This is a table of type quadgram and their frequencies. Use it to search & browse the list to learn more about your study carrel.
quadgram | frequency |
---|---|
here in the quarto | 25 |
at the same time | 21 |
in the first quarto | 16 |
in the st q | 15 |
the end of the | 12 |
for the sake of | 12 |
not in the quarto | 11 |
i do not know | 10 |
is not in the | 9 |
the rest of the | 8 |
the character of hamlet | 8 |
to a nunnery goe | 8 |
wanting in the first | 7 |
between ben jonson and | 7 |
be found in the | 7 |
in regard to the | 7 |
the return from parnassus | 7 |
is wanting in the | 7 |
as if he had | 7 |
to be able to | 7 |
with an introduction by | 7 |
or not to be | 6 |
of hamlet prince of | 6 |
for the purpose of | 6 |
in the character of | 6 |
in such a manner | 6 |
in the first act | 6 |
into the hands of | 6 |
go to a nunnery | 6 |
the scene of the | 6 |
in relation to the | 6 |
in the first edition | 5 |
in the st quarto | 5 |
the earth a while | 5 |
as well as the | 5 |
in the last scene | 5 |
in the second quarto | 5 |
the tragedy of hamlet | 5 |
i will my lord | 5 |
the text of the | 5 |
at the end of | 5 |
are not in the | 5 |
in spite of his | 5 |
enter hamlet and horatio | 5 |
as you like it | 5 |
on the other hand | 5 |
the public at large | 5 |
as if he were | 5 |
allows himself to be | 5 |
the children of the | 5 |
is one of the | 5 |
himself to be guided | 5 |
the quarto has not | 5 |
the very beginning of | 5 |
it is necessary towards | 4 |
the way in which | 4 |
a play to night | 4 |
thy name is woman | 4 |
sweare by my sword | 4 |
there should be a | 4 |
as the night the | 4 |
may be so in | 4 |
on the part of | 4 |
in the light of | 4 |
is supposed to be | 4 |
from this time forth | 4 |
it is to be | 4 |
with the rest of | 4 |
enter horatio and marcellus | 4 |
meanings of the word | 4 |
in the beginning of | 4 |
to be found in | 4 |
enter king and queene | 4 |
between hamlet and ophelia | 4 |
the meaning of the | 4 |
and one of the | 4 |
to others that we | 4 |
it would have been | 4 |
persons of the drama | 4 |
witching time of night | 4 |
with a bare bodkin | 4 |
that we know not | 4 |
very potent with such | 4 |
this line not in | 4 |
if he had been | 4 |
the face of the | 4 |
may be taken as | 4 |
in the globe theatre | 4 |
hamlet prince of denmarke | 4 |
scene between hamlet and | 4 |
the cause of this | 4 |
others that we know | 4 |
the king my father | 4 |
is dead and gone | 4 |
some remarks on the | 4 |
the death of the | 4 |
in a state of | 4 |
to know a man | 4 |
it was about to | 4 |
if it be a | 4 |
of the play is | 4 |
he not come againe | 4 |
the punishment of the | 4 |
of something after death | 4 |
remarks on the tragedy | 4 |
seems to have been | 4 |
you were sent for | 4 |
the augustan reprint society | 4 |
the night the day | 4 |
the cause of his | 4 |
the will of god | 4 |
is said to have | 4 |
are more things in | 4 |
to almost as much | 4 |
glad to see you | 4 |
on account of his | 4 |
will he not come | 4 |
spirit that i haue | 4 |
god be with you | 4 |
of the english drama | 4 |
in the words of | 4 |
on the top of | 4 |
where it comes againe | 4 |
be all my sinnes | 4 |
an air of probability | 4 |
a piece as this | 4 |
that i haue seene | 4 |
if there be any | 4 |
allowed himself to be | 4 |
this may have been | 4 |
that he would not | 4 |
tragicall historie of hamlet | 4 |
on the tragedy of | 4 |
not like the king | 4 |
and all great mark | 4 |
in the face of | 4 |
so far from being | 4 |
between the first and | 4 |
of the best of | 4 |
at the court of | 4 |
he is very potent | 4 |
very glad to see | 4 |
in the shape of | 4 |
towards the end of | 4 |
is very potent with | 4 |
we know not of | 4 |
not all the world | 4 |
in the presence of | 4 |
it not like the | 4 |
ben jonson and shakspere | 4 |
it is not to | 4 |
as he is very | 4 |
he is dead and | 4 |
such was the very | 4 |
at such a time | 4 |
and will he not | 4 |
it may be so | 4 |
the fashion of the | 4 |
it will not be | 4 |
is the image of | 4 |
in the sense of | 4 |
on the other side | 4 |
an essay of montaigne | 3 |
in the quarto of | 3 |
i must call in | 3 |
heauen i charge thee | 3 |
whose sight the happy | 3 |
for to be made | 3 |
be any good thing | 3 |
have been one of | 3 |
and we cast away | 3 |
canst not then be | 3 |
no more like my | 3 |
dexterity to incestuous sheets | 3 |
but for a hope | 3 |
if he doe not | 3 |
out on the top | 3 |
the reading of the | 3 |
and when you are | 3 |
woman will be out | 3 |
written by john webster | 3 |
post with such dexterity | 3 |
is necessary towards the | 3 |
of his friendship for | 3 |
my thoughts be bloody | 3 |
most of his critics | 3 |
the same time that | 3 |
one of the principal | 3 |
it seems to have | 3 |
let it be observed | 3 |
the effect of the | 3 |
nor it cannot come | 3 |
is by no means | 3 |
it is not madnesse | 3 |
i will more willingly | 3 |
in spite of the | 3 |
appearance of the ghost | 3 |
pleasure of his bed | 3 |
for the loss of | 3 |
and be a villain | 3 |
with all my heart | 3 |
hope of something after | 3 |
when that he may | 3 |
his full quietus make | 3 |
minutes of this night | 3 |
to go to a | 3 |
from whence no passenger | 3 |
is not madnesse that | 3 |
i should take it | 3 |
the right understanding of | 3 |
fare you well my | 3 |
divers honest and learned | 3 |
my leaue of you | 3 |
the course of the | 3 |
i do not think | 3 |
into the mouth of | 3 |
so full of authority | 3 |
the carrying out of | 3 |
the usurper to death | 3 |
flie to others that | 3 |
when thou liest howling | 3 |
rich curssed of the | 3 |
flattery of the world | 3 |
the second and third | 3 |
from the hand of | 3 |
in your silence still | 3 |
use of the word | 3 |
not i my lord | 3 |
if it be so | 3 |
see what i see | 3 |
all my sinnes remembred | 3 |
the clowne shall make | 3 |
and change at that | 3 |
speake to her hamlet | 3 |
this and the following | 3 |
of the sixteenth century | 3 |
of reason and nature | 3 |
but no more like | 3 |
the very witching time | 3 |
is a play to | 3 |
ben jonson and dekker | 3 |
on the character of | 3 |
in the corner of | 3 |
are of a most | 3 |
i do beseech you | 3 |
is for the moment | 3 |
that shapes our ends | 3 |
lowest scorn of the | 3 |
that he may his | 3 |
the lowest scorn of | 3 |
one and the same | 3 |
with such large discourse | 3 |
the spirit that i | 3 |
i take to be | 3 |
mutines in the bilboes | 3 |
that it should come | 3 |
the commencement of the | 3 |
such a manner as | 3 |
by heauen i charge | 3 |
will be found in | 3 |
has long ago been | 3 |
that dreame of death | 3 |
a manner as to | 3 |
what is your affaire | 3 |
it is not the | 3 |
to watch the minutes | 3 |
in romeo and juliet | 3 |
general editors richard c | 3 |
play is the image | 3 |
a murder done in | 3 |
i know you are | 3 |
in which the author | 3 |
to be true to | 3 |
as mad as he | 3 |
line not in q | 3 |
off the earth a | 3 |
the time of the | 3 |
that he could not | 3 |
scorned by the right | 3 |
to the top of | 3 |
and bid him ply | 3 |
not so my lord | 3 |
as white as snowe | 3 |
hold you the watch | 3 |
the whole plot of | 3 |
fall of a sparrow | 3 |
yet the salt of | 3 |
the death of his | 3 |
line is not in | 3 |
thousand more calamities besides | 3 |
man in his humour | 3 |
may be supposed to | 3 |
put the usurper to | 3 |
than flie to others | 3 |
in conformity to the | 3 |
kings and happiest monarchs | 3 |
second scene of the | 3 |
tell me one thing | 3 |
as mortall as an | 3 |
in these days of | 3 |
i might not this | 3 |
riuet to his face | 3 |
come by and by | 3 |
watch the minutes of | 3 |
the editors of the | 3 |
may be regarded as | 3 |
for in that dreame | 3 |
was the very armour | 3 |
shall my sister be | 3 |
eight of great wit | 3 |
is it not rather | 3 |
may be the word | 3 |
on the two meanings | 3 |
with such dexterity to | 3 |
may be the diuell | 3 |
in the second scene | 3 |
the burning eyes of | 3 |
in russet mantle clad | 3 |
the minutes of this | 3 |
