Commit | Line | Data |
---|---|---|
2667acfd KT |
1 | The quality of mercy is not strain['|e]d:\ |
2 | It droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven:\ | |
3 | {The }Merchant{ of Venice{ IV-i}}:\ | |
4 | Portia | |
5 | Friends{,} Romans{,} Countrymen:\ | |
6 | lend me your ears{;}:\ | |
7 | {Julius }Caesar{ III-ii}:\ | |
8 | {Mark }Antony | |
9 | Neither a borrower nor a lender be:\ | |
10 | For loan oft loses both itself and friend{.}:\ | |
11 | Hamlet{ I-iii}:\ | |
12 | Polonius | |
13 | To be{,} or not to be{\:}:\ | |
14 | that is the question{\:}:\ | |
15 | Hamlet{ III-i}:\ | |
16 | Hamlet | |
17 | Alas{,} poor Yorick{!}:\ | |
18 | I knew him{,} Horatio{;}:\ | |
19 | Hamlet{ V-i}:\ | |
20 | Hamlet | |
21 | Double{,} double toil and trouble{;}:\ | |
22 | Fire burn and cauldron bubble{.}:\ | |
23 | Macbeth{ IV-i}:\ | |
24 | Witch{es} | |
25 | By the pricking of my thumbs{,}:\ | |
26 | Something wicked this way comes{.}:\ | |
27 | Macbeth{ IV-i}:\ | |
28 | {Second |2nd }Witch | |
29 | Out, damned spot! out, I say!:\ | |
30 | :\ | |
31 | Macbeth{ V-i}:\ | |
32 | Lady Macbeth | |
33 | Unbidden guests:\ | |
34 | Are often welcomest when they are gone{.}:\ | |
35 | {King }Henry VI{,} Part I{ I-ii}:\ | |
36 | ||
37 | She is a woman{,} therefore may be woo'd{;}:\ | |
38 | She is a woman{,} therefore may be [won|screw'd]{.}:\ | |
39 | Titus Andronicus{ II-i}:\ | |
40 | Demetrius | |
41 | Such duty as the subject owes the prince{,}:\ | |
42 | Even such a woman oweth to her husband{.}:\ | |
43 | {The }Taming of the Shrew{ V-ii}:\ | |
44 | Kate | |
45 | Who is Silvia{?} what is she{,}:\ | |
46 | That all our swains commend her{?}:\ | |
47 | {The }Two Gentlemen of Verona{ IV-ii}:\ | |
48 | Thurio | |
49 | Tu-whit{,} tu-who[ - | |--]a merry note{,}:\ | |
50 | While greasy Joan doth keel the pot{.}:\ | |
51 | Love's Labo{u}r Lost{ V-ii}:\ | |
52 | Winter | |
53 | My only love sprung from my only hate{!}:\ | |
54 | Too early seen unknown{,} and known too late{!}:\ | |
55 | Romeo{ and Juliet{ I-v}}:\ | |
56 | Juliet | |
57 | But{,} soft{!} what light through yonder window breaks{?}:\ | |
58 | It is the east{,} and Juliet is the sun{!}:\ | |
59 | Romeo{ and Juliet{ II-ii}}:\ | |
60 | Romeo | |
61 | What's in a name{?} That which we call a rose:\ | |
62 | By any other name would smell as sweet{.}:\ | |
63 | Romeo{ and Juliet{ II-ii}}:\ | |
64 | Juliet | |
65 | Good night{,} good night{!} parting is such sweet sorrow{,}:\ | |
66 | That I shall say good night till it be morrow{.}:\ | |
67 | Romeo{ and Juliet{ II-ii}}:\ | |
68 | Juliet | |
69 | A plague o['|n] both your houses{!}:\ | |
70 | They have made worms' meat of me{.}:\ | |
71 | Romeo{ and Juliet{ III-i}}:\ | |
72 | Mercutio | |
73 | This royal throne of kings{,} this scepter['|e]d isle{,}:\ | |
74 | This earth of majesty{,} this seat of Mars{,}:\ | |
75 | {King }Richard II{ II-i}:\ | |
76 | John of Gaunt | |
77 | Not all the water in a rough rude sea:\ | |
78 | Can wash the balm from an anointed king{.}:\ | |
