1 So they do nothing, 'tis a venial slip.'
2 Nothing at all, it is a high-wrought flood.
3 Yet we see nothing done, She may be honest yet.
4 Nothing extenuate, Nor set down aught in malice.
5 Quick, quick, fear nothing; I'll be at thy elbow.
6 Let him come when he will; I will deny thee nothing.
7 Ay, and said nothing but what I protest intendment of doing.
8 Yet I persuade myself, to speak the truth Shall nothing wrong him.
9 O gentle lady, do not put me to't, For I am nothing if not critical.
10 To lose't or give't away were such perdition As nothing else could match.
11 What he will do with it Heaven knows, not I, I nothing but to please his fantasy.
12 Marry, patience, Or I shall say you are all in all in spleen, And nothing of a man.
13 I remember a mass of things, but nothing distinctly; a quarrel, but nothing wherefore.
14 I had been happy if the general camp, Pioners and all, had tasted her sweet body, So I had nothing known.
15 Abandon all remorse; On horror's head horrors accumulate; Do deeds to make heaven weep, all earth amaz'd; For nothing canst thou to damnation add Greater than that.
16 The thought whereof Doth, like a poisonous mineral, gnaw my inwards, And nothing can or shall content my soul Till I am even'd with him, wife for wife, Or, failing so, yet that I put the Moor At least into a jealousy so strong That judgement cannot cure.
17 So let the Turk of Cyprus us beguile, We lose it not so long as we can smile; He bears the sentence well, that nothing bears But the free comfort which from thence he hears; But he bears both the sentence and the sorrow That, to pay grief, must of poor patience borrow.
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