conformity to the plan | 3 |
the tragedie of hamlet | 3 |
let her come in | 3 |
you shall not goe | 3 |
it is an honest | 3 |
will riuet to his | 3 |
in the fall of | 3 |
such dexterity to incestuous | 3 |
the cause of all | 3 |
between jonson and dekker | 3 |
suitable to the dignity | 3 |
there are more things | 3 |
will a man lie | 3 |
by the children of | 3 |
long will a man | 3 |
nephew to old norway | 3 |
the watch to night | 3 |
upon the appearance of | 3 |
at the age of | 3 |
the construction of the | 3 |
was about to speake | 3 |
of the fifth act | 3 |
to me all the | 3 |
by the hand of | 3 |
the player went to | 3 |
the fall of a | 3 |
makes vs rather beare | 3 |
he would not have | 3 |
any good thing to | 3 |
be false to any | 3 |
an allusion to the | 3 |
for a hope of | 3 |
this side of the | 3 |
of kings and happiest | 3 |
but what is your | 3 |
follows in st q | 3 |
could not have been | 3 |
the top of my | 3 |
and it must follow | 3 |
dispute between ben jonson | 3 |
prejudice to the whole | 3 |
to the dignity of | 3 |
i must tell you | 3 |
a thing to be | 3 |
i am very glad | 3 |
o this conscience makes | 3 |
curssed of the poore | 3 |
be as mortall as | 3 |
true idea of the | 3 |
a man of the | 3 |
be a breeder of | 3 |
that we haue seene | 3 |
and ministers of grace | 3 |
looking before and after | 3 |
or eight of great | 3 |
this play is the | 3 |
will more willingly part | 3 |
poet and the player | 3 |
for it cannot be | 3 |
in which it is | 3 |
at whose sight the | 3 |
is to be supposed | 3 |
of the second act | 3 |
of a true taste | 3 |
that is to say | 3 |
thing to be done | 3 |
of the dramatic art | 3 |
my lord such a | 3 |
the worser part of | 3 |
children of the chapel | 3 |
knight of the order | 3 |
acted on the stage | 3 |
of your maiden presence | 3 |
to the two universities | 3 |
vs rather beare those | 3 |
the translation of the | 3 |
the work of the | 3 |
i forgot my selfe | 3 |
the order of st | 3 |
but now the time | 3 |
the mutines in the | 3 |
thou canst not then | 3 |
laertes shall be king | 3 |
the stage with the | 3 |
the murder of a | 3 |
far from being able | 3 |
or be nothing worth | 3 |
i will speake to | 3 |
she would hang on | 3 |
this line is not | 3 |
conscience makes cowardes of | 3 |
of the character of | 3 |
is directed against the | 3 |
to the rules of | 3 |
passage in the st | 3 |
we will my lord | 3 |
the king of england | 3 |
not then be false | 3 |
by the right rich | 3 |
other side of the | 3 |
do not know whether | 3 |
and if he doe | 3 |
very witching time of | 3 |
whole plot of the | 3 |
who would this indure | 3 |
the woman will be | 3 |
the appearance of a | 3 |
is represented as a | 3 |
bid him ply his | 3 |
should be as mortall | 3 |
doubt as to the | 3 |
neuer to speake of | 3 |
armour he had on | 3 |
historie of hamlet prince | 3 |
the shape of a | 3 |
are the onely men | 3 |
sight the happy smile | 3 |
the rich curssed of | 3 |
to set it right | 3 |
these days of reformation | 3 |
you the watch to | 3 |
between jonson and shakspere | 3 |
the corner of his | 3 |
it seems to me | 3 |
one would think that | 3 |
a difference in each | 3 |
of a murder done | 3 |
the poet and the | 3 |
is a man of | 3 |
my lord i will | 3 |
the face of both | 3 |
there is a play | 3 |
from being able to | 3 |
the attention of the | 3 |
thou be a breeder | 3 |
here follows in st | 3 |
care of kings and | 3 |
the salt of most | 3 |
of which it is | 3 |
two or three of | 3 |
in accordance with his | 3 |
throw away the worser | 3 |
in the reign of | 3 |
fatted all the region | 3 |
in the very beginning | 3 |
and thousand more calamities | 3 |
of great wit and | 3 |
or he to hecuba | 3 |
a breeder of sinners | 3 |
the best of his | 3 |
the whole conduct of | 3 |
it could not be | 3 |
to post with such | 3 |
then venome to thy | 3 |
in his preface to | 3 |
not in the q | 3 |
in the british museum | 3 |
the author of the | 3 |
in the following scene | 3 |
good thing to be | 3 |
such a piece as | 3 |
we come to the | 3 |
the conclusion of the | 3 |
in the domain of | 3 |
mary there it goes | 3 |
and you your selfe | 3 |
vicious mole of nature | 3 |
the tragedians of the | 3 |
seem to have been | 3 |
end of the scene | 3 |
image of a murder | 3 |
side of the tiber | 3 |
am very glad to | 3 |
the part of the | 3 |
precisely on the event | 3 |
you speake like a | 3 |
said to have been | 3 |
name so full of | 3 |
againe as it was | 3 |
cannot come to good | 3 |
change from the quarto | 3 |
be taken as a | 3 |
he doe not bleach | 3 |
is your affaire in | 3 |
of the city of | 3 |
i neuer gaue you | 3 |
essays on the stage | 3 |
is not to be | 3 |
ghost that we haue | 3 |
put on the stage | 3 |
then be false to | 3 |
been the cause of | 3 |
take my leaue of | 3 |
in the midst of | 3 |
what may this meane | 3 |
to have been the | 3 |
the university of wittenberg | 3 |
it cannot come to | 3 |
of the order of | 3 |
the whole tenour of | 3 |
i charge thee speake | 3 |
of raising a laugh | 3 |
the city of london | 3 |
lady in thy orizons | 3 |
the st quarto has | 3 |
the taste of hunger | 3 |
way in which he | 3 |
a hope of something | 3 |
can by no means | 3 |
and the player went | 3 |
out of the grave | 3 |
very armour he had | 3 |
without the sensible and | 3 |
been one of the | 3 |
and say you are | 3 |
haue seene to night | 3 |
more like my father | 3 |
there be any good | 3 |
for so long a | 3 |
in that dreame of | 3 |
the fact of his | 3 |
but a little higher | 3 |
it does not appear | 3 |
coat in these days | 3 |
scorn of the age | 3 |
he may his full | 3 |
are as mad as | 3 |
brought on the stage | 3 |
come down to us | 3 |
where the body is | 3 |
hamlet prince of denmark | 3 |
nothing in the text | 3 |
it is an act | 3 |
make use of the | 3 |
this conscience makes cowardes | 3 |
the cause of the | 3 |
the other side of | 3 |
nor i my lord | 3 |
nothing to do with | 3 |
the second scene of | 3 |
in the same scene | 3 |
the trumpet to the | 3 |
to conform to the | 3 |
all the region kites | 3 |
in the realm of | 3 |
passion in the gods | 3 |
side of the channel | 3 |
the very armour he | 3 |
you reade my lord | 3 |
i haue a daughter | 3 |
as well as to | 3 |
plot of the play | 3 |
the thing is not | 3 |
the image of a | 3 |
it likes vs well | 3 |
the result of his | 3 |
i am more an | 3 |
may his full quietus | 3 |
looked upon as the | 3 |
take hold of him | 3 |
the king and the | 3 |
as well as in | 3 |
touching this dreaded sight | 3 |
do you thinke i | 3 |
on this side of | 3 |
briefe let me be | 3 |
and borne before an | 3 |
to the end of | 3 |
may be said to | 3 |
it is easy to | 3 |
if it be not | 3 |
the chief character in | 3 |
to be guided by | 3 |
would hang on him | 3 |
those that would make | 3 |
corner of his iaw | 3 |
away the worser part | 3 |
well that ends well | 3 |
second husband kisses me | 2 |
to be driven about | 2 |
have been altered by | 2 |
in the matter of | 2 |
great and moving circumstances | 2 |
them as white as | 2 |
and for our tragedie | 2 |
the character of the | 2 |
contents of a book | 2 |
blacke as his purpose | 2 |
wounded name behind him | 2 |
fortenbrasse nephew to old | 2 |
whose lightest word would | 2 |
with heraldry more dismall | 2 |
of the french ambassador | 2 |
the applause of the | 2 |
may be a deale | 2 |
all the characteristic qualities | 2 |
blacker then is ieat | 2 |
the skirts of norway | 2 |
news to tell you | 2 |
how can that be | 2 |
of vice must pardon | 2 |
that playes the king | 2 |
well what i haue | 2 |
break with the king | 2 |
out of the ayre | 2 |
more things in heauen | 2 |
to those rules established | 2 |
lies in our own | 2 |
cause and ground of | 2 |
should such fellowes as | 2 |
one lucianus nephew to | 2 |
my noble fathers person | 2 |
may be you wil | 2 |
as also in the | 2 |
the relation between the | 2 |
but it is no | 2 |
these lines are new | 2 |
reason at all in | 2 |
for you shall heare | 2 |
the reaches of our | 2 |
sends out arrests on | 2 |
