1H4 I.iii.223 | [Hotspur to Northumberland and Worcester, of having a starling say ‘Mortimer’ to King Henry] To keep his anger still in motion |
1H4 I.iii.40 | [Hotspur to King Henry, of a nobleman] And still he smiled and talked |
1H4 II.iv.255 | [Prince Hal to Falstaff] you carried your guts away as nimbly ... and roared for mercy, and still run and roared, as ever I heard bull-calf |
1H4 III.ii.43 | [King Henry to Prince Hal] Had I so lavish of my presence been ... / Opinion, that did help me to the crown, / Had still kept loyal to possession |
1H4 III.iii.175 | [Prince Hal to Falstaff] I must still be good angel to thee |
1H4 IV.iii.38 | [Blunt to Hotspur, of not being a rebel] And God defend but still I should stand so |
1H4 V.ii.15 | [Worcester to Vernon] we shall feed like oxen at a stall, / The better cherished still the nearer death |
1H4 V.ii.59 | [Vernon to Hotspur, of Prince Hal] Making you ever better than his praise / By still dispraising praise valued with you [i.e. constantly suggesting that praise itself could not be compared with you] |
1H4 V.ii.6 | [Worcester to Vernon, of King Henry] He will suspect us still, and find a time / To punish this offence in other faults |
1H4 V.ii.84 | [Hotspur to all] If life did ride upon a dial's point, / Still ending at the arrival of an hour |
1H6 I.iii.63 | [Winchester to all, of Gloucester] One that still motions war and never peace |
1H6 II.i.56 | [Pucelle to all] Sleeping or waking must I still prevail |
1H6 II.iv.104 | [Somerset to Richard] thou shalt find us ready for thee still |
1H6 II.iv.130 | [Vernon to Richard, of wearing his rose] In your behalf still will I wear the same |
1H6 IV.i.161 | [King to all] as we hither came in peace, / So let us still continue peace and love |
1H6 IV.i.76 | [Talbot to King] I go, my lord, in heart desiring still / You may behold confusion of your foes |
1H6 V.iv.132 | [Winchester to Charles, of King Henry] Thou shalt be placed as viceroy under him, / And still enjoy thy regal dignity |
2H4 I.ii.24 | [Falstaff to Page, of Prince Henry's face] He may keep it still at a face-royal, for a barber shall never earn sixpence out of it |
2H4 II.i.156 | [Falstaff to Hostess] you'll be a fool still |
2H4 induction.4 | [Rumour] I ... / Making the wind my post-horse, still unfold / The acts commencèd on this ball of earth |
2H4 IV.iii.7 | [Falstaff to Colevile] Colevile shall be still your name |
2H4 IV.iv.104 | [King Henry IV to all] Will Fortune never come with both hands full, / But wet her fair words still in foulest terms? |
2H6 I.i.104 | [Cardinal to Gloucester] For France, 'tis ours; and we will keep it still |
2H6 I.i.222 | [York alone] Pirates may make cheap pennyworths of their pillage ... / Still revelling like lords till all be gone |
2H6 I.ii.47 | [Gloucester to Duchess] wilt thou still be hammering treachery, / To tumble down thy husband and thyself |
2H6 I.iii.44 | [Queen to Suffolk] shall King Henry be a pupil still / Under the surly Gloucester's governance? |
2H6 II.i.85 | [King to all] Let never day nor night unhallowed pass, / But still remember what the Lord hath done |
2H6 III.i.239 | [Suffolk to all, of Gloucester] The King will labour still to save his life |
2H6 IV.iv.22 | [King to Queen] Still lamenting and mourning for Suffolk's death? |
2H6 IV.ix.17 | [King to soldiers] Continue still in this so good a mind |
2H6 IV.ix.28 | [Messenger to King, of York] still proclaimeth, as he comes along, / His arms are only to remove from thee / The Duke of Somerset |
2H6 V.iii.11 | [Richard to York, of Salisbury] still where danger was, still there I met him |
3H6 III.iii.18 | [Lewis to Queen] let thy dauntless mind / Still ride in triumph over all mischance |
3H6 IV.vi.26 | [Warwick to King] Your grace hath still been famed for virtuous |
3H6 V.v.23 | [Richard to Queen] That you might still have worn the petticoat / And ne'er have stolen the breech from Lancaster |
AC I.i.59.1 | [Philo to Demetrius] sometimes, when he is not Antony, / He comes too short of that great property / Which still should go with Antony |
