AC III.iv.8 | [Antony to Octavia, of Caesar paying him terms of honour] cold and sickly / He vented them |
AYL II.vii.41 | [Jaques to Duke Senior, of Touchstone's observations] the which he vents / In mangled forms |
Cor I.i.207 | [Martius to Menenius, of the Citizens] They vented their complainings |
Cor III.i.257 | [Menenius to Patrician, of Coriolanus] What his breast forges, that his tongue must vent |
Cym I.iii.4 | [First Lord to Cloten, of the air] there's none abroad so wholesome as that you vent |
Cym V.iii.56 | [Posthumus to Lord, of the victory] Will you rhyme upon't, / And vent it for a mock'ry |
H8 I.ii.23 | [Queen Katherine to Wolsey, of the people] they vent reproaches / Most bitterly on you as putter-on / Of these exactions |
KL I.i.165 | [Kent to Lear] whilst I can vent clamour from my throat |
Tem I.ii.280 | [Prospero to Ariel] thou didst vent thy groans |
TN IV.i.15 | [Feste to Sebastian, of Olivia] Shall I vent to her that thou art coming? |
TN IV.i.9 | [Sebastian to Feste] vent thy folly somewhere else |
TS I.ii.176 | [Hortensio to Gremio] 'tis now no time to vent our love |