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Quotes from Hamlet

Quiz yourself by thinking what should be in each of the black spaces below before clicking on it to display the answer.
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Question
Answer
Scene
'Tis bitter cold   and I am sick at heart -Francisco   Act1 scene1  
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What, has this   thing appeared again tonight? -Horatio   Act1 scene1  
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'tis but our   fantasy- Marcellus   Act1 scene1  
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It harrows me   with fear and wonder.- Horatio   Act1 scene1  
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Stay, speak, speak   I charge the speak! -Horatio   Act1 scene1  
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He smote   the sledded Polacks -Horatio (in reference to King Hamlet, Hamlet's foil)   Act1 scene1  
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martial   stalk-Marcellus   Act1 scene1  
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This bodies some strange   euption to our state- Horatio (superstions of the period)   Act1 scene1  
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Valiant   Hamlet   Act1 scene1  
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young Fortinbras of unimproved   mettle, hot and full   Act1 scene1  
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Julius fell   , The graves stood tennantless(allusion to ancient Rome, Julius was killed by traitors. Also was said that corpses rose from the dead. Obsession with hierarchy.)   Act1 scene1  
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sometime sister,   now our queen   Act1 scene2  
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Now follows   Moves on, giving a speech, doesn't pause   Act1 scene2  
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pester us with a message   importing the surender of those lands lost by his father   Act1 scene2  
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[Aside] A little more than kin,   and less than kind.   Act1 scene2  
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I am too much   i'th'sun.   Act1 scene2  
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inky   cloak   Act1 scene2  
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suits of   solem black   Act1 scene2  
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I have that within which passes show,   These are but the trappings and the suits of woe.   Act1 scene2  
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unmanly   grief   Act1 scene2  
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heart unfortified,   a mind impatient   Act1 scene2  
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weary, stale,   flat and unprofitable   Act1 scene2  
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tis and unweeded garden   that grow to seed; things rank and gross in nature possess it merely   Act1 scene2  
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Frailty,   thy name is woman!   Act1 scene2  
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A beast that wants   discourse of reason   Act1 scene2  
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no more like my father   Than I to Hercules   Act1 scene2  
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incestuous   sheets   Act1 scene2  
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The funeral baked meats   did coldy furnish forth the marriage tables   Act1 scene2  
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A countenance more in sorrow   than in anger   Act1 scene2  
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give it and understanding   but no tongue   Act1 scene2  
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My farther's spirit   -in arms!   Act1 scene2  
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Hold it a fashion   and a toy in blood   Act1 scene3  
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subject   to his birht   Act1 scene3  
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Fear it, Ophelia,   fear it   Act1 scene3  
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Do not as some ungracious   pastors do   Act1 scene3  
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This above all:   to thine own self be true   Act1 scene3  
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give every man thy ear,   but few thy voice   Act1 scene3  
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You have taken these tenders for true pay   which are not stirling   Act1 scene3  
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You'll tender   me a fool   Act1 scene3  
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More honoured in breach   than the obsevance.   Act1 scene4  
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They clepe   us drunkards   Act1 scene4  
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spirit of health   or goblin damned   Act1 scene4  
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I do not set my life   at a pin's fee   Act1 scene4  
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He waxes desperate   with imagination   Act1 scene4  
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Something is rotten   in the state of Denmark   Act1 scene4  
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harrow up thy soul,   freeze thy young blood   Act1 scene5  
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List,list,   oh, list!   Act1 scene5  
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Revenge his fould   and most unnatural murder   Act1 scene5  
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Haste me to know't, that I with wings as swift   As meditation or the thoughts of love May sweep to my revenge.   Act1 scene5  
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The serpant that did sting thy father's life   Now wears his crown   Act1 scene5  
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in the blossoms   of my sin   Act1 scene5  
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A couch for luxury   and damned incest   Act1 scene5  
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Remember thee?   Rhetoric, repeated, of course he will.   Act1 scene5  
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Meet I set this down   That one may smile, and smile, and be a villain-   Act1 scene5  
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These are but wild and   whirling words, my lord.   Act1 scene5  
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Swear.   repeated   Act1 scene5  
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There is more things in   heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy.   Act1 scene5  
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antic   disposition   Act1 scene5  
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doubtful   phrase   Act1 scene5  
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The time   is out of joint   Act1 scene5  
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Oh, cursed spite,   That I was ever born to set it right!   Act1 scene5  