and fell incensed points | 2 |
in so far as | 2 |
it would be a | 2 |
you not his face | 2 |
i do not take | 2 |
very cunning of the | 2 |
being crossed by the | 2 |
in the dramatic art | 2 |
court it in a | 2 |
ioyes will nere begin | 2 |
take the ghosts word | 2 |
doubt that in earth | 2 |
it had already been | 2 |
let vs once againe | 2 |
can change the stamp | 2 |
and will no reconcilement | 2 |
appeared in an english | 2 |
with thoughts beyond the | 2 |
consummation devoutly to be | 2 |
indeed i heard it | 2 |
i would i had | 2 |
walke is here in | 2 |
none wed the second | 2 |
the account of the | 2 |
personall power to businesse | 2 |
or by some habit | 2 |
where he is eaten | 2 |
of armes against your | 2 |
with the text of | 2 |
with the assistance of | 2 |
you to giue quiet | 2 |
in order to do | 2 |
therein are set downe | 2 |
to speake of this | 2 |
see where it comes | 2 |
his head a grasse | 2 |
i haue a soule | 2 |
should have contrived some | 2 |
where hee comes poring | 2 |
my most seeming vertuous | 2 |
me a stope of | 2 |
which may be viewed | 2 |
in reality the fault | 2 |
this madnesse may prooue | 2 |
enemies of the latter | 2 |
first a carthusian i | 2 |
my dayes of nature | 2 |
would turne all his | 2 |
a few of the | 2 |
in finding fault with | 2 |
crie out vpon my | 2 |
not set my life | 2 |
built his play upon | 2 |
to keepe the winde | 2 |
east and west makes | 2 |
what you haue seene | 2 |
millitarie discourses of lo | 2 |
the delusion of our | 2 |
what a scandale wouldst | 2 |
both of them are | 2 |
yet may contrition make | 2 |
good my lord be | 2 |
they are not guilty | 2 |
it tempt you toward | 2 |
represented on the stage | 2 |
things in heaven and | 2 |
now see that noble | 2 |
silence will sit drooping | 2 |
those are the onely | 2 |
a burthen that age | 2 |
so as to find | 2 |
will you see the | 2 |
this meane my lord | 2 |
and are most tyrannically | 2 |
these are the onely | 2 |
discoveries made upon men | 2 |
must weare your rew | 2 |
what players be they | 2 |
the kings maiesties servants | 2 |
as being versed in | 2 |
leartes i forgot my | 2 |
to leartes i forgot | 2 |
of which we shall | 2 |
to prove that shakspere | 2 |
for all in all | 2 |
how cheerefully my mother | 2 |
the character of him | 2 |
doe but obserue his | 2 |
we shall be able | 2 |
not a pipe for | 2 |
this is wondrous strange | 2 |
winde sits in the | 2 |
them to mens eies | 2 |
reputation holds as it | 2 |
for it is as | 2 |
passe through your dominions | 2 |
sits in the shoulder | 2 |
powre your earth on | 2 |
native hue of resolution | 2 |
on their watch in | 2 |
enter ghost and hamlet | 2 |
long it could not | 2 |
love in a direct | 2 |
would harrow vp thy | 2 |
would you gracious figure | 2 |
turns the whole play | 2 |
in the same year | 2 |
marke thou the king | 2 |
could of men distinguish | 2 |
he is more than | 2 |
from one extreme to | 2 |
when you are desirous | 2 |
who were with him | 2 |
still crie out vpon | 2 |
ministring angell shall my | 2 |
morning cocke crew lowd | 2 |
him that fortenbrasse nephew | 2 |
the law of writ | 2 |
but two months dead | 2 |
to set in the | 2 |
therefore sweete nature must | 2 |
how comes it that | 2 |
king doth wake to | 2 |
forgetting what is said | 2 |
he would have been | 2 |
it will easily be | 2 |
and leaue the earth | 2 |
the hart vngalled play | 2 |
the pernicious influence which | 2 |
you may bridle it | 2 |
a damned ghost that | 2 |
ile call thee hamlet | 2 |
by the contention of | 2 |
it will be short | 2 |
the principall publike audience | 2 |
very cautious in finding | 2 |
statement by sir henry | 2 |
he had reason to | 2 |
of resolution is sicklied | 2 |
louisiana state university james | 2 |
king and queene moult | 2 |
the most of his | 2 |
hell it selfe should | 2 |
and that writer metamorphosis | 2 |
to break with the | 2 |
it may be assumed | 2 |
ponderous and marble iawes | 2 |
it is evident by | 2 |
burning eyes of heauen | 2 |
haue seene it in | 2 |
which could only be | 2 |
a scandale wouldst thou | 2 |
substance of a doubt | 2 |
snares to intrap the | 2 |
answere made it none | 2 |
not know whether this | 2 |
salt of most vnrighteous | 2 |
assist mee in reuenge | 2 |
all my smoothe body | 2 |
no part in the | 2 |
for the reasons i | 2 |
in time it may | 2 |
alone has he followed | 2 |
it is a custome | 2 |
to shatter all his | 2 |
toe of the pesant | 2 |
as harbindgers preceading still | 2 |
things which charm by | 2 |
is not this something | 2 |
used as a noun | 2 |
till by some elder | 2 |
who was in life | 2 |
playing on a lute | 2 |
is not in q | 2 |
jonson and shakspere in | 2 |
braine of mine hunts | 2 |
the minds of the | 2 |
man on his knees | 2 |
patient as the female | 2 |
a house of evil | 2 |
the realm of intellect | 2 |
enter the ghost in | 2 |
by a certain secret | 2 |
the articles agreed on | 2 |
of this most horride | 2 |
this not to doe | 2 |
a foolish prating knaue | 2 |
he has no doubt | 2 |
the mind and soul | 2 |
advanced to a certain | 2 |
god a mercy on | 2 |
rotten in the state | 2 |
say you are not | 2 |
all those his lands | 2 |
i drink hot blood | 2 |
preface of the first | 2 |
an actor in rome | 2 |
it selfe in ease | 2 |
and subtle treason that | 2 |
advantage over other creatures | 2 |
sound what stop she | 2 |
are arrant knaues all | 2 |
that were wont to | 2 |
addressed to his sword | 2 |
on your lippes i | 2 |
that he had reason | 2 |
it was neuer acted | 2 |
vnequall for your loue | 2 |
of the page are | 2 |
realme dismantled was of | 2 |
and middle of the | 2 |
at the university of | 2 |
in the understanding of | 2 |
with the act of | 2 |
that it is necessary | 2 |
thinking too precisely on | 2 |
interpreters to be over | 2 |
second and third acts | 2 |
i lay worse than | 2 |
following scene between hamlet | 2 |
would not have it | 2 |
in no other of | 2 |
in the state of | 2 |
and i will stand | 2 |
with traines of fier | 2 |
vpon the witnesse of | 2 |
if i gall him | 2 |
the fantastick rules of | 2 |
a man may fish | 2 |
tending to what we | 2 |
they must sweep my | 2 |
king like not the | 2 |
when thy first lord | 2 |
men are as mad | 2 |
of the ghost still | 2 |
their most fixed opinions | 2 |
able to prove that | 2 |
but by my faith | 2 |
those who left it | 2 |
that haue free soules | 2 |
refer to his father | 2 |
college of washington louis | 2 |
was no sallets in | 2 |
tardy sonne to chide | 2 |
i your true loue | 2 |
in the roman streets | 2 |
you giue me leaue | 2 |
that can informe me | 2 |
the importance of the | 2 |
she ten times our | 2 |
and sweate vnder this | 2 |
the ideas of the | 2 |
and scant of breath | 2 |
to go to the | 2 |
of heauen to keepe | 2 |
a month of his | 2 |
man may fish with | 2 |
as if increase of | 2 |
what stop she please | 2 |
the first quarto edition | 2 |
actors are come hither | 2 |
thousand crownes in annuall | 2 |
upon defects no more | 2 |
should be very cautious | 2 |
her face too roughly | 2 |
tongue lends the heart | 2 |
thy life extorted treasure | 2 |
but not by him | 2 |
by these pickers and | 2 |
by my selfe me | 2 |
as hardy as the | 2 |
that i did my | 2 |
i stay too long | 2 |
for some vicious mole | 2 |
is there no offence | 2 |
all the more so | 2 |
comes out of the | 2 |
you haue seene to | 2 |
wind of the occasion | 2 |
vnrighteous teares had left | 2 |
the change from the | 2 |
incestuous pleasure of his | 2 |
to you no further | 2 |
owne selfe be true | 2 |
work up great and | 2 |
lookes into our hearts | 2 |
of things divine no | 2 |
i haue seene nothing | 2 |
special school of thought | 2 |
belike he likes it | 2 |
was a bakers daughter | 2 |
must be their scourge | 2 |
the greatest respect for | 2 |
laertes comes out of | 2 |
the crowing of the | 2 |
contained in the first | 2 |
is a damned ghost | 2 |
because it is against | 2 |
with a sense of | 2 |
captaines beare hamlet like | 2 |
with all his crimes | 2 |
than the mutines in | 2 |
i would set downe | 2 |
their scourge and minister | 2 |
