Hamlet (Quarto 1, 1603)
Not Peer Reviewed
THE
Tragicall Historie of
HAMLET
Prince of Denmarke
By William Shake-speare.
As it hath beene diuerse times acted by his Highnesse ser-
uants in the Cittie of London: as also in the two V-
niuersities of Cambridge and Oxford, and else-where
At London printed for N.L. and Iohn Trundell.
1603.
The Tragicall Historie of
HAMLET
Prince of Denmarke.¶
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,
¶
Enter King, Queene, Hamlet, Leartes, Corambis,
¶Nephew to olde Norway, who impudent
¶And bed-rid, scarcely heares of this his
¶Yong good Cornelia, and you Voltemar
¶For bearers of these greetings to olde
Norway, giuing to you no further personall power
Then those related articles do shew:
¶Farewell, and let your haste commend your dutie.
220King. Wee doubt nothing, hartily farewel:
¶And now Leartes, what's the news with you?
¶Lea. My gratious Lord, your fauorable licence,
231.1Now that the funerall rites are all performed,
¶I may haue leaue to go againe to France,
232.1For though the fauour of your grace might stay mee,
¶Which makes my minde and spirits bend all for France.
¶King: Haue you your fathers leaue, Leartes?
240Cor. He hath, my lord, wrung from me a forced graunt,
241.1King With all our heart, Leartes fare thee well.
Lear. I in all loue and dutie take my leaue.
¶For your intent going to Wittenberg,
¶Wee hold it most vnmeet and vnconuenient,
296.1Being the Ioy and halfe heart of your mother.
¶Therefore let mee intreat you stay in Court,
¶Nor all together mixt with outward semblance,
263.1Is equall to the sorrow of my heart,
272.1Generall ending. Therefore cease laments,
None liues on earth, but hee is borne to die.
¶Stay here with vs, go not to Wittenburg.
¶And there's no health the King shall drinke to day,
¶But the great Canon to the clowdes shall tell
¶
Exeunt all but Hamlet.
Would melt to nothing, or that the vniuersall
313.1Globe of heauen would turne al to a Chaos!
¶O God, within two months; no not two: married,
330Mine vncle: O let me not thinke of it,
¶My fathers brother: but no more like
My father, then I to Hercules.
¶Vnrighteous teares had left their flushing
Deuoyd of reason would not haue made
Such speede: Frailtie, thy name is Woman,
¶Of appetite had growne by what it looked on.
¶Ere yet the shooes were olde,
¶Like Nyobe, all teares: married, well it is not,
¶Nor it cannot come to good:
¶But breake my heart, for I must holde my tongue.
¶
you, (Horatio) or I much
Enter Horatio and Marcellus.
¶forget my selfe.
350Ham. O my good friend, I change that name with you:
¶but what make you from Wittenberg Horatio?
¶Marcellus.
¶Marc. My good Lord.
¶But what is your affaire in Elsenoure?
¶Weele teach you to drinke deepe ere you depart.
¶Sir, I know you are no trowant:
But what is your affaire in Elsenoure?
¶I thinke it was to see my mothers wedding.
¶Hor. Indeede my Lord, it followed hard vpon.
¶ Ham. Thrift, thrift, Horatio, the funerall bak't meates
¶Did coldly furnish forth the marriage tables,
370Would I had met my deerest foe in heauen
¶Ere euer I had seene that day Horatio;
¶O my father, my father, me thinks I see my father.
¶Hor. Where my Lord?
¶Ham. Why, in my mindes eye Horatio.
¶Ham. He was a man, take him for all in all,
¶I shall not looke vpon his like againe.
¶Ham. Saw, who?
380Hor. My Lord, the King your father.
¶Ham. Ha, ha, the King my father ke you.
¶With an attentiue eare, till I may deliuer,
385This wonder to you.
¶Ham. For Gods loue let me heare it.
¶Marcellus and Bernardo, on their watch,
¶In the dead vast and middle of the night.
390Beene thus incountered by a figure like your father,
¶Armed to poynt, exactly Capapea
¶Appeeres before them thrise, he walkes
395Within his tronchions length,
While they distilled almost to gelly.
¶With the act of feare stands dumbe,
¶And speake not to him: this to mee
¶And I with them the third night kept the watch,
400Where as they had deliuered forme of the thing.
¶Each part made true and good,
¶The Apparition comes: I knew your father,
¶These handes are not more like.
415Hor. As I do liue, my honord lord, tis true,
¶And wee did thinke it right done,
In our dutie to let you know it.
¶Ham. Where was this?
405Mar. My Lord, vpon the platforme where we watched.
¶Yet once me thought it was about to speake,
¶And lifted vp his head to motion,
410Like as he would speake, but euen then
¶The morning cocke crew lowd, and in all haste,
¶Our sight.
¶Hold you the watch to night?
420All We do my Lord.
¶All Armed my good Lord.
¶Ham. From top to toe?
¶All. My good Lord, from head to foote.
¶Hor. O yes my Lord, he wore his beuer vp.
¶Ham. How look't he, frowningly?
¶Ham. Pale, or red?
430Hor. Nay, verie pal
¶Ham. And fixt his eies vpon you.
¶Ham. I would I had beene there.
¶Hor. It would a much amazed you.
¶Hor. While one with moderate pace
Might tell a hundred.
¶Mar. O longer, longer.
¶Ham. I wil watch to night, perchance t'wil walke againe.
¶Hor. I warrant it will.
¶And bid me hold my peace, Gentlemen,
450Giue it an vnderstanding, but no tongue,
¶I will requit your loues, so fare you well,
¶Vpon the platforme, twixt eleuen and twelue,
¶Ile visit you.
455Ham. O your loues, your loues, as mine to you,
Farewell, my fathers spirit in Armes,
¶Well, all's not well. I doubt some foule play,
¶Would the night were come,
¶Though all the world orewhelme them to mens eies.
Exit.
¶
Enter Leartes and Ofelia.
462.1But ere I part, marke what I say to thee:
¶Beware Ofelia, do not trust his vowes,
¶Perhaps he loues you now, and now his tongue,
¶The Chariest maide is prodigall enough,
Belieu't Ofelia, therefore keepe a loofe
496.1Lest that he trip thy honor and thy fame.
¶Ofel. Brother, to this I haue lent attentiue eare,
¶And doubt not but to keepe my honour firme,
¶But my deere brother, do not you
510Like to a cunning Sophister,
¶Teach me the path and ready way to heauen,
511.1While you forgetting what is said to me,
512.1Doth giue his heart, his appetite at ful,
¶And little recks how that his honour dies.
515Lear. No, feare it not my deere Ofelia,
¶
Enter Corambis.
¶And these few precepts in thy memory.
¶"Be thou familiar, but by no meanes vulgare;
¶"Graple them to thee with a hoope of steele,
¶"But do not dull the palme with entertaine,
530"Of euery new vnfleg'd courage,
"Beware of entrance into a quarrell; but being in,
¶"Beare it that the opposed may beware of thee,
¶"For the apparrell oft proclaimes the man.
¶And they of France of the chiefe rancke and station
¶"This aboue all, to thy owne selfe be true,
¶And it must follow as the night the day,
¶Lear. I humbly take my leaue, farewell Ofelia,
¶And remember well what I haue said to you.
exit.
¶Ofel. It is already lock't within my hart,
555Ofel. Somthing touching the prince Hamlet.
¶That you haue bin too prodigall of your maiden presence
560Vnto Prince Hamlet, if it be so,
As so tis giuen to mee, and that in waie of caution
¶So well as befits my honor, and your credite.
565Ofel. My lord, he hath made many tenders of his loue
¶to me.