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And how, and who,   what means, and where they keep   Act2 Scene1  
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drinking, fencing, swearing   quarreling, drabbing-you may go so far   Act2 Scene1  
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flash and outbreak   of a fiery mind- polonius of laertes   Act2 Scene1  
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Wherefore   should you do this?-butting in   Act2 Scene1  
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what was I   about to say?   Act2 Scene1  
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or then, or then,   with such or such   Act2 Scene1  
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Your bait of falsehood   takes this carp of truth   Act2 Scene1  
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By indirections   find directions out   Act2 Scene1  
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doublet   all unbraced   Act2 Scene1  
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Pale   as his shirt   Act2 Scene1  
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pietous   in purport   Act2 Scene1  
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He took me by the wrist   and held me hard   Act2 Scene1  
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he raised a sigh so pietous and profound   as it did seem to shatter all his bulk and end his being   Act2 Scene1  
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He seemed   to find his way with out his eyes   Act2 Scene1  
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This is the   very ecstasy of love   Act2 Scene1  
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It is as proper to our age To cast beyond ourselves in our opinion   as it is for the younger sort to lack discretion   Act2 Scene1  
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The need we have   to use you did provoke our hasty sending.   Act2 scene2  
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no the'exterior nor   the inward man Resembles that it was   Act2 scene2  
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So much from   th'understanding of himself   Act2 scene2  
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To lay our service   freely at your feet   Act2 scene2  
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My too much   changed son   Act2 scene2  
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brevity is the   soul of wit   Act2 scene2  
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More matter   with less art   Act2 scene2  
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Why day is day, night   night, and time is time   Act2 scene2  
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That he is mad 'tis true; tis true   'tis pity; And pity 'tis 'tis true   Act2 scene2  
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in her   excellent white bosom   Act2 scene2  
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doubt that the stars are fire, doubt that the sun doth move,   doubt truth to be a liar, but never doubt I love.   Act2 scene2  
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I love thee best,   oh, most best, believe it   Act2 scene2  
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To be honest, as this world goes,   is to be one picked out of ten thousand.   Act2 scene2  
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the sun   breed maggots in a dead dog   Act2 scene2  
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Though this be madness,   yet there is method in't   Act2 scene2  
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I will not more willingly part withal-   except my life, except my life, except my life.   Act2 scene2  
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Then you live about her waist,   or in the middle of her favours?   Act2 scene2  
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I hold of ambition so airy and light a quality   that it is but a shadow's shadow.   Act2 scene2  
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Then are our begars bodies, and our   monarchs and outstretched heroes the beggars' shadows.   Act2 scene2  
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What a piece of work is man, how noble in reason, how infinite in faculties,   in form and moving how express and admirable, in action how like and angel, in apprehension how like a god:   Act2 scene2  
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Man delights not me-   No, nor woman neither, though by your smiling you seem to say so   Act 2 scene2  
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Black as   his purpose   Act 2 scene2  
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And all for nothing!   For Hecuba!   Act 2 scene2  
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the devil hath power   T'assume a pleasing shape   Act 2 scene2  
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The play's the thing   wherein I'll catch the conscience of the King.   Act 2 scene2  
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crafty madness   keeps him aloof   Act3 scene1  
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some   confession   Act3 scene1  
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forcing of   his disposition   Act3 scene1  
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I do wish That your good beauties   be the happy cause Of Hamlet's wildness   Act3 scene1  
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devotion's visage and pious action   we do sugar o'er The devil himself   Act3 scene1  
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How smart a lash that speech   doth give my conscience!   Act3 scene1  
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Oh heavy   burden!   Act3 scene1  
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To be, or not to be   that is the question:   Act3 scene1  
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slings and arrows   of outrageous fortune   Act3 scene1  
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To die, to sleep; To sleep perchance to dream-   ay, there's the rub: For in that sleep of death what dreams may come,   Act3 scene1  
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For in that sleep of death   what dreams may come,   Act3 scene1  
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The undoscovered country,   from whose bourn No traveller returns   Act3 scene1  
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rather bear those ills we have     Act3 scene1  
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The fair   Ophelia!   Act3 scene1  
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Ha, ha!   Are you honest?   Act3 scene1  
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power of beauty will sooner transform   honesty from what it is to a bawd   Act3 scene1  
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I did   love you once   Act3 scene1  
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I loved   you not   Act3 scene1  
