s very angry, and resolve to beat
him to-morrow
I know not yet what that is, and am
ashamed to ask
I do not like his being angry and in
debt both together to me
I will not by any over submission make
myself cheap
I slept soundly all the sermon
I and she never were so heartily angry
in our lives as to-day
I calling her beggar, and she me
pricklouse, which vexed me
I love the treason I hate the traitor
I would not enquire into anything, but
let her talk
I kissed the bride in bed, and so the
curtaines drawne
I have promised, but know not when I
shall perform
I met a dead corps of the plague, in
the narrow ally
I am a foole to be troubled at it,
since I cannot helpe it
I was exceeding free in dallying with
her, and she not unfree
I was a great Roundhead when I was a
boy
I pray God to make me able to pay for
it.
I took a broom and basted her till she
cried extremely
I was demanded L100, for the fee of the
office at 6d. a pound
I never designed to be a witness
against any man
I fear is not so good as she should be
If the exportations exceed importations
If it should come in print my name
maybe at it
Ill from my late cutting my hair so
close to my head
Ill all this day by reason of the last
night's debauch
Ill sign when we are once to come to
study how to excuse
Ill humour to be so against that which
all the world cries up
Ill-bred woman, would take exceptions
at anything any body said
In my nature am mighty unready to
answer no to anything
In men's clothes, and had the best legs
that ever I saw
In our graves (as Shakespeere resembles
it) we could dream
In discourse he seems to be wise and
say little
In perpetual trouble and vexation that
need it least
In comes Mr. North very sea-sick from
shore
In a hackney and full of people, was
ashamed to be seen
In my dining-room she was doing
something upon the pott
Inconvenience that do attend the
increase of a man's fortune
Inoffensive vanity of a man who loved
to see himself in the glass
Instructed by Shakespeare himself
Irish in Ireland, whom Cromwell had
settled all in one corner
It not being handsome for our servants
to sit so equal with us
Justice of God in punishing men for the
sins of their ancestors
Justice of proceeding not to condemn a
man unheard
Keep at interest, which is a good,
quiett, and easy profit
King is at the command of any woman
like a
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