This is a table of type trigram and their frequencies. Use it to search & browse the list to learn more about your study carrel.
trigram | frequency |
---|---|
in the quarto | 55 |
not in q | 45 |
here in the | 29 |
it is a | 25 |
i do not | 24 |
not in quarto | 23 |
my good lord | 21 |
in the st | 20 |
the st q | 20 |
it is not | 19 |
that i haue | 17 |
he does not | 17 |
good my lord | 17 |
i my lord | 17 |
to the king | 16 |
as if he | 16 |
not in the | 15 |
of the play | 15 |
i pray you | 15 |
this is the | 15 |
there is no | 15 |
of the word | 15 |
out of the | 14 |
as well as | 14 |
of the quarto | 14 |
as to the | 14 |
in the play | 13 |
to have been | 13 |
it may be | 13 |
of the king | 13 |
is not in | 13 |
it is the | 13 |
in the folio | 12 |
to a nunnery | 12 |
one of the | 12 |
the st quarto | 12 |
the cause of | 12 |
of the time | 12 |
as it is | 12 |
in st q | 12 |
rosincrance and guildensterne | 12 |
at the same | 12 |
the same time | 11 |
the rest of | 11 |
is it not | 11 |
but in the | 11 |
i haue seene | 11 |
there is a | 11 |
the king is | 10 |
of the world | 10 |
do not know | 10 |
that he is | 10 |
of the ghost | 10 |
let me see | 10 |
the end of | 10 |
the king and | 9 |
and all the | 9 |
that of the | 9 |
he had been | 9 |
with the king | 9 |
it would be | 9 |
of his father | 9 |
the character of | 9 |
a man of | 9 |
if he had | 9 |
by no meanes | 9 |
enter king and | 8 |
king and queene | 8 |
he would have | 8 |
is to be | 8 |
you shall heare | 8 |
to be a | 8 |
will my lord | 8 |
it is to | 8 |
he is not | 8 |
the quarto has | 8 |
like the king | 8 |
the face of | 8 |
he has no | 8 |
ought to be | 8 |
enter hamlet and | 8 |
but it is | 8 |
a nunnery goe | 8 |
of the folio | 8 |
to his mother | 8 |
and to the | 8 |
as in the | 8 |
i saw him | 8 |
in which he | 8 |
speake to it | 8 |
if it be | 8 |
as you may | 8 |
according to the | 8 |
i take it | 7 |
not to be | 7 |
rest of the | 7 |
there was no | 7 |
i haue a | 7 |
the sake of | 7 |
the name of | 7 |
he is the | 7 |
from the first | 7 |
i doe not | 7 |
him in the | 7 |
he is dead | 7 |
and in the | 7 |
by and by | 7 |
but there is | 7 |
and for my | 7 |
what i haue | 7 |
the moment he | 7 |
they are not | 7 |
the hand of | 7 |
he could not | 7 |
heauen and earth | 7 |
seems to me | 7 |
where he is | 7 |
i haue heard | 7 |
hamlet and horatio | 7 |
it is an | 7 |
it should be | 7 |
i will my | 7 |
i know not | 7 |
for the sake | 7 |
in which the | 7 |
to tell you | 7 |
i cannot tell | 7 |
with all my | 7 |
take my leaue | 7 |
use of the | 7 |
let me be | 7 |
of his own | 7 |
he has been | 7 |
the text of | 6 |
in the q | 6 |
out of his | 6 |
do you thinke | 6 |
all the world | 6 |
you shall not | 6 |
thing to be | 6 |
of the drama | 6 |
is in the | 6 |
and in his | 6 |
the best of | 6 |
and that in | 6 |
what is the | 6 |
a kinde of | 6 |
he would not | 6 |
which is the | 6 |
that he may | 6 |
of the same | 6 |
be with you | 6 |
the word is | 6 |
well my lord | 6 |
is on the | 6 |
the body is | 6 |
to see you | 6 |
the second quarto | 6 |
may be the | 6 |
fare you well | 6 |
he is a | 6 |
that he had | 6 |
to be done | 6 |
i charge thee | 6 |
the fashion of | 6 |
i am very | 6 |
it must be | 6 |
of a man | 6 |
the death of | 6 |
the quarto reading | 6 |
of which he | 6 |
and out of | 6 |
and with a | 6 |
i thanke you | 6 |
my lord i | 6 |
there is nothing | 6 |
is not the | 6 |
that it is | 6 |
the top of | 6 |
of what is | 6 |
the idea of | 6 |
the presence of | 6 |
belongs to the | 6 |
so my lord | 6 |
does not mean | 6 |
part of the | 6 |
in the world | 6 |
and if he | 5 |
for it is | 5 |
king of denmarke | 5 |
exeunt all but | 5 |
the quarto is | 5 |
enter the ghost | 5 |
we are not | 5 |
in the sense | 5 |
would have been | 5 |
the sense of | 5 |
the man who | 5 |
for a time | 5 |
he was a | 5 |
in the text | 5 |
glad to see | 5 |
in relation to | 5 |
such a time | 5 |
the king of | 5 |
to do with | 5 |
what do you | 5 |
end of the | 5 |
i hold my | 5 |
was about to | 5 |
the third act | 5 |
this speech is | 5 |
i would not | 5 |
not a whit | 5 |
of his uncle | 5 |
be true to | 5 |
quarto has not | 5 |
the nature of | 5 |
in his heart | 5 |
it be so | 5 |
the state of | 5 |
it is his | 5 |
in the same | 5 |
me thinkes i | 5 |
i beseech you | 5 |
for a while | 5 |
in regard to | 5 |
that which is | 5 |
of the passage | 5 |
may be supposed | 5 |
any more than | 5 |
no my lord | 5 |
that i am | 5 |
that she is | 5 |
do you see | 5 |
to his face | 5 |
refer to the | 5 |
is not a | 5 |
to the end | 5 |
earth a while | 5 |
the success of | 5 |
i will speake | 5 |
for the moment | 5 |
now my lord | 5 |
be regarded as | 5 |
is the only | 5 |
as i haue | 5 |
with his mother | 5 |
and not the | 5 |
enter horatio and | 5 |
will speake to | 5 |
the earth a | 5 |
that he should | 5 |
if he were | 5 |
it was not | 5 |
at such a | 5 |
prince of denmarke | 5 |
with all our | 5 |
horatio and marcellus | 5 |
is it a | 5 |
the law of | 5 |
in the presence | 5 |
a play to | 5 |
must not be | 5 |
text of the | 5 |
if thou hast | 5 |
he has just | 5 |
i thinke it | 5 |
and there is | 5 |
ile follow thee | 5 |
which he is | 5 |
which it is | 5 |
were sent for | 5 |
the act of | 5 |
may have been | 5 |
is about to | 5 |
that he has | 5 |
all that is | 5 |
it is no | 5 |
that the king | 5 |
vpon my sword | 5 |
but do not | 5 |
like to a | 5 |
of the old | 5 |
of all his | 5 |
giue me leaue | 5 |
of the apparition | 5 |
partly in the | 4 |
in the margin | 4 |
what haue you | 4 |
sweare by my | 4 |
and will he | 4 |
it will not | 4 |
for such a | 4 |
there is not | 4 |
as he is | 4 |
to the quarto | 4 |
the folio reading | 4 |
seene to night | 4 |
to think of | 4 |
of his critics | 4 |
work of the | 4 |
what he had | 4 |
for to be | 4 |
queen of carthage | 4 |
of what he | 4 |
day and night | 4 |
in the consequence | 4 |
so far as | 4 |
what a treasure | 4 |
johnson and steevens | 4 |
you in the | 4 |
of this world | 4 |
the forms of | 4 |
be represented as | 4 |
as it was | 4 |
the thought of | 4 |
spirit that i | 4 |
cause of this | 4 |
to take it | 4 |
what you haue | 4 |
to old norway | 4 |
line not in | 4 |
on the two | 4 |
they are the | 4 |
