Analysis Pages
Vocabulary in Hamlet
Vocabulary Examples in Hamlet:
Act I - Scene I
🔒"to illume that part of heaven..." See in text (Act I - Scene I)
"in russet mantle clad..." See in text (Act I - Scene I)
"that is the trumpet to the morn..." See in text (Act I - Scene I)
"Neptune's empire..." See in text (Act I - Scene I)
"With martial stalk..." See in text (Act I - Scene I)
"sledded Polacks..." See in text (Act I - Scene I)
"the sensible and true avouch..." See in text (Act I - Scene I)
"good Marcellus..." See in text (Act I - Scene I)
"Holla..." See in text (Act I - Scene I)
"liegemen..." See in text (Act I - Scene I)
"ho..." See in text (Act I - Scene I)
"Where now it burns..." See in text (Act I - Scene I)
Act I - Scene II
🔒"In my mind's eye, Horatio...." See in text (Act I - Scene II)
"Give it an understanding, but no tongue..." See in text (Act I - Scene II)
"A sable silvered..." See in text (Act I - Scene II)
"truncheon's length..." See in text (Act I - Scene II)
"A truant disposition..." See in text (Act I - Scene II)
"impious stubbornness..." See in text (Act I - Scene II)
"obsequious..." See in text (Act I - Scene II)
"dejected havior of the visage..." See in text (Act I - Scene II)
"thy vailed lids..." See in text (Act I - Scene II)
"Dread..." See in text (Act I - Scene II)
"His further gait herein..." See in text (Act I - Scene II)
"With mirth in funeral, and with dirge in marriage..." See in text (Act I - Scene II)
"imperial jointress..." See in text (Act I - Scene II)
"our sometime sister, now our queen..." See in text (Act I - Scene II)
"The memory be green..." See in text (Act I - Scene II)
"Here in the cheer and comfort of our eye,..." See in text (Act I - Scene II)
"O, that this too too sullied flesh would melt, Thaw and resolve itself into a dew,..." See in text (Act I - Scene II)
"less than kind..." See in text (Act I - Scene II)
"Thrift, thrift, Horatio..." See in text (Act I - Scene II)
"i' the sun..." See in text (Act I - Scene II)
Act I - Scene III
🔒"with a larger tether may he walk..." See in text (Act I - Scene III)
"mere implorators of unholy suits..." See in text (Act I - Scene III)
"a command to parley..." See in text (Act I - Scene III)
"Set your entreatments at a higher rate..." See in text (Act I - Scene III)
"extinct in both..." See in text (Act I - Scene III)
"springes to catch woodcocks..." See in text (Act I - Scene III)
"Which are not sterling..." See in text (Act I - Scene III)
"Marry..." See in text (Act I - Scene III)
"to thine own self be true..." See in text (Act I - Scene III)
"Take each man's censure..." See in text (Act I - Scene III)
"A double blessing is a double grace..." See in text (Act I - Scene III)
"steep and thorny way to heaven..." See in text (Act I - Scene III)
"Virtue itself 'scapes not calumnious strokes..." See in text (Act I - Scene III)
"The chariest maid is prodigal enough..." See in text (Act I - Scene III)
"your chaste treasure open..." See in text (Act I - Scene III)
"no soil nor cautel doth besmirch..." See in text (Act I - Scene III)
"In thews and bulk..." See in text (Act I - Scene III)
"My necessaries are embark'd...." See in text (Act I - Scene III)
"tenders..." See in text (Act I - Scene III)
"the primrose path of dalliance..." See in text (Act I - Scene III)
Act I - Scene IV
🔒"beetles o'er his base..." See in text (Act I - Scene IV)
"shake our disposition..." See in text (Act I - Scene IV)
"burst their cerements..." See in text (Act I - Scene IV)
"thy canonized bones..." See in text (Act I - Scene IV)
"a questionable shape..." See in text (Act I - Scene IV)
"dram of evil..." See in text (Act I - Scene IV)
"the o'ergrowth of some complexion..." See in text (Act I - Scene IV)
"The pith and marrow of our attribute..." See in text (Act I - Scene IV)
"Makes us traduced..." See in text (Act I - Scene IV)
"to the manner born..." See in text (Act I - Scene IV)
"Keeps wassail..." See in text (Act I - Scene IV)
Act I - Scene V
🔒"I do commend me to you..." See in text (Act I - Scene V)
"With arms encumber'd thus..." See in text (Act I - Scene V)
"old mole..." See in text (Act I - Scene V)
"Hic et ubique..." See in text (Act I - Scene V)
"truepenny..." See in text (Act I - Scene V)
"But he's an arrant knave..." See in text (Act I - Scene V)
"this distracted globe..." See in text (Act I - Scene V)
"lazar-like..." See in text (Act I - Scene V)
"a most instant tetter..." See in text (Act I - Scene V)
"posset And curd..." See in text (Act I - Scene V)
"swift as quicksilver..." See in text (Act I - Scene V)
"With juice of cursed hebenon..." See in text (Act I - Scene V)
"harrow up thy soul..." See in text (Act I - Scene V)
Act II - Scene I
🔒"unreclaimed blood,..." See in text (Act II - Scene I)
"speak of horrors,..." See in text (Act II - Scene I)
"Your bait of falsehood takes this carp of truth..." See in text (Act II - Scene I)
"encompassment and drift of question..." See in text (Act II - Scene I)
"Having ever seen in the prenominate crimes The youth you breathe of guilty..." See in text (Act II - Scene I)
" season it in the charge..." See in text (Act II - Scene I)
"forgeries..." See in text (Act II - Scene I)
"By indirections find directions out..." See in text (Act II - Scene I)
"As if he had been..." See in text (Act II - Scene I)
Act II - Scene II
🔒"The play's the thing..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"I'll tent him to the quick..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"With most miraculous organ..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"A scullion..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"With this slave's offal..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"A dull and muddy-mettled rascal..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"Like John-a-dreams, unpregnant of my cause..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"Make mad the guilty and appal the free..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"A broken voice..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"in a dream of passion..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"better have a bad epitaph..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"according to their desert..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"Would have made milch..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"would treason have pronounced..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"bisson rheum..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"The mobled queen..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"the spokes and fellies..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"with your beard..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"On Mars's armour..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"the Cyclops..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"senseless Ilium..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"Striking too short at Greeks..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"eyes like carbuncles..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"total gules..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"With heraldry more dismal..