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Definition
That future strife may be prevented now -King Lear |
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Definition
If it be nothing, I shall not need spectacles -Gloucestor |
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Definition
His knights grow riotous -Goneril |
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Definition
Cart coxcomb cuckoo peace egg -Fool |
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Definition
Thou shoulds't not have been old till thou hast been wise -Fool |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Glass-gazing, superserviceable, finical rogue (bawd) -Kent/Caius |
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Term
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Definition
Basest and poorest shape -Edgar |
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By Juno/Shut up your doors -Kent/Regan |
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Definition
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Contending with the fretful elements -Knight |
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Definition
I am a man more sinned against than sinning -King Lear |
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Definition
Then shall the realm of Albion come to great confusion -The Fool |
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Definition
They took me the use of mine own house -Gloucester |
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Definition
I have ta'en too little care of this (hovel) philosopher (Poor Tom) -King Lear |
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Definition
This is the letter -Edmund |
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Definition
Out vile jelly, where is thy lustre now -Cornwall |
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Definition
I stumbled when I saw -Gloucester |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Thy business that I go about -Cordelia |
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Term
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Definition
Strage oeillades to noble Edmund -Regan |
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Term
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Definition
Trifle with his despair -Edgar |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Thorough tatter'd clothes great vices do appear; robes and furr'd gowns hide all -King Lear |
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Definition
If he return the conqueror; then I am the prisoner; his bed my gael -Goneril/Edgar |
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Definition
Pray now, forget and forgive. I am old and foolish. -King Lear |
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Term
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Definition
Which of them shall I take? -Edmund |
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Definition
Men must endure [...] ripeness is all -Edgar |
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Term
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Definition
Thy great employment will not bear question -Edmund |
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Term
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Definition
Yet Edmund was beloved -Edmund |
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Term
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Definition
Is this the promised end? (Kent) Or image of that horror (Edgar) |
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Term
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Definition
Which of you doth love us most -King Lear |
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Term
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Definition
All friends shall taste the wages of their virtue, and all foes the cup of their deservings -Albany |
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