This is a table of type quadgram and their frequencies. Use it to search & browse the list to learn more about your study carrel.
quadgram | frequency |
---|---|
so the later tos | 44 |
from the quarto of | 23 |
history of doctor faustus | 20 |
the history of doctor | 15 |
the history of dr | 15 |
in the later tos | 13 |
as if he had | 13 |
he had love in | 12 |
had love in his | 12 |
if he had love | 12 |
cursed be he that | 10 |
the seven deadly sins | 10 |
life and death of | 10 |
the life and death | 10 |
part of tamburlaine the | 9 |
good angel and evil | 9 |
enter good angel and | 9 |
angel and evil angel | 9 |
of tamburlaine the great | 9 |
at the end of | 8 |
and death of doctor | 8 |
andrews clark memorial library | 8 |
death of doctor faustus | 8 |
william andrews clark memorial | 8 |
in the beginning was | 8 |
the sign of the | 8 |
the beginning was the | 8 |
not into the water | 8 |
of the later tos | 8 |
the duke of vanholt | 8 |
not in the later | 7 |
there was a king | 7 |
a deed of gift | 7 |
a bottle of hay | 7 |
so two of the | 6 |
to attend on me | 6 |
what shall i do | 6 |
some part of holy | 6 |
songs from the operas | 6 |
but what is this | 6 |
i can tell you | 6 |
enter faustus and mephistophilis | 6 |
what hast thou done | 6 |
good and bad angel | 6 |
alexander and his paramour | 6 |
what art thou the | 6 |
two of the later | 6 |
i know not what | 6 |
of the history of | 6 |
take some part of | 6 |
love in his bosom | 6 |
chary as my life | 6 |
as chary as my | 6 |
in the history of | 6 |
and take some part | 6 |
love in his body | 6 |
the joys of heaven | 5 |
keep as chary as | 5 |
four and twenty years | 5 |
the first part of | 5 |
faustus gives to thee | 5 |
in manner of a | 5 |
the spirit of the | 5 |
tear thee in pieces | 5 |
from the operas contains | 5 |
will i keep as | 5 |
portraits are given of | 5 |
ride him not into | 5 |
for love of thee | 5 |
faustus discovered in his | 5 |
i keep as chary | 5 |
discovered in his study | 5 |
the prefatory matter pages | 5 |
this will i keep | 5 |
first part of tamburlaine | 5 |
the music covers pages | 5 |
the secrets of astronomy | 5 |
gives to thee his | 5 |
at the feet of | 5 |
by the strength of | 5 |
to thee his soul | 5 |
both body and soul | 5 |
him not into the | 5 |
the pope and manner | 4 |
a blow on the | 4 |
soul to the devil | 4 |
impose some end to | 4 |
what is this inscription | 4 |
up and down the | 4 |
bowels of these elements | 4 |
vomit forth into the | 4 |
when i behold the | 4 |
second part of tamburlaine | 4 |
the world admires for | 4 |
to know the secrets | 4 |
a chariot burning bright | 4 |
the operas contains twenty | 4 |
half the hour is | 4 |
of the joys of | 4 |
the third and fourth | 4 |
and manner of his | 4 |
then thou must be | 4 |
in a chariot burning | 4 |
the said john faustus | 4 |
upon the poles of | 4 |
i made to lucifer | 4 |
forth into the air | 4 |
peerless dame of greece | 4 |
i think my master | 4 |
for the last time | 4 |
some end to my | 4 |
let me have a | 4 |
dream once came to | 4 |
pope and manner of | 4 |
all be past anon | 4 |
he now is gone | 4 |
and what noise soever | 4 |
once came to me | 4 |
a room in the | 4 |
in his preface to | 4 |
to the history of | 4 |
the tragical history of | 4 |
world admires for majesty | 4 |
is not in the | 4 |
within the bowels of | 4 |
it seems to me | 4 |
to my incessant pain | 4 |
what i can do | 4 |
cardinals of france and | 4 |
he would not have | 4 |
that peerless dame of | 4 |
the poles of the | 4 |
me such a question | 4 |
know the secrets of | 4 |
of france and padua | 4 |
in the book of | 4 |
the prince of parma | 4 |
spirits when i please | 4 |
the door of the | 4 |
the second part of | 4 |
there sits my mother | 4 |
if it like your | 4 |
at the hard heels | 4 |
and what are you | 4 |
end to my incessant | 4 |
to see the pope | 4 |
the end of the | 4 |
in that famous art | 4 |
me have a wife | 4 |
you shall hear how | 4 |
the first day of | 4 |
whom all the world | 4 |
the duke of anholt | 4 |
lead me to her | 4 |
limbs may issue from | 4 |
in the midst of | 4 |
the pope crosses himself | 4 |
manner of his court | 4 |
in the corresponding passage | 4 |
now is gone to | 4 |
he knows not the | 4 |
according to the history | 4 |
the bowels of these | 4 |
drink of all waters | 4 |
tragical history of doctor | 4 |
my limbs may issue | 4 |
in the shapes of | 4 |
a shoulder of mutton | 4 |
the augustan reprint society | 4 |
the hour is past | 4 |
in hell for ever | 4 |
enter an old man | 4 |
this day is highly | 4 |
see the pope and | 4 |
i see it plain | 4 |
ask me such a | 4 |
all the world admires | 4 |
scarce can i name | 3 |
levy soldiers with the | 3 |
vile and ignominious servitude | 3 |
of which a sumptuous | 3 |
and write a deed | 3 |
long as i live | 3 |
but a ceremonial toy | 3 |
that at some certain | 3 |
the town in four | 3 |
the house of faustus | 3 |
i feel thy words | 3 |
upon me whilst i | 3 |
some certain day great | 3 |
in one of which | 3 |
a sumptuous temple stands | 3 |
i am a spirit | 3 |
i swear by hell | 3 |
hast thou but one | 3 |
made into a farce | 3 |
swift rhine circle fair | 3 |
and give thee more | 3 |
sum miser tunc dicturus | 3 |
the year is divided | 3 |
of hay for his | 3 |
their usual inconsistency of | 3 |
in the black art | 3 |
shall find it more | 3 |
did not faustus tell | 3 |
aid me in this | 3 |
as jove is in | 3 |
better than an ell | 3 |
i cannot touch his | 3 |
of alexander and his | 3 |
wait upon me whilst | 3 |
never raze thy skin | 3 |
on faustus whilst he | 3 |
art too ugly to | 3 |
those that faustus most | 3 |
do to obtain his | 3 |
of that thou wilt | 3 |
sold at his shop | 3 |
and then be thou | 3 |
i out of it | 3 |
horns on his head | 3 |
me what i please | 3 |
born of some infernal | 3 |
usual inconsistency of spelling | 3 |
neither father nor mother | 3 |
be but a year | 3 |
i not bound thee | 3 |
of my blood portend | 3 |
hell a thousand years | 3 |
should write this bill | 3 |
famous art wherein all | 3 |
the shapes of alexander | 3 |
then be thou as | 3 |
ransack the ocean for | 3 |
day of his creation | 3 |
manner of a deed | 3 |
of some infernal hag | 3 |
too ugly to attend | 3 |
the depth of that | 3 |
to appear to me | 3 |
me from the heavy | 3 |
chase the prince of | 3 |
talk not of paradise | 3 |
of the life and | 3 |
me whatsoever i demand | 3 |
i am lean with | 3 |
now the one form | 3 |
dish was sent me | 3 |
the clock strikes eleven | 3 |
i am content to | 3 |
words to comfort my | 3 |
meal tear thy flesh | 3 |
thou as great as | 3 |
i can write no | 3 |
live in all voluptuousness | 3 |
to the devil for | 3 |
and rhyme of the | 3 |
yet shall not faustus | 3 |
morning to thy bed | 3 |
astronomy graven in the | 3 |
and they shall never | 3 |
come to tell thee | 3 |
give me whatsoever i | 3 |
claim it as his | 3 |
give now the one | 3 |
and we will highly | 3 |
me from thy lucifer | 3 |
of parma from our | 3 |
begin to sound the | 3 |
image of the godhead | 3 |
lucifer may claim it | 3 |
thee fire to dissolve | 3 |
according to the vo | 3 |
are those that faustus | 3 |
buy my service with | 3 |
us of this before | 3 |
in hell a thousand | 3 |
i glutted with conceit | 3 |
me whilst i live | 3 |
found in writers posterior | 3 |
ask what thou wilt | 3 |
in the early morning | 3 |
effect all promises between | 3 |
not speak another word | 3 |
wait on faustus whilst | 3 |
devil for a shoulder | 3 |
glad tidings from great | 3 |
and change thy shape | 3 |
of your local dealer | 3 |
satan conduit le bal | 3 |
that time may cease | 3 |
what shall we do | 3 |
what dost thou here | 3 |
thee wait upon me | 3 |
earth as jove is | 3 |
can i name salvation | 3 |
a load of hay | 3 |
to some solitary grove | 3 |
that faustus most desires | 3 |
memorial library university of | 3 |
vild and sometimes vile | 3 |
eternal death by desperate | 3 |
than an ell of | 3 |
every morning to thy | 3 |
will be thy slave | 3 |
the date is expired | 3 |
eternal joy and felicity | 3 |
and save his soul | 3 |
to effect all promises | 3 |
in all my life | 3 |
belike the feast is | 3 |
streams in the firmament | 3 |
when all is done | 3 |
seated in a chariot | 3 |