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"whose sable arms..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"The rugged Pyrrhus..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"like th' Hyrcanian beast..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"but wherefore I know not..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"More than his father's death..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"where he speaks of Priam's slaughter..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"'twas Æneas' tale to Dido..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"an honest method..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"indict the author of affecta- tion..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"there were no sal- lets in the lines..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"'twas caviary to the general..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"cracked within the ring..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"by the altitude of a chopine..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"thy face is valanced..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"the pious chanson..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"O Jephthah, judge of Israel..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"nor Plautus too light..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"poem unlimited..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"on his ass..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"Roscius..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"When the wind is southerly..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"I know a hawk from a handsaw..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"appurtenance of welcome is fashion..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"'Sblood..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"ducats..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"make mows at him..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"unless the poet and the player went to cuffs..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"holds it no sin to tarre them..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"to make them exclaim against their own succession..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"an eyrie of children, little eyases..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"was better both ways..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"the late innovation..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"whose lungs are tickle o' the sere..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"He that plays the king..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"coted..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"by your smiling you seem to say so..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"firmament..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"a sterile promontory..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"moult no feather..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"by the consonancy of our youth..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"sort you with the rest..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"by my fay, I cannot reason..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"Then are our beggars bodies..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"so airy and light a quality..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"Which dreams indeed are ambition..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"your ambition makes it one..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"she is a strumpet..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"On Fortune's cap we are not the very button..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"you could go backward..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"God-a-mercy..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"an arras..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"out of thy star..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"play'd the desk or table-book..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"Perpend..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"the cause of this defect..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"And pity 'tis 'tis true..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"More matter, with less art..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"brevity is the soul of wit..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"levies..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"Upon our first..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
" our brother Norway..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"we shall sift him..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"the fruit to that great feast..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"as I hold my soul..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"in the full bent..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"Put your dread pleasures more into command..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"As fits a king's remembrance..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"gentry..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"neighbour'd to his youth and haviour..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"his commission..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"in annual fee..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"sends out arrests..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"bounded in a nutshell..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"What a piece of work is a man..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"there is nothing either good or bad but thinking makes it so...." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"As therein are set down..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"falsely borne in hand..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"the Polack..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"Buzz, buzz..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"Hercules and his load..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"fishmonger..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"I'll loose my daughter to him..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"Within the centre..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
"Take this from this..." See in text (Act II - Scene II)
Act III - Scene I
🔒"If she find him not..." See in text (Act III - Scene I)
"With variable objects shall expel This something-settled matter in his heart..." See in text (Act III - Scene I)
"O'er which his melancholy sits on brood..." See in text (Act III - Scene I)
"what monsters you make of them..." See in text (Act III - Scene I)
"for thy dowry..." See in text (Act III - Scene I)
"inoculate our old stock but we shall relish of it..." See in text (Act III - Scene I)
"from what it is to a bawd..." See in text (Act III - Scene I)
"How does your honour for this many a day..." See in text (Act III - Scene I)
