3H6 II.vi.100 | [Edward to Warwick] in thy shoulder do I build my seat |
3H6 III.iii.206 | [Warwick to Queen, of Edward] I'll ... force the tyrant from his seat by war |
3H6 III.iii.28 | [Queen to Lewis, of Edward] Usurps the regal title and the seat / Of England's true-anointed lawful King |
3H6 V.vii.13 | [Edward to all, of his path to the throne] Thus have we swept suspicion from our seat |
Cor I.i.134 | [Menenius to Citizens, as the belly addressing the other body parts about the food it receives] I send it ... to th'seat o'th' brain |
H5 I.i.88 | [Canterbury to Ely, of King Henry] his true titles to ... the crown and seat of France |
H5 I.ii.270 | [King Henry to Ambassador] We never valued this poor seat of England |
R2 II.i.41 | [John of Gaunt to York, of England] this seat of Mars [or: home, residence] |
R2 III.ii.119 | [Scroop to King Richard] distaff-women manage rusty bills / Against thy seat |
R3 III.vii.168 | [Richard to Buckingham, of the young prince] Which, mellowed by the stealing hours of time, / Will well become the seat of majesty |
TC I.iii.31 | [Nestor to Agamemnon] With due observance of thy godlike seat |