JUSTICE.-Justice is lame as well as blind, amongst us. So justice, while she winks at crimes, Stumbles on innocence sometimes, BUTLER.-Hudibras, Part I. Canto II. Line 1177. JUVENILE.-A most acute juvenal; voluble and free of grace! SHAKSPERE.-Love's Labour's Lost, Act III. 1. How canst thou part sadness and melancholy, my tender juvenal? 2. By a familiar demonstration of the working, my tough senior. SHAKSPERE.-Love's Labour's Lost, Act I. KEEP.-Who cannot keep his wealth must keep his house. SHAKSPERE. Timon of Athens, Act III. Scene 3. (Timon's Servant.) KEPT.-All these things have I kept from my youth up. From my earliest youth, even up to this present age, I have always, further, paid all submission to the injunctions you have given. RILEY'S Plautus.-Trinummus, Act II. Scene 2. KICK.-When late I attempted your pity to move, Perhaps it was right to dissemble your love, KILL ANONYMOUS.-From a Comedy in Three Acts called "The Panel,” Scene 4; Notes and Queries, 391. Princes were privileg'd To kill, and numbers sanctified the crime. DR. PORTEUS.-Poem on Death. For heaven's sake, when you kill him, hurt him not. KILLING.-Did I not make it appear by my former arguments or was I only amusing myself, and killing time in what I then said? YONGE'S Cicero.-Tusculan Disp. Book V. KIN.-A little more than kin, and less than kind. KINDNESS. (Hamlet, on the king having addressed him as "my Son.") Have I not seen In thy swoln eye the tear of sympathy, DR. ROBERTS.-To a Young Gentleman leaving KING.-A king is more powerful when he is enraged with an inferior man. BUCKLEY'S Homer.-The Iliad, Vol. I. Page 4; The king's name is a tower of strength. SHAKSPERE.-King Richard III. Act V. Scene 3. The sum of all Is, that the king hath won. SHAKSPERE.-King Henry IV. Part II. Act I. Obey him gladly; and let him too know, COWLEY.-The Davideis, Book IV. Line 674; If I could find example Of thousands that had struck anointed kings SHAKSPERE.-Winter's Tale, Act I. Scene 2. KING.-Not all the water in the rough rude sea The deputy elected by the Lord. SHAKSPERE.-King Richard II. Act III. Scene 2. (The King to Aumerle.) Do not fear our person; There's such divinity doth hedge a king, That treason can but peep to what it would, SHAKSPERE. Hamlet, Act IV. Scene 5. What earthly name to interrogatories, Shall tithe or toll in our dominions; SHAKSPERE.-King John, Act III. Scene 1. Whiles he thought to steal the single ten, SHAKSPERE.-King Henry VI. Part III. Act V. I am a sage, and can command the elements- SCOTT.-Quentin Durward, Chap XIII.; see also It is the curse of kings, to be attended By slaves that take their humours for a warrant. SHAKSPERE.-King John, Act IV. Scene 2. (The King to Hubert.) Such is the breath of kings. SHAKSPERE.-King Richard II. Act I. Scene 3. (Bolingbroke to the King.) 198 KING-KINGS OF BRENTFORD. KING.-Now lie I like a king. SHAKSPERE.-King Henry V. Act IV. Scene 1. (Erpingham to the King.) Ay, every inch a king. SHAKSPERE.-King Lear, Act IV. Scene 6. The wisest sovereigns err like private men, Which better had been branded by the hangman. SCOTT.-Kenilworth, Chap. XXXII. Here lies our sovereign lord the king, Who never says a foolish thing, And never does a wise one. ROCHESTER.-On Charles II. (Elegant Extracts.) Kings may be blessed, but Tam was glorious, BURNS.-Tam o' Shanter. God bless the King! God bless the faith's defender! God bless us all!-Is quite another thing. SCOTT.-Redgauntlet, Chap. VIII. (Quoting Dr. A king Of shreds and patches. SHAKSPERE. Hamlet, Act III. Scene 4. (His rebuke to his Mother at the moment the KING LOG.-Loud thunder to it's bottom shook the log, POPE.-The Dunciad, Book I. Line 327. KINGS OF BRENTFORD.-So sit two kings of Brentford on one throne; And so two citizens who take the air, Close pack'd and smiling in a chaise and one. COWPER.-The Sofa, Book I. Line 78. KINGDOM.-For, as yourselves, your empires fall, HABINGTON-Nox nocti indicat scientiam. KINGDOMS.-Kingdoms and nations at his call appear, KISS.-My lady came in like a nolle prosequi, and stopt the Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May. Ere I could Give him that parting kiss, which I had set SHAKSPERE.-Cymbeline, Act I. Scene 4. While now her bending neck she plies Yet wishes you would snatch, not ask the bliss. Once more for Pity; that I may keep the KITTEN. DRYDEN.-Don Sebastian, Act III. Scene 2. I'm glad of 't, with all my heart: I had rather be a kitten and cry mew, I had rather hear a brazen candlestick turn'd, Or a dry wheel grate on the axle-tree; And that would set my teeth nothing on edge, "Tis like the forc'd gait of a shuffling nag. SHAKSPERE.-King Henry IV. Part I. Act III. KNAVE.—Knavery's plain face is never seen till used. (lago after Roderigo leaves him.) |