you your selfe | 4 |
my deare father | 4 |
and it is | 4 |
speake no more | 4 |
wager on your | 4 |
hell it selfe | 4 |
more than a | 4 |
what would you | 4 |
the word in | 4 |
hamlet in his | 4 |
are not in | 4 |
you were sent | 4 |
but to the | 4 |
if this be | 4 |
of his mother | 4 |
this play is | 4 |
it not like | 4 |
but he is | 4 |
to speake with | 4 |
the first and | 4 |
of this speech | 4 |
no more of | 4 |
woe is me | 4 |
here is the | 4 |
watch to night | 4 |
the image of | 4 |
it is as | 4 |
and let vs | 4 |
which he has | 4 |
fashion of the | 4 |
vpon the platforme | 4 |
he has not | 4 |
it to the | 4 |
to speake of | 4 |
the passage is | 4 |
sense of the | 4 |
get thee to | 4 |
what can it | 4 |
such a fellow | 4 |
take it for | 4 |
be found in | 4 |
you haue seene | 4 |
the dead body | 4 |
it in his | 4 |
of the man | 4 |
in the grave | 4 |
hamlet does not | 4 |
but it was | 4 |
as you like | 4 |
speake to me | 4 |
of the page | 4 |
the king shall | 4 |
enter the king | 4 |
my loue i | 4 |
not so much | 4 |
it seems to | 4 |
o my lord | 4 |
it likes vs | 4 |
here it is | 4 |
is one of | 4 |
to go on | 4 |
he not come | 4 |
by my sword | 4 |
but that i | 4 |
as his own | 4 |
should be a | 4 |
doubt as to | 4 |
regard to his | 4 |
his fathers death | 4 |
speake of this | 4 |
it might be | 4 |
of the speech | 4 |
has not been | 4 |
as white as | 4 |
point in the | 4 |
what might you | 4 |
this and the | 4 |
of a doubt | 4 |
they do not | 4 |
and be a | 4 |
but doe not | 4 |
is dead and | 4 |
when my father | 4 |
a thing to | 4 |
as i do | 4 |
to the play | 4 |
is more than | 4 |
should be as | 4 |
what say you | 4 |
come on sir | 4 |
please you to | 4 |
with you in | 4 |
of the two | 4 |
an excellent play | 4 |
top of my | 4 |
face of the | 4 |
of the third | 4 |
used as a | 4 |
nothing in the | 4 |
know you are | 4 |
in the other | 4 |
when he is | 4 |
it is in | 4 |
with the rest | 4 |
of all the | 4 |
in such a | 4 |
i could not | 4 |
even in the | 4 |
that it was | 4 |
that we haue | 4 |
to be in | 4 |
play is the | 4 |
too much of | 4 |
of his guilt | 4 |
is a man | 4 |
with a bare | 4 |
of the phrase | 4 |
it will be | 4 |
very glad to | 4 |
would have him | 4 |
the king in | 4 |
to find the | 4 |
neuer to speake | 4 |
be taken as | 4 |
you like it | 4 |
kill a king | 4 |
the heart of | 4 |
head to foote | 4 |
his duty to | 4 |
he had had | 4 |
character of hamlet | 4 |
will he not | 4 |
as i am | 4 |
he must have | 4 |
i am glad | 4 |
seems to have | 4 |
he did not | 4 |
this is a | 4 |
a peece of | 4 |
that is the | 4 |
would not have | 4 |
the point of | 4 |
to be found | 4 |
the fact that | 4 |
for they are | 4 |
not like the | 4 |
if it were | 4 |
if there be | 4 |
the work of | 4 |
by the poet | 4 |
you make of | 4 |
the meaning is | 4 |
what is your | 4 |
god a mercy | 4 |
where is this | 4 |
in the corner | 4 |
now to the | 4 |
reading of the | 4 |
father much offended | 4 |
the murder of | 4 |
he has to | 4 |
that he could | 4 |
in order to | 4 |
into the grave | 4 |
like a whale | 4 |
given to the | 4 |
to her father | 4 |
if he could | 4 |
as the night | 4 |
no more be | 4 |
to your lordship | 4 |
commencement of the | 4 |
it is but | 4 |
god be with | 4 |
dead and gone | 4 |
this line not | 4 |
the winde sits | 4 |
or he to | 4 |
to know a | 4 |
of a thing | 4 |
know a man | 4 |
that you haue | 4 |
i know you | 4 |
or in the | 4 |
night the day | 4 |
i know the | 4 |
meanings of the | 4 |
to my reuenge | 4 |
will last you | 4 |
of the players | 4 |
but it may | 4 |
to know his | 4 |
to the queen | 4 |
the side of | 4 |
not come againe | 4 |
not all the | 4 |
king my father | 4 |
in the first | 4 |
play to night | 4 |
i will not | 4 |
or not to | 4 |
are the onely | 4 |
change from the | 4 |
it comes againe | 4 |
the which he | 4 |
where it comes | 4 |
the night the | 4 |
his father and | 4 |
the king my | 4 |
not of the | 4 |
of the last | 4 |
or is it | 4 |
would i had | 4 |
i see my | 4 |
to me in | 4 |
would be a | 4 |
he seems to | 4 |
to see your | 4 |
my good friend | 4 |
him to his | 4 |
the right reading | 4 |
rossencraft and gilderstone | 4 |
the kind of | 3 |
to show his | 3 |
also st q | 3 |
him for a | 3 |
the burning eyes | 3 |
used in scotland | 3 |
be made of | 3 |
off the earth | 3 |
me one thing | 3 |
i would have | 3 |
that i know | 3 |
those that would | 3 |
which i would | 3 |
the second and | 3 |
hamlet could not | 3 |
and ground of | 3 |
the construction of | 3 |
in that he | 3 |
i thinke i | 3 |
i holde it | 3 |
let me heare | 3 |
lord such a | 3 |
god blesse you | 3 |
the first act | 3 |
set it downe | 3 |
though i am | 3 |
my leaue of | 3 |
he loues you | 3 |
will no reconcilement | 3 |
direction of the | 3 |
on the ground | 3 |
with all his | 3 |
to take his | 3 |
the possibility of | 3 |
the hands of | 3 |
in the midst | 3 |
to make the | 3 |
all my heart | 3 |
the trumpet to | 3 |
his mother and | 3 |
the carrying out | 3 |
may be as | 3 |
what thinke you | 3 |
you on this | 3 |
laertes shall be | 3 |
where is he | 3 |
the effect of | 3 |
what is betweene | 3 |
from the quarto | 3 |
in the gods | 3 |
if you be | 3 |
be supposed to | 3 |
would be to | 3 |
a man as | 3 |
go not to | 3 |
with blood of | 3 |
in this world | 3 |
i will be | 3 |
of the best | 3 |
to my mother | 3 |
he is very | 3 |
in twelue venies | 3 |
interview with the | 3 |
some vicious mole | 3 |
i might not | 3 |
most select and | 3 |
pleasure of his | 3 |
for his own | 3 |
it not rather | 3 |
forgot my selfe | 3 |
then be false | 3 |
thy face is | 3 |
let not thy | 3 |
on his knees | 3 |
is an act | 3 |
of them are | 3 |
he is gone | 3 |
be all my | 3 |
as much as | 3 |
charge thee speake | 3 |
to be damned | 3 |
makes it so | 3 |
and for a | 3 |
nephew to old | 3 |
as mortall as | 3 |
what he has | 3 |
what wilt thou | 3 |
you reade my | 3 |
not have it | 3 |
of the commission | 3 |
for which he | 3 |
as pure as | 3 |
not that i | 3 |
to the folio | 3 |
not so my | 3 |
all in the | 3 |
for the law | 3 |
a man is | 3 |
he is about | 3 |
sit you downe | 3 |
and as he | 3 |
not his owne | 3 |
on the event | 3 |
that i shall | 3 |
but i cannot | 3 |
this time forth | 3 |
you must not | 3 |