¶Cor. Tenders, I, I, tenders you may call them.
¶Cor. Springes to catch woodcocks,
What, do not I know when the blood doth burne,
¶How prodigall the tongue lends the heart vowes,
575Or tendring thus you'l tender mee a foole.
602.1Cor. Ofelia, receiue none of his letters,
¶"For louers lines are snares to intrap the heart;
¶"Refuse his tokens, both of them are keyes
¶Come in Ofelia, such men often proue,
601.1"Great in their wordes, but little in their loue.
Ofel. I will my lord.
exeunt.
¶
Enter Hamlet, Horatio, and Marcellus.
605An nipping winde, what houre i'st?
¶Hor. Indeed I heard it not, what doth this mean my lord?
¶And as he dreames, his draughts of renish downe,
615The kettle, drumme, and trumpet, thus bray out,
¶The triumphes of his pledge.
¶Natiue here, and to the maner borne,
620It is a custome, more honourd in the breach,
¶Then in the obseruance.
¶
Enter the Ghost.
¶Hor. Looke my Lord, it comes.
625Be thou a spirite of health, or goblin damn'd,
¶Bring with thee ayres from heanen, or blasts from hell:
¶Be thy intents wicked or charitable,
¶That I will speake to thee,
Ile call thee Hamlet, King, Father, Royall Dane,
¶Haue burst their ceremonies: why thy Sepulcher,
¶In which wee saw thee quietly interr'd,
635Hath burst his ponderous and marble Iawes,
¶To cast thee vp againe: what may this meane,
¶Making night hideous, and we fooles of nature,
¶With thoughts beyond the reaches of our soules?
¶Say, speake, wherefore, what may this meane?
645To impart to you alone.
¶Mar. Looke with what courteous action
¶It waues you to a more remoued ground,
¶But do not go with it.
650Hor. No, by no meanes my Lord.
¶Hor. What if it tempt you toward the flood my Lord.
660That beckles ore his bace, into the sea,
¶Ham. Still am I called, go on, ile follow thee.
¶I do not set my life at a pinnes fee,
655And for my soule, what can it do to that?
¶Being a thing immortall, like it selfe,
Go on, ile follow thee.
¶Ham. My fate cries out, and makes each pety Artiue
670As hardy as the Nemeon Lyons nerue,
¶Still am I cald, vnhand me gentlemen;
¶By heauen ile make a ghost of him that lets me,
¶Away I say, go on, ile follow thee.
¶Mar. Lets follow, tis not fit thus to obey him.
exit.
¶
Enter Ghost and Hamlet.
¶Ham. Ile go no farther, whither wilt thou leade me?
¶Ghost Marke me.
¶Ham. I will.
695To walke the night, and all the day
¶Confinde in flaming fire,
¶Till the foule crimes done in my dayes of Nature
¶Are purged and burnt away.
¶Ghost Nay pitty me not, but to my vnfolding
Lend thy listning eare, but that I am forbid
¶Would harrow vp thy soule, freeze thy yong blood,
¶Thy knotted and combined locks to part,
¶And each particular haire to stand on end
705Like quils vpon the fretfull Porpentine,
¶Hamlet, if euer thou didst thy deere father loue.
¶Ham. O God.
¶Ham. Murder.
As in the least tis bad,
¶meditation, or the thought of it, may sweepe to my reuenge.
720On Lethe wharffe: briefe let me be.
¶Tis giuen out, that sleeping in my orchard,
725But know thou noble Youth: he that did sting
¶Thy fathers heart, now weares his Crowne.
¶O wicked will, and gifts! that haue the power
¶But vertne, as it neuer will be moued,
¶So Lust, thought to a radiant angle linckt,
And prey on garbage: but soft, me thinkes
¶I sent the mornings ayre, briefe let me be,
¶Sleeping within my Orchard, my custome alwayes
745In the after noone, vpon my secure houre
¶Thy vncle came, with iuyce of Hebona
¶In a viall, and through the porches of my eares
750Hold such an enmitie with blood of man,
¶The naturall gates and allies of the body,
¶And turnes the thinne and wholesome blood
¶Like eager dropings into milke.
¶And all my smoothe body, barked, and tetterd ouer.
¶Thus was I sleeping by a brothers hand
760Of Crowne, of Queene, of life, of dignitie
At once depriued, no reckoning made of,
¶But sent vnto my graue,
¶With all my accompts and sinnes vpon my head,
765O horrible, most horrible!
765.1Ham. O God!
¶But howsoeuer, let not thy heart
¶Leaue her to heauen,
¶And to the burthen that her conscience beares.
To be neere, and gin's to pale his vneffectuall fire:
¶Hamlet adue, adue, adue: remember me.
Exit
¶And shall I couple hell; remember thee?
¶Yes thou poore Ghost; from the tables
¶Of my memorie, ile wipe away all sawes of Bookes,
¶All triuiall fond conceites
¶Yes, yes, by heauen, a damnd pernitious villaine,
¶Murderons, bawdy, smiling damned villaine,
¶(My tables) meet it is I set it downe,
795So vncle, there you are, there you are.
Now to the words; it is adue adue: remember me,
¶Soe t'is enough I haue sworne.
¶Mar. Lord Hamlet.
¶Hor. Ill, lo, lo, ho, ho.
805Hor. What news my lord?
¶Ham. O wonderfull, wonderful.
¶Hor. Good my lord tel it.
¶Ham. No not I, you'l reueale it.
¶Hor. Not I my Lord by heauen.
810Mar. Nor I my Lord.
Once thinke it? but you'l be secret.
¶Both. I by heauen, my lord.
¶Ham. There's neuer a villaine dwelling in all Denmarke,
815But hee's an arrant knaue.
¶you this.
¶Ham. Right, you are in the right, and therefore
¶I holde it meet without more circumstance at all,
¶As it is, and for my owne poore parte, ile go pray.
¶Hor. Ther's no offence my Lord.
¶Ham. Yes by Saint Patrike but there is Horatio,
830And much offence too, touching this vision,
¶For your desires to know what is betweene vs,
¶Or'emaister it as you may:
And now kind frends, as yon are frends,
¶Schollers and gentlmen,
835Grant mee one poore request.
¶Both. My lord, we will not.
840Hor. In faith my Lord not I.
¶Mar. Nor I my Lord in faith.
845Gho. Sweare.
The Gost vnder the stage.
¶Sweare by my sword.
¶Gost. Sweare.
¶Come hither Gentlemen, and lay your handes
¶Ghost Sweare.
so fast, a worthy Pioner, once more remoue.
¶There are more things in heauen and earth Horatio,
¶Then are Dream't of, in your philosophie,
But come here, as before you neuer shall
¶As I perchance hereafter shall thinke meet,
870With Armes, incombred thus, or this head shake,
¶As well well, wee know, or wee could and if we would,
¶Or there be, and if they might, or such ambiguous:
¶Giuing out to note, that you know aught of mee,
875This not to doe, so grace, and mercie
880In all my loue I do commend mee to you,
¶And what so poore a man as Hamlet may,
¶Nay come lett's go together,
¶But stil your fingers on your lippes I pray,
¶That euer I was borne to set it right,
¶Nay come lett's go together.
Exeunt.
¶
Enter Corambis, and Montano.
And this same mony with my blessing to him,
¶And bid him ply his learning good Montano.
¶Mon. I will my lord.
905I knew the gentleman, or know his father,
¶To inquire the manner of his life,
898.1As thus; being amongst his acquaintance,
¶At game, or drincking, swearing, or drabbing,
¶You may go so farre.
¶Mon. My lord, that will impeach his reputation.
