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Bear. [Animal] Approach thou like the rugged Ruffian bear

A.S. P. C. L.
Macbeth 41 3761144

-They have ty'd me to a stake; I cannot fly, but bearlike I must sight the courfe 16.5 7

-And then our arms, like to a muzzled bear

I am as melancholy as a gib cat, or a lugg'd bear
Call hither to the ftake my two brave bears

Are thefe thy bears, we'll bait these bears to death

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Wert thou a bear, thou wouldst be kill'd by the horse

- if you burt these bear-whelps, then beware: the dam will wake -Churlish as a bear

- One bear will not bite another, and wherefore fhould one baftard -The cub-drawn bear

King John. 2
1 Henry iv.

2

2 Henry vi. 5

385 239 392 255 4432 33 1600 223

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Timon of Athens.36
Ibid. 4 3

8182 3

823153

8461 4

Titus Andronicus. 4 1

Troi. and Cref. 2 859133
Ibid. 5 8890134

Lear. 3946128

-Thou'dit fhun a bear; but, if thy flight lay toward the raging sea, thou'dft meet the bear i' the mouth

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Bear-ward. And manacle the bear-ward in their chains
-Despite the bear-ward that protects the bear
Bear-whelp. Like to a chaos, or an unlick'd bear-whelp
Bear [Conftellation.] The wind-fhak'd furge, with high and monstrous main, feems to
caff water on the burning bear

Othello. 2 11051147
50124

Beard. Doth he not wear a great round beard like a glover's paring knife M.W.of. W.
A little yellow beard, a cain-colour'd beard

-Whofe beard they have finged off with brands of fire - I could not endure a husband with a beard on his face You may light on a husband that hath no beard

Ibid. 1 4 50127

4

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-He that hath a beard is more than a youth, and he that hath no beard is less than a

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- In either your ftraw-colour'd beard, your orange-tawney-beard, your purple-in

grain beard, or your French-crown-coloured beard, your perfect yellow -The green corn hath rotted, ere his youth attain`d a beard

-Good things to your beards

You that did void your rheum on my beard

Ibid. 1 2 1782 34
Ibid. 2 2 1801 4
Ibid. 4 2 192|1| 6

Mereb.of Venice.13 2012 I

- Lord worshipp'd might he be! what a beard haft thou got! thou haft more hair on

thy chin than dobbin my thill horse has on his tail Stroke your chins, and fwear by your beards

- Is his head worth a hat, or his chin worth a beard

Ibid. 2 2 203 2

As You Like It. 1 2225233
Ibid. 3 2 2362 4

➡ Let me stay the growth of his beard, if thou delay me not the knowledge of his chin

Your having in beard is a younger brother's revenue

Ibid. 3 2 2362 7
Ibid. 3 2 2372 60

- His beard grew thin and hungerly, and feem'd to ask him fops as he was drinking

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A. S. P. C.L. All's Well-151 3 303|1|37 Twelfth Night.31 3201 41

You thould be women, and yet your beards forbid me to interpret that you are fo

We might have met them dareful beard to beard, and beat them backward home 16.5 5
Whofe valour plucks dead lions by the beard

White beards have arm'd their thin and hairless scalps, against thy majesty'

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I will sooner have a beard grow in the palm of my hand, than he get one on his cheek

Whofe beard the filver hand of peace hath touch'd

'Tis merry in hall, when beards wag all

Whofe chin is but enrich'd with one appearing hair
What a beard of the general's cut

A black beard will tuin white

Do what thou dar'ft; I beard thee to thy face

- His well proportion'd beard made rough and rugged, like to the tempeft lodg'd

-If e'er again I meet him beard to beard, he is mine, or I am his

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➡ And your beards deserve not so honourable a grave, as to stuff a botcher's cushion, or to be entombed in an afs's pack faddle

- By Jupiter, were I the wearer of Antonius' beard, I would not have 't to-day

By this white beard

Art not afham'd to look upon this beard

'Tis moft ignobly done to pluck me by the beard

Ilid. 21 71224

Antony and Cleopatra. 2 2 774139
Troilus and Cref.4 5 883133
Lear. 2 4 4992 43
Ibid. 3 7 951|2|38
16.4 6 957223
Hamlet. 2100419

And told me, I had white hairs in my beard, ere the black ones were there
His beard was grizzl'd

