Enfolded Hamlet: Enfolded Text

Enfolded Hamlet: Enfolded Text


The Tragedie of
H A M L E T

Prince of Denmarke.

                                     
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
9           Bar. Hee.1.1.5
10         Fran. You come most carefully vpon your houre,1.1.6
11         Bar. Tis now strooke twelfe, get thee to bed Francisco,1.1.7
12         Fran. For this reliefe much thanks, tis bitter cold,1.1.8
13          And I am sick at hart.1.1.9
14         Bar. Haue you had quiet guard?1.1.9
15         Fran. Not a mouse stirring.1.1.10
16         Bar. Well, good night:1.1.12
16-7      If you doe meete Horatio and | Marcellus, 
17          The riualls of my watch, bid them make hast.1.1.13
18                   Enter Horatio, and Marcellus.1.1.13
19         Fran. I thinke I heare them, {stand ho, who is} <Stand: who's> there?1.1.14
20         Hora. Friends to this ground.1.1.15
21         Mar. And Leedgemen to the Dane,1.1.15
22         Fran. Giue you good night.1.1.16
23         Mar. O, farwell honest {souldiers} <Soldier>, who hath relieu'd you?1.1.16
24-5     Fran. Barnardo {hath} <ha's> my place; giue you good night. | Exit Fran.1.1.17
26         {Blv} Mar. Holla, Barnardo.1.1.18
27         Bar. Say, what is Horatio there?1.1.19
28         Hora. A peece of him.1.1.19
29         Bar. Welcome Horatio, welcome good Marcellus,1.1.20
30         {Hora.} <Mar.> What, ha's this thing appeard againe to night?1.1.21
31         Bar. I haue seene nothing.1.1.22
32         Mar. Horatio saies tis but our fantasie,1.1.23
33         And will not let beliefe take holde of him,1.1.24
34         Touching this dreaded sight twice seene of vs,1.1.25
35         Therefore I haue intreated him along{,}1.1.26
36         With vs<,> to watch the minuts of this night,1.1.27
37         That if againe this apparision come,1.1.28
38         He may approoue our eyes and speake to it. 1.1.29
39          Hora. Tush, tush, twill not appeare.1.1.30
40          Bar. Sit downe a while,1.1.30
41         And let vs once againe assaile your eares,1.1.31
42         That are so fortified against our story,1.1.32
43         What we {haue two nights} <two Nights haue> seene.1.1.33
44          Hora. Well, sit we downe,1.1.33
45         And let vs heare Barnardo speake of this.1.1.34
46          Bar. Last night of all,1.1.35
47         When yond same starre thats weastward from the pole,1.1.36
48         Had made his course t'illume that part of heauen1.1.37
49         Where now it burnes, Marcellus and my selfe1.1.38
50         The bell then beating one.1.1.39
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
58          Mar. {Speake to} <Question> it Horatio.1.1.45
59          Hora. What art thou that vsurpst this time of night,1.1.46
60         Together with that faire and warlike forme,1.1.47
61         In which the Maiestie of buried Denmarke1.1.48
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
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
73         Of mine owne eies.1.1.58
74          Mar. Is it not like the King?1.1.58
75          Hora. As thou art to thy selfe.1.1.59
76         Such was the very Armor he had on,1.1.60
77         When {he the ambitious} <th'Ambitious> Norway combated,1.1.61
78         So frownd he once, when in an angry parle1.1.62
79         He smot the {sleaded pollax} <sledded Pollax> on the ice.1.1.63
80         Tis strange.1.1.64
81          Mar. Thus twice before, and {iump} <iust> at this dead houre,1.1.65
82         With martiall stauke hath he gone by our watch.1.1.66
83          Hora. In what perticular thought{,} to worke<,> I know not,1.1.67
84         But in the grosse and scope of {mine} <my> opinion,1.1.68
85         This bodes some strange eruption to our state.1.1.69
86          Mar. Good now sit downe, and tell me he that knowes,1.1.70
87         Why this same strikt and most obseruant watch1.1.71
88         So nightly toiles the subiect of the land,1.1.72
89         And {with} <why> such dayly {cost} <Cast> of brazon Cannon1.1.73
90         And forraine marte, for implements of warre,1.1.74
91         Why such impresse of ship-writes, whose sore taske1.1.75
92         Does not deuide the Sunday from the weeke,1.1.76
93         What might be toward that this sweaty hast1.1.77
94         Doth make the night ioynt labourer with the day,1.1.78
95         Who ist that can informe mee?1.1.79
96          Hora. That can I.1.1.79
97         <nn5> At least the whisper goes so; our last King,1.1.80
98         Whose image euen but now appear'd to vs,1.1.81
99         Was as you knowe by Fortinbrasse of Norway,1.1.82
100       Thereto prickt on by a most emulate pride1.1.83
101       Dar'd to the combat; in which our valiant Hamlet,1.1.84
102       (For so this side of our knowne world esteemd him)1.1.85
103       Did slay this Fortinbrasse, who by a seald compact1.1.86
104       Well ratified by lawe and {heraldy} <Heraldrie,>1.1.87
105       {B2v} Did forfait (with his life) all {these} <those> his lands1.1.88
106       Which he stood seaz'd {of} <on>, to the conquerour.1.1.89
107       Against the which a moitie competent1.1.90
108       Was gaged by our King, which had {returne} <return'd>1.1.91
109       To the inheritance of Fortinbrasse,1.1.92
110       Had he bin vanquisher; as by the same {comart,} <Cou'nant>1.1.93
111       And carriage of the article desseigne,1.1.94
112       His fell to Hamlet; now Sir, young Fortinbrasse1.1.95
113       Of vnimprooued mettle, hot and full,1.1.96
114       Hath in the skirts of Norway heere and there1.1.97
115       Sharkt vp a list of {lawelesse} <Landlesse> resolutes1.1.98
116       For foode and diet to some enterprise1.1.99
117       That hath a stomacke in't, which is no other1.1.100
118       {As} <And> it doth well appeare vnto our state1.1.101
119       But to recouer of vs by strong hand1.1.102
120       And tearmes {compulsatory} <Compulsatiue>, those foresaid lands1.1.103
121       So by his father lost; and this I take it,1.1.104
122       Is the maine motiue of our preparations1.1.105
123       The source of this our watch, and the chiefe head1.1.106
124       Of this post hast and Romadge in the land.1.1.107
124+1   { Bar. I thinke it be no other, but enso;}1.1.108
124+2   {Well may it sort that this portentous figure}1.1.109
124+3   {Comes armed through our watch so like the King}1.1.110
124+4   {That was and is the question of these warres.}1.1.111
124+5   { Hora. A moth it is to trouble the mindes eye:}1.1.112
124+6   {In the most high and palmy state of Rome,}1.1.113
124+7   {A little ere the mightiest Iulius fell}1.1.114
124+8   {The graues stood tennatlesse, and the sheeted dead}1.1.115
124+9   {Did squeake and gibber in the Roman streets}1.1.116
124+10 {As starres with traines of fier, and dewes of blood}1.1.117
124+11 {Disasters in the sunne; and the moist starre,}1.1.118
124+12 {Vpon whose influence Neptunes Empier stands,}1.1.119
124+13 {Was sicke almost to doomesday with eclipse.}1.1.120
124+14 {And euen the like precurse of feare euents}1.1.121
124+15 {As harbindgers preceading still the fates}1.1.122
124+16 {And prologue to the Omen comming on}1.1.123
124+17 {Haue heauen and earth together demonstrated}1.1.124
124+18 {Vnto our Climatures and countrymen.}1.1.125
125                    Enter Ghost <againe>...
126       {B3} But soft, behold, loe where it comes againe1.1.126
127       Ile crosse it though it blast mee: stay illusion,                   {It spreads}1.1.127
128       If thou hast any sound or vse of voyce,                   {his armes.}1.1.128
129       Speake to me, if there be any good thing to be done1.1.130
130       That may to thee doe ease, and grace to mee,1.1.132
130       Speake to me.1.1.132
131       If thou art priuie to thy countries fate1.1.133
132       Which happily foreknowing may auoyd1.1.135
132       O speake:1.1.135
133       Or if thou hast vphoorded in thy life1.1.136
134       Extorted treasure in the wombe of earth1.1.137
135       For which they say {your} <you> spirits oft walke in death. {The cocke}1.1.138
136       Speake of it, stay and speake, stop it Marcellus. {crowes.}1.1.139
137        Mar. Shall I strike <at> it with my partizan?1.1.140
138        Hor. Doe if it will not stand.1.1.141
139        Bar. Tis heere.1.1.141
140        Hor. Tis heere.1.1.141
141        Mar. Tis gone. <Exit Ghost.>1.1.142
142       We doe it wrong being so Maiesticall1.1.143
143       To offer it the showe of violence,1.1.144
144       For it is as the ayre, invulnerable,1.1.145
145       And our vaine blowes malicious mockery.1.1.146
146        Bar. It was about to speake when the cock crewe.1.1.147
147        Hor. And then it started like a guilty thing,1.1.148
148       Vpon a fearefull summons; I haue heard,1.1.149
149       The Cock that is the trumpet to the {morne} <day>,1.1.150
150       Doth with his lofty and shrill sounding throat1.1.151
151       Awake the God of day, and at his warning1.1.152
152       Whether in sea or fire, in earth or ayre1.1.153
153       Th'extrauagant and erring spirit hies1.1.154
154       To his confine, and of the truth heerein1.1.155
155       This present obiect made probation.1.1.156
156        Mar. It faded on the crowing of the Cock.1.1.157
157       Some {say} <sayes,> that euer gainst that season comes1.1.158
158       Wherein our Sauiours birth is celebrated1.1.159
159       {This} <The> bird of dawning singeth all night long,1.1.160
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
167       Breake we our watch vp and by my aduise1.1.168
168       Let vs impart what we haue seene to night1.1.169
169       Vnto young Hamlet, for vppon my life1.1.170
170       This spirit dumb to vs, will speake to him:1.1.171
171       Doe you consent we shall acquaint him with it1.1.172
172       As needfull in our loues, fitting our duty.1.1.173
173        Mar. {Lets} <Let> doo't I pray, and I this morning knowe1.1.174
174       Where we shall find him most {conuenient} <conueniently>. Exeunt.1.1.175
175                    <Scena Secunda.>..
176       {Florish.} Enter Claudius, King of Denmarke, {Gertradt he} <Gertrude the> Queene,..
177       <Hamlet> {Counsaile: as} Polonius, {and his Sonne} Laertes, <and his Sister O->..
178       <phelia, Lords Attendant> {Hamlet, Cum Alijs}...
179        {Claud.} <King.> Though yet of Hamlet our deare brothers death1.2.1
180       The memorie be greene, and that it vs befitted1.2.2
181       To beare our harts in griefe, and our whole Kingdome,1.2.3
182       To be contracted in one browe of woe1.2.4
183       Yet so farre hath discretion fought with nature,1.2.5
184       That we with wisest sorrowe thinke on him1.2.6
185       Together with remembrance of our selues:1.2.7
186       Therefore our {sometime} <sometimes> Sister, now our Queene1.2.8
187       Th'imperiall ioyntresse {to} <of> this warlike state1.2.9
188       Haue we as twere with a defeated ioy1.2.10
189       With {an} <one> auspitious, and {a} <one> dropping eye,1.2.11
190       With mirth in funerall, and with dirdge in marriage,1.2.12
191       In equall scale waighing delight and dole1.2.13
192       Taken to wife: nor haue we heerein bard1.2.14
193       Your better wisdomes, which haue freely gone1.2.15
194       With this affaire along (for all our thankes)1.2.16
195       Now followes that you knowe young Fortinbrasse,1.2.17
196       Holding a weake supposall of our worth1.2.18
197       Or thinking by our late deare brothers death1.2.19
198       Our state to be disioynt, and out of frame1.2.20
199       Coleagued with {this} <the> dreame of his aduantage1.2.21
200       He hath not faild to pestur vs with message1.2.22
201       {B4} Importing the surrender of those lands1.2.23
202       Lost by his father, with all {bands} <Bonds> of lawe1.2.24
203       To our most valiant brother, so much for him:1.2.25
204       <Enter Voltemand and Cornelius.>1.2.
205       Now for our selfe, and for this time of meeting,1.2.26
206       Thus much the busines is, we haue heere writ1.2.27
207       To Norway Vncle of young Fortenbrasse1.2.28
208       Who impotent and bedred scarcely heares1.2.29
209       Of this his Nephewes purpose; to suppresse1.2.30
210       His further gate heerein, in that the leuies,1.2.31
211       The lists, and full proportions are all made1.2.32
212       Out of his subiect, and we heere dispatch1.2.33
213       You good Cornelius, and you Valtemand,1.2.34
214       For {bearers} <bearing> of this greeting to old Norway,1.2.35
215       Giuing to you no further personall power1.2.36
216       To busines with the King, more then the scope1.2.37
217       Of these {delated} <dilated> articles allowe:1.2.38
218       Farwell, and let your hast commend your dutie.1.2.39
219        {Cor.} Vo. In that, and all things will we showe our dutie.1.2.40
220        King. We doubt it nothing, hartely farwell.1.2.41
221       <Exit Voltemand and Cornelius.>..
222       And now Laertes whats the newes with you?1.2.42
223       <nn5v> You told vs of some sute, what ist Laertes? 1.2.43
224       You cannot speake of reason to the Dane1.2.44
225       And lose your voyce; what wold'st thou begge Laertes,?1.2.45
226       That shall not be my offer, not thy asking,1.2.46
227       The head is not more natiue to the hart1.2.47
228       The hand more instrumentall to the mouth1.2.48
229       Then is the throne of Denmarke to thy father,1.2.49
230       What would'st thou haue Laertes?1.2.50
231        Laer. {My dread} <Dread my> Lord,1.2.50
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? 
240        Polo. <He> Hath my Lord {wroung from me my slowe leaue}1.2.58
240+1   {By laboursome petition, and at last}1.2.59
240+2   {Vpon his will I seald my hard consent,}1.2.60
241       {B4v} I doe beseech you giue him leaue to goe.1.2.61
242        King. Take thy faire houre Laertes, time be thine1.2.62
243       And thy best graces spend it at thy will:1.2.63
244       But now my Cosin Hamlet, and my sonne{.}<?>1.2.64
245        Ham. A little more then kin, and lesse then kind.1.2.65
246        King. How is it that the clowdes still hang on you.1.2.66
247        Ham. Not so {much} my Lord, I am too much {in the sonne} <i'th'Sun>.1.2.67
248        Queene. Good Hamlet cast thy {nighted} <nightly> colour off1.2.68
249       And let thine eye looke like a friend on Denmarke,1.2.69
250       Doe not for euer with thy {vailed} <veyled> lids1.2.70
251       Seeke for thy noble Father in the dust,1.2.71
252       Thou know'st tis common all that liues must die,1.2.72
253       Passing through nature to eternitie.1.2.73
254        Ham. I Maddam, it is common.1.2.74
255        Quee. If it be1.2.74
256       VVhy seemes it so perticuler with thee.1.2.75
257        Ham. Seemes Maddam, nay it is, I know not seemes,1.2.76
258       Tis not alone my incky cloake {coold} <good> mother1.2.77
259       Nor customary suites of solembe blacke1.2.78
260       Nor windie suspiration of forst breath1.2.79
261       No, nor the fruitfull riuer in the eye,1.2.80
262       Nor the deiected hauior of the visage1.2.81
263       Together with all formes, moodes, {chapes} <shewes> of griefe1.2.82
264       That can {deuote} <denote> me truely, these indeede seeme,1.2.83
265       For they are actions that a man might play1.2.84
266       But I haue that within which {passes} <passeth> showe1.2.85
267       These but the trappings and the suites of woe.1.2.86
268-9    King. Tis sweete and commendable | in your nature Hamlet,1.2.87
270       To giue these mourning duties to your father1.2.88
271       But you must knowe your father lost a father,1.2.89
272       That father lost, lost his, and the suruiuer bound1.2.90
273       In filliall obligation for some tearme1.2.91
274       To doe obsequious sorrowe, but to perseuer1.2.92
275       In obstinate condolement, is a course1.2.93
276       Of impious stubbornes, tis vnmanly griefe,1.2.94
277       It showes a will most incorrect to heauen1.2.95
278       A hart vnfortified, {or} <a> minde impatient1.2.96
279       An vnderstanding simple and vnschoold1.2.97
280       For what we knowe must be, and is as common 1.2.98
281       {C1} As any the most vulgar thing to sence,1.2.99
282       Why should we in our peuish opposition1.2.100
283       Take it to hart, fie, tis a fault to heauen,1.2.101
284       A fault against the dead, a fault to nature,1.2.102
285       To reason most absurd, whose common theame1.2.103
286       Is death of fathers, and who still hath cryed1.2.104
287       From the first {course} <Coarse>, till he that died to day1.2.105
288       This must be so: we pray you throw to earth1.2.106
289       This vnpreuailing woe, and thinke of vs 1.2.107
290       As of a father, for let the world take note1.2.108
291       You are the most imediate to our throne,1.2.109
292       And with no lesse nobilitie of loue1.2.110
293       Then that which dearest father beares his sonne,1.2.111
294       Doe I impart {toward you for} <towards you. For> your intent1.2.112
295       In going back to schoole in Wittenberg, 1.2.113
296       It is most {retrogard} <retrograde> to our desire,1.2.114
297       And we beseech you bend you to remaine1.2.115
298       Heere in the cheare and comfort of our eye,1.2.116
299       Our chiefest courtier, cosin, and our sonne.1.2.117
300        Quee. Let not thy mother loose her prayers Hamlet, 1.2.118
301       I {pray thee} <prythee> stay with vs, goe not to Wittenberg.1.2.119
302-3    Ham. I shall in all my best | obay you Madam. 
304        King. Why tis a louing and a faire reply,1.2.121
305       Be as our selfe in Denmarke, Madam come,1.2.122
306       This gentle and vnforc'd accord of Hamlet1.2.123
307       Sits smiling to my hart, in grace whereof,1.2.124
308       No iocond health that Denmarke drinkes to day,1.2.125
309       But the great Cannon to the cloudes shall tell.1.2.126
310       And the Kings rowse the {heauen} <Heauens> shall brute againe, 1.2.127
311       Respeaking earthly thunder; come away.        {Florish.} <Exeunt.> {Exeunt all,} 1.2.128
312                                               <Manet Hamlet>..
313        Ham. O that this too too {sallied} <solid> flesh would melt, {but Hamlet}1.2.129
314       Thaw and resolue it selfe into a dewe,1.2.130
315       Or that the euerlasting had not fixt 1.2.131
316       His cannon gainst {seale} <Selfe->slaughter, ô God, <O> God,1.2.132
317       How {wary} <weary>, stale, flat, and vnprofitable1.2.133
318       {Seeme} <Seemes> to me all the vses of this world?1.2.134
319       Fie on't, {ah fie,} <Oh fie, fie,> tis an vnweeded garden1.2.135
320       That growes to seede, things rancke and grose in nature, 1.2.136
321       Possesse it {meerely that} <meerely. That> it should come {thus} <to this:>1.2.137
322       {C1v} But two months dead, nay not so much, not two,1.2.138
323       So excellent a King, that was to this1.2.139
324       Hiperion to a satire, so louing to my mother,1.2.140
325       That he might not {beteeme} <beteene> the winds of heauen1.2.141
326       Visite her face too roughly, heauen and earth1.2.142
327       Must I remember, why she {should} <would> hang on him1.2.143
328       As if increase of appetite had growne1.2.144
329       By what it fed on, and yet within a month,1.2.145
330       Let me not thinke on't; frailty thy name is woman1.2.146
331       A little month or ere those shooes were old1.2.147
332       With which she followed my poore fathers bodie1.2.148
333       Like Niobe all teares, why she <euen she.>1.2.149
334       O {God,} <Heauen!> a beast that wants discourse of reason1.2.150
335       Would haue mourn'd longer, married with {my} <mine> Vncle,1.2.151
336       My fathers brother, but no more like my father1.2.152
337       Then I to Hercules, within a {month,} <Moneth?>1.2.153
338       Ere yet the salt of most vnrighteous teares,1.2.154
339       Had left the flushing {in} <of> her gauled eyes1.2.155
340       She married, ô most wicked speede; to post1.2.156
341       With such dexteritie to incestious sheets,1.2.157
342       It is not, nor it cannot come to good,1.2.158
343       But breake my hart, for I must hold my tongue.1.2.159
344       Enter Horatio, {Marcellus, and Bernardo} <Barnard, and Marcellus>...
345        Hora. Haile to your Lordship.1.2.160
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
356       But what in faith make you from Wittenberg?1.2.168
357        Hora. A truant disposition good my Lord.1.2.169
358        Ham. I would not {heare} <haue> your enimie say so,1.2.170
359       Nor shall you doe {my} <mine> eare that violence1.2.171
360       To make it truster of your owne report 1.2.172
361       Against your selfe, I knowe you are no truant,1.2.173
362       But what is your affaire in Elsonoure?1.2.174
363       Weele teach you {for} to drinke <deepe,> ere you depart.1.2.175
364       {C2}  Hora. My Lord, I came to see your fathers funerall.1.2.176
365        Ham. I {prethee} <pray thee> doe not mocke me fellowe studient,1.2.177
366       I thinke it was to <see> my mothers wedding.1.2.178
367        Hora. Indeede my Lord it followed hard vppon.1.2.179
368        Ham. Thrift, thrift, Horatio, the funerall bak't meates1.2.180
369       Did coldly furnish forth the marriage tables,1.2.181
370       Would I had met my dearest foe in heauen1.2.182
371       {Or euer I had} <Ere I had euer> seene that day Horatio,1.2.183
372       My father, me thinkes I see my father.1.2.184
373        Hora. <Oh> Where my Lord?1.2.185
374        Ham. In my mindes eye Horatio.1.2.185
375        Hora. I saw him once, {a} <he> was a goodly King.1.2.186
376        Ham. {A} <He> was a man take him for all in all1.2.187
377       I shall not looke vppon his like againe.1.2.188
378        Hora. My Lord I thinke I saw him yesternight.1.2.189
379        Ham. saw, who?1.2.190
380        Hora. My Lord the King your father.1.2.191
381        Ham. The King my father?1.2.191
382        Hora. Season your admiration for a while1.2.192
383       With an attent eare till I may deliuer1.2.193
384       Vppon the witnes of these gentlemen1.2.194
385       This maruile to you.1.2.195
386        Ham. For {Gods} <Heauens> loue let me heare?1.2.195
387        Hora. Two nights together had these gentlemen1.2.196
388       Marcellus, and Barnardo, on their watch1.2.197
389       In the dead wast and middle of the night1.2.198
390       Beene thus incountred, a figure like your father 1.2.199
391       Armed at {poynt,} <all points> exactly Capapea1.2.200
392       Appeares before them, and with solemne march,1.2.201
393       Goes slowe and {stately by them; thrice} <stately: by them thrice> he walkt1.2.202
394       By their opprest and feare surprised eyes1.2.203
395       Within his tronchions length, whil'st they {distil'd} <bestil'd> 1.2.204
396       Almost to gelly, with the act of feare1.2.205
397       Stand dumbe and speake not to him; this to me1.2.206
398       In dreadfull secresie impart they did,1.2.207
399       And I with them the third night kept the watch,1.2.208
400       Whereas they had deliuered both in time1.2.209
401       Forme of the thing, each word made true and good,1.2.210
402       The Apparision comes: I knewe your father,1.2.211
403       {C2v} These hands are not more like.1.2.212
404        Ham. But where was this?1.2.212
405        Mar. My Lord vppon the platforme where we {watch} <watcht>,1.2.213
406        Ham. Did you not speake to it?1.2.214
407        Hora. My Lord I did,1.2.214
408       But answere made it none, yet once me thought1.2.215
409       It lifted vp it head, and did addresse1.2.216
410       It selfe to motion like as it would speake:1.2.217
411       But euen then the morning Cock crewe loude,1.2.218
412       And at the sound it shrunk in hast away1.2.219
413       And vanisht from our sight.1.2.220
414        Ham. Tis very strange.1.2.220
415        Hora. As I doe liue my honor'd Lord tis true1.2.221
416       And we did thinke it writ downe in our dutie1.2.222
417       To let you knowe of it.1.2.223
418        Ham. {Indeede} <Indeed, indeed> Sirs but this troubles me,1.2.224
419       Hold you the watch to night?1.2.225
420        {All} <Both>. We doe my Lord.1.2.225
421        Ham. Arm'd say you?1.2.226
422        {All} <Both>. Arm'd my Lord.1.2.227
423        Ham. From top to toe?1.2.228
424        {All} <Both>. My Lord from head to foote.1.2.228
425        Ham. Then sawe you not his face{.} <?>1.2.229
426        Hora. O yes my Lord, he wore his beauer vp.1.2.230
427        Ham. What look't he frowningly?1.2.231
428        Hora. A countenance more in sorrow then in anger.1.2.232
429        Ham. Pale, or red?1.2.232
430        Hora. Nay very pale.1.2.233
431        Ham. And fixt his eyes vpon you?1.2.233
432        Hora. Most constantly.1.2.234
433        Ham. I would I had beene there.1.2.234
434        Hora. It would haue much a maz'd you.1.2.235
435        Ham. Very like, <very like:> stayd it long?1.2.236
436        Hora. While one with moderate hast might tell a {hundreth} <hundred>.1.2.237
437        {Both} <All>. Longer, longer.1.2.238
438        Hora. Not when I saw't.1.2.239
439        Ham. His beard was {grissl'd,} <grisly?> no.1.2.239
440        Hora. It was as I haue seene it in his life 1.2.240
441       A sable siluer'd.1.2.241
441+1   {C3}  Ham. {I will} <Ile> watch to {nigh} <Night;> 
442       Perchaunce twill {walke} <wake> againe.1.2.241
443        Hora. I {warn't} <warrant you> it will.1.2.242
444        Ham. If it assume my noble fathers person,1.2.243
445       Ile speake to it though hell it selfe should gape 1.2.244
446       And bid me hold my peace; I pray you all1.2.245
447       If you haue hetherto conceald this sight1.2.246
448       Let it be {tenable} <treble> in your silence still,1.2.247
449       And {what someuer} <whatsoeuer> els shall hap to night,1.2.248
450       Giue it an vnderstanding but no tongue, 1.2.249
451       I will requite your loues, so farre {you} <ye> well:1.2.250
452       Vppon the platforme twixt a leauen and twelfe1.2.251
453       Ile visite you.1.2.252
454        All. Our dutie to your honor.  Exeunt.1.2.252
455        Ham. Your {loues} <loue>, as mine to you, farwell.1.2.253
456       My fathers spirit (in armes) all is not well,1.2.254
457       I doubt some foule play, would the night were come,1.2.255
458       Till then sit still my soule, {fonde} <foule> deedes will rise1.2.256
459       Though all the earth ore-whelme them to mens eyes. Exit.1.2.257
460                    <Scena Tertia.> 
461                    Enter Laertes, and {Opheliahis Sister} <Ophelia>. 
462        Laer. My necessaries are {inbarckt,} <imbark't;> farwell, 1.3.1
463       And sister, as the winds giue benefit1.3.2
464       And {conuay, in} <Conuoy is> assistant doe not sleepe1.3.3
465       But let me heere from you.1.3.4
466        Ophe. Doe you doubt that?1.3.4
467        Laer. For Hamlet, and the trifling of his {fauour} <fauours>,1.3.5
468       Hold it a fashion, and a toy in blood1.3.6
469       A Violet in the youth of primy nature,1.3.7
470       {Forward} <Froward>, not permanent, sweete, not lasting,1.3.8
471       The {perfume and} suppliance of a minute 1.3.10
471       No more.1.3.10
472        Ophe. No more but so.1.3.10
473        Laer. Thinke it no more.1.3.10
474       For nature cressant does not growe alone1.3.11
475       In thewes and {bulkes,} <Bulke:> but as {this} <his> temple waxes1.3.12
476       The inward seruice of the minde and soule1.3.13
477       Growes wide withall, perhapes he loues you now,1.3.14
478       And now no soyle nor cautell doth besmirch1.3.15
479       The vertue of his {will,} <feare:> but you must feare,1.3.16
480       {C3v}<nn6v> His greatnes wayd, his will is not his owne,1.3.