"in thy orisons..." See in text (Act III - Scene I)
"And lose the name of action..." See in text (Act III - Scene I)
"fardels bear..." See in text (Act III - Scene I)
"With a bare bodkin..." See in text (Act III - Scene I)
"Ay, there's the rub..." See in text (Act III - Scene I)
"To sleep—perchance to dream..." See in text (Act III - Scene I)
"That flesh is heir to..." See in text (Act III - Scene I)
"No more..." See in text (Act III - Scene I)
"To be, or not to be, that is the question..." See in text (Act III - Scene I)
"beautied with plastering art..." See in text (Act III - Scene I)
"we do sugar o'er..." See in text (Act III - Scene I)
"That show of such an exercise..." See in text (Act III - Scene I)
"it so fell out..." See in text (Act III - Scene I)
"Did you assay him..." See in text (Act III - Scene I)
"to be sounded..." See in text (Act III - Scene I)
"why he puts on this confusion..." See in text (Act III - Scene I)
"Niggard of question..." See in text (Act III - Scene I)
"It shall be so. Madness in great ones must not unwatch'd go..." See in text (Act III - Scene I)
"lawful espials..." See in text (Act III - Scene I)
"Get thee to a nunnery..." See in text (Act III - Scene I)
Act III - Scene II
🔒" trippingly..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"To give them seals never..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"she be shent..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"I will speak daggers to her, but use none..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"though you can fret me..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"Govern these ventages..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"drive me into a toil..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"while the grass grows..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"Sir, I lack advancement..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"were she ten times our mother..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"is there no sequel..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"not of the right breed..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"but to the matter..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"put your discourse into some(295) frame..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"put him to his purgation..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"choler..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"Of Jove himself..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"my fortunes turn Turk with me..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"With Hecate's ban thrice blasted..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"So you must take your husbands..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"free souls..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"Directly seasons him his enemy..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"you mark his favorite flies..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"To pay ourselves what to ourselves is debt..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"But what we do determine oft we break..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"That's wormwood..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"My operant powers their functions leave..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"Hymen did our hands..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"Neptune's salt wash and Tellus' orbed ground..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"Phoebus' cart..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"miching mallecho..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"O God, your only jig-maker..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"capons..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"of the chameleon's dish..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"I will pay the theft..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"Do not itself unkennel..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"so well commeddled..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"Sh'hath seal'd thee for herself..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"Where thrift may follow fawning..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"let the candied tongue lick absurd pomp..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"That no revenue hast..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"a most pitiful ambition..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"some of Nature's journeymen..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"not to speak it profanely..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"Suit the action to the word..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"Termagant. It out-Herods Herod..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"periwig-pated fellow..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"When churchyards yawn..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"They fool me to the top of my bent..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"The hart ungalled play..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"and presently..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"The Mousetrap..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"to take off my edge..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
"chorus..." See in text (Act III - Scene II)
Act III - Scene III
🔒"This physic but prolongs thy sickly days..." See in text (Act III - Scene III)
"He took my father grossly, full of bread..." See in text (Act III - Scene III)
"this is hire and salary..." See in text (Act III - Scene III)
"heart with strings of steel..." See in text (Act III - Scene III)
"To give in evidence..." See in text (Act III - Scene III)
"Offence's gilded hand..." See in text (Act III - Scene III)
"we will fetters put upon this fear..." See in text (Act III - Scene III)
"but with a general groan..." See in text (Act III - Scene III)
"mortised and adjoin'd..." See in text (Act III - Scene III)
"upon whose weal depends..." See in text (Act III - Scene III)
"With all the strength and armour of the mind..." See in text (Act III - Scene III)
Act III - Scene IV
🔒"This man shall set me packing..." See in text (Act III - Scene IV)
"When in one line two crafts directly meet..." See in text (Act III - Scene IV)
"Hoist with his own petar..." See in text (Act III - Scene IV)
"And marshal me to knavery..." See in text (Act III - Scene IV)
"as I will adders fang'd..." See in text (Act III - Scene IV)
"'Twere good you let him know..." See in text (Act III - Scene IV)
"To the next abstinence..." See in text (Act III - Scene IV)
"That not your trespass but my madness speaks..." See in text (Act III - Scene IV)
"Would gambol from..." See in text (Act III - Scene IV)
"And makes as healthful music..." See in text (Act III - Scene IV)
"yet all that is I see..." See in text (Act III - Scene IV)
"with the incorporal air..." See in text (Act III - Scene IV)
"Conceit in weakest bodies strongest works..." See in text (Act III - Scene IV)