so the whole eare | 2 |
when that her golden | 2 |
my sinnes remaine below | 2 |
university of michigan benjamin | 2 |
as wholesome as sweete | 2 |
my heart of heart | 2 |
i set it downe | 2 |
conceit that from her | 2 |
let me be accurst | 2 |
businesse with the king | 2 |
discourse looking before and | 2 |
be a couch for | 2 |
draw water from eyes | 2 |
amaze the standers by | 2 |
in the prologue of | 2 |
vse them according to | 2 |
finding of the commission | 2 |
if the gods themselues | 2 |
of his fell sword | 2 |
louers lines are snares | 2 |
which he does in | 2 |
it is not possible | 2 |
when proofing methods and | 2 |
tooke delight to see | 2 |
we can by no | 2 |
become the lowest scorn | 2 |
he is the only | 2 |
you tremble and look | 2 |
the crime cleere from | 2 |
forth and worke thy | 2 |
to his good friends | 2 |
if circumstances leade me | 2 |
being versed in both | 2 |
the bore of the | 2 |
that if you be | 2 |
his ponderous and marble | 2 |
heeles may kicke at | 2 |
seek out assurance in | 2 |
that was a woman | 2 |
pit of clay for | 2 |
your infamy shall die | 2 |
sleepe rocke thy braine | 2 |
he hath my lord | 2 |
to the king and | 2 |
have a share in | 2 |
had made his course | 2 |
that makes it so | 2 |
a king may go | 2 |
vnlocke chastitie vnto desire | 2 |
how strange or odde | 2 |
or the blanke verse | 2 |
rest of the play | 2 |
is now a burthen | 2 |
their date is gone | 2 |
like a peece of | 2 |
it not disparage him | 2 |
therefore as a stranger | 2 |
and the suites of | 2 |
the controversy between ben | 2 |
in the skirts of | 2 |
is preceded by a | 2 |
is evident by the | 2 |
each particular haire to | 2 |
so honest a man | 2 |
charm by a certain | 2 |
a vice to know | 2 |
by the attack of | 2 |
i saw thee last | 2 |
publike audience that came | 2 |
better haue a bad | 2 |
work of his plot | 2 |
and an nipping winde | 2 |
he was the chief | 2 |
striking too short at | 2 |
audience that came to | 2 |
dislike to his uncle | 2 |
in obedience to her | 2 |
man is twice a | 2 |
delicate and tender prince | 2 |
day would quake to | 2 |
give his life to | 2 |
him to seize the | 2 |
the appearance of the | 2 |
is dedicated to the | 2 |
let him go gertrude | 2 |
on the question of | 2 |
you to drinke deepe | 2 |
be on his face | 2 |
is in thy hand | 2 |
ready way to heauen | 2 |
i heard it not | 2 |
the reputation of divers | 2 |
of the quarto is | 2 |
down to us from | 2 |
to tell the secrets | 2 |
reproach is made to | 2 |
and scope of my | 2 |
yong lady and mistris | 2 |
the length of time | 2 |
a divinity that shapes | 2 |
of nature in them | 2 |
to say that the | 2 |
controversy between ben jonson | 2 |
eies will riuet to | 2 |
how of late thou | 2 |
they catch one anothers | 2 |
the whole eare of | 2 |
haue you heard the | 2 |
the behaviour of the | 2 |
that he should not | 2 |
man and wife is | 2 |
i but still to | 2 |
be very cautious in | 2 |
dwelling in all denmarke | 2 |
so shocking to human | 2 |
doth confound the sence | 2 |
yet out of his | 2 |
that no scene can | 2 |
the meaning would be | 2 |
keepe thee from despaire | 2 |
prodigall the tongue lends | 2 |
for the apparell oft | 2 |
what would he do | 2 |
that i might be | 2 |
acquainted with all the | 2 |
that from her working | 2 |
the force of the | 2 |
he loued passing well | 2 |
does well to commend | 2 |
tooke thee for thy | 2 |
with what courteous action | 2 |
visit her face too | 2 |
for the object of | 2 |
no other of his | 2 |
charge thee let it | 2 |
them how we will | 2 |
thou be then the | 2 |
and now the blood | 2 |
had growne by what | 2 |
an introduction by clarence | 2 |
at his head a | 2 |
a mode of thought | 2 |
the incestuous pleasure of | 2 |
in the mermaid tavern | 2 |
to heare their praise | 2 |
against rosencrantz and guildenstern | 2 |
and fixt his eyes | 2 |
to judge of the | 2 |
one of the humanists | 2 |
files produced at a | 2 |
the laws of nature | 2 |
little recks how that | 2 |
till the foule crimes | 2 |
monsters you make of | 2 |
but first weele make | 2 |
that for some vicious | 2 |
a sense of his | 2 |
is it not like | 2 |
of the first act | 2 |
questions of the state | 2 |
that the starres doe | 2 |
the king like not | 2 |
the godly ballet wil | 2 |
the true idea of | 2 |
own conceit that from | 2 |
mine hunts not the | 2 |
and we most sory | 2 |
his hide is so | 2 |
vpon his like againe | 2 |
who this had seene | 2 |
is the ground upon | 2 |
shall find it is | 2 |
what is to come | 2 |
with regard to his | 2 |
the rest of this | 2 |
i pray you passe | 2 |
and remember well what | 2 |
well as to his | 2 |
finding fault with men | 2 |
play vpon this pipe | 2 |
ready to sacrifice their | 2 |
that sokes vp the | 2 |
to intrap the heart | 2 |
proofing methods and tools | 2 |
it has been assumed | 2 |
and for my loue | 2 |
if she should breake | 2 |
smile and be a | 2 |
in the same figure | 2 |
of nature as sinful | 2 |
the dram of eale | 2 |
make known what you | 2 |
and allies of the | 2 |
we most sory for | 2 |
not come to my | 2 |
ever came up to | 2 |
then your particular demands | 2 |
must be held to | 2 |
is to be found | 2 |
beard as white as | 2 |
this is the very | 2 |
the commotion of his | 2 |
that the poet has | 2 |
a prince out of | 2 |
is stated to be | 2 |
teares to droppes of | 2 |
admiration for a while | 2 |
hast thy father much | 2 |
made a fool of | 2 |
to offer it the | 2 |
you like to a | 2 |
more than is necessary | 2 |
that he might not | 2 |
doubt that the starres | 2 |
barren spectators to laugh | 2 |
that made him bewray | 2 |
haue such a fellow | 2 |
is an improved edition | 2 |
his will is not | 2 |
some elder masters of | 2 |
first verse of the | 2 |
made us with such | 2 |
those of a true | 2 |
at the head of | 2 |
what it fed on | 2 |
upon as the true | 2 |
and not the smallest | 2 |
to blazon thy hearts | 2 |
not diuide the sunday | 2 |
end of act iii | 2 |
a treasure had he | 2 |
you are my mother | 2 |
if the poet had | 2 |
vertue it selfe scapes | 2 |
him as you go | 2 |
he could repent of | 2 |
one line two crafts | 2 |
vs grant him then | 2 |
of the importance of | 2 |
the ground upon which | 2 |
also in st q | 2 |
look upon him as | 2 |
according to his folly | 2 |
to perseuer in a | 2 |
and tell me he | 2 |
the first years of | 2 |
is proved by the | 2 |
to be a preparation | 2 |
what to our selues | 2 |
of minnesota james sutherland | 2 |
and gross in nature | 2 |
rew with a difference | 2 |
do not saw the | 2 |
these are now the | 2 |
owle was a bakers | 2 |
that was to this | 2 |
piece can affect us | 2 |
so berattle the common | 2 |
why say thy sinnes | 2 |
fault lies in our | 2 |
to do justice to | 2 |
of love in a | 2 |
the drama richest in | 2 |
her haire downe singing | 2 |
the foule crimes done | 2 |
armes against your maiestie | 2 |
right justified text is | 2 |
on board the vessel | 2 |
the death of ophelia | 2 |
sent the mornings ayre | 2 |
to speake with you | 2 |
i charge thee let | 2 |
something is rotten in | 2 |
you tooke delight to | 2 |
to grunt and sweate | 2 |
whole eare of denmarke | 2 |
may kicke at heauen | 2 |
the weak man is | 2 |
with the dead body | 2 |
to see your fathers | 2 |
would suggest that the | 2 |
confest a murder committed | 2 |
grunt and sweate vnder | 2 |
the first act of | 2 |
be then the fat | 2 |
let vs impart what | 2 |
adulterous bed to night | 2 |
you your selfe shall | 2 |
it would be spoke | 2 |
the lesse they deserue | 2 |
o a pit of | 2 |
my selfe me thinkes | 2 |
i am bound to | 2 |
i thinke it be | 2 |
the platforme where we | 2 |
from top to toe | 2 |
ply his learning good | 2 |
moes at my vncle | 2 |
blazon thy hearts griefe | 2 |
o it offends mee | 2 |
to laertes i forgot | 2 |
would give his life | 2 |
does not refer to | 2 |
you on this booke | 2 |
what some way or | 2 |
my yong lady and | 2 |
so used in scotland | 2 |
go to your rest | 2 |
after the ghost has | 2 |
i prethee tell me | 2 |
i finde thee apt | 2 |
eies shall still be | 2 |
