
burden'd being young " ..... 419
Being nurse and feeder ** 446
Or being early pluck'd " 528
bird being tamed *' 560
Like lawn being spread " 590
Being moved, he strikes " 623
Being ireful, on the lion " ..... 628
f^esh flowers being shed " «... 665
with others being mingled " 691
And being low " 708
milk and blood being mingled " ~... 902
Being prison'd in her eye " 980
For he being dead " ~... 1019
horns being hit " -... 1033
And being open'd " ..... 1051
troubled
VA
(t
u
u
f
(I
t(
tt
It
11
II
BelMg — the brain .
and, being gone
That, thou being dead
The sovereignty of either being so
great RL
He makes excuses for his being
there "
The guilt being great *'
her hand in my hand being lock'd *'
And being lighted
The curtains being close
To wink, being blinded
being so applied
The flesh being proud
Being so bad, such numbers seek for
thee
The moon being clouded
Who, being stopp'd
her bark being peel'd away
the other being dead
doth weep, the sun being set
sorrow ebbs being blown with
His nose being shadow'd
Here one being throng'd
Being from the feeling of her own
grief brought
recaird in rage, being past
Being constrain'd with dreadful
circumstance "
Which being done "
Then being ask'd Son
And being frank she lends "
Whose speechless song, being many,
seeming one *•
As thou being mine
Thine by thy beauty being false to
me
My life, being made of four
speed being made from thee
desire, of perfect'st love being made
Being had, to triumph, being lack'd,
to hope
winter, which, being full of care
Being your slave
Being your vassal
being at your beck
wherewith being crown'd
being woo'd of time
or victor being charged
my body being dead
Or, being wreck'd
tongues to be your being shall re-
hearse
you yourself, being extant*
my glory, being dumb
beauty being mute
Being fond on praise
being best acquainted
As thou being mine
my mind, being crown'd with you
Even so, being full of your ne'er-
cloying sweetness
When not to bo receives reproach
of being
for I, being pent In thee
so thou, being rich in • Will
But being biith from me
he again desires her, being sat
nor being desired yielded
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
~... 1068
1089
..... 1134
M... 69
LC
II
229
•« ••■
260
•••••
316
•••••
867
•••••
375
•«•••
531
•••••
712
•••■•
896
•••••
1007
■■•••
1119
••■••
1169
1187
•• •« ■
1226
1830
•••••
1416
•«•••
1417
•«•••
1578
•••••
1671
1703
•••••
1853
2
5
4
4
8
13
36
14
41
14
45
7
50
8
51
10
52
14
56
13
57
1
58
4
58
5
60
6
70
6
70
10
74
10
80
11
81
11
83
6
83
10
83
11
84
14
88
5
96
14
114
1
118
5
121
2
133
13
135
11
144
11
66
•• •••
149
BEING
41
BEST
B^lMf^yoa o'er me ... . strong
For bting both to me
Tbou being a goddess
Th J grace being gain*d
LC 257
PP 2 n
"86
"38
To show the .... daughters R L ~... 953
ahapes her sorrow to the beldam's
woea " ~... 1458
Belied — the picture was .... " ~... 1533
As an J she belied with false com-
pare Son
not be so, nor thou belied "
Bellere^Not to , and yet VA
Who will believe my verse Son
And then believe me
Never believe though in my nature
I do believe her
I do believe her P P
Believed— by mad ears .... be Son
Believed her eyes when they to as-
sail Z C .
Belleviag— . . . . she is dead VA ..
O hard-believing love " ~
Bell— that hears the passing-bell " ~
as fowl hear falcon's bells R L ^
like a heavy-hanging bell "
the surly sullen bell San
u
II
130
140
17
21
109
138
1
140
14
13
986
1
10
9
2
2
12
u
II
II
2G2
467
WV*
702
511
.... 1493
71 2
18 28
.... 1263
23 14
58 11
88 13
92 7
254
Hy wether's bell ringsdoleful knellPP
Belly— He on her .... falls VA
Belovg—
danger to resistance did .... RL
belongs to love's fine wit Son
to yon it doth belong
to thee I so belong
better state to me belongs
bosoms that to me belong L C ^
Beloved—
Where her .... CoUatinus lies R L .... 256
thou art beloved of many Son 10 3
that love and am beloved " 25 13
Thy sweet beloved name " 89 10
Nor my beloved as an idol shew "105 2
I to be beloved of thee " 150 14
Below— to the ground .... VA ~... 923
Coucheth the fowl below with his
wings' shade R L ~... 507
Belt— A of straw and ivy buds P P 20 13
Bemoaned — forc-benioaned moan Son 30 11
Bend— He bends her fingers V A ^... 476
woodman that doth bend his bow R L ~... 580
Or bends with the remover Son 116 4
Bendiag- from his ... . crest V A m,^ 395
bending all my loving thoughts Son 88 10
Within his bending sickle's com-
pass come " 116 10
Bewllt— the .... of rest "28 2
O benefit of ill " 119 9
Bent— botcher, .... to kill VA ~... 618
The world is bent my deeds tocroas Son 90 2
whose busy care is bent "143 6
Which, not to anger bent PP 5 12
What though her ftowning hrowa
be bent " 19 13
If to women he be bent " 21 45
... all with red VA 901
.. not to their lot RL ^.., 534
to Tarquin m bequeath " ..... IIM
111 bequeath unto the knife " 1184
shall I beqaeaih to thee " 1192
Beqaeath— thou didst .... to me P P 10 12
Beqaeathed— unto the clouds .... RL ~... 1727
Beqaeat-—
Nature's .... gives nothing Sun 4 3
Bereave— stains snd soon bereaves VA ~... 797
Kushing from forth a cloud bo-
reaves our sight R L 873
Bereft— I am ... . him so VA .. .. 381
sense of feeling were bereft me " 439
From me by strong assault it is
bereft R L 835
Beauty's effect with beauty were
bereft Son ^ \\
Berry— Or as the .... breaks V A ~... 460
that helpless berries saw " ..... 604
they hhn wiih berries " ..... 1104
Bcaeeeh— I heartily .... thee " 4M
BeaeechM—
acceptance weepingly beseech'd L C 207
Bcaeeeher— no Cair beseechers kill Son 135 13
Beseem-
deep regard beseems the sage R L 277
as well beseem thy heart Son 132 10
Beset— she is dreadfully RL 444
Beahrew— Beshrew that heart Son 133 1
Beside— falls an orient drop .... V A ..... 981
my added praise beside San 103 4
her pale and pined cheek beside L C 32
and to no love beside " 77
Bealdea— . . . . , his soul's fair temple RL ^... 719
Besides, of weariness ho did com-
plain him " .... 845
Besides, the life and feHing " .... 1317
Who with his fear is put besides
his part Son 23 2
all the world besides methinks are
dead " 112 14
Besiege— When forty winters shall
.... thy brow Son 2 1
besiege all kinds of blo<jd " 109 10
Till thus he *gan besiege me L C ..... 177
Betleged — From the .... Ardea R L 1
the walls of strong-besieged Troy " «... 1429
Besmeared —
besmear'd with sluttish time San 55 4
Beat— red, she loves him .... V A ~... 77
Her best is better'd " .... 78
But then woos best " .... 570
desire sees best of all " .... 720
Since her best work " .... 954
best become her grief " .... 9G8
But none is best " .... 971
They that love best " .... 1164
Grief best is pleased with grief's
society RL .... 1111
shall fit the trespass best " 1613
Look, whom she best endow'd Son 11 11
perspective it is best painter's art " 24 4
what is best, that bi-st I wfjth In thee " 37 13
then do mine eyes best see " 43 1
Thou, best of dearest " 48 7
Shall Time's best Jewel " 65 10
best to be with you alone " 75 7
So all my best is dressing old words
new " '76 11
being best acquainted " 88 5
I better in one general best " 91 8
But best is best, If u«;ver intenoix'd " 101 8
of sweet beauty's beat "106 6
BEST
42
BIDE
BmI— proved thee my beet of love ^Slim 110 8
next my heaven the best " 110 13
Creating every bad a perfect beat "114 7
Now I love you best "115 10
Yet what the best is " 187 4
my days are past the best " 188 6
O, love's best habit " 138 11
When all my best doth worship " 149 11
thy worst all best exceeds " 150 8
If best were as It was, or best
without L C -... 98
as it best deceives " ~... 306
my years be past the best P P 1 6
O, love's best habit " 1 11
Bad in the best " 7 18
Beatow— all naked, will bestow it &m 26 8
In more pleasures to bestow them L C ^... 139
Bestow'd— The kiss I gave you is be-
stowed in vain VA ~... 771
O, that sad breath his spongy lungs
bestow'd L C ~... 826
Bestow*Mt— which youngly thou .... Son 11 3
Betake— every one to rest themselves
betake /2 iy ..... 125
oft betake him to retire " ~... 175
to singing he betakes P P % 12
Bethinking— with false .... grieves VA 1024
Betokened— that ever yet betoken'd " ~... 453
Betray — himself confounds, betrays R L »... 160
to betray my life " 238
thine eyes betray thee unto mine " 483
might the stern wolf betray Son 96 9
betraying me, I do betray " 151 5
betray the fore-betray 'd L C 328
Betray'd— Betray'd the hours R L 933
Betraying — . . . . me, I do betray Son 151 5
Better— Are better proof V A ~... 626
his beauty may the better thrive " 1011
While thou on Tereus dcscant'st
better skill R L
which of the twain were better
the better so to clear her
might become them better
in ranks of better equipage
and poets better prove
all the better part of me
or whether better they
the better part of me
Knowing a better spirit
might be better used
on better judgement making
these I better in one general best
Thy love is bettor
I see a better state
That did not better for my life pro-
vide
That better Is by evil still made
better
'Tis better to be vile than vile es-
teemed
Better becomes the grey cheeks
teach thee wit, better it were
The better angel is a man right fair
Tempteth my better angel
My better angel is a man right fair PP
Tempteth my better angel "
Bettered— Her best is better'd VA
Then better'd that the world Son
Betttrlny— with the .... of the time "
t<
i<
«<
Son
t(
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
»■••■
1134
••••■
1151
•«•••
1320
•••••
1323
32
12
32
13
39
2
59
11
74
8
80
2
82
13
87
12
91
8
91
9
92
7
111 8
119 10
II
121
1
132
6
140
5
144
3
144
6
2
3
2
6
•••••
.78
75
8
82
5
Bettering—
stamp of the time-bettering days Son 82 8
Betuni bled— from her .... couch R L 1037
Between— And, lo, I lie between that
sun and thee V A ~... 194
Between this heavenly and earthly
sun ** ..... 198
a war of looks was then between
them " 855
lest between them both it should R L 74
between desire and dread " ..... 171
'Twecn frozen conscience and hot-
burning will « 247
between her chamber and his will " ..... 802
Between whose hills " 390
As if between them twain " «... 405
Between each kiss P P 1 8
So between them love did shine P T ^... 83
Betwixt—
*Twixt crimson shame and anger VA ~... 76
'twixt the son and sire " ..... 1160
Betwixt mine eye and heart Son 47 1
As 'twixt a miser and his wealth " 75 4
As oft 'twixt May and April L C 102
must the love be great 'twixt thee
and me PP B 8
Betel—
though they themselves be bevel Son 121 11
Bewailed— Lest my bewailed guilt " 86 10
Beware — Hadst thou but bid beware K^ 948
Beweep — beweep my outcast state Son 29 2
Bewltch'd— bewitch'd with lust's foul
charm R L 173
Consents bewitch'd, ere he desire L C ~... 131
Bewitching— Bewitching like the
wanton mermaid's song VA ^.. 777
Bewraj'd- thehatefulfoebewray'd/? L 1698
To hear her secrets so bewray'd P P 19 54
Beyond— D^ise extreme beyond ex-
tremity R L ..... 969
Beyond all date Son 122 4
Bias— Study his bias leaves PP 5 5
Bid— Bid me discourse VA 145
To bid the wind a base " 303
And bid Suspicion " 448
and bid good night " ..... 534
Bids him farewell " ..... 580
bid them leave quaking, bids them
fear no more " 899
thou but bid beware " ..... 943
They bid thee crop " ..... 946
bids her rejoice " 977
Who bids them still " ..... 1041
and bids them do their liking R L 434
And bids her eyes hereafter still be
blind " 758
bids it leap from thence " ..... 760
bid fair Lucrece speak " ..... 1268
Bid thou be ready " 1292
Bid him with speed " -... 1294
And bids Lucretius give " 1773
shame bids him possess his breath " ..... 1777
to the painted banquet bids my
heart Son Al 6
bid your servant once adieu " 57 8
Biddlni^-Biddiug them find their
sepulchres L C ~... 46
Bide—
tame to sufferance, bide each check 5m 58 7
BIDE
43
BLEED
B14C
vaj o*er-prei8*d defence can bide Son 199
Some in her tbreaden fillet still did
bide L C
pitcbf vapours firom their biding R L ~...
BIcv^Borne on the bier with wMte San 12
Bir-
aataiun, big with rich increase " 97
Big discontent so breaking L C m...
Bill— That some would sing, some
other in their bills VA ~...
Bllllag-Hioyes that sit a-billlng *' ^...
BIb— I their father had not bin RL ~...
Son
VA
134
4(
U
«
«
li
RL
8
83
650
8
6
56
1102
366
210
8
67
4.^5
532
560
601
604
1101
88
(I
II
II
II
— 457
••••• Ol 1
«... 1107
-... 1121
«... 1142
bond that him as fast doth bind
Bird— Look how a bird lies
woe unto the birds
birds to their nest
Like a wild bird
Even as poor birds
birds that helpless berries saw
the birds such pleasure
Birds nercr limed
give the sneaped birds more cause
to sing **
Uke to a new-kill'd bird
where the sweet birds sing
The little birds that tune
'You mocking birds/ quoth she
And for, poor bird, thou sing'st
choirs, where late the sweet birds
sang Son 73 4
The very birds are mute " 97 12
Yet nor the lays of birds " 98 6
Of bird, of flower, or shape "113 6
Sweet birds sing not PP 18 38
Melodious birds sing madrigals " 20 8
and birds did sing ' " 21 5
She, poor bird, as all forlorn " 21 9
All thy fellow birds do sing '* 21 25
Even so, poor bird, like thee ** 21 27
Let the bird of loudest lay P T ~... 1
For thrae dead birds sigh a prayer " ..... 67
Birth— A dearer birth than this ^Stm 32 11
Mrth, or wealth, or wit " 37 5
Showing their birth " 76 8
Some glory in their birth " 91 1
better than high birth to me " 91 9
Birth-hoar— or birtb^our's blot R L 537
Bit— The iron bit he cnisheth VA «... 269
Bite— and bites the poor flies " 316
Bitter— to bitter wormwood taste RL 893
And bitter words to ban " ..... 1460
that I will bitter think Son 111 11
To bitter sauces did I frame my
feeding " 118 6
Bltt^mesa— Nor think the bitterness
of absence sour " 57 7
No bitterness that I will "111 11
Blab— NeTer can blab VA «... 126
Blaek— And coal-black clouds " 533
mourner, black and grim " ..... 920
black chaos comes again " 1020
with so black a deed R L ~... 226
With such black payment " ..... 576
Black lust, dishonour, shame " .... 654
Kack stage for tragedies and mur-
ders fell " «,.. 766
Black— Through Night's black bo-
som should not peep again R L ~... 7b8
underneath thy black all-hidiag
cloak ** «... 801
bathe his coal-black wings " .... 1009
changed to black in every vein " .... 1454
Lucrece clad in mourning black " .... 1585
And some look'd black " .... 1743
Of that black blood " .... 1745
Makes black night beauteous Son 27 12
in these black linra be seen " 63 13
That in black ink my love may still
shine bright " 65 14
black night doth take away " 73 7
black was not counted fair " 127 1
But now is black beauty's successive
heir " 127 3
my mistress' eyes are raven black " 127 9
black wires grow on her head " 130 4
Thy black is fairest " 131 12
In nothing art thou black " 131 13
Have put on black, and loving
mourners be " 132 8
beauty herself is black " 132 IS
Who art as black as hell " 147 14
more black and damned here L C .... 54
In black mourn I P P 18 19
Blackest— The sin is clear'd R L .... 354
Black-flsced- by this .... niglit VA 773
but when a black-faced cloud R L .... 547
such black-faced storms " .... 1518
Blade-
he shakes aloft his Roman blade " 605
Blame — blames her miss VA 53
blotting it with blame " 796
Death is not to blame " .... 992
bear an cver-during blame R L 224
warrant for blame " 620
nurse of blame " .... 767
Is worthy blame " .... 1257
those proud lords to blame " .... 1259
The more to blame my sluggard
negligence " 1278
every eye beholds their blame " 1343
I cannot blame thee Son 40 6
Not blame your pleasure " 58 14
O, blame me not " 103 6
bloody, full of blame " 129 8
Let reason rule things worthy
blame PP 19 3
Blamed— But yet be blamed Son 40 7
That thou art blamed " 70 1
Blank— Commit to these waste blanks " 77 10
Blaatr-Thy hasty spring still blasts R L .... 49
Unruly blasts wait " 869
before the northern blast " .... 1335
Blasted— Bud, and be blasted VA 1142
Blasting — of many a blasting hour L C .... 72
Blase — fiery eyes blaze forth her
wrong VA .... 219
Blazed— red fires in both their fkces
blazed R L — 1353
BUzon-^ln the blazon of sweet beau-
ty's best iSm 106 5
Blazoned- W^itb wit well blazon'd L C .... 217
Bleed— make ray faint heart bleed VA .... 669
. seem'd with him to bleed " .... 1056
my false heart bleed R L .... 228
every tear he falls a Trojan bleeds " «... 1661
BLEED
44
BLOT
Bleed— that beholds her bleed R L ^... 1732
by whom thy fair wife bleeda " ^... 1824
BleedliM^-bleeding as they go VA 924
bleeding under Pyrrhus' proud
foot R L 1440
key-cold Lucrece* bleeding stream ♦* 1774
To shew her bleeding body " 1851
Of proofo new-bleeding L C ~... 153
with bleeding groans they pine " «... 275
Heart is bleeding PP 18 23
Blemish— The blemish that will nev-
er be forgot R L i536
spied in her some blemish *' „... 1358
Blemlih'd- If in this blemish'd fort " 1176
So beauty blemish'd once 's for ever
lost P/> 13 11
Blench— These blench^ gave my
heart Sm 110 7
Blend— sapphire and the opal blend L C 215
Blew— and never did he bless VA 1119
Naming thy name blesses an ill re-
port Son 95 8
Blessed— But blessed bankrupt VA ^... 466
from the blessed thing he sought R L ~... 340
this blessed league to kill " »... 383
To hold their cursed-blessed fortune " ~... 866
With means more blessed than my
barren rhyme Son 16 4
mine eyes be blessed made ** 43 9
the rich, whose blcned key " 52 1
Blessed are you whose worthiness " 52 13
in every blessed shape we know " 53 12
it hath thought itself so blessed
never " 119 6
upon that blessed wood " 128 2
Blewed-flsir- But what's so ... . " 92 13
Blening— blessing every book " 82 4
to your beauteous blessing^ add a
curse " 84 13
Blest— by pleading may be blest VA -... 828
more blest than living lips Son 52 11
more blest may be the view " 56 12
some special instant special blest ** 128 12
Blind — But blind they are, and keep
themselves R L 378
in blind concealing night ** ..... 675
her eyes hereafter still be blind " ..... 7.58
Blind, muffled bawd " 768
The poor, lame, blind " ..... 902
which the blind do see Son 27 8
and is partly blind "113 3
Swear to thy blind soul " 1.% 2
Thou blind fool, Love " 137 1
with tears thou keep'st me blind " 148 13
thou lovest, and I am blind " 149 14
Blinded— with a greater light R L 875
Blindfold— With blindfold fury VA 554
Blindness— gave eyes to blindness Son 152 11
BHi»— to want his bliss R L 389
A bliss in proof Son, 129 11'
Blood— her blood doth boil VA 655
Whose blood upon " „... 665
heating of the blood " 742
Like milk and blood " ..... 902
But stole his blood " ..... 1056
his congealed blood " ..... 1122
his blood, that on the ground " ..... 1167
pale cheeks and the blood ** 1169
in my breast as in his blood ** .... 1182 I
Blood—
Thou art the next of blood R L ..... 1184
to stain the ocean of thy blood " ..... 655
such wretched blood should spill " .... 999
my foul-defiled blood « .... 1029
My stained blood to Tarquin " .... 1181
My blood shall wash " .... 1207
Ere she with blood had stain'd " .... 1316
the blood his cheeks replenish " .... 1357
The red blood reek'd " 1377
To Simois' reedy banks the red
blood ran " .... 1437
Her blue blood changed " .... 1464
Though my gross blood " .... 1655
Her blood in poor revenge " .... 1788
that the crimson blood " .... 1738
Some of her blood still pure and red
remained " .... 1742
of that black blood " .... 1745
Corrupted blood some watery token
shows " 1748
And blood untainted " 1749
blood so unjustly stain'd " .... 1836
And see thy blood warm Son 2 14
And that fresh blood " 11 8
burn the long-lived phoenix in her
blood " 19 4
When hours have draln'd his blood " 63 8
Beggar'd of blood to blush through
lively veins " 67 10
Where cheeks need blood " 82 14
besiege all kinds of blood " 109 10
to my sportive blood '* 121 6
sadly pcnu'd in blood L C .... 47
O false blood, thou register of lies " 52
satisfaction to our blood " .... 162
Are errors of the blood " .... 184
and rubies red as blood " 198
Bloodless— by doubt and .... fear VA 891
takes her by the bloodless hand R L 1597
In bloodless white L C 201
Bloody— the boar, that .... beast VA .... 999
So, at his bloody view " .... 1037
In bloody death R L .... 430
Here friend by friend in bloody
channel lies " .... 1487
My bloody judge forbade " .... ^648
and by this bloody knife " .... 1840
upon this bloody tyrant, Time Son 16 2
The bloody spur cannot provoke
him on " 60 9
bloody, full of blame " 129 3
vanquish'd men in bloody fight P P 18 86
Bloom— The canker-blooms have full
as deep Son 64 6
Blossom- made the blossoms dote L C .... 236
Spied a blossom passing fair PP 11 3
Blot— when they blot the sky VA .... 184
die, unhallow'd thoughts, before
you blot R L .... 192
a slavish wipe or birth-hour's blot " .... 687
To blot old books and alter their
contents " .... 948
To shun this blot she would not
blot the letter " .... 1322
Or blot with hell-born sin " .... 1619
when clouds do blot the heaven Son 28 10
So shall those blots that do with me
remain " 86 3
BEST
42
BIDE
Best— proved thee mj best of love ^Slim 110 8
next my heaven the best ^ 110 13
Creating every bad a perfect best ** 114 7
Now I love you best "115 10
Yet what the best is *' 187 4
my days are past the best "188 6
O, love's best habit ** 138 11
When all my best doth worship " 149 11
thy worst all best exceeds " 150 8
If best were as It was, or best
without L C .... 98
as it best deceives " ~... 806
my years be past the best PP 1 6
O, love's best habit " 1 11
Badinthebt^t " 7 18
Beaton— all naked, will bestow it Son 2& 8
in more pleasures to bestow them L C ..... 139
Beatow'd — The kiss I gave you is be-
stow'd in vain VA ..... 771
O, that sad breath his spongy lungs
bestow'd L C ~... 326
Bestow'st— wtiich youngly thou .... Son 11 3
Betake— every one to rest themselves
betake R L — 125
oft beUke him to retire " ~... 175
to singing he betakes PP S 12
Betliliikinv— with fulsc grieves VA ~... 1024
Betokened — that ever yet betoken'd '* «... 453
Betray— himsi'lf confounds, betrays A 2/ ~... 160
to betray my life " ~... 233
thine eyes betray thee unto mine " 483
might the stern wolf betray Son 96 9
betraying me, I do betray " 151 5
betray the fore-betray'd L C 328
Betray'd— Betray 'd the hours Ji L 933
Betraying — . . . . me, I do l>etray Son 151 5
Better— Are better proof VA 626
his beauty may the better thrive '* «... 1011
While thou on Tereus descant'st
better skill RL «... 1134
which of the twain were better ** «... 1154
1320
«... Io2o
32 12
«(
(I
Son
«
M
II
II
II
the better so to clear her
might become them better
in ranks of better equipage
and poets better prove
all the better part of me
or whether better they
the better part of me
Knowing a better spirit
might be better used
on better Judgement making
these I better in one general best
Thy love id bettor
I see a better state
That did not better for my life pro-
vide
That better is by evil still made
better
'Tis better to be vile than vile es-
teemed
Better becomes the grey cheeks
teach thee wit, better it were
The better angel is a man right fair "
Tempteth my better angel "
My b&tter angel \a a man right fair P P
Tempteth my better angel "
Better'd— Uer best \s bctter'd VA
Then better'd that the world Son
Bettering— with the .... of the time "
32 13
39 2
59
74
80
11
8
2
II
II
u
l(
u
a
u
II
II
II
82 13
87 12
91
91
92
111
8
9
7
119 10
121
1
132
6
140
5
144
3
144
6
2
3
2
6
•••••
.78
75
8
82
5
855
74
171
u
II
Bettering—
stampof the time-bettering days Son 82 8
Betnmbled — from her .... couch B L «... 1037
Between— And, lo, I lie between that
sun and thee VA «... 194
Between this heavenly and earthly
sun " «... 198
a war of looks was then between
them "
lest between them both it should R L
between desire and dread "
Tween frozen conscience and hot-
burning will **
between her chamber and his will '*
Between whose hills
As if between them twain
Between each kiss P P
So bet ween them love did shine P T
Betwixt—
'Twixt crimson shame and anger VA
'twixt the son and sire **
Betwixt mine eye and heart Son
As 'twixt a miser and his wealth "
As oa 'twixt May and April L C
must the love be great 'twixt thee
and me PP
Bevel-
though they themselves be bevel Son
Bewailed— Lest my bewailed guilt "
Beware — Hadst thou but bid beware VA
Beweep — bewecp my outcast state Son
Bewltch'd— bewitch'd with lust's foul
charm R L
Consents bewitch'd, ere he desire L C
Bewitching— Bewitching like the
wanton mermaid's song V A
Bewraj'd— the hateful foe bewray'd R L
To hear her secrets so bewray'd P P 19 54
Beyond— D^ise extremes beyond ex-
tremity R L
Beyond all date Son
Bias— Study his bias leaves P P
Bid— Bid me discourse VA
To bid the wind a base
And bid Suspicion
and bid good night
Bids him farewell
bid them leave quaking, bids them
fear no more
thou but hid beware
They bid thee crop
bids her rejoice
Who bids them still
and bids them do their liking R L
And bids her eyes hereafter still be
blind
bids it leap from thence
bid fair Lucrece speak
Bid thou be ready
Bid him with speed
And bids Lucretius give
shame bids him possess his breath
to the painted banquet bids tny
heart Son 47
bid your servant once adieu ** 57
Bidding— Bidding them find their
sepulchres L C «... 46
Bide—
tame to sufferance, bide each check 5m £8 7
■••••
302
••*•■
890
•«••■
405
7
8
•••••
83
•••«•
76
■■•••
1160
47
1
76
4
•••••
102
8
8
121
U
36
10
•«•■•
943
29
2
•«■••
173
■■•••
131
••• •
777
•••••
1698
122
5
u
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
u
II
u
11
969
4
5
145
.^03
448
534
580
AQQ
I... y4tS
.... 940
..« 977
.... 1011
• ••• 4v's
»••• #Oo
.... 760
.... 1268
.... 1292
.... XX«r4
.... 1773
.... 1777
6
8
BOLD
46
BOTH
Bold— with bold, stem looks E L .... 1282
J your maid may be so bold '* ~... 1282
life and bold audacity " «... 1346
bold Hector, march'd to field " 1430
to flatter fools and make them bold " ~... 15o9
to give them from me was I bold Son 122 11
I dare not be so bold " 131 7
Youth is hot and bold P P 12 7
Bold-fkced— like a bold-faced suitor VA 6
Boldness— At the wood's boldness Son 128 8
Boll'n— one being throng'd bears
back, all boll'n and red Ji L 1417
Bond— unloose it from their bond " 13C
My bonds in thee Son 87 4
Whereto all bonds do tie me " 117 4
Under that bond /' 134 8
scal'd false bonds of love " 142 7
vow, bond, nor space L C «... 2<vl
to that strong-bonded oath ** — . 279
Bondage-
He held such petty .... in disdain VA «... 394
And, true to bondage L C 34
Bone — on feathers, flesh, and bone VA «... 56
colour, pace, and bone " «... 294
Shall curse my bones Ji L «... 209
my bones with dust shall cover Son 32 2
a ring of posied gold and bone L C «... 45
Boned —
Shows me a bare-boned d^ith R L 1761
Bonnet— And with his bonnet VA «... 339
Bonnet nor veil henceforth no crea-
ture wear " «... 1081
he put his bonnet on " «... 1087
Book — margcnts of such books R L 102
the school, the book " 615
To blot old books and alter their
contenU " «... 948
To cipher what is writ in learned
books " «... 811
women's faces are their own faults'
books " «... 1253
O, let my books be then the elo-
quence Son 23 9
Is from the book of honour rased " 25 11
in some antique book ** 59 7
And of this book this learning " 77 4
and much enrich thy book *' 77 14
blessing every book " 82 4
makes his book thine eyes P P 5 5
Book— Book both my wilfulness and
errors down Son 117 9
Boot^And'WUl'toboot " 135 2
Bootless—
this idle theme, this bootless chat VA — 422
trouble deaf heaven with my boot-
less cries
Bore — I bore the canopy
it bore not beauty's name
our drops this diflTerence bore
Born — mine honour is new-born
or blot with hell-born sin
my old age new born
With April's first-born flowers
As to behold desert a beggar bom
Before these bastard signs of fair
were born
is thine and born of thee
Ere you were born
born to our desire
Son
29
8
(t
125
1
It
127
2
LC
•••••
300
RL
•«•••
1190
(t
1519
li
•••••
1759
Son
21
7
66
2
u
68
3
u
78
10
u
104
14
u
128
7
Bom— who, not bora fair Son 127 11
conscience is born of love " 151 2
Borne— borne so hard a mind VA «.. 203
Bome by the trustless wings R L «... 2
Borne on the bier with white and Son 12 8
by me be borne alone ** 86 4
Borrow— 'Tis much to borrow V A «... 411
shining star doth borrow " «... 861
tears did lend and borrow " 961
eyes that light will borrow R L «... 1083
she their looks duth borrow " 1498
good day, of night now borrow P P 15 17
Borrow'd—
they borrow'd all their shine V A ^... 488
That to his borrow'd bed he make
retire R L 673
To see those borrow'd tears " «... 1549
with art's false borrow'd face Son 127 6
Which borrow'd from this holy fire
of love "153 5
O, all that borrow'd motion L C 827
BoHon — From his soft bosom V A 81
Within my bosom " 646
of her bosom dropp'd " 958
within her bosom " -••• 1173
Through Night's black bosom R L «... 788
But they whose guilt within their
bosoms lie " «... 1342
in that bosom sits Son 9 13
Which in my bosom's shop " 24 7
Thy bosom is endeared " 31 1
salve which wounded bosoms fits '* 120 12
in thy 8t«el botsora's ward " 133 9
he did in the general bosom reign L C «... 127
The broken bosoms that to me be-
long " 254
Both— Both favour, savour V A «... 747
mingled both together " 902
Both crystals, where they " «... 963
both of them extremes " «... 987
Could rule them both " 1008
They both would strive " «... 1092
Which of them both R L 53
lest between them both " 74
Both which, as servitors " «... 285
and all the power of both *' ..... 572
tutor both to good and bad *' 995
Kill both thyself and her " «... 1036
both were kept for heaven " «... 1166
Thou dead, both die, and both shall
victors be " 1211
in both their faces blazed " 1353
And both she thinks tf>o long " 1572
Both stood, like old acquaintance " «... 1595
stain both moon and sun Son 35 3
Both find each other, and I lose both
twain " 42 11
And both for ray sake " 42 12
can jump both sea and land " 44 7
Are both with thee " 45 2
Than both your poets " 8;J 14
Both grace and faults " 96 3
had stol'n of both " 99 10
both skill and argument " lOO 8
Both truth and beauty " loi 3
Book both my wilfulness and errors
down " 117 9
Thy registers and thee I both defy " 123 9
thou hast both him and me " 134 15
BLEED
44
BLOT
Bl«c4— ihftt beholds ber bleed R L
by vbom thy fair wife bleeds " «...
BkcdiBf^-bkeding m ihey go VA
bleeding ander Pyrrhus* pitrad
foot R L -...
key-cold Lacreoe* bleeding stream ** .....
To shew her bleeding body **
Of proofii new-bleeding X C -...
with bleeding groans they pine ** ....
Heart is bleeding PP 18
Blenisk— The blemish that will ner-
er be forgot R L .....
spied in her some blemish ** ....
BleaUhM— If in thU blemish'd fort ** ....
So beauty blemished once 's for CTer
lost p/> 13
Bleach— These blenches gave my
heart Stm 110
Blead— sapphire and the opal blend L C ....
Bleas— and nerer did he bless VA ....
Naming thy name blesses an ill re-
port Son 95
Blessed— But blessed bankrupt VA ....
from the blessed thing he sought R L ....
this blessed league to kill "
To hold iheir cur3fed-}>lcs8od fortune " .
With means more blessed than my
barren rhyme Son
mine eyes be blessed made "
the rich, whose blessed key "
Blessed are you whose worthiness
in every blessed shape we know
it hath thought itself so blessed
never
upon that blessed wood
Biesaed-fkir— But what's so ... .
BiesslMg — blessing every book
to your beauteous blessing^ add a
curse "
Bleat— by pleading may be blest V A
more blest than living lips Son
more blest may be the view "
some special instant special blest
Blind— But blind they are, and keep
ft
tt
14
II
41
II
II
16
43
52
52
53
119
128
92
82
81
52
56
128
themselves
in blind concealing night
her eyes hereafter still be blind
Blind, muffled bawd
The poor, lame, blind
which the blind do see
and is partly blind
8wear to thy blind soul
Thou blind fool, Love
with tears thou keep'st me blind
thou luvest, and I am blind
RL
II
II
II
II
Son
II
M
II
II
II
27
113
136
137
li8
149
Blinded— with a greater light R L ....
Blindfbld— With blindfold fury
Blindness — gave eyes to blindness
Bliss — to want his bliss
A bliss in proof
Blood— her blood doth boil
Whose blood upon
heating of the blood
Like milk and blood
But stole hU blood
his congealed blood
his blood, that on the ground
pale cheeks and the blood
in my breast as in his blood
w ^1 •••••
Son 152
R L
Son 129
VA ....
II
(I
11
II
(I
II
1732
18?4
921
1440
1774
1851
153
275
23
536
1358
1175
11
7
215
1119
8
466
340
383
866
4
9
1
13
12
6
2
13
4
13
328
11
12
12
378
675
758
768
902
8
3
2
1
13
14
375
554
11
389
11
555
665
742
902
1056
1122
1167
1169
1182
M
U
tt
U
II
u
u
tl
M
U
Blood—
Thou art the next of blood RL ^
to stain the ocean of thy blood
such wretched blood should spill
my foul-defiled blood
My stained blood to Tarquln
My blood shall wash
Ere she with blood had stain'd
the blood his cheeks replenish
The red blood rcek'd
To Simois' reedy banks the red
blood ran
Her blue blood changed
Though my gross blood
Her blood in poor revenge
that the crimson blood
Some of her blood still pure and red
remain'd
of that black blood
Corrupted blood some watery token
shows
And blood untainted
blood so unjustly stain'd
And see thy blood warm San
And that fresh blood **
burn the long-lived phcenix in her
blood "
When hours have drained his blood **
Beggar'd of blood to blush through
lively veins
Where cheeks need blood
besiege all kinds of blood
to my sportive blood **
sadly peuu'd in blood L C
O false blood, thou register of lies
satisfaction to our blood
Are errors of the blood
and rubies red as blood
Bloodless — by doubt and .... fear
takes her by the bloodless hand
In bloodless white
Bloody— the boar, that .... beast
So, at his bloody view
In bloody death RL ^
Here friend by friend in bloody
channel lies ^
My bloody judge forbade '*
and by this bloody knife "
upon this bloody tyrant, Time Son
The bloody spur cannot provoke
him on
bloody, full of blame
vanquished men in bloody fight PP
Bloom— The canker-blooms have full
as deep Son
Blossom— made the blossoms dote L C
Spied a blossom passing fair P P
Blot^when they blot the sky VA
die, unhallow'd thoughts, before
you blot R L
a slavish wipe or birth-hour's blot "
To blot old books and alter their
contents "
To shun this blot she would not
blot the letter "
Or blot with hell-bom sin "
when clouds do blot the heaven Son
So shall those blots that do with me
remain **
1184
.... 665
■•.M 999
.... 1029
.... 1181
.... 1207
.... 1316
.... 1857
.... 1377
.... 1487
.... 1663
.... 1796
.... 1738
..- 1742
.... 1745
1748
1749
— 1836
2 14
11 8
u
u
II
u
M
II
19
63
4
8
67
82
109
121
VA
RL
LC
VA
II
10
14
10
6
— 47
62
— 162
.... lo4
.... 188
.... fSrl
«... 1097
.... 201
••••• vfSfSf
1037
430
u
u
— 1487
\646
.... XIMU
16 2
60 9
129 8
18 86
64 6
— 235
17 3
— 184
-••• 687
.... 1322
.... 1619
28 10
36 8
Snaking— br«k[nKr)ng>*-tnlii L
•obnnklngLhi'lrcanUiiU
Bmut— Bnnd bwwrt, luU vjx V
Ilia buck. Ida bmst
lnci^«d In hisljmKt
■hika IbFV on toy brenat
bound him to 1i<^r bmut
la nf bnut u In big blood
ber hr«>u. like Ivory globea X
On ber b.ru brri,t
reniilni upon her breut
bj beating on ber breaal
luck in gtnile bnuts
Iiollow-awDlllDgreailiL-r'd bicaita
ibEBbeatlmd lu ber liaimtru b»ut
And bubbling frorn her hniaat
heatnick bis bond upon h1i bWBSt
Which in rh. bri-jul duth lire ;S
Arc ilndoivi 1,1 ni7 breaat
Wlibla tha genile closure of mr
breaat
irhlch in thy bmat doth lla
' .... 811
theBherWeasMaredun
" in
J
wouldh^eda«»rclly " ....
DwdavDuld touch luytirstE
10
what Kirow I .hall breed i( L ....
10 phyaic your-culil brean
LC...
398
wii.KTlnue breed. " _...
L«.n'dbecbi™iup-illlBthora PP II
And the tun) e'a loyal breait
P T ..._
r»tli-ril aleb ci:]<a<lal broMh
VA ....
Thai's I'jr ihvsvlf .„ liMd another
all but with i]>t«aih
Ihee &m 6
S»«bi«<ltobr«reWm ■' J2
BanWdbylbybreith
Myc>.«ib™dnot PP 18
draw.uphirbrtttlb
Brwder— Of iho fairbreodor VA ....
iinback'd breeder, full of fiair " _...
}>labmlh and beam; Mt
lohwAdonl.'bmilh
im
brcedelbloYebysmelllng " ....
SL....
2U
Brwdlag^ A brooding Jennet " ....
jilay'd itllh her lir«alh
400
iin>hola»m<< brnlbi make ^k
Brll.ed~halh.b.' IheDeatlnW " ....
for paasagB o[ her breath
Brldl.^ThEatuddgd bridle •■
Biadc mo Hop my breath
1180
Brief— This brief abrldfiement S L ....
Thin-rindtngbrealli
1«W
lUi>uKli .,.y words are bHef " .....
ills brcalb.lrlTik' up again
bld> blm l*iK« his breath
tell Sim U
When Buumei'a breath
am M
8
•rllbbla brier boun and weeka -' IH
BrMlk— nimmer-a honey bieMb &•
Where breath moat bnatbea "
Then otben Ibr the breath of words
WlKWblroKlfthohesrrn') breath "
With the breath tbou glreal and
takeit p :
Srrathe-
brcaibes >he forth ber aplte Jt I
(her— WhciL (11 Ibe bnalhen
thelli-bri.iibvlli In her face
With lirotlb,^lh life In her
Ihlng-Lnlbuvl, brealblOfa
Br.
IhlB^.nblle—ina...
VA
(hlean-TIll .. hadhifolny
-Whkh bred more btauty
"
Bred-
butofnowomanbn^
Ihsu<^i>n bome-fared >Irire "
In Tarqiito new aniblliun bred SI
By (by bright beauty waa It ucwly
bred
erron by opinion bied "
sbslliny fainoK'bred
BRIEF
49
BUD
Bri^f-Our dates are brief Son 123 S
Id brief the grounds and motives
of her woe L C 63
Brier— Each envious brier VA 705
Brifhtr-grej, and bright, and quick " 140
And as the bright sun " 485
a bright star shooteth " ~... 815
that makes him bright " .... 862
as bright as heaven's beauties R L 13
that she reflects so bright " 876
By thj bright beauty " -... 490
peari firom her bright eyes " ..... 1213
their youthful sons bright weapons
wield " ~... 1482
like bright things sUin'd ** ..... 1435
Troy had been bright " 1491
Into so bright a day ' " .... 1518
to thine own bright eyes Son 1 5
An eye more bright ** 20 5
though not so briglit " 21 11
to please him thou art bright "* 28 9
darkly bright are bright in dark ** 43 4
shadows doth make bright *' 43 5
And nighto bright days " 43 14
you shall shine more bright ** 55 3
my love may still shine bright '* 65 14
sod thought thee bright ** 147 13
Bright orient pearl PP 10 3
Brighter— Brighter than glass ** 7 3
Brig htaess — And swear that bright-
ness doth not grace San 150 4
BrfaB— Under whoee brim VA 1088
on the brook's green brim PP 6 10
Briae— with showers of silver brine R L ^... 796
the silken figures in the brine L C ~... 17
Briag— sometime false doth bring VA ~... 658
brings beauty under " .... 746
Wonkl bring him mulberries " 1103
my attempt will bring R L .... 491
And bring him where his suit " .... 898
tnd bring truth to light '* .... 940
Brings home his lord " .... 1584
thy sweet love remember'd such
wealth brings Son 29 13
For to thy sensual fault I bring in
sense ** S5 9
let him bring forth ** 38 11
to mine own self bring ** 39 3
Can bring him to his sweet up-
locked treasure " 52 2
by that which I bring forth '' 72 13
give life and bring a tomb ** 83 12
my Muse brings forth ** 103 1
bring water for my stain ** 109 8
Bring me within the level "* 117 11
Green plants bring not P P 18 39
Brlnisk— And wiped the ... . pearl R L .... 1213
With brinish current L C .... 284
Bristle— with hairy bristles armed VA .... 6*i5 |
Brtotly— Of bristly pikes - .... 620 j
with white and bristly beard Son 12 8
Brittle— yet, as glass is, brittle PP 7 3
A brittle glass that's broken " 13 4
IrsM— Broad breast, full eye VA .... 296 ,
broad buttock, tender jiide ** .... 29>$
On your broad main Son 80 8
Brail— And broils root out ** .53 6
Brake — feathered creatures .... away ** 143 2
lo act thy bed-vow broke ** 152 3 ,
4
Broke— Vows for thee broke P P 8 4
If by me broke " 3 13
Broken— with lustful language.... VA 47
Poor brokeu glass R'L 1758
my slumbers should be broken Son 61 3
The broken bosoms L C 254
If broken, then it is no fault PP 3 12
that's broken pr^enily " 13 4
broken dead within an hour " 13 6
As broken glass no cement can re-
dress " 13 10
Broker-
were ever brokers to defiling L C 173
Brood— all that brood to kill R L 627
devour her own sweet brood Son 19 2
Brook— his shadow in the brook VA 162
his shadow in the brook '* 1099
sitting by a brook PP 4 1
growing by a brook "65
A brook where Adon "66
on the brook's green brim " 6 10
JTroolb— brooks not merry guests R L 1125
Brother— death-worthy in thy .... " .... 635
the sister and the brother PP S 2
Brooght—
She had not brought forth thee VA 204
brought unto his bed R L .... 120
.fault brought in subjection " 724
of her own grief brought " — 1578
than this his love had brought Son 32 11
1 would bo brought " 44 3
And brought to medicine "118 11
which brought me to her eye L C 247
Brow — Even so she kiss'd bis brow VA 59
one wrinkle in my brow " 1.39
His louring brows " 183
hides his angry brow " .... 339
with his brows repine " 49<i
With heavy eye, knit brow R L .... 709
with a cunning brow " 749
To mask their brows " .... 794
character'd in my brow " 807
A brow unbent " ..... 1509
shall' besiege thy brow Son 2 1
my love's fair brow " 19 9
splendour on my brow " 33 10
delves the parallels in beauty's brow " 60 10
drain'd his bU)od and fiird his brow " 63 3
Inhabit on a living brow " 68 4
of lip, of eye, of brow " 106 6
stamp'd upon my brow ** 112 *J
her frowning brows be bent P P 19 l.'i
Brofniy — Uisbrowny locks did hang Zr C .... 8j
With bruised arms and wreaths R L 1 10
Bmtaa — from the purple fountain
Brutus drew " „... \'?A
Brutus, who pluck'd the knife " 1W)T
which Brutus made U'fore " 1*47
Babbling— Ami .... from her breast " 17:r
Bad— Who plucks the bud V A .... 416
intnide the maidrm bud R L — H4^
Within thine own bud Sun 1 11
the darling buds of May "18 3
loathsome canker lives in sweetest
bod " 35 4
th<dr mask^l Ihi/Ih di<«close " &4 8
For canker vice the sweetest bads
dotbkive " 70 7
BOTH
47
BREAK
Bom— On both sides thus if simple
troth suppress'd Sun 188 8
But being both from me, both to
ench friend " 144 11
of all sires both high and low L C ~... 21
and sexes both enchanted " ~... 128
Both fire from hence ** ~... 294
naturo is both Icind and tame *' ~... 311
both to me, both to each ft-iend JPP 2 11
One god is god of both *' 8 18
One knight loves both, and both in
thee remain '* 8 14
to turn them both to gain " 16 10
Thou and I were both beguiled ** 21 30
BottOB—
the bottom poison, and the top VA ~... 1143
search the bottom of annoy R L ~... 1109
Bottom-grast Sweet l)ottom-grass VA ~... 236
Bottom i«M—
O, deeper sin than .... conceit E L ~... 701
Boagk—on a ragged bough VA 87
Upon those boughs Son 73 8
music burthens every bough " 102 11
Boaght — ^thy interest was not .... Ji L 1067
Boaneed— He, spying her, .... in PP 6 13
Boand— The sea hath bounds VA ~... 389
What rounds, what bounds L C 109
Bound — ^thou art bound to breed VA ~... 171
in her arms be bound ** 226
he neighs, he bounds '* 265
bound him to her breast " 812
a wretched image bound H L 1501
As bound in knighthood "* 1697
bound to stay your leisuro Son 58 4
Bound for the prize *' 86 2
Boaodeth— Yet in the eddy Jt L 1669
Boaadiiig' — the .... banks overflows " 1119
Boundless —
there falls into thy boundless flood " 653
nor earth, nor boundless sea Son 65 1
Boantooas—
The bounteous largess given thee "46
which bounteous gift " 11 12
Boantlfai—
Bountiful they will him call PP 21 40
Boanty— shouldst in bounty cherish Son 11 12
as your bounty doth appear ** 53 11
that lf>ts not bounty fall L C ..... 41
Bow— to the saddle-bow VA ..... 14
by Cupid's bow she doth protest " ...„ 681
that doth bend his bow E L ..... 580
i^otr— in battle ne'er did bow VA ~... 99
Joints forget to bow «* 1061
She bows her head " 1171
to the ground their knees they bow A Z/ 1846
make me bow Son 90 3
under my transgression bow *' 120 3
Bow-baek— On his bow-back VA ~... 619
Bowed — to thee like osiers bowed PP 5 4
As heaven, it seem'd, to kiss the
turrets bow'd E L 1372
Bower— hath no name, no holy .... Son 127 7
82
95
155
344
403
407
583
Boy — was the tender boy
cry, flint-hearted boy
Is love so light, sweet boy
to the wayward boy
excuse thy courser, gentle boy
silly boy, believing she is dead
'6weet boy,' she says
VA -.
It
u
w
(t
II
<(
Boy— sweet boy, ere this VA ~... 618
By this the boy " -... 1165
Nothing, sweet boy Son 108 5
O thou, my lovely boy " 126 1
The boy for trial " 153 10
Forbade the boy P P 9 8
As if the boy should use "11 8
Brag— brag not of thy might VA 113
Nor shall Death brag .Stm 18 11
Beauty brag, but 'tis not she P T 63
Bragg'd— When virtue bragg'd E L 54
Whose bare out-bragg'd the web L C 95
Braided — his .... banging mane VA ..... 271
braided in loose negligence L C 35
Brain—
proceedinjBis of a dronken brain VA 910
disposing of her troubled brain " ..... 1040
the brain being troubled " 1068
the weak brain's forgeries E L 460
how are our brains beguiled Son 59 2
deliver'd from thy brain " 77 11
in my brain iuhearse " 86 3
What's in the brain " 108 1
thy tables are within my brain " 122 1
so long as brain and heart " 122 5
Brain'd— And deep-brain'd sonnets L C 209
Brain-sick- by .... rude desire E L 175
Brake — brakes obscure and rough VA 237
brake off his late intent " 469
fawn hid in some brake " ..... 876
Here kenuel'd in a brake " ..... 913
Here in these brakes PP 9 10
Bramble— The thorny brambles VA ..... 629
Branch —
the branches of another root E L 828
Brand— ray name receives a brand San HI 5
Cupid laid by his brand " 153 1
Love's brand new-fired *' 153 9
his heart-inflaming brand " 154 2
This brand she quenched " 154 9
Brand — Brand not my forehead E L 1091
Brass — And brass eternal slave to
mortal rage Son 64 4
Since brass, nor stone " 65 1
tombs of brass' are spent " 107 14
Unless my nerves were brass " 120 4
Brave — When their brave hope E L 14;«)
And see the brave day Son 12 2
Save breed, to brave him " 12 14
And wear their brave state " 15 8
weed out-braves his dignity " 94 12
Youth like summer brave P P 12 4
Bravery— Hiding thy bravery Son 34 4
Braving — Braving compare, disdain-
fully did sting E L ..... 40
Brawl — And ban and brawl P P 19 20
Brawny — his brawny sides VA 6i5
Breach— where no breach should be " «... 1066
in the breach appears " «... 1175
To make the breach E L 469
The impious breach «* „... 800
why of two oaths' breach Son 152 5
Break— her intendments break VA 222
girths he breaks asunder " «... 266
The client breaks " 836
the berry breaks before " «... 460
love breaks through " «... 676
breaks the silver rain " «... 959
breaks ope her lock'd-up eyes E L 446
When I bremk t<
Td break 4>n DBth
Br«»li»r— Orkldnsb<
BmkFtli— Brmkvib
PP 3 U
iei enibnce " — .
bruiting ringi m-twiln L C — .
blTtliiu.vhr.ufl
t.
ii«a
her brcMis, llki^ ivory globe)
RL
iremtbeth— bnaibfib lo her rue
On her bi.ru brcut
hii ivn-mh hrtntheih life in licr
by beaUog on her breul
BrHtbIng.<ibile-i'> .
lurk In gtDile brcisii
nmlhlFH-Tlll .. hedlitfolll-d
liolli.w-sWflllDBl'ealher'dbroMti
»r«l-Wblc;h brrf more bemuly
*mi™rminh«br™«
1IK3
h..t«f uowoniinbred
■hfliheithidlnberliannlEwihreuI "
im
than clUlhume-brHl Hlrlfe
And bubbling rmffl ll« br«ut
inTirrinin liuw suibllion bred
be Krack hli hand upon bli brei
184!
Bj thy bright b«<.ly itm It ne<
Which In ihrbn-uldolbliie
an
'w
bred
23
error, by opinion bred
An itlndoir, lo hiy bnut
.isllmytmob^bred
Within tbs gentle clowre of i
conceit of lovelliere brrd
«
ilmngly In my puItbm bieil
which in Ihj breul dotb llg
IW
Brml— thou art bound lo breed
kud moat Di»t loilng breul
hr»d. by hexlug ef the blood
130
would hr»djiu*nliy
needi vould touch nil brmat
10
10 fbj^e jour cold btnui
LC
230
jT,, bS^rion' h' of p.ln
■Wluitbt™i»cold
WhatTlnuebmil.
l«n'd her bmuL up-Ull i thorn
PP
'si
JO
while iur«.'tian breeds
And he<un1»'.1u}>]bivut
PT
breed! Ihefnteiirlh'SBtnre
BrMth— 1' 1! ilgb cdestlal bmih
ThM's for thyiolf to breed BDOIh
.llhutirilbsl)r™ih
thea
Comes timtli pirninied
S«e breed lobT»re him
hi. hreilh bte«lhelh
which i>ubllc miniiora brecdt
Buibh'd br thy bKtth
WO
Uy *fcH breed ikiI
bis brrslh and bc«uty Mt
BRIEF
imer'i honey breath
1 fur Ibe brealb of won
■U Il.y breslh
Bmllit—
brolheasbelbrthht
WhBihebreiithesou
Brwdcr-Of Ihcftirbreedpr
in?
Tlreedetli-ljesuly breed(.-Ih bea
bre«l«hlovebysidi'llinK
ly H ....
2W
Breedl»g-Abn«ll„R Jennet
thjtbsle-brmllnuipr
Krldlf-TlM^ ,10.1.1-1 bridle
iisn
Jlrlrf-Tl,i,bri,.r^l.ri.l>..-.,„.nt
KL~...
Im
Nor ™ul fortune lo brief ml
Son 14
BRIEF
49
BUI)
Bii«r— Oar dates are brief Son 123
In brief the grounds and motives
of her woe L C 68
Brier— Each envious brier VA 705
Bright— grey, and bright, and quick " 140
And as the bright sun " »... 485
a bright star shooteth " 815
that makes him bright " 862
as bright as heaven's beauties Ji L 13
that she reflects so bright " 376
By thy bright beauty " 490
pearl from her bright eyes " 1213
their youthful sons bright weapons
wield " -... 1432
Like bright things stain'd " 1435
Troy had been bright " 1491
Into so bright a day ' " 1518
to thine own bright eyes Son 1
An eye more bright " 20 5
though not BO bright " 21 11
to please him thou art bright *' 28 9
darkly bright are bright in dark " 43 4
shadows doth make bright " 43 5
And nights bright days " 43 14
you shall shine more bright " 55 3
my love may still shine bright " 65 14
and thought thee bright " 147 18
Bright orient pearl P P \0 3
Brightor— Brighter than glass '^7 8
Brightnem — And swear that bright-
ness doth not grace Son 150 4
Brim— Under whose brim VA 1088
on the brook's green brim P P 6 10
Brine— with showers of silver brine R L 796
the silken figures in the brine L C 17
Bring— sometime false doth bring VA 658
brings beauty under " 746
Would bring him mulberries " 1103
my attempt will bring R L ~... 491
And bring him where his suit " 898
and bring truth to light " 940
Brings home his lord " 1584
thy sweet love remember'd such
wealth brings Son 29 13
For to thy sensual fault I bring in
sense " 35 9
let him bring forth " 38 11
to mine own self bring *' 39 8
Can bring him to his sweet up-
locked treasure " 62 2
by that which I bring forth " 72 13
give life and bring a tomb " 83 12
my Muse brings forth " 103 1
bring water for my stain " 109 8
Bring me within the level " 117 11
Green plants bring not jP P 18 39
Brinlak— And wiped the ... . pearl R L 1213
With brinish current L C 284
BrisUfr— with hairy bristles armed VA 625
Briftly— Of bristly pikes •• 620
with white and bristly beard Son 12 8
Brittle— yet, as Kla.«s is, brittle PP 7 3
A brittle glaits that's broken " 13 4
Broad— Broad breast, full eye VA 2%
broad butt^k, tender |iido " 298
On your broad main Son 80 8
Broil — And broib root out " 55 6
Brakfr— feather'd creatures .... away " 143 2
In act thy bed-vow broke " 152 3
Broke— Vows for thee broke i» P 3 4
If by me broke " 3 13
Broken— with lustful language .... VA 47
Poor broken glass R'L 1758
my slumbers should be broken Son 61 3
The broken bosoms L C 254
If broken, then it is no fault PP 3 12
that's broken presently " 13 4
broken dead within an hour '* 13 6
As broken glass no cement can re-
dress " 13 10
Broker-
were ever brokers to defiling L C ^... 173
Brood— all that brood to kill R L 627
devour her own sweet brood Son 19 2
Brook— his shadow in the brook VA 162
bis shadow in the brook '* 1099
sitting by a brook PP 4 1
growing by a brook "66
A brook where Adon "66
on the brook's green brim " 6 10
Prooib— brooks not merry guests R L 1125
Brothei^—death-worthy in thy .... " 635
the sister and the brother PP S 2
Bronght—
She had not brought forth thee VA 204
brought unto his bed R L 120
.fault brought in subjection " 724
of her own grief brought " ~... 1578
than this his love had brought Son 32 11
I would be brought " 44 3
And brought to medicine " 118 11
which brought me to her eye L C 247
Brow — Even so she kiss'd his brow VA 69
one wrinkle in my brow *' 139
His louring brows " 183
bides his angry brow " ..... 339
with his brows repine " 490
With heavy eye, kuit brow R L 709
with a cunning brow " 749
To mask their brows " „... 794
character'd in my brow " 807
A brow unbent " 1509
shall' besiege thy brow Son 2 1
my love's fair brow " 19 9
splendour on my brow " 33 10
delves the parallels in beauty's brow " 60 10
draln'd his blood and filPd his brow " 63 3
inhabit on a living brow " 68 4
of lip, of eye, of brow " 106 6
stamp'd upon my brow " 112 2
her frowning brows be bent PP 19 13
Browny — Uisbrowny locks did hang Zr C 85
Braised-
With bruised arms and wreaths RL 110
Brntiu — from the purple fountain
Brutus drew " llM
Brutus, who pluck'd the knife " 1807
which Brutus made before " 1847
Babbling— And from her breast " 1737
Bad— Who plucks the bud VA 416
intrude the maiden bud R L 848
Within thine own bud Son 1 11
the darling buds of May " 18 3
loathsome canker lives in sweetest
bud " 35 4
their masked buds disclose " 64 8
For canker vice the sweetest buds
doth love " 70 7
BUD
50
BUT
Bad— And buds of maijoram Son 99 7
Pluck'd in the bud PP 10 2
A belt of straw and ivy buds " 20 13
Bud—Bud, and be blasted VA ~... 1142
bud before thj spring Jt L ~... 604
when first it 'gins to bud Pi> 13 3
Bnddlng— of thy budding name Son 95 3
Bnlk— Beating her bulk R L 467
Ballet— deadly bullet of a gun VA .... 461
The golden bullet beats it down P P 19 80
Balwarks —
for me many bulwarks builded L C 152
Bailded— buildcd far from accident iSm 124 5
for roe many bulwarks builded L C 152
Bailding—
To ruinate proud buildings R L ..... 944
He of tall building .Sim 80 12
Balli— Though weak-built hopes per-
suade RL «... 130
Of rich-built Dion " ..... 1524
when it is built anew &m 119 11
built up with newer might '' 123 2
Barden'd—
back'd and burden'd being young VA 419
Borden-wiNe— For .... I'll hum R L ~... 1133
Baried— He might be buried VA ..... 244
their pride lies buried Son 25 7
which I thought buried " 31 4
where buried love doth live " 81 9
cost of outworn buried age " 64 2
My name be buried " 72 11
Truth and beauty buried be PT 64
Bariest — Within thine own bud bur-
iest content Son 1 11
Barn —
He burns with bashfUl shame VA ~... 49
her fire must bum " ~... 94
The sun doth bum my face " ~... 186
If they burn too " -... 192
lamp that burns by night " ..... 755
Do burn themselves " ~... 810
Fair torch, burn out thy light R L -... 190
To burn the guiltless casket " ..... 1057
quench Troy that burns so long " ..... 1468
fire to burn thy city " ..... 1554
to burn his Troy with water " ~... 1561
burn the long-lived phoenix Son 19 4
war's quick fire shall burn " 65 7
full flame should afterwards bum
clearer " 115 4
Barn'd— in three hot Junes burn'd " 104 7
When he most burn'd L C 814
She burn'd with love PP 1 13
She burn'd out love " 7 14
Bameth— the fire that burneth me VA ..... 196
Bunicth more hotly " «... 332
fire that burneth hero R L «... 1475
aK Mton as straw^out-burneth P P 7 14
Barn lug —
maiden burning of his cheeks VA 50
my marrow burning " -... 142
With burning eye " -... 178
As burning fevers " ~... 7.S9
conscience and hot-burning will R L ~... 247
cheers up his burning eye " ..... 435
burning Troy doth bear " 1474
Lifts up his burning head Son 7 2
that burning lungs did raise L C ~... 228
Of burning blushes " ..... S04
Barnish'd- hills seem .... gold
Barnt — ^two lamps, burnt out,
r A M... BOB
in
darkness lie
u
■■■••
1128
burnt out in tedious nights
RL
••**•
1879
burnt the shining glory
«•
•••••
1623
he the burthen of a guilty mind
i(
•«•••
735
burthen of mine own love's might Son
23
8
The second burthen of a former
child
u
69
4
wanton burthen of the prime
It
97
7
wild music burthens every bough '*
102
11
Bary- to biiry that posterity
VA
•••••
758
Barying—
Burying in Lucrcce* wound
RL
•••••
1810
Baah—
brambles and embracing bushes
VA
•••••
629
the bushes in the way
It
•«•••
871
no secret bushes fear
RL
•••••
88
shape every bush a hideous shap^
less devil
u
•••••
973
Busy— my thought, my busy care
VA
••••a
883
Busy yourselves in skili^outending
schools
RL
••••■
1018
busy winds give o'er
II
•••••
1790
whose busy care is bent
Son 148
6
Bat— but love he laugh'd to scorn
VA
•••••
4
But rather famish
II
•••••
20
seem an hour but short
ti
•••■•
23
but frosty in desire
II
•••■•
86
but soon she stops
11
•••-••
46
but never to obey
u
•••••
61
cannot choose but love
ft
•■•••
79
But when her lips
<l
•«•••
89
But help she cannot get
II
•••••
93
'Tis but a kiss I beg
It
•••••
96
Touch but ray lips
II
•••••
115
there are but twain
M
•••••
123
But having no defects
11
•••••
138
but light, and will aspire
II
•••••
150
shines but warm
II
■■«•■
193
but died unkind
11
•••••
204
but speak fair words
M
••*••
208
but the eye alone
U
•••••
213
but of no woman bred
II
••••■
214
But, lo, from forth
11
«••••
259
But when the heart's attorney
11
•••«•
8:15
But now her cheek
11
•••■a
347
but my body's bane
11
••••■
372
but deep desire b*th none
II
••••a
889
But when he saw
11
••a**
893
But, when his glutton
II
•••••
899
the lesson is but plain
11
••••a
407
love but to disgrace it
It
•••••
412
all but with a breath
11
•••••
414
Had I no eyes but ears
II
•••••
438
that were but sensible
11
496
nothing but the very smell
11
••■•«
441
But, 0, what banquet
U
••••a
445
But blessed bankrupt
11
••••a
466
But hers, which through
It
•••••
491
But now I lived
II
•«•••
497
But now I died
II
•••••
498
But for thy piteous lips
11
•••••
604
but the ungrown fry
11
■••••
626
but dissolves with tempering
u
•••»•
565
But then woos best
u
••aa*
670
But all in vain
M
••••a
607
But that thou told'st me
U
•••••
614
thj bod r but ■ *<r*lli:
But bdM tbit'i put la
ButUDDdlr tIe«|H
biiljDurde<li»[Dlo'
Bat LuBl'a effect
butlbrfolie'dirt " ...-
841
Butbur ruKalghlt'uiiU nolfitreiUll
thoo but bid bewsre " ....
»w
Butthninghlheflood-iMtm "
M9
Hb«l.bulSi(ihl',<.l.ild
Butlab»ie*l«nemu>l>lt
Bot n™.« U l..-.-t' " ....
bulbelhatgi>ea
»4
IdMbutJat ■■
nut no perrecKon li to ibsolate
mo
But like .llll-plninBTBnUli..
IdUbuticl "
ooa
But Ixrriient Ibil 11 ennnol cure
>u but lile rorlorn " ...
«!&
But ill-aniietrf OcpnT-lunitv
But Molc hii blood " ....
But they ne'er meet with Opportn-
Bui ln>Mw«t bauty " ....
DM
nlty
Bui when .WonlBllT*d - ....
U»j
v»
bulhe«jH^liii-'Jlivtbf«
Bu(bT>ki» '■ -...
but pi.y r.,M,i, ,u,..„-
Bui bell dead •■ _...
botuDBVQurj-cnd ■■
Bui If Ibfl like tbe snow-white nr«n
bat high or low ■■ ....
darire
but know, it i.M good ■■
But eagloi gued upon
IlulkinirJi.j(r--f RL....
OL»|,i.i„"*-.fMJ.:yMbi.tof.fcw " ....
But IbLi no »1»u(!bt«rbou«o
BatmneuDtimelylbougbl " ....
But .ben 1 fe.r'.l
But beluly, in thit irhlte inlltulcd "
Bui, p«rl7 rich
9J
hut .loin from forth thy g.te
But .h..,ll..l..v.c-«op*d
lJ,rTh:.v-l,.,L(.-., "
l.-o..i,j,rii„j.'l„rpi.<.i.,n*»MrenB:th
iholui^iiHUL '■ _...
1«1.UM.. l.lH'J.lll..|lft '■ ....
141
butalouUyUy. So belt
duth-bodine criea "
Bui bun,=l <i-iT, IvJlehM
Orwhit fond bo^igir, but 10 loueb
Bat cowurd-Ufce wlih trembling "
Butubekmyklniniau
botihelsiiotherown
But blind they ire
But tbey muil ope
But Ihst life lli«l la d«th
bat mlgblily be noted
But If Ibou yield
bnl hi* foul appulitc
Bui when a black-focei
bedi>thhutd*lly
ii wlib MTenl grue* "
BV
kjr— mide Ums bf toitune'i di
AndbripanorillthTKlor
Dj- [>™ising lilm bm
B; >tlful tutr iif wballhTH
H*ri,byihjl>e»iilr
BTlwikiDEo'ntboc
C»o>e irlppidK i.r
WMakfplngbr.Tl
■)o<r
And trylhtirvrrficl l»iirlcniiiqni "
well br
f lili^r l>j ihj- pltlureur ni:f lovo '
«
9
t),l.h,lh« pTgT«
CilI'd lo that uidit bj idTlHd n-
Whkh ui» br «„<.
»p»*U
At ir br Bma InttlDct Ilia wnitch
Aiid,privili.^Bil,yll
■lbit»!l,r W.lde
Bj iKir UDhiMlDg
BTtbul^.c-. ..rn-.iii^nt
bribit«i»iiu.,r«dc
n:v Mr,,. Ji.lill, ..,.,. mill
H
noblo by lh<^ s-sj-
n-hirh bat to-dif br ftedlDf li il-
byhimhct.melil..d
inyii
OrhehliuuniHcby
brTiiDc'irdih»ddefk«d
XRDglh hv ;i..,i,li,t.,w.jdi«Wr.l "
ra
B
ftlrerby Ihclrplice
Bf Kclng brthcr (ban ths (ye bath
Ihry ]n(4iur6 by Lliy deed* "
iliniMbj' ihitirhlvh [bring ftnb "
WUch by iDd by bUck iiUhl duth
Uk« "
CoiuDnied with Ihit which it wu
Boortth'd by "
And by sod by dfui fUrred "
■uliiil day by <Uy "
Tbouby Ihr dlaL'i thudy slPnUh "
bjtby iruo-i.-lllng/fkud
tpHii,bs I
Mu w
youweTebymyuoklndDtsaghikcD "
Allbyyoun
Sc:i li. uu, fottlnp, but by When'
ByU.clrf.iikthongbt»
hiTc luDlty by DRlure M aubalil "
Mide mors or leu by Iby codiIduhI
by paying U» much itnt "
Wbn butl^y WBUlnggravn "
by Ib«l>1<ulilnKiuiiid "
eyBcaimipl by orcr-p«nl»llo«ki "'
lij Un we dsitn-d ba
■lay US not by art "
By— Mad ilandenri by ma
By aFir-eiample nlayit th
nied
Commandud by Lba moUa
fkll by thy aids
Cupid laid by hl9 bnmd
Laid bj bis aide
oon by dealb'a iharp
Adonli lUllaR by her
Inthy lady-tiinr "
liKavi'ii bv l,„liihen "
rl-.Ti, by whose fall! "
^u by and by
lUt lbs by-past perili L C
•.Ting
Thry
Inel R L
Caf*d— ihe would the caged cloliter
fly LC
Caltlir-wki the weary calUff VA
Call-lirui^nin.iw.rinii every call '•
aiU—\B her poAliin. calli It balm
DothrullMiixi'ir
Even Id ihc momenl (bat we call
Calls back the lg
But DOW la bUck
But 1a pTohned
bnt iloplwil itralgl
n.Uj.UInljsi).lh.mlo™i
Bu[.»fl onough
Bui if jtore nf cnnrns he •
Bullf FiirtuDSflnMdufni
»uMhoi1shrickin«1iiTbln
Ilj»llliaeBMni¥l>utlD«nc
niil1olhe>n1tw«ni>>oni
Bi'uulxlira^, hut'llisotil
Butrliei^LlkeloDmorUI bi
Batrhrr^lrr— Or ...tbntr
DBttoCk— hroiul hiillwS.leiii
but (luce I Bin nar slali
No newi bul hnllh
But m^Bve vita
O. but wllta mine
Bul ir Ihoo oicb tbf b(
Bot^'inL;lv>l1i riuiiime
bul Utc In doubt
Bt lbls,Tb<;Jnrc-alck que«n
i-n\:i^ tbat nolffhbouri by
in.ii 1^ j-inoiUng bf
t.y[il<-a.liU£iiii>/bebloit
l.n'Hclli]»rcV«
lusting bi bli neck
tat Un in doubt
BMiewuM look bul benulf
lutwhMberonripeye.™
lot nolle End j«u
butBol«fl.lr«Bl^kle
ll.«by.ubtlcly
By this, poor W«l
tioddcu ua b; niiiBj "
relieved bj any
%. alinmiMliu guo brdnjiind bcr
by nlfihl "
nimrdrr brit'di bi hutlng '■
i>in,l.lhathuniO,y night
Whleh bj iho rlghu '■
CAN
57
CASE
u
u
San
ti
(I
<i
u
u
Cui— That defunctiTe masic can P T
If what parta can so remain "
Onc«ll'i--date, canceU'd ere well
hegnn E L ^
Cancelled mj fortunes
date from cancelPd destiny
lore's long nince canceU'd woe
Caadie— As those (coId candles
Caaker— This canker that eau up VA
And loathsome canker lives in
sweetest hod Son
canker Tice the sweetest buds doth
lore
a canker in the ft*agnint rose
A Tengeful canker eat him up
Gaaker-blooais— The canker-blooms
have full as deep a dye
CuikerlBf^Foul-cankering rust the
hidden treasure frets VA
CsBBon— from discharged cannon
fumes B L
CuiBOi— she cannot choose but love VA
help she cannot get **
she cannot right her cause **
cannot be easily harm'd
that I cannot reprove
O DO, it cannot be
cannot express my grief
the thing that cannot be amended R L
kings' misdeeds cannot be hid in
clay
it cannot cure his pain
when he cannot use it
DOf that cannot be
That cannot tread the way
cannot abuse a body dead
The repetition cannot make it less
The weary time she cannot enter-
tain
' It cannot be/ quoth she
' can lurk * from * cannot ' took
*It cannot be,' she in that sense
forsook
'It cannot be, I find
that cannot write to thee
1 cannot blame thee
cannot provoke him on
death, which cannot choose
thj praise cannot be so thy praise **
thy memory cannot retain **
your memory death cannot take **
of my silence cannot boast **
I cannot know thy change **
Cannot dispraise but in a kind of
praise
Crabbed age and youth cannot live
together P P
but cannot pluck the pelf "
Senseless trees they cannoi hear
thee
If thou wake, he cannot sleep **
Truth may seem, but cannot be P T
CaiM^icd— And .... in darkness R L
GaB«py — from heat did .... the herd Sim
I bore the canopy **
Caast— Thou canst not see VA
and canst not feel **
What! canst thou talk
what canst thou boast **
• ••••
14
•■•••
48
•••••
26
•■•••
934
1729
80
7
21
12
••••a
656
85
4
70
7
95
2
99
13
54
ti
M
U
««
U
((
M
U.
U
U
Sm
u
M
767
• •••
1043
«•»•
79
• ■••
93
• •••
220
• ■■■
627
■ ••*
787
• •••
937
• •••
1069
• •••
578
• «••
609
■ ••*
861
• •••
862
• •••
1049
• •••
1152
*•••
1267
• •••
1285
■ •••
1361
»•••
1534
• •••
1537
■ •••
1538
• •••
1539
38
7
40
6
50
9
64
13
70
11
77
9
8t
3
86
11
93
6
^
12
1
14
12
21
21
21
M
► ♦••
C2
»•••
3W
12
6
25
1
••«
139
• ••
201
»**•
4'r,
»»•»
1077
M
M
U
U
628
4 8
4 12
47 11
89 5
92
133
149
20
52
66
66
7
62
Caast— how canst thou Ailfll R L
yet canst not live Son
audit canst thou leave
For thou not farther than my
thoughts canst move
Thou canst not, love, disgrace me **
Thou canst not vex me **
Thou canst not then use rigour
C«nst thou, O cruel
Cap— A cap of flowers P P
Caparison— For rich caparisons VA
Capitol— by the Capitol that we adore £Z
Captala — when their captain once
doth yield VA
AlTbction is my captain R L
And as their captain **
captain jewels in the carcanet Son
captive good attending captain ill "
CaptlTate— to captivate the eye VA
CaptiTS — my captive and my slave *'
The coward captive vanquished R L
A captive victor that hath lost "
captive good attending captain ill Son
Car— from highmoet pitch with weary
car "
Careaaet— captain Jewels in the .... "
Careasa— The carcass of a beauty L C
Care— my thought, my busy care VA
and with what care *'
Save thieves and cares R L
To whose weak ruins muster troops
of cares
carrier of grisly care
deep-drenched in a sea of care
where cares have carved some
and grim care's reign
His face, though full of cares
kiird with deadly cares
dearest and mine only care
winter, which, being full of care
I throw all care
her whose busy care is bent
now reason is past care
age is full of care
to a cabin hang'd with care
Qtre — What cares he now
Kow Nature cares not
For wtiat care I who calls me
Carefkl — How careful was I
Lo, as a careful housewife
Careless — careless lust stirs up
a careless hand of pride
Careless of thy sorrowing
Carrlafe — her levell'd eyes their car-
riage ride L C -... 22
Carrier— carrier of grisly care R L ~... 926
Carry — He carries thence inca^red V A -... 5«2
with fkpeed pr«fpare to carry it R L . 1294
Without all bail siiall carry roe
away Sim 74 2
Carry-tale— This carry-tale, diss^m-
ti<>aji Jealousy VA -... 667
Carve — O, carve not with thy h*mT% S/m 19 9
Carved — wh^rre car(:s hare . . . sr^me // L 1445
carved in It with t#«rs ** «.« 1713
^e carved ihet: for her wr-aX Hon 11 13
Case — his conduct in this case R L ..... 813
beggar wails bis ca<ie ** «.« 711
my ease is past the help of law ** .^. 1023
M
M
U
Son
9
12
1
11
286
1835
893
271
298
8
12
281
101
75
730
12
9
8
11
883
681
126
~... 720
~«.. 92o
~... 1100
..... 1451
.... 1503
M... 1993
48 7
PP
u
VA
Son
VA
LC
PP
56
112
143
147
12
14
112
48
143
21
13
9
6
9
2
3
285
953
3
1
1
656
30
26
CASE
58
CHARM
Ciae— lore in lore's fresh case Son 108 9
not in his case L C 116
CMket— To burn the guiltless .... RL »... 1057
Cast— east into eternal sleeping VA ~... 951
love hath cast his utmost sum Son 49 8
and I be cast away " 80 13
CMt-away— a hopeless cast-away JR L 744
Castle— The strongest castle PP 19 29
Cat— Yet foul night-waking cat ML 554
(%it«h— S^onie catch her by the neck V'A 872
that this night-owl will catch R L 360
holds what it doth catch Son 113 8
housewife runs to cat^'h " 143 1
Cries to catch her whose busy care " 143 6
But if thou catch thy hope "143 11
Catrhing — Jealous of catching VA ^... 321
Catching all passions L C 126
Caterpillar — As caterpillars do the
tender leaves VA ~... 798
Cattle— that grazed his cattle nigh L C 57
Caught— caught the yielding prey VA ~... 547
CaoM— she cannot right her cause " 220
where is no cause of fear " 1153
It shall be cause of war " 1159
give the sneaped birds more cause
to sing R L 333
the cause of ray untimely death " ..... 1178
No cause, but company " «... 1236
The cause craves haste " 1293
I can allege no cause Son 49 14
The cause of this fair gift " 87 7
and see just cause of hate " 150 10
and yet no cause I have P P 10 7
the cause of all my moan " 18 61
Caoseleiw— 'tis a causeless fantasy VA 897
Canser— Causer of this PP 18 8
Caatel- Applied to cautels L C »... 303
Care — These lovely caves VA 247
all the neighbour caves " 830
in his shelly cave with pain " 1034
Grim cave of death R L 769
CaTe-keepIng— Cave-ke<»ping evila " 1250
CaTll— I cavil with mine infamy " ..... 1025
Thus cavils she with everything " 1093
Cease — O time, cease thou thy course " 1765
the limes should cease Son 11 7
Ceased- When he hath ceased VA 919
CeaaelmM— Thou ceaseless lackey R L »... 967
Ceasing-. . . . their clamorous cry VA 693
Cedar— The cedar stoops not R L -... 6<>4
wither at the cedar's roots " ..... 665
Cedar-tops — That ci>dar-topsand hills
seem burnish'd gold VA — .. 858
Celeatiai— I'll sigh celestial breath " 189
on his celestial face Son 33 6
Celestial as thou art P P 13
Cell— And in thy shady cell R L 881
Cement — no cement can redress P P 13 10
Censure — That censures falsely Son 148 4
Centre— the .... of my sinful earth " 146 1
Ceremony — ceremony of love's rite " 23 6
Certain— with certain of his friends VA 588
ller certain sorrow writ R L 1311
dirge of her certain ending " 1612
liVhen I was certain Son 115 11
Tlieso are certain signs to know P P 21 67
Ciiafe— He chafes her lips VA 477
GhAflng^All swoln with chafing *' ..... 825
of an angry-chafing boar ** .... 662
Chain— in a red-rose chain VA 110
Chained- which wretchedness hath
chained R L ^ ., 900
Challenge— doth that fair field " 58
Chamber—The locks between her . . . . " 302
unto the chamber door " 837
Into the chamber wickedly he
stalks " »... 365
with shining falchion in my cham-
ber came " 1626
Champaign- like a goodly .... plain ** 1247
Champion — Her champion mounted
for the VA ..... 596
Chanee—
wondering each other's chance R L 1596
acquit me from this chance " ..... 1706
By chance or nature's changing
course Son 18 8
Change— With shifting change " 20 4
variation or quick change " 76 2
upon desired change " 89 6
I cannot know thy change " 93 6
And in this change " 105 11
Change — shall change thy good R L 656
to change their kinds " ..... 1147
O, change thy thought that I may
change my mind Son 10 9
To change your day of youth " 13 12
to change my state with kings " 29 14
That my steel'd sense or changes
right or wrong "112 8
and change decrees of kings " 115 6
thou shalt not boast that I do change " 123 1
they would change their state " 128 9
Changed — blue blood .... to black R L 1454
Sorrow changed to solace PP 13 11
Changing— nature's .... course Son 18 8
Each changing place " 60 3
Channel — In the sweet channel VA 958
in bloody channel lies R L 1487
O, how the channel L C 285
Chant— hears them chant it VA -... 869
Chaos — black chaos comes again " ..... 1020
Vast sin-concealing chaos R L 767
Chap — Her cheeks with chaps " 1452
Character — at first in .... was done Son 69 8
Reserve their character " 85 3
that ink may character " 108 1
it had conceited characters L C ~... 16
Thought characters and words
merely but art . " 174
Charactered-. ... in my brow R L ~... 807
Full character'd with lasting mem-
ory Son 122 2
Charge— When thou shalt .... me RL 226
Gives the hot charge " 434
Eat up thy charge Son 146 8
My heart doth charge the watch P P 15 2
Charged — or victor being charged Son 70 10
Nature hath charged me L C 220
Charging — Charging the sour-faced
groom R L 1334
Chariot— In her light chariot VA 1192
Charitable— no time for deeds R L 908
Charity— in the charity of age L C 70
Charm— bewitch'd with lust's foul
charm R L 173
when I might charm thee so " 1681
to charm a sacred nun L C ..... 260
CHARM
59
CHIEF
Gkam— should uae like loving
charms . PP 11 8
ClAm«d— charm'd the sight Ji L .... 1404
Hlftctions in his charmed power L C 146
my leisures erer charmed " 193
Ckarter — jour charter is so strong Son 58 9
The charter of thy worth " 87 3
CkMTj — which I will keep so chary " 22 11
CkiM— hied him to the chase VA 3
As if another chase " ..... 696
itis no gentle chase " 883
in poor revenge, held it in chase H L 1736
her neglected child holds her in
chase &m 143 5
CAose— and then I chase it VA «... 410
To chase injustice R L 1693
I thy babe chase thee afar behind Son 143 10
diMed—
accomplishment so hotly chased R L ..... 716
from forth her fair streets chased ** 1834
Ckasing^roe that's tired with ... . V A 561
Chaste— Luc rece the chaste R L ~... 7
Haply that name of 'chaste* " 8
oar mistress' ornaments are chaste " 322
which thy chaste bee kept *' .... 840
And by this chaste blood " ~... 1836
And by chavte Lucrcce* soul ** »... 1839
that Tow'd chaste life to keep Sim 154 3
To whose sound chaste wings obey P T ~... 4
Chiitest— in the chastest tears R L ~... 682
Ckastlty-^espite of fruitless .... VA^.., 751
Pure Chastity is rifled R L ~... 692
of sweet chastity's decay " ~... 808
my white stole of chastity L C 297
and praised cold chastity " — 315
still conquer chastity PP A 8
It was married chastity P T .... 61
Chat— this bootless chat VA 422
As palmers' chat makes short tlieir
pilgrimage R L .... 791
Cheap— sold cheap what is most dear &i«i 110 3
Cheater— Then gentle cheater " 151 3
Check— To check the tears R L .... 1817
patience, tame to sufferance, bide
each check Son 58 7
If thy soul check thee *' 136 1
Cheek'4— Priam check'd his son's
desire R L .... 1490
Sap check'd with fh)8t Son 5 1
Cheered and check'd '^ 15 6
OMek— doth she stroke his cheek VA .... 45
maiden burning of his cheeks ** .... 50
his brow, his cheek, his chin " .... 59
Wishing her cheeks were ** .... 65
making her cheeks all wet **■ .... 83
(soaring his cheeks ** .... 185
Bed cheeks and fiery eyes ** .... 219
la each cheek appears ** .... 242
a check that smilea ** — 252
DOW her cheek was pale *' .... 347
hb fair cheek feels ** — 352
His tenderer cheek *" .... 353
Claps her pale cheek ** .... 468
strikes her on the cheeks " .... 475
XJsarpa her cheek '* .... 591
her two cheeks (air ** .... 957
Sighs dry her cheeks ** .... 966
Which her cheek mdta " .... 982
psle cheeks and tb« blood ** — 1169
Cheek— Their silver cheeks R L .... 61
her rosy cheek lies under " 886
lank and lean discolour'd cheek ** .... 708
Upon ray cheeks " 756
Poor Lucrece' cheeks " 1217
Nor why her fair cheeks " 1225
that down thy cheeks are raining " 1271
the blood his cheeks replenish " .... I.'i57
Her cheeks with chaps " 1452
Cheeks neither red nor pale " 1510
O, from thy cheeks " 1762
On Helen's cheek Son 53 7
painting imitate his cheek *' 67 5
Thus is hb cheek the map " 68 1
And found it in thy cheek '* 79 11
Where cheeks need blood '* 82 14
Which on thy soft cheek for com-
plexion dwelb " 99 4
though rosy lips and cheeks "116 9
roses see I in her cheeks ** 130 6
the grey cheeks of the east ** 132 6
her pale and pined cheek beside L C 32
Each cheek a river " 283
which in his cheek so glow'd *' 324
thy cheeks may blow P P 17 9
Cheek*d— Bose-cheek'd Adonb hied
him VA .... 8
Cheer-
smiled with so sweet a che^r R L 264
'tis with so dull a cheer Son 97 13
she securely gives good cheer R L . 89
Cheer — He cheers the mom V A 4ft4
cheers up hb burning eye R L 435
To cheer the ploughman " .... 958
they will not cheer thee P T 21 22
Cheered— Cheered and check'd Son 15 6
Cheering— cheering up her senses VA .... 896
Cheq«er*d— chequer'd with white " .... 1168
Cherish- To dry the old oak's sap
and cherish springs R L 950
as Priam him did cherbh " .... 1546
thou shouldst in bounty cherbh Son 11 12
Cherry-
mulberries and ripe-red cherries VA 1103
Chembia — Such cherubins as your
sweet self resemble
Which, like a cherubln
Cheat— Some purer chest to close
lock'd up in any chest
time that keeps you as my chest
from Time's chest lie hid
Chid— And chid the painter
Clilde— And 'gins to chide
If thou wilt chide
thus chides she Death
if thou mean to chide
chides hb vanbh'd, loathed delight
But chide rough winter
They do but sweetly chide thee
And chide thy beauty
chide the world-without-end hour
The forward violet thus did I chide "
do you with Fortune chide
rhldlng— Chiding that tongue
ChJef— The field's chief flower
present sorrow seemeth chief
should be thy chief desire
That she hath thee, b of my waO-
ing chief **
Son 114
6
Jj (J ....
319
R Lt ....
761
San 48
9
" 52
9
" 65
• 10
R L
1528
VA ....
46
u
48
u
932
R L ....
484
It " ....
742
1255
Son 8
7
•* 41
10
r *• 57
5
le" 99
1
" 111
1
" 145
6
r *JL •«•••
8
M
970
Son 10
8
42
CHIEFLY
60
CLIP
«(
..—. 568
8 11
19 26
... 1152
785
••••• 813
.... lOM
1753
Son
M
U
U
M
2
8
17
21
87
59
124
143
VA
RL
t(
10
11
13
11
2
4
1
5
.... 898
.... 274
.... 1825
431
525
.... 533
.... 1756
9 8
77
Chlefljr— Chiefly in love vboae leave
exceeds VA
Ai^ I in deep delight am chiefly
drown'd PP
Spare not to spend, and chiefly there **
Child— the old become a child VA
as he is bat Night's child R L
The nurse, to still her child **
the child a man, the man a child
fond and testy as a child
If in the child the father's image
lies
This fair child of mine
Resembling sire and child
some child of yours alive
As any mother's child
To see his active child
burthen of a former child
were but the child of state
Whilst her neglected child
Childish— And childish error
Then, childish fear, avaunt
Such childish humour
Chlldrea— Nor children's tears nor
mothers' groans
And sung by children
and thy children's sake
If children pre-decease progenitors **
By children's eyes Son
Those children nursed "
Chill— and chill extinctare hath L C
Chin— his brow, his cheek, his chin VA
did he raise his chin *'
her snow-white dimpled chin R L
peers her whiter chin "
Small show of man was yet upon
his chin L C
Chip— with those dancing chips Son
Chivalrj- by his manly chivalry R L
Ckolec — when most his choice is fro-
ward VA
Choir— still the choir of echoes "
Bare ruin'd choirs, where late Son
Choke— chokes her pleading tongue VA
Ckoked— Is almost choked R L
Ckooae— she cannot choose but love VA
death, which cannot choose Son
Press never thou to chr>oso anew P P
Chopp*d— Ikmted and chopp'd Son
Choras — As chorus to their tragic
•scene P T
ChonM-lIke— . . . . her eyes did rain VA
Chose— for their habitation choso out
thee Son
thine eye hath chose the dame P P
Chronlele— in the (throuiclu of wasted
time Am 106 1
Chnrl— And tender churl " 1 12
When that churl r>c«alh " 32 2
Then, churlH, their thoughts " 69 11
Clinrllsh— ScorniiiK hlR . ... drum VA 107
churlish, hanth in voice *' i:u
a churlish swine to gore " 616
>Clde— to 'cido this title iSbn 40 9
Cinder — Here vncioscd in cinders lie P T 55
Cipher— To cipher me how fondly I
did dote R L 207
To cipher what U writ " 811
Ciphor'd—cipher'd cither's heart " 1390
11
294
59
85
420
472
128 10
109
.... 570
73 4
•••••
282
79
64
13
19
84
62
10
•••••
52
•••••
860
95 10
19 1
RL
M
VA
Son
LC
RL
from
u
«t
M
CIrele— Bine circles stream'd R L
Circles her body in **
CIreled— ivory globes .... with blue V A
Her circled eyne **
CIrralt— Within the circuit **
ClreaMstaacc — ^In such-like .... **
with circumstances strong
with dreadful circumstance
CIsterK— coral cisterns filling **
Cite — Doth cite ^ch moving sense P P
Cited — trespass cited up in rhjrmes R L
CItixen— May feel her heart, poor ..."
City — and enter this sweet city **
the city to destroy •*
fire to bum thy city **
upon these terms, I held my city L C
Of court, of city "
Civil— civil home-bred strife
Such civil war
sober guards and civil fears
Clad— clad in mourning black
Claim — Then virtue claims
beauty
shall claim excuse's giving
possess the claim they lay
CUuMorom— Ceasing their ... . cry V A
Claoioar — pens her piteous clamours
in her head R L
'my wife* with clamours fiU'd "
In clamours of all size L C
Clap — Claps her pale cheek VA
Clapping— till clapping makes it red **
Clapping their proud tails **
Clasp— With coral clasps and amber
studs P P
Claw — under the gripe's sharp claws R L
Clay — misdeeds cannot be hid in clay **
When I perhaps compounded am
with clay Son 71 10
Clean— clean starved for a look '* 75 10
Cleanly— cold fault cleanly out V A ^... 694
Cleanly-eoined — in .... excuses R L .... 1073
Clear— O thou clear god VA .... 860
the clear unmatched red and white iZZr .... 11
In his clear bed " ..... 382
as clear from this attaint of mine " .... 825
Those round clear pearls " .... 1553
To the clear day Son 43 7
The clear eye's moiety " 46 12
what nature made so clear " 84 10
Clear wells spring not PP 18 37
Clear— 1o clear this spot by death R L .... 1053
the better so to clear her " .... 1320
fountain clears itself again *' .... 1707
her mind untainted clears " .... 1710
sees not till heaven clears Son 148 12
Clear'd — sin is ... . with absolution R L 854
Clearer— with thy much .... light Son 43 7
should afterwards burn clearer "115 4
Cleave— cleaves an infant's heart VA .... 942
(Meft— O cleft effect ! cold modesty L C 293
Clepe — She clepes him king of graves Tvl .... 995
Clerk— And like unletter'd clerk Son 95 6
Client— The client breaks VA 336
To trembling clients R L 1020
Climb— permit the sun to climb " .... 775
nimb'd— climb'd the stcep-up heav-
enly hill Son 1 6
Cllp--to clip Elysium VA .... 600
1587
1739
407
1229
..... 230
1262
1703
.... 1234
15 3
524
.... 4&5
..... 469
1369
1554
..~ 176
••••• {i9
35 12
298
1585
.... 59
1715
••••• 693
.... 681
*•••• 1cAf4
• •••• wOO
468
923
20 14
543
.... 609
CASE
58
CHARM
Cane — love in love's fresh case Son 108 9
not in his ca^e L C 116
Ciiiket— To hurn the guiltless .... BL 1057
Cast'— cast into eternal sleeping VA ~... 951
love hath cast his utmost sum Son 49 3
and I be cast away " 80 13
Caat-away — a hopeless cast-away R L 744
Castle— The strongest castle Pi* 19 29
fat— Yet foul night-waking cat R L 5M
(%it«h— Some catch her by the neck VA 872
that this night-owl will catch H L 360
holds what it doth caUh Son 113 8
housewife runs to catch " 143 1
Cries to catch her whose busy care " 143 6
But if thou catch thy hope " 143 11
€at«hing — Jealous of catching VA 321
Catching all pa.«(sions L C 126
Caterpillar — As caterpillars do the
tender leaves VA 798
Cattle— that grazed his cattle nigh L C 57
Caught— caught the yielding prey VA 547
Canae — she cannot right her cause " ~... 220
where is no cause of fear " 1153
It shall be cause of war " 1159
give the sneaped birds more cause
to sing R L 333
the cause of my untimely death " ..... 1178
No cause, but company " ~... 1236
The cause craves haste " 1295
I can allege no cause Son 49 14
The cause of thb fair gift " 87 7
and see just cause of hate " 150 10
and yet no cause I have P P 10 7
the cause of all my moan *' 18 51
CauaeleaH — 'tis a causeless fantasy VA 897
Canaer— Causer of this P P 18 8
Cantel— Applit*d to cautela L C ..... 303
Cave — These lovely caves VA 247
all the neighbour caves ** 830
in his shelly cave with pain " 1034
Grim cave of death R L 769
Cave-keeping— Cave-keeping evils " 1250
Cavil— I cavil with mine infamy " «... 1025
Thus cavils she with everything " 1093
Ceaae — O time, cease thou thy course " 1765
the times slumld cease Son 11 7
Ceased— When he hath ceased VA 919
Ceaaeleaa— Thou ceaseless lackey R L 967
Ceasing-. . . . their clamorous cry VA 693
Cedar— Tlie cedar stoops not R L — . 664
wither at the cedar's roots " 665
Cedar-topa — That ctxlar-tops and hills
seem burnish'd gold VA ~... 858
Celeatlal— I'll sigh celestial breath " 189
on his celestial face Son 33 6
Celestial as thou art P P 5 13
Cell— And in thy shady cell R L 881
Cement— no cement can redress PP 13 10
Cenanre — That censures falsely Son 148 4
Centra— the .... of my sinful earth " 146 1
Ceremony— ceremony of love's rite " 23 6
Certain— with certain of his friends VA 588
ller certain sorrow writ R L 1311
dirge of iter certain ending " 1612
liV hen I was certain iSim 115 11
Tlieac are certain signs to know P P 21 57
Chaft— He chafes her liiw VA ..... 477
Ghaflnff— All swoln with chafing " ..... 325
of an angry-chafing boar ** ..... 662
Chain — in a red-rose chain VA ..... 110
Chained— which wretchedness i\ath
chained R L ^ .. 900
Challenge— doth that fair field " ..... 58
Chamber— The locks between her . . . . " ..... 902
unto the chamber door " ~... 837
Into the chamber wickedly he
stalks *' — 865
with shining falchion in my cham-
ber came " ...« 1626
Champaign— like a goodly .... plain " ..... 1247
Champion — ller champion mounted
for the VA ..... 596
Chance-
wondering each other's chance R L .... 1596
acquit me from this chance " ..... 1706
By chance or nature's changing
course Son 18 8
Change— With shifting change " 20 4
variation or quick change " 76 2
upon desired change *' 89 6
I cannot know thy change " 93 6
And in this change " 105 11
Chantfe — shall change thy good R L ~... 656
to change their kinds " ..... 1147
O, change thy thought that I may
change my mind Son 10 9
To change your day of youth ** 15 12
to change my state with kings " 29 14
That my steel'd sense or changes
right or wrong " 112 8
and change decrees of kings " 115 6
thou shalt not boast that I do change " 123 1
they would change their state " 128 9
Changed— blue blood .... to black R L ..... 1454
Sorrow changed to solace PP 15 11
Changing — nature's .... course Son 18 8
Each changing place " 60 3
Channel— In the sweet channel VA 958
in bloody channel lies R L ~... 1487
O, how the channel L C 285
Chant— hears them chant it VA ..... 869
Chaoa — black chaos comes again ** .... 1020
Vast sin-concealing chaos R L .... 767
Chap— Her cheeks with chaps ** .... 1452
Character — at first in .... was done Son 59 8
Reserve their character " 85 3
that ink may character " 108 1
it had conceited characters L C .... 16
Thought characters and worda
merely but art . " .... 174
I1iaracter*d— . ... in my brow R L .... 807
Full character'd with lasting mem-
ory Son 122 2
Charge— When thou shalt .... me RL .... 226
Gives the hot charge " ..... 434
Kat up thy charge Son 146 8
My heart doth charge the watch P P iS 2
Charged — or victor being charged Son 70 10
Nature hath charged me L C 220
Charging — Charging the sour-faced
groom R L .... 1334
Chariot— In her light chariot VA .... 1192
Charitable— no time for deeds R L 908
Charity — in the charity of age L C .... 70
Charm— bewitch'd with lust's foul
charm R L .... 178
when I might charm thee so " .... 1681
to charm a sacred nun X C ..... 260
CHARM
59
CHIEF
CkArm— Bbould uae like loving
charms . PP 11 8
Ckftrmed— charm'd the sight R L ~... 1404
Affections in his charmed power L C 146
mjr leisures ever charmed " -... 193
Charter— your charter is so strong Son 58 9
The charter of thy worth " 87 3
Chary— which I will keep so chary " 22 11
Chaae— hied him to the chase VA 3
As if another chase " 696
it is no gentle chase " 883
in poor revenge, held it in chase R L 1736
her neglected child holds her in
chase Son 143 5
CA4M»— and then I chase it VA 410
To chase injustice R L 1693
I thy babe chase thee afar behind Son 143 10
Chased—
accomplishment so hotly chased R L 716
flrom forth her fair streets chased " 1834
Ckasinff— roe that's tired with VA 561
Chaste — Lucrece the chaste R L ~... 7
Haply that name of 'chaste' " 8
our mistress' ornaments are chaste " 822
which thy chaste bee kept " 840
And by this chaste blood " 1836
And by chaste Lucrece' soul ** ~... 1839
that Tow'd chaste life to keep Son 154 3
To whose sound chaste wings obey P T 4
Chaatest— in the chastest tears R L ~... 682
Chastity— despite of fruitless VA 751
Pure Chastity is rifled R L ~... 692
of sweet chastity's decay " 808
my white stole of chastity L C 297
and praised cold chastity " «... 315
still conquer chastity PP A 8
It was married chastity P T 61
Chat— this bootless chat VA 422
As palmers' chat makes short their
pilgrimage R L 791
Cheap — sold cheap what is most dear Son 110 8
Cheater— Then gentle cheater " 151 3
Check— To check the tears R L 1817
patience, tame to sufferance, bide
each check Son 58 7
If thy soul check thee " 136 1
Cheek'd— Priam check'd his son's
desire R L ~... 1490
Sap check'd with frost S(m 5 1
Cheered and check'd " 15 6
Cheek— doth she stroke his cheek VA 45
maiden burning of his cheeks " 50
his brow, his cheek, his chin " ~... 59
Wishing her cheeks were " ~... 65
making her cheeks all wet " — •• 83
Souring his cheeks " 185
Red cheeks and fiery eyes " 219
in each cheek appears *' 242
a cheek that smiles " 252
now her cheek was pale " 847
his fair cheek feels "* ~... 352
His tenderer cheek " ~... 353
Claps her pale cheek " ~... 468
strikes her on the cheeks " ~.>. 475
Usurpa her cheek " ~... 591
her two cheeks fair " — • 957
Sighs dry her cheeks " ~... 966
Which her cheek melU '* .... 982
psle cheeks and the blood "* ~... 1169
Cheek— Their silver cheeks R L 61
her rosy, cheek lies under " 886
lank and lean discolour'd cheek " ..... 708
Upon my cheeks " 756
Poor Lucrece* cheeks " 1217
Nor why her fair cheeks " 1225
that down thy cheeks are raining " 1271
the blood his cheeks replenish " 1357
Her cheeks with chaps " 1452
Cheeks neither red nor pale " 1510
O, from thy cheeks " 1762
On Helen's cheek Son 53 7
painting imitate his cheek " 67 5
Thus is his cheek the map " 68 1
And found it in thy cheek " 79 U
Where cheeks need blood " 82 14
Which on thy soft cheek for com-
plexion dwells " 99 4
though rosy lips and cheeks ** 116 9
roses see I in her cheeks ** 190 6
the grey cheeks of the east ** 132 6
her pale and pined cheek beside L C ~... 32
Each cheek a river " «... 283
which in his cheek so glow'd " 324
thy cheeks may blow P P 17 9
Cheek'd— Rose-cheek'd Adonis hied
him VA «... 8
Cheer —
smiled with so sweet a cheer R L 264
'tis with so dull a cheer Son 97 13
she securely gives good cheer R L 89
Cheer — He cheers the mom VA 4ft4
cheers up his burning eye R L ..... 435
To cheer the ploughman " 958
they will not cheer thee P T 21 22
Cheered— Cheered and check'd Son 15 6
Cheering — cheering up her senses VA 896
Chequered— chequer'd with white " »... 1168
Cherish- To dry the old oak's sap
and cherish springs R L ..... 950
as Priam him did cherish " ..... 1546
thou shouldst in bounty cherish &m 11 12
Cherry —
mulberries and ripe-red cherries VA 1103
Chembin — Such cherubins as your
sweet self resemble Son l\A 6
Which, like a cherubin L C 819
Chest— Some purer chest to close R L ..... 761
lock'd up in any chest Son 48 9
time that keeps you as my chest " 52 9
from Time's chest lie hid " 65 ' 10
Chid— And chid the painter R L 1528
Chide— And 'gins to chide VA ..... 46
If thou wilt chide " 48
thus chides she Death " ..... 932
if thou mean to chide RL ..... 484
chides his vanish'd, loathed delight " 742
But chide rough winter " 1255
They do but sweetly chide thee Son 8 7
And chide thy beauty ** 41 10
chide the world-without-end hour " 57 5
The forward violet thus did I chide *< 99 1
do you with Fortune chide *' HI 1
Chiding— Chiding that tongue " 145 6
Chief- The field's chief flower VA ~... 8
present sorrow seemeth chief '* .... 970
should be thy chief desire Son 10 8
That she hath thee, is of my wail-
ing chief " 42 t
CHIEFLY
60
CLIP
Chiefly— Chiefly in love whose leare
exceeds VA ..... 5G8
And I in deep delight am chiefly
drown'd PP 8 11
Spare not to spend, and chiefly there " 19 26
Ckild— the old become a child VA ».. 1152
as he is but Night's child Ji L 785
The nurse, to still her child *' 813
the child a man, the man a child " 954
fond and testy as a child " 1094
If in the child the father's image
lies " ~... 1753
This fair child of mine Son 2 10
Resembling sire and child " 8 11
some child of yours alive " 17 13
As any mother's child " 21 11
To see his active child " 37 2
burthen of a former child " 59 4
were but the child of state '* 124 1
Whilst her neglected child " 143 5
Childish— And childish error VA ~... 898
Then, childish fear, avaunt R L ~... 274
Such childish humour " 1825
Children— Nor children's tears nor
mothers' groans " ..... 431
And sung by children " ~... 525
and thy children's sake " ~... 533
If children pre-decease progenitors " .....1756
By children's eyes Son 9 8
Those children nursed " 77 11
dittl^nd chill extincture hath L C ..... 294
Chin— his brow, his cheek, his chin VA ..... 59
did he raise his chin " 85
her snow-white dimpled chin R L ~... 420
peers her whiter chin ** ~... 472
Small show of man was yet upon
his chin L C 92
Chip— with those dancing chips Son 128 10
Chivalry— by his manly chivalry Ji L ~... 109
Cholec — when most his choice is tro-
ward VA «... 670
Choir— still the choir of echoes '* »... 840
Bare niin'd choirs, where late Son 73 4
Choke— chokes her pleading tongue VA 217
Choked— Is almost choked Ji L »... 282
Choose— she cannot choose but love VA 79
death, which cannot choose Son 64 13
Press never thou to choose anew P P 19 34
Chopp'd— Beatcd and chopp'd Son 62 10
Choras — As chorus to their tragic
•scene P T 52
ChonM-like— . . . . her eyes did rain VA ~... 860
Chose— for their habitation chose out
thee Son 95 10
thine eye hath chose the dame P P 19 1
Chronicle — in thechroniclc of wasted
time Son 106 1
Chnrl-And tender churl " 1 12
When that churl Death " 32 2
Then, churls, their thoughts " 69 11
Churlish— Scorning his .... drum VA 107
churlish, harsh in voice " 134
a churlish swine to gore " 616
•(»de— to 'cide this title Son 46 9
Cinder— Here enclosed in cinders lie P T ..... 05
Cipher— To cipher me how fondly I
did dote Ji L ~... 207
To cipher what is writ " ..... 811
CipherM—ciphcr'd cither's heart " ..... 1396
Circle— Blue circles stream'd R L ..... 1587
Circles her body in " — 1739
Circled— ivory globes .... with blue VA ~... 407
Her circled eyne ** . 1229
Cirenit-Within the circuit " 230
Cirenmstance— In such-like .... ** ..... 844
with circumstances strong R Is ..... 1262
with dreadful circumstance " ..... 1703
Cistern— coral cisterns filling ** ..... 1234
Cite— Doth cite each moving sense P P 15 3
Cited — trespass cited up in rhymes R L 524
Cltiien — May feel her heart, poor ... ■ " «... 465
City— and enter this sweet city " 469
the city to destroy " ..... 1369
fire to bum thy city " «... 1554
upon these terms, I held my city L C ~... 176
Of court, of city " 59
arU— civil home-bred strife VA 764
Such civil war Son 85 12
sober guards and civil fears L C 298
Clad— clad in mourning black R L ..... 1585
Claim — Then virtue claims from
beauty " .... 59
shall claim excuse's giving " ..... 1715
possess the claim they lay " ..... 1794
ClanioronB — Ceasing their .... cry VA ..... 693
Cianionr — ^pens her piteous clamours
in her head R L 681
•my wife' with clamours fill'd " 1804
In clamours of all slse Ij C .... 2i
Clap — Claps her pale cheek VA ..... 468
Clapping— till clapping makes it red " ..... 468
Clapping their proud tails ** ..... 923
Clasp— With coral clasps and amber
studs PP 20 14
Claw— under the gripe's sharp claws R L 643
Clay— misdeeds cannot be hid In clay " ..... 609
When I perhaps compounded am
with clay Son 71 10
Clean— clean starved for a look " 75 10
Cleanly— cold fault cleanly out VA 694
Cleanly-eolned— in .... excuses R L . 1078
Clear— O thou clear god VA «... 860
the clear unmatched red and white jRZr «... 11
In his clear bed *' ..... 882
as clear from this attaint of mine " «... 825
Those round clear pearls '* 1553
To the clear day Son 43 7
The clear eye's moiety " 46 12
what nature made 60 clear *' 84 10
Clear wells spring not P P 18 87
Oear—lo clear this spot by death R L 1053
the better so to clear her " «... 1320
fountain clears itself again " ...« 1707
her mind untainted dears " ...« 1710
sees not till heaven clears Son 148 12
ClearM— sin is ... . with absolution R L 854
Clearer— with thy much .... light Son 43 7
should afterwards burn clearer " 115 4
Cleave— cleaves an infant's heart VA «... 942
Cleft— O cleft effect ! cold modesty L C «... 293
Clepe— She clepes him king of graves VA «... 995
Clerk— And like unlettcr'd clerk Son 9& 6
Client- The client breaks VA «... 836
To trembling clients R L 1020
Climb — permit the sun to climb " «... 775
(■limb*d— climb'd the steep-up heav-
enly hill Son 1 i
Clip--to clip Elyshim VA «... 800
CONQUERED
64
COPY
Gonqver'd — Thy never-conqaer'd
fort R L »... 482
in the rearward of a conquer'd
woe Son 90 6
Conqveror — Her lips are conquerors VA ~... 549
Coaqucat— on her fair delight " 1030
by the conquest satisfied R L »... 422
make conquest of the stronger " ~... 1767
To be death's conquest Son 6 14
How to divide the conquest " 46 2
The coward conquest of a wretch's
knife " 74 11
CoBScleDce — ^'Tween frozen .... R L ^... 247
to know what conscience is Son 151 1
conscience is born of love " 151 2
No want of conscience '* 151 13
CSoBiecrate — was consecrate to thee " 74 6
Consecrated— battcr'd down her con-
secrated wall R L ..... 723
Consecration — All vows and conse-
crations L C ..... 263
Consent—plausibly did give consent R L »... 1854
Do in consent shake hands Son 28 6
Consents bewitch'd, ere he desire L C 131
Consider— When I . . . . every thing Son 15 1
Consort— consort with ugly night VA ..... 1041
Consorted — and his consorted lords RL 1609
Conspirator— whispering ... . " 769
Conspire — thou stick*st not to ... . Son 10 6
Constancy — my verse to ... . confined " 105 7
The constancy and virtue " 117 14
thy truth, thy constancy " 152 10
Love and constancy b dead P T 22
Constant— throng her constant woe VA 967
like a constant and confirmed
devil RL ~... 1513
And, constant stars Son 14 10
none you, for constant heart " 53 14
constant in a wondrous excellence " 105 6
to thee I'll constant prove P P 5 8
Constrained— coustraiu'd with dread-
ful circumstance R L 1703
Constme— sense .... their denial ** 324
nill I construe whether PP li 8
Consnlting—. ... for fuul weather VA 972
Consnme — Rot and .... themselves " ..... 132
that in air consumes R L 1042
Consumed — Consumed with that
which it was nourish'd by Son 73 12
Consamest — that thou .... thyself "92
Contain- is that which it contains " 74 13
what thy memory cannot contain " 77 9
of me their reproach contains L C 189
Contemn — shouldstcontemumethisr^ 205
Contend— meeting clouds contend *' 820
all forwards do contend Son 60 4
Contending— with her .... tears VA 82
to calm contending kings R L 9'i9
in skill-contonding schools " 1018
Thus art with arms contending PP 16 13
Content-— Forced to content VA 61
full of cares, yet show'd content R L ~... 1503
buriest thy content Son 1 11
rebuked to my content " 119 13
'gainst her own content . L C 157
For a sweet content P P 18 51
Cbn<en/— and alter their contents R L 948
more bright in these contents Son 55 3
reading what contents it bears L C ~... 19
Content— eo breaking their contents L C 56
Contented— I can be well contented VA 513
With what I most enjoy contented
least Son 2d 8
my well-contented day " » 32 1
But be contented ** 74 1
He is contented thy poor drudge " 151 11
Contenting — . . . . but the eye alone VA ~... 213
Continual— with continual kissing " 606
with their continual motion R L 591
by thy continual haste Son 128 12
Continnance— . . . . tames the one R L 1098
Contracted — contracted to thine own
bright eyes Son 1 5
when two contracted new " 56 10
Contradict— If thou my love's desire
do contradict R L ~... 1631
Contrary — These contraries such uni-
ty do hold " «... 1558
quite contrary I read Son 62 11
Contrite— Her contrite sighs R L 1727
Contrive— the herald will contrive " 206
so to herself contrives L C ~... 243
Control— controls his thoughts un-
just R L ..... 189
can affection's course control " .... 500
should his use control " 1781
control your times of pleasure Son 58 2
lease of my true love control " 107 3
stands lea&t in thy control " 125 14
Controlled— what he was .... with V A 270
truth dimm'd and controll'd R L 448
white fleece her voice controll'd •' 678
prescience she controlled still " ~... 727
Controlling— Controlling what he
was controlled with VA 270
all 'hues' in his controlling Son 20 7
folly, doctor-like, controlling skill '* 66 10
Controversy— controversy hence a
question takes L C 110
Convert — to water do convert R L 592
desire converts to cold disdain " 691
to store thou wouldst convert Son 14 12
Converted— 'fore duteous, now con-
verted are " 7 11
converted from the thing it was " 49 7
Convertest — when thou from youth
convertest "11 4
Convertlte — departs a heavy .... R L 743
Convey — I may convey this troubled
soul " 1176
Convey'd — quickly is convey'd VA 1192
Cony — earth-delving conies keep " 687
Cool— Shall cool the heat " 19a
Cool shadow to his melting " 315
quench'd in a cool well by Son 154 9
water cools not love " 154 14
Adon used to cool his spleen P P (i 6
Cool'd— that must be cool'd VA 387
C-oolIng— Cooling his hot face R L ~... 682
Co-partner — co-partners in my pain ** 789
Cope — who shall cope him first VA 888
C-oped— never coped with stranger
eyea R L 99
bopesmate—copesmate of ugly Night " 923
Copious—Their copious stories VA S-t5
Copse — a copse that neighbours by " 259
Copy— not let that copy die Son 11 14
Let him but copy "84 9
CORAL
65
COWARD
Gtnl— that fireet eoral mouth VA 542
Her coral lips R L 420
eoral dsterna filling " ~... 1234
Coral is far more red Son 180 2
With c<val daspe PP 20 14
Com — ^As com o'ergrown by weeds R L 281
Comet— to correct correction &m 111 12
Onrectimi— to correct correction ** 111 12
Cnrrea^ndenee — . ... with tnie sight " 14S 2
Otrnipt— . . . . by OTer-i>artiallooks ** 137 5
corrupt my saint to be a devil " 144 7
corrupt my saint to be a devil P P 2 7
Carrapted— Which once corrupted R L ..... 294
spotted, spoil'df corrupted " .....1172
Corrupted blood some watery token ** 1748
Oarrvpting^-Myself corrupting, salv-
ing thy amiss Son 35 7
Carydos— Poor Corydon' PP 18 62
Cast— and oft that wealth doth cost R L ..... 146
2
10
5
96
12
4
Stm.
41
«<
64
91
146
LC
PP
13
146
cost of outworn buried age
prouder than garments' cost
Why so large cost
by that cost more dear
painting, pain, and cost
Coatly— outward walls so costly gay Son
C»4«preBie — Co-snprcmes and stars
of love P T 51
CMch— from her betumbled couch R L 1037
CaMhetk—Coucheth the fowl below " .... 607
Caald— there he could not die TA ..... 246
that 1 could not see ** ~... 440
More I could tell " .... 805
Could nile them both " 1008
he could not die " 1060
all could not satisfy R L 96
Coiild pick no meaning " 100
Nor could she moralize " 104
could not st-ay him " 323
What could he see " 414
could weeping purify " 685
could not forestall their will " 728
I could not put him back " 843
I could prevent this storm " 966
If tears could help " 1274
itself couM not mlstruitt " ..... 1516
her poor tongue could not speak " 1718
DO man could dlstlnguiiih " 1785
Then what could death do Son 6 11
If I could write the beauty " 17 5
could with a backward look " 59 5
what the old world could say " 59 9
be could his looks translate " 96 10
Could make ine any " 98 7
yet I none could seo " 99 14
it could so preposterously " 1<I9 11
I coukl not love you dearer " 115 2
couM not so much hold " 122 9
Well could he ride L C 106
For further I could say " 169
Could 'scape the hall " 310
could not hold arg^iment P P 3 2
none cottld look but beauty's queen "44
O never faith could hold "52
Fare well I could not "14 6
the fair'st that eye could see " 16 3
That nothing could be used " 16 10
Alss, she could not help it " 16 12
Hsarce I could from tears refrain " 21 16
CoaMat— Unless thou .... return R L 961
I
Coaldat— Since thou . . . .not defend R L ..... 1034
If thou couldst answer Sun 2 10
Coansel—coun.v^l of their friends YA 640
All this beforehand counsel R L 494
Counsel may stop a while LC 159
Take counsel of some wi:(er head PP 19 5
Count — Shall sum my count Son 2 11
When I do count the clock " 12 1
count bad what I think good ** 121 8
thus far I count my gain " 141 13
Connted— black was not counted fair " 127 1
CoantenaBce— should .... his sin P Z ..... 343
your countenance fill'd up his line Son 86 13
Coanterfelt— To the poor RL 1269
And counterfeits to die " 1776
than your painted counterfeit Son 16 8
Adonis, and the counterfeit " 53 5
Countermand— never .... mine eye R L ..... 276
' Coanierpart- such a . . . . shall fame Son 84 11
Connting— Now counting best to be " 75 7
Counting no old thing old " 103 7
Covntleaa— pay this countless debt VA 84
Coantry— By all our country rights R L 1838
Couple — Will couple my reproach " 816
Covplement— Making a couplcment Son 21 5
Courage — Shows his hot courage VA 276
In shape, in courage " 294
stirs up a desperate courage " ."VMJ
courage to the coward " 1158
Con rageons— Courageous Roman, do
not steep thy heart R L 1828
Conrageottsly — Courageously to pluck
him VA 30
Coarse— And with his strong course " 960
Holding their course " 1193
his course doth let R L 328
can affection's course control " 500
against proportion'd course " 774
O time, cease thou thy course " 1765
nature's changing course Se)n 18 8
Him in thy course " 19 11
five hundnnl courses of the sun " 59 6
to the course of altering things " 115 8
what course, what stop he makes L C 109
Coarser — the lusty courser's rein V A 31
Adonis' trampling courser " 261
Ijci me excuse thy courser " 403
Court— Of court, of city L C 59
her noble suit in court did shun " 234
Pid court the lad PP 4 3
Courteajr— They all strain courtesy VA 888
villain court'sics to her low R L 13:{8
Cover — Covers the shame " 357
Though men can cover crimes " 1252
that beauty that doth cover thee Son 22 5
my t>ones with dust shall cover " 32 2
doth cover every blot " 95 11
Cover'd — The naked and concealed
fiend he cover'd
Coverlet — On the green coverlet
Covet— Those that luurh covet
Covetons — For thou art covetous
Coward — like a paUvfttcc<i coward
Thy coward heart
courage to the coward
The coward ca[>tlve vanquished
The coward fights
Pale cowards, marching on
The coward conquest
LC Z 17
R L 394
" 134
Stm 134 6
VA 569
" 1024
" 1158
R L 75
" 273
M... I07I
Son 74 11
COMPANY
63
CONQUER
t(
<i
PP
VA
t(
II
14
11
CoBpaay — slain in merry company R L
No cauae, but company
hia lord and other company
Uae tiu company no more
CompareT-flweet above compare
which she compares to tears
Braving compare, disdainfully did
sUng R L
all sorrow loth compare "
Shall I compare thee Son
a couplemeut of proud compare "
Compare them with the bettering "
thy trespaw with compare
belied with false compare
O, but with mine compare
Conpared — may be compared well VA
Compared with loss of thee Son
Conparlng— Comparing it to her
AdonU' breath VA
Comparing him to that R L
Con pans— might .... his fair fair "
hia bending sickle's compass come Son
Coaipass'd— Upon his ... . crest VA
compass'd oft with venturing "
Con passionate— and be ... . R L
Compeer — nor his compeers by night Son
Compelled— from this .... stain R L
Conpile— of that which I compile Son
Compiled— of your praise, richly .... *'
Conpialn— and complain on theft V A
yet complain on drouth "
host of heaven I complain me R L
of weariness he did complain him '*
the other to complain Son
to hear her so complain P P
CoBplained — Lucrece* soul that late
complained R L
C<miplaInlM9— counterfeit of her .... "
weary time with her complaining "
Conplexlon— of a man's .... VA
is his gold complexion dimm'd Son
on thy soft cheek for complexion
dwells
that thy complexion lack
Conpiexloii*d— the swart-eomplex-
ion'd night
Conpoaed — To this composed wonder "
ConpoaitioB— Until life's composi-
tion be recured
Conpoaad — In a pure compound
and to compounds strange
With eager compounds
For compound sweet
As compound love
CoaipoBBded— I perhaps compound-
ed am with clay Son
Simple were so well compounded P T
Coaiprehend — beforehand counsel
comprehends R L
comprehend in still imagination "
pleasures live that art can compre-
hend P P
Coaeave— whose concave womb re-
worded L C
Omeelt— than bottomless conceit R L
Conceit and grief an eager combat
fight
Conceit deceit All, so compact
the conceit of this inconstant stay Son
21
1110
1236
1584
50
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u
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«
RL
Son
•••••
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1102
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130
14
142
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90
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1172
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1565
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567
594
86
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1570
215
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L C —•
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It
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702
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1298
1423
9
Conceit— some good conceit of thine Son 26 7
Finding the first conceit *' 108 13
unripe years did want conceit PP 4 9
whose deep conceit is such "87
As passing all conceit "88
Coneeited— the .... painter drew R L .... 1371
on it had conceited characters L C ~... 16
Concealed—^ of concealed sorrow VA 333
of faults conceal'd Son 88 7
the naked and concealed fiend L C 317
Coneealing- in blind .... night R L 675
Vast sin-concealing chaos " 7t>7
Concord — If the true concord Son 8 5
The wiry concord " 128 4
Concordant— Seeiiieth this concord-
ant one P T 46
Conclude— still concludes in woe VA ~... 839
she concludes the picture R L 1533
They did conclude to l>ear " »... 1850
CoBclnsion— tries a merciless .... " ..... 1160
Condenn'd— be condemn'd of trea^
son VA ~... 729
The lily I condemned Son 99 6
Conduct— Extinguishing his ... . RL ~... 313
Conduit— Like ivory conduits " 1234
C0BfW»— truth I must confess VA 1001
like him I must confess " 1117
Let me confess Son 36 1
Conftws'd— So now I have confess'd " 134 1
Confine — In whose confine immured " 84 3
neither sting, knot, nor confine L C ..... 265
Confined — my verse to constancy con-
fined Son 105 7
forfeit to a confined doom "107 4
to whom I am confined " 110 12
Conflnned — I spurn at my confirm'd
despite R L »... 1026
constant and confirmed devil " ..... 1513
Conflict— the fighting conflict VA 345
Confound— and her spirit confounds " -... 882
doth men's minds confound " ..... 1048
himself confounds, Wtrays R L «... 160
doth confound and kill • ..... 250
on her confounds his wits " «... 290
that did my fame confound " 1202
these many lives confounds " ..... 1489
and confounds him there Son 5 6
sweetly chide thee, who confounds "87
doth now his gift confound " 60 8
In other accents do this praise con-
found " C9 7
that mine ear confounds " 128 4
Confbunded — Even so confounded VA ..... 827
confounded In a thousand fears R L 456
Or slate itself confounded Son 64 10
Reason, in itself confounded P T 41
Confounding- Against age's Son 63 10
Confusion- with of their cries R L . ... 445
whole is swallow'd in confusion " 1159
Congealed— with hlA blood VA 1122
mourning and congealed face R L 1744
Congest- Must for your victory us
all congest L C ..... 258
Conjure— conjures him by high al-
mighty Jove R L „... 568
Conquer— conquers where becomes K^ ..... lOO
Which I to conquer sought R L 488
my hand shall conquer thee " ..... 1210
still conquer chastity P P 4 8
CONQUERED
64
COPY
Conqner'd — Thj never-conquer'd
fort It L 482
In the rearward of a conquer*d
woe Son 90 6
Conqueror— Her lips are conquerors VA ~... 549
Conqueat— on her fair delight " 1030
by the conquest satisfied R L 422
make conquest of the stronger " 1767
To be death's conquest Son 6 14
How to divide the conquest " 46 2
The coward conquest of a wretch's
knife " 74 11
Conscience— *Twecn frozen .... R L 247
to know what conscience is Son 151 1
conscience is born of love " 151 2
No want of conscience " 151 13
Consecrate — was consecrate to thee " 74 6
Consecrated— battcr'd down her con-
secrated wall R L ~... 723
Consecration — All tows and conse-
crations L C 263
Consent— plausibly did give consent R L 1854
Do in consent bhake hands Son 28 6
Consents bcwitch'd, ere he desire L C 131
Consider- Wlien I . ...everything Son 15 1
Consort— consort with ugly night VA 1041
Consorted— and his consorted lords R L 1609
Conspirator — whispering .... " ..... 769
Conspire— thou stlck'st not to ... . Son 10 6
Constancy- my verse to ... . confined " 105 7
The constancy and virtue " 117 14
thy truth, thy constancy " 152 10
Love and constancy is dead P T ~... 22
Constant— throng her constant woe VA 967
like a constant and confirmed
devil RL 1513
And, constant stars <Sof» 14 10
none you, for constant heart ** 53 14
constant in a wondrous excellence " 105 6
to thee I'll constant prove P P 5 3
Con8train*d— constrain'd with dread-
ful circumstance R L 1703
Construe— sense .... their denial '* 324
nill I construe whether PP H 8
Consulting— .... for foul weather VA 972
Consume — Rot and .... themselves " 132
that in air consumes R L 1042
Consumed — Consumed with that
which it was nourish'd by Son 73 12
Consumest— that thuu .... thyself "92
Contain— b that which it contains " 74 13
what thy memory cannot contain " 77 9
of me their reproach contains L C 189
Contemn — shouldst eontomn mo this V A 205
Contend— meeting; clouds contend " 820
all forwards du contend Son 60 4
Contending— with her .... tears V A 82
to calm contending kings R L 939
in skill-conteu'linK schcmls " 1018
Thus art with arms contending PP 16 13
Content^ — Forced to content V A 61
full of cares, yet show'd content R L 1503
buri»*st thy content Son 1 11
rebuke<l to my eontont " 119 13
'gainst her own content . L C 157
For a sweet content PP 18 51
Content— 9M(i alter their contents R L 948
more bright in these contents Son 55 3
reading what contents it bears L C ~... 19
Cbii/«n/— so breaking their contents L C ..... 56
Contented — I can be well contented VA «... 513
With what I most enjoy contented
least Son 29 8
my well-contented day " , 82 1
But be contented " 74 1
He is contented thy poor drudge " 151 11
Contenting—. . . . but the eye alone VA ..... 213
Continual— with continual kissing " 606
with their continual motion R L ...... 591
by thy continual haste Son 123 12
Continuance — . . . . tames the one R L ..... 1098
Contracted— contracted to thine own
bright eyes Son 1 5
when two contracted new " 66 10
Contradict— If thou my love's desire
do contradict R L ~.~ 1631
Contrary— These contraries such uni-
ty do hold " ..... 1558
quite contrary I read Son 62 11
Contrite— Her contrite sighs R L 1727
Contrive— the herald will contrive " ~... 206
so to herself contrives L C 243
Control— controls his thoughts un-
just R L ..... 189
can affection's course control " 500
should his use control " 1781
control your times of pleasure Son 58 2
lease of my true love control " 107 3
stands least in thy control " 125 14
Controlled— what he was .... with V A 270
truth dimm'd and controll'd R L ..... 44S
white fleece her voice controll'd •* ..... 678
prescience she controlled still " «... 727
Controlling— Controlling what he
was controlled with V A ~... 270
all 'hues' in his controlling Son 20 7
folly, doctor-like, controlling skill ** 66 10
Controversy— controversy hence a
question takes L C 110
Convert — to water do convert R L 592
desire converts to cold disdain " ..... 691
to store thou wouldst convert Son 14 12
Converted — 'fore duteous, now con-
verted are " 7 11
converted fn.)m the thing it was " 49 7
Convertest — when thou from youth
con veriest "11 4
Convertlte — departs a heavy .... RL 743
Convey— I may convey this troubled
soul " „... 1176
Convey M— quickly is convey'd VA ~... 1192
Cony^arth-delving conies keep " 687
Cool— Shall cool the heat " ..... 190
Cool shadow to his melting " 315
queneh'd in a cool well by Son 154 9
water cools not love " 154 14
Adou used to cool his spleen PP (i 6
CooPd— that must be cool'd VA ~... 387
Cooling— Cooling his hot face R L 682
Co-partner— co-partners in my pain " 789
Cope — who shall cope him first VA 8S8
Coped — never coped with stranger
eyes R L 99
CopeKniate — copesmate of ugly Night " 925
Copious— Their copious stories VA S45
Copse — a copse that neighbours by •* 259
Copy— not let that copy die Son 11 14
Let him but coi>y '* S4 9
CORAL
65
COWARD
Coral— that sweet coral month VA 542
Her coral lips Jt L 420
coral ciatems filling " 1234
Coral U far more red 5m 130 2
With cqpa clasps PP 20 14
Com — ^As corn o'ergrown by weeds R L 281
Correct— to correct correction Son 111 12
CorreetlOB— to correct correction "111 12
CorreaiMndence — . . . . with true sight " 148 2
Corrnpt — . ... by over-partial looks " 137 5
corrupt my saint to be a devil " 144 7
corrupt my saint to be a devil PP 2 7
Cormpted — Which once corrtipted Ji L 294
spotted, spoii'd, corrupted " ..... 1172
Corrupted blood some watery token " 1748
Corrapting — Myself corrupting, salv-
ing thy amiss Son 35 7
Corjrdo*— Poor Corydon* PP 18 62
Coat — and oft that wealth doth cost Ji L 146
cost of outworn buried i^ Son 64 2
prouder than garments* cost " 91 10
Why so large cost " 146 5
by that cost more dear L C 96
painting, pain, and cost P P 13 12
Costly— <Hitward walls so costly gay Son 146 4
Co-aapreme — Co-supremes and stars
of love P T 51
Orach — from her betumbled couch R L 1037
Coaeheth-Coucheth the fowl below " 507
Coald— 4here he could not die VA ..... 246
that I could not see " 440
More I could tell " ..... 805
Could rule them both " 1008
he could not die " 1060
all could not satisfy R L 96
Could pick no meaning '* 100
Nor could she moralize '* ..... 104
could not stay him " 323
What could he see " 414
could weeping purify " 685
could not forestall their will " 728
I could not put him back ** 843
I could prevent this storm " 966
If t«irs could help " 1274
itaelf could not mistrust " »... 1516
her poor tongue could not si>eak ** 1718
DO man could distlngui^ih " 1785
Then what could death do Son 6 11
If I could write the beauty " 17 5
couk) with a backward look " 59 6
what the old world could say " 59 9
he could his looks translate " 96 10
Could make me any " 98 7
yet I none could see " 99 14
it could so preposterously " 109 11
I could not love you dearer "115 2
could not so much hold " 122 9
Well could he ride L C 106
For further I could say " 169
Could 'scape the hail " 310
could not hold argument P P 3 2
none could look but beauty's queen "44
O never faith could hold "52
Fare well I could not "14 6
the fair'st that eye could see " 16 3
That nothing could be used " 16 10
Alas, she could not help it " 16 12
Scarce I could horn tears refrain " 21 16
Coaidai— Unless thou .... return R L 961
Coaldst— Since thou . . . .not defend R L 1034
If thou couldst answer Son 2 10
CoQBBel— counsel of their friends VA 640
AH this beforehand counsel R L 494
Counsel may stop a while L C 159
Take counsel of some wiser head P P 19 5
Coant— Shall sum my count Son 2 11
When I do count the clock " 12 1
count bad what I think good " 121 8
thus far I count my gain " 141 13
Counted — black was not counted fair " 127 1
Coantenance— should .... his sin R L 843
your countenance fill'd up his line Son 86 13
Counterfeit— To the poor .... R L ^... 1269
And counterfeits to die " 1776
than your painted counterfeit >Shn 16 8
Adonis, and the counterfeit " 53 5
Countermand — never .... mine eye R L ..... 276
Coanterpart — such a . . . . shall fame Son 84 11
Counting— Now counting best to be " 75 7
Counting no old thing old " 108 7
Countless— pay this countless debt VA 34
Country— By all our country rights R L 1838
Couple— Will couple my reproach " 816
Coaplement— Making a couplement tSbn 21 5
Courage— Shows his hot courage V A 276
In shape, in courage " 294
stirs up a desperate courage " 556
courage to the coward " „... 1158
Courageoas — Courageous Roman, do
not steep thy heart R L 1828
Courageously — Courageously to pluck
him VA 30
Coarse — And with his strong course " 960
Holding their course " 1193
his course doth let R L 328
can affection's course control " 500
against proportion'd course " 774
O time, cease thou thy course " »... 1765
nature's changing course Son 18 8
Him in thy course " 19 11
five hundred courses of the sun " 59 6
to the course of altering things " 115 8
what course, what stop he makes L C 109
Coarser — the lusty courser's rein V A «... 81
Adonis' trampling courser " 261
Let me excuse thy courser " 403
Court— Of court, of city L C 59
her noble suit in court did shun " 234
Did court the latl P P 4 3
Courteajr— They all strain courtesy VA 888
villain court'sies to her low R L 1338
Cover — Covers the shame " 357
Though men can cover crimes " 1252
that beauty that doth cover thee Son 22 5
my bones with dust shall cover " 82 2
doth cover every blot " 95 II
Cover'd — ^The naked and concealed
fiend he cover'd
Coverlet — On the green coverlet
Covet — Those that much covet
Covetons — For thou art covetous
Coward — like a pale-faced coward
Thy coward heart
courage to the coward
The coward captive vanquished
The coward fights
Pale cowards, marching on
The coward conquest
LC Z 17
R L 894
" 134
Son 134 6
VA 569
" 1024
" 1168
R L 75
" 273
" ..... 1391
Son 74 11
COWARD-LIKE
66
CROW
Cowftrd-IIke— . . . . with trembling R L ~... 231
Coj— why art thou coy VA 96
to my coy disdain " ^... 112
instead of love's coy touch R L ~... 669
Coaenlng^-Cozening the pillow " »... 387
Crabbed— Crabbed age and youth P P 12 1
Crack *d—€rack'd many a ring LC 4A
Cradle— Lo, in this hollow cradle VA 1185
Craft— False-creeping craft and per-
jury R L 1517
in his craa of will L C 126
but an art of craft " 295
When craft hath Uught her PP 19 22
Craggy — And all the craggy moun-
tains yields " 20 4
Cramp — Is plagued with cramps R L 856
Crank— He cranks and crosses VA ~... 682
Cranny — vents and crannies of the
place R L 810
through every cranny spies " ~... 1086
Crave — what she did crave VA 88
a beggar's orts to crave R L ~... 985
The cause craves haste *' 1293
the account of hours to crave Son 58 3
more than I did crave P P 10 9
I pardon crave uf thee " 10 11
Craved— I .... nothing of thee still " 10 10
Crawl— Crawls to maturity Son 60 6
Created— wcrt thou first created " 20 9
Which eyes not yet created " 81 10
Creating— Creating every bad a per-
fect best " 114 7
Creation— From the creation R L ~... 924
But heaven in thy creation Son 93 9
Slandering creation with a false
esteem " 127 12
Creature — Pursue these fearfiil crea-
tures VA 677
Tis he, foul creature " 1005
henceforth no creature wear " ..... 1081
To creatures stern sad tunea . R L ..... 1147
these pretty creatures stand '* 1233
Such harmless creatures " 1347
A creeping creature " 1627
From fairest creatures Son 1 1
swet't favour or deformod'st crea^
ture " 113 10
One of her feather'd creatures " 143 2
Fair creature kill'd too soon P P 10 7
Credent— And credent soul L C 279
Credit— I credit her false-speaking
tongue Son 138 7
credit her false-speaking tongue PP I 7
Crednlona — and yet too credulous VA 986
The credulous old Priam R L 1522
Creep— fearing to creep forth VA 1036
dog creeps sadly thence R L ..... 7JI6
halt, creep, cry out for the© " 902
the little worms that creep " 1248
see time how slow it creeps " 1575
Creep in 'twixt vows Son 116 6
Creeping— Which drives the creeping
thief R L Sft^
False-oreeping craft and perjury " 1517
A creeping creature " 1627
Crept— a wandering wasp hath crept " 839
Creat— his uncontrolled crest VA 104
Upon his compass'd crest " 272
High crest, short ears *' 297
Creet^from his bepding crest V A .....
When tyrants* crests and tombs Son 107 14
Crest- woundlBg—. . . ., private scar R L ~... 828
Crew— and all his lordly crew " 1781
Cried— and softly cried 'Awake " . 1628
Cried *0 false blood L C ..... 62
That it cried. How true a twain P T . 45
Criea— cries * Fie, no more of love VA ..... 186
•Pity,' she cries " 257
* For shame,' he cries " ..... 879
' Ay me !' she cries " «... 833
owls' and wolves' death-boding
cries , R L ~... 1<I5
with confusion of their cries ** ..... 445
the poor lamb cries ** .... 677
Who nothing wants to answer her
but cries *« . 1459
dear daughter,' old Lflcretius cries " «... 1751
Answer'd their cries *^ ..... 1806
Cries to catch her Son 148 6
Crime— Whose crime will bear R L «... S24
art guilty of my cureless crime " «... 772
He guilty of my death, since of my
crime ** «... 931
let his unrccalling crimo *' «... 90S
Though men can cover crimes ** «... 12K
one most heinous crime Swi 19 8
to pardon of self-doing crime *' 68 12
how once I sufTer'd in your crime " 120 8
who have lived for crime *' 124 14
Criraeftal — this cursed .... night R L «... 970
Crimson — 'Twixt crimson shame V A «... 76
never let their crimson liveries
wear *• . 806
that the crimson blood R L ~... 1738
Cripple— A soon can find a halt P P 19 10
Critic— To critic and to flatterer
stopped are Son 112 11
Crooked— crooked, churliyh. harsh in
voice VA «... 184
his crooked tushes slay " «... 624
Whose crooked beak threats R L ««. 508
crookiHl eclipses 'gainst his glory
fight
Sim
60
7
his scythe and crooked knife
t<
100
14
did hang in crooked curls
LC
•••••
85
Crop— bid thee crop a weed
VA
•••••
946
she crops the stalk
M
••■••
1175
the ploughman with increasefiil
crop
RL
•••••
958
Cross— I see what crosses
u
•••••
491
A thousand crosses keep them
u
•••••
912
the strong offence's cross
Son
84
12
lay on me this cross
i«
42
12
One silly cross
PP
18
13
CVo«»— He cranks and crosses
VA
•••••
682
To cross the curious workmanship "
•••«•
734
cross him with their opposite
per-
suasion
RL
■••••
286
To croM their arms
«
•••••
793
cross Tarquin In his flight
11
•••••
968
is bent my deeds to cross
Son
90
2
Crossed— thus to be crossed
u
133
8
Crow — Out-stripping crows
that
strive
VA
••••a
824
The crow may bathe
RL
•••«•
1009
A crow that flics
Son
70
4
The crow or dove
M
113
12
And thou treble-dated crow
PT
DEARER
70
DECEASED
Dearer— loet a dearer thing than life B L
M
Son
.... 687
.... 1163
32 11
which was the dearer
A dearer birth than this
I could not love you dearer " 115 2
Dearestr-by fortune's dearest spite " 37 8
Thou, best of dearest " 48 7
your dearest love to call ** 117 3
Dearly— 'I loved her dearly " 42 2
Dear-purehaaed— your own .... right ** 117 6
Dearth— she faint with dearth VA ... 545
dearth of daughters ** .... 754
of dearths, or season's quality Son 14 4
pine within and suflfer dearth " 14G 3
Death— And so, in spite of death VA 173
it is a life in death " 413
life was death's annoy " 497
death was lively joy " 498
having writ on death " ..... 509
I thy death should fear " «... 660
I prophesy thy death " 671
Swear Nature's death " 744
exclaims on Death " 930
thus chides she Death *' 932
not Death's ebon dart " 948
Death is not to blame '* 992
sweet Death, I did but jest " 997
With Death she humbly " ..... 1012
To wail his death ** 1017
death doth my love destroy " 1163
reft from her by death " 1174
Though death be adjunct, there's
no death B L 133
The death of all •' 147
triumph in the map of death " 402
And death's dim look " 403
lived in death and death in life " 406
In bloody death and ravishment " 430
Wounding itself to death ** 466
liviiig'dcaih and pain perpetual " 726
Grim cave of death " „... 769
Be guilty of my death " 931
desperate instrument of death '' 1038
To clear this sjiot by death " 105:<
Till life to death acquit " 1071
'Tis (loubie death to drown in ken
of shore * " 1114
death reproach's delitor " 1155
when death takes one " 1161
cause of my untimely death " 1178
in my death I murder " 1189
Tills plot of death " 1212
Of present death, and shame " 1263
By that her death " 1264
The adulterate death of Lucreco " 1645
Shows me a bare-b<»ned death " 1761
Shall rotten death make conquest " 17fi7
to be revenged on her dt^th " 1778
the death of this true wife " 1K41
Then what could death do Son 6 11
To be death's conquest " 6 14
rage of death's eternal cold " 13 12
Nor shall Death brag thou wan-
der'st in his shade " 18 11
Then look I death my days should
expiate " 22 4
hid in death's dateless night " 30 6
When that churl Death " 32 2
Sinks down to death " 45 8
Of their sweet deaths " 54 12
Death— 'Gainst death and aU-obUri-
ous enmity Son 5S 9
This thought is as a death *' 64 IS
for restful death I cry " 66 1
After my death, dear lore ** 72 8
Death's second self " 73 8
your memory death cannot take " 81 3
eat him up to death " 99 18
and death to me subscribes " 107 10
when their deaths be near ** 140 7
3o Shalt thou feed on Death " 146 18
And Death once dead " 146 14
Desire is death which physic did
except " 147 8
by death's sharp sting P P 10 4
That the lover, sick to death " 17 7
Death is now the phtvnix' nest P T M
Death-bed— As the death-bed Son 73 11
Death-bodlBf— and wolves' death-
boding cries B L -... 165
Death-dlTlninfr— Be the death-di-
vining swan P T ..... 15
DeathsmaB — As slanderous .... BL ~... 1001
Death-worthy— seem death-worthy
in thy brother " 635
DebarrM— the benefit of rest Son 28 2
Debate— in his inward mind he doth
debate B L ~... 185
Debate when leisure serves " ..... 1019
debate with angry swords " 1421
against myself I'll vow debate Son 89 13
Debated— debated, even in my soul B L 498
Debaters — serves with dull .... *' 1019
Debateth— Time with Decay Sfm, 15 11
Debating— fear, avaunt ! die B L 274
Debt— |>ay this countless debt VA 84
that the debt should double " 621
pays the hour his debt B L S29
that pay a daily debt " ..... 649
The barren tender of a poet's debt Son 83 4
Debtor— that to bad debtors lends B L 964
and death reproach's debtor " 1155
a friend came debtor for my sake <SS9a 134 11
Decay— with thy life's decay B L 517
sweet chastity's decay " ..... 808
with decay of things " 947
age and cold decay Son 11 6
a house fall to dix:ay " 13 9
Time debateth with Decay •* 15 11
fortify yourself in your decay " 16 3
it4»elf confounded to decay " 64 10
my love was my decay " 80 14
a satire to decay " 100 11
on the doubts of my decay P P 14 4
Decay — and when that decays B L ~... 713
will wither, and his sap decay ** ..... 1168
in mine own love's strength seem
to decay Son 23 7
so strong, but Time diHjaya " 65 8
even with my life decay " 71 12
DeeayM — as soon decay'd and done B L ..... 23
gracious numbers are decay'd Son 79 3
Dereaae — fearing ray love's decease VA ..... 1002
children pre-decease progenitors B L 1756
the riper should by time decease Son 1 8
after yourself's decease " 13 7
after their lord's decease *' 97 8
Dereased-linesof thy deceased lover ** 8!l 4
hang more praise upon deceased I '* 72 7
DAME
68
DAY
DAme — no daine hereafter living R L 1714
Fortune, cursed fickle dame PP 18 15
thine eye hath chose the dame " 19 1
Dam n'd— voice .... up with woe R L 1661
Damned— imposthumes, grief, and
daron'd despair VA 743
more black and damned L C 54
Damp — With rotten damps ravish the
morning air R L 778
Damsel— Unto the silly damsel PP 16 8
Dance— leam'd to sport and dance VA 105
Dance on the sands " 148
Dancing— with those dancing chips Son 128 10
Dandling— stiird with dandling VA 562
Danger— or what great .... dwells " 206
his danger by thy will " ..... 639
Danger deviseth shifts " 690
leadeth on to danger " 788
sundry dangers of his will's obtain-
ing R L 128
The dangers of his loathsome en-
terprise " «... 183
Such danger to resistance " 1263
Dangeroos— from the ...year VA 508
Dank— As the dank earth weeps R L 1130
Dapper— Like a dive-dapper VA ..... 86
Dardan— from the strand of Dardan /2£r ..... 1436
Dare— dares not be so bold VA ..... 401
which no encounter dare *' ..... 676
I dare not say " 803
and dare not stay " 894
She dares not look RL 458
She dares not thereof make dis-
covery " 1314
Then may I dare to boast Son 26 13
Nor dare I chide " 57 5
Nor dare I question " 57 9
I dare not be so bold " 131 7
Darest- thou .... do such outrage R L 605
What darest thou not " 606
Daring— engirt with daring infamy " 1173
Not daring trust the otfice P P 15 4
Dark— heavy, dark, disliking eye VA ..... 182
'tis dark, and going I shall fall " ..... 719
Now (»f this dark night " 727
in dark ol)8Curity " 760
thro' the dark laund " 813
in the dark she lay ** 827
Into the deep-dark cabins " 1038
from their dark beds " 1050
From earth'H dark womb R L 549
Through the dark night he stealeth " 729
dark harbour for defame *' 768
8ome dark, deep desert " 1144
in the dreadful dead of dark mid-
night " 1625
are bright in dark Son 43 4
what dark days seen " 97 3
block as hell, as dark as night " 147 14
drives away dark dreaming night PP 15 8
Darken— To her whose light R L 191
Darkening— Darkening thy {lower Srm 100 4
Darkly— And, darkly bright " 43 4
Darkneiw— burnt out, in lies VA 1128
dim darkness duth display R L 118
canopied in ils'lruitas sweetly lay " 398
In darkness dauntH thi m " 4ti2
would they still in darkness bt' — . " 752
Looking on darkness 'Sy% 27 8
Darksome— in that .... prison R L ~... 879
Darlings — shake the .... buds of May Son 18 S
Dart— Thine eye darts forth V A ^... 196
she darts as one on shore " ..... 817
but thy false dart " 941
not Death's ebon dart *' 948
mightdart their injuries Sim 139 12
Daah— Some loathsome dash R L 206
Date— An expired date " ..... 26
date of ncvcr-onding woes " ..... 935
date from cancell'd destiny ** 1729
beauty's doom and date Son 14 14
hath all too short a date " 18 4
youth and thou are of one date " 22 2
to outlive long date " 88 12
Beyond all date " 122 4
Our dates are brief " 128 5
Dated— And thou treble-dated crow P T ~... 17
Dateleaa— hid in death's night Son ^ 6
A dateless, lively heat " 158 6
Daughter— dearth of daughters VA 754
beldam daughters of her daughter R L 953
the dame and daughter die " ..... 1477
Daughter, dear daughter *' 1751
for daughter or for wife " 1792
'My daughter,' and 'my wife " 1804
'My daughter,' and 'my wife " 1800
It was a lording's daughter P P 16 1
Daunt — In darkness daunts them RL 462
Day — A summer's day will seem VA X\
So shall the day seem night " 122
tired in the mid-day heat " ..... 177
My day's delight is past " ..... 380
now is turn'd to day " ~... 481
IIi.«) day's hot task " 530
sun by day, and her by night " 732
melts with the mid-day sun " 750
a stormy day, now wind " 965
stars ashamed of day " 1032
silly lamb, that day * " 1098
day should yet be light " 1184
shall rock thee day and night " ..... 1186
in her vaulty prison stows the day R L 119
and wretched, hateful days " 161
open to adorn the day " 399
she never may behold the day " 746
' For day,' quoth she " 747
the jealous Day behold that face " 800
to the U-U-tale Day " 806
grooms arc sightless night, kings
glorious day " 1013
Revealing day through every cran-
ny spies " 1086
day hath nought to do " 1092
thou sing'st not in the day " 1142
ere the break of doy " 12S0
Into m bright a day " 1518
treasure of thy lusty days Sfin 2 6
he reoleth from the day " 7 10
the brave day sunk in hIdt»ous night " 12 2
stormy gusts of winter's day " 13 11
To change your day of youth " 15 12
compare thee to a summer's day " IS 1
my days should expiate " 22 4
I/>, thus, by day my limbs " 27 13
When day's oppression " 28 3
But day by night and nijjht by day " 28 4
I tell the day, to please him " 28 9
But day doth daily draw " 28 13
■* ,^
DEFENDANT
72
DESIRE
Defendant— the defendant doth that
plea deny Son 46 7
Denied— by him defiled H L ~... 787
let forth my foul-defiled blood " ..... 1029
With outward honesty, but yet de-
filed " ..... 1545
Deflling— vows were ever brokers to
defilinR L C 173
Define — And for myself mine own
wurth do define Son 62 7
Defiower — quoth he ' I mu.Ht .... R L 348
Defbrmed^Ht — or .... creature Son 113 10
DeftanctlTe — That .... munic can P T ..... 14
Def^— Thy regi^sters and thee I both
defy .Siim 123 9
Age, I do defy thee Pi» 12 11
Defying— Faith's defying " 18 6
Degenerate— with deeds degenerate R L 1003
Deified — new lodged and newly .... L C 84
Deign— If thou wilt .... this favour VA ..... 15
Delay— haste is mated with delays " 909
the glovo, that did delay him R L 325
unhallow'd haste her words delays *' 552
many accents and delays '* 1719
Delayed— Her audit, though delay'd^Stm 126 11
Delicious— His taste delicious R L 699
Delight— bctter'd with a more .... V A 78
My day's delight is past " 380
aim at like delight *' 400
on her fair delight " 1030
in that sky of his delight R L ..... 12
shame that follows sweet delight " 357
her life, her world's delight " 385
marks thee for my earth's delight " 487
chides his vanisb'd, loathed delight " 742
false slave to false delight " 927
sweet hours from love's delight Son 36 8
decrepit father takes delight " 37 1
to heart's and eye's delight " 47 14
or pursuing no delight " 75 11
Or more delight than hawks " 91 11
but figures of delight " 98 11
lose their dear deli^ht " 102 12
is there more delight " l.'K) 7
And I In deep delight PP 8 11
thus dissembled her delight " 19 16
Deltghl— Do 1 delight to die VA 49G
otheoi, they think, delight " 84:i
by nature they delight R L 697
joy dellglits in joy Son 8 2
Delights to peep " 24 12
stories to delight his ear P P 4 5
Delighted— with thy tongue's tune
delight4>d Son 141 5
Delightful— and high plain VA Zi6
Delighting— and ravishment .... R L 430
Deliver- and she delivers it " 1333
For it no form delivers to the heart Son 113 5
Delivered— deli ver'd from thy brain " 77 11
Delve— And delves the parallels " 60 10
Delving— where earth-delving conies
keep VA 687
Demand— Demand of him L C 141)
Demeanour— he by dumb demeanour
seeks to show R L 474
Demure — doth give . . . good-morrow " 1219
Denial — but denial and reproving " 242
He in the worst sense construe
their denial *' ..... 824
Denied— mayst thou be denied &)n 142 14
Denote— then love doth well denote ** 148 7
Deny — If thou deny, then force R L ..... 513
deny that thou bear'st love Son 10 1
doth that plea deny '* 46 7
And deny himself for Jove P P 17 17
Denying— Love's denying " 18 6
Depart — that he may depart VA ..... 578
He thence departs R L ..... 743
if thou shouldst depart Son 6 11
As easy might I from myself depart " 109 3
Departeittr-from that which thou . . . . " 11 2
Depend — it depends upon that love " 92 4
on thy humour doth depend " 92 8
truth and beauty on my love de-
pends " 101 3
that do on mine depend L C ..... 274
Depending — words are now .... R L ..... 1615
Deprive— to deprive dlshonour'd life " ..... 1186
Deprived — which thou hast here .... " ..... 1752
Derive— my knowledge I derive Son 14 9
Derived — Thou wast not to this end
from me derived jR L ..... 1755
De«cant— To descant on the doubts P i* 14 4
DeNcanrnt — on Tereus descant'st R L ..... 1134
Descended— with slow-sad gait .... *' 1081
descended her sheaved hat L C ..... 31
Descending'— the heat of this de-
scending sun VA 190
Describe— Describe Adonis, and the
counterfeit Son 53 5
Descried — in men's nativity R L ..... 538
Description — I see descriptions of
the fairest wights iSbn 106 2
Deaert— Some deep dark desert R L 1144
i>e«er^— with your most high deserts Son 17 2
knowledge of mine own desert " 49 10
As to behold desert " 66 2
than mine own d^ert " 72 6
your great deserts repay " 117 2
Where thy desert may merit praise PP 19 27
Deserve — Deserves the trnvaU Son 79 6
may deserve to pitied be " 142 12
deserve not punishment P P 3 4
Deserved — deserv^ed a greater fee VA ..... 609
deserved thy beauty's use Son 2 9
DeMervest— which thou alone " 39 8
Deserving — where is my deserving *' 87 6
Design — a meritorious fair design R L 1692
soft audience to my sweet design L C 278
Desire— desire doth lend her force V A 29
but frosty in desire " 36
and his high desire " ..... 276
approach of sweet desire " ..... 886
deep desire hath noue " 389
or life desire " ..... 496
Now quick desire " 547
Love in^his desire '* 653
desire sees best of all " 720
desire's foul nurse " 773
drops of hot desire " 1074
unto himself was his desire " 1180
trustless wings of false desire R L 2
toss'd l>etween desire and dread " — 171
by brain-sick rude desire " 175
Lucrece must I force to my desire " ..... 182
or were he not my dear friend, this
desire " ..... 234
Desire my pilot la " «... 279
DESIRE
73
DIALECT
Dnire— By reprobate desire R L »... SOO
vhich fond desire doth scorch '* ~... 314
not to foul desire ** ^... 574
His true respect wUl prison Cslse
desire *' 642
This hot desire " 691
IXrunken Desire must Tomit " 703
or rein his rash desire '* 706
Feeble Desire, all recreant ** ^... 710
Desire doth fight with Grace " »... 712
But if the like the snow-white
swan desire " ^... 1011
chcck'd his son's desire " ~... 1490
to answer his desire " „... 1606
If thou my love's desire do contra-
dict " 1631
should be thy chief desire Son 10 8
The first my thought, the other my
desire " 45 3
with my desire keep pace " 51 9
Therefore desire, of perfect'st love
being made " 51 10
times of your desire ** 57 2
make them bom to our desire " 123 7
Desire i» death " 147 8
And so the general of hot desire " 154 7
Of pensive and subdued desires L C 219
Z>Bnre— From fairest creatures we de-
sire increase Son 1 1
Dost thou desire my slumbers * " 61 3
nor smell, desire to be invited *^ 141 7
privileged by age, desires to k now LC 62
When he again desire her " 66
ere he desire, have granted " 131
And twice desire ere it be day PP 19 17
Desired— but strongly he desired £ L 415
to set a form upon desired change Son 89 6
the help of bath desired " 153 11
nor being desired yielded L C 149
DfilrlBg— Desiring this man's art Son 29 7
Despair— grief and damn'd despair VA 743
ai one full of despair " 955
Despair, and hope " 988
. DesiMLir to gain doth traffic RL 131
another white despair Son 99 9
of comfort and despair " 144 1
of comfort and despair PP 2 1
Dmpttir—o( time's help to despair R L 983
For, if I should despair Sum 140 9
. . . Hecuba beheld R L »... 1447
desperate in hlB suit VA .... 336
stirs up a desperate courage " 556
theirs whose desperate hands " ..... 765
and in a desperate rage R L 219
8be, desperate, with her nails " 739
some desperate instrument " 1038
I desperate now approve Son 147 7
Dciplse— looking scornfully he doth
despise R L 187
that loves what they despise «S!t>n 141 3
thy service to despise " 149 10
Dcif^sed — . . . . , rheumatic, and cold VA ..... 135
I am not lame, poor, nor despised Son 37 9
Time's spoils despised everywhere " 100 12
bat despised straight " 129 5
De^biBf— myself almost despising " 29 9
Deapite— in high heaven's despite VA 731
despite of fruitless chastity " ..... 751
boasted blushes in despite R L ..... 55
RL
Son
i(
ti
«(
t<
u
•••••
782
•••••
1026
s
12
19
13
44
8
60
14
128
14
141
4
Despite— despite of cure remain
at my conflrm'd despite
Despite of wrinkles
despite thy wrong
For then despite of space
despite his cruel band
despite thy scythe and thee
Who, in despite of view
DeapltoAilljr — despitefully I mean to
bear thee R L 670
Destined— The destined ill LC ~... 156
Destiny— she bribed the Destinies VA 733
The Destinies will curse thee " ^... 945
date from cancell'd Destiny R L 1729
Deatltnte— turrets and pale " 441
Destroy— each other did destroy VA 846
If thou destroy them not " 760
doth my love destroy " ^... 1168
who will the vine destroy R L 215
I purpose to destroy thee ** ..... 514
the city to destroy " 1369
the user so destroys it Son 9 12
Detain — can no more detain him VA 677
She may detain, but not still keep Son 126 10
Determinate— in thee are all ... . *' 87 4
Determination— Find no ... . "13 6
Determined- by their verdict is .... " 46 11
Determining— which way io fiy RL 1150
Detest— made herself herself detest *' 1566
Detriment— surmise of others' .... ** 1579
Derlee — but your device in love VA 789
from them no device can take R L 535
Lo, this device was sent me LC 232
Devil- adored by this devil R L ..... 85
profaned in such a devil " 847
a hideous, shapeless devil " 973
the semblance of a devil " 1246
constant and confirmed devil " 1513
Such devils steal eifects " ..... 1555
my saint to be a devil Son 144 7
my saint to be a devil P P 2 7
Devise — Devise extremes beyond ex-
tremity R L ..... 969
devise some virtuous lie Son 72 5
poets can in praise devise " 83 14
Devised — yet when they have .... " 82 9
Devlseth— Danger dcviseth shifts VA 690
Devour— Devours his will R L ..... 700
What virtue breeds iniquity de-
vours " ..... 872
but that which doth devour " ..... 1256
devour her own sweet brood Son 19 2
Devoured— Not that devour'd, but
that which R L ..... 1256
Devouring—. ... all in haste VA 57
lived by foul devouring R L ..... 700
Devouring Time, blunt thou Son 19 1
Dew — morning's silver-melting dew R L ~... 24
resembling dew of night ** ..... 396
relenting dew of lamentations " 1829
Dew-bedabbled — the .... wretch VA — •• 703
Dew'd— So they were dew'd " ..... 66
Dewy— weep like the dewy night R L 1232
dried up the dewy uiorn P P 6 1
Dexterity — quick bearing and .... RL ..... 1889
Dial— which stop the hourly dial " 827
Thy dial how thy precious minutes Son 77 2
by thy dial's shady stealth " 77 7
Dialect— He had the dialect L C .... 12S
DECEIT
71
DEFEND
Deeeit— Thou look'st not like deceit RL 585
To hide deceit " 1507
Saw how deceits were gilded L C ~... 172
Deceltfnl— <^Dceit . . . ., so compact R L 1423
DeetlTe— do not deceive me " ~... 5S5
thjr sweet self dost deceive Son 4 10
so sweetly doth deceive " 39 12
as it best deceives L C ~... 306
IktrelTed— with painted grapes VA 601
Like a deceived husband Son 93 2
mine eye may be deceived " 104 12
Di!«elTC«t— if thou thyself deceivest " 40 7
DeeelTliiy — the deceiving harmony VA 781
And roost deceiving " 1156
]>eeeiiiber — old December's bareness .Scm 97 4
Decide— To 'cide thU title " 46 9
Deek — And decks with praises R L 108
to deck his oratory " »... 815
Deelines — fair from fair sometime
declines Son \% 7
Declined— With head declined R L 1661
My low-declined honour " 1705
Decrease— at height decrease Son 15 7
De cr e e quiver'st thou at this .... R L 1030
heaven in thy creation did decree Son 93 9
change decrees of kings "115 6
Decrepit — Teaching decrepit age to
tread Ihe measures V A 1148
As a decrepit father Son 37 1
Dedicated— The dedicated words " 82 3
Deed — Let fair humanity abhor the
deed R L 195
with so black a deed *« 226
shows like a virtuous deed " 252
tears ensue the deed ^ 502
This deed will make thee " 610
time for charitable deeds " 908
with deeds degenerate " 1003
My life's foul deed " 1208
To talk in deeds " 1348
Whose deed hath made her " 1566
The lechers in their deed " \^M
with this deadly deed " 17:«)
or grief help grievous deeds " 1822
and ransom all ill deeds Son 34 14
To see his active child do deeds of
youth " 37 2
into my deeds to pry " 61 6
they measure by thy deeds " 69 10
is bent my deeds to cross " 90 2
turn sourest by their deeds " 94 13
of my harmful deeds " 111 2
my deeds must not be shown " 121 12
save in thy deeds *' 131 13
the very refuse of thy deeds " 150 6
by him became his deed L C Ill
Deem — but dull and slow she deems RL 1336
but fairer we it deem Son 54 3
Deemed — and for true things dcem'd " 96 8
which Is so deemed " 121 3
Deep — Then love's deep groans VA 377
but deep desire hath none " 389
Sad pause and deep regard R L 277
I>eep woes roll forward " «... 1118
And with deep groans " 1132
Some dark, deep desert ** 1144
Till after a deep groan " «... 1276
And that deep torture ** 1287
Deep soands make lesser nolae " 1329
Deep— Show'd deep regard R L ..... 1400
By deep surmise of others' detri>
ment " ...., 1679
which deep impression bears ** . 1712
bail it from the deep unrest " ..... 1725
The deep vexation " 1779
Wherein deep policy did him dis-
guise « 1815
And that deep vow " 1847
And dig deep trenches Son 2 2
have full as deep a dye " 54 5
upon your soundless deep " 80 10
praise the deep vcrraillion " 98 10
For that deep wound " 133 2
I have* sworn deep oaths of thy
deep kindness '* 152 9
arguments and question deep L C 121
whose deep conceit is such P P S 7
And I in deep delight " 8 11
Deep in the thigh ** 9 11
My sighs so deep " 18 31
Deep-braln'd— And .... sonnets L C ~... 209
Deep-dark— Into the deep-dark cab-
ins of her head VA 1038
Deep-drenched— deep-drenched in a
sea of care R L ...~ 1100
Deeper — O, deeper sin " 701
Deepest— My deepest sense Son 120 10
Deep-green — The .... emerald L C 213
Deeply— upon her back deeply dis-
tress'd VA 814
Passion on pa.<tsion deeply is re-
doubled " 832
Deep-sore — hearts' .... wounding " 432
Deep-snnken — thine own .... eyes Son 2 7
Deep-sweet- Ear's .... music VA 432
Deep-woandMl — . . . . with a boar PP 9 10
Deer— thou shalt be my deer VA ~... 231
Then be my deer " 239
Borteth with a herd of deer " ..... 689
As the poor frighted deer R L 1149
And stall'd the deer P P 19 2
Defkce— winter's ragged hand deface iSm 6 1
nor none falser to deface her P P 7 6
Defkced— soul's fair temple is ... . R L 719
by Time's fell hand defaced Son 64 1
Defkme— dark harbour for defame R L 768
minstrels tuning my defame " 817
thou livest in my defame " 1033
Defeat— true love that doth my rest
defeat *Sw» 61 11
Defeated— me of thee defeated " 20 11
Defeature — with impure defeature VA 736
Defect — But having no defects " 1;J8
torments us with defect R L -... 151
God wot, it was defect " ..... 1345
see thee frown on my defects Son 49 2
shall not be thy defect " 70 1
doth worship thy defect " 149 11
Defence — 'gainst Time's scythe can
make defence " 12 13
making no defence " 89 4
my o'er-press'd defence " 139 8
As passing all conceit needs no de-
fence
PP 8 8
ef^nd— can so well defend her
VA -... 472
the growing rose defends
R L .... 492
defend thy loyal dame
" .... 1034
suppose thou dost defend me
** 1684
DID
75
DISDAIN
Dii— Uioa left'st me more than I did
crare PP 10 9
how god Mars did try her "11 3
her lipe on hU did act the eeizure " 11 10
sweetly did she smile " 14 7
that loTe with love did fight " 16 5
did bear the maid away ** 16 14
Beasts did leap, and birds did sing " 21 5
Trees did grow, and plants did spring" 21 6
Ererything did banish moan " 21 7
between them love did shine P T 83
Didst--0, thou didst kill me VA 499
thou didst name the boar " 641
Didst thoa not mark " 643
thoa didst teach the way R L 630
Why didst thou promise Son 34 1
thou didst forsake me " 89 1
whence didst thou steal " 99 2
thou didst bequeath to me P P 10 12
Dlfr-there he could not die VA 246
Do I delight to die " ~... 496
ftnd die forsworn " 726
like a glutton dies " 803
who lives and must not die " 1017
he could not die " 1060
shall I die by drops " 1074
And die, unhaliow'd thoughts E L 192
Yea, though I die " 204
with trembling terror die " 231
fear, araunt ! debating, die " »... 274
threats If he mounts he dies " ~... 508
The patient dies " 904
For if I die my honour liTes " 10^
I need not fear to die " ^... 1052
thereon (all and die " 1139
ToUreordie " 1164
YetdielwUlnot " .... 1177
Thou dead, both die " .....1211
the dame and daughter die " 1477
here Priam dies " ~... 1485
the Judge is robb'd, the prisoner dies" 10i^2
yet let the traitor die " ..... 1686
The old bees die " 1769
Thy father die " ..... 1771
to die with her a space " 1776
beauty's rose might never die Son 1 2
Die single, and thine image dies " 3 14
thou issueless shalt hap to die "93
Thou shouldst print more, not let
that copy die " 11 14
And die as last as they see others
grow " 12 12
they in their glory die " 25 8
Die to themselves " 54 11
Save that, to die I leave my love " 66 14
to all the world must die " 81 6
happy to die " 92 12
Though to itself it only live and die " 94 10
Which die for goodness " 124 14
A flower that dies when first P P 13 3
IHed— And died to kiss his shadow VA ..... 162
but died unkind " 204
But now I died " 498
Uved and died with him " 1080
in that darksome prison died R L 379
But since he died Son 32 13
Uved and died as flowers do " 68 2
Blcai—Unlook'd on, diest unless " 7 14
Histsd— «y, dieted in grace L C »... 261
Difference — ^leaves out difference
our drops this difference bore
Different— Of different flowers
the dialect and different skill
Dig — His snout digs sepulchres
And dig deep trenches
Digestion — in digestion souring
Dignified — they basely dignified
and therein dignified
Dignify— so dignifies his story
Dignity — proud of such a dignity
Son
LC
Son
LC
VA
Son
RL
It
Son
u
RL
105
98
101
84
8
300
6
125
622
2
699
660
4
8
437
The bravest weed outbraves his
dignity ^n 94 12
Digression— digression is so vile R L 202
Diligence — done with speedy .... " ..... 1853
Din— dim darkness doth display " 118
And death's dim look " 403
In his dim mist " ..... 548
And wipe the dim mist " «... 643
Dim register and notary " ~... 7G5
in her dim element " ~... 1588
fair fresh mirror, dim and old " ..... 1760
Dlminlih'd— Beanyjotdiminish'd VA 417
Dlmm*d— torch .... and controll'd R L 448
is his gold complexion dimm'd Son 18 6
Dimple— appears a pretty dimple VA ..... 242
Dimpled — her snow-white .... chin R L 420
Dint— snow takes any dint VA 354
Dire— The dire imagination " ..... 975
And the dire thought R L ..... 972
war and dire events VA 1159
Directed— are bright in dark .... Son 43 4
Direction— by their own direction VA ..... 216
Directly— yet not directly tell Son 144 10
yet not directly tell P P 2 10
Dlrefhl— stem and .... god of war VA 98
exclaiming on the direful night R L ~... 741
Dii^e— Begins the sad dirge " . 1612
Disabled — by lini plug sway disabled <Sim 66 8
Dlsarm*d— by a virgin hand disarm'd " 154 8
Disbursed — And all my fame that
lives disbursed be R L ..... 1203
Discern — wherein it shall discern " 619
Discharge — . . . . one word of woe " 1605
Discharged — from .... cannon fumes " ..... 1043
Disciplined- Who . . . ., ay, dieted L C 261
Discloses— their masked buds .... Son 54 8
DIscoloar'd— and lean .... cheek R L ~... 708
Discontent— servile to all discon-
u
Son
u
LC
be-
PP
tents VA
in shows of discontent R L
thus attired in discontent
blow of thralled discontents
her poor infant's discontent
By discontent so breaking
Thy discontent thou didst
qucatb
Discord — Melodious discord, heavenly
tune VA
My restless discord loves no stops R L
Dlsconrse — Bid me discourse VA
My thoughts and ray discourse Son
Discovery— discovery of her way VA
She dares not therefore make dis-
covery jB L
Disdain— in a dull disdain VA
Servile to my coy disdain
smiles as in disdain
bondage in disdain "
H
(I
.... 1161
..... 1580
1601
124 7
143 8
••••• oo
10 12
..... 1124
..... 145
147 11
«... 1314
33
..... 112
DESIRE
73
DIALECT
RL
«<
(t
(4
tl
l«
II
II
II
II
II
II
11
II
10
45
51
51
67
123
147
154
800
314
574
642
691
703
706
710
712
1011
1490
1606
1631
8
3
9
10
2
7
8
7
219
Dftlrc— By reprobate desire
which food desire doth scorch
not to foul desire
His true respect will prison false
desire
This hot desire
Drunken Desire must vomit
or rein his rash desire
Feeble Desire, all recreant
Desire doth fight with Grace
But if the like the snow-white
swan desire
check'd his son's desire
to answer his desire "
If thou my love's desire do contra-
dict
should be thy chief desire Son
The first my thought, the other my
desire "
with my desire keep pace
Therefore desire, of perfect'st love
being made
times of your desire
make them bom to our desire
Desire i» death
And so the general of hot desire
Of pensive and subdued desires L C
Desire — From fairest creatures we de-
sire increase Son 1 1
Dost thou desire my slumbers - " 61 3
nor smell, desire to be invited " 141 7
privileged by age, desires to know L C ~... 62
When he again desires her ** 66
ere he desire, have granted " 131
And twice desire ere it be day P P 19 17
Desired — but strongly he desired E L 415
to set a form upon desired change Son 89 6
the help of bath desired *' 153 II
nor being desired yielded L C ~... 149
DcsirlBff— Dcbiriug this man's art Sun 29 7
Despair— grief and daniu'd despair VA 743
ai one full of despair ** 955
Despair, and hoi>e " 988
. Despair to gain doth traffic RL 131
another white despair Son 99 9
of comfort and despair " 144 1
of comfort and despair PP 2 1
Despair— of time's help to despair R L ~... 983
For, if I should despair Sun 140 9
Despairing— Hecuba beheld R L 1447
Desperate— as desperate In his suit VA .... 336
stirs up a desperate courage " 556
theirs whose desperate hands " ..... 765
and in a desperate rage R L 219
She, desperate, with her nails " 739
some desperate instrumvut ** 1038
I desperate now approve San 147 7
Despise — looking scornfully he doth
despise R L »... 187
that loves what they despise Son 141 3
thy service to despise " 149 10
DesplsH — . . . . , rheumatic, and cold V A »... 135
I am not lame, poor, nor despised Son 37 9
Time's spoils despised everywhere " 100 12
but despised straight ** 129 5
Deapising — myself almost despising " 29 9
Deaplt^— in high heaven's despite VA 731
despite of fruitless chastity " ..... 751
boasted blushes in despite R L .... 55
RL
M.«.
782
II
M...
1026
Son
8
12
11
19
13
II
44
8
M
60
14
U
128
14
U
141
4
Deaplto— despite of cure remain
at my conflrm'd despite
Despite of wrinkles
despite thy wrong
For then despite of space
despite his cruel hand
despite thy scythe and thee
Who, in despite of view
Deapltefkily— despitefully I mean to
bear thee R L ..... 670
Dectlned— The destined ill L C -... 156
Deatlny— she bribed the Destinies VA — 788
The Destinies will curse thee *' ..... 945
date from cancell'd Destiny R L ..... 1729
Dcatltnte — turrets .... and pale " ..... 441
Deatroy— each other did destroy VA ~... 846
If thou destroy them not ** 760
doth my love destroy ** ..... 1168
who will the vine destroy R L ..... 215
I purpose to destroy thee ** ~... 514
the city to destroy " 1869
the user so destroys it Son 9 12
Detain — can no more detain him VA ^... 077
She may detain, but not still keep Son 126 10
Determinate— in thee are all ... . " 87 4
Determination— Find no ... . *' 13 6
Determined— by their verdict Is " 46 11
Determining—. . . . which way to tiy RL 1150
Deteat— made herself herself dutest *' 1566
Detriment— surmise of others' .... " 1579
Devlee — but your device in love VA ..... 789
from them no device can take R L 535
Lo, this device was sent me L C 232
Devil- adored by this devil R L ~... 85
profaned In such a devil " 847
a hideous, shapeless devil " 973
the semblance of a devil ** 1246
constant and confirmed devil " 1513
Such devils steal effects " ..... 1555
my saint to be a devil Son 144 7
my saint to be a devil P P 2 7
Devise — Devise extremes beyond ex-
tremity R L ..... 969
devise some virtuous lie Son 72 5
poets can in praise devise '* 83 14
Devised — yet when they have .... ** 82 9
Deviseth— Danger deviseth shifts VA .... 600
Devonr— Devours his will R L .... 700
What virtue breeds iniquity de-
vours " .... 872
but that which doth devour " .... 1256
devour her own sweet brood Son 19 2
Devoar'd— Not that dcvour'd, but
that which R L .... 1256
Devouring-. ... all in haste VA 57
lived by foul devouring R L 700
Devouring Time, blunt thou Son 19 1
Dew — morning's silver-melting dew jR Z» 24
resembling dew of night " .... 896
relenting dew of lamentations " 1829
Dew-bedabbled— the wretch V A — •• 703
Dew*d — So they were dew'd " .... 66
Dewy— weep like tlie dewy night R L .... 1232
dried up the dewy morn P P 6 I
Dexterity — quick bearing and .... RL .... 1889
Dial— which stop the hourly dial " .... 827
Thy dial how thy precious minutes iSm 77 2
by thy diaPs shady stealth " 77 7
Dialect— lie had the dialect L C ..... 12S
DIAL-HAND
74
DID
Diftl-hftnd— beauty like a . . . . ^Son 104 9
DialoKued— And dialogued for him L C 132
Diamond— The diamond, why, 'twas
beauUful " — 211
Dian— Make modest Dlan VA 725
A maid of Dian's Son \^ 2
Diapason — with deep groans the di-
apason R L ~... 1132
Did— did he raise his chin VA ~... 85
what she did crave " 88
Never did passenger in summer's
heat " 91
in battle ne'er did bow " »... 99
did hotly overlook them " ~... 178
so did this horse " ...» 293
he did not lack " 299
each other did destroy ** ~... 346
her eyes did rain " 360
did honey passage yield " 452
he did think to reprehend " 470
love did wittily prevent " ..... 471
When he did frown " ..... 571
my joints did tremble " ..... 642
where did I leave " ~... 715
late did wonder " ~... 748
So did the merciless *' .... 821
did feed her sight " 822
tears did lend and borrow " 961
she did follow " ..... 975
I did but jest " «... 997
I did but act " — 1006
he did see his face " ~... 1109
did not whet his teeth " ..... 1113
never did he bless ** ~... 1119
Collatine unwisely did not let R L 10
did him peculiar duties " ~... 14
disdainfully did sting *« .... 40
some untimely thought did insti-
gate " .... 43
No comfortable star did lend his
light " .... 164
fondly I did dote " 207
fear did make her colour rise '* .... 257
her husband's welfare she did hear " 26:{
the glove that did delay him " 825
What did he note " 415
as his hand did scale " .... 440
I did entertain thee " .... 596
did I entertain him " .... 842
he did complain him " 845
When Tarquin did " .... 917
who did thy stock pollute " 1063
that did my fame confound ** .... 1202
Such danger to resistance did belong" .... 1265
did make him more amazed " .... 1356
peasants did so well resemble ** 1392
from his lips did fly " .... 1406
some mermaid did their ears entice " .... 1411
no semblance did remain *' .... 1453
Lucrece swears he did her wrong " .... 1462
fond Paris, did incur " 1473
as Priam him did cherish " .... 1546
go did I Tarquin, so my Troy did
perish " «... 1547
where you did fulfil *• «... 1635
act of lust, and so did km '* .... 1636
I did begin to start and cry " .... 1639
That blow did baU it " 1725
I oOen did behold ** 1758
Did— I did give that life R L 1800
policy did him disguise " .... 1815
at him, did his words allow ** .... 1S45
They did conclude to bear ** 1850
Komans plausibly did give consent " .... 1854
Those hours that with gentle work
did frame Son 5 1
Which erst from heat did canopy
the herd " 12 6
their parts of me to thee did give " 31 11
early morn did shine ** 33 9
my foot did stand " 44 5
the wretch did know *< 60 7
where they did proceed " 76 8
I alone did call upon thy aid " 79 1
you did painting need " 83 1
you did exceed " 83 3
you did impute ** 83 9
That did my ripe thoughts in my
brain Inhcarse " 86 3
heaven In thy creation did decree " 93 9
Nor did I wonder " 98 9
I with these did play ** 98 14
The forward violet thus did I chide " 99 1
on thorns did stand *' 99 8
her mournful hymn did hush the
night " 102 10
That did not better for my life pro-
vide " 111 8
I did strive to prove " 117 13
To bitter sauces did I frame my
feeding " 118 6
sorrow which I then did feel " 120 2
Love's own hand did make ** 145 1
Straight in her heart did mercy
come " 145 5
which physic did except " 147 8
fire did quickly steep " 15.^ 3
Oft did she heave her napkin L C .... 15
As they did battery " .... 23
In her threaden fillet still did bide " .... 33
in his fair parts she did abide " .... 83
did hang In crooked curls ** 85
did enchant the mind '* .... 89
Did livery falseness In a pride of
truth '• .... 105
still did wake and sleep *' .... 123
did in the general bosom " .... 127
that did his picture get " .... 134
that did in freedom stand " .... 143
Yet did I not as some my equals did " .... 148
Till now did ne'er invite " 182
that so their shame did find " 187
sonnets tiiat did amplify " 209
his in vised properties did tend " .... 212
that burning lungs did raise " .... 228
noble suit iu court did shun " .... 234
and did thence remove " .... 237
which did no form receive " .... 241
did her force subdue " 248
his watery eyes he did dismount " 281
and mine did him restore " 301
did win whom he would maim " .... 312
from his heart did fly " .... 325
did not the heavenly rhetoric PP 3 1
Did court the lad ** 4 8
unripe years did want conceit "49
she hotter that did look "67
did I see a fair sweet youth ** 9 9
DID
75
DISDAIN
Did— thou left'st me more than I did
crare PP 10 9
how god Man did try her "11 3
her lipe on his did act the eeizure " 11 10
sweetly did she smile '* 14 7
that love with love did fight *' 16 5
did bear the maid away ** 16 14
Beasto did leap, and birds did sing '* 21 5
Treesdid grow, and plants did spring*' 21 6
Everything did bunish moan " 21 7
between them love did shine P T 83
Didit-O, thou didst kiU me VA 499
thou didst name the boar " 641
Didst thou not mark " 643
thou didst teach the way E L 630
Why didst thou promise Son 34 1
thou didst forsake me " 89 1
whence didst thou steal " 99 2
thou didst bequeath to me P P 10 12
Die— there he could not die VA 246
Do I delight to die " 496
and die forsworn " 726
like a glutton dies " ^... mn
who lives and must not die " »... 1017
be could not die " 1060
•hall I die by drops " 1074
And die, unhallow'd thoughts £ L .... 192
Yea, though I die ** 204
with trembling terror die " 231
fear, avaunt! debating, die " ..... 274
threats If he mounts he dies " ..... 508
The patient dies " 904
For if I die my honour lives " ..... 1032
I need not fear to die *' ..... 1052
thereon fall and die *' 1139
To live or die " 1154
Yet die I will not " 1177
Thou dead, both die " 1211
the dame and daughter die " 1477
here PrUra dies " 1485
the Judge is robb*d, the prisoner dies" 10il2
yet let the traitor die " 1686
The old bees die ** 1769
Thy father die " ~... 1771
to die with her a space " 1776
beauty's rose might never die Son 1 2
Die single, and thine image dies " 3 14
thou issueless shalt hap to die "93
Thou shouidst print more, not let
that copy die " 11 14
And die as fast as they see others
grow " 12 12
they in their glory die " 25 8
Die to themselves " 54 11
Save that, to die I leave my love " 66 14
to all the world must die *' 81 6
happy to die " 92 12
Though to itself it only live and die " 94 10
Which die for goodness " 124 14
A flower that dies when first PP 13 3
Died— And died to kiss his shadow V A »... 162
but died unkind " 204
But now I died " 498
Uved and died with him " lOHO
in that darksome prison died R L S79
But since he died Son 32 13
lived and died as fiowers do '* 68 2
Dicat—Unlook'd on, diest unless '* 7 14
Dieted— ay, dieted in grace LC 261
Dffference— leaves out difference
our drops this difference bore
Different— Of different flowers
the dialect and different skill
Dig— His snout digs sepulchres
And dig deep trenches
Digestion— in digestion souring
Dignified — they basely dignified
and therein dignified
Dignify— so dignifies his story
Dignity — proud of such a dignity
.Sim 105 8
L C ~... 800
Son 98 6
LC 125
VA 622
Son 2 2
R L ~... 699
" 660
Son 101 4
" 84 8
R L 437
The bravest weed outbraves his
dignity Son 94 12
Digression— digression is so vile R L ..... 202
Diligenee — done with speedy .... " ..... 1853
Din— dim darkness doth display " ..... 118
And death's dim look " ..... 403
In his dim mist " 548
And wipe the dim mist " ..... 643
Dim register and notary " ~... 755
in her dim element " ..... 1588
fair fresh mirror, dim and old " ..... 1760
DIminlsh'd— Beanyjotdiminish'd VA 417
Dimmed— torch .... and controll'd R L 448
is his gold complexion dimm'd Son 18 6
Dimple — appears a pretty dimple VA 242
Dimpled — her snow-white .... chin R L ~... 420
Dint— enow takes any dint VA ~... 854
Dire— The dire imaginaUon " ..... 975
And the dire thought R L 972
war and dire events VA 1159
Directed— are bright in dark .... Son 43 4
Direction- by their own direction VA — . 216
Directly— yet not directly tell Son 144 10
yet not directly tell PP 2 10
Direfhl — stem and .... god of war VA 98
exclaiming on the direful night R L ~... 741
Dli^e— Begins the sad dirge " ..... 1612
Disabled— by limping sway disabled <Sim 66 8
Dlaarm*d — by a virgin hand disann'd " 154 8
Dlsbnrsed — And all my fame that
lives disbursed be R L ..... 1203
Discern- wherein it shall discern " 619
Discharge — . . . . one word of woe " 1605
Discharged— from .... cannon fumes " ..... 1043
Disciplined— Who ..... ay, dieted L C ~... 261
DIscloaea— their masked buds .... Son 54 8
Dlscolonr'd— and lean .... cheek R L ..... 708
Discontent— servile to all discon-
Son
II
LC
be-
PP
tenU VA
in shows of discontent R L
thus attired in discontent "
blow of thralled discontents
her poor infant's discontent
By discontent so breaking
Thy discontent thou didst
queath
Discord — Melodious discord, heavenly
tune VA
My restless discord loves no stops R L
Dlsconrae — Bid me discourse VA
My thoughts and my discourse Son
Discovery — discovery of her way VA
She dares not therefore make dis-
covery R L
Disdain— in a dull disdain VA
Servile to my coy disdain
smiles as in disdain
l>ondage in disdain "
i(
<i
1161
M... 15<XI
1601
124 7
143 8
M... do
10 12
1124
~... 145
147 11
..... 1314
83
..... 112
.... 241
••.•• 894
DISDAIN
76
DIVIDE
Disdftln — and such disdain VA ~... 501
wiU hold thee In disdain " ~... 761
disdain and deadly enmity B L 603
hang their heads at this disdain " ..... 521
converts to cold disdain ^ 691
torments me with disdain Son 132 2
with too much disdain " 140 2
was wounded with disdain PP 16 11
i>udatfi— dishonour to disdain htm R L 844
Disdain to him disdained scraps *' 987
disdains the tillage Son 3 6
Disdained— eyes disdain'd the woo-
ing VA 858
disdained scraps to give R L 987
Disdalneth— my love no whit .... Son 33 13
DIsdalnftilly— . ... did sting R L 40
Disease— longer nurseth the disease Son 147 2
Diseased— To be diseased "118 8
For men diseased " 154 12
Disgrace— love but to disgrace it VA 412
disgrace me half so ill Son 89 5
As I'll myself disgrace " 89 - 7
May time disgrace " 126 8
/>i«srraoe— blush at her own disgrace R L 479
The same disgrace which they
themselves behold " 751
lies martyr'd with disgrace " 802
unseen shame ! invisible disgrace " ..... 827
Of her disgrace " 1320
When, in disgrace with fortune Son 29 1
to west, with this disgrace " 33 8
and cures not the disgrace *' 34 8
and doing me disgrace " 103 8
if not lives in disgrace " 127 8
cures all disgrace in me P P 3 8
Disgraced— he stands disgraced R L »... 718
in them doth stand disgraced ** ..... 183;{
perfection wrongfully disgraced Son 66 7
Disgalse— policy did him disguise R L ~... 1815
Disguised — with chaps and wrinkles
were disguised " ..... 1452
Dishevell'd— with long .... hair VA 147
in my dishevell'd hair R L ~... 1129
DUhonour— O foul dishonour to my
household's grave " — . 198
To privilege dishonour ** 621
Black lust, dishonour, shame " ..... 654
For it had been dishonour " «... 844
Dishonoured- my body so . ... " ..... 1185
to deprive dishonour'd life " ..... 1186
DifUoin'd— till breathless he ... . VA ..... 541
Disliking— dark, disliking eye *' ' 182
Dismal— This dismal cry ** ~... 889
Dismay'd— her senses all dlsmay'd " 896
and will not be dismay'd R L ~... 273
Dismiss — Dismiss your vows V A 425
Dismoant— his watery eyes he did
dismount L C 281
Disorder— Disorder breeds by heat-
ing VA 742
Dispatch — and makes all swift .... Son 143 3
Dispensation- with good thoughts
makes dispensation R L 248
Dispense— never will dispense " ..... 1070
1 thus far can dispense " 1279
with the foul act dispense " 1704
with my neglect I do dispense iSb» 112 12
Disperse— under
disperse
thee their poesy
((
78
Dispersed— in thy sea dispersed R L .... 6m
The dispersed air '< ..... 1806
DIsplaeett— and displacest laud *' 887
Display— dim darkness doth display " ..... 118
DIsplay'd— his gaudy banner is ... . " 272
Disposed—. ... to set me light Son 88 1
Dispofllng-To the disposing VA ..... 1040
Disposition— with noble disposition iZZ ..... 1696
Dispraise— Cannot dispraise but in a
kind Son 95 7
DispatatloB— graceless holds he dis-
putation R L ~... 246
made a theme for disputation " ..... 822
Holds disputation with each thing " ..... 1101
Dissemble— the boar, not to ... . VA ..... 641
Dlssenbied— thus .... her delight P P 19 16
Dissembled with an outward show " 19 88
Dissension— And set dissension VA . 1160
Dlssentloas—Dlssentious Jealousy ** 657
Dissolve — Would in thy palm dissolve " 144
dissolves w^ith tempering " 565
Dissolved— For stones to water R L 592
DIssolntioB-frost hath dissolution " 855
Dissuade—. . . . one foolish heart Son 141 10
Distain- silver-shining queen he
would dlstain R L ..... 786
Distalned— her tear-distaincd eye " ..... 1586
Distance— Injurious distance should
not stop Son 44 2
With safest distance L C 151
But kept cold distance " 237
Distance and no space, was seen P T 80
Distant — And comely-distant sits heL C 65
Dbitemper*d — a sad .... guest Son 153 12
Distempering — .... gentle love VA 653
Distill— by verse distills your truths &m 64 14
Distillation— summer's distillation ''5 9
DlNtlii*d— But flowers distill'd " 6 13
ere thou be distill'd "62
Distill'd from limbecks " 119 2
Dbtiliing — with such .... showers VA 66
Distinct— Two distincts, division
none P T ..... 27
Distinguish — . . . . what he said R L ~... 1785
Dbtract— Their distract parcels L C 231
Distractedly— sight .... commix'd " ..... 28
Distraction— In the distraction Son 119 8
Distress— Distress likes dumps RL 1127
where all distress is steird " ..... 1444
distress and dolour dwell'd ** ~... 1446
Distressed— upon her back deeply
distress'd VA .... 814
her heart, poor citizen ! distrpss'd R L 465
Distnrb— stealing in the feast V A .... 450
Disturb his hours of rest R L ~... 974
Dlstarbed- with disturbed mind V A .... 840
From sleep disturbed R L .... 454
Disinrblng— where love reigns, di»-
turbiug Jealousy VA .... 649
Ditty— a woeful ditty " .... 836
welcome daylight with her ditty P P 15 7
there sung the dolefuU'st ditty ** 21 11
Dive-dapper— Like a dive-dapper VA — . 86
Divert— Divert strong minds Son 115 8
Diverted — Sometime diverted their
poor balls L C .... 24
Divide— from her breast it doth .... R L 1737
How to divide the conquest Son 46 2
with his hearing to divide L C .... 67
DOTH
80
DOVE
Doth— Doth homage to his new-ap-
pearing sight Son 7
in the world' doth spend " 9
for ornament doth use " 21
his fair doth rehearse ** 21
that doth cover thee " 22
Which in thy breast doth live ** 22
But day doth daily draw " 28
And night doth nightly make " 28
buried love doth live " 81
Yet doth it steal sweet hours " 86
that this shadow doth such sub-
stance give " 87
Which time and thoughts so sweet-
ly doth deceive " 89
who doth hence remain " 89
even so doth she abuse me " 42
shadows doth make bright " 43
sleep in sightless eyes doth stay " 43
My heart doth plead " 46
doth that plea deny " 46
each doth good turns " 47
with sighs himself doth smother " 47
then my eye doth feast " 47
in his thoughts of love dOth share
a part " 47
Doth teach that ease " 60
same groan doth put this in my
mind " 50
which the robe doth hide " 62
The one doth shadow " 58
bounty doth appear " 63
much more doth beauty " 54
that sweet ornament which truth
doth give " 54
sweet odour which doth in it live ** 64
to you it doth belong " 68
Time that gave doth now his gift
confound " 60
Time doth transfix the flourish " 60
that doth my rest defeat " 61
a map doth Nature store " 68
world's eye doth view " 69
slander doth but prove " 70
vice the sweetest buds doth love " 70
night doth take away " 78
on the ashes of his youth doth lie " 78
every word doth almost " 76
sick Muse doth give " 79
thy poet doth invent " 79
beauty doth he give " 79
what in thee doth live " 79
which he doth say " 79
spirit doth use your name " 80
proudest sail doth bear '* 80
doth wilfully appear . " 80
he upon your soundless deep doth
ride " 80
modern quill doth come too short " 83
what worth in you doth gn^ow " 83
penury within that pen doth dwell " 84
as a dream doth flatter " 87
on thy humour doth depend " 92
my life on thy revolt doth lie " 92
doth thy beauty grow " 93
Doth spot the l>eauty " 95
beauty's veil doth cover " 95
knife ill used doth lose his edge " 96
ear that doth thy lays esteem " 100
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Doth — owner's tongue doth publish Son 102 4
Philomel in summer's front doth
sing " 102 7
Ah, yet doth beanty like a " 104 9
which methinks still doth sUnd " 104 11
in thy breast doth lie " 109 4
pity doth the impression fill " 112 1
Doth part his function ** 118 8
which it doth latch "113 6
holds what it doth catch " 113 8
Or whether doth my mind *' 114 1
palate doth prepare *' 114 12
and doth first begin ** 114 14
that which still doth grow " 115 14
what we see doth lie " 123 11
Doth half that glory "182 8
mourning doth thee grace " 132 11
bond that him as. fast doth bind " 134 8
Doth follow night "145 11
which doth preserve the ill " 147 8
love doth well denote " . 148 7
my best doth worship " 149 11
brightness doth not grace the day " 150 4
My soul doth tell my body " 151 7
at thy name doth point out " 151 9
landlord which doth owe them L C 140
that on this earth doth shine PP 3 10
doth ravish human sense "86
My heart doth charge the watch " 16 2
Doth cite each moving sense " 15 3
For she doth welcome daylight " 15 7
A woman's nay doth stand for
nought " 19 42
He with thee doth bear a part " 21 56
the anthem doth commence P T ~... 21
To eternity doth rest " «... 58
Doting — now must doting Tarqnin
make It L ..... 155
from thy doting eyne " „... 643
doting father of his fruit " 1064
Had doting Priam check'd " 1490
as she wrought thee, fell a-doting Son 20 10
to my dear doting heart " 131 3
Doable— done me double wrong VA 429
that the debt should double " 521
with a thousand doubles " 682
'Tis double death to drown R L 1114
given grace a double majesty Son 78 8
Nor double penance " 111 12
this double voice accorded L C 3
Single nature's double name P T 39
Donbled— each several limb is ... . VA ..... 1067
Doable-lock— double-lock the door " 448
Donble-vantage— . ... me Sun 88 12
Donbt— hounds are driven to doubt VA 692
Who, overcome by doubt " ..... 891
I shall not know, but live in doubt PP 2 13
on the doubts of my decay " 14 4
I ne'er know, but live in doubt Son 144 13
wavering st^xid in doubt L C 97
Donbt All— a vain and doubtful good PP 13- 1
A doubtful goiid, a gloaa " 13 5
Long was the combat doubtful " 10 5
Doubting— Doubting the filchingagejSSon 75 6
doubting of the rest " 115 12
Dove — than doves or roses are VA 10
Two St reugthless doves " 153
doves that sit a-billing " 366
yokes her silver doves " ..... 1190
DOVE
81
DROWN
-From Vemu' doret doth chal-
leoge R L 58
The dore sleeps fast " 360
The crow or dove, it shapes them Son ilfi 12
MUdss adore PP 7 2
than her milk-white dore "93
To the phoenix and thedore P T 50
BtwlaBd— Dowland to thee is dear PP S 5
BswB— o'er the downs VA 677
The stain npon his silver down B L ~... 1012
His phflenlx down began L C ~... 93
l>i as a long as he was down VA 43
down Adonis sits ** 825
down she kneels " 350
she flttly falleth down " ~... 463
She iinketh down " 693
Flock down the rich " 1150
itnight be stmcken down Ji L 217
tetter'd down her consecrated wall ** »... 723
thst down thy cheeks are raining ** ~... 1271
Whst wit sets down ** .... 1299
Wsgg'd up and down " 1406
Sinks down to death iSon 45 8
I can let down a story " 88 6
Book both mj wilfulness and er-
rors down " 117 9
6eti down her babe " 143 3
Anddownllaid LC 4
So dida he down ** ~... 64
weighs down the airy scale " 226
The golden bullet beaU it down P P 19 30
iawa-rased— lofty towers I see Son 64 3
Itewiright— fell I not downright VA 645
towaward— . . . . eye still looketh " ~... 1106
current downward flow'd apace L C 284
Bowry— the dowry of a lawful bed R L 938
DralaM— When hours hare drain'd
faU blood Son «S 8
Braw— draw me through the sky VA 153
Thst she wUl draw " 552
dnw» up her breath " 929
To draw the cloud R L . ... 871
Draw not thy sword " 626
and back the same grief draw " 1673
Kor draw no lines there Son 19 10
They draw but what they see " 24 14
daily draw loy sorrows " 28 13
Brawn— Even so, the curtain drawn R L ..... 874
is drawn the power of Greece " ^...1368
would be drawn out too long " 1616
drawn by your own sweet skill Son 16 14
Mioe eyes bare drawn thy shape " 24 10
Drawn after you, you pattern " 98 12
was in little drawn L C 90
Brtad— wondrous dread VA 635
DKrther of dread and fear R L 117
between desire and dread " 171
0, this dread night " 965
BnadHk— the heart that shadows
dreadeth '< ~... 270
BrsadAil—withdreadful prophecies T/l 928
by dreadful fancy waking R L 450
with more dreadful sights " 462
in the dreadful dead " 1625
coostrain'd with dreadfiil circum-
stance " ..... 1703
thy voice his dreadful thunder PP 5 11
BrMdftilly— she is dreadfully beset R L ..... 444
Brtadlng — . . . . the winter's near Son 97 14
6
Dreading— Dreading my love PP 7 10
Dream— <io seldom dream on evil R L 87
A dream, a breath " 212
If Collatinus dream of my intent " 218
Thoughts are but dreams ** 353
starts Collatine as from a dream " 1772
in dreams they look on thee Son 43 8
when dreams do show thee '* 43 14
as a dream doth flatter " 87 18
Before, a Joy proposed ; behind, a
dream " 129 12
Dreaming—. ... on things to come " 107 2
dark dreaming night P P 15 8
Dregs— but lost the dregs of life Son 74 9
Dreneh'd— Or in the ocean VA 494
that his wounds wept, was drench'd " 1054
deep-drenched in a sea of care R L ~... 1100
Dress — to dress his beauty new Son 68 12
Dresa'd— dress'd in all his trim '* 98 2
Dreasing- is dressing old words new " 76 11
dressings of a former sight *' 123 4
Drew — and backward drew VA 641
painter drew so proud R L 1371
this mild image drew " 1520
from the purple fountain Brutus
drew " 1734
from a maund she drew L C ..... 86
afflicted fancy fastly drew " 61
Dried — Scarce had the sun dried up
the dewy morn PP 6 1
Drink— More thirst for drink VA 92
Hisnostrilsdrink theair " ..... 273
Dost thou drink tears " 949
that gave drink to thee R L 577
bis breath drinks up again " 1666
like a willing patient I will drink Son 111 9
Drink up the monarch's plague "114 2
most kingly drinks it up " 114 10
Drive— To drive infection VA 508
drives the creeping thief R L SOS
drives away dark dreaming night P P 15 8
Drlren- hounds arc to doubt VA ..... 692
Drone-like— and I a drone-like hee R L 8.36
Droop — Doth make them droop VA 666
Drooping— keep my .... eyelids Son 27 7
Drop — ^an orient drop beside VA 981
by drops of hot desire " ..... 1074
Which in round drops " 1170
should drop on them R L ..... 686
huge stones with little water-drops " 959
with swelling drops 'gan wet " 1228
Many a dry drop " 1375
of her drops spilling " »... 1236
And drop sweet balm " 1466
His eye drops fire " 1562
And do not drop in for an after loss Son 90 4
Now with the drops " 107 9
our drops this diflference bore L C 300
Dropp'd— dropp'd a precious Jewel VA 824
of her bosom dropp'd " 958
Dropping— Green-dropping sap " 1176
Dross — in selling hours of dross Son 146 1 1
Drouth- yet complain on drouth VA 544
Drown — labour drowns for want of
skill R L 1099
to drown in ken of shore " 1114
And then they drown their eyes " 1230
To drown one woe " 1680
Then can I drown an eye Son 30 5
L
DROWN
82
EACH
Ihrowa— nor grows with heat, nor
drowns with showers Son 124 12
Drowii'd — when she seemeth .... VA ~... 984
never drown'd him R L ..... 266
I in deep delight am chiefly
drown'd PP % 11
Dmdge— thy poor drudge to he Son 151 11
Dmg— Drugs poison him " 118 14
Drnm — Scorning his churlish drum VA 107
Drumming— Uis drumming heart R L ~... 435
Dmnk— What potions have I drunk iSbn 119 1
Drunken — of a drunken brain V A 910
Who is but drunken *' ..... 984
Drunken Desire must vomit R L ..... 703
Dry — blow them dry again V A ..... 62
those hills be dry *' 233
lips' rich treasure dry '* ..... 552
Dries up his oil " 758
sought still to dry " ..... 964
Sighs dry her cheeks ** ..... 966
who first should dry " 1092
As dry com bustious matter " ..... 1162
To dry the old oak's sap RL ..... 930
Many a dry drop " 1375
To dry the rain Som 34 6
Dnek— ducks as quickly in VA 87
Due — And as his due writ in my tes-
tament RL ..... 1183
To eat the worldl due Son 1 14
That due of many now ** 81 12
That due to thee ** 39 8
mine eye's due " 46 13
give thee that due " 69 3
but earth, which is his due " 74 7
Dag — swelling dugs do ache VA 875
Dull— in a dull disdain '* 33
image dull and dead '* «... 212
Looks on the dull earth " 340
From forth dull sleep R L 450
serves with dull debaters ** ..... 1019
but dull and slow she seems " 1336
If the dull substance Son 44 1
Of my dull bearer " 51 2
Shall neigh,— no dull fleah " 51 11
'tis with so dull a cheer " 97 13
I would not dull you "102 14
o'er dull and speechless tribes " 107 12
Dnlllng—Dulling my lines " 103 8
Dnllnem— with a perpetual dullness " 56 8
Dally— Plods dully on " 50 6
Damb— And all this dumb play V A 359
Though I were dumb " 406
Strike the wise dumb " 1146
All orators are dumb R L 268
he by dumb demeanour " ..... 474
Sometime her grief is dumb " 1105
be yon mute and dumb " 1123
Hath served a dumb arrest ** 1780
And dumb presagers Son 23 10
For who's so dumb ** 38 7
taught the dumb on high " 78 5
be most my glory, being dumb " 83 10
Me for ray dumb thoughts " 85 14
wilt thou be dumb " 101 9
Dambljr— Dumbly she passions VA 1059
Damps— Distress likes dumps R L 1127
Dan— why then her breasts are dun Son 130 3
Darings— bear an ever-during blame R L 224
Dont— But durst not ask of her " .... 1228
Dont— Or durst inhabit on a living
brow Son 68 4
Dost— And smear with dust R L .... 945
and smeared ail with dust " .... 1881
my bones with dust Son 82 2
Weighs not the dust *« 108 10
Dateoaa — yet the duteous vassal R L .... 1360
The eyes 'fore duteous Scm 7 11
Doty— to get it is thy duty VA 168
did him peculiar duties R L .... 14
'gainst law or duty " .... 497
For fleeUwing'd duty " .... 1216
His kindled duty kindled *' .... 1352
hath my duty strongly knit Son 26 2
To witness duty " 26 4
Duty so great " 26 5
In personal duty L C .... 180
Dwell— dwells upon my suit VA .... 206
within her bosom it shall dwell *' .... 1173
hot-burning fire doth dwell R L .... 1557
where every eye doth dwell Son 5 2
and dwell in lover's eyes *' 55 14
with vilest worms to dwell " 71 4
within that pen doth dweU " 84 5
no more shall dwell "89 10
sweet love should ever dwell " 93 10
for complexion dwells " 99 4
To dwell with him L C .... 129
Dweird— all distress and dolour
dwell'd R L .... 1446
Dweller— Have I not seen dwellers Son 125 5
Dwelling— Love lack'd a dwdHing L C 82
Dye — have full as deep a dye Son 54 5
with damask dye to grace her P P 1 5
Forth their dye " 18 40
Dyed— thou hast too grossly dyed Son 99 5
of truth ill beauty dyed "101 2
Dyer— like the dyer's hand " 111 7
Dying— Even as a dying coal VA 838
This dying virtue R L .... 223
A dying life to living infamy " .... 1055
That dying fear " 1266
And dying eyes " .... 1378
Like dying coals burnt out " 1379
there's no more dying then Son 146 14
Each— Each leaning on their elbows VA .... 44
in each cheek appears " .... 242
each other did destroy " .... 346
Each part in me " 436
they kiss each other " .... 606
Each envious brier " 705
£Iach shadow makes him stop, each
murmur stay " 706
From whom each lamp " .... 861
numbs each feeling part " 892
view'd each other's sorrow " 968
each passion labours so " 969
each tributary subject " 1045
each part doth so surprise " 1049
each several limb " 1067
interchange each other's seat R L 70
each one by him enforced " 803
As each unwilling portal " 809
income of each precious thing ** 834
Each in her sleep " 404
hearers to attend each line " .... 818
with each thing she views " ... 1101
So I at each sad strain " .. . 1181
DOTH
80
DOVE
IMli— Doth homage to his new-ap-
pemring sight 9im 7
in the world'doth spend ** 9
for omsment doth use " 21
his fair doth rehearse " 21
that doth cover thee " 22
Which in thy breast doth lire " 22
But day doth daily draw " 28
And night doth nightly make ** 28
haried love doth live ** 81
Yet doth it steal sweet hours ** 86
that this shadow doth such sab-
stance give ** 87
Which time and thoughts so sweet-
ly doth deceive ** 89
who doth hence remain " 89
even so doth she abuse me ** 42
sliadows doth make bright " 43
sleep in sightless eyes doth stay " 43
My heart doth plead " 46
doth that plea deny ** 46
each doth good turns " 47
with sighs himself doth smother " 47
then my eye doth feast ** 47
in his thoughts of love d6th share
a part "47
Doth teach that ease ** 50
same groan doth put this in my
mind ** SO
which the robe doth hide ** 62
The one doth shadow ** 63
bounty doth appear ** 53
much more doth beauty " 54
that sweet ornament which truth
doth give " 54
sweet odour which doth in it lire ** 54
to you it doth belong *' 58
Time that gave doth now his gift
confound ** 60
Time doth transfix the flourish ** 60
that doth my rest defeat " 61
a map doth Nature store " 68
world's eye doth view ** 69
slander doth but prove " 70
vice the sweetest buds doth lore " 70
night doth take away ** 73
on the sshes of his youth doth lie " 73
every word doth almost *' 76
sick Muse doth give *' 79
thy poet doth invent " 79
beauty doth he give " 79
what in thee doth live ** 79
which he doth say " 79
spirit doth use your name *' 80
proudest sail doth bear ** 80
doth wilfully appear " 80
he upon your soundless deep doth
ride " 80
modem quill doth come too short " 83
what worth in you doth grow ** 83
penury within that pen doth dwell " 84
ss a dream doth flatter ** 87
on thy humour doth depend ** 92
my life on thy revolt doth lie " 92
doth thy beauty grow " 93
Doth spot the beauty ** 95
beauty's veil doth cover '* 95
knife ill used doth lose his edge " 95
ear that doth thy lays esteem " 100
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7
4
7
10
12
13
2
6
8
10
7
8
5
13
8
10
13
3
11
14
7
Dotli— owner's tongue doth paUish 9im 102
Philomel in summer's front doth
sing
Ah, yet doth beanty like a
which methinks still doth stand
in thy breast doth lie
pity doth the impression flll
Doth part his function
which it doth latch
holds what it doth cateh
Or whether doth my mind
palate doth prepare
and doth flrst begin
that which stUl doth grow
what we see doth lie
Doth half that glory
mourning doth thee grace
bond that him as. fast doth bind
Doth follow night
which doth preserve the ill
love doth well denote
my best doth worship
brightness doth not grace the day
My soul doth tell my body
at thy name doth point out
landlord which doth owe them
that on this earth doth shine
doth ravish human sense
My heart doth charge the watch
Doth cite each moving sense
For she doth welcome daylight
A woman's nay doth stand for
nought
He with thee doth bear a part
u
u
II
M
102
104
104
109
112
118
lis
113
114
114
114
115
128
182
132
131
145
147
.148
•• 149
" 150
•• 151
« 151
PP 8
u
II
•I
u
u
II
8
15
15
15
19
21
Jt A ■••••
u
II
II
•I
11
20
131
VA
M
RL
Son
ti
78
111
the anthem doth commence
To eternity doth rest
Doting—now must doting Tarquin
make R L ~...
from thy doting ejne
doting father of his fruit
Had doting Priam check'd
as she wrought thee, fell a-doting Son
to my dear doting heart
Donblf — done me double wrong
that the debt should double
with a thousand doubles
*Tis double death to drown
given grace a double majesty
Nor double penance
this double voice accorded
Single nature's double name
Donbled — each several limb is . ,
Donble-loek— double-lock the door **
Donble-vantage— . ... roe Son 88
Doabt — hounds are driven to doubt VA .....
Who, overcome by doubt " .....
I shall not know, but live in doubt PP 2
on the doubts of my decay '* 14
I ne'er know, but live in doubt Sotn 144
wavering stood in doubt L C
Donbtftil— a vain and doubtful good PP
A doubtful good, a gloss **
Long was the combat doubtful *'
Doubting— Doubting the filching age Sm
duubting of the rest "
Dove — than doves or roses are VA
Two strongthless doves
doves that sit a-bilHng
yokes her silver doves
LC
PT
VA
7
9
11
4
1
8
6
8
1
12
14
14
11
8
11
8
11
8
7
11
4
7
9
140
10
6
2
8
7
42
56
21
58
155
643
1064
1490
10
3
429
521
682
1114
8
12
3
39
1067
448
12
692
891
13
4
1?
9'
K
II
13-
13
16
75
115
EATER
84
END
Kater— Eater of youth, false slave R L ~... 927
Batlagr — themarrow-eatingsicknessK^ ~... 741
Were an alt-eating shame Son 2 8
Ebb — And sorrow ebbs, being blown R L ~... 1330
Thus ebbs and flows *' ~... 1569
Ebon— Not Death's ebon dart VA ~... 948
Echo — spend their mouths: Echo
replies " ~... 695
And twenty echoes ** ~... 834
still the choir of echoes ** ~... 840
Eeli|Mf — Clouds and eclipses stain Son 35 3
Crooked eclipbcs 'gainst his glory " 60 7
hath her eclipse endured ** 107 5
Erllpsed — suns weie cloud-eclipsed
so RL ~... 1224
Eortasy—ln a trembling ecstasy Y A 895
her suffering ecstasy assuage L C ~... 69
Eddy— Yet in the eddy bonndcth in
his pride R L ~... 1669
Edge— Thy edge should blunter be &mi 56 2
the kuife ill used doth lose his edge " 95 14
even to the edge of doom *' 116 12
This bateless edge R L ~... 9
Effefi— The warm effects V A ^... 605
But Lust's effect " »... 800
robb'd of his effect " «... 1132
All pure effects, and doth RL ~... 251
till their effects be tried " ~... 353
His venom in effect " 5.T2
8uch devils steal effects " «... 1555
Beauty's effect with beauty Son 5 11
alter not love's sole effect '• 36 7
my dumb thoughts, speaking in
effect " 85 14
Effects of terror L C ~... 202
O cleft effect ** «... 293
Effecting— nought at all effecting VA 912
fell cxploiU effecting R L 429
Effectually—but effectually is out ^n 113 4
Elsel— Potions of eisel "111 10
Either— Till either gorge be stuff'd VA 58
Of cither's colour R L 66
of either being so great '• «... 69
Swelling on either side *' «... 389
Whose love of either " «... 1165
The face of either dpher'd either's
heart '* 1396
though enemies to cither's reign San 28 5
badges of cither's woe ** 44 14
8o, either by thy picture " 47 9
Either not assail'd " 70 10
In cither's aptness L C 306
To put in practice either PP 16 7
Either was the other's mine P T «... 36
To themselves yet either neither " 43
That are either true or fair " «... 66
Elbow— leaning on their elbows V A ^... 44
Elder— How can I then be elder Son 22 8
Element^water-galls in her dim
element R L 1588
by elements so slow Son 44 13
these quicker elements are gone *' 45 5
Eloquence — Her modest eloquence
with sighs is mixed R L 663
my books be then the eloquence Son 23 9
Else — or else be mute VA «... 208
nothing else he sees " «... 287
For nothing else " «... 288
Else, suffer'd, it will set ** .^. 888
Else — or else some shame supposed R L .^ S77
or else his quality ** «... 875
would else have come to me ** .^ 916
And what wrong else may be im-
agined ** .^ 1823
else lasting shame *' ..^ 1629
Or else this glutton be 9m 1 18
Or else rcceivest with pleasure ** 8 4
Or else of thee " 14 IS
thou gavest it else mistaking *' 87 10
None else to me ** 112 7
« and all things else are thine L C «... 266
Elsewhere— whilst thou dost wake
elsewhere Son 61 18
Tell me thou lovest elsewhere ** 189 6
That they elsewhere might dart " 139 12
ElyslnM— To clip Elysium VA «... 600
Enbarked— a late-embarked friend ** «... 818
^Mbaasy — In tender .... of love Son 45 6
EMbracf — a sweet embrace VA «... 689
from the sweet embrace " «... 811
f^om their strict embrace " «... 874
to embrace mine infamy R L «... 504
seeing thee embrace him " «... 518
Embraced— the warlike god .... mo P P 11 6
EMbracemeat— Beating his kind
embracenients VA «... 812
that lends embracenients *' «... 790
Embracing— with her hard .... ** «... 659
brambles and embracing bushes *' «... 629
girdle with embracing llames R L «... 6
Ember— Which, in pale embers hid '* «... 5
Embroidered- Embroider'd all with
leaves PP 20 12
Emerald— The deep-green emerald L C «... 218
Emptied— Have emptied all their
fountains " ..^ 255
Empty— Even as an empty eagle VA «... 65
through the empty skies ** «... 1191
Emnlation— Seeing such emulation RL «... 1808
Enacted— policy remains enacted ** «... 529
Eneamp^d— Encamp'd in hearts L C «... 208
Enchained— Caucell'd my fortunes
and enchained me R L «... 984
Enchant— I will enchant thine ear VA «... 145
did enchant the mind L C «... 88
Enchanted- Enchanted Tarquin an-
swers R L «... 83
and sexes both enchanted L C «... 128
Enchanting- rouudenchantingplts IM «... 247
Sinon, whose enchanting story R L 1521
Enclose — his traitor eye encloses " «... 73
which their hue encloses L C «... 287
Enclosed- and keep themselves ....RL 378
Here enclosed in cinders lie P T 65
Encompami'd— encompass'd with a
winding maze R L 1151
Encounter— fur the hot encounter VA 696
If thou encounter •* „... 672
which no encounter dare " 676
Encouraging — As 'twere encourag-
ing the Greeks to fight R L «... 1402
Encrimson'd— and the .... mood L C «... 201
End — now stand on end VA «... 272
but unsavoury end ** «... 1138
finds no excuse nur end R L «... 238
to a great, good end ** «... 528
my life's fair end shall free it " «... 1208
to this end from me derived " ..... 175S
END
85
ENTREAT
&i4— bath in the world an end Son 9 11
Againat ibis coming end *' 13 3
Thf end is truth's and beauty's
doom and date '* 14 14
my weary traTel's end •* 50 2
the world-wit bout-end hour " 57 5
oar minutes hasten to their end " 60 2
my life hath end " 92 6
haTe what shall hare no end " 110 9
•he altered with an end " 145 9
ii this thy body's end " 146 8
Aagur of the fever's end P T 7
JSM—Aod where she ends VA ~... 60
the story aptly ends " 716
Eod without audience " »46
End thy ill aim Ji L 579
tn boor great strifes to end " ~... 899
to end a hapless life ** 1045
the fatal knife, to end his TOW " »... 1843
ksKs are r^ored and sorrows end Son 30 14
ln4«ared— Thy bosom is endearod " 31 1
Ia4fd— hath ended in the west VA »... 530
before thy shoot be ended B L 579
Philomel had ended " ~... 1079
For now my song is ended P P 16 16
bier— my origin and ender L C 222
Ife41a9->the world hath ending with
thy Ufe VA -... 12
date of never-ending woes B L 9:)5
dirge of her certain ending '* .... 1612
oat to the ending doom Son 55 12
bdlev— To endless date of never-
ending woes R L 935
<riives of endless age Son 107 8
bd«w'd— Look, whom she best ... . •' 11 11
bd«r»— their verdure still endure VA 507
in her poison'd closet yet endure R L 1659
Ifrely heat, still to endure Son 153 6
IMv«d— their dolour others hare
endured R L »... 1582
hath her eclipse endured San 107 5
beaiy — Finding their enemy V A ..... 887
light and lust are deadly enemies R L 674
hatier'd by the enemy " 1171
Greeks that are thine enemies " ..... 1470
lUne enemy was strong ** .... 1646
thongh enemies to either's rdgn Son 28 5
have been mine enemies ** 139 10
falkekled— that enfeebled mine '* 86 14
laferted— I enforced this fire R L .... 181
Each one by him enforced ** 803
if not, enforced hate ^ .... 668
enforced by sympathy ** .... 1228
therefore art enforced to seek anew jjim 82 7
bftrtMieHt^Byfonl enforcement is Xr .... 1623
lnflnuidittiB9>— Enfranchising his
mouth VA 396
■■ffaM— Once more the engine " .... 3G7
bglrt—engirts so white a foe " 364
that hath engirt his marriage R L 221
engirt with daring infamy *" 1173
ft«UrtmM»-TiU looking on an
EagUshman PP 16 3
Ikfnfl— I engraft you new Son 15 14
bignfM— my love engrafted to
this store " 37 8
hgiiw tt wOl live engmyen in
my ftce R L .... 203
harder hast .... Son 183 6
•••••
1164
512
9
10
29
8
•«•••
22
129
5
75
5
70
12
152
11
603
55
9
Enjoy— their loves shall not enjoy VA
this night I must enjoy thee R L
fur still the world enjoys it San
With what I most enjoy "
Enjoy'd— enjoy'd but of a few R L
Enjoy'd no sooner but despised
straight San
Enjoyer — Now proud as an enjoyer "
Enlarged— envy evennore enlarged "
Enlighten — And to enlighten tlioe "
Enmity— disdain and deadly enmity R L
death and all-oblivious enmity San
Eaoogh— within this limit is relief
enough V A 235
^is not enough that through Son 34 5
likeenough thou know'st '* 87 2
They had not skill enough " 106 12
your pity is enough to cure me "111 14
Is't not enough to torture me " 133 3
More than enough am I " 135 3
But soft! enough—too much PP 19 49
Enpatron— you enpatron me LC 224
Enraged— Being so enraged VA 29
how he is enragi-d " .... 317
Here, all enraged R L 1562
Enrich— i'nrich the poor V A .... 1150
and much enrich thy book Sun 77 14
Enrich'd — annexions of fair gems
enrich'd LC 208
Enseonee— do I ensconce roe here <Sm 49 9
Enseoneed— so .... his secret evil R L 1515
Ensign— churliiAi drum and .... red VA 107
Ensnare— do not then ensnare me R L 584
Ensnared—. . . . thoe to this night " 485
Ensue — repentant tears .... the deed '* 502
another straight ensues *' .... 1104
and shame that might ensue " .... 1263
Ensnlng^-or any thing ensuing VA 1078
Enswathed— Enswathed, and scal'd L C .... 49
Enter— thy spear's point can enter VA .... 626
false sound enter there " .... 780
through which it enters " 890
and enter this sweet city R L .... 469
Soft pity enters at an iron gale " .... 595
Enterprise— of his loathsome .... " .... 184
Entertain— I did entertain thee *' .... 596
did 1 enU>rtain him " 842
The weary time she cannot enter-
tain " .... 1361
And entertain my love " .... 1629
To entertain the time with
thoughts of love San 39 11
Ent«rtaln*d— All entertain'd, each
passion VA .... 969
He entertain'd a show R L 1514
Entertainment— Witness the V A .... 1108
Entice — some mermaid did their
ears entice R L 1411
Quickly him they will entice P P 21 44
Entitled— Entitled in thy parts Son Zl 7
Entomb — Entombs her outcry R L 679
quoth she, ' your tunes entomb '* ....1121
Entombed— her head entombed is " 390
entombed in men's eyes Son 81 8
Entranee— No penetrable entrance
to her plaining R L ..... 559
Entreat— entreats, and prettily en-
treaU VA .... 73
as I entreat thee now '* .... 97
EACH
83
EAT
iMh— Each flower moistened It L 1227
each little mote will peep " .... 1261
wondering each other's chance " ~... 1596
Each present lord b^an " ~... 1696
burning head, each under eye Sum 7 2
Strikes each in each ** 8 10
Pointing to each his thunder " 14 6
And each, though enemies " 28 6
Both find each other *' 42 11
each doth good turns now unto the
other " 47 2
Each trifle under truest bars " 48 24
tame to suflTerance, bide each check '* 68 7
Each changing place " 60 3
each part will be forgotten " 81 4
I must each day say o'er "108 6
Till each to raxed oblirion ''122 7
For since each hand " 127 6
both to each friend "144 11
Each eye that saw him L C 89
Each stone's dear nature ** »... 210
each several stone " ~... 216
Each cheek a river " 283
both to each friend PP 2 11
Between each kiss "78
Doth cite each moving sense " 16 8
each minute seems a moon " 16 16
Biger — tidings in my eager eyes R L 254
an eager combat fight " 1298
With eager compounds <S!m 118 2
Ea^le— Even as an empty eagle VA^... 55
But eagles gazed upon R L 1016
Save the eagle, feather'd king P T 11
far— For to a pretty ear VA 74
I will enchant thine ear " 145
His ears up-prick'd " -... 271
high crest, short ears " ..... 297
Ear's deep-sweet music " ..... 432
Had I no eyes but ears, my ears
would love " 433
neither eyes nor ears " 437
whispers in mine ear " 659
with listening ear " 698
Yet from mine ear " 778
armed in mine ear " 779
Mine ears, that to your wanton talk " 809
sadly in her ear " ..... 889
Shaking their scratch'd ears " ..... 924
with eye or ear " «... 1023
She whisperH in his ears " ..... 1125
From thievish ears R L .... 85
by our ears our hearts oft tainted
be " «... 38
He stories to her ears " «... 106
with open listening ear " «... 283
His ear her prayer admits " «... 558
notes to pleasing ears " «... 1126
interprets to the ear " «... 1325
mermaid did their ears entice " «... 1411
shadow'd by his neighbour's ear " «... 1416
do offend thine ear San 8 6
Sing to the ear that doth thy lays
esteem " 100 7
that mine ear confounds " 128 4
by mad ears believed be " 140 12
Nor are mine ears " 141 6
stories to delight his ear PP 4 5
By ringing in thy lady's ear " 19 28
to loond me on Ui' ear " 19 61
Early— Or being early pluck'd VA 628
Which she too early R L 1801
one «irly morn did shine Son 33 9
too early I attended L C «... 78
Eamcat— Her earnest eye did make
him R L 1856
Earth— Earth's sovereign salve VA «... 28
Upon the earth's increase " «... 168
Unless the earth " 170
The bearing earth " 267
Looks on the dull earth " 840
and all the earth relieveth " 484
in earth or heaven " 493
fall to the earth " 646
The earth, in love with thee " 722
on the earth would breed " 758
on earth usurp'd his name " 794
earth's worm, what dost thou " 938
earth's foundation shakes " 1047
marks thee for my earth's delight R L 487
From earth's dark womb " 549
By heaven and earth " 572
Seasoning the earth with showers " «... 796
As the dank earth weeps " «... 1180
But as the earth doth weep " 1226
that breathes the fat earth's store " «... 1837
And make the earth devour Son 19 2
with earth and sea's rich gems " 21 6
From sullen earth, sings hyihns " 29 12
Upon the farthest earth " 44 6
so much of earth and water " 44 11
nor earth nor boundless sea " 65 1
The earth can have but earth " 74 7
when I in earth am rotten " 81 2
The earth can yield me " 81 7
the centre of my sinful earth "146 1
To the orbed earth L C «... 26
that on this earth doth shine PP 3 10
Earth-delving— where earth-delv-
ing conies keep VA 687
Earthly— heavenly and earthly sun " 198
suck'd an earthly mother " 863
This earthly saint, adored R L 86
ne'er touch'd earthly faces Son 17 8
My vow was earthly P P 8 7
with such an earthly tongue " 6 14
Earthqnake— But like an ... . VA 648
Ease— With honour, wealth, and .,,,RL 142
ease to the pained " 901
Doth teach that ease San 50 3
with ease we prove " 136 7
Eased — oppression is not eased by
night " 28 8
Easeth — It easeth some, though
none it ever cured R L 1581
Easily— cannot be easily harm'd VA 627
Eaaing — keep him from heart-easing
words R L 1782
East— the grey cheeks of the east Son 132 6
throw gazes to the east PP 15 1
Eastern— to meet the eastern light R L 773
Easy— As easy might I . ^Sbn 109 8
Words arc easy, like the wind P P 21 S3
Eat — eats up Love's tender spring VA «... 656
water that doth eat in steel R L 755
To eat up errors " «... 937
To eat the world's due Son 1 14
canker eat him up to death " 99 13
Eat up thy charge " 146 8
i
t
I
k
r
III
EATER
84 END
Kater— Eater of youth, false slave R L 927
BatlBg — the marrow-eating sickness K^ 741
Were an all-eating shame Son 2 8
Ebb — And sorrow ebbs, being blown R L 1330
Thus ebbs and flows " 1569
EboD— Not Death's ebon dart VA 948
Echo— spend their mouths: Echo
replies " 695
And twenty echoes " 834
still the choir of echoes " 840
Eclipse — Clouds and eclipses stain Son 35 3
Crooked eclip6t» 'gainst his glory *' 60 7
hath her eclipse endured *' 107 5
Eclipsed— suns wete cloud-eclipsed
so RL 1224
Ecstasy— in a trembling ecstasy VA 895
her suffering ecstasy assuage L C — 69
Eddy— Yet In the eddy booudeth in
his pride R L 1669
Edge— Thy edge should blunter be 61cm 56 2
the knife ill used doth lose bis edge " 95 14
even to the edge of doom ** 116 12
This bateless edge R L 9
Effect- The warm effects VA 605
But Lust's effect " 800
robb'd of his effect " 1132
All pure effects, and doth R L ~... 251
till their effects be tried " 353
His venom in effect " 5:{2
Such devils steal effects " 1555
Beauty's effect with beauty Son 5 11
alter not love's sole effect " 36 7
my dumb thoughts, speaking in
effect " 85 14
Effects of terror L C 202
O cleft effect " ..... 293
Effecting— nought at all effecting VA 912
fell exploite effecting R L 429
Effectually—but effectually is out Son IIH 4
Elsel— Potions of eisel ''111 10
Either— Till either gorge be stuff'd VA 58
Of cither's colour R L 66
of either being so great '* «... 69
Swelling on either side " 389
Whose love of either " ~... 1165
The face of either clpher'd cither's
heart " 1396
though enemies to cither's reign Son 28 5
badges of cither's woe " 44 14
So, either by thy picture " 47 9
Either not assaii'd " 70 10
In cither's aptness L C 306
To put in practice either P P 16 7
Either was the other's mine P T 36
To themselves yet either neither " «... i^i
That are either true or fair " 66
Elbow— leaning on their elbows VA 44
Elder— now can I then be elder Son 22 8
Element — water-galls in her dim
element R L 1588
by elements so slow Son 44 13
these quicker elements are gone " 45 5
Eloquence — Her modest eloquence
with sighs is mixed R L 563
my books be then the eloquence Son 23 9
EIm — or else be mute VA 208
nothing else he sees " ..... 287
For nothing else " ..... 288
Else, suffered, it will set ** .... 888
M
182
182
Son 1
1
'* 8
" 14
1
" 87
1
" 112
Xr C «••••
26
Son 61
1
" 189
" 139
1
Else — or else some shame supposed R L ».~
or else his quality ** ....
would else have come to me
And what wrong else may be im-
agined
else lasting shame
Or else this glutton be
Or else rcceivest with pleasure
Or else of thee
thou gavest it else mistaking
None else to me
« and all things else are thine
Eltewhere— whilst thou dost wake
elsewhere
Tell me thou lovest elsewhere
That they elsewhere might dart
ElyslaM— To clip Elysium VA ....