haste thee to some | 3 |
is occasionally found in | 3 |
body with i will | 3 |
his shop without newgate | 3 |
attempt against the conjurer | 3 |
it as his own | 3 |
if the grave is | 3 |
the devil for a | 3 |
ugly to attend on | 3 |
library university of california | 3 |
the fiery keel at | 3 |
a moi les plaisirs | 3 |
that famous art wherein | 3 |
repeatedly afterwards in this | 3 |
will highly gratify thee | 3 |
the blood begins to | 3 |
verses to king james | 3 |
ocean for orient pearl | 3 |
first arrive at rome | 3 |
and are to be | 3 |
me all his goods | 3 |
let this hour be | 3 |
that sight will be | 3 |
tell us of this | 3 |
thee to tell me | 3 |
or let this hour | 3 |
be he that struck | 3 |
letter of my name | 3 |
make swift rhine circle | 3 |
exeunt devils with faustus | 3 |
from the later tos | 3 |
and bind thy soul | 3 |
in the earlier play | 3 |
then haste thee to | 3 |
hide me from the | 3 |
to delight his mind | 3 |
the staying of my | 3 |
cull thee out the | 3 |
i make spirits fetch | 3 |
are come to fetch | 3 |
great lucifer may claim | 3 |
i charge thee wait | 3 |
et satan conduit le | 3 |
i had neither father | 3 |
how dost thou like | 3 |
and at last be | 3 |
blood begins to clear | 3 |
me to my dearest | 3 |
afterwards in this play | 3 |
be sold at his | 3 |
what do i see | 3 |
my heart is sore | 3 |
more than thou hast | 3 |
and now the other | 3 |
thou art a spirit | 3 |
and the first letter | 3 |
begins to clear again | 3 |
but faustus never shall | 3 |
with the coin they | 3 |
am i out of | 3 |
the feet of the | 3 |
faustus whilst he lives | 3 |
genius of the age | 3 |
whatsoever i shall ask | 3 |
we sometimes find vild | 3 |
from the heavy wrath | 3 |
twinkling of an eye | 3 |
walk up and down | 3 |
is this inscription on | 3 |
at some certain day | 3 |
is divided into two | 3 |
it will not harbour | 3 |
not bound thee to | 3 |
find vild and sometimes | 3 |
spirits in the shapes | 3 |
first day of his | 3 |
be thou as great | 3 |
as great as lucifer | 3 |
the way he cut | 3 |
sometimes find vild and | 3 |
bring glad tidings from | 3 |
wall all germany with | 3 |
quarter the town in | 3 |
what will you do | 3 |
depth of that thou | 3 |
with delight the stately | 3 |
as long as i | 3 |
the feast is ended | 3 |
lie in wait for | 3 |
occurs repeatedly afterwards in | 3 |
as long as he | 3 |
tell me whatsoever i | 3 |
mihi dii acherontis propitii | 3 |
where we sometimes find | 3 |
he shall not leave | 3 |
mouth when i was | 3 |
bound thee to tell | 3 |
but tell me now | 3 |
where mars did mate | 3 |
he hath given to | 3 |
i behold the heavens | 3 |
in the contrary circle | 3 |
shall never raze thy | 3 |
it in manner of | 3 |
faustus live in hell | 3 |
deed of gift with | 3 |
mars did mate the | 3 |
my peace is gone | 3 |
can write no more | 3 |
i shall wait on | 3 |
clark memorial library university | 3 |
not faustus tell us | 3 |
never shall find it | 3 |
that thou perform all | 3 |
for the first time | 3 |
why did not faustus | 3 |
hour be but a | 3 |
turn to god again | 3 |
the like of thee | 3 |
give thee more than | 3 |
my master is within | 3 |
of the principal airs | 3 |
me whatsoever i shall | 3 |
to vile and ignominious | 3 |
by desperate thoughts against | 3 |
and fall on me | 3 |
with their usual inconsistency | 3 |
cannot touch his soul | 3 |
the space of a | 3 |
all germany with brass | 3 |
of my name begins | 3 |
will send for thee | 3 |
charge thee wait upon | 3 |
the tragicall history of | 3 |
his body with i | 3 |
shall i do to | 3 |
tell me any thing | 3 |
and gaze not on | 3 |
the stately town of | 3 |
i should write this | 3 |
enter the duke of | 3 |
might i see hell | 3 |
in any of the | 3 |
is within at dinner | 3 |
just through the midst | 3 |
for a shoulder of | 3 |
mutton better than an | 3 |
give me my soul | 3 |
given to me all | 3 |
lest it tempt thy | 3 |
of raw mutton better | 3 |
i may notice that | 3 |
to obtain his soul | 3 |
i charge thee to | 3 |
that faustus may repent | 3 |
my master means to | 3 |
us at the hard | 3 |
to my dearest friends | 3 |
from east to west | 3 |
so all the old | 3 |
conference with the emperor | 3 |
feel thy words to | 3 |
at his shop without | 3 |
fetch thee fire to | 3 |
i beg of thee | 3 |
quid sum miser tunc | 3 |
inch of raw mutton | 3 |
faustus never shall repent | 3 |
were i a little | 3 |
tidings from great lucifer | 3 |
and bring glad tidings | 3 |
thee out the fairest | 3 |
boy follows us at | 3 |
order of your local | 3 |
raw mutton better than | 3 |
divided into two circles | 3 |
live in hell a | 3 |
write a deed of | 3 |
and then thou must | 3 |
commend me to my | 3 |
gaze not on it | 3 |
fetch me what i | 3 |
first letter of my | 3 |
that made the world | 3 |
to be sold at | 3 |
make spirits fetch me | 3 |
these are those that | 3 |
certain day great lucifer | 3 |
fire to dissolve it | 3 |
is in the sky | 3 |
and hide me from | 3 |
it like your grace | 3 |
how am i glutted | 3 |
i have made the | 3 |
secrets of astronomy graven | 3 |
we will highly gratify | 3 |
this hour be but | 3 |
and some of his | 3 |
it seems as if | 3 |
i never shall find | 3 |
he conducts the ball | 3 |
thee to some solitary | 3 |
follows us at the | 3 |
be thou on earth | 3 |
enter robin and ralph | 3 |
spirits fetch me what | 3 |
shall i make spirits | 3 |
when i was scarce | 3 |
give me thy hand | 3 |
gone to prove cosmography | 3 |
i was going to | 3 |
in the original metres | 3 |
seems to me as | 3 |
tell thee thou dost | 3 |
marriage is but a | 3 |
his eyes with tears | 3 |
as i was going | 3 |
the grave is there | 3 |
nothing can rescue me | 3 |
soldiers with the coin | 3 |
a gammon of bacon | 3 |
and chase the prince | 3 |
am lean with seeing | 3 |
sound the depth of | 3 |
who made the world | 3 |
will first arrive at | 3 |
of the duke of | 3 |
that i may write | 3 |
greater things than these | 3 |
i live till morning | 3 |
unwilling i should write | 3 |
thou dost injure us | 3 |
so all the tos | 3 |
thou art too ugly | 3 |
what might the staying | 3 |
thou shalt find me | 3 |
to tell me any | 3 |
contrary circle it is | 3 |
death by desperate thoughts | 3 |
soul to be great | 3 |
if i live till | 3 |
let faustus live in | 3 |
being seated in a | 3 |
master means to die | 3 |
parma from our land | 3 |
will not harbour me | 3 |
the first letter of | 3 |
all promises between us | 3 |
now will i make | 3 |
enter wagner and clown | 3 |
the heavy wrath of | 3 |
to comfort my distressed | 3 |
am i glutted with | 3 |
commander of these elements | 3 |
and i can write | 3 |
in all the world | 3 |
master is within at | 3 |
i will send for | 3 |
faustus tell us of | 3 |
not against our kingdom | 3 |
it were not for | 3 |
that he would not | 3 |
sint mihi dii acherontis | 3 |
and do greater things | 3 |
are to be sold | 3 |
glutted with conceit of | 3 |
compare the folio shakespeare | 3 |
they are come to | 3 |
passeth over the stage | 3 |
is gone to prove | 3 |
the ocean for orient | 3 |
my name begins with | 3 |
is not thy soul | 3 |
me not at all | 3 |
do greater things than | 3 |
contrary to thy promise | 3 |
i will be thy | 3 |
think my master means | 3 |
had neither father nor | 3 |
and this is my | 3 |
for nothing can rescue | 3 |
sight will be as | 3 |
and thou shalt see | 3 |
delight the stately town | 3 |
i would have pleasure | 3 |
exeunt lucifer and belzebub | 3 |
to india for gold | 3 |
and commander of these | 3 |
blood streams in the | 3 |
to tear me in | 3 |
i have interest in | 3 |
my heart is heavy | 3 |
up to this time | 3 |
dee went the fiddle | 3 |
thou on earth as | 3 |
never to look to | 3 |
and begin to sound | 3 |
if thou deny it | 3 |
this attempt against the | 3 |
the contrary circle it | 3 |
comfort my distressed soul | 3 |
have i not bound | 3 |
nor am i out | 3 |
demeure chaste et pure | 3 |
shall not faustus fly | 3 |
from end to end | 3 |
tell me who made | 3 |
thy words to comfort | 3 |
that i shall wait | 3 |
speak well of scholars | 3 |
must bequeath it solemnly | 3 |
staying of my blood | 3 |
hazarded that for thee | 3 |
occasionally found in writers | 3 |
we are come to | 3 |
lost eternal joy and | 3 |
why shouldst thou not | 3 |
tear me in pieces | 3 |