AC II.iii.37 | [Antony alone, of Caesar] His cocks do win the battle still of mine / When it is all to nought |
AC III.ii.60 | [Caesar to Octavia] You shall hear from me still |
AC V.i.75 | [Caesar to all] How calm and gentle I proceeded still / In all my writings |
AW I.iii.198 | [Helena to Countess] in this captious and intenable sieve / I still pour in the waters of my love / And lack not to lose still |
AW II.i.204 | [King to Helena] I, / Thy resolved patient, on thee still rely |
AW IV.iii.21 | [Second Lord to First Lord] in the common course of all treasons we still see them reveal themselves till they attain to their abhorred ends |
AW IV.iv.35 | [Helena to Widow and Diana] All's well that ends well; still the fine's the crown. |
AYL I.ii.10 | [Celia to Rosalind] so thou hadst been still with me |
AYL I.ii.214 | [Duke Frederick to Orlando] The world esteemed thy father honourable, / But I did find him still mine enemy |
AYL I.iii.71 | [Celia to Duke Frederick, of herself and Rosalind] we still have slept together |
AYL I.iii.74 | [Celia to Duke Frederick, of herself and Rosalind] wheresoe'er we went ... / Still we went coupled and inseparable |
AYL II.iv.18 | [Corin to Silvius, of Phebe] That is the way to make her scorn you still |
AYL III.ii.374 | [Rosalind as Ganymede to Orlando] one of the points in the which women still give the lie to their consciences |
AYL III.ii.50 | [Corin to Touchstone] we are still handling our ewes |
CE II.i.11 | [Luciana to Adriana, of men] their business still lies out o'door |
CE II.i.110 | [Adriana to Luciana] the gold bides still / That others touch |
CE IV.iv.154 | [Dromio of Syracuse to Antipholus of Syracuse] I could find in my heart to stay here still, and turn witch |
CE IV.iv.42 | [Antipholus of Ephesus to Dromio of Ephesus] Wilt thou still talk? |
CE V.i.387 | [Antipholus of Syracuse to Antipholus of Ephesus] I see we still did meet each other's man |
CE V.i.67 | [Adriana to Abbess, of Antipholus of Ephesus straying from home] Still did I tell him it was vile and bad |
Cor I.i.98 | [Menenius to First Citizen, of the belly] Still cupboarding the viand |
Cor II.i.238 | [Brutus to Sicinius, of Martius] We must suggest the people in what hatred / He still hath held them |
Cor II.ii.131.2 | [Coriolanus to Menenius, of the senators] I do owe them still / My life and services |
Cor II.iii.182 | [Brutus to Citizens, of Coriolanus] If he should still malignantly remain / Fast foe to th'plebeii, your voices might / Be curses to yourselves? |
Cor II.iii.251 | [Brutus to Citizens, of voting for Coriolanus] Say you ne'er had done't--Harp on that still--but by our putting on |
Cor III.ii.5 | [Coriolanus to Nobles, of his behaviour towards the Citizens] yet will I still / Be thus to them |
Cor III.iii.127 | [Coriolanus to Plebeians] Have the power still / To banish your defenders |
Cor IV.i.28 | [Coriolanus to Volumnia] My hazards still have been your solace |
Cor IV.i.52 | [Coriolanus to all] While I remain above the ground you shall / Hear from me still |
Cor IV.iv.15 | [Coriolanus alone] Friends now fast sworn ... whose meal and exercise / Are still together |
Cor IV.vii.1 | [Aufidius to Lieutenant, of the soldiers] Do they still fly to th'Roman? |
Cor V.i.28 | [Cominius to all] 'twas folly, / For one poor grain or two, to leave unburnt / And still to nose th'offence |
Cor V.iii.155 | [Volumnia to Coriolanus] Think'st thou it honourable for a nobleman / Still to remember wrongs? |
Cor V.iv.57 | [stage direction] Sound still with shouts |
Cor V.vi.73 | [Coriolanus to all] I am returned your soldier ... still subsisting / Under your great command |
Cym I.i.3.1 | [First Gentleman to Second Gentleman] our bloods / No more obey the heavens than our courtiers / Still seem as does the king's |
Cym I.ii.52 | [Innogen to Posthumus] in our trifles / I still win of you |
Cym I.iii.14 | [Second Lord to himself, as if to Cloten, of Cloten's opponent] he fled forward still, toward your face |
Cym I.iv.12 | [Pisanio to Innogen, of Posthumus] he did keep / The deck ... / Still waving |