920Cor. I faith not a whit, no not a whit,
As you may bridle it not disparage him a iote.
¶What was I a bout to say,
Mary this, I saw him yesterday, or tother day,
950Or then, or at such a time, a dicing,
¶Or at Tennis, I or drincking drunke, or entring
¶Of a howse of lightnes viz. brothell,
¶Thus sir do wee that know the world, being men of reach,
¶By indirections, finde directions forth,
¶Mon. I haue my lord.
¶Cor. Wel, fare you well, commend mee to him.
965Mon. I will my lord.
Cor. And bid him ply his musicke
¶
Enter, Ofelia.
¶Cor. Farewel, how now Ofelia, what's the news with you?
971.1So great an alteration in a Prince,
¶So pitifull to him, fearefull to mee,
978.1A maidens eye ne're looked on.
970Cor. Why what's the matter my Ofelia?
¶Of. O yong Prince Hamlet, the only floure of Denmark,
974.1Hee is bereft of all the wealth he had,
¶The Iewell that ador'nd his feature most
¶Is filcht and stolne away, his wit's bereft him,
¶Hee found mee walking in the gallery all alone,
There comes hee to mee, with a distracted looke,
¶His garters lagging downe, his shooes vntide,
987.1As if they had vow'd, this is their latest obiect.
¶He doth vnclaspe his holde, and parts away
993.1Silent, as is the mid time of the night:
¶And as he went, his eie was still on mee,
¶For thus his head ouer his shoulder looked,
995He seemed to finde the way without his eies:
¶For out of doores he went without their helpe,
996.1And so did leaue me.
¶Cor. Madde for thy loue,
¶Ofelia I did repell his letters, deny his gifts,
1005As you did charge me.
¶Cor. Why that hath made him madde:
¶By heau'n t'is as proper for our age to cast
That I was so rash: but what remedy?
¶Though wilde a while, yet more true to thy loue.
exeunt.
¶
Enter King and Queene, Rossencraft, and Gilderstone.
1030Therefore we doe desire, euen as you tender
1030.1Our care to him, and our great loue to you,
1035That you will labour but to wring from him
¶Doe this, the king of Denmarke shal be thankefull.
¶Your maiestie may more commaund in wordes
1049.1By loue, by duetie, and obedience.
Guil. What we may doe for both your Maiesties
1046.1To know the griefe troubles the Prince your sonne,
¶We will indeuour all the best we may,
1051.1So in all duetie doe we take our leaue.
¶
Enter Corambis and Ofelia.
Return'd from Norway.
¶I holde my duetie as I holde my life,
¶Both to my God, and to my soueraigne King:
1070And I beleeue, or else this braine of mine
¶Hunts not the traine of policie so well
¶As it had wont to doe, but I haue found
¶The very depth of Hamlets lunacie.
1073.1Queene God graunt he hath.
¶
Enter the Ambassadors.
¶King Now Voltemar, what from our brother Norway?
¶His nephews leuies, which to him appear'd
¶To be a preparation gainst the Polacke:
¶But better look't into, he truely found
¶Receiues rebuke from Norway: and in fine,
1095Makes vow before his vncle, neuer more
¶Whereon olde Norway ouercome with ioy,
¶Giues him three thousand crownes in annuall fee,
1100So leuied as before, against the Polacke,
¶With an intreaty heerein further shewne,
¶Through your dominions, for that enterprise
1105As therein are set downe.
¶Meane time we thanke you for your well
Tooke labour: go to your rest, at night weele feast togither:
¶Right welcome home.
exeunt Ambassadors.
Now my Lord, touching the yong Prince Hamlet,
¶Certaine it is that hee is madde: mad let vs grant him then:
¶Now to know the cause of this effect,
¶For this effect defectiue comes by cause.
¶Queene Good my Lord be briefe.
¶Cor. Madam I will: my Lord, I haue a daughter,
¶Haue while shee's mine: for that we thinke
¶My Lord, but note this letter,
¶The which my daughter in obedience
1135Deliuer'd to my handes.
1135.1King Reade it my Lord.
Cor. Marke my Lord.
¶Doubt that in earth is fire,
1145Doubt that the starres doe moue,
¶Doubt trueth to be a liar,
¶But doe not doubt I loue.
¶To the beautifull Ofelia:
¶Thine euer the most vnhappy Prince Hamlet.
¶My Lord, what doe you thinke of me?
1160I, or what might you thinke when I sawe this?
Cor. I would be glad to prooue so.
1170Lord Hamlet is a Prince out of your starre,
1170.1And one that is vnequall for your loue:
¶Therefore I did commaund her refuse his letters,
¶Shee as my childe obediently obey'd me.
¶Which I tooke to be idle, and but sport,
¶He straitway grew into a melancholy,
From that vnto a fast, then vnto distraction,
Then into a sadnesse, from that vnto a madnesse,
¶And if this be not true, take this from this.
1185And it hath fallen out otherwise.
¶Nay, if circumstances leade me on,
Ile finde it out, if it were hid
1190As deepe as the centre of the earth.
1191.1Cor. Mary my good lord thus,
¶The Princes walke is here in the galery,
¶There let Ofelia, walke vntill hee comes:
1197.1There shall you heare the effect of all his hart,
¶And if it proue any otherwise then loue,
1198.1Then let my censure faile an other time.
¶
Enter Hamlet.
To leaue vs here?
1695Cor. And here Ofelia, reade you on this booke,
1710Ham. To be, or not to be, I there's the point,
¶To Die, to sleepe, is that all? I all:
¶No, to sleepe, to dreame, I mary there it goes,
1720For in that dreame of death, when wee awake,
¶And borne before an euerlasting Iudge,
The vndiscouered country, at whose sight
¶But for this, the ioyfull hope of this,
¶Whol'd beare the scornes and flattery of the world,
¶The taste of hunger, or a tirants raigne,
¶To grunt and sweate vnder this weary life,
¶When that he may his full Quietus make,
1730With a bare bodkin, who would this indure,
¶But for a hope of something after death?
Which pusles the braine, and doth confound the sence,
1735Which makes vs rather beare those euilles we haue,
¶Than flie to others that we know not of.
¶I that, O this conscience makes cowardes of vs all,
¶Lady in thy orizons, be all my sinnes remembred.
brance, such tokens which I haue receiued of you.
1760Ham. Are you faire?
¶Ofel. My Lord.
¶Ofel. What meanes my Lord?
Your beauty should admit no discourse to your honesty.
¶Ofel. My Lord, can beauty haue better priuiledge than
1765with honesty?
Then Honesty can transforme Beauty:
¶This was sometimes a Paradox,
But now the time giues it scope.
¶I neuer gaue you nothing.
¶Ofel. My Lord, you know right well you did,
1754.1But now too true I finde,
¶Rich giftes waxe poore, when giuers grow vnkinde.
¶Ham. I neuer loued you.
¶Ofel. You made me beleeue you did.
It had beene better my mother had ne're borne me,
¶O I am very prowde, ambitious, disdainefull,
1780With more sinnes at my becke, then I haue thoughts
¶Do, crawling between heauen and earth?
¶To a Nunnery goe, we are arrant knaues all,
Beleeue none of vs, to a Nunnery goe.
1785Ham. Wher's thy father?
¶Ofel. At home my lord.
He may play the foole no where but in his
¶Owne house: to a Nunnery goe.
Ofel. Help him good God.
This plague to thy dowry:
1792.1Ofel. Alas, what change is this?
¶Ham. But if thou wilt needes marry, marry a foole,
¶For wisemen know well enough,
What monsters you make of them, to a Nunnery goe.