faustus vows never to | 3 |
the coin they bring | 3 |
in writers posterior to | 3 |
to delight thy mind | 3 |
town in four equivalents | 3 |
like almain rutters with | 3 |
the face of heaven | 3 |
with conceit of this | 3 |
now the blood begins | 3 |
i am one that | 3 |
an inch of raw | 3 |
the later tos have | 3 |
almain rutters with their | 3 |
that thou wilt profess | 3 |
was a king in | 3 |
it is occasionally found | 3 |
thee ever to attend | 3 |
from thence to venice | 3 |
year is divided into | 3 |
sound magician is a | 3 |
into the next room | 3 |
write it in manner | 3 |
be i a devil | 3 |
drawn by the strength | 3 |
shall wait on faustus | 3 |
how do you like | 3 |
hath given to me | 3 |
afflict his body with | 3 |
they shall never raze | 3 |
day great lucifer may | 3 |
beginning was the word | 3 |
is but a ceremonial | 3 |
this is my companion | 3 |
of astronomy graven in | 3 |
fly to india for | 3 |
i swear to you | 3 |
of constantines great towne | 3 |
for as much hay | 3 |
i a little bird | 3 |
all the old eds | 3 |
to me all his | 3 |
prince of parma from | 3 |
the seventh and last | 3 |
what wouldst thou have | 3 |
one of which a | 3 |
his faith is great | 3 |
as much hay as | 3 |
thy heart shall have | 3 |
in the middle of | 3 |
may claim it as | 3 |
which a sumptuous temple | 3 |
lord and commander of | 3 |
music of the principal | 3 |
ever to attend on | 3 |
on earth as jove | 3 |
jove is in the | 3 |
to tell thee thou | 3 |
for that security craves | 3 |
in all the land | 3 |
and faustus vows never | 3 |
thou must bequeath it | 3 |
the emperor and the | 3 |
means to die shortly | 3 |
me my soul again | 3 |
thee more than thou | 3 |
ponder on my sins | 3 |
to sound the depth | 3 |
lean with seeing others | 3 |
a few lines after | 3 |
in our early dramatists | 3 |
au sein des cieux | 3 |
might the staying of | 3 |
thee thou dost injure | 3 |
to give me whatsoever | 3 |
graven in the book | 3 |
vows never to look | 3 |
and bad angel descend | 3 |
stately town of trier | 3 |
was sent me from | 3 |
be he that took | 3 |
a sound magician is | 3 |
me who made the | 3 |
with seeing others eat | 3 |
in the manner of | 3 |
eademque res legatur duobus | 2 |
they can dry the | 2 |
the everlasting song that | 2 |
glasses begin to ring | 2 |
me for seven years | 2 |
that this city stands | 2 |
yet god may pity | 2 |
the pageant of the | 2 |
are copied from the | 2 |
voice of my lover | 2 |
the iterating of these | 2 |
swarm to my problems | 2 |
he seizes the book | 2 |
the value of form | 2 |
leave of the emperor | 2 |
found in passages of | 2 |
holding in his hand | 2 |
feed among the roses | 2 |
a roaring voice says | 2 |
both germany and the | 2 |
little step and lofty | 2 |
si una eademque res | 2 |
the course of nature | 2 |
to gain a deity | 2 |
begin to speak thus | 2 |
reads from a book | 2 |
me crave of thee | 2 |
i am not used | 2 |
that live with lucifer | 2 |
the sense and spirit | 2 |
version of the book | 2 |
let us into the | 2 |
instruct thee in the | 2 |
the glasses begin to | 2 |
maine fall into rhine | 2 |
old man and scholar | 2 |
is pleased to jest | 2 |
has been standing before | 2 |
my horse into the | 2 |
vain pleasure of four | 2 |
we must die an | 2 |
hand in holy water | 2 |
set of notes on | 2 |
they might have the | 2 |
beautiful as was bright | 2 |
my father was a | 2 |
do you remember how | 2 |
full power to fetch | 2 |
came hither of mine | 2 |
therefore wish all books | 2 |
et faust entrent en | 2 |
broad my poodle grows | 2 |
that nothing has been | 2 |
friar sandelo a blow | 2 |
and commander of all | 2 |
look through the sieve | 2 |
prelude at the theatre | 2 |
here comes his boy | 2 |
is stoutly to abjure | 2 |
see thou hast a | 2 |
of every element be | 2 |
shall be my father | 2 |
and this was their | 2 |
i have no need | 2 |
devil is an egotist | 2 |
all manner of delight | 2 |
devilish eyes wrathfully in | 2 |
attempt of the knight | 2 |
therefore acknowledge your error | 2 |
avoid such ways which | 2 |
boring a hole in | 2 |
not what they are | 2 |
but such spirits as | 2 |
the hearts of all | 2 |
these vain trifles of | 2 |
a terror to my | 2 |
have them wall all | 2 |
may boldly go and | 2 |
fair and gorgeous to | 2 |
kings where state is | 2 |
that in his study | 2 |
upon god that made | 2 |
these instances at least | 2 |
to mark him how | 2 |
of the two languages | 2 |
that country continent to | 2 |
seen the pride of | 2 |
me some demonstrations magical | 2 |
the vintner cannot properly | 2 |
will perform will make | 2 |
to whom faustus doth | 2 |
i will combat with | 2 |
as are the elements | 2 |
may repent and save | 2 |
now that i have | 2 |
and dine with me | 2 |
the human souls of | 2 |
requisite we will inform | 2 |
with cloth of arras | 2 |
move upon one axletree | 2 |
and wait on thee | 2 |
not all the world | 2 |
my brother is a | 2 |
is limited to damned | 2 |
horse had had some | 2 |
shalt behold the seven | 2 |
made man for ever | 2 |
a devil in despair | 2 |
too simple is my | 2 |
shall be at my | 2 |
now no more can | 2 |
whatsoever else is requisite | 2 |
i am an instance | 2 |
freed from the fumes | 2 |
knows not the pot | 2 |
of all the provinces | 2 |
he opens the book | 2 |
with a load of | 2 |
to be won by | 2 |
i appear before thee | 2 |
she brings a great | 2 |
and from america the | 2 |
such spirits when i | 2 |
helen of greece was | 2 |
was their penance appointed | 2 |
highly gratify thee for | 2 |
names of holy saints | 2 |
must for pleasure fall | 2 |
what means this show | 2 |
i will set my | 2 |
beaten silk and staves | 2 |
pleasant fruits and princely | 2 |
the story of the | 2 |
earthly meat or drink | 2 |
this circle on the | 2 |
the world with this | 2 |
hadst given ear to | 2 |
have interest in the | 2 |
return to helen for | 2 |
but let us into | 2 |
god in heaven knows | 2 |
is such a glorious | 2 |
not be angrier with | 2 |
thee of the joys | 2 |
our swords we will | 2 |
the apparition was so | 2 |
what will you bet | 2 |
speculated on her relationship | 2 |
ears i am a | 2 |
for his forty dollars | 2 |
night was never seen | 2 |
the how and where | 2 |
the part am i | 2 |
drank the last life | 2 |
within forty foot of | 2 |
that we have no | 2 |
i wet my throttle | 2 |
make my servile spirits | 2 |
look not so fierce | 2 |
no need of such | 2 |
lucifer prince of the | 2 |
lord and regent of | 2 |
but are erring stars | 2 |
our god with lucifer | 2 |
with winding banks that | 2 |
desire for her sweet | 2 |
sway thy thoughts from | 2 |
do to shun the | 2 |
and his saviour christ | 2 |
doctor faustus by christopher | 2 |
et consecratam aquam quam | 2 |
than the evening air | 2 |
a rag will answer | 2 |
ready to execute what | 2 |
to golden rivers flowing | 2 |
faustus removed the horns | 2 |
that the panes thereof | 2 |
thou have me do | 2 |
faustus may repent and | 2 |
for thou art right | 2 |
but differ in their | 2 |
julius caesar brought from | 2 |
when he played the | 2 |
he would not banquet | 2 |
have mercy upon thee | 2 |
set my countenance like | 2 |
i have been a | 2 |
are indicated by italic | 2 |
left us by my | 2 |
the preparation of the | 2 |
printed at london for | 2 |
i must tell you | 2 |
from sea to land | 2 |
more frequented for this | 2 |
exeunt faustus and mephistophilis | 2 |
and try if devils | 2 |
go bear these tidings | 2 |
where eye can see | 2 |
and thou shalt behold | 2 |
the midst of the | 2 |
and the empyreal heaven | 2 |
je ne suis demoiselle | 2 |
learned faustus will be | 2 |
that underprop the groundwork | 2 |
where now is all | 2 |
ghost be with the | 2 |
at supper with such | 2 |
they all one motion | 2 |
she showed me mine | 2 |
but we occasionally find | 2 |
text version of the | 2 |
the name of god | 2 |
will he not drink | 2 |
and round the linden | 2 |
and thou shalt turn | 2 |
by the hand of | 2 |
honour and of wealth | 2 |
the sky in wanton | 2 |
upon a bottle of | 2 |
return an old franciscan | 2 |
hanged the next sessions | 2 |
make the journey thither | 2 |
he hit his hornes | 2 |
the door is open | 2 |
wilt thou bid me | 2 |
one bare hour to | 2 |
such forward wits to | 2 |
it tempt thy soul | 2 |
messengers are praising the | 2 |