Cym I.v.35 | [Posthumus to Frenchman] I have been debtor to you for courtesies which I will be ever to pay, and yet pay still |
Cym I.vii.139.1 | [Iachimo to Innogen] I ... will continue fast to your affection, / Still close as sure |
Cym II.iv.181 | [Posthumus alone, of women] even to vice / They are not constant, but are changing still |
Cym IV.iii.41 | [Pisanio alone] The heavens still must work |
Cym IV.iv.29 | [Belarius to Guiderius and Arviragus] to be still hot Summer's tanlings |
E3 I.ii.46 | [King David to Douglas, of the Countess's jewels] Those are her own, still liable to her |
E3 II.ii.86 | [King Edward to himself, of Prince Edward] Still do I see in him delineate / His mother's visage |
E3 III.iii.190 | [Derby to Prince Edward] So may thy temples, with Bellona's hand, / Be still adorned with laurel victory |
E3 III.iv.51 | [King Edward to all, of Prince Edward] if he break out, Nestor's years on earth / Will make him savour still of this exploit |
E3 III.iv.90 | [Prince Edward to King Edward] Yet marble courage still did underprop |
E3 IV.i.22 | [Salisbury to Villiers] I might for ransom ... / Require of thee a hundred thousand francs, / Or else retain and keep thee captive still |
E3 IV.iii.51 | [Charles to Villiers] Stay, and be still in favour with thy lord |
E3 V.i.222 | [Prince Edward to King Edward] grant that many princes more ... / May still be famous for like victories |
E3 V.i.86 | [Copland to the Queen, of King Edward] His name shall keep me in allegiance still |
H5 I.ii.145 | [King Henry to all] the Scot, / Who hath been still a giddy neighbour to us |
H5 III.vii.96 | [Constable to Orleans, of the Dauphin] Doing is activity, and he will still be doing |
H5 IV.i.295 | [King Henry alone] Two chantries where the sad and solemn priests / Sing still for Richard's soul |
H8 I.ii.52.2 | [King Henry to all, of the repeated use of the word 'exaction'] Still exaction! |
H8 II.i.13 | [First Gentleman to Second Gentleman, of Buckingham] to his accusations / He pleaded still not guilty |
H8 II.ii.127 | [Campeius to Wolsey, of Pace] you ... / Kept him a foreign man still [i.e. always abroad] |
H8 II.iii.7 | [Anne to Old Lady, of Queen Katherine] Still growing in a majesty and pomp |
H8 III.i.130 | [Queen Katherine to Wolsey and Campeius] Have I with all my full affections / Still met the King |
H8 III.i.63 | [Campeius to Queen Katherine, of Wolsey] Zeal and obedience he still bore your grace |
H8 III.ii.315 | [Norfolk to Wolsey] in all you writ to Rome ... ‘Ego et Rex meus’ / Was still inscribed |
H8 III.ii.445 | [Wolsey to Cromwell] Still in thy right hand carry gentle peace / To silence envious tongues |
H8 IV.ii.25 | [Griffith to Katherine, of Wolsey] his sickness / Pursued him still |
H8 IV.ii.76 | [Katherine to Patience] be near me still |
H8 V.iv.67 | [Lord Chamberlain to all, of the crowds] They grow still, too |
H8 V.v.17 | [Cranmer to all] This royal infant--heaven still move about her! |
Ham I.i.122 | [Horatio to Barnardo and Marcellus] As harbingers preceding still the fates / And prologue to the omen coming on |
Ham I.ii.104 | [Claudius to Hamlet, of sons mourning dead fathers] who still hath cried, / From the first corse till he that died today, / ‘This must be so’ |
Ham I.v.187 | [Hamlet to Horatio and Marcellus] Let us go in together, / And still your fingers on your lips, I pray |
Ham II.ii.187 | [Polonius to himself, of Hamlet] Still harping on my daughter |
Ham II.ii.42 | [Claudius to Polonius] Thou still hast been the father of good news |
Ham III.i.175 | [Claudius to Polonius, of Hamlet] This something-settled matter in his heart, / Whereon his brains still beating puts him thus / From fashion of himself |
Ham III.ii.222 | [First Player as King to his Queen] Our wills and fates do so contrary run / That our devices still are overthrown |
Ham IV.vii.115 | [Claudius to Laertes] And nothing is at a like goodness still [stays always at the same level of goodness] |
Ham V.ii.41 | [Hamlet to Horatio] As peace should still her wheaten garland wear |
JC V.i.95 | [Cassius to Brutus] the affairs of men rest still incertain |
KJ II.i.27 | [Austria to Arthur, of England] still secure / And confident from foreign purposes |