which a man | 3 |
potent with such | 3 |
a bad epitaph | 3 |
confidence in the | 3 |
riuet to his | 3 |
that i will | 3 |
sight of the | 3 |
what would he | 3 |
we know not | 3 |
my sinnes remembred | 3 |
me thought it | 3 |
will riuet to | 3 |
should be spoken | 3 |
and shall i | 3 |
behinde the arras | 3 |
but as i | 3 |
me by the | 3 |
i prethee tell | 3 |
if you call | 3 |
you say right | 3 |
and it must | 3 |
to the queene | 3 |
the intent of | 3 |
tell him that | 3 |
of the poore | 3 |
the light of | 3 |
but for the | 3 |
it must follow | 3 |
his uncle a | 3 |
in any case | 3 |
it was to | 3 |
of their own | 3 |
there should be | 3 |
may call it | 3 |
the result of | 3 |
i would suggest | 3 |
your silence still | 3 |
these are the | 3 |
not perfect conscience | 3 |
precisely on the | 3 |
there must be | 3 |
he cannot be | 3 |
his father had | 3 |
two or three | 3 |
construction of the | 3 |
you do not | 3 |
to understand the | 3 |
of the thing | 3 |
speake to him | 3 |
because he is | 3 |
he should have | 3 |
we cast away | 3 |
a noise within | 3 |
will not speake | 3 |
you well my | 3 |
all the rest | 3 |
of the people | 3 |
i must be | 3 |
on the character | 3 |
it is common | 3 |
able to think | 3 |
said to you | 3 |
vertue it selfe | 3 |
the question of | 3 |
o that this | 3 |
cloak of madness | 3 |
is not to | 3 |
from this time | 3 |
speake to her | 3 |
that i must | 3 |
a sense of | 3 |
murder done in | 3 |
though it is | 3 |
in order that | 3 |
was a man | 3 |
of his bed | 3 |
makes vs rather | 3 |
image of a | 3 |
that we know | 3 |
for if the | 3 |
enter queene and | 3 |
him ply his | 3 |
it is against | 3 |
in the face | 3 |
you such a | 3 |
of the queen | 3 |
is said to | 3 |
in this and | 3 |
do not go | 3 |
borne in hand | 3 |
could not but | 3 |
when thou shalt | 3 |
regard to the | 3 |
what make you | 3 |
and he hath | 3 |
to perseuer in | 3 |
your affaire in | 3 |
are set downe | 3 |
to be true | 3 |
likes vs well | 3 |
if you haue | 3 |
do beseech you | 3 |
be the right | 3 |
in him the | 3 |
to make it | 3 |
in thy memory | 3 |
to damne me | 3 |
the will of | 3 |
and i will | 3 |
their ill report | 3 |
in his mind | 3 |
a man lie | 3 |
know not of | 3 |
lost a father | 3 |
such a ones | 3 |
and with such | 3 |
and this same | 3 |
do not you | 3 |
and as the | 3 |
with the ghost | 3 |
of complicity in | 3 |
to the players | 3 |
friends thou hast | 3 |
a most louing | 3 |
haue you heard | 3 |
thought of the | 3 |
the world shall | 3 |
me to you | 3 |
and you your | 3 |
the king had | 3 |
it could not | 3 |
of his companions | 3 |
looke you now | 3 |
against the which | 3 |
understanding of the | 3 |
not then be | 3 |
within a month | 3 |
does well to | 3 |
understanding of hamlet | 3 |
man and wife | 3 |
the folio of | 3 |
at the act | 3 |
of a murder | 3 |
of the sentence | 3 |
he is mad | 3 |
said to his | 3 |
heere in the | 3 |
for in the | 3 |
hecuba to him | 3 |
he was the | 3 |
hamlet the dane | 3 |
lord i will | 3 |
as he has | 3 |
of a king | 3 |
he doe not | 3 |
for i mine | 3 |
to grunt and | 3 |
of the grave | 3 |
i do beseech | 3 |
as if you | 3 |
how comes it | 3 |
heauen i charge | 3 |
be false to | 3 |
a murder done | 3 |
let me not | 3 |
in the end | 3 |
we haue done | 3 |
will a man | 3 |
of the night | 3 |
to my sonne | 3 |
bid him ply | 3 |
rapier and dagger | 3 |
for the very | 3 |
i can tell | 3 |
rather beare those | 3 |
right understanding of | 3 |
the sonne of | 3 |
very potent with | 3 |
he accuses himself | 3 |
have been a | 3 |
i am dead | 3 |
the reading of | 3 |
from his own | 3 |
there would be | 3 |
suspicion of his | 3 |
by my faith | 3 |
of hamlet prince | 3 |
now you speake | 3 |
do not think | 3 |
must tell you | 3 |
tell me one | 3 |
and at the | 3 |
it is like | 3 |
this soliloquy is | 3 |
by the hand | 3 |
the phrase would | 3 |
and all after | 3 |
not with the | 3 |
and that of | 3 |
take him for | 3 |
then will i | 3 |
and with no | 3 |
about to speake | 3 |
hamlet prince of | 3 |
is nothing in | 3 |
speake like a | 3 |
that you know | 3 |
i would you | 3 |
the original text | 3 |
what was i | 3 |
because it is | 3 |
the king would | 3 |
fare thee well | 3 |
and for the | 3 |
leaue of you | 3 |
be as mortall | 3 |
my loue is | 3 |
may be regarded | 3 |
the two meanings | 3 |
at the end | 3 |
oh this is | 3 |
this line is | 3 |
i will more | 3 |
something of the | 3 |
to take the | 3 |
according to his | 3 |
when that he | 3 |
he has a | 3 |
of his friend | 3 |
see what i | 3 |
it in a | 3 |
rest of this | 3 |
of my death | 3 |
haue seene to | 3 |
others that we | 3 |
a piece of | 3 |
not i my | 3 |
the king shal | 3 |
but you must | 3 |
ere yet the | 3 |
to the matter | 3 |
it is most | 3 |
so as to | 3 |
it was against | 3 |
slaue am i | 3 |
and a spade | 3 |
then venome to | 3 |
is very potent | 3 |
that he was | 3 |
and change at | 3 |
the onely men | 3 |
not at first | 3 |
her come in | 3 |
but that the | 3 |
what may this | 3 |
him with it | 3 |
the speech is | 3 |
judgment of himself | 3 |
and with his | 3 |
that is not | 3 |
burning eyes of | 3 |
most of his | 3 |
second and third | 3 |
or it might | 3 |
why what a | 3 |
for and a | 3 |
thinke of it | 3 |
may this meane | 3 |
still am i | 3 |
to know what | 3 |
venome to thy | 3 |
my lord such | 3 |
of such a | 3 |
allusion to the | 3 |
he goes to | 3 |
on the other | 3 |
out of my | 3 |
if this should | 3 |
for you shall | 3 |
suggest that the | 3 |
that on the | 3 |
of the preceding | 3 |
when you are | 3 |
o my deere | 3 |
by the attack | 3 |
of the other | 3 |
nor i my | 3 |
is this a | 3 |
the cause and | 3 |
must call in | 3 |
in all my | 3 |
and the following | 3 |
cunning of the | 3 |
may be taken | 3 |
it is that | 3 |
as it stands | 3 |
mortall as an | 3 |
to offer it | 3 |
thinking of the | 3 |
is the true | 3 |
it was about | 3 |
is there no | 3 |
in his life | 3 |
we haue seene | 3 |
in the nd | 3 |
a bare bodkin | 3 |
notion of his | 3 |
bound to take | 3 |
in thy orizons | 3 |
there you are | 3 |
to others that | 3 |
is as the | 3 |
canst not then | 3 |
a lover of | 3 |
the history of | 3 |
make you from | 3 |
way to heauen | 3 |
haue a daughter | 3 |
shall not goe | 3 |
