Enfolded Hamlet: Enfolded Search for "5-6"
Q2 Enfolded F1 Enfolded Hamlet: Enfolded Search for "5-6"
The Tragedie of
H A M L E TPrince of Denmarke.
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 9 Bar. Hee. 1.1.5
62 Did sometimes march, by heauen I charge thee speake. 1.1.49 63 Mar. It is offended. 1.1.50 64 Bar. See it staukes away. 1.1.50 65-66 {B2} Hora. Stay, speake, speake, I charge thee speake. | Exit <the> Ghost. 1.1.51 67 Mar. Tis gone and will not answere. 1.1.52 68 Bar. How now Horatio, you tremble and looke pale, 1.1.53 69 Is not this somthing more then phantasie? 1.1.54
1213 Ham. Then I would you were so honest a man. 2.2.176 1214 Pol. Honest my Lord. 2.2.177 1215 Ham. I sir to be honest as this world goes, 2.2.179 1215-6 Is to be | one man pickt out of {tenne} <two> thousand. 1217 Pol. That's very true my Lord. 2.2.180 1218-9 Ham. For if the sunne breede maggots in a dead dogge, | being a 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 1228-9 neere this. | Ile speake to him againe. What doe you reade my
1232 Ham. Betweene who. 2.2.194 1233 Pol. I meane the matter {that} you {reade} <meane,> my Lord. 2.2.195 1234-5 Ham. Slaunders sir; for the satericall {rogue} <slaue> sayes heere, | that old 1235-6 men haue gray beards, that their faces are {wrinckled,} <wrin-| kled;> their eyes 1236-7 purging thick Amber, {&} <or> plumtree | gum, & that they haue a plen- 1237-8 {Flv} tifull {lacke} <locke> of wit, | together with {most} weake hams, all which sir 1238-40 though I | most powerfully and potentlie belieue, yet I hold it | not
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. 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.
1421-2 peare like entertainment | then yours? you are welcome: but my 1422-3 Vncle-father, | and Aunt-mother, are deceaued. 1424 Guyl. In what my deare Lord. 2.2.377 1425-6 Ham. I am but mad North North west; when the | wind is Sou- 1426 therly, I knowe a Hauke, from a hand saw. 2.2.379 1427 Enter Polonius. .. 1428 Pol. Well be with you Gentlemen. 2.2.380
1432-3 Ros. Happily {he is} <he's> the second time come to them, for | they say an 1433 old man is twice a child. 2.2.385 1434-5 Ham. I will prophecy, he comes to tell me of the | players, mark it, 1435-6 You say right sir, <for> a Monday {morning,} <mor-| ning> t'was {then} <so> indeede. 1437 Pol. My Lord I haue newes to tell you. 2.2.389 1438-9 Ham. My Lord I haue newes to tel you: | when Rossius {was} an Actor 1439 in Rome{.} <----> 2.2.391
1442 Pol. Vppon {my} <mine> honor. 2.2.394 1443 Ham. Then {came} <can> each Actor on his Asse{.} <----> 2.2.395 1444-5 Pol. The best actors in the world, either for {Tragedie} <Trage-| die>, Comedy, 1445-6 History, Pastorall, {Pastorall} <Pastoricall-> Comicall, | Historicall Pastorall, scene 1446-7 <Tragicall-Historicall: Tragicall-| Comicall-Historicall-Pastorall: Scene> 1447-8 {indeuidible} <indiuible>, or {Poem} <Po-| em> vnlimited, Sceneca cannot be too heauy, nor 1448-50 Plautus | too light for the lawe of writ, and the liberty: these are | the
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>, 1488 but cald it an honest method, {as wholesome as sweete, & by very} 2.2.445
1542 Play. But who, {a woe} <O who>, had seene the {mobled} <inobled> Queene, 2.2.502 1543 Ham. The {mobled} <inobled> Queene{.} <?> 2.2.503 1544 Pol. That's good<: Inobled Queene is good>. 2.2.504 1545-6 Play. Runne barefoote vp and downe, | threatning the {flames} <flame> 1547 With Bison rehume, a clout {vppon} <about> that head 2.2.506 1548 Where late the Diadem stood, and for a robe, 2.2.507 1549 About her lanck and all ore-teamed loynes, 2.2.508
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>. 1568-9 Pol. My Lord, I will vse them according to their {desert} <de-| sart>. 1570-1 Ham. Gods {bodkin} <bodykins> man, {much} better, vse euery man | after his de-
1582 downe and insert in't, could {you} <ye> not? 2.2.543 1583 Play. I my Lord. 2.2.544 1584-5 Ham. Very well, followe that Lord, & looke you | mock him not. 1585-6 My good friends, Ile leaue you {tell} <til> night, | you are welcome to Elson- 1586 oure. {Exeunt Pol. and Players.} 2.2.547 1587 Ros. Good my Lord. Exeunt. 2.2.548 1588 <Manet Hamlet> ..