"the precious diadem stole..." See in text (Act III - Scene IV)
"not twentieth part the tithe..." See in text (Act III - Scene IV)
"In the rank sweat of an enseamed bed..." See in text (Act III - Scene IV)
"cozen'd you at hoodman-blind..." See in text (Act III - Scene IV)
"apoplex'd..." See in text (Act III - Scene IV)
"And batten on this Moor..." See in text (Act III - Scene IV)
"Hyperion..." See in text (Act III - Scene IV)
"With tristful visage..." See in text (Act III - Scene IV)
"As false as dicers' oaths..." See in text (Act III - Scene IV)
"No, by the rood, not so..." See in text (Act III - Scene IV)
"you answer with an idle tongue..." See in text (Act III - Scene IV)
"screen'd and stood between Much heat..." See in text (Act III - Scene IV)
"How now, a rat? [Draws.] Dead for a ducat, dead..." See in text (Act III - Scene IV)
Act IV - Scene II
🔒"A knavish speech sleeps in a foolish ear..." See in text (Act IV - Scene II)
"The body is with the King, but the King is not with the body..." See in text (Act IV - Scene II)
"Compounded it with dust, whereto 'tis kin..." See in text (Act IV - Scene II)
Act IV - Scene III
🔒"cicatrice..." See in text (Act IV - Scene III)
"I see a cherub that sees them..." See in text (Act IV - Scene III)
"The bark is ready..." See in text (Act IV - Scene III)
"seek him i' the other place yourself..." See in text (Act IV - Scene III)
"A man may fish with the worm that hath eat..." See in text (Act IV - Scene III)
"and we fat ourselves for maggots...." See in text (Act IV - Scene III)
" not in their judgment, but their eye..." See in text (Act IV - Scene III)
Act IV - Scene IV
🔒"Even for an eggshell..." See in text (Act IV - Scene IV)
"Bestial oblivion, or some craven scruple..." See in text (Act IV - Scene IV)
"To fust in us unused..." See in text (Act IV - Scene IV)
"This is the imposthume of much wealth and peace..." See in text (Act IV - Scene IV)
"Craves the conveyance of a promised march..." See in text (Act IV - Scene IV)
Act IV - Scene V
🔒"They find us touch'd..." See in text (Act IV - Scene V)
"All flaxen was his poll..." See in text (Act IV - Scene V)
"like the kind life-rendering pelican..." See in text (Act IV - Scene V)
"you must wear your rue with a difference..." See in text (Act IV - Scene V)
"There's fennel for you, and columbines..." See in text (Act IV - Scene V)
"This nothing's more than matter..." See in text (Act IV - Scene V)
"O, how the wheel becomes it..." See in text (Act IV - Scene V)
"barefac'd on the bier..." See in text (Act IV - Scene V)
"some precious instance of itself..." See in text (Act IV - Scene V)
"paid with weight..." See in text (Act IV - Scene V)
"swoopstake, you will draw both friend and foe..." See in text (Act IV - Scene V)
"That both the worlds, I give to negligence..." See in text (Act IV - Scene V)
"between the chaste unsmirched brows..." See in text (Act IV - Scene V)
"The rabble call him lord..." See in text (Act IV - Scene V)
"By Cock..." See in text (Act IV - Scene V)
"By his cockle hat and staff..." See in text (Act IV - Scene V)
"Yet the unshaped use of it doth move(10) The hearers..." See in text (Act IV - Scene V)
"Eats not the flats with more impetuous haste..." See in text (Act IV - Scene V)
"It spills itself in fearing to be spilt..." See in text (Act IV - Scene V)
"such divinity doth hedge a king..." See in text (Act IV - Scene V)
Act IV - Scene VI
🔒"Horatio, when thou shalt have overlook'd..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VI)
Act IV - Scene VII
🔒"chaunted snatches of old lauds,..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"an envious sliver broke,..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"on the pendant boughs her crownet weeds..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"That liberal shepherds give a grosser name..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"A chalice for the nonce;..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"hot and dry..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"our drift look through our bad performance..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"Should have a back or second..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"no cataplasm so rare,..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"an unction of a mountebank,..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"set a double varnish on the fame..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"A sword unbated..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"Revenge should have no bounds..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"But to the quick o' the ulcer..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"like a spendthrift sigh, That hurts by easing..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"growing to a pleurisy,..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"Time qualifies the spark and fire of it...." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"the painting of a sorrow,..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
" to play with you...." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
" The scrimers of their natio..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"the brooch indeed..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"Come short of what he did...." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"incorpsed and demi-natured..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"this gallant..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"That I might be the organ...." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"As checking at his voyage..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"tell him to his teeth,..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"It warms the very sickness in my heart..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"Are all the rest come back..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"am set naked on your kingdom..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"Break not your sleeps for that...." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"Whose worth, if praises may go back again,..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"And so have I a noble father lost;..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"Convert his gyves to graces;..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"the general gender bear him,..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"the star moves not but in his sphere,..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"Lives almost by his looks;..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"your conscience my acquittance seal..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"for this 'would' changes..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"Know you the hand?..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"Too slightly timber'd for so loud a wind,..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
"seem much unsinew'd,..." See in text (Act IV - Scene VII)
Act V - Scene I
🔒" Sweets to the sweet..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"to the present push..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
