nosweatshakespeare.com
Open in
urlscan Pro
199.16.173.142
Public Scan
URL:
https://nosweatshakespeare.com/quotes/famous/there-are-more-things-in-heaven-and-earth/
Submission: On May 04 via manual from US — Scanned from US
Submission: On May 04 via manual from US — Scanned from US
Form analysis
1 forms found in the DOMPOST https://nosweatshakespeare.com/wp-comments-post.php
<form action="https://nosweatshakespeare.com/wp-comments-post.php" method="post" id="commentform" class="comment-form">
<p class="comment-notes"><span id="email-notes">Your email address will not be published.</span> <span class="required-field-message">Required fields are marked <span class="required">*</span></span></p>
<p class="comment-form-author"><label for="author">Name <span class="required">*</span></label> <input id="author" name="author" type="text" value="" size="30" maxlength="245" autocomplete="name" required="required"></p>
<p class="comment-form-email"><label for="email">Email <span class="required">*</span></label> <input id="email" name="email" type="text" value="" size="30" maxlength="100" aria-describedby="email-notes" autocomplete="email" required="required">
</p>
<p class="comment-form-url"><label for="url">Website</label> <input id="url" name="url" type="text" value="" size="30" maxlength="200" autocomplete="url"></p>
<p class="comment-form-cookies-consent"><input id="wp-comment-cookies-consent" name="wp-comment-cookies-consent" type="checkbox" value="yes"> <label for="wp-comment-cookies-consent">Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time
I comment.</label></p>
<p class="comment-form-comment"><label for="comment">Comment <span class="required">*</span></label> <textarea id="comment" name="comment" cols="45" rows="8" maxlength="65525" required="required"></textarea></p>
<p class="form-submit"><input name="submit" type="submit" id="submit" class="submit" value="Post Comment"> <input type="hidden" name="comment_post_ID" value="1031723" id="comment_post_ID">
<input type="hidden" name="comment_parent" id="comment_parent" value="0">
</p>
<p style="display: none;"><input type="hidden" id="akismet_comment_nonce" name="akismet_comment_nonce" value="6b60943dbd"></p>
<p style="display: none !important;" class="akismet-fields-container" data-prefix="ak_"><label>Δ<textarea name="ak_hp_textarea" cols="45" rows="8" maxlength="100"></textarea></label><input type="hidden" id="ak_js_1" name="ak_js" value="128">
<script type="rocketlazyloadscript">document.getElementById( "ak_js_1" ).setAttribute( "value", ( new Date() ).getTime() );</script>
</p>
</form>
Text Content
* Youtube * Twitter * Facebook * Instagram * Pinterest * Home * Resources * Shakespeare Biography * Shakespeare Facts * Shakespeare’s Family * Shakespeare’s Era * Shakespeare Insults * English Literature * PlaysIt is believed that Shakespeare wrote 38 plays in total between 1590 and 1612. This list of Shakespeare plays brings together all 38 plays in alphabetical order. Each Shakespeare’s play name links to a range of resources about each play: Character summaries, plot outlines, example essays and famous quotes, soliloquies and monologues: All’s Well That Ends Well Antony and Cleopatra As You Like It The Comedy of Errors Coriolanus Cymbeline Hamlet Henry IV Part 1 Henry IV Part 2 Henry VIII Henry VI Part 1 Henry VI Part 2 Henry VI Part 3 Henry V Julius Caesar King John King Lear Loves Labour’s Lost Macbeth Measure for Measure The Merchant of Venice The Merry Wives of Windsor A Midsummer Night’s Dream Much Ado About Nothing Othello Pericles Richard II Richard III Romeo & Juliet The Taming of the Shrew The Tempest Timon of Athens Titus Andronicus Troilus & Cressida Twelfth Night The Two Gentlemen of Verona The Winter’s Tale * Characters * Play Types * Summaries * Themes * Sonnets * Read All Sonnets * What Is Iambic Pentameter? * How To Write A Sonnet * Love Sonnets * Poems * Quotes * Famous Shakespeare Quotes * Quotes by