it was a | 3 |
to the top | 3 |
the omission of | 3 |
finde him not | 3 |
is not his | 3 |
as if it | 3 |
change at that | 3 |
deare father loue | 3 |
we will my | 3 |
am very glad | 3 |
is far more | 3 |
of something after | 3 |
my father liued | 3 |
how came he | 3 |
reade my lord | 3 |
meane my lord | 3 |
the sight of | 3 |
the tragedie of | 3 |
clowne shall make | 3 |
thee to thy | 3 |
my lord be | 3 |
you call it | 3 |
how now ophelia | 3 |
is the king | 3 |
i haue no | 3 |
an houre of | 3 |
that part of | 3 |
and of all | 3 |
the nd quarto | 3 |
the meaning of | 3 |
they say the | 3 |
and a most | 3 |
or like a | 3 |
as of a | 3 |
is a play | 3 |
tragedians of the | 3 |
corner of his | 3 |
i forgot my | 3 |
more willingly part | 3 |
to be made | 3 |
this is not | 3 |
and in fine | 3 |
but for a | 3 |
it should come | 3 |
if he doe | 3 |
but still to | 3 |
doe not bleach | 3 |
to work out | 3 |
by heauen i | 3 |
shake our disposition | 3 |
in your silence | 3 |
and you shall | 3 |
he will not | 3 |
a comma after | 3 |
a man may | 3 |
trumpet to the | 3 |
you must take | 3 |
that they are | 3 |
i suspect it | 3 |
and if thou | 3 |
thoughts are ours | 3 |
see how the | 3 |
and must the | 3 |
thou canst not | 3 |
false to any | 3 |
that i loue | 3 |
king of england | 3 |
as against the | 3 |
hath my lord | 3 |
i take to | 3 |
are of a | 3 |
vpon my life | 3 |
me to the | 3 |
the king doth | 3 |
the thing is | 3 |
of him that | 3 |
our last king | 3 |
not the less | 3 |
all the time | 3 |
to a more | 3 |
to lay his | 3 |
for in that | 3 |
takes refuge in | 3 |
the midst of | 3 |
the last line | 3 |
in my heart | 3 |
looke my lord | 3 |
conscience of the | 3 |
a king of | 3 |
behind the arras | 3 |
queene is good | 3 |
follows in st | 3 |
so well as | 3 |
but what is | 3 |
it in the | 3 |
all my sinnes | 3 |
may be a | 3 |
why might not | 3 |
is but a | 3 |
of this passage | 3 |
should be the | 3 |
is full of | 3 |
i will vse | 3 |
who has not | 3 |
where the body | 3 |
but the king | 3 |
of his will | 3 |
let her come | 3 |
is the image | 3 |
you are welcome | 3 |
his father in | 3 |
it is only | 3 |
as if the | 3 |
the commencement of | 3 |
line is not | 3 |
to know the | 3 |
neuer gaue you | 3 |
that hamlet is | 3 |
being true to | 3 |
take to be | 3 |
not a few | 3 |
one from the | 3 |
your selfe and | 3 |
better and worse | 3 |
we may find | 3 |
the clowne shall | 3 |
to be the | 3 |
passage in the | 3 |
i should say | 3 |
idea of the | 3 |
i tell thee | 3 |
i must tell | 3 |
would you were | 3 |
carrying out of | 3 |
to show that | 3 |
him on to | 3 |
stand me now | 3 |
was the very | 3 |
here comes the | 3 |
passion in the | 3 |
the play of | 3 |
it selfe in | 3 |
and bid him | 3 |
relation to the | 3 |
to suppresse his | 3 |
obserue his lookes | 3 |
it is hardly | 3 |
what i see | 3 |
long will a | 3 |
and fixt his | 3 |
ile no more | 3 |
my blessing with | 3 |
it my lord | 3 |
in good faith | 3 |
is for the | 3 |
thinke it was | 3 |
as he would | 3 |
of a most | 3 |
a corruption of | 3 |
you thinke i | 3 |
haue you eyes | 3 |
the right understanding | 3 |
between the second | 3 |
what he is | 3 |
to the soule | 3 |
or that the | 3 |
wealth and peace | 3 |
a second time | 3 |
so far from | 3 |
to the present | 3 |
to the dane | 3 |
an allusion to | 3 |
be the diuell | 3 |
we will not | 3 |
of his madness | 3 |
will not satisfy | 3 |
shall be king | 3 |
confession of his | 3 |
we must not | 3 |
is there not | 3 |
i came to | 3 |
of his iaw | 3 |
it would seem | 3 |
come by and | 3 |
as he liued | 3 |
should it be | 3 |
and we cast | 3 |
do my lord | 3 |
i neuer gaue | 3 |
to the test | 3 |
is here used | 3 |
ghost that we | 3 |
question of the | 3 |
there be any | 3 |
vs rather beare | 3 |
tragedie of hamlet | 3 |
the quality of | 3 |
i think it | 3 |
of the q | 3 |
then i haue | 3 |
i incline to | 3 |
but i suspect | 3 |
to him the | 3 |
come to my | 3 |
the corner of | 3 |
how say you | 3 |
to hide the | 3 |
teach you to | 3 |
and that he | 3 |
the type of | 3 |
a kind of | 3 |
speake with you | 3 |
so haue i | 3 |
i shall not | 3 |
not madnesse that | 3 |
is the more | 3 |
one who has | 3 |
i haue scene | 3 |
side of the | 3 |
that would make | 3 |
of the original | 3 |
his conscience is | 3 |
the rites of | 3 |
if not from | 3 |
in the old | 3 |
and will not | 3 |
doe you heare | 3 |
a man must | 3 |
of your maiden | 3 |
we may suppose | 3 |
before and after | 3 |
thing is not | 3 |
briefe let me | 3 |
the ayre bites | 3 |
the tragedians of | 3 |
in the right | 3 |
that he would | 3 |
i must call | 3 |
after your death | 3 |
hearsed in death | 3 |
is not madnesse | 3 |
the ground of | 3 |
of my father | 3 |
of the first | 3 |
then let the | 3 |
for that which | 3 |
and leaue the | 3 |
you speake like | 3 |
with the other | 3 |
and the queene | 3 |
to my god | 3 |
and if we | 3 |
not for the | 3 |
you may call | 3 |
seem to have | 3 |
ile speake to | 3 |
to make them | 3 |
if the king | 3 |
by no means | 3 |
he to hecuba | 3 |
he may be | 3 |
could not be | 3 |
meaning of the | 3 |
this must be | 3 |
but he would | 3 |
to take him | 3 |
of which the | 3 |
not to come | 3 |
for a moment | 3 |
to accuse himself | 3 |
him with the | 3 |
the understanding of | 3 |
your maiden presence | 3 |
a misprint for | 3 |
for he has | 3 |
horatio and the | 3 |
should be represented | 3 |
or at least | 3 |
something after death | 3 |
is the first | 3 |
to her hamlet | 3 |
will more willingly | 3 |
white as snowe | 3 |
to be right | 3 |
is your affaire | 3 |
like a camell | 3 |
be the word | 3 |
supposed to be | 3 |
is the matter | 3 |
where is your | 3 |
the fourth act | 3 |
on this booke | 3 |
and with the | 3 |
alas my lord | 3 |
for looke you | 3 |
st quarto has | 3 |
that was a | 3 |
of vs all | 3 |
too precisely on | 3 |
the place of | 3 |
to the ghost | 3 |
here follows in | 3 |
and let him | 3 |
you are not | 3 |
change is this | 3 |
with a little | 3 |
forme of the | 3 |
presence of the | 3 |
to the noble | 3 |
the notion of | 3 |
and winde of | 2 |
through your dominions | 2 |
why may not | 2 |
on the margin | 2 |
i beare my | 2 |
you call the | 2 |
must weare your | 2 |
do not feare | 2 |
that i was | 2 |
