1H4 I.iii.25 | [Northumberland to King Henry, of Hotspur's report] As is delivered to your majesty |
AW I.iii.112 | [Steward to Countess, of Helena's thoughts] This she delivered in the most bitter touch of sorrow |
AW IV.iii.151 | [Bertram to First Lord, of Parolles' revelations] I con him no thanks for't, in the nature he delivers it [i.e. given the kind of thing he is saying] |
CE II.ii.173 | [Antipholus of Syracuse to Dromio of Syracuse, of Adriana] her very words / Didst thou deliver to me on the mart |
Cor I.i.93 | [First Citizen to Menenius] an't please you, deliver [i.e. out with it] |
Cor II.i.54 | [Menenius to Brutus and Sicinius] I cannot say your worships have delivered the matter well |
H8 II.iii.106 | [Anne to Old Lady, of Queen Katherine] Pray do not deliver / What here you've heard to her |
Ham I.ii.193 | [Horatio to Hamlet, of the ghostly vision] I may deliver ... / This marvel to you |
Ham I.ii.209 | [Horatio to Hamlet, of the sentinels] as they had delivered |
Ham V.ii.380.1 | [Horatio to Ambassadors and Fortinbras] All this can I / Truly deliver |
JC III.i.181 | [Brutus to Antony] we will deliver you the cause / Why I ... / Have thus proceeded |
Mac III.iii.2 | [Second Murderer to Third Murderer, of Macbeth] he delivers / Our offices and what we have to do |
MM IV.ii.122 | [Provost to disguised Duke, reading Angelo's letter] more depends on it than we must yet deliver |
Oth I.iii.90 | [Othello to all] I will a round unvarnished tale deliver / Of my whole course of love |
Oth II.iii.213 | [Montano to Iago] If ... / Thou dost deliver more or less than truth |
Per V.i.160.1 | [Marina to Pericles, of her mother's death] As my good nurse Lychorida hath oft / Delivered weeping |
Per V.iii.63 | [Pericles to Cerimon] Will you deliver / How this dead queen re-lives? |
R2 III.i.39 | [Bolingbroke to York] Take special care my greetings be delivered |
R2 III.ii.92 | [Scroop to King Richard] More health and happiness betide my liege / Than can my care-tuned tongue deliver him |
R2 III.iii.34 | [Bolingbroke to Northumberland, of King Richard] send the breath of parley / Into his ruined ears, and thus deliver |
R2 IV.i.9 | [Bagot to Aumerle] I know your daring tongue / Scorns to unsay what once it hath delivered |
RJ III.v.138 | [Capulet to Lady Capulet, of Juliet] Have you delivered to her our decree? |
Tem II.i.48 | [Sebastian to Antonio, of Adrian] as he most learnedly delivered |
Tem V.i.314.2 | [Prospero to Alonso] I'll deliver all |
TG III.ii.35 | [Proteus to Duke, of getting Silvia to believe slander of Valentine] if his enemy deliver it |
TN V.i.288 | [Feste to Olivia, of Malvolio's letter] Look, then, to be well edified when the fool delivers the madman |
TNK I.i.38 | [Theseus to First Queen] Deliver you for all [i.e. on behalf of all] |
TNK II.i.7 | [Gaoler to Wooer] I would I were really that I am delivered to be |
WT IV.iv.495 | [Florizel to Camillo] This you may know, / And so deliver: I am put to sea |
WT IV.iv.556 | [Camillo to Florizel] What you, as from your father, shall deliver ... I'll write you down |
WT V.ii.26 | [Second Gentleman to all, of the Third Gentleman] he can deliver you more |