Play | Key Line | Modern Text | Original Text |
Hamlet | Ham IV.vii.22 | Too slightly timbered for so loud a wind, | Too slightly timbred for so loud a Winde, |
Henry VI Part 3 | 3H6 II.i.55 | Hew down and fells the hardest-timbered oak. | Hewes downe and fells the hardest-tymber'd Oake. |
Love's Labour's Lost | LLL V.ii.636 | I think Hector was not so clean-timbered. | I thinke Hector was not so cleane timber'd. |
Othello | Oth II.i.48 | His bark is stoutly timbered, and his pilot | His Barke is stoutly Timber'd, and his Pylot |
Troilus and Cressida | TC I.iii.43 | Whose weak untimbered sides but even now | Whose weake vntimber'd sides but euen now |