Play * Monologues * Soliloquys * Stratford * ebooks * Blog * Shop * Search * Menu Menu ‘THERE ARE MORE THINGS IN HEAVEN AND EARTH’, MEANING & CONTEXT You are here: Home1 / Shakespeare Quotes2 / Famous Shakespeare Quotes3 / ‘There Are More Things In Heaven And Earth’, Meaning &... In Act 1 Scene 5 of Shakespeare’s play, Hamlet, Hamlet says to his friend: > “There are more things in Heaven and Earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in > your philosophy.” Hamlet has been told by the night watch that the ghost of his father has appeared to them. Hamlet and his friend, Horatio go up to the battlements and the ghost appears. Horatio is a practical, down to earth scholar and he is stunned by this – he doesn’t believe in ghosts. He says: “O day and night, but this is wondrous strange.” Hamlet replies: “There are more things in Heaven and Earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy.” He is suggesting that the human imagination is limited and that there are many things we don’t know, things that haven’t been discovered and, in fact, things we haven’t even dreamt of. MY LATEST POSTS Famous Shakespeare Quotes 11 of the most famous Shakespeare quotes and phrases More Videos 0 of 30 secondsVolume 0% Press shift question mark to access a list of keyboard shortcuts Keyboard ShortcutsEnabledDisabled Play/PauseSPACE Increase Volume↑ Decrease Volume↓ Seek Forward→ Seek Backward← Captions On/Offc Fullscreen/Exit Fullscreenf Mute/Unmutem Decrease Caption Size- Increase Caption Size+ or = Seek %0-9 Next Up 9 Interesting facts about Shakespeare's sonnets 01:14 This ad will end in 26 Live 00:03 00:26 00:30 “There are more things in heaven and earth”, Hamlet quote MEANING OF “THERE ARE MORE THINGS IN HEAVEN AND EARTH” It is here that we see Shakespeare for what he is. Besides being the greatest poet who ever wrote English poetry and the most brilliant writer of stage entertainment, he also had insights far beyond those of his contemporaries: he understood that the knowledge about the world that scientists and explorers had discovered, was only the beginning of what there is that we don’t yet know about, of what is still waiting for us to discover, and that, in fact, taking into account the work being done by astronomers, a lot more beyond the earth too. He was very aware of the limitations of the human imagination and, in fact, he was right and we are still being stunned by new discoveries, both about our planet and the universe. THE DISCOVERY OF WHAT THERE IS IN HEAVEN AND EARTH Shakespeare’s contemporary, Galileo Galilei, pioneered the use of the telescope for observing the night sky. He discovered that the earth was not at the centre of a perfect and unchanging cosmos, and that, in reality, the Earth revolved around the Sun instead of the other way round, and that it was its spinning that produced night and day. He was persecuted by the Church for his undermining of the traditional idea of how God had created the universe. Human beings had not imagined such a thing before that. Shakespeare’s contemporaries believed that human beings had been created fully formed by God in a paradisiacal garden. Charles Darwin’s Origin of the Species outlined in detail, the evolution of human beings, from a single cell entity over billions of years, to what they are now, and still evolving, to a condition in the future, which, again, is beyond our imaginations. He also showed that we are actually apes, and are closely related to the likes of chimpanzees and gorillas, having a common ancestor. SCIENCE AND RELIGION Scientific discoveries have put science at odds with religion. Scientists are usually agnostic concerning the existence of God, whereas religious men and women insist on His existence. The difference is that religion is based on faith – the belief in God, rather than knowing that He exists, although they will say that they know He does. Scientists say that we don’t know and