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Get thee to a nunnery.   Why, wouldst thou be a breeder of sinners?   Act3 scene1  
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proud, revengedul,   ambitious   Act3 scene1  
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arrant   knaves   Act3 scene1  
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he may play the fool   nowhere but in's own house   Act3 scene1  
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Heavenly powers,   restore him!   Act3 scene1  
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God hath given you one face   and you make yourselves another.   Act3 scene1  
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Those that are married already,   all but one, shall live;   Act3 scene1  
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coutiers, soldier's, scholar's,   eye, tongue, sword,   Act3 scene1  
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glass   of fashion   Act3 scene1  
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Like sweet bells   jangled out of tune and harsh,   Act3 scene1  
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Madness in geat ones   must not unwatched go.   Act3 scene1  
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trippingly   on the tongue   Act3 scene2  
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let your own discretion   be your tutor   Act3 scene2  
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'twere the mirror up to nature;   to show virtue her feature, scorn her own image   Act3 scene2  
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imitated humanity   so abominably   Act3 scene2  
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not a pipe   for Fortune's finger   Act3 scene2  
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Give me a man   that is not passion's slave   Act3 scene2  
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Something   too much of this.   Act3 scene2  
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I eat the air,   promise-crammed   Act3 scene2  
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Country   matters   Act3 scene2  
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Metal   mor attractive   Act3 scene2  
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or any show   that you will show him   Act3 scene2  
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You are naught,   you are naught   Act3 scene2  
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'Tis brief my lord.   As woman's love.   Act3 scene2  
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Such love must needs be   treason in my breast   Act3 scene2  
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what we do determine,   oft we break   Act3 scene2  
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The lady doth protest   too much, methinks   Act3 scene2  
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I could interpret between you and   your love if I could see the puppets dallying   Act3 scene2  
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Thoughts black, hands apt,   dugs fit, and time agreeing   Act3 scene2  
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Give me some light.   Away.   Act3 scene2  
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let the strucken   deer go weep,   Act3 scene2  
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A very,   very- pajock.   Act3 scene2  
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I'll take the ghost's word   for a thousand pound   Act3 scene2  
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marvellous   distempered   Act3 scene2  
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while the grass grows-   the proverb is something musty   Act3 scene2  
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how unworhty a thing you make of me.   You would play upon me   Act3 scene2  
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Why, do you think i am   easier to be played on than a pipe?   Act3 scene2  
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Like a;   camel, weasel, whale (polonius agrees withall)   Act3 scene2  
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witching   time   Act3 scene2  
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I drink   hot blood   Act3 scene2  
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I will speak daggers   to her, but use none.   Act3 scene2  
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majesty dies not alone, but like a   gulf doth draw What's near it with it.   Act3 scene3  
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Never alone did the King   sigh, but with general groan.   Act3 scene3  
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my offence is rank,   it smells to high heaven   Act3 scene3  
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primal   elsdest curse upon't A brother's muder!   Act3 scene3  
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Though inclination   be as sharp as will   Act3 scene3  
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My crown,   mine own ambition, and my queen.   Act3 scene3  
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Oh bosom   black as death!   Act3 scene3  
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Bow,   stubborn knees;   Act3 scene3  
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hire and salary,   not revenge   Act3 scene3  
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crimes broad blown,   as flush as May   Act3 scene3  
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drunk asleep, or in his rage,   O in th'inscestuous pleasure of his bed   Act3 scene3  
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his heels may kick at heaven   and that his soul may be as damned and black as hell   Act3 scene3  
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My words fly up, my thoughts remain below,   words without thoughts never to heaven go.   Act3 scene3  
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Grace hath screened and stood   between muc heat and him   Act3 scene4  
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father much   offended   Act3 scene4  
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your husband's brother's wife,   and, would it were not so, you are my mother.   Act3 scene4  
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I set you up a glass   Where you may see the inmost part of you.   Act3 scene4  
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Almost as bad, good mother,   As kill a king and marry with his bother.   Act3 scene4  
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damned   custom   Act3 scene4  
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makes marriage vows   as false as dicers' oaths.   Act3 scene4  
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What act that roasrs so loud   and thunders in the index?   Act3 scene4  
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An eye like Mars,   to threaten and command   Act3 scene4  
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mildewed   ear   Act3 scene4  