481       <For hee himselfe is subiect to his Birth:>1.3.18
482       He may not as vnualewed persons doe,1.3.19
483       Carue for himselfe, for on his choise depends1.3.20
484       The {safty} <sanctity> and health of {this whole} <the weole> state,1.3.21
485       And therefore must his choise be circumscribd 1.3.22
486       Vnto the voyce and yeelding of that body1.3.23
487       Whereof he is the head, then if he saies he loues you,1.3.24
488       It fits your wisdome so farre to belieue it1.3.25
489       As he in his {particuler act and place} <peculiar Sect and force>1.3.26
490       May giue his saying deede, which is no further 1.3.27
491       Then the maine voyce of Denmarke goes withall.1.3.28
492       Then way what losse your honor may sustaine1.3.29
493       If with too credent eare you list his songs1.3.30
494       Or {loose} <lose> your hart, or your chast treasure open1.3.31
495       To his vnmastred importunity.1.3.32
496       Feare it Ophelia, feare it my deare sister,1.3.33
497       And keepe {you in} <within> the reare of your affection1.3.34
498       Out of the shot and danger of desire,1.3.35
499       "The chariest maide is prodigall inough1.3.36
500       If she vnmaske her butie to the Moone1.3.37
501       "Vertue it selfe scapes not calumnious strokes1.3.38
502       "The canker gaules the infants of the spring1.3.39
503       Too oft before {their} <the> buttons be disclos'd,1.3.40
504       And in the morne and liquid dewe of youth1.3.41
505       Contagious blastments are most iminent, 1.3.42
506       Be wary then, best safety lies in feare,1.3.43
507       Youth to it selfe rebels, though non els neare.1.3.44
508        Ophe. I shall {the effect} <th'effect> of this good lesson keepe1.3.45
509       As {watchman} <watchmen> to my hart, but good my brother1.3.46
510       Doe not as some vngracious pastors doe, 1.3.47
511       Showe me the steepe and thorny way to heauen1.3.48
512       {Whiles} <Whilst like> a puft, and reckles libertine1.3.49
513       Himselfe the primrose path of dalience treads.1.3.50
514       And reakes not his owne reed. {Enter Polonius.}1.3.51
515        Laer. O feare me not,1.3.51
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
523       And these fewe precepts in thy memory1.3.58
524       {Looke} <See> thou character, giue thy thoughts no tongue,1.3.59
525       Nor any vnproportion'd thought his act,1.3.60
526       Be thou familier, but by no meanes vulgar,1.3.61
527       {Those} <The> friends thou hast, and their a doption tried,1.3.62
528       Grapple them {vnto} <to> thy soule with hoopes of steele,1.3.63
529       But doe not dull thy palme with entertainment1.3.64
530       Of each {new hatcht} <vnhatch't,> vnfledgd {courage,} <Comrade.> beware 1.3.65
531       Of entrance to a quarrell, but being in,1.3.66
532       Bear't that th'opposed may beware of thee,1.3.67
533       Giue euery man {thy} <thine> eare, but fewe thy voyce,1.3.68
534       Take each mans censure, but reserue thy iudgement,1.3.69
535       Costly thy habite as thy purse can buy, 1.3.70
536       But not exprest in fancy; rich not gaudy,1.3.71
537       For the apparrell oft proclaimes the man1.3.72
538       And they in Fraunce of the best ranck and station,1.3.73
539       {Or} <Are> of a most select and {generous, chiefe} <generous cheff> in that:1.3.74
540       Neither a borrower nor a lender {boy,} <be;> 1.3.75
541       For {loue} <lone> oft looses both it selfe, and friend,1.3.76
542       And borrowing {dulleth} <dulls the> edge of husbandry;1.3.77
543       This aboue all, to thine owne selfe be true1.3.78
544       And it must followe as the night the day1.3.79
545       Thou canst not then be false to any man: 1.3.80
546       Farwell, my blessing season this in thee.1.3.81
547        Laer. Most humbly doe I take my leaue my Lord.1.3.82
548        Pol. The time {inuests you} <inuites you,> goe, your seruants tend.1.3.83
549        Laer. Farwell Ophelia, and remember well1.3.84
550       What I haue sayd to you.1.3.85
551        Ophe. Tis in my memory lockt1.3.85
552       And you your selfe shall keepe the key of it.1.3.86
553        Laer. Farwell.                         Exit Laertes.1.3.87
554        Pol. What ist Ophelia he hath sayd to you?1.3.88
555        Ophe. So please you, something touching the Lord Hamlet.1.3.89
556        Pol. Marry well bethought1.3.90
557       Tis tolde me he hath very oft of late1.3.91
558       Giuen priuate time to you, and you your selfe1.3.92
559       Haue of your audience beene most free and bountious,1.3.93
560       {C4v} If it be so, as so tis put on me,1.3.94
561       And that in way of caution, I must tell you,1.3.95
562       You doe not vnderstand your selfe so cleerely1.3.96
563       As it behooues my daughter, and your honor,1.3.97
564       What is betweene you giue me vp the truth,1.3.98
565        Ophe. He hath my Lord of late made many tenders 1.3.99
566       Of his affection to me.1.3.100
567        Pol. Affection, puh, you speake like a greene girle1.3.101
568       Vnsifted in such perrilous circumstance,1.3.102
569       Doe you belieue his tenders as you call them?1.3.103
570        Ophe. I doe not knowe my Lord what I should thinke.1.3.104
571        Pol. Marry {I will} <Ile> teach you, thinke your selfe a babie1.3.105
572       That you haue tane {these} <his> tenders for true pay1.3.106
573       Which are not {sterling,} <starling.> tender your selfe more dearely1.3.107
574       Or (not to crack the winde of the poore phrase1.3.108
575       {Wrong} <Roaming> it thus) you'l tender me a foole.1.3.109
576        Ophe. My Lord he hath importun'd me with loue1.3.110
577       In honorable fashion.1.3.111
578        Pol. I, fashion you may call it, go to, go to.1.3.112
579        Ophe. And hath giuen countenance to his speech1.3.113
580       My Lord, with {almost} all the {holy} vowes of heauen.1.3.114
581        Pol. I, {springs} <Springes> to catch wood-cockes, I doe knowe1.3.115
582       When the blood burnes, how prodigall the soule1.3.116
583       {Lends} <Giues> the tongue vowes, these blazes daughter1.3.117
584       Giuing more light then heate, extinct in both1.3.118
585       Euen in their promise, as it is a making 1.3.119
586       You must not take for fire, {from} <For> this time <Daughter,>1.3.120
587       Be {something} <somewhat> scanter of your maiden presence1.3.121
588       Set your {intreatments} <entreatments> at a higher rate1.3.122
589       Then a commaund to {parle;} <parley.> for Lord Hamlet,1.3.123
590       Belieue so much in him that he is young, 1.3.124
591       And with a larger {tider} <tether> may he walke1.3.125
592       Then may be giuen you: in fewe Ophelia,1.3.126
593       Doe not belieue his vowes, for they are brokers1.3.127
594       Not of {that die} <the eye> which their inuestments showe1.3.128
595       But meere {imploratotors} <implorators> of vnholy suites 1.3.129
596       Breathing like sanctified and pious bonds1.3.130
597       The better to {beguide:} <beguile.> this is for all,1.3.131
598       I would not in plaine tearmes from this time foorth1.3.132
599       {D1} Haue you so slaunder any moment leasure1.3.133
600       As to giue words or talke with the Lord Hamlet, 1.3.134
601       Looke too't I charge you, come your wayes.1.3.135
602        Ophe. I shall obey my Lord. Exeunt.1.3.136
603       Enter Hamlet, Horatio {and} Marcellus...
604        Ham. The ayre bites {shroudly, it is} <shrewdly: is it> very colde{.}<?>1.4.1
605        Hora. It is <a> nipping, and an eager ayre.1.4.2
606        Ham. What houre now?1.4.3
607        Hora. I thinke it lackes of twelfe.1.4.3
608        Mar. No, it is strooke.1.4.4
609        Hora. Indeede; I heard it not, {it then} <then it> drawes neere the season,1.4.5
610       Wherein the spirit held his wont to walke  {A florish of trumpets }1.4.6
611       <Oo1> What does this meane my Lord?  {and 2. peeces goes of.}1.4.
612        Ham. The King doth wake to night and takes his rowse.1.4.8
613       Keepes {wassell} <wassels> and the {swaggring} <swaggering> vp-spring reeles:1.4.9
614       And as he draines his drafts of Rennish downe,1.4.10
615       The kettle drumme, and trumpet, thus bray out 1.4.11
616       The triumph of his pledge.1.4.12
617        Hora. Is it a custome?1.4.12
618        Ham. I marry ist,1.4.13
619       {But} <And> to my minde, though I am natiue heere1.4.14
620       And to the manner borne, it is a custome 1.4.15
621       More honourd in the breach, then the obseruance.1.4.16
621+1   {This heauy headed reueale east and west}1.4.17
621+2   {Makes vs tradust, and taxed of other nations,}1.4.18
621+3   {They clip vs drunkards, and with Swinish phrase}1.4.19
621+4   {Soyle our addition, and indeede it takes}1.4.20
621+5   {From our atchieuements, though perform'd at height}1.4.21
621+6   {The pith and marrow of our attribute,}1.4.22
621+7   {So oft it chaunces in particuler men,}1.4.23
621+8   {That for some vicious mole of nature in them}1.4.24
621+9   {As in their birth wherein they are not guilty,}1.4.25
621+10 {(Since nature cannot choose his origin)}1.4.26
621+11 {By their ore-grow'th of some complextion}1.4.27
621+12 {Oft breaking downe the pales and forts of reason,}1.4.28
621+13 {Or by some habit, that too much ore-leauens}1.4.29
621+14 {The forme of plausiue manners, that these men}1.4.30
621+15 {Carrying I say the stamp of one defect} 1.4.31
621+16 {D1v} {Being Natures liuery, or Fortunes starre,}1.4.32
621+17 {His vertues els be they as pure as grace,}1.4.33
621+18 {As infinite as man may vndergoe,}1.4.34
621+19 {Shall in the generall censure take corruption}1.4.35
621+20 {From that particuler fault: the dram of eale} 1.4.36
621+21 {Doth all the noble substance of a doubt}1.4.37
621+22 {To his owne scandle.}1.4.38
622       Enter Ghost...
623        Hora. Looke my Lord it comes.1.4.38
624        Ham. Angels and Ministers of grace defend vs:1.4.39
625       Be thou a spirit of health, or goblin damn'd, 1.4.40
626       Bring with thee ayres from heauen, or blasts from hell,1.4.41
627       Be thy {intents} <euents> wicked, or charitable,1.4.42
628       Thou com'st in such a questionable shape,1.4.43
629       That I will speake to thee, Ile call thee Hamlet,1.4.44
630       King, father, royall {Dane, ô} <Dane: Oh, oh,> answere mee, 1.4.45
631       Let me not burst in ignorance, but tell1.4.46
632       Why thy canoniz'd bones hearsed in death1.4.47
633       Haue burst their {cerements?} <cerments,> why the Sepulcher,1.4.48
634       Wherein we saw thee quietly {interr'd} <enurn'd,>1.4.49
635       Hath op't his ponderous and marble iawes, 1.4.50
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
644        Hora. It beckins you to goe away with it 1.4.58
645       As if it some impartment did desire1.4.59
646       To you alone.1.4.60
647        Mar. Looke with what curteous action1.4.60
648       It {waues} <wafts> you to a more remooued ground,1.4.61
649       But doe not goe with it.1.4.62
650        Hora. No, by no meanes.1.4.62
651        Ham. It will not speake, then {I will} <will I> followe it.1.4.63
652        Hora. Doe not my Lord.1.4.64
653        Ham. Why what should be the feare,1.4.64
654       I doe not set my life at a pinnes fee,1.4.65
655       {D2} And for my soule, what can it doe to that1.4.66
656       Being a thing immortall as it selfe;1.4.67
657       It waues me forth againe, Ile followe it.1.4.68
658        Hora. What if it tempt you toward the flood my Lord,1.4.69
659       Or to the dreadfull {somnet} <Sonnet> of the {cleefe} <Cliffe,>1.4.70
660       That {bettles} <beetles> ore his base into the sea, 1.4.71
661       And there {assume} <assumes> some other horrable forme1.4.72
662       Which might depriue your soueraigntie of reason,1.4.73
663       And draw you into madnes, thinke of it, 1.4.74
663+1   {The very place puts toyes of desperation}1.4.75
663+2   {Without more motiue, into euery braine}1.4.76
663+3   {That lookes so many fadoms to the sea}1.4.77
663+4   {And heares it rore beneath.}1.4.78
664        Ham. It {waues} <wafts> me still, Goe on, Ile followe thee.1.4.79
665        Mar. You shall not goe my Lord.1.4.80
666        Ham. Hold of your {hands} <hand>.1.4.80
667        Hora. Be rul'd, you shall not goe.1.4.81
668        Ham. My fate cries out1.4.81
669       And makes each petty arture in this body1.4.82
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
678        Mar. Something is rotten in the state of Denmarke.1.4.90
679        Hora. Heauen will direct it.1.4.91
680        Mar. Nay lets follow him. Exeunt.1.4.91
681       Enter Ghost, and Hamlet...
682        Ham. {Whether} <Where> wilt thou leade me, speake, Ile goe no further.1.5.1
683        Ghost. Marke me.1.5.2
684        Ham. I will.1.5.2
685        Ghost. My houre is almost come 1.5.2
686       When I to sulphrus and tormenting flames1.5.3
687       Must render vp my selfe.1.5.4
688        Ham. Alas poore Ghost.1.5.4
689       {D2v}  Ghost. Pitty me not, but lend thy serious hearing 1.5.5
690       To what I shall vnfold.1.5.6
691        Ham. Speake, I am bound to heare.1.5.6
692        Ghost. So art thou to reuenge, when thou shalt heare.1.5.7
693        Ham. What?1.5.8
694        Ghost. I am thy fathers spirit,1.5.9
695       Doomd for a certaine tearme to walke the night, 1.5.10
696       And for the day confind to fast in fires,1.5.11
697       Till the foule crimes done in my dayes of nature1.5.12
698       Are burnt and purg'd away: but that I am forbid1.5.13
699       To tell the secrets of my prison house,1.5.14
700       I could a tale vnfolde whose lightest word 1.5.15
701       Would harrow vp thy soule, freeze thy young blood,1.5.16
702       Make thy two eyes like stars start from their spheres,1.5.17
703       Thy {knotted} <knotty> and combined locks to part,1.5.18
704       And each particuler haire to stand an end,1.5.19
705       Like quils vpon the {fearefull} <fretfull> Porpentine, 1.5.20
706       But this eternall blazon must not be1.5.21
707       To eares of flesh and blood, {list, list} <list Hamlet>, ô list:1.5.22
708       If thou did'st euer thy deare father loue.1.5.23
709        Ham. O {God.} <Heauen!>1.5.24
710        Ghost. Reuenge his foule, and most vnnaturall murther.1.5.25
711        Ham. Murther{.} <?>1.5.26
712        Ghost. Murther most foule, as in the best it is,1.5.27
713       But this most foule, strange and vnnaturall.1.5.28
714-5    Ham. Hast <, hast> me to {know't} <know it>, | that {I} with wings as swift  
716       As meditation, or the thoughts of loue1.5.30
717       May sweepe to my reuenge.1.5.31
718        Ghost. I find thee apt,1.5.31
719       And duller shouldst thou be then the fat weede1.5.32
720       That {rootes} <rots> it selfe in ease on Lethe wharffe,1.5.33
721       Would'st thou not sturre in this; now Hamlet heare,1.5.34
722       {Tis} <It's> giuen out, that sleeping in {my} <mine> Orchard,1.5.35
723       A Serpent stung me, so the whole eare of Denmarke1.5.36
724       Is by a forged processe of my death1.5.37
725       Ranckely abusde: but knowe thou noble Youth, 1.5.38
726       The Serpent that did sting thy fathers life1.5.39
727       Now weares his Crowne.1.5.40
728        Ham. O my propheticke soule! {my} <mine> Vncle?1.5.41
729       {D3}  Ghost. I that incestuous, that adulterate beast,1.5.42
730       With witchcraft of his wits, {with} <hath> trayterous gifts, 1.5.43
731       O wicked wit, and giftes that haue the power1.5.44
732       So to seduce; wonne {to his} <to to this> shamefull lust1.5.45
733       The will of my most seeming vertuous Queene;1.5.46
734       O Hamlet, what <a> falling off was there1.5.47
735       From me whose loue was of that dignitie 1.5.48
736       That it went hand in hand, euen with the vowe1.5.49
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
743       <Oo1v> But soft, me thinkes I sent the {morning} <Mornings> ayre,1.5.
744       Briefe let me be; sleeping within {my} <mine> Orchard,1.5.59
745       My custome alwayes {of} <in> the afternoone,1.5.60
746       Vpon my secure houre, thy Vncle stole1.5.61
747       With iuyce of cursed {Hebona} <Hebenon> in a viall,1.5.62
748       And in the porches of {my} <mine> eares did poure1.5.63
749       The {leaprous} <leaperous> distilment, whose effect1.5.64
750       Holds such an enmitie with blood of man, 1.5.65
751       That swift as quicksiluer it courses through1.5.66
752       The naturall gates and allies of the body,1.5.67
753       And with a sodaine vigour it doth {possesse} <posset>1.5.68
754       And curde like {eager} <Aygre> droppings into milke,1.5.69
755       The thin and wholsome blood; so did it mine, 1.5.70
756       And a most instant tetter {barckt} <bak'd> about1.5.71
757       Most Lazerlike with vile and lothsome crust1.5.72
758       All my smooth body.1.5.73
759       Thus was I sleeping by a brothers hand,1.5.74
760       Of life, of Crowne, {of} <and> Queene at once dispatcht, 
761       Cut off euen in the blossomes of my sinne,1.5.76
762       Vnhuzled, disappointed, {vnanueld} <vnnaneld>,1.5.77
763       No {reckning} <reckoning> made, but sent to my account1.5.78
764       Withall my imperfections on my head,1.5.79
765       O horrible, ô horrible, most horrible.1.5.80
766       If thou hast nature in thee beare it not,1.5.81
767       {D3v} Let not the royall bed of Denmarke be 1.5.82
768       A couch for luxury and damned incest.1.5.83
769       But {howsomeuer} <howsoeuer> thou {pursues} <pursuest> this act,1.5.84
770       Tain't not thy minde, nor let thy soule contriue 1.5.85
771       Against thy mother ought, leaue her to heauen,1.5.86
772       And to those thornes that in her bosome lodge1.5.87
773       To prick and sting her, fare thee well at once,1.5.88
774       The Gloworme shewes the matine to be neere1.5.89
775       And gins to pale his vneffectuall fire, 1.5.90
776       Adiew, adiew, {adiew,} <Hamlet:> remember me. <Exit>1.5.91
777        Ham. O all you host of heauen, ô earth, what els,1.5.92
778       And shall I coupple hell, ô fie, hold, {hold} my hart,1.5.93
779       And you my sinnowes, growe not instant old,1.5.94
780       But beare me {swiftly} <stiffely> vp; remember thee, 1.5.105
781       I thou poore Ghost {whiles} <while> memory holds a seate1.5.96
782       In this distracted globe, remember thee,1.5.97
783       Yea, from the table of my memory1.5.98
784       Ile wipe away all triuiall fond records,1.5.99
785       All sawes of bookes, all formes, all pressures past 1.5.100
786       That youth and obseruation coppied there,1.5.101
787       And thy commandement all alone shall liue,1.5.102
788       Within the booke and volume of my braine1.5.103
789       Vnmixt with baser matter, yes <, yes,> by heauen,1.5.104
790       O most pernicious woman. 
791       O villaine, villaine, smiling damned villaine,1.5.106
792       My tables, <my Tables;> meet it is I set it downe1.5.107
793       That one may smile, and smile, and be a villaine,1.5.108
794       At least {I am} <I'm> sure it may be so in Denmarke.1.5.109
795       So Vncle, there you are, now to my word, 1.5.110
796       It is adew, adew, remember me.1.5.112
796       I haue sworn't. 1.5.112
797       < Hor. & Mar. within. My Lord, my Lord.>1.5.113
798                    Enter Horatio, and Marcellus...
798+1   {Hora. My Lord, my Lord.}  
799        Mar. Lord Hamlet...
800        Hora. { Heauens} <Heauen> secure him.1.5.113
801        {Ham.} <Mar.> So be it.1.5.114
802        {Mar.} <Hor.> Illo, ho, ho, my Lord.1.5.115
803        Ham. Hillo, ho, ho, boy come, {and} <bird,> come.1.5.116
804       {D4}  Mar. How i'st my noble Lord? 1.5.117
805        Hora. What newes my Lord?1.5.117
806        Ham. O, wonderfull.1.5.118
807        Hora. Good my Lord tell it.1.5.119
808        Ham. No, {you will} <you'l> reueale it.1.5.119
809        Hora. Not I my Lord by heauen.1.5.120
810        Mar. Nor I my Lord.1.5.120
811        Ham. How say you then, would hart of man once thinke it,1.5.121
812       But you'le be secret.1.5.122
813        Booth. I by {heauen.} <Heau'n, my Lord.>1.5.122
814        Ham. There's {neuer} <nere> a villaine,1.5.123
814       Dwelling in all Denmarke 1.5.123
815       But hee's an arrant knaue.1.5.124
816-7    Hora. There needes no Ghost my Lord, come from the | graue  
817       To tell vs this.1.5.126
818        Ham. Why right, you are {in the} <i'th'> right,1.5.126
819       And so without more circumstance at all1.5.127
820       I hold it fit that we shake hands and part, 1.5.128
821       You, as your busines and {desire} <desires> shall poynt you,1.5.129
822       For euery man {hath} <ha's> busines and desire1.5.130
823       Such as it is, and for {my} <mine> owne poore part1.5.131
824       {I will} <Looke you, Ile> goe pray.1.5.132
825        Hora. These are but wilde and {whurling} <hurling> words my Lord.1.5.133
826        Ham. {I am} <I'm> sorry they offend you hartily,1.5.134
827       Yes faith hartily.1.5.135
828        Hora. There's no offence my Lord.1.5.135
829        Ham. Yes by Saint Patrick but there is {Horatio} <my Lord>,1.5.136
830       And much offence to, touching this vision heere, 1.5.137
831       It is an honest Ghost that let me tell you,1.5.138
832       For your desire to knowe what is betweene vs1.5.139
833       Oremastret as you may, and now good friends,1.5.140
834       As you are friends, schollers, and souldiers,1.5.141
835       Giue me one poore request.1.5.142
836        Hora. What i'st my Lord, we will.1.5.143
837        Ham. Neuer make knowne what you haue seene to night.1.5.144
838        Booth. My Lord we will not.1.5.145
839        Ham. Nay but swear't.1.5.145
840        Hora. In faith my Lord not I.1.5.146
841        Mar. Nor I my Lord in faith.1.5.146
842       {D4v}  Ham. Vppon my sword.1.5.147
843        Mar. We haue sworne my Lord already.1.5.147
844        Ham. Indeede vppon my sword, indeed.1.5.148
845       {Ghost cries vnder the Stage.}1.5.149
845        Ghost. Sweare. <Ghost cries vnder the Stage.>1.5.149
846-7    Ham. {Ha,} <Ah> ha, boy, say'st thou so, art thou there {trupenny} <true-| penny>? 
847       Come {on,} <one> you heare this fellowe in the Sellerige,1.5.151
848       Consent to sweare.1.5.152
849        Hora. Propose the oath my Lord.1.5.152
850        Ham. Neuer to speake of this that you haue seene 1.5.153
851       Sweare by my sword.1.5.154
852        Ghost. Sweare.1.5.155
853        Ham. Hic, & vbique, then weele shift {our} <for> ground:1.5.156
854       Come hether Gentlemen1.5.157
855       And lay your hands againe vpon my sword, 1.5.158
857       {Sweare by my sword}1.5.159
856       Neuer to speake of this that you haue heard.1.5.160
857       <Sweare by my Sword.>1.5.159
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
865       Heere as before, neuer so helpe you mercy, 1.5.169
866       (How strange or odde {so mere} <so ere> I beare my selfe,1.5.170
867       As I perchance heereafter shall thinke meet,1.5.171
868       To put an Anticke disposition on1.5.172
869       That you at such {times} <time> seeing me, neuer shall1.5.173
870       With armes incombred thus, or {this} <thus,> head shake, 1.5.174
871       Or by pronouncing of some doubtfull phrase,1.5.175
872       As well, {well,} we knowe, or we could and if we would,1.5.176
873       Or if we list to speake, or there be and if {they} <there> might,1.5.177
874       Or such ambiguous giuing out, to note)1.5.178
875       <Oo2> That you knowe ought of me, this {doe sweare,} <not to doe:>1.5.
