Play | Key Line | Modern Text | Original Text |
The Comedy of Errors | CE IV.iv.76 | That since have felt the vigour of his rage. | That since haue felt the vigor of his rage. |
Cymbeline | Cym I.vi.21 | To try the vigour of them, and apply | To try the vigour of them, and apply |
Hamlet | Ham I.v.68 | And with a sudden vigour it doth posset | And with a sodaine vigour it doth posset |
King Edward III | E3 I.i.44 | And, by the fiery vigour of thy words, | And by the fiery vigor of thy words, |
King John | KJ III.i.104 | The grappling vigour and rough frown of war | The grapling vigor, and rough frowne of Warre |
Love's Labour's Lost | LLL IV.iii.293 | And abstinence engenders maladies. | And abstinence ingenders maladies. / And where that you haue vow'd to studie (Lords) / In that each of you haue forsworne his Booke. / Can you still dreame and pore, and thereon looke. / For when would you my Lord, or you, or you, / Haue found the ground of studies excellence, / Without the beauty of a womans face; / From womens eyes this doctrine I deriue, / They are the Ground, the Bookes, the Achadems, / From whence doth spring the true Promethean fire. / Why, vniuersall plodding poysons vp / The nimble spirits in the arteries, / As motion and long during action tyres / The sinnowy vigour of the trauailer. / Now for not looking on a womans face, / You haue in that forsworne the vse of eyes: / And studie too, the causer of your vow. / For where is any Author in the world, / Teaches such beauty as a womans eye: / Learning is but an adiunct to our selfe, / And where we are, our Learning likewise is. / Then when our selues we see in Ladies eyes, / With our selues. / Doe we not likewise see our learning there? |
Measure for Measure | MM II.ii.184 | With all her double vigour, art and nature, | With all her double vigor, Art, and Nature |
Richard II | R2 I.iii.71 | Doth with a twofold vigour lift me up | Doth with a two-fold rigor lift mee vp |
The Tempest | Tem I.ii.486.1 | And have no vigour in them. | And haue no vigour in them. |
Titus Andronicus | Tit IV.ii.107 | The vigour and the picture of my youth. | The vigour, and the picture of my youth: |
Troilus and Cressida | TC II.iii.243 | And give him half; and for thy vigour, | And giue him halfe, and for thy vigour, |
Troilus and Cressida | TC III.iii.172 | High birth, vigour of bone, desert in service, | High birth, vigor of bone, desert in seruice, |
The Two Noble Kinsmen | TNK I.i.195 | Or sentencing for aye their vigour dumb, | Or sentencing for ay their vigour dombe, |