it is only when he has been scientifically verified – when we have discovered Him – that we will be able to say that we know. When Shakespeare puts “There are more things in Heaven and Earth than are dreamt of in your philosophy” into the mouth of one of his characters he is demonstrating what the scientists of our time now know. He is showing how different his thinking is from most of the people of his time, who believed what the Church insisted on: that it had everything worked out for all time. OTHER WISE SHAKESPEAREAN SAYINGS Shakespeare demonstrates his timeless, universal, understanding over and over again in the profound things he puts into the mouths of his characters. Such as: > The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, but in ourselves, that we are > underlings. > > Julius Caesar, Act 1, Scene 3 > One touch of nature makes the whole world kin > > Troilus and Cressida, Act 3, Scene 3 > The common curse of mankind – folly and ignorance. > > Troilus and Cressida, Act 2, Scene 3 > Life’s but a walking shadow, a poor player, > That struts and frets his hour upon the stage, > And then is heard no more. It is a tale > Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, > Signifying nothing. > > Macbeth, Act 5, Scene 5 > The fool doth think he is wise, but the wise man knows himself to be a fool. > > As You Like It, Act 5, Scene 1 > There is nothing either good or bad, but thinking makes it so. > > Hamlet, Act 2, Scene 2 > It is not in the stars to hold our destiny but in ourselves. > > Julius Caesar, Act 1, Scene 2 > Some are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust > upon them > > Twelfth Night, Act 2, Scene 2 > There is no darkness but ignorance > > Twelfth Night, Act 4, Scene 2 > We know what we are, but know not what we may be > > Hamlet, Act 4, Scene 5 * Total29 * Facebook0 * Twitter11 * WhatsApp0 * Pinterest0 * Email2 * Print1 9 replies 1. Garrick Little says: October 5, 2022 at 4:09 pm You paint the church and Christianity with a broad brush. Individuals representing the institutional church interpreted without justification what they thought the Bible claimed. There was no scientific justification or scriptural justification for their opinion. You do a disservice to the cause of Truth to claim otherwise! The legacy of Darwin and the claim humans descended from chimps is an open question with little support from real science in my opinion as someone with an advanced degree, (PhD organic chemistry). Reply * Danielle says: October 29, 2022 at 5:05 pm It seems that this quote is more aptly interpreted as man’s folly in thinking that he can figure out God. It’s true that humans are discovering more about the universe, but we are mere infants thinking ourselves clever to pull a plum out of a pie. Reply * Anna says: December 6, 2022 at 8:47 pm Please read : “The Human Condition” solved…..written by Australian Biologist— evolution at its finest…….. Reply * Henry says: January 9, 2023 at 11:00 am Of course the church “interpreted without justification what they thought the Bible claimed.” That’s not saying much. Anybody can interpret anything without justification if they so choose. The church has a habit of making claims about the Bible and “God” offering up any justification or especially evidence. But that’s fine. To each his own. But as far as “the legacy of Darwin”, scientists who study human evolution do not claim that humans descended from chimps. No “real” science makes that claim. While you may have a PhD degree in organic chemisry apparently it hasn’t helped you acquire this commonly known scientific evidence about evolution. The claim is (and it’s backed by OVERWHELMING “support from real science”) that apes and humans share a common ancestor. The fossil record and human and ape DNA research is the essence of this evidence. And of course it’s more complex than that. Anyone can easily find this information in many of the peer