if this should faile | 2 |
cannot choose his origin | 2 |
he himself had made | 2 |
of the original text | 2 |
yet more true to | 2 |
and doe you heare | 2 |
euer you did my | 2 |
among those of the | 2 |
there appears no reason | 2 |
to death as soon | 2 |
the baser nature comes | 2 |
but he does not | 2 |
and the cue for | 2 |
makes thy tongue to | 2 |
to put them in | 2 |
precepts in thy memory | 2 |
how should it be | 2 |
more suitable to his | 2 |
too much of that | 2 |
doubt some foule play | 2 |
once me thought it | 2 |
the path and ready | 2 |
passe and conduct ouer | 2 |
the king shal be | 2 |
two meanings of the | 2 |
my father much offended | 2 |
i haue heard of | 2 |
us we know not | 2 |
from him the cause | 2 |
book is dedicated to | 2 |
be made use of | 2 |
angels and ministers of | 2 |
doubt trueth to be | 2 |
top of my bent | 2 |
vse his foyle and | 2 |
tell the secrets of | 2 |
to cast thee vp | 2 |
he may play the | 2 |
found it was against | 2 |
lay worse than the | 2 |
beard me in denmarke | 2 |
damned ghost that we | 2 |
is the only one | 2 |
so oft it chaunces | 2 |
on the ground of | 2 |
to give rise to | 2 |
the night were come | 2 |
a while with an | 2 |
the colour of the | 2 |
a beast that wants | 2 |
there is an improved | 2 |
which the author dedicates | 2 |
the key of it | 2 |
that i am forbid | 2 |
that of the folio | 2 |
without being true to | 2 |
berattle the common stages | 2 |
design of this scene | 2 |
any thing we see | 2 |
cause of his misery | 2 |
sit on those time | 2 |
for the furtherance of | 2 |
of complicity in the | 2 |
to giue quiet passe | 2 |
forme of the thing | 2 |
writer ovid and that | 2 |
no dramatick piece can | 2 |
a lover of his | 2 |
rapier and dagger do | 2 |
he writes how he | 2 |
where is your quirkes | 2 |
it is not improbable | 2 |
what is the matter | 2 |
with an intreaty heerein | 2 |
thrice his head thus | 2 |
may so express it | 2 |
as to the lungs | 2 |
the king of denmarke | 2 |
such impresse of ship | 2 |
may for a while | 2 |
that one may smile | 2 |
a very strange beast | 2 |
but i do not | 2 |
that knowes our thoughts | 2 |
giue them the foyles | 2 |
an anticke disposition on | 2 |
why then belike he | 2 |
it is very soultry | 2 |
the finding of the | 2 |
than are dreamt of | 2 |
top of the question | 2 |
scandale wouldst thou leaue | 2 |
you are staid for | 2 |
ere yet the salt | 2 |
this author in the | 2 |
too much of water | 2 |
and she stands amazde | 2 |
the word in the | 2 |
this realme dismantled was | 2 |
his preface to his | 2 |
smiles vpon a second | 2 |
would i had beene | 2 |
no king on earth | 2 |
desirous to be blest | 2 |
course of the dramatic | 2 |
not the smallest alteration | 2 |
free passe and conduct | 2 |
age and body of | 2 |
he is the more | 2 |
shoulder of your saile | 2 |
of a brother and | 2 |
that thou knowest thine | 2 |
in the neighbourhood of | 2 |
meane the matter you | 2 |
is not unfrequently used | 2 |
wil tel you all | 2 |
all the charms of | 2 |
is vnequall for your | 2 |
acted by his highnesse | 2 |
mary my good lord | 2 |
he ought to have | 2 |
these letters to my | 2 |
beyond our powers of | 2 |
watch in the dead | 2 |
let me not thinke | 2 |
so capitall a calfe | 2 |
the king had plotted | 2 |
in a shape of | 2 |
lord hamlet is a | 2 |
answers the end of | 2 |
is sure to be | 2 |
he is not the | 2 |
the phrase would be | 2 |
tooke to be idle | 2 |
any length of time | 2 |
thou art a scholler | 2 |
and not forgotten yet | 2 |
these players here draw | 2 |
he takes refuge in | 2 |
it lacks of twelue | 2 |
goes on to say | 2 |
methods and tools were | 2 |
ile make a ghost | 2 |
mine eies shall still | 2 |
it sends some precious | 2 |
poring vppon a booke | 2 |
catch one anothers rapiers | 2 |
know a man well | 2 |
pray you passe with | 2 |
and the second act | 2 |
it is the king | 2 |
if gods his foe | 2 |
the additions played by | 2 |
impulses of his blood | 2 |
large discourse looking before | 2 |
for so this side | 2 |
their ill report while | 2 |
yet but yaw neither | 2 |
with his own weapons | 2 |
defiance of our reason | 2 |
the following scene between | 2 |
it was not so | 2 |
split the eares of | 2 |
the centre of the | 2 |
of the new criticism | 2 |
you as an ape | 2 |
the conduct of the | 2 |
and to touch upon | 2 |
the description of the | 2 |
i tooke to be | 2 |
none of his letters | 2 |
of a doubt to | 2 |
i am glad to | 2 |
not the case with | 2 |
beare those euilles we | 2 |
take this from this | 2 |
which whilome pleasde mine | 2 |
a pit of clay | 2 |
the words of the | 2 |
and his commission to | 2 |
at a time when | 2 |
as contained in the | 2 |
when in reality the | 2 |
would you were so | 2 |
to know my stops | 2 |
how that his honour | 2 |
same time that it | 2 |
had the best of | 2 |
then will i follow | 2 |
sauiours birth is celebrated | 2 |
i knew your father | 2 |
conception is a blessing | 2 |
the best of their | 2 |
the following words of | 2 |
shall i couple hell | 2 |
from the very beginning | 2 |
hath in the skirts | 2 |
it that they trauell | 2 |
reaches of our soules | 2 |
where now it burnes | 2 |
was one of project | 2 |
not with the body | 2 |
first lord is dead | 2 |
recite a little ditty | 2 |
holds as it was | 2 |
little in their loue | 2 |
whiffe and winde of | 2 |
o throw away the | 2 |
for a few moments | 2 |
for this effect defectiue | 2 |
him to think of | 2 |
of michigan edward niles | 2 |
must sweep my way | 2 |
am but mad north | 2 |
no money bid for | 2 |
the time is out | 2 |
ill report while you | 2 |
it offends mee to | 2 |
to take his judgment | 2 |
the first book of | 2 |
to set on some | 2 |
ghost in his night | 2 |
what monsters you make | 2 |
as therein are set | 2 |
that haue the power | 2 |
walke out of the | 2 |
all the uses of | 2 |
you your fathers leaue | 2 |
this braine of mine | 2 |
the wheel becomes it | 2 |
and why such dayly | 2 |
are not a pipe | 2 |
his friendship for horatio | 2 |
you go to bed | 2 |
and the same man | 2 |
must take your husband | 2 |
none of our owne | 2 |
we are not the | 2 |
you must weare your | 2 |
did coldly furnish forth | 2 |
haue news to tell | 2 |
lord such a ones | 2 |
and if we would | 2 |
shakspere at that time | 2 |
the very place puts | 2 |
some quantitie of barren | 2 |
entertainment of his master | 2 |
the top of the | 2 |
that writer ovid and | 2 |
in the most important | 2 |
a tanner will last | 2 |
when in an angry | 2 |
it might well enough | 2 |
this seems to me | 2 |
the strictest rules of | 2 |
set in the best | 2 |
on which turns the | 2 |
regard to those rules | 2 |
my fathers spirit in | 2 |
thou to beard me | 2 |
as the middle of | 2 |
vse them after your | 2 |
a great deal of | 2 |
is indisputably kept up | 2 |
more things in heaven | 2 |
haue said to you | 2 |
pursue me lasting strife | 2 |
fell incensed points of | 2 |
doth seeke to damne | 2 |
said there was no | 2 |
delusion of our imagination | 2 |
to the words of | 2 |
the nature of man | 2 |
he is ready to | 2 |
and the rites of | 2 |
i mary there it | 2 |
and shifted thy coat | 2 |
if thou hast any | 2 |
to those things which | 2 |
this part of the | 2 |
but my deere brother | 2 |
more natural evidence of | 2 |
father in his habite | 2 |
allow themselves to be | 2 |
seem to me all | 2 |
not put the usurper | 2 |
to affect our passions | 2 |
but obserue his lookes | 2 |
as thy purse can | 2 |
let him goe gertred | 2 |
which might depriue your | 2 |
these are but wild | 2 |
why one faire daughter | 2 |
but as i haue | 2 |
if thou shouldst die | 2 |
get thee vp agen | 2 |
is a corruption of | 2 |
the naturall gates and | 2 |
you no further personall | 2 |
nothing that could give | 2 |
stand me now upon | 2 |
few precepts in thy | 2 |
gives an air of | 2 |
in the translation of | 2 |
beginnings of the english | 2 |
and i beseech you | 2 |
is meant to be | 2 |
forbeare the earth a | 2 |
nay then let the | 2 |
if the king like | 2 |
of the kind of | 2 |
are snares to intrap | 2 |