¶Ham. Nay, I haue heard of your paintings too,
¶God hath giuen you one face,
And you make your selues another,
1800You fig, and you amble, and you nickname Gods creatures,
¶A pox, t'is scuruy, Ile no more of it,
It hath made me madde: Ile no more marriages,
¶All that are married but one, shall liue,
1805To a Nunnery goe.
exit.
1805.1Ofe. Great God of heauen, what a quicke change is this?
¶The Courtier, Scholler, Souldier, all in him,
exit.
1818.1Some deeper thing it is that troubles him.
I will my selfe goe feele him: let me worke,
Ile try him euery way: see where he comes,
1204.1Send you those Gentlemen, let me alone
To finde the depth of this, away, be gone.
exit King.
Now my good Lord, do you know me?
Enter Hamlet.
¶Cor. Not I my Lord.
1215For to be honest, as this age goes,
Is one man to be pickt out of tenne thousand.
¶Cor. What doe you reade my Lord?
1230Ham. Wordes, wordes.
¶Cor. What's the matter my Lord?
¶Ham. Betweene who?
¶Cor. I meane the matter you reade my Lord.
¶For here the Satyricall Satyre writes,
1235That olde men haue hollow eyes, weake backes,
Grey beardes, pittifull weake hammes, gowty legges,
¶If like a Crabbe, you could goe backeward.
¶Cor. How pregnant his replies are, and full of wit:
1226.1All this comes by loue, the vemencie of loue,
¶And when I was yong, I was very idle,
¶Will you walke out of the aire my Lord?
¶Ham. Into my graue.
Very shrewd answers,
¶My lord I will take my leaue of you.
1265
Enter Gilderstone, and Rossencraft.
I will more willingly part with all,
¶Olde doating foole.
¶Welcome kinde Schoole-fellowes to Elsanoure.
1417.1Gil. We thanke your Grace, and would be very glad
¶You were as when we were at Wittenberg.
¶Tell me true, come, I know the good King and Queene
¶Come, I know you were sent for.
Come, you were sent for.
¶Ross. My lord, we were, and willingly if we might,
Know the cause and ground of your discontent.
2210Ham. Why I want preferment.
1355No nor Man that is so glorious a creature,
Contents not me, no nor woman too, though you laugh.
¶Gil. My lord, we laugh not at that.
1360Ham. Why did you laugh then,
When I said, Man did not content mee?
content you.
¶What entertainement the Players shall haue,
¶We boorded them a the way: they are comming to you.
¶Ham. Players, what Players be they?
1375Ross. My Lord, the Tragedians of the Citty,
1385Gil. No my Lord, their reputation holds as it was wont.
1385.1Ham. How then?
¶Gil. Yfaith my Lord, noueltie carries it away,
For the principall publike audience that
Came to them, are turned to priuate playes,
And to the humour of children.
¶Ham. I doe not greatly wonder of it,
1410For those that would make mops and moes
At my vncle, when my father liued,
¶Now giue a hundred, two hundred pounds
¶For his picture: but they shall be welcome,
He that playes the King shall haue tribute of me,
1370The clowne shall make them laugh
That are tickled in the lungs, or the blanke verse shall halt
(for't,
1415
The Trumpets sound, Enter Corambis.
1430Do you see yonder great baby?
He is not yet out of his swadling clowts.
¶Is twice a childe.
¶Cor. My lord, I haue news to tell you.
¶Ham. My Lord, I haue newes to tell you:
1440Cor. The Actors are come hither, my lord.
¶Ham. Buz, buz.
Either for Comedy, Tragedy, Historie, Pastorall,
¶Seneca cannot be too heauy, nor Plato too light:
¶For the law hath writ those are the onely men.
¶Ham. Why one faire daughter, and no more,
If you call me Iepha, I hane a daughter that
1460Ham. Nay that followes not.
¶Cor. What followes then my Lord?
¶Wil tel you all: for look you where my abridgement comes:
¶What my olde friend, thy face is vallanced
1470My yong lady and mistris, burlady but your
¶Pray God sir your voyce, like a peece of vncurrant
¶Golde, be not crack't in the ring: come on maisters,
¶Weele euen too't, like French Falconers,
But it was neuer acted: or if it were,
1480Neuer aboue twice, for as I remember,
¶It pleased not the vulgar, it was cauiary
To the million: but to me
¶And others, that receiued it in the like kinde,
¶Cried in the toppe of their iudgements, an excellent play,
¶Set downe with as great modestie as cunning:
¶Come, a speech in it I chiefly remember
Was Æneas tale to Dido,
¶If it liue in thy memory beginne at this line,
¶Let me see.
The rugged Pyrrus, like th'arganian beast:
¶No t'is not so, it begins with Pirrus:
1493.1O I haue it.
¶When he lay couched in the ominous horse,
¶Hath now his blacke and grimme complexion smeered
¶With Heraldry more dismall, head to foote,
¶Now is he totall guise, horridely tricked
1500With blood of fathers, mothers, daughters, sonnes,
¶Back't and imparched in calagulate gore,
1503.1So goe on.
1510His antike sword rebellious to his Arme,
¶Pyrrus at Pryam driues, but all in rage,
Strikes wide, but with the whiffe and winde
¶Of his fell sword, th'unnerued father falles.
¶Cor. Enough my friend, t'is too long.
1540A pox, hee's for a Iigge, or a tale of bawdry,
Or else he sleepes, come on to Hecuba, come.
¶Cor. Mobled Queene is good, faith very good.
¶And o're her weake and all ore-teeming loynes, a blancket
¶And a kercher on that head, where late the diademe stoode,
¶Would treason haue pronounced,
1555Mincing her husbandes limbs,
¶It would haue made milch the burning eyes of heauen,
1560Cor Looke my lord if he hath not changde his colour,
And hath teares in his eyes: no more good heart, no more.
¶Ham. T'is well, t'is very well, I pray my lord,
¶I tell you they are the Chronicles
1565And briefe abstracts of the time,
After your death I can tell you,
¶You were better haue a bad Epiteeth,
Then their ill report while you liue.
Vse them after your owne honor and dignitie,
¶der of Gonsago?
¶players Yes my Lord.
¶Some dozen or sixteene lines,
Which I would set downe and insert?
¶Ham. T'is well, I thanke you: follow that lord:
And doe you heare sirs? take heede you mocke him not.
1584.1Gentlemen, for your kindnes I thanke you,
1585And for a time I would desire you leaue me.
1585.1Gil. Our loue and duetie is at your commaund.
¶
Exeunt all but Hamlet.
¶Why these Players here draw water from eyes:
¶For Hecuba, why what is Hecuba to him, or he to Hecuba?
1600.1His father murdred, and a Crowne bereft him,
¶He would turne all his teares to droppes of blood,
¶Amaze the standers by with his laments,
1603.1Strike more then wonder in the iudiciall eares,
1605Confound the ignorant, and make mute the wise,
¶Hauing my father murdred by a villaine,
Stand still, and let it passe, why sure I am a coward:
¶Who pluckes me by the beard, or twites my nose,
¶Giue's me the lie i'th throate downe to the lungs,
¶Or by this I should a fatted all the region kites
1620With this slaues offell, this damned villaine,
Treacherous, bawdy, murderous villaine:
¶Why this is braue, that I the sonne of my deare father,
¶Should like a scalion, like a very drabbe
¶Thus raile in wordes. About my braine,
¶I haue heard that guilty creatures sitting at a play,
1630.1Committed long before.
¶As he is very potent with such men,
¶The play's the thing,
1645Wherein I'le catch the conscience of the King.
exit.
¶
Enter the King, Queene, and Lordes.
