bard revision 1.2
11.1ScgdThe quality of mercy is not strain['|e]d:\
21.1ScgdIt droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven:\
31.1Scgd{The }Merchant{ of Venice{ IV-i}}:\
41.1ScgdPortia
51.1ScgdFriends{,} Romans{,} Countrymen:\
61.1Scgdlend me your ears{;}:\
71.1Scgd{Julius }Caesar{ III-ii}:\
81.1Scgd{Mark }Antony
91.1ScgdNeither a borrower nor a lender be:\
101.1ScgdFor loan oft loses both itself and friend{.}:\
111.1ScgdHamlet{ I-iii}:\
121.1ScgdPolonius
131.1ScgdTo be{,} or not to be{\:}:\
141.1Scgdthat is the question{\:}:\
151.1ScgdHamlet{ III-i}:\
161.1ScgdHamlet
171.1ScgdAlas{,} poor Yorick{!}:\
181.1ScgdI knew him{,} Horatio{;}:\
191.1ScgdHamlet{ V-i}:\
201.1ScgdHamlet
211.1ScgdDouble{,} double toil and trouble{;}:\
221.1ScgdFire burn and cauldron bubble{.}:\
231.1ScgdMacbeth{ IV-i}:\
241.1ScgdWitch{es}
251.1ScgdBy the pricking of my thumbs{,}:\
261.1ScgdSomething wicked this way comes{.}:\
271.1ScgdMacbeth{ IV-i}:\
281.1Scgd{Second |2nd }Witch
291.1ScgdOut, damned spot! out, I say!:\
301.1Scgd:\
311.1ScgdMacbeth{ V-i}:\
321.1ScgdLady Macbeth
331.1ScgdUnbidden guests:\
341.1ScgdAre often welcomest when they are gone{.}:\
351.1Scgd{King }Henry VI{,} Part I{ I-ii}:\
361.1Scgd
371.1ScgdShe is a woman{,} therefore may be woo'd{;}:\
381.1ScgdShe is a woman{,} therefore may be [won|screw'd]{.}:\
391.1ScgdTitus Andronicus{ II-i}:\
401.1ScgdDemetrius
411.1ScgdSuch duty as the subject owes the prince{,}:\
421.1ScgdEven such a woman oweth to her husband{.}:\
431.1Scgd{The }Taming of the Shrew{ V-ii}:\
441.1ScgdKate
451.1ScgdWho is Silvia{?} what is she{,}:\
461.1ScgdThat all our swains commend her{?}:\
471.1Scgd{The }Two Gentlemen of Verona{ IV-ii}:\
481.1ScgdThurio
491.1ScgdTu-whit{,} tu-who[ - | |--]a merry note{,}:\
501.1ScgdWhile greasy Joan doth keel the pot{.}:\
511.1ScgdLove's Labo{u}r Lost{ V-ii}:\
521.1ScgdWinter
531.1ScgdMy only love sprung from my only hate{!}:\
541.1ScgdToo early seen unknown{,} and known too late{!}:\
551.1ScgdRomeo{ and Juliet{ I-v}}:\
561.1ScgdJuliet
571.1ScgdBut{,} soft{!} what light through yonder window breaks{?}:\
581.1ScgdIt is the east{,} and Juliet is the sun{!}:\
591.1ScgdRomeo{ and Juliet{ II-ii}}:\
601.1ScgdRomeo
611.1ScgdWhat's in a name{?} That which we call a rose:\
621.1ScgdBy any other name would smell as sweet{.}:\
631.1ScgdRomeo{ and Juliet{ II-ii}}:\
641.1ScgdJuliet
651.1ScgdGood night{,} good night{!} parting is such sweet sorrow{,}:\
661.1ScgdThat I shall say good night till it be morrow{.}:\
671.1ScgdRomeo{ and Juliet{ II-ii}}:\
681.1ScgdJuliet
691.1ScgdA plague o['|n] both your houses{!}:\
701.1ScgdThey have made worms' meat of me{.}:\
711.1ScgdRomeo{ and Juliet{ III-i}}:\
721.1ScgdMercutio
731.1ScgdThis royal throne of kings{,} this scepter['|e]d isle{,}:\
741.1ScgdThis earth of majesty{,} this seat of Mars{,}:\
751.1Scgd{King }Richard II{ II-i}:\
761.1ScgdJohn of Gaunt
771.1ScgdNot all the water in a rough rude sea:\
781.1ScgdCan wash the balm from an anointed king{.}:\
791.1Scgd{King }Richard II{ III-ii}:\