KJ II.i.522 | [Blanche to King John] That she is bound in honour still to do / What you in wisdom still vouchsafe to say |
KJ II.i.568 | [Bastard alone, of commodity] That broker that still breaks the pate of faith |
KJ V.vii.73 | [Bastard to dead King John] my soul shall wait on thee to heaven,< / As it on earth hath been thy servant still |
KL I.i.158 | [Kent to Lear] let me still remain / The true blank of thine eye |
KL II.iv.101 | [Lear to Gloucester, of Cornwall] Infirmity doth still neglect all office / Whereto our health is bound |
KL III.iv.177 | [Edgar as Poor Tom to all, of Child Roland] His word was still ‘Fie, foh, and fum’ |
KL III.iv.95 | [Edgar as Poor Tom to Lear] Still through the hawthorn blows the cold wind |
KL IV.i.2 | [disguised Edgar alone] better ... known to be contemned, / Than still contemned and flattered |
KL IV.i.65 | [Gloucester to Edgar as Poor Tom] That I am wretched / Makes thee the happier. Heavens deal so still! |
LLL II.i.50 | [Maria to Princess, of Longaville's wit] whose will still wills / It should none spare that come within his power |
LLL III.i.188 | [Berowne alone] A woman, that is like a German clock, / Still a-repairing, ever out of frame |
LLL III.i.84 | [Armado to Mote] The fox, the ape, and the humble-bee / Were still at odds, being but three |
LLL IV.iii.317 | [Berowne to all] For valour, is not Love a Hercules, / Still climbing trees in the Hesperides? |
LLL IV.iii.327 | [Berowne to all] From women's eyes this doctrine I derive: / They sparkle still the right Promethean fire |
LLL IV.iii.37 | [King reading his ode] thou will keep / My tears for glasses and still make me weep |
LLL V.ii.200 | [Berowne to Rosaline] Our duty is so rich, so infinite, / That we may do it still without account |
LLL V.ii.24 | [Rosaline to Katharine] Look what you do, you do it still i'th' dark |
LLL V.ii.28 | [Rosaline to Katharine] past cure is still past care |
LLL V.ii.840 | [Rosaline to Berowne] You shall this twelvemonth term from day to day / Visit the speechless sick, and still converse / With groaning wretches |
Luc.1098 | [] Like an unpractised swimmer plunging still, / With too much labour drowns for want of skill |
Luc.1337 | [of Lucrece] Speed more than speed but dull and slow she deems: / Extremity still urgeth such extremes |
Luc.1658 | [Lucrece, of her mind] that never was inclined / To accessory yieldings, but still pure |
Luc.1749 | [] blood untainted still doth red abide |
Luc.201 | [] True valour still a true respect should have |
Luc.475 | [of Lucrece] she with vehement prayers urgeth still / Under what colour he commits this ill |
Luc.49 | [] O rash false heat, wrapped in repentant cold, / Thy hasty spring still blasts and ne'er grows old |
Luc.611 | [] But happy monarchs still are feared for love |
Luc.727 | [of Lucrece] her subjects ... / Which in her prescience she controlled still |
Luc.752 | [of transgressions committed at night] would they still in darkness be, / To have their unseen sin remain untold |
Luc.d10 | [] [to the Earl of Southampton] to whom I wish long life still lengthened with all happiness |
MA I.i.108 | [Beatrice to Benedick] I wonder that you will still be talking |
MA I.i.125 | [Benedick to Beatrice, of her never loving] God keep your ladyship still in that mind! |
MA II.iii.44 | [Don Pedro to Balthasar] It is the witness still of excellency / To put a strange face on his own perfection |
Mac I.vi.12 | [Duncan to Lady Macbeth] The love that follows us sometime is our trouble, / Which still we thank as love |
Mac I.vi.28.1 | [Lady Macbeth to Duncan] Your servants ever / Have theirs, themselves and what is theirs, in compt, / To make their audit at your highness' pleasure, / Still to return your own |
Mac I.vii.8 | [Macbeth alone] We still have judgement |
Mac II.i.27 | [Banquo to Macbeth, of his intentions] still keep / My bosom franchised and allegiance clear |
Mac II.ii.41 | [Macbeth to Lady Macbeth, of a voice] Still it cried ‘Sleep no more’ to all the house |
