DIAMOND
I shall but lend my diamond till
your return.
Cymbeline, Act. i, sc.
4, l. 153.
“Tragedies”, p. 372,
col. B, line 59.
DIAMOND
My ten thousand ducats are yours;
so is your diamond too.
Cymbeline, Act i, sc.
4, l. 163.
“Tragedies”, p. 373,
col. A, line 1.
DIAMOND
It must be married
To that your diamond.
Cymbeline, Act ii, sc.
4, l. 98.
“Tragedies”, p. 389 [379], col.
A, lines 42, 43.
DIAMOND
That diamond upon your finger,
say,
How came it yours?
Cymbeline, Act v, sc.
5, l. 137.
“Tragedies”, p. 396,
col. A, line 51.
DIAMOND
To me he seems like diamond to
glass.
Pericles, Act ii, sc.
3, l. 36.
Third Folio, 1664, p. 7, col.
B, line 38;
separate pagination.
DIAMOND
You shall, like diamonds, sit
about his crown.
Pericles, Act ii, sc.
4, l. 53.
Third Folio, 1664, p. 8, col.
B, line 42.
DIAMOND
The diamonds of a most praised
water
Do appear, to make the world twice rich.
Pericles, Act iii, sc.
2, l. 102.
Third Folio, 1664, p. 11, col.
B, line 13.
RUBY
The impression of keen whips
I’ld wear as rubies.
Measure for Measure, Act ii, sc.
4, l. 101.
“Comedies”, p. 69,
col. B, line 63.
RUBY
Her nose, all o’er embellished
with rubies, carbuncles,
sapphires.
Comedy of Errors, Act iii, sc.
2, l. 138.
“Comedies”, p. 92,
col. A, line 49.
RUBY
Those be rubies, fairy favors.
Midsummer Night’s Dream, Act
ii, sc. 1, l. 12.
“Comedies”, p. 148,
col. A, line 35.
RUBY
Over thy wounds now do I prophesy,—Which,
like dumb mouths, do ope their ruby lips.
Julius Caaesar, Act iii, sc.
1, l. 260.
“Tragedies”, p. 120, col.
B, lines 34, 35.
RUBY
And keep the natural ruby of
your cheeks,
When mine is blanch’d with fear.
Macbeth, Act iii, sc.
4, l. 115.
“Tragedies”, p. 142,
col. B, line 17.
RUBY
But kiss; one kiss! Rubies
unparagon’d,
How dearly they do’t!
Cymbeline, Act ii, sc.
2, l. 17.
“Tragedies”, p. 376,
col. B, line 18.
SAPPHIRE
Like sapphire, pearl and rich
embroidery.
Merry Wives of Windsor, Act v, sc.
5, l. 75.
“Comedies”, p. 51, col.
A, line 66 (last).