1673 And it doth much content me 3.1.24 1674 To heare him so inclin'd. 3.1.26 1674-5 Good gentlemen | giue him a further edge, 1675-6 And driue his purpose {into} <on | To> these delights. 1677 Ros. We shall my Lord. Exeunt. {Ros. & Guyl.} 3.1.28 1678 King. Sweet Gertrard, leaue vs {two} <too>, 3.1.28 1679 For we haue closely sent for Hamlet hether, 3.1.29
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- 1799-1800 uen you one {face} <pace>, and you make your {selfes another,} <selfe an-| other:> you gig {&} <you> am-
1851-2 I had as liue the towne cryer | <had> spoke my lines, nor doe not saw the ayre 1852-3 too much {with} | your hand thus, but vse all gently, for in the very tor- 1854-5 rent tempest, and as I may say, <the> whirlwind of {your} | passion, you must 1855-6 acquire and beget a temperance, that | may giue it smoothnesse, ô it 1856-7 offends mee to the soule, | to {heare} <see> a robustious perwig-pated fellowe 1858 {G4} tere a {passion to totters}<Passi-| on to tatters>, to very rags, to {spleet} <split> the eares of the | ground- 3.2.10 1859-60 lings, vvho for the most part are capable of | nothing but inexplica-
1861-2 ore-dooing Termagant, it out Herods Herod, pray you auoyde it. 1863 Player. I warrant your honour. 3.2.15 1864-5 Hamlet. Be not too tame neither, but let your owne | discretion be 1865-6 your tutor, sute the action to the word, | the word to the action, with 1866-7 this speciall obseruance, | that you {ore-steppe} <ore-stop> not the modestie of na- 1867-8 ture: For any | thing so {ore-doone} <ouer-done>, is from the purpose of playing, 1868-9 whose | end both at the first, and novve, was and is, to holde as twere
1871-2 Image, and the very age and | body of the time his forme and pressure: 1872-3 Now this | ouer-done, or come tardie off, though it {makes} <make> the vnskil- 1874-5 full laugh, cannot but make the iudicious greeue, the | censure of 1875-6 <the> which one, must in your allowance ore-| weigh a whole Theater of o- 1876-7 thers. O there be Players | that I haue seene play, and heard others 1877-8 {praysd} <praise>, and that | highly, not to speake it prophanely, that neither ha- 1878-80 uing {th'accent} | <the accent> of Christians, nor the gate of Christian, Pagan, {nor}
1891-2 the play be then to be considered, that's villanous, and | shewes a most 1892-3 pittifull ambition in the foole that vses | it: goe make you readie. <Exit Players.> {How} 1894 <Enter Polonius, Rosincrance, and Guildensterne>. .. 1895-6 <How> now my Lord, | will the King heare this peece of worke? 1896-7 {Enter Polonius, Guyldensterne, & Rosencraus.} Pol. And the Queene to, and that presently. 1898-9 Ham. Bid the Players make hast. <Exit Polonius.> | Will you two help to hasten tho(-,e) .