best light all beauties | 2 |
title which may be | 2 |
poesie for a ring | 2 |
i tooke thee for | 2 |
this that you haue | 2 |
you make of them | 2 |
this is not a | 2 |
come back from the | 2 |
as well as of | 2 |
nature is fine in | 2 |
though wilde a while | 2 |
michel montaigne and his | 2 |
you shall see anon | 2 |
and fie for shame | 2 |
make a ghost of | 2 |
were so honest a | 2 |
of nebraska cleanth brooks | 2 |
to split the eares | 2 |
that with wings as | 2 |
why now you speake | 2 |
and the adulterous fault | 2 |
if increase of appetite | 2 |
you how pale he | 2 |
is not his own | 2 |
than once or twice | 2 |
what is said to | 2 |
of a most select | 2 |
least the whisper goes | 2 |
being a thing immortall | 2 |
i haue news to | 2 |
do not get three | 2 |
the anonymous essay on | 2 |
make thy two eyes | 2 |
would seeme to know | 2 |
singeth all night long | 2 |
apparell oft proclaimes the | 2 |
young prince did not | 2 |
occasion smiles vpon a | 2 |
to the prejudice of | 2 |
am thy fathers spirit | 2 |
alteration that shall appeare | 2 |
the man to be | 2 |
rauen doth bellow for | 2 |
to keepe thee from | 2 |
be you wil lothe | 2 |
difference in each others | 2 |
that of the king | 2 |
that there is nothing | 2 |
thy purse can buy | 2 |
not disparage him a | 2 |
the beginnings of the | 2 |
i heare him comming | 2 |
of nero enter this | 2 |
their mouldy tales out | 2 |
motiue in this case | 2 |
how they be too | 2 |
vp the kings countenance | 2 |
and let vs once | 2 |
hath made it in | 2 |
what he means is | 2 |
as thou art to | 2 |
king on earth is | 2 |
you are desirous to | 2 |
so far as i | 2 |
to give us an | 2 |
health to your lordship | 2 |
the entertainment of his | 2 |
but what some way | 2 |
againe this apparition come | 2 |
would be to slander | 2 |
sheeted dead did squeake | 2 |
i have already given | 2 |
as to those things | 2 |
much levity in it | 2 |
twixt eleuen and twelue | 2 |
players here draw water | 2 |
the toe of the | 2 |
if the water come | 2 |
to see my mothers | 2 |
that it is not | 2 |
you not come your | 2 |
and that of the | 2 |
a man who has | 2 |
remember well what i | 2 |
in those days no | 2 |
i am dead horatio | 2 |
thou pursuest this act | 2 |
will not be disagreeable | 2 |
obedience to her father | 2 |
in relation to his | 2 |
haue shot mine arrow | 2 |
of the old fusty | 2 |
it in his life | 2 |
sulphurous and tormenting flames | 2 |
of this speech is | 2 |
shall keepe the key | 2 |
the fruits of his | 2 |
that you at such | 2 |
all that is required | 2 |
far as the middle | 2 |
with the name of | 2 |
the yonger sort to | 2 |
a thorough examination of | 2 |
the taste of the | 2 |
purging of his soule | 2 |
burthen that age cannot | 2 |
may contrition make them | 2 |
of his own judgment | 2 |
king my father ke | 2 |
breake we our watch | 2 |
parle he smot the | 2 |
nephew to the king | 2 |
by consequence so close | 2 |
the scornes and flattery | 2 |
play the foole no | 2 |
any of his own | 2 |
and it all hangs | 2 |
to a seene what | 2 |
by sir henry bunbury | 2 |
state college of washington | 2 |
how say you then | 2 |
of dawning singeth all | 2 |
thou hast thy father | 2 |
more than once or | 2 |
and the lady shall | 2 |
fust in us unused | 2 |
and these few precepts | 2 |
am satisfied in nature | 2 |
instrument is in thy | 2 |
are to take notice | 2 |
like to a cunning | 2 |
for the first time | 2 |
squeake and gibber in | 2 |
but long it could | 2 |
great folke should haue | 2 |
so long a time | 2 |
i can by no | 2 |
to be done to | 2 |
was in conformity to | 2 |
bid the souldiers shoote | 2 |
of his own genius | 2 |
more circumstance at all | 2 |
what is hecuba to | 2 |
it came about that | 2 |
would he do and | 2 |
in the best light | 2 |
but it was neuer | 2 |
that his heeles may | 2 |
false to any man | 2 |
find in him the | 2 |
nor do not saw | 2 |
the name of the | 2 |
disparage him a iote | 2 |
the impressions of the | 2 |
things rank and gross | 2 |
cocke they are too | 2 |
leaue her to heauen | 2 |
murder committed long before | 2 |
where he says that | 2 |
law hath writ those | 2 |
of the state and | 2 |
of him that lets | 2 |
straitway grew into a | 2 |
point with their fingers | 2 |
to get into a | 2 |
the cloak of madness | 2 |
doth beate like yours | 2 |
on some quantitie of | 2 |
and not made them | 2 |
years after the death | 2 |
many tenders of his | 2 |
he followed as his | 2 |
the poet gives us | 2 |
be round with him | 2 |
to beard me in | 2 |
and by opposing end | 2 |
are so far from | 2 |
sweete nature must pay | 2 |
the tongue lends the | 2 |
on the crowing of | 2 |
were not well developed | 2 |
wont to be the | 2 |
what wilt thou do | 2 |
set my life at | 2 |
the region kites with | 2 |
the stamp of nature | 2 |
and shall i couple | 2 |
as mine to you | 2 |
but know thou noble | 2 |
so much so that | 2 |
in accordance with them | 2 |
in the low countries | 2 |
draughts of renish downe | 2 |
earth ere he rot | 2 |
or a tale of | 2 |
a name so full | 2 |
earely and shrill crowing | 2 |
thee to thy prayer | 2 |
this most horride murder | 2 |
favour of the great | 2 |
you passe with your | 2 |
the walls of the | 2 |
it may be that | 2 |
some precious instance of | 2 |
to suspend their most | 2 |
a certain secret force | 2 |
know his uncle a | 2 |
of the young prince | 2 |
an ape doth nuttes | 2 |
he does not take | 2 |
the sunday from the | 2 |
haue so strutted and | 2 |
after the apparition of | 2 |
conclusion of this scene | 2 |
not you like to | 2 |
such large discourse looking | 2 |
well as from the | 2 |
beleeue none of vs | 2 |
and i with them | 2 |
no doubt as to | 2 |
subtle treason that the | 2 |
your quirkes and quillets | 2 |
meaning is plain enough | 2 |
in our own slow | 2 |
me he that knowes | 2 |
the charms of his | 2 |
perhaps he loues you | 2 |
then into a fast | 2 |
is to learn how | 2 |
which charm by a | 2 |
his appetite at ful | 2 |
all flaxen was his | 2 |
wants discourse of reason | 2 |
from the idea of | 2 |
disasters in the sunne | 2 |
ile giue thee this | 2 |
and we fooles of | 2 |
more true to thy | 2 |
it is in the | 2 |
of the fourth act | 2 |
these words are not | 2 |
at the close of | 2 |
a progresse through the | 2 |
towards the whole plot | 2 |
in earth is fire | 2 |
such a manner that | 2 |
are apt to produce | 2 |
are dreamt of in | 2 |
the best actors in | 2 |
to glose with them | 2 |
his heeles may kicke | 2 |
in the wombe of | 2 |
there is a kinde | 2 |
to the same effect | 2 |
the king your father | 2 |
a couch for luxury | 2 |
the life of the | 2 |
which makes vs rather | 2 |
the whole speech is | 2 |
and tools were not | 2 |
change that name with | 2 |
an olde mans sawe | 2 |
extreme to the other | 2 |
leaue thy damnable faces | 2 |
but it may mean | 2 |
such as it is | 2 |
princes walke is here | 2 |
will appear in the | 2 |
naturall gates and allies | 2 |
oft proclaimes the man | 2 |
the beginning of act | 2 |
of your owne report | 2 |
was a most unhappy | 2 |
thy father much offended | 2 |
thy coat in these | 2 |
not rotten before he | 2 |
gaged by our king | 2 |
to a cunning sophister | 2 |
a quicke change is | 2 |
like a guilty thing | 2 |
is out of ioynt | 2 |
i take my leaue | 2 |
mee to the soule | 2 |
but answere made it | 2 |
weare your rew with | 2 |
against the sacred laws | 2 |
to see so often | 2 |
then he should have | 2 |
went without their helpe | 2 |
thou hadst not come | 2 |
the first and the | 2 |
of not a few | 2 |
word would harrow vp | 2 |
the sight of the | 2 |
with all our heart | 2 |
in such a piece | 2 |
part of the scene | 2 |
and all the straines | 2 |
stirre me most to | 2 |
if thou hast nature | 2 |
way or other conduces | 2 |
played by the kings | 2 |
play of which it | 2 |
meane time we thanke | 2 |
action is indisputably kept | 2 |
eager and an nipping | 2 |
ovid and that writer | 2 |
and passion in the | 2 |
there is method in | 2 |
well said old mole | 2 |
i would suggest that | 2 |
me all the uses | 2 |