876       So grace and mercy at your most neede helpe you.1.5.180
877       <Sweare.>..
878        Ghost. Sweare.1.5.181
879        Ham. Rest, rest, perturbed spirit: so Gentlemen,1.5.182
880       Withall my loue I doe commend me to you, 1.5.183
881       {El} And what so poore a man as Hamlet is,1.5.184
882       May doe t'expresse his loue and frending to you1.5.185
883       God willing shall not lack, let vs goe in together,1.5.186
884       And still your fingers on your lips I pray,1.5.187
885       The time is out of ioynt, ô cursed spight 1.5.188
886       That euer I was borne to set it right.1.5.189
887       Nay come, lets goe together. Exeunt.1.5.190
888                    <Actus Secundus.>..
889                    Enter {old} Polonius, {with his man or two} <and Reynoldo>...
890        Pol. Giue him {this} <his> money, and these notes Reynaldo.2.1.1
891        Rey. I will my Lord.2.1.2
892        Pol. You shall doe meruiles wisely good Reynaldo,2.1.3
893       Before you visite him, {to} <you> make {inquire} <inquiry>2.1.4
894       Of his behauiour.2.1.5
895        Rey. My Lord, I did intend it.2.1.5
896-7    Pol. Mary well said, | very well said; looke you sir, 
898       Enquire me first what Danskers are in Parris,2.1.7
899       And how, and who, what meanes, and where they keepe,2.1.8
900       What companie, at what expence, and finding 2.1.9
901       By this encompasment, and drift of question2.1.10
902       That they doe know my sonne, come you more neerer2.1.11
903       Then your perticuler demaunds will tuch it,2.1.12
904       Take you as t'were some distant knowledge of him,2.1.13
905       {As} <And> thus, I know his father, and his friends, 2.1.14
906       And in part him, doe you marke this Reynaldo?2.1.15
907        Rey. I, very well my Lord.2.1.16
908        Pol. And in part him, but you may say, not well,2.1.17
909       But y'ft be he I meane, hee's very wilde,2.1.18
910       Adicted so and so, and there put on him 2.1.19
911       What forgeries you please, marry none so ranck2.1.20
912       As may dishonour him, take heede of that,2.1.21
913       But sir, such wanton, wild, and vsuall slips,2.1.22
914       As are companions noted and most knowne2.1.23
915       To youth and libertie.2.1.24
916        Rey. As gaming my Lord.2.1.24
917        Pol. I, or drinking, fencing, swearing,2.1.25
918       Quarrelling, drabbing, you may goe so far.2.1.26
919        Rey. My Lord, that would dishonour him.2.1.27
920        Pol. Fayth <no,> as you may season it in the charge.2.1.28
921       {E1v} You must not put another scandell on him,2.1.29
922       That he is open to incontinencie,2.1.30
923       That's not my meaning, but breath his faults so quently2.1.31
924       That they may seeme the taints of libertie,2.1.32
925       The flash and out-breake of a fierie mind,2.1.33
926       A sauagenes in {vnreclamed} <vnreclaim'd> blood,2.1.35
926       Of generall assault.2.1.35
927        Rey. But my good Lord.2.1.35
928        Pol. Wherefore should you doe this?2.1.36
929        Rey. I my Lord, I would know that.2.1.37
930        Pol. Marry sir, heer's my drift,2.1.37
931       And I belieue it is a fetch of {wit,} <warrant:>2.1.38
932       You laying these slight {sallies} <sulleyes> on my sonne2.1.39
933       As t'were a thing a little soyld {with} <i'th'> working,2.1.40
934       Marke you, your partie in conuerse, him you would sound2.1.42
935       Hauing euer seene in the prenominat crimes 2.1.43
936       The youth you breath of guiltie, be assur'd2.1.44
937       He closes with you in this consequence,2.1.45
938       Good sir, (or so,) or friend, or gentleman,2.1.46
939       According to the phrase, {or} <and> the addistion2.1.47
940       Of man and country.2.1.48
941        Rey. Very good my Lord.2.1.48
942-3    Pol. And then sir doos {a this, a} <he this? | He> doos, what was I about to say? 
944       {By the masse} I was about to say something,2.1.51
944       Where did I leaue?2.1.51
945        Rey. At closes in the consequence.2.1.51
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
953       I saw him enter such a house of sale,2.1.58
954       Videlizet, a brothell, or so foorth, see you now,2.1.59
955       Your bait of falshood {take} <takes> this {carpe} <Cape> of truth, 2.1.60
956       And thus doe we of wisedome, and of reach,2.1.61
957       With windlesses, and with assaies of bias,2.1.62
958       By indirections find directions out,2.1.63
959       So by my former lecture and aduise2.1.64
960       {E2} Shall you my sonne; you haue me, haue you not? 2.1.65
961        Rey. My Lord, I haue.2.1.66
962        Pol. God buy {ye, far ye} <you; fare you> well.2.1.66
963        Rey. Good my Lord.2.1.67
964        Pol. Obserue his inclination in your selfe.2.1.68
965        Rey. I shall my Lord.2.1.69
966        Pol. And let him ply his musique.2.1.70
967        Rey. Well my Lord. Exit {Rey}.2.1.70
968       Enter Ophelia...
969-70  Pol. Farewell. | How now Ophelia, whats the matter? 
971        Oph. {O my Lord, my Lord} <Alas my Lord>, I haue beene so affrighted,2.1.72
972        Pol. With what {i'th name of God} <in the name of Heauen>?2.1.73
973        Ophe. My Lord, as I was sowing in my {closset} <Chamber>,2.1.74
974       Lord Hamlet with his doublet all vnbrac'd,2.1.75
975       No hat vpon his head, his stockins fouled,2.1.76
976       Vngartred, and downe gyued to his ancle,2.1.77
977       Pale as his shirt, his knees knocking each other,2.1.78
978       And with a looke so pittious in purport2.1.79
979       As if he had been loosed out of hell2.1.80
980       To speake of horrors, he comes before me.2.1.81
981        Pol. Mad for thy loue?2.1.82
982        Oph. My lord I doe not know,2.1.83
982       But truly I doe feare it.2.1.83
983        Pol. What said he?2.1.83
984        Oph. He tooke me by the wrist, and held me hard,2.1.84
985       Then goes he to the length of all his arme,2.1.85
986       And with his other hand thus ore his brow,2.1.86
987       He falls to such perusall of my face2.1.87
988       As {a} <he> would draw it, long stayd he so,2.1.88
989       At last, a little shaking of mine arme,2.1.89
990       And thrice his head thus wauing vp and downe,2.1.90
991       He raisd a sigh so pittious and profound2.1.91
992       {As} <That> it did seeme to shatter all his bulke,2.1.92
993       And end his beeing; that done, he lets me goe,2.1.93
994       And with his head ouer his {shoulder} <shoulders> turn'd2.1.94
995       Hee seem'd to find his way without his eyes,2.1.95
996       For out adoores he went without theyr {helps,} <helpe;>2.1.96
997       And to the last bended their light on me.2.1.97
998       {E2v}  Pol. {Come,} goe with mee, I will goe seeke the King,2.1.98
999       This is the very extacie of loue,2.1.99
1000     Whose violent propertie fordoos it selfe,2.1.100
1001     <Oo2v> And leades the will to desperat vndertakings2.1.
1002     As oft as any {passions} <passion> vnder heauen2.1.102
1003     That dooes afflict our natures: I am sorry,2.1.103
1004     What, haue you giuen him any hard words of late?2.1.104
1005      Oph. No my good Lord, but as you did commaund2.1.105
1006     I did repell his letters, and denied2.1.106
1007     His accesse to me.2.1.107
1008      Pol. That hath made him mad.2.1.107
1009     I am sorry, that with better {heede} <speed> and iudgement2.1.108
1010     I had not {coted} <quoted> him, I {fear'd} <feare> he did but trifle 2.1.109
1011     And meant to wrack thee, but beshrow my Ielousie:2.1.110
1012     {By heauen} <It seemes> it is as proper to our age2.1.111
1013     To cast beyond our selues in our opinions,2.1.112
1014     As it is common for the younger sort2.1.113
1015     To lack discretion; come, goe we to the King,2.1.114
1016     This must be knowne, which beeing kept close, might moue2.1.115
1017     More griefe to hide, then hate to vtter loue,                   <Exeunt.>2.1.116
1017     {Come.    Exeunt.}2.1.116
1018                  <Scena Secunda.>..
1019     {Florish.} Enter King {and} Queene, {Rosencraus} <Rosincrane> and..
1019-20              {Guyldensterne} <Guild-| sterne Cum alijs>. 
1021      King. Welcome deere Rosencraus, and Guyldensterne,2.2.1
1022     Moreouer, that we much did long to see you,2.2.2
1023     The need we haue to vse you did prouoke2.2.3
1024     Our hastie sending, something haue you heard2.2.4
1025     Of Hamlets transformation, so <I> call it,2.2.5
1026     {Sith nor} <Since not> th'exterior, nor the inward man2.2.6
1027     Resembles that it was, what it should be,2.2.7
1028     More then his fathers death, that thus hath put him2.2.8
1029     So much from th'vnderstanding of himselfe2.2.9
1030     I cannot {dreame} <deeme> of: I entreate you both2.2.10
1031     That beeing of so young dayes brought vp with him,2.2.11
1032     And sith so nabored to his youth and {hauior} <humour>,2.2.12
1033     That you voutsafe your rest heere in our Court2.2.13
1034     Some little time, so by your companies2.2.14
1035     To draw him on to pleasures, and to gather2.2.15
1036     {E3} So much as from {occasion} <Occasions> you may gleane,2.2.16
1036+1 {Whether ought to vs vnknowne afflicts him thus,}2.2.17
1037     That opend lyes within our remedie.2.2.18
1038      Quee. Good gentlemen, he hath much talkt of you,2.2.19
1039     And sure I am, two men there {is} <are> not liuing2.2.20
1040     To whom he more adheres, if it will please you2.2.21
1041     To shew vs so much gentry and good will,2.2.22
1042     As to expend your time with vs a while,2.2.23
1043     For the supply and profit of our hope,2.2.24
1044     Your visitation shall receiue such thanks2.2.25
1045     As fits a Kings remembrance.2.2.26
1046      Ros. Both your Maiesties2.2.26
1047     Might by the soueraigne power you haue of vs,2.2.27
1048     Put your dread pleasures more into commaund2.2.28
1049     Then to entreatie.2.2.29
1050      Guyl. {But} we both obey.2.2.29
1051     And heere giue vp our selues in the full bent,2.2.30
1052     To lay our {seruice} <Seruices> freely at your feete2.2.31
1053     To be commaunded.2.2.32
1054      King. Thanks Rosencraus, and gentle Guyldensterne.2.2.33
1055      Quee. Thanks Guyldensterne, and gentle Rosencraus.2.2.34
1056     And I beseech you instantly to visite2.2.35
1057-8 My too much changed sonne, | goe some of {you} <ye,>  
1059     And bring {these} <the> gentlemen where Hamlet is.2.2.37
1060      Guyl. Heauens make our presence and our practices2.2.38
1061     Pleasant and helpfull to him. <Exit.>2.2.39
1062      Quee. {I} Amen. {Exeunt Ros. and Guyld.}2.2.39
1063     Enter Polonius...
1064      Pol. Th'embassadors from Norway my good Lord,2.2.40
1065     Are ioyfully returnd.2.2.41
1066      King. Thou still hast been the father of good newes.2.2.42
1067      Pol. Haue I my Lord? {I} assure <you,> my good Liege2.2.43
1068     I hold my dutie as I hold my soule,2.2.44
1069     Both to my God, {and} <one> to my gracious King;2.2.45
1070     And I doe thinke, or els this braine of mine2.2.46
1071     Hunts not the trayle of policie so sure2.2.47
1072     As {it hath} <I haue> vsd to doe, that I haue found2.2.48
1073     The very cause of Hamlets lunacie.2.2.49
1074      King. O speake of that, that {doe I} <I do> long to heare.2.2.50
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
1082     {Enter Embassadors.} <Enter Polonius, Voltumand, and Cornelius.>..
1083      King. Well, we shall sift him, welcome {my} good friends,2.2.58
1084     Say Voltemand, what from our brother Norway?2.2.59
1085      Vol. Most faire returne of greetings and desires;2.2.60
1086     Vpon our first, he sent out to suppresse2.2.61
1087     His Nephews leuies, which to him appeard2.2.62
1088     To be a preparation gainst the Pollacke,2.2.63
1089     But better lookt into, he truly found2.2.64
1090     It was against your highnes, whereat greeu'd2.2.65
1091     That so his sicknes, age, and impotence2.2.66
1092     Was falsly borne in hand, sends out arrests2.2.67
1093     On Fortenbrasse, which he in breefe obeyes,2.2.68
1094     Receiues rebuke from Norway, and in fine,2.2.69
1095     Makes vow before his Vncle neuer more 2.2.70
1096     To giue th'assay of Armes against your Maiestie:2.2.71
1097     Whereon old Norway ouercome with ioy,2.2.72
1098     Giues him {threescore} <three> thousand crownes in anuall fee,2.2.73
1099     And his commission to imploy those souldiers2.2.74
1100     So leuied (as before) against the Pollacke,2.2.75
1101     With an entreatie heerein further shone,2.2.76
1102     That it might please you to giue quiet passe2.2.77
1103     Through your dominions for {this} <his> enterprise2.2.78
1104     On such regards of safety and allowance2.2.79
1105     As therein are set downe.2.2.80
1106      King. It likes vs well,2.2.80
1107     And at our more considered time, wee'le read,2.2.81
1108     Answer, and thinke vpon this busines:2.2.82
1109     Meane time, we thanke you for your well tooke labour,2.2.83
1110     Goe to your rest, at night weele feast together,2.2.84
1111     Most welcome home. {Exeunt } <Exit> Embassadors.2.2.85
1112      Pol. This busines is <very> well ended.2.2.85
1113     {E4} My Liege and Maddam, to expostulate2.2.86
1114     What maiestie should be, what dutie is,2.2.87
1115     Why day is day, night, night, and time is time,2.2.88
1116     Were nothing but to wast night, day, and time,2.2.89
1117     Therefore <since> breuitie is the soule of wit,2.2.90
1118     And tediousnes the lymmes and outward florishes,2.2.91
1119     I will be briefe, your noble sonne is mad:2.2.92
1120     Mad call I it, for to define true madnes,2.2.93
1121     What ist but to be nothing els but mad,2.2.94
1122     But let that goe.2.2.95
1123      Quee. More matter with lesse art.2.2.95
1124      Pol. Maddam, I sweare I vse no art at all,2.2.96
1125     That {hee's} <he is> mad tis true, tis true, tis pitty,2.2.97
1126     And pitty {tis tis} <it is> true, a foolish figure,2.2.98
1127     But farewell it, for I will vse no art.2.2.99
1128     <Oo3> Mad let vs graunt him then, and now remaines 2.2.
1129     That we find out the cause of this effect,2.2.101
1130     Or rather say, the cause of this defect, 2.2.102
1131     For this effect defectiue comes by cause:2.2.103
1132     Thus it remaines, and the remainder thus 2.2.105
1132     Perpend,2.2.105
1133     I haue a daughter, haue {while} <whil'st> she is mine,2.2.106
1134     Who in her dutie and obedience, marke,2.2.107
1135     Hath giuen me this, now gather and surmise,2.2.108
1136     <The Letter.>..
1137     To the Celestiall and my soules Idoll, the most beau-2.2.110
1137-9 tified {Ophelia,} <O-| phelia.> | that's an ill phrase, a {vile} <vilde> phrase,  
1139-40 beautified is a {vile} <vilde> | phrase, but you shall heare: {thus} <these> in  
1140-1 her excellent white | bosome, these {&c.} 
1142      Quee. Came this from Hamlet to her?2.2.114
1143      Pol. Good Maddam stay awhile, I will be faithfull,2.2.115
1144     Doubt thou the starres are fire,                   {Letter.}2.2.116
1145     Doubt that the Sunne doth moue,2.2.117
1146     Doubt truth to be a lyer,2.2.118
1147     But neuer doubt I loue.2.2.119
1148-9 O deere Ophelia, I am ill at these numbers, I haue not art to | recken 
1149-50  my grones, but that I loue thee best, ô most best {belieue} <be-| leeue> it, adew. 
1151-2  Thine euermore most deere Lady, whilst this | machine is to him. Hamlet. 
1152-3 {Pol.} This in obedience hath my daughter {showne} <shew'd> me,  
1154      And more {about} <aboue> hath his {solicitings} <soliciting,>2.2.126
1155     {E4v} As they fell out by time, by meanes, and place,2.2.127
1156     All giuen to mine eare.2.2.128
1157      King. But how hath she receiu'd his loue?2.2.129
1158      Pol. What doe you thinke of me?2.2.129
1159      King. As of a man faithfull and honorable.2.2.130
1160      Pol. I would faine proue so, but what might you thinke2.2.131
1161     When I had seene this hote loue on the wing,2.2.132
1162     As I perceiu'd it (I must tell you that)2.2.133
1163     Before my daughter told me, what might you,2.2.134
1164     Or my deere Maiestie your Queene heere thinke,2.2.135
1165     If I had playd the Deske, or Table booke,2.2.136
1166     Or giuen my hart a {working} <winking> mute and dumbe,2.2.137
1167     Or lookt vppon this loue with idle sight,2.2.138
1168     What might you thinke? no, I went round to worke,2.2.139
1169     And {my young Mistris} <(my yong Mistris)>thus I did bespeake,2.2.140
1170     Lord Hamlet is a Prince out of thy star,2.2.141
1171     This must not be: and then I {prescripts} <Precepts> gaue her2.2.142
1172     That she should locke her selfe from {her} <his> resort,2.2.143
1173     Admit no messengers, receiue no tokens,2.2.144
1174     Which done, she tooke the fruites of my aduise:2.2.145
1175     And he {repell'd,} <repulsed.> a short tale to make, 2.2.146
1176     Fell into a sadnes, then into a fast,2.2.147
1177     Thence to a {wath} <Watch>, thence into a weakenes,2.2.148
1178     Thence to <a> lightnes, and by this declension,2.2.149
1179     Into the madnes {wherein} <whereon> now he raues,2.2.150
1180     And all we {mourne} <waile> for.2.2.151
1181      King. Doe you thinke <'tis> this?2.2.151
1182      Quee. It may be very {like} <likely>.2.2.152
1183      Pol. Hath there been such a time, {I would} <I'de> faine know that,2.2.153
1184     That I haue positiuely said, tis so,2.2.154
1185     When it proou'd otherwise? 2.2.155
1186      King. Not that I know.2.2.155
1187      Pol. Take this, from this, if this be otherwise;2.2.156
1188     If circumstances leade me, I will finde2.2.157
1189     Where truth is hid, though it were hid indeede2.2.158
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
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
1202      King. We will try it.2.2.167
1203     Enter Hamlet <reading on a Booke>...
1204-5  Quee. But looke where sadly the poore wretch | comes reading. 
1206      Pol. Away, I doe beseech you both away,                   {Exit King and Queene.}2.2.169
1207-8 Ile bord him presently,                   <Exit King & Queen.> | oh giue me leaue, 
1208     How dooes my good Lord Hamlet?2.2.171
1209      Ham. Well, God a mercy.2.2.172
1210      Pol. Doe you knowe me my Lord?2.2.173
1211      Ham. Excellent <excellent> well, {you are} <y'are> a Fishmonger.2.2.174
1212      Pol. Not I my Lord.2.2.175
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 
1229      Lord.2.2.191
1230      Ham. Words, words, words.2.2.192
1231      Pol. What is the matter my Lord.2.2.193
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 
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 
1248-51 his replies are, | a happines | that often madnesse hits on, | which reason 
1251-3 and {sanctity} <Sanitie> could not | so prosperously be deliuered of. {I will leaue} 
1253-7 {him and my daughter. My Lord, I will take my leaue of you.} 
1253     <I will leaue him.>2.2.212
1254     <And sodainely contriue the meanes of meeting>2.2.212
1255     <Betweene him, and my daughter.>2.2.213
1256     <My Honourable Lord, I will most humbly>2.2.213
1257     <take my leaue of you.>2.2.214
1258     <Oo3v>  Ham. You cannot <Sir> take from mee any thing that I | will {not} more2.2.
1259     willingly part withall: except my life, {except my life, except} my2.2.216
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
1268      Ros. My most deere Lord.2.2.223
1269-70  Ham. My {extent} <excellent> good friends, how doost thou | Guyldersterne? 
1270-1 {A} <Oh,> Rosencraus, good lads how doe {you} <ye> | both? 
1272      Ros. As the indifferent children of the earth.2.2.227
1273      Guyl. Happy, in that we are not {euer happy on Fortunes lap,} <ouer- happy: on For->2.2.229
1274     <tunes Cap,>We are not the very button.2.2.229
1275      Ham. Nor the soles of her shooe.2.2.230
1276      Ros. Neither my Lord.2.2.231
1277-8  Ham. Then you liue about her wast, or in the {middle of her fauours.} <mid-> 
1278     <dle of her fauour?>2.2.233
1279      Guyl. Faith her priuates we.2.2.234
1280-1  Ham. In the secret parts of Fortune, oh most true, | she is a strumpet,  
1281     {What} <What's the> newes?2.2.236
1282-3  Ros. None my Lord, but <that> the worlds growne | honest. 
1284-5  Ham. Then is Doomes day neere, but your newes is | not true;  
1285     <Let me question more in particular: what haue>2.2.240
1286     <you my good friends, deserued at the hands of Fortune,>2.2.241
1287     <that she sends you to Prison hither?>2.2.241
1288     < Guil. Prison, my Lord?>2.2.242
1289     < Ham. Denmark's a Prison.>2.2.243
1290     < Rosin. Then is the World one.>2.2.244
1291     < Ham. A goodly one, in which there are many Con- >2.2.245
1292     <fines, Wards, and Dungeons; Denmarke being one o'th'>2.2.246
1293     <worst.>2.2.247
1294     < Rosin. We thinke not so my Lord.>2.2.248
1295     < Ham. Why then 'tis none to you; for there is nothing>2.2.250
1296     <either good or bad, but thinking makes it so: to me it is>2.2.251
1297     <a prison.>2.2.251
1298     < Rosin. Why then your Ambition makes it one: 'tis>2.2.252
1299     <too narrow for your minde.>2.2.253
1300     < Ham. O God, I could be bounded in a nutshell, and>2.2.254
1301     <count my selfe a King of infinite space; were it not that>2.2.255
1302     <I haue bad dreames.>2.2.256
1303     < Guil. Which dreames indeed are Ambition: for the>2.2.257
1304     <very substance of the Ambitious, is meerely the shadow>2.2.258
1305     <of a Dreame.>2.2.259
1306     < Ham. A dreame it selfe is but a shadow.>2.2.260
1307     < Rosin. Truely, and I hold Ambition of so ayry and>2.2.261
1308     <light a quality, that it is but a shadowes shadow.>2.2.262
1309     < Ham. Then are our Beggers bodies; and our Mo->2.2.263
1310     <narchs and out-stretcht Heroes the Beggers Shadowes:>2.2.264
1311     <shall wee to th'Court: for, by my fey I cannot rea->2.2.265
1312     <son?>2.2.265
1313     < Both. Wee'l wait vpon you.>2.2.266
1314  < Ham. No such matter. I will not sort you with the>2.2.267
1315     <rest of my seruants: for to speake to you like an honest>2.2.268
1316     <man: I am most dreadfully attended;>2.2.269
1316-7 But in the beaten | way of friendship, what make you at Elsonoure? 
1318      Ros. To visit you my Lord, no other occasion.2.2.271
1319-20  Ham. Begger that I am, I am {euer} <euen> poore in thankes, | but I thanke 
1320-1 you, and sure deare friends, my thankes | are too deare a halfpeny: 
1321-2 were you not sent for? | is it your owne inclining? is it a free visitati- 
1322-3 on? come, {come,} | deale iustly with me, come, come, nay speake. 
1324      Guy. What should we say my Lord?2.2.277
1325     {F2}  Ham. <Why> Any thing but {to'th} <to the> purpose: you were | sent for, and there is2.2.278
1326-7 a kind {of} confession in your lookes, | which your modesties haue not 
1327-8 craft enough to {cullour} <co-| lor>, I know the good King and Queene haue 
1328     sent for you.2.2.281
1329      Ros. To what end my Lord?2.2.282
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. 
1339      Guyl. My Lord we were sent for.2.2.292
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- 
1348-9 ted with golden fire, why it {appeareth nothing} <appeares no other thing> | to me {but} <then> a foule 
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. 
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 
1368-9 target, the Louer shall | not sigh gratis, the humorus Man shall end 
1369-70 his part in | peace, <the Clowne shall make those laugh whose lungs> 
1371-2 <are tickled a'th'sere:> and the Lady shall say her minde | freely: or the 
1372-3 {black} <blanke> verse shall hault for't. What players | are they? 
1374-5  Ros. Euen those you were wont to take {such} delight in, | the Trage- 
1375     dians of the Citty.2.2.328
1376     {F2v}  Ham. How chances it they trauaile? their {residence} <resi-| dence> both in repu- 2.2.329
1377-8 tation, and profit was better both | wayes. 
1379-80  Ros. I thinke their inhibition, comes by the meanes | of the late  
1380     innouasion. 
1381-2  Ham. Doe they hold the same estimation they did | when I was in 
1382     the Citty; are they so {followed.} <follow'd?>2.2.335
1383      Ros. No indeede {are they} <they are> not.2.2.336
1384     < Ham. How comes it? doe they grow rusty?>2.2.337
1385     < Rosin. Nay, their indeauour keepes in the wonted>2.2.338
1386     <pace; But there is Sir an ayrie of Children, little>2.2.339
1387     <Yases, that crye out on the top of question; and>2.2.340
1388     <are most tyrannically clap't for't: these are now the>2.2.341
1389     <Oo4> <fashion, and so be-ratled the common Stages (so they>2.2.