Embarked — a late-embarked friend '* ....
Embaasy — In tender .... of love Son 45
Embrace — a sweet embrace VA ....
from the sweet embrace " ....
from their strict embrace " .
to embrace mine infamy R L ....
seeing thee cmbra<^e him " ....
Embraced— the warlike god.... me PP 11
Embraeement— Beating his kind
embracements VA ...
that lends embracements ** ....
Embracing— with her hard .... " ....
brambles and embracing bushes " ....
girdle with embracing flames R L ....
Ember — Which, in pale embers hid " ....
Embroidered- Embroider'd all with
leaves P P 20
Emerald- The deep-green emerald L C ....
Emptied — Have emptied all their
fountains " ....
Empty — Even as an empty eagle VA ....
through the empty skies " ....
Emulation- Seeingsucheraulation RL .... 18(
Enacted — policy remains enacted *' .... Si
Encamp'd- Encamp'd in hearts L C .... 21
Enchained — Caucell'd my fortunes
and enchained me R L ....
Enchant^I will enchant thine ear VA ....
did enchant the mind L C ....
Enchanted— Enchanted Tarquin an-
swers R L — .
and sexes both enchanted L C ....
Enchanting — round enchanting pits VA ....
Sinon, whose enchanting story R L ....
Enclose — his traitor eye encloses " ....
which their hue encloses L C ....
Enclosed — and keep themselves. . ..RL ....
Here enclosed in cinders lie P T
Eneompaw)*d — encompass'd with a
winding maze R L ....
Encounter- for the hot encounter VA ....
If thou encounter " ....
which no encounter dare " ....
Encouraging — As 'twere encourag-
ing the Greeks to fight R L ....
Encrimson'd — and the .... mood L C ....
End — now stand on end
but unsavoury end
finds no excuse nor end
to a great, good end
my life's fair end shall free it
to this end from me derived
VA ..
R L ..»
u
(I
END
85
ENTREAT
Sb4— hath in the world an end Son 9 11
Against this coming end " 13 3
Thy end is truth's and beauty's
doom and date ** 14 14
my weary tracers end " 60 2
the world-withoutoeud hour " 57 5
our minutes hasten to their end '* 60 2
my life hath end *' 92 6
have what shall hare no end ** 110 9
she altered with an end " 145 9
is this thy body's end ** 146 8
Augur of the fever's end P T 7
.J&uf— And whore she ends VA^... 60
the story aptly ends " 716
End without audience " ..... 846
End thy ill aim M L 579
an hour great strifes to end " »... 899
to end a hapless life ** 1045
the &tal knife, to end his TOW '< 1843
losses are restored and sorrows end Son 30 14
^bdeared— Thy bosom is endeared " 81 1
laded— hath ended in the west VA ..... 530
before thy shoot be ended R L 579
Philomel had ended " ..... 1079
For now my song is ended P P 16 16
Sader — my origin and ender LC 222
Sadlag— the world hath ending with
thy Ufe VA -... 12
date of nerer-ending woes R L 9:f5
dirge of her certain ending ** .... 1612
out to the ending doom Son 55 12
Sadleaa — ^To endless date of never-
ending woes R L ..... 935
olives of endless age Son 107 8
ladew'd— Look, whom she best ....*' 11 11
Sadare — their verdure still endure VA 507
in her poison'd closet yet endure R L 1659
lively heat, still to endure Son 153 6
EBdar«d— their dolour others have
endured R L ..... 1582
hath her eclipse endured Son 107 5
EaeMj— Finding their enemy VA 887
light and lust are deadly enemies R L 674
batter'd by the enemy ** „... 1171
Greeks that are thine enemies " ~... 1470
Mine enemy was strong '* ..... 1646
though enemies to either's reign Son 28 5
have been mine enemies " 139 10
Eaftc^led— that enfeebled mine ** 86 14
Balbreed— I enforced this fire R L 181
Each one by him enforced ** 803
if not, enforced hate " .... 668
enforced by sympathy " .... 1228
therefore art en forced to seek anew Son 82 7
lafbrreMCttt^By foul enforcement R L 1623
bframchlsliif— Enfranchising his
month VA .... 396
Eaylme— Once more the engine " 367
Eaflrlri— engirts so white a foe '* 364
that hath engirt his marriage R L 221
engirt with daring infamy ** ....1173
bgUahMas— Till looking on an
Englishman PP 16 3
lignft— I engraft you new Son 15 14
Idfraftod — my love engrafted to
Uils store " 87 8
Idfravem— it will live engraven in
my face R L 203
bgrMMd— thou harder hast .... San 133 6
((
u
••■••
1164
512
9
10
29
8
»••••
22
129
6
75
5
70
12
152
11
•••••
608
55
9
Enjoy— their loves shall not enjof V A
this night I must enjoy thee R L
for still the world enjoys it Son
With what I most enjoy "
Enjoy'd— cnjoy'd but of a few R L
Enjoy'd no sooner but despised
straight Son
Enjoyer— Now proud as an enjoyer "
Enlarged — envy evermore enlarged
Enlighten — And to enlighten thee
Enmity— disdain and deadly enmity R L
death and all-oblivious enmity Son
Enongh— within this limit is relief
enough VA 235
'Tis not enough that through Son 84 5
likeenough thou know'st " 87 2
They had not skill enough " 106 12
your pity is enough to cure me "111 14
Is 't not enough to torture me " 133 3
More than enough am I " 135 3
But soft ! enough— too much P P 19 49
Enpatron — you enpatron me LC 224
Enraged— Being so enraged VA 29
how he is enraged " .... 317
Here, all enraged R L 1562
Enrich — enrich the poor V A .... 1150
and much enrich thy book Son 77 14
Enriched— annexions of fair gems
enrich'd L C 208
Ensconce — do I ensconce me here Son 49 9
Enseonced— so .... his secret evil R L 1515
Ensign— churliith drum and .... red VA 107
Ensnare— do not then ensnare me jR Zr 584
Ensnared— thee to this night " 485
Ensue— repentant tears .... the deed " .... 602
another straight ensues *' .... 1104
and shame that might ensue " .... 1263
Ensning^-or any thing ensuing VA 1078
Enswathed— Enswathed, and scal'd L C .... 49
Enter— thy spear's point can enter VA 626
false sound enter there " .... 780
through which it enters '* 890
and enter this sweet city R L 469
Soft pity enters at an iron gate " 595
Enterprise — of his loathsome .... " .... 184
Entertain— I did entertain thee " 596
did I entertain hhn " . 842
The weary time she cannot enter-
tain " «... 1361
And ent(>rtain my love " .... 1629
To entertain the time with
thoughts of love Son 39 11
Entertained— All entertain'd, each
passion VA .... 969
He entertain'd a show R L 1514
Entertainment— Witness the ... . VA .... 1108
Eatlee— some mermaid did their
ears entice
Quickly him they will entice
Entitled— Entitled in thy parts
Entomb— Entombs her outcry
quoth she, 'your tunes entomb
Entombed— her head entombed is
entombed in men's eyes
Eatranee — No [icnetrable entrance
to her plaining R L
Entreat— entreats, and prettily en-
treats VA
as I entreat thee now
RL
PP
Son
RL
(*
II
Son
u
.... 1411
21 44
37 7
.... 679
.... 1121
.... 390
81 8
.... 559
.... 7S
.... 97
I— Elich envlom lii
I>a I«n¥rihij«}ickri '
e,iilp.iff.-ln«iik.«.(W
"Rtp — ere h^■ "wcinls buqiiti
«reiiuinini:r1iBin>«daD
e bU «s*i7 noon-tide
:loud7 looki wtll ulm ei
Err-To n^ they err I d.ro not «™ 131
7
even In my soul
....
KrrfJ-uirli™M.rn!v..-^h«Te,... " I3T
eien in pluDty winleth "
Brrar-AndthilJbhemr VA ....
898
Eveninlhlithougbt
To «U up errors RL
Even in llie moment "
So>retha«erron So- M
Even H Ibe m.td
'.'.'.'. I
iriW.l«*fror ■• 119
inr-irliriilnauviJerran '■ ]1T
Whiil »rrt*l..d *rroft bath my
EvenwbU^ghs
cv.iil,vllj.Mir-ai.r»,->|[y am
Arv.err..rj^.flh..'t.l^l £ ..-
En.1— Wlil,»iiTitrf..i.ilici.l &■ 11
8
>i--.l«— 'iitKhra 'k«p« doth open
39
lny X L ....
lead me la tbelr riot oien there "
Could 'Kupe (he hiil i. C ....
tor my uke even » doth ihe
43
■•«pi:dtlil.»rr«ir »» 90
a
BMrnprth-TTie «>n of bittle "ica.
And l.v*nil,..i>«.Lhuu*lUI«ilolen "
p..|h 1.S ihp BLicLt i. ff ....
Evenlnlbeeyei
a
E>pM-<mnlInntH»pled XL ....
bungry ey« eren UU they wink "
»p((^.fl.klera.id LC...
Even of live hundred eouiwi
even »« foe.
hw-^ » Z, ...,
your love even .Lih my life dear »
»ip,-lniiBpl[n|(™.r«rdolh»py VA ....
cren In Ihe mouthi of men "
81
&«iI-And'»on«™iiiy.prG.Bdlh8,So« 110
»Ha«»-Ha>)tbe....b<iliiiaae P T ..-
IG
E>enuwhenflnt
■.Uto-c«loi.fd«libhL.hlgh....Kl,
9i
Even to thy pun
110
Qitceai *d— IbeSoDiii lu Tsrc
belter lo borUe ihBn xlla e
Eiiti>r»ln(— whosi
&l( hbK^I houknow-itlbyallmi
WerMl-eullDlu eler u il alecpiog
b'llclti.^ Ibe etiTOAl prrwcn
ai
.tpi-nd liurllvtnKlnetemiil lo
.... 336
Ktoralty— H'll) elerolrj to net ■
TlioKceMBleMlKkoyttieter
W7
ihleii.hprogrtMtneloriiily
7W
laid iiivmt hama far stemlly
Toet*rnlljdp>thn«
.... 781
Bttkpii-JunobuliiiEthiope
.... KM
E>e-How1lkoEre1mpple
.... 1277
Etrn— Eren u the hd
Z". 1281
Eien u nn empty engle
Even lotbeklu-dbii brow
.... 1M13
Even by the item
... 1688
Evcn'Madylngeod
C8 8
Even u Ibe wind
Even u poor binli
IM 14
nPP 17 Ifl
EVEN
87
EXAMPLE
EreD— Even that your pity Son 111 14
Even those that said "115 2
bears it out even to the edge of doom " 116 12
Even 80. beinc; full "118 5
Beyond all date, even to eternity " 122 4
Even there rmolved L C 296
* Even thus,' quoth she PP 11 5
' Even thus,' quoth ahe "11 7
' Even thus,' quoth she " 11 9
Even so, poor bird, like thee *' 21 27
Even — or room or weary even V A 495
thou gild'st the even &>n 28 12
star that ushers in the even "132 7
Evening— All our evening sport P P 18 47
Event— of war and dire events VA 1159
What uncouth ill event R L 1598
Ever— feast might ever last V A ..... 447
that ever yet betoken'd " 453
that ever threat his foes " 620
ever strive to kiss you " 1082
Yet ever to obtain R L 129
If ever man were moved " 587
That ever modest eyes " 683
ever let his unrecalling crime " 993
If ever, love, thy Lucrece " 1306
though none it ever cured • " 1581
And ever since, as pitying " 1747
in my verse ever live young Son 19 14
if ever that time come " 49 1
watchman, ever for thy sake " 61 12
slander's mark was ever ypt the
fair " 70 2
still all one, ever the same i* 76 5
when thou wilt ; if ever, now " 90 1
sweet love should ever dwell " 93 10
still such, and ever so " 105 4
nor no man ever loved " 116 14
and this shall ever be " 123 18
that tongue that ever sweet " 145 6
who ever shunn'd by precedent L C 155
were ever brokers to defiling " 173
to none was ever said " 180
my leisures ever charmed " ..... 103
beauty biemish'd once 's for ever
lost PP 13 11
whose month was ever May " 17 2
Ever-dnrlng' — bear an ... . blame R L 224
Ever-flxed— it \& an ever-fixed mark Son 116 5
Everlasting— Tarquin's everlasting
banishment R L 1855
Evermore—. . . . acknowledge thee Son 36 9
envy evermore enlarged " 70 12
Frantic-mad with evermore unrest " 147 10
Every — he comes in every jar VA 100
every light impression " 566
comment upon every woe " 714
Every tongue more moving " 776
unto every stranger " 790
answering every call " 849
every present sorrow " 970
every beauty robb'd " 1132
For every little grief " 1179
And every one to rest R L 125
Till every minute pays " 329
seu every Joint a-ehaking " 452
mark of every open eye " ..... 520
kings, like gods, should govern
every thing
that every eye can see
((
((
602
750
Every — Shape every bush a hideous R L 973
seek every hour to kill " 998
gazed upon with every eye " 1015
through every cranny spies " 1086
with every thing she sees " .... 1093
When every part a part of woo " 1827
Imi^ne every eye beholds " ..... 1843
changed to black in every vein " 14S4
For every tear he falls " 1551
Circles her body in on every side ** 1739
every eye doth dwell Son 5 2
bareness every where "58
When every, private widow " 9-7
consider every thing " 15 1
And every fair from fair " 18 7
And every fair with his fair " 21 4
outstrlpp'd by every pen " 32 6
For every vulgar paper " 88 4
prey of every vulgar thief " 48 8
every hour survey " 52 3
Since every one hath, every one,
one shade " 53 8
can every shadow lend " 53 4
in every blessed shape " 53 12
all my every part " 62 2
That every word " 76 7
As every alien pen " 78 3
blessing every book "82 A>
admired every where " 84 12
To every hymn " 85 7
And every humour " 91 5
doth cover every blot " 95 11
December's bareness every where " 97 4
of youth in every thing " 98 8
despised every where " 100 12
publish evsry where " 102 4
burthens every bough " 102 11
Creating every bad "114 7
to every wandering bark " 116 7
That every tongue '* 127 14
like in every part "132 12
To every place at once L C 27
And every light occasion " 86
jest at every gentle offer P P 4 12
truth in every shepherd's tongue " 20 18
Every thing did banish moan " 21 7
Every one that flatters thee " 21 31
Every man will be thy friend " 21 35
Thus of every grief in heart " 21 55
Every fowl of tyrant wing P T 10
Evidence — lust came .... to swear R L 1660
Evldent^that thou none lovest is
most evident Son 10 4
Evil— do seldom dream on evil R L 87
O, unlook'd-for evil " 846
thought of his committed evil " 972
shall be accounted evil " 1245
evils that obscurely sleep " 1260
ensconced his secret evil " 1515
of good or evil luck Son 14 3
by evil still made better " 119 10
Unless this general evil " 121 13
my female evil " 144 5
ray female evil PP 2 5
Example — By whose example R L 1194
Which should example where your
equal grew Son 84 4
by self-example mayst thou " 142 14
Or forced examples L C ...^ 167
EXAMPLE
8d
EYE
L C
268
VA
292
568
JtC Jj •••••
81
229
Son 83
8
" 150
8
" 82
8
r A •••••
293
Son 6
4
r JS. •••••
1131
&m M
8
" 105
6
. »• 38
3
PP 7
18
12 L
191
VA ....
443
&m 147
8
i? L
138
Son 146
7
X/ C ...••
42
iSbn 109
7
" 67
11
VA
886
it
930
a L
767
Jj C •••••
813
KxMaple— Of stale example
Ezeeed-— the llTing should exceed
whose leave exceeds commission
Ur exceeds his harren skill
the fear doth still exceed
I found you did exceed
thy worst ail best exceeds
Exeeeded— Exceeded by the height
Excel— So did this horse excel
wtiich fairly doth excel
ExeelPd— wherein they late excell'd VA
KxcelleBce— stewards of their ....
i^ a wondrous excellence
Kxeellent— sweet argument, too . . .
though excellent in neither
Exeelleth— whose light .... thine
Exeeliing— of thy face excelling
Except — which physic did except
Exceas — the profit of excess
inheritors of this excess
but where excess b^;s all
Exchanged— not with the time . . .
Excheqner— no .... now but his
Exclaim— the dogs exclaim aloud
exclaims on Death
exclaims against repose
he would exclaim
ExclalmiBg— exclaiming on the
direful night R L ..... 741
Exclamation — ^in his pride, no ... . " ..... 705
Excnse— What bare excuses VA ...~ 188
O strange excuse " ..... 791
He makes excuses R L ...» 114
O what excuse " . 225
Might have excuse '* 235
finds no excuse nor end " ..... 2.38
for colour or excuses ** 267
in cleanly-eoin'd excuses " ..... 1073
had stain'd her stain'd excuse " ...~ 1316
Where no excuse can gire ** 1614
to make mine own excuse " ..... 1653
By ray excuse shall claim excuse's
giving " 1715
and make my old excuse Son 2 11
O, what excuse " 51 5
Ezctue— Let me excuse thy courser VA ..... 403
thus I will excuse ye Son 42 5
excuse the slow oflfenoe " 51 1
thus shall excuse my Jade " 51 12
Excuse not silence so " 101 10
Let me excuse thee *' 139 9
Exmalng— Excusing thy sins more " 35 8
Exeestost — executest the traitor's
treason R L ...- 877
Execvtor^livcs th' executor to be Son 4 14
Exhale<-Exhale this vapour vow PP 8 11
Exhaled — their exhaled unwhole-
some breaths R L 779
Exile— she Joy'd to jest at my exile P P 14 9
Exiled— for exiled msjesty's repeal i2 Z ...„ 640
Expect— for that which we expect " .... 149
Expected— 'expected of ray friends VA 718
432
976
8
Expectlng^tho onset still .... RL ...«
Expel— doth labour to expel VA ...^
Ilxpense— And raoan the expense Son 30
husband nature's riches from ex-
pense ** 94
The expense of spirit " 129
Bxperlenee— Experience for me L C .....
i«
u
6
1
152
«<
VA
Son
<t
Experienced- Now set thy long-
experienced wit to school R L
Expiate— death my day should .... Son
Expire— whereon It must expire *^
Expired — An expired date R L
when body's works expired Son
Exploit— feU exploits effecting R L
Express— express my grief for one V A
with heaved-up hand she doth ex-
press RL
than I can well express "
That may express my love Son
lend me words, and words express **
Expressed — no outward harm .... R L
that more hath more express'd 18m
pen would have express'd
from the truth vainly express'd
Expreaslng — One thing expressing
Expressly — their manners most ex-
pressly told R L
Extant— being extant, well might
show Son
Extemporally— sings extemporally
a woeful ditty VA
Extend— sometimes they do extend L C
their sighs to you extend
Extenuate— she doth extenuate
Extern— With my extern
External— In all external grace
Extinetare— and chill extlucture L C
Extlngnlshing— . ... his conduct R L
Extreme — are both of them ex-
tremes. VA
And extreme fear can neither
fight R L
extremes beyond extremity
still urgeth such extremes
Savage, extreme, rude Son
and In quest to have, extreme "
Extremity— extremes beyond .... R L
Extremity still urgeth **
When swift extremity
Ewe — My ewes breed not
Eye — in his angary eyes
since eyes In eyes
Mine eyes are grey
With burning eye
dark, disliking eye
Thine eye darts forth
but the eye alone
fiery eyes blaze forth
His eye, which scornfully
to captivate the eye
Broad breast, full eye
holds her In his eye
to his eyes suing
His eyes saw her eyes
Her eyes woo'd stUl, his eyes dls-
daln'd
her eyes did rain
when his glutton eye
Had I no eyes
neither eyes nor ears
illumine with her eye
Thy eyes' shrewd tutor
And these mine eyes
mine eyes to watch
surfeit by the eye
His eyes, like glow-worma
• «•••
1820
22
4
73
11
28
27
4
••••a
429
•••■•
1069
....
111
•••••
1286
108
4
140
S
•••••
91
23
12
106
7
147
12
105
8
~... 1897
83 6
«.... 836
25
276
~... 1010
125 2
53 13
M... 813
~... 280
<t
u
Son
PP
VA
u
4(
«(
U
u
u
i{
u
u
«(
I<
(I
l(
tl
»l
«
t<
u
It
•••••
1837
129
4
129
10
■••••
969
1337
51
6
18
2
■••*•
70
120
•«•••
140
•••••
178
••■■•
182
••••■
196
•••••
213
••«••
219
■••••
275
•••••
281
•■»••
296
•••••
342
•••••
856
•••••
857
•••••
358
•••••
860
»■•••
899
•«•••
483
•«•••
437
•••••
486
•••••
500
••«••
503
•••••
S84
•••••
602
•••••
621
FAIR
92
FALSE
Son
u
u
4(
u
tt
u
«(
M
LC
It
u
u
pp
14
II
II
u
11
u
If
pr
VA
Son
u
u
Fair--' Fair, kind, and true
hallow'd thy fair name
black vas not counted fair
At such who, not bom fair
no fair acceptance shine
no fair beseechers kill
To put fair truth
is a man right fair
have sworn thee fair
if that be fair
have sworn thee fair
when in his fair parts
from many a several fair
annexions of fair gems
8howing fair nature
is a man right fair
with her fair pride
Then, thou fair sun
she on her back, fair queen
Fair is my love, but not so fair as
fickle
Fair was the mom when the fair
queen of love
did I see a fair sweet youth
Sweet rose, fair flower
Fair creature, kill'd too soon
Spied a blossom passing fair
That are either true or fair
Fairer— Thrice fairer than myself
Shall hate be fairer lodged
but fairer we it deem
Grows fairer than at first
made fairer by their place
None fairer, nor none falser
Fairest— O fairest mover on
mortal round
From fairest creatures
descriptions of the fairest wights
Thou art the fairest
Thy black is fairest
The fairest votary took up that fire "
the fairest one of three P P
the fair'stthat eye could see *'
Fairiay- Fairing the foul Son
Fairly — which fairly doth excel "
Fairy— Or, like a fairy, trip VA
Faith — plight your honourable
faiths to me B L
And purest faith unhappily fore-
sworn Son
Yet, in good faith
In faith, I do not love thee
and new faith torn
And all my honest faith
O never faith could hold
Her faith, her oaths
Faith's defying
Where her faith was firmly fix'd
In faith, you had not had it
Faithful— Faithful friends are hard
to find
Faithful friend fh>m flattering foe
Falchion— His falchion on a flint Ji L
under his insulting falchion
by Tarquin's falchion
With shining falchion
Falcon — As falcons to the lure
Which like a falcon
as fowl hear falcon's bells
105 13
108 8
127 1
127 11
135 8
185
137
144
147
148
2
2
8
4
9
9
10
10
17
54
119
this
LC
PP
VA
Son
u
II
II
106
131
131
154
16
16
127
5
13
12
3
13
5
152 13
83
• •••• MvV
..... 208
...M oil
3
8
10
13
1
9
1
4
3
I..M 66
7
10 10
3
12
117
6
..... 868
1 1
u
II
II
pp
II
II
u
II
II
II
II
II
II
66
131
141
152
152
5
7
18
2
4
12
5
1
3
6
4
146
1690
4
5
1
3
8
2
12
6
VA
BL
ti
18 11
19 24
21 34
21 58
176
..... 1046
..... 1626
«... 1027
506
M».» oil
II
II
II
II
II
M
II
UL -
II
II
II
II
II
Son
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
Fall— Hindering their present Mi R L
with their fresh falls' haste "
not In smiling pomp, nor falls Son
And falls through wind before the
fall should be PP
By shallow rivers, by whose falls "
FaUr-Ytdx fall the wit VA
mellow plum doth £cdl
fall to the earth
He on her belly falls
and going I shall fall
But If thou fall
you will fall again
falls an orient drop beside
rise up and fall
falls into thy boundless flood
shall thereon fall and die
why should so many fall
For every tear he falls
He falls, and bathes the pale fear
so fair a house fall to decay
fall by thy side "
for whose dear love I rise and fall "
that lets not bounty fall L C
Fall'n — As apt as new-fall'n snow V A
Falleth— she flatly falleth down "
With this, she falleth in the place
Falling— like a falling plume
False — Gives false alarms
sometime false doth bring
a false sound enter there
but thy false dart
with false bethinking grieves
false and full of fraud
trustless wings of false draire
O rash-false heat
this false lord arrived
triumph in so false a foe
suspecteth the false worshippers
my false heart bleed
Unto a view so false
will prison false desire
thou traitor, thou false thief
false slave to false delight
of this false night's abuses
serve thou false Tarquin so
fear that false hearts have
false Sinon's tears
and that false Tarquin stain'd
as is false women's fashion
less false in rolling
being false to me
Why should false painting
To show false Art
true love may seem false in this
Thou mayst be false
the false heart's history
that I was false of heart
others' false adulterate eyes
with art's false borrow'd (ace
with a false esteem
belled with false compare
that is not false I swear
And to this false plague
in the world's false subtleties
And seal'd false bonds
whereon my false eyes dote
*0 false blood, thou register of lies L C
Of this false Jewel
~... 551
M..« 650
124 6
10
20
RL
11
II
II
II
II
II
u
II
II
II
11
II
It
II
It
II
II
II
II
M
II
II
U
U
M
II
II
II
II
II
II
tt
6
7
472
527
646
594
719
721
769
981
466
~... 653
1139
1483
..... 1551
-... 1775
13 9
151
151
12
14
••••• 4X
••••• Oi/4
..... 463
..... 1121
..... 814
651
••••• tfOo
«... 780
..... 1024
.... 1141
..... 40
M... 50
....• / f
M... OO
..... XSmJu
M... Boo
927
..... 1075
1197
..... 1512
1560
..... 1748
Son
20
20
41
67
68
72
92
93
100
121
127
127
130
131
137
138
142
148
4
6
14
5
14
9
14
7
1
5
6
12
14
9
14
4
7
6
62
154
FALSE
93
FAULT
FalM—O, that false fire LC 824
in the world's false forgeries P P I 4
to this false peijury "83
False creeping— False-creeping craft R L 1517
Fahehood—To unmask falsehood " «... 940
From hands of falsehood Son 48 4
Why of eye's falsehood " 137 7
Falsely— That censures falsely "148 4
FtlseBeaa— Did livery falseness in a
pride of youth L C 105
Falser— nor none falser to deface her PP 7 6
False-speaklmg— credit her fal8&-
speaking tongue Son 138 7
credit her false-«peaking tongue P P 1 7
FalteriBg— the .... feeble souls R L 1768
Faae— espoused to more fame ** 20
should underprop her fame " »... 53
to her ears her husband's fame " ~... 106
a badge of fame " 1054
shall my fame be bred " 1188
that did my fame confound " ~... 1202
And all my fame " ~... 1203
with fame and not with fire " .... 1491
My fame, and thy perpetual infomy " ..... 1638
qieakiug of your fame Son 80 4
Give my love fame ** 100 13
.her fame so to herself L C 243
fear, law, kindred, fame " 270
AaM— shall fame his wit Son 84 11
FMilUi^thatafi'able,.... ghost '* 86 9
Fiaiine— making a famine "17
Faailsh— But rather famish them VA .... 20
Faalsli'd— mine eye is famish'd Son 47 3
FaHOoaed— warrior for fight '* 25 9
Vka— To fan and blow them dry VA 52
Faaey— to be soft (iincy's slave R L 200
by dreadful fancy waking " .... 450
Towards this afflicted fancy L C 61
wounded fancies sent me " .... 197
Her fancy fell a-turnlng P P 16 4
As well as fancy " 19 4
Faag— Under whose sharp fangs VA 663
Faigled— garmenta, though new-
fangled ill 5m 91 3
FuBiag— Fanning the hairs VA 306
FntMiie—humour of fantastic wits " .... 850
Fntuy— 'tis a causeless fantasy " .... 897
Far— he sends fiar off " .... 801
ikr off upon a hill " .... 697
By this, far off " 973
Which far exceeds R L .... 81
Far from the purpose " 113
doth so Car proceed " .... 251
iar poorer than before " .... 693
I thus far can dispense ** 1279
Met far from home " 1596
And far the weaker " 1647
From far where I abide Sbn 27 5
How far I toil " 28 8
From limits far remote " 44 4
Thus far the miles " 50 4
8o far from home ** 61 6
From me far off " 61 14
8o far from variation '* 76 2
inferior far to' his " 80 7
How far a modem quill " 83 7
smell far worse than weeds " 94 14
more strong, far greater " 119 12
bviUed far from accident '* 124. 6
Soil
130
2
• 4
130
10
it
136
4
«
141
13
RL
•«•••
698
it
»••••
716
<t
••■«•
721
<i
••■••
1594
P P
14
6
VA
•••••
680
Son
87
1
PP
14
5
ft
18
48
It
21
48
Son
22
12
RL
•■••■
1386
Son
28
8
It
47
11
II
69
8
II
151
8
II
44
6
If
117
8
RL
•••••
1319
Son
20
4
II
124
8
VA
•••••
627
II
675
RL
•«•••
860
II
•••••
555
II
1334
II
••«••
1670
Far — Coral is far more red
a far more pleasing sound
Thus far for love
Thus far I count my gain
Fare— Tarquin fares this night
So fares it with this faultful lord
To ask the spotted princess how
she fares
to ask her how she fares
Fare well I could not
Farewell— Bids him farewell
Farewell ! thou art too dear
• Farewell,' quoth she
Farewell, sweet lass
Then farewell his great renown
Faring — her babe from faring ill
Far-off— See those far-off eyes
Farther— still farther off from thee Son
For thou not farther
seeing farther than the eye
flesh stays no farther reason
Farthest— Upon the farthest earth
transport me farthest
Faahion — tears may grace the ....
as is false women's fashion
inviting time our fashion calls
Fast — the green sticks fast
twenty locks kept fast
The dove sleeps fast
WhUe in hU hold-fast foot
sour-faced groom to hie as fast
that forced him on so fast
Am fast as thou shalt wane, so ftst
thou grow'st Son 11 1
And die as fast " 12 12
As fast as objects *' 114 8
that him as fast doth bind " 134 8
IhH—e&gie, sharp by fast VA^... 55
feasting to a public fast R L .... 891
Fasten— Nimbly she fastens VA 88
Fastened— So fasten'd in her arms " 68
Fastei^-and then it faster rock'd R L 262
faster than Time wastes life Son 100 13
Fastly— afflicted fancy fastly drew L C .... 61
Fat— that breeds the fat earth's St ore in Zr .... 1837
Fatol— Wreathed up in fatal folds VA .... 879
And kiss'd the fatal knife R L .... 1843
Fat»— I am the mistress of my fate " 1069
look upon myself, and curse my
fate ifim 29 4
Father— this was thy father's guise VA 1177
Here was thy father's bed " .... 1183
I their father had not been R L 210
Their father was too weak " 865
doting father of his fruit " 1064
Till Lucrece' father " 1732
the father's image lies " .... 1753
Thy father die, and not thy father
thee " .... 1771
Then son and father weep " 1791
The father says ' She's mine " ....1793
You had a father Son 13 14
decrepit father takes delight ** 37 1
• Father,' she says L C 71
• O father, what a hell " 288
Fanlt— And 'tis your fault VA 381
the cold fault cleanly out " 694
'Tis not my fault " 1003
The shame and fault R L 238
FAULT
94
FEASTING
FmU— the faalt U thine Ji L .... 482
The fault anknown ** ~... 527
Are nature's faulu ** .... 539
When patterned by thy fault ** -... 629
Men's faults do seldom ** — 633
And by their morUl fault ** .... 724
That all the faulu ** ~... 804
Nor fold my fault " ~... 1«73
are their own faults' books *' ~... 1253
Poor women's faulU ^ .... 1258
Yet with the fault " ~... 1279
can give the fault amending ** ~... 1614
All men make faults Son 35 5
For to thy sensual fault ** 85 9
Of faulu conceal'd ** 88 7
forsake me for some fault " 89 1
Some say, thy fault is youth ** 96 1
Both grace and faulU " 96 3
Thou makest faulU graces '* 96 4
grew to faults assured ** 118 10
And in our faulu " 138 14
thy foul faulu should find " 148 14
Lest guilty of my faulU *' 151 4
Outfacing faulU in love P T \ 8
our faulu in love thus smother'd be '* 1 14
then it is no fault of mine " 8 12
Fanltfnl— this faultful lord of Rome R L ^... 715
Faronr— If thou wilt deign this .... V A 15
Some favour, some remorse " 257
Both favour, savour " 747
in favour with their stars Son 25 1
The most sweet favour " 113 10
dwellers on form and favour ** 125 5
A thousand favours L C ~... 86
favours to allure his eye P P 4 6
Faroar'd— Were I hard-favour*d VA 133
Hard-favour'd tyrant ** 931
♦ " For some hard-favour'd groom R L 1632
FaTonrit«— Great princes' favourites Son 25 5
Fawn— Hasting to feed her fawn VA 876
that I do fawn upon Son 149 6
Fawn*d— They that fawn'd on him
before PP 21 49
Fawneih— lion o'er his prey R L 421
Fear— breeder full of fear VA .... 820
for fear of slips ** ~... 515
signs of fear lurk ** .... 644
fear doth teach it " .... 670
wit waiU on fear ** 690
The fear whereof doth make " .... 880
doubt and bloodless fear " 891
A second fear through all " 903
I felt a kind of fear " 998
thou art so full of fear " 1021
where is no cause of fear " 1153
Put fear to valour " 1158
mother of dreail and fear R L 117
But honest fear " 173
Here pale with fear " .... 183
the fear doth still exceed " 229
extreme fear can neither fight " 230
O, how her fear " 257
tremble with hi!r loyal fear " 261
Then, childUh fear, avauut " .... 274
Yet he still pumupN his fear " .... 308
fear's frost hath disbolutiun '* 355
confounded in a thousand fears " 456
With trembling fear *' .... 511
will make'theo only loved for fear ** .... 610
F««r— If but for fear of this B L 614
sweating with guilty fear ** .... 740
That dying fear ** .... 1266
a kind of heavy fear " 1435
Nor ashy-pale the fear " .... 1512
weaker with so strong a fear ** 1647
the pale fear in his face " .... 1775
Is it for fear to wet a widow's eye Son 9 1
Who with his fear is put *' 23 2
So I, for fear of trust " 23 5
I was not sick of any fear ** 86 12
For fear of which '* 104 13
Kot mine own fears ** 107 1
Applying fears to hopes, and hopes
to fears ** 119 8
For fear of harms L C .... 165
Of wealth, of filial fear ** .... 270
all forces, shocks, and fears ** 273
my sober guards and civil fears '* «... 298
All fears scorn I P P 18 20
fbar—l thy death should fear VA .... 660
bids them fear no more ** 899
you need not fear " .... 1083
he would not fear him " .... 1094
It shall not fear " .... 1154
no secret bushes fear R L — 88
Who fears a sentence " .... 244
Then who fears sinking ** .... 280
so heedful fear "* .... 281
The merchant fears, ere rich at
home " .... 336
now I need not fear to die " .... 1052
thou wilt be stol'n, I fear Son 48 13
that which it fears to lose " 64 14
to fear the worst of wrongs " 92 5
that fears no blot '* 92 13
It fears not policy " 124 9
Yet fear her, O thou minion " 126 9
But, soft! enough, — too much, I
fear PP 19 49
Fear'd— I fear'd thy fortune VA 642
nor fear'd no hooks R L 103
still are fear'd for love " .... 611
I fear'd by Tarquin's falchion " .... 1046
But when I fear'd " «.. 1048
Feareth— th' other feareth harm " .<.. 172
Fearftal- As fearful of him, part V A .... 630
Pursue these fearful creatures " .... 67>
Whereon with fearful eyes " 927
in this fearful flood R L 1741
O fearful meditation Sm 65 9
Fearftilly— Where fearfully the dogs K^ .... 886
The roses fearfully on thorns Sum 99 8
Fearfully PP 18 44
Fearing— fearing my love's decease V A 1002
fearing to creep forth " .... 1036
Fearing some hard news R L 255
fearing uu i>uch thing " 363
fearing of Time's tyranny Son 115 9
the loss thereof still fearing P P 7 10
Feast— the feast might ever last VA 447
disturb the feast " .... 450
then my eye doth feast San 47 5
feasU so solemn and so rare ** 52 5
To any sensual fea^t " 141 8
For feasts of love L C 181
Femst-flndlng— Feast-finding min-
strels R L .... 817
FeutUff— Thy private feasting " .... 891
FEASTING
95
FIELD
FewtlBg— Justice is feasting H L 906
■II faU with feasting Son 1^ 9
Feat— With sleided sUk feat and
affectedlf L C ...» 48
Feather— on feathers, flesh, and boners ...~ 56
atsUrringof afeather " 802
vith thought's feathers flies R L ...~ 1216
Have added feathers Sou 1% 7
Feathered— ware like .... wings VA 306
hollow-«welling feather'd breasts R L ..... 1122
One of her feather'd creatures Son 143 2
Save the eagle, feather'd king P T 11
Ffatare— it shapes them to your .... Son 113 12
Fcatared— Featured Uke him " 29 6
Featarelesa— Harsh, , and rude " 11 10
Ftd— with thy increase be fed VA 170
eye so fuU hath fed " 899
sijnple semblance he hath fed *' ..... 795
Ue fed them with his sight <* ...~ 1104
that those shrunk pipes had fed R L 1455
Within be fed, without be rich Son 146 12
r«»-hU youth's fair fee VA 393
The honey fee of parting " 638
h&th deserved a greater fee " 609
but sin ne'er gives a fee R L 913
now becomes a fee Son 120 13
Feeble— Thy mark is feeble age VA 941
Feeble Desire, all recreant RL 710
Haltering feeble soills alive " 1768
Like feeble age, he reeleth Son 7 10
Her feeble foree P P 19 21
F«e4— why shouldst thou feed VA ..... 169
Feed where thou wilt *' 2:V2
glutton-like she feeds " 548
that did feed her sight " ..... 822
UasUng to feed her fawn *' 876
feeds his vulture folly R L ..... 556
while the oppressor feeds " 905
To feed oblivion " 947
mountain-spring that feeds a dale " 1077
Justice feeds iniquity " 1687
Feeds on the rarities Son 60 11
So Shalt thou feed on Death, that
feeds on men " 146 13
My flocks feed not PP 18 1
Shepherds feed their flocks " 20 6
Feeder— Being nurse and feeder VA 446
Fesd'it—Feed'st thy light's flame Son \ %
FecdetJi— She feedeth on the steam VA 63
FeadlBg— by feeding is allay'd Son 56 8
did I frame ray feeding "118 6
Feeding on that which doth pre-
serve " 147 3
Fwl— and canst not feel VA ..... 201
scorns the heat he feels " 311
hil fair cheek feels '* ..... 852
'why dost thou feel it " .... 373
May feel her heart, poor cltlxen R L 465
what helpless shame I feel " 756
though I feel thou art Son 48 10
which I then did feel *< 120 2
FMPst— when thou feel'st it cold " 2 14
Fseliag^— that the sense of feeling VA ~... 439
numbs each feeling part " 892
life and feeling of her passion R L ..... 1317
Being from the feeling *' 1578
Not by our feeling Son 121 4
Nor tender feeling " 141 6
some feeling pity L C ..... 178
Feeling-Feeling it break Z C .. . 275
Feellnfly— sorrow then Ls feelingly
sufliced R L ..... 1112
Here feelingly she weeps *' ..... 1492
Feellag-palnftal— More feeling-pain-
ful : let It then sufllce " ~... 1679
Fee-slMple — And was my own .... L C ...~ 144
Feign— god of both, as poets feign PP S 13
Feigned— your feigned tears VA ...» 425
Fell— in fell battle's rage R L ~... 145
fell exploits effecting ** 429
tragedies and murders fell " 766
by Time's fell hand defaced Son 64 1
when that fell arrest " 74 1
but spite of heaven's fell rage L C 13
i%//— fell I not downright VA 645
When their glass fell R L ^... 1526
as she wrought thee, fell a-doting Son 20 10
that so fell sick of you "118 14
laid by his brand and fell asleep " 153 1
I fell, and yet do question make L C 821
Then fell she on her back PP 4 13
and yet she full a-turning ** 7 16
And as he fell to her, so fell she to
him " 11 4
Her fancy fell a-turning " 16 4
As it fell upon a day " 21 1
Fellow— All thy .... birds do sing *' 21 25
Fellowship — And fellowship in woeR L ..~. 790
Felt— were it with thy hand felt VA 143
having felt the sweetness " 553
I felt a kind of fear " -... 998
When more is felt than one hath
power to tell R L 1288
What freexings have I felt Son 97 3
Female — proud, as females are VA 809
to hell, my female evil Son 144 5
to hell, my female evil P P 2 5
Fence— the red should .... the white R L 63
Fester— Lilies that fester Son 94 14
Fetched— And aii she fetched breath PP 11 11
Fetlock- fetlocks shag and long VA 295
Fever— As burning fevers " ..... 739
of this madding fever Son 119 8
My love is as a fever ** 147 1
Augur of the fever's end P T 7
Few— enjoy'd but of a few R L 22
• Few words,' quoth she " 1613
nor none, or few, do hang Son 73 2
Fickle— It shall bo fickle VA 1141
Dost hold Time's fickle glass Son 126 2
a fickle maid full pale L C 5
but not so fair as fickle PP 7 1
Fortune, cursed fickle dame " 18 15
Whilst as fickle fortune smiled " 21 29
Fie—' Fie, no more of love VA 18.5
•Fie, lifeless picture " 211
' Fie, fie,' he says " ..... 611
• Fie, fie, fond love " 1021
' Fie, fie, fie,' now would she cry PP 21 13
Field— The field's chief flower VA 8
Making my arms his field " 108
tempest to the field " 454
dare not stay the field ** 894
doth challenge that fair field R L 58
in her fair face's field " «... 72
the fields of fruitful Italy " 107
bold Hector, march'd to field ** 1430
in thy beauty's field Son 2 2
FALSE
93
FAULT
FftlM—O, that false fire LC 824
in the world's false forgeries P P \ 4
to tbia false perjury "33
False-ereeptsg— False-creeping craft R L ~... 1517
Falaehood—To unmask falsehood " ~... 940
From hands of falsehood Son 48 4
Why of eye's falsehood " 137 7
Falsely— That censures falsely "148 4
FalaeBeaa— Did livery falseness in a
pride of youth L C 105
Falser— nor none falser to deface her PP 7 6
Falae-tpeaktsf— credit her false-
speaking tongue Son 188 7
credit her false-apeaking tongue PP I 7
FalterlBg^the feeble souls Ji L 1768
Faoie— espoused to more fame " »... 20
should underprop her fame " 63
to her ears her husband's fame " 106
a badge of fame " 1054
shall my fame be bred " ..... 1188
that did my fame confound " 1202
And all my fame " 1203
with fkme and not with fire " ..... 1491
My fame, and thy perpetual infamy " ..... 1638
speakiug of your fame Son 80 4
Give my love fame " 100 13
.her fame so to herself L C ^... 243
fear, law, kindred, fame " 270
/bnK— shall fame his wit Son 84 11
Faalllar— that afl'able,.... ghost " 86 9
Famise — making u famine "17
Famish— But rather famish them VA ..... 20
Fanlsh'd— mine eye is famish'd Son 47 8
Faaonaed— warrior .... for fight " 25 9
Faa— To fan and blow them dry VA ~... 62
Fasey— to be soft fancy's slave R L 200
by dreadful fancy waking " ..... 450
Towards this afflicted fancy L C 61
wounded fancies sent me " „... 197
Her fancy fell a-turning P P 16 4
As well as fancy " 19 4
Faag — Under whose sharp fangs VA 663
Faagled — garments, though new-
fangled ill iSbn 91 8
FaBsing— Fanning the hairs VA »... 806
FkBtaatie— humour of fantastic wits " ..... 850
Faataay— 'tis a causeless fantasy " 897
Fki^he scuds far off " .... 801
&r off upon a hill " ..... 697
By this, far off " ..... 973
Which far exceeds R L ..... 81
Far from the purpose " ..... 113
doth so far proceed " 251
far poorer than before " ..... 693
I thus far can dispense " 1279
Met far from home " ..... 1596
And far the weaker " 1647
From far where I abide St>n 27 6
How far I toil " 28 8
From limits far remote " 44 4
Thus far the miles " 50 4
So far from home "61 6
From me far off " 61 14
So far from variation " 76 2
inferior far to' his " 80 7
How far a modem quill " 83 7
tfmcll far worse than weeds " 94 14
more strong, far greater " 119 12
buikled far from accident " 124. 6
<(
«
11
it
Far— Coral is far more red Son,
a far more pleasing sound "
Thus far for love
Thus far I count my gain
Fare — Tarquin fares this night R L ^
So fares it with this faultful lord " ..
To ask the spotted princess how
she fares
to ask her how she fares
Fare well I could not
Farewell — Bids him farewell
Farewell ! thou art too dear
* Farewell,' quoth she
Farewell, sweet lass
Then farewell his great renown
Farlsg — her babe from faring ill
Far-off— See those far-off eyes
Farther^-etill farther off from thee Son
For thou not farther "
seeing farther than the eye "
flesh stays no farther reason
Farthest — Upon the farthest earth
transport me farthest
Fash ioB— tears may grace the .... R L
130 2
130 10
136 4
141 13
698
715
PP
VA
Son
PP
(t
u
Son
RL
(i
u
<(
..... i mX
.... 1694
14 6
.... oou
1
6
as is false women's fashion
inviting time our fashion calls
Fast— the green sticks fast
twenty locks kept fast
The dove sleeps fast
While in his hold-fast foot
sour-faced groom to hie as fust
that forced him on so fast
As fast as thou shalt wane, so Csst
Son
it
VA
RL -
((
((
87
14
18 49
21 48
22 12
~... 1386
28 8
47 11
69 8
151 8
44 6
117 8
..... 1319
20 4
124 8
..... 627
675
860
..... 655
1334
~... 1670
Son 11
((
<t
VA
RL
VA
It
RL
Son
LC
12 12
114 8
134 8
M... 65
M... o91
M... 68
262
100 13
M... 61
..... 1837
••■•• o/«f
.... 1843
.... 1068
thou grow'st
And die as fast
As fast as objects
that him as fast doth bind
Jhj^— eagle, sharp by fast
feasting to a public fast
Fastes— Nimbly she fastens
Fasten*d— So fasten'd in her arms
Faster- and then it faster rock'd
faster than Time wastes life
Faatly— afflicted fancy fastly drew
Fat— that breeds the fat earth's store R L
Fatal— Wreathed up in fatal folds VA
And kiss'd the fatal knife R L
Fate — I am the mistress of my fate "
look upon myself, and curse my
fate Son ^ A
Father— this was thy father's guise VA .... 1177
Here was thy father's bed " .... 1183
I their father had not been R L .... 210
Their father was too weak " 865
doting father of his fruit " 1064
Till Lucrece' father " .... 1732
the father's image lies " .... 1753
Thy father die, and not thy father
thee " .... 1771
Then son and father weep " 1791
The father says ' She's mine " .... 1795
You had a father Son 13 14
decrepit father takes delight " 37 1
• Father,' she says L C .... 71
' O father, what a hell " 288
Fault-And 'tis your fault VA .... 881
the cold fault cleanly out " 694
'Tis not my fault " 1003
The shame and fault J2 Z .... 238
FIRE
97
FLIGHT
Ftr»— io his fire doth quake RL ~... 1556
hot-burniDg fire doth dwell " 1557
she gives her sorrow fire " 1604
slight air and purging fire Son 45 1
nor war's quick fire shall burn ** 55 7
the glowing of such fire " 7:< 9
And his love-kindling fire " 153 3
from this holy fire of love ** 153 5
Where Cupid got new fire " 153 14
votsrj took up that fire ** 154 5
Which from Love's fire " 154 10
Love's fire heato water ^ 154 14
Both fire from hence L C ...~ 294
0, that false fire '' .... 324
b music and sweet fire P P S 12
as straw with fire fiameth *" 7 13
/Ire-wind that fires the torch R L 815
fire my good one out Sm 144 14
fire my good one out P P 2 14
Fired— Love's brand new-fired Son 153 9
lira— And the firm soil win ** 64 7
Flnily— on that he firmly doted R L 416
(aith was firmly fix'd in love P P 18 11
Ftrst-Struck dead at first VA ~... 250
who shall cope him first ** 888
who first should dry his tears '* 1092
I should have kill'd him first ** ..... 1118
First red as roses RL 258
FIrtt, like a trumpet ** ...„ 470
First, hovering o'er the paper " 1297
wert thou first created Son 20 9
The first my thought " 45 3
that made me first your slave " 58 1
at first in character was done '* 59 8
At first the very worst " 90 12
when first your eye I eyed " 104 2
Since first I saw you fresh " 104 8
when first I hallow'd " 108 8
Finding the first conceit " 108 13
O.tis the first " 114 9
mine eye loves it and doth first
begin " 114 14
Grows fairer than at first " 119 12
when first it 'gins to bud P P 13 3
Flfst^ni— With April's first-born
flowers Sm 21 7
FU— The fishes spread on it VA ..... 1100
FUer— No fiAher but the ungrown
fry forbears " 626
IH— season once more fits " 827
foots and painful fits R L 8.56
shall fit the trespass best '* 1613
which wounded bosoms fits Son 120 12
Fitted— out of their spheres been
fitted " 119 7
Five— five hundred courses " 59 6
my five wits nor my five senses " 141 9
Fix— Will fix a sharp knife RL 1138
Fixed— Whose beams upon his hair-
less face are fix'd VA 487
eyes are sadly fixed R L 5G1
from their fixed places *< i.')25
candles fix'd in heaven's air Son 21 12
with hb colour fix'd " lui 6
it is an ever-fixed mark *' 116 5
and nowhere fix'd LC 27
was firmly fix'd in love PP 18 11
FloM— with embracing flames R L 6
And to the flame " 180
7
name— Feed'st thy light's flame Sun I 9
seem'd my flame to qualify " 109 2
My most full flame " 115 4
Not one whose flame L C 191
In a mutual flame P T 24
Ptome— That flame through water L C ..... 287
FUmeth— as straw with fire PP 7 113
FlamiBg— by his flaming torch R L ..... 448
with a flaming light '* ...~ 1627
Flaming in the phuenix' sight P T ..... 35
Flank— in his soft flank VA 1053
nuzzling in his flank ** ..... 1115
Flap-moath*d— flap-mouth'd mourn-
er, black and grim " 920
Flash'd— It flash'd forth fire " .... 348
FlaUy— she flatly faileth down " 463
Flatter— And flatters her " .... 978
one doth flatter thee " .... 989
Th' one sweetly flatters R L .... 172
To flatter thee " 1061
Only to flatter fools " 1559
false Sinon's tears doth flatter " 1560
So flatter I the swart-cuuiplexion'd
night Son 28 11
Flatter the mountain-tops " 33 2
as a dream doth flatter " 87 13
Every one that flatters thee PP 21 31
Flatter'd— flatter'd by their leader's
jocund show R L .... 296
by lies we flatter'd be Son 138 14
Flatterer— To critic and to flatterer " 112 11
Flattering— HU flattering ' Holla VA 284
and flattering thoughts retire R L 641
And with sueb-Iiko flattering PP 21 41
Faithful friend from flattering foe " 21 58
Flattery — your foigiu'd tears, your
flattery VA 425
Sweet flattery ! then she loves Sun 42 14
the monarch's plague, this flattery "114 2
'tis flattery in tuy seeing " 114 9
Flaw— gusts and foul flaws VA 456
Fled— Love to heaven is fled " 793
at him should have fled " 947
her eyes are fled " .... 1037
to the world that I am fled Son 71 3
where is my judgement fled " 148 3
And blushing fled PP 9 14
All our evening sport from us
is fled " 18 47
Phoenix and the turtle fled P T 2:i
Fleece— Till with her own white R L 678
Ere beauty's dead fleece Son 68 8
Fleetest— sorry seasons as thou . . . . " 19 5
Fleet'foot— Or as the fleet-foot roe VA 561
Fleeting— a froth of fleeting joy R L 212
the pleasure of the fleeting year Son 97 2
Fleet-wlng'd— Forfleet-wiiig'dduty /2Z, .. . 1216
Flesh— feathers, flesh, and bone VA 56
My flesh is soft and plump " 142
The flesh being proud R L 712
with her nails her flesh doth tear " 739
the dull substance of my flesh Son 44 1
Shall neigh,— no dull flesh " 51 11
flesh stays no farther reason " 151 8
Flew— observed as they flew L C 60
Flight — tender smell or 8|)eedy .... R L 695
cross Tarquin in his flight " 968
scars of battle '8cai>eth by the
flight LC 244
FLINT
98
FOLLY
Flist— Nay, more than flint VA 200
His falchion on a flint R L ~... 176
Aa from this cold flint '* 181
Fltnt-heartMi— 'O, pity/ 'gan she
cry, ♦flint-hoart€d boy VA ^... 95
Flinty— flinty, hard aa steel " «... 199
Flock— among a flock of sheep " 685
My flocks feed not P P 18 1
Flocks all sleeping ** 18 42
shepherds feed their flocks " 20 6
Flood— jewel in the flood VA 824
drown'd him in the flood EL 266
into thy boundless flood ** ^... 653
forward like a gentle flood " .... 1118
no flood by raining slaketh " ..... 1677
in this fearful flood " 1741
and gave the flood L C 44
why was not I a flood PP 6 14
Flood-gates— But through the .... VA 959
Flonriah— the flourish set on youth Son 60 9
Flow— And to his flow Ji L 651
Thus ebbs and flows " ..:.. 1569
an eye, unused to flow Son 'JO 5
Flo w*d— downward flow'd apace L C 284
Flower— The field's chief flower VA 8
gardens full of flowers *' ..... 65
Fair flowers that are not " 131
These forceless flowers " 152
fresh flowers being shed " 665
thou pluck'st a flower " 946
No flower was nigh " ..... 1055
The flowers are sweet " 1079
A purple flower sprung up " 1168
the new-sprung flower " ..... 1171
' Poor flower,' quoth she " 1177
my sweet love's flower " 1188
take root with precious flowers R L ..... 870
Each flower moisten'd " .... 1227
against the wither'd flower " ..... 1254
that the flower hath kill'd " 1255
But flowers distill'd &m 5 13
would bear your living flowers " 16 7
With April's first-born flowers " 21 7
is no stronger than a flower " 65 4
and died as flowers do now " 68 2
To thy fair flower " 69 12
The summer's flower " 94 9
But if that flower " 94 11
Of diffV'rent flowers " 98 6
More flowers I noted " 99 14
Of bird, of flower, of shape "113 6
or flowers with flowers gather'd " 124 4
have been a spreading flower L C 75
and gave him all my flower " ~... 147
Sweet rose, fair flower P P 10 1
A flower that dies "13 3
a gloss, a glass, a flower " 13 5
As flowers dead lie wither'd " 13 9
shine, sun, to succour flowers " 15 16
A cap of flowers " 20 11
Flown— to hell \» flown away Son 145 12
Flnxive — bathed she in her fluxive
eyes
Flj— fly they know not whither
strive to over>fly them
They basely fly
away she flics
sparks of fire do fly
can neither fight nor fly
VA 304
" 324
" »... 894
" -... 1027
R L 177
" ^... 230
Fly— the eyes fly from their lighU R L 461
He faintly flies " «... 740
fly with the filth away " .... loiO
wheresoe'er they fly •* 1014
determining which way to fly " „... 1150
with thought's feathers flies " .....1216
and from his lii>s did fly " ..... 1406
and through her wounds doth fly " 1728
A crow that flies Son 70 4
ignorance aloft to fly " 78 6
which flit»8 before her face " 143 7
that which flies from thee "143 9
the cagetl cloister fly L C ..... 249
from his heart did fly " 825
/7y— poor flies in his fume VA „... 316
Flying— The timorous flying hare VA . 674
Foam— They Join and shoot their
foam R L ..... 1442
Foe— so white a foe VA 864
that ever threat his foes " ..... 620
to amaze his foes " 684
if his foes pursue him " ..... 699
triumph in so false a foe RL ~... 77
a parley to his heartless foe " ..... 471
to fine the hate of foes " «... 936
to see his friends his foes " ..... 988
to scratch her wicked foe " ..... 1035
will kill myself, thy foe " 1196
to ban her cruel foes *' 1460
ta'en prisoner by the foe " 1609
revenged on my foe " ..... 1683
the hateful foe bcwray'd " ..... 1698
that should have slain her foe ** .... 1827
Thyself thy foe Son 1 8
yet we must not be foes " 40 14
even so as foes commend " 69 4
from my face she turns my foes " 139 11
Faithful friend from flattering
foe PP 21 58
Fogirjr— vaporous and foggy Night R L 771
Foil— which remaiu'd the foil L C 153
Foird—foil'd the god of fight VA 114
victories once foil'd Sun 25 10
she foil'd the framing P P 1 15
Folnon — spring and .... of the year Son 53 9
Foist— What thou dost fobt upon us " 123 6
Fold— The sheef) are gone to fold VA 532
Wreathed up in fatal folds " 879
in her lips' sweet fold R L 679
iWd— Fold in the object VA «... 822
Nor fold my fanlt R L ~... 1078
Here folds she up " „... 1310
Folded — Shame folded up " ..... 676
Of folded schedules Z C ..... 43
Follow— What follows more VA 54
imagination she did follow " 975
shame that follows sweet delight R L ..... 857
temptation follows where thou art ^Sbf* 41 4
To follow that which fliea " 143 7
Doth follow night "145 11
Followed- That .... it as gentle day " 145 10
Following— What following sorrow R L 186
following where he haunted L C 180
Folly— love is wise in folly VA ..*.. 838
feeds his vulture folly R L 556
folly lurk in gentle breasts " 851
His time of folly " «... 992
wound his folly's show " «... 1810
folly, age, and cold decay Son 11 6
FIELD
96
FIRE
Field— ralleys, dales, and fields P P 20 8
Flesd— with such foul fiends VA 638
my angel be tum'd fiend Son 144 9
night, who, Uke a fiend *« 145 11
The naked and concealed fiend L C ~... 317
my angel be tum'd fiend PP 2 9
Foul precurrer of the fiend P T 6
Fierce — from the fierce tiger's jaws Son 19 3
Or some fierce thing " 23 8
Fiery— Kfxl cheeks and fiory eyes VA 219
in his fiery race Son 61 11
Fiery-pointed— the fair and .... sun R L »... 872
Figlit— foil'd the god of fight VA 114
fight brings beauty under " ..... 746
to use it in the fight R L ~... 62
makes them still to fight *' 68
with life's strength doth fight " 124
can neither fight nor fly " 280
The coward fights " 273
Desire doth fight with Grace " ~... 712
an eager combat fight " ~... 1298
encouraging the Greeks to fight " ~... 1402
warrior famoused for fight Son 25 9
'gainst his glory fight " 60 7
against myself I'll fight " 88 8
that love with love did fight PP 16 6
vanquish'd men in bloody fight " 18 36
Fighting— note the fighting conflict Fi4 ..... 345
sUtcs for pillage fighting R L 428
but fighting outwardly L C 203
Figure— but figures of delight Son 98 11
Steal from his figure " 104 10
Laundering the silken figures L C 17
Figured — . ... to thee my true spirit Son 108 2
to take her figured proffer PP 4 10
Figuring- Figuring that their pas-
sions L C 199
Filching— Doubting the filching age Sm 75 6
Filed— by all the Muses filed " 85 4
Smooth not thy tongue with filed
talk PP 19 8
Filial— Of wealth, of filial fear L C -... 270
Fill— as minutes fill up hours R L ..... 297
To fill with wonn-holos " ..... 946
although to-day thou fill Son 56 5
doth the impression fill " 112 1
Ay, fill it full with wills " 136 6
Filled— 'My daughter' and 'my
wife' with clamours fill'd R L ..... 1804
Ifltwerefill'd Son 17 2
drain'd his blood and fill'd his brow '• 63 3
countenance fill'd up his line " 86 13
Fillet— Some in her thrcaden fillet L C 33
Filleth— she feeds, yet never filleth VA 548
Filling— coral cisterns filling R L 1234
Filth— fly with the filth away " 1010
Find— she in him finds missing VA 605
in a brake she finds a hound " 913
Find sweet beginning " ..... 1138
shall he think to find a stranger
just R L ..... 159
finds no excuse nor end " 238
from thence, where it may find " 760
To find some desperate instrument " 1038
Will we find out " -... 1146
To find a face " ..... 1444
And who she finds forlorn " ..... 1500
It cannot be, I find " ..... 15:19
That he finds means " ..... 1561
Find— Who finds his Lucrece
RL
M...
1565
this refuge let me find
u
»..«.
1664
Find no determination
Son
18
6
that I in heaven find
u
14
8
To find where your true image
It
24
6
for myself no quiet find
u
27
14
Both find each other
u
42
11
Shall reasons find
It
49
8
will my poor beast then find
u
61
5
your praise shall still find room
(i
l»
10
To find out shames
M
61
7
and thou shalt find
<•
77
10
Wherein it finds a joy
<(
91
6
0, what a happy title do I find
U
92
11
thou in this shalt find thy monu
-
nient
u
107
13
when it alteration finds
It
116
8
and find the lesson true
II
118
13
now I find true
ti
119
9
And thou shalt find it
tf
142
4
thy foul faults should find
It
148
14
find their sepulchres in mud
LC
•••••
46
to do will aptly find
It
»•■••
88
which abroad they find
tt
•■»••
137
that so their shame did find
It
187
All unseen 'gan passage find
PP
17
6
A cripple soon can find a halt
It
19
10
Faithful friends are hard to find
II
21
84
Finding— Finding their enemy
VA
••■••
887
Feast-finding minstrels
RL
••••«
817
Finding thy worth
Son
82
6
Finding the first conceit
It
108
13
Finding myself in honour
LC
•••••
150
Fine— to fine the hate of foes
RL
•«••■
936
belongs to love's fine wit
Son
23
14
the fine point of seldom pleasure
It
62
4
Finger— locks her lily fingers one in
one
VA
•••••
228
He bends her fingers
II
••••■
476
the needle his finger pricks
RL
•«•••
819
As on the finger of a throned queen Son
96
5
NVith thy sweet fingers
tt
128
3
O'er whom thy fingers walk
It
128
U
Give them thy fingers
It
128
14
Fire— coals of glowing fire
VA
•«•••
35
yet her fire must burn
It
•••••
94
all compact of fire
It
*•••«
149
darts forth the fire
It
196
scornfully glisters like fire
It
•••■•
275
love's fire doth assuage
It
••••■
331
It fiash'd forth fire
ft
•«•■•
848
set the heart on fire
It
•« ••■
388
To touch the fire
ti
•••»•
402
or in the fire
It
»••••
494
do abat« the fire
It
654
Mine eyes are tum'd to fire
It
1
^072
melt at mine eyes' red fire
II
•*•••
1073
matter is to fire
It
•»•••
1162
bears the lightless fire
RL
*••••
4
sparks of fire do fiy
It
•■••«
177
I enforced this fire
It
•••••
181
Against love's fire
It
••«••
855
huge fires abide
It
•••••
647
Thou blow'st the fire
tt
•••••
884
That two red fires
It
»••«•
1353
the fire that burneth here
tt
•••••
1475
with fame and not with fire
It
•••••
1491
His eye drops fire
It
•«•••
1552
balls of quenchless fire
It
•••••
1551
rat^ThitoneforaU.o
AiJireforboDDur
UDBOurroiwcUti
lorlhitiFblchire«i]
(llfoi wtntor Kit
llfor
woner wnie for
nrlMlDgs
aUyh for piling DgbtlEig '* .
Thnt tnn lot ingcr " .
ShUlplEidftirTue " .
For Ibow [L.Im. eywi bftr«y Ifaee " .
nitrliilhHlur'm^'i.'anh'gdvllgbt " .
For In Ihy IhJ " .
ForUwrul pollcjreniiilii»enKt»d " .
■Thtn, rur tfajrhuabiDd '■ .
Parnitrki dncrled " .
for hJfl »ke ftpin me "
foi thine own «1ie1»Tenif " .
For ilona dluolrnl to water do
Farkliigi.][kegads.>li
Litl^ majttil]''! Kpeil
Fa
Willi the Ighil)' linen
Uwn. 11 revels
gulllj'rehelfarrrmlBlo
DbW agilnil liiuiKir
hi
iil.lmK.lfl-orl.l.oft™f
lo.
>rartheniorniD|!ll||fat
ilwylhoir guilt
di
ihnTbourfordelWiiift
I'D
Cur Ihr honour
niorevontfurpttBsgeuf hsrbrMlb "
that la gone lor wfaich I sought "
For more It 1>
I boiband "
work waa
r, like a hcavj-haoging
enaaaubtleSinon
017 tear he falla
on In hia fln
k> for nlgbt. and then
.he
th<',lr>v..ll'uldeadof
ark ■■ ....
e that waa thjr Lncn™ " ....
rIngJuatlCB "
a merllorloua Iklr deaign " ....
ghterorforwIfB "
she caned thee tor her
10 IS
11 9
FLINT
98
POLLY
18
18
20
fllBi— Naf, more than fliiit VA ....
Hu fafehion od a flint B L
Am from thb cold flint **
¥UnUkfwU4--'0, pity,* *gan abe
erj^ 'flint-hearted boy VA
Fllatj— flinty, hard aa steel **
Flack— among a flock of sheep
Mj floclu feed not
Flocks all sleeping
shephenis feed their flocks
Flaad— jevel in the flood
drown'd him in the flood
into thy boundless flood **
forward like a gentle flood **
no flood by raining slaketh **
in this fearful flood
and gave the flood L C
why was not I a flood P P
Flaod-^tc*— Bat through the ... . VA
Floniiah — the floaiish set on youth Som
PP
VA
RL
Flow— And to his flow
Thus ebbs and flows
an eye, unused to flow
FlowM — downward flow'd apace
Flower— The field's chief flower
gardens full of flowers
Fair flowers that are not
These forceless flowers
fresh flowers being shed
thou pluck'st a flower
Ko flower waa nigh
The flowers are sweet
A purple flower sprung up
the new-spning flower
' Poor flower,' quoth she
my sweet lore's flower
take root with precious flowers
Each flower moisten 'd
against the wither'd flower
that the flower hath kill'd
But flowers distill'd
would bear your living flowers
With April's first-born fiowers
is no stronger than a flower
and died as flowers do now
To thy fair flower
The summer's flower
But if that flower
Of different flowers
More fiowers I noted
Of bird, of flower, of shape
or flowers with flowers gather'd
have been a spreading flower
and gare him all my flower
Sweet rose, fair flower
A flower that dies
a Kl<'S-^ a glftss, a flower
As flowers dead lie wither'd
shine, sun, to succour flowers
A cap of flowers
Flown— to bvll is flown away
FlaxlTe — bathed she in her fluxive
eyes
Fly— fly they know not whither
strive to over-fly them
They basely fly
away she flies
sparks of fire do fly
can neither fight nor fly
RL ^.
Stm
LC
r.4
6
60
• •••
30
Ji Jj M»
San
u
u
«4
M
((
ti
5
16
21
65
68
6U
94
98
99
113
124
X/ C/ M<
PP
•I
(t
San
LC
VA
«
u
RL
u
10
13
13
13
15
20
145
2D0
176
ISl
95
199
685
1
42
6
824
260
653
ins
1677
1741
44
14
959
9
651
1569
•>
2*4
S
65
131
152
665
946
1055
1079
1168
1171
1177
IISS
870
1227
1254
1255
13
7
t
4
2
12
9
11
6
14
6
4
75
147
1
3
5
9
16
11
12
50
304
324
894
1027
177
230
Fly— the eyea fly from their UghU R L 461
He faintly fliea
fly with the filth away
wbereaoe'er they fly
determining which way to fly
with thoashi's feathers fliea
and from his lips did fly
and through her wounds doth fly
Son
70
" 78
** 14.1
" 143
L \j ~...
M
M
l(
M
U
U
1
40
69
139
A crow that flies
ignorance aloft to fly
which flitv before her face
that which flies from thee
the caffrd cloister fly
from his heart did fly **
/7y— poor flies in his fume V A
Fljlny— The timorous flying hare VA
FawB— They join and shoot their
foam RL
Fae— so white a foe V A
that ever threat his foes **
to amaze his foes
if his foes pursue him
triumph in so false a foe R L ^.
a parley to his heartless foe ** ...
to fine the hate of foes
to see his friends his foes
to scratch her wicked foe
will kill myself, thy foe
to ban her cruel foes
ta'en prisoner by the foe
revenged on my foe
the hateful foe bewray'd
that should hare slain her fbe "
Thyself thy foe Son
yet we must not be foes *•
even so as foes commend
from my face she turns my foea
Faithful friend from fiattering
foe PP 21
Foinry— vaporous and foggy Night R L .
Foil— which remaiu'd the foil L C .....
Foird— foU'd the god of fight VA .....
victories once foil'd Son 25
she foil'd the framing P P 7
FolsoB — spring and .... of the year Son 58
Foist— What thou dost foist upon ua " 123
Fold— The sheep are gone to fold V A ^..,
Wreathed up in faUl folds **
in her lips' sweet fold R L .....
/Wrf— Fold in the ol^ject VA
Nor fold my fault R L ....
Here folds she up ** „...
Folded— Shame folded up ^ ....
Of folded {Schedules L C ^...
Follow— What follows more VA .
imagination she did follow ** »...
shame that follows sweet delight R L ....
temptation follows where thou art Son 41
To follow that which flies " 143
Doth follow night ** 145
FoIIow'd- That .... it as gentle day ** 145
Following — What following sorrow R L ....
following where he haunted L C ....
Folly— love is wise in folly VA .*.
ftM-ds his vulture folly R L ....
folly lurk in gentle breasts
His time of folly
wound his folly's show " «...
folly, age, and cold decay Son 11
740
1010
1014
1150
1216
1406
1728
4
6
7
9
249
325
816
674
1442
864
620
684
699
77
471
936
1035
1196
1460
1609
1688
1686
1827
8
14
4
11
58
771
153
114
10
15
9
6
582
879
679
822
1073
1310
675
43
54
975
857
4
7
11
10
186
180
M
U
656
851
1810
FOR
102
FOREST
For— It might for Fortune's basUrd ^n 124 2
Which die for goodness, who have
lived for crime " 124 14
great bases for eternity " 125 3
For compound sweet " 125 7
only me for thee "125 12
For since each hand " 127 5
For well thou k no w'ttt " 131 3
To mourn for me " 132 11
For that deep wound "133 2
for I, being pent in thee " 133 13
For thou art covetous "134 6
to write for me " 134 7
came debtor for my sake " 134 11
Thus far for love " 136 4
For nothing hold me " 136 11
for my name is 'Will' " 136 14
For, if I should despair " 140 9
For they in thee " 141 2
languish'd for her sake " 145 3
For that which longer " 147 2
For I have sworn thee fair " 147 13
for thy sake " 149 4
for now I know thy mind " 149 13
For, thou betraying me " 151 5
for whose dear love " 151 14
For all my vows are oaths " 152 7
For I have sworn deep oaths " 152 9
For I have sworn thee fair " 152 13
The boy for trial " 153 10
the bath for my help lies " 153 13
For men diseased "154 12
Came there for cure " 154 13
For some, uutuck'd, descended L C 81
For on his visage was in little
drawn " 90
For maidcn-tongued he was " «... 100
Came for additions " 118
For his advantage still " 123
And dialogued for him " 132
Experience for me many bulwarks
builded " 162
For when we ragre " 160
For fear of harms " 165
For further I could say " 169
For feasts of love " 181
For these, of force, must " „... 223
What me your minister, for you
obeys " 229
For she was sought by spirits " 236
Must for your victory " 268
For thou art all " ^... 266
For, lo, his passion " „... 295
What I should do again for such a
sake " 322
For being both to me PP 2 11
Vows for thee broke " 3 4
gone to the hedge for shade "62
tarriance for Adonis made "64
For his approach "68
Paler for sorrow "93
For Adon's sake "94
I weep for thee "10 7
For why thou left'st mo nothing " 10 8
For why I craved nothing " 10 10
For methinks thou stay'st too long " 12 12
beauty blemish'd once 's for ever
lost " 13 11
for I supp'd with sorrow " 14 6
For— a word for shadows like myself P P
For she doth welcome daylight '*
For why, she sigh'd "
Yet not for me, shine sun
For of the two the trusty knight
For now my song is ended
Vow, alack I for youth unmeet
Thou for whom Jove would swear "
And deny himself for Jove
Turning mortal for thy love
For now I see
All our love is lost, for Love is dead "
For a sweet content
Other help for him
doth stand for nought "
To sin and never for to saint "
For her griefs so lively shown "
For these dead birds sigh a prayer P T
Forage— she begins to forage VA
Forbade—. ... my tongue to speak R L
Forbade the boy p P
Forbear— the un grown fry forbears VA
u
It
ti
<i
%
u
II
It
II
14
15
15
16
11
7
12
16
16 11
16 16
17
17
13
15
17 17
17 18
18 16
18 48
18 61
18 54
19
19
21
42
44
17
67
.. 664
.. 1648
9 8
.. 526
thou might'st my seat forbear Son 41 9
forbear to glance thine eye " 12)9 6
Forbid— But I forbid thee " 19 8
That god forbid that made me " 58 1
spoil of beauty can forbid " 65 12
in honour so forbid L C ..... 160
Forbidden— That use is not forbid-
den usury Son 6 6
Forfolddlng^--all these poor forbid-
ding«( R L ~... 323
Forbod— To be forbod the sweets L C ..... 164
Force — desire doth lend her force VA 29
then force must work my way R L ~... 613
by force, by fraud, or skill " ^... 1248
Sweet love, renew thy force Son 66 1
some in their body's force " 91 2
For these, of force L C ~... 223
did her force subdue " ..... 248
The aloes of all forces " ..... 273
Her feeble force will yield P P 19 21
i^cc— Perforce will force it VA 72
Lucrece must I force to my desire R L ..... 182
doth force a further strife " ..... 689
I force not argument a straw " ..... 1021
Forced— Forced to content VA ~... 61
Forced it to tremble R L ~... 261
This forced league " ..... 689
acquit ray forced offence " ..... 1071
That was not forced " ..... 1657
forced him on so fast " 1670
How may this forced stain " ..... 1701
Where thou art forced Son 41 12
Or forced examples L C ~... 167
O, that forced thunder " ..... 325
Forceleaa— These forceless flowers V A »... 162
Ford — Deep sounds make leaser
noise than shallow fords R L 1329
'Fore — ^The eyes 'fore duteous Son 7 11
Fore-bemoaned— of .... moan " 30 11
Fore-betrajr'd — betray the .... L C 328
Forego— Mine eyes .... their light R L 228
Foregoing— foregoing simple savour &m 125 7
Foregone— grieve at grievances . . . . " 30 9
Forehead— Brand not my forehead R L ..... 1091
Foreknowing— Foreknowing well VA ..... 245
Foresight— But her foresight R L 728
Foreat'— Have from the forests shook i&m 104 4
FORESTALL
103
FORWARD
RL
It
Sum
VA
Son
PP
VA
Son
107
1S4
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122
40
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71
117
149
18
81
it
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Son
PP
FwwUll— Thus I foresUII thee
eoald not forestall thj will
Fwctell— Foretell new storms
FMf^it— Suppoeed as forfeit
Mjfelf ril forfeit
Fenjed— Last full of forged lies
hs»t thou forged hooks
Ferirrry— the weak braiu's forgeries R L ~...
trestfon, forfierr. and shift
In the world's falne forgeries
I'ercet— her joints forgft to 1m»w
for fear of trust forget to say
dt«r love, forget me quite "
Korfrt'st — that thou .... so long **
Forjcftftil— return, fur^cetful Muse "
I'eiylfiil m iw Were to import .... "
hiffrttinir — . . . . shame's pure blutth V A
rorfiif— Till forgiug Nature "
Fordfe— I do forgive thy robbery Son
Forgot— that will uevcr be forgot R L
And nerer be forgot "
And all the rest forgot Sun
in your sweet thoughts would be
forgot "
Forgot upon your dearest love ^
think on thee, when I forgot "
All my merry jigs are quite forgot P P
FMfttteB — each part will be ... . Son
FiMloni— in thine own law forlorn V A
DiiD cloudy and forlorn
that was but late forlorn
And who she finds forlorn
And fh>m the forlorn world
Cytherea, all In love forlorn
^e. poor bird, as all forlorn
/Mom— Jjove hath forlorn me
Fern— such saintlike fonns
8o fair a form
BO form of thee hast left
your sweet form should bear
Thy beauty's form
form of well-reflned pen
To set a form
time and outward form
it no form delivers
dwellers on form and favour
were beauteous as his form
which did no form receive
all strange forms receives
/brst'-that face should form another Son
thy shadow's form form happy
show "
Fenial — nor tied in formal plat L C
Fem'd — And therefore are they
form'd R L
Is form'd in them by force "
Fsraier— sharpen 'd in his ... . might Son
burthen of a former child "
the wits of former days
dressings of a former sight
Fenake— swiftly doth forsake him
hioiaelf he must forsake
beaoties do themselves forsake
thoo didst forsake me
Fataakn— I am forsaken
F^ sae k — himaelf himself forsook
the shadow had forsook them
she in that sense forsook
-A woman I forswore
li
RL
Son
<»
((
II
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it
33
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1644
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1241
1243
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176
1538
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Forswore — I forswore not thee PP Z 6
Forsworn— steal a kiss and die .... VA 726
faith unhappily forsworn Son 66 4
though thou art forsworn " 88 4
thou know'st I am forsworn ** 152 1
But thou art twice forsworn " 152 2
If lore make me forsworn P P 5 1
Though tt> myself forsworn ** 5 3
Fort— Thy never-con<iuer'd fort R L ~... 482
If in this blemish'd fort *' .... 1175
Forth— TliiniM«ye darts forth VA^... 196
brought forth ilwv ** ~... 204
blaze forth her wnmg ** .... 219
But. lo. fn»m forth " 259
And forth hhe ruiihes " .... 2G2
drink tho air. and forth again *' 273
It flash'd forth firo •• 348
lK?fore one h'af put forth " .... 416
to creep forth again " 1036
To 9*ft forth that R L .... 32
rutts forth another wind " 315
Bushing fnuu forth a cloud " .... 373
peepingforth this tumult to behold " 447
From forth dull sh^ep " .... 450
breathes she forth her spite " .... 762
I« to lot forth " 1029
stol'n fnmi forth thy gate " 1068
forth with bashful inuooence " 1341
gleam'd forth their ashy light " 1378
She throws forth Tarquln's name " 1717
from forth her fair Htreets " 1834
And make mo travel forth Son Z\ 2
let him bring forth " 38 U
Shall you pace forth '* 55 10
by that which I bring forth " 72 13
my Muse brings forth " 103 1
that put'st forth all to use " 134 10
Breathed forth the sound " 145 2
thos«.> impediments stand forth L C 269
Forth their dye Pi' 18 40
And set thy pttrson forth to sell " 19 12
Forthwith— forthwith he lighteth R L .... 178
Fortified— Which her vinage L <J .... 9
Fortify— And fortify yourself Son 16 3
do I now fortify " 63 9
Fortreea'd— Are weakly fortress'd R L .... 28
Fortnne— I fear'd thy fortune V A .... 642
Reckoning his fortune R L 19
Love and Fortune be my gods " .... 351
their cursed-blessed fortune " 866
Caucell'd my fortunes " 9:J4
the giddy round of Fortune's wheel " 952
Nor can I fortune to brief min-
utes tell Son 14 5
Whilst I, whom fortune " 25 8
with fortune and men's eyes " 29 I
And Shalt by fortune " VI 3
by fortune's dean'st spite " 37 3
Join with the spite of fortune ** 90 3
the very worst of fortune's might " 90 12
do you with Fortune chidu " 111 1
It might for Fortune's bastard " 124 2
() frowning F{»rtune, cursed fickle PP 18 15
Whilst as fickle Fortune smili!d " 21 29
But if Fortunt? once do frown " 21 47
Forty— When forty winters Son 2 1
Forward— IH^'P wot^ roll forward R L .... 1118
all forwards do contend San 60 4
The forward violet " 99 1
FOUGHT
104
FRESH
FoBght -the strand of Dardan,
where they fought H L ~... 1436
Foel— foul, or wrinkled-old VA 133
Gusts and foul flaws *' 456
with such foul fiends " ~... 638
desire's foul nurse " — 773
consulting for foul weather ** 972
To wash the foul face " 983
'Tis he, foul creature " 1005
The foul boar's conquest " ~... 1030
But this foul, grim " Iia5
arabiUous, foul infirmity E L 150
with lust's foul charm " 173
foul dishonour " 198
including all foul harms ^ ~... 199
Full of foul hope " 284
Who, like a foul usurper " ...~ 412
his foul thoughts might compass " „... 346
but his foul appetite " 546
Yet, foul night-waking cat " ~... 554
not to foul desire " 574
With foul offenders " 612
foul sin may say " ~... 629
lived by foul devouring " 700
with foul insurrection " 722
Thou foul abettor " 886
My life's foul deed " 1208
By foul enforcement ** 1623
with the foul act dispense " »... 1704
For his foul act " -... 1824
Tarquin's foul oflbnce " 1852
limbecks foul as hell within Scm 119 2
Fairing the foul " 127 6
And all they foul that thy " 132 14
upon so foul a face " 137 12
with her foul pride *' 144 8
thy foul faults should find " 148 14
against the truth so foul a lie " 152 14
the patterns of his foul beguiling L C 170
of his foul adulterate heart " 175
Foul precurrer of the fiend P T 6
FouI-cankerlng— .... rust V A 767
Fool-deflled— my foul-defiled blood R L 1029
Fooler— and they thy fouler grave " 661
Foul-reeking— furnace of .... smoke " ...» 799
Foond— And swear I found you " 1636
my friend hath found that loss Son 42 10
'twixt a miser and his wealth is
found " 75 4
To n»»w-found methods " 76 4
And found such fair assistance " 78 2
And found it in thy cheek " 79 11
1 found, or thought I found " 83 3
found a kind of meetness '* 118 7
this advantage found " 153 2
But found no cure '• 153 13
Found yet moe letters L C 47
are seld or never found P P 13 7
Foandation— earth's .... shakes VA 1047
Fount— toads infect fair founts R L &iO
a river running from a fount L C ..... 283
Fonntain— where the pleasant foun-
Ulns lie V A 234
Mud not the fountain R L 577
The poison'd fountain " 1707
And from the purple fountain " 1734
and silver fountains mud Son 35 2
In a cold valley-fountain " 153 4
all their fountains in my well L C ..... 255
Four— feeder of the other four VA .... 446
' never four such lamps " ..... 469
My life, being made of four Son 45 7
Fowl— Coucheth the fowl below M L ...^ 507
as fowl hear falcon's bells ** ...» 511
As lagging fowls " ..... 1335
Every fowl of tyrant wing P T ...- 10
Fox— Or at the fox VA 675
Fragrant— a canker in the ... . rose Son 95 2
With a thousand fragrant posies P P 20 10
Frail— my firail Joints shake R L ..... 227
Frailer— why are frailer spies Son 121 7
Frailty— All frailties that besiege " 109 10
Or on my frailties " 121 7
Frame— with gentle work did frame "51
My body is the frame ** 24 H
wonder of your frame " 59 10
did I frame my feeding " 118 6
frame all thy ways PP 19 25
Franed— Wherein she framed thee VA ..... 731
She framed the love P P 7 15
Framing— For framing thee so fair VA 744
yet she foil'd the framing PP 7 15
Frank— And being frank Son 4 4
Frantic— Frantic with grief H L ...- 762
Frentlcly— frantlcly she doteth VA ..... id'iB
Frantic - mad — frantic - mad with
evermore unrest Son 147 10
Fraud- false and full of fraud VA 1141
by force, by fraud or skill R L 1243
Franghted— Fraughted with gall P P IS 26
Free— Free vent of words VA ...- 834
thy Lucrece Is not free R L ..... 1624
she lends to those are free Son 4 4
my oblation, poor but free " 125 10
nor he will not be free "134 5
and yet am I not free " 134 14
he was, and thereof free L C ..... 100
but mine own was free '* ...» 195
Dree—Or free that soul R L ...» 930
my life's fair end shall free it " 1208
Freed— be freed from guilty woe " 1482
Freedom— 8teal thine own freedom V A 160
the freedom of that right Son 46 4
that did in freedom stand L C »... 143
Freesing— parching heat nor freez-
ing cold RL ~... 114.3
What freezings have I felt Son 97 3
Frenzy — peiitilence and frenzies
wood VA 740
And his untimely frenzy R L 1675
Frequent— That I have .... been Son 117 5
Fresh-pale with fresh variety VA 21
fresh beauty for the use " 164
when in his fresh array " 483
upon the fresh flowers " 665
Uiwn fresh beauty " 796
doth always fresh remain " 801
colours fresh and trim " »... 1079
with their fresh falls' haste R L 650
But now that fair fresh mirror " 1760
the world's fresh ornament San 1 9
Whose fresh repair "38
And that fresh blood " 11 8
And in fresh numbers " 17 6
Since first I saw you fresh " 104 8
My love looks fresh " 1U7 10
love in love's fresh case " 108 9
Fresh to myself L C »... 76
FRESH
105
FROM
VrMh— in whoM Areth regard L C 218
lovely, fjresh, and green P P A 2
Vrathcr— Some f^reaber stamps Son 82 8
Frrt^resistance made him fret VA 69
ttill he kmra and freta ** ~... 75
vhen be doth fret *' ..... 621
the hidden treasure frets '' 767
the wind in greater fury fret R L 648
JH^— as frets upon an instrument " ~... 1140
rrieBd-«o white a fHend VA 364
with certain of his friends " 588
counsel of their friends " 640
expected of my friends " ~... 718
a late-embarked friend " 818
his affairs, his friends, his state R L ~... 45
were he not my dear friend ** 234
my kinsman, my dear friend " ~... 237
and hears no heedful friends " 495
I rest thy secret friend " 526
My husband is thy friend " ~... 582
the humble suppliant's friend *' 897
a thousand thousand friends " 963
to see his friends his foes " »... 988
MytelC thy friend, will kUl myself,
thy foe " 1196
Here friend by friend in bloody
channel lies " »... 1487
And friend to friend gives unad-
Tised wounds " 1488
like him with friends possess'd Son 29 6
For precious friends hid in death's
dateless night " 30 6
I think on thee, dear friend " SO 13
Aod all those fHends which I
thought buried '* 81 4
Bad my friend's Muse grown " 32 10
Suflering my friend for my sake
to approve her " 42 8
my frioud hath found that loss " 42 10
my friend and I are one " 42 13
the miles are measured from thy
friend " 60 4
by thy tme-telling friend " 82 12
To me, £air friend " 104 1
lo try an older friend "110 11
Pity me then, dear friend "111 13
that deep wound it gives my friend
and me " 133 2
my sweet'st friend must be " 133 4
But then my friend's heart " 133 10
And sue a friend came debtor for
my sake " 134 11
both to each friend "144 11
thst I do call my friend " 149 5
both to each friend PP 2 11
yes, dear friend " 10 11
All thy friends are lapp'd in lead " 21 24
b no friend in misery " 21 82
Faithful friends are hard to find " 21 34
Every man will be thy friend " 21 85
He that is thy friend indeed " 21 51
Faithful friend from flattering foe " 21 58
Vtrimdly— Sorrow that friendly sighs
sought stin to dry VA ..... 964
Mf <Blilp— and sweet friendship's
oath R L 569
In scorn or friendship PP 14 8
frii^t— fright the sUly lamb VA 1098
Tlwy fright him R L ..... 308
Friglit— And fright her with con-
fusion RL ~... 448
fright her crying babe " ..... 814
Frighted— As the poor frighted deer " »... 1149
From — pluck him from his horse V A .... 80
From his soft bosom " 81
From morn till night " ~... 154
Seeds spring from seeds " ~... 167
shines firom heaven " 193
The heat I have from thence " ~... 195
And when from thence " -... 227
from tempest and from rain " ..... 288
And from her twining arms '* ..... 256
from forth a copse " ~... 259
As from a furnace " ..... 274
lightning from the sky " 848
my palfrey from the mare " ~... 384
ttam his bending crest ** ~... 895
fh>m roy unyielding heart " 423
For from the stillltory " 448
As if fh>m thence " ..... 488
fh>m the dangerous year " ..... 508
buys my heart from me " «... 517
nectar from his lips " 572
stealing moulds from heaven " ..... 730
Yet firom mine ear " ~... 778
from the sweet embrace ** ~... 811
shooteth from the sky " ..... 815
from Venus' eye " 816
From his moist cabinet mounts up " 854
fjrom whose silver breast " 855
From whom each lamp " 861
from their strict embrace " 874
from her two checks fair " 957
fh>m their dark I)ods " ..... 1050
like a vapour from her sight " 1166
reft from her by death " 1174
From the besieged Ardea R L 1
fortreas'd fJrom a world of hanus " 28
From thievish ears " 85
From Venus' doves doth challenge " ..... 68
rirtue claims from beauty beau-
ty's red " -... 69
Proving from world's minority
their right " ..... 67
pick no meaning from their part-
ing looks ** ... 100
Far from the purpose of his com-
ing " ~... 113
unloose it from their bond " ..... 186
leap'd from his bed " 169
That from the cold stone sparks of
fire do fly " 177
'As from this cold flint I enforced " ..... 181
hard news from the warlike band " 255
beats these from the stage " 278
He takes it from the rushes " 318
That shuts him from the heaven " ..... 838
Hath barr'd him from the blessed
thing " 840
So from himself impiety hath
wrought " 841
Rushing from forth a cloud " 878
From this fnir throne to heave " 413
From forth dull sleep " ..... 450
From sleep disturbed " ..... 454
the eyes fly from their lights " 461
shame that from them no device
can take ** ...». 635
FORESTALL
103
FORWARD
FMTttUU— Thus I forestall thee R L 484
eould not forestall thy will ** ~... 728
F^ntell— Foretell new storms " 1589
Ftalbit— Supposed M forfeit Son im 4
Myself ni forfeit " 134 3
For^d— Lust full of forged lies VA 804
hast thou forged hooks &m 137 7
Forgery— the weak brain's forgeries H L »... 460
treason, forgery, and shift " «.•. 920
in the world's false forgeries P P \ 4
Forfet— her joints forget to bow V A ~... 1061
for fear of trust forget to say Son 23 5
dear love, forget me quite " 72 3
Foriret'st— that thou so long "100 1
Forgetftal— return, forgetful Muse " 100 5
forfetfalnewi— Were to import .... " 122 14
ForgettlBf — . . . . shame's pure blush V A ~... 558
Forfing— Till forgiug Nature ** 729
Porglre — I do forgive thy robbery San 40 9
Forgot— that will uever be forgot Ji L 536
And never be forgot " 1644
And all the rest forgot Son 25 12
in yoar sweet thoughts would be
forgot " 71 7
Forgot upon your dearest love "117 3
think on thee, when I forgot "149 3
All my merry jigs are quite forgot PP 18 9
Forgotten— each part will be ... . Son 81 4
Forlorn— in thine own law forlorn VA 251
IMan cloudy and forlorn " 725
that was but late forlorn " 1026
And who she finds forlorn R L 1500
And from the forlorn world Son 33 7
Cytherea, all in love forlorn PP 6 3
She, poor bird, an all forlorn " 21 9
/br/om— Love hath forlorn nie " 18 21
Form— such saintlike fonns It L 1519
8o fair a form " ..... 1530
no form of thee hast left San 9 6
your sweet form should bear " 13 8
Thy beauty's form " 24 2
form of well-reflned pen " 85 8
To set a form " 89 6
Ume and outward form " 108 14
it no form delivers " 113 5
dwellers on form and favour " 125 6
were beauteous as his form L C 99
which did no furm receive " 241
all strange forms receives " 303
/brm — that face should form another Son 3 2
thy shadow's form form happy
show "43 -6
Formal— nor tied in formal plat L C 29
FormM — And therefore are they
form'd R L 1241
Is form'd in them by force " 1243
Former— sharpen'd in his ... . might Son 56 4
btirthen of a former child " 59 4
the wits of former days " 59 13
dressings of a former sight " 123 4
Fomak^— swiftly doth forsake him VA 321
himself he must forsake R L 157
beauties do themselves forsake Son 12 11
thou didst forsake me " 89 1
Fomken— I am forsaken " 13:^ 7
Ftomook— himself himself forsook VA 101
the shadow had forsook them " ... . 176
she in that sense forsook R L .^.. 1538
FMmworo— A woman I forswore PP Z 5
Forswore — ^I lorswore not thee P P Z 6
Forsworn— steal a kiss and die .... VA 726
faith unhappily forsworn Son 66 4
though thou art forsworn " 88 4
thou know'st I am forsworn ** 152 1
But thou art twice forsworn " 152 2
If love make me forsworn P P 5 1
Though to myself forsworn "53
Fort— Thy never-conquer'd fort R L 482
If in this blcmish'd fort " .... 1175
Forth— Thine eye darts forth VA 196
brought forth thee " 204
blaze forth her wrong " -... 219
But, lo. from forth " 259
And forth she rushes " ..... 262
drink the air, and forth again " 273
It flash'd forth fire " 348
before one leaf put forth " 416
to creep forth again " 1036
To set forth that R L 32
Putfs forth another wind " 315
Bushing from forth a cloud " 373
peeping forth this tumult to behold " 447
From forth dull sleep " ..... 450
breathes she forth her spite " ~... 762
Is to let forth " ..... 1029
slol'n from forth thy gate " 1068
forth with bashful innocence " 1341
gleain'd forth their ashy light " 1378
She throws forth Tarquin's name " ..... 1717
from forth her fair streets " 1834
And make me travel forth Son 34 2
let him bring forth "38 11
Shall you pace forth " 55 10
by that which I bring forth " 72 13
my Muse brings forth " 103 1
that put'st forth all to use "134 10
Breathed forth the sound " 145 2
those impedimenta stand forth L C 269
Forth their dye PP 18 40
And set thy person forth to sell " 19 12
Forthwith— forthwith he lighteth R L ..... 178
Fortified- Which her visage L C 9
Fortify— And fortify yourself Son \S 3
do I now fortify " 63 9
FortrenM— Are weakly fortress'd R L 28
Fortnne— I fear'd thy fortune V A ~... 642
Reckoning his fortune R L 19
Love and Fortune be my gods " ..... 351
their cursed-blessed fortune " 866
Cauccll'd my fortunes " 934
the giddy round of Fortune's wheel " ..... 952
Nor can I fortune to brief min-
utes tell Son 14 5
Whilst I, whom fortune " 25 8
with fortune and men's eyes " 29 I
And Shalt by fortune " 32 3
by fortune's dearest spite " 37 3
Join with the spite of fortune " 90 3
the very worst of fortune's might " 90 12
do you with Fortune chide "111 1
It might for Fortune's bastard " 124 2
O frowning Fortune, cursed fickle PP 18 15
Whilst as fickle Fortune smUed " 21 29
But if Fortune once do frown " 21 47
Fortj— When forty winters Son 2 1
Forward— Deep woes roll forward R L ...~ 11 18
all forwards do contend Son 60 4
The forward violet " 99 1
FROM
107
FULL-FED
VroM— Your nmme fh>iii hence im-
mortal Son 81 5
any fear from thence " 86 12
Be absent lh>m th7 walks " 89 9
husband nature's riches trook ex-
pense " 94 6
From thee, the pleasure " 97 2
From 70U hare I been absent " 98 1
Or from their proud lap pluck them " 98 8
U not fhmi mj lore's breath " 99 3
had stol'n from thee " 99 15
Have Arom the fon»ts shook " 104 4
Steal from his figure " 104 10
I from myself depart "109 3
As ftom my soul, which " 109 4
praises from your tongue " 112 6
&rthe9t flrom your sight "117 8
Distiird from limbecks foul ** 119 2
give them from me ** 122 11
buikled far from accident "124 5
breath that from my mistress recks " 130 8
Me from myself thy cruel eye hath
taken "133 5
therefore fVom my face she turns
my foes " i:)9 11
health from their physicians know " 140 8
Diasoade one foolish heart from
serving thoe " 141 10
not from thoee lips of thine " 142 5
that which flies from thee " 143 9
Tempteth my better angel from
my aide " 144 6
being both from me "144 11
From heaven to hell Is flown " 145 12
'I hate' from hate away she threw " 145 13
random from the truth " 147 12
0, from what power hast thou this
powerful might " 150 1
borrow'dfVom this holy fire of Love " 153 5
Which from Love's fire took heat
perpetual " 154 10
From off" a hill L C 1
from a sistering vale " ~... 2
fortified her visage from the sun " 9
would not break from thence " 34
from a maund she drew " 36
If that from him there may be " 68
his mettle from his rider takes " 107
from judgement stand aloof " »... 166
from many a several fair " 206
was sent me from a nun " 232
s river running from a fount " »... 283
Both fire from hence " 294
thunder from his heart " 325
Tempteth my better angel from
my side PP 2 6
each moving sense from idle rest " 15 3
Ne'er to pluck thee from thy thorn " 17 12
All our evening sport from us is fled " 18 47
Scarce I could from tears refrain " 21 16
Faithful friend from flattering foe " 21 58
From this session interdict P T .... 9
In a mutual flame from hence " 24
PrMtr— in summer's front doth sing Son 102 7
Fnst-fiap check'd with frost "57
Like litUe frosts R L 331
fear's frost hath dissolution " „... 855
Froaty— but fWwty in desire VA ...- 36
froth of fleeting joy B L ...^ 212
Frothy— Whose frothy mouth VA ...» 901
Froward— the froward infant still'd " «.. 662
when most his choice is froward " 570
ah, fool too froward P P 4 14
Frown— wounding of a frown VA 465
Foul words and frowns " 573
For at a frown they in their glory
die £bn 25 8
fh>wns and wrinkles strange " 93 8
within the level of your frown " 117 11
Frown — now doth he fh>wn VA 45
When he did frown " 571
see thee frown on my defects Son 49 2
But if Fortune once do frown P7* 21 47
Frown*st— On whom frown'st thou Sun 149 6
Frowning— O frowning Fortune PP 18 15
her frowning brows be bent " 19 13
Froaen— What wax. so frozen VA ...~ 565
'Tween frozen conscience R L ..... 247
Fmit— doting father of his fruit " 1064
and unfnther'd fruit Son 97 10
FrnitAil— Won in the fields of fruit-
ful Italy ^2 L 107
Frttitless— despite of chastity VA...^ 751
Fry — the ungrown fry forbears " 626
Fuel— with self-substantial fuel Son 1 6
FnlU— how canst thou fulfil R L 628
where you did fulfil " 1635
My love-suit, sweet, fulfil Son 136 4
' Will' will fulfil the treasure " 136 5
Falfllled— tliat they are so fulfilled R L 1258
Full— gardens full of flowers VA 65
Broad breast, full eye " .... 296
breeder, full of fear " 320
Full gently now she takes him " ~... 361
eye so full hath fed " 399
Whose full perfection " 634
Lust full of forged lies " 804
My face is full of shame " ..... 808
Full of respecU " «... 911
as one full of despair " ..... 955
thou art so full of fear " 1021
false and full of fraud " 1141
and too full of riot " 1147
Full of foul hope and full of fond
mistrust PZ ..... 284
gives the watch-word to his hand
full soon " -... 370
His face, though full of cares " 1503
Full many a glorious morning Son 33 1
thy years full well befits " 41 8
have full as deep a dye " 64 5
winter, which being full of care " 56 13
Sometime all full with feasting " 75 9
Was it the proud full sail *" 86 1
My most full flame " 115 4
To give full growth " 115 14
Even so, being full '* 118 5
Full character'd with lasting
memory " 122 2
murderous, bloody, full of blame " 129 3
Nor that full star " 182 7
Ay, fill it full with wills " 136 6
espied a fickle maid full pale L C ...~ 6
Youth is full of pleasance, age is
full of car© P P 12 2
Youth is full of sport " 12 5
heard it said full oft *' 19 41
Fnll-fbd- Look, as the .... hound P Zr ...» 6M
FULLNESS
108
GAZER
FallneM— eTen till they wink with
fallness Son 56 6
FMif»— bites the poor flies in his.... K^ ..... 816
which from discharged cflonon
fumes R L ..... 1043
Fasetloii— Doth part his fanction <Skm 113 3
Famace— Aa from a furnace V A ~... 274
thou furnace of foul>reeking
smoke R L ..... 799
Farrow— time's furrows I behold Son 22 8
Farther— now she will no further VA 905
doth force a further strife R L 689
For further I could say LC 169
Farj — his fury was assuaged V A ..... 818
With blindfold fury " .... 554
the headlong fury of his speed R L ~... 501
with the wind in greater fiiry fret " ..... 648
Spend'st thou thy fUry Son 100 8
Oage— or all for one we gage R L .... 144
but laid no words to gage *' ~... 1351
OaiB— Despair to gain doth traffic " ~... 131
are with gain so fond " 184
bankrupt in this poor-rich gain " ..... 140
A captive victor that hath lost in
gain ** ..... 730
Having no other pleasure of his
gain " 860
my loss is my love's gain Son 42 9
lives upon his gains " 67 12
thus far I count my gain " 141 13
to turn them both to gain PP 16 10
Gain— if I gain the thing I seek R L 211
I have seen the hungry ocean gain Son 64 5
And gain by ill thrice more "119 14
It was to gain my grace L C ~... 79
GalnM— Thy grace being gain'd "38
Gainer— I by this will be a gainer too Stm 88 9
Gaining— doth traificoft for gaining R L 131
Or, gaining more " 138
'Gainst^'Gainst venom'd sores VA ..... 916
dotes on what he looks 'gainst
law or duty R L ..... 497
That 'gainst thyself Son 10 6
nothing 'gainst Time's scythe " 12 13
And 'gainst myself " 85 11
'Gainst death and all oblivious en-
mity " 55 9
Crooked eclipses 'gainst his glory " 60 7
'gainst my strong Infection " 111 10
'gainst her own content L C 157
'gainst rule, 'gainst sense, 'gainst
shame *' ..... 271
the battery that you make 'gainst
mine " 277
'Gainst whom the world PP Z 2
Gait — comforter, with weary gait VA 529
with slow-sad gait descended R L 1081
An humble gait, calm looks " 1508
fingers walk with gentle gait Son 128 11
Gall— Thy honey turns to gall R L ..... 889
water'^alls in her dim element " 15S8
Fraughted with gall P P 18 26
Ga11ant--or kill the gallant knight " 16 6
Galled— To break upon the galled
shore R L 1440
•Gan— 'O, pity,' 'gan she cry V A — 95
with swelling drops 'gan wet R L 1228
and often 'gan to tear L C ..... 51
'Gan — ^Till thus he 'gan besiege me
All unseen 'gan passage find
Gaol — in a gaol of snow
use rigour in my gaol
Gaping — ^a press of gaping faces
Garden— gardens full of flowers
And many maiden gardens
Garment — Who wears a garment
Some in their garments
prouder than garments cost
with the garment of a grace
Gash — ^That makes more g^hea
Gate — ^it will not ope the gilte
But through the flood-gates
Soft pity enters at an iron gate
but stol'n from forth thy gate
Sings hymns at heaven's gate
Nor gates of steel so strrmg
W^ho glazed with crystal gate
Gathered — flowers that are not ....
Or flowers with flowers gather'd
L C ..... 177
PP 17 6
VA 862
Son 188 12
R L »... 1406
VA —,» 65
Am 16 6
VA 415
Am 91 8
" 91 10
LC^... 816
wA M... lOno
" ..... 424
" ..... 959
R L M... 595
" 1068
iSbn 29 12
" 65 8
LC 286
VA 131
&m 124 4
Gaadj— The gaudy sun would peep V A ..... 1088
R L ...- 272
&m 1 10
VA ..... 491
" ..... 571
" -... 771
" ~... 1108
R Li m... 60
" ..... 677
" ..... 624
" ..... 1874
" «... 1611
his gaudy banner is display 'd
herald to the gaudy spring
Gave— crystal tears gave light
O, had she then gave over
The kiss I gave you
entertainment that he gave
virtue gave the golden age
fountain that gave drink
by him that gave it thee
art gave lifeless life
no guilty instance gave
whom she best endow'd she gave
the more
thy sour leisure gave sweet leave
And Time that gave doth now
gave ray heart another youth
gave eyes to blindness
sigh'd, tore, and gave the flood
habitude gave life and grace
and gave him all my flower
to the stream gave grace
gave the tempter place
Gavest— the hours thou gavest me
San 11 11
" 39 10
" 60 8
" 110 7
" 152 11
L C 44
" ..... 114
" — 147
" — 285
" 818
R L 933
Am 22 14
" 87 9
" 87 10
VA ~... 286
Son &i 8
" 146 4
to repose
Thou gavest me thine
Thyself thou gavest
me, to whom thou gavest it
Gaj — caparisons or trapping gay
dead fleece made another gay
thy outward walls so costly gay
the learned man hath got the lady
gay PP 16 15
Gaae — eyes pay tributary gazes VA 682
an eye to gaze on beauty R L ..... 496
deer, that stands at gaze " 1149
The lovely gaze where every eye Son 5 2
to gaze therein on thee " 24 12
anon their gazes lend L C ..... 26
mine eyes throw gazes to the east PP 15 1
Gaxed — they long have gazed VA 927
gazed for tidings in my eager eyes R L ^... 254
gazed upon with every eye " ..... 1015
wistly on him gazed " «... 1355
on him she gazed, and gazing still " 1531
livery so gazed on now Son 2 3
Gazer— That the star-gazers VA 509
gazer late did wonder " ..... 748
GAZER
109
GIVE
Oawr— How many guen mightat
tboulead iSkm 96 11
Qamtk—Sow gazeth she on him VA 224
gaieth on her yet unstained bed R L 36A
object whereupon it gaxcth Son 20 6
Qasiag— .... npon a late-em barked r^ ~... 818
wonder of still-gazing eyes B L 84
rsge of lost by gazing qualified ^ 424
Gazing upon the Greeks " ..... 1384
on him she gazed, and gazing still " 1531
in th^ir gazing spent Sm 125 8
<3c«— with earth and sea's rich gems ** 21 6
With annexions of rich gems L C »... 208
Gtader— That thy sable makest P T 18
Ofiieral— to the general doom B L 924
a private sin in general ** 1484
I better in one general best St>n 91 « 8
this general evil they maintain " 121 13
\ht general of hot desire ** 154 7
did in the general biisom reign L C 127
VMitle- whose gentle wind VA 189
With gentle majesty " 278
thy courser, gentle boy ** ..... 403
IHstempcrinK gentle Love " ..... 653
Lore's gentle spring " 801
Lo,here the gentle lark *' ~... 853
h is no gentle chase " ~... 883
Then, gentle shadow " „... 1001
beast that knows no gentle right E L 545
lome gentle gust doth get ** 549
folly lurk in gentle breasts " 851
roll forward like a gentle flood " 1118
let beasts bear gentle minds " 1148
Their gentle sex to weep " 1237
Know, gentle wench " 1273
with gentle work did fhime Son 5 1
direr lodged than gentle luve ** 10 10
A woman's gentle heart " 20 3
thy robbery, gentle thief ** 40 9
Gentle thou art, and therefore " 41 5
Within the gentle closure " 48 11
had all thy gentle grace " 79 2
shall be my gentle verse " 81 9
youth and gentle sport *' 96 2
In gentle numbers " 100 6
fiDgen walk with gentle gait " 128 11
aied in giving gentle doom *' 145 7
that follow'd it as gentle day "145 10
Then, gentle cheater *' 151 3
he 'gan besiege me : "Gentle maid L C 177
jest at every gentle offer P P 4 12
Qeatlcat— the rudest or ... . sight Son 113 9
llcatlf— Full gently now VA 361
and gently hear him " lOOti
when thou gently sway'st Son 128 3
Oeatry— By knighthood, gentry R L 569
6et— help she cannot get VA 93
to get it is thy duty " 168
how to get my palfrey " 384
Or sells eternity to get a toy R L 214
some gentle gust doth get " 549
where he the lamb may get " 878
Go, get me hither paper " 1289
unless thou get a son S*m 7 14
that did his picture get L C 1S4
Oaitly— beheld some sprite R L 4.'!
Let ghastly shadows *' 971
a jewel hung in ghastly night Son 27 11
filMit— Grim-grinning giioet VA 933
I Ghoat— that aflfkble familiar ghost Son 86 9
! Olddy — and turn the giddy round R L ~... 952
Gift— Which bounteous gut Son 11 12
doth now his gift confound ** 60 8
The cause of this fair gift ** 87 7
So thy great gift " 87 11
and your gifts to tell ** 103 12
Thy gift, thy ubles " 122 1
Which by a gift of learning />/> 16 U
Gild— the golden age to gild R L ..... 60
Gilded— nor the gilded monuments Son 65 1
And gilded honour shamefully *' 66 5
much outlive a gilded tomb " 101 11
were gilded in his smiling L C 172
Glld*Bt— thou giJd'st the even Son 28 12
Gilding— Oildiiig the object " 20 6
Gilding pale streams " 33 4
Gllla— their golden gills VA ~... 1100
'Gin— suitor 'gins to woo him ** 6
And 'gins to chide **..... 46
when first it 'gins to bud P P 13 8
Girded— all girded up in sheav^ <Sbf» 12 7
Girdle—. . . . with embracing flames R L 6
Girl— 'My girl,' quoth she " ..... 1270
But tell me, girl, when went " ~... 1276
Girth — now his woven girths VA ~... 266
Give— So offers he to give " ..... 88
Give me one kiss, I'll give " ..... 209
' Give me my hand,' saith he " .... 873
'Give me my heart,' saith she ** ..... 874
O, give it me " ..... 375
Gives false alarms ** ~... 651
gives a deadly groan " 1044
she securely gives good cheer R L ~... 89
And give the sneaped birds '* 833
Which gives the watch-word " 870
Gives the hot charge " 434
but be that gives them knows ** 833
Give physic to the sick " 901
but sin ne'er gives a fee ** ..... 913
disdained scraps to give " ..... 987
at least I give " 1053
she doth give demure good-morrow " ..... 1219
To give her so much grief •* «... 1463
And friend to friend gives " .... 1488
and give the harmless show *' .... 1507
smilingly with this gives o'er " .... 1567
that we may give redress " 1603
she gives her sorrow fire " .... 1604
can give the fault amending " .... 1614
to give this wound to me " 1722
give his sorrow place " .... 1773
and busy winds give o'er " .... 1790
I did give that life " 1800
to give thyself a blow " .... 1823
plausibly did give consent '* 1854
Nature's bequest gives nothing Son 4 3
largess given thee to give "46
your sweet semblance to some
other give " 13 4
To give away yourself " 16 13
this gives life to thee " 18 14
not to give back again " 22 14
of me to thee did give " 31 11
give physic to ray grief " 34 9
the shadow doth such substance
give " 87 10
O. give thyself the thanks ** 88 6
dost give invention " 88 8
GIVE
110
GO
CliTf»— by this separation I maj gire Son 39 7
and give him leave " 51 14
worthinera gives scope " 52 13
which truth doth give " 54 2
give thee that due " 69 3
give thee so thine own " 69 6
give warning to the world '' 71 3
will give thee memory " 77 6
doth give another place *' 79 4
beauty doth he give " 79 10
others would give life " 83 12
charter of thy worth gives thee
releasing " 87 3
Give not a windy night *' 90 7
which gives thee all '* 100 2
And gives thy pen " lUO 8
Give my love fame " 100 13
Nor gives to necessary wrinkln "108 11
Then give me welcome " 110 18
To give full growth " 115 14
Give salutation to my sportive blood *' 121 6
Therefore to give them "122 11
Give them thy fingers *' 128 14
it gives my friend and me " 133 2
give the lie to my true sight *' 150 3
Nor gives it satisfaction L C 1G2
Given — largess given thee to give Son 4 6
have given admiring praise '* 59 14
And given grace a double majesty " 78 8
And given to time "117 6
GlTest— With the breath thou givest
and takest P T 19
GiTtng— shall claim excuse's giving R L ~... 1715
Giving him aid, my verse Son 86 8
in giving gentle doom " 145 7
consecrations giving place L C 263
Glad— Make glad and sorry seasons Son 19 5
but then no longer glad " 45 13
Gladly— which thou receivest not
gladly "83
Glance— But the mild glance J2 L ...^ 1399
do I not glance aside Son 76 3
forbear to glance thine eye aside " 189 6
Glaaa— like pearls in glass VA 980
Two glasses, where herself '• ~... 1129
For princes are the glass jR L 615
Wilt thou be glass " 619
When their glass fell " 1526
Poor broken glass " ^... 1758
all the beauty of my glass " «... 1763
Look in thy glass Son 8 1
Thou art thy mother's glass "39
pent in walls of glass " 5 10
My glass shall not persuade me " 22 1
my glass shows me myself " 62 9
Thy glass will show thee " 77 1
which thy glass will truly show " 77 5
Look in your glass "103 6
Your own glass shows you " 103 14
Dost hold Time's fickle glass " 126 2
Brighter than glass, and yet, as
glass is, brittle PP 7 3
A brittle glass *• 13 4
a gloss, a glass, a flower "13 5
As broken glass '* 13 10
Glassy— Writ in the glassy margents
of such books £ L 102
Glased— glazed with thine eyes Son 24 8
Who glazed with crystal gate L ».« 286
••••• IvfO
•..M 816
••••• Ztv
• •••« trio
407
••••• oUS
...~ 485
...^ 109
1018
83 1
GleaaiM— gleam'd forth their ashy
lights HL
Glide-^ glides he In the night VA
Glister— scornfully glisters like flre "
Glittering— their .... golden towers B L
Globe— ivory globes circled with blue "
Gloony — possession of thy .... place "
Glorify— bright sun glorifies the sky VA
GlorioBS — glorious by his manly
chivalry B L
kings glorious day "
Full many a glorious morning Son
look'd on the world with glorious
eye PP 6 11
Glorionsly— so gloriously behold VA ...- 857
his triumph and his glories " ..... 1014
G lor J— Time's glory is to calm R L ...~ 939
burnt the shining glory •* 1523
they in their glory die Son 25 8
a part of all thy glory live " 87 12
'gainst his glory fight " 60 7
shall bo most my glory " 83 10
lends not some small glory " 84 6
losing me shall win much glory " 88 8
Doth half that glory " 182 8
G/ory— Some glory in iheir birth " 91 1
Glosa— Gloss on the rose VA 936
A shining gloss that vadeth P P 13 2
a gloss, a glass, a flower " 13 5
As vaded gloss no rubbing " 13 8
Glove— Lucrctia's glove, wherein R L 817
This glove to wanton tricks " ..... 820
The doors, the wind, the glove " . 325
Glow— and begins to glow VA 337
which in his liver glows R L ...~ 47
GIowM— which in his cheek so ... . LC ..... 324
Glowing— coals of glowing fire VA ...~ 35
sec'st the glowing of such fire San 73 9
with crystal gate the glowing roses L C ...~ 286
Glow-worm- Uis eyes, like glow-
worms VA ..... 621
GIned— Their lips together glued " ..... 546
Glntton— when his glutton eye " 89?
Lust like a glutton dies " ...» 803
or else this glutton be Son 1 13
Glattoning-Or gluttoning on all " 75 14
Glniton-llke — And .... she feeds VA ...~ 548
Gnat— Gnats are unnoted R L ...~ 1014
Go— to her straight goes he V A ..... 264
His testy master goeth about " ...« 319
let go, and let me go " ..... 879
you crush me ; let me go " 611
where'er he goes " 622
through the which he goes " .... 683
bleeding as they go " 924
with swift intent he goes R L ..... 46
that would let him go " 76
yet ere he go to bed " 776
to mark how slow time goes " 990
Go, get me hither paper " 1289
which shall go before " 1802
with his own weight goes " 1494
with the blunt swains he goes " 1504
a watery rigol goes " 1745
among the wastes of time must go Son 12 10
if it shaU go well " 14 7
I'll run and give him leave to go " 51 14
with that which goes before " 60 8
over-goes my blunt invention " 108 7
FULLNESS
108
GAZER
Fallal eren UD tbej wink with
foUiMat Am
raac^Utes the poor iicaln hto . . . . K^
vblch Crom discharged caDDOo
fumes R L
FvBCtJMi— DoCh part his function Am
Fmnata As from a furnace K^
them furnace <tf foai-reeking
fln#4ce JSX
Farraw — time's furrows I behold
Farther— now she will no further
doth fr/roe a further strife
For further I could saj
Farjr—his furf was assuaged
With UindfrM furf
the h*4dloni|; furf of his speed
with tlie wind In greater furj fret
8pend*st thou thy furj Scm
VA
RL
LC
VA
RL -
«
M 6
S16
1(M3
113 3
r4
22 3
«... 905
.... 689
«... 169
.... 318
••«•• v>FV
901
.... 648
100 3
<tr all for one we gage R L ..... 144
twt laid no words to gage ** .... 1351
|{alB—D«»pair to gain doth traffic ** .... 131
are with gain so fond ** .... 131
tmnkrupt in this poor-rich gain " ..~ 140
A <af«tiTe victor that hath lost in
Ksin ** 730
Ifaving no other pleasure of hb
frsin ** 8G0
mj I'tm is raj kive's gain Son 42 9
Utt^ uprjn bis gains *' 67 12
thu* far 1 cMut my gain ** 141 13
Ut lam ihi-rii fioth U» ^ain P P \(i IQ
Crfli»— If I Ksiii the thing I seek R L 211
I ha rifMM'nth** hungry ocesD gain iSmi 64 5
Awl gain by ill thrice more "119 H
ii »«# to Ksin my grace L C .... 79
<Jaln*4— Thy grace being galn'd "38
tialnrr— I by this will be a gainer too Am 88 9
Gain lag— doth traffic oft forgainlDgiZZ/ .... 131
Or, Kalniug niore " .... 138
'Oalnsl— 'Gainst Tenom'd sores VA .... 916
dot«« on what he looks 'gainst
law or duty R L .... 497
That 'gainst thyself Am 10 6
nothing 'gainst Time's scythe " 12 13
And 'gainst myself " 36 11
'Gainst death and all oblivious en-
mity " M 9
Crooked eclipses 'gainst his glory " 60 7
'gainst my strong infection "111 10
'gaintit her own content L C .... 157
'gainst rule, 'gainst sense, 'gainst
shame " .... 271
the battery that you make 'gainst
mine " 277
'Gainst whom the world PP 3 2
Gait— cum fortcr, with weary gait VA 529
with slow-Mid gait descended R L 1081
An humble gait, calm hwks " 1508
fingers walk with gentle gait Am 128 11 i
Gall— Thy honey turns to gall R L 889
water-galls in her dim clement " 1588
Fraughted with gall P P \% 26
Oallaat— or kill the gallant knight " 16 6
Galled— To break upon the galled
shore R L 1440
*GaB— 'O, pity,' 'gan she cry VA .... 95
with swelling drops 'gan wet R L 1228
and often 'gan to tear L C .... 51
'Gan— TUlthoa he *gan besiege mc £C 177
All unseen 'gan passage find PP tl «
Gaal— in a gaol of snow VA SQ
use rigour in my gad Am IS 12
Gapiag— a prcas of gaping (isces R L 1406
Garden— gardens full of flowers VA 95
And many maiden gardens Am 16 6
Ganaeat-Who wears a garment VA 415
Sume In their garments Am 61 S
prouder than garments cost ** 91 10
with the garment of a grace LC .^ S16
Gash— That makes more gashes V A 1066
Gate— it wiU not ope the gite " ..^ 424
But through the flood-gates " 959
Soft pity enters at an iron gate R L .... 995
but storn from forth thy gate " .^ 1068
Sings hyifins at heaven's gate Am S 12
Nor gates of steel so strong " 65 8
Who glazed with crystal gate LC 286
GatherM— flowers that are not ... . V A .... 131
Or flowers with flowers gather'd Am 124 4
Gaady— The gaudy sun would peep VA .... 1068
his gaudy ^nuer is display 'd R L ... 272
herald to the gaudy spring Am 1 10
Gave— crystal tears gave light V A ... 491
O, had she then gave over " .... 571
The kiss I gave you " 771
entertainment that he gave " .... 1106
virtue gave the golden age R L .... 60
fountain that gave drink " . 677
by him that gave it thee " 624
art gave lifeless life " .... 1S74
no guilty instance gave " ..... 1611
whom she best endow'd she gave
the more Am 11 11
thy ^ur leisure gave sweet leave " 89 10
And Time that gave doth now " 60 8
gave my heart another youth ** 110 7
gave eyes to blindness " 192 11
sigh'd, tore, and gave the flood L C .... 44
habitude gave life and grace " . 114
and gave hlra all my flower " .... 147
to the stream gave grace " .... 285
gave the tempter place " «... 818
Gavest^the hours thou gavest me
to repose R L .... 933
Thou gavest me thine Am 22 14
Thyself thou gavest " 87 9
me, to whom thou gavest it " 87 10
Gay— caparisons or trapping gay V A .... 286
dead fleece made another gay Am 68 8
thy outward walls so costly gay " 146 4
the learned man hath got the lady
gay PP 16 15
Gaze — eyes pay tributary gazes V A .... 6S2
an eye to gaze on beauty R L .... 496
deer, that stands at gaze " .... 1149
The lovely gaze where every eye Am 5 2
to gaze therein on thee " 24 12
anon their gazes lend L C .... 26
mine eyes throw gazes to the east P P IS 1
Gazed— they long have gazed VA . 927
gazed for tidings in my eager eyeaR L . 254
gazed upon with every eye " .... 1015
wistly on hlra gazed " .... 1S55
on him she gazed, and gazing still " .... 1581
livery »o gazed on now Am 2 8
Gazer—That the star-gazers VA .... 609
gazi'r late did wonder " .... 748
GAZER
109
GIVE
Gmser— How many gaxen mighUt
tboulead Son 96 11
GaMth— Now gaxeth she on him VA 224
gazeth on her yet unstained bed E L S6B
olO^t whereupon it gazeth Son 20 6
Quing' — .... upon a late-embarked VA ~... 818
wonder of still-gazing eyes E L ^... 84
rage of lust by gazing qualified " 424
Gazing upon the Greeks " ..... 1384
on him she gazed, and gazing still " 1531
in th^ir gazing spent Son 125 8
Qen — with earth and sea's rich gems " 21 6
With annexions of rich gems L C 208
Geader— That thy sable makest P T 18
Geaenil— to the general doom E L 924
a priTate sin in general " 1484
I better in one general beat Son 91, 8
this general evil they maintain ^ 121 13
the general of hot desire " 154 7
did in the general brisom reign L C 127
Geatle— whose gentle wind VA 189
With gentle majesty " 278
thy courser, gentle boy " 403
Distempering gentle Love " 653
Lore's gentle spring " 801
Lo, here the gentle lark " 853
it is no gentle chase " ~... 883
Then, gentle shadow " 1001
beast that knows no gentle right E L 545
some gentle gust doth get ** 549
folly lurk in gentle breasts " 851
roll forward like a gentle flood " 1118
let beasts bear gentle minds " 1148
Their gentle sex to weep " 1237
Know, gentle wench " 1273
with gentle work did fkame Son 5 1
fairer lodged than gentle love " 10 10
A woman's gentle heart " 20 3
thy robbery, gentle thief *' 40 9
Gentle thou art, and therefore " 41 5
Within the gentle closure " 48 11
had all thy gentle grace " 79 2
shall be my gentle verse " 81 9
youth and gentle sport " 96 2
In gentle numbers " 100 6
fingers walk with gentle gait " 128 11
used in giving gentle doom " 145 7
that followM it as gentle day " 145 10
Then, gentle cheater •' 151 3
he 'gan besiege me : "Gentle maid L C ..... 177
jest at every gentle offer P P 4 12
Geatleat— the rudest or sight Son 113 9
Gf«tly— Full gently now VA 361
and gently hear him ** 1096
when thou gently sway'st Son 128 3
6e«try— By knighthood, gentry E L 569
Get— help she cannot get VA 93
to get it is thy duty " 168
how to get my palfrey " 884
Or sells eternity to get a toy E L 214
some gentle gust doth get " 549
where he the lamb may get " 878
Go, get me hither paper " 1289
unless thou get a son Son 7 14
that did hit picture get L C ..... 134
Ghastly— beheld some sprite E L 4ol
Let ghastly shadows *' 971
a jewel hung in ghastly night Son 27 11
Ghott—Orim-grinnlng ghost VA 933
Ghoai— that affable familiar ghost Son 86 9
Giddy — and turn the giddy round E L ..... 952
Gift— Which bounteous gift San \1 12
doth now his gift confound " 60 8
The cause of this fair gift " 87 7
So thy great gift " 87 11
and your gifts to tell *' 103 12
Thy gift, thy tables " 122 1
Which by a gift of learning PP 16 14
Gild— the golden age to gild E L 60
Gilded— nor the gilded monuments Son 55 1
And gilded honour shamefully ** 66 5
much outlive a gilded tomb " 101 11
were gilded in his smiling L C 172
Gild*Bt— thou gild'st the even Son 28 12
Gilding— Gilding the object " 20 6
Gilding pale streams " 33 4
GUIs— their golden gills VA 1100
'Gin— suitor 'gins to woo him " 6
And 'gins to chide " ~... 46
when first it 'gins to bud PP 13 3
Girded— all girded up in sheavds Son 12 7
Girdle — . . . . with embracing flames E L 6
Girl- 'Mygirl/quothshe " 1270
But tell me, girl, when went " ..... 1276
Girth— now his woven girths VA 266
Give— So offers he to give ** ..... 88
Give me one kiss, I'll give '* ..... 209
' Give me my hand,' saith he ** .... 373
'Give me my heart,' saith she *' .... 874
O, give it me " .... 375
Gives false alarms ** .... 651
gives a deadly groan " .... 1044
she securely gives good cheer E L 89
And give the sncaped birds " .... 833
Which gives the watch-word " .... 870
Gives the hot charge " 484
but he that gives them knows " 83:i
Give physic to the sick '* 901
but sin ne'er gives a feo *' .... 913
disdained scraps to give ** 987
at least I give '* .... 1053
she doth give demure good-morrow " .... 1219
To g^ve her so much grief ** .... 1463
And friend to friend gives " .... 1488
and give the harmless show " .... 1507
smilingly with this gives o'er *' .... 1567
that we may give redress *' 1603
she gives her sorrow fire " 1604
can give the fault amending ** .... 1614
to give this wound to me " .... 1722
give his sorrow place " .... 1773
and busy winds give o'er " .... 1790
I did give that life " 1800
to give thyself a blow '* .... 1823
plausibly did give consent " .... 1854
Nature's bequest gives nothing Som 4 3
largess given thee to give " 4 G
your sweet semblance to some
other give " 13 4
To give away yourself " 16 13
this gives life to thee " 18 14
not to give back again " 22 14
of me to thee did give *' 31 11
give physic to my grief " 34 9
the shadow doth such substance
give " 37 10
O, give thyself the thanks ** 88 6
dost give invention ** 88 8
GREEK
113
GROSSLY
LC
PP
8m
RL
YA
u
9m
LC^.
QmwA ctoiaging the Greeks to
ifht RL
or aU the Greeks
Cie i M trip nptm the green VA
the green sticks Ikst "*
the orstor too green **
On the green corerleC R L
And snouner'i green sO girded
vtth golden ihce the mendovs green
and he in then still green
summer of another^ green
whi^ jet are green
The deep-green emerald
lorely, fresh, and green
on the brook's green hrim **
Like a green plum **
Green plants bring not **
Crsen* d r ipp i ng— Green -dropping
sap, which she eompues to tears VA
6rMC -cordless, so greets hearen R L
And searcel f greet roe
to greet it with my lajs
thos anew to greet
llreeteth— wife that greeteth thee
firtw— Grew kinder, and his fury
Grew I not faint
where yoar equal grew
the womb wherein they grew
]dock them where they grew
grew to faults assured
And grew a seething bath
in others^ orchards grew
6ivy— Mine ejes are grey, and bright VA
the grey cheeks of the cast A«
firief— make them droop with grief V A
And now his grief **
grief and daron*d despair **■
best become her grief **
Grief hath two tongues **
express my grief ••
For erery little grief
and such griefs sustain
Frantic with grief
ny grief with groans
toms to gall, thy joy to grief
Troe grief is fond
Sometime her grief is dumb
Grief bert is pleased with griePs
society
Great grief grieresi roost
Grief dallied with, nor law nor
limit knows
for grief of my sustaining
Oooceit and grief
from our house in grief
Her grief, but not her grier? true
quality
Bttch grief and not a tongue
As if with grief or trarail he had
ftlDted
feeling of her own grief
And tell thy grief
The grief away that stops his an-
swer
To posh grief on, and back the
suae grief draw
or grief help grievous deeds
night doth nightly make griers
rtrength seem stronger
8
12
33
63
68
104
4
6
10
18
49
102
145
84
86
98
118
153
132
R Id .....
1402
1470
146
527
806
394
i*
I
3
14
11
8
213
2
10
5
39
1176
112
6
6
8
1303
318
615
4
4
8
10
«
171
140
6
6fi6
701
743
9fM
1007
10«i9
1179
139
762
797
8»
1094
IIOS
1111
1117
u
...- 1120
-... 1272
...- 1298
— 1308
...» 1313
.... 1463
...- 1543
.-.~ 1.578
.... 1603
.... In64
.... ]Di3
.... 1S22
_ I
Grief— give phyaic to my grief i&m 31 9
it is a greater grief ** 40 11
it is not all my grief *« 42 1
now my greatest grief ** 48 6
My grief lies onward *« 50 14
When other petty griefs *' 90 10
Of grief and blushes L C .... 200
For her griefs so lively shown P P 21 17
Thus of every grief in heart ** 21 55
Grievaaee — grieve at grievances for-
gone Sm 30 9
Her grievance with his hearing L C ^.^ 67
Grieve— Thy coward heart with false
bethinking grieves VA 1024
Great grief grieves most at that
would do it good R L ....
grieve at grievances forgone Sm 30
Grieved— No more be grieved at •* 35
Grievlng^-Grieving themselves to
RL ^.
VA ..
RL ^.
u
VA
Sm
VA
VA ...
R Lt ....
Semi 28 14
guess at others* smarts
Orievaas— or grief help .... deeds
Grim — mourner, blsck and grim
grim and urchin-snouted boat
As the grim Hon fawneth
Whose grim aspect
Grim cave of death
and grim care's reign
Glim-grinning — ghost
Grin — Or as the wolf doth grin
Grind — I never more will grind
Grinning — grim-grinning ghost
Gripe — hind under the gripe's sharp
claws R L
Griped — Griped in an armed hand "
Griping— and griping it, the needle **
Grisly — carrier of grisly care "
Groan— Then love's deep groans
heavy groan advantage thee
g^ves a deadly groan
nor mother's groans respecting
my tears, my sighs, my grosns
my grief with groans
in his bed with bedrid groans
And with deep groans
Till after a deep groan
When sighs sad groans
he answer? with a groan
For that rame srroan
A thousand %x*]^u%
with bleediug frrnans they pine
(hrian — my heart Inngs not to groan I" ^4
her heart, whereat it gruans
to sigh, to weep, and groan
power to make love groan
that makes my heart to groan
Groin — the tusk in his soft grr^in
Groom — bed of s<^me rascal gror>m
Poor grooms are sight les»» night
charging the sour-faced groom
When, silly grr>om ! God wot
For some hsrd-favour'd groom
death of Lucrece and her groom
Gross Not gross to sink
hold it her own groM abuse
Though ray gross blood
And their gross painting
to my gross body's treas'jn **
Grossly — Grossly engiri with daring
infamy R L
110
u
Sm
•■SO
50
131
AC.
• ••••
RL
Sm 131
u
i:«
VA
•••••
RL
••••«
t»
••.••
u
•••••
«t
•••••
u
•«•••
u
•••••
VA
• *»••
RL ^.
Sm
82
151
1117
9
1
1238
1822
920
1105
421
451
769
1451
933
459
10
933
543
1425
319
926
377
950
1044
431
5«8
797
975
1132
1276
1319
II
13
10
27.'J
829
1.162
•'>
1
IIH
671
1013
I3:M
IU5
16:t2
164.>
l.W
1.31.>
1655
13
6
.... 1173
GROSSLY
114
HAD
Grossly — ^ihou hast too grossly dyed Son
GrOBBd— What see'st thou in the
ground VA
now on the ground **
to the ground below **
of the sluttish ground "
imprison'd in the ground "
on the ground lay spill'd '*
My sable ground of sin E L
to the skies and ground '*
Then jointly to the ground "
showers are to the ground fhn
treads un the ground "
Talley-fountain of that ground "
In brief the grounds and motives L C
he should not pass those grounds P P
lie wither'd on the ground "
Through heartless ground **
GroondfNl-— . ... on sinful loving Son
It is so grounded inward "
Grove — hasteth to a myrtle grove V A
Hake thy sad grove R L
in men, as in a rough-grown grove "
Which a grove of myrtles made P P
Grow — spring doth yearly grow V A
face grows to face "
To grow unto himself "
still blasts, and ne'er grows old R L
so their pride doth grow "
as they see others grow Son
consider every thing that grows '*
and straight grow sad "
that thou dost common grow "
what worth in you doth grow "
doth thy beauty grow "
to that which still doth grow "
Grows fairer than at first "
That it nor grows with heat "
black wires grow on her head "
I should grow mad "
that, when it grows "
Trees did grow and plants P P
Saw division grow together P T
Grow*8t — so fast thou grow'st Son
to time thou grow'st "
as thy sweet self grow'st "
Growing— Things .... to themselves VA
the growing rose defends R L
grown with this growing age Son
upon misprision growing "
Growing a bath and healthful "
an osier growing l>y a brook P P
Grown — as in a rough-grown grove R L
grown with this growing age Son
And sweets grown common "
Who hast by waning grown "
world is grown so bad "
Growth — arc growth's abuse V A
shall never come to growth R L
in pride of all his growth Son
in growth of rii)cr days "
To give full growth to that "
Guard— thy sword to ... . iniquity R L
To guard the lawful reasons Son
let my heart be his guard "
8ho<>k off my sober guards L C
Guarded— the honey guarded with
a sting R L
Gaeaa— to guess at others' smart **
99
5
Gbcw— And that, in gueaa, thy mea-
sure
Son 69
10
•••■•
118
I guess one angel
*' 144
12
■»■•■
224
I guess one angel
PP 2
12
•«•••
923
Goeat^that sour, unwelcome guest
r ^1 •••••
449
•••••
983
welcome to her princely guest
Ji Xr •••••
90
■«•••
1046
brooks not merry guests
II
1125
•••••
1167
to that unhappy guest
tl
1565
••■••
1074
mine eye is my heart's guest
Son 47
7
1199
a sad distemper'd guest
" 153
12
•••••
1846
Golde— had his team to guide
w ^% •« • • •
179
75
2
Fortune be my gods, my guide
K Ld •••••
851
130
12
That guides thb hand
»i
1722
153
4
star that guides my moving
Son 26
9
•••••
63
Golle— that so much guile
R Ij «...
1584
9
8
The wiles and guiles that women
13
9
work
PP 19
S7
18
85
Gollt-The guilt being great
R L «...
229
142
2
This guilt would seem
«...
635
62
4
For they their guilt with weeping " «...
754
865
Opportunity, thy guilt is great
.....
876
••»••
1129
But they whose guilt
1342
•••••
1249
Lest my bewailed guilt
Son 36
10
21
4
Golltletih-So .... she securely gives A L ~...
89
••■••
141
To bum the guiltless casket
44
1057
•«•••
540
Let guiltless souls be freed
it
1482
•• •••
1180
Gillty- his guilty hand pluck'd up
•••••
49
the latch
a
858
•••••
298
The guilty rebel for remission
714
12
12
the burthen of a guilty mind
•••••
735
lo
1
sweating with guilty fear
** «...
740
45
14
Since thou art guilty
•••••
772
69
14
guilty of thy honour's wrack
•••••
841
83
8
Guilty thou art of murder
•••••
918
93
13
Guilty of peijury and subornation " «...
919
115
14
Guilty of treason
II
••••a
920
119
12
Guilty of incest
14
921
124
12
Be guilty of my death
II
931
130
4
Let guiltless souls he freed flrom
140
9
guilty woes
(1
«.*•
1482
142
11
no guilty instance gave
(1
■•••■
1511
21
6
The guilty goddess of my harmful iSm 111
2
•••••
42
Lest gtiilty of my faults
" 151
4
11
1
Gnlsc — this was thy father's guise
W ^« •••••
1177
18
12
Golf— A swallowing gulf
R Ij —*••
557
126
4
Ooll— Which nightly gulls hUn
Son 86
10
•••»•
166
Gun— deadly bullet of a gun
r J% •••••
461
•••••
492
Gaah— Shall gush pure streams
H Jj •••••
1078
32
10
Gost— Gusts and foul flaws
VA —
456
87
11
some gentle gust doth get
R L «...
549
154
11
Against the stormy gusts
Son 13
11
6
5
what with his gust Is 'greeing
" 114
11
1249
Gyves— sports in unconstrained . . .
• AJ V •••••
242
32
10
102
12
Habit— throws that shallow .,,\)j R L «...
1814
126
3
love's best habit
Son 138
11
140
11
love's best habit
PP 1
11
»••••
166
HablUtlon— Which for their ....
^S^fi 95
10
ior.2
Habltade— . . . . gave life and grace
Jj O •••••
114
99
12
Had— Had ta'en his last leave
r ^ •••••
2
102
8
the shadow had forsook
II
176
115
14
Adonis had his team to guide
It
179
626
0, had thy mother borne
203
49
12
She had not brought
u
«...
204
133
11
they had not seen
857
•••••
298
had his acts made plain
u
359
or I had no hearing
It
428
•••••
493
I had my load before
a
430
•••■•
1238
Had I no eyes
M
438
HAD
115
HAND
u
(I
u
•<
tl
•(
u
u
u
((
M
U
Bad— Had not his clouded with his
brow's VA
BO man had seen
O, had she then gare over
■he bad not suck'd
then he bad spolce
bad lost his power
that the boar bad trench'd
If he had spoke
Hsd I been tootb*d
the bearens had him lent M L
sleep Itad closed up mortal eyes
thdr father bad not bin
Hsd CoUatinus kill d
oad Narcissus seen her
Self-love had never drowu'd him
had they in that darksome prison
died
Then hsd they seen
hsd sheathed their light
For it had been dishonour
Philomel had ended **
when sadly she had laid
had stain'd her stain'd excuse **
observance in this work was had "
the painter had anatomized **
those shrunk pipes had fed **
Had doting Priam check'd
Troy had been bright **
with grief or travail he had fainted **
beauty had purloin'd his eyes "
When they had sworn **
You hsd a father Sou
Had my friend's Muse grown **
than this bu love bad brought "
Being had, to triumph **
*to show what wealth she hsd **
Save what is bad "
had all thy gentle grace **
Thus have I had thee **
laaijoram had stoPn thy hair **
nor white, had stol'n of both **
robbery had annez'd thy breath **
eokMir it had stoPn from thee "
They had not skill enough **
sad no sooner had **
Had, haring, and la quest to have **
legions of true hearts hsd warm'd **
L C —
Tine had not acythed
on it had conceited characters
voe had pelleted in tears
tehcdales had she many a one
ud had let go by
ir I had safHtppUed
He had the dialect
Uy parta had power
8nree had the sun dried up
that often there had been **
Ah, that I had my lady
Had women been so strong as men "
70U had not had it then "
Had the essence but in one P T
■hisl-O, would tboa hadst not, or
PP
Ihad
'Thou hadat been gon«
Hadst thou but bid beware
■ore than thou hadst before
^Mftre tboa hadst this more
liU-€oold 'scape the baU
VA
&m
LC ^.
•••••
493
•«•••
504
•••••
571
•••••
572
•«•••
943
•••••
944
•••••
1052
•••••
1097
••« ••
1117
•«•••
17
•••••
1G3
»«•••
210
•••••
232
••»••
2«W
•••••
■26G
•••••
379
»••••
380
•••••
397
•«•••
&44
••>••
1079
■••••
1212
•••••
1316
»«•••
i:iS,>
■••*•
14.10
•••••
1455
•••••
1490
•••••
1491
«•••»
\h^\
mmmmm
1651
«••>•
1H49
13
14
«2
10
32
11
52
14
67
13
75
12
79
2
87
13
9!l
J
99
10
99
11
99
15
106
12
\m
6
129
10
154
6
«•««■
12
••■••
16
•••••
18
— •••
Ail
••••«
59
«■••«
76
•••««
125
••••«
260
6
1
6
8
11
13
19
23
19
24
26
^.
428
....
613
•....
943
40
2
40
4
,^t^
no
Hair— sighs and golden hairs VA ...» 51
with long disheveird hair " ..... 147
for thee of my hairs " 191
Fanning the hairs " 906
Iler hair like golden threads R L ..... 400
time to tear his curled hair " ..... 981
in my disheveird hair " 1129
had storn thy hair Sm 99 7
If hairs be wires " 130 4
Her hair, nor loose, nor tied h C ..... 29
behold these UlenU of their hair ** 204
Hairlesft— upon his hairless face VA. — 487
Hairy— with hairy bristles armed " 625
Half— ere summer half be done " ..... 802
They that lose half R L 1158
and shows not half your parts Son 17 4
disgrace me half so ill ** 89 5
Doth half that glory " 132 8
Hallow'd— I hallow'd thy fair name " 108 8
Hallow'd with sighs L C ..... 228
Halt— The poor, lame, blind, bait R L 902
and I straight will halt Stm 9d 3
A cripple soon can find a bait PP 19 10
Hamaie^d— antiquities of ... . steel R L ..... 951
brass or bammer'd steel Son 120 4
Hand— her fair immortal hand VA ..... 80
My smooth moist hand, were it
with thy hand felt " ..... 143
Can thy right hand " .... 158
and then his hand ** ..... 223
With one fair hand ** ..... 351
Her other tender band " .... 352
her soft hand's print " .... 353
Ukcs him by the hand *" .... 361
* Give me my hand " .... 873
You huri my band " 421
Not thy soft bands ** .... 633
whose desperate hands ** .... 765
In hand with all things " 912
She Ukes him by the band ** ....1124
Her joy with heaved-up hand R L .... Ill
she took me kindly by the hand "* .... 253
And how her hand, in my hand
being lock'd " .... 260
his guilty hand pluck'd up the latch " .... 358
give the watchword to his hand
fuHsoon ** 370
Her lily band her rosy cheek lies
under '* .... 386
Without the bed her other fklr
band was ** 393
His eye commends the leading to
his hand " 436
His hand, as proud of such a
dignity " — 437
as his hand did scale "* <440
His band, that yet remains ** .... 463
that his hand shak«i withal " .... 467
my heaved-op hands xi^p^ ** .... 639
Such wretched hands Mjch wretch-
ed blood shoukl Kpill ** .... 999
Poor hand, why quiver'st thoo ** .... 1090
Yield Ut my band ; my hand shaH
conquer thee ** .... 1210
the other Uk«s in hand " .... 123$
Boch sr>ber action with his hand •* .... I4<j9
Here one man's hand lean'd ** .....1415
Grip«d in an armed band " .... 142?
A hand, a foot, a face ** .... 1427
HAND
116
HARSH-SOUNDING
Hand— he takes ber hj the bkxxl-
less hand Ji L 1597
That guides this hand " 1722
ThU said, he struck his hand " 1842
winter's ragged band deface Son 6 1
with Nature's own hand painted " 20 1
shake hands to torture me " 28 6
from hands of falsehood '* 48 4
my hand against myseif uprear " 49 11
Or at your hand the account of
hours to crave " 58 8
despite his cruel hand " 60 14
With Time's Injurious hand cnish'd ** 63 2
by Time's fell hand defaced " 64 1
Or what strong hand can hold " 65 11
The hand that writ it " 71 6
The lily I condemned, for thy hand " 99 6
beauty, like a dial-hand " 104 9
Of hand, of foot, of Up '-106 .6
like the dyer's hand "111 7
For since each hand hath put on "127 5
tender inward of thy hand " 128 6
Lore's own hand did make " 145 1
but in her maiden hand " 154 4
by a virgin hand disarm 'd " 154 8
a careless hand of pride L C t30
Or monarch's hands that lets not
bounty fall " 41
that never touch'd his hand " ^... 141
advance of yours that pbraseless
hand " 225
But alas, my hand hath sworn P P 17 11
Handled— idle, over-haudled theme VA 770
Handllngr— with too much handling " 560
Handmaid — Her twinkling hand-
maids too R L 787
Hang — droop with griefand hang the
head VA 6r.6
dolh she hang her head " 1058
Thy kinsmen hang their heads R L ~... 521
and hang their heads with mine " 79^{
calls to mind wliere hangs a piece '* Viiid
Hang on such thorns Son 54 7
And hang more praise " 72 7
or none, or few, do hang " 73 2
did hang in crooked curls L C 85
plum that hangs upon a tree P P 10 5
Hang*d— to a cabin hang'd with care " 14 3
Hanging— his braided hanging mane r^ 271
still hanging by his neck " ^... 5U3
like a heavy-hanging bell R L 1493
in my bosom's shop is hanging Son 24 7
Hanging her pale and pined cheek L C 32
Hap— That golden hap which their
superiors want R L 42
issueless shalt hap to die Son 9 3
Hapletta— to end a hapless life R L 1045
Haply— Haply that name of 'chaste " 8
Haply I think on thee &>n 29 10
And haply of our old acquaintance " 89 12
wilt thou not haply say " 101 5
Happier— Or ten times happier "68
were happier than thou art "69
the height of happier men " 82 8
Happiness— O happiness enjoy'd but
of a few R L 22
Happy — And now the happy season VA 327
treasure of his happy »t4ite R L 16
But happy monarchs still are fear'd " 611
Happy— some happy mean to end R L ~... 1045
sire, and child, and happy mother Son 8 11
on the top of happy hours " 16 5
Then happy I, that love ** 25 18
return in happy plight " 28 1
then ten times happy me " 87 14
shadow's form form happy show " 43 6
how happy you make those " 57 12
O, what a happy title " 92 11
Happy to have thy love, happy to
die ** 92 12
saucy Jacks so happy are in this " 128 13
Happy — which happiest hoae that pay " 6 6
Harbinger — But thou shrieking
harbinger P T 5
Harbour— dark harbour for defame R L 768
Hard— flinty, hard as steel VA 199
borne so hard a mind " ~... 203
with his hard hoof he wounda " 367
lest thy hard heart " ~... 375
hath made mine hard " -... 378
where a heart is hard " ~... 426
holds her pulses hard " ~... 476
That hard heart of thine " 500
with her hard embracing " ~... 559
Fearing some hard news R L 255
Of hard misfortune *" »... 1718
how hard true sorrow hits Son 120 10
why 'twas beautiful and hard L C 211
Faithful friends are hard to find P P 21 84
Hard-believing— O hard-believing
love, how strange VA ~... 985
Harden— Tears harden lust R L 560
Hardened— Stone him with harden'd
hearts " 978
Harder— O, If no harder than a stone " ...<. 593
hearts, harder than stones " 9?8
thou harder hast engrossed Son 133 6
Hardest— The hardest knife ill used " 95 14
Hard-ravoar*d — Were I hard-fa-
vour'd, foul VA 133
Hard-favour'd tyrant " 931
some hard-favour'd groom R L 1632
Hare — at the timorous flying hare VA ^... 674
on foot the purblind hare " 679
Harm— thence doth little harm " ^... 195
fortress'd from a world of harms R L 28
no outward harm exprcss'd " 91
th' other feareth harm " 172
including all foul harms " ^... 199
A little harm done " 528
should right poor ladies' harms " 1694
For fear of harms L C 165
Harm have I done to them " 194
Harmed — cannot be easily harmed VA ~... 627
but ne'er was harmed L C 194
Harmftal— A harmful knife R L 1724
of my harmful deeds Son 111 2
Harm leas — Harmless Lucretia,
marking what he tells R L 510
Such harmless creatures " 1347
and give the harmless show " 1507
sheathed in her harmless breast " 1723
Harmony — Ix»t the deceiving har-
mony should run VA ~... 781
Harsh — churlish, harsh in voice " — 134
Harsh, featureless, and rude Son 11 10
Harsh-sounding — heavenly tune
harsh-sounding VA ^... 481
HARVEST
117
HATH
Hmircft— the harrest of his wita E L .... 859
should that harvest reap Son 128 7
Baat— hast thou a tongue VA ~... 427
when thou hast on foot the pur-
Uindhare *' ~... 679
thou hast no eyes to see " 939
Why hast thou cast " 951
vhat treasure hast thou lost " 1075
as thou hast pretended Ji L 576
Hast thou put on his shape " 597
Hast thou command " 624
which thou hast here deprived " 1752
my image thou hast torn " 1762
no form of thee hast left behind Son 9 6
Hsst thou, the master-mistress of
my passion " 20 2
hast all the ail of roe " 81 14
at that which thou hast done ** 85 1
What hast thou then " 40 2
That thou hast her "* 42 1
thou hast the strength of laws " 49 13
thou hast {Mun'd by the ambush *' 70 9
thou hast but lost the dregs of life " 74 9
thou hast too grossly dyed ** 99 5
Who hast by waning grown " 126 3
thou haider hast engrossed "133 6
thou hast both him and me ** 134 13
thou hast thy *WiU "135 1
hast thou forged hooks " 137 7
hast thou this powerful might " 150 1
Whence hast thou this becoming ** 150 5
Whilst thou hast wherewith to
spend PP 21 36
Haste— devouring all in haste VA ~... 57
And all in haste '* ~... 870
Her more than haste " ~... 909
And in her haste ** ..... 1029
return again in harte B L ~... 821
So his unhallow'd haste « ..... 552
with their fresh faUs' haste " ..... 630
The cause craves haste ** ..... 1295
to my lord with more than haste " ~... 1332
that doth behold his haste " ..... 1668
by thy continual haste Stm 12:1 ii
Ai«e»— I haste me to my bed " 27 1
why should I haste me thence ** 51 3
Hartes— minutes hasten to their end " 60 2
IsBtstk— and hasteth to his horse V A ~... 258
hasteth to a myrtle grove ** .... 865
lastiiv— Hasting to feed her fawn ** 876
Isstj— Thy hasty spring still bJasU R L .... 49
lat-she heaveth up his hat VA .... 351
tome, nntock*d, descended her
sheaved hat LC .... 31
BatdH-cockooa batch in sparrows*
nests
lale-To make thee hate
there is no hate in loving
if DOC, enforced bate
to Ine the hate of fbea
or begets him bate
p o a wss'd with mnrderoos bate
6hsn hate be Ikirer lodged
i» in my love aod bate
than hate^ known injury
b yoor waken*d hate
Tfane^ kwe or to Tine's bat*
•ad thy dear vinoe bat*
Hsteof nysitt
RL
■••••
»49
VA
■*#••
711
RL
— «••
240
u
•■•••
668
M
••«^
936
M
•a...
W^
Am
10
5
u
10
10
M
»
12
M
40
12
M
117
12
M
124
3
M
142
1
M
142
2
Son,
VA
RL
Sim
((
((
M
(I
Hate— and see Just cause of hate
In vowing new hate
Hale— I hate not love, but your
bates himself for his ofl'ence
him whom thou dost hate
Then hate me when thou wilt
the sound thut said ' I hate
*I hate ' she alter'd with an end
* I hate ' from hate
But, love, hate on
Hated— Past reason hated
Hateful — Hateful divorce of love
to his hateful name
and wretched hateful days
Hateful it is ; there is no hate
'O hateful, vaporous, and foggy Night '*
hateful cuckoos hatch in sparrows'
nests
the hateful foe bewray'd
Hatefklly— But hatefully at random VA
Hateth— Who hateth thee that I do
150
152
89
90
145
145
145
149
129
VA
RL
41
«(
10
4
789
738
14
1
2
9
13
13
7
932
994
161
240
771
849
1698
940
call my friend
Hath — the world hath ending
yet bath he been my captive
hath he hung his lance
for my sake hath learn'd
the heart hath treble wrong
hath made mine hard
The sea hath bounds, but deep de-
sire hath none
eye so full bath fed
hath done roc double wrong
Hath taught them
hath ended in the west
hath caught the yielding prey
She hath assay 'd as much
hath deserved a greater fee
he hath a battle set
Beauty hath nought to do
hath she bribed the Destinies
semblance he hath fed
Hath dropp'd a precious Jewel
For who hath she to spend
When he hath ceased
web that she hath wrought
that hath done thee wrong
Grief hath two tongues
when he hath sung
and hath kill'd him so
hath done her beauty wrong
that hath engirt
Hath barr'd him
impiety hath wrought
fear's frost hath dissolution
That thinks she hath beheld
Thy beauty hath ensnared thee
Only he hath an eye to gaae
The wolf hath seized
But she hath lost
And he hath won
that hath hmi in gain
a wandering wanp hath crepC
And scarce hath fyea
\Sr>then he hath it
which wnrtchedneas hath eludtted
what Im bath Aaid
' Why hath thy servant oppor-
tunities
bath Tarquin rifled ase
Soti 149 5
VA .... 12
" 101
" 103
" 105
" .... 829
.... 878
u
M
«
U
u
M
U
U
U
M
RL
>... 889
...• 899
.... 429
.... 501
... 630
.... 547
.... 608
.... 04ni
.... 619
■ ••• floO
... 733
.... 795
••«• o23
• ••• cM/
.... 919
.... 1005
.... 1007
.... 1095
.... 1110
... 80
.... 221
.... Ml
.... 355
.... 451
4%5
— 496
.... 677
— ©*7
.... 6*1
7-10
.... «»
%57
— M2
•«
915
SB2
14W
HATH
118
HAVE
Hath— For day hath nought R L .... 1092
grief Is dumb and bath no words " 1105
winter that the flower hath kUl'd " ...~ 1255
one hath power to tell " 1288
So woe hath wearied woe " i:J63
that hath done him wrong " 1467
that hath transgressed so " ...~ 1481
Whose deed hath made herself " 1566
hath OTerslipp'd her thought " .... 1576
with painted images hath spent *' 1577
He bath no power " 1594
Hath thee befairn " 1599
what spite hath thy fair colour spent " 1600
it hath to say " 1618
sad task hath not said ** ..... 1699
Hnth served a dumb arrest " ...~ 1780
and too late bath spill'd " 1801
that she hath kiird " 1803
bath in the world an end Son 9 11
Nature hath not made " 11 9
bath all too short a date " 18 4
that more bath more exprcss'd " 23 12
what silent love hath writ " %\ 13
Mine eye bath play'd the painter
and bath stell'd " 24 1
That hath his windows glazed ** 24 8
Thy merit hath my duty strongly
knit " 26 2
Hath dear religious love " 31 6
region cloud bath mask'd him '* 3:) 12
That she bath thee " 42 3
my friend bath found " 42 10
thy love bath cast " 49 3
Since every one hath, every one,
one shade " 53 3
Hath been before " 69 2
Hath travcU'd on to age's steepy
night " 63 5
Ruin bath taught " 64 11
For she bath no exchequer " 67 11
the eye bath shown " 69 8
hath in this line some interest *' 74 8
every alien pen hath got my use " 78 3
such virtue bath my pen " 81 13
my heart bath 'scaped " 90 5
humour bath its adjunct " 91 5
my life bath end '• 9*2 6
a winter bath ray absence been " 97 1
Hath put a spirit of youth " 98 3
it bath my added praise " 103 4
Hath motion, and mine eye may
be deceived " 104 12
moon bath her eclipse " 107 6
Which bath not figured " 108 2
hath the mind no part " 113 7
errors bath my heart committed "119 5
Whilst it bath thought "119 6
hand bath put on nature's power " 127 5
beauty hath no name " 127 7
music bath a far more pleasing
sound " i:«) 10
Thy face hath not the power " 1.31 6
cruel eye bath taken " i:« 5
Whoever hath her wish " 135 1
Hath left me, and I desperate " 147 7
what eyes bath Love " 148 1
over me hath power L C ~... 74
The one a palate hath " 167
Nature hath charged me ** «... 220
Hath— In thee hath neither sting
and chill eztincture hath
how often hath she joined
to please me hath she coined
Heart bath his hope
learned man hath got the lady
my band hath sworn
Love hath forlorn me
thine eye hath chose the dame
hath taught her thus to say
Love bath reason, reason none
Hfttred^no hatred in thine eye
Haanted— following where be ... .
Hare— Which long have roin'd
I have been woo'd
thou unask'd sbalt have
The beat I have from thence
if thou wilt have twain
since I bare hemm'd thee here
what a horse should have
and thou sbalt have it
For I have heard
That they have murder'd
you shall have a kiss •
though the rose have prickles
You have no reason
till they have singled
time thou needs must have
If love have lent you
what have you urged
have seen him no more
they long have gazed
at him should have fled
they have wept till now
That what tliey have not
LC 265
PP 7 7
"79
" 15 10
" 16 15
" 17 11
" 18 21
" 19 1
" 19 22
P T 47
Son ^ 5
L C 130
VA 83
" 97
" 102
" 195
" «... 210
" «... 229
" 874
" 418
" «... 502
«... OoO
" «... 674
" «... 612
«... 708
" «... 776
" «... 787
" «... 927
" 947
" «... 1062
iC Li «... 136
by hoping more, they have but less " 137
" «... 152
«... 163
" «... 201
" «... 235
«... 269
«... ttuo
«... 882
.. ■ • . 4.1 o
" «... 624
" «... 645
Of that we have
The thing we have
true respect should have
Might have excuse
Poor wretches have remorse
to have him heard
might have reposed still
* I have debated
Shall have thy trespass
' Have done,' quoth he
Have batter'd down her conse-
crated wall
true eyes have never practised
To have their unseen sin remain
So should I have
I have no one to blush
Have no perfection of my summer
left
We have no good that we can say
Truth and Virtue have to do with
thee
would else have come
' Let him have time
Let him have time
Let him have time
Let him have time
Let him have time
'Let him have time
Let him have time
Have time to wail
such an oflBce have
Have beard the cause
that dear Jewel I have lost
t(
It
»i
(1
t(
II
II
41
ti
II
II
U
It
l»
II
II
II
II
u
723
748
753
789
792
837
873
.... 911
.... 916
a ... tfOl
.... 982
• ••• aHSo
• ••• vvVs
.... 985
.... 988
■••• y«iu
.... 1000
.... 1178
.... 1191
HAND
116
HARSH-SOUNDING
t«
u
«l
It
t«
it
II
II
It
tt
LC
II
11
Haad— he takes her bj the blood-
less hand R L
That guides this hand
This said, he struck his hand **
winter's ragged hand deface Son
with Nature's own hand painted
shake hands to torture me
froui hands of falsehood
my hand against myself uprear
Or at your hand the account of
hours to crave
despite his cruel hand
With Time's injurious hand cmsh'd
by Time's fell hand defaced
Or what strong hand can hold
The hand that writ it
The lily I condemned, for thy hand
beauty, like a dial-hand
Of hand, of foot, of lip
like the dyer's band
For since each hand hath put on
tender inward of thy hand
Love's own hand did make
but in her maiden hand
by a virgin hand disarm 'd
a careless hand of pride
Or monarch's hands that lets not
bounty fall
that never touch'd his band
advance of yours that phraseless
hand
But alas, my hand hath sworn P P
Handled— idle, over-handled theme VA
HaHdllng— with too much handling "
Handmaid — Her twinkling hand-
maids too R L
Hang — droop with griefand hang the
head VA
doth she hang her head "
Thy kinsmen hang their heads R L
and hang their heads with mine "
calls to mind where hangs a piece '*
Hang on such thorns Son
And hang more praise "
or none, or few, do hang
did hang in crooked curls
plum that hangs upon a tree
Hang*d— to a cabin hang'd with care
Hanging — his braided hanging mane VA
still hanging by his neck "
like a heavy-hanging bell R L
in my bosom's shop is hanging Son
Hanging her pale and pined cheek L C
Hap— That golden hap which their
suiieriora want R L
issueless shalt hap to die Son
HapleMi — to end a hapless life R L
Haply— Haply that name of * chaste "
Haply I think on thee Son
And haply of our old acquaintance
wilt thou not haply say
Happier— Or ten times happier
wore happier than thou art
the height of happier men
Happiness— O happiness enjuy'd but
of a few R L
Happy— And now the happy season V A
treasure of his happy state R L
But happy monarchs still are fear'd "
1597
«... 1722
.... 1842
6 1
20
28
48
49
58
60
63
64
65
71
99
104
106
111
127
128
145
154
154
1
6
4
11
8
14
2
1
11
6
6
9
.6
7
5
6
1
4
8
SO
41
141
.... 225
17 11
.... 770
.... 560
787
6ri6
1058
621
79:i
.... 1»66
54 7
II
72
73
LC
PP
11
10
14
7
2
85
5
»
.... 693
.... 1493
24 7
.... 32
... 42
9 3
... 1045
8
10
12
5
8
9
8
22
327
16
611
29
89
101
6
6
32
M
M
U
U
U
BL .
Eufiiff—wome happy meui to end it L
aire, and child, and happy moUier 8m
on the top of happy hours
Then happy I, that love
return in happy plight
then ten times happy me
shadow's form form hai^j she
how happy you make thoae
O, what a happy title **
Happy to have thy lore, han>7 to
die «
saucy jacks so happy are in tbte **
Happy — which happies those that pay "
Harbinger — But thou shrieking
harbinger P T
Harl»onr— dark harbour for de£uii« R L
Hard— flinty, hard as steel V A
borne so hard a mind **
with his hard hoof he wounds
lest thy hard heart
hath made mine hard
where a heart is hard
holds her pulses hard
That hard heart of thine
with her bard embracing
Fearing some hard news
Of hard misfortune ***
how hard tnie sorrow hits Son
why 'twas beautiful and hard L C
Faithful friends are hard to find P P
Hard-belieTing— O hard-believing
love, how strange VA
Harden— Tears harden lust R L
Harden*d— Stone him withharden'd
hearts **
Harder— O, if no harder than a stone
hearts, harder than stones
thou harder hast engrossed
Hardest— The hardest knife ill nsed
Hard-fkvour'd — Were I hard-£»-
vour'd, foul VA
Hard-favour'd tyrant "
some hard-favour'd groom R L
Hare — at the timorous flying hare VA
on foot the purblind hare **
Harm— thence doth little harm **
fortress'd from a world of harms R L
no outward harm ezpress'd
tb' other feareth harm
including all foul harms
A little harm done
should right poor ladies' harms
For fear of harms
Harm have I done to them
Harmed — cannot be easily harmed
but ne'er was harmed
Harroftal— A harmful knife
of my harmful deeds
Harmleaa — Harmless Lucretia,
marking what he tells R L
Such harmless creatures
and give the harmless show
sheathed in her harmless breast **
Harmony— Lest the deceiving har-
mony should run VA
Harsh — churlish, harsh in voice
Harsh, featureless, and rude
Harsh -sounding — heavenly tone
harsh-sounding VA
— 1048
8 11
16 5
29 IS
28
S7
48
1
14
6
u
M
14
t«
U
tl
U
U
L C «...
II
Sim 111
tl
11
11
07 12
92 11
92 12
128 18
6 6
•.••• 5
••••• / OB
••••• 4«PSr
— 208
•••M 867
.... 375
~... 878
»... 438
— 476
M... 500
~... 859
295
~... 1718
120 10
..... 211
21 84
— 965
~... oqO
..... 978
— 693
138 6
96 14
•«••• 138
. 1632
u... 674
— 195
••••• *o
••••• w\
172
.... 199
.... 528
.... 1694
165
194
627
194
1?24
2
510
1347
1507
172
•n
11
HARVEST
117
HATH
Hureft— the harrest of his wiU Ji L 859
■hould that banreiit reap Son 128 7
Hail— hast thou a tongue VA .... 427
when thou hast on foot the pur-
blind hare " ~... 679
thou hast no eyes to see " 939
Why hast thou east " 951
▼hat treasure hast thou lost " 1075
as thou hast pretended li L 576
Hast thou put on his shape " 597
Hast thou command ** 624
which thou hast here deprired " 1752
my image thou hast torn " 1762
no form of thee hast left behind Son 9 6
Hast thou, the master-mistress of
my passion " 20 2
hast all the aU of roe " 81 14
at that which thou hast done " 85 1
What bast thou then " 40 2
That thou hast her ** 42 1
thou bast the strength of laws " 49 13
thou hast pass'd by the ambush " 70 9
thou hast but lost the dregs of life " 74 9
thou bast too grossly dyed *' 99 5
Who hast by waning grown " 126 3
thou harder hast engrossed " 133 6
thou hast both him and me " 134 13
thou hast thy • Wm " 135 1
bast thou forged hooks " 137 7
hast thou this powerful might " 150 1
Whence hast thou this becoming " 150 5
Whilst thou hast wherewith to
spend PP 21 36
Haste — devouring all In haste VA 57
And all in haste " 870
Her more than haste " 909
And in her haste *' «... 1029
return again in haste R L 821
So his unhallow'd haste " 552
with their fresh falls' haste " ..... 6.>0
The cause craves haste " 1295
to my lord with more than haste " 1.332
that doth behold his haste '* 1668
by thy continual haste Son 123 11
naai»—\ haste me to my bed " 27 1
why should I baste me thence " 51 3
Hasten— minutes hasten to their end *' 60 2
Haateth— and hasteth to his horse VA 258
hasteth to a myrtle grove " ..... 865
Haatlag— Hasting to feed her fawn " 876
Hasty— Thy hasty spring still blasts R L 49
Hat— she heaveth up his hat VA 351
some, untuck'd, descended her
sheaved hat L C 31
Hateh— cuckoos hatch in sparrows'
nests R L 849
Hate— To make thee hate VA ..... 711
there is no hate in loving R L 240
if not, enforced hate " 668
to fine the hate of foes " 9.i6
or begets him hate " 1005
posMM'd with murderous hate Son 10 5
Shall hate be fairer lo<Iged " 10 10
is in my love and hate " 35 12
than hate's known injury " 40 12
In your waken'd hate " 117 12
Time's love or to Time's bate " 124 3
and thy dear virtue hate " 142 1
Hate of my sin '< 142 2
Hate— and see Just cause of hate Son 150 10
In vowing new hate ** 152 4
Hate— I hate not love, but your VA ..... 789
hates himself for his ofl'ence R L 738
him whom thou dost hate " 89 14
Then hate me when thou wilt Son 90 1
the sound that said ' I hate ** 145 2
*I hate' she alter'd with an end ** 145 9
'I hate' from hate ** 145 13
But, love, hate on *' 149 13
Hated— Past reason hated " 129 7
Hateful— Hateful divorce of love VA .,.., 932
to his hateful name ** ..... 994
and wretched hateful days R L ...~ 161
Hateful it is ; there is no hate " 240
'Ohateful.vaporous, and foggy Night'* 771
hateful cuckoos hatch in sparrows*
nests " ..... 849
the hateful foe bewray'd " .... 1698
Hatefklly-But hatefully at random VA 940
Hateth— Who hateth thee that I do
call my friend Son 149 5
Hath — the world hath ending VA ...~ 12
yet bath he been my captive " 101
bath he hung bis lance " ..... 103
for my sake hath learn'd '* ..... 105
the heart hath treble wrong " 329
hath made mine hard " 878
The sea hath bounds, but deep de-
sire hath none *' ~... 389
eye so full hath fed ** 899
hath done me double wrong " ~... 429
Hath taught them " ..... 501
hath ended in the west ** ..... 530
hath caught the yielding prey " 547
She hath assay'd as much '* 608
hath deserved a greater fee " 609
he hath a battle set " ..... 619
Beauty hath nought to do '* ..... 6.S8
hath she bribed the Destinies " .... 733
semblance he hath fed " ..... 795
Hath dropped a precious Jewel '* ..... 823
For who hath she to spend " 847
When he hath ceased " 919
web that she hath wrought " ~... 991
that hath done thee wrong ** 1005
Grief hath two tongues " -... 1007
when he hath sung " 1095
and hath kill'd him so " 1110
hath done her beauty wrong R L ...» 80
that hath engirt " 221
Hath barr'd him ** 340
impiety hath wrought " 341
fear's frost hath dissolution ** 355
That thinks she hath beheld " 451
Thy beauty hath ensnared thee " 485
Only he bath an eye to gaze *' ~... 496
The wolf hath seized " ...- 677
But she hath lost •< ..... 687
And he hath won " 688
that hath lost in gain " ..... 730
a wandering wasp hath crept " ...~ 8.')9
And scarce hath eyes •* ..... 857
'So then he hath it '* 862
which wretchedness hath chained " 900
what he hath said *' 915
' Why hath thy servant oppor-
tunities " ..... 932
hath Tarquin rifled me *' 1050
HATH
118
HAVE
Hath— For day hath oouKht H L 1092
grief is dumb and hath do words ** 1105
winter that the flower hath kill'd " 1255
one hath power to tell " 1288
So woe hath wearied woe " i:)63
that hath done him wrong " 1467
that hath transgressed so ** ...~ 1481
Whose deed hath made herself " 1566
hath overslipp'd her thought " .... 1576
with painted images hath spent " 1577
He hath no power " 1594
Hath thee befail'n " 1599
w hat spite hath thy fair colour spent " 1600
it hath to say " 1618
sad task hath not said " 1699
Hath served a dumb arrest " 1780
and too hite hath spill'd ** 1801
that she hath kill'd " 1803
hatli ill the world an end Son 9 11
Nature hath not made "11 9
hath all too short a date " 18 4
that more hath more express'd " 23 12
what silent love hath writ " 23 13
Mine eye hath play'd the painter
and hath stell'd " 24 1
That hath his windows glazed " 24 8
Thy merit hath my duty strongly
knit " 26 2
Hath dear religious love " 31 6
region cloud hath mask'd him ** Xi 12
That she hath thee *' 42 3
my friend hath found " 42 10
thy love hath cast " 49 3
Since every one hath, every one,
one shade " 53 3
Hath been before " 59 2
Hath traveird on to age's steepy
night " 63 5
Ruin hath taught "64 11
For she hath no exchequer " 67 11
the eye hath shown " 69 8
bath in this line some interest ** 74 8
every alien pen hath got my use " 78 3
such virtue hath my pen " 81 13
my heart hath 'scaped " 90 5
humour hath its adjunct " 91 5
my life hath eud " 92 6
a winter hath ray absence been " 97 1
Hath put a spirit of youth " 98 3
it hath my added praise " 103 4
Hath motion, and mine eye may
be deceived " 104 12
moon hath her eclipse " 107 5
Which hath not figured "108 2
hath the mind no part "113 7
errors hath my heart committed "119 5
Whilst it hath thought "119 6
hand hath put on nature's power " 127 5
beauty hath no name " 127 7
music hath a far more pleasing
sound " 130 10
Thy face hath not the power " 131 6
cruel eye hath taken " 133 5
Whoever hath her wish " 1*5 1
Hath lea me, and I desperate " 147 7
what eyes hath Love " 148 1
over me hath power L C «... 74
The one a palate hath " ..... 167
Nature hath charged me " .... 220
Hath— In thee hath neither sting
LC
.•«••
285
and chill extincture hath
H
•..«•
294
how often hath she joined
PP
7
7
to please me hath she coined
t(
7
9
Heart hath his hope
II
15
10
learned man hath got the lady
It
16
15
my hand hath sworn
tl
17
11
Love hath forlorn me
II
18
21
thine eye hath chose the dame
II
19
1
hath taught her thus to say
II
19
22
Love hath reason, reason none
PT
47
Hatred— no hatred iu thine eye
Son
93
5
Uainted— following where he ... .
LC
•• *•«
130
Have— Which long have rain'd
VA
••••a
83
I have been woo'd
•1
•«••■
97
thou uuask'd shalt have
II
•••••
102
The heat I have from thence
II
*••••
195
if thou wilt have twain
II
•••••
210
since I have hemm'd thee here
II
•••••
229
what a horse should have
II
•••••
299
and thou shilt have it
11
•••••
874
For I have heard
M
•••••
413
That they have murder'd
II
•*•••
502
you shall have a kiss •
II
•■••«
686
though the rose have prickles
II
•••*•
574
You have no reason
II
•••••
612
till they have singled
11
••••a
693
time thou needs must have
II
•■•••
759
If love have lent you
U
•••••
775
what have you urged
II
•••••
787
have seen him no more
II
•••••
819
they long have gazed
It
«••••
927
at him should have fled
It
•••••
947
they have wept till now
II
•••••
1062
That what they have not
RL
•••••
135
by hoping more, they have but less "
•••■•
137
Of that we have
II
■••••
152
The thing we have
tl
•••••
153
true respect should have
It
•••••
201
Might have excuse
II
■»•••
235
Poor wretches have remorse
II
•■«••
269
to have him heard
II
•••••
806
might have reposed still
It
••»••
882
* I have debated
It
•••••
498
Shall have thy trespass
II
•••»•
524
' Have done,' quoth he
II
••*••
645
Have batter'd down her conse-
crated wall
It
•••••
728
true eyes have never practised
tl
•••••
748
To have their unseen sin remain
II
••*••
758
So should I have
II
•« •••
789
I have no one to blush
u
•*•••
792
Have no perfection of my summer
left
tl
••>••
837
We have no good that we can say
II
•••••
873
Truth aud Virtue have to do with
thee
II
•••••
911
would else have come
M
•••••
916
* Let him have time
tl
•••••
981
Let him have time
If
•••••
982
Let him have time
II
•■■•■
983
Let him have time
it
•••••
984
Let him have time
It
•••••
985
'Let him have time
It
••■•■
9S8
Let him have time
It
•*•••
990
Have time to wail
It
•■••«
994
such an office have
tl
■••••
1000
Have heard the cause
11
•*«••
1178
tliat dear jewel I have lost
U
•••••
1191
HAVE
119
HE
Hare — For men haTe marble, wu-
mea waxen minds Ji L 1240
for I have them here " ~... 1290
creatures have a true respect " 1347
where cares hare carved some " 144.5
the fear that false hearts have " »... \hVl
She would have said " 1535
dolour others have endured " 1582
should have slain her foe " 1827
I have astronomy Son 14 2
eyes for eyes have done *' 24 9
eyes have drawn " 24 10
have supposed dead "31 2
morning have I seen *' 33 1
yet I have still the loss " 34 JO
Roses have thorns *' 35 2
ThU wish I have '* 37 14
till she have prevailed ** 41 8
Thee have I not *' 48 9
you have some part ** 53 13
canker-blooms have full as deep " 54 5
I have no precious time " 57 3
When you have bid " 67 8
subjects worse have given " 59 14
hours have drained ** 63 3
When I have seen " 64 1
When I have seen " 64 5
have seen such interchange " 64 9
But weep to have that " 64 14
unless this miracle have might " 65 13
earth can have but earth " 74 7
8o oft have I invoked thee " 78 1
Have added feathers " 78 7
Your name from hence immortal
life shall have " 81 5
yet when they have devised " 82 9
therefore have I slept " 8:) 5
Thus have I had thee " 87 13
grlefii have done their spite " 90 10
Happy to have thy love " 92 12
They that have power *' 94 1
what a mansion have those vices got " 95 9
what freezings have I felt " 97 3
From you have I been absent " 98 1
If Time have any wrinkle " 100 10
Have from the forests shook " 104 4
seasons have I seen " 104 6
have often lived alone " 105 13
pen would have express'd " 106 7
Have eyes to wonder " 106 14
If I have ranged " 109 5
'tis true I have gone here and there "110 1
that I have look'd on truth "110 5
done, have what shall have no end " 1 10 9
lines that I before have writ " 115 1
that I have scanted all "117 1
That I have frequent been "117 5
That I have hoisted sail "117 7
potions have I drunk "119 1
How have mine eyes out of their
spheres been fitted "119 7
thrice more than I have spent " 119 14
Yoa've pass'd a hell of time " 120 6
have no leisure taken " 120 7
might have remember'd " 120 9
Have faculty by nature to subsist " 122 6
before have heard " 123 8
who have lived for crime " 124 14
Have I not seen " 125 5
Have — and In quest to have Som, 129 10
I have seen roses " 130 5
Have put on black " 132 8
now I have confess'd " 134 1
Him have I lost " 134 13
heart and eyes have erred " 137 13
to have years told ** 13S 12
looks have been mine enemies " 139 10
That have profaned " 142 6
if thou dost seek to have " 142 13
the thing she would have stay " 143 4
mayst have thy 'Will " 143 13
Two loves I have of comfort " 144 1
For I have sworn thee fair " 147 13
Which have no correspondence " 148 2
Or, if they have " 148 3
For I have sworn deep oaths " 152 9
I have sworn thee fair " 152 13
Ink would have seeni'd L C .... 54
have been a spreading flower " 75
ere he desire have granted " 131
'So many have, that never " 141
Have of my suflferlng youth " ..... 178
I have been call'd unto " ~... 181
that mine eyes have seen " ..... 190
Harm have I done to them " ..... 194
I have received from many " 206
The thing we have not " 240
Have emptied all their fountains " 255
loves not to have years told P P 1 12
Two loves I have of comfort "21
and yet no cause I have " 10 7
that wont to have play'd " 18 29
Have you not heard it said " 19 41
They have at commandment " 21 46
Having— But having no defects VA 138
having writ on death " ..... 509
And having felt the sweetness " 553
But having thee at vantage " ..... 635
for having so otTended " 810
Having lost the fair discovery " ..... 828
Having no fair to lose " 1083
Which having all R L 96
In having much, torments us " 151
Having solicited the eternal power " ..... 344
Having no other pleasure " «... 860
Who, having two sweet babes " 1161
For having traffic with thyself Son 4 9
And having climb'd "75
And having thee " 91 12
That having such a scope " 103 2
Had, having, and in quest to have " 129 10
having so short a lease " 146 5
Having*— Whone rarest havings L C 235
Hawk— full-fed hound or gorged .,,,RL 694
Some in their hawks Son 91 4
Of more delight than hawks " 91 11
Hasard — Such hazard now must dot-
ing Tarquin make R L 151
He — Hunting he loved, but love he
laugh'd to scorn VA . 4
He red for shame " «... 36
as he was down " «... 43
now doth he frown " «... 45
He burns with bashful " „... 49
He saith she is immodest " ..... 53
Panting he lies and breatheth " 62
Still Is he sullen, still he lours and
frets « ..... 75
HEAR
123
HEART
Hesr— That to he«r it was great pity PP 21 12
That to hear her " 21 15
they cannot hear thee ** 21 21
Hewd— For I hare heard VA 413
As If they heard '* 1126
The threshold grates the door to
hare him heard H L 306
Hare heard the cause " 1178
that we before hare heard theui
told Son 123 8
Heaid where his plants L C ...» 171
Hare yoo not hcaid it P P 19 41
Hear'itr— thou hear'st me moralize VA 712
why hear'st thou music sadly Son 8 1
Hearer— Will tie the hearers R L 818
HearlBg— or I had no hearing VA 428
And hearing him " 944
And in my hearing Ji L ...» 1123
Hearing you praised Son 8.5 9
with his hearing to divide L C 67
Hcarkea— To hearken if his foes VA 699
She hearkens for his hounds " 868
Hearsay— Let them say more that
like of hearsay well Son 21 13
Hearsed— within a puddle's womb
is hearsed PL 657
Heart— Is thine own heart VA 157
the heart hath treble wrong " 329
the heart's attorney " »... 335
heart all whole as thine, thy heart " 370
'Give me my heart " 374
thy hard heart do steel it " »... 375
Because Adonis' heart " 378
set the heart on fire " 388
from my unyielding heart " 423
where a heart Is hard " 426
heart's deep-sore wounding " 432
that hard heart of thine " 500
thispoor heart of mine " 502
bays my heart from me " 517
look well to her heart " 580
For my sick heart " 684
My boding heart pants " »... 647
Knocks at my heart " 659
make my faint heart blee^ " 669
my lieart stands armed " 779
And then my little heart " 783
my heart longs not " 785
my heart of teen " 808
now she beats her heart " 829
enters to surprise her heart " 890
cleaTcs an infant's heart " 942
Thy coward heart " 1024
never wound the heart " 1042
my heart to lead " 1072
Heavy hearts lead " 1073
Ky throbbing heart " „... 1186
oar hearts oft tainted be R L ...^ 38
my false heart bleed " »... 228
the heart that shadows dreadeth. '* »... 270
My heart shall never countermand " ...» 276
But with a pure appeal seeks to
the heart " 293
But his hot heart, which fond de-
sire « »... 814
is his heart misled " „... 369
Anon his beating heart, alarums
striking " 433
His drumming heart cheers up " .... 435
Heart— the heart of all her land R L
F •••••
439
May feel her heart, poor citizen
((
469
but his heart granteth
u
•••••
558
and wreck-threatening heart
u
•••••
590
From a pure heart
u
••fl**
625
She wakes her heart
u
•••••
759
Stone him with haiden'd hearts
u
•*•••
978
against my heart
u
■••••
1137
Faint not, faint heart
M
• •••V
1209
drown their eyes or break their
hearts
14
1239
either cipher'd cither's heart
M
• ••••
1396
the fear that false hearts have
M
• ••••
1512
And then against my heart
U
•••••
1640
as if her heart would break
M
• •••«
1716
so thick come in his poor heart's
aid
M
• ••••
1784
do not steep thy heart
(1
•••••
1828
A woman's gentle heart
Son
\ 20
8
raiment of my heart
u
22
6
Bearing thy heart
U
22
11
Presume not on thy heart
(1
22
13
weakens his own heart
U
23
4
table of my heart
It
24
2
know not the heart
U
24
14
endeared with ail hearts
It
81
1
absent from thy heart
It
41
2
Mine eye and heart are at a mor-
tal war
U
46
1
Mine eye my heart thy picture's
sight
It
46
8
My heart mine eye the freedom of
u
46
4
My heart doth plead
It
46
5
tenants to the heart
It
46
10
dear heart's part
II
46
12
And my heart's right thine in-
ward love of heart
u
46
14
Bclwixt mine eye and heart
11
47
1
Or heart in love
M
47
4
bids my heart
It
47
6
mine eye is my heart's guest
M
47
7
Awakes my heart to heart's and
eye's delight
M
47
14
But you like none, none you, for
constant heart
U
53
14
It is so grounded inward in my
heart
II
62
4
the thought of hearts can mend
It
69
2
kingdom of hearts shouldst owe
II
70
14
when my heart hath 'scaped
II
90
5
Thy looks with me, thy heart in
other place
It
93
4
false heart's history
II
93
7
Whate'er thy thoughts or thy
heart's workings be
II
93
11
Take heed, dear heart
II
95
13
never say that I was false of heart
II
109
1
gave my heart another youth
U
110
7
it no form delivers to the heart
11
113
5
What wretched errors hath my
heart committed
II
119
5
so long as brain and heart
II
122
5
let me be obsequious in thy heart
II
125
9
my dear doting heart
II
131
8
thy heart torments me with disdain
II
132
2
let It then as well beseem thy heart
It
132
10
Beshrew that heart that makes my
heart to groan
U
183
1
Prison my heart
M
183
9
HEART
124
HEAVENLY
Bnut— But then my fHend'i heart
let mj poor heart hail Son 183 10
let my heart he his guard "188 11
the Judgement of my heart i« tied *' 137 8
Why should my heart think " 187 9
Which my heart knows •* 137 10
my heart and eyes have erred " 137 13
That thy unkind ness lays upon
my heart " 139 2
Dear heart, forbear ** 189 6
Though thy proud heart go wide " 140 14
'tis my heart that loTes " 141 8
Dissuade one foolish heart " 141 10
thy proud heart's slare " 141 12
Boot pity in thy heart " 142 11
Straight in her heart did mercy
come " 145 5
With insufficiency my heart to sway" 150 2
true hearts had warra'd ** 154 6
supposed them mistress of his
heart L C ..... 142
of his foul adulterate heart *' 175
my heart so much as warmed " 191
Kept hearts in liveries " »... 195
Encamp'd in hearts *' ~... 203
Now all these hearts that do on
mine depend " «... 274
What rocky heart to water will
not wear " ^... 291
That not a heart which in his lerel
came " ^... 809
that forced thunder from his heart
did fly " «... 825
Persuade my heart P P Z 3
To win his heart she touch'd him "47
My heart doth charge the watch " 15 2
Heart hath his hope " 15 10
Heart's renying " 18 7
Heart is bleeding " 18 23
Thus of every grief in heart " 21 55
Hearts remote, yet not asunder P T «... 29
Heart-easing— keep him from heart-
easing words R L 1782
Hearted— 'gan she cry, ' flint-hearted
boy VA ~... 95
at least kind-hearted prove Son 10 12
Hearten— And therein heartens up
his servile powers R L «... 295
Heartily— I heartily beseech thee VA 404
Heart-inflaming— his .... brand Son 154 2
Heartleas — To sound a parley to his
heartless foe RL 471
Which heartless peasants did so
well resemble " 1392
Through heartless ground P P 18 35
Heart-ttriaga— Shall tune our .... R L «... 1141
Heart^wish'd- burn'd in ... . luxury L C 314
Heat — passenger in summer's heat VA 91
tired in the mid-day heat •' 177
Shall cool the heat " 190
The heat I have from thence " 195
scorns the heat he feels " «... 311
O rash-false heat R L «... 48
Can curb his heat " «... 706
knows not parching heat " «... 1145
Thy heat of lust " 1473
Which erst fh>ni heat did canopy Son 12 6
That it nor grows with beat " 124 12
A dateless, lively heat "158 6
154
154
i<
«<
u
II
II
M
U
ti
II
II
II
II
II
10
14
742
413
686
15
111
638
193
268
493
533
730
731
793
13
17
112
838
Heat— from Lore's flre took heat Son
Love's fire heats water "
Heating— by heating of the blood VA «.
Heave— to heave the owner out R L ^.
labour hence to heave thee " «.
Oft did she heave her napkin L C ^.
Heaved-ap— Her Joy with hand R L „.
my heaved-up hands appeal " ...
Hearea— that shines flrom heaven VA^.
resounds like heaven's thunder " «.
in earth or heaven
that shadow heaven's light
stealing moulds from heaven
in high heaven's despite
Love to heaven is fled
as bright as heaven's beauties R L ^.
the heavens had him lent " «.
greets heaven for his success
from the heaven of his thought
As if the heavens should counte-
nance his sin
The eye of heaven is out
By heaven and earth
To all the host of heaven
by heaven, I will not hear thee
for heaven and CoUatine
As heaven, it scem'd
By heaven's fair sun
that I in heaven flnd
Though yet, heaven knows, it is
but as " 17
the eye of heaven shines " 18
Who heaven itself for ornament
doth use " 21 8
That heaven's air in this huge ron-
dure hems
flx'd in heaven's air
when clouds do blot the heaven
And trouble deaf heaven
sings bynins at heaven's gate
when heaven's sun stalneth
in heaven's sweetest air
But heaven in thy creation did de-
cree
do inherit heaven's^races
welcome, next my heaven the best " 110 13
To shun the heaven that leads men " 129 14
And yet, by heaven, I think
not the morning sun of heaven
From heaven to hell
sees not till heaven clears "
spite of heaven's fell rage L C
To sing heaven's praise P P
Wish'd himself the heaven's breath "
There is no heaven, by holy then
Son
II
II
u
II
II
M
11
II
II
II
II
<i
••••• 856
••••• 572
667
«... 1166
«... 1372
«... 1837
14 8
S
5
21
21
28
29
29
83
70
93
94
8
12
10
8
12
14
4
9
5
II
130
132
145
148
5
17
19
Heaven-hoed- The .... sapphire
Heavenly — calls it ... . moisture
this heavenly and earthly sun
heavenly tune harsh-sounding
The heavenly moisture
her heavenly image sits
the steep-up heavenly hill
Such heavenly touches ne'er
touch'd
with heavenly alchemy
the heavenly rhetoric of thine
eye
thou a heavenly love
whose heavenly touch
LC
VA
II
11
RL
Son
II
11
PP
II
17
88
8
8
13
5
12
12
18
14
8
45
215
64
198
431
542
288
5
8
4
1
7
5
HEAVETH
125
HER
VA ~.
(t
30
SO
351
482
10
11
■Mreth— she heaTeth np his hat
taiatlj she ap-heayeth
■eartly— Aod .... from woe to woe Son
Which heaTily he answers "
Hearlacaa— request to know yonr
heavioeys S L ~... 1283
this moody heariness " 1602
Hcary— think it heavy unto thee VA 156
heavy, dark, dUllklng eye " 182
Her heavy anthem " «... 839
What may a heavy groan " ~... 950
Heavy hearts lead •* —. 1073
in his ears a heavy tale " ~... 1125
weariness with heavy upright R L 121
When heavy sleep had closed up " 163
With heavy eye, knit brow " ..... 709
dq;>arts a heavy convertite " 743
The heavy motion that it doth " 1326
a kind of heavy fear " 1435
Though woe be heavy " 1574
Though heavy sleep on sightless
eyes Sm 43 12
But heavy tears, badges of cither's
woe '* 44 14
How heavy do I journey " 50 1
My heavy eyelids to the weary night " 61 2
And heavy ignorance aloft to fly " 78 6
That heavy Saturn laugh'd " 98 4
Reavy-hanginy— like a . . . . bell H L 1493
Hfetor— bold , march'd to field " 1430
Here manly Hector faints " 1486
Hecaba— despairing Hecuba beheld " 1447
Lo, here weeps Hecuba " 1485
Hedge— Behind some hedge VA 1094
gone to the hedge for shade P P 6 2
Heed— Take heed, dear heart Son 95 13
Heedftil — corn o'ergrown by weeds,
so heedful fear B L -... 281
hears no heedful friends " ~... 493
Beedftiily—heedfully doth view " 454
Heel- Beating his kind embrace-
ments with her heels VA 312
Heigbfr— His wonted height R L 776
at height decrease Son 15 7
by the height of happier n^en " 32 8
ilthough his height be taken "116 8
Belawn — Thy heinous hours wait
on them R L 910
one most heinous crime Son 19 8
Bdr-His tender heir might bear "14
and make worms thine heir " 6 14
beauty's successive heir " 127 3
Held— He held such petty bondage VA 894
Her blood, in poor revenge, held
it in chsse R L 1736
Held hack his sorrow's tide " 1789
of small worth held Son 2 4
the frame wherein 'tis held '* 24 3
upon these terras I held my city L C 176
Helea— For Helen's rape R L 1369
On Helen's cheek all art of beauty
set Son 53 7
HeU— Night, image of hell R L 764
To ugly hell ; when, lo " 1082
torture may be call'd a hell " 1287
effects from Ughtless holl «' in^-j
though waiting BO be hell Son 58 13
limbecks foul as hell "119 2
you've pass'd a hell of time " 120 6
u
II
Hell — the heaven that leads men to
this hell Son 129 14
To win me soon to hell " 144 5
one angel in another's hell
From heaven to hell
Who art as black as hell
what a hell of witchcraft lies L C
To win me soon to hell PP 2
one angel in another's hell " 2
HeU-b«ni— Or blot with sin R L .....
Help — Her help she sees, but help
144
145
147
12
12
14
288
5
12
1519
VA
11
RL
u
I*
M
II
Son
93
M... 371
...a. Vl<S
M... iloO
-... 1022
M... 1056
1685
86 4
ti
11
II
u
(i
80
153
153
9
11
13
18 24
18 54
..... 1274
..... 1822
..... 1830
16 1-2
21 52
604
~... 756
«... 1027
..... 1056
21 8
she cannot get
thy help I would assure thee
They buy thy help
of time's help to despair
my case is past the help of law
Poor helpless help
the help that thou shalt lend me
Without thy help
Your shallowest help will hold me
up
the help of bath desired
the bath for my help lies
All help needing P P
Other help for him "
J£elp—I( tears could help R L
Do wounds help wounds, or grief
help grievous words
and help to bear thy part
Alas, she could not help it P P
He will help thee "
Helplem— that helpless berries saw VA
what helpless shame I feel R L
This helpless smoke of words "
Poor helpless help "
Hem — in this huge rondure hems Son
Uenm'd — Since I have hemm'd thee
here V A «... 229
hemm'd with thieves " ~... 1022
Henee — I pray you hence " «... 882
labour hence to heave thee R L ..... 586
Tarquin from hence " ..... 1276
when he takes thee hence Son 12 14
who doth hence remain " 39 14
From hence your memory " 81 3
Your name from hence '* 81 5
To make him seem long hence as
he shows now " 101 14
Hence, thou suborn 'd informer "125 13
hence a question takes L C ...» 110
Both fire from hence " 294
In a mutual flame from hence P T 24
Hencefbrth— . ... no creature wear VA 1081
Her— trembling in her passion " ..... 27
doth lend her force " ...- 29
Under her other was the tender boy " ..... 32
she with her tears " ..... 49
with her windy sighs " ..... 51
blames her miss " ..... 53
tires with her beak " 66
shaking her wings " 57
breatheth in her face " 62
wishing her cheeks were gardens " 65
fasten'd in her arms " 68
she tunes her tale " ..... 74
Her best is better'd " ..... 78
by her fair immortal " 80
he take truce with her " ..... 82
making her cheeks all wet " ..... 83
HER
126
HER
Der—Bat when her lips VA ^.- 89
Her help she sees ** .... 93
yet her fire must bum *' .... 94
mutering her that foil'd the god ** ..... 114
her pleading tongue " ..... 217
blaze forth her wrong ^ ..... 219
cannot right her cause ** ..... 220
her sobs do her inteudmento break ** ..... 222
she shakes her head ** ..... 223
Sometimes her arms infold him " .... 225
he will not in her arms " ..... 226
She locks her lily fingers ** ..... 228
Her words are done, her woes the
more " ...» 254
her object will away " ..... 255
from ber twining arms ** ...> 256
to her straight goes he " ..... 264
and neighs unto her *' ..... 307
to see him woo her " ...> 309
embracements with ber heels ** .... 312
With her the horse " ..... 322
He sees her coming ** .... 337
he holds her in his eye " .... 342
conflict of her hue " .... 345
DOW her cheek was pale " 347
Her other tender hand " . 352
her soft hand's print " 353
Her eyes petitioners to his eyes " 354$
His eyes saw her eyes " .... 357
Her eyes woo'd still ** .... 358
her eyes did min ** .... SCO
engine of her thoughts *' .... 367
in her naked bed " .... 397
His meaning struck her ** .... 462
Claps her pale cheeks " .... 468
think to reprehend her " .... 470
that can so well defend her " .... 472
breatheth life in her " .... 474
He wrings her nose, be strikes her
on the cheeks ** .... 475
He bends her fingers, holds her
pulses hard ** .... 476
He chafes ber lips " .... 477
He kisses ber; and she, by her
goodwill « .... 479
so he will kiss her " .... 480
Her two blue windows ** .... 482
her face illumined with her eye " .... 486
Her arras do lend " .... 639
her thirsty lips " .... 543
He with her plenty " .... 645
Her lipe are conquerors " .... 649
Her face doth reek and smoke,
her blood doth boil " .... 655
her hard embracing *' .... 659
prays her that he may " .... 678
look well to her heart " .... 680
He tells her, no " .... 687
Usurps her cheek " .... 691
her yoking arms " .... 692
He on her belly falls, she on her
back " .... 694
Her champion mounted *' .... 596
He will not manage her, although
he mount her " 698
worse than Tantalus' Is her annoy " .... 699
and to lack her Joy " .... 600
languisheth in her mishaps " .... 608
Her pleading hath ** ..» 609
Her— obscures her sUver shine VA .... 728
the sun by day and her by night " .... 732
bound him to her breast " .... 812
Lore upon her back ** .... 814
did feed ber sight " — 822
discorery of her way " .... 828
She beats ber heart ** .... 829
repetition of her moans ** ... 831
Her heavy anthem " .... 839
Her song was tedious *' .... 841
would say after her ** .... 852
no tidings of her lore ** .... 867
catch her by the neck, some kiss
her face " .... 872
twine about her thigh to make
her stay " .... 873
Hasting to feed her fawn " .... 876
Appals her senses and her spirit
confounds " .... 882
Sadly in ber ear " — 889
to surprise her heart " .... 890
cheering up her senses '* — 896
through all her sinews " .... 903
which madly hurries her " .... 904
bear her a thousand ways " .... 907
Her more than baste " .... 909
draws up ber breath ** .... 929
Since her best work " .... 954
She vail'd her eyelids " — 956
her two cheeks fair *' .... 957
of her bosom dropp'd ". .... 958
O, how her eyes ** .... 961
Her eyes seen in the tears, tears
in her eye " .... 962
Sighs dry her cheeks *' .... 966
throng her constant woe " .... 967
best become ber grief " .... 968
pleased her babe *' .... 974
bids her rejoice " .... 977
flatters her it is " . 978
Whereat her tears began " .... 979
prison'd in her eye " .... 980
which her cheek melts *' .... 982
Her rash suspect " .... 1010
and in her haste , " .... 1029
on her fair delight " .... 1030
her eyes as murder'd " .... 1031
her eyes are fled " .... 1037
cabiuM of her head " ».. 1038
her troubled brain " .... 1040
once more leap her eyes " . 1060
doth she hang her head " ia'>8
Her voice is stopp'd, her Joints
forget " .... 1061
Her eyes are mad " .... 1062
her sight dazzling ** .... 1064
her mangling eye " .... 1065
her face with his " ^.. 1122
by her side lay kill'd " .... 1165
like a vapour from her sight " .... 1166
She bows her head " 1171
to her Adonis' breath " .... 1172
within her bosom " 1173
reft from her by death " 1174
yokes her silver doves " .... 1190
in her light chariot " 1192
should underprop her fame JZ L .... 6S
in her fair face's field " .... 72
Now thinks he that her husband's ** «.« 78
HEART
124
HEAVENLY
■Mrt— But then mj friend's heart
let B17 poor bean ball Son 1S3 10
let my heart be bis gnard ** 13S 11
the Judgement of my heart is tied ''137 8
Why sboQld my beart think ** 137 9
Which m J heart knovs ** 137 10
m J heart and eyes have erred " 137 13
That thy nnkindness lays upon
my heart "139 2
Dear heart, forbear ** 139 6
Though thy proud heart go wide ** 140 14
'tin my heart that loTes ** 141 3
Dissuade one foolUb heart ** 141 10
thy proud heart's slare ** 141 12
Boot pity in thy heart ** 142 11
Straight in ber lieart did mercy
come "145 5
With insufficiency my heart to sway *' 150 2
true hearts had warm'd "154 6
supposed them mistress of Us
heart L C ~... 142
of his foul adulterate heart ** ~... 175
my heart so much as warmed " — 191
Kept hearts In liveries ** .... 195
Encamped in hearts ** .... 203
Now all these hearts that do on
mine depend " .... 274
What rocky heart to water will
not wear *' .... 291
That not a heart which in his level
came ** .... 309
that forced thunder from his heart
did fly " .... 325
Persuade my heart PP 3 3
To win his heart she touched him "47
My heart doth charge the watch " 15 2
Heart hath his hope " 15 10
Heart's renying " 18 7
Heart is bleeding *' 18 23
Thus of every grief in heart ** 21 65
Hearts remote, yet not asunder P T .... 29
Heart-eaalng— keep him from heart-
easing words B L .... 1782
Hearted— 'gan she cry, ' flint4iearted
boy V A .... 95
at least kind-hearted prove San 10 12
Hearten— And therein heartens up
his servile powers R L .... 295
Heartily— I heartily beseech thec> VA 404
Heart-inllMBing— his .... brand Son 154 2
Ueartlesa— To sound a parley to his
heartless foe RL 471
Which heartless peasants did so
well resemble " 1392
Through heartless ground P P 18 35
Heart-strings— Shall tune our /? Z> .... 1141
Heart-wisk'd— burn'd in ... . luxury L C 314
Heat— passenger in summer's heat V A 91
tired in the mid-day heat " 177
Shall cool the heat " 190
The heat I have from thence " 195
scorns the heat he feels *' .... 311
O rash-false heat R L .... 48
Can curb his beat " 706
knows not parching heat " .... 114.5
Thy heat of lust " .... 1473
Which erst from heat did canopy Son 12 6
Thst it nor grows with beat " 124 12
A dateless, lively heat " 163 6
Heat— from Lovers fire took heat Son
Love's fire heats water "
HeatlB^— by heating of the blood VA
Heave — to heave the owner out R L
labour hence to heave thee "
Oft did she heave her napkin L C
Heared-ap— Her joy with hand R L
u
u
u
<l
u
my heaved-up hands appeal
Heave*— that shines fh>m heaven VA ....
resounds like heaven's thunder ** ....
in earth or heaven " ....
that shadow heaven'a light ** ....
stealing moulds ftom heaven ** ....
in high heaven's deai^te "
Love to heaven is fied " ....
as bright as heaven's beautlea R L .
the heavens bad him lent
greets heaven for his succesa
from the heaven of bis thought
As if the heavens should counte-
nance his sin
The eye of heaven is out
By heaven and earth
To all the host of heaven
by heaven, I will not hear thee
for heaven and CoUatine
As heaven, it seem'd "
By heaven's fair sun "
that I in heaven find Son
Though yet, heaven knows, it is
but as
the eye of heaven shines
Who heaven itself for ornament
doth use
That heaven's air in this huge ron-
dure hems
fix'd in heaven's air
when clouds do blot the heaven
And trouble deaf heaven
sings hymns at heaven's gate
when heaven's sun staincth
in heaven's sweetest air
But heaven in thy creation did de-
cree
do inherit heaven's traces
welcome, next my heaven the best
To shun the heaven that leads men
And yet, by heaven, I think
not the morning sun of heaven
From heaven to hell
sees not till heaven clears
spite of heaven's fell rage L C
To sing heaven's praise P P
Wish'd himself the heaven's breath "
There is no heaven, by holy then
154 10
IM 14
— 742
••■•• 413
15
111
.... 638
193
268
493
533
7H0
731
793
IS
17
112
.«•• •>43
.•M 356
572
.«. 098
••••. 6d7
.... 1166
.... 1372
1837
14 8
«t
K
M
M
U
<l
U
u
u
It
u
u
u
11
(•
il
17
18
s
5
21 8
21
21
28
29
29
83
70
8
12
10
8
12
14
4
93 9
94 5
110 13
(C
129
130
132
145
148
5
17
19
Heaven-hoed— The .... sapphire
Heavenly— calls it ... . moisture
this heavenly and earthly sun
heavenly tune harsh-sounding
The h^ivcnl^ moisture
her heavenly image sits
the steep-up heavenly hill
Such heavenly touches ne'er
toueb'd
with heavenly alchemy
the heavenly rhetoric of thine
eyo
thou a heavenly love
whose heavenly touch
LC
VA
u
RL
Son
(I
PP
M
U
17
88
8
8
9
14
13
5
12
12
18
14
8
45
215
64
198
431
642
288
6
8
4
1
7
5
lnherurnct.1«nl>h
BerllueUonilch
in h«i cnii-l I
nlwdidbri
*ith1ier«onipliilnlne
loo long vlih bermWtirBg
halb dnnllpp'd her Ihought
or btrown grief brought
Losing faff *iMa
her tnrdlituJned era
iDberdlmrlcmrnl
holdjcig hmbuid
Id In I
Id lict md (Deo
EeT*r«.>h
llEr UrelT colour riiia
AllulhoUlinher
»ha ElTia her lorTaw Hn
Her honour li )ii'«o prttonsc
long 1«1,«fl,.T word.
Hit body'i tttla bcr mlDd n
minted clrun
mf hothtitt "oiiU brrtli
IlerconlriUaiKh) " ....
hther.lhttlKhoUiiherblMd " ....
And1)uI.bIlDgh«nh«rbreut " ....
•riKlwlnrrhort 111 " -..
Smneof hnbluol "
lo die irllh tier - ....
Keplle.b.'rhu.l.nd
■Ji'V'nJt htr own iwcnt brood '
,,ha..nL.iDlirrl,lood ■
■nd nil htr ridlng«ir<vl* '
her balir ffom faring lU '
endhrrcldfUnnew
^VlllKgrlrlufrhri
Hen, h). ih; beautT lempllBg ber
(olhee
lorcdberdeerlj ■
Tb'iu diHl Inre her, becuue tboB
know'rt lore Tier
tatmj ukoloipiinTii her '
j^ndIo«tngl>n my fri™J
iDUlItbEnlioldiihKrnUl '
And tlope her pipe "
'Tbu when hernoumful bjrmai '
>, llkeluir KnctliaD
topiloihowlipriirlde '
onhttb hereplijac endured '
I trmi her, Ihoa mlnlou of
OneofherfMlher'dcrMlort. " 1« 1
her Deglocied QblM hold* her In
IJ"
U lOT.
■ 181
-fi.iiii,,. |... ....rl.! ZC...
f-N.. L.j.K,l,o kitil'deres "
il|.^-,i.ia«llii'r«hrnyeflhml "
Ili.iiKlnn liprjule ind i^bqA cheek " ....
iV.iiicJiiher»hr«idenfiilet "
bnfhedihrJo berduilto eres "
«nclmoli<norberWM "
■Ila he b)- hf iidrtu ■■
ffli,'Nl»r»i!nIiidnifresber ■■ ..,.
WhMh 1
■uintring
HER
129
HID
Htr-Hud mide him her place L C 82
'gtinst her own content " 157
1>fi»8t perils in her way " ~... 158
Whkh late her noble suit " 234
To spend her Hring " 238
She that her fame *' ~... 243
Aod makes her absence raliant,
Dot her might " ~... 245
brought me to her eye " ~... 247
did her force subdue " -... 248
Meved her eyCH " ~... 262
Idobeliereher PP \ 2
her false-epeatdng tongue "17
vith her fkir pride "28
take her figured proffer " 4 10
Then fell she on her back " 4 13
He, spying her " 6 13
dtmask dye to grace her "75
faber to deface her "76
Her lipe to mine "77
Between each kiss her oatlis "78
all her pure proteatings " 7 11
Her faith, her oaths, her tears " 7 12
than her milk-white dove "93
Her stand she takes "95
and left her all alone " 9 14
idonis sitting by her " 11 1
god Mars did try her " 11 8
And as he fell to her " 11 4
dipi^d Adonis in her arms " U 6
And with her Upe on hia " 11 10
her meaning nor her pleasure " 11 12
And wish her lays " 15 6
daylight with her ditty " 15 7
Were I with her " 15 13
That liked of her master " 16 2
Her £ancy fell a-turning " 16 4
Where her faith was firmly fix*d " 18 11
thoa loToit her well " 19 11
though her frowning brows " 19 18
Her cloudy looks will calm " 19 14
diswm bled her delight " 19 16
atiire to try her strength " 19 19
Her feeble force " 19 21
When craft hath taught her thus " 19 22
And to her will frame all thy ways " 19 25
To hear her secrets " 19 54
LetD'd her breast up-tiU a thorn " 21 10
to hear her so complain " 21 15
her grlefla so lively shown " 21 17
Icfald— The owl, night's herald VA 531
the herald will contrive R L ^... 206
herald to the gaudy spring Son 1 10
Herald sad and trumpet be P T ^... 3
ImMrj— . ... in Lucrece* face R L 64
loW-Herbe for their smell VA ..... 165
herb, leat or weed " 1055
liid—to herdmen and to herda " ..... 456
▼ith a herd of deer " 689
from heat did canopy the herd Son 12 6
Aod scarce the herd PP 6 2
Herds stand weeping ** 18 41
leria««— to herdmen and to herda VA ~... 456
■•ft— Here come and sit " 17
rfnee I have hemm'd thee here " 229
tad leare me here alone " 382
here tile gentle lark " „... a'SG
Berekennell'dln abrake " 913
hoeahe meets another " ^... 917
Here — Here overcome, as one VA ..... 955
here I prophesy " „... 11.35
Here was thy father's bod, here " 1183
Here pale with fear R L 183
Here with a cockatrice' dead-kill-
ing eye " ..... 540
Here she exclaims against " 757
for I have them here " 1290
Here folds she up " ..... 1310
And here and there the painter
interlaces " ..... 1390
Here one man's hand lean'd " ..... 1415
Here one being throng'd " 1417
the fire that burneth here " .....1475
And here in Troy " ..... 1476
hero weeps Hecuba, here Priam " ..... 1485
Here manly Hector faints, here
Troilus " ..... 1486
Here friend by friend " 1487
Here feelingly she weeps " „... 1492
Sinon here is painted " 1541
Here all enraged, such passion " ..... 1562
here the hopeless merchant " ..... 1660
Here with a sigh " ..... 1716
Even here she sheathed " ..... 1723
which thou hast here deprived " ..... 1752
than you yourself here live Son 13 2
By praising him here " 30 14
But here's the Joy " 42 13
do I ensconce me here " 49 9
I have gone here and there "110 1
more black and damned here L C ~... 54
Look here, what tributes " ..... 197
that is not warmed here " 292
she touch'd him here and there PP A 7
Here in these brakes " 9 10
here was the sore " 9 12
here be It said " 19 53
Here the anthem doth commence P T 21
Here enclosed in cinders lie " «... 56
Hereafter— hereafter shall attend VA «... 1136
hereafter still be blind R L 758
no dame hereafter living " 1714
Herein — Herein lives wiadoro, beauty Son 11 5
Heretic— It fears not policy, that
heretic " 124 9
Hera— But hers, which through the
crystal tears gave light VA 491
Hera, by thy beauty tempting her
to thee Son 41 13
She showed hers ; he saw PP 9 13
Hertelf— with herself at strife VA ^... 11
where herself herself beheld " ..... 1129
Means to immure herself " . 1194
Lucrece shames herself to see RL ~... 1084
And to herself all sorrow " 1102
80 with herself is she " ..... 1153
made herself herself detest " ..... 1566
slay herself, that should have slain " 1827
Since Bome herself in them " ..... 1883
beauty herself is black Son 132 13
The destined ill she must herself
MMty L C 156
so to herself contrives " ..... 243
Hid— hid in some brake VA ..... 876
Which in pale embers hid R L 5
cannot be hid in clay " ..... 609
of many, almost hid behind " 1413
and arm'd his long-hid wita " ..... 181G
[
HID
130
HIM
Sm
Hid— bid in deatli's dateless night
trom Time's chest lie bid
Hidden— niBt the .... treasure frets VA
ti
80 6
65 10
...M 767
that hidden in thee lie fiim 81 8
Hide— broad buttock, tender hide VA 298
thrusts into bis hide Son BO W
JETide— bides his angry brow VA .... 889
that hides the silver moon R L ...~ 871
should not the greater hide ** «... 663
and hide their infamy " ..... 791
may hide them when they list *' ~... 1008
To hide the truth " ..... 1075
To bide deceit and gire the barm-
less show " -... 1507
Wbich hides your Ufe Son n 4
his visage hide ** 83 7
which the robe doth hide " 62 10
to bide my will in thine " 135 6
to have what thou do«t hide " 142 13
Hideoas— a hideous shapeless devil E L 973
To hideous winter Son 6 6
8unk in hideous night " 12 2
Hiding— hiding base sin in plaits R L ..... 93
the aspiring mountains biding ** .... 548
thy black all-hiding cloak " 801
Hiding thy bravery in their rot-
ten smoke Son 84 4
Hie— unto the wood they hie them VA 823
away she hies " ~... 1188
to her mistress hies R L 1215
sour-faced groom to hie as fast ** .... 1334
with bashful innocence doth hie " .... 1341
O, sweet shepherd, hie thee P P 12 11
Hied— hied him to the chase VA .... 3
And thither hied Son 153 12
High— high delightful plain VA 236
and bis high desire ** .... 276
High crest,' short ears ** .... 297
the high wind sings " . 805
pitch the price so high " ... 551
in high heaven's despite *' .... 731
mounts up on high " 854
but high or low " .... 1189
In that high task J2Z .... 80
colour'd with bis high estate " 92
Collatinc's high name " .... 108
Huge rocks, high winds ** .... 885
By their high treason *' .... 369
by high almighty Jove *' 568
Some high, some low " ,^.. 1412
with your most high deserts Son 17 2
the dumb on high to sing ** 78 5
As high as learning " 78 14
better than high birth to me " 91 9
of all size, both high and low L C 21
Higher— the higher by this let R L 616
To jump up higher scem'd " ....1414
HIghnost— But when from high-
most pitch Son 7 9
Hlgh-pitrh*d— His .... thoughts R L 41
High-prond — at such .... rate '* 19
Hild— O, let it not be hild " 1257
Hill— if those hills be dry VA 233
far off upon a hill " 697
hills seem bumisb'd gold " 858
Between whose bills R L .... 890
the stcc'p-up heavenly hill Son 7 5
Prom off a hill L C .... 1
upon a steep-up hill PP 9 6
Htll— That hills and valleys PP 20 S
HJUock— Bound rising hlllocka VA 2S7
Him— hied him to the Ghase ** 8
makes amain unto him ** 6
'gins to woo him " .... 6
pluck him from his horae " .^ 80
Backward she push'd him " .... 41
govern'd him in strength ** .... 42
resistance made him fret ** ..... 60
Being red, she loves him *' .... 77
Leading him prisoner ** ..... no
So he were like him " ..... iso
gazeth she on him *< .... 224
infold him like a band " ..... 22s
She answers him " .... 806
to see him woo her " .... 809
about to take him " .... S19
swiftly doth forsake bim '* .... 821
Just before bim as he sat '* .... 849
takes him by the hand ** .... 861
1 am bereft him so " .... 881
And learn of him ** .... 404
can no more detain him ** .... 577
no longer to restrain him ** .... 579
Bids him farewell " ..... 580
in him finds missing " .... 605
As fearful of him ** .... 680
let him keep his loathsome cabin " .... 687
his foes pursue him still " .... 099
makes him stop '* .... 706
bound him to her breast " 812
after him she darts " .... 817
have him seen no more " .... 819
Venus salutes him " .... 850
that makes bim bright ** .... 862
doth make him shake ** 880
who shall cope him ** .... 888
anotlier answer him " .... 918
And, hearing him " .... 944
at him should have lied *' .... 947
to strike him dead ** .... 948
call'd him all to nought " .... 998
clepes him king of graves '* .... 995
Be wreak'd on him ** .... 1004
Tells him of trophies " .... 1018
with bim is beauty " .... 1019
seem'd with him to bleed " 1056
to rob him of his fair " .... 1086
would not fear him " .... 1094
and gently hear him " .... 1096
bring him mulberries " .... 1103
they bim with berries " .... 1104
He thought to kiss bim, and hath
killed him " 1110
wbct bis teeth at him " ....1113
to persuade him there " .... 1114
been tooth'd like him " 1117
With kissing him I should have
killed him " 1118
takes him by the hand " 1124
did him peculiar duties ' R L .... 14
the heavens had him lent " .... 17
that would let bim go ** .... 76
that nothing in him seem'd " 94
persuade bim to abstaining " 130
betake him to retire " .... 174
drown'd him in the flood *' .... 266
So cross liim with their opposite
persuasions " .... 286
Tift— Her o»fO«t ejr
infc«rKiniabtnii<:.h
TMibe her plain M
IsbCTlhepslniiThkd
HerchHki Willi t'liBiu
LucreceBixuds
ifiDberinlnd
ioo tang with bCTrnnilnlng
hath OTenlJpp^d hart hodght
oflierftWD grief liroufht
hvTtur-dlBlftttifid eya
b er nd-bchnldJDf buibsad
InberAid J^cb
B«rEfM, thonnhindin IM>n
kn»thoUk»i]>fr
erpolHiD'd closet Tdcn-
niLDcla
hlher,1h>tlchDUihFrb1«d
fl]l1iericV-«Uu«hter'd MIf
Her blood, in pnornTeni?
And buVibllnR trom her bitut
dndaberbodrln
Some of bv blood
nTei«cd<iTi1i.'rd»iri
BrpllH.
iimI
phftntt Jb hvrliloDd
■ndii1lhGrr«dIngi<rH)i
her bnl>« from faring II]
T1li»i diHl loTo hpr, basDK i
knoir'rt loTBlifr
nynkcuiiippraii'lWT
Andlui
inlioldi h
jVndjitopflbcr-plpe
lliUKclic-iiberniourrifU) hymoi
■ lM>|)«tDihnw her pride
muotjLilh bor eclipse endund
tbli purpose, ibstb^rbb III
Yel Ivu brr, Uinii miDion of
hetplouuro
rtmj,„p,Wln«uro
Her>i.,11i.i],>„ii,t,delBr'd
■ Her prellT looks
On? of bcr fntliei
SlnahehimKlfbreft
TogTOirnniohliQ«lf
And for hi,i„.-lf 1,!. Ith«m<ut
Whni be blm»lf hlmMir a>ii-
foUDdl
fiomlilnuelflniplclfhith wrought
BerouHihTiplilmKlf
e^1(-lll himieK dolh Km
FurnowagiinMhlnmlf
Uimwlf hlniwlf at
And dfnj hlinstlf for Jov8 " 1
Hind— LlkQ i wbllo hind undortba
BUd»r-S«ndBOn Irii hlii.lir legi VA -.
HladariaK-^UIuduIni: their pm-
cntfill fi£ ..
HladBHl— Thougbiroid>cwne....A« i
Bl^— their clbflini ind tfaeir hipi r^ ..
