Enfolded Hamlet: Enfolded Search for "3-4"
Q2 Enfolded F1

Enfolded Hamlet: Enfolded Search for "3-4"


Enfolded Hamlet Page

The Tragedie of
H A M L E T

Prince of Denmarke.

Context:


  1. [EH]
    0           [The Persons Represented] 
    1           <nn4v> <Actus Primus. Scoena Prima> 
    2           {B1r}              Enter Barnardo, and Francisco, two Centinels. 
    3-4       {Bar. Whose} <Barnardo. | Who's> there?1.1.1
    5-6       Fran. Nay answere me. Stand and vnfolde | your selfe.1.1.2
    7           Bar. Long liue the King,1.1.3
    8           Fran. {Barnardo.} <Barnardo?>1.1.4




  2. [EH]  
    670       As hardy as the Nemeon Lyons nerue; 1.4.83
    671       Still am I cald{,} <?> vnhand me Gentlemen1.4.84
    672       By {heauen} <Heau'n,> Ile make a ghost of him that lets me,1.4.85
    673-4   I say away, goe on, Ile followe thee. | {Exit } <Exeunt.>Ghost and Hamlet. 
    675        Hora. He waxes desperate with {imagion} <imagination>.1.4.87
    676        Mar. Lets followe, tis not fit thus to obey him.1.4.88
    677        Hora. Haue after, to what issue will this come?1.4.89




  3. [EH]  
    1190     Within the Center.2.2.159
    1191      King. How may we try it further?2.2.159
    1192-3  Pol. You know sometimes | he walkes foure houres together  
    1193-4 Heere | in the Lobby. 
    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




  4. [EH]
    1219-20  good kissing carrion{.} <----> | Haue you a daughter?  
    1221      Pol. I haue my Lord.2.2.183
    1222-3  Ham. Let her not walke i'th Sunne, conception is a | blessing, 
    1223-4 But <not> as your daughter may conceaue, friend | looke to't. 
    1225-6  Pol. How say you by that, still harping on my {daughter,} <daugh-| ter:> yet hee 
    1226-7  knewe me not at first, {a} <he> sayd I was a {Fishmonger, a is farre gone,} <Fishmon-> 
    1227-8  <ger: he is farre gone, farre gone:>and truly in my youth, | I suffred much extremity for loue, very 




  5. [EH]
    1238-40 though I | most powerfully and potentlie belieue, yet I hold it | not 
    1240-1 honesty to haue it thus set downe, for <you> your | selfe sir {shall growe} <should be> old 
    1241-2 as I am: if like a Crab you could | goe backward. 
    1243-4  Pol. Though this be madnesse, | yet there is method in't, will you 
    1244-5 walke | out of the ayre my Lord?  
    1246      Ham. Into my graue.2.2.207
    1247-8  Pol. Indeede {that's} <that is> out {of the ayre;} <o'th'Ayre:> | how pregnant sometimes 




  6. [EH]  
    1260     life.                     {Enter Guyldersterne, and Rosencraus.}2.2.217
    1261      Pol. Fare you well my Lord.2.2.218
    1262      Ham. These tedious old fooles.2.2.219
    1263-4  Pol. You goe to seeke {the} <my> Lord Hamlet, there | he is. 
    1265     <Enter Rosincran and Guildensterne.>..
    1266      Ros. God saue you sir.2.2.221
    1267      Guyl. {My} <Mine> honor'd Lord.2.2.222




  7. [EH]        
    1330-1  Ham. That you must teach me: but let me coniure | you, by the 
    1331-2 rights of our fellowship, by the consonancie of | our youth, by the 
    1332-3 obligation of our euer preserued loue; | and by what more deare a  
    1333-4 better proposer {can} <could> charge | you withall, bee euen and direct with 
    1334-5 me whether you | were sent for or no. 
    1336      Ros. What say you.2.2.288
    1337-8  Ham. Nay then I haue an eye of you? if you loue me | hold not of. 