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 1959 Brutus kild mee. 3.2.104
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 1988-9 not thinking on, with the Hobby-horse, whose | Epitaph is, for ô, for 1989 ô, the hobby-horse is forgot. 3.2.135
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 1998-9 action, the poysner with some {three or foure come } <two or | three Mutes comes> in againe, {seeme} <seeming > to {con-} 1999-2001 {dole } <lament >with her, | the dead body is carried away, the poysner wooes the | Queene
2100-1 King. Haue you heard the argument? is there no {offence} <Of-| fence> in't? 2102-3 Ham. No, no, they do but iest, poyson in iest, no {offence} <Of-| fence> i'th world. 2104 King. What doe you call the play? 3.2.236 2105-6 Ham. The Mousetrap, mary how tropically, | this play is the Image 2106-7 of a murther doone in Vienna, {Gonszago} <Gon-| zago> is the Dukes name, his wife 2107-8 Baptista, you shall see | anon, tis a knauish peece of worke, but what {of} 2108-10 {that} <o'that>? | your Maiestie, and wee that haue free soules, it touches | vs not,
2172 Guyl. Is in his retirement meruilous distempred. 3.2.301 2173 Ham. With drinke sir? 3.2.302 2174 Guyl. No my Lord, <rather> with choller, 3.2.303 2175-6 Ham. Your wisedome should shewe it selfe more {richer} <ri-| cher> to signifie 2176-7 this to {the} <his> Doctor, for, for mee to put him | to his purgation, would 2177-8 perhaps plunge him into <farre> | more choller. 2179-80 Guyl. Good my Lord put your discourse into some | frame,
2182-3 Guyl. The Queene your mother in most great {affliction} <affli-| ction> of spirit, 2183 hath sent me to you. 3.2.312 2184 Ham. You are welcome. 3.2.313 2185-6 Guyl. Nay good my Lord, this curtesie is not of | the right breede, if 2186-7 it shall please you to make me a {wholsome} <whol-| some> aunswere, I will doe your 2187-8 mothers commaundement, | if not, your pardon and my returne, shall 2188-9 be the end of | <my> busines.
2232-3 Guil. But these cannot I commaund to any vttrance | of harmonie, I 2233 haue not the skill. 3.2.362 2234-5 Ham. Why looke you now how vnwoorthy a thing | you make of 2235-6 me, you would play vpon mee, you would | seeme to know my stops, 2236-7 you would plucke out the hart | of my mistery, you would sound mee 2237-9 from my lowest | note to <the top of> my compasse, and there is much {musique} <Mu-| sicke> ex- 2239-40 cellent voyce in this little organ, yet cannot | you make it {speak, s'bloud}
2241-2 strument you wil, | though you <can> fret me {not}, you cannot play vpon me. 2242-3 God | blesse you sir. 2244 Enter Polonius. .. 2245-6 Pol. My Lord, the Queene would speake with you, | & presently. 2247-8 Ham. Do you see {yonder} <that> clowd that's almost in shape {of} | <like> a Camel? 2249 Pol. {By'th masse} <By'th'Misse,> and {tis,} <it's> like a Camell indeed. 3.2.378 2250 Ham. Mee thinks it is like a Wezell. 3.2.379
2252 Ham. Or like a Whale. 3.2.381 2253 Pol. Very like a Whale. 3.2.382 2254 {H4v} <Ham.>Then {I will} <will I> come to my mother by and by, 3.2.383 2255-6 They foole me to the top of my bent, | I will come by & by, 2258 {Leaue me friends.} 3.2.387 2257-8 <Pol.> I will, say so. <Exit.> | <Ham.> By and by is easily said, <Leaue me Friends:> 2259 Tis now the very witching time of night, 3.2.388
2372 King. My words fly vp, my thoughts remaine belowe 3.3.97 2373 Words without thoughts neuer to heauen goe. Exit. 3.3.98 2374 Enter {Gertrard} <Queene> and Polonius. .. 2375-6 Pol. {A} <He> will come strait, | looke you lay home to him, 2377 Tell him his prancks haue beene too braod to beare with, 3.4.2 2378 And that your grace hath screend and stood betweene 3.4.3 2379 Much heate and him, Ile silence me {euen} <e'ene> heere, 3.4.4
2433 With {heated} <tristfull> visage, as against the doome 3.4.50 2434 Is {thought sick} <thought-sicke> at the act 3.4.51 2435 Quee. Ay me, what act? 3.4.52 2435-6 {Ham.} That roares so low'd, and {thunders} <thun-| ders> in the Index, 2437 <Ham.> Looke heere vpon this Picture, and on this, 3.4.53 2438 The counterfeit presentment of two brothers, 3.4.54 2439 See what a grace was seated on {this} <his> browe, 3.4.55