Hb-Hud U-sn lila Jul luiv.i " ..
in bli iTr4tLDf pAlm
dm Agmliisliorw
loth the nnikfllilicb
and licD fail huii}
haitethto tahone
Bri'BkHh fata rein "■
And nnv lili voivn glrrhi *
*IIh hli hard houf
Hli can u|»prlck'di hla bnldal
btDging man* '
Hh— Upon bla co
Hli nutrilB dilDk lb« air
HIaejre, whlchnoomnilly "
Sbovi hli hoi coDia^ and Ua
bigb daire «
•bal recketh he hli rlder^ "
Bla llatteriDg ' UoUa ' or big ' SUod,
laay
with hia proud alght
HliartwUhnaliue'i "
Turlhmuihhianiaaa
Ilelaiki upon his lore "
mdonmlj'
.'t hj.w bli ai
111! tlk« Ilk loTp.liia youth'i ft
from }ii> bending crml
lil9 uiuulh. lib Inck, bii breu
■Whii ton hU true lo«e
Ulsolhnragenti
"hia procwdlugi lAacb th«o
illng
lend his neck, swee
nil. lips obcr
big lipa' rich (maun
HID
130
HIM
Sm
Hid— bid in death's dateless night
from Tiine'tt chest lie hid
Hidden— rust the .... treasure frets VA
(4
80
65
6
10
767
that hidden in thee lie fiim 81 8
Hide— broad buttock, tender hide VA 298
thrusto into his hide iSm 50 10
JERde— hides his angry brow VA .... 889
that hides the silver moon E L ...~ 871
should not the greater hide ** ..... 663
and hide their infamy " ..... 791
may hide them when they list " .... 1008
To hide the truth " «... 1075
To hide deceit and give the harm-
less show " .... 1507
Which hides your life Son n 4
his visage hide " 88 7
which the robe doth hide " 52 10
to hide my will in thine " 135 6
to have what thou doot hide " 142 13
Hideoaa — a hideous shapeless devil B L .... 973
To hideous winter Son 6 6
8unk in hideous night *' 12 2
Hiding— hiding base sin in plaits R L .... 93
the aspiring mountains hiding ** .... 548
thy black all-hiding cloak " 801
Hiding thy bravery in their rot-
ten smoke Son 84 4
Hte— unto the wood they hie them VA 823
away she hies " .... 1188
to her mistress hies B L .... 1215
sour-faced groom to hie as fast ** .... 1.334
witi) bashful innocence doth hie " 1341
O, sweet shepherd, hie thee PP 12 11
Hied — hied him to the chase VA .... 3
And thither hied Son 153 12
High-high delightful plain VA 2.%
and his high desire " 276
High crest, short ears " .... 297
the high wind sings " .... 805
pitch the price so high " ... 551
in high heaven's despite *' .... 731
mounts up on high " .... 854
but high or low " .... 1189
In that high task R L .... 80
colour'd with his high estate " .... 92
Collatine's high name " .... 108
Huge rocks, high winds " .... 335
By their high treason *' .... 369
by high almighty Jove " 568
Some high, some low " .^.. 1412
with your most high deserts Sun 17 2
the dumb on high to sing ** 78 5
As high as learning " 78 14
better than high birth to me " 91 9
of all size, both high and low L C 21
Higher— the higher by this let R L 646
To jump up higher soem'd " ....1414
Highmost — But when from high-
most pitch Son 7 9
High-pitch'd- His .... thoughto R L 41
HIgh-prond— at such .... rate " 19
Hild— (), let it not be hild " 1257
Hill- if those hills be dry VA 233
far off upon a hill *' 697
hills seem burnish'd gold " 858
Between who«e hills R L 890
the stecp-up heavenly hill Son 7 5
From off a hill L C .... 1
upon a steep-up hill JPP 9 5
HUl— That hills and valleys
Hillock— Round rising hlUocka
Him— hied him to the Ghase
makes amain unto him
'gins to woo him
pluck him from his horae
Backward she push'd him
govern'd him in strength
resistance made him fret
Being red, she loves him
Leading him prisoner
So he were like him
gazeth she on him
infold him like a band
She answers him
to see him woo her
about to take him
swiftly doth forsake him
Just before him as he sat
takes him by the hand
1 am bereft him so
And learn of him
can no more detain him
no longer to restrain him
Bids him farewell
in him finds missing
As fearful of him
let him keep his loathsome cabin
his foes pursue him still
makes him stop
bound him to her breast
after him she darts
have him seen no more
Venus salutes him
that makes him bright
doth make him shake
who shall cope him
another answer him
And, hearing him
at him should have fled
to strike him dead
call'd him all to nought
elopes him king of graves
Be wreak'd on him
Tells him of trophies
with him is beauty
seem'd with him to bleed
to rob him of his fair
would not fear him
and gently hear him
bring him mulberries
they him with berries
He thought to kiss him, and hath
killed him
whet his tei>th at him
to persuade him there
been tooth'd like him
With kissing him I should have
killed him
takes him by the hand
did him peculiar duties
the heavens had him lent
that would let him go
that nothing in him seem'd
persuade him to abstaining
betake him to retire
drown'd him In the flood
So cross him with their <^poait6
persuasions
PP
20
s
VA
••••«
237
u
8
M
•••••
6
U
«••••
6
U
•••••
80
««
•••••
41
u
•••••
42
<t
•••••
09
u
•••••
77
(t
•••••
110
a
•■•••
180
u
•••••
224
II
■••••
225
11
••■••
808
M
•••M
809
II
• ••«•
819
n
• ••••
821
u
•••••
849
M
• ■•••
861
11
• ••••
881
II
• •«••
404
II
••«•«
577
M
■••••
579
U
«>•••
080
M
• •••
605
U
•••••
680
II
• ••■•
687
It
••»••
609
II
•••■•
706
II
•«•••
812
II
•••••
817
U
•••••
819
II
*••••
850
M
•••••
862
II
• •«■•
880
11
•••••
888
II
•••••
922
II
•••••
944
II
•••••
047
11
•••••
948
II
•••••
093
II
•••••
095
U
•••••
1004
u
•••••
1018
II
•••••
1019
u
•••••
1056
II
•••••
1086
u
•••••
1004
II
•■•••
1096
II
••■••
1103
H
•••••
1104
II
•••••
1110
II
•••••
1113
II
••••a
1114
II
1
•••••
1117
!
II
•••••
1118
II
•••••
1124
RL
•••••
14
II
■••••
17
u
••■••
76
II
•••••
04
«l
•••••
180
II
•••••
174
M
U hli bevt mlilod " -». K9
to bb taiDd full KMO " ~~ aio
■be curtiln dnwQ, blieTObegiui " — .. ST4
Apd In hi) *U1 hla vUrul eje ba
Hf> eje, wbLch 1mt« "
Hbdrui,ii,jii>>:Lci.rlch«nupbl.
BiiTrt"c<>iu<a«adi ths lading to
blilmod
nil hand, « proud '
MmakehlaaUnd'
uhlibBndiUdKDlD "
Ills hind, 1b>[ jTl Koinlu]
Uiliuidahiikeaiillhil
While in blahold-fju
f,..l. l,li«ull,irvr..ll
IIU vjlf 1,-T i.r^yr-
idialU, bDt
..„, hb pu™ " ..._
.1 doih iMnd
hl-b»«
fur hi* KBlie ipurs mt
lIuUhDupulanhli
.h>|>« - ....
Thnuwroii«'»lliiibo
'"^
ni.far^c. th(.»ihfullofc*rei "
loKornhi..™ ■■ _...
.... 873
ihopilnlerkbmir'd-lthhi.rtm "
The nolf but mI.wI hii p«r
HiiumwdclM^u.
69B
[u hi. pl.tl. fll.« " -.
Vri-.mwL-i,M,fya " _...
IIl,*)'(>drc.p»flrB '■ ....
clmr pcBrl. df hi. that mora lb;
While Lu.ii.il. hi. pride
pllj " ....
FgrSinorinblaflrs '■ _...
.... 108
l>mDkruplbeg|C»villibia<»M "
liiiwoundi will not b«»o« "
Brl.ii-linm<'lLi!lnri " ....
L«.inithl.>poll
h>l» hlnaelf fbr hJ. oironca
1 HIS
Hl»— cblds hit Tui.b'd loalhed de~
light
He in bis tpccd
lil!-<.lll«il.flghl
iif^'rul hi. ^1d<'Dbt:)id
l>i.«i.j"thnr'dlltfht
annol cam hU pain
ir kill. bU life or elH hla qualltT '
EL 141
filher nf lii- lr:,il
laugh with hla companlona
hia ninod wllh noughl agiM* "
Hia let'O will withei nnd bis aap
Ilia noaa belug ihadOH'i
HIMSELF
132
HIS
Himself—if himself were slain VA ^... 243
himself Affection's sentinel " ^... 650
To recreate himself •* 1095
Since he himself is reft " ~... 1174
To grow nnto hhnself ** ~... 1180
And for himself himself he mast
forsake R L ~... 157
T^lien he himself himself con-
founds " .... 160
fi om himself impiety hath wrought " 841
He ronseth up himself " (Ml
8elf-wlU himself doth tire *' .... 707
For now against himself " .... 717
hates himself for his offence " .... 738
against himself to rave " .... 982
Himself himself seek every hour
to kill " 998
in an armed hand ; himself behind " .... 1425
Himself on her self-slaughtered
body « .... 1733
That in himself such murderous Son 9 14
with sighs himself doth smother " 47 4
Accomplish'd in himself L C 116
When as himself to singing he be-
Ukea PP 8 12
Wish'd himself the heaven's breath " 17 8
And deny himself for Jove " 17 17
Hind — Like a white hind under the
gripe's sharp claws B L .... 543
Hinder— Stands on his hinder legs VA 698
Hindering— Hindering their pres-
ent fall R L 651
Hlndmoat— Though words come .... Son 85 12
Hipa— their elbows and their hipe VA 44
His— Had ta'en his h&st leave " 2
And rein his proud head " .... 14
on his sweating palm '* 25
him from his horse " 30
doth she stroke his check " 45
she stops bis lips " .... 46
burning of his cheeks " .... 50
she kiss'd his brow, his cheek, his
chin ** .... 59
in his angry eyes " .... 70
From his soft bosom " 81
did he raise his chin " .... 85
ready for his pay " — . 89
turns his lips another way *' 90
hath he hung his lance *' 103
His batter'd shield, his uncon-
trolled crest " 104
Scorning his churlish drum " .... 107
Making my arms his field, his tent
my bed " 108
his stronger strength " .... HI
Love keeps his revels " 123
to kiss his shadow " 162
Adonis had his team *' .... 179
His lowering brows, o'erwhelming
his fair sight " 183
Souring his cheek " 185
and then his hand " .... 223
hostetb to his horse " .... 258
Breaketh his rein " .... 26*
And now his woven girths " 266
with his hard hoof " 267
cn»heth 'tween his teeth " .... 269
His ears up-prick'd; his braided
hanging mane *' .... 271
ia— Upon his compMs'd crest
VA
•••••
272
His nostrils drink the air
<i
■>M.
273
His eye, which scornfully
M
••«••
276
Shows his hot courage and his
high desire
«
•»• —
276
what recketh he his rider's
M
.••••
28S
His flattering ' Holla ' or his * Stand,
I say
M
• •«•■
284
He sees his love
U
• •■••
287
with his proud sight
M
.«.••
288
His art with nature's
H
•••••
291
For through his mane
«
805
He looks upon his love
U
.••«•
807
as if she knew his mind
U
•••••
808
Spurns at his love
W
....«
811
Beating his kind embraoements
U
..««
812
He vails his Uil
U
.«.•«
814
to his melting buttock
U
•..«•
815
the poor flies in his fume
H
.•.•■
816
His love, perceiving
1(
•••••
817
his fury was assuaged
It
.«..«
818
His testy master goeth
14
.••.•
819
his boisterous and unruly
l(
.*•«
826
desperate in his suit
U
••.••
886
with his bonnet hides his angry
brow
M
••••a
888
he holds her in his eye
1*
»•.••
342
heaveth up his hat
W
.«..•
851
his fair cheek feels
it
.•«•
852
His tenderer cheek
C«
.•..a
853
to his eyes suing
II
••..•
856
His eyes saw her eyes
II
.•.*•
857
his eyes disdain'd
M
• ••.•
858
had his acts made plain
M
■•.••
859
he saw his love, his youth's fair flM
"
«■«••
393
from his bending crest
II
•»•«>
895
his mouth, his back, his breast
II
«■•••
886
Who sees his true love
U
.«••
897
his glutton eye
II
•••.•
899
His other agents
II
•..*•
400
his proceedings teach thee
M
.«..•
406
Loseth his pride
U
.•«••
420
by his stealing in
II
••.«•
480
which to his speech
II
•••••
452
His meaning struck her ere his
words begun
M
•■••«
462
And at his look
II
••.•«
463
brake off his late intent
tl
•a...
469
his breath breatheth
U
•m»*»
474
that his uukindness
U
.•.a.
478
when in his fresh array
II
•m%*%
483
upon his hairless fsce
M
%^m—
487
Had not his clouded with his brow's
repine
II
aa.aa
490
His day's hot task
II
.....
530
lend his neck a sweet embrace
l«
....
539
tiis lips obey
tl
• •••m
549
his lips' rich treasure
II
mm%^»
552
his choice is fro ward
II
....
670
nectar from his lips
II
.....
572
in his breast
•1
....
682
certain of his friends
•
....
588
she trembles at his tale
•1
aaaa*
591
and on his neck
U
•a...
592
still hanging by his neck
u
aaaaa
693
On his bow-back
II
«•»•
619
ever threat his foes
M
•a.aa
620
His eyes like glow-worms
II
a*. .a
621
His snout digs sepulchres
M
Ma.
622
HIS
136
HOLY
Hb— Angry that hU preacrlptions Son 147 6
As his triumphant prise ** 151 10
laid by his brand ** 153 1
And his love-lcindling fire ** 153 3
Laid by his side his heart-Inflam-
ing brand " 154 2
man that grazed his cattle L C 67
upon his grained bat ** ~... 64
with his hearing to divide " 67
eyes stuck over all bis face *' ~... 81
And when in his fair parts '* 8a
His browny locks did hang *' >... 85
Upon his lips their silken parcels " .... 87
For on his visage '* >... 90
* Small show of man was yet upon
his chin " „... 92
His phoenix down began " 9.3
Yet show'd his visage ** 96
His qualities were beauteous as
bis form " 99
His rudeness so with his author-
ised youth " ..... 104
''That horse his mettle from his
rider takes " .... 107
by him became his deed ** .... ill
Or he his manage *' .... 112
His real habitude gave life " 114
in himself, not in his case ** 116
Pieced not his grace " .... 119
of his subduing tongue " .... 120
For his ad van Ugc still " .... 123
in his craft of will " 126
that did his picture get " I.t4
that never touch'd his hand ** .... 141
mistrcMs of his heart " 142
with his art in youth " 145
in his charinod power " .... 146
and his amorous spoil ** 154
of his foul beguiling »' 170
Heard where his plants " 171
gilded in his smiling ** .... 172
Of his foul adulterate heart *' .... 175
commanding in his monarchy '* .... 196
, his in vised properties " .... 212
• This said, his watery eyes " .... 281
'For, lo, his passion " .... 295
His poison'd me, and mine did
him restore " ..... 301
which in his level came *' .... 809
of his all-hurting aim " .... 310
moisture of his eye " 323
in his cheek so glow'd " 324
from his heart did fly " 325
his spongy lungs bestow*d " 326
Wooing his purity PP 2 8
stories to delight his ear "45
favours to allure his eye "46
To win his heart "47
Study his bias leaves, and makes
his book thine eyes " 5 ^
thy voice his dreadful thunder " 6 11
used to cool his spleen "66
For his approach "68
and throws his mantle by "69
And with her lips on his " 11 10
Heart hath his hope " 15 10
farewell his great renown " 21 48
Use his company no more ** 21 50
Lest the requiem lack his right P T .... 16
tPT....
81
14
84
VA ....
17
M
.....
1084
A Ij
871
Son 93
7
r mM. •••■•
MO
u
103»
am 120
10
Hla— *Twixt the turtle and his queen P T
That the t^irtle taw his right
Hiss — where never serpent hisses
and the wind doth hiss you
The adder hisses
History— the false heart's history
Hit— at random dost thou Mt
tender horns being hit
how hard true sorrow hits
Hltker— the purpose of his coming
hither R L ..... 113
Post hither, this vile purpose " .... 220
Go, get me hither paper " 1289
Hive— In thy weak hive " .... 839
the young possess their hive " .... 1769
a platted hive of straw L C ..... 8
Hoard— She hoards, to spend B L .... 1318
that I hoard them not L C 220
Hoarsely— she .... calls her ma'd R L 1214
Hoisted— That I have hoisted sail Son 111 7
Hold— hold up thy head VA 118
be holds her in his eye " .... 342
holds her pulses hard " .... 476
will bold thee in disdain " .... 761
and hold it for no sin S L .... 209
holds he disputation " .... 246
To hold their cursed-blessed fortune " .... 866
Holds disputation with each thing " . 1101
Lest he should hold it " .... 1315
These contraries such unity do
hold " .... 1558
which you hold in lease Son 13 5
Holds in perfection " 15 2
shall beauty hold a plea " 65 3
honey breath hold out " 65 6
can hold his swia foot back " 65 11
I hold such strife " 75 3
will hold mc up afloat " 80 9
in manners holds her still " 85 1
holds his rank before " 85 12
For how do I hold thee " 87 5
I sometime hold my tongue " 102 13
holds what it doth catch " 113 8
could not so much hold " 122 9
Dost hold Time's fickle glass " 126 2
For nothing hold mc, so it please
thee hold " 136 11
child holds her In chase " 143 6
No want of conscience holds it " 151 13
could not hold argument P P 3 2
O never faith could hold "62
Hold-flMt— While iu his hold-fast
foot
Ji L ...M 655
Holding— Holding their course to
Paphos VA .... 1193
who, holding Lucrece' life B L .... 1805
Hole— To fill with worm-holes " .... 946
I make some hole " .... 1176
through loop-holes thrust " .... 1383
HollestH-sanctified of holiest note L C .... 233
Holla— His flattering ' Holla VA .... 284
Holloa— hears some huntsman holloa '* 973
Hollow — Love made those hollows " .... 243
Whose hollow womb " .... 268
Lo, \p this hollow cradle " 1185
Hollow-swelling— hollow-swelling
feather'd breasU B L 1122
Holy— By holy human law " .... 671
breach of holy wedlock vow " .... 809
HOLY
137
HOT
■•Ij— A holy and obsequious t«ar Son SI 5
those holy antique hours " 68 9
BO name, no holy bower " 127 7
this holy Are of Lore ** 153 5
of my holy tows afraid L C ...~ 179
There is no heaven, by holy then PP id 45
B^y-tlio«9hted — ^And .... Lucrece R L . — 384
Heaiage— homage to his new-appear-
ing sight Son 7 S
Heme— ere rich at home he lands R L ...~ 33G
Brings home his lord " «... 1584
Met far from home *' 1596
So far from home Son 61 6
Comes home again '* 87 12
That is my home of lore "109 5
HMMwbred— than civil strife V A 764
Henely— The .... villain court'sies R L ..... 1338
■•■eward— Homeward through the
darklawnd VA 813
Haaest— But honest fear, bewltch'd RL 173
Pawn'd honest looks " 1351
And all my honest faith Son. 152 8
Htamtf— Thou smothor'st honesty R L 885
With outward honesty " 1545
■oaey— A thousand honey secrets VA 16
did honey passage yield ** — . 452
The honey fee of parting *^ 538
I think the honey guarded R L ..... 493
Mj honey lost, and I "" 836
And suck'd the honey " ..... 840
Thy honey turns to gall " ~... 889
sammer's honey breath Son 65 5
Heaoar— pore blush and honour's
wrack VA 658
Now she adds honours " ~... 994
Honour and beauty RL ...^ 27
His honour, his affairs " — . 45
With honour, wealth, and ease " ~... 142
Ai life for honour " ..... 145
Honour for wealth *' ..... 146
Pawning his honour " ..... 156
To kill thine honour " ~... 516
And stoop to honour " »... 574
Thou wrongest his honour " ~... 599
ihine honour lay in me " ~... 834
of thy honour's wrack " 841
Yet for thy honour " -... 842
Honour thyself to rid me " ..... 1031
m7 honour lives in thee " .... 1032
Mj honour 1*11 bequeath " ..... 1184
Tis honour to deprive " ~... 1186
mine honour is new-bom " ..... 1190
Mine honour be the knife's " .... 1201
Her honour is ta'en prisoner " .... 1608
Hy low-declined honour " .... 1705
inhoDour might uphold Son 13 10
Of public honour and proud titles *' 25 2
ia that I honour most " 25 4
Is from the book of honour " 25 11
vith public kindness honour me " 36 11
that honour from thy name " 36 12
sUded honour shamefully misplaced " 66 5
finding myself in honour so for-
bid ZC... 150
I mine honour shielded '* .... 151
B^Marsble— plight your honour-
able faiths RL 1690
Btttarsd— by oath they truly .... " 410
ttnt makes him honoured " .... 1005
Hoiioariiig— the outward honouring Son 125 2
Hoof— with his hard hoof VA .... 267
Hoord— Bound-hoof 'd, short-Jointed " .... 295
Hook—nor fear'd no hooks R L lOH
hast thou forged hooks Son 137 7
Hope— Things out of hope VA 567
so fair a hope is slain " .... 762
This sound of hope ** ».. 976
Despair, and hope *' .... 988
weak-built hopes persuade him R L .... 130
Full of foul hope ** .... 284
If in thy hope thou darest ** .... 605
To shame his hope ** .... 1003
When their brave hope ** .... 1430
And to their hope ** .... 1433
one more rich in hope Son 29 5
in hope my verse shall stand ** 60 13
But hope of orphans " 97 10
fears to hopes and hopes to fears " 119 3
But if thou catch thy hope *" 143 11
Heart hath his hope PP 15 10
ifepe— But that I hope Sm 26 7
being lack'd, to hope ** 62 14
Hopeless— a hopeless castaway R L .... 744
hopeless merchant of this loss " .... 1660
Hoping— Thus hoping that Adonis VA .... 1009
And so by hoping more R L .... 137
Horn— for his hounds and for his ... . VA .... 868
she hears a merry horn ** 1025
whose tender horns being hit " 1033
comes with horn and hounds PP 9 6
Horse — to pluck him from his horse VA .... 90
and hastcth to his horse " 258
So did this horse excel " 293
Look, what a horse should have " 299
With her the horse " .... 822
my horse is gone " .... 880
though thy horse be gone " .... 890
on thy well-brealh'd horse *' .... 678
Sin's pack-horse, virtue's snare R L .... 928
Then can no horse Son 51 9
Some in their horse ** 91 4
than hawks or horses be '* 91 11
"That horse his mettle from his
rider takra
LC
••••a
107
Whether the horse by him
M
■••••
111
Hoepitallty— Beward not ....
RL
•••••
675
Host— leaves the Boman host
u
•••••
8
To all the host of heaven
M
•••••
698
Hostess- A woeful hostess brooks
not merry guests
«(
••••a
1125
Hot— hot as coals of glowing flre
VA
••••a
35
Shows his hot courage
M
•••••
276
His day's hot task
U
••••«
630
Hot, faint and weary
U
•m»»^
659
for the hot encounter
U
696
The hot scent-snuffing hounds
U
••••«
692
Which the hot tyrant stains
l<
•••••
797
drops of hot desire
M
•••■•
1074
But his hot heart
RL
•••••
314
Gives the hot charge
M
a»a««
434
Cooling his hot face
U
•••■a
682
This hot desire converts to cold'
disdain
U
■••••
691
Sometime too hot
Sim
18
6
in three hot Junes burn'd
u
104
7
the general of hot desire
M
164
7
these trophies of affections hot
LC
•••«•
218
cold modesty, hot wrath
U
a»«aa
298
I
lot— H«t -wni the dif
Y«ih l> hut .ud 1»
Mol-bi mini — eudkIf
138 HOW
T How^do b* li CDngid
ML— 147
Kunaplishuint M hoti j chued
Hottrr—shc liotfr llii[ -dbl luuk
-wliU lb J houudi
« cunning hound*
RL... 7I«
relplng of Ibe htmndi
tua-M, hovnd or gargMI bnwk
ri tbe hour bli del)
Thj hulnuui boun vdII
tbPbuiinthuuj^mt be
proud bulldluKi with ihy boiin
ClMuib hia b.>un vt ml
•erkCTerrbaurtoUU
Inthil ■' - ■
lit ■lib gontlt work Om S
lunxd M«1d
» and (itli huun In ma
liounfaiiTcanlu'dbli blood "
liol/anli^uclioun
<.rnu.»r>t>1"ll»Kh0Dr
d*«l«ithlD.aboi>r FP
13
mluuhi BddM to tho boun
HMrlT—whli^bBiop the baud)' dlilJe^
lli.«.-H<^hoii«l.i«d.'d
from Aiirliuuicln grief
B<»w™lft^Lo,iu> tnreful.... *»
Hii«r*d-oh«™biii .him Ihnn ..../,»?
HonrlBK-Plnt ocr ib> p.per « i
flow— O, bow quick It loTt VA
Look, how lUrdllo
Look how been
how doth ihe now for wlU
HOW
139
How— I teach thee how JSkm 101 13
Mark how with my neglect " 112 12
How bare raiae eyes *' 119 7
To weigh bow once I suflbr'd ** 120 8
how hard true sorrow hits " 120 10
How oft, when thou ** 128 1
How can it? O, how can Love's
eye " 148 9
taught thee how to make "150 9
Saw how deceits were gilded L C ~... 172
By bow much of me " ^... 189
How mighty then you are " 253
How coldly those impediments ** 269
0, how the channel " ~... 285
how shall I swear to love PP 5 1
how often hath she joined ** 7 7
How many tales to please me "79
how god Mars did try her "11 3
Lord, how mine eyes " 15 1
How sighs resound " 18 34
How true a twain P T 45
Howllag— and he replies with ... . VA ^... 918
In bowling wise, to see my dole-
ful plight PP 18 33
flM-€onfliet of her hue VA 345
a whiter hue than white " .S98
savour, hue and qualities " 747
A man in hue, all ^hues Son 20 7
fkir in knowledge as in hue " 82 5
flowers in odour and in hue " 98 G
seeing of his living hue " 67 6
So your sweet hue "104 11
which their hue encloses L C 287
Hatd— The heaven-hued sapphire " ...~ 215
Hige— Huge rocks, high winds R L ^... 335
huge flres abide " ...~ 647
And waste huge stones " ...~ 959
That this huge stage presenteth Son 15 3
in this huge rondure hems " 21 8
Hig«ly — alone stands hugely politic " 124 11
HsM— For burden-wise Til bum R L 1133
Hanan — By holy human law " ...~ 671
doth ravish human sense P P S 6
Himanlty — Let fair .... abhor R L 195
Hiable— the .... suppliant's friend " 897
An humble gait, calm looks " 1508
The humble as the proudest Son 80 6
The humble salve " 120 12
And in thy suit be humble true P P 19 32
Hiably— she .... doth insinuate VA 1012
Hiaou* — Soothing the humour " 850
Such cliildisb humour R L 1825
And every humour hath Son 91 5
on thy humour doth depend " 92 8
Hudrpd—What is ten touches VA 519
twenty hundred kisses " 522
five hundred courses of the sun Son 59 6
laif— bath he hung bis lance V A 103
a Jewel hung in ghastly night Son 27 11
Hung with the trophies " 31 10
•Hnger— Sharp .... by the conquest R L 422
Imgry — I have seen the .... ocean Son 64 5
Thy hungry eyes even till " 56 6
But— To hunt the Iwar VA 588
thou wouldst bunt the boar " ..... 614
if thou needs wilt hunt " ..... 673
Why hunt I then for colour R L .... 267
Hiited— Spied the bunted boar VA .... 900
Psst reason hunted Son 129 6
Hintiiiy—Hunting he loved
VA
•••••
4
the hunting of the boar
4«
•••«•
7i:
Hnntaaaii— she hears some ....
U
•••••
978
Hnrl— their silken parcels hurls
LC
•■•••
87
Unrry— Which madly hurries her
VA
904
Hart— You hurt my hand
u
•••■•
421
To mend the hurt
u
•••••
478
Upon his hurt she looks
H
1063
They that have power to hurt
Son
94
1
Hnrting— bis all-hurting aim
LC
• •••«
810
Unsband — her husband's shallow
r
tongue
RL
• ••••
78
to her ears her husband's fame
u
••••«
106
Until her husband's welfare
(«
•••••
263
So thy surviving husband
M
•■•■•
619
Then, for thy husband
It
•••••
533
her hus1>and's love
it
■••••
670
' My husband is thy friend
II
•••••
682
husband, do thou take
11
*••••
1200
to do her husband wrong
II
•••••
1264
One of my husband's men
II
•••••
1291
Shed for the slaughter'd husband
II
•••••
1376
her sad-beholding husband
II
•••••
1590
Dear husband, in the interest
11
•«•••
1619
Replies her husband
II
1796
sweet husband to another
Son
8
9
her husband's shape in mind
II
9
8
Like a deceived husband
II
93
2
wETtM^and— And .... nature's riches
II
94
6
Hnsbandry— the tillage of thy ....
II
8
6
Which husbandry in honour
u
13
10
Hnsh — mournful hymns did hush
II
102
10
Hnsh'd— Even as the wind is hush'd VA
• ■■••
458
Hymns— sings .... at heaven's gate
Son
29
12
To every hymn
11
85
7
her mournful hymns did bush
u
102
10
I— but a kiss I beg
VA
—••m
96
I have been woo'd, as I entreat
11
•••••
97
overruled I oversway'd
II
»••••
109
And I will wink
M
122
were I hard-fa vour'd
U
•••••
133
then I were not for thee
U
•■•••
137
I will enchant thine ear
CI
•••■•
145
whereon I lie
«
•••••
151
even where I list to sport me
M
••■••
154
I must remove
U
••■••
186
And, lo, I lie
U
194
The heat I have
11
• ••••
195
And were I not immortal
M
•••••
197
What am I, that thou
U
•■•••
205
I have hemm'd thee here
U
•«•••
229
I am such a park
U
— ••m
239
And this I do
U
•••••
281
' Stand, I say
M
•••••
284
thou wert as I am, and I a man
U
•••••
369
I would assure thee
U
•••••
371
I never shall regard
U
•••••
877
I am bereft him so
U
•••••
381
I pray you hence
U
•••••
382
I heartily beseech thee
U
•••••
404
Though I were dumb
U
•••••
406
•I know not love
U
•••••
409
and then I chase it
U
••••«
410
and I will not owe it
U
•••••
411
For I have heard it is
M
•••••
413
or I had no hearing
M
•■••«
428
I had my load before
«
• •*••
4.30
Had I no eyes
U
■••••
488
HOLY
137
HOT
Hoi J— « holy and obeequioas t«ar Son 31 6
thooe holy antique boon " 68 9
no name, no holy bower " 127 7
this holy fire of Lore " 153 5
of my holy rows afraid L C 179
There is no heaven, by holy then PP 19 45
H«ly-tlio«9hted— And .... Lucrece R L 384
Homaye— homage to his new-appear-
ing sight Son 1 Z
Hone— ere rich at home he lands R L ...~ 336
Brings home his lord " 1584
Met far ttom home " 1596
So far from home Son 61 6
Comes home again ** 87 12
That is my home of love *' 109 5
HoMM-bred— than civil .... strife VA 764
Homely— The .... villain court'sies RL ...~ 1338
Homeward — Homeward through the
dark lawnd VA ..... 813
Honnt— But honest fear, bewitch'd R L 173
Pawn'd honest looks " 1351
And all my honest faith Son 152 8
HoBCotj— Thou smothor'st honesty R L 885
With outward honesty " 1545
Hoaey — A thousand honey secrets VA 16
did honey passage yield *' ~... 452
The honey fee of parting " 538
I think the honey guarded R L 493
My honey lost, and I ** ~... 836
And suck'd the honey " 840
Thy honey turns to gall " 889
summer's honey breath Son 65 5
HoBOor— pure blush and honour's
wrack VA ..... 558
Now she adds honours '* ..... 994
Honour and beauty R L ...~ 27
His honour, his affairs " — . 45
With honour, wealth, and ease " 142
As life for honour " ~... 145
Honour for wealth " ~... 146
Pawning his honour ** ~... 156
To kill thine honour " ~... 516
And stoop to honour ** .... 674
Thou wrongest his honour ** >... 699
thine honour lay in me ** ..... 834
of thy honour's wrack " 841
Yet for thy honour ** ..... 842
Honour thyself to rid me " ..... 1031
my honour lives in thee " ..... 1032
My honour I'll bequeath ** ..... 1184
Tis honour to deprive " «... 1186
mine honour Is new-born ** ..... 1190
Mine honour be the knife's " ..... 1201
Her honour is ta'en prisoner " ..... 1608
My low-declined honour *' .... 1705
in honour might uphold Son 13 10
Of public honour and proud titles " 25 2
in that I honour most " 25 4
Is from the book of honour *' 25 11
with public kindness honour me " 36 11
that honour from thy name " 86 12
gilded honour shamefully misplaced" 66 5
Finding myself in honour so for-
bid XC...~ 150
I mine honour shielded ** 151
Hoiioorable — plight your honour-
able faiths RL ..... 1690
Boaoored — by oath they truly .... " 410
that makes him honour'd " ..... 1005
Hoiiomriiig— the outward honouring Son
Hoof— with his hard hoof VA
Hoord— Bound-hoof 'd, short-Jointed "
RL
Son
VA
u
u
RL
M
M
t(
M
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Son
u
u
It
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PP
Son
RL
u
VA
RL
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Hook— nor fear'd no hooks
hast thou forged hooks
Hope — ^Things out of hope
so fair a hope is slain
This sound of hope
Despair, and hope
weak-built hopes persuade him
Full of foul hope
If in thy hope thou darest
To shame his hope
When their brave hope
And to their hope
one more rich in hope
in hope my verse shall stand
But hope of orphans
fears to hopes and hopes to fears
But if thou catch thy hope
Heart hath his hope
Hope — But that I hope
being lack'd, to hope
Hopeless— a hopeless castaway
hopeless merchant of this loss
Hoping— Thus hoping that Adonis
And so by hoping more
Horn — for his hounds and for his . . .
she hears a merry horn
whose tender horns being hit
comes with horn and hounds
Home — to pluck him from his horse VA
and hasteth to his horse "
Go did this horse excel **
Look, what a horse should have **
With her the horse
my horse is gone
though thy horse be gone
on thy well-breath'd horse
Sin's pack-horse, virtue's snare R L
Then can no horse Son
Some in their horse "
than hawks or horses be "
*' That horse his mettle from his
rider takes
Whether the horse by him
Hospitality— Reward not ....
Host— leaves the Roman host
To all the host of heaven
Hostess— A woeful hostess brooks
not merry guests
Hot— hot as coals of glowing fire
Shows his hot courage
His day's hot task
Hot, faint and weary
for the hot encounter
The hot scent-snuffing hounds
Which the hot tyrant stains
drops of hot desire
But his hot heart
Gives the hot charge
Cooling his hot face
This hot desire converts to cold'
disdsin
Sometime too hot
in three hot Junes burn'd
the general of hot desire
these trophies of affections hot
cold modesty, hot wrath
125 2
...M 267
295
137 7
667
...- 762
..... 976
• •••• sfoO
••••« ]«>U
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••••• XvOv
1433
29 5
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97
119
143
15
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M... 1009
...M 137
w... 868
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1033
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9
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91
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LC
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Son
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18 6
104 7
164 7
218
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aot-fl«»»th>!<UT pp
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an
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lI<>>l»autru<»U»ir<Dd
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• 7
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tlu houn tbou H^Tvit nia
prinul buLhilugiiwlih ibj houn
DiMurb UiliuuH uf mt
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Inlbntndbaurar mine
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0,cirTenut will] <li)f hniin
hEVM^UtdDtbauriaiiis
..«t boar, ft™,, luvB". dBllghl
he ir 111 Dol e^erf bouc lurTe;
Upon Ibe binin and tiiaca
u.ijnlii'd bis blood
dcklc glut, bl> ikkle, buur
W 9
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BtrtriMt— l^nt o'er the paper A £ — 1297
Hair— O-liavnulckUlDTS VA .... 98
Look.howAldrlHa " .... ST
Look how he can *^ .... 79
re lonaenlMb " .... 102
bow doth all
wlu
far a in.xl.'rn quill
h-iw du I hold th«
HOW
139
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IS
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12
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How— I teach thee how
Mark how with my neglect
How have mine eyes
To weigh how once I sulTer'd
how hard true aorrow hiti
How oft, when thoa
How can it? O, how can LoTe't
eye
taught thee how to make
Saw how deceits were gilded
Bj how much of me
How mighty then you are
How coldly those impedimenta
O, how the channel
how shall I swear to lore
how often hath she Joined
How many tales to please me
how god Mars did try her
Lord, how mine eyes
How sighs resound
How true a twain
Howling— and be replies with . .
In bowling wise, to see my dole-
ful plight PP 18 33
H«o-<:onflict of her hue VA 345
a whiter hue than white ** 398
sarour, hue and qualities " 747
A man In hue, all * hues Son 20 7
fair iu knowledge as in hue " 82 5
flowers in odour and in hue " 98 6
seeing of his living hue *' 67 6
So your sweet hue "104 11
which their hue encloses L C ~... 287
Haed— The hearen-hued sapphire ** ...~ 215
Hage— Huge rocks, high winds E L 835
huge Ares abide ** ...^ 647
And waste huge stones " ..-> 959
That this huge stage presenteth Son 15 3
in this huge rondure hems '^ 21 8
Hagely— alone stands hugely politic ** 124 11
Ham— For burden-wise ru hum R L ~... 1133
Hanaa — By holy human law ^ ..... 571
doth raTish human sense P P S 6
Hananlty — Let fair .... abhor R L .... 195
Uanble— the.... suppliant's friend " 897
An humble gait, calm looks '* 1508
The humble as the proudest Son 80 6
The humble salve " 120 12
And in thy suit be humble true P P 19 32
Hanbly— she doth insinuate VA 1012
Uanoar— Soothing the humour *' ...~ 850
Such childish humour R L ..... 1825
And every humour hath Son 91 5
on thy humour doth depend " 92 8
Handred— What is ten .... touches VA ..... 519
twenty hundred kisses " — 522
five hundred courses of the sun Son 59 6
Hang — ^hath he hung bis lance VA 103
a Jewel hung in ghastly night Son 27 11
Hung with the trophies " 31 10
• Huger — Sharp .... by the conquest R L 422
Hanyry — I have seen the .... ocean Son 64 5
Thy hungry eyes even till *' 56 6
Hant^To hunt the boar VA 588
thou wouldst bunt the boar " ...~ 614
if thou needs wilt hunt ** .... 673
Why hunt I then for colour R L ..... 267
Haated— Spied the hunted boar VA .... 900
Past reason hunted Son 129 6
Hantlng^Hunting he loTod
the hunting of the boar
HantamaB— she hears some ....
Harl^their silken parcels hurls
Uarnr— Which madly hurries her
Hart— You hurt my hand
To mend the hurt
Upon his hurt she looks
They that have power to hurt
Hartfng— his alUhurting aim
Hasband — her husband's shallow
tongue
to her ears her husband's fame
Until her husband's welfare
So tby surviving husband
Then, for thy husband
her husljand's love
* My husband is thy friend
husband, do thou take
to do her husband wrong
One of my husband's men
Shed for Uie siaughter'd husband
her sad-beholding husband
Dear husband, in the interest
Beplies her husband
sweet husband to another
her husband's shape in mind
Like a deceived husband
IfiMfrand- And .... nature's riches
Hasband ry— the tillage of thy ... .
Which husbandry in honour
Hash — mournful hymns did hush
Httsh'd— Even as the wind is hush'd VA
Hymns— sings .... at heaven's gate Son
To every hymn
her mournful hymns did hush
I— but a kiss I beg
I have been woo'd, as I entreat
overruled I oversway'd
And I will wink
were 1 hard-favour'd
then I were not for thee
I will enchant thine ear
whereon I lie
even where I list to sport me
I must remoTe
And, lo, I lie
The heat I have
And were I not immortal
What am I, that thou
I have herom'd thee here
I am such a park
And this I do
' Stand, I say
thou wert as I am, and I a man
I would assure thee
I never shall regard
I am bereft him so
I pray you hence
I heartily beseech thee
Though I were dumb
' I know not love
and then I chase it
and I will not owe it
For I have heard it is
or [ had no hearing
I had my load before
Had I no eyes
VA
....
4
u
.....
7i:
u
.....
978
LC
.....
87
VA
.....
904
it
.....
421
(1
....
478
(t
1068
Son
94
1
LC
• ••••
810
RL
• ••••
78
•4
••■••
106
«<
••■••
263
it
•••••
619
tl
•••••
083
M
>••••
670
U
•••••
682
U
•••••
1200
tl
•••••
1264
it
•••••
1291
il
•••••
1376
it
•••••
1590
it
•••••
1619
U
•••••
1796
Son
8
9
It
9
8
II
9:t
2
II
94
6
II
8
6
M
13
10
II
102
10
VA
• •••a
458
Son
29
12
II
85
7
II
102
10
VA
•••••
96
It
••••«
97
It
•••••
109
II
122
II
•••••
133
u
•••••
137
II
•••••
145
II
•••••
151
u
•••••
154
u
•••••
186
u
•••••
194
II
• ••■•
195
II
•••••
197
II
•••••
205
M
•••••
229
II
•••••
239
u
•••••
281
II
•••••
284
u
•••••
869
If
•••••
371
u
••■••
877
II
•••••
381
II
•••••
382
H
•••••
404
U
•••••
406
II
•••••
409
II
•••••
410
II
•••••
411
M
•••••
413
M
•••••
428
M
• •«••
430
U
••••a
438
I>uIdvUghlU)ilis
BrCatetkaaw
Ifumr-d thy furl
Whu abould I do
IprupUes]' tliy diith
' Whwa did 1 luis
guLug ikHllfall
TbulduIgBTeyou
Iml
ould tell, but uion 1 1
w I irlll kvar
mlh, 1 did but ym
di > kind or fgot
Hud I b«cn tooth'd Ukc hiin, I
'Wh«twinl, KI
VIbj hunt I ib«a
rtiii,i«l me, I O
will uut wtvog tbj tnu lObo
at each nd Wnila will Mnln j
«■ waking, wret«bed I
I know -wbatlhorna
I (hlafetbebutiuj'guaidal
1 aua Ibr exiled m^Jettj'! rtpeal
I will indict
IdidboglDtoatart
IiuukjLllgullL-dtlr
I,hr.ulJu<,tllvO
itLil.ivIn;.inulilm
AiiJ -hr i].H I
I oRen did beboM
•eewhM
Iwaa
'IdldglTatbatllfo
I awed her
that I inB7 Changs
DToilnd
sdock
Wben I babold tbs
MI»~4eaTg ihit idle tti
idle over-handled lh<
But Idle Munda
SL^... lOie
ir-Foiiridii
But IT 1 li»8
Who, If It wl
uil!>ti'd fort I niika
.... f..™, idlfitrt PJ* IB
l,-lim..«,iJI
„l_W,.|l-|,alr,i
-d Idol, tow dBll
»dd»d
VA ....
n.;- M'.vf\ u
n Idol ihow SBk IM
aUln~'"7'"
.? be nird Uolatrr " lOS
An U lbs 4rtd il
exceed
Uif tbekncwhli
iriprlntrlDKiliiiii
Bnt. Iidf , if joat nuid nuy b«
Aa If with gileT or tnriU b« bkd
ir Ifaon iDf loTe'a dealra do con-
tndlet " .
u If taer heut would bn«k " .
IfiiillicchlMlhet-lh.T'.fiiiBccUW -
K pngcnlloxm " -
If 111
uif tbcnnul
ir he be de*d
ir bt had ipoks
ir hedldHShNb
M If (ber beard
And, If pOBKH'd
>u thTMlf dec^THt "
uwlliea
Kdiill inhatanetof lUT Oeab
BuUf ihQ
Jit
Id
" ....
O.lfcghanI
^t<
■ddlflhoi
If lothTb
p"
houdimtd
If but for
fear
of tbl^ thy
wlU
iraUlbe»
[-11
jm.i.b»lleh.ng» " 'Z
IfthmlMj
u llicme
ir,CoU.ltn
tht
nebonoorLT
looo"
If Ihoo WOUldM UH
IF
145
IMAGE
If— If Time have any wrinkle grftTen^Sm 100 10
If any, be a satire to decay ** 100 11
if nerer intennixM " 101 8
if I no more can write '* 108 5
if I hare ranged " 109 6
For if it see the rudest " US 9
If it be poisoo'd ** 114 13
If this be error " 118 13
For if you were "120 5
If my dear love were but the child " 124 1
If Nature, sorereign mistress " 126 5
Or if it were " 127 2
But is profaned, if not lives in dis-
grace " 127 8
If snow be white " 130 3
If hairs be wires " 130 4
If thy soul check thee " 136 1
If eyes, corrupt by over-partial
looks " 137 S
If I might teach thee "140 6
For if I should despair " 140 9
Or, if it do, not from those lips " 142 5
If thou dost seek " 142 13
But if thou catch " 143 11
• If thou turn back ** 143 14
Or, if they have " 148 3
If that be fair whereon " 148 5
If it be not, then love " 148 7
if thou lour'st on me " 149 7
If thy unworthinese raised love in
me " 150 13
If that from him there may be LC 68
if I had self-applied " .... 76
If best were as it was " 98
Tet, if men moved him " ..... 101
If broken then it is no fault PP S 12
If by me broke " 3 13
If love make me forsworn "51
if not to beauty vowed "52
If knowledge be the mark "57
If music and sweet poetry agree "81
As if the boy should use "118
And if these pleasures may thee
move " 20 15
If that the world and love were
joung " 20 17
Bat if store of crowns be scant " 21 37
If that one be prodigal " 21 89
If he be addict to vice " 21 43
If to women he be bent " 21 45
Bat if Fortune once do frown " 21 47
If thou sorrow, he will weep " 21 63
If thou wake, he cannot sleep " 21 54
If vhat parts can so remain P T 48
liatraace— ignorance aloft to fly Son 78 6
my rude ignorance " 78 14
IfMrant-All ignorant that soul P P 5 9
ni-This ill presage VA 457
Whose inward ill no outward
hsrm express'd PL 91
So that in venturing ill " 148
thej all rate his ill " 304
bad they seen the period of their ill " 380
becoromits this ill " 476
fiidthyillalra " 579
If tU these petty ills " „... 656
thitthontaught'st this ill " 996
the ilsDder of mine ill " 1207
aotthesuthorsof their ill " 1244
10
111— this bInSt and m EL ...« 1800
lodged not a mind so ill " ..... 1530
'What uncouth ill event " .....1598
her babe from faribg ill Son 22 12
and ransom all 111 deeds " 84 14
in whom all ill well shows " 40 13
any thing, he thinks no ill " 57 14
be it ill or well " 68 14
captive good attending captain ill " 66 12
If some suspect of ill " 70 13
disgrace me half so ill " 89 5
though new-fangled ill " 91 3
blesses an ill report " 95 8
The hardest knife ill used " 95 14
who calls me well or ill "112 3
The ills that were not "118 10
would by ill be cured " 118 12
O benefit of ill "119 9
gain by ill thrice more " 119 14
might speak ill of thee " 140 10
a woman colour'd ill " 144 4
which doth preserve the ill " 147 8
this becoming of things ill " 150 6
The dettined ill she must L C 166
faulU in love with love's ill rest PP I 8
a woman colour'd ill "24
I'll— I'll smother thee with kisses VA ..... 18
I'll sigh celestial breath " 188
I'll make a shadow " ..... 191
I'll quench them " .... 192
I'll give it thee again " 200
ni be a park " ..... 231
this night I'll waste " ..... 688
I'll beg her love B L ...» 241
worthless slave of thine I'll slay " ..... 616
I'll hum on Tarquin still " 1188
to Tarquin I'll bequeath " ..... 1181
I'll bequeath unto the knife " 1184
I'll tune thy woes " .... 1465
I'll murder straight, and then PlI
slaughter thee " 1634
for their style I'll read Son 82 14
Towards thee I'll run " 61 14
against myself I'll fight " 88 3
As I'll myself disgrace " 89 7
against myself I'll vow debate " 89 13
Myself I'll forfeit " 134 3
Therefore I'll lie with love PP 1 13
to thee I'll constant prove "53
ni-annexed- But .... Opportunity JR L 874
liion — cloud-kissing Iliou with annoy " 1370
Of rIch-buUt Ilion " 1524
Illiterate— Yea, the illiterate that
know not how " 810
lU-nartared— Ill-nurtured, crooked FA 134
Ill-resonnding— his .... noise " 919
Illnrained — illumined with her eye " 486
Ill-wresting— Now this .... world Son 140 11
Image — image dull and dead VA 212
An image like thyself " 664
her heavenly image sits B L 288
image of hell '* 764
That for Achilles' Image " 1424
a wretched image bound " .. .. 1501
this mild image drew " .... 1520
That she with painted images " ..... 1577
the father's image lies " 1753
ray image thou hast torn " ..... 1762
thine image dies with thee Son 3 14
Imi(*— fODi true Imiige ptcEaccf
Ht LC
For much idiuxinnry wirk
nij'»ur.ima«ln»iT*lg1>t
TliedlrvlmnflDatluii
tiiii«liie— O, lli.'ii Iningliie (hia
iDinglDeliHuciiie
IiuiBEne ererj ejrB
tmtst"i-to' «>B whoU to b« . . .
elHoii; be imagined
iMlUlt-Tu iu>L[.U tbM vdl
toiiBlUiUthclslllf
|»l..ljDKlnilul«bt>ch«k
AndwerelDotEinniDrtal
DUiddlK^rthnll
lB»iire-M«inloimmurehi;r«1
LBn«r*4-lmn.and 1. iho »ioro
••Op|<l>hobelmmi.n<l
lapnrh'd-Whf
iHpfdlwral— Ad
K ioipvrifnil
-Iin[wi
BDUDdJorth LC
InpnioiilT— ImpcriouBlr he !i»p>
l»»let)t— Implstj-lmlli wrougbl
iiollienai'diinpiriT
«iih lili prewnM g:MrvtniplHf
Inplm — D Jmpiausiict
TbelmplDiutirtach
iBpleub'd— nielnl Bmoroiul;
Inport— Wen la .. rurgeirnlntM
iMpDitair— Whom thine tjei woo
iBpnltlsn— In knighlhosd Is her
luipoiKlua
In|l«IbiiBH~-8urfei[<. grieT
iKprrpuble— When nwka
linprnwi.t~Wh<'n Ihnu jmprerant
lapriMD'd-
...InlhegroDDd
iinprlKn'd
1 B bnij dnd
The iinpriM
o'd BbKnce
34
g
(97
*a
SM
IM
::::
wi
^
iz
13J
M
•
I"
M
803
»
M
'"
7M
'«
"s
"sj
4K
039
!17
«9
(3
n
>M
....
WW
"S7
"!
:::
KS
109
122
»
m
10
UT
'm
T«
1ST
060
712
"?
-■■;
046
tS6
ss
"
to purge mr inpurg (ale SL^.
iBparltf— That some Inpurilj " -.
Inpal*— fOl m)' ala jrou did Impute jba I
In— In meb Ume-beguillnf VA ..
trcmbllDg Id h«r paaalon " ,.
m'd hliu in itrength. Ihooih
ID Id I
Look In miDe e^eba
Since era In eft*
iponlsnoilnilghl
In Ihelr prime
churllih, hanh Id t<
ope wrinkle In mj 1
In ahape, In oHirige
poor fliei in hla fume
It ti a life In death
irllher In their prime
Each part Id Die
■oddvad
MoUIrr— -HT >otc be «I1'd I
Al 1/ the deid the lliing at
Uir»)ie1ii>i^«1.linilDd
AsJf frum liicTittihaj born
paichue U ihuu miks
If inr loT« joii QW« me
If you will uj u
If tbouencountir
If Iboo Dcali vllt hunt
Tolie»rkeo
at If III
jfkll
HI dnlroy them
It H, the •
And, If poAKH'd
If Dane uf thuM
if thercbcKlMrm
if I g«lo thr Mag
• If ColUllnui dreii
If ill Ihcsc pet I; ill
VA
'.'".
RT.
lOlfl
am
«
J
i'J'
AH 100
«
TIT
tin IM
«
l-a
E
IS
HO
133
243
»4S
Wl
82*
3U
en
7IW
;
II
m
770
Ml
1109
KL
■:::
M
im
Ml
33»
MS
«W
4M
008
IM
W7
l»3
MO
eus
If-For If I die
Bui ir I llT*
Who, If it wIdI
fiat, lady, If jour mild may bo
'IfitihauldbelDld
If CTei. Ion, thy Lucrect
Aa If »Die mf muld did Iheir ei
rom IhfKlf to Blore thou
uldgl convert
»uld write
not p.id before
f the obile I think on thee "
fU\ in me
r >l<xh( Mdk do pleue "
r my lore Ihou my lote ra-
ou Ibyadf decelTeet "
<> dull •ulnt.anc? of my Beab
Mlbuught
rtlieyBliTp
rrtliillluiucome '
ijy *niii^ liuUuct the irreteh
iTri^nolblogDew
uoek-d a
Niy, If yoD read thli line
If thinking on me then
of yuu, ir hecantell
If l)JouViUl™v,.mL■
If lhyi.".""irtiiii.nsTr.
IF
145
IMAGE
If— If Time have any wrinkle graven iSm 100 10
If any, be a satire to decay "100 11
if nerer intennlx'd " 101 8
if I no more can write " 103 6
if I hare ranged " 109 6
For if It see the rudest " 118 9
If it be polBon'd " 114 18
If this be error " 116 18
For if you were ** 120 5
If my dear love were but the cbild " 124 1
If Nature, sovereign mistress "126 5
Or if it were " 127 2
But is profaned, if not lives in dis-
grace " 127 8
If snow be white ** ISO 8
U hairs be wires " 180 4
If thy soul check thee *' 186 1
If eyes, corrupt by over-partial
looks " 187 5
If I might teach thee " 140 6
For if I should despair " 140 9
Or, if it do, not from those lips ** 142 5
If thou dost seek " 142 13
But if thou catch " 143 11
• If thou turn back " 143 14
Or, if they have " 148 3
If that be fair whereon " 148 5
If it be not, then love " 148 7
if thou lour'st on me " 149 7
If thy unworthiness raised love in
me " 150 13
If that from him there may be LC 68
if I had self-applied " _. 76
If best were as it was " 98
Yet, if men moved him " 101
If broken then it is no fault PP Z 12
If by me broke " 3 13
If love make me forsworn "61
if not to beauty vowed "52
If knowledge be the mark "67
If music and sweet poetry agree "81
As if the boy should use "118
And if these pleasures may thee
move " 20 15
If that the world and love were
young " 20 17
But If store of crowns be scant " 21 37
If that one be prodigal " 21 89
If he be addict to vice " 21 43
If to women he be bent " 21 45
But if Fortune once do frown " 21 47
If thou sorrow, he will weep " 21 53
If thou wake, he cannot sleep " 21 54
If what parts can so remain P T 48
Igvorsnee — ignorance aloft to fly Son 78 6
my rude ignorance " 78 14
IfBorant— All ignorant that soul P P 5 9
Ul— This ill presage VA 457
Whose inward ill no outward
harm expressed JH L 91
So that in venturing ill " 148
they all rate his ill " 301
had they seen the period of their ill " 380
he commits this ill " 476
End thy m aim " 579
If all these petty ills " ..... A56
that thou taught'st this ill " 996
the slander of mine ill " ..... 1207
not the auttiors of their ill " 1244
10
III— this bluSt and Ul EL ...« 1800
lodged not a mind so ill " ..... 1580
'What uncouth ill event " .....1598
her babe from farlbg ill Am 22 12
and ransom all ill deeds " 84 14
in whom all ill well shows " 40 13
any thing, he thinks no Ul " 57 14
be it iU or well " 68 14
captive good attending captain ill " 66 12
If some suspect of 111 " 70 13
disgrace me half so ill " 89 5
though new-fangled Ul " 91 8
blesses an iU report " 95 8
The hardest knife iU used " 95 14
who calls me well or ill "112 3
The ills that were not " 118 10
would by Ul be cured " 118 12
O benefit of iU " 119 9
gain by iU thrice more " 119 14
might speak ill of thee " 140 10
a woman colour'd ill " 144 4
which doth preserve the Ul " 147 8
thU becoming of things iU " 150 5
The dettined iU she must LC 156
faulU in love with love's ill rest P /> 1 8
a woman colour'd ill "24
I'll— rU smother thee with kisses VA ..... 18
rn sigh celestial breath " ..... 188
I'll make a shadow " ..... 191
ril quench them " .... 192
ru give it thee again " ..... 209
rU be a park " .... 231
this night ru waste " ..... 588
I'U beg her love R L ...- 241
worthless slave of thine I'll slay " ..... 515
ru hum on Tarquin still " ..... 1188
to Tarquin I'll bequeath " 1181
I'll bequeath unto the knife " 1184
ru tune thy woes " ..... 1465
I'll murder straight, and then I'U
slaughter thee " 1634
for their style I'll read Son S2 14.
Towaztis thee I'll run " 51 14
against myself I'll fight " 88 3
As ru myself disgrace " 89 7
against myself I'll vow debate " 89 18
Myself I'll forfeit " 184 3
Therefore I'll lie with love PP I 13
to thee ru constant prove "53
Ill-annexed— But .... Opportunity R L 874
IlioB — cloud-kissiuglliou with annoy" ..... 1870
Of rich-buUt Ilion " 1524
lUiterate— Yea, the ilUterate that
know not how " ..... 810
IU*Bnrtared— Ill-nurtured, crooked Kil ..... 134
in-retonnding— his .... noise " 919
lllamined— Ulumined with her eye " 486
lll-wrestiag- Now this .... world .Sitm 140 11
Innge— Image dull and dead VA ...~ 212
An image like thyself " 664
her heavenly image sits R L ..... 288
image of hell ** ..... 7&1
That for AehUles' image " 1424
a wretched image bound " .. .. 1501
this mild image drew " .... 1520
That she with painted images " .... 1577
the father's image Uos " .... 1753
my Image thon hast torn " .... 1762
thine image dies with thee Sm 3 14
l»-1n Pri»m*i inlnlrf w
And hem la Tio j
ipriT.i*»tnloi(encral
nibTKiriDtlnKlelKB
. lurk in wch ■ look
. AidlDlhitcold.hat-harDlnglln
TIllHTCIlllJinhoIdll
AnUEdlrlnbnud
Ikwfb ml In tun
■bind lo dixwDlcDt
In thuiD I md tuch art
HoMaJupcrfHllon
ViuDt III lhr!l[ ^oglhful M
Id roulh l»(urr ni7 >l«hl
AwdlllpwurirllUTiinii
tarMf youncif In TMir Je
neither la iDirardoorth
Tainitaa sddy , boundeth In hii
prtle '
Iirtgt wnt out. rccili'd longs "
^ booDd In knigbtboud "
ami Id li wiib lt*n "
B«-H...l In i-.ir rtr™g^b«ld
In I'
) .law riTen
Wbkb In Ihr bnwim'i ihnp
Jot Id rb.t I h«D»or
A»liii'frii.- I. ">,., r pride lb
In tbtm dMb lUad
ouliT Tl(tau la B>
k^a viMe in nlnirdlBf
liiUirb»oiT'>kU
Look In tbT ^am
ud>bclDib«
iDniilIi>E<r<.id>I'>>h</
Id tbr K«r, tbTAKht
A }oon]^ Id mf h>o^
Tif l>Ik-<
)tl>11ii4-*l
kiMnlDt
I»— Though Id Hirlinn
I Kits U>« ia aoch «rt
Entitled in ihf pirli
ThillinlbjibundinwHCM
ten tlm« man In vonh
In wbom )U1 111
leid thoe In their riot
A ku In loio
MO bright Id -dark dlroctod
lulh» living d.r
WhcolndewlDlitht
thou In bim d«tlle
And art 111 hlui
^rUlillntheHcuiiU^iils
You live Id thli, ind d
in lh« neln ot light
in liope my vene ilull iltrid
in him thsM holjr intique hon:
Thou
In tbj cheek
ha pralae ihvtnjr ip^ndi *^
a otrlh un loltru
!li p»rt -will l« torgoiten "
u fair In knowlodgsu
In Ihee It li abated
irhat worth In you doth grow
po?ta can In pnlae dvvLtfl
In whose conflae Immured
le glurrln their birth, k
ijvu doflt ihoa thj
Ii-ikipa ber pip« In growth of
riper diji So
Look Id Tonr glua
InthiwIiDlJim
AndJotbit-chu
ffhM',lBtl..-bndn " IW
l» l«e*i frab p.u.a " lOS
iBthrbmatdoIhJIc " IM
li ntf i»iar« TVign'd " m
btltboairtmrdl " IDS
AgodlDloTe " 11
Toirh31il— rksiD - 11
minaejeitlnBiyinliiil " 11
lUtotlerTlnmjieelng " 11
CtHpln'twiiHow! " 11
iDTournakcn'dhsie " 11
Tl.«poIlc7inl«.e " 11
Unt - 11
IiolfcrtllDjroororliiie " IM
fflfch in Ibsltirm. " 12
Id tb«lr b^DOH Tdgn " 12
Iliaftn not immlllng pomp " IW
l»ll»lrg«ii.g.pcnl - IM
»Ui)d.]B»tliitl.)r(!ontrol " lis
^boiBlhjpo-cr - IM
liltti«flUi«a " 1"
IfnolllTtaindbeinca " 127
b Ihj BM*I bdsuni'fl w»Fd
OK linour io ""T g»ol
tHl,^lB«pci<llnthea
ud Jill that b Id ma
ud WUl'looyerplui
lUenrirllliDtbloe
ainwilllnclhcniMiD
■tthaq,b«iB|rlohlD'mn
Inlblngiof gteit
Tben In tbe Dumb
And In our IkulU
Ituut plijln ihr ht»rt
InpunuUof Ihslblng
nor llod Id fonntl put
In hor a urelcu hand of prldo
Some Id bcr threulDa fillut
braided In looM negllgenca
■heiDarlierlhrew
II pauiloni iu bLi craft
AndlatmifltmlnnionplMai
Thai did in fre«dani nand
IN
152
INFECTED
In — fe^^imple, not in part L C -... 144
art in youth and youth in art ** ~... 145
in his charmed power ** ~... 146
oiyBelf in honour so forbid " .... 150
To put the hy-past perils in her way *' ~... 156
that preach in our behoof " ..... 165
in others' orchards grew " ..... 171
were gilded in his smiling " »... 172
of shame in me remains " ..... IS8
Kept hearts in liveries '* ..... 195
commanding in his monarchy " .... 196
In bloodless white " 201
Encamp'd in hearts ** 203
in whose fresh regard '* «... 213
parcels in combined sums " ..... 231
noble suit in court did shun *' »... 234
her living in eternal love " 238
Mports in unconstrained gyres " 242
in that my boast is true " 246
their fountains in my well *' ..... 255
ay, dieted in grace " ..... 261
In thee hath neither sting " ..... 265
in the sullering pangs it l)ears " ..... 272
In the small orb of one " 289
In him a plenitude of subtile matter ** ~... 302
In cither's aptness " ..... 306
which in his level came ** «... 309
And, veil'd in them, did win " ...- 312
burn'd in heart-wish 'd luxury " 314
which in his check so glow'd " ..... 324
in the world's false forgeries P P I 4
in love with love's ill rest *' 1 8
And age, in love " 1 12
in love thus smother'd be " 1 14
one angel in another's hell " 2 12
but live in doubt " 2 13
cures all disgrace in me *' 3 8
vow ; in thee it is " 3 11
all in love forlorn "63
bounced in, whereas he stood ** 6 13
Yet in the midst of all " 7 11
Bad in the best, though excellent
in neither
And I in deep delight
and both in thee remain
Here in these bnilces
Deep in the thigh
See, in my thigh
Pluck'd in the bud and vaded in
the spring
thou left'st me nothing in thy will
clipp'd Adopts In her arms
In spite of physic
In scorn or friendship
To put in practice either
Playing in the wanton air
firmly flx'd in love
More in women than in men remain "
In black mourn I "
Living in thrall
In howling wise, to see
men in bloody fight
In faith, you had not
ringing in thy lady's ear
And in thy suit be humble
toys that in them lurk
kisses all the joys in bed
in every shepherd's tongue
In the merry month
i<
<i
t(
K
41
it
«l
l(
(t
It
(I
«
l(
*(
<(
7
18
8
11
8
14
9
10
9
11
9
12
10
2
10
8
11
6
13
12
14
8
16
7
17
4
18
11
18
18
18
19
18
22
18
83
18
86
19
24
19
28
19
32
19
39
19
47
20
18
21
2
Ib— Sitting in a pleasant thade P P 21 S
thou monm'st in vain *' 21 19
All thy friends are lapp'd in lead *' 21 24
Is no friend in misery ** 21 82
help thee in thy need " 21 52
Thus of every grief in heart " 21 55
priest in surplice white P T 13
In a mutual flame ** 24
loved, as love in twain " ..... 25
essence but in one " 26
there in love was slain *' ..... 28
But in them it were a wonder ** ..... 32
Flaming in the phoenix' sight *' ..... 85
Reason, in itself confounded " ..... 41
Grace in all simplicity •• ..... 54
enclosed in cinders lie " «... 65
Incaged—incaged in his breast VA i82
Incapable— Incapable of more &>» 113 13
Ineenae— OiTer pure incense R L 194
Ineertainty — Incertainties now
crown themselves San 107 7
certain o'er incertainty " 115 ii
Ineeat^-GuUty of incest B L ~... 921
InelinatioB— An accessary by thine
inclination '* ...^ 922
iBeline— so false will not incline ** ..... 292
Inclined— that never was inclined " ..... 1657
IneloM— dost thou thy sins inclose Son 95 4
IncIndiBg— . ... all foul harms B L .... 199
iBCome— the income of each pre-
cious thing " 334
iBOonstancy— Inconstancy PP 18 17
InconstABt— of this inconstant stay Son 15 9
vex me with inconstant mind " 92 9
Incorporate— Incorporate then they
seem VA .... 540
iBcrease— Upon the earth's increase " 169
with thy increase he fed " 170
You do it for increase •• „... 791
we desire increase Soth 1 1
wisdom, beauty, and increase "11 5
big with rich increase " 97 6
/ncreoie— that men as plants increase " 15 6
Increaaeftal — ploughman with in-
creaseful crops B L 958
Increasing— her woes the more ....VA 254
Increasing store with loss Son 64 8
Incur— fond Paris, did incur B L 1473
Indeed — seeing thee so indeed V A 667
indeed to do me good B h 1028
shows me myself indeed Ssm 62 9
He that is thy friend indeed P P 21 61
Indenting— indenting with the way VA 704
Indigeat— monsters and things .... Son 114 6
Indirectly— poor beauty .... seek '* 67 7
Infkmy— to embrace mine infamy B L 504
not their own infamy " 539
wrapp'd in with infamies " .... 6:^
and hide their infamy *' 794
I cavil with mine infamy " I02d
A dying life to living infamy " .... 1055
engirt with daring infamy •• 1173
and thy perpetual infamy " ..... 16:J8
Infant— Or like the froward infant VA 562
cleaves an infant's heart " 942
Old woes, not infant sorrows B L 1096
her poor infant's discontent Son 143 8
Infpet— Or toads infect fair founts B L .... 850
Infected- O, that infected moUture L C .... .H23
INFECTION
153
INVISIBLE
IifteOoK— To driTe infection VA 608
vhile infection breeds R L ~... 907
with infection shoald he live Son 67 1
vith base infection meet " 91 11
'gainst my strong infection " 111 10
laferlor— InfeHor far to hU " 80 7
Isflraity— beauty with infirmities VA 735
imbitioos foul infirmity R L ~... 150
Twas not their infirmity P T ~... 60
Iiflane — when thou wilt inflame L C ~... 268
Iillaaiiis^-by his side his heart-
inflaming brand Son 164 2
lafliet-thU night I wUl inflict R L 1630
Iiflaeace — The beauteous influence K^ 862
in secret influence comment Son 15 4
Whose influence is thine *' 78 10
Isfbld— infold him like a band VA .... 225
Isfbraier— This sour informer " 655
Hence, thou suborn'd informer Son 125 13
Isftittfed— with an infringed oath R L ^... 1061
IbAhiIbI^ — Infusing them with
dreadful prophecies VA 928
Ishablt— inhabit on a living brow Son 68 4
Ishearse— thoughts in my brain ....*' 86 3
Iiherit— do inherit heaven's graces " 94 5
liherltoi^-inheritors of this excess ** 146 7
liifvity— thy sword to guard .... R L 626
Wtiat virtue breeds iniquity devours" ..... 872
justice feeds iniquity " ..... 1687
self-Uving were iniquity Son 62 12
hjariou— ransacked by theft R L 838
injurious, shifting Time " 930
lujorioas distance should not Son 44 2
With Time's injurious hand " 63 2
I^Jiry— than hate's known injury *' 40 12
Without accusing you of injury " 58 8
The injuries that to myself I do " 88 11
dust and injury of age " 108 10
That they elsewhere might dart
their injuries " 139 12
The injury of many L C .... 72
Ii^sstiee— To chase injustice with
revengeful arms R L ..... 1693
Ilk— paper, ink, and pen " 1289
That in black ink Son 65 14
that ink may character " 108 1
Ink would have seem'd more
black L C .... 54
Iiaoeeaee — And forth with bashful
innocence doth hie R L 1341
Iiordlnate — in him seem'd .... " ..... 94
iMlaute— she humbly doth .... VA 1012
Isstanee-^no guilty instance gave R L ..... 1511
iBstant— some special instant spe-
cial blest Son 52 11
Iistsad— Instead of love's coy touch R L 669
hutlgate — untimely thought did
instigate " 43
lasUactr— ^Vs if by some instinct .Son 50 7
lutmnent — some desperate .... R L 1038
as frets upon an instrument " 1140
'Poor instrument,' quoth she " 1464
ImAeleBcy — With insufficiency my
heart to sway Son 150 2
lattli-while he insults o'er dull
and speechless tribes " 107 12
Inalter— what ransom the insulter
wUleth VA .... 550
lasaltlng^under his ... . falchion R L 509
lumrreetloB— her subjects with foal
insurrection RL .... 722
Intelllffenee— gulls him with .... Son 86 10
Intend— to-morrow he intends VA .... 687
Intend a sealous pilgrimage ^Sbfi 27 6
battery to the spheres intend L C .... 23
Intendinf — Intending weariness
with heavy sprite R L .... 121
Intendment— do her intendments
break VA .... 222
Intent— brake off* his late intent ** .... 469
with swift intent be goes R L .... 46
GoUatinus dream of my intent ** .... 218
blunt the sharp'st intents Son 116 7
Interrhange — . . . . each other's seat R L 70
such interchange of state Son 64 9
Interdict— From this session .... P T .... 9
Interest— And one for interest VA .... 210
thy interest was not bought R L 1067
in the interest of thy bed " 1619
My sorrow's interest " .... 1797
As interest of the dead &)n 31 7
hath in this line some interest ** 74 8
Interim— Let this sad interim " 66 9
Interlace— and there the painter in-
terlaces R L .... 1390
Intermixed- best, if never .... Son 101 8
Interpret — the eye interprets to the
ear R L 1825
Intermpted— her quiet interrupted " 1170
Intltvled— in that white intituled " .... 67
Into— Into your idle over-handled
theme VA .... 770
Into the quiet closure *' .... 782
cast into eternal sleeping *' .... 951
Into the deep dark " .... 1038
the smoke of it into his face R L .... 812
Into the chamber wickedly he
stalks " .... 365
there falls into thy boundless flood " 653
Into so bright a day " .... 1518
that pour'st into my verse Son 88 2
thrusts into his hide " 50 10
into my deeds to pry ** 61 6
into the beauty of thy mind " 69 9
should look into your moan " 71 18
resolved my reason into tears L C 296
Intmde — worm .... the maiden bud R L .... 848
Innndation— the .... of the eyes L C 290
Inured — Is not . . . . ; return again R L .... 821
Invasion — vows a league, and now
invasion " .... 287
Inveigh — No man inveigh against " 1254
Invent— want subject to invent Son 38 1
thy poet doth invent " 79 7
Invention— can my invention make R L 225
Throng her inventions " 1302
dost give invention light Son 38 8
Which, labouring for invention " 69 3
And keep invention " 76 6
over-goes my blunt invention " 103 7
is my invention spent " 105 11
In vised— Whereto his invised prop-
erties LC 212
Invisible — That inward beauty and
invisible VA 434
on him, invisible commander " 10O4
O unseen shame, invisible dis-
grace RL .... 827
la ilup* is SIdod** vh aboiBd '
Fur Blnauln hb fln duth quikc "
And In tlim MM.'uX'bunilni fli*
iUr-«^lalnher<]lmEl
Utirad IndlacnDl
iiFin Inlier waU
Tbt iRben in their deed
he toruM Id mlgbljr Roma
Doth io her pobon'd ckMl
Yi-i jn iliB -(.ildf bODodath In 1i
In rage aent out, rocall'd la rage
Ai baund Id kolgbthood
tarrtd In It wlib Inn
coma In Ilia pM>r bcan'a a
hli irit in >u<«
nurrlB; in I.iierovf' iroul
iBtheelhTiummer
L*a>i[is ill.-" livii.ulB poaterltr
Twtb lb hit iDidaie Bge
}ojddlghulnJ«7
liilliu wnrldilirtliipend
IhotllDhoaTcu
!D(h.m reaii
}1Mi In perttttl
i«iucl«..ii<lmrpHdal:
Udr Blory die
g In ghiullj- nUht
iln in lio|>p)' plight
uQHDt (ihike hand!
U nunllj lou'd
ay digramXon ii
Xttttion l> In]- cuptaiii "
wbcDbiigluJ; b.uaerl>Alqil>]r-|l -
Uj part 1) jnuili
bnLre mjr pilot a "
Ii ilniuil cbuknl '
ilj -will Is l»clE'd
UUlx-lr.t'il
Tbj ■» wUhlD ■ puddle'i voinb
PanCfautltjiirUed
Whila LoM ia in bia iirhle
hbHnl'i tMlt t?mplo b dihccd
br itroDg uault II la beieCt ,
pcrftcUou la av tbaulula
l^ iiLbguel -with crtiu|i9
'Tlnw'a glor]' la tucaJw '
'The buer la b«
Tba mighllci li Ibe Ihlug "
Itt moan belog duuilcd preaonUr
Sac* thai mr caae la put ttie h«lp "
[a to l«t forth m; rool di
r dtj biita nMighl to do wbM'*
oun hji Dlghl
ir ffrlcf -li food
vboH abule la awiUo
Uet boiue la auk-d
Iironn'aiaibcn
jap'd Ibe Hmblancs " _
irsll ei-
B<-fo« ihu wiiltli la dniwt
-irb.:ie4j]dlilrn.batdl'd
ib^LiictHieltDoirree
wlicD Ibe Judgo is mlib'd
■nd tpoiliai ia Uiy mind
bsbeioMr
lis » food
. not fuibldden
1 ihjr prncpc« ta, grmcloiu
And oIUd ia bl* gold
IN
151
IN
fs— stops her pipe in growth of
riper days
Look in your glass
in my Terse can sit
when you look in it
In process of the seasons hare I
seen
in three hot Junes burn'd
in a wondrous excellence
And in this change
Three themes in one
nercr kept scat in one
When in the chronicle
In praise of ladies dead
Then, in the blason
I'll lire in this poor rhyme
in this shalt find thy monument
What's in the brain
in lore's fresh cause
in thy breast doth lie
in my nature reigii'd
in it thou art my all
A god in lore
To what it works in
In so profound abysm I throw
in my purpose bred
mine eye is in my mind
'tb flattery in my seeing
Creep in 'twixt rows
in your waken'd hate
Thus policy in lure
In the distraction of this madding
ferer
I suffer'd in your crime
Which in their wills
in their badness reign
forgetful ness in me
It suffers not in smiling pomp
in their gazing spent
obsequious in thy heart
stands least in thy control
who in thy power
In the old age
if not lires in disgrace
so happy are in this
in a waste of shame
Is lust in action
Mad in pursuit, and in possession so "
and in quest to hare
A bliss in proof
see I in her ch(*eks
And in some perfumes
Than in the breath
Yet, in good faith
in my Judgement's place
In nothing art thou black sare in
thy deeds
that ushers in the even
Mke in erery part
in thy steel bosrim's ward
nse rigour in my fraol
for I, being pent in thee
and all that is in me
and ' Will; in overplus
hide my will in thine
Shall will in others seem
And in my will
And in abundance
80 thou, being rich in ' Will
Sm 102
8
M
103
6
U
103
13
((
103
14
II
104
6
It
104
7
(1
105
6
11
106
11
U
105
12
It
105
14
11
106
1
U
106
4
U
106
5
U
107
11
U
107
13
It
106
1
II
108
9
II
109
4
(1
109
9
U
109
14
II
110
12
II
111
7
u
112
9
u
112
13
II
113
1
II
114
9
11
115
6
II
117
12
«l
118
9
II
119
8
II
120
8
II
121
8
II
121
14
II
122
14
II
124
6
II
125
8
II
125
9
II
125
14
II
126
1
II
127
1
II
127
8
II
128
13
II
129
1
II
129
2
0"
129
9
M
129
10
II
129
11
II
130
6
II
130
7
II
130
8
II
131
5
II
131
12
•1
131
13
»l
132
7
II
132
12
• 1
133
9
U
133
12
11
133
13
II
133
14
II
135
2
M
135
6
II
135
7
II
135
8
il
135
10
U
135
11
Ih— and me in that one * Will Sm 135 14
in things of great receipt ** 136 7
Then in the number ** 136 9
Though in thy store's account ** 136 10
Be anchor'd in the bay ** 137 6
In things right true " 137 18
in the world's false subtleties " 138 4
is in seeming trust ** 138 11
And age in love ** 138 12
And in our faulU " 138 14
but in my sight " 139 5
And in my madness " 140 10
In faith, I do not love thee " 141 1
they in thee a thousand errors note " 141 2
in despite of view " 141 4
Root pity in thy heart " 142 11
In pursuit of the thing " 14:i 4
child holds her in chase " 143 5
one angel in another's hell " 14 1 12
but live in doubt " 144 13
Straight in her heart " 145 5
in giving gentle doom '* 145 7
in selling hours of dross "146 11
Love put in my head " 148 1
do I in myself respect " 149 9
That in the very refuse " 150 6
That, in my mind, thy worst *' 15G 8
raised love in me " I'lO 13
Triumph in love '* 151 8
To stand in thy affairs " 151 12
In loving thee " 152 1
In act thy bed-vow broke *' 152 3
In vowing new hate " 152 4
faith in thee iK lost '* 152 8
In a cold valloy-fountain " 153 4
but in her rasidcn hand " 154 4
in a cool well by " 154 9
silken figures in the brine L C ~... 17
had pelleted in tears '* ~... 18
In clamours of all size '* 21
nor tied in formal plat " 29
in her a careless hand of pride " ~... 30
Some in her threaden fillet *' ..... 33
braided in loose negligence " ..... 35
she in a river threw " ..... 38
find their sepulchres in mud " ..... 46
sadly penn'd in blood " ..... 47
she in her fluxive eyes " ..... 50
This said, in top of rage " 55
In brief the grounds and motives ** ..... 63
in the cliarity of age " 70
though ill me you l>ehold " 71
And whi>n in his fair parts " 83
did hanit in crooked curls ** 85
was in little drawn " 90
thinks in Paradise was sawn " ..... 91
wavering Htood in doubt " ..... 97
falsent>s.H in a pride of truth " ~... 105
in hinis4*lf, not in his case *' ..... 116
catching all passions in his craft
of will " «... 126
in the general bosom reign ** ..... 127
dwell with him in thoughts ** ... . 129
In personal duty, fullowing " ~... 130
and in it put their mind " ..... 135
that in the imagination set " ..... 136
theirs in thought assign'd " 138
And labouring in moe pleasures " ..... 139
That did in freedom stand - ..... 143
b-blM upnn ^ Ihn) i> (dd
Vtaich li not Dili'd
Bui ncFW Li liluk bautr'i n
baulr hencif !■ I
Ii't DM eDaugb
wliuu Hill l> br){.' ^Lilipuioiu •
And IriH, Ihj luul tn.jKV !■ «d-
AmoBf K Dumber odv Ii reckon^
WbvTctA ihe JudgemeDt of nj
ban li tied " 1ST
Bjthlilinat " 137
Uiit ibe !■ intdc of Irnlh " IM
ILiu U ilniplc InilhwpvRM " 198
fiulvbcrefore u ji ibe nol (be 1>
iCbotbiUlit
Wta.la4«qilleofTl
liUiiilbT bodj'aCDd
Mr Ionia H ■ reTa
Utin ii di'itb
Lore'i tjc li DOl M tnit
Tbil i> » TH-d
TbiiiiH proud
Til pronlACd Id Ibe rbuitj'
B.t..oebD>.
'iiiiiiiri»i
Au'a to ft ■■on
Boibcrparlr b nor true nark
TtiiI3i,((iTeni iDii-iiflDiiHlci
*hit labour lit to kAT«
la All m J boui ii true
' IM
DUurpiiliDll]lliid (udU
m^ lo?o Hunlieb young
loTe-ib«ih
nbltll.lOOtblDII
ongu«
U; bsltcr ■
>gcilimDi>iirl«biair
W«li>'g
.>uril
iDtbHlll.
"'"' ^°^,'
not K >lte
1 i-^i,iitonfU»
' P-l"
.>ulg,:^l>c^^l•nuk
r.ir 1, my
■Dd TCI, u
glwl*,bntUa
Toalb b niU or iport, ige^ breath
liihort
Yuulb la Dlniblr, l^liUne ■
YuuLh !■ huLud buM,aee Uirak
lud fold "
IV'^uiy ii liuEa v^tlu uddoabtftil
Dov laj »ng 1< tndcd
All ii unla
AU aj bdj'i lOTs ii lort
le tbat 1> Ihy fricDd
MiMsucT li dnd
'ouijt.r.s.l'ul'tliDDl.ta
..xi, nw
Tfataokd^lUg
vere il vilh Ih j bind felt
n«n buy, uul may It be
INFECTION
153
INVISIBLE
laftetloH— To drire infection VA 608
while infection breeds B L ~... 907
with infection should he lire Son 67 1
with base infection meet " 94 11
'gainst my strong infection " 111 10
Inferior— inferior far to his " 80 7
InflrMlty— beauty with infirmities VA 735
ambitious foul Infirmity Ji L 150
Twas not their infirmity P T »... 60
Inflame— when thou wilt Inflame L C ~... 268
Inflaming— by his side his heart-
inflaming brand Son 154 2
Inflict— this night I will inflict Jt L «... 1690
Inflaenee— The beauteous influence F^ „... 862
in secret influence comment Son 15 4
Whose iufluencc is thine ** 78 10
Infbld— infold him like a band VA 225
InfbnMer— This sour informer " ~... 655
Honce, thou suborn'd informer Son 125 13
laflrlnged— with an infringed oath RL »... 1061
Infaslni^ — Infusing them with
dreadful prophecies V A 928
Inhabit— inhabit on a living brow Sim 68 4
Inheane— thoughts in my brain . . . . " 86 3
Inherit— do inherit heaven's graces " 94 5
Inherltoi^inheritont of this excess ** 146 7
Inlqaity— thy sword to guard .... RL 626
What virtue breeds iniquity devours" 872
Justice feeds iniquity *' 1687
self-living were iniquity Stm 62 12
Injarioos— ransacked by ... . theft R L 838
injurious, shifting Time " 930
lujurious distance should not Son 44 2
With Time's injurious hand " 63 2
li^ary — than hate's known injury " 40 12
Without accusing you of injury " 58 8
The injuries that to myself I do " 88 11
dust and injury of age " 108 10
That they elsewhere might dart
their injuries •< 139 12
The injury of many L C ~... 72
I^Jastlee— To chase injustice with
revengeful anns R L ..... 1693
Ink— paper, ink, and pen " 1289
That in black ink Son 65 14
that ink may character " 108 1
Ink would have secm'd more
black L C 54
Innocence — And forth with bashful
innocence doth hie R L 1341
Inordinate— in him scem'd .... " 94
Inslnnate — she humbly doth ... . VA 1012
Instanee-ruo guilty instance gave R L 1511
Instant— w>me special instant spe-
cial blest Son 52 11
Inatead— Instead of love's coy touch R L 669
Instigate — untimely thought did
instigate " 43
Instinct — As if by some instinct Son 50 7
Instmment— some dettpcrate .... R L 1038
as frets upon an instrument " 1140
' Pour instrument,' quoth she " 1464
Insnfllclency — With insufficiency my
heart to sway Son 150 2
Insult— While he insults o'er dull
and speechless tribes " 107 12
Insalter— what ransom the insulter
willeth VA ..... 650
Intnltlnff — under his ... . falchion R L ..... 609
Iwnirreetlon— her sultjects with foul
insurrection R L ...~ 722
Intelligence— gulls him with .... Sm 86 10
Intend — to-morrow he intends VA ..... 687
Intend a aealous pilgrimage Son 27 6
battery to the spheres intend L C ...~ 23
Intending — Intending weariness
with heavy sprite RL ..... 121
Intendment— do her intendments
break VA .... 222
Intent— brake off" his late intent '* 469
with swift intent he goes jR L 46
Collatinus dream of my intent ** ..... 218
blunt the sharp'st intents Son 115 7
Interchange — . . . . each other's seat R L 70
such interchange of state Son 64 9
Interdict— From this session .... P T ..... 9
Interest— And one for interest VA ..... 210
thy interest was not bought J? L ..... 1067
in the interest of thy bed *" »... 1619
My sorrow's interest " ..... 1797
As interest of the dead Son 31 7
hath in this line some interest " 74 3
Interim— Let this sad interim ** 66 9
Interlace — and there the painter in>
terlaces RL ...~ 1390
Intermixed— best, if never .... Son 101 8
Interpret— the eye interprets to the
ear R L 1326
Intermpted— her quiet interrupted " 1170
Intltnled- in that white intituled *' ..... 67
Into — Into your idle over-handled
theme VA ..... 770
Into the quiet closure " ..... 782
cast into eternal sleeping " «... 951
Into the deep dark " 1038
the smoke of it into his face jR L ..... 812
Into the chamber wickedly he
sUlks " ..... 865
there falls into thy boundless flood " 653
Into so bright a day " ..... 1518
that pour'st into my verse Son 38 2
thrusts into his hide " 50 10
into my deeds to pry '* 61 6
into the beauty of thy mind " 69 9
should look into your moan " 71 13
resolved my reason into tears L C 296
Intrude — worm .... the maiden bud R L ..... 948
Inundation— the .... of the eyes L C 290
Innred- Is not . . . . ; return again R L ..... 821
Invasion— vows a league, and now
invasion " „... 287
Inveigh— No man inveigh against " 1264
Invent— want subject to invent Son 38 1
thy poet doth invent ** 79 7
Invention— can my in vent Ion make R L 225
Throng her inventions " 1302
dost give invention light Son 38 8
Which, lal>ouring for invention " 59 3
And keep invention " 76 6
over-goes my blunt invention " 103 7
Lh my invention spent " 105 11
Invised — Whereto his iuvised prop-
erties L C 212
Invisible — That inward beauty and
InviMlble VA 434
on him, Invisible commander " 1004
O unseen shame, invisible dis-
grace RL ..... 827
I
INVITE
154
IS
iBTito— Till now did ne'er inrite
LC
182
iBTited— desire to be Invited
Son 141
7
lHritlB9— Where to the ... . time
u
124
8
luToeate— which rhymers inrocato
u
88
10
iHToeatloB— Roman gods with iu
m
Tocations
RL
• •«••
1831
iHTOked— So oft have I inroked thee Son
78
1
iBward— That inward beaut j and
invisible
VA
•••••
484
Whose inwaid ill
RL
•••••
91
And in his inward mind
u
•••••
185
With inward vice
(4
•••••
1546
vexatiou of his inward soul
il
•••••
1779
Neither in inward worth
don
16
11
thine inward love of heart
u
46
14
grounded inward in my heart
u
62
4
To ki«s the tender inward
<(
128
6
Ireftil— Being ireful, on the lion
VA
• •••«
628
Iron— the iron bit he crusheth
u
••••«
269
enters at an iron gate
RL
• %m —
595
and yet as iron rusty
PP
7
4
la— 0, how quick is love
VA
•••••
38
The steed is stalled up
14
•••«•
39
saith she is immodest
<l
•••••
63
river that is rank
U
•••••
71
StiU is he sullen
((
•••••
75
Her best is better'd
M
•••••
78
^Tis but a kiss I beg
U
•••••
96
sport is not in sight
M
••V*
124
My flesh is soft
to
•••••
142
Love is a spirit all compact
a
•«•••
149
Is love so light, sweet boy
u
•••••
155
Is thine own heart
II
•••••
157
to get it is thy duty
II
••«••
168
StUl is left alive
II
•••••
174
what 'tis to love
M
•••••
202
Within this limit is relief
M
•••■■
235
The time is spent
M
•••••
255
thus my strength is tried
II
•••••
280
breeder that is standing by
II
•••••
282
how he is enraged
u
•••••
817
When it is barr'd
11
•••••
330
An oven that is stopp'd
a
•••••
331
attorney once is mute
II
«■•••
335
that she is so nigh
II
•••••
841
My day's delight is past, my horM
\
is gone
11
••«••
380
And 'tis your (kult
M
•••••
381
Is how to get my palArey
M
•••••
384
Aflfection is a coal
M
•••••
387
Who U so faint
II
•■•••
401
lesson is but plain
M
•»•••
407
'TIS much to borrow
M
•••••
411
is love but to disgrace it
II
•••«•
412
For I have heard it ia
U
•••••
413
The colt that's back'd
II
•••••
419
where a heart is hard
II
•••••
426
ia hush'd before it raineth
U
•••••
458
believing she is dead
M
•••••
467
now is tum'd to day
II
•«•••
481
So is her fkce illumined
14
•••••
486
What hour is this
II
••«•«
495
the plague is banlsh'd
U
•••••
510
What Is ten hundred
It
»••••
519
Is twenty hundred
11
•••••
522
is sour to taste
II
•••••
528
shrieks,— 'tis very late
II
•«•••
531
fea of parting tender'd is
M
• ••••
538
roe that's tired with chasing
U
•••••
561
VA
u
M
U
II
M
II
II
II
II
II
M
la— his choice is fh>ward
yet 'tis plttck'd
She is resolved
is she in the very Usta
All ia imaginary
is her annoy
She's Love, she loves, and yet she
is not loved
know'st not what It is
whate'er la in his way **
is trodden on by many "
The night is spent **
and now 'tis dark **
all is but to rob thee "
What Is thy body "
so fair a hope is slain
Gold that's put to use
The kiss I gave you is bestow'd
tempting tune is blown
The path is smooth
When reason is the bawd
Love to heaven is fled
is tempest alter sun
Love is all truth
The text is old
My face is full of shame
deeply is redoubled
How love is wise
* 'Tis so :' they answer all, ' Tis so
morning is so much o'erwora
it is no gentle chase
'tis a causeless fantasy
is mated with delays
Thy mark is feeble age
her best work is ruin'd
But none is best
it is Adonis' voice
Who is but drunken
Death is not to blame
but is still severe
'TIS not my fault
'Tis he, foul creature
that Adonis is alive
with him is beauty slain
he is not dead
Her voice is stopp'd
several limb is doubled
Whose tongue ia music now **
What face remains alive that's
worth "
'Tis true, 'tis true **
But he is dead **
and that is cold "
this is my spite **
where is no cause **
matter is to fire **
is reft from her by death **
And so 'tis thine; hut know, it is
as good **
And 'tis thy right "
quickly Is convey'd **
As is the morning's silver-melting
dew RL
that which is so singular **
Or why is Collatine "
because it is his own **
For then is Tarquin brought
treasure is the meed proposed
there's no death supposed
670
574
579
695
097
610
615
628
707
717
719
723
757
762
768
771
778
788
792
793
800
804
806
808
832
41
II
II
II
U
u
II
II
II
14
M
M
U
U
851
aicA
•>.M ooo
•..#• o08
•..M 897
M«M 9Uw
941
..... 971
••••a 992
..... 1000
1003
lOOS
.... 1009
.... 1019
M... 1060
1061
.... 1067
1077
.... 1076
.... 1111
1119
1124
ll:{3
1153
1162
.... 1174
118
..«• lie
IIJ
M
IT
160
JOY
It— it merits not reproying San 142 4
Or, if it do, not from those lips *" 142 5
Be it lawful I love thee '* 142 9
that, when it grows " 142 11
Uaght it thus anew "145 8
follow'd it as gentle day ** 145 10
to say it is not so ** 148 6
If it be not, then love " 148 7
How can it? O, how can "148 9
hold it that I call " 151 13
think sometime it saw L C 10
Which on it had " 16
what contents it bears " «... 19
'Tis promised In the charity '* 70
Let it not tell your judgement ** ..... 78
it was to gain my grace *' ~... 79
the web it seem'd to wear " ..... 95
If best were as it was ** ...~ 98
In it put their mind ** ~... 135
' Nor gires it satisfaction ** ~... 162
That we must curb it " 163
and cry "It is thy last " ..... 168
why, 'twas beautiful and hard " ..... 211
what labour is 't to leave " ~... 239
the suffering pangs it bears " 272
Feeling it break " — 275
as it best deceives " 806
vapour vow ; in thee it is P P 8 11
then it is no fault of mine " 8 12
when first it 'gins to bud " 13 3
'Tmaybe,sheJoy'd " 14 9
'T may be, again to make me " 14 10
It was a lording's daughter " 16 1
alas, it was a spite " 16 7
she could not help it " 16 12
ere it be day " 19 17
had not had it then " 19 24
bullet beato it down " 19 80
heard it said full oft " 19 41
here be it said " 19 63
it fell upon a day " 21 1
to hear it was great pity " 21 12
in them it were a wonder P T ...~ 32
That it cried, How true " 45
Whereupon it made " ..... 49
'Twas not their Infirmity " ~... 60
It was married chastity " .... 61
Beauty brag, but 'tis not she " 63
Italy— in the fields of fruitful lUly R L ..... 107
Itself— Beauty within itself VA .... 130
Beauty itself doth of Itself R L .... 29
Wounding itself to death ",.... 466
That Jealousy itself " 1516
fountain clears itself again " 1707
Who heaven itself for ornament
doth use Son 21 8
Or state itvelf confounded " 64 10
lace Itself with his society " 67 4
Without all ornament, itself and
true " 68 10
to itself it only live and die " 94 10
thought Itself so blessed never "119 6
The sun Itself sees not " 148 12
Reason in itself confounded P T 41
Ivory— Of this ivory pale VA 230
ivory in an alabaster band " 863
Her breasts, like Ivory globes Jl L .... 407
to batter such an ivory wall " 464
Like Ivory conduits " 1234
Ivy— A belt of straw and ivy buds P P 20 18
Jack— Do I envy those Jacks Son 128 5
Since saucy Jacks so happy are " 128 13
Jade— How like a Jade he stood VA .... 891
Till, like a jade B L .... 707
thus shall excuse my Jade Som 51 12
Jar — he comes in every Jar VA .... 100
Javelin— With Javelin's point " 616
Jaw— from the fierce tiger's Jaws Son 19 3
Jealons— Jealous of catching VA 821
Let not the Jealous day J2 L .... 800
question with my Jealous thought Son 57 9
Jealousy— Jealousy, that sour un-
welcome guest VA .... 448
Love reigns, disturbing Jealousy " .... 649
dissentlous Jealousy " 657
waited on with Jealousy " 1137
That Jealousy itself J2 L 1516
tenour of thy Jealousy Son 61 8
Jeering^- As silly-Jeering Idiots are
with kings
^C mj •••••
1812
Jennet— A breeding Jennet
VA
260
Jest— dally, smile, and Jest
*C Jj .....
106
Death, I did but Jest
997
But smile and jest
PP 4
12
she Joy'd to Jest
" 14
9
Jesting— and all were Jestings
" 7
12
Jet— and of beaded Jet
L C
87
Jewel— Torches are made to light,
Jewels to wear VA .... 163
Jewel In the flood " .... 824
Of that rich Jewel B L .... 34
of that dear Jewel I have lost " .... 1191
a Jewel hung In ghastly night Son 27 11
to whom my Jewels trifles are " 48 5
Or captain Jewels In the carcanet " 52 8
Shall Time's best jewel " 65 10
The basest jewel " 96 6
fairest and most precious jewel " 131 4
Of this false Jewel L C 154
Jig— All my merry jigs P P 18 9
Jocnnd— their leader's jocund show JR L 296
Join— join they all together VA 971
They Join and shoot their foam jR L 1442
Join with the spite of fortune Son 90 3
Joined— how often hath she Joined P P 1 7
Joint— ray joints did tremble V A .... 642
her Joints forget to bow " 1061
my frail joints shake RL .... 227
sets every joint a-shaking " 452
Jointed— Round-hoof 'd, short-joint-
ed, fetlocks shag VA .... 295
Jointly— All jointly listening jR L .... 1410
Then jointly to the ground " .... 1S40
Jollity— needy nothing trimm'd in
jollity Sm 66 8
Jot— be any Jot dlmlnish'd VA 417
Journey — a journey in my head Son 11 3
How heavy do I journey " 50 1
Jove — '0 Jove,' quoth she VA .... 1015
by high almighty Jove R L 568
Thine eye Jove's lightning seems P P 5 11
• O Jove,' quoth she " 6 14
Thou for whom Jove would sw^ir " 17 15
And deny himself for Jove " 17 17
Joy— on presented joy VA 4(tt
and death was lively Joy " .... 498
and to lack her Joy " .... 600
JOY
161
KILLED
J«f— Joy bids her r^oice VA ^... 977
Her Joy with heaved-up hand jB L »... Ill
a froth of fleeting Joy *' «... 212
Muit aell her Joy ** .... 385
Joy breeds months of pain ** ~... 600
thy Joy to grief •* 889
that tune their memory's Joy " ~... 1107
Trojan mothers sharing Joy " 1431
their light Joy seemed to appear ** »... 1434
Joy delights in Joy Sum % 2
Bat here's the Joy " 42 13
and my Joy behind *' 50 14
• Joy aboye the rest " 91 6
Before, a Joy proposed " 129 12
Were kisses all the Joys in bed P P 19 47
i^Unlook'd-for Joy in Uiat I hon-
our most Son 25 4
This told I Joy ; but then no longer
glad " 45 13
JiyM— she Joy'd to Jest PP 14 9
Jorlcss— While with a Joyless smile R L 1711
Jrige— Being Judge in love VA 220
My bloody Judge forbade R L ~... 1648
And when the Judge is robb'd " 1652
JidfeMeni— ^o I my .... pluck Son 14 1
8o, till the Judgement '« 55 13
on better Judgement making " 87 12
Tet then my Judgement "115 3
in my Judgement's place " 131 12
the judgement of my heart *' 137 8
where is my Judgement fled *' 148 3
Let it not tell your Judgement L C 73
from Judgement stand aloof " ..... 166
Jslefr— lean and lacking juice VA 136
isMp— To Jump up higher seem'd jB L 1414
can Jump both sea and land Son 44 7
JsM— in three hot Junes burn'd "104 7
isno— Juno but an Ethiope were PP 11 16
iist— Now was she Just before him VA 349
fiiUl folds Just in his way " 879
when it seems most just " 1156
to find a stranger Just .R L ..... 159
a tthow so seeming Just " 1514
Jost to the time Son 109 7
Aod on just proof " 117 10
And the Just pleasure lost " 121 3
and see Just cause of hate " 150 10
Jsstise— Justice is feasting R L ..... 906
might plead for justice there ** ..... 1649
For sparing Justice feeds iniquity " 1687
J«tify— Ocall me not to justify the
vrong Son 139 1
isrtlr— And justly thus controls R L 189
One Justly weeps " ..... 1235
Kcci— edge on his keen appetite R L 9
Pluck the keen teeth Son 19 3
to mske our appetites more keen "118 1
to make our wits more keen LC 161
Kcqh-Love keeps his revels VA 123
kevp his loathsome cabin " 637
keep with thy hounds " 678
(trthslelviog conies keep " „... 687
Atll It keep in quiet " 1149
he should keep unknown R L ..... 34
ntd keep themselves enclosed " ..... 378
Keep still possession " 803
kwp them from thy aid " ~... 912
"Tu keep thy sharp woes waking " 1136
11
Keep— keep him firom heart-easing
words R L 1782
private widow well may keep Son 9 7
yourself keeps yourself still " 16 13
which I will keep so chary " 22 11
keep my drooping eyelids " 27 7
with my desire keep pace " 51 9
that keeps you as my chest " 52 9
thy image should keep open " 61 1
that keeps mine eye awake " 61 10
And keep invention " 76 6
To keep an adjunct " 122 13
She keeps thee to this purpose " 126 7
but not still keep, her treasure " 126 10
Whoe'er keeps me " 133 11
that vow'd chaste life to keep " 154 3
Keep the obsequy so strict P T ~... 12
Keep'st— with tears thou keep'st me
blind Son 148 13
Keeping— Cave-keeping evils that
obscurely sleep RL ~... 1250
Ken— to drown in km of shore " 1114
Kenmeird— kenncll'd in a brake VA 913
Kept— twenty locks kept fast " 575
by a painted cloth be kept in awe^R Z> ..... 245
dear love bo kept unspotted " ..... 821
which thy chaste bee kept " ..... 840
when time is kept with tears " 1127
both were kept for heaven " «... 1166
And kept unused Son 9 12
till now never kept seat in one " 105 14
his prescriptions are not kept " 147 6
Kept hearts in liveries L C 105
But kept cold difltance " ..... 237
that kept my rest away PP 14 2
Key— as the rich, whose blessed key Son 52 1
Key • cold — in key - cold Lucrece'
bleeding stream R L 1774
Kill— For looks kill love VA 464
thou didst kill me: kill me once
again " ..... 499
butcher, bent to kill " ..... 618
doth cry •Kill, kill! " 652
the other kills thee quickly " 990
murder wakes to stain and kill R h 168
doth confound and kill " 250
this blessed league to kill " 383
To kill thine honour " ..... 516
all that brood to kill " ...» 627
Or kills his life " ...» 875
seek every hour to kill " «... 998
Kill both thyself and her " 1036
'To kill myself,' quoth she " ...» 1156
will kill myself, thy foe " «... 1196
act of lust, and so did kill " 1636
Kill me with spites Sm 40 14
But, ah, thought kills mo " 44 9
To-morrow see again and do not
kill " 56 7
and wretched minutes kill "126 8
no fair beseechers kill " 136 13
Kill me outright with looks " 139 14
or kill the gallant knight PP 16 6
KllI'd— and hath kill'd him so VA »... 1110
I should have kill'd him " ...» 1118
by her side lay kill'd " ...» 1165
between them both it should be
kill'd R L .... 74
kill'd my son or sire " .... 232
\
KILL»D
162
KNIFE
Klir4— Uke to a new-kUl'd blzd It L .... 457
tiwi the flower hath kill'd ** ~... 1255
kUrd with deadly cares " 1593
*tis mine that ihe hath kiU'd ** 1803
ere it be seir-kill'd Son B 4
klird too soon bj death's sharp
sUng PP 10 4
KlUiUff— a cockatrice* dead-kilUng
eye It L 640
O comfort-kUllng Night " .... 764
Kind— I felt a kind of fear VA 998
overthrow of mortal kind " 1018
stern sad tunes, to change their
kinds It L .... 1147
the impression of strange kinds " 1242
a kind of heavy fear " 1435
but in a kind of praise Son 95 7
besiege all kinds of blood " 109 10
found a kind of meetnen "118 7
All kind of arguments L C 121
iTiiu^-Beating his kind embrace-
ments VA ~... 312
deceitful, so compact, so kind JR L 1423
presence is, gracious and kind Son tO 11
although their eyes were kind " 69 11
Kind is my love to-day, to-morrow
kind " 105 5
Fair, kind, and true " 105 9
Fair, kind, and true " XWi 10
Fair, kind, and true " 10^ 13
covetous and he is kind " 134 6
kiss me, be kind *' 148 12
is nor true nor kind LC 186
Their kind acceptance " 207
fair nature is both kind and tame " 311
Kinder— Grew kinder, and his fury VA 318
Kind-hearted— at least .... prove Son 10 12
Kindle-Sbe seeks to kindle VA .... 606
Kindled— Hid kindled duty kindled
her mistrust R L 1352
Thy eye kindled the fire " 1475
Kindling— his love-kindling fire
did quickly steep Son 153 3
Kindly— She took me kindly by the
hand R L 253
Kindness — with public kindness
honour me Son 36 11
deep oaths of thy deep kindness " 152 9
Kindred— filial fear, law, . . . ., fame L C 270
King— King of graves and grave
for kings VA 995
Who like a king " 1043
That kings might be espoused R L .... 20
But king nor peer " 21
this proud issue of a king " 37
what thou art, a god, a king " 601
For kings, like gods " 602
when once thou art a king " 606
Then kings' misdeeds " 609
'a sea, a sovereign king " 652
So shall these slaves be king " .... 659
Or kings be breakers " 852
to calm contending kings " 939
coming from a king " 1002
grooms are sightless night, kings
glorious day " 1013
As silly-jeering idiots are with kings " 1812
to change my state with kings Son 29 14
beauties whereof now he is king ** 63 6
KiBg— In sleep a king, bat waking
no such matter Son 87 14
and change decrees of kings " 115 6
King Pandlon he is dead PP 21 23
Pity but he were a king ** 21 42
Save the eagle, feather'd king P T 11
Klagdom— on the .... of the shore Son 64 6
kingdoms of hearts shouldst owe " 70 14
Kingly— most kingly drinks it up " 114 10
Klnsnan — But as he is my kinsman R L .... 237
Thy kinsmen hang their heads ** 021
KIrtle— A cap of flowers and a . . . . P P 20 11
Kits— I'll smother thee with kisses V A .... 18
Ten kisses short as one ** .... 22
she murders with a kiss ** 64
And one sweet kiss ** .... t>4
'Tis but a kiss I beg *' ..... 96
The kiss shall be thine own " .... 117
for one poor kiss " «... 207
Give me one kiss " 209
A thousand kisses " .... 517
twenty hundred kisses " .... 622
you shall have a kiss " .... 536
to rob thee of a kiss " .... 723
Lest she should steal a kiss " .... 72C
The kiss I gave you " .... 771
by a kiss thought to persuade ** . 1114
the pillow of a lawful kiss R L 887
Between each kiss PP 7 8
Were kisses all the Joys " 19 47
Kiss — Art thou ashamed to kiss VA 121
to kiss his shadow " 162
For men will kiss " .... 216
He kisses her " .... 479
he win kiss her still " 480
they kiss each other " .... 505
some kiss her face " .... 872
ever strive t« kiss you " .... 1082
He thought to kiss blm *' 1110
Wherein I will not kiss " .... 1188
to kiss the turrets bowed R L .... 1372
To kiss the tender inward Son 128 6
me thy lips to kiss "128 14
kiss mo, be kind *' 143 12
To kiss and clip me P P 11 14
Kissed— Even so she kiss'd VA 69
And kiss'd the fatal knife R L 1843
And often kiss'd L C .... 61
Kissing— And kissing speaks VA .... 47
with continual kissing " 606
With kissing him " 1118
Threatening cloud-kissing Ilion R L ^... 1370
Kissing with golden face Son 83 3
Knee — And with his knee R L .... 359
their knees they bow '* .... 1S46
Kneel — down she kneels VA 850
But kneel with rao RL 1830
Knell— rings out the doleful knell " .... 1495
bell rings doleful knell PP 18 28
Knew— as if she knew his mind VA 308
her thirsty lips well knew " .... 643
no bearing yoke they knew R L 409
my judgement knew no reason Son 115 3
that the ruflle knew L C .... 68
And knew the patterns " .... 170
Knew vows were ever brokers " .... 173
Knife — for the self-same purpose
seek a knife RL .... 1047
Win fix a sharp knife *' 1138
KNIFE
163
LACKING
latfe— rn bequeath unto the knife H L ~... 1 184
Hine honour be the kDife'8 *' 1201
And with my knife tcratch out " .... 1469
A harmful knife " ..... 1724
The murderous knife " 1735
Brutus, who pluck'd the knife " 1807
aod by thi» bloody knife " 1840
And ki»s*d the fatal knife *' 184:{
confounding age's cruel knife Son 6:< 10
conquest of a wretch's knife " 74 11
The haidest knife ill used " 95 14
his icy the and crooked knife " 100 14
Esifht— Knights by their oaths R L 1694
ladies dead, and lovely knights Son 106 4
One knight loyes both PP 8 14
or km the gallant knight " 16 6
the trusty knight was wounded " 16 11
Iiighthood— O shame to R L 197
fiy knighthood, gentry ** .569
As bound in k nigh Ihoud " 1697
Isit- With heavy eye, knit bK>w " 709
Knit poisonous clouds ** 777
DT duty strongly knit Son 26 2
Kiock— Knocks at my heart VA 659
Kiot — neither sting, knot, nor con-
fine L C 265
Emw— secrets Shalt thou know VA 16
nor know not what we mean ** 126
they know not whether " ..... 304
'I know not love,' quoth he, 'nor
will not know it " 409
know myself, seek not to know ** 525
For know, my heart " 779
For now she knows " 88.')
she knows not whither ** 904
Which knows no pity " 1000
vhy then I know •' 1109
bat know, it is as good " ..... 1181
of this rakh alarm to know R L 473
I know what thorns " 492
I know repentant tears " 502
that knows no gentle right " 545
that know not how " 810
bot he that gives them knows " 8:]3
thou shalt not know " ia)8
But thou Shalt know " 1067
Dor law, nor limit knows " 1120
That knows not parching heat " 1145
Know, gentle wench " 1273
to know your heavincfls " 128:{
Collatine may know " 1312
prepares to let them know " 1607
dear my love, you know Son 13 13
Though yet, heaven knows "17 8
They draw but what they see,
know not the heart " 24 14
And yet, love knows " 40 11
tbewretch did know " 50 7
oomotion shall I know " 51 8
every blessed shape we know " 53 12
0, know, sweet love " 76 9
Thou by thy dial's shady stealth
mayitknow " 77 7
u>d yet I know it not " 92 14
I cannot know thy change " 93 6
To know my shames " 112 6
■ine eye well knows " 114 11
^hich is not mix'd with seconds,
knows no art " 125 11
ii
({
It
t«
ti
LC
PP
shall
t(
u
Know— All this the world well
knows, yet none knows well Son
yet well I know "
And will, thy soul knows "
They know what beauty is •*
Which my heart knows "
though I know she Hm
Although she knows
ah, my love well knows
from their physicians know
this shall I ne'er know
now I know thy mind
Love is too young to know
Yet who knows not
by age, desires to know
though I know she lies
Although I know my years
The truth I shall not know
The cock that treads them
not know
These are certain signs to know "
Knowing— As .... Tarquin's lust R L
Knowing a better spirit Son
thy own worth then not knowing "
knowing thy will
Knowing thy heart torments me
Knowledge — my knowledge I derive
Within the knowledge of mine
own desert
Thou art as fair in knowledge
If knowledge be the mark
Known— if the fact be known
than hate's known injury
known to us poor swains
Know'st— thou .... not what it is
because thou know'st I love her
thou know'st thy estimate
For well thou know'st to my dear
doting heart
thou know'st \ am forsworn
129
130
136
137
137
138
138
139
140
144
149
151
151
18
9
8
3
10
2
6
9
8
13
18
1
2
{(
{(
ti
t(
PP
RL
Son
PP
VA
Son
tt
it
ti
1
2
1
6
2
13
19
40
21
57
1854
80
2
87
9
89
7
132
2
14
9
49
10
82
5
5
7
239
40
12
18
45
«•••«
615
42
87
131
152
6
2
8
1
Labour— each passion labours so VA 969
doth labour to expel " 976
labour hence to heave thee R L ...~ 686
With too much labour " 1099
Yet save that labour " 1290
what labour is 't to leave L C 2.'J9
Labonr'd— the painter la bour'd with
his skill R L ..... 1506
Labouring— you see the .... pioner " 1380
Which, labouring for invention Son 59 8
And labouring in moe pleasures L C 139
Labyrinth— Are like a labyrinth VA 684
Lare— And lace itself with his society Son 67 4
Lack— he did not lack VA 299
and to lack her Joy *• 600
but lack tongues to praise .Sen 106 14
not born fair, no beauty lack " 127 11
they foul that thy complexion lack " 1.32 14
l/cst the requiem lack his right P T 16
Lack— I sigh the lack of many a
thing Son 90 8
Lack'd— being lack'd, to hope " 52 14
Then lack'd I matter " 86 14
Love lack'd a dwelling L C ...~ 82
Lackey — Thou ceaseless lackey to
eternity R L 97
Lacking— lean, and lacking juice VA 136
Love-lacking vestals " 752
LACKING
164
LAUGH'D
Lacklnsr— Which I by lacking Son 31 2
Lad— Did court the lad PP i 3
Ladea— one with treasure laden VA 1022
Ladjr— No, lady, no ; my heart " 783
their dear govemras and lady Ilea B L 44<3
a sad look to her lady's sorrow " ...~ 1221
But, lady, if your maid may be *' 1282
should right poor ladles* harms " 1694
In praise of ladies dead Son 106 4
Ah, that I had my lady P P 11 13
learned man hath got the lady gay " 16 15
All my lady's love is lost " 18 10
By ringing in thy lady's ear " 19 28
Unless thy lady prove unjust " 19 83
Laid— when sadly she had laid It L 1212
but laid no words to gage " 1351
laid great bases for eternity Son 125 3
On purpose laid to make the taker
mad " 1?9 8
Cupid laid by his brand *' 153 1
Laid by his side " 154 2
And down I laid L C 4
Lain— Or Iain in ambush R L 233
Lagging— As lagging fowls before
the northern blast " ~... 1335
Lamb— never fright the silly lamb VA ...» 1098
The silly lambs : pure thoughts JR L 167
the poor lamb cries " 677
She like a wearied lamb " 737
where he the lamb may get *' 878
How many lambs might the stern
wolf betray iSbn 96 9
If like a lamb he could his looks
translate " 96 10
Lame — The poor, lame, blind, halt,
creep, cry out for tliee R L ...« 902
So I, made lame by fortune's dear-
est spite San 87 8
So then I am not laine " 37 9
Youth is nimble, age is lame P P 12 6
Lameness — Speak of my lameness Son 89 3
Lament — she finds forlorn, she doth
lament RL 1500
And my laments would be " 1616
Lamentable — A thousand lament-
able objects " 1373
Lamentation — relenting dew of la-
mentations " 1829
Lamenting — lamenting Philomel
had ended '* . 1079
with my lamenting tongue " ...» 1465
Lamp — Were never four such lamps VA 489
the lamp that burns " 755
each lamp and shining star " ..... 861
Where, lo, two lamps, burnt out, in
darkness lies " 1128
lianee — hath he hung his lance " »... 103
Land — ere rich at home he lands R L 336
the heart of all her land " ..... 439
can jump both sea and land Son 44 7
Of lands and mansions L C ...~ i:i8
Landlord- Than the true gouty
landlord " 140
Langnage — with lustful language VA 47
Langnish^d— To ine that langulsh'd
for her sake Son 145 3
Langalsheth— Even so she .... VA 603
Langnlshment — weeps at thy .... RL 1130
heartstrings to true languisbment " ..... 1141
M
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PP
Son
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PP
VA
tt
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RL
u
u
u
II
II
Son
II
LC
Laak— lank and lean diacolour'd
cheek B L
Lap— Or from their proud lap Son
Lapp'd— All thy friends are lapp'd
in lead PP
Large— To leap large lengths of land Son
of this large privilege **
whose will is large and spacious
to make thy large * Will' more
Why so large cost, having so short
Largeneaa— What largeness thinks
in Paradise was sawn L C
Largess — The bounteous largeas
given thee to give iSbi»
Lark— Lo, here the gentle lark VA
Like to the lark at break of day Son
were tuned like the lark
LaaeiTloiis — . . . . grace, in whom
Making lascivious comments
Lata — Farewell, sweet lass
Last— had ta'en his last leave
And yields at last
picks them all at last
At last she thus begins
At last she calls to mind
At last she sees
At last she smilingly
At last he takes her
At last it rains
before these last so bad
do not leave mo last
and cry, ' It is thy last
Last — wish the feast might ever last VA
And as they last **
Thy violent vanities can neverlast££
cease thou thy course and last no
longer "
She bade love last P P
Lasting— monuments of .... moans R L
else lasting shame
Life's lasting date
character'd with lasting memory Son
Latch— Which with a yielding .,,, RL
pluck'd up the latch "
or shape, which it doth latch
Late— brake off his lat« intent
shrieks, — 'tis very late
gazer late did wonder
that was but late forlorn
wherein they late excell'd "
which late this mutiny restrains jR L
Comes all too late "
and too late hath spili'd *'
Lucrece' soul that late complained "
where late the sweet birds sang Son
Which late her noble suit L C
too late she will repent P P
Late-embarked— a .... friend VA
Late-8ack*d— Who, like a late-sack'd
island R L
Lattice — through .... of sear'd age L C
Land— against long-living laud R L
plantest scandal and dlsplacest
laud **
Langh — That laughs and weeps VA
Nor laugh with his companions R L
To make the weeper laugh, the
laugher weep L C
Laogh'd— love he laugh'd to scorn VA
.... 706
98 8
21
44
95
135
135
146
24
10
18
5
12
5
• ••■• cfX
4 6
...» oOv
29 11
15
40
95
18
6
18
6
49
M.M o66
..... 576
..... 1803
...M 196o
.... 1501
..... 1567
1597
...» 1790
67 14
90
II
<i
Son
VA
II
II
9
168
447
507
894
..... 1765
7 16
u... 1629
~... 1729
122 2
..... 389
~... 358
113 6
« • • •• ^K# 9
..... 581
~... 748
~... 1026
~... IWl
426
~... 1686
-... 1801
..... 1839
73 4
— 234
19 16
818
1740
14
622
.... 414
.... 1066
.... 124
IT
160
JOY
It— it merits not reproving Son 142 4
Or, if it do, not from those lips " 142 5
Be it lawful I love thee ** 142 9
that, when it grows " 142 11
Uught it thus anew ** 145 8
foUow'd it as gentle day " 145 10
to say it is not so *' 148 6
If it be not, then love " 148 7
How can it? O, how can *' 148 9
hold it that I call *' 151 13
think sometime it saw L C ...~ 10
Which on it had " «... 16
what contents it bears " ~... 19
"lis promised in the charity " 70
Let it not tell your Judgement ** «... 73
it was to gain my grace " «... 79
the web it seem'd to wear " «... 95
If best were as it was ** ...« 98
in it put their mind *' 135
'Nor gives it satisfaction " «... 162
That we must curb it " 163
andcry "Itisthy last " 168
why, 'twas beautiful and hard " 211
what labour is 't to leave " 239
the suffering pangs it bears ** «... 272
Feeling it break " «... 275
as it best deceives *' 806
vapour vow ; in thee it is P P 8 11
then it is no fault of mine " 8 12
when first it 'gins to bud " 13 3
'T may be, she Joy'd " 14 9
*T may be, again to make me " 14 10
It was a lording's daughter " 16 1
alas, it was a spite " 16 7
she could not help it ** 16 12
ere it be day " 19 17
had not had it then " 19 24
bullet beaU it down ** 19 80
heard it said full oft " 19 41
here be it said " 19 63
it fell upon a day " 21 1
to hear it was great pity " 21 12
in them it were a wonder P T ...« 32
That it cried, How true " ...« 45
Whereupon it made " «... 49
'Twas not their infirmity " «... 60
It was married chastity " «... 61
Beauty brag, but 'tis not she " «... .63
Italy— in the fields of fruitful lUly R L ...« 107
Itself— Beauty within itself VA 130
Beauty itself doth of it.self R L ...^ 29
Wounding itself to death ". 466
That Jealousy itself " 1516
fountain clears itself again " 1707
Who heaven itself for ornament
doth use Son 21 8
Or state itself confounded " 64 10
lace itself with hw society " 67 4
Without all ornament, itself and
true " 68 10
to itself it only live and die " 94 10
thought itself so blessed never "119 6
The sun itself sees not " 148 12
Beason in itself confounded P 7 41
Ivory— Of this ivory pale VA 230
ivory in an alaliustcr band " 363
Her breasts, like ivory Rloi)e8 R L 407
to batter such an ivory wall " 464
Like ivory conduits " 1234
t(
VA
RL
VA
u
Jack— Do I envy those Jacks
Since saucy Jacks so happy are
Jade— How like a Jade he stood
Till, like a Jade
thus shall excuse my Jade
Jar — he comes in every Jar
Javelin— With Javelin's point
Jaw— from the fierce tiger's Jaws
Jealona— Jealous of catching
Let not the Jealous day
question with my Jealous thought Sim
JealoBsy — Jealousy, that sour an-
welcome guest VA
Love reigns, disturbing Jealoosy
dissentious Jealousy
waited on with Jealousy "
That Jealousy itself R L
tenour of thy Jealousy Son
Jeering^- As sUly-Jcering idiots are
Son
VA
RL
u
M
Ivy—A belt of straw and ivy buds PP 2fi 18
128 5
128 13
...« 891
...« 707
51 12
100
M... olo
19 3
•••■• 821
57 9
•• ••• o49
«... 657
«... 1187
...« 1516
61 8
— 1812
260
— 106
4 12
14 9
7 12
MM. Ol
...« 168
«... 824
...« 34
— 1191
27 11
48 5
63 8
65 10
96 6
181 4
.M.« lOv
18 9
— 296
«... 971
1442
90 3
7 7
«.M 642
«... 1061
— . 227
«... 432
— 295
«... 1410
1816
66 8
417
27 3
50 1
«... 1015
«... ooo
RL
VA
RL
•4
PP
LC
VA
u
RL
It
Sim
u
u
u
u
u
with kings
Jennet— A breeding Jennet
Jest— dally, smile, and Jest
Death, I did but Jest
But smile and Jest
she Joy'd to Jest
Jeatlag— and all were Jostings
Jet— and of beaded Jet
Jewel— Torches are made to light,
Jewels to wear
Jewel in the flood
Of that rich Jewel
of that dear Jewel I have lost
a Jewel hung In ghastly night
to whom my Jewels trifles are
Or captain Jewels in the carcanet
Shall Time's best Jewel
The basest Jewel
fairest and most precious Jewel
Of this false Jewel L C
Jig— All my merry Jigs P P
Jocund— their leader's Jocund show R L
Join— Join they all together VA
They Join and shoot their foam R L
Join with the spite of fortune Son
Joined — how often hath she Joined P P
Joint— my Joints did tremble VA
her Joints forget to bow •*
my frail Joints shake R L
sets every Joint a-shaking **
Jointed— Ruund-lioof'd, short-Joint-
ed, fetlocks shag VA
Jointly— All Jointly listeoing R L
Then jointly to the gn»und **
Jollity— needy nothing trimm'd in
Jollity Son
Jot— be any Jot diminish'd VA
Jonmey- a Journey in my head Son
How heavy do I journey **
Jove— 'O Jove,' quoth she VA
by high almighty Jove R L
Thine eye Jove's lightning seems P P
• O Jove,' quoth she
Thou for whom Jove would swear
And deny himself for Jove
Joy — on presented joy V A
and death was lively Joy
and to lack her Joy
u
u
«(
II
u
5
6
17
17
11
14
15
17
405
498
600
LEAVE
166
LEST
Leare — leave exceeds commission VA 568
tby sour leisure gave sweet leave Son 89 10
and give him leave to go " 51 14
£eaw— leave me here alone VA 882
And leave this idle theme " 422
' Where did I leave " -... 715
Leave me, and then the story " 716
Leaves Love upon her back " 814
Bid them leave quaking " ~... 8d9
wolf would leave his prey " ~... 1097
Tarquin leaves the Roman host Jt L 3
in venturing ill we leave to be " 148
for thine own sake leave me " »... 583
And leaves it to be master'd ** 863
leave thy peeping " ~... 1089
And leave the faltering " 1768
audit canst thou leave Son 4 12
Will sourly leave her " 41 8
To leave |KX)r me " 49 13
I leave my love alone " 66 14
which thou must leave ere long " 73 14
If thou wilt leave me •* 90 9
leaves out difference *' 105 8
To leave for nothing "109 12
Who leaves unsway'd ** 141 11
what labour is't lo'lcave L C 239
To leave the battery " ~... 277
and he takes and leaves " ~... 305
To leave the master loveless P /* 16 6
Leaving— Leaving his spoil perplox'di?Zf 733
Leaving thee living in posterity Son 6 12
Leaving no posterity P T 59
Lecher— The lechers in their deed R L 1637
a lover, or a lecher whether?^ P P 1 17
Lecture — read lectures of such
shame R L ~... 618
Led— desire thus madly led " 300
Leeae- Leese but their show Son 5 14
Left-still U left alive VA ~... 174
and left Adonis there " 322
the very smell were left me " «... 441
Left their round turrets R L 441
the load of lust he left l)ehind " 734
no perfection of my summer left " 837
Was left unseen, sava to the eye
of mind " 1426
and, as it left the place " 1735
summer's distillation left Son 5 9
no form of thee ha-st left behind ** 9 6
Art left the prey of every vulgar
thief " 48 8
Since I left you mine eye is in my
mind " 113 1
Hath left me, and I desperate " 147 7
and left her all alone PP 9 14
2</'/ — seize love upon thy left VA «... 158
Leftist— For why thou left'st me
nothing PP 10 8
And yet thou left'st me more *• 10 9
Leg— straight legs and passing strong r^ 297
Stands on his hinder legs " 698
his weary legs doth scratch " 705
a foot, a face, a leg, a head R L 1427
Legacy— What legacy shall I bequeath " 1192
thy beauty's legacy Son 4 2
Legion — Whicli many legions of
truoheart3 " 154 6
LelBore— pay them at thy leisure VA 518
Debate where leisure serves R L .... 1019
Lelanre— thy sour leisure gave sweet
leave Sm 89 10
I must attend time's leisure " 44 12
bound to stay your leisure ** 58 4
have no leisure taken ** 120 7
Or any of my leisures L C ~... 193
LelNorely— but do it leisurely R L ..... 1349
Lend— desire doth lend her force VA -... 29
Her arms do lend his neck ** ..... 539
to lend the world his light " ..... 756
That lends embracementa " ..... 790
May lend thee light, as thou dost
lend " ..... 864
tears did lend and borrow ** ..... 961
star did lend his light R L 164
burn out thy light, and lend it not " ..... 190
that to bad debtors lends " ..... 964
Lends light to all fair eyes " .... 1083
no god to lend her those ** ..... 1461
She lends them words " ..... 1498
that thou Shalt lend me " ..... 1685
gives nothing, but doth lend Son 4 3
she lends to those are free "44
lends but weak relief '* 34 11
can every shadow lend " 53 4
He lends thee virtue ** 79 9
What strained touches rhetoric
can lend " 82 10
lends not some small glory " 84 6
to lend base subjects light " 100 4
Lest sorrow lend roe words " 140 3
anon their gaxea lend L C 26
Lendeth — sorrow to my sorrow ....jR Zr — .. 1676
Lending — Lending him wit " „... 964
Lending soft audience to my sweet
design L C ~... 278
Length— through the .... of times R L 718
At length address'd " 1606
To leap large lengths Son 44 10
and luugth thyself to-morrow PP 15 18
Her feeble force will yield at length " 19 21
Lent— to his melting buttock lent V A «... 815
If love have lent you " ..... 775
wealth the heavens had him lent R L 17
For it was lent thee " 626
glance that sly Ulysses lent •* „... 1399
to Phrygian shepherds lent " ..... 1502
their |>a8slons likewise lent me LC 199
Lena- they have but less R L 137
cannot make it less " ..... 1285
men of less truth than tongue Son 17 10
less false in rolling "20 5
are loved of more and less " 96 3
I love not less, though less the
show appear " 102 2
summer is less pleasant " 102 9
Made more or less " 123 12
And so much less of shame L C 188
Lefwer— more rage and lesser pity R L «... 468
The lesser thing should not the
greater hide " 663
lesser noise than shallow fords " 1329
'tis the lesser sin Son 114 13
Lemon— the lesson is but plain VA 407
and find the lesson true Son 118 18
Lent— lest thy hard heart VA ..... 875
Lest Jealousy, that sour " 449
Lest she should steal a kiss " 726
Lest the deceiving harmony " «... 781
KILL'D
162
KNIFE
Kurd— Like to a new-kill'd biid JR L 457
that the flower hath kill'd " ~... 1255
kiird with deadly cares ** — 1593
'tis mine that ihe hath kUl'd " ~... 1803
ere it be self-kill'd Son 6 4
killed too soon by death's sharp
sUng PP 10 4
Killing— a cockatrice* dead-killing
eye R L 640
O comfort-killing Night " .... 764
Kind— I felt a kind of fear VA 998
overthrow of mortal kind " ...» 1018
stern sad tunes, to change their
kinds JR L 1147
the impression of strange kinds *' ...» 1242
a kind of heavy fear " 1435
but in a kind of praise Son 95 7
besiege all kinds of blood " 109 10
found a kind of meetncss "118 7
All kind of arguments L C ~... 121
jr<nd— Beating his kind embrace-
ments VA ..... 812
deceitful, so compact, so kind JR L 1423
presence is, gracious and kind Son 10 11
although their eyes were kind " 69 11
Kind is my love to-day, to-morrow
kind " 105 5
Fair, kind, and true " 105 9
Fair, kind, and true " ia5 10
Fair, kind, and true " la^ 13
covetous and he is kind " 131 6
kiss me, be kind " 143 12
is nor true nor kind L C — 18A
Their kind accepUnce " 207
fair nature is both kind and tame " 311
Kinder— Grew kinder, and his fury K^ 318
Kind-hearted — at least .... prove Son 10 12
Kindle— She seeks to kindle VA .... 60i>
Kiadled— Hid kindled duty kindled
her mistrust JR L \Va
Thy eye kindled the fire "* 1475
Kindling— his love-kindling fire
did quickly steep Son 153 3
Kindly— She took me kindly by the
hand R L »... 253
Klndnem — with public kindness
honour me San 36 11
deep oaths of thy deep kindness " 152 9
Kindred— filial fear, law, , fame L C .... 270
King — King of graves and grave
for kings VA 995
Who like a king " 1043
That kings might be espoused R L ..... 20
But king nor peer " 21
this proud issue of a king " ...» 37
what thou art, a god, a king *' GOl
For kings, like gods " 602
when once thou art a king " 606
Then kings' misdeeds " 609
' a sea, a sovereign king " 652
So shall these slaves bo king " ...» 659
Or kings be breakers '• 852
to calm contending kings " 939
coming from a king " 1002
grooms are sightless night, kings
glorious day " 1013
As silly-jeering idiots are with kings" »... 1812
to change my state with kings Son 29 14
beauties whereof now he is king " 63 6
87
115
21
21
64
70
114
i(
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U
«
M
4(
14
6
23
42
11
6
14
10
— 237
...» 521
20 11
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••••• 04
••••• v%
«... 117
207
»... 209
617
622
536
..... 72$
...» 72C
.«» 771
1114
..... 887
7
19
VA
King— In sleep a king, bat waking
no such matter Son
and change decrees of kings "
King Pandion he is dead P P
Pity but he were a king **
Save the eagle, feather'd king P T
KlngdoM— on the .... of the shore Son
kingdoms of hearts shouldst owe '*
Kingly— most kingly drinks it up **
Klnanan— But as he is my kinsman R L
Thy kinsmen hang their heads "
KIrtle— A cap of flowers and a . . . . PP
Kits— I'll smother thee with kisses VA
Ten kisses short as one **
she murders with a kiss "
And one sweet kiss **
*Tis but a kiss I beg •*
The kiss shall be thine own **
for one poor kiss **
Give me one kiss
A thousand kisses
twenty hundred kisses
you shall have a kiss
to rob thee of a kiss
Lest she should steal a kiss
The kiss I gave you
by a kiss thought to persuade
the pillow of a lawful kiss J? L
Between each kiss PP
Were kisses all the Joys
Kiu — Art thou ashamed to kiss
to kiss his shadow
For men will kiss
He kisses her
he will kiss her still
they kiss each other
some kiss her face
ever strive to kiss you
He thought to kiss him
Wherein I will not kiss
to kiss the turrets bowed R L
To kisH the tender inward Son
me thy lips to kiss *'
kiss me, be kind
To kiss and clip me
Kl8s*d— Even so she kiss'd
And kiss'd the fatal knife
And often kiss'd
Kissing— And kissing speaks
with continual kissing
With kissing him
Threatening cloud-kissing Dion
Kissing with golden face
Knee — And with his knee
their knees they bow
Kneel— down she kneels
But kneel with mc
Knell — rings out the doleful knell
bell rings doleful knell
Knew— as if she knew his mind
her thirsty lips well knew
no bearing yoke they knew
ray judgement knew no reason
that the ruflie knew
And knew the patterns
Knew vows were ever brokers
Knife — for the self-same purpoae
seek a knife R L .... 1<M7
Will fix a sharp knife '^ 1138
u
14
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PP
VA
RL
LC
VA
41
44
RL
Son
RL
4.
VA
RL
it
PP
VA
41
RL
Son
LC
44
M
128
128
143
11
8
47
121
162
216
479
480
505
872
1082
1110
1188
1S72
6
14
12
14
...» 09
»... 51
...» 47
— 1118
»... 1370
83 3
M... lo4o
»... 390
. 1830
»... 1495
18 28
— 643
3
68
170
178
115
LIE
168
LIGHT
Llc^-OQ hi! back doth lie
VA
•••••
663
Lie quietly, and hear
M
•«•••
709
latapa, burnt out, In darkness lies **
•••••
1128
dotli Tarquin lie revolving
RL
••*••
127
her beloved Collatinus lies
«t
•••••
256
where such treasure lies
K
•••••
280
from the rushes where it lies
U
•••••
318
Lies at the niercj
U
•••»•
364
her rosy cheek lies under
««
•••••
386
like a virtuous monument, she lies "
•••••
891
tlieir dear governess and lady liei
\ "
•••*•
443
she trembling lies
•••••
457
under his insulting falchion lies
•••••
609
Iamb lies panting there
•••••
737
Immodestly lies martyr'd
•••••
802
whose guilt within their bosoms lie **
• «••
1342
under Pyrrhus' proud foot lies
(t
•••••
1448
in bloody channel lies
14
■•«••
1487
the father's image lies
t(
•••••
1753
where abundance lies
efon
1
7
where all thy beauty lies
It
2
5
your true image pictured lies
u
24
6
their pride lies buried
M
25
7-
that hidden in thee lie
ti
81
8
that thou in him dost lie
u
46
5
thy fair appearance lies
(«
46
8
My grief lies onward
(«
50
14
from Time's chest lie hid
((
63
10
on the ashes of his youth doth lie
1 "
73
10
When you entombed in men's eyei
\
shall lie
it
81
8
my life on thy revolt doth lie
ti
92
10
for't lies in thee
t(
101
10
which in thy breast doth lie
t«
109
4
see where it lies
It
137
3
Therefore I lie with her
u
138
13
the bath for my help lies
tl
153
13
what a hell of witchcraft lies
LC
288
Therefore I'll lie with love
PP
1
13
He wither'd on the ground
t(
13
9
Here enclosed in cinders lie
PT
•••••
55
Z^e, n.— Lust full of forged lies
VA
•••••
804
devise some virtuous lie
Son
72
6
by Ilea we flatter'd be
u
138
14
give the lie to my true sight
tl
150
3
against the truth so foul a lie
It
152
14
thou register of lies
LC
•••••
62
Zie, tr.— would say this poet lies
Son
17
7
Those lines that I before have writ
t
do lie
It
115
1
For thy records and what we see
»
doth lie
II
123
11
though I know she lies
It
138
2
though I know she lies
PP
1
2
Lifb— ending with thy life
VA
•••«•
12
life were done
II
«••••
197
would surpass the life
u
• ••••
289
It is a Ufe in death
II
•••••
413
breatheth life in her
tl
• ••••
474
or life desire
II
••■••
496
and life was death's annoy
II
• •«••
497
reaves his son of life
It
• •VM
766
with life's strength doth fight
XL
124
is but to nurse the life
tl
141
As life for honour
If
• ••••
145
to betray my life
II
• ••••
233
Must sell her Joy, her life
II
• ••••
385
Showing life's triumph
II
• ••••
402
death's dim look in life's mortalitj
r •»
•••••
403
life— But that life lived in death and
u
II
II
II
u
II
II
II
II
II
II
M
U
II
death in life R L
with thy life's decay "
Thou their fair life
lost a dearer thing than life
The life of purity
Or kills his life
to end a hapless life
A dying life to living infamy
Till life to death acquit
When life Is shamed
to deprive dishonour'd life
My life's foul deed, my life's fair
end shall fVee it
Besides, the life and feeling
Of spirit, life, and bold audacity
art gave lifeless life
Show'd life imprison'd
one man's lust these many lives
confounds
Life's lasting date
That life was mine
I did give that life "
who holding Lucrece' life **
coiisumest thyself in single life Son
the lines of life that life repair
Which hides your life
this gives life to thee
Though in our lives
My life, being made of four, with
two alone
Until life's composition
though my lover's life
To live a second life
Even with my life decay
My life hath in this line
lost the dregs of life "
you are to my thoughts as food to
life
immortal life shall have
others would give life
lives more life in one
For term of life
And life no longer
my life hath end
my life on thy revolt doth lie
than Time wastes life
better for my life provide
And saved my life
vow'd chaste life to keep
gave life and grace L C
Lifeless— Fie, lifeless picture VA
art gave lifeless life B L
Llfe-polsonlng — Life-poisoning pes-
tilence
Lifts— She lifts the cofler-lids
Lifts up his burning head
LIgh t» n. — the crystal tears gave . . .
that shadow heaven's light
lend the world bis light
their light blown out
imtron of all light
May lend thee light
office and their light
threw unwilling light
were open'd to the light
No comfortable star did lend his
light
Fair torch, burn out thy light
tl
u
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
tl
M
tl
II
II
II
II
II
II
,,%„ 516
...•• 661
• •••• iMIi
•••M Yeu
••••• 875
.... 1045
.... 1055
.... 1071
.... 115.5
.... 1186
.... 1207
.... 1317
1346
.... 1374
>... 1456
.... 1489
1729
.... 1762
.... lOUU
.... 1805
9
16
17
18
86
45
45
63
68
71
74
74
75
81
83
83
92
92
92
92
100 13
111 3
3
9
4
14
6
7
9
12
7
12
8
9
1
5
12
13
2
3
6
10
145
154
14
3
114
211
1374
VA
IC
Son
VA
tl
II
It
II
It
RL
II
-... 740
.... 1127
7 2
633
.... /do
.... 826
.... ooU
864
.... 1039
.... 1051
.... 105
.... 164
.... IVv
LIGHT
169
LIKE
Ligkt, M.— To darken her whose
light J2 L — 191
Mine eyes forego their light " ~... 228
by the light he spies '* ~... 816
bUnded with a greater light *' 875
bad sheathed their light ** .... S97
eyes fly fxoin their lighto " — 461
Small lights are soon blown out " .... 647
sets his foot upon the light " ~... 673
For light and lust "* ~... 674
looks for the morning light " «... 745
to meet the eastern light ^ «... 773
in their smoky ranks his smother'd
light " ~... 783
The light will show *< 807
and bring truth to light " ..... 940
Lends light to all fair eyes that
light will borrow " «... 1083
with thy piercing light " 1091
ocean quench their light " ~... 1231
glesm'd forth their ashy lights " ~... 1378
creature, with a flaming light " .... 1627
Feed'st thy light's flame ^Sbn 1 6
when the gracious light *' 7.1
dost gire inyention light " 38 8
with thy much clearer light ** 43 7
once in the main of light " 60 5
to lend base subjects light *' 100 4
£^r.— Torches are made to light KX .... 163
Let sin, alone committed, light
alone R L 1480
Ufkt, «0'.— but light and wiU aspire K /I .... 150
Ii lore so light, sweet boy ** .... 155
to every light impression '* .... 566
tresds on it so light *' .... 1028
abould yet be light " — 1134
in her light chariot *' .... 1192
That through their light joy
teemed to appear ^R L .... 1434
And erery light occasion L C .... 86
i^ A<v.— When thou sbalt be dis-
poned to set me light Am 88 1
Ughtsd— And being lighted R L 316
Uffkteth— torch forthwith he ... . " .... 178
UghtlMW— hears the iightless fire " .... 4
steal efTeeU firom lightless hell " 1555
Uiktaivg— as .... from the sky VA .... 348
Thine eye Jove's lightning seems P P 5 11
Uks-Uke a bold-faced suitor VA 6
like a dire-dapper " .... 86
Or.Ukealialry.trip " 146
Or, like a nymph " .... 147
flowers like sturdy trees " .... 152
So he were Uke him " .... 180
Like misty yapours " .... 184
Thing like a man '* .... 214
like a band *' .... 225
like heaven's thunder " .... 268
SUaters like Are " .... 275
vave like feather'd wings " .... 306
Then, like a melancholy *' .... 813
that, like a ftlUng plume " .... 314
Mkealowly lorer ** .... 850
Show'd Uke two sUrer doves " .... 366
Hov like a Jade he stood ** .... 391
Kfas at like delight " .... 400
Like a red mom " .... 453
Like the deadly bullet " 461
Uke the fair son ** 483
Like— Shone like the moon VA .-.. 40^i
Like a wild bird •« SCO
like the froward infant " .... 562
like a pale-faced coward " .... 568
Like lawn being spread ** 590
Like to a mortal butcher " .... 618
eyes, like glow-worms " «... 621
But, like an earthquake ** 648
An image like thyself " .... 664
like a labyrinth " .... 684
like the wanton mermaid's " .... 777
Love comforteth like sunshine ** .... 799
Lust like a glutton dies *' .... 803
In such-like circumstance, with
such-like sport " .... 844
Like shrill-tongued tapsters ** .... 849
Like a milch doe " .... 875
like one that spies " .... 878
Like soldiers, when their captain " .... 893
Like milk and blood ** 902
Like the proceedings " .... 910
like sluices, stopp'd " .... 956
But like a stormy day " .... 965
Like many clouds ** .... 972
like pearls in glass ** .... 980
Like stars ashamed ** . 1032
Who, like a king " 1043
lurk'd like two thieves " .... 1086
been tooth'd like him " .... 1117
melted like a rapour '* .... 1166
shows like a virtuous deed jB L .... 252
Like little frosts ** .... 831
Where, like a virtuous monument *' .... 391
Show'd like an April daisy " .... 895
Her eyes, like marigolds ** .... 897
Her hair, like golden threads ** 400
Her breasts, like ivory globes " .... 407
Who, like a foul usurper " 412
like straggling slaves '* .... 428
Like to a new-kill'd bird *' 457
First, like a trumpet " .... 470
Which, like a falcon *" 606
Like a white hind *< .... 643
look'st not Uke deceit ** ..... 585
My sighs, like whirlwinds " .... 686
like a troubled ocean " .... 589
For kings, like gods " .... 602
the like oflfences prove ** .... 613
Till, like a Jade " 707
Like to a bankrupt '* .... 711
He like a thievish dog " 736
She like a wearied lamb " .... 737
like water that doth eat " 755
But like still-pining TanUlus " .... 858
But if the like the snow-white
swan desire " .... 1011
mine eyes, like sluices " .... 1076
Like an unpractised swimmer " .... 1098
When with Uke semblance " ....1113
like a gentle flood '* .... 1118
moisten'd like a melting eye " .... 1227
weep like the dewy night ** .... 1232
Like ivory conduits " 1234
like a gooidly champaign plain " .... 1247
Much like a press of people *' .... 1801
Like dying coals burnt out '* .... 1879
Like bright things staiu'd " .... 1435
like a heavy-hanging bell *' .... 1498
like a constant and confirmed devil " ..... 1618
LIKE
170
LIP
Llk»— Whose woidi, like wUdflre J2 L
like rainbowB in the sky
stood, like old acquaintance
Who, like a late-sack'd city
Like feeble ago Son
like a makeless wife "
Be scorn'd like old men
Which, like a jewel
Wishing me like to one
Featured like him, like him with
fHends possess'd
Like to the lark
Like stones of worth
interim like the ocean be
But like a sad slave
Like as the waves make towards
shadows like to thee
And, like unletter'd clerk
like enough thou know'st
Like a deceived husband
How like Eve's apple
Which, like a canker
If like a lamb
How like a winter
Like widow'd wombs
Therefore, like her, I sometime
like a dial-hand
but yet, like prayers divine
Like him that travels
like the dyer's hand
Whilst, like a willing patient
Like as to make our appetites
are nothing like the sun •
And suit thy pity like in every part
He learn 'd but surety-like to write "
Which like two spirits
who, like a fiend
Like usury, applying wet to wet L C
Like unshorn velvet
Like fools that in the imagination
set
Which, like a cherubin
That like two spirits PP 2
to me like oaks, to thee like osiers " 6
Like a green plum " 10
should use like loving charms " U
Youth like summer morn, age like
winter weather " 12 3
Youth like summer brave, age like
winter bare " 12
for shadows like myself ** 14
were tuned like the lark ** 15
Like a thousand vanquished men '* 18
Thy like ne'er was " 18
Even so, poor bird, like thee " 21
Words are easy, like the wind " 21
//<j&e— like you worse and worse VA
Distress likes dumps R L ~...
Let them say more that like of
hearsay well
But you like none, none you, for
constant heart
Liked— That liked of her master P P
Likely— In likely thoughts VA
Likeness— In that thy likeness "
In Tarquin's likeness E L ^
the likeness of a man
LIker— Much liker than your paint-
ed counterfeit ** 16
I*
((
u
II
II
II
It
u
II
u
II
ii
II
II
II
II
II
u
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
u
II
7
9
17
27
29
29
29
52
56
57
60
61
85
87
93
93
95
96
97
97
102
104
108
109
111
111
118
130
132
134
144
145
1523
1587
1595
1740
10
4
10
11
5
6
11
7
9
11
1
4
6
2
2
IS
2
10
1
8
13
9
5
6
7
9
1
1
12
7
2
11
40
94
136
319
2
4
5
8
4
11
6
36
50
27
2a
774
1127
Sm 21 13
II
53
14
16
2
• »•
990
• •«
174
• •«
596
41
11
8
Likewise— Biay .... be sepulchred JR L . 805
their passions likewise lent me L C . 199
LiklBf— to swallow Venus' liking VA 248
bids them do their liking Jt L ..... 434
yoke thy liking to my will " 1633
Lily— locks her lily fingers VA ~... 228
A lily prison'd " 362
whose wonted lily white " «... 1053
of lilies and of roses jR L ..... 71
Her lily hand her rosy cheek lies
under " „... 386
anger makes the lily pale ** 478
Lilies that fester, smell far worse Sim 94 14
wonder at the lily's white " 98 9
The lily I condemned ** 99 6
A lily pale, with damask dye PP 7 5
LiBb — each several limb is doubled VA ..... 1067
limbs with travel tired Son 27 2
Lo, thus by day, my limbs " 27 13
Limbeck— Distilld from limbecks ** 119 2
Limed — Birds never limed no secret
bushes fear JR <L ..... 88
Limit— Within this limit VA .... 235
nor law, nor limit knows R L »... 1120
From limits far remote Son 44 4
a limit past my praise " 82 6
Limning- In limning out V A ..... 290
Limping— by limping sway disabled &m 66 8
Line- to attend each line R L ..... 818
So should the lines of life Stm 16 9
When in eternal lines to time thou
grow'st " 18 12
Nor draw no lines there " 19 10
These poor rude lines " 32 4
With lines and wrinkles " 63 4
iu these black lines be seen ** 63 13
Nay, if you read this line *' 71 5
My life hath in this line " 74 3
your countenance fiU'd up his line " 86 18
Dulling my lines " 103 8
Those lines that I before have writ "115 1
in top of rage the lines she rents L C 55
Llaen- the nightly linen that she
wears R L 680
Linger— To linger out a purposed
overthrow Son 90 8
Lingering- Who, with a . . . . stay R L 328
Lion— on the lion he will venture VA 628
rough bear, or lion proud " 884
the lion walk'd along " ..... 1099
As the grim lion fawneth R L 42'
the unicorn and lion wild " 95
Time, blunt thou the lion's paws Son 19
Lip— lips with loathed satiety VA
but soon she stops his lips ** .....
thy li|)s shall never open " .....
her lips were ready " .....
turns his lips another way " .....
Touch but my lips with those fair
lips of thine " .....
why not lips on lips "
u|)on thy tempting lip " ....
thy lips the worse for one poor kiss " «.,
Graze on my lips *' ...
He chafes her lips " ..
for thy piteous lips " ,
Pure lips, sweet seals in my soft
lips imprinted "
on my wax-red lips **
LEAVE
166
LEST
LrsTC — leave exceeds oommlasioo VA ...~
thy sour leisure gave sweet lemre Son 39
aod gire him leave to go ** 51
Zeatv— leave me here alone VA ~...
And leave this idle theme ** ~.-.
•Where did I leave " —
Leave me, and theo the story ^
Leaves Love upon her back ^ ~...
Bid them leave quaking *'
wolf would leave his prey " -...
Tarquin leaves the Roman host Jt L ~...
in venturing ill we leave to be ** —
for thine own sake leave me ** >...
And loaves it to be master'd " ~...
leave thy peeping '* -...
And leave the faltering **
audit canst thou leave Son
Will sourly leave her **
To leave poor me "
I leave my love alone *'
which thou must leave ere long *'
If thou wilt leave me **
leaves out difference **
To leave for nothing **
Who leaves unsway'd "
what labour Is't to leave L C ...~
To leave the battery "
and he takes and leaves **
To leave the master loveless P P
Leavlag— Leaving his spoil perplex'd R L
Leaving thee living in posterity Son
Leaving no posterity P T
Lecher— The lechers in their deed R L
a lover, or a lecher whether ? P P
Lectare — read lectures of such
shame R L ^
Led— desire thus madly led
Leese— Leese but their show
Left— still U left alive
and left Adonis there
the very smell were left me
Left their round turrets
the load of lust he left behind
DO perfection of my summer left
Was left unseen, sava to the eye
of mind
and, as it left the place "
summer's distillation left Son
no form of thee hast left behind "
Art left the prey of every vulgar
thief "
Since I left you mine eye Is in my
mind
Hath left me, and I desperate
and left her all alone
Z<(lf— selre love upon thy left
Lefl*st— For why thou leftist me
nothing
And yet thou left'st me more "
Lear— straight legs and passlugstrong VA
Stands on his hinder legs *'
his weary legs doth scratch "
a foot, a face, a h>g, a head R L
Legacy— What legacy shall I bequeath "
thy beauty's legacy Son
Legion — Which many legions of
true hearta "
Lelsare — pay them at thy leisure V A
Debate where lelaurj serves R L
568
10
U
382
422
715
716
814
899
109<
3
148
583
863
1089
7 I
4
A 1 V(7
12
41
8
49
13
66
14
73
14
90
9
105
8
109
12
141
11
• ••»•
239
•••••
277
•••••
305
16
6
• ■•••
733
6
12
59
••••■
1637
7
17
•••••
618
300
Son
VA
RL
<«
PP
VA
PP
14
174
322
441
441
734
837
-... 1426
-... 1735
5 9
9 6
48 8
113 1
147 7
9 14
.... 158
10 8
10 9
297
..... 698
~... 705
1427
..... 1192
4 2
154 6
518
.... 1019
LC
RL
VA
M
Son
14
M
M
«<
Lciamre — thy soar leisure gave sweet
leave
I must attend time's Idsore
bound to stay your leisure
have no leisure taken
Or any of my leisures
LeiNarely— but do it leisurely
Lead— desire doth lend her force
Her arms do lend bis neck **
to lend the workl his light *^
That lends embracements **
May lend thee light, as thou doat
lend •«
tears did lend and borrow **
star did lend his light R L
burn out thy light, and lend it not "
that to bad debtors lends *•
Lends light to all fair eyes
no god to lend her those
She lends them words
that thou Shalt lend me
gives nothing, but doth lend
she lends to those are free
lends but weak relief
can every shadow lend
He lends thee virtue
What strained touches rhetoric
can lend
lends not some small glory
to lend base subjects light
Lest sorrow lend me words
anon their gazes lend L C
Lendeth — sorrow to my sorrow ..,, R L
LendlBf— Lending him wit **
Lending soft audience to my sweet
design L C
Length— through the .... of times R L
At length address'd **
To leap large lengths Son
and length thyself to-morrow P P
Her feeble force will yield at length **
Lent— to his melting buttock lent VA
If love have lent you "
wealth the heavens had him lent R L
For it was lent thee
glance that sly Llysses lent
to Phrygian shepherds lent
their passions lilcewlse lent me
Leas— they have but less
cannot make It less
men of less truth than tongue
less false in rolling
are loved of more and less
I love not less, though leas the
show appear
summer is less pleasant
Made more or less "
And so much less of shame L C
Lfmer— more rage and lesser pity R L
The lesser thing should not the
greater hide
lesser noise than shallow fords
'tis the lesser sin
Lesson — the lesson Is but plain
and find the lesson true
Lest— lest thy hard heart
Lest Jealousy, that sour
Lest she should st«al a kLss
Lest the deceiving harmony
89 10
44 12
68 4
120 7
193
-••• 29
— 539
— 756
~... 790
.... 864
.... 961
.... 164
...- 190
.... 1083
— 1461
— 1498
.... 1685
4 3
4 4
S4 11
53 4
79 9
82
84
100
140
44
15
19
t<
LC
RL
u
Son
u
u
u
M
Son
VA
Son
VA
10
6
4
3
26
1676
964
278
718
1606
10
18
21
— 315
— 775
.... 17
..... 626
— 1399
.... 1502
••••• 199
••••• loi
.... 1285
17 10
20 5
96 3
102 2
102 9
123 12
— 188
...• 4oo
.... 663
.... 1329
114 13
.... 407
IS
375
449
726
781
118
LIVED
172
LONGER
Lived— When beauty lived and died <Sm» 68 2
What merit lived in me " 72 2
have often lived alone " 105 13
who have lived for crime ** 124 14
Uvellliood— The precedent of pith
and livelihood T^i .... 26
Lively— death was lively joy ** ..... 498
Her lively colour kUl'd R L .... 1593
to blush through lively veins Son 67 10
A dateless lively heat '* 153 6
For her griefs so lively shone PP 21 17
Liver— which in his liver glows M L .... 47
Livery— never let their crimson liv-
eries wear V A .... 506
livery that he wore " 1107
A badge of fame to slander's livery RL .... 1054
her face wore sorrow's livery ** .... 1222
Thy youth's proud livery Son 2 3
Kept hearts in liveries L C .... 195
lAvery— Did livery fidseness ** .... 105
LI vest— thou livest in my defame RL .... 1033
LlviBg— As if the dead the living
should exceed VA .... 292
thy death my Uving sorrow " .... 671
against long-living laud R L .... 622
living death and pain perpetual " .... 726
A dying life to living infamy " — 1055
DO dame hereafter living *' .... 1714
Leaving thee living Son 6 12
would bear your Uving flowers ' '* 16 7
looking on thee in the Uving day " 43 10
The living record of your memory " 55 8
steal dead seeing of his living hue " 67 6
inhabit on a Uving brow '* 68 4
more blest than Uving lips " 128 12
To Apend her Uving L C .... 238
Living in thrall PP 18 22
Lo— And, lo, I lie between VA 194
But, lo, from forth a copse " 259
Lo, thus my strength is tried " .... 280
When, lo, the unback'd " 320
Lo, here the gentle lark " .... 853
Where, lo, two lamps " ....1128
lo, here I prophesy " .... 1135
Lo, in this hollow cradle " .... 1185
lo, there falls into thy boundless
flood R L .... 653
when, lo, the blushing morrow " .... 1082
Lo, here weeps Hecuba " .... 1485
Lo, here the hopeless merchant " .... 1660
Lo, in the orient Son 7 1
Lo, thus by day my limbs " 27 13
Lo, as a careful housewife " 143 1
And, lo, behold these talents Z C .... 204
Lo, all these trophies '* .... 218
Lo, this device was sent me " .... 232
For, lo, his passion " .... 295
Load— I had my load before VA .... 430
She bears the load of lust RL .... 734
This load of wrath " .... 1474
Loan— those that pay the wilUng
loan Son 6 6
Loathed— with loathed saUety KA .... 19
Thou loathed In their shame R L .... 662
his vanished loathed delight *' .... 742
turn to loathed sours " 867
to live a loathed slave " .... 984
Loathsone— keep his ... . cabin stiU VA 637
of his loathsome enterprise R L .... 184
•<
M
LoathiOMe— Some loathsome oath
the herald wiU contrive R L ^
write my loathsome trespass
The loathsome act of lust
And loathsome canker lives
Lork— under twenty locks
Play with his locks
The locks between her chamber
His browny locks did hang
ZrOcA;— locks her Uly fingers
bid Suspicion double-lock the door
Locked— in my hand being lock'd R L
breaks ope her lock'd-up eyes
lock'd up in any chest
his sweet up-locked treasure
Lode-star—. ... to his lustful eye
Lodged— lodged not a mind so Ul
be fairer lodged than gentle love
She was new lodged
Son
VA
it
RL
LC
VA
u
u
Son
u
RL
u
Sun
LC
Lofty— bark peel'd from the lofty
RL
Son
VA
u
M
M
RL
pine
When lofty trees I see
sometime lofty towers I see
Long— one long as twenty
Which long have rain'd
with long disbevell'd hair
fetlocks shag and long
Long may they kiss
lovers' hours are long
they long have gazed
Long after fearing to creep forth
Of things long since, or
after supper long he questioned
To hold their cursed-blessed for^
tune long
But long she thinks
quench Troy that burns so long
too long with her remaining
Short time seems long
would be drawn out too long
from heart-easing words so long
So long as meq can breathe
So long lives this
So long as youth and thou
weep afresh love's long-siuce<an->
cell'd woe
to outlive long date
in the long year set
In days long since
thou must leave ere long
that thou forget'st so long
make him seem long hence
so long as brain and heart
Ere long espied a fickle maid
And long upon these terms
methinks thou stay'st too long
Long was the combat doubtful
my tongue to be so long
Long— m J heart longs not to groan VA
and then she longs for morrow R L
long to hear her words *'
Longer— no longer to restrain him VA
cease then thy course and last no
longer R L
No longer yours than you yourself
live here Son
draw my sorrows longer
but then no longer glad
No longer mourn for me
u
((
u
u
u
u
Son
u
u
u
... 206
.... 812
.... 1636
35 4
•.... 675
1090
M... 802
.... BO
228
••••• 260
446
48 9
52 2
179
1530
10 10
1167
12 5
64 8
..» 83
147
.... 295
.... 605
— 927
1036
1078
••••• Xm6
1369
.... 149o
.... 1572
.... 1578
1616
1782
18 18
18 14
22 2
80
88
52
67
78
100
101
" 122
L U ....
u
H
U
U
U
4(
PP
t(
u
7
12
6
14
14
1
14
6
6
.... 17n
12 12
16 6
19 62
.... VOO
1671
— 1610
.... 679
1766
(I
It
u
18
2
28
18
45
18
71
1
LONGER
173
LOSE
u
u
l<
u
LMifer— And life no longer than thy
lore Son
longer nnraeth the diaeaae "
LMf^xperieneed — set thy long-
experienced wit to school E L
LMf^hid— his .... wits advisedl j '*
LtBglBg — Longing to hear the hate-
ftil foe "
ss a ferer longing still Son
A longing tarriance for Adonis P P
LMig-llTfd — bum the .... phoenix Son
Long-lirlBg^reproach against long-
liTing laud R L
Look— Look, how a bird lies V A
Look how he can, she cannot choose **
Look in mine ejeballs **
Look, when a jwinter
Look, what a horse shoold haye
He looks upon his lore
Looks on the dull earth
Look, the world's comforter
and look well to her heart
Look, how a bright star **
Look, how the world's poor people **
looks so steadfastly **
looks apon his lips **
That eye which looks on her R L
Look, as the fair and fiery-pointed
sun "
She dares not look **
And dotes on what he looks **
eyes do learn, do read, do look **
Look, as the full-fed hound **
looks for the morning light **
look to her lady's sorrow **
those far-off eyes look sad **
Look, look, how listening Priam **
She looks for night "
Look in thy glass Son
and look another way **
Look, what an anthrift **
Look, whom she best endow'd **
Then look I death **
tod look for recompense **
And look upon myself **
Look, what b best «*
in dreams they look on thee
The rose looks fair
Tbey look into the beaoty
700 kwk upon this verse
should look into yoar moan
Look, what thy memory
10 oft as thou wflt look
•trtDgle and look strange
That leares look pale
Look in your glass
Tovr own i^aas shows yoa when
70a look in it
IC7 lore looks fresh
That looks on tempests
■t7B beauty shoold Vvilk so
Look here, what tribatea
■he hotter that dU look
2«QlM), what a war of looks
For one sweet look
Aod at his look
looks kill lore, aad lore by lorAs
reriTeth
with looks again
92
147
147
6
19
u
t* -
I
9
11
22
23
29
37
43
S4
m
71
ii
m u m
I I
»
ICO
l*tt
VfT
127
LC
PP
VA
3
2
1820
1810
1698
1
4
4
622
67
79
119
289
299
807
aio
529
580
815
925
1063
1123
290
372
4S8
497
616
691
745
1221
1386
1M8
1571
1
12
9
II
4
n
4
Vi
3
3
9
9
13
9
13
%
14
6
14
14
VTt
§
VA
Z7l
♦VI
¥4
UA2
M
M
M
U
««
Look—uo meaning from their part-
ing looks R L
And death's dim look **
my loathsome trespass in my looks *'
with bold stern looks
Pawn'd honest looks
and she their looks doth borrow
piteous looks to Phrygian shep-
herds lent
calm looks, eyes wailing still
can lurk in such a look
Serving with looks Son
Yet mortal looks
is famish'd for a look
with a backward look
clean starved for a look
Thy looks with me
In many's looks the false heart's
history
Thy looks should nothing
could his looks translate
by over-partial looks ^
pretty looks have been mine ene-
mies
Kill me outright with looks
with many a lovely look
Such looks as none could look
Her cloudy looks will calm
L«ok*d— who, being look'd on
look'd red and raw
And some look'd black
look'd but with divining eyes
that I have lor>k'd on truth
The son look'd on the wf/rkl
LMk*Kt— Thoa not like deceit R h
LMkrth— still look<?th for a grave V A
Lacking— ThfD loriking acomfully R L
Sun
..... 100
••••• 4lw
••••• v\m
~... 1202
— lS5i
M... 1002
M... 1006
— 1536
7 4
7 7
47 8
69 6
70 10
98 4
M
U
U
II
93
98
96
187
7
12
10
6
PP
M
VA
RL
Bon
M
PP
139 10
180 14
4 8
4 4
19 14
«... 1092
«... 1740
106 11
110 6
• II
«•«»• 1104
im
Looking on darkn<
By lo'>king on the«
L/wking with pretty nith
Till kif^king (*n an Englishman
inKigh .... thrust
27
43
132
16
8
10
4
8
PP
R /j M>.« 1388
kioae nor tied In fomal
LO
M
RL
M
plat
braided in looae negligence
L«rd— this false k>rd arrived
And now this lontful lord
The BAman kml marrrlietb **
Save '>f th*rir lord **
this faultful U,r4 trf lUrtWi **
U*ar k/H of f bst d*iir jewel •♦
tlMse profid lofd« U» Maro« **
A letter Ut my l//fd **
she tbns Ijegins : ' tUtm wttwihy UrHI **
At ArdAa Ui my \ttfA **
Brings k/A»e hl« \tfrd **
OAhitlM and bl« f/fn^rrUA UrHUt **
l>ear k/rd, thy wnv/^ **
er^ I nam^ Mm. ym fair I//fd« **
Ka^b pTM^nt k#rd ^/^an **
He, b«, fair 1//H« *ti« b«i **
l\//n 'mtt/tt%pA U/r4 '/f f(//wi4 **
ly/td f4 rnf Vnt
Th'T' ar^ th* Vvrds
aft^T tbHf V/H • d***ae*
I/vr*f, h/^w afctfi^ •'fMi
tjiff4lj- «*4 a«» hU l/zMly ^r*« /T A
HsTlASf ttt, tn'tt Ut Umh V a
Him
H
PP
00
— 710
,..., 1191
»... 1209
.,... 1299
^... wn
„.., 1670
..... mi
.... \%\%
Vi I
94 7
iff i
K 1
. 1731
i¥A
*.
LIGHT
169
LIKE
Light, n.— To darken her whose
light R L ..... 191
Mine eyes forq^ their light ** ..... 228
hj the light he spies ** ~... 816
bUnded with a greater light *" ~... 875
had sheathed their light ** ..... 397
eyes fly from their lights '* ..... 461
ftnall lights are soon blown out " ~... 647
sets his foot upon the light *' ..... 673
For Ught and lust " ..... 674
looks for the morning light '* ~... 745
to meet the eastern light " ~... 773
in their smoky ranks his smother'd
light " -... 783
The light will show " 807
and bring truth to light '* ~... 940
Lends light to all fair eyes that
light will borrow " .... 1083
with thy piercing light " 1091
ocean quench their light " 1231
gleam'd forth their ashy lights " 1378
creature, with a flaming light " 1627
Feed'st thy light's flame 8on \ %
when the gracious light ** 7.1
dost give Invention light " 88 8
with thy much clearer light *" 43 7
once in the main of light " 60 6
to lend base subjects ligbt " 100 4
highly v.— Torches are made to light VA ..... 163
Let sin, alone committed, light
alone R L 1480
Uffht, (u^/.— but light and will aspire VA ..... 150
Is love so light, sweet boy " ..... 155
to every light impression " ..... 660
treads on it so light " .... 1028
should yet be light " .... 1134
in her light chariot " .... 1192
That through their light Joy
seemed to appear R L .... 1434
And every light occasion L C .... 86
lAghl, oiir.— When thou shalt be dis-
poned to set me light iSm 88 1
Lighted— And being lighted R L 816
LIghteth— torch forthwith he ** .... 178
Lightleaa— bears the lightless fire " .... 4
steal effecU from lightless hell *' .... 1555
Lightalng— as .... from the sky VA .... 348
Thine eye Jove's lightoiug seems P P 6 11
Like— like a bold-faced suitor KA .... 6
Like a dive-dapper " 86
Or, like a fairy, trip " 146
Or, like a nymph " 147
flowers like sturdy trees " .... 152
8o he were like him ** .... 180
Like misty vapours " .... 184
Thing like a man " .... 214
like a band " .... 225
like heaven's thunder " .... 268
glisters like Are " .... 275
wave like feather'd wings " 806
Then, like a melancholy " .... 813
that, like a falling plume " 814
like a lowly lover " 850
Show'd like two silver doves ** .... 366
How like a Jade he stood ^ .... 391
aim at like delight " .... 400
Like a red mom " .... 453
Like the deadly bullet " — 461
Like the fair sun "" .... 483
Like— Shone like the moon
VA
.tt.
4»1
Like a wild bird
u
...•
5G0
like the fVoward infant
(1
.....
562
like a pale-faced coward
u
.....
569
Like lawn being spread
M
.....
590
Like to a mortal butcher
M
....
618
eyes, like glow-worms
<t
.....
621
But, like an earthquake
U
648
An image like thyself
11
..«•
664
like a labyrinth
U
....a
684
like the wanton mermaid's
M
.....
777
Love comforteth like sunshine
U
....
799
Lust like a glutton dies
U
.....
803
In such-like circumstance, with
such-like sport
U
.....
844
Like shrill-tongued tapsters
M
....
849
Like a milch doe
M
....
875
like one that spies
i4
.....
878
Like soldiers, when their captain
M
..*..
893
Like milk and blood
M
.....
902
Like the proceedings
tl
.....
910
like sluices, stopp'd
U
.....
956
But like a stormy day
U
....
965
Like many clouds
U
.....
972
like pearls in glass
U
.....
980
Like stars ashamed
U
.....
1032
Who, like a king
U
.....
IMS
lurk'd like two thieves
U
.....
1086
been tooth'd like him
U
.....
1117
melted like a vapour
«t
....
1166
shows like a virtuous deed R L
.....
252
Like UtUe fWists
U
.....
831
Where, like a virtuous monument
It
.....
391
Show'd like an April daisy
U
....
895
Her eyes, like marigolds
M
....
897
Her hair, like golden threads
M
....
400
Her breasts, like ivory globes
M
....
407
Who, like a foul usurper
((
....
412
like straggling slaves
U
.....
428
Like to a new-kill'd bird
U
.....
457
First, like a trumpet
M
.....
470
Which, like a falcon
M
.....
506
Like a white hind
M
....
543
look'st not like deceit
M
585
My sighs, like whirlwinds
U
....
586
like a troubled ocean
U
....
589
For kings, like gods
(4
....
602
the like offences prove
M
....
613
Till, like a Jade
U
.....
707
Like to a bankrupt
M
.....
711
He like a thievish dog
<1
736
She like a wearied lamb
M
....
737
like water that doth eat
U
755
But like still-pining Tantalus
<l
.....
858
But if the like the snow-white
swan desire
<(
....
1011
mine eyes, like sluices
tl
.....
1076
Like an unpractised swimmer
(«
.....
1098
When with like semblance
U
.....
1113
like a gentle flood
tt
.....
1118
molsten'd like a melting eye
M
.....
1227
weep like the dewy night
U
.....
1232
Like ivory conduits
U
.....
1234
like a goodly champaign plain
It
....
1247
Much like a press of people
1<
...«M
1301
Like dying coals burnt out
l«
....
1379
Like bright things stain'd
u
....
1485
like a heavy-hanging bell
u
.....
1498
like a constant and confirmed devil "
.....
1518
LIKE
170
LIP
u
u
M
M
M
U
U
Like— Whose wordi, like wildflie B L —
like rainbows in the sky
stood, like old acqoaintanoe
Who, like a late^sack'd citj
Like feeble age
like a makeieaa wife
Be scorn'd like old men
Which, like a jewel
Wishing me like to one
Featured like him, like him with
friends poraeas'd
Like to the lark
Like stones of worth
interim like the ocean be
Hut like a sad slave
Like as the wares make towards
shadows like to thee
And, like unletter'd clerk
like enough thou know*st
Like a deceived hiuband
How like Eve's apple
Which, like a canker
If like a Iamb
How like a winter
Like widow'd wombs
Therefore, like her, I sometime
like a dial-hand
but jet, like prayers divine
Like him that travels
like the dyer's hand
WhiUt, like a willing patient
Like as to make our appetites
are nothing like the sun •
And suit thy pity like in every part **
He learn'd but surety-like to write **
Which like two spirits *'
who, like a fiend **
Like usury, applying wet to wet L C
Like unhbom velvet
Like fools that in the imagination
set
Which, like a cherubin
That like two spirits P P
to me like oaks, to thee like osiers
Like a green plum
should use like loving charms
Youth like summer mom, age like
winter weather
Youth like summer brave, age like
winter bare
for shadows like myself
were tuned like the lark
Like a thousand vanquish'd men
Thy like ne'er was
Even so, poor bird, like thee
Words arc easy, like the wind
/Ake—\i\ic you worse and worse
I>istr(*ss likes dumps
Let them say more that like of
hearsay well
But you like none, none you, for
constant heart
Llked^That liked of her master P P
Likely— In likely thoughts VA
Likeness— In that thy likeness **
In Tarquin's likeness R L
the likeness of a man Son
Liker— Much likcr than your paint-
ed counterfeit "
u
M
M
M
M
U
U
u
m—^
1623
•~a>
1687
•«••«
1695
•....
1740
7
10
9
4
17
10
27
11
29
5
29
6
29
11
52
m
1
66
9
67
11
6U
1
61
4
86
6
87
2
93
2
93
13
93
2
96
10
97
1
97
8
102
13
101
9
108
6
109
6
111
7
111
9
118
1
130
1
132
12
134
7
144
2
145
11
•••••
40
•*••■
94
•••••
136
•••■*
319
2
2
6
4
10
6
11
8
12
u
12
4
u
14
11
M
15
6
M
18
36
U
18
50
U
21
27
U
21
33
VA
•••••
774
RL
•••••
1127
Son 21 13
<i
53
14
16
2
»•••
990
» •«•
174
p*««
696
41
11
16
8
RL
M
PP
VA
M
••••• vQD
•••»• Slo
M 14
98 9
99 6
7 5
— 1067
27 2
27 13
119 2
«... 88
••••• £i5St
1120
44 4
82 6
66 8
16 9
Likewise— May .... be sepulchred
their passions likewise lent me
Liking— to swallow Venus' liking
bids them do their liking
yoke thy liking to my will
LI I)— locks her lily fingers
A lily prison'd
whose wonted lily white
of lilies and of roses
Her lily hand her rosy cheek lies
under
anger makes the lily pale
Lilies that fester, smell far worse
wonder at the lily's white
The lily I condemned
A lily pale, with damask dye
LlBb— each several limb is doubled
limbs with travel tired
Lo, thus by day, my limbs
LiHbeck— Dbtill'd from Umbecks **
LlHed- Birds never limed no secret
bushes fear R <L
LlHlt- Within this Umit VA
nor law, nor limit knows R L
From limits far remote Son
a limit past my praise **
LlHBlng— In limning oat V A
Llaplng^by limping sway disabled S(m
Line- to attend each line R L
So should the lines of life Son
When in eternal lines to time thou
grow'st ** 18 12
Nor draw no lines there ** 19 lo
These poor rude lines ** 32 4
With lines snd wrinkles *' ti3 4
iu these black lines be seen ** 63 13
Nay, if you read this line ** 71 6
My life hath in this line *< 74 3
your countenance fill'd up his line ** 86 13
Dulling my lines ^ 103 8
Those lines that I before have writ ** \15 i
in top of rage the lines she rents L C 55
Linen— the nightly linen that ahe
weare R L — 680
Linger— To linger out a purposed
overthrow ^Sm 90 8
Lingering— Who, with a sUy R L 328
Lion— on the lion he will venture VA 628
rough bear, or lion proud ^ 884
the lion walk'd along *' ..... 1093
As the grim lion fawneth R L ..... 421
the unicorn and lion wild *' ..... 956
Time, blunt thou the lion's paws Son 19 1
Lip— lips with loathed satiety V A ..... 19
but soon she stops his lips ** .... 46
thy lips shall never open ** «... 48
her lips were ready " «... 89
turns his lips another way ** ..... 90
Touch but my lifts with those fair
li|Mi of thine « lis
why not lips on lips •* ..... 120
uijon thy tempting lip " ..... 127
thy lips the worse for one poor kiss " ..... 207
Graze on n»y lips •* ..... 283
He chafes her lips *• 477
for thy piteous lips •« .... 504
Pure lips, sweet seals in my soft
lips imprinted " .... fin
on my wax-red lips •• .... 611
loi*— thr dcMlmo t
A.™hjocHoT
me'tloT*
IlhlnkmTio'
to nittkoJoTB groin
Thin fur A.r Jo
4ofthr!oT«
U>k« but mj n
.ii.ettirlon,>Bd
TbouUlndfQo
Xon
O.loTE'ilialli
And«g*lBloT.
jtintM
And Kjil'd /ilH
bondao/loTS
T«lo.» bo
U.u'<flreUi^Jil."BU'r,<r
not loT*
Lots to niT^eir and to nc
■ld«
UitfUcll'dldirvlJIns
For trvU of I0.0
Lorentda iheta not
lirlBg Is
J In loTO irllh
Thenlbr* Tit lis wltb loro w
It low Bi.k* mo
■hiJlLaeulok
■llln lore forlorn
Tilt It my lure
h«o»thioftmplo
Drtrflngwylow
Bb> bum'd wJlh lo
O, mj lore, mj 1o»fl la joung '
IhalluTDwllhloTsdldflglit
io»H. «bow! moolli wMsierMsj '
Turolng luomtl for tbr lOTO
Lo.e'.d.nylBj
j^lliayliidy'ilnrolilost •
L..ve
-idlj' ll.'<
hil
ovei.odi.mbelo.od
a» IS
IS
do lOTC lh»
" M
lov
tbee In luch »rt
" M
13
>c thluin nultiing 1
no^
£
^■,-.
lOTOaDOttO
1„ri.,tOtoU
ror
bar
ttai
10T« Uhlt
dciplM
B«
lU.
ullla
TSthH
Ibee
Dl
/
LIVED
172
LONGER
Llred— When benaty lived and died <Sm» 68 2
What merit lived in me ** 72 2
have often lived alone *' 105 13
who have lived for crime " 124 U
Livelihood— The precedent of pith
and livelihood VA 26
Livelj— death was lively joy " ~... 498
Her lively colour kUl'd E L 1593
to blush through lively veins Son 67 10
A dateless lively heat " 153 6
For her griefs so lively shone PP 21 17
Liver— which in his liver glows M L ~... 47
Livery — never let their crimson liv-
eries wear V A «... 606
livery that he wore " 1107
A badge of fame to slander's livery R L «... 1054
her face wore sorrow's livery " -... 1222
Thy youth's proud livery Son 2 3
Kept hearts in liveries L C ..... 195
X^very— Did livery fiedseness " ..... 106
Liveat— thou livest in my defame R L ~... 1033
Livinr- As if the dead the living
should exceed VA ..... 292
thy death my living sorrow " ..... 671
against long-living laud R L ..... 622
living death and pain perpetual " «... 726
A dying life to living infamy " «... 1055
no dame hereafter living " «... 1714
Leaving thee living Son 6 12
would bear your living flowers "16 7
looking on thee in the living day " 43 10
The living record of your memory " 55 8
steal dead seeing of his living hue " 67 6
inhabit on a living brow " 68 4
more blest than living llpa " 128 12
To Apend her living L C «... 238
Living in thrall PP 18 22
Lo— And, lo, I lie between VA 194
But, lo, from forth a copse " 259
Lo, thus my strength is tried " «... 280
When, lo. the unback'd " 320
Lo, here the gentle lark " «... 853
Where, lo, two lamps " «... 1128
lo, here I prophesy " «... 1135
Lo, in this hollow cradle " «... 1185
lo, there falls into thy boundless
flood B L «... 653
when, lo, the blushing morrow " «... 1082
Lo, here weeps Hecuba " «... 1485
Lo, here the hopeless merchant " «... 1660
Lo, in the orient Son 7 1
Lo, thus by day my limbs " 27 13
Lo, as a careful housewife " 143 1
And, lo, behold these talents Z C «... 204
Lo, all these trophies " «... 218
Lo, this device was sent me " «... 232
For, lo, his passion " «... 295
Load— I had my load before VA 430
She bears the load of lust B L «... 734
This load of wrath " «... 1474
LoAB— those that pay the willing
loan Son 6 6
Loathed— with loathed satiety KA «... 19
Thou loathed In their shame JR L «... 662
his vanUh'd loathed delight " «... 742
turn to loathed sours " 867
to live a loathed slave " «... 984
LoathaoHe— keep his ... . cabin still VA 637
of his loathsome enterprise B L «... 184
u
M
LoathiOHe— Some loathsome oath
the herald will contrive M L ^
write my loathsome trespass
The loathsome act of lust
And loathsome canker lives Son
Lork— under twenty locks VA
Day with his locks '*
The locks between her chamber R L
His browny locks did hang L C
Z<ocA»— locks her lily fingers VA
bid Suspicion double-lock the door **
Locked— in my hand being lock'd R L
breaks ope her lock'd-up eyes
lock'd up in any chest
his sweet up-locked treasure
Lode-star—. ... to his lustful eye
Lodged— lodged not a mind so ill
be fairer lodged than gentle love
She was new lodged
206
1636
tS5 4
«... 675
iooo
...M 802
«.« 00
(t
Son
RL
u
Son
LC
RL
aon
u
(I
Lofty— bark peel'd from the lofty
pine
When lofty trees I see
sometime lofty towers I see
Long— one long as twenty
Which long have raln'd "
with long disbevell'd hair **
fetlocks shag and long "
Long may they kiss **
lovers* hours are long **
they long have gaxed "
Long after fearing to creep forth "
Of things long since, or **
after supper long he questioned R L
To hold their cursed-blessed for-
tune long
But long she thinks
quench Troy that burns so long
too long with her remaining
Short time seems long
would be drawn out too long
from heart-easing words so long
So long as meq can breathe
So long lives this
So long as youth and thou
weep afresh love's long-since-can-
cell'd woe
to outlive long date
in the long year set
In days long since
thou must leave ere long
that thou forget'st so long
make him seem long hence
so long as brain and heart
Ere long espied a fickle maid
And long upon these terms
roethinki thou stay'st too long
Long was the combat doubtful
my tongue to be so long
ikm^my heart longs not to groan VA
and then she longs for morrow R L
long to hear her words **
Longer— no longer to restrain him VA
cease then thy course and last no
longer R L
No longer yours than you yourself
live here Son
draw my sorrows longer
but then no longer glad
No longer mourn for me
260
48 9
62 2
••••• JLfif
1690
10 10
1167
12 6
64 8
VA — 22
" -... 83
« 147
« 296
*• 605
« 927
« — low
" — 1078
u
Son
u
u
M
M
M
.... 122
AAA
— 1869
*•••• A40o
.... 1572
«... 1678
— 1616
.... 178S
18 18
18 14
22 2
80
88
62
67
7
12
6
14
78 14
100 1
101 14
122 6
iC«.«
u
PP
12
18
6
176
12
6
u
u
((
19 62
.... 1671
.... 1610
.... 679
...« 1765
18 2
28 18
45 18
71 1
LUCRETIUS
178
MADRIGAL
It
VA ~
L«eretliiii— '0/ quoth Lucretius,'!
did give R L
Lullaby— Then, lullaby, the learned
man PP
Lanff— that burning lungs did raise L C
bis spongy lungs bestow'd
Lare — As falcons to the lure
Lark— lurk in mine eye
embers bid, lurks to aspire
folly lurk in gentle breasts
can lurk iu such a look
'can lurk' from'' cannot' took
tricks and toys that in them lurk P P
Lark*d— lurk d like two thieves VA
Larking— Who sees the .... serpent iS L
u
RL
(I
tt
M
16 15
228
„.,, 326
1027
6
...» 1535
..... 1537
19 89
1086
862
Lost- though not in lust VA ~... 42
Careless lust stirs up " ..... 656
sweating Lust on earth " ..... 794
Lust's effect is tempest " ..... 800
Lust's winter comes ere summer " ..... 802
Lust like a glutton dies " ..... 803
Lust full of forged lies " »... 804
to obtain his lust R L 156
While lust and murder wakes " ~... 168
with lust's foul charm " ..... 173
armour of still-alaugbtcr'd lust " ..... 188
choked by unresisted lust " ..... 282
"StufT up his lust •• ..... 297
His rage of lust " ..... 424
Tears harden lust " ..... (HK)
school where Lust shall learn " ..... 617
Not to seducing lust " 639
Black lust, dishonour, shame " ~... 654
light and lust are deadly enemies " ..... 674
O, that prone lust should stain " ~... 684
And Lust, the thief " ..... 693
While Lust is in his pride " ..... 706
She bears the load of lust " ..... 734
as knowing Tarquin's lust ** ..... 1854
the Greeks with little lust " ..... 1384
Thy heat of lust, fond Paris " ..... 1473
And one man's lust " »... 1489
The loathsome act of lust " ..... 1636
lust came evidence to swear " ..... 1650
Is lust in action ; and till action
lust Am 129 2
Lnst-breaihed— Lust-breathed Tar-
quin leaves R L 8
Liutflil — with .... language broken VA ~... 47
And now this lustful lord R L 169
lode-star to his lustful eye " ...~ 179
Lnitlly— chant it lustily VA ..... 869
Lusty— lusty courser's rein " 31
lusty, young, and proud " 260
treasure of thy lusty days Son 2 6
and lusty leaves quite gone "67
Lute— Upon the lute doth ravish P P 8 6
Fbcebus' lute, the queen of music " 8 10
Luxury- in heart-wish'd luxury X C »... 314
Lying- Love-god lying once asleep Son 154 1
■ad— Being mad before
As they were mad
Of mad mischances
Her eyes are mad
It shall be raging-mad
let the thief run mad
Sometime 'tis mad
mad with their sweet melody
VA 249
" 738
m,,.. 1062
" ..... 1151
R L M... 997
" ...» 1106
*• — 1108
u
tl
VA ..
tt
u
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RL
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t(
tt
t(
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tl
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Son
■ad — ^Who, mad that sorrow should
his use control R L
to make the taker mad Son
Mad in pursuit, and in possession so "
I should grow nuui
Mad slanderers by mad ears be-
lieved be
frantic-mad with evermore unrest "
■adam— ' Madam, ere I was up RL
■addlng^-of this madding fever Son
■ade — Nature that made thee
resistance made him fret
Torches are made to light
Love made those hollows
his acts made plain
made mine hard
And once made perfect
thyself art made away
then apologies be made
Made glorious by his manly chiv-
alry
and made her thrall
which in thy reign are made
If that be made a theme
the other made divine
made me stop my breath
Make weak-made women tenants
made for Priam's Troy
made herself herself detest
vow, which Brutus made before
This were to be new made
hath not made for store
So I, made lame
mine eyes be blessed made
My life, being made of four
being made fh>m thee
of perfect'st love being made
whereof are ye made
are sweetest odours made
that made me first your slave
And art made tongue-tied
dead fleece made another gay
what nature made so clear
made myself a motley
Made old offences
by evil still made better
Made more or less
that she is made of truth
made them swear against the thing
they see
and made him her place
made fairer by their place
and made their wills obey
Love made them not
smiled or made some moan
made the blossoms dote
that she is made of truth
tarriance for Adonis made
which a grove of myriles made
Made me think upon mine own
Whereupon it made this threne
■adly— Which madly hurries her
Is madly toss'd
desire thus madly led
■admen — My thoughts and my dia-
course as madmen's are Son
■adness — And in my madness "
■adrigal— Melodious birds sing mad-
rigals PP
— 1781
129 8
129 9
140 9
140 12
147 10
~... 1277
119 8
11
...M 163
..... 243
..... 859
M... 878
•>... 4U(I
M... 763
108
•••«• #28
1164
..... 1180
— 1260
~... 1867
■.••• 1666
— 1847
2 IS
t(
II
It
u
II
II
11
II
II
u
II
II
II
It
II
11
87
43
45
60
51
63
54
68
66
68
84
110
110
119
123
138
9
8
9
7
8
10
1
12
1
9
8
10
2
4
10
12
1
162
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it
If
It
PP
12
82
...- 117
..... 138
••••• loo
— 235
1 1
It
II
6
21
21
PT
VA
RL
It
4
4
18
~... 49
..... 171
147 11
140 10
20 8
LOSE
174
LOVE
RL
■••••
688
u
»»•••
979
u
••#••
1158
Son
18
10
t(
39
6
ti
42
9
*4
42
11
U
64
14
(1
97
14
t(
102
12
(1
125
6
(1
134
12
VA
420
RL
•••••
1580
Son
42
10
it
88
8
«(
119
4
LoM — what he would lose again
to him lose their mildneas
They that lose haif
Nor lose possession of that fair
lose name of single one
If I lose thee
and I lose both twain
which it fears to lose
knife ill used doth lose his edge
lose their dear delight •
Lose all and more
So him I lose
Loacth — Loseth his pride
Losing — Losing her woes in shows R L
And losing her, ray friend
That thou in losing me
Still losing when I saw myself
Lots— fur loss of Nestor's golden
words R L 1420
the hopeless merchant of this loss " 1660
All losses are restored Son 30 14
yet I have still the loss " 84 10
A loss in love " 42 4
my loss is my love's gain ** 42 9
my friend hath found that loss " 42 10
store with loss, loss with store ** 64 8
drop in for an after-loss " 90 4
Compared with loss of thee *" 90 14
live thou upon thy servant's loss " 146 9
the loss thereof still fearing P P 1 10
Wrought all my loss '* 18 14
Lost— perfect, never lost again VA 408
lost the fair discovery " 828
bad lost his power '* 944
what treasure hast thou lost " 1075
Their virtue lost " 1131
and all together lost R L 147
lost a dearer thing than life " .... 687
captivevic'iorthathath lost in gain '* 730
My honey lost, and I " 836
that dear jewel I have lost ** 1191
hut lost the dregs of life Son 74 9
And the Just pleasure lost " 121 8
Uim have I lost " 134 13
my honest faith in thee is lost ** 152 8
Lost, vaded, broken, dead P P 13 6
And as goods lost " 13 7
once 's for ever lost *' 13 11
Ail my lady's love is lost " 18 10
All our love is lost ** 18 48
Lot— bequeath not to their lot R L »... 534
Load— To stop the loud pursuers VA 688
Anon their loud alarums " ...» 700
and my loud crying still Son 143 14
Londcst^Let the bird of loudest lay P T 1
Iionr — still he lours and frets VA — 75
Loar*Ht— Nay, If thou lour'st on me Son 149 7
Lonrlng^Kis louring brows V A 183
Love— but love he laugh'd to scorn ** 4
O, how quick is love ** .... 38
Love keeps his revels •* .... 123
Love is a spirit " .... 149
Is love so light, sweet boy •* 155
seize love upon thy left " .... 158
cries ' Fie, no more of love " .... 185
What 'tis to love? how want of
love tormenteth ** .... 202
Being Judge in love ** ...» 220
Love made those hollows ** •»« 248
Love— Why, there Love lived VA
Poor queen of love "
He sees his love **
He looks upon his love "
Spurns at his love **
His love, perceiving "
Love-«ick Love by pleading
love's fire doth assuage
love's deep groans
But when he saw his love
Who sees his true-love
'I know not love
My love to love is love but to dis-
grace it
To love's alarms
should I be in love
Yet would my love
that breedeth love
For looks kill love, and love by
looks reviveth
that by love so thriveth
love did wittily prevent
if any love you owe me
Chiefly in love
Yet love breaks through
Tell me, love's master
the very lists of love
She's Love, she loves
To which Love's eyes
For where Love reigns
Distempering gentle Love
eats up Love's tender spring
For love can comment
in love with thee
If love have lent you
I hate not love, but your device
in love
Call it not love, for Love
Love comforteth like sunshine
Love's gentle spring
Love surfeits not
Love is all truth
Leaves Love upon her back
How love makes young
How love is wise
tidings of her love
Hateful divorce of love
Love's golden arrow
love, how strange it seems
fearing my love's decease
Fie, fie, fond love
Sorrow on love
all love's pleasure
doth my love destroy
They that love best their loves
shall not
kiss my sweet love's flower
Of Collatine's fair love R L
love's modest snow-white weed **
I'll beg her love ; but she "
Self-love had never drown'd him "
Love thrives not in the heart
Then Love and Fortune
Against love's fire fear's frost
untimely tears, her husband's love "
still are fear'd for love "
Yield to ray love "
Instead of love's coy touch **
For Collatine's dear love **
u
M
U
U
U
u
M
U
M
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u
11
II
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II
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II
II
U
II
II
II
II
II
II
M
II
. 246
, 2S1
. 287
. 807
, 811
817
828
384
877
393
S97
409
412
424
438
442
444
464
466
471
523
568
576
585
595
610
632
649
653
656
714
722
775
789
793
799
801
803
804
814
837
838
867
932
947
985
1002
1021
1136
1140
1163
1164
1188
7
196
241
266
270
851
855
670
<S11
668
.. 821
MAKE
180
MAN
■ake— your epitaph to make Son 81 1
makes your praises worse ** 84 14
the spite of fortune, make me bow " 90 3
and me most wretched make " 91 14
dost thou make the shame " 95 1
make me any summer's story ** 98 7
And make Time's spoils '* 100 12
Make answer, Muse "101 5
To make him much outlive " 101 11
To make him seem long hence '* 101 14
But makes antiquity " 108 12
To make of monsters "114 5
tu make our appetites "118 1
rather make them bom " 128 7
to make the taker mad "129 8
proudly make them cruel " 131 2
the power to make love groan " 131 6
makes my heart to groan " 133 1
to make thy large * Wiir more " 139 12
Make but my name " 136 13
she that makes me sin " 141 14
makes all swift dispatch " 143 8
Love's own hand did make " 145 1
To make me give the lie " 150 8
to make me love thee more " 150 9
what stop he makes L C ~... 109
To make the weeper laugh " 124
to make our wits more keen " 161
makes her absence valiant " 245
that you make 'gainst mine " 277
and yet do question make " 821
If love make me forsworn P P 5 1
and makes his book'thine eyes "55
lute, the queen of music, makes " 8 10
to make me wander thither " 14 10
make thee a bed of roses " 20 9
Makest— makest thou to be gone VA ~... 188
And makest fair reputation R L 623
Thuu makest the vestal " ...» 883
rankest waste in niggarding Son 1 12
Thou makest faults graces "96-4
That thy sable gender makest P T ~... 18
Haketh— too sensible thy passion
niaketh R L 1678
thus raaketh mine untrue Son 113 14
Raking— Making them rod and pale K^ ...» 21
making her cheeks all wet " 83
Making my arms his field " 108
Making it subject " 737
Making such sober action R L »... 1403
Making a famine Son 1 7
Making a couplemcnt " 21 5
Making no summer " 68 11
Not making worse what nature " 84 10
Making his style admired' " 84 12
Making their tomb " 86 4
on better judgement making " 87 12
making no defence " 89 4
Making lascivious comments " 95 6
making beautiful old rhyme " 106 3
Making dead wood " 128 12
making addition thus " 135 4
Makeless— like a makeless wife "94
Malady— not the least of all these
maladies VA «... 745
our maladies unseen Son \\% 8
Against strange maladies " 153 8
Halcontent— like a melancholy ... . VA 313
■an— more lovely than a man " ..... 9
214
S19
216
Man— Thing like a man VA
Thou art no man, though of a
man's complexion **
For men will kiss "
and I a man "
make true men thieves "
young men thrall and old men dote "
men's minds confound "
The eyes of men without an orator R L
that meaner men should vaunt "
A martial man to be "
or an old man's saw
descried in men's nativity
If ever man were moved
Men's faults do seldom
man, that coflfbrs up his gold
the child a man, the man a child
The mightier man
Since men prove beasts
For men have marble
In men, as in a rough-grown grove "
Though men can cover crimes
No man inveigh against
With men's abuses
One of my husband's men
The very eyes of men
Here one man's hand
And one man's lust
That no man could distinguish
men as plants increase
yourself in eyes of men
like old men of less truth
8o long as men can breathe
pattern to succeeding men
A man in hue
Which steals men's eyes "
with fortune and men's eyes **
this man's art and that man's scope "
by the height of happier men "
For no man well of such a salve
can speak " 84 7
All men make faults " 89 S
in men's eyes shall lie " 81 8
even in the mouths of men " 81 14
of all men's pride I boast " 91 12
nor no man ever loved " 116 14
All men are bad " 121 14
that leads men to this hell " 129 14
in the bay where all men ride " 137 6
As testy sick men " 140 7
the likeness of a man " 141 11
is a man right fair "144 3
Death that feeds on men " 146 13
true as all men's " 148 8
which yet men prove " 153 7
For men diseased " 154 12
A reverend man L C 67
Small show of man " 92
Yet, if men moved him " 101
and often men would say " ..... 106
This man's untrue " ..... 169
is a man right fair ' P P 2 3
the learned man hath got the lady
gay " 16 15
More in women than in men " 18 18
Like a thousand vanquish'd men " 18 36
' Had women been so strong as men " 19 23
women still to strive with men ** 19 43
Every man will be thy friend " 21 35
u
u
II
M
U
U
«
U
U
M
((
M
U
U
Son
(4
M
U
M
U
15
16
17
18
19
20
20
29
29
82
724
887
1048
80
41
200
244
588
587
683
855
954
lOOi
1148
1240
1249
1252
1254
12S9
1291
1388
1415
1489
1789
5
12
10
13
12
7
8
1
7
8
MAN
181
MASTER
It
111— No man will supply thy want P P 21 38
Itugv— He will not maoae^ her VA ...^ 598
manage by the well-doing steed L C ~... 112
lane— his braided hanging mane VA ...« 271
Thin mane, thick Uil *' ~... 298
thnragh his mane and tail " 803
Isif ling^reprehends her .... eye VA ~... IWto
laalftild— With objects manifold L C 216
laalj— Made glorious by his manly
chivalry R L 109
Here manly Hector faints '* 1486
Till manly shame " ..... 1777
laaner— their manners most ex-
pressly told " 1397
vith manners may I sing Son 39 1
in manners holds her still " 85 1
vhich public manners breeds " 111 4
manner of my pity-wanting pain " 140 4
laasioB— Her mansion batter'd R L ~... 1171
what a mansion have those vices
got &m 95 9
npon thy fading mansion spend " 146 6
Of lands and mansions L C 138
laatle— -his .... rudely o'er his arm R L ..... 170
and throws his mantle by P P 6 9
laaaal — Set thy seal-manual V A ^... 516
laay— The many musits " ..... 683
trodden on by many " ..... 707
like many clouds " ~... 972
Alas, how nuny bear such shame-
ful blows R L
Many a dry drop seem'd **
The scalps of many, almost hid **
Stood many Trojan mothers
Many she sees where cares have
the public plague of many moe
vhy should so many fall
these many lives confounds
Till after many accents
being many seeming one
thou art beloved of many
And many maiden gardens
the lack of many a thing
of many a vanish'd sight
many a holy and obsequious tear
That due of many now is thine
Fall many a glorious morning
And, proud of many
In many's looks the false heart's
history
Hov many lambs might the stem
volf betray
How many gazers might'st thou
lead
nany nymphs that vow'd
Bianjr k^ns of true hearts
had she many a one
Ciaek'd many a ring
many a blasting hour
Hany there were that did
maay have, that never touch'd **
■any bulwarks boiided
Amcmg the many that mine eyes ^
fnn many a several fkir "
lith many a lovely look P P
How many tales to pitase me **
la»-triumph in the map of death R L
^ fMe, that map which deep
InpreMioo bears **
t<
41
Son
M
832
M...
1373
.....
1413
n...
1431
.....
1445
.....
1479
M...
1483
.....
1489
.....
1719
8
13
10
3
16
6
30
3
30
8
31
5
31
12
33
1
67
12
93
96
XC-
M
96
11
154
3
164
6
M...
43
M...
45
.....
72
_...
YAK
.....
141
_...
1.V2
.....
19ii
~...
2o»;
4
3
Map — the map of days outworn Son 68 1
And him as for a map " 68 18
Mar— Mar not the thing R L 578
To mar the subject Son 103 10
Marble— though marble wear with
RL ^
4<
Son
RL
Son
RL
M
raining
For men have marble
are they formed as marble will
Not marble, nor the gilded
March— thy ml^ty vapours march
To march in ranks
March'd — march'd on to make
bold Uector march'd to field **
Marcheth— niarchcth to Lucreco* bed "
Marching — inarching on with trem-
bling paces "
Mare — my palfrey from the mare V A
Mirgent — Writ in the glassy mar-
gents of such books R h
upon whose weeping roargent L C
Marl^Id— Her eyes like marigolds R L
But as the marigold Son
Marjoram — Aud buds of niaijoram "
Mark — Didst thou not mark my face VA
Mark the poor wretch
My will that marks thee
tu mark how slow time goes
Mark how one string
Mark how with my neglect
I sit and mark
Mark — Thy mark is feeble age
mark of every open eye
For marks descried in men's na-
tivity
true mark of uiodcsty
slander's mark was ever yet the
fair Son
it is an ever-fixed mark "
If knowledge be the mark P P
Marketh— advisedly she marketh VA
Marking— She, marking them, begins ^
uiarkintc what he tells R L
Marr*d— To mend the hurt that his
unkiD«ine8ii niarr'd V A
Marriage— that hath engirt his ,,,. R L
to the marriage of true minds
Married — Ky unions married
wert not married to my muse
It was marri(.'«l chantity
Marrow — my marrow burning
Marrow-eat iaa— The — sickness
Man — Nor Mars his sword
how gijd Mars did try her
Martial— A martial man to be
RL
t(
Son
«
PP
VA
RL
560
.... 1240
... 124t
55 1
... 782
32 12'
... 438
... 1430
... 801
... 1391
... 884
102
39
397
6
7
643
680
487
990
9
12
5
941
520
25
99
8
112
15
ti
M... 538
..... 1220
70 2
116 5
5 7
-... 457
.... 835
~... 670
Son
It
116
8
82
PT
VA
Son
PP
RL .
55
11
402
.... 1712
Martjr*d— lies niartyr'd with disgrace " ~...
Manrel— Therefore no marvel VA -...
No marvel then, though I Son 148
Mask — To niajtk thfdr brows R L ~...
Masked — The region cloud hath
mask'd him from me Son 33
their ma»k<;d budd dincl^ises ** 54
mask'd not thy show •* 70
Maaoary— rofH out the work of ... . ** 55
Master- Hifi t«-»ty master VA .....
Tell me, love's ma»ter, shall we
meet ** —
af>ks the weary raitiif for his master ^ ~...
That lik»^l of her nia/f ter P P 16
To leave the master loveless ** 16
478
221
1
•
1
61
142
741
7
3
2^10
11
794
12
8
13
6
319
585
914
2
<
1
LOVE
17.7
LUCRETIUS
Zove— make me lovo thee more Son 150 9
I lore what others do ahhor ** 150 11
And age in lore lores not to hare
years toM PP 1 12
IT lore make me forsworn, how
ahail I swear to lore "51
do not lore that wrong " 5 13
One knight lores hQth " 8 U
So they lored, as lore in twain P T »... 25
Lored— Hunting he lored VA 4
yet she is not lored *' 610
make thee only lored for fear RL 610
Their images I lored Sm 31 IS
1 lored her dearly " 42 2
His rider loved not speed " 50 8
are lored of more and less " 96 8
nor no man erer lored ** 116 14
So they lored, as lore in twain P T 25
Lore-god— The little Lore-god Son 154 1
LoTO-k ladling— his lore-kindling Are" 158 8
Lore-laeklng— Lore-lacking restate VA 752
Lorelcw— To leave the master ..., PP 16 6
LorellBcas — Unth rifty loreliness,
why dost thou spend Son 4 1
IjOToly — more lorely than a man VA 9
These lorely cares ' " ~... 247
Calls back the lovely April An 3 10
The lorely gaze where erery eye "52
Thou art more lorely " 18 2
beauteous and lovely youth '* 54 13
thy lorely argument " 79 5
How sweet and lorely " 95 1
ladies dead and lorely knights ** 106 4
O thou, my lorely boy " 126 1
lorely, fresh, and green PP 4 2
With many a lovely look "48
Lorer— For lorers say, the heart VA 829
And like a lowly lorer " 350
must not repel a lorer " ...» 573
For lorers* hours are long " 842
trophies of my lovers gone Son 31 10
rude lines of thy deceased lorer " 32 4
and dwell in lovers' eyes " 55 14
though my lover's life " 63 12
Thy lovers withering as thy sweet
selfgrow'st " 126 4
Was this a lover PP 7 17
That the lover, sick to death " 17 7
Lorer'd— would not be so lover'd L C 820
Lore-ffirk— By this, the .... queen VA 175
That love-uick Love " 328
LoTcat— Why lovest thou that Son 8 8
that thou none lovest " 10 4
And then thou lovest me " 136 14
Tell me thou lovest elsewhere " 139 5
as thou lovi>st those " 142 9
Those tluit can see thou lovest " 149 14
Because thou lovest the one PP 8 4
Thou lorest to hoar "89
plainly say thou lorest her well " 19 11
Lore-anit— my lore-suit, sweet, fulfil iStm 136 4
Loring — restalsandself-lovingnunsK^ 752
the loving swine " 1115
there is no hate in loving JR L 240
and tell my loving tale " 480
apparel on my tattcr'd loving Son 26 11
and all love's loving parts " 31 8
vouchsafe me but this loving
thought " 32 9
12
Lorlng— Loving offenders, thus I
wUl An 42 5
Self so self-loring were iniquity " 62 11
all my loring thoughts on me " 88 10
and most most loring breast " 110 14
and loring mourners be " 132 3
grounded on sinful loring " 142 2
In loring thee thou know'st " 152 1
should use like loving charms PP 11 8
Low — And being low never relieved
by any VA 708
Ne'er settled equally, but high or
low " 1139
But low shrubs wither R L 665
low rassals to thy state " ..... 666
rillain court'sics to her low " ..... 1338
Some high, some low " ..... 1412
From his low tract Son 7 12
both high and low L C »... 21
Low-deellned — My .... honour R L »... 1706
Lower — Stray lower, where the
pleasant fountains lie V A 234
Lowly— And like a lowly lover " ..... 850
Loyal— tremble with her loyal fear R L 261
Since thou couldst not defend thy
loyal dame " »... 1034
when I fear'd I was a loyal wife " 1048
And the turtle's loyal breast P T «... 57
Lnek— of good or evil luck Satn 14 8
Lncreee — Lucrece the chaste R L ~... 7
his boast of Lucrece' sovereignty " ..... 86
in Lucrece* face was seen " 64
with modest Lucrece " 123
So Lucrece must I force " ..... 182
marcheth to Lucrece* bed " -... 801
by Lucrece* side " 881
And holy-thoughted Lucrece " »... 384
* Lucrece,' quoth he " «... 512
But cloudy Lucrece " 1084
Poor Lucrece* cheeks " «... 1217
whereof in Lucrece view " 1261
bid fair Lucrece speak " 1268
'O, peace!* quoth Lucrece " .....1284
If erer, love, thy Lucrece " 1806
For Lucrece thought " ..... 1344
is Lucrece come " .... 1443
Lucrece spends her eyes " 1457
And therefore Lucrece swears " 1462
So Lucrece, set a-work " «... 1496
Who finds his Lucrece " ..... 1585
thy Lucrece is not free " 1624
The adulterate death of Lucrece " 1645
For she that was thy Lucrece " ..... 1682
Till Lucrece* father " «... 1732
as pitying Lucrece* woes " 1747
now Lucrece is unlived " ..... 1754
Then live, sweet Lucrece " 1770
Lucrece* bleeding stream " 1774
holding Lucrece' life " 1805
the knife from Lucrece' side " 1807
Burying in Lucrece' wound " 1810
And by chaste Lucrece* soul " 1839
to bear dead Lucrece thence " 1850
Lacretla— Lucretia's glove, wherein
her needle sticks " 817
Lucretia, marking what he tells " 510
Lneretlas— dear daughter,* old Lu-
cretius cries " «... 1751
bids Lucretius give his sorrow " 1773
LUCRETIUS
178
MADRIGAL
Lacrftluii— '0/ quoth Lucretius, 'I
did give R L »... 1800
Lullaby— Then, lullaby, the learned
man PP IG 15
Luiff — that burning lungs did raise L C 228
his spongy lungs bestow'd " «... 326
Lure — As falcons to the lure V A «... 1027
Lark— lurk in mine eye " ~... 644
embers hid, lurks to aspire R L 5
folly lurk in gentle breasts " 851
can lurk in such a look ** 1535
* can lurk' from ** can not' took " 1537
tricks and toys that in them lurk P P 19 39
Lark*d— lurk d like two thieves VA 108G
Larking— Who sees the .... serpent/? L 362
Last — though not in lust V A ..... 42
Careless lust stirs up *' 556
sweating Lust on earth " 794
Lust's effect is tempest " 800
Lust's winter comes ere summer " 802
Lust like a glutton dies " 803
Lust full of forged lies " 804
to obtain his lust R L ~... 156
While lust and murder wakes " 168
with lust's foul charm " ~... 173
armour of still-«laughter'd lust ** ..... 188
choked by unresisted lust " .... 282
"Stuff up his lust " «... 297
His rage of lust " 424
Tears harden lust " ..... 560
school where Lust shall learn ** ..... 617
Not to seducing lust " 639
Black lust, dishonour, shame '* ..... 654
light and lust arc deadly enemies *' 674
O, that prone lust should stain " 684
And Lust, the thief " «... 693
W^hilc Lust is in his pride " 705
She bears the load of lust " «... 7.34
as knowing Tarquin's lust " 1354
the Greeks with little lust " «... 1:^84
Thy heat of lust, fond Paris " «... 1473
And one man's lust " «... 1489
The loathsome act of lust " «... 16.36
lust came evidence to swear " 1650
Is lust in action ; and till action
lust 8on\lB 2
Lost*breathed— Lust-breathed Tar-
quin leaves R L 3
Lustflil- with .... language broken VA 47
And now this lustful lord R L 169
lode-star to his lustful eye " 179
Lnstlly— chant it lusUly VA 869
Lnsty — lusty courser's rein " ...^ 31
lusty, young, and proud " 260
treasure of thy lusty days Son 2 6
and lusty leaves quite gone "57
Lute— Upon the lute doth ravish PP % 6
Fhocbus' lute, the queen of music " 8 10
Laxary— in heart-wish'd luxury L C 314
Lying— Love-god lying once asleep iScm 154 1
■ad— Being mad before VA 249
As they were mad " 323
Of mad mischances " 738
Her eyes are mad " «... 1062
It shall be raging-mad ** 1151
let the thief run mad R L «... 997
Sometime 'tis mad " ...« 1106
mad with their sweet melody " .... 1108
Mad— Who, mad that sorrow should
his use control R L
to make the taker mad 8(m
Mad in pursuit, and in possenion so **
I should grow mad **
Mad slanderers by mad ears be-
lieved be **
frantic-mad with <rvennore unrest **
■adam — ' Madam, ere I was up RL
Haddlnfr— of this madding fever Som
Made — Nature that made thee
resistance made him fret
Torches are made to light
Love made those hollows
his acts made plain
made mine hard
And once made perfect
thyself art made away
then apologies be made
Made glorious by his manly chiv-
alry
and made her thrall
which in thy reign are made
If that be made a theme
the other made divine
made me stop my breath
Make weak-made women tenants
made for Priam's Troy
made herself herself detest
vow, which Brutus made before "
VA
u
u
M
U
U
RL ^
— 1781
129 8
129 9
140 9
140 12
147 10
«... 1277
119 8
•••■• GO
...« 163
243
•••« o^9
«.M S78
— 406
..» 76S
SI
tt
u
«l
11
.... 109
•••«• 735
This were to be new made
hath nut made for store
So I, made lame
mine eyes be blessed made
My life, being made of four
being made from thee
of perfect'st love being made
whereof are ye made
are sweetest odours made
that made me first your slave
And art made tongue-tied
dead fleece made another gay
what nature made so clear
made myself a motley
Made old offences
by evil still made better
Made more or less
that she is made of truth
made them swear against the thing
they see
and made him her place
made fairer by their place
and made their wills obey
Love made them not
smiled or made some moan
made the blossoms dote
that she is made of truth
tarriance for Adonis made
which a grove of myrtles made
Made me think upon mine own
Whereupon it made this threne
Madly- Which madly hurries her
Is madly toss'd
desire thus madly led
Madmen— My thoughts and my dia-
course as madmen's are
Madness — And In my madness
Madrigal— MelodioosMrds slog mad-
rigals PP
1104
1100
«M« 1260
1067
.^ 1560
1847
2 IS
M
«(
U
M
«t
N
«(
II
U
U
11
87
43
45
50
9
S
9
7
8
61 10
63 1
54 12
68
00
68
84
110
110
1
9
8
10
2
4
119 10
123 12
138 1
152 12
LC
82
u
117
••• —
133
14
185
M
217
II
235
PP 1
1
" 6
4
" 21
4
« 21
18
PT
40
r ^A •«••■
904
Rh —
171
44
300
aom 147
11
*' 140
10
SO
MAID
179
MAKE
M«ld— she boanely calls her maid RL 1214
cb«ek8 anto her maid seem so " ~... 1217
Kren 80 the maid " 1228
Which makes the maid weep " 1232
ere I was up/ replied the maid " 1277
if your maid may be so bold ** .... 1282
Her maid is gone " 1296
A maid of Dlan's Sim 153 2
a fickle maid fall pale L C 5
be 'gan besiege me :* Gentle maid " ..... 177
He preach'd pure maid " 815
pervert a reconciled maid " 829
did bear the maid away P P 16 14
Maiden — quench the .... burning VA 50
A pair of maiden worlds R L 408
the worm intrude the maiden bud " 848
And many maiden gardens Sbn 16 6
maiden Tirtue rudely strumpeted ** 66 6
but in her maiden hand " 154 4
maidens' eyes stuck over aU his
face L C 81
MaideB-toiiinied--For .... he was " 100
Main — did win whom he would .... " 312
Main — once in the main of light Son 60 5
win of the watery main " 64 7
On your broad main "80 8
Maintain— this general evil they
malnUin " 121 3
Maintained— rights in Rome .... R L 1838
Mi^Jecty— With gentle majesty VA 278
ariseth in his majesty " 856
in plaits of msjesty R L »... 93
for exiled majesty's repeal " 640
In great commanders grace and
majesty ** ~... 1387
his sacred majesty Son 7 4
given grace a double majesty " 78 8
Make— makes amain unto him VA ...~ 5
Hake use of time " »... 129
I'll make a shadow ** 191
they make no battery " 426
clapping makes it red '* 4G8
bargains may I make " »... 512
purchase if thou make " 515
wilt thou make the match " 586
make them droop with grief " ~... 666
make my faint lieart " 669
To make the cunning bounds '* 686
shadow makes him stop " »... 706
To make thee hate " 711
make true men thieves " 724
Hake modest Dian ** 725
makes me like you " ~... 774
Hake verbal repeUtion " ..... 831
makes young men thrall " «... 837
that makes him bright " ..... 862
to make her stay *' .... 873
fear whereof doth make him shake " 880
make them wet again " ..... 966
makes thee ridiculous " ..... 988
makes the wound seem three *' 1064
That makes more gashes " 1066
shall it make most weak " 1145
Hake the young old " .....1152
Yet their ambition makes R L 68
He makes excuses " 114
Hake something nothing " »... 154
must doting Tarquin make " ~... 155
can my invention make " ..... 225
Make — And with good thoughts
makes dispensation R L ~... 248
did make her colour rise " 257
The wind wars with his torch to
make him stay " ..... 311
march'd on to make his stand " 438
The sight which makes ** 455
To make the breach " 469
makes the lily pale " ..... 478
and makes a pause " 541
Tliat to his borrow'd bed he make
retire " 573
* This deed will make thee ** 610
Hake slow pursuit *' 696
Hake war against " ..... 774
Let their exhaled unwholesome
breaths make sick *• ..... 779
and make perpetual night '* 784
As palmers' chat makes short *' ~... 791
* Hake me not object '* ...„ 806
To make the child " 954
to make amends " ..... 961
To make him curse *' .... 970
To make hlra moan " ..... 977
That makes him honour'd " ..... 1005
To make more vent " 1040
Hake her rouans mad " 1106
doth make the wound " 1116
Hake thy sad grove " ..... 1129
I make some hole " 1175
abridgement of my will I make " 1198
the knife tbat'makes my wound *' 1201
Which makes the maid weep " 1232
Hake weak-made women " ..... 1260
cannot make it less *' 1285
dares not thereof make discovery " 1314
Deep sounds make lesser noise " ..... 1329
did make him more amazed '* ..... 1356
and make them bold " ..... 1559
to make mine own excuse " 1653
his sorrows, make a saw ** 1672
make conquest of the stronger " 1767
sorrow's tide, to make it more " 1789
and make my old excuse Son 2 11
Hake sweet some vial "63
make worms thine heir " 6 14
Hake thee another self " 10 13
would make the world away "11 8
do I question make " 12 9
Time's scythe can make defence " 12 13
Hake war upon this bloody tyrant " 16 2
Can make you live " 16 12
And make the earth devour " 19 2
Hake glad and sorry seasons " 19 5
Hay make seem bare " 26 6
Hakes black night beauteous " 27 12
doth uightly make grief's strength " 28 14
make me travel forth " 34 2
All men make faults " 35 5
I make my love engrafted " 87 8
how to make one twain " 39 13
shadow shadows doth make bright " 43 5
make some special instant " 52 11
Hakes summer's welcome " 56 14
how happy you make those " 57 12
make towards the pebbled shore " 60 1
should make you woe " 71 8
makes thy love more strong " 73 13
To make me tongue-tied " 80 4
ME
185
MESSENGER
He— To win me soon to hell PP 2 5
For being both to me " 2 11
cures All disgrace in me "88
If by me broke " 3 13
If love make me forsworn "51
These thoughta, to me like oaks "54
Which is to me some praise " 5 10
many tales to please me "79
*twixt thee and me "88
Spenser to me, whose deep conceit "87
thou left'st me nothing " 10 8
jet thou Icft'st me more " 10 9
thou didRt bequeath to me " 10 12
the warlike gud embraced me " 11 5
the warlike god unlaced me " U 7
To kiss and clip me " 11 14
And dalTd me to a cabin " 14 3
to make me wander thither " 14 10
and bade me come to>morrow " 15 12
To spite me now " 15 15
Yet not for me " 15 16
Love hath forlorn me " 18 21
to round me on th' ear " 19 51
Uve with me and be my love " 20 1
Then live with me " -20 16
pleasures might me move " 20 19
Made me think upon " 21 18
Kone alive wUl pity mo " 21 28
iMd— As he roots the mead VA 636
As winter meads when sun £ L ~... 1218
Im4ow — ^the meadows green Son 83 3
leagre— ugly, meagre, lean VA 931
Ifaa— know not what we mean " 126
what dost thou mean " 933
means to immure herself " 1194
if thou mean to chide Jt L 484
do I mean to place him " 517
I mean to bear thee " 670
What means the world Son 14S 6
li«ier— that .... men should vaunt " 41
Ifaainf — Hii meaning struck her VA ~... 462
Could pick no meaning Ji L 100
would not take her meaning i* P 11 12
leais—fiome happy mean to end a
bspless life R L »... 1045
These means, as frets " 1140
Pausing for means " 1365
That he finds means " 1561
With means more blessed Son 16 4
Tban public means "111 4
Icaat-and meant thereby " 11 13
Ictsare — Measure my strangeness
with my unripe years VA 524
to tread the measures " 1148
they measure by thy deeds Son 69 10
tre not my measure " 91 7
Ifssared— Thus far the miles are.... " 50 4
IcdiatMT— be you mediators J? L 1020
Icdtdae— And brought to medicine iS(m 118 11
lediUtloB—O, fearful meditation " 65 9
lied— this favour, for thy meed VA ~... 15
ii the meed proposed Ji L 132
leek— all recreant, poor, and meek " 710
Icct— shall we meet to-morrow VA 585
here she meets another " 917
to meet the eastern light R L ...» 773
ne'er meet with Opportunity " ~... 903
tbey with winter meet Son 5 13
with base infection meet " 94 11
14
PP
(t
8
20
Ji Jj M...
VA
It
•••••
•••••
«
4<
■eetlag'— the .... clouds contend V A ^... 820
till meeting greater ranks R L -... 1441
All our merry meetings P P \B 46
MeetneM— found a kind of meetness ^^im il8
MelaBclioiy— like a . . . . malcontent V A «...
oppreHs'd with melancholy Son 45-
Hellow— The mellow plum doth £b]1 VA .....
Melodious— Melodious discord, heav-
enly tune
the sweet melodious sounds
Melodious birds sing madrigals
Melody— with their sweet melody
Melt^-or seem to melt
melt with the midday sun
Which her cheek melts
melt at mine eyes' red fire
Melt at my tears
when sun doth melt
Melted- Was melted like a vapour VA ~...
Melting— to his melting buttock lent " .
morning's silver-melting dew R L .....
moistened like a meltiug eye " .....
All melting ; though our drops L C ~...
Memorial— Which for memorial still Son 74
Memory — might bear his memory
their brave state out of memory
living record of your memory
shall never cut from memory
will give thee memory
what thy memory cannot contain
From hence your memory
with lasting memory
Mend — To mend the hurt
the thought of hearts can mend
thou dost but mend the i»tyle
sinful then, striving to mend
Mended — Whether we are mended
Merchandised— That love is mer-
chandized whoHC rich esteeming "
Merehant— The merchant fears R L
merchant of this loss " .....
Merclflil — It shall be merciful VA ~...
Merdlefm— the .... and pitchy night " .....
tries a mercilc&s conclusion R L ~...
Merry— Lies at the mercy " ...«,
in her heart did mercy come Son 145
Merelj — characters and words mere-
ly but art L C ~...
merely with the garment " .....
Merit— Thy merit hath my duty iS^i
W^hat merit lived in mo "
And place my merit "
or thy dear merit
it merits not rojirovlng
What merit do I in myself respect "
(4
II
14
M
41
44
44
VA
Son
44
44
14
1
15
55
63
77
77
81
122
I •••
69
78
103
59
102
44
44
Where thy desert may merit
Meritorlons— a .... fair design
Mermaid — ^Thy mermaid's voice
like the wanton mermaid's songs
As if some mermaid
Merry — she hears a merry horn
And merry fools
slain in merry company
brooks not merry guests
All my merry jigs
All our merry meetings
In the merry mouth of May
Menaenger — the mindful messenger
PP
RL
VA
26
72
88
108
142
149
19
44
RL
VA
RL
44
PP
41
U
18
18
21
7
813
8
627
431
9
8
1108
144
750
982
1073
694
1218
1166
815
24
1227
300
4
4
8
8
11
6
9
8
2
478
2
U
9
11
3
836
1660
1155
821
1160
864
6
174
816
2
2
2
4
4
9
27
1692
429
777
1411
1025
989
1110
1125
9
46
2
come back
R L »... 1683
MESSENGER
186
MIND
VA
RL
LC
Son
M
U
(I
PP
Son
<i
LC
Hfmenprer— By those swift ....