¶King Lordes, can you by no meanes finde
¶You being so neere in loue, euen from his youth,
¶To wring from him the cause of all his griefe,
¶But still he puts vs off, and by no meanes
¶Before we left him, and I take it,
He hath giuen order for a play to night,
King With all our heart, it likes vs very well:
Queene Thankes gentlemen, and what the Queene of
( Denmarke
1045.1Gil. Weele once againe vnto the noble Prince.
He is inclin'd to any kinde of mirth.
Cor. Madame, I pray be ruled by me:
And my good Soueraigne, giue me leaue to speake,
¶We cannot yet finde out the very ground
¶Of his distemperance, therefore
There question you the cause of all his griefe,
1839.1And then in loue and nature vnto you, hee'le tell you all:
¶My Lord, how thinke you on't?
¶Who hopes his griefe will be reueal'd to her.
exeunt omnes
¶
Enter Hamlet and the Players.
as I taught thee,
1850Mary and you mouth it, as a many of your players do
¶I'de rather heare a towne bull bellow,
Then such a fellow speake my lines.
¶Nor do not saw the aire thus with your hands,
¶But giue euery thing his action with temperance.
¶To split the eares of the ignoraut, who for the
1860I would haue such a fellow whipt, for o're doing, tarmagant
¶It out, Herodes Herod.
¶players My Lorde, wee haue indifferently reformed that
1885among vs.
¶Ham. The better, the better, mend it all together:
¶There be fellowes that I haue seene play,
¶And heard others commend them, and that highly too,
¶That hauing neither the gate of Christian, Pagan,
That you would a thought, some of Natures journeymen
¶Had made men, and not made them well,
¶They imitated humanitie, so abhominable:
¶Take heede, auoyde it.
¶players I warrant you my Lord.
Ham. And doe you heare? let not your Clowne speake
¶More then is set downe, there be of them I can tell you
¶Quantitie of barren spectators to laugh with them,
¶A pittifull ambition in the foole the vseth it.
¶Apparell, and Gentlemen quotes his ieasts downe
¶In their tables, before they come to the play, as thus:
.5Cannot you stay till I eate my porrige? and, you owe me
¶A quarters wages: and, my coate wants a cullison:
¶And your beere is sowre: and, blabbering with his lips,
And thus keeping in his cinkapase of ieasts,
¶When, God knows, the warme Clowne cannot make a iest
¶Maisters tell him of it.
1900players We will my Lord.
¶Horatio. Heere my Lord.
1905As e're my conuersation cop'd withall.
¶Hor. O my lord!
1910Why should the poore be flattered?
¶What gaine should I receiue by flattering thee,
¶That nothing hath but thy good minde?
1912.1And not with such as thou Horatio.
¶There is a play to night, wherein one Sceane they haue
¶Comes very neere the murder of my father,
¶Marke thou the King, doe but obserue his lookes,
¶For I mine eies will riuet to his face:
And if he doe not bleach, and change at that,
Horatio, haue a care, obserue him well.
¶Ham. Harke, they come.
¶
Enter King, Queene, Corambis, and other Lords.
1950feede a the ayre.
¶I father: My lord, you playd in the Vniuersitie.
1955Cor. That I did my L: and I was counted a good actor.
¶Ham. What did you enact there?
in the Capitoll, Brutus killed me.
1960Ham. It was a brute parte of him,
To kill so capitall a calfe.
¶Come, be these Players ready?
¶Lady will you giue me leaue, and so forth:
To lay my head in your lappe?
¶Ofel. No my Lord.
¶
downe in an Arbor, she leaues him: Then enters Luci-
¶Ham. This is myching Mallico, that meanes my chiefe.
Ofel. What doth this meane my lord?
Be not afeard to shew, hee'le not be afeard to tell:
O these Players cannot keepe counsell, thei'le tell all.
¶Prol. For vs, and for our Tragedie,
¶Heere stowpiug to your clemencie,
¶We begge your hearing patiently.
¶Ham. As womens loue.
¶
Enter the Duke and Dutchesse.
¶Since happy time ioyn'd both our hearts as one:
2028.1And now the blood that fill'd my youthfull veines,
¶Runnes weakely in their pipes, and all the straines
¶Is now a burthen that Age cannot beare:
2040To heauen must I, and leaue the earth with you.
¶When death takes you, let life from me depart.
¶Thon maist (perchance) haue a more noble mate,
2043.1More wise, more youthfull, and one.
¶A second time I kill my Lord that's dead,
¶Ham. O wormewood, wormewood!
2055But what we doe determine oft we breake,
¶Our thoughts are ours, their end's none of our owne:
¶But die thy thoughts, when thy first Lord is dead.
¶If once a widdow, euer I be wife.
¶ous time with sleepe.
2095Dutchesse Sleepe rocke thy braine,
¶And neuer come mischance betweene vs twaine.
exit Lady
¶Ham. Madam, how do you like this play?
2100King Haue you heard the argument, is there no offence
¶in it?
¶King What do you call the name of the play?
¶The image of a murder done in guyana, Albertus
¶Was the Dukes name, his wife Baptista,
¶Father, it is a knauish peece a worke: but what
A that, it toucheth not vs, you and I that haue free
2110Soules, let the galld iade wince, this is one
¶Lucianus nephew to the King.
¶Ofel. Ya're as good as a Chorus my lord.
2115poopies dallying.
¶a man do but be merry? for looke how cheerefully my mo-
1980ther lookes, my father died within these two houres.
¶Ofel. Nay, t'is twice two months, my Lord.
¶Ham. Two months, nay then let the diuell weare blacke,
1985And not forgotten yet? nay then there's some
¶Likelyhood, a gentlemans death may outliue memorie,
¶But by my faith hee must build churches then,
Or els hee must follow the olde Epitithe,
¶With hoh, with ho, the hobi-horse is forgot.
¶Begin, a poxe, leaue thy damnable faces and begin,
¶Come, the croking rauen doth bellow for reuenge.
¶Thou mixture rancke, of midnight weedes collected,
¶Thy naturall magicke, and dire propertie,
exit.
2140King Lights, I will to bed.
¶
Exeunt King and Lordes.
¶Then let the stricken deere goe weepe,
¶The Hart vngalled play,
¶Thus runnes the world away.
2146.1Hor. The king is mooued my lord.
For more then all the coyne in Denmarke.
¶
Enter Rossencraft and Gilderstone.
2165Ham. And if the king like not the tragedy,
¶Why then belike he likes it not perdy.
¶My good lord, let vs againe intreate
To know of you the ground and cause of your distempera-
(ture
¶Ham. I pray will you play vpon this pipe?
¶Ross. Alas my lord I cannot.
¶Ham. Pray will you.
¶Ham. why looke, it is a thing of nothing,
T'is but stopping of these holes,
¶And with a little breath from your lips,
¶Gil. But this cannot wee do my Lord.
Ros. My lord wee cannot.
¶You would search the very inward part of my hart,
2240Zownds do you thinke I am easier to be pla'yd
¶On, then a pipe? call mee what Instrument
You will, though you can frett mee, yet you can not
Countenance, fauours, and rewardes, that makes
Do the king, in the end, best seruise;
¶For hee doth keep you as an Ape doth nuttes,
¶In the corner of his Iaw, first mouthes you,
Then swallowes you: so when hee hath need
2650.1Ros. Wel my Lord wee'le take our leaue.
Ham Farewell, farewell, God blesse you.
2242.1
Exit Rossencraft and Gilderstone.
¶
Enter Corambis
¶Cor. T'is like a camell in deed.
¶Ham. Or like a whale.
¶Ham. Why then tell my mother i'le come by and by.
2254.1Good night Horatio.