this mystery than heretofore | 2 |
live still to be | 2 |
place that men call | 2 |
from the face of | 2 |
german valdes and cornelius | 2 |
writers these is little | 2 |
how he doth demean | 2 |
of yon labouring cloud | 2 |
the next line but | 2 |
how do you mean | 2 |
that your words have | 2 |
will not hide from | 2 |
is that lucifer thy | 2 |
nunc surgat nobis dicatus | 2 |
be as cunning as | 2 |
waxen wings did mount | 2 |
conference about fair ladies | 2 |
will plead for me | 2 |
business with good devotion | 2 |
them and we crush | 2 |
to lie upon the | 2 |
and brought the spoils | 2 |
his hornes against the | 2 |
all the principles magic | 2 |
the window of the | 2 |
not in my ability | 2 |
words have won me | 2 |
lie foul upon our | 2 |
and physic are for | 2 |
edition of the history | 2 |
murder and death of | 2 |
seems to defy emendation | 2 |
rush and roll of | 2 |
and every palfry a | 2 |
in their true shapes | 2 |
horror from the vaulted | 2 |
are but obeyed in | 2 |
entice such forward wits | 2 |
his business is to | 2 |
vow i made to | 2 |
must i trouble you | 2 |
he will spare him | 2 |
here is the key | 2 |
and led thine eye | 2 |
in their airy brows | 2 |
years thy youth thou | 2 |
read me strange philosophy | 2 |
thy lord to pardon | 2 |
you have seen many | 2 |
shall be hell that | 2 |
a deal too good | 2 |
i made blind homer | 2 |
stranger engines for the | 2 |
of obedience and humility | 2 |
of scene is supposed | 2 |
am a servant to | 2 |
penance appointed by faustus | 2 |
make thee go like | 2 |
that faustus shall be | 2 |
i hear the noise | 2 |
will i make an | 2 |
for their meat and | 2 |
person to shew thee | 2 |
has forgot his leg | 2 |
that make safe passage | 2 |
the footnotes have been | 2 |
in peace and quiet | 2 |
two circles over the | 2 |
me all for which | 2 |
of the sky in | 2 |
man that in his | 2 |
heretofore the delphian oracle | 2 |
to that of the | 2 |
the devilish eyes wrathfully | 2 |
entrails of yon labouring | 2 |
these lines brings gold | 2 |
that awkward changes of | 2 |
hath damned both body | 2 |
castle by the sea | 2 |
make men foolish that | 2 |
in my heavenly words | 2 |
and if his pills | 2 |
but must thou sit | 2 |
the devil choke thee | 2 |
my love was near | 2 |
in some years we | 2 |
no name to give | 2 |
that might have grown | 2 |
the witch starts back | 2 |
were i in your | 2 |
and so have hope | 2 |
hornes on their browes | 2 |
interest in the same | 2 |
from the printed book | 2 |
ribs of the rock | 2 |
image of the mater | 2 |
shall i have nan | 2 |
nothing so sweet as | 2 |
and characters of signs | 2 |
you ask me such | 2 |
now is the lubber | 2 |
virtue in my heavenly | 2 |
he surely would mistake | 2 |
mephistophilis removes the horns | 2 |
flesh and blood is | 2 |
which the spirits are | 2 |
a plague take him | 2 |
quickly overcame them by | 2 |
enough to torture me | 2 |
oath i made to | 2 |
o death of bitterness | 2 |
with ravishing sound of | 2 |
such is the everlasting | 2 |
crucis quod nunc facio | 2 |
the monarch of the | 2 |
this sight doth delight | 2 |
has made the wax | 2 |
that disturbeth our holy | 2 |
world may see my | 2 |
why wert thou not | 2 |
bring them every morning | 2 |
a horror from the | 2 |
we hear one rack | 2 |
spoils to rich dardania | 2 |
the place of execution | 2 |
has but one leg | 2 |
vial full of precious | 2 |
to buy a horse | 2 |
give me back my | 2 |
now tell me what | 2 |
teach thee to turn | 2 |
than thou hast wit | 2 |
have the human souls | 2 |
than he commands must | 2 |
he is about to | 2 |
vix justus sit securus | 2 |
faites retentir la plaine | 2 |
another word for a | 2 |
them all for mephistophilis | 2 |
indicated by italic letters | 2 |
body of the law | 2 |
if devils will obey | 2 |
opens the casket and | 2 |
blest with your sage | 2 |
himself on faustus proved | 2 |
hope that this my | 2 |
him take as much | 2 |
and with his elbow | 2 |
translations of good poetry | 2 |
this magic and repent | 2 |
be always serviceable to | 2 |
of magic and my | 2 |
peeps through the crack | 2 |
may issue from your | 2 |
and make perpetual day | 2 |
have they all one | 2 |
rotten whores against the | 2 |
ut appareat et surgat | 2 |
small trifle to suffice | 2 |
at first will light | 2 |
hath sent some of | 2 |
on the threshold of | 2 |
some years we have | 2 |
i do repent i | 2 |
from which new green | 2 |
as was bright lucifer | 2 |
doctrine call you this | 2 |
had i lived with | 2 |
the knight to revenge | 2 |
i believe marlowe wrote | 2 |
good and bad angels | 2 |
to look to heaven | 2 |
i have seen enough | 2 |
former vow i made | 2 |
on your fiery backs | 2 |
strike a terror to | 2 |
that our hell affords | 2 |
else is requisite we | 2 |
is that the reason | 2 |
the scriptures and his | 2 |
and this the man | 2 |
say that we have | 2 |
believest thou in god | 2 |
afterwards siebel and marguerite | 2 |
by doubting his skill | 2 |
cannot save thy soul | 2 |
into the world with | 2 |
have been playing with | 2 |
make safe passage to | 2 |
new strength to angels | 2 |
meat from the table | 2 |
construction being quod tu | 2 |
art no greater miracle | 2 |
point your fingers and | 2 |
and returning the kiss | 2 |
when they vomit forth | 2 |
blind homer sing to | 2 |
nor will i henceforth | 2 |
tidings to great lucifer | 2 |
into that damned art | 2 |
if not a husband | 2 |
bid me to supper | 2 |
every adjunct to the | 2 |
thou make men to | 2 |
of those two deceased | 2 |
chief lord and regent | 2 |
to overwhelm the world | 2 |
homer sing to me | 2 |
all celestial bodies but | 2 |
the moon drop from | 2 |
que la bague au | 2 |
who has left the | 2 |
the way is long | 2 |
lord to pardon my | 2 |
told that faustus happening | 2 |
that there would come | 2 |
pray that god may | 2 |
till mephistophilis return again | 2 |
he bows to frosch | 2 |
the fiery lake of | 2 |
wings did mount above | 2 |
not i do to | 2 |
upon seven hills that | 2 |
why thou shouldst ask | 2 |
and think on the | 2 |
chorus quid sum miser | 2 |
what means the gentleman | 2 |
know he would give | 2 |
would serve his turn | 2 |
i know your friendship | 2 |
the doctor any insult | 2 |
what wonders i have | 2 |
german and italian text | 2 |
to make the moon | 2 |
for conquest in my | 2 |
charge thee to return | 2 |
than heavenly power permits | 2 |
that security craves lucifer | 2 |
all places shall be | 2 |
experience change thy mind | 2 |
aquam quam nunc spargo | 2 |
lucifer will bear thee | 2 |
think of the devil | 2 |
no place in the | 2 |
name to give it | 2 |
much is known to | 2 |
against the term for | 2 |
the devil give thee | 2 |
the students shall be | 2 |
the flower is gone | 2 |
with provision fit for | 2 |
let it be propitious | 2 |
and regent of perpetual | 2 |
the smart of all | 2 |
dancing with the young | 2 |
of this circle on | 2 |
i could not be | 2 |
and ladies of honor | 2 |
miseris socios habuisse doloris | 2 |
safe passage to each | 2 |
but in some years | 2 |
dwelling pure and lowly | 2 |
kings are but obeyed | 2 |
surgat nobis dicatus mephistophilis | 2 |
deepness doth entice such | 2 |
which he prefers before | 2 |
la porte du jardin | 2 |
be he that disturbeth | 2 |
being all i desire | 2 |
love thee from my | 2 |
dramatists lines which are | 2 |
till swoln with cunning | 2 |
begotten of an old | 2 |
germany and the world | 2 |
and play is play | 2 |
my soul must suffer | 2 |
could neither get backward | 2 |
he prefers before his | 2 |
dust shall he eat | 2 |
he shall appear to | 2 |
yet god will pity | 2 |
that he shall be | 2 |
of embden shall be | 2 |
the pleasure of lying | 2 |
but i have it | 2 |
us sway thy thoughts | 2 |
be bold with his | 2 |
additional texts are indicated | 2 |
better meat than a | 2 |
than was the fiery | 2 |
prefixed to the collected | 2 |
golden fleece that yearly | 2 |
bring thee unto heaven | 2 |
that sometime grew within | 2 |
circle on the ground | 2 |
within the compass of | 2 |
in black and white | 2 |
followed some edition of | 2 |
those that wish him | 2 |
saisissant la main de | 2 |
corner of a wench | 2 |
hit his hornes against | 2 |
world with this case | 2 |
witch breaks the circle | 2 |
tell me what is | 2 |
east to west in | 2 |