Met— When as I met the boar
Met far from home
Metol— With twisted metal
Mothlnkt— And yet methinks
Methinks no face so gracious
which methinks still doth stand
That all the world besides me-
thinks are dead
methinks thou stay'st too long
Method— To new-found methods
Metre — And stretched metre
Mettle— That horse his mettle
MIekle — more mickle was the pain P P
Mid-day— tired in the mid-day heat VA
melts witli the mid-day sua **
Middle — strong youth in his middle
age Son
Midnight— dead of dark midnight R L
Midstr-But in the midst
And midst the sentence
Yet in the midst of all
Might— He might be buried
the feast might ever last
kings might be espoused
Might have excuse to work
might compass his fair fair
might have reposed still
Till they might open
and shame that might ensue
which the world might bear her
might become them better
There might you see
That one might see
You might behold
might one behold
Their pleading might you seo
might be done to me
might plead for Justice there
when I might charm thee so
beauty's rose might never die
might bear his memory
in honour might uphold
it might unused stay
That I might see
might be better used
being extant, well might show
might the stern wolf betray
might I from myself depart
Might I not then say
Then might I not say so
might have reraember'd
It might for Fortune's bastard
That she might think me
might dart their injuries
If I might t«ach thee
might speak ill of thee
might think sometime it saw
I might as yet have been
That she might think me
as well as well might be
Air, would I might triumph so
pl^tfures might me move
Miifht— nor brag not of thy might
sought with all my might
of mine own love's might
sharpen'd in his former might
unless this miracle have might
Spends all his might
45 10
Wtf
.... 1596
205
14 2
62 5
104 11
112
12
76
17
• •••
16
14
12
4
12
107
9
177
750
PP
VA
u
RL
II
u
II
II
u
II
II
It
11
14
U
Son
7 6
...~ 1625
••••• 566
7 11
■ •••• ^"T^
••••• ^9 f
..... 20
••••• £oo
882
M... o99
..... 12G3
«... 1321
..... 1380
1386
H... luOO
M... l«K7tf
1401
M... 1628
..... 1649
..... 1681
1 2
1
13
48
69
82
88
96
109
115
115
120
124
188
139
140
140
L C ...~
14
U
II
II
M
II
II
U
II
II
U
II
II
U
II
PP
II
II
II
VA
RL
Son
II
II
II
4
10
3
9
13
6
9
3
10
13
9
2
8
12
5
10
10
75
3
2
10
19
113
..... 4oo
23 8
56 4
65 18
80 8
1
16
17
20
Jfighi—woni of fortune's might Son 90 U
gives thee all thy might " 100 2
built up with newer might " 123 2
with cunning, when thy might " 1.^ 7
hast thou this powerful might " 150 1
her absence valiaut, not her might L C . 245
Mightier— The mightier man, the
mightier is the thing R L 1004
do not you a mightier way Son 16 1
Mightily— but mightily he noted R L 414
MIghtat— Then mightst thou pause VA ..... 137
thou mightst my seat forbear Son 41 9
mightst thou lead away ** 96 11
Mighty— Thyself art mighty R L 583
forgot in mighty Rome " .... 1644
How mighty then you are L C ..... 253
Milch— Like a milch doe VA 875
Mild — raging-mad and silly-mild " .... 1151
And let mild women R L 979
not infant sorrows, bear them mild " .... 1096
By this, mild patience " 1268
But the mild glance *' 1399
So mild that Patience " .... 15^
this mild image drew ** .... 1520
so weary and so mild " .... 1542
Mild as a dove PP 7 2
Mildnesa— to him lose their .... R L .... 979
Mile — To leap large lengths of miles Son 44 10
Thus far the miles are measured " 50 4
Milk— Like milk and blood VA .... 902
Milk-white— than her dove PP 9 8
Million — That millions of strange
shadows on you tend
Million'd— Time, whose mUlion'd
accidents
Mind— so hard a mind
if she knew his mind
with disturbed mind
For all my mind
weak and silly mind
doth men's minds confound
troubled minds that wake
And in his inward mind
burthen of a guilty mind
to close so pure a mind
let beasts bear gentle minds
For men have marble, women
waxen, minds
At last she calls to mind
to mock the mind
save to the eye of mind
not a mind so ill
came in her mind the while
should bear a wicked mind
and spotless is my mind
May my pure mind
her mind untainted clears
from weak minds proceeds
her husband's shape in mind
that I may change my mind
To work my mind
by night my mind
doth put this in my mind
Since mind at first
the beauty of thy mind
thy mind's imprint will bear
new acquaintance of thy mind
vex me with inconstant mind
mine eye is in my mind
Son S3 3
u
VA
II
II
CI
u
RL
II
II
II
u
11
II
u
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
Son
II
M
II
115 5
.... 203
.... 340
383
.... 1016
1048
.... 126
..... 185
.... 7«>v
— 761
.... 1148
.... 1240
.... 1366
— 1414
.... 1426
.... 1530
1536
••••• Xv4v
•••-• IflOO
.... 1704
.... 1710
.... 1825
9 8
10
27
9
4
II
u
M
11
U
27 13
50 13
59
69
77
77
92
118
8
9
8
12
9
1
MASTER
182
ME
II
Madfr—hewatj u joa master now Som 106 8
UmUr'4— with a leathern rein VA .... 392
to be master'd by bb joung B L ~... 863
Maat^iin^— For mastering her V A ~... 114
mastering what not strires L C* — 240
Maater-Mifftma — the master -mis-
tress of my passion Som 20 2
Mmteb— wilt thuu make the match VA ...~ 5S6
shall not match his woe ** — 1140
Matrhetb— thy odour matcbeth not
thy show SbH 69 13
Mate — In the poosession of bis beau-
teous mate R L — 18
HatMl— is mated with delays V A ...^ 909
Matter—* Nu matter where,' quoth he ** -... 715
Aa dry combustions matter ** ~... 1162
mi.^took the matter so R L ...~ 1826
No matter then although Sun 44 5
Then lack'd I matter ** 86 14
but waking no such matter *' 87 14
a plenitude of subtle matter L C ...~ 302
Matarity— Crawls to maturity Sun 60 6
Maand — farours from a maund she
drew L C ...~ 36
Maw— and pine the maw VA . 602
May — sweet boy, and may it be " — . 155
That thine may lire " _... 172
by pleading may be blest *' .... 328
sorrow may be said " -... 333
Long may they kiss ** 505
May say, the plague is banlsh'd " ^... 510
bargains may I make " 512
that he may depart ** ^... 578
much as may be pru^ced " ^... 608
may be compared well ** ~... 701
May lend thee light ** ^... 864
yes, it may ; thou hast " «... 939
What may a heavy groan adrantagc ** >... 950
may the better thrive ** ...« 1011
that they may surprise R L 166
8r>rrow may on this arise " 186
May feel her heart " «... 465
foul sin may say " . 629
never may behold " _... 746
where it may find " «... 760
May set at noon " ~... 784
May likewise be " „... 805
Tarquin's eye may read the mot. " 830
where he the lamb may get " ..... 878
where none may spy hira ** ..... 881
his suit may be obtained *' 898
stars may hide them " ..... 1008
The crow may bathe " 1009
1 may convey this troubled soul " .....1176
That he may vow " «... 1179
may be so bold " 1282
may be call'd a hell " 1287
CoIIatine may know " l:M2
may grace the fashion " ..... 1319
her boauty I may tear " «... 1472
that we may give redress " ..... 1603
may be imagined " 1622
'How may this forced stain be
wiped " .,.,. 1701
May my pure mind with the foul
actdlsfiense " ..... 1704
May any terms acquit me " ..... 1706
Yet neither may poMsess " 1794
widow well may keep Son 9 7
! M«y— thai I may change
beauty still may live **
Where I may noi remove **
May make seem bare **
may I dare to boast **
Suns of the world may stain **
I I may not erennore acknowledge
thee "
with manners may I sing "
separation I may give **
yet it may be said "
more blest may be the view **
Where you may be *
You yourself may privilege your
time
my love may still shine bright **
your true love may seem **
the world may see my pleasure **
May btUl seem love to me "
mine eye may be deceived **
that ink may character *'
That may express my lore **
I may be straight **
May time disgrace and wretched
minutes kill **
She may detain, but not still keep **
That I may not be so **
Thy pity may deserve "
Suspect I may **
My soul doth tell my body that he
may "
there may be aught applied L C
may her suffering ecstasy assuage **
couns(*l may stop awhile **
with acture they may be
Suspect I may, yet not
T may be she joy'd to jest **
*T may be again **
thy cheeks may blow "
Where thy desert may merit praise"
pleasures may thee move **
Truth may seem, but cannot be P T
May — the darling buds of May Son
oft 'twixt May and April L C
Love whose month was ever May P P
In the merry month of May
Mayst — mayst thou well be tasted
thou revenged mayst be
Thou mayst call thine
where thou mayst prove
that thou mayst true lore call
thou mayst come and part
thou mayst in me behold
this learning mayst thou taste
by the dial's shady stealth mayst
know
mayst without attaint o'erlook
that thou mayst take
Thou mayst be false
mayst thou be denied
thou mayst have thy • Will " ]
w
pp
VA
RL
Son
u
tt
««
Maxe— with a winding maxe
Me — why dost abhor me
Bid me discourse
trees support me
draw me through the sky
I list to spori me
* Ay me,' quoth Venus
fire that bumeth me
RL
VA
M
M
MINORITY
188
MOIST
Minority— Proving from world's mi-
nority their right B L 67
MiMtrel— Feast-fiuding rainstrels ** ~... 817
Mlnato — But in one minute's fight VA .... 746
one minute in an hour ** ..... 1187
Wlio buys a minute's mirth H L ..... 213
as minutes fill up hours *' ~... 297
Till every minute pays " -... 829
One poor retiring minute " .... 962
to brief minutes tell Son 14 6
So do our minutes ** 60 2
thy precious Tuiuutes waste " 77 2
and wretched minutes kill " 126 . 8
But now are minutes added P P IS 14
each minute seems a moon ** 13 15
Miracle— uuletM this .... have might Son 65 13
Mire — his coal-black wings in mire R L ~... 1009
Mirror— now that fair fresh mirror " ..... 17G0
Mirth— Who buys a minute's mirth *' ..... 213
For mirth doth search " 1109
MlMcaird-truth.... simplicity iSm 66 11
Mischance— Of mad mischances V A ..... 738
With some mischance R L ..... 9«>8
bechance him pitiful mischances " «... 976
Mischief— A mischief worse V A «... 7G4
Why work'st thou mischief JS L ..... 960
Misdeed— Tlicn kings' misdeeds " ..... 609
Tliat from their own misdeeds '* ..... 637
Miser- As 'twixt a miser and his
wealth &>n 75 4
Misery— For misery is trodden on V A ^... 707
and much misery " 738
Is no friend in misery P P 21 82
Misfortune — Of hard misfortune R L ..... 1713
MlMgOTcrnlng — dishouour, shame,
misgoverning " 654
Mishap— languisheth in her mishaps F^ ..... 603
Misplaced — Iionour shamefully .... ^Sbn 66 5
Misprision- upon .... growing " 87 11
Misled— is his heart misled R L 869
Mlm— blames her miss VA ...~ 53
MlsH*d— being clouded presently is
miss'd R L ~... 1007
thy record never can bo miss'd Son 122 8
Mis -shapen — Mis-shapen Time,
copesmate of ugly Kight R L ~... 925
Mlsslng-she in him finds missing VA ...» 605
Mistake — hounds .... their smell " ..... 686
Miiftakes that aim, and cleaves " ..... 942
oft the eye mistakes ** ..... 1068
though I mistake my view Son 148 11
Mistaking— Or me, to whom thou
gavest it, else mistaking " 87 10
Mistook— mistook the matter so R L 1826
Mist- In his dim mist " ..... 548
And wipe the dim mist " ~... G43
Muster thy mists to meet " ~... 773
MIstresH — ^Their mistress, mounted,
through the empty skies VA
our mistress' ornaments R L ....
I am the mistress of my fate "
to her mistress hies "
Ifer mistress she doth give "
set in her mistress' sky " ~...
the master-mistress of my passion <Sli>» 20
sovereign mistress over wrack " 126
Therefore my mistress' eyes " 127
My mistress' eyes ^ 130
that from my mistress reeki " 130
1191
322
1069
1215
1219
1230
2
5
9
1
8
Son
u
cc
(I
MlitreM— My mistreas, when ahe
walks
But at my mistress' eye
got new fire, my mistr^s* eyes
but I, my mistress' thrall
Sweetly supposed them mistress
of his heart - LC
Lest that my mistress hear P P
Mlstrost- where it should most .,,,VA
and full of fond mistrust R L
duty kindk-d her mistrust
itself could not mistrust
MlstmKtfkil— in some .... wood VA
Misty— like misty vaptmrs "
eye of heaven is out, and misty
uight R L
And let thy misty vapours *'
Mlsnse — are oaths but to misuse thee Son
Mixed— such lamps together mix'd V A
130
153
153
154
12
9
14
12
«i
((
~... 142
19 50
M... 1154
M... *o4
.... 1352
.... 1516
.... 826
— 184
(«
eloquence with sighs is mixed R L
Which is not mix'd Son
and solace mix'd with sorrow P P
Moan— repetition of her moans VA
moved with woman's moans R L
monuments of lasting moans
To make him moan ; but pity not
his moans
Make her moans mad
moan tired moan
of fore-bemoaned moan
time's leisure with my moan
should look into your moan
upon myself with presunt moan
smiled or made some moan
the cause of all my moan
Every thing did banish moan
ikfoan— To make him moan
And moan the expense
Mock— Tu mock the subtle in them-
selves beguiled R L
fools to mock at him resort
Mock with thy tickling beams
higher seem'd, to mock
shadows like to thee do mock my
152
125
15
((
II
II
Son
»i
14
U
LC
PP
u
RL
Sirti
356
782
7
489
563
11
11
.... 831
..... 587
.... 4 90
.... 977
— 1108
1363
80 11
44
71
149
12
13
8
... 217
18 51
21
80
7
977
8
II
II
sight
And mock you with me
mock their own presage
Mocking— You mocking birds
Modern— How far a modern quill
Modest — and modest pride
Make modest Dian
With modest Lucrece
love's modest snow-white weed
O modest wantons
Her modest eloquence with sighs
is mixed
Tliat ever modest eyes
Modestly— She modestly prepares
Modesty — wanton modesty
true mark of modesty
terror and dear modesty
cold modesty, hot wrath
Moe — public plague of many moe
In me moe woes
Found yet moe letters
And Ialx)uring in moe pleasures
Moiety — The clear eye's inoioty
Moist— My smooth moist Iiand
From his moist cabinet
San
II
II
RL
Son
VA
II
RL
II
II
.... 9SI
.... trOV
.... lU9v
— 1414
61 4
71 14
107 6
.... 1121
83 7
725
•■••• 1£SS
401
M
II
II
LC
II
RL
II
LC
Son
VA
II
.... 56S
.... 683
.... 1607
..... 40&
1220
.... 202
.... ^90
.... 1479
.... 1615
47
.••. Iv9
46 12
.... 143
.... eo4
MOISTEN' D
189
MORE
Molstea'd — . ... like a melting eye R L ^... 1227
H*ist«re— calls it heareDly ... . V A »... 64
The hearenlj moisture ** ~... 542
0. tbatinfected moistureof his eye L C 323
■Mneat— Which in a moment R L 250
Eren in the moment ** 8G8
but a little moment S(m 15 2
Upon the mumont L C 248
lOMentarf— This momentary Joj R L 690
lonarrli — ^But happy monarchs ** 611
Drink up the monarch's plague iSm 114 2
Or monarch's hand L C 41
iMMrrhy— commanding in his mon-
archy " 196
'HoBgafr— 'Mongst our mourners P T 20
loaaler— To make of monsters iSfm 114 6
lontt— Joy breeds months of pain R L 690
vhose month was ever May PPM 2
In the merry month of May ^ 21 2
loa«««nt — Where, like a virtuous
monument, she lies R L 891
Poor wasting monuments " ..... 798
To All irith vurm-hoies stately
monuments " ..... 946
Bor the gilded monuments Son S5 1
Your monument shail be ** 81 9
■halt find thy monument *' 107 13
iMd — his .... with nought ag^recs R L ..... 109.5
it small arails my mood '* 1273
Is writ in moods Son 93 8
and the encrimson'd mood L C 201
iMdy— And moody Piuto winks R L ..... IVsa
tiiia moody heaviness " 1602
loM— Shone like the moon VA ..... 492
Uiat hides the silver moon R L 371
The moon being clouded " 1007
With sun and moon Son 21 6
Main both moon and sun " 35 3
The mortal moon hath her eclipse
endured ** 107 5
each minute seems a moon P P 15 15
Isralixe — thou bear's! me moralize r^ ..... 712
Nor could she moralize R L ^... 104
Isrr— more lovely than a man VA .... 9
ICore white and red ** ..... 10
What follows more she murders
with a kiss "" ..... 54
Which bred more beauty " ..... 70
vith a more delight ** ..... 78
More thirst for drink ** ~... 92
He, no more of love ** IM
Ksy, more than flint " ~... 200
ber woes the more increasing ** ..... 254
the happy season once more fits ** ~... 327
Bameth more hotly, swelleth with
more rage " ~... 332
Once more the engine " ~... 3ft7
Once more the niby'Colour'd " ~... 451
DO more had seen " ~... 5^4
now no more resLsteth ** ~... SfA
«o more detain him ** ..... 577 |
And more than fo ** <K1
bear a little more " .... 7fi9
aiore gold begets ** .... 708
more moving than your own ** .... 77o
More I eovild telL bat more I dare
Dot say •* .... «*'»
bin leen no more ** .... f^VJ
bids them fear oo more " — iM
More— Her more than haste Kj4 .... 909
once more leap her eyes ** «... 1050
That makes more gashes ** «... 1064
more am I accurst ** 1120
now no more reflect ** 1130
more sweet-smelling sire *' .... 1178
espoused to more fame R L .... 20
he pineth still for more " .... 98
More than his eyes " .... 105
And so, by hoping more " .... 137
Or gaining mure " .... 138
beholds as more divine ** .... 29t
Paying more slaviiih tribute " 299
To add a more rejoicing " 8:)2
birds more cause to Hing " .... 3.13
latch, and with no more " 8:{9
With mon> than admiration *' .... 418
with more dreadful sights " 462
more rage and lesser pity " 468
her oratory adds more grace *' 064
• No more,' quoth he " 667
To make more vent " 1040
doth make the wound ache more " 1116
No more than wax "' .... 1245
The more to blame " 1278
For more it is " .... 1286
When more is felt ** .... 12H8
moves more than hear them told " .... 1324
with more than haste *' 1332
Speed more than speed '* .... 1336
Promise more speed " 1349
make him more amazed " 1356
The more she saw the blood " i:)57
The more she thought ** 1.358
More feeling-painful ** 1679
But more than he ** 1718
That I no more can see ** .... 1764
to make it more *' .... 1789
How much more praise Son 2 9
she gave thee more ** 11 11
Thou shouldst print more ** 11 14
With moans more blessed ** 16 4
more lovely and more temperate " 18 2
An eye more bright " 20 5
Li't them say more ** 21 13
More than tliat tongue that more
hath more express'd " 23 12
more rich in hojie " 29 5
once more re-survey ** 82 8
No more Ije gri«*vod " 35 1
m«irc than thy sins are ** 35 8
or all, or more ** 37 6
ten timers more in worth ** 38 9
What ha.<tt thou then more than
thou haflst lif>fore " 40 2
thou harlHt this more ** 40 4
toucht^ me more nearly ** 42 4
More sharp to me ** 50 12
O, how mud) more ** 54 1
shall fthine more bright ** HH Z
more bl»?«t may be ** i!6 12
thrice more wish'd, 0»ore rare ** 54 14
72 <
72 7
72 13
73 13
83 13
M 1
M 14
To do more for me
And ban;; more praise
liv*. no more to »hame
make^ thy love more strong
Ther*" live* more life
Wbi'h can •ay more
of praise »id sijmethiBg more
U ?fl
ME
185
MESSENGER
Xfr— To win me soon to hell P P 2 5
For being both to me " 2 11
cures all disgrace in me "88
If by me broke " 3 13
If loTe make me forsworn "51
These thoughts, to me like oaks "64
Which is to me some praise " 5 10
many tales to please me "79
'twixt thee and me "88
Spenser to me, whose deep conceit "87
thou leftist me nothing " 10 8
yet thou left'st me more " 10 9
thou didHt bequeath to me "10 12
the warlike god embraced me "11 5
the warlike god unlaced me " 11 7
To kiss and clip me " 11 14
And dalTd me to a cabin " 14 3
to make me wander thither " 14 10
and bade me come to-morrow " 15 12
To spite me now " 15 15
Yet not for me " 15 16
Lore hath forlorn me " 18 21
to round me on th' ear " 19 51
Live with me and be mj lore " 20 1
Then Ure with me " -20 16
pleasures might me move " 20 19
Made me think upon " 21 18
None alive will pity me " 21 28
Mead— As he roots the mead VA 630
As winter meads when sun Ji L ~... 1218
Meadow — the meadows green S(m 33 3
Meagre — ugly, meagre, lean VA ~... 931
Meaa— know not what we mean " 126
what dost thou mean " ...^ 933
means to immure herself " „... 1194
if thou mean to chide Jt L 484
do I mean to place him " 517
I mean to bear thee " 670
What means the world Son 148 6
Meaner — that .... men should vaunt " 41
Meaning— Uis meaning struck her VA «... 462
Could pick no meaning It L 100
would not take her meaning PP 11 12
Meana— 8ome happy mean to end a
hapless life R L 1045
These means, as frets " 1140
Pausing for means " ..... 1365
That he finds means " ..... 1501
With means more blessed Son 16 4
Than public means " HI 4
Meant— and meant thereby " 11 13
Measare — Measure my strangeness
with my unripe years V A 524
to tread the measures " ..... 1148
they measure by thy deeds San 69 10
are not my measure " 91 7
Meaanred— Thus far the miles are.... " 50 4
Mediator— be you mediators R L 1020
Medlelne — ^And brought to medicine iSun 118 11
MediUt1oa—0, fearful mediUt ion " 65 9
Meed — this favour, for thy uiced V A «... 15
is the meed proposed R L ...» 132
Meek — all recreant, poor, and meek " 710
.... 585
.... 917
773
a... VUO
5 13
94 11
Meet — shall we meet to-morrow
here she meets another
to meet the eastern light
ne'er meet with Opportunity
they with winter meet
with base infection meet
VA
ic
RL
Sun
Meetiag'-tho .... clouds contend VA
till meeting greater ranks R L
All our merry meetings P P
Meetnesa— found a kind of meetness Son
Melancholy- like a . . . . malcontent VA
oppress'd with melancholy Son
Mellow- The mellow plum doth fall VA
Melodiona— Melodious discord, heav-
enly tune
the sweet melodious sounds
Melodious birds sing madrigals
Melody— with their sweet melody
Melt—or seem to melt
melt with the midday sun
Which her cheek melts
melt at mine eyes' red fire
Melt at my tears
when sun doth melt
Melted— Was melted like a vapour VA
Melting— to his melting buttock lent "
morning's silver-melting dew R L
moistened like a melting eye "
All melting ; though our drops L C
MeMorial- Which for memorial still Son
MeMory — might bear his memory
their brave statu out of memory
living record of your memory
shall never cut from memory
will give thee memory
what thy memory cannot contain
From hence your memory
with lasting memory
Mend— To meud the hurt
the thought of hearts can mend
thou dost but mend the style
sinful then, striving tu mend
Mended — Whether we are mended
Merch and Ixed— That love is mer-
chandized whose rich esteeming **
Merchant— The merchant fears R L
merchant of this loss "
Merclfkil— It shall be merciful VA
Merdlesa— the .... and pitchy night "
tries a merciless conclusion R L
Merey — Lies at the mercy "
in tier heart did mercy come Son
Merely — characters and words mere-
ly but art
merely with the garment
Merit— Thy merit hath my duty
What merit lived in me
And place my merit
or thy dear merit
it merits not repn>ving
What merit do I in myself respect "
Where thy desert may merit P P
Meritorioat— a .... fair dosiKu R L
Mermaid— Thy mermaid's voice V A
like the wanton mermaid's songs "
As if some mermaid R L
Mtrrj — she hears a merry horn VA
And merry fools R L
slain in merry company
brooks not merry guests
All my merry jigs
All our merry meetings
In the merry month of May
Mcaaenger— the mindful messenger
come back R L
II
PP
II
RL
VA
II
II
u
RL
II
II
II
II
II
11
II
II
II
VA
Son
«i
II
II
..... 820
— 1441
18 46
il8 7
M... 818
45- 8
~... 627
481
8 9
20 8
1108
••••• 750
••••• 1078
..... 1218
M... 116o
~... 815
..... m^
«... 1227
n... 300
74
1
15
55
63
77
77
81
122
69
78
103
59
4
4
8
8
11
6
9
8
2
478
2
11
9
11
LC
II
Son
102 8
..... 836
~... 1660
.... 1156
..... 1160
145 5
«... 174
...M 816
26 2
II
II
II
72
88
108
142
149
2
2
4
4
9
It
II
PP
II
14
19 27
~... 1692
...» 777
.... 1411
..... 1025
M... 9(59
..... 1110
..... 1125
18 9
18 46
21 2
— 1688
MESSENGER
186
MIND
[|
HMMnprer— By those swift .... Son 45 10
Met— When as I met the boar VA 999
Met far from home Jt L ~... 1596
HeUl— With twisted metal LC 205
H«thlnkt— And yet methinks Son 14 2
Methinks no face so gracious " 62 5
which methinks stm doth stand *' 104 11
That all the world besides me-
thinks are dead " 112 14
methinks thou stay'st too long P P 12 12
Method— To new-found methods Son 76 4
Metre — And stretched metre " 17 12
Mettle— That horse his mettle L C ~... 107
MIckle— more mickle was the pain P P 16 9
Mid-day— tired in the mid-day heat VA 177
melts with the mid-day sun *' 750
Middle — strong youth in his middle
age Son 7 6
Midnight— dead of dark midnight R L .... 1625
Midst— But in the midst " 341
And midst the sentence " 666
Yet in the midst of ail PP 7 11
Might— He might be buried VA ..... 244
the feast might ever last " ..... 447
kings might be espoused R L ...~ 20
Might have excuse to work " ..... 235
might compass his fair fair " ~... 846
might have reposed still " 882
Till they might open " ..... 899
and shame that might ensue '* .... 12G3
which the world might bear her " .... 1321
might become them better " 1323
There might you see ^ .... 1380
That one might see ** .... 1386
You might behold ^ .... 1388
might one behold ** .... 1395
Their pleading might you sec " .... 1401
might be done to me " .... 1623
might plead for Justice there ** ....1649
when I might charm thee so " .... 1681
beauty's rose might never die Son 1 2
might bear his memory "14
in honour might uphold ** 13 10
it might unused stay " 48 3
That I might see ** 69 9
might be better used ** 82 13
being extant, well might show " 88 6
might the stern wolf betray ** 96 9
might I from myself depart " 109 3
Might I not then say ** 116 10
Then might I not say so " 116 13
might have remember'd " 120 9
It might f«)r Fortune's bastard " 124 2
That she might think me ** 138 8
might dart their injuries " 139 12
If I might t«ach thee " 140 6
might speak iU of thee " 140 10
might think sometime it saw L C .... 10
I might as yet have been " 75
That she might think me P P 1 3
as well as well might lie " 16 2
Air, would I might triumph so " 17 10
pleasures might me move " 20 19
Might— nor brag not of thy might V A ...^ 113
sought with all my might R L ...^ 488
of mine own love's might Son 23 8
sharpen'd in his former might " 66 4
unless this miracle have might ** 65 13
spends aU his might ** 80 8
Might— woni of fortune's might Son 90
gives thee all thy might " 100
built up with newer might ** 128
with cunning, when thy might " 1.9
hast thou this powerful might " 160
her absence valiant, not her might L C ....
Mightier— The mightier man, the
mightier is the thing R L ....
do not you a mightier way Son 16
Mightily- but mightily he noted R L
Migh tat— Then niightot thou pause V A
thou mlghtst my scat forbear Son 41
mightst thou lead away " 96
Mighty— Thyself art mighty R L
forgot in mighty Rome *' ....
How mighty then you are L C ....
Milch— Like a milch doe VA
Mild— raging-mad and silly-mild ** ....
And let mild women R L ....
C(
(i
u
u
«t
M
not infant sorrows, bear them mild
By this, mild patience
But the mild glance
So mild that Patience
this mild image drew
so weary and so mild
Mild as a dove PP
Mlldnesa— to him loee their .... R L
Mile— To leap largo lengths of miles Sm
Thus far the miles are measured "
Milk— Like milk and blood VA
Milk-white— than her .... dove P P
Million— That millions of strange
shadows on you tend
Mlllion'd— Time, whose milUon'd
accidents
Mind— so hard a mind
if she knew his mind
with disturbed mind
For all my mind
weak and silly mind
doth men's minds confound
troubled minds that wake
And in his inward mind
burthen of a guilty mind
to close so pure a mind
let beasts bear gentle minds
For men have marble, women
waxen, minds
At last she calls to mind
to mock the mind
save to the eye of mind
not a mind so ill
came in her mind the while
should bear a wicked mind
and spotless is my mind
May my pure mind
her mind untainted clears
from weak minds proceeds
her husband's shape in mind
that I may change my mind
To work my mind
by night my mind
doth put this in my mind
Since mind at first
the beauty of thy mind
thy mind's imprint will bear
new acquaintance of thy mind
vex me with inconstant mind
mine eye is in my mind
Son
VA
u
CI
u
u
44
50
• •••■
9
58
115
R Is ....
41
II
M
M
(I
11
U
II
II
II
Son
II
II
II
II
II
u
9
10
27
27
60
69
69
77
77
92
118
MIND
187
MINISTER
Hind— hath th« mind no put
.S^ 113
7
My mcMit true mind
ti
113
14
Or whether doth mj mind
M
114
1
And my great mind
<l
114
10
Dirert strong minds
«
115
8
the marriage of true minds
•(
116
1
been with unknown minds
l<
117
5
for now I know thy mind
<(
149
13
That in my mind
il
150
8
The mind and sight
LC
28
did enchant the mind
u
•■•••
89
and in it put their mind
II
135
none of the mind
l<
• •• ••
184
Hladed— If all were minded so
Son
11
7
Mlndflil— But now the mindful mes-
senger come back
RL
■ •• •«
1583
Blue— Though mine be not so fair
VA
•••••
116
The kiss shall be thine own as
well as mine
II
117
Look in mine eyeballs
u
• •»••
119
Mine eyes are grey
II
• ••••
140
Adonis* heart hath made mine hard "
•«•••
378
this poor heart of mine
II
•••••
502
And these mine eyes
II
•• •••
503
mine eyes to watch
tl
584
lurk in mine eye
II
644
whispers in mine ear
CI
• •*••
659
presenteth to mine eye
II
••••■
661
Mine eyes forego their light
EL
• ••••
228
never countermand mine eye
II
■ ••••
276
thine eyes betray thee unto mine
II
•••■•
483
to embrace mine infamy
II
«••••
504
see thy state and pity mine
II
•••••
644
hang their heads with mine
II
793
from this attaint of mine
II
•••••
825
cavil with mine infamy
II
1025
mine eyes, like sluices
II
1076
to affright mine eye
II
»••••
1138
mine honour is new-bom
11
•••■•
1190
mine honour be the knife's
II
•«•••
1201
the slander of mine ill
II
•• •••
1207
mine own would do me good
II
•••••
1274
Mine enemy was strong
II
•••••
1646
to make mine own excuse
II
•••••
1653
Thine, mine, his own
i<
••••a
1684
to 'venge this wrong of mine
II
1691
That life was mine
II
••«•■
1752
' She's mine.' ' 0, mine she is
II
•••••
1795
for she was only mine
II
»••••
1798
'tis mine that she hath kUl'd
II
1803
*This fair child of mine
Son
2
10
Mine be thy love
II
20
14
thy heart when mine is slain
II
22
13
in mine own love's strength
II
23
7
of mine own love's might
II
23
8
Mine eye hath play'd
II
24
1
Mine eyes have drawn
II
24
10
which wit so poor as mine
II
26
5
love stol'n from mine eye
II
31
6
he was but one hour mine
II
83
11
As thou being mine, mine is the
1
good report
II
36
14
The pain be mine
II
38
14
What can mine own praise to mine
1
own self bring
II
89
3
what is't but mine own
II
39
4
All mine was thine
u
40
4
then do mine eyes best see
l(
43
1
mine eyes be blessed made
u
43
9
Mine— Mine eye and heart are at a
mortal war Son 46
Mine eye my heart thy picture's
sight
My heart mine eye the freedom
mine eye's due is thine
Betwixt mine eye and heart
When that mine eye
mine eye is my heart's guest
dearest 8^°d mine only care
knowledge of mine own desert
that keeps mine eye awake
Mine own true love
possesseth all mine eye
so gracious is as mine •
mine own worth do define
Mine own self-love
than mine own desert
matter; that enfeebled mine
With mine own weakness
thou art assured mine
As thou being mine, mine is thy
good report
and mine eye may be deceived
Not mine own fears
thou mine, I thine
Gored mine own thoughts
Mine appetite I never more
mine eye is in my mind
thus maketh mine untrue
mine eye saith true
Mine eye well knows
That mine eye loves it
How have mine eyes
Mine ransoms yours, and yours
that mine ear confounds
Myself I'll forfeit, so that other
mine
One will of mine
dost thou to mine eyes
Or mine eyes seeing this
have been mine enemies
love thee with mine eyes
Nor are mine ears
O, but with mine compare
of love as oft as mine
thine eyes woo as mine importune
thee
I mine honour shielded
that mine eyes have seen
but mine own was free
And mine I pour
hearts that do on mine depend
that you make 'gainst mine
and mine did him restore
then it is no fault of mine
Her lips to mine
Lord, how mine eyes
the office of mine eyes
think upon mine own
Either was the other's mine
Mingle— To mingle beauty
Hingled— with others being ....
being mingled both together
red nor pale, but mingled so
Mingling— Mingling my talk with
tears
Minion — O thou .... of her pleasure Son
Minister— What me your minister L C «... 829
u
46
8
u
46
4
II
46
13
u
47
1
II
47
8
II
47
7
M
48
7
(1
49
10
M
61
10
M
61
11
M
62
1
(1
62
5
U
62
7
M
62
11
II
72
6
U
86
14
U
88
6
tt
92
2
U
96
14
II
104
12
CI
107
1
II
108
7
CI
110
8
u
110
10
IC
113
1
II
118
14
M
114
8
((
114
11
U
114
14
II
119
7
U
120
14
M
128
4
IC
134
8
M
135
12
M
137
1
M
137
11
U
139
10
CI
141
1
U
141
5
U
142
8
CI
142
7
1
u
142
10
LC
•••••
151
u
•••••
190
II
••■••
195
II
•••■•
256
tt
••«■•
274
tt
■••••
277
tt
••■••
801
pp
8
12
M
7
7
tt
15
1
II
15
4
II
21
18
PI
86
VA
•••••
735
u
•••••
691
M
•••••
902
RL
•••••
1510
I
II
•••••
797
Son 128
9
MINORITY
188
MOIST
Minority — Proving from vorld's mi-
nority their right R L ..... 67
HiMtrel— Feast-flnding minstrels *' ..... 817
Mlnaie— But in one minute's fight VA ..... 746
one minute in an hour " ~... 1187
Who buys a minute's mirth R L ..... 213
as minutes fill up hours " ..... 297
Till every minute pays " 829
One poor retiring minute " 962
to brief minutes tell Son 14 ff
So do our minutes ** 60 2
thy precious minutes waste *' 77 2
and wretched minutes kill " 126 . 8
But now are minutes added P P 15 14
each minute seems a moon " 15 15
H I raele— unless this .... have might Son 65 13
Hire — his coal-black wings in mire R L ..... 1009
Hlrror— now that fair fresh mirror " ..... 1760
Mirth— Who buys a minute's mirth " ..... 213
For mirth doth search " 1109
Mlscaird— truth .... simplicity Am 66 11
Mischance— Of mad mischances V A 738
With some mischance R L 9()8
bechance him pitiful mischance " 976
Mischief— A mischief worse V A . 764
Why work'st thou mischief R L ..... 960
Misdeed— Then kings' misdeeds " ~... 609
That from their own misdeeds " ..... 637
Miser — As 'twixt a miser and his
wealth ' iSim 75 4
Misery— For misery is trodden on V A 707
and much misery ** ..... 738
Is no friend in misery P P 21 82
Misfortune — Of hard misfortune R L ~... 1713
MlMgoTerning— dishonour, shame,
misgoverning " ..... 654
Mishap— languisheth in her mishaps K^ ..... 603
MiNplaced— honour shamefully .... Son 66 5
Misprision— upon .... growing *' 87 11
Misled— is his heart misled R L 869
Mlm— blames her miss VA ...~ 53
Mlss'd — being clouded presently is
mhis'd R L ~... 1007
thy record never can be miss'd Son 122 8
M Is • shapen — M is - shapen Time,
copesmate of ugly Night R L ~... 925
Missing — she in him finds missing VA ...~ 605
Mistake — hounds .... their smeU " ~... 686
Mistakes that aim, and cleaves " 942
oft the eye mistakes " ...~ 1068
though I mistake my view Son 148 11
Mistaking — Or me, to whom thou
gavest it, else mistaking " 87 10
Mistook- mistook the matter so RL 1826
Mhit- In his dim mist ** ..... 548
And wipe the dim mist " ..... 643
Muster thy misU to meet " ~... 773
Mistress— Their mistress, mounted,
through the empty skies VA 1191
our mistress' ornaments R L 322
I am the mistress of my fate " 1069
to her mistress hies " »... 1215
Her mistress she doth give *' ~... 1219
set in her mistress' sky "* ..... 1230
the master-mistress of my passion iStm 20 2
sovereign mistress over wrack " 126 5
Therefore my mistress' eyes " 127 9
My mistress' eyes "^ 130 1
that f^om my mistress reeks " 130 8
<(
u
u
14
((
Mistrcwi— My mistress, when she
walks Son
But at my mistress' eye
got new fire, my mistress' eyes
but I, my mistress* thrall
Sweetly supposed them mistress
of his heart - LC
Lest that ray mistress hear P P
MIstmst— where it should most .,,,V A
and full of fond mistrust R L
duty kindled her mistrust
itself could not mistrust
MistrnBtfkil— in some .... wood V A
Misty— like misty vapours "
eye of heaven is out, and misty
night R L
And let thy misty vapours *'
Misuse — are oaths but to misuse thee Son
Mixed — such lamps together mix'd V A
RL
Son
PP
VA
RL
130
158
158
154
12
9
14
12
eloquence with sighs is mixed
Which is not mix'd
and solace mix'd with sorrow
Moan — repetition of her moans
moved with woman's moans
monuments of lasting moans
To make him moan; but pity not
his moans
Make her moans mad
moan tired moan
of fore-bemoaned moan
time's leisure with my moan
should look into your moan
upon myself with present moan
(t
u
Son
u
tc
.... 142
19 50
1154
.... 1852
.... 1516
M... o2o
— 184
856
M.M 782
152 7
.... 489
.... 068
125 11
15 11
.... 881
.... Ooa
.... iVO
.». 977
— 1106
.... 1863
80 11
44
71
149
LC
PP
RL
Son
(I
u
u
smiled or made some moan
the cause of all my moan
Every thing did banish moan
Moan— To make him moan
And moan the expense
Moek — To mock the subtle in them-
selves beguiled R L
fools to mock at him resort
Mock with thy tickling beams
higher sccm'd, to mock
shadows like to thee do mock my
sight
And mock you with me
mock their own presi^
Mocking — You mocking birds
Modern— How far a modern quill
Modest — and modest pride
Make modest Diau
With modest Lucrece
love's modest snow-white weed
O modest wantons
Her modest eloquence with sighs
is mixed
That ever modest eyes
Modestly— She modestly prepares
Modesty — wanton modesty
true mark of modesty
terror and dear modesty
cold modesty, hot wrath
Moe — public plague of many moe
In me moe woes
Found yet moe letters
And labouring in moe pleasures
Moiety— The clear eye's moiety
Moist— My smooth moist hand
From his moist cabinet
12
18
8
.... 217
18 61
21
80
7
977
8
Son
u
M
RL
Son
VA -
41
RL ^
U
U
••••• VD/
••••• sFOv
.... 1090
— 1414
61 4
71 14
107 6
.... 1121
83 7
••••• 72S
123
196
401
14
44
U
LC
u
RL
Sj O •••••
Son
VA
u
.... 009
.... 688
.... 1607
.... 401
.... 1220
.... 202
.... 293
.... 1479
.... 1615
47
.... 188
46 12
— 148
— 854
Jij-Ilr reuluUon, tiu>t»i.rl
tbutn^nnir wound
llTiluDwlwhUlhitdldmrCun
Ut blood fhnllwuli
My life', fuul dwd, m/ Ute'i Mr «]
iiud^ nj bMid ilul
lib iha
tn; tluKiiird Dugllgence
A letter to mf lotd, mf Idt«, m
Yield (o I
CODqUPI
My^oaoi
I tedl<»ii
Hj— muter-BiIilmi
m J loie U H &lr
Mj (lut (hiill not
O, !,.l mj 1x«ln
er ui>>p.'iiliiugbreut
iif hoif It Iho fnins
Whk-h ill DiT boMm'ithdp
Arc -wlndcpiti to liy bnut
Lord of jn; lots
mrdiilrMronElrlntt
not to (hov mT *lt
tlmt guldi's my moTlog
Dt mr puiloD 8m to
wiih
mjUni*
DtlngtODgUf
And
m/
ADd
[Dlta
TbJi
»u
tidUi
»Tr
FdldpcrUn
AikI
my
.m.
And
■au.
ml
>ny lot.
/lo
<^'td«)n
jok
iby
MT
■Hi
IhT
And
the.
igiinai mj bwrt
EuBhouUm
mj poor wlT oMk
Uj blixHlr Judga forbada i
by Jiiy Inj lliuba, \iy ulKhl mj ml
'dn* luf barrowi lunger
(wurrp my outfui it>i«
Ihequftlllyul
iJiynrpur.
My Iciv-declli
Br my MWnH
ir my .llKlit MuK
before m
thin my
forinylovelbouuaal
lliee all my poTcrty
my frknd and 1 ap
Biy flesh wrn thou
nul Mop ruy w»y
MORE
190
MOTHER
More — no more shall dwell Son 89 10
Of more delight than hawks " 91 11
loved of more and leas " 96 3
More flowers I noted " 99 14
more weak in seeming ** 102 1
is of more worth " 103 3
If I no more can write ** 103 5
And more, much more "103 13
I never more will grind " 110 10
Incapable of more " 113 13
our appetites more keen "118 1
more strong, far greater " 119 12
more than I have spent " 119 14
that receive thee more " 122 12
Made more or less " 123 12
Which prove more short " 125 > 4
Lose all, and more "125 6
more blest than living lipe " 128 12
Coral is far more red " 130 2
is there more delight " 130 7
a far more pleasing sound " 130 10
More than enough "135 3
make thy large 'Will 'more " 135 12
Is more than my o'er-press'd de-
fence can bide " 139 8
without be rich no more " 146 12
there's no more dying then " 146 14
make me love thee more " 150 9
The more I hear and see " 150 10
More worthy I to be " 150 14
more perjured I " 152 . 13
more black and damned here L C 54
by that cost more dear " ^... 96
to make our wits more keen " 161
with more than love's good will PP 9 7
he saw more wounds than one " 9 13
And yet thou left'st me more " 10 9
more mickle was the pain " 16 9
More in women than in men " 18 18
Use his company no more " 21 50
Mom— of the weeping morn VA ~... 2
From morn till night " ...» 154
Like a red morn " 453
He cheers the mom " — 484
or morn or weary even " „... 495
To wake the morn H L ..... 942
one early morn did shine Son 83 9
when his youthful morn " 63 4
dried up the dewy mom PP B 1
Fair was the morn "91
Youth like summer morn " 12 3
Morning— And wakes the morning K .4 ..... 855
Musing the morning " ~... 866
morning's silver-melting dew JR L ~... 24
looks for the morning light " ..... 745
ravish the morning air " ~... 778
that tune their morning's Joy " .....1107
Full many a glorious morning Son 83 1
the morning sun of heaven " 132 6
watch; the morning rise PP 15 2
Mortal — on this mortal round VA ~... 368
Like to a mortal butcher " 618
for thy mortal vigour " 953
of all mortal things " ..... 996
overthrow of mortal kind " 1018
Where mortal stars, as bright JB J^ .... 13
had closed up mortal eyes " .... 163
at the mercy of his mortal sting ** .... 364
And by their mortal fault " .... 724
Am
u
It
u
PP
Mortal— Yet mortal looks adore
arc at a mortal war
eternal slave to mortal rage
Above a mortal pitch
The mortal moon
Turning mortal for thy lore
Mortality— death's dim look in life's
mortality R L
sad mortality o'er-sways their
power Son
Mortgage— am mortgaged to thy will "
Morrow— Venus salutes him with
this fair good-morrow V A
when lo, the blushing morrow R L
give demure good-morrow **
and then she longs for morrow
a windy night, a rainy morrow
Moat- when most his choice
shall it make moat weak
it should most mistrust
And most deceiving when it aeema
most Just
it shows most toward
When most unseen, then moat
doth tyrannize R L
Great grief grieves most
manners most expressly told
Who should weep most
thou none lovest is most evident San
Sets you most rich
with your most high deserts
one m<»st heinous crime
in that I honour most
With what 1 most enjoy
When most I wink
Most worthy comfort, now my
greatest grief
Yet be most proud
Whore breath most breathes
shall be most my glory
Who is it that says most
And to the most of praise
and mo roost wretched make
they most do show
of this most balmy time
sold cheap what is most dear
Most true it is
and most most loving breast
The mont sweet favour
My most true mind
most kingly drinks it up
My most full flame
When most impeach'd
and most precious Jewel
I am perjured most
O most potential love
When he most bum'd
Mot— may read the mot afar
Mote— each little mote will peep
Mother— O, had thy mother
that suck'd an earthly mother
mother of dread and fear
nor mothers' groans respecting
That mother tries a meicileas
conclusion
many Trojan mothers sharing Joy "
unbless some mother Son
Thou art thy mother's glass
aire and child and happy mother
7 7
4A 1
64 4
86 6
107 6
17 18
— 40S
Sofn
VA
i(
M
(I
(I
M
(I
It
M
II
tl
II
U
II
(I
tl
11
If
U
II
CI
tl
CI
CI
II
tl
U
CI
CI
65
134
2
2
.... o99
1082
.... 1219
.... 1571
90 7
. 670
— 1145
.... 1154
.... li«>o
.... 1167
•«.. o7e
.... 1117
.... 1397
179S
10
15
17
19
25
29
43
48
78
81
83
84
4
10
2
8
4
8
1
6
9
14
10
1
86 10
91 14
94
107
110
110
2
9
8
6
110 14
113 10
113
114
115
125
131
152
X) C ....
RL
M
VA
u
RL
CI
cc
a
14
10
4
14
4
6
264
814
880
1251
203
.... o03
.... 117
431
.... 1160
.... 1431
8 4
8 9
8 U
MOTHER
191
MURDEROUS
Mother— As any mother's child Son 21 11
And pbi7 the mother's part " 143 12
Motion— With their continual .... Ji L 691
The bcary motion " 1326
with swift motion slide Son 45 4
no motion shall I know " 51 8
llath motion, and mine eye " 104 12
wood whose motion sounds " 128 2
the motion of thine eyes " 149 12
all that borrow'd motion L C 327
Motive — the grounds and motires of
her woe " -... fi3
Motley— a motley to the riow Son 110 2
Mould — stealing moulds from heaven VA 730
Mount — although ho mount her " 598
mounts up on high *' 854
if he mount ho dies R L 508
Mountain— on mountain or in dale VA 232
As mountain snow melts " ~... 750
the aspiring mountains R L 548
The mountain or the sea Son 113 11
And all the craggy mountains
yields PP 20 4
Moantain-apriBg — As from a . . . . H L 1077
Moantain-top — Flatter the moun-
tain-tops ^n 33 2
Mounted— Ucr champion mounted VA ..... 590
mounted, through the empty skies " ~... 1191
though mounted on the wind Son 51 7
Moam— to mourn some newer way R L ...~ 1365
No longer mourn for me Son 71 1
Yet so they mourn '" 127 13
To mourn for me "132 11
In black mourn I PP 18 19
Moarner— mourner, black and grim K^ 920
let no mourner say Ji L ...~ 1797
and they mourners seem Sun 127 10
and loving mourners be *' 132 3
'Mongst our mourners P T 20
Moam*Ht— thou mourn'st in vain PP 21 19
Moanifkil — her .... hymns did hush Sun 102 10
Moamlng^-clad in mourning bia^'k R L 1585
the mourning and eongea]e<1 face " ..... 1744
As those two mourning eyes Son 132 9
mourning doth thee grace "132 11
Moue— the weiik mouse {lanteth R L ..... 555
Mouth— Open 'd their mouths V A .... 248
Enfranchising his mouth " 396
that Nweet coral mouth " 542
they spend their mouths " 695
Whose frothy mouth " 9Ul
even in the mouths of men Son 81 14
Mouthed — Another flap-mouth'd
mourner V A ~... 920
Of mouthed graves Son 11 6
Move — thy outwanl parts would ....V A 43.")
Tills moves in him more rage R L 468
moves more than hear them told " 1324
that move thy pity " 1553
my thoughts ean!«t move Son 47 11
these pleasures may thee move P P 20 15
pleasures might me move " 20 19
Moved— Riing moved, he istrikcs VA 623
moved with womau'.s moans R L 587
Be moved with my tears " 588
Yet if men moved him L C 101
Mover— O fairest mover VA 368
Movlnif— more moving than your own " 776
star that guides my moving Son 26 9
Moving— Who, moving others Son 94 8
Doth cite each moving sense P P 15 8
Mow — but for his scythe to mow Son 60 12
Maeh— 'TIS much to borrow VA 411
be still as much " ..... 442
with too much handling " ..... 560
as much as may be " 608
With much ado " 694
mischances and much misery " 738
is so much o'erworn " «... 866
how much a fool was I " ..... lOl.'i
too much wonder of his eye R L 95
That, cloy'd with much, ho " 98
Those that much covet " 134
In having mucli " 151
She, much amazed " 446
With too much labour drowns " 1099
and too much talk atfords " 1106
Much like a press of i>eople " 1301
much imaginary work was there " . 1422
To give her so much grief " «... 1463
that so much guile " 1534
liow much more praise Son 2 9
for thou art much too fair " 6 13
Much liker than your painted
counterfeit " 16 8
replete witli too much rage " 23 3
with thy much clearer light " 43 7
so much of earth and water " 44 11
O, how much more " 54 1
though much, is not so great " 61 9
so much as my poor name " 71 11
and much enrich thy book " 77 14
shalt wiu much glory " 88 8
Lest I too much pr«)fane " 89 11
To make him much outlive " 101 11
And more, much more, than in
my verse " 103 13
could not so much hold " 122 9
by paying too much rent " 125 6
with too much diiMiain " 140 2
And so much less L C 188
By how much of me " 189
my heart so much as warmed " 191
enough,— too much, 1 fear P P 19 49
Mud— Mud not the fountain that
gave drink to thee R L 577
infect fair founts with venom mud " 850
and silver fountains mud S\n 'X5 2
find their se[)ulchres in mud L C ..... 46
Muffled— lUind muffled bawd R L 7u8
Mulberry- Would bring him mul-
Urrlos VA ..... 110;i
Murder— To rate the iMJftr for murt her" «... 906
While lust and murder wakes R L 168
tragedh>H and inunlers fell " „... 766
rape and munlerN rages " 909
of murder and of theft " 919
*Vtfri/rr— she munlers with a kiss V A .... 54
I murder shameful scorn R L 1189
rilmunler straight " .....1634
Murder'd—murder'd this poor heart r^ 602
murder'd with the view " «... 1031
Murder'st— Thou niurder'st troth R L -... 885
and murder'st all that are " ..... 929
Mnrderous— The murderous knife " ~... 1735
such murderous shame commits Son 9 14
possesVd with murderous hate " 10 6
Is peijur'd, murderous " 129 3
MURMUR
192
MY
Marmar— «acta munnar stay VA ~... 706
Mom— with me as with that Mnse Son 21 1
Had m J friend's Muse '* 32 10
How can my Muse ** 88 1
Be thou the tenth Muse " 88 9
If my slight Muse do please " 88 18
invoked thee for my Muse ** 78 1
my sick Muse doth give " 79 4
married to my Muse " 82 1
My tongue-tied Muse " 85 1
by all the Muses filed " 85 4
Where art thou, Muse " 100 1
Return, forgetful Muse "100 6
Rise, resty Muse " 100 9
<) truant Muse " 101 1
Make answer, Muse ** 101 5
Then do thy office, Muse "' 101 13
my Muse brings forth " 108 1
Hnnir — Ear's deep-eweet music VA 432
Whose tongue is music now ** 1077
Music to hear, why hear'st thou
music sadly ' Son 8 1
But that wild music '* 102 11
thou my music, music play'st *' 128 1
music bath a far more pleasing
sound " 180 10
is music and sweet flre PP 5 12
If music and sweet poetry agree "81
lute, the queen of music, makes " 8 10
That defunetive music can P T 14
Musing— Musing the morning VA ...~ 866
HoHlt—The many musita through
the which he goes " 688
MBSt—yet her fire must bum " ~... 94
I must remove " ^... 186
that must be cooFd ** ~... 887
must not repel a lover " «... 673
thou needs must have " 759
truth I must confess " 1001
lives and must not die ** 1017
like him, I must confess " 1117
must doting Tarquin make R L 155
himself he must forsake " ~... 157
Which must be lode-star " 179
must I force to my desire " ~... 182
quoth he, 'I must deflower " ~... 848
But they must ope " ~... 883
Must sell her Joy, her life ** 885
must my will abide '* ~... 486
this night I must enjoy thee " 512
force must work my way ** ~... 513
thou perforce must bear " 612
Must he in thee read lectures " 618
must vomit his receipt '* 703
alone must sit and pine *' «... 795
So must my soul " 1169
How Tarquin must be used " ~... 1195
And only must be wail'd " 1799
must be tomb'd with thee Son 4 13
among the wastes of time must go ** 12 10
And you must live " 16 14
must you see his skill " 24 5
an accessary n(>eds must be " 35 13
we two must be twain " 36 1
yet we must not be foes " 40 14
I must attend time's leisure " 44 12
whereon it must expire " 73 11
which thou must leave ere long " 73 14
or must from you be took " 75 12
Most— to all the world mutt die
I must ne'er love him
I must each day say o'er
and I must strive
Needs must I under my transgrea-
sion bow
and yours must ransom me
my deeds must not be shown
though delay'd, answer'd must be
my sweet'st friend must be
in thy stores' account I one must be
Son
u
81
80
106
113
6
14
«
5
M
U
<l
U
tl
LC
u
u
'PP
u
(i
u
PL
(I
l«
u
u
u
Son
VA
u
PL
u
VA
Son
it
PT
VA
(4
she must herself assay
That we must curb it
where I myself must render
must your oblations be
Must for your victory
As they must needs
Then must the love be great
one must be refused
Must live alone
Master— muster troops of cares
Muster thy mists
Hnsterlng— '. ... to the quiet cabinet "
Bute — or else be mute
attorney once is mute
Will not my tongue be mute
be you mute and dumb
beauty being mute
the very birds are mute
Matiay— Gives false alarms, suggest-
eth mutiny
This mutiny each part
this mutiny restrains
with herself is she in mutiny
Mataal— Till mutual overthrow
in each by mutual ordering
But mutual render
In a mutual flame
My — ray captive and my slave
Over my altars
And for ray sake
Making my anus bis field, his tent
my bed
to my coy disdain
Touch but my lips
one wrinkle in my brow
My beauty as the spring
My flesh is soft and plump, my
marrow burning
My smooth moist hand
sun doth burn my face
for thee of my hairs
quench them with my tears
dwells upon my suit
thou shalt be my deer
Graze on my lips
Then be my deer
thus my strength is tried
My heart all whole as thine, thy
heart my wound
my body's banc would cure
• Give me my hand
• Give me my heart
My day's delight is past, my horse
is gone
all my mind, my thought, my busy
care
ray palfrey from the mare
My love to love
120 8
120 14
121 12
126 11
133 4
186 10
..... 156
. 163
— 221
..... 223
.... 258
8 2
8 8
16 9
18 53
••••• 720
»•••• TT5
••••• 442
••••• ^ffl
227
.... 1128
88 11
97 12
.... 651
.... 1049
«... 426
.... 1153
.... 1018
8 10
125 12
101
.... 103
.... 105
" .... 112
" .... 115
" 189
" .... 141
" .... 142
•' 143
" 191
" .... 192
.... 206
" .... 281
" .... 283
" .... 239
" .... 280
" .... 870
" 872
" 878
.... o74
" 380
(«
(I
M
.... 383
•••• oo4
..^ 412
NAME
198
NEIGHBOUR
9une — spirit doth u«e your namo Son W 2
Your namo from hence " 81 5
Thy sweet beloved name ** 89 10
of thy budding name " 95 3
Naming thy name '* 95 8
I hallow'd thy fair name "108 8
my name receives a brand "111 5
it bore not beauty's name "127 - 2
Sweet beauty hath no name " 127 7
Make but my name thy love " 136 13
for my name is ' Will " 136 14
But rising at thy name " 151 9
Single nature's double name P T — . 39
JVbme— thou didst name the boar V A »... 641
But ere I name him R L 1688
5«mele«8 — blurr'd with nameless
basUrdy " ^... 622
Naming— Naming thy name Son 95 8
Kapkin— her napkin to her cyne L C 15
NarHiwna—Narcissus so himself VA ...» 161
had Narcissus seen her Jl L 265
HatfTity— descried in men's nativity " 538
Nativity, once in the main Son 60 5
5atare— Nature that made thee VA 11
By law of nature " ^... 171
with nature's workmanship " .... 291
Till forging Nature " 729
workmanship of nature " 734
Swear Nature's death " 744
Now Nature cares not " 953
Are nature's faults H L ~... 539
by nature they delight " 697
In scorn of nature " ..... 1374
Nature's bequest gives nothing Son 4 3
nature calls thee to be gone " 4 11
Nature hath not made "11 9
nature's changing course " 18 8
with Nature's own hand " 20 1
Nature as she wrought thee " 20 10
rarities of nature's truth " 60 11
now Nature bankrupt is " 67 9
for a map doth Nature store " 68 13
what nature made so clear " 84 10
husband nature's riches " 94 6
though in my nature rcign'd " 109 9
my nature is subdued "111 6
by nature to subsist " 122 6
Nature, sovereign mistress " 126 5
hath put on nature's power "127 5
of one by nature's outwards L C 80
Each stone's dear nature " 210
Nature hath charged me " 220
Sliowing fair nature " 311
Single nature's double name P T 39
5ay— Nay, more than flint VA 200
Nay, do not struggle " ..... 710
•Nay, then,' quoth Adon " „... 769
Nay, if you read this line Son 71 5
Nay, if thou lour'st on me " 149 7
There a nay Is placed P P 18 12
and say thee nay " 19 20
A woman's nay doth stand " 19 42
5ear— with others all too near Son 61 14
dreading the winter's near " 97 14
that I come so near "136 1
since I am near slain " 139 13
when their deaths be near " 140 7
come thou not near P T 8
Nearer — to myself was nearer Ji L lHio
nearly — toochea me more nearly Bsm 42 4
Neteaaary— gives to ... . wrinklea " 108 11
Keek— Whose ainewy neck V A 99
his neck a sweet embrace " ..... 539
And on his neck " ..... 592
still hanging by his neck " .... 593
His short thick neck ** 627
some catch her by the neck " .... 872
One on another's neck Son 131 11
Heek'd— The strong-uevk'd steed VA ~... 263
5eetar— Such nectar from his lips " .... 572
Heed— what needs a second striking " .... 250
if thou needs wilt hunt " .... 673
thou needs must have " .... 7.99
you need not fear " .... 1063
I need not fear to die RL .... 1052
an accessary needs must be San 85 IS
of posting is no need " 51 4
Where cheeks need blood " 82 14
that you did painting need " 83 1
Then need I not to fear " 92 5
Truth needs no colour " 101 6
Because he needs no praise " 101 9
Needs must I under my transgres-
sion bow " 120 8
Nor need I tallies " 122 10
needs would touch ray breast " 153 10
that needs will taste L C .... 167
As they must needs P P S 2
conceit needs no defence "88
He will help thee in thy need " 21 52
Need'st— What nced'st thou wound Son 139 7
Needeth— needeth then apologies R L .... 31
Needing— ere that there was true
needing Son 118 8
All help needing PP 18 24
Needle — wherein her needle sticks R L .... 317
the needle his finger pricks " 319
Needy — And needy nothing Son 66 3
Xe*er— in battle ne'er did bow VA .... 99
ne'er pleased her babe " .... 974
Ne'er saw the beauteous livery " .... 1107
Ne'er settled equally " .... 1139
still blasts and ne'er grows old R L .... 49
But they ne'er meet " .... 903
sin ne'er gives a fee " .... 913
ne'er touch'd earthly faces Son 17 8
I must ne'er love him " 89 14
this shall I ne'er know " 144 13
Till now did ne'er invite L C 182
but ne'er was harmed " 194
Ne'er to pluck thee P P 17 12
Thy like ne'er was " 18 50
Ne*er-cloylng — your ,... sweetness &m US 5
Neglect— so then we do neglect R L .... 152
For thy neglect of truth ^n 101 2
Mark how with my neglect " 112 12
N^lected— Neglect^ all, with swift
intent R L 46
Whilst her neglected child Son 143 5
Negligenee— blame my sluggard.... iZZf 1278
braided in loose negligence L C 35
Neigh— snorts and neighs aloud VA .... 2^
be neighs, he bounds *' 265
and neighs unto her " 807
Shall neigh,— no dull flesh Son 51 11
Nelghboor- from forth a copse that
neighbours by VA .... 259
all the neighbour caves " 830
■etthei tiiag, knot, hut cs
bat Brltbcr Itun nor IrutI
Uungh cucUfiiIJii nrllbi
Ah, ndthvr bo m j ibiufl
>'dlh«toaT«Qn(
Ndllicr two not ddc
Tolbrnurliartt ellhcTii
Nnei^I DCTor nw Ihit jou
[DiiulDo'vrlaHblia
v<.unov<^rrikii1.M.lil
bul ne'er wolununl
IH
kMthiDm«fM«tii«i. «i
Ooercr&llliconldtiold
PP
.rcHld.irni'Ter found
DMlh Ji now thr phitnli' not P 7
Me>r Lo pluck thee
Tbylikene-erwu
18
50
k« rf NBlor-.«old<.a wunb
... uao
M
Irt-Uci ungl.il <u ■ >i<;l 1' J
... «;
■.udneTerforluHlML
Jmt— i>>«:ro ntYiT svrppnl hlaea "
RL
U.T Up. tbtU De.tr op...
Nntr^dlBc-dile of ... woei
83S
tut oner loobtj -
Son
"i
JtH—luTurijuinncwiniblllonbredAL
... 91
inb.lll^Ti^v..iiabow
mj old igf now born
KeTHcaobUb
Thii were Id Id urw mmda
Sxi
"■*j
Vi
.... 37B
IcmtmftTounc*'
... a;:
and her old r»M utrf
MTtr l»l .gain
.... tw
new wUl .uj-deur tLmC. wut«
so
mun™^'""*
.... 420
Which newtay
u
■Hy newvnl'Mlos
Dei« fouT •uch Uniiit "
lBOr«l«n lirM*rt pilntal new
l).ne.erltHhelf=riB.«iiUrerla ■'
where two conlrKO'd nuw
M
t»d^r*tDi!T<!r Allah - "
S9
luhnntY«l'>bcalbH
todrt^l>i9 beaut)' n.'w
nmc nUsTfd by mnj
.... -08
M barren of Btw ptido
71
inJan-U'crdoD.
T6
oo'cr pinwd Iwr bibe
>uD i> daily now iiid old
IS
uriDtTfcrWomiiij'et
.... 1007
Horn wound lh.h«tt
thouKli ilter-d new
AUa^^iMghl
.... loas
Uurloruwiiiicw
IWtr Mw Ihi- U'auiiBut li.eiT
lVh«f» !„■- lo:.p.*L.whit newto
intrdldbeblto
3
KCwielil«i«ia.Mj
... ii:»
oflVncfi of tabc'Itom new
tara.„.v..;i[,„..i
la vowing new hkU aftfr new lor
^llll^^llalll..■v.■rcop^d
... »»
hairing
WJ-1».(, b>Ld ui.v.^rdrowr'd him ■■
Cupid KOt new are
nL-wlodg.^.odr.-ly deified
LC
UulwIllnnerlwforKul
sa
tl<nttniTatj behold ihedtr
.Vew-eppenriwi-to hi. Igbt
l*m
hitc leicr pnctls.'d bow
If ewblMdjnt— Uf proof. ....
LC
Kew-1.OTW-n.liio honour U ...
XL
But ther ne'er meet
3OT
-.^■er give., fee
.... ei:i
OohewtTjitooffutry
Son
fhiH lei tr m.i..f. 1o jtrowlhi
bum up w1.hne-L-r might
Newlkil-a-Ai iipt ■> . . . . •now
>H
5ew.fc.gied-ihougl,....llI
itui neier vu Inclined
... IWT
flrw-trrd-Uvc'i hiiiA new-fired
rwoiKhtDCTerdie 5n
NrW'hiBd— T<>riL->-f.,<iudmeibod* "
baitnlr Wuchn ne'er loucb'd
Sew-klll-d-Llkelos bird
RL
«T
anhlr fuel
Sewly-wM nrwiyl:,^
A f l«M Deter pierMd
M 6
DC* k,ig-M ind ni'wly-lelfied
•hiUlerer cut from memorr
63 11
3(,m-TL.l •omulliue true new!
VA
tu
NEWS
200
NO
5efra— Dews from the warlike band R L ^... 255
No news but health Son 140 8
Kew-apmnpr— the new-epruDg flower K^ 1171
New- waxen— From lips .... pale R L ~... 1663
5ext— Thou art the next of blood VA 11H4
next Touchsafe t' afford R L ..... 1305
next mj bearen the best Son 110 13
And my next self " 133 6
5lbbler— the tender nlbbler PP 4 11
Hlee— the painter was so nice R L 1412
And nice affections warering L C . 97
Higgard— The niggard prodigal R L 79
Then, beauteous niggard San 4 5
Than niggard truth " 72 8
Niggarding— makest waste in ... . ** 1 12
KIgh— that she is so nigh VA 841
No flower was nigh " ..... 1055
that grazed his cattle nigh L C ..... 57
Hlght^-so shall the day scorn night V A ..... 122
From morn till night ^ 154
The night of sorrow " «... 481
in water seen by night *' «... 492
The owl, night's herald " 6.31
and bid good-night " ..... 584
let me say "Good-night ** ..... 635
'Good-night,' quoth she ** ..... 637
this night I'll waste in sorrow ** 583
The night is spent " 717
' In night,' quoth she " 720
' Now of this dark night " 727
and her by night " 732
that bums by night " 755
by this black-faced night " 773
merciless and pitchy night *' 821
and outwore the night " 841
to spend the night withal " ..... 847
consort with ugly night ** 1041
rock thee day and night " 1186
For he the night before R L »... 15
Till sable Night " «... 117
and wore out the night *' 123
the dead of night " 162
and misty night , •* ..... aw
resembling dew of niglit " SOTi
one in dead of night ** 449
to this night *' 485
' this night I must *' 512
in blind concealing night " 675
Tarquin fares thb night " 698
through the dark night " ..... 729
on the direful night " 741
* night's 'scapes doth open lay " 747
unseen secrecy of night " 763
•O comfort-killing Night " 764
vaporous and foggy Night " «... 771
make perpetual night " 784
Were Tarquin Night, as he is but
Night's child « ..... 785
Through Night's black bosom " ..... 788
• O Night, thou furnace " „... 799
copesmate of ugly Night " 925
sentinel the night " 942
O, this dread night " ..... 965
this cursed crlmeful night " 970
Poor grooms are sightless night " 1013
and uncbeorful Night " ..... 1024
this fabie night's abuses " 1075
And solemn night " 1081
And therefore still in night " 1085
Iftght— what's done by night R L ..... 1092
weep like the dewy night *' .^ 1232
AasaU'd by night *• .^ 1282
burnt out in tedious nights ** .... 1879
She looks for night ** 1571
thb night I wUl inflict ** 1690
in hideous night Am 12 2
change your day of youth to sul-
lied night *< 15 12
hung in ghastly night " 27 11
Makes black night beauteous ** 27 12
by night my mind " 27 13
is not eased by night *' 28 3
But day by night, and night by day " 28 4
the swart-complexlon'd night " 28 11
And night doth nightly " 28 14
hid in death's dateless night *' 80 6
When in dead night ** 43 11
All days are nighU " 43 13
And nights bright days ** 43 14
to the weary night ** 61 2
to age's steepy night ** 63 6
by and by block night '< 73 7
his compeers by night ** 86 7
Give not a wludy night *' 90 7
did hush the night " 102 10
the day or night ** 113 11
that our night of woe "120 9
Doth follow night *' 145 11
as dark as night " 147 14
Good night, good rest PP 14 1
She bade good-night *< 14 2
dark dreaming night " 15 8
The night so pack'd, I post " 15 9
the night would post too soon " 15 13
Pack night, peep day ; good day,
of night now borrow " 15 17
Short, night, to-night, and length
thyself " 15 18
will calm ere night " 19 14
NlghtlBgale— Save the ... . alone P P 21 8
Nightly— For with the linen R L ...» 680
warble of her nightly sorrow " 1080
doth nightly make grief's strength Sun 28 14
Which nightly gull« him " 86 10
Night-owl— that this will catch R L 860
N Ight- waking— foul .... cat " .... 554
Nigh t- wanderers— . . . . often are VA 825
NIght-wanderIng—.... weasels R L ^.., 807
Nill—ulU I construe whether PP 14 8
Nimble— Relish your nimble notes R L 1126
For nimble thought can jump Son 44 7
those Jacks that nimble leap '* 128 5
Youth Is nimble PP 12 6
Nimbly— Nimbly she fastens VA ...~ 38
Nine— Than those old nine Son 38 10
No — But having no defects VA — 138
and yet no footing seen " .... 148
* Fie, no more of love " «... 185
but of no woman bred ** «... 214
Thou art no man " «... 215
No dog shall rouse thee " 240
Taking no notice " «... H41
Therefore no marvel *" «... 890
they make no battery " ...« 426
or I had no heariug " ...« 428
Had I no eyes " ...« 433
no more had seen " «... 604
No flsher but the ungrowu " «... a)2o
,urs li nibduel
mr itrung lorecUcm
things ilxhl tfucrnir heart
len myjudgon
>Dd IDT loud ci7lng
Tetnirt^ih id; bettor ii
ilCciiUhlninj'IrHiD
irnirdcirlDTc
iiktihsulirolileyDD
Oi!iuu,mylorel)'Uiy
Till my bUl «ngel llrs mj good
one out " |«4
iawiny-oefulalaio ■ 115
i^qnlreoriaTtiiirulartb •• l«t
MrJotrliuaffViT " W
MjTTFuan.tliEphxiiQlintainjIoTe'' 147
Mj-ihougliMiiilmydlMoone " 1«
l>ivcijut1u«i]'licsd " t4t
iBBiyjgdgr.nafDiatil " lU
lybnldotbvonbip
My nobler punlo my grom bodf'i
■nyavecl'il/ripnil
PrijBii my hr«n
my Mvnd'i heart let
hMrtbatl
my hcmrt be bis guard
butl,myiidslm
MyjplrlUlooll.
UiTMtojniirm)
NO
202
NOR
Ho— O, nol it is an ever-fixed mark Son 116 6
nor no man ever loved " 116 14
have noleisure taken " 120 7
No, I am that I am " 121 9
No, Time, thou Shalt not *' 123 1
No, it was buildod far "124 5
No, let me be obsequious ** 125 9
knows no art " 125 11
beauty bath no name, no holy
bower "127 7
no beauty lack "127 11
Enjoy'd no sooner " 129 5
and no sooner had " 129 6
But no such roses " 130 6
no fair acceptance shine " 135 8
Let no unkind, no fair bcseechers
kill " 185 13
No news but health "140 8
be rich no more " 146 12
no more dying then " 146 14
Which have no correspondence " 148 2
as all men's : no " 148 8
No marvel then " 148 11
stays no farther reason " 151 8
No want of conscience " 151 13
But found no cure " 153 13
and to no love beside L C ...^ 77
which did no form receive " ~... 241
it is no fault of mine P P 8 12
conceit needs no defence "88
and yet no cause I have " 10 7
no rubbing will refresh " 13 8
no cement can redress " 13 10
pipe can sound no deal " 18 27
There is no heaven " 19 45
Is no Mend in misery " 21 32
No man will supply thy want " 21 38
Use his company no more " 21 60
and no space was seen P T ...~ 30
Leaving no posterity " ...^ 59
Koble— with noble disposition R L ~... 1095
noble by the sway L C ..... 108
Which late her noble suit " 234
Kobler — My nobler part Son 151 6
Hobly— Thou nobly base B L ..... 660
Hoiie — ^hls ill-resounding noise VA 919
No noise but owls' and wolves* R L 165
lesser noise than shallow fords " ~... 1329
Hone — deep desire hath none VA 389
But none is best " 971
if none of those R L 44
when none may spy him " ~... 881
and be nurse to none " 1162
But none where all distress " ~... 1446
though none it ever cured " 1581
and they none of ours " ...^ 1757
Thou single wilt prove none Son 8 14
that thou none lovest " 10 4
O, none but unthrifts " 13 13
But you like none, none you " 53 14
O, none, unless this miracle " 65 13
When yellow leaves, or none " 73 2
power to hurt and will do none " 94 1
yet I none could see " 99 14
None else to me, nor I to none "112 7
yet none knows well " 129 13
Among a number one is reckon'd
none " 136 8
to none was ever said L C 180
None — none of the mind
LC
M..«
181
Such looks as none could look
PP
4
4
None fairer, nor none falser
u
7
6
I see that there is none
u
18
54
None takes pity on thy pain
M
21
20
None alive will pity me
U
21
28
Two distincts, division none
PT
•••••
27
Love hath reason, reason none
M
•••••
47
Non-payment— Say, for ... .
VA
•■••«
521
Noon— May set at noon
RL
•••••
784
out-going in thy noon
Sim
7
13
Noon-tide— his weary .... prick
RL
•••«•
781
Nor— nor brag not of thy might
VA
•••••
113
nor know not what we mean
u
126
nor will not know it
u
•••••
409
neither eyes nor ears, to hear nor
see
((
•••••
437
nor hear, nor touch
M
•••••
440
Bonnet nor veil henceforth
U
••••«
1081
Nor sun nor wind
u
•«••«
1082
But king nor peer to such
RL
•••••
21
Nor read the subtle-shining secre-
cies
(1
•••••
101
■ nor fear'd no hooks
tt
•■•«•
108
Nor could she moralize
u
••••■
104
can neither fight nor fly
II
•••••
230
finds no excuse nor end
u
•■••a
238
Nor children's tears nor mothers'
groans respecting
11
•••••
431
Nor aught obeys
11
•••••
546
Nor shall he smile at thee
II
«••••
1065
Nor laugh with his companions
II
»••••
1066
Nor fold my fault
II
••«•■
1073
nor law nor limit knows
u
• •■••
1120
loves no stops nor rests
u
• ••••
1124
heat nor freezing cold
II
•••••
1145
Nor why her fair cheeks
II
• ••••
1225
Cheeks neither red nor pale
II
• •«««
1510
Nor ashy pale the fear that
II
•••••
1512
Nor it, nor no remembrance
Sim
5
12
Nor can I fortune to brief minutes
tell
II
14
5
nor outward fair
II
16
11
Nor lose possession
II
18
10
Nor shall Death brag
II
18
U
Nor draw no lines
II
19
10
remove nor be removed
II
25
14
Nor can thy shame
II
34
9
Nor tltou with public kindness
II
86
11
poor, nor despised
II
37
9
nor the gilded monuments
II
55
1
Nor Mars his sword nor war's
quick fire
55
7
Nor services to do
57
4
Nor dare I chide
57
5
Nor think the bitterness
57
7
Nor dare I question
67
9
nor stone, nor earth, nor bound-
less sea
II
65
1
Nor gates of steel
II
65
8
nor nio nor you
II
72
12
neither he, nor his compeers
II
86
7
nor tliat affable familiar ghost
II
86
9
Yet nor the lays of birds, nor the
sweet smell
II
98
5
Nor did I wonder
II
98
9
Nor praise the deep vermillion
II
98
10
nor red nor white
II
99
10
Nor my beloved
M
105
2
Xurttiatfulliiur
DOT )h iriU wii I* tm
nor llioii Uiltd
Kiw trader fecUof
■Ktk(T>— A* IbcsIbC tow]t bcfon
Jl hf*a uDd DCQiHl iride
SM— nWlUibctlwUh
kaov-iliiotirlial
Dot to dlistDib]«
'rt ^niLiTkobscuiiij
ud TiU Dol lei
" 1>
A
N.i-Niior... >1
pr —
*
Km to briiera
Dtath b pot I«
RL.~
KU
ItwuiHtibe
■hf DOl !!(■ DD li|H
car q«rt k iwi In risht
Ui-,ri....-,s„illoot*n)oj " ..
Wb'rciD 1 Till DOl kia ■• ..
•ndnotbemo " ..
<:ulUuri* unnlKl. did not M SL-
DUooaldnutHiiirr " -
Tbit wbu iher hiTe ooi " _.
Will hi
ill sot b« Jiinuy'd
ootlDund
OgWonldlhoQj
Hat— Tboa looli'M not U
KaltoseduclDglmt
U Dot, enfunwl bilo
udM Dol fartsUa Ibtdr irill
Tkcr Ililuk net
Thai knawi tiai pinUat baU
lot— Iran not nniiDsr^ dUUlUtlon
left i
Then let not wtnlei^ raggsd hud
jirrgmlliDiiUrs
■hall not penuada ma
All, potformywlf
PrMume aol on thj- h«rt
So (ben urn Dot li'
Were it Dot th.v Kiu
Diuk'd Dut ibj ilmv
NEWS
200
NO
Newt— news firom the warlike band R L 255
No news but health Son 140 8
Kew-«pniBff— the new-sprung flower F^ 1171
New-waxen— From lips .... pale Ji L ~... 1^>63
Next^Thou art the next of blood VA ..... 1184
next Touchsafe t' aflbrd R L 1305
next my heaven the best Son 110 13
And my next self ** 133 6
Kibbler— the tender nibbler PP 4 11
NIee— the painter was so nice R L 1412
And nice affections wavering L C 97
Nifgard- The niggard prodigal R L 79
Then, beauteous niggard Son 4 5
Than niggard truth " 72 8
Nifffarding— makcst waste in ... . '* 1 12
Nigh- that she is so nigh VA 341
No ilower was nigh " 1055
that grazed his cattle nigh L C 67
Night— so shall the day seem uight V A 122
From mom till night " ..... 154
The night of sorrow ** 481
in water seen by night '* „... 492
The owl, night's herald " ..... 531
and bid good-night ** ^... 534
let me say "Good-night ** ^... 636
'Good-night/ quoth she " 637
this night I'll waste in sorrow ** 688
The night is spent " ..... 717
* In night,' quoth she " 720
* Now of this dark night " 727
and her by night '* 732
that bums by night " 755
by this black-faced night " 773
merciless and pitchy night " 821
and outwore the night " 841
to spend the night withal " 847
consort with ugly night ** 1041
rock thee day and night " 1186
For he the night before R L 15
Till sable Night «' ..... 117
and wore out the night " ..... 123
the dead of night " 162
and misty night , " ..... *•><;
resembling dew of night " 39(>
one in dead of night ** 449
to this night " ..... 485
* this night I must ** 512
in blind concealing night *' 675
Tarquin fares this night " 698
through the dark night ** 729
on the direful night *' 741
* night's 'scapes doth open lay " 747
unseen secrecy of night " 76.')
•O comfort-killing Night " ...» 764
▼aporous and foggy Night " 771
make perpetual night ** 784
Were Tarquin Night, as he is but
Night's child " «... 785
Through Night's black bosom ** ..... 788
* O Night, thou furnace " ..... 799
copesmate of ugly Night ** ..... 925
sentinel the night " .... 942
O, this dread night *' 965
this cursed crimeful night ** 970
Poor grooms are sightleu night " ..... 1013
and uncheerful Night " ..... 1024
this false night's abuses ** 1075
And solemn night ** 1081
And therefore still in uight " „... 1085
Night— what's done by night
weep like the dewy night
AsHdl'd by night
burnt out In tedious nights
She looks for night
this night I wiU inflict
in hideous night
change your day of youth to sul-
lied night
hung in ghastly night
Makes black night beauteous
by night my mind
is not eased by night
But day by night, and night by day **
the swar^-complexion'd night
And night doth nightly
hid in death's dateless night
When in dead night
All days are nights
And nights bright days
to the weary night
to age's steepy night
by and by black night
his compeers by night
OiTe not a windy night
did hush the night
the day or night
that our night of woe
Doth foUow night
as dark as night
Good night, good rest
She bade good-night
dark dreaming night
The night so pack'd, I post
the night would post too soon
Pack night, peep day ; good day,
of night now borrow **
Short, night, to-night, and length
thyself "
will calm ere night **
Nightingale— Save the .... alone P P
Nightly— For with the Unen R L
warble of her nightly sorrow "
doth nightly make grief 's strength Son
Which nightly gulU him **
Night-owl— that this .... will catch R L
N Igh t- wak I ng— foul cat "
Nigh t- wanderers— . . . . often are VA
Night- wandering-. . . . weasels R L
Nlll— nill I construe whether P P
Nimble— Relish your nimble notes R L
For nimble thought can jump Son
those jacks that nimble leap
Youth is nimble
Nimbly— Nimbly she fastens
Nine — Than those old nine
No — But having no defects
and yet no footing seen
* Fie, no more of love
but of no woman bred
Thou art no man
No dog shall rouse thee
Taking no notice
Therefore no marvel
they make no battery
or I had no hearing
Had I no eyes
no more had seen
No fisher but the ungrown
RL
■••*•
1012
»*
,,„
1282
«
MM
1262
•
•MM
1879
M
•■•••
1571
U
«»•••
1630
aom
ml-
13
2
SUr*
u
15
12
M
27
11
M
27
12
M
27
13
M
28
8
rday"
28
4
u
28
11
M
28
14
«
80
6
M
43
11
M
48
13
U
43
14
M
61
2
U
63
5
»<
78
7
tl
86
7
«
90
7
M
102
10
M
118
11
M
120
9
M
145
11
U
147
14
PP
14
1
M
14
2
M
15
8
M
15
9
M
15
IS
15 17
15 18
19 14
21 8
...~ 680
1060
28 14
86 10
— 554
>... 825
14 8
.... 1126
44 7
PP
VA
Son
VA
128
12
• ••••
38
It
K
t«
It
•M
M
M
U
5
6
38
10
••••• loo
~... 148
.... 185
214
215
.«.•• X4v
..M 841
M... syo
426
.... 428
.... 433
504
.... ai20
NOT
206
NOW
Hot— Not daring trort PP 15 4
Yet not for me ** 15 16
Alaa, she could not help it " 16 12
My flocks feed not ** 18 1
My ewes breed not ** 18 2
My rams speed not ** 18 3
Plays not at all " 18 »0
Clear wells spring not " 18 87
Sweet birds sing not *' 18 88
Green plants bring not " 18 89
Smooth not thy tongue ** 19 8
you bad not had it then '* 19 24
Spare not to spend ** 19 26
bo thou not slack " 19 85
shall not know *• 19 40
Have you not heard it said " 19 41
She will not stick to round me *' 19 51
they will not cheer thee " 21 22
come thou not near P T 8
Hearts, remote, yet not asunder ** ...^ 29
the self was not the same ** ...^ 88
'Twas not their infirmity " ...» 60
Beauty brag, but 'tis not she *' ..... 63
Hotary—and notary of shame B L 765
Note— To note the fighting conflict VA ...~ 345
begins a wailing note *' 8:{5
shamed with the note JR L .... 208
What did he note " 415
Relish your nimble notes " 1126
one pleasing note do sing Son 8 12
in thee a thousand errors note "141 2
sanctified, of holiest note L C 233
Hoted— but mightily he noted B L ...~ 414
invention in a noted weed Son 76 6
More flowers I noted * ** 99 14
Hoteth— poor Venus noteth VA 1057
Ifothini^nothing else he sees *' ~... 287
For nothing eline ** ..... 288
nothing but my body's bane ** »... 872
prove nothing worth " ..... 418
nothing but the very smell " ...» 441
nothing in him seem'd M L »... 94
nothing by augmenting it " 154
nothing can affection's course con-
trol " — 500
the wound that nothing healeth " »... 731
Who nothing wants *' »... 1459
Nature's bequest giv^ nothing Son 4 8
And nothing 'gainst Time's scythe " 12 13
one thing to my purpose nothing '^ 20 12
If there be nothing new " 69 1
And nothing stands " 60 12
And needy nothing '* 66 3
Want nothing that the thoughts " 69 2
can nothing worthy prove ** 72 4
to love things nothing worth ** 72 14
nothing thence but sweetness " 93 12
Nothing, sweet boy " 108 5
To leave for nothing ** 109 12
For nothing this wide universe " 109 13
To me are nothing novel, nothing
strange " 123 3
are nothing like the sun " 130 1
In nothing art thou black " 131 13
For nothing hold me " 136 11
That nothing me, a something " 136 12
left'st me nothing PP 10 8
nothing of thee still * 10 10
That nothing could be used 16 10
Notiee— Taking no notice VA »... 841
Hotorion— thou notorious bawd B L »... 886
Honght— Alaa, he nought esteems VA ..... 631
Beauty hath nought ** „... 638
nought at all respecting ** ..... 911
nought at all effecting *< . 912
call'd him all to nought " .... 993
For day hath nought to do ML 1092
his mood with nought agrees ** ...» 1095
presentcth nought but show Son 15 3
Receiving nought by elements " 44 13
stay and think of nought " 57 11
doth stand for nought P P 19 42
lfoiirteli*d— that which it was hjSon 73 12
Hovel— To me are nothing novel "123 3
How — stalled up, and even now VA ~... 89
Now doth she stroke his cheek,
now doth he frown " »... 45
as I entreat thee now *• «... 97
And now Adonis " ..... I8I
now she weeps, and now she fain " . 221
And now her sobs ** ..... 222
Now gazeth she on him, now on
the ground « «... 224
how doth she now for wits " 249
Now which way *• «... 263
now his woven girths " ..... 266
now stand on end " ...- 272
What cares he now " «... 285
he now prepares " . 303
now the happy season ** 327
now her cheek was pale *' «... 847
Now was she Just before him " «... 849
gently now she takes him " »... 861
now press'd with bearing " „... 430
now is turn'd to day " „... 481
But now I lived " «... 497
But now I died " »... 498
Now let me say " «... 535
Now quick desire '* «... 647
He now obeys, and now no more
resisteth " 663
now she can no more " «... 677
Now is she In the very lista " «... 695
And now his grief ** «... 701
And now 'tis dark *' «... 719
Now of this dark night " 727
now it sleeps alone ** . «. 786
now I will away " «... 807
now she beats her heart '* «... 829
For now she knows " «... 883
now she will no further " «... 905
Now Nature cares not " «... 953
now wind, now rain '* 965
For now reviving joy " «... 977
Now she unweaves " 991
Now she adds honours " «... 994
they have wept till now " «... 1062
Whose tongue is music now " «... 1077
now no more reflect " «... 1130
now thinks he B L ...« 78
Now leaden slumber ** «... 124
Such hazard now muHt " «... 155
now stole upon the time " «... 162
Now serves the season " «... 166
And now thisi lustful lora ** «... 169
That now he vows a league, and
now invasion " .... 887
Now is he come " .... 8S7
NO
202
NOR
90-^, nol it is an ever^fixed mark Son 116 6
nor no man ever lored " 116 14
have no leisure taken " 120 7
No, I am that I am " 121 9
No, Time, thou Shalt not " 123 1
No, it was builded far " 124 6
No, let me be obsequious " 125 9
knows no art " 125 11
beauty bath no name, no holy
bower " 127 7
no beauty lack ** 127 11
Enjoy'd no sooner " 129 5
and no sooner had " 129 6
But no such roses " 130 6
no fair acceptance shine " 135 8
Let no unkind, no fair beseechers
kill " 135 13
No news but health " 140 8
be rich no more " 146 12
no more dying then " 146 14
Which have no correspondence " 148 2
as all men's : no *' 148 8
No marvel then "148 11
stays no farther reason " 151 8
No want of conscience " 151 13
But found no cure " 153 13
and to no love beside L C ...^ 77
which did no form receive " ~... 241
it is no fault of mine PP 3 12
conceit needs no defence "88
and yet no cause I have " 10 7
no rubbing will refresh " 13 8
no cement can redress " 13 10
pipe can sound no deal " 18 27
There is no heaven " 19 45
Is no flriend in misery " 21 32
No man will supply thy want " 21 38
Use his company no more " 21 50
and no space was seen P T ...^ 30
Leaving no posterity " .... 59
Koble— with noble disposition E L 1095
noble by the sway L C ^... 108
Which late her noble suit " 234
Kobler — My nobler part Son 151 6
Hobly— Thou nobly base B L 6G0
Holie — his ill-resounding noise V A ..... 919
No noise but owls' and wolves' R L ..... KiS
lesser noise than shallow fords " 1329
Hone — deep desire hath none VA 389
But none is best " 971
if none of those R L 44
when none may spy him " »... 881
and be nurse to none " ..... 1162
But none where all distress " ..... 1446
though none it ever cured " 1581
and they none of ours " ...^ 1757
Thou single wilt prove none Son 8 14
that thou none lovest " 10 4
O, none but unthrifts " 13 13
But you like none, none you " 53 14
O, none, unless this miracle " G5 13
When yellow leaves, or none " 73 2
power to hurt and will do none " 94 1
yet I none could see " 99 14
None else to mo, nor I to none "112 7
yet none knows well " 129 13
Among a number one is reckon'd
none " 136 8
to none was ever said L C ~... 180
LC
PP
u
u
(I
u
pr-.
VA
RL
Sim
RL
VA
None — none of the mind
Such looks as none could look
None fairer, nor none falser
I see that there is none
None takes pity on thy pain
None alive will pity me
Two distincts, division none
Love hath reason, reason none
Non-payment— Say, for ... .
Noon—May set at noon
out-going in thy noon
Noon«tlde— his weary .... prick
Nor— nor brag not of thy might
nor know not what we mean "
nor will not know It "
neither eyes nor cars, to hear nor
see ••
nor hear, nor touch **
Bouuot nor veil henceforth "
Nor sun nor wind "
But king nor peer to such R L
Nor read the subtle-shining secre-
cies "
. nor fear'd no hooks "
Nor could she moralize "
cun neither fight nor fly "
finds no excuse nor end "
Nor children's tears nor mothers*
groans r(»specting "
Nor aught obeys
Nor shall he smile at thee
Nor laugh with his companions
Nor fold my fault
nor law nor limit knows
loves no stops nor rests
heat nor frecving cold
Nor why her fair cheeks
Cheeks neither red nor pale
Nor ashy pule the fear that
Nor it, nor no remembrance
Nor can I fortune to brief minutes
tell "
nor outward fair "
Nor lose possession
Nor shall Death brag
Nor draw no lines
remove nor be reujoved "
Nor can thy shame **
Nor thou with public kindness
poor, nor despised
nor the gilded monuments
Nor Miint his sword nor war's
quick fire
Nor services to do
Nor dare I chide *'
Nor think the bitterness
Nor dare I question
nor stone, nor earth, nor bound-
less sea
Nor gates of steel
nor me nor you
neither he, nor his compeers
nor that affable familiar ghost
Yet nor the lays of birds, nor the
sweet smell "
Nor did I wonder "
Nor praise the deep vermillion "
nor red nor white *•
Nor my beloved ••
4
7
181
4
6
18 54
21 20
21
t(
M
M
U
l(
(t
U
41
Son
u
u
«<
«
M
M
ii
<l
U
U
U
II
l(
28
27
47
521
784
13
781
113
126
409
437
.... 440
1061
.... 1082
.... 101
.... 108
104
.... 230
.... 238
.... 431
.... o4o
1065
.... 1066
.... 1073
1120
1124
— 1145
. — 1225
.... 1310
.... 1512
5 12
14 5
16 11
18 10
18 11
19
25
84
36
87
55
55
57
57
67
57
65
65
72
86
86
98
98
98
99
105
10
14
9
11
9
1
7
4
5
7
9
1
8
12
7
9
5
9
10
10
2
0, If no harder
O, b« lauamber'd
O, how tn they wrspp*!!
O, that prone lost
O, deeper tin
'O comfort-klUlDg Night
■ h*Uful, Tiparoui, lud toggj
'OMlght,ltaoururoic8
O, oDl^lt »n
XL — «0I
O— O, lOTO'l bHt hi
■phblUR ipciks ; 'OtjDittBjet "
O most potcDtEil lore
O, how the eh«Boel
O lUher, what ■ heU
O, that [nfecled moliturs
O, that forced thunder
O, froni Ihj cheeki
PP 1 II
lellkeaaki PP
her oatha of tr
Hit fiiilh, hor
Ohdnnili!— All I
■bat * btppr title
O, bUme me not
0, ncTer ht that I
O, for lay lake
O, 'til the Brn
onquerori, hti ]![■ ober " ...
Jor aught obeya XL —
ndmadetbelt irmioliOT LC...
'u whoK sound chutevinga ob«]F p T ...
ObPjeil-hlntrongerMrcngth.... VA ^.
flWrrt~hernhjMti.uUwa)r " __
■■ IdiiilhooljMt - „
Lkii me uuiuhjMltothetell-Ulo
OthoD, mrloretrboT
than mlnlOD of her pltai
O, lei It Uien aa well
OBJECT
209
OF
Object— With objects manifold LC^... 216
Oblatlos— And Uke thou my ... . iSbn 125 10
must yoar oblations be L C ^... 223
OkllTiOB— Planting oblivion, beat-
ing reason back VA 557
To feed oblirlon B L 947
Tin each to raxed oblivion Son \n 7
OkllTlow— 'Gainst death and all-
oblivious enmity " 55 9
Obloqvy — the author of their .... RL ..... 523
Ohacre brakes obscure and rough K^ ~... 237
obscures her silver shine " »... 728
Obsearely— evils that .... sleep R L ..... 1250
O^anrlty— not in dark obscurity VA 760
Obaeqvloss— « holy and .... tear Son 31 6
obsequious in thy heart " 125 9
OkMqvy— Keep the .... so strict P T ~... 12
Msemsee— Such sweet observance /2/^ 1385
Obsirved— observed as they flew L C ~... 60
Oktals— Yet ever to obUin R L 129
to obtain his lust *' ..... 156
Obtained— his suit may be obtained " 898
ObtalBlBf^-dangers of his will's .... " ..... 128
OwasiOB— on what occasion " 1270
And every light occasion L C ..... 86
Oecaa— Or in the ocean drench'd VA^... 494
Uke a troubled ocean R L 589
to staiu tlie oceao of thy blood *' ~... 655
Who in a salt-waved ocean " ..... 1231
Let this sad interim like the ocean
be 6bn 56 9
I have seen the hungry ocean *' 64 5
wide as the ocean is " 80 5
I pour your ocean L C 256
OM--they such odd action yield R L 1433
OdMr— For that sweet odour Son 54 4
Of their sweet deaths are sweetest
od(Mirs made " 54 12
But why thy odour matcheth not " 69 13
in odour and in hue " 98 6
O'er-o'er the downs VA 677
itain that o*er with silver white R L 56
rudely o'er his arm " 170
UoD fawneth o'er his prey " 421
So o'er this sleeping soul " 423
Who o'er the white sheet " 472
First hovering o'er the paper " 1297
with this gives o'er " 1567
and busy winds give o'er " 1790
sll illver'd o'er with white .$^12 4
from woe to woe tell o'er " 80 10
o'er dull and speechless tribes " 107 12
•sy o'er the very luime "108 6
I was certain o'er Incertainty " 115 11
O'er whom thy fingers walk " 128 11
I ftrong o'er thera, and you o'er
me being strong L C 2.'57
O'treharged— . ... with burthen Son 23 8
O'crflow — the bounding bank o'cr-
flows R L 1119
O'ergreea— So you . . . . my bad Son \\1 4
0*srfmr«— As corn by weeds RL 281
O'srlook — mayst without attaiut
o'erlook &m 82 2
©•erwprens'd— my .... defence " 1.39 8
0*er-rMd — Which eyes not yet cre-
ated shall o'er-read ** 81 10
0*sr8aow*d— Beauty o'ersnow'd and
bareness "58
14
0'entraw*d— and the top .... VA ..... 1143
O'ersway— But sad mortality o'er-
sways their power San 65 2
O'ertake— o'ertake me in my way " 34 8
Overwhelming— his fidr sight V A ...^ 183
O'erwom—...., despised, rheumatic " 135
is so much o'erworn " 866
crush'd and o'erworn San 63 2
Of— leave of the weeping mom VA ..... 2
of pith and livelihood " ..... 26
coals of glowing fire " ...» 35
burning of his cheeks " « 50
moisture, air of grace " .... 64
gardens full of flowers " ..... 65
direful god of war " ...» 98
brag not of thy might *' ..... 113
the god of fight " «... 114
those fair lips of thine " ..... 115
Make use of time ** ..... 129
all compact of fire ** ..... 149
be of thyself rejected " „... 159
By law of nature " ..... 171
so in spite of death " ..... 173
* Fie, no more of love " ..... 185
heat of this descending " ..... 190
a shadow for thee of my hairs " 191
how want of love " ..... 202
but of no woman bred " 214
of a man's complexion " ..... 215
circuit of this ivory pale " .. .. 2.%
Poor queen of love " «... 251
Of the fair breeder " «... 282
stirring of a feather " 302
breeder, full of fear " «... .'RJO
Jealous of catching " 321
aidance of the tongue " 330
So of concealed sorrow " «... 333
conflict of her hue '* «... 345
what a war of looks " «... 355
pnson'd in a gaol of snow " «... 362
the engine of her thoughts " ...» 867
approach of sweet desire " ...« 386
And learn of him " «... 404
Say, that the sense of feeling " 439
the stillitory of thy face " 443
feeder of the other four " «... 446
deadly bullet of a gun " 461
wounding of a frown " 465
The night of sorrow " 481
that hard heart of thine " «... 500
thid poor heart of mine ** «... 602
for fear of slips " 515
The honey fee of parting " 5.38
the sweetness of the spoil " «... 553
Things out of hope " 667
with certain of his friends " 588
the very lists of love " 595
Of bristly pikes " ...« 620
As fearful of him, part " 630
that face of thine " «... 631
counsel of thoir friends ** 640
signs of fear lurk " «... 644
of an angry-chafing boar " «... 662
The thought of it " «... 669
among a flock of sheep " «... 685
with a henl of deer " «... 689
the hubtlng of the boar " 711
' Why, what of that " «... 717
expected of my friends " «... 718
OF
210
OF
Of— desire Mee best of all
rob thee of a kiss
Now of this dark night
condemn'd of treason
vorkmanship of nature
Of mad mischances
heating of the blood
not the least of all
despite of fruitless chsatitj
of daughters and of sons
by the rights of time
reaves his son of life
closure of my breast
to be barr'd of rest
Lust full of forged lies
full of shame, my heart of teen
Of those fair anns
discovery of her way
repetition of her moans
the choir of echoes
humor of fantastic wits
lark, weary of rest
patron of all light
no tidings of her love
yelping of the hounds
proceedings uf a drunken brain
Full of respects
licking of his wound
Hateful divorce of love
as one full of despair
channel of her bosom dropp'd
This sound of hope
face of the sluttish ground
both of them extremes
clepes him king of graves
of all mortal things
I felt a kind of fear
author of thy slander
Tells him of trophies
To be of such a weak
overthrow of mortal kind
thou art so full of fear
stars ashamed of day
cabins of her head
disposing of her troubled brain
drops of hot desire
Of things long since
to rob him of his fair
pity of his tender years
robb'd of his effect
• Wonder of time
false and full of fraud
and too full of riot
is no cause of fear
It shall be cause of war
of a more sweet-smelling sire
art the next of blood
Thus weary of the world
wings of false desire
Of Collatine's fair love
that name of ' chaste
sky of his delight
treasure of his happy state
possession of his beauteous mate
but of a few
splendour of the sun
from a world of harm
doth of itself persuade
The eyes of men
VA «... 720
" „... 727
" ...» 729
• •••• fO"!
•■••• 738
" 742
•»•«• 7vj
" — 754
•••«• 7v9
" 766
" — 782
• ••M f04
••••• vV4
^ ftllft
• ••M 0*0
" 831
" 840
••••• oOU
••••• m«s
••••• OOv
••••« OOf
• ••M Ool
" ...- 910
• ••— if 1 1
" 932
••••• tfOi)
••••• VvO
••••• 976
••••• Vo3
••••• Vof
• ••«• tfsrO
CI OQA
•■••• ww^M
<< QOfi
•«••• 1006
" ...„ 1018
" ...» 1016
" ... 1018
" ..... 1021
" ..... 1032
" 1038
'• 1040
" 1074
" ...„ 1078
" 1086
" 1091
" 1132
" ...» 1133
" 1141
" 1147
" 1153
" 1159
" tl78
'• 1184
" 1189
B L 2
" 7
" 8
" 12
" 16
" 18
" 22
" 25
" 29
Of— Of that rich Jewel RL ^^ 84
boast of Lucrece' sovereignty '* .... 86
issue of a king " .... 87
envy of so rich a thing " .... 89
if none of those " .... 44
Which of them both " .... 53
Of cither's colour " 66
The sovereignty of either " .... 60
war of lilies and of roses " .... 71
wonder of sUll-gazing eyes " .... 84
in plaiu of mi^esty **■ .... 9.1
wonder of his eye *' .... 95
margents of such looks " .... 102
fields of fruitful Italy " .... 107
wreaths of victory " .... 110
purpose of his coming hither *' .... 118
show of stormy, blustering weather " .... 115
mother of dread and fear ^ .... 117
As one of which " .... 127
dangers of his will's obtaining ** .... 128
the profit of excess " .... 138
The aim of all " .... 141
The death of all " .... 147
Of that we have " .... 152
want of wit " .... 158
the dead of night " 162
sparks of fire do fly " .... 177
dangers of his loathsome enterprise " .... 184
armo)ir of still-slaughter'd lust " .... 188
a froth of fleeting Joy " .... 212
dream of my intent " .... 218
quittal of such strife ** .... 236
Full of foul hope and full of fond
mistrust " . 284
crannies of the place " .... 810
smoke of it into his face ** .... 812
things of trial *' .... 826
income of each precious thing " .... 384
heaven of his thought " .... 838
in the midst of his unfruitful prayer *' .... 344
The eye of heaven *• .... 856
mercy of his mortal sting " .... 364
period of their ill " .... 880
cozening the pillow of a lawful kiss " .... 887
admired of lewd, unhallow'd eyes *' .... 892
dew of night " 896
in the map of death ^ 402
A pair of maiden worlds " ..... 407
8ave of their lord ** 409
His rage of lust " .... 424
proud of such a dignity " 437
heart of all her land " . 439
Whose ranks of blue veins " .... 440
confusion of their cries *' 445
dead of night " .... 449
reason of this rash alarm " .... 473
fury of his speed " .... 501
worthless slave of thine " 515
mark of every open eye " .... 520
author of their obloquy " .... 523
picture of true piety " .... 542
wrinkles of his face " .... 562
all the form of both " .... 572
for fear of this " .... 614
lectures of such shame ** .... 618
the ocean of thy blood ** «... 655
Instead of lore's coy touch ** «.» 668
bed of some rascal groom ** «... 671
breeds months of pain ** .... 690
NOT
206
NOW
Hot— Not daring trust PP 16 4
Yet not for me *' 15 16
Alas, she coald not help it " 1ft 12
My flocks feed not ** 18 1
My ewes breed not "18 2
My rams speed not " 18 3
Plays not at all " 18 80
Clear wells spring not " 18 87
Sweet birds sing not " 18 88
Green plants bring not " 18 89
Smooth not thy tongue " 19 8
you had not had it then " 19 24
Spare not to spend " 19 26
bo thou not slack " 19 85
shall not know " 19 40
Have you not heard it said " 19 41
She will not stick to round me " 19 51
they will not cheer thee " 21 22
come thou not near P T ~... 8
Hearts, remote, yet not asunder ** ...~ 29
the self was not the same ** 88
*Twas not their infirmity " ...« 60
Beauty brag, but 'tis not she ** ...^ 63
Kotary — and notary of shame B L 765
note— To note the fighting conflict VA ...^ 345
begins a wailing note *' 835
•hamed with the note R L ...^ 208
What did he note '* 415
Relish your nimble notes " 1126
one pleasing note do sing Scm 8 12
in thee a thousand errors note *' 141 2
sanctified, of holiest note L C .... 233
Hoted— but mightily he noted R L 414
invention in a noted weed San 76 6
More flowers I noted • " 99 14
Hoteth— poor Veniis noteth VA ...~ 1057
Ifothini^nothing else he sees ** ~... 287
For nothing el»e " ».... 288
nothing but my body's bane " ~... 872
prove nothing worth " «... 418
nothing but the very smell ** ...~ 441
nothing in him seem'd R L ~... 94
nothing by augmenting it " »... 154
nothing can affection's course con-
trol " 500
the wound that nothing healeth *' .^. 731
Who nothing wants " «... 1459
Nature's bequest giv^ nothing San 4 8
And nothing 'gainst Time's scythe " 12 13
one thing to my purpose nothing " 20 12
If there be nothing new " 69 1
And nothing stands " 60 12
And needy nothing ** 66 3
Want nothing that the thoughU " 69 2
can nothing worthy prove " 72 4
to love things nothing worth " 72 14
nothing thence but sweetness " 93 12
Nothing, sweet boy " 108 5
To leave for nothing " 109 12
For nothing this wide universe " 109 13
To me are nothing novel, nothing
strange "123 3
are nothing like the sun " 130 1
In nothing art thou black " 131 13
For nothing hold nio " 13G 11
That nothing me, a something " 136 12
left'st me nothing PP 10 8
nothing of thee still * 10 10
That nothing could be used 16 10
VA
RL
VA
M
It
RL
M
M
PP
il
U
Hotlee— Taking no notice
Hotortottt— thou notorious bawd
Noaght— Alaa, he nought esteem
Beauty hath nought
nought at all respecting
nought at all effteting
caird him all to nought
For day hath nought to do
his mood with nought agrees
preaenteth nought but show
Beceiving nought by elements
stay and think of nought
doth stand for nought
Honriah'd— that which it was .... by Son
Novel— To me are nothing novel "
How — stalled up, and even now VA
Now doth she stroke his cheek,
now doth he frown "
as I entreat thee now **
And now Adonis
now she weeps, and now she flidn
And now her sobs
Now gazeth she on him, now on
the ground
how doth she now for wits
Now which way
now his woven girths
now stand on end
What cares he now
he now prepares
now the happy season
now her cheek was pale
Now was she Just before him
gently now she takes him
now pross'd with bearing
now is turn'd to day
But now I lived
But now I died
Now let me say
Now quick desire "
He now obeys, and now no more
resisteth "
now she can no more
Now is she in the very lists
And now his grief
And now 'tis dark
Now of this dark night
now it sleeps alone
now I will away
now she beats her heart
For now she knows
now she will no further
Now Nature cares not
now wind, now rain
For now reviving joy
Now she unweaves
Now she adds honours
they have wept till now
Whose tongue is music now
now no more reflect
now thinks he
Now leaden slumber
Such hazard now muHt
now stole upon the time
Now serves the season
And now thi8 lustful lora
That now he vows a league, and
now invasion
Now is he come
•••M 841
••••• ooO
—.. 6S1
.... 638
— 911
.... 912
.... v9w
— 1092
— 1005
15 3
44
67
19
78
123
u
M
M
tt
M
U
(4
U
U
M
(i
«
tt
tf
tt
tt
(t
tt
(t
tt
tt
It
tl
tt
li
II
II
tl
13
11
42
12
8
89
RL
tl
tl
«
«t
45
«•••• 9 i
— 181
. 221
— 222
.... 224
253
••••• xoo
. — 272
.... 285
.... 827
.... 847
.... 9%9
.... vol
430
— 497
585
— 547
.... 563
.... 577
— 595
701
— 719
... 727
. M. Too
— 807
»••• 829
*•••• oOv
953
••.•• 965
-... 977
■.... 991
w... 994
.... 1062
.... 1077
.... 1130
.... 124
.... 155
.... 162
B... 166
... 169
^. 187
•M. S87
dirge of h«cerUln.
lbs iBWiul of ihr Lx
^eidortliirkiDldulgl
gtDom of (bins
me of tbea dtTetted
Ibit Ulce of beuur *>■'
f oulh mud Ihou in of oDi
ulruvni.if iiijh.m
be of thjielt » nrj
80 1, fm ttar of trnit
ccnmoti J of lore*! 1IU
one pall of <r<ie|dni
Ihli wrong of nilna
in of hl>lil*iird M
I jiUnl thought ' IB 1
Ai iDtereil of the dt«d
psni of me to tb(« did gin
Thll due of minf
Uuii ur ibr deceimnl lo«er
bi;l|(litor bniiplcriucii
TliQa of 1bf»ir Ihj aweet ••
J0.I -IpccItp
jwnti.iwBltjurglm
r inf of tbw aU
r Ajitrtof klllhjflor:
K bciUriHino/ me
Tben of Ih; bciut]' <lo
Of ptagun, of <
48 1
i8 I
U tl
dciiro, of potfoct'it loTe being m
o
208
OBJECT
0— O modest vanton
RL
401
0— O, love's best habit
Aulas
11
0, if no harder
M
•••••
693
0, call not me
- 139
O, be reinember'd
M
•••••
607
0, but with mine compare
« 14S
0, how are they wrapp'd
U
•••••
636
me, what eyes
" 148
0, that prone lost
If
•••••
684
0, how can love's eye
" 148
0, deeper sin
U
• ■•M
701
cunning Love
" 148
IS
*0 coinfort-killing Night
((
•••••
764
Canst thou, cruel
•* 149
'0 hatefUl, vaporoas, and foggy
<(
•••••
771
0, from what power
" 190
*0 Night, thou furnace
U
■••••
799
0, though I love
" UH>
11
*0 unseen shame
II
•••••
827
Cried, '0 false blood
XC.~-
tn,
0, unfelt sore
il
•••••
828
appetite, ttam Judgement
M
16S
unlook'd-for evil
M
■*•••
846
0, then, advance
225
Opportunity, thy guilt
11
•••••
876
But, my sweet
U
28S
0, hear me then
M
•••••
930
0, pardon me
M
948
O, this dread night
*l
•«•••
905
0, hear me tell
M
2SS
*0 Time, thou tutor
II
•••••
995
most potential love
M
2M
no, that cannot be
M
«••••
1049
0, how the channel
U
285
* 0, that is gone
II
«••••
1051
father, what a hell
w
288
she sobbing speaks : ' eye of eyes "
•••■•
1088
cleft effect
«4
.....
298
O, let it not be hild
II
•••■•
1257
0, that infected moisture
u
S2S
'0, peace r quoth Lucrece
l(
•••••
1284
0, that false fire
M
«24
Ulysses, 0, what art
l4
••••■
1394
0, that forced thunder
M
925
' 0, teach me how to make
II
•••••
1653
0, that sad breath
U
926
' 0, speak,' quoth she
II
•••••
1700
0, all that borrow'd motion
u
827
0, from thy cheeks
II
•••••
1762
0, love's best habit
pp 1
11
Time, cease thou thy course
II
•••••
1765
never faith could hold
- 5
2
' She's mine.' * 0, mine she is
11
•«•••
1795
do not love that wrong
" ff
18
*0,' quoth Lucretius, ' I did give
U
•«•••
1800
• Jove,' quoth she
" 6
14
0, change thy thought
Som
10
9
yes, dear friend
« 10
11
0, that you were
II
13
1
0, my love, my love
" IS
10
0, none but unthrifta
II
13
13
0, sweet shepherd, hie thee
« 12
11
0, carre not with thy hours
II
19
9
frowning Fortune
" 18
15
0, let me, true iu lore
II
21
9
cruel speeding
- 18
25
0, therefore, love
M
22
9
Oak— To dry the old oak's sap
R L »...
950
0, let my books
U
23
9
those thoughts to me like oaks
PP 5
4
0, learn to read
II
23
13
Oath— And him by oath
R L ».M
410
0, then vouchsafe
II
82
9
and sweet friendship's oath
.....
089
0, give thyself
14
88
6
the vestal violate her oath
u
88S
0, how thy worth
II
39
1
with an infringed oath
II
.....
1061
absence, what a torment
II
89
9
KnighU, by their oaths
11
1694
0, what excuse
II
61
6
why of two oaths' breach
Am un
5
0, how much more
It
54
1
For all my vows are oaths
- 16S
7
0, let me suffer
II
68
5
For I have sworn deep oaths
- 182
9
O, that record
H
69
5
Oaths of thy love
" 152
10
0, sure I am
II
69
13
to that strong-bonded oath
LC^^
279
0, nol thy love
II
61
9
To break an oath
PP S
14
0, how shall summer's
II
65
5
her oaths of true love
II 7
8
fearful meditation
II
65
9
Her faith, her oaths, her team
" 7
12
0, none, unless this
II
65
13
Obdarate— Art thou obdurate
VA
199
0, him she stores
II
67
13
Obdurate vassals fell exploits
RL ^.^
429
0. if, I say
II
71
9
Obedience— Whose swift obedience
1215
0, lest the world
II
72
1
Obey— but never to obey
VA
61
0, lest your true love
II
72
9
conquerors, his lips obey
u
649
0, know, sweet love
II
76
9
He now obeys
u
.....
663
0, how I faint
II
80
1
Nor aught obeys
R Zt M.M
646
0, what a happy title
U
92
11
and made their wills obey
LC —
183
0, in what sweets
II
95
4
your minister, for you obeys
M
.....
229
0, what a mansion
u
95
9
To whose sound chaste wings obey P T -^
4
truant Muse
II
101
1
Obeyed— his stronger strength ....
r A ....•
111
0, blame me not
II
103
5
Object— her object will away
u
9m—
255
0, never say that I
II
109
1
Fold in the object
«l
821
0, for my sake
II
111
1
Make me not object to the tell-tale
0, 'tis the first
II
114
9
day
R L ...)
80
0, no I it is an ever-fixed
It
116
5
No object but her passion's strength " .....
IK
benefit of ill
II
119
9
thousand lamentable objects
II
13^
0, that our night
11
120
9
(3ildiug the object
Am 20
thou, my lovely boy
II
126
1
1 Of his quick objects
•* lis
thou minion of her pleasure
II
126
9
As fast as objects
" 114
0, let it then as well
II
132
10
1 The goodly objects
X» C a....
OBJECT
209
OF
O^eet— With objecto m»nifold LC 216
OblAtlos— And take thoa my ... . iSbn 125 10
most your oblations be LC ~... 223
Obi lrl«B— Planting oblivion, beat-
ing reason back VA ..... 557
To feed obliTlon R L ..... 947
Till eaeh to raxed obliTlon 6bn 122 7
ObliTlow— 'Gainst death and all-
oUivioiis enmity " 55 9
Obloqvy— the author of their .... RL ~... 523
OkM«r»— brakes obscure and rough VA ..... 237
obscures her silver shine ** ..... 728
Obscarely— evils that .... sleep It L 1250
O^srarlty— not in dark obscurity VA ..... 760
Obseqnlou— a holy and .... tear Son 31 5
obsequious in thy heart " 125 9
Obasqwy— Keep the .... so strict P T ~... 12
Okserranee— Such sweet observance i?L 1385
Obscrred— observed as they flew L C ~... 60
ObtalB— Yet ever to obUin E L 129
to obtain his lust " ..... 156
Obtained— his suit may be obUined " 898
ObtatnlBg^-dangers of his will's .... ** ~... 128
OeeasloB— on what occasion " ~... 1270
And every light occasion L C 86
Oeean— Or in the ocean drenched VA 494
like a troubled ocean R L 589
to staiu tlie ocean uf thy blood ** ..... 655
Who in a salt-waved ocean " ~... 1231
Let this sad interim like the ocean
be
Son
56 9
I hsve seen the hungry ocean ** 64 5
wide as the ocean is " 80 5
I poor your ocean L C 256
Odd— they such odd action yield R L ~... 1433
Odo«r— For that sweet odour Son 54 4
Of their sweet deaths are sweetest
odours made " 64 12
But why thy odour matcheth not " 69 13
in odour and in hue " 98 6
O'er— o'er the downs VA 677
stain that o'er with silver white R L 56
rudely o'er his arm " 170
lion fawneth o'er his prey " 421
So o'er this sleeping soul " ..... 423
Who o'er the white sheet " ..... 472
First hovering o'er the paper " ~... 1297
with this gives o'er " 1567
and bosy winds give o'er " 1790
all sllver'd o'er with white Sen \% 4
fh>m woe to woe tell o'er " 30 10
o'er dull and speechless tribes *' 107 12
say o'er the very same " 108 6
I was certain o'er incertainty *' 115 11
O'er whom thy fingers walk " 128 11
I strong o'er them, and you o'er
me being strong L C 2.57
O'erehai^ed — . . . . with burthen Son 23 8
0*trflow— the bounding bank o'er-
llows R L 1119
O'erfreea— So you . . . . ray bad Jim 112 4
O'e r gr s wB — As corn .... by weeds R L 281
O'siiook — msyst without attaint
o'eilook Son 82 2
0*er-preM*d— my .... defence " 139 8
0*6r-read — Which eyes not yet cre-
ated shall o'er-read " 81 10
0*srsBOW*d— Beauty o'ersnow'd and
bareness "58
14
O'erstraw'd— and the top .... VA ..... 1143
O'ersway- But sad mortality o'er-
sways their power San 65 2
Overtake— o'ertake me in my way " 34 8
OVrwhelmlng— his fair sight VA .... 183
O'srwom — ...., despised, rheumatic " 135
is so much o'erworn " »... 866
crush'd and o'erworn Son 63 2
Of— leave of the weeping morn VA ...~ 2
of pith and livelihood " .... 26
coals of glowing fire " ..... 35
burning of his cheeks ** « 50
moisture, air of grace " «... 64
gardens full of flowers " ..... 65
direful god of war " ..... 98
brag not of thy might " ..... 113
the god of fight *< ..... 114
those fair lips of thine " ..... 115
Make use of time ** .... 129
sll compact of fire ** .... 149
be of thyself rejected " .... 159
By law of nature " .... 171
so in spite of death " .... 173
• Fie, no more of love ** .... 185
heat of this descending " .... 190
a shadow for thee of my hairs *' .... 191
how want of love ** .... 202
but of no woman bred " .... 214
of a man's complexion " .... 215
circuit of this ivory pale " . .. 230
Poor queen of love " .... 251
Of the fair breeder " 282
stirring of a feather " 302
breeder, full of fear *' .... .320
Jealous of catching " 321
aidance of the tongue " 330
So of concealed sorrow " .... 333
conflict of her hue *' .... 845
what a war of looks " .... 855
prison'd in a gaol of snow " .... 862
the engine of her thoughts " .... 367
approach of sweet desire " .... 386
And learn of him " .... 404
Say, that the sense of feeling " .... 439
the stillitory of thy face " 443
feeder of the other four " .... 446
deadly bullet of a gun " .... 461
wounding of a frown " .... 465
The night of sorrow " .... 481
that hard heart of thine " .... 500
this poor heart of mine " .... 502
for fear of slips " .... 515
The honey fee of parting " .... 538
the sweetness of the spoil " .... 553
Things out of hope " .... 567
with certain of his friends *' .... 588
the very lists of love " 595
Of bristly pikes " .... 620
As fearful of him, part " 630
that face of thine " 631
counsel of their friends '* 640
signs of fear lurk " .... 644
of an sngry-chafing boar " .... 662
The thought of it " .... 669
among a flock of sheep " .... 685
with a herd of deer " .... 689
the hubting of the boar " 711
♦ Why, what of that " .... 717
expected of my friends *' .... 718
OF
216
OFT
Of-Of one by nature's ootvardt L C 80
occasion of the wind ^ ^
•Small show of man " 92
in a pride of truth " 105
Proud of subjection " 108
tip of bis subduing tongue *' 120
AU kind of arguments *' 121
In hia craft of wiU " 126
Of 7oung, of oldf and sexea both
enchanted ** 128
Of lands and mansions " 138
mistress of his heart ** ~... 142
Demand of him ** _ 149
Of proofs new-bleeding ** ~... 153
Of this false Jewel " -... 154
For fear of harms " 165
patterns of his foul beguiling ** ~... 170
bastards of his foul adulterate heart " ~... 175
Have of my suffering " 178
of my holy rows afraid " ~... 179
For feasts of lore " ~... 181
Are errors of the blood, none of
the mind ^ ~... 184
las of shame in me " »... 188
By how much of me ** ~... 189
Or any of my leisures ** ~... 193
Of paled pearls ** ~... 198
Of grief and blushes *" 200
Effects of terror " ~... 202
these talenU of their hair " ~... 204
With the annexions of fair gems
enrich'd " ~... 208
trophies of affections hot ** ~... 218
Of ponsived and subdued desires ** ~... 219
For these, of force must your ob-
lations be ** ~... 223
'"0, then, adrance of yours that '
phraseless hand *' ~... 225
the airy scale of praise ^ .... 226
lister sanctified, of holiest note ** .... 233
KpiriU of richest coat ** ~... 236
The scars of battle ** „... 244
Of stale example *" 2i»
Of wealth, of filial fear *' ~... 270
The aloes of all forces " ~... 273
I bell of witchcraft Ues *" .... 288
ort» of one particular tear ^ ..... 289
inoDdation of the eyes " ..... 290
hut an art of craft " .... 29.5
Holeof chastity I dalTd "* .... 297
I plenitude of subtle matter " .... 302
Of burning blushes, or of weeping
water ** ...- 304
the hail of his all hurting aim " .... 310
the gannent of a Grace ** .... 316
aobtare of his eye *« .... 323
ihe is made of truth P P \ 1
Tvo lores I tutre, oi comfort and
despair " 2 1
rhetoric of thine eye ** 3 I
it is no fault of mine ** 3 12
oaths of true lore swesring ** 7 8
of all her pure protcstings ** 7 11
the queen of mask, makes ** 8 10
One god is god of both " 8 13
vhen the fslr queen of lore "91
aipeetacleof rath ** 9 11
lothing of thee still ** 10 10
1 paidon cmre of thM *• lo 11
Of— Youth is full of pleasance, age
is full of care P P 12 i
Youth is full of sport '* 12 5
In spite of physic " 13 12
the doubts of my decay '* 14 4
the office of mine eyes '* 15 4
good day, of night now borrow ** 15 17
the fairest one of three " 16 1
That liked of her master '* 16 2
For of the two the trusty knight ** 16 11
was Victor of the day ** 16 18
a gift of learning " 16 14
Causer of this " 18 8
The cause of all ray moan ** 18 61
counsel of some wiser head " 19 6
make thee a bed of roses *' 20 9
A cap of flowers " 20 11
with leaves of myrtle " 20 12
A belt of straw " 20 13
merry month of May " 21 2
grore of myrtles made " 21 4
careless of thy sorrowing " 21 26
store of crowns be scant " 21 37
Thus of every grief in heart " 21 55
bird of loudest lay P T .... 1
precurrer of the fiend *• «... 6
Augur of the fever's end ** «... 7
fowl of tyrant wing " .... 10
and stars of love " .... 51
Off— Sometime he scuds far off VA 301
And all amaxed brake off ** .... 469
far off upon a hill ** 697
By this, far off she hears *' .... 973
wind would blow it off ** .... 1099
those far-off eyes look sad R L 1384
still farther off from thee 8fm 28 8
From me far off ** 61 14
From off a hill LC ...^ 1
Shook off my sober guards ** .... 298
Offence — the like offences prove R L .... 613
hates himself for hia offence ** .... 738
To cloak offences •* .... 749
acquit my forced offence ^ .... 1071
For one's offence " .... 1483
the quality of my offence " .... 1702
publish Tarquin's foul offenc« " .... 1652
bears the strong offences cross 8tm 34 12
excuse the slow offence ** 51 1
comment upon that offence " 89 2
Made old offences of affections new ** 1 10 4
All ray offences L C .... 183
Offend— do offend thine ear 8fm 8 6
Offended — for having so offended VA 814
Offender— With foul offenders R L .... 612
The offender's Br>rrow 8im 34 II
offenders, thus I will excuse ye " 42 5
Offer— So offers be to gire V A — 86
Offer pure incense R L . — 194
)««t at CTery gentle r»ff<>r PP A 12
0«<c— their office and their light VA .... 1099
Thy princely office R L . — 4M
Time's office is t4> fine the hate ** , — 936
would Bocb an office have ** ..... IMt
These oOf.-es, so oft 8am 77 U
Then do thy office, Muse *• IW U
the office of mine eyes P P H 4
Oftfrlng — We are their offspring RL — 17:57
<HI— <:>o<npaM'd oft with Tentoring VA — 5(7
oft the eye mistakes ** — IMf
OFT
216
ON
RL
t»
i<
u
u
-... 70
..... 131
174
Oft— oar hearts oft Udnted be
That oft they interchanged
doth traffic oft for gaining
and oft that wealth doth cost
oft betake him to retire
By oft predict that I in hearen
find A» 14 8
so oft as thon wilt look " 77 18
So oft have I invoked thee *' 78 1
How oft, when thou " 128 1
of love as oft as mine ** 142 7
Oft did she heave L C ...~ 15
As oft 'twixt May and April ** ..... 102
Have you not heard it said full
oft PP 19 41
Often — as night-wanderers .... are VA ..... 825
often from his place . R L — 565
to weep are often willing ** ..... 1237
I often did behold *" .... 1758
often is his gold complexion
dimm'd Stm 18 6
have often lived alone *' 106 13
And often reading L C ...~ 19
As often shrieking " ..... 20
These often bathed she " .... 50
And often kiss'd and often 'gan
to tear " .... 51
and often men would say ** .... 106
advice is often seen " .... 160
that often there had been PP B 8
how often hath' she Joined '* 7 7
OftoBttmes— stories .... begun VA ...^ 845
Oil— Dries up his oU " .... 756
Old— foul or wrinkled-old *' .... 133
The text is old " .... 80G
and old men dote " .... 837
Make the young old, the old be-
come a child " .... 1152
blasts and ne'er grows old R L 49
or an old man's saw ** .... 244
To blot old books " .... 948
To dry the old oak's sap ** .... 950
Old woes, not infant sorrows ** 1096
with her old eyes " .... 1448
The credulous old Priam ** .... 1522
Priam, why art thou old " .... 1550
like old acquaintance in a trance " 1595
dear daughter,' old Lucretius cries " .... 1751
my old age new born ** .... 1759
fresh mirror dim and old " 1760
The old bees die " 1769
and make my pid excuse Son 2 11
when thou art old ** 2 13
Be scorn'd like old men " 17 10
do thy worst, old Time " 19 13
persuade me I am old " 22 1
and her old face new " 27 12
And with old woes new wail *' 80 4
Than those old nine " 38 10
what the old world could nay " 59 9
Bobbing no old to dress his beauty
new " 68 12
dressing old words new " 70 11
sun is daily new and old " 76 13
of our old acquaintance tell " 89 12
What old December's bareness " 97 4
you never can be old " 104 1
making beautiful old rhyme ** 106 8
Counting no old thing old " 108 7
110
4
128
6
127
1
138
10
«■•••
73
•••••
128
1
10
110
11
107
8
■••••
25
••••a
37
u
tl
u
M
U
U
U
U
<l
U
u
44
56
63
87
120
148
160
224
232
233
272
aoo
810
S40
Old— Made old oflfencea of aifectiona
new Stm
foist upon us that is old "
In the old age **
say not I that I am old **
tell your judgement I am old LC
Of young, of old **
say not I that I am old P P
Older— on newer proof to try an
older friend Son
Olive— olives of endless age **
Ob— on his sweating palm V A
on a ragged bough **
leaning on their elbows **
Tires with her beak on feathers,
flesh, and bone **
feedeth on the steam as on a prey "
Who, being lookHl on "
Why not lips on lips *"
Dance on the sands **
and complain on theft **
Now gazeth she on him, now on
the ground
on mountain or in dale
Graze on my lips
now stand on end
on so proud a back
puts on outward strangeness
Looks on the dull earth
mover on this mortal round
it will set the heart on fire
take advantage on presented Joy
For on the grass she lies
strikes her on the cheeks *'
having writ on death **
Set thy seal-manual on my wax-
red lips "
yet complain on drouth **
And on his neck *'
He on her belly falls, she on her
back « «... 594
On his bow-back " ..... 619
on the lion he will venture " .... 628
shakes thee on my breast ** ..... 648
on his back doth lie <* ..... 663
And on thy well-breath'd " «... 678
And when thou hast on foot " ..... 679
wit waits on fear " .... 690
Stands on his hinder legs " .... 698
trodden on by many " «... 707
Are on the sudden wasted ** .... 749
That on the earth " . 753
leadeth on to danger ** ..... 788
on earth usurp'd his name " ..... 794
as one on shore '* „... 817
Passion on passion " ..... 832
mounts up on high " ..... 854
exclaims on Death " ..... 930
Gloss on the rose " ..... 936
I rail'd on thee " 1002
Be wreak'd on him " «... 1004
she treads on it so light *' 1028
conquest on her fair delight " 1030
would he put his bonnet un ** .... 1067
The fishes spread on it " . noo
Sorrow on love hereafter " ...„ nag
waited on with Jealousy *• 1137
on the ground lay spill'd '* ..... i]67
baseless edge on his keen appetite R L .... 9
888
405
473
475
509
616
644
692
OF
212
OF
Of— the current of her sorrow R L 1569
feeling of her own grief " >... 1578
surmise of others' detriment " ..... 1579
shows of discontent " 1580
one word of woe " 1605
dirge of her certain ending " ~... 1612
the interest of thy bed " ..... 1619
dead of dark midnight ** .... 1625
groom of thine " ..... 16.^
act of lust '* ...y 1636
death of Lucrece " ..... 1645
hopeless merchant of this loss "..... 1660
woe of his, poor she attendeth " ..... 1674
one pair of weeping eyes ** ..... 1680
this wrong of mine ** 1691
quality of my offence " ..... 1702
Of haid misfortune ** 1713
Of that polluted prison ** 1726
Some of her blood " 1742
Of that black blood " 1745
they none of ours " ..... 1757
the beauty of my glass " ..... 1768
conquest of the stronger " ..... 1767
vexation of his inward soul " ..... 1779
lord of Borne " .wt.. 1818
dew of lamentations " 1829
death of this true wife " .... 1841
of small worth held Son 2 4
treasure of thy lusty days "26
*This fair child of mine " 2 10
tillage of thy husbandry "86
Of his self-love "88
April of her prime " 8 10
windows of thine age shalt see " 8 11
Despite of wrinkles " 8 12
So great a sum of sums "48
Thou of thyself thy sweet self
dost deceive " 4 10
pent in walls of glass " 5 10
If ten of thine ten times " 6 10
concord of well-tuned sounds "85
form of thee bast left behind "96
thou art beloved of many " 10 8
for love of me " 10 13
In one of thine "11 2
I see barren of leaves " 12 5
Then of thy beauty do I question
make " 12 9
among the wastes of time must go " 12 10
gusts of winter's day " 13 11
rage of death's eternal cold " 13 12
to tell of good or evil luck " 14 3
Of plagues, of deartlis " 14 4
Or else of thee this I prognosticate " 14 13
wear their brave state out of
memory " 15 8
conceit of this inconstant stay " 15 9
day of youth to sullied night " 15 12
Time for love of you " 15 13
the top of happy hours " 16 5
So should the lines of life " 16 9
yourself in eyes of men " 16 12
ihe Ix'auty of your eyes " 17 5
old men of lesn truth " 17 10
metre of au antique song " 17 12
some child of yours alive " 17 13
the darling buds of May " 18 3
the eye of heaven shines " 18 5
poaseaaion of that fair " 18 10
u
u
u
Of— master-mistress of my paaaion Som
me of thee defeated "
couplement of proud compare **
that like of hearsay well **
youth and thou are of one date "
raiment of my heart **
be of thyself so wary **
So I, for fear of trust "
ceremony of love's rite "
burthen of mine own love's might **
presagers of my speaking breast **
in table of my heart
Of public honour
fortune of such triumphs bars
book of honour razed quite
Lord of my love
good conceit of thine
worthy of thy sweet respect
the benefit of rest
at break of day arising
sessions of sweet silent thought
remembrance of things past
the lack of many a thing
expense of many a vanish'd sight
account of fore-bemoaned moan
As interest of the dead
trophies of my lovers gone
parts of me to thee did give
That due of many
hast all the all of mo
lines of thy deceased lover
bettering of the time
height of happier men
ranks of better equipage
Suns of the world may stain
of such a salve can speak
do deeds of youth
comfort of thy worth and truth
Or any of these all
by a part of all thy glory live
the better part of me
lose name of single one
with thoughts of love
taste of what thyself refusest
is of my wailing chief **
substance of my flesh were thought "
despite of space "
large lengths of miles "
so much of earth "
badges of cither's woe
embassy of love to thee
being made of four
Of thy fair health
conquest of thy sight
freedom of that right
A quest of thoughts
inward love of heart
thoughts of love doth share a part "
From hands of falsehood, in sure
wards of trust
Thou, best of dearest
prey of every vulgar thief
closure of my breast
reasons find of settled gravity
knowledge of mine own desert
the strength of laws
Of ray dull bearer **
of posting is no need "
desire, of perfect'st love being made "
u
M
U
U
M
U
U
u
It
u
u
II
u
u
<l
u
u
It
It
It
11
II
It
tt
It
tt
u
tt
tt
u
tt
tt
20
2
90
11
SI
6
21
18
22
2
22
6
22
9
28
5
28
6
28
8
28
10
24
2
28
2
25
8
25
11
28
1
28
7
28
12
28
2
29
11
80
1
80
2
80
8
80
8
80
11
81
7
81
10
81
11
81
12
81
14
82
4
82
6
82
8
88
12
88
14
84
7
87
2
87
4
87
6
87
12
88
2
89
8
89
11
40
8
42
8
44
1
44
8
44
10
44
11
44
14
45
6
45
7
45
18
46
2
46
4
46
10
46
14
47
8
48
4
48
7
48
8
48
11
49
8
49
10
49
IS
61
2
61
4
61
10
ON
218
ONE
On— Oq whom frown'st thou Sfm 149 6
if thou lour'st OD me ** 149 7
But, love, bate on " 149 13
Which on it had ZC .... 16
Their Tiew right on " 26
For on hia visage " ~... 90
velvet, on that termless skin ** 94
on this side the verdict went " 113
So on the tip "* 120
that do on mine depend '* 274
were levell'd on my face ** -... 282
that on this earth doth shine P P 8 10
Then fell she on her back " 4 13
on the brook's green brim *' 6 10
The sun look'd on the world " 6 11
as this queen on him ** 6 12
he seized on my lips *' 11 9
And with her lips on his ** 11 10
lie wither'd on the ground " 13 9
descant on the doubts of my decay ** 14 4
Till looking on an Englishman " 16 3
On a day, alack the day "17 1
meetings on the plains *' 18 46
to round me on th' ear ** 19 51
None takes pity on thy pain " 21 20
They that fawned on him '* 21 49
On the sole Arabian tree P T »... 2
Obm-— season once more fits VA 327
attorney once is mute " ..... 3.35
Once more the engine ** ..... 367
And once made perfect " ..... 408
Once more the ruby-oolour'd " 451
kill me once again ** ..... 499
captain once doth yield ** ..... 893
once more leap her eyes ** ..... 1050
in his fair welkin once appear 22 L 116
Which once corrupted " ~... 294
ere once she speaks ** 567
when once thou art a king ** ..... 606
Who wayward once " ...„ 1095
Once set on ringing " ..... 1494
Ere once she can discharge *' ..... 1605
all at once began to say " ..... 1709
can see what once I was " 1764
a thousand victories once foil'd Son 25 10
by fortune once more re-survey " 82 3
bid your servant once adieu *' 57 8
once in the main of light *' 60 5
Though I, once gone ** 81 6
That you were once unkind . " 120 1
how once I suffer'd *' 120 8
Nut once vouchsafe ** 135 6
And Death once dead *' 146 14
Love-god lying once asleep ** 154 1
To every place at once L C ...~ 27
'Once,' quoth she PP 9 9
So beauty blemish'd once ** 18 11
But if fortune once do frown '* 21 47
One— Ten kisses short as one, one
long as twenty VA ..... 22
Over one arm the lusty courser's
rein " «... 31
And one sweet kiss ** 84
not see one wrinkle ** ..... 139
for one poor kiss " ..... 207
Give me one ki^ ** ..... 209
And one for interest *' 210
lily fingers one in ono " .... 228
excel a common one ** «... 29.3
One— With ono fair hand VA ..... 891
For one sweet look " «... 871
before one leaf put forth ** . 416
at thy leisure, one by one " «... 518
To one sore sick ** «... 702
But in one minute's fight ** «... 746
As one on shore ** «... 817
as one that unaware ** «... 823
like one that spies an adder '* 878
remaincth in one place ** ...« 885
as one full of despair ** «... 955
The one doth flatter thee *' 989
As one with treasure laden " «... 1022
Over one shoulder doth she ** «... 1058
express my grief for one *' « ... 1069
shall not be one minute ** «... 1187
And every one B L 125
As one of which " «... 127
That ono for all or all for one ** 144
Th' one sweetly flatters " 172
For one sweet grape " 215
Each one by him enfoi:ced ** «... 803
Imagine her as one in dead of night " 449
I have no one " «... 792
One poor retiring minute " «... 962
wouldst thou one hour come back " 965
to see one that by alms doth live " «... 986
continuance tames the one ** «... 1097
And as one shifts, another straight
ensues " 1104
Or one cncompaas'd with a wind-
ing maze " 1151
two sweet babes, when death takes
one « «... 1161
When the one pure, the other " «... 1164
The one will live, the other " 1187
one Justly weeps, the other " 1235
than one hath power to tell " «... 1288
One of my husband's men *' «... 1291
That one might see *' «... 1386
That one would swear " «... 1393
might one behold ** «... 1395
Here one man's hand " «... 1415
Here one being throng'd ** «... 1417
* Why should the private pleasure
of some one " «... 1478
For one's offence why should so
many fall " «... 1433
And one man's lust " «... 1489
discharge one word of woe " 1605
with one poor tired tongue " «... 1617
To drown ono woe, one pair of
weeping eyes " «... I68O
The one doth call her his " 1793
be it ten for one Son 6 8
Mark how one string ** 8 9
Who, all in one, one pleasing note
do sing << 8 12
being many, seeming one " 8 13
In one of thine ** 11 2
one most heinous crime " ]9 8
adding one thing to my purpose " 20 12
youth and thou are of one date *' 22 2
The ono by toil, the other '* 28 7
like to one more rich " 29 5
my sun one early mom ** 33 9
was but one hour mine ** S3 n
undivided loves are one '* 80 2
there is but one respect ** 8G 5
ONE
219
OR
u
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M
II
it
It
It
II
It
II
II
II
II
II
II
Oic— lose name of cin^ one
bow to make one tvain
my fHeod and I are one
Since eveiy one hath, erery one,
one shade
And you, bat one, can erery
The one doth vhadov
Why vrite I stUI all one
in one of your fair eyes
I better in one general best
One blujfbing shame
To one, of one, still such, and
erer so
Ooe thing expressing
Three themes in one
nerer kept seat in one
One on another's neck
One will of mine
Think all but one, and me in that
one 'Will
fall with wills, and my will one
Among a number one is reckon'd
none
in thy stores' account I one must be
Diaosde one foolish heart
One of her feather'd creatures
I gaess one angel
fire my good one out
Which one by one
Kbedules had she many a one
Of one by nature's outwards so
commended
The one a palate hath
Not one wboee flame
orb of one particular tear
I ga€S8 one angel P P
fire my good one out
Becsoae thou lovest the one
One god is god of both
One knijiht loves both
be saw more wounds than one
the fairest one of three
Bat one must be refused
One silly cross
One woman would another wed
Every ooe that flatters thee
If that one be prodigal
Had the essence bat in one
Neither two nor one
Seeaieth this concordant one
^— the only soTereign plaster
Oolj be hath an eye
*iU make thee only lored for fear **
Only to flatter fools "
^ the was only saine "
A>d only must ba waifd
^ only herald lo the gaady
39
42
53
53
53
76
83
91
99
105
105
105
105
131
135
136
\m
141
143
144
144
LC
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" 18
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136 6
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43
devest and mine only care
^^ Tirtoe ooly is liMir «h^/w
Tl>oagbioitaeific*>c:7::Tes£d ^ *
i**der. only mt Ut the*
J^jyay pla«ae tlias 2ar
^** Ibe onset acill «X}flKSi2f
^iBtfaeoa«t<naM
^■•wi—Onwanl t* Ivaj
^ririef Ikawwari
^ th«K fxat 'wwu-ii
hie tfa: Uea<£ L 1 .
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-..- 46 ;
— 916 \
— 4ir. '
— fAh .
— ly/*
— lT>i
.— i:yj
Ok— it will not ope the gate
But they must ope
brvaks ope her KvkVi-up eyes
OKB~<^y 1^1* *yi9\\ novor t>|icn
ciHirse opens them again
lUit as tlioy open
the door he opens wide
Till thi'T might o|kmi
C^>fi»— with open listening ear
mark of every open eye
night's 'scapiv doth oiM^n lay
turns to op(>n shame
Lays oi>en all the lit tin worms
keep my drt>oping eyelids open
VA — «M
#? i. »3
VA -,.. 4{l
R L iim
" a^»
•• A-M
" 747
" l;!4H
Sm
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wide
thy image should kiH*p o|M*n
Open*d— ()i>cn*d their mouths
ruby-colour'd |K>rtMl o|H>u'd
And U'ing op(>n'd
were open'd to the light
Opinion— errors by opinion bred
Opportnnlty— But ill-uiinexM ....
O Op|>ortunity, thy guilt Is gn*at
How comes it then, viluOpiKirtuuity "
ne'er meet with Opportunity
thy servant Opimrtunlty
In vain I rail at ()p|Mirtunity
Opposite — with their .... iM-rsuasion "
OppremM— The weak opprrHn'd, the
imprension of strsnge kinds "
and night by duy opp^^«H'd Sun
oppressed with mdanvhfily
Oppression— When day's oppression
is not cssed
Oppressor— while the .... feuds U L
Or— than doves or roses are
or prey be gone
foul, or wrinklerl^kl **
dissfilve, or s«%ni U> melt **
Or. Iik<- a fairy, trip **
Or, like a nymph **
Or what great danger **
fair words, or *'lti \m muis **
mountain or in dale **
for curb or pri/:li log spar **
caparis'/ns or trapping gay **
wh«rtb«-r be ruu or fly "
stopp'd, or river stay'd **
or ivory fn an ala^^axt^rr "
or I l«ad no iMaring "
Or w*T*; I d*:af ••
Of *A th«: w/,jf d'Xb grin "
ffr s* th*" t^rry hr*^1cn **
Or ijk*: tl-p*: 'I'AdJy tra^ *
ib •ar»>» or it*%r»'U *
'/r if, ti^. 'AAaci dr*!iw^b 4. */r iti it*
flf-:
or Hy.rt, '/r ^*%rj •n**4 *
«t*.,af?,*. t// «!>; '/t ..> -;*«>* ■
'/? '^..'.jf **/;/ >*.v« 4 *
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OF
215
OFT
Of— Of one by nature's outwards L C
oocaaion of the wind
'Small ahow of man
in a pride of truth
Proud of subjection
tip of bis subduing tongue
All kind of argumenta
in hia craft of will
Of young, of old, and sezea both
enchanted
Of lands and mansions
mistress of his heart
Demand of him
Of proofs new-bleeding
Of this false Jewel
For fear of harms
patterns of his foul beguiling
bastards of bis foul adulterate heart "
u
tk
It
tl
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Have of my suffering
of my holy tows afraid
For feasts of love
Are errors of the blood, none of
the mind
less of shame in me
By how much of me
Or any of my leisures
Of paled pearls
Of grief and blushes
Efftets of terror
these talents of their hair
With the annexions of fair gems
enrich'd
trophies of affections hot
Of pcoslved and subdued desires
For these, of force must your ob-
lations be
"*0, then, advance of yours that
phraseless hand
the airy scale of praise
sister sanctified, of holiest note
spirits of richest coat
The scars of battle
Of stale example
Of wealth, of filial fear
The aloes of all forces
a hell of witchcraft lies
orb of one particular tear
inundation of the eyes
but an art of craft
stole of chastity I daff'd
a plenitude of subtle matter
Of burning blushes, or of weeping
water
the hail of his all hurting aim
the garment of a Grace
moisture of his eye
she is made of truth 1
Two loves I have, of comfort and
despair
rhetoric of thine eye
it is no fault of mine
oaths of true love swearing
of all her pure protestings
the queen of music, makes
One god is god of both
when the fair queen of love
a spectacle of ruth
nothing of thee still
1 pardon crave of thee
tl
tl
tl
II
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U
U
tl
II
11
11
II
II
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86
92
105
108
120
121
126
128
138
142
149
153
154
165
170
175
178
179
181
184
188
189
193
198
200
202
204
208
218
219
••••• £Eo
II
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II
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226
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233
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244
It
268
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270
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273
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288
11
289
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295
It
297
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304
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310
tl
316
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323
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1
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2
1
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3
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tl
7
8
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7
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8
13
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9
1
11
9
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10
10
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10
11
Of— Youth is full of pleasance, age
is f^ll of care P P 12 2
Youth is full of sport ** 12 6
In spite of physic " 13 12
the doubts of my decay " 14 4
the office of mine eyes ** 15 4
good day, of night now borrow " 15 17
the fairest one of three '^ 16 1
That liked of her master ** 16 2
For of the two the trusty knight " 16 11
was victor of the day *' 16 18
a gift of learning " 16 14
Causer of this *' 18 8
The cause of all ray moan *' 18 51
counsel of some wiser head " 19 5
make thee a bed of roses " 20 9
A cap of flowers ** 20 11
with leaves of myrtle " 20 12
A belt of straw " 20 13
merry month of May "21 2
grove of myrtles made '* 21 4
careless of thy sorrowing " 21 26
store of crowns be scant " 21 37
Thus of every grief in heart " 21 55
bird of loudest lay P T 1
precurrer of the fiend ** .... 6
Augur of the fever's end " «... 7
fowl of tyrant wing *' 10
and stars of love " 51
Off— Sometime he scuds far off VA 301
And all amazed brake off " ..... 469
far off upon a hill " 697
By this, far off she hears " 973
wind would blow it off " 1089
those far-off eyes look sad R L 1386
still farther off from thee Son 28 8
From me far off *< 61 14
From off a hill LC 1
Shook off my sober guards " ..... 298
Offenee— the like offences prove R L ..... 613
hates himself for his offence " ~... 738
To cloak offences " 749
acquit my forced offence ** »... 1071
For one's offence " ..... 1483
the quality of my offence *' ..... 1702
publish Tarquin's foul offence " 1852
bears the strong offences cross Son 34 12
excuse the slow offence *' 51 1
comment upon that offence ** 89 2
Made old offences of affections new " 110 4
All ray offences L C 183
Offend— do offend thine ear Son 8 6
Offended— for having so offended VA 810
Offendei^With foul offeuders R L 612
The offender's sorrow Son 84 11
offenders, thus I will excuse ye '* 42 5
Offer— So offers he to give VA 88
Offer pure incense R L 194
Jest at every gentle offer P P 4 12
Office— their office and their light VA 1039
Thy princely office R L 628
Time's office is to fine the hate *' ..... 936
would such an office have " ...~ 1000
These offices, so oft Son 77 13
Then do thy office, Muse " 101 13
the office of mine eyes PP 15 4
Offspring — We are their offspring R L ..... 1757
Oftr— compass'd oft with venturing V A ..... 567
oft the eye mistakes *' 1068
OR
221
OUR
Or-Or my afRjctlon pat L C ~... 192
Or any of my leisures ** .... 193
nailed or made aome moan " «... 217
Or aiater aaoctifled ** ~... 233
bluahea, or of weeping water '* .... 304
Or BwoundinK paleneaa ** ...~ 805
Or to turn white " ~... 808
Or he refuaed to take PP 4 10
a loT«r, or » lecher whether ** 7 17
are aeld or never found " 13 7
In acorn or friendship " 14 8
or kiU the gaUant knight " 16 6
That are either true or fair P T ~... 66
Oratw^— the orator too green VA 806
of men without an orator 22 L ...~ 80
All orators are dumb ** 268
The orator, to deck his oratory " ..... 815
Oratory— to her .... adds more grace *' ~... 564
The orator, to deck his oratory " 815
Or^— In the small orb L C ..... 289
Orbed— To the orbed earth " .... 25
Orchard — in others' orchards grew " ~... 171
Ordering— in each by mutual .... Son 8 10
Orleat— an orient drop beaide VA ...» 981
In the orient when the gracioua
light Son 7 I
Bright orient pearl PP 10 8
Origin — my origin and ender L C 222
Ornament — our mistress' ornaments
are chaste Ji L 822
the world's fresh ornament Son 1 9
for ornament doth use " 21 3
By that sweet ornament " 54 2
Without all ornament " 68 10
The ornament of beauty " 70 3
profaned their scarlet ornaments ** 142 6
appertalnlngs and to ornaments LC ^... 115
Orphan— The orphan pinee while
the oppressor feeds R L .... 905
But hope of orphans Sun 97 10
Orphena— Pluto winks while Orph-
eus plays R L .... 553
Orti— a beggar's orts to crave " ..... 985
Osier— to thee like osiers bowed PP 5 4
Under an osier growing by a brook "65
Other— Under her other was VA .... 32
each other did destroy " .... 346
Her other tender hand " .... 352
His other agents aim " 400
feeder of the other four " .... 446
may they kiss each other " 505
with others being mingled " 691
others, they think " 843
u thou dost lend to other " 864
all other eyes to see ** .... 952
Tiew'd each other's sorrow '* .... 963
The other kills thee quickly " .... 990
some other in their bills " .... 1102
was the other queen R L 66
interchange each other's seat " .... 70
th' other fcareth harm " 172
her other fair hand was " 393
DO other pleasure of his gain " 860
tames the one ; the other wild " 1097
Will slay the other " 1162
the other made divine " ....1164
the other being dead " 1187
the other takes in hand " .... 1235
to guess at others* smart " 1238
Other— while others saucily R L 1348
aurmise of others' detriment " .... 1579
theirdolour others have endured " 1582
his lord and other company " 1584
wondering each other's chance " .... 1506
call her his, the other his " .... 1798
love toward others Son 9 13
they see others grow ** 12 12
to some other give ** 13 4
the other to complain " 28 7
Both find each other " 42 11
The other two " 45 1
the other my desire '* 45 3
doth good turns now unto the
other " 47 2
The other as your bounty " 68 11
with others all too near " 61 14
As I all other ** 62 8
In other accents ** 60 7
In others' works " 78 11
When others would give " 88 12
whilst other write good words *' 85 5
Then others for the breath " 85 13
When other petty griefs ** 90 10
And other strains of woe " 90 18
thy heart in other place *' 93 4
Who, moving others ** 94 8
Others but stewards " 94 8
For to no other pass '* 103 11
varying to other words " 105 10
Of others' voices " 112 10
but by others* seeing ** 121 4
should others' false adulterate eye " 121 5
forfeit, so that other mine " 134 3
Shall will in others " 135 7
Bobb'd others' beds' revenues "142 8
what others do abhor " 150 11
With others thou shouldst '• 150 12
must curb it upon others' proof L C .... 163
in others' orchards grew " .... 171
thou lovest the one and I the other PP 6 4
other help for him ** 18 64
Either was the other's mine P 7 .... 36
Onr— our sport is not in sight VA .... 124
by our ears our hearts oft tainted
oe ,R Jj .... 38
our mistress' ornaments are chaste " .... 822
from forth a cloud, bereaves our
sight " .... 873
that we call them ours " .... 868
that we can say is ours ** .... 873
Shall tune our heart-strings " .... 1141
from our house in grief *' .... 1308
and they are none of ours " .... 1757
To rouse our Roman gods " .... 1831
By our strong arms " .... 1834
By all our country rights " 1838
Our undivided loves are one Son 36 2
In our two loves " 36 5
Though in our lives " 36 6
And our dear love ** 39 6
how are our brains beguiled " 59 2
So do our minutes hasten " 60 2
of our old acquaintance tell " 89 12
Our love was new " 102 6
Of this our time " 106 10
to make our appetites more keen "118 1
we our palate urge " 118 2
to prevent our raaladiea " 118 8
OUR
222
OWEST
Onr— O, that oar night of woe Son 120 9
Not by our feeling " 121 4
Our dates are brief ** 123 5
make them born to our desire " 128 7
inviting time our fashion calls "124 8
And In our faults " 138 14
to make our wits more keen L C »... 161
satisfaction to our blood ** .... 162
that preach in our behoof " ^... 165
our drops this difference bore " ~... 800
Since that our faults P P I 14
All our pleasure known " 18 49
All our merry meetings " 18 46
All our evening sport ** 18 47
All our love is lost ** 18 48
'Mongst our mourners P T ~... 20
OmI— In limning out VA ...^ 290
Thingsout of hope ** ~... 667
the cold fault cleanly out " »... 694
Their light blown out " «... 82Q
Tolleys out his voice ** ...~ 921
lo, two lamps burn out " >... 1128
and wore out the night R L ...~ 128
' Fair torch, burn out thy light ** ...~ 190
The eye of heaven is out " ^... 856
to heave the owner out " 413
Small lights are soon blown out " ...» 647
halt, creep, cry out for thee " ...~ 902
'Out, idle words, servants to shal-
low fools " 1016
And seems to point her out " ...» 1087
Will we find out " -... 1146
tread the way out readily '* ..... 1152
pattern of the worn-out age " ~... 1350
burnt out in tedious nights ** 1.379
scratch out the angry eyra *' 1469
ringtf out the doleful knell " 1495
would be drawn out too long " «... 1616
What he breathes out " ~... 1666
In rage sent out *' 1671
wear their brave state out Son 15 8
prick'd thee out for women's
pleasure ** 20 13
But, out, alack ! he was but one
hour mine " 83 11
root out the work of masonry " 55 6
wear this world out " 55 12
To find out shames " 61 7
or vanish'd out of sight '< 6.") 7
summer's honey breath hold out " 65 5
To linger out a purposed overthrow " 90 8
habitation chose out thee " 95 10
leaves out difference ** 105 8
but effectually is out ** 113 4
But bears it out even to the edge " 116 12
out of their spheres been fitted ** 119 7
fire ray good one out ** 144 14
doth point out thee " 151 9
love put out Religion's eye L C 250
fire my good one out P P 2 14
She burned out love " 7 14
Ont-bmgg'd— Whose bare .... the
web it seem'd to wear L C 95
OMt-brave — out-braves his dignity Son 94 12
Ont-bMnieth— as soon as straw ..,.PP 7 14
OatCMt— beweep my outcast state Sm 29 2
Ontcry— Entombs her outcry R L 679
Oatflielng^-Outfacing faults in love P P \ 8
Ont-golair— out-going in thy noon San 7 13
San
88
" 55
« 101
t(
u
i(
ti
Oatllve— to ontlive long date
outlive this powerful rhyme
much outlive a gilded tomb
Ontrairfr— darest do such outrage
Oatrageont— no outrageous thing *'
OMtrlghtr-Kill me ... . with looks San
Oatmii— How he outruns the wind V A
* Outruns the eye R L
OBt-strfpp'd— they be out-strlpp'd
by every pen Son
Oat-stripplag— Out-stripping crows VA
OMtward— puts on ... . strangeness *'
thy outward parts would move "
no outward harm expressed R L
With outward honesty **
Inward worth nor outward fair Son
mine eye's due is thine outward
part "
outward thus with outward praise
Where time and outward form
the outward honouring
Painting thy outward walls
outwards so commended
with an outward show
OMtwardly— but fighting outwardly L C
Oatwore— and outwore the night VA
Oatworn— Hleath by time outworn
of outworn buried age
the map of days outworn
Oven — An oven that is stopp'd
Over — Over one arm the lusty
Over my altars hath he
O, had she then gave over
Over one shoulder doth she
sovereign mistress over wrack
sorrow over me hath power
eyes stuck over all his face
Overcome — Who, .... by doubt
Overcome, as one
Overllow— will force it overflow
Over-fly — strive to over-fly them "
Over-go — That over-goes my blunt
invention Son
Over - handled — your idle over-
handled theme VA
Overlook — did hotly overlook them '*
Over-partial— corrupt by ... . looks Son
Overplns— 'and ' Will ' in overplus
Overraled— Thus he that ....
Oversee— Shalt oversee this will
Overaeen — How was I overseen
Over-shoot— to .... his troubles
OTer-allpp*d— hath over-slipp'd her
thought R L
Ovemway'd— overruled I . . . . VA
Overthrow- Till mutual overthrow "
a purposed overthrow Son
Overtnrn — war shall statues overturn "
Over-waah'd— cheeks .... with woe R L
Owe— and I will not owe it VA
if any love you owe me "
which Collatlne doth owe R L
more slavish tribute than they owe "
kingdoms of hearts shouldst owe Son
Since what he owes thee "
landlord which doth owe them L C
Owed— I owed her, and 'tis mine R L
borrow'd motion seeming owed L C
Oweat— of that fair thou owest San
12
2
11
605
607
14
.... 681
...M 1667
139
32 6
...- 824
..... 310
...» 435
• •••• 9\
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LC
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125
146
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...- 1761
64 2
68 1
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w... 91
..... 103
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..... 1058
126 5
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VA
RL
VA
103 7
..... 770
137 6
135 2
...M 109
..... 1205
..... 1206
..... 680
...n 1576
109
~... 1018
90 8
55 5
...» 1225
411
523
82
»... 299
14
14
.... 140
.... 1803
.... 827
18 10
70
79
OWL
223
PAINTING
VA
• ••«•
Ml
RL
• ••••
165
«t
•••«•
300
VA
•••••
117
Owl— The owl, oight't herald
No noise but owls' and wolrea'
that this night-owl will catch
Own— The kias shall be thine own
Is thine own heart to thine own
face " -... 157
Steal thine own ft«edom " »... 160
by their own direction " ~... 216
in thine own law forlorn "* 251
more moving than your own ** 776
because it is his own B L 35
bat she is not her own " 241
blush at her own disgrace " «.•. 479
not their own infamy " ~... 539
for thiue own sake leave me ** 583
Their own transgrosiuns *' ~... 634
That fhmi their own misdeeds " ~... 637
Till with her own white fleece " ~... 678
can see his own abomination " ~... 704
breakers of their own behesta " ...~ 852
At his own shadow " ...» 997
are their own faults' books " 1253
mine own would do me good " ~... 1274
her own gross abuse " 1315
vith his own weight goes ** .... 1494
the feeling of her own grief *' 1578
to make mine own excuse " 1653
Thine, mine, his own " »... 1684
thine own bright eyes Son 1 5
Withhi thine own bud " 1 11
thine own deep-sunken eyes ** 2 7
by your own sweet skill " 16 14
her own sweet brood " 19 2
Nature's own hand " 20 1
ve^ens his own heart " 23 4
mine own love's strength " 23 7
mine own love's might " 23 8
Thine own sweet argument " 38 8
nine own praise to mine own self
bring <* 39 3
inioe own when I praise " 39 4
of mine own desert " 49 10
Mine own true love " 61 11
mine own worth do define " 62 7
Mine own self-love " 62 11
){iTe thee so thine own '* 69 6
than mine own desert " 72 6
thy own worth then not knowing ** 87 9
With mine own weakness " 88 5
Year own glass shows " 103 14
Kot mine own fears " 107 1
Hock their own presage " 107 6
Gored mine own thoughts "110 3
his own vision holds " 1 13 8
your own dear-purchased right *' 117 6
reckon up their own "121 10
thou thine own state " 142 3
Love's own hand did make "145 1
Ask'd their own wills L C ~... 1S3
was my own fee-simple " .... 144
'gainst her own content " ..... 157
bat mine own was free " ..... 195
to your own command " ..... 227
Made me think upon mine own P P 21 18
Owarr^beanty, in the owners' arms R L ~... 27
From this fair throne to heave
the owner out " 413
and owners of their faces Son 94 7
The ovtuer's tongue doth publish " 102 4
Pace— colour, pace, and bone VA «... 294
knit brow and strengthless pace R L ~... 709
marching on with trembling paces " ~... 1391
with my desire keep pace Son 51 9
and no pace perceived ** 104 10
/Vwrc— Shall you pace forth " 65 10
Pack— Pack night, peep day P P 15 17
Pack*d— The night so pack'd, I post *' 15 8
Pack-horse — sin's pack-horse, vir-
tue's snare R L ~... 928
Page— wait on them as their pages " 910
antiquity for aye his page Son 108 12
Paid— as if not paid before " 30 12
Pain— in^iis shelly cave with pain VA 1034
Pain pays the income R L 3;<4
Joy breeds mouths of pain " ..... 690
living death and pain perpetual ** ..... 726
perplex'd in greater pain " «... 733
have co-partners in my pain *' ..... 789
it cannot cure his pain " 861
The pain be mine Son 38 14
with pretty ruth upon my pain ** 132 4
and rid my pain " 139 14
The manner of my pity-wanting
pain " 140 4
she that makes me sin awards me
pain " 141 14
painting pain and cost P P 13 12
As take the pain " 14 12
more mickle was the pain " 16 9
None takes pity on thy pain " 21 20
Pained— case to the pained R L ..... 901
Painfull— gouts and painfnl fits " 856
More feeling-painful " 1679
The painful warrior famoused Son 25 9
Paint— ground of sin I will not .... R L 1074
Painted— Well-paintod idol VA .... 212
deceived with painted grapes " .... 601
Shall by a painted cloth R L 245
To this well-paiiited piece " 1443
in Priam's painted wound " 1466
she wceiJfl Troy's painted woes " .... 1492
Sinou here is painted " 1541
That she with painted images " 1577
than your painted counterfeit Son 16 8
with Nature's own hand painted *' 20 1
Stirr'd by a painted beauty " 21 2
And to the paint<>d banquet " 47 6
in Grecian tiros are painted new " 53 8
Painter— Look, when a painter V A .,... 289
Which the conceited painter drew
so proud R L 1371
to show the painter's strife " 1377
and there the imiuter interlaces " i:^
the painter was so nice " 1412
In her the painter had anatomized " 1450
The painter was no god " 1461
In him the painter labour'd " .... 1506
And chid the painter " 1528
Mine eye hath play'd the painter Son 24 1
it is best painter's art " 24 4
For through the painter " 24 5
Painting— Of skilful painting R L 1367
about the painting round " 1499
Painting my age with beauty Son 62 14
Why should false painting imitate " 67 5
And their gross painting " 82 13
that you did painting need " 83 1
to your fair no painting set " 83 2
PAINTING
224
PARTING
PalntiHir— PAlnting thy outward
walls Am 146 4
painting pain and cost P P 13 12
Pair— A pair of maiden worlds RL ...~ 408
one pair of weeping eyes ** ..... 1680
Palate— And to bis palate doth pre-
pare Son 114 12
we our palate urge " 118 2
The one a palate bath L C >.... 167
Pale— Making them red and pale VA ~... 21
shame and anger asby^pale *' ..... 76
But now her cheek was pale *' ..... ft47
Claps her pale cheek " ..... 468
whereat a sadden pale ** ..... 589
agues pale and faint ** ..... 739
With cold-pale weakness numbs " ..... 892
and they are pale *< ..... 1123
Resembling well his pale cheeks " 1169
Which in pale embers Iiid Ji L 5
Here pale with fear ** ..... 183
round turrets destitute and pale " ...~ 441
anger makes the lily pale *' ..... 478
Pale cowards marching on ** ..... 1391
Cheeks neither red nor pale ** ..... 1510
Nor asby-psle the fear " «... 1512
And now this psle swan ** ..... 1611
From lips new-waxen pale " ..... 1663
the pale fear in his face " ..... 1776
Gilding pale streams Son 88 4
That leaves look pale *' 97 14
a fickle maid full pale L C 5
her pale and piued cheek " 82
A lily pale with damask dye PP 7 6
Pla/0 — Within the circuit of this
ivory pale VA 230
Paled— Of paled pearls and rubies L C 198
Pale-fkeed— like a . . . . coward VA 569
Palenem— Or swounding paleness ** 806
Paler— Paler for sorrow PP 9 3
Palftrey— bow to get my palfrey " 884
Thy palfrey, as be should " 885
PalM— on his sweating palm ** ~... 25
Would in thy palm dissolve *' 144
Palmer — As palmers' chat makes
short their pilgrimage B L ...~ 791
Pandlon— King Pandion he Is dead P P 21 23
Pang— in the suffering pangs it
bears L C 272
Pant— My boding heart pants VA ..... 647
Panteth — the weak mouse panteth R L ..... 566
Paatlnfr— Panting he lies VA ..... 62
wearied lamb lies panting there R L 737
Paper— paper, ink, and pen ** ~... 1289
o'er the paper with her quill '* 1297
So should my papers Son 17 9
For every vulgar paper " 88 4
Tearing of papers, breaking L C ..... 6
Paphos — Holding their course to.... Kil ..... 1193
Paradise — thinks in .... was sown L C ..... 91
to win a Paradise PP 8 14
Parallel— And delves the parallels &m 60 10
Parasite— sounds resembling para-
sites VA 848
Parcel- their silken parcels hurls L C 87
Their distract parcels in combined
sums " ~... 231
ParehiBg— not parching heat nor
freezing cold R L ..... 1146
Pardon— Yet pardon me VA ..... 998
Pardoa- Yourself to pardon Son
' **0, pardon me, in that my boast L C
I pardon crave of thee P P
Paris— Thy beat of lust, fond Paris R L
Park— I'll be a park VA
I am such a park **
Parley— parley to his heartless foe 22 L
Parllag^-from their parling looka **
Part— thy outward parts would move V A
Each part in me **
numbs each feeling part **
This mutiny each part doth so sur-
prise "
My part is youth R L
corrupted takes the worser part
against a thorn thou bear'st thy part
every part a part of woe
'TIS but a part of sorrow
help to bear thy part
In singleness the parts that thou San
shows not half your parts **
put besides his part
all love's loving parts
all their parts of me
in thy parts do crowned sit
by a part of all thy glory live
the better part of me
eye's moiety and the dear heart's
part
mine eye's due is thine outward
part
love doth share a part
To guard the lawful reasons on
thy part
you have some part
and all my every part
Those parts of thee
The very part was consecrate
the better part of me
each part will be forgotten
Upon thy part
hath the mind no part
oblivion yield his part
like in every part
And play the mother's part
My nobler part to my gross body's
treason
And when in his fair parts
my own fee-simple not in part
My parts had power to charm
that I thy parts admire
He with thee doth bear a part
Por^— with wringing ; let us part
Do summon us to part
As fearful of him, part ; through
seems to part in sunder
thou mayst come and part
Which parts the shore
Doth part his function
If what parts can so remain
Partake — against myself with thee
partake
Partial— corrupt by over -partial
looks
As well as fancy, partial wight
Partially— partially they smother
Particular — But these particulars
of one particular tear
Parting— The honey fee of parting V A
u
l(
M
U
U
U
U
U
M
U
M
U
M
II
il
«
t<
U
(t
il
68 12
246
10 11
.... 1473
M... 231
M... 239
471
..... 100
»•••• 400
••••• oSf2
..... 1049
••••• ^Ho
..... 1135
«... 1827
..... 1328
«... 1830
8 8
17
23
81
81
87
87
88
46
47
62
69
74
74
81
88
113
122
132
143
151
LC
u
(1
•••••
PP
5
«(
21
VA
•«•••
t«
•« •••
i»
•••••
RL
•••••
Sfm
48
i«
66
ti
113
PT
•••••
>
San 149
I
i(
137
PP
19
RL
Son
91
LC
VA
•
4
2
3
11
7
12
2
46 12
IS
8
49 12
63 IS
2
1
6
8
4
6
7
7
12
12
6
83
144
260
10
56
421
534
630
888
12
10
3
48
5
4
634
7
289
538
PARTING
225
PELLETED
Putlaft^Yet at my parting FPU 7
ParUj^^od la parti j blind iSbn 113 8
Parta«r — To be thy partner R L ~... 672
Paiir— Thy adverse party Sm 35 10
Where neither party L C 186
PMi—M acorning it should pass VA 982
when thou shalt strangely paaa So» 49 5
For to no other pass " 103 11
let me pass untold " 136 9
he should not pass theso grounds P P % 8
Paaaage— did honey passage yield VA 452
Struggling for passage " 1047
for passage of her breath R L 1040
AH unseen 'gan passage find P P 11 6
PM9*d— Thou hast pass'd by iSbn 70 9
you've pass'd a hell of time " 120 6
Puteager — . ... in summer's heat V A 91
PiMiiig— straight legs and strong " 297
As passing all conceit P P S 8
^led a blomom passing fair "17 3
Paaaiag-kell— that hears the — VA 702
PiMloB — trembling in her passion " ...» 27
ivelling passion doth provoke '* 218
Passion on passion deeply is re«
doubled " .-- 832
Variable passions throng " 967
each passion labours so " 969
her passion's strength renews R L 1103
life and feeling of her paasion " 1317
toch passion her assails " ...~ 1562
too sensible thy passion maketh " ..... 1678
the master-mistress of my passion Son 20 2
Catching all passions L C 126
their passions likewise lent me " ...~ 199
For, lo, his passion, but an art ^ ~... 295
Auricm— Dumbly she passions VA 1059
PHtr-My day's delight Is past " 380
past reason's weak removing R L 243
To all sins past " ..... 923
is past the help of law *' 1022
recall'd In rage being paat " ~... 1671
From what Is past " 1685
the violet past prime Son 12 3
remembrance of things past " 30 2
a limit past my praise " 82 6
tt the present nor the past " 123 10
Put reason hunted * 129 6
Put reason hated ** 129 7
my days are past the best "138 6
Put cure I am, now reason is past
care " 147 9
To pat the by-past perils L C ..... 158
my years be past the best PP l 6
Pitnt— so my potent back again Is
87
nrerving
Pttk— The path Is smooth
She treads the path
Pitlcace— Where thou with ....
vith greater patience bear it
By this, mild patience
Puleoce aeem'd to scorn
That patience Is quite beaten
hxA patience, tame to aufferance
My toDgue-tied patience "
Nlcat-The patient dies while the
physician sleeps R L
Whllat, Uke a willing patient Son
Playing patient sports L C
PMIcBUjr— unless I look aU.... RL
15
Sm
VA
««
RL
u
u
u
u
Son
8
788
908
486
1158
1268
1505
1563
.58
140
111
904
9
242
1641
Patroa— god and patron of all light VA 860
Pattern— Even so this pattern R L ~... 1350
beauty's pattern to succeeding men iSbn 19 12
you pattern of all those " 98 12
patterns of this foul beguiling L C ..... 17U
Patterned— When .... by thy fault R L ..... 629
Panae— Then raightst thou pause V A ^... 137
doth provoke a pause " 218
Sad pause and deep regard R L 277
and makes a pause " ~... 041
Paastng — Pausing for means to
mourn " 1869
Paw— blunt thou the lion's paws Son 19 1
Pawn*d— Pawn'd honettt looks R L 1351
Pawning— Pawning his honour " 156
Pay— one sweet kiss shall pay V A ..... 84
So thou wilt buy, and i>ay " ..... 514
pay them at thy leisure " ..... 518
Love's eyes pay tributary gazea " ...» 632
every minute jwys the hour R L 829
Pain pays the Income " 834
streams that pay a daily debt " »... 649
those that pay the willing loan Son G 6
Which I new pay as if not paid " 30 12
and pays it thee again *' 79 8
thou thyself dost pay " 79 14
lie pays the whole " 134 14
/Viy — her lips were ready for his pay K^l ~... 89
Pay lag — Paying what ransom " 650
by paying too much rent Son 125 6
Paying more slavish tribute R L 229
Payments-Say, for non-payment V A ^... 521
With such black payment R L 576
Peace — How he in peace is wounded " 8:U
'O peace!' quoth Lucrece " 1284
And for the peace of you Son 75 3
And peace proclaims i* 107 8
I»ve'8 arms art peace L C 271
Peaceful— And in i. peaceful hour VA 652
Pearl— like p<»arl« in ^lass " 980
And wiped the brim, h jwarl R L -... 1213
Those round clear pea. is " ..... 1553
Ah, but those tears arc )*earl Son 34 13
Of paled pearls and rubiei. L C 198
Bright orient pearl P P 10 3
Pearly— With pearly sweat R L 396
Peaaant— Which heartless peafiants " ..... 1392
Pebbled— waves make towards the
pebbled shore Son 60 1
Pervllar— did him peculiar duties R L 14
PeePd- the bark peel'd from the
lofty pine " 1167
her bark b«;ing peel'd away " „... 1169
Peep— the gaudy sun would peep V A 1088
should not peep again R L 788
each little mote will peep ** 1251
Delights to peep Stm 24 12
Pai^k niifht, peep day PP 15 17
Pe^'d— ^»me beauty peep'd // C ...« 14
Peeplaa— leave thy p'.'eping R L ...- 1089
Nymphs back peeping PP 18 43
Iieeping forth this tumult R L ..... 447
Peer— p*?<.'r to such a pe<.TleM dame " ~... 21
o'er the white sheet peers her
whiter chin " ..... 472
Prerlag— i»«.*ering through a wave V A W
Peerle«»— p*?«;r to such a dame R L ...- 21
Pelf— but cannot f.hick the p«If P P \\ 12
Pelleted— wo*: ha/i pi.lletefl in tears L C ..... l9
Palt— Kcini to pell nod iw
P*B— paper, Ink, and pen
^■all— Tliiw'a -ot m; pDpIl t>«ll " I
BcaulrJWi pencil, beiulj'.IruHi " ID
P««iU>d— To pcn<:lll'd pFi»i>«ii«a K £ ...
P«i!lnble-Ilap>iielnib]«i.-DtraDi.-«" -.
P>Bn'd-«dLy prnn'd Id blood L C ...
rtwUri—itt pcDiliHl aiitl HilidiKd
SL ...
Ffrpttull;— drop«ii
F*rf lutd— . In t>
p4Tpli^ii^d In ^Kitei
Hr glmslmll not |Kr>uiid<: me Sa
rrnuidcDir heart Pi
frnnaalQii— wilUlbei^oppodteper-
/o^l,iletagpeDtIpI
Pnpli — poor puoplc ai
I'errftiHl — ODd DOpai
t«roelrB«t--Tlili tliou
PerrelilaK— perciHvln
Penhaaiw— l^mhaiii:r
iC™ «4
ilenr* — JJlKpobtudliiii; . . .
Petltlonrn— pollliuni'ri M bi
Pettj— micli i«>ltj bondattp
Perftefot-of .... love being mad
e&m Gi
PerfFrUoB-WhHe full peifecHan
t'A
Aai pur.: pcrfwllo.i
B L ....
But na perfi-cllon U so >bMlDl«
Hold.inp«ft«.iou
An 'is
di^raa'd
yeiflin*— Perforce fill fore* H
VA —
IhoupeilbMniuitbeaT
SL....
PfrfgrcB am Jhlne
PcrfUe-Thrffi April perfuma
*«rftm*d— toineibruBihjjoifumed VJ ....
Sm 04
ft^bapn-Wh™ 1 perhap. con
pounded am with eUj-
" 71
Peril— To pui riit by-post peril*
L C ...,
Period-had Ih.'J Hen the period
of their 111
it L
Bbe puti the period
B-mll
BL
li peijurwl, munlerouii
Sm I»
" IM
PerJ.rj-fliilK)--)! perjury
a L .....
craTt and perjur; should thnut
■■ —
liuph<inlxandIbo dove " -.
fh rue— And pmHona pbian 5™ i
— laeleaa— that ptirantlen hand LC.
rbrrglin— 10 >bepherd> leuc R L ...
Pbjsle-Gltophyilctolhailck " _.
give pbyslp 10 lUJ grief Bn I
vhleb phyale did except " \a
1« phfilc jour cold breast LC -.
loBplteof phjrsie PP \
FhTBlelaa— while Ihe....aleepa B L ..
rram their pbyilclani know Hm 1<
thcpbyitcianlomjlovu " U
rhyalognomj— Of mlghion* BL ...
rirk— picki ihem all at ]ut VA ...
<;ou!d pick uu men ning BL ...
PleHre-yie, liMeM picture VA ..
tin- ploturcor true plfty BL ..
TliijpfciurgFliejidviai.'dly penned '■ ..
Ihy ]J.'iure'astj(hl Kuuldbar Sat 4
by thy picture or my bT< " i
\
OUR
222
OWEST
Onr— O, that our night of woe Son 120 9
Kot by our feeling " 121 4
Our dates are brief ** 123 5
make them bom to our desire " 128 7
iuTlting time our fashion calls " 124 8
And in our faulu " 138 14
to make our wits more keen L C 161
satisfaction to our blood " ..... 162
that preach in our behoof " »... 165
our drops this difference bore " 800
Since that our faulU PP 1 14
AH our pleasure known " 18 49
All our merry meetings " 18 46
All our evening sport *' 18 47
AH our love is lost '* 18 48
'Mongst our mourners P T ~... 20
Oat— In limning out VA ..... 290
Things out of hope " ~... 067
the cold fault cleanly out " 694
Their light blown out " ..... 826
Tolleys out his voice " ...» 921
lo, two lamps burn out " ..... 1128
and wore out the night Ji L ...~ 123
* Fair torch, burn out thy light " ...» 190
The eye of heaven is out " 356
to heave the owner out " 413
Small lights are soon blown out " 647
halt, creep, cry out for thee " ...- 902
* Out, idle words, servants to shal-
low fools " 1016
And seems to point her out " 1087
Will we find out " -... 1146
tread the way out readily " 1152
pattern of the worn-out age *' 1350
burnt out in tedious nighu " 1379
scratch out the angry eyes *' 1469
ringtf out the doleful kneH " ...~ 1495
would be drawn out too long " ~... 1616
What he breathes out " ~... 1666
In rage sent out " 1671
wear their brave state out Son 15 8
prick'd thee out for women's
pleasure " 20 13
But, out, alack ! he was but one
hour mine " 83 11
root out the work of masonry " 55 6
wear this world out " 55 12
To find out shames " 61 7
or vanish'd out of sight " 63 7
summer's honey breath bold out " 65 5
To linger out a purposed overthrow " 90 8
habitation chose out thee *' 95 10
leaves out difference ** 105 8
but effectuaHy is out *' 113 4
But bears it out even to the edge " 116 12
out of their spheres been fitted *' 119 7
fire my good one out ** 144 14
doth point out thee " 151 9
love put out Religion's eye L C 250
fire my good one out P P 2 14
She burned out love ** 7 14
Oot-bmgg'd— Whose bare .... the
web it seein'd to wear L C ...~ 95
OHt-brave — out-braves his dignity Son 94 12
Oat-bHrneth— as soon as straw ....PP 7 14
Oatcast— beweep my outcast state Son 29 2
Oatcry— Entombs her outcry X L ..— 679
Oatflictiig— Outfacing faults in love PP l 8
Oat-goiaff— out-going in thy noon Son 7 13
Oatllre— to outlire long date Sm 88 12
outlive this powerful rhyme ** 65 2
much outUve a gilded tomb " 101 11
Oatraire— darest do such outrage B L .... 605
Oatrageooa— no outrageous thing '* ...~ 607
Oatrightr-Kill me ... . with looks 8m 139 14
Oatraa— How he outruns the wind VA . 681
' Outruns the eye R L .... 1667
Oat-stiipp'd— they be oat-strlpp'd
by every pen San 82 A
Ont»stripplng—Out-stripirfng crows Fil ..... 824
Oatward — puts on ... . strangeneas ** .... 310
thy outward parts would move *' ...~ 435
no outward harm express'd It L ...~ 91
With outward honesty ** 1M5
Inward worth nor outward fktr Sun 16 11
mine eye's due is tiiine outward
part " 46 W
outward thus with outward praise ** M 5
Where time and outward form ** 108 14
the outward honouring ** 125 2
Painting thy outward walls ** 146 4
outwards so commended L C .... 80
with an outward show PP 19 88
Oatwardly— but fighting outwardly L C .... 203
Ootwore— and outwore the night VA .... 841
Oatworn— death by time outworn B L ...~ 1761
of outworn buried age Son 64 2
the map of days outworn *' 68 1
Ovea— An oven that is stopp'd VA .... S31
Over— Over one arm the lusty " »... 31
Over my altars hath he ** .... 103
O, had she then gave over ** .... 571
Over one shoulder doth she ** .... 1058
sovereign mistress over wrack Son 126 5
sorrow over me hath power L C .... 74
eyes stuck over all his face " .... 81
Overcome — Who, .... by doubt VA .... 891
Overcome, as one " .... 955
Overllow— will force it overflow ** .... 72
Over-fly— strive to over-fly them " .... 834
Over-go — That over-goes ray blunt
invention Son 108 7
Over - handled — your idle over-
handled theme VA .... 770
Overlook— did hotly overlook them " .... 178
Over-partial— corrupt by ... . looka Son 1.17 5
OverplBS->and ' Will ' in overplus '* 185 2
Overruled- Thus he that .... VA .... 109
Oversee— flhalt oversee this will B L .... 12D5
Overseea — How was I overseen ** .... 1206
Over-shoot — to .... his troubles VA .... 680
Over-allpp*d — hath ovcr-elipp'd her
thought B L .... 1676
Oversway'd— overruled I ... . KX .... 109
Overthrow— Till mutual overthrow " — . 1018
a purposed overthrow Son 90 8
Overturn— war shall statues overturn ** 66 5
Over-waah'd— cheeks with woe B L .... 1225
Owe— and I will not owe it VA .... 411
if any love you owe me ** .... 528
which Collatine doth owe B L .... 82
more slavish tribute than they owe " .... 299
kingdoms of hearts shouldst owe Son 70 14
Since what he owes thee ** 79 14
landlord which doth owe them L C .... 140
Owed— I owed her, and 'tis mine B L . — 1808
borrow'd motion seeming owed L C .... 827
Oweat— of that fair thou owest iSbi» 18 10
PLANT
228
POETRY
•••••
165
15
5
171
18
39
21
6
•••••
887
Plftnt — sappy plants to bear VA
that men as plants increase Son
lie ird where his plants L C
Green plants bring not P P
Trees did grow and plantsdid spring "
Planteat — Thou plantest scandal R L
Planting— Planting oblivion, beat-
ing reason iMck VA «... 567
Plaster— the only sovereign plaster " ..... 91tt
Plat— nor tied in formal plat L C 29
Platted— a platted hive of straw " 8
Plausibly—. . . . did give consent R L ~... 1854
Play— all this dumb play VA 359
P//iy— Be bold to play " 124
Play with his locks " ..... 1090
Pluto winks while Orpheus plays R L 653
Will play the tyranU &m 5 3
and play as wantonly " 54 7
To play the watchman ** *61 12
I with these did play " 98 14
And play the mother's part " 143 12
Plays not at all, but seems afhdd P P 18 30
PlayM— play'd with her breath R L »... 400
Mine eye hath play'd Son 24 1
that wont to have play'd P P 18 29
Play*8t — thou, my music, music .... Son 128 1
Playing— Playing the plaee L C 241
Playing patient sports ** 242
Playing in the wanton air PP 17 4
Plea— No rightful plea might plead R L 1649
a lawful pica commence Son 35 11
doth that plea deny *• 40 7
shall bt>auty hold a plea ** 65 3
Plead— Shall plead for me R L ^... 480
Ploads in a wilderness " 544
Xo rightful plea might plead '* ' 1649
Who plead for love Son 23 11
My h<>art duth plead ** 46 5
Pleadeth— are dumb when beauty
pleadeth R L 268
Pleading— her pleading tongue VA^... 217
by ]>Ieading may be blest " ..... 328
pleading hath deserved " 609
llcr pity-pleading eyes R L 561
There pleading might you see " 1401
Pleasanee— Youth is full of P P 12 2
Pleasant— pleaNant fountains lie VA 234
summer is less pleasant now Son 102 9
Sitting in a pleasant shade PP 21 3
Please — to please him thou art bright iSm 28 9
do please these curious days ** 38 13
»o it please thee hold '* 136 11
sickly appetite to please " 147 4
How many talcs to please me P P 7 9
Pleased- If themselves, others VA 843
ne'er pleaseil her babe " 974
pleased with grief's society jR L 1111
is pleased to dote Son 141 4
Pleasing— nimble notes to ... . earsiS L 1126
one pleasing note do sing Son 8 12
hath a far more pleasing sound ^* 130 10
Pleasore — birds such pleasure took VA «... 1101
That all love's pleasure " 1140
Having no other jileasure R L 860
Thy secret pleasure turns " 890
the jirivate pleasure of some one " 1478
Or else receivost with pleasure Son 8 4
prick'd thee out for women's pleas-
ure " 20 18
u
Pleasure — From whence at pleasure Son
the fine point of seldom pleasure
control your times of pleasure
Nut blame your pleasure
the world may see my pleasure
hath his adjunct pleasure
thi> pleasure of the fleeting year
his pleasures wait on thee
And the just pleasure lost
O thou minion of her pleasure
in moe pleasures to bestow
Where all those pleasures live
take her meaning nor her pleasure
All our pleasure known
we will all the pleasures prove
And if these pleasures may thee
move
Thi>se pretty pleasures might me
move
Plenitude — In him a plenitude of
subtle matter
Plenty- amid their plenty
with her plenty press'd
that even in plenty wanteth
Plight— Shall plight your honour-
able faiths
return in happy plight
to see my doleful plight
Plod— Plods dully on
Plot— Whoever plots the sio
This plot of death
heart think that a several plot
Ploughman — To cheer the ....
PI nek— pluck him from his horse
Who plucks the bud
Pluck down the rich
To pluck the quills
do I my judgement pluck
Pluck the keen teeth
pluck them where they grew
still will pluck thee back
but cannot pluck the pelf
Ne'er to pluck thee
Youth so apt to pluck a sweet
Pluek'd— being early pluck'd
guilty hand pluck'd up the latch R L
Brutus, who pluck'd the knife
untimely pluck'd, soon vaded
Pluck'd in the bud
Pluck *Ht — thou pluck'st a flower
Plum— The mellow plum doth fall
Like a green plum
Plume — like a falling plume
Plump— flesh is soft and plump
Plunging — unpractised swimmer
plunging R L
Pinto — Pluto winks while Orpheus
plays "
Poesy— under thee their poesy dis-
perse Son
Poet— would say, 'This poet lies
be term'd a poet's rage
and poets bettor prove
thy poet doth invent
The barren tender of a poet's debt
Than both your p<R»ts
god of both, as poets feign P P
Poetry — If mu^io and sweet poetry
agree
Son
48
12
it
52
4
It
58
2
u
58
14
u
75
8
II
91
6
u
97
2
M
97
11
It
121
3
It
126
9
LC
•••••
139
PP
5
6
e"
11
12
M
18
45
II
20
2
20 15
20 19
LC
•••••
802
VA
• ••■■
20
11
•••••
645
RL
«■•••
657
II
»••••
1690
Son
28
1
PP
18
33
Son
50
6
RL
•«•«•
879
It
•••■«
1212
Son 137
9
RL
•••••
958
VA
■ ••••
30
It
•••••
416
II
•••■•
1150
RL
•«••«
949
Sm
14
1
u
19
3
It
98
8
11
126
6
PP
14
12
tl
17
12
It
17
14
VA
•••••
628
RL
••••«
358
tt
•••••
1807
PP
10
1
tt
10
2
VA
•«•••
946
tl
••■••
527
PP
10
5
VA
•••••
314
II
»••••
142
tl
tl
tl
It
tl
tt
M... 1098
..... 553
78
4
17
7
17
11
32
13
79
7
83
4
83
14
8
13
8
POINT
229
POSTING
PolBt— With jareUn't point « churl-
Ish twloe to gore VA 616
thy spear't point can enter " ~ . 626
the fine point of seldom pleasure Son 52 4
iVinl— And seems to point her out R L 1087
Points on me graciously Son 26 10
doth point out thee " 151 9
Poiated — the fair and fiery-pointed
suu R L 372
Polafst— thou point'st the season " >... 879
Polatiaf — I\>inting to each his
thunder Son 14 6
PoiaoB — ^The hottom poison, and the
top o'entraw'd VA ~... 1143
I vUl not poison thee R L 1072
Drugs poison him Son 118 14
PaiiOB'd — Doth in her poiaon'd
closet yet endure R L ..... 1639
The poison'd founUin clears " ~... 1707
If it be poison'd iSm 114 13
His poison'd me LC .... 301
PoisonlBS— Life-poisoning pestilence K^ ..... 740
PoisoaoBi— The poisonous simple R L ..... 530
Knit poisonous clouds " .... 777
P«»llr]r— For lawful policy remains ** . 529
policy did him disguise '* .... 1815
Thus policy in loTO &m 118 9
It fears not policy, that heretic ** 124 9
Polish*d— In polish'd form ** 85 8
P«»IIU«— alone sUnds hujsely politic ** 124 11
PeUatfr— impurity doth not pollute R L .... 854
who did thy stock pollute ** .... 106:{
Pellated— Of that polluted prison ** .... 1726
PdlatioB — my poor souBpioUution **
in smiling pomp Son
PMip-— suffers not
Pww— the worse for one poor kiss
Poor queen of love
bites the poor flies
tills poor heart of mine
the poor fool prays
Even as poor birds
As those poor birds
Mark the poor wretch
By this, poor Wat
bow the world's poor people
poor Venus noteth
Alas, po6r world
enrich the poor with treasures
'Poor flower,' quoth she
Poor wretches have remorse in
poor abuses
Bat all these poor forbiddings
liay feel her heart, poor citixen
a poor unseasonable doe
the poor lamb cries
all recreant, poor and meek
Poor wasting monuments
The poor, lame, blind
One poor retiring minute
Poor grooms are sightless night
'Poor hand, why qniver'st thf^u
Poor helpless help, the treaMire
And for, poor bird
As the poor frighted deer
my poor soul's pollution
Poor Lucrece* cheeks
Ftor women's fiaces
Poor women's faulu
To the poor coitnterfelt
124
VA
«(
RL
u
1157
6
207
2.M
316
502
578
601
604
680
697
92.5
1057
1075
ll.V)
1177
269
32:i
AfA
581
677
710
71^
Vrl
Vi2
10i:(
1142
1149
II."
1-M7
Poor—' Poor instrument,' quoth she R L .... 1464
with one poor tired tongue " .... 1617
was strong, my poor self weak " .... Ift46
That my poor beauty *' .... 1651
Which speochless woe of his poor
sbeattcudeth " .... 1674
should right poor ladies' harms *' 1694
her poor tongue could not speak *' .... 1718
Her blood in poor revenge " 1736
Poor broken glass " .... 1758
C()me in hb poor heart's aid ' '* 1784
which wit so poor as mine Son 26 5
These poor rude lines ** 32 4
lame, poor, nor despised *• 37 9
To leave poor me " 49 13
will my poor beast then find " 51 5
Why should poor beauty " 67 7
as my poor name reheante *' 71 11
I'll live in this {K>or rhyme " 107 11
That poor retention " 122 9
my oblation poor but free ** 125 10
WhiUt ray poor lips "128 7
my friend's heart let my poor
heart bail ** 133 10
her poor infant's discontents " 143 8
Poor soul, the centre of my sinful "146 1
thy poor drudge to be " 151 11
their poor balls are tied L C .... 24
known to us poor swains PP 18 45
PoorCorydon " 18 52
She, poor bird, as all forlorn " 21 9
Even so, poor bird, like thee " 21 27
Poorer — far poorer than before R L .... 693
Poorlj — But, p*x>rly rich, so wanteth " 97
Is poorly imitated after you Sun 53 6
Poor-rich— they pruve bankrupt in
this poor-rich gain RL ...^ 140
Portal — Once more the ruby-col-
our'd portal open'd VA .... 451
Ail each unwilling portal R L .... 309
Poaled— riug of .... gold and bone L C .... 45
Powweas— that which thry jiossess R L .... Vio
the youug poss<.-88 their hive " 1769
bids him possosri his breath ** 1777
may \nj«»irits the claim they lay ** 1794
Pomeas'd— And, if ifijmem'd, assoon " .... 23
For thou art so pOMM»a'd Son 10 5
like him with frieikU |KHi»f«f>*d ** 29 6
P<MM«seth— p«>»sewK;th all mine eye '^ 62 1
Pow f ilag— Prwaeiwing or yHirsuing " 75 U
t/io dear for my po^iMfssing " 87 1
PMseanloB— III the |iOue»sion of his
R L 18
•* 8o:j
Son 18 10
" 129 9
RL 1
" 926
" 13.13
•• 'ijt}
PP 15 9
" 15 13
VA 'TA
R L ..... 2fi8
Son 3 8
6 12
" V, 11
P T TA
Son 51 4
beauteous mate
Keep btiil p<r«S4*Ksion
Nor hfne pTMifffMiou
* and in p^fWHrMion »o
Po«t^-lMr«ieg<.-<l Ard'.a all in poat
awift nuhtU: \itMtt
The pi/Hi att4;ndfl
Pui — P'jst hither, thin rile {rtirpoae
I post uuUnny prKty
the night would jiimt t*ni mrt,n
Pasterlff— t// bury that |Kj«t«;rity
That my p^^^tirriiy
Ui t,U>\t ptmU-rity
Leavirjff th<^ liriiii; in p^rfcti^rity
iu the fyt-n o( all ffty^t^Tiiy
l>'*\lnx DO ifmurity
Pofttlaf — of prating is no wj^
POSY
230
PRESAGER
20
10
•• •••
2G4
111
10
119
1
256
38
2
••••■
33
Pofijr— a thousand fragrant posies P P
Potential— O most potential love L C
PotloB— Potions of eisel 'gainst Son
What potions have I drunk "
Poor — And mine I pour your ocean
ail among L C
Poiir*st — that pour'st into my verse Stm
Ponted— Who bluah'd and pouted VA
Poverty— Although thou steal thee
all my poverty Son 40 10
what poverty my Muse brings forth '* 103 1
Power— thy had lost his ... . VA 941
heartens up his servile powers R L ~... 295
solicited the eternal power " »... 345
The powers to whom I praf " 349
and all the power of both " 572
than one hath power to tell " ..... 1288
\% drawn the power of Greece " «... 13(>8
He hath no power to ask ** ...» ]>')94
Another ]X)wer; no flood " 1677
o'ersways their power Son 65 2
They that have power " 94 1
Darkening thy power " 100 4
my lovely boy, who in ray power "126 1
hath put on nature's power " 127 5
Thy face hath not the power " 131 6
Use power with power " 139 4
these rebel powers that theo array " 146 2
O, from what power " 150 1
over me hath power L C 74
affections in his charmed power " ..... 146
* *' My parts had power to charm " 260
Powerful — shall outlive this power-
ful rhyme Son 55 2
hast thou this powerful might " 150 1
Practice— To put in practice either PP 16 7
]je»t she S4)me subtle practice smell *' 19 9
Practised — eyes have never prac-
tised how R L 748
Praise — Therefore that praise which
Collatine " 82
And decks with praises " ..... 108
shame and thriftless praise Son 2 8
How much more praise "29
thine shall be the praise " 38 14
What can mine own praise " 39 3
your praise shall still find room " 55 10
have given admiring praise " 69 14
with outward praise is crown'd " 69 5
accents do this praii»e confound " 69 7
Yet this thy praise cannot be so
thy praise " 70 11
hang more praise upon deceased I " 72 7
No praise to thee " 79 12
And in the praise thereof " 80 3
a limit past my praise " 82 6
can in praise devise " 83 14
Than this rich praise " 84 2
Being fond on praise, which makes
your praises worse " 84 14
While comments of your praise " 85 2
But to the most of praise " 85 10
but in a kind of praise " 95 7
Because he needs no praise " 101 9
hath my added praise beside " 103 4
alike my songs and praises be " 105 3
In praise of ladit's dead " 106 4
S» all their praises " 106 9
To know my shames and praises " 112 6
Praise— weighs down the airy scale
of praise L C
Which is to me some praise P P
To sing heaven's praise "
W^hen thy desert may merit praise "
Prai«e— To praise the clmr un-
matched red R L
I will not praise that purpose not
to sell San
mine own when I praise thee "
tliat for myself I praise
Nor praise the deep vermillioa
but lack tongues to praise
Praised — prodigal that .... her so JE Zr
Hearing you praised, I say San
.... 226
5 10
5 14
19 27
u
((
u
u
M
21
39
62
98
106
83
101
• •••
39
60
106
And to be praised of ages yet to be
and praised o^ld chastity L C
Praising— By praising him here Son
PraUdng thy worth "
Pray — I pray you hence VA ...
The poor fool prays her " ...
to pray he doth begin R L ^.
The powers to whom I praj
rebel for remission prays
She prays she never may behold
So will I pray that thou San 143
Prayer— in the midst of tiis unfruit-
ful prayer R L ~...
she with vehement prayer "
His ear her prayers admits " »...
but yet, like prayers divine Son
Fur these dead birds sigh a prayer P T
Preach— that preach in our behoof L C
Preach'd— He preach'd pure maid "
Preeedent— The precedent of pith VA
The precedent whereof R L
ever shunn'd by precedent L C
Precept — what are precepts worth
Precious — Whose precious taste
dropp'd a precious Jewel
income of each precious thing
t.ike root with precious flowers
For precious friends hid
I have no precious time
thy precious minutes waste
And precious phrase
of all too precious you
fairest and most precious jewel
Precurrer— Foul .... of the fiend P T
Pre-dcceaie — If children pro-de-
cease progenitors R L
Predict— By oa predict that I in
heaven find Son
Prefer- That shall prefer and un-
dertake L C
Prefiguring — ^all you prefiguring Son
Premeditate— he doth premeditate R L
Prepare — bid the wind a base he
u
VA
RL
Son
« «•'
u
u
t«
30
57
77
85
86
131
11
14
4
13
10
14
79
9
12
315
14
14
382
578
342
349
714
746
13
U4
475
558
5
67
165
315
26
1261
155
267
543
824
3:u
870
6
3
2
4
2
4
6
VA
RL
It
<i
Son
now prepares
prepare to carry it
and she prepares to write
prepares to let them know
you should prepare
doth prepare the cup
Preposterously — could so preposter-
ously be stain'd
Presage— This ill presage VA
augurs mock their own presage Son
Presager— And dumb presagers
<(
<(
««
M... lido
14 8
..... 280
106 10
183
•••»• •«Uo
«... 1290
1607
13 3
114 12
109 11
«... 4.57
107 6
23 10
PELT
226
PICTURE
RL
Son
(4
<C
<(
41
41
••••«
1<118
•• •••
1289
16
10
19
10
32
6
78
3
79
6
81
13
84
5
85
8
100
8
106
7
• ••••
681
Felt— seems to pelt and swear
Pen— paper, ink, and pen
Time's pencil, or my pupil pen
with thine antique pen
they be outstripp'd by every pen
as every alien pen
travail of a worthier pen
such virtue hath my pen
within that pen doth dwell
of well refined pen
And gives thy i»en •*
I see their antique pen "
Ptn — lie pens her piteous clamours R L
PenaDce — Nor double penance, to
correct correction ^Sbn 111 12
PeDcIl— Time's . . . .,or my pupil pen " 16 10
Beauty no pencil, beauty'b truth " 101 7
Penciird— Tu peucill'd pi'nsiveness iZ Z> 1497
Penetrable— No penetrable entrance " 5.59
PeDD'd— sadly ponn'd in blood L C ...» 47
PenHlved— Of pensived and subdued
desires " ..... 219
PemilveuoNii— To pencill'd RL 1497
Pent— pent in walls of glass Son 5 10
for I, being pent in thee " 133 18
Penary— Lean .... within that pen " 84 5
People — poor people are amazed V A ...« 925
a press of people at a dour R L ...~ 1301
Perceive — 1 perceive the reason V A 727
When I perceive that men Sun 15 5
Perfeived— and no pace perceived " 104 10
Perceivest— This thou perceivest &m 73 13
PercelTinft— perceiving how he is
enraged V A ...„ 817
Perrhanee— Perchance his boast R L 36
Perchance that envy " 39
Perfect— And once made perfect VA ...~ 408
The perfect ceremony Son 23 6
every bad a perfect l)est " 114 7
whose perfect white R L 394
Perfect'st— of .... love being made Son 51 10
Perf^tlon— Whose full perfection VA 634
And pure jwrfcction " 736
Have no perfection R L 837
But no perfection is so absolute " «... 853
Holds in piTfectiou Son 15 2
And right perfection wrongfully
disgraced " 66 7
Perfbrre — Perforce will force it VA 72
thou perfurce must bear R L ..... 612
Perforce am thine Son 133 14
Perftime— Three April perfumes " 104 7
And in some perfumes " 130 7
Perftimed— Comes breath perfumed VA ...~ 444
As the perfumed tincture Son 54 6
Perhapn— When I perhaps com-
pounded am with clay " 71 10
Peril— To put the by-iwst perils L C ...~ 158
Period — had they seen the period
of their ill R L 380
She puts the period " 565
Perish— so my Troy did perish " ..... 1547
rude, barrenly perish Son 11 10
Perjured— For perjured Sinon R L 1521
Is {)erjured, murderous Son 129 3
I am i>erjured most *' 152 6
sworn thee fair; more peijurod I " 152 13
Perjury— <iuilty of i»crjury R L ...~ 919
craft and perjury should thrust " ...» 1517
RL
Son
RL
LC
VA
LC
VA
44
(4
Peijnry— to this false peijury P P
Permit— permit the sun to climb R L
pcrmft the basest clouds Son
Perpetnal— death and pain .... R L
and make perpetual night **
and thy perpc*tual Infamy "
with a perpetual dullness San
took heat perpetual **
Perpetually— drop on them .... R L
Perpl^x^ — • . • • in his throno VA
porplex'd in greater pain R L
PerNon— Health to thy person "
And set thy perwon forth P P
Pemonal— In p(.>rsonal duty L C
Penpeetlve — perspective it ia best
painter's art San
Pemoade— to persuade him there VA
doth of itself persuade R L
persuade him to abstaining **
My glass shall not persuade me Son
Persuade my heart P P
Persnajiion- with their opposite per*
suasion
Perusal— Worthy perusal stand
Perused— she advisedly perused
Which she perused
Perverse— Pen-ersc it shall be
Pervert— And new pervert
Pestilenre — Life-poisoning ....
Petltloneni — petitioners to his eyes
Petty— such petty bondage
the i>etty streams that pay R L
If all these petty ills **
When other {K'tty griefs Son
Philomel — lamenting Philomel had
ended R L
Come, Philomel, that slng'st "
Pbilomel on summer's front Son
Philomela— While PhilomeU alta
and sings PP
PhopbuH- That PhcDbus' lute "
Phflpnix— turn the long-lived ....
His phoenix down began
Pha>uix and the turtle fled
Flaming in the pha>nix' sight
To the phccnix and the dove
Death is now the phcenix' nest
Phrase — And precious phrase
Phraseleiw— that phraseleas band
Phrygian— to .... shepherds lent
Physic— Give physic to the sick
give physic to my grief
which physic did except
to physic your cold breast
In spite of physic
Physician— while the ... . sleeps
from their physicians know
the physician to my love
Physiognomy— Of .... might one
Pick — picks them all at last
Could pick no meaning
Picture— Fie, lifeless picture
picture of an angry-<iiafing boar **
the picture of true piety R L
This picture she adviaedly peruaed **
the picture was belied **
thy picture's sight would bar Son
With my love's picture
by thy picture or my love
8 Z
...M /id
33 5
784
~... 1638
56 8
IM 10
...M oo6
— IMS
...» 733
.... 1305
19 12
...» 130
24 4
— 1114
...» 29
.... 130
22 1
3 8
»... 28o
88 6
.... 1527
• ••• ^%
.... 1157
.... 829
-... 740
u... Boo
»... tBH
»... 649
».«. QwO
90 10
— 1079
...» 1128
102 7
Son
LC
PT
15
8
19
14
Son
LC
RL
4(
Son
•«
LC
PP
RL
Son
44
RL
VA
RL
VA
85
6
10
4
93
23
85
50
56
4
».» 225
»... 1502
9
8
259
12
904
8
5
u
(I
34
147
18
140
147
...» 1395
...» 576
— 100
— 211
— 668
»... 542
.... 1527
. — 1533
46 3
47 5
47 9
PICTURE
227
PLAIT
netare— thy picture in mj slglit Sen
that did hiB picture get LC
Pletarfd — your true image .... lies Son
47 13
« • • • M *f^
24 6
Pleee— where hangs a piece X L ~... 1366
To this well-painted piece ** 1443
Pieced — Pieced not his grace L C ~... 119
Pl«d— When proud-pied April Son 9$ 2
Pierced— A closet never pierced ** 46 6
PlerelMir— with thy piercing light R L ^... 1091
Pletjr— the picture of true piety " 542
Pike— Of bristly pikes VA ~... 6-iU
PilgriMafe— makes short their .... JR L 791
mischief in thy pilgrimage " ...„ 960
Attending on his golden pilgrim-
age Son 7 8
a aealous pilgrimage to thee " 27 6
Pillage— slaves for pillage fighting H L 428
Pillow— Cozening the pillow "* IWI
and on that pillow lay " 1620
PUol— Desire my pilot is *' 279
Pla«— aarfeit by the eye and pine
the maw VA ..... 602
alone must sit and pine Ji L 795
The orphan pines while the op-
pressor feeds '* 905
He ten times pines, that pines b^
holding "* 1115
Thus do I pine and surfeit Son 75 13
Why dost thou pine " 146 3
And let that pine to aggravate " 146 10
with bleeding groans they pine L C ..... 275
PbM— peel'd from the lofty pine R L 1167
PiBed — pale and pined cheek beside L C ..... 32
PiBetli— he pincth still for more B L 98
PiBinff— like still-pining Tantalus " 858
Ploner — you see the labouring pioner " 1380
Pipe— those shrunk pipes had fed " ~... 145^)
And stops her pipe in growth of Son 102 8
My shepherd's pipe can sound P P 18 27
Pirate— strong pirates, shelves, and
sands R L 335
Pit — these round enchanting pits VA 2-47
Pitch— doth pitch the price " ..... 551
when from highmost pitch Son 7 9
Above a mortal pitch " 86 6
PltrJi*d— His high-pitch'd thoughts R L 41
PItehj— merciless and pitchy night F. 4 ~... 821
pitchy vapours from their biding R L 55ii
PIteoaa— But for thy piteous lips VA 504
pens her Viteous clamours RL 681
piteous 4ook8 to Phrygian shep-
herds lent " ..... 1502
PItk— The precedent of pith VA 20
Pitied— may deserve to pitied be San 142 12
Pltlftal— bechance him pitiful mis-
chances R L 976
Pitiful thrivers, in their gazing &m 125 8
Pity— '0,pity,"gan she cry V A ..... 95
•Pity,' she cries, 'some favour " ~... 257
For pity now she can no more de-
Uinhim " 577
Which knows no pity " 1000
In pity of his tender years " 1091
more rage and lesser pity R L 468
Soft pity enters at an iron gate " ~... 595
pearls of his that move thy pity " 1553
your pity is enough to cure me iSSm 111 14
Tour love and pity "112 1
And suit thy pity *' 182 12
Pity— Root pity in thy heart .Sm 142 11
Thy pity may deserve ** 142 12
Have of my suffering youth some
feeling pity L C .... 178
That to hear it was great pity P P 2\ 12
None takes pity on thy pain *' 21 2J
Pity but he were a king *' 21 42
PUf^—ace thy state and pity mine R L ..... 644
but pity not his moans '* 977
Pity the world, or else Son 1 13
Pity me then and wish *« 111 8
Pity me then, dear friend ** 111 13
Nunc alive will pity me PP 21 28
Pitying— as pitying Lucrece' woes R L 1747
and they, as pitying me Son 132 1
Pity-pleading— Her eyes R L 561
Pity-wanting— of my .... pain Son 140 4
Place— remaineth in one place V A 886
she falleth in the place '* ~... 1 121
vents and crannies of the place R L 310
the period often from his place *' ..... 565
possession of thy gloomy place " 803
shot from their fixed places '* 1525
and, as it left the place " ..... 17:H5
to weep upon the tainted place ** 1746
give his sorrow place " ..... 1778
treasure thuu some place San 6 3
Shifu but hU place " 9 10
the place where he would be " 44 8
Each changing place ** 60 8
doth give another place " 79 4
thy heart in other place ** 93 4
Nor gives to necessary wrinkles
place "108 11
in my judgement's place " 131 12
the wide world's common place " 137 10
To every place at once L C 27
and made him her place " .... 82
made fairer by their place ** 117
Playing the place " 241
and consecrations giving place " 263
gave the tempter place " .... 318
/Ycio0 — do I mean to place him R L .... 517
And place my merit Son 88 2
Placed— they thinly placed are " 52 7
a nay is placed without remove P P 18 12
Plagne — the plague is Ijanish'd VA 510
Become the public plague R L 1479
of plagues, of dearths, or seasons Son 14 4
Drink up the monarch's plague "114 2
And to this false plague " 1.37 14
Only my plague thus far " 141 13
Plague— To plague a private sin R L 1481
Plagned — Is plagued with cramj.s " 856
Plain— high delightful plain VA 236
like a goodly champaign plain R L 1247
All our merry meetings on the
plains PP 18 46
PTa^n— had his acts made plain VA 359
the lesmn is but plain " 407
in his plain face she spied R L 1532
* Tarquiu ' was pronounced plain " 1786
In true plain words Son 82 12
Plaining— entrance to her plaining R L 559
Plainly— But plainly say thou lov'st
her PP 19 11
Plaint— That she her plaints R L 1364
Plalntftel- A plaintful story L C 2
Plait— in plaits of mi^esty R L 93
PLANT
228
POETRY
Plant^-Mippy plants to bear VA Ji... 165
that men aa plants increase Son 15 5
Heinl where his plants L C 171
Green plants bring not PP 18 39
Trees did gnrow and plants did spring** 21 6
Planteatr-Thou plautest scandal Ji L ~... 887
PlaDtlug— Planting oblivion, beat-
ing reason back VA ~... 557
Piaster— the only sovereign plaster " 916
Plat— nor tied in formal plat L C ^.., 29
Platted— a platted hive of straw " ^... 8
Plavslbly- . ... did give consent B L 1854
Plar— all this dumb play VA 359
Play— Be bold to play " ..... 124
Play with his locks *' 1090
Pinto winks while Orpheus plays R L 553
Will play the tyranU Son 5 Z
and play as wantonly '* 54 7
To play the watchman " '61 12
I with these did play " 98 14
And play the mother's part *' 143 12
Plays not at all, but seems afraid P P 18 30
PUr*d— play'd with her breath B L 400
Mine eye hath play'd iSim 24 1
that wont to have play *d PP 18 29
Plaj*Bt— thou, my music, music .... Sou 128 1
Piayinpr— Playing the place L C 241
Playing patient sporU *' 242
Playing in the wanton air PP VJ 4
Plea— No rightful plea might plead R L ..... 1649
a lawful pica commence Son 85 11
doth that plea deny ** 4G 7
shall beauty hold a plea " 65 3
Plead— Shall plead for me R L ^... 480
Ploads in a wilderness " 544
No rightful plea might plead " ' 1649
Who plead for love Son 23 11
My heart duth plead ** 46 5
Pleadeth— are dumb when beauty
pleadeth R L 268
Pleading— her pleading tongue VA ..... 217
by pleading may be blest ** 328
pleading hath deserved " 609
Her pity-pleading eyes R L 561
There pl(n\ding might you see *• 1401
Pleasance— Youth is full of P P 12 2
Pleasant— plea.'^ant fountains lie VA 234
summer is less pleasant now Son 102 9
Sitting in a pleasant shade PP 21 3
Please — to plea.*te him thou art bright iSbn 28 9
do please these curious days " 38 13
so it please thee hold " 1.36 11
sickly appetite to please "147 4
How many tales to please me P P 7 9
Pleased— If themselves, others VA 843
ne'er pleased her babe " 974
plea.Hed with grief's society RL 1111
is pleastHl to dote Son 141 4
Pleasinif— nimble notes to ... . ears R L 1126
one pleaning note do sing Son 8 12
hath a far more pleasing sound ^' 130 10
Pleasure — binLt such pleasure took VA 1101
That all lovf's pleasure " 1140
Ilaviug no other pleasure R L 860
Thy secret pleasure turns " 890
the private pleanure of some one *' ..... 1478
Or else receivesjt with pleasure Son 8 4
prick'd thee out for women's pleas-
ure " 20 18
Pleatnre— From whence at pleasure An
the fine point of seldom pleason
control your times uf pleasure
Not blame your pleasure
the world may see my pleasure
hath his adjunct pleasure
the pleasure of the fleeting year
his pleasures wait on thee
And the Just pleasure lost
O thou minion of her pleasure
in moe pleasures to bestow
Where all those pleasures live
take her meaning nor her pleasare
All our pleasure known
we will all the pleasures prove
And if these pleasures may thee
move •*
These pretty pleasures might me
move •*
Plenitude— In him a plenitude of
subtle matter X €
Plenty— amid their plenty VA
with her plenty press'd **
that even in plenty wanteth R L
Plight— Shall plight your honour-
able faiths *•
return in happy plight
to see my doleful plight
Plod— Plods dully on
Plotr-Whoever plots the sin
This plot of death
h(*art think that a several plot
Ploughman — To cheer the ....
PInek— pluck him from his horse
Who plucks the bud
Pluck down the rich
To pluck the quills
do I my Judgement pluck
Pluck the keen teeth
pluck them where they grew
still will pluck thee back
but cannot pluck the pelf
Ne'er to pluck thee
Youth so apt to pluck a sweet
Pluck'd— being early pluck'd
An
48
IS
u
fiS
M
58
tt
58
14
U
75
M
91
U
97
M
VI
11
II
121
U
128
LC
•••••
1»
PP
5
«"
11
12
M
18
45
M
20
S
SO 15
90 19
PP
RL
28
18
50
M
Son
RL
VA
187
M
RL
PP
u
14
19
08
128
14
17
17
VA -.
guilty hand pluck'd up the latch R L -.
PP
u
VA -.
H
PP
VA
Brutus, who pluck'd the knife
untimely pluck'd, soon vaded
Pluck'd in the bud
Plnck*8t— thou pluck'st a flower
Plom — The mellow plum doth fall
Like a green plum
Plume — like a falling plume
Plump — flesh is soft and plump
Plunging — unpractised swimmer
plunging R L
Pinto— Pluto winks while Orpheus
plays "
Poesjr- under thee their poesy dis-
Itene Son
Poet— would say, * This poet lies
be term'd a poet's rage
and poets l>etter prove
thy i)Oct doth invent
The barn>n tender of a poet's debt
Than both your poets
g<Kl of both, as poets feign P P
Poetry— If music and sweet poetry
agree ••
10
10
10
M
tl
u
<•
78
17
17
82
79
83
88
8
90
045
867
1090
1
S3
6
879
1212
9
958
80
418
1150
949
1
S
8
6
IS
IS
14
528
858
1807
1
S
946
527
5
814
143
1098
55S
4
7
11
13
m
I
4
14
IS
PUT
234
QUOTH
Pnt— with scorn she put away P P 19 IS
though she put thee back " 19 36
Pat*8t— that put'9t forth all to use Sim 134 10
Patrilled— that which is so putrified R L ...~ 1750
VjTMMld—Thy pyramids built up Son 123 2
P|TrhBs— under Pyrrhns' proud foot
lies R L 1448
And rail on Pyrrhus " ~... 1467
(^■ke — tributary subject quakes VA »... 1045
saw them quake and tremble R L ~... i:{93
In his fire doth quake with cold ** ~... 155G
QMklng— Bids them leave quaking VA 899
QBAllfled— lust by gazint; qualified R L ~... 424
(Ratify — seem'd my flame to qualify Son 109 2
I^mI I ty— savour, hue. and qualities V A .... 747
his life or else his quality R L 875
her grief 's true quality " 1313
What is the quality " -... 1702
of dearths or season's quality Son 14 4
His qualities were beauteous L C ~... 99
nature, worth, and quality " ..... 210
Qaeen— the love-sick queen began VA ..... 175
Poor queen of love " ~... 251
leaders to their queen ** ~... 503
'Fair queen,' quoth he " .... 523
All in rain ; good queen '* 607
where their queen " .... 1193
was the other queen R L 66
The sUver-shiuing queen " .... 786
on the finger of a throned queen Son 96 5
could look but beauty's queen PP A 4
on her back, fair queen, and toward " 4 13
as this queen on him " 6 12
the queen of music, makes " 8 10
when the fair queen of love "91
She, silly queen "97
'Twixt the turtle and his queen P T .... 81
(^ench — . . . . the maiden burning VA 60
I'll quench them with my tears " .... 192
To quench the coal R L 47
ocean quench their light " .... 12-U
with my tears quench Troy " .... 1468
Qaenched— This brand she .... Son 154 9
(^aenchless — are balls of ... . fire R L 1554
Qaettr-A quest of thoughts Son 46 10
and in quest to have " 129 10
(^ettlon— do I question make " 12 9
Nor dare I question '• 57 9
hence a qu(»tion takes L C 110
arguments and question deep " .... 121
and yet do question make " 821
(^estloned— after supper long he
Qalfkly^-Quickly him they will en-
tice PP
Qaifk-ahlfUag^-Quick-ahifting an-
21 44
tics
questioned jR L
Qaick — O, how quick is love VA
bright, and quick in turning
Now quick desire
In youth, quick bearing R L
nor war's quick fire shtJl burn Son
variation or quick change
Of his quick objects
Qalcker —- these quicker elements
are gone
<^lekly— <lucks as quickly in VA
quickly told and quickly gone
other kills thee quickly
quickly is convey'd "
fire did quickly steep Son
But quickly on this side L C
«(
(i
It
<i
(t
14
U
••••• 88
.... 140
1387
55 7
76 2
113 7
45 5
— 87
.... 520
990
••••• xi«rx
153 8
.... llo
RL
VA
M
Son
VA
Son
RL
459
782
1149
442
1170
27 14
.... 709
126 12
.... 1297
83 7
85 8
•••■• i«S
.... 1563
5 7
u
u
25
62
72
103
18
11
11
8
7
9
236
Qalet— Into the quiet closure
shall it keep in quiet
mustering to the quiet cabinet R L -.
her quiet interrupted
for myself no quiet find
Qaletly— Lie quietly, and hear
(Jaietas— her .... is to render thee
({alll— To pluck the quills
o'er the paper with her quill "
How far a modern quill Son
their character with golden qaill "
Qalt— Nor youth all quit L C
(^Blt«— heart were quite undone VA
quite beaten from her breast R L
and lusty leaves quite gone Son
book of honour rased quite "
quite contrary I read
dear love, forget me quite
over-goes my blunt invention quite "
All my merry Jigs are quite forgot P P
Qalttal— a quittal of such strife R L
(^nlTer*st— why quiver'st thou at
this decree " .... 1030
Qaote — . . . . my loathsome trespass " .... 812
(^BOth— ' Ay me,' quoth Venus
' I know not love,' quoth he
canst thou talk?' quoth she
where am I V quoth she
* Fair queen,' quoth he
'Good-night,' quoth she
* The IxHir,' quoth she
' Thou hadst been gone,' quoth she
' No matter where,' quoth he
what of that ?' qubth she
'I am,' quoth he
'In night,' quoth she
' Nay, then,' quoth Adon
'No, no,' quoth she
' O Jove,' quoth she
' And yet,' quoth she
' Wonder of time,' quoth she
'Poor flower,' quoth she
Quoth he, 'She took me kindly
' So, so,' quoth he, ' these lets
quoth he, * I must deflower
' Lucrece,' quoth he, * this night
Quoth she, ' Reward nut
' Have done,' quoth he
'Thou art,' quoth she, 'a sea
'No more,' quoth he; ' by heaven
' For day,' quoth she
' In vain,' quoth she, ' I live
' You mocking birds,' quoth she
' To kill myself,' quoth she
' My girl,' quoth she
' O, peace I' quoth Lucrece
' Poor instrument,' quoth she
' It cannot be,' quotli she
' Fool, fool !' quoth she
' Few words,' quoth she
groom of thine," quoth he
you fair lords,' quoth she
' O, speak,' quoth she
* ' No, no,' quoth she
' O,' quoth Lucretius, ' I did gire
VA 187
" .... 427
•••M 523
" .... 6S7
" .... 589
.... 613
u 71*5
" .... 717
.... t lo
" .... 720
" 769
••••• sfVf
" .... 1015
" 1070
" 113S
" .... 1177
R L .... 253
••••• doll
" avi
.... 575
" 645
" 652
" .... 667
" .... 747
" 1121
.... lido
" 1270
" 1284
•■■•• l*i04
•• • • • X o* *^
••••• lOOo
••••• 1613
" .... 1632
*• .... 1688
" .... 1700
" 1714
" «... 1800
POSY
230
PRESAGER
PP 20
10
Lt C •-•••
264
Son 111
10
" 119
1
^^ \^ »••••
256
\Son 88
2
VA -...
33
Pwj— a thousand fragrant poeles
PotentiAl — O most potential love
Potion — Potions of eisel 'gainst
What potions have I drunk
Poor — And mine I pour your ocean
all among
Poar*tt — ^that pour'st into my verse Son
Pouted— Who blush'd and pouted
Poverty— Although thou steal thee
all my poverty Son 40 10
what poverty my Muse brings forth " 103 1
Power— thy had lost his ... . V A 944
heartens up his servile powers R L ..... 295
solicited the eternal power ** 345
The powers to whom 1 pray " 349
and all the power of both " 572
than one hath power to tell " ..... 1288
is drawn the power of Greece " ~... 1368
He hath no power to ask " 1594
Another power ; no flood " ...~ 1677
o'erswaya their power Son 65 2
They that have power " 94 1
Darkening thy power " 100 4
my lovely boy, who in ray power " 126 1
hath put on nature's power " 127 5
Thy face hath not the power "131 6
Use power with power " 139 4
these rebel powers that theo array ** 146 2
O, from what power " 150 1
over me hath power L C ^... 74
affections in his charmed power " 146
*" My parts had power to charm '* ~... 260
Powerful — shall outlive this power-
ful rhyme iSim 55 2
hast thou this powerful might " 150 1
Practice— To put in practice either P P 16 7
Lest she some subtle practice smell " 19 9
Practised —eyes have never prac-
tised how R L 748
Praise — Therefore that praise which
Collatlne " 82
And decks with praises " 108
shame and thriftless praise Son 2 8
How much more praise "29
thine shall be the praise " 38 14
What can mine own praise " 39 3
your praise shall still find room " 55 10
have given admiring praise " 59 14
with outward praise is crown'd " 69 5
accents do this praise confound " 69 7
Yet this thy praise caunot be so
thy praise " 70 11
hang more praise upon deceased I " 72 7
No praise to thee " 79 12
And in the praise thereof " 80 3
a limit past my praise " 82 6
can In praise devise " 83 14
Than this rich praise " 84 2
Being fond on praise, which makes
your praises worse " 84 14
While comments of your praise " 85 2
But to the most of praise " 85 10
but In a kind of praise " 95 7
Because he needs no praise " 101 9
hath my added praise beside " lO:) 4
alike my songs and praises be " 105 3
In praine of ladies dead " 106 4
S» all their praises "106 9
To know my shames and praiaea " 112 6
Praise— weighs down the airy Male
of praise L C
Which is to me aume pndae P P
To sing heaven's praise **
When thy desert may merit praise **
PraUe — To praise the clear un-
matched red R L
I will not praise that purpose not
to sell Sm
mine own when I praise thee **
that for myself I praise **
Nor praise the deep Termillion **
but lack tongues to praise **
Praised- prodigal that .... her 90 RL
Hearing you praised, I say Son
And to be praised of ages yet to be **
5
A
19
226
10
14
27
21
e2
M
106
85
101
eo
M
and praised cold chastity L C
Pratalajir— By praising him here &m
Praising thy worth **
Pray — I pray you hence VA -.
The poor fool prays her •* «.
to pray he doth begin R L ^.
The powers to whom I pray **
rebel for remission praya **
She prays she never may beliold **
So will I pray that thou Sm
Prayer — in the midst of his anfinaiU
ful prayer R L
she with vehement prayer
His car her prayers limits
but yet, like prayers divine
For these dead birds sigh a prayer P T
Preacli— that preach in our behoof L C
Preached- He preach*d pure maid "
Precedent— The precedent of pith VA
The precedent whereof R L
ever shunn'd by precedent L C ...
Preeept — what are precepts worth ** ...
Precious— Whose precious taste VA ...
dropp'd a precious Jewel " ...
income of each precious thing R L ...
take root with precious flowers " ...
For precious friends hid 8(m
I have no precious time **
thy precious minutes waste "
And precious phrase **
of all too precious you
fairest and most precious jewel
Precurrer— Foul .... of the fiend P T ..