may well seem | 2 |
as a man | 2 |
he wants to | 2 |
the shew of | 2 |
our hearts as | 2 |
else this braine | 2 |
the play is | 2 |
pay his due | 2 |
when she saw | 2 |
what we haue | 2 |
i couple hell | 2 |
by his cockle | 2 |
thousand crownes in | 2 |
you some violets | 2 |
foole me to | 2 |
in a sinne | 2 |
you made me | 2 |
refuse his tokens | 2 |
it the shew | 2 |
and possibly the | 2 |
my fathers death | 2 |
and dupt the | 2 |
after next speech | 2 |
that i did | 2 |
into a sadnesse | 2 |
the stamp of | 2 |
because they were | 2 |
at rapier and | 2 |
earely and shrill | 2 |
put it in | 2 |
the porches of | 2 |
that makes it | 2 |
not come to | 2 |
with them the | 2 |
and at his | 2 |
earth we make | 2 |
what did you | 2 |
be a liar | 2 |
owne selfe be | 2 |
out his rapier | 2 |
but answere made | 2 |
the poet takes | 2 |
king it likes | 2 |
till by some | 2 |
how now ofelia | 2 |
is good for | 2 |
platforme where we | 2 |
is hecuba to | 2 |
buried denmarke did | 2 |
select and generous | 2 |
change that name | 2 |
may find it | 2 |
thou knowest thine | 2 |
bestow our selues | 2 |
know right well | 2 |
those his lands | 2 |
awake the god | 2 |
his good friends | 2 |
beare hamlet like | 2 |
runnes the world | 2 |
as one might | 2 |
infamy shall die | 2 |
with wings as | 2 |
so neere the | 2 |
in her owne | 2 |
barren spectators to | 2 |
which makes thy | 2 |
hamlet is a | 2 |
you are staid | 2 |
of the universe | 2 |
and win your | 2 |
an action of | 2 |
i haue not | 2 |
there are many | 2 |
of this most | 2 |
but i perceiue | 2 |
find in him | 2 |
leaue to do | 2 |
to the other | 2 |
to the spectators | 2 |
touching this vision | 2 |
but by the | 2 |
fault in the | 2 |
to finde the | 2 |
eares of the | 2 |
who is that | 2 |
in the fall | 2 |
an euerlasting iudge | 2 |
to thine owne | 2 |
a phantom of | 2 |
comes so neere | 2 |
mole of nature | 2 |
in that of | 2 |
can tell you | 2 |
king and the | 2 |
know of him | 2 |
cause of his | 2 |
set it by | 2 |
of these gentlemen | 2 |
as not a | 2 |
heauens secure him | 2 |
blessing with thee | 2 |
and then you | 2 |
keepe thee from | 2 |
him for his | 2 |
dead for a | 2 |
a word belonging | 2 |
for my loue | 2 |
as starres with | 2 |
he sets to | 2 |
the old relation | 2 |
said old mole | 2 |
a coward of | 2 |
is no authority | 2 |
what this shew | 2 |
for vpon my | 2 |
a brothers hand | 2 |
the lady shall | 2 |
come in ofelia | 2 |
sweepe to my | 2 |
the winde is | 2 |
conscience makes cowardes | 2 |
as a noun | 2 |
the very cunning | 2 |
tooke my father | 2 |
had met my | 2 |
to cast light | 2 |
how can that | 2 |
with this slaues | 2 |
teach me the | 2 |
realme dismantled was | 2 |
o i am | 2 |
must the honor | 2 |
has not yet | 2 |
to be sure | 2 |
comes poring vppon | 2 |
act of feare | 2 |
arrangement of the | 2 |
damned ghost that | 2 |
do with it | 2 |
is not done | 2 |
have nothing to | 2 |
this that you | 2 |
one word more | 2 |
come from france | 2 |
but none of | 2 |
of gilderstone and | 2 |
an antike roman | 2 |
might be toward | 2 |
the meaning seems | 2 |
of most excellent | 2 |
forget these idle | 2 |
to giue the | 2 |
know what is | 2 |
so the whole | 2 |
enter ofelia playing | 2 |
the spirit of | 2 |
nature cannot choose | 2 |
so strutted and | 2 |
take from me | 2 |
the doubt that | 2 |
so would i | 2 |
upon by the | 2 |
these are sinnes | 2 |
that hath a | 2 |
that this wet | 2 |
he is at | 2 |
should tell the | 2 |
fortie yeares are | 2 |
on which his | 2 |
with you lady | 2 |
along with you | 2 |
is to cast | 2 |
is not necessarily | 2 |
of my soule | 2 |
this title which | 2 |
to know him | 2 |
have a share | 2 |
but no tongue | 2 |
the number of | 2 |
has just mentioned | 2 |
exit hamlet and | 2 |
do and if | 2 |
my lord in | 2 |
selfe should gape | 2 |
it tempt you | 2 |
to break with | 2 |
so and so | 2 |
not greatly wonder | 2 |
vpon your lap | 2 |
to glose with | 2 |
this something more | 2 |
the quarto seems | 2 |
if we would | 2 |
of the pesant | 2 |
haue many pocky | 2 |
and other lords | 2 |
tongue to blazon | 2 |
nor witch hath | 2 |
as i can | 2 |
might you thinke | 2 |
what might be | 2 |
beard me in | 2 |
and see how | 2 |
to his care | 2 |
to be buried | 2 |
man after his | 2 |
hath a stomacke | 2 |
present obiect made | 2 |
looke to the | 2 |
sing a downe | 2 |
is not yet | 2 |
capitall a calfe | 2 |
thou be a | 2 |
assurance of his | 2 |
would turne all | 2 |
thanke you for | 2 |
as it neuer | 2 |
to haue the | 2 |
as therein are | 2 |
will stay till | 2 |
was borne to | 2 |
the night ioynt | 2 |
the sins they | 2 |
sokes vp the | 2 |
the shaping of | 2 |
where is the | 2 |
of my opinion | 2 |
are not ignorant | 2 |
ballet wil tel | 2 |
goe my lord | 2 |
loues to heare | 2 |
fool according to | 2 |
i heare him | 2 |
prologue to the | 2 |
to the day | 2 |
haue the power | 2 |
you know the | 2 |
this effect defectiue | 2 |
bore of the | 2 |
your fathers funerall | 2 |
i mary there | 2 |
to the german | 2 |
and tetterd ouer | 2 |
beate like yours | 2 |
why such impresse | 2 |
vpon the fretfull | 2 |
charge thee let | 2 |
is the drama | 2 |
if once a | 2 |
owne necke downe | 2 |
as by the | 2 |
a common phrase | 2 |
you were not | 2 |
that leads to | 2 |
folke should haue | 2 |
in scotland still | 2 |
go vp the | 2 |
cheerefully my mother | 2 |
had he beene | 2 |
justified text is | 2 |
see how to | 2 |
buried in christian | 2 |
came back on | 2 |
at the time | 2 |
axe and a | 2 |
actor in rome | 2 |
remains the same | 2 |
he wished to | 2 |
he the ambitious | 2 |
how now mother | 2 |
if they might | 2 |
then such a | 2 |
the story of | 2 |
whats he that | 2 |
ioyes will nere | 2 |
and make a | 2 |
growne by what | 2 |
both of them | 2 |
to propose a | 2 |
second quarto and | 2 |
in the very | 2 |
earth doth still | 2 |
time we thanke | 2 |
toe of the | 2 |
play vpon this | 2 |
in the second | 2 |
in which it | 2 |
come hither gentlemen | 2 |
of which it | 2 |
the common stages | 2 |
certain of what | 2 |
of the second | 2 |
and your leane | 2 |
too much for | 2 |
shall not be | 2 |
the heeles of | 2 |
the princes walke | 2 |
the beginning of | 2 |
may be viewed | 2 |
art thou that | 2 |
is that of | 2 |
this world is | 2 |