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Have you   eyes?   Act3 scene4  
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Eyes withot feeling, feeling withoug sight,   Ears without hands or eyes, smelling sans all,   Act3 scene4  
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Oh shame,   where is thy blush?   Act3 scene4  
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Stewed in corruption,   honeying and making love Over the nasty sty!   Act3 scene4  
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These wrds like   daggers enter in my ears.   Act3 scene4  
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That from a shel the precious   diadem stoe and put it in his pocket   Act3 scene4  
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tardy son   to chide?   Act3 scene4  
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dread   command?   Act3 scene4  
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This visitation Is but to   whet thy almost blunted purpose.   Act3 scene4  
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with th'incorporal     Act3 scene4  
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My pulse as your doth   temperately keep time, and makes as healthful music   Act3 scene4  
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rank corruption, mining within,   infects unseen   Act3 scene4  
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do not spread the compost   on the weeds to make them ranker   Act3 scene4  
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cleft my   heart in twain   Act3 scene4  
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go not   to my uncle's bed   Act3 scene4  
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I must be cruel   only to be kind.   Act3 scene4  
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Let the bloat King   tempt you again to bed   Act3 scene4  
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pair of   reechy kisses   Act3 scene4  
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damned   fingers   Act3 scene4  
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I essentially am not   in madness, but mad in craft   Act3 scene4  
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fair,   sober, wise   Act3 scene4  
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if words be made of breath, and breath of life,   I have no life to breathe   Act3 scene4  
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I will trust as   I will adders fanged   Act3 scene4  
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the engineer hoist   with his own petard   Act3 scene4  
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most   grave   Act3 scene4  
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There's matter in these sighs,   these profound heaves You must translate.   Act4 scene1  
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Mad as the sea and wind   when both contend which is mightier.   Act4 scene1  
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His liberty is full of threats to all-   To you yourself, to us, to everyone.   Act4 scene1  
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Should have kept short, restrained,   and out of haunt This mad young man.   Act4 scene1  
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like the owner of a fould disease,   to keep it from divulging, let it feed even on the pith of life.   Act4 scene1  
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his poisoned shot,   may miss our name   Act4 scene1  
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My soul is full   of discord and dismay   Act4 scene1  
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a sponge   calls Rosencrantz   Act4 scene2  
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soaks up the King's countenance,   his rewards, his authorities.   Act4 scene2  
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first mouthed,   to be last swallowed   Act4 scene2  
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but squeezing you and,   sponge, you shall be dry again.   Act4 scene2  
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A knavish speech sleeps   in a foolish ear.   Act4 scene2  
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He's love of the   most distracted multitude,   Act4 scene3  
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At   supper   Act4 scene3  
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Not where he eat's,   but where he is eaten.   Act4 scene3  
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politic   worms   Act4 scene3  
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Your worm is your   only emperor for diet   Act4 scene3  
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two dishes,   but to one table.   Act4 scene3  
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you shall nose him   as you go up the stairs into the lobby   Act4 scene3  
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fiery   quickness   Act4 scene3  
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if thou knew'st   our purposes.   Act4 scene3  
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By letter conjuring to that effect,   The present death of Hamlet.   Act4 scene3  
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for like the hectic in   my blood he rages   Act4 scene3  
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Go,   captain   Act4 scene4  
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Tell   him   Act4 scene4  
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We go to gain a little patch of ground   That hath in it no profit but the name.   Act4 scene4  
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How all occasions do inform against me,   And spur my dull reveng!   Act4 scene4  
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What is a man If his chief good and market   of his time be but to sleep and feed?   Act4 scene4  
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delicat and   tender prince   Act4 scene4  
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what is mortal and unsure To all tht fortune,   death, and danger dare, even for an eggshell.   Act4 scene4  
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find quarrel   in a straw when honours at the stake.   Act4 scene4  
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Oh, from this time forth   My thoughts be bloody or be nothing worth.   Act4 scene4  
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Spurns enviously   at straws:   Act4 scene4  
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He is dead   and gone   Act4 scene5  
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his head a   grass-green turf   Act4 scene5  
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Let in the maid that   out a maid Never departed more.   Act4 scene5  
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By Cock,   they are to blame.   Act4 scene5  
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Come,   my coach.   Act4 scene5  
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When sorrows come, they come not single spies,   but in battalions   Act4 scene5  