Pre-decea«e — If children pre-de-
ceasc progenitors R L
Predictr-By oa predict that I in
heaven find Son
Preft^r— That shall prefer and un-
dertake L C
Preflgnrlng — all you prefiguring Son
Premeditate — he doth premeditate R L
Prepare — bid the wind a base he
11
14
4
13
10
14
T9
9
12
S15
14
14
SS2
578
342
349
714
.... 746
143 13
475
558
106 5
67
.... 165
.... 315
.... 2K
1261
.... 367
543
824
834
870
6
u
u
90
67
77
85
86
131
3
2
4
2
4
6
VA
RL
Son
now prepares
prepare to carry it
and she prepares to write
prepares to let them know
you should prepare
doth prepare the cup
Prepoateronsly — could so preposter-
ously be stain 'd
Presage— This ill presage VA
augurs mock their own presage Son
Presager— And dumb presagers **
u
1756
14 8
280
106 10
••••• 1S9
.... 129^
.... 129
.... 16t
13
114
109
107
23
PRESCIENCE
231
PRISON'D
PrtMlfne«— Which In her ... . RL 727
PrMcrlptloB— his preacriptiont are
not kepi Son 147 6
Pr w nt»— Be as thy presence is ** 10 1 1
And with liis presence " 67 2
P rt s eatr-Thst every prcsrnt sorrow Ki4 ~... 970
Hindering their present fall R L 551
To Tiew thy present trespass ** 6^2
Of present death, and shame ** 12G3
Some present speed to come " ~... 1307
Each present lord began " ..... 1696
Presents thy shadow Son 27 10
Thyself away art present " 47 10
behold these present days *' 106 13
Crowning the present " 115 12
at the present nor the past " 123 10
upon myself with present moan ** 149 8
PriMiit-alweDt— These present-ab-
sent with swift motion slide " 45 4
Presented — advantage on .... Joy VA 405
PrcMil'st^And thou present's! Son 70 8
P rt a eateth— presenteth to mine eye V A 661
this huge stage presenteth Son 15 3
PrcMitly— do presently abuse it R L 86 1
being clouded presently is missed ** 1007
that's broken presently P P 18 4
Prcaerre— which doth .... the ill Son 147 8
P r ess — Much like a press of people R L 1301
a press of gaping faces " — . 1408
as thou art cruel ; do not press Son 140 1
Press never thou to choose P P 19 84
Press'd— now press'd with bearing VA 430
with her plenty press'd " 545
my o'er-press'd defence can bide Son 139 8
pTMniMe — Presume not on thy heart ** 22 13
Prsteided — as thou hast pretended R L ..... 576
^rsttlly— entreats, and .... entreats V A 73
Pretty— For toaprt'tty ear " 74
appears a pretty dimple " ..... 242
A pretty while these pretty crea-
tures stand R L 1233
Those pretty wrongs Son 41 1
Looking with pretty ruth " 132 4
Her pretty looks have been " 139 10
I post nnto ray pretty PP 15 9
These pretty pleasures " 20 19
PreTatled— till she have prevailed Son 41 8
Prevent— did wittily prevent VA 471
this vile purpose to prevent R L 220
I could prevent this storm *' 966
to prevent our maladies iSim 118 3
Prevenrst— thou bis scythe " 100 14
Prey— or prey be gone VA 58
on the steam as on a prey *' 63
caught the yielding prey " 547
Rich preys mske true men '* 724
the wolf would leave his prey " 1097
That for hi» prey R L 342
lion fawneth o'er his prey " 421
The wolf hath seized his prey " -... 677
The prey wherein by nature they
delight " -... 697
Art left the prey 5km 48 8
The prey of worms ** 74 10
Prlaai — painting, made for Priam's
Troy R L ~... 1367
Staring on Priam's wounds *' 1448
in Priam's painted wound " 1466
weeps Hecuba, heie Priam dies " ~... 1485
Priam— Had doting Priam check'd R L 1490
The credulous old Priam " 1522
as Priam him did cherish " .... 1646
listening Priam weU his eyes " ~... 1548
Priam, why art thou old " ..... 1550
To Priam's trust false Sinon's tears '* .... 1560
Prlee— pitch the price so high V A .... 651
Prieeleas— What priceless wealth R L .... 17
Priek— the needle his finger pricks " .... 319
his weary noon-tide prick " .... 781
Priek'd— His ears up-prick'd VA 271
but since she priek'd thee out iSim 20 13
Pricking— curb or pricking spur VA .... 285
Prickles — What though the rose
have prickles " .... 574
Pride— and modest pride " .... 278
Losetb his pride " .... 420
Sith in thy pride " .... 762
so their pride doth grow RL .... 298
Swell in their pride *' .... 482
Smoking with pride " 438
they in thy pride " .... 662
While Lust is in his pride ** 705
Who in their pride " .... 864
boundeth in his pride ** .... 1669
bis wit in state and pride " ..... 1809
their pride lies buried Son 25 7
his imprison'd pride *' 52 12
so barren of new pride " 76 1
and of goodly pride " 80 12
of all men's pride I boast " 91 12
my love's breath ? The purple pride " 99 3
in pride of all his growth *' 99 12
such a scope to show ber pride " 103 2
shook three summers' pride " 104 4
with her foul pride *' 144 8
Proud of this pride " 151 10
a careless hand of pride L C 80
falseness in a pride of truth " .... 106
with her fair pride PP 2 8
Priest — Let the priest in surplice
white
Prime — gather'd in their prime
wither in their prime
Sith in his prime
rejoicing to the prime
the lovely April of her prime
behold the violet past prime
a pure unstained prime
wanton burthen of the prime
Primrose— this primrose bank
Prince — For princes are the glass
Or say with princes
Great princes' favorites
Of princes, shall outlive
Princely- welcome to her princely
guest
wound'st his princely name
Thy princely oflace
Prlneeaa— To ask the spotted ....
Print— her soft hand's print
Thou sbouldst print more
Prison— And in her vault y prison
in that darksome prison died
will prison false desire
Of that polluted prison
Prison my hesrt
Prison*d— .A lily prison'd
I.rlson'd in her eye
PT
• ••••
n
VA
• •••«
131
u
•••••
418
u
»••••
1163
RL
332
Son
3
10
u
12
3
II
70
8
41
97
7
VA
151
RL
....
615
Son
14
7
It
25
6
•<
55
2
RL
• ••••
90
II
•••••
699
<i
•• •••
628
II
•••••
721
VA
• •• ••
853
Son
11
14
RL
• ••••
119
M
•••••
379
(1
•••••
642
u
•«•••
1728
Son 133
9
VA
• •• *•
862
M
•••••
960
REEK
237
RENEWD
BMk— Her fkce doth reek F 555
thai tnaax mf mbtreu reeks A 130 8
Beek'd— The red blood reek'd M J 1377
BcekiMir— furnace of foul-reeking
nnoke " 790
Beeleth— he reeleth from the day An 7 10
Beflfared — ten timea reflgured thee " 6 10
Beflsed— form of well reflned-pen ** ^ 8
Belleet— aud now no more reflect VA ~ .. 1130
that she reflects ao bright R L ^.. 376
BeflratB— I could flrom tears retrain PP i 16
Brfrnh— no rubbing will refiresh ** .^ 8
Ifeft— reft from her bj death VA ~. 1174
Jteftqre— this refuge let me find M L ^.' 1654
Befliae the rerj refuse of thj deeds Son ISt 6
Bcftned — Or he refused to take her
figured
But one must be refused
BeflMMit— of what thyself refUsest
Begard— I never shall regard
deep regard beseems the sage
creeping thief to some regard
Show'd deep regard
emerald, in whose fresh regard
Bcflaa — The region cloud hath
ma8k*d him Son
Beglster— Dim register and notary Ji L
what new to register San
Thy registers and thee "
false blood, thou register of lies L C
PP
4"
10
4i
16
9
San
40
8
VA
••«••
»77
RL
t77
it
• ••••
05
M
• ••■•
1
LC
•••••
i >
83
108
123
1
765
3
9
52
Behearae— with his fair doth .... Son 2\ 4
erery rulgitr paper to rehearse " 38 4
as my poor name rehearse " 71 11
your being shall rehearse " 81 11
Belga—For when love reigns VA ...» 649
And there reigns lore Soin 31 3
and in their badness reign " 121 14
in the general bosom reign L C ..... 127
J2e^i»— which in thy reign are made R L .^^ 804
beauty's wreck and grim care's
reign " 1451
enemies to either's re^n Son 28 5
Beiga'd— though in my nature . ..." 109 9
And reign'd commanding L C 196
Beln— And rein his proud head VA 14
the lusty courser's rein " 31
Breaketh his rein " 264
master'd with a leathern rein " 892
or rein his rash desire R L 706
B^Jeeted— be of thyself rejected VA 159
Bfjolce— Joy ^^^^ ^^^ rejoice " 977
Bfjoldn^— more rejoicing to the
prime R L 332
Beleasinf— doth urge releasing VA 256
thy worth gives thee releasiog Son 87 3
Beleateth— at rain relenteth VA 200
BcieBtlDg— In such relenting dew R L 1829
Belief— Within this limit is relief
enough VA 235
sorrow lends but weak relief Son 34 11
Belier— seducing lust, thy rash ....RL 6.39
lUllfTed— never relieved by any VA 708
Bfllereth— all the earth rolievoth *' 4S4
Bellglon— put out Religion'^ eye L C 250
Bfllflom — Hath dear religious love ^/n 31 G
Religious love put out Religion's L C 2"»0
Belish— Rt^lish your nimble uot»»s R L 1126
Bemain— doth always fresh remain r. 4 8(11
What face remains alive " 1076
Bemain— that yet remains upon her
breast R L ..'..* 468
surviving husband shall remain " ..... 519
lawful policy remains " 529
despite of cure, remain " ..... 732
remains a hopeless castaway " 744
their unseen sin remain untold " 753
in a rough-grown grove, remain " 1249
no semblance did remain " 1453
blots that do with me remain Son 36 •'{
him here who doth hence remain " 89 14
This with thee remains ** 74 14
above that idle rank remain " 122 8
with him in thoughts, or to re-
main L C ...» 129
much less of shame in me remain " 188
and both in thee remain PP % 14
More in women than in men re-
main " 18 18
If what parts can so remain P T 48
Remaln'd— still pure and red . . .. R L 1742
which remaln'd the foil L C ..... 158
Bematneth— . ... in one place VA 885
Bematnin^— too long with her ..,. R L 1572
Remedy— The remedy indeed to do
me good " ~..< 1028
for this sin there is no remedy Son 62 8
a bath and healthful remedy ** 154 11
Remember — read this line, .... not " 71 5
an adjunct to remember thee " 122 18
Remember'd — O, be remember'd, no
outrageous R L ..... 607
remember'd not to be Son 8 18
. For thy sweet love remember'd " 29 18
of thee to be remember'd " 74 12
night of woe might have re-
member'd " 120 9
Remembrance— no .... what it was " 5 12
I summon up remembrance " 80 2
RemissioD— rel)el for ... . prays R L ..... 714
Remorse — ' some favour, some .... VA 257
have remorse in poor abuses R L ..^. 269
Remorseless — In the .... wrinkles ** 562
Remote — From limits far remote Son 44 4
Hearts remote, yet not asunder P T ..... 29
Remove — never to remove VA 81
I must remove " 186
Remove your siege " 423
fear of this thy will remove R L ...~ 614
may not remove nor be removed Son 25 14
with the remover to remove "116 4
and did thence remove L C 237
a way is placed without remove P P 18 12
Removed— not remove nor bo ... . Son 25 14
But things removed that bidden " 31 8
earth removed from thee " 44 6
And yet this time removed " 97 5
Remorer— with the .... to remove "116 4
Removing — past reason's weak .... R L ..... 248
Render— the wronger till he render
right " -... 943
But mutual render only me for
thee Son 125 12
her quietus is to render tliee " 126 12
when I myself must render L C 221
Renew— but her passion's strength
renews R L 1103
Sweet love, renew thy force Son 56 1
Rene w*d— and wish I were rcnew'd "111 8
RENEWEST
238
RESTLESS
■h
R^newMt^if now thou not .... Son 3 8
Bene wn— farewell hia great .... P P 21 48
R^nt— by paying too much rent Son 125 6
beds' revenues of their rents ** 142 8
In top of rage tlie lines she rents L C ...~ 55
R^nylug^Heart's renylng PP 18 7
Repair— Whose fresh repair If now Son 3 3
Which to repair should be " 10 8
lines of life that life repair *' 16 9
To this urn let those repair P 7 65
Repay — your great deserts repay Son in 2
Repeal— for exiled majesty's repeal S L fi40
Repeat— He doth again repeat ** ~... 1848
Repel— must not repel a lover V A ~... 573
Repent— Though thou repent, yet I
have Son 34 10
too late, she will repent P P 19 15
Repentant— wrapp'd in ... . cold R L 48
repentant tears ensue the deed " 502
Repetition— repetition uf her moans K^ 831
repetition cannot make it less P L ~... 1285
Repine — with his brows repine VA 490
Replenish— the blood his checks ....RL 1357
Replete — replete with too much rage Son 23 3
Incapable of more, replete with
you " 113 13
Replication— All replication prompt Z C 122
Replied— ere I was up,' replied the
maid R L 1277
Reply— Thus she replies VA 88ii
spend their mouths; Ek:ho replies " 695
and he replies with howling " 918
Thus he replies: 'The colour RL 477
Replies her husband, ' do not take ** ...» 1796
Report — mine is thy good report Son 36 14
have I slept in your report ** 83 5
thy name blesses an ill report " 95 8
mine is thy good report " 96 14
Repose— against repose and rest R L 757
thou gavest me to repose ** 933
The dear repose for limbs Son 27 2
and that repose to say " 50 3
Reposed— might have reposed still R L ..... 882
Reprehend — think t-o reprehend her K^ ~... 470
reprehends her mangling eye '* ~... 1065
Reproach— Reproach, disdain and
deadly enmity R L ~... 503
Thou back'st reproach against " 622
reproach to Tarquin's shame " ~... 816
And undeserved reproach " 824
Reproach is stamp'd " ..... 829
and death reproach's debtor " ~... 1155
receives reproach of being Son 121 2
By how much of me their reproach
contains L C 189
Reprobate — By reprobate desire R L ~... 800
Reproof— But as reproof and reason " 489
Reprove — that I cannot reprove V A «... 787
Reproving— but denial and .... R L 242
it merits not reproving Son 142 4
ReptttatloD — fair .... but a bawd R L ~... 623
that senseless reputation " ~... 820
Request — request to know your
heaviness " ~... 1283
At this request, with noble " 1695
Reqniem— the .... luck his right P T ~... 16
Require — services to do till you .... Son 57 4
Resemble — peasants did so well ,.,,RL ~... 1892
as your sweet self resemble Son 114 6
Resembli ig'— idle sounds resembling
parat- tes VA
Rescml f ing well his pale cheeks **
resemb ^ng dew of night R L
Resembling strong yotith Son
Resen>plJng sire and child
Reservr —Reserve them for my love
Resei ve their character
Rese^v^d — Reserved the stalk and
M
(I
U
((
ti
U
l(
gave him all my flower L C
Reaigi — W^here they resign VA
Resist anee—. . . . made him fret "
to 1 aistance did belong R L
Reais'ieth— now no more resisteth VA
Reso'Atioi- will is back'd with ....RL
My resolution, love, shall be thy
M * resolution, husband, do thou
:ake
Re* lived — She is resolved no longer VA
r ^solved my reason into tears L C
ReiolvlDg— to obtain his will .... R L
B ionnd — resounds like heaven's
« thunder VA
flow sighs resound P P
(eaonndlng — ill-resounding noise VA
Resort- fools to mock at him resort R L
graces that to thee resort Son
Reapeet— Full of respects VA
a true respect should have R L
Respect and reason wait **
true respect will prison false desire "
creatures have a true respect **
worthy of thy sweet respect Son
there is but one respect
Call'd to that audit by advised re-
spects
Pejpec<— others for the breath of
words respect
What merit do I in myself respect **
Respecting— nought at all ... . VA
nor mothers' groans respecting R L
Rest — beats, and takes no rest VA
to be barr'd of rest "
the gentle lark, weary of r^
in this hollow cradle take thy reai
to rest themselves betake R L
exclaims against repose and rest
Disturb his hours of rest
loves no stops nor rests
debarr'd the benefit of rest
that doth ray rest defeat
that seals up all in rest
in love with love's ill rest
Good night, good rest
that kept my rest away
each moving sense from idle rest
Pu<— protestation urged the rest
And all the rest forgot
a Joy above the rest
doubting of the rest
Rest— I rest thy secret friend
want to rest thy weary head
So should my shame still rest upon
record
To eternity doth rest
Restful — for restful death I cry
Restleas— with restless trances
liy restless discord loves
.... 1169
M... 386
7 6
8 11
32 7
85 8
147
~... 1039
69
..... 1265
..... 563
..... 352
u
i(
PT
Son
RL
M
18
1193
1200
579
296
129
268
84
919
96 4
..... 911
201
..... 275
1347
26 12
86 5
49 4
85
149
II
u
Son
tt
li
PP
u
u
u
RL
Son
It
u
RL
.1
18
9
911
..... 431
M... 647
M... 859
«... 1185
«... 125
M... 757
..... <fi4
1114
28 2
61
78
1
14
14
15
11
8
8
1
2
8
25 12
91 6
115 12
~... 526
..... 1621
..... 1643
58
66 1
iiaA
PUT
234
QUOTH
Pnt— with Bcorn she put away P P 19 IS
though she put thee back " 19 36
Pat*tt— that put*»t forth all to use Son 134 10
Patrifl«d— that which is so putrifted 72 Z ...» 1750
Pjrramld— Thy pyramids built up Son 123 2
Pyrrhaa— under Pyrrhus' proud foot
lies R L 1448
And raU on Pyrrhus " 1467
(^ake — ^tributary subject quakes VA 104.3
saw them quake aud tremble R L i:{9:)
In his fire doth quake with cold " ~... 1556
Qaaklng— Bids them li>ave quaking K^ 899
QoAllfled— lust by gazing qualified R L 424
Oaallf^ — eeem'd my flame to qualify Son 109 2
^nalltj — savour, hue, and qualities V A .... 747
his life or else his quality R L 875
her grief's true quality " ..... 1313
What is the quality " 1702
of dearths or season's quality Son 14 4
His qualities were beauteous L C 99
nature, worth, and quality ** 210
<^«eD— the love-sick queen began V A 175
Poor queen of love " ~... 251
leaders to their queen " ~... 503
' Fair queen,' quoth he " 523
All in vain ; good queen " .... 607
where their queen " .... 1193
was the other queen R L 66
The silver-shiuing queen " .... 786
on the finger of a throned queen Son 96 5
could look but beauty's queen P P \ 4
on her back, fair queen, and toward " 4 13
as this queen on him " 6 12
the queen of music, makes " 8 10
when the fair queen of love "91
She, silly queen "97
'Twixt the turtle and his queen P T .... 31
QoeDch — .... the maiden burning Kj4 .... 50
I'll quench them with my tears " .... 192
To quench the coal jR L .... 47
ocean quench their light " 12^11
with my tears quench Troy " .... 1468
Qaenched — This brand she .... Son 154 9
Qnenchleflt— are balls of ... . fire R L 1554
^nett— A quest of thoughts Son 46 10
and in quest to have " 129 10
<^ettloD— do I question make " 12 9
Nor dare I question " 57 9
hence a question takes L C 110
arguments and question deep " .... 121
and yet do question make " .... 321
Qoestloned— after supper long he
questioned R L .... 122
C)iilck— O, how quick is love VA .... 88
bright, and quick in turning " .... 140
Now quick desire " .... 547
In youth, quick bearing R L .... 1387
nor war's quick fire shall burn Son 55 7
variation or quick change " 76 2
Of his quick objects " 113 7
Qaieker —- these quicker elements
are gone " 45 5
(^Irkly— ducks as quickly in VA .... 87
quickly told and quickly gone " .... 520
other kills thee quickly " .... 990
quickly is convey'd " .... 1192
fire did quickly steep Sim 153 8
But quickly on this side L C .... 113
Qnlckly— Quickly him they will en-
tice PP
Quick -ahlftlBg^-Quick-ehining an-
tics RL
Qnlet^Into the quiet closure VA
shall it keep in quiet
mustering to the quiet cabinet
her quiet interrupted
for myself no quiet find
Qnietly— Lie quietly, and hear
Qaletna — her .... is to render thee
Qolll— To pluck the quUls
o'er the paper with her quill
How far a modern quill Son
their character with golden qaill "
RL ^
am
VA
RL
M
LC
VA
RL
Son
M
M
II
M
U
VA
u
M
U
u
u
u
M
II
Qolt— Nor youth all quit
Quite — heart were quite undone
quite beaten from her breast
and lusty leaves quite gone
book of honour rased quite
quite contrary I read
dear love, forget me quite
over-goes my blunt invention qnite "
All my merry Jigs are quite forgot P P
QaltUl— a quittal of such strife R L
QuIver^Kt— why quivcr'st thou at
this decree
Qaote — . . . . my loathsome trespaaa
Qaoth— • Ay me,* quoth Venus
*I know not love,' quoth he
canst thou talk?' quoth she
where am If quoth she
' Fair queen,' quoth he
*G<MKl-night,' quoth she
' The l)oar,' quoth she
* Thou hadst been gone,' quoth the
'No matter where,' quoth he
what of that ?* qubth the
' I am,' quoth he
*Iu night,' quoth she
* Nay, then,' quoth Adon
* No, no,' quoth she
* O Jove,' quoth she
' And yet,' quoth she
' Wonder of time,' quoth she
* Poor flower,' quoth she
Quoth he, 'She took me kindly
* So, so,' quoth he, ' these lets
quoth he, ' I must deflower
* Lucrece,' quoth he, * this night
Quoth she, ' Reward not
* Have done,' quoth ho
'Thou art,' quoth she, 'a sea
*No more,' quoth he; * by heaven
* For day,' quoth she
' In vain,' quoth she, ' I live
* You mocking birds,' quoth she
*To kill myself,' quoth she
* My girl,' quoth she
' O, peace !' quoth Lucrece
' Poor instrument^' quoth she
* It cannot be,' quoth she
' Fool, fool !' quoth she
' Few words,' quoth slie
groom of thine," quoth he
you fair lords,' quoth she
* O, speak,' quoth she
* ' No, no,' quoth she
' O,' quoth Lucretius, 'I did giT«
21 44
... 459
.... 782
1149
442
1170
27 14
.... 709
126 12
.... 1297
83 7
85 3
.... 13
.... 783
1563
5 7
25
62
72
103
18
u
u
u
II
(I
•I
R L •*..
II
II
u
u
M
U
tl
U
U
M
11
11
s
7
9
... 238
... 1030,
... 812
... 187
.... 427
... 493
... 523
... ^n
... 589
.... 613
... 715
... 717
... 718
... 720
... 769
>.. 997
... 1015
.... 1070
.... 1I3S
.... 1177
253
.... 330
••••• S\s
••••■ o7v
652
.... 667
.... 747
..... svv4
1121
.... 1156
1270
.... 1284
14G4
.... 1«>>4
.... jOuO
.... 1613
.... 1632
.... 1688
1700
M.. 1714
.... 1800
RIGHT
240
ROSE
Son S» U
" 117 6
P T ...^ 16
•• • • • *.FV
VA ...« 158
Bl^ht^TbRt for thy right
your own dear-purchased right
Lest the requiem lack his right
That the turtle saw his right
Righl— Can thy right hand
And right perfection wrong/tilly
disgraced Son 66 7
or changes right or wrong ** 112 8
in others seem right gracious '* 135 7
In things right true " 137 13
The better angel is a man right fair '* 144 3
Their riew right on LC ...~ 26
My better angel is a man right fair P P 2 3
RigM — cannot right her cause V A «... 220
should right poor ladies' harms " ...~ 1694
Rightful— No rightful plea might
plead R L ...» 1649
Rightly— They rightly do inherit Son 9\ 5
Bigol— ft watery rigol goes R L ..... 1745
Rtgonr— ruin'd with thy rigour VA 934
blunt rage and rigour roll'd R L ...» 1398
then use rigour in my gaol Son 133 12
Blnf— rings sadly in her car VA ..... 889
rings out the doleful knell jR L ...~ 1495
breaking rings a-twain L C ..... 6
a ring of posied gold and bone ** ...» 45
My wether's bell rings dolefUl
knell PP 18 28
Ringing — Once set on ringing R L 1494
By ringing in thy lady's ear P P 19 28
Riot— and too full of riot VA 1147
in their riot even there iSim 41 11
Ripe— That did my ripe thoughts " 86 3
Riper— But as the riper should ** 1 8
in growth of riper days " 102 8
Ripe-red — and ripe-red cherries VA 1103
Rise— Will never rise so he will
kiss her " ...» 480
for thou shalt not rise " ...» 710
fear did make her colour rise R L ~... 257
itself to death, rise up and fall ** ...» 466
Rise, resty Muse, ray love's sweet
face survey Son 100 9
dear love I rise and fall ^ 151 14
Ri»6—M.y heart doth charge the
watch ; the morning rise PP 15 2
Rising— Round rising hillocks F^ ...» 287
But rising at thy name Son 151 9
Rite— ceremony of love's rite " 23 6
Rlrer— Rain added to a river VA ...» 71
is stopp'd, or river stay'd " ...» 331
In two slow rivers R L 1738
a river running from a fount L C 283
By shallow rivers by whose falls P P 2Q 7
one by one she in a river threw L C ...» 38
Roaring- the violent roaring tide R L ...» 1667
Rob— To rob thee of a kiss VA ...» 723
to rob him of his fair " 1086
which sourly robs from in ■ Son 35 14
He robs thee of, and pays it thee " 79 8
Robb'd— robb'd of his elTect VA 1132
But robb'd and ransack'd R L 838
And when the judge is robb'd " 1652
Robb'd others' beds' revenues Son 142 8
Robbery— I do forgive thy robbery " 40 9
And to his robbery had annex 'd " 99 11
Robbing— Robbing no old to dress " 68 12
Robe — wardrobe which the robe
doth bide " 62 10
Roek— rock thee day and night VA »... 1186
}f uge rocks, high winds R L . 335
When rocks impr^nable Son 65 7
There will we sit upon the rocks P P 20 5
Roek'd-4ind then it faster rock'd R L »... 262
Roeky — rocky and wreck -threat-
ening heart ** »... 590
What rocky heart to water will
not wear L C »... 291
Roe— Or as the fleet-foot roe VA »... 561
Or at the roe " »... 676
Roll— Deep woes roll forward R L 1118
Roird— blunt rage and rigour roll'd " 1399
Rolllnfr— Rolling his greedy eyeballs " »... 868
less false in rolling Son 20 5
Roman— leares the Roman host R L »... 3
welcomed by the Roman dame " »... 51
The Roman lord marcheth " »... 301
shakes aloft his Roman blade " »... 505
Awake, thou Roman dame " 1628
He with the Romans " »... 1811
Courageous Roman, do not steep " »... 1828
To rouse our Roman gods ^ 1831
The Romans plausibly did giro " 1854
Rome— this faultful lord of Rome " »... 715
never be forgot in mighty Rome ^ 1644
thou wronged lord of Rome " »... 1818
Since Rome herself on them ** ..... 18.S3
country rights in Rome maintained " »... 1838
her bleeding body thorough Rome ** »... 1851
Rondnre— in this huge .... hems Son 21 8
Roof— that beauteous roof to ruinate " 10 7
Room — your praise shall still find
room " 55 10
Root— Would root these beauties as
he roots the mead VA »... 636
root out the work of masonry Son 55 6
Root pity in thy heart ^ 142 11
.fioot- wither at tho cedar's root R L »... 665
of another root are rotted " »... 823
take root with precious flowers " »... 870
Roae — than doves or roses are VA 10
prisoner in a red-rose chain " »... 110
What though the rose " 574
upon the blushing rose " 590
Gloss on the rose ** »... 936
war of lilies and of roses R L 71
First red as roses *• »... 258
white as lawn tho roses took away " 2^
And the red rose blush " »... 479
thorns the growing rose defends " 492
beauty's rose might never dio Son 1 2
Roses have thorns and silver foun-
tains mud " 35 2
The rose looks fair " 54 3
perfumed tincture of the roses ** 54 6
Sweet roses do not so " 54 11
Roses of shadow, since his rose " 67 8
a canker in the fragrant rose " 95 2
the deep vermiltion in the rose " 98 10
The roses fearfully on thorns *' 99 8
Save thou, my rose " 109 14
I have seen roses damask'd " i:i0 5
But no such roses see I " 130 6
with crystal gate the glowing roses L C 286
Sweet rose, fair flower PP 10 1
make thee a bed of roses " 20 9
.B(M«— And ere I rose was Tarquiu R L 1281
He rose and ran awav P P 4 14
RAZED
Based— It from tho book of honour
raxed quite Son
towers I se« down^razed
Till each to razed oblivion
Bead— Nor read the aubtle^hining
236
REEDY
M
25 11
M 8
122 7
SL ^
Son
secrecies
eyes do learn, do read, do look
read lectures of such shame
may read the mot afar
must be used, read it in me
in them I read such art
O, learn to read
Theirs for their style Til read
quite contrary I read
Kay, if you read this line
eyes not yet created shall o'er-read **
Beadily--tread the way out readily R L
BcadlBf^— reading what coutents it
101
616
.... 618
„... 1195
14 10
u
23
32
62
71
81
13
14
11
5
lU
bears
Beady— were ready for his pay
Bid thou be ready by and by
Beal— His real habitude gave life
Bcap— should that harvest reap
Bear — Anon, he rears upright
Bearward — Come in the rearward
BeaaoB— beating reason back
You have no reason
I perceive the reason
When reason is the bawd
past reason's weak removing
Respect and reason wait
Tho reason of this rash alarm
reproof aud reason beat it dead
spum'st at right, at law, at reason
LC
VA
RL
LC
Son
VA
Son
VA
tt
RL ^.
tt
it
tt
Son
tt
tt
tt
tt
u
tt
L C —.
tt
PP
PT
u
VA
RL
reasons find of settled gravity
To guard the lawful reasons
Against thy reasons making
my judgement knew no reason
Past reason hunted
Past reason hated
My reason, the physician
now reaiton is past care
flesh stays no farther reason
prompt and reason strong
Though Reason weep and cry
resolved my reason into tears
Let reason rule things
Reason in itself confounded
Love hath n>aM)n, reason none
Beave — reaves bb son of life
Bebel — command thy rebel will
The guilty reU'l for remission "
these rebel powers that thee array Son
Bebttked— ^ I return rebuked "
Beeaird— In rage sent out, recall'd
in rage R L
Beceipt— Desire muat vomit hia re-
ceipt
In things of great receipt
Beeeire — receives her soft hand's
print
Receives the scroll
my name receives a brand
receives reproach of being
tables that receive thee more
yet receives rain still
which did no form receive
all strange forms receives
Beeelf ed— I have .... from many
«... 1152
• ••■• 1«F
.... 89
..... 1292
~... 114
128 7
...- 279
90 6
..... 557
-... 612
~... 727
-... 792
243
275
473
489
880
8
12
4
3
6
7
5
9
8
122
168
296
3
41
47
766
625
714
2
13
49
49
89
115
129
129
147
147
151
19
146
119
u
VA
RL
Son
tt
ft
tt
LC
tt
tt
..... 1671
-... 708
136 7
1340
111 5
2
12
9
241
303
206
121
122
135
tt
u
B«cieiTMt— that which tbon .... not Son
Or else receivest with pleasure **
thou my love receivest
Beceiriiiir — Receiving nought by-
elements
Becite— world should task you to . . .
Becketh — What recketh he his
rider's angry stir VA
Beckon— At my abuses reckon ap
their own Son
Bcekon*d— one is reckon'd none **
Beckoaliif^Reckoning his fortune R L
But reckoning Time Son
Becompenae— and look for ... . **
Beeoneiled— pervert a . . . . maid L C
Beeord— So should my shame still
rest upon record R L
The living record of your memory Son
record could with a backward look "
thy record never can be mias'd "
thy records and what we see doth
lie
Beeountlng— recounting it to me **
Bcereaat— all — , poor, and meek R L
Bcereate— To recreate himself VA
Beeare— A smile .... the wounding **
Becnred— life's composition be ... . ^Im
8
8
8
4
40
5
44
IS
72
1
~... 283
121
136
115
28
10
8
19
5
11
829
M... 1643
55 8
59 5
122 8
123 11
45 12
— 710
..... 1095
M... 465
Bed— white and red than dovea
Making them red and pale
She red and hot as coaia
He red for shame
Being red, she loves him
drum and ensign red
not as fair, yet are they red
Red cheeks and fiery eyes
Uow white and rod
Like a red morn
till clapping makes it red
on my wax-red lips
be)>aiutcd all with red
mine eyes' red fire
mulberries and ripe-red cherries
VA
u
u
u
li
u
RL^
u
u
u
clear unmatched red and white
claims from beauty beauty's red
the red should fence the white
Argued by beauty's red
First red as roses
Ami the red rose blush
two red fires iu both their taoea
The rwl hloiKl reek'd
bears back all boll'n and red
reedy banks the red blood ran
Cheeks neither red nor pale
blushing red no guilty instance
sod in tears, look'd nxl and raw
still pure and red remaiu'd
untainted still doth red abide
A third, nor red nor white
more red than her lips' red
roses damask'd, red and white **
paled pearls and rubies red as blood L C
Bedeem— Return, forgetful Muse,
and straight redeem Son
Bed rem— that we may give redreta R L
broken glass no cement can redress P /*
Bedonbled— Passion on passion deep-
ly is redoubled VA
R«d-ro«e — in a red-rose chain "
Beedy— To 8imois' reedy bauki R L
tt
tt
It
«t
Son
tt
45 9
..... 10
21
..... 4K#
«... //
..... 107
.... 116
219
M... 84o
453
516
— 901
.... 1078
.... IIOS
11
69
~... 6S
M... 65
.... 258
— 479
..... 1858
.... 1877
— 1417
— 1437
— 1510
.... 1511
— 1592
— 1742
— 1749
99 10
130 2
180 5
.... 198
100 5
.... 1608
13 10
.... 882
.... 110
~.. 1437
REEK
237
RENEWED
Beck— Her fluse doth reek V . '
that Arom my mistress reeks Sn ^
Beek'd— The red blood rcek'd R 1
Bc«kl»ff— furnace of foul-reeking
smoke "
Beeleth— he reeleth from the daj Sim
Bi>flrirHi— ten times refigured thee ^
Beflned— form of well refined-pen '*
Befleet^-aud now no more reflect V A.
that she reflects so bright jR L
Befinln— I could from tears retrain P P
R^freah— no nibbing will refresh "
Belt— reft from her by death VA
Behir»— this refuge let me find R L
Beftase— the very refuse of thy deeds <!Am
BefhMed— Or he refused to take her
figured PP
But one must be refused
BeftMeat— of what thyself refuscst
Begard — I never shall regard
deep regard beseems the sage
creeping thief to some regard
Show'd deep regard
emerald, in whose fresh regard
Beglom — The region cloud hath
raask'd him San
Beg inter— Dim register and notary R L
what new to register iSon
Thy registers and thee "
O false blood, thou register of lies L C
Son
655
130 8
«... 1377
790
7 10
6 10
85 8
-... 1130
- .. 876
l 16
:h 8
„. 1174
..^ 1654
l»- 6
<i
Son
VA
RL
4
16
40
It
It
LC
10
9
8
„... t77
277
...- t)5
..... 1 O
• 1
83
108
123
ti
(I
21
38
71
81
VA
Son
LC
31
121
1
765
8
9
52
4
4
11
11
649
8
14
127
804
Bthearae— with his fair doth . . .
erery vulgar paper to rehearse
aa my poor name rehearse
your being shall rehearse
BtlgB— For when love reigns
And there reigns love
and in their badness reign
in the general bosom reign
lif^n— which in thy reign are made R L
beauty's wreck and grim care's
reign " ...~ 1451
enemies to cither's reign Son 28 5
Bflgi'd— though in my nature . ..." 109 9
And reign'd commanding
Beln — And rein his proud head
the lusty courser's rein
Breaketh his rein
master'd with a leathern rein
or rein his rash desire
Bejeeted— be of thyself rejected
BeJole«H-Joy bids her rejoice
Bcjolflnifr— more rejoicing to the
prime R L ...~ 332
Beleaalnsr— doth urge releaning V A ..... 256
thy worth gives thee releasing Son 87 3
Belenteth— at rain relentHh V A 200
Belentlnv — In such relenting dew Rh ...» 1829
K^illef— Within this limit is relief
enough VA 235
sorrow ionds but weak relief Sitn 34 11
Belter— seducing lust, thy rash ..,,RL 6.^J
Believed— never relieved by any V A 708
Belleveth— all the onrtb n-lieveth '* ..... 4A4
Bellfrion— put out Rellgirui's eye L C 250
BeiigloBS — iiath deur relii(iourtl«)ve .S^n 31 6
Religious love put out l!4>li^ii>n's // C ...~ 2"»0
Bellsh— HeliHh your iiiniMe notes R L 1126
BeBiaIii—<loth ulwavM fresh remain VA WU
What face reinain> alive •' 1070
LC 196
VA ...- 14
M... 31
" ..... 264
" 392
R L 706
VA ..... 159
Bemain— that yet remains upon her
breast RL ..:. 468
surviving husband shall remain " ..... 519
lawful policy remains ** ..... 029
despite of cure, remain " 732
remains a hopeless castaway " 744
their unseen sin remain untold " 753
in a rough-grown grove, remain " 1249
no semblance did remain " 1453
blots that do with me remain Son 36 3
him here who doth hence remain " 89 14
This with thee remains ** 74 14
aboT« that idle rank remain *' 122 8
with him in thoughts, or to re-
main L C 129
much less of shame in roe remain '* 188
and both in thee remain PP B 14
More in women than in men re-
main " 18 18
If what parts can so remain P T ..... 48
BemalB'd— still pure and red ... . RL 1742
which remained the foil L C ..... 158
BeMalietk— .... in one place VA 885
Bemalnln^— too long with her ..,. RL 1572
Beaiedy— The remedy indeed to do
me good " ~... 1028
for this sin there is no remedy Son 62 3
a bath and healthful remedy " 154 11
BeMeMber— read this lino, .... not " 71 5
an adjunct to remember thee " 122 13
Beaiember'd— O, be remember'd, no
outrageous R L ...» 607
remember'd not to be Son 8 IS
. For thy sweet love remember'd " 29 IS
of thee to be remember'd " 74 12
night of woe might have re-
member'd " 120 9
BeMembrance— no .... what it was " 5 12
I summon up remembrance '* SO 2
Remission — rebel for ... . prays R L ...~ 714
Bemorse — ' some favour, some .... VA ...» 257
have remorse in poor abuses R L ..a. 269
BemorMleia— In the .... wrinkles " 562
Bemote — From limits far remote Son 44 4
Hearts remote, yet not asunder P T ...^ 29
Bemove — never to remove VA ...» 81
I roust remove " »... 186
Remove your siege ** 423
fear of this thy will remove R L 614
may not remove nor bo removed Son 25 14
with the remover to remove " 116 4
and did thence remove L C 237
a way is placed without remove P P 18 12
Bemoved— not remove nor be ... . Son 25 14
But things removed that hidden " 81 8
earth removed from thee " 44 6
And yet this time removed " 97 5
Bemover— with the .... to remove " 116 4
BemovlDf — past reason's weak .... R L ...» 248
Bender — the wronger till he render
right " »... 943
But mutual render only me for
thee
her quietus is to render thee
when I myself must render
Bene w— but her passion's strength
renews
Sweet love, renew thy force
Benew*d— and wish I were rcnew'd
Son 125
12
" 126
12
L C ...»
221
Ji 2j ...»
1103
Son 56
1
" 111
8
RENEWEST
238
RESTLESS
Benewett — if now thou not .... Son 3 3
Benoim— farewell his groat .... P P 21 48
Bent— by paying too much rent Son 125 6
beds' revenues of their rents ** 142 8
in top of rage the lines she rents L C ..... 55
Renying— Heart's renying PP 18 7
Repair— Whose fresh repair if now Son 3 3
Which to repair should be " 10 8
lines of life that life repair " 16 9
To this urn let those repair P 7 65
Bepajr — your great deserts repay Son 117 2
Repeal- for exiled majesty's repeal R L 640
Bepeat^lle doth again repeat " .:... 1848
Bepel— must not repel a lover VA -... 673
Bepent— Though thou repent, yet I
have Son 34 10
too late, she will repent P P 19 15
Bepeutant— wrapp'd in ... . cold XL 48
repentant tears ensue the deed " 502
Bepetltion— re]R*tition of her moans K^ 831
repetition cannot make it less P L ~... 1285
Beplne — with his brows repine VA 490
Beplenlsh- thebloodhischeelcs....72 Z> 1357
Beplete — replete with too much rage Son 23 8
Incapable of more, replete with
you •• 113 13
BepllcatloD — All replication prompt Z« C 122
Beplled — ere I was up,' replied the
maid P L 1277
Beply— Thus she replies VA 38J
spend their mouttis; Ek:ho replies " 695
and he replies with howling *' ..... 918
Tims he replies: 'The colour PL 477
Replies her husband, 'do not take " 179.6
Beport — mine is thy good report Sun 36 14
have I slept in your report *' 83 5
thy name blesses an ill report " 95 8
mine is thy good report " 96 14
BepOM — against repose and rest P L 757
thou gavest me to repose ** 933
The dear repose for limbs Son 27 2
and that repose to say " 60 3
Bepoaed— might have reposed still P L 882
Beprehend — think to reprehend her K^ 470
reprehends her mangling eye " 1065
Beproach — Reproach, disdain and
deadly enmity P L ..... 603
Thou back'st reproach against " ..... 622
reproach to Tarquin's shame " ~... 816
And undeserved reproach ** 824
Reproach is stainp'd " ~... 829
and death reproach's debtor " ..... 1155
receives reproach of being Son 121 2
By how much of me their reproach
contains L C 189
Beprobate— By reprobate desire P L 300
Beproof— But as reproof and reason " 489
Beprore — that I cannot reprove VA 787
Beproring— but denial and .... R L 242
it merits not reproving Son 142 4
Bepntatlon— fair .... but a bawd P L ..... 623
that senseless reputation ** 820
Beqaest — request to know your
heaviness " ~... 1283
At this request, with noble " 1695
Beqalem— the luck his right P T 16
Beqol re— services to do till you .... Son 67 4
Beaenible — peasants did so well ...,RL ~... 1892
as your sweet self resemble Son 114 6
M
U
>... 1169
»••• 386
7 6
8 11
32 7
85 8
Beaembll ig — ^idle sounds reaembling
parafr ^ea VA
Rescml Ung well bis pale cheeka **
resemb ^og dew of night P L
Resem'^lng strong youth Son
Resen.pling aire and child
ReRerT« —Reserve them for my love
Reset re their character
Reserved — Reserved the stalk and
ga\e him all my flower L C -... 147
Realgi —Where they resign VA 1039
BeMlsi ADce — . . . . made him fret ^ 69
to 1 tistance did belong P L 12ri5
Beals'Vth— now nomore resisteth VA ^... 563
Beso' Atton— will is back'd with . . . . P X ~... 352
My resolution, love, shall be thy
Vpast " 1193
M * resolution, husband, do thou
:ake " 1200
Be- lived — She is resolved no longer VA 679
rhiolved my reason into tears L C ..... 296
B4>iolrIng— to obtain his will .... R L .... 129
B ionnd — resounds like heaven's
, thunder VA 268
flow sighs resound PP 18 84
{MonDding— ill-resounding noise VA .... 919
fieaort- fools to mock at him resort P L ~... 989
graces that to thee resort Son 96 4
Beapeetr-Full of respects VA .... 911
a true respect should have P L .... 201
Respect and reason wait ** ..... 276
true respect will prison false desire *' ..... 642
creatures have a true respect " ..... 1347
worthy of thy sweet respect Son 28 12
there is but one respect " 86 6
Call'd to that audit by advised re-
spects ** 49 4
Pejpec<— others for the breath of
words respect " 85 IS
What merit do I in myself respect ** 149 9
Respecting— nought at all ... . VA ..... 911
nor mothers' groans respecting P L .... 431
Beat — beats, and takes no rest VA^.., 647
to be barr'd of rest " -«. 784
the gentle lark, weary of rest ** .... 85S
in this hollow cradle take thy rest ** .... 1185
to rest themselves betake P L ..~ 125
exclaims against repose and rest ** .... 757
Disturb his hours of rest ** .». 974
loves no stops nor rests ** .». 1114
debarr'd the benefit of rest Son 28 2
that doth my rest defeat ** 61 11
that seals up all in rest " 78 8
in love with love's ill rest PP 1 8
Good night, good rest " 14 1
that kept my rest away ** 14 2
each moving sense from idle rest ** 15 S
P««e— protestation urged the rett P L .... 1844
And all the rest forgot Son 25 12
a Joy above the rest ** 91 6
doubting of the rest "115 12
ReU—1 rest thy secret friend P L . 526
want to rest thy weary head ** .... 1621
So should my shame still rest upon
record '* . 1643
To eternity doth rest P T .... 58
Bestftal— for restful death I cry Son 66 1
BestleM— with restless trances P L .... 974
My restless discord loves ** «... 1121
SCHOOL
244
SEE
••••• 6Io
617
~... 1018
18*^0
School— the glass, the . . . . , the book R L
Aod wilt thou be the school *'
in skill-coutendipg schools **
thy long-experienced wit to school '*
Rco|H»— Desiring this man's art and
that man's scope Son 29 7
whose worthiness gives scope " 52 13
The scope and tenour " 61 8
That having such a scope " 108 2
which wondrous scope affords ** 105 12
Scorch — which fond desire doth ..,.RL ~... 314
Score — thy dear love to score Son 122 10
Scorn — love he laugh'd to scorn VA 4
smiles at thee in scorn " ~... 252
I murder shameful scorn R L «... 1189
In scorn of nature " »... 1374
my merit in the eye of scorn Son 88 2
In scorn or friendship P P 14 8
That which with scorn she put away " 19 18
Scorn — scorns the heat he feels VA »... 311
The sun doth scorn you " 1084
Patience seera'd to scorn his woes R L 1505
That then I scorn to change Son 29 14
AH fears scorn I P P 18 20
Scorned— Be scorn'd like old men Son 17 10
Scornful— taught them .... tricks V A 601
The scornful mark of every open
eye R L ~... 520
ScorDftelly— glisters like fire VA 275
Then looking scornfully R L 187
ScomlDg — Scorning his churlish
drum VA 107
scorning it should pass " ~... 982
Scowl— He Bcowb and hates himself R L 738
Scowling — another sadly scowling VA 917
Scrap — disdained scraps to give R L 987
Scratch— briar his weary legs doth
scratch VA ~... 705
to scratch her wicked foe R L ~... 1035
scratch out the angry eyes " ..... 1469
Scratch'd— Shaking their .... ears VA 924
Scroll— Receives the scroll R L 1340
Send— he scuds far off VA 301
Scythe— 'gainst Time's can make &m 12 13
but for his scythe to mow " 60 12
his scythe and crook(>d knife " 100 14
despite thy scythe and th<»e " 123 14
Scythed— Time had not scythed L C 12
Sen— The sea hath bounds VA 389
a sea, a sovereign king R L 652
Thy sea within a puddle's womb " 657
the puddle in thy sea dispersed " 658
deep-drenched in a sea of care " 1100
with earth and sea's rich gems Son 21 6
can jump both sea and land " 44 7
nor earth, nor boundless sea " 65 1
The mountain or the sea " 113 11
The sea, all water " 135 9
Seal — Pure lips, sweet seals VA 511
To stamp the seal of Time R L 941
She carved thee for her seal Son 11 13
that seals up all in rest " 73 8
SeftPd- ner letter now is seal'd R L 1331
And seal'd false bonds Son 142 7
and seal'd to curious secrecy /r C 49
Sealing— St ill to be sealing V A ^... 512
Seal-mannnl— Set thy seal-manual " 516
Seaman— Wreck to the seaman " «... 454
Scnrch— search the bottom of annoy ^ L «... 1109
VA
RL
M
Son
u
u
14
19
104
H
827
166
879
4
5
6
75 2
«••• lo
796
«... 70
«... 289
41 9
106 14
1144
«... 250
903
68
78
59
7
8
126 11
Senr'd— through lattice of sear'd age LC ^.
Seaaon — now the happy senaon
Now serves the season
thou polnt'st the season
of dearths, or seasons' quality
Make glad and sorry seasons
In process of the seasons
Scnaoned — Or as aweet a ca a o n'd
showers are to the ground
aeaaon'd woe had pelleted with tears L C
Senaonlnf — Seasoning the earth
with showers R L
Seatr-interchange each other's seat **
And in the self-same seat "
thou mightst my seat forbear Sim
till now never kept seat in one "
Sented— <leep desert, seated from the
way R L
Second— What needs a^ . . . striking VA
A second fear through all "
To live a second life on second
head San
Death's second self **
The second burthen of a former
child "
/Steonci— Which is not mix'd with sec-
onds "
Secrecy — the subtle-shining secre-
cies R L . 101
the unseen secrecy of night ** «... 763
seal'd to curious secrecy L C «... 49
Secret— no secret bushes fear R L «... 88
I rest thy secret friend *' «... 626
Thy secret pleasure turns ** «... 890
smile at thee in secret thought " «... 1065
so ensconced his secret evil ** «... 1515
in secret influence comment Son 15 4
SKret—A. thousand honey secrets VA «... 16
To hear her secreU P P 19 54
Secnrel J— she .... gives good cheer R L 89
Seducing— Not to seducing lust " 639
See— Her help she sees VA «... 93
Thou canst not see " «... 139
He sees his love, and nothing else
he sees " «... 287
to see him woo her " «... 309
He sees her coming " ...« 837
Who sees his true love *' «... 397
to hear nor see " «... 437
I could not see " 440
Then shalt thou see " «... 703
desire sees best of all ** 720
thou hast no eyes to see " 939
taught all other eyes to see " 952
To see his face, the lion " 1093
If he did see his face ** 1109
weasels shriek to see him there R L «... 307
Who sees the lurking serpent ^ «... 362
What could he see " ...« 414
I see what crosses my attempt " ...« 491
That thou shalt see thy state " 644
|:Ire he can see his own abomination " «... 704
but that every eye can see " «... 750
And time to see one '* «... 986
to see his friends his foes '* «... 988
Lucrece shames herself to see " ...« 1084
with every thing she sees " ...« 1093
To see the salvo doth make " «... 1116
overseen that thou shalt see it *' .... 1206
RIGHT
240
ROSE
Son 88
14
" 117
6
M^ A •«••■
16
CI
84
1 A •••••
158
Blfht^That for thy right
jour own dear-purchased right
Lest the requiem lack his right
That the turtle saw his right
Right— CvLii thy right hand
And right perfection wrongfully
disgraced Son 86 7
or changes right or wrong '* 112 8
in others seem right gracious " 135 7
In things right true " 137 13
The hetter angel is a man right fair ** 144 3
Their view right on LC 26
My better angel Is a man right fair P P 2 3
JSf^Al— cannot right her cause VA 220
should right poor ladies' harms " ...» 1694
Rightfal— No rightful plea might
plead It L ..... 1649
Rtfhtly— They rightly do inherit Sm 9\ 5
Bigol— a watery rigol goes R L 1745
Rigour— ruin'd with thy rigour VA 954
blunt rage and rigour roU'd R L ..... 1398
then use rigour in my gaol Son 133 12
BlBg— rings sadly in her ear VA 889
rings out the doleful knell R L ...~ 1495
breaking rings a-twain L C 6
a ring of pojticd gold and bone " ...~ 45
My wether's bell rings dolefUl
knell PP 18 28
Ringing— Once set on ringing R L 1494
By ringing in thy lady's car PP 19 28
Blot— and too full of riot VA 1147
in their riot even there Son 41 11
Ripe— That did my ripe thoughts " 86 8
Riper— But as the riper should "18
in growth of riper days " 102 8
Bipe«red — and ripe-red cherries VA ...» 1103
Bite— Will never rise so he will
kiss her " ...» 480
for thou Shalt not me " ...» 710
fear did make her colour rise R L 257
itself to death, rise up and fall ** ...» 466
Rise, rcsty Muse, my love's sweet
face survey Son 100 9
dear love I rise and fall " 151 14
RUe — My heart doth charge the
watch ; the morning rise P P 15 2
Biting— Round riiiing hillocks VA ...» 237
But rising at thy name Son 151 9
Bite— ceremony of love's rite " 23 6
River— Rain added to a river VA ...» 71
is stopp'd, or river stay'd " 331
In two slow rivers R L 1738
a river running from a fount L C 283
By shallow rivers by whone falls P P 20 7
one by one she in a river threw L C 38
Roaring— the violent roaring tide R L 1667
Rob— To rob thee of a kifw VA ...» 723
to rob him of l»ls fair " ...» 1086
which sourly robs from in ' Son 35 14
He robs thee of, and pays it thee " 79 8
Robb*d— robb'd of liis elTeet VA 1132
But robb'd and ransack'd R L 838
And when the Judge is robb'd " 1652
Robb'd others' bt'd^' revenues Son 142 8
Robbery— I do forKive thy robbery " 40 9
And to bis r(>)>bery had anncx'd " 99 11
Robbing— Ri>bl>ing no old to dress " 68 12
Robe— wanl rohe which the robe
doth hide " 62 10
Rock— rock thee day and night VA .... 1186
Huge rocks, high winds R L . 3S5
When rocka impregnable Son 65 7
There wUl we tit upon the rockt PP 20 5
Roek'd-«nd then it faster rockM R L 262
Rock J — rocky and wreck -threat-
ening heart " «... 090
What rocky heart to water wOl
not wear L C «... 291
Roe— Or as the fleet-foot roe VA 5«l
Or at the roe " »... 67G
Roll— Deep woes roll forward R L »... 1118
Roird— blunt rage and rigour roll'd ** 138S
Rolling— Rolling his greedy eyeballs " »... 368
less faUe in rolling Son 20 5
RomtD- leaves the Roman host R L . 3
welcomed by the Roman dame ** »... 51
The Roman lord marcheth " . 801
shakes aloft hit Roman blade ** .... 505
Awake, thou Roman dame ** »... 1623
He with the Romans ** »... 1811
Courageous Roman, do not tteep " »... 1828
To rouse our Roman gods ** »... 1831
The Romans plausibly did give ** »... 1851
Rome— this faultful lord of Rome ** »... 713
never be forgot in mighty Rome •* »... 1(U4
thou wronged lord of Rome " »... 1818
Since Rome herself on them " »... 11613
country rights in Rome maintained " »... 1838
her bleeding body thorough Rome ** »... 1851
Rondure— in this huge .... hems San 21 8
Roof— that beauteous roof to ruinate '* 10 7
Room— your praise shall atill find
room *' 5S 10
Root— Would root these beauties at
he roots the mead VA »... 686
root out the work of masonry San 55 6
Root pity in thy heart "142 11
i^oof— wither at the cedar't root R L »... 665
of another root are rotted " .... 823
take root with precious flowers " »... 870
Rote — than doves or roses are VA »... 10
prisoner in a red-rose chain " »... 110
What though the rose " »... 574
upon the blushing rose " »... 590
Gloss on the rose ** »... 986
war of lilies and of rotet R L »... 71
First red as roses " »... 258
white as lawn the roses took away " «... 259
And the red rose blush " »... 479
thorns the growing rote defends " »... 4W
beauty's rose might never dio Son 1 2
Roses have thorns and silver foun-
tains mud " 35 2
The rose looks fair " 54 S
perfumed tincture of the rotet " 54 6
Sweet roses do not so " 54 11
Roses of shadow, since his rose *' 67 8
a canker In the fragrant rote " 95 2
the deep vermlllion in the rose ** 98 10
Tho roses fearfully on thorns " 99 8
Save thou, my rose *• 109 14
I have seen roses damatk'd "130 6
But no such roses see I " 130 6
with crystal gate the glowing rotes L C »... 286
Sweet rose, fair flower P P 10 1
make thee a bed of rosea " 20 9
P<M«— And ere I rose was Tarquln R L »... 12!Jl
He rose and ran away PP 4 14
SEEM'D
Bkb'I — Ink *oa]d ban tMn
BHB>rt— Thou an not vbat Ibon
Mva'd RL — «W
Thou KcmU Dol whil thou art '■ .... 601
SHBfth— Hrrov Hvmelh chief FA >70
lhmiphman.vL'al>lii«
bed liablliiln tUtulDg
llp.nc>1no«hJI
have bim wvn
Jiff tjr« »wn 1
Then had Ihr-f »rQ
glorious morning ha>f Iw
lu ibw black lltl« 1« iKD
M*ntt)rTlniP'./pU)iaud
ThDUHe'nihel*ni«ht
IhuuanVtthrKlowJnic
Sfrtblait— And tnw aic^
le Klmre P P 1
L or Deier
iionevU Ai; ...
Balf-Utne encmj' waa tin
Let mjF unaoundi-d tfil
thjr
■elf
■ 191
My-or(iil*.-lf LC„.. xa
Tlij.tihciHiiriia>m.lthcaame P T ...- IS
Nelf-appIM-ir I hud ••'ir-<t|>plinl L C .... 7«
tielf-dolns-Ynurwir lo ptrdaa at
^1 f-ai ample— hr ..m*TiItboa " HI M
Self-kllI'd-cre [t b.' K'lf-klllM " « 4
UcIMbtf-.... had nerrr drown'd
him BL .... »S
Self BilBr-lf-l-rina "ere Iniquitj »■ U II
Yrl fcr Ilig Mlf-iame |h>'i^.b " 1'." IWT
evi.Qiiy EbuK'Ifiaiuoikr A* is S
SelfHtlaafhler'll— vn]ii.T.... boij R L .... 1133
lielZ-KahnUBtlal— wUh ..rue) ism 1 8
HelMrHt— IClfavnWDoarlMniM ££ .... IIU
Seir-Htll— . hlnitrl doihllni " 707
8eif-wllrd— BoKDtJKir.wiii'd am t u
Sell-to tellmfU'ir VA .... »3
"j-y
rr life
(bit purpUH nul to srll &■ 21
N-IIhjjo'nanronlilnaell
Kelllac— In HlllnKliaun of dna
AfMbUNH — wliow liniple
WhenFllhllkeKinblaDiie
PP 8
» atone VA .... i
SADBEHOLDING
242
SAVE
u
4t
889
>..•• 561
••••• 7oO
.... 1212
8 1
47
M... BUT
8»d-b«holdlng— her sad-beholding
huaband saw R L
8addle-bon— to the saddle-bow VA
Sadly— rings sadlj in her ear "
another sadly scowling **
pity-pleading eyes are sadly fixed RL
thievish dog creeps sadly thence
when sadly she had laid
why hear'st thou music sadly Son
letters sadly penned in blood L C
Sadness— Therefore, in sadness, now
I will away VA
Sad-set— sadHbet eyes and wretched
arms B L ~... 1662
Sad-taned- to list the .... tale L C ~... 4
guf^t^With s.irest distance *' .... 151
Sage— this sorrow to the sage B L .... 222
deep regard beseems the sage " .... 277
Said— This said, impatience chokes VA ..... 217
sorrow may be said " .... 833
if she said 'No " 852
This said, she hasteth ** .... 865
This said, his guilty hand R L 858
This said, he shakes aloft " .... 605
This said, he sets his foot " .... 673
as grant what he hath said " 915
This said, from her be-tumbled
couch " .... 1037
She would have said " 1535
her sad task hath not said " 1699
could distinguish what he said *' .... 1785
This said, he struck his hand " 1842
And yet it may be said Son 42 2
renew thy force ; be it not said " 66 1
those that said I could not love "115 2
the sound that said *I hate " 145 2
This said, in top of rage Z> C... 55
to none was ever said " .... 180
This said, his watery eyes " 281
Have you not heard it said P P 19 41
Yet will she blush, here be it said ** 19 53
Sail— as the proudest sail doth bear Son 80 6
Was it the proud full sail " 86 1
That I have hoisted sail " 117 7
Saint— This earthly saint, adored R L 85
corrupt my saint to be a devil Son 144 7
corrupt my saint to be a devil P P 2 7
To sin and never for to saint " 19 44
Salnt-likc— Or blot with hell-bom
sin such saint-like forms
Salth— Salth that the world
He saith she is immodest
' Fondling,' she saith
'Give me my hand,' saith he
* Give me my heart,' saith she
shall I say mine eye saith truth
Sake — And for my sake
and thy children's sake
for his sake spare me
for thine own sake leave me
And for my sake
And for my sake
And for my sake
for my sake to approve her
And both for my sake
watchman ever for thy sake
O, for my sake do you
a friend came debtor for my sake
that languish'd for her sake
R L 1519
VA 12
••••• oo
" 229
" 873
" ..... 874
Son 114 3
VA .... 105
R L .... 533
" 682
" 583
" 1197
" .... 1681
Son A2 7
" 42 8
" 42 12
" 61 12
" 111 1
" 184 11
" 145 3
Sake — all tyrant, for thy sake Son
should do again for such a sake L C
For Aden's sake P P
Salt^my salt tears gone VA
To their salt sovereign R L
Salt-waved— Who in a ... . ocean "
Salvtatlon— Give salutation to mj
sportive blood
Salate — Venus salutes him
Salve— Earth's sovereign salve
To see the salve doth make
well of such a salve can speak
salve which wounded bosoms flta
Salving— salving thy amiss
Sane— in the self-same seat sita Col-
Am
VA
u
RL
San
u
u
149 4
.... S22
9 4
1071
650
— 1231
2t 6
.••• o5v
28
— 1116
%4 7
120 12
85 7
RL^
u
w
u
Son
u
M
PT
LC
VA
latine
and if the same
The same disgrace which they
for the self-same purpose seek
and back the same grief draw
tyrants to the very same
even by the selfwwme sky
For that same groan
whether revolution be the same
But those same tongues
still all one, ever the same
each day say o'er the very same
That the self was not the same
Sanetifled— Or sister sanctified
Sand — Dance on the sands
strong pirates, shelves, and sands R L
Sang- where late the sweet birds
sang Son
Sap — Green-dropping sap, which she
compares VA
To dry the old oak's sap R L
leaves will wither and his sap decay "
Sap check'd with frost Som
Vaunt in their youthful sap **
Sapphire— The hcaven-hued .... LC
Sappy — Sappy plants to bear V A
Sat— before him as he sat **
again desires her, being sat LC
Satiety— And yet not cloy thy lips
with loathed satiety VA
Satire— If any, be a satire to decay San
Satisfketlon- Nor gives it ... . LC
Satisfied— by the conquest satisfied jR L
Satlsfjr- all could not satisfy **
Satnm— That heavy Saturn laugh'd San
Sanee — ^To bitter sauces did I frame **
Sanclly- while others saucily R L
Sancy- My saucy bark inferior far San
Since saucy jacks so happy are **
Savage— Savage, extreme, rude, cruel **
Save — Save a proud rider V A
Save sometime too much wonder R L
Save thieves and cares
Save of their lord
Yet save that labour
save to the eye of mind
Save breed, to brave hlra An
Save that my soul's imaginary sight **
Save where thou art not
Save, where you are
Save that to die I leave my love
Save what is had
Save thou, my rose "
save in thy deeds *'
289
600
..» 751
— 1047
.... 1673
6 8
15 6
50 13
59
09
76
108
12
6
6
6
148
835
78
(«
M
U
14
t(
U
.<(
«(
.... 1176
950
.... 1168
6 7
15 7
215
165
.... 949
.... Go
100 11
— 162
422
98 4
118 6
•■••• lw40
80 7
128 18
129 4
. 300
..... 96
.... 126
..... ^Kmt
.... 1290
1426
12 14
27
48
57
66
75
9
10
13
14
12
109 14
181 IS
SAVE
243
SCHEDULE
SftTe— Save the nightingale alone P P 21 8
Save the eagle, featber'd king P T 11
Sared— And saved my life Son 145 14
8aT0«r— aayour, hue, and qualitiea VA ..... 747
foregoing simple savour Son 125 7
Saw— His eyes saw her ejes VA ...« 8.57
But when he saw his loye ** ..... 39H
that helpless berries saw '* 604
Ne'er saw the beauteous livery " ..... 1107
The more she saw the blood JS L 1357
be saw them quake and tremble " Ki93
her sad-beholding husband saw " ..... 1590
I never saw that you Son 83 1
Since first I saw you fresh "104 8
when I saw myself to win "119 4
I never saw a goddess go "180 11
when she saw my woeful state *' 145 4
might think sometime It saw L C ...» 10
Each eye that saw him " ..... 89
Saw how deceits were gilded " 172
he saw more wounds than one P P 9 13
the turtle saw his right P T ..... 34
Saw division grow together ** ..... 42
8aw—^ sentence or an old man's saw R L ...~ 244
his aighs, his sorrows make a saw " 1672
8aw*iit— thou not signs of fear V A 644
Sawa— What largeness thinks in
Paradise was sawn L C ..... 91
8ay*-what shall she say VA ..... 253
Aa who should say " 280
or his 'SUnd, I say " ..... 284
For lovers say the heart '* ..... 329
Say, that the sense ** ..... 439
Hay say, the plague " 510
Say, for non-payment " ..... 521
*Now let me say, "Good -night,"
and so say you " ..... 535
if you will say so '* ..... 5.%
and ere he says ' Adieu " »... 537
*Sweet boy,' she says " ..... 583
Say, shall we? shall we? wilt thou " 586
' Fie, fie,' he says " 611
more I dare not say " ..... 805
She says "TU so " 851
And would say after her " 8.12
And says, within her bosom " .....1173
As who should say Ji L ..... 320
foul sin may say " ..... 629
She says her subjects *' 722
that we can say is ours " ..... 873
but stoutly say ' So be it " 1209
What should I say " 1291
all the task it hath to say " ..... 1618
at once began to say *' ..... 1709
' He, he,' she says " 1717
The father says 'She's mine '* 1795
let no mourner say " 1797
To say, within thine own Son 2 7
let your son say so " 13 14
Or say with princes if it shall go
well " 14 7
age to come would say "17 7
wilt thou not haply say " 21 5
Let them say more that like " 21 13
forget to say " 23 5
How would, I say, mine eyes " 43 9
And says in him thy fair appear-
ance lies " 46 8
and that repose to say " 50 3
Say— the old world could say Son 59 9
O. if, I say, you look " 71 9
which he doth say ** 79 13
Who is it that says most? which
can say more *' 84 1
you praised, I say ' 'Tia so " 83 9
Say that thou didst forsake " 89 1
Some say, thy fault is youth " 96 1
Some say, thy grace U youth " 96 2
say o'er the very same " 108 6
O, never say that I " 109 1
Or whether shall I say *' 114 3
Might I not then say " 115 10
then might I not say so "115 13
Since my appeal says I did strive " 117 13
every tongue says beauty " 127 14
some say that thee behold " 131 5
To say they err "131 7
say this is not " 137 11
But wherefore says she " 138 9
And wherefore say not " 138 10
to say it is not so " 148 6
say I love thee not " 149 1
' Father,' she says, ' though In me Z> C 71
often men would say " 106
what he would say " .... 132
For further I could say " ..... 169
But wherefore says my love P P I 9
And wherefore say not I " 1 10
say thou lovest her well " 19 11
ban and brawl, and say thee nay " 19 20
taught her thus to say " 19 22
Haying — Saying, some shape in
Sinon's was abused B L 1529
saved my life, saying 'not you Son 145 14
Scale— as his hand did scale B L 440
am I come to scale " 481
weighs down the airy scale of
praise L C 226
Scalp— The scalps of many R L 1413
Scandal— the scandal will survive " 204
Thou plantest scandal " 887
For greatest scandal waits " 1006
Which vulgar scandal stamp'd Son 112 2
Scantr-if store of crowns be scant P P 21 87
Scanted— that I have scanted all Son 117 1
'Scape— night's 'sea pes duth open lay /* /> 747
Could 'scape the hail L C 310
'Scaped— Hmy heart hath 'scaped Son 90 5
*Scmpeth— battle ... .by the flight L C 244
Scar— The scar that will, despite R L 732
crest-wounding private scar " .... 828
The scars of battle 'scapeth L C 244
Scarce — And scarce hath eyes R L 8.57
duteous vassal scarce is gone " 1360
Scarce had the sun dried up P P B 1
And scarce the herd gone "62
Scarce I could from tears refrain " 21 16
Scarcely — And scarcely greet me Sun 49 6
Scarcity— would breed a scarcity VA 753
Scarlet— His scarlet lust came R L ..... 1650
profaned their scarlet ornaments Son 142 6
Scatter— They scatU'r and unloose URL 136
Scene — As chorus to their tragic ....PT 52
Seent-snafflng— hot hounds VA 692
Sceptre — with the sceptre straight
be stnicken duwn R L 217
Schedule— By this short schedule " 1312
Of folded schedules had she many L C 43
SHALL
249
SHARP
LC
«••••
280
PP
2
13
u
5
1
u
7
u
19
35
u
19
40
u
19
46
RL
•••••
78
<4
••■••
1016
Is"
•••••
1329
u
• ••»•
1814
PP
20
7
Shall— That shall prefer
The truth I shall not know
bow shall I swear to love
to know thee shall suffice
When time shall serve
the cock that treads them shall not
know
with age shall them attaint
Shallow— her husband's .... tongue R L
servants to shallow fools
make lesser noise than shallow fords "
throws that shallow habit by
By shallow rivers by whose falls
BhslIowMt— Your shallowest help
will hold me Son 80 9
BhaH-secrets shalt thou know V A ~... 16
thou nnask'd shalt have " ..... 102
thou shalt be my deer " ..... 231
and thou shalt have it " ..... 374
Then shalt thou see '* ..... 703
for thou shalt not rise " ..... 710
When thou shalt charge me R L 226
Shalt have thy trespass cited up ** ...> 024
That thou shalt see thy sUte " ..... 644
CoUatine, thou shalt not know " ..... 1058
But thou shalt know thy interest *' ..... 1067
Shalt oversee thhi will " 1205
that thou shalt see it " 1206
that thou shalt lend me " 1685
windows of thine age shalt see Son 8 11
inuelcss shalt hap to die "98
As fast as thou shalt wane "11 6
And shalt by fortune once more
re^urvey " 82 8
vhen thou shalt strangely pass " 49 5
and thou shalt find "77 10
When thou shalt be disposed " 88 1
■halt win much glory " 88 8
in this shalt And thy monument " 107 13
thou shalt not boast " 123 1
thou shalt find it merits not re-
proving " 142 4
So shalt thou feed on Death " 146 13
Ifongst our mourners shalt thou
go PT 20
Shame— He red for shame VA 36
Be burns with bashful shame " ..... 49
Pure shame and awed resistance " ..... 69
rrwixt crimson shame " «... 76
* For shame,' he cries " «... 379
Forgetting shame's pure blush " ..... 558
Cynthia for shame obscures " ..... 728
My face is full of shame " 808
bcAUty would blush for shame R L 54
When shame assail'd " ..... 63
O, shame to knighthood " ..... 197
ttis surviving shame " ..... 223
The shame and fault finds no ex-
cuse " 238
Covers the shame that follows " ..... 357
or else some shamo supposed " 377
What wrong, what shame " «... 499
The shame that from them " 535
put on his shape to do him shame " ..... 597
shame be seeded in thine age " 603
read lectures of such shame " ~... 618
dishonour, shame, misgoverning " 654
Thou loathed in their shame " ~... 662
Shame folded up " .... 675
44
<l
(I
t(
U
U
i(
((
tl
(4
U
U
14
U
Son
(4
44
44
44
44
4(
44
44
44
(4
Shame— what helpless shame I feel R L
Dim register and notary of shame "
reproach to Tarquin's shtuue
* O unseen shame ! invisible
pleasure turns to open shame
to rid me of this shame
So of shame's ashes
My shame so dead
My shame be his
live and think no shame of mo
women tenants to their shame
and shame that might ensue
he blush'd to see her shame
else lasting shame
my shame still rest upon record
Till manly shame bids him
Were an all-eating shame
such murderous shame commits
For shame ! deny that thou
Nor can thy shame give physic
guilt should do thee shame
To find out shame
dost thou make the shame
One blushing shame
To know my shames
slandcr'd with a bastard shame
expense of spirit in a waste of shame "
They sought their shame and so
their shame did find L C
And so much less of shame
'gainst rule, 'gainst sense, 'gainst
shame
S/uune— To shame the sun by day
and her VA
To shame his hope R L
Lucrece shames herself to see "
live no more to shame nor me nor
you Son 72 12
Shamed— shamed with the note R L ...~ 208
When life is shamed " ..... 1155
For I am shamed by that Son 72 13
Shameftil— Shameful it is RL 239
partner in this shameful doom " 672
bear such shameful blows " ..... 832
I murder shameful scorn " ..... 1189
Sharaeftilly— honour .... misplaced Son 66 6
Shaming— As shaming any eye R L 1148
Shape — In shape, in courage VA 294
Hast thou put on his shape R L ..... 597
Shape every bush " »... 973
And shapes her sorrow " 1458
some shape in Sinon's was abused " ..... 1529
Tarquin's shape came in her mind " 1536
her husband's shape in mind Son 9 8
Mine eyes have drawn thy shape " 24 10
in every blessed shape we know " 53 12
No shape so true " 62 6
Of bird, of flower, or shape " 113 6
it shapes them to your feature " 113 12
Shapeless— shapeless and unfinish'd FjI ..... 416
a hideous, shapeless devil R L ~... 978
Share— doth share a part Son 47 8
Ah, neither be my share PP 14 1
Sharing— Trojan mothers .... joy R L .... 1431
Sharp — empty eagle, sharp by fast VA 55
Under whose sharp fangs " ~... 663
sun and sharp air " .... 1085
with his sharp spear " .... 1112
Sharp hunger by the conquest RL .... 422
•«•••
756
OT**«
765
• ••••
816
• ••••
827
•••••
890
•••••
1031
•••••
1188
•••••
1190
•••••
1202
•••••
1204
•••••
1260
•••••
1263
•••••
1344
•••••
1629
•••••
1643
•••••
1777
2
8
9
14
10
1
34
9
36
10
61
?
95
1
99
9
112
6
127
4
129
1
•••••
187
•• •••
188
•••••
271
•••••
732
•••••
1003
•••••
1084
SHARP
250
SHE
Shmrp — under the gripe's .... claws R L
To keep th j sharp woes waking "
Wm fix a sharp knife **
in sorrow's sharp sustaining **
More sharp to me Son
by death's sharp sting P P
Sharpened— To-morrow sharpen'd in
his former might Ssm
Sharp*st— blunt the sharp'st intents "
Sharply— sharply he did think VA
Hhe — thus she began **
With this she seizeth "
6he red and hot "
Nimbly she fastens **
she begins to prove
Backward she push'd him, as she
would be thrust
80 soon was she along
Now doth she stroke
soon she stops his lips
she with her tears
blow them dry again she seeks
lie saith she is immodest
she murders with a kiss "
Even so she kiss'd his brow
And where she ends she doth anew
begin
She feedcth on the steam
Still she entreats
she tunes her tale
she loves him best
she cannot choose but love
Immortal hand she swears
what she did crave
she for this good turn
Her help she sees, but help she
cannot get
She bathes in water
' 0, pity,' 'gan she cry
She had not brought forth
she cannot right her cause
And now she weeps, and now she
fain would speak
she shakes her head
Now gazeth she on him
She would, he will not
She locks her lily fingers
* Fondling,' she saith
how doth she now
shall she turn? what shall she say
• Pity,' she cries, 'some favour
And forth she rushes
She answers him, as if she knew
his mind
She puts on outward strangeness
that she is so nigh
How she came stealing
Now was she just before him
down she kneels
she heaveth up his hat
she takes him by the hand
' Give me my heart,' saith she
Thus she replies
quoth she, ' hast thou a tongue
advisedly she niarketh
she flatly falleth down
believing she is dead
on the grass she lies as she were
slain
t(
It
u
«
<l
<4
tt
M
U
(I
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tt
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u
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11
If
It
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tl
It
•«•••
643
• ••••
1186
• ••••
1138
• ••••
1673
00
12
10
4
66
4
115
7
•••••
470
•••••
7
•••••
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•••••
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41
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•••••
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•■•••
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•«•••
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•••••
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■••••
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M«**
224
»• ■••
226
M««*
228
»«•••
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Mas*
249
»«•■•
253
MB**
257
■•■••
262
>••*•
808
• •**
810
«•*•
341
••**•
844
• ««•
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**••
350
• **«
351
«•••
861
«•••
374
• *••
385
• •■•
427
• •«•
457
• ■••
463
••••
467
If
M... 473
She — and she by her good will
faintly she upheaveth
' O, where am I ?* quoth she
' Good-night,' quoth she
she faint with dearth
giutton-like she feeds
she will draw his lips
she begins to forage
she takes all she can, not all she
listeth
O, had she then gave over
she had not suck'd
she can no more detain him
She is resolved no longer
by Cupid's bow she doth protest
' Sweet boy,' she says
* The boar!' quoth she
she trembles at his tale
yoking arms she throws
She sinketh down
she on her l>ack
Now is she in the very lists'
imaginary she doth prove
so she languisheth
which she in him finds missing
She seeks to kindle
She hath assay'd
She's Love, she loves, and yet she
is not loved
hadst been gone,* quoth she
what of that?* quoth she
* In night,' quoth she
Lest she should steal
Wherein she framed thee
hath she bribed the Destinies
after him she darts
in the dark she lay
now she beats her heart
' Ay me !' she cries
She, marking them, begins
who hath she to spend
She says * 'Tis so :' they answer
if she said ' No
This said, she hastcth
yet she hears no tidings
She hearkens for his hounds
Anon she hears them
she coastcth to the cry
And as she runs
She wildly breaketh
she hears the hounds
Whereat she starts
For now she knows
Thus stands she
She tells them 'tis
with that word she spied
she knows not whither
This way she runs, and now she
will no further
She treads the path that she un-
treads
She finds a liound
here she meets another
To whom she speaks
she at these sad signs draws up
thus chides she Death
She vail'd her eyelids
far oflf she hears
imagination she did follow
VA
L •••••
479
t»
•••••
482
tl
••■••
493
u
•••••
637
ft
■••••
54S
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948
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571
II
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II
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It
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579
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u
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tl
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tl
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738
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895
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975
SEEM'D
246
SENSUAL
geeoi'd — Ink would have teein'd
more black
the web it soem'd to wear
I'st — ^Thoa art not what thou
LC
54
95
secm'st
Thou seem'at not what thou art
Seenieth — sorrow seemeth chief
when she seemeth drown'd
S(>emeth this concordant one
Seemiiif— Seeming to bury
as seeming troubled
though seeming short
a show so seeming just
being many, seeming one
though more weak in seeming
l»est habit Is in seeming trust
borrowed motion seeming owed
R It ••••• 600
•* ...» 601
VA ~... 970
P T 46
VA 758
*♦ ...» 830
" 842
RL .... 1514
Son % \Z
" 102 1
" 138 11
LC 327
Seemly — Is but the seemly raiment Son 22 6
VA ...- 148
...•• SfoV
•' 4»'>
♦* 504
" 962
" ..... 1031
" 1194
R Lt ...M 64
•• ..... 265
M... Sou
.SIrm
33
1
14
63
13
«i
64
1
((
64
5
«t
64
9
(t
68
9
4(
96
7
It
97
3
Seen — and yet no footing seen
AM they had not seen them
in water seen by night
lips no more had seen
have him seen no more
Her eyes seen in the tears
Which seen, her eyes
immure herself and not be seen
lu Lucrece' face was seen
had Narcissus seen her
Then had they seen
glorious morning have I seen
in these black lines be seen
seen by Tinic's fell hand
I have seen the hungry ocean
seen such interchange
holy antique hours are seen
errors that in thee are seen
what dark days seen
In process of the seasons have I
seen " 104 6
Have I not seen dwellers " 125 5
I have seen roses damask 'd "130 5
advice is often seen L C 160
many that mine eyen have seen " 190
Distance and no space was seen P T ...~ 30
8ee*8t — What see'st thou in the
ground VA 118
Thou see*8t our mistr<»s' orna-
ments RL 822
Thou see'st the twilight Son 7S 5
thou see'st the glowing *• 73 9
Seethlni^ — And grew a seething bath " 153 7
Selae— Seize love upon thy left VA ...» 158
Sits Sin, to seize the souls R L 882
Selied— wolf hath his prey '• 677
he seized on my lips PP 11 9
Selxeth— With this she seizeth VA 25
Seizure — on his did act the seizure P P 11 10
Seld— goods lost are seld or never
found " 13 7
Seldom — do seldom dream on evil R L 87
st>ldom to themselves appear " 633
yet it seldom sleeps ** 1574
the fine [loint of seldom pleasure Son 52 4
Since, seldom coming, in the long
year set " 52 6
Self— Mine enemy was strong, my
poor self weak R L ...^ 1646
Let my unsounded self " 1819
to thy sweet self too cruel Son 1 8
Son
u
It
II
u
M
LC
PT
LC
VA
Son
RL
tt
Son
Self— thy sweet self dost deceive
Make thee another self
to mine own self bring
Self to self-lovlng were iniqaitj
Death's second self
as your sweet self resemble
as thy sweet self grow'at
And my next self
thy sweet self prore
My woeful self
That the self was not the same
Self-applied— if I had self^pplied
Self-doing— Yourself to pardon of
self-doing crime Son
Self-example— Hy .... mayst thou **
Self-kiU'd— ere it be self-kill'd **
Self-love— — had never drown'd
him R L
Of his self-love, to stop Son
Sin of self-love posscsseth all **
self-love quite contrary I read **
Self-loTing— and self-loving nuns
Self so self-loving were iniquity
Self-same — And In the .... seat
Yet for the self-same purpose
even by the self-same sky
Self-slanghter'd— on her .... body R L
Self-snbsUotial- with .... fuel Son
Self-trust— if there be no self-trust R L
Self-will-. . . . himself doth tire
Self-will'd-Be not self-will'd
Sell-^To sell myself
Or sells eternity to get a toy
Must sell her joy, her life
that purpose not to sell
set thy person forth to sell
Selling — in selling hours of droea
Semblanee — whose simple ....
When with like semblance
the semblance of a devil
no semblance did remain
In thy sweet semblance
And your sweet semblance
Sead— vapours doth he send
I send this written ambasaage
I send them back again **
Send 'st- that thou send'st from thee *'
Sense— that the sense of feeling VA
appals her senses *'
her senses all dismay 'd
Urging the worser sense
He in the worst sense
she in that sense forsook
I bring in sense
That my steel'd sense
that my adder's sense
My deepest sense, how hard
nor my five senses can
'gainst rule, 'gainst sense
doth ravish human sense
Doth cit« each moving sense
Senselem — cold and senseless stone VA
that senseless reputation R L
She tears the senseless Sinon "
Sen»elcss trees they cannot hear P P
Sensible— that were but sensible VA
My woe too sensible thy paaslon
maketh R L
Sensval— For to thy acnsual fkult
4
10
89
62
78
114
126
133
151
10
13
3
12
8
6
4
6
4
143
38
76
t«
Son
VA
RL
ti
Son
PP
Sun
VA
RL
M
U
U
Son
VA
Son
58 12
142 14
6 4
„.„ 266
3 8
62 1
62 11
62 12
...M 289
-... 1047
15 6
..... 1733
1 6
• • • •« X*v9
~... 707
18
513
214
885
14
12
11
..... i99
.... ins
..... 1246
~... 1453
M... 1759
13 4
...~ 274
26 8
45 14
61 6
. — 489
..... 882
6
21
19
146
•I
RL
Son
11
LC
PP
u
249
..... 824
.... 1538
35 9
112
112
120
141
8
15
8
10
10
9
271
6
8
.... 211
.... 820
— 1564
21 21
.... 496
.... 1678
85 »
SENSUAL
247
SHAKE
8eM«Al~To any sensaal feast Son 141 8
Sent— Id rage sent out Ji L 1671
what tributes wounded fancies sent L C 197
was sent me from a nun " 2.%
Sentenfe — Who fears a sentence Ji L »... 244
And midst the sentence " 566
Seatinel— himself affection's ... . VA ^... 650
and sentinel the night R L 942
Separable— in our lives a . . . . spite Sun 36 6
Separation— That by this separation " 89 7
SepiUellre — His snout digs sepul-
chres V A «... 622
The right of sepulchres Son 68 6
And their sepulchres in mud L C 46
Sepulchred— be .... in thy shade B L 805
Seqaevt— In .... toil all forwards Son 60 4
Serpe«t— where never serpent hisses r^l 17
Who sees the lurking serpent R L 362
Serrant— Why hath thy servant Op-
portunity " ~... 932
servants to shallow fools " ..... 1016
bid your servant once adieu Son 57 8
live thou upon thy servant's loss " 146 9
Serve— Now serves the season R L ..... 166
leisure serve with dull debaters " ~... 1019
serve thou false Tarquin so " 1197
To serve their eyes L C 135
Serve always with assured trust PP 19 31
When time shall serve " 19 &5
Served — Hath served a dumb arrest R L 1780
Servlee— Nor services to do Son 57 4
thy service to despise " 149 10
Servil»— Yet was he servile VA 112
Subject and servile " 1161
heartens up his servile powers R L 295
Servilely— Servilely mastcr'd with VA 392
Servlaif— Serving with loolcs Son 7 4
one foolish heart from serving ** 141 10
Servitor — as servitors to the unjust R L 285
Session — When to the sessions Son 30 1
From this session interdict P T 9
Set— And being set, I'll smother VA 18
it will set the heart on fire " 388
Set thy seal-manual " 516
he hath a battle set " 619
his breath and beauty set " 933
set dissension *twixt the son " 1160
name of 'chaste' unhappily set R L 8
Toset forth that which " 32
sets every joint a-shaking " 452
sets his foot upon the light " 673
May set at noon " 784
the sun being set " 1226
set in her mUtrcss' sky " 12.'M)
What wit sets down " «... 1299
Once set on ringing " 1494
So Lacrece, set a-work " 1496
against my heart he set his sword " 1640
With sad-set eyes and wretched
arms " 1662
set thy long-experienced wit " 1820
Sets you most rich in youth Son 15 10
In the long year set " 52 6
On Helen's cheek all art of beauty
set " 53 7
the flourish set on youth " 60 9
to your fair no painting set " 83 2
disposed to set me light " 88 1
I can set down a story " 88 6
Set— To set a form Son 89 6
Sets down her babe " 143 8
Upon whose weeping margent she
was set LC 89
in the imagination set " 186
And set thy person forth P P 19 12
Set*st— Thou set'st the wolf R L 878
Settled— Ne'er settled equally VA 1189
reasons find of settled gravity Son 49 8
Several — each several limb V A 1067
but with several graces R L ..... 1419
think that a several plot <SE>n 137 9
from many a several fair L C ~... 206
each several stone " 216
Severe— but is still severe VA «... 1000
merciful and too severe *' 1155
Sex— Their gentle sex to weep R L 1237
and sexes both enchanted L C 128
Shade — smotber'd up in shade VA 1035
below with his wings' shade R L 507
be sepulchred in thy shade " 805
thou wander'st in his shade Sfm 18 11
thy shade shines so " 43 8
thy fair imperfect shade " 43 11
every one, one shade " 53 3
Under a myrtle shade P P 6 2
gone to the hedge for shade "11 2
Sitting in a pleasant shade " 21 8
Shaded — alack, too timely shaded " 10 3
Shadow— died to kiss his shadow VA 162
the shadow had forsook ** 176
I'll make a shadow ** 191
shadow to his melting buttock lent " 315
Each shadow makes hira stop " »... 706
Then, gentle shadow " „... 1001
When ho beheld his shadow ** 1099
in the heart that shadows dread-
eth R L 270
Such shadows are the weak *' 460
shadows his lewd eyes affright " «... 971
At his own shadow " 997
On this sad shadow " ..... 1457
Presents thy shadow Son 27 10
Whilst that this shadow "* 37 10
whoso shadow shadows doth make " 43 5
How would thy shadow's form " 43 6
strange shadows on you tend " 53 2
can every shadow lend " 53 4
shadow of your beauty show ** 53 10
While shadows like to thee " 61 4
Roses of shadow " 67 8
As with your shadow " 98 14
• Wander,' a word for shadows P P 14 11
Shadow— <\o\x^ that shadow heav-
en's light VA -... 5.33
Shadowed— His nose being .... R L . 1416
Shady— And in thy shady cell ** 881
dial's shady stealth mayst know Son 77 7
Shair— fetlocks shag and long VA ..... 295
Shake — Sometimes she shakes her
head " ..... 223
Shakes thee on my breast " 648
make him shake and shudder " ..... 880
earth's foundation shakes " 1047
* my frail Joints shake RL 227
that his hand shakes withal ** 467
shakes aloft his Roman blade " 505
Rough winds do shake Son 18 8
shake hands to torture me ** 28 6
SHEPHERD
253
SHOULD
Sli^herd — Sorrow to shepherds VA ...^ 455
to Phrygian shepheids lent R L 1502
sweet shepherd, hie thee P P \2 11
My shepherd's pipe cad sound ** 18 27
see the shepherds feed their flocks " 20 6
truth in every shepherd's tongue " 20 18
8kifld—Uis batter'd shield VA 104
•Dd cmli'd it then their shield R L 61
Shielded— I mine honour shielded L C ~... 151
Shift— Danger deriseth shifts VA...^ 690
And as one shifts R L 1104
treason, forgery, and shift " 920
Shifts but his place £lim 9 10
Shifting— With shifting change " 20 4
Quick-shifting antics, ugly R L 459
injurious, shifting Time " ~... 930
Shiiie— The sun that shines from
heaven shines but warm VA 193
shine when he doth fret " 621
too hot the eye of heaven shines Son 18 5
one early mom did shine " 33 9
thy shade shines so " 43 8
But you shall shine " 55 S
my love rony still shine bright " 65 14
no fair acceptance shine " 135 8
that on this earth doth shine P P 3 10
shine, sun, to succour flowers *' 15 16
So between them love did shine P T 33
iSKne—borrow'd all their shine VA 488
obscures her silver shine ** »... 728
Shinliif— shining star doth borrow " 861
read the subtle-shining secrecies R L 101
and to shining arms " 197
The silver-shining queen " 786
burnt the shining glory " 1523
With shining falchion " .... 1626
A shining gloss thflt vadeth PP 13 2
8hiTer*d— And all the beauty R L ...~ 1763
Shock— forces, shocks, and fears L C 273
Shone— Shone like the moon VA 492
Shook — shook three summers' pride Son 104 4
Shook oflf my sober guards L C 298
Skooi— to over-shoot his troubles VA 680
before thy shoot be ended R L 679
Join and shoot their foam " 1442
But shoot not at me Son 117 12
Shooteth—Shooteth from the sky VA 815
Shop— Which in my bosom's shop Son 24 7
Shore — as one on shore VA 817
to drown in ken of shore R L 1114
To break upon the galled shore " 1440
Which parts the shore Son 56 10
make towards the pebbled shore " 60 1
on the kingdom of the shore " 64 6
Shorn — right of sepulchres were
shorn away " 68 6
Short— Ten kisses short as one VA 22
an hour but short *' ..... 33
High crest, short ears ** 297
His short thick neck " 627
though seeming short *' 842
makes short their pilgrimage R L ..... 791
and how swift and short " 991
By this short scheduU} " 1312
Short time seems long " 1573
sick and short assays " 1720
hath all too short a date Son 18 4
quill doth come too short " 83 7
more short than waste or ruining " 125 4
146
12
f
5
15 18
Shert— having so short a lease Son
age's breath is short P P
£%0f<— Short, night, to-night, and
length thyself to-morrow "
Short-Jointed- Round-hoof 'd VA
8hort-nDmber*d— leases of short-
number'd hours Son 124 10
Shot— And little stars shot RL .... 1625
Shonld— should not be wasted VA 130
As who should say *♦ .... 280
the living should exceed " .... 292
what a horse should have " .... 299
Thy palfrey, as he should " .... 885
Yet should I be in love " 438
Should by his stealing in disturb " 450
that the debt should double " 621
I thy death should fear " .... 660
What should I do " «... 667
Lest she should steal " 726
harmony should run ** .... 781
at him should have fled '* .... 947
who should best become ** .... 96^
as scorning it should pass ** .... 982
where no breach should be " .... 1066
should dry his tears ** ..... 1092
the day should yet be light " 11*4
should most mistrust " 1154
he should keep unknown R L .... 34
meaner men should vaunt " .... 41
should underprop her fame " .... 53
the red should fence the whito " .... 63
it should be kill'd « .... 74
respect should have " 201
As who should say ** .... 820
should countenance his sin '* 343
should govern every thing " .... 602
The lesser thing should not " .... 663
should stain so pure a bed " 684
Her tears should drop *' 68S
should not peep again " .... 788
So should I have " .... 789
'Why should the worm Intrude " «... 848
wretched blood should spill ** .... 999
should thee behold " .... 1143
• if it should be told « .... 1284
What should I say « .... 1291
Lest he should hold " .... 1315
' Why should the private pleasure " ....1478
why should so many fall '* .... 1483
peijury should thrust " 1517
should bear a wicked mind " .... 1.540
I should not live " 1642
So should my shame " 1643
should right poor ladies' harms " 1694
that should survive " .... 176iJ
should his use control " .... 1781
Who should weep most " 1792
that should have slain her foe *' 1827
should by time decease Son 1 3
that face should form another "32
to repair should be thy chief desire " 10 8
the times should cease " 11 7
you should prepare " 13 3
So should that l)eauty " 13 6
your sweet form should bear "13 8
So should the lines of life " 16 9
So should my papers " 17 9
You should live twice " 17 14
death my days should expiate " 22 4
SHALL
249
SHARP
(i
«
44
44
Sludl— That shall prefer L C
The truth I ahall not know P P
bow shall I swear to love
to know thee shall suffice
When time shall serve
the cock that treads them shall not
know
with age shall them attaint **
Shallow— her husband's .... tongue R L
servants to shallow fools "
make lesser noise than shallow fords "
throws that shallow habit by **
Bjr shallow rivers by whose falls P P
BhallowMtr-Your shallowest help
.... 280
2 13
6 1
6 7
19 35
19
19
will hold me
Shalt— secrets shalt thou know
thou nnask'd shalt have
thou shalt be mjr deer
and thou shalt have it
Then shalt thou see
for thou shalt not rise
When thou shalt charge me
Shalt have thy trespass cited up
That thou shalt see thy state
Collatine, thou shalt not know
But thou shalt know thy interest
Shalt oversee this will
that thou shalt see it
that thou shalt lend me
windows of thine age shalt see
issueless shalt hap to die
As fast as thou shalt wane
And shalt by fortune once more
re^urvey
when thou shalt strangely pass
and thou shalt find
When thou shalt be disposed
shalt win much glory
in this shalt And thy monument
thou shalt not boast
thou shalt find it merits not re-
proving
So shalt thou feed on Death
'Mongst our mourners shalt thou
go
Sluoie — He red fur shame
Be burns with bashful shame
Pure shame and awed resistance
Twixt crimson shame
' For shame,' he cries
Forgetting shame's pure blush
Cynthia for shame obscures
Hy face is full of shame
beauty would blush for shame
When shame assail'd
O, shame to knighthood
this surviving shame
The shame and fault finds no ex-
cuse
Covers the shame that follows
or else some shame suppa^ied
What wrong, what shame
The shame that from them
put on his shape to do him shame
shame be seeded in thine age
read lectures of such shame
dishonour, shame, misgoverning
Thou loathed in their shame
Shame folded up
Son
VA -
44
44
44
44
• «
44
RL -
44
(4
44
U
44
44
44
Son
44
40
46
1016
..... 1329
..... 1814
20 7
80 9
~... 16
102
..... 231
«... 874
..... 703
~... 710
226
.... 024
.... 644
«... 1058
M... 1067
.... 1205
.... 1206
1685
8 11
9 3
11 6
44
44
44
41
44
44
44
82
49
77
88
88
107
123
8
5
10
1
8
13
1
142 4
146 13
PT
VA
4t
41
4(
44
44
44
R Zj —.
44
14
41
44
44
II
44
41
20
86
49
69
76
379
658
728
808
54
63
197
223
238
357
877
499
5.35
697
603
618
654
662
675
Shame— what helpless shame I feel R L
Dim register and notary of shame
reproach to Tarqnin's shame
'O unseen shame 1 invisible
pleasure turns to open shame
to rid me of this shame
So of shame's ashes
My shame so dead
My shame be his
live and think no shame of mo
women tenants to their shame
and shame that might ensue
he blush'd to see her shame
else lasting shame
my shame still rest upon record
Till manly shame bids him
Were an all-eating shame
such murderous shame commits
For shame ! deny that thou
Nor can thy shame give physic
guilt should do thee shame
To find out shame
dost thou make the shame
One blushing shame
To know my shames
slander'd with a bastard shame
expense of spirit in a waste of shame "
They sought their shame and so
their shame did find L C
And so much less of shame
'gainst rule, 'gainst sense, 'gainst
shame
Shame— To shame the sun by day
and her VA
To shame his hope R L
Lucrece shames herself to see
live no more to shame nor me nor
41
44
44
44
14
44
41
U
41
44
41
(4
44
44
44
Son
44
U
44
44
— 756
— 765
.... 816
.... sKCi
.... ovO
— 1031
.... 1188
.... 1190
.... 1202
.... 1204
.... 1260
.... 1263
••••• 1629
.... 1643
.... 1777
2
9
10
34
8
14
1
9
36 10
44
44
41
<4
61
95
99
112
127
129
44
44
44
you
Son
RL
Son
RL
41
44
44
II
44
11
Shamed — shamed with the note
When life is shamed
For I am shamed by that
Shamefhl— Shameful it is
partner in this shameful doom
bear such shameful blows
I murder shameful scorn
Shamefhlly— honour .... misplaced Son
Shaming— As shaming any eye R L
Shape— In shape, in courage VA
Hast thou put on his shape R L
Shape every bush
And shapes her sorrow
some shape in Sinon's was abused
Tarquin's shape came In her mind "
her husband's shape in mind Son
Mine eyes have drawn thy shape "
in every blessed shape we know
No shape so true
Of bird, of flower, or shape
it shapes them to your feature
Shapeless— shapeless and unfinish'd VA
RL
Son
PP
RL
VA
44
44
U
RL
?
1
9
6
4
1
187
188
•••«• mix
.... 732
.... 1003
.... lOcM
72 12
.... ^uo
.... 1155
72 13
239
.... 672
.... oo2
.... 1189
66 6
.... 1148
294
.... 697
.... wio
.... 1458
.... 1629
1536
9 8
41
41
11
24
53
62
113
113
a hideous, shapeless devil
Share— doth share a part
Ah, neither be my share
Sharing^Trojan mothers .... joy
Sharp— empty eagle, sharp by fast
Under whose sharp fangs
sun and sharp air
with his sharp spear
Sharp hunger by the conquest
10
12
6
6
12
416
978
8
1
47
14
1431
65
.... DO«
.... 1066
.... 1112
.... 422
SHUN
255
SIGN
ttra— To shun thU blot R L
We sicken to shun sickness Sun
To shun ttie hearen "
ber noble so it in oonrt did shun L C
8kmBn*d — who ever shunn'd by
precedent **
gkst— That shuts him from the
iMAven B L
81^— By this, the loYe-sick queen
began
Tbst love-sick Lore by pleading
For my sick heart
by brain-sick rude desire
To one sore sick
nuwboiesome breaths make sick
Gire physic to the sick *
lick and short assays
And my sick Muse
I was not sick of any fear
And sick of welfare
him that so fell sick of you
As testy sick men
I, dck withal, the help of bath
desired
That the lover, sick to death
flkken — We sicken to shun sickness Son
Uckle— Within his bending sickle's
compass oome
Time's fickle glass, his sickle, hour
flMily— The uncertain sickly appe-
tite
their sickly radiance do smend
SlrkBMS — marrow-eating sickness
We sicken to shun sickness
Stek-tliODghted — Venus
Side— and by Venus' side
His brawny sides
br her side lay kill'd
Collstine again by Lucrece* side
Swelling on either side
for standing by her side
her body iu on every side
plack'd the knife from Lucrece'
side
thsn spurring to his side
Upon thy side against myself
On both sides thus
my better sngel from my side
fsU by thy side
Laid by his side
sits he by her side
on this side the verdict went
my better angel from my side
Slfirr — Bemove your siege
This siege that bath engirt
Against t&e wreckful siege
Sifli— Then with her windy sighs
sighs can never grave it
Sorrow that friendly sighs sought
8ighs dry her cheeks
My sighs are blown swsy
eloquence with sighs is mixed
My sighs, like whirlwinds
my tears, my sigh% my groans
When sighs and groans and tears
Three times with sighs
. Even so his sighs
Here with a sigh
Her contrite ughs
118
129
1322
4
14
234
155
838
VA ...~
•175
M
328
M
584
A Jj •••••
175
702
U
• ••••
779
(1
901
■ ••••
1720
Som 79
4
" 86
12
" 118
7
" 118
14
" 140
7
" 15S
11
PP 17
7
iSon 118
4
" 116
10
r " 126
2
" 147
4
L C ...-
214
VA ....
741
Sim 118
4
VA ....
5
180
625
1165
S Ij ...~
881
<4
389
425
M
1739
M
1807
&m 50
12
" 88
3
" 138
8
** 144
6
" 151
12
" IW
2
X^ !> •••-•
6.5
11.3
PP 2
6
VA .—
42:*
// L ....
221
Sim G5
6
v ^1 « • • ■•
51
M
376
9';4
44
9G6
• ••*•
1071
R li .....
563
«t
5W
M
5KiS
U
1319
u
1604
M
1672
M
1716
M
1727
Sim
LC
PP
M
RL
41
M
Son
SIffh — with sighs himself doth
smother
Hallow'd with sighs
their sighs to you extend
My sighs so deep
How sighs resound **
Sigh^VW sigh celestial breath VA
For now 'tis stale to sigh R L
I sigh the lack of many a thing Son
For these dead birds sigh a prayer P T
Si|rh*d — sigh'd, tore, and gave the
flood LC
For why she sigh'd P P
Si^hlBf— And sighing it again VA
Sight— our sport is not in sight **
o'erwhelming his fair sight ^
with hb proud sight agrees "
O, what a sight it was
that did feed her sight
That her sight dazzling
He fed them with his sight
the truest sight beguile
like a vapour from her sight
moralize his wanton sight
a cloud, bereaves our sight
Lucrece to their sight
The sight which makes supposed
terror
daunts them with more dreadful
sights
To see sad sights moves more
beguiled attention, charm'd the
sight
to his new-appearing sight
rich in youth before my sight **
my soul's imaginary sight **
expense of many a vanlsh'd sight *'
stand against thy sight "
the conquest of thy sight **
thy picture's sight would bar **
thy picture in my sight **
like to thee do nuxrk ray sight **
or vanlsh'd out of sight **
all full with feasting on your sight **
the rudest or gentlest sight **
transport me farthest from your
sight **
dressings of a former sight **
but in my sight **
no correspondence with true sight **
give the li<' to my true sight **
The mind and ffi^bt diMnictedly L C
Weak siichts th«'ir sickly radiance **
Whr>9e si};hts till then "■
*rjti» f heir wUh«?*l sight P P
Flaming In the phtjcnix' sight P T
ftlgbte4 — Thick - sighted, barren,
lean VA
Slyhtliss P<x»r gr<joms are sights
lesM night
thy shadow to my sightl<iM view
on sijrbtleM *'y^•^ doth stay
Slini — Haw'ftt tlioii not signs
signs and prf«diifi(fi»
at these sa<i signs
such signs of rage thej bear
8u<;h signs of truth
lif'fore \\t*-%*f t/aittsnl signs
These are certain signs to know
47 4
— 228
«... 276
18 81
18 84
— 1862
30 S
••••a Of
... 44
15 12
... 930
.... 124
.... 183
.... S43
.... 822
.... 1064
.... 1104
1144
...M llQO
.... 104
••.*• S73
••••• oo4
.... 455
•••••
462
•«•••
1324
•«•••
1404
7
15
10
27
30
38
46
46
47
13
61
63
75
113
117
8
123
4
1.19
5
148
2
IVi
3
««•«•
28
214
•«••«
282
15
10
«« ■••
35
.... 136
RL
....
1013
Him
27
10
u
43
12
VA
.....
644
u
....
926
u
....
929
RL
.. ...
1419
»t
....
1532
S/jn
68
t
PP
21
81
SILENCE
256
SING
Kllrnce— This silence for my sin Son 83 9
of my silence cannot boast *' 86 11
Excuse not silence so " 101 10
Silent^This silent war of lilies Ji L .... 71
In silent wonder " ~... 84
what silent love hath writ 5m 23 13
the sessions of sweet silent thought " 30 1
Silk— With sleided silk L C ...~ 48
Silken— Laundering the .... figures " ..... 17
their silken parcels hurls *' 87
Siily— The silly boy, believing VA 467
a weak and silly mind *' ..... 1016
fright the silly lamb " 1098
The silly lambs R L ~... 167
When, silly groom ! God wot " 1345
She, silly queen, with more PP 9 7
Unto the silly damsel " 16 8
One silly cross " 18 13
Silly-JeeriDg— As .... idiots R L 1812
Silly-mild— raging-mad and ... . VA ~... 1151
Silveiv-like two silver doves ** ...~ 366
obscure her silver shine " ~... 728
from whose silver breast " ...~ 855
breaks the silver rain " ...~ 959
yokes the silver doves *' .....1190
Their silver checks R L ~... 61
that hides the silver moon *' ..... 371
with showers of silver brine " ...~ 796
The stain upon his silver down ** 1012
his beard all silver-white " 1405
and silver fountains mud Son 85 2
Siiver'd- all silver'd o'er with white " 12 4
Sllrer-meltiBfy— morning's . . . .dew R L 24
SilTer-ahinlDir— The .... queen " 786
Silver- white — stain that o'er with
silver-white " 56
Simile— Take all these similes L C ..... 227
Simoiii— To Siniois' reedy banks R L 1437
shoot their foam at Simois' banks " ..... 1442
Simple — In a tomb so simple VA ...» 244
Under who<«e simple semblance " ..... 795
simple truth mlKcall'd simplicity Son 66 11
4>regoing simple savour " 125 7
thus is simple truth supprest '* 1.38 8
Who, young and simple L C 320
And was my own fee-simple " ..... 144
Simple were so well compounded P T 44
Simple — The |)oisonous simple some-
time is compacted R L «.... 530
Simplicity— simple truth miscall'd
simplicity &m 66 11
Grace in all simplicity P T 54
Simply— Simply I credit <$^ 138 7
Sin— Ilidint; base sin R L ~... 93
and hold it fur no sin " 209
should countenance his sin " ...„ 843
The blackest sin is clear'd " 3o4
Authority for sin " «... 620
by thy fault foul sin may say " 629
deeper sin than bottomless conceit " 701
To have their unseen sin " -... 753
Whoever plots the sin " 879
Sits Sin to seize the souls " 882
but Sin ne'er gives a fee " 913
To all sins past " 923
sin's pack-horse, virtue's snare " ~... 928
My sable ground of sin " «... 1074
Let sin, alone committed '^ 1480
To plague a private sin *' «... 1484
Sin— Or blot with bell-born sin R L
Excusing thy sins more than thy
sins are Son
Sin of self-love possesseth all mine
eye
for this sin there is no remedy
That sin by him advantage should **
This silence for ray sin
dost thou thy sins incloM
'tis the lesser sin
Love is my sin
Hate of my sin
SiH—He learn'd to sin
she that makes me sin
To sin and never for to saint
Since— since eyes in eyes
since I have hemm'd thee here
since I am such a park
Since sweating Lust on earth
usurp'd
Since her best work is ruln'd
Since thou art dead
Since he himself is reft
Since thou art guilty
guilty of my death since of my
crime
Since that my case is past
Since thou eouldst not defend
Since men prove beasts
And ever since, as pitying
Since Rome herself in them
Since sweets and beauties do them-
selves forsake
But since she prick'd thee oat
But since he died
Since why to love I can allege
Since from thee going
Since, seldom coming
Since every one hath
Since mind at first
Since brass, nor stone, nor earth
since his rose is true
Since what he owes thee
But since your worth
Since that my life
Since first I saw you fresh
Since all alike my songs
Since, spite of him, I'll live
Since I loft you
Since my appeal says
For since each hand
Since saucy jacks so happy are
since mourning doth thee grace
but since I am near slain
Since I their altar
Since that our faults in love
Since — Of things long since, or
love's long-einco-cancell'd woe
In days long since
SIn-eoncealIng— Vast .... chaos
Sinew— all her sinews spread
Sinewy— Whose sinewy neck
Sinftal— Were it not sinful then
grounded on sinful loving
the centre of my sinful earth
Sing — the high wind sings
and sings extcmpornlly
That some would sing
birds more cause to sing
— 1519
86
M
62
1
U
62
3
d "
67
8
u
83
9
M
95
4
U
114
13
<(
142
I
U
142
2
RL
■•••a
630
Son 141
14
PP
19
44
VA
•»•••
120
It
•••••
229
<c
•••••
239
(1
•••••
794
M
••••«
954
II
•••••
1135
It
••••«
1174
RL
^«*«
772
M
••••■
931
M
1022
U
1034
il
•••••
1148
«l
••«*•
1747
u
••••«
1833
Son
12
11
II
20
13
u
82
13
1*
49
14
II
51
13
II
52
6
u
53
8
II
59
8
II
65
1
II
67
8
u
79
14
14
80
5
U
92
10
II
104
8
II
105
8
II
107
11
u
113
1
II
117
13
II
127
5
II
128
13
II
132
11
II
139
13
LC
•«•••
224
PP
1
14
VA
••••■
1078
Son
30
7
II
67
14
RL
•••••
767
VA
90:{
It
•••••
99
Son 103
9
It
142
2
II
146
1
VA
•••••
305
It
• •••«
836
II
•■■••
1102
RL
•••«•
333
SING
257
SLANDERER
Sif— where the sweet birds sing R L 871
one pleasing note do sing Son 8 12
Sings this to thee " 8 14
siDgs hymns at heaven's gate " 29 12
with manners may I sing '* 89 1
taught the dumb on high to sing " 78 5
Or, if they sing " 97 13
Sing to the ear '* 100 7
hi summer's front doth sing " 102 7
ikiil enough your worth to sing " 106 12
To sing heaven's praise P P 6 14
While PhUumela sits and sings " 15 6
Sveet birds sing not ** 18 38
Melodious birds sing madrigals " 20 8
Beasts did leap and birds did sing *' 21 5
Ail thy fellow birds do sing " 21 25
ini|r*st~ Philomel that sing'st of
ravishment R L ~... 1128
thou sing'st not in the night ** 1142
SliglBg— to singing he beUkes PP 8 12
Sliglf^IMe single, and thine Image
diea with thee Son Z 14
'Thou single wilt prove none " 8 14
eoDSumest thyself in single life " 9 2
lose name of single one " 39 (>
Single natare's double name P T ~... 39
Slagled— till they have singled VA 693
8lifrlnHW — ^In singleness the parts Son 8 8
nagilar — that which is so singular R L 32
8iak— Not gross to sink V A ^... 160
Sinks down to death Son 45 8
Siaketh— 8ho sinkcth down V A ...~ 598
SlaklMg— Then who fears sinking
where such treasure lies R L 280
Slaoa— peijured Sinon, whose en-
chanting story " ~... 1521
•orne shape in Slnon's was abused ** ..... 1529
subtle Sinon here Is painted ** 1541
borrow'd tears that Sinon sheds *' 1M9
For Sinon in his fire " .....1556
&lse Slnon's tears doth flatter " ~... 1560
She tears the senseless Sinon '* ..... 1564
Sire— Or butcher-<iire that reaves VA .... 766
divension 'twixt the son and sire " ..... tlGO
s more sweet-smelling sire *' ..... 1178
kiird my son or sire R L ..... 232
The sire, the son, the dame " ..... 1477
Resembling sire and child Son 8 11
SIrea— have I drunk of Siren tears ''119 1
Sister— Or sister sanctified L C ^... 233
the sister and the brother P P % 2
Sistertag^from a sistering vale L C ~... 2
Sit— Here come and sit V A ^... 17
chafing, down Adonis sits ** ..... 325
doves that sit a-billing "* ..... 366
up in shade doth sit ** ..... 1035
her heavenly image sits R L -... 288
Id the self-same seat sits Coliatine " .... 2^
alone must sit and pine ** .... 795
like still-pining Tanulus he sits " .... 85H
Sits Sin to seize the souls ** .... 8^2
where she sits weeping " .... 1087
in that busom siu Sun 9 \.\
In thy parts do crowned sit *• .TT 7
than in my verse can sit ** 103 13
sits he by her side /, C .... 65
Philomela sits and singi, I sit and
"tt»rk PP 15 5
There will we sit " 20
5
Sith— Sith In thy pride so fair a hope VA 7«2
SIth in hU prime death doth " .... 1163
8lttlll|^-Sweet Cytherea, sitting by
a brook PP A 1
with young Adonis sitting by her " It 1
Sitting in a pleasant shade " 21 3
SltaatloB— And situation with those
dancing chips Sm 128 10
Slae— In clamours of all size L C .... 21
Skllfhi— Of skilful painting R L .... 1867
Skill— far exceeds hU barren skill " .... 81
drowns for want of skill " .... 1099
on Tereus descant'st better skill " .... 1134
by force, by fraud, or skill ** .... 1243
laboured with his skill ** .... 1506
for his wondrous skill " .... 1528
drawn by your own sweet skill Son 16 14
must you see his skill " 24 5
folly doctor-like controlling skill " 66 10
some in their i^kill ** 91 i
both skill and argument " 100 8
They had not skill enough ** 106 12
to this purpose, that her skill ** 126 7
strength and warrantlste of skill " 150 7
the dialect and different skill L C .... 125
8klll<«ontendInff— in schools R L .... 1018
Skiird— well-skill'd workman " ..... 1520
Shift— her alabaster skin ** .... 419
on that termless skin L C .... 94
Skip— away he skips PP 11 11
Sky— draw me through the sky VA 153
when they blot the sky " .... 184
as lightning from the sky ** .... 348
sun glorifies the sky " .... 485
chase were in the skies " .... 696
shooteth from the sky " .... 815
through the empty skies ** .... 1191
in that sky of his delight R L .... 11
a falcon towering in the skies " .... 506
to the skies and ground *' .... 1199
suns set in her mlstreAA* sky " .... 1230
which purl'd up to the sky " . 1407
that the skies were sorry " .... 1524
like rainbows in the sky " 1587
even by the self-same sky Son 15 6
Slaek— be thou not slack P P 19 3.>
Slaek*d— Slack'd, not suppress'd R L .... 425
Slaekly— Though slackly braided L C .... 35
Slain— if himself were slain VA 243
she lies as she were slain " .... 473
so fair a hope is slain " 762
with him is bfrauty slain " .... 1019
thus was Adonis slain " ....1111
by Tarquin's falchion to be slain R L 1046
slain in merry company ** 11 10
that should have slain her foe *' 18'/7
when mine is slain Sun 22 13
but since I am near slain " 139 13
Number there in love was slain P T 2M
Slaketb— no flor>d by raining .... R h 1677
Slander— author of thy slander VA irXM
a badgeof fame to slander's livery R L .... 1054
wa»h the slander of mine ill *' .... 12'l7
For slander's mark was ever yet Sun 70 2
slander doth but apprr#ve " 70 5
And thence this slander ** 131 14
Klander*d— And b^iity iilander'd *" 127 4
Slanderer- Mafl hlan'lerers by mad
ears belie v^jd be ** 140 12
17
SHEPHERD
253
SHOULD
Shepherd — Sorrow to shepherds VA ..... 455
to Phrygian shepherds lent R L ..... 1502
O sweet shepherd, hie thee P P 12 11
Hy shepherd's pipe can sound " 18 27
see the shepherds feed their flocks " 20 6
tmth in every shepherd's tongue " 20 18
Shield— His batter'd shield VA .... 104
and caird it then their shield R L ..... 61
Shielded— I mine honour shielded L C ~... 151
Shifl-Danger deviseth shifts VA 690
And as one shins R L 1104
treason, forgery, and shift " 920
Shifts but his place Son 9 10
ShlfUar-With shifting change " 20 4
Quick-shifting antics, ugly R L 459
injurious, shifting Time ** .... 930
Shine — The sun that shines from
heaven shines but warm VA .... 193
shine when he doth fret '* .... 621
too hot the eye of heaven shines Son 18 5
one early morn did shine " 33 9
thy shade shines so " 43 8
But you shall shine " 55 8
my love rosy still shine bright " 65 14
no fair acceptance shine "135 8
that on this earth doth shine PP S 10
shine, sun, to succour flowers ** 15 16
So between them love did shine P T 33
iSUne— borrow'd all their shine VA 488
obacures her silver shine " 728
Shining— shining star doth borrow " ..... 861
read the subtle-shining secrecies R L 101
and to shining arms " 197
The silver-shining queen " 786
burnt the shining glory " .... 1523
With shining falchion " .... 1626
A shining (;1(Mn that vadeth PP 13 2
Shlver*d— And all the l>eauty R L 1763
Shork— forces, shocks, and fears L C 273
Shone— Shone like the moon VA 492
Shook — shook three summers' pride Son 104 4
Shook off my sober guanls L C 298
Shooi— to over-shoot his troubles VA 680
before thy shoot be ended R L 679
Join and shoot their foam " .... 1442
But shoot not at me Son 117 12
Shooteth—Shooteth from the sky VA 815
Shop— Which in my bosom's shop Son 24 7
Shore— as one on shore VA 817
to drown in ken of shore R L 1114
To break upon the galled shore *' 1440
Which part» the shore Son 56 10
make towards the pebblod shore " 60 1
on the kingdom of the shore *' 64 6
Shorn — right of sepulchres were
shorn away " 68 6
Short— Ten kisses short as one VA 22
an hour but short ** 33
High crest, short ears •' 297
Hia short thick n(H:k " 627
though seeming short *' 842
makes short their pilgrimage R L .... 791
and how swift and short " 991
By this short schedule " 1312
Short time seems long " 1573
sick and short assays " 1720
hath all too short a date Son 18 4
quill doth come too »hort " 83 7
more short than waste or ruining " 125 4
146
f
12
5
15
18
•••••
295
Short— having so short a lease Scm
age's breath is short P P
iS%or^-Short, night, to-night, and
length thyself to-morrow "
Short-Jointed— Round-hoof 'd, .... VA
Short-nvmber*d— leases of short-
number'd hours Son 124 10
Shot^And little stars shot R L .... 1525
Shovld— should not be wasted VA .... 130
As who should say " .... 280
the living should exceed " 292
what a horse should have " .... 299
Thy palfrey, as he should " 885
Yet should I be in love " .... 438
Should by his stealing in disturb ** .... 450
that the debt should double " 621
I thy death should fear ** .... 660
What should I do " .... 667
Lest she should steal ^ ..... 726
harmony should run ** .... 781
at him should have fled *' .... 947
who should best become ** .... 96&
as scorning it should pass ** . 982
where no breach should be " .... 1066
should dry his tears ** ..„ 1092
the day should yet be light " ....1134
should most mistrust " .... 1154
he should keep unknown R L 34
meaner men should vaunt '* .... 41
should underprop her fame " .... 53
the red should fence the whito " .... 63
it should be kill'd •< ..... 74
respect should have ** .... 201
As who should say ** ..... 320
should countenance his sin '* 343
should govern every thing " .... 602
The lesser thing should not *' .... 66.t
should stain so pure a bed " .... 684
Her tears should drop ** ..... 68<)
should not peep again " .... 788
So should I have " .... 789
'Why should the worm Intrude *' .... 848
wretched blood should spill ** .... 999
should thee behold " .... 1143
* if it should be told ** .... 1284
What shoukl I say " .... 1291
Lest he should hold " .... 131.5
' Why should the private pleasure " .... 1478
why should so many fall '* .... 1483
perjury should thrust " 1517
should bear a wicked mind ** .... 1540
I should not live " .... 1642
So should my shame " 1<M3
should right poor ladies' harms ** .... 1691
that should survive " .... ]76.»
should his use control " 1781
Who should weep most '* .... 1792
that should have slain her foe " .... 1827
should by time decease Son 1 3
that face should form another ** 3 2
to repair should be thy chief desire " 10 8
the times should cease " 11 7
you should prepare " 13 8
So should that lieauty ** 13 5
your sweet form should bear " 13 8
So should the lines of life " 16 9
So should my papersi " 17 9
You should live twice " 17 14
death my days should expiate '* 22 4
SHOULD
254
SHUN
Mould — gailt should do thee shAme 3m
diitanoe should not stop mj way
why should I haste me
Then should I spur
Thy edge should blunter be
what should I do but tend
I should In thought control
image should keep open
slumbers should be broken
with infection should he live
advantage should achieve
Why should false painting
Why should poor beauty
Why should he live
then should make you woe
world should look into your moan
the world should task you
that you should love
And so should you
Which should example
should do it wrong
love should ever dwell
Thy looks should nothing
should afterwards bum clear
I should your great deserts repay
Which should transport
For why should others' false
beauty should look so
should that harvest reap
Why should my heart
For, if I should despair, I should
grow mad
foul faults should And
What I should do again L C
he should not pass those grounds P P
before the fall should be
should use like loving charms
Shoulder — Over one shoulder
Hhonldat^thou shouldst think it
why shouldst thou feed
shouldst contemn me
thou shouldst strike at it
if thou shouldst depart
the parts that thou shouldst bear
thou shouldst in bounty cherish
Thou shouldst print more
kingdoms of hearts shouldst owe
shouldst not abhor my state
the deer that thou shouldst strike P /*
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Show— Shows thee unripe
Shows his hot courage
it shows most toward
his barren skill to show
shows like a virtuous deed
demeanour seeks to show
The light will show
To show the beldam daughters
to show the painter's strife
Show me the strumpet
some watery token shows
Shows me a bare-boned death
To show her bleeding body
shows not half your parts
not to show my wit
in wanting words to show it
To show mo worthy
Till then not show my head
in whom all ill well shows
when dreams do show thee me
VA
u
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72
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84
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89
11
93
10
93
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115
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117
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117
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•••••
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• ••••
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807
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953
»• • • •
1377
• •••• .
1471
■«•••
1748
*• •••
1761
•••••
1851
17
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26
4
26
6
26
12
26
14
40
13
43
14
Show— shadow of yoar beauty show Sm
Show me your image
shows me myself indeed
to show what wealth she had
To show false Art
Thy glass will show thee
thy glass will truly show
being extant well might show
the thing they most do show
long hence as he shows now
such a scope to show her pride
Your own glass shows you
Nor my beloved as an idol show
outward form would show it dead
Show — No cloudy show
their leader's Jocund show
and give the harmless show
He entertain'd a show
in shows of discontent
wound his folly's show
Leese but their show
presenteth nought but shows
shadow's form form happy show
their virtue only is their show
thy odour matcheth not thy show
suspect of ill mask'd not thy show
virtue answer not thy show
leas the show appear
Small show of man
s wound at tragic shows
Dissembled with an outward show P P
Showed — Show'd like two silver
doves VA ~^
Show'd like an April daisy B L ....
Show'd deep regard ** ...»
Show'd life imprison'd
full of cares, yet show'd content
Yet show'd his visage L C .....
Stm
5S
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19 88
866
ti
44
PP
ii
She show'd him favours
She showed hers
Shower — With such distilling
showers VA .»..
with showers of silver brine M L ....
Or as swcet-season'd showers Son 75
nor drowns with showers " 124
Show*st— grown, and therein show'st ** 126
Showing-Showing their birth " 76
Showing life's triumph S L .....
Showing fair nature L C ...~
Shown— farther than the eye hath
shown Som 69
my deeds must not be shown ** 121
For her griefs so lively shown P P 21
Shrewd— Thy eyes' shrewd tutor VA ...>.
Shriek— night's herald, shrieks "* .....
shriek to see him there M'L ....
Shrieking— As often shrieking L C ....
But thou shrieking harbinger P T ....
Shrill-tongned- Like .... tapsters VA ....
Shrine — inccn»e to so pure a shrine R L ....
Shrink— Shrinks backward in his
shelly cave VA .... 1
Shrub— stoops not to the base
shrub's foot ML ....
But low shrubs wither " ....
Shrunk — th ose shrunk pipes had fed " ....
Shudder- makehirashakcand .... VA ....
Shan — prevent this storm and shun
thy wrack B L ...
1400
1456
1503
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66
796
2
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So •hilllliw slurs
■Snlct IhTlliDUKhu
Bd— H« irllh tlH Bomuit WH ■■-
^».,ir.j>j>ll) lUload
B L — lUl
Bo thou througb vlndawi
5d gmt ft sum
60 Ihou. Ihyicir
Bo BID 1 now
Boshv, d«|>-d»iich«l
Bo mnchnditnild
Bo wllh hlniBeir
iu]'l>u'l;«')di>1iiinnun'il
T»lU,t.„,l.,Ll«,rh..r
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jlreWiKi much inlet
thHlburnj!io1r>iiK
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whr ihould « n..nj fall
SomlWIiliJi IMii.'Nn;
"
ii"i,'!w'*. sl'Miiiiit j'l.i
" .....
Inio H> bright ( d«y
Bo hlr * torn, lodged not * m
Qd
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B...Dt«.T-Md.V.*t»I7,.ndMIdlld- ..._
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80 did 1 Turqiilu ; 10 nij Troj dM
peri^
SoPrKiD'itrort
ictof1ii«,.iid»dklkUI
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WHO leu K Mr ■ houar
Si>>huuldl1ivlli>»
So shuiilil my |ulp«V«
Ba long u men
tk^Wng llvui Ihli
ihiiugh not 10 bright
BmniDTtMMli
bh nij ion NUI
■ onmhaaiiUlIai
AM » DT pt-teat buk
dligiKe me holT M III
llmiuiiUyBpcDl
KuIt«upre'cDI'ist
BolMlboutuo
Bo thou, being rich Id 'Will
>— So win I pr*]'
■■III to Mutif g«r
WhT » 1*rg« eon, hiTlng ao ihori
That If w Tci'd
That la ao proud
' M 11
' 148 I
■ M 8
' iw 10
' 1» 10
S II
« II
Tbenlghlaopich'd
. ipnktXL ins«
aBL — 1502
t(ofl-rr-.ni
ilir.
mjr a.-.h t
•ol'
her wFt b
aDlt:ll«h<
Jo my «.f
laMtaol
riio
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win
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Soft plljr ciilen ■! II lr«D gtte
Lending loR audivDca
SOFT
262
SON
Soft—Touches so soft still conquer PP 4 8
But soft ! enough " 19 49
Soften— soften it with their con-
tinual motion Ji L ...~ 591
Softer— Softer than wax PP 1 4
Softly— on a flint he softly smiteth R L ...~ 176
And softly cried "Awake " ...~ 1628
Soft-slow- With soft-«low tongue ** ...~ 1220
Soil— And the firm soil win Son M 7
The soil is this, that thou dost " 69 14
Solace — Sorrow changed to solace,
and solace mix'd with sorrow PP 15 11
Sold— sold cheap what is most dear Son 110 3
Soldier— Like soldiers, when their
captain VA . — 893
Sole— alter not love's sole effect Son 36 7
On the sole Arabian tree PT 2
Solemn- This solemn sympathy VA 1057
And solemn night with slow-sad
gait BL 1081
feasts so solemn and so rare Son 52 5
Solicited—. . . . the eternal power H L ..... 345
Some — 'some favour, some remorse VA 257
in some mistrustful wood " ..... 826
Some catch her by the neck, some
kiss her face " ...~ 872
Some twine about her thigh " ...» 873
fawn hid in some brake " 876
some huntsman holloa " ...~ 973
Behind some hedge ^ 1094
That some would sing, some other
in their bills " 1102
But some untimely thought P L 43
Some loathsome dash " 206
Fearing some bard news " 25.5
to some regard " ..... 305
or else some shame supposed ** 377
beheld some ghastly sprite " 451
some worthless slave " 515
some gentle gust " ..... 549
some rascal groom " ..... 671
Some purer chest " 761
That some impurity " 854
With some mischance cross Tarquin " ..... 968
some desperate instrument " ..... 1038
Some happy mean " 1045
Some dark deep desert " 1144
I make some hole " ..... 1175
Some present speed " 1307
in her some blemish " 1358
to mourn some newer way " «... 1.365
As if some mermaid " 1411
Some high, some low ** 1412
where cares have carved some " 1445
pleasure of some one " 1478
Saying, some shape " 1529
It eiiseth some " 1581
* ".For some hard-favour'd groom " 1632
Some of her blood " 1742
And some look'd black " 1743
some watery token shows " ..... 1748
unbless some mother Son 3 4
Make sweet some vial, treasure
thou some place "63
to some other give ** 13 4
But were some child " 17 13
Or some fierce thing " 23 3
I hope some good conceit " 26 7
As if by some instinct ** 50 7
u
u
tt
(t
C(
II
Some — some special instant Son
you have some part "
in some antique book
If some suspect
devise some virtuous lie
life hath in this line some interest
Some fresher stamp
not some small glory
forsake me for some foult
Some glory in their birth, some in
their skill
Some in their wealth, some in
their body's force
Some in their garments
Some in their hawks and hounds,
some in their horse
Some say thy fault is youth, some
wantonness
Some say thy grace is youth
some worthless song
And in some perfumes
some say that thee behold
think me some untutor'd youth
Some beauty peep'd through
For some, untuck'd, descended
Some in her tbreaden fillet
Where want cries some, but
as some my equals did
some feeling pity
smiled or made some moan
think me some untutor'd youth
Which is to me some praise
Take counsel of some wiser bead
some subtle practice smell
Something— Make .... nothing
add something more
a something sweet to thee
Sometimes—Sometime he trots
Sometime he scuds
That sometime true news, some-
time false doth bring
Sometime he runs among
And sometime where
And sometime sorteth
Save sometime too much wonder
that sometime threat the spring
sometime is compacted
Sometime her grief is dumb
Sometime 'tis mad
Yet sometime Tarquin
Sometime too hot
from fair sometime declines
When I am sometime absent
When sometime lofty towers
Sometime all full with feasting
I sometime hold my tongue
might think sometime
Sometime diverted their poor balls
Sometime a blusterer
Sometimes— Sometimes she shakes
Sometimes her arms
Yet sometimes falls
That sometimes anger thrusts
Sometimes her levell'd eyes
sometimes they do extend
Son — Art thou a woman's son
dearth of daughters and of sons
reaves his son of life
There lives a son
52
11
53
18
59
7
70
13
72
5
74
3
82
8
84
6
89
1
91
91
91
91
2
8
u
96
1
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96
2
U
100
3
u
130
7
tl
131
5
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138
3
LC
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u
•••••
81
u
■••••
83
u
•••••
42
u
• ••••
148
(1
•••••
178
u
»■«••
217
PP
1
3
M
5
10
tl
19
5
U
19
9
PL
•«•••
154
Son
85
10
•1
136
12
VA
••■••
277
u
•••••
801
(1
»«•••
658
*l
• ••••
685
II
•••••
687
M
•••••
689
PL
■••••
95
u
831
II
•■■••
530
II
■•••«
1105
u
•••••
1106
u
•••••
1786
Son
18
5
41
18
7
u
41
2
II
64
3
II
75
9
II
102
13
LC
•••••
10
Is "
•••••
24
II
•••••
58
VA
•••••
228
M
•••••
225
(1
•••••
981
Son
50
10
LC
••••*
22
u
•••••
25
VA
•••••
201
u
■••a*
754
w
«■•••
766
u
•••«•
863
SLANDERING
258
SMOKE
SUwderlBf — Slandering creation
with a false esteem Son 127 12
SUflderooa— To slanderoos tongues R L 161
As slanderous deathsman " ...~ 1001
SlMghter— that doth lire by ... . " 955
and then Til slaughter thee " ...~ 1634
Slaaghter'd— armour of stiU-slaugh-
ter'dlust " ..... 188
shed for the slaughter'd husband *' ~... 1376
on her self-slaughter'd body threw ** 17.H.3
SlMghterhome— But this no " 1039
SlaTe — my captive and ray slave VA ~... 101
to be sofl fancy's slave Ji L ~... 200
And they, like straggling slaves *' 428
some worthless slave of thine " ..... 515
these slaves be king and thou their
slave " „... 659
false slave to false delight *' ..... 927
to live a loathed slave ** 984
deathsman tu so base a slave " .... 1001
Being your slave, what should I
do S(m 57 1
But, like a sad slave, stay ** 57 11
that made me first your slave " 58 1
•lave to mortal rage " 64 4
But slave to slavery " 133 4
Thy proud heart slave ** 141 12
Slavery— But slave to slavery " 133 4
Slavish— Paying more tribute Ji L -... 299
Worse than a slavish wipe " «... 537
Slay— his crooked tushes slay VA 624
themselves do slay •* „... 765
worthless slave of thine Til slay R L .... 515
To slay the tiger " .... 955
Will slay the other " .... 1162
To slay herself •• ..... 1827
and slay me not by art Son 1^ 4
Sleep — sleeps, while now it sleeps V A 786
When heavy sleep had closed R L ~... 163
The dove sleeps fast ^ .... 360
Each in her sleep " .... 404
From forth dull sleep " .... 450
From sleep disturbed " .... 454
while the physician sleeps *' 904
evils that obscurely sleep " .... 1250
yet it seldom sleeps ** .... 1574
But when I sleep Son 43 3
Through heavy sleep " 43 12
Or, If they sleep " 47 13
In sleep a king *• 87 14
still did wake and sleep L C 123
If thou wake he cannot sleep PP 21 54
Sleeping— into eternal sleeping VA .... 951
But she, sound sleeping, fearing R L .... 863
So oVr this sleeping soul " — 423
eyes that are sleeping ** .... 1090
Was 8l(K>ping by a virgin hand dia-
anu'd «Son 154 8
Flocks all sleeping PP 18 42
Slelded— With sleidcd silk L C .... 48
Slept — have I slept in your report Son 83 5
Slew — Swearing I slew him R L .... 518
old Priam after slew " 1522
Slide— with swia motion slide Son 45 4
So slides he down L C 64
Slight— If my slight Muse do please 5m 38 13
slight air and purging fire " 45 1
Slip— let not Advantage slip VA 129
for fear of slips *' .... 615
Slipped- time hath over-sUpp'd her
thought
Slow— Make slow pursuit **
to mark how slow time goes **
With soft-slow tongue **
but dull and slow she deems **
see time how slow it creeps **
In two slow rivers •*
by elements so slow Bm
excuse the slow offence **
extremity can seem but slow **
going he went wilful-alow **
cold and to temptation slow **
Slow-aad— with .... gait descended R L
Sluggard — blame my .... negligence **
jR L — 1571
.^ 1220
ISM
»^ 1575
.... 1738
44 18
61 1
6t 6
51 13
M 4
.... 1061
— 1278
— 956
— 1076
— 124
61 3
VA
Son
RL
65 4
.M. 19P9
Sluice — who like sluices stopped VA
mine eyes like sluices R L
Slnmber — Now leaden slumber **
my slumbers should be broken
SlBttish — of the sluttish ground
bcsmear'd with sluttish time
Sly— that sly Ulysses lent
Small— small head and nostril wide VA
Small lights are soon blown out R L ...~ 647
of small worth held <Sbn 2 4
lends not some small glory " SI 6
Small show of man L C .... 92
In the small orb "
Small — it small avails my mood R L
Smallest— put to the smallest teen L C
Smart- to guess at others' smarts R L
Smear — And smear with dust
Smeared— smeared all with dust
Smell— Herbs for their smell VA .
the very smell were left me
hounds mistake their smell
his smell with others
smell to the violet
Unapt for tender smell
add the rank smell of weeds
nor the sweet smell
Nor taste nor smell **
S9nell — X\iQ new -sprung flower to
smell VA
smell far worse than weeds Ams
steal thy sweet that smells **
some subtle practice smell PP
Smelling— breedeth love by ... . VA
a more swect-emelling sire "
Smile — A smile rccures the woanding **
C(
M
M
. — 1273
.... 192
— 1388
.... 945
166
441
681
RL
Am
M
RL
PP
M
RL
LC
While with a Joyless smile R L
<Stm{^— dally, smile, and Jest VA
smiles as in disdain **
smiles at thee in scorn **
Nor shall he smile at thee
But smile and Jest
sweetly did she smile
Smiled— Whereat she smiled
smiled or made some moan
Whilst as fickle Fortune smiled P P
Smiling- regard and smiling gov«
ernment R L
It suffers not in smiling pomp Son
were gilded in his smiling L C
I smiling credit her falae-speaking P P
Smilingly— with this gives o'er R L
Smiteth— on a flint he softly smiteth
Smoke— And blows the smoke of it
furnace of foul-reeking smoke
II
— 695
69 12
96 5
141 7
— 1171
94 14
99 2
19 9
— 1178
.... 465
.... 1711
.... 106
.... 241
— 252
1065
4 12
14 7
— 261
— 217
21 29
. — 1400
124 6
.... 172
1 7
.... 1567
176
.^.. 812
SOUL
264
SPEND
it
u
II
u
•i
II
u
(I
107
1
109
4
125
13
136
1
136
2
136
3
146
1
146
9
151
7
So«l — nor the prophetic soul Son
As from my soul
saborn'd informer! a true soul
If thy soul check thee
Swear to thy blind soul
And will, thy soul knows, is ad-
mitted
Poor soul, the centre of my sinful
earth
Then, soul, live thou
My soul doth toll my body
And credent soul to that strong-
bonded oath LC .... 279
All ignorant that soul that sees
thee PP 5 9
Sound— false sound enter there VA ..... 780
But idle sounds " ..... MS
This sound of hope " ~... 976
Unprofitable sounds, weak R L 1017
Deep sounds make lesser noise " ~... 1329
quoth she, ' without a sound " ..... 1464
concord of well tuned sounds Son 8 5
a far more pleasing sound " 130 10
Breathed forth the sound " 145 2
the sweet melodious sound P P S 9
Towhose sound chaste wings obey P 7 ...~ 4
Sound — But she, sound sleeping R L 363
swallow up his sound advice " 1409
Sound— To sound a parley " 471
against himself he sounds this
doom " 717
wood whose motion sounds Son 128 2
pipe can sound no deal P P 18 27
8o«nding— heavenly tune harsh-
sounding VA 431
Hoandleat— upon your .... deep Son 80 10
Soundly — But soundly sleeps VA ..... 78G
Sour — that sour unwelcome guest " 449
is sour to taste ** 5*28
'This sour Informer " 655
turn to loathed sours R L 867
Were it not thy sour leisure Son 89 10
the bitterness of absence sour " 57 7
Sourest — turn sourest by their deeds " 94 13
Soar-fkced— charging the sour-faced
groom R L 1334
Soaring:— Souring his cheeks, cries
♦Fie VA 185
in digestion souring R L 699
Soorly — which sourly robs from me Son 35 14
Will sourly leave her " 41 8
Sovereign-Earth's sovereign salve VA 28
only sovereign plaster * *' ~... 919
a sea, a sovereign king R L 652
Flatter the mountain-tops with
sovereign eye Son 33 2
sovereign mistress over wrack " 126 5
maladi<^ a sovereign cure " 153 8
Sovereign— To their salt sovereign R L 650
Whilst I, my sovereign, watch Son 67 6
Sovereignty — his boast of Lucrece'
sovereignty R L 36
The sovereignty of either " 69
Space — to die with her a space " ..... 1776
. For then, despite of space Son 44 3
TOW, bond, nor space L C 264
Distance, and no space was seen P T 30
Spacloas — whose will Islarge and. . . .Son 135 5
Spare— for his sake spare me R L 582
Spare— Spare not to spend P P
Sparing- It shall be sparing VA
sparing justice feeds iniquity R L
Spark— sparks of fire do fly **
Sparkling— When sparkling start
twire not Son
Sparrow— hatch in sparrows' nests R L
Speak— And kissing speaks VA
Speak, fair ; but speak fair words "
M
M
M
RL .
11
<i
M
II
Son
II
II
41
«4
u
u
II
II
II
II
now she fain would speak
To whom she speaks
teach the fool to speak
thus speaks advisedly
begin ere once she speaks
To whom she sobbing speaks
patience bid fair Lucrece speak
I should not live to speak
forbade my tongue to speak
* O, speak,' quoth she
her poor tongue could not speak
of such a salve can speak
Speak of the spring and foison
you for love speak well of me
Speak of my lameness
To speak of that
What's new to spenk
I love to hear her speak
might speak ill of thee
Speaking'—. ... to those that came R L
presagers of my speaking breast Sotn
speaking of your fame
Speaking of worth
dumb thoughts, speaking in eflbct
credit her false-speaking tongue
credit her false-speaking tongue ' P P
Spear- spear's point can enter V A
with his sharp spear "
for Achilles' image stood his spear ^ L
Special — special instant special blest £on
Spectacle— how vile a .... it were R L
a spectacle of ruth P P
Speech — Which to his speech V A
In speech, it seem'd Jt L
To blush at speeches rank L C
Speechless- Which .... woe of his P X>
Whose speechless song
o'er dull and speechless tribes
Speed — Ills all-too-timeless speed
the headlong fbry of his speed
He in his speed looks
Bid him with speed prepare
Some present speed to come
Speed more than speed but dull
and slow she deems
Promise more speed
His rider loved not speed
In winged speed no motion
Speed — when from thee I speed
My rams speed not
Speeding— O, cruel speeding
Speedjr— tender smell or ... . flight
done with speedy diligence
Spend- spend their mouths
to spend the night
Not spend the dowry
She hoards, to spend
Lucrece spends her eyes
why dost thou spend
in the world doth s|K!nd
19 26
..... 1147
~... 1687
...» 177
28 12
— 47
— 208
~... 221
••••• yjiO
— 1146
180
..... o67
.... 1088
M... 1268
..... 1642
..... lv4o
— 1700
— 1718
84 7
9
10
3
2
8
9
10
80
83
85
138
1
Son
•I
RL -
II
11
i<
58
72
89
100
108
130
140
28 10
4
8
14
7
7
... 626
1112
..... 1424
52 11
M... 631
9 11
.... 1405
807
..... 1674
8 13
107 12
44
601
— 745
..... 1307
Son 50 8
" 61 8
Son 51 2
PP 18 8
" 18 25
R L 695
" 1853
VA — 695
R L 938
..... 13Io
" — 14«I7
Son A I
"99
SPEND
265
SPRINGING
M
M
87
S
80
3
14A
6
149
7
•«•••
238
21
86
19
26
100
8
76
12
8fai4— no predoni time at all to ... . Son
in the praise thereof spenda all
thy fading mansion vpend
krar'st on me, do I not spend
To spend her living in eternal lore L C
thou hast wherewith to spend P P
Spare not to spend "
8fend*st— apend'st thou thy fury Son
8fendi«9— Spending again what is **
Spenser— Spenser to me, whose deep
conceit is such PP 8 7
Spent— The time is spent VA 255
The night is spent " 717
shall for him be spent R L 1182
with painted images hath spent '* 1577
to those already spent " 1589
hath thy fair colour spent " IGOO
what is already spent Son 76 12
thne so Idly spent " 100 6
is my invention spent '* 105 11
and tombs of brass are spent " 107 14
mure than I have spent *' 119 14
in their gaadng spent '* 125 8
a beauty spout and done L C 11
SphMe— out of their spheres been
fitted Son 119 7
battery to the spheres intend L C 23
Spied— spied the hunted boar VA 900
he spied in her some blemish R L 1358
in his plain face she spied " ..... 1532
Spied a blossom passing fair PP 17 3
Spill— hands such wretched blood
should spill R L 999
SpUI*4— on the ground lay spiird VA 1167
and too late have spili'd R L 1801
Spilling— of her drops spilling *' 1230
Spirit-Love is a spirit VA 149
and her spirit confounds ** 882
spirit, life, and bold audacity R L 134G
The spirit of love &m 56 8
la it thy spirit " 61 5
My spirit is thine " 74 8
Knowing a better spirit " 80 2
that able spirit affords " 85 7
Was it his spirit, by spirlU taught *' 86 5
Hath put a spirit of youth " 98 3
figured to thee my true spirit " 108 2
The expense of spirit in a waste "129 1
Which like two spirits " 144 2
The worser spirit a woman "144 4
My spirits to attend L (J 3
spiriU Of richest coat " 236
That like two .npirits PP 2 2
My worser spirit a woman "24
Spite— so in spite of death VA 173
this is my spite " ..... Ii:t3
thus breathes she forth her spite R L 762
what spite hath thy fair colour
spent " ..... 1600
in our lives a separable spite Son 36 6
by fortune's dearest spite " 37 8
Kill me with spites " 40 14
Join with the spite of fortune " 90 3
petty griefs have done their spite " 90 10
Since, spite of him, ril live " 107 11
but spite of heaven's fell rage L C ..... 13
In spite of physic PP 13 12
aUs, i» was a spite " 16 7
SipUo—To spite me now " 15 15
Spleen — A thousand spleens VA ..... 907
Adon used to cool his spleen PP 6 6
Splendonr— Against the golden .... RL ...~ 35
with all-triumphant splendour Son 83 lU
Spoil— sweetness of the spoil VA 553
Leaving his spoil perplex'd R L 733
To spoil antiquities ** 951
his spoil of beauty Son 65 12
make Time's spoils despised " 100 12
and his amorous spoil L C ^... 154
Spoird— spotted, spoil'd, corrupted R L ..... 1172
Spoke— then ho had spoke VA 943
If he had spoke ** 1097
Spongy — his spongy lungs bestow'd L C 826
Sport— such time-beguiling sport VA 24
our sport is not in sight " 124
with such-like sport " ..... 844
and his time of sport R L 992
comments on thy sport Son 95 6
thy grace is youth and gentle sport " 96 2
Playing patient sports L C 242
Youth is full of sport P P 12 6
All our evening sport ** 18 47
iSJpofi— leam'd to sport and dance VA ..... 105
where I list to sport me " ..... 154
Sportlng^Advice is sporting R L ~... 907
Sportive— For sporiive words " 1813
salutation to my sportive blood Son 121 6
Spot— That spots and stains R L 196
The spots whereof could weeping
purify " ...» 685
To clear this spot by death " 1053
Doth spot the beauty Son 95 8
Spotleaa — Immaculate and spotless R L ..... 1656
Spotted— To ask the spotted princess " 721
spotted, spoil'd, corrupted " 1172
Spread — . . . . upon the blushing rose VA 590
through all her sinews spread " ..... 903
The fishes spread on it *' .....1100
through all her body spread R L «... 1266
theJr fair leaves spread Son 23 5
Spreading — have been a . . . . flower L C 75
Spright— with a lazy spright VA .... 181
weariness with heavy spright R L ..... 121
Her winged spright " 1728
Spring- The tender spring upon VA 127
Spring doth yearly grow " 141
Love's tender spring " 656
Love's gentle spring " ..... 801
Thy hasty spring still blasts R L ..... 49
sometime threat the spring " 331
thy vices bud bofuce thy spring " ..... 604
wait on the tender spring *' ..... 860
and cherish springs ** ..... 950
Wanting the spring " 1455
herald to the gaudy spring Son 1 10
Speak of the spring ** Ki 9
the treasure of his spring *' 63 8
have I l>een alxtent iu the spring ** 98 1
and then but in the spring " 102 5
Three beautef>u9 springs " 104 6
and vad'fl in the spring PP 10 2
i^r<«^—.Se«lM spring from seeds VA ..... 167
Away he springs " ..... 258
a mountain-spring that feeds a dale 7? L ~... 1077
Trees did grow and plants did
spring PP 21 6
dear wells spring not " 18 87
Sf rlsflnf — If springing things VA .... 417
SPRITE
266
STATE
Son
VA
BL
u
«(
VA
Son
451
1168
1171
285
9
7
311
1026
880
12
878
1029
316
881
1086
655
7
13
8|^to— beheld some gbsBily sprite R L
Spmsf— A purple flower spruug ap VA
tiie new-epruDg flower to smell **
S pm T' corb or pricking spur ** ~...
The bloody spur cannot provoke
him Son 50
Then should I spur " 51
Spwn — Spurns at his love V A ...»
In Tain I spurn at my confirmed R L .....
Spun'st— 'Tis thou that spurn'st at
right " -...
SpurlBf— Spurring to his side San 50
8f y— one that spies an adder
in her haste unfortunately spies
by the light he spies
where none may spy bira
through every cranny spies
4iy— this bate-breeding spy r a ..^.
why are frailer spies Son 121
Spyisf — He spying her, bounced in PP 6
Stage — and beats these from the
stage R L 278
Black stage for tragedies " «... 766
That this huge stage presentelh Son 15 3
an unperfect actor on the stage ** 23 1
StalB— Stain to all nymphs VA ...~ 9
The stain upon his silver down R L ...» 1012
How may this forced stain " .... 1701
fh>m this compelled stain " 1708
Her body's sUin " »... 1710
bring water for my stain Son 109 8
Sbtin — stains and soon l)ereavc8 VA 797
And stains her face " ~... 1122
Virtue would stain that o'er with^ Ir ...» 56
murder wakes to stain " »... 168
•tains love's modest snow-white
weed " 196
Who seeks to stain the ocean ** »... 655
should stain so pure a bed " 684
Suns of the world may stain Son 33 14
stain both moon and sun " 85 3
Stoiaed— all sUin'd with gore VA ...^ 664
stained taste of violated troth R L. ...» 1059
My sUined blood to Tarquin " 1181
had staln'd her stain'd excuse " 1316
Like bright things stain'd ** 1435
be stain'd with this abuse '* 1655
and that false Tarquin stain'd " 1743
this chaste blood so unjustly
stained " 1836
BO preposterously be stain'd Sun \^ 11
Staineth— breaks before it staineth VA »... 460
when heaven's sun staineth San 33 14
Stale— For now 'tis sUle to sigh R L 1362
Of sUle example L C 268
Stalk— She crops the sUlk VA ...» 1175
wickedly he stalks R L ...» 365
Reserved the stalk L C 147
Stalled— The st«ed is sUlled up VA 39
And sUll'd the deer P P 19 2
Stamp— Ue stamps and bites VA ...» 316
To stamp the seal of time R L 941
Some fresher stamp San 82 8
Stamped- Reproach is stamp'd R L 829
stamp'd the semblance " 1246
stamp'd upon my brow San 112 2
Staad — now stand on end V A ...» 272
orhis'SUnd, Isay " »... 284
Stands on his hinder legs '* «... 698
Staad— my heart stands armed
Thus stands she
And they woukl stand auspidoua R L
he stands disgraced
deer that stands at gaae
these pretty creatures stand
you see grave Nestor stand
that thou dost trembling stand
in them doth stand disgraced
Now stand you on the top
stand against thy sight
although my fool did stand
And nothing stands
in hope my verse shall stand
fearfully on thorns did stand
which methinks still dotli stand
all alone stands hugely politic
stands least in thy control
by thee blushing stand
To sUnd in thy affairs
that did in freedom stand
from Judgement stand aloof
these impediments stand forth
Herds stand weeping
A woman's nay doth stand for
nought
jSktiM^march'd on to make his stand R L
Her stand she takes
Staad lag-that is standing by
for standing by her side
Star — Look, how a bright star
shining star doth borrow
stars ashamed of day
Where mortal stars, as bright
No comfortable star did lend
Which must be lode-star
But little stars may hide them
And little stars shot
Not from the stars
And constant stars
the stars iu .«ecret influence
are in favour with their start
Till whatsoever star
sparkling stars twtre not
the star to every wandering bark
Nor that full star
Co-supremes and stars of love
Stare — and there he stares
in her sad fuce he stares
Star-gasem— That the star-gazers
Staring — The staring ruffian
Staring on Priam's wounds
Stark — .\nd stood stark naked
Start — Anon he starts
Whereat she starts
Even there he starts
I did begin to start and cry
By this sUrts Collatine
Starteth — from her be-tumbled
couch she starteth
Starved — clean starved for a look
State — of his happy state
his affairs, his friends, his state
That thou shalt see thy state
low vassals to thy state
scandal waits on greatest state
companions at thy state
clothes his wit in state and pride
And wear their brave state
VA
••••■
779
(«
•••••
895
RL
••••■
M7
«(
••••«
718
t(
•••«•
1149
«(
•••••
1233
M
•••••
1401
ft
•••••
1589
<«
•■•••
1833
Sun
16
5
u
88
6
M
44
5
U
60
12
»l
60
13
u
99
8
u
104
11
M
124
11
u
125
14
M
128
8
M
151
12
LC
•••••
143
tt
•••••
166
u
•••••
260
pp
18
41
It
19
43
RL
•■•••
438
PP
9
5
VA
•••••
282
RL
•••••
425
VA
•••••
815
M
■•••«
861
««
•••••
1032
RL
•••••
1.^
H
•••••
164
(1
•••••
179
U
•••••
1008
•«
•••••
1325
Son
14
1
«4
14
10
U
15
4
U
25
1
Ct
26
9
M
28
12
U
116
7
U
132
7
PT
•••••
51
VA
•••••
301
RL
•«•■•
1591
VA
•••••
509
<•
••■••
1149
RL
••••ft
1448
PP
6
10
VA
•••••
302
t(
•••••
878
RL
•••••
348
u
•••••
1639
li
•••••
1772
•••••
1037
San
75
10
RL
16
tt
•••••
45
(•
•••••
644
<{
•••••
666
II
•••■•
1006
u
•••••
1066
II
•••••
1809
San
15
8
STATE
267
STILL
(I
it
«(
It
ti
29
2
29
10
29
14
64
9
64
10
92
7
96
12
118
11
124
1
128
9
142
3
145
4
150
12
■••••
946
State— bcwecp my outcast state Son
and then my state "
change my state with kings "
such interchange of state "
Or state itself confounded
I see a better state
the strength of all thy state
to medicine a healthful state
were but the child of state
they would change their state
compare thou thine own state
she saw ray woeful state
shouldjit not abhor my state
Stately— fill with worm-holes stately
monuments R L
8tatae — Statue contenting but the
eye VA 213
statues, tombs, and stories ** ~... 1013
war shall statues overturn Son 53 6
Statute— The sUtute of thy beauty " 134 9
Stajr — each murmur stay VA ~... 706
to make her stay " 873
dare not stay the field " 894
with his torch to make him stay H L 311
could not stay him " 823
doth Tarquiu stay ** ^... 423
She stays, exclaiming . " 741
upon his silver down will stay " ...^1012
a little while doth stay " 1364
on sightless eyes doth stay Son 43 12
where thou dost stay " 44 4
it might unused stay " 48 3
stay and think of nought " 57 11
bound to stay your leisure " 58 4
still with thee shall sUy " 74 4
no longer than thy love will stay " 92 3
the thing she would have stay " 143 4
flesh stays no farther reason " 151 8
what will not stay L C 159
iSkoy— Who with a lingering stay R L 328
conceit of this inconstant stay Son 15 9
Stay'd— or river siay'd V A ^... 331
but he was stay'd by thee R L 917
sod there she stay'd •' 1275
Stay'st— thou stay'st too long PP 12 12
SteadfiMt— with a steadfast eye R L 1339
SteadfluUy— looks so stead ftuttly VA 1063
Steal— Steal thine own freedom *' 160
Lest she should steal a kiss " 726
and to steal his breath " 9:U
Away he steals R L 283
Such devils steal effects " 1555
Which steals men's eyes 5on 20 8
Yet doth it steal sweet hours " ;<6 8
steal thee all my poverty " 40 10
And steal dead seeing of his living
hue " 67 6
the filching ago will steal " 75 6
to steal thyself away ** 92 1
whence didst thou steal thy sweet " 99 2
Steal from his figure " 104 10
Stealeth— through the dark night
he stealeth RL 729
Stealing — How she came stealing V A 344
by his stealing in " ~... 450
stealing moulds from heaven " »... 730
Stealing unseen to west Son 33 8
Stealing away the treasure " 63 8
Stcaltii— by thy dial's shady stealth " 77 7
Steam— feedeth on the steam VA 68
Steed— to alight thy steed " .... 13
The steed is stalled up " ..... 39
The strong-neck'd steed " ..... 263
a well-proportion'd steed " 290
by the well-doing steed L C 112
Steel— Strong-temper'd steel VA ...~ 111
flinty, hard as steel *' 199
water that doth eat in steel R L 755
antiquities of hammer'd steel " 951
Nor gates of steel so strong Son 65 8
were brass or hammer'd steel *' 120 4
in thy steel bosom's ward " 133 9
Steelr-ihy hard heart do steel it VA 875
Steerd— And being steel'd " 376
That my steel'd sense Son 112 8
Steep— do not steep thy heart R L ..... 1828
love-kindling fire did quickly steep jftm 153 3
Steep-up — the stcep-up heavenly hill "75
stand she takes upon a steep-up
hUl PP 9 5
Steepy — travelled on to age's steepy
night Son 63 5
Steird— where all distress is ... . R L ~... 1444
hnth play'd the painter and hath
stell'd Son 2\ 1
Step— as if he told the steps VA 277
lurking serpent steps aside R L 862
Stem— by the stern and direful god VA 98
To creatures stem sad tunes R L 1147
cover crimes with bold stern looks " 1252
might the stern wolf betray Son 96 9
Steward — but stewards of their ex-
cellence " 94 8
Stick— the greon sticks fast VA 527
wherein her needle sticks R L 317
She will not stick to round me PP 19 51
Stick ^st — thou stick'st not to con-
spire Son 10 6
Stifle— To stifle beauty VA 934
Still— Still she entreats " 73
Still is he sullen, still be lours and
frets " ..... 75
still is left alive " 174
Her eyes woo'd still " 858
be still as much " 442
So he will kiss her still " 480
their verdure still endure " 507
still to be sealing " 512
still hanging by his neck " 593
he whetteth still " ..... 617
let him keep his loathsome cabin
still " 637
foes pursue him still " 699
still concludes in woe " 839
And still the choir of echoes answers" 840
Sought stUl to dry " 964
but is still severe " 1000
bids them still consort " ~... 1041
still looketh for a grave " ...~ 1106
Thy hasty spring still blasts R L ..... 49
makes them still to fight " «... 68
pineth still for more " 98
True valour still, a true ** ~... 201
the fear doth still exceed " ~... 229
for vantage still " ..... 249
yet he still pursues " -.... 808
might have reposed still ** ..... 882
the onset still expecting " »... 4SA
8tlll-«hc wllh TcbaiuDt pnre
(Itlll-.llH to MrlTe with men P P
JtL.
_ *-s
aw— pun ttaoagbU ue dud ud
mopurchi mil »re fiti'i for lof
•Ull RL
ll»«>nln>Ucd*tlll
iii..llHm.gla»tl<,d "
And Ihvrcfure would tbcr ilill
TbBr,u«f,w.iiUlu5rehlU -
hcrofur will ba blind
. IM
KMp»tmp»KMlon
. 8M
irhicb Bielhlnki itlll dull. .Hud Sm
Aud Uitrefui.: still In nlgbt
. IDU
MdiajrlourJcrylnKilil!
tui- _
. lOM
8llird-<im'd wLlb d>Ddll(i» VA
. mi
StUltt«i7-lbe .lUliturj of tby tm» VA
crnwimugXIll
-isoa
Min-pUlnr-But liki; rtlUiilnidg
And .1111 on biu. .be gu«d, ua
TiDUlug A ^
■huuUl ni; •b>me Hill rat
.IHS
>l»uj(hler'd lu.l
To KcE««rj jkWlnK., but >t
1
8U«»-di.JilurullT did iilDg
■1 tham^nj^f hlnnKFim; iling -
,.n"u:..uuiU..r^
. H42
i.,.»r.vKii.r>t.-Jiil.lm.llnB
Mllldollifnl»tilde
l,.,il. „.;.-. -r;.,..i,N..Mior LC
■ubatuceatlllllVH
*■
b;rd«ih'>.hirp.tiug PP
■donhliboutfitUl
8tlr-tld.r'nnKrI»tlr VA
■till llic world enjuyi It
tacuiXiIlUtDiT [i'n
TuitivB wiTyQurstl(lie*piT«
nfillvtitlUdtdbtdeLC..'
■nil did wnka and lietp " -
(wo .plrtU do .ugRMt mo Hill P P
Btlrr'd-«lrr
lliv
!itlrr<n«-»
Mr«Jt *i.
Slafk-who.
dtt,.
mill.
Kowtolci.
pom
wonl
ol^ 01
ebiBtltr
Stol'm-lbg
but .(«rD 1
TT
(h ihF s»ta
fi L lOM
«lo»Mllll-Slun"«
iIbIiM £ L .... 1730
Stood— How llki- 1 ]*de be >I->nd
had Nnretasui accn hop ai she
Mood H I- -... M9
:forAch1ll<?i' Imager itoodhliapoar " .... IU4
lllc?iliit&4]ick^4
bDuucol in, vhci
SOUL
264
SPEND
li
u
u
u
u
<t
107
1
109
4
125
18
136
1
136
2
196
3
146
1
146
9
151
7
Soil — nor the prophetic soul Son
As from mjr soul
suborn'd informer! a true soul
If thjr soul check thee
Swear to thy blind soul
And will, thy soul knows, is ad-
mitted
Poor soul, the centre of mj sinful
earth
Then, soul, live thou
My soul doth tell my body
And credent soul to that strong-
bonded oath L C .... 279
All ignorant that soul that sees
thee PP 5 9
Sonnd — false sound enter there VA ..... 780
But idle sounds ** ..... 848
This sound of hope " ..... 976
Unprofitable sounds, weak R L ..... 1017
Deep sounds make lesser noise " 1329
quoth she, 'without a sound " .....1464
concord of well tuned sounds Son 8
a far more pleasing sound " 130 10
Breathed forth the sound " 145 2
the sweet melodious sound P P S 9
To whose sound chaste wings obey P T ..... 4
Sottnd— Bui she, sound sleeping Ji L 363
swallow up his sound advice " ..... 1409
Sound— To sound a parley " ..... 471
against himself he sounds this
doom " ..... 717
wood whose motion sounds Son 128 2
pipe can sound no deal P P 18 27
8o«nding— heavenly tune harsh-
sounding VA 431
Hoondlesa— upon your .... deep Son 80 10
Sonndly— But soundly sleeps VA 786
8oor— that sour unwelcome guest " 449
is sour to taste '* 528
• This sour informer " 655
turn to loathed sours J2 L 867
Were it not thy sour leisure Son 39 10
the bitterness of absence sour " 57 7
Soarest — turn sourest by their deeds " 94 13
8oar-fkced — charging the sour-faced
groom Ji L 1334
Soorlng: — Souring his cheeks, cries
•Fie VA 185
in digestion souring R L 699
Soarly — which sourly robs from me Son 35 14
Will sourly leave her " 41 8
Sovereign— Earth's sovereign salve VA 28
only sovereign plaster * " 919
a sea, a sovereign king R L ..... 652
Flatter the mountain-tops with
sovereign eye Son 33 2
sovereign mistress over wrack " 126 5
maladies a sovereign cure " 153 8
Sowreiffn— To their salt sovereign R L 650
Whilst I, my sovereign, watch Son 57 6
Sovereignty — his boast of Lucrece'
sovereignty R L 36
The sovereignty of either " 69
Space — to die with her a space " ~... 1776
. For then, despite of space Son 44 3
TOW, bond, nor space L C 264
Distance, and no space was seen P T 30
Spaeloas — whose will is large and. . . .Son 135 5
S|iare — for his sake spare me R L 582
t{
u
£L ..
S|»are— Spare not to spend PP
Sparing— It shall be sparing VA
sparing Justice feeds iniquitj R L
Spark— sparks of fire do fly **
Sparkling— When sparkling start
twire not Son
Sparrow— hatch in sparrows' nests R L
Speak— And kissing speaks VA
Speak, fair ; but speak fair worda **
now she fain would speak
To whom she speaks
teach the fool to speak
thus speaks advisedly
begin ere once she speaks
To whom she sobbing speaks
patience bid fair Lucrece speak
I should not live to speak
forbade my tongue to speak
' O, speak,' quoth she
her poor tongue could not speak
of such a salve can speak
Speak of the spring and foison
you for love speak well of me
Speak of my lameness
To speak of that **■
What's new to speak ••
I love to hear her speak **
might speak ill of thee **
Speakings. ... to those that came R L
presagers of my speaking breast San
speaking of your fame
Speaking of worth
dumb thoughts, speaking in effect
credit her false-speaking tongue
credit her false-speaking tongue ' P P
Spear— spear's point can enter V A
with his sharp spear **
for Achilles' image stood his spear R L
Special— apecial instant special blest iSm
Spectacle— how vile a .... it were R L
a spectacle of ruth P P
Speech— Which to his speech VA
In speech, it seem'd Ji L
To blush at speeches rank L C
Speechlesa— Which .... woe ot U» R L
Son
%i
n
u
u
Son
u
(t
«t
19 26
1147
— 1687
— 177
28 12
••••• 9WF
•••«• ^/
••»•• 200
— 221
.... 918
— 1146
180
•>... 067
1088
..... 1268
1642
1048
— 1700
— 1718
84 7
58
72
80
100
108
130
140
.... 1689
28 10
9
10
8
2
8
9
10
(I
u
il
M
80
88
4
8
Whose speechless song
o'er dull and speechless tribes
Speed— His all-too-tlmeless speed
the headlong fbry of his speed
He in his speed looks
Bid him with speed prepare
Some present speed to come
Speed more than speed but dull
and slow she deems
Promise more speed
His rider loved not speed
In winged speed no motion
Sjpeed — when from thee I speed
My rams speed not
Speeding— O, cruel speeding
Speedjr— tender smell or ... . flight
done with speedy diligence
Spend— spend their mouths
to spend the night
Not spend the dowry
She hoards, to spend
Lucrece spends her eyes
why dost thou spend
in the world doth spend
((
RL ..
u
u
M
(t
tc
i<
Son
u
Son
PP
85 14
188 7
1 7
••« 626
— 1112
— 1424
52 11
~... 6S1
9 11
..... 452
— 1406
M... 807
1674
8 18
107 12
44
— . 501
745
..... 1307
m... 1336
..... 1349
60 8
51
51
18
18
R L .....
u
VA -
II
RL -
t(
M
Son
8
2
8
25
696
... 1853
695
847
938
— 1318
.... 14R7
4 1
9 9
STRENGTH
270
SUBSCRIBE
8tr«agt]i— There is such strength Son 150 7
strive to try lier strength PP 19 19
8irengtJien*d — My love is ... . Son 102 1
8tr«Bgthlpss— Two .... doves VA 153
knit brow, and strengthlcss pace R L ..... 709
Stretched— And stretched metre Son 17 12
Striet— From their strict embrace VA 874
Keep the obsequy so strict P T 12
fitrife—with herself at strife VA 11
workmanship at strife " 291
civil home-bred strife " «... 764
revenge or quittal of such strife R L ..... 236
there were no strife " ~... 405
doth force a ftirther strife " ~... 689
sort an hour great strifes to end " ~... 899
to show the painter's strife " 1377
weep with equal strife " ~... 1791
I hold such strife Son 75 8
SU'lke— strikes her on the cheeks VA ..... 475
strikes whatever is in his way ** ~... 623
And whom he strikes '* ..... 624
thou shouldst strike at it " .... 938
to strike him dead ** ..... 948
Strike the wise dumb " ..... 1146
strike a poor unseasonable doe R L ..... 581
Strikes each in each Son 8 10
the deer that thou shouldst strike P P 19 2
Striking — what needs a second .... VA ..... 250
his beating heart, alarum striking R L 4:i3
String — Shall tunc our heart-strings " 1141
Mark how one string, sweet hus-
band to another Son 8 9
Stripped— they bo out-stripp'd by
every pen " 82 6
Stripping— Out-stripping crows that
strive VA ..... 824
Strive— fltrive to overfly them " -... 324
all in vain you strive *' 772
ever strive to kiss you " 1082
They both would strive " ..... 1092
Yet strive I to embrace R L ..... 504
as he is, he strives in vain " 1665
all the world, and I must strive Son 112 5
I did strive to prove " 117 13
mastering what not strives L C 240
she strive to try her strength P P 19 19
•till to strive with men " 19 43
Strl Ted— beauty and virtue strived R L 62
Striving— As striving who should VA ..... 968
then, striving to mend <Si>n 103 9
Stroke— doth she stroke his cheek VA 45
curse thee for this stroke " ..... 945
Mrong — straight legs and passing . . . . " 297
never waxeth strong " ..... 420
with his strong course " ..... 960
My will is strong R L ..... 243
strong pirates, shelves, and sands " ..... 335
From mo by strong assault " ..... 835
and they too strong *' 865
with circumstances strong " ..... 1262
Mine enemy was strong " 1646
with BO strong a fear " ~... 1647
By our strong arms ** ..... 1834
Resembling strong youth Son 7 6
the strong offence's cross " 84 11
your charter is so strong " 58 9
Kor gates of steel so strong " 65 8
what strong hand can hold " 65 11
which makes thy love more strong " 73 13
tt
Strong— 'gainst my strong infection Son 111
Divert strong minds ** 115
more strong, far greater " 119
replication prompt and reason
strong L C .....
I strong o*er them, and you o'er
me being strong " «...
Had women been so strong P P 19
Strong-bfffleged — the walls of
strong-besieged Troy R L «...
Strong-bonded — to that .... oath L C .....
Stronger— his .... strength obey'd VA .....
make conquest 'of the stronger R L .....
make grief's strength seem
stronger Son
is no stronger than a flower **
Strongest— The strongest body VA
The strongest castle P P
Strongly— but strongly he desired R L
my duty strongly knit Son
You are so strongly in my purpose
bred
Strong-neck *d— The .... steed
Strong-tempered-. . . . steel
Strnck— Struck dead at first
His meaning strnck her
Which strnck her sad, and
he struck his hand upon his breast "
that struck me dead Son
Stracken— straight be ... . down R L
Straggle — he stn^^gles to be gone VA
Nay, do not struggle
Struggling— Struggling for passage
Strumpet— Show me the strumpet R L
Strumpeted — maiden virtue rudely
strum peted Son
Stock— stuck over all his face L C .....
Stud— coral clasps and amber studs P P 20
Stndded- The studded bridle VA .....
Study— Study his bias leaves PP 6
Stuff— Stuflr up his lust R L -...
Stuff'd- Till either gorge be stuff'd VA -...
Sturdy— like sturdy trees support me " «...
Son
28
63
19
26
112
VA -.
it
i(
RL
86
tt
It
66
tt
tt
Style— Theirs for their style
thou dost but mend the style
Making his style admired
Subdue— did her force subdue
Subdued — my nature is subdued
pensive and subdued desires
Subduing'— tip of his subduing tongue "
Subject— tributary subject quakes VA
Where subjects' eyes do learn R L
her subjects with foul insurrection "
Son
82
78
84
Son 111
tt
tt
ft
88
59
82
84
100
103
VA
tt
want subject to invent
To subjects worse have given
Of their fair subject
That to his subject lends
to lend base subjects light
To mar the subject
Sutjed— taking it subject
Subject and servile
As subject to Time's love
Subjection — by their mortal fault
brought in subjection R L
Proud of subjection L C -...
Subornation— perjury and .... RL
Subom'd — Hence, thou. . . . informer 6!m 125
Snbaerlbe — and Death to me sub-
acribea ** 107
Son 124
10
8
12
122
2.17
23
1429
279
111
1767
14
4
1145
29
415
2
13
263
111
250
462
262
1842
6
217
227
710
1047
1471
6
81
14
37
5
297
58
152
14
11
12
248
6
219
120
1045
616
722
1
14
4
6
4
10
737
1161
3
724
108
919
13
10
SUBSIST
271
SUGAR»D
8ilMlst— by nature to subsiBt iS^ 122
SibstMiM^their substance still lives " 5 14
doth such substance give " 37 10
If the dull substance " 44 1
What is your substance " 53 1
SabfUaUal— Feed'st thy light's
flame with self-substantial fuel " 1
Sibtle— Swift subtle post, carrier R L 926
To mock the subtle " 957
even as subtle Sinon " ...» 1541
a plenitude of subtle matter L C ~... 302
some subtle practice smell P P 19 9
Stbtle-shlnlag— the .... secrecies Ji L ~... 101
Stbtlety— which lives by subtlety VA G75
in the world's false subtleties &m 138 4
BBMonr— shine sun to ... . flowers P P 15 16
SMccedlBfr— in succeeding times R L ~... 525
pattern to succeeding men Sum 19 12
Swenta— greets heaven for his ... . R L 112
Sicennlon— ProTing his beauty by
succession thine Son 2 12
8«cersalvf — beauty's successive heir " 127 3
SadH-such time-beguiling sport V A 24
with such distilling showers " 66
I am such a park ** ...~ 239
He held such petty bondage " . — 394
Were never fuur such lamps ^ — 4S9
tricks, and such disdain ** ..... 501
kiises such a trouble " ..... 522
8ach nectar from his lips '* ...~ 572
vith such foul fiends " 638
thou provokest such weeping " ...~ 949
such a weak and silly mind " ...~ 1016
the birds such pleasure took " ..... 1101
at such high-proud rate R L ^... 19
to such a peerless dame " ..... 21
margents of such books " 102
and such griefs sustain ** ...~ 139
there is such thwarting strife ^ 143
Such hazard now " ..... 155
quittal of such strife " ..... 236
where such treasure lies '* ..... 280
fearing no such thing ** 36:t
proud of such a dignity ** „... 437
8ach shadows are ** .... 460
batter such an ivory wall '* ~... ¥A
With »uch black payment " ..... 576
darest do such outrage " ..... 605
of such shame " ..... 618
bear such shameful blows " ..... 832
in fuch a devil " «... 847
tuch numbers seek for thee " ~... 896
Such wretched hands such wretch-
ed blor^d " -... 999
would such an olBoe have *• ...- 1000
Such danger to resistance ** ..... 1265
still urgeth such extremes " 13:r7
Such harmless creatures *' 1347
Such sweet observance " 1383
Making such sober action ** ..... 1403
such signs of rage " ..... 1419
rach odd action yield ** 1433
such black-faced vtomis ** .... 1519
hell-bom sin such saint^likc forms ** ..... l.**!)
Such signs of truth ** .... inaz
can lurk in such a look ** .... VX*
But such a face ** .... 1540
Such devils steal eflceU ** .... IVW
such unity do bold '* M^
RL
<i
It
Son
••••• lovIZ
..... 1825
1829
9 14
M
<l
8of h— such passion her assails
Seeing such emulation
Such childish humour
In such relenting dew
such murderous shame
I read such art
Such heavenly touches
of such triumph bars
such wealth brings
such a beauteous day
of such a salve can speak
Such civil war
I love thee in such sort
doth such substance give '
Hang on such thorns
truth of such account
For such a time
such interchange of state
the twilight of such day
the glowing of nuch fire
I hold such strife
found such fair assistance
such virtue hath my pen
And such a counterpart
but waking no such matter
Such is my love
I love thee in such sort
having such a bcope
Such seems your beauty
still such, and ever so
Even such a beauty
Such cherubins as your sweet self
resemble
At stich who, not bom fair
But no such roses
There is such strength
was he such a storm
do again for such a sake
Such Imjks as none could look
with such an earihly tongue
whose deep conceit Ln such
Soeh-llke — In such-like circum-
stance, with stich-like sport VA .... 844
And with such-like flatt«'ring P P 2\ 41
8aek*d— she had not suck 'd V A ^... 672
suck'd an «^rthly mother " .... 863
And suck'd the honey R h 840
Sadden— whcH'at a suden pale Ky4 .... 6>»9
Are on a sudden waited ** .... 749
Saddenljr— Be suddenly revengr.-d R h 1C83
that vadrth suddenly P P \'\ 1
Sue— sue for exiled maj<'Sty's r*.'j¥ral R L «l
And sue a friend S/m \M 11
Snlfer— suffer these abominations R L 1832
O, let me suffer /^/n TA
It suffers not in smilinR fiomp " 124 6
pine within and suffer dearth ** 144 8
SBflTeraaee — patience, tame to ... . " 58 7
SaflTer'd— , it will »K the h»^rt VA .... 388
I Huffer'd in your crime Aim Wi 8
SaflTeriBC— Puffering my friend ** 42 8
her suffering «r*ta*y assuage L C .... r&
Have of my suff«'ring jmiih ** .... 178
in the suffering jian^rs it U»rs ** .... 272
ftafllki^— let it thf-n «iiflice R L .... 1679
t// know thf* shall suffice PP i 7
R«aee4— then in f«-«-lifitfly ^ufb*-*^ R L .... 1112
in thy abuiidarif-e am n'ifEcd Aon 37 11
8Bfar*d— Thy sugar'd tongue R L . —
14
17
25
29
34
84
35
36
87
54
62
63
64
73
73
75
78
81
84
87
88
96
103
104
105
106
114
127
130
" 150
mJ \^ .....
I(
«
l<
u
M
U
(I
M
<l
4<
It
M
li
M
It
It
<i
PP
It
4
5
8
10
8
8
18
1
7
12
13
10
7
6
9
9
9
8
2
18
11
14
13
13
2
3
4
8
6
11
6
7
101
322
4
14
7
SUGGEST
272
SURFEIT
Sain^Cft— two spirits do suggest me Son 144 2
two spirits do suggest me still P P 2 2
8«fgetted — . . . . this proud issue Ji L ~... 37
Saggesteth — alarms, .... mutiny Fi4 ~... 651
SaggMtlon— By their suggestion ** ..... 1044
Sving'— to his eyes suing " ~... 836
Soft— dwells upon my suit ** 20C
as desperate in his suit " ..... 8:^6
Tender ray suit B L M4
where his suit may be obtained '* 898
my love-suit, sweet, fulfil Son 186 4
A youthful suit,— it was L C «... 79
Which late her noble suit " .... 284
And in thy suit be humble P P 19 82
^Mir— And suit thy pity Son 132 12
Salted— Her eyes so suited " 127 10
Saltor— suitor 'gins to woo him VA 6
Sollen— Still is he sullen ** ..... 75
From sullen earth, sings Son 29 12
the surly sullen bell ** 71 2
Sullied— your day of youth to sullied
night " IS 12
Sam — Shall sum my count " 2 11
So great a sum of sums ** 4 8
hath cast his utmost sum *' 49 8
all thy sum of good ** 109 12
parcels in combined sums L C ...~ 231
Summer — ^A summer'sday will seem KJl .... 23
in summer's heat " ...» 91
ere summer half be done " ..... 802
perf^tion of my summer Jt L 887
time leads summer on Son 5 5
Summer's distillation left "59
In thee thy summer "62
And summer's green all girded " 12 7
compare thee to a summer's day "18 1
And summer's lease " 18 4
thy eternal summer " 18 9
When summer's breath " 54 8
Make summer's welcome " 56 14
summer's honey breath " 65 5
summer of another's green " 68 11
The summer's flower is to the sum-
mer sweet " 94 9
this time removed was summer's
time " 97 5
For summer and his pleasures " 97 11
any summer's story tell " 98 7
in summer's front doth sing " 102 7
the summer is less pleasant "102 9
shook three summent' pride " 104 4
was beauty's summer dead " 104 14
Youth like summer morn P P 12 8
Youth like summer brave " 12 4
Sammon— Do summon us to part VA 534
I summon up remembrance Son SO 2
San— Even as the sun VA 1
The sun doth burn my face " ..... 186
of this descending sun " ..... 190
The sun that shines " 193
between that sun and thee " 194
heavenly and earthly sun " 198
Like the fair sun " ..... 483
sun glorifies the sky " 485
To shame the sun " 732
melts with the mid-day sun " 750
is tempest after sun " ..... 800
The sun ariseth " 856
Vor sun nor wind " ...» 1082
VA
• ••M
1084
14
•••••
1063
U
•••■«
1088
JtL
• ••••
25
u
••••»
872
u
•••••
775
M
•••••
1218
M
— •••
1224
II
••«••
1226
U
• ••••
1230
II
•••••
1837
Son
21
6
II
24
11
M
25
6
U
35
3
M
33
9
II
S3
14
11
49
6
11
59
6
II
76
13
II
130
t
II
132
5
II
148
12
LC
• ••••
9
PP
3
10
II
6
1
II
6
11
41
15
16
RL
••«••
888
41
•••••
128
VA
1095
EL
»••••
525
PP
21
11
Son— The sun doth loom you
sun and sharp air
gaudy sun would peep
golden splendour of the sun
fair and fiery-pointed sun
permit the sun to climb
when sun doth melt their snow
Why her two suns
the sun being set
Of th(»e fair suns
By heaven's fair sun
With sun and moon
where-through the sun
the marigold at the sun's eye
stain both moon and sun
Even so my sun one early mom
Suns of the world may stain when
heaven's sun staineth
with that sun thine eye
five hundred courses of the sun
the sun is daily new and old
are nothing like the sun
not the morning sun of heaven
The sun itself soes not
fortified her visage from the sun
Then, thou fair sun
Scarce had the sun
The sun look'd on the world
shine sun to succour flowers
Sander— seems to part in sunder
Sundry — The sundry dangers
Sung'— when he hath sung
And sung by children
sung the doIefuU'st ditty
Sunk— brave day sunk in hideous
night .am 12 2
Sunken — thine own deep-sunken eyes "27
Sunset — sunset fadclh in the west " 73 6
Sunshine— comforteth like .... VA 799
Superior — which their superiors
want R L ...» 42
8npp*d— for I supp'd with sorrow P P 14 G
Sapper— after supper long he ques-
tioned R L »... 122
Suppliant— the humble suppliant's
friend " ...» 897
Supplicant— And .... their sighs L C ^... 276
Supply— No man will .... thy want P P 21 38
Support— sturdy trees support me VA 152
Suppose — . . . . thou dost defend me R L 16S4
or your afilairs suppose Son 37 10
Supposed— there's no death .... R L 133
or else some shame supposed " 377
makes supposed terror true " 4.55
my unsounded self, supposed a fool " 1819
I by lacking have supposed dead Son 31 2
Supposed as forfeit " 107 4
Sweetly supposed them L C 142
Supposing — supposing thou art true Son 93 1
Suppressed — slack'd, not suppress'd RL ...» 425
thus is simple truth supprest Son 138 8
Supreme — Imperious supreme of all VA 996
the supreme fair R L 780
Sureeaae— If they surcease to be " »... 1766
Sure — in sure wards of trust Son 48 4
O, sure I am, the wits " 59 13
And to be sure " 131 9
Surety-like— He learn'd hut .... "134 7
Surftit— Whereon they surfeit VA 544
STILL
268
STOOD
Still— she with vehement prajren
urgeth still B L
monarcha still are fear'd for love
•he controlled still
And therefore would they still
hereafter still be blind
Keep still possession
i<
i(
<(
!•
U
. 476
611
727
752
758
803
And therefore still in night " »... 1085
unpractised swimmer plunging still " »... 1098
ril bum on Tarquin still " 1133
Extremity still urgeth " 1337
eyes wailing still ** 1508
And still on him she grazed, and
gazing still " 1531
should my shame still rest " „... 1643
To accessary yieldings, but still
pure " 1658
of her blood still pure " ^... 1742
still doth red abide *' 1749
substance still lives Son 5 14
adore his beauty still "77
and still weep ** 9 5
still the world enjoys It " 9 10
beauty still may live *' 10 14
To give away yourself keeps your-
self still *' 16 13
in my bosom's shop is hanging
still ".24 7
still farther oflT " 28 8
yet I have still the loss " 34 10
For still temptation follows " 41 4
art present still with me " 47 10
And I am still with them " 47 12
praise shall still find room " 65 10
and he iu them still green " 63 14
may still shine " 65 14
still with thee shall stay " 74 4
Why write I stUl all one " 76 6
you and love are still my argument " 76 10
8o is my love still telling " 76 14
You stiU shall live " 81 13
Muse in manners holds her still " 85 1
still cry 'Amen " 85 6
May still seem love " 93 3
Yet seem'd it winter still " 98 13
Such seems your beauty still " 104 3
still such, and ever so " 106 4
Still constant in a wondrous ex-
cellence "105 6
that which still doth grow " 115 14
Still losing when I saw myself " 119 4
by evil still made better " 119 10
still will pluck thee back " 126 6
She may detain, but not still keep,
her treasure " 126 10
to be my comfort still " 134 4
am I that vex thee still " 135 8
yet receives rain still " 135 9
and love that still " 136 13
spirits do suggest me still " 144 2
a fever, longing still " 147 1
Btili to endure " 153 6
in her threaden fillet still did bide L C &3
still did wake and sleep " 123
two spirits do suggest me still PP 2 2
Touches so soft still conquer chas-
Uty "48
the loss thereof still fearing " 7 10
I craved nothing of thee still " 10 10
Still— still to strive with men PP 19 a
<S(i<(— pure thoughts are dead and
still R L — 167
in still imagination " ..^ 702
The nurse, to still her child " -.^ 818
Stone-sUll. astonish'd with " 1730
which methinks still doth stand Son 104 11
and my loud crying still " 143 14
Stlll*d— stiird with dandling VA .... 562
StUl-gaJclng— wonder of ... . eyes R L . 84
Stimtory— thestUlitoryofthyface K^ ..... 443
Stlll-plning— But like sUU-pining
TanUlus R L 858
Still-8laoghter*d— armour of still-
slaughter'd lust " ..... 188
Sting— disdainfully did sting " ..... 40
at the mercy of his mortal sting " ..... 864
honey guarded with a sting " . 493
hath neither sting, knot, nor L C .... 265
by death's sharp sting PP 10 4
Stir-rider's angry stir VA .... 283
careless lust stirs up " .... 556
the strumpet that began this stir R L . 1471
Stlrr'd—stirr'd by a painted beauty Son 21 2
Stirring— at stirring of a feather VA .... 302
Myself was stirring B L .... 1280
Stock— who did thy stock pollute " 1063
Stole— But stole his blood VA .... 1066
Now stole upon the time R L .... 162
and he stole that word San 79 9
my white stole of chastity L C .... 297
Stol'tt— the treasure stol'n away R L .... 1050
but stol'n from forth thy gate " .... 1068
religious love stol'n from mine eye Son 81 6
thou wilt be stol'n, I fear " 48 13
buds of marjoram had stol'n " 99 7
nor red, nor white, bad stol'n " 99 10
it had stol'n from thee " 99 15
Stone — stone at rain relentcth V A .... 200
cold and senseless stone " .... 211
That from the cold stone R L .... 177
For stones dissolved to water " .... 592
no harder than a stone " .... 693 *
And wast« huge stones " .... 969
Stone him with harden'd hearts,
harder than stones " .... 978
Like stones of worth Son 62 7
than unswept stone " 65 4
Since bra^s, nor stone "65 1
are themselves as stone " 94 3
Each stone's dear nature L C .... 210
each several stone " ..... 216
Stone-still— Stone-still, astonish'd R L 1730
'Stonlshed— 'stonish'd as night-
wandcrere VA .... 826
Stood— How like a jade he stood " .... 891
Calleth in the place she stood " .... 1121
upon their whiteness stood " ..... ] 170
had Narcissus seen her as she
stood R L .... 265
for Achilles' image stood his spear " .... 1424
Stood for the whole " .... 1428
Stood many Trojan mothers " .... 1431
both stood like old acquaintance " ..„ 1596
Stood Collatine and all " .... 1731
like a late-sack'd island vastly stood " .... 1740
wavering stood in doubt L C 97
And stood stark naked PP 6 10
bounced in, whereas he stood " 6 18
SWEET
274
TABLE
Sweiet— Tet doth it steal sweet honrs Son
Thine own sweet argument
sour leisure gave sweet leave
Sweet flattery ! then she lovea
sweet up-locked treasure
By that sweet ornament
For that sweet odour
Sweet roses do not so
Of their sweet deaths
Sweet love, renew thy force
My sweet love's beauty
That I in your sweet thoughts
late the sweet birds sang
O, Icnow, sweet love
with thy sweet graces graced be
I grant, sweet love
Thy sweet beloved name
lu thy face, sweet love
If thy sweet virtue
is to the summer sweet
How sweet and lovely
nor the sweet smell
They were but sweet
my iove*s sweet face
So your sweet hue
blazon of sweet beauty's best
Nothing, sweet boy
The most sweet favour
your sweet self resemble
as thy sweet self grow'st
Sweet beauty hath no name
With thy sweet fingers
To thy sweet will making
my love-suit, sweet, fulfil
a something sweet to thee
that tongue that ever sweet
thy sweet self prove
What's sweet to do
When winds breathe sweet
But, O my sweet
to my sweet design
Sweet Cytherea, sitting
is music and sweet fire
If music and sweet poetry agree
the sweet melodious sound
did I sec a fair sweet youth
Sweet rose, fair flower
O, sweet shepherd, hie thee
Sweet birds sing not
Farewell, sweet lays
For a sweet content
Sweet— Vflih sweeU that shall
The sweets we wish for
Sweets with sweets war not
Since sweets and beauties
all her fading sweets
O, in what sweets
Sweet thief, whence didst thou
steal thy sweet
But sweet or colour
And sweets grown common
For compound sweet
To be forbod the sweets
Youth, so apt to pluck a sweet
Sweeten — sweetens in the suffering
pangs
Sireeteat — canker lives in ... . bud
are sweetest odours made
in heaven's sweetest air
%Son
36
8
u
88
8
M
89
10
U
42
14
M
52
2
It
64
2
U
54
4
M
54
11
U
54
12
U
56
1
M
68
11
U
71
7
M
78
4
M
76
9
II
78
12
U
79
5
II
89
10
U
93
10
a
93
14
II
94
9
II
95
1
u
98
5
II
98
11
11
100
9
11
104
11
II
106
5
II
108
5
II
113
10
II
114
6
II
126
4
II
127
7
II
128
8
II
133
4
11
136
4
II
136
12
II
145
6
II
151
4
LC
•••••
88
II
• ••••
103
II
•»•■•
239
II
•«••«
278
PP
4
1
II
5
12
<i
8
1
u
8
9
II
9
9
11
10
1
11
12
11
It
18
88
II
18
49
It
18
51
VA
..... ]
1144
RL
•••«•
867
Sm
8
2
It
12
11
II
19
7
II
95
4
II
99
2
II
99
15
II
102
12
II
125
7
LC
164
PP
17
14
LC
•••••
272
Son
85
4
ti
54
12
u -
70
4
Sweetctt— ranker Tlce thesweeteat
buds doth love Son 70 7
For sweetest things turn sourest *' 94 18
my sweet'st friend must be ** 183 4
Sweetly— in darkness sweetly lay R L ..... 898
They do but sweetly chide thee Son 8 7
so sweetly doth deceive '^ 39 12
Sweetly supposed them L C . 142
sweetly did she smile PP 14 7
Th' one sweetly flatters R L 172
Sweetnem — sweetness of the spoil V A »... 553
nothing thence but sweetness San 93 12
your ne'er-cloying sweetness " 118 5
Sweet-aeasonM— Or as ... . showers ** 75 2
Sweet-anelllBg — a more .... sire V A 1178
Swell—Swell in their pride R L ..... 432
swells the higher by this let " ..... 646
Swelleth — swelleth with more rage V A .... 832
Swelling^And swelling passion *' ..... 218
swelling dugs do ache ** ..... 875
Swelling on either aide R L ..... 888
your hollow -swelling feather'd
breasU " H22
with swelling drops 'gan wet ** ..... 1228
With swelling ridges ** .... 1439
Swenring— my patent back again is
swerving Son 87 8
Swift— by whose swift aid VA .... 1190
with swift intent he goes R L 46
Swift subtle poet, carrier ** .... 926
and bow swift and short " .... 991
Whose swifl obedience " .... 1215
With swift pursuit to venge " 1991
with swift motion slide Son 45 4
By those swift messengers " 45 10
When swift extremity »• 51 6
can hold his swift foot back " 65 11
and mak«*s all swift despatch *' 143 8
Swlfteat— The .... hours observed LC ^ - 60
Swift-footed — whate'er thou wilt,
swift-footed Time Son 19 6
Swiftly— swiftly doth forsake him VA 821
Swimmer— Like an unpractised ,.,.RL .... 1098
Swine— a churlish swine to gore VA .... 616
the loving swine •• ....1115
Swoln— All swoln with chafing ** .... 825
Swore— and that they swore R L .... 1848
Sworn— When they had sworn " .... 1849
For I have sworn thee fair Son 147 13
For I have sworn deep oaths " 152 9
For I have sworn thee fair " 152 18
But, alas! my hand hath sworn PP 17 11
That's to ye sworn Zr C7 .... 180
Swoand- Here Troilus swounds R L 1486
and swound at tragic shows L C .... 808
Swonnding — Or swounding paleness " 805
Sword — Draw not thy sword R L 626
they would debate with angry
swords ** .... 1421
against my heart he set his sword *' .... 1640
Nor Mars his sword Son 55 7
SjrmpatkUed — with like semblance
it is sympathized R L .... 1118
Thou truly fair wert truly sympa-
thized An 82 11
Sympathy— This solemn sympathy VA .... 1057
enforced by sympathy R L ..» 1229
Table— in table of my heart Son 24 2
STRENGTH
270
SUBSCRIBE
150
19
102
17
u
I*
u
75
u
u
u
8
19
8
32
Strea^tk— There is sach strength Son
■trire to try her strength P P
84reBftheB*d— My lore Is ... . Son
Stm^hlfM— T wo .... doves V A
knit brow, and strcngthless pace R L
Stretched— And stretched metre Som
Strict— From their strict embrace VA ...~
Keep the obsequy so strict P T -...
Mrlfr— with herself at strife VA ....
worlcraanship at strife ** ....
ciTil home-bred strife ** —
reTeuge or quittal of such strife R L ~...
there were no strife ** —
doth force a further strife ** -...
sort an hour great strifes to end
to show the painter's strife
weep with equal strife
I hold such strife Son
Strike— strikes her on the cheeks VA
strikes whatever is in his way **
And whom he strikes **
thou shouldst strike at it
to strike him dead
Strike the wise dumb
strike a poor unseasonable doe R L
Strikes each in each Son
the deer that thou shouldst strike P P
Strikiag — what needs a second .... VA
his beating heart, alarum striking R L
String — Shall tune our heart-strings **
Mark how one string, sweet hus-
band to another Son
8trlpp*d— they be out-stripp'd by
erery pen "
Stripping— Out-stripping crows that
strive VA
Strive— strive to overfly them "
all in vain you strive
ever strive to kiss you
They both would strive
Yet strive I to embrace
as he is, he strives in vain
all the world, and I must strive
I did strive to prove
mastering what not sttrives
ahe strive to try her strength
•till to strive with men "*
Strlved— beauty and virtue st rived R L
Strlvlag- As striving who should V A
then, striving to mend Son
Stroke^oth she stroke his cheek V A
curse thee for this stroke "
Strong — straight legs and passing . . . . "
never waxeth strong
with his strong course
My will is strong
strong pirates, shelves, and sands
From nie by strong assault
and they too strong
with circumstances strong
Mine enemy was strong
with so strong a fear
By our strong arms
Resembling strong youth
the strong offence's cross
your charter Is so strong
Nor gates of 8t(H*l so strong
what strong hand can hold
which makes thy love more strong "
M
tl
R L ...M
Son
LC
PP
112
117
• ••*•
19
19
103
((
(I
R Jj —'
it
u
i(
it
u
H
Son
u
u
M
II
7
34
58
65
65
78
7
19
1
153
709
12
874
12
11
291
lU
236
403
689
899
1377
1791
3
475
62:<
624
938
948
1146
581
10
2
250
4:<3
1141
9
6
324
324
772
1082
1092
504
1665
5
13
240
19
43
52
968
9
45
945
297
420
960
243
335
835
865
1262
1646
1647
1834
6
11
9
8
11
13
I Stroag^'gainst my strong infection An 111
Divert strong minds *' 115
j more strong, far greater '* 119
replication prompt and reason
strong L C
I strong o*er them, and you o*er
me being strong ** .....
Had women been so strong P P 19
StTMif -healeged — the walls of
strong-besieged Troy R L -...
StroBf-honded— to that .... oath L C ....
Stronger— his .... strength obey'd VA ~...
make conquest 'of the stronger R L .
make grief^s strength seem
stronger Son
is no stronger than a flower **
Strongest— The strongest body VA
The strongest castle P P
StroM^ly— but strongly he desired R L
my duty strongly knit Son
You are so strongly in my purpose
bred
Strong -neck'd— The .... steed
Strong-tempered-. . . . steel
Straek— Struck dead at first
His meaning struck her
Which struck her sad, and
he struck his hand upon bis breast **
that struck me dead Sen
Strneken— straight be ... . down R L
Stmggle— he st niggles to be gone VA
Nay, do not struggle •*
Straggling— Struggling for passage **
Stmmpet— Show me the strumpet R L
Stmmpeted — maiden virtue rudely
strum peted iSiM
Stack— stuck over nil his face L C .
8tad— coral clasps and amber stnds PPM
Stadded— The studded bridle VA
Stady -Study his bias leaves PP 6
Staff— Stuff up his lust R L ....
SUff'd— Till either gorge he sturd VA
Stardy— like sturdy trees support me
II
28
65
19
26
112
VA -.
II
II
u
RL ...
86
66
u
Son
II
II
Style— Theirs for their style
thou dost but mend the style
Making his style admired
Sabdae— did her force subdue
Sabdaed— my nature is subdued
pensive and subdued desires
Sabdalng— tip of his subduing tongue *'
Subject— tributary subject quakes VA
Where subjects' eyes do learn R L
her subjects with foul insurrection *'
Son
82
78
84
L C ....
Son 111
AJ o ....
u
u
M
88
59
82
84
100
103
VA
M
want subject to invent
To subjects worse have given
Of their fair subject
That to his subject lends
to lend base subjects light
To mar the subject
5ki!y«€<— Making it subject
Subject and servile
As subject to Time's love Son 124
Sal^ectlon— by their mortal fkult
brought in subjection R L ....
Proud of subjection L C ....
Sobomatlon- perjury and .... RL ....
Sobom^d— Hence, thou. . . . informer 6bi» 125
Sabaeribe— and Death to me lub-
acribes ** 107
10
8
12
122
257
23
1429
279
111
1767
14
4
1145
29
415
2
13
263
111
S50
462
162
1842
6
217
227
710
1047
1471
6
81
14
87
5
297
58
152
14
11
12
248
6
219
120
1015
616
722
1
14
4
6
4
10
787
1161
8
724
108
919
13
10
TARQUIN
276
TELL
Tarqnin— flometime 'Tarquin' waa
proDOunced plain R L 1786
to publish Tarquin's foul offence " 1852
Tarquin's everlasting banishment ** «... 1855
Tarrlane«— longing .... for Adonia PP 6 4
Taak— His day's hut task VA .... 630
In that high task B L ~... 80
the task it hath to saj ** 1G18
her sad task hath not said " ..... 1699
should task you to recite Son 72 1
Taate— Dainties to taste VA 1G4
is sour to taste " 528
this learning niayst thou taste S<m 77 4
so shall I taste " 90 11
that needs will taste Z C ~... 167
Tcute—wert thou to the taste VA ...» 445
Whose precious taste " 543
but alter not his taste R L 651
His taste delicious *' 699
to bitter wormwood taste ** .... 893
The sUlned taste of violated troth " 1059
By wilful taste of what thyself Son 40 8
Nor taste, nor smell " 141 7
Tasti'd— mayst thou well be tasted VA 128
Tatter'd— Will be a tatter'd weed Son 2 4
on my tatter'd loving " 26 11
Taught— them scornful tricks VA 501
Those eyes that taught all other eyes " .... 952
Ruin hath taught me Son 64 11
taught the dumb on high " 78 6
by spirits taught to write " 86 6
love taught it this alchemy " 114 4
And taught it thus anew ** 145 8
Who taught thee how *' 150 9
hath taught her thus to say PP 19 22
Tauf ht*st— that thou .... this ill RL 996
Teach— his proceedings teach thee VA 406
doth teach it divination ** .... 670
teach the fool to speak " 1146
and thou didst teach the way R L 6:)0
Teach me to curse him *' 996
0, teach me how to make " 1653
To teach my tongue Son 19 52
Doth teach that ease " 50 3
1 teach thee how « 101 13
If I might teach thee wit " 140 5
Teachest— And that thou teachcst " 89 13
Teaching— Teaching the sheets VA 398
Teaching decrepit age " 1148
Teaching them thus to use it R L 62
Team — had his team to guide VA 179
Tear — she with her tears " 49
with her contending tears *• 82
quench them with my tears " 192
With tears, which chorus-like " 360
your feigned tears " 425
the crystal tears gave light " 491
Dost thou drink tears " 949
O, how her eyes and tears " 961
seen in the tears, tears in her eye " 962
tears make them wet again " 966
Whereat her tears began " 979
With purple tears, that his wound
wept " 1054
my salt tears gone " 1071
first should dry his tears " 1092
which she compares to tears " 1176
Nor children's tears R L 431
teuB ensoe the deed " .... 502
RL^
u
u
$t
u
«
u
u
u
u
u
M
U
Son
060
.... 570
.... 588
.... ^94
.... 682
686
.... 797
.... 1127
.... 1131
.... 1271
.... 1274
1319
.... 1375
.... 1468
.... 1549
1.551
.... IdoU
>••. 1592
.... 1718
.... 1817
81 5
u
t(
II
34
44
119
148
148
XC.
7
21
Tear— Tears harden lust
By her untimely tears
Be moved with my tears
Melt at my tears
in the chastest tears
Her tears should drop
Mingling my talk with tears
when time is kept with tears
at each sad strain will strain a tear '*
Thofie tears from thee
If tears could help
and tears may grace
seem'd a weeping tear
And with my tears quench Troy
To see those borrow'd tears
For every tear he falls
false Sinon's tears doth flatter
Her eyes, though sod in tears
carved in it with tears
To check the tears
a holy and ol>sequious tear
Ah ! but those tears are pearl
heavy tears, badges of either's woe **
potions have I drunk of Siren tears "
with watching and with tears
with tears thou keep'st me blind
woe had pelleted in tears
orb of one particular tear
resolved my reason into tears
Her faith, her oaths, her tears
Scarce I could from tears refjrain
Jcflr— shall rudely tear thee
her nails her flesh doth tear
to tear his curled hair
her beauty I may tear
She tears the senseless Sinon
and often 'gau to tear
Tear-dlNtalned— about her .... eye R L
Tearing— Tearing of papers, break-
ing rings L C .... 6
Tedlons— Her song was tedious VA ..... S41
My woes are tedious R L .... 1909
burnt out in tedious nights *' .... 1379
Teeming— The teeming autumn Son 97 6
Teen — my heart of teen V A ..... 808
put to the smallest teen L C 192
Teeth— 'tween his teeth V A 269
whet his teeth at him ** .... 1113
But through his teeth R L 1787
Pluck the keen teeth Stm 19 3
Tell— Tell me, love's master VA 585
He tells her, no ; to-morrow " .... 587
More I could tell " ..... 805
She tells them 'tis " .... 897
Tells him of trophies " .... 1013
Do tell her she is dreadfully besets L .... 444
and tell my loving tale " .... 480
marking what he tells '* .... 510
will tell my story " .... 813
But tell me, girl, when went " .... 1275
than one hath power to tell " .... 1288
sad tales doth tell " .... 149o
And tell thy grief " .... 1603
To tell them all " .... 1617
and tell the face thou viewest Son 8 1
count the clock that tells the time " 12 1
But not to tell of good " 14 3
fortune to brief minutes tell ** 14 5
I tell the day to please him " 28 9
II
PP
II
RL
II
ti
II
fi
LC
18
14
1
10
18
18
289
296
12
16
.... 669
.... 739
.... Vol
.... 1472
.... 61
— 1586
TELL
277
THAN
Son
SO
76
94
89
93
95
98
103
139
140
** 144
" 151
jj o •••••
It
M
M
(I
«(
U
M
<(
Ml— from woe to woe tell o'er
doch almost tell my name
if he can tell
of oar old acquaintance tell
nothing thence but sweetness tell
That tongue that tells
any sammer's story tell
and your gifts to tell
Tell me thou lovest elsewhere
yet, love, to tell me so
yet not directly tell
Uj loul doth tell my body
Let it not tell your Judgement
yott are, O, bear me tell " ~...
yet not directly tell PP 2
tlwu oomest thy tale to tell *• 19
Tri]h4r-«tUl telling what is told Son 76
by thy true-telling friend " 82
Ml*tal»— object to the tell-Ule Day R L ^...
TOipcruiee— when .... is thaw'd ** ~...
Twynvte— lovely and more .... Son 18
Tfliptt'd — Strong -tern per'd steel
his Wronger strength obey'd V A
Tiiap»lBf— dissolves with tempering ** .....
Taip«t— from .... and fhmi rain ** .....
tempest to the field ** ~...
tempest after sun ** .....
This windy tempest R L
That looks on tempests Sun 116
Tiaple— his soul's fair temple R L ~...
Her sacred temple spotted *^
ViBpC— uproar tempts his v«ins ** ~...
And now, to tempt all LC ~...
TanptatloB— For still .... follows Son 41
and to temptation slow '* 94
-Not to be tempted L C ^...
ive the tempter place ** .....
TMnptoth — Tempteth my better
angel Sf/n 144
Ttoipteth my better angel P P 2
TtaipCiBf— Upon thy tempting lip
the tempting tune is bluwn
tempting her to thee
Tea— Ten kisseii short as one
What is ten hundrt^
without ten Women's wit
He ten times pines
Or ten times happier be it ten for
one Sfm ti
Ten times thyself **
If ten of thine ten times ** «
then ten times happy me ** Z7
tm times more in wurtb ^ '^*
TtmtMt — tenant* Uj their »bame R L ...^
all tenants to the bean i^M^ V*
Timd— strange shadow* on yni tend " T^'.
What should I do but u-x»A *- :;:
to no other pMS my vfrrv-^ tend " I'/f
his inviicd properti'4 did Urod L C
Trader— was the tender U>y VA ...>
The tender spring " ...
broad buttock. Kikd^ hi<le *- ...
Her other tender hand " .. _
cats up Lore's tender >pric.g " ....
do the tender leaves *- . .
whose tender boms btinr Lit *- . .
in pity of his teod'^r yean - . .,
Unapt for tender vo^l R A .
wait ott the tcttdcr fpfiiif - ....
PP
VA
M
Sun
VA
RL
41
10
••
t
7
12
12
5
7
12
5
6
10
7
73
2r)3
10
14
12
806
884
2
111
565
238
454
800
1788
6
719
1172
427
2.V2
4
4
251
318
6
6
127
77S
U
21 ,
TA'i \
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h
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10
14
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10
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\r.