Old men have grey beards

Com'ft thou to beard me in Denmark

That we can let our beard be fhook with danger, and think it pastime Beardlefs. Shall a beardlefs boy, a cocker'd filken wanton brave our fields

Bearing thence rings, jewels, any thing his rage did like

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Take and give back, afairs, and their dispatch, with fuch a smooth, difcreet, and ftable bearing

Twelfth Night 4

With thy brave bearing I fhould be in love, but that thou art fo faft mine enemy

Scaling his prefent bearing with his past

If there be fuch valour in the bearing, what make we abroad
Women are more valiant, that flay at home, if bearing carry it

2 328 229

2601213

2 Henry vi. 5
Coriolanus. 2 3 718244
Tim. of Atb. 3 5 816229
Ibid. 3 5 816|2|31|

Bearing-cloth. Here's a fight for thee: look thee, a bearing-cloth for a fquire's child

Thy fcarlet robes, as a child's bearing-cloth I'll use to carry thee out

Bearns. They fay bearns are bleffings

Bear'. And yet, in faith, thou hear it thee like a king

Winter's Take. 3 3 347213 of this place

1 Henry vi. 3 547210 All's Well. 3280242

Beaf. Not that, I being a beaft, the would have me; but that the, being a very beaftly
creature, lays claim to me

A very gentle beaft, and of good confcience
The very best at a beaft, my lord, that ever I faw

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1 Henry iv. 5 4 4711 2 Comedy of Errors. 3 2 111155 Mid. Night's Dream. 5 1 1942 1 Ibid. 5 I 1942

2

Love's Lab. Loft.1
Macbeth.

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What beaft was it then, that made you break this enterprize to me
And made a prey for carrion kites and crows, even of the bonny beast he lov'd fo
well

Nature teaches beafts to know their friends

The beat with many heads butts me away

He fhall find the unkindeft beaft more kinder than mankind

2 Henry vi. 5

Coriolanus. 2 1 712110
Ibid 4 1 726124

Tim. of Athens.41 8191 2

What a beaft art thon already, and feeft not thy lofs in transformation

- O, what a beat was I to chide at him

Ibid. 4 3 823160

Romeo and Juliet. 3 2 9842 24

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Beaft. Unfeemly woman, in a seeming man! or ill-befeeming beast in seeming both

Romeo and Juliet.

- A beast, that wants difcourfe of reason, would have mourn'd longer
- Let a beast be lord of beasts, and his crib shall stand at the king's mess

A. S. P. C. L.

3 986135

Hamlet. 21003117
Ibid.s 21038131

Othello.

1104425L

Ibid. 4110681 I 8214

Titus Andron 5 3 855231 Tam.of the Shrew. 4 2 269220

Your daughter and the Moor are now making the bealt with two backs
There's many a beast then in a populous city, and many a civil monster
Beaflieft. So that in the beaftlieft fenfe, you are Pompey the Great Meaf. for Meaf21
Beaf-like. Her life was beast-like, and devoid of pity
Beafly. Fye on her ! fee how beaftly the doth court him
He stabb'd me in mine own house, and that most beastly
Tbou beastly feeder, art fo full of him, that thou provokest thyself to caft him up b1|
-In that beastly fury he has been known to commit outrages, and cherish factions

2 Henry iv. 2

- We have seen nothing: we are beastly; fubtle as the fox, for prey; like warlike as the wolf for what we cat

I

479 1 51 3 479 28

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2 Henry iv.

-Thine eyes and thoughts beat on a crown, the treasure of thy heart
No new device to beat this from his brains

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3 479 2 5 157815x 2 690224

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Tam. of the Shrew. 4 I

— O thou fond many! with what loud applause didst thou beat heaven with bleffing Bolingbroke

— He'll beat Aufidius' head below his knee, and tread upon his neck

- On fair ground I could beat forty of them

Coriolanus.1 3 70714L
Ibid I 721243

Beaten. Since I pluck'd geefe, play'd truant, and whipp'd top, I knew not what 'twas

to be beaten till lately

Let us be beaten if we cannot fight

- Are we not beaten? Is not Angiers loft?