which are in the | 2 |
my weakenesse and my | 2 |
a most select and | 2 |
you were not so | 2 |
on to say that | 2 |
man did not content | 2 |
thy two eyes like | 2 |
complicity in the murder | 2 |
in heaven and earth | 2 |
make capital out of | 2 |
i refer to the | 2 |
mention of a dispute | 2 |
the toppe of their | 2 |
similar to the one | 2 |
of that writer ovid | 2 |
your lippes i pray | 2 |
i had beene there | 2 |
not madnesse that possesseth | 2 |
the ayre bites shrewd | 2 |
is to be judged | 2 |
neither in respect of | 2 |
comes it that they | 2 |
to play the fool | 2 |
a seene what i | 2 |
my loue forget these | 2 |
the design of this | 2 |
the apparell oft proclaimes | 2 |
since nature cannot choose | 2 |
is all my ioy | 2 |
fault with men of | 2 |
all hangs by consequence | 2 |
it will not speake | 2 |
keyes to vnlocke chastitie | 2 |
to do with the | 2 |
would the night were | 2 |
to what issue will | 2 |
looke to the queene | 2 |
the folio edition of | 2 |
euer i was borne | 2 |
in thy life extorted | 2 |
time it may be | 2 |
it is i set | 2 |
stranger giue it welcome | 2 |
i shall note it | 2 |
that are tickled in | 2 |
i was borne to | 2 |
by the delusion of | 2 |
and your poore seruant | 2 |
in as a thing | 2 |
for implements of warre | 2 |
acquaint him with it | 2 |
custome hath made it | 2 |
which would have been | 2 |
not from his mouth | 2 |
the first edition of | 2 |
and all for nothing | 2 |
come mischance betweene vs | 2 |
me the murder of | 2 |
then the fat weede | 2 |
see your fathers funerall | 2 |
we should be very | 2 |
that is vnequall for | 2 |
the sheeted dead did | 2 |
both because of what | 2 |
and a winding sheete | 2 |
see my mothers wedding | 2 |
is said to me | 2 |
it should be spoken | 2 |
his uncle is guilty | 2 |
keep you as an | 2 |
some way or other | 2 |
robin is all my | 2 |
brother and a king | 2 |
jonson and his party | 2 |
itself doth relate it | 2 |
i meane the matter | 2 |
crossed by the contention | 2 |
mischance betweene vs twaine | 2 |
better my mother had | 2 |
i will speake daggers | 2 |
you may call it | 2 |
with such as thou | 2 |
forgets the doubt that | 2 |
imprinted and enlarged to | 2 |
tremble and look pale | 2 |
yet within a month | 2 |
will please the vulgar | 2 |
in order to render | 2 |
let me be cruell | 2 |
sacred laws of divine | 2 |
principall publike audience that | 2 |
hostile to all theatrical | 2 |
the opinion of the | 2 |
that the king had | 2 |
now the very witching | 2 |
advisory editors emmett l | 2 |
for my loue forget | 2 |
any more than in | 2 |
i haue my lord | 2 |
reading of the q | 2 |
how his audit stands | 2 |
i will leaue him | 2 |
but my good lord | 2 |
the sensible and true | 2 |
the folio reading is | 2 |
queene how now boy | 2 |
still better and worse | 2 |
in the play to | 2 |
haue newes to tell | 2 |
your rew with a | 2 |
and thus awhile the | 2 |
thou hast nature in | 2 |
ballet wil tel you | 2 |
let shame say what | 2 |
the ghosts word for | 2 |
players cannot keepe counsell | 2 |
foole me to the | 2 |
most fit it is | 2 |
thinkes i sent the | 2 |
to the finding of | 2 |
it not stand me | 2 |
art priuy to thy | 2 |
buried denmarke did sometimes | 2 |
may go a progresse | 2 |
not yet out of | 2 |
thinke i saw him | 2 |
our circumstance and course | 2 |
had already been acted | 2 |
it hath made me | 2 |
things divine no less | 2 |
state of his mind | 2 |
points of mighty opposites | 2 |
i would not have | 2 |
side of our knowne | 2 |
the ambassadors from england | 2 |
i doubt some foule | 2 |
acted by the children | 2 |
medium for political and | 2 |
tongue to blazon thy | 2 |
i must hold my | 2 |
of the ghost to | 2 |
your father lost a | 2 |
my heart in twaine | 2 |
the reason why they | 2 |
hath writ those are | 2 |
was to be in | 2 |
in the morning betime | 2 |
loue i charge thee | 2 |
and her haire downe | 2 |
be viewed as ebook | 2 |
dunghill idiote slaue am | 2 |
to know his uncle | 2 |
and bid me hold | 2 |
at all in nature | 2 |
not a few of | 2 |
i vow by that | 2 |
such a fellow speake | 2 |
in such a case | 2 |
set downe with as | 2 |
a considerable number of | 2 |
finde him most conueniently | 2 |
i neuer knew of | 2 |
no more than is | 2 |
them the third night | 2 |
such a genius as | 2 |
the god of day | 2 |
and thrice his head | 2 |
scene of the fifth | 2 |
worser part of it | 2 |
in king henry the | 2 |
our sauiours birth is | 2 |
the stage a medium | 2 |
may beware of thee | 2 |
may to thee do | 2 |
the act of feare | 2 |
keepe the winde away | 2 |
thoughts beyond the reaches | 2 |
teach you to drinke | 2 |
of the return from | 2 |
which turns the whole | 2 |
and most obseruant watch | 2 |
falles vpon my face | 2 |
he feels as if | 2 |
in the middle of | 2 |
of a dispute between | 2 |
or blasts from hell | 2 |
assume my noble fathers | 2 |
the adulterous fault i | 2 |
to put an anticke | 2 |
on the side of | 2 |
and tormenting flames must | 2 |
a ghost of him | 2 |
what courteous action it | 2 |
you would seeme to | 2 |
sends some precious instance | 2 |
letters to my sonne | 2 |
know what is betweene | 2 |
the uses of this | 2 |
could i drink hot | 2 |
to be wondered at | 2 |
earth doth still crie | 2 |
wherein they are not | 2 |
reasons i have already | 2 |
to be commended for | 2 |
with wings as swift | 2 |
the sake of the | 2 |
without prejudice to the | 2 |
we shall find it | 2 |
vnder this weary life | 2 |
it is an eager | 2 |
is of such a | 2 |
a countenance more in | 2 |
there is a most | 2 |
no offence my lord | 2 |
as iust a man | 2 |
also that it is | 2 |
which is to be | 2 |
see where he comes | 2 |
eats away all sense | 2 |
thus the unity of | 2 |
and the reputation of | 2 |
and the sheeted dead | 2 |
i must be their | 2 |
that the everlasting had | 2 |
here in the galery | 2 |
power to businesse with | 2 |
it is against himself | 2 |
thinkes i feele his | 2 |
him that lets me | 2 |
i haue newes to | 2 |
thinke it was to | 2 |
which are not in | 2 |
to pale his vneffectuall | 2 |
fashion of the time | 2 |
but not exprest in | 2 |
yet it will come | 2 |
mine eies will riuet | 2 |
lewdnesse court it in | 2 |
lend thy serious hearing | 2 |
that their faces are | 2 |
the bird of dawning | 2 |
haue you your fathers | 2 |
what hast thou done | 2 |
the lines are properly | 2 |
but i incline to | 2 |
interest in the subject | 2 |
a man as hamlet | 2 |
of most vnrighteous teares | 2 |
and gibber in the | 2 |
in closely examining the | 2 |
on earth is safe | 2 |
kill so capitall a | 2 |
most carefully vpon your | 2 |
the party of florio | 2 |
you would play vpon | 2 |
no not a whit | 2 |
may have been one | 2 |
you giue him leaue | 2 |
to droppes of blood | 2 |
the characteristic qualities of | 2 |
for any length of | 2 |
for the principall publike | 2 |
to shake our disposition | 2 |
end of the last | 2 |
thou art priuy to | 2 |
be a comma after | 2 |
the king is not | 2 |
of the last line | 2 |
i thinke i saw | 2 |
the speech of the | 2 |
in a direct manner | 2 |
that grows to seed | 2 |
daughter that i loue | 2 |
suspend their most fixed | 2 |
essays of michel montaigne | 2 |
friends to this ground | 2 |
the everlasting had not | 2 |
be edified by the | 2 |
sheepe and calues that | 2 |
the beauty of the | 2 |
that i loue passing | 2 |
we fooles of nature | 2 |
haue seene may be | 2 |
will take my leaue | 2 |
it came to passe | 2 |
here draw water from | 2 |
the preface of the | 2 |
must have been the | 2 |
no further personall power | 2 |
seven or eight of | 2 |
will is not his | 2 |
newes to tell you | 2 |
on by a most | 2 |
you what it meanes | 2 |
that hath made him | 2 |
the understanding of hamlet | 2 |
when in one line | 2 |
as it was wont | 2 |
ile speake to it | 2 |
their honour and their | 2 |
for i mine eies | 2 |
it selfe scapes not | 2 |
to the humour of | 2 |
that great folke should | 2 |
owne report against your | 2 |
weakenesse and my melancholy | 2 |
let come what comes | 2 |
sweepe to my reuenge | 2 |
and must the honor | 2 |