¶O God, let ne're the heart of Nero enter
¶Let me be cruell, not vnnaturall.
exit.
¶
Enter the King.
¶King O that this wet that falles vpon my face
2326.1The earth doth still crie out vpon my fact,
¶Pay me the murder of a brother and a king,
2314.1And the adulterous fault I haue committed:
Yet may contrition make them as white as snowe:
I but still to perseuer in a sinne,
It is an act gainst the vniuersall power,
¶
hee kneeles._enters Hamlet
¶And thus hee dies: and so am I reuenged:
Who knowes, saue the immortall powres,
2360And shall I kill him now,
¶When he is purging of his soule?
2355Making his way for heauen, this is a benefit,
And not reuenge: no, get thee vp agen,
¶Of saluation in't, then trip him
¶That his heeles may kicke at heauen,
¶And fall as lowe as hel: my mother stayes,
¶This phisicke but prolongs thy weary dayes.
exit Ham.
2372.1No King on earth is safe, if Gods his foe.
exit King.
¶
Enter Queene and Corambis.
2375Cor. Madame, I heare yong Hamlet comming,
exit Cor.
¶Ham. Mother, mother, O are you here?
2385How i'st with you mother?
¶Ham. Mother, you haue my father much offended.
2390Queene How now boy?
Ham. How now mother! come here, sit downe, for you
¶Queene What wilt thou doe? thou wilt not murder me:
¶Helpe hoe.
¶Cor. Helpe for the Queene.
¶Ham. I a Rat, dead for a Duckat.
¶Rash intruding foole, farewell,
¶I tooke thee for thy better.
2410As to kill a king, and marry with his brother.
¶Queene How! kill a king!
¶If you be made of penitrable stuffe,
¶I'le make your eyes looke downe into your heart,
¶See here a face, to outface Mars himselfe,
An eye, at which his foes did tremble at,
2440A front wherin all vertues are set downe
2440.1For to adorne a king, and guild his crowne,
¶Whose heart went hand in hand euen with that vow,
¶He made to you in marriage, and he is dead.
¶Murdred, damnably murdred, this was your husband,
Looke you now, here is your husband,
2447.1With a face like Vulcan.
¶A looke fit for a murder and a rape,
¶A dull dead hanging looke, and a hell-bred eie,
¶To affright children and amaze the world:
2450And this same haue you left to change with this.
2455What Diuell thus hath cosoned you at hob-man blinde?
¶A! haue you eyes and can you looke on him
2464.1Ham. To leaue him that bare a Monarkes minde,
¶For a king of clowts, of very shreads.
Ham. Nay but still to persist and dwell in sinne,
¶To sweate vnder the yoke of infamie,
¶Queene Hamlet, no more.
¶Ham. Why appetite with you is in the waine,
2453.1Your blood runnes backeward now from whence it came,
¶Who'le chide hote blood within a Virgins heart,
¶Queene Hamlet, thou cleaues my heart in twaine.
¶better.
¶
Enter the ghost in his night gowne.
¶Saue me, saue me, you gratious
Powers aboue, and houer ouer mee,
With your celestiall wings.
¶Doe you not come your tardy sonne to chide,
¶That I thus long haue let reuenge slippe by?
¶O do not glare with lookes so pittifull!
Forgoe their proper powers, and fall to pitty.
2490Ghost Hamlet, I once againe appeare to thee,
¶To put thee in remembrance of my death:
2491.1Doe not neglect, nor long time put it off.
¶But I perceiue by thy distracted lookes,
¶Speake to her Hamlet, for her sex is weake,
¶Comfort thy mother, Hamlet, thinke on me.
Queene Nay, how i'st with you
¶That thus you bend your eyes on vacancie,
2515Ham. Why doe you nothing heare?
¶Queene Not I.
¶Queene No neither.
¶As he liued, looke you how pale he lookes,
¶See how he steales away out of the Portall,
Looke, there he goes.
exit ghost.
2520.1Which makes thy tongue to blazon thy hearts griefe:
¶I neuer knew of this most horride murder:
¶But Hamlet, this is onely fantasie,
2521.1And for my loue forget these idle fits.
¶O mother, if euer you did my deare father loue,
¶Forbeare the adulterous bed to night,
2545And win your selfe by little as you may,
2545.1In time it may be you wil lothe him quite:
¶And in his death your infamy shall die.
2573.1That knowes our thoughts, and lookes into our hearts,
¶Ham. It is enough, mother good night:
¶Come sir, I'le prouide for you a graue,
¶Who was in life a foolish prating knaue.
2585
Exit Hamlet with the dead body.
¶
Enter the King and Lordes.
finde him?
¶As one forgetting that I was his mother:
2392.1At last I call'd for help: and as I cried, Corambis
¶Call'd, which Hamlet no sooner heard, but whips me
Out his rapier, and cries, a Rat, a Rat, and in his rage
¶The good olde man he killes.
¶Lordes goe to him, inquire the body out.
¶Our letters to our deare brother of England,
¶Happly the aire and climate of the Country
1828.1May please him better than his natiue home:
¶See where he comes.
¶
Enter Hamlet and the Lordes.
¶Gil. My lord, we can by no meanes
Know of him where the body is.
2685Where he is eaten, a certaine company of politicke wormes
¶are euen now at him.
¶Father, your fatte King, and your leane Beggar
¶Looke you, a man may fish with that worme
That hath eaten of a King,
¶And a Beggar eate that fish,
Which that worme hath caught.
¶King What of this?
¶Ham. Nothing father, but to tell you, how a King
May go a progresse through the guttes of a Beggar.
¶Father, you had best looke in the other partes below
¶For him, aud if you cannot finde him there,
You may chance to nose him as you go vp the lobby.
2700I'le warrant you hee'le stay till you come.
in tender preseruation of your health,
2701.1The which we price euen as our proper selfe,
¶It is our minde you forthwith goe for England,
¶Ham. O with all my heart: farewel mother.
¶King Your louing father, Hamlet.
¶My mother is your wife, man and wife is one flesh,
And so (my mother) farewel: for England hoe.
¶
exeunt all but the king.
2717.1king Gertred, leaue me,
¶And take your leaue of Hamlet,
¶To England is he gone, ne're to returne:
¶Our Letters are vnto the King of England,
¶That on the sight of them, on his allegeance,
2727.1He presently without demaunding why,
¶He once being dead, why then our state is free.
exit.
¶
Enter Fortenbrasse, Drumme and Souldiers.
2735Fort. Captaine, from vs goe greete
The king of Denmarke:
2737.1According to the Articles agreed on:
¶You know our Randevous, goe march away.
exeunt all.
2738.1
enter King and Queene.
¶I hope to heare good newes from thence ere long,
¶If euery thing fall out to our content,
2820But this mischance of olde Corambis death,
¶That she, poore maide, is quite bereft her wittes.
2825We vnderstand her brother's come from France,
2825.1And he hath halfe the heart of all our Land,
¶And hardly hee'le forget his fathers death,
¶
Enter Ofelia playing on a Lute, and her haire
2766.1downe singing.
From another man?
2770By his cockle hatte, and his staffe,
And his sandall shoone.
2780Larded with sweete flowers,
¶That bewept to the graue did not goe
¶With true louers showers:
¶He is dead and gone Lady, he is dead and gone,
At his heeles a stone.
¶Ofelia Well God yeeld you,
¶It grieues me to see how they laid him in the cold ground,
I could not chuse but weepe:
¶And will he not come againe?
¶And will he not come againe?
¶No, no, hee's gone, and we cast away mone,
¶And he neuer will come againe.