-But in the beaten way of friendship

M. Wives of Wind 5 1

Beating. Still 'tis beating in my mind your reafon for raising this sea storm

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70239
Macbeth. 6385231
King John 3 4 400 131
Hamlet. 21031115
Tempeft.
Ibid. S

2

3255

21 229

Winter's Tale. 4 2 348

Much Ado About Nothing.

121

1 Henry v.4 464748
3 Henry vi
1 603

Richard 53 66626
Hamlet. 21003-52

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Beauty. Grief the canker of

exquifite, because painted

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571

Ibid. 3 3 591'

Richard ii. 2 2 423

Love's Lab. Loft.'s 2 167-7

Hamlet. 2 2 1011 24 Tempest

2 Gent. of Verona.1 2

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- Say that upon the altar of her beauty you facrifice your tears, your fighs, your heart

lives with kindness

Holy-day time of my beauty

2 6132

27247

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- These black masks proclaim an enshield beauty ten times louder than beauty could]
difplayed

-The goodness, that is cheap in beauty, makes beauty brief in goodneis
Since that my beauty cannot please his eye, I'll weep what's left away, and weeping|

die

-First he did praise my beauty, then my speech

Comedy of Errors. 21 10 255
Ibid. 4 2 114225

Exceeds her as much in beauty, as the first of May doth the laft of December

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A.S. P. C. L.

Love's Lab. Loft.2 I

1521 19

Beauty. My beauty, though but mean, needs not the painted flourish of your praise

is bought by judgment of the eye, not utter'd by bafe fale of chapmen's tongues 16.2 I 152 1 21 My continent of beauty

-I may fwear, beauty doth beauty lack

Your beauty, ladies, hath deform'd us

None, but your beauty; 'would that fault were mine

Look on beauty, and you shall see 'tis purchas'd by the weight provoketh thieves fooner than gold

Ibid. 4 1 158 1,25

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As You Like It.1

3

228 230

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238 2,35

Honefty coupled to beauty, is to have honey fauce to fugar
What though you have beauty (as, by my faith, I fee no more in you than without
candle may go dark to bed,) muft you be therefore proud and pitylefs
'Tis beauty truly blent, whose red and white nature's own sweet and cunning hand
laid on

Ibid. 5 240 216

Twelfth Night 1 5 312232
Ibid. 1 5 312238

I will give out diverse schedules of my beauty
I'll have thy beauty scratch'd with briars, and made more homely than thy state

-If lufty love fhould go in quest of beauty, where should he find it
Blanch

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-'s princely majefty is fuch, confounds the tongue, and makes the fenfes rough 1 H. vi.5
that the tyrant oft reclaims, fhall to my flaming wrath be oil and flax
'Tis beauty that doth oft make women proud
Your beauty was the cause of that effect

If I thought that, I tell thee, homicide, these nails should rend that beauty from my
cheeks

→ I did kill king Henry ;-but 'twas thy beauty that provoked me -waining and distresled widow

O beauty, 'till now I never knew thee

The beauty that is borne here in the face, the bearer knows not

- O beauty, where is thy faith

- If beauty have a foul, this is not she

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- For beauty, starv'd with her severity, cuts beauty off from all pofterity Rom. and Jul. 1 Her beauty hangs upon the cheeks of night like a rich jewel in an Æthiop's ear: Beauty too rich for ufe, for earth too dear

- Ofweet Juliet, thy beauty hath made me effeminate

's enfign yet is crimson in thy lips, and in thy cheeks

If Callio do remain, he hath a daily beauty in his life, that makes

Bechance. All happiness bechance to thee

2

Bechanced. That fuch a thing bechanc'd would make me fad
Beck. And that thy beck might from the bidding of the gods command
What a coil's here! ferving of becks, and jutting out of bums
With more offences at my beck than I have thoughts to put them in
Becked. Whofe eyes beck'd forth my wars, and call'd them home
Become. God and his angels guard your facred throne, and make you long

Ibid. 1 5 973237
Ibid. 1982 243
Ibid. 5 3 995 250

me ugly Othello.510741 28
Gent. of Verona. I 24 23
Merch. of Venice.1 1 1972 17
me Ant.and Cleo. 3 9 787210
Tim. of Athens. 2 809 210
Hamlet. 311017252
Ant. and Cleop. 410 794 125
become it
Henry
3 Henry vi. 21
Love's Lab. Loft. 1 2
Rom, and Jul. 4 2
Ant. and Cleop
M. W.of Wind. 4 5