up spirits when i | 2 |
what means the sieve | 2 |
thee to appear to | 2 |
emperor and the courtiers | 2 |
the branch that might | 2 |
for which god threw | 2 |
and wish all books | 2 |
steps forth from behind | 2 |
cut for conjuring is | 2 |
thief upon the cross | 2 |
the walls of rome | 2 |
need to accept your | 2 |
of an angel fair | 2 |
from behind the stove | 2 |
a window of the | 2 |
and then the great | 2 |
have them fly to | 2 |
have not i made | 2 |
is great mephistophilis so | 2 |
name begins with l | 2 |
with mine own blood | 2 |
the cardinals of france | 2 |
that wish him well | 2 |
dost not thou know | 2 |
to fetch or carry | 2 |
as erst i did | 2 |
which being all i | 2 |
they will plead for | 2 |
faustus with a false | 2 |
the goblet of gold | 2 |
us go and inform | 2 |
thou art a proud | 2 |
thou hast heard all | 2 |
that exceeds in this | 2 |
been a student here | 2 |
have you not led | 2 |
if thou hadst given | 2 |
let not a word | 2 |
hast a familiar spirit | 2 |
ipse nunc surgat nobis | 2 |
all beasts are happy | 2 |
that which has the | 2 |
from place to place | 2 |
heart for naming of | 2 |
and long ere this | 2 |
help to me than | 2 |
is like a beast | 2 |
whole load of hay | 2 |
as the knight awaked | 2 |
and universal body of | 2 |
meat than a dish | 2 |
man that breathes on | 2 |
in his study sits | 2 |
not i made blind | 2 |
world for pleasant fruits | 2 |
make me rich in | 2 |
a dreadful night was | 2 |
moment we feel one | 2 |
if i named god | 2 |
and peeps through the | 2 |
arrest thy soul for | 2 |
le coeur de marguerite | 2 |
find in our early | 2 |
your local dealer made | 2 |
thinke here how this | 2 |
devil enough to grudge | 2 |
english mile in length | 2 |
sole king of all | 2 |
conquest in my breast | 2 |
whereby he is in | 2 |
an old franciscan friar | 2 |
such is the force | 2 |
spirit longs with ye | 2 |
i do long to | 2 |
adorns herself with the | 2 |
the emperor of the | 2 |
each in the other | 2 |
courser a bundle of | 2 |
on the ground brings | 2 |
raise them to life | 2 |
the blocksberg meet you | 2 |
with the old philosophers | 2 |
sacrifice shall he repent | 2 |
shall they drag huge | 2 |
sword of an archangel | 2 |
none but i have | 2 |
begot by a chimny | 2 |
on the preparation of | 2 |
riding my horse into | 2 |
from america the golden | 2 |
hung up as monuments | 2 |
the strength of yoky | 2 |
of this single one | 2 |
greater help to me | 2 |
hell is all manner | 2 |
the sight of the | 2 |
for disobedience to my | 2 |
me of those joys | 2 |
book with seven seals | 2 |
then thou shouldst see | 2 |
like lions shall they | 2 |
take her for his | 2 |
i went to him | 2 |
he stays my tongue | 2 |
framing of this circle | 2 |
bear these tidings to | 2 |
is certain that awkward | 2 |
be a greater help | 2 |
quittance of my wrongs | 2 |
consecratam aquam quam nunc | 2 |
hell that are not | 2 |
trifles and mere old | 2 |
made blind homer sing | 2 |
throw me down to | 2 |
and clear for you | 2 |
here to the altar | 2 |
for this mystery than | 2 |
this i should have | 2 |
say it once again | 2 |
those joys thou never | 2 |
come which makes it | 2 |
and is it thou | 2 |
thou heaven is such | 2 |
be devil enough to | 2 |
his dominion that exceeds | 2 |
but not at the | 2 |
of the god bacchus | 2 |
i never could learn | 2 |
me they can dry | 2 |
flew about his eares | 2 |
history in which these | 2 |
ruin him in one | 2 |
would for three farthings | 2 |
me of all ambiguities | 2 |
this is the time | 2 |
commands must we perform | 2 |
shun the snares of | 2 |
was the voice of | 2 |
sporting in the dalliance | 2 |
rack the name of | 2 |
in the first syllable | 2 |
i leapt out of | 2 |
renounce this magic and | 2 |
upholds he not thee | 2 |
faustus waves his wand | 2 |
the principles magic doth | 2 |
our lord god be | 2 |
my mother upon a | 2 |
in all his life | 2 |
qui me viens de | 2 |
are given of beethoven | 2 |
have you so many | 2 |
nearer to the gods | 2 |
be propitious for my | 2 |
for he hath given | 2 |
ever since have run | 2 |
are laid before me | 2 |
is the lubber tame | 2 |
second attempt of the | 2 |
i know he would | 2 |
no hay as long | 2 |
different from a flourish | 2 |
of gift of body | 2 |
have it well roasted | 2 |
tout bas vous riez | 2 |
the fairest maid in | 2 |
shew me some demonstrations | 2 |
that enchanted castle in | 2 |
have i done to | 2 |
crack them and we | 2 |
thy lord and master | 2 |
and i will be | 2 |
students shall be bravely | 2 |
made by this doctor | 2 |
has not been given | 2 |
circles over the whole | 2 |
buzzeth in mine ears | 2 |
a lamp in his | 2 |
his rump the leeches | 2 |
suck forth my soul | 2 |
this time have been | 2 |
by the holy council | 2 |
all things that move | 2 |
insult by doubting his | 2 |
that faustus is so | 2 |
for horns he gave | 2 |
to slay mine enemies | 2 |
and live and die | 2 |
know the words of | 2 |
realm to care for | 2 |
thine eye shall like | 2 |
thousand threads one treadle | 2 |
nail huge forked horns | 2 |
but wherefore do i | 2 |
of the history in | 2 |
and i will combat | 2 |
immediately the vintner enters | 2 |
end is limited to | 2 |
when such as we | 2 |
to look into a | 2 |
dross that is not | 2 |
and that was my | 2 |
offer you my arm | 2 |
will not i do | 2 |
as of no authority | 2 |
unhappy spirits that fell | 2 |
i will stay with | 2 |
magic is to him | 2 |
now hast thou but | 2 |
difficulties in the way | 2 |
the pots before my | 2 |
the man that in | 2 |
from their smoky mouths | 2 |
god that made the | 2 |
from the east they | 2 |
i felt a world | 2 |
full of precious grace | 2 |
have no need to | 2 |
who had a great | 2 |
now thou hast no | 2 |
shalt command the state | 2 |
with grace for conquest | 2 |
the guilt of all | 2 |
their own proper shapes | 2 |
weare a paire of | 2 |
you what my heart | 2 |
run into the earth | 2 |
are sometimes found in | 2 |
i do love thee | 2 |
thine hour is almost | 2 |
whom faustus doth dedicate | 2 |
he should give me | 2 |
what can i do | 2 |
the devil will come | 2 |
some account of the | 2 |
this was their penance | 2 |
mark him how he | 2 |
loves an inch of | 2 |
art thou than flaming | 2 |
then return to helen | 2 |
the place that men | 2 |
thee in the rudiments | 2 |
thou kept on that | 2 |
for thee at midnight | 2 |
but may i raise | 2 |
transformed into a young | 2 |
giving him the cup | 2 |
my soul for my | 2 |
no sacrifice shall he | 2 |
say i killed the | 2 |
sense and spirit of | 2 |
given a unique identity | 2 |
a dominion or intelligentia | 2 |
are set with groves | 2 |
and in the last | 2 |
through gardens and fields | 2 |
and i advise thee | 2 |
do long to see | 2 |
in the part of | 2 |
that the gloomy shadow | 2 |
as i pass her | 2 |
bill with mine own | 2 |
noise soever you hear | 2 |
whose deepness doth entice | 2 |
translation of faust in | 2 |
lies upon the town | 2 |
thought to have done | 2 |
and was a male | 2 |
welkin with her pitchy | 2 |
au souvenir de nos | 2 |
as wife and child | 2 |
not so fierce on | 2 |
hay as long as | 2 |
once gave ear to | 2 |
but one bare hour | 2 |
kingdoms of infernal rule | 2 |
the ocean with a | 2 |
for i am wanton | 2 |
follow up my airy | 2 |
should fly from me | 2 |
from their eyes the | 2 |
clad in the beauty | 2 |
and the devil give | 2 |
the prince of hell | 2 |
fools that will laugh | 2 |
to revenge himself on | 2 |
la bague au doigt | 2 |
for which i prayed | 2 |
of a thousand stars | 2 |
this game let our | 2 |
that durst dissuade me | 2 |
he has done penance | 2 |
rocky cleft below there | 2 |
she whom thine eye | 2 |
me at the last | 2 |
a while to ponder | 2 |
brighter art thou than | 2 |
que mon verre soit | 2 |
nine numbers by twenty | 2 |
look to the goblet | 2 |
which they two are | 2 |
change of scene is | 2 |
writ them a bill | 2 |
why should i die | 2 |
belike we must sin | 2 |
the pastors of the | 2 |
on the dew of | 2 |
how each his legs | 2 |
the true substantial bodies | 2 |
the sir arthur s | 2 |
certain that awkward changes | 2 |
how this good gentleman | 2 |
that struck his holiness | 2 |
you not led this | 2 |
feeds on mischief and | 2 |
drain the sparkling glass | 2 |
this profession were to | 2 |
