2H6 III.ii.411 | [Suffolk to Queen] Even as a splitted bark so sunder we |
3H6 V.iv.28 | [Queen to all, of Edward, George, and Richard] All these the enemies to our poor bark |
CE I.i.117 | [Egeon to Duke, of those who had saved him] Had not their bark been very slow of sail [F: backe] |
CE III.ii.158 | [Antipholus of Syracuse to Dromio of Syracuse] If any bark put forth, come to the mart |
CE IV.i.86 | [Dromio of Syracuse to Antipholus of Ephesus] there's a bark of Epidamnum / That stays but till her owner comes aboad |
CE IV.iii.38 | [Dromio of Syracuse to Antipholus of Syracuse] the bark Expedition put forth tonight |
E3 I.i.118 | [King Edward to all] our fleeting bark is under sail |
E3 III.i.90 | [King John to Mariner] Return unto thy bark |
Ham IV.iii.43 | [Claudius to Hamlet] The bark is ready |
JC V.i.67 | [Cassius as if to the elements] blow wind, swell billow, and swim bark! |
KL IV.vi.18 | [disguised Edgar to Gloucester] yon tall anchoring bark |
Mac I.iii.24 | [First Witch to Witches, of a sailor] Though his bark cannot be lost, / Yet it shall be tempest-tossed |
MV II.vi.15 | [Gratiano to Salerio] The scarfed bark puts from her native bay |
Oth II.i.181 | [Othello to Desdemona] let the labouring bark climb hills of seas |
Oth II.i.48 | [Cassio to Montano, of Othello] His bark is stoutly timbered |
Per Chorus.V.22 | [Gower alone] Of heavy Pericles, think this his bark |
R3 III.vii.161 | [Richard to Buckingham, of himself] Being a bark to brook no mighty sea |
R3 IV.iv.234 | [Queen Elizabeth to King Richard, of herself] Like a poor bark of sails and tackling reft |
RJ III.v.131 | [Capulet to Juliet, of her tears] Thou counterfeitest a bark, a sea, a wind |
RJ V.iii.118 | [Romeo as if to the poison] Thou desperate pilot, now at once run on / The dashing rocks thy sea-sick weary bark! |
Sonn.116.7 | [of love] It is the star to every wand'ring bark |
Sonn.80.7 | [] My saucy bark ... / On your broad main doth wilfully appear |
TC I.i.106 | [Troilus alone, of Pandarus] Our doubtful hope, our convoy, and our bark |
TC I.iii.40 | [Nestor to Agamemnon, of a rough sea] behold / The strong-ribbed bark through liquid mountains cut |
TC prologue.12 | [Prologue, of Tenedos] the deep-drawing barks do there disgorge / Their warlike fraughtage |
Tem I.ii.144 | [Prospero to Miranda, of Antonio's agents] In few, they hurried us aboard a bark |
Tim IV.ii.19 | [Third Servant to Flavius] Leaked is our bark |
Tim V.i.48 | [Timon to himself, of gold] 'Tis thou that riggest the bark and ploughest the foam |
Tit I.i.74 | [Titus to all] the bark that hath discharged his freight |
WT III.iii.8 | [Antigonus to Mariner] Look to thy bark |
WT V.ii.65 | [First Gentleman to Third Gentleman, of Antigonus] What became of his bark and his followers? |