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Dogberry   Listen
noun
Dogberry  n.  (Bot.) The berry of the dogwood; called also dogcherry.
Dogberry tree (Bot.), the dogwood.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Dogberry" Quotes from Famous Books



... wit, and yet so as to give a vivid representation of a veritable fool,—'hic labor, hoc opus est'. A drunken constable is not uncommon, nor hard to draw; but see and examine what goes to make up a Dogberry. ...
— Literary Remains, Vol. 2 • Coleridge

... than ninety years. Grendon was on the road between Oxford and London. Howe stated that Shakespeare often visited the place in his journey from Stratford, and that he found the original of his character of Dogberry in the person of a parish constable who lived on there till 1642. Howe was on familiar terms with the man, and he confided his reminiscence to his friend Aubrey, who duly recorded it, although in ...
— Shakespeare and the Modern Stage - with Other Essays • Sir Sidney Lee

... by the merest accident (no thanks to their fidelity) they detect him, and with awful adjurations sentence him to perpetual banishment; but, thirdly, on his immediate return, in utter contempt of their sentence, they ignore him altogether, and apparently act upon Dogberry's direction, that, upon meeting a thief, the police may suspect him to be no true man; and, with such manner of men, the less they meddle or make, the more it will be for ...
— The Notebook of an English Opium-Eater • Thomas de Quincey

... "The big bow-wow I can do myself, like anyone going," said Scott, but he owned that the exquisite touch of Miss Austere was denied him; and it seems certainly to have been denied in greater or less measure to all her successors. But though reading and writing come by nature, as Dogberry justly said, a taste in them may be cultivated, or once cultivated, it may be preserved; and why was it not so among those poor islanders? One does not ask such things in order to be at the pains ...
— Henry James, Jr. • William Dean Howells



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