  8. [EH]
    1340-1  Ham. I will tell you why, so shall my anticipation | preuent your 
    1341-2 discouery, {and} <of> your secrecie to the King & | Queene moult no fea- 
    1342-3 ther, I haue of late, but wherefore | I knowe not, lost all my mirth, 
    1343-4 forgon all custome of {exercises:} <ex-| ercise;> and indeede it goes so {heauily} <heauenly> with 
    1344-5 my {disposition,} <dispositi-| on;> that this goodly frame the earth, seemes to mee a  
    1345-7 {sterill} <ster-| rill> promontorie, this most excellent Canopie the ayre, | looke 
    1347-8 you, this braue orehanging {firmament}, this maiesticall roofe | fret- 




  9. [EH]
    1349-50 and pestilent congregation of {vapoures} <va-| pours>. What <a> peece of worke is a 
    1350-1 man, how noble in | reason, how infinit in {faculties,} <faculty?> in forme and 
    1351-2 moouing{,} | how expresse and admirable<?> in action, how like an An- 
    1353-4 gell <?> in apprehension, how like a God: the beautie of the | world; the 
    1354-5 paragon of Annimales; and yet to me, what is | this Quintessence of 
    1355-6 dust: man delights not me, <no,> | nor {women} <Woman> neither, though by your 
    1356-7 smilling, you seeme | to say so. 




  10. [EH]
    1358-9  Ros. My Lord, there was no such stuffe in my | thoughts. 
    1360-1  Ham. Why did {yee} <you> laugh {then}, when I sayd man delights | not me. 
    1362-3  Ros. To thinke my Lord if you delight not in man, | what Lenton 
    1363-4 entertainment the players shall receaue | from you, we coted them 
    1364-5 on the way, and hether are | they comming to offer you seruice. 
    1366-7  Ham. He that playes the King shal be welcome, his | Maiestie shal 
    1367-8 haue tribute {on} <of> me, the aduenterous | Knight shall vse his foyle and 




  11. [EH]   
    1410-1  those that would make {mouths} <mowes> at him | while my father liued, giue 
    1411-2  twenty, fortie, {fifty, a} <an> hundred | duckets a peece, for his Picture 
    1412-3  in little, {s'bloud} there is {somthing} <some-| thing> in this more then naturall, if 
    1413-4  Philosophie could | find it out. {A Florish.} 
    1415     <Flourish for the Players.>..
    1416     Guyl. There are the players.2.2.369
    1417-8 Ham. Gentlemen you are welcome to Elsonoure, your | hands come  




  12. [EH]
    1459-60  Ham. Nay that followes not. (passing well. 
    1461      Pol. What followes then my Lord?2.2.414
    1462-3  Ham. Why as by lot God wot, and then you knowe it | came to 
    1463-4 passe, as most like it was; the first rowe of the {pious chanson} | <Pons Chanson> will 
    1464-5 showe you more, for looke where my {abridgment comes} | <Abridgements come>. 
    1466     Enter {the} <foure or fiue> Players...
    1467-8 {Ham. You are} <Y'are> welcome maisters, welcome all, I am glad to see | thee 




  13. [EH]
    1470-1  what my young Lady and {mistris, by lady} <Mi-| stris? Byrlady> your Ladishippe is  
    1471-2  nerer {to} heauen, then when | I saw you last by the altitude of a 
    1472-3  chopine, pray God | your voyce like a peece of vncurrant gold, 
    1473-4  bee not crackt | within the ring: maisters you are all welcome, 
    1474-5  weele {ento't} <e'ne | to't> like {friendly Fankners} <French Faulconers>, fly at any thing we see,  
    1475-7  weele | haue a speech straite, come giue vs a tast of your {quality,} <qua-| lity:> 
    1477      come a passionate speech.2.2.432