2642-3 to be demaunded of a spunge, what {replycation} <re-| plication> should be made by 2643 the sonne of a King. 4.2.13 2644 Ros. Take you me for a spunge my Lord? 4.2.14 2645-6 Ham. I sir, that sokes vp the Kings countenaunce, his | rewards, his 2646-7 authorities, but such Officers doe the King | best seruice in the end, he 2647-8 keepes them like an {apple} <Ape> in | the corner of his iaw, first mouth'd to be 2648-9 last swallowed, | when hee needs what you haue gleand, it is but squee-
2682 King. Now Hamlet, where's Polonius? 4.3.16 2683 Ham. At supper. 4.3.17 2684 King. At supper, where. 4.3.18 2685-6 Ham. Not where he eates, but where {a} <he> is eaten, a {certaine} <cer-| taine> conua- 2686-7 cation of {politique} wormes are een at him: your worme | is your onely 2687-8 Emperour for dyet, we fat all creatures els | to fat vs, and wee fat our 2688-9 {selues} <selfe> for maggots, your fat King | and your leane begger is but varia-
2692 <pp3> Ham. Nothing but to shew you how a King may goe | a progresse 4.3. 2693 {K2v} through the guts of a begger. 4.3.31 2694 King. Where is Polonius? 4.3.32 2695-6 Ham. In heauen, send thether to see, if your {messenger} <Messen-| ger> finde him 2696-7 not thrre, seeke him i'th other place your | selfe, but {if} indeed <if> you find 2697-8 him not {within} this {month} <moneth>, you | shall nose him as you goe vp the 2698 stayres into the Lobby. 4.3.37
2712-3 Ham. I see a Cherub that sees {thē} <him:> but come for | England, 2713 Farewell deere Mother. 4.3.49 2714 King. Thy louing Father Hamlet. 4.3.50 2715-6 Ham. My mother, Father and Mother is man and | wife, 2716 Man and wife is one flesh, <and> so my mother: 4.3.53 2716-7 Come | for England. Exit. 2718 King. Follow him at foote, 4.3.54
2782 With true loue showers. 4.5.40 2783 King. How doe {you} <ye> pretty Lady? 4.5.41 2784-5 Oph. Well good dild you, they say the Owle was | a Bakers daugh- 2785-6 ter, Lord we know what we are, but | know not what we may be. 2786 God be at your table. 4.5.44 2787 {K4v} King. Conceit vpon her Father. 4.5.45 2788-9 Oph. Pray <you> lets haue no words of this, but when | they aske you
2802 {(He answers.)} So would I a done by yonder sunne 4.5.65 2803 And thou hadst not come to my bed. 4.5.66 2804 King. How long hath she beene {thus} <this>? 4.5.67 2805-6 Oph. I hope all will be well, we must be patient, | but I cannot chuse 2806-7 but weepe to thinke they {would} <should>| lay him i'th cold ground, my brother 2807-8 shall know of it, | and so I thanke you for your good counsaile. Come 2808-9 my | Coach, God night Ladies, god night.
2991-2 cleere of our shyp, so | I alone became theyr prisoner, they haue dealt 2992-3 with me like | thieues of mercie, but they knew what they did, I am to 2993-5 doe | a <good> turne for them, let the King haue the Letters I haue | sent, and 2995-6 repayre thou to me with as much {speede} <hast> as thou wouldest | flie death, 2996-7 I haue wordes to speake in {thine} <your> eare will make thee | dumbe, yet are 2996-8 {L3} they much too light for the {bord} <bore> of the matter, | these good fellowes 2998-9 will bring thee where I am, Rosencraus | and Guyldensterne hold theyr
3051+1 {Of him that brought them}. 3052-3 King. Laertes you shall heare them: | leaue vs. <Exit Messenger> 3054-5 High and mighty, you shall know I am set naked on your | kingdom, 3055-6 to morrow shall I begge leaue to see your kingly | eyes, when I shal first 3056-7 asking {you} <your> pardon, there-vnto {recount the occasion} <re-| count th'Occasions> of my suddaine 3057 <and more strange > returne. 4.7.47 3058 <Hamlet.> 4.7.48
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 3198-9 Clowne. It must be {so offended} <Se offendendo>, it cannot be els, for | heere lyes the
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- 3218-9 ent gentlemen | but {Gardners} <Gardiners>, Ditchers, and Grauemakers, they hold