Tender— His tender heir might bear Son 1 4
And, tender churl " i 12
As tender nurse ♦» 22 12
In tender embassy of love *' 45 6
To kiss the tender inward ** 128 G
Nor tender feeling " 141 1)
The tender nibbler p P 4 n
Ibuier— Tender my suit R L 534
The barren tender Son 83 4
Of pensivcd and subdued desires
the tender L C 219
TeBder*d— fee of parting is V A 638
as you to me then tendcr'd Sim 120 11
Tenderer— His tenderer check VA 353
Tenoar— the tcnour of her woe R L ~... 1310
The scofje and tenour Son 61 8
Tent— his tent my bed VA ...~ 108
the night before in Tarquin'stent R L ...~ 15
Tenth- Be thou the tenth Muse Sm 38 9
Teren- ' Tereu, Tereu :' by Rud by PP 21 14
Terens— While thou on Tercus R L 1134
Term— May any terms acquit me " 1706
For term of life Son VI 2
Buy tenmt divine "146 11
And long upon these terms L C ^... 176
Term**- be U'rm'd a po«;i's rage Sun 17 11
Termleas— on thai teruih-ss skin L C ...- 94
Terror- Which with cold terror VA ..... 1048
with trembling terror die R L ...» 231
What terror 'tis " 4.02
makes huinn/feti terror true •* ..... 455
EflecU of t«rrror L C ..... 2ff2
TeataaieBt— writ in my testament R L 1183
Teaty-His testy master V A ..... 319
fond and testy as a child R L ..... 1094
As testy sick men Son W) 7
Text— The text is old VA 806
Than— 'Thrice fairer than myself '• ..... 7
more lovely than a man ** ..... 9
than dov<:s or x*f^r% sm ** ..... 10
than she for thin ViffoX turn ^ ..... 92
Nay. more than flint ** .... 2fiO
a whiter hue than whfle ** ^... 3!H
Tliat worse than Taiitalu* ** ... . y/s
than thy i»p*4r'« i»'iint *• fi26
And more than ^» •* „... rfi,\
than civil \i*nn*^ht*'*\ strife ** »... 7ft4
more rnoviiij; than your own ** ..... 77<;
Her mor»r than ba^t^r ** 9ri5»
Ratb^rr than triumph R L .... 77
More than hi% *-y^ ** |<i5
DK/re «lavj«b tri>»ut«' than tb*ry owe " '£fi
With mop' than s/lruiraiM/n ** 411
Wor**; titan a •lavUh m\yn ** ..... .w;
D'/hard<rr than a »tf/ne •• r/ji
ad*«r*rr tbinj; than life ** ..... f^7
f^r pffifT*'.r tUzu U'fore " f/jZ
d»*^r *i ft than J*/» lorn l«-»4 'on^rlt " ..... '01
h-^ru, banJ'-r than «ton«Tt " „ .. it',^
Wivl*-r tfi hJni than tiyrs " ... ir*/
Tlvar* tb'-y wK'/^ »hot«5 " ll'/j
No twfr*- than wax ** ., ,. lu't
ti»af* I 'an »-;j *-xpf«-M " ^2M
than or,*- tix'.h [^,**-r xti t*-II •■ .... VtrA
Wtt- tr.ai. J,*:ar lh*-w* u,v\ •■ j;!r/|
l.-v^tf-r r,'..M- 'i.xu <i.*i^/ir forla * J*/V
vitfi u*u:y \\.xu r.a*!" *' . . \%.:l
•j^**l .•/*'/f«- tMf, •;y-«'d ' ,. .. J*:*
\u u^. tu/^. voris tiiai* m*^% ** «,., \ik\i
SURFEIT
273
SWEET
Swftlt— Do surfeit by the ejre Fil ..... 602
Surfeits, imposthumet, grief " ..... 743
LoTe surfeits not " ~... WA
Is but to surfeit R L 139
pine and surfeit day by day Son 75 13
Sarftlt-taking— So Tarquin R L 698
Sarly— hear the surly sullen bell 8m 71 2
Simtie— Tarquin answers with sur-
mise R L 88
By deep surmise " ~... 1679
on Just proof surmise accumulate Son 117 10
8«raimiBt— in ail worths surmount " 62 8
Smrpai would surpass the life VA . — 289
Sarpliee— Let the priest in surplice
white P T ..... 13
8«rprlie— to surprise her heart VA 890
doth so surprise " 1049
that they may surprise R L 166
Sarrey — he will not every hour .... Son 52 3
my loTe's sweet face survey " 100 9
8«itIt« — thou dost survive VA ...~ 173
the scandal will survive R L 204
iurcMse to be that should survive '* ..... 1766
If thou survive my well-contented
day Son 82 1
Or you survive when I in earth " 81 2
SairlTlng^this surviving shame R L 223
So thy surviving husband " ..... 519
Saipeet— It shall suspect where is VA 1153
Suspect I may, yet not Son 144 10
Suspect I may, yet not PP 2 10
aHtped—Ber rash suspect VA 1010
The ornament of beauty is suspect Son 70 3
If some suspect of ill " 70 13
SupMtetk — Little suspecteth the
fUse worshipper R L 86
Swpieioii— And bid suspicion VA 448
From that suspicion R L 1321
Swtali — and such griefii sustain " ..... 139
8«staiBlng— for grief of my ... . " ..... 1272
long in sorrow's sharp sustaining " 1573
8wallow~to swallow Venus* liking VA 248
swallow up his sound advice R L 1409
8wallow*d — whole is .... in confusion " 1159
as a swallow'd bait S(m 129 7
Swallow! ng~but a . . . . grave VA 757
A swallowing gulf R L 557
Swaii— with the blunt swains he goes " 1504
known to us poor swains P P 18 45
Swan — the snow-white swan desire RL 1011
And now this pale swan " 1611
Be the dcath-divinlng swan P T 15
Swart • eonplexloii*d — the swart-
complex ion'd night Son 28 11
Sway— by limping sway disabled '* 66 8
my heart to sway " 150 2
noble by the sway L C 108
Swaj'd— 'Thus he that overruled I
oversway'd VA 109
Swaj'st— when thou gently sway'st Son 128 3
Swear — ^immortal hand she sweiirs VA 80
Swear Nature's death *' 744
That one would swear R L 1393
seems to pelt and swear " 1418
swears he did her wrong " 1462
And swear I found you " ~... 1635
came evidence to swear ** 1650
I swear it to myself alone Son 131 8
that is not false I swear "131 9
18
Swear— Then will I swear Son 132 IS
Swear to thy blind soul *' 136 2
swears that she is made of truth " 138 1
And swear that brightness *' 150 4
swear against the thing they see " 152 12
To swear against the truth " 152 14
When my love swears P P \ 1
how shall I swear to love *' 5 1
Thou for whom Jove would swear " 17 15
Swearing— Swearing I slew him R L ..... 518
Swearing unless I took all " »... 1641
to me love swearing Son 152 2
her oaths of true love swearing P P 1 8
Sweat— queen began to sweat VA 175
With pearly sweat RL «... 896
Begrimed with sweat *' . 1381
Sweating— on his sweating palm VA ~... 25
Since sweating Lust " «... 794
sweating with guilty fear R L ~... 740
Sweet— sweet above compare VA ~... 8
And one sweet kiss " 84
sweet boy, and may it be " «... 159
Sweet bottom-grass " 236
For one sweet look ** 871
approach of sweet desire " ..... 886
Ear's deep-sweet music " ...« 432
Pure lips, sweet seals " 511
his neck a sweet embrace " ...« 639
that sweet coral mouth ** 642
' Sweet boy,' she says " 683
•sweet boy, ere this " «... 613
sweet lips and crystal eyne " ...« 633
from the sweet embrace ** 811
In the sweet channel " 958
sweet Death, I did but Jest " 997
The flowers are sweet " 1079
But true-sweet beauty lived " 1080
Find sweet beginning '* 1138
Sweet issue of a more '* 1178
my sweet love's flower ** «... 1188
For one sweet grape R L «... 215
with so sweet a cheer *• «... 264
that follows sweet delight " 357
and enter this sweet city " 469
and sweet friendship's oath " «... 669
in her lips' sweet fold " 679
of sweet chastity's decay " ...« 808
where the sweet birds sing " 871
mad with their sweet melody " 1108
Who, having two sweet babes " 1161
Such sweet observance " 1.385
And drop sweet balm " 1466
Sweet love, what spite " «... 1600
In thy sweet semblance " «... 1759
Then live, sweet Lucrcce " 1770
to thy sweet self too cruel Son 1 8
thy sweet self dost deceive " 4 10
substance still lives sweet " 5 14
Make sweet some vial "63
sweet husband to another "89
And your sweet semblance " 13 4
your sweet issue your sweet form
should bear " 13 8
drawn by your own sweet skill " 16 14
her own sweet brood " 19 2
worthy of thy sweet respect " 26 12
For thy sweet love " 29 13
of sweet silent thought " 30 1
To that sweet thief ** 35 14
THAT
279
THAT
Hut— Applying this to that, and so
toao VA 713
'Why, what of thatf quoth she '* »... 717
For stealing mouldb from hearen
that were diviue " ~... 730
That on the earth would breed " 753
lamp that burns by night *' ^... 755
to bury that posterity " ~... 768
Or butcher-sire that reaves his son
ofUfe " -... 766
gold that's put to use " 768
'Wbst hsTe you urged that I can-
not reprore " — 787
The path is smooth that leadeth
on to danger ** »... 788
That lends enibracements unto
erery stranger " —.. 790
Mine ears, that to your wanton talk ^ ~... 809
the object that did feed her sight " ~... 822
M one that unaware '* 823
That all the neighbour caves ** 830
That cedar-tops and hills seem " «... 858
lofluence that makes him bright ** 862
a son that suck'd an earthly mother " 863
like one that spies an adder ** ~... 878
And childish error, that they are
afraid " >... 898
And with that word '* ~... 900
the path that she untreads again " 908
Mistakes that aim, and cleaves " .... 942
'Dost thou drink tears, that thou
provokest " „... 949
Those eyes that taught ** 952
tide that from her two cheeks " 957
Sorrow that friendly sighs sought " .... 964
That every present sorrow seemeth ** „. ., 970
web that she hath wrought " 991
It was not she that call'd " ^... 993
the boar, that bloody beast ** ^... 999
creature, that hath done thee wrong " ~... 1005
hoping that Adonis is alive " .... iuu9
And that his beauty may the bet-
ter thrive ** _... 1011
Whereat she leaps that was but
late forlorn " .... 1026
That from their dark beds once
more leap " ..... ia50
woand that the boar had trench'd " .... 1(|.72
tears, that his wound wept ** ..... lu&i
Her eyes are mad that they have
wept ** ...» 1062
That her sight dazzling nukes the
wound ♦* .... 1064 I
That makes more gashes " .... Vjf/i
What face remains alive that's
worth the viewing " .... 1076
the sUly lamb that day ** .... ym
That some would sing ** .... ii02
livery that be wore " .... IIW
entertainment that he gave ** .... ]l(^
She takes him by the hand, and
that is cold •• _... 1124
coflfer-lids that ckMe ** .... ]127
That, tboQ being dead, the day
sboukl yet be Ugbt •* .... 1154
That an love's pleasore shall not
inaieh " .... 1140
With sweeU that shall the traeat
sight befoOe - II44 |
That— they that love best VA .... 1164
the boy that by her side lay kllPd " 1165
blood, that on the ground lay spiird " .... 1167
Haply that name of * chaste ' JC L ..... 8
Which triumph'd in that sky " 12
That kings might be espoused " .... 20
To set forth that which is so sin-
gular " .... 32
Of that rich jewel " .... 84
Perchance that envy " .... 89
that meaner men should vaunt " .... 41
That golden hap which " .... 42
Virtue would stain that o'er " .... 66
beauty, in that white intituled " .... 67
challenge that fair field " .... 68
That oft they interchange " 70
armies, that would let him go " .... 76
Now thinks he that her husband's " .... 78
prodigal that praised her so " 79
In that hi^h task hath done " .... 80
Therefore that praiite which " 82
For that he coloured with bis high
estate " 92
That nothing in him seeni'd " .... 94
That, cloy'd with much, he pineth " .... 98
But she, that never coped " .... 99
troubled minds that wake " 128
Those that much covet " .... 134
That what they have not, that
which they possess " .... 135
That they prove bankrupt " .... 140
That one for all '* .... 144
oft that wealth doth cost " .... 146
So that in venturing ill ** .... 148
The things we are for that which
we expect ** .... 149
Of that we have " .... 152
Now serves the season that they
may surprise • " .... 166
That from the cold stone •* .... 177
that which is divine " .... 193
That spoU and stains ** ]96
That it will live engraven " .... 203
That my posterity •* .... 206
To wish that I their father •* .... 210
This siege that hath engirt ** .... 221
That which is vile '• .... 2-V2
roses that on lawu we lay " 256
That had Narcissus nefu her " .... 265
the hfrart that shadows dreadeth ** 270
That now be rows a l«4gue " .... 287
Tliat eye which I«^*k» " 290
That eye which biin beholds ** .... 291
wind that fir«s the tonrh " .... 315
Tlie ti^fitn^ the wind, the glove
that did delay him " 32$
Like little frrjsU that sometime " .... 331
That shuts bim from the heaven ** 336
That for his prey •* .... 342
That his foul thoughts ** .... 346
the sbame that fr>llows sweet de-
light " 367
The dove sle^rps fast that this
night-owl will catch ** 360
draw the cl^xid that hides *' .... 371
Whether it Is that the rellecU to
bright •* 376
That dazzleth th«TO ** ..... 377
in that darlu^Kue prisoD died " -^ 979
TABLE
275
TARQUIN
Table— thy tables, are within my
bndn Son 122 1
To trust those Ubles " 122 12
Ta'e»— Had ta'en his last leave VA 2
is ta'en prisoner by the foe R L 1608
Tail— Thin mane, thick Uil VA ...~ 298
through his mane and tail *' tiOH
He Tails his tail " ^... Hl4
Clapping their proud tails " 923
Tiaiated— our hearts oft tainted he E L 38
Which by him Uinted *' 1182
weep upon the tainted place " 1746
Take— Till he take truce VA 82
goeth about to take him " 319
snow takes any dint " ..... 354
DOW she takes him " 861
To take advantage " 4U5
she takes all she can " 564
take counsel of their friends " 640
and takes no r^t " 647
she takes him by the hand " 1 124
in this hollow cradle take thy rest " 1185
takes the worscr part R L 294
He takes it from the rushes " 318
He takes for accidental things " 326
no device can take " .... 535
take root with precious flowers " 870
when death takes one " >... 1161
husband, do thou take " 1200
the other takes in hand " 1235
At last he tskes her " 1597
do not take away " 1796
when he takes thee hence Son 12 14
As he takes from you " 15 14
Unless thou take that honour " 36 12
decrepit father takes delight " 37 1
Take all my comfort " 87 4
Take all my loves, my love, yea,
Uke them all " 40 1
come and take my love " 64 12
black night doth take away " 73 7
To take a new acquaintance " 77 12
your memory death cannot take " 81 3
that thou niayst take " 91 13
Take heed, dear heart " 95 13
And take thou my oblation " 125 10
thy beauty thou wilt take " 134 9
take the worst to be " 137 4
his metal from his rider takes L C 107
henee a question takes " 110
Take all these similes '* 227
and he takes and leaves " »... 305
to take her figured proffer P P A 10
Her stand she takes "95
And would not take her meaning " 11 12
As take the pain " 14 12
Take counsel of some wiser head " 19 6
None takes pity on thy pain " 21 20
Tiaken — Had ta*en his last leave VA 2
is ta*en prisoner by the foe R L ..... 1608
although his height be taken ^bn 116 8
have no leisure taken " 120 7
thy cruel eye hath taken " 1.33 5
Taker— to make the taker mad " 129 8
Takeat— breath thou givest and . . . . P r ...». 19
Taklng^Taking no notice VA ~... 341
but she. In worser taking R L ...~ 453
So surfeit-taking Tarquin fares " ..... 698
Tale— flhe tan(» her tale VA 74
Tale— she trembles at his tale VA mi
This carry-tale, dissontious Jealousy** 657
in his ears a heavy tale " 1125
and tell ray loving tale R L 480
object to the tell-tale Day " .... 806
to purge my impure tale " 1078
sad tales doth tell " .... 1496
to list the sad-tuned tale L C .... 4
How many tales to please me PP 7 9
thou comest thy tale to tell " 19 7
Talent— these talents of their hair L C . 204
Talk— 'What! canst thou talk K^ .... 427
To talk In deeds R L .... 1348
Begins to talk ; but through " .... 1788
IWit— to your wanton talk VA 809
Mingling my talk with tears R L .... 797
and too much talk aflbrds " 1106
thy tongue with filed talk PP 19 8
Talk*d— And talk'd of virtue R L 846
Tall— He of tall building Son M 12
Tally— Nor need I tallies " 122 10
Tame— tame and gently hear him VA .... 1096
And patience, tame to sufferance Son 58 7
nature is both kind and tame L C 311
Youth is wild and age is tame P P 12 8
TVime— To tame the unieorn R L 956
Continuance tames the one " .... 1097
Tamed— tamed with too much VA 560
Tan— Tan sacred beauty Son 115 7
Tangled— tangled in a net VA 67
Tann*d— ohopp'd with tann'd an-
tiquity Son 62 10
Tantalas— worse than Tantalus' VA 599
like still-pining Tantalus R L 858
Tapster — Like shrill-tongued tap-
sters VA .... 849
Tarqaln — . . . . leaves the Roman R L 3
in Tarquin's tent " 15
Which Tarquin view'd " .... 72
Enchanted Tarquin answers " 83
For then is Tarquin " .... 120
doth Tarquin lie revolving " .... 127
now must doting Tarquin make " 165
These worlds in Tarquin " .... 411
doth Tarquin stay " 423
' In Tarquin's likeness " 596
So surfeit-Uking Tarquin " 698
• Were Tarquin Night " 785
with Tarquin's name " .... 814
reproach to Tarquin's shame " .... 816
How Tarquin wronged me " 819
And Tarquin's eye " 830
When Tarquin did, but he " .... 917
some mischance cross Tarquin " 968
At Time, at Tarquin " 1024
I fear'd by Tarquin's falchion " 1016
hath Tarquin rifled me " 1050
I'll hum on Tarquin still " 1133
my stained blood to Tarquin " 1181
How Tarquin must be used " 1195
serve thou false Tarquin so " .... 1197
•Tarquin from hence " 1276
Tarquin gone away " .... 1281
as knowing Tarquin's lust ** 1354
But Tarquin's shaiHJ " 1536
To me came Tarqliin armed " -... 1544
So did I Tarquin " ~ .. 1547
She throws forth Tarquin s name " 1717
and that false Tarquin staln'd *' 1748
TARQUIN
276
TELL
Tarqiln— flometime 'Tarquio' waa
pronounced plain R L ~... 1786
to publish Tarquin'8 foul offence *' 1852
Tarquin's everlaitting banishment ** .... 1853
Tarriane«— longing .... for Adonia P P 6 4
Task— Ilia day's hut task VA .... 530
In that high task B L 80
the task it hath to saj ** .... 1G18
her sad task hath not said " .... 1699
should task you to recite Son 72 1
Taste— Dainties to taste VA .... 164
is sour to taste *' 528
this learning mayst thou taste Son 77 4
so shall I taste " 90 11
that needs will taste L C .... 167
TVuto—wert thou to the taste VA. 445
Whose precious taste ** 543
but alter not his taste R L .... 651
His taste delicious '* 699
to bitter wormwood taste ** .... 893
The stained taste of violated troth ** .... 1059
By wilful taste of what thyself Son 40 8
Nor taste, nor smell " 141 7
Tasted— mayst thou well be tasted VA 128
Tatter*d— Will be a tatter'd weed Son 2 A
on my tatter'd loving " 26 11
Tani^ht— them sconiful tricks VA .... 501
Those eyes that taught all other eyes " 952
Ruin hath taught me Son 64 11
taught the dumb on high ** 78 5
by spiriU taught to write " 86 5
love taught it this alchemy "114 4
And taught it thus anew " 145 8
Who taught thee how " 150 9
hath taught her thus to say PP 19 22
Taaght*8t— that thou .... this ill R L 996
Teach— hlH proceedings teach thee VA .... 406
doth teach it divination ** .... 670
teach the fool to speak " 1146
and thou didst teach the way R L 630
Teach me to curse him " 996
O, teach me how to make " 1653
To teach my tongue Son 19 52
Doth teach that ease " 50 8
I teach thee how " 101 13
If I might teach thee wit " 140 5
Tearheat— And that thou teachest " 39 13
Teaching— Teaching the sheets VA 398
Teaching decrepit age *' 1148
Teaching them thus to use it R L 62
Team — had his team to guide V A .... 179
Tear — she with her tear* " .... 49
with her contending tears ** 82
quench them with my tears " 192
With tears, which chorus-like " 360
your feigned tears " 425
the crystal tears gave light " 491
Dost thou drink tears " 949
O, how her eyes and tears " 961
seen in the tears, tears in her eye " 962
tears make them wet again " 966
Wiiereat her tears began ." 979
With purple tears, that his wound
wt'pt " 1054
my salt tears gone " 1071
first should dry his tears " 1092
which she compares to tears " 1176
Nor children's tears R L 431
tears ensue the deeti ** .... 502
570
Tear— Tears harden lost B L
By her untimely tears •*
Be moved with my tears **
Melt at my tears **
in the chastest tears *
Her tears should drop **
Mingling my talk with lean ** 797
when time is kept with tears * .«. 1127
at each sad strain will strain a tear ** 1131
Those tears from thee " 1271
If tears could help ** 1274
and tears may grace ** ^. 1319
seem'd a weeping tear ** .... 1375
And with my tears quench Trof " 1468
To see those borrow'd tears " *,^ 1519
For every tear be falls ** ... 1551
false Sinon's tears doth flatter " 1560
Her eyes, though sod in tears ** ^. 1502
carved in it with tears " .... 171S
To check the tears ** 1817
a holy and obsequious tear Son SI 5
Ah ! but those tears are pearl ** 34 IS
heavy tears, badges of cither's voe ** 44 14
jiotions have I drunk of Siren tears ** 119 1
with watching and with tears ** 148 10
with tears thou keep'st me blind ** 148 IS
woe had pelleted in tears L C ~.. 18
orb of one particular tear
resolved my reason into tears
Her faith, her oaths, her tears
Scarce I could from tears retrain
Tear— shall rudely tear thee R L ...
her nails her flesh doth tear **
to tear his curled hair "
her beauty I may tear "
She tears the senseless Sioon "
and often 'gan to tear L C
Tear-dlstained— about her .... eye R L
TeariiMc— Tearing of papers, break-
LC
VA
RL
u
LC
M
M
PP
7 12
21 16
Son
VA
LC
VA
«4
RL
Son
VA
ing rings
Tedlons — Her song was tedious
My woes are tedious
burnt out in tedious nights
TeemlBff— The teeming autumn
Teen— my heart of teen
put to the smallest teen
Teeth— 'tween his teeth
whet his teeth at him
But through his teeth
Pluck the keen teeth
Tell— Tell me, love's master
He tells her, no ; to-morrow
More I could tell
She tells them 'tis
Tells him of trophies
Do tell her she Is dreadfully beset R L
and tell my loving tale **
marking what he tells **
will tell my story
But tell me, girl, when went
than one hath power to tell
sad tales doth tell
And tell thy grief
To tell them all
and tell the face thou viewest
count the clock that tells the time
But not to tell of good **
fortune to brief minutes tell **
I tell the day to please him **
... 7S9
961
— 1471
— 1564
51
... IsN
... 6
mm— 041
>«••• |9H
.... 1379
97 6
■.... WK
-... 192
u
«(
•I
.... 1113
.... 1787
19 S
.... 5ov
587
.... 805
.... 897
1013
u
(t
M
M
Son
M
480
510
.... 818
... 1275
.... IZBq
149a
IVA
1617
S 1
12 1
14 S
14 5
28 9
TELL
277
THAN
Tell— from woe to woe tell o*er Sim 90 10
doth almost tell my Dame " 76 7
If he can tell "* 84 7
of oar old acquaintance tell " 89 12
nothing thence but sweetness tell '* 93 12
That tongue that tells " 95 5
any summer's story tell " 98 7
and your gifts to tell " 103 12
Tell me thou lovest elsewhere " 139 5
jet, love, to tell me so " 140 6
yet not directly tell *' 144 10
My soul doth tell my body *' 151 7
Let It not tell your judgement L C ~... 73
jou are, O, hear me tell " 253
yet not directly tell PP 2 10
thou comest thy tale to tell " 19 7
TeUiapr— still telling what is told Son 76 14
by thy true-telling friend " 82 12
Tell-tole— object to the tell-tale Day R L »... 806
Teapermnce— when .... is thaw'd " ..... 884
Teaperate— lovely and more .... Son 18 2
Taaiper'd — Strong -tern pcr'd steel
his stronger strength obey'd VA Ill
Tevpering—dissolTes with tempering" 565
Teapest— from .... and from rain '* 238
tempest to the field ** 454
tempest after sun '* 800
This windy tempest Ji L 1788
That looks on tempests Son 116 6
Teaple— his soul's fair temple R L 719
Her sacred temple spotted ** ..... 1172
Taapt — uproar tempts his reins " 427
And now, to tempt all L C 252
TeMptation— For still .... follows Son 41 4
and to teuiptation slow " 94 4
Teapted— Not to be tempted L C 251
feapter — gave the tempter place " 818
Teapteth — Terapteth my better
angel Son 144 6
Tempteth my better angel P P 2 6
TeaptlBf— Upon thy tempting lip VA 127
the tempting tune is blown " 778
tempting her to thee Son 41 13
Tto«— Ten kisses short as one VA 22
What is ten hundred " 519
without ten women's wit " 1008
He ten times pines RL 1115
Or ten times happier be it ten for
one Son 6 8
Ten times thyself "69
If ten of thine ten times " 6 10
then ten times happy me " 37 14
ten times more in worth " 38 9
Teaant — tenants to their shame R L 1260
all tenants to the heart Son 46 10
Te^d — strange shadows on you tend " 5.3 2
What should I do but tvnd " 57 1
to no other pass my versH^s tend " 103 11
his invised properties did tend L C 212
TfBder — was the tender boy VA 32
The tender spring " 127
broad buttock, tender hide " 298
Her other tender hand " 352
eats up Love's tender spring ** 656
do the tender leaves " 798
whoee tender horns being hit " iO:^{
in pity of his tender years " 1091
Unapt for tender smell R L 695
wait on the tender spring " 869
Tender— His tender heir might bear Son
And, tender churl
As tender nurse
In tender embassy of love
To kiss the tender inward
Nor tender feeling
The tender nibbler P P
JbiKter—Tcnder my suit R L
The barren tender Son
Of pensived and subdued desires
the tender L C
TenderM— fee of parting .... la VA
as you to me then tender'd Son
Tenderer— His tenderer cheek VA
Tenoar — the tenour of her woe R L
The scope and tenour Son
Tent— his tent my bed V A
the night before in Tarquin'stent R L
Son
PP
RL
1
1
22
45
128
141
4
83
4
12
12
6
6
6
11
534
4
Son
LC
Son
LC
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RL
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VA
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Tenth— Be thou the tenth Muse
Tereu— • Tereu, Tcreu !' by and by
Terens— While thou on Tereus
Term— May any terms acquit me
P^or term of life
Buy terms divine
And long upon these terms
Term'd — be term'd a poet's rage
Termlen — on that termless skin
Terror— Which with cold terror
with trembling terror die
What terror 'tis
makes supposed terror true
Effects of terror
Testament— writ in my testament
Testy — His testy master
fond and testy as a child
As testy sick men
Text— The text is old
Than — ' Thrice fairer than myself
more lovely than a man
than doves or rosra are
than she for tliis good turn
Nay, more than flint
a whiter hue thau whtte
That worse than Tantalus
than thy spear's point
And more than so
than civil home-bred strire
more moving than your own
Her more than haste
Rather than triumph
More thaq. his eyes "
more slavish tribute than they owe "
With more than admiration "
Worse than a slavish wipe "
no harder thau a stone
a dearer thing than life
far poorer than before
deeper sin thau liottomless conceit
hearts, harder than stones
Wilder to him than tigers
Than they wlioiM? whole
No more than wax
than I can well express
than one hath i>ower to tell
more than hear them told
les-ser noise than ^fllal]ow fords
with more than haste
Speed more tlian speed
In me moe words than woea
38
21
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41
219
..... 538
120 11
853
..... 1310
61 8
...~ 108
...M lO
9
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1134
1706
92 2
146 11
176
17 11
...» 94
1048
231
452
..... 455
202
1183
~... 1094
140 7
806
7
• •••• V
10
200
398
. . • . • u99
626
661
764
776
•« •«• Vv«f
••••• 4
105
299
418
537
593
687
693
701
978
98J
1159
1245
».>• 1 Ac)0
1288
1324
M... 1<5<(9
1332
13.36
1615
THAT
283
THAT
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That— And for that riches where is
my deaenriiig Son
That thou io losing me **
The Injnrlea that to myself I do "
That fur thy right myself will hear
Ssy that thou didst forsake
comment upon that offence
Wretched in this alone, that thou
roayst take
it depends upon that lore of thine
Than that which on thy humour
l^nce that my life on thy revolt
what's so blessed fair that fears no
blot
Therefore in that I cannot know
That in thy face sweet love should
They thai have power
That do not do the thing
But if that (lower
Lilies that fester smell far worse
That tongue that tells
all things turn to fair that eyes
can see
graces that to thee resort
errors that in thee are seen
That leaves look pale
That heavy Saturn laugh'd
steal thy sweet that smells
Where art thou, Muse, that thou
forget'st so long
To speak of that which gives
ear that doth thy lays ^teem
That love is merchandized
Not that the summer is
But that wild music burthens
That having such a scope
That over-goes my blunt
To mar the subject that before
was well
What's in the brain, that ink may
character
That may express my love
So that eternal love
never say that I was false of heart
That is my home of love
Like him that travels
So that myself bring water
All frailties that besiege
That it cotild so preposterously
Most true it is that I have look'd
That did not better for my life
Thence comes it that my name re-
ceives a brand
bitterness that I will bitter think
Even that your pity is enough
That my steel'd sense
that my adder's sense
That all the world besides
And that which governs
And that your lovo taught it
That mine eye loves it
lines that I before have writ
Even those that said I could not love '*
To give full growth to that which
still doth grow
Tliat looks on tempests
Accuse me thus : that I have scant-
ed all
That I have frequent been
M
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tl
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87
6
88
8
88
11
88
14
89
1
89
2
91
13
92
4
92
8
92
10
92
13
93
6
93
10
94
1
94
2
94
11
94
14
95
5
95
12
96
4
96
7
97
14
98
4
99
2
100
1
100
2
100
7
102
3
102
9
102
11
loa
2
103
7
103 10
108
1
108
4
108
9
109
1
109
5
109
6
109
8
109
10
109
11
110
5
111
3
111
5
111
11
111
14
112
8
112
10
112
14
113
2
114
4
114
14
115
1
115
2
115
14
116
6
117
1
117
5
That— That I have hoisted sail
ere that there were true needing
The ills that were not, grew
Drugs poison him that so fell sick
of you
That better is by evil still made
That you were once unkind
And for that sorrow which
O, that our night of woe
But that your trespass now becomes
No, I am that I am, and they that
level
Which shall above that idle rank
remain
That poor retention could not
those tables that receive thee more
Time, thou shalt not boast that I
do change
What thou dost foist upon ua that
Isold
Than think that we befbre
not policy, that heretic
That it nor grows with heat
to this purpose that her skill
That every tongue says beauty
Upon that blessed wood
concord that mine ear confounds
those Jacks that nimble leap
which should that harvest reap
the heaven that leads men to this
hell
the breath that from my mistress
reeks
That music hath a far more
some say that thee behold
that is not false I swear
Nor that full star that ushers in
the even
Doth half that glory to the sober
west
all they foul that thy complexion
lack
Beshrew that heart that makes
my heart
For that deep wound it gives
and all that is in mo
confessed that he is thine
Myself I'll forfeit, so that other
mine
Under that bond that him as fast
doth bind
Thou usurer that put'st forth all
to use
am I that vex thee still
and mo in that one ' Will
If thy soul check thee that I come
so near
Swear to thy blind soul that I was
thy * Will
That nothing me, a something
Make but my name thy love, and
love that still
That they behold, and see not
Why should my heart think that
a several plot
swears that she is made
That she might think me
thinking that she thinks me young '*
say not I that I am old
Son 117
7
" 118
8
" 118
10
" 118
14
" 119
10
" 120
1
" 120
2
" 120
9
II
tt
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tl
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11
It
It
11
11
It
It
tt
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II
II
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II
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It
II
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II
II
II
II
II
II
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120 13
121
136
9
122 8
122 9
122 12
123 1
123
6
123
8
124
9
124
12
126
7
127
14
128
2
128
4
128
6
128
7
129 14
130
8
130
10
131
6
131
9
182
7
132
8
132 14
133 1
133 2
133 14
134 1
134 8
134 8
134
10
135
3
135
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II
136
2
136
12
136
18
137
2
137
138
1
138
8
13R
5
188
10
THAT
2S4
THAT
Tkat— That thy unkindneas lays
upon my h^urt Son 139 2
That they elsewhere might dart "139 12
That I may not be so *' 140 13
'tis my heart that loves what they
despise " 141 3
That she that miik« me sin " 141 14
That have profaned "142 6
Boot pity in thy heart, that, when
it grows " 142 11
To follow that which flies before her" 143 7
&> runn'st thou after that which
flies from thee " 148 9
I pray that thou mayst have thy
'Will " 148 13
And whether that my angel be " 144 9
lips that Love's own hand did make "145 1
the sound that said ' I hate " 145 2
To me that langulsh'd for her nke " 145 8
Chiding that tongue that ever sweet " 145 6
That follow'd it " 145 10
powers that thee array " 146 2
And let that pine " 146 10
Death, that feeds on men " 146 13
For that which longer nurseth " 147 2
Feeding on that which doth " 147 3
Angry that his prescriptions " 147 6
That censures falsely what " 148 4
If that be fair whereon " 148 5
That is so vex'd with watching " 148 10
thee that I do call my friend " 149 6
On whom frowu'st thou that I do
fawn upon " 149 6
That is so proud " 149 10
Those that can see " 149 14
And swear that brightness " 150 4
That in the very refuse " 150 6
That, in my mind, thy worst all
best exceeds " 150 8
tell ray body that he may " 151 7
hold it that I call " 151 13
valley-fountain of that ground " 153 4
nymphs that vow'd chaste life to
keep " 154 8
votary took up that fire " 154 5
and this by that I prove " 154 13
scythed all that youth begun L C ...~ 12
That seasoned woe had " 18
hands that lets not bounty fall " «... 41
A reverend man that gnzed his
cattle " 57
a blusterer, that the ruffle knew " ^... 58
If that from him there may " ^... 68
That maidens' eyes stuck over all " ».... 81
Each eye that saw him " 89
velvet, on that termless skin " .... 94
his visage by that cost more dear " 96
That horse his mettle " ..... 107
* That he did in the general bosom
reign " .... 127
'Many there were thatdid his pic-
ture get " 134
fools that in the imagination set " 136
* So many have, that never touch'd
his hand " .... 141
self, that did in freedom stand " .... 143
That we must curb it " 163
the sweets that seem so good " .... 164
harms that preach in our behoof " «... 165
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That— a palate hath that needs will
taste L C
That's to ye sworn to none
offences that abroad you see
They sought their shame that so
their shame did find
the many that mine eyes have seen
Figuring that they their passions
sonnets that did amplify
charged me that I hoard them not
That is to you my origin
yours that phraseless hand
sighs that burning lungs did raise
She that her fame
in that my boast is true
bosoms that to me belong
hearts that do on mine depend
battery that you make 'gainst mine "
credent soul to that strong-bonded
oath
That shall prefer and undertake
That flame through water
What breast so cold that is not
warmed
That not a heart which
That the unexperient gave
O, that infected moisture
O, that false fire
O, that forced thunder
O, that sad breath
O, all that borrowed motion
swears that she Is made of truth
that she might think me
thinking that she thinks me young "
says my love that she is young "
say not I that I am old "
Since that our faults
That like two spirits do
whether that my angel be
Sun, that on this earth doth shine
those pleasures live that art can
comprehend
learned is that tongue that well
ignorant that soul that sees
some praise, that I thy parts admire "
do not love that wrong
she hotter that did look
nis approach that often there
had been
That Phoebus' lute, the queen of
music, makes
plum that hangs upon a tree
Ah, that I had my lady
gloss that vadeth suddenly
A flower that dies
glass that's broken presently
that kept my rest away
that liked of her master
an Englishman, the fair'st that
eye could
the combat doubtful that love
with love did fight
That nothing could be used
That the lover, sick to death
My curtal dog, that wont to have
play'd
Other help for him I see that
there is none
the deer that thou shouldst strike
II
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167
•••••
180
•■•*•
188
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187
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•••••
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1
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16 8
16 6
16 10
17 7
18 29
18 54
19 2
THAT
285
THE
Tkai— That thus dissembled her de-
Ught LC 19 16
That which with scorn she put away " 19 18
guiles thst women work " 19 37
toys thst in them lurk ** 19 39
The cock thst treads them " 19 40
Lest thst my mistress hear " 19 60
That hills and valleys " 20 3
If that the world " 20 17
That to hear it was great pity " 21 12
That to hear her so complain " 21 15
Every one that flatters thee ^ 21 81
If that one be prodigal " 21 89
they that fawn'd on him before '* 21 49
He that is thy friend " 21 51
That dcfunctive music can P T 14
That thy sable gender niakest " ..... 18
That the turtle saw his right " ..... 34
That the self was not the same ** 88
That it cried, * How true a twain " ..... 45
That are either true or fair " 66
Thaw*d— wasted, thaw'd, and done VA 749
when temperance is thaw'd E L 884
The— Even as the sun V A ..... 1
of the weeping morn " 2
hied him to the chase " ..... 3
The field's chief flower " ..... 8
Saith that the world ** ..... 12
to the saddle-bow " ..... 14
The precedent of pith " ...„ 26
the lusty courier's rein *' 81
was the tender boy " ...- 82
The studded bridle " 37
The steed is sUlled up ** 89
To tie the rider " ..... 40
quench the maiden burning " ..... 50
feedeth on the steam " ...». 63
overflow the bank " .... 72
by the stern and direAil " ..... 98
foird the god of fight " 114
The kiss shall be thiue own " ..... 117
What seest thou in the ground " ...~ 118
the day seem night " 122
The tender spring *' 127
The spring doth yearly gfrow " 141
trip upon the green " 146
Dance on the sands " ..... 148
draw me through the sky " ir>3
shadow in the brook *' ...» 162
fresh beauty for the use " 164
Upon the earth's increase " ..... 169
Unless the earth " 170
By this the love-sick queen " 175
the shadow had forsfook them " 176
tired in the raid-day heat " 177
when they blot the sky " ..... 184
The sun doth burn " 186
Shall cool tlie heat '* 190
The sun that shines " 193
The heat I have " 195
darts forth the fire " 196
the worse for one poor kiss '* 207
but the eye alone " 213
aow on the ground " 224
Within the circuit " 230
the pleasant fountains lie " 2.'}i
her woes the more increa.sing " 254
The time is 8i>cnt " 256
The strong-neck'd steed " 263
The— The bearing earth VA ~... 267
The iron bit ho crusheth " ..... 269
His nostrUs drink the air *' »... 273
as if he told the steps " ~... 277
to captivate the eye " «.... 281
Of the fair breeder " ..... 282
would surpass the life " ..... 280
as if the dead the living ** .... 292
To bid the wind a base *' .... 808
the high wind sings ** . SOS
Fanning the hairs ** ..... 806
scorns the heat he feels " .... 811
and bites the poor flies "• .... 816
the unback'd breeder " .... 820
With her the horse " ..... 822
unto the wood they hie *' .... 823
And now the happy season *' .... 827
the heart hath treble wrong ** .... 829
the aidanco of the tongue " .... 830
when the heart's attorney '* .... 835
The client breaks '* 836
Looks on the dull earth *' .... 840
to the wayward boy " .... 844
note the fighting conflict " .... 845
Lightning from the sky *' .... 848
disdain'd the wooing ** .... 858
takes him by the hand " .... 861
once more the engine " .... 867
palfrey from the mare " .... 384
Welcomes the warm approach " .... 886
set the heart on fire " .... 888
The sea hath bounds " .... 889
tied to the tree ** 891
Throwing the base thong " .... 895
Teaching the sheets '* .... 898
To touch the fire, the weather
being cold " .... 402
the lesson is but plain " . 407
Who plucks the bud " .... 416
The colt that's back'd " 419
it will not ope the gate " .... 424
that the sense of feeling " .... 439
but the very smell ** .... 441
from the stiilitory " .... 443
wcrt thou to the taste *' .... 445
of the other four " .... 446
not wish the feast " 447
double-lock the door " .... 448
disturb the feast " 450
Once more the ruby-colour'd ** .... 451
W^reck to the seaiuau, tempest to
the field " 454
woe unto the birds " .... 465
Even as the wind is hush'd " .... 458
Or as the wolf doth grin " .... 459
Or as the berry breaks " .... 460
like the deadly bullet " ..;. 461
the wounding of a frown " .... 465
The silly boy, believing " .... 467
Fair fall the wit " 472
on the grass she lies " 473
strikes her on the cheeks " 475
To mend the hurt " 478
The night of sorrow " 481
Like the fair sun " -... 483
He cheers the morn, and all the
earth relicveth '* ~... 484
And as the bright sun glorifies
tl^sky " — 4«B
theflr.
fmmlh
d.n«,T.,
Thutth
IhoptagueLluio
the debt
■ bDlllll d
uUl.^
th« ungmwn fry
uTbnn
ow plum dolb nil
tfnen
•Look,i
ended In
Ibe weit
Theow]
nigbi'a hmld
The f\y
|. nn'Hl>
To ihuue tbe i
•uhjoct lo ih.- I
I<'n<lthrwac]d1ili11i;'
I'f'ltiu rlvMeof tlma
Ihi: wortJ will huU til
Tbe pitb !<: •laoolb
TlieirannriTwi
tbouiroulditbu
Tlio Ihornj l>nii
did Ibe merclleu mnd i^lchT Dl«bt "
upon the rr,-.b
Lninblejit
i wind
.UBlla, tbroDgh tbo
the hunliDg of tbe bi
the alorr iptlj' end)
Tbe night ii ipenl
Tbe eutb, In Iots
to ipend the nt)|hl vllbil
Ibebii>h»in1hewir
eolsb her bv the neck
,hr hun the liouoili
The fair ulicimf
tlio Kmoroiu }-eIr)agDrth* hi
rlrL'du^exclumiJQud
dAronuLUj the Held
ahejplni ilit^ buubil boar
(fhe treAd^ tlis puth
Like Ihc proiwdlnjn
ukatbi! V(1H7 csitlir
Tl>^«dlr ■ ■
tl^n plaster
world's pool people
THAT
282
THAT
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Thftt--4hiQgB removed that hidden
in thee lie Son
That due of many now i« **
When that charl Death **
Tis not enough that through the
cloud •*
That heals the wound **
To him that bears
griered at tliat which thou hast
done
That I am accessary "
To that sweet thief **
confess that we two roust be twain **
blots that do with me remain **
take that honour from thy name **
Whilst that this shadow **
That I in thy abundance am **
what l^best that best I wish in thee
thou dost breathe, that pour'st
into my Terse
For who's so dumb that cannot
write to thee
And he that calls on thee
That by thb separation I may
That due to thee which
And that thou teachest how
Vo love, my love, that thou mayst
true love call
wrongs that liberty commits
That thou bast her, it is
That she hath thee, is
A loss in love that touches me
more nearly
hath found that loss
thought kills me, that I am not
thought
But that, so much of earth
the freedom of that right
plead that thou in him
doth that plea deny
When that mine eye is
That to my use it might
Against that time, if ever that
time come
Caird to that audit "
Against that time when
greet me with that sun
Against that time do I
Doth teach that ease and that re-
pose to say
The beast that bears me
bear that weight in me
That sometimes anger thrusts
For that same groan doth
is the time that keeps you
That millions of strange shadows
By that sweet ornament
For that sweet odour
When that shall vade
That wear this world out
the Judgement that yourself arise
to the banks, that, when they see
is love that in your will
That god forbid that made me first
your slave
That you yourself may privilege
nothing new but that which is
O, that record could with
That I might see what
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82
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84
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84
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36
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36
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87
10
87
11
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88
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7
38
11
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41
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42
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42
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42
10
44
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5
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7
47
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49
5
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6
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3
50
5
60
6
60
10
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13
52
9
63
2
54
2
54
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54
14
55
12
55
13
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57
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58
1
58
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69
1
59
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59
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Tkat— Each changing place with
that which goes beikyre i
And Time that gave
thy spirit that tboa seiid*it fnm
thee
It is my love that keeps Mdne eye
love that doth my rest
Tis thee, myself, that tot myaelf
I praise
That he shall never cut
That time will come
we€p to have that which it fears
to lose
That in black ink my love
Save that, to die I leave
That sin by him advantage
Those parts of thee that tlie
world's eye doth view
Want nothing that the thoagfat of
hearts
give thee that due
tongues, that give thee ao thine own
And that, in guess they measure
by thy deeds
The soil is this, that thou dost
common grow
That thou art blamed shall not
A crow that flies
Give warning to the worid thai I
am fled
The hand that writ it
That I in your sweet thoughts
What merit lived in me, that you
should love
That you for love speak well
by that which I bring forth
That time of year thou mayst
Death's second self^ that seals up
all in rest
That on the ashes
consumed with that which it was
nourish'd by
To love that well which
when that fell arrest
The worth of that is that which It
And that is this, and this •
Then bctter'd that the work!
That every word doth
Tliine eyes that taught thee dumb
proud of that which I compile
and be stule that word
thank him not for that which he
doth say
saw that you did painting need
That you yourself, being extant
Who is it that says most
Than this rich praise, that yoa
alone are you
within that pen doth dwell
That to his sul^ect lends
But he that writes of you
That you are you
To every hymn that able
affords
But that is in my thought
That did my ripe thoughts
mortal pitch, that struck me dead
He, nor that affable fiuniliar gboat
that enfeebled mine
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283
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That— And for that riches where is
my desenriiig Son
That thou in losing me **
The injuries that to myself I do
That for thy right myself will hear
Say that thou didst forsake
comment upon that offence
Wretched in this alone, that thou
roayst take
it depends upon thst love of thine
Than that which on thy humour
Since that my life on thy revolt
what's so blessed fair that fears no
blot
Therefore in that I cannot know
That in thy face sweet lore should
They that have power
That do not do the thing
But if that (lower
Lilies that fester smell far worse
That tongue that tells
all things turn to fair that eyes
can see
graces that to thee resort
errors that in thee are seen
That leaves look pale
That heavy Saturn laugh'd
steal thy sweet that smells
Where art thou, Muse, that thou
forget'st so long
To speak of that which gives
ear that doth thy lays esteem
That love is merchandiaed
Not that the summer is
But that wild music burthens
That having such a scope
That over-goes my blunt
To mar the subject that before
was well
What's in the brain, that ink may
character
That may express my love
So that eternal love
never say that I was false of heart
That is my home of love
Like him that travels
So that myself bring water
All frailties that besiege
That it could so preposterously
Most true it is that I have look'd
That did not better for my life
Thence comes it that my name re-
ceives a brand
bitterness that I will bitter think
Even that your pity is enough
That my steel'd sense
that my adder's sense
That all the world besides
And that which governs
And that your love taught it
That mine eye loves it
lines that I before have writ
Even those that said I could not love "
To give full growth to that which
still doth grow
Tliat looks on tempests
Accuse me thus : that I have scant-
ed all
That I have frequent been
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That— That I have hoisted sail
ere that there were true needing
The ills that were not, grew
Drugs poison him that so fell sick
of you
That better is by evil still made
That you were once unkind
And for that sorrow which
O, that our night of woe
But that your trespass now becomes
No, I am that I am, and they that
level
Which shall above that idle rank
remain
That poor retention could not
those tables that receive thee more '*
Time, thou shalt not boast that I
do change
What thou dost foist upon us that
Isold
Than think that we before
not policy, that heretic
That it nor grows with heat
to this purpose that her skill
That every tongue says beauty
Upon that blessed wood
concord that mine ear confounds
those jacks that nimble leap
which should that harvest reap
the heaven that leads men to this
hell
the breath that from my mistress
reeks
That music hath a far more
some say that thee behold
that is not false I swear
Nor that full star that ushers in
the even
Doth half that glory to the sober
west
all they foul that thy complexion
lack
Beshrew that heart that makes
my heart
For that deep wound it gives
and all that is In me
confess'd that he is thine
Myself I'll forfeit, so that other
mine
Under that bond that him as fast
doth bind
Thou usurer that put'st forth all
to use
am I that vex thee still
and me in that one ' Will
If thy soul check thee that I come
80 near
Swear to thy blind soul that I waa
thy • Will
That nothing me, a something
Make but my name thy love, and
love that still
That they behold, and see not
Why should my heart think that
a several plot
swears that she Is made **
That she might think me **
thinking that she thinks me young **
say not I that I am okl **
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Tke-The flesh being prood R L ^
The guilty rebel
thrmigh the length of timeti
To uk the spotted princess
tbrottgb the darlc night
Boaring away the woand
Tb« scar that wUl
She bears the load
And he the burthen
on the direful night
looks for the morning light
behold the day
The same disgrace
Afainst the unseen
and the rarisher
to meet the eastern light
pennit the sun to climb
rarish the morning air
The life of purity, the supreme fair "
The silver-«hining queen
Seasoning the earth
Let not the Jealous Day
That all the faults
to the tell-tale Day
The light will show
The story of sweet chastity
The impious breach
Yea, the ilUterate
The nurse, to still her child
The orator, to deck
Will tie the hearers
The branches of another root
read the mot afar
And suck'd the honey
the worm intrude the maiden bud **
The aged man "
the harrest of his wits **
The sweets we wish for **
Eren in the moment **
wait on the tender spring "
The adder hiss» where the sweet
birds sing
the traitor's treason
ThoQ set'st the wolf where he the
lamb may get
WboeTer plots the sin, thou point'st
the season
to seise the souls
Thoa makest the Testal
Thou blow'st the fire
the humble suppliant's friend
Give physic to the sick, ease to the
pained
The poor, lame, blind
The patient dies while the physi*
cian sleeps
The orphan pines whQe the op-
pressor feedi*
while the widow weepe
From the creation to the general
doom
Betray'd the hours
fine the hate of foes
Not spend the dowry
To stamp the seal
To wake the morn and sentinel
the night
To wrong the wronger
To phick the quills
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924
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942 :
943 '
949 .
The— To dry the old oak's sap R L »... 950
the giddy round ** ....« 952
the beldam daughters " 953
make the child a man " 954
slay the tiger *' 955
tame the unicorn ** » .. 956
To mock the subtle in themselves " 957
cheer the ploughman " 958
And the dire thought ** 972
the abusing of his time " 994
the thief run mad " 997
' The baser is he ** ^... 1002
The mightier man, the mightier
is the thing '* 1004
The moon being clouded " 1007
* The crow may bathe " «... 1009
with the filth away " «... 1010
But if the like the snow-white
swan desire " 1011
The stain upon his silver down " ..... 1012
past the help of law " 1022
The remedy indeed " 1028
the self-eame purpose *' 1047
the treasure stol'n away " 1056
the guiltless casket " «... 1067
The stained taste " 1059
I am the mistreM " 1069
hide the truth " 1075
The well tuned warble *' ...« 1080
the blushing morrow " 1082
Continuance tames the one; the
other wild " 1097
The little birds " 1107
the bottom of annoy " «... 1109
To see the salve doth make the
wound ache more " 1116
the bounding banks o'erflows " «... 1119
As the dank earth " «... 1130
the diapason bear *' 1132
sing'st not in the day " 1142
seated from the way " 1144
As the poor frighted deer " 1149
tread the way •* «... 1152
which of the twain " «... 1154
Will slay the other " 1162
which was the dearer ** 1103
When the one pure, the other
made divine " 1164
the bark peel'd from the lofty pine " «... 1167
batter'd by the enemy " «... 1171
Have heard the cause " 1178
unto the knife *• «... 1184
The one will live, the other being
dead •* 1187
to the skies " «... 1199
Mine honour be the knife's " 1201
wash the slander " 1207
And wiped the brinish pearl " 1213
But as the earth doth weep, the
sun \n:\n% s<:t " 1226
p:ven m the maid ** 1228
Which makes the maid weep like
the dewy night " ...« 12JI2
the other Ukes in hand ** .s« 1239
The weak oppreas'd, the imprea-
aion of strange kimls ** 1242
the authors of th«;ir ill ** «... 1244
the semblance of a devil ** «... 1246
all the little worms ** ...« 1248
Tka-igiluit tbB »lihrr
thefla«erbidhkll|-J
Tbfe pnot^^nt vbf »ro
Tolhe|ioor<'ogi!lcrril
■ Tbe more to blun«
Yelwlih the null
■hich ibe world
Fonhui lhc«7eliili'rpnli
dHrgltiii iba ao
The wi-IlHikiU'd wgrkruin
TliecnduIoui^dPrUm
burDMhoblnlDKslorr
itait IhK ikla wtit mnj
The more ahe uv Ihe blood
The more Btae thought
And yet the duteoui luul
The weirj lime
Befon tbe which li drawn
Thi (dullente demlh
And &r the weaker
Ibe Judge ii robb'd, tbe pritone
Tbe red blood reek'd, K
The Tfry tjt*
Guing uiun the Greeki
The Ikce of ellher
But the BilM gUnee
eomiiroglng Ihu Creeks to light
cbirhi'd il»; light
IVilulh.-eddy
Back to the etralt
back the ume grief dra'
• kaifa, and, aa It
W»Dtlng I
(o the bcU
The paliit.
klodleil Ibe in
chUd the rubefi
Image
Andahlv
er'd all tbe beaut;
of llieilranger
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..- ITTO
THAN
278
THAT
Than— But more than be R L 1718
happier than thou art Son 6 9
lairer lodged than gentle love " 10 10
than you yourself here live " V6 2
more blessed than my barren rhyme " 16 4
than your painted counterfeit ** 16 8
of less truth than tongue " 17 10
eye more bright than theirs " 20 5
be elder than thou art " 22 8
More than that tongue *' 23 12
A dearer birth than this ** 32 11
more than thy sins are " 35 8
Than those old nine " 88 10
more than thou hadst before ** 40 2
than hate's known injury ** 40 12
not farther than my thoughts " 47 11
than spurring to his side " 50 12
Than unswept stone " 55 4
should blunter be than appetite " 56 2
is no stronger than a flower " 65 4
than the eye hath shown " 69 8
Than you shall hear " 71 2
than njine own desert " 72 6
than niggard truth " 72 8
Than both your poeU " 83 14
Than this rich praise " 84 2
than high birth to me ** 91 9
Richer than wealth, prouder than
garments' cost " 91 10
more delight than hawks or horses " 91 11
than thy love will stay " 92 8
Than that which on thy humour " 92 8
smell far worse than weeds " 94 14
faster than Time wastes life " 100 18
Than when her mournful hymns " 102 10
Than when it hath " 103 4
Than of your graces " 103 12
than in my verse can sit " 103 13
Than public means "111 4
Grows fairer than at first " 119 12
more than I have spent " 119 14
to be vile than vile esteemed '* 121 1
Than think that we before have
heard " 123 8
more short than waste or ruining '* 124 4
more blest than living lips " 128 12
more red than her lips' red " 130 2
Than in the breath " 130 8
more than enough am I *' 135 3
more than o'er-press'd defence " 139 8
Than the true gouty landlord L C 140
Brighter than glass PP 1 3
Softer than wax "74
Paler for sorrow than her milk-
white dove "93
with more than love's good will "97
he saw more wounds than one " 9 13
more than I did crave " 10 9
More in women than in men " 18 18
Than— To break upon the galled
shore and than R L 1440
Thank— O, give thyself the thanks Son 38 5
Then thank him not " 79 13
That— Nature that made thee, with VA ...» 11
Saith that the world hath ending " 12
a river that is rank " 71
And begg'd for that which thou
unask'd shalt have " .... 102
he that overruled I oversway'd " ..... 109
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Thai— mastering her that foU*d ib«
god of fight VA ^.
flowers that are not gathered " .^
That thou shouldst think it heavy " ...
That thine mar live when thou " ...
In that thy likeness still is left " ...
The sun that shines from heaven
I lie between that sun and thee
the flre that bumeth me "
* What am I, that thou shouldst
contemn me this "
That in each cheek appears a pretty
dimple "
To love a cheek that smiles at thee "
a copse that neighbours by
Of the fair breeder that is sunding by '
his tail, that, like a falling plume '
crows that strive to overfly them
That love-sick Love by treading
may be blest
An oven that is stopp'd
Taking no notice that she is so ntgb "
doves that sit a-billing
a coal that must be cool'd
Who is so faint, that darea not be
so bold
That laughs and weeps, and all
The colt that's back'd
That inward beauty and invisible
Each part in me that were but sen-
sible
That the sense of feeling were be-
reft me
And that I could not see, nor hear
breath perfumed that breedeth love
by smelling
Jealousy, that sour unwelcome guest"
a red morn that ever yet betoken'd "
bankrupt that by love so thriveth "
the wit that can so well defend her "
thehurtthathi.Hunkindnessmarr'd "
Thy eyes' shrewd tutor, that hard
heart of thine
That they have murder'd this poor
heart
That the star-gazers, having writ
Say, for non-payment that the debt
should double
clouds that shadow heaven's light
The heavenly moisture, that sweet
coral mouth
That she will draw his lips' rich
treasure dry
roe that's tired with chasing
prays her that he may depart
That worse than Tantalus' is her
annoy
birds that helpless berries saw
But that thou told'st me thou wouldst" ..
pikes that ever threat his foes " ..
esteems that face of thine " ..
They that thrive well
This canker that eats up
That sometime true news, some-
time false doth bring
That if I love thee, I thy death
That tremble at the imagination
To one sore-sick that hears the
passing-bell
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292
THE
The— The first my thought, the
other my desire
the conquest of thy sight
the freedom of that right
But the defendant
all tenants to the heart
The clear eye's moiety and the
dear heart's part
now unto the other
And to the painted banquet
Are left the prey
Within the gentle closure
from the thing it was
Within the knowledge of mine
To guard the lawful reasons
the strength of laws
I journey on the way
* Thus far the miles
The beast that bears me
the wretch did know
The bloody spur
excuse the slow offence
mounted on the wind
So am I as the rich
The which he will not
For blunting the fine point
in the long year set
Jewels in the carcanet
So is the time
the wardrobe which the robe doth
hide
and the counterfeit
Speak of the spring and foison of
the year
The one doth shadow
The other as your bounty
The rose looks fair
The canker-blooms
As the perfumed tincture of the
roses
nor the gilded monuments
root out the work of masonry
The living record
Even in the eyes
out to the ending doom
60, till the judgement
The spirit of love
like the ocean be
Which parts the shore
Come daily to the banks
may be the view
Upon the hours
chide the world-without-end hour
watch the clock for you
Nor think the bitterness
at your hand the account
The Imprison'd absence
The second burthen
courses of the sun
what the old world could say
revolution be the same
the wits of former days
Like as the waves make towards
the pebbled shore
once in the main of light
the flourish set on youth
delves the parallels
Feeds on the rarities
eyelids to the weary night
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61
The— The scope and tenour
To play the watchman
the treasure of his spring
The rich proud cost
the hungry ooean gain
the kingdom of the shore
And the firm soil win of the
watery main
Against the wreckful siege
The map of days outworn
Before the golden tresses of the
dead
The right of sepulchres
the world's eye doth view
the thought of hearts can mend
the voice of souls
the eye hath shown
the beauty of thy mind
the rank smell of weeds
The soil is this
was ever yet the fitir
The ornament of beauty
Thy worth the greater
the sweetest buds doth lore
the ambush of young days
the surly sullen bell
the world that I am fled
The hand that writ it
Lest the wise world
O, lest the world
shake against the cold
late the sweet birds sang
the twilight of such day
fadeth in the west
the glowing of such fire
That on the ashes
As the death-bed
The very part
The earth can have
the better part of me
lost the dregs of life
The prey of worms
The coward conquest
The worth of that
showers arc to the g^ronnd
And for the peace of yon
Doubting the filching age
the world may see my pleasure
Why with the time
ever the same
For as the sun
The vacant leaves
The wrinkles which thy glass
the dumb on high
to the leamed's wing
but mend the style
Deserves the travail of a worthier
pen
And in the praise thereof
wide as the ocean is
The humble as the proudest
The worst was this
to all the world must die
The earth can yield me
When all the breathers
even in the mouths of men
The dedicated words
the time-bettering days
The barren tender
Son
» 61
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U
73
9
M
78
10
u
78
11
u
74
6
II
74
7
M
74
8
II
74
9
II
74
10
M
74
11
II
74
13
II
75
2
U
75
3
II
75
6
II
75
8
II
76
8
11
76
5
II
76
13
II
77
3
11
77
5
II
78
5
II
78
7
M
78
11
II
79
6
II
80
3
11
80
5
II
80
6
II
80
14
II
81
6
II
81
7
II
81
12
11
81
14
II
82
3
II
82
8
«l
88
4
THAT
280
THAT
That— But that life lived in death R L 406
What he beheld, on that he firmly
doted " «... 416
That thinks she hath beheld " 451
Who, angrj that the eyes " 461
His hand, that yet remains " 463
her bulk that his hand shakes
withal " -... 467
That even for anger makes ** — •• 478
Under that colour *' ...~ 481
My will that marks thee " »... 487
That done, some worthless slave " ~... 515
The shame that from them " 535
The blemish that will never be
forgot " 536
beast that knows no gentle right " 545
gulf that even in plenty " ...» 557
That twice she doth begin ** 567
That to his borrow'd bed " ~... 573
Mud not the fountain that gave
drink " 677
the thing that cannot be amended " 578
woodman that doth bend his bow " ...» 580
by him that gave it thee *' 624
all that brood to kill " 627
That from their own misdeeds *' 637
That thou shalt sec thy state " »... 614
streams that pay a dally debt " 649
That done, despitefully I mean " 670
linen that she wears " »... 680
That ever modest eyes " ..... 683
O, that prone lust should stain " 684
his will, that lived by foul devour-
ing " ..... 700
and when that decays " ..... 713
That through the length " 718
victor that hath lost in gain " «... 730
the wound that nothing healeth " 731
The scar that will, despite of cure,
remain " ..... 732
but that every eye " ...» 750
like water that doth eat in steel " ...» 755
That in their smoky ranks *' ...~ 783
Day behold that face " ...» 800
That all the faults which " ...» 804
the illiterate, that know not how " 810
good name, that senseless reputa-
tion " ...» 820
If that be made a theme " ...» 822
That is as clear " 82.5
he that gives them " »... 833
That some impurity doth " 854
aged man that coffers up his gold " 855
torment that it cannot cure " 861
in the moment that " »... 868
no guod that wo can say " 873
thou that executest " 877
'Tlstliou thatspuru'st " 880
souls that wander " 882
free that soul which " 900
incest, that altomination " 921
all that are to Ci>mo " 923
murder'st ali that are " 929
the tiger that duth live " 955
Lending him wit that to bad
debtors lends " »... 964
•ee one that by alms doth live " 9H6
curse him that thou tuught'st this ill " 996
That makes him honoured " »... 1005
M
U
((
i4
(«
U
U
II
M
M
•I
II
That— Since that my case E L
smoke from JEtna that in air con-
sumes
Or that which fh>m discharged
cannon fumes
that cannot be
Of that true type
0, that is gone
That thou art doting father
mountain-spring that feeds a dale
eyes that light will borrow
eyes that are sleeping
little birds that tune
lie ten times pines that pines b^
holding food
grief grieves most at that would
Philomel, that sing'st of ravish-
ment
That knows not parching heat
deer, that stands at gase
That cannot tread the way
They that lose half
That mother tries
That he may vow, in that sad hour
Revenge on him that made me
That wounds my body
' Dear lord of that dear jewel
Mine honour be the knife's that
makes my wound
My shame be his that did my fame
my fame that lives
To those that live
How was I overseen that thou
shalt see it
little worms that creep
that obscurely sleep
winter that the flower hath kiird
Dot that devoured, but that which
doth devour
Poor women's faults, that they are
so fulfiU'd
shame that might ensue
By that her death
That dying fear
Those tears from thee, that down
thy che<*ks
And that deep torture
Yet save that labour
Of that unworthy wife that greet-
eth thee
From that suspicion which
motion tliat it doth ))chold
a part of sorrow that we hear
That two red fires
That she her plaints
That one might see
That one would swear
glance that sly Ulysses lent
That it beguiled attention
That for Achilles' image
That through their light joy
the spring that those shrunk pip^
Pyrrhus that hath done him wrong
quench Tniy that burns so Umg
Greeks that are thine enemies
strumpt-'t that began this stir
That with my nails
load of wrath that burning Troy
the fire that burneth here
u
•I
M
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
It
II
(I
.... 1022
.... 1M2
1043
.... 1019
«... 1050
...» 1051
...» 1064
...» 1077
»... 1083
...» 1090
...» 1107
1115
...» 1117
1128
»... 1145
»... 1149
»... 1152
1158
«... 1160
.... 1179
.... 1180
1185
.... 1191
1201
1202
.... 1203
.... 1204
.... 1206
.... l*4o
.... 1250
.... 1255
.... 1256
.... 1258
.... 1203
.... 1264
.... 1266
i(
II
11
11
II
M
It
II
It
II
II
II
.... 1271
.... 1287
... 1290
1904
1321
1.126
1328
1333
1364
1386
1393
1.199
1404
1424
14;U
1455
1467
14«>8
1470
1471
1472
1474
1475
i
THAT
281
THAT
That— hlB bead that hath trana-
gressed so RL >... 1481
That piteous looks to Phrygian
shepherds lent ** .... 1602
8o mild that Patience seem'd to
scorn *' ..... 1505
A brow unbent, that seem'd to
welcome " «... 1509
That blushing red no guilty in-
stance gave " .....1511
the fear that false hearts have ** ..... 1512
That Jealousy itself could not " ..... 1516
Of rich-built Ilion, that the skies
were " «... 1524
That she concludes the picture was
belied •• ..... 1533
* It cannot be,' quoth she, ' that so
much guile *' 1534
she in that sense forsook *' 1538
those borrow'd tears that Sinon
sheds " ..... 1649
dear pearls of his that move thy
pity " -... 1553
And in that cold hot-burning fire
doth dwell " 1557
That he finds means to burn , *' ..... 1561
That patience is quite beaten " 1568
Comparing him to that unhappy
guest »* ..... 1565
And they that watch see time " 1575
That she with painted images " ..... 1577
Hath thee befall'n, that thou dost ** ..... 1599
tell thy grief, that we may give
redress " 1603
A stranger came, and on that pil-
low lay « ..... 1620
From that, alas, thy Lucrece is not " ..... 1624
That my poor beauty had purloin'd " 1651
That was not forced ; that never was " ..... 1657
The grief away that stops his an-
swer so »• 1664
the eye that doth behold bis haste " 1668
the strait that forced him on '* 1670
For she that was thy Lucrece " 1682
the help that thou shalt lend me " ..... 1685
Speaking to those that came with " ..... 1689
But she, that yet her sad task " 1699
The face, that map which deep " 1712
That guides this hand to give " 1722
knife, that thence her soul un-
sheathed " ..... 1724
That blow did bail it " 1725
Of that polluted prison where " 1726
Lucrece* father, that beholds her
bleed " 1732
rivers, that the crimson blood " ..... 1738
some look'd black, and that false
Tarquin " 1743
Of that black blood a watery rigol " 1745
Blushing at that which is *' 1750
*That life was mine " 1752
But now that fair fresh mirror " 1760
That I no more can see what once " ..... 1764
If they surcease to be that should
survive " ..... 1766
Who, mad that sorrow should his
use " ..... 1781
That no man could distinguish " ..... 1785
*I did give that life " ..... 1800
(t
(•
u
It
u
That-'tis mine that she hath kiU'd R L
he throws that shallow habit by
To slay herself, that should have
slain
That they will suffer these
by the Capitol •that we adore
By heaven's fair sun that breeds
Lucrece' soul that late complained
And that deep vow, which Brutus
made
again repeat, and that they swore
That thereby beauty's rose 8im
Thou that art now "
the time that face should form an-
other
hours that with gentle work
And that unfair which
That use is not forbidden
Which happies those that pay the
willing loan
That's for thyself
Why lovest thou that which
the parts that thou shouldst bear
That thou consumest thyself
That thou no form
in that bosom sits
That on himself such murderous
shame
deny that thou bear'st love to any
But that thou none lovest
That 'gainst thyself thou stick'st
not to conspire
Seeking that beauteous roof to
ruinate
that I may change my mind
That beauty still may live
from that which thou departcst
And that fresh blood which
not let that copy die
clock that tells the time
That thou among the wastes
that you were yourself
So should that beauty which
By oft predict that I in heaven find
every thing that grows
That this huge stage
perceive that men as plants in-
crease
the lines of life that life repair
child of yours alive that time
possession of that fair thou owest
as with that Muse
That heaven's air
Let them say more that like of
hearsay well
I will not praise that purpose not
to sell
For all that beauty that doth
cover thee
More than that tongue that more
That hath his windows
Joy in that I honour most
I, that love and am beloved
But that I hope
star that guides my moving
Save that my soul's imaginary sight
That am dcbarr'd
and that man's scope
That then I scorn to change
M
((
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11
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II
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tl
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•••••
1808
»••••
1814
• ■•••
1827
•••«•
1882
•■•*•
1885
• •••«
1837
•••••
1839
• ••»•
1847
■ •••«
1848
1
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6
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6
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8
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9
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9
6
9
18
9
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10
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10
4
10
6
10
7
10
9
10
14
11
2
11
8
11
14
12
1
12
10
13
I
13
5
14
8
15
1
16
8
15
6
16
9
17
18
18
10
21
1
21
8
21 13
21 14
22
5
28
12
24
8
25
4
25
18
26
7
26
9
27
9
28
2
29
7
29 14
THAT
284
THAT
That— That thy unkindneis lays
upon my heart Son 139 2
That they elsewhere might dart " 139 12
That I may not be so " 140 13
'tis my heart that loves what they
despise " 141 3
That she that makes me sin " 141 14
That have profaned " 142 6
Boot pity in thy heart, that, when
it grows " 142 11
To follow that which flies before her " 143 7
So runn'st thou after that which
files from thee " 143 9
I pray that thou mayst have thy
♦WUl " 143 13
And whether that ray angel be ** 144 9
lips that love's own hand did make " 145 1
the sound that said ' I hate " 145 2
To me that langulsh'd for her sake " 145 8
Chiding that tongue that ever sweet " 145 6
That follow'd it " 146 10
powers that thee array " 146 2
And let that pine *' 146 10
Death, that feeds on men " 146 13
For that which longer nurseth " 147 2
Feeding on that which doth " 147 3
Angry that his prescriptions " 147 6
That censures falsely what " 143 4
If that be fair whereon *' 148 5
That is so vex'd with watching " 148 10
thee that I do call ray friend ** 149 6
On whom frowu'st thou that I do
fawn upon " 149 6
That is so proud " 149 10
Those that can see " 149 14
And swear that brightness "150 4
That in the very refuse " 150 6
That, in my mind, thy worst all
best exceeds " 160 8
tell my body that he may " 151 7
hold it that I call " 161 13
valley-fountain of that ground " 153 4
nymphs that vow'd chaste life to
keep "154 S
votary took up that fire " 154 5
and this by that I prove " 154 13
scythed all that youth begun L C 12
That season'd woe had " 18
hands that lets not bounty fall " .... 41
A reverend man that grazed his
cattle *' 57
a blusterer, that the ruffle knew " 58
If that from hira there may " 68
That maidens' eyes stuck over all " ~... 81
Each eye that saw him " 89
velvet, on that termless skin " ~... 94
his visage by that cost more dear " ~... 96
That horse his mettle ** ..... 107
* That he did in the general bosom
reign " ~... 127
' Many there were that did his pic-
ture get " 134
fools that in the imagination set " »... 136
* So many have, that never touch'd
his hand " ..... 141
self, tliat did in freedom stand *' .... 143
That we must curb it " 163
the sweets that seem so good " 164
barms that preach in our behoof " .... 165
(t
u
u
u
M
U
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tt
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u
tt
t<
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tt
tt
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Thatr— a i>a]ate hath that needs will
taste LC
That's to ye sworn to none
offences that abroad you see
They sought their shame that so
their shame did find
the many that mine eyes have seen
Figuring that they their passions
sonnets that did amplify
charged me that I board them not
That is to you my origin
yours that phraseless hand
sighs that burning lungs did raise
She that her fame
in that my boast is true
bosoms that to me belong
hearts that do on mine depend
battery that you make 'gainst mine **
credent soul to that strong-bonded
oath
That shall prefer and undertake
That flame through water
What breast so cold that is not
warmed
That not a heart which
That the unexperient gave
0, that infected moisture
O, that false fire
O, that forced thunder
O, that sad breath
O, all that borrowed motion
swears that she is made of truth P P
that she might think me "
thinking that she thinks me young "
says my love that she is young
say not I that I am old
Since that our faults
That like two spirito do
whether that my angel be
Sun, that on this earth doth shine
those pleasures live that art can
comprehend
learned is that tongue that well
ignorant ttiat soul that sees
some praise, that I thy parts admire "
O do not love that wrong
she hotter that did look
His approach that often there
had been
That Phoebus* lute, the queen of
music, makes
plum that hangs upon a tree
Ah, that I had my lady
glass that vadeth suddenly
A flower that dies
glass that's broken presently
that kept my rest away
that liked of her master
an Englishman, the fair'st that
eye could
the combat doubtAil that love
with love did fight
That nothing could be used
That the lover, sick to death
My curtal dog, that wont to have
play'd
Other help for him I see that
there is none
the deer that thou shouldst strike
tt
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tt
M
tt
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tt
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tt
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•••••
167
•*•»•
180
•••••
188
••■••
187
••«••
190
«••••
199
•••••
209
■••••
220
• ••M
222
■■•••
225
•••••
228
••••a
24S
■••••
246
•••••
264
•••••
274
■••••
277
•«•••
279
••••a
280
• •••«
287
• ««••
292
•••••
809
••*••
818
•••■•
823
• ••••
824
•••••
825
• ••••
826
••••»
827
10
14
10
5
6
5
10
5
IS
6
6 8
8
10
10
5
11
13
18
2
13
8
18
4
14
2
16
2
16 8
16
16 10
17 7
18 29
18 64
19 2
^*t — ComLngfFoiq Ih
(uclinuiutMniKckl
aj out fur tli»
\r looklDg on Ihee
*hiU I ba]u«1h to;h»
nv band ibill cunquor Ibea
TfaoH lean from thc«
-wir^ ibM gKcKili tbee
Hiilbtbinbcrairn
On th« .nd th<D«
■udtkQn I'll •luigh tec thee
Tbr iilber d]e,slid Dot Ibj ftUur
lb«e
ij Ibr grVt aai th« S
■ndahainlbi-e
thlDe4>uas>e din wllb Outt
llatbMtu'besaD'
ib'd wllb lb»
lBlb«lhyii
hi liiwd «D0lbrr iqfw
4«n tliun rpA^ml Ibw
trMTlng thee ll»idg Id pmteril;
du bul ttwIIt cblds thM
Tbe world <r 111 wall Uim
fDrtn at ib«e liaat loft behlod
Uike Ibw aDDibcT Mlf
Since fiwu Ibee guing
Tumrt* liw ri] run
That tliiiu Knil'iii tiota Ihea
Tl> ihpe, DifHir, thai for mfaeir I
Th-VKlAM-.
11 .b..*!!™
will hIv,. 11
)nvuK.t .1,
./^rmyMgw
"."hinlmnd
born or thee
Yot wbM u
tbu Ibf met
lie Tob. Ih
■oof.aodpaTa
»«alo
Mj bondi Id thee
lurl:..».l.> l.oMlli.v
Thiii time tJiadlbpK
^ndprnrrllimTlrluou!
IUIU|{ llinj iinlaitti
Oiminnd vlLh Iwu of lb«e
" 97
Jl
Jtbaililal'ii Cnimlhee
- w
Kira h»Mltrayinlgbt
" 100
(br'tllwJnUi™
I l.-«ib thee how
" 101
lulbwniytrueaplrtl
" loe
prnvi.ll Ibw lUjr bMt of L)ie
" no
B
liylliMUiublugsUail
imirnlnE dolli lta«gnc«
(>f him.wjKlf. UKltlM
In th»li Ihouundci
Be
BUwf
lllnr
etbce
dial
roldlW
cD
.f«l
hind
f>
■tnlh
Fo
r I hai
n tfanM
Is Ihee I'll cantUnt proT<
tollK«lllEeo«len1>an«l
UlDDVlbKlholUnOirc
\k grrat ■'twIjBl 1b«e and m*
DowUnd l» lb«e li dear
tod both In Ihee ranmin
I vtcp far lhe«
lt!nrHlii<>thlD|[i>rtb(«
I ]«doii Mte of th«
Jli(e, I do nbhof iIil-u; youlb, I
A(e, I dodaff th«l O. sweel ib
l.n4. ble lh»
ki-er Id pluck Ihee
iliniiiih nhtimt ttii'f btck
nH-TollHwIUiDl
tbtj ouDot he«r lb
theTwtlLbotcl,«t
illh thfte dulh bcu B jart
•Dd compUln OD Ihcft
ckMbj injurious then
bjlbeiroi'iiJInctlaa
wither in their prime
tbdrdunuinui
da Ihfy jpond U
tholiloudiaiiiu
tiuir light bloi
log (heir tcnilch'd sin
from tlicli dark beda
Their >I1t« ghHki.and
thMlhelrahleld
from world'e miuorllf tb
aut JE L .... U
flf from Ihelr llghu
Tb^ klDimeD hsng Ihfir hisdi
Thil tror
■ukano.
Tolhiirai
their hudi
To
iiMk their browi uA
Irlnftrar
ofl
Wbo
iu Ihi^lr iiriil"
Tbi^
Toh
»ldlhelr<;nnial-bL™Ml
clrp^itM
tbei
gliUcrlnggoli!
liter
their uintenU
tnlh
elrwildi.™
ther dro>n tbi
B.ithorsoriliFli
ginuu'd forth (belr uhj llghu
In theli fKca
Their fUelhelrmiuineiialogtH'
ThM through their light
E L .._ ua»
to the iiro.iixl IhcIrliuettLhrr
c.ora
rBhrighuh
ni
e'litsoDii'lr
nuitod;rANilwlr
[h™
•ir li^vcx .^r
lul
rhMr
they:
ihuir glory dia
Whonlltbelri-rti
Ihelr loaiknl bndi dlKloaa '
But, fur thdr Tirtiu oulf ll tbdt
or Ihelr tweet dalhi
ThPD, chucli. thi!lr Ihoughti, il-
though Iheli fjL-i were klud
In their wealth, ■
bodr'g force
1^
r,l,-li«ht - 1
.i.,«olrtn " 1
eooiiihc
nliei " 1
mockthii
wnproMge « 1
their .ph
b»n lilted " 1
lb
irirllli " 1
BJ their
no
kthoughu " U
THEIR
299
THEMSELVES
Tlielr^-Aiid in their badness reign Son 121 14
in their gasing spent " 125 8
becoming of their woe " 127 13
woaki change their state '* 128 9
might dart their injuries " 139 12
when their deaths be near " 140 7
from their physicians know ^"140 8
their scarlet ornaments " 142 6
rerenuea of their rents *' 142 8
leveird eyes their carriage ride L C 22
their poor balls are tied " ^... 24
Their view right on; anon their
gazes lend " ..... 26
their sepulchres in mud " 4A
so breaking their contents " 56
their silken parcels " -... 87
made fairer by their place " 117
yet their purposed trim " ..... 118
Ask'd their own wills, and made
their wills obey " ..... 133
To serve their eyes, and in it put
their mind '* 135
They sought their sh^e that so
their shame did find " 187
their reproach contains " 189
their passions likewise lent *' 199
these talents of their hair " ..... 204
Their kind acceptance " 207
their sickly radiance do " ..... 214
Since I their altar " 224
Their distract parcels " ..... 231
their fountains in my well " ..... 255
supplicant their sighs " ..... 276
which their hue encloses " ..... 287
and eyes their wished sight P P 15 10
Forth their dye " 18 40
shepherds feed their flocks " 20 6
to their tragic scene P T 52
not their infirmity " 60
Theln-— . . . . whose desperate hands VA 765
theirs in thought assigned L C 1.^8
Them— But rather famish them VA 20
Making them red and pale ** ..... 21
fan and blow them dry "..... 52
the shadow had forsook them *' »... 176
hotly overlook them " 178
quench them with my tears " 192
unto the wood they hie them " 323
strive to overfly them " 324
was then between them " ..... 355
as they had not seen them " 357
taught them scornful tricks " ~... 501
pay them at thy leisure " ..... 518
picks them all at last " ..... 576
Doth make them droop " 666
If thou destroy them not " 760
She, marking them " 835
she hears them chant it " ..... 869
She tells them " 897
Bids them leave quaking, bids
them fear no more " ..... 899
Infusing them with dreadful pro-
phecies " ~... 928
opens them again " ..... 960
makes them wet again " 966
are both or them extremes " 987
Could rule them both " ..... 1008
bids them still consort *' 1041
He fed them with his sight ** .... 1104
TheM— Which of them both
Teaching them thos
makes them stUl to fight
lest between them both
That dazzleth them
As if between them twain
bids them do their liking
In darkness daunts them
from them no device can take
drop on them perpetually
but he that gives them knows
that we call them ours
wait on them as their f»ages
keep them from thy aid
little stars may hide them
sorrows bear them mild
Is form'd in them by force
Then call them not the authors
for I have them here
might become them better
more than hear them told
he saw them quake and tremble
She lends them words
and make them bold '
prepares to let them know
To tell them all
in them doth stand disgraced
in them I read such art
Let them say more
Compare them with
Reserve them for my love
yea, take them all
I send them back again
And I am still with them
and he in them still green
When in the least of them
pluck them where they grew
it shapes them to your feature
Therefore to give them
rather make them born
before have heard them told
Give them thy fingers
proudly make them cruel
Or made them swear
Bidding them find
moe pleasures to bestow them
which doth owe them
supposed them mistress
Love made them not
Harm have I done to them
that I hoard them not
But yield them up
I strong o'er them
And, veil'd in them
cherubin, above them horer'd
to turn them both to gain
toys that in them lurk
The cock that treads them
time with age shall them attaint
But in them it were a wonder
So between them love did shine
Theme — leave this idle theme
your idle, overhandled theme
If that be made a theme
Three themes in one
Themselves — Rot and consume . . . .
Things growing to themselves
hands themselves do slay
Do burn themselves
JB Xt .•••• 53
" 62
••••• 877
" ..... 4.14
" 535
*• 686
...u Ouw
" ..... 910
" 1008
" ..... 1096
" 1243
" 1244
M... 1290
" ..... 1323
" 1324
" «... 1393
" 1498
M... 1559
" ..... 1607
" ..... 1617
" «... 1833
Son 14 10
" 21 13
" 32 6
" 32 7
" 40 1
« 45 14
" 47 12
" 63 14
« 92 6
" 98 8
*• 113 12
" 122 11
" 123 7
" 123 8
" 128 14
" 131 2
" 152 12
L C ...« 46
••••• 139
••••• Avtl
••••« loO
*' «... 220
« ...- 221
«... AoJ
" — 312
M... 819
PP 16 10
" 19 89
" 19 40
" 19 46
P T 32
VA ..... 422
" 770
JC Jj ...M 822
Son 105 12
VA — 132
" 166
" 765
" — 810
THEMSELVES
TbfMiln*— If pleucdtkfmHl'ea f
of d«T, Ibeimnlra irllhdrew
kMplhtmsplvM cncliwd
wblvh tbe] Ihcuwlvn behuld
Wlilcb so\ ihtnuel'M
in IhrniHlra iKEuiliiil
GrlcvluglliRnulro togutM
.Iter
iC...
IIT
JT...
Tha— Tfaf n with ber wlndr ilgbi
r^ .-
Then wh j not lipi on Uf
1»
then wiot igiln
at
Thi.mi.iKhi.ithoup«™,ft
rtlUD
W^K not fgc Ih«i
Tbonwoulhywl/
lOT
■ Ddlb«u]il>h>nd
xa
TbHibemydwr
t3>
Thrn,1ille>iiietoncbalT
ti.i
• «lhoabcl-«ntheni
" ...
tu
Tben -Id Ibcr spend
Tbm Tlrtna chilnu
all'd It then Ibelc ihicld
Fur then laTitrquIn
■0 Umd m da neglect
Then where li iralh
Tben l.jiikluK icrn fully
Tlieo 107 dlgresiion
Thi'mv-lioreura .inking
How Hin Ibi^J Ihen
TIieaCOllKllaas^a
Ibuii fon» mu'l -work
Tbrn. Jur Hi; buibind
notttieo
And Ibon Ibe; drows Ibdiere*
Tlienclllheifluot
For ih.>n Uio eye
whenniaurv c&Ili
" ™
IS
Thenirbetbrire
" M
IR
Then other, for (he bre«th
•' (5
^
worth then nol knowing
" ST
Then hile me
" M
1
Then need I not 10 r^or
Then do Iby otBce, Mum
" 101
1»
THEN
IkM-Wm it lot ilDrul UuB
TlicB cItt me ■doMW
ni* nc 4b<ii and viih
I^ ms (bDO.'dartHead
Tm ihn Bj joigtaeax
lU^I DM ihM vr
Ttcii might not Mr w
■hlch ihtndidA*!
juq Id lur. llurn Imdo'd
Thnivlll 3<r«mr
And (ben llwa loTst bs
Tken, Bul. ilic Ibon
then Ion dDlh>dldeo«U
Thea ibou, luruia
then K It DO buti of miDa
Tbto Ml ibt OD hn bKk
Tli™ iDon lie Jote tK fml
tuHita ihecVtf'd AduDii
Tbm lo)l»hJ' thi larnal man
Then hrrxrll bb i
r<li>-^Tb«n ti no 1
owpindlT tbCDM
th«K« tb<*u Tilt kflfltD^'n
vh J •IkhiM bulr lue iht
oFilDf Inrtrvai xhtatt
n»n — Tbm IhJ l*aal j Ua
THEREFORE
no dMih luiiixned
F bo no wlf'iiDR
■Dd1h«nirt will unfold
liinPDIsM'' ul.j.yru Ibfre
r»
Tht«ini^liiyoa»»
no
there would ipp™r
And hpfe jnd ibere
luKKiQiiTworlcwwUKn
at
Tl.^drufjuulcelbm
IH>
»«"5
S
N\.ran-DOllnalh««
jlp.l ihtiT iTigM lore
" n
tl.=«i.buloDe™p«t
- M
iDlhrirriutvttntben
- 41
11
ir i]icnbFDDit.iD(Bev
- «
Then 1U«»M* lite
11
fWllu-»«Illi»iiolwlnd
batoiiijr wrioil* gT»>ei» tfcers
" lOD
10
ud there >li|dui ■ Iks
" lot
rilof Jox
I hLiej^asfaereaDd then
ere ibii Ihrn '«u tnie Deeding
li Ihere moK delifht
And irill, thf wu] kiwwi, ■■ td-
tbciT^ A« mon drit>E tbca
tlxn Bij Ik BB^t applied
IM 13
facrclndtben PP
There i, no he..en " I
131 14 : There -■ .i-iutberoeta " 1
-.„ U I There 1 ■■ .. 'ti... - !
S37 j A.i.lrlL>.--ui;;;ll.eii.jlTfuir5ldillT" 5
.... ra nrrril)— tbu txaulr'i Iwt *■
...' !4« her Hi. iDd Du^n Iherebf " 1
...- JM nenCbn— Tlieretore no murcl F^ -.
■ — SOI , ADdtherrfon huhabe " —
— 8Z» Tberer-.re. decile of " -
.— C9I TheKrote.JDMdDM ■ -
.... 7-0 Aodlb.-iWi.rewoulilb* " -
..... Wi Therefore Lhil praiK SL ~
-.. lUU Aud iherefuR vuukl thej itiU - ...
THEREFORE
302
THEY
<i
u
Son
It
ti
i«
u
It
•••••
1052
•••••
1085
•••••
1241
•••«•
1452
22
9
41
6
41
6
61
10
52
5
82
2
82
7
83
2
83
5
93
6
102 13
Tlier«fbre — . . . .now I need not fear R L
And therefore stUl tn ntght ^
And therefore are they form'd
And therefore Lucrece swears
O therefore, love, be of thyself
and therefore to be won
therefore to be assailed
Therefore desire, of perfeet'st love "
Therefore are feasts "
And therefore mayst without attaint "
And therefore art enforced "
And therefore to your fair
And therefore have I slept
Therefore in that I cannot
Therefore, like her, I sometime
Therefore my verse to constancy
confined " 105 7
Therefore to give them "122 11
and therefore we admire "123 5
Therefore my mistress' eyes " 127 9
Therefore I lie with her " 138 13
therefore from my fsce "139 11
Therefore I'll lie with love PP i 13
Therein — And therein heartens np R L ..... 296
And therein so ensconced " ~... 1515
to gaze tlierein on thee Son 24 12
and therein dignified " 101 4
and therein show'st " 126 3
Thereof— not .... make discovery Ji L 1314
And in the praise thereof Son 80 3
the loss thereof still fearing P P 7 10
and thereof free L C 100
Thereon— shall thereon fall and die R L ..... 1139
These— These blue-vein'd violets F A 125
These forceless flowers " 152
These lovely caves, these round
enchanting pits
And these mine eyes
Would root these beauties
Pursue these fearful creatures
of all these maladies
she at these sad signs
and beats these from the stage
these poor forbiddings could not
these lets attend the time
These worlds in Tarquin new am-
bition bred
blow these pitchy vapours
If all thf^se petty ills shall change
So shall these slaves be king
These means, as frets upon an in-
strument
these pretty creatures stand
These many lives confound
These contraries such unity do hold "
These water-galls in her dim ele-
ment
will suffer these abominations
Yet in these thoughts
These poor rude lines
Or any of these all
do please these curious days
These present-absent with swift
motion glide
when these quicker elements are
gone
more bright in these contents
in these black lines be seen
Tired with ail these **
(1
•••••
247
It
••••«
503
It
•«•••
636
II
••■••
677
It
•••••
746
It
•••••
929
RL
••■■•
278
II
••••■
823
It
•••••
830
It
•••••
411
II
650
It
•••••
656
II
•••«•
659
t(
»•••■
1140
II
•••••
1233
11
•••••
1489
d"
••«••
1558
II
••«••
1588
II
•■•••
1832
Son
29
9
II
82
4
(1
87
6
II
88
13
K
41
M
f(
45 4
45 5
66 3
68 13
66 1
II
M
These— Tired with all these, firom
these would I Son
before these last so bad
Before these bastard signs
Commit to these waste blanks
These offices, so oft as thou wilt look **
But these particulars are not **
All these I better **
I with these did play
behold these present days
These blenches gave my heart
these rebel powers that thee array
«
66
67
68
77
77
91
91
98
106
110
146
IS
14
8
10
13
7
8
14
13
7
2
These often bathed she L C ...~ 50
And long upon these terms " ..... 176
these talents of their hair ** 204
Lo, sU these trophies " ..... 218
For these, of foree, must your " ..... 223
Take all these similes " .... 227
Now all these hearts " .... 274
Here in these brakes PP 9 10
If these pleasures may thee move ** 20 15
These pretty pleasures might me
move " 20 19
These are certain signs " 21 67
For these dead birds sigh P T .... 67
They — So they were dew'd VA .... 66
yet are they red " .... 116
For, where they lay *• ...» 176
when they blot the sky " .... 184
If they burn too *• .... 192
fly they know not whether •* .... 304
As they were mad, unto the wood
they hie them " .... 823
as they had not seen them *' .... 357
They wither in their prime " .... 418
they make no battery '* .... 426
Would they not wish " .... 447
they borrow'd all their shine " .... 488
That they have murder'd *' .... 602
Long may they kiss " .... 605
And as they last " 607
Are they not quickly told " .... 520
Incorporate then they seem " .... 540
Whereon they surfeit " .... 544
They that thrive well « .... 640
till they have singled ** .... 69S
they spend their mouths " .... 695
others, they think, delight " .... 843
they answer all ' 'Tis so ** .... 851
They all strain courtesy " .... 888
They basely fly " .... 894
that they are afraid " .... 893
bleeding as they go " .... 924
they long have gazed " .... 927
They bid thee crop " .... 946
they vlew'd each other's sorrow " .... 963
then join they all together *' .... 971
Where they resign " 1039
they have wept till now " 1062
They both would strive " .... 1092
they him with berries " 1104
and they are pale " .... 1123
As if they heard " .... 1128
wherein they late exceird " ....1131
They that love beat " .... 1164
That oft they Interchange R L .... 70
what they have not, that which
they possess " .... 135
They scatter and unloose it ** .... 136
I open. Ihrj ill rate bit
0, hud tbtj In thU <Urki
Tfll lliej
rnwhl niH-n
Dubearin
l,!0.t).1
When ihPT 111 tli«
imrtl.llr
l,« ™b.h«
»T-r»pp'dli
lh^l,.«
tbeylhy
Ihey h; . .
%yn.lun=ihiyd,llgl,l - .
They Ihink not " .
which Iher IhcmirlTH behold " .
would theTitllllDilarkntMlM ■■ .
Porlberlhelrpillt " .
■udllifr lOOltlODg " .
thej ne'er mrvt wilh Opportunitj " .
Tli»j buj Ihjr help 1 .
hide iheiD when thtj llit " .
Tbcf thit loH hair - ,
Th«B ther whooo whole " -,
iretheTform'duniirWewUl " .
IhHlheTireKruKllI'd " .
Bnttber whoKCDilt " .
ItKcm'dlher-wtPuM dehats " ^
Ihfj tn*h odd •nion jlM " ,
the ilnnd gf DiidiiD where the;
They Join Ind:
And ihry
Ihf ir I
|>w«.1hecUlinlhrTl«r
" .... ITW
; -in
■nuMhe^wllUiiBiT
" .... IKW
llu<m4)rul
ihpirtnerathe.bgw
Qiikhiri.
*Dd Diet Iber .wore
They liar
When .he, hid ™o™
Tbt? ilHi
" .... ]»,»
S,,!!,., 1
therwllh winter iiKet
thleh^thi
ThejdoliQliweetly
111. .hurt
« they ►« .lib™
" II K
Tli-T dra- hnl --bit Ihej ■■■
- U U
tbeTi„[h..-ircV>rnli^
■Id
And lb™, all ,h,. t]«[.ll
" 31 14
nitk-elRhl
ikwUhfutlnea
or whether bellm Iher
they mtnl do ahow
They righlly do Inhe
Or, ir they >Id«
pluck Iheni where th>
And. ror they look'd
That
It they ge
■re Ihvy now lnm«f.-ti«l
That they elKwhere
For they lulhM
tB«»rl([hl
fit. It U
iiirrh K Ihlek It L .... IK
B lilt p<wr heart-i
" ..,. 17M
nikk-«lKht«], Ur-
THIEF
804
THING
Son
Thief— -thoQ traitor, thou filae . .
let the thief run mad
To that sweet thief
thy rohbery, gentle thief
the prey of erery vulgar thief
Sweet thief^ whence didst thou steal "
JB Xr •••••
85 14
M
it
40
48
99
Son
u
VA
PP
u
VA
RL
VA
M
M
U
U
U
l(
M
J2£.
Thlerlsh — From thievish ears
He like a thievish dog
For truth proves thievish
Time's thievish progress
Thigh— twine about her thigh
Deep in the thigh
*8ee, in my thigh/ quoth she
Thin— Thin mane, thick tall
Thin winding breath
Thine— those fair lips of thine
The kiss shall be thine own
I will enchant thine ear **
thine own heart to thine own &ee **
Steal thine own freedom **
That thine may live
Thine eye darts forth
in thine own law forlorn
all whole as thine
that hard heart of thine
thst face of thine
And so 'tis thine
whose light excelleth thine
the fault is thine
thine eyes betray thee
some worthless slave of thine
To kill thine honour
for thine own sake leave me
shame be seated in thine age
thine honour lay in me
accessary by thine inclination
that are thine enemies
for trespass of thine eye
On thee and thine
some hard-favour'd groom of thine "
Thine, mine, his own
thine own bright eyes
thine own bud
thine own deep-eunk4n eyes
by succession thine
of thine age shalt see
thine image dies with thee
If ten of thine ten times
make worms thine heir
with pleasure thine annoy
do offend thine ear
live in thine or thee
In one of thine
Thou maynt call thine
But from thine eyes
with thine antique pen
doth live an thine in me
thou gavest me thine
glased with thine eyes
snd thine for mo
some gcHid coitoelt of thine
now is tliliio ahtno
Thine own iw«H*t argument
but thtno Hhttli be the praise
All mine wan thine
Thine by thy lM>auty
is thino oulwunl part
thine inwani l*iv(< of heart
with that sun thine eye
A Li ——
u
M
U
U
(«
M
M
<l
M
II
II
aon
It
11
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
u
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
It
II
9
S
2
85
••••• 736
48 14
77 8
••••• 878
9 11
9 12
1407
• ••M llO
117
.... 145
157
••••• 160
••••• X i m
• ••— AsM)
..... 251
.... 870
...M 500
...M 631
.... 1181
191
M..« 4o«
..... seo
.... 615
.... 516
.... 583
.... 603
.... 834
922
.... 1470
.... 1476
.... 1630
.... 1632
.... 1684
1 5
1
2
2
8
8
6
6
8
8
10
n
11
14
19
22
22
24
24
26
81
88
88
40
41
46
46
49
11
7
12
11
14
10
14
4
6
14
2
4
9
10
7
14
8
10
7
12
3
14
4
14
13
14
6
u
u
II
M
II
II
RL
Thine — give thee so thine own
My spirit is thine
Thine eyes, that taught
is thine and born of thee
upon that love of thine
no hatred in thine eye
thou mine, I thine
Thine eyes I love
Perforce am thine
confess'd that he is thine
to hide my will In thine
Wound me not with thine eye
to glance thine eye
Bear thine eyes straight
compare thou thine own state
from thoM lips of thine
Whom thine eyes woo
the motion of thine eyes "
all things else are thine L C
the heavenly rhetoric of thine eye P P
makes his book thine eyes "
Thine eye Jove's lightning seems **
When as thine eye hath chose **
Thing— Things growing to them-
selves VA
Thing like a man
If springing things
Things out of hope
in hand with all thipgs
of all mortal things
Of things long since, or any thing
ensuing
envy of so rich a thing
The things we are
The thing we have
if I gain the thing I seek
accidental things of trial
income of each precious thing.
the blessed thing he sought
fearing no such thing
Mar not the thing
should govern every thing
no outrageous thing
The lesser thing should not
a dearer thing than life
the seal of time in aged things
with decay of things
the mightier is the thing
with every thing she sees
with each thing she views
Like bright things stain'd
and uttering foolish things
every thing that grows
By adding one thing
and all things rare
Or some fierce thing replete
remembrance of things past
many a thing I sought
But things removed, that hidden
they view things unrespected
converted from the thing
Though you do any thing
to love things nothing worth
That do not do the thing
sweetest things turn sourest
And all things turn to fair
and for true things deem'd
a spirit of youth in every thing
One thing expressing
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
11
II
II
u
II
Son
II
M
II
II
It
It
II
It
II
It
It
It
tl
69
6
74
8
78
5
78
10
92
4
93
5
108
7
182
1
188
14
134
1
135
6
139
3
139
6
140
14
142
8
142
5
142
10
149
12
•■•■•
266
8
1
5
5
5
11
19
1
■ ■•••
166
•■•••
214
•••••
417
•••••
567
•••■«
912
•••••
996
•••»»
1078
•••••
89
• ••■■
149
•••••
153
■••••
211
•■■••
826
•••••
834
•••••
840
•••••
863
• ••••
678
••••a
602
••••■
607
■ ••■•
663
• ••••
687
• ••••
941
•••••
947
• «•••
1004
1093
•••••
1101
•••••
1435
•••••
1813
15
1
20
12
21
7
23
3
30
2
80
3
31
8
43
2
49
7
57
14
72
14
94
2
94
13
95
12
96
8
98
8
105
8
THING
305
THIS
TkliH^-dremming on things to comeAn 107 2
CooBdog no old thing new " 106 7
momtere and things Indigett ** 114 5
to the course of altering things "116 8
lo things of great receipt ** l'% 7
Id things right true " 187 13
In porsalt of the thing " 148 4
tbU beconUng of things ill " 100 5
against the thing they see '* lft'2 12
The thing we hare not L C 240
and all things else are thine " ~... 266
Against the thing he sought " 313
rale things worthy blame P P 19 3
Every thing did hanUh moan " 21 7
Thinlt— think it heavy unto thee VA ~... 156
did think to reprehend her " 470
othera, they think, delight ** .... 84:t
She thinks he could not ** 1060
Now thinks he that her husband R L ..... 78
When shall he think ** 169
That thinks she hath beheld " 451
I think the honey guarded " 493
Think but how vile a spectacle " ..... 631
They think not but that every eye ** .... 750
and think no shame of me " ~... 1201
But long she thinks " 1859
And both she thinks too long " ..... 1572
To think their dolour " ~... 1582
Haply I think on thee ^Im 29 10
I think on thee, dear friend *' 80 13
As soon as think the place " 44 8
Nor think the bitterness '* 67 7
stay and think of nought " 67 11
he thinks no III " 67 14
I think good thoughU '* 86 5
that I will bitter think " 111 11
count bad what I think good " 121 8
Than think that we " 123 8
I think my love as rare " 180 13
as I think, proceeds " 131 14
Think all but one " 136 14
think that a several plot " 137 9
That she might think me " 138 . 3
that she thinks mc young ** 138 6
Do I not think on thee " 149 3
might think soraetimo it saw L C ~... 10
thinks in Paradise was sawn '* 91
That she might think me PP \ 3
that she thinks me young ''15
Think women still to strive " 19 43
Msde me think upon mine own " 21 18
Thlnklng^If thinking on me then Son 1\ 8
but thinking on thy face " 131 10
Thus vainly thinking " 138 5
Thus vainly thinking P P \ 5
Thinly— they thinly placed are Son 52 7
Third— A third, nor red nor white " 99 10
Thltit— More thirst for drink VA 92
Thirsty— her thirsty lips well knew " 543
This— wilt deign this favour " 15
With this she seizeth " 25
pay this countless debt " »... 84
Upon this promise *' 85
for this good turn " 92
this primrose bank " 151
By this the love-«iok queen " 175
of this descending sun " ..... 190
Between this heavenly and earthly
sun " ..... 198
20
This— shouldst contemn me this VA 206
This said, impatience ** 217
of this ivory pale *' 230
Within this limit " .... 236
At this Adonis smiles " 241
And this I do '• 281
8o did this horse excel " 293
And all this dumb play " ..... 859
This beauteous combat ** ..... M5
on this mortal round " ..... 868
this idle theme, this bootless chat *' 422
This ill presage ** .... 467
What hour is this " .... 495
this poor heart of mine " .... 602
kiss each other for this cure " .... 505
thb night ril waste " .... 683
sweet boy, ere this '* .... 613
This sour informer, this bate-
breedlug spy ** .... 656
This canker that eats " 656
This carry-talc, dissentious *' 657
By this, poor Wat " .... 697
Applying this to that " .... 713
O, then imagine this '* .... 721
Now of this dark night " .... 727
For, by this black-faced night " .... 773
With this, he breaketh " .... 811
with this fair good-morrow *' 859
This said, she hastcth ** .... 866
By this she hears " .... 877
This dismal cry rings " 889
This way she runs " 905
curse thee for this stroke " .... 945
By this, far off " 973
This sound of hope " 976
Even at this word " 1025
This mutiny each part " 1049
This solemn sympathy " 1057
this foul, grim, and urchin-snouted
boar " 1105
With this, she falleih " .... 1121
this is my spite " .... 1133
By this the boy " .... 1165
this was thy father's guise " .... 1177
in this hollow cradle " ....1185
This batelcss edge R L .... 9
Suggested this proud issue " .... 87
this falw lord arrived " 60
This heraldry In Lucrece* face " .... 64
This Hllent war " 71
This earthly i>aint, adored by this
devil " .... 85
in this poor-rich gain " .... 140
And in this aim " 143
And this ambitious " 150
And now this lustful lord " 169
'As from this cold flint I enforced
this fire " 181
on this arise " 186
this vile purpose " 220
This siege that hath " .... 221
This blur to youth, this sorrow to
to the sage " .... 222
This dying virtue, this surviving
shame " 223
dear friend, this desire . " 2:m
his conduct In this case " 313
'Thlsgloveto wanton tricks " 320
abhor this fact " .... 349
Tkh-TDIa Bid, hia gulllT hmi
thli Digbl-avl will culch
■hll hlrH,-,! U-wK"'- I" kill
From Iliii fulr llirons
This more* In hi
tiie higher by thltk'l
Tarquin fiir«> Ih
To clone Ibii >pu(
Ihil ta}ie nSghl'i abuHi
Bj ifaii, limeDKhg Pbilomal
If is tbl> blembli'd tort
conifr (hit IroulilHI aoul
'Tlil»bri«f«bridgdni
This piQt
wUl
lliii well-piiDled plec«
thli ud ahidoii
leftdvl^oilly penued "
T1i«n be tbii III
Thia— thli nighl I irtll Infl
ll» d«lta or thli true win
Th!. Mid, he ilruck bb h«nd
Yet pyratbij cunning
thi* vrltUiD ainbaua^
DnlrlngthiamiD'airl
bu t this loving 1 bought
Androrthlgiln
Tbb thougbt ii u * death
Eov wllh Ihli nga
inlfaLhlimlncIa Sn t
I, JiArnl
Ii-oorJd
The woml »
Tbnn tbt9 rieh pralH
Thf ciiue lit llib fail Kilt
Andlbf Ihli Till be
lulb 'u^KiI IbU loiiow
Wn;I*h«lln ilil»»lcmo
at Oils ]»(« priTilege
(Xlhlanarllrao
«( tbli m«i bUmr tin
Aim! lOi.-u iu ihl. elmlt
l»ughUlil,L.Hukl«iii;
If Ihli be error
dT tbii nuddlDg ferer
DnkH lbf« genenl ei
imlnguf thJDg>iU
Ihl^lwlj'il'
^ <.! Uv.-
ThDbcuDd
be queucliKl
urfihtobj
(hmt 1 prof e
tdli double
•Dice iccordad
ltaii-id.1
Inpof nge
Tuwudf th
3 Binielcd ftnej
fialqultklj
on thl. iilde
Or mil iiti>
J.Td
L.1, ihi.'dpr
^""JSSlntnw
:n.i.-id,b
,»ji.r!-r>jc8
our drop- 1
pqtjury
XbU on thia
rartb dolb gbl
mr tadr .( ibia
bur
CiUKcfHii.
To Iblt troop f
houDotn
Prointblxo.
i?«ru«b lhl.«
Had..
liitthre
n-piir
Tbllhrr-Andtl
tl>e
h>.-d
unikein -n
hliher
Thong-Tbm-li.
tmselho
onlhorDidldiUnd
99
Ne'er lo [rfuck t he* from Ihj' Ihoro
FP
I«»n'dii.T brftt;! u 1 1-1 1 11 m thorn
T1ior»j— Tlie Jiorny brnmblut
YA
S»
ouRh Roae
RL
ThOH-lhOH Iklr lliH of IhlM
irihuehiliibedr]'
MS
A J tliD» poor bird*
Oftbo«f.ir.r.n.
Th.,-.. .■)-.■- .h^l l^uRht
«52
RL
TnlliuKiwoBnDln
n
lU
Or u lb«Q bun
3Z7
Vor ihoM Ihlnf cyei belntf Dim
4N
Totbo«thmtllTB
OrihQMtBlr.un.
Ibxerprnudl'inKioblanis
IBS
Th.«Q iiu™ fmu, tbee
il,o,eAr-c.ll..y.*look»d
ISSfl
1«J
not.>Jl..ln>dWrlh.»e
TlioM rouDd cleir peirli
iim
KpiriVlng; Lo Iboic tiiul came
itsa
Inndstnlhownraftre
Sm
Thow boon Ibnt wilb gentle
"
s
1
X8 10
1.1 ID
Tfaowparlxil
Upon liicwe bu
Tk«»-DiiIenTyt)io«Ji
wllta iJiw dan<4pg i^bli
As thoflfl vboH bo-iutln
not IVom ibou 1l|is at II
ThoH lips that Lots*! o
ttiUnd forth
UUKhta
lelikcoiki PP
The
When.' s11 1Jio» |>l«inrci
h« fbhfiulft not pAB thoM! ; nmitd*
Tu ihl> nm ]« IhoM niBir J"
^'ouchurc. thou ooDder T
lu wilt drlEU
If III
Feed when Ihou wilt
•whTdogilfaou ftttllt
wIllIhoQ mnlii^lliDmilcb
Tboii liidil bnn gone
«bDU (Dld'atioe thau wnulilBt
farifaauihiilt not th
Ihollhcar'aliuBinDr
JIatirihuiiMi
thoa nenli luiiil hii
0, thou tlear jmi
Tll«l— thoo hut no ojn
«t rvndom doA Ihmi hi
Hadit thou but bid
ir thou denT
And Ihou, Ibe luthor
■BulltlhoujieM
■9 Ihuu hul pretended
TIkim Iwk'si u.ii niin deceit
)u nobljr hue
Hilhelrf^rlire
Ht iDBlbal In their thui
ce thou .rt guilty
-Tia thou Ib.l sputB-M mt right
Thou niknt the Tntil
Thou blow'ti Ibe flre
Thou iniolber'st honnlr, tboa
Thou plan tat I
Thon oi.l.hcr
fnlK thief
■Uiiil<j1b.„.ii,
llic hours Ihmi
nfdi^-Locrece to their ilgbt
had itaeatbedlhelr light
bidslhcmdulhclrinilns
Li^tliht^trniiindtumU
uir^-II-lictcldtlieT
:ii« ydiingposKss their U>a
Thul (rfni ihi'ir iikq mladecdi
To their ull wnVcign, with their
romoirbrlKht lb
■lit to gran Ihetl
ther in their glory dia
Who *11 their parts
Their Imaga 1 lored
heir browi utd bide
their glitlcrlng golden towan
(liar their couteuta
Inthdr wlldnru
tumethitliiuamln/ijor
their ■weclinelodi
loehiDgntheirldndi
doth malt Ihrix' mow
qiii>nch their llrbt
ther drown Cbsh eyea « break
their beiru
Their 11110011] awL llkuagoodlr
are Iheir oon tuulla' bouki
RD!]t<.l().liilhrlrtK>wm<lle
brbnlil»ll>drhUjuo
b..lhtT,olrri..:.-.1.l^>.l
Whu lead Ihee In their riot
A.iin.vih.-lr-iwUrl
I li.'ir milked budiducloas
But, for their *lrtiie oaij li t
Of their iweet death!
Ici't.'Ti Id their end
Theu. churli. tli«ir thouebt*
sitlietrhKbllatloa
THEREFORE
302
THEY
I*
Son
it
t(
It
(I
tt
{«
it
it
it
•••••
1052
•••••
1085
•■•••
1241
•«•••
1452
22
9
41
5
41
6
01
10
52
5
82
2
82
7
83
2
83
5
93
6
102
13
105
7
122
11
123
5
127
9
138
18
139
11
1
13
Thf rf)fbre— . . . .now I need not fear R L
And therefore still (n night ^
And therefore are they form'd
And therefore Lucrece swears
O therefore, love, be of thyself
and therefore to be won **
therefore to be assailed "
Therefore desire, of perfect'st love "
Therefore are feasts "
And therefore mayst without attaint "
And therefore art enforced
And therefore to your fair
And therefore have I slept
Therefore in that I cannot
Therefore, like her, I sometime
Therefore my verse to constancy
confined
Therefore to give them
and therefore we admire
Therefore my mistress' eyes
Therefore I lie with her
therefore from my face
Therefore I'll lie with love P P
Therein — And therein heartens up H L ..... 295
And therein so ensconced " ..... 1515
to gaze therein on thee Son 24 12
and therein dignified ** 101 4
and therein show'st " 126 3
Thereof— not .... make discovery li L ..... 1314
And in the praise thereof Son 80 3
the loss thereof still fearing PP 7 10
and thereof free L C ..... 100
Thereon— shall thereon fall and die R L ...~ 1139
Theae— These blue-vein'd violets VA 125
These forceless flowers " 152
These lovely caves, these round
enchanting pits " ..... 247
And these mine eyes " ..... 503
Would root these beauties " ~... 636
Pursue these fearful creatures " ..... 677
of all these maladies " ~... 745
she at thette sad signs " ..... 929
and beats these from the stage R L 278
these poor forblddings could not *' ..... 823
these lets attend the time " ..... 830
These worlds in Tarquin new am-
bition bred " ..... 411
blow these pitchy vapours " 650
If all these petty ills shall change " ..... 656
So shall these slaves be king " ..... 659
These means, as frets upon an in-
strument " ..... 1140
these pretty creatures stand " 1233
These many lives confound " ..... 1489
These contraries such unity do hold " 1558
These water-galls in her dim ele-
ment " «... 1588
will sufi'er these abominations " 1832
Yet in these thoughts Son 29 9
These poor rude lines " 82 4
Or any of these all " 37 6
do please these curious days " 88 13
These presenUabeent with swift
motion glide " 45 4
when these quicker elements are
gone *• 45 6
more bright in these cont€nta " 65 3
in these black lines be seen ** 63 13
Tired with all these " 66 1
These— Tired with all these, fhmi
these would I Som
before these last so bad **
Before these bastard signs
Commit to these waste blanks
These offices, so oft as thou wilt look **
But these particulars are not
All these I better
I with these did play
behold these present days
These blenches gave my heart
these rebel powers that thee array
u
u
«
«
H
u
66
67
68
77
77
91
91
98
106
110
146
These often bathed she
And long upon these terms
these talents of their hair
Lo, all these trophies
For these, of force, must yonr
Take all these similes
Now all these hearts
Here in these brakes
if these pleasures may thee move
These pretty pleasures might me
move
These are certain signs
For these dead birds sigh
They — So they were dew'd
yet are they red
For, where they lay
when they blot the sky
If they burn too
fly they know not whether
As they were mad, unto the wood
they hie them
as they had not seen them
They wither in their prime
they make no battery
Would they not wish
they borrow'd all their shine
That they have murder'd
Long may they kiss
And as they last
Are they not quickly told
Incorporate then they seem
Whereon they surfeit
They that thrive well
till they have singled
they spend their mouths
others, they think, delight
they answer all * 'Tis so
They all strain courtesy
They basely fly
that they are afraid
bleeding as they go
they long have gazed
They bid thee crop
they view'd each other's sorrow
then Join they all together
Where they resign
they have wept till now
They both would strive
they him with berries
and they are pale
As if they heard
wherein they late exceli'd
They that love best
That oft they interchange
what they have not, that which
they possess
They scatter and unloose it
Mj C> ...m
(I
u
((
u
PP
u
u
IS
14
8
10
13
7
8
14
13
7
2
50
.... 176
..... 204
• ■•M ZlO
• • • •« 2aB*'
..... 227
...- 274
9 10
20 15
20 19
21 57
PT
VA
It
i(
u
u
tl
u
u
II
II
II
u
u
l«
M
II
tl
II
II
II
«
It
II
U
U
u
II
II
RL
II
67
66
..... 116
••••• 176
——• IcHi
••••• Wm
— 304
••••• 32?
••«•• 357
•••■• 41o
••••• 426
•••M 4nr#
••••• ^Ow
..... 602
...M OUv
M... 607
..... 520
••••• Cfsv
~... 640
..... 688
..... 695
..... 843
.... 851
M... ooo
894
••••• <fA*S
••••• y^ff
— 946
M... 963
.... 1039
— 1062
.... 1092
— 1104
— 1123
.... 1126
.... 1131
.... 1164
.... 70
— 185
THEMSELVES
300
THEN
TheaiMlTe*— If pleased themselTes V A
• •••4
843
Then— How comes it then
R L
895
of day, tberaselves withdrew
u
1032
0, hear me then
M
• ••••
930
to rest themselves betake
R L ,..-
125
True sorrow then
It
•••«•
1112
keep themselves enclosed
u
••••■
878
Then let it not
II
• ••••
1174
themselves so beautify
t»
•••■•
404
And then they drown their eyes
U
•••••
1239
do seldom to themselves appear
l(
633
Then call them not
It
• •••a
1244
which they themselves behold
u
•••■•
751
For then the eye
U
••••■
1325
Which not themselves
M
««•••
833
Then little strength rings out
II
•••••
1495
in themselves beguiled
It
•••••
957
and then she longs
It
•«••■
1571
Grieving themselves to guess
It
•• ••■
1238
Then be this all the task
M
•••••
1618
beauties do themselves forsake
San
^ 12
11
and then I'll slaughter thee
II
••■•■
1634
And in themselves their pride
It
25
7
And then against my heart
II
••«••
1640
Die to themselves
It
54
11
let it then suffice
11
•■■••
1679
are themselves as stone
M
94
3
Then live, sweet Lucrece
M
•••••
1770
now crown themselves assured
II
107
7
And then in key-cold
It
•••••
1774
though they themselves be bevel
It
121
11
Then son and father weep
II
•••••
1791
All aids, themselves made fairer
LC
• ••••
117
Then jointly to the ground
II
•••••
1846
To themselves yet either
PI
r
43
Then being ask'd
Sim
\ 2
5
Then— Then with her windy sighs
VA
• ••••
61
Then, beauteous niggard
It
4
6
Then why not lips on lips
u
•••••
120
Then how, when nature calls
u
4
11
then wink again
It
•••••
121
Then, were not summer's
II
S
9
Then mightst thou pause, for then
Then let not winter's
u
6
1
I were not for thee
It
•••••
187
Then what could death^do
II
6
11
Then woo thyself
II
•••••
159
Then of thy beauty
II
12
9
and then bis hand
11
•••••
223
then you were
II
18
6
Then be my deer
II
••■••
239
Then the conceit of this
11
15
9
Then, like a melancholy
II
•••*•
813
And then believe me
II
21
10
was then between them
It
•••••
355
Then look I death
11
22
4
then love's deep groans
11
•••••
877
How can I then be elder
u
22
8
and then I chase it
II
•«•••
410
be then the eloquence
II
23
9
Incorporate then they seem
II
•••••
540
Then happy I
II
25
18
But then woos best
II
•••••
570
Then may I dare to boast
u
26
13
O, had she then gave over
II
•••••
571
then not show my head
11
28
14
Then do they spend
II
•••••
895
then begins a journey
II
27
8
Then shalt thou see
II
•«•••
703
For then my thoughts
u
27
5
then the story aptly ends
It
•••••
716
How can I then return
11
28
1
0, then imagine this
It
•••••
721
and then my state .
II
29
10
'Nay, then,' quoth Adon
11
••■••
769
That then I scorn
M
29
14
And then my little heart
11
•••••
783
Then can I drown an eye
U
80
6
then he had spoke
M
••■••
943
Then can I grieve
•1
80
9
then join they ail together
U
•••••
971
0, then vouchsafe me
u
82
9
Then, gentle shadow
II
•••••
1001
So then I am not lame
CI
87
9
and then she reprehends
M
■••••
1065
then ten times happy me
M
87
14
then would Adonis weep
«l
•••■■
1090
hast thou then more
•1
40
2
why then I know
II
•••••
1109
Then, if for my love
<l
40
6
What needeth then
RL
•••••
81
then she loves but me alone
U
42
14
Then virtue claims
u
•••••
59
then do mine eyes best tee
(1
43
1
caird it then their shield
II
•••■•
61
Then thou, whose shadow
M
43
5
For then is Tarquin
«
•••••
120
For then, despite of space
u
44
8
BO then we do neglect
II
•••••
152
No matter then although
M
44
6
Then where is truth
u
•••••
158
then no longer glad
M
45
13
Then looking scornfully
II
•••••
187
then my eye doth feast
M
47
6
Then my dlgresMion
II
•••••
202
my poor beast then find
11
51
6
Then white as lawn
II
•••••
259
Then should I spur
II
61
7
and then it faster rock'd
II
•«•••
262
Then can no horse
M
61
9
* Why hunt I then
u
•••••
267
Then, churls, their thoughts
M
69
11
'Then, childish fear, avaunt
II
»•■••
274
Then thou alone kingdoms
M
70
14
Then who fears sinking
II
•••••
280
then should make you woe
«
71
*8
How can they then
It
»••••
350
So then thou hast but lost
M
74
9
• Then Love and Fortune
II
•••••
851
Then better'd that the world
II
75
8
Then had they seen
u
»••••
880
Then thank him not
M
79
13
Then Collatlne again
II
•••••
381
Then if he thrive
M
80
IS
then force must work
II
»••••
513
Then others for the breath
M
85
IS
' Then, fur thy husband
II
•••••
533
Then lack'd I matter
tt
86
14
do not then ensnare me
It
»••«•
584
worth then not knowing
M
87
9
Then kings' misdeeds
II
•••••
609
Then hate me
«
90
1
then most doth tyrannize
It
•••••
676
Then need I not to fear
II
92
6
And then with lank
It
•••••
708
Then do thy office, Muse
U
101
IS
•So then he hath it
II
•••••
862
and then but in the spring
(1
102
6
thlilumuHlolKbuld
Thia mona In him
enter Ihiii-ffttUT
thlaruh lirm In kno*
liecammlliltaUJll
lolhli night
All ttli buturtbidJ
Thit u^A, he >h»kea •loi
■thiinlght Imiut eojo]
■tlliladiwlDln
bT till, drilling
ThlideHl»niniak?th
irbulTorfvBTOt thli
Tbi> guilt wouIilH-Bin
tbf higher hj thia 1«l
In llilishunvfuUiMin
Thli fon«d Ivagua
Toiliiiii [l,lHl.l..t
Efta no ihig imitero
in ihli irork <cu had
To tills vcll-iMiDted pleca
Onth
Thi»li>
1 ahiidDii
_... 41S
ll,lir.-r„^vl,.|„i,. ritnt
.... 4M
_,.. 4M
At thll »qu«t
.... «s
'UoirmiiTlhlirbnedaUl
■cqulln»rt«mlbl>ch>D«
..., «»
Wllhthb,lhfT(ll
4U
ebB uMQn Ihl.
-... DM
Th>iig..ldt'>thl.budtott
Z'. Ml
* 11 bihli deadly dMd
.... ftie
Alldbrll>HchaH,-hl«d
l,ytl,l.l.luoJjk.lit.l
Ihc death or thIa triu vita
.„. 689
Thlaa.Ld,he«tnKkhlah«id
WO
ll«.lmioIt,i-.iiJvUd.!uo<u
.... 691
ot..|.,-ll,i. Kl"LI,,nij..
_... 698
'ThIa fair child or mine
Thlaweretobcoe-niKlB
thii thy g<.l<l.!u time
SiBK.thl. loiu™
.... 7M
WitUoMl hK lolly
.... S35
AKBln<iil>i<<:ou.l..g«iid
.... S»
Tlitt IU1> hnxa •Iiige
.... 966
.... 970
war upon tLl. Iiluody lyraot
.... 996
Wlikh>hl.,TlBi«'ii«ndl
TblJ |«*t lie.
1030
Bo long lira tbia, and Ikia (iToa
.... 1031
thU \,Ufi- raodiira bEnu
1039
Yetcy,..lliiacunDlng
thb vAlM> aiiibasuga
.... lOM
l)«lrinsH.Js.n.n'aarl
but this lulUlglllOUKht
e, anlm Ihli mincle .
Yaihisliij [.raise
HiJ, K you rpmllhl!
mtf •Hm fHlse to thi
Tliia tliou pcnwliTHt
When Ibou rcTlewtW
Tl«i..
-crJd
TliaalUirlitli pniite
Tha Mtua -af lliia ^c Itlft
And bjr Tills A.id bo
WmUhnl la thbilOM
AUthliiwiy
of thbUrgrpri'tWo
AMri'tttaliliux
Yd Ihii ibuDdint iMue
For fc*r Qf wblch. hew ibl»
And In thli clwiiKC
Of Ail our time
1htairkl«ui>l<eneIi«U
Uigbtit ihi>aKtieur
fikcknpitliKialtila
*i hmniT re lu Ibli
trtlfii'lhlnlMiitir
TUi bnnd ibe qiKBch's]
ud Ihli bi Ihu I pcv<
>7 THOSE
Thln-ulhkqureDonliim
WHihUiluier
Bif lidf 11 Ibis bt,j
Tu lUlaimoponni'lhouiiot i
luin. XL-
■nPP
LoD'd her l>r.>B.I up-tlll i Ihur
Tliorij— The ihHrny bnuoblr-i
VA
TbnnM»h-her bl..-.'.ll»g bodr >b
Tlio.«-.h*eftltllp.orihlii.
irih<aehl1libedrr
-
...
T1io«« rrfuod <-kar p*4rlii
IVae Ibuuft tkal Ihf
Li tkw '■f.n y^>rt
An'liillbu-'fri'D'l*
Lilliui'iiuiUnd forth hC ~..
ughu, lu rag Ilka Mks FP :
bol pun 1bo*D.grouudi "
n lot ihoM' npilr FT ...
hMfi-, lh„uwgiider VA ...
Then mlghUt Ihou piuaa
thou liinlt he i
F«d where Ih
'modlhoaBhslthBTelt
Whsi niB.i ihi.i. lumr quoil
■he, liuttliousloiiKiie
O, would Ihou hadil 4101
wcrtlboiiloibDUile
O, IhoudldaUlllme
SnIliiinolllhuT
'Which purchue If thou Duke
Thou hidsl heen gone
Vhea thou didtt
■IHdnihounotir
BawM thou not >l
<n thou hut OD foot
fat It Ihoii Ml
It Ihou dcslroji tlivm not
Thou nobly hue
Thou Ihdr Mr life
Thou loathod In their •huna
Since thou mn gulllj
Or If Ihou wilt
' O Night, thou funuM
ThnuKl'stibowolf
■Th Ihou lliiiapnm'il at right
TliaumiknilhcTcMal
THIEF
804
THING
Thief— thou traitor, thou false .,,, RL
• ••••
888
Thine— give thee to thine own
San
09
e
let the thief run mad
It
• •••«
997
My spirit Is thine
M
74
8
To that sweet thief
Son
85
14
Thine eyes, that taught
M
78
5
thy robbery, gentle thief
M
40
9
is thine and born of thee
M
78
10
the prey of every vulgar thief
4«
48
8
upon that love of thine
M
92
4
Sweet thief, whence didst thou steal '*
99
2
no hatred in thine eye
U
98
5
Thierlsh— From thievish ears
RL
•«•••
85
thou mine, I thine
M
106
7
He like a thievish dog
u
• ••••
736
Thine eyes I love
tf
182
1
For truth proves thievish
Son
48
14
Perforce am thine
U
183
14
Time's thievish progress
u
77
8
confess'd that he is thine
M
134
1
Thl^h—twine about her thigh
VA
873
to hide my will in thine
M
185
6
Deep in the thigh
PP
9
11
Wound me not with thine eye
U
139
8
'See, in my thigh,' quoth she
u
9
12
to glance thine eye
M
188
6
Thin— Thin mane, thick tail
VA
• ••••
298
Bear thine eyes straight
If
140
14
Thin winding breath
RL
• ••••
1407
compare thou thine own stata
U
142
8
ThiB»— those fair lips of thine
VA
••m —
115
from those lips of thine
U
142
5
The kiss shall be thine own
u
• ••M
117
Whom thine eyes woo
M
142
10
I will enchant thine ear
M
• ••••
145
the motion of thine eyes
M
149
12
thine own heart to thine own face "
• ••M
157
all things else are thine
LC
•«•••
266
Steal thine own freedom
U
• ••••
160
the heavenly rhetoric of thine eye P P
S
1
That thine may live
«l
• ••••
172
makes his book thine eyes
(f
6
6
Thine eye darts forth
II
■ «•■«
196
Thine eye Jove's lightning seemi
a
5
11
in thine own law forlorn
II
• ••••
251
When as thine eye hath chose
M
19
1
all whole as thine
II
■ ••M
870
Thing— Things growing to them'
*
that hard heart of thine
u
• ••••
600
selves
VA
•••«•
166
that face of thine
II
• ••••
631
Thing like a man
ti
•••••
214
And so 'tis thine
II
• ••••
1181
If springing things
It
•••••
417
whose light excelleth thine
RL
•••••
191
Things out of hope
tf
•••••
567
the fault is thine
II
•••••
482
in hand with all things
M
— ••m
912
thine eyes betray thee
II
•••••
483
of all mortal things
M
••■••
996
some worthless slave of thine
u
•••••
615
Of things long since, or any thing
To kill thine honour
II
•••••
616
ensuing
ft
••••■
1078
for thine own sake leave me
•1
•••••
683
envy of so rich a thing
RL
•••••
89
shame be seated in thine age
It
•••••
603
The things we are
M
• ••••
149
thine honour lay in me
It
•••••
834
The thing we have
tt
•••««
158
accessary by thine inclination
it
»••■•
922
if I gain the thing I seek
H
•••••
211
that are thine enemies
If
•••••
1470
accidental things of trial
M
•••••
826
for trespass of thine eye
u
•■•••
1476
income of each precious thing.
U
••••«
834
On thee and thine
If
•••••
1630
the blessed thing he sought
M
«••••
840
some hard-favour'd groom of thine "
1682
fearing no such thing
ft
«■•••
863
Thine, mine, his own
It
•••••
1684
Mar not the thing
M
• ••••
678
thine own bright eyes
San
1
5
should govern every thing
ft
*••••
602
thine own bud
II
1
11
no outrageous thing
tf
•••••
607
thine own deep-sunk^ eyes
<i
2
7
The lesser thing should not
ft
•••••
663
by succession thine
M
2
12
a dearer thing than life
tt
• ••••
687
of thine age shalt see
11
8
11
the seal of time in aged things
tf
• ••••
Ml
thine image dies with thee
ft
8
14
with decay of things
U
■•■•a
947
If ten of thine ten times
If
6
10
the mightier is the thing
tf
• ••••
10O4
make worms thine heir
U
6
14
with every thing she sees
M
• ■•••
1093
with pleasure thine annoy
If
8
4
with each thing she views
M
••«••
1101
do offend thine ear
U
8
6
Like bright things stain'd
tl
• •••■
1435
live in thine or thee
U
10
14
and uttering foolish things
U
■••*•
1813
In one of thine
II
11
2
every thing that grows
Son
15
1
Thou mayst call thine
It
11
4
By adding one thing
u
20
12
But from thine eyes
11
14
9
and all things rare
tl
21
7
with thine antique pen
It
19
10
Or some fierce thing replete
u
23
3
doth live as thine in me
M
22
7
remembrance of things past
M
80
2
thou gavest me thine
II
22
14
many a thing I sought
tt
SO
3
glased with thine eyes
II
24
8
But things removed, that hidden
«
81
8
and thine for me
It
24
10
they view things unrespected
It
43
2
some good conceit of thine
II
26
7
converted from the thing
II
49
7
now is thine alone
M
8t
12
Though you do any thing
II
57
14
Thine own sweet argument
If
88
3
to love things nothing worth
M
72
14
but thine shall be the praise
It
88
14
That do not do the thing
It
94
2
All mine was thine
II
40
4
sweetest things turn sourest
tl
94
13
Thine by thy beauty
II
41
14
And all things turn to fair
II
95
12
is thine outward part
If
46
13
and for true things deem'd
tl
96
8
thine inward love of heart
It
46
14
a spirit of youth in every thing
tt
98
3
with that sun thine eye
ft
49
6
One thing expressing
U
105
8
THOU
810
THOU
Thov— thou not farther than mj
thoughts canst raovo Son 47
But thou, to whom " 48
Thou, best of dearest ** 48
thou art not, though I feel thou art " 48
thou mayst corao and part " 48
thence thou wilt be stol'n " 48
thou Shalt strangely pass ** 49
To leave poor me thou hast the
strength " 49
From where thou art " 61
So, love, be thou ; although to-day
thou fill " 66
Dost thou desire " 61
thou seud'st from thee " GI
whilst thou dost wake ** 01
that thou dost common grow " 69
That thou art blamed " 70
So thou be good *' 70
And thou present'st *' 70
Thou hast pass'd " 70
Then thou alone " 70
thou mayst in me behold " 73
In me thou see'st " 73
In me thou seo'st the glowing " 73
Tills thou pcrcelvesl " 73
thou must leave ** 73
When thou reviewest this, thou
dost review " 74
So then thou hast " 74
learning mayst thou taste " 77
Thou by thy dial's shady stealth " 77
and thou shalt find " 77
oft as thou wilt look " 77
thou dost but mend " 78
But thou art all my art " 78
thou thyself dost pay " 79
I grant thou wert not " 82
Thou art as fair " 82
Thou truly fair wert truly " 82
Farewell ! thou art too dear " 87
thou know'st thy estimate " 87
Thyself thou gavest " 87
to whom thou gavest It " 87
When thou »halt be "88
though thou art forsworn " 88
That thou in losing nie " 88
Say that thou didst forsake " 89
whom thou dost bate " 89
bate me when thou wilt " 90
If thou wilt leave me " 90
that thou mayst take " 91
thou art assured mine " 92
Thou canst not vex me " 92
Thou mayst be false " 92
supposing thou art true ** 93
dost thou make the shame '* 95
thou thy sins inclose " 95
Thou makest faults graces " 96
mightst thou lead away " 96
If thou wouldst use " 96
As thou being mine ** 96
And, thou away, the very birds " 97
whence didst thou steal " 99
thou hast too grossly dyed " 99
Where art thou. Muse, that thou
forget'st " 100
Spend'st thou thy fury *' 100
So thou prevent'st his scythe ** 100
Thoo— So dost thou too Son 101
4
11
wilt thou not haply say
i<
101
6
5
wilt thou be dumb
(i
101
9
7
thou age unbred
u
104
13
10
And thou in this shalt find
u
107
IS
12
thou mine, I thine
u
106
7
13
Save thou, my rose; in it thou art
5
my all
u
109
14
No, Time, thou shalt not
u
123
1
13
What thou dost foist
u
128
6
3
And take thou my oblation
u
125
10
thou suborn'd informer
((
125
13
5
thou, my lovely boy
it
126
1
3
As thou goest onwards
II
126
6
5
Yet fear her, thou minion
II
126
9
13
How oft, when thou, my music
II
128
1
14
when thou gently sway'st
u
128
8
1
Thou art as tyrannous, so as thou art "
131
1
5
For well thou know'st
II
131
3
8
Thou art the fairest
It
131
4
9
In nothing art thou black
u
131
13
14
thou harder hast engrossed
II
133
6
1
Thou canst not then use
u
133
12
5
And yet thou wilt
II
133
13
9
Thou wilt restore
II
]»1
4
13
But thou wilt not
It
134
5
14
For thou art covetous
It
134
6
The statute of thy beauty thou will
> It
134
9
5
Thou usurer, that put'st forth
II
134
10
9
thou hast both him and me
u
134
li
4
thou hast thy • Will
tt
136
1
7
Wilt thou, whose will is large
It
136
6
10
So thou, being rich
It
135
11
13
And then thou lovrat me
li
136
14
11
Thou blind fool, Love, what dost
13
thou
It
137
1
14
hast thou forged hooks
II
137
7
1
Tell me thou lovest elsewhere
It
139
5
5
WTiat need'st thou wound
It
139
7
11
Be wise as thou art cruel
It
140
1
1
I may not be so, nor thou belied
tt
140
18
2
compare thou thine own state
tt
142
3
9
thou shalt find It merits not
II
142
4
10
as thou lovest those
II
142
9
1
If thou dost seek to have what
4
thou dost hide
It
142
13
8
mayst thou be denied
M
142
14
1
So runn'st thou after that
It
143
9
14
But If thou catch
II
143
11
1
thou n^pyst have thy 'Will
II
143
13
9
If thou turn back
It
143
14
13
Why dast thou pine
u
146
3
2
Dost thou upon thy fading
It
146
6
9
Then, soul, live thou
It
146
9
14
So t«halt thou feed on death
It
146
13
1
thou keep'st nie blind
It
148
13
1
Canst thou, cruel
(t
149
1
4
On whom frown'st thou
It
149
r,
4
Nay, if thou lour'at on me
»l
149
7
11
Those that can see thou lovest
It
149
14
12
thou this powerful might
u
150
I
14
Whence host thou this
It
150
6
12
thou shouldst not abhor
li
150
12
2
For, thou betraying me
tt
151
5
5
In loving thee thou know'st
It
152
1
But thou art twice forsworn
It
152
2
1
thou register of lies
x< O •••••
62
3
witness dost thou bear
tt
• •••«
53
14
For thou art all
It
• •••'
766
THOU
311
THOUGHT
Tli«i— *''When thou impresscst L C 267
Wben thou wilt iDflame " ...~ 268
Thou being a godden P P 3 6
thou a heavenly love *' 3 7
Then, thou fair sun ** 8 10
Celestial as thou art " 5 13
Because thou lovest the one "84
Thou lovest to hear "89
For why thou left'st me nothing " 10 8
And jet thou left'st me more " 10 9
thou didst bequeath to me " 10 12
thou stay'st too long " 12 12
Thou for whom Jove " 17 15
thst thou shouldst strike " 19 2
And when thou comest " 19 7
thou lovest her well " 19 U
thou to choose anew ** 19 34
be thou not slack " 19 So
thou mourn*st in vain " 21 19
Thou and I were both '* 21 80
Whilst thou hast " 21 36
If thou sorrow " 21 53
If thou wake " 21 54
Bat thou shrieking harbinger P T ~... 5
come thou not near " ...» 8
And thou treble-dated crow " 17
thou givest and takest " 19
Shalt thou go " 20
Thoofli— though not in lust VA 42
Though mine be not so fair " ..... 116
though of a man's complexion " ..... 215
though a thousand bark " ~... 240
Though nothing but " ..... 372
though thy horse be gone " 890
Though I were dumb " 406
Though neither eyes nor ears " 4:{7
though the rose have prickles " ~... 574
though seeming short " 842
Though weak-built hopes B L l.'iO
Though death be adjunct " 13:i
Yea, though I die " .... 2<M
though marble wear with raining " ..*... 560
Though men can cover crimes " 1252
though my words are brief " 1309
His face, though full of cares " 1503
Though woe be heavy " 1574
though none it ever cured " 1581
Her eyes, though sod in tears " 1592
Though my gross blood be stain'd " 1655
though they with winter Spn 5 13
Though yet heaven knows " 17 3
though not so bright " 21 11
though enemies to cither's reign *' 28 5
And though they be " 32 6
Though thou repent " 34 10
Though in our lives " 86 6
Which though it alter not " 36 7
Though I feel thou art " 48 10
though mounted ou the wind " 51 7
Though you do any thing " 57 14
though waiting so be hell " 58 13
thy love, though much " 61 9
though my lover's life " 63 12
Though I, once gone " 81 6
Though words come hindmost " 85 12
though thou art forsworn " 88 4
though new-fangled ill '* 91 3
though alter'd new " 93 3
Though to itself " 94 10
ThoBgh— though more weak in
seeming <Sbn 102 1
though less the show appear "102 2
Though absence scem'd " 109 2
though in my nature rcign'd " 109 9
though rosy lips and cheeks "116 9
though they themselves be bevel " 121 11
Her audit, though delay'd "126 11
Though in thy stores' account " 136 10
though I know she lies " 138 2
Though not to love " 140 G
though thy proud heart " 140 14
though I mijktake my view " 148 11
O. though T love what others "150 11
Though slackly braided L C ...~ 35
though in me you behold " „... 71
unruly though they be " «... 103
Though Reason weep, and cry " 168
though our drups this difference
bore " 800
though I know she lies P P \ 2
Though to myself forsworn "53
though excellent in neither " 7 18
What though her frowning brows " 19 13
What though she strive " 19 19
though she put thee back " 19 36
Thonght— of her thoughts began V A ^... 367
my thought, my busy care " 383
W^hose vulture thought " ..... 551
The thought of it " ..... 669
in thoughts unlikely " 9K9
In likely thoughts " ..... 990
His high-pltch'd thoughts R L .... 41
But some untimely thought " ..... 43
For unstaln'd thoughts " ...« 87
pure thoughts are dead and still " «... 167
controls his thoughts unjust " 189
And die, unhalluw'd thoughts " ... . 192
with good thoughts makes dis-
pensation " ...„ 248
W^ilhin his thought " „... 288
from the heaven of his thought " 338
That his foul thuughts " ..... 346
Thoughts are but dreams " 353
is as a thought unacted " .... 527
and flattering thoughts retire " 641
So let thy thoughU " 666
Even in this thought " 729
And the dire thought " 972
smile at thee in secret thought " 1065
duty with thought's feathers flies " 1216
hath overslipp'd her thought " 1576
O, change thy thought Son 10 9
In the soul's thought " 26 8
For then my thoughts " 27 5
Yet in these thoughts " 29 9
of sweet silent thought " 30 1
but this loving thought " XH 9
with thoughts of love " 39 11
Which time and thoughU " 39 12
If the dull substance of my flesh
were thought ** 44 1
For nimble thought " 44 7
thought kills me, that I am not
thought " 44 9
The first my thought " 46 8
A quest of thoughts " 46 10
And in his thoughts " 47 8
than my thoughts canst move " 47 11
THOUGHT
312
THROUGH
Thopffht— with ray Jealous thought Son 57 9
I should in thought " 58 2
* This thought is as a death " 64 13
the thought of hearts can mend *' 69 2
Then, churls, their thoughU " 69 11
in your sweet thoughts " 71 7
So are you to my thoughts " 75 1
I think good thoughU " 85 5
But that Is in my thought " 85 11
Me for my dumb thoughts " 85 14
That did my ripe thoughU *' 86 3
loving thoughts on thee " 88 10
Whate'er thy thoughts '* 93 11
Gored mine own thoughts "110 3
their rank thoughts my deeds " 121 12
My thoughts and my discourse " 147 11
Whereon the thought L C 10
To dwell with him in thoughU " ~... 129
theirs in thought asslgn'd " 138
Those thoughU, to me like oaks PP 5 4
IHou^A/— He thought to kiss him VA ~... 1110
thought to persuade him " ~... 1114
Lucrece thought he blush'd R L 1344
She thought ho blush'd " ~... 1354
The more she thought " 1358
which I thought buried Son 31 4
I found, or thought I found '* 83 X
it hath thought lUelf so blessed "119 6
and thought thee bright " 147 13
Thought characters and words
merely but art L C 174
Ah, thought I, thou mourn'st PP 21 19
Thooghted— Sick-thoughted Venus
makes amain VA 5
And holy-thoughted Lucrece R L ~... 384
Thousand— A .... honey secreU V A 16
though a thousand bark " ..... 240
a thousand ways he seeks " 477
A thousand kisses " ~ . 617
with a thousand doubles " 682
twenty thousand tongues " ..... 775
A thousand spleens bear her a
thousand ways " ...~ 907
A thousand times " 11:K)
confounded in a thousand fears R L 456
A thousand crosses keep them " 912
A thousand thousand friends " 963
a thousand lamentable objecU " 1373
After a thousand victories Son 25 10
A thousand groans " 131 10
A thousand errors note " 141 2
A thousand favours from a maund L C 36
Like a thousaud vauquish'd men P P 18 36
With a thousand fragrant posies " 20 in
Thrall — makes young men thrall VA 8.')7
and made her thrall R L 725
but I my mistress' thrall Son 154 12
Living In thrall PP 18 22
Thralled — blow of ... . discontent Son 124 7
Tliremd»— Her hair like golden RL 400
Threaden — Some In her .... fillet j^ C 33
Threat—ever threat his foes VA 620
that sometime threat the spring R L 331
ihreaU If he mounU he dies " 508
the world doth threat " 547
TkrMtentng— thy rocky and wreck-
threatening heart " 590
Threatening cloud-kissing Ilion " 1370
Three — makes the wound seem .... V A 1064
Three— Three times with sighs R L .... 1604
Three winters cold S(m 104 8
shook three summers' pride " 104 4
Three beauteous springs " 104 5
Three April perfume in three hot
Junes burn'd ** 104 7
Three themes in one ** 105 12
Which three till now " 105 14
the fairest one of three P P 16 l
Threefbld — A torment thrice .... Sun 133 8
Threeacore— And threescore year
would make "11 8
Threne— Whereupon it made this
threne P T 49
Threahold— The .... grates the door R L ~... 306
Threw— threw unwilling light VA .... 1051
un her self-slaughter'd body threw R L 1 733
from hate away she threw Sun 145 13
she in a river threw h C S8
Threw my affections " ..... 146
Thrfee—' Thrice fairer than myself K.i ..... 7
thrice more wish'd, more rare Son 56 14
thrice more than I have spent " 119 14
A torment thrice threefold " 133 8
Thrtfllcm — all-eating shame and
thriftless praise Son 2 8
Thrive— They that thrive well VA 640
may the better thrive " 1011
Love thrives not in the heart R L 270
shall together thrive Son 14 11
Then if he thrive " 80 18
Thrivem— Pitiful thrivers, In their
gazing " 125 8
TkriTeth— that by love so thriveth VA 466
Throbbtng^My throbbing heart " .....1186
Throne — perplexed in his throne " ..... 1043
From this fair throne R L ..... 413
Throned— finger of a throned queen Son 96 6
Throng — throng her consUnt woe VA 967
Throng her inventions R L 1302
through his lips do throng " >... 1783
Thronged- Here one being throng'd " ~... 1417
Thronging — Which, thronging
through her lips " ..... 1041
Throagh— peering through a wave V A ^... 86
draw me through the sky " ..... 158
through his mane and tall the
high wind sings " . 805
through the crystal tears gave light " ~... 491
Yet love breaks through " ..... 676
through whom he rushes " 630
through the which he goes " — . 683
through the dark lawnd runs apace " ~... 813
Through which it enters " .... 890
Through all her sinews spread " .... 903
But through the flood-gates breaks " 959
mounted, through the empty skies " .... 1191
Through little vents and crannies R L 310
That through the length of tim^ " .... 718
through the dark night he stealeth " .... 729
Through Night's black bosom " .... 788
Which thronging through her lips " .... 1041
through every cranny spies " ... 1086
Why pry'st thou through my
window " «... 1089
Through which I may convey " .... 1176
Through crystal walls " .... 1251
through all her body spread " .... 1266
through loop-holes thrust " .... 138J
THROUGH
813
THY
Tliroifh— through their light J07 S L ~... 1484
As through an arch *' 1667
through her wounds doth flf " «... 1728
through his lips do throng ** 1783
But through his teeth " 1787
through windows of thine age Son S 11
For through the painter " 24 5
where-through the sun ** 24 11
that through the cloud thou break " 34 S
Through heavy sleep *' 43 12
to blush through lively veins " 67 10
through my unkind abuse ** 134 12
through lattice of seared age L C 14
That flame through water " ^... 287
And falls through wind PP 10 6
Through the velvet leaves *' 17 5
Through heartless ground " 18 85
Tkrow — her yoking arms she throws KX ^... 592
She throws her eyes about jR L 1499
She throws forth Tarquin's name *' ~... 1717
throws that shallow habit by " 1814
I throw all care Stm 112 9
and throws his mantle by P P 6 9
throw gazes to the east ^ 15 1
Throwing — Throwing the base
thong V A ~... 893
Throwing his mantle rudely ** 170
Thmt— she would be thrust " .... 41
through loop-holes thrust R L ..... 1383
craft and peijury should thrust " 1517
under truest bars to thrust Son 48 2
anger thrusts Into his hide ** 50 10
rkBBder •— resounds like heaven's
thunder V A ..... 268
Pointing to each his thunder Son 14 6
that forced thunder L C ~... 825
thy voice his dreadful thunder PP 6 11
rhw— thus she began VA »... 7
Thus he that overruled " .... 109
thus my strength is tried " .... 280
Thus she replies " 385
Thus stands she " .... 895
thus chides she Death " .... 932
Thus hoping that Adonis " 1009
thus was Adonis slain " .... 1111
Thus weary of the world " 1189
Teaching them thus to use it RL 62
thus speaks advisedly " .... 180
And Justly thus controls " .... 189
Thus graceless holds he " .... 246
desire thus madly led " .... 300
Thus treason works " 361
Thus he replies " .... 477
'Thus I foresUll thee " 484
When thus thy vices bud " .... 604
thus breathes she forth her spite " .... 762
Thus cavils she with every thing " .... 1093
1 thus far can dispense " .... 1279
At last she thus begins " .... 1303
And turn'd it thus '< 1539
Thus ebbs and flows " .... 1569
And thus begins " 1598
thus attired in discontent " 1601
fremey thus awaketh " .... 1675
Ld, thus by day my limbs &m 27 13
thus I will excuse thee " 42 5
As thus ; mine eyes' due '* 46 13
Thus far the miles " 50 4
Thus can my love excuse ** 51 1
That—thus shall excuse my Jade Som 61 12
taught me thus to ruminate " 64 11
Thus is his cheek the map ** 68 1
Thy outward thus with outward *' 69 6
Thus do I pine <* 75 18
Thus have I had thee " 87 18
violet thus did I chide ** 99 1
thus maketh mine untrue "118 14
Accuse me thus ''117 1
Thus policy in love " 118 9
threefold thus to be crossed "183 8
making addition thus " 185 4
Thus far for love • "186 4
Thus vainly thinking " 188 5
thus is simple truth supprest " 188 8
thus far I count my gain " 141 13
taught it thus anew to greet "145 8
Till thus he 'gan besiege me LC .... 177
Thus merely with the garment " .... 816
Thus vainly thinking P P 1 5
in love thus smother'd be - " 1 14
'Even thus,' quoth she " 11 5
'Even thus,' quoth she " U 7
' Even thus,' quoth she " 11 9
Thus art with arms contending " 16 13
That thus dissembled " 19 16
taught her thus to say " 19 23
Thus of every grief in heart " 21 55
Property was thus appalled P T .... 87
ThwartlBg^there issuch thwarting
strife R L .... 143
Thy— hath ending with thy life VA .... 12
to alight thy steed " .... 18
this favour, for thy meed " 15
yet not cloy thy lips " .... 19
thy lips shall never open " .... 48
brag not of thy might " .... 118
hold up thy head " .... 118
there thy beauty lies " 119
upon thy tempting lip " .... 127
were it with thy hand felt " — 148
in thy palm dissolve " 144
Can thy right hand seise love upon
thy left " 158
to get it is thy duty " 168
with thy increase be fed " .... 170
In that thy likeness " .... 174
O, had thy mother " 203
What were thy lips " .... 207
thy heart my wound " .... 870
thy help I would assure thee " .... 871
lest thy hard heart " .... 875
'Thy palfrey, as he should " .... 885
though thy horse be gone " .... 890
' Let me excuse thy courser " .... 403
Thy mermaid's voice ** .... 429
thy outward parts would move " .... 435
the stillitory of thy face " .... 448
Thy eyes' shrewd tutor " .... 500
But for thy piteous lips " .... 504
banlsh'd by thy brt>ath " 510
Set thy seal-manual " .... 516
pay them at thy leisure " .... 618
thy spear's point can enter " .... 626
not thy soft hands " .... 633
danger by thy will " .... 639
I fear'd thy fortune " 642
I thy death should fear " .... 660
I prophesy thy death " -... 671
thj IoMdii Iripa "
•OdDlb]' lipA *
'Whiil IjthrbodT *
HLh in Ihy pride
Ttaf mirk 1* IHbll ag*) but th^
tilHdirt '
b*«rliig him, thy \-im "
nnu Ih/rHilitr'ibHl
Thrh.
npringMlllbl
uttbf ILglii
The colour in Ihrftcis
Thy tiBtu-«>aqu«r'd turi
Thj beiutr bulb coanued
Bf thr bright bmulf
ForiDlhrbrd
1 tor thr huibaud Bud thf
Sou It Ihy riKtj uid
ihjf t\ca budbefurHthriprlng
ir Jd Ibj bi>p«
ntmiDiDd Ibjr rebel will
Draw not th j »"ord
Thf prlnceljr office
thjr
tby doling
Tbiit tbuH ihili n'r Ibr "l»t«
lolothy boundlesf flood •
thu oovn of tbf blood
■hill 'change lb; good
Inlhy tM-iljpersr
thay In thj pi
.>r gr»if a
a kt Ibr thoiiEbts.low ti
(0 thritita
MuiLerlbrnibLi
And let tb; inIM; Tftpouri
thjblMkill-bldlngclo.lI
of thy gloumy pl»M
»hlch In Ihy rvign ire mada
■epnlchTrd in Ibr ihida
In UiJ WMk hire
:b thr cbute be* kept B L ^.
thr guUt la great
And in thr ibadr cell
Thjr honer t"n» to g»ll. Ihr Jo
Ti.^r 1.U)- ihr h^ip
with ihr hour.
in ihr pllgrliasgD
defend thj lojal damo
dldlbritocklwllule
•tlhratale
thr Intenut vraa 3iol boii^ht
tmm lonh thy gate
leave Hiy peeping
bock, with Ihr tlrklidj; beama
thou bear'tt Ihr part
To keep Ihr abirp woea
■bill be Ibj boaal
MrK'lf, thr friend, will
leir, thy roe
that down thy cheeks
ni...o Ibr pity
n-stiUy Ki^nry hLiid
Thy rether die, and not Ihy flUhn
Now get Iby loDg-«iperleDced wtt "
and hvOp to bPar lliy part
Ferd'illhy llghl'ifluuio
Thyielf Iby fue. to thy iwM
ShiU bi'slFga [by brow
Hiy yontb'a proud Uiery
THOU
310
THOU
ThoH— tboa not farther than mj
thoughts canst move Son 47
But thou, to whom '* 48
Thou, heat of dearest " 48
thou art not, though I feel thou art " 48
thou mayst come and part " 48
thence thou wilt be stol'n '* 48
thou Shalt strangely pass '* 49
To leave poor me thou hast the
strength " 49
From where thou art " 61
So, love, l>e thou ; although to-day
ihou fill " 56
Dost thou desire " 61
thou seud'st from thee " Gl
whilst thou dost wake " 61
that thou dost common grow " 69
That thou art blamed " 70
So thou be good " 70
And thou present'st " 70
Thou hast pass'd " 70
Then thou alone " 70
thou mayst in me behold " 73
In me thou sec'st " 73
In roe thou see'st the glowing " 73
This thou percelvest " 73
thou must leave " 73
When thou reviewest this, thou
dost review " 74
So then thou hast " 74
learning mayst thou taste " 77
Thou by thy dial's shady stealth " 77
and thou shalt find " 77
oa as thou wilt look " 77
thou dost but mend " 78
But thou art all my art " 78
thou thyself dost pay " 79
I grant thou wert not " 82
Thou art as fair " 82
Thou truly fair wert truly " 82
Farewell ! thou art too dear " 87
thou know'st thy estimate " 87
Thyself thou gavest " 87
to whom thou gavest it " 87
When thou shalt be "88
though thou art forsworn " 88
That thou in losing me " 88
Say that thou didst forsake " 89
whom thou dost hate " 89
hate me when thou wilt " 90
If thou wilt leave me " 90
that thou mayst take " 91
thou art assured mine " 92
Thou canst not vex me " 92
Thou mayst be false " 92
supposing thou art true " 93
dost thou make the shame " 95
thou thy sins inclose " 95
Thou makest faults graces " 96
mightst thou lead away " 96
If thou wouldst use " 96
As thou l)eing mine " 96
And, thou away, the very birds " 97
whence didst thou steal " 99
thou hast too grossly dyed " 99
Where art thou, Muse, that thou
forget'st " 100
Spend'st thou thy fury " 100
So thou prevent'st his scythe ** 100
11
5
7
10
12
13
5
13
3
5
3
5
13
14
1
5
8
9
14
1
5
9
13
14
6
9
4
7
10
13
11
13
14
1
5
11
1
2
9
10
1
4
8
1
14
1
9
13
2
9
14
1
1
4
4
11
12
14
12
2
5
1
3
14
u
u
tt
M
tt
tl
ThoH— So dost thou too Son 101
wilt thou not haply say " 101
wilt thou be dumb
thou age unbred
And thou in this shalt find
thou mine, I thine
Save thou, my rose; in it thou art
my all
No, Time, thou shalt not
What thou dost foist
And take thou my oblation
thou suborn'd informer
thou, my lovely boy
As thou gocst onwards
Yet fear her, O thou minion
How oft, when thou, my music
when thou gently sway*st
Thou art as tyrannous, so as thou art "
For well thou know'st
Thou art the fairest
In nothing art thou black
thou harder hast engrossed
Thou canst not then use
And yet thou wilt
Thou wilt restore
But thou wilt not "
For thou art covetous **
The statute of thy beauty thou wilt **
Thou usurer, that put'st forth
thou hast both him and me
thou hast thy * Will
Wilt thou, whose will is large
So thou, being rich
And then thou lovest me
Thou blind fool, Love, what dost
thou
hast thou forged hooks
Tell me thou lovest elsewhere
What need'st thou wouud
Be wise as thou art cruel
1 may not be so, nor thou belied
compare thou thine own state
thou shalt find it merits not
as thou lovest those
If thou dost seek to have what
u
M
44
M
41
4i
U
•4
44
«4
101
104
107
106
109
123
128
125
125
126
126
126
128
128
131
131
131
131
133
133
133
134
134
134
134
134
134
136
135
135
136
137
137
139
139
140
140
142
142
142
thou dost hide
mavst thou be denied
«
So runn'st thou after that
But if thou catch
thou nyiyst have thy ' Will
If thou turn back
Why dost thou pine
Dost thou upon thy fading
Then, soul, live thou
So shalt thou feed on death
thou keep'st me blind
Canst thou, O cruel
On whom frown'st thou
Nay, if thou lour'st on me
Those that can see thou lovest
thou this powerful might
Whence hast thou this
thou shouldst not abhor
For, thou betraying me
In loving thee thou know'st
But thou art twice forsworn
thou register of H^
witness dost thou bear
For thou art all
143
142
143
143
143
143
146
146
146
14G
148
149
149
149
149
150
150
150
151
152
152
X« O •••••
u
14
44
44
44
44
44
44
44
44
(4
41
44
44
4
6
9
IS
13
7
14
1
6
10
13
1
6
9
1
3
1
3
4
13
6
12
13
4
5
6
9
10
11
1
5
11
14
1
7
5
7
1
13
3
4
9
13
14
9
11
13
14
3
G
9
13
13.
1
r»j-
THY
now (hj clunga &
in Ibf creation did deorM '
Th(t In thy ttce
Whale'er tbj- OioughU or Ihj
borl'i vocklntn bo *
Thy lookiubouldnoibiDg '
IrihTiwoetTlrtueKiDAi^rnottfaj
of Ihr budding nuns
816 THV
Tbr— TothynrHlwllI
' WUV add lotbj' Will
.T,ake ihi Urg* Will mart
If lbr»ouL<;h«klb«
8>iF>r1»1h7UInd»ulth>l
Ihj Will
And vUl, Ihji huI koowi
Though In lb)' ill
mrnuMtbyloT.
jmowj tl
jrlhTp
Ihe hkhiHIi of ill thraUM
mlDais ihr^ood report
•rhpnn dtilit thoo ilnl tbf nrad
Wbtchoaihfnft clink
mndcmncdl'arlbyhand
bud (DDCx'd ihy bmlh
ftlvBilbecilllbr might
SpBHrJ'sl Ibou XbJ fuiT
rvrkenlng ihy powci
^udgimlhipiio
Forlbynfglmt
Tbvndollijoffloo
>b*1t find lb; jnonomont
In thjrbKUldoth lit
ill thf lum of good
&*nl»lhypuco
Tbisin, Ihyubles
ihy dear loietoBrore
Thy pyramid! bulll up
Thy rcglaicn and thee
Far Ihy Tccordi and ichal
ty thy a>D(lnuDl liute
dnplte Ihy Hytha sod tbea
-obHquloua in Ihy heart
alanda leail In thy control
■who In thy powf
fhylo.
"WtihihyB.
. wllherl
uihya.
Give Ibem (by flDgen, id« Iby Uft
la klu "
Tby r»eo bath not Ihe power "
but Iblnking i>n Ihj fa™
Thy black Is falrtut
T.lutkwHiinlbyd.'.'di
Knoirlngtbrbra
Mthyf.
Andiu
thy alerl bcaom'e ward
am moilgagtd lo Ihy will
The lUtuM of thy beaut]
Uiou ha*t th J ' Will
when tby mlgbt
tby proud heart go wld«
Ihy longui''» tune drllghlcd
rTlnaebati
1-hyp,
and tby den
Ibwl plly in Ihy br
Thy plly may dfaone
Whilit 1. thy babe, cbia*
But If Ibuu I'irlL-b tti.v hops
thy»
thy |M.
Uhyni
lnilijaff»lra,(Ulbythr
In act thy bed-iow broke ■
Oaths of thy love, tby Irulh, thy
con.tancy
It I> Ihy lul
Thy«.
tlnggaln'd
' t
left'Kn,« nothing la lb; .HI
- 10
Tby<II>cou1t-uIlhoii didst beq
nth " 10
Ihy GhwVi n»y blow
pluck iheB from thy thorn
Turning mortal for Ihy Iots
Thy like ne'erwa.
" IB
ibou cumut thy lalo to tell
SiuDOIh not thy ionf[ue
" »
And«lIhv[.iT»on forth
" 1»
" 19
Whe«.hyd(«rtn.a7n«rtt
" 1»
Byrtoglngln1hyl,.Jj's..,ir
A»dinlby.ui.bel,umhl(,tr
rni™thyl«lrptovt«nJu.l
" 1»
TollTe«lihibi.e.udb8tUyl
None tak« pliy on ihf pain
AllthyfrienilB»rfliip]/dlnlB«d " II
Allthyr.ll<>-l.ird.doainB
" 21
CatclM.oriby«.ruwlnK
Every man will be Ibj frkod
" 21
THOUGHT
312
THROUGH
Thoi^irht— with my Jealous thought Son 57 9
I should io thought " 58 2
• This thought is as a death " M 13
the thought of hearts can mend " 69 2
Then, churls, their thoughu "* 69 11
in your sweet thoughts " 71 7
So are you to my thoughts " 75 1
I think good thoughts " 85 5
But that is in my thought " 85 11
Me for my dumb thoughts '* 85 14
That did my ripe thoughts " 86 3
loving thoughts on thee " 88 10
Whatever thy thoughts ** 93 II
Gored mine own thoughts " 110 3
their rank thoughts my deeds '* 121 12
My thoughts and my dUiCOurse " 147 11
Whereon the thought L C lU
Tu dwell with him in thoughts " 129
theirs in thought assign'd " 138
Those thoughts, to me like oaks PP 5 4
noti^A/— He thought to kiss him VA ~... 1110
thought to persuade him " 1114
Lucrece thought ho blush'd R L 1344
She thought he blush'd " 1354
The more she thought " 1358
which I thought buried Son 31 4
I found, or thought I found *' 83 »
it hath thought itself so blessed "119 6
and thought thee bright ** 147 13
Thought characters and words
merely but art L C 174
Ah, thought I, thou mourn'st P P 21 19
Thoaghted— Sick-thoughted Venus
makes amain VA ...» 5
And huly-thoughted Lucrece R L ~... 384
Thousand— A .... honey secrets V A 16
though a thousand bark '* ~... 240
a thousand ways he seeks " ..... 477
A thousand kisses " .. . 517,
with a thousand doubles " 682
twenty thousand tongues " ..... 775
A thousand spleens bear her a
thousand ways " ...~ 907
A thousand times " 1130
confounded in a thousand fears R L 456
A thousand crosses keep them " 912
A thousand thousand friends " 963
a thousand lamentable objects " 1373
After a thousand victories Son 25 10
A thousand groans " 131 10
A thousand errors note " 141 2
A thousand favours from a maund L C 36
Like a thousand vanquish'd men P P 18 36
With a thousand fragrant posies *' 20 10
Thrmll — makes young men thrall V A ^... 837
and made her thrall R L 725
but I my mistress' thrall Son 154 12
Living in thraU PP 18 22
Thralled — blow of ... . discontent Son 124 7
Threads— Her hair like golden ....RL 400
Threaden — Some in her .... fillet j. C 33
Threat— ever threat his foes VA 620
that sometime threat the spring R L 3.'U
threats if he mounts he dies " 508
the world doth threat " «... 547
TkreAtening— thy rocky and wreck-
thrfat*;ning heart " 590
Threatening cIuud-kissinR Ilion " 1370
Three — makes the wound seem .... V A 10u4
RL
Son
and
Sm
VA
u
RL
Son
II
Three— Three times with atght
Three winters cold
shook three summers' pride
Three beauteous springs **
Three April perfumes in three hot
Junes burn'd **
Three themes in one "
Which three till now **
the fairest one of three P P
Threefold— A torment thrice .... Son
Threeaeore— And threescore year
would make **
Threne— Whereupon it made this
threne P T
Thrcahold— The grates the door R L
Threw— threw unwilling light VA
on her self-claughter'd body threw R L
from hate away she threw Son
she in a river threw L C
Threw my affections "
Thrire— 'Thrice fairer than myself VA
thrice more wish'd, more rare Son
thrice more than I have spent **
A torment thrice threefold **
Thriftless — all-eating shame
thriftless praise
Thrive— They that thrive well
may the better thrive
Love thrives not in the heart
shall together thrive
Then if he thrive
Thriven— Pitiful thrivers, in their
gazing
Thriveth— that by love so thriveth VA
Throbbing— My throbbing heart "
Throne— perplexed in his throne **
From this fair throne R L
Throned— finger of a throned queen 5m
Throng — throng her constant woe VA
Throng her inventions R L
through his lips do throng **
Throng'd— Here one being throng'd
Thronging — Which, thronging
through her lips
Through- peering through a wave VA
draw me through the sky *'
through his mane and tail the
high wind sings
through the crystal tears gave light
Yet love breaks through
through whom he rushes
through the which he goes
through the dark lawnd runs apace
Through which it enters
Through all her sinews spread
But through the flood-gates breaks
mounted, through the empty skies "
Through little vents and crannies R L
That through the length of times "
through the dark night he stealeth *'
Through Night's black bosom "
Which thronging through her lips '*
through every cranny spies
Why pry'st thou through my
window
Through which I may convey
Through crystal walls
through all her body spread
through loop-holes thrust
leM
104 Z
104 4
104 6
104
105
105
16
133
11
7
12
14
I
8
.... 49
M... uUD
.... 1031
.... 1733
145 13
1»
.... 146
14
14
8
56
119
133
II
11
<i
ti
II
u
u
u
11
2 8
.... 1011
.... 270
14 11
80 IS
125 8
466
.... 1186
.... 1013
.... 413
96 5
967
.... 1302
.... 1783
.... 1417
.... 1041
— 158
.... 805
491
.... 576
.... 630
.... OtSv
.... eiw
.... 890
.... 903
.... VS9
... 1191
..... 310
II
11
II
u
.... 718
.... 729
.... 788
... 1041
... 1006
.... 1069
.... 1176
.... 1251
.... 1266
TIME
318
'TIS
Time — And time to see one B L . 98S
Let him hare time to see ^ »... 9i8
Let him have time to mark how
alow time goes " .... 990
In time of Borrow " «... 991
His time of folly and his time of
sport " ..... 992
Have time to wail the abusing of
his time " 994
'O Time, thou tutor " ..... 995
At Time, at Tarquin " «... 1024
He ten times pines " «... 1116
when time is kept with tears *' 1127
The weary time she cannot " ...~ 1361
Time's ruin, beauty's wreck " 1451
time duth weary time " «... 1570
Short time seems long " «... 1578
see time how slow it creeps " .... 1575
Which all thU time " «... 1576
Three times with sighs ** ...« 1604
death by time outworn " «... 1761
Time, cease thou thy course ** «... 1765
should by time decease Son 1 8
Now is the time "82
this thy golden time " 8 12
time leads summer on ** 5 5
Or ten times happier "68
Ten times thyself "69
ten times reflgured thee " 6 10
the times should cease " 11 7
the clock that tells the time " 12 1
wastes of time must go " 12 10
'gainst Time's scythe " 12 13
Where wasteful Time " 15 11
Time for love of you " 15 13
this bloody tyrant, Time " 16 2
Which this, Time's pencil " 16 10
in time to come " 17 1
of yours alive that time " 17 13
to time thou grow'st " 18 12
Devouring Time, blunt thou " 19 1
swift-footed Time " 19 6
do thy worst, old Time " 19 13
time's furrows I behold " 22 8
my dear time's waste " 80 4
the bettering of the time " 82 5
ten times happy me " 87 14
ten times more in worth " 38 9
To entertain the time " 89 11
Which time and thoughts " 89 12
1 must attend time's leisure " 44 12
Another time mine eye " 47 7
Against that time, if ever that time
come " 49 1
Against that time when thou " 49 5
Against that time do I " 49 9
So is the time "62 9
besmear'd with sluttish time " 55 4
and times of your desire " 57 2
I have no precious time " 57 8
control your times of pleasure " 68 2
may privilege your time " 58 10
And Time that gave " 60 8
Time doth transfix " 60 9
And yet to times in hope " 60 18
With Time's injurious " 68 2
For such a time " 63 9
by Time's fell hand defitced ** 64 1
That Time will come ** 64 12
Time— but Time decays
Stm
66
8
Shall Time's best Jewel fh>m Time's
chest lie hid
u
66
10
being woo'd of time
u
70
6
That time of year
M
78
1
Why with the time
u
76
8
Time's thieviih progress
tl
77
8
And yet this time removed was
summer's time
<t
97
5
time so idly spent
w
100
6
If Time have any wrinkle
u
100
10
And make Time's spoils despised
u
100
12
faster than Time wastes life
l«
100
13
chronicle of wasted time
It
106
1
Of this our time
u
106
10
of this most balmy time
II
107
9
Where time and outward form
u
108
14
Just to the time, not with the
time exchanged
II
109
7
But reckoning Time
II
115
5
fearing of Time's tyranny
II
115
9
Love's not Time's fool
II
116
9
And given to time
II
117
6
you're pass'd a hell of time
II
120
6
No, Time, thou shalt not boast
M
123
1
As subject to Time's love or to
Time's hate
II
124
8
inviting time our fashion calls
«
124
8
call the fools of time
U
124
13
hold Time's fickle glass
II
126
2
May time disgrace
II
126
8
Time had not scythed all
LC
•■•••
12
When time shall serve
PP
19
85
When time with age
II
19
46
Ttme-befvllinf— Such .... sport
VA
■••••
24
Time-betierlng— of the ... . days
Son
82
8
TimeleM— His all-too-timeless speed R L
•••••
44
Timely— alack, too timely shaded
PP
10
8
TimoromH-thc .... flying hare
VA
••••«
674
so the timorous yelping
II
881
Ttnctnre — tincture of the roses
Son
64
6
Tip — So on the tip
LC
• ••••
120
Tire— Tires with her beak
VA
• ••••
56
Self-will himself doth Ure
RL
• •••«
707
And you in Grecian tires
Son
63
8
Tired— tired in the mid-day heat
VA
• •••«
177
that's tired with chasing
II
• ••••
561
his wilful eye he tired
RL
•••••
417
moan tired moan
II
••••t
1363
with one poor tired tongue
II
•••••
1617
for limbs with travel tired
Son
27
2
tired with my woe
It
60
5
Tired with all these
II
66
1
Tired with all these
II
66
13
'TIN- 'Tis but a kiss I beg
VA
#••••
96
What 'tis to love
II
•••••
202
And 'tis your fault
II
••■••
881
•Tis much to borrow
II
•••■•
411
shrieks,— 'tis very late
II
•••••
531
yet 'tis pluck'd
It
•••••
674
and now 'tis dark
II
• ••M
719
•'Tis so:' they answer all ' 'Tis so
II
•••■■
861
'tis a causeless fantasy
II
■«•••
897
"Tis not my fault
II
•••••
1008
'TIS he, foul creature
It
• •••■
1005
"Tis true, 'tis true
II
• ••••
nil
And so 'tis thine
II
• ••••
1181
And 'tis thy right
M
•••••
1184
What terror 'tis
RL
•*••«
4C8
Thj on iTiy ■eU-btn
hnifDg blm, tliT power
for thy muiul vigour
niin'd wUh ll.y rigour
tbtiilM lb]- (albur'i guise
Hanwuihrbifaer'ibtd
attd'Uilbrriglii
In tbii boUow cradle UVr lb]r n
TfaTl>utriprliiK«illbluta
Inini out Uiy llghL
Thjn.
ucr-dlurl
T>iTb«ul7l)iitheainiirui
Br tli; bright bcautf
Tor Id Ih; bed
»llh Ihy UfK'iidecaj
AndlntliidFidkrliil
comioaDd tbr rebel wUl
Drtir not tby iwokI
Th; prlDCclr offin
In th/ IM dtKpefKd
■nd tbaf ihy (.pulur gnn«
•8a let Iby thoughta, low ti
4 THY
Tki— •bich tbr cbutB I™ k<I>* A £ I
or thf faonour'i Truk -■ .„ e
Yet fot tbjr booour * _ I
tbr gulU U iml " — t
And In Ibj ihadf cell " g
inu (0 ctll,Ui7 Joy
grief
Thr«
Tb; Bugir'd lODfua
id ihj-i
wikjioimio
LtlhyiK
nleiut HM not boofbt
iHijpef[iing
IbypliTcingllBlil
■gfOTS
ll.-,
lUIci
■hill ba (bj bi
Uf>clt, thj mend, wUI UU n
•eir, tb; toe
ttaEtdowulbrcfaeeka
Uesltb la lh]f per»n
thf Lucrece tbou will Ma
ni tuDs thy woei
Thy heat oT luit, foud Ptrit
Thy
I urhls tbilnioTa tbl pltf
.'Uiburu thfi^llj
Ihlbyfnlroloucapent
itlhjrw.
Littr»
j.ikelhT lililng l<i ray will •
a.iJ 111/ perpaluel inramr '
Ui-erioTd.ilijaorTow •■
FurihclbiitWUIhy Lucrwo "
Tb]r [ilberdie. Bud DOl (by titbet
Slid ht^lptulieirthy part ** -
PM.'d'iUhylliihl'lBuiie am
Tli^icir ibyfoc.tuihyawNtMlt "
Sb all bittege thy brow "
111 iby bBBUty'tBeU "
Tby youth'i proud llTar; "
Ikf — when mil thr beuitr Urn
tnuun of Ihy liutj difi
d«er<reill tbf bciut^'a usa
Aod He thr Uood
Look in Uij giun
tllUje of thy haabknctrr
TlUHi irt th J mother'! glia
■hould be ihj cblef dedti
O, ctaonge thy tbougbl
Be,«thi,ir«,..n-,.|«
D(>t Oil thyhnrt
il haili my duly
lul'B t bought
Id thj I
U tbf lb
HilD*, by Ihj bemitjr
vonld thy ihidow's farm
tby inucb cleuer llgbt
tbT >h*ile iblnes so
Iby Mt iiDperreci Bhada
Of thrfalrhnllh
(be ntaqucit of tbji ilgbt
Tfcj— tbyplclnre'nightirouldbar Sim «
thy flir Bppeiranco llM " M
So, either by thy plciure " »J
(hyplcturcloiOTii){b( " 47
When u thy lave bitli cut " 43
Tby Higc thauld tluDt«r ba
Thy hiiiigry eyes
Il It tby will thy louiga ahould kMp
«HhbeiHlyofthjdBT
Thy aulw.nl U„u. -Hh
Iholwauljaf thy mind
TothyWrflowpr
But »hj Ihy oJaur nil
i>lin1lnat)ielhyd,'f<'<'l
Thy worth the greilar
tbla thypniia cinnol
muli'd not tby ihow
makes tby lore more at
Thy ;:l!iM Trill show ih<
iwthy
Thvdi^ilhnvlliriircciauiimllliitei "
thy iniDd'i imiiriat
thy glut will truly sfaow "
Thou by thy dial's
"liai Ihy mfimary eaniialconlUn "
deitver'dftarn thf hniio
nfilu.liit.npBof ihy mind
kuiiw'M tby eaiiiatio
The ehtrier of tby worth
bull>ylhv-KriLnll"S
lhy<II>B>anhlhcnnotkDO
-JO ihy ilils Kgalott myiell
Upanl
Apisina
I rlifbt
Ihr— on itij vell-braih'd
keep wlib thy boundi
viaa.1 Lainr Doaj
8Uh In thj prUe "
Ibjr uuk li fwbto ige; but ibj
IhT guilt la great
AndlntliTabiulTcell
Th J honey tunu to g»ll. thy Jojr
to gitef ■
Thy Kcret p]«aum
Thy prlrile railing
Thy .iDoothlGg lltJe.
Thy •ggsr'ii Ion gun '
Thyco»riirtlh™rt " .
llilA wu Ihy IkLh.cr'n guise " h
IIetei>iuilhr'''ih<'r'ib«) " .
■Dd'tlilhyrlght " -
InthliholluwcndlvUkeUiyreat " .
ThybMlyBprlng.illll'iMU XL.
bumouttliyllKbt " '
Thn cotaut Id thy ttce ** -
Thy noTur-«oiiqau[*d fori " .
Tbj bMUty hith enininid " -
By Iby bright bWTity " .
TrUblliyll(-.'*iile™y " .
jtndlnibydejaftruii " -
ThykiniDifnfaiDglbclrbnda ■■ .
TliyliMieMui "
iKntthyiKWfrli-inl
child rvn-i,.iikc
End Iby ill aim befora tby
beepded
■MyhuilADd blby friend
B«t itlhy i^Klij anil
JIo»«mtUy>1i°ias
thyTlaahudbcliinitby ipr
If In thy hope
tbrwtllKoiavo
In thy nmme
Dd Ihy rebel irlll
thy
»«w , .
Thj ptintely ol
t,y thy fault
To r lew \hj prociii tr«pui
deUh-wurthy Inthy brotbet
from Ihy doting eyne
That Ihou
JntQ thy be
lh<! DCniQ of thy blood
«hilt cbtnge thy good
krgr»<8
ll-biaiag cloak
mypiaco
ly n'lgn ire n»da
Wh;h>lhtbyHrTsnt
»llh Iby hour.
Inlhypilgriaiiigs
ihuD Ihy wr»k
defBDil thy layal Jsne
wmng ihyimeslTrptlDa
did Ihy stock puiluto
■hill be Ihy boul
Uyicir, thy mend, will kill my-
Hesllb lo thy penon
thy Lucme thou will *ee
Thy heM of luat, foud Pmrla
yokethytikingtomy will
■ltd Ihy perpctud infiuiiy
:D«irlurd, lb J (of (o*
t<>oi.'n»ll.lelhypQ5siiiur.iuV
r.,r!.)i.'llii.l-Jiii1hyT.ui-™
Thyf.
I, and not thy btbor
Uowrwllhy lopg-ojpedeneodwlt " .
\iy wboTo lliy TAlr wiff- bleeds ** -
Thynn'Whedwlfeiiiiatook " .
and hiilpio hear thy part " ■
Tewl'it thy llght'i Snuis Boa
Ttayevlf ihy tan. lu thy (weet Klf "
Sh»llb»iegolhybtow
Thy yodUi'a pioud llT«ry ^
TouiakemonTC
b]r I'DTqUiD'n fulc
To «•« IhB uBirt
tv l[wi> lb; Bbirp <"»
U> Tarquln I'tl beqiwilh
to bcr miilreu bles
htolh):p,.noiiii«t™iieb-
1' ilTunl •
oiidB. tu apeod whan he li
Tn Ke nd ilghu
Interprut* to ibv «flr
'Al Anlvm to m; loid
To talk In dnxli
DO words ID jigu
'llsiUlelnilgh. In weep
lUo- up
uipup bl^hcrAoem^illlOBUHk
to bun ber cruel to
On.'nrdwTmr
Mcin'<llo««>rnbitwi
TuliUcdcci'lt
To lue Q»nio Tiirqulii ■inied
To we IhrHw Inrroir'd l«*ra
to burn thf citf
Onl; 10 Biiitec (wli
10 let Ihem kaaw
To teJI them all
TtM
1 Ihy f.
Whuu'er tbr IboiitiliU or thf
hMrt'iirofklrmil*
Thy Wlu ibould noltUng '
ilolhllirbaiuljgnv *
I f 1 h yi w wl •lrtu« oany tr not thf
■ ibygr
lhe>l»ni01i<i/all Ihysuta ■
n^qclfllhr^foorl Import "
«hen«d{dMLlhau*t«l thj (WMt "
niiichontlijwftciiHit
condcmDslfurlhgrliuid "
tiidsnnci'dthTbrPDth "
dives lii« >11 1 ^ might "
B|MMid'(lilioulhJfuiT •
Itatkenlnglliy power *"
Ibut dulli Ihy iKj-i ohKiD "
AiidglTtflihTpen "
inhalBlLal bclhyBmnndi "
'VIlViddtoiliT 'WIU
111 IbrUInd joul tblt I wu
buKiilhiliTlonsuo
when thy Dii(ht
Ihy pn>ud fa«ait go wids
Ihy lonnue'tiunedHlRhl^d
iind ihT dFU- 'Irlue hale
Root pll;- )q (hylifan
Tby ^ty niay dcKire
WhlUt I, thy hBbr, r}ma»
Jfihou
I'>>lullugil.yaiitwiiri Willi
thy nidjiif; nun lion apend
&II 11)1 ihy «harge1 U tblt '■
i.omhl|,lliy deft
■or thy Je«^
lit up
Thyglfl thylabJia
thy duT luTs In ■
Thy pynmtdi bu
ThyrcgiBtcRuit
Fur tby records mid whit
bylhycontiouMhute
•ln|>llethyHylhiiuid'tfaeg
obiequbqi in IhyhuarC
itiDthycouIiDl
ThylniB]
InthyiM
wltlierlng
Olrt them Ihy llngrn, me thyllFa
toklH ■
Thy hcehiUi not the power "
butlblohin^oHlliyluci; "
Thy black lsri.ir.'>t
bhi-kuTeJotlnrdH^di
Knowing Ihy linrt lonnnil* '
ej« bccDine Ihyfacu ^
iLkwell be*ofiDi thy heart "
And iu.lt tby pi ly "
Ihy ei™] bOMin-i ward
■BiiBiirtaagedlnlby will
Tlioalatule-of (hy beauty
tboahiM tby 'Will
; loTc, thy tralh, tb}
Ihy.
oleohli dreadful thunder
me nothing In Ihy will
l.o.,m..ui,h.>u-lM« bequeath
thyc
pluek
the« from thy tborD
Tun.
ng mortal for Ihy K».
Thy Ikene'crwa.
th.m
&u»<.
b not Ihy tongue
ABd«clthyie'»'>'>'nli
.11 tby way*
WiF
Byri
nBlnglolhylndy'itar
And
nlhy.alll«huiiiUoi™.
Dnlemihy Inly proVt nnjuil
Toll
l.k«rl'J-o'"hy piln
All!
rfrlfnJ.iLrel.pp-d it, lead
ETery man wiU bt thy Mend
) bnak • (woTold
Wbon 1q ■umedng tft
tuMtltllnMlheo
Tulcaplirgi Icd^Id
gic'daf blood Id biDBh
to IhcK wagle blan
To guild Ifae lniTful
inJlholtpposi'l'iMiT
Id bcir IbM irelghl
Matt shirp lo me IlilD
Tom
ko mt UMlgUMiri
ynur
r|duphlun,.k.
loal
ttac -world mutt die
long
mirrieJUm/Uuu
And
UiTPlbretoyuurftit
TUm
oTil.«.lJ««
■Cuiup dill J
Horwtvlcil
ofWirn:..r
To ™b)eci. worw hiTs gli
huWD (o Iheir end
rorhhMJIIicUiiuov '
And jel lo Umra
to iha wury nighi
IuioinTdwl.lui.ty
TIME
318
'TIS
Time — And time to see one S L ~... 98S
Let him have time to see " 988
Let bim have time to mark how
slow time goes " .... 990
In time of sorrow " ~... 991
His time of folly and his time of
sport " «... 992
Have time to wail the abusing of
his time *' 994
'O Time, thou tutor " -... 995
At Time, at Tarquin " -... 1024
He ten times pines *' m... 1115
when time is kept with tears *' 1127
The weary time she cannot " 1361
Time's ruin, beauty's wreck " ~... 1451
time doth weary time " ~... 1570
Short time seems long " ~... 1573
see time how slow it creeps " ~... 1575
Which all this time "* 1576
Three times with sighs " 1604
death by time outworn " ~... 1761
Time, cease thou thy course " 1765
should by time decease Son 1 8
Now is the time ** 3 2
this thy golden time " 8 12
time leads summer on "55
Or ten times happier "68
Ten times thyself "69
ten times reflgured thee " 6 10
the times should cease " 11 7
the clock that tells the time " 12 1
wastes of time must go " 12 10
'gainst Time's scythe " 12 13
Where wasteful Time " 15 11
Time for love of you " 15 18
this bloody tyrant, Time " 16 2
Which this, Time's pencil " 16 10
in time to come " 17 1
of yours alive that time " 17 13
to time thou grow'st " 18 12
Devouring Time, blunt thou " 19 1
swift-footed Time "19 6
do thy worst, old Time " 19 13
time's furrows I behold " 22 3
my dear time's waste " 80 4
the bettering of the time " 82 5
ten times happy me " 87 14
ten times more in worth " 38 9
To entertain the time " 89 11
Which time and thoughts " 89 12
1 must attend time's leisure " 44 12
Another time mine eye " 47 7
Against that time, if ever that time
come " 49 1
Against that time when thou " 49 5
Against that time do I " 49 9
So is the time " 62 9
be8mear*d with sluttish time " 55 4
and times of your desire " 57 2
I have no precious time " 57 8
control your times of pleasure " 68 2
may privilege your time " 68 10
And Time that gave " 60 8
Time doth transfix " 60 9
And yet to times in hope " 60 13
With Time's injurious " 63 2
For such a time " 68 9
by Time's fell hand defiftced " 64 1
That Time will come " 64 12
Time— but Time decays
Shall Time's best Jewel fh>m Time's
chest lie hid
being woo'd of time
That time of year
Why with the time
Time's thievish progress
And yet this time removed was
summer's time
time so idly spent
If Time have any wrinkle
And make Time's spoils despised
faster than Time wastes life
chronicle of wasted time
Of this our time
of this most balmy time
Where time and outward form
Just to the time, not with the
time exchanged
But reckoning Time
fearing of Time's tyranny
Love's not Time's fool
And given to time
you've pass'd a hell of time
No, Time, thou shalt not boast
As subject to Time's love or to
Time's hate
inviting time our fashion calls
call the fools of time
hold Time's fickle glass
May time disgrace
Time had not scythed all
When time shall serve
When time with age
TIme-begviltng— Such .... sport
TIroe-beUerIng— of the .... days
Timeless— His all-too-timeless speed iS L
Timely — alack, too timely shaded
TImoromH-tho .... flying hare
so the timorous yelping
TInctnre — tincture of the roses
Tip— So on the tip
Tire— Tires with her beak
Self-will himself doth tire
And yon In Grecian tires
Tired— tired in the mid-day heat
that's tired with chasing
his wilful eye he tired
moan tired moan
with one poor tired tongue
for limbs with travel tired
tired with my woe
Tired with all these
Tired with all these
'Tin— 'Tis but a kiss I beg
What 'tis to love
And 'tis your fault
'Tis much to borrow
shrieks, — 'tis very late
yet 'tis pluck'd
and now 'tis dark
' 'Tls so :' they answer all ' 'Tis so
'tis a causeless fantasy
"Tis not my fault
'TIS he, foul creature
•'Tis true, 'tis true
And so 'tis thine
And 'Us thy right
What terror 'tis
66
u
65
10
M
70
6
H
78
1
U
76
8
tl
77
8
U
97
5
U
100
6
U
100
10
U
100
12
(«
100
13
II
106
1
II
106
10
«l
107
9
M
108
14
II
109
7
II
115
5
U
115
9
It
116
9
11
117
6
11
120
6
U
128
1
>
II
124
8
I*
124
8
II
124
13
II
126
2
II
126
8
LC
•••••
12
PP
19
85
tl
19
46
VA
■••••
24
Son
82
8
RL
•••••
44
PP
10
3
VA
•••••
674
tl
881
8(m
64
6
LC
• •■M
120
VA
• ■•«■
56
RL
• •■••
707
Son
68
8
VA
•••••
177
It
•••■•
561
RL
•«•••
417
It
■••••
1863
II
•••••
1617
Son
27
2
II
60
5
II
66
1
II
66
18
VA
•••«•
96
II
■«•••
202
II
•«•••
881
M
•••••
411
II
•••••
681
II
••■«•
674
II
•••a*
719
II
••■••
851
II
•••*•
897
II
•••■•
1008
II
•••••
lOOS
II
•••••
1111
II
•••••
1181
M
•••••
1184
RL
— —
4rs
TO
326
TO
To— desire to be invited Son 141 7
To any sensual feast "141 8
and vassal wretch to be " 141 12
deserve to pitied be " 142 12
thou dost seek to have *' 142 13
housewife runs to catch ** 143 1
Cries to catch her '* 148 6
To follow that which flies ** 143 7
turn back to me " 143 11
To win me soon to hell '* 144 5
my saint to be a devil *' 144 7
both to each friend *' 144 11
To me that languish'd " 145 8
taught it thus anew to greet ** 145 8
From heaven to hell '' 145 12
to aggravate thy store ** 146 10
api>etite to please " 147 4
the physician to my love " 147 5
to say it is not so " 148 6
thy service to despise " 149 10
my heart to sway " 150 2
To make me give the lie to my
true sight " 150 8
thee how to make me love ** 150 9
to be beloved of thee " 150 14
to know what conscience is ** 151 1
to my gross body's treason " 151 6
thy poor drudge to be " 151 11
To sUnd in thy affairs " 151 12
to me love swearing " 152 2
but to misuse thee " 152 7
And, to enlighten thee, gave eyes
to blindness " 152 11
To swear against the truth " 152 14
still to endure *" 153 6
vow'd chaste life to keep " 154 3
My spirits to attend L C 3
to list the sad-tuned tale *' ..... 4
her napkin to her eyne " .... 15
to the spheres intend " «... 23
To the orbed earth " «... 25
To every place at once *' 27
And, true to bondage " ..... 34
applying wet to wet " «... 40
scal'd to curious secrecy " «... 49
often 'gan to tear " «... 51
desires to know " 62
his hearing to divide " «... 67
Fresh to myself " «... 73
Love to myi»elf, and to no love be-
side " 77
it was to gain my grace " «... 79
sweet to do, to do will aptly find " 88
began but to appear " «... 93
web it seem'd to wear " «... 95
May and April is to see " 102
To appertain In gs and to ornament " ' 115
To make the weeper laugh " 124
To dwell with him in tlioughta, or
to remain " «... 129
To serve their eyes " «... 135
pleasures to bestow them " 139
To put the by-past perils " «... 158
to make our wits more keen " «... 161
satisfactitm to our blood " 162
To be furbod the sweets " 164
ever brokers to defiling " 173
That's to ye sworn to none was " 180
put to the smallest teen *' «... 192
To— Harm have I done to them
That is, to you
to your own command
and to your audit comes
To spend her living
what labour is't to leave
BO to herself contrives
brought me to her eye
Not to be tempted
And now, to tempt all
that to me belong
to physic your cold breast
to charm a sacred nun
when they to assail begun
sighs to you extend
To leave the battery
to my sweet design
to that strong bonded oath
to the streaqi gave grace
to water will not wear
Appear to him, as he to me
Applied to cautels
To blush at speeches rank, to weep
at woes
Or to turn white
love not to have years told
To win me soon to hell
my saint to be a devil
both to me, both to each friend
to this false perjury
To break an oath, to win a paradise
stories to delight his ear
favours to allure
To win hb heart
to take her figured proffer
how shall I swear to love
If not to beauty vowed
Though to myself forsworn, to thee
I'll constant prove
to me like oaks, to thee like osiers
LC
•••••
194
u
••■••
222
u
■••■•
227
u
••••■
230
u
••«••
238
u
•••••
239
44
•■«•■
243
44
••••■
247
44
•••••
251
M
••••■
252
44
••••■
254
41
••»••
259
U
• •■••
260
44
«.•••
262
44
•••••
276
44
•••■•
277
44
■«••■
278
n
••••■
279
44
•«••■
285
U
•«•■■
291
44
•••■■
299
44
•••••
303
>
U
■••■•
807
44
«■•••
806
PP
1
12
44
2
5
44
2
7
44
2
11
44
8
8
« "
3
14
(4
4
5
44
4
6
44
4
7
44
4
10
44
6
1
14
5
2
44
8
bowed
44
6
4
to know thee shall suffice
44
5
7
Which is to me some praise
U
6
10
Which, not to anger bent
44
5
12
To sing heaven's praise
44
5
14
to the hedge for shade
44
6
2
used to cool his spleen
44
6
6
damask dye to grace her
44
7
5
none falser to deface her
44
7
6
Her lips to mine
U
7
7
many tales to please
44
7
9
Dowland to thee is dear
44
8
5
Spenser to me
44
8
7
Thou lovest to hear
14
8
9
to singing he betakes
44
8
12
didst bequeath to me
44
10
12
began to woo him
•4
11
2
And as he fell to her, so fell she
to him
44
11
4
To kiss and clip me
44
11
14
when first it 'gins to bud
44
13
8
And dafi^d me to a cabin
44
14
3
To descant on the doubts
44
14
4
she joy'd to jest
44
14
9
again to make me wander
44
14
10
throw gazes to the east
M
15
1
Sorrow changed to solace
4(
15
11
added to the hours
44
15
14
To spite me now
44
15
15
<?rlOTelMi PP 1
H^m IQ pluek Ihee
tint iroDt to luwc pl»/'d
thf penon forth to i
^o^J^J(rfnhD^ellsill>Illlt
ToU>f TltlilbM
cerMIn ilgni to knav
To •(.»« sound ihmtcBlnei ohej
To Ihii troop™""''''"'' "oiBwr
To IhmiielTBi yrt *llhor iicllliur
To thp phmilxiod iheiliive
chonu to their InK*° ««>l(i
TOeternltTdnlh mt
To thii TifB Irt tho« iTpilr
Tdd— Or toad« \iitixl Aitr foauu
■Ithough Irxliy Ihou All
KlndUtUTloTBla-<l<ir
T«(rtliiT— ■nchluniia mli'd
Tlielt llpa loirttet gluol
Jdo thoT »1l iogeih«r
■od all logMber Iwi
AU TTblcb logelhor
■btUloi^icr (brin
rorbide mj tongue to ngRik
ll every tongue a»]fib™u[|f
hlw-apcmklpg ton([ue
vllh iby lungiu
TONGUE
328
TRAFFIC
To«gr»©— In ererr shepherd's ... . PP 20 18
Tonyued— Like shrill-tongued tap-
sters VA 849
With cIose-tOQgued treason S L ~... 770
For maiden-tongued he was L C 100
Tonfve-tled— made tongue-tied hj
authority Son 66 9
To make me toDgue-tied " 80 4
My tongue-tied Muse *' 85 1
My tongue-tied patience " 140 2
To-night— Short, night, to-night P P 15 18
Too— If they burn too, I'll VA ~... 192
with too much handling ** ~... 560
the orator too green " ..... 806
and yet too credulous " 986
and too full of riot " .....1147
merciful and too severe " 1155
His all-too-timclc88 speed B L 44
sometime too much wonder " ..... 95
Doth too too oft betake him " ..... 174
handmaids too, by him defiled " ..... 787
Their father was too weak, and
they too strong " 865
With too much labour " 1099
and too much talk affords " 1106
This is too curious-good " ..... 1300
too long with her remaining ** «... 1572
would be drawn out too long " ..... 1616
My woe too sensible " ~... 1678
Comes all too late " ..... 1686
she too early and too late hath
spill'd " ~... 1801
to thy sweet self too cruel Son 1 8
for thou art much too fair " 6 13
hath all too short a date " 18 4
Sometime too hot "18 5
replete with too much rage " 23 8
sweet argument too excellent " 38 3
with others all too near *' 61 14
Too base of thee " 74 12
doth come too short " 83 7
of all too precious you " 86 2
Farewell, thou art too dear ** 87 1
be a gainer too *' 88 9
Lest I too much profane " 89 11
thou hast too grossly dyed " 99 6
So doet thou too " 101 4
by paying too much rent " 125 6
with too much disdain "140 2
Love is too young " 151 1
too early I attended L C 78
Ah, fool too frowBrd PP A 14
alack ! too timely shaded " 10 3
Fair creature, klll'd too soon " 10 4
methinks thou stay'st too long " 12 12
the night would post too soon " 15 13
Neither too young " 19 6
And then too late " 19 15
But, soft ! enough,— too much " 19 49
Took— birds such pleasure took VA 1101
She took me kindly by the hand R L 253
the roses took Bray " 259
•can lurk ' from 'cannot' took " 15.17
I took all patiently " 1641
and heart a league is took Son 47 1
when I took ray way " 48 1
or must from you be took ** 75 12
votary took up that fire " 154 5
took heat perpetual " 154 10
Tool— But this DO slaughterhouse
no tool imparteth R L .... 1038
TooU'd— Had I been tooth'd VA 1117
Top— That cedar-tops and hills seem " ..... 858
and the top o'erstraw'd " ..... 1143
on the top of happy hours Sun 16 5
Flatter the mountain-tope ** 83 2
This said, in top of rage L C 55
Torch—Torches are made to light VA ...» 163
Whereat a waxen torch R L 178
* Fair torch, burn out thy light " ..... 190
The wind wars with his torch " ..... 811
wind that fires the torch " ..... 315
Are by his flaming torch " ..... 448
Tore— as if the name he tore *' ..... 1787
sigh'd, tore, and gave the flood /> C ~... 44
Toment— torments us with defect R L ~... 151
But torment that it cannot " . 861
what a torment wouldst thou prove 5mi 89 9
torments me with disdain " 1.32 2
A torment thrice threefold " 133 8
Tormentetli- want of love .... VA 202
Tom— my Image thou hast torn R L ...» 1762
and new faith torn Son 152 3
TorUre— And that deep torture R L 1287
shake hands to torture me Son 28 6
to torture me alone " 133 8
Tots'd— Is madly toss'd R L 171
Tonch—' Touch but my lips TX -... 115
To touch the fire " »... 402
not see, nor hear, nor touch " ..... 440
but to touch the crown R L 216
that touches me more nearly Son 42 4
needs would tonch my breast " 158 10
would not touch the bait PP A 11
IbticA— ten hundred touches VA ~... 519
Instead of love's coy touch R L «.... 669
Such heavenly touches Son 17 8
What strained touches " 82 10
to base touches prone " 141 6
Touches so soft PP 4 8
whose heavenly touch "86
Touched- touch'd no unknown bait R L ..... lOS
ne'er touch'd earthly faces Son 17 8
that never touch'd hb hand L C ..... 141
she touch'd him here and there P P A 7
Touching— by touching thee VA ~... 438
Toward— where it shows most toward " 1157
No love toward others Son 9 13
Then fell she on her back, fair
queen, and toward P P 4 13
Towards— Towards thee I'll run Son 51 14
make towards the pebbled shore " 60 1
Towards this afflicted fancy L C 61
Tower— glittering golden towers R L «... 945
And from the towers of Troy " 1382
lofty towers I see down-razed Son 64 3
The strongest castle, tower, and
town PP 19 29
Towering— towering in the skies R L .... 606
Town— The strongest castle, tower,
and town
Toy— appetite, unapt io toy
To toy, to wanton
Or sells eternity to get a toy
The tricks and toys
Tract — From his low tract
TralBc— doth traflic oft for gaining R L
For having traffic with thyself
PP
19
29
VA
•••■•
34
it
•••••
106
RL
214
PP
19
39
Son
7
12
RL
•••••
131
Son
4
9
TRAGEDY
329
TROJAN
Tnif«4j— Black sUge for tragedies R L ~... 766
Traglr— and siround at tragic shows J^ C ~... 806
As choms to their tragic scene P T — . 52
Traitor— his traitor eye encloaes B L ~... 78
ere traitors be espied " ~... 3G1
executest the traitor's treason " ~... 877
thou traitor, thou Calse thief " ~... 888
yet let the traitor die ** .... 1686
TnuBpliag— Adonis* .... courser VA ..... 261
Traiiee — with restless trances R L ~... 971
old acquaintance in a trance ** .... 1595
Traasferred— are they now .... Son 137 14
TraBsflx— Time doth the flourish " 60 9
TraBNffrHned — that hath .... so R L .... 1481
TraBsgrMatOB — Their own trans-
gressions ** .... 634
under my transgression bow Son 120 3
Traaslate— he could his looks .... " 96 10
Translatod— To truths translated '* 96 8
Transport— Which should .... uie *' 117 8
Trapplag— or trapping gay VA 286
Trsfall— As if with grief or travail R L 1543
Deserves the travail Son 79 6
Travel— for limbs with travel tired " 27 2
And make me travel forth ** 34 2
my weary travel's end " 50 2
Like him that travels "109 6
Traveird— Hath traveird on " 63 5
Tread— 8he treads the path F^ .... 908
she treads on it so light " .... 1028
to tread the measures ** .... 1148
That cannot tread the way R L .... 1152
treads on the ground Son 130 12
The cock that treads them P P 19 40
Tieason— condemu'd of treason VA 729
Thus treason works R L 8G1
By their high treason " .... 369
With close-tongucd treason " 770
executest the traitor's treason " .... 877
Wrath, envy, treason, rape " .... 909
Guilty of treason " .... 920
to my groi» body's treason Son 151 6
rrcasare — his lips' rich treasure VA 552
the hidden treasure frets " 767
As one with treasure laden " .... 1022
what trensure hast thou lost ** 1075
enrich the poor with treasures " 1150
Unlocked the treasure R L 16
And wlien great treasure *' .... 132
sinking where such treasure lies " .... 280
his treasure to behold " — 857
the treasure stol'n away " .... 1056
Where all the treasure Son 2 6
With beauty's treasure ** 6 4
thy love's use their treasure " 20 14
to his sweet up-locked treasure ** 52 2
the treasure of his spring ** 63 8
will steal his treasure " 75 6
but not still keep her treasure *' 126 10
fulfil the treasure of thy luve " 136 5
lireoMure — treasure thou some place "63
Treatlie— Your treatise makes me VA .... 774
Treble — heart hath treble wrong " 829
Treble-dated— And thou .... crow P T 17
Tree— like sturdy trees V A ^... 152
tied unto a tree " 263
tied to the tre« ** 3U1
When lofty trees I see Son 12 5
that hangs upon a tree P P 10 5
Tree— Trees did grow P P 21 6
Senselens trees they cannot hear
thee " 21 21
On the sole Arabian tree P T .... 2
Tremble — she tremble at his tale VA . 691
my Joints did tremble " . Mi
tremble at the imagination ** .... 668
tremble with her loyal fear JB L .... 261
he saw them quake and tremble ** .... ]80(
Trenbllng^trembling in her pas-
sion VA .... 27
in a trembling ecstasy *' .... 895
with trembling terror die R L .... 231
she trembling lies ** .... 457
With trembling fear *' .... 511
To trembling clients ** .... 1020
marching on with trembling paces ** .... 1391
thou dost trembling stand ** .... 1599
Trendi— And dig deep trenches Sou 2 2
Trendi'd- that the boar had .... VA .... 1052
Treapaas — Shalt have thy trespass R L .... 524
To view thy present trespass ** .... 632
Will quote my loathsome trespaa " .... 812
And with my trespass " .... 1070
for trespass of thine eye ** .... 1476
shall At the trespass best " .... 1613
Authorizing thy trespass Son 85 6
But that your trespass ** 120 13
Trees— Before the golden tresses " 68 5
Trial— accidental things of trial R L .... 326
The boy for trial Son 153 10
Tribe — insults o'er dull and speech-
less tribes " 107 12
Tribatary— pay tributary gazes VA .... 632
tributary subject quakes " .... 1045
Tribute — Paying more slavish .... RL .... 299
Look here, what tributes L C .... 197
Trick — taught them scornful tricks VA .... 501
' This glove to wanton tricks R L .... 320
The tricks and toys PP 19 89
Tried— Thus my strength is tried VA .... 280
till their efTects be tried R L .... 353
Trifle— Trifles unwitnessed VA .... 1023
Each trifle under truest bars San 48 2
to whom my Jewels trifles are " 48 5
Trim— colours fresh and trim V A .... 1079
' dress'd in all his trim &m 98 2
yet their purposed trim L C .... 118
TrimmM— nothing in Jollity Son 66 8
Trip— trip upon the green VA .... 146
thy footing trips " .... 722
Tripping— Came tripping by Son 154 4
Trlamph— his triumphs and hb
glories VA .... 1014
Showing life's triumph R L .... 402
fortune of such triumph Son 25 3
IHumph — Rather tlian triumph R L — 77
Being had, to triumph Son 52 14
Triumph in love " 151 8
would I might triumph so PP V 10
Triumphant— With all-triumphant
splendour Son 83 10
As his triumphant prize " 151 10
TrlnrophM — Which triumph'd in
that Nky R L .... 12
Triumphing— in their faces " ....1388
Trodden— trodden on by many V A 707
Trotlus— here Troilus swounds R L .... I486
Trqjan— Stood many Trojan mothers " — . 1431
IROJAN
330
TRUTH
Trojan— he falls, a Trojan bleeds Ji L 1551
Troop — muster troops of cares ** 720
To this troop come thou not near P T .... 8
Trophy— Tells him of trophies VA 1013
Hung with the trophies Son 31 10
* " Lo, all these trophies of affec-
tions hot L C ...~ 218
Trot— Sometime he trots VA . 277
Troth — ^human law and common
troth BL .... 671
taste of Tiolated troth " 1059
and undertake my troth L C .... 280
Troable— such a trouble VA 522
to overshoot his troubles ** 680
And trouble deaf heaven Son 29 3
Troahled— as seeming troubled VA ... 830
of her troubled brain " ... 1040
the brain being troubled ** 1068
troubled minds that wake J? L 126
like a troubled ocean ** .... 589
I may convey this troubled soul *' .... 1176
Troy- made for Priam's Troy " .... 1367
And from the towers of Troy " . 1382
walls of strong-besieged Troy " .... 1429
quench Troy that burns so long ** .... 1468
that burning Troy doth bear ** .... 1474
And here in Troy " .... 1476
Troy had been bright with fame " .... 1491
weeps Troy's painted woes ** 1492
Onward to Troy " .... 1504
BO my Troy did perish " . 1547
to burn his Troy with water " .... 1561
Tmant— O .... Muse, what shall be Stm 101 1
Tmce— Till he take truce VA .... 82
Trae— true leaders to their queen " 503
That sometime true news " 658
makes true men thieves " .... 724
True valour still a true respect B L .... 201
makes supposed terror true " .... 455
the picture of true piety " .... 542
His true respect will prison " 612
And my true eyes have never ** .... 748
Of that true type " .... 1050
thy true afl'ection so " . 1060
True grief is fond and testy " .... 1094
True sorrow then is feelingly *' .... 1112
heart-strings to true languishment " 1141
true mark of modesty '* .... 1220
her griefs true quality " .... 1313
creatures have a true respect *' .... 1347
the death of this true wife " «... 1841
If the true concord Son 8 5
And your true rights " 17 11
O, let me, true in love " 21 9
your true image pictured lies ** 24 6
that thou mayst true love call *' 40 3
So true a fool is love " 57 13
Mine own true love " 61 11
No shape so true ** 62 6
since his rose is true " 67 8
itself and true "* 68 10
O, lest your true love " 72 9
In true plain words " 82 12
'•Tis so, 'tis true " 85 9
supposing thou art true ** 93 1
and for true things deem'd *' 96 8
Fair, kind, and true ** 105 9
Fair, kind, and true " 106 10
Fair, kind, and true ** 105 18
Son
u
u
u
u
u
it
u
u
u
xc.
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u
M
PP
Tm*— of my true love control
figured to thee my true spirit
Alas, 'tis true
Most tnie it is that I
My most true mind
mine eye saith true
to the marriage of true minds
ere that there was true needing
and find the lesson true
now I find true
how hard true sorrow hits
I will be true
thou suboru'd informer! atruesoul *'
In things right true **
no correspondence with true sight **
Love's eye is not so true **
O, how can Love's eye be true **
give the lie to my true sight
many legions of true hearts
And, true to bondage
Than the true gouty landlord
party is nor true nor kind
in that my boast is true
but neither true nor trusty
her oaths of true love swearing
And in my suit be humble true
How true a twain
That are either true or fair
Tme-love — Who sees his true-love
Tmcst— the truest sight beguile
under truest bars to thrust
Trae-sweet — But true-sweet beauty VA
Tme-telllBg- by thy .... friend Son
Truly— by oath they truly honoured R L
true in love, but truly right Son
thy glass will truly show **
truly fair wert truly sympathised
And truly not the morning sun
Tmmpetr-Flrst like a trumpet Jt L
Herald sad and trumpet be P T
Trnst— if there be no self-trust R L
So Priam's trust false Sinon's tears "
So I, for fear of trust Son
in sure wards of trust
best habit is in seeming trust
Serve always with assured trust P P
Tnul— To trust those Ubles Son
rude, cruel, not to trust "
Not daring trust the office P P
Tmstless — borne by the .... wings R L
Tnisty — but neither true nor trusty P P
For of the two the tnisty knight
107
108
110
110
118
114
116
118
t
2
1
5
14
3
1
8
118 13
119 9
120
123
125
137
148
148
148
150
154
7
7
19
PT..
44
VA
Son
10
14
IS
13
2
8
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3
34
140
186
246
2
8
82
4JS
66
u
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Tmth— Love is all truth
truth I must confess
Then where is truth
When Truth and Virtue
and bring truth to light
To hide the truth
Such signs of truth
As truth and beauty
Thy end is truth's
of less truth than tongue
of thy worth and truth
to break a twofold truth
For truth proves thievish
which truth doth give
by verse distills your truth
rarities of nature's truth
no truth of such account
VA -
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u
mmmmm
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1144
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....
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82
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182
6
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23
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48
4
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11
19
31
122
12
129
4
15
4
2
7
2
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•••••
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•••••
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— 1075
.... 1532
14 11
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17 10
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Then need I
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TWO
332
UNKINDNESS
Two— Who, having two sweet babes £ L ...~ 1161
Why her two suns ** ...~ 1224
That two red fires " 1353
In two slow rivers " ~... 1738
that we two must be twain Son 36 1
In our two loves " 36 5
The other two, slight air " 45 1
made of four, with two alone " 45 7
where two contracted new " 56 10
As those two mourning eyes ** 132 9
Two loves I have " 144 1
Which like two spiriU " 144 2
But why of two oaths' breach " 152 5
Two loves I have PP 2 1
That like two spirits ** 2 2
For of the two the trusty knight " 16 11
Two distiucts, division none P T «... 27
Neither two nor one was called " ...~ 40
Twofold— to break a twofold truth Son 41 12
Type— of that true type R L 1050
Tyraanlse — then most doth tyrannise '* ..... 676
Tynumooi — Thou art as tyrannous Son 131 1
Tyranny — subject to the tyranny VA ..... 787
fearing of Time's tyranny Son 115 9
Tyrant— the hot tyrant stains • VA 797
Hard-favour'd tyrant " «... 981
Or tyrant folly lurk in gentle R L 851
Will play the tyrants S&n h Z
this bloody tyrant, Time " 16 2
When tyrants' crests " 107 14
And I, a tyrant ** 120 7
Am of myself all tyrant '* 149 4
Every fowl of tyrant wing P T 14
Ugly— ugly, meagre, lean V A 931
consort with ugly night " «... 1041
ugly in her eyes R L ...« 459
copesmate of ugly Night " «... 925
Tougly hell; when, lo " 1082
With ugly rack on bis Son ^ G
Ulysaes— In Ajax and Ulysses R L 1394
glance that sly Ulysses lent " 1399
Unacted — is as a thought unacted " «... 527
Unadvised — gives .... wounds ** 1488
Unapproved— What .... witness L C 53
Unapt— unapt to toy VA 34
Unapt fur tender smell R L 695
Unask'd- thou unask'd shalt have VA ...« 102
Unaware — as one that unaware " «... 823
Sheathed unaware the tusk *' 1116
Unback'd— lo, the unback'd breeder " - 320
Unbent— A brow .... tha< seem'd R L 1509
Unbless—un bless some mother Son 3 4
Unbred— hear this, thou age unbred " 104 13
Uneertain— The sickly appetite " 147 4
Uncertainly — sorrow writ .... R L 1311
Uneheerftal— at Tarquin and un-
cheerful Night " 1024
Uneleanness— With your .... " 193
Unconqnered— maiden worlds .... " «... 408
Unconstrained- sports in uncon-
strained gyves L C 242
Uncontrolled— his .... crest VA 104
quoth be; 'my uncontrolled tide RL 645
Uneouple — Uncouple at the timor-
ous flying hare VA 674
Uneonth— What uncouth ill event R L 1598
Under— Under her other was VA ...« 32
Under twenty locks " ...« 575
Under— Under whose sharp fangs V A ...« 668
fight brings beauty under ** ...« 746
Under whose simple semblance " ...« 796
Under whose brim ** ...« 1088
her rosy cheek lies under R L ...« 886
Under what colour he commits *' ...« 476
Under that colour I am come " ...« 481
under his Insulting falchion " «... 509
under the gripe's sharp claws '* «... 543
under Pyrrhus' proud foot lies '* «... 1449
burning head, each under eye Son 7 2
under truest bars to thrust " 48 2
under thee thy poesy disperse *' 78 4
I under my transgression bow ** 120 3
Under the blow of thralled " 124 7
Under that bond that him "134 8
Works under you L C ...« 230
Under an osier growing PP B 5
Under a myrtle shade ** 11 2
Underneath— underneath thy black
all-hiding cloak RL 801
Underprop— should .... her Came ** .... 53
Understood- blushes, aptly .... LC 200
Undertake— prefer and .... my troth *' «... 280
Undeserved— And .... reproach R L ...« 824
Undlstingnished- shrieking undis-
tinguished woe L C 20
Undivided— our .... loves are one Son 86 2
Undone— heart were quite undone VA ...« 788
Unear*d— so fair whose .... womb Son 3 5
Unexperlent— That the .... gave L C ...« 818
Unfklr— And that .... which fairly San 5 4
UnfktherM— Fortuue's bastard be
unfather'd " 124 2
and unfather'd fruit " 97 10
Unfelt — unfelt sore ! crest-wound-
ing R L ..... 827
Unflnlsh'd— shapeless and .... VA ...« 415
Unfold— with weeping will unfold R L 754
and there we will unfold *' 1146
Unfolding— By new unfolding Son 62 12
Unfortnnately— in her haste unfor-
tunately spies VA 1029
Unfhiltftal — midst of his unfruit-
i(
li
ful prayer R L
Ungrown— the .... fry forbears VA
Unhallow*d— die thoughU R L
of lewd unhallow'd eyes "
So his unhallow'd haste
Unhappily— name of 'chaste' un-
happily set
faith unhappily forsworn Son
Unhappy— to that unhappy guest R L
Unicorn — To tame the unicorn "
Union — By unions married Son
Unity— such unity do hold R L
Universe — this wide universe I call Swi
Unjnst — controls his thoughts .... R L
OS servitors to the unjust "
says she not she is unjust Son
Unless thy lady prove unjust P P
Unjnstly — blood so unjustly stainod R L
Unkind — ' young, and so unkind VA
but died unkind "
strangeness, seems unkind "
That you were once unkind Son
through my unkind abuse '*
Let no unkind "
Unkindness— his .,.. marr'd VA
...« 526
«... BvZ
«... 662
8
66 4
..... 1565
«».. vOD
8 6
1658
109 13
• •••• XOv
«... 285
138 9
19 83
1836
...« 1<57
«... 204
810
120 1
134 12
135 18
UNKINDNESS
333
UNUSED
Son
RL
<t
t«
Son
120
8
1»9
2
••»••
34
••••«
103
627
116
8
117
5
11
7
138
UBkladBCH— bf m j .... shaken
That thy unkindnesB lays
UnkaowB— he should keep ....
She touch'd no unknown halts
The fault unknown
Whose worth's unknown
frequent been with unknown minds "
Vnl«ei4— the warlike god .... me P P
irBle«nied — Unlearned in the world's
false subtleties San
ITnleM— Unless the earth with thj
increase be fed V A ..... 170
Unless it be a boar " ..... 410
Unless thou couldst return R L 961
Unless thou yoke thy liking " 1633
unless I took all patiently ** 164!
unless thou get a son Son 7 14
Unless thou take that honour " 36 12
unless this miracle have might " 65 13
Unless you would devise " 72 6
Unless my nerves were brass " 120 4
Unless this general evil they main-
tain " 121 13
Unless thy lady prove unjust PP 19 83
Unletter'd— And, like clerk Son K 6
Unlike— Unlike myself thou hcar'st r. 4 .... 712
Unlikely— in thoughts unlikely " .... 989
Unlived— now Lucrece is unlived R L ~... 1754
Unlock'd— Unlock'd the treasure ** ...~ 16
UnlookM— Unlook'd on diest Son 1 U
Unlook'd for joy " 25 4
Ualook'd-fbr— O unlook'd-for evil R L 846
Unloose— .... it from their bond " ..... 136
UnMask— To unmask falsehood " 940
Unmask, dear dear, this " 1602
UnMatehed— the clear unmatched
red and white " 11
Unmeet— Vow, alack ! for youth un-
meet PP n 13
Unaioved — Unmoved, cold, and to
temptation slow Son 94 4
Unnoted — Gnats are unnoted R L 1014
Unpeopled — Bare and unpeopled " 1741
Unpereelved — And unpercelved fly " ..... 1010
Unperf^t — As an unperfect actor Son 23 1
Unpraetlsed- Like an unpractised
swimmer R L 1098
Unprofitable—. . . . sounds, weak " 1017
Unprovident— art so uii provident Son 10 2
Unreealllng — let his ... . crime R L 993
Unrest — bail it from the deep unrest " 1725
with evermore unrest San 147 10
Unresisted— choked by lust R L 282
Unreapeeted — they view things .... San 43 2
unwoo'd and unresiK*cted fade " 51 10
Unripe— Shews thee unripe V A 128
with my unripe years " 624
But whether unripe years P P 4 9
Unmly — boisterous and .... beast VA 326
Unruly blasts wait R L 869
unruly though they be L C 103
UnaaTOnry — but unsavoury end V A 1138
Unaeaaonable — a poor doe R L 681
Unseeing— When to unseeing eyes Son 43 8
Unseen— When most unseen R L 676
To have their unseen sin " 7'»3
Against the unseen secrecy " 763
unseen shame " 827
Was left unseen *' ..... 1426
Unteen— Stealing unseen to west Son 83 I
preventour maladies unseen '* 118 3
All unseen 'gan passage find P P YI 6
Unset— maiden gardens, yet unset Son 16 6
Unsheatlied— thence her soul .... R L 1724
Unshorn- Like unshorn velvet L C .... 94
Unsklllflil — Unskillful in the
world's false forgeries P P V 4
Unsounded- Let my ... . self R L 1819
Unspotted— dear love bo kept .... •* ..... 821
Unstained- For unstain'd thoughU " ~... 87
on her yet unstained bed *' ..... 866
a pure unstained prime Son 70 8
Unaway'd- Who leaves unsway'd " 141 11
Unawept— Than unswept stone " 65 4
Untainted— her mind clears R L «... 1710
And blood untainted ** «... 1749
untainted do allow Son 19 11
Unthrlflr-Look, what an unthrift "99
O, none but unthrifts " 13 13
Unthrifty — Unthrifty loveliness,
why dost thou spend "41
Until— Until her husband's welfare R L «... 263
Until life's composition Son 45 9
Untimely— But some .... thought R L «... 43
By her untimely tears " «... 670
the cause of my untimely death " «... 1178
And his untimely frenay " „... 1675
Untimely breathings, sick " «... 1720
untimely pluck 'd, soon vaded PP 10 1
Unto— makes amain unto him V A .,.^ 6
think it heavy unto thee " 166
being tied unto a tree " «... 263
and neighs unto her " 307
unto the wood they hie " 823
woe unto the birds " «... 455
hundred touches unto thee " ...« 619
unto every stranger " 790
To grow unto himself " 1180
brought unto his bed R L 120
Unto a view so false " . 292
unto the chamber door " «... 337
Unto a greater uproar " «... 427
betray thee unto mine " «... 483
Unto the base bed " «... 671
ril bequeath unto the knife " «... 1184
cheeks unto her maid seem so " «... 1217
unto the clouds bequeathed " 1727
turns now unto the other Son 47 2
I have been call'd unto L C 181
I post unto my pretty PP 15 9
Unto the silly damsel " 16 8
Untold— To have their unseen sin re-
main untold R L 753
let me pass untold San 136 9
Untread- that she untreads again VA ...« 908
Untrl«m*d— changing course .... Son 18 8
Untme — speak well of me untruo " 72 10
thus maketh mine untrue " 113 14
"This man's untruo 2/ C «... 169
Untnek*d — For some .descended " «... 31
Untnned— With untuned tongue R L 1214
Untntor'd— think me some untu-
tor'd youth <$!tm 138 8
think me some untutor'd youth P P \ 8
Unosed— Thy unu!k>d beauty Son 4 13
And kept unused " 9 12
an eye unused to flow " 80 6
it might unused stay " 48 8
UNWEAVE
334
UPON
t4
U
U
U
fi
it
ft
it
tt
tf
EL ^
CJnwMTe— Now she uDweares the
web VA
Unwed— Neither too young Dor jet
unwed PP
UnwelcOMe— that sour .... guest VA
UnwholesoMe— unwholesome truths
make sick R L
Unwholesome weeds take root **
Unwilling— wilful and unwilling VA
threw unwilling light "
As each unwilling portal R L
Unwisely— unwisely did not let "
UnwItneHsed— . . . . with eye or ear VA
Unwoo*d — They lire unwoo'd and
unrespected Son
Unworthlneas-^If thy unworthiness **
Unworthy— Of that unworthy wife R L
Unyielding— from my .... heart V A
Up— The steed is stalled up
hold up thy head
She heaveth up his hat
stirs up a desperate courage
eats up Love's tender spring
dries up his oil
From his moist cabinet mounts up
on high
Wreathed up in fatal folds
cheering up her senses
draws up her breath
smother'd up in shade
A purple flower sprung up
Her Joy with heaved-up hand
had cfosed up mortal eyes
And therein heartens up his ser-
vile powers
Stuff up his lust, as minutes fill
up hours
pluck'd up the latch
cheers up his burning eye
breaks ope her lock*d-up eyes
to death, rise up and fall
cited up in rhymes
He rou»eth up himself
my heaved-up hands appeal
Shame folded up in blind conceal-
ing night
that cofTers up his gold
To eat up errors
' Madam, ere I was up
Here folds she up the tenour of
her woe
Wagg'd up and down
which purl'd up to the sky
Which scera'd to swallow up his
sound advice
To Jump up higher seem'd
voice daram'd up with woe
his breath drinks up again
till it blow up rain
Lifts up his burning head
the steep-up heavenly hill
all girded up in sheaves
I summon up remembrance
lock'd up in any chest
To lie up envy evermore
that seals up all in rest
will hold mo up afloat
countenance flII'd up his line
■at him up to death
tt
M
tt
tt
tt
tt
tt
tt
tt
tt
^t
tt
tt
tt
U
U
u
..•«. 991
19 6
••••• V^ar
••••• fl / «f
••••• 870
••••• ooO
1051
n... <ttl9
10
1023
54 10
150 13
— ••• XoVik
423
M... 39
..... 118
~... 351
M... OuO
~... 666
M... 756
..... Ov*V
896
•«... y*«i
..... 1035
1168
111
163
..... 297
.... 858
..... 435
••••• ^40
..... 524
638
Son,
tt
M
tf
tt
M... 675
M... oOO
M... 8o7
..... 1277
..... 1310
..... 1406
..... 1407
••••• X4U«f
1414
M... 1661
M... 1666
1788
7 2
M •?:
If
7
12
ao
48
70
78
80
86
99
5
7
2
9
12
8
9
18
18
Up— Drink up the monarch's plague Sm,
most kingly drinks It up "
reckon up their own "
built up with newer might
Eat up thy charge
votary took up that flre
But yield them up
dried up the dewy mom
Up-henvetli- faintly she ....
Uphold— in honour might uphold
u
u
tf
114
114
121
123
146
154
LC
PP
VA
Son
2
10
10
2
8
5
6 1
.... 482
13 10
it
ft
ft
ft
tt
Up-loeked- to his sweet up-locked
treasure **
Upon — Upon this promise VA
*The tender spring upon thy
tempting lip
trip upon the green
seise love upon thy left
*Upon the birth's increase why
shouldst thou feed
dwells upon my suit
^pon his compass'd crest now
stand on end
He looks upon his love
beams upon his hairless face are
flx'd
spread upon the blushing rose
blood upon the f^resh flowers being
shed
^ far off upon a hill
comment upon every woe
Upon fresh beauty, blotting
Leaves Love upon her back **
Gazing upon a late-embarked friend "
Upon the wide wound
Upon his hurt she looks
He ran upon the boar
She looks upon his lips
upon their whiteness stood
Upon the world dim darkness
52
2
85
ft
ft
tt
*i
ft
it
ft
ft
ft
127
..... l^O
.... lOo
.... lo9
206
307
...•• Vyi
.... 590
.... Do5
.... 697
714
— 814
.... 818
.... 1052
.... 1063
.... 1112
— 1123
— 1170
ft
ft
doth display
Now stole upon the time
to work upon his wife
yet remains upon her breast
seta his foot upon the light
Upon my cheeks what helpless
shame I feel
upon his silver down will stay
gaxed upon with every eye
as frets upon an instrument
Oacing upon the Greeks
break upon the galled shore
Upon his head that hath
still rest upon record
weep upon the tainted place
served a dumb arrest upon his
tongue
struck his hand upon his breast
Upon thyself thy beauty's legacy Son
war upon this bloody tyrant
And look upon myself
Upon the farthest earth
Upon the hours
lives upon his gains
you look upon this verse
hang more praise upon deceased I
Upon those bows which shake
did<:all upon thy aid
upon your soundless deep doth ride "
upon misprision growing **
X Jj ....
ft
ft
ft
ft
tt
It
ft
ft
ft
It
u
tt
u
tf
tt
It
tt
tf
118
162
235
463
673
— 756
— 1012
.... 1015
— 1140
.... l«lo4
.... IvsU
.... 1481
.... 1643
1746
— 1780
— 1842
4 2
16
29
44
57
67
71
72
73
79
80
87
2
4
6
2
12
9
7
8
1
10
1!
TONGUE
328
TRAFFIC
T(nig«e—iJi erery shepherd's .... P P 20 18
ToBirv^'-Like shrill-toDgued Up-
•ters VA »49
With cIose-tODgued treason Ji L ~... 770
For maiden-toDgued he was L C 100
ToB9«e-tled— made tODgue>tied bj
authoritj Sm 66 9
To make me tongue-tied ** 80 4
Mj tungue-tied Muae ** 85 1
My tongue-tied patience ** 140 2
To-Blglit— Short, night, to-night PP 15 IS
Too— If they burn too, I'll VA «... 192
with too much handling " .... /)60
the orator too green ** .... 806
and yet too credulous ** .... 986
and too full of riot ** .... 1147
merciful and too severe *' .... 1155
Uis all-too-timelcss speed £ L — . 44
sometime too much wonder ^ .... 95
Doth too too oft betake him *' 174
handmaids too, by him defiled ** .... 787
Their father was too weak, and
they too strong " .... 865
With too much labour " .... 1099
and too much talk affords '* .... 1105
This is too curious-good " .... 1300
too long with her remaining ** .... 1572
would be drawn out too long " .... 1616
My woe too sensible " .... 1678
Comes all too late " ....1686
she too early and too late hath
spill'd " .... 1801
to thy sweet self too cruel Son 1 8
for thou art much too fair " 6 13
hath all too short a date " 18 4
Sometime too hot " IS 5
replete with too much rage " 23 3
sweet argument too excellent " 38 3
with others all too near " 61 14
Too base of thee " 74 12
doth come too short " 83 7
of all too precious you " 86 2
Farewell, ihou art too dear •* 87 1
bo a gainer too *' 88 9
Lest I too much profane " 89 11
thou hast too grossly dyed " 99 5
So dost thou too " 101 4
by paying too much rent " 125 6
with too much disdain " 140 2
Love is too young ** 151 1
too early I attended L C 78
Ah, fool too froward P P 4 14
alack ! too timely shaded " 10 3
Fair creature, kill'd too soon " 10 4
methinks thou stay'st too long ** 12 12
the night would post too soon " 15 13
Neither too young " 19 6
And then too late " 19 15
But, soft I enough,— too much ** 19 49
Took— birds such pleasure took VA 1101
She took me kindly by the hand R L 25.'{
the roses took aray " 259
• can lurk ' from * cannot' took " 1537
I took all patiently " 1641
and heart a league is took Son 47 1
when I took my way " 48 1
or must from you be took " 75 12
votary took up that firo " 154 5
took heat perpetual *' 154 10
Tool— But this no alaaghterhouse
no tool imparteth R L
Tooth'd— Had I been tooth'd VA
Top— That cedar-tops and hills seem "
and the top o'erstraw'd "
on the top of happy hours Sun
Flatter the mountain-tope "
This said, in top of rage L C
TorrlH-Torches are made to light V A
Whereat a waxen torch R L
' Fair torch, burn out thy light
The wind wars with his torch "
wind that fires the torch **
Are by his flaming torch "
Tore— as if the name he tore "
sigh'd, tore, and gave the flood L C
TonaeBt— torments us with defect R L
But torment that it cannot *'
what a torment wouldst thou prove Sm
torments me with disdain "
A torment thrice threefold **
TormeBteth- want of love ....
Tom— my image thou hast torn
and new faith torn
Tortare— And that deep torture
shake hands to torture me
to torture me alone
ToM*d— Is madly toss'd
ToBch— ' Touch but my lips
To touch the fire
not see, nor hear, nor touch
but to touch the crown
that touches me more nearly
needs would touch my breast
would not touch the bait
TbucA— ten hundred touches
Instead of love's coy touch
Such heavenly touches
What strained touches
to base touches prone
Touches so soft
whose heavenly touch
ToBch'd— touch'd no unknown bait R L
ne'er touch'd earthly faces Sofn
that never touch'd his hand L C
she touch'd him here and there P P
ToQchlng — by touching thee VA
Toward— where it shows most toward "
No love toward others S7n
Then fell she on her back, fair
queen, and toward P P
Towards— Towards thee I'll run Son
make towards the pebbled shore **
Towards this afllicted fancy L C
Tower— glittering golden towers R L
And from the towers of Troy "
lofty towers I see down-razed Son
The strongest castle, tower, and
town PP
Towering— towering in the skies R L
Town— The strongest castle, tower,
and town PP
Tojr— appct Ite, u napt io toy V A
To toy, to wanton "
Or sells eternity to get a toy R L
The tricks and toys P P
Tract— From his low tract Son
TrafRe— doth traffic oft for gaining R L
For having traffic with thyself Son
VA
RL
Son
RL
Son
RL
VA
RL
Son
PP
VA
RL
Son
(i
t«
PP
u
... 10»
— 1117
.... OwO
— 1143
16 5
S3 2
..... 65
— 178
— 190
— 311
••••• Ol*v
.... I487
.... 44
••••• 101
••••• vOI
39 9
132 2
133 8
— . 208
.... 1762
152 8
— 1287
28 6
133 S
.... 171
— 115
— 402
.... 216
4
10
11
519
669
8
10
6
8
5
103
8
141
4 7
»••■• 4alO
.... 1157
9 13
42
153
4
17
82
141
4
8
17
4
51
60
13
14
1
.... 61
.... 945
.... 1382
64 8
19 29
.... 506
19 29
.... 84
.... 108
.... 214
19 39
7 IS
.... 131
4 9
TRAGEDY
329
TROJAN
Tragedj— Blsck stage for tragedies B L ~... 766
Tnglfv— and swound at tragic shows L C ~... 808
As chorus to their tragic scene P T ~... 62
Traitor— his traitor eye encloses R L ~... 7B
ere traitors be espied *' SCI
executest the traitor's treason *' ~... 877
thou traitor, thou false thief " ~... 888
jet let the traitor die " .... 1686
Tr»«pllBg— Adonis' .... courser V A 26!
TniBM — with restless trances R L ~... 974
old acquaintance in a trance " ~... 1595
TraMferred — are they now .... Son 137 14
Transfix— Time doth the flourish '* 60 9
TraMffrcased — that hath .... so R L ..... 1481
Transgreialoii — Their own trans-
gressions ** ...~ 634
under my transgression bow Son 120 8
TraMlmte— he could his looks .... " 90 10
Translated— To truths translated ** 96 8
Transport—Which should me '^ 117 8
Trapping— or trapping gay VA 286
Trarail— As if with grief or travail RL 1543
Dcsenres the travail Son 79 6
Travel—for limba with travel tired ** 27 2
And make me travel forth " 84 2
my weary travel's end " 60 2
Like him that travels " 109 6
Traveled— Hath travell'd on " 63 6
Tread— She treads the path V A ...~ 908
she treads on it so light " ~... 1028
to tread the measures " ..... 1148
That cannot tread the way R L ..... 1152
treads on the ground Son 130 12
The cock that treads them PP 19 40
Tieasoa—condemn'd of treason VA 729
Thus treason works R L 8G1
By their high treason " 869
With close-tongued treason " ...~ 770
executest the traitor's treason " ..... 877
Wrath, envy, treason, rape " 909
Guilty of treason " 920
to my gross body's treason Son 151 6
rreasnrf — his lips' rich treasure VA ..... 552
the hidden treasure frets " ~... 767
As one with treasure laden " 1022
what treasure hast thou lost " 1075
enrich the poor with treasures " 1150
Unlocked the treasure R L 16
And wlien great treasure " ..... 132
sinking where such treasure lies " ~... 280
his treasure to behold " 857
the treasure stol'n away " 1056
Where all the trea.<iure Son 2 6
With beauty's treasure "64
thy love's use their treasure " 20 14
to his sweet up-locked treasure " 52 2
the treasure of his spring ** 63 8
will steal his treasure " 75 6
but not still keep her treasure " 126 10
fulfil the treasure of thy love " 136 5
Trtoiurt — treasure thou some place "63
Treatise — ^Your treatise makes me VA 774
Tr«fol«— heart hath treble wrong " 329
Treble-dated— And thou .... crow P T ..... 17
Tree— like sturdy trees VA 152
tied unto a tree " 263
tied to the tree " 391
When lofty trees I see Son 12 5
\hat hangs upon a tree P P 10 5
Tree— Trees did grow PP 21 6
Senselens trees they cannot hear
thee " 21 21
On the sole Arabian tree P T ..... 2
Tremble— she trembles at his tale VA ..... 591
my joints did tremble " ..... S42
tremble at the imagination " ..... 668
tremble with her loyal fear R L .... 261
he saw them quake and tremble " .... ]89t
Trembling— trembling in her pas-
sion VA .... 27
in a trembling ecstasy " .... 895
with trembling terror die R L .... 231
she trembling lies " 457
With trembling fear " .... 511
To trembling clients " .... 1020
marching on with trembling paces ** .... 1391
thou dost trembling stand " .... 1599
Ti^neh— And dig deep trenches Son 2 2
Trench*d— that the boar had .... VA .... 1052
Treapew Shalt have thy trespass R L .... 624
To view thy present trespass " 632
Will quote my loathsome trespass ** 812
And with my trespass " .... 1070
for trespass of thine eye *' .... 1476
shall fit the trespass best " .... 1613
Authorizing thy trespass Son 35 6
But that your trespass " 120 13
Trem — Before the golden tresses ** 68 6
Trial— accidental things of trial R L .... 826
The boy for trial Son 153 10
Tribe — ^Insults o'er dull and speech-
leas tribes " 107 12
Trlbntary— pay tributary gazes VA .... 632
tributary subject quakes " .... 1045
Tribate— Paying more slavish .... R L 299
liook here, what tributes L C .... 197
Triek— taught them scornful tricks VA .... 601
*This glove to wanton tricks R L 820
The tricks and toys PP 19 39
Tried— Thus my strength is tried VA 280
till their effete be tried R L .... 853
Trifle— Trifles unwitnessed V A .... 1023
Each trifle under truest bars Son 48 2
to whom my Jewels trifles are " 48 6
Trim— colours fresh and trim V A 1079
' dress'd in all his trim Son %^ 2
yet their purposed trim L C .... 118
TrImmM— nothing .... in Jollity Son %^ 8
Trip— trip upon the green VA .... 146
thy footing trips " .... 722
Tripping— Came tripping by Son 164 4
Triamph— his triumphs and his
glories VA 1014
Showing life's triumph R L .... 402
fortune of such triumph Son 25 3
IHumpA— Rather than triumph R L 77
Being had, to triumph Son 52 14
Triumph in love " 151 8
would I might triumph so P P 17 10
Trlamphant— With all-triumphant
splendour Son 83 10
As his triumphant prize " 151 10
Trinmpird — Which triumph'd in
that sky R L 12
Trlnmphlng— . ... in their faces " .... 1388
Trodden— trodden on by many V A 707
Troilns— here Trollus swounds R L .... 1486
Trojan— Stood many Trojan mothers " .... 1481
VIEW
337
WAKE
u
tt
Fbi»— distarbed, heedftilly doih
Tiew R L ^.
To Tiew thf present tresiNLM
with each thing she Tiews
The precedent whereof in Lucrece
view
I loTed, I view in thee Son 31
thej riew things unrespected ** 43
that the world's eye doth view ** 89
TIew'd — Tiew'd each other's sorrow VA ....
Which Tarquin view'd R L
wherein they riew'd their faces " .....
Tieweat— and tell the face thoa . . . . Son 3
Tiewlng— that's worth the viewing VA ~...
TIfoar— for thy mortal vigour ^ .....
Til«— digression is so Tile, so base R L
thb vile purpose to prevent
That what is vile
how Tile a spectacle it were
How comes it then, rile Opportu-
nity
From this rile world Son
to be rile than vile esteemed "
Tileit — with vilest worms to dwell
(4
U
u
u
It
71
121
71
454
632
HOI
1261
13
2
1
963
72
1526
1
1076
953
202
220
252
631
895
4
1
4
TilUta— The homely .... court'sies R L ..... 1838
TUm— who will the vine destroy " 215
TloUte— the vestal violate her oath " ..... 883
TlolAted— taste of violated troth " ..... 1059
TMeai— Thy .... vanities can never *' ..... 894
the violent roaring tide ** 1667
Tlolet— These blue-vein'd violeU VA ..... 125
smell to the violet ** ..... 936
the violet past prime Son 12 3
The forward violet " 99 1
Tlrgtn— by a virgin hand disarm'd " 154 8
Tlrtae— Their virtue lost VA .... 1131
beauty and virtue strived R L .... 52
When virtue bragg'd, beauty
would " 54
Virtue would stain o'er " 56
Then virtue claims from beauty " .... 59
which virtue gave the golden age ** 60
beauty's red and virtue's white " 65
Thus dying virtue *• 223
And talk'd of virtue " .... 846
When virtue is profaned " .... 847
What virtue breeds " .... 872
When Truth /ind Virtue " 911
sin's pack-horse, virtue's snare " 928
But, for their virtue Son 54 9
virtue rudely strurapeted " 66 6
He lends thee virtue " 79 9
such virtue hath my pen ** 81 13
If thy sweet virtue " 93 14
virtue of your love " 117 14
and thy dear virtue hate " 142 1
Tlrtaoaa— shows like a . . . . deed R L 252
Where like a virtuous monument " 391
With virtuous wish Son 16 7
devise some virtuous lie
And prove thee virtuous
Visage — his visage hide
Which fortified her visage
For on his visage
Yet show'd his visage
T'MoB — Nor his own vision holds
^islt — to come and visit me
Vales— churlish, harsh in voice
Thy mermaid's voice
22
" 72
5
" 88
4
" 33
7
L C
9
it
90
96
Son 113
8
RL ....