  14. [EH]
    1480-1  or if it was, not aboue once, for the play I | remember pleasd not 
    1481-2  the million, t'was cauiary to the | generall, but it was as I receaued  
    1482-3  it & others, whose {iudgements} | <iudgement> in such matters cried in the top 
    1483-4  of mine, an | excellent play, well digested in the scenes, set downe 
    1485-6  with as much modestie as cunning. I remember one sayd | there 
    1486-7  {were} <was> no sallets in the lines, to make the matter {sauory,} <sa-| uoury> nor no 
    1487-8  matter in the phrase that might indite the | author of {affection} <affectation>, 




  15. [EH]
    1489-90  t'was Aeneas {talke} <Tale> | to Dido, & there about of it especially {when} <where> he 
    1490-1  speakes | of Priams slaughter, if it liue in your memory begin at 
    1492-3  this line, let me see, let me see, the rugged Pirhus like | Th'ircanian 
    1493-4 {F3v} beast, {tis} <It is> not so, it beginnes with Pirrhus, | the rugged Pirrhus, he whose 
    1494     sable Armes,2.2.452
    1495     Black as his purpose did the night resemble,2.2.453
    1496     When he lay couched in {th'omynous} <the Ominous> horse,2.2.454




  16. [EH]
    1560-1  Pol. Looke where he has not turnd his cullour, and | has teares in's 
    1561     eyes, {prethee} <Pray you> no more.2.2.520
    1562-3  Ham. Tis well, Ile haue thee speake out the rest {of this} | soone, 
    1563-4 Good my Lord will you see the players well {bestowed;} <be-| stow'd,> doe {you} <ye> 
    1564-5 heare, let them be well {vsed,} <vs'd:> for they are | the {abstract} <Abstracts> and breefe 
    1565-6 Chronicles of the time; after | your death you were better haue a 
    1566-7 bad Epitaph then | their ill report while you {liue} <liued>. 




  17. [EH]
    1570-1  Ham. Gods {bodkin} <bodykins> man, {much} better, vse euery man | after his de- 
    1571-2 sert, & who {shall} <should> scape whipping, vse | them after your owne honor 
    1572-3 and dignity, the lesse they | deserue the more merrit is in your boun- 
    1573-4 ty. Take them | in. 
    1575      Pol. Come sirs. <Exit Polon.>2.2.534
    1576-7  Ham. Follow him friends, weele heare a play to {morrowe;} <mor-| row.> dost thou 
    1578     {F4v} heare me old friend, can you play the | murther of Gonzago?2.2.538




  18. [EH]
    1769-70 time giues it | proofe, I did loue you once. 
    1771      Oph. Indeed my Lord you made me belieue so.3.1.115
    1772-3  Ham. You should not haue beleeu'd me, for vertue cannot so 
    1773-4 {euocutat} <innocculate> our old stock, but we shall relish of it, I loued you not. 
    1775     {G3}  Oph. I was the more deceiued.3.1.119
    1776-7  Ham. Get thee {a Nunry} <to a Nunnerie>, why would'st thou be a breeder of sin- 
    1777-8 ners, I am my selfe indifferent honest, but yet I could accuse mee of 




  19. [EH]
    1779-80 very proude, {reuengefull} <re-| uengefull>, ambitious, with more offences at my beck, 
    1781-2 then I haue thoughts to put them {in, imagination } <in imagination,> to giue them shape, 
    1782-3 <Oo5v> or time to act them in: what should such | fellowes as I do crauling be- 
    1783-4 tweene {earth and heauen,} <Heauen and Earth.>| wee are arrant knaues <all>, beleeue none of vs, 
    1784-5 goe thy | waies to a {Nunry} <Nunnery>. Where's your father?  
    1786      Oph. At home my Lord.3.1.130
    1787      Ham. Let the doores be shut vpon him,3.1.131