bear thee quick to | 2 |
is all manner of | 2 |
the art is old | 2 |
has it done to | 2 |
not the double motion | 2 |
such a glorious thing | 2 |
may it please your | 2 |
thou hast a familiar | 2 |
out the fairest courtezans | 2 |
casket in the press | 2 |
like the fox in | 2 |
will make thee vow | 2 |
here will i dwell | 2 |
come within forty foot | 2 |
niggard of my cunning | 2 |
and always be obedient | 2 |
art thou a man | 2 |
the admirablest lady that | 2 |
we are is hell | 2 |
lest you perish with | 2 |
of proud audacious deeds | 2 |
room in the house | 2 |
angelo erected is a | 2 |
with her pitchy breath | 2 |
wrathfully in thy head | 2 |
is it the thought | 2 |
yet must i trouble | 2 |
with a band of | 2 |
it may be so | 2 |
whom faustus hath blasphemed | 2 |
long as he lives | 2 |
mercy on my soul | 2 |
lord of rats and | 2 |
text is surrounded by | 2 |
jointly move upon one | 2 |
am i a god | 2 |
if you hear me | 2 |
may exhort the wise | 2 |
make an end immediately | 2 |
she adorns herself with | 2 |
for your horse is | 2 |
into a young and | 2 |
the threshold of the | 2 |
faustus hath hazarded that | 2 |
gives him a dagger | 2 |
him into the water | 2 |
all torn asunder by | 2 |
to his heir denying | 2 |
that faustus happening to | 2 |
beauty in their airy | 2 |
of those that wish | 2 |
make thee vow to | 2 |
unwonted yearning for that | 2 |
give me for as | 2 |
last line of the | 2 |
alexander and his beauteous | 2 |
make me immortal with | 2 |
to do thee right | 2 |
thou art out of | 2 |
entreat thy lord to | 2 |
carry the said john | 2 |
sometimes found in passages | 2 |
that holy shape becomes | 2 |
which are defective in | 2 |
pray devoutly to the | 2 |
had no power on | 2 |
when i upon the | 2 |
scorn those joys thou | 2 |
i from malta went | 2 |
have heard that great | 2 |
perceives the sign of | 2 |
mephostophiles should bring him | 2 |
he that struck his | 2 |
threats the stars with | 2 |
massy entrails of the | 2 |
into their habitation wheresoever | 2 |
nor sporting in the | 2 |
devils will tear thee | 2 |
no power on thee | 2 |
him know the words | 2 |
i would lift up | 2 |
thy likeness to god | 2 |
sweeper and an oyster | 2 |
eve may be saved | 2 |
patient judgments we appeal | 2 |
did mate the carthaginians | 2 |
not my conjuring speeches | 2 |
drink nothing but salt | 2 |
has lost his master | 2 |
spirits on sweet musaeus | 2 |
horse into the water | 2 |
will bid us welcome | 2 |
preparation of the e | 2 |
not live but by | 2 |
the same old way | 2 |
him whatsoever he desires | 2 |
still lies upon the | 2 |
but beware how thou | 2 |
brings a great book | 2 |
drawing forth heavens sceanes | 2 |
therefore object it not | 2 |
but not into the | 2 |
that i may be | 2 |
whatever faustus shall command | 2 |
so wretched the lot | 2 |
there would come a | 2 |
linden lass and lad | 2 |
that nothing can be | 2 |
that all might die | 2 |
you that live with | 2 |
ride him into the | 2 |
obedient to my will | 2 |
by christopher marlowe from | 2 |
him yesterday to buy | 2 |
stab thine arm courageously | 2 |
that are not heaven | 2 |
or why is this | 2 |
how many a one | 2 |
death lying in wait | 2 |
is thine own appetite | 2 |
and his paramour before | 2 |
to make thee young | 2 |
where thou shalt see | 2 |
then up to naples | 2 |
an this be hell | 2 |
him in one term | 2 |
were he a stranger | 2 |
he makes an indecent | 2 |
would almost seem that | 2 |
notes on the trumpet | 2 |
mean her reputation for | 2 |
and death of a | 2 |
again i will confirm | 2 |
so round the naked | 2 |
me in my study | 2 |
caesar brought from africa | 2 |
clear for you the | 2 |
had been omitted by | 2 |
the gloomy shadow of | 2 |
paramour before the emperor | 2 |
know that your words | 2 |
blest be faustus evermore | 2 |
thee now no more | 2 |
which lie foul upon | 2 |
all at one time | 2 |
covered with cloth of | 2 |
then this profession were | 2 |
who all at once | 2 |
for the sake of | 2 |
may not follow thee | 2 |
the evening air clad | 2 |
will obey thy hest | 2 |
spirits that fell with | 2 |
serpent that tempted eve | 2 |
steel are laid before | 2 |
if not for thy | 2 |
thou shouldst see how | 2 |
fair example be to | 2 |
i fear me nothing | 2 |
spirits of every element | 2 |
where a thousand threads | 2 |
yesterday to buy a | 2 |
goates hornes on their | 2 |
bodies but one globe | 2 |
resolute am i in | 2 |
something equivalent to them | 2 |
the way of a | 2 |
so fierce on me | 2 |
sweeper upon an oyster | 2 |
immortal that thou hast | 2 |
unto some brutish beast | 2 |
fetch or carry the | 2 |
lovely than the monarch | 2 |
to a devilish exercise | 2 |
there lies the brew | 2 |
these metaphysics of magicians | 2 |
and call it mirth | 2 |
damned art for which | 2 |
only for pleasure of | 2 |
made the flowering pride | 2 |
by aspiring pride and | 2 |
gorgeous to the eye | 2 |
the old ribs of | 2 |
now draw up faustus | 2 |
much beholding unto you | 2 |
by the kingdoms of | 2 |
per inoequalem motum respectu | 2 |
gentleman is pleased to | 2 |
this line is not | 2 |
thee to turn thyself | 2 |
that threats the stars | 2 |
had some rare quality | 2 |
fall on the last | 2 |
all the lice about | 2 |
end of the play | 2 |
about thee into familiars | 2 |
but you have friends | 2 |
headlong run into the | 2 |
must live still to | 2 |
for faustus in his | 2 |
servile spirits to invent | 2 |
you shall have your | 2 |
you would never ask | 2 |
walls of thebes with | 2 |
so i leave thee | 2 |
hear a hundred thousand | 2 |
what shape thou wilt | 2 |
leave me a while | 2 |
the day before me | 2 |
no need to accept | 2 |
thou wilt not have | 2 |
and necromantic books are | 2 |
wear thy colours on | 2 |
to lay the fury | 2 |
augustan reprint society publications | 2 |
and where hell is | 2 |
and green the crop | 2 |
i have nan spit | 2 |
faustus hath already done | 2 |
what we can do | 2 |
would inform your worships | 2 |
hell and lucifer to | 2 |
the moon in twenty | 2 |
i feel so small | 2 |
by their folly make | 2 |
draws a stopper out | 2 |
i am by nature | 2 |
to study nothing else | 2 |
from the cradle to | 2 |
he would give his | 2 |
loves pleasure must for | 2 |
for heaven is in | 2 |
whose fiendful fortune may | 2 |
bumper in my hand | 2 |
this is your villany | 2 |
i came hither of | 2 |
saturn in thirty years | 2 |
with his elbow punched | 2 |
this bill is ended | 2 |
drive distrust into my | 2 |
night is on the | 2 |
so fair as thou | 2 |
sent some of his | 2 |
the love of man | 2 |
ever made by this | 2 |
full well i know | 2 |
how hard it is | 2 |
prince of the east | 2 |
we have seen the | 2 |
late didst promise us | 2 |
shall the body do | 2 |
only to wonder at | 2 |
i am the spirit | 2 |
our schools ring with | 2 |
song that in the | 2 |
bad him take as | 2 |
that loves an inch | 2 |
erst i did command | 2 |
before me to despatch | 2 |
over the whole world | 2 |
augustan reprint society william | 2 |
bear me to her | 2 |
pomp of proud audacious | 2 |
each part of rome | 2 |
many a thousand year | 2 |
so faustus hath already | 2 |
the cradle to the | 2 |
two or three scholars | 2 |
resolve me of all | 2 |
yet in the word | 2 |
knight to revenge himself | 2 |
bestiality will make a | 2 |
will laugh on earth | 2 |
a world of profit | 2 |
pardon him for this | 2 |
we have determined with | 2 |
that to this day | 2 |
trickles from mine arm | 2 |
if we say that | 2 |
quite bereave thee of | 2 |
before his chiefest bliss | 2 |
of doctor faustus from | 2 |
oxe hornes on his | 2 |
the sport of every | 2 |
to practice magic and | 2 |
long ere this i | 2 |
hills that bind the | 2 |
for you the way | 2 |
when we hear one | 2 |
as great as have | 2 |
beheld in all his | 2 |
to have any parents | 2 |
groves of fruitful vines | 2 |
dissuade me from thy | 2 |
this inscription on mine | 2 |
them by turning all | 2 |
that i may conjure | 2 |
same into thy soul | 2 |
must belong to a | 2 |
emperor of the world | 2 |
thou likest him for | 2 |
the bonds of the | 2 |
will be as cunning | 2 |
which seems to defy | 2 |
i see an angel | 2 |
devil threatened to tear | 2 |
these tidings to great | 2 |
the doctor has no | 2 |
king of all the | 2 |
how am i vexed | 2 |
turning all the bushes | 2 |
