1H4 I.iii.232 | [Worcester to Hotspur] I'll talk to you / When you are better tempered to attend |
1H4 III.i.220 | [Glendower to Mortimer] Sit, and attend |
3H6 II.i.167 | [Warwick to Richard and Edward] Attend me, lords |
Cor I.ix.4 | [Cominius to Martius] Where great patricians shall attend and shrug |
Cym I.vii.142 | [Innogen to Iachimo] I do condemn mine ears, that have / So long attended thee |
E3 IV.v.10 | [Charles to King John] Our men ... / Look on each other, as they did attend / Each other's words |
H8 I.i.158 | [Buckingham to Norfolk, of Wolsey] Attend: this holy fox ... suggests the King our master / To this last costly treaty |
Ham IV.v.99 | [Claudius to Guards] Attend. Where is my Switzers? |
KJ V.ii.163.2 | [Lewis the Dauphin to and of Cardinal Pandulph and Bastard] We will attend to neither |
LC.3 | [] My spirits t'attend this double voice accorded |
LC.78 | [] too early I attended / A youthful suit it was to gain my grace |
LLL V.i.139 | [Armado to Holofernes] Shall I tell you a thing? Holofernes: We attend |
Luc.1682 | [Lucrece to Collatine] For she that was thy Lucrece, now attend me |
MM III.i.161 | [Isabella to disguised Duke] My stay must be stolen out of other affairs, but I will attend you a while |
MND IV.i.92 | [Puck to Oberon] Fairy king, attend, and mark |
MV V.i.103 | [Portia to Nerissa] The crow doth sing as sweetly as the lark / When neither is attended |
Per I.ii.70 | [Pericles to Helicanus] Attend me then |
Per II.iii.59 | [Simonides to Thaisa] O, attend, my daughter |
R3 III.i.13 | [Richard to Prince Edward, of the latter's uncles] Your grace attended to their sugared words |
RJ I.prologue.13 | [to audience] if you with patient ears attend |
RJ V.iii.77 | [Romeo to himself] What said my man when my betossed soul / Did not attend him as we rode? |
Tem I.ii.454 | [Prospero to Ferdinand] I charge thee / That thou attend me |
Tem I.ii.78.1 | [Prospero to Miranda] Dost thou attend me? |
Tem I.ii.87 | [Prospero to Miranda] Thou attend'st not! |
Tit V.iii.78 | [Marcus to all] if my frosty signs and chaps of age ... / Cannot induce you to attend my words |
Tit V.iii.91 | [Marcus to all] floods of tears will drown my oratory / And break my utt'rance even in the time / When it should move ye to attend me most |
TN I.iv.27 | [Orsino to Viola as Cesario, of his suit to Olivia] She will attend it better in thy youth / Than in a nuncio's of more grave aspect |
Ven.809 | [Adonis to Venus] Mine ears that to your wanton talk attended / Do burn themselves |