Play | Key Line | Modern Text | Original Text |
Antony and Cleopatra | AC III.vi.44 | Should have an army for an usher, and | Should haue an Army for an Vsher, and |
Coriolanus | Cor I.iii.49 | Enter Valeria, with an Usher and a Gentlewoman | Enter Valeria with an Vsher, and a Gentlewoman. |
Coriolanus | Cor II.i.151 | These are the ushers of Martius. Before him | These are the Vshers of Martius: / Before him, |
Henry VIII | H8 I.ii.9.2 | Enter the Queen, ushered by the Dukes of Norfolk | Duke of Norfolke. Enter the Queene, Norfolke |
Henry VIII | H8 I.iv.64.2 | habited like shepherds, ushered by the Lord Chamberlain. | habited like Shepheards, vsher'd by the Lord Chamberlaine. |
Henry VIII | H8 II.iv.1.9 | a Gentleman Usher, bare-headed, accompanied with a | a Gentleman Vsher bare-headed, accompanyed with a |
Henry VIII | H8 III.ii.410 | No sun shall ever usher forth mine honours, | No Sun, shall euer vsher forth mine Honors, |
Henry VIII | H8 IV.ii.1.2 | Griffith, her gentleman usher, and Patience, her | Griffith, her Gentleman Vsher, and Patience her |
King Lear | KL IV.vii.23.1 | Enter Gentleman ushering Lear in a chair carried by | Enter Lear in a chaire carried by Seruants |
Love's Labour's Lost | LLL V.ii.328 | A mean most meanly; and in ushering | A meane most meanly, and in Vshering |