1307
VA
154
41
429
Yolee— volleys out his voice VA .... 921
it Is Adonis' voice ** .... 978
Her voice is stopp'd " .... 1061
her voice controll'd R L .... 678
and voice damm'd up with woe ** 1661
All tongues the voice of souls Son 69 8
Of others' voices ** 112 10
this double voice accorded L C .... 3
thy voice his dreadful thunder P P 5 11
Volley— volleys out hb voice VA ^... 921
Voait— must vomit his m> ipt R L .... 703
Votary— The fairest votary ' ook up ^Sm 154 5
Voneluafifr— Vouchsafe, thou wonder r.i .... 13
next vouchsafe t' afford R L .... 1305
O then vouchsafe me Son 32 9
Not once vouchsafe to hide *' 135 6
Vow— Dismiss your vows VA .... 425
breach of holy wedlock vow R L .... 809
the fatal knife to end his vow ** .... 1843
And that deep vow " 1847
Creep in 'twixt vows &>n 115 6
In act thy bed-vow broke ** 132 3
For all my vows are oaths ** 152 7
Knew vows were ever brokers L C .... 173
of my holy vows afraid " 179
All vows and consecrations " 263
vow, bond, nor space " 264
Vows for thee broke P P Z 4
My vow was earthly "37
My vow was breath "89
Exhale this vapour vow ** 3 11
Vow, alack ! for youth unmeet *' 17 13
Kotc— That now he vows a league R L 287
That he may vow " 1179
against myself I'll vow San 89 13
This I do vow " 123 13
Vowed— that vow'd chaste life to keep " 154 3
if not to beauty vowed P /* 5 2
Vowing— In vowing new hate Son 152 4
Valgar— For every vulgar paper " 38 4
prey of every vulgar thief " 48 8
Which vulgar scandal " 112 2
Vnltare — Whose vulture thought V A .... 551
feeds his vulture folly R L .... 556
Wagg*d— Wagg'd up and down R L .... 1406
Wall— To wail hU death VA .... 1017
to wail a week R L . 213
beggar wails his case " .... 711
wail the abusing of his time " .... 994
The world will wail thee Son 9 4
new wail my dear time's waste " 80 4
Waird— must bo wail'd byCollatine/2 L 1799
Walling— begins a wailiug note VA 8:^5
calm look, eyes wailing still R L 1508
is of my wailing chief &m 42 3
Waist— girdle with embracing flames
the waist
Walt — wit waits on fear
wait on wrinkled age
wait on the tender spring
wait on them as their pages
scandal waits on greatest state
I am to wait
his pleasures wait on thee
Waited— It shall be waited on
Waiting— though waiting so be hell Son
Wake — And wakes the morning
and troubled minds that wake
RL
•••••
6
VA
•••»•
690
RL
•••••
275
(«
•••••
869
i<
••*••
910
II
•••••
1006
Son
58
13
II
97
U
VA
»••••
1137
\Son
58
13
VA
•••••
855
RL
*••••
126
WAKE
338
WAS
Wftkt— waket to stain and kill E L ~... 168
Win he not wake ** ~... 219
She wakes her heart " .... 75e
To wake the morn ** .... »12
thou dost wake elsewhere Son 61 13
still did wake and sleep L C .... 123
If thou wake, be cannot sleep PP 21 54
Waken'd— in your waken'd hate iSm 117 12
Wakinn— by dreadful fancy .... ML .... 4iiO
Yet, foul night-waking cat " .... 654
To keep thy sharp woes waking ^ .... 1136
but waking no such matter Son 87 14
Walk — curtains being close, about
he walks R L 967
Be absent from thy walks Son 89 9
thy fingers walk with genUe gait *' 128 11
My mistress, when she walks *' 130 12
Walk'd— the lion walk'd along VA 1093
Wall — to batter such an ivory wall R L .... 464
batter'd down her consecrated wall ** .... 723
Through crystal walls " .... 1251
the walls of strong-besieged Troy " .... 1429
pent in walls of glass Son 5 10
Painting thy outward walls '* 146 4
Waader— the souls that .... by him R L ^... 882
to make me wander thither PP 14 10
Wander, a word for shadows " 14 11
Wanderer— as night-wanderers of-
ten are VA 825
WaBder*si— thou .... in his shade Son 18 11
Wandering— Night-wandering wea-
sels shriek R L .%7
a wandering Vasp hath crept *' 839
to every wandering bark ^Sbn 116 7
Wane— As fast as thou shalt wane "11 1
Waninff— wealth and ease in waning
age R L 142
Who hast by waning grown Son 126 8
Want— how of love tormenteth V A 202
which their superiors want R L 42
and all, for want of wit " .... 153
to want his bliss " 389
drowns for want of skill " 1099
nothing wants to answer " 1459
cunning want to Rrace their art Son 24 13
want subject to invent *' 38 1
Want nothing that the thought " 69 2
No want of conscience " 151 13
Where want cries some, but L C 42
unripe years did want conceit PP A 9
No man will supply thy want " 21 38
Wanteth — so wanteth in his store R L .... 97
that even in plenty wantoth ** .... 557
Wanting— Wanting the spring " 1455
in wanting words to show it Son 26 6
this fair gift in me is wanting " 87 7
manner of my pity-wanting pain " 140 4
Wanton — to toy, to wanton V A 106
the wanton mermaid's songs " 777
to your wanton talk " 809
moralize his wanton sight R L 104
•Thisgloveto wanton tricks " 820
O modest wantons ! wanton modesty '* 401
Bearing the wanton burthen Son 97 7
Playing in the wanton air PPM 4
Wantonly — and play us wantonly Son 54 7
WantOBnem — Some »ay, thy fault is
jouth, some wantonness " 96 1
War— direful god of war VA .... 98
M
U
War— what a war of looks V A
It shall be cause of war "
This silent war of liliea R L
Make war against proportioned
course of time **
in peace is wounded, not in war "
And all in war with Tinie Son
Make war upon this bloody tyrant **
Such civil war is in my love and
hate **
are at a mortal war
When wasteful war shall statues
nor war's quick Are shall burn
TFor— The wiift wars with his torch R L
Sweets with sweets war not San
Warble— The well-tuned warble R L
Ward — by him enforced, retires his
waM "
in sure wards of trust Son
in thy steel boeom's ward **
Wardrobe — Or as the wardrobe **
Warlike— hard news from the war-
like band R L
' the warlike god embraced me P P
' the warlike god unlaced me **
Warm— 'The sun that shines fh>m
heaven shines but warm V A
Welcomes the warm approach "
The warm effects **
And see thy blood warm Sun
Warm*d— legions of true hearts had
warm'd "
my heart so much as warm'd L C
that is not warmed here **
Warnlng^-tiive .... to the world Son
Warrant- warrant for blame R L
Warrantlso— strength and warran-
tise of skill Son
Warrior— The palnftii .... famoused *'
Wary— be of thyself so wary "
Was — Under her other was the ten-
der boy VA
So soon was she along as he was
down **
Yet was he servile
what he was controlled with
his fury was assuaged
O, what a sight it was
now her cheek was pale
Now was she Just before him
a war of looks was then between
them
life was death's annoy
death was lively Joy
was it not white
Her song was tedious
It was not that she call'd him
how much a fool was I **
was but late forlorn "
that his wound wept, was drench'd "
No flower was nigh "
When he was by
thus was Adonis slain
Was melted like a vapour
this was thy father's guise
unto himself was his desire
Here was thy father's bed
Well was he welcomed
in Lucrece* face was seen
u
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u
u
ff
u
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•••••
774
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831
15
13
16
2
85
12
46
1
55
5
55
7
....
811
8
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•«•••
1060
•••••
803
48
4
183
9
52
10
«••••
255
11
6
11
7
•••••
198
•••••
886
•••••
605
2
14
154
6
•••••
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• ••*•
292
71
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620
150
7
25
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22
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SS
•••••
43
•••••
112
•••«•
270
•••••
818
*••••
843
• «•••
847
• ••«•
849
• ••*•
855
•••••
497
••«••
498
•••••
643
• ••M
841
• ••••
998
•••«•
1015
•••••
1026
«••••
1054
• •»M
1055
•••••
1101
•••••
1111
•••••
1166
•••••
1177
»••••
1180
•••••
1188
• ••••
81
TWO
332
UNKINDNESS
Two— Who, having two sweet babes RL ...~ 1161
Why her two suns ** 1224
That two red fires " 1353
In two slow rivers " 1788
that we two must be twain Son 36 1
In our two loves " 86 6
The other two, slight air " 45 1
made of four, with two alone " 45 7
where two contracted new " 66 10
As those two mourning eyes " 182 9
Two loves I have *' 144 1
Which like two spirits " 144 2
But why of two oaths' breach " 152 5
Two loves I have P P 2 I
That like two spiriU "22
For of the two the trusty knight *' 16 11
Two distiucts, division none P T . 27
Neither two nor one was called " 40
Twofold— to break a twofold truth Son 41 12
Tjrpe— of that true type JS L 1050
Tyrannlxe— then must doth tyrannize " ...» 676
Tynuinoas — Thou art as tyrannous Son 131 1
Tyranny— subject to the tyranny VA 787
fearing of Time's tyranny &m 115 9
Tyrant— the hot tyrant stains • VA 797
Hard-favour'd tyrant " «... 981
Or tyrant folly lurk in gentle B L 851
Will play the tyrants Son 5 3
this bloody tyrant, Time " 16 2
When tyrants' crests " 107 14
And I, a tyrant " 120 7
Am of myself all tyrant ** 149 4
Every fowl of tyrant wing P T 14
Ugly — ugly, meagre, lean VA 981
consort with ugly night " 1041
ugly in her eyes R L 459
copesmate of ugly Night " 925
To ugly hell ; when, lo " ».... 1082
With ugly rack on his Son 33 G
Ulysses— In AJax and Ulysses R L 1894
glance that sly Ulysses lent " 1899
Unacted— is as a thought unacted ** ~... 527
Unadvised — gives .... wounds " 1488
Unapproved — What .... witness L C ..... 53
Unapt — unapt to toy V A 34
Unapt for tender smell R L 695
Unask'd— thou unask'd shalt have VA ..... 102
Unaware — as one that unaware " — 828
Sheathed unaware the tusk ** 1116
Unback'd— lo, the unback'd breeder " • 820
Unbent— A brow .... thai seem'd R L 1509
Unbless — unbless some mother Son 8 4
Unbred— hear this, thou age unbred " 104 18
Uncertain— The sickly appetite *' 147 4
Uncertainly— sorrow writ .... R L 1311
Uncheerftal — at Tarquin and un-
checrful NiKlit ** 1024
Uncieanness— With your .... " 193
Unconquered— maiden worlds .... " 408
Unconstrained- Hports in uncon-
strained gyves L C 242
Uncontrolled— his .... crest VA 104
quoth he; 'my uncontrolled tide R L 645
Uncouple — Uncouple at the timor-
ous flying hare V A 674
Unconth— What uncouth ill event R L 1598
Under- Under her other was V A 82
Under twenty locks " ..... 575
w f^ •••••
<«
RL
(t
u
t(
Son
u
ti
It
u
LC
PP
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Under— Under whose sharp fangs
fight brings beauty under
Under whose simple semblance
Under whoso brim
her rosy cheek lies under
Under what colour he commits
Under that colour I am come
under his insulting falchion
under the gripe's sharp claws
under Pyrrhus' proud foot lies
burning head, each under eye
under truest bars to thrust
under thee thy poesy disperse
I under my transgression bow
Under the blow of thralled
Under that bond that him
Works under you
Under an osier growing
Under a myrtle shade
Underneath— underneath thy black
all-hiding cloak R L
Underprop— should .... her fame **
Understood — blushes, aptly .... LC
Undertake— prefer and .... my troth "
Undeserved — And .... reproach R L
Undlstlngnlshed— shrieking undis-
tinguished woe L C
Undivided— our .... loves are one Son
Undone— heart were quite undone VA
UnearM— so fair whose .... womb Son
Unexperlent— That the .... gave L C
Unfklr— And that .... which fairly Son
Unfkther'd— Fortune's bastard be
un fathered
and unfather'd fruit
Unfelt— O unfelt sore ! crest-wound-
ing RL
Unfinished— shapeless and .... V A
Unfold — with weeping will unfold R L
and there wc will unfold *'
Unfolding— By new unfolding Son
Unfortunately— in her haste unfor-
tunately spies V A
Unfhiitftal— midst of his unfhiit-
ful prayer R L
Ungrown— the .... fry forbears VA
UnhallowM— die, thoughts R L
of lewd unhallow'd eyes "
So his unhallow'd haste
Unhappily— name of 'chaste' un-
happily set
faith unhappily forsworn Son
Unhappy— to that unhappy guest R L
Unicorn — To tame the unicorn **
Union— By unions married Son
Unity— such unity do hold R L
Universe — this wide universe I call Son
Unjnst — controls his thoughts .... R L
as servitors to the unjust "
says she not she is unjust Son
Unless thy lady prove unjust P P
Unjustly — blood so unjustly staintjd R L
Unkind—' young, and so unkind VA
but died unkind "
strangeness, seems unkind "
That you were once unkind Son
through my unkind abuse "
Let no unkind "
Unkindneas— his ..... marr'd VA
66S
...- 746
...- 795
..... 1088
...n 476
..... 481
M... OOv
..... 543
7 2
48
78
120
124
184
6
11
2
4
3
7
8
230
5
2
M
M
U
II
...M 801
M... 53
..... 200
..... 280
...~ 824
20
36 2
ISA
3 5
...M 818
5 4
124 2
97 10
••••• OZf
• *m— 419
• •■•• #vv
..... 1146
52 12
..... 1029
844
526
192
382
552
66 4
■ I... luD3
M... 950
8 6
1558
109 13
.... 285
138 9
19 38
...M 1896
M... 204
~... 810
1
IS
IS
478
120
134
135
WATCH
340
WEAKLY
Watch— y[j heart doth charge the
waich PP 15 2
Watrhlng— That is »o vex'd with .... &m 148 9
WatchHaB— To play the watchman " 61 12
Watchword— Which gives the ... . RL 870
Water— She hathes in water VA ^... 94
in water seen by night ** ..... 492
As air and water ** ~... 654
stones dissolved to water R L 592
And grave like water " 755
no water thence proceeds " 1552
to burn his Troy with water " 1561
of earth and water wrought Son 44 11
bring water for my stain " 109 8
The sea, all water " 135 9
Love's fire heats water, water cools " 154 14
That flame through water L C ..... 287
to water will not wear " ~... 291
or of weeping water " ~... 304
Water-dropa — huge stones with
little water-drops P L ~... 969
Water-gall — These water-galla in
her dim element ** „... 1588
Watery— swan in her watery nest " .....1611
a watery rigol goes " ..... 1745
some watery token shows " 1748
win of the watery main Son 64 7
his watery eyes he did dismount L C 281
Wave — peering through a wave VA 86
wave like feather'd wings " ..... M6
Till the wild waves " 819
Whose waves to imitate P L 1438
Like as the waves make Son 60 1
Waved— Who in a salt-waved ocean P L »... 1231
Wavering— wavering stood in doubt /> C 97
Wax — What wax so froacn VA ~... 565
Ko more than wax P L 1245
Softer than wax PP 1 4
Waxen— Whereat a waxen torch P L .178
men have marble, women waxen,
minds " 1240
From lips new-waxen pale " ~... 1663
Waxeth— never waxeth strong V A 420
Wax-red — on my wax-red \\\t» " ..... 516
Way— his lips another way " 90
which way shall she turn " 253
a thousand ways he seeks " .... 477
whate'er is in his way " 623
indenting with the way " 704
discovery of her way " 828
the bushes in the way " 871
just in his way " ..... 879
This way she runs " ...- 905
bear her a thousand ways " ..... 907
unwilling portal yields him way P L 309
force must work my way " ..... 513
thou didst teach the way " ...« 630
seated from the way " ..... 1144
determining which way to fly " 1150
tread the way out readily " 1152
to mourn some newer way " ~... 1365
and look an6ther way Son 7 12
do not you a mightier way " 16 1
o'ertake me in my way " 34 8
should not stop my way *' 44 2
when I took my way " 48 1
do I journey on the way " 50 1
by-past perils in her way L C 158
And to her will frame all thy ways P P 19 25
VA
RL
VA
u
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Wayward— to the wayward boy
Who wayward once .
We— whereon we lean
know not what we mean
shall we meet to-morrow
Say, shall we? shall we
all for one we gage
venturing ill we leave to be
The things we are for that which
we expect
we have ; so then we do
The thing we have
that on lawn we lay
The sweets we wish for
that we call them ours
We have no good that we can say
is ours
Will we find out; and there we
will unfold
of sorrow that we hear
that we may give redress
We are their ofl*spring
the Capitol that we adore
We will revenge the death
creatures we desire increase
that we two must be twain
yet we must not be foes
in every blessed shape we know
but fairer we it deem
Whether we are mended
For we, which now behold
with eager compounds we our
palate urge
We sicken to shun sickness when
we purge
and therefore we admire
we before have heard them
and what we see doth lie
with ease we prove
by lies we flatter'd be
For when we rage
That we must curb it
The thing we have not
we will all the pleasures prove
There will we sit upon the rocks
Weak— weak and silly mind
shall it make most weak
past reason's weak removing
are the weak brain's forgeries
the weak mouse panteth
To whose weak ruins muster
In thy weak hive
Their father was too weak
Unprofitable sounds, weak arbi-
trators
The weak oppressed
my poor self weak
Weak words, so thick come
from weak minds proceeds
lends but weak relief
though more weak in seeming
Weak sights their sickly radiance L C
age is weak and old P P
Weak-bnilt- Though .... hopes P L
Weaken— Whose strength's abun-
dance weakens his own heart Son
Weaker— And far the weaker P L
Weakling— Myself a weakling
Weakly— Are weakly fortress'd
..... 125
m
.... 586
••••• a44
.... 148
— 149
.... 152
.... ids
M... ZvB
M... cWf
«.... 873
.... 1146
.... 1328
.... 1608
.... 1757
.... 1835
.... 1&41
1 1
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86
40
53
54
59
106
118
118
123
123
1
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8
11
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123 11
136 7
138
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14
160
.... 162
.... 240
20 2
20 5
.... 1016
.... 1145
243
.... 460
.... 555
.... 720
.... 0«Nv
.... 865
.... 1017
— 1242
.... ]v49
.... 1784
.... 1825
84 11
102 1
.... 214
12 7
...« ItlU
23 4
— 1647
••••* Oo4
.... 28
WEAKMADE
341
WELL
WMk*auide— Make .... women R L 1260
WettkneH— with cold-pale .... VA 89*2
With mine own weakness Son 88 5
WmI— Thy weal and woe V A ..... 987
Wealtli— What prireless wealth R L 17
honour, wealth, and ease in waning
age '* ~... 142
Honoar for wealth ; and oft that
wealth doth cost " ~... 146
thy sweet love remember'd such
wealth brings Son ^ Vi
birth, or wealth, or wit " 37 6
to show what wealth she had " 67 13
'twixt a miser and his wealth " 75 4
Some in their wealth " 91 2
Richer than wealth " 91 10
Of wealth, of filial fear . LC 270
WcApOB — bright weapons wield R L 1432
Wear— jewels to wear YA 163
Who wears a garment " ..... 415
their crimson liveries wear " 506
henceforth no creature wear " 1081
And wear their brare state Son 15 8
That wear this world out " 55 12
how thy beauties wear " 77 1
though marble wear with raining RL 560
the nightly linen that she wears " 680
the web it seem'd to wear L C 95
to water will not wear " 291
Weai1ed~She like a wearied lamb R L 737
So woe hath wearied woe '* 186.3
WeArineaa— .... with heavy spright *' 121
of weariness he did complain him " 845
Weary— or morn or weary even V A 49.'>
comforter, with weary gait " 529
Hot, faint, and weary ** ...- 559
brier his weary legs doth scratch " 705
lark, weary of rest " 8.53
asks the weary caitifT " »... 914
Thus weary of the world " 1189
his weary noon-tide prick R L 781
The w^iry time she cannot *' 1361
so weary, and so mild " 1542
to rest thy weary head " 1621
from highmost pitch, with weary
car Sim 7 9
Weary with toil I haste me " 27 1
my weary travel's end " 50 2
to the weary night " 61 2
n'iNiry— And time doth weary time R L 1570
Weasel — Night-wandering weasels
shriek to see him " 307
Weatker— the weather being cold VA 402
ooDSolting for foul weather " 972
of stormy blustering weather RL 115
age like winter weather PP 12 3
Web — She unweaves the web VA 991
the web it seem'd to wear L C 95
Wed — One woman would another
wed PP 19 48
Wedlock— breach of holy ... . vow R L 809
Weed — ^bid thee crop a weed VA 946
herb, leaf, or weed " 1055
love's modest snow-white weed R L ...^ 196
As com o'ergrown by weeds " 281
Unwholesome weeds take root " 870
Will be a totter'd weed Son 2 A
add the rank smell of weeds " 69 12
invention in a noted weed " 76 6
Son
if
94 12
94 14
124 4
Weed — The basest weed out-braves
smell far worse than weeds
weeds among weeds
Week— a minute's mirth to wail a
week RL 213
with his brief hours and weeks &» 116 11
Weep— that laughs and weeps VA 414
then would Adonis weep " ..... 1090
while the widow weeps R L 906
weeps at thy languishment " 1130
But as the earth doth weep " „... 1226
Which makes the maid weep '* ..... 12.32
One justly weeps " 1235
to weep are often willing " ...« 1237
If thou dost weep for grief *• 1272
to sigh, to weep, and groan " 1362
Lo, here weeps Hecub« " ...» 1485
she weeps Troy's painted woes " 1492
to weep upon the tainted place ** ...~ 1746
Who should weep most " 1791
weep with equal strife " 1792
He weeps for her " 1798
be thy widow, and still weep Son 9 5
And weep afresh " 30 7
But weep to have that " 64 14
the laugher weep L C ..... 124
Though Reason weep, and cry " -... 168
to weep at woes " ..... 807
I weep for thee and yet P P 10 7
Procure to weep " 18 32
If thou sorrow, he will weep " 21 5S
Weeper— To make the weeper laugh L C 124
Weeping— of the weeping morn VA 2
thou provokest such weeping " 949
could weeping purify R L «... 685
with weeping will unfold " 754
where she sitK weeping " 1087
seem'd a weeping tear *• 1375
one pair of weeping eyes *' ~... 1680
Upon whose weeping margent L C 39
or of weeping water " 304
Herds sUnd weeping P P 18 41
Weeplngly— acceptance weepingly
beseech'd L C 207
Weigh— Weighs not the dust Son 108 10
To weigh how once 1 suffer'd " 120 8
Whose white weighs down L C ..... 226
Welght^with his own weight goes R L 1494
to bear that weight in me Son 50 6
Weloome — Welcomes the warm ap-
proach Ki4 ...- 386
welcome to her princely guest R L ...» 90
that seem'd to welcome woe " ~... 1509
Makes summer's welcome Son .56 14
Then give nie welcome " 110 13
For she doth welcome daylight P P 15 7
Welcomed- Well was he welcomed R L ..... 51
Wellkre— Until her husband's.... " 263
And sick of welfare Son 118 7
Welkin— Against the welkin VA .... 921
in his fair welkin once appear R L 116
Well— As well as mine VA 117
majrst thou well be tasted " — . 128
Well-painted idol " 212
For knowing well, if there " ~... 245
a well-proportion'd steed " ~... 290
can so well defend her " ~... 472
I can be well contented " ..... 513
her thirsty lips well knew ** ..... 543
WELL
342
WERE
Well— and look well to her heart FA ~... 580
Thej that thrive well " «0
on thy well-breath'd horse *' ...~ 678
grief may be compared well ** „... 701
pleased her babe so well " ~... 974
resembling well his pale cheeks " 1169
cancelt'd ere well begun Jt L 26
Well was he welcomed " ~... 61
and thou art well appaid " 914
As well to hear as grant " ...» 913
• Well, well, dear ColUtlne " ...~ 1058
To imitate thee well " ~... 1137
than I can well express " 1286
peasants did so well resemble " ~... 1892
private widow well may keep Son 9 7
if it shall go well " 14 7
that like of hearsay well " 21 13
my well-contented day " 82 1
well of such a salv^ can spiak " 34 7
in whom all 111 well shows " 40 13
thy years full well befits " 41 3
iHS It ill or well *' 58 14
you for love speak well of me untrue " 72 10
To love that well " 73 14
being extant, well might show " 83 6
will be well esteem'd " 96 6
subject that before was well " 103 10
who calls me well or ill "112 3
Mine eye well knows ** 114 11
All this the world well knows; yet
none knows well " 129 13
yet well I know •* 130 9
For well thou know'st " 131 3
as well beseem thy heart " 132 10
ah, my love well knows " 139 9
then love doth well denote " 148 7
Well could he rido X C «... 106
With wit well blazon'd »• ~... 217
Well learned is that tongue that
well can thee commend PP 5 8
Fare well I could not "14 6
as well an well might be ** 16 2
As well as fancy ** 19 4
say thou loveat her well " 19 11
Simple were so well compounded P T 44
Well — quenched in a cool well by Son 154 9
all their fountains in my well L C «... 255
Clear wells spring not P P 18 37
Well -COB ton ted— my day Son 82 1
Well-doing— by the well-doing steed L C 112
Well-painted- Well-painted idol VA 212
To this well-painted piece R L 14*J
Well-proportlon'd— .... steed VA 290
Well-rellned— form of ... . pen Son 85 8
Well-aeeing— Lest eyes well-seeing " 148 14
Well-sklird— The workman R L ~... 1520
Well-tuned— the well-tuned warble " 1080
concord of well-tuned sounds Son 8 5
Wench— Know, gentle wench, it " 127 3
Went^ike a foul usurper .... about R L 412
'But tell me, girl, when went " 1275
goins: he went wilful-elow Son 51 13
on this side the verdict went L C 113
Wept— that his wound wept VA 1054
they have wept till now " 1062
Were — her cheeks were gardens " 65
So they were dew'd " 6t?
when her lips were ready " 89
Were I hard-favour'd " ...- 133
M
k(
U
U
M
U
U
Were— then I were not for thee VA ..
were it with thy hand felt " ..
So be were like him
And were I not immortal, life
were done
What were thy lips the worse
if himself were slain
As they were mad
Though I were dumb
Or were I deaf
that were but sensible
feeling were bereft me
but the very smell were left me
she lies as she were slain
Were never four such lamps
Were beauty under twenty locks
As if another chase were in the
skies
moulds fh>m h^iven that were
divine
heart were quite undone
were open'd to the light J
Or were he not my dear friend
between them twain there were
no strife
If ever man were moved
a spectacle It were
Were Tarquin Night, as he Is
which of the twain were better
alack, what were it
When both were kept for heaven
were cloud-eclipsed so
As 'twere encouraging the Greeks
About him were a press
with chaps and wrinkles were dis-
guised
that the skies were sorry
Were an all-eating shame
This were to be new made
Then, were not summer's distilla-
tion left
Beauty's effect with beauty were
bereft
Ten times thyself were happier
If all were minded so
O, that you were yourself
determination ; then you were
187
.»• 180
197
••••• 207
••••• 823
435
•••.• 436
438
•.... 473
489
M... 675
u
«••••
730
u
•••••
783
RL
•••••
105
CI
•«•••
234
«l
•••••
405
l<
*••••
687
Ift
mmmmm
631
M
••••«
785
»i
• ••••
1154
M
• ••••
1156
41
• ••••
1166
l«
•«•••
1224
U
•••••
1402
ii
•••••
1408
u
••••»
1452
<c
•••••
1524
Ikm
2
8
u
2
13
M
M
•I
(4
<i
t(
If it were fill'd with your
But were some child of yours alive
Were it not thy sour leisure *•
substance of my flesh were thought '*
sclf-loving were Iniquity
signs of fair were born
sepulchres, were shorn away
although their eyes were kind
They were but sweet
Were it not sinful then
For as you were when first
Ere you were born
and wish I were renew'd
The ills that wore not
That you were once unkind
Unless my nerves were brass
if you were by my unkindness
shaken
Were to import forgetfulness
were but the child of state "
Were 't aught to me
Or if it were, It bore
u
M
It
U
U
U
If
(t
It
•i
u
M
11
II
ft
6
11
6
9
11
7
13
1
13
6
17
2
17
18
39
10
44
1
62
12
68
3
68
6
69
11
98
11
103
9
104
2
104
14
111
8
118
10
120
1
120
4
120
5
122
14
124
1
125
1
127
2
VALOUR
336
VIEW
••••*
1158
•••■•
201
■••••
742
ao
8
63
7
•••••
1041
68
7
8M
■••••
75
18
36
*••••
635
•••••
249
88
12
•••••
184
•••••
274
•a«»«
1166
*•••«
550
*••••
782
8
9
8
11
*••••
771
•••••
967
76
2
•••••
21
103
10
TftlMV— Pat fear to Talour VA
True Tftlour still a tme respect **
TMish'd— bis .... loathed deUgbt B L
of man J a Tanish'd sight Son
or Tanish'd out of sight "
TaBfohetli — through her Hpa, 90.,,,RL
TanltlljBff— Are .... or vanish'd Son
Taaltj— Thy violent vanities £ L
Taaqnish^d— captive .... doth yield ^
Like a thousand vanquish'd men P P
Tantage — having thee at vantage V A
sense for vantage still R L
Doing thee vantage, doable-van-
tage me Son
Tapo«r— Like misty Tapoars V A
vapours doth he send **
melted like a vapour **
Which blows these pitchy Tapoars R L
misty vapours march so thick "
and breath a vapour is P P
Exhale this vapour vow *'
Taporovs— and foggy Night R L
Tariabia — variable passions throng VA
TarlatloB— So far from variation Son
Variety— pale with fresh variety VA
TarylMg— varying to other words Son
TaMwl— Obdurate vassals, fell ez-
ploiU R L ..... 429
From vassal actors ** — . 608
low vassals to thy state " ..... 666
the duteous vassal acarce is gone " 1360
Being your vassal Son 58 9
and vassal wretch to be *' 141 12
Taasalage— to whom in vassalage " 26 1
Tait— Vast sin-concealing chaos R L ..... 767
Taitly— like a late-€ack'd island,
vastly stood " ~... 1740
Yanlty— And in her vaulty prison " ..... 119
Taaat— Vaunt in their youthful sap Son 15 7
Telie«eBi— But she with vehement
prayers R L ..... 475
Tell— ' Bonnet nor veil VA 1081
beauty's veil doth cover Son 95 11
Teird— And, veil'd in them L C ..... 812
Vein— Her azure veins R L 419
uproar tempts his veins " 427
Whose ranks of blue veins " ~... 440
changed to black in every vein " 1454
to bludb through lively veins Son 67 10
In ray love's veins " 99 6
YelnM— These blue-vein'd vioIeU VA 123
Yelvetr— Like unshorn velvet L C 94
Through the velvet leaves PP 17 5
Venge— tovengetbiswrongof mine^Z ~... 1691
Yengeflil— A .... canker eat him up Son 99 13
Venom— His venom in effect R L 532
fair founts with venom mud ** 850
Venom*d— 'Gaiust venom'd sores VA 916
Yent— Free vent of words " 3:«
Through little vents and crannies R L 810
To make more vent for passage " 1040
Venture — on the liun he will .... V A »... 628
Ventaring— compass'd oft with .... *' 667
So that in venturing ill R L 148
YeniM— Sick-thoughted Venus VA 5
and by Venus' side " 180
•Ay rac,' quoth Venus " ~... 187
to swallow Venus' liking " ..... 248
in the night from Venus' eye " 816
TeniM— Venus salutes him
VA
.«..«
899
poor Venus noteth
•«
.....
1057
From Venus' doves doth challenge R L
....•
56
Venus with young Adonis
PP
11
1
Verbal- Make verbal repetition
VA
••••«
831
Verdlet- And by their verdict is de-
termined
Sim
46
11
On this side the verdict went
LC
113
Verdnre— their Terdure still endure VA
•••>•
507
VennillloB— Nor praise the deep . .
. . Son
98
lU
Verse— Who will believe my verse
«(
17
1
My loTc shall in my Terse
u
19
14
^ bcAuty to his Terse
u
21
2
that pour'st into my Terse
(4
88
2
by verse distills your truth
U
54
14
in hope my verse shall stand
u
60
13
you look upon this verse
M
71
9
Why is my verse so barren
M
76
1
such fair assistance in my vene
U
78
2
My verse alone had all
U
79
2
shall be my gentle verse
U
81
9
full sail of his great verse
a
86
1
my verse astonished
u
86
8
to no other pass my verses tend
u
108
11
than in my verse can sit
11
103
13
my verse to constancy confined
u
105
7
Very— nothing but the very smell
VA
•••••
441
shrieks,— 'tis very late
u
••••4k
531
in the very lists of love
u
•mmmm
ns
The very eyes of men
RL
— ••m
1383
tyrants to the very same
Son
5
3
The very part was consecrate
u
74
6
At first the very worst
u
90
12
the very birds are mute
u
97
12
say o'er the very same
u
106
6
and proved, a very woe
M
129
U
the very refuse ef thy deeds
U
150
6
Vestal— Love-lacking Testals
VA
•«•••
753
makest the Tcstal violate her oath R L
•••••
888
Vex— Thou canst not vex me
Son
92
9
am I that vex thee still
M
135
3
Vexation— The deep vexation
RL
•••••
1779
Vex'd— That is so with watching S(m 148
10
Vial— Make sweet some vial
M
6
3
Vice— When thus thy vices bud
RL
•••••
604
With inward vice
M
•••*•
1546
For canker vice
Son
70
7
have those vices got
li
95
9
If he be addict to vice
PP
21
43
Victor— A captive victor that hath R L
•••••
730
and both shall victors be
u
•••■•
1211
or victor being charged
Son
70
10
As victors, of my silence
t4
86
11
was victor of the day
PP
16
13
Victory — UU victories, his tri
■»
uraphs
VA
*••••
1014
arms and wreaths of victory
RL
••«••
110
After a thousand victories
Son
25
10
Must for your victory
LC
•■•••
258
View— wistly to view
VA
■••••
343
as murder'd with the view
M
]
1031
So, at his bloody view
t(
• ••«•
1037
Their view right on
RL
•••••
2t
Unto a view so false
*t
• ■•••
292
to my sightless view
Son
27
10
more blest may be the view
•4
56
12
a motley to the view
41
110
2
Who, in despite of view
(4
141
4
though I mistake my view
«4
148
11
■old cbeap whmt Is mMt d«*r
hiTowhil shall taxe no snil
To 1rb*t It varki In
Tur wlinl care 1
what It da(h cstch
wbtX with his EUil l> 'giwEhg
Whmt potloni bira I drunk
Theyknow wbM heiiiiir 1»
Yd whm the but ia
Willi nctd'it Ihou nouiid
Ihalluveanhal Ibvy daplM
irhit thou dott hkia
Wbit'isonttodu
Wb»t iBrBcni* Ihlukl In
Wbitliboulddoagmin
vbatruoiliDolwwiH
What Ibough h« frownlDg br
nhat-Whal though short,
Whrtl— gUdjr round ot Fartuno'a
I .... «n
> 19 «
»S 11
unbuk'd biHder
I be halb Inng
.he beheld faUahldoT
I ho via bf
, al CullaUuni
. Tlnuc br.gg'd
. beauty baart«d bluihe*
Wlien he hliDKir
When heavy tlwp
WhoD Ibou Bbalt cbaTKe me
Wkta— WhsD the om poi*, t
WlHtl
hnlh
*.»k^ror
»•»
whu
sbuhmdUld
»h«
Hin>
3>hjL
Whe
1.1= U
''' 'i" !" "^ ^ *
Wht
.lillj
Rraou! (ioti
ot
wIkI LI
«llat1i
cold
WheD
C' I *.'
WhulneUrDtdtlae*
But 'Uia \a a,L--
•hen mlaatiiltlD
■hen lioilj't "ork'i eipi
WhcD, In dl«en«:e
WbcD thu chnrl Dath
vben hemieii'i gnu ttlliKtb
lu IbfKir
When
Fdf *ben IhfH qulckvr
yibvn I •hall too
IVbea u ih)' Inic hutli eiat
-wbcn thouihihalniiigflf pi
■Whtu loTf, convened
When irbkt tietk
■vhfln from lh« 1 apeed
When tvift eitreialir
Whep nunmerthnMlh
WheDlhtlihullTidii
Then wulerut war ihill itit
*bcn the gmcluu
Bui when from htghmiaC pitch
VbeD c'crjr prltaui widow
whin than trvai juulb
Thin ! do couDt Die -clock
Wb«t> Tou ^monilK'.i U. men'i tjet "
81
Wbon Jl <ho IrciUifr!
81
when IhiT l>»'fl ■l'^«l««t
ea
When otbenwauliljilvu life
But when jQurcauDlcDOTico . "
w
■When thou »b.llb.dl>ro«a
KB
l.«lco.*.b..nl1.™wlU
M
W
When other pMlj grleh "
M
S2
When proud-triMI ApHI ■■
a
When I wu wont to greet "
when Tier nn.orufulhin.n.
when ii ]»ib iay addnl pnl»
103
wbenjuuloakinll "
103
IW
108
When Ijranla' creed *
whenamlhallcWd
loa
8
When n'
121
1
Whenm
11 impeich'd
•tend* leut
when iho
when ili<
i^nlly.wn
I!l>
8
M7 n>l)t
es%when.li
wilki
130
tt
when Ih; might
When all mj belt
VhC
*
nd.bre»ih
■hei
IVhe
Whe
uwlltlna
meet burn
.'he
Cjthete^ .11
When u thine i
J>P l»
7
Wb»n i:r*n tuth lui^hl her
m
When time ihiaiKr.*
»
Wh.nct— t>..m .!,:..[„■.. «t pleuup
An 48
IZ
wbencedhlstihoutteil
WbenahmibwIhK
" IM
ft
where I Ibt U. ip<
Fwd wbeni ibou
For There • btsn
'WheredldllMTur -Hvi
Where fMrfiilljr Ihe dogm
Where Ihrr irsljti lln'irolB
where no hnnth ihauU b«
Wberg.la, iwul»u|H
•her* herself lipfMl heheli
" IIM
- -... IIM
" _... IIM
" 1193
BL.... 13
" IM
lei " .... SH
■■ .._ ISO
It may Sod
e now I huTe
the iwef I hi nil ilug
■Wham no Kimtv mh «!»«
Where Ihou wnil wonl
whtraiuudiafulfll
prbcin where lH)realh(!d
-WheroihuUlllve
wkeres1ltfa3']<»ulrlles
WhertalUbetreMuru
Tor where in jhe
where ««T.O*l'dothdweU
b»rene«e>ery whore
where auUtul Time
e burled loTedolhllra
1jurli<l wlipre m; ly>l; it
where Ute Ibe (weet Mrdi ung
uid where Ihe^ did proceed
Time's spoils dispE:
longueduthpiiblli
Where Ume ind oi
L C 41
X L — I
" i
Son M
iR.fniiiinllbeeF'^ — Tai
klM " __. lim
Wherein li ilunp'd
WATCH
340
WEAKLY
Ji Mj •••••
M
H
Stm
44
109
135
154
u
Son
LC
VA
&4
It
RL
Son
GO
Watch— yLj heart doth charge the
watch PP 15
WatrklBg— That is MTox'd with Sim 148
Watckaaa— To play the watchman *" 61
W»tehworii--Which girea the .... R L -...
Wat«r^-She hathes in water VA ..-.
in water seen by night ** — .
As air and water ** —
atones diflaolred to water
And grare like water
no water thence proceeds
to bum his Troy with water
of earth and water wrought
bring water for my stain "
The sea, all water **
Lore's fire heats water, water cools **
That flame through water L C
to water will not wear **
or of weeping water **
Water-dropa — huge stones with
little water-drops R L
ffater-gall — These water-galls in
her dim element **
Watery— swan in her watery nest
a watery rigol goes
some watery token shows
win of the watery main
his watery eyes he did dismount
Ware — peering through a ware
ware like feather'd wings
Till the wild waves
Whose waves to imitate
Like as the waves make
Wafed— Who in a salt-waved ocean R L
IT avering— wavering stood in doubt L C
Wax— What wax so frozen VA
No more than wax R L
Softer than wax P P
Waxen— Whereat a waxen torch R L
men have marble, women waxen,
minds
From lips new-waxen pale
Waxeth — never waxeth strong
Wax-red — on my wax-red lips
Way — his lips another way
which way shall she turn
a thousand ways he seeks
whate'er is in his way
indenting with the way
discovery of her way
the bushes in the way
just in his way
This way she runs
bear her a thousand ways
unwilling portal yields him way R L
force must work my way
thou didst teach the way
seated from the way
determining which way to fly
tread the way out readily
to mourn some newer way
and look anotlier way
do not you a mightier way
o'ertake me in my way
should not stop my way
when I took my way
do I journey on the way
by-pa!(t perils in her way
And to her will frame all thy waysP P 19
ti
u
VA
••«••
t«
•••••
II
••«•■
II
•••••
•1
■••••
•1
11
•••••
II
•« •••
II
••••■
II
••■••
II
• ••••
II
•••••
RL
•••••
It
• ••••
It
••■••
11
•••••
ti
•••■•
11
It
•••••
Son
7
II
IG
u
34
II
44
II
48
II
LC
50
2
9
12
370
94
492
654
592
756
1552
1561
11
8
9
14
287
291
304
959
1588
1611
1745
1748
«*
281
86
306
819
1438
1
1231
97
565
1245
4
178
1240
1G63
4'iO
516
90
253
477
623
704
828
871
879
905
907
309
513
630
1144
1150
1152
1365
12
1
3
2
1
1
158
25
VA
RL
VA
RL
u
u
u
M
M
U
Soik
Way ward— to the wayward boy
Who wayward once
We — whereon we lean
know Dol what we mean
shall we meet to-morrow
Say, shall we? shall we
all for one we gage
▼entaring ill we leare to be
The things we are for that which
we expect
we have; so then we do
The thing we hare
that on lawn we lay
The sweets we wish for
that we call them ours
We hare no good that we can say
is ours
Will we find out ; and there we
will anfoM
of sorrow that we hear
that we may give redress
We are their offspring
the Capitol that we adore
We will revenge the death
creatures we desire increase
that we two must be twain **
yet we must not be foes **
in every blessed shape we know **
but fairer we it deem '*
Whether we are mended "
For we, which now behold **
with eager compounds we our
palate urge "
We sicken to shun sickness when
we purge
and therefore we admire
we before have heard them
and what we see doth lie
with ease we prove
by lies we flatter'd be
For when we rage
That we must curb it
The thing we have not
we will all the pleasures proTe P P
There will we sit upon the rocks
Weak— weak and silly mind
shall it make most weak
past reason's weak removing
arc the weak brain's forgeries
the weak mouse panteth
To whose weak riiins muster
In thy weak hive
Their father was too weak
Unprofitable sounds, weak arbi-
trators
The weak oppressed
my poor self weak
W>ak words, so thick come
from weak minds proceeds
lends but weak relief
though more weak in seeming **
Weak sights their sickly radiance L C
age is weak and old P P
Weak-bailt— Though hopes R L
Weakem— W^hose strength's abun-
dance weakens his own heart 8im
Weaker— And far the weaker R L
Weakling— Myself a weakling «
Weakly— Are weakly fortress'd •*
1095
— 125
— 126
58S
086
148
149
152
— 155
258
....« ODO
».M 873
••■••
1146
•■■»•
1128
•■•••
1608
•■•••
1757
••■••
18»
•■•••
1841
1
1
86
1
40
14
53
12
M
S
59
11
M
M
LC
u
M
M
VA
u
RL
M
U
U
M
M
M
Son
106 13
118 S
118 4
123 5
123 8
123 11
136 7
138 14
M... lOv
.... 163
240
20 2
20 5
.... 1016
1145
— 243
460
.... 555
... 720
.... Suw
.... 6pc
1017
1242
1646
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.... 1825
84 11
102 1
.... 214
12 7
.... 130
28 4
1647
.... Oov
Which vheu bei nd-tHboldlDs
'Whlcli Bpwelilui Vit oT bit "
napirbfchilccp Imjmulon bean "
inikli leeDU lu werp *
thktuhtcb lioo pulTiHeil
Thit lite ■wu Tulna aliicb thoa
hutbsrndcpri'nl "
-Whkbihiitaaciirlr
raw, whicb Brutut jnide beTon "
Whk-h beipg Jone •lib epMdy
"Vblcb, uwd, llvua &
:ccl
unfair •
Willi:!! bippicslhuse
iiutl which ihnu Kcciiot
Wblch ID iriair ihould ba tb;
ittim Tbiit wblcb lUgu dcpiitiai
llood which jDuogl^ihou bold
Which bounteous gift
Wblcb cnt from beat
bcautj wbLch jou boJd la leue
Which huibnriilrv in M.iujiir
Whlcblhl. Tim..', p^u.rll
Which hides v<>itr lire
WhlchitviiliiDi^u'iTj'ci
Which Jutbrbruut
thjr bitn. which wiUlifpp
'Which in mj boeoiD'a liiop
bnlTMgmitwUIcliwiKu
dukDos which Lhu blind do
Which, like > jrwcl hung in
Which I oew-pnj
at thai which Ii
I— Which, Iibooring Ibr I
which cocB heforo
lUnt nhiub Blv.'i thee ill thr might
100
1
£iuce fint I uw jron fregh, which
ypl lire green
hucwhlchmclblnluniiidolh
lud
IM
IS
Thi«>ll>ciD»inaDo,whlebi
drouiiK^ponffurd.
105
Which ihree 111! noil
For Wl', which now behold
10*
IS
Which halh not Ak"»'1
^iil. .l,lch in Ihj br,..« d.)ll
Us "
111. '.in. wl.f.hpNbik'iiiiuiii'n breed) •
111
4
l«e.h«i. •
M
IS
th«.-..rrn-v.-|,icli <hendldfNl
130 t
>l<hr.t.l.lcht).uu hut done
sslTe»ln.li-i.-™n<l.^llHK,inillta
thief whlcli sourly robs from me '
Which (houKh It slier not
30
ISI 8
those old nine which rbrmen in-
Which ,l,allj.U.vMhal
TOCRt«
SO
10
Which ...-li.i™ !,■».,■•
ThsC due to thee which thou de-
m 14
30
Which pr.)?e tnoni short
1» 4
Which time (Ddthouehti
80
Which 1. no. Mll'd
lis 11
Which hes.ilx Ini smiwcr.
SO
Ups, which should thnt hsrrnt
ThowblL-hhewillnot
Which mjr hesrt knows
" W7 10
■wsrdrohi! which the n>bc doth hide
tbsl which Bin before
"US 7
omwncfil which ituth doih giir*
thst which dies from thee
" I4S B
odour which doth in It liTo
M
Which like two tpiiitt
IM 2
Which but to^»T
For thit which longer nurtelh
HJ S
Which psrU the share
that which doth piwcrra
winter, which, being full of cirs
M
13
Desire is desth, which phasic did
WHICH
349
WHO
Which— Which have no correspond-
eace
Son 148
2
Which borrow'd from this holy fire "
153
5
a seething bath which jet men
prore
(1
153
7
Which many legions
II
154
6
Which from Love's fire
II
154
10
Which fortified her visage
LC
••■••
9
Which on it had
II
•«•••
16
Which one by one
II
•••*•
88
Which she perused
II
•••••
44
Which may her sufibring
11
•••••
69
objects which abroad they find
li
• •••«
137
landlord which doth owe them
II
•••••
140
proofs new -bleeding, which re-
mained the foil
II
••••■
153
Which late her noble suit
u
••«••
234
the place which did no form receive "
••«••
241
accident which brought me to her
eye
li
»•••«
247
water which their hue encloses
14
• ••••
287
heart which in his level came
il
•••■•
309
Which, like a cherubin
II
•••••
819
flre which in his cheek so glow'd
U
•••■•
324
Which is to me some praise
PP
5
10
Which, not to anger bent
11
5
12
Which by a gift of learning
M
16
14
That which with scorn
II
19
18
Which a grove of myrtles made
II
21
4
While-While she Ukes all
VA
•«•••
564
while now it sleeps alone
II
•••••
786
While lust and murder wakes
RL
•••••
168
winks while Orpheus plays
II
••«••
653
While in his hold-fast foot
u
• ••*•
655
While Lust is in his pride
M
*»••«
705
dies while the physician sleeps
II
•••••
904
pines while the oppressor feeds
U
• ••••
905
feasting while the widow weeps
M
«•*••
906
■porting while Infection breeds
II
•••••
907
While thou on Tereus descant'st
M
•••••
1134
while others saucily
II
•••«•
1848
While CoUatine and his consorted
lords
II
•••••
1609
While with a joyless smile
U
•«•«•
1711
While thou dost breathe
Son
38
2
While shadows like to thee
ti
61
4
While comments of your praise
u
85
2
Now, while the world is bent
•1
90
2
While he insults
li
107
12
While Philomela sits and sings
PP
15
5
WkOe-'in a breathing-while
VA
••■••
1142
A pretty while these pretty crea-
tures stand
RL
••**•
1233
a litUe while doth stay
u
•••••
1364
came in her mind the while
u
• *•••
1536
But if the while I think
Sim
30
13
While*— And whiles against a thorn R L
•••••
1136
Wkllst— Whilst I, whom fortune
8Mi
25
3
Whilst that this shadow
u
37
10
Whilst I. my sovereign, watch
u
57
6
whilst thou dost wake elsewhere
u
61
13
Whilst I alone did call
u
79
1
Whilst he upon your
M
80
10
whilst other write good words
U
85
5
Whilst, like a willing patient
U
111
9
Whilst it hath thought
M
119
6
Whibt my poor lips
U
128
7
Whilst her neglected chiki
M
143
5
Whilst I thy babe
M
143
10
Son 154
S
PP 21
29
" 21
M
Whilst— Whilst many nymphs
Whilst as fickle Fortune
Whilst thou hast wherewith
Whirlwimd— My sighs, like whirl-
winds R L »... 586
Whisper— whispers in mine ear V A ^.., 659
She whispers in his ear " ...^ 1125
Whlfperlng^. . . . conspirator R L 769
Whit— my love no whit disdaineth Son 83 13
White— More white and red VA 10
best ; and being white " 77
How white and red " «... 846
So white a friend engirts so white
a foe " 8W
a whiter hue than white *' .... 898
was it not white *" .... 643
whose wonted lily white " .... 1063
chequer'd with white " .... 1168
clear unmatched red and white R L .... 11
sUin that o'er with silver-white ** .... 56
in that white intituled " 57
the red should fence the white ** .... 63
beauty's red and virtue's white ** .... 65
love's modest snow-white weed *' .... 196
Then white as lawn " .... 259
coverlet; whose perfect white *' .... 394
her snow-white dimpled chin ** .... 420
Who o'er the white sheet " .... 472
Like a white hind " .... 542
Till with her own white fleece " .... 678
like the snow-white swan " ....1011
his beard all silver-white " 1405
all silvered o'er with white Son n 4
with white and bristly beard '* 12 8
wonder at the lily's white ** 98 9
shame, another white despair " 99 9
A third, nor red, nor white " 99 10
If snow be white ** 130 8
roaes damask'd red and white " 130 6
In bloodless white L C .... 201
Whose white weighs down ** .... 226
There my white stole of chastity ** ..» 297
Or to turn white and swound ^ .... 806
than her milk-white dove PP 9 3
Let the priest in surplice white P T .... 13
Whitenew— upon their .... stood VA — . 1170
Whiter— a whiter hue than white ** .... 399
peers her whiter chin R L .... 472
Whither— she knows not whither F^ .... 904
Who— Who blush'd and pouted ** .... 33
Who, being looked on ** .... 87
Who conquers where he comes ** ..» 100
As who should say " .... 280
hairs, who wave like feather'd
wings " ..... 806
Who sees his true^ove ** «... 397
Who U so faint ** 401
Who wears a garment ** .... 415
Who plucks the bud ** .... 416
For who hsth she ** .... 847
Who doth the world " 857
Who shall cope him first ** 888
Who, overcome by doubt ** «.« 891
Who when he lived " 935
eyelids, who, like sluices, stopp'd ** ..... 9i56
Asstrivingwhosluniliiljest become " .... 968
Who is but drunken *" .... 984
To wail his death who lives and ** — 1017
Who bids them still ** 104J
WHO
350
WHOSE
Who— Who, like a king VA .... 104S
They both would strire who lint
should dry his tears ** .... 1092
Who did Dot whet his teeth ** 1118
W^ho buys a minute's mirth R L .... 213
who will the vine destroy *' «... 215
Who fears a sentence ** .... ?44
Then who fears sinking " .... 280
Who, flatter'd by their leader's " .... 296
As who should say " .... 820
Who with a lingering stay " .... 828
Who sees the lurking serpent '* .... 862
Who, therefore angry •* .... 888
Who, like a foul usurper " .... 412
Who, peeping forth " .... 447
Who, angry that the eyes " .... 461
Who o'er the white sheet " .... 472
Who seek to stain ** .... 655
W^ho this accomplishment *' .... 716
Who in their pride " ..... 864
For who so base " .... 1000
He shall not boast who did thy
stock pollute " .... 1063
Who wayward once, his mood *' .... 1095
Who, being stopp'd " ....1119
Who, if it wink " .... 1139
Who, having two sweet babes ** 1161
Who in a salt-waved ocean " .... \tM
And who cannot abuse " .... 1267
Who nothing wants " .... 1459
And who she finds forlorn " .... 1500
Who finds his Lucrece " 1585
Who, like a late-sack'd island " 1740
Who, road that sorrow •• 1781
Who should weep most " 1792
air, who, holding Lucrece* life " .... 1805
Brutus, who pluck'd the knife " .... 1807
Who, wondering at him " .... 1845
Or who is he so fond Son 8 7
chide thee, who confounds "87
Who, all in one " 8 12
Who for thyself " 10 2
Who lets so fair a house " 18 9
Who will believe my verse " 17 1
Who heaven itself " 21 8
Who with his fear is put besides " 23 2
Who plead for love " 28 11
Let those who are in favour " 25 1
Who all their parts of me " 81 11
For who's so dumb " 88 7
him here who doth hence remain " 89 14
Who lead thee in their niot " 41 11
Who even but now come back " 45 11
Or who his spoil of beauty " 65 12
Who is it that says most " 84 1
Who, moving others, are " 94 8
what care I who calls me " 112 3
who have lived for crime " 124 14
lovely boy, who in thy power " 126 1
Who hast by waning grown " 126 8
At such who, not born fair "127 11
Who, in despite of view " 141 4
Who leaves unsway'd "141 11
night, who like a fiend " 145 11
Who art as black as hell " 147 14
Who hat«th thee " 149 5
Who taught thee how to make " 150 9
Yet who knows not conscience " 161 2
who ever shunn'd by precedent L C .... 155
LC
(I
II
Who— Who disciplined, ay, dieted
Who glazed with crystal gate
Who, young and simple
Whoever— Whoever plots the sin
Whoe'er keeps me, let my heart
Whoever haih her wish "
Whole— My heart all whole as thine V A
RL
Son
whose whole is swallow'd
Stood for the whole
He pays the whole, and yet am I
Whom — And whom he strikes
part; through whom he rushes
From whom each lamp
To whom she speaks
The powers to whom I pray
To whom she sobbing speaks
by whom thy fair wife bleeds
Let those whom Nature
Look, whom she best endow'd
Whilst I, whom fortune
my love, to whom in vassalage
in whom all ill well shows
to whom my jewels trifles are
Or me, to whom thou gavest it
him whom thou dost hate
to whom I am confined
O'er whom thy fingers walk
Whom thine eyes woo
On whom frown'st thou
did win whom he would maim
*Gainst whom the world
Thou for whom Jove would swear
Whose — Whose sinewy neck
breath, whose gentle wind
Whose hollow womb renounds
■Whose beams upon his hairless
Whose precious tast€
Whose vulture thought
love, whose leave exceeds
Whoso tushes never sheathed
Whose full perfection
Under whose sharp fangs
Whose blood upon the fresh
sickness, whose attaint
theirs whose desperate hands
Under whose simple semblance
Whose ridges with the meeting
from whose silver breast
whose swelling dugs do ache
Whose frothy mouth
whose tender horns being hit
flank ; whose wonted lily white
Whose tongue is music now
Under whose brim
Whose downward eye
doves, by whose swift aid
Within whose face
Whose inward ill
her whose light exccUeth thine
• Whose crime will bear
Between whose hills
coverlet; whose perfect white
Whose ranks of blue veins
Whose grim aspect sets every
Whose crooked beak threats
To whose weak ruins muster troops
Then they whose whole is
Whose love of either
By whose example
RL
Son
VA
133
135
134
II
It
II
jB Jj ....
II
Son
II
II
u
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
LC
PP
K
VA
II
II
II
II
41
II
It
II
II
II
II
II
11
11
25
26
40
48
87
89
110
128
142
149
8
17
II
II
II
41
II
II
II
II
II
II
RL
II
M
II
11
II
II
II
It
U
41
261
28G
820
879
11
1
870
1159
1428
14
624
630
861
918
349
1088
1824
9
11
8
1
13
5
10
14
12
11
10
6
812
2
15
99
189
268
487
548
651
668
617
634
663
665
741
765
795
820
855
875
901
1033
1053
1077
1088
1106
1190
52
91
191
224
890
S94
440
452
608
720
1168
1166
1194
WHOSE
351
WILD
Wk<Me— Whose swift obedience to
her mistresB hiee J
But they whose guilt
Whose wares to imitate
SlnoD, whose enchanting storj
Whose words, like wildfire
Whose deed hath made herself
Whose fresh repair
she so fair whose unear'd womb
Whose speechless song
Whose strength's abundant
Then thou, whose shadow
the rich, whose blessed key
you, whose worthiness gives scope
Whose action is no stronger
Whose influence is thine
In whose confine immured
my thought, whose lore to you
That lore is merchandised whose
rich esteeming
Time, whose million'd accidents
Whose worth's unknown
wood whose motion sounds
As those whose beauties
Wilt thou, whose will
her whose busy care is bent
for whose dear lore I rise
a hill whose concare womb
Upon whose weeping margent
Whose bare out-bragg'd the web
Kot one whose flame
emerald, in whose fresh regard
Whose white weighs down
Whose rarest barings
Whose sights till then were
to thee is dear, wttose hearenly
touch
whose deep conceit b soch
Lore, whose month wss erer May
By shallow riren by whose Calls
To whose sound chaste wings
Why— why art thou coy
why not lips on lips
why do«t abhor me
why tboukist tbou feed
Why. there I»re lired
* why dust thou f«el it
*Wby. whatof thai
Why hast tboQ cast
why then I know
Or why Li OjUatine
* Why hunt I tkm f>>r colour
* Why shoaM the w/nn istmde
* Why hath thy terra&t
* Why wr>rk*4< tt^n «Mrhi^
why qairer'iit th/i*! at this
Why pry'nt 1^02 thrrn^h
For why her laoe
Why her two mint
Kor why h^ ficr '.iiHtks
Why sIkwU tM^ f^.T^itt ykttunrt
why sbmoM 10 Bcsay £sJ
Priaa. why ar: \!j>'/^ 'JA
Why an th«c :ii z« aztir^
And why WA X fr.«]. w'jk
* W^y. Cflfla«:»«t. a« w >t 'Jm: •ar*
why 4ost :)b>£ wp^.tri
ni)|3csi<d. v^.r ^Mi. 'Jwa a/UiMt
r, wky 4-jc Uim tittt
RL
...- 1215
u
.... 1842
u
1438
u
«... 1521
H
1523
u
..... 15M
Son
8 8
««
8 5
u
8 13
M
23 4
U
43 5
U
52 1
"
52 13
u
65 4
M
78 10
U
frl 3
U
85 n
u
102 8
u
ll.'S 5
u
116 8
u
128 2
M
131 2
M
135 5
M
143 6
M
151 14
LC
1
M
««••• Ar
M
95
M
191
U
213
M
TX
»t
— 235
M
— 282
PP
8 5
I*
8 7
U
17 2
u
20 7
PT
4
VA
^^»m ^^
M
120
W
— 13«
M
— \m
u
— 246
u
— x:%
M
— 717
M
-.- V,\
«*
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EL
— »
•»
vr*
s*
— w»
•»
«... ys2
U
~... w*
U
\«aft
Iw
!'#»
1»
— 1222
*
.... iru
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«k
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t
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•>
. lV0^
■r
... s«n
JV»
4 ;
«
4
is
4 7
M
ti
tl
M
Why— why hear*st thou music sadly 80m
Why lorest thou that which
Why didst thou promise
Since why to lore
why should I haste me thence
Why should false painting
Why should poor beauty **
Why should he lire **
But why thy odour matcheth not **
Why is my rcrse so barren **
Why with the time do I not **
Why write I still all one **
my judgement knew no reason why **
why, fearing of Time's tyranny **
For why shouki others' false adul-
terate eyes
why are frailer spies
why then her breasts are dun
Why of eyps' falsehood
Why should my heari think
Why dost thou pine within
Why so large cost
why of two oaths' breach
why 'twss beautiful and hard
* why was not I a flofjd
For why thou leffst me "
For why I crared nothing **
For why she sigh'd **
Wleke4— to scratch her wicked Uit R L
shouki bear a wicked mind **
Wkkedly-wickedly he sUlks
WMe— small head and nfjstril wfale VA
Upon the wide wound
the dorir he opens wide
To the wide world
my drofjping tjt\id» open
wide as the ocean is
Of the wide world
thb wide unlr*T«« I call
tlMi wide world's eomuK/n place
tb<mgb thy pro/tid heart go wide
Wld#«— whil^ the wUUiW weeps
to wet a wUlffw't #rye
The world will he thy wid^yw
When er^ry private widow ••
WI4«w*4— Uke wid'/w'd wz/mU "
Wield — y'Mthful »ffb* hrijTkt w«9^
ons wi«rtd B L
Wifip^-t// work opr/o his wife **
I wss a loyal wife **
iii that 'ib worthy wife ••
9lMMi^»UY'l b-tc'Ahd iff the wife **
ff/r 4a-'*;rt.**'f or f'^r wife *•
t^vAk, f ^//.utlu^ '«bA ws« fAy wife **
* My 4*/*/ht/T' and 'lay wife *•
* a»y da/jjfht^r ' anid * ssy wife *•
Thy wf*^^.^ wife M,i«t''>'/k *•
\\^ d*«t»f '^ •J.U %T-l^. wife •*
lik« a u*»x*r>t» wife
Wkf%t^-^Ui^rit^y/rM t4 th* Uit^nA
wlarii*.*
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352
WILL
Wild— Youth is wild, and age i» tame PP
Wilder-Wilder to him than tigen R L
Wlldemem— Pleads, in a wlldernees **
Wlldflre— Whose words like wUdfire **
Wlldly-8he wildly breaketh VA
Wildly determining which way R L
Wlldmem— than tigers in their ....
(I
12 8
..... 980
..:.. 544
..... 1523
~... 1160
wile— The wiles and guiles PP 19 87
Wllftl-wilful and unwiUing VA 865
his wilful eye he tired E L ~... 417
By wilful taste of what &m 40 8
Wllftilly— doth wilfully appear " 80 8
WIlAilnem— Book both my wilfuIneM" 117 9
Wllftal-tlow— going he went .... " 61 13
Will— ril smother thee with kisses VA 18
A summer's day will seem ** ..... 23
Perforce will force it " 72
And I will wink " .... 122
I will enchant thine ear " ..... 145
light, and will aspire ** ..... 150
will draw me through the sky " ..... 15.')
ril sigh celestial breath " 189
I'll make a shadow ** ..... 191
I'll quench them with my tears " ..... 192
rU gire it thee again " 209
For men will kiss ** ..... 216
he will not in her arms be bound " «... 226
I'll be a park ** 231
her object will away *' ..... 255
will set the heart on fire ** ~... 388
•nor will not know it " ..... 409
and I will not owe it ** ..... 411
it will not ope the gate *' ..... 424
Will never rise, so he will kiss her
stUl •• 480
If you will say so *' ..... 536
That she will draw ** ..... 552
'this night ril waste " .... 583
He will not manage her *' .... 598
good queen, it will not be ** 607
on the lion he will venture ** .... 628
world wUl hold thee " .... 761
you will fall again ** .... 769
will not let a false sound enter '* 780
now I will away " 807
will have him seen no more ** .... 819
now she will no further " 905
The Destinies will curse thee " .... 945
will ever strive to kiss you " .... 1082
Wherein I will not kiss " .... 1188
That it will live RL .... 203
the scandal will survive *' .... 204
the herald will contrive " .... 206
who will the vine destroy ** .... 215
Will he not wake " .... 219
Whose crime will bear " .... 224
Will not my tongue be mute ** .... 227
I'll beg her love " .... 241
will not be dismay'd " 273
will not incline " .... 292
this night-owl will catch " .... 860
my attempt will bring " .... 491
some worthless slave of thine I'll
slay " "... 515
that will never be forgot " .... 536
*How will thy shame be seeded " .... 603
*This deed will make thee ' " .... 610
will prison false desire " .... 642
. I will not hear thee " .... 667
Win— The scar that will, despite of
cure, remain J
with weeping will unfold
The light will show
Will quote my loathsome trespass
will tell my story
Will couple my reproach
Will tie the hearers
upon his silver down will stay
I will not wrong
never will dispense
* I will not poison thee
I will not paint
that light will borrow
will strain a tear
I'll hum on Tarquin still
Will fix a sharp knife
Will we find out ; and there we will
unfold
Will slay the other
His leaves will wither
' Yet die I will not
to Tarquin Fli bequeath
I'll bequeath unto the knife
The one will live
wUl kill myself *
are they form'd as marble will
each little mote will peep
it will soon be writ
I'll tune thy woes
wounds will not be sore
this night I will inflict
I'll murder straight, and then 111
slaughter thee
this act will bo
That they will suffer
We will revenge the death
Will be a tatter'd weed
will be the tomb
Will play the tyrants
The world will wail thee
world will be thy widow
Who will believe
I will not praise
I, not for myself, but for thee will
I will keep so chary
all naked, will bestow
for their style I'll read
WMll sourly leave her
thus I will excuse ye
what excuse will my poor beast
Towards thee I'll run
he will not every hour survey
To what you will
That Time will come
will steal his treasure
Thy glass will show
thy mind's imprint will bear
thy glass will truly show
will give thee memory
will hold me up afloat
each part will be forgotten
against myself I'll fight
will be a gainer too
will bear all wrong
And I will comment
and I straight will halt
As I'll myself disgrace
I will acquaintance strangle
RL
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r**4 •w«i]>-.i viii.
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■WhOT!.|.l L .. - 'Sub
WbtRbmili-mbintlM* ' 81
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WbrnmDruliUn.ubiiltal
WlKR, lot btlWHu Ibem both
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froialberiubn ■lLeiel>ll<(
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IS
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—
t»
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^rela U •hull dbam " — I
ireinbrnilunUiaT delight " .._ W7
Whmt— Whit merit llTsd in m
SiiTe vtait 1> tiAii
vhllli» Alrtwlj 4J]fDt
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'yMKhntufibw
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whmt wotUi In fou doth gitn
what in rail Is vrit
irb*t nMura mida
WHEN
1'hitthouglnhB.triro PF IS »
u.n.™n»»ni»ln P T .... ♦»
r-irhiit<!'er1«inUl»*»T VA es3
1 vbktf'er thou wUt Sat 19 6
■frlhj tlioughta ■" »3 11
Irr-Tlll wbiUoeToriUr " IC »
Wblt poUoni t
■Wb»l-'.-Ub«
Slit, •rh'n big glKitonpya
" 3M
«l.enin]>l•^«hllI»I'
" 483
" .... 6)0
WbculiodidfruwD
" .... 571
.hIlw»h.>D)»dulbft«t
WheiUli™dlJ.(tl»l04
Aud wbon tliou liiut QD root
' ..,, tmt
!D tilou iball cburtte mi
en -virtue )■ proCined
when de*th Uta oi
m*a— And wheo Ibou comnt FP 1»
Whan cnft lulh tia^hl ber " 19
Wben Una >lllll Kne " i»
WluD liiua vllb age " I)
TTknn— Frum whoiir" ai plMHre S» 4S
wbeiMWilidU [houitul " M
Whence hul IbcHi tl
■ YA _.
And when >h
cnoqucn ohc
where
When did I
Wbefoftsrhillylhadogi " -.
-where thej Tiuw'd ^'U'^li -^itn.^r's " «,
"WherefhCTTal^HThHr-oiBde " -.
-wherejio bmch ihuuld be " -.
where heiKlf herw-lf beheld " ..
where II tbouldjiiMUnL'inut " -
to FniiliuS where Iheirnueen " „
u bright RL ...
11 belw<^
larcd Mlitlniu Uet -
Vhftt,
Where Ibrir deu^ivernon
Where ihoq irllh (itlience
In ■ wlhivrucM whure aro nolawi
Where iohjecu- cy« d« Warn
Khool wher; T.u't aball karn
where tbe tweel birds ^nl
where hU sull laty 'be nblaJned
Where no cSiMlKClin give
■Where thou WMt wont
There 7nu .did fulfil
prlnn where iLhreatbed
WhureibjiU live
where abui.riauo>ll.-»
where ell thf beaut; Uo
Where all the treaiure
For where li she
where burled ]uv«<l»lh Ura
fullowi where thou art
Where bou an tnrrai
whore Uiuu dual etar
whenshewouldbs
S»'« where ihou art not
Fmra when thou arl
where IwoeanlracLEd new
S«YiM>l>erejou«ra
Ik where rou LUl
1»edllilh>n where, aWk
biiti.<d where mjr b-iy li
vhi-irlale Iheiweel blnliUDf
miil «heru llivy Jilt proceed
When breath moat breaifaea
Where cheekg need blood
owlllit «l
Hi«rd *l
HiUpUn
.mtol
r party li
Where ell tta»e pleainrvi lire J
ATirctwhereAduBUMd
Where her IBIIh wm ermljr fli'd
Wherefbre— But .... do pot jou
portly
vhereof In Lucrcc* view
Tli«Tvof IK jrni rnide
irkan-tkrinfli-
irhtma-When
,-unw«le>D VA ~... m
...tlivMD am
aallbundiidotleme"
:iFUh to
iTtlilitwtb
PP 21 M
VA -... 1113
thB7 know not whvtlier " -... 3IH
VtKthiirJlJilbitihii j;^.... s;s
TbTuhelhrrbewily, birth ,%n ST S
Vbcther Ire are nienilfll, or wh».
therlKtWrlbo/ " M 11
Whflliur thehunr.. i,y liim
And vbelbH tliitt in]> mngel
nlJlIi
m«tt*Ul-tM slielU'lh itUI
Tlkih-Wbk-h bml <••(■!■■ brautr
Whh>blong1»T<in<n*d
Ihat vhicb thou unosk'il ihill hi
-which way ihallibi.. turn
HhJrO.Khlehiooniliillj' Rllitei
i«»ri,irhlthihoriivUki!b«rere« " .... aeu
Which luliUapwch " — . 4S3
'Whioli cunniiiB Inra - .... 4TI
ben. -wbkb through lb« cr7«t«l
.... «1T
ITS
Which purcbue if ihixi inik<
The *h<<-h. bj Cupld'i 1k>«
elftcU wbJch she Ln blta t
To which Love'i oyM
. »ia
WHICH
ilhewlilchhagoe* CJ .-
Which Tlrtue g*(e
Wbleh T«rquln tIcw'
Which far eiceedi
tbalwhii'b the]- pAUDM
That tyn whlcb blm boboUla
Which once comipled
Which drlrei Ibe creeping tblBC
b™ri, -which J-0Bdd«lra
rs these pitch; npourt "
WHO
350
WHOSE
Who— Who, like a kiDg VA 104S
They both would striTe who firat
should dry his tears ** ...~ 1092
Who did not whet his teeth " ...^ 1118
Who buys a minute's mirth R L .... 213
who will the vine destroy " -.., 215
Who fears a sentence ** «... 5^44
Then who fears sinking ** ..... 280
Who, flatter'd by their leader's " ..... 296
As who should say " .... 820
Who with a lingering stay *• 828
Who sees the lurking serpent '* .... 362
Who, therefore angry " .... 888
AVho, like a foul usurper *' .... 412
Who, peeping forth " .... 447
Who, angry that the eyes " .... 461
Who o'er the white sheet ** . 472
Who seek to stain ** .... 655
Vfho this accomplishment ^ .... 716
Who in their pride •* .... 864
For who so base ** .... 1000
He shall not boast who did thy
stock pollute *' .... 1063
Who wayward once, his mood " .... 1095
Who, being stopp'd " 1119
Who, If it wink " .... 1139
Who, having two sweet babes *' 1161
Who in a salt-waved ocean " .... 12:{1
And who cannot abuse ** .... 1267
Who nothing wants '* 1459
And who she finds forlorn " .... 1500
Who finds his Lucrece " .... 1585
Who, like a late-«ack'd island " 1740
Wlio, mad that sorrow *• ..... 1781
Who should weep most " 1792
air, who, holding Lucrece' life " 1805
Brutus, who pluck'd the knife " .... 1807
Who, wondering at him " .... 1845
Or who is he so fond Son 3 7
chide thee, who confounds "87
Who, all in one " 8 12
Who for thyself " 10 2
Who lets so fair a house " 13 9
Who will believe my verse " 17 1
Who heaven Itself " 21 3
Who with his fear is put besides " 23 2
Who plead for love " 23 11
Let those who are In favour " 25 1
Who all their parts of me " 81 11
For who's so dumb " 88 7
him here who doth hence remain " 89 14
Who lead thee in their viot " 41 11
Who even but now come back •* 46 11
Or who his spoil of beauty " 65 12
Who is it that says most " 84 1
Who, moving others, are " 94 3
what care I who calls me " 112 3
who have lived for crime •* 124 14
lovely boy, who in thy power " 126 1
Who hast by waning grown " 126 3
At such who, not born fair ** 127 11
Who, in despite of view " 141 4
Who leaves unsway'd "141 11
night, who like a fiend " 145 11
Who art as black as hell " 147 14
Who hat^th thee " 149 6
Who taught thee how to make " 150 9
Yet who knows not conscience " 151 2
who ever shunn'd by precedent L C .... 155
Who— Who disciplined, ay, dieted L C .... 261
Who glazed with crystal gate " .... 286
Who, young and simple " ^. 820
Whoever— Whoever plots the sin R L . 879
Whoe'er keeps mc, let my heart Scm 133 11
Whoever hath her wish " 135 1
Whole— My heart all whole as thine F ^4 .... 870
whose whole Is swallow'd RL 1159
Stood for the whole •' «... 1428
He pays the whole, and yet am I Son 134 14
Whom- And whom he strikes VA .... 624
part; through whom he rushes " .... 600
From whom each lamp " .... 861
To whom she speaks " .... 918
The imwers to whom I pray R L .... 849
To whom she sobbing speaks " .... 1088
by whom thy fair wife bleeds " .... 1824
I^t those whom Nature S(m 11 9
IxK>k, whom she best cndow'd " 11 11
Whilst I, whom fortune " 25 3
my love, to whom in vassalage " 26 1
in whom all ill well shows " 40 13
to whom my jewels trifles are " 48 5
Or me, to whom thou gavcst it " 87 10
him whom thou dost hate " 89 14
to whom I am confined " 110 12
O'er whom thy fingers walk ** 128 11
Whom thine eyes woo " 142 10
On whom frown*st thou " 149 6
did win whom he would maim Z C .... 812
'Gainst whom the world PP Z 2
Thou for whom Jove would swear " 17 15
Whose — Whose siuewy neck V A .... 99
breath, whose gentle wind " .... 189
Whose hollow womb resounds " .... 268
Whose beams upon his hairless " .... 487
Whose precious taste " .... 548
Whose vulture thought " ...„ 651
love, whose leave exceeds " .... 568
Whose tushes never sheathed " .... 617
Whose full perfection " 634
Under whose sharp fangs " .... 663
W^hose blood upon the fresh " 665
sickness, whose attaint " .... 741
theirs whose desperate hands " .... 765
Under whose simple semblance " .... 795
Whose ridges with the meeting " .... 820
from whose silver breast " .... 855
whose swelling dugs do ache " 875
Whose frothy mouth " ...» 901
whose tender horns being hit " .... 1033
flank ; whose wonted lily white " 1053
Whose tongue is music now " .... 1077
Under whose brim " ...^ 10B8
Whose downward eye " 1106
doves, by whose swift aid " ... 1190
Within whose face R L . 52
Whose inward ill " .... 91
her whose light excelleth thine ** .... 191
• Whose crime will bear " .... 224
Between whose hills " .... 890
coverlet ; whose perfect white " .... 894
Whose ranks of blue veins " 440
Whose grim aspect sets every " 452
Wh(»e crooked beak threats " 508
To whose weak ruins muster troops" 720
Then they whose whole is " .... 1159
WTiose love of either " .... 1165
By whose example " .... 1194
WHOSE
351
WILD
If h<we— Whose swift obedience to
her mlBtreas biee JZ L ...» 1215
But tbej wboee guilt ** ...~ 1342
Whoee waves to imitate " 14S8
SiDon, whose encbaatlng storf *' ~... 1521
Wbose words, like wildfire " 1523
Whose deed hath made herself ** ~... 1566
Whose fresh repair Son 8 8
she so fair whose uuear'd womb "85
Whose ttpeech less song " 8 13
Whose strength's abundance " 23 4
Then thou, whose shadow '* 43 5
the rich, whose blessed key ** 52 1
jon, whose worthiness gires scope " 52 13
Whose action is no stronger ** 65 4
Whose influence is thine " 78 10
In whose confine immured " 84 3
my thought, whose lore to you " 85 11
That love is merchandixcd whose
rich esteeming " 102 3
Time, whose million'd accidents "115 5
Whose worth's unknown " 116 8
wood whose motion sounds "128 2
As those whose l>eauties "131 2
Wnt thou, whose will " 135 5
her whose busy care is bent " 143 6
for whose dear love I rise " 151 14
a hill whose concave womb L C 1
Upon whose weeping margent " 89
Whose bare nut-bragg'd the web " ~... 95
Not one whose flame " ~... 191
emerald, in whose fresh regard " »... 213
Whose white weighs down " »... 226
Whose rarest havings " ~... 235
Whose sights till then were " 282
to thee is dear, whose heavenly
touch PP 8 5
whose deep conceit is such "87
Love, whose month was ever May " 17 2
By shallow rivers by whose falls " 20 7
To whose sound chaste wings P T 4
If hf— why art thou coy VA 96
why not lips on lips " 120
why dost abhor me " 138
why shouldst thou feed " ~... 169
Why, there Love iived " „... 246
• why dost thou feel it " 873
♦Why, what of that " «... 717
Why hast thou cast " 931
why then I know " 1109
Or why Is Collatine Jt L 33
' Why hunt I then for colour " 2(i7
• Why should the worm intrude " ..... 848
• Why hath thy servant " 932
•Why work'st thou mischief " 9r»0
why quiver'st thou at this " ~... 1030
Why pry'st thou through " „... 1089
For why her face " ~... 1222
Why her two suns " 1224
Nor why her fair checks " «... 1225
Why should the private pleasure " 1478
why should so many fall " «... 14S3
Priam, why art thou old " 1550
Why art thou thus attired " 1601
And why not I from this " «... 1708
• Wby, Collatine, is woe the cure " «... 1821
why dost thou spend Son 4 1
niggard, why dost thou abuse "45
usurer, why dost thou use "47
Why— why hear'st thou music sadly Son 8 1
Why lovest thou that which "88
Why didst thou promise " 84 1
8ince why to love " 49 14
why should I haste me thence " 51 8
Why should false painting " 67 5
Why should poor beauty " 67 7
Why should he live " 67 9
But why thy odour matchcth not " 69 13
Why is my verse so barren " 76 1
Why with the time do I not " 76 3
Why write I still all one " 76 6
my judgement knew no reason why " 115 8
why, fearing of Time's tyranny " 115 9
For why should others' (alse adul-
terate eyes " 121 5
why are frailer spies " 121 7
why then her breasts are dun " 130 8
Why of eyes' falsehood "137 7
Why should my heart think " 137 9
Why dost thou pine within " 146 3
Why so large cost " 146 5
why of two oaths' breach "152 5
why 'twas beautiful and hard L C «... 211
< why was not I a flood PP 6 14
For why thou left's! me " 10 8
For why I craved nothing " 10 10
For why she sigh'd " 15 12
Wicked— to scratch her wicked toe H L 1035
should bear a wicked mind " 1540
Wickedly— wickedly he sUlks " 365
Wide— small head and nostril wide VA 296
Upon the wide wound " 1052
the door he opens wide R L 859
To the wide world ikm 19 7
my drooping eyelids open wide " 27 7
wide as the ocean is " 80 5
Of the wide world "107 2
this wide universe I call " 109 13
the wide world's common place " 137 10
though thy pruud heart go wide " 140 14
Widow— while the widow weeps Ji L «... 906
to wet a widow's eye Son 9 1
The world will be thy widow "95
When every private widow "97
WIdow'd— Like widow'd wombs " 97 8
Wield — youthful sons bright weap-
ons wield R L 14.32
WIfte— to work upon his wife " «... 235
I was a loyal wife " «... 1048
Of that unworthy wife " 1304
slaughter'd husband by the wife " 1376
for daughter or for wife " 1792
quoth Collatine, 'she was my wife " 1802
• My daughter' and ' ray wife " «... 1801
'my daughter' and 'my wife " 1806
by whom thy fair wife bleeds " 1821
Thy wretched wife mistook " 1826
the death of this true wife " 1841
like a uiakeless wife Son 9 4
Wight— descriptions of the fairest
wights " 106 2
As well as fancy, partial wight P i* 19 4
Wild- Like a wild bird VA ..... 560
Till the wild waves " 819
the unicorn and lion wild R L ...« 956
tames the one ; the other wild " 1097
But that wild music Son 102 11
a youngster proud and wild PP 9 4
Wbirsltwuinrumd
whcHlhimdoilUir
Then tbere *r« bi
"Whereft-rrullrltiedogi
i>hen!lh«rTle«'<lvui'li.,l1i
WheretheirwlpilljcirQi!
vlien nolirei
9, u bright RL
'« bUlheawvct hirdi ud|
■Iwrt ihi'f -ilM proceed
re chrvks need blood
Time's spoils despltad erery \
tongue doth piiblUh' every wt
Where lime lud outward ton
WhereherbelorHlCullitlnailU* *
■hen *iich tremure lira '
ftoiuIbaros'hisvhereilliM "
Wh«r(i,llkeBTirtUDiMnionaiiiBnt "
Where thcliJrargoTerneB
Whera thoD will p«ileuco "
In^vlldL-riieHObcieireuoUn "
Where Bubtecu' pjfM Jii Imuti "
Where now h*»e "
where the iveet hlrdi aing "
where be tlio Ismblim? gel
where uoni^ mdy <py IJin "
where hli mil nwybt
DcbHlewhc: '
I erics mue, but when
A l,nj.ili wli-
Where lb; d<
re (he ill
eeplhg
whtte wulcful Time
WILL
353
WIND
Will— Against myaeirru TOW debate £cm 89 13
will not seem 80 "* IK) 14
thy lore will sUj " 92 3
and will do none *' 94 1
will be well esteemed " 96 6
I'll liTe in thU poor rbjme *' 107 11
I nerer more will grind ** 110 10
willing patient, I wUl drink *' 111 9
that I wUl bitter think ** 111 11
I will be true " 123 14
still will pluck thee back ** 12G 6
Then will I swear " 132 13
Myself I'll forfeit *' I'M 3
he will not be free " lU 5
to do will aptly find X C .... 88
may stop awhile what will not ** ~... 159
that needs will taste " .... 167
to water will not wear " 291
Therefore I'll lie with loTO PP 1 13
but I will prove "85
to thee I'll constant prove *' 5 8
DO rubbing will refresh « 13 8
looks will calm ere night " 19 14
too late she will repent *' 19 13
force will yield at length *' 19 21
She will not stick to round " 19 51
Yet will she blush " 19 53
we will all the pleasures prove " 20 2.
There will we sit ** 20 5
There will I make thee ** 20 9
they will not cheer thee " 21 12
None alive will pity me " 21 28
Every man will be thy friend " 21 85
Ko man will supply thy want " 21 38
Bountiful they will him call " 21 40
Quickly him they will entice " 21 44
He will help thee in thy need " 21 52
If thou sorrow, he will weep " 21 53
IFi0— and she, by her good will VA .... 479
Come not within his danger by
thy will " .... C39
of hU wUl's obtaining B L 128
bU will resolving " .... 129
My will is strong " .... 243
troten conscience and hot-burn-
ing will " 247
between her chamber and his will " .... 302
My will is back'd " 852
And in bU will his wilful eye " 417
must my will abide " 486
My will that marks thee " .... 487
But will is deaf " 495
thy will remove " 614
command thy rebel will *' .... 625
Devours his will " 700
Self-will himself doth tire " .... 707
could not forestall their will " 728
abridgement of my will I make " 1198
sbalt oversee this will " 1205
blotted straight with will " 1299
thy liking to my will " .... 10.33
that in your will Son 57 13
Is it thy will " 61 1
knowing thy will " 89 7
Which in their wills *' 121 8
am mortgaged to thy will " 134 2
thou hast thy* Will " 185 1
And ' Will ' to boot, and ' Will* in
overplus ** 135 2
23
Will— To thy sweet win Sim
whose will is large
to hide my will in thine
Shall will in others
And in my will
rich in ' WUl,' add to thy ' WUl
One wiU of mine, to make thy
large 'WUl' more
me in that one ' Will
that I was thy 'WUl
And will, thy soul knows
* WUl ' WiU fulfil the treasure
full with wills, and my will one
for my name is ' WiU
So wUl I pray that thou mayst have
thy 'WiU
in his craft of wUl L C
Ask'd their own wills, and made
their wills obey "
with more than love's good will P P
left'st me nothing in thy wUl "
And to her will frame all thy ways "
Wlll'd— Be not self-will'd ^»
WiUeth— the insulter wiUeth VA
Wtlltng— to weep are often willing R L
((
11
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II
u
II
II
II
II
II
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II
135
135
135
135
1.S3
135
135
135
136
136
136
136
136
143
that pay the willing loan
Whilst like a willing patient
Willingly— would wUlingly impart
Wilt— wilt thou make the mutch
But if thou needs wilt hunt
And wilt thou bo the school
Wilt thou be glass wherein
Or if thou wilt permit
When wilt thou be humble
When wilt thou sort an hour
thv Lucrece thou wilt see
Thou siuKle wUt prove none
Grant, if thou wUt
And do whate'er thou wilt
thou wilt be stol'n, I fear
so oft as thou wilt look
Then hate mo when thou wUt
If thou wilt leave me
wilt thou not haply say
wUt thou be dumb
And yet thou wilt
Thou wilt restore
But thou wilt not
of thy beauty thou wUt take
Wilt thou, whose will
When thou wilt inflame
Win—' What win I' if I gain
win of the watery main
Shalt win much glory
when I saw myself to win
To win me soon to hell
did win whom he would maim
To win me soon to heU
to win a paradise
To win his heart
Wind — breath, whose gentle wind
To bid the wind a base
the high wind sings
coal revives with wind
Even as the wind is liush'd
How he outruns the wind
now wind, now rain
As when the wind
Nor sun nor wind
Son
VA
RL
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II
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617
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348
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Which— but that which doth derour R L
Throng her inTentionB, which
shall go before
suspicion which the world might
bear
Before the which is drawn
Which the conceited painter
Which heartless peasants
breath, which purl'd up
Which seem'd to swallow up
Which bleeding under Pyrrhus*
Which all this time
Which when her sad-beholding
husband saw
Which speechless woe of his
map which deep impression bears
Which seems to weep
that which is so putrified
That life was mine which thou
hast hero deprired
Which she too early
vow, which Brutus made before
Which being done with speedy
Which, used, lives Son
And that unfair which fairly doth
excel
Which happies those
that which thou receivest
Which to repair should be thy
from that which thou departest
blood which youogly thou bestow'st **
Which bounteous gift
Which erst from heat
beauty which you hold in lease
Which husbandry in honour
Which this Time's pencil
Which hides your life
Which steals men's eyes
Which in thy breast
thy heart, which I will keep
Which in my bosom's shop
forgot for which he toil'd
Duty so great which wit so poor
darkness which the blind do see
Which, like a Jewel hung in
Which I new-pay
Which I by lacking
friends which I thought buried
As interest of the dead, which
now appear
those tears are pearl which thy
love sheds
at that which thou hast done
thief which sourly robs from me
Which though it alter not
those old nine which rhymers in-
vocate
That due to thee which thou de-
servest
Which time and thoughts
Which heavily he answers
The which he will not
wardrobe which the robe doth hide*'
ornament which truth doth give
odour which doth in it live
Which but to-day
Which parts the shore
winter, which, being full of care
new, but that which is
1256
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Which— Which, labouring for in-
vention Son
that which goes before **
death, which cannot chooM
that which it fears to loae
that which I bring forth
those boughs which shake
Which by and by black night
that which it was nourish 'd by
This thou perceivest which makes
thy love •• 78 18
To love that well which thou must
leave " 78 14
Which for memorial
earth, which is his due
is that which it contains
The wrinkles which thy glass
of that which I compile
for that which he doth say
Which eyes not yet created
words which writers use
Which shall be most my glory
most? which can say more
Which should example where your
praise, which makes your pndsea
worse
Which nightly gulls him
strains of woe, which now seem woe
that which on thy humour
Which, like a canker
Which for their habiUtion
Which on thy soft cheek
that which gives thee all thy might "
Since first I saw you fresh, which
yet are green **
hue, which methinksstllldothstand **
For fear of which "
Three themes in one, which won-
drous scope affords **
Which three till now "
For we, which now behold •*
Which hath not figured
soul, which in thy breast doth lie
means which public manners breeds "
Which vulgar scandal
And that which governs me
or shape, which it doth latch
to that which still doth grow
Which alters when it alteration
Which should transport me
Which, rank of goodness
that sorrow which I then did feel
salve which wounded bosoms fits
pleasure lost, which is so deem'd
Which in their wills
Which shall above that
Which works on leases
Which die for goodness
Which prove more short
Which is not mix'd
lips, which should that harvest
Which my heart knows
that which flies before
that which flies from thee
Which like two spirita
For that which longer nurseth
that which doth preserve
Desire is death, which physic did
except ** 147
M
U
II
U
II
II
II
u
II
II
M
M
II
74
74
74
77
78
79
81
82
83
84
84
84
86
90
92
95
95
99
100
104
104
104
106
106
106
106
109
111
112
113
113
115
116
117
118
120
120
121
121
122
124
124
126
125
128
187
148
148
144
147
147
WITH
355
WITH
With— He burns with bashful shame ;
she with her tears VA ~... 49
Then with her windy sighs " »... fil
she murders with a kiss *' 54
Tires with her beak *' S6
dew'd with such distilling showers " ~... 66
better'd with a more delight " ^... 78
take truce with her contending
tears " ~... 82
* Touch but mj lips with those fair
Ups " 115
with thy hand felt " 143
a nymph, with longdisherell'd hair " 147
with thy increase be fed " ~... 170
With burning eye did hotly over-
look " ...« 178
AdonU, with a laxy sprigbt " 181
with a heavy, dark, disliking eye ** 182
quench them with my tears " ~... 192
with his hard hoof he wounds *' 267
what he was controlled with " 270
With gentle majesty '* 278
with his proud sight agrees " 288
His art with nature's workman-
ship at strife " 291
Beating his kind embracements
with her heels " 312
With her the horse, and '* ~... 822
All swoln with chafing " 825
swelleth with more rage " «... 332
ooal revives with wind " 3:^
And with his bonnet hides *' 339
Looks on the dull earth with dis-
turbed mind " ~... 840
With one fair hand she heaveth " »... 851
With tears, which chorus-like " 360
master'd with a leathern rein " 392
and all but with a breath <* »... 414
hurt my hand with wringing " 421
now press'd with bearing '* 490
illumined with her eye " »... 486
clouded with his brow's repine '* ~... 490
Measure my strangeness with my
unripe years *' ~... 524
comforter, with weary gait *' 529
with her plenty press'd, she faint
with dearth " 545
With blindfold fury she begins " 554
weary, with her hard embracing " 559
tamed with too much handling " 560
that's tired with chasing " 561
stUl'd with dandling " 562
but dissolves with tempering " ^... 565
compass'd oft with venturing " ^... 567
with certain of his friends " 588
deceived with painted grapes *' ~... 601
kindle with continual kissing *' «... 606
With javelin's point " 616
with hairy bristles arm'd " 625
to do with such foul fiends " 638
ail stain'd with gore " 664
make them droop with grief ** ...~ 666
encounter with the boar " 672
keep with thy hounds *' ~... 678
and with what care " 681
crosses with a thousand doubles " 682
•ortetb with a herd of deer ** 689
with others being mingled " 691
With much ado " ...» 694
With— with listening ear VA 698
indenting with the way " 704
in love with thee " ...„, 722
mingle beauty with infirmities ** ..... 785
with impure defeature " 736
melts with the mid-day sun " ..... 750
blotting it with blame " ..... 796
With this, he breaketh " 811
with the melting clouds contend " 820
with such-like sport " ..... 844
salutes him with this fair good-
morrow " «... 859
With cold-pale weakness numbs " ..... 892
And with that word she spied " 900
bepainted all with red " 901
id mated with delays " ..... 909
In hand with all things '* 912
he replies with howling ** 918
Whereon wiih fearful eyes they
long have gazed " 927
Infusing them with dreadful pro-
phecies " 928
ruiu'd with thy rigour " 954
And with his strong course opens " 960
With Death she humbly doth In-
sinuate " 1012
with him is beauty slain " 1019
As one with treasure laden,
heram'd with thieves " 1022
unwitnessed with eye or ear " 1023
with false bethinking grieves " 1024
as murder'd with the view " 1031
in his shelly cave with pain " ..... 1034
consort with ugly night " 1041
wound the heart with looks again " 1042
Which with cold terror doth " 1048
With purple tears, tliat his wound
wept, was drench'd " 1054
seera'd with him to bleed " 1056
lived and died with him «* 1080
Play with his locks " 1090
fed them with his sight, they him
with berries " ..... 1104
ran upon the boar with his sharp
spear '* 1112
With kissing him I should have
kUl'd him " ...« 1118
My youth with his ; the more " 1120
With this she falleth " 1121
stains her face with his congealed
blood " 1122
waited on with Jealousy " ...» 1137
With sweets that shall '* ..... 1144
enrich the poor with treasures '* 1150
chequer'd with white " 1168
girdle with embracing flames H L 6
With pure aspects did him . " 14
with swift intent he goes " 46
stain that o'er with silver white " ..... 56
answers with surmise " 83
colour'd with his high estate " 92
cloy'd with much " 98
coped with stranger eyes " 99
And decks with praises " 108
With bruised arms " ..... 110
Her Joy with heavcd-up hand she
doth express " Ill
with heavy spright " 121
With modest Lucrece " 123
WHO
350
WHOSE
Who— Who, like a king VA .... 1048
They both would strive who flnt
should dry his tears *' ..... 1092
Who did Dot whet his teeth ** ..... 1118
Who buys a minute's mirth R L ...» 213
who will the vine destroy " ..... 216
Who fears a sentence ** ..... ?44
Then who fears sinking " ..... 280
Who, flatter'd by their leader's " 296
As who should say " ..... 820
Who with a lingering stay *' . 828
W'ho sees the lurking serpent " ..... 862
Who, therefore angry " ..... 888
Who, like a foul usurper ** ..... 412
Who, peeping forth " ..... 447
Who, angry that the eyes " ..... 461
Who o'er the white sheet " ..... 472
Who seek to stain " ..... 655
Who this accomplishment " .... 716
Who in their pride " 864
For who so base " ..... 1000
He shall not boast who did thy
stock pollute ** ..... 1063
Who wayward once, his mood '* 1095
Who, being stopp'd " ..... 1119
Who, if it wink " -... 1139
Who, having two sweet babes " 1161
Who in a salt-waved ocean " 1281
And who cannot abuse ** ..... 1267
Who nothing wants " «... 1459
And who she finds forlorn " ..... 1500
Who finds his Lucrcce " 1585
Who, like a late-sack'd island " 1740
Who, mad that sorrow •• 1781
Who should weep most " 1792
air, who, holding Lucrcce' life " 1805
Brutus, who pluck'd the knife " »... 1807
Who, wondering at him " ..... 1845
Or who is he so fond Son 8 7
chide thee, who confounds "87
Who, all in one " 8 12
Who for thyself " 10 2
Who lets so fair a house " 13 9
Who will believe my verse " 17 1
Who heaven itself " 21 8
Who with his fear is put besides " 23 2
Who plead for love " 23 11
Let those who are in favour " 25 1
Who all their parts of me " 81 11
For who's so dumb " 88 7
him here who doth hence remain " 89 14
Who lead thee in their laot " 41 11
W^ho even but now come back " 45 11
Or who his spoil of beauty " 65 12
Who is it that says most " 84 1
Who, moving others, are " 94 3
what care I who calls me " 112 8
who have lived for crime ** 124 14
lovely boy, who in thy power " 126 1
Who hast by waning grown " 126 3
At such who, not born fair ** 127 11
Who, in despite of view " 141 4
Who leaves unsway'd " 141 11
night, who like a fiend ** 145 11
Who art as black as hell " 147 14
Who hateth thee " 149 6
Who taught thee how to make " 150 9
Yet who knows not conscience ** 151 2
who ever ahunn'd by precedent L C ..... 155
mJ O .....
(t
<t
Who— Who disciplined, ay. dieted
Who glazed with crystal gate
Who, young and simple
Wboever— Whoever plots the dn R L
Whoe'er keeps me, let my heart Son
Whoever hath her wish '•
Whole— My heart all whole aa thine V A
whose whole is swallow'd R L
Stood for the whole **
He pays the whole, and yet am I Son
VA
133
135
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Whom— And whom he strikes
part; through whom he rushes
From whom each lamp
To whom she speaks
The powers to whom I pray
To whom she sobbing speaks
by whom thy fair wife bleeds
Let those whom Nature
Look, whom she best endow'd
Whilst I, whom fortune
my love, to whom in vassalage
in whom all ill well shows
to whom my jewels trifles are
Or me, to whom thou gavest it
him whom thou dost hate
to whom I am confined
O'er whom thy fingers walk
Whom thine eyes woo
On whom frown'st thou
did win whom he would maim
'Gainst whom the world
Thou for whom Jove would swear
Whose — Whose sinewy neck
breath, whose gentle wind
Whose hollow womb resounds
Whose beams upon his hairless
Whose precious taste
W^hose vulture thought
love, whose leave exceeds
Whoso tushes never sheathed
Whose full perfection
Under whose sharp fangs
Whose blood upon the fresh
sickness, whose attaint
theirs whose desperate hands
Under whose simple semblance
Whose ridges with the meeting
from whose silver breast
whose swelling dugs do ache
Whose frothy mouth
whose tender horns being hit
flank ; whose wonted lily white
Whose tongue is music now
Under whose brim
Whose downward eye
doves, by whose swift aid
Within whose face
Whose inward ill
her whose light excelleth thine
• Whose crime will bear
Between whose hills
coverlet ; whose perfect white
Whose ranks of blue veins
Whose grim aspect sets every
Whose crooked beak threats
To whose weak ruins muster trf>op8 "
Then they whose whole is
Whose love of cither
By whose example **
R Jj ...~
11
11
25
26
40
48
87
89
110
128
142
149
8
17
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630
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1088
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189
268
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543
551
568
617
634
668
665
741
765
795
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855
875
901
1033
1053
1077
1068
1106
1190
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91
191
224
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449
45Z
609
720
1159
1169
1194
WHOSE
351
WILD
Whote—Wbose swift obedience to
her mistrees hies Jt L . — t2t5
But thef whose goilt " 1342
Whose waves to imitate '* 1438
Sinon, whose enchanting story *' ~... 1521
Whose words, like wildfire " .... 1523
Whose deed hath made herself " ~... 1566
Whose fresh repair Son 3 3
■he so fair whose unear'd womb "86
Whose speechless song " 8 13
Whose strength's abundance " 23 4
Then thou, whose shadow " 43 5
the rich, whose blessed key " 52 1
you, whose worthiness gives scope " 52 13
Whose action is no stronger '^ 65 4
Whose influence is thine " 78 10
In whose confine immured " 84 3
my thought, whose love to you " 85 11
That love is merchandized whose
rich esteeming " 102 3
Time, whose million'd accidents "115 5
Whose worth's unknown " 116 8
wood whose motion sounds "128 2
As those whose beauties "131 2
Wilt thou, whose will " 135 5
her whose busy care is bent " 143 6
for whose dear love I rise " 151 14
a hill whose concave womb L C »... 1
Upon whose weeping margent " 39
Whose bare nut-bragg'd the web " ~... 95
Not one whose flame " ~... 191
emerald, in whose fresh r^ard " 213
Whose white weighs down " ^... 226
Whose rarest havings " 235
Whose sights till then were " ^... 282
to thee is dear, whose heavenly
touch PP % 5
whose deep conceit is such "87
Love, whose month was ever May " 17 2
By shallow rivers by whose falls " 20 7
To whose sound chaste wings P T 4
If hy— why art thou coy V A 96
why not lips on lips " ~... 120
why dost abhor rae " «... 138
why shouldst thou feed " ~... 169
Why, there Love lived " ~... 246
* why dost thou feel it " -... 373
*Why, what of that " ~... 717
Why hast thou cast " 951
why then I know " 1109
Or why Is Collatine R L 33
* Why hunt I then for colour " ..... 267
' Why should the worm intrude " ..... 848
* Why hath thy servant " 932
* Why work'st thou mischief " 9r.O
why quiver'st thou at this " ..... 1030
Why pry'st thou through " ..... 1089
For why her face " 1222
Why her two suns " ..... 1224
Nor why her fair cheeks " „... 1225
Why should the private pleasure " 1478
why should so many fall " ..... 1483
Priam, why art thou old " 1.550
Why art thou thus attired " -... 1601
And why not I from this " ..... 1708
* Wby, Collatine, is woe the cure " ~... 1821
why dost thou spend Son 4 1
niggard, why dost thou abuse "45
usurer, why dost thou use "47
Wby— why hear'st thou music sadly Sum 8 1
Why lovest thou that which "88
Why didst thou promise " 84 1
Since why to love " 49 14
why should I haste me thence " 51 8
Why should false painting " 67 5
Why should poor beauty " 67 7
Why should he live " 67 9
But why thy odour matcheth not " 69 18
Why is my verse so barren " 76 1
Why with tlie time do I not " 76 3
Why write I still all one " 76 5
my Judgement knew no reason why " 115 8
why, fearing of Time's tyranny " 115 9
For why should others' dilse adul-
terate eyes " 121 6
why are frailer spies " 121 7
why then her breasts are dun "130 8
Why of eyes' falsehood "137 7
Why should my heart think " 137 9
Why dost thou pine within " 146 8
Why so large cost " 146 5
why of two oaths' breach "152 5
why 'twas beautiful and hard L C ..... 211
' why was not I a flood PP 6 14
For why thou left'st me " 10 8
For why I craved nothing " 10 10
For why she sigh'd " 15 12
Wicked— to scratch her wicked toe R L ..... 1035
should bear a wicked mind " ..... 1540
Wickedly— wickedly he sUlks " ..... 365
Wide— email head and nostril wide VA ..... 296
Upon the wide wound " ..... 1052
the door he opens wide R L 859
To the wide world Son 19 7
my drooping eyelids open wide " 27 7
wide as the ocean is " 80 6
Of the wide world " 107 2
this wide universe I call " 109 13
the wide world's common place " IV 10
though thy proud heart go wide " 140 14
Widow— while the widow weeps R L ..... 906
to wet a widow's eye Son 9 1
The world will be thy widow "95
When every private widow "97
WIdow'd— Like widow'd wombs " 97 8
Wield — youthful sons bright weap-
ons wield R L ...~ 14.12
Wlf^— to work upon his wife " ~... 235
I was a loyal wife " -... 1048
Of that unworthy wife " 1.T04
elaughter'd husband by the wife " ~... 1.376
for daughter or for wife " 1792
quoth Collatine, 'she was my wife " ~... 1802
'My daughter 'and 'my wife " .....1801
' my daughter' and ' my wife " 1806
by whom thy fair wife bleeds " 1824
Thy wretched wife mistook " 1826
the death of this true wife " ..... 1841
like a makcless wife Son 9 4
Wight— descriptions of the fairest
wighU " 106 2
As well as fancy, partial wight P P 19 4
Wild— Like a wild bird VA 560
Till the wild waves " ..... 819
the unicorn and lion wild R L ...~ 956
tames the one ; the other wild " 1097
But that wild music San 102 11
a youngster proud and wild PP 9 4
WILD
352
WILL
Wild— Youth is wild, and age ift tame PP 12 8
Wilder— Wilder to him than tigen R L 980
Wlldernefw— Pleads, in a wilderness " J... 844
Wildfire— Whose words like wildfire *' 1523
Wildly— She wildly breaketh VA 874
Wildly determining which way R L ~... 1150
Wlldnem— than tigers in their .... " 980
Wile— The wiles and guiles PP 19 87
Wllfbl-wilful and unwlliing VA ..... 865
his wilful eye he tired R L 417
By wilful taste of what Son 40 8
Wilftally— doth wilfully appear ** 80 8
WIlftalneM— Book both my wilfulness" 117 9
Wilfbl-slow— going he went ... . ** 61 18
Will— I'll smother thee with kisses VA 18
A summer's day will seem " ~... 28
Perforce will force it " ~... 72
And I will wink " 122
I will enchant thine ear " »... 145
light, and will aspire " ..... 150
will draw me through the sky ** »... 153
ril sigh celestial breath " ..... 189
I'll make a shadow ** ..... 191
I'll quench them with my tears " ^... 192
ru give it thee again " 209
For men will kiss ** ..... 216
be will not in her arms be bound '* ~... 226
I'll be a park *' «... 231
her object will away ** ..... 255
will set the heart on fire *' ..... 888
'nor will not know it " ..... 409
and I will not owe it ** ..... 411
it will not ope the gate " ..... 424
Will never rise, so he will kiss her
still " ..... 480
If you will say so *' «... 536
That she will draw " «... 552
HhU night I'll waste ** «... 583
He will not manage her '* «... 598
good queen, it will not be " 607
on the lion he will venture ** «... 628
world will hold thee " 761
you will fall again " «... 769
will not let a false sound enter " 780
now I will away " «... 807
will have him seen no more " «... 819
now she will no further " «... 906
The Destinies will curse thee " 945
will ever strive to kiss you " «... 1082
W^herein I will not kiss " «... 1188
That it will live R L «... 203
the scandal will survive " «... 204
the herald will contrive " «... 206
who will the vine destroy " «... 215
Will he not wake " «... 219
Whose crime will bear " «... 224
Will not my tongue be mute ** «... 227
ril beg her love " «... 241
will not be dismay'd " 273
will not incline " «... 292
this night-owl will catch " «... 860
my attempt will bring " 491
some worthless slave of thine I'll
slay " «... 515
that will never be forgot " «... 536
* How will thy shame be seeded *" 603
*This deed will make thee " «... 610
will prison false desire ** «... 642
. I will not hear thee ** 667
Will— The scar that will, despite of
cure, remain J
with weeping will unfold
The light will show
Will quote my loathsome trespass
will tell my story
Will couple my reproach
Will tie the hearers
upon his silver down will stay
I will not wrong
never will dispense
* I will not poison thee
I will not paint
that light will borrow
will strain a tear
I'll hum on Tarquin still
Will fix a sharp knife
Will we find out ; and there we will
unfold
Will slay the other
His leaves will wither
* Yet die I will not
to Tarquin I'll bequeath
I'll bequeath unto the knife
The one will live
wUl kill myself *
are they form'd as marble will
each little mote will peep
it will soon be writ
I'll tune thy woes
wounds will not be sore
thU night I will inflict
I'll murder straight, and then Pll
slaughter thee
this act will bo
That they will suffer
We will revenge the death
Will be a tatter'd weed
will be the tomb
Will play the tyrante
The world will wail thee
world will be thy widow
Who will believe
I will not praise
I, not for myself, but for thee will
I will keep so chary
all naked, will bestow
for their style I'll read
Will sourly leave her
thus I will excuse ye
what excuse will my poor beast
Towards thee I'll run
he will not every hour survey
To what you will
That Time will come
will steal his treasure
Thy glass will show
thy mind's imprint will bear
thy glass will truly show
will give thee memory
will hold me up afloat
each part will be forgotten
against myself I'll fight
will be a gainer too
will bear all wrong
And I will comment
and I straight will halt
As I'll myself disgrace
I will acquaintance stranc^le
RL
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732
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la
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u
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IC
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cc
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CI
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u
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II
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u
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80
14
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WITH
359
WITHOUT
Son
u
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it
l(
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4
139
7
139
14
140
2
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8
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8
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9
147
10
148
2
148
10
148
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149
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2
150
12
ffith— Use power with power
wound with cunning
Kill me outright with looks
with too much disdain
lore thee with mine eyes
with thy tongue's tune delighted "
To any sensual feast with thee alone "
but with mine compare
Wooing his purity with her foul
pride
she alter'd with an end
frantic^nad with evermore unrest
correspondence with true sight
vex'd with watching and with tears
with tears thou keep'st me
myself with thee partake
Berenge upon myself with present
moan
With insuflElciency my heart to sway "
With others thou shouldst not abhor "
Storming her world with sorrow's
wind L C 7
With sleided silk feat *' .... 48
with his hearing to divide " ..... 67
with his authorized youth " 104
To dwell with him " ..... 129
What with his art in youth " ..... 145
With safest distance I mine honour
shielded " 151
with acture they may be " 185
With twisted metal amorously
impleach'd " 205
With the annexions of fair gems
enrich'd " 208
With objecU manifold " ..... 216
With wit well blason'd " ..... 217
Hallow'd with sighs " .... 228
with bleeding groans they pine " 275
With brinish current downward
flow'd " 284
glased with crystal gate " „... 286
But with the inundation " .... 290
with the garment of a Grace " 316
Outfacing faults in love with love's
ill rest PP 1 8
lie with love, and love with me " 1 13
Wooing his purity with her fair
pride "28
With young Adonis "42
with many a lovely look "43
with such an earthly tongue " 5 14
look'd on the world with glorious
eye " 6 11
with damask dye to grace "75
as straw with fire flamcth " 7 13
Adonis comes with horn "96
with more than love's good will "97
deep-wounded with a boar " 9 10
with young Adonis sitting "11 1
And with her lips on his "1110
cabin hang'd with care " 14 3
for I sopp'd with sorrow " 14 6
welcome daylight with her ditty " 15 7
solace mix'd with sorrow " 15 11
Were I with her " 15 13
love with love did fight " 16 5
was wounded with disdain " 16 11
Tlius art with arms contending " 16 13
Fraughted with gall " 18 26
With— Smooth not thy tongue with
filed talk PP 19 8
with scorn she put away " 19 18
Serve always with assured trust " 19 31
Dissembl<Kl with an outward show " 19 38
still to strive with men " 19 43
When time with age shall them
attaint " 19 46
Live with me " 20 1
With a thousand fragrant posies " 20 10
with leaves of myrtle " 20 12
With coral clasps " 20 14
Then live with me " 20 16
To live with thee " 20 20
And with such-like " 21 41
He with thee doth bear a part " 21 56
With the breath thou givest P T -... 19
Withal— spend the night withal VA 847
that his hand shakes withal R L ...~ 467
I, sick withal, the help Sm 153 11
Withdrew— themselves withdrew V A «... 1032
Wither— they wither in their prime " ...» 418
To wither in my breast " 1182
wither at the cedar's root R L ~... 665
His leaves will wither " .....1168
Withered— against the ... . flower " ...» 1254
As flowers dead lie wither'd P P 13 9
Withering— Thy lovers withering San 126 4
Withhold— to withhold me so VA 612
Within— Beauty within itself " 130
Within the circuit " -... 230
W^ithin this limit " 235
Come not within his danger " 639
Within my bosom " „... 646
within her bosom it shall dwell " 1173
Within whose face R L 52
Within his thought " 288
Thy sea within a puddle's womb
is hearsed " ..... 657
Within your hollow-swelling " 1122
within their bosoms lie " 1342
Within thine own bud Sm I \\
within thine own deep-sunken ey^ " 2 7
Within the gentle closure " 48 11
Within the knowledge " 49 10
within that pen doth dwell " 84 5
Within his bending sickle's compass" 116 10
within the level of your frown " 117 11
foul as hell within * "119 2
are within my brain " 122 1
pine within and suffer dearth " 146 3
Within be fed, without " 146 12
dead within an hour PP 13 6
Withontr-End without audience VA 846
without ten women's wit " 1008
eyes of men without an orator R L 30
Without the bed her other " «... 393
without or yea or no " 1340
quoth she, 'without a sound " 1464
Without this, folly Son U 6
travel forth without my cloak " 84 2
Without thy help " 36 4
the world-wlthout-end hour " 67 5
Without accusing you " 58 8
Without all ornament " 68 10
Without all bail " 74 2
mayst without attaint o'erlook " 82 2
fed, without be rich no more " 146 12
As it was, or best without L C ^.^ 98
WIND
354
WITH
irind—the wind doth hiss you VA 1084
The wind would blow it olT " ~... 1089
The wind wars with his torch R L ^.,. 311
Puffs forth another wind " ^... 815
The doors, the wind, the gloTe '* 8*25
Huge rocks, high winds " .... 835
And with the wind " ~... 648
blown with wind of words " 1380
and busy winds give o'er ** 1790
his thunder, rain, and wind Son 14 6
Rough winds do shake *' 18 8
though mounted on the wind " 51 7
hoisted sail to all the winds "117 7
with sorrow's wind and raiu L C 7
light occasion of the wind ** «... 86
When winds breathe sweet " ~... 103
and falls through wind PP 10 6
Through the velvet leaves the wind ** 17 6
Words are easy, like the wind " 21 33
Winding' — with a winding maze R L ~... 1151
Thin winding breath " 1407
Window — Her two blue windows V A 482
pry'st thou through my window R L ..... 1089
So then through windows Son 3 11
That hath his windows glazed " 24 8
Are windows to my breast " 24 11
Windy— Then with her sighs VA 61
This windy tempest R L ~... 1788
Give not a windy night Son 90 7
Winff— Shaking her wings VA 57
wave like feather'd wings " 806
Borne by the trustless wings R L 2
with his wings' shade " ~... 507
from ancient ravens' wings " ..... 949
his coal-black wings in mire " 1009
feathers to the learned's wing Son 78 7
To whose sound chaste wings obey P T 4
Every fowl of tyrant wing " 10
Winged— For fleet-wing'd duty R L ^... 1216
Her winged spright " 1728
In winged speed no motion Son 51 8
Wink— He wiuks and turns his lips VA ...~ 90
then wink again ** — 121
And I will wink " ~... 122
To wink, being blinded . R L 875
And moody Pluto winks " 653
Who if it wink " 1139
When most I wink Son 43 1
till they wink with fullness " 56 6
WInklnff— yet .... there appears R L 4.'S8
Winter— Lust's winter comes VA 802
As winter meads R L 1218
But chide rough winter " ~... 1255
Why forty winters shall besiege
thv brow
Son
2
1
To hideous winter
«4
5
6
though they with winter meet
tl
5
13
let not winter's ragged hand
U
6
1
gusts of winter's day
<t
13
11
Or call It winter
11
66
13
How like a winter hath my absence "
97
1
dreading the winter's near
(«
97
14
Yet seem'd it winter still
II
98
13
Three winters cold
«l
104
8
age like winter weather
PP
12
3
age like winter bare
u
12
4
Wipe — Worse than a slavish wipe
RL
• •• ••
6.^
And wipe the dim mist
u
•••••
643
Wiped— can be wiped away
il
•••••
606
M
11
VA
u
RL
Son
II
PP
M
M
VA
RL
44
Son
PP
Son
u
u
it
wiped— wiped the brinish pearl R L
forced stain be wiped from roe "
Wire— If hairs be wires, black wires
grow on her head Son
Wiry— The wiry concord, that mine
ear
Wisdom— Herein lives wisdom
Wise— ;love is wise in folly
Strike the wise dumb
old and yet not wise
List the wise world
Be wise as thou art cruel
what fool is not so wise
WUe — In howling wise, to see
Wiser— Take counsel of some wiser
head
Wlsli— Would they not wish
To wish that I their father
The sweets we wish for
that best I wish in thee
and wish I were renew'd
And wish her lays
ITmA— With virtuous wish would
This wish I have
Whoever hath her wish
WIsh'd— thrice more more rare
eyes their wished sight P P
, Wish'd himself the heaven's breath **
burn'd in heart-wish'd luxury L C
Wishing— Wishing her cheeks
Wishing Adonis had his team
Wishing me like to one
Wlstly- wisily to view
wistly on him gazed
Yet not so wistly
Wlt^how doth she now for wits
Fair fall the wit
wit waits on fear
humour of fantastic wits
without ten women's wit
and, all for want of wit
confounds his wits
the harvest of his wits
Lending him wit
What wit sets down
Began to clothe his wit
And arm'd his long-hid wits
long-experienced wit to school
belongs to love's fine wit
not to show my wit
which wit so poor as mine
birth, or wealth, or wit
the wits of former days
shall fame his wit
If I might teach thee wit
But my five wits nor my five senses "
to make our wits more keen L C
With wit well blazon'd
Witchcraft— what a hell of ....
With— the sun with purple-colour'd
face VA
with herself at strife
hath ending with thy life
smother thee with kisses
cloy thy lips with loathed satiety
pale with fresh variety
With this she seizeth
With leaden appetite, unapt
with lustful language broken
1213
1701
4
5
130
128
11
1146
...^ 195D
71 13
140 1
8 13
18 83
19 5
447
210
18
8
6
7
14
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VA
RL
PP
VA
u
(I
RL
II
I*
II
II
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87
111
15
16
87
135
56 14
15 10
17 8
814
65
...M 179
29 5
.... 848
13S5
€ 12
249
472
...M 680
850
1006
15S
290
QiSl
1299
1809
..... 1816
1820
23 14
M
II
26
26
37
59
84
140
141
II
II
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II
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5
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IS
11
5
9
— 161
...- 217
I
11
12
18
19
21
25
84
47
WONTED
361
WORLD
Wonted— whose wonted lily white VA 1058
His wonted height Ji L ...~ 776
Woo — 'gins to woo him VA 6
Then woo thyself " 158
to see him woo her " »... 809
But then woos best " ~... 570
And when a woman woos Son 41 7
Whom thine eyes woo " 142 10
did ne'er invite, nor never woo L C .... 182
began to woo him P P 11 2
Wood — ^unto the wood they hie VA ~... 323
in some mistrustful wood " 826
Upon that blessed wood Son 128 2
At the wood's boldness ** 128 8
Making dead wood more blest " 128 12
IFood— pestilence and frenzies wood VA ..... 740
Woodman— He is no woodman R L ..... 680
Woo*d— I have been woo'd VA ~... 97
Her eyes woo'd still " ..... 858
being woo'd of time Sun 70 6
Wooiag— eyes disdain'd the .... VA .... 358
wooing his purity Son 144 8
Wooing his purity PP 2 8
Word— but speak fair words VA ..... 208
Her words are done '* ..... 254
Free vent of words " 834
ere his words bflfun " ..... 462
Foul words and frowns " ~... 573
And with that word " ..... 900
Even at this word " .... 1025
the woeful words she told " .... 1126
haste hpr words delays R L .... 552
Out, idle words, servants " .... 1016
This helpless smoke of words " .... 1027
Sometime her grief is dumb and
hath no words ** 1105
though my words are brief " .... 1309
With words, till action might be-
come them " 1323
being blown with wind of words " .... 1330
but laid no words to gage *' .... 1351
loss of Nestor's golden words " .... 1420
And bitter words to ban ** .... 1460
She lends them words " .... 1498
Whose words, like wildfire " 1523
discharge one word of woe " 1605
long to hear her words ** .... 1610
' Few words,' quoth she " .... 1613
In me moe woes than words '* .... 1615
live to speak another word " .... 1642
heart-easing words so long " 1782
Weak words, so thick come " ..... 1784
For sportive words " .... 1813
did his words allow " 1845
wanting words to show it Son 26 6
That every word doth almost tell ** 76 7
dressing old words new " 76 11
and he stole that word " 79 9
The dedicated words " 82 3
In true plain words '* 82 12
whilst other write good words " 85 5
Though words come hindmost " 85^ 12
the breath of words respect *' 85 13
varying to other words " 105 10
Lest sorrow lend me words, and
words express *' 140 8
and words merely but art L C .... 174
a word for shadows like myself P P 14 11
Words are easy like the wind *' 21 33
RL
VA
RL
u
VA
RL
u
u
u
u
Son
112
.... 1107
.... IZo
.... 1222
..... V9^
.... JSiO
.... oOl
.... 513
.... 1385
.... 1422
••••• 14VD
5 1
Wordless — . ... so greets heaven
Wore— livery that he wore
and wore out the night
her face wore sorrow's livery
Work— her best work is ruin'd
to work upon his wife
Thus treason works
force must work my way
in this work was had
imaginary work was there
So Lucrece set a-work
with gentle work did frame
To work my mind, when body's
work's expired " 27 4
the work of masonry '* 55 6
In others' works " 78 11
To what it works in "111 7
Which works on leases *' 124 10
W^orks under you L C .... 230
guiles that women work P P 19 87
Work'st— Why .... thou mischief R L 960
Working— thy heart's workings be Son 93 11
Workman— The well-skill'd .... RL .... 1520
Workmanship— at strife VA .... 291
workmanship of nature *' .... 784
World— the world hath ending " .... 12
Look, the world's comforter " 529
all the world amazra " .... 6.^
lend the world his light " .... 756
the world will hold thee " .... 761
Who doth the world " .... 857
Look, how the world's poor people " 925
Alas, poor world, what treasure " .... 1075
Thus weary of the world " .... 1189
fortrcss'd from a world of hanns R L 28
Proving from world's minority •* 67
Upon the world dim darkness " .... 118
her life, her world's delight " .... 885
A pair of maiden worlds ** .... 408
These worlds in Tarquin " .... 411
the world doth threat " 547
which the world might bear " .... 1321
the world's fresh ornament Son 1 9
Pity the world " 1 13
To eat the world's due " 1 14
Thou dost beguile the world "84
The world will wall thee "94
The world will be thy widow "95
in the world doth spend "99
for still the world enjoys It " 9 10
hath in the world an end " 9 11
make the world away "11 8
To the wide world " 19 '
from the forlorn world his visage
hide
Suns of the world may stain
That wear this world out
the old world could say
world's eye doth view
Give warning to the world
From this vile world
Lest the wise world
O, lest the world should task yon
the world may see
to all the world must die
breathers of this world are dead
Now while the world is bent
Of the wide world dreaming
You are my all-the- world
(I
u
M
tl
U
If
14
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M
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tl
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83
7
33
14
55
12
59
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69
1
71
3
71
4
71
13
72
1
75
8
81
6
81
12
90
2
107
2
112
5
WORLD
362
WOULD
World— That all the world
All this the world well knows
wide world's (^ommon place
in the world's false subtleties
world is grown so bad
What means the world to say
Storming her world
in the world's false forgeries
*Oainst whom the world
The sun look'd on the world
If that the world and love
World-wltboat>eBd— the .... hour
Son
112 14
129 IS
u
137
138
10
4
«
LC
PP
u
u
u
S(m
VA ...
BL
i<
Son
u
tl
II
WonB— eyes, like glow-worms
earth's worm, what dost thou
Why should the worm intrude
the little worms that creep
and make worms thine heir
with vilest worms to dwell
The prey of worms
Shall worms, inheritors of this
Worm«hole— To fill with worm-holes£ /^
Wormwood— to bitter .... taste **
Wom-ontr-pattern of the .... age **
Worse — were thy lipe the worse VA
worse than Tantalus' is her annoy "
mischief worse than civil home-
bred strife
like you worse and worse
Worse than a slavish wipe
To subjects worse have given
Not making worse what nature
which makes your praises worse
smell far worse than weeds
And worse essays prove thee
Worter— Urging the worser sense
takes the worser part
but she, in worser taking
The worser spirit a woman
My worser spirit a woman
Wonhip— doth worship thy defect
140 11
148 6
7
4
2
11
17
5
621
983
1
8
4
20
67
M
t<
• ••••
1248
6
14
71
4
74
10
146
7
•••••
946
•••••
893
»••••
1350
•••••
207
•••••
699
•••••
764
BL
Son
u
«
BL
M
M
Son
PP
Son
69
84
84
94
110
144
2
149
774
637
14
10
14
14
8
249
294
453
4
4
11
Worshipper— suspecteth the false
worshipper
Worst— The worst is but denial
He in the worst sense construes
Yet do thy worst, old Time
The worst was this
At first the very worst
But do thy worst
fear the worst of wrongs
take the worst to l>e
thy worst all best exceeds
Worth- prove nothing worth
that's worth the viewing
of small worth held
Neither in inward worth
of thy worth and truth
ten times more in worth
O, how thy worth with manners
Like stones of worth
Praising thy worth
mine own worth do define
in all worths surmount
Thy worth the greater
to love things nothing worth
The worth of that
But since your worth
Finding thy worth a limit
Speaking of worth, what worth in
you doth grow
BL
u
<i
Son
i(
li
««
M
It
II
VA
II
Son
H
tl
It
II
tl
II
II
II
II
If
11
tl
11
tt
86
242
324
13
14
12
1
6
4
8
~... 1076
2 4
19
80
90
92
92
137
150
16
87
88
39
62
60
62
62
70
72
74
80
82
11
4
9
1
7
14
7
8
6
14
13
5
6
a
u
tt
87
s
87
9
103
8
106
12
116
8
•••••
210
»•*»•
267
79
6
62
18
•••••
515
80
11
100
3
83 8
Worth— The charter of thy worth Son
thy own worth then not knowing **
all bare, is of more worth
skill enough your worth to sing
Whose worth's unknown
dear nature, worth, and quality L C
what are precepts worth **
Worthier— the travail of a ... . pen Son
Worthlaesa— whose .... gives scope **
Worth 1ms— some .... slave of thine B L
I am a worthless boat Son
on some worthless song **
Worthy— seem death-worthy in thy
brother B L ~... 635
Is worthy blame " ..... 1257
thus begins: 'Thou worthy lord " ISa^
To show me worthy Son 26 12
Worthy perusal stand " 88 6
Most worthy comfort " 48 6
can nothing worthy prove " 72 4
More worthy I to be '' 150 14
rule things worthy blame P P 19 8
Wot— God wot, it was defect B L ..... 1345
Would — as she would be thrust VA 41
Would in thy palm dissolve ** ..... 144
and now she fain would speak ** .... 221
She would, he will not ^ ..... 226
would surpass the life ** .... 289
Would thou wert as I am . ** .... 369
I would assure thee " .... 871
bane would cure thee " .... 872
O, would thou hadst not ** .... 428
my ears would love " .... 433
thy outward parts would move ** .... 435
Yet would my love to thee be " .... 442
Would they not wish « 447
Would root these beauties ** 636
would breed a scarcity ** .... 753
And would say after her " 852
would he put his bonnet on '* .... 1087
the gaudy sun would peep " 1088
The wind would blow it off " .... 1089
then would Adonis weep " 1090
They both would strive " .... 1092
he would not fear him " 1094
tiger would be tame '* .... 1096
wolf would leave his prey " .... 1097
That some would sing ** 1102
Would bring him mulberries " 1103
beauty would blush for shame B L .... 54
Virtue would stain that o'er '* .... 66
that would let him go " .... 76
Would with the sceptre straight
be strucken " .... 217
And they would stand ** .... 347
This guilt would seem '* 635
what he would lose again " .... 688
And therefore would they still In
darkness be " .... 752
queen he would distain " .... 786
Collatine would else have come to
" 916
" 963
" .... 1000
" 1085
" .... 1117
" .... 1274
" .... 1288
me
Would purchase thee a thousand
who so base would such an office
have
in night would cloister'd be
at that would do it good
mine own would do me good
She would request to know
WITH
357
WITH
If Ith— engirt with daring infaiuf R L ~... 1173
With untuned tongue she hoarsely
calls " — ' 1214
duty with thought's feathers flies " ~... 121tf
With soft-slow tongue " 1220
OTer-wash'd with woe " 1225
with swelling drops 'gan wet " ~... 1228
corer crimes with bold stern looks " 1252
With ineu's abuses " 1259
Aasail'd by night with cireum-
sUnees strong " 1262
Yet with the fault I thus far can
dispense . " 1279
Bid him with speed prepare " 1294
hovering o'er the paper with her
quill " -... 1297
blotted straight with will " 1299
Ere she with blood had stain'd ** 1316
With woi-ds, till actiou *' 1323
blown with wind of words " 1330
with more than haste " 1332
blushing on her with a steadfast eye " 1339
with bashful iunoceuce doth hie " 1341
And blushing with him " 1355
Threatening cloud-kissing Ilion
with annoy " 1370
Begrimed with sweat, and smeared
all with dust ** ~... 1381
Gazing upon the Greeks with lit-
tle lust " 1384
marching on with trembling paces *' 1391
Making such sober action with his
hand " ~... 1403
listening, but with several graces " 1410
debate with angry swords *' 1421
With swelling ridges ; and " ....1439
SUring on Priam's wounds with
her old eyes '* 1448
Her cheeks with chaps and wrin-
kles were disguised " 1452
tune thy woes with my lamenting
tongue " — •• 1465
with my tears quench Troy " «... 1468
with my knife scratch out " 1469
with my nails her beauty I may
tear " 1472
bright with fame and not with fire " ..... 1491
with his own weight goes " 1494
with the blunt swains he goes ** 1504
h&bour'd with his skill " 1506
blot with hell-born sin " ..... 1519
with grief or travail he had fainted " 1543
With outward honesty *' ..... 1545
With inward vice " 1546
doth quake with cold " 1556
bum his Troy with water " 1561
tears the senseless Sinon w|th her
nails " 1564
with this gives o'er " ..... 1567
weary time with her complaining " .... 1570
too long with her remaining " 1572
she with painted images hath spent " ..... 1577
kill'd with deadly cares " ..... 1593
Three times with sighs she gives ** 1604
With sad attention long to hear '* ~... 1610
tell them all with one poor tired
tongue . " »... 1617
With shining falchion in my cham-
ber came " ..« 1626
With— with a flaming light B L
.... 1627
* With this, I did begin
«
.... 1639
with so strong a fear
14
1M7
stain'd with this abuse
((
1655
With head declined, and voice
damni'd up with woe
U
1661
With sad-set eyes
<i
.... 1602
that came with Collatine
It
1689
With swift pursuit to venge
4(
1691
chase injustice with revengeful
arms
41
16y3
with noble disposition
<t
.... 1695
constrained with dreadful circum-
stance
M
.... 1703
with the foul act dispense
U
1704
With this, they all
((
.... 1709
While with a joyless smile
t(
.... 1711
earned in it with tears
It
1713
Here with a sigh
l(
1716
astonish'd with this deadly deed
44
.... 1730
to die with her
41
1776
weep with equal strife
44
1791
with clamours fill'd
14
.... IcMM
He with the Romans was ^teem'd
41
.... 1811
idiots are with kings
44
1812
But kneel with me
41
1830
rouse our Roman gods with invo-
cations
44
1831
done with speedy diligence
44
.... 1853
Feed'st thy light's flame with self-
substantial fuel
Son
1 6
thine image dies with thee
II
3 14
having traffic with thvself alone
U
4 9
must be tomb'd with thee
U
4 13
that with gentle work did frame
44
5 1
Sap check'd with frost
44
5 7
Beauty's effect with beauty were
bereft
II
6 11
they with winter meet
It
5 13
With beauty's treasure
II
6 4
Serving with looks
11
7 4
with weary car
II
7 9
Sweeta with sweeta war not
• 1
8 2
receivest with pleasure thine annoy *'
8 4
possess'd with murderous hate
II
10 5
silver'd o'er with white
II
12 4
Borne on the bier with white and
bristly beard
II
12 8
Or say with princes
11
14 7
Time debateth with Decay
*1
15 11
all in war with Time
II
15 13
With means more blessed
11
16 4
With virtuous wish would bear
II
16 7
fill'd with your most high deserts
II
17 2
yellow'd with their age
II
17 9
0, carve not with thy hours
11
19 9
draw no lines there with thine
antique pen
U
19 10
with nature's own hand painted
11
20 1
With shifting change
It
20 4
So is it not with me as with that
Muse
It
21 1
every fair with his fair doth re-
•
hearse
It
21 4
With sun and moon, with earth
and sea's rich gems
11
21 6
With April's first-born
11
21 7
Who with his fear is put besides
II
23 2
replete with too much rage
M
23 8
WRINKLE
364
YET
Ifrinkle— With lines and wrinkles Son 63 4
The wrinkles which thy glass " 77 5
and frowns and wrinkles strange " 93 8
any wrinkle graven there " 100 10
Nor give to necessary wrinkles "108 11
Wrinkled— wait on wrinkled age R L ~... 275
Wrinkled-old— foul or wrinkled-old r^ ~... 133
^rlt— having writ on death " ~... 509
Writ in the glassy margents R L ~... 102
what is writ in learned books ** ~... 811
writ in ray tratament " -... 1188
and It will soon be writ " 1295
sorrow writ uncertainly " -... 1311
now is seal'd and on it writ ** ~... 1331
what silent love hath writ Son 23 13
The hand that writ it " 71 6
what in you is writ " 84 9
Iswritinraoods " 93 8
that I before have writ "115 1
I never writ, nor no man " 116 14
Write— and she prepares to write R L 1296
If I could write the beauty Son 17 5
let rae, true in love, but truly write ** 21 9
that cannot write to thee ** 88 7
Why write I still " 76 6
I always write of you " 76 9
when I of you do write " 80 1
But he that writes of you " 84 7
whilst other writ^ good words " 85 5
by spiriU taught to write " 86 5
If I no more can write " 103 5
but surety-like to write for me " 134 7
Writer— words which writers use " 82 3
Written— this written ambassage " 26 3
Wrong— blare forth her wrong VA 219
the heart hath treble wrong " 320
hath done mc double wrong " 429
hath done thee wrong *' ..... 1005
hath done her beauty wrong R L 80
What wrong, what shame ** ~... 499
to do her husband wrong " ..... 1264
swears he did her wrong " ~... 1462
that hath done him wrong *' ..... 1467
And what wrong else " «... 1622
to venge this wrong of mine ** 1691
Her wrongs to us " 1840
despite thy wrong Son 19 13
to bear love's wrong " 40 12
Those petty wrongs "41 1
myself will bear all wrong " 88 14
should do it wrong *' 89 11
to fear the worst of wrongs " 92 5
or changes right or wrong "112 8
to justify the wrong " 139 1
do not love that wrong PP 5 13
Wrong— To wrong the wronger R L 943
1 will not wrong thy true affec-
tion so " ..... 1060
Wronged— How Tarquln .... me " ...« 819
•Thou wronged lord of Rome " -... 1818
Wronger— To wrong the wronger " ..... 943
Wrongest— Thou .... his honour " ..... 699
Wrongftally— perfection wrongfully
disgraced Son 66 7
Wronght^that she hath wrought VA ...~ 991
impiety hath wrought R L ~... 841
Till Nature as she wrought Son 20 10
of earth and water wrought " 44 11
Wrought all my loss PP 18 14
Tet— thus I will excuse ye
dear friend, and I assure ye
That's to ye sworn
Tea— Yea, though I die
Yea, the Illiterate, that know not
without or yea or no
my love, yea, take them all
Year— from the dangerous year
with my unripe years
of his tender years
And threescore year would make Son
Thy beauty and thy years
in the long year fet
spring and folson of the year
That time of year
the pleasure of the fleeting year
loves not to have years told
my years be past the best
loves not to have years told
unripe years did want
Yearly— spring doth yearly grow
Yell— loud pursuers in their yell
Yellow — When .... leaves or none
to yellow autumn tum'd
Yellowed — yellow'd with their age
Yelping— the timorous yelping of
the hounds
Yes — O, yes It may
O, yes, dear friend
Yet— And yet not cloy
yet her fire must burn
Yet hath he been
Yet was he servile
yet are they red
yet mayst thou well
and yet no footing seen
yet his proceedings teach thee
Yet should I be
Y'et would my love
that ever yet betoken'd
yet complain on drouth
she feeds, yet never filleth
yet 'tis pluck'd
Yet love breaks through
yet she Is not loved
Yet from mine ear
And yet she hears
yet nought at all
Yet sometimes falls
and yet too credulous
Yet pardon me, I felt
and never woman yet
'And yet,' quoth she
day should yet be light
Yet their ambition makes
Doth yet In his fair welkin
Yet ever to obtain
yet he still pursues
on her yet unstained bed
yet, winking, there appears
that yet remains
Yet strive I
Yet, foul nlght-waklng cat
yet ere he go to bed
'Yet am I guilty
Yet for thy honour
Yet for the self-same purpose
'Yet die I will not
Yet with the fault
San
42
6
u
111
18
LC
•••••
180
RL
•••••
204
it
«••••
810
M
•••••
1340
Son
40
1
VA
••••a
506
u
•••••
524
li
•■•••
1091
Son
11
8
t(
41
3
u
52
6
«•
53
9
(1
73
1
u
97
2
•«
138
12
PP
1
6
«
1
12
u
4
9
VA
■ ••••
141
%i
•••••
688
Son
78
2
u
104
5
u
r
17
9
VA
• ••••
881
«<
•••••
939
PP
10
11
VA
19
(t
•••••
»4
41
•••«•
101
M
•••■•
113
M
••■••
116
U
•••••
128
t*
•••••
148
i<
■••••
406
U
•••••
438
U
•••••
442
(1
M*««
453
U
•••■•
544
U
•••■•
548
11
•••••
674
t(
•■•••
576
fl
»••••
610
u
•■•••
778
l<
•••••
867
u
•••••
911
l(
•••••
981
M
•••••
986
«l
••■•a
998
«l
•••••
1007
«l
•••••
1070
(1
• ••••
1134
RL
•••••
68
«
. •••
116
■
r*««*
129
H
• •■••
308
'«
3G6
•
4.'»8
»«
•••••
46S
((
•••••
504
U
•«•«•
554
U
•••••
776
u
■••••
841
(I
•■•••
842
u
•••••
1047
u
■••»•
1177
fl
•••••
1279
YET
365
YOU
Tet— Tet saTe that labour
R Jj •••••
1290
And yet the duteous vassal
(«
1300
yet show'd content
(t
■•■••
1503
but yet defiled
(1
■••••
1545
and yet not wise
((
•«■••
1550
yet it seldom sleeps
4(
•••••
1574
in her poison'd closet yet endure
l(
•••••
1659
Yet in the eddy
<l
••••a
1669
yet let the traitor die
«4
•••••
1686
that yet her sad task
li
•«•••
1699
Yet sometime * Tarquin
U
•••••
1786
Yet neither may possess
M
•••••
1794
yet canst not live
Sm
4
8
Yet mortal looks adore
u
7
7
And yet methinks I have
»l
14
2
maiden gardens, vet unset
«t
16
6
Though yet, heaven knows
(t
17
8
Yet do thy wont
f(
19
13
Yet eyes this cunning want
((
24
13
Yet in these thoughts
il
29
9
Yet him for this my love
u
83
13
yet I have still the loss
u
84
10
Yet doth it steal
It
36
8
But yet be blamed
u
40
7
And yet, love knows
<(
40
11
yet we must not be foes
«l
40
14
but yet thou mightst
<l
41
9
And yet it may be said
u
42
2
And yet to times in hope
It
60
18
was ever yet the fair
u
70
2
Yet this thy praise
II
70
11
Yet be most proud
II
78
9
Yet what of thee
11
79
7
eyes yet not created
It
81
10
yet when they have devised
II
82
9
for my sin you did impute
. "
83
9
and yet I know it not
II
92
14
And yet this time
It
97
5
Yet this abundant Issue
II
97
9
Yet nor the lays of birds
II
98
5
Yet seem'd it winter still
II
98
13
yet I none could see
II
99
14
of ages yet to be
II
101
12
which yet are green
II
104
8
Ah, yet doth beauty
It
104
9
Can yet the lease
u
107
3
but yet, like prayers
II
108
6
Yet then my Judgement
II
115
3
Yet fear her, thou minion
II
126
9
Yet so they mourn
II
127
13
yet none knows well
II
129
13
yet well I know
II
130
9
And yet, by heaven
II
130
13
Yet, in good faith
11
131
5
And yet thou wilt
II
183
13
and yet am I not free
11
134
14
yet receives rain still
II
135
9
Yet what the best is
II
187
4
Yet do not so
II
139
13
yet, love, to tell me so
II
140
6
yet not directly tell
II
144
10
Yet this shall I ne'er know
II
144
13
Yet who knows not
II
151
2
which yet men prove
II
153
7
Found yet moe letters
LC
47
I might as yet have been
4(
•••••
75
was yet upon his chin
II
•••••
92
Yet show'd his visage
II
•••••
96
Yet, if men moved him
II
•••••
101
Yet— yet their purposed trim L C 118
* Yet did I not " „... 148
and yet do question make " 821
Would yet again betray " «... 828
yet not directly tell PP 2 10
Yet not so wistly *• 6 12
and yet, as glass is, brittle "78
and yet as iron rusty "74
Yet in the midst of all " 7 11
yet she foil'd the framing " 7 15
and yet she fell a-turning " 7 16
and yet no cause I have " 10 7
And yet thou left'st me more " 10 9
Yet at my parting sweetly *• 14 7
Yet not for me " 15 16
too young, nor yet unwed " 19 6
Yet will she blush " 19 58
Hearts remote, yet not asunder P T 29
To themselves yet either neither " 43
Yield— did honey passage yield VA 452
And yields at last " ^... 566
captain once doth yield " 893
captive vanquished doth yield R L *.... 75
portal yields him way " «... 309
But if thou yield " «... 626
Yield to my love ** «... 668
Yield to my hand " ...» 1210
they such odd action yield " «... 1433
The earth can yield me Son 81 7
to razed oblivion yield " 122 7
But yield them up LC «... 221
will yield at length P P 19 21
the craggy mountains yields " 20 4
Yielded— nor being desired yielded L C ~... 149
Yielding— caught the yielding prey VA «... 647
Which with a yielding latch jB L «... 339
and her for yielding so *' «... 1036
To accessary yieldings " «... 1658
Yoke— yokes her silver doves VA «... 1190
no bearing yoke they knew R L 409
Unless thou yoke thy liking " «... 1633
Yoking— her .... arms she throws F^ «... 592
Yore— what beauty was of yore Son 68 14
Yob— I pray you hence VA «... 382
•You hurt my hand " «... 421
' if any love you owe me ** «... 528
" Good night," and so say you " 535
If you will say so, you shall have
a kiss
' you crush me ; let me go
You have no reason
* you will fall again
The kiss I gave you
all in vain you strive
like you worse and worse
' If love have lent you
' What have you urg'd
You do it for increase
ever strive to kiss you
you need not fear
The sun doth soom you, and the
wind doth hiss you
thoughts, before you blot R L
be you mediators "
* You mocking birds,' quoth she
be you mute and dumb
There might you see
You might behold
you see grave Kestor stand
II
II
II
It
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
It
II
M
«••« 536
«... 611
...« 612
«... 769
— 771
«... 772
774
«... 775
«... 787
• •••• /vA
«... 1082
— 1083
••••• l^lo4
.... 192
.... 1020
.... 1121
.... 1123
.... 1880
.... 1388
.... 1401
WITHOUT
360
WONT
Wlthont^-sees thee without wonder PP 5 9
a nay is placed without remove *' 18 12
Witnewi—' Witness this primrose
bank VA -... 151
Witness the entertainment " 1108
To witness duty, not to show Son 26 4
To this I witness call " 124 13
on another's neck do witness bear " 131 11
What unapproved witness L C 53
Wittily— love did wittily prevent VA «... 471
Witty— wise in folly, foolish-witty " „... 838
Woe— her woes the more increasing " «... 254
woe unto the birds •* ..... 455
coiument upon every woe " 714
and twenty times, ' Woe, woe " -... 833
still concludes in woe " 839
throng her constant woe ** 967
Thy weal and woe " 987
shall not match his woe " ...» 1140
fellowship in woe doth woe as-
suage H L 790
Base watch of woes *' ..... 928
date of never-ending woes " 935
old woes, not infant sorrows " 1096
Deep woes roll forward " ..... 1118
To keep thy sharp woes waking " „... 1136
fair cheeks over-washed with woe " 1225
My woes are tedious " l.'W9
the tenour of her woe " ..... 1.310
a part of woe doth bear " 1327
So woe hath wearied woe " 1363
her sorrow to the beldam's woes " ..... 1458
I'll tune thy woes " 1465
be freed from guilty woe " 1482
•he weeps Troy's painted woes " «... 1492
Patience scem'd to scorn his woes " 1505
that seem'd ta welcome woe " ~... 1509
Though woe be heavy " 1574
Losing her woes in shows ** 1580
discharge one word of woe " -... 1605
In lue raoe woes than words " «... 1615
voice damm'd up with woe " «... 1661
W^hich speechless woe of his " 1674
My woe too sensible " «... 1678
To drown one woe " 1680
as pitying Lucrece' woes " «... 1747
' Woe, woe,' quoth CoUatine " 1802
such emulation in their woe " 1808
is woe the cure for woe " «... 1821
And with old woes new wail Son 80 4
love's loug-slnce-cancell'd woe " 30 7
from woe to woe tell o'er " 80 10
badges of cither's woe " 44 14
tired with my woe " 60 6
then should make you woe " 71 8
in the rearward of a conquered woe " 90 6
strains of woe which now seem
woe " 90 13
O, that our night of woe " 120 9
becoming of their woe " 127 13
and proved, a very woe "129 11
That season'd woe had pelleted L C «... 18
shrieking undistinguish'd woe " ...« 20
grounds and motives of her woe ** ...« 63
'But, woe is me . " /8
Ifoeftil— a woeful ditty VA 836
the woeful words she told " ...« 1126
A woeful hostess brooks not R L «... 1125
she saw my woeful state Son 145 4
LC
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Woeftal— My woeful self
Wolf— Or as the wolf doth grin
the wolf would leave his prey
No noise but owls' and wolves'
The wolf hath seized his prey
Thou set'st the wolf
might the stem wolf betray
Wonuui— Art thou a woman's son
but of no woman bred
and never woman yet
without ten women's wit
moved with woman's moans
And let mild women
men have marble, women waxen,
minds
Poor women's faces
Poor women's faults
Make weak-made women
A woman's face
A woman's gentle heart
as is false women's fashion
and women's souls amazeth
And for a woman wert thou
pricked thee out for women's pleas-
ure
when a woman woos, what wo-
man's son " 41 7
a woman colour'd ill *' 144 4
a woman colour'd ill P P 2 4
A woman I forswore "85
More in women than in men " 18 18
Had women been so strong •** 19 2S
guiles that women work ** 19 87
A woman's nay doth stand ** 19 42
Think women still to strive *' 19 43
One woman would another wed '^ 19 48
If to women he be bent ** 21 45
Womb — ^Whose hollow .... resounds F^ «.« 268
From earth's dark womb R L «... 649
Thy sea within a puddle's womb ** ...« 657
so fair whose unear'd womb Son 8 5
the womb wherein they grew " 86 4
Like widow'd wombs ** 97 8
whose concave womb reworded L O «... 1
Won— Won in the fields R L 107
And he hath won ** .... 688
and therefore to be won Son 41 6
Wonder — Vouchsafe, thou wonder VA «... 18
gazer late did wonder " «... 748
' Wonder of time " «... 1133
In silent wonder R L «... 84
too much wonder of his eye ** «... 95
wonder of your frame Son 89 10
Nor did I wonder *' 98 9
Have eyes to wonder ** 106 14
that sees thee without wonder PP 5 9
But in them it were a wonder P T «... 83
Wondering— wondering each other's
chance R L «... 1506
Who wondering at him *'* ....1845
Not wondering at the present Son 123 10
Wondrous— at vantage,— ^... dread VA . — 633
the painter for his wondrous skill RL «... 1528
in a wondrous excellence Son 105 6
which wondrous scope affbrds ** 105 12
Wont— Where thou wast wont to
rest R L «... 1621
When I was wont to greet It Son 102 6
that wont to have play'd PP 18 29
YOUNG
367
YOURSELF
To«ii9— With 7onng Adonis PP A 2
VeDua, with young Adonis *' 11 1
O, my love, my lore is young " 12 10
Neither too young nor yet " 19 6
the world and lore were young ** 20 17
Tommgllng— She told the youngling "11 8
Tomaglf— blood wliieh youngly thou
bestow'st Son n 8
Tomngvter— « .... proud and wild "94
Tomr— And 'tis your fault VA 881
Bemove your siege " ..... 423
your tows, your feigned tears,
your flattery " 425
your idle orer-handled theme " 770
Your treatise makes me " 774
more moving than your own ** 776
but your device in love " 789
to your wanton talk " «... 809
With your uncleanness M L 193
your tunes entomb " ~... U21
Within your hoUoW'Swelling fea-
ther'd breasU " ..... 1122
ReUsh your nimble notes " ..... 1126
if your maid may be so bold " 1282
to know your heaviness " 1283
plight your honourable faiths " 1690
And your sweet semblance Son 18 4
When your sweet issue your sweet
form should bear " 13 8
let your son say so " 13 14
change your day of youth " 15 12
fortify yourself in your decay "10 3
bear your living flowers " 16 7
your painted counterfeit " 16 8
by your own sweet skill " 16 14
your most high deserts " 17 2
Which hides your life and shows
not half your parts " 17 4
the beauty of your eyes "17 5
number all your graces '' 17 6
And your true rights " 17 11
To fiad where your true image " 24 6
What is your substance " 53 1
shadow of your beauty show " 63 10
OS your bounty doth appear " 53 11
by verse distills your truth " 54 14
record of your memory " 65 8
your praise shall still find room " 55 10
Being your slave " 57 1
and times of your desire " 57 2
bid your servant once adieu " 57 8
or your aflairs suppose " 67 10
love that in your will " 57 13
made me first your slave " 58 1
your times of pleasure " 58 2
Or at your hand " 58 3
Being your vassal, bound to stay
your leisure " 58 4
being at your beck " 68 5
absence of your liberty " 58 6
your charter is so strong " 58 9
may privilege your time " 58 10
Not blame your pleasure " 58 14
Show me your image " 59 7
wonder of your frame " 59 10
That I in your sweet thought " 71 7
But let your love " 71 12
look Into your moan " 71 13
0, lest your true love " 72 9
Son
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Tomr— feasting on your sight
doth use your name
speaking of your fame
But since your worth
On your broad main
Your shallowest help
upon your soundless deep
your epitaph to make
From hence your memory
Your name from hence
Your monument shall be
tongues to be your being shall re-
hearse
therefore to your fair no painting
set
I slept in your report
in one of your fair eyes
Then both your poets
where your equal grew
you to your beauteous blessings
makes your praises worse
While comments of your praise
But when your countenance
As with your shadow
Look in your glass
Than of your graces and your gifts
Your own glass shows you
when first your eye I eyed
Such seems your beauty
So your sweet hue
your worth to sing
Even that your pity
Your love and pity
and praises from your tongue
shapes them to your feature
And that your love
as your sweet self resemble
your great deserts repay
your dearest love to call
your own dear-purchased right
farthest from your sight
level of your frown
in your waken'd hate
and virtue of your love
bring full your ne'er-cloying sweet-
ness
I suffer'd in your crime
that your trespass
Let it not tell your Judgement
must your oblations be
to your own command
What me your minister
and to your audit comes
I pour your ocean all among
Must for your victory
to physic your cold breast
Tours — No longer yours than you
yourself Son
were some child of yours allv^
As I by yours
Mine ransoms yours, and yours
must ransom me
*0, then, advance of youis that
phrascless hand L C
Tomrself— Busy yourselves in skill-
contending schools a L
O, that you were yourself Son
No longer yours than you your-
self here lire **
75
9
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WORLD
362
WOULD
World— That all the world 5m 112 14
All this the world well knows '* 129 18
wide world's common place *' 187 10
in the world's false subtleties " 138 4
world is g^wn so bad ** 140 11
What means the world to say " 148 6
Storming her world L C 7
in the world's false forgeries P P \ 4
*Gainst whom the world ** 8 2
The san look'd on the world " 6 11
If that the world and love " 20 17
If orld-wtthont-end— the .... hour Son 57 5
MTorm — eyes, like glow-worms VA 621
earth's worm, what dost thou '* 933
Why should the worm intrude R L 848
the little worms that creep " 1248
and make worms thine heir Son 6 14
with vilest worms to dwell " 71 4
The prey of worms " 74 10
Shall worms, inheritors of this *' 146 7
Worm-hole— To fill with worm-holes J? 2^ ..... 946
Wormwood— to bitter.... taste ** 893
Wom-oat— pattern of the .... age " 18S0
Worse — were thy lips the worse VA ..... 207
worse than Tantalus' is her annoy '* 599
mischief worse than civil hom^
bred strife '' 764
like you worse and worse " -... 774
Worse than a slavish wipe R L ...~ 637
To subjects worse have given Son 69 14
Not making worse what nature ** 84 10
which makes your praises worse ** 84 14
smell far worse than weeds *' 94 14
And worse essays prove thee " 110 8
Worser — Urging the worser sense R L ..... 249
takes the worser part ** ..... 294
but she, in worser taking *' 453
The worser spirit a woman Son 144 4
My worser spirit a woman P P 2 4
Wonhip— doth worship thy defect Son 149 11
Wonihipper— suspecteth the false
worshipper RL ^
Wont— The worst is but denial
He in the worst sense construes
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It
Yet do thy worst, old Time
The worst was this
At first the very worst
But do thy worst
fear the worst of wrongs
take the worst tu l»e
thy worst all best exceeds
Worth— prove nothing worth
that's worth the viewing
of small worth held
Neither in inward worth
of thy worth and truth
ten times more in worth
O, how thy worth with manners
Like stones of worth
Praising thy worth
mine own worth do define
in all worths surmount
Thy worth the greater
to love things nothing worth
The worth of that
But since your worth
Finding thy worth a limit
Speaking of worth, what worth in
you doth grow
Son
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Worth— The charter of thy worth San
thy own worth then not knowing **
all bare, is of more worth
skill enough your worth to sing
Whose worth's unknown *'
dear nature, worth, and quality L C
what are precepts worth **
Worthier — ^the travail of a ... . pen Son
Worthlnesa— whose .... gives scope **
Worthless— some .... slave of thine R L
I am a worthless boat Son
on some worthless song **
Worthy— seem death-worthy in thy
brother R L
Is worthy blame
thus begins: 'Thou worthy lord
87
87
103
106
116
79
62
80
100
II
11
83 8
To show me worthy
Wortliy perusal stand
Most worthy comfort
can nothing worthy prove
More worthy I to be
rule things worthy blame
Wot— Ood wot, it was defect
Would- as she would be thrust
Would in thy palm dissolve
and now she fain would speak
She would, he will not
would surpass the life
Would thou wert as I am
I would assure thee
bane would cure thee
O, would thou hadst not
my ears would love
thy outward parts would move
Yet would my love to thee be
Would they not wish
Would root these beauties
would breed a scarcity
And would say after her
would he put his bonnet on
the gaudy sun would peep
The wind would blow it off
then would Adonis weep
They both would strive
he would not fear him
tiger would be tame
wolf would leave his prey
That some would sing
Would bring him mulberries
beauty would blush for shame
Virtue would stain that o'er
that would let him go
Would with the sceptre straight
be strucken
And they would stand
This guilt would seem
what he would lose again
And therefore would they still in
darkness be
queen he would distain
CoUatine would else have come to
me
Would purchase thee a thousand
who so base would such an office
have
in night would cloistcr'd be
at that would do it good
mine own would do me good
She would request to know
Son
II
II •>!
II
PP
RL
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26
38
48
72
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19
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447
636
753
852
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1102
1103
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347
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688
752
786
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963
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1085
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1274
1288
VENUS AND ADONIS
EvEir u the sun with pnrple-colour'd face
Had ta'en his last leave of the weeping mom,
Bose-cheek'd Adonis hied him to the chase ;
Hunting he lored, but love he laugh'd to scorn ;
Sick-thoughted Venus makes amain unto him, 6
And like a bold-faced suitor 'gins to woo him.
* Thrice fkirer than myself/ thus she began,
' The field's chief flower, sweet above compare,
Stain to all nymphs, more loTelj than a man,
More white and red than doves or roses are ; 10
Nature that made thee, with herself at strife,
Saith that the world hath ending with thy life.
* Vouchsafe, thou wonder, to alight thy steed,
And rein hid proud head to the saddle-bow ;
If thou wilt deign this favour, for thy meed 15
A thousand honey secrets shalt thou know ;
Here come and sit, where never serpent hisses,
And, being set, I'll smother thee with kisses ;
* And yet not cloy thy lips with loathed satiety.
But rather famish them amid their plenty, 20
Making them red and pale with fresh variety;
Ten kisses short as one, one long as twenty ;
A summer's day will seem an hour but short.
Being wasted in such time-beguiling sport.'
With this she seizeth on his sweating palm, 25
The precedent of pith and livelihood,
And, trembling in her passion, calls it balm,
Earth's sovereign salve to do a goddess good ;
Being so enraged, desire doth lend her force
Ck>urageously to pluck him from his horse. 80
Over one arm the lusty courser's rein.
Under her other was the tender boy.
Who blush'd and pouted in a dull disdain.
With leaden appetite, unapt to toy ;
She red and hot as coals of glowing fire, S5
H^ red for shame, but frosty in desire.
The studded bridle on a ragged bough
Nimbly she fastens,— O, how quick is love ! —
The steed is stalled up, and even now
To tie the rider she begins to prove ; 40
Backward she push'd him, as she would be
thrust,
Andgovem'd him in strength, though not in lust.
So soon was she along as he was down.
Each iMining on their ellMws and their hips:
Now doth she stroke his cheek, now doth be
frown, 45
And 'gins to chide, but soon she stops his lips, j
24
And kissing speaks, with lustfUl language
broken,
' If thou wilt chide, thy lips shall never open.'
He bums with bashful shame; she with her tears
Doth quench the maiden burning of his cheeks ; 50
Then with her windy sighs and golden hairs
To fan and blow them dry again she seeks ;
He saith she is immodest, blames her miss ;
What follows more she murders with a kiss.
Even as an empty eagle, sharp by fast, 56
Tires with her beak on feathers, flesh, and bone.
Shaking her wings, devouring all in haste.
Till either gorge be stufTd or prey be gone ;
Even so she kiss'd his brow, his cheek, his chin,
And where she ends she doth anew beg^ 60
Forced to content, but never to obey,
Panting he lies and breatheth in her face ;
She feedeth on the steam as on a prey.
And calls it heavenly moisture, air of g^race; 64
Wishing her cheeks were gardens full of flowers,
So they weredew'd with such distilling showers.
Look, how a bird lies tangled in a net.
So fasten'd in her arms Adonis lies ;
Pure shame and awed resistance made him fret,
Which bred more beauty in his angry eyes ; 70
Rain added to a river that is rank
Perforce will force it overflow the bank.
Still she entreats, and prettily entreats,
For to a pretty ear she tunes her tale ;
Still is he sullen, still be lours and frets, 75
'Twixt crimson shame and anger ashy-pale ;
Being red, she loves him best; and being white,
Her best is better'd with a more delight.
Look how he can, she cannot choose but love ;
And by her fair immortal hand she swears 80
From his soft bosom never to remove.
Till he take truce with her contending tears.
Which long have rain'd, making her cheeks all
wet;
And one sweet kiss shall pay this countless debt
Upon this promise did he raise his chin, 85
Like a dive-dapper peering through a wave.
Who, being look'd on, ducks as quickly in ;
So offers he to give what she did crave ;
But when her lips were ready for his pay.
He winks, and turns his lips another way. 90
Never did passenger in summer's heat
More thirst for drink than she for this good turn.
869
370
VENUS AND ADONIS
[Line 93-204.
Her help she sees, but help she cannot get;
She bathes in water, yet her fire must bum ;
*0, pity,' 'gan she cry, 'flint-hearted boy I
'Tis but a kiss I beg ; why art thou coy?
95
* I bare been woo'd, as I entreat thee now,
Even by the stem and direful god of war,
Whose sinewy neck in battle ne'er did bow,
Who conquers where he comes in every jar; 100
Yet hath he been my captive and my slave,
And begg'd for that which thou unask'd shalt
have.
'Over ray altars hath he hung his lance.
His batter'd shield, his uncontrolled crest,
And for ray sake hath learn'd to sport and dance,
To toy, to wanton, dally, smile and jest ; 106
Scorning his churlish drum and ensign red.
Making my arms his field, his tent my bed.
*Thus he that overruled I oversway'd,
Leading him prisoner in a red-rose chain ; IJO
Strong -tempered steel his stronger strength
obey'd,
Yet was he servile to my coy disdain.
O, be not proud, nor brag not of thy might.
For mastering her that foil'd the god of fight !
* Touch but my lips with those fair lips of thine,—
Though mine be not so fair, yet are they red, — 116
The kiss shall be thine own as well as mine;
What see'st thou in the ground? hold up thy head ;
Look in mine eyeballs, there thy beauty lies ;
Then why not lips on lips, since eyes in eyes? 120
' Art thou ashamed to kiss? then wink again.
And I will wink ; so shall the day seem night ;
Love keeps his revels where there are but twain ;
Be bold to play, our sport is not in sight;
These blue-vein'd violets whereon we lean 125
Never can blab, nor know not what we mean.
* The tender spring upon thy tempting lip
Shews thee unripe ; yet mayst thou well be tasted ;
Make use of time, let not advantage slip;
Beauty within itself should not be wasted ; 130
Fair flowers that are not gathered in their prime
Rot and consume themselves in little time.
'Were I hanl-favour'd, foul, or wrinkled-old,
ni-nurturcd, crooked, churlls^h, harsh in voice,
O'erworn, despised, rheumatic and cold, 135
Thick-sighted, barren, lean, and lacking juice.
Then mightst thou pause, for then I were not
for thee ;
But having no defects, why dost abhor me?
' Thou canst not see one wrinkle in my brow ;
Mine eyes are grey, and bright, and quick ic
turning; 140
My beauty as the spring doth yearly grow.
My flesh Is soft and plump, ray marrow burning;
My smooth, moist hand, were it with thy hand
felt.
Would in thy palm dissolve, or seem to melt.
'Bid me discourse, T will enchant thine ear, 145
Or, like a fairy, trip upon the green,
Or, like a nymph with long dishevell'd hair.
Dance on the sands, and yet no footing seen ;
Love is a spirit all compact of fire.
Not gross to sink, but light, and will aspire. ISO
' Witness this primrose bank whereon I lie;
These forceless flowers like sturdy trees support
me;
Two strengthless doves will draw me through the
sky.
From mom till night, even where I list to sport me ;
Is love so light, sweet boy, and may it be 155
That thou shouldst think it heavy unto thee?
'Is thine own heart to thine own face affected?
Can thy right hand seize love upon thy left?
Then woo thyself, be of thyself rejected.
Steal thine own freedom, and complain on theft.
Narcissus so himself himself forsook, 161
And died to kiss his shadow in the brook.
' Torches are made to light, jewels to wear,
Dainties to taste, fresh beauty for the use, 164
Herbs for their smell, and sappy plants to bear ;
Things growing to themselves are growth's abuse ;
Seeds spring from seeds and beauty breedeth
beauty ;
Thou wast begot ; to get it is thy duty.
' Upon the earth's increase why shouldst thou feed,
Unless the earth with thy increase be fed? 170
By law of nature thou art bound to breed.
That thine may live when thou thyself art dead;
And so, in spite of death, thou dost sarvive,
In that thy likeness still is left alive.*
By this, the love-«ick queen began to sweat, 175
For, where they lay, the shadow had forsook than.
And Titan, tired in the mid-day heat,
With burning eye did hotly overlook them,
Wishing Adonis had his team to guide.
So he were like him and by Venus' side. 180
And now Adonis, with a lajcy spright.
And with a heavy, dark, disliking eye.
His louring brows o'erwhelming his fair sight.
Like misty vapours when they blot the sky, 184
Souring his checks, cries * Fie, no more of love!
The sun doth burn my face ; I must remove.*
' Ay me,' quoth Venus, ' young, and so unkind !
What bare excuses makest thou to be gone!
I'll sigh celestial breath, whose gentle wind
Shall cool the heat of this descending sun ; 190
I'll make a shadow for thee of my hairs;
If they burn too, I'll quench them with my teariL
* The sun that shines from heaven shines bat warm.
And, lo, I lie between that sun and thee:
The heat I have from thence doth little harm, 19S
Thine eye darts forth the fire that buraeth me;
And were I not immortal, life were done
Between this heavenly and earthly sun.
'Art thou obdurate, flinty, hard as steel?
Nay, more than flint, for stone at rain relenteth;
Art thou a woman's son, and canst not feel 201
What 'tis to love? how want of love tormenteth?
O, had thy mother borne so hard a mind.
She had not brought forth thoe, but died unkind.
Line 205-318.]
VENUS AND ADONIS
371
* What Mil I, that thou shonldst contemn me this?
Or what great danger dwells upon my suit ? 206
What were thy lips the worse for one poor kiss?
8peak, fair; but speak fair words, or else be mute ;
Give me one kiss, lil give it thee again,
And one for interest, if thou wilt have twain. 210
*Fie, lifeless picture, cold and senseless stone,
Well-painted idol, image dull and dead,
Statue contenting but the eye alone,
Thing like a man, but of no woman bred !
Thou art no man, though of a man's com-
plexion, 215
For men will kiss even by their own direction.'
This said, impatience chokes her pleading tongue.
And swelling passion doth provoke a pause ;
Red cheeks and flery eyes blase forth her wrong;
Being judge in love, she cannot right her cause;
And now she weeps, and now she fain would
speak, 221
And now her sobs do her intendments break.
Sometimes she shakes her head, and then his hand,
Kow gazcth she on him, now on the ground ;
Sometimes her arms infold him like a band ; 225
She would, he will not in her arms be bound ;
And when from thence he struggles to be gone,
She locks her lily fingers one in one.
'Fondling,' she saith, 'since I have hemm*d thee
here
Within the circuit of this ivory pale, 230
m be a park, and thou shalt be my deer ;
Feed where thou wilt, on mountain or in dale ;
Grace on my lips, and if those hills f)e dry.
Stray lower, where the pleasant fountains Ho.
* Within this limit is relief enough, 2&5
Sweet bottom-grass and high delightful plain.
Bound rising hillocks, brakes obscure and rough,
To shelter thee from tempest and from rain ;
Then be my deer, since I am such a park ;
No dog shall rouse thee, though a thousand
bark.' 240
At this Adonis smiles as in disdain.
That in each cheek appears a pretty dimple ;
Lore made those hollows, if himself were slain,
He might be buried in a tomb so simple ;
Foreknowing well, if there he came to lie, 245
Why, there Love lived, and there he could not
die.
These lovely caves, these round enchanting pits,
Open'd their mouths to swallow Venus' liking.
Being mad before, how doth she now for wits? 249
Struck dead at first, what needs a second striking ?
Poor queen of love, in thine own law forlorn.
To love a cheek that smiles at thee in scorn !
Kow which way shall she turn ? what shall she say ?
Her words are done, her woes the more increasing ;
The time is spent, her object will away, 255
And from her twining arms doth urge releasing.
*Pity,' she cries, 'some favour, some remorse !'
Away he springs, and hasteth to his horse.
But, lo, from forth a copse that neighbours by,
A breeding jennet, hMty,' young, and proud, 260
Adonis' trampling courser doth espy.
And forth she rushes, snorts and neighs aloud ;
The strong-neck'd steed, being tied unto a tree,
Breaketh his rein and to her straight goes he.
Imperiously he leaps, he neighs, he bounds, 265
And now his woven girths he breaks asuuder;
The bearing earth with his hard hoof he wounds.
Whose hollow womb resounds like heaven's thun-
der;
The iron bit h? crusheth 'tween his teeth,
Controlling what he was controlled with. 270
His ears up-prick*d ; his braided hanging mane
Upon his compass'd crest now stand on end ;
His nostrils drink the air, and forth again.
As from a furnace, vapours doth he send ;
His eye, which scornfully glisters like fire, 275
Shows his hot courage and his high desire.
Sometime he trots, as if he told the steps.
With gentle majesty and modest pride ;
Anon he rears upright, curvets and leaps,
^ who should say ' Lo, thus my strength is tried ;
And this I do to captivate the eye 281
Of the fair breeder that is standing by.'
What rceketh he his rider's angry stir.
His flattering ' Holla' or his 'SUnd, I say'?
What cares he now for curb or pricking spur? 288
For rich caparisons or trapping gay ?
He sees his love, and nothing else he sees.
For nothing else with his proud sight agrees.
Look, when a painter would surpass the life,
In limning out a well-proportion'd steed, 290
His art with nature's workmanship at strife.
As if the dead the living should exceed ;
So did this horse excel a common one
In shape, in courage, colour, pace, and bone.
Round-hoof'd, short-jointed, fetlocks shag and
lon^, 295
Broad breast, full eye, small head and nostril wide.
High crest, short ears, straight legs and passing
strong.
Thin mane, thick tail, broad buttock, tender hide ;
Look, what a horse should have he did not lack,
Save a proud rider on so proud a back. 300
Sometime he scuds far ofl", and there he stares ;
Anon he starts at stirring of a feather;
To bid the wind a bast> he now prepares,
And whe*r he run or fly they know not whether;
For through his mane and tall the high wind
sings, :{05
Fanning the hairs, who wave like feather'd
wings.
He looks upon his love and neighs unto her;
She answers him, as if she knew his mind ; 308
Being proud, as females are, to see him woo her.
She puts on outward strangeness, seems unkind.
Spurns at his love and .scorns the heat he feels.
Beating hb kind cmbracements with her heels.
Then, like a melancholy malcontent.
He vails his tall, that, like a falling plume.
Cool shadow to his melting buttock lent; 315
He stanifiH, au'l hitos the poor flWvt in hbt fume.
His love, perceiving how he Ls onrag«*d,
Grew kinder, and his fury was assuaged.
372
VENUS AND ADONIS
[Link 319-430.
His testy master goeth about to take him ;
Wtien, lo, the unback'd breeder, full of fear, 320
Jealous of catching, swiftly doth forsake him,
With her the horse, and left Adonis there ;
As they were mad, unto the wood they hie them,
Out-stripping crows that strive to over-fly them.
All swoln with chafing, down Adonis sits, 82S
Banning his boisterous and unruly beast;
And now the happy season once more fits,
That love-sick Love by pleading may be blest;
For lovers say the heart hath treble wrong
When it is barr'd the aidance of the tongue. 830
An oven that is stopped, or river stay'd,
Burncth more hotly, swulleth with more rage;
80 of concealed sorrow may be said :
Free vent of words love's fire doth assuage ;
But when the heart's attorney once is mute, 339
The client breaks, as des])crate in his suit.
He sees her coming, and begins to glow,
Even as a dying coal revives with wind.
And with his bonnet hides his angry brow.
Looks on the dull earth with disturbed mind ; 340
Taking no notice that she is so nigh.
For all askaikce he holds her iu his eye.
O, what a sight it was, wistly to view
Uow she came stealing to the wayward boy !
To note the fighting conflict of her hue, 345
Uow white and red each other did destroy !
But now her cheek was pale, and by and by
It flash'd forth flre, as lightning from the sky.
Now was she Just before him as ho sat,
And like a lowly lover down she kneels; 350
With one fair hand she hcaveth up his hat,
Her other tender hand his fair cheek feels;
His tenderer check receives her soft hand's
print.
As apt as new-fall'n snow takes any dint.
O, what a war of looks was then between tliem ! 355
Her eyes petitioners to his eyes suing ;
His eyes saw her eyes as they had not seen them !
Her eyes woo'd still, his eyes disdain'd the wooing ;
And all tliiitdunib play had his acts made plain
With tears, which chorus-like her eyes did
rain. 360
Full gently now she takes him by the hand,
A lily prison'd in a gaol of snow.
Or ivory in an alabaster band ;
So white a friend engirts so white a foe;
This beauteous combat, wilful and unwilling, 365
Show'd like two silver doves that sit »-bilIing.
Once more the engine of her thoughts began :
O fairest mover on this mortal round,
Would thou wert as I am, and I a man, 369
My heart all whole as thine, ihy heart my wound ;
For one sweet look thy help I would assure thee.
Though nothing but my body's bane would cure
thee.'
Give me my hand,' saith he; ' why dost thou feel
itr
Give me my heart,' saith sh3, 'and thou shalt
have it ;
O, give it me. lest thy hard heart do steel it, 375
And being steel'd, soft aigbs can never grave it ;
Then love's deep groans I never shall regard,
Because Adonis' heart hath made mine hard.*
' For shame,' he cries, * let go, and let me go ;
My day's delight is past, my horse is gone, 380
And 'tis your fault I am bereft him so;
I pray you hence, and leave me here alone ;
P'or all my mind, my thought, my busy c&re.
Is how to get my palfrey from the mare.*
Thus she replies: 'Thy palfrey, as he should, 335
Welcomes the warm approach of sweet desiro ;
Affection is a coal that must be cool'd ;
Else, suffered, it will set the heart on fire; 888
The sea hath bounds, but deep desire hath none ;
Therefore no marvel though thy horse be gone.
• How like a jade he stood, tied to the tree,
Servilely master'd with a leathern rein !
But when he saw his love, his youth's fair fee,
He held such petty bondage in disdain ; 3M
Throwing the base thong from his bending crest,
Enfranchising his mouth, his back, his breast.
• Who sees his true-love in her naked bed,
Teaching the sheets a whiter hue than white.
But, when his glutton eye so full hath fed,
His other agents aim at like delight? 400
Who is so faint, that dares not be so bold
To touch the fire, the weather being cold?
• Let me excuse thy courser, gentle boy ;
And learn of him, I heartily beseech thee,
To take advantage on presented Joy ; 406
Though I were dumb, yet his proceedings teach
thee;
O, learn to love ; the lesson Is but plain, %
And once made perfect, never lost again.'
' I know not love,' quoth he, ' nor will not know It,
Unless it be a boar, and then I chase it ; 410
'Tis much to borrow, and I will not owe it;
My love to love is love but to disgrace it ;
For I have heard it is a life in death,
That laughs, and weeps, and all but with m
breath.
'Who wears a garment shapeless and unflni8h*d?
Who plucks the bud before one leaf put forth? 416
If springing things be any Jot diminish'd,
They wither in their prime, prove nothing worth ;
The colt that's back'd and burdon'd being young
Loseth hU pride, and never waxeth strong. 420
• You hurt my hand with wringing; let us part.
And leave this idle theme, this bootless chat;
Remove your siege from my unyielding heart;
To love's alarms it will not o|K5 the gate ;
Dismiss your vows, your feigned tears, your
flattery ; 425
For where a heart is hard they make no battery.*
• What ! canst thou talk V quoth she, ' hast thoa a
tongue ?
O, would thou hadst not, or I had no hearing !
Thy mermaid's voice hath done me double wrong ;
I had my load before, now press'd with bearing ; 430
Line 431-544]
VENUS AND ADONIS
373
Xelodious discord, hesrenly tune hanh-aoond-
Ear's deep-sweet music, and heart's deep<«ore
wounding.
* Had I no ef es but ears, my ears would love
That inward beauty and invisible ;
Or were I deaf, thy outward parts would move 485
Each part in me that were but sensible;
Though neither eyes nor ears, to hear nor see.
Yet should I be in love by touching thee.
* Say, that the sense of feeling were bereft me,
And that I could not see, nor hear, nor touch, 440
And nothing but the very smell were left me,
Yet would my love to thee be still as much ;
For from the stillitory of thy face excelling
Comes breath perfumed, that breedeth love by
smelling.
' But, O, what banquet wert thou to the taste, 445
Being nurse and feeder of the other four!
Would they not wish the feast might ever last,
And bid Suspicion double-lock the door,
Lrat Jealousy, that sour unwelcome guest,
Should by his stealing in disturb the feast f 450
Once more the ruby-colour'd portal open'd.
Which to his speech did honey passage yield ;
Like a red mom that ever yet betoken'd
Wreck to the seaman, tempest to the field,
Sorrow to shepherds, woe unto the birds, 455
Ousts and fool flaws to herdmen and to herds.
This ill presage adviaedly she marketh ;
Even as the wind is hush'd before it raineth.
Or as the wolf doth grin before he barkcth.
Or as the berry breaks before it staineth, 460
Or like the deadly bullet of a gun.
His meaning struck her ere his words begun.
And at his look she flatly falleth down.
For looks kill love, and love by looks reviveth ;
A smile rccures the wounding of a frown ; 465
But blessed bankrupt, that by love so thriveth !
The silly boy, believing she is dead.
Claps her pale cheek, tUl clapping makes it red; j
And all %mKUf^ brake off his late intent.
For sharply he did think to reprehend her, 470
Which cunning love did wittily prevent ;
Fair (all the wit that can so well defend her!
For on the grass she lies as she were slain.
Till his breath breatheth life in her again.
He wrings her nose, he strikes her on the cheeks,
He bends her fingers, holds her puLKS hard, 476
He chafes her lips ; a thousand way* he seeks
To mend the hurt that his onkindness marr'd;
He kisses her ; and she, by her go'jd will.
Win never rise, so he will kiss her still. 480
The night of sorrow now is tom'd to day ;
Her two blue windows faiutly she op-h««veth.
Like the fisir sun, when in h\-, frH»h array
He cheers the mom. a:id all th** «4rtb rfU^veth ;
And as the briffht iMjn t^lorifitrv the sky, 446
So is her Csce illumined with lurr eye ;
Whose beams upon his hairless face are fix'd.
As if from thence they borrow'd all their shine.
W^ere never four such lamps together raix'd.
Had not his clouded with his brow's repine;
But hers, which through the crystal tears gave
Ught, 481
Shone like the moon in water seen by night.
'O, where am I?* quoth she; 'in earth or heaven,
Or In the ocean drench'd, or in the fire?
What hour is this? or mom or weary even? 495
Do I delight to die, or life desire?
But now I lived, and life was death's annoy ;
But now I died, and death was lively Joy.
' O, thou didst kill me ; kill me once again ; 499
Thy eyes' shrewd tutor, that hard heart of thine.
Hath taught them scornful tricks, and such di»*
dain.
That they have murder'd this poor heart of mine ;
And these mine eyes, true leaders to their queen.
But for thy piteous lips no more had seen.
' Long may they kiss each other, for this cure! 505
O, never let their crimson liveries wear!
And as they last, their verdure still endure,
To drive infection from the dangerous year !
That the star-gazers, having writ on death, 509
May say, the plague is banish'd by thy breath.
' Pure lips, sweet seals in my soft lips imprinted.
What bargains may I make, still to be scssling?
To sell myself I can be well contented.
So thou wilt buy, and pay, and use good dealing;
Which purchase if thou make, for fear of slips
Set thy seal-manual on my wax-red lipa. 516
' A thousand kisses buys my heart from me ;
And pay them at thy kisore, one by one.
What is ten hundred touches unto thee?
Are they not quickly told and quickly gone? 630
^y, for non-payment that the debt should
double,
Is twenty hundred kisses such a trouble?*
* Fair queen,' quoth he, ' if any love you owe me.
Measure my strangeness with my unripe years;
Before I know myself, seek not to know me; 529
No fisher but the ungniwn fry forbears;
The mellow plum doth fall, the green sticks fkst,
Or being early friock'd is sour to taste.
• Lrx>k. the world's comforter, with weary gait.
His day's hot task hath endM in the west ; 590
The owl, night's herald, shrieks,— 'tis very late;
The sheep are gone to fold, birds to their nest;
And coal-black clouds that shadow heaven's
light
Do summon us to part, and bid good-night.
'Now let me say "Good-night," and so say you;
If you will say s«>, yrni shall have a kiss.' 596
' O'xid-oight,' t\wA\\ she ; and. ere he says 'Adieu,'
The honey f»*<; of jiartiug t^nd'T'd is;
Her arm* do lend his m.'ck a sweet embrace; 59E
locyjrporate then th^T^ seem ; face grows to Csee.
Till brfathless he disHn'd. snd )jar;kward drew
Th«f h<'aTf;nly ro'/lrtur^, that iww't c'iral m'iuth,
yi\%*m'. pr<rcl'Mis taMU- her thirtty lips well knew,
WlR-reon they warftlt, yet complain on drouth ;
374
VENUS AND ADONIS
[Line 545-652.
\
He with her plentf pressed, she faint with
dearth, 545
Their lips together glued, fUl to the earth.
Now qaick desire hath caught the yielding prey,
And glutton-like she feed^, yet never ftlleth ;
Her lips are conquerors, his lips obey,
Paying what ransom the influlter wiileth ; 550
Whose vulture-thought doth pitch the price so
high,
That she will draw his lips' rich treasure dry.
And having felt the sweetness of the sjMil,
With blindfold fury she begins to forage ; 551
Her face doth r^k and smoke, her blood doth boil,
And careless lust stirs up a desperate courage,
Planting oblivion, beating reason back,
Forgetting shame's pure blush and honour's
wrack.
Hot, faint, and weary, with her hard embracing,
Like a wild bird being tamed with too much hand-
ling, 560
Or as the fleet-foot roe that's tired with chasing,
Or like the froward infant still'd with dandling,
He now obeys, and now no more resistcth,
While she takes all she con, not all she liateth.
What wax so frozen but dissolves with tempering,
And yields at last to every light impression? 566
Things out of hope are compass'd oft with ven-
turing,
Chiefly in love, whose leave exceeds commission ;
Affection faints not like a pale-faced coward.
But then woos best when most his choice is
froward. 670
When he did frown, 0, had she then gave over,
Such nectar fnim hiti lips she had not suck'd.
Foul words and frowns must not repel a lover ;
What though the rose have prickles, yet 'tis
pluck'd ;
Were beauty under twenty locks kept fast, 575
Yet love breaks through, and picks them all at
last
For pity now she can no more detain him ;
The poor fool prays her that he may depart;
She is resolved no longer to restrain him ;
Bids him farewell, and look well to her heart, 580
The which, by Cupid's bow she doth protest.
He carries thence incagcd in his breast.
'Sweet boy,' she says, 'this night I'll waste in
sorrow,
For my sick heart commands mine eyes to watch.
Tell me, love's master, shall we meet to-mor-
row? . 585
Say, shall we? shall we? wilt thou make the
match?'
He tells her, no ; to-morrow he intends
To hunt the boar with certain of his friends.
'The boar!' quoth she; whereat a sudden pale,
Like lawn being spread upon the blushing rose, 590
Usurps her cheek ; she trembles at his tale,
And on his neck her yoking arms she throws;
She sinketh down, still banging by his neck.
He on her belly falls, she on her back.
Now is she in the very lists of love, 696
Her champion mounted for the hot encounter;
All is imaginary she doth prove.
He will not manage her, although be mount her;
That worse than Tantalus' is her annoy,
To clip Elysium, and to lack her Joy. SOO
Even as poor birds, deceived with painted grapea,
Do surfeit by the eye and pine the maw,
Even so she languisheth in her mishaps.
As those poor birds that helpless berries saw. 601
The warm effects which she in him finds missing
She seeks to kindle with continual kissing.
But all in vain ; good queen, it will not be ;
She hath assay'd as much as may be proved ;
Her pleading hath deserved a greater fee ;
She's Love, she loves, and yet she is not loved. 610
• Fie, fie,' he says, • you crush me ; let me go ;
You have no reason to withhold me so.'
'Thou hadst been gone,* quoth she, 'sweet boy, ere
this.
But that thou told'st me thoa wooldst hunt tho
boar.
O, be advised ; thou know'st not what it is 616
With Javelin's point a churlish swine to gore,
Whose tushes never sheathed he whetteth still,
Like to a mortal butcher, bent to kiU.
' On his bow-back he hath a battle set
Of bristly pikes, that ever threat his foes ; 620
His eyes, like glow-worms, shine when he doth
fret;
His snout digs sepulchres where'er he goes;
Being moved, he strikes whate'er is in his way;
And whom he strikes his crooked tushes alay.
' His brawny sides, with hairy bristles arm'd, 625
Are better proof than thy spear's point can enter;
His short thick neck cannot be easily harm'd;
Being ireful, on the lion he will venture;
The thorny brambles and embracing bushes, 629
As fearful of him, part ; through whom he rushes.
' Alas, he nought esteems that face of thine,
To which Love's eyes pay tributary gazes ;
Nor thy soft hands, sweet lips and crystal eyne,
^1iosc full perfection all the world amazes; 634
But having thee at vantage, — wondrous dread.* —
Would root these l)eautie8 as he roots the mead.
' O, let him keep his loathsome cabin still ;
Beauty hath nought to do with such foul fiends ;
Come not within his danger by thy will ; 6^^
They that thrive well take counsel of their friends.
When thou didst name tlie boar, not to dissemble,
I fear'd thy fortune, and my Joints did tremble.
' Didst thou not mark my face? was it not white?
Saw'st thou not signs of fear lurk in mine eye?
Grew I not faint? and fell I not downright? 645
Within my bosom, wiiereon thou dost lie.
My boding heart pants, beats, and takes no rest,
But, like an earthquake, shakes thee on my
breast.
' For where Love reigns, disturbing Jealousy
Doth call himself AffV'Ction's sentinel ; 660
Gives false alarms, suggesteth mutiny.
And in a peaceful hour doth cry " Kin^ kiUf*
Line 653-766.]
VENUS AND ADONIS
375
Distempering gentle Love in his desire,
As air and water do at»ate the fire.
' This sour informer, this bate-breeding spf , 65S
This canker that eats up Love's tender spring,
This carry-tale, dissentious Jealousy,
That sometime true newi, sometime false doth
bring,
Knocks at my heart, and whispers in mine ear,
That if I love thee, I thy death should fear; 660
'And more than so, presentcth to mine eye
The picture of an angry-chafing boar.
Under whose sliarp fangs on his back doth lie
An image like thyself, all stained with gore ;
Whose blood upon the fresh flowers being shed
Doth make them droop with grief and hang the
head. 666
' What should I do, seeing thee so indeed.
That tremble at the imagination ?
The thought of it doth make my faint heart bleed.
And fear doth teach it divination ; 670
I prophesy thy death, my living sorrow.
If thou encounter with the boar to-morrow.
' But if thou needs wilt hunt, be ruled by me ;
Uncouple at the timorous flying hare,
Or at the fox which lives by subtlety, 675
Or at the roe which no encounter dare ;
Pursue these fearful creatures o'er the downs.
And on thy well-breath'd horse keep with thy
hounds.
'And when thou hast on foot the purblind hare,
Hark the poor wretch, to overshoot his troubles.
How he outruns the wind, and with what care 681
He cranks and crosses with a thousand doubles ;
The many musits through the which he goes
Are like a labyrinth to amaze his foes.
' Sometime he runs among a flock of sheep, 685
To make the cunning hounds mistake their smell,
And sometime where earth-delving conies keep.
To stop the loud pursuers in their yell ;
And sometime sorteth with a herd of deer :
Danger deviseth shifts ; wit waits on fear ; 690
' For there his smell with others being mingled.
The hot scent-snuffing hounds are driven to doubt.
Ceasing their clamorous cry till they have singled
With much ado the cold fault cleanly out ;
Then do they spend their mouths ; Echo replies.
As if another chose were in the skies. 696
' By this, poor Wat, far off upon a hill,
Stands on his hinder legs with listening ear.
To hearken if his foes pursue him still ;
Anon their loud alarums he doth hear ; 700
And now his grief may be compared well
To one sore sick that hears the passing-bell.
•Then shalt thou see the dew-bedabbled wretch
Turn, and return, indenting with the way;
Each envious brier his weary legs duth scratch, 705
Each sl^kdow makes him stop, each murmur stay ;
For misery is trodden on by many,
And being low never relieved by any.
* Lie quietly, and hear a little more;
Nay, do not struggle, for thou shalt not riae; 710
To make thee hate the hunting of the boar,
Unlike myself thou hear^st me moralize.
Applying this to that, and so to so ;
For k>ve can comment upon every woe.
' Where did I leave V ' No matter where,' quoth he ;
' Leave me, and then the story aptly ends ; 716
The night is spent' * Why, what of thatf quoth
she.
* I am,' quoth he, ' expected of my friends ;
And now 'tis dark, and going I shall fall.'
* In night,' quoth she, ' desire sees best of all. 720
' But if thou fall, O, then imagine this,
The earth, in love with thee, thy footing trips,
And all is but to rob thee of a kiss.
Rich preys make true men thieves ; so do thy lips
Make modest Dlan cloudy and forlorn, 725
Leat she should steal a kiss, and die forsworn.
' Now of this dark night I perceive the reason :
Cynthia for shame obscures her silver shine,
Till forging Nature be condemn'd of treason, 729
For stealing moulds from heaven that were divine ;
Wherein she framed thee, in high heaven's
despite.
To shame the sun by day and her by night.
' And therefore hath she bribed the Destinies
To cross the curious workmanship of nature,
To mingle beauty with infirmities 735
And pure perfection with impure defeature ;
Making it subject to the tyranny
Of mad mischances and much misery ;
' As burning fbvers, agues pale and faint,
Life-poisoning pestilence and frenzies wood, 740
The marrow-eating sickness, whose attaint
Disorder breeds by heating of the blood;
Surfeits, Imposthumes, grief and damn'd despair.
Swear Nature's death for framing thee so fair.
' And not the least of all these maladies 746
But in one minute's fight brings beauty under ;
Both favour, savour, hue and qualities.
Whereat the Impartial gazer late did wonder.
Are on the sudden wasted, thaw'd and done, 749
As mountain snow melts with the mid-day sun.
' Therefore, despite of fruitless chastity,
Lov^lacking Tcstals and self-loving nuns,
That on the earth would breed a scarcity
And barren dearth of daughters and of sons,
Be prodigal ; the lamp that burns by night 753
Dries up his oil to lend the world his light.
' What is thy body but a swallowing grave,
Seeming to bury that posterity
Which by the rights of time thou needs must hare.
If thou destroy them not In dark obscurity? 760
If so. the world will hold thee in disdain,
Sith in thy pride so fair a hope is slain.
'So In thyself thyself art made away;
A mischief worse than civil home-bred strifSs,
Or theirs whose desperate hands themselves do
slay, 765
Or butcher-sire that reaves his son of life.
376
VENUS AND ADONIS
[Line 767-880.
Foiil-cankering rust the hidden treasure frets,
But gold that's put to use more gold begets.*
* Nay, then/ quoth AdoD, ' you will fiUI again
Into your idle over-handled theme; 770
The kiss I gave you is bestow'd in vain,
And all in vain you strive against the stream ;
For, by this black-faced night, desire's foul
nurse.
Your treatise makes me like you worse and
worse.
' If love have lent yon twenty thousand tongues,
And every tongue more moving than your own, 776
Bewitching like the wanton mermaid's songs,
Yet from mino ear the tempting tune is blown ;
For know, my heart stands armed in mine ear,
And will not let a false sound ent€r there ; 7M
' Lest the deceiving harmony should run
Into the quiet closure of my breast ;
And then my little heart were quite undone,
In his bedchamber to bo barr'd of rest
No, lady, no; my heart longs not to groan, 785
But soundly sleeps, while now it sleeps alone.
* What have you urged that I cannot reprove?
The path is smooth that leadcth on to danger;
I hate not love, but your device in love
That lends cmbraccmcnts unto every stranger. 790
You do it for increase : O strange excuse.
When reason is the bawd to lust's abuse!
' Call it not love, for Love to heaven is fled
Since sweating Lust on earth usurp'd his name ;
Under whoso simple semblance he hath fed 795
Upon fresh beauty, blotting it with blame ;
Which the hot tyrant stains and soon bereaves,
As caterpillars do the tender leaves.
* Love comforteth like sunshine after ratn,
But Lust's effect is tempest after sun ; 800
Love's gentle spring doth always fresh remain.
Lust's winter comes ere summer half be done;
Love surfeits not, Lust like a glutton dies;
Love is all truth, Lust full of forged lies.
' More I could tell, but more I dare not say ; 805
The text is old, the orator too green.
Therefore, in sadness, now I will away ;
My face is full of shame, my heart of teen ;
Mine cars, that to your wanton talk attended,
I>o burn themselves for having so offended.' 810
With thin, he breakcth from the sweet embrace
Of those fair amis which bound him to her breast,
And homeward through the dark lawnd runs
apace ;
Leaves Tx)ve upon her back deeply distress'd.
I/)ok, bow a bright star shooteth from the sky,
So glides he in the night from Venus' eye ; 816
Which after him she darts, as one on shore
Gazing upon a late-embarked friend.
Till the wild waves will have him seen no more.
Whose ridges with the meeting clouds contend ; 820
So did the merciless and pitchy night
Fold in the object that did feed her sight
Whereat amazed, as one that unaware
Hath dropp'd a precious jewel in the flood,
Or 'stonisb'd as night-wanderers often are, 825
Their light blown out in some roirtrustful wood ;
Even so confounded in the dark she lay.
Having lost the fair discovery of her way.
And now she beats her heart, whereat it groans.
That all the neighbor caves, as seeming troubled.
Make verbal repetition of her moans ; 831
Passion on passion deeply is redoubled ;
* Ay me r she cries, and twenty times, ' Woe, woe I*
And twenty echoes twenty times cry so.
She, marking them, begins a wailing note, 835
And sings extemporally a woeful ditty ;
Uow love makes young men thrall, and old men
dote;
How love is wise in folly, foolish-witty ;
Her heavy anthem still concludes in woo,
And still the choir of echoes answer so. 840
Her song was tedious, and outwore the night,
For lovers' hours are long, though seeming short;
If pleased themselves, others, they think, delight
In such-like circumstance, with such-like sport;
Their copious stories, oftentimes begun, 845
End without audience, and are never done.
For who hath she to spend the night withal,
But idle sounds resembling parasites ;
Like shrill-ton gucd tapsters answering every call.
Soothing the humour of fantastic wits? 860
She says ' Tis so:' they answer all • *Tis so;*
And would say after her, if she said ' No.'
Lo, here the gentle lark, weary of rest,
From his moist cabinet mounts up on high,
And wakes the morning, from whose silver breast
The sun ariseth in his majesty ; 856
Who doth the world so gloriously behold.
That cedar-tops and hills seem bumish'd gold.
Venus salutes him with this fair good-morrow ;
'O thou clear god, and patron of all light, 860
From whom each lamp and shining star doth bor-
row
The beauteous influence that makes him bright.
There lives a stm, that suck'd an earthly mother.
May lend thee light, as thou dost lend to other.*
This said, she hasteth to a myrtle grove, 865
Musing the morning is so much o'er worn.
And yet she hears no tidings of her love ;
She hearkens for his hounds and for his horn |
Anon she hears them chant it lustily.
And all in haste she coasteth to the cry. 870
And as she runs, the bushes in the way
Some catch hor by the neck, some kiss her face,
Some twine about her thigh to make her stay ;
She wildly brcaketh from their strict embrace, 874
I^ike a milch doe, whose swelling dugs do ache.
Hosting to feed her fawn hid in some brake.
By this she hears the hounds are at a bay ;
Whereat she starts, like one that spies an adder
Wreathed up in fatal folds just in his way.
The fear whereof doth make him shake and shud-
der; .880
LiNB 881-994.]
VENUS AND ADONIS
Oil
Eren so the timorous yelping of the hounds
Appftis her senses and her spirit confounds.
For now she knows it is no gentle chase,
But the blunt boar, rough bear, or lion proud.
Because the cry remaineth in one place, 885
Where fearfhlly the dogs exclaim aloud ;
Finding their enemy to be so curst,
They all strain courtesy who shall cope him 6rst.
This dhnnal cry rings sadly in her ear,
Through which it enters to surprise her heart ; 890
Who, OTercome by doubt and bloodless fear,
With cold-pale weakness numbs each feeling part ;
Like soldiers, when their captain once doth
yield,
They basely fly, and dare not stay the field.
Thus stands she in a trembling ecstasy ; 895
Till, cheering up her senses all dlsmay'd,
She tells them 'tis a caiuieless fantasy,
And childish error, that they are afraid ;
Bids them leave quaking, bids them fear no
more; 899
And with that word she spied the hunted boar ;
Whose frothy mouth, bepainted all with red.
Like milk and blood being mingled both together,
A second fear through all her sinews spread.
Which madly hurries her she knows not whither;
This way she runsi and now she will no further.
But back retires to rate the boar for raurther. 906
A thousand spleens bear her a thousand ways ;
She treads the path that she untrcads again ;
Her more than haste is mated with delays.
Like the proceedings of a drunken brain, 910
Full of respects, yet iuni>;ht at all respecting;
In hand with all things, nought at all efTccting.
Here kenneird in a brake she finds a hound,
And asks the weary caitifT for his master ;
And their another licking of his wound, 915
'Gainst Tenom'd sores the only sovereign plaster ;
And here she meets another sadly scowling.
To whom she speaks, and he replies with howl-
ing.
When he hath ceased his ill-resounding noise,
Another flap-mout)i*d mourner, black and grim,
Against the welkin volleys out his voice ; 921
Another and another answer him,
Clapping their proud tails to the ground below.
Shaking their scratch'd cars, bleeding as they go.
Look, how the world's poor people are amazed
At apparitions, sixns, and prodigies, 926
Whereon with fearful eyes they long have gazed,
Infusing them with dreadful prophecitvi;
So she at these sod signs draws up her breath.
And, sighing it again, exclaims on Death. 930
• Hard-favour'd tyrant, ugly, meagre, lean.
Hateful divorce of love,' — thus chides she Death, —
'Grim-grinning ghost, earth's worm, what dost
thou mean
To stifle beauty and to steal his breath.
Who when he lived, his breath and beauty set
Gloss on the rose, smell to the violet? 936
* If he be dead,— O no, it cannot be,
Seeing his beauty, thou shouldst strike at it ; —
O yes, it may ; thou hast no eyes to see,
But hatefully at random dost thou hit. 940
Thy mark is feeble age; but thy false dart
Mistakes that aim, and cleaves an Infant's heart
' Hadst thou but bid beware, then he had spoke,
And, hearing him, thy power had lost his power.
The Destinies will curse thee for this stroke; 945
They bid thee crop a weed, thou pluck'st a flower ;
Love's golden arrow at him should have fled,
And not Death's ebon dart, to strike him dead.
' Dost thou drink tears, that thou provokest such
weeping 7
What may a heavy groan advantage thee? 960
Why hast thou cast into eternal sleeping
Those eyes that taught all other eyes to see?
Now Nature cares not for thy mortal vigour.
Since her best work is ruin'd with thy rigour.'
Here overcome, as one full of despair, 9R!I
She vail'd her eyelids, who, like sluices, stopp'd
The crystal tide that from her two cheeks fair
In the sweet channel of her bosom dropp'd ;
But through the flood-gates breaks the silver
rain.
And with his strong course opens them again. 960
O, how her eyes and tears did lend and borrow !
Her eyes seen in the tears, tears in her eye ;
Both crystals, where they view'd each other's
sorrow.
Sorrow that friendly sighs sought still to dry;
But like a stormy day, now wind, now rain, 965
Sighs dry her cheeks, tears make them wot again.
Variable passions throng her constant woe.
As striving who should best become her grief;
All entertain'd, each passion labours so
That every present sorrow seemeth chief, 970
But none is best ; then Join they all together,
Like many clouds consulting for foul weather.
By this, far off she hears some huntsman holloa;
A nurse's song ne'er pleased her babe so well ;
The dire imagination she did follow 975
This sound of hope doth labour to expel ;
For now reviving joy bids her rejoice.
And flatters her it is Adonis' voice.
Whereat her tears began to turn their tide,
Being prison'd in her eye like pearls in glsss;980
Yet sometimes falls an orient drop beside,
Which her cheek melts, as scorning it should pa'W
To wsfeh the foul face of the sluttish ground.
Who is but drunken when she secraeth drowuM.
O hard-believing love, how strange it seems 985
Not to believe, and yet too credulous !
Thy weal and woe are both of them extremes;
Despair, and hope, makes tlicc ridiculous ; 988
The one doth flatter thee in thoughts unlikely.
In likely thoughts the other kills thee quickly.
Now she unweaves the web that she hath wrought ;
Adonis lives, and Death is not to blame;
It was not she that call'd him all to nought;
Now she adds honours to his hateful name;
372
VENUS AND ADONIS
[LiNE3i9-43a
His testy master goeth about to take him ;
When, lo, the unback'd breeder, full of fear, 820
Jealous of catching, swiftly doth forsake him,
With her the horse, and left Adonis there ;
As they were mad, unto the wood they hie them.
Out-stripping crows that strive to over-fly them.
All swoln with chafing, down Adonis sits, 325
Banning his boisterous and unruly beast;
And now the happy season once more fits.
That love-sick Love by pleading may be blest ;
For lovers say the heart hath treble wrong
When it is barr'd the aidance of the tongue. 330
An oven that is stopp'd, or river stay'd,
Burneth more hotly, swelleth with more rage;
So of concealed sorrow may be said :
Free vent of words love's fire doth assuage;
But when the heart's attorney once is mute, 33S
The client brealts, as desperate in his suit.
He sees her coming, and begins to glow.
Even as a dying coal revives with wind.
And with his bonnet hides his angry brow.
Looks on the dull earth with disturbed mind ; 340
Taking no notice that she is so nigh.
For all askance he holds her iu his eye.
O, what a sight it was, wistly to view
How she cjune stealing to the wayward boy !
To note the fighting conflict of hor hue, 845
Uow white and red each other did destroy !
But now her cheek was pale, and by and by
It flash'd forth fire, as lii;htniug from the sky.
Now was she Just before him as he sat,
And like a lowly lover down she kneels ; 850
With one fair hand she heaveth up his hat,
Uer other tender hand his fair cheek feels;
His tenderer cheek receives her soft hand's
print,
As apt as ncw-fall'n snow takes any dint.
O, what a war of looks was then between tliem ! 355
Her eyes petitioners to hl» eyes suing;
His eyes saw her eyes as they had not seen them !
Her eyes woo'd still, his eyt^sdisdain'd the wooing;
And all thi^tdunib play had his acts made plain
With tears, which chorus-like her eyes did
rain. 360
Full gently now she takes him by the hand,
A lily prisou'd in a gaol of snow,
Or ivory in an alabaster band;
So white a friend engirts so white a foe ;
This Ix'auteouM combat, wilful and unwilling, 365
Show'd like two silver doves that sit »-billiug.
Once more the engine of her thoughts began :
O fain'st mover on this mortal round.
Would thou wert as I am, and I a man, 369
My heart all whole as thine, thy heart my wound ;
For one «weet look thy help I would assure thee,
Though nothing but my body's bane would cure
thw.'
Give me my hand,' saith he; * why dost thou feel
itr
Give me my heart,' saith sh?, 'and thou shalt
have it;
O, give it mc. lest thy hard heart do steel it, 873
And being steel'd, soft sighs can never grave it;
Then love's deep groans I never shall regard.
Because Adonis' heart hath made mine banL'
' For shame,' he cries, * let go, and let me go ;
My day's delight is past, my horse is gone, 880
And 'tis your fault I am bereft him to ;
I pray you hence, and leave me here alone ;
For all my mind, my thought, my busy care,
Is how to get my palfrey from the mare.'
Thus she replies: 'Thy palfrey, as he should, 885
Welcomes the warm approach of sweet desire;
Affection is a coal that must be cool'd ;
ELte, suffered, it will set the heart on fire ; 888
The sea hath bounds, but deep dc>sire hath none ;
Therefore no marvel though thy horse be gone.
' How like a jade he stood, tied to the tree,
Servilely master'd with a leathern rein !
But when he saw his love, his youth's fair fee,
He held such petty bondage in disdain ; 8M
Throwing the base thong from his bending creiti
Enfranchising his mouth, his back, his breast.
' Who sees his true-love in her naked bed.
Teaching the sheets a whiter hue than white,
But, when his glutton eye so full hath fed,
His other agents aim at like delight? 400
Who is so faint, that dares not be so bold
To touch the fire, the weather being cold?
' I>et me excuse thy courser, gentle boy ;
And learn of him, I heartily beseech thee,
To take advantage on presented joy ; 400
Though I were dumb, yet his proceedings teach
thee;
O, learn to love ; the lesson is but plain, \
And once made perfect, never lost again.'
* I know not love,' quoth he, * nor will not know ft.
Unless it be a boar, and then I chase it ; 410
'Tis much to borrow, and I will not owe it;
My love to love is love but to disgrace it ;
For I have heard it is a life in death.
That laughs, and weeps, and all but with a
breath.
' Who wears a garment shapeless and unfinbh'd?
Who plucks the bud before one leaf put forth? 410
If springing things be any jot diminish'd.
They wither in their prime, prove nothing worth;
The colt that's back'd and burden'd being young
Loseth his pride, and never waxeth strong. 420
' You hurt my hand with wringing ; let as part,
And leave this idle theme, this bootless chat;
Remove your siege from my unyielding heart;
To love's alarms it will not ope the gate ;
Dismiss your vows, your feigned tears, your
flattery ; 425
For where a heart is hard they make no battery.'
* What ! canst thou talk V quoth she, ' haat thoQ a
tongue?
O, would thou hadst not, or I had no hearing!
Thy mermaid's voice hath done me double wrong;
I had my load before, now preaa'd with bearing ; 480
Line 1103-1194.]
VENUS AND ADONIS
379
Would bring him mulberries and ripe-red cher-
riea;
He fed them with his sight, they him with ber-
ries.
'But this foul, grim, and urchin-snouted boar, 1105
Whoee downward eye still looketb for a grave,
Ne'er saw the beauteous livery that he wore ;
Witneia the entertainment that he gave ;
If he did see his face, why then I know 1109
He thought to kiss him, and hath kill'd him so.
"Tia true, 'tis true; thus was Adonis slain ;
He ran upon the boar with his sharp spear,
Who did not whet his teeth at him again.
But by a kiss thought to persuade him there ;
And nuzzling in his flank, the loving swine 1115
Sheathed unaware the tusk in his soft groin.
' Had I been tooth'd like him, I must confess,
With kissing him I should have kiil'd him first;
But he is dead, and never did he bless
Ify youth with his; the more am I accurst.' 1120
With this, she falleth in the place she stood.
And stains her face with his congealed blood.
She looks upon his lips, and they are pale ;
She takes him by the hand, and that is cold ;
She whispers in his ears a heavy tale, 1125
As if they heard the woeful words she told ;
She lifts the coffer-lids that close his eyes.
Where, lo, two lamps, burnt out, in darkness lies ;
Two glasses, where herself herself beheld
A thousand times, and now no more reflect; 1130
Their virtue lost, wherein they late excell'd,
And every beauty robb'd of his effect ;
' Wonder of time,' quoth she, ' this is my spite,
That, thou being dead, the day should yet be
Ught.
' Since thou art dead, lo, here I prophesy, 1 135
Sorrow on love hereafter shall attend ;
It shall be waited on with Jealousy,
Find sweet beginning but unsavoury end ;
Ne'er settled equally, but high or low, 1139
That all love's pleasure shall not match his woe.
' It shall be fickle, false, and full of fraud ;
Bud, and be blasted, in a breathing while ;
The bottom poison, and the top o'erstraw'd
With sweets that shall the truest sight beguile ;
The strongest body shall it make most weak, 1 14.5
Strike the wise dumb, and teach the fool to speak.
' It shall be sparing and too full of riot.
Teaching decrepit age to tread the measures ;
The staring ruffian shall it keep in quiet,
Fluck down the rich, enrich the poor with treas-
orea; 1150
It shall be raging-mad, and silly-mild.
Make the young old, the old become a child.
' It shall suspect where is no cause of fear ;
It shall not fear where it should most mistrust ;
It shall be merciful and too severe, 1155
And most deceiving when it seems most Just ;
Perverse it shall be where it shows most toward,
Put fear to valour, courage to the coward.
' It shall be cause of war and dire events.
And set dissension 'twixt the son and sire ; 1160
Subject and servile to all discontents,
As dry combustions matter is to fire ;
Sith in his prime death doth my love destroy.
They that love best their loves shall not enjoy.'
By this the boy that by her side lay kill'd 1165
Was melted like a vapour from her sight.
And in his blood, that on the ground lay spill'd,
A purple flower sprung up,chequer'd with white.
Resembling well his pale cheeks and the blood
Which in round drops upon their whiteness
stood. 1170
She bows her head, the new-sprung flower to smell.
Comparing it to her Adonis' breath ;
And says, within her bosom it shall dwell.
Since he himself is reft from her by death ;
She crops the stalk, And in the breach appears
Green-dropping sap, which she compares to
tears. 1176
* Poor flower,' quoth she, * this was thy father's
guise,—
Sweet issue of a more sweet-smelling sire, —
For every little grief to wet his eyes ;
To grow unto himself was his desire, 1180
And so 'tis thine; but know, it is as good
To wither in my breast as in his blood.
' Here was thy father's bed, hero in my breast;
Thou art the next of blood, and 'tb thy right;
Lo, in this hollow cradle take thy rest; 1185
My throbbing heart shall rock thee day and night ;
There shall not be one minute In an hour
Wherein I will not kiss my sweet love's flower.'
Thus weary of the world, away she hies, 1189
And yokes her silver doves; by whose swift aid
Their mistress, mounted, through the empty skies
In her light chariot quickly Is couvey'd ;
Holding their course to Paphos, where their
queen
Means to immure herself and not be seen.
374
VENUS AND ADONIS
[Line 545-652.
He with her plenty pressed, she faint with
dearth, 545
Their lips together glued, CeiII to the earth.
Now quick desire hnth caught the yielding prey,
And glutton-like she feeds, yet never filleth;
Her lips are conquerors, his lips obey,
Faying what ransom the insulter wUleth ; 550
Whose vulture-thought doth pitch the price so
high,
That she will draw his lips* rich treasure dry.
And having felt the sweetness of the spoil.
With blindfold fury she begins to forage ; 554
Her face doth reek and smoke, her blood doth boil,
And careless lust stirs up a desperate courage,
Planting oblivion, beating reason back.
Forgetting shame's pure blush and honour's
wrack.
Hot, faint, and weary, with her hard embracing,
Like a wild bird being tamed with too much hand-
Ung, 560
Or as the fleet-foot roe that's tired with chasing,
Or like the froward Infant still'd with dandling,
He now obeys, and now no more resisteth,
While she takes all she can, not all she listcth.
What wax so frozen but dissolves with tempering,
And yields at last to every light impression? 5G6
Things out of hope are compass'd oft with ven-
turing,
Chiefly in love, whose leave exceeds commission ;
Affection faints not like a pale-faced coward.
But then woos best when most his choice Is
froward. 570
When he did frown, 0, had she then gave over,
Such nectar fnim hiit lips she had not suck'd.
Foul words and frowns must not repel a lover;
What though the rose have prickles, yet 'tis
pluck 'd ;
Were beauty under twenty locks kept fast, 675
Yet love breaks through, and picks them all at
last.
For pity now she can no more detain him ;
The poor fool prays her that he may depart ;
8he is resolved no longer to restrain him ;
Bids him farewell, and look well to her heart, 580
The which, by Cupid's bow she doth protest.
He carries thence incaged in his breast.
'Sweet boy,' she says, 'this night I'll waste in
sorrow,
For my sick heart commands mine eyes to watch.
Tell me, love's master, shall we meet to-mor-
row? . 585
Say, shall we? shall we? wilt thou make the
match V
He tells her, no ; to-morrow he intends
To hunt the boar with certain of his friends.
'The boar I' quoth she; whereat a sudden pale,
Like lawn bi'ing spread upon tlie blushing rose, 590
Usuffts her cheek ; she trembles at his tale,
And on his neck her yoking arms she throws;
She sinketh down, still hanging by his neck,
He on her belly falls, she on her back.
Now is she in the very ILsts of love, 580
Her champion mounted for the hot encounter;
All is imaginary she doth prove,
He will not manage her, although he mount her ;
That worse than Tantalus' is her annoy,
To clip Elysium, and to lack her Joy. SCO
Even as poor birds, deceived with painted grapes,
Do surfeit by the eye and pine the maw,
Even so she languisheth in her mishapa.
As those poor birds that helpless berries saw. 601
The warm effects which she in liim finds missing
She seeks to kindle with continual kissing.
But all in vain ; good queen, it will not be ;
She hath assay 'd as much as may be proved ;
Her pleading hath deserved a greater fee ;
She's Love, she loves, and yet she is not loved. 610
' Fie, fle,' he says, ' you crush me ; let me go ;
You have no reason to withhold me so.'
'Thou hadst been gone,' quoth she, 'sweet boy, ert
this.
But that thou told'st me thou wouldst hunt the
boar.
O, be advised ; thou know'st not what it is 615
With Javelin's point a churlish swine to gore.
Whose tushes never sheathed he whetteth still.
Like to a mortal butcher, bent to kilL
' On his bow-back he hath a battle set
Of bristly pikes, that ever threat his foes ; 620
His eyes, like glow-worms, shine when he doth
fret;
His snout digs sepulchres where'er he goes;
Being moved, he strikes whate'er is in his way;
And whom he strikes his crooked tushes slay.
' His brawny sides, with hairy bristles arm'd, 625
Are better proof than thy spear's point can enter;
His short thick neck cannot be easily harm'd;
Being ireful, on the lion he will venture ;
The thorny brambhw and embracing bushes, 629
As fearful of him, part ; through whom he rudies.
' Alas, he nought esteems that face of thine,
To which Love's eyes pay tributary gazes;
Nor thy soft hands, sweet lips and crystal eyne,
^1iose full perfection all the world amaxes ; ^
But having thee at vantage, — wondrous dread!—
Would root these beauties as he roots the mead.
' O, let him keep his loathsome cabin still ;
Beauty hath nought to do with such foul fiends ;
Come not within his danger by thy will ; 69
They that thrive well take counsel of their friends.
When thou didst name the boar, not to dissemble,
I fear'd thy fortune, and my Joints did tremble.
' Didst thou not mark my face? was it not white?
Saw'st thou not signs of fear lurk in mine eye?
Grew I not faint? and fell I not downright? 645
Within my bosom, whereon thou dost lie,
My boding heart pants, beats, and takes no rest,
But, like an earthquake, shakes thee on my
breast.
* For where Love reigns, disturbing Jealousy
Doth call himself Affection's sentinel ; 6S0
Gives false alarms, suggesteth mutiny,
And in a peaceful hour doth cry ** g<ii^ kUlT
Line 99-215.]
THE RAPE OF LUCRECE
381
But »he, that nerer coped with stranger eyes,
Could pick no meaning from their parting looks,
Kor read the snhtle-shining secrecies 101
Writ in the glassy margents of such books;
She touch'd no unknown baits, nor fear'd no
hooks;
Kor could she moralise his wanton sight,
More than his eyes were open'd to the light. 105
He stories to her ears her husband's fame,
Won in the fields of fruitful lUly ;
And decks with praises Collatine's high name,
Made glorious by his manly chivalry
With bruised arms and wreaths of victory ; 110
Her Joy with hcaTcd-up hand she doth express.
And wordless so greets heaven for his success.
Far from the purpose of his coming hither.
He makes excuses for his being there ;
No cloudy show of stormy blustering weather
Doth yet in his fair welkin once appear ; 116
Till sable Night, mother of dread and fear,
Upon the world dim darkness doth display,
And in her vanity prison stows the day.
For then is Tarqnin brought unto his bed, 120
Intending weariness with heavy spright ;
For after supper long he questioned
With modest Lucrece, and wore out the night ;
Now leaden slumber with life's strength doth
fight;
And every one to rest themselves betake, 125
Save thieves and cares and troubled minds that
wake.
As one of which doth Tarqnin lie revolving
The sundry dangers of his will's obtaining ;
Yet ever to obtain his will resolving,
Though weak-built hopes persuade him to ab-
staining; 130
Despair to gain doth traffic oft for gaining,
And when great treasure is the meed proposed,
Though death be adjunct, there's no death sup-
posed.
Those that much covet are with gain so fond
That what they have not, that which they possess,
They scatter and unloose it from their bond, 136
And so, by hoping more, they have but less;
Or, gaining more, the profit of excess
Is but to surfeit, and such griefs sustain.
That they prove bankrupt in this poor-rich gain.
The aim of all Is but to nurse the life 141
With honour, wealth, and ease, in waning age ;
And in this aim there is such thwarting strife
That one for all or all for one we gage ;
As life for honour in fell battle's rage; 145
Honour for wealth ; and oft that wealth doth cost
The death of all, and all together lost.
80 that in venturing ill we leave to be
The things we are for that which we exi)ect ;
And this ambitious, foul infirmity, 150
In having much, torments us with defect
Of that we have ; so then we do neglect
The thing we have, and, all for want of wit,
Make something nothing by augmenting it.
Such hazard now must doting Tarquin make,
Fawning his honor to obtain his lust ; 156
And for himself himself he must forsake ;
Then where Is truth, if there be no self-trust?
When shall he think to find a stranger just.
When he himself himself confounds, betrays
To slanderous tongues and wretched hateful
days? 161
Now stole upon the time the dead of night.
When heavy sleep had closed up mortal eyes ;
No comfortable star did lend his light, 164
No noise but owls' and wulvus' deatb-buding cries;
Now serves the season that they may surprise
The silly lambs : pure thoughts are dead and still.
While lust and murder wakes to stain and kill.
And now this lustful lord leap'd from his bed.
Throwing his mantle rudely o'er his arm ; 170
Is madly toss'd between desire and dread ;
Th' one sweetly flatters, th' other feareth harm;
But honest fear, bewitch'd with lust's foul chano,
Doth too too oft betake him to retire.
Beaten away by brain-sick rude desire. 175
His falchion on a flint he softly smiteth.
That from the cold stone sparks of fire do fly ;
Whereat a waxen torch forthwith he llghteth.
Which must be lode-star to his lustful eye;
And to the flame thus speaks advisedly : 180
' As from this cold flint I enforced this fire,
So Lucrece must I force to my desire.'
Here pale with fear he doth premeditate
The dangers of his loathsome enterprise.
And in his inward mind he doth debate 185
What following sorrow may on this arise ;
Then looking scornfully he doth despise
His naked armour of stlll-slaughter'd lust,
And justly thus controls his thoughts unjust:
'Fair torch, burn out thy light, and lend it not
To darken her whose light excelleth thine ; 191
And die, unhallow'd thoughts, before you blot
With your uncleanness that which is divine ;
Offer pure incense to so pure a shrine ;
Let fair humanity abhor the deed 195
That spots and stains love's modest snow-white
weed.
' O shame to knighthood and to shining arms !
O foul dishonour to my household's grave !
impious act, including all foul harms I
A raariial man to be soft fancy's slave ! 200
True valour still a true respect should have;
Then my digression is so vile, so base.
That it will live engraven in my face.
' Yea, though I die, the scandal will survive,
And be an eye-sore in my golden coat; 205
Some loathsome dash the herald will contrive,
To cipher me how fondly I did dote ;
That my posterity, shamed with the note.
Shall curse my bones, and hold it for no sin
To wish that I their father had not bin. 210
' What win I, if I gain the thing I seek?
A dream, a breath, a froth of fleeting joy.
Who buys a minute's mirth to wail a week?
Or sells eternity to get a toy? 214
For one sweet grape who will the vine destroy?
382
THE RAPE OF LUCRE CE
[Line 316-331.
Or what fond beggar, bat to touch the crown.
Would with the sceptre straight bo stracken
down?
'If Collatinus dream of my intent,
Will he not wake, and in a desperate rage
Poet hither, this vile purpose to prevent T 220
This siege that hath engirt his marriage.
This blur to youth, this sorrow to the sage.
This dying virtue, this surviving shame.
Whose crime will bear an ever-during blame?
' O what excuse can my invention make, 225
When thou shalt charge me with so black a deed?
Will not my tongue be mute, my frail Joints shake.
Mine eyes forego their light, my false heart bleed ?
The guilt being great, the fear doth still exceed ;
And extreme fear can neither fight nor fly, 230
But coward-like with trembling terror die.
'Had Ck>llatinus kill'd my son or sire.
Or lain in ambush to betray my life.
Or were he not my dear friend, this desire
Might have excuse to work upon his wife, 23S
As in revenge or quittal of such strife ;
But as he is my kinsman, my dear friend.
The shame and fault finds no excuse nor end.
'Shameful it is; ay, if the fact be known ;
Hateful it is ; there is no hate in loving ; 240
m beg her love ; but she is not her own ;
The worst is but deuial and reproving ;
My will is strong, past reason's weak removing.
Wlio fears a sentence or an old man's saw
Shall by a painted cloth be kept in awe.' 245
Thus graceless holds he disputation
*Tween fh)zen conscience and hot-burning will.
And with good thoughts makes dispensation.
Urging the worser sense for vantage still ;
Which in a moment doth confound and kill 250
AU pure effects, and doth so far proceed
That what is vile shows like a virtuous deed.
Quoth he, ' She took me kindly by the hand.
And gazed for tidings in my eager eyes,
Fearing some hard news from the warlike band.
Where her beloved Collatinus lies. 256
O, how her fear did make her colour rise!
First red as roses that on lawn we lay,
Then white as lawn, the roses took away.
'And how her hand, in my hand being lock'd, 260
Forced it to tremble with her loyal fear !
Which struck her sad, and then it faster rock'd.
Until her husband's welfare she did hear ;
Whereat she smiled with so sweet a cheer
That had Narcissus seen her as she stood 265
Self-love had never drown'd him in the flood.
• Why hunt I then for colour or excuses?
All orators are dumb when beauty pleadeth ;
Poor wretches have remorse in poor abuses ;
Love thrives not in the heart that shadows dread-
eth; 270
Afllection is my captain, and he leadeth ;
And when his paudy banner is display'd.
The coward fights, and will not be dinnay'd.
'Then, childish fear, avauut! debating, diet
Respect and reason wait on wrinkled age ! 275
My heart shall never countermand mine eye ;
Sad pause and deep regard beseems the sage ;
My part is youth, and beats these from the stage ;
Desire my pilot is, beauty my prise ;
Then who fears sinking where such trMsnre
Uesr 280
As com o'ergrown by weeds, so heedfUl fear
Is almost choked by unresisted lust.
Away he steals with open Ibtening ear,
Full of foul hope and full of fond mistrust ;
Both which, as servitors to the unjust, 285
So cross him w^ith their opposite persuasion,
That now he vows a league, and now Invasion.