1390     <call them) that many wearing Rapiers, are affraide of>2.2.343
1391     <Goose-quils, and dare scarse come thither.>2.2.344
1392     < Ham. What are they Children? Who maintains 'em?>2.2.346
1393     <How are they escoted? Will they pursue the Quality no>2.2.347
1394     <longer then they can sing? Will they not say afterwards>2.2.348
1395     <if they should grow themselues to common Players (as>2.2.349
1396     <it is like most if their meanes are no better) their Wri->2.2.350
1397     <ters do them wrong, to make them exclaim against their>2.2.351
1398     <owne Succession.>2.2.351
1399     < Rosin. Faith there ha's bene much to do on both sides:>2.2.353
1400     <and the Nation holds it no sinne, to tarre them to Con->2.2.354
1401     <trouersie. There was for a while, no mony bid for argu->2.2.355
1402     <ment, vnlesse the Poet and the Player went to Cuffes in>2.2.356
1403     <the Question.> 2.2.356
1404     < Ham. Is't possible?>2.2.357
1405     < Guild. Oh there ha's beene much throwing about of>2.2.358
1406     <Braines.>2.2.359
1407     < Ham. Do the Boyes carry it away?>2.2.360
1408     < Rosin. I that they do my Lord, Hercules & his load too.>2.2.362
1409-10 Ham. It is not {very} strange, for {my} <mine> Vncle is King of | Denmarke, and 
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  
1418-9  {then}, th'appurtenance of welcome is fashion | and ceremonie; let 
1419-20  mee comply with you in {this} <the> garb: {let me} | <lest my> extent to the players, 
1420-1  which I tell you must showe | fairely {outwards} <outward>, should more ap- 
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
1429-30  Ham. Harke you Guyldensterne, and you to, at each | eare a hearer, 
1430-1 that great baby you see there is not yet | out of his {swadling} <swathing> clouts. 
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
1440      Pol. The Actors are come hether my Lord.2.2.392
1441      Ham. Buz, buz.2.2.393
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 
1450     only men.2.2.402
1451-2  Ham. O Ieptha Iudge of Israell, what a treasure had'st | thou? 
1453      Pol. What a treasure had he my Lord?2.2.405
1454-5  Ham. Why one faire daughter and no more, | the which he loued 
1455     passing well.2.2.408
1456      Pol. Still on my daughter.2.2.409
1457      Ham. Am I not i'th right old Ieptha?2.2.410
1458-9  Pol. If you call me Ieptha my Lord, I haue a {daughter} <daugh-| ter> that I loue 
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 
1468-9  well, welcome good friends, oh <my> old friend, {why} | thy face is {va-} 
1469-70  {lanct} <valiant> since I saw thee last, com'st thou to | beard me in Denmark? 
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
1478     Player. What speech my {good} Lord?2.2.433
1479-80 Ham. I heard thee speake me a speech once, but it was | neuer acted, 
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>, 
1488      but cald it an honest method, {as wholesome as sweete, & by very}2.2.445
1488-9  {much, more handsome then fine:} one | <cheefe> speech in't I chiefely loued, 
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
1497     Hath now this dread and black complection smeard,2.2.455
1498     With {heraldy} <Heraldry> more dismall head to foote,2.2.456
1499     Now is he {totall} <to take> Gules horridly trickt2.2.457
1500     With blood of fathers, mothers, daughters, sonnes,2.2.458
1501     Bak'd and empasted with the parching streetes2.2.459
1502     That lend a tirranus and {a} damned light2.2.460
1503     To their {Lords murther} <vilde Murthers>, rosted in wrath and fire,2.2.461
1504     And thus ore-cised with coagulate gore,2.2.462
1505     With eyes like Carbunkles, the hellish Phirrhus 2.2.463
1506     Old grandsire Priam seekes; {so proceede you}.2.2.464
1507-8  Pol. Foregod my Lord well spoken, with good {accent} <ac-| cent> and good 
1508-9  Play. Anon he finds him,                   (discretion. 
1510     Striking too short at Greekes, his anticke sword2.2.469
1511     Rebellious to his arme, lies where it fals,2.2.470
1512     Repugnant to commaund; vnequall {matcht} <match>,2.2.471
1513     Pirrhus at Priam driues, in rage strikes wide,2.2.472
1514     But with the whiffe and winde of his fell sword,2.2.473
1515     Th'vnnerued father fals: <Then senselesse Illium,>2.2.474
1516     Seeming to feele {this} <his> blowe, with flaming top2.2.475
1517     Stoopes to his base; and with a hiddious crash2.2.476
1518     Takes prisoner Pirrhus eare, for loe his sword2.2.477
1519     Which was declining on the milkie head2.2.478
1520     Of {reuerent} <Reuerend> Priam, seem'd i'th ayre to stick,2.2.479
1521     <Oo4v> So as a painted tirant Pirrhus stood2.2.
1522     <And> Like a newtrall to his will and matter,2.2.482
1522     Did nothing: 2.2.482
1523     But as we often see against some storme,2.2.483
1524     A silence in the heauens, the racke stand still,2.2.484
1525     The bold winds speechlesse, and the orbe belowe2.2.485
1526     As hush as death, anon the dreadfull thunder2.2.486
1527     Doth rend the region, so after Pirrhus pause,2.2.487
1528     A rowsed vengeance sets him new a worke,2.2.488
1529     And neuer did the Cyclops hammers fall,2.2.489
1530     On {Marses Armor} <Mars his Armours,> forg'd for proofe eterne,2.2.490
1531     With lesse remorse then Pirrhus bleeding sword2.2.491
1532     Now falls on Priam.2.2.492
1533     {F4} Out, out, thou strumpet Fortune, all you gods,2.2.493
1534     In generall sinod take away her power,2.2.494
1535     Breake all the spokes, and {follies} <Fallies> from her wheele,2.2.495
1536     And boule the round naue downe the hill of heauen2.2.496
1537     As lowe as to the fiends.2.2.497
1538      Pol. This is too long.2.2.498
1539-40  Ham. It shall {to the} <to'th> barbers with your beard; {prethee} <Pry-| thee> say on, he's 
1540-1 for a Iigge, or a tale of bawdry, or he | sleepes, say on, come to Hecuba. 
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 head2.2.506
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
1550     A blancket in {the alarme} <th'Alarum> of feare caught vp, 2.2.509
1551     Who this had seene, with tongue in venom steept,2.2.510
1552     Gainst fortunes state would treason haue pronounst;2.2.511
1553     But if the gods themselues did see her then,2.2.512
1554     When she saw Pirrhus make malicious sport2.2.513
1555     In mincing with his sword her {husband} <Husbands> limmes,2.2.514
1556     The instant burst of clamor that she made,2.2.515
1557     Vnlesse things mortall mooue them not at all,2.2.516
1558     Would haue made milch the burning eyes of heauen2.2.517
1559     And passion in the gods.2.2.518
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>. 
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- 
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
1579      Play. I my Lord.2.2.539
1580-1  Ham. Weele hate to morrowe night, you could for <a> | neede study 
1581-2 a speech of some dosen {lines,} or sixteene lines, which | I would set 
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> ..
1589      Ham. I so {God buy to you,} <God buy'ye:> now I am alone, 2.2.549
1590     O what a rogue and pesant slaue am I.2.2.550
1591     Is it not monstrous that this player heere2.2.551
1592     But in a fixion, in a dreame of passion2.2.552
1593     Could force his soule so to his {owne} <whole> conceit2.2.553
1594     That from her working all {the} <his> visage {wand,} <warm'd;>2.2.554
1595     Teares in his eyes, distraction {in his} <in's> aspect,2.2.555
1596     A broken voyce, {an} <and> his whole function suting2.2.556
1597     With formes to his conceit; and all for nothing,2.2.557
1598     For Hecuba.2.2.558
1599     What's Hecuba to him, or he to {her} <Hecuba>,2.2.559
1600     That he should weepe for her? what would he doe2.2.560
1601     Had he the {motiue, and that} <Motiue and the Cue> for passion2.2.561
1602     That I haue? he would drowne the stage with teares,2.2.562
1603     And cleaue the generall eare with horrid speech,2.2.563
1604     Make mad the guilty, and appale the free,2.2.564
1605     Confound the ignorant, and amaze indeede2.2.565
1606     The very {faculties} <faculty> of eyes and eares; yet I,2.2.566
1607     A dull and muddy metteld raskall peake,2.2.567
1608     Like Iohn-a-dreames, vnpregnant of my cause,2.2.568
1609     And can say nothing; no not for a King,2.2.569
1610     Vpon whose property and most deare life,2.2.570
1611     A damn'd defeate was made: am I a coward,2.2.571
1612     Who cals me villaine, breakes my pate a crosse,2.2.572
1613     Pluckes off my beard, and blowes it in my face,2.2.573
1614     Twekes me by {the nose,} <th'Nose?> giues me the lie i'th thraote2.2.574
1615     As deepe as to the lunges, who does me this,2.2.575
1616     Hah, {s'wounds} <Why> I should take it: for it cannot be2.2.576
1617     But I am pidgion liuerd, and lack gall2.2.577
1618     {G1} To make oppression bitter, or ere this2.2.578
1619     I should {a} <haue> fatted all the region kytes2.2.579
1620     With this slaues offall, {bloody,} <bloudy: a> baudy villaine,2.2.580
1621     Remorslesse, trecherous, lecherous, kindlesse villaine.2.2.581
1622     <Oh Vengeance!>              ..
1623     {Why} <Who?> what an Asse am I, <I sure,> this is most braue,2.2.582
1624     That I the sonne of {a} <the> deere murthered,2.2.583
1625     Prompted to my reuenge by heauen and hell,2.2.584
1626     Must like a whore vnpacke my hart with words,2.2.585
1627-8 And fall a cursing like a very drabbe; | a {stallyon,} <Scullion?> fie vppont, foh. 
1628-9 About my {braines; hum,} <Braine.> | I haue heard, 
1629     That guilty creatures sitting at a play,2.2.589
1630     Haue by the very cunning of the scene,2.2.590
1631     Beene strooke so to the soule, that presently2.2.591
1632     They haue proclaim'd their malefactions:2.2.592
1633     For murther, though it haue no tongue will speake2.2.593
1634     With most miraculous organ: Ile haue these Players2.2.594
1635     Play something like the {murther} <murder> of my father2.2.595
1636     Before mine Vncle, Ile obserue his lookes,2.2.596
1637     Ile tent him to the quicke, if {a doe} <he but> blench2.2.597
1638     I know my course. The spirit that I haue seene2.2.598
1639     May be {a deale} <the Diuell>, and the {deale} <Diuel> hath power2.2.599
1640     T'assume a pleasing shape, yea, and perhaps,2.2.600
1641     Out of my weakenes, and my melancholy,2.2.601
1642     As he is very potent with such spirits,2.2.602
1643     Abuses me to damne me; Ile haue grounds2.2.603
1644     More relatiue then this, the play's the thing2.2.604
1645     Wherein Ile catch the conscience of the King. Exit. 2.2.605
1646-7 Enter King, Queene, Polonius, Ophelia, Rosencraus, <Ro-| sincrance>Guyl- 
1647     densterne, <and> Lords...
1648      King. {An} <And> can you by no drift of {conference} <circumstance>3.1.1
1649     Get from him why he puts on this confusion,3.1.2
1650     Grating so harshly all his dayes of quiet 3.1.3
1651     <Oo5> With turbulent and dangerous lunacie?3.1.
1652      Ros. He dooes confesse he feeles himselfe distracted,3.1.5
1653     But from what cause, {a} <he> will by no meanes speake.3.1.6
1654      Guyl. Nor doe we find him forward to be sounded,3.1.7
1655     But with a craftie madnes keepes aloofe 3.1.8
1656     When we would bring him on to some confession3.1.9
1657     {G1v} Of his true state.3.1.10
1658      Quee. Did he receiue you well?3.1.10
1659      Ros. Most like a gentleman.3.1.11
1660      Guyl. But with much forcing of his disposition.3.1.12
1661      Ros. Niggard of question, but of our demaunds3.1.13
1662      Most free in his reply.3.1.14
1663      Quee. Did you assay him to any pastime?3.1.15
1664      Ros. Maddam, it so fell out that certaine Players3.1.16
1665     We ore-raught on the way, of these we told him,3.1.17
1666     And there did seeme in him a kind of ioy3.1.18
1667     To heare of it: they are {heere} about the Court,3.1.19
1668     And as I thinke, they haue already order3.1.20
1669     This night to play before him.3.1.21
1670      Pol. Tis most true,3.1.21
1671     And he beseecht me to intreat your Maiesties3.1.22
1672     To heare and see the matter.3.1.23
1673      King. With all my hart,3.1.24
1673     And it doth much content me3.1.24
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
1680     That he as t'were by accedent, may {heere} <there>3.1.30
1681     Affront Ophelia; her father and my selfe,<(lawful espials)>3.1.31
1682     {Wee'le} <Will> so bestow our selues, that seeing vnseene,3.1.32
1683     We may of their encounter franckly iudge,3.1.33
1684     And gather by him as he is behau'd,3.1.34
1685     Ift be th'affliction of his loue or no3.1.35
1686     That thus he suffers for.3.1.36
1687      Quee. I shall obey you.3.1.36
1688     And for your part Ophelia, I doe wish3.1.37
1689     That your good beauties be the happy cause3.1.38
1690     Of Hamlets wildnes, so shall I hope your vertues,3.1.39
1691     Will bring him to his wonted way againe,3.1.40
1692     To both your honours.3.1.41
1693      Oph. Maddam, I wish it may.3.1.41
1694      Pol. Ophelia walke you heere, gracious so please {you,} <ye>3.1.42
1695     {G2} We will bestow our selues; reade on this booke,3.1.43
1696     That show of such an exercise may cullour3.1.44
1697     Your {lowlines;} <lonelinesse.> we are oft too blame in this,3.1.45
1698     Tis too much proou'd, that with deuotions visage3.1.46
1699     And pious action, we doe {sugar} <surge> ore3.1.47
1700     The deuill himselfe.3.1.48
1701      King. O tis {too} true,3.1.48
1702     How smart a lash that speech doth giue my conscience.3.1.49
1703     The harlots cheeke beautied with plastring art,3.1.50
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
1711     Whether tis nobler in the minde to suffer3.1.56
1712     The slings and arrowes of outragious fortune,3.1.57
1713     Or to take Armes against a sea of troubles,3.1.58
1714     And by opposing, end them, to die to sleepe3.1.59
1715     No more, and by a sleepe, to say we end3.1.60
1716     The hart-ake, and the thousand naturall shocks3.1.61
1717     That flesh is heire to; tis a consumation3.1.62
1718     Deuoutly to be wisht to die to sleepe,3.1.63
1719     To sleepe, perchance to dreame, I there's the rub,3.1.64
1720     For in that sleepe of death what dreames may come3.1.65
1721     When we haue shuffled off this mortall coyle3.1.66
1722     Must giue vs pause, there's the respect3.1.67
1723     That makes calamitie of so long life:3.1.68
1724     For who would beare the whips and scornes of time,3.1.69
1725     {Th'oppressors} <The Oppressors> wrong, the {proude} <poore> mans contumely,3.1.70
1726     The pangs of {despiz'd} <dispriz'd> loue, the lawes delay,3.1.71
1727     The insolence of office, and the spurnes3.1.72
1728     That patient merrit of {th'vnworthy} <the vnworthy> takes,3.1.73
1729     When he himselfe might his quietas make3.1.74
1730     With a bare bodkin; who would <these> fardels beare,3.1.75
1731     To grunt and sweat vnder a wearie life,3.1.76
1732     But that the dread of something after death,3.1.77
1733     The {vndiscouer'd} <vndiscouered> country, from whose borne3.1.78
1734     {G2v} No trauiler returnes, puzzels the will,3.1.79
1735     And makes vs rather beare those ills we haue,3.1.80
1736     Then flie to others that we know not of.3.1.81
1737     Thus conscience dooes make cowards <of vs all>, 3.1.82
1738     And thus the natiue hiew of resolution3.1.83
1739     Is {sickled} <sicklied> ore with the pale cast of thought,3.1.84
1740     And enterprises of great {pitch} <pith> and moment,3.1.85
1741     With this regard theyr currents turne {awry} <away>,3.1.86
1742     And loose the name of action. Soft you now,3.1.87
1743     The faire Ophelia, Nimph in thy orizons3.1.88
1744     Be all my sinnes remembred.3.1.89
1745      Oph. Good my Lord,3.1.89
1746     How dooes your honour for this many a day?3.1.90
1747      Ham. I humbly thanke you <: well, well,> well.3.1.91
1748      Oph. My Lord, I haue remembrances of yours3.1.92
1749     That I haue longed long to redeliuer,3.1.93
1750     I pray you now receiue them.3.1.94
1751      Ham. No, {not I} <no>, I neuer gaue you ought.3.1.95
1752      Oph. My honor'd Lord, {you} <I> know right well you did,3.1.96
1753     And with them words of so sweet breath composd3.1.97
1754     As made {these} <the> things more rich, {their} <then> perfume {lost,} <left:>3.1.98
1755     Take these againe, for to the noble mind3.1.99
1756     Rich gifts wax poore when giuers prooue vnkind,3.1.100
1757     There my Lord.3.1.101
1758      Ham. Ha, ha, are you honest.3.1.102
1759      Oph. My Lord.3.1.103
1760      Ham. Are you faire?3.1.104
1761      Oph. What meanes your Lordship?3.1.105
1762-3  Ham. That if you be honest & faire, {you} <your Honesty> | should admit 
1763     no discourse to your beautie.3.1.107
1764      Oph. Could beauty my Lord haue better comerse3.1.109
1765     Then {with} <your> honestie?3.1.109
1766-7  Ham. I truly, for the power of beautie will sooner | transforme ho- 
1767-8 nestie from what it is to a bawde, then the | force of honestie can trans- 
1768-9 late beautie into his likenes, | this was sometime a paradox, but now the 
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 
1778-9 such things, that it were {better} <bet-| ter> my Mother had not borne mee: I am 
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
1787-8 That he may | play the foole no {where} <way,> but in's owne house, 
1788     Farewell.3.1.132
1789      Oph. O helpe him you sweet heauens.3.1.133
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- 
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
1808     {Th'expectation,} <Th'expectansie> and Rose of the faire state,3.1.152
1809     The glasse of fashion, and the mould of forme,3.1.153
1810     Th'obseru'd of all obseruers, quite quite downe,3.1.154
1811     {And} <Haue> I of Ladies most deiect and wretched,3.1.155
1812     That suckt the honny of his {musickt} <Musicke> vowes;3.1.156
1813     Now see {what} <that> noble and most soueraigne reason3.1.157
1814     Like sweet bells iangled out of {time} <tune>, and harsh,3.1.158
1815     That vnmatcht forme, and {stature} <Feature> of blowne youth3.1.159
1816     Blasted with extacie, ô woe is mee3.1.160
1817     T'haue seene what I haue seene, see what I see.   {Exit.}3.1.161
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
1825     I haue in quick determination3.1.168
1826     Thus set it downe: he shall with speede to England,3.1.169
1827     For the demaund of our neglected tribute,3.1.170
1828     Haply the seas, and countries different,3.1.171
1829     With variable obiects, shall expell3.1.172
1830     This something setled matter in his hart,3.1.173
1831     Whereon his braines still beating3.1.174
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
1838     But if you hold it fit, after the play,3.1.181
1839     Let his Queene-mother all alone intreate him3.1.182
1840     To show his {griefe,} <Greefes:> let her be round with him,3.1.183
1841     And Ile be plac'd (so please you) in the eare3.1.184
1842     Of all their conference, if she find him not,3.1.185
1843     To England send him: or confine him where3.1.186
1844     Your wisedome best shall thinke.3.1.187
1845      King. It shall be so,3.1.187
1846-7 Madnes in great ones must not {vnmatcht} <vnwatch'd> goe.        | Exeunt. 
1848     Enter Hamlet, and <two or > three of the Players...
1849-50  Ham. Speake the speech I pray you as I {pronoun'd} <pronounc'd> | it to you, trip- 
1850-1 pingly on the tongue, but if you mouth it | as many of {our} <your> Players do, 
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- 
1860-1 ble dumbe showes, and noyse: I {would} <could> | haue such a fellow whipt for 
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 
1870-1 the Mirrour vp to nature, to shew vertue her <owne> | feature; scorne her own 
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} 
1880-1 {man} | <or Norman>, haue so strutted & bellowed, that I haue | thought some of Na- 
1881-2 tures Iornimen had made men, | and not made them well, they imita- 
1882-3 ted humanitie so {abhominably} <ab-| hominably>. 
1884-5  Player. I hope we haue reform'd that indifferently with | vs <, Sir>. 
1886-7  Ham. O reforme it altogether, and let those that | play your clownes 
1887-8 speake no more then is set downe for | them, for there be of them that 
1888-9 wil themselues laugh, | to set on some quantitie of barraine spectators 
1889-91 to laugh | to, though in the meane time, some necessary question | of 
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) . 
1900      {Ros. I my Lord} <Both. We will my Lord>. Exeunt {they two.} 3.2.51
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
1908     For what aduancement may I hope from thee3.2.57
1909     That no reuenew hast but thy good spirits3.2.58
1910     To feede and clothe thee, why should the poore be flatterd?3.2.
1911     No, let the candied {tongue licke} <tongue, like> absurd pompe,3.2.60
1912     And crooke the pregnant hindges of the knee3.2.61
1913     Where thrift may follow {fauning;} <faining?> doost thou heare,3.2.62
1914     Since my deare soule was mistris of {her} <my> choice,3.2.63
1915     And could of men distinguish <,> her election{,}3.2.64
1916     {S'hath} <Hath> seald thee for herselfe, for thou hast been3.2.65
1917     As one in suffring all that suffers nothing,3.2.66
1918     A man that Fortunes buffets and rewards3.2.67
1919     {Hast}<Hath> tane with equall thanks; and blest are those3.2.68
1920     Whose blood and iudgement are so well {comedled} <co-mingled>,3.2.69
1921     That they are not a pype for Fortunes finger3.2.70
1922     To sound what stop she please: giue me that man3.2.71
1923     That is not passions slaue, and I will weare him3.2.72
1924     In my harts core, I in my hart of hart3.2.73
1925     As I doe thee. Something too much of this,3.2.74
1926     There is a play to night before the King,3.2.75
1927     One scene of it comes neere the circumstance3.2.76
1928     Which I haue told thee of my fathers death,3.2.77
1929     I prethee when thou seest that act a foote,3.2.78
1930     Euen with the very comment of {thy} <my> soule3.2.79
1931     Obserue {my} <mine> Vncle, if his occulted guilt3.2.80
1932     Doe not it selfe vnkennill in one speech,3.2.81
1933     It is a damned ghost that we haue seene,3.2.82
1934     And my imaginations are as foule3.2.83
1935     As Vulcans {stithy;} <Stythe.> giue him {heedfull} <needfull> note,3.2.84
1936     For I mine eyes will riuet to his face,3.2.85
1937     And after we will both our iudgements ioyne3.2.86
1938     {In} <To> censure of his seeming.3.2.87
1939      Hor. Well my lord,3.2.87
1940     If {a} <he> steale ought the whilst this play is playing3.2.88
1941     And scape {detected} <detecting>, I will pay the theft.3.2.89
1942     Enter {Trumpets and Kettle Drummes,} King, Queene,..
1942               Polonius, Ophelia <, Rosincrance,>..
1943     <Guildensterne, and other Lords attendant, with>..
1944  <his Guard carrying Torches. Danish>..
1945  <March. Sound a Flourish>...
1946   Ham. They are comming to the play. I must be idle,3.2.90
1947     {H1} Get you a place.3.2.91
1948      King. How fares our cosin Hamlet?3.2.92
1949      Ham. Excellent yfaith,3.2.94
1949-50 Of the Camelions dish, I eate | the ayre, 
1950     Promiscram'd, you cannot feede Capons so.3.2.95
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
1959     Brutus kild mee.3.2.104
1960-1  Ham. It was a brute part of him to kill so capitall a | calfe there, 
1961     Be the Players readie?3.2.106
1962      Ros. I my Lord, they stay vpon your patience.3.2.107
1963      {Ger} <Qu>. Come hether my {deere} <good> Hamlet, sit by me.3.2.108
1964      Ham. No good mother, heere's mettle more attractiue.3.2.110
1965      Pol. O ho, doe you marke that.3.2.111
1966      Ham. Lady shall I lie in your lap?3.2.112
1967      Ophe. No my Lord.3.2.113
1968      <Ham. I meane, my Head vpon your Lap?>3.2.114
1969      <Ophe. I my Lord.>3.2.115
1970      Ham. Doe you thinke I meant country matters?3.2.116
1971      Oph. I thinke nothing my Lord.3.2.117
1972      Ham. That's a fayre thought to lye betweene maydes legs.3.2.119
1973      Oph. What is my Lord?3.2.120
1974      Ham. Nothing.3.2.121
1975      Oph. You are merry my Lord.3.2.122
1976      Ham. Who I?3.2.123
1977      Oph. I my Lord.3.2.124
1978-9  Ham. O God your onely Iigge-maker, what should | a man do but 
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 
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
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 
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 
2001-2 with gifts, shee seemes {harsh} <loath and vnwilling > awhile, | but in the end accepts <his>loue. <Exeunt> 
2003      Oph. VVhat meanes this my Lord?3.2.136
2004-5  Ham. Marry this {munching} <is Miching> Mallico, {it} <that> meanes | mischiefe. 
2006-7  Oph. Belike this show imports the argument of the | play{.} <?> 
2008      Ham. We shall know by {this fellow, Enter Prologue.} <these Fellowes:>3.2.141
2008-9 The Players | cannot keepe <counsell>, they'le tell all. 
2010      Oph. Will {a} <they> tell vs what this show meant?3.2.143
2011-2  Ham. I, or any show that {you will} <you'l> show him, be not | you asham'd 
2012-3 to show, heele not shame to tell you what it | meanes. 
2014-5  Oph. You are naught, you are naught, Ile mark the | play. 
2016     <Enter Prologue.>..