801.1Scgd{King }Richard II
811.1ScgdI'll put a girdle round the earth:\
821.1ScgdIn forty minutes{.}:\
831.1Scgd{A }Midsummer[-| ]Night's Dream{ II-i}:\
841.1ScgdPuck
851.1ScgdI can call spirits from the vasty deep{.}:\
861.1ScgdWhy{,} so can I{,} or so can any man{;}:\
871.1Scgd{King }Henry IV{,} Part I{ II-iv}:\
881.1Scgd
891.1ScgdThere are more things in heaven and earth{,} Horatio{,}:\
901.1ScgdThan are dream[t|ed] of in your philosophy{.}:\
911.1ScgdHamlet{ I-v}:\
921.1ScgdHamlet
931.1ScgdThe time is out of joint{;} O cursed spite{,}:\
941.1ScgdThat ever I was born to set it right{!}:\
951.1ScgdHamlet{ I-v}:\
961.1ScgdHamlet
971.1ScgdOnce more unto the breach{,} dear friends{,} once more{;}:\
981.1ScgdOr close the wall up with our English dead{.}:\
991.1Scgd{King }Henry V{ III-i}:\
1001.1Scgd{King }Henry V
1011.1ScgdWas ever woman in this humour woo['|e]d{?}:\
1021.1ScgdWas ever woman in this humour [won|screw'd]{?}:\
1031.1Scgd{King }Richard III{ I-ii}:\
1041.1Scgd{King }Richard III
1051.1ScgdNow is the winter of our discontent:\
1061.1ScgdMade glorious summer by this sun of York:\
1071.1Scgd{King }Richard III{ I-i}:\
1081.1Scgd{King }Richard III
1091.1ScgdThere['s| is] a divinity that shapes our ends{,}:\
1101.1ScgdRough[-| ]hew them how we will{.}:\
1111.1ScgdHamlet{ V-ii}:\
1121.1ScgdHamlet
1131.1ScgdThere is a tide in the affairs of men:\
1141.1ScgdWhich{,} taken at the flood{,} leads on to fortune{;}:\
1151.1Scgd{Julius }Caesar{ IV-iii}:\
1161.1ScgdBrutus
1171.1ScgdNever{,} never{,} never{,} never{,} never{.}:\
1181.1ScgdPray you undo this button{.}{ Thank you{,} sir{.}}:\
1191.1Scgd{King }Lear{ V-iii}:\
1201.1Scgd{King }Lear
1211.1ScgdI grow{,} I prosper{\:}:\
1221.1ScgdNow{,} gods{,} stand up for bastards{!}:\
1231.1Scgd{King }Lear{ I-ii}:\
1241.1ScgdEdmund
1251.1ScgdThe better part of valour is discretion{;}:\
1261.1Scgdin the which better part I have saved my life{.}:\
1271.1Scgd{King }Henry IV{,} Part I{ V-iv}:\
1281.1ScgdFalstaff
1291.1ScgdAsses are made to bear{,} and so are you{.}:\
1301.1ScgdWomen are made to bear{,} and so are you{.}:\
1311.1Scgd{The }Taming of the Shrew{ II-i}:\
1321.1Scgd
1331.1ScgdFull fathom five thy father lies{;}:\
1341.1ScgdOf his bones are coral made{;}:\
1351.1Scgd{The }Tempest{ I-ii}:\
1361.1ScgdAriel
1371.1ScgdShe lov['|e]d me for the dangers I had pass['|e]d{;}:\
1381.1ScgdAnd I lov['|e]d her that she did pity them{.}:\
1391.1ScgdOthello{ I-iii}:\
1401.1ScgdOthello
1411.1ScgdUneasy lies the head that wears a crown{.}:\
1421.1ScgdMany good morrows to your Majesty{!}:\
1431.1Scgd{King }Henry IV{,} Part II{ III-i}:\
1441.1Scgd
1451.1ScgdMislike me not for my complexion{,}:\
1461.1ScgdThe shadow['|e]d livery of the burnish['|e]d sun{.}:\
1471.1Scgd{The }Merchant{ of Venice{ II-i}}:\
1481.1ScgdMorocco
1491.1ScgdCowards die many times before their deaths{;}:\
1501.1ScgdThe valiant never taste of death but once{.}:\
1511.1Scgd{Julius }Caesar{ II-ii}:\
1521.1ScgdCaesar
1531.1ScgdO{h}{!|,} Pardon me{,} thou bleeding piece of earth{,}:\