reviewed scientific journals available today. Darwin’s great insight, and the unifying principle of biology today, is that all species are related to one another like sisters, cousins, and distant kin in a vast family tree of life. The implications are breathtaking; if we could travel back far enough in time, we would find common ancestors between ourselves and every other living organism, from porcupines to flamingoes to cactuses. Our immediate evolutionary family is comprised of the hominoids, the group of primates that includes the “lesser apes” (siamangs and gibbons) as well as the “great apes” (chimpanzees, bonobos, gorillas, and orangutans). Among the great apes, our closest relatives are the chimpanzees and bonobos. And that “real science” that you talk about is the fossil record, along with studies of human and ape DNA, that clearly indicates humans shared a common ancestor with chimpanzees and bonobos sometime around 6 million years ago (mya). https://www.nature.com/scitable/content/ne0000/ne0000/ne0000/ne0000/89011172/Figure-1-626_1_2.jpg Reply * Tom says: September 8, 2023 at 5:10 pm Your throwing crap at the wall hoping it will stick. Doesn’t sound like you are up to speed on recent science. Extreme cherry picking at it’s finest. If that fairy tale works for you, oh well…….. Reply 2. Anna says: December 6, 2022 at 8:43 pm I think the church tries desperately to explain the unexplainable- information written in the simplest of form so as to appeal to the masses and interpreted wherever the “person” might be….brings to mind the word tomato vs tomato….where the “a” is pronounced differently (long and short) yet meaning is the same—-mystery!!! Reply 3. Pete Muldoon says: July 4, 2023 at 10:17 pm The tonic accent is correctly placed on “your”, not “philosophy”: “There are more things in Heaven and Earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in *your* philosophy.” Hamlet is not questioning the limits of philosophy (science) in general, just Horatio’s version of it. Reply * aliza says: October 29, 2023 at 2:59 am Well said, Pete! Reply 4. David Bondehagen says: March 7, 2024 at 9:29 am There are more things in heaven and earth than are dreamt of in this guy’s philosophy. He’s right, of course, that science has discovered much about the nature of our physical reality. But Shakespeare is speaking about things of a more supernatural sort (ghosts for instance) that the materialist Horatio wouldn’t understand. Reply LEAVE A REPLY Want to join the discussion? Feel free to contribute! LEAVE A REPLY CANCEL REPLY Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked * Name * Email * Website Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment. Comment * Δ * Famous Shakespeare Quotes * ‘A Blessing In Disguise’, Meaning & Context * ‘A Charmed Life’, Meaning & Context * ‘A Grain Of Salt’, Meaning & Context * ‘A Laughing Stock’, Meaning & Context * ‘A Piece Of Cake’, Meaning & Context * ‘A Plague On Both Your Houses’, Meaning & Context * ‘A Pound of Flesh’, Meaning & Context * ‘A Rose By Any Other Name’, Meaning & Context * ‘A Twice-Told Tale’, Meaning & Context * ‘Add Insult To Injury’, Meaning & Context * ‘All Of A Sudden’, Meaning & Context * ‘Apple Of My Eye’, Meaning & Context * ‘As Dead As A Doornail’, Meaning & Context * ‘As Luck Would Have It’, Meaning & Context * ‘As Old As Methuselah’, Meaning & Context * ‘As Right As Rain’, Phrase Meaning & Context * ‘Bated Breath’, Meaning & Context * ‘Be Still My Beating Heart’, Meaning & Context * ‘Better Late Than Never’, Meaning & Context * ‘Bite The Bullet’, Meaning & Context * ‘Black And Blue’, Meaning & Context * ‘Born With A Silver Spoon In Your Mouth’, Meaning & Context * ‘Brave New World’, Meaning & Context * ‘Break A Leg’, Meaning & Context * ‘Break The Ice’, Meaning & Context * ‘Bury The Hatchet’, Meaning & Context * ‘Cakes And Ale’, Meaning & Context * ‘Call A Spade A Spade’, Meaning & Context * ‘Call It A