shall note it | 2 |
he has the | 2 |
could not by | 2 |
pollax on the | 2 |
which they are | 2 |
is in him | 2 |
eager and an | 2 |
known what you | 2 |
is an improved | 2 |
be familiar with | 2 |
to accept the | 2 |
a man like | 2 |
slander any moment | 2 |
i think this | 2 |
your selfe shall | 2 |
not at all | 2 |
and for his | 2 |
oft it chaunces | 2 |
a seene what | 2 |
as an ape | 2 |
she is a | 2 |
the rugged pyrrhus | 2 |
a stranger giue | 2 |
to explain the | 2 |
will haue sounder | 2 |
and all things | 2 |
by the very | 2 |
of great pith | 2 |
once a widdow | 2 |
my face would | 2 |
to beard me | 2 |
if he but | 2 |
to olde norway | 2 |
is ready to | 2 |
as thou art | 2 |
the order of | 2 |
thinkes i sent | 2 |
graue did not | 2 |
this was your | 2 |
a play in | 2 |
audience that came | 2 |
to you both | 2 |
from the idea | 2 |
not made them | 2 |
thy countries fate | 2 |
is not for | 2 |
and in this | 2 |
the object of | 2 |
of them i | 2 |
is the very | 2 |
priuy to thy | 2 |
no my good | 2 |
each of the | 2 |
he hath not | 2 |
right well you | 2 |
a ministring angell | 2 |
in the understanding | 2 |
would not haue | 2 |
is he to | 2 |
of the courtier | 2 |
a fool of | 2 |
hamlet seems to | 2 |
neuer make known | 2 |
his heart with | 2 |
that in earth | 2 |
from this point | 2 |
all night long | 2 |
for a king | 2 |
hue of resolution | 2 |
he will last | 2 |
at a time | 2 |
a second leaue | 2 |
will leaue him | 2 |
away the worser | 2 |
i follow it | 2 |
it is well | 2 |
in the notes | 2 |
will i follow | 2 |
might well enough | 2 |
was the chief | 2 |
which is a | 2 |
denmarke did sometimes | 2 |
my theory is | 2 |
blacke as his | 2 |
but little in | 2 |
you go to | 2 |
hand in hand | 2 |
the subiect of | 2 |
hast me to | 2 |
immediately on the | 2 |
let the doores | 2 |
just because he | 2 |
how a king | 2 |
if the gods | 2 |
scandale wouldst thou | 2 |
who comes heere | 2 |
difference in each | 2 |
die thy thoughts | 2 |
they seem to | 2 |
enter a messenger | 2 |
the same word | 2 |
thee vp agen | 2 |
queene here hamlet | 2 |
may go a | 2 |
one sute of | 2 |
the emphasis is | 2 |
cannot keepe counsell | 2 |
the behaviour of | 2 |
i am sure | 2 |
the present tense | 2 |
haue newes to | 2 |
on your side | 2 |
you by no | 2 |
such fellowes as | 2 |
did the night | 2 |
must take your | 2 |
know the good | 2 |
of the three | 2 |
editors of the | 2 |
blesse you sir | 2 |
the rest shall | 2 |
influence of the | 2 |
thou hast nature | 2 |
hamlet must be | 2 |
sure you shall | 2 |
me now leave | 2 |
in part by | 2 |
not you like | 2 |
kept the watch | 2 |
between horatio and | 2 |
his like againe | 2 |
as the king | 2 |
faine i would | 2 |
assume a virtue | 2 |
through the most | 2 |
not possible to | 2 |
and the meaning | 2 |
standers by with | 2 |
good king and | 2 |
your poore seruant | 2 |
all my ioy | 2 |
earth and fire | 2 |
her sex is | 2 |
they catch one | 2 |
the spirit that | 2 |
you from wittenberg | 2 |
the good king | 2 |
had in his | 2 |
sent into england | 2 |
shoulder of your | 2 |
as to what | 2 |
but wild and | 2 |
i will stand | 2 |
true and good | 2 |
for some other | 2 |
not a thing | 2 |
earth ere he | 2 |
of your owne | 2 |
is the cause | 2 |
the pressure of | 2 |
lookes it not | 2 |
the same root | 2 |
in the drama | 2 |
him on the | 2 |
and the next | 2 |
to his sword | 2 |
of nero enter | 2 |
but the great | 2 |
he can do | 2 |
the page are | 2 |
his load too | 2 |
pittifull ambition in | 2 |
a more remoued | 2 |
playes the king | 2 |
proof of the | 2 |
shaping of his | 2 |
are but the | 2 |
i heard it | 2 |
of clay for | 2 |
in the attempt | 2 |
you deny me | 2 |
drink hot blood | 2 |
the widow being | 2 |
tell you all | 2 |
to whom i | 2 |
we our watch | 2 |
here draw water | 2 |
you nothing heare | 2 |
shall my sister | 2 |
is wondrous strange | 2 |
seene what i | 2 |
accuse himself of | 2 |
for those that | 2 |
he was in | 2 |
it followed hard | 2 |
is easy to | 2 |
he would be | 2 |
the other side | 2 |
not to doe | 2 |
have been set | 2 |
done in my | 2 |
are you faire | 2 |
no second husband | 2 |
that hee is | 2 |
of his being | 2 |
by yonder sunne | 2 |
as how should | 2 |
hand of his | 2 |
sit on those | 2 |
may sweepe to | 2 |
blasts from hell | 2 |
that ophelia would | 2 |
and let me | 2 |
these letters to | 2 |
to the phrase | 2 |
giuen him any | 2 |
we bound to | 2 |
no discourse to | 2 |
with the play | 2 |
rich curssed of | 2 |
i haue found | 2 |
each particular haire | 2 |
be to slander | 2 |
ile wipe away | 2 |
looke with what | 2 |
tragicall historie of | 2 |
to thy venome | 2 |
he comes before | 2 |
thoughts and remembrance | 2 |
the one case | 2 |
springes to catch | 2 |
at the command | 2 |
true idea of | 2 |
will be all | 2 |
sends out arrests | 2 |
in my dayes | 2 |
the better to | 2 |
let in the | 2 |
appetite had growne | 2 |
quiet passe through | 2 |
the suites of | 2 |
doth make the | 2 |
a hill to | 2 |
he had my | 2 |
of the madness | 2 |
acceptance of the | 2 |
pay me the | 2 |
from the tempest | 2 |
and in a | 2 |
with him in | 2 |
dreams may come | 2 |
not know whether | 2 |
the man dies | 2 |
a crowne bereft | 2 |
be spoken with | 2 |
writes how he | 2 |
suites of woe | 2 |
pray will you | 2 |
minutes of this | 2 |
i would a | 2 |
the world of | 2 |
fashion of euphuism | 2 |
to drinke deepe | 2 |
as a chorus | 2 |
comes out the | 2 |
tell him of | 2 |
the nights are | 2 |
and calues that | 2 |
haue my father | 2 |
me a stope | 2 |
to the divine | 2 |
of horatio for | 2 |
then a dane | 2 |
could never have | 2 |
i shall note | 2 |
haue you your | 2 |
be applied to | 2 |
shrill crowing throate | 2 |
out to note | 2 |
what noyse is | 2 |
who do not | 2 |
word belonging to | 2 |
affaire in elsenoure | 2 |
and tools were | 2 |
doubt i loue | 2 |
get three oddes | 2 |
and two or | 2 |
be nothing worth | 2 |
and we fooles | 2 |
confest a murder | 2 |
last night of | 2 |
would be very | 2 |
from the same | 2 |
flattery sit on | 2 |
giue him the | 2 |
shot mine arrow | 2 |
euer i was | 2 |
of the character | 2 |
to doubt the | 2 |
him the cause | 2 |
of this night | 2 |
on my daughter | 2 |
in the character | 2 |
poore seruant euer | 2 |