79 | {King }Richard II{ III-ii}:\ | |
80 | {King }Richard II | |
81 | I'll put a girdle round the earth:\ | |
82 | In forty minutes{.}:\ | |
83 | {A }Midsummer[-| ]Night's Dream{ II-i}:\ | |
84 | Puck | |
85 | I can call spirits from the vasty deep{.}:\ | |
86 | Why{,} so can I{,} or so can any man{;}:\ | |
87 | {King }Henry IV{,} Part I{ II-iv}:\ | |
88 | ||
89 | There are more things in heaven and earth{,} Horatio{,}:\ | |
90 | Than are dream[t|ed] of in your philosophy{.}:\ | |
91 | Hamlet{ I-v}:\ | |
92 | Hamlet | |
93 | The time is out of joint{;} O cursed spite{,}:\ | |
94 | That ever I was born to set it right{!}:\ | |
95 | Hamlet{ I-v}:\ | |
96 | Hamlet | |
97 | Once more unto the breach{,} dear friends{,} once more{;}:\ | |
98 | Or close the wall up with our English dead{.}:\ | |
99 | {King }Henry V{ III-i}:\ | |
100 | {King }Henry V | |
101 | Was ever woman in this humour woo['|e]d{?}:\ | |
102 | Was ever woman in this humour [won|screw'd]{?}:\ | |
103 | {King }Richard III{ I-ii}:\ | |
104 | {King }Richard III | |
105 | Now is the winter of our discontent:\ | |
106 | Made glorious summer by this sun of York:\ | |
107 | {King }Richard III{ I-i}:\ | |
108 | {King }Richard III | |
109 | There['s| is] a divinity that shapes our ends{,}:\ | |
110 | Rough[-| ]hew them how we will{.}:\ | |
111 | Hamlet{ V-ii}:\ | |
112 | Hamlet | |
113 | There is a tide in the affairs of men:\ | |
114 | Which{,} taken at the flood{,} leads on to fortune{;}:\ | |
115 | {Julius }Caesar{ IV-iii}:\ | |
116 | Brutus | |
117 | Never{,} never{,} never{,} never{,} never{.}:\ | |
118 | Pray you undo this button{.}{ Thank you{,} sir{.}}:\ | |
119 | {King }Lear{ V-iii}:\ | |
120 | {King }Lear | |
121 | I grow{,} I prosper{\:}:\ | |
122 | Now{,} gods{,} stand up for bastards{!}:\ | |
123 | {King }Lear{ I-ii}:\ | |
124 | Edmund | |
125 | The better part of valour is discretion{;}:\ | |
126 | in the which better part I have saved my life{.}:\ | |
127 | {King }Henry IV{,} Part I{ V-iv}:\ | |
128 | Falstaff | |
129 | Asses are made to bear{,} and so are you{.}:\ | |
130 | Women are made to bear{,} and so are you{.}:\ | |
131 | {The }Taming of the Shrew{ II-i}:\ | |
132 | ||
133 | Full fathom five thy father lies{;}:\ | |
134 | Of his bones are coral made{;}:\ | |
135 | {The }Tempest{ I-ii}:\ | |
136 | Ariel | |
137 | She lov['|e]d me for the dangers I had pass['|e]d{;}:\ | |
138 | And I lov['|e]d her that she did pity them{.}:\ | |
139 | Othello{ I-iii}:\ | |
140 | Othello | |
141 | Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown{.}:\ | |
142 | Many good morrows to your Majesty{!}:\ | |
143 | {King }Henry IV{,} Part II{ III-i}:\ | |
144 | ||
145 | Mislike me not for my complexion{,}:\ | |
146 | The shadow['|e]d livery of the burnish['|e]d sun{.}:\ | |
147 | {The }Merchant{ of Venice{ II-i}}:\ | |
148 | Morocco | |
149 | Cowards die many times before their deaths{;}:\ | |
150 | The valiant never taste of death but once{.}:\ | |
151 | {Julius }Caesar{ II-ii}:\ | |
152 | Caesar | |