Mac II.iv.27.2 | [Ross to Macduff, of the suggestion that Malcolm and Donalbain killed their father] 'Gainst nature still! |
Mac III.i.21 | [Macbeth to Banquo, of Banquo's advice] Which still hath been both grave and prosperous |
Mac IV.iii.24.1 | [Malcolm to Macduff] Though all things foul would wear the brows of grace, / Yet grace must still look so |
Mac V.i.73 | [Doctor to Gentlewoman, of Lady Macbeth] Remove from her the means of all annoyance / And still keep eyes upon her |
Mac V.vi.26 | [Macduff to all, as if to Macbeth] If thou be'st slain, and with no stroke of mine, / My wife and children's ghosts will haunt me still |
Mac V.vi.53 | [Macduff to Macbeth] let the angel whom thou still hast served / Tell thee Macduff was from his mother's womb / Untimely ripped |
MM I.ii.122 | [Claudio to Lucio, of heaven's judgement] still 'tis just. |
MM II.i.271 | [Escalus to Justice] Pardon is still the nurse of second woe |
MM III.i.104 | [Isabella to Claudio, of his freedom in exchange for Angelo's seduction] he would give't thee, from this rank offence, / So to offend him still |
MM III.i.13 | [disguised Duke to Claudio, of death] For him thou labour'st by thy flight to shun, / And yet runn'st toward him still |
MM III.i.22 | [disguised Duke to Claudio] For what thou hast not, still thou striv'st to get |
MM IV.ii.132 | [Provost to disguised Duke, of Barnardine] His friends still wrought reprieves for him |
MM V.i.407 | [Duke to all] Haste still pays haste, and leisure answers leisure, / Like doth quit like, and Measure still for Measure |
MM V.i.468 | [Escalus to Angelo] I am sorry one so learned and so wise / As you, Lord Angelo, have still appeared, / Should slip so grossly |
MND I.i.212 | [Lysander to Helena, of the night] A time that lovers' flights doth still conceal |
MND III.i.146 | [Titania to Bottom] The summer still doth tend upon my state |
MND III.ii.345 | [Oberon to Puck] Still thou mistakest, / Or else committest thy knaveries wilfully |
MND III.ii.413 | [Lysander to himself, of Demetrius] He goes before me, and still dares me on |
MND V.i.193 | [Bottom as Pyramus to Flute as Thisbe] I am thy lover's grace, / And like Limander am I trusty still |
MV I.i.17 | [Solanio to Antonio, of how he would behave if he had ships abroad] I should be still / Plucking the grass to know where sits the wind |
MV I.iii.106 | [Shylock to Antonio, of Antonio's condemnation of him] Still have I borne it with a patient shrug |
MV III.ii.144 | [Bassanio to Portia, of a prize-winner] Hearing applause and universal shout, / Giddy in spirit, still gazing in a doubt / Whether those pearls of praise be his or no |
MV III.ii.74 | [Bassanio to himself] The world is still deceived with ornament |
MV IV.i.265 | [Antonio to Bassanio, of Fortune] it is still her use / To let the wretched man outlive his wealth / To view with hollow eye and wrinkled brow / An age of poverty |
MV V.i.62 | [Lorenzo to Jessica] There's not the smallest orb which thou beholdest / But in his motion like an angel sings, / Still quiring to the young-eyed cherubins |
MW III.iv.19 | [Anne to Fenton] Yet seek my father's love, still seek it |
MW V.v.92 | [Mistress Quickly to fairies, of Falstaff] About him, fairies, sing a scornful rhyme, / And, as you trip, still pinch him to your time |
Oth I.iii.128 | [Othello to all, of Desdemona] Her father loved me, oft invited me, / Still questioned me the story of my life |
Oth I.iii.146 | [Othello to all, of Desdemona listening to his stories] still the house affairs would draw her thence |
Oth II.i.104 | [Iago to Desdemona, of Emilia talking] I find it still when I have list to sleep |
Oth II.i.218 | [Iago to Roderigo, of Othello] will she love him still for prating? |
Oth III.iii.176 | [Othello to Iago] Think'st thou I'd make a life of jealousy, / To follow still the changes of the moon / With fresh suspicions? |
Per Chorus.I.36 | [Gower alone, of Antiochus and his daughter] he made a law, / To keep her still |
Per Chorus.IV.27 | [Gower alone, of Marina] She sung, and made the night-bird mute, / That still records with moan |
Per Chorus.IV.29 | [Gower alone] Still / This Philoten contends in skill / With absolute Marina |