I cannot joy, until I be refolv'd where our valiant father is become
Becomes. Nothing becomes him ill that he would well
Becomed love. And gave him what becomed love I might
Becomings. My becomings kill me, when they do not eye well to you
Bed. There's his chamber, his castle, his standing- bed, and truckle-bed

- Doth not the gentleman deserve as full, as fortunate a bed, as ever Beatrice fhall
couch upon

She knows the heat of a luxurious bed

M. Ado About Noth. 3

- Faintness constraineth me to measure out my length on this cold bed But here an angel in a golden bed lyes all within

-No bed fhall e'er be guilty of my stay

- By heaven, I will ne'er come into your bed until I fee the ring - Go to thy cold bed, and warm thee

3

2 511127 609146 152154 991127 7712 9

68239

J132118

Ibid. 4 137221

Mid. N. Dr.3 2 189119

Merch. of Venice. 2 7 206 257

Ibid. 3 2 212221
Ibid. S1 220 158

Induc. to Tam. of the Shrew. 125127
All's Well. 2 3 288150

-Although before the folemn prieft I have fworn, I will not bed her
I'll to the Tuscan wars, and never bed her

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Bedfellow. Lady, were you her bed-fellow last night

No truly not, altho' until last night I have this twelve-month been her bed-fellow Ib. 4 1 -Nay, the man that was his bed-fellow, that he should for a foreign purfe, fo fell his fovereign's life

Two tender bed-fellows for duft

1 Henry iv. 2
Henry viii.
Ant. and Cleop. 2
Much Ado About Noth. 4 1

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448 2 6 687|2|19| 6779142 138 219 138 220

Henry v.2 2
Richard iü.4 4

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Coriolanus. 2 2

715 153

Ant. and Cleop1 2

768 246

Bed-mate. Nought but heavenly business should rob my bed-mate of my company

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Bed-room. By your fide no bed-room me deny

Bed-award. In heart as merry, as when our nuptial day was done and tapers burnt to bed-ward

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Troil, and Cref

3

863 218

Mid. Night's Dream 3

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Richard iii.

2

630261

Love's Lab. Loft. 21

152232

2 Henry iv.

473

Henry v.

509

- Duke. D. P.

Let's not forget, the noble duke of Bedford late deceas'd, but fee his exequies ful

1 Henry vi

543

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- And such high vaunts of his nobility, did instigate the bedlam brain-fick dutchefs

Ay, Clifford a bedlam and ambitious humour makes him oppofe himself against his king

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- Let's follow the old earl, and get the bedlam to lead him where he would
Be-drench the fresh green lap of fair king Richard's land
Been. For her fake that I have been, for I feel the last fit of my greatnefs
Beer. The honey-bag steal from the humble bees

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Richard ii. 3 3
Henry viii. 31
Mid. Night's Dream. 3 1

687 128

184 236

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Kill me a red-hip'd humble-bee on the top of a thistle, and good monfieur bring me the honey-bag

- 'Tis feldom, when the bee doth leave her comb in the dead carrion

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- When, like the bee, tolling from every flower the virtuous sweets; our pack'd with wax, our mouths with honey, we bring it to the hive; and are murder'd for our pains

- compared to the government of a state

So bees with smoke, are from their hives driven away

Ibid. 4 4 4992 6 Henry v.12 512232 1 Henry vi. 5 5492 6

-The commons like an angry hive of bees, that want their leader, fcatter up and down, and care not who they fting

Some fay, the bee stings; but I fay, it is the bees wax

But for your words they rob the Hybla bees

2 Henry vi. 3 2 588114 Ibid. 4 2 593|2|18 Julius Cafar. 5 1762148

- When that the general is not like the hive, to whom the foreigners shall all repair, what honey is expected

Troi. and Cref. 38622 7 Titus Andronicus.51 850141

- We'll follow where thou lead'st, like stinging bees in hottest summer's day

- Full merrily the humble bee doth sing, 'till he hath loft his honey and his sting

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Beef. What fay you to a piece of beef and mustard
-But I am a great eater of beef, and I believe, that does harm to my wit Tw. Night.
- O my sweet beef, I must still be good angel to thee
Beef-witted. Thou mungrel beef-witted lord
Beer. Here's a pot of good double beer

4 F

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