Day’, Meaning & Context * ‘Come What May’, Meaning & Context * ‘Count Your Blessings’, Meaning & Context * ‘Cruel To Be Kind’, Meaning & Context * ‘Cut To The Chase’, Meaning & Context * ‘Cutting Corners’, Meaning & Context * ‘Dogs of War’, Meaning & Context * ‘Don’t Throw The Baby Out With The Bathwater’, Meaning & Context * ‘Eat, Drink and Be Merry’, Meaning & Context * ‘Elbow Room’, Meaning & Context * ‘Even A Worm Will Turn’, Meaning & Context * ‘Face The Music’, Meaning & Context * ‘Fancy Free’, Meaning & Context * ‘Fight Fire With Fire’, Meaning & Context * ‘Flesh and Blood’, Meaning & Context * ‘For Goodness Sake’, Meaning & Context * ‘Foregone Conclusion’, Meaning & Context * ‘Forever And A Day’, Meaning & Context * ‘Foul Play’, Meaning & Context * ‘Frailty, Thy Name Is Woman’, Meaning & Context * ‘Full Circle’, Meaning & Context * ‘Get Carried Away’, Meaning & Context * ‘Get Thee To A Nunnery’, Meaning & Context * ‘Gild The Lilly’, Meaning & Context * ‘Give The Devil His Due’, Phrase Meaning & Context * ‘Go Cold Turkey’, Meaning & Context * ‘Go Down In Flames’, Meaning & Context * ‘Good Riddance’, Meaning & Context * ‘Green Eyed Monster’, Meaning & Context * ‘Hand To Mouth’, Meaning & Context * ‘He Who Sups With The Devil Should Have A Long Spoon’, Meaning & Context * ‘Heart of Gold’, Meaning & Context * ‘Hell Hath No Fury Like A Woman Scorned’, Meaning & Context * ‘High Time’, Meaning & Context * ‘Hit The Sack’, Meaning & Context * ‘Hoisted By His Own Petard’, Meaning & Context * ‘Hot Blooded’, Meaning & Context * ‘In A Nutshell’ Meaning & Context * ‘In Cold Blood’, Meaning & Context * ‘In My Heart Of Hearts’, Meaning & Context * ‘It’s Greek To Me’, Meaning & Context * ‘Jump The Shark’, Meaning & Context * ‘Kick The Bucket’, Meaning & Context * ‘Kill With Kindness’, Meaning & Context * ‘Let’s Kill All The Lawyers’, Meaning & Context * ‘Lie Low’, Meaning & Context * ‘Make Your Hair Stand on End’, Meaning & Context * ‘Making The Beast With Two Backs’, Meaning & Context * ‘Melted Into Thin Air’, Meaning & Context * ‘Mind Your Ps and Qs’, Meaning & Context * ‘Mind’s Eye’, Meaning & Context * ‘Mum’s The Word’, Meaning & Context * ‘Murder Most Foul’, Meaning & Context * ‘Neither A Borrower Nor A Lender Be’, Meaning & Context * ‘Neither Here Nor There’, Meaning & Context * ‘Night Owl’, Meaning & Context * ‘No Man Is An Island’, Meaning & Context * ‘No Pain No Gain’, Meaning & Context * ‘Not Over Until The Fat Lady Sings’, Phrase Meaning & Context * ‘Nothing New Under The Sun’, Meaning & Context * ‘Once Bitten Twice Shy’, Meaning & Context * ‘One Fell Swoop’, Meaning & Context * ‘Over The Hill’, Meaning & Context * ‘Par For The Course’, Meaning & Context * ‘Parting Is Such Sweet Sorrow’, Meaning & Context * ‘Pitched Battle’, Phrase Meaning & Context * ‘Play It By Ear’, Meaning & Context * ‘Poisoned Chalice’, Meaning & Context * ‘Pomp and CIrcumstance’, Meaning & Context * ‘Practise What You Preach’, Meaning & Context * ‘Round the Bend’, Meaning & Context * ‘Screw Your Courage To The Sticking Place’, Meaning & Context * ‘Sea Change’, Meaning & Context * ‘Short Shrift’, Meaning & Context * ‘Skin and Bones’, Meaning & Context * ‘Snail’s Pace’, Meaning & Context * ‘Something’s In The Wind’, Phrase Meaning & Context * ‘Son Of A Bitch’, Meaning & Context * ‘Sound And Fury, Signifying Nothing’, Meaning & Context * ‘Spice It Up’, Meaning & Context * ‘Spill The Beans’, Meaning & Context * ‘Spotless Reputation’, Meaning & Context * ‘Still Waters Run Deep’, Meaning & Context * ‘Strange Bedfellows’, Meaning & Context * ‘Swan Song’, Meaning & Context * ‘The Elephant In The Room’, Meaning & Context * ‘The Greatest Thing Since Sliced Bread’, Meaning & Context * ‘The Lady Doth Protest Too Much’, Meaning & Context * ‘The Play’s The Thing’, Meaning & Context * ‘The Pot Calling The Kettle Black’, Meaning & Context * ‘The Truth Will Out’, Meaning & Context * ‘There Are More Things In Heaven