" When that her golden couplets are disclose..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
" Make Ossa like a war..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
" though I am not splenitive and ras..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"To o'ertop old Pelion or the skyish head(250) Of blue Olympus..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"on that cursed head..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"treble..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"thy bride-bed to have deck'd..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
" For charitable prayer..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"And with such maimed rites?..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"Alexander looked o' this fashion..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"let her paint an inch thick..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"your gambols..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"! My gorge rises at ..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"your whoreson dead body..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"many pocky corses nowadays..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
" the age is(135) grown so picke..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
" he galls his kib..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"We must speak by the card..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"for thou liest in't..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
" of a pair of indenture..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
" Is this the fine of his fine..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"his quiddities now, his quillets, his cases, his tenures, and his tricks..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"but to play at loggets with 'em..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
" and now my Lady Worm's, chapless, and knock'd about the mazard with a sexton's spad..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"he meant to beg it..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"which this ass now o'erreaches..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"How the knave jowls it to the ground, as if 'were Cain's..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"hath the daintier sense...." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"get thee in Yaughan..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"will not mend his pace with beating..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"Ay, tell me that, and unyoke. ..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"Mass, I cannot tell. ..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"The gallows does well. But how does it well? It does well..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"bore arms...." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"great folk should have countenance..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"it is, will he, nill he, he goes...." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"goodman delver..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"perform; argal,..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"se offendendo..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
"The crowner hath sat on her..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
" Woo't weep, woo't fight, woo't fast, woo't tear thysel..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
" Alas, poor Yorick! I knew him, Horatio: a fellow of infinite je..." See in text (Act V - Scene I)
Act V - Scene II
🔒"palpable..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"But let this same be presently perform'd..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"Where is this sight?..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"with the occurrents..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"Absent thee from felicity awhile..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"as a woodcock to mine own springe..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"I am afeard you make a wanton of me..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"Or quit in answer of the third exchange..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"we defy augury..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"as would perhaps trouble a woman..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"He did comply with his dug before he sucked it..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"the drossy age dotes on..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"This lapwing runs away with the shell on his head..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"it is the breathing time of day with me..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"more German to the matter..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"I knew you must be edified by(155) the margent ere you had done..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"with their assigns, as girdle,(150) hanger, and so..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"it would not much approve me..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"His purse is empty already..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"The concernancy..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"his definement suffers no perdition in you..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"I beseech you remember—..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"chough..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"water-fly..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"And with such cozenage..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"Between the pass and fell incensed points..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"The changeling never known..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"even in that was heaven ordinant..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"I had my father's signet in my purse..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"Not shriving-time allow'd..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"How to forget that learning..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"benetted round with villainies..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"read it at more leisure..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"on the supervise, no leisure bated..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"Worse than the mutines in the bilboes..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"If aught of woe or wonder..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"The ears are senseless..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"I am more an antique Romanthan a Dane..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"I'll be your foil, Laertes..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"To keep my name ungor'd..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"Rapier and dagger..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)
"who else would trace him, his umbrage, nothing more..." See in text (Act V - Scene II)