Hamlet (Quarto 1, 1603)
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¶
Enter Two Centinels.
¶1. STand: who is that?
¶2. Tis I.
¶2. And if you meete Marcellus and Horatio,
¶The partners of my watch, bid them make haste.
¶1. I will: See who goes there.
¶
Enter Horatio and Marcellus.
20Hor. Friends to this ground.
¶Mar. And leegemen to the Dane,
¶1. Barnardo hath my place, giue you good night.
¶Mar. Holla, Barnardo.
¶2. Say, is Horatio there?
¶Hor. A peece of him.
¶2. Welcome Horatio, welcome good Marcellus.
30Mar. What hath this thing appear'd againe to night.
¶And wil not let beliefe take hold of him,
35Therefore I haue intreated him a long with vs
¶To watch the minutes of this night,
¶That if againe this apparition come,
¶He may approoue our eyes, and speake to it.
¶Hor. Tut, t'will not appeare.
402. Sit downe I pray, and let vs once againe
¶What we haue two nights seene.
45of this.
¶ward from the pole, had made his course to
¶Illumine that part of heauen. Where now it burnes,
50The bell then towling one.
¶
Enter Ghost.
Mar. Breake off your talke, see where it comes againe.
552. Lookes it not like the king?
¶Walke? By heauen I charge thee speake.
speake.
¶2. How now Horatio, you tremble and looke pale,
70What thinke you on't?
¶Hor. Afore my God, I might not this beleeue, without
¶Mar. Is it not like the King?
¶Such was the very armor he had on,
¶When he the ambitious Norway combated.
¶So frownd he once, when in an angry parle
80Tis strange.
¶Mar. Thus twice before, and iump at this dead hower,
¶Hor. In what particular to worke, I know not,
¶But in the thought and scope of my opinion,
¶So nightly toyles the subiect of the land,
90And forraine marte, for implements of warre,
¶Does not diuide the sunday from the weeke:
¶What might be toward that this sweaty march
¶Doth make the night ioynt labourer with the day,
95Who is't that can informe me?
¶Our late King, who as you know was by Forten-
¶The combate, in which our valiant Hamlet,
Who by a seale compact well ratified, by law
¶And heraldrie, did forfeit with his life all those
¶Against the which a moity competent,
¶Was gaged by our King:
¶Of inapproued mettle hot and full,
¶Hath in the skirts of Norway here and there,
¶That hath a stomacke in't: and this (I take it) is the
¶Chiefe head and ground of this our watch.
125
Enter the Ghost.
¶But loe, behold, see where it comes againe,
¶If there be any good thing to be done,
130That may doe ease to thee, and grace to mee,
Speake to mee.
¶If thou art priuy to thy countries fate,
¶Which happly foreknowing may preuent, O speake to me,
¶Or if thou hast extorted in thy life,
¶Or hoorded treasure in the wombe of earth,
140Hor. Tis heere.
¶call, to offer it the shew of violence,
¶For it is as the ayre invelmorable,
145And our vaine blowes malitious mockery.
¶Hor. And then it faded like a guilty thing,
¶Vpon a fearefull summons: I haue heard
¶The Cocke, that is the trumpet to the morning,
150Doth with his earely and shrill crowing throate,
¶Awake the god of day, and at his sound,
¶Whether in earth or ayre, in sea or fire,
¶To his confines, and of the trueth heereof
155This present obiect made probation.
¶Marc. It faded on the crowing of the Cocke,
¶Wherein our Sauiours birth is celebrated,
¶The bird of dawning singeth all night long,
¶The nights are wholesome, then no planet frikes,
¶No Fairie takes, nor Witch hath powre to charme,
¶So gratious, and so hallowed is that time.
¶Hor. So haue I heard, and doe in parte beleeue it:
¶Walkes ore the deaw of yon hie mountaine top,
¶Breake we our watch vp, and by my aduise,
¶Let vs impart what wee haue seene to night
¶Vnto yong Hamlet: for vpon my life
170This Spirite dumbe to vs will speake to him:
¶As needefull in our loue, fitting our duetie?
¶Marc. Lets doo't I pray, and I this morning know,