And Earth’, Meaning & Context * ‘There’s Method In His Madness’, Meaning & Context * ‘There’s The Rub’, Meaning & Context * ‘Throw Someone Under The Bus’, Meaning & Context * ‘To Coin A Phrase’, Meaning & Context * ‘To Sleep Perchance To Dream’, Meaning & Context * ‘Too Much Of A Good Thing’, Meaning & Context * ‘Tower of Strength’, Meaning & Context * ‘Under Wraps’, Meaning & Context * ‘Up In Arms’, Meaning & Context * ‘We Happy Few’, Meaning & Context * ‘Wear Your Heart On Your Sleeves’, Meaning & Context * ‘What Dreams May Come’, Meaning & Context * ‘What The Dickens’, Meaning & Context * ‘What You Egg’, Meaning & Context * ‘What’s Done Is Done’, Meaning & Context * ‘What’s In A Name’, Meaning & Context * ‘Wherefore Art Thou’, Meaning & Context * ‘Wild Goose Chase’, Meaning & Context * ‘Willy Nilly’, Meaning & Context * ‘Woe Is Me’, Meaning & Context * ‘All That Glitters Is Not Gold’, Meaning * ‘All The World’s A Stage’: Quote & Meaning * ‘Discretion Is The Better Part Of Valor’, Meaning & Context * ‘Salad Days’, Meaning & Context * ‘Double Double Toil and Trouble’, Meaning * The Meaning Of ‘Dudgeon’ * ‘Et Tu Brute’, Meaning * ‘Fair Is Foul And Foul Is Fair’, Meaning * ‘Fair Play’, Meaning & Context * ‘Brevity Is The Soul Of Wit’ Meaning & Context * ‘Good Night Sweet Prince’, Meaning & Context * ‘Heavy Is The Head That Wears The Crown’, Meaning * ‘Outrageous Fortune’, Meaning & Context * ‘Cry ‘Havoc!’ And Let Slip The Dogs Of War’: Speech & Analysis * ‘If Music Be The Food Of Love’, Meaning * ‘Love Is Blind’, Meaning & Context * ‘My Kingdom For A Horse’, Meaning & Context * ‘Out Brief Candle’, Meaning * ‘Out Damned Spot’, Meaning * ‘Something Is Rotten in the State Of Denmark’, Meaning * ‘Something Wicked This Way Comes’, Meaning & Context * ‘Shuffle Off This Mortal Coil’ Meaning * ‘In A Pickle’ Meaning & Context * ‘Star Crossed Lovers’ Meaning & Context * ‘Though She Be But Little, She Is Fierce’: Quote & Analysis * The Seven Ages Of Man * ‘Be All And End All’ Saying Origin & Meaning * ‘Clothes Make The Man’ Saying Origin & Meaning * ‘Every Dog Has Its Day’ Saying Origin & Meaning * ‘I Have Not Slept One Wink’ Saying Origin & Meaning * ‘Let The Cat Out Of The Bag’ Saying Origin & Meaning * ‘Lose Your Marbles’ Saying Origin & Meaning * ‘Oh What A Tangled Web We Weave’ Saying Origin & Meaning * ‘Raining Cats And Dogs’ Saying Origin & Meaning * ‘The Game’s Afoot’ Saying Origin & Meaning * ‘The World Is Your Oyster’ Saying Origin & Meaning * ‘Through Thick And Thin’ Saying Origin & Meaning * ‘Till Death Do Us Part’ Saying Origin & Meaning * ‘These Violent Delights Have Violent Ends’ Quote & Analysis * ‘To Thine Own Self Be True’, Meaning & Context * ‘Two Household, Both Alike in Dignity’, Meaning * ‘Piece Of Work’, Meaning & Context * ‘What A Piece Of Work Is Man’, Meaning * Shakespeare Quotes By Play * A Midsummer Night’s Dream Quotes * All’s Well That Ends Well Quotes * Antony and Cleopatra Quotes * As You Like It Quotes * Cardenio Quotes * Coriolanus Quotes * Cymbeline Quotes * Edward III Quotes * Hamlet Quotes * Hamlet Quotes in Modern English * Henry IV Part 1 Quotes * Henry IV Part 2 Quotes * Henry VI Part 1 Quotes * Henry VI Part 2 Quotes * Henry V Quotes * Henry V Quotes in Modern English * Henry VI Part 3 Quotes * Henry VIII Quotes * Julius Caesar Quotes * Julius Caesar Quotes in Modern English * King John Quotes * King Lear Quotes * Love’s Labour’s Lost Quotes * Macbeth Quotes * Macbeth Quotes in Modern English * Lady Macbeth Quotes * Macbeth Ambition Quotes * Measure For Measure Quotes * Much Ado About Nothing Quotes * Othello Quotes * Othello Quotes in Modern English * Pericles Quotes * Richard II Quotes * Richard III Quotes * Romeo and Juliet Quotes * Romeo and Juliet Quotes in Modern English * Sir Thomas More Quotes * The Comedy Of Errors Quotes * The Merchant of Venice Quotes * The Merry Wives of Windsor Quotes * The Taming of the Shrew Quotes * The Tempest