153 | O{h}{!|,} Pardon me{,} thou bleeding piece of earth{,}:\ | |
154 | That I am meek and gentle with these butchers{.}:\ | |
155 | {Julius }Caesar{ III-i}:\ | |
156 | {Mark }Antony | |
157 | The play's the thing:\ | |
158 | Wherein I'll catch the conscience of the king{.}:\ | |
159 | Hamlet{ II-ii}:\ | |
160 | Hamlet | |
161 | How sharper than a serpent's tooth it is:\ | |
162 | to have a thankless child{.}:\ | |
163 | {King }Lear{ I-iv}:\ | |
164 | {King }Lear | |
165 | Had I but served my God with half the zeal I served my king:\ | |
166 | He would not in [mine|my] old age have left me naked to [mine|my] enemies{.}:\ | |
167 | {King }Henry VIII{ IV-ii}:\ | |
168 | {Cardinal }Wolsey | |
169 | It seems she hangs upon the cheek of night:\ | |
170 | Like a rich jewel in an Ethiop's ear{.}:\ | |
171 | Romeo{ and Juliet{ I-v}}:\ | |
172 | Romeo | |
173 | Where the bee sucks{,} there suck I{;}:\ | |
174 | In a cowslip's bell I lie{.}:\ | |
175 | {The }Tempest{ V-i}:\ | |
176 | Ariel | |
177 | O brave new world{,}:\ | |
178 | That has such people [in't|in it]{!}:\ | |
179 | {The }Tempest{ V-i}:\ | |
180 | Miranda | |
181 | Why{,} then the world's mine oyster{,}:\ | |
182 | Which I with sword will open{.}:\ | |
183 | {The }Merry Wives of Windsor{ II-ii}:\ | |
184 | Falstaff | |
185 | A goodly apple rotten at the heart{\:}:\ | |
186 | O{h}{,} what a goodly outside falsehood hath{!|.}:\ | |
187 | {The }Merchant{ of Venice{ I-iii}}:\ | |
188 | Antonio | |
189 | I never kill['|e]d a mouse{,} nor hurt a fly{;}:\ | |
190 | I trod upon a worm against my will{,}:\ | |
191 | Pericles{ IV-i}:\ | |
192 | Marina | |
193 | Golden lads and girls all must{,}:\ | |
194 | Like chimney sweepers{,} come to dust{.}:\ | |
195 | Cymbeline{ IV-ii}:\ | |
196 | Guiderius | |
197 | You blocks, you stones, you worse than senseless things!:\ | |
198 | O you hard hearts{,} you cruel men of Rome{.}:\ | |
199 | {Julius }Caesar{ I-i}:\ | |
200 | Marullus | |
201 | A horse{!|,} a horse{!|,} my kingdom for a horse{!}:\ | |
202 | :\ | |
203 | {King }Richard III{ V-iv}:\ | |
204 | {King }Richard III | |
205 | My salad days,:\ | |
206 | When I was green in judg{e}ment, cold in blood{,}:\ | |
207 | Antony [and|&] Cleopatra{ I-v}:\ | |
208 | Cleopatra | |
209 | Age cannot wither her, nor custom stale:\ | |
210 | Her infinite variety{.}:\ | |
211 | Antony [and|&] Cleopatra{ II-iii}:\ | |
212 | Enobarbus | |
213 | Give me some music\: music, moody food:\ | |
214 | Of us that trade in love{.}:\ | |
215 | Antony [and|&] Cleopatra{II-v}:\ | |
216 | Cleopatra | |
217 | 'Tis better playing with a lion's whelp,:\ | |
218 | Than with an old one dying{.}:\ | |
219 | Antony [and|&] Cleopatra:\ | |
220 | Enobarbus | |
221 | The barge she sat in, like a burnished throne,:\ | |
222 | Burned on the water{.} The poop was burnished gold{;|.}:\ | |
223 | Antony [and|&] Cleopatra:\ | |
224 | Enobarbus | |
225 | Done like a Frenchman - turn and turn again!:\ | |
226 | :\ | |
227 | {King }Henry VI{,} Part I{ III-iii}:\ | |
228 | {Joan }Pucelle|{Saint |St{.} }Joan{ of Arc} |