35261846King. Hamlet from
England! is it po
ssible?
30591847What chance is this? they are gone, and he come home.
3059.11848Lear. O he is welcome, by my
soule he is:
30651849At it my iocund heart doth leape for ioy,
30661850That I
shall liue to tell him, thus he dies.
30681851king Leartes, content your
selfe, be rulde by me,
3068.11852And you
shall haue no let for your reuenge.
28851853Lear. My will, not all the world.
30741854King Nay but Leartes, marke the plot I haue layde,
31001855I haue heard him often with a greedy wi
sh,
30991856Vpon
some prai
se that he hath heard of you
31011857Touching your weapon, which with all his heart,
31021858He might be once ta
sked for to try your cunning.
31241860King Mary Leartes thus: I'le lay a wager,
3124.11861Shalbe on
Hamlets side, and you
shall giue the oddes,
3124.21862The which will draw him with a more de
sire,
3124.31863To try the mai
stry, that in twelue venies
3124.41864You gaine not three of him: now this being granted,
3124.51865When you are hot in mid
st of all your play,
31281866Among the foyles
shall a keene rapier lie,
31331867Steeped in a mixture of deadly poy
son,
31341868That if it drawes but the lea
st dramme of blood,
31381869In any part of him, he cannot liue:
3138.11870This being done will free you from
su
spition,
3138.21871And not the deere
st friend that
Hamlet lov'de
3130.11874But
say lord
Hamlet should refu
se this match.
31211875King I'le warrant you, wee'le put on you
H3 Such
The Tragedie of Hamlet
1876Such a report of
singularitie,
31231877Will bring him on, although again
st his will.
31501879I'le haue a potion that
shall ready
stand,
31481880In all his heate when that he calles for drinke,
1882Lear. T'is excellent, O would the time were come!
31531883Here comes the Queene.
enter the Queene. 1884king How now Gertred, why looke you heauily?
31601886Hauing made a garland of
sundry
sortes of
floures,
31581887Sitting vpon a willow by a brooke,
31651888The enuious
sprig broke, into the brooke
she fell,
31671889And for a while her clothes
spread wide abroade,
31681890Bore the yong Lady vp: and there
she
sate
smiling,
1891Euen Mermaide-like, twixt heauen and earth,
31691892Chaunting olde
sundry tunes vncapable
31701893As it were of her di
stre
sse, but long it could not be,
31731894Till that her clothes, being heauy with their drinke,
31741895Dragg'd the
sweete wretch to death.
31781897Too much of water ha
st thou
Ofelia, 31791898Therefore I will not drowne thee in my teares,
3179.11899Reuenge it is mu
st yeeld this heart releefe,
3179.21900For woe begets woe, and griefe hangs on griefe.
exeunt.