2H6 I.ii.23 | [Duchess to Gloucester, of his dream] I'll requite it / With sweet rehearsal of my morning's dream |
3H6 IV.v.23 | [Edward to Stanley] I will requite thy forwardness |
3H6 IV.vi.10 | [King to Lieutenant] I'll well requite thy kindness |
3H6 IV.vii.77 | [Edward to all] I'll requite this kindness |
AW III.v.98 | [Helena to Widow, of Diana] to requite you further, / I will bestow some precepts of this virgin |
AYL I.i.129 | [Oliver to Charles] thy love to me ... I will most kindly requite; |
Cor IV.ii.12.1 | [Volumnia to Brutus and Sicinius] Th'hoarded plague o'th' gods / Requite your love! |
Cor IV.v.73 | [Coriolanus to Aufidius, of his name] the drops of blood / Shed for my thankless country, are requited / But with that surname |
H5 III.vi.48 | [Pistol to Fluellen] I will thee requite |
H8 III.ii.168 | [Wolsey to King Henry] your royal graces ... have been more than could / My studied purposes requite |
Ham I.ii.251 | [Hamlet to Horatio and sentinels] I will requite your loves |
MA II.iii.219 | [Benedick alone, of Beatrice's love] it must be requited |
MA III.i.111 | [Beatrice alone, of Benedick] I will requite thee |
Mac II.iii.36 | [Porter to Macduff, of drink] I requited him for his lie |
MV I.ii.61 | [Portia to Nerissa, of the French lord] if he love me to madness, I shall never requite him |
Per III.ii.73 | [Cerimon reading Pericles' scroll, of whoever buries Thaisa] The gods requite his charity |
R3 I.iv.68 | [Clarence to Keeper] I have done these things ... / For Edward's sake, and see how he requits me! |
TC V.x.38 | [Pandarus alone] traitors and bawds, how earnestly are you set a-work, and how ill requited! |
Tem III.iii.72 | [Ariel to Alonso, Sebastian, and Antonio, of Prospero] Exposed unto the sea, which hath requit it |
Tem V.i.169 | [Prospero to Alonso] I will requite you |
TG III.i.23 | [Duke to Proteus] thine honest care, / Which to requite, command me while I live |
Tim III.iii.20 | [Sempronius to Servant, of Timon] does he think so backwardly of me now / That I'll requite it last? |
Tim IV.iii.525 | [Flavius to Timon] that you had power and wealth / To requite me by making rich yourself |
Tim V.i.71 | [Timon to Poet and Painter, of their proposed service to him] how shall I requite you? |
Tit I.i.240 | [Saturninus to Titus] I ... will with deeds requite thy gentleness |
Tit V.i.12 | [First Goth to Lucius, of Titus] Whose high exploits and honourable deeds / Ingrateful Rome requites with foul contempt |
TN IV.ii.119 | [Malvolio to Feste] I'll requite it in the highest degree |
TNK V.iv.36 | [Gaoler to Palamon and the Knights] The gods requite you all |