ADDENDA TO QUOTATIONS
- above all pain, all passion, and all pride, [ix.] 59.
- all this world were one glorious lie, [v.] 334.
- and doubtless ’mong the grave and good, [vii.] 366.
- as good as a prologue, [viii.] 309.
- calm pleasures, [vii.] 318.
- commanded to shew the knight in love, [i.] 348.
- constrained by mastery, [i.] 151.
- deem not devoid of elegance, [vii.] 317.
- each other’s beams to share, [xi.] 488.
- earth destroys those raptures, [vii.] 318.
- elegant Petruchio, etc., [i.] 344.
- Elysian beauty, [vii.] 320.
- endure having hot molten lead, etc., [vii.] 322.
- first garden ... innocence, [i.] 105.
- for a song, [vii.] 362.
- gentlemen’s gentlemen, [vii.] 211.
- glared round his soul, [vii.] 319.
- grand carnival of this our age, [xi.] 440.
- Hamlet, to leave the part of, [xii.] 383.
- he was hurt and knew it not, [vii.] 354.
- head to the East, [vii.] 342.
- his face ’twixt tears and smiles, [xi.] 480.
- his grace looks cheerfully, [viii.] 183.
- his look made the still air cold, [vii.] 99.
- huge, dumb heap, [viii.] 448.
- interlocutions between Lucius and Caius, [iv.] 276.
- is it to be supposed that it is England, [xi.] 444.
- leave all and follow it, [vii.] 315.
- license of the time, [i.] 235.
- like dew-drops from the lion’s mane, [v.] 267 n.
- like poppies spread, [vii.] 308.
- madness, that fine, [xii.] 340.
- meek mouths ruminant, [iii.] 239.
- mighty dead, [vii.] 365.
- mind reflecting ages past, [iv.] 213.
- mouth with slumbery pout, [viii.] 478.
- No maid could live near such a man, [i.] 305.
- No, thou art not my child, [viii.] 427.
- Not Fate itself could awe, [xi.] 410.
- now of the planetary, [iv.] 230.
- Oh, not from you, [vii.] 339.
- out on the craft, [vii.] 365 n.
- owes no allegiance, [i.] 112.
- paint a sunbeam to the blind, etc., [v.] 237.
- perceive a softness, etc., [xi.] 522.
- picks pears, etc., [ix.] 71.
- play at bowls with the sun and moon, [ix.] 64.
- play with wisdom, [xi.] 551.
- pomp of elder days, [v.] 177.
- prevailing gentle arts, [iii.] 108.
- proper study, etc., [vii.] 312.
- rejoice when good kings bleed, [i.] 191.
- right divine, [iii.] 288.
- roast me these Violantes, [viii.] 156.
- round which with tendrils, etc., [vii.] 310.
- sailing with supreme dominion, [vii.] 339.
- see o’er the stage, etc., [vi.] 273; [xii.] 123.
- spin his brains, [vii.] 319.
- stand all apart, [viii.] 181.
- still, small, etc., [vii.] 336.
- strange that such difference, etc., [xi.] 505.
- sweet passion of love, [viii.] 261.
- there were two upon the housetops, [viii.] 393.
- thin partitions do their bounds, etc., [viii.] 217.
- trees in Sherwood forest, [v.] 143.
- well of English, etc., [vii.] 321.
- what was my pride, etc., [xi.] 455.
- which waste the marrow, [xii.] 427.
- whose body nature was, [vii.] 320.
- winged words, [xii.] 345.
- within our bosoms, etc., [ii.] 395.
- you ask her crime, [vii.] 350.
About one-third of the above are additional occurrences of quotations already indexed.