his uncle would | 2 |
his heeles may | 2 |
how now boy | 2 |
against your highnesse | 2 |
been allowed to | 2 |
each others wrong | 2 |
the word he | 2 |
thee to a | 2 |
know his uncle | 2 |
is rotten in | 2 |
haue burst their | 2 |
be indifferent to | 2 |
may kicke at | 2 |
you would play | 2 |
is more pregnant | 2 |
wash the crime | 2 |
seene may be | 2 |
with the body | 2 |
breaks out in | 2 |
the sentence is | 2 |
the things he | 2 |
to the true | 2 |
in his delay | 2 |
to his will | 2 |
weak man is | 2 |
that knowes our | 2 |
of his kind | 2 |
not well developed | 2 |
better my mother | 2 |
because of the | 2 |
of earth we | 2 |
this is too | 2 |
giues him three | 2 |
from whence no | 2 |
go a progresse | 2 |
committed long before | 2 |
out arrests on | 2 |
this weary life | 2 |
in him a | 2 |
the force of | 2 |
will tell you | 2 |
i humbly thanke | 2 |
by cause of | 2 |
you toward the | 2 |
if circumstances leade | 2 |
it is on | 2 |
though you can | 2 |
is your husband | 2 |
cause and reason | 2 |
or tother day | 2 |
begge your hearing | 2 |
hamlet takes him | 2 |
his false friends | 2 |
all dasht and | 2 |
it assume my | 2 |
in accordance with | 2 |
motiue in this | 2 |
circumstances leade me | 2 |
person of the | 2 |
them from him | 2 |
thou hast thy | 2 |
wherein they are | 2 |
if thou shouldst | 2 |
me to wed | 2 |
sting thy fathers | 2 |
that is vnequall | 2 |
act gainst the | 2 |
are you here | 2 |
at this point | 2 |
way without his | 2 |
their watch in | 2 |
armes against your | 2 |
burst in ignorance | 2 |
see my mothers | 2 |
addressed to his | 2 |
you haue heard | 2 |
is very well | 2 |
sight the happy | 2 |
gods his foe | 2 |
here depends on | 2 |
blanke verse shall | 2 |
came to passe | 2 |
king shal be | 2 |
leartes i forgot | 2 |
smiles vpon a | 2 |
or to the | 2 |
ofelia as before | 2 |
o it offends | 2 |
she is not | 2 |
i neuer knew | 2 |
no more the | 2 |
in the lines | 2 |
murder committed long | 2 |
this side of | 2 |
am glad to | 2 |
vnrighteous teares had | 2 |
and goes away | 2 |
it does not | 2 |
then belike he | 2 |
that out a | 2 |
locks to part | 2 |
shall make them | 2 |
passe and conduct | 2 |
what a scandale | 2 |
and yet it | 2 |
deeds will rise | 2 |
his dislike to | 2 |
of all your | 2 |
he is ready | 2 |
least the whisper | 2 |
a pit of | 2 |
beholde tis i | 2 |
or does he | 2 |
and our vaine | 2 |
know well enough | 2 |
god of day | 2 |
do it wrong | 2 |
which let thy | 2 |
but not exprest | 2 |
the minutes of | 2 |
giue thee this | 2 |
solidity and compound | 2 |
he is careful | 2 |
so goe on | 2 |
ioyfull hope of | 2 |
i will come | 2 |
and not made | 2 |
placed to the | 2 |
not be to | 2 |
of his loue | 2 |
heeles may kicke | 2 |
thinke on me | 2 |
by the contention | 2 |
thou vilde king | 2 |
would harrow vp | 2 |
her haire downe | 2 |
set it right | 2 |
of my watch | 2 |
now powre your | 2 |
his beard as | 2 |
thou art priuy | 2 |
of confession in | 2 |
and it doth | 2 |
in a shape | 2 |
vow before his | 2 |
he must be | 2 |
will speake daggers | 2 |
he might well | 2 |
the rich curssed | 2 |
the assay of | 2 |
the ghost in | 2 |
not the smallest | 2 |
would not make | 2 |
mad let vs | 2 |
nor do i | 2 |
beseech you giue | 2 |
your fingers on | 2 |
vpon my secure | 2 |
we pray you | 2 |
thou art to | 2 |
a sauagenes in | 2 |
comes it that | 2 |
as it were | 2 |
and a winding | 2 |
this and all | 2 |
what doth this | 2 |
of the actor | 2 |
a few of | 2 |
then their ill | 2 |
is an honest | 2 |
was no question | 2 |
you how pale | 2 |
the toe of | 2 |
see where it | 2 |
the matter you | 2 |
should a fatted | 2 |
would treason haue | 2 |
crimes done in | 2 |
say you this | 2 |
players be they | 2 |
native hue of | 2 |
a little more | 2 |
here is one | 2 |
it can be | 2 |
if it assume | 2 |
great god of | 2 |
it blast me | 2 |
two months dead | 2 |
heart in twaine | 2 |
has begun to | 2 |
the first folio | 2 |
may we not | 2 |
quicke change is | 2 |
sallets in the | 2 |
wilt thou do | 2 |
been but a | 2 |
between him and | 2 |
reading is right | 2 |
heare their praise | 2 |
in part him | 2 |
saw him yesternight | 2 |
hope of this | 2 |
is the sole | 2 |
it shows the | 2 |
used by shakspere | 2 |
his mind and | 2 |
too short at | 2 |
noueltie carries it | 2 |
olde mans sawe | 2 |
shadow of a | 2 |
this ebook was | 2 |
dawning singeth all | 2 |
to be carried | 2 |
not able to | 2 |
as an olde | 2 |
sure to be | 2 |
my loue forget | 2 |
the skirts of | 2 |
for the apparell | 2 |
hath made me | 2 |
speeches of the | 2 |
vs impart what | 2 |
contrition make them | 2 |
she should breake | 2 |
no man sir | 2 |
him that fortenbrasse | 2 |
all the straines | 2 |
true auouch of | 2 |
he proceeds to | 2 |
walke vntill hee | 2 |
an actor in | 2 |
playing on a | 2 |
bones hearsed in | 2 |
wings as swift | 2 |
said to the | 2 |
horse is forgot | 2 |
that yong leartes | 2 |
or by pronouncing | 2 |
let him goe | 2 |
of his treachery | 2 |
shall finde him | 2 |
the god of | 2 |
had these gentlemen | 2 |
he tooke me | 2 |
doe not greatly | 2 |
he is in | 2 |
as rosincrance and | 2 |
without their helpe | 2 |
make the night | 2 |
that my lord | 2 |
our knowne world | 2 |
set downe with | 2 |
thou poore ghost | 2 |
it was as | 2 |
have seen the | 2 |
in their loue | 2 |
and allies of | 2 |
impart they did | 2 |
the matter of | 2 |
comes by cause | 2 |
this troubles me | 2 |
with his own | 2 |
both your maiesties | 2 |
me lasting strife | 2 |
we most sory | 2 |
but with a | 2 |
tooke thee for | 2 |
where late the | 2 |
proofs of his | 2 |
for your intent | 2 |
giue it welcome | 2 |
brother and a | 2 |
naturall gates and | 2 |
much as if | 2 |
treasure in the | 2 |
all our heart | 2 |
you as an | 2 |
first weele make | 2 |
her conduct has | 2 |
in all denmarke | 2 |
the forme of | 2 |
it stalkes away | 2 |
you at such | 2 |
a mercy on | 2 |
he expects to | 2 |
acts little of | 2 |
ghosts word for | 2 |
more to giue | 2 |
a figure like | 2 |
yeares are past | 2 |
say you then | 2 |
the voice of | 2 |
allies of the | 2 |
from him a | 2 |
quarto and the | 2 |
what we are | 2 |
consent to sweare | 2 |
to my heart | 2 |
is a custome | 2 |
i vow by | 2 |
one that is | 2 |
treason that the | 2 |