the footnotes has been | 2 |
may try his cunning | 2 |
his waxen wings did | 2 |
and may not follow | 2 |
won by any conquering | 2 |
scriptures and his saviour | 2 |
it into two pieces | 2 |
my scholars by the | 2 |
countenance upon my pain | 2 |
the streets straight forth | 2 |
a greater help to | 2 |
ut mephistophilis appareat et | 2 |
doctor quickly overcame them | 2 |
that thrusts his head | 2 |
their meat and drink | 2 |
the history in which | 2 |
the window where he | 2 |
occasionally find in our | 2 |
her lips suck forth | 2 |
are we the sport | 2 |
line is not in | 2 |
monuments and situation of | 2 |
will answer for a | 2 |
i saw a cloven | 2 |
must thou needs be | 2 |
throws himself into a | 2 |
between the quiet poles | 2 |
with grief of heart | 2 |
here i have made | 2 |
and let it be | 2 |
made music with my | 2 |
thou shalt not be | 2 |
thy good angel leave | 2 |
faustus may try his | 2 |
way of a nearly | 2 |
is a castle passing | 2 |
and soul to lucifer | 2 |
argue of divine astrology | 2 |
the last line of | 2 |
and return to mighty | 2 |
distrust into my thoughts | 2 |
blow on the pate | 2 |
will charm thy soul | 2 |
young blade has room | 2 |
hell hath no limits | 2 |
then hear me read | 2 |
colours on my plumed | 2 |
feel as if the | 2 |
of spirits and of | 2 |
be it to make | 2 |
and immediately the vintner | 2 |
this soul should fly | 2 |
to the door of | 2 |
would i have a | 2 |
art thou the third | 2 |
which makes it forfeit | 2 |
a line or two | 2 |
wouldst thou have me | 2 |
even here is writ | 2 |
also inconsistent in the | 2 |
to come within forty | 2 |
if my soul must | 2 |
vintner cannot properly be | 2 |
out on the settle | 2 |
in person to shew | 2 |
also be a devil | 2 |
before this royal emperor | 2 |
it be a bran | 2 |
your fingers and nip | 2 |
that lucifer an angel | 2 |
he loves thee not | 2 |
think ourselves much beholding | 2 |
for that i know | 2 |
why streams it not | 2 |
ell of fried stock | 2 |
enter mephistophilis like a | 2 |
as he drank thereout | 2 |
our horses shall eat | 2 |
doth drive distrust into | 2 |
our conference about fair | 2 |
philosophy is odious and | 2 |
no better meat than | 2 |
and search all corners | 2 |
give us a song | 2 |
he that disturbeth our | 2 |
yet will i call | 2 |
of an old churl | 2 |
not follow thee without | 2 |
me from my vow | 2 |
you still are here | 2 |
much as he would | 2 |
enter faustus to conjure | 2 |
gift of body and | 2 |
if i were not | 2 |
and rich apparel to | 2 |
past anon o god | 2 |
he tempts us thus | 2 |
i knew something worse | 2 |
poles shall be at | 2 |
happy and blest be | 2 |
a moi leurs caresses | 2 |
all the tos lechery | 2 |
what magic can perform | 2 |
groupe de jeunes filles | 2 |
substance of this centric | 2 |
if faustus will repent | 2 |
young and tender though | 2 |
the story of faust | 2 |
the blocksberg has a | 2 |
mounted on fair palfreys | 2 |
morrow will not do | 2 |
smite with death thy | 2 |
day before me and | 2 |
and what art thou | 2 |
the stars move still | 2 |
keys and a lamp | 2 |
all is dross that | 2 |
tell us where he | 2 |
his soul to lucifer | 2 |
neither am i fair | 2 |
and inform the rector | 2 |
and blest be faustus | 2 |
i in this as | 2 |
speak and we see | 2 |
be a divine in | 2 |
but mine must live | 2 |
bas au souvenir de | 2 |
which i consider as | 2 |
all the world dissolves | 2 |
on these conditions following | 2 |
brother is a soldier | 2 |
lost both germany and | 2 |
he seems to me | 2 |
she turns from him | 2 |
leader of the music | 2 |
half so fair as | 2 |
damned both body and | 2 |
have seen many boys | 2 |
thou art so fair | 2 |
fond to imagine that | 2 |
with her wanton glances | 2 |
being quod tu mandares | 2 |
my horse vanished away | 2 |
the brunt of war | 2 |
for conjuring is stoutly | 2 |
played the spy again | 2 |
in their several provinces | 2 |
thy bills hung up | 2 |
me down to hell | 2 |
shall not live but | 2 |
the snares of death | 2 |
sooner may a gulling | 2 |
a golden goblet gave | 2 |
the lord bless you | 2 |
was the fiery keel | 2 |
me of eternal happiness | 2 |
thou canst not carry | 2 |
wouldst be devil enough | 2 |
with such vain fancies | 2 |
and midnight never come | 2 |
this city stands upon | 2 |
the tu does not | 2 |
i thinking the horse | 2 |
penny they have left | 2 |
if i pay so | 2 |
parents base of stock | 2 |
but i have interest | 2 |
the throne of the | 2 |
for such a dreadful | 2 |
that magic will perform | 2 |
else to his heir | 2 |
a rock or tree | 2 |
i in your place | 2 |
the gentleman is pleased | 2 |
from an old hag | 2 |
i will tell you | 2 |
and i live alone | 2 |
engines for the brunt | 2 |
not for thy wedding | 2 |
will be as pleasant | 2 |
is supposed to be | 2 |
lovely dream once came | 2 |
am not used to | 2 |
it that plunged her | 2 |
we crack them and | 2 |
person are sometimes found | 2 |
the child is stifled | 2 |
yet art thou still | 2 |
bridge thorough the moving | 2 |
copied from the printed | 2 |
accept your offered arm | 2 |
the goblet to his | 2 |
he profits in divinity | 2 |
thou never shalt possess | 2 |
so many a midnight | 2 |
not for you to | 2 |
at the first sight | 2 |
wedding finger he a | 2 |
with seven seals protected | 2 |
devil shall fetch thee | 2 |
issue from their smoky | 2 |
and every creature shall | 2 |
later tos have surgat | 2 |
chaste as was penelope | 2 |
all covenants and articles | 2 |
if thou wilt not | 2 |
may i raise such | 2 |
yet level at the | 2 |
i as many souls | 2 |
knows not the double | 2 |
go and inform the | 2 |
then wherefore should you | 2 |
proficient in this art | 2 |
them fly to india | 2 |
lines which are defective | 2 |
did not he charge | 2 |
souls as there be | 2 |
so i believe marlowe | 2 |
she opens the press | 2 |
the dalliance of love | 2 |
which i saw of | 2 |
of the footnotes has | 2 |
and with a roaring | 2 |
that god may have | 2 |
make that country continent | 2 |
pours the drink into | 2 |
the names of saturn | 2 |
being deprived of the | 2 |
with walls of flint | 2 |
whose shadow made all | 2 |
brood the key of | 2 |
i now no more | 2 |
bring him any thing | 2 |
i am a servant | 2 |
to our conjuring in | 2 |
there is any pain | 2 |
already faustus hath hazarded | 2 |
bills hung up as | 2 |
while to ponder on | 2 |
bonds of the avenger | 2 |
now that the gloomy | 2 |
within the window where | 2 |
comments on the preparation | 2 |
to mine own use | 2 |
thy soul to lucifer | 2 |
of wrath and horror | 2 |
grace for conquest in | 2 |
try what i can | 2 |
should you ask me | 2 |
that he shall appear | 2 |
que la valse nous | 2 |
no more of it | 2 |
to remember that i | 2 |
not the pleasure of | 2 |
on shakespeare and milton | 2 |
compare the history of | 2 |
me breathe a while | 2 |
inoequalem motum respectu totius | 2 |
faustus by christopher marlowe | 2 |
end of physic is | 2 |
loved spouse is dead | 2 |
have i thought to | 2 |
soles to run with | 2 |
see the history of | 2 |
of his melodious harp | 2 |
into that vast perpetual | 2 |
heaven is in these | 2 |
of the life of | 2 |
shall i appear before | 2 |
she knows not how | 2 |
the rush and roll | 2 |
and dims the welkin | 2 |
to curse faustus to | 2 |
was born in hell | 2 |
to vaunt her heavenly | 2 |
poles of the zodiac | 2 |
search all corners of | 2 |
far as doth the | 2 |
charge thee to appear | 2 |
you vomit forth into | 2 |
feather in my hat | 2 |
with a false head | 2 |
in this game let | 2 |
in their most flourishing | 2 |
i might see all | 2 |
hear me with patience | 2 |
my study at midnight | 2 |
i was begotten on | 2 |
the public schools with | 2 |
as is the substance | 2 |
that mephostophiles should bring | 2 |
quality that he would | 2 |
within the massy entrails | 2 |
will buy my service | 2 |
didst love the world | 2 |
indian moors obey their | 2 |
let him know the | 2 |
like a foggy mist | 2 |
won me at the | 2 |
pardon my unjust presumption | 2 |
unfrequently in our old | 2 |
thou didst love the | 2 |
then had i lived | 2 |
his sword is broken | 2 |
figures of every adjunct | 2 |
faustus hath done it | 2 |
one that loves an | 2 |
see the knight asleep | 2 |
influence hath allotted death | 2 |
who knows not the | 2 |
for he is just | 2 |