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we are pictures,   or mere beasts;   Act4 scene5  
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riotous   head   Act4 scene5  
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That drop of blood that's calm   proclaims me bastard, cries cuckold to my father   Act4 scene5  
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Why art thou   thus incensed   Act4 scene5  
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To hell, aalegiance!   Vows to the blackest devil!   Act4 scene5  
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I'll be revenged   Most throughly for my death.   Act4 scene5  
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guiltess of   your father's death   Act4 scene5  
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oh heat,   dry up my brains!   Act4 scene5  
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young maid's wits Should   be as mortal as an old man's life?   Act4 scene5  
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some violets, but they withered   all when my father died.   Act4 scene5  
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thought and affliction, passion,   hell itself she turns to favour and to prettiness.   Act4 scene5  
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Do you   see this, oh God?   Act4 scene5  
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patience............jointly labour with your   soul To give it due content   Act4 scene5  
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No trophy, sword,   nor hatchment o'er his bones, no noble rite, no formal ostentaion-   Act4 scene5  
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where th'offence is,   let the great axe fall.   Act4 scene5  
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She's so conjunctive   to my life and soul   Act4 scene7  
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to a   public count   Act4 scene7  
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like the spring that   turneth wood to stone   Act4 scene7  
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gyves   to graces   Act4 scene7  
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my arrows, too slightly timbered for   so loud a wind, would have reverted to my bow again   Act4 scene7  
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noble   father   Act4 scene7  
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no wind of   blame shall breathe   Act4 scene7  
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pluck such   envy   Act4 scene7  
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envenom with   his envy   Act4 scene7  
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painting of sorrow,   A face without a heart?   Act4 scene7  
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There lives within the very flame of love   A kind of wick or snuff that will abate it   Act4 scene7  
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To cut his   throat i'th'church.   Act4 scene7  
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Revenge should   have no bounds   Act4 scene7  
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One woe doth   tread upon another's heel,   Act4 scene7  
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Drowned?   Oh, where?   Act4 scene7  
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like a creature native   and indued Unto that element   Act4 scene7  
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heavy with   their drink   Act4 scene7  
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Alas, then   she is drowned   Act4 scene7  
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Too much of water hast thou,   poor Ophelia, And therefore I forbid my tears   Act4 scene7  
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nature her custom holds,   Let shame say what it will   Act4 scene7  
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I have a speech o'fire that   fain would blaze But that this folly douts it.   Act4 scene7  
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wilfully seeks   her own salvation?   Act5 scene1  
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If this had not been a   gentlewoman, she should have been buried out o'Christian burial.   Act5 scene1  
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the more pity that great folk   should have countenance in this world to drown or hang themselves more than their even   Act5 scene1  
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What is he that builds stronger than either   the mason, the shipwright, or the carpenter?   Act5 scene1  
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The gallows-maker, for that frame   outlives a thousand tenants.   Act5 scene1  
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'A grave-maker.' The houses he makes   lasts till doomsday.   Act5 scene1  
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Has this fellow no feeling   of his business that he sings in grave-making?   Act5 scene1  
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jowls it to the ground, as if'twere Cain's   jawbone, that did the first murder!   Act5 scene1  
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Lady   Worm's   Act5 scene1  
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I think it be thine indeed,   for thou liest in't.   Act5 scene1  
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Why was he   sent into England?   Act5 scene1  
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He shall recover his wits there.   Or if he do not, 'tis no great matter there.   Act5 scene1  
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There the men are   as mad as he.   Act5 scene1  
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How long will a   man lie i'th'earth ere he rot?   Act5 scene1  
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Alas, poor Yorick! I knew him, Horatio: a fellow of   infinite jest, of most excellent fancy.   Act5 scene1  
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Whee be your gibes now, your gambolss, your songs,   your flashes of merriment, that were wont to set the table on a roar?   Act5 scene1  
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let her paint and inch thick,   to this favour she must come.   Act5 scene1  
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Imperial Caeser, dead and turned to clay,   Might stop a hole to keep the wind away.   Act5 scene1  
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From her fair and unpolluted flesh   May violets spring.   Act5 scene1  
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A minist'ring angel shall my sister be   When thou liest howling.   Act5 scene1  
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Sweets to   the sweet   Act5 scene1  
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I thought they bride-   bed to have decked   Act5 scene1  
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pile your dust upon   the quick and dead   Act5 scene1  
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The devil   take thy soul!   Act5 scene1  