2945His beard as white as snowe:
¶All flaxen was his pole,
He is dead, he is gone,
¶And we cast away moane:
¶God a mercy on his soule.
¶God be with you Ladies, God be with you.
exit Ofelia.
2809.1king A pretty wretch! this is a change indeede:
¶O Time, how swiftly runnes our ioyes away?
¶Content on earth was neuer certaine bred,
¶To day we laugh and liue, to morrow dead.
2835How now, what noyse is that?
¶
A noyse within._enter Leartes.
¶Lear. Stay there vntill I come,
¶O thou vilde king, giue me my father:
¶Speake, say, where's my father?
¶king Dead.
Be juggled with, for he is murdred.
2875Queene True, but not by him.
Lear. By whome, by heau'n I'le be resolued.
¶king Let him goe Gertred, away, I feare him not,
¶There's such diuinitie doth wall a king,
¶That treason dares not looke on.
¶Let him goe Gertred, that your father is murdred,
Swoop-stake-like, draw at friend, and foe, and all?
2895Lear. To his good friends thus wide I'le ope mine arms,
And locke them in my hart, but to his foes,
551.1I will no reconcilement but by bloud.
And that in soule we sorrow for for his death,
2960Meane while be patient, and content your selfe.
2905
Enter Ofelia as before.
¶Should be as mortall as an olde mans sawe?
2913.1O heau'ns themselues! how now Ofelia?
¶Ofel. Wel God a mercy, I a bin gathering of floures:
¶Here, here is rew for you,
You may call it hearb a grace a Sundayes,
Heere's some for me too: you must weare your rew
2935With a difference, there's a dazie.
¶Here Loue, there's rosemary for you
For remembrance: I pray Loue remember,
¶And there's pansey for thoughts.
2930Lear. A document in madnes, thoughts, remembrance:
¶O God, O God!
¶Ofelia There is fennell for you, I would a giu'n you
¶Some violets, but they all withered, when
My father died: alas, they say the owle was
2785A Bakers daughter, we see what we are,
But can not tell what we shall be.
¶For bonny sweete Robin is all my ioy.
¶Ofel. Nay Loue, I pray you make no words of this now:
And you a downe a, t'is a the Kings daughter
2790To morrow is saint Valentines day,
All in the morning betime,
¶And a maide at your window,
To be your Valentine:
¶The yong man rose, and dan'd his clothes,
And dupt the chamber doore,
¶Let in the maide, that out a maide
Neuer departed more.
¶Nay I pray marke now,
¶Away, and fie for shame:
¶Yong men will doo't when they come too't
¶By cocke they are too blame.
2800Quoth she, before you tumbled me,
¶You promised me to wed.
¶So would I a done, by yonder Sunne,
¶If thou hadst not come to my bed.
So God be with you all, God bwy Ladies.
2950God bwy you Loue.
exit Ofelia.
¶Lear. Griefe vpon griefe, my father murdered,
king Content you good Leartes for a time,
2960.1Although I know your griefe is as a floud,
¶Brimme full of sorrow, but forbeare a while,
¶And thinke already the reuenge is done
2963.1To bury griefe within a tombe of wrath,
¶Leartes had a father he held deere.
¶king No more of that, ere many dayes be done,
.5You shall heare that you do not dreame vpon.
exeunt om.
¶
Enter Horatio and the Queene.
2985This letter I euen now receiv'd of him,
2985.1Whereas he writes how he escap't the danger,
3515He found the Packet sent to the king of England,
3525.1As at his next conuersion with your grace,
¶He will relate the circumstance at full.
¶For murderous mindes are alwayes jealous,
¶But know not you Horatio where he is?
¶Hor. Yes Madame, and he hath appoynted me
.10To morrow morning.
¶A mothers care to him, bid him a while
¶Faile in that he goes about.
.15Hor. Madam, neuer make doubt of that:
¶I thinke by this the news be come to court:
¶Quickely finde, Hamlet being here,
¶Things fell not to his minde.
¶And in the Packet there writ down that doome
¶To be perform'd on them poynted for him:
¶And by great chance he had his fathers Seale,
3551.1So all was done without discouerie.
¶Horatio once againe I take my leaue,
.5Horat. Madam adue.
¶
Enter King and Leartes.
¶What chance is this? they are gone, and he come home.
3065At it my iocund heart doth leape for ioy,
¶That I shall liue to tell him, thus he dies.
3068.1And you shall haue no let for your reuenge.
2885Lear. My will, not all the world.
¶King Nay but Leartes, marke the plot I haue layde,
3100I haue heard him often with a greedy wish,
¶Touching your weapon, which with all his heart,
¶He might be once tasked for to try your cunning.
¶Lea. And how for this?
¶King Mary Leartes thus: I'le lay a wager,
¶The which will draw him with a more desire,
¶To try the maistry, that in twelue venies
¶You gaine not three of him: now this being granted,
.5When you are hot in midst of all your play,
¶Among the foyles shall a keene rapier lie,
¶Steeped in a mixture of deadly poyson,
¶That if it drawes but the least dramme of blood,
¶In any part of him, he cannot liue:
¶And not the deerest friend that Hamlet lov'de
3130Lear. My lord, I like it well:
¶King I'le warrant you, wee'le put on you
Such a report of singularitie,
¶Will bring him on, although against his will.
¶In all his heate when that he calles for drinke,
Lear. T'is excellent, O would the time were come!
¶Here comes the Queene.
enter the Queene.
king How now Gertred, why looke you heauily?
3153.1Queene O my Lord, the yong Ofelia
¶Sitting vpon a willow by a brooke,
¶And for a while her clothes spread wide abroade,
Euen Mermaide-like, twixt heauen and earth,
¶Chaunting olde sundry tunes vncapable
¶Till that her clothes, being heauy with their drinke,
¶Dragg'd the sweete wretch to death.
¶Too much of water hast thou Ofelia,
¶Therefore I will not drowne thee in my teares,
3179.1Reuenge it is must yeeld this heart releefe,
¶For woe begets woe, and griefe hangs on griefe.
exeunt.
¶
enter Clowne and an other.
¶In christian buriall.
¶Clowne No, that's certaine, the water drown'd her.
¶If the water come to me, I drowne not my selfe:
3205But if I goe to the water, and am there drown'd,
¶Ergo I am guiltie of my owne death:
3208.1Y'are gone, goe y'are gone sir.
3215Clowne Mary more's the pitty, that great folke
¶Should haue more authoritie to hang or drowne
¶Themselues, more than other people:
¶Goe fetch me a stope of drinke, but before thou
¶Of a Mason, a Shipwright, or a Carpenter?
¶And will indure long.
¶Clowne That's prety, too't agen, too't agen.
¶2. Why then a Carpenter, for he buildes the gallowes,
3232.1And that brings many a one to his long home.
Clowne Prety agen, the gallowes doth well, mary howe
3235dooes it well? the gallowes dooes well to them that doe ill,
goe get thee gone:
¶A Graue-maker, for the houses he buildes
Last till Doomes-day. Fetch me a stope of beere, goe.
3245
Enter Hamlet and Horatio.
That is thus merry in making of a graue?
Clowne A pick-axe and a spade, a spade,
For and a winding sheete,
Most fit it is for to be made,
For such a ghest most meet.
¶Ham. Looke you, there's another Horatio.
Why mai't not be the scull of some Lawyer?
3289.1Me thinkes he should indite that fellow
¶Of an action of Batterie, for knocking
3290Him about the pate with's shouel: now where is your
Quirkes and quillets now, your vouchers and
¶Double vouchers, your leases and free-holde,
Holde the conueiance of his land, and must
¶The honor lie there? O pittifull transformance!