me the path | 2 |
is farre gone | 2 |
all which sir | 2 |
and speake not | 2 |
my great power | 2 |
about my braine | 2 |
looke you sir | 2 |
it such a | 2 |
that age cannot | 2 |
reputation holds as | 2 |
made of sheep | 2 |
he takes refuge | 2 |
not this beleeue | 2 |
haue thoughts to | 2 |
of the text | 2 |
to those who | 2 |
where my lord | 2 |
loue know from | 2 |
but when the | 2 |
nature of man | 2 |
for a hope | 2 |
me he that | 2 |
grandsire pryam seekes | 2 |
vice to know | 2 |
refers to the | 2 |
cocke they are | 2 |
what if it | 2 |
did slay this | 2 |
at my becke | 2 |
so leuied as | 2 |
of the cocke | 2 |
the memory of | 2 |
haue done all | 2 |
would speake with | 2 |
who is to | 2 |
it was no | 2 |
vnhand me gentlemen | 2 |
therefore as a | 2 |
the news with | 2 |
a enter ghost | 2 |
would this indure | 2 |
he straitway grew | 2 |
to this effect | 2 |
pursue me lasting | 2 |
haue all a | 2 |
more calamities besides | 2 |
willing shall not | 2 |
doth wake to | 2 |
regarded as the | 2 |
that falles vpon | 2 |
related to the | 2 |
sit still my | 2 |
my yong lady | 2 |
and the lady | 2 |
note once more | 2 |
it selfe scapes | 2 |
heele of the | 2 |
on the side | 2 |
of thy braine | 2 |
art priuy to | 2 |
that thou knowest | 2 |
husband kisses me | 2 |
allude to the | 2 |
that he might | 2 |
her minde freely | 2 |
your true loue | 2 |
thou shalt deuise | 2 |
mary my good | 2 |
and no more | 2 |
king and queen | 2 |
both are wounded | 2 |
head a grasse | 2 |
shall still be | 2 |
wouldst thou leaue | 2 |
do the king | 2 |
and makes each | 2 |
would he do | 2 |
may be right | 2 |
in this speech | 2 |
the incestuous pleasure | 2 |
carefully vpon your | 2 |
forms of madness | 2 |
we must note | 2 |
vicious mole of | 2 |
when i looke | 2 |
i sent the | 2 |
verie well my | 2 |
to mens eies | 2 |
and tell me | 2 |
the corresponding passage | 2 |
wipe away all | 2 |
the apparition comes | 2 |
of the printers | 2 |
would play vpon | 2 |
cause of all | 2 |
i had my | 2 |
halfe an houre | 2 |
is proofe and | 2 |
was one of | 2 |
might depriue your | 2 |
ambition in the | 2 |
of the ayre | 2 |
nature in them | 2 |
parle he smot | 2 |
to this passage | 2 |
you thinke of | 2 |
my selfe me | 2 |
so shall you | 2 |
as you go | 2 |
in his eares | 2 |
all those his | 2 |
labourer with the | 2 |
me the murder | 2 |
shall i do | 2 |
enter the players | 2 |
and his mother | 2 |
that are so | 2 |
oh what a | 2 |
why should the | 2 |
giue them the | 2 |
that his honour | 2 |
the godly ballet | 2 |
their reputation holds | 2 |
the articles agreed | 2 |
should come a | 2 |
leaue to speake | 2 |
how cheerefully my | 2 |
but obserue his | 2 |
lady and mistris | 2 |
tell the secrets | 2 |
of hamlets lunacie | 2 |
down to the | 2 |
is not more | 2 |
my trust and | 2 |
such a one | 2 |
of his letters | 2 |
lookes into our | 2 |
third night kept | 2 |
was not the | 2 |
toppe of their | 2 |
yong maides life | 2 |
perseuer in a | 2 |
news to tell | 2 |
foe in heauen | 2 |
the gods themselues | 2 |
not goe with | 2 |
of dawning singeth | 2 |
tell him his | 2 |
seruice of the | 2 |
with his brother | 2 |
the soule of | 2 |
or such ambiguous | 2 |
breake my heart | 2 |
be all the | 2 |
at one with | 2 |
the quarto surely | 2 |
nature of the | 2 |
you not speake | 2 |
proclaimes the man | 2 |
to what issue | 2 |
who was in | 2 |
ouercome with ioy | 2 |
the shoulder of | 2 |
haue shot mine | 2 |
order of the | 2 |
shall haue tribute | 2 |
glose with them | 2 |
is a prince | 2 |
himself as a | 2 |
is the reason | 2 |
receiues rebuke from | 2 |
the first quarto | 2 |
the thing must | 2 |
from my conscience | 2 |
when he lay | 2 |
take pains to | 2 |
eleuen and twelue | 2 |
i loue passing | 2 |
a vilde phrase | 2 |
it was wont | 2 |
and like a | 2 |
are as mad | 2 |
those who left | 2 |
what hast thou | 2 |
to kill him | 2 |
it is already | 2 |
i am natiue | 2 |
might tell a | 2 |
the sheeted dead | 2 |
in heauen and | 2 |
me most to | 2 |
king your father | 2 |
that can i | 2 |
then the fat | 2 |
and then in | 2 |
what he means | 2 |
my fathers brother | 2 |
but know not | 2 |
not his face | 2 |
selfe me thinkes | 2 |
may be that | 2 |
fixt his eyes | 2 |
am satisfied in | 2 |
by opposing end | 2 |
though lewdnesse court | 2 |
altitude of a | 2 |
if it liue | 2 |
be so in | 2 |
would be spoke | 2 |
i say the | 2 |
used in the | 2 |
to lay our | 2 |
in obedience to | 2 |
the acceptance of | 2 |
you the watch | 2 |
in the one | 2 |
he wore his | 2 |
to heare the | 2 |
satisfied of their | 2 |
face doth glow | 2 |
a stope of | 2 |
the hope that | 2 |
of your saile | 2 |
all the best | 2 |
and bid me | 2 |
beware of thee | 2 |
our selues in | 2 |
and a king | 2 |
no cause without | 2 |
teares had left | 2 |
harbindgers preceading still | 2 |
of of a | 2 |
heere lies the | 2 |
first lord is | 2 |
used as an | 2 |
as will not | 2 |
is the trumpet | 2 |
o throw away | 2 |
the command of | 2 |
ape doth nuttes | 2 |
shall my lord | 2 |
sitting at a | 2 |
is against himself | 2 |
of our knowne | 2 |
should such fellowes | 2 |
most vnrighteous teares | 2 |
seemes to me | 2 |
water hast thou | 2 |
the children and | 2 |
birth is celebrated | 2 |
fate cries out | 2 |
so to seduce | 2 |
play with the | 2 |
well my liege | 2 |
but by my | 2 |
must be remembered | 2 |
ile visit you | 2 |
see my trespasse | 2 |
receiue none of | 2 |
the fretfull porpentine | 2 |
must pay his | 2 |
looks as if | 2 |
that vnto a | 2 |
you go vp | 2 |
reaches of our | 2 |
when thy first | 2 |
and remember well | 2 |
the facts of | 2 |
i should take | 2 |
the ghosts word | 2 |
the straines of | 2 |
thou shouldst die | 2 |
it is intended | 2 |
vntill hee comes | 2 |
what ceremony else | 2 |
and as you | 2 |
of armes against | 2 |
do you know | 2 |
vpon a second | 2 |
of her father | 2 |
in his eyes | 2 |
all the same | 2 |
more then is | 2 |
the same figure | 2 |
ready to laugh | 2 |
god of heauen | 2 |
should scape whipping | 2 |
more like a | 2 |
watch the minutes | 2 |
wring from him | 2 |
if like a | 2 |
tenders of his | 2 |
such earnest vowes | 2 |
heart of all | 2 |
thoughts be bloody | 2 |
issue will this | 2 |
the actors are | 2 |
my sinnes remaine | 2 |
on the stage | 2 |