1541.1ScgdThat I am meek and gentle with these butchers{.}:\
1551.1Scgd{Julius }Caesar{ III-i}:\
1561.1Scgd{Mark }Antony
1571.1ScgdThe play's the thing:\
1581.1ScgdWherein I'll catch the conscience of the king{.}:\
1591.1ScgdHamlet{ II-ii}:\
1601.1ScgdHamlet
1611.1ScgdHow sharper than a serpent's tooth it is:\
1621.1Scgdto have a thankless child{.}:\
1631.1Scgd{King }Lear{ I-iv}:\
1641.1Scgd{King }Lear
1651.1ScgdHad I but served my God with half the zeal I served my king:\
1661.1ScgdHe would not in [mine|my] old age have left me naked to [mine|my] enemies{.}:\
1671.1Scgd{King }Henry VIII{ IV-ii}:\
1681.1Scgd{Cardinal }Wolsey
1691.1ScgdIt seems she hangs upon the cheek of night:\
1701.1ScgdLike a rich jewel in an Ethiop's ear{.}:\
1711.1ScgdRomeo{ and Juliet{ I-v}}:\
1721.1ScgdRomeo
1731.1ScgdWhere the bee sucks{,} there suck I{;}:\
1741.1ScgdIn a cowslip's bell I lie{.}:\
1751.1Scgd{The }Tempest{ V-i}:\
1761.1ScgdAriel
1771.1ScgdO brave new world{,}:\
1781.1ScgdThat has such people [in't|in it]{!}:\
1791.1Scgd{The }Tempest{ V-i}:\
1801.1ScgdMiranda
1811.1ScgdWhy{,} then the world's mine oyster{,}:\
1821.1ScgdWhich I with sword will open{.}:\
1831.1Scgd{The }Merry Wives of Windsor{ II-ii}:\
1841.1ScgdFalstaff
1851.1ScgdA goodly apple rotten at the heart{\:}:\
1861.1ScgdO{h}{,} what a goodly outside falsehood hath{!|.}:\
1871.1Scgd{The }Merchant{ of Venice{ I-iii}}:\
1881.1ScgdAntonio
1891.1ScgdI never kill['|e]d a mouse{,} nor hurt a fly{;}:\
1901.1ScgdI trod upon a worm against my will{,}:\
1911.1ScgdPericles{ IV-i}:\
1921.1ScgdMarina
1931.1ScgdGolden lads and girls all must{,}:\
1941.1ScgdLike chimney sweepers{,} come to dust{.}:\
1951.1ScgdCymbeline{ IV-ii}:\
1961.1ScgdGuiderius
1971.1ScgdYou blocks, you stones, you worse than senseless things!:\
1981.1ScgdO you hard hearts{,} you cruel men of Rome{.}:\
1991.1Scgd{Julius }Caesar{ I-i}:\
2001.1ScgdMarullus
2011.1ScgdA horse{!|,} a horse{!|,} my kingdom for a horse{!}:\
2021.1Scgd:\
2031.1Scgd{King }Richard III{ V-iv}:\
2041.1Scgd{King }Richard III
2051.1ScgdMy salad days,:\
2061.1ScgdWhen I was green in judg{e}ment, cold in blood{,}:\
2071.1ScgdAntony [and|&] Cleopatra{ I-v}:\
2081.1ScgdCleopatra
2091.1ScgdAge cannot wither her, nor custom stale:\
2101.1ScgdHer infinite variety{.}:\
2111.1ScgdAntony [and|&] Cleopatra{ II-iii}:\
2121.1ScgdEnobarbus
2131.1ScgdGive me some music\: music, moody food:\
2141.1ScgdOf us that trade in love{.}:\
2151.2SmycroftAntony [and|&] Cleopatra{ II-v}:\
2161.1ScgdCleopatra
2171.1Scgd'Tis better playing with a lion's whelp,:\
2181.1ScgdThan with an old one dying{.}:\
2191.1ScgdAntony [and|&] Cleopatra:\
2201.1ScgdEnobarbus
2211.1ScgdThe barge she sat in, like a burnished throne,:\
2221.1ScgdBurned on the water{.} The poop was burnished gold{;|.}:\
2231.1ScgdAntony [and|&] Cleopatra:\
2241.1ScgdEnobarbus
2251.1ScgdDone like a Frenchman - turn and turn again!:\
2261.1Scgd:\
2271.1Scgd{King }Henry VI{,} Part I{ III-iii}:\
2281.1Scgd{Joan }Pucelle|{Saint |St{.} }Joan{ of Arc}
229