cast no more doubts | 2 |
hidden mystery had been | 2 |
life quite long enough | 2 |
with a quiet sleep | 2 |
whither should i fly | 2 |
an altar and a | 2 |
them a bill with | 2 |
time has been standing | 2 |
will i call on | 2 |
the emperor of germany | 2 |
the nose is leading | 2 |
i had never seen | 2 |
footnotes has been changed | 2 |
when shame is born | 2 |
voir si belle en | 2 |
i disdain to have | 2 |
a dish of ripe | 2 |
you will do us | 2 |
have determined with ourselves | 2 |
bereave thee of salvation | 2 |
valeat numen triplex jehovoe | 2 |
will have heads and | 2 |
bind thyself to me | 2 |
whom you shall teach | 2 |
of the four tos | 2 |
the devil is an | 2 |
have won me at | 2 |
nice estate was left | 2 |
fall into the ocean | 2 |
wherefore should you ask | 2 |
have hope that this | 2 |
faustus may be a | 2 |
deed of gift of | 2 |
you so many kinds | 2 |
a hogshead of claret | 2 |
earnestly to visit me | 2 |
thee go like qui | 2 |
pleasure must for pleasure | 2 |
what has it done | 2 |
or something equivalent to | 2 |
has left the dance | 2 |
stabbing his arm lo | 2 |
is for the wench | 2 |
the freedom i have | 2 |
if by the spirit | 2 |
in mine ears i | 2 |
you may see how | 2 |
he surfeits upon cursed | 2 |
is given a unique | 2 |
the star shoots by | 2 |
paid for their meat | 2 |
kinsmen chiefly brought him | 2 |
fits a mercenary drudge | 2 |
heavenly helen which i | 2 |
patch up rotten whores | 2 |
the life of mr | 2 |
would i advise it | 2 |
spirit appears in the | 2 |
power to fetch or | 2 |
to wonder at unlawful | 2 |
neighbor with her wanton | 2 |
the world on holidays | 2 |
that all the world | 2 |
each footnote is given | 2 |
and faustus now will | 2 |
i sit upon her | 2 |
the shining sword of | 2 |
that was wont to | 2 |
and to hold the | 2 |
with all my heart | 2 |
pliant is this mephistophilis | 2 |
perform all covenants and | 2 |
we feel one prick | 2 |
with a willing hand | 2 |
an ell of fried | 2 |
and when the storm | 2 |
to pour the same | 2 |
hath lost both germany | 2 |
not he charge thee | 2 |
as magic is to | 2 |
the face of god | 2 |
his holiness a blow | 2 |
led this life quite | 2 |
of a swift spirit | 2 |
element be always serviceable | 2 |
might have grown full | 2 |
not my heart for | 2 |
and drink your fill | 2 |
do i dally my | 2 |
shining sword of an | 2 |
thou shalt turn thyself | 2 |
years we have more | 2 |
word damnation terrifies not | 2 |
lay that damned book | 2 |
je ris de me | 2 |
long and broad my | 2 |
thinking some hidden mystery | 2 |
you deliver this as | 2 |
regent of perpetual night | 2 |
shalt turn thyself into | 2 |
my countenance like a | 2 |
to patient judgments we | 2 |
could not wake him | 2 |
passionate for being deprived | 2 |
into two circles over | 2 |
pull in his head | 2 |
in the house of | 2 |
i can creep into | 2 |
and remain for ever | 2 |
a plague take you | 2 |
thy soul for disobedience | 2 |
me in this attempt | 2 |
i may write afresh | 2 |
did not i tell | 2 |
that shortly he was | 2 |
fathers in the castle | 2 |
or the ocean to | 2 |
to execute what thou | 2 |
bright lucifer before his | 2 |
eat a load of | 2 |
thou of faustus manly | 2 |
texts are indicated by | 2 |
mephistophilis shall be his | 2 |
and fell to eating | 2 |
speak not to me | 2 |
wilt thou have a | 2 |
where is it now | 2 |
leave the spot alive | 2 |
that mephistophilis shall do | 2 |
appareat et surgat mephistophilis | 2 |
not have me know | 2 |
why is this immortal | 2 |
own proper shapes and | 2 |
at the same time | 2 |
thou shalt command the | 2 |
the spirit appears in | 2 |
are means to bring | 2 |
long as this lasts | 2 |
have made the alteration | 2 |
but the sun will | 2 |
and we crush them | 2 |
then honor to whom | 2 |
rat in the cellar | 2 |
great mephistophilis so passionate | 2 |
faustus is gone to | 2 |
her for his wife | 2 |
in the pomp of | 2 |
art for which they | 2 |
built the walls of | 2 |
muse to vaunt her | 2 |
as oft as he | 2 |
get backward nor forward | 2 |
aspiring pride and insolence | 2 |
of thebes with ravishing | 2 |
mephistophilis like a franciscan | 2 |
be obedient to my | 2 |
me to know my | 2 |
are come from hell | 2 |
quod tu mandares ut | 2 |
or carry the said | 2 |
ourselves much beholding unto | 2 |
lovely land of wine | 2 |
hour is almost come | 2 |
to dost thou heare | 2 |
the other works and | 2 |
and tasted the eternal | 2 |
for me a harvest | 2 |
dealer made in u | 2 |
for all the world | 2 |
our conjuring in the | 2 |
bring him whatsoever he | 2 |
to offer you my | 2 |
faustus lost eternal joy | 2 |
tos have surgat mephistophilis | 2 |
beheld the poor knight | 2 |
so he presently gave | 2 |
the misery of this | 2 |
into the entrails of | 2 |
have mercy on my | 2 |
shall the spirits of | 2 |
venice shall they drag | 2 |
i writ them a | 2 |
tipplers at the cask | 2 |
least it would almost | 2 |
in and comfort her | 2 |
solamen miseris socios habuisse | 2 |
ere our conference cease | 2 |
the marketing and kitchen | 2 |
these being equivalent to | 2 |
must remain in hell | 2 |
instances at least it | 2 |
with sweat and with | 2 |
enchanted castle in the | 2 |
the body of the | 2 |
the devil shall fetch | 2 |
himself face to face | 2 |
the quiet poles shall | 2 |
thebes with ravishing sound | 2 |
i rub my hands | 2 |
for the like of | 2 |
faustus spent his time | 2 |
that was my undoing | 2 |
as to let us | 2 |
at least it would | 2 |
the broom it scratches | 2 |
but the devil threatened | 2 |
live in speculation of | 2 |
consolidated at the end | 2 |
answer for a sail | 2 |
this immortal that thou | 2 |
it is certain that | 2 |
inconsistent in the corresponding | 2 |
and trees from which | 2 |
will inform thee ere | 2 |
and crowns a year | 2 |
if thou canst not | 2 |
brought the spoils to | 2 |
pointing to the animals | 2 |
god will pity thee | 2 |
at the last to | 2 |
first let him know | 2 |
beautifulest in all the | 2 |
have them fill the | 2 |
not allied to me | 2 |
eyes with tears ran | 2 |
torments that our hell | 2 |
doctor faustus from the | 2 |
this as your deed | 2 |
tout bas au souvenir | 2 |
i came just in | 2 |
will my soul do | 2 |
my conjuring speeches raise | 2 |
everlasting song that in | 2 |
of the stage and | 2 |
that he did not | 2 |
wilt not have mercy | 2 |
infernal spirits on sweet | 2 |
mephistopheles to sit down | 2 |
what in his bosom | 2 |
whereas his kinsmen chiefly | 2 |
could not be angrier | 2 |
the longing of my | 2 |
that thou art out | 2 |
thou not a creature | 2 |
hear the noise of | 2 |
from thine own soul | 2 |
dancing and our singing | 2 |
is known to me | 2 |
that will laugh on | 2 |
bras pour faire le | 2 |
and blood is for | 2 |
the moment we feel | 2 |
a fan of feathers | 2 |
it is not in | 2 |
or we are parted | 2 |
you remember how you | 2 |
i do confess it | 2 |
knight was not present | 2 |
and made the flowering | 2 |
and when a dozen | 2 |
than when sir paris | 2 |
being in hell for | 2 |
he came to hell | 2 |
remember that i have | 2 |
from constantinople have they | 2 |
laid before me to | 2 |
doth the mind of | 2 |
thee quick to hell | 2 |
a lovely dream once | 2 |
every element be always | 2 |
and shall a promise | 2 |
the depths of being | 2 |
sometime grew within this | 2 |
spirits and of spirit | 2 |
and do you remember | 2 |
see my just revenge | 2 |
ways which brought poor | 2 |
shapes of alexander the | 2 |
perform the form of | 2 |
i will keep watch | 2 |
the doctor has been | 2 |
somewhat to delight his | 2 |
shall appear to the | 2 |
devoutly to the prince | 2 |
i know too well | 2 |
to hold the torches | 2 |
he could neither get | 2 |
into the depths of | 2 |
and pity of thy | 2 |
de richesse en cette | 2 |
to him yesterday to | 2 |
those thoughts that do | 2 |
lamp in his hand | 2 |
is it truly marguerite | 2 |
be addressed as drawer | 2 |
as indian moors obey | 2 |
from malta went away | 2 |
have run up and | 2 |
ere this i should | 2 |
before me and the | 2 |
what shall the body | 2 |
and has the doctor | 2 |
appear to the said | 2 |
dirige vers la maison | 2 |
to whom i must | 2 |
an instance to prove | 2 |
be at my command | 2 |
have seen enough to | 2 |
belle en ce miroir | 2 |
thy thoughts from this | 2 |