2017      {Prologue.} For vs and for our Tragedie,3.2.149
2018     Heere stooping to your clemencie,3.2.150
2019     We begge your hearing patiently.3.2.151
2020      Ham. Is this a Prologue, or the {posie} <Poesie> of a ring?3.2.152
2021      Oph. Tis breefe my Lord.3.2.153
2022      Ham. As womans loue.3.2.154
2023     Enter King and <his>Queene...
2024   King. Full thirtie times hath Phebus cart gone round3.2.155
2025     Neptunes salt wash, and Tellus {orb'd the} <Orbed> ground,3.2.156
2026     And thirtie dosen Moones with borrowed sheene3.2.157
2027     About the world haue times twelue thirties beene3.2.158
2028     Since loue our harts, and Hymen did our hands3.2.159
2029     Vnite comutuall in most sacred bands.3.2.160
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,} 
2036     {And} <For> womens feare and loue {hold} <holds> quantitie,3.2.167
2037     <Oo6v> {Eyther none,} in neither ought, or in extremitie,3.2.1
2038     Now what my {Lord} <loue> is proofe hath made you know,3.2.169
2039     And as my loue is {ciz'd} <siz'd>, my feare is so,3.2.170
2039+1 {Where loue is great, the litlest doubts are feare,}3.2.171
2039+2 {Where little feares grow great, great loue growes there.}3.2.172
2040      King. Faith I must leaue thee loue, and shortly to,3.2.173
2041     My operant powers {their} <my> functions leaue to do,3.2.174
2042     And thou shalt liue in this faire world behind,3.2.175
2043     Honord, belou'd, and haply one as kind,3.2.176
2044     For husband shalt thou{.} <------>3.2.177
2045      {Quee} <Bap>.. O confound the rest,3.2.177
2046     Such loue must needes be treason in my brest,3.2.178
2047     In second husband let me be accurst,3.2.179
2048     None wed the second, but who kild the first. {Ham. That's}3.2.180
2049      <Ham. Wormwood, Wormwood.>3.2.181
2050      <Bapt.> The instances that second marriage moue {wormwood}3.2.182
2051     Are base respects of thrift, but none of loue,3.2.183
2052     A second time I kill my husband dead,3.2.184
2053     When second husband kisses me in bed.3.2.185
2054      King. I doe belieue {you thinke} <you. Think> what now you speake,3.2.186
2055     But what we doe determine, oft we breake,3.2.187
2056     Purpose is but the slaue to memorie,3.2.188
2057     Of violent birth, but poore validitie,3.2.189
2058     Which now {the} <like> fruite vnripe sticks on the tree,3.2.190
2059     But fall vnshaken when they mellow bee.3.2.191
2060     Most necessary tis that we forget3.2.192
2061     To pay our selues what to our selues is debt,3.2.193
2062     What to our selues in passion we propose,3.2.194
2063     The passion ending, doth the purpose lose,3.2.195
2064     The violence of {eyther,} <other> griefe, or ioy,3.2.196
2065     Their owne {ennactures} <ennactors> with themselues destroy,3.2.197
2066     Where ioy most reuels, griefe doth most lament,3.2.198
2067     Greefe {ioy} <ioyes>, ioy griefes, on slender accedent,3.2.199
2068     This world is not for aye, nor tis not strange,3.2.200
2069     That euen our loues should with our fortunes change:3.2.201
2070     For tis a question left vs yet to proue,3.2.202
2071     Whether loue lead fortune, or els fortune loue.3.2.203
2072     The great man downe, you marke his {fauourite} <fauourites> flyes,3.2.204
2073     {H2v} The poore aduaunc'd, makes friends of enemies,3.2.205
2074     And hetherto doth loue on fortune tend,3.2.206
2075     For who not needes, shall neuer lacke a friend,3.2.207
2076     And who in want a hollow friend doth try,3.2.208
2077     Directly seasons him his enemy.3.2.209
2078     But orderly to end where I begunne,3.2.210
2079     Our wills and fates doe so contrary runne,3.2.211
2080     That our deuises still are ouerthrowne,3.2.212
2081     Our thoughts are ours, their ends none of our owne,3.2.213
2082     So thinke thou wilt no second husband wed,3.2.214
2083     But die thy thoughts when thy first Lord is dead.3.2.215
2084      {Quee} <Bap>.. Nor earth to {me giue} <giue me> foode, nor heauen light,3.2.216
2085     Sport and repose lock from me day and night,3.2.217
2085+1 {To desperation turne my trust and hope,}3.2.218
2085+2 {And Anchors cheere in prison be my scope,}3.2.219
2086     Each opposite that blancks the face of ioy,3.2.220
2087     Meete what I would haue well, and it destroy,3.2.221
2088     Both heere and hence pursue me lasting strife,                   {Ham. If she should}3.2.222
2089     If once {I be} a widdow, euer I be {a} wife. {breake it now.}3.2.223
2090      <Ham. If she should breake it now.>3.2.224
2091-2  King. Tis deeply sworne, | sweet leaue me heere a while, 
2093     My spirits grow dull, and faine I would beguile3.2.226
2094     The tedious day with sleepe.3.2.227
2095      Quee. Sleepe rock thy braine,                   <Sleepes>3.2.227
2096     And neuer come mischance betweene vs twaine. {Exeunt.} <Exit>3.2.228
2097      Ham. Madam, how like you this play?3.2.229
2098      Quee. The Lady {doth protest} <protests> too much mee thinks.3.2.230
2099      Ham. O but shee'le keepe her word.3.2.231
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, 
2110-2 let the {gauled} <gall'd> Iade winch, our withers are vnwrong. | <Enter Lucianus.> | This is one Lu- 
2112  cianus, Nephew to the King.3.2.244
2111             {Enter Lucianus.}..
2113   Oph. You are {as good as a} <a good> Chorus my Lord.3.2.245
2114      Ham. I could interpret betweene you and your loue3.2.246
2115     {H3} If I could see the puppets dallying.3.2.247
2116      Oph. You are keene my lord, you are keene.3.2.248
2117-8  Ham. It would cost you a groning to take off {mine} <my> | edge. 
2119      Oph. Still better and worse.3.2.251
2120-1  Ham. So you mistake {your} husbands. | Beginne murtherer, <Pox> leaue 
2121-2 thy damnable faces and | begin, come, the croking Rauen doth bellow 
2122-3 for {reuenge} <Re-| uenge>. 
2124-5  Luc. Thoughts black, hands apt, | drugges fit, and time agreeing, 
2126     {Considerat} <Confederate> season els no creature seeing,3.2.256
2127     Thou mixture ranck, of midnight weedes collected,3.2.257
2128     VVith Hecats ban thrice blasted, thrice {inuected} <infected>,3.2.258
2129     Thy naturall magicke, and dire property,3.2.259
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
2138      Quee. How fares my Lord?3.2.267
2139      Pol. Giue ore the play.3.2.268
2140      King. Giue me some light, away.3.2.269
2141      {Pol.} <All.> Lights, lights, lights.            Exeunt {all but Ham. & Horatio.}3.2.270
2142     <Manet Hamlet & Horatio.>..
2143      Ham. Why let the strooken Deere goe weepe,3.2.271
2144     The Hart vngauled play,3.2.272
2145     For some must watch while some must sleepe,3.2.273
2146-7 {Thus} <So> runnes the world away. | Would not this sir & a forrest of fea- 
2147-8 thers, if the rest of | my fortunes turne Turk with me, with <two> prouinciall 
2149-50 Roses on my raz'd shooes, get me a fellowship in a cry | of players? <sir.> 
2151      Hora. Halfe a share.3.2.279
2152      Ham. A whole one I.3.2.280
2153     For thou doost know oh Damon deere3.2.281
2154     This Realme dismantled was3.2.283
2154-5 Of Ioue himselfe, | and now raignes heere 
2156     A very very paiock.3.2.284
2157      Hora. You might haue rym'd.3.2.285
2158-9  Ham. O good Horatio, Ile take the Ghosts word for | a thousand 
2159     pound. Did'st perceiue?3.2.287
2160      Hora. Very well my Lord.3.2.288
2161      Ham. Vpon the talke of the poysning.3.2.289
2162      Hor. I did very well note him.3.2.290
2163     <Enter Rosincrance and Guildensterne.>..
2164     {H3v}  Ham. {Ah ha,} <Oh, ha?> come some musique, come the Recorders,3.2.292
2165     For if the King like not the Comedie,3.2.293
2166     Why then belike he likes it not perdy.3.2.294
2167     Come, some musique.3.2.295
2167+1 {Enter Rosencraus and Guyldensterne.} 
2168   Guyl. Good my Lord, voutsafe me a word with you.3.2.297
2169     <pp1>  Ham. Sir a whole historie.3.2.
2170      Guyl. The King sir.3.2.299
2171      Ham. I sir, what of him?3.2.300
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, 
2180     And {stare} <start> not so wildly from my affaire.3.2.309
2181      Ham. I am tame sir, pronounce.3.2.310
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. 
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
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
2207     {H4}  Ros. Good my Lord, what is your cause of {distemper,} <distem-| per> you do {sure-}3.2.338
2208-9 {ly} <freely> barre the doore {vpon} <of> your owne {liberty} <Liber-| tie> if you deny your griefes to 
2209     your friend.3.2.339
2210      Ham. Sir I lacke aduauncement.3.2.340
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
2219-20  Guyl. O my lord, if my duty be too bold, my loue | is too vnmanerly. 
2221-2  Ham. I do not wel vnderstand that, wil you play | vpon this pipe? 
2223      Guyl. My lord I cannot.3.2.352
2224      Ham. I pray you.3.2.353
2225      Guyl. Beleeue me I cannot.3.2.354
2226      Ham. I doe beseech you.3.2.355
2227      Guyl. I know no touch of it my Lord.3.2.356
2228-9  Ham. {It is} <'Tis> as easie as lying; gouerne these ventages | with your {fin-} 
2229-30 {gers, & the vmber} <finger and thumbe>, giue it breath with your | mouth, & it wil discourse 
2230-1 most {eloquent} <excellent> musique, | looke you, these are the stops. 
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} 
2240-1 <Why > do you think <that> I am easier to be | plaid on then a pipe, call mee what in- 
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
2251      Pol. It is backt like a Wezell.3.2.380
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
2260     When Churchyards yawne, and hell it selfe {breakes} <breaths> out3.2.389
2261     Contagion to this world: now could I drinke hote blood,3.2.390
2262     And doe such <bitter> busines as the {bitter} day3.2.391
2263     Would quake to looke on: soft, now to my mother,3.2.392
2264     O hart loose not thy nature, let not euer3.2.393
2265     The soule of Nero enter this firme bosome,3.2.394
2266     Let me be cruell, not vnnaturall,3.2.395
2267     I will speake {dagger} <Daggers> to her, but vse none,3.2.396
2268     My tongue and soule in this be hypocrites,3.2.397
2269     How in my words someuer she be shent,3.2.398
2270     To giue them seales neuer my soule consent. {Exit.}3.2.399
2271              Enter King, Rosencraus, and Guyldensterne...
2272      King. I like him not, nor stands it safe with vs3.3.1
2273     To let his madnes range, therefore prepare you,3.3.2
2274     I your commission will forth-with dispatch,3.3.3
2275     And he to England shall along with you,3.3.4
2276     The termes of our estate may not endure3.3.5
2277     Hazerd so {neer's} <dangerous> as doth hourely grow3.3.6
2278     Out of his {browes} <Lunacies>.3.3.7
2279      Guyl. We will our selues prouide,3.3.7
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
2288     The liues of many, the {cesse} <cease> of Maiestie3.3.15
2289     Dies not alone; but like a gulfe doth draw3.3.16
2290     What's neere it, with it, {or} it is a massie wheele3.3.17
2291     Fixt on the somnet of the highest mount,3.3.18
2292     To whose {hough} <huge> spokes, tenne thousand lesser things3.3.19
2293     Are morteist and adioynd, which when it falls,3.3.20
2294     {I1} Each small annexment petty consequence3.3.21
2295     Attends the boystrous {raine,} <Ruine.> neuer alone3.3.22
2296     Did the King sigh, but <with> a generall grone.3.3.23
2297      King. Arme you I pray you to this speedy {viage,} <Voyage;>3.3.24
2298     For we will fetters put {about} <vpon> this feare3.3.25
2299     <pp1v> Which now goes too free-footed.3.3.
2300      {Ros.} <Both.> We will hast vs. Exeunt Gent.3.3.26
2301                  Enter Polonius...
2302      Pol. My Lord, hee's going to his mothers closet,3.3.27
2303     Behind the Arras I'le conuay my selfe3.3.28
2304     To heare the processe, I'le warrant shee'letax him home,3.3.29
2305     And as you sayd, and wisely was it sayd,3.3.30
2306     Tis meete that some more audience then a mother,3.3.31
2307     Since nature makes them parciall, should ore-heare3.3.32
2308     The speech of vantage; farre you well my Leige,3.3.33
2309     I'le call vpon you ere you goe to bed.3.3.34
2310     And tell you what I knowe. {Exit.}3.3.35
2311      King. Thankes deere my Lord.3.3.35
2312     O my offence is ranck, it smels to heauen,3.3.36
2313     It hath the primall eldest curse vppont,3.3.37
2314     A brothers murther, pray can I not,3.3.38
2315     Though inclination be as sharp as will,3.3.39
2316     My stronger guilt defeats my strong entent,3.3.40
2317     And like a man to double bussines bound,3.3.41
2318     I stand in pause where I shall first beginne,3.3.42
2319     And both neglect, what if this cursed hand3.3.43
2320     Were thicker then it selfe with brothers blood,3.3.44
2321     Is there not raine enough in the sweete Heauens3.3.45
2322     To wash it white as snowe, whereto serues mercy3.3.46
2323     But to confront the visage of offence?3.3.47
2324     And what's in prayer but this two fold force,3.3.48
2325     To be forestalled ere we come to fall,3.3.49
2326     Or {pardon} <pardon'd> being downe, then I'le looke vp.3.3.50
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
2334     Offences guilded hand may {showe} <shoue> by iustice,3.3.58
2335     And oft tis seene the wicked prize it selfe3.3.59
2336     Buyes out the lawe, but tis not so aboue,3.3.60
2337     There is no shufling, there the action lies3.3.61
2338     In his true nature, and we our selues compeld3.3.62
2339     Euen to the teeth and forhead of our faults3.3.63
2340     To giue in euidence, what then, what rests,3.3.64
2341     Try what repentance can, what can it not,3.3.65
2342     Yet what can it, when one cannot repent?3.3.66
2343     O wretched state, ô bosome blacke as death,3.3.67
2344     O limed soule, that struggling to be free,3.3.68
2345     Art more ingaged; helpe Angels make assay,3.3.69
2346     Bowe stubborne knees, and hart with strings of steale,3.3.70
2347     Be soft as sinnewes of the new borne babe,3.3.71
2348     All may be well.3.3.72
2349              Enter Hamlet...
2350      Ham. Now might I doe it {, but} <pat,> now {a} <he> is {a} praying,3.3.73
2351     And now Ile doo't, and so {a} <he> goes to heauen,3.3.74
2352     And so am I {reuendge} <reueng'd>, that would be scand3.3.75
2353     A villaine kills my father, and for that,3.3.76
2354     I his {sole} <foule> sonne, doe this same villaine send3.3.77
2355     To heauen.3.3.79
2355     {Why,} <Oh> this is {base and silly} <hyre and Sallery>, not reuendge,3.3.79
2356     {A} <He> tooke my father grosly full of bread,3.3.80
2357     Withall his crimes braod blowne, as {flush} <fresh> as May,3.3.81
2358     And how his audit stands who knowes saue heauen,3.3.82
2359     But in our circumstance and course of thought,3.3.83
2360     Tis heauy with him: and am I then {reuendged} <reueng'd>3.3.84
2361     To take him in the purging of his soule,3.3.85
2362     When he is fit and seasond for his passage?3.3.87
2362     No.3.3.87
2363     Vp sword, and knowe thou a more horrid hent,3.3.88
2364     When he is {drunke, a sleepe,} <drunke asleepe:> or in his rage,3.3.89
2365     Or in th'incestious pleasure of his bed,3.3.90
2366     At {game a} <gaming,> swearing, or about some act3.3.91
2367     That has no relish of saluation in't,3.3.92
2368     {I2} Then trip him that his heels may kick at heauen,3.3.93
2369     And that his soule may be as damnd and black3.3.94
2370     As hell whereto it goes; my mother staies,3.3.95
2371     This phisick but prolongs thy sickly daies. Exit.3.3.96
2372      King. My words fly vp, my thoughts remaine belowe3.3.97
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 betweene3.4.3
2379     Much heate and him, Ile silence me {euen} <e'ene> heere,3.4.4
2380     Pray you be round <with him>.3.4.5
2381      <Ham. within. Mother, mother, mother.>..
2384                  {Enter Hamlet.}..
2382      {Ger.} <Qu.> Ile {wait} <warrant> you, feare me not,3.4.6
2383     With-drawe, I heare him comming.3.4.7
2384     <Enter Hamlet.>..
2385      Ham. Now mother, what's the matter?3.4.8
2386      {Ger.} <Qu.> Hamlet, thou hast thy father much offended.3.4.9
2387      Ham. Mother, you haue my father much offended.3.4.10
2388      {Ger.} <Qu.> Come, come, you answere with an idle tongue.3.4.11
2389      Ham. Goe, goe, you question with {a wicked} <an idle> tongue.3.4.12
2390      {Ger.} <Qu.> Why how now Hamlet?3.4.13
2391      Ham. What's the matter now?3.4.13
2392      {Ger.} <Qu.> Haue you forgot me?3.4.14
2393      Ham. No by the rood not so,3.4.14
2394     You are the Queene, your husbands brothers wife,3.4.15
2395     {And} <But> would {it} <you> were not {so, you} <so. You> are my mother.3.4.16
2396      {Ger.} <Qu.> Nay, then Ile set those to you that can speake.3.4.17
2397-8  Ham. Come, come, and sit you downe, you shall not | boudge, 
2399     You goe not till I set you vp a glasse3.4.19
2400     Where you may see the {most} <inmost> part of you.3.4.20
2401      {Ger.} <Qu.> What wilt thou doe, thou wilt not murther me,3.4.21
2402     {Helpe how} <Helpe, helpe, hoa>.3.4.22
2403      Pol. What {how helpe} <hoa, helpe, helpe, helpe>.3.4.23
2404      Ham. How now, a Rat, dead for a Duckat, dead.3.4.24
2405      Pol. O I am slaine. <Killes Polon ius.>3.4.25
2406      {Ger.} <Qu.> O me, what hast thou done?3.4.25
2407      Ham, Nay I knowe not, is it the King?3.4.26
2408     {I2v}  {Ger.} <Qu.> O what a rash and bloody deede is this.3.4.27
2409      Ham. A bloody deede, almost as bad, good mother3.4.28
2410     As kill a King, and marry with his brother.3.4.29
2411      {Ger.} <Qu.> As kill a King{.}<?>3.4.30
2412      Ham. I Lady, {it was} <'twas> my word.3.4.30
2413     Thou wretched, rash, intruding foole farwell,3.4.31
2414     I tooke thee for thy {better} <Betters>, take thy fortune,3.4.32
2415     Thou find'st to be too busie is some danger,3.4.33
2416     Leaue wringing of your hands, peace sit you downe,3.4.34
2417     And let me wring your hart, for so I shall3.4.35
2418     If it be made of penitrable stuffe,3.4.36
2419     If damned custome haue not brasd it so,3.4.37
2420     That it {be} <is> proofe and bulwark against sence.3.4.38
2421      {Ger.} <Qu.> What haue I done, that thou dar'st wagge thy tongue3.4.39
2422     In noise so rude against me?3.4.40
2423      Ham. Such an act3.4.40
2424     That blurres the grace and blush of modesty,3.4.41
2425     Cals vertue hippocrit, takes of the Rose3.4.42
2426     From the faire forhead of an innocent loue,3.4.43
2427     And {sets} <makes> a blister there, makes marriage vowes3.4.44
2428     As false as dicers oathes, ô such a deede,3.4.45
2429     <pp2> As from the body of contraction plucks3.4.
2430     The very soule, and sweet religion makes3.4.47
2431     A rapsedy of words; heauens face {dooes} <doth> glowe3.4.48
2432     {Ore} <Yea> this solidity and compound masse3.4.49
2433     With {heated} <tristfull> visage, as against the doome3.4.50
2434     Is {thought sick} <thought-sicke> at the act3.4.51
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
2440     Hiperions curles, the front of Ioue himselfe,3.4.56
2441     An eye like Mars, to threaten {and} <or> command,3.4.57
2442     A station like the herald Mercury,3.4.58
2443     New lighted on a {heaue, a kissing} <heauen-kissing> hill,3.4.59
2444     A combination, and a forme indeede,3.4.60
2445     Where euery God did seeme to set his seale3.4.61
2446     To giue the world assurance of a man,3.4.62
2447     {I3} This was your husband, looke you now what followes,3.4.63
2448     Heere is your husband like a mildewed eare,3.4.64
2449     Blasting his wholsome {brother,} <breath.> haue you eyes,3.4.65
2450     Could you on this faire mountaine leaue to feede,3.4.66
2451     And batten on this Moore; ha, haue you eyes?3.4.67
2452     You cannot call it loue, for at your age3.4.68
2453     The heyday in the blood is tame, it's humble,3.4.69
2454     And waits vppon the iudgement, and what iudgement3.4.70
2455     Would step from this to this, {sence sure youe haue}3.4.71
2455+1 {Els could you not haue motion, but sure that sence}3.4.72
2455+2 {Is appoplext, for madnesse would not erre}3.4.73
2455+3 {Nor sence to extacie was nere so thral'd}3.4.74
2455+4 {But it reseru'd some quantity of choise}3.4.75
2455+5 {To serue in such a difference,} what deuill wast 
2456     That thus hath cosund you at hodman blind;3.4.77
2456+1 {Eyes without feeling, feeling without sight,}3.4.78
2456+2 {Eares without hands, or eyes, smelling sance all,}3.4.79
2456+3 {Or but a sickly part of one true sence}3.4.80
2456+4 {Could not so mope:} ô shame where is thy blush?3.4.81
2457     Rebellious hell,3.4.82
2458     If thou canst mutine in a Matrons bones,3.4.83
2459     To flaming youth let vertue be as wax3.4.84
2460     And melt in her owne fire, proclaime no shame3.4.85
2461     When the compulsiue ardure giues the charge,3.4.86
2462     Since frost it selfe as actiuely doth burne,3.4.87
2463     {And} <As> reason {pardons} <panders> will.3.4.88
2464      {Ger.} <Qu.> O Hamlet speake no more,3.4.88
2465     Thou turnst {my very} <mine> eyes into my <very> soule,3.4.89
2466     And there I see such blacke and {greeued} <grained> spots3.4.90
2467     As will <not> leaue {there} their tin'ct.3.4.91
2468      Ham. Nay but to liue3.4.91
2469     In the ranck sweat of an inseemed bed3.4.92
2470     Stewed in corruption, honying, and making loue3.4.93
2471     Ouer the nasty stie.3.4.94
2472      {Ger.} <Qu.> O speake to me no more,3.4.94
2473     These words like daggers enter in {my} <mine> eares,3.4.95
2474     No more sweete Hamlet.3.4.96
2475      Ham. A murtherer and a villaine,3.4.96
2476     A slaue that is not twentith part the {kyth} <tythe>3.4.97
2477     {I3v} Of your precedent Lord, a vice of Kings,3.4.98
2478     A cut-purse of the Empire and the rule,3.4.99
2479     That from a shelfe the precious Diadem stole3.4.100
2480     And put it in his pocket.3.4.101
2481      {Ger.} <Qu.> No more.3.4.101
2482     Enter Ghost...
2483      Ham. A King of shreds and patches,3.4.102
2484     Saue me and houer ore me with your wings3.4.103
2485     You heauenly gards: what would {your} <you> gracious figure?3.4.104
2486      {Ger.} <Qu.> Alas hee's mad.3.4.105
2487      Ham. Doe you not come your tardy sonne to chide,3.4.106
2488     That lap'st in time and passion lets goe by3.4.107
2489     Th'important acting of your dread command, ô say.3.4.109
2490      Ghost. Doe not forget, this visitation3.4.110
2491     Is but to whet thy almost blunted purpose,3.4.111
2492     But looke, amazement on thy mother sits,3.4.112
2493     O step betweene her, and her fighting soule,3.4.113
2494     Conceit in weakest bodies strongest workes,3.4.114
2495     Speake to her Hamlet.3.4.115
2496      Ham. How is it with you Lady?3.4.115
2497      {Ger.} <Qu.> Alas how i'st with you?3.4.116
2498     That you {doe} bend your eye on vacancie,3.4.117
2499     And with {th'incorporall} <their corporall> ayre doe hold discourse,3.4.118
2500     Foorth at your eyes your spirits wildly peep,3.4.119
2501     And as the sleeping souldiers in th'alarme,3.4.120
2502     Your bedded haire like life in excrements3.4.121
2503     Start vp and stand an end, ô gentle sonne3.4.122
2504     Vpon the heat and flame of thy distemper3.4.123
2505     Sprinckle coole patience, whereon doe you looke?3.4.124
2506      Ham. On him, on him, looke you how pale he glares,3.4.125
2507     His forme and cause conioynd, preaching to stones3.4.126
2508     Would make them capable, doe not looke vpon me,3.4.127
2509     Least with this pittious action you conuert3.4.128
2510     My stearne effects, then what I haue to doe3.4.129
2511     Will want true cullour, teares perchance for blood.3.4.130
2512      {Ger.} <Qu.> To {whom} <who> doe you speake this?3.4.131
2513      Ham. Doe you see nothing there?3.4.131
2514      {Ger.} <Qu.> Nothing at all, yet all that is I see.3.4.132
2515      Ham. Nor did you nothing heare?3.4.133
2516      {Ger.} <Qu.> No nothing but our selues.3.4.133
2517     {I4}  Ham. Why looke you there, looke how it steales away,3.4.134
2518     My father in his habit as he liued,3.4.135
2519     Looke where he goes, euen now out at the portall. Exit {Ghost}.3.4.136
2520      {Ger.} <Qu.> This is the very coynage of your braine,3.4.137
2521     This bodilesse creation extacie is very cunning in.3.4.139
2522      <Ham. Extasie?>3.4.139
2523      {Ham.} My pulse as yours doth temperatly keepe time,3.4.140
2524     And makes as healthfull musicke, it is not madnesse3.4.141
2525     That I haue vttred, bring me to the test,3.4.142
2526     And <I> the matter will reword, which madnesse3.4.143
2527     Would gambole from, mother for loue of grace,3.4.144
2528     Lay not {that} <a> flattering vnction to your soule3.4.145
2529     That not your trespasse but my madnesse speakes,3.4.146
2530     It will but skin and filme the vlcerous place3.4.147
2531     {Whiles} <Whil'st> ranck corruption mining all within3.4.148
2532     Infects vnseene, confesse your selfe to heauen,3.4.149
2533     Repent what's past, auoyd what is to come,3.4.150
2534     And doe not spread the compost {on} <or> the weedes3.4.151
2535     To make them {rancker,} <ranke.> forgiue me this my vertue,3.4.152
2536     For in the fatnesse of {these} <this> pursie times3.4.153
2537     Vertue it selfe of vice must pardon beg,3.4.154
2538     Yea curbe and wooe for leaue to doe him good.3.4.155
2539-40  {Ger.} <Qu.> O Hamlet | thou hast cleft my hart in twaine. 