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I am not splenative and rash,   Yet ave i in me something dangerous,   Act5 scene1  
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I loved   Ophelia.   Act5 scene1  
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Forty thousand brothers could not with all   their quantity of love Make up my sum.   Act5 scene1  
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Woo't weep, woo't fight,   woo't fast, woo't tear thyself, woo't drink up eisel, eat a crcodile?   Act5 scene1  
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Dost come here   to whine,   Act5 scene1  
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Make Ossa   like a wart!   Act5 scene1  
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Let Hercules himself do what he may,   The cat will mew, and dog will have his day.   Act5 scene1  
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Strengthen   your patience   Act5 scene1  
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Present   push   Act5 scene1  
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kind of fighting that   would not let me sleep.   Act5 scene2  
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There's a divinity that shapes our ends,   Rough-hew them how we will.   Act5 scene2  
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they did make   love to this employment.   Act5 scene2  
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killed my king   and whored my mother,   Act5 scene2  
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a man's life's no   more than to say 'one'.   Act5 scene2  
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the bravery of his grief did put   me into a towering passion.   Act5 scene2  
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It is indifferent   cold, my lord, indeed.   Act5 scene2  
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Exceedingly, my lord,   it is very sultry-   Act5 scene2  
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of very soft society   and great showing   Act5 scene2  
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all's golden   words are spent   Act5 scene2  
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but to know a man well   were to know himself.   Act5 scene2  
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I will gain nothing   but my shame and the odd hits   Act5 scene2  
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I am constant   to my purposes   Act5 scene2  
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ill all's here   about my heart   Act5 scene2  
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a kind of gainsgiving   as would perhaps troubl a woman   Act5 scene2  
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There is a special providence in the fall of a sparrow. If it be now,   'tis not to come; if it be not to come, it will be now; if it be not now, yet it will come. The readiness is all.   Act5 scene2  
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Never   Hamlet.   Act5 scene2  
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Who does it then?   His madness.   Act5 scene2  
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Hamlet is of the faction that is wronged;   His madness is poor Hamlet's enemy.   Act5 scene2  
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I have shot my arrow   o'er the house and hurt my brother.   Act5 scene2  
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I am satisfied in nature, Whose motive   in this case should stir me most to my revenger;   Act5 scene2  
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elder   masters   Act5 scene2  
🗑
your offered love   like love and will not wrong it.   Act5 scene2  
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skill shall like a star i'th'darkest   night stick fiery off indeed.   Act5 scene2  
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The cannons to the heavens,   the heavens to earth   Act5 scene2  
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Here's to thy   health   Act5 scene2  
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And yet it is almost   against my conscience.   Act5 scene2  
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woodcock to mine   on springe   Act5 scene2  
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No, no,   the drink, the drink!   Act5 scene2  
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It is here, Hamlet.   Hamlet thou art slain.   Act5 scene2  
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The King-   the Kings's to blame.   Act5 scene2  
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Tehn, venom,   to thy work.   Act5 scene2  
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thou inscestuous, murd'rous,   damned Dane, Drink off this potion.   Act5 scene2  
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Mine and my father's death   come not upont thee, Nor thine on me.   Act5 scene2  
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Heaven make   thee free of it.   Act5 scene2  
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Death, Is   strict in his arrest   Act5 scene2  
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I am mor antique   Roman than a Dane.   Act5 scene2  
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in this harsh world draw thy   breath in pain to tell my story.   Act5 scene2  
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Exchange   forgivness   Act5 scene2  
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potent poison   quite o'ercrows my spirit.   Act5 scene2  
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-the rest   is silence.   Act5 scene2  
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He has my   dying voice.   Act5 scene2  
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Now cracks   a noble heart.   Act5 scene2  
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sweet prince, and flights of   angels sing thee to they rest!   Act5 scene2  
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woe or wonder,   cease your search.   Act5 scene2  
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So shall you hear of carnal, bloody,and unnatural acts,   of accidental judgements, casual slaughters, of deaths put on by cunning and forced cause,   Act5 scene2  
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with sorrow   I embrace my fortune.   Act5 scene2  
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Bear Hamlet like a   soldier to the stage,   Act5 scene2  
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proved   most royal   Act5 scene2  
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soldier's music   and the rite of war   Act5 scene2  
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Such a sight as this   becomes the field   Act5 scene2  
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Go, bid   the soldiers shoot.   Act5 scene2  
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With mirth in funeral   and dirge in marriage   Act1 scene2  
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