Within his thought her heavenly image sits.
And in the self-same seat sits Collatine;
That eye which looks on her confounds his wits;
That eye which him beholds, as more divine, 291
Unto a view so false will not incline ;
But with a pure appeal seeks to the heart,
Which onoe corrupted takes the worser part ;
And therein heartens up his servile powers, 296
Who, flatter'd by their leader's Jocund show,
Stuff* up his lust, as minutes fill up hours ;
And as their captain, so their pride doth grow,
Paying more slavish tribute than they owe.
By reprobate desire thus madly led, 900
The Roman lord marcheth to Lucrece* bed.
The locks between her chamber and his will,
Each one by him enforced, retires his ward;
But, as they open, they all rate his ill, 804
Which drives the creeping thief to some regard ;
The threshold grates the door to have him heard ;
Night-wandering weasels shriek to see him
there;
They fright him, yet he still pursues his fear.
As each unwilling portal yields him way.
Through little vents and crannies of the place 810
The wind wars with his torch to make him stay,
And blows the smoke of it into his face,
Extinguishing his conduct in this case ;
But his hot heart, which fond desire doth scorch,
Puffs forth another wind that fires the torch ; 815
And being lighted, by the light he spies
Lucretia's glove, wherein her needle sticks;
He takes it from the rushes where it lies.
And griping it, the needle his finger pricks ; 819
As who should say, 'This glove to wanton tricks
Is not inured ; return again in haste ;
Thou see'st our mistress' omaiueuts are chaste.'
But all these poor for biddings could not stay him ;
He in the worst sense construes their denial ;
The doors, the wind, the ^love, that did delay him.
He takes for accidental things of trial ; 826
Or as those bars which stop the hourly dial.
Who with a lingering stay bis course doth let.
Till every minute pays the hour his debt.
'So, so,' quoth he, 'these lets attend the time, 330
Like little ttQKX» xixaX sometime threat the spring.
Line 332-446.]
THE RAPE OF LUCRECE
883
To add ft more rejoicing to the prime.
And give the sneftped birds more cause to sing,
Fain pays the income of each precious thing ;
Huge roclcs, high winds, strong pirates, shelves,
and sands, 835
The merchant fears, ere rich at home he lands.'
Now is he come unto the chamber door,
That shuts him from the heaven of his thought.
Which with a yielding latch, and with no more,
Hath barr'd him from the blessed thing he sought.
So from himself impiety hath wrought, 341
That for his prey to pray he doth begin,
As if the heavens should countenance his sin.
But in the midst of his unfruitful prayer,
Having solicited the eternal power 345
That his foul thoughts might compass his fair fair,
And they would stand auspicious to the hour.
Even there he starts: quoth he 'I must deflower;
The powers to whom I pray abhor this fact ;
How can they then assist me in the act? 350
'Then Love and Fortune be my gods, my guide!
My will is back'd with resolution ;
Thoughts are but dreams till their effects be tried ;
The blackest sin is clear'd with absolution ; 354
Against love's fire fear's frost hath dissolution.
The eye of heaven is out, and misty night
Covers the shame that follows sweet delight.'
This said, his guilty hand pluck'd up the latch,
And with his knee the door he opens wide.
The dove sleeps fast that this nightrowl will catch ;
Thus treason works ere traitors be espied. 361
Who sees the lurking serpent steps aside ;
But she, sound sleeping, fearing no such thing,
Lies at the mercy of his mortal sting.
Into the chamber wickedly he stalks, 365
And gazeth on her yet unstained bed.
The curtains being close, about he walks,
Rolling his greedy eyeballs in his head ;
By their high treason is his heart misled ;
Which gives the watch-word to his hand full
soon 370
To draw the cloud that hides the silver moon.
Look, as the fair and flery-pointod sun,
Rushing from forth a cloud, bereaves our sight;
Even so, the curtain drawn, his eyes begun
To wink, being blinded with a greater light;
Whether it is that she reflects so bright, 376
That dazzleth them, or else some shame sup-
posed;
But blind they are, and keep themselves en-
closed.
O, had they in that darksome prison died !
Then bad they seen the period of their ill ; 380
Then CoUatine again, by Lucrece' side.
In his clear bed might have reposed still ;
But they must ope, this blessed league to kill;
And holy-thoughted Lucrece to their sight
Must sell her Joy, her life, her world's delight
Her lily hand her rosy choek lies under, 886
Cozening the pillow of a lawful kiss;
Who, therefore angry, seems to part in sunder,
Swelling on either side to want his bliss ;
Between whose bills her head entombed is ; 890
Where, like a virtuous monument, she lies,
To be admired of lewd unhallowed eyes.
Without the bed her other fair hand was.
On the green coverlet ; whose perfect white
Show'd like an April daisy on the grass, 805
With pearly sweat, resembling dew of night.
Her eyes, like marigolds, had sheathed their light,
And canopied in darkness sweetly lay,
Till they might open to adorn the day.
Her hair, like golden threads, play'd with her
breath ; 400
O modest wantons! wanton modesty !
Showing life's triumph in the map of death,
And death's dim look in life's mortality ;
Each in her sleep themselves so beautify 404
As if between them twain there were no strife,
But that life lived in death and death in life.
Her breasts, like ivory globes circled with blue,
A pair of maiden worlds unconquered.
Save of their lord no bearing yoke they knew,
And him by oath they truly honoured. 410
These worlds in Tarquin now ambition bred;
Who, like a foul usurper, went about
From this fair throne to heave the owner out.
What could he see but mightily he noted ?
What did he note but strongly he desired ? 415
What he beheld, on that he firmly doted.
And in his will his wilful eye he tired.
With more than admiration he admired
Her azure veins, her alabaster skin, 419
Her coral lips, her snow-white dimpled chin.
As the grim lion fawneth o'er his prey,
Sharp hunger by the conquest satisfied,
So o'er this sleeping soul doth Tarquin stay,
His rage of lust by gazing qualified ; 424
Slack'd, not suppress'd ; for standing by her aide.
His eye, which late this mutiny restrains.
Unto a greater uproar tempts his veins ;
And they, like straggling slaves for pillage fight-
ing,
Obdurate vassals fell exploits effecting, 429
In bloody death and ravishment delighting,
Nor chiidren's tears nor mothers' groans respect-
ing.
Swell in their pride, the onset still expecting;
Anon his beating heart, alarum striking,
Gives the hot charge, and bids them do their
liking.
His drumming heart cheers up his burning eye,
His eye commends the leading to his hand ; 436
His hand, as proud of such a dignity.
Smoking with pride, marcli'd on to make his stand
On her bare breast, the ht?art of all her land ;
Whose ranks of blue veins, as his hand did scale,
Left their round turrets destitute and pale, ill
They, mustering to the quiet cabinet
Where their dear governess and lady lies.
Do tell her she is dreadfully beset. 444
And fright her with confusion of their cries;
She, much amazed, breaks ope her lock'd-up eyes,
384
THE RAPE OF LUCRECE
[Line 447-560.
Who, peeping forth this tumult to behold,
Are bx hi^ flaming torch diram'd and controll'd.
Imagine her as one in dead of night 449
From forth dull sleep by dreadful fiancj waking,
That thinks she hath beheld some ghastly sprite,
Whose grim aspect sets every Joint a-ehaking ;
What terror 'tis, but she, in worser taking,
From sleep disturbed, hcedfully doth view 454
The sight which makes supposed terror true.
Wrapp'd and confounded in a thousand feam.
Like to a new-kill'd bird she trembling lies ;
She dares not look ; yet, winking, there appears
Quick-shifting antics, ugly in her eyes; 459
8uch shadows are the weak brain's forgeries;
Who, angry that the eyes fly from their lights.
In darkness daunts them with more dreadful
sights.
His hand, that yet remains upon her breast, —
Rude ram, to batter such an ivory wall ! —
May feel her heart, poor citizen ! distress'd, 465
Wounding itself to death, rise up and fall,
Beating her bulk, that his hand shakes withal.
This moves in him more rage and lesser pity.
To make the breach and enter this sweet city.
First, like a trumpet, doth his tongue begin 470
To sound a parley to his heartless foe ;
Who o'er the white sheet peers her whiter chin.
The reason of this rash alarm to know.
Which he by dumb demeanour seeks to show ;
But she with vehement prayers urgeth still
Under what colour he commits this ill. 476
Thus he replies : ' The colour in thy face,
That even for anger makes the lily pale
And the red rose blush at her own disgrace,
Shall plead for me and tell my loving tale ; 480
Under that colour am I come to scale
Thy never-conquer'd fort ; the fault is thine,
For those thine eyes betray thee unto mine.
*Thus I forestall thee, if thou mean to chide:
Thy beauty hath ensnared thee to this night, 485
Where thou with patience must my will abide ;
My will that marks thee for my earth's delight,
Which I to conquer sought with all my might ;
But as reproof and reason beat it dead,
By thy bright beauty was it newly bred. 490
• I see what crosses my attempt will bring ;
I know what thorns the growing rose defends ;
I think the honey guarded with a sting ;
All this beforehand counsel comprehends; 494
But will is deaf and hears no heedful friends;
Only he hath an eye to gaze on beauty.
And dotes on what he looks, 'gainst law or duty.
' I have debated, even in my soul.
What wrong, what shame, what sorrow I shall
breed ;
But nothing can affection's course control, 500
Or stop the headlong fury of his speed.
I know repentant tears ensue the deed.
Reproach, disdain, and deadly enmity;
Yet stiivo I to embrace mine infamy.'
This said, he shakes aloft his Roman blade, 509
Which, like a falcon towering in the skies,
Coucheth the fowl below with his wings' shade,
Whose crooked beak threats if he mount he dies;
So under his insulting falchion lies 509
Harmless Lucrctia, marking what be tells
With trembling fear, as fowl hear falcon's bells.
' Lucrece,' quoth he, ' this night I must enjoy thee ;
If thou deny, then force must work my way,
For in thy bed I purpose to destroy thee ;
That done, some worthless slave of thine 1*11 slay,
To kill thine honour with thy Ufa's decay ; 516
And in thy dead arms do I mean to place him,
Swearii^g I slew him, seeing thee embrace him.
' So thy surviving husband shall remain
The scornful mark of every open eye ; 520
T^y kinsmen hang their heads at this disdain,
Thy issue blurr'd with nameless bastardy ;
And thou, the author of their obloquy,
Shalt have thy trespass cited up in rhymes
And sung by children in succeeding times.
•But if thou yield, I rest thy secret friend; 526
The fault unknown is as a thought unacted;
A little harm done to a great good end
For lawful policy remains enacted.
The {>oisonous simple sometime is compacted
In a pure compound ; being so applied, 531
His venom in effect is purified.
' Then, for thy husband and thy children's sake,
Tender my suit; bequeath not to their lot
The shame that from them no device can take.
The blemish that will never be forgot ; 536
Worse than a slavish wipe or birth-hour's blot ;
For marks descried in men's nativity
Are nature's faults, not their own infamy.'
Here with a cockatrice* dead-killing eye 540
He rouscth up himself, and makes a pause ;
While she, the picture of true piety,
Like a white hind under the gripe's sharp claws,
Pleads, in a wilderness where are no laws,
To the rough beast that knows no gentle right.
Nor aught obeys but his foul appetite. 546
But when a black-faced cloud the world doth
threat,
In his dim mist the aspiring mountains hiding.
From earth's dark womb some gentle gust doth get.
Which blows these pitchy vapours from their bid-
ing, 550
Hindering their present fall by this dividing ;
So his unhallow'd haste her words delays.
And moody Pluto winks while Orpheus plays.
Yet, foul night-waking cat, he doth but dally.
While in his bold-fast foot the weak mouse pant-
eth; 665
Her sad behaviour feeds his vulture folly,
A swallowing gulf that even in plenty wanteth ;
His ear her prayers admits, but his heart grantcth
No penetrable entrance to her plaining;
Tears harden lust, though marble wear with
raining. 550
Link 561-679.]
THE RAPE OF LUCRECE
385
Her pitf-pleading eyes are sadly fixed
In the remorscleas wrinkles of hU face ;
Her modest eloquence with sighs is mixed,
MThich to her oratory adds more grace.
8be pats the period often fh)m his place, 563
And midst the sentence so her accent breaks
That twice she doth begin ere once she speaks.
She conjures him by high almighty Jove,
By knighthood, gentry, and sweet friendship's
oath.
By her untimely tears, her husband's lore, 570
By holy human law and common troth,
By heaven and earth, anA all the power of both.
That to his borrowed bed he make retire.
And stoop to honour, not to foul desire.
Quoth she, ' Reward not hospitality 575
With such black payment as thou hast pretended ;
Mud not the fountain that gave drink to thee ;
Mar not the thing that cannot be amended;
End thy ill aim before thy shoot be ended ;
He is no woodman that doth bend his bow
To strike a poor unseasonable doe. 581
' My husband is thy friend ; for his sake spare me ;
Thyself art mighty ; for thine own sake leave me;
Myself a weakling ; do not then ensnare me;
Thou look'st not like deceit ; do not deceive me.
My sighs, like whirlwinds, labour hence to heave
thee ; 586
If ever man were moved with woman's moans,
Be moved with my tears, my sighs, my groans;
* All which together, like a troubled ocean.
Beat at thy rocky and wreck-threatening heart,
To soften it with their continual motion ; 591
For stones db»solved to water do convert.
O, if no harder than a stone thou art,
Melt at my tears, and be compassionate !
Soft pity enters at an iron gate. 595
' In Tarquin's likeness I did entertain thee ;
Hast thou put on his shape to do him shame ?
To all the host of heaven I complain me.
Thou wrong'st his honour, wouud'st his princely
name. 599
Thou art not what thou seem'st ; and if the same,
Thou seem'st not what thou art, a god, a king;
For kings, like gods, should govern every thing.
• How will thy shame be seeded in thine age.
When thus thy vices bud before thy spring!
If in thy hope thou darest do such outrage, 605
What darest thou not when once thou art a king?
(i, be remcmber'd, no outrageous thing
From vassal actors can be wiped away ;
Then kings' misdeeds cannot be hid in clay.
•This deed will make thee only loved for fear;
But happy mouarchs still are fear'd for love;
With foul oftenders thou perforce must bear, 612
When they in thee the like offences prove;
If but for fear of this, thy will remove;
For princes are the glass, the school, the book,
Where subjects' eyes do learn, do road, do look.
*And wilt thou be the school where LuKt shall
learn? 617
Must he in thee rea<l lectures of such shame?
Wilt thou be glass wherein it shall discern
25
Authority for sin, warrant for blame, 620
To privilege dishonour in thy name?
Thou back'st reproach against lung-living laud,
And makeat fair reputation but a bawd.
' Hast thou command ? by him that gave it thee,
From a pure heart command thy rebel will ; 6:23
Draw not thy sword to guard iniquity,
For it was lent thee all that brood to kill.
Thy princely office how canst thou fulHl,
When, pattern'd by thy fault, foul sin may say
He learn'd to sin and thou didst teach the way?
'Think but how vile a spectacle it were, 631
To view thy present trespass in another.
Men's faults do neldom to themselves appear ;
Their own transgressions partially they smother;
This guilt would seem death-worthy in thy bro-
ther.
O, how are they wrapp'd in with infamies
That from their own misdeeds askance their
eyes! 637
' To thee, to thee, my heaved-up hands appeal,
Not to seducing lust, thy rash relier ;
I sue for exiled majesty's repeal ; 640
Let him return, an.i flattering thoughts retire ;
His true respect will prison false de&ire.
And wipe the dim mi»*. from thy doting eyne.
That thou shalt see thy ctate and pity mine.'
'Have done,' quoth he; 'my uncontrolled tide
Turns not, but swells the higher by this let. 046
Small lights are soon blown out, huge fires abide,
And with the wind in greater fury fret ;
The petty streams that pay a daily debt
To their salt sovereign, with their fresh falls'
haste 650
Add to his flow, but alter not his taste.'
' Thou art,' quoth she, ' a sea, a sovereign king
And, lo, there falls into thy boundless flood
Black lust, dLshonour, shame, misgoverning,
Who seek to stain the ocean of thy blood. 655
If all these petty ills shall change thy good,
Thy sea within a puddle's womb is hearsed.
And not the puddle in thy sea dispersed.
' So shall these slaves be king, and thou their slave ;
Thou nobly base, they basely dignified; 660
Thou their fair life, and they thy fouler grave;
Thou loathed in their shame, they in thy pride;
The lesser thing should not the greater hide;
The cedar st^wps not to the base shrub's foot,
But low shrubs wither at the cedar's root. 665
* So let thy thoughts, low vassals to thy state' —
'No more,' quoth he; ' by heaven, I will not hear
thee ;
Yield to my love; if not, enforced hate.
Instead of love's coy touch, shall rudely tear thee;
That done, despitcfully I mean lo lH?ar thee 670
I'Uto the bas(! beti of some rascal groom,
To be thy partner in this shameful doom.*
This said, he sets his foot upon the light.
For light and lust are deadly enemies;
Shame foldtMl up in blind concealing night, 675
When most unseen, then most doth tyrannize.
The wolf hath seized his prey, the poor lamb cries;
Till with her own white fleece her voice con-
tr ll'd
Entombs her outcry in her lips' sweet fold :
386
THE RAPE OF LUCRECE
[Line 680-798.
For with the nightly linen that she wemn 880
He |M*ns her piteous clanMMirs in her head.
Cooling his hot face in the chastest tears
That ever miMlest eyes with sorrow shed.
O, that prone lust should stain so pure a bed!
Tlie spots whereof could weeping purify, 685
Her tears should drop on them perpetually.
But she hath lo^t a dearer thing than life,
And he hath won what he would lose again ;
This forced league doth force a further strife ;
This momentary Joy briN.'ds months of pain ;
This hot dcAirt^ converts to cold disdain ; 090
Pure Chastity Ls rifled of her store.
And Lust, the thief, far poorer than before.
Look, as the full-fed hound or gorged hawk
Unapt for tender smell or speedy flight, 693
Make nlow pursuit, or altogether balk
The prey wherein by nature they delight,
8o surfeit-taking Tarquin fares this night:
His taste delicious, in digeittion souring, 699
Devours his will, that lived by foul devouring.
O, deeper sin than bottomless conceit
Can comprehend in still imagination!
Drunken Desire must vomit his receipt.
Ere he can see his own abomination.
While Lust is in his pride, no exclamation 705
Can curb his htrat or rein his rash desire,
Till, like a Jade, Self-will himself doth Ure.
And then with lank and lean discoiour'd cheek,
With heavy eye, knit bn»w, and strengthless pace,
Feelile Desire, all recn*ant, ix>or, and meek, 710
Like to a bankrupt b^'ggar wails his case:
The fl(»ih being proud. Desire doth fight with
(trace.
For there it revels, and when that decays
The guilty n>bel for remission prays.
8o fares It with this faultful lord of Rome, 715
Who this accomplishment so hotly chased;
For now against hinis(>lf he sounds this doom.
That through the length of times ho stands dis-
graced ;
Besidi's, his soul's fair temple is defaced, 719
To whwe weak ruins muster troops of cares.
To nsk the slotted princess how she fares.
She says, her subjects with foul insurrection
Uav«> batter'd down her consecrated wall,
And by their mortal fault brought in subjection
Her immortality, and made her thrall 725
To living death and pain i)erpeiuai;
Which in her prescience she contndlcd still.
But her foresight could not forestall their will.
Even in this thought through the dark night ho
stealeth,
A captive victor that hath lost in gain ; 730
Bearing away the wound that nothing healeth.
The Hear that will, d(>!>pite of cure, remain ;
Leaving his spoil {K'rplex'd in greater pain.
She b«>ars the load of lust he left behind,
And he the burthen of a guilty mind. 735
He like a thievish dog creeps sadly thence;
She like a wearieii lamb lies panting there;
He scowls, and hates himsiUf for his offence ;
She, desi>crate, with her nails her flesh doth tear;
He faintly flies, sweating with guilty fear; 740
She stays, exclaiming on the dlreftil ni^t;
He runs, and chides his Taniah'd, kmtlied de-
light.
, He thence departa a heavy conrertite;
I She there remains a hopeless cast-away;
He in his speed looks for the morning light; 745
She prays she never may behold the day,
* For day,' quoth she, * night's 'scapes doth open
lay,
And my true eyes hare never practiced how
To cloak oflenccs with a cunning brow.
'They think not but that erery eye can see 750
The same disgrace whicli they themselves behold ;
And therefore would they still in darkness be.
To have their unseen sin remain untold;
For they their guilt with weeping wiU unfold.
And grave, like water that doth eat in steel.
Upon my cheeks what helpless shame I feel.'
Here she exclaims against repose and rest, 757
And bids her eyes hereafter still be blind.
She wakes her heart by beating on her breast.
And bids it leap from thence, where it may find
Some purer chest to close so pure a mind. 761
Frantic with grief thus breathes she forth her
spite
Against the unseen secrecy of night:
' O comfort-killing Night, image of hell !
Dim register and notary of shame ! 765
Black stage for tragedies and murders fell!
Vast sin-«oncealing cha<M! nurse of bbune!
Blind, mutHed bawd! dark harlwur fordefkme!
(irim cave of death! whispering conspirator
With close-tonguixl treason and the ravisher!
' O hateful, vaporous, and foggy Night ! 771
Since thou art guilty of my cureless crime.
Muster thy mists to meet the eastern light,
Make war against proportioned course of time;
Or if thou wilt permit the sun to climb 775
His wonted height, yet ere he go to l>ed,
j Knit poisonous clouds about his golden head.
' 'With rotten damps ravish the morning air;
Let their exhaled unwholesome breattis make sick
The life of purity, the supreme fair, 780
Ere ho arrive his weary noon-tide prick ;
And let thy misty vap<^urs march so thick
That in their smoky ranks his smothered light
May set at n<x)n and make perpetual night !
•Were Tarquin Night, as he is but Night's child.
The silver-«hining queen he would distain ; 786
Her twinkling handmaids too, by him defiled,
Through Night's black bosom should not peep
again ;
So should I have co-partners in my pain ; 788
And fellowship in woe doth woe assuage.
As palmers' chat makes short their pilgrimage.
' Whore now T have no one to blush with me.
To cross their arms and hang their heads with
mine.
To mask their brows and hide their infamy ;
But I alone alone must sit and pine, IVS
Seasf)ning the earth with showers of silver bnne,
Mingling my talk with tears, my grief with
groans,
Poor wasting monuments of lasting moana.
IJNE 799-915]
THE RAPE OF LUCRECE
387
'0 Night, thou furnace of foul-reeking smoke,
Let not ttie Jealous Day b?hold that face 800
Which underneath thy black all-hiding cloak
Immodestly lies martyr'd with disgrace !
Keep still possession of thy gloomy place,
That all the faults which in thy reign are made
May likewise be sepulchred in thy shade! 8(K>
'Hake me not object to the tell-tale Day !
The light will show, charactered in my brow,
The story of sweet chastity's decay,
The impious breach of holy wedlock vow ;
Yea, the illiterate, that know not how 810
To cipher what is writ in learned books.
Will quote my loathsome trespass in my looks.
*The nurse, to still her child, will tell my story,
And fright her crying babe with Tarquin'n name ;
The orator, to deck his oratory, 815
Will couple my reproach to Tarquin's shame ;
Feast-finding minstrels, tuning my defame.
Will tie the hearers to attend each line,
How Tarquin wronged me, I Collatine.
*Let my good name, that senseless reputation,
For Collatine's dear love be kept unspotted; 821
If that be made a theme for disputation.
The branches of another root are rotted.
And undeserred reproach to him allotted
That is as clear from this attaint of mine
As I, ere this, was pure to Collatine. 826
' O unseen shame ! invisible disgrace !
O unfelt sore! crest-wounding, private scar!
Beproach is stamp'd in CoUatinus' face.
And Tarquin's eye may read the mot afar, 830
How he in peace is woundtni, not in war.
Alas, how many bear such shameful blows.
Which not themselves, but he that gives them
knoOrs !
' If, Collatine, thine honour lay in mo,
From roe by strong assault it is bereft. 835
My honey lost, and I, a drone-like bee,
Have no perfection of my summer left.
But robb'd and ransack'd by injurious theft;
In thy weak hive a wandering wasp hath crept.
And suck'd the honey which thy chaste bee
kept. 840
* Yet am I guilty of thy honour's wrack ;
Yet for thy honour did I entertain him ;
Coming from thee, I could not put him back.
For it had been dishonour to disdain him ;
Besides, of weariness he did complain him, 845
And talk'd of virtue : unlook'd-for evil,
When virtue is profaned in such a devil !
'Why should the worm intrude the maiden bud?
Or hateful cuckoos hatch in sparrows' nests?
Or toads infect fair founts with venom mud?
Or tyrant folly lurk in gentle breasts? 851
Or kings be breakers of their own behests?
But no perfection Ls so absolute
That some impurity doth not pollute.
' The aged man that coffers up his gold 8.^5
Is plagued with cramps and gouts and painful fits,
And acarce hath eyes bis treasure to behold,
But like still-pining Tantalus he sits
And useless barns the harvest of his wits.
Having no other pleasure of his gain 830
But torment that it cannot cure his pain.
* So then he hath it when he cannot use it.
And leaves it to be mastered by his young ;
Who in their pride do presently abuse it ;
Their father was too weak, and they too strong.
To hold their cursed-blessed fortune long. 866
The sweets we wish for turn to loathed sours
Even in the moment that we call them ours.
' Unruly blasts wait on the tender spring ;
Unwholesome weeds take root with precious flow-
ers ; 870
The adder hisses where the sweet birds sing;
What virtue breeds iniquity devours;
We have no good that wo can say is ours
But ill-annexed Opportunity
Or kills hb life or else his quality. 875
' O Opportunity, thy guilt is great!
'Tis thou that executest the traitor's treason ;
Thou set'st the wolf where he the lamb may get;
Whoever plots the sin, thou point'st the season ;
*Tis thou that spurn'st at right, at law, at reason;
And in thy shady cell, where none may spy him.
Sits Sin, to seize the souls that wander by him.
' Thou makest the vestal violate her oath ; 883
Thou blow'st the fire when temperance is thaw'd ;
Thou smother'st honesty, thou murder'st troth;
Thou fuul abettor ! thou notorious bawd! 886
Thou plantest scandal and displacest laud ;
Thou ravisher, thuu traitor, thou false thief,
Thy honey turns to gall, thy Joy to grief!
' Thy secret pleasure turns to open shame, 890
Thy private feasting to a public fast.
Thy smoothing titles to a ragged name,
Thy sugar'd tongue to bitter wormwood taste ;
Thy violent vanities can never last.
How comes it then, vile Opportunity, 895
Being so bad, such numbers seek for thee?
' When wilt thou be the humble suppliant's friend,
And bring him where his suit may be obtained?
When wilt thou sort an hour great strifes to end?
Or fret« that soul which wretchedness hath
chained t 900
Give physic to the sick, ease to the pained ?
The poor, lame, blind, halt, creep, cry out for
thee;
But they ne'er meet with Opportunity.
' The patient dies while the physician sleeps ;
The orphan pines while the oppressor feeds ;
Justice is feasting while the widow weeps; 906
Advice is s[»orting while infection breeds;
Thou grant'st no time for charitable deeds ;
Wrath, envy, treason, rape, and murder's ragea,
Thy heinous hours wait on them as their pages.
• When Truth and Virtue have to do with thee,
A thousand crosses keep them from thy aid ; 912
They buy thy help, but Sin ne'er gives a f^^;
He gratis comes, and thou art well appaid
As well to hear as grant what he hath said.
382
THE RAPE OF LUCRECE
[Line 216-331.
Or what fond beggar, but to touch the crown,
Would with the aceptre atraight be atrucken
down?
' If ColUtinua dream of my intent,
Will he not wake, and in a desperate rage
Post hither, this vile purpose to prevent? 220
This siege that hath engirt his marriage.
This blur to youth, this sorrow to the sage.
This dying virtue, this surviving shame,
Whose crime will bear an ever-during blame ?
' O what excuse can my Invention make, 225
When thou shalt charge me with so black a deed?
Will not my tongue be mute, my frail Joints shako.
Mine eyes forego their light, my false heart bleed ?
The guilt being great, the fear doth still exceed ;
And extreme fear can neither fight nor fly, 230
But coward-like with trembling terror die.
'Had Collatinus kill'd my son or sire,
Or lain in ambush to betray my life,
Or were he not my dear friend, this desire
Might have excuse to work upon his wife, 235
As in revenge or quittal of such strife ;
But as he is my kinsman, my dear friend.
The shame and fault finds no excuse nor end.
'ShameAil it is; ay, if the fact be known ;
Hateful it is ; there is no hate in loving ; 240
ril beg her love ; but she is not her own ;
The worst is but denial and reproving;
My will is strong, past reason's weak removing.
Who fears a sentence or an old man's saw
Shall by a painted cloth be kept in awe.' 245
Thus graceless holds he disputation
•Tween fVozen conscience and hot-burning will.
And with good thoughts makes dispensation.
Urging the worser sense for vantage still ;
Which in a moment doth confound and kill 250
Ail pure effects, and doth so far proceed
That what is vUe shows like a virtuous deed.
Quoth he, ' She took me kindly by the hand.
And gazed for tidings in my eager eyes,
Fearing some hard news from the warlike band,
Where her beloved Collatinus lies. 256
O, how her fear did make her colour rise!
First red as roses that on lawn we lay,
Then white as lawn, the roses took away.
'And how her hand, in my hand being lock'd, 260
Forced it to tremble with her loyal fear !
Which struck her sad, and then it faster rock'd.
Until her husband's welfare she did hear ;
Whereat she smiled with so sweet a cheer
That had Narcissus seen her as she stood 265
Self-love had never drown'd him in the flood.
• Why hunt I then for colour or excuses?
All orators are dumb when beauty pleadeth ;
Poor wretches have remorse in poor abuses ;
Love thrives not in the heart that shadows dread-
eth ; 270
Affection is my captain, and he Icadeth ;
And when his gaudy banner is display'd,
The coward fights, and will not be diamay'd.
* Then, childish fear, avauut ! debating, die !
Respect and reason wait on wrinkled age I 275
My heart shall never coantermand mine eje;
Sad pause and deep regard beaeems the sage ;
My part is youth, and beats these from the stage ;
Desire my pilot is, beauty my prize ;
Then who fears sinking where auch treasore
llesr 280
As corn o'ergrown by weeds, so heedful fear
Is almost choked by unresisted lust.
Away he steals with open listening ear.
Full of foul hope and full of fond miatmst ;
Both which, as servitors to the nnjust, 285
So cross him with their opposite persuasion.
That now he vows a league, and now invasion.
Within his thought her heavenly image aita,
And in the self-same seat sits Collatine ;
That eye which looks on her confounds his wits;
That eye which him beholds, as more divine, 291
Unto a view so false will not incline ;
But with a pure appeal seeks to the heart,
Which once corrupted takes the worser part;
And therein heartens up his servile powers, 296
Who, flatter'd by their leader's Jocund show,
Stuff up his lust, as minutes fill up hours;
And as their captain, so their pride doth grow,
Paying more slavish tribute than they owe.
By reprobate desire thus madly led, 800
The Roman lord marcheth to Lucrece* bed.
The locks between her chamber and his will,
Each one by him enforced, retires his ward ;
But, as they open, they all rate his ill, 804
Which drives the creeping thief to some regard ;
The threshold grates the door to have him heard ;
Night-wandering weasels shriek to see him
there;
They fright him, yet he still pursues his fear.
As each unwilling portal yields him way.
Through little vents and crannies of the place 310
The wind wars with his torch to make him stay,
And blows the smoke of it into his face,
Extinguishing his conduct in this case ;
But his hot heart, which fond desire doth scorch.
Puffs forth another wind that fires the torch ; 815
And being lighted, by the light he spies
Lucretia's glove, wherein her needle sticks;
He takes it from the rushes where it lies.
And griping it, the needle his finger pricks; 819
As who should say, 'This glove to wanton tricks
Is not inured; return sigain in haste;
Thou see'st our mistress' ornaments are chaste.'
But all these poor forbiddings could not stay him ;
He in the worst sense construes their denial ;
The doors, the wind, the glove, that did delay him.
He takes for accidental things of trial ; 826
Or as those bars which stop the hourly dial,
Who with a lingering stay his course doth let.
Till every minute pays the hour his debt.
' So, so,' quoth he, ' these lets attend the time, 330
Like little f^oata that sometime threat the a|»ting,
Link 1033-1146.]
THE RAPE OF LUCRECE
389
Bat if I live, thou llvest in mj defame ;
Since thou couldst not defend thy loyal dame,
And wast afeard to scratch her wicked foe,
Kill hoth thyself and her for yielding so.' 1036
This said, from her he-tumbled couch she stnrteth,
To find some desperate instrument of death ;
But this no slaughterhouse no tool imparteth
To make more vent for passage of her breath ; 1040
Which thronging through her lips, so vanlsheth
As smoke from £tna that in air consumes.
Or that which from discharged cannon fumes.
' In Tain,' quoth she, * I lire, and seek in rain
Some happy mean to end a hapless life. 1045
I fear'd by Tarquin's falchion to be ^In,
Yet for the self-same purpose seek a knife ;
But when I fear'd I was a loyal wife ;
80 am I now ; O no, that cannot be ; 1049
Of that true type hath Tarquin rifled me.
'O, that is gone for which I sought to live.
And therefore now I need not fear to die.
To clear this spot by death, at least I give
A bodge of fame to slander's livery,
A dying life to living infamy ; 1055
Poor helpless help, the treasure stol'n away,
To burn the guiltless casket where it lay !
'Well, well, dear Collatine, thou shalt not know
The stained taste of violated troth ;
I will not wrong thy true atfection so, lOGO
To flatter thee with an infringed oath ;
This bastard grafl* shall never come t^) growth ;
He shall not boast who did thy stuck ix>llute
That thou art doting father of his fruit. 1064
'Nor shall he smile at thee in secret thought,
Kor laugh with lils companions at thy state;
But thou shalt know thy interest was not bought
Basely with gold, but stol'n from forth thy gate.
For me, I am the mistress of my fate, 1069
And with my tre!}i)ass never will dispense,
Till life to death acquit my forced oHunce.
'I will not poison thee with my attaint,
Nor fold my fault in cleanly-coin'd excuses ;
Ify sable ground of sin I will not paint, 1074
To hide the truth of this false night's abuses ;
If y tongue shaii utt^ir all ; mine eyes, like sluices,
As from a mountain-spring that feeds a dale,
Shall gush pure streams to purge my impure
tale.'
By this, lamenting Philomel had ended 1079
The well tuned warble of her nightly sorrow.
And solemn night with slow-sad gait descended
To ugly hell; when, lo, the blushing morrow
Lends light to all fair eyes that light will borrow;
But cloudy Lucrecc shames herself to see.
And therefore still in night would cloister'd be.
Bevealing day through every cranny spies, 1086
And seems to point her out where she sits weep-
To whom she sobbing speaks: ' O eye of eyes,
Why pry'st thou through my window? leave thy
peeping;
Mock with thy tickling beams eyes that are sleep-
ing ; 1090
Brand not my forehead with thy piercing light,
For day hath nought to do what's done by night.'
Thus cavils she with every thintr »^e «eea ;
True grief is fond and testy as a child, 1094
Who wayward once, his mood with nought agrees ;
Old woes, not infant sorrows, bear them mild ;
Continuance tames the one; the other wild,
T^ike an unpractised swimmer plunging still
With too much labour drowns for want of skill
So she, deep-drenched in a sea of care, 1100
Holds disputation with each thing she views.
And to herself all sorrow doth compare;
No object but her passion's strength renews,
And as one shifts, another straight ensues; 1104
Sometime her grief is dumb and hath no words;
Sometime 'tis mad and too much talk affords.
The little birds that tune their morning's Joy
Make her moans mad with their sweet melody ;
For mirth doth search the bottom of annoy;
Sad souls are slain in merry company; 1110
Grief best is pleased with grief's society;
True sorrow then Is feelingly sufficed
When with like semblance it is sympathized.
'Tis double death to drown in ken of shore; 1114
He ten times pines that pines beholding food ;
To see the salve doth make the wound ache more ;
Great grief grieves most at that would do it good ;
Deep woes roll forward like a gentle flood.
Who, being stopp'd, the bounding banks o'er*
flows; 1119
Grief dallied with nor law nor limit knows.
' You mocking birds,' quoth she, ' your tunes en-
tomb
Within your holiow-swcUing feather'd breasts,
And in my hearing be you mute and dumb;
My restless discord loves no stops nor rests;
A woeful hostess brooks not merry guests ; 1125
Ri'Iish your nimble notes to pleasing ears ;
Distress likes dumps when time is kept with
tears.
Tome. Philomel, that sing'st of ravishment.
Make thy sad grove in my dishevell'd hair;
As the dank earth weeps at thy languishment.
So I at each sad strain will strain a tear, 1131
And with deep groans the diapason bear;
For burden-wise I'll hum on Tarquin still,
While thou on Tcrcus descant'st better skill.
'And whil(>8 ap^alnst a thorn thou licar'st thy part,
To keep thy sharp woes waking, wretched I,
To imitate thee well, against my h«'art 1137
Will fix a sharp knife, to affright mine eye;
Who, if It wink, shall thereon fall and die.
These means, as frets upon an instrument.
Shall tunc our heart-strings to true languish-
ment. 1141
'And for, poor bird, thou sing'st not In the day,
As shaming any eye should thee behold.
Some dark di»ep d»»s'rt, seatcil from the way.
That knows not parching heat nor freezing col-l.
Will wc find out; and there we will unfold
390
THE RAPE OF LUCRECE
[Line i 147-1263.
To crcatams stem sad tuocSf to change their
kinib; 1147
Since men prove beasts, let beasts bear gentle
minds.'
As the poor frighted deer, that standi at gaze,
Wildly determining which way to fly, lloO
Or one encompass'd with a winding maxe,
That cannot tread the way out readily ;
80 with herw*lf is she in mutiny,
To live or die, which of the twain were better,
When life is sliamed and death reproach's
debtor. ll.W
*To kill myself,' quoth she, 'alack, what were it,
But with my body my ptxir soul's pollution?
Tlipy that l<i»c half with greater patiem*« bear it
Than they who«e whole is swallow'd in confusion.
That mother tries a merciless conclusion 1160
Who, having two sweet babes, when death takes
one,
Will slay the other and be nurse to none.
* My b<»dy or my soul, which was the dearer,
When the one pure, the utlier made divine?
Whose love of either to niys<'lf wa« nearer, 1165
When Ijoth were kept for heaven and Collatine?
Ay me I the bark iieel'd fn>m the lofty pine,
Ills leaves will wither and his sap decay ;
So must my soul, her bark being peel'd away.
' Her house is sack'd, her quiet interrupted,
Ifer mansion battered by the enemy ; 1171
Her sacred temple .si>otte<l, spoil'd. corrupted,
Grossly engirt with daring infamy;
Then let it not be call'd impiety,
If in this blemiHh'd fort I make some hole
Through which 1 may convey this troubled soul.
« Yet die I will not till ray O^llatine 1177
Have hoard the cause of my untimely death;
That he may vow, in that sad hour of mine,
Rt;venge on him that made me stop my breath.
My Htain(>d Mood to Tarquin I'll bequeath, 1181
Which by him t-ainte<I shall for him be spent,
And as his due writ in my testament.
•My honour I'll bequeath unto the knifo
That wounds my b<xly so dishonoured. 1185
•Tis h<»nour to deprive dishonour'd life;
The one will live, the other being deiul ;
80 of .shame's ashes shall my fame be bred ;
For in my death I murder shameful scorn ;
My shame so dead, mine honour is new-born
' D.*ar lord of that dear jewel T have lost, 1191
What legacy shall I bequeath to thee?
My resolution, love, shall be thy boast.
By whose example thou revenged mayst be.
How Tarquin must be us<"d, read it in me; IIW
Myself, thy friend, will kill myself, thy foe,
And, for my sake, serve thou false Tarquin so.
• This brief abridgement of my will I make :
My Koul and iMxly to the skies and ground ;
My n^solution, husband, do thou take; 1200
Mine honour be the knife's that makes my wound ;
My shame bo his that did my fame confound ;
And all my fame that lives disbursi'd be
To those that live and think no shame of mc.
' Thou, Collatine, shalt oversee this will ; 1205
How was I overseen that thou shalt see it !
My blood shall wash the slander of mine ill;
My life's foul deed, my life's fair end shall free it.
Faint n(H, faint heart, but stoutly say '*So be it;"
Yield to my hand ; my hand shall conquer thee ;
Thou dead, both die and both shall victon be.*
This plot of death when sadly she had laid, 1212
And wiped the brinisth pearl from her bright eyes.
With untuned tongue she hoarsely calls her maid,
Whoite swift obedience to her mistress hies;
For fleet-wing'd duly with thought's feathers flies.
Poor Lucrcce' cheeks unto lier maid seem so
As winter meads when sun doth melt their snow.
Her mL-itrew* she doth give demure good-morrow.
With soft slow tongue, true mark of modesty.
And sorts a sad look to her lady's sorrow, 1221
For why her face wore sorrow's livery.
But durst not ask of her audaciously
Why her two suns were cloud-eclipsed so, 1224
Nor why her fair cheeks over-wash'd with woe.
But as the earth doth weep, the snn being set.
Each flower moisten'd like a melting eye.
Even so the maid with swelling drops 'gan wet
Her circled eyne, enforced by sympathy
Of those fair suns set in her mistress' sky, 1230
Who in a salt-waved <x;eau quench their light.
Which makes the maid weep like the dewy
night.
A pretty while these pretty creatures stand.
Like ivory conduits coral cisterns filling ; 1234
One Justly weeps ; the other takes in hand
No cause, but comi>any, of her drops spilling;
Their gentle sex to weep are often willing,
Grieving themselves to guess at others' smarta,
And then they drown their eyes or break their
hearts. 1239
For men have marble, women waxen, minds.
And therefore are they form'd as marble will;
The weak oppress'd, the impression of strange
kinds
Is form'd in them by force, by fraud, or skill ;
Then call them not the authors of their ill, 1244
No more than wax shall be accounted evil
Wherein is stamp'd the semblance of a devil.
Their smoothness, like a goodly chamfiaign plain.
Lays open all the little worms that creep ;
In men, as in a rough-grown grove, remain
Cave-keeping evils that obscurely sleep ; 12.'50
Through crystal walls each little mote will peep;
Though men can cover crimes with bold stcro
looks.
Poor women's faces are thoir own faults' books.
No man inveigh against the withcr'd flower,
But chide rough wint4>r that the flower hath kiU'd;
Not that devour'd, but that which doth devour,
Is worthy of blame. O, let it not be hild 1267
Poor women's faults, that they are so fulfill'd
With men's abuses ; those proud lords to blame
Make weak-made women tenants to their shame.
The precedent whereof in Lucrece view, 1261
Assail'd by night with circumstances strong
Of present death, and shame that might ensue
Line i 264-1372.]
THE RAPE OF LUCRECE
391
Bj that her death, to do her husband wrong ;
Such danger to resiBtance did belong, 1265
That dying fear through all her body spread ;
And who cannot abuae a body dead?
By this, mild patience bid fair Lucrece speak
To the poor counterfeit of her complaining;
'My girl,' quoth she, 'on what occasion break
Those tears from thee, that down thy cheeks are
raining? 1271
If thou dost weep for grief of my sustaining,
Know, gentle wench, it small avails luy mood;
If tears could help, mine own would do me good.
•But tell me, gfirl, when went' — and there she
stay'd 1275
Till after a deep groan— ' Tarqu in from hence?'
* Madam, ere I was up,' replied the maid,
*The more to blame my sluggard nogUj?pnce ;
Yet with the fault I thus far can dispense ;
Myself was stirring ere the breA: of day, 1280
And ere I rose was Tarquin gone away.
• But, lady, If your maid may be so bold,
She would request to know your heaviness.'
*0, peace!' quoth Lucrece; Mf it should be told,
The repetition cannot make it less, 1285
For more it is than I can well express ;
And that deep torture may be call'd a hell
When more is felt than one hath i>ower to tell.
Go, get me hither paper, ink, and pen ; 1289
Yet save that labour, for I have them hero.
What should I say? One of my husband's men
Bid thou be ready by and by to bear
A letter to my lord, my love, my dear;
Bid him with speed prepare to carry it; 1294
The cause craves haste and it will soon bo writ.'
Her maid Is gone, and she prepares to write,
First hovering o'er the paper with her quill ;
Conceit and grief an eager combat fii^ht;
What wit sets down is blotted straight with will ;
This is too curious-good, this blunt and ill; 1:^)0
Much like a press of people at a door.
Throng her inventions, which shall go before.
At last she thus begins: 'Thou worthy lord
Of that unworthy wife that greet i-th tliee.
Health to thy |>erson ! next vouchsafe t' atf.jrd, —
If ever, love, thy Lucrece thou wilt see, — IJUMJ
Some present speed to come and visit me.
So, I commend me from our house in grief;
My woes are tedious, though my words are
brief.'
Here folds she up the tenour of her woe, 1310
Htr certain sorrow writ uncertainly.
By this short schedule Collatine may know
Her grief, but not her grief's true quality ;
She dares not thereof make discovery, 1314
Leat he should hold it her own gross abu.so,
Ere she with blood had stain'd her stain'd ex-
cuse.
Besides, the life and feeling of her passion
She hoards, to spend when he is by to hear her.
When sighs and groans and tears may grace the
fashion
Of her disgrace, the better so to clear her 1320
From that suspicion which the world might bear
her.
To shun this blot, she would not blot the letter
With words, till action might become them
better.
To see sad sights moves more than hear them told ;
For then the eye interi)rets to the ear 1325
The heavy motion that it doth behold.
When every part a part of woe doth bear.
'Tis but a part of sorrow that we hear ;
Deep sounds make lesser noise than shallow
fords.
And sorrow ebbs, being blown with wind of
words. 1330
Her letter now Is seal'd and on it writ
• At Ardea to my lord with more than haste.'
The post attends, and she delivers it,
Charging the sour-faced groom to hie as fast
As lagging fowls before the northern blast ;
Speed more than speed but dull and slow she
deems ; 1336
Extremity still urgeth such extremes.
The homely villain court'sies to her low.
And blushing on her, with a steadfast eye
Receiveji the scroll without or yea or no, 1340
And forth with bashful innocence doth hie.
But they whose guilt within their Ixisoms lie
Imagine every eye beholds their blame ;
I'^or Lucrece thought he blush'd to see her
shame ;
When, silly groom I God wot, it was defect
Of spirit, life and bold audacity. 1346
Such harmless creatures have a true respect
To talk in deeds, while others saucily
Promise more speed but do it leisurely ; 1349
Even so this pattern of the worn-out age
Pawn'd honest looks, but laid no words to gage.
His kindled duty kindled her mistrust.
That two red fires in both their faces blazed ;
She thought he blush'd, as knowing Tarquin's lust,
And blushing with him, wistly on hira gazed ; 1355
Her earnest eye did make him more amazed ;
The more she saw t he blood his cheeks replenish,
The more she thought he spied in her some
blemish.
But long she thinks till he return again,
And yet the duteous vassal scarce is gone.
The weary time she cannot entertain, 1361
For now 'tis stale to sigh, to weep and groan ;
So woe hath wearii^d woe, moan tired moan.
That she her plaints a little while doth stay,
Pausing for means to mourn some newer way.
At last she calls to mind where hangs a piece
Of skilful painting, made for Priam's Troy;
Before the which is drawn the power of Greece,
For Helen's rape the city to destroy, 1369
Threatening cloud-kissing Ilion with annoy;
Which the conceited painter drew so proud.
As heaven, it seem'd, to kias the turrets bow'd
892
THE RAPE OF LUCRECE
[Line 1373-1491.
A thousand lamentable objects there,
In acorn of nature, art gave lifi'less life ;
Many a dry drop secm'd a weeping tear, 1375
8hed for the slaughtcr'd husband by the wife;
The rod blood reek'd, to show the painter's strife;
And dying eyes glcam'd forth their ashy lights,
Like dying coals burnt out in tedious nights.
There might you see the labouring pioner 1380
Begrimed with sweat and smeared all with dust ;
And from the towers of Troy there would appear
The very eyes of men through loop-holes thrust,
Gazing upon the Greeks with little lust ; 1384
Such sweet observance in this work was had
That one might see those far-off eyes look sad.
In great coninmndcrs grace and majesty
You might bohuld, triumphing in their faces;
In youth, quick ticaring and dexterity ;
And hero and there the painter interlaces i;^
Pale cowards, marching on with trembling paces,
Which heartless peasants did so well resemble
That one would swear he saw them quake and
tremble.
In AJax and Ulysses, O, what art
Of physiognomy might one behold! 1395
The face of either cipher'd cither's heart;
Their face their manners most exprcusly told;
In AJax' eyes blunt rage and rigour roird ;
But the mild glance that sly Ulysses lent 1399
Show'd deep regard and smiling government.
There pleading might you see grave Nestor stand.
As 'twere encouraging the Greeks to fight,
Making such sober action with his hand 1403
That it beguiled attention, charm'd the sight;
In speech, it seem'd, his beard all silver white
Wagg'd up and down, and from his lips did fly
Thin winding breath which purl'd up to the sky'.
About him were a press of gaping faces,
Which seenrd to swallow up his sound advice;
All jointly listening, but with several graces.
As if some mermaid did their ears entice, 1411
Some high, some low, the paint4>r was so nice;
The scalps of many, almost hid behind.
To Jump up higher seem'd, to mock the mind.
Here one m&n's hand lean'd on another's head,
His nose being shadow'd by his neighbour's ear;
Here one being throng'd bears back, ail boli'n
and red ; 1417
Another sinother'd seems to pelt and swear;
And in their rage such signs of rage they bear
Am, but for loss of Nestor"s golden words.
It seem'd they would debate with angry swords.
For much imaginary work was there; 1422
Conceit deceitful, so compact, so kind.
That for Achilles' image st(X)d liis 8{)ear
Griped in an amu'd hand ; himself behind
Was left unseen, save to the eye of mind; 1426
A hand, a foot, a face, a leg, a head.
Stood for the whole to be imagined.
And from the walls of strong-besieged Troy
When their brave hope, bold Hector, march'd to
field, 14;W
Stood many Trojan mothers sharing joy
To see their youthful sons bright weajwns wield ;
And to their hope they such odd action yield
That through their light joy seemed to appear.
Like bright things stain'd, a kind of heavy fear.
And from the strand of Dardan, where they fought,
To Simois' reedy banks the red blood ran, 1487
Whose waves to imitate the battle sought
With swelling ridges; and their ranks began
To break upon the galled shore, and than 1440
Retire again, till meeting greater ranks
They Join and shoot their foam at Simois' banka.
To this well-painted piece is Lucrece come,
To find a face where all distress ht stell'd. 1441
Many she sr«s where cares have carved some.
But none where all distress and dolour dwell'd.
Till she despairing Hecuba beheld,
Staring on Priam's wounds with her old eyes.
Which bleeding under Pyrrhus* proud foot lies.
In her the painter had anatomized 1460
Time's ruin, beauty's wreck, and grim care's reign ;
Her cheeks with chape and wrinkles were dis-
guised ;
Of what she was no semblance did remain ;
Her blue blood changed to black in every vein,
Wanting the spring that those shrunk pipes
have fed, 1455
Show'd life imprlson'd In a body dead.
On thL^ sad shadow Lucrece spends her eyes,
And shapes her sorrow to the beldam's woes,
Who nothing wants to answer her but cries,
And bitter words to ban her cruel foes ; 1460
The painter was no god to lend her those ;
And therefore Lucrece swears he did her wrong,
To give her so much grief and not a tongue.
'Poor instrument,' quoth she, ' without a sound,
I'll tune thy woi>s with my lamenting tongue.
And drop sweet balm in Priam's painted wound.
And rail on Pyrrhus that hath done him wrong.
And with my tears quench Troy that bums so
long,
And with my knife scratch out the angry eyes
Of all the Greeks that are thine enemies. 1470
'Show me the strumpet that began this stir,
That with my nails her beauty I may tear.
Thy heat of lust, fond Paris, did incur
This load of wrath that burning Troy doth bear ;
Thy eye kindled the fire that bumeth here; 1475
And here in Troy, for trespass of thine eye,
The sire, the son, the dame, and daughter die.
' Why should the private pleasure of some one
Become the public plague of many moe?
Let sin, alune committed, light alone 1480
Upon his head that hath transgressed so;
Let guiltless souls be freed from guilty woe ;
For one's otfence why should so many fall,
To plague a private sin in general?
' Lo, here weeps Hecuba, here Priam diea, 1485
Here manly Hector faints, here TroUus swounda.
Here friend by friend in bloo<ly channel lies
And friend to friend gives unadvised wouna».
And one man's lust these many lives confounds;
Had doting I'riani check'd his son's desire,
Troy had been bright with fame and not witb
fire.' 1491
Line 1492-1606.]
THE RAPE OF LUCRECE
393
Here feelingly she weeps Troy's painted woes ;
For sorrow, like a heaTy-banging bell,
Once set on ringing, with his own weight goes;
Then little strength rings out the doleful kneli;
So Lucrece, set »-work, sad tales doth tell 1496
To penciird pensircness and colour'd sorrow ;
She lends them words, and she their looks doth
borrow.
She throws her eyes about the painting round,
And who she finds forlorn she doth lament.
At last she sees a wretched image bound, 1501
That piteous looks to Phrygian shepherds lent ;
His face, though full of cares, yet show'd content;
Onward to Troy with the blunt swains he goes,
So mild that Patience seem'd to scorn his woes.
In him the painter laboured with his skill 1506
To hide deceit and give the harmless show
An humble gait, calm looks, eyes wailing still,
A brow unbent, that seem'd to welcome woe ;
Cheeks neither red nor paie, but mingled so 1510
That bluMhing red no guilty instance gave,
Nor ashy pale the fear that false hearts have.
But, like a constant and confirmed devil.
Ho entertain'd a show so seeming Just,
And therein so ensconced his secret evil, 1515
That jealousy itself could not mistnist
False-creeping craft and peijury should thrust
Into so bright a day such black-faced storms.
Or blot with hell-lx)rn sin such saint-like forms.
The well-skill'd workman this mild image drew
For perjured Sinon, whose enchanting story
The credulous old Priam after slew ; 1522
Whose words, like wildfire, burnt the shining
glory
Of rich-built Ilion, that tlie skies were sorry,
And little stars shot fntm their fixed places,
When their glass fell wherein they vicw'd their
faces. 1526
This picture she advisedly perused,
And chid the painter for his wondrous skill.
Saying, some shape in Sinou's was abused ;
So fair a form liHlgcd not a mind so ill ; 1530
And still on him she gazed, and gazing still
Such signs of truth in his plain face she spied
That she concludes the picture was belied.
*It cannot be,' quoth she, 'that so much guile* —
She would have said 'can lurk in such a look;'
But Tarquin's shape came in her mind the while.
And from her tongue 'can lurk' from 'cannot'
took ; 1537
'It cannot be' she in that sense forsook.
And turn'd it thus, ' It cannot Im>, I find,
But such a face should bear a wicked mind ;
For even as subtle Sinon here is painted, 1541
80 sober-«ad, so weary, and so mild.
As if with grief or travail he had fainted.
To me came Tarquin armed ; so btrguiled
With outward honesty, but yet defiled 1545
With inward vice; as Priam him did cherish.
So did I Tarquin ; so my Troy did i>erish.
Look, look, how listening Priam wets his eyes.
To see those borrow'd tt'urs that Sinon sheds!
Pj iam, why art thou old and yet not wise? 1550
For every tear he falls a Trojan bleeds;
His eye drops fire, no water thence proceeds;
Those round clear pearls of his that move thy
pity
Are balls of quenchless fire to bum thy city.
' Such devils steal effects from lightless hell ;
For Sinon in his fire doth quake with cold, 1556
And in that cold hot-buniing fire doth dwell ;
These contraries such unity do hold.
Only to flatter fools and make them bold ;
So Priam's trust false Sinon's tears doth flatter,
That he finds means to bum his Troy with
water.' 1561
Here, all enraged, such passion her assails.
That patience is quite beaten from her breast.
She tears the senseless Sinon with her nails,
Comparing him to that unhappy guest 1565
Whose deed hath made herself herself detest;
At last she smilingly with this gives o'er;
' Fool, fool r quoth she, * his wounds will not he
sore'
1568
Thus ebbs and flows the current of her sorrow.
And time doth weary time with her complaining.
She looks for night, and then she longs for morrow,
And both she thinks too long with her remaining;
Short time seems long in sorrow*s sharp sustain-
ing; 1573
Though woo be heavy, yet it seldom sleeps.
And they that watch see time how slow it creeps.
W^bich all this time hath overslipp'd her thought,
That she with painted images hath spent ;
Being from the feeling of her own grief brought
By deep surmise of others' detriment.
Losing her woes in shows of discontent 1580
It easeth some, though none it ever cured,
To think their dolour others have endured.
But now the mlndAil messenger come back
Brings home his lord and other company ;
Who finds his Lucrece clad in mourning black ;
And round about her tear-dl»t:iinctl eye 1586
Blue circles stream'd, like rainlxiws in the sky;
These water-galls in her dim element
Foretell new storms to those already spent.
Which when her sad-beholdiug husband saw,
Amazedly in her sad face he stares ; 1591
Her eyes, though sod in tears, loiik'd red and raw,
Her lively colour kill'd with deadly cares.
He hath no power to ask her how she fares ;
Both stood, like old acquaintance in a trance,
Met far from home, wondering each other's
chance. 1596
At last he taki>s her by the bloodless hand.
And thus begins: 'What uncouth ill event
Hath thee U^fairn, that thou dost trembling stand?
Sweet love, what spite hath tliy fair colour spent?
Why art thou thus attired In disconUnit? 1601
Unmask, dear dear, this moody heaviness,
And tell thy grief, that wo may give rodreas.'
Three times with sighs she gives her sorrow fire,
Ere once she can discharge one word of woe;
At length address'd to answer his desire, 1606
394
THE RAPE OF LUCRECE
[Line 1607-1722,
She modestly prepares to let them know
Iler honour is ta'cn prisoner by the foe ;
While CollatiDe and his consorted lords 1609
With sad attention long to hear her words.
And now this pale swan in her watery nest
Begins the sad dirge of her certain ending;
' Few words,' quoth she, 'shall fit the trespass best,
Where no excuse can give the fault amending;
In me nioe woes than words are now depending;
And my laments would bo drawn out too long,
To tell them all with one poor tired tongue.
' Then be this all the task it hath to say : 1618
Dear husband, in the interest of thy bed
A stranger came, and on that pillow lay
Where thou wast wout to rest thy weary head ;
And what wrong else may be imagined
By foul enforcement might be done to me,
From that, alas, thy Lucrece is not free. 1624
' For in the dreadful dead of dark midnight.
With shining falchion in my chamber came
A creeping creature, with a flaming light.
And softly cried '' Awake, thou Ruman dame,
And entertain my luvu; else lasting shame
On thee and thine this night I will inflict,
If thou my love's desire do contradict. 1631
***For some hard-fa vour'd groom of thine,*' quoth
he,
"Unless thou yoke thy liking to my will,
I'll murder straight, and then I'll slaughter thee,
And swear I found you where you did fulfil
The loathsome act of lust, and so did kill 1636
The lechers in their deed ; this act will be
My fame, and thy perpetual infamy."
* With this, I did begin to start and cry ;
And then against my heart ho set his sword,
Swearing, unless I touk all patiently, 1641
I should not live to speak another word ;
So should my shame still rest upon record.
And never be forgot in mighty Rome
The adulterate death of Lucrece and her groom.
* Mine enemy was strong, my poor self weak, 1646
And far the weaker with so strong a fear ;
My bloody judge forbade my tongue to speak ;
No rightful plea might plead for justice there;
liis scarlet lust came evidence to swear 1650
That my poor beauty had purloin'd his eyes;
And when the judge is robb'd, the prisoner dies.
*0 teach me bow to make mine own excuse!
Or, at the least, tiiis refuge let me find ; 1654
Though my gross blood be stain'd with this abuse.
Immaculate and spotless is my mind ;
That was not forced ; that never was inclined
To accessary yieldings, but still pure
Doth in her poison'd closet yet endure.'
Lo, here, the hopeless merchant of this'loss,
With head declined, and voice damm'd up with
woe, 1661
With sad-«et eyes and wretched arms across,
From lips new-waxen pale begins to blow
The grief away that stops his answer so ;
But, wretched as he is, he strives in vain ;
What he breathes out his breath drinks up
again. 1066
As through an arch the violent roaring tide
Outruns the eye th'at doth behold hb haste.
Yet in the eddy boundeth in his pride 1669
Back to the strait that forced him on so fast,
In rage sent out, recall'd in rage, being past ;
Even so his siglis, hb sorrows, make a saw.
To push grief on and back the same grief draw
W^hich speechless woe of his poor she attcndeth.
And hb untimely frenzy thus awaketh : 1675
' Dear lord, thy sorrow to my sorrow lendeth
Another power ; no flood by raining slaketh.
My woe too sensible thy passion maketh
More feeling-painful ; let it then suffice 1679
To drown one woe, one pair of weeping cyea.
'And for my sake, when I might charm thee so.
For she that was thy Lucrece, now attend me ;
Be suddenly revenged on my foe.
Thine, mine, hb own ; suppose thou dost defend
me
From what b past; the help that thou shalt lend
me 1685
Comes all too late, yet let the traitor die ;
For sparing justice feeds iniquity.
'But ere I name him, you fair lords,' quoth she.
Speaking to those that came with Collatine,
' Shall plight your honourable faiths to me, 1^0
With swift pursuit to venge thb wrong of mine;
For 'tis a meritorious fair design
To chase injustice with revengeful arms;
Knights, by their oatlis, should right poor ladies'
hanus.'
At this request, with noble disposition 1695
Each present lord began to promise aid.
As bound in knighthood to her imposition.
Longing to hear the hateful foe bcwray'd. 1698
But she, that yet her sad task hath not said.
The proti»<tation stops. * O, six'ak,' quoth she,
*Uow may thb forced stain be wiped from me?
'What is the quality of my offence.
Being constrain'd with dreadful circumstance?
May my pure mind with the foul act dbpenae,
My low-declined honour to advance? 1705
May any terms acquit me from this chance?
Tlie poison'd fountain clears itself again ;
And why not 1 from thb compelled stain 7*
With this, they all at once began to say, 1709
Iler body's stain her mind untainted clears;
While with a joyless smile she turns away
The face, that map which deep impression bears
Of hard mbfortune, carved in it with tears.
' No, no,' quoth siie, ' no dame hereafter living
By my excuse shall claim excuse's giving.* 1715
ITerc with a sigh, as if her heart would break.
She throws forth Tarquin's name; 'Ue, he,' she
says.
But more than 'he' her poor tongue could not
speak ;
Till after many accents and delays, 1719
Untimely breathings, sick and short assays.
She utters this : ' He, he, fair lords, 'tb be,
That guides thb hand to give thb wound to me^'
Line 1723-1837.]
THE RAPE OF LUCRECE
395
Even here she sheathed in her harmless breast
A harmful knife, that thence her soul unsheathed :
That blow did bail it from the deep unrest 1725
Of that polluted prUon where it breathed ;
Her contrite sighs unto the clouds bi>queathcd
Her winged spright, and through her wounds
doth fl]r
Life's lasting date from cancelled destiny.
Stono-«tiU, astonLsh'd with this deadly deed,
Stood CoUatine and all his lordly crew ; 1731
Till Lncrece' father, that beholds her bleed,
Himself on her sclf-slaughtcr'd body threw;
And from the purple fountain Brutus drew
The murderous knife, and, as it left the place,
Her blood, in poor revenge, held it in chase ;
And bubbling from her breast, it doth divide
In two slow rivers, that the crimson blood
Circles her body in on every side,
Who, like a late-sack'd island, vastly stood 1740
Bare and unpeopled in this fearful flood.
Some of her blood still pure and red rcmain'd.
And some look'd black, and that false Tarquiu
stain'd.
About the mourning and congealed face
Of that black blood a watery rigol goes, 1745
Which seems to weep upon the tainted place;
And ever since, as pitying Lucrece* woes.
Corrupted blood some watery token shows;
And blood untainted still doth red abide.
Blushing at that which is so putrified. 1750
' Daughter, dear daughter,' old Lucretius cries,
'That life was mine which thou hast here de-
privtHi.
If in the child the father's image lies.
Where shall I live now Lucrcce is unlived?
Thou wa»t not to this end from nie derived.
If children pre-decease progenitors, 1756
We are their offspring, and they none of ours.
Poor broken glass, I often did behold
In thy sweet semblance ray old age new born ;
But now that fair fresh mirror, dim and old, 1760
Shows me a bare-boned death by time outworn;
O, from thy cheeks my image thou hast torn,
And shiver'd all the beauty of my glass.
That I no more can see what once I was.
'O time, cease thou thy course and last no longer.
If they surcease to be that should survive. 1766
Shall rotten death make conquest of the stronger.
And leave the faltering, feeble souls alive 7
The old l)ecs die, the young possess their hive;
Then live, sweet Lucrece, live again, and see
Thy father die, and not thy father thee I' 1771
By this, starts Collatine as from a dream.
And bids Lucretius give his sorrow place;
And then in key-cold Lucrece' bleiniing stream
He falls, and bathes the pale fear in his face,
And counterfeits to die with her a space ; 1776
Till manly shame bids him possess his breath,
And live to be revenged on her death.
Tne deep vexation of his inward soul 1779
Hath served a dumb arrest upon his tongue;
Who, mad that sorrow should his use control
Or keep him from heart-easing words so long.
Begins to talk ; but through his lips do throng
Weak words, so thick come in his poor heart's
aid 1784
That no man could distinguish what he said.
Yet sometime 'Tarquin' was pronounced plain,
But through his teeth, as if the name he tore.
Tills windy tempest, till it blow up rain.
Held back his sorrow's tide, to make it more ;
At last it rains, and busy winds give o'er; 1790
Then son and father weep with equal strife
Who should weep most, for daughter or for wife.
The one doth call her his, the other his.
Yet neither may possess the claim they lay.
The father says ' She's mine.* ' O, mine. she is,'
Replies her husband ; 'do not take away 1796
My sorrow's interest ; let no mourner say
He weeps for her, for she was only mine.
And only must be wail'd by CoUatihe.'
• O,' quoth Lucretius, ' I did give that life 1800
Which she too early and too late hath spill'd.'
' Woe, woo,' quoth Collatine, • she was my wife ;
I owed her, and 'tis mine that she hath kill'd.'
'My daughter' and 'my wife' with clamours fill'd
The dispersed air, who, holding Lucrece' life,
Answer'd their cries, 'my daughter' and 'my
wife.' 1806
Brutus, who pluck'd the knife from Lucrece' side,
Seeing such emulation in their woe.
Began to clothe his wit in state and pride.
Burying in Lucrece' wound his folly's show.
He with the Romans was csti^med so 1811
As silly-jeering Idiots are with kings.
For sportive words and uttering foolish things;
But now he throws that shallow habit by
Wherein deep policy did him disguise, 1815
And arm'd his long-hid wit« advisedly
To check the tears in Collatinub' eyes.
'Thou wronged lord of Rome,' quoth he, 'arise;
Let my unsounded self, supposed a fool.
Now set thy long-expcriencixl wit to school.
' Why, Collatine, is woe the cure for woe? 1821
Do wounds help wounds, or grief help grievous
deeds?
Is it revenge to give thyself a blow
For his foul act by whom thy fair wife bleeds?
Such childish humour from weak minds proceeds;
Thy wretched wife mistook the matter so,
To slay herself that should have slain her foe.
'Courageous Roman, do not steep thy heart
In such relenting dew of lamentations, 1829
But kneel with me and help to bear thy part
To rouse our Roman gods with invocationa
That they will suffer these abominations,
Since Rome herself in them doth stand dis-
graced.
By our strong arms from forth her fair street*
chased.
' Now, by the Capitol that we adore, 188S
And by this chaste blood so unjustly stained.
By heaven's fair sun that breeds the fiit eftrth'i
■tore,
390
THE RAPE OF LUCRECE
[Line i 147-1265.
To creatures stern sad tunes, to change their
kinds; 1147
Since men prove beasts, let beasts bear gentle
minds.*
As the poor frighted deer, that stands at gaze,
Wildly determining which way to fly, 1150
Or one encompass'd with a winding maze,
That cannot tread the way out readily ;
80 with herself is she in mutiny,
To live or die, which of the twain were better.
When life is shamed and death reproach's
debtor. 1155
'To Icill myself,' quoth she, 'alack, what were it,
But with my body my poor soul's pollution?
They that lose half with greater patience bear it
Than they whose whole is swallow'd in confusion.
That mother tries a merciless conclusion 1 160
Who, having two sweet babes, when death takes
one.
Will slay the other and be nurse to none.
* My body or my soul, which was the dearer,
When the one pure, the other made divine?
Whose love of either to myself was nearer, 1165
When both were kept fur heaven and Collatine?
Ay me I the bark peel'd from the lofty pine,
His leaves will wither anfl his sap decay ;
So must my soul, her bark being pccl'd away.
' Her house is sack'd, her quiet interrupted,
Her mansion battered by the enemy ; 1171
Her sacred temple slotted, spoil'd, corrupted,
Grossly engirt with daring infamy ;
Then let it not be call'd impiety.
If in this blemish'd furt I make some hole
Through which I may convey this troubled soul.
• Yet die I will not till my Collatine 1177
Have heard the cause of my untimely death ;
That he may vow, in that sad hour of mine,
Revenge on him that made me stop my breath.
My stained blmnl to Tarquin I'll bequeath, 1181
Which by him tainted shall for him be spent.
And as liis due writ in my testament.
' My honour I'll bequeath unto the knife
That wounds my Ixxly so dishonoured. 1185
•Tis honour to deprive dishonour'd life;
The one will live, the other being dead ;
So of .shame's ashes shall my fame be bred ;
For In my death I murder shameful scorn ;
My shame so dead, mine honour is new-born
• Dv'ar loni of that dear jewel I have lost, 1191
What legacy shall I bequeath to thee?
My resr)lutlon, love, shall be thy boast.
By whose example thou revenged mayst be.
How Tarquin must be usj-d, read it in me; 1195
Myself, thy friend, will kill myself, thy foe.
And, for my sake, serve thou false Tarquin so.
* This brief abridgement of my will I make :
My Aoul and iMxiy to the skies and ground ;
My resolution, husband, do thou take; 1200
Mine honour be the knife's that makes my wound ;
My shame be his that did my fame confound ;
And all ray fame that lives disbursed be
To those that live and think no shame of mo.
' Thou, Cbllatine, shalt oversee this will ; 1208
How was I overseen that thou shalt see it !
My blood shall wash the slander of mine ill;
My life's foul deed, my life's fair end shall free it
Faint not, faint heart, but stoutly say " So be it;"
Yield to.my hand; my hand shall conquer thee;
Thou dead, both die and both shall victon be.*
This plot of death when sadly she had laid, 1213
And wiped the brinish pearl fh>m her bright eyes.
With untuned tongue she hoarsely calls her maid,
Whofie swift olx>dience to her mistreas hies;
For fleet-wing*d duty with thought's feathers fUet.
Poor Lucroce' cheeks unto her maid seem so
As winter meads when sun doth melt their snow.
Her mistreas she doth give demure good-morrow,
With soft slow tongue, true mark of modesty,
And sorts a sad look to her latly's sorrow, 1221
For why her face wore sorrow's livery,
But durst not ask of her audaciously
Why her two suns were cloud-eclipsed so, 1224
Kor why her fair cheeks over-wash'd with woe.
But as the earth doth weep, the snn being aet.
Each flower moisten'd like a melting eye.
Even so the maid with swelling dropa'gmn wet
Her circled eyne, enforced by sympathy
Of those fair suns set in her mistress' sky, 1290
Who in a salt-waved ocean quench their light.
Which makes the maid weep like the dewy
night.
A pretty while these pretty creatures stand.
Like ivory conduits coral cisterns filling ; 12M
One Justly weeps; the other takes in hand
No cause, but company, of her drops spilling;
Their gentle sex to weep are often willing.
Grieving themselves to guess at others* imaita,
And then they drown their eyes or break their
hearts. 1239
For men have marble, women waxen, minds,
And therefore are they form'd as marble will ;
The weak oppress'd, the impression of strangs
kinds
Is form'd in them by force, by fraud, or skill;
Then call them not the authors of their ill, 1244
No more than wax shall be accounted evil
Wherein is stamp'd the semblance of a deviL
Their smoothness, like a goodly champaign plain.
Lays open all the little worms that creep ;
In men, as in a rough-grown grove, remain
Cave-keeping evils that obscurely sleep ; 1250
Through crystal walls each little mote will peep;
Though men can cover crimes with bold stera
looks.
Poor women's faces are their own foolts* booka.
No man inveigh against the withered flower,
But chide rough winter that the flower hath kill'd ;
Not that devour'd, but that which doth devour,
Is worthy of blame. O, let it not be hild 12S7
Poor women's faults, that they are so fulfill*d
With men's abuses ; those proud lords to blams
Make weak-made women tenants to their shame.
The precedent whereof in Lucrece view, 1261
Assail'd by night with circumstances strong
I Of present death, and shame that might ensue
Son. 6-14.]
SONNETS
397
Ten times thyself were happier than thou art,
If ten of thine ten times refigured thee; 10
Then what could death do, if thou shouldst depart,
Learing thee living in posterity ?
Be not self-will'd, for thou art much too fiiir
To be death's conquest and make worms thine
heir.
Lo, in the orient when the gracious light
Lifts up his burning head, each under eye
Doth homage to his new-appearing sight,
Serving with looks his sacred majesty,
And having clirab'd the steep-up heavenly hill, 5
Resembling strong youth in his middle age,
Yet mortal looks adore his beauif still,
Attending on his golden pilgrimage ;
But when from highmost pitch, with weary car,
Like feeble age, he reeleth from the day, 10
The eyes, 'fore duteous, now converted are
From his low tract, and look another way ;
So thou, thyself out-going in thy noon,
Unlook'd on dicst, unless thou get a son.
Music to hear, why hear'st thou music sadly?
Sweets with sweets war not, joy delights in joy.
Why lovest thou that which thou receivest not
gladly,
Or else receivest with pleasure thine annoy?
If the true concord of well tuned sounds, 5
By unions married, do offend thine car,
They do but sweetly chide thee, who confounds
In singleness the parts that thou shouldst bear.
Mark how one string, sweet husband to another,
Strikes each in each by mutual ordering ; 10
Resembling sire and child and happy mother.
Who, all in one, one pleasing note do sing;
Whose speechless song, being many, seeming
one.
Sings this to thee: 'Thou single wilt prove
none.'
Is it for fear to wet a widow's eye
That thou consumest thyself in single life?
Ah ! if thou issuel('S:fi shalt hap to die.
The world will wail thee, like a niakeless wife ;
The world will be thy widow, and still weep 6
That thou no form of thee hast left behind.
When every private widow well may keep
By children's eyes her husband's shape in mind.
Look, what an unthrift in the world doth spend
Shifts but his place, for dtill the world enjoys it;
But beauty's waste hath in the world an end, 11
And kept unused, the user so destroys it.
No love toward others in that bosom sits
That on himself such murderous shame com-
mits.
10
For shame ! deny that thou bcar'st love to any.
Who for thyself art so unprovident.
Grant, if thou wilt, tliou art beloved of many,
But that thou none lovoal is most evident;
For thou art so possess'd with murderous hate 5
That 'gainst thyself thou stick'st not to conspire,
Seeking that beauteous roof to ruinate
Which to repair should be thy chief deslro.
O, change thy thought, that I may change my
mind!
Shall hate be fairer lodged than gentle love? IC
Be, as thy presence is, gracious and kind.
Or to thyself at least kind-hearted prove ;
Make thee another self, for love of me,
That beauty still may live in thine or thee.
11
As fast as thou shalt wane, so fast thou growest
In one of thine, from that which thou departest;
And that fresh blood which youngly thou be-
stowest
Thou mayst call thine when thou from youth
convertest.
Herein lives wisdom, beauty, and increase ; 5
Without this, folly, age, and cold decay ;
If all were minded so, the times should cease
And threescore year would make the world away.
Let those whom Nature hath not made for store,
Harsh, featureless, and rude, barrenly perish;
Look, whom she best endow'd she gave the more;
Which bounteous gift thou shouldst in bounty
cherish ; 12
She carved thee for her seal, and meant thereby
Thou shouldst print more, not let that copy die.
1)3
When I do count the clock that tells the time,
And see the bravo day sunk in hideous night ;
When I behold the violet past prime.
And sable curls all silver'd o'er with white ;
When lofty trees I see barren of leaves, b
Which erst from heat did canopy the herd.
And summer's green all ginled up in sheaves,
Borne on the bier with white and bristly beard.
Then of thy beauty do I question make.
That thou among the wastes of time must go.
Since sweets and beauties do themselves forsake
And die as fast as they see others grow ; 12
And nothing 'gainst Time's scythe can make
defence
Save breed, to bravo him when he takes thee
hence.
13
O, that you were yourself! but, love, you are
No longer yours than you yourself here live ;
Against this coming end you should prepare.
And your sweet semblance to some other give.
So should that beauty which you hold in lease
Find no determination ; then you were 6
Yoursi'lf again, after yourself's decease,
When your sweet issue your sweet form should
bear.
Who lets so fair a house fall to decay.
Which husbandry in honour might uphold 10
Against the stormy gusts of winter's day
And barren rage of death's eternal cold ?
O, none but unthrifts; dear my love, you know
You hod a father ; let your son say so.
1-4^
Not from the stars do I my judgement pluck;
And yet mcthinks I have astronomy,
But not to tell of good or evil luck.
Of plagu*^, of dearths, or seasons' quality;
Nor can I fortune to bri«?f minutes tell, 5
Pointing to each his thunder, rain, and wind.
Or say with princtw If it shall go well,
By oft predict that I in heaven find ;
8D2
THE RAPE OF LUCRECE
[Line 1373-1491.
A thousand lamentable objecU there,
In acorn of nature, art gave lifeless life ;
Many a dry drop seem'd a weeping tear, 1375
8hcd for the 8laughter*d husband by the wife ;
The rod blood reek'd, to show the painter's strife ;
And dying eyes gleam*d forth their ashy lights.
Like dying coals burnt out in tedious nights.
There might you see the labouring pioner 1380
Begrimed with sweat and smeared all with dust;
And from the towers of Troy there would appear
The very eyes of men through loop-holes thrust,
Gazing upon the Greeks with little lust ; 1384
Such sweet observance in this work was had
That one might see those far-off* eyes look sad.
In great cunimanders grace and majesty
You might behold, triumphing in their faces;
In youth, quick bearing and dexterity ;
And hero and there the painter interlaces 1390
Pale cowards, marching on with trembling paces,
Which heartless peasants did so well resemble
That one would swear he saw them quake and
tremble.
In Ajax and Ulysses, O, what art
Of physiognomy might one behold! 1395
The face of either ciphered cither's heart ;
Their face their manners most expressly told;
In Ajax' eyes blunt rage and rigour roll'd;
But the mild glance that sly Ulysses lent 1399
Show'd deep regard and smiling government.
There pleading might you see grave Nestor stand.
As 'twere encouraging the Greeks to fight.
Making such sober action with his hand 1403
That it beguiled attention, charm'd the sight;
In speech, it seem*d, his beard all silver white
Wagg'd up and down, and from his lips did fly
Thin winding breatlt which purl'd up to the sky.
About him were a press of gaping faces,
Which seem'd to swallow up his sound advice ;
All jointly listening, but with several graces.
As if some mermaid did their ears entice, 1411
Some high, some low, the painter was so nice;
The scalps of many, almost hid behind,
To Jump up higher seem'd, to mock the mind.
Here one m&n's hand lean'd on another's head.
His nose being shadow'd by his neighbour's ear;
Here one being throug'd bears back, all boli'n
and red ; 1417
Another smulhcr'd seems to pelt and swear;
And in their rage such signs of rage they bear
As, but for loss of Nestor's golden words.
It seem'd they would debate with angry swords.
For much imaginary work was there; 1422
Conceit deceitful, so compact, so kind.
That for Achilles' image stood his si)ear
Griped in an armed hand; himself behind
Was left unseen, save to the eye of mind ; 1426
A hand, a foot, a face, a leg, a head,
Stoud for the whole to be imagined.
And from the walls of strong-besieged Troy
When their brave hoi)c, bold Hector, march'd to
field, 14:U)
Stood many Trojan mothers sharing joy
To see their youthful sons bright weapons wield ;
And to their hope they such odd action yield
That through their light joy seemed to appear,
Like bright things stain'd, a kind of hcmvy fear.
And from the strand of Dardan, where they fought,
To Simois' reody banks the red blood ran, 1437
Whose waves to imitate the battle sought
With swelling ridges ; and their ranks began
To break upon the galled shore, and than 1440
Retire again, till meeting greater ranks
They join and shoot their foam at Simois' banks.
To this well-painted piece is Lucrece come,
To find a face where all distress is stell'd. 1441
Many she sees where cares have carved some.
But none where all dbtrees and dolour dwell'd.
Till she despairing Hecuba beheld.
Staring on Priam's wounds with her old eyea,
Which bleeding under Pyrrhus' proud foot liet.
In her the painter had anatomized 1450
Time's ruin, beauty's wreck, and grim care's reign ;
Her cheeks with chaps and wrinkles were dis-
guised ;
Of what she was no semblance did remain ;
Her blue blood changed to black in every vein,
Wanting the spring that those shrunk pipes
have fed, 1455
Show'd life impriaon'd in a body dead.
On this sad shadow Lucrece spends her eyes,
And shapes her sorrow to the beldam's woes,
Who nothing wants to answer her but cries,
And bitter words to ban her cruel foes; 1460
The painter was no god to lend her those ;
And therefore Lucrece swears he did her wrong.
To give her so much grief and not a tongue.
'Poor instrument,' quoth she, ' without a sound,
I'll tune thy woes with my lamenting tongue,
And drop sweet balm in Priam's painted wound.
And rail on Pyrrhus that hath done him wrong.
And with my tears quench Troy that bums so
long.
And with my knife scratch out the angry eyes
Of all the Greeks that are thine enemies. 1470
' Show me the strumpet that began this stir,
That with my naUs her beauty I may tear.
Thy beat of lust, fond Paris, did incur
This load of wrath that burning Troy doth bear;
Thy eye kindled the fire that bumeth here ; 1475
And here in Troy, for trespass of thine eye.
The sire, the son, the dame, and daughter die.
* Why should the private pleasure of some one
Become the public plague of many moe ?
Let sin, alone committed, light alone 1480
Upon his head that hath transgressed so;
Let guiltless souls be freed from guilty woe ;
For one's ofienee why should so many fall,
To plague a private sin in general ?
* Lo, here weeps Hecuba, hero Priam dies, 1485
Here manly Ilector faints, here Troilus swounds.
Here friend by friend in bloody channel lies
And friend to friend gives unadvised wounds
And one man's lust these many lives confounds;
Had doting Priam check'd his son's desire,
Troy had been bright with fame and not witb
fire.' 1491
Son. 22-30.]
SONNETS
399
Prestiroe not on thy heart when mine is slain ;
Thou gavest me thine, not to give back again.
As an nnperfect actor on the stage,
WIio with his fear is put besides his part,
Or some fierce thing replete with too much rage,
Whose strength's abundance weakens his own
heart ;
80 I, for fear of trust, forget to say 5
ITie perfect ceremony of love*s rite,
And in mine own love's strength seem to decay,
O'ercharged with burthen of mine own love's
might.
O, let my books be then the eloquence
And dumb presagers of my speaking breast; 10
Who plead for love, and look for recompense,
More than that tongue that more hath more ex-
prcss'd.
O, learn to read what silent love hath writ ;
To hear with eyes belongs to love's fine wit.
Mine eye hath play'd the painter and hath stell'd
Thy beauty's form in table of ray heart;
My l)ody is the frame wherein 'tis held,
And perspective it Is best painter's art.
Fur through the painter must you see his skill, 5
To find where your true image pictured lies;
Which in my bosom's shop is hanging still,
That hath his windows glazed with thine eyes.
Now see what good turns eyes for eyes have done:
Mine eyes have drawn thy sliape, and thine for
me 10
Are windows to my breast, where-through the sun
Delights to peep, to gaze therein on thoe ;
Yet eyes this* cunning want to grace their art.
They draw but what they see, know not the
heart.
Let those who are in favour with their stars
Of public honour and proud titles boast,
Whil:tt I, whom fortune of such triumph bars,
Unlook'd for joy in that I honour most.
Great princes' favourites their fair leaves spread
But as the marigold at the sun's eye, G
And in themselves their pride lies buried,
For at a frown they in their glory die.
The painful warrior famouscd for fight,
Afl4.*r a thousand victories, once foil'd, 10
Is from the book of honour razed quite.
And all the rest forgot for which he toil'd ;
Then happy I, that love and am beloved
Where I may not remove nor be removed.
SO
Lord of my love, to whom in vassalage
Thy merit hath my duty strongly knit,
To thee I send this written ambassagc,
To witness duty, not to show my wit ;
Puty so great, which wit so poor as mine 5
May make seem bare, in wanting words to show it,
But that I hope some good conceit of thine
In thy soul's thought, all naked, will bestow it;
Till whatsoever star that guides my moving,
Points on me graciously with fair a'*|)ect, 10
And puts apparel on my tattor'd loving.
To show me worthy of thy sweet respect ;
Then may I dare to boast how I d4i love theci;
Till then not show my head where thou ma fst
prove me.
sr
Weary with toil, I haste me to my bed.
The dear repose for limbs with travel tired ;
But then begins a journey in my head,
To work my mind, when body's work's expired ;
For then my thoughts, from far where I abide,
Intend a zealous pilgrimage to thee, 6
And keep my drooping eyelids open wide,
Looking on darkness which the blind do see ;
Save that my soul's imaginary sight
Presents thy shadow to my sightless view, 10
Which, like a jewel hung in ghastly night.
Makes black night beauteous and her old face new.
Lo, thus, by day my limbs, by night my mind.
For thee and for myself no quiet find.
as
How can I then return in happy plight,
That am debarr'd the benefit of rest?
When day's oppression is not eased by night.
But day by night, and night by day, oppress'd?
And each, though enemies to cither's reign, 6
Do in consent shake hands to torture me ;
The one by toil, the other to complain
How far I toil, still farther off from thee.
I tell the day, to please him thou art bright,
And dost him grace when clouds do blot the
heaven ; 10
So flatter I the swart-complcxion'd night ;
When sparkling stars twire not thou gild'st the
even.
But day doth daily draw my sorrows longer.
And night doth nightly make grief's strength
seem stronger.
SO
When, in disgrace with fortune and men's eyes,
I all alone beweep my outcast state.
And trouble deaf heaven with my bootless cries,
And look upon myself, and curse my fate.
Wishing roe like to one more rich in hope, 5
Featured like him, like him with friends posseas'd,
Desiring tlds man's art, and that man's scope,
With what I most enjoy cont^-'n^-d least ;
Yet in these thoughts myself almost despising,
Haply I think on thee, and then my state, 10
Like to the lark at break of day arising
From sullen earth, sings hymns at heaven's gate;
For thy sweet love remember'd such wealth
brings
That then I scorn to change my state with kings.
30
When to the sessions of sweet silent thought
I summon up remembrance of things past,
I sigh the lack of many a thing I sought.
And with old woes new wail my dear time's waste ;
Then can I drown an eye, unused to flow, 5
For precious friends hid in death's dateless night.
And weep afresh love's loug-sinco-cancell'd woe,
And moan the expense of many a vanish'd sight ;
Then can I grieve at grievances foregone,
And heavily from woe to woe tell o'er 10
The sad account of fore-bemoaned moan,
Wliich I new pay as if not paid before.
394
THE RAPE OF LUCRECE
[Line i 607-1 722.
She modestly prepares to let them know
Uer honour is ta'en prisoner by the foe ;
While CoUatine and his consorted lords 1609
With sad attention long to hear her words.
And now this pale swan in her watery nest
Begins the sad dirge of her certain ending;
' Few words,' quoth she, ' shall fit the trespass b^t,
Where no excuse can give the fault amending;
In me moe woes than words are now depending;
And my laments would bo drawn out too long,
To tell them all with one poor tired tongue.
' Then be this all the task it hath to say : 1618
Dear husband, in the interest of thy bed
A stranger came, and on that pillow lay
Where thou wast wont to rest thy weary head ;
And what wrong else may bo imagined
By foul enforcement might be done to me,
From that, alas, thy Lucrece is not free. 1624
' For in the dreadful dead of dark midnight,
With shiuiug falchion in my chamber came
A creeping creature, with a flaming light,
And softly cried "Awake, thou Roman dame,
And entertain my love ; eLne lasting shame
On thee and thine this night I will inflict,
If thou my love's desire do contradict. 1631
'"For some hard-fa vour'd groom of thine," quoth
he,
"Unless thou yoke thy liking to my will,
I'll murder straight, and then I'll slaughter thee.
And swear I found you where you did fulfil
The loathsome act of lust, and so did kill 1636
The lechers in their deed ; this act will be
My fame, and thy perpetual infamy."
* With this, I did begin to start and cry ;
And then against my heart ho set his sword.
Swearing, unless I took all patiently, 1641
I should not live to speak another word ;
So should my shame still rest upon record,
And never be forgot in mighty Rome
The adulterate death of Lucrece and her groom.
' Mine enemy was strong, my poor self weak, 1646
And far the weaker with so strung a fear;
My bloody judge forbade my tongue to speak ;
No rightrul plea might plead for justice there ;
Ilis scarlet lust came evidence to swear 1650
That my poor beauty had purloin'd his eyes;
And when the judge is robb'd, the prisoner dies.
'O teach me how to make mine own excuse!
Or, at the least, this refuge let me find ; 1654
Though my gross blood be stain'd with this abuse,
Immaculate and sjiotless is my mind ;
That was not forced ; that never was inclined
To accessary yieldings, but still pure
Doth in her poisou'd closet yet endure.*
Lo, here, the hopeless merchant of this'loss.
With head declined, and voice damm'd up with
woe, 1661
With sad-eet eyes and wretched arms across,
From lips new-waxen pale begins to blow
The grief away that stops his answer so;
But, wretched as he is, he strives in vain ;
What he breathes out his breath drinks up
again. 1066
As through an arch the violent roaring tide
Outruns the eye th'at doth behold his haste,
Yet in the eddy boundeth in his pride 1668
Back to the strait that forced him on 00 fast,
In rage sent out, recalVd in rage, being past ;
Even so his sighs, his sorrows, make a saw.
To push grief on and back the same grief draw
Which speechless woe of his poor she attendeth.
And his untimely frenzy thus awaketh : 1675
' Dear lord, thy sorrow to my sorrow lendeth
Another power; no flood by raining slaketh.
My woe too sensible thy passion maketh
More feeling-painful ; let it then suffice 1679
To drown one woe, one pair of weeping eyea.
'And for my sake, when I might charm thee so.
For she that was thy Lucrece, now attend me ;
Be suddenly revenged on my foe,
Tiiiue, mine, his own ; suppose thou do«t defend
me
From what is past; the help that thou ahalt lend
me 1685
Comes all too late, yet let the traitor die ;
For sparing justice feeds iniquity.
'But ere I name him, you fair lords,' quoth she,
Speaking to those that came with CoUatine,
'Shall plight your honourable faiths to me, 1690
With swift pursuit to venge this wrong of mine;
For 'tis a meritorious fair design
To chase injustice with revengeful arms;
Kn igh ta, by their oaths, should right poor ladiei^
harms.'
At this request, with noble disposition 1685
Elach present lord began to promise aid.
As bound in knighthood to her imposition.
Longing to hear the hateful foe bewray'd. lOM
But she, that yet her sad task hath not said.
The protestation stops. ' O, speak,' quoth she,
' How may this forced stain be wiped from me?
' What is the quality of my offence.
Being constrain'd with dreadful circumstance?
May my pure mind with the foul act di^>enae,
My low-declined honour to advance? 1705
May any terms acquit me from this chance?
The poison'd fountain clears itself again ;
And why not I from this compelled stain?*
With this, they all at once began to say, 1709
Her body's stain her mind untainted clean ;
While with a joyless smile she turns away
The face, that map which deep impression bean
Of hard misfortune, carved in it with tean.
' No, no,' quoth she, ' no dame hereafter living
By my excuse shall claim excuae's giving.' 1715
Here with a sigh, as if her heart would break,
She throws forth Tarquin's name ; * He, be,' ahe
says.
But more than 'he' her poor tongue could not
speak ;
Till after many accents and delays, 1719
Untimely breathings, sick and short assays,
She utten this : * He, he, foir lords, 'tis he,
That guides this hand to give thia wound to me'
Son. 39-47]
SONNETS
401
30
O. bow thy worth with maDnen may I sing,
When thou art all the bettor part of ine?
'What can mine own praise to mine own self bring?
And what is't but mine own when I praise thee?
Even for this let us divided live, 5
And our dear love lose name of single one,
That by this separation I may give
That due to thee which thou deservest alono.
absence, what a torment wouldst thou prove,
Were it not thy sour leisure gave sweet leave 10
To entertain the time with thoughts of love,
Which time and thoughts so sweetly doth deceive.
And that thou tcachest how to make one twain.
By praising him here who doth hence remain !
Take all my loves, my love, yea, take them all ;
What hast thou then more than thou hadst before?
No love, my love, that thou mayst true love call ;
All mine was thine before thou hadst this more.
Then, if for my love thou my love rcccivcst, 5
1 cannot blame thee for my love thou uscst;
But yet be blamed, if thou thyself deceivcst
By wilful taste of what thyself refusest.
1 do forgive thy robbery, gentle thief.
Although thou steal thee all my poverty ; 10
And yet, love knows, it is a greater grief
To bear love's wrong than hate's known injury.
Lasciviou.s grace, in whom all ill well shows.
Kill me with spites ; yet we must not be foes.
Those pretty wrongs that liberty commits.
When I am sometime alisent from thy heart,
Thy beauty and thy years full well befits.
For still temptation follows where thou art.
Gentle thou art, and therefore to be won, ft
Beauteous thou art, therefore to be assailed ;
And when a woman woos, what woman's son
Will sourly leave her till she have prevailed?
Ay me ! but yet thou mightst my seat forbear,
And chide thy beauty and thy straying youth.
Who lead thee in their riot even there 11
Where thou art forced to break a twofold truth.
Hers, by thy beauty tempting her to thee.
Thine, by thy beauty being false to me.
That thou hast her, it is not all my grief.
And yet it may be said I loved her dearly ;
That she hath thee, is of my wailing chief,
A loss in love thai touches me more nearly.
Loving offenders, thus I will excuse ye : 5
Thou dost love her, because thou know'st I love her ;
And for my sake even so doth she abuse mo.
Suffering my friend for my sake to approve her.
If I lose thee, ray loss is my love's gain,
And losing her, my friend hath found that loss;
Both And each other, and I lose both twain, 11
And both for my sake lay on me this cross;
But here's the joy ; my friend and I are one;
Sweet flattery ! then she loves but me alone.
43
When most I wink, then do mine eyes best see,
For all the day they view things unrespectcd;
But when I tikH>p, in dreams they look on thee.
And, darkly bright, are bright in dark directed.
26
Then thou, whose shadow shadows doth maka
bright, ft
How would thy shadow's form form happy show
To the clear day with thy much clearer light.
When to unseeing eyes thy shade shines so !
How would, I say, mine eyes be blessed made
By looking on thee in the living day, 10
Whep in dead night thy fair imperfect shade
Through heavy sleep on sightless eyes doth stay 1
All days are nights to see till I see thee.
And nights bright days when dreams do show
thee me.
If the dull substance of my flesh were thought,
Injurious distance should not stop my way ;
For then, despite of space, I would be brought,
From limits far remote, where thou dost stay.
No matter then although my foot did stand 5
Upon the farthest earth removed from thee ;
For nimble thought can jump both sea and land,
As soon as think the place where he would be.
But, ah, thought kills me, that I am not thought.
To leap large lengths of miles when thou art gone,
But that, so much of earth and water wrought,
I must attend time's leisure with my moan ;
Beceiving nought by elements so slow IS
But heavy tears, badges of cither's woe.
The other two, slight air and purging fire,
Are both with thee, wherever I abide;
The first my thought, the other my desire.
These present-absent with swift motion slide,
For when these quicker elements are gone ft
In tender embassy of love to thee.
My life, being made of four, with two alone
Sinks down to death, oppress'd with melancholy;
Until life's composition be recured 9
By those swift messengers return'd from thee,
Who even but now come back again assured
Of thy fair health, recounting it to me ;
This told, I joy; but then no longer glad,
I send them back again, and straight gi-ow sad.
Mine eye and heart are at a mortal war.
How to divide the conquest of thy sight;
Mine eye my heart thy picture's sight would bar.
My heart mine eye the freedom of that right.
My heart doth plead that thou in him dost lie,
A closet never pierced with crystal eyes, 6
But the defendant doth that plea deny.
And says in him thy fair api)earance lies.
To 'cide this title is impanuelcd
A quest of thoughts, all tenants to the heart ;
And by their verdict is determined 11
The clear eye's moiety and the dear heart's part;
As thus: mine eye's due is thine outward part.
And my heart's right thine inward love of heart.
47
Betwixt mine eye and heart a league is took.
And each doth good turns now unto the other;
When that mine eye is famish'd for a look.
Or heart in love with sighs himself doth smother.
With my love's picture then my eye doth feast.
And to the painted banquet bids my heart ; 6
Another time mine eye is my heart's guest.
And in his thoughts of love doth share a part ;
402
SONNETS
[Son. 47-55-
80, either by thy picture or iny lore,
Thyself away art present still with me; 10
For t hou not farther than m y t hought« canst move,
And I am still with them and they with thee ;
Or, if they sleep, thy picture in my sight
Awakes my heart to heart's and eye's delight.
48
How careful was I, when I took my way,
Each trifle under truest bars to thrust,
That to my use it might unused stay
From hands of falsehood, in suie wards of trust !
But thou, to whom my jewels trifles are, 5
Most worthy comfort, now my greatest grief,
Thou, best of dearest and mine only care,
Art left the prey of every vulgar thief.
Thee have I not lock'd up in any chest.
Save where thou art not, though I feel thou art,
Within the gentle closure of my breast, 11
From whence at pleasure thou mayst come and
part;
And even thence thou wilt be stol'n, I fear,
For truth proves thievish for a prize so dear.
4Q
Against (hat time, if ever that time come,
When I shall see thee frown on my defects.
When as thy love hath cast his utmost sum,
Caird to that audit by advised respects ; 4
Against that time when thou shalt strangely
pass,
And scarcely greet mo with that sun, thine eye,
When love, converted from the thing it was,
Shall reasons find of 8<*ttled gravity;
Against that time do I ensconce me here
Within the knowledge of mine own desert, lU
And this my hand against myself uprear,
To guard the lawful reasons on thy part ;
To leave i)Oor mc thou hast the strength of laws,
Since why to love I can allege no cause.
How heavy do I journey on the way,
When what 1 seek, my weary travel's end.
Doth teach that case and that repose to say,
' Thus far the miles are measured from thy friend I*
The beast that bears me, tired with my woe, 5
Plods dully on, to bear that weight in me.
As if by some instinct the wreteh did know
His rider loved not speed, being made from thee;
The bloody spur cannot provoke him on
That sometimes anger thrusts into his hide;
Which heavily he answers with a groan, 11
More sharp to me than spurring t4) his side;
For that same groan doth put this in my mind
My grief lies onward, and my joy behind.
01
Thus can my love excuse the slow offence
Of my dull bearer when from thee I speed ;
From where thou art why should I haste me
thence?
Till I return, of posting is no need.
O, what excuse will my poor beast then find,
When swift extremity can seem but slow? 6
Then should I spur, though mounted on the wind,
In winged speed no motion shall I know ;
Then can no horse with my desire keep pace;
Therefore desire, of perfeet'st love being made,
Shall neigh, — no dull flesh,— in his fiery race; 11
But love, for love, thus shall excuse my jade;
Since from thee going he went wllfiil-elow,
Towards thee I'll run and give him leave to go.
CSS
So am I as the rich, whose blessed key
Can bring him to his sweet up-locked treasure,
The which he will not every hour survey.
For blunting the fine point of seldom pleasure.
Therefore are feasts so solemn and so rare, f
Since, si>ldom coming, in the long year set,
Like stones of worth they thinly placed are.
Or captain jewels i n the carcanet.
So is the time that keeps you as my chest,
Or as the wardrobe which the robe doth hide.
To make some special instant special bleat, 11
By new unfolding his imprisou'd pride.
Blessed are you, whose worthiness gives scope,
Being had, to triumph, l>eing lack'd, to hope.
03
What is your substance, whereof are you made.
That millions of strange shadows on you tend 7
Since every one hath, every one, one shade,
And you, but one, can every shadow lend.
Describe Adonis, and the counterfeit 5
Is poorly imitated after you ;
On Helen's check all art of beauty set,
And you in Grecian tires are painted new;
Speak of the spring and foison of the year.
The one doth shadow of your beauty show, 10
The other as your bounty doth appear;
And you in every blesstxl shape we know.
In all external grace you have some part,
But you like none, none you, for constant heart.
€S4
O, how much more doth beauty beauteous seem
By that sweet ornament which truth doth gire !
The rose looks fair, but fairer we it deem
For that sweet odour which doth in It live.
The canker-blooms have full as deep a dye 5
As the perfumed tincture of the roses,
Hang on such thorns, and play as wantonly
When summer's breath their masked buds dis-
closes ;
But, for their virtue only is their show.
They live unwoo'd and un respected fade; 10
Die iu themselves. Sweet roses do not so ;
Of their sweet dcatlis are sweetest odours made ;
And so of you, lieauteous and lovely youth,
When that shall vade, by verse distills your
truth.
05
Not marble, nor the gilded monuments
Of princes, shall outlive this powerful rhyme;
But you shall shine more bright in these contents
Than unswept stone, besmear'd with sluttish
time.
When wasteful war shall statues overturn, 5
And broils root out the work of masonry,
Nor Mars his sword nor war's quick fire ahaU
burn
The living record of your memory.
Son. 6-14.]
SONNETS
397
Ten times thyself were happier than thou art,
If ten of thine ten times refigured thee ; 10
Then what could death do, if thou shouldst depart,
Leaving thee liring In posterity?
Be not self-wUl'd, for thou art much too fair
To be death's conquest and make worms thine
heir.
Lo, In the orient when the gracious light
Lifts up his burning head, each under eye
Doth homage to his new-appearing sight,
Serving with looks his sacred majesty ;
And having clirob'd the steep-up heavenly hill, 6
Resembling strong youth in his middle age.
Yet mortal looks adoro his beaui^ still,
Attending on his golden pilgrimage ;
But when from highmost pitch, with weary car,
Like feeble age, he reeleth from the day, 10
The eyes, 'fore duteous, now converted are
From his low tract, and look another way ;
80 thou, thyself out-going in thy noon,
Unlook'd on diest, unless thou get a son.
Music to hear, why hear'st thou music sadly?
Sweets with sweets war not, joy delights in joy.
Why lovestthou that which thou receivest not
gladly.
Or ebe receivest with pleasure thine annoy?
If the true concord of well tuned sounds, 5
By unions married, do offend thine ear,
They do but sweetly chide thee, who confounds
In singleness the parts that thou shouldst bear.
Mark how one string, sweet husband to another,
Strikes each in each by mutual ordering; 10
Resembling sire and child and happy mother.
Who, all in one, one pleasing note do sing;
Whose speechless song, being many, seeming
one,
Sings this to thee: 'Thou single wilt prove
none.'
Is It for fear to wet a widow's eye
That Ihou consumest thyself in single life?
Ah! if thou ii»ueless shalt hap to die.
The world will wail thee, like a makeless wife ;
The world will be thy widow, and still weep 5
That thou no form of thee hast left behind.
When every private widow well may keep
By children's eyes her husband's shape in mind.
Look, what an unthrift in the world doth spend
Shifts but his place, for Atill the world enjoys it ;
But beauty's waste hath in the world an end, 11
And kept unused, the user so destroys it.
No love toward others in that bosom sits
That on himself such murderous shame com-
mits.
10
For shame ! deny that thou hear'st love to any.
Who for thyself art so unprovident.
Grant, if thou wilt, thou art beloved of many,
But that thou none lovest is most evident ;
For thou art so posscss'd with murderous hate 5
That 'gainst thyself thou stick'st not to conspire.
Seeking that beauteous roof to ruinate
Which to repair should be thy chief desire.
O, change thy thought, that 1 may change my
mind!
Shall hate be fairer lodged than gentle lore? IC
Be, as thy presence is, gracious and kind.
Or to thyself at least kind-hearted prove ;
Make thee another self, for love of me.
That beauty still may live in thine or thee.
11
As fast as thou shalt wane, so fast thou growest
In one of thine, from that which thou departest;
And that fresh blood which youngly thou be-
stowest
Thou mayst call thine when thou from youth
convertest.
Herein lives wisdom, beauty, and Increase; 5
Without this, folly, age, and cold decay ;
If all were minded so, the times should cease
And threescore year would make the world away.
Let those whom Nature hath not made for store,
Harsh, featureless, and rude, barrenly perish ;
Look, whom she best endow'd she gave the more;
Which bounteous gift thou shouldst in bounty
cherish ; 12
She carved thee for her seal, and meant thereby
Thou shouldst print more, not let that copy die.
IS
When I do count the clock that tells the time.
And see the brave day sunk in hideous night ;
When I behold the violet past prime.
And sable curb all silver'd o'er with white ;
When lofty trees I see barren of leaves, d
Which erst from heat did canopy the herd.
And summer's green all girded up in sheaves,
Borne on the bier with white and bristly beard.
Then of thy beauty do I question make.
That thou among the wastes of time must go.
Since sweets and beautl^ do themselves forsake
And die as fast as they see others grow ; 12
And nothing 'gainst Time's scythe can make
defence
Save breed, to brave him when he takes thee
hence.
13
O, that you were yourself! but, love, you are
No longer yours than you yourself here live ;
Against this coming end you should prepare.
And your sweet semblance to some other give.
So should that l^eauty which you hold in lease
Find no determination ; then you were 6
Yourself again, after yourself 's decease.
When your sweet issue your sweet form should
bear.
Who lets so fair a house fall to decay.
Which husbandry in honour might uphold 10
Against the stormy gusts of winter's day
And barren rage of death's eternal cold?
O, none but unthrifls; deer my love, you know
You had a father ; let your son say so.
14
Not from the stars do I my judgement pluck ;
And yet methinks I have astronomy,
But not to tell of good or evil luck.
Of plagues, of dearths, or seastms' quality;
Nor can I fortune to brief minutes tell, 6
Pointing to each his thunder, rain, and wind,
Or say with princes if it shall go well,
By oft predict that I in heaven find ;
398
SONNETS
[Son. 14-22.
But from thine eyes my knowledge I derive,
And, constant stars, in them I read such art.
As truth and beauty shall together thrive, 11
If from thyself to store thou wouldst convert ;
Or else of thee this I prognosticate :
Thy end is truth's and beauty's doom and date.
IS
When I consider every thing that grows
Holds in perfection but a little moment,
That this huge stage presenteth nought but shows
Whereon the sta^ in secret influence comment;
When I perceive that men as plants increase, 5
Cheered and chcck'd even by the self-same sky,
Vaunt in their youthful sap, at height decrease.
And wear their brave state out of memory ;
Then the conceit of this inconstant stay
Sets you most rich in youth before my sight
Where wasteful Time debateth with Decay, 11
To change your day of youth to sullied night ;
And all In war with Time for love of you,
As he takes from you, I engraft you new.
le
But wherefore do not you a mightier way
Make war upon this bloody tyrant. Time?
And fortify yourself in your decay
With means more blessed than my barren rhyme?
Now stand you on the top of happy hours, 5
And many maiden gardens, yet unset.
With virtuous wish would bear your living flowers
Much llkcr than your painted counterfeit;
8o should the lines of life that life repair, 9
Which this. Time's pencil, or my pupil pen,
Neither in inward worth nor outward fair.
Can make you live yourself in eyes of men.
To give away yourself keeps yourself still ;
And you must live, drawn by your own sweet
skiU.
ir
Who win believe my verse in time to come.
If it were ftll'd with your most high deserts?
Though yet, heiiven knows, it is but as a tomb
Which hides your life and shows not half your
parts.
If I could write the beauty of your eyes 5
And in fresh numbers number all your graces.
The age to come would say ' This poet lies ;
Such heavenly touches ne'er touch'd earthly faces.'
So should my papers, yellow'd with their age.
Be scorn'd, like old men of less truth than tongue,
And your true rights be tenned a poet's rage
And stretched metre of an antique song; 12
But were some child of yours alive that time.
You should live twice, in it and in my rhyme.
18
Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?
Thou art more lovely and more temperate;
Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May,
And summer's lease hath all too short a date ;
Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines, 6
And often is his gold complexion dimm'd ;
And every fair from fair sometimes declines.
By chance or nature's changing course untrimm'd ;
But thy eternal summer shall not fade.
Nor lose posscKsion of that fair thou owest; 10
Nor shall Death brag thou wander'st in his shade,
When in eternal lines to time thou growest;
So long as men can breathe, or eyes can tee,
So long lives this, and this gives life to thee.
lO
Devouring Time, blunt thoa the lion's paws.
And make the earth devour her own sweet brood;
Pluck the keen teeth from the fierce tiger's jaws,
And burn the long-lived phoenix in her blood ;
Make glad and sorry seasons as thou fleet'st, 5
And do whate'er thou wilt, swift-footed Time,
To the wide world and all her fading sweets ;
But I forbid thee one most heinous crime ;
O, carve not with thy hours my love's fair brow,
Nor draw no lines there with thine antique pen ;
Him in thy course untainted do allow 11
For beauty's pattern to succeeding men.
Yet do thy worst, old Time; despite thy wrong,
My love shall in my verse ever live yoong.
SO
A woman's face with Nature's own hand painted
Ha^t thou, the master-mLstress of my passion ;
A woman's gentle heart, but not acquainted
With shiftiug change, as is false women's fashion ;
An eye more bright than theirs, less false in roll-
ing, 5
Gilding the object whereupon it gazeth;
A man in hue, all ' hues' in his controlling,
Which steals men's eyes and women's aoula
amazeth.
And for a woman wert thou first created ;
Till Nature, as she wrought thee, fell a-doting.
And by addition me of thee defeated, 11
By adding one thing to my purpose nothing.
But since she prick'd thee out for women's
pleasure,
Mine be thy love, and thy love's use thetr
treasure.
21
So is it not with me as with that Muse
Stirr'd by a painted beauty to his verse,
Who heaven itself for ornament doth use
And every fair with his fair doth rehearse,
Making a couplement of proud compare, 5
With sun and moon, with earth and sea's rich
gems.
With April's first-bom flowers, and all things rare
That heaven's air in this huge rondure bema.
O, let me, true in love, but truly write.
And then believe me, my love is as fair 10
As any mother's child, though not so bright
As those gold candles fix'd In heaven's air ;
Let them say more that like of hearsay well;
I will not praise that purpose not to selL
My glass shall not persuade me I am old.
So long as youth and thou are of one date;
But when in thee time's furrows I behold.
Then look J death my days should expiate.
For all that beauty that doth cover thee 5
Is but the seemly raiment of my heart.
Which in thy breast doth live, as thine in me;
IIow can I then be elder than thou art?
O, therefore, love, be of thyself so wary
As I, not for myself, but for thee will ; 10
Bearing thy hearty which I will keep so chary
As tender nurse her babe from faring ilL
Son. 72-80.]
SONNETS
405
O, lest the world should task you to recite
What merit lived in me, that you should love
After my death, dear lore, forget me quite,
For you in me can nothing worthy prove;
Unless you would devise some virtuous lie^ 5
To do more for me than mine own desert,
And hang mure praise upon deceased I
Than niggard truth would willingly impart;
O, lest your true love may seem false in this,
That yon for love speak well of me untrue, 10
My name be buried where my body is,
And live no more to shame nor me nor you.
For I am shamed by that which I bring forth,
And so should you, to love things nothing worth.
That time of year thou mayst in me behold
When yellow leaves, or none, or few, do hang
Upon those boughs which shake against the cold.
Bare ruin'd choirs, where late the sweet birds sang.
In mc thou scc'st the twilight of such day 5
As after sunset fadeth in the west ;
Which by and by black night doth take away.
Death's second self that seals up all In rest.
In me thou sec'st the glowing of such fire,
That on the ashes of his youth doth lie, 10
As the death-bed whereon it must expire.
Consumed with that which it was nourished by.
This thou perceivest, which makes thy love
more strong,
To love that well which thou must leave ere long.
But be contented ; when that fell arrest
Without all bail shall carry me away,
My life hath In this line some interest,
Which for memorial still with thee shall stay.
When thou reviewest this, thou dost review 5
The very part was consecrate to thee ;
The earth can have but earth, which Is his due;
My spirit is thine, the better part of me;
So then thou hast but lost the dregs of life,
The prey of worms, my body being dead ; 10
The coward conquest of a wretch's knife.
Too base of thee to be remembered.
The worth of that Is that which It contains,
And that Is this, and this with thee remains.
80 are you to my thoughts as food to life,
Or as sweet-scason'd showers are to the ground ;
And for the peace of you I hold such strife
As 'twlxt a miser and his wealth is found ;
Now proud as an enjoyer, and anon 5
Doubting the filching age will steal his treasure;
Now counting best to be with you alone.
Then bi'tter'd that the world may sec my pleasure ;
Sometime all full with feasting on your sight.
And by and by clean starved for a look ; 10
Possessing or pursuing no delight.
Save what Is had or must from you be took.
Thus do I plno and surfeit day by day.
Or gluttonlng on all, or all away.
ro
Why Is my verse so barren of new pride.
So far from variation or quick change?
Why with the time do I not glance aside
To new-found methodsand to compounds strange?
Why write I still all one, ever the same, 5
And keep invention in a noted weed.
That every word doth almost tell my name,
Showing their birth and where they did proceed f
O, know, sweet love, I always write of you.
And you and love are still my argument ; 10
So all my best Is dressing old words new,
Spending again what is already spent ;
For as the sun Is daily new and old,
So is my love still telling what la told.
Thy glass will show thee how thy beauties wear,
Thy dial how thy precious minute waste ;
The vacant leaves thy mind's imprint will bear,
And of this book thli learning mayst thou taste.
The wrinkles which thy glass will truly show 5
Of mouthed graves will give thee memory ;
Thou by thy dial's shady stealth mayst know
Time's thievish progress to eternity.
Look, what thy memory cannot contain
Commit to these waste blanks, and thou shalt find
Those children nursed, delivered from thy brain.
To take a new acquaintance of thy mind. 12
These offices, so oft as thou wilt look.
Shall profit thee and much enrich thy book.
rs
So oft have I invoked thee for my Muse
And found such fair assistance in my verse
As every all^n pen hath got my use
And under thee their poesy disperse.
Thine eyes, that taught the dumb on high to sing
And heavy ignorance aloft to fly, * 6
Have added feathers to the learned's wing
And given grace a double majesty.
Yet be most proud of that which I compile,
Whose Influence U thine and born of thee; 10
In others' works thou dost but mend the style,
And arts witli thy sweet graces graced be ;
But thou art all my art, and dost advance
As high as learning my rude ignorance.
ro
Whilst I alone did call upon thy aid.
My verse alone had all thy gentle grace;
But now my gracious numbers are decay'd.
And my sick Muse doth give another place.
I grant, sweet love, thy lovely argument 5
Deserves the travail of a worthier pen ;
Yet what of thee thy poet doth invent
He robs thee of, and pays it thee again.
He lends thee virtue, and he stole that word
From thy behaviour; beauty doth he give, 10
And found it In thy cheek ; he can aflbrd
No praise to thee but what In thee doth live.
Then thank him not for that which he doth say,
Since what he owes thee thou thyself dost pay.
SO
O, how I faint when I of you do write,
Knowing a better spirit doth use your name.
And In the praise thereof spends ail his might.
To make me tongue-tied, speaking of your fkmel
But since your worth, wide as the ocean is, 5
The humble as the pn>udest sail doth bear,
My saucy bark, Inferior far to his.
On your broad main doth wilfully appear.
406
SONNETS
[Son. So-^.
Your shallowest help will hold mc up afloat,
Whilst he upon your soundless deep doth ride ;
Or, being wrecked, I am a worthless boat, 1 1
He of tall building and of goodly pride;
Then if he thrive and I be cast away,
The worst was this ; my love was my decay.
81
Or I shall live your epitaph to make,
Or you survive when I in earth am rotten ;
From hence your memory death cannot take,
Although in me each part will be forgotU'n. 4
Your name from hence immortal life shall have,
Though I, once gone, to all the world must die ;
The earth can yield me but a common grave.
When you entombed in men's cyos shall lie.
Your monument shall be my gentle verse,
Which eyes not yet created shall o'er-reod ; 10
And tongues to be your being shall rehearse,
When all the breathers of tlii^ world arc dead ;
You still shall live, — such virtue hath my pen, —
Where breath most breathes, even in the mouths
of men.
I grant thou wert not married to my Muse,
And therefore mayst without attaint o'erlook
The dedicated words which writers use
Of their fair subject, blessing every book.
Thou art as fair in knowledge as in hue, 5
Finding thy worth a limit past my praise;
And therefore art enforced to seek anew
Some fresher stamp of the time-bettering days.
And do so, love ; yet when they have devised
What strained touches rhetoric can lend, 10
Thou truly fair wort truly sympathized
In true plain words by thy true-telling friend;
And their gross painting might be better used
Where cheeks need blood ; in thee it is abused.
83
I never saw that you did painting need,
And therefore to your fair no painting set;
I found, or thought I found, you did exceed
The barren tender of a iwet's debt;
And therefore have I slept in your report, 5
That you yourself, being extant, well might show
How far a modern quill doth come too short,
8pt>aking of worth, what w^orth in you doth grow.
This silence for my sin you did impute.
Which shall be most my glory, being dumb; 10
For I impair not beauty being mute.
When others would give life and bring a tomb.
There lives more life in one of y<mr fair eyes
Than both your poets can in praise devise.
84
Who is it that says most? which can say more
Than this rich praise, that you alone are you?
In whose confine immured is the store
Which should example where your equal grew.
Lean penury within that pen doth dwell 5
That to his subject lends not some small glory ;
But he that writes of you, if ho can tell
That you are you, so dignifies his story,
Let him but copy what in you is writ,
Not making worse what nature made so clear.
And suoh a counterpart shall fame his wit, 11
Making his style admired every where.
You to your beauteous blessings add a cuiae,
Being fond on praise, which makes your praises
worse.
8S
My tongue-tied Muse in manners holds her still,
While comments of your praise, richly compiled.
Reserve their character with golden quill,
And precious phrase by all the Muses filed.
I think good thoughts, whilst other write good
words, 5
And, like unletter'd clerk, still cry 'Amen*
To every hymn that able spirit affords,
In polish 'd form of well refined pen.
Hearing you praised, I say *'Tis so. 'tis true,*
And to the most of praise add something more ;
But that is in my thought, whocie love to you, II
Though words come hindmost, holds his rank
bt'fore.
Then others for the breath of words respect.
Me for my dumb thoughts, speaking in effect.
80
Was it the proud full sail of his great verse.
Bound for the prize of all too precious you.
That did my ripe thoughts in my brain inhearse,
Making their tomb the womb wherein they grew?
Was it his spirit, by si)irits taught to write 5
Above a mortal pitch, that struck me dead?
No, neither he, nor his compeers by night
Giving him aid my verse astonished.
He, nor that affable familiar ghost
Which nightly gulls him with intelligence,
As victors, of my silence cannot boast; 11
I was not sick of any fear from thence:
But when your countenance fill'd up his line,
Then lack'd I matter ; that enfeebled mine.
&r
Farewell ! thou art too dear for my possessing.
And like enough thou know'st thy estimate;
The charter of thy worth gives thee releasing;
My bonds in thee are all determinate. 4
For how do I hold thee but by thy granting?
And for that riches where is my deserving ?
The cause of this fair gift in me is wanting.
And so my patent back again is swerving.
Thyself thou gavest, thy own worth then not
knowing, 9
Or me, to whom thou gavest It, else mistaking;
So thy great gift, upon misprision growing.
Comes home again, on l>etter judgement making.
Thus have I had thee, as a dream doth flatter.
In sleep a king, but waking no such matter.
88
When thou shalt be disposed to set mo light,
And place my merit in the eye of scorn
Ui>on thy side against myself I'll fight,
And prove thoo virtuous, though thou art for-
sworn.
With mine own weakness being best acquainted,
Upon thy part I can set down a story 6
Of faults conceal'd, wherein I am attainted ;
That thou in losing me shalt win much glory;
And I by this wUl be a gainer too;
For bending all my loving thoughts on thee,
I The injuritn* that to myself I do, 11
, Doing thee vantage, double-vantage me.
Son. 39-47.]
SONNETS
401
30
O. how thy worth with maDnen may I siDg,
When thou art all the better part of me?
^tThatcan mine own praise to mine own self bring?
And what is't but mine own when I praise thee?
Even for this let us divided live, 5
And our dear love lose name of single one,
That by this separation I may give
That due to thee which thou deservest alone.
absence, what a torment wouldst thou provoi
Were it not thy sour leisure gave sweet leave 10
To entertain the time with thoughts of love,
Which time and thoughts so sweetly doth deceive,
And that thou teachest how to make one twain.
By praising him here who doth hence remain !
Take all my loves, my love, yea, take them ail ;
What bast thou then more than thou hadst before?
No love, my love, that thou mayst true love call ;
All mine was thine before thou hadst this more.
Then, if for my love thou my love receivest, 5
1 cannot blame thee for my love thou usest ;
But yet be blamed, if thou thyself deceivest
By wilful taste of what thyself refusest.
I do forgive thy robbery, gentle thief,
Although thou steal thee all my poverty ; 10
And yet, love knows, it is a greater grief
To bear love's wrong than hate's known injury.
Lascivious grace, in whom all ill well shows.
Kill me with spites ; yet we must not be foes.
Those pretty wrongs that liberty commits.
When I am sometime alisent from thy heart,
Thy beauty and thy years full well befit«,
For still temptation follows where thou art.
Gentle thou art, and therefore to be won, ft
Beauteous thou art, therefore to be assailed ;
And when a woman woos, what woman's son
Will sourly leave her till she have prevailed ?
Ay me ! but yet thou mightst my seat forbear.
And chide thy beauty and thy straying youth.
Who lead thee in their riot even there 11
Where thou art forced to break a twofold truth,
Hers, by thy beauty tempting her to thee,
Thine, by thy beauty being false to me.
That thou htu)t her, it is not all my grief.
And yet it may be said I loved her dearly ;
That she hath thee, is of my wailing chief,
A loss in love thai touches me more nearly.
Loving offenders, thus I will excuse ye : 5
Thou dost love her, because thou know'st I love her ;
And for my sake even so doth she abuse me,
Suffering my friend for my sake to approve her.
If I lose thee, ray loss Ls my love's gain,
And losing her, my friend hath found that loss ;
Both find each other, and I lose both twain, 11
And both for my sake lay on me this cross ;
But here's the Joy ; my friend and I are one;
Sweet flattery ! then she loves but me alone.
When most I wink, then do mine eyes best see.
For all the day they view things unrespected ;
But when I sleep, in dreams they look on thee.
And, darkly bright, are bright in dark directed.
26
Then thou, whose shadow shadows doth maka
bright, 5
How would thy shadow's form form happy show
To the clear day with thy much clearer light.
When to unseeing eyes thy shade shines so !
How would, I say, mine eyes be biased made
By looking on thee in the living day, 10
Whcp in dead night thy fair imperfect shade
Through heavy sleep on sightless eyes doth stay 1
All days are nights to see till I see thee,
And nights bright days when dreams do show
thee me.
If the dull substance of my flesh were thooght.
Injurious distance should not stop my way ;
For then, despite of space, I would be brought,
From limits far remote, where thou dost stay.
No matter then although my foot did stand 5
Upon the farthest earth removed from thee ;
For nimble thought can Jump both sea and land,
As soon as think the place where he would be.
But, ah, thought kills me, that I am not thought,
To leap large lengths of miles when thou art gone,
But that, so much of earth and water wrought,
I must attend time's leisure with my moan ;
Receiving nought by elements so slow 13
But heavy tears, badges of cither's woe.
The other two, slight air and purging fire,
Are both with thee, wherever I abide;
The first my thought, the other my desire.
These present-absent with swift motion slide,
For when these quicker elements are gone 6
In tender embassy of love to thee,
My life, being made of four, with two alone
Sinks down to death, oppress'd with melancholy;
Until life's composition bo recured 9
By those swift messengers return'd flrom thee,
Who even but now come back again assured
Of thy fair health, recounting it to me ;
This told, I Joy; but then no longer glad,
I send them back again, and straight grow sad.
Mine eye and heart are at a mortal war.
How to divide the conquest of thy sight;
Mine eye my heart thy picture's sight would bar,
My heart mine eye the freedom of that right.
My heart doth plead that thou in him dost lie,
A closet never pierced with crystal eyes, 6
But the defendant doth that plea deny,
And says in him thy fair appearance lies.
To 'cide this title is impanneled
A quest of thoughts, all tenants to the heart ;
And by their verdict is determined II
The clear eye's moiety and the dear heart's part ;
As thus: mine eye's due is thine outward part.
And my heart's right thine inward love of heart.
Betwixt mine eye and heart a league is took.
And each doth good turns now unto the other;
When that mine eye is famish'd for a look,
Or heart in love with sighs himself doth smother,
With my love's picture then my eye doth feast,
And to the painted banquet bids my heart; 6
Another time mine eye is my heart's guest.
And in his thoughts of love doth share a part ;
408
SONNETS
[Son. 97-105.
And yet this time removed was summer's time;
The teeming autumn, hig with rich increase,
Bearing the wanton hurthen of the prime.
Like widow'd wombs after their lord's decease;
Yet this abundant issue seem'd to me
But hope of orphans and unfather'd fruit ; 10
For summer and his pleasures wait on thee,
And, thou away, the very birds are mute ;
Or, if they sing, 'tis with so dull a cheer
That leaves look pale, dreading the winter's
near.
08
From you have I been abnent in the spring,
When proud-pied April, drcss'd in all his trim,
Hath put a spirit of ^outh in every thing,
That heavy Saturn laugh'd and leap'd with him.
Yet nor the lays of birds, nor the sweet smell 6
Of different flowers in odour and in hue.
Could make me any summer's story tell,
Or from their proud lap pluck them where they
grew;
Nor did I wonder at the lily's white,
Nor praLse the deep vermillion in the rose; 10
They were but sweet, but figures of delight.
Drawn after you, you patti'ru of all those.
Yet seem'd it winter still, and, you away,
As with your shadow I with these did play.
00
The forward violet thus did I chide :
Sweet thief, whence didst thou steal thy sweet
that smells.
If not from my love's breath? The purple pride
Which on thy soft cheek for complexion dwells
In my love's veins thou hast too grossly dyed.
The lily I condemned for thy hand, 6
And buds of marjoram had sUU'n thy hair ;
The roses fearfully on thorns did stand.
One blushing shame, another white despair;
A third, nor red nor white, had stol'n of both, 10
And to his robbery had annex'd thy breath ;
But, for hi;> theft, in pride of all his growth
A vengeful canker eat him up to death.
More flowers I noted, yet I none could see
But sweet or colour it had stol'n from thee.
100
Where art thou. Muse, that thou forget'st so long
To speak of that which gives thee all thy might?
Spend'st thou thy fury on some worthless song,
Darkening thy power to lend base subjects light?
Return, forgetful Muse, and straight redeem
In gentle numl)ers time so idly spent; 6
Sing to the ear that doth thy lays esteem
And gives thy pen both skill and argument.
Rise, re«ty Muse, my love's sweet face survey,
If Time have any wrinkle graven there; 10
If any, be a satire to decay,
And make Time's spoils dcMpised every where.
Give my love fame faster than Time wastes life ;
So thou prevent'st his scythe and crooked knife.
101
O truant Muse, what shall be thy amends
For thy neglect of truth in beauty dyed?
Both truth and l)eauty on my love dei)ends;
80 dost thou too, and therein dignified. 4
Make answer. Muse ; wilt thou not haply say:
'Truth needs no colour, with his colour fix'd;
Beauty no pencil, beauty's truth to lay ;
But best is best, if never intcrmix'd'?
Because he needs no praise, wilt thou be dumb?
Excuse not silence so, for 't lies in thee 10
To make him much outlive a gilded tomb
And to be praised of ages yet to bo.
Then do thy oflice, Muse ; I teach thee how
To make him seem long hence as he shows now.
My love is strengthen'd, though more weak in
seeming;
I love not less, though less the show appear;
That love Is merchandized whose rich esteoming
The owner's tongue doth publish every where.
f)ur love was new, and then but in the spring, 5
When I was wont to greet it with my lays;
As Philomel in summer's front doth sing,
And stops her pipe in growth of riper days;
Not that the summer is less pleasant now
Than when her mournful hymns did hush the
night, 10
But that wild music burthens every bough.
And sweets grown common lose their dear delight.
Therefore, like her, I sometime hold my tongue.
Because I would not dull you with my song.
103
Alack, what poverty my Muse brings forth.
That having such a scope to show her pride,
The argument, all bare, is of more worth
Thau when it hath my added praise beside!
O, blame me not, if I no more can write ! 5
Look in your glass, and there appears a face
That over-goes my blunt invention quite,
Dulling my lines and doing mo disgrace.
Were it not sinful then, striving to mend.
To mar the subject that before was well? 10
For to no other pass my verses tend
Than of your graces and your gifts to tell ;
And n»ore, much more, than in my verse can sit.
Your own glass shows you when you look in it.
104
To me, fair friend, you never can be old.
For as you were when first your eye I eyed.
Such seems your beauty still. Three winters cold
Have from the forests shook three summers' pride.
Three beauteous springs to yellow autumn turn'd
In process of the seasons have I seen, 6
Throe April perfumes in three hot Junes burn'd.
Since first I saw you fn?sh, which yet arc green.
Ah, yet doth l>eauty, like a dial-hand, 9
Steal from his figure, and no pace perceived ;
So your sweet hue, which methinks still doth
stand.
Hath motion, and mine eye may be deceived;
For fear of which, hear this, thou age unbred :
Ere you were born was beauty's summur dead.
100
Let not my love be call'd idolatry.
Nor my beloved as an Idol show.
Since all alike my songs and praises be
To one, of one, still such, and ever ao.
Son. 105-113.]
SONNETS
409
Kind is my love to-day, to-morrow kind, 6
Still constant in a wondrous excellence;
Therefore my verse to constancy confined.
One thinfi; expressing, leaves out difference.
' Fair, kind, and true,' is all my argument,
' Fair, kind, and true,' varying to other words;
And in this change \A my invention spent, 11
Three themes in one, which wondrous scope af-
fords.
' Fair, kind, and true,' have often lived alone,
Which three till now never kept seat in one.
loe
When in the chronicle of wasted time
I see descriptions of the fairest wights,
And beauty making beautiful old rhyme
In praise of ladies dead and lovely knights,
Then, in the blaxon of sweet beauty's best, 5
Of hand, of foot, of lip, of eye, of brow,
I see their antique pen would have express'd
Even such a beauty as you master now.
80 all their praises are but prophecies
Of this our time, all you prefiguring; 10
And, for they look'd but with divining eyes.
They had not skill enough your worth to sing ;
For we, which now behold those present days,
Have eyes to wonder, but lack tongues to pndse.
lor
Not mine own fears, nor the prophetic soul
Of the wide world dreaming on things to come,
Can yet the lease of my true love control.
Supposed as forfeit to a confined doom.
The mortal moon hath her eclipse endured, 5
And the sad augurs mock their own presage;
Incertainties now crown themselves assured,
And peace proclaims olives of endless ago.
Now with the drops of this most balmy time 9
My love looks fresh, and Death to me subscribes,
Since, spite of him, I'll live in this poor rhyme,
While he insults o'er dull and speechless tribes ;
And thou In this shalt find thy monument.
When tyrants' crests and tombs of brass are
spent.
108
What's in the brain, that ink may character.
Which hath not figured to thee my true spirit?
What's new to speak, what new to register,
That may express my love, or thy dear merit?
Nothing, sweet boy; but yet, like prayers divine,
I must each day say o'er the very same; 6
Counting no old thing old, thou mine, I thine.
Even as when first I hallow'd thy fair name.
So that eternal love in love's fresh case
Weighs not the dust and injury of ago, 10
Nor gives to necessary wrinkli'S place.
But makes antiquity for aye his }»age;
Finding the first conceit of love there bred.
Where time and outward form would show it
dead. ,
100
O, never say that I was false of heart,
Though absence seem'd my flame to qualify.
As easy might I from myself depart
As from my soul, which in thy breast doth lie;
That is luy home of love; If I have ranged, ff
Like him that travels, I return again;
Just to the time, not with the time exchanged,
60 that myself bring water for my stain.
Never believe, though in my nature reign'd
AU frailties that besiege all kinds of blood, 10
That it could so preposterously be stain'd,
To leave for nothing all thy sum of good;
For nothing this wide universe I call.
Save thou, my rose ; In it thou art my aU.
110
Alas, 'tis Crue I have gone here and there,
And made myself a motley to the view,
Gored mine own thoughts, sold cheap what Is
most dear,
Made old oflTences of affections new ;
Most true it is that I have look'd on truth 5
Askance and strangely ; but, by all above.
These blenches gave my heart another youth,
And worse essays proved thee my best of love.
Now all is done, have what shall have no end ;
Mine appetite I never more will grind 10
On newer proof, to try an older friend,
A god in love, to whom I am confined.
Then give me welcome, next my heaven the
best,
Even to thy pure and most most loving breast
111
O, for my sake do yon with Fortune ohide,
The guilty goddess of my harmful deeds,
That did not better for my life provide
Than public means which public manners breeds.
Thence comes it that my name receives a brand,
And almost thence my nature Is subdued 6
To what it works in, like the dyer's hand ;
Pity me then and wish I wore renew'd ;
Whilst, like a willing patient, I will drink
Potions of eisel 'gainst my strong infection; 10
No bitterness that I will bitter think,
Nor double penance, to correct correction.
Pity me then, dear friend, and I assure ye
Even that your pity is enough to cure me.
lis
Your love and pity doth the impression fill
Which vulgar scandal stamp'd upon my brow;
For what care I who calls me well or 111,
So you o'er-green my bad, my good allow?
You are my all the world, and I must strive ff
To know my shames and praises from your
tongue;
None else to me, nor I to none alive,
That my stcel'd sense or changes right or wrong.
In so profound abysm I throw all care
Of others' voices, that my adder's sense 10
To critic and to flatterer stopped are.
Mark how with my neglect I do dispense :
You are so strongly in my purpose bred
That all the world besides metliinks are dead.
113
Since I left you mine eye is in my mind,
And that which governs me to go about
Doth part his function and is partly blind.
Seems seeing, but eflTectually is out ;
For it no form delivers to the heart 8
Of bird, of flower, or shape, which it doth latch ;
Of his quick objects hath the mind no part,
Nor his own vision holds what it doth catch ;
404
SONNETS
[Son. 63-71.
His beauty shall in these black lines be seen,
And they shall live, and he in them still green.
When I have seen by Time's fell hand defaced
The rich-proud cost of outworn buried age;
When sometime lofty towers I see down-razed,
And brass eternal slave to mortal rage ;
When I have seen the hungry ocean gain 5
Advantage on the kingdom of the shore,
And the firm soil win of the watery main,
Increasing store with loss and loss with store;
When I have seen such interchange of state,
Or 8tat« itself confounded to decay ; 10
Ruin hath taught me thus to ruminate,
That Time will come and take my love away.
This thought is as a death, which cannot choose
But weep to have that which it fears to lose.
eo
Since brass, nor stone, nor earth, nor boundless
sea.
But sad mortality o'er-sways their power.
How with this rage shall beauty hold a plea,
Whose action is no stronger than a flower?
O. how shall summer's honey breath hold out 5
Against the wreck ful siege of battering days,
Whun rocks impregnable are not so stout.
Nor gates of steel so strong, but Time decays?
O fearful meditation ! where, alack, 9
Shall Time's best jewel from Time's chest lie hid ?
Or what strong hand can hold his swift foot back ?
Or who his spoil of beauty can forbid?
O, none, unless this miracle have might,
That in black ink my love may still shine bright.
ee
Tired with all these, for restful death I cry,
As, to behold desert a beggar born,
And needy nothing trimm'd in Jollity,
And purest faith unhappily forsworn.
And gilded honour shamefully misplaced, 5
And maiden virtue rudely strumpeted.
And right perfection wrongfully disgraced,
And strength by limping sway disabled,
And art made tongue-tied by authority,
And folly, doctor-like, controlling skill, 10
And simple truth miscall'd simplicity.
And captive good attending captain ill ;
Tired with all these, from these would I be gone.
Save that, to die, I leave my love alone.
er
i\h, wherefore with infection should he live
And with his presence grace Impiety,
That sin by him advantage should achieve
And lace itself with his society?
Why should false painting imitate his cheek, 5
And steal dead seeing of his living hue?
Why should i)Oor beauty indirectly seek
Roses of shadow, since his rose is true?
Why should he live, now Nature bankrupt is,
Beggar'd of blood to blush through lively veins?
For she hath no exchequer now but his, 11
And, proud of many, lives upon his gains.
O, him she stores, to show what wealth she had
In days long since, before these last so bad.
68
Thus is his cheek the map of days outworn,
When beauty lived and died as flowers do now,
Before these bastard signs of fair were bom,
Or durst inhabit on a living brow ;
Before the golden tresses of the dead, 5
The right of sepulchres, were shorn away,
To live a second life on second head ;
Ere beauty's dead fleece made another gay ;
In him those holy antique hours are seen,
Without all ornament, itself and true, 10
Making no summer of another's green.
Robbing no old to dress his beauty new ;
And him as for a map doth Nature store.
To show fklse Art what beauty was of yore.
60
Those parts of thee that the world's eye doth view
Want nothing that the thought of hearts can
mend;
All tongues, the voice of souls, give thee that dne.
Uttering bare truth, even so as foes commend.
Thy outward thus with outward praise is crown'd ;
But those same tongues, that give thee so thine
own, 6
In other accents do this praise confound
By seeing farther than the eye hath shown.
They look into the beauty of thy mind.
And that, in guess, they measure by thy deeds;
Then, churls, their thoughts, although their eyea
were kind, 11
To thy fair flower add the rank smell of weeds ;
But why thy odour matcheth not thy show.
The soil is this, that thou dost common grow.
ro
That thou art blamed shall not be thy defect.
For slander's mark was ever yet the fair ;
The ornament of beauty is suspect,
A crow that flies in heaven's sweetest air.
So thou bo good, slander doth but approve 9
Thy worth the greater, being woo'd of time ;
For canker vice the sweetest buds doth love,
And thou present'st a pure unstained prime.
Thou hast pass'd by the ambush of young days,
Either not assail'd, or victor being charged ; 10
Yet this thy praise cannot be so thy praise,
To tie up envy evermore enlarged ;
If some suspect of ill mask'd not thy show,
Then thou alone kingdoms of hearts shouldst
owe.
n
No longer mourn for me when I am dead
Than you shall hear the surly sullen bell
Give warning to the world that I am fled
From this vile world, with vilest worms to dwell;
Nay, if you read this line, remember not 5
The hand that writ it ; for I love you so.
That I in your sweet thoughts would be forgot,
If thinking on me then should make you woe.
O, if, I say, you look upon this verse 9
When I perhaps compounded am with clay,
Do not so much as my poor name rehearse.
But let your love even with my life decay;
Lest the wise world should look into your moui.
And mock you with me after I am gone.
Son. 72-80.]
SONNETS
405
O, lest the world should task 70a to recite
What merit lived in me, that you should love
After my death, dear love, forget me quite,
For you in me can nothing worthy prove;
Unless you would devise some virtuous lie^ 5
To do more for mc than mine own desert,
And bant; more praise upon deceased I
Than niggard truth would willingly impart ;
O, lest your true love may seem false in this.
That you for love speak well of me untrue, 10
Hy name be buried where my body is,
And live no more to shame nor me nor you.
For I am shamed by that which I bring forth,
And so should you, to love things nothing worth.
73
That time of year thou mayst in me behold
When yellow leaves, or none, or few, do hang
Upon those boughs which shake against the cold,
Bare ruin'd choirs, where late the sweet birds sang.
In me thou see'st the twilight of such day 6
As after sunset fadeth in the west ;
Which by and by black night doth take away,
Death's second self that seals up ail in rest.
In mc thou see'st the glowing of such fire.
That on the ashes of his youth doth lie, 10
As the death-bed whereon it must expire.
Consumed with that which it was nourished by.
This thou perceivest, which makes thy love
more strong,
To love that well which thou must leave ere long.
But be contented ; when that fell arrest
Without all bail shall carry me away.
My life hath in this line some interest.
Which for memorial still with thee shall stay.
When thou reviewest this, thou dost review 5
The very part was consecrate to thee;
The earth can have but earth, which is his due ;
My spirit is thine, the better part of me;
So then thou hast but lost the dregs of life.
The prey of worms, my body being dead; 10
The coward conquest of a wretch's knife.
Too base of thee to be remembered.
The worth of that is that which it contains.
And that is this, and this with thee remains.
80 are you to my thoughts as food to life.
Or as sweet-season'd showers are to the ground ;
And for the peace of you I hold such strife
As 'twixt a miser and his wealth is found;
Now proud as an enjoyer, and anon 5
Doubting the filching age will steal his treasure ;
Now counting b^t to be with you alone.
Then better'd that the world may see my pleasure ;
Sometime all full with feasting on your sight,
And by and by clean starved for a look ; 10
Possessing or pursuing no delight.
Save what is had or must from you be took.
Thus do I pine and surfeit day by day.
Or gluttoning on ail, or all away.
Why is my verse so barren of new pride,
So far from variation or quick change?
Why with the time do I not glance aside
To new-found methods and to compounds strange?
Why write I still all one, ever the same, 5
And keep invention in a noted weed,
That every word doth almost tell my name.
Showing their birth and where they did proceed f
O, know, sweet love, I always write of you.
And you and love are still my argument ; 10
So all my best is dressing old words new,
Spending again what is already spent ;
For as the sun is daily new and old,
So is my love still telling what is told.
Thy glass will show thee how thy beauties wear.
Thy dial how thy precious minutes waste ;
The vacant leaves thy mind's imprint will bear.
And of this book this learning mayst thou taste.
The wrinkles which thy glass will truly show
Of mouthed graves will give thee memory ;
Thou by thy dial's shady stealth mayst know
Time's thievish progress to eternity.
Look, what thy memory cannot contain
Commit to these waste blanks, and thou shalt find
Those children nursed, deliver'd from thy brain.
To take a new acquaintance of thy mind. 12
These offices, so oft as thou wilt look.
Shall profit thee and much enrich thy book.
So oft have I invoked thee for my Muse
And found such fair assistance in my verse
As every ali^n pen hath got my use
And under thee their poesy disperse.
Thine eyes, that taught the dumb on high to ting
And heavy ignorance aloft to fly, * 6
Have added feathers to the learned's wing
And given grace a double majesty.
Yet be most proud of that which I compile.
Whose influence in thine and born of thee; 10
In others' works thou dost but mend the style,
And arts with thy sweet graces graced be ;
But thou art all my art, and dost advance
As high as learning my rude ignorance.
ro
Whilst I alone did call upon thy aid.
My verse alone had all thy gentle grace;
But now my gracious numbers are decay'd.
And my sick Muse doth give another place.
I grant, sweet love, thy lovely argument 9
Deserves the travail of a worthier pen;
Yet what of thee thy poet doth invent
lie robs thee of, and pays it thee again.
He lends thee virtue, and he stole that word
From thy behaviour; beauty doth he give, 10
And found it in thy cheek ; he can afl!brd
No praise to thee but what in thee doth live.
Then thank him not for that which he doth say.
Since what he owes thee thou thyself dost pay.
SO
0, how I faint when I of you do write.
Knowing a better spirit doth use your name,
And in the praise thereof spends all his might,
To make mo tongue-tied, speaking of your Camel
But since your worth, wide as the ocean is, 6
The humble as the proudest sail doth bear.
My saucy bark, inferior far to tiis.
On your broad main doth wilfully appear.
406
SONNETS
[Son. 80-88.
Your shallowest help wUI hold me up afloat,
Whilst he upon your soundless deep doth ride ;
Or, being wreck'd, I am a worthless boat, 1 1
He of tall building and of goodly pride;
Then if he thrive and I be cast away,
The worst was this; my love was my decay.
81
Or I shall live your epitaph to make,
Or you survive when I in earth am rotten ;
From hence your memory death cannot take,
Although in me each part will be forgotUm. 4
Your name from hence immortal life shall have,
Though I, once gone, to all the world mu:it die ;
The earth can yield me but a common grave.
When you entombed in men's eyes shall lie.
Your monument shall be my gentle verse,
Which eyes not yet created shall o'er-read ; 10
And tongues to be your being shall rehearse,
When all the breathers of this world are dead ;
You still shall live,— such virtue hath my pen, —
Where breath most breathes, even in the mouths
of men.
82
I grant thou wert not married to my Muse,
And therefore mayst without attaint o'erluok
The dedicated words which writers use
Of their fair subject, blessing every book.
Thou art as fair in knowledge as in hue, 5
Finding thy worth a limit past my praise;
And therefore art enforced to seek anew
Some fresher stamp of the time-bettering days.
And do so, love ; yet when they have devised
What strained touches rhetoric can lend, 10
Thou truly fair wert truly sympathized
In true plain words by thy true-telling friend ;
And their gross painting might be better used
Where cheeks need blood ; In thee it is abused.
83
I never saw that you did painting need,
And therefore to your fair no painting set;
I found, or tliought I found, you did exceed
The barren tender of a ix>et's debt;
And therefore have I slept in your report, 5
That you yourself, being extant, well might show
How far a modern quill doth come too short.
Speaking of worth, what worth in you doth grow.
This silence for my sin you did impute,
Which shall bo most my glory, being dumb; 10
For I impair not beauty being mute,
When others would give life and bring a tomb.
There lives more life in one of your fair eyes
Than both your poets can in praise devise.
84
Who is it that says most? which can say more
Than this rich praise, that you alone are you ?
In whose confine immured is the store
Which should example where your e<iual grew.
Lean penury within that pen doth dwell 5
That to his subjetit lends not some small glory;
But he that writes of you, if he can tell
That you are you, so dignifies his story,
Let him but copy what in you is writ,
Kot making worse what nature mode so clear,
And such a counterpart shall fame his wit, 11
Making his style admired every where.
You to your beauteous blessings add a cune.
Being fond on praise, which makes your praises
worse.
86
My tongue-tied Muse in manners holds her still.
While comments of your praise, richly compiled.
Reserve their character with golden quill.
And precious phrase by all the Muses filed.
I think good thoughts, whilst other write good
words, 5
And, like unletter'd clerk, still cry 'Amen'
To every hymn that able spirit afibrds.
In polish'd form of well refined pen.
Hearing you praised, I say "Tis so. 'tis true,*
And to the most of praise add something more ;
But that is in my thought, whose love to you, 11
Though words come hindmost, holds his rank
before.
Then others for the breath of words respect.
Me for my dumb thoughts, speaking in effect
8e
Was it the proud full sail of his great verse,
Bound for the prize of all too precious you,
That did my ripe thoughts In my brain inhearse,
Making their tomb the womb wherein they grew?
Was it his spirit, by spirits taught to write 5
Above a mortal pitch, that struck me dead?
No, neither he, nor his compeers by night
Giving him aid my verse astonish^.
He, nor that affable familiar ghost
Which nightly gulls him with intelllgeDce,
As victors, of my silence cannot boast ; 11
I was not sick of any fear from thence;
But when your countenance flll'd up his line,
Then lack'd I matter ; that enfeebled mine.
&r
Farewell ! thou art too dear for my possessing.
And like enough thou know'st thy estimate;
The charter of thy worth gives thee releasing ;
My bonds In thee are all determinate. 4
For how do I hold thee but by thy granting?
And for that riches where is my deserving ?
The cause' of this fair gift In me is wanting,
And so my patent back again is swerving.
Thyself thou gavest, thy own worth then not
knowing, 9
Or me, to whom thou gavest It, else mistaking;
So thy great g^, upon misprision growing.
Comes home again, on better judgement making.
Thus have I had thee, as a dream doth flatter,
In sleep a king, but waking no such matter.
88
When thou shalt be disposed to set me light,
And place my merit in the eye of scorn
Upon thy side against myself I'll fight,
And prove thee virtuous, though thou art for-
sworn.
With mine own weakness being best acquainted.
Upon thy part I can set down a story 6
Of faults conceard, wherein I am attainted ;
That thou in losing me shalt win much glory;
And I by this will be a gainer too;
For bending all my loving thoughts on thee,
The injuries that to myself I do, w
Doing thee vantage, double-vantage me.
Son. 8»-97.]
SONNETS
Affl
Such is my love, to thee I so belong,
That for thy right myself will bear all wrong.
80
Say that thou didst forsake nie for some fault,
And I will comment upou that offence;
Speak of my lameness, and I straight will halt,
Against thy reasons making no defence.
Thou canst not, love, disgrace me half so ill,
To set a form upon desired change, 6
As I'll myself disgrace; knowing thy will,
I will acquaintance strangle and look strange;
Be absent from thy walks ; and in my tongue
Thy sweet beloved name no more shall dwell,
Lest I, too much profane, should do It wrong,
And haply of our old acquaintance tell. 12
For thee, against myself Til vow debate,
For 1 must ne'er love him whom thou dost hate.
OO
Then hate me when thou wilt ; if ever, now ;
Now, while the world is bent my deeds to cross.
Join with the spite of fortune, make me bow.
And do not drop in for an after-loss;
Ah, do not, when my heart hath 'scaped this sor-
row, 5
Come in the rearward of a conquered woe ;
Give not a windy night a rainy morrow,
To linger out a purposed overthrow.
If thou wilt leave me, do not leave me last,
When other petty griefs have done their spite.
But in the onset come ; so shall I taste 11
At first the very worst of fortune's might;
And other strains of woe, which now seem woe,
Ck>mpared with loss of thee will not seem so.
Ol
Some glory in their birth, some in their skill,
Some in their wealth, some in their body's force;
Some in their garments, though new-fangled ill ;
Some in their hawks and hounds, some in their
horse;
And every humour hath his adjunct pleasure,
Wherein it finds a joy above the rest ; 6
But these particulars are not my measure ;
All these 1 better in one general best.
Thy love is better than high birth to me.
Richer than wealth, prouder than garments' cost,
Of more delight than hawks or hontes be ; 11
And having thee, of all men's pride I boast ;
Wretched in this alone, that thou mayst take
Ail this away and me most wretched make.
But do thy worst to steal thyself away,
For term of life thou art assured mine;
And life no longer than thy love will stay,
For it depends upon that love of thine.
Then need I not to fear the worst of wrongs, 5
When in the least of them my life hath end.
I see a better state to me belongs
Than that which on thy humour doth depend ;
Thou canst not vex me with inconstant mind.
Since that my life on thy revolt doth lie. 10
O, what a happy title do I find,
Uappy to have thy love, happy to die !
But what's so blessed-fair that fears no blot?
Thou mayst be false, and yet 1 know it not.
03
So shall I live, supposing thou art true.
Like a deceived husband; so love's face
May still seem love to me, though alter'd new ;
Thy looks with me, thy heart in other place;
For there can live no hatred in thine eye, 5
Therefore in that I canuot know thy change.
In many's looks the false heart's history
Is writ in moods and frowns and wrinkles strange,
But heaven in thy creation did decree 9
That in thy face sweet love should ever dwell ;
Whate'er thy thoughts or thy heart's workings be.
Thy looks should nothing thence but sweetness
tell,
now like Eve's apple doth thy beauty grow.
If thy sweet virtue answer not thy show !
They that have power to hurt and will do none,
That do not do the thing they most do show.
Who, moving others, are themselves as stone,
Unmoved, cold, and to temptation slow ;
They rightly do inherit heaven's graces 5
And husband nature's riches from expense;
They are the lords and owners of their faces,
Others but stewards of their excellence.
The summer's flower is to the summer sweet,
Though to Itself it only live and die, 10
But if that flower with base infection meet.
The basest weed outbraves his dignity ;
For sweetest things turn sourest by their deeds;
Lilies that fester smell far worse than weeds.
OO
How sweet and lovely dost thou make the shame
Which, like a canker in the fragrant rose,
Doth spot the beauty of thy budding name!
O, in what sweets dost thou thy sins inclose!
That tongue that tells the story of thy days, 6
Making lascivious comments on thy sport,
Cannot dispraise but in a kind of praise;
Naming thy name blesses an ill report.
O, what a mansion have those vices got
Which for their habitation chose out thee, 10
Where beauty's veil doth cover every blot
And all things turn to fair that eyes can see!
Take heed, dear heart, of this large privilege;
The hardest knife ill used doth lose his edge.
Qe
Some say, thy fault is youth, some wantonness;
Some say, thy grac^ is youth and gt^ntle sport;
Both grace and faults are loved of more and leas;
Thou makest faults graces that to thee resort.
A» on the finger of a throned queen 5
The basest Jewel will be well esteein'd.
So are those errors that in thee are seen
To truths translated and for true things deem'd.
How many Iambs might the stern wolf betray,
If like a lamb he could his looks translate! 10
How many gazers mightst thou lead away.
If thou wouldst use the strength of all thy state
But do not so ; I love thee in such sort.
As thou being mine, mine is thy good report.
How like a winter hath my absence been
From thee, the pleasure of the fleeting year!
What freezings have I felt, what dark days seen I
What old December's bareness every where ! 4
414
SONNETS
[Son 146-154.
Why BO largt; cost, having so short a Icaae, 6
Doet thou upon thy fading mansion spend?
Shall worms, inheritors of this excess,
Eat up thy charge? is this thy body's end?
Then, soul, live thou upon thy servant's loss,
And let that pine to aggravate thy store ; 10
Buy terms divine in selling hours of dross ;
Within bo fed, without be rich no more ;
80 shalt thou feed on Death, that feeds on men,
And Death once dead, there's no more dying
then.
My love is as a fever, longing still
For that which longer nurseth the disease;
Feeding on that which doth preserve tlie ill,
The uncertain sickly appetite to please.
My reason, the physician to my love, 5
Angry that his proscriptions are not kept.
Hath left me, and I desperate now approve
Desire is death, which physic did except.
Past cure I am, now reason is past care,
And frantic-mad with evermore unrest ; 10
My thoughts and my discourse as madmen's are.
At random fn)m the truth vainly expreas'd ;
For I have sworn thee fair, and thought thee
bright,
Who art as black as hell, as dark as night
148
O me, what eyes hath Love put in my head.
Which have no correspondence with true »i;^ht !
Or, if they have, where is my Judgement fled,
That censures fals(>Iy what they see aright ?
If that be fair whereon my false eyes dote, 5
What means the world to say it is not so t
If it be not, then love doth well denote
Love's eye is not so true as all men's; no.
How can it? 0, how can Love's eye be true.
That is so vex'd with watching and with tears?
Ko marvel then, though I mistake my view ; 11
The sun itself sees not till heaven clears.
O cunning Love! with tears thou keep'st me
blind.
Lest eyes well-seeing thy foul faults should find.
140
Canst thou, O cruel ! say I love thee not.
When I against myself with thee partake?
Do I not think on thee, when I forgot
Am of myself, all tyrant, for thy sake?
Who hateth thee that I do call my friend? 6
On whom frown'st thou that I do fawn upon ?
Nay, if thou lour'st on me, do I not spend
Revenge upon myself with present moan?
What merit do I in myself respect.
That is so proud thy service to despise, 10
When all my beat doth worship thy defect,
Commanded by the motion of thine eyes?
But, love, hate on, for now I know thy mind;
Those that can see thou lovest, and I am blind.
100
O, from what power ha.st thou this powerful might
With insuflBciency my heart to sway ?
To make mc give the lie to my true sight.
And swear that brightness dot h not grace the day ?
Whence hast thou this becoming of things ill.
That in the very refuse of thy deeds 6
There is such strength and warrantise of skill,
That, in my mind, thy worst all best exceeds?
Who taught theo how to make me love thee more,
The more I hear and see just cause of hate?
0, though I love what others do abhor, 11
With others thou shouldst not abhor my state;
If thy un worthiness raised love in me.
More worthy I to be beloved of thee.
161
Love is too young to know what conscience is;
Y'et who knows not conscience is born of love?
Then, gentle cheater, urge not my amiss.
Lest guilty of my faults thy sweet self prove;
For, thou betraying me, I do betray 6
My nobler part to my gross body's treason ;
My soul doth tell my body that he may
Triumph in love; flesh stays no farther reason,
But ri»iug at thy name doth point out thee
As his triumphant prize. Proud of this pride,
He is contented thy )K)or drudge to be, 11
To stand in thy atfairs, fall by thy side.
No want of consclencu hold it that I call
Her Move' for whose dear love I rise and fall.
13S
In loving thee thou know'.st I am forsworn,
But thou art twice forsworn, to me love swearing;
In act thy bed-vow broke, and new faith torn.
In vowing new hate after new love bearing. 4
But why of two oaths' breach do I accuse thee.
When I break twenty ? I am perjured most ;
For all my vows are oaths but to misuse thee,
And all my honest faith in thee is lost;
For I have sworn deep oaths of thy deep kindness.
Oaths of thy love, thy truth, thy constancy ; 10
And. to enlighten thee, gave eyes to blindness,
Or made them swear against the thing they see;
For I have sworn thee fair ; more perjured I,
To swear against the truth so foul a lie!
1S3
Cupid laid by his brand and fell asleep;
A maid of Dian's this advantage found.
And his love-kindling fire did quickly steep
In a cold valley-fountain of that ground;
Which borrow'd from this holy fire of Love H
A dateless, lively heat, still to endure,
And grew a seething bath, which yet men prove
Against strange maladies a sovereign cure.
But at my mistress* eye Love's brand new-fired.
The Iwy for trial needs would touch my breast ;
1, sick withal, the help of bath desired, 11
And thither hied, a sad distemper'd guest,
• But found no cure ; the bath for my help lies
Where Cupid got new fire, my mistress' eyes.
164
The little Love-god lying once asleep
Laid by his side his heart-inflaming brand,
^Vllilst many nymphs that vow'd chaste life to
keep
Came tripping by; but in her maiden hand
The fairest votary took up that fire 5
Which many legions of true hearts had warm'd ;
And so the general of hot desire
Was sleeping by a virgin hand disarm'd.
This brand she quenched in a cool well by.
Which fn^m Love's fire took heat perpetual, 10
Growing a bath and healthful remedy
For men diseased; but I, my mistress' thrall.
Came there for cure, and this by that I proTC^
Love's fire heats water, water cools not love.
Son. 105-X13.]
SONNETS
409
Kind is mj love to-day, to-morrow kind, 6
Still constant in a wondrous excellence;
Therefore mj verse to constancy confined,
One thing expressing, leaves out difference.
* Fair, kind, and true,' is all my argument,
'Fair, kind, and true,' varying to other words;
And in this change is my invention spent, 11
Three themes in one, which wondrous scope af-
fords.
' Fair, kind, and true,' have often lived alone,
Which three till now never kept seat in one.
loe
When in the chronicle of wasted time
I see descriptions of the fairest wights,
And beauty making beautiful old rhyme
In praise of ladies dead and lovely knights,
Then, in the blazon of sweet beauty's best, 5
Of hand, of foot, of lip, of eye, of brow,
I see their antique pen would have express'd
Even such a beauty as you master now.
80 all their praises are but prophecies
Of this our time, all you prefiguring; 10
And, for they look'd but with divining eyes,
They had not skill enough your worth to sing ;
For we, which now behold those present days,
Have eyes to wonder, but lack tongues to praise.
lor
Not mine own fears, nor the prophetic soul
Of the wide world dreaming on things to come,
Can yet the lease of my true love control,
Supposed as forfeit to a confined doom.
The mortal moon hath her eclipse endured, 5
And the sad augurs mock their own presage ;
Inccrtainties now crown themselves assured.
And peace proclaims olives of endless age.
Now with the drops of this most balmy time 9
My love looks fresh, and Death to me subscribes,
Since, spite of him, I'll live in this poor rhyme.
While he insults o'er dull and speechless tribes;
And thou in this shalt find thy monument,
When tyrants' crests and tomba of brass are
spent.
108
What's in the brain, that ink may character,
Which hath not figured to thee my true spirit?
What's new to speak, what new to register,
That may express my love, or thy dear merit ?
Nothing, sweet boy ; but yet, like prayers divine,
I must each day say o'er the very same; 6
Counting no old thing old, thou mine, I thine.
Even as when first I hallow'd thy fair name.
80 that eternal love in love's fresh case
Weighs not the dust and injury of age, 10
Nor gives to necessary wrinkles place.
But makes antiquity for aye his page;
Finding the first conceit of love there bred.
Where time and outward form would show it
dead. •
100
O, never say that I was false of heart,
Though absence seem'd my flame to qualify.
As easy might I from myself depart
As from my soul, which in thy breast doth lie;
That is luy home of love; if I have ranged, 5
Like him that travels, I return again ;
Just to the time, not with the time exchanged,
6u that myself bring water for my stain.
Never believe, though in my nature reign'd
All fraUUes that beaiege aU kinds of blood, 10
That it could so preposterously be stain'd.
To leave for nothing all thy sura of good ;
For nothing this wide universe I call.
Save thou, my rose ; in It thou art my alL
110
Alas, 'tis frue I have gone here and there,
And made myself a motley to the view,
Gored mine own thoughts, sold cheap what is
most dear,
Made old offences of affections new ;
Most true it is that I have look'd on truth 6
Askance and strangely ; but, by all above,
These blenches gave my heart another youth.
And worse essays proved thee my best of love.
Now all is done, have what shall have no end ;
Mine appetite I never more will grind 10
On newer proof, to try an older friend,
A god in love, to whom I am confined.
Then give me welcome, next my heaven the
best,
Even to thy pure and most most loving breast
HI
O, for my sake do you with Fortune ohide,
The guilty goddess of my harmful deeds,
That did not better for my life provide
Than public means which public manners breeds.
Thence comes it that my name receives a brand.
And almost thence my nature is subdued 6
To what it works in, like the dyer's hand ;
Pity me then and wish I were renew'd ;
WhUst, like a willing patient, I will drink
Potions of eisel 'gainst my strong Infection; 10
No bitterness that I will bitter think,
Nor double penance, to correct correction.
Pity me then, dear friend, and I assure ye
Even that your pity is enough to cure me.
lis
Your love and pity doth the impression fill
Which vulgar scandal stamp'd upon my brow ;
For what care I who calls me well or ill,
So you o'er-green my bad, my good allow ?
You are my all the world, and I must strive ff
To know my shames and praises from your
tongue;
None else to me, nor I to none alive,
That my steel'd sense or changes right or wrong.
In so profound abysm I throw all care
Of others' voices, that my adder's sense 10
To critic and to flatterer stopped are.
Mark how with my neglect I do dispense :
You are so strongly in my purpose bred
That all the world besides methinks are dead.
113
Since I left you mine eye is in my mind.
And that which governs me to go about
Doth pari his function and is partly blind,
Seems seeing, but effectually is out;
For it no form delivers to the heart 5
Of bird, of flower, or shape, which it doth latch;
Of his quick objects hath the mind no part,
Nor his own vision holds what it doth catch ;
416
A LOVER'S COMPLAINT
[Line 99-217.
* His qualities were beauteooB as his form, 99
For maiden-tonf^icd he was, and thereof fk«e;
Yet, if men moved him, was he such a storm
As oft 'twixt May and April is to see.
When winds breathe sweet, unruly though they
be.
His rudeness so with his authorized youth
Did livery falseness in a pride of truth. 105
* Well could he ride, and often men would say,
" That horse his mettle from his rider takes;
Proud of subjection, noble by the sway.
What rounds, what bounds, what course, what
stop he makes !"
And controversy hence a question takes, 110
Whether the horse by him became his deed,
Or he bis manage by the well-doing steed.
'But quickly on this side the verdict went;
His real habitude gave life and grace
To appertalnliigs and to ornament, 115
Accomplish'd in himself, not in his case;
All aids, themselves made fairer by their place,
Came for additions ; yet their purposed trim
Pieced not his grace, but were all graced by him.
*So on the tip of his subduing tongue 120
All kind of arguments and question deep.
All replication prompt and reason strong.
For his advantage »till did wake and sleep ;
To make the weeper laugh, the laugher weep,
He had the dialect and dilferent skill, 125
Catching all passions in his craft of will;
' That he did in the general bosom reign
Of young, of old, and sexes both enchanted,
To dwell with hiui in thoughts, or to remain 129
In pewonal duty, following where he haunted;
Consents bewitchtHl, ere he desire, have granted.
And dialogued for liim what he would say,
Ask'd their own wlllis and made their wills obey.
'Many there were that did his picture get, 134
To serve their eyes, and in ii put their mind;
Like fools that in the imagination set
The gootlly objects which abroad they find
Of lands and mansions, theirs in thought assign'd ;
And labouring in moe pleasures to bestow them
Than the true gouty landlord which doth owe
them ; 140
'So many have, that never touch'd his hand.
Sweetly supposed them mistress of his heart.
My woeful 8<-1f, that did in freedom stand.
And was my own fcM>-«imple, not in part, 144
What with his art in youth, and youth in art,
Threw my ailections in his charmed power.
Reserved the btalk and gave him all my flower.
' Yet did I not, as some my equals did,
Demand of him, nor being desired yielded;
Finding myself in honour so forbid, 150
With safest distance I mine honour shielded;
Experience for me many bulwarks buildcd
Of proofs new-bleeding, which remained the foil
Of thb false jewel, and his amorous spoiL
'But, ah, who ever shunn'd by precedent
The destined ill she must herself assay 7
Or forced examples, 'gainst her own content,
155
To put the by-past perils In her way?
Counsel may stop awhile what will not stay ;
For when we rage, advice is often seen 100
By blunting us to make our wits more keen.
' Nor grives it satisfaction to our blood.
That we must curb it upon others* proof;
To be forbod the sweets that seem so good, 164
For fear of harms that preach in our behoof.
appetite, from judgement stand aloof!
The one a palate hath that needs will taste,
Though Reason weep, and cry " it is thy last.**
' For further I could say "This man's untrue,**
And knew the patterns of his foul beguiling ; 170
Heard where his plants in others' orchards grew.
Saw how deceits were gilded in his smiling ;
Knew vows were ever brokers to defiling;
Thought characters and words merely but art.
And bastards of his foul adulterate heart. 175
'And long upon these terms I held my city,
Till thus he 'gan besiege me : " Gentle maid.
Have of n)y suffering youth some feeling pity,
And be not of my holy vows afraid ;
That's to ye sworn to none was ever said ; 180
For feasts of love I have been call'd unto,
Till now did ne'er invite, nor never woo.
' " All my offences that abroad you see
Are errors of the blood, none of the mind ;
Love made them not; with acture they may be.
Where neither party is nor true nor kind ; 186
They sought their shame that so their shame did
find;
And so much less of shame in me remains
By how much of me their reproach contains.
' "Among the many that mine eyes have seen.
Not one whose flame my heart so much as warmed,
Or my ailection put to the smallest teen, 192
Or any of my leisures ever charmed ;
Harm have I done to them, but ne'er was harmed ;
Kept hearts in liveries, but mine own was free.
And reign'd, commanding in his monarchy. 196
' "Look here, what tributes wounded fancies sent
me.
Of paled pearls and rubies red as blood ;
Figuring that they their passions likewise lent me
Of grief and blushes, aptly understood 200
In bloodless white and the encrimson'd mood;
Effects of terror and dear modesty,
Encamp'd in hearts, but fighting outwardly.
' "And, lo, behold these talents of their hair,
With twisted metal amorously impleach'd, 205
1 have received from many a several fair.
Their kind acceptance weepingly besecch'd.
With the annexions of fair gems enrieh'd,
And decp-brain'd sonnets that did amplify 209
Each stone's dear nature, worth, and quality.
* " The diamond, why, 'twas beautiful and hard,
Whereto his invised properties did tend ;
The deep-green emerald, in whose fresh regard
Weak sights their sickly radiance do amend ;
Tlie heavcn-hued sapphire and the opal blend
With objects manifold ; each several stone, 216
Wit h wit well blazon'd, smiled or made some moan.
Line 218-329.]
A LOVER'S COMPLAINT
All
"* Lo, all these trophies of affections hot,
Of pensived and subdued desires the tender,
Nature hath charged me that I hoard them not,
But yield them up where I myself must render,
That is, to you, my origin and ender; 222
For these, of force, mu&t your oblations be,
Since I their altar, you enpatron me.
' "O, then, advance of yours that phraseless hand,
Whose white weighH down the airy scale of praise ;
Take all these similes to your own command, 227
Hallow'd with sighs that burning lungs did raise;
What me your minister, for you obeys,
Works under you ; and to your audit comes
Their distract parcels in combined sums. 231
'" Lo, this device was sent me from a nun,
Or sbter sanctified, of holiest note ;
Which late her noble suit in court did shun,
Whose rarest havings made the blossoms dote;
For she was sought by spirits of richest coat.
But kept cold distance, and did thence remove.
To spend her living in eternal love. 238
• " But, O my sweet, what labour is 't to leave
The thing we have not, mastering what not strives.
Playing the place which did no form receive, 241
Playing patient sports in unconstrained gyves?
She that her fame so to herself contrives.
The scars of battle *scapeth by the flight, 244
And makes her absence valiant, not her might.
'"O, pardon me, in that my boast is true;
The accident which brought me to her eye
Upon the moment did her force subdue.
And now she would the caged cloister fly ;
Religious love put out Religion's eye; 250
Not to be tempted, would she be immured.
And now, to tempt all, liberty procured.
*" How mighty then you are, O, hear me tell !
The broken bosoms that to me belong
Have emptied all their fountains in my well.
And mine I pour your ocean all among; 75R
I strong o'er them, and you o'er me being strong.
Must for your victory us all congest.
As compound love to physic your cold breast
'*'My parts had power to charm a sacred nun.
Who disciplined, ay, dieted in grace, 261
Believed her eyes when they to assail begun,
All vows and consecrations giving place ;
O most potential love! vow, bond, nor space,
In thee hath neither sting, knot, nor confine, 265
For thou art all, and all things else are thine.
* " When thou iropressest, what are precepts worth
Of stale example? When thou wilt inflame,
How coldly those impediments stand forth
Of wealth, of filial fear, law, kindred, fame !
Love's arms are peace, 'gainst rule, 'gainst sense,
'gainst shame ; 271
And sweetens, in the suffering pangs it bears,
The aloes of all forces, shocks and fears.
27
'"Now all these hearts that do on mine depend.
Feeling it break, with leading groans they pine;
And supplicant their sighs to you extend, 276
To leave the battery that you make 'gainst mine.
Lending soft audience to my sweet design.
And credent soul to that strong-bonded oath
That shall prefer and undertake my troth." 280
' This said, his watery eyes he did dismount.
Whose sights till then were levell'd on my face;
Each cheek a river running from a fount 283
With brinish current downward flow'd apace;
O, how the channel to the stream gave grace !
Who glazed with crystal gate the glowing roses
That flame through water which their hue en-
closes.
'O father, what a hell of witchcraft lies
In the small orb of one particular tear!
But with the inundation of the eyes 290
What rocky heart to water will not wear?
What breast so cold that is not warmed here?
O cleft effect! cold modesty, hot wrath,
Both fire from hence and chill extincture hath.
' For, lo, his passion, but an art of craft, 296
Even there resolved my reason into tears ;
There my white stole of chastity I daff'd.
Shook off my sober guards and civil fears ;
Appear to him, as he to me appears, 299
All melting ; though our drops this difference bore,
His poison'd me, and mine did him restore.
' In him a plenitude of subtle matter.
Applied to cautels, all strange forms receives,
Of burning blushes, or of weeping water, 304
Or swounding paleness; and he takes and leaves.
In either's aptness, as it best deceives,
To blush at speeches rank, to weep at woes.
Or to turn white and swound at tragic shows ;
' That not a heart which in his level came
Could 'scape the hail of ids all-hurting aim, 810
Showing fair nature is bSh kind and tame;
And, veird in them, did wiVwhom he would maim ;
Against the thing he sought he would exclaim;
When he most bum'd in heart-wish'd luxury.
He preach'd pure maid and praised cold chastity.
'Thus merely with the garment of a Grace 816
The naked and concealed fiend he cover'd ;
That the unexperient gave the tempter place,
Which, like a cherubln, above them hover'd.
Who, young and simple, would not be so lover'd?
Ay me! I fell, and yet do question make 821
What I should do again for such a sake.
' O, that infected moisture of his eye,
O, that false fire which in his cheek to glow'd,
O, that forced thunder from his heart did fly, 825
0, that sad breath his spongy lungs bestow'd,
O, all that borrow'd motion seeming owed.
Would yet again betray the fore>betray'd.
And new pervert a reconciled maid t*
112
SONNETS
[Son. 129-137.
All this the world well knows; yet none knows
well
To shun the hearen that leads men to this hell.
130
My mistress' eyes are nothing like the sun ;
Coral is far more red than her lips' red ;
If snow be white, why then her breasts are dun ;
If hairs be wires, black wires grow on her head.
I have seen roses damask'd red and white, 5
But no such roses see I in her cheeks ;
And in some perfumes is there more delight
Than in the breath that from my mistress reeks.
I love to hear her speak, yet well I know
That music hath a far more pleasing sound ; 10
I grant I never saw a goddess go,
My mistress, when she walks, treads on the
ground ;
And yet, by heaven, I think my love as rare
As any she belied with false compare.
131
Thou art as tyrannous, so as thou art,
As those whose beauties proudly make them cruel ;
For well thou know'st to my dear doting heart
Thou art the fairest and most precious jewel.
Yet, in good faith, some say that thee behold, 5
Thy face hath not the power to make love groan ;
To say they err I dare not be so bold.
Although 1 swear it to myself alone.
And to be sure that is not false I swear,
A thousand groans, but thinking on thy face.
One on another's neck, do witness bear 11
Thy black is fairest in my judgement's place.
In nothing art thou black save in thy deeds.
And thence this slander, as 1 think, proceeds.
13S
Thine eyes I love, and they, as pitying me,
Knowing thy heart torments mo with disdain.
Have put on black and loving mourners be,
Looking with pretty ruth upon my pain.
And truly not the morning sun of heaven 5
Better becomes the grey cheeks of the east.
Nor that full star that ushers in the even
Doth half that glory to the sober we^Jt,
As those two mourning eyes become thy face;
O, let it then as well beseem thy heart 10
To mourn for me, since mourning doth thee grace.
And suit thy pity like in every part.
Then will I swear beauty herself is black,
And all they foul that thy complexion lack.
133
Beshrew that heart that makes my heart to groan
For that deep wound it giv(.>8 my friend and me!
Is't not enough to torture me alone.
But slave to slavery my sweet'st friend must be?
Mo from myself thy cruel eye hath taken, 5
And my next self thou harder hast engrossed;
Of htm, myself, and thee, I am forsaken ;
A torment thrice threefold thus to be crossed.
Prison my heart in thy steel bosom's ward,
But then my friend's heart let my poor heart bail ;
Whoe'er keeps mo, let my heart be his guard; 11
Thou canst not then use rigour in my gaol ;
And yet thou wilt ; for I, b4'ing pent in thee,
Perforce am thine, and all that b in me.
134
So, now I have confeas'd that he is thine
And I myself am mortgaged to thy will,
Myself I'll forfeit, so that other mine
Thou wilt restore, to be my comfort still ;
But thou wilt not, nor he will not be free, 5
For thou art covetous and he is kind ;
He learn'd but surety-like to write for me.
Under that bond that him as fast doth bind.
The statute of thy beauty thou wilt take.
Thou usurer, that put'st forth all to use, 10
And sue a friend came debtor for my sake;
So him I lose through my unkind abuse.
Him have I lost ; thou hast both him and me ;
He pays the whole, and yet am I not free.
136
Whoever hath her wish, thou hast thy * Will,*
And ' Will' to boot, and • Will ' In overplus ;
More than enough am I that vex thee still.
To thy sweet will making addition thus.
Wilt thou, whose will is large and spacious, 5
Not once vouchsafe to hide my will in thine?
Shall will in others seem right gracious.
And in my will no fair acceptance shine?
The sea, all water, yet receives rain still.
And in abundance addeth to his store ; 10
So thou, being rich in * Will,' add to thy • Will '
One wilt of mine, to make thy large ' Will' more.
Let no unkind, no fair bcseechers kill ;
Think all but one, and me in that one * WilL
130
If thy soul check thee that I come so near.
Swear to thy blind soul that I was thy • Will,'
And will, thy soul knows, is admitted there ;
Thus far for love, my love-suit, sweet, fulftL
' Will' will fulfil the treasure of thy love, 5
Ay, fill it full with wills, and my will one.
In things of great receipt with ease we prove
Among a number one is reckon'd none ;
Then in the number let me pass untold.
Though in thy stores' account I one must be;
For nothing hold me, so it please thee hold 11
That nothing me, a something sweet to thee;
Make but my name thy love, and love that still.
And then thou lovest me. for my name Is * Will.*
i3r
Thou blind fool, Love, what dost thou to mine eyes.
That they behold, and see not what they see?
They know what beauty is, see where It lies.
Yet what the best is take the worst to be.
If eyes, corrupt by over-partial looks, 5
Be anchor'd in the bay where all men ride.
Why of eyes' falsehood hast thou forged hooks.
Whereto the Judgement of my heart is tied?
Why should my heart think that a several plot
Which my heart knows the wide world's common
place ? 10
Or mine eyes seeing this, say this is not,
To put fair truth upon so foul a face?
In things right true my heart and eyes have
erred.
And to this false plague are they now trana-
ferred.
THE PASSIONATE PILGRIM
419
Fair is my love, but not so fair as fickle,
Mild as a dove, but neither true nor trusty,
Brighter than glass and yet, as glass is, brittle,
Softer than wax and yet as iron rusty ;
A Illy pale, with damask dye to grace her, 5
None fairer, nor none falser to deface her.
Her lips to mine how often hath she Joined,
Between each kiss her oaths of true love swearing !
How many tales to please roe hath she coined.
Dreading my love, the loss thereof still fearing!
Yet in the midst of all her pure protest! ngs.
Her faith, her oaths, her tears, and all were
jestings. 12
She burn'd with love, as straw with fire flameth ;
She burn'd out love, as soon as straw out-burncth ;
She framed t he love, and yet she foiled the framing ;
She bade love last, and yet she fell a-turning. 16
Was this a lover, or a lecher whether?
Bad in the best, though excellent in neither.
If music and sweet poetry agree,
As they must needs, the sister and the brother.
Then must the love be great 'twixt thee and me.
Because thou lovest the one and 1 the other.
Dowland to thee is dear, whose heavenly touch
Upon the lute doth ravish human M>nse; 6
Spenser to nie, whose deep conceit is such
As passing all conceit needs no defence.
Thou lovest to hear the sweet melodious sound
That Phoebus* lute, the queen of music, makes;
And I in deep delight am chiefly dn>wn'd 11
When as himself to singing he betakes.
One god is god of both, as poets feign ;
One knight loves both, and both in thee remain.
Fair was the morn when the fair queen of love,
« • • * *
Paler for sorrow than her milk-white dove.
For Aden's sake, a youngster proud and wild ;
Her stand she takes upon a steep up-hill ; 6
Anon Adonis comes with horn and hounds;
She, silly queen, with more than love's good will,
Forbade the boy he should not pass those grounds ;
*Once,' quoth she, 'did I see a fair sweet youth
Here in these brakes deep-wounded with a boar.
Deep in the thigh, a spectacle of ruth ! 11
See, in my thigh,' quoth she, 'here was the sore.'
She showed hers ; he saw more wounds than one,
And blushing fled, and left her all alone.
lO
Sweet rose, fair flower, untimely pluck'd, soon
vaded,
Pluck'd in the bud and vaded in the spring !
Bright orient pearl, alack, too timidly shaded !
Fair creature, kilVd too soon by death's sharp
sting !
Like a green plum that hangs npon a tree, 5
And falls through wind before the fall should be.
I weep for thee and yet no cause I have ;
For why thou left'st me nothing in thy will ;
And yet thou left'st me more than I did crave ;
For why I cn^vcd nothing of thee still ; 10
yes, dear fkiend, I pardon crave of thee.
Thy discontent thou didst bequeath to me.
11
Venus, with young Adonis sitting by her
Under a myrtle shade, began to woo him ;
She told the youngling how god Mars did try her,
And as he fell to her, so fell she to him.
'Even thus,' quoth she, 'the warlike god eic-
braced me,' 6
And then she clipp'd Adonis in her arms ;
' Even thus,' quoth she, 'the warlike god unlaced
me,'
As if the boy should use like loving charms ;
* Even thus,' quoth she, ' ho seized on my lips,'
And with her lips on his did act the seixure ; 10
And a^ she fetched breath, away ho skips.
And would not take her meaning nor her pleasure.
Ah, that I had my lady at this bay.
To kiss and clip me tiU I run away!
IS
Crabbed age and youth cannot live together;
Youth is full of plcasance, age is full of care;
Youth like summer morn, age like winter wea>
ther ;
Y'outh like summer brave, age like winter bare.
Youth is full of si>ort, age.s breath is short; 6
Y'outh is nimble, age is lame;
Youth is hot and bold, age is weak and cold ;
Youth is wild, and age is tame.
Age, I do abhor thee ; youth, I do adore thee ;
O, my love, my love is young! 10
Age, I do defy thee ; O, sweet shepherd, hie thee,
For methinks thou stay'st too long.
13
Beauty is but a vain and doubtful good;
A shining gloss that vadeth suddenly;
A flower that dies when first it 'gins to bud ;
A brittle glass that's broken presently ;
A doubtful good, a gloss, a glass, a flower, 9
Lost, vaded, broken, dead within an hour.
And as goods lost are seld or never found.
As vaded gloss no rubbing will refresh.
As flowers dead lie wither'd on the ground,
As broken gloss no cement can redress, 10
So beauty blemish'd once's for ever lost.
In spite of physic, painting, pain, and cost.
14
Good-night, good rest. Ah, neither be my sharo;
She bade good night that kept my rest away;
And dafTd me to a cabin hang*d with care.
To descant on>the doubts of my decay.
' Farewell,' quoth she, ' and come again to-mor-
row;'
Fare well I could not, for I supp'd with sorrow.
Yet at my parting sweetly did she smile.
In scorn or friendship, nill I construe whether;
'T may l>e, she Joy'd to Jest at my exile, 9
'T may be, again to make me wander thither;
' Wander,' a word for shadows like myself.
As take the pain, but cannot pluck the pelt
414
SONNETS
[Son 146-154.
Why so large cost, having so short a lease, 6
Doet thou upon thy fading mansion spend?
Shall worms, inheritors of this excess,
Eat up thy charge? is this thy hody's end?
Then, soul, live thou upon thy serrant's loss,
And let that pine to aggravate thy store ; 10
Buy terms divine in selling hours of dross ;
Within be fed, without be rich no more ;
80 sbalt thou feed on Death, that feeds on men,
And Death once dead, there's no more dying
then.
My love is as a fever, longing still
For that which longer nunieth the disease;
Feeding on that which doth preserve the ill,
The uncertain sickly appetite to please.
My reason, the physician to my love, 5
Angry that his prescriptions are not kept.
Hath left me, and I desperate now approve
Desire is death, which physic did except.
Past cure I am, now reason is past care,
And frantic-mad with evermore unrest ; 10
My thoughts and my discourse as madmen's are.
At random from the truth vainly exprcss'd ;
For I have sworn thee fair, and thought thee
bright,
Who art as black as hell, as dark as night.
O me, what eyes hath Love put In my head,
Which have no correspondence with true sight!
Or, if they have, where is my judgement fled,
That censures falsely what they see aright?
If that be fair whereon my false eyes dote, 5
What means the world to say it is not so?
If it be not, then love doth well denote
Love's eye is not so true as all men's; no.
How can it? 0, how can Love's eye be true,
That is so vex'd with watching and with tears?
Ko marvel then, though I mistake my view ; 11
The sun itself sees not till heaven clears.
O cunning Love! with tears thou keep'st me
blind.
Lest eyes well-seeing thy foul faults should find.
Canst thou, O cruel ! say I love thee not.
When I against myself with thee partake?
Do I not think on thee, when I forgot
Am. of myself, all tyrant, for thy sake?
Who hat<.'th thee that I do call my friend? 6
On whom frown'sl thou that I do fawn upon ?
Nay, if thou lour'st on me, do I not spend
Revenge upon myself with present moan?
What merit do I in myself respect.
That is so proud thy service to di>spise, 10
When all my best doth worship thy defect,
Commanded by the motion of thine eyes?
But, love, hate on, for now I know thy mind;
Those that can see thou loveat, and I am blind.
ISO
O, from what power ha»t thou this powerful might
With insufficiency my heart to sway ?
To make me give the lie to my true sight.
And swear that brightness doth not grace the day ?
Whence hast thou this l>ecoming of things ill,
That in the very refuse of thy deeds 6
There is such strength and warrantise of skill,
That, in my mind, thy worst all best exceeds?
Wholanght thee how to make me lore thee more,
The more I hear and see just cause of hate?
0, though I love what others do abhor, 11
With others thou shouldst not abhor my state;
If thy anworthiness raised love in me,
More worthy I to be beloved of thee.
101
Love is too young to know what conscience is ;
Yet who knows not conscience is bom of lovo?
Then, gentle cheater, urge not my amias,
Lesit guilty of my faults thy sweet self proTe;
For, thou betraying me, I do betray •
My nobler part to my gross body's treason ;
My soul doth tell my body that he may
Triumjih in love; flesh stays no farther reason.
But rising at thy name doth p«)int out thee
As his triumphant prize. Proud of this pride.
He is contented thy poor drudge to be, 11
To stand in thy aiTairs, fall by thy side.
No want of conscience hold it that I call
Her 'love' for whose dear love I rise and fall.
In loving thee thou know'st I am forsworn.
But thou art twice forsworn, to me love swearinfp ;
In act thy bed-vow broke, and new faith torn.
In vowing new hate after new love bearing. 4
But why of two oaths' breach do I accuse thee,
When 1 break twenty? I am peijured most;
For all my vows are oaths but to misuse thee.
And all my honest faith in thee is lost;
For I have sworn deep oaths of thy deep kindness.
Oaths of thy love, thy truth, thy constancy ; 10
And. to enlighten thee, gave eyes to blindness.
Or made them swear against the thing they see;
For I have sworn thee fair ; more |ieijured I,
To swear against the truth so foul a lie!
103
Cupid laid by his brand and fell asleep ;
A maid of Dian's this advantage found,
And his love-kindling fire did quickly ateep
In a cold valley-fountain of that ground ;
Which l)orrow'd from this holy fire of Love ff
A dateless, lively heat, still to endure.
And grew a seething bath, which yet men prove
Against strange maladies a sovereign cure.
But at my mistress* eye Love's brand new-fired,
The boy for trial needs would touch my breast ;
1, sick withal, the help of bath desired, 11
And thither hied, a sad distemper'd guest,
• But found no cure; the bath for my help lies
Where Cupid got new fire, my mistress* eyes.
The little Love-god lying once asleep
Laid by his side his heart-inflaming brand.
Whilst many nymphs that vow'd chaste life to
keep
Came tripping by; but In her maiden hand
The fairest votary took up that fire 5
Which many legions of true hearts had warni*d ;
And so the general of hot desire
Was sleeping by a virgin hand disarm'd.
This brand she quenched in a cool well by.
Which from Love's fire took heat perpetaal, !•
Growing a bath and healthful remedy
For men diseased; but I, my mistress' thrall.
Came there for cure, and this by that I prore^
Love's fire heats water, water cools not lorflL
THE PASSIONATE PILGRIM
421
And when thou comest Ihj talo to tell,
Smooth not thy tonfnie with filed talk,
Lest she some subtle practice smell, —
A crippH soon can find a halt ;— 10
But plainly say thou luvcst her well,
And set thy person f<irth to sell.
What though her frowning brows be bent.
Her cloudy looks will calm ere night;
And then Umi late nhe will repent 15
That thus dissembled her delight ;
And twice desire, ere it be day,
That which with scorn she put away.
What though she strive to try her strength.
And l)an and brawl and say thee nay, 20
Her feeble force will yield at length,
When craft hath taught her thus to say :
* Hod women l>een so strong as men.
In faith, you had not had it then.*
And to her will frame all thy ways ; 25
Spare not to spend, and chiefly there
Where thy desert may merit praise.
By ringing in thy lady's ear;
The strongest castle, tower and town.
The golden bullet beats it down. 80
Scnre always with assured trust,
And in thy suit be humble true;
Unless thy lady prove unjust,
Press never thou to cho<»se anew ;
When time shall servo, be thou not slack 85
To proffer, though she put thee back.
The wiles and guiles that women work.
Dissembled with an outward show.
The tricks and toys that in them lurk.
The cock that treads them shall not know. 40
Have you not heard it said full oft,
A woman's nay doth stand for nought?
Think women still to strive with men.
To sin and never for to saint ;
There is no heaven, by holy then, 45
When time with age shall them attaint.
Were kisses all the Joys in bed,
One woman would another wed.
But, soft! enough, — too much, I fear, —
Lest that my mihtress hear my song ; 50
She will not stick to round me on th' ear,
To teach my tongue to be s*) long;
Yet will she blush, here be it said.
To hear her secrets so bewray'd.
530
Live with me, and bo my love.
And we will all the pleasures prove
That hills and valleys, dales and fields.
And all the craggy mountains yields.
There will we sit uiion the rocks, 6
And sec the shcphenls ft>ed their flocks.
By shallow rivers, by whose falls
Melodious birds sing madrlgala.
There will I make thee a bed of hm^mi.
With a thousand fragrant iMsies,
A cap of flowers and a kirtle
Embroider'd all with leaves of myrtle. •
A belt of straw and Ivy buds.
With coral clasps and amber studs ;
And if theae pleasures may thee more,
Then live with me and be my love.
LovR*8 Answer.
If that the world and love were young.
And truth In every shepherd's tongue.
These pretty pleasures might me move
To live with thee and be thy love.
IC
15
20
81
As it fell upon a day
In the merry month of May,
Sitting in a pleasant shade
Which a grove of myrtles made.
Beasts did leap and blnhi did sing, 5
Trees did grow and plants did spring;
Every thing did banish moan,
Save the nightingale alone;
She, poor bird, as all forlorn,
Lean'd her breast u|>-till a thorn, 10
And there sung the dolefull'st ditty.
That to hear it was great pity ;
' Fie, fie, fie,' now would she cry ;
' Tereu, tcreu !' by and by ;
That to hear her so complain, 16
Scarce I could from tears refrain;
For her griefs so lively shown
Made mo think upon mine own.
Ah, thought I, thou mourn'st in rain I
None tak(9 pity on thy pain ; 20
Senseless trees they cannot hear thee;
Ruthless beasts they will not cheer thee;
King Pandion he is d<'ad ;
All thy friends are lapp'd in lead;
All thy fellow birds do sing, 25
Careless of thy sorrowing.
Even so, poor bird, like thee.
None alive will pity me.
Whibt as fickle Fortune smiled.
Thou and I wore lN)th iM^guiled. 80
Every one that flatters thee
Is no friend in mlsiTv.
Words are eajty, like the wind;
Faithful friends are hurd to And;
Every man will be thy friend 85
Whilst thou hast wherewith to spend;
But if store of crowns be scant,
No man will supply thy want.
If that one be prodigal,
Bountiful they will him call, 40
And with such-like flattering,
' Hty but he were a king;'
If he be addict to vice.
Quickly him they will entice;
If to women he be bent, 45
They have at commandment;
But If Fortune once do frr>wn.
Then farewell his great renown;
They that fawn'd on him before
Use his company no more. 51
416
A LOVER'S COMPLAINT
[Line 99-217.
' His qaalitlcs were beauteooB as his form, 99
For malden-tongucd he was, and thereof fk«e;
Yet, if men moved him, was he such a storm
As oft *twixt May and April is to see,
When winds breathe sweet, anruly though they
be.
His rudeness so with his authorized youth
Did livery falseness in a pride of truth. 105
* Well could he ride, and often men would say,
" That horse his mettle from his rider takes;
Proud of subjection, noble by the sway.
What rounds, what bounds, what course, what
stop he makes!"
And controversy hence a question takes, 110
Whether the horse by him became his deed,
Or he bis manage by the well-doing steed.
'But quickly on this side the verdict went;
His real habitude gave life and grace
To appertain iiigs and to ornament, 115
Accomplished in himself, not in his case;
All aids, themselves made fairer by their place,
Came for additions ; yet their purposed trim
Pieced not his grace, but were all graced by him.
'So on the tip of his subduing tongue 120
All kind of arguments and question deep,
All replication prompt and reason strong.
For his advantage still did wake and sleep ;
To make the weeper laugh, the laugher weep,
He had the dialect and different sk ill, 125
Catching all passions in his craft of will ;
' That he did in the general bosom reign
Of young, of old, and sexes both enchanted,
To dwell with him in thoughts, or to remain 129
In persnonal duty, following where he haunted;
Consents liewitchcd, ere he desire, have granted.
And dialogued for him what he would say,
Ask'd their own wills and made their wills obey.
'Many there were that did his picture get, 134
To serve their eyes, and in it put their mind ;
Like fools that in the imagination set
The goodly objects which abroad they find
Of land.s and mansions, theirs in thought assigned ;
And labouring in moe pleasures to bestow them
Than the true gouty landlord which doth owe
them ; 140
'So many have, that never touch'd hLs hand.
Sweetly supposed them mistress of his heart.
My woeful self, that did in freedom stand.
And was my own foe-simple, not in part, 144
What with his art in youth, and youth in art,
Threw my alfections in his charmed power,
Beserved the stalk and gave him all my flower.
'Yet did I not, as some my equals did.
Demand of him, nor l>eing desired yielded;
Finding mysolf in honour so forbid, 150
With safest distance I mine honour shielded;
Experience for me many bulwarks builded
Of proofs new-bleeding, which remaiu'd the foil
Of this false jewel, and his amorous spoiL
'But, ah, who ever shunn'd by precedent
The destined ill she must herself assay?
Or forced examples, 'gainst her own content,
155
To put the by-past perils In her way ?
Counsel may stop awhile what will not stay ;
For when we rage, advice is often seen 160
By blunting us to make our wits more keen.
' Nor gives it satisfaction to our blood.
That we must curb it upon others' proof;
To be forbod the sweets that seem so good, IM
For fear of harms that preach in our behoof.
appetite, from judgement stand aloof!
The one a palate hath that needs will taste.
Though Reason weep, and cry ** It is thy last.**
' For further I could say "This man's untrue,**
And knew the patterns of his foul beguiling ; 170
Heard where his plants in others' orchards grew,
Saw how deceits were gilded in his smiling ;
Knew vows were ever brokers to defiling;
Thought characters and words merely but art.
And bastards of his foul adulterate heart. 175
'And long upon these terms I held my city.
Till thus he 'gan besiege me : '* Gentle maid.
Have of my suffering youth some feeling pity,
And be not of my holy vows afraid ;
That's to ye sworn to none was ever said ; 180
For feasts of love I have been call'd unto,
Till now did ne'er invite, nor never woo.
' " All my offences that abroad you see
Are errors of the blood, none of the mind ;
Love made them not ; with acture they may be.
Where neitlier party is nor true nor kind ; IM
They sought their shame that so their shame did
find;
And so much less of shame in me remains
By how much of me their reproach contains.
' "Among the many that mine eyes have aeen,
Not one whose flame my heart so much as warmed.
Or my affection put to the smallest teen, 192
Or any of my leisures ever charmed ;
Harm have I done to them, but ne'er was banned ;
Kept hearts in liveries, but mine own was free.
And reign'd, commanding In bis monarchy. 19d
' " Look here, what tributes wounded fancies sent
me.
Of paled pearls and rubies red as blood ;
Figuring that they their passions likewise lent me
Of grief and blushes, aptly understood 200
In bloodless white and the encrimson'd mood ;
Effects of terror and dear modesty,
Encamp'd in hearts, but fighting outwardly.
' "And, lo, behold these talents of their hair.
With twisted metal amorously impleach'd, 205
1 have received from many a several fair.
Their kind acceptance weepingly beseecb'd.
With the annexions of fair gems cnrich'd.
And deep-brain'd sonnets that did amplify 209
Each stone's dear nature, worth, and quality.
' " The diamond, why, 'twas beautiful and hard.
Whereto his invised properties did tend ;
The deep-green emerald, in whose fresh regard
Weak sights their sickly radiance do amend;
The heaven-hued sapphire and the opal blend
With objects manifold; each several stone, 216
With wit well blaxon'd, smiled or made some moan.
Line 218-329.]
A LOVER'S COMPLAINT
All
"*Lo, ftll these trophies of affections hot,
Of pensived and subdued desires the tender,
Nature hath charged me that I hoard them not,
But yield them up where I myself miist render,
That is, to you, my origin and ender ; 222
For these, of force, must your oblations be,
Since I their altar, you enpatron me.
* "0, then, advance of yours that phraseless hand,
Whose white wcighM down the airy scale of praise ;
Take all these similes to you r own command, 227
Hallow'd with sighs that burning lungs did raise ;
What me your minister, for you obeys,
Works under you; and to your audit comes
Their distract parcels in combined sums. 231
* " Lo, this device was sent me from a nun,
Or sister sanctified, of holiest note;
Which late her noble suit in court did shun.
Whose rarest havings made the blossoms dote;
For she was sought by spirits of richest coat.
But kept cold distance, and did thence remove.
To spend her living in eternal love. 238
***But, O my sweet, what labour is 't to leave
The thing we have not, mastering what not strives.
Playing the place which did no form receive, 241
Playing patient sports in unconstrained gyves?
She that her fame so to herself contrives,
The scars of battle 'scapeth by the flight, 244
And makes her absence valiant, not her might.
'"O, pardon me, in that my boast is true;
The accident which brought me to her eye
Upon the moment did her force subdue.
And now she would the caged cloister fly ;
Religious love put out Religion's eye; 250
Not to be tempted, would she be immured.
And now, to tempt all, liberty procured.
**' How mighty then you are, 0, hear me tell !
The broken bosoms that to me belong
Have emptied all their fountains in my well.
And mine I pour your ocean all among; 25({
I strong o'er them, and you o'er me being strong,
Must for your victory us all congest.
As compound love to physic your cold breast
'"My parts had power to charm a sacred nun.
Who disciplined, ay, dieted in grace, 261
Believed her eyes when they to assail begun.
All vows and consecrations giving place ;
O most potential love! vow, bond, nor space.
In thee hath neither sting, knot, nor confine, 265
For thou art all, and all things else are thine.
* "When thou impressest, what are precepts worth
Of stale example? When thou wUt Inflame,
How coldly those impediments stand forth
Of wealth, of filial fear, law, kindred, fame!
Love's arms are peace, 'gainst rule, 'gainst sense,
'gainst shame ; 271
And sweetens, in the sufTering pangs it bears,
The aloes of all forces, shocks and fears.
27
'" Now all these hearts that do on mine depend.
Feeling it break, with leading groans they pine;
And supplicant their sighs to you extend, 276
To leave the battery that you make 'gainst mine.
Lending soft audience to my sweet design.
And credent soul to that strong-bonded oath
That shall prefer and undertake my troth." 280
* This said, his watery eyes he did dismount.
Whose sights till then were levell'd on my face ;
Each cheek a river running from a fount 283
With brinish current downward flow'd apace;
O, how the channel to the stream gave grace I
Who glazed with crystal gate the glowing roses
That flame through water which their hue en-
closes.
'O father, what a hell of witchcraft lies
In the small orb of one particular tear I
But with the inundation of the eyes 290
What rocky heart to water will not wear?
What breast so cold that is not warmed here?
O cleft effect: cold modesty, hot wrath.
Both flre from hence and chill extincture hath.
' For, lo, his passion, but an art of craft, 296
Even there resolved my reason into tears;
There my white stole of chastity I dafl^d,
Shook off my sober guards and civil fears ;
Appear to him, as he to me appears, 299
All melting ; though our drops this difference bore.
His poison'd me, and mine did him restore.
' In him a plenitude of subtle matter.
Applied to cauteU, all strange forms receives.
Of burning blushes, or of weeping water, 304
Or swounding paleness; and he takes and leaves.
In cither's aptness, as it best deceives,
To blush at speeches rank, to weep at woes.
Or to turn white and swound at tragic shows;
' That not a heart which in his level came
Could 'scape the hail of his all-hurting aim,
810
Showing fair nature is both kind and tame;
And, veird In them, did win whom he would malm ;
Against the thing he sought he wcaild exclaim;
When he most bum'd in heart-wish'd luxury,
He preach'd pure maid and praised cold chastity.
'Thus merely with the garment of a Grace 816
The naked and concealed fiend he cover'd;
That the unexpcrient gave the tempter place.
Which, like a cherubln, above them hover'd.
Who, young and simple, would not be so lover'd?
Ay me! I fell, and yet do question make 821
What I should do again for such a sake.
' O, that infected moisture of his eye,
O, that false fire which in his cheek so glow'd,
O, that forced thunder from his heart did fly, 32S
O, that sad breath his spongy lungs bestow'd,
O, all that borrowed motion seeming owed.
Would yet again betray the fore>betray'd.
And new pervert a reconciled maid r
THE PASSIONATE PILGRIM
When my love sweara that she is made of truth,
I do believe her, though I know she lies.
That she might think me some untutor'd youth,
Unskilful in the world's false forgeries, 4
Thus vainly thinking that she thinks me young,
Although I know my years be past the best,
I smiling credit her false-speaking tongue,
Outfacing faults in love with love's ill rest.
But wherefore says my love that she is young?
And wherefore say not I that 1 am old? 10
O, love's best habit Is a soothing tongue.
And age, In love, loves not to have years told,
Therefore I'll lie with love, and love with me.
Since that our faults in love thus smother'd be.
Two loves I have, of comfort and despair,
That like two spirits do suggest me still ;
My better angel is a man right fair,
My worser spirit a woman colour'd 111.
To win me soon to hell, my female evil 5
Tempteth my better angel from my side.
And would corrupt my saint to be a devil,
Wooing his purity with her fair pride.
And whether that my angel be tum'd liend,
Suspect I may, yet not directly tell ; 10
For being both to me, both to each friend,
I guess one angel in another's hell;
The truth I shall n(ft know, btit live in doubt.
Till my bad angel fire my good one out.
Did not the heavenly rhetoric of thine eye,
'Gainst whom the world could not hold argument,
Persua<le ray heart to this false poijury?
Vows for thee broke deserve not punishment.
A woman I forswore ; but I will prove, S
Thou being a goddess, I forswore not thee;
My vow was earthly, thou a heavenly love;
Thy grace being gain'd cures all disgrace in me.
My vow was breath, and breath a vapour is;
Then, thou fair sun, that on this earth doth shine.
Exhale this vapour vow ; in thee it is ; 11
If broken, then it is no fault of mine.
If by me broke, what fool is not so wise
To break an oath, to win a paradise?
Sweet Cytherea, sitting by a brook
With young Adonis, lovely, fresh, and green,
Did court the lad with many a lovely look.
Such looks as none could look but beauty's queen.
418
She told him stories to delight his ear, 5
She show'd him favours to allure his eye ;
To win his heart, she touch'd him here and there;
Touches so soft still conquer chastity.
But whether unripe years did want conceit,
Or he refused to take her figured proffer, 10
The tender nibbler would not touch the bait,
But smile and jest at every gentle offer;
Then fell she on her back, fair queen, and
toward;
He rose and ran away ; ah, fool too froward.
If love make me forsworn, how shall I swear to
love?
O never faith could hold, if not to beauty vowed ;
Though to myself forsworn, to thee I'll constant
prove;
Those thoughts, to me like oaks, to thee like osiers
bowed.
Study his bias leaves, and makes his book thine
eyes, 5
Where all those pleasures live that art can com-
prehend.
If knowledge be the mark, to know thee shall
suffice ;
Well learned is that tongue that well can thee
commend ;
All ignorant that soul that sees thee without
wonder ;
Which is to me some praise, that I thy part* ad-
mire ; 10
Thine eye Jove's lightning seems, thy voice hia
dreadful thunder.
Which, not to anger bent, is music and sweet fire.
Celestial as thou art, O do not love that wrong,
To sing heaven's praise with such an earthly
tongue.
O
Scarce had the sun dried up the dewy mom,
And scarce the herd gone to the hedge for ahade.
When Cytherea, all in love forlorn,
A longing tarriance for Adonis made
Under an osier growing by a brook, 5
A brook where Adon used to cool his spleen ;
Hot was the day ; she hotter that did look
For his approach, that often there had been.
Anon he comes, and throws his mantle by, 9
And stood stark naked on the brook's green brim ;
Theisun look'd on the world with glorious eye,
Yet not so wistly as this queen on him.
He, spying hor, bounced in, whereas he stood;
'O Jove,' quoth she, ' why was not I a flood P
THE PASSIONATE PILGRIM
419
Fair is mj love, but not so fair as fickle,
Mild as a dove, but neither true nor trusty,
Brighter than glass and yet, as glass is, brittle,
Softer than wax and yet as iron rusty ;
A lily pale, with damask dye to grace her, 6
None iairer, nor none falser to deface her.
Her lips to mine how often hath she joined.
Between each kiss her oaths of true love swearing !
How many talcs to please me hath she coined,
Dreading my love, the loss thereof still fearing!
Yet in the midst of all her pure protestings.
Her faith, her oaths, her tears, and all were
jestings. 12
She burn'd with love, as straw with fire flameth;
She burn'd out love, as soon as straw out-bumeth ;
She framed the love, and yet she foil'd the framing;
She bade love last, and yet she fell a-turning. 16
Was this a lover, or a lecher whether?
Bad in the best, though excellent in neither.
If music and sweet poetry agree,
As they must needs, the sister and the brother.
Then must the love be great 'twixt thee and me.
Because thou lovest the one and I the other.
Dowland to thee is dear^ whose heavenly touch
Upon the lute doth ravish human sense; 6
Spenser to me, whose deep conceit is such
As passing all conceit ne«is no defence.
Thou lovest to hear the sweet melodious sound
That Phcebus' lute, the queen of music, makes;
And I in deep delight am chiefly drown'd 11
When as himself to singing he betakes.
One god is god of both, as poets feign ;
One knight loves both, and both in thee remain.
Fair was the mom when the fair queen of love,
« * • * *
Paler for sorrow than her milk-white dove,
For Adon's sake, a youngster proud and wild ;
Her stand she takes upon a steep up-hill ; 5
Anon Adonb comes with horn and hounds ;
She, silly queen, with more than love's good will.
Forbade the boy he should not pass those grounds ;
'Once,' quoth she, 'did I see a fair sweet youth
Here in these brakes deep-wounded with a boar,
Deep in the thigh, a spectacle of ruth ! 11
See, in my thigh,' quoth she, 'here was the sore.'
She showed hers ; he saw more wounds than one.
And blushing fled, and left her all alone.
lO
Sweet rose, fair flower, untimely pluck'd, soon
vaded,
Pluck'd in the bud and vaded in the spring !
Bright orient pearl, alack, too timely shaded !
Fair creature, kilVd too soon by death's sharp
sting!
Like a green plum that hangs upon a tree, 5
And falls through wind before the fall should be.
I weep for thee and yet no cause I have;
For why thou left'st me nothing in thy will ;
And yet thou left'st me more than I did crave ;
For why 1 cn^ved nothing of thee atlU ; 10
yes, dear friend, I pardon crare of thee,
Thy discontent thou didst bequeath to me.
11
Venus, with young Adonis sitting by her
Under a myrtle shade, began to woo him ;
She told the youngling how god Mars did try her,
And as he fell to her, so fell she to him.
'Even thus,' quoth she, 'the warlike god em-
braced me,' 6
And then she clipp'd Adonis in her arms ;
' Even thus,' quoth she, 'the warlike god unlaced
me,'
As if the boy should use like loving charms ;
' Even thus,' quoth she, ' he seized on my lips,'
And with her lips on his did act the seizure ; 10
And a^ she fetched breath, away he skips,
And would not take her meaning nor her pleasure.
Ah, that I had my lady at this bay.
To kiss and clip me till I run away I
IS
Crabbed age and youth cannot live together;
Youth is full of pleasance, age is full of care ;
Youth like summer morn, age like winter wea>
ther;
Youth like summer brave, age like winter bare.
Youth is full of sport, ag&'s breath is short ; 6
Youth is nimble, age is lame;
Youth Is hot and bold, age is weak and cold ;
Youth is wild, and age Is tame.
Age, I do abhor thee ; youth, I do adore thee;
O, my love, my love Is young ! 10
Age, 1 do defy thee; O, sweet shepherd, hie thee,
For methinks thou stay'st too long.
13
Beauty is but a vain and doubtful good ;
A shining gloss that vadeth suddenly;
A flower that dies when first it 'gins to bud ;
A brittle glara that's broken presently ;
A doubtful good, a gloss, a glass, a flower, 9
Lost, vaded, broken, dead within an hour.
And as goods lost are seld or never found.
As vaded gloss no rubbing will refresh,
As flowers dead lie wither'd on the ground.
As broken glass no cement can redress, 10
So beauty blemixh'd once's for ever lost,
In spite of physic, painting, pain, and cost
14:
Good-night, good rest. Ah, neither be my sharo ;
She bade go«l night that kept my rest away;
And dalTd me to a cabin hang*d with care.
To descant on* the doubts of my decay.
' Farewell,' quoth she, 'and come again tcMoor-
row;'
Fare well I could not, for I supp'd with sorrow.
Yet at my parting sweetly did she smile.
In scorn or friendship, nill I construe whether;
'T may be, she joy'd to jest at my exile, 9
'T may be, again to make me wander thither;
' Wander,' a word for shadows like myself.
As take the pain, but cannot pluck the pcAt
^H
IffllSVo.
^
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Thu book Bhould be returoed U '
the Library on or bof&re Uie.laat date \
stamped below.
A fine of five oonte n day is incorred .
by retaining it beyond the specUlod
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Please return promptly.
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122
THE PH(ENIX AND TURTLE
He that is thy friend indeed,
He will help thee in thy need ;
If thov sorrow, he will weep;
If thou wake, he cannot sleep;
Thus of every grief in heart
He with thee doth bear a part.
These are certain signs to know
Faithful friend from flattering foe.
66
THE PHCENIX AND TURTLE
Let the bird of loudest lay,
On the sole Arabian tree,
Herald sad and trumpet be.
To whose sound chaste wings obey.
But thou shrieking harbinger,
Foul precurrer of the fiend.
Augur of the fever's end.
To this troop come thou not near !
From this session interdict
Every fowl of tyrant wing.
Save the eagle, feather'd king ;
Keep the obsequy so strict.
Let the priest in surplice white,
That defunctive music can,
Be the death-divining swan.
Lest the requiem lack his right.
10
15
And thou treble-dated crow,
That thy sable gender makest
With the breath thou givcst and takest,
*Mongst our mourners shalt thou go. 20
Here the anthem doth commence :
Love and constancy is dead ;
Phoonix and the turtle fled
In a mutual flame from hence.
So they loved, as love in twain
Had the essence but in one ;
Two distlncts, division none ;
Number there in love was slain.
HeaiDts remote, yet not asunder;
Distance, and no space was soeq
Twlxt the turtle and his queen ;
But in them it were a wonder.
So between them love did shine.
That the turtle saw his right
25
80
Flaming in the phoenix' sight;
Either was the other's mine.
Property was thus appalled.
That the self was not the same ;
Single nature's double name
Neither two nor one was called.
Reason, in itself confounded,
Saw division grow together,
To themselves yet either neither,
Simple were so well compounded ;
That it cried, How true a twain
Seemeth this concordant one !
Love hath reason, reason none,
If what parts can so remain.
Whereupon it made this threne
To the phoenix and the dove,
Co-supremes and stars of love.
As chorus to their tragic scene.
THRENOS.
Beauty, truth, and rarity,
Grace in all simplicity,
Here enclosed in cinders lie.
Death is now the phoenix' nest;
And the turtle's loyal breast
To eternity doth rest.
Leaving no posterity ;
'Twas not their infirmity,
It was married chastity.
Truth may seem, but cannot be
Beauty brag, but 'tis not she ;
Truth and beauty buried be.
To this urn let those repair
That are either true or fair;
For these dead birds sigh a prayer.
60
65
00
THE XVO.
t J
• •
I
L»
420
THE PASSIONATE PILGRIM
Lord, how mine ef es throw gazes to the east I
My heart doth charge the watch; the morning
rise
I>oth cite each moving sense from idle rest.
Not daring trust the office of mine eyes, 4
While Philomela sits and sings, I sit and mark,
And wish her lays were tuned like the lark ;
For she doth welcome daylight with her ditty,
And drives away dark dreaming night ;
The night so paek'd, I poet unto my pretty; 9
Heart bath his hope and eyes their wished sight;
Sorrow changed to solace, and solace mix*d
with sorrow ;
For why, she sigh'd, and bade me come to-
morrow.
Were I with her, the night would poet too soon ;
But now are minutes added to the hours ; 14
To spite me now, each minute seems a moon ;
Yet not for me, shine sun to succour flowers !
Pack night, peep day; good day, of night now
borrow ;
Short, night, to-night, and length thyself to-
morrow.
lO
It was a lording's daughter, the fairest one of
three,
That liked of her master as well as well might be,
Till looking on an Englishman, the fiair'st that
eye could see.
Her fancy fell a-turning.
Long was the combat doubtful that love with love
did fight ; 6
To leave the master loveless, or kill the gallant
knight ;
To put in practice either, alas, it was a spite
Unto the silly damsel !
But one must be refused ; more mickle was the
paiu
That nothing could be used to turn them both to
gain, 10
For of the two the trusty knight waa wounded
with disdain ;
Alas, she could not help it !
Thus art with arms contending was victor of the
day.
Which by a gift of learning did bear the maid
away ;
Then, lullaby, the learned man hath g^t the lady
gay ; 15
For now my song is ended.
ir
On a day, alack the day I
Love, whose month was ever May,
Ppied a blotwom passing fair,
Playing in the wanton air;
Through the velvet leaves the wind 5
All unseen 'gan passage find ;
That the lover, sick to death,
Wished himself the heaven's breath.
*Alr,' quoth he, 'thy cheeks may blow;
Air, would I might triumph so ! 10
But, alas ! my hand bath sworn
Ne'er to pluck thee from thy thorn ;
Vow, alack ! for youth unmeet ;
Youth, so apt to pluck a sweet.
Thou for whom Jove would swear 15
Juno but an Ethiope were ;
And deny himself for Jove,
Turning mortal for thy love.'
18
My flocks feed not.
My ewes breed not,
My rams speed not ;
All is amiss ;
Love's denying, 5
Faith's defying,
Heart's renying
Causer of this.
All my merry Jigs are quite forgot,
All my lady's love is lost, God wot ; 10
Where her faith was firmly fix'd in love,
There a nay is placed without remove.
One silly cross
Wrought all my loss ;
O frowning Fortune, cursed, fickle damol 15
For now I see
Inconstancy
More in women than in men remain.
In black mourn I,
All fears scorn I, 20
Love hath forlorn me,
Living in thrall ;
Heart is bleeding,
All help needing,
O cruel speeding, 15
Fraughted with gall.
My shepherd's pipe can sound no deal;
My wether's bell rings doleful knell;
My curtal dog, that wont to have play'd,
Plays not at all, but seems afraid ; 80
My sighs so deep
Procure to weep.
In howling wise, to see my doleAil plight.
How sighs resound
Through heartless ground, S5
Like a thousand vanquish'dmen in bloody ftghtl
Clear wells spring not,
Sweet birds sing not.
Green plants bring not
Forth their dye; 40
Herds stand weeping.
Flocks all sleeping.
Nymphs back peeping
Fearfully ;
All our pleasure known to us poor swains, 45
All our merry meetings on the plains.
All our evening sport from us is fled.
All our love is lost, for Love is dead.
Farewell, sweet lass,
Thy like ne'er was SO
For a sweet content, the cause of all my moan ;
Poor Corydon
Must live alone ;
Other help for him I see that there is none.
lO
When as thine eye hath chose the dame.
And stall'd the deer that thou shouldst rtrfke,
Let reason rule things worthy blame.
As well as fancy, partial wight;
Take counsel of some wiser head, •
Neither too young nor yet unwed.
TffE PASSIONATE PILGRIM
421
And when thou comest thy tale to tell,
Smooth not thy tongue with filed talk,
Lest she some subtle practice smell, —
A crippH soon can find a halt ;— 10
But plainly say thou lovest her well,
And set thy person forth to sell.
What though her frowning brows be bent,
Her cloudy looks will calm ere night ;
And then too late she will repent 15
That thus dissembled her delight ;
And twice desire, ere it be day,
That which with scorn she put away.
What though she strive to try her strength.
And ban and brawl and say thee nay, 20
Her feeble force will yield at length,
When craft hath taught her thus to say:
* Had women been so strong as men.
In faith, you had not had it then.'
And to her will frame all thy ways ; 25
Spare not to spend, and chiefly there
Where thy desert may merit praise,
By ringing in thy lady's ear ;
The strongest castle, tower and town.
The golden bullet beaU it down. 80
Senre always with assured trust.
And in thy suit be humble true ;
Unless thy lady prove unjust,
Press never thou to choose anew ;
When time shall serve, be thou not slack 85
To proffer, though she put thee back.
The wiles and guiles that women work.
Dissembled with an outward show,
The tricks and toys that in them lurk.
The cock that treads them shall not know. 40
Have you not heard it said full oft,
A woman's nay doth stand for nought?
Think women still to strive with men.
To sin and never for to saint ;
There is no heaven, by holy then, 45
When time with age shall them attaint.
Were kisses all the joys in bed.
One woman would another wed.
But, soft! enough,— too much, I fear, —
Lest that my mistress hear my song ; 00
She will not stick to round me on th* ear.
To teach my tongue to be so long ;
Yet will she blush, here be it said.
To hear her secrets so bewray'd.
SO
Live with me, and be my love.
And we will all the pleasures prove
That hills and valleys, dales and fields.
And all the craggy mountains yields.
There will we sit upon the rocks, 5
And see the shepherds feed their flocks,
By shallow rivers, by whose fails
Melodious birds sing madrigals.
There will I make thee a bed of roses,
With a thousand fhigrant posies,
A cap of flowers and a kirtle
Embroider'd all with leaves of myrtle. •
A belt of straw and ivy buds.
With coral clasps and amber studs;
And if these pleasures may thee move,
Then live with me and be my love.
LOVB'S ANSWBB.
If that the world and love were young,
And truth in every shepherd's tongue.
These pretty pleasures might me move
To live with thee and be thy love.
IC
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20
81
As it fell upon a day
In the merry month of May,
Sitting in a pleasant shade
Which a grove of myrtles made,
Beasts did leap and birds did sing, 5
Trees did grow and plants did spring;
Every thing did banish moan,
Save the nightingale alone;
She, poor bird, as all forlorn,
Lean'd her breast up-till a thorn, 10
And there sung the dolefuU'st ditty.
That to hear it was great pity ;
* Fie, fie, fie,' now would she cry;
*Tereu, tereu !' by and by ;
That to hear her so complain, 15
Scarce I could from tears refndn;
For her griefii so lively shown
Made me think upon mine own.
Ah, thought I, thou mourn'st in vain!
None takes pity on thy pain ; 20
Senseless trees they cannot hear thee;
Ruthless beasts they wUl not cheer thee;
King Pandion he is dead ;
All thy friends are lapp'd in lead;
All thy fellow birds do sing, 25
Careless of thy sorrowing.
Even so, poor bird, like thee.
None alive will pity me.
Whilst as fickle Fortune smiled.
Thou and I were both beguiled. 80
Every one that flatters thee
Is no friend in misery.
Words are easy, like the wind;
Faithful friends are hard to find ;
Every man will be thy friend 85
Whilst thou hast wherewith to spend;
But if store of crowns be scant.
No man will supply thy want.
If that one be prodigal.
Bountiful they will him call, 40
And with such-like flattering,
' Pity but he were a king;'
If he be addict to vice.
Quickly him they will entice;
If to women he be bent, 48
They have at commandment;
But If Fortune once do frown.
Then farewell his great renown;
They that fawn'd on him before
Use his company no mure. 61
122
THE PH(ENIX AND TURTLE
He that is thy friend indeed,
He will help thee In thy need ;
If tho« sorrow, he will weep ;
If thou wake, he cannot sleep;
Thus of erery grief in heart
He with thee doth bear a part.
These are certain signs to know
Falthftal friend from flattering foe.
06
THE PHCENIX AND TURTLE
Let the bird of loudest lay,
On the sole Arabian tree,
Herald sad and trumpet be.
To whose sound chaste wings obey.
But thou shrieking harbinger,
Foul precurrcr of the fiend.
Augur of the fever's end.
To this troop come thou not near I
From this session interdict
Every fowl of tyrant wing,
Save the eagle, feather'd king ;
Keep the obsequy so strlcL
Let the priest in surplice white,
That defunctive music can,
Be the deatb-divining swan,
Lest the requiem lack his right.
10
15
And thou treblo-dated crow.
That thy sable gender makest
With the breath thou givest and takest,
'Mongst our mourners shalt thou go. 20
Here the anthem doth commence :
Love and constancy is desd ;
Phoenix and the turtle fled
In a mutual flame from hence.
8o they loved, as love in twain
Had the essence but in one ;
Two distincts, division none;
Number there in love was slain.
HeaiDts remote, yet not asunder;
Distance, and no space was socq
*Twixt the turtle and his queen ;
But in them it were a wonder.
8o between them love did shine,
That the turtle saw his right
25
80
Flaming in the phoenix' sight;
Either was the other's mine.
Property was thus appalled.
That the self was not the same ;
Single nature's double name
Neither two nor one was called.
Reason, in itself confounded,
Saw divbion grow together.
To themselves yet either neither,
Simple were so well compounded ;
That it cried, How true a twain
Seemeth this concordant one !
Love hath reason, reason none.
If what parts can so remain.
Whereupon it made this threne
To the phoenix and the dove,
Co-supremcs snd stars of love.
As chorus to their tragic scene.
THBENOS.
Beauty, truth, and rarity,
Grace in all simplicity.
Here enclosed in cinders lie.
Death is now the phoenix' nest ;
And the turtle's loyal breast
To eternity doth rest.
Leaving no posterity ;
'Twas not their infirmity,
It was married chastity.
Truth may seem, but cannot be
Beauty brag, but 'tis not she;
Truth and beauty buried be.
To this urn let those repair
That are either true or fair;
For these dead birds sigh a prayer.
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65
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THK XZfO.
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