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I will do anything, Nerissa, ere I'll be married to a sponge.
William Shakespeare
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William Shakespeare
Age: 51 †
Born: 1564
Born: April 26
Died: 1616
Died: April 23
Actor
Dramaturge
Playwright
Poet
Stage Actor
Writer
Stratford-upon-Avon
Warwickshire
Shakespeare
The Bard
The Bard of Avon
William Shakspere
Swan of Avon
Bard of Avon
Shakespere
Shakespear
Shakspeare
Shackspeare
William Shake‐ſpeare
Sponge
Sponges
Married
Anything
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Prosperity's the very bond of love, Whose fresh complexion and whose heart together Affliction alters.
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Care keeps his watch in every old man’s eye, And where care lodges, sleep will never lie.
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The people are the city.
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Omission to do what is necessary Seals a commission to a blank of danger And danger, like an ague, subtly taints Even then when we sit idly in the sun.
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Twas never merry world Since lowly feigning was called compliment.
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Praise us as we are tasted, allow us as we prove.
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I am indeed not her fool, but her corrupter of words. (Act III, sc. I, 37-38)
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Spirits are not finely touched But to fine issues.
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For now I stand as one upon a rock environed with a wilderness of sea, who marks the waxing tide grow wave by wave, expecting ever when some envious surge will in his brinish bowels swallow him.
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He is not great who is not greatly good.
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Crack'd in pieces by malignant Death.
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The glowworm shows the matin to be near And gins to pale his uneffectual fire.
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I have drunk and seen the spider.
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I do know of these That therefore only are reputed wise For saying nothing.
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There is a history in all men's lives, Figuring the nature of the times deceased, The which observed, a man may prophesy, With a near aim, of the main chance of things As yet not come to life, which in their seeds And weak beginnings lie intreasured.
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We wound our modesty and make foul the clearness of our deservings, when of ourselves we publish them.
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Let us not burden our remembrances with a heaviness that's gone.
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You undergo too strict a paradox, Striving to make an ugly deed look fair.
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Hot blood begets hot thoughts, And hot thoughts beget Hot deeds, And hot deeds is love.
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Of one that lov'd not wisely but too well.
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