Quotes * The Two Gentlemen of Verona Quotes * The Two Noble Kinsmen Quotes * The Winter’s Tale Quotes * Timon of Athens Quotes * Titus Andronicus Quotes * Troilus and Cressida Quotes * Twelfth Night Quotes * Shakespeare Monologues * Monologues vs Soliloquies – Differences & Definitions * ‘Alas Poor Yorick’ Monologue Analysis * ‘Blow, Winds and Crack Your Cheeks’ Monologue Analysis * ‘Friends, Romans, Countrymen’ Speech Analysis * ‘Full Of Vexation Come I, With Complaint’ Monologue Analysis * ‘Her Father Loved Me, Oft Invited Me’ Monologue Analysis * ‘How Sweet The Moonlight Sleeps Upon This Bank!’ Monologue Analysis * ‘I Am Arm’d And Well Prepared’ Monologue Analysis * ‘I Know A Bank Where The Wild Thyme Blows’ Monologue Analysis * ‘I Must Eat My Dinner’ Monologue Analysis * ‘Like To The Pontic Sea’ Monologue Analysis * ‘My Mistress With A Monster Is In Love’ Monologue Analysis * ‘O, Reason Not The Need’ Monologue Analysis * ‘Once More Unto The Breach Dear Friends’ Speech Analysis * ‘Romans, Countrymen and Lovers! Hear Me For My Cause’ Speech * ‘Signior Antonio, Many A Time And Oft’ Monologue Analysis * ‘St Crispin’s Day’ speech with translation * ‘The Quality Of Mercy Is Not Strain’d’ Monologue Analysis * ‘To Bait Fish Withal’ Monologue Analysis * ‘To Horse You Gallant Princes’ Monologue Analysis * ‘That I Did Love The Moor’ Monologue Analysis * ‘Unhappy That Am I, I Cannot Heave’ Monologue Analysis * ‘Virtue! A Fig!’ Monologue Analysis * ‘Ye Elves of Hills’ Monologue Analysis * ‘You Are Three Men Of Sin’ Monologue Analysis * A Midsummer Night’s Dream Monologues * The Tempest Monologues * Twelfth Night Monologues * Hamlet Monologues * Henry V Monologues * Julius Caesar Monologues * King Lear Monologues * Macbeth Monologues * Merchant of Venice Monologues * Othello Monologues * Richard III Monologues * Romeo and Juliet Monologues * Shakespeare Soliloquies * ‘And What’s He Then That Says I Play The Villain’ Soliloquy Analysis * ‘All The Infections That The Sun Sucks Up’ Soliloquy Analysis * ‘Gallop Apace, You Fiery-Footed Steeds’ Soliloquy Analysis * ‘How All Occasions Do Inform Against Me’ Soliloquy Analysis * ‘How Oft When Men Are At The Point Of Death’ Soliloquy Analysis * ‘I Am That Merry Wanderer Of The Night’ Soliloquy Analysis * ‘I Boarded The King’s Ship’ Analysis * ‘If It Were Done When ‘Tis Done’ Soliloquy Analysis * ‘Is This A Dagger Which I See Before Me?’ Soliloquy Analysis * ‘It Is The Cause’ Soliloquy Analysis * ‘It Is The East And Juliet Is The Sun’ Soliloquy Anaysis * ‘Now Is The Winter Of Our Discontent’ Soliloquy Analysis * ‘Now Might I Do It Pat’ Soliloquy Analysis * ‘O For A Muse of Fire’ Analysis * ‘O God Of Battles! Steel My Soldiers’ Hearts’ Soliloquy Analysis * ‘O That This Too Solid Flesh Would Melt’ Soliloquy Analysis * ‘O, My Offence Is Rank It Smells To Heaven’ Soliloquy Analysis * ‘O, She Doth Teach The Torches To Burn Bright’ Soliloquy Analysis * ‘O, What A Rogue And Peasant Slave Am I!’ Soliloquy Analysis * ‘The Clock Struck Nine When I Did Send The Nurse’ Soliloquy Analysis * ‘The Raven Himself Is Hoarse’ Soliloquy Analysis * ‘This Is The Excellent Foppery Of The World’ Soliloquy Analysis * ‘Thou, Nature, Art My Goddess’ Soliloquy Analysis * Hamlet: ‘To Be Or Not To Be, That Is The Question’ * ‘Tomorrow, And Tomorrow, And Tomorrow’ Soliloquy Analysis * ‘What Light Through Yonder Window Breaks?’ Soliloquy Analysis * ‘What’s In A Name?’ Soliloquy Analysis * A Midsummer Night’s Dream Soliloquy In Modern English * Hamlet Soliloquies In Modern English * Julius Caesar Soliloquies * King Lear Soliloquies In Modern English * Macbeth Soliloquies In Modern English * Othello Soliloquies In Modern English * Richard III Soliloquies * Romeo & Juliet Soliloquies in Modern English * The Merchant of Venice Soliloquies In Modern English * The Tempest Soliloquies In Modern English * Twelfth Night Soliloquies * Shakespeare Quote Categories * 50 Shakespeare Quotes