Per III.i.52 | [First Sailor to Pericles, of throwing a dead body overboard] with us at sea it hath been still observed, and we are strong in custom |
Per III.ii.45 | [Second Gentleman to Cerimon] your purse, still open |
Per IV.ii.141 | [Marina to Bawd] If fires be hot, knives sharp, or waters deep, / Untied I still my virgin knot will keep |
PP.18.43 | [] Think women still to strive with men, / To sin and never for to saint |
PP.2.2 | []Two loves I have, of comfort and despair, / That like two spirits do suggest me still |
PP.4.8 | [] Touches so soft still conquer chastity |
PP.7.10 | [] Dreading my love, the loss thereof still fearing! |
R2 I.i.22 | [Mowbray to King Richard] Each day still better other's happiness |
R2 II.i.22 | [York to John of Gaunt, of Italy] Whose manners still our tardy-apish nation / Limps after in base imitation |
R2 II.ii.34 | [Queen Isabel to Bushy] Conceit is still derived / From some forefather grief |
R2 II.iii.49 | [Bolingbroke to Percy] as my fortune ripens with thy love / It shall be still thy true love's recompense |
R2 III.ii.62 | [King Richard to all] heaven still guards the right |
R2 III.iii.166 | [King Richard to all] shall we play the wantons with our woes, / And make some pretty match with shedding tears, / As thus to drop them still upon one place / Till they have fretted us a pair of graves |
R2 V.ii.21 | [York to Duchess of York, of Bolingbroke] Bespake them thus: ‘I thank you, countrymen.’ / And thus still doing, thus he passed along |
R2 V.ii.32 | [York to Duchess of York, of Richard] His face still combating with tears and smiles |
R2 V.v.54 | [Richard alone] my finger, like a dial's point, / Is pointing still in cleansing them from tears |
R3 I.iii.221 | [Queen Margaret to Richard] The worm of conscience still begnaw thy soul! |
R3 I.iii.277 | [Queen Margaret to Buckingham] My charity is outrage, life my shame, / And in that shame still live my sorrow's rage! |
R3 I.iv.37 | [Clarence to Keeper] still the envious flood / Stopped in my soul |
R3 II.i.139 | [Richard to Buckingham, of the Queen's relatives and Clarence's death] they did urge it still unto the King! |
R3 III.i.126 | [Prince Edward to York] My Lord of York will still be cross in talk |
R3 III.ii.52 | [Hastings to Catesby, of the Queen's relatives] they have been still my adversaries |
R3 III.vii.50 | [Buckingham to Richard] Play the maid's part: still answer nay, and take it |
R3 IV.i.84 | [Anne to Queen Elizabeth, of Richard] never yet one hour in his bed / Did I enjoy the golden dew of sleep, / But with his timorous dreams was still awaked |
R3 IV.iii.48 | [Ratcliffe to King Richard] Buckingham, backed with the hardy Welshmen, / Is in the field, and still his power increaseth |
R3 IV.iv.365 | [Queen Elizabeth to King Richard, of the princes' death] Harp on it still shall I till heart-strings break |
R3 V.iii.118 | [Richmond to God] Sleeping and waking, O defend me still! |
RJ I.i.171 | [Romeo to Benvolio] Alas that love, whose view is muffled, still / Should without eyes see pathways to his will! |
RJ I.i.217 | [Benvolio to Romeo, of Rosaline] Then she hath sworn that she will still live chaste? |
RJ II.ii.172 | [Juliet to Romeo, of why she called him back] I shall forget, to have thee still stand there |
RJ II.iii.23 | [Friar Laurence alone] Two such opposed kings encamp them still / In man as well as herbs - grace and rude will |
RJ III.iii.39 | [Romeo to Friar Laurence, of Juliet's lips] Who, even in pure and vestal modesty, / Still blush, as thinking their own kisses sin |
RJ III.v.178 | [Capulet to Lady Capulet, of Juliet] still my care hath been / To have her matched |
RJ III.v.73 | [Lady Capulet to Juliet] much of grief shows still some want of wit |
RJ IV.iii.29 | [Juliet alone, of Friar Laurence] he hath still been tried a holy man |
RJ V.iii.106 | [Romeo to himself, as if to supposedly dead Juliet] I still will stay with thee / And never from this palace of dim night / Depart again |
RJ V.iii.270 | [Prince to Friar Laurence] We still have known thee for a holy man |