the loss of her | 2 |
vpon my face would | 2 |
the domain of art | 2 |
in order to make | 2 |
and end his being | 2 |
while you forgetting what | 2 |
the law hath writ | 2 |
truster of your owne | 2 |
to reason and nature | 2 |
but i shall note | 2 |
at the side of | 2 |
he should have contrived | 2 |
probability to the whole | 2 |
whole conduct of the | 2 |
lightest word would harrow | 2 |
this solidity and compound | 2 |
let not thy mother | 2 |
under the protection of | 2 |
the education of the | 2 |
and speake to it | 2 |
your poore seruant euer | 2 |
murder done in guyana | 2 |
who else can be | 2 |
the reasons i have | 2 |
god willing shall not | 2 |
the cause and ground | 2 |
correspondence of sir thomas | 2 |
i haue intreated him | 2 |
and thy commandment all | 2 |
we haue done all | 2 |
now where is your | 2 |
it was not to | 2 |
the impulses of nature | 2 |
the mastery over him | 2 |
i will vse them | 2 |
olde grandsire pryam seekes | 2 |
did squeake and gibber | 2 |
night kept the watch | 2 |
be sure you shall | 2 |
that you tooke delight | 2 |
the good king and | 2 |
of his own self | 2 |
lover of his kind | 2 |
faine i would beguile | 2 |
he says that he | 2 |
it the shew of | 2 |
rules of reason and | 2 |
to thee do ease | 2 |
not speake to it | 2 |
doth make the night | 2 |
ebook was one of | 2 |
why what is hecuba | 2 |
they foole me to | 2 |
he went without their | 2 |
what might be toward | 2 |
bring with thee ayres | 2 |
death may outliue memorie | 2 |
with the intent of | 2 |
we are to be | 2 |
the middle of the | 2 |
in one line two | 2 |
would make mops and | 2 |
of what he has | 2 |
your selfe by little | 2 |
mops and moes at | 2 |
cautious in finding fault | 2 |
by the kings maiesties | 2 |
by little as you | 2 |
from the other world | 2 |
and moes at my | 2 |
would not let him | 2 |
according to the articles | 2 |
the tenets of the | 2 |
well versed in greek | 2 |
passion of love in | 2 |
put an anticke disposition | 2 |
can you by no | 2 |
editors of the folio | 2 |
i will take my | 2 |
this was your husband | 2 |
columbia university arthur friedman | 2 |
or like a whale | 2 |
to a carelesse libertine | 2 |
we do not hesitate | 2 |
with all the circumstances | 2 |
devoutly to be wished | 2 |
will haue sounder proofes | 2 |
but lend thy serious | 2 |
made true and good | 2 |
the essays of montaigne | 2 |
that came to them | 2 |
prouidence in the fall | 2 |
reality the fault lies | 2 |
he is a man | 2 |
appear in the sequel | 2 |
to kill so capitall | 2 |
as an olde mans | 2 |
and doe my best | 2 |
under the same name | 2 |
at his heeles a | 2 |
the name of ovid | 2 |
strength by limping sway | 2 |
i humbly thanke you | 2 |
as i do thee | 2 |
a stranger giue it | 2 |
fault i haue committed | 2 |
my fate cries out | 2 |
contention of the windes | 2 |
and worke thy last | 2 |
that did sting thy | 2 |
between horatio and the | 2 |
his learning good montano | 2 |
now powre your earth | 2 |
and to the humour | 2 |
we ought to be | 2 |
of water hast thou | 2 |
why the young prince | 2 |
also in the two | 2 |
know you are no | 2 |
there is no vestige | 2 |
heart there was a | 2 |
a peece of vncurrant | 2 |
but i perceiue by | 2 |
honour and their conscience | 2 |
is one lucianus nephew | 2 |
in his heart that | 2 |
closes in the consequence | 2 |
shocking to human nature | 2 |
sunday from the weeke | 2 |
thou art to thy | 2 |
shakspere more than once | 2 |
bridle it not disparage | 2 |
that i must call | 2 |
the unity of action | 2 |
more then is set | 2 |
presence of the ghost | 2 |
was a daughter of | 2 |
they are not a | 2 |
libertine doth giue his | 2 |
the princes walke is | 2 |
in his death your | 2 |
the title of the | 2 |
hast nature in thee | 2 |
what from our brother | 2 |
for those that would | 2 |
would i had met | 2 |
held to be the | 2 |
is very natural and | 2 |
perceiue by thy distracted | 2 |
to do him good | 2 |
of what may follow | 2 |
i this morning know | 2 |
a carthusian i entered | 2 |
to him by a | 2 |
uses of this world | 2 |
should be represented as | 2 |
or in his rage | 2 |
been loosed out of | 2 |
to what i shall | 2 |
bewept to the graue | 2 |
giue him leaue to | 2 |
and may have been | 2 |
give leave to these | 2 |
mirror up to nature | 2 |
that name with you | 2 |
the reign of henry | 2 |
our hearts as one | 2 |
the cittie of london | 2 |
was falsely borne in | 2 |
now the time giues | 2 |
an act gainst the | 2 |
that would make mops | 2 |
as to affect our | 2 |
call the main design | 2 |
man of the world | 2 |
a shape of heauen | 2 |
to the profoundest pit | 2 |
couch for luxury and | 2 |
countenance more in sorrow | 2 |
imparched in calagulate gore | 2 |
in this important scene | 2 |
he likes it not | 2 |
as to be able | 2 |
saw you not his | 2 |
is the cause of | 2 |
we bound to take | 2 |
than a bad epitaph | 2 |
lends the heart vowes | 2 |
what is the reason | 2 |
axe and a spade | 2 |
cowardes of vs all | 2 |
maiden virtue rudely strumpeted | 2 |
flie at any thing | 2 |
when he the ambitious | 2 |
not come your tardy | 2 |
i haue thoughts to | 2 |
very little to the | 2 |
entirely to suspend their | 2 |
here depends on the | 2 |
this present obiect made | 2 |
the critic from the | 2 |
by the poet to | 2 |
find it is necessary | 2 |
a fellow of infinite | 2 |
did not put the | 2 |
for he was likely | 2 |
but in our circumstance | 2 |
halfe an houre of | 2 |
what is betweene vs | 2 |
cleere from my conscience | 2 |
i would you were | 2 |
seene may be the | 2 |
as patient as the | 2 |
much of water hast | 2 |
murder of my father | 2 |
us with such large | 2 |
thus the glimpses of | 2 |
third night kept the | 2 |
was the chief of | 2 |
my wordes fly vp | 2 |
nose him as you | 2 |
that they are not | 2 |
were it not that | 2 |
a deeper interest in | 2 |
till i may deliuer | 2 |
when he meant to | 2 |
should stirre me most | 2 |
character of him who | 2 |
on account of their | 2 |
invading interpreters to be | 2 |
what an asse am | 2 |
fretted with golden fire | 2 |
change the stamp of | 2 |
the rue of the | 2 |
as how should it | 2 |
me to the top | 2 |
he fell out with | 2 |
that guilty creatures sitting | 2 |
in most of our | 2 |
shall make them laugh | 2 |
of an action of | 2 |
the blanke verse shall | 2 |
by his own hand | 2 |
or a tirants raigne | 2 |
out vpon my fact | 2 |
seems to me to | 2 |
you thinke i meant | 2 |
as well as from | 2 |
speake not to him | 2 |
with them that loues | 2 |
with an idle tongue | 2 |
and prey on garbage | 2 |
is described in the | 2 |
time of the reformation | 2 |
the passion of love | 2 |
this wet that falles | 2 |
that hamlet is satisfied | 2 |
is scarcely to be | 2 |
i sent the mornings | 2 |
from the preface of | 2 |
exit hamlet and horatio | 2 |
giue quiet passe through | 2 |
and so berattle the | 2 |
did repell his letters | 2 |
for a man to | 2 |
but that i am | 2 |
so far as to | 2 |
to the best of | 2 |
we do not know | 2 |
at rapier and dagger | 2 |
not stand me now | 2 |
of much wealth and | 2 |
and faine i would | 2 |
from a letter of | 2 |
a coward of him | 2 |
the news with you | 2 |
or it might mean | 2 |
sick at the act | 2 |
how a king may | 2 |
and therefore as a | 2 |
quirkes and quillets now | 2 |
slaying of his uncle | 2 |
like to a carelesse | 2 |
and strength by limping | 2 |
nature to be sinful | 2 |
or give leave to | 2 |
philosophise is to learn | 2 |
seeme to know my | 2 |
hamlet is a prince | 2 |
nature was our great | 2 |
how smart a lash | 2 |
your admiration for a | 2 |
such men often proue | 2 |
now weares his crowne | 2 |
and free from all | 2 |
now a burthen that | 2 |
queen of france and | 2 |
as if it had | 2 |
maintenance of states is | 2 |
than if it were | 2 |
a time when proofing | 2 |
was sometime a paradox | 2 |
hamlet as if he | 2 |
enter laertes and ophelia | 2 |
his own ideal of | 2 |
the king shall drinke | 2 |
and in part him | 2 |
awake the god of | 2 |
to what we may | 2 |
had not thought it | 2 |
between the fifth and | 2 |