2541      Ham. O throwe away the worser part of it,3.4.157
2542     And {leaue} <liue> the purer with the other halfe,3.4.158
2543     Good night, but goe not to {my} <mine> Vncles bed,3.4.159
2544     Assune a vertue if you haue it not, <refraine to night,>3.4.160
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
2546+1 {For vse almost can change the stamp of nature,}3.4.168
2546+2 {And either the deuill, or throwe him out}3.4.169
2546     {With wonderous potency:} once more good night,3.4.167
2547     And when you are desirous to be blest,3.4.171
2548     Ile blessing beg of you, for this same Lord3.4.172
2549     I doe repent; but heauen hath pleasd it so3.4.173
2550     {I4v} To punish me with this, and this with me,3.4.174
2551     That I must be their scourge and minister,3.4.175
2552     I will bestowe him and will answere well3.4.176
2553     The death I gaue him; so againe good night3.4.177
2554     I must be cruell only to be kinde,3.4.178
2555     {This} <Thus> bad beginnes, and worse remaines behind.3.4.179
2555+1 {One word more good Lady.}3.4.180
2556      {Ger.} <Qu.> What shall I doe?3.4.180
2557      Ham. Not this by no meanes that I bid you doe,3.4.181
2558     Let the {blowt} <blunt> King temp't you againe to bed,3.4.182
2559     Pinch wanton on your cheeke, call you his Mouse,3.4.183
2560     And let him for a paire of reechie kisses,3.4.184
2561     <pp2v> Or padling in your necke with his damn'd fingers.3.4.
2562     Make you to {rouell} <rauell> all this matter out3.4.186
2563     That I essentially am not in madnesse,3.4.187
2564     But {mad} <made> in craft, t'were good you let him knowe,3.4.188
2565     For who that's but a Queene, faire, sober, wise,3.4.189
2566     Would from a paddack, from a bat, a gib,3.4.190
2567     Such deare concernings hide, who would doe so,3.4.191
2568     No, in dispight of sence and secrecy,3.4.192
2569     Vnpeg the basket on the houses top,3.4.193
2570     Let the birds fly, and like the famous Ape,3.4.194
2571     To try conclusions in the basket creepe,3.4.195
2572     And breake your owne necke downe.3.4.196
2573      {Ger.} <Qu.> Be thou assur'd, if words be made of breath3.4.197
2574     And breath of life, I haue no life to breath3.4.198
2575     What thou hast sayd to me.3.4.199
2576      Ham. I must to England, you knowe that.3.4.200
2577      {Ger.} <Qu.> Alack I had forgot.3.4.201
2577     Tis so concluded on.3.4.201
2577+1 { Ham. Ther's letters seald, and my two Schoolefellowes,}3.4.203
2577+2 {Whom I will trust as I will Adders fang'd,}3.4.204
2577+3 {They beare the mandat, they must sweep my way}3.4.205
2577+4 {And marshall me to knauery: let it worke,}3.4.206
2577+5 {For tis the sport to haue the enginer}3.4.207
2577+6 {Hoist with his owne petar, an't shall goe hard}3.4.208
2577+7 {But I will delue one yard belowe their mines,}3.4.209
2577+8 {And blowe them at the Moone: ô tis most sweete}3.4.210
2577+9 {When in one line two crafts directly meete,} 
             {K1} <Ham.> This man shall set me packing, 
2579     Ile lugge the guts into the neighbour roome;3.4.212
2580     Mother {good night indeed,} <goodnight. Indeede> this Counsayler3.4.213
2581     Is now most still, most secret, and most graue,3.4.214
2582     Who was in life a {most} foolish prating knaue.3.4.215
2583     Come sir, to draw toward an end with you.3.4.216
2584     Good night mother. {Exit.}3.4.217
2585     <Exit Hamlet tugging in Polonius.>..
2586               Eenter King {, and Queene, with Rosencraus}..
2586+1                                {and Guyldensterne}. 
2587-8     King. There's {matter} <matters> in these sighes, | these profound heaues, 
2589     You must translate, tis fit we vnderstand them,4.1.2
2590     Where is your sonne?4.1.3
2590+1  {Ger. Bestow this place on vs a little while.}4.1.4
2591      <Qu.> Ah {mine owne} <my good> Lord, what haue I seene to night?4.1.5
2592      King. What Gertrard, how dooes Hamlet?4.1.6
2593      {Ger.} <Qu.> Mad as the {sea} <Seas> and wind when both contend4.1.7
2594     Which is the mightier, in his lawlesse fit,4.1.8
2595     Behind the Arras hearing some thing stirre,4.1.9
2596     {Whyps out his Rapier,} <He whips his Rapier out, and> cryes a Rat, a Rat,4.1.10
2597     And in {this} <his> brainish apprehension kills4.1.11
2598     The vnseene good old man.4.1.12
2599      King. O heauy deede!4.1.12
2600     It had beene so with vs had wee been there,4.1.13
2601     His libertie is full of threates to all,4.1.14
2602     To you your selfe, to vs, to euery one,4.1.15
2603     Alas, how shall this bloody deede be answer'd?4.1.16
2604     It will be layd to vs, whose prouidence4.1.17
2605     Should haue kept short, restraind, and out of haunt4.1.18
2606     This mad young man; but so much was our loue,4.1.19
2607     We would not vnderstand what was most fit,4.1.20
2608     But like the owner of a foule disease4.1.21
2609     To keepe it from divulging, {let} <let's> it feede4.1.22
2610     Euen on the pith of life: where is he gone?4.1.23
2611      {Ger.} <Qu.> To draw apart the body he hath kild,4.1.24
2612     Ore whom, his very madnes like some ore4.1.25
2613     Among a minerall of mettals base,4.1.26
2614     Showes it selfe pure, {a} <He> weepes for what is done.4.1.27
2615      King. O Gertrard, come away,4.1.28
2616     {K1v} The sunne no sooner shall the mountaines touch,4.1.29
2617     But we will ship him hence, and this {vile} <vilde> deede4.1.30
2618     We must with all our Maiestie and skill {Enter Ros. & Guild.}4.1.31
2619-20      Both countenaunce and excuse. <Enter Ros.& Guild.> | Ho Guyldensterne, 
2621     Friends both, goe ioyne you with some further ayde,4.1.33
2622     Hamlet in madnes hath Polonius slaine,4.1.34
2623     And from his {mothers closet} <Mother Clossets> hath he dreg'd him,4.1.35
2624     Goe seeke him out, speake fayre, and bring the body4.1.36
2625     Into the Chappell; I pray you hast in this,                   <Exit Gent.>4.1.37
2626     Come Gertrard, wee'le call vp our wisest friends,4.1.38
2627     {And} <To> let them know both what we meane to doe4.1.39
2628     And whats vntimely doone,4.1.41
2628+1 {Whose whisper ore the worlds dyameter,}4.1.42
2628+2 {As leuell as the Cannon to his blanck,}4.1.43
2628+3 {Transports his poysned shot, may misse our Name,}4.1.44
2628+4 {And hit the woundlesse ayre,} ô come away, 
2629     My soule is full of discord and dismay. Exeunt.4.1.45
2630                  Enter Hamlet {, Rosencraus, and others}...
2631     < Ham. Safely stowed.>4.2.1
2632     < Gentlemen within. Hamlet, Lord Hamlet.>4.2.2
2633      Ham. {Safely stowd, but soft,} what noyse, who calls on Hamlet?4.2.4
2634     O heere they come.  <Enter Ros. and Guildensterne.>4.2.4
2635      Ros. What haue you doone my Lord with the dead body?4.2.5
2636      Ham. {Compound} <Compounded> it with dust whereto tis kin.4.2.6
2637      Ros. Tell vs where tis that we may take it thence,4.2.7
2638      And beare it to the Chappell.4.2.8
2639      Ham. Doe not beleeue it.4.2.9
2640      Ros. Beleeue what.4.2.10
2641-2  Ham. That I can keepe your counsaile & not mine | owne, besides 
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- 
2650     sing you, and spunge you shall be dry againe.4.2.21
2651      Ros. I vnderstand you not my Lord.4.2.22
2652-3  Ham. I am glad of it, a knauish speech sleepes in a | foolish eare. 
2654-5  Ros. My Lord, you must tell vs where the body is, | and goe with vs 
2655     to the King.4.2.26
2656     {K2}  Ham. The body is with the King, but the King is not | with the4.2.28
2657     body. The King is a thing{.} <---- >4.2.28
2658      Guyl. A thing my Lord.4.2.29
2659-60  Ham. Of nothing, bring me to him.<hide Fox, and all | after.> Exeunt. 
2661               Enter King, {and two or three.}..
2662       King. I haue sent to seeke him, and to find the body, 
2663     How dangerous is it that this man goes loose,4.3.2
2664     Yet must not we put the strong Law on him,4.3.3
2665     Hee's lou'd of the distracted multitude,4.3.4
2666     VVho like not in their iudgement, but theyr eyes,4.3.5
2667     And where tis so, th'offenders scourge is wayed4.3.6
2668     But {neuer} <neerer> the offence: to beare all smooth and euen,4.3.7
2669     This suddaine sending him away must seeme4.3.8
2670     Deliberate pause, diseases desperat growne,4.3.9
2671     By desperat applyance are {relieu'd} <releeued,>4.3.10
2672     Or not at all. <Enter Rosincrane.>4.3.11
2672              {Enter Rosencraus and all the rest.}4.3.11
2673   {King.} How now, what hath befalne?4.3.11
2674      Ros. Where the dead body is bestowd my Lord4.3.12
2675                  VVe cannot get from him.4.3.13
2676      King. But where is hee?4.3.13
2677-8  Ros. Without my lord, guarded to know your | pleasure. 
2679      King. Bring him before vs.4.3.15
2680      Ros. {How,} <Hoa, Guildensterne?> bring in {the} <my> Lord. {They enter.}4.3.15
2681     <Enter Hamlet and Guildensterne.>..
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- 
2689-90 ble {seruice, two} <service to> dishes | but to one table, that's the end. 
2690+1  {King. Alas, alas.}4.3.26
2690+2  {Ham. A man may fish with the worme that hath eate of a King, &}4.3.28
2690+3 {eate of the fish that hath fedde of that worme.}4.3.28
2691      King. King. VVhat doost thou meane by this?4.3.29
2692     <pp3>  Ham. Nothing but to shew you how a King may goe | a progresse4.3.
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
2699      King. Goe seeke him there.4.3.38
2700      Ham. {A} <He> will stay till {you} <ye> come.4.3.39
2701      King. Hamlet this deede <of thine,> for thine especiall safety4.3.40
2702     Which we do tender, as we deerely grieue4.3.41
2703     For that which thou hast done, must send thee hence.4.3.42
2704     <With fierie Quicknesse.> Therefore prepare thy selfe,4.3.43
2705     The Barck is ready, and the wind at helpe,4.3.44
2706     Th'associats tend, and euery thing {is} <at> bent4.3.45
2707     For England.4.3.46
2708      Ham. For England{.} <?> 4.3.46
2709      King. I Hamlet.4.3.46
2710      Ham. Good. 4.3.46
2711      King. So is it if thou knew'st our purposes.4.3.47
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
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
2723     And England, if my loue thou hold'st at ought,4.3.58
2724     As my great power thereof may giue thee sence,4.3.59
2725     Since yet thy Cicatrice lookes raw and red,4.3.60
2726     After the Danish sword, and thy free awe4.3.61
2727     Payes homage to vs, thou mayst not coldly set4.3.62
2728     Our soueraigne processe, which imports at full4.3.63
2729     By Letters {congruing} <coniuring> to that effect4.3.64
2730     The present death of Hamlet, doe it England,4.3.65
2731     For like the Hectique in my blood he rages,4.3.66
2732     {K3} And thou must cure me; till I know tis done,4.3.67
2733     How ere my haps, my ioyes {will nere begin} <were ne're begun>. Exit.4.3.68
2734              Enter Fortinbrasse with {his } <an>Army {ouer the stage}...
2735      Fortin. Goe Captaine, from me greet the Danish King,4.4.1
2736     Tell him, that by his lycence Fortinbrasse4.4.2
2737     {Craues} <Claimes> the conueyance of a promisd march4.4.3
2738     Ouer his kingdome, you know the randeuous,4.4.4
2739     If that his Maiestie would ought with vs,4.4.5
2740     We shall expresse our dutie in his eye,4.4.6
2741     And let him know so.4.4.7
2742      Cap. I will doo't my Lord.4.4.7
2743      For. Goe {softly} <safely> on. <Exit.>4.4.8
2743+1             {Enter Hamlet, Rosencraus, &c.}4.4.9
2743+2  {Ham. Good sir whose powers are these?}4.4.10
2743+3  {Cap. They are of Norway sir.}4.4.11
2743+4  {Ham. How purposd sir I pray you?}4.4.12
2743+5  {Cap. Against some part of Poland.}4.4.13
2743+6  {Ham. Who commaunds them sir?}4.4.14
2743+7  {Cap. The Nephew to old Norway, Fortenbrasse.}4.4.15
2743+8  {Ham. Goes it against the maine of Poland sir,}4.4.16
2743+9 {Or for some frontire?}4.4.17
2743+10  {Cap. Truly to speake, and with no addition,}4.4.18
2743+11 {We goe to gaine a little patch of ground}4.4.19
2743+12 {That hath in it no profit but the name}4.4.20
2743+13 {To pay fiue duckets, fiue I would not farme it;}4.4.21
2743+14 {Nor will it yeeld to Norway or the Pole}4.4.22
2743+15 {A rancker rate, should it be sold in fee.}4.4.23
2743+16  {Ham. Why then the Pollacke neuer will defend it.}4.4.24
2743+17  {Cap. Yes, it is already garisond.}4.4.25
2743+18  {Ham. Two thousand soules, & twenty thousand duckets}4.4.26
2743+19 {VVill not debate the question of this straw,}4.4.27
2743+20 {This is th'Imposthume of much wealth and peace,}4.4.28
2743+21 {That inward breakes, and showes no cause without}4.4.29
2743+22 {Why the man dies. I humbly thanke you sir.}4.4.30
2743+23  {Cap. God buy you sir.}4.4.30
2743+24  {Ros. Wil't please you goe my Lord?}4.4.31
2743+25  {Ham. Ile be with you straight, goe a little before.}4.4.32
2743+26 {How all occasions doe informe against me,}4.4.33
2743+27 {K3v} {And spur my dull reuenge. What is a man}4.4.34
2743+28 {If his chiefe good and market of his time}4.4.35
2743+29 {Be but to sleepe and feede, a beast, no more:}4.4.36
2743+30 {Sure he that made vs with such large discourse}4.4.37
2743+31 {Looking before and after, gaue vs not}4.4.38
2743+32 {That capabilitie and god-like reason}4.4.39
2743+33 {To fust in vs vnvsd, now whether it be}4.4.40
2743+34 {Bestiall obliuion, or some crauen scruple}4.4.41
2743+35 {Of thinking too precisely on th'euent,}4.4.42
2743+36 {A thought which quarterd hath but one part wisedom,}4.4.43
2743+37 {And euer three parts coward, I doe not know}4.4.44
2743+38 {Why yet I liue to say this thing's to doe,}4.4.45
2743+39 {Sith I haue cause, and will, and strength, and meanes}4.4.46
2743+40 {To doo't; examples grosse as earth exhort me,}4.4.47
2743+41 {Witnes this Army of such masse and charge,}4.4.48
2743+42 {Led by a delicate and tender Prince,}4.4.49
2743+43 {Whose spirit with diuine ambition puft,}4.4.50
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
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
2743+58 {Which is not tombe enough and continent}4.4.65
2743+59 {To hide the slaine, ô from this time forth,}4.4.66
2743+60 {My thoughts be bloody, or be nothing worth.  Exit.} 
2744      Enter {Horatio, Gertrard, and a Gentleman} <Queene and Horatio>...
2745      Quee. I will not speake with her.4.5.1
2746      {Gent.} <Hor.> Shee is importunat,4.5.3
2746-7 Indeede distract, her moode | will needes be pittied. 
2748     {K4}  Quee. What would she haue?4.5.3
2749      {Gent.} <Hor.> She speakes much of her father, sayes she heares4.5.4
2750     There's tricks i'th world, and hems, and beates her hart,4.5.5
2751     Spurnes enuiously at strawes, speakes things in doubt4.5.6
2752     That carry but halfe sence, her speech is nothing,4.5.7
2753     Yet the vnshaped vse of it doth moue4.5.8
2754     The hearers to collection, they {yawne} <ayme> at it,4.5.9
2755     And botch the words vp fit to theyr owne thoughts,4.5.10
2756     Which as her wincks, and nods, and gestures yeeld them,4.5.11
2757     Indeede would make one thinke there {might} <would> be thought4.5.12
2758     Though nothing sure, yet much vnhappily.4.5.13
2759-60  {Hora.} <Qu.> Twere good she were spoken with, | for shee may strew 
2760-1 Dangerous coniectures | in ill breeding mindes, 
2761     Let her come in.4.5.16
2766                  {Enter Ophelia.}..
2762      {Quee.} `To my sicke soule, as sinnes true nature is,4.5.17
2763     `Each toy seemes prologue to some great amisse,4.5.18
2764     `So full of artlesse iealousie is guilt,4.5.19
2765     `It spills it selfe, in fearing to be spylt.4.5.20
2766     <Enter Ophelia distracted.>..
2767      Oph. Where is the beautious Maiestie of Denmarke?4.5.21
2768      Quee. How now Ophelia? {shee sings.}4.5.22
2769      Oph. How should I your true loue know from another one,4.5.24
2770     By his cockle hat and staffe, and his Sendall shoone.4.5.26
2771      Quee. Alas sweet Lady, what imports this song?4.5.27
2772      Oph. Say you, nay pray you marke,4.5.28
2773     He is dead & gone Lady, he is dead and gone,                   {Song.}4.5.30
2774     At his head a grasgreene turph, at his heeles a stone.4.5.32
2774+1 {O ho.}4.5.33
2775                  <Enter King.>..
2776      Quee. Nay but Ophelia.4.5.34
2777-8  Oph. Pray you marke. | White his shrowd as the mountaine snow. 
2775              {Enter King.}..
2779   Quee. Alas looke heere my Lord.4.5.37
2780      Oph. Larded {all} with sweet flowers,4.5.38
2781     Which beweept to the {ground} <graue> did not go {Song.}4.5.39
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 
2789     what it meanes, say you this.4.5.47
2790     To morrow is S. Valentines day,                   {Song.}4.5.49
2790     All in the morning betime,4.5.49
2791     And I a mayde at your window4.5.51
2791     To be your Valentine.4.5.51
2792     Then vp he rose, and dond his close, and dupt the chamber doore,4.5.53
2793     Let in the maide, that out a maide, neuer departed more.4.5.55
2794      King. Pretty Ophelia.4.5.56
2795      Oph. Indeede <la?> without an oath Ile make an end on't,4.5.57
2796     By gis and by Saint Charitie,4.5.58
2797      alack and fie for shame,4.5.59
2798     Young men will doo't if they come too't,4.5.60
2799      by Cock they are too blame.4.5.61
2800-1 Quoth she, Before you tumbled me, | you promisd me to wed, 
2802     {(He answers.)}              So would I a done by yonder sunne4.5.65
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. 
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
2817     Next, your sonne gone, and he most violent Author4.5.80
2818     Of his owne iust remoue, the people muddied4.5.81
2819     Thick and vnwholsome in <their> thoughts, and whispers4.5.82
2820     For good Polonius death: and we haue done but greenly4.5.83
2821     In hugger mugger to inter him: poore Ophelia4.5.84
2822     Deuided from herselfe, and her faire iudgement,4.5.85
2823     VVithout the which we are pictures, or meere beasts,4.5.
2824     Last, and as much contayning as all these,4.5.87
2825     Her brother is in secret come from Fraunce,4.5.88
2826     {Feeds} <Keepes> on {this} <his> wonder, keepes himselfe in clowdes,4.5.89
2827     {L1} And wants not buzzers to infect his eare4.5.90
2828     With pestilent speeches of his fathers death,4.5.91
2829     {Wherein} <Where in> necessity of matter beggerd,4.5.92
2830     Will nothing stick our {person} <persons> to arraigne4.5.93
2831     In eare and eare: ô my deare Gertrard, this4.5.94
2832     Like to a murdring peece in many places4.5.95
2833     Giues me superfluous death. A noise within.4.5.96
2834               Enter a Messenger...
2835      <Qu. Alacke, what noyse is this?>4.5.96
2836-7     King. {Attend,} where {is} <are> my Swissers, | let them guard the doore, 
2837     What is the matter?4.5.99
2838      Messen. Saue your selfe my Lord.4.5.99
2839     The Ocean ouer-peering of his list4.5.100
2840     Eates not the flats with more impitious hast4.5.101
2841     Then young Laertes in a riotous head4.5.102
2842     Ore-beares your Officers: the rabble call him Lord,4.5.103
2843     And as the world were now but to beginne,4.5.104
2844     Antiquity forgot, custome not knowne,4.5.105
2845     The ratifiers and props of euery word,4.5.106
2846     {The} <They> cry choose we{,} <?> Laertes shall be King,4.5.107
2847     Caps, hands, and tongues applau'd it to the clouds,4.5.108
2848     Laertes shall be King, Laertes King.4.5.109
2849       Quee. How cheerefully on the false traile they cry. {A noise within.} 
2850         O this is counter you false Danish dogges. 
2851              <Noise within.> Enter Laertes {with others}...
2852       King. The doores are broke. 
2853      Laer. Where is {this King? sirs} <the King, sirs?> stand you all without.4.5.113
2854      All. No lets come in.4.5.114
2855      Laer. I pray you giue me leaue.4.5.114
2856      All. VVe will, we will.4.5.115
2857-8  Laer. I thanke you, keepe the doore, | ô thou {vile} <vilde> King, 
2858     Giue me my father.4.5.117
2859      Quee. Calmely good Laertes.4.5.117
2860-1  Laer. That drop of blood {thats calme} <that calmes> | proclames me Bastard, 
2862     Cries cuckold to my father, brands the Harlot4.5.119
2863     Euen heere betweene the chast vnsmirched browe4.5.120
2864     Of my true mother.4.5.121
2865      King. VVhat is the cause Laertes4.5.121
2866     That thy rebellion lookes so gyant like?4.5.122
2867     {L1v} Let him goe Gertrard, doe not feare our person,4.5.123
2868     There's such diuinitie doth hedge a King,4.5.124
2869     That treason can but peepe to what it would,4.5.125
2870     Act's little of his will, tell me Laertes4.5.126
2871     Why thou art thus incenst, let him goe Gertrard.4.5.127
2872     Speake man.4.5.128
2873      Laer. {Where is} <Where's> my father?4.5.129
2874      King. Dead.4.5.129
2875      Quee. But not by him.4.5.129
2876      King. Let him demaund his fill.4.5.130
2877      Laer. How came he dead, I'le not be iugled with,4.5.131
2878     To hell allegiance, vowes to the blackest deuill,4.5.132
2879     Conscience and grace, to the profoundest pit4.5.133
2880     I dare damnation, to this poynt I stand,4.5.134
2881     That both the worlds I giue to negligence,4.5.135
2882     Let come what comes, onely I'le be reueng'd4.5.136
2883     Most throughly for my father.4.5.137
2884      King. Who shall stay you?4.5.137
2885      Laer. My will, not all the {worlds:} <world,>4.5.138
2886     And for my meanes I'le husband them so well,4.5.139
2887     They shall goe farre with little.4.5.140
2888-9  King. Good Laertes, | if you desire to know the certainty 
2890     Of your deere {Father, i'st} <Fathers death, if> writ in your reuenge,4.5.142
2891     That soopstake, you will draw both friend and foe4.5.143
2892     Winner and looser.4.5.144
2893      Laer. None but his enemies,4.5.145
2894      King. Will you know them then?4.5.145
2895      Laer. To his good friends thus wide I'le ope my armes,4.5.146
2896     And like the kind life-rendring {Pelican} <Politician>,4.5.147
2897     Repast them with my blood.4.5.148
2898      King. Why now you speake4.5.148
2899     Like a good child, and a true Gentleman.4.5.149
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
2907     {12} O heate, dry vp my braines, teares seauen times salt4.5.155
2908     Burne out the sence and vertue of mine eye,4.5.156
2909     By heauen thy madnes shall be payd {with} <by> weight4.5.157
2910     {Tell} <Till> our scale {turne} <turnes> the beame. O Rose of May,4.5.158
2911     Deere mayd, kind sister, sweet Ophelia,4.5.159
2912     O heauens, ist possible a young maids wits4.5.160
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
2920     Fare you well my Doue.4.5.168
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- 
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
2938     For bonny sweet Robin is all my ioy.4.5.187
2939      Laer. Thought and {afflictions} <Affliction>, passion, hell it selfe4.5.188
2940     She turnes to fauour and to prettines.4.5.189
2941      Oph. And wil {a} <he> not come againe, {Song.}4.5.190
2942     And wil {a} <he> not come againe,4.5.191
2943     No, no, he is dead, goe to thy death bed,4.5.193
2944     He neuer will come againe.4.5.194
2945     His beard {was} as white as snow,4.5.195
2946     <All> Flaxen was his pole,4.5.196
2947     He is gone, he is gone, and we cast away mone,4.5.198
2948-9 {God a mercy} <Gramercy> on his soule, | and of all {Christians} <Christian> soules, <I pray God.> 
2950     God buy {you} <ye>. <Exeunt Ophelia>4.5.201
2951      Laer. Doe you <see> this {ô God.} <you Gods?>4.5.202
2952      King. Laertes, I must {commune} <common> with your griefe,4.5.203
2953     Or you deny me right, goe but apart,4.5.204
2954     {12v} Make choice of whom your wisest friends you will,4.5.