Sonn.10.14 | [] Make thee another self, for love of me, / That beauty still may live in thine or thee |
Sonn.105.4 | [] Since all alike my songs and praises be / To one, of one, still such, and ever so |
Sonn.105.6 | [of love] Still constant in a wondrous excellence |
Sonn.119.10 | [] O benefit of ill, now I find true / That better is, by evil still made better |
Sonn.119.4 | [] Still losing when I saw myself to win |
Sonn.126.10 | [of Nature] She may detain, but not still keep her treasure |
Sonn.126.6 | [] Nature ... / As thou goest onwards, still will pluck thee back |
Sonn.134.4 | [] Myself I'll forfeit, so that other mine / Thou wilt restore, to be my comfort still |
Sonn.135.9 | [] The sea all water, yet receives rain still |
Sonn.136.13 | [] Make but my name thy love, and love that still |
Sonn.144.2 | [] Two loves I have of comfort and despair, / Which like two spirits do suggest me still |
Sonn.147.1 | [] My love is as a fever, longing still / For that which longer nurseth the disease |
Sonn.153.6 | [] A dateless lively heat still to endure |
Sonn.16.13 | [] To give away yourself keeps yourself still |
Sonn.41.4 | [] For still temptation follows where thou art |
Sonn.55.10 | [] your praise shall still find room, / Even in the eyes of all posterity |
Sonn.63.14 | [of his friend] His beauty shall in these black lines be seen, / And they shall live, and he in them still green |
Sonn.65.14 | [] in black ink my love may still shine bright |
Sonn.74.4 | [] My life hath in this line some interest, / Which for memorial still with thee shall stay |
Sonn.76.10 | [] And you and love are still my argument |
Sonn.76.14 | [] For as the sun is daily new and old, / So is my love still telling what is told |
Sonn.76.5 | [] Why write I still all one, ever the same |
Sonn.81.13 | [] You still shall live (such virtue hath my pen) |
Sonn.85.6 | []I ... still cry Amen / To every hymn that able spirit affords |
Sonn.9.5 | []The world will be thy widow and still weep / That thou no form of thee hast left behind |
Sonn.93.3 | [] love's face / May still seem love to me, though altered new |
Sonn.98.13 | [] Yet seemed it winter still, and you away |
TC I.i.23 | [Troilus to Pandarus] Still have I tarried |
TC II.ii.145 | [Priam to Paris] You have the honey still |
TC II.ii.192 | [Paris to all] I propend to you / In resolution to keep Helen still |
TC III.i.117 | [Pandarus singing] The shaft confounds, / Not that it wounds, / But tickles still the sore |
TC III.iii.22 | [Calchas to Agamemnon] Oft have you ... Desired my Cressid in right great exchange, / Whom Troy hath still denied |
TC IV.v.195 | [Nestor to Hector] this thy countenance, still locked in steel, / I never saw till now |
TC IV.v.293 | [Troilus to Ulysses] still sweet love is food for fortune's tooth |
TC V.ii.197 | [Thersites alone] Lechery, lechery, still wars and lechery |
TC V.x.28 | [Troilus to all, as if to Diomedes] I'll haunt thee like a wicked conscience still |
Tem IV.i.108 | [Juno to Ferdinand and Miranda] Hourly joys be still upon you! |
Tem V.i.214 | [Alonso to Ferdinand and Miranda] Let grief and sorrow still embrace his heart / That doth not wish you joy |
TG I.i.9 | [Valentine to Proteus] since thou lovest, love still, and thrive therein |
TG II.i.11 | [Valentine to Speed] you'll still be too forward |
TG II.vi.24 | [Proteus alone] love is still most precious in itself |
TG IV.iii.31 | [Silvia to Eglamour, of her flight] To keep me from a most unholy match, / Which heaven and fortune still rewards with plagues |
TG IV.iv.34 | [Launce to his dog] Did not I bid thee still mark me and do as I do? |
TG V.iv.43 | [Proteus to Silvia] 'tis the curse in love, and still approved, / When women cannot love where they're beloved! |
Tim I.i.262 | [First Lord to Apemantus, responding to ‘Time to be honest’] That time serves still |
Tim II.i.11 | [Senator alone, of Timon] No porter at his gate, / But rather one that smiles and still invites / All that pass by |
Tim II.i.3 | [Senator alone, of Timon] Still in motion / Of raging waste? |
Tim III.vi.73 | [Timon as if to the gods] For your own gifts make yourselves praised; but reserve still to give, lest your deities be despised |
