Enfolded Hamlet: Enfolded Search for "164"
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Enfolded Hamlet: Enfolded Search for "164"


Enfolded Hamlet Page

The Tragedie of
H A M L E T

Prince of Denmarke.

Context:


  1. [EH]
    160       And then they say no spirit {dare sturre} <can walke> abraode1.1.161
    161       The nights are wholsome, then no plannets strike,1.1.162
    162       No fairy {takes} <talkes>, nor witch hath power to charme1.1.163
    163       {B3v} So {hallowed} <hallow'd>, and so gratious is {that} <the> time.1.1.164
    164        Hora. So haue I heard and doe in part belieue it,1.1.165
    165       But looke the morne in russet mantle clad1.1.166
    166       Walkes ore the dewe of yon high {Eastward} <Easterne> hill1.1.167




  2. [EH]
    161       The nights are wholsome, then no plannets strike,1.1.162
    162       No fairy {takes} <talkes>, nor witch hath power to charme1.1.163
    163       {B3v} So {hallowed} <hallow'd>, and so gratious is {that} <the> time.1.1.164
    164        Hora. So haue I heard and doe in part belieue it,1.1.165
    165       But looke the morne in russet mantle clad1.1.166
    166       Walkes ore the dewe of yon high {Eastward} <Easterne> hill1.1.167
    167       Breake we our watch vp and by my aduise1.1.168




  3. [EH]
    346-7    Ham. I am glad to see you well; | Horatio, or I do forget my selfe. 
    348-9    Hora. The same my Lord, | and your poore seruant euer. 
    350-1    Ham. Sir my good friend, | Ile change that name with you, 
    352       And what make you from Wittenberg Horatio?1.2.164
    353       <nn6> Marcellus.1.2.
    354        Mar. My good Lord.1.2.166
    355        Ham. I am very glad to see you, (good euen sir)1.2.167




  4. [EH]
    858        Ghost. Sweare {by his sword}.1.5.161
    859        Ham. Well sayd olde Mole, can'st worke it'h {earth} <ground> so fast,1.5.162
    860       A worthy Pioner, once more remooue good friends.1.5.163
    861        Hora. O day and night, but this is wondrous strange.1.5.164
    862        Ham. And therefore as a stranger giue it welcome,1.5.165
    863       There are more things in heauen and earth Horatio1.5.166
    864       Then are dream't of in {your} <our> philosophie, but come1.5.168




  5. [EH]
    1195     {Fl}  Quee. So he {dooes} <ha's> indeede.2.2.161
    1196      Pol. At such a time, Ile loose my daughter to him,2.2.162
    1197     Be you and I behind an Arras then,2.2.163
    1198     Marke the encounter, if he loue her not,2.2.164
    1199     And be not from his reason falne thereon2.2.165
    1200     Let me be no assistant for a state 2.2.166
    1201     {But} <And> keepe a farme and carters.2.2.167




  6. [EH]
    1818     {G3v} Enter King and Polonius...
    1819      King. Loue, his affections doe not that way tend,3.1.162
    1820     Nor what he spake, though it lackt forme a little,3.1.163
    1821     Was not like madnes, there's something in his soule3.1.164
    1822     Ore which his melancholy sits on brood,3.1.165
    1823     And I doe {doubt, the hatch} <doubt the hatch,> and the disclose3.1.166
    1824     VVill be some danger; which {for} to preuent,3.1.167




  7. [EH]
    2030      {Quee} <Bap>. So many iourneyes may the Sunne and Moone3.2.161
    2031     Make vs againe count ore ere loue be doone,3.2.162
    2032     But woe is me, you are so sicke of late,3.2.163
    2033     So farre from cheere, and from {our former} <your forme> state,3.2.164
    2034     That I distrust you, yet though I distrust,3.2.165
    2035     Discomfort you my Lord it nothing must.3.2.166
    2035+1 {H2} {For women feare too much, euen as they loue,} 




  8. [EH]
    2544+1 {That monster custome, who all sence doth eate}3.4.161
    2544+2 {Of habits deuill, is angell yet in this}3.4.162
    2544+3 {That to the vse of actions faire and good,}3.4.163
    2544+4 {He likewise giues a frock or Liuery}3.4.164
    2544+5 {That aptly is put on to refraine night,} 
    2545     And that shall lend a kind of easines3.4.166
    2546     To the next abstinence, {the next more easie:}3.4.167




  9. [EH]
    2913     Should be as mortall as {a poore} <an old> mans life.4.5.161
    2914     <Nature is fine in Loue, and where 'tis fine,>4.5.162
    2915     <It sends some precious instance of it selfe>4.5.163
    2916     <After the thing it loues.>4.5.164
    2917      Oph. They bore him bare-faste on the Beere, {Song.}4.5.165
    2918         <Hey non nony, nony, hey nony:> 
    2919     And {in} <on> his graue {rain'd} <raines> many a teare,4.5.167




  10. [EH]
    3350      Ham. Vpon what ground?5.1.160
    3351-2  Clow. Why heere in Denmarke: I haue been {Sexten} <sixeteene>| heere man 
    3352     and boy thirty yeeres.5.1.162
    3353     {M3v}  Ham. How long will a man lie i'th earth ere he rot?5.1.164
    3354-5  Clow. {Fayth} <Ifaith,> if {a} <he> be not rotten before {a} <he> die, as we haue | many poc- 
    3355-6 kie corses <now adaies>, that will scarce hold | the laying in, {a} <he> will last you som eyght 
    3356-7 yeere, or nine | yeere. A Tanner will last you nine yeere.