- F.48/J.82 Whose cheek is this — The Winter's Tale
- F.67/J.58 Delayed till she had ceased to know — Cordelia
- F.113/J.111 The Bee is not afraid of me — As You Like It
- F.254/J.283 A Mien to move a Queen — Imogen
- F.267/J.1737 Rearrange a Wife's affection — Lady Macbeth
- F.279/J.664 Of all the Souls that stand create — The Merchant of Venice
- F.325/J.322 There came a Day at Summer's full — Romeo and Juliet
- F.345/J.608 Afraid! Of whom am I afraid — Macbeth
- F.594/J.1181 When I hoped I feared — Hamlet
- F.657/J.521 Endow the Living with the Tears — King Richard III
- F.664/J.379 Rehearsal to Ourselves — Macbeth
- F.668/J.551 There is a Shame of Nobleness — Timon of Athens
- F.685/J.619 Glee The great storm is over — The Tempest
- F.793/J.753 My Soul accused me And I quailed — Winter's Tale
- F.873/J.774 It is a lonesome Glee — The Tempest
- F.917/J.957 As One does Sickness over — King Lear
- F.982/J.919 If I can stop one Heart from breaking — A Midsummer Night's Dream
- F.1030/J.1019 My Season's furthest Flower — Ophelia and Herb Rue
- F.1075/J.960 As plan for Noon and plan for Night — Romeo and Juliet
- F.1105/J.1098 Of the Heart that goes in, and closes the Door — The Winter's Tale
- F.1177/J.1161 Trust adjust her "Peradventure" — Lady Macbeth
- F.1183/J.1229 Because He loves Her — The Winter's Tale
- F.1189/J.1112 That this should feel the need of Death — Love's Labor's Lost
- F.1294/J.1216 A Deed knocks first at Thought — Macbeth
- F.1326/J.1150 How many schemes may die — Macduff
- F.1351/J.1339 A Bee his burnished Carriage — Rape of Lucrece
- F.1356/J.1333 A little Madness in the Spring — King Lear's Fool
- F.1380/J.1353 The last of Summer is Delight — A Midsummer Night's Dream
- F.1401/J.1376 Dreams are the subtle Dower — The Taming of the Shrew
- F.1439/J.1414 Unworthy of her Breast — Imogen
- F.1497/J.1457 It stole along so stealthy — Othello
- F.1508/J.1476 His voice decrepit was with Joy — The Winter's Tale
- F.1519/J.1500 It came his turn to beg — Claudius' Prayer
- F.1527/J.1486 Her spirit rose to such a height — Ophelia
- F.1606/J.1768 Lad of Athens, faithful be — Timon of Athens
- F.1650/J.1627 The pedigree of Honey — The Merchant of Venice
- F.1679/J.1645 The Ditch is dear to the Drunken man — King Lear
- F.1688/J.1658 Endanger it, and the Demand — The Merchant of Venice
- F.1715/J.1651 A word made Flesh is seldom — The Merchant of Venice
- F.1717/J.1661 Guest am I to have — Timon of Athens
- F.1719/J.1698 'Tis easier to pity those when dead — Romeo and Juliet
- F.1765/J.1747 The parasol is the umbrella's daughter — Umbrella Pine