  20. [EH]
    1790-1  Ham. If thou doost marry, Ile giue thee this plague | for thy dow- 
    1791-2 rie, be thou as chast as yce, as pure as snow, | thou shalt not escape ca- 
    1792-3 lumny; get thee to a {Nunry} <Nunnery>, | <Go,> farewell. Or if thou wilt needes marry, 
    1793-4 marry a foole, | for wise men knowe well enough what monsters you 
    1795-6 make of them: to a {Nunry} <Nunnery> goe, and quickly to, {farewell} <Far-| well>. 
    1797      Oph. <O> Heauenly powers restore him.3.1.141
    1798-9  Ham. I haue heard of your {paintings} <pratlings too> well enough, | God {hath} <has> gi- 




  21. [EH]
    1799-1800 uen you one {face} <pace>, and you make your {selfes another,} <selfe an-| other:> you gig {&} <you> am- 
    1800-1 ble, and you {list you} <lispe, and> nickname | Gods creatures, and make your wan- 
    1801-2 tonnes {ignorance;} <your Ig-| norance.> goe to, Ile no more on't, it hath made me madde, 
    1803-4 I say we will haue no {mo marriage,} <more Marriages.> those that are | married alreadie, all 
    1804-5 but one shall liue, the rest shall keep | as they are: to a {Nunry} <Nunnery,> go. Exit <Hamlet>. 
    1806      Oph. O what a noble mind is heere orethrowne!3.1.150
    1807     The Courtiers, souldiers, schollers, eye, tongue, sword,3.1.151




  22. [EH]
    1831-2 Puts him thus | from fashion of himselfe. 
    1832     What thinke you on't?3.1.175
    1833      Pol. It shall doe well.3.1.176
    1833-4 But yet doe I belieue | the origin and comencement of {his} <this> greefe, 
    1835     Sprung from neglected loue: How now Ophelia?3.1.178
    1836     You neede not tell vs what Lord Hamlet said,3.1.179
    1837     We heard it all: my Lord, doe as you please,3.1.180




  23. [EH]
    1951      King. I haue nothing with this aunswer Hamlet,3.2.97
    1951-2 These | words are not mine. 
    1953      Ham. No, nor mine now my Lord.3.2.99
    1953-4 You playd once | i'th Vniuersitie you say, 
    1955-6  Pol. That {did I} <I did> my Lord, and was accounted a good | Actor, 
    1957      Ham. <And> What did you enact?3.2.102
    1958      Pol. I did enact Iulius Cæsar, I was kild i'th Capitall,3.2.104




  24. [EH]
    1979-80 be merry, for looke you how {cheerefully}<cheereful-| ly> my mother lookes, and my 
    1980-1 father died within's two | howres. 
    1982      Oph. Nay, tis twice two {months} <moneths> my Lord.3.2.128
    1983-4  Ham. So long, nay then let the deule weare blacke, | for Ile haue a 
    1984-5 sute of sables; ô heauens, die two {months} <mo-| neths> agoe, and not forgotten yet, 
    1985-6 then there's hope a | great mans memorie may out-liue his life halfe a 
    1986-8 yeere, | but {ber Lady a} <byrlady he> must build Churches then, or els shall {a} | <he> suffer 




  25. [EH]
    1990     {H1v} {The Trumpets sounds. Dumbe show followes.} <Hoboyes play. The dumbe shew enters.>..
    1991-2  Enter a King and {a} Queene, <very louingly; >the Queene {embracing him, and he her, he} <embra-| cing him> 
    1992-3 <She kneeles, and makes shew of Protestation vnto | him.> 
    1993-4 <He> takes her vp, and declines his head vpon her necke, {he lyes} | <Layes> him downe vp- 
    1994-5 pon a bancke of flowers, she seeing him | asleepe, leaues him: anon {come} <comes> in {an} 
    1995-6 {other man} <a Fellow>, takes off his | crowne, kisses it, <and> pours poyson in the {sleepers } <Kings> eares, 
    1996-8 and {leaues him: } | <Exits.>the Queene returnes, finds the King dead, <and>| makes passionate 




