Enfolded Hamlet: Enfolded Search for "54"
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Enfolded Hamlet: Enfolded Search for "54"


Enfolded Hamlet Page

The Tragedie of
H A M L E T

Prince of Denmarke.

Context:


  1. [EH]
    51                      {Enter Ghost.}1.1.40
    51-2      Mar. Peace, breake thee of, <Enter the Ghost.> | looke where it comes againe. 
    53          Bar. In the same figure like the King thats dead.1.1.41
    54          Mar. Thou art a scholler, speake to it Horatio.1.1.42
    55          Bar. Lookes {a} <it> not like the King? marke it Horatio.1.1.43
    56          Hora. Most like, it {horrowes} <harrowes> me with feare and wonder.1.1.44
    57          Bar. It would be spoke {to} <too>.1.1.45




  2. [EH]
    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
    70         What thinke you-ont?1.1.55
    71          Hora. Before my God I might not this belieue,1.1.56
    72         Without the sencible and true auouch1.1.57




  3. [EH]
    232       Your leaue and fauour to returne to Fraunce,1.2.51
    233       From whence, though willingly I came to Denmarke,1.2.52
    234       To showe my dutie in your Coronation;1.2.53
    235       Yet now I must confesse, that duty done1.2.54
    236       My thoughts and wishes bend againe {toward} <towards> Fraunce1.2.55
    237       And bowe them to your gracious leaue and pardon.1.2.56
    238-9    King. Haue you your fathers leaue, | what saies Polonius? 




  4. [EH]
    516       <Enter Polonius.>..
    517       I stay too long, but heere my father comes 1.3.52
    518       A double blessing, is a double grace,1.3.53
    519       Occasion smiles vpon a second leaue.1.3.54
    520        Pol. Yet heere Laertes? a bord, a bord for shame,1.3.55
    521       {C4} The wind sits in the shoulder of your saile,1.3.56
    522       And you are stayed {for, there my} <for there: my> blessing with {thee,} <you;>1.3.57




  5. [EH]
    636       To cast thee vp againe? what may this meane1.4.51
    637       That thou dead corse, againe in compleat steele1.4.52
    638       Reuisites thus the glimses of the Moone,1.4.53
    639       Making night hideous, and we fooles of nature1.4.54
    640       So horridly to shake our disposition 1.4.55
    641       With thoughts beyond {the} <thee;> reaches of our soules,1.4.56
    642-3   Say why is this, wherefore, what should we doe? {Beckins.} | <Ghost beckens Hamlet.>1.4.57




  6. [EH]
    737       I made to her in marriage, and to decline1.5.50
    738       Vppon a wretch whose naturall gifts were poore,1.5.51
    739       To those of mine; but vertue as it neuer will be mooued,1.5.53
    740       Though lewdnesse court it in a shape of heauen 1.5.54
    741       So {but} <Lust,> though to a radiant Angle linckt,1.5.55
    742       Will {sort} <sate> it selfe in a celestiall bed 1.5.57
    742       And pray on garbage.1.5.57




  7. [EH]  
    946       <At friend, or so, and Gentleman.>..
    947        Pol. At closes in the consequence, I marry,2.1.52
    948       He closes <with you> thus, I know the gentleman,2.1.53
    949       I saw him yesterday, or {th'other} <tother> day,2.1.54
    950       Or then, or then, with such {or} <and> such, and as you say,2.1.55
    951       There was {a gaming there, or tooke} <he gaming, there o'retooke> in's rowse,2.1.56
    952       There falling out at Tennis, or perchance2.1.57




  8. [EH]
    1075     {E3v}  Pol. Giue first admittance to th'embassadors,2.2.51
    1076     My newes shall be the {fruite} <Newes> to that great feast.2.2.52
    1077      King. Thy selfe doe grace to them, and bring them in.2.2.53
    1078     He tells me my {deere Gertrard} <sweet Queene, that> he hath found2.2.54
    1079     The head and source of all your sonnes distemper.2.2.55
    1080      Quee. I doubt it is no other but the maine 2.2.56
    1081     His fathers death, and our <o're->hastie marriage.2.2.57




  9. [EH]
    1704     Is not more ougly to the thing that helps it,3.1.51
    1705     Then is my deede to my most painted word:3.1.52
    1706     O heauy burthen.3.1.53
    1707      Pol. I heare him comming, <let's> with-draw my Lord.3.1.54
    1708                  <Exeunt.>..
    1709                  Enter Hamlet...
    1710      Ham. To be, or not to be, that is the question,3.1.55