2955     And they shall heare and iudge twixt you and me,4.5.206
2956     If by direct, or by colaturall hand4.5.207
2957     They find vs toucht, we will our kingdome giue,4.5.208
2958     Our crowne, our life, and all that we call ours4.5.209
2959     To you in satisfaction; but if not,4.5.210
2960     Be you content to lend your patience to vs,4.5.211
2961     And we shall ioyntly labour with your soule4.5.212
2962     To giue it due content.4.5.213
2963      Laer. Let this be so.4.5.213
2964     His meanes of death, his obscure {funerall,} <buriall;>4.5.214
2965     No {trophe sword} <Trophee, Sword>, nor hatchment ore his bones,4.5.215
2966     No noble {right} <rite>, nor formall ostentation,4.5.216
2967     Cry to be heard as twere from heauen to earth,4.5.217
2968     That I must {call't} <call> in question.4.5.218
2969      King. So you shall,4.5.218
2970     And where th'offence is, let the great axe fall.4.5.219
2971     I pray you goe with me. Exeunt.4.5.220
2972              Enter Horatio {and others} <with an Attendant>...
2973      Hora. VVhat are they that would speake with me? 
2974      {Gent. Sea-faring men} <Ser. Saylors> sir, they say they haue Letters for you.4.6.3
2975      Hor. Let them come in.4.6.4
2976     I doe not know from what part of the world4.6.5
2977     I should be greeted. If not from Lord Hamlet. {Enter Saylers.}4.6.6
2978                  <Enter Saylor.>..
2979      Say. God blesse you sir.4.6.7
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 
2988-9 were two daies old at Sea, a Pyrat of very | warlike appointment gaue 
2989-90 vs chase, finding our selues too | slow of saile, wee put on a compelled 
2990-1 valour, {and} in the grapple I | boorded them, on the instant they got 
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 
2999-3000 course for England, of them | I haue much to tell thee, farewell. 
3001-2                           {So} <He> that thou knowest thine | Hamlet. 
3003      { Hor.} Come I will <giue> you way for these your letters,4.6.32
3004     And doo't the speedier that you may direct me4.6.33
3005     To him from whom you brought them. {Exeunt} <Exit>.4.6.34
3006              Enter King and Laertes...
3007      King. Now must your conscience my acquittance seale,4.7.1
3008     And you must put me in your hart for friend,4.7.2
3009     Sith you haue heard and with a knowing eare,4.7.3
3010     That he which hath your noble father slaine4.7.4
3011     Pursued my life.4.7.5
3012      Laer. It well appeares: but tell mee4.7.5
3013     Why you {proceede} <proceeded> not against these feates4.7.6
3014     So {criminall} <crimefull,> and so capitall in nature,4.7.7
3015     As by your safetie, {greatnes,} wisdome, all things els4.7.8
3016     You mainely were stirr'd vp.4.7.9
3017      King. O for two speciall reasons4.7.9
3018     Which may to you perhaps seeme much vnsinnow'd,4.7.10
3019     {But} <And> yet to mee {tha'r} <they are> strong, the Queene his mother4.7.11
3020     Liues almost by his lookes, and for my selfe,4.7.12
3021     My vertue or my plague, be it eyther which,4.7.13
3022     {She is} <She's> so {concliue} <coniunctiue> to my life and soule,4.7.14
3023     That as the starre mooues not but in his sphere4.7.15
3024     I could not but by her, the other motiue,4.7.16
3025     Why to a publique count I might not goe,4.7.17
3026     Is the great loue the generall gender beare him,4.7.18
3027     Who dipping all his faults in theyr affection,4.7.19
3028     {Worke} <Would> like the spring that turneth wood to stone,4.7.20
3029     Conuert his Giues to graces, so that my arrowes4.7.21
3030     Too slightly tymberd for so {loued Arm'd} <loud a Winde>,4.7.22
3031     Would haue reuerted to my bowe againe,4.7.23
3032     {But} <And> not where I {haue aym'd} <had arm'd> them.4.7.24
3033      Laer. And so haue I a noble father lost,4.7.25
3034     A sister driuen into {desprat} <desperate> termes,4.7.26
3035     {Whose worth,} <Who was> if prayses may goe backe againe4.7.27
3036     {L3v} Stood challenger on mount of all the age4.7.28
3037     For her perfections, but my reuenge will come.4.7.29
3038-9  King. Breake not your sleepes for that, | you must not thinke 
3040     That we are made of stuffe so flat and dull,4.7.31
3041     That we can let our beard be shooke with danger,4.7.32
3042     And thinke it pastime, you shortly shall heare more,4.7.33
3043     I loued your father, and we loue our selfe,4.7.34
3044     And that I hope will teach you to imagine{.} <------ >4.7.35
3045              Enter a Messenger {with Letters}...
3046     <How now? What Newes?>4.7.36
3047-8  {Messen. These} <Mes. Letters my Lord from Hamlet. This> to your | Maiestie, this to the Queene. 
3049      King. From Hamlet, who brought them?4.7.38
3050      Mess. Saylers my Lord they say, I saw them not,4.7.39
3051     They were giuen me by Claudio, he receiued them4.7.40
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
3059      {King.} What should this meane, are all the rest come backe,4.7.49
3060     Or is it some abuse, {and} <Or> no such thing?4.7.50
3061      Laer. Know you the hand?4.7.51
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
3068      King. If it be so Laertes,4.7.58
3068-9 As how should it be so, | how otherwise, 
3069     Will you be rul'd by me?4.7.59
3070      Laer. {I my Lord, so you will} <If so you'l> not ore-rule me to a peace.4.7.60
3071      King. To thine owne peace, if he be now returned4.7.61
3072     As {the King} <checking> at his voyage, and that he meanes4.7.62
3073     No more to vndertake it, I will worke him4.7.63
3074     To an exployt, now ripe in my deuise,4.7.64
3075     Vnder the which he shall not choose but fall:4.7.65
3076     {L4} And for his death no wind of blame shall breathe,4.7.66
3077     But euen his Mother shall vncharge the practise,4.7.67
3078     And call it accedent.4.7.68
3078+1  {Laer. My Lord I will be rul'd,}4.7.69
3078+2 {The rather if you could deuise it so}4.7.70
3078+3 {That I might be the organ.}4.7.70
3078+4  {King. It falls right,}4.7.71
3078+5 {You haue beene talkt of since your trauaile much,}4.7.72
3078+6 {And that in Hamlets hearing, for a qualitie}4.7.73
3078+7 {Wherein they say you shine, your summe of parts}4.7.74
3078+8 {Did not together plucke such enuie from him}4.7.75
3078+9 {As did that one, and that in my regard}4.7.76
3078+10 {Of the vnworthiest siedge.}4.7.76
3078+11  {Laer. What part is that my Lord?}4.7.77
3078+12  {King. A very ribaud in the cap of youth,}4.7.78
3078+13 {Yet needfull to, for youth no lesse becomes}4.7.79
3078+14 {The light and carelesse liuery that it weares}4.7.80
3078+15 {Then setled age, his sables, and his weedes} 
3078+16 {Importing health and grauenes; two months since} 
3078     <Some two Monthes hence>4.7.68
3079     Heere was a gentleman of Normandy,4.7.82
3080     {I haue} <I'ue> seene my selfe, and seru'd against the French, 30804.7.83
3081     And they {can} <ran> well on horsebacke, but this gallant4.7.84
3082     Had witch-craft in't, he grew {vnto} <into> his seate,4.7.
3083     And to such wondrous dooing brought his horse,4.7.86
3084     As had he beene incorp'st, and demy natur'd4.7.87
3085     With the braue beast, so farre he {topt me} <past my> thought,4.7.88
3086     That I in forgerie of shapes and tricks4.7.89
3087     Come short of what he did.4.7.90
3088      Laer. A Norman wast?4.7.90
3089      King. A Norman.4.7.91
3090      Laer. Vppon my life {Lamord} <Lamound>.4.7.92
3091      King. The very same.4.7.92
3092      Laer. I know him well, he is the brooch indeed4.7.93
3093     And Iem of all {the} <our> Nation.4.7.94
3094      King. He made confession of you,4.7.95
3095     And gaue you such a masterly report4.7.96
3096     For art and exercise in your defence,4.7.97
3097     And for your Rapier most {especiall} <especiallye>) ,4.7.98
3098     That he cride out t'would be a sight indeed4.7.99
3099     {L4v} If one could match you; {the Scrimures of their nation}4.7.100
3099+1 {He swore had neither motion, guard, nor eye,}4.7.101
3099+2 {If you opposd them;} sir this report of his 
3100     Did Hamlet so enuenom with his enuy,4.7.103
3101     That he could nothing doe but wish and beg4.7.104
3102     Your sodaine comming ore to play with {you.} <him;>4.7.105
3103     Now out of this.4.7.106
3104      Laer. {What} <Why> out of this my Lord?4.7.106
3105      King. Laertes was your father deare to you?4.7.107
3106     Or are you like the painting of a sorrowe,4.7.108
3107     A face without a hart?4.7.109
3108      Laer. Why aske you this?4.7.109
3109      King. Not that I thinke you did not loue your father,4.7.110
3110     But that I knowe, loue is begunne by time,4.7.111
3111     And that I see in passages of proofe,4.7.112
3112     Time qualifies the sparke and fire of it,4.7.113
3112+1 {There liues within the very flame of loue}4.7.114
3112+2 {A kind of weeke or snufe that will abate it,}4.7.115
3112+3 {And nothing is at a like goodnes still,}4.7.116
3112+4 {For goodnes growing to a plurisie,}4.7.117
3112+5 {Dies in his owne too much, that we would doe}4.7.118
3112+6 {We should doe when we would: for this would changes,}4.7.119
3112+7 {And hath abatements and delayes as many,}4.7.120
3112+8 {As there are tongues, are hands, are accedents,}4.7.121
3112+9 {And then this should is like a spend thirfts sigh,}4.7.122
3112+10 {That hurts by easing; but to the quick of th'vlcer,}4.7.123
3113     Hamlet comes back, what would you vndertake4.7.124
3114     To showe your selfe {indeede} your fathers sonne <indeed,>4.7.125
3115     More then in words?4.7.126
3116      Laer. To cut his thraot i'th Church.4.7.126
3117      King. No place indeede should murther sanctuarise,4.7.127
3118     Reuendge should haue no bounds: but good Laertes4.7.128
3119     Will you doe this, keepe close within your chamber,4.7.129
3120     Hamlet return'd, shall knowe you are come home,4.7.130
3121     Weele put on those shall praise your excellence,4.7.131
3122     And set a double varnish on the fame4.7.132
3123     The french man gaue you, bring you in fine together4.7.133
3124     And wager {ore} <on> your heads; he being remisse,4.7.134
3125     Most generous, and free from all contriuing,4.7.135
3126     {M1} Will not peruse the foyles, so that with ease,4.7.136
3127     Or with a little shuffling, you may choose4.7.137
3128     A sword {vnbated} <vnbaited>, and in a {pace} <passe> of practise4.7.138
3129     Requite him for your Father.4.7.139
3130      Laer. I will doo't,4.7.139
3131     And for <that> purpose, Ile annoynt my sword.4.7.140
3132     I bought an vnction of a Mountibanck4.7.141
3133     So mortall, {that} <I> but {dippe} <dipt> a knife in it,4.7.142
3134     Where it drawes blood, no Cataplasme so rare,4.7.143
3135     Collected from all simples that haue vertue4.7.144
3136     Vnder the Moone, can saue the thing from death4.7.145
3137     That is but scratcht withall, Ile tutch my point4.7.146
3138-9 With this contagion, that if I gall him slightly, | it may be death. 
3140      King. Lets further thinke of this.4.7.148
3141     Wey what conuenience both of time and meanes4.7.149
3142     May fit vs to our shape <,> if this should fayle,4.7.150
3143     And that our drift looke through our bad performance,4.7.151
3144     Twere better not assayd, therefore this proiect,4.7.152
3145     Should haue a back or second that might hold4.7.153
3146     If this {did} <should> blast in proofe; soft let me see,4.7.154
3147     Wee'le make a solemne wager on your {cunnings} <commings>,4.7.155
3148     I {hate,} <ha't:> when in your motion you are hote and dry,4.7.157
3149     As make your bouts more violent to {that} <the> end,4.7.158
3150     And that he calls for drinke, Ile haue {prefard} <prepar'd> him4.7.159
3151     A Challice for the nonce, whereon but sipping,4.7.160
3152     If he by chaunce escape your venom'd stuck,4.7.161
3153     Our purpose may hold there; {but stay, what noyse?} <how sweet Queene.>4.7.162
3154              Enter Queene...
3155      Quee. One woe doth tread vpon anothers heele,4.7.63
3156     So fast {they} <they'l> follow; your Sisters drownd Laertes.4.7.64
3157      Laer. Drown'd, ô where?4.7.65
3158      Quee. There is a Willow growes {ascaunt the} <aslant a> Brooke4.7.66
3159     That showes his {horry} <hore> leaues in the glassy streame,4.7.67
3160     {Therewith} <There with> fantastique garlands did she {make} <come,>4.7.68
3161     Of Crowflowers, Nettles, Daises, and long Purples4.7.69
3162     That liberall Shepheards giue a grosser name,4.7.70
3163     But our {cull-cold} <cold> maydes doe dead mens fingers call them.4.7.71
3164     There on the pendant boughes her {cronet} <Coronet> weedes4.7.72
3165     {M1v} Clambring to hang, an enuious sliuer broke,4.7.73
3166     When downe {her} <the> weedy trophies and her selfe4.7.74
3167     Fell in the weeping Brooke, her clothes spred wide,4.7.75
3168     And Marmaide like awhile they bore her vp,4.7.76
3169     Which time she chaunted snatches of old {laudes} <tunes>,4.7.77
3170     As one incapable of her owne distresse,4.7.78
3171     Or like a creature natiue and indewed4.7.79
3172     Vnto that elament, but long it could not be 4.7.80
3173     Till that her garments heauy with {theyr} <her> drinke,4.7.81
3174     Puld the poore wretch from her melodious {lay} <buy,> 4.7.82
3175     To muddy death.4.7.83
3176      Laer. Alas, then {she is} <is she> drownd.4.7.83
3177      Quee. Drownd, drownd.4.7.84
3178      Laer. Too much of water hast thou poore Ophelia,4.7.85
3179     And therefore I forbid my teares; but yet4.7.86
3180     It is our tricke, nature her custome holds,4.7.87
3181     Let shame say what it will, when these are gone,4.7.88
3182     The woman will be out. Adiew my Lord,4.7.89
3183     I haue a speech {a} <of> fire that faine would blase,4.7.90
3184     But that this folly {drownes} <doubts> it. Exit.4.7.91
3185      King. Let's follow Gertrard,4.7.91
3186     How much I had to doe to calme his rage,4.7.92
3187     Now feare I this will giue it start againe,4.7.93
3188     Therefore lets follow. Exeunt.4.7.94
3189                 Enter two Clownes...
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
3198-9  Clowne. It must be {so offended} <Se offendendo>, it cannot be els, for | heere lyes the 
3199-3200 poynt, if I drowne my selfe wittingly, it {argues} <ar-| gues> an act, & an act hath 
3200-1 three branches, it is {to} <an>| act, to doe, <and> to performe, {or all;} <argall> she drownd her 
3201-2 selfe | wittingly. 
3203      Other. Nay, but heare you good man deluer.5.1.14
3204-5  Clowne. Giue mee leaue, here lyes the water, good, | here stands the 
3204-6 man, good, if the man goe to this <wa-> | <ter and> {water &} drowne himselfe, it is will {M2} 
3206-7 he, nill he, he goes, | marke you that{,}<?> but if the water come to him, & 
3207-9 drowne | him, he drownes not himselfe, argall, he that is not | guilty of 
3209     his owne death, shortens not his owne life.5.1.20
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- 
3218-9 ent gentlemen | but {Gardners} <Gardiners>, Ditchers, and Grauemakers, they hold 
3219-20 vp | Adams profession. 
3221      Other. Was he a gentleman?5.1.32
3222      Clowne. {A} <He> was the first that euer bore Armes.5.1.33
3223      <Other. Why he had none.>5.1.34
3224      <Clo. What, ar't a Heathen? how dost thou vnder->5.1.36
3225     <stand the Scripture? the Scripture sayes Adam dig'd;>5.1.37
3226     <could hee digge without Armes? > 5.1.38
3226-7 Ile put another {question} <que-| stion> to thee, if thou answerest me not to the pur- 
3227-8 pose, {confesse} <con-| fesse> thy selfe. 
3229      Other. Goe to.5.1.40
3230-1  Clow. What is he that builds stronger then eyther the | Mason, the 
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 
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 
3247-8 not mend his pace with beating, and when | you are askt this question 
3248-9 next, say a graue-maker, the | houses <that> hee makes lasts till Doomesday. 
3249-50 Goe get thee {in, and} | <to Yaughan,> fetch mee a {soope} <stoupe> of liquer. 
3251                  <Sings.>..
3252     In youth when I did loue did loue,                   {Song.}5.1.61
3253      Me thought it was very sweet5.1.62
3254     To contract ô the time for a my behoue,5.1.63
3255      O me thought there {a} was nothing {a} meet.5.1.64
3256     {M2v}              {Enter Hamlet and Horatio.}5.1.65
3256-7  Ham. Has this fellowe no feeling of his busines{?} <,> <that> {a} | <he> sings {in} <at> graue- 
3257     making.5.1.66
3258-9  Hora. Custome hath made it in him a propertie of {easines} <ea-| sinesse>. 
3260-1  Ham. Tis een so, the hand of little imploiment hath | the {dintier} <daintier> sence 
3262                  <Clowne sings.>..
3263      {Clow.} But age with his stealing steppes {Song.}5.1.71
3264                 hath {clawed} <caught> me in his clutch,5.1.72
3265      And hath shipped me {into} <intill> the land,5.1.73
3266                 as if I had neuer been such.5.1.74
3267-8  Ham. That skull had a tongue in it, and could sing | once, how the 
3268-9 knaue iowles it to the ground, as if {twere} <it | were> Caines iawbone, that did the 
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
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} 
3280-1 <if> we had the tricke to | see't, did these bones cost no more the breeding, 
3281-3 but | to play at loggits with {them} <’em?>: mine ake to thinke | on't. 
3284                  <Clowne sings.>..
3284      {Clow.} A pickax and a spade a spade,                   {Song.}..
3286                 for and a shrowding sheet,5.1.95
3287                  O a pit of Clay for to be made5.1.96
3288                 for such a guest is meet.5.1.97
3289-90  Ham. There's another, why {may} <might> not that be the | skull of a Lawyer, 
3290-1 where be his {quiddities} <Quiddits> now, his {quillites,} | <Quillets?> his cases, his tenurs, and his 
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 
3300-1 and breadth of a payre of | Indentures? The very conueyances of his 
3301-3 Lands will {scarcely} | <hardly> lye in this box, & must th'inheritor himselfe | haue 
3303     no more, ha.5.1.112
3304      Hora. Not a iot more my Lord.5.1.113
3305      Ham. Is not Parchment made of sheepe-skinnes?5.1.114
3306     {M3}  Hora. I my Lord, and of {Calues-skinnes} <Calue-skinnes> to.5.1.115
3307-8  Ham. They are Sheepe and Calues {which} <that> seeke out {assurance} <assu-| rance> in 
3308-9 that, I wil speak to this fellow. Whose graue's | this {sirra} <Sir>? 
3310-1  Clow. Mine sir, {or} | <O> a pit of clay for to be made. 
3312                      <for such a Guest is meete.> 
3313      Ham. I thinke it be thine indeede, for thou lyest in't.5.1.122
3314-5  Clow. You lie out ont sir, and therefore {tis} < it is> not yours; | for my part I 
3315     doe not lie in't, <and> yet it is mine.5.1.124
3316-7  Ham. Thou doost lie in't to be in't & say {it is} <'tis> thine, | tis for the dead, 
3317-8 not for the quicke, therefore thou | lyest. 
3319-20  Clow. Tis a quicke lye sir, twill away againe from me | to you. 
3321      Ham. What man doost thou digge it for?5.1.130
3322      Clow. For no man sir.5.1.131
3323      Ham. What woman then?5.1.132
3324      Clow. For none neither.5.1.133
3325      Ham. Who is to be buried in't?5.1.134
3326-7  Clow. One that was a woman sir, but rest her soule | shee's dead. 
3328-9  Ham. How absolute the knaue is, we must speake | by the card, or 
3329-30 equiuocation will vndoo vs. By the | Lord Horatio, {this} <these> three yeeres I 
3330-1 haue {tooke} <taken> note of it, | the age is growne so picked, that the toe of the 
3331-3 pesant | coms so neere the {heele} <heeles> of {the} <our> Courtier he galls his | kybe. How 
3333     long hast thou been <a> Graue-maker?5.1.142
3334-5  Clow. Of <all> the dayes i'th yere I came too't that day | that our last king 
3335     Hamlet {ouercame} <o'recame> Fortenbrasse.5.1.144
3336      Ham. How long is that since?5.1.145
3337-8  Clow. Cannot you tell that? euery foole can tell that, | it was {that} <the> 
3338-9 very day that young Hamlet was borne: hee | that {is} <was> mad and sent into 
3339     England.5.1.148
3340      Ham. I marry, why was he sent into England?5.1.149
3341-2  Clow. Why because {a} <he> was mad: {a} <hee> shall recouer his | wits there, or if 
3342     {a} <he> doo not, {tis} <it's> no great matter there.5.1.152
3343      Ham. Why?5.1.
3344-5  Clow. Twill not be seene in him {there}, there the men are as | mad 
3346      Ham. How came he mad? (as hee.5.1.156
3347      Clow. Very strangely they say.5.1.157
3348      Ham. How strangely?5.1.158
3349      Clow. Fayth eene with loosing his wits.5.1.159
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. 
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 
3360-1 out water a great while; & your water | is a sore decayer of your whor- 
3361-2 son dead body, heer's a scull {now hath lyen you} | <now: this Scul, has laine> i'th earth {23.} <three & twenty> yeeres. 
3363      Ham. Whose was it?5.1.175
3364-5  Clow. A whorson mad fellowes it was, | whose do you think it was? 
3366      Ham. Nay I know not.5.1.178
3367-8  Clow. A {pestilence} <pestlence> on him for a madde rogue, a pourd a | flagon of 
3368-9 Renish on my head once; this same skull | sir, <this same Scull sir,> was {sir} Yoricks skull, the 
3369     Kings Iester.5.1.181
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- 
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 
3380-2 to my Ladies {table} | <Chamber>, & tell her, let her paint an inch thicke, to this | fa- 
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
3390-1  Ham. To what base vses wee may returne Horatio? | Why may not 
3391-2 imagination trace the noble dust of {Alexander} <A-| lexander>, till {a} <he> find it stopping 
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
3400     {Imperious} <Imperiall> Cæsar dead, and turn'd to Clay,5.1.213
3401     Might stoppe a hole, to keepe the wind away.5.1.214
3402     O that that earth which kept the world in awe,5.1.215
3403     Should patch a wall t'expell the {waters} <winters> flaw.5.1.216
3404     But soft, but soft {awhile,} <aside;> here comes the King, {Enter K. Q.}5.1.217
3405     <Enter King, Queene, Laertes, and a Coffin,>5..
3406         <with Lords attendant.> 
3407     The Queene, the Courtiers, who is {this} <that> they follow? {Laertes and}5.1.218
3408     And with such maimed rites? this doth betoken,                   {the corse.}5.1.219
3409     The corse they follow, did with {desprat} <disperate> hand5.1.220
3410     Foredoo it owne life, twas {of} some estate,5.1.221
3411     Couch we a while and marke.5.1.222
3412      Laer. What Ceremonie els?5.1.223
3413      Ham. That is Laertes a very noble youth, marke.5.1.224
3414      Laer. What Ceremonie els?5.1.225
3415      {Doct.} <Priest.> Her obsequies haue been as farre inlarg'd5.1.262
3416     As we haue {warrantie} <warrantis>, her death was doubtfull,5.1.227
3417     And but that great commaund ore-swayes the order,5.1.228
3418     She should in ground vnsanctified {been} <haue> lodg'd5.1.229
3419     Till the last trumpet: for charitable {prayers} <praier>,5.1.230
3420     <Shardes,> Flints and peebles should be throwne on her:5.1.231
3421     Yet heere she is allow'd her virgin {Crants} <Rites>,5.1.232
3422     Her mayden strewments, and the bringing home5.1.233
3423     Of bell and buriall.5.1.234
3424      Laer. Must there no more be doone?5.1.235
3425      {Doct.} <Priest.> No more be doone.5.1.235
3426     We should prophane the seruice of the dead,5.1.236
3427     To sing {a} <sage> Requiem and such rest to her5.1.237
3428     As to peace-parted soules.5.1.238
3429      Laer. Lay her i'th earth,5.1.238
3430     And from her faire and vnpolluted flesh5.1.239
3431     May Violets spring: I tell thee churlish Priest,5.1.240
3432     A ministring Angell shall my sister be5.1.241
3433     When thou lyest howling.5.1.242
3434      Ham. What, the faire Ophelia.5.1.242
3435      Quee. Sweets to the sweet, farewell,5.1.243
3436     I hop't thou should'st haue been my Hamlets wife,5.1.244
3437     I thought thy bride-bed to haue deckt sweet maide,5.1.245
3438     And not {haue} <t'haue> strew'd thy graue.5.1.246
3439      Laer. O {treble woe} <terrible woer,>5.1.246
3440     {M4v} Fall tenne times {double} <trebble,> on that cursed head,5.1.247
3441     Whose wicked deede thy most ingenious sence5.1.248
3442     Depriued thee of, hold off the earth a while,5.1.249
3443     Till I haue caught her once more in mine armes;5.1.250
3444     <Leaps in the graue.>..