Tim IV.ii.41 | [Flavius alone] bounty, that makes gods, does still mar men |
Tim IV.iii.245 | [Apemantus to Timon] Willing misery / Outlives incertain pomp, is crowned before. / The one is filling still, never complete, / The other at high wish |
Tim IV.iii.334 | [Timon to Apemantus] If thou wert the ass, thy dullness would torment thee, and still thou livedst but as a breakfast to the wolf. |
Tim IV.iii.517 | [Flavius to Timon] Suspect still comes where an estate is least |
Tim IV.iii.84 | [Timon to Timandra] Be a whore still |
Tim V.i.120 | [Second Senator to Flavius] At all times alike / Men are not still the same |
Tim V.i.211 | [Flavius to Senators] Trouble him no further; thus you still shall find him |
Tit V.iii.41 | [Saturninus to Titus, of Virginius' daughter] the girl should not survive her shame, / And by her presence still renew his sorrows |
TN II.iii.47 | [Feste singing] What's to come is still unsure |
TN II.iv.116 | [Viola as Cesario to Orsino] Our shows are more than will; for still we prove / Much in our vows, but little in our love |
TN II.iv.29 | [Orsino to Viola as Cesario] Let still the woman take / An elder than herself |
TN II.v.151 | [Malvolio reading the letter supposedly from Olivia] let me see thee a steward still |
TN II.v.169 | [Malvolio reading the letter supposedly from Olivia] in my presence still smile |
TN III.iv.373 | [Viola alone, of Sebastian] he went / Still in this fashion, colour, ornament, / For him I imitate |
TN IV.i.61 | [Sebastian to Olivia] Let fancy still my sense in Lethe steep |
TN IV.ii.56 | [Feste as Sir Topas to Malvolio] remain thou still in darkness |
TN V.i.109.1 | [Orsino to Olivia] Still so cruel? Olivia: Still so constant, lord |
TN V.i.122 | [Orsino to Olivia] Live you the marble-breasted tyrant still |
TNK II.i.99 | [Arcite to Palamon] dead-cold winter must inhabit here still |
TNK IV.iii.87 | [Doctor to Wooer, of the Gaoler's Daughter] Desire to eat with her, carve her, drink to her, and still among intermingle your petition of grace and acceptance into her favour |
TNK V.ii.104.1 | [Doctor to Wooer] You must not from her, / But still preserve her in this way |
TNK V.iii.73 | [Emilia to herself, of Arcite] Upon my right side still I wore thy picture |
TS II.i.298 | [Petruchio to all,of Katherina] 'Tis bargained 'twixt us twain, being alone, / That she shall still be curst in company |
TS III.i.53 | [Bianca to Lucentio as Cambio] I must believe my master, else, I promise you, / I should be arguing still upon that doubt |
TS IV.i.193 | [Petruchio alone, of Katherina] if she chance to nod I'll rail and brawl, / And with the clamour keep her still awake |
TS IV.iii.189 | [Petruchio to Katherina] Look what I speak, or do, or think to do, / You are still crossing it |
TS IV.iv.53 | [Baptista to Tranio as Lucentio] old Gremio is hearkening still |
Ven.1000 | [of a boar] Which knows no pity, but is still severe |
Ven.1106 | [of a boar] Whose downward eye still looketh for a grave |
Ven.480 | [of Venus and Adonis] she, by her good will, / Will never rise, so he will kiss her still |
Ven.507 | [Venus to Adonis, of his lips] as they last, their verdure still endure |
Ven.617 | [of a boar] Whose tushes never sheathed he whetteth still |
Ven.637 | [Venus to Adonis, of a boar] O, let him keep his loathsome cabin still |
WT I.ii.214.1 | [Camillo to Leontes, of Polixenes] You had much ado to make his anchor hold: / When you cast out, it still came home |
WT I.ii.449 | [Polixenes to Camillo] Be pilot to me, and thy places shall / Still neighbour mine |
WT III.ii.210 | [Paulina to Leontes] a barren mountain, and still winter / In storm perpetual |
WT III.iii.121 | [Shepherd to Clown] We are lucky, boy, and to be so still requires nothing but secrecy |
WT III.iii.48 | [Antigonus to the baby Perdita] Which may, if fortune please, both breed thee, pretty, / And still rest thine |
WT IV.iv.136 | [Florizel to Perdita] What you do / Still betters what is done |
WT V.i.8 | [Leontes to Paulina] I ... still think of / The wrong I did myself |