  26. [EH]
    2130     On wholsome life {vsurps} <vsurpe> immediatly.3.2.260
    2131     <Powres the poyson in his eares.>..
    2132-3  Ham. {A} <He> poysons him i'th Garden {for his} <for's> estate, his | names Gonza- 
    2133-4 go, the story is extant, and {written in very} <writ in> choice | Italian, you shall see 
    2134-5 anon how the murtherer gets the | loue of Gonzagoes wife. 
    2136      Oph. The King rises.3.2.265
    2137      <Ham. What, frighted with false fire.>3.2.266




  27. [EH]
    2190      Ham. Sir I cannot.3.2.319
    2191      {Ros.} <Guild.> What my Lord.3.2.320
    2192-3  Ham. Make you a wholsome answer, my wits {diseasd,} <dis-| eas'd> but sir, such  
    2193-4 {answere} <answers> as I can make, you shall {commaund,} <com-| mand:> or rather {as} you say, my 
    2194-5 mother, therefore no more, | but to the matter, my mother you say. 
    2196-7  Ros. Then thus she sayes, your behauiour hath strooke | her into a- 
    2197     mazement and admiration.3.2.327




  28. [EH]
    2198-9  Ham. O wonderful sonne that can so {stonish} <astonish> a | mother, but is there 
    2199-2200 no sequell at the heeles of this {mothers} <Mo-| thers> admiration, {impart}. 
    2201-2  Ros. She desires to speak with you in her closet | ere you go to bed. 
    2203-4  Ham. We shall obey, were she ten times our mother, | haue you any 
    2204     further trade with vs?3.2.334
    2205      Ros. My Lord, you once did loue me.3.2.335
    2206      Ham. {And} <So I> doe still by these pickers and stealers.3.2.336




  29. [EH]
    2211-2  Ros. How can that be, when you haue the voyce of | the King him- 
    2212     selfe for your succession in Denmarke.3.2.342
    2212+1 {Enter the Players with Recorders.}  
    2213-4  Ham. I {sir}, but while the grasse growes, the prouerbe is something 
    2214-6 musty, | <Enter one with a Recorder.>| ô the {Recorders}, <Recorder> let mee see {one}, to withdraw with you, why 
    2217-8 doe you goe about to recouer the wind of mee, as if you | would driue 
    2218     me into a toyle?3.2.347




  30. [EH]
    2280     Most holy and religious feare it is3.3.8
    2281     To keepe those many many bodies safe3.3.9
    2282     That liue and feede vpon your Maiestie.3.3.10
    2283-4  Ros. The single | and peculier life is bound 
    2285     With all the strength and armour of the mind3.3.12
    2286     To keepe it selfe from noyance, but much more3.3.13
    2287     That spirit, vpon whose {weale} <spirit> depends and rests3.3.14




  31. [EH]
    2808-9 my | Coach, God night Ladies, god night. 
    2809-10 Sweet Ladyes | god night, god night.        <Exit.> 
    2811-2  King. Follow her close, | giue her good watch I pray you. 
    2813-4 O this is the poyson of deepe griefe, it springs | all from her Fathers 
    2814     death, {and now behold,} ô Gertrard, Gertrard,4.5.77
    2815     When sorrowes {come} <comes>, they come not single spyes,4.5.78
    2816     But in {battalians:} <Battaliaes.> first her Father slaine,4.5.79




  32. [EH]
    2900     That I am guiltlesse of your fathers death,4.5.150
    2901     And am most {sencibly} <sensible> in griefe for it,4.5.151
    2902     It shall as leuell to your iudgement {peare} <pierce>4.5.152
    2903-4 As day dooes to your eye.{A noyse within.} |<A noise within. Let her come in.> 
    2905                  Enter Ophelia..
    2904      {Laer. Let her come in.}4.5.153
    2906      <Laer.> How now, what noyse is that?4.5.154




  33. [EH]
    2921-2  Laer. Hadst thou thy wits, and did'st perswade {reuenge} <Re-| uenge,> 
    2922     It could not mooue thus.4.5.170
    2923      Oph. You must sing {a downe} <downe> a downe,4.5.172
    2923-4 And you call | him a downe a. O how the wheele becomes it, 
    2924-5 It is | the false Steward that stole his Maisters daughter. 
    2926      Laer. This nothing's more then matter.4.5.174
    2927-8  Oph. There's Rosemary, thats for remembrance, | pray {you} loue re- 