3445     Now pile your dust vpon the quicke and dead,5.1.251
3446     Till of this flat a mountaine you haue made5.1.252
3447     {To'retop} <To o're top> old Pelion, or the skyesh head5.1.253
3448  Of blew Olympus.5.1.254
3449   Ham. What is he whose {griefe} <griefes>5.1.254
3450     Beares such an emphesis, whose phrase of sorrow5.1.255
3451     {Coniures} <Coniure> the wandring starres, and makes them stand5.1.256
3452     Like wonder wounded hearers: this is I5.1.257
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
3460      King. Pluck them a sunder.5.1.264
3461      Quee. Hamlet, Hamlet.5.1.264
3461+1  {All. Gentlemen.} 
3462      {Hora.} <Gen.> Good my Lord be quiet.5.1.265
3463      Ham. Why, I will fight with him vpon this theame5.1.266
3464     Vntill my eye-lids will no longer wagge.5.1.267
3465      Quee. O my sonne, what theame?5.1.268
3466      Ham. I loued Ophelia, forty thousand brothers5.1.269
3467     Could not with all theyr quantitie of loue5.1.270
3468     Make vp my summe. What wilt thou doo for her.5.1.271
3469      King. O he is mad Laertes.5.1.272
3470      Quee. For loue of God forbeare him.5.1.273
3471      Ham. {S'wounds} <Come> shew me what {th'owt} <thou'lt> doe:5.1.274
3472     Woo't weepe, woo't fight, {woo't fast,} woo't teare thy selfe,5.1.275
3473     Woo't drinke vp Esill, eate a Crocadile?5.1.276
3474     Ile doo't, doost <thou> come heere to whine?5.1.2
3475     To out-face me with leaping in her graue,5.1.278
3476     Be buried quicke with her, and so will I.5.1.279
3477     And if thou prate of mountaines, let them throw5.1.280
3478     Millions of Acres on vs, till our ground5.1.281
3479     Sindging his pate against the burning Zone5.1.282
3480     {N1} Make Ossa like a wart, nay and thou'lt mouthe,5.1.283
3481     Ile rant as well as thou.5.1.284
3482      {Quee.} <Kin.> This is meere madnesse,5.1.284
3483     And {this} <thus> a while the fit will worke on him,5.1.285
3484     Anon as patient as the female Doue5.1.286
3485     When that her golden {cuplets} <Cuplet> are disclosed5.1.287
3486     His silence will sit drooping.5.1.288
3487      Ham. Heare you sir,5.1.288
3488     What is the reason that you vse me thus?5.1.289
3489     I lou'd you euer, but it is no matter,5.1.290
3490     Let Hercules himselfe doe what he may5.1.291
3491     The Cat will mew, and Dogge will haue his day. Exit {Hamlet}5.1.292
3492      King. I pray {thee} <you> good Horatio waite vpon him. {and Horatio}.5.1.293
3493     Strengthen {your} <you> patience in our last nights speech,5.1.294
3494     Weele put the matter to the present push:5.1.295
3495     Good Gertrard set some watch ouer your sonne,5.1.296
3496     This graue shall haue a liuing monument,5.1.297
3497     An houre of quiet {thereby} <shortly> shall we see5.1.298
3498     {Tell} <Till> then in patience our proceeding be. Exeunt.5.1.299
3499              Enter Hamlet and Horatio...
3500      Ham. So much for this sir, now {shall you} <let me> see the other,5.2.1
3501     You doe remember all the circumstance.5.2.2
3502      Hora. Remember it my Lord.5.2.3
3503      Ham. Sir in my hart there was a kind of fighting5.2.4
3504     That would not let me sleepe, {my} <me> thought I lay5.2.5
3505     Worse then the mutines in the {bilbo} <Bilboes>, rashly,5.2.6
3506     And {praysd} <praise> be rashnes for it: let vs knowe,5.2.7
3507     Our indiscretion {sometime} <sometimes> serues vs well5.2.8
3508     When our {deepe} <deare> plots doe {fall} <paule>, & that should {learne} <teach> vs5.2.9
3509     Ther's a diuinity that shapes our ends,5.2.10
3510     Rough hew them how we will.5.2.11
3511      Hora. That is most certaine.5.2.11
3512      Ham. Vp from my Cabin,5.2.12
3513     My sea-gowne scarft about me in the darke5.2.13
3514     Gropt I to find out them, had my desire,5.2.14
3515     Fingard their packet, and in fine with-drew5.2.15
3516     To mine owne roome againe, making so bold5.2.16
3517     {N1v} My feares forgetting manners to {vnfold} <vnseale>5.2.17
3518     Their graund commission; where I found Horatio5.2.18
3519     {A} <Oh> royall knauery, an exact command5.2.19
3520     Larded with many seuerall sorts of {reasons,} <reason;>5.2.20
3521     Importing Denmarkes health, and Englands to,5.2.21
3522     With hoe such bugges and goblines in my life,5.2.22
3523     That on the superuise no leasure bated,5.2.23
3524     No not to stay the grinding of the Axe,5.2.24
3525     My head should be strooke off.5.2.25
3526      Hora. I'st possible?5.2.25
3527      Ham. Heeres the commission, read it at more leasure,5.2.26
3528     But wilt thou heare {now} <me> how I did proceed.5.2.27
3529      Hora. I beseech you.5.2.28
3530      Ham. Being thus benetted round with villaines,5.2.29
3531     {Or} <Ere> I could make a prologue to my braines,5.2.30
3532     They had begunne the play, I sat me downe,5.2.31
3533     Deuisd a new commission, wrote it faire,5.2.32
3534     I once did hold it as our statists doe,5.2.33
3535     A basenesse to write faire, and labourd much5.2.34
3536     How to forget that learning, but sir now5.2.35
3537     It did me {yemans} <Yeomans> seruice, wilt thou know5.2.36
3538     {Th'effect} <The effects> of what I wrote?5.2.37
3539      Hora. I good my Lord.5.2.37
3540      Ham. An earnest coniuration from the King,5.2.38
3541     As England was his faithfull tributary,5.2.39
3542     As loue betweene them {like} <as> the palme {might} <should> florish,5.2.40
3543     As peace should still her wheaten garland weare5.2.41
3544     And stand a Comma tweene their amities,5.2.42
3545     And many such like, {as sir} <Assis> of great charge,5.2.43
3546     That on the view, and {knowing} <know> of these contents,5.2.44
3547     Without debatement further more or lesse,5.2.45
3548     He should {those} <the> bearers put to suddaine death,5.2.46
3549     Not shriuing time alow'd.5.2.47
3550      Hora. How was this seald?5.2.47
3551      Ham. Why euen in that was heauen {ordinant,} <ordinate;>5.2.48
3552     I had my fathers signet in my purse5.2.49
3553     Which was the modill of that Danish seale,5.2.50
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
3561      {Ham.} They are not neere my conscience, their {defeat} <debate>5.2.58
3562     {Dooes} <Doth> by their owne insinnuation growe,5.2.59
3563     Tis dangerous when the baser nature comes5.2.60
3564     Betweene the passe and fell incenced points5.2.61
3565     Of mighty opposits.5.2.62
3566      Hora. Why what a King is this!5.2.62
3567      Ham. Dooes it not {thinke} <thinkst> thee stand me now vppon?5.2.63
3568     He that hath kild my King, and whor'd my mother,5.2.64
3569     Pop't in betweene th'election and my hopes,5.2.65
3570     Throwne out his Angle for my proper life,5.2.66
3571     And with such {cusnage,} <coozenage;> i'st not perfect conscience?5.2.67
3572     <To quit him with this arme? And is't not to be damn'd>5.2.68
3573     <To let this Canker of our nature come>5.2.69
3574     <In further euill.>5.2.60
3575      <Hor. It must be shortly knowne to him from England>5.2.70
3576     <What is the issue of the businesse there.>5.2.71
3577      <Ham. It will be short,>5.2.72
3578     <The interim's mine, and a mans life's no more>5.2.73
3579     <Then to say one: but I am very sorry good Horatio,>5.2.74
3580     <That to Laertes I forgot my selfe;>5.2.75
3581     <For by the image of my Cause, I see>5.2.76
3582     <The Portraiture of his; Ile count his fauours:>5.2.77
3583     <But sure the brauery of his griefe did put me>5.2.78
3584     <Into a Towring passion.>5.2.79
3585      <Hor. Peace, who comes heere?>5.2.80
3586                 Enter {a Courtier} <young Osricke>...
3587      {Cour.} <Osr.> Your Lordship is right welcome backe to Denmarke.5.2.81
3588      Ham. I {humble} <humbly> thanke you sir.5.2.82
3588     Doost know this water fly?5.2.82
3589      Hora. No my good Lord.5.2.83
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 
3598     to his right vse, tis for the head.5.2.93
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> 
3607-8 has layed a great wager on your head, | sir this is the matter. 
3609      Ham. I beseech you remember.5.2.104
3610      {Cour.} <Osr.> Nay {good my Lord} <in good faith,> for {my} <mine> ease in good faith, {sir here is newly}5.2.105
3610+1 {com to Court Laertes, belieue me an absolute gentlemen, ful of most}5.2.107
3610+2 {N2v} {excellent differences, of very soft society, and great showing: in-}5.2.108
3610+3 {deede to speake fellingly of him, hee is the card or kalender of gen-}5.2.110
3610+4 {try: for you shall find in him the continent of what part a Gentle-}5.2.111
3610+5 {man would see.}5.2.111
3610+6  {Ham. Sir, his definement suffers no perdition in you, though I}5.2.113
3610+7 {know to deuide him inuentorially, would dazzie th'arithmaticke of}5.2.114
3610+8 {memory, and yet but raw neither, in respect of his quick saile, but}5.2.115
3610+9 {in the veritie of extolment, I take him to be a soule of great article,}5.2.117
3610+10 {& his infusion of such dearth and rarenesse, as to make true dixion}5.2.118
3610+11 {of him, his semblable is his mirrour, & who els would trace him, his}5.2.119
3610+12 {vmbrage, nothing more.}5.2.120
3610+13  {Cour. Your Lordship speakes most infallibly of him.}5.2.121
3610+14  {Ham. The concernancy sir, why doe we wrap the gentleman in}5.2.123
3610+15 {our more rawer breath?}5.2.123
3610+16  {Cour. Sir.}5.2.124
3610+17  {Hora. Ist not possible to vnderstand in another tongue, you will}5.2.126
3610+18 {doo't sir really.}5.2.126
3610+19  {Ham. What imports the nomination of this gentleman.}5.2.128
3610+20  {Cour. Of Laertes.}5.2.129
3610+21  {Hora. His purse is empty already, all's golden words are spent.}5.2.131
3610+22  {Ham. Of him sir.}5.2.132
3610+23  {Cour. I know you are not ignorant.}5.2.133
3610+24  {Ham. I would you did sir, yet in faith if you did, it would not}5.2.135
3610+25 {much approoue me, well sir.}5.2.135
3611      {Cour.} <Sir,> You are not ignorant of what excellence Laertes is <at>5.2.137
3612     <his weapon>...
3612+1  {Ham. I dare not confesse that, least I should compare with} 
3612+2 {him in excellence, but to know a man wel, were to knowe himselfe.} 
3612+3  {Cour. I meane sir for this weapon, but in the imputation laide on} 
3612+4 {him, by them in his meed, hee's vnfellowed.} 
3613      Ham. What's his weapon?5.2.144
3614      {Cour.} <Osr.> Rapier and Dagger.5.2.145
3615      Ham. That's two of his weapons, but well.5.2.146
3616-7  {Cour.} <Osr.> The {King sir} <sir King> {hath wagerd} <ha's wag'd> with him six Barbary {horses} <Hor-| ses>,  
3617-8 againgst the which hee {has impaund} <impon'd> as I take it six French | Rapiers 
3618-9 and Poynards, with their assignes, as girdle, {hanger and} | <Hangers or> so. Three 
3619-20 of the carriages in faith, are very | deare to fancy, very responsiue to 
3620-1 the hilts, most delicate | carriages, and of very liberall conceit. 
3622      Ham. What call you the carriages?5.2.154
3622+1  {Hora. I knew you must be edified by the margent ere you had}5.2.156
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? 
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} 
3639-40 {is} <'tis> the breathing time of day with me, let | the foiles be brought, the 
3640-1 Gentleman willing, and the | King hold his purpose; I will winne 
3641-2 for him {and} <if> I can, if | not, {I will} <Ile> gaine nothing but my shame, and 
3642     the odde hits.5.2.178
3643      {Cour.} <Osr.> Shall I {deliuer} <redeliuer> you <ee'n> so?5.2.179
3644-5  Ham. To this effect sir, after what florish your {nature} <na-| ture> will. 
3646      {Cour.} <Osr.> I commend my duty to your Lordshippe.5.2.182
3647-8  Ham. Yours <, yours; hee> doo's well to commend it | himselfe, there are no 
3648     tongues els for's {turne} <tongue>.5.2.184
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
3657+1             {Enter a Lord.} 
3657+2  {Lord. My Lord, his Maiestie commended him to you by young}5.2.196
3657+3 {Ostricke, who brings backe to him that you attend him in the hall,}5.2.197
3657+4 {he sends to know if your pleasure hold to play with Laertes, or that}5.2.198
3657+5 {you will take longer time?}5.2.199
3657+6  {Ham. I am constant to my purposes, they followe the Kings plea-}5.2.201
3657+7 {sure, if his fitnes speakes, mine is ready: now or whensoeuer, pro-}5.2.202
3657+8 {uided I be so able as now.}5.2.202
3657+9 {N3v}  {Lord. The King, and Queene, and all are comming downe.}5.2.204
3657+10  {Ham. In happy time.}5.2.205
3657+11  {Lord. The Queene desires you to vse some gentle entertainment}5.2.207
3657+12 {to Laertes, before you fall to play.}5.2.207
3657+13  {Ham. Shee well instructs me.}5.2.208
3658      Hora. You will loose <this wager,> my Lord.5.2.209
3659-60  Ham. I doe not thinke so, since he went into France, | I haue bene 
3660-1 in continuall practise, I shall winne at the | ods; <but> thou {would'st} <wouldest> not 
3661-2 thinke how {ill all's} <all> heere {about} <a-| bout> my hart, but it is no matter. 
3663      Hora. Nay good my Lord.5.2.214
3664-5  Ham. It is but foolery, but it is such a kinde of {gamgiuing,} | <gain-giuing> as 
3665     would perhapes trouble a woman.5.2.216
3666-7  Hora. If your minde dislike any thing, obay {it}. I will {forstal} <fore-| stall> their 
3667     repaire hether, and say you are not fit.5.2.218
3668-9  Ham. Not a whit, we defie augury, {there is} <there's a> speciall | prouidence,in 
3669-70 the fall of a Sparrowe, if it be <now>, tis not | to come, if it be not to come, 
3670-1 it will be now, if it | be not now, yet it {well} <will> come, the readines is all, 
3671-3 since no | man {of} <ha's> ought <of what> he leaues, {knowes} what ist to leaue {betimes,} <be-| times?> 
3673+1 {let be.} 
3675     {A table prepard, Trumpets, Drums and officers with Cushions,}..
3674-5       `{King, Queene, and all the state, Foiles, daggers,} 
3674         {and Laertes.} 
3674                  <Enter King, Queene, Laertes and Lords, with other Atten->..
3675                                   <dants with Foyles, and Gauntlets, a Table and> 
3676                                   <Flagons of Wine on it.> 
3677      King. Come Hamlet, come and take this hand from me.5.2.225
3678      Ham. Giue me your pardon sir, {I haue} <I'ue> done you wrong,5.2.226
3679-80 But pardon't as you are a gentleman, | this presence knowes, 
3681     And you must needs haue heard, how I am punnisht5.2.229
3682     With {a} sore distraction, what I haue done5.2.230
3683     That might your nature, honor, and exception5.2.231
3684     Roughly awake, I heare proclame was madnesse,5.2.232
3685     Wast Hamlet wronged Laertes? neuer Hamlet.5.2.233
3686     If Hamlet from himselfe be tane away,5.2.234
3687     And when hee's not himselfe, dooes wrong Laertes,5.2.235
3688     Then Hamlet dooes it not, Hamlet denies it,5.2.236
3689     Who dooes it then? his madnesse. Ift be so,5.2.237
3690     Hamlet is of the faction that is wronged,5.2.238
3691     His madnesse is poore Hamlets enimie,5.2.239
3692     <Sir, in this Audience,>5.2.240
3693     Let my disclaiming from a purpos'd euill,5.2.241
3694     Free me so farre in your most generous thoughts5.2.242
3695     That I haue shot {my} <mine> arrowe ore the house5.2.243
3696     {N4} And hurt my {brother} <Mother>.5.2.244
3697      Laer. I am satisfied in nature,5.2.244
3698     Whose motiue in this case should stirre me most5.2.245
3699     To my reuendge, but in my tearmes of honor5.2.246
3700     I stand a loofe, and will no reconcilement,5.2.247
3701     Till by some elder Maisters of knowne honor5.2.248
3702     I haue a voyce and president of peace5.2.249
3703     To <keepe> my name {vngord:} <vngorg'd.> but {all} <till> that time5.2.250
3704     I doe receaue your offerd loue, like loue,5.2.251
3705     And will not wrong it.5.2.252
3706-7  Ham. I <do> embrace it freely, | and will this brothers wager 
3707     franckly play.5.2.253
3708     Giue vs the foiles. <Come on.>5.2.254
3709      Laer. Come, one for me.5.2.254
3710      Ham. Ile be your foile Laertes, in mine ignorance5.2.255
3711     Your skill shall like a starre i'th darkest night5.2.256
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
3719-20  King. I doe not feare it, | I haue seene you both, 
3721     But since he is {better} <better'd>, we haue therefore ods.5.2.263
3722-3  Laer. This is to heauy: | let me see another. 
3724-5  Ham. This likes me well, | these foiles haue all a length. <Prepare to play.> 
3726      Ostr. I my good Lord. 5.2.266
3727      King. Set me the stoopes of wine vpon that table,5.2.267
3728     If Hamlet giue the first or second hit,5.2.268
3729     Or quit in answere of the third exchange,5.2.269
3730     Let all the battlements their {ordnance} <Ordinance> fire.5.2.270
3731     The King shall drinke to Hamlets better breath,5.2.271
3732     And in the cup an {Onixe} <vnion> shall he throwe,5.2.272
3733     Richer then that which foure successiue Kings5.2.273
3734-5 In Denmarkes Crowne haue worne: | giue me the cups, 
3736     And let the kettle to the {trumpet} <Trumpets> speake,5.2.275
3737     The trumpet to the Cannoneere without,5.2.276
3738     The Cannons to the heauens, the heauen to earth,5.2.277
3739     {N4v} Now the King drinkes to Hamlet, come beginne. {Trumpets}5.2.278
3740     And you the Iudges beare a wary eye. {the while.}5.2.279
3741      Ham. Come on sir.5.2.280
3742      Laer. Come {my Lord} <on sir>. <They play.>5.2.280
3743      Ham. One.5.2.280
3744      Laer. No.5.2.280
3745      Ham. Iudgement.5.2.280
3746      Ostrick. A hit, a very palpable hit. {Drum, trumpets and shot.}5.2.281
3747      Laer. Well, againe.          {Florish, a peece goes off.}5.2.281
3748      King. Stay, giue me drinke, | Hamlet this pearle is thine.5.2.282
3750     Heeres to thy health: giue him the cup.5.2.283
3751                  <Trumpets sound, and shot goes off.>..
3752      Ham. Ile play this bout first, set {it} by a while5.2.284
3753     Come, another hit.      What say you?5.2.285
3754      Laer. <A touch, a touch,> I doe {confest} <confesse>.5.2.286
3755      King. Our sonne shall winne.5.2.287
3756      Quee. Hee's fat and scant of breath.5.2.287
3757     {Heere Hamlet take my} <Heere's a> napkin rub thy browes,5.2.288
3758     The Queene carowses to thy fortune Hamlet.5.2.289
3759      Ham. Good Madam.5.2.290
3760      King. Gertrard doe not drinke.5.2.290
3761-2  Quee. I will my Lord, | I pray you pardon me. 
3763      King. It is the poysned cup, it is too late.5.2.292
3764-5  Ham. I dare not drinke yet Madam, | by and by. 
3766      Quee. Come, let me wipe thy face.5.2.294
3767      Laer. My Lord, Ile hit him now.5.2.295
3768      King. I doe not think't.5.2.295
3769      Laer. And yet {it is} <'tis> almost {against} <'gainst> my conscience.5.2.296
3770-1  Ham. Come for the third | Laertes, you {doe} but dally. 
3772     I pray you passe with your best violence5.2.298
3773     I am {sure} <affear'd> you make a wanton of me.5.2.299
3774      Laer. Say you so, come on.          <Play.>5.2.300
3775      Ostr. Nothing neither way.5.2.301
3776      Laer. Haue at you now.5.2.302
3777                  <In scuffling they change Rapiers.>..
3778      King. Part them, they are incenst.5.2.302
3779      Ham. Nay come againe.5.2.303
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
3788-9  Quee. No, no, the drinke, the drinke, | ô my deare Hamlet, 
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
3798     Vnbated and enuenom'd, the foule practise5.2.317
3799     Hath turn'd it selfe on me, loe heere I lie5.2.318
3800     Neuer to rise againe, thy mother's poysned,5.2.319
3801     I can no more, the King, the Kings too blame.5.2.320
3802-3  Ham. The point inuenom'd to, | then venome to thy worke. 
3804                  <Hurts the King.>..
3805      All. Treason, treason.5.2.323
3806      King. O yet defend me friends, I am but hurt.5.2.324
3807-8  Ham. {Heare} <Heere> thou incestious <murdrous,> | damned Dane, 
3809     Drinke {of} <off> this potion, is {the Onixe} <thy Vnion> heere?5.2.326
3810     Follow my mother. <King Dyes.>5.2.327
3811-2  Laer. He is iustly serued, | it is a poyson temperd by himselfe, 
3813     Exchange forgiuenesse with me noble Hamlet,5.2.329
3814     Mine and my fathers death come not vppon thee,5.2.330
3815     Nor thine on me. <Dyes.>5.2.331
3816      Ham. Heauen make thee free of it, I follow thee;5.2.332
3817     I am dead Horatio, wretched Queene adiew.5.2.333
3818     You that looke pale, and tremble at this chance,5.2.334
3819     That are but mutes, or audience to this act,5.2.335
3820     Had I but time, as this fell sergeant Death5.2.336
3821     Is strict in his arrest, ô I could tell you,5.2.337
3822     But let it be; Horatio I am dead,5.2.338
3823     Thou liuest, report me and my {cause a} <causes> right5.2.339
3824     To the vnsatisfied.5.2.340
3825      Hora. Neuer belieue it;5.2.340
3826     I am more an {anticke} <Antike> Romaine then a Dane,5.2.341
3827     Heere's yet some liquer left.5.2.342
3828      Ham. As th'art a man5.2.343
3828-9 Giue me the cup, | let goe, by heauen Ile {hate,} <haue't.> 
3830     {O1v} O {god} <good> Horatio, what a wounded name5.2.344
3831     Things standing thus vnknowne, shall {I leaue} <liue> behind me?5.2.345
3832     If thou did'st euer hold me in thy hart,5.2.346
3833     Absent thee from felicity a while,5.2.347
3834     And in this harsh world drawe thy breath in paine {A march a}5.2.348
3835-7 To tell my story: | <March afarre off, and shout within.>| what warlike noise is this? {farre off.} 
3838                 Enter Osrick...
3839      Osr. Young Fortenbrasse with conquest come from Poland,5.2.350
3840     To th'embassadors of England giues this warlike volly.5.2.352
3841      Ham. O I die Horatio,5.2.352
3842     The potent poyson quite ore-crowes my spirit,5.2.353
3843     I cannot liue to heare the newes from England,5.2.354
3844     But I doe prophecie th'ellection lights5.2.355
3845     On Fortinbrasse, he has my dying voyce,5.2.356
3846     So tell him, with th'occurrants more and lesse5.2.357
3847     Which haue solicited, the rest is silence. <O, o, o, o. Dyes>5.2.358
3848-9  Hora. Now {cracks} <cracke> a noble hart, | good night sweete Prince, 
3850     And flights of Angels sing thee to thy rest.5.2.360
3851     Why dooes the drum come hether?5.2.361
3852     Enter Fortenbrasse, {with the Embassadors} <and English Ambassador, with Drumme,>..
3853     <Colours, and Attendants>...
3854      For. Where is this sight?5.2.362
3855      Hora. What is it {you} <ye> would see?5.2.362
3856     If ought of woe, or wonder, cease your search.5.2.363
3857      For. {This} <His> quarry cries on hauock, ô {prou'd} <proud> death5.2.364
3858     What feast is toward in thine eternall cell,5.2.365
3859     That thou so many Princes at a {shot} <shoote>5.2.366
3860     So bloudily hast strook?5.2.367
3861      Embas. The sight is dismall5.2.367
3862     And our affaires from England come too late,5.2.368
3863     The eares are sencelesse that should giue vs hearing,5.2.369
3864     To tell him his commandment is fulfild,5.2.370
3865     That Rosencraus and Guyldensterne are dead,5.2.
3866     Where should we haue our thankes?5.2.372
3867      Hora. Not from his mouth5.2.372
3868     Had it th'ability of life to thanke you;5.2.373
3869     He neuer gaue commandement for their death;5.2.374
3870     But since so iump vpon this bloody question5.2.375
3871     {O2} You from the Pollack warres, and you from England5.2.376
3872     Are heere arriued, giue order that these bodies5.2.377
3873     High on a stage be placed to the view,5.2.378
3874     And let me speake, to {yet} <th'yet> vnknowing world5.2.379
3875     How these things came about; so shall you heare5.2.380
3876     Of carnall, bloody and vnnaturall acts,5.2.381
3877     Of accidentall iudgements, casuall slaughters,5.2.382
3878     Of deaths put on by cunning, and {for no} <forc'd> cause5.2.383
3879     And in this vpshot, purposes mistooke,5.2.384
3880     Falne on th'inuenters heads: all this can I5.2.385
3881     Truly deliuer.5.2.386
3882      For. Let vs hast to heare it,5.2.386
3883     And call the noblest to the audience,5.2.387
3884     For me, with sorrowe I embrace my fortune,5.2.388
3885     I haue some {rights,} <Rites> of memory in this kingdome,5.2.389
3886-7 Which {now} <are> to clame my vantage doth | inuite me. 
3888      Hora. Of that I shall haue {also} <alwayes> cause to speake,5.2.391
3889     And from his mouth, | whose voyce will drawe {no} <on> more,5.2.392
3891     But let this same be presently perform'd5.2.393
3892-3 Euen {while} <whiles> mens mindes are wilde, {least} | <Lest> more mischance 
3894     On plots and errores happen.5.2.394
3895      For. Let foure Captaines5.2.395
3896     Beare Hamlet like a souldier to the stage,5.2.396
3897     For he was likely, had he beene put on,5.2.397
3898-9 To haue prooued most {royall;} <royally:> | and for his passage,5.2.398
3900     The souldiers musicke and the {right} <rites> of warre5.2.399
3901     Speake loudly for him:5.2.400
3902     Take vp the {bodies,} <body;> such a sight as this,5.2.401
3903     Becomes the field, but heere showes much amisse.5.2.402
3904     Goe bid the souldiers shoote. {Exeunt.}5.2.403
3905     <Exeunt Marching: after the which, a Peale of>..
3906     <Ordenance are shot off.>..
3907     FINIS...