3231 Shypwright, or the Carpenter. 5.1.42 3232-3 Other. The gallowes maker, for that <Frame> out-liues a | thousand tenants. 3234-5 Clowne. I like thy wit well in good fayth, the gallowes | dooes well, 3235-6 but howe dooes it well? It dooes well to those | that do ill, nowe thou 3236-7 doost ill to say the gallowes is | built stronger then the Church, argall, 3237-8 the gallowes | may doo well to thee. Too't againe, come. 3239-40 Other. VVho buildes stronger then a Mason, a {Shipwright} <Ship-| wright>, or a
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 3278-9 Ham. Why een so, & now my Lady wormes {Choples} | <Chaplesse>, & knockt 3279-80 about the {massene} <Mazard> with a Sextens | spade; heere's fine reuolution {and}
3291-2 tricks? why | dooes he suffer this {madde} <rude> knaue now to knocke him a- 3292-4 bout | the sconce with a durtie shouell, and will not tell him of | his acti- 3294-5 on of battery, hum, this fellowe might be in's | time a great buyer of 3295-6 Land, with his Statuts, his {recognisances} <Recog-| nizances>, his fines, his double vou- 3296-7 chers, his recoueries, | <Is this the fine of his Fines, and the recouery of his Reco-> 3298-9 <ueries,> to haue his fine pate full of fine durt, will <his>| vou- 3299-3300 chers vouch him no more of his purchases & {doubles} <dou-| ble ones too,> then the length
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. 3358 Ham. Why he more then another? 5.1.169 3359-60 Clow. Why sir, his hide is so tand with his trade, that {a} | <he> will keepe
3372-3 Ham. <Let me see.> Alas poore Yoricke, I knew him {Horatio} <Ho-| ratio>, a fellow of infinite 5.1.184 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- 3378-9 shes of merriment, that were wont to | set the table on a roare, {not} <No> one 3379-80 now to mocke your owne {grinning,} | <Ieering?> quite chopfalne. Now get you
3382 uour she must come, make her laugh at that. 5.1.195 3382-3 {Prethee} <pry-| thee> Horatio tell me one thing. 3384 Hora. What's that my Lord? 5.1.196 3385-6 Ham. Doost thou thinke Alexander lookt a this {fashion} <fa-| shion> i'th earth? 3387 Hora. Een so. 5.1.199 3388 Ham. And smelt so pah. 5.1.200 3389 Hora. Een so my Lord. 5.1.201
3392 a bunghole? 5.1.204 3393 Hor. Twere to consider too curiously to consider so. 5.1.206 3394-5 Ham. No faith, not a iot, but to follow him thether | with modesty 3395-6 enough, and likelyhood to leade it <as thus>. | Alexander dyed, Alexander was 3396-7 buried, Alexander {returneth to} <re-| turneth into> dust, the dust is earth, of earth vvee 3397-9 make | Lome, & why of that Lome whereto he was {conuerted,} <conuer-| ted)> might 3399 {M4} they not stoppe a Beare-barrell? 5.1.212
3452 Like wonder wounded hearers: this is I 5.1.257 3453 Hamlet the Dane. 5.1.258 3454 Laer. The deuill take thy soule. 5.1.259 3455-6 Ham. Thou pray'st not well, | I {prethee} <prythee> take thy fingers 3457 {For} <Sir> though I am not spleenatiue <and> rash, (from my throat, 5.1.261 3458 Yet haue I {in me something} <something in me> dangerous, 5.1.262 3459 Which let thy {wisedome} <wisenesse> feare; {hold off} <Away> thy hand, 5.1.263
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 3598 to his right vse, tis for the head. 5.2.93
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> 3607-8 has layed a great wager on your head, | sir this is the matter. 3609 Ham. I beseech you remember. 5.2.104
3622+2 {N3} {done.} 5.2.156 3623 {Cour.} <Osr.> The {carriage} <Carriages> sir are the hangers. 5.2.157 3624-5 Ham. The phrase would bee more Ierman to the | matter if wee 3625-6 could carry {a} cannon by our sides, I would | it {be might} <might be> hangers till 3626-7 then, but on, six Barbry {horses} <Hor-| ses> against six French swords their as- 3627-8 signes, and three | liberall conceited carriages, that's the French 3628-9 {bet} <but> {against} <a-| gainst> the Danish, why is this {all} <impon'd as> you call it?
3712 Stick fiery of indeed. 5.2.257 3713 Laer. You mocke me sir. 5.2.257 3714 Ham. No by this hand. 5.2.258 3715-6 King. Giue them the foiles young Ostricke, | cosin Hamlet, 3716 You knowe the wager. 5.2.260 3717 Ham. Very well my Lord. 5.2.260 3718 Your grace {has} <hath> layed the ods a'th weeker side. 5.2.261