  34. [EH]
    2928-9 member, and there is {Pancies} <Paconcies>, thats for | thoughts. 
    2930-1  Laer. A document in madnes, thoughts and {remembrance} <remem-| brance> fitted. 
    2932-3  Ophe. There's Fennill for you, and Colembines, there's | Rewe for 
    2933-4 you, & heere's some for me, we may call it {herbe of Grace} | <Herbe-Grace> a Sondaies, 
    2934-5 <Oh> you {may} <must> weare your Rewe | with a difference, there's a Dasie, I would 
    2935-7 giue you | some Violets, but they witherd all when my Father {dyed,} <dy-| ed:> 
    2937     they say {a} <he> made a good end.4.5.186




  35. [EH]
    2980      Hora. Let him blesse thee to.4.6.8
    2981-2  Say. {A} <Hee> shall sir {and} <and't> please him, there's a Letter | for you sir, it {came} 
    2982-3 <comes> {frō th'Embassador} <from th'Ambassadours> that was | bound for England, if your name be Ho- 
    2983-4 ratio, as I am let | to know it is. 
    2985                  <Reads the Letter.>..
    2986-7  {Hor.} Horatio, when thou shalt haue ouer-lookt this, giue these | fel- 
    2987-8 lowes some meanes to the King, they haue Letters | for him: Ere wee 




  36. [EH]
    3190-1  Clowne. Is shee to be buried in Christian buriall, {when she} <that>| wilfully 
    3191     seekes her owne saluation?5.1.2
    3192-3  Other. I tell thee she is, <and> therfore make her graue | straight, the crow- 
    3193-4 ner hath sate on her, and finds it {Christian} <Chri-| stian> buriall. 
    3195-6  Clowne. How can that be, vnlesse she drown'd herselfe in | her owne 
    3196     defence.5.1.7
    3197      Other. Why tis found so.5.1.8




  37. [EH]
    3210      Other. But is this law?5.1.21
    3211      Clowne. I marry i'st, Crowners quest law.5.1.22
    3212-3  Other. Will you ha the truth an't, if this had not | beene a gentlewo- 
    3213-4 man, she should haue been buried | out {a} <of> christian buriall. 
    3215-6  Clowne. Why there thou sayst, and the more pitty that | great folke 
    3216-7 should haue {countnaunce} <countenance> in this world to | drowne or hang tho(-,e) selues, 
    3217-8 more then theyr euen {Christen:} <Christi-| an.> Come my spade, there is no aunci- 




  38. [EH]
    3269-70 first murder, {this} <It> | might be the pate of a pollitician, which this asse {now} 
    3270-1 {ore-reaches;} <o're Of-| fices:> one that {would} <could> circumuent God, might it not? 
    3272      Hora. It might my Lord.5.1.81
    3273-4  Ham. Or of a Courtier, which could say good {morrow} <Mor-| row> sweet lord, 
    3274-5 how doost thou {sweet} <good> lord? This | might be my Lord such a one, that 
    3275-6 praised my lord such | a ones horse when {a went} <he meant> to beg it, might it not? 
    3277      Hor. I my Lord.5.1.87




  39. [EH]
    3370      Ham. This?5.1.182
    3371   Clow. Een that.5.1.183
    3372-3  Ham. <Let me see.> Alas poore Yoricke, I knew him {Horatio} <Ho-| ratio>, a fellow of infinite5.1.184
    3373-4 iest, of most excellent fancie, hee | hath {bore} <borne> me on his backe a thou-5.1.185
    3374-5 sand times, and {now} how | abhorred {in} my imagination {it} is: my gorge 
    3375-6 rises at it. Heere | hung those lyppes that I haue kist I know not howe 
    3376-7 oft, | where be your gibes now? your gamboles, your | songs, your fla- 




