1H6 III.i.19 | [Gloucester to Winchester] Thou art ... / Lascivious, wanton |
3H6 I.iv.74 | [Queen to York, of his sons] The wanton Edward, and the lusty George |
3H6 III.iii.210 | [Warwick to Queen, of Edward] matching more for wanton lust than honour |
Luc.104 | [of Lucrece and Tarquin] Nor could she moralize his wanton sight |
Luc.320 | [] This glove to wanton tricks / is not inured |
Oth I.iii.266 | [Othello to all] light-winged toys / Of feathered Cupid seel with wanton dullness / My speculative and officed instruments |
R3 I.i.17 | [Richard alone] I ... want love's majesty / To strut before a wanton ambling nymph |
R3 III.vii.186 | [Buckingham to Richard, of Elizabeth and King Edward] [a] widow ... / Made prize and purchase of his wanton eye [F; Q lustfull] |
Tem IV.i.95 | [Iris to Ceres, of Venus and Cupid] Here thought they to have done / Some wanton charm upon this man and maid |
TNK V.i.148 | [Emilia praying to Diana] thine ear - ... into whose port / Ne'er entered wanton sound |
Ven.809 | [Adonis to Venus] Mine ears that to your wanton talk attended / Do burn themselves |