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ACT V.

Evils of a forced Marriage.

You would have married her most shamefully,
Where there was no proportion held in love.
The truth is, she and I, long since contracted,
Are now so sure, that nothing can dissolve us,
The offence is holy, that she hath committed:
And this deceit loses the name of craft,
Of disobedience, or unduteous title;
Since therein she doth evitate* and shun
A thousand irreligious cursed hours,

Which forced marriage would have brought upon her. *Escape, avoid.

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Anger, 312

Anger, effects of, 316

Antony after his defeat, 102

Antony taking leave of his servants,
103

Antony, his description of Brutus, 62
Antony, his despondency, 103
Antony, his luxury, 99

Antony, his oration over Cæsar's
body, 53.

Antony, his virtues and vices, 100
Apemantus, his appeal to Timon, Sr
Apology of Lord Say, 293
Appeal of the Chief-Justice to Henry
V., 268
Appearances, false, 275
Applause, 318

Ariel's description of managing the
storm, I

Ariel's song, 3, II
Army, a routed, 170

Arthur and Hubert, scene between,

221

Assassin, countenance of, 225

Assignation, 118

Aufidius, contrition of, 98

Authority, a father's, 117
Authority, privilege of, 162

BANISHMENT, 232

Banishment of Belarius described.
167

Beatrice, her awakened love for Be-
nedick, 129

Beatrice, her disdainful manner de-
scribed, 128

Beatrice, her disposition described,
126

Beautiful boy described, 12
Beauty, 157, 188, 215
Beauty petitioning in vain, 19
Bees, commonwealth of, 272
Benedick's disparagement of Bea
trice, 125

Benedick's recantation, 127
Benedick's ridicule of love, 126
Birth, high, 303

Boasters, 131, 214

Bolingbroke coming into London, 240
Braggarts, 130, 141
Brawler described, 195

Brutus and Cassius, quarrel scene
between, 57

Brutus and Cassius, parting of, before

the battle of Philippi, 62

Brutus, his address to the citizens, 52
Buckingham's prayer for Henry
VIII., 313

CESAR'S suspicions of Cassius, 50
Caliban's curses, 2, 4
Caliban's promises, 5
Calumny, 37

Capulet and Montague charged by
the Prince of Verona, 183
Capulet, his anger at Juliet, 199

Capulet, his consent to the suit of Crown, transports of, 293

Customs, new, 312

Paris, 185

Cruelty, 85

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Cheerfulness, 107

Christmas time, reverence of, 26
City, a prosperous, described, 322
Clarence's dream, 303

Cleopatra, her death, comments on
by Cæsar, 105

Cleopatra, her love for Antony, 100
Cleopatra, her speech on applying
the serpent, 105

Cleopatra, her supposed death de-
scribed, 104.

Cleopatra on the Cydnus, 100
Conscience, 311

Conscience, a good, 291
Conscience, a guilty, 8, 292

Conscience, a struggling, 225

Consideraton, 271

Conspiracy, 51

DAGGER Scene in Macbeth, 74
Danger, 246

Danger clings for support, 221
Danger whilst sleeping, Oliver's ex-
posure to, 152

Dawn, approach of, 33, 194
Dawn of morning, 296
Daybreak, 122, 131, 310
Death, apostrophe to, 119
Death, approach of, 230
Death, fear of, 51, 164
Death of King John, 230

Death preferable to separation of
lovers, 292

Death, terrors of, 164
Deceit, 306

Deceit of appearances, 113

Deed, a good, 116

Conspiracy, King John's, with Hu- Defamation, 154

bert, 217

Constance, reproaches of, 217

Defiance of Edgar to Edmund in
King Lear, 70

Constancy, Cressida's professions of, Defiance of King John to the French,

87

Contemplation, 307

Contempt of Cassius for Cæsar, 48
Contention, 257

Cordelia, her emotion at her sisters'
cruelty, 67

Cordelia, King of France's approval
of, 64

Coriolanus, Aufidius' hate of, 91
Coriolanus, Aufidius' jealousy of, 97
Coriolanus, character of, 92
Coriolanus, his contempt for the mob,
94

Coriolanus, his denunciation of Aufi-
dius, 97

Coriolanus, his inflexibility, 96
Coriolanus, his popularity, 92
Coriolanus, his praise by Cominius, 92
Coriolanus, his prayer for his son, 97
Coriolanus, his prowess, 91
Coriolanus, his rekindled love for his
wife, 96

Counsel ineffectual in misfortune, 130
Countenance, a guilty, 290
Courage, 73, 214

Courtesy, ceremonious, insincere, 56
Courtier, a conceited, 157
Courtier, a noble, character of, 138
owardice, 232

Cranmer's prophecy about Queen
Elizabeth, 320

Crown, the, resigned by Richard II.,

239

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Faulconbridge's defiance of the Dau-
phin, 229.
Faulconbridge's disparagement of
the French, 229

Faulconbridge's speech on titles, 212
Favours to be asked at a favourable
time, 95

Ferdinand and Miranda, scene be-
tween, 6

Ferdinand swimming ashore de-
scribed, 4

Fleet sailing, described, 276
Flowers, the dew in, 123
Fool, Jaques' description of, 146
Fool, his liberty of speech, 147
Forgiveness, duty of, 162
Fortune, 262

Fortune-teller, description of, 155

Friar Laurence's narration to the

Prince, 209
Friend forsaken, 81

Friends faithless, 80

Friends, parting of, 110
Friendship, female, 122

Friendship, fickleness of, 94
Friendship in adversity, 79
Friendship in love, 125
Friendship, martial, 95

GENTLEMAN, an accomplished, 17
Ghosts, dangers of following, 31
Ghosts vanish at cock-crow, 26
Glory, 287

Gloster, Duke of, his deformity, 297,

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34

Hamlet, his reflections on Yorick's
skull, 46

Hamlet, his soliloquy on his mother's
marriage, 28

Hamlet, his soliloquy on life and
death, 36

Hatred of Suffolk for his foes, 291
Hector in battle, 89

Henry V., his address at Harfleur,
276

Henry V., his character, 262, 276
Henry V., his defiant message to
the Dauphin, 273

Henry V., his perfections, 272
Henry V., his rebuke to Falstaff,
269

Henry V., his reply to the Constable
of France, 285

Henry V., his reproof by his father,

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