3302.1I prethee tell me Horatio,
That deale with them, or put their trust in them.
3275There's another, why may not that be such a ones
Scull, that praised my Lord such a ones horse,
¶When he meant to beg him? Horatio, I prethee
¶Lets question yonder fellow.
Now my friend, whose graue is this?
¶Ham. What woman?
¶One that was a woman.
¶Ham. An excellent fellow by the Lord Horatio,
¶Comes so neere the heele of the courtier,
That hee gawles his kibe, I prethee tell mee one thing,
¶How long will a man lie in the ground before hee rots?
He be laide in, as we haue many pocky corses,
¶He will last you, eight yeares, a tanner
¶Will last you eight yeares full out, or nine.
¶Ham. And why a tanner?
That it will holde out water, that's a parlous
¶Deuourer of your dead body, a great soaker.
Looke you, heres
a scull hath bin here this dozen yeare,
¶Hee that's mad.
¶Ham. I mary, how came he madde?
3350Ham. Vpon what ground?
¶Clowne A this ground, in Denmarke.
3351.1Ham. Where is he now?
3340Ham. To England! wherefore?
¶Or if he haue not, t'is no great matter there,
¶It will not be seene there.
¶Ham. Why not there?
Clowne Why there they say the men are as mad as he.
¶Clowne This, a plague on him, a madde rogues it was,
He powred once a whole flagon of Rhenish of my head,
3365Why do not you know him? this was one Yorickes scull.
¶I knew him Horatio,
¶A fellow of infinite mirth, he hath caried mee twenty times
3375hundred times, and to see, now they abhorre me: Wheres
3380to my Ladies chamber, and bid her paint her selfe an inch
¶tell me one thing, doost thou thinke that Alexander looked
¶thus?
¶Ham. No, why might not imagination worke, as thus of
¶Alexander, Alexander died, Alexander was buried, Alexander
became earth, of earth we make clay, and Alexander being
¶stoppe the boung hole of a beere barrell?
3400Imperious Cæsar dead and turnd to clay,
¶Might stoppe a hole, to keepe the winde away.
3405
Enter King and Queene, Leartes, and other lordes,
with a Priest after the coffin.
¶Ham. What funerall's this that all the Court laments?
¶Stand by a while.
3415Priest My Lord, we haue done all that lies in vs,
And more than well the church can tolerate,
¶And but for fauour of the king, and you,
¶She had beene buried in the open fieldes,
¶Ham. The faire Ofelia dead!
¶I had thought to adorne thy bridale bed, faire maide,
¶And not to follow thee vnto thy graue.
¶
Leartes leapes into the graue.
3445Now powre your earth on, Olympus hie,
¶And make a hill to o're top olde Pellon:
Hamlet leapes
in after Leartes
¶Whats he that coniures so?
¶Ham. Beholde tis I, Hamlet the Dane.
¶I prethee take thy hand from off my throate,
¶For there is something in me dangerous,
¶Which let thy wisedome feare, holde off thy hand:
¶I lou'de Ofelia as deere as twenty brothers could:
¶Shew me what thou wilt doe for her:
¶Wilt fight, wilt fast, wilt pray,
¶Com'st thou here to whine?
¶And where thou talk'st of burying thee a liue,
¶Here let vs stand: and let them them throw on vs,
¶Whole hills of earth, till with the heighth therof,
3480Make Oosell as a Wart.
¶Anone as milde and gentle as a Doue:
3484.1Therfore a while giue his wilde humour scope.
¶A Cat will meaw, a Dog will haue a day.
Exit Hamlet and Horatio.
¶Queene. Alas, it is his madnes makes him thus,
3482.1And not his heart, Leartes.
¶Therfore Leartes be in readynes.
¶Made friends and Louers, as befittes them both,
¶Euen as they tender vs, and loue their countrie.
¶
Enter Hamlet and Horatio
¶Ham. beleeue mee, it greeues mee much Horatio,
3580That to Leartes I forgot my selfe:
¶For by my selfe me thinkes I feele his griefe,
3581.1Though there's a difference in each others wrong.
¶
Enter a Bragart Gentleman.
¶Horatio, but you marke yon water-flie,
3588.1The Court knowes him, but hee knowes not the Court.
3600By my troth me thinkes t'is very colde.
¶Ham. T'is hot me thinkes.
¶With all their acoutrements too, a the carriages:
3620In good faith they are very curiously wrought.
¶And howe's the wager? I vnderstand you now.
¶At Rapier and Dagger do not get three oddes of you,
And on your side the King hath laide,
¶Ham. Very well, if the King dare venture his wager,
I dare venture my skull: when must this be?
¶Are comming downe into the outward pallace.
Very sore, all here about.
¶Hor. My lord, forbeare the challenge then.
¶Ham. No Horatio, not I, if danger be now,
¶Why then it is not to come, theres a predestiuate prouidence
in the fall of a sparrow: heere comes the King.
¶
Enter King, Queene, Leartes, Lordes.
3715King We doubt it not, deliuer them the foiles.
3678.1Protesting that I neuer wrongd Leartes.
¶That was not Hamlet, but his madnes did it,
And all the wrong I e're did to Leartes,
¶I here proclaime was madnes, therefore lets be at peace,
¶And hurt my brother.
¶But in termes of honor I'le stand aloofe,
3700And will no reconcilement,
3701.1I may be satisfied.
King Giue them the foyles.
3725Haue all a laught, come on sir:
a hit.
3745Ham. Iudgement.
¶Ham. Another. Iudgement.
¶Lear. I, I grant, a tuch, a tuch.
¶King Here Hamlet, the king doth drinke a health to thee
¶Queene Here Hamlet, take my napkin, wipe thy face.
3750King Giue him the wine.
3752.1I'le drinke anone.
¶Queene Here Hamlet, thy mother drinkes to thee.
3758.1
Shee drinkes.
3770Ham. Leartes come, you dally with me,
¶Ile hit you now my Lord:
¶
They catch one anothers Rapiers, and both are wounded,
3777.1Leartes falles downe, the Queene falles downe and dies.
3780King Looke to the Queene.
¶Queene O the drinke, the drinke, Hamlet, the drinke.
¶Hamlet, thou hast not in thee halfe an houre of life,
¶The fatall Instrument is in thy hand.
¶Vnbated and invenomed: thy mother's poysned
3798.1That drinke was made for thee.
¶Then venome to thy venome, die damn'd villaine:
¶Come drinke, here lies thy vnion here.
The king dies.
¶Hamlet, before I die, here take my hand,
And withall, my loue: I doe forgiue thee.
Leartes dies.
¶Ham. And I thee, O I am dead Horatio, fare thee well.
¶Hor. No, I am more an antike Roman,
Then a Dane, here is some poison left.
¶Ham. Vpon my loue I charge thee let it goe,
What a scandale wouldst thou leaue behinde?
If not from thee? O my heart sinckes Horatio,
Farewel Horatio, heauen receiue my soule.
Ham. dies.
¶
Enter Voltemar and the Ambassadors from England.
enter Fortenbrasse with his traine.
¶Hor. If aught of woe or wonder you'ld behold,
3856.1Then looke vpon this tragicke spectacle.
¶Fort. O imperious death! how many Princes
3875The first beginning of this Tragedy:
¶Let there a scaffold be rearde vp in the market place,
3872.1And let the State of the world be there:
Where you shall heare such a sad story tolde,
3875.1That neuer mortall man could more vnfolde.
¶Which now to claime my leisure doth inuite mee:
3895Let foure of our chiefest Captaines
¶Beare Hamlet like a souldier to his graue:
¶For he was likely, had he liued,
¶To a prou'd most royall.
¶Finis