  40. [EH]
    3590-1  Ham. Thy state is the more gracious, for tis a vice to | know him, 
    3591-2 He hath much land and fertill: let a beast | be Lord of beasts, and his 
    3592-3 crib shall stand at the Kings | messe, tis a chough, but as I {say,} <saw> spaci- 
    3593-4 ous in the {possession} <pos-| session> of durt. 
    3595-6  {Cour.} <Osr.> Sweete Lord, if your {Lordshippe} <friendship> were at leasure, | I should  
    3596     impart a thing to you from his Maiestie.5.2.90
    3597-8  Ham. I will receaue it {sir} withall dilligence of spirit, <put> | your bonnet 




  41. [EH]
    3599      {Cour.} <Osr.> I thanke your Lordship, {it is} <'tis> very hot.5.2.94
    3600-1  Ham. No belieue me, tis very cold, the wind is | Northerly. 
    3602      {Cour.} <Osr.> It is indefferent cold my Lord indeed.5.2.97
    3603-4  Ham. {But yet} me thinkes it is very {sully} <soultry> and hot, {or} <for> my | complec- 
    3604     tion.5.2.99
    3605-6  {Cour.} <Osr.> Exceedingly my Lord, it is very soultery, as t'were | I can- 
    3606-7 not tell how: <but> my Lord his Maiestie bad me {signifie} <sig-| nifie> to you, that {a} <he> 




  42. [EH]
    3630-1  {Cour.} <Osr.> The King sir, hath layd {sir,} that in a dozen passes {betweene} <be-| tweene> 
    3631-2 {your selfe} <you> and him, hee shall not exceede you three hits, | hee hath 
    3632-3 {layd on} <one> twelue for {nine} <mine>, and {it} <that> would come to | immediate triall, if 
    3633-4 your Lordshippe would vouchsafe the | answere. 
    3635      Ham. How if I answere no?5.2.170
    3636-7  {Cour.} <Osr.> I meane my Lord the opposition of your person | in triall. 
    3638-9  Ham. Sir I will walke heere in the hall, if it please | his Maiestie, {it} 




  43. [EH]
    3649-50  Hora. This Lapwing runnes away with the shell on his | head. 
    3651-2  Ham. {A} <He> did {so sir} <Complie> with his dugge before {a} <hee> | suckt it, thus {has} <had> he and 
    3652-3 {many} <mine> more of the same {breede} <Beauy> | that I know the drossy age dotes on, 
    3653-4 only got the tune of | the time, and {out of an} <outward> habit of incounter, a 
    3654-5 kind of {histy} | <yesty> colection, which carries them through and through 
    3656     the most {prophane and trennowed} <fond and winnowed> opinions, and doe but blowe 5.2.193
    3657     them to their {triall,} <tryalls:> the bubbles are out.5.2.194




  44. [EH]
    3780      Ostr. Looke to the Queene there howe.5.2.303
    3781      Hora. They bleed on both sides, how {is it} <is't> my Lord?5.2.304
    3782      Ostr. How ist Laertes?5.2.305
    3783-4  Laer. Why as a woodcock | to mine {owne} sprindge Ostrick, 
    3785     {O1} I am iustly kild with mine owne treachery.5.2.307
    3786      Ham. How dooes the Queene?5.2.308
    3787      King. Shee sounds to see them bleed.5.2.308




  45. [EH]
    3789-90 The drinke the drinke, | I am poysned. 
    3791      Ham. O villanie, how let the doore be lock't,5.2.311
    3792     Treachery, seeke it out.5.2.312
    3793-4  Laer. It is heere {Hamlet, thou} <Hamlet. | Hamlet thou> art slaine, 
    3795     No {medcin} <Medicine> in the world can doe thee good,5.2.314
    3796     In thee there is not halfe an {houres} <houre of> life,5.2.315
    3797     The treacherous instrument is in {my} <thy> hand5.2.316