  10. [EH]
    1901     <Enter Horatio.>..
    1902      Ham. What {howe} <hoa>, Horatio.   {Enter Horatio.}3.2.52
    1903      Hora. Heere sweet Lord, at your seruice.3.2.53
    1904      Ham. Horatio, thou art een as iust a man3.2.54
    1905     As ere my conuersation copt withall.3.2.55
    1906      Hor. O my deere Lord.3.2.56
    1907     {G4v}  <Ham.> Nay, doe not thinke I flatter,3.2.56




  11. [EH]
    2327     My fault is past, but oh what forme of prayer3.3.51
    2328     Can serue my turne, forgiue me my foule murther,3.3.52
    2329     That cannot be since I am still possest3.3.53
    2330     Of those effects for which I did the murther;3.3.54
    2331     My Crowne, mine owne ambition, and my Queene;3.3.55
                 {I1v} May one be pardond and retaine th'offence? 
    2333     In the corrupted currents of this world,3.3.57




  12. [EH]
    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
    2440     Hiperions curles, the front of Ioue himselfe,3.4.56
    2441     An eye like Mars, to threaten {and} <or> command,3.4.57




  13. [EH]
    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
    2719     Tempt him with speede abord,4.3.54
    2720     Delay it not, Ile haue him hence to night.4.3.55
    2721     Away, for euery thing is seald and done4.3.56




  14. [EH]
    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
    2719     Tempt him with speede abord,4.3.54
    2720     Delay it not, Ile haue him hence to night.4.3.55
    2721     Away, for euery thing is seald and done4.3.56
    2722     That els leanes on th'affayre, pray you make hast,4.3.57




  15. [EH]
    2743+44 {Makes mouthes at the invisible euent,}4.4.51
    2743+45 {Exposing what is mortall, and vnsure,}4.4.52
    2743+46 {To all that fortune, death, and danger dare,}4.4.53
    2743+47 {Euen for an Egge-shell. Rightly to be great,}4.4.54
    2743+48 {Is not to stirre without great argument,}4.4.55
    2743+49 {But greatly to find quarrell in a straw}4.4.56
    2743+50 {When honour's at the stake, how stand I then}4.4.57




  16. [EH]
    2743+51 {That haue a father kild, a mother staind,}4.4.58
    2743+52 {Excytements of my reason, and my blood,}4.4.59
    2743+53 {And let all sleepe, while to my shame I see}4.4.60
    2743+54 {The iminent death of twenty thousand men,}4.4.61
    2743+55              {That for a fantasie and tricke of fame}4.4.62
    2743+56 {Goe to their graues like beds, fight for a plot}4.4.63
    2743+57 {Whereon the numbers cannot try the cause,}4.4.64




  17. [EH]
    3062      King. Tis Hamlets caracter. Naked,4.7.52
    3062-3 And in a {postscript} <Post-| script> heere he sayes alone, 
    3063     Can you {deuise} <aduise> me?4.7.53
    3064      Laer. {I am} <I'm> lost in it my Lord, but let him come,4.7.54
    3065     It warmes the very sicknes in my hart4.7.55
    3066     That I <shall> liue and tell him to his teeth4.7.56
    3067     Thus {didst} <diddest> thou.4.7.57




  18. [EH]
    3240     Carpenter.5.1.51
    3241      Clowne. I, tell me that and vnyoke.5.1.52
    3242      Other. Marry now I can tell.5.1.53
    3243      Clowne. Too't.5.1.54
    3244      Other. Masse I cannot tell.5.1.55
    3245                  <Enter Hamlet and Horatio a farre off.>..
    3246-7  Clow. Cudgell thy braines no more about it, for your | dull asse wil 




  19. [EH]
    3554     Folded the writ vp in {the} forme of th'other,5.2.51
    3555     {Subcribe} <Subscrib'd> it, gau't th'impression, plac'd it safely,5.2.52
    3556     {N2} The changling neuer knowne: now the next day5.2.53
    3557     Was our Sea fight, and what to this was {sequent} <sement,>5.2.54
    3558     Thou knowest already.5.2.55
    3559      Hora. So Guyldensterne and Rosencraus goe too't.5.2.56
    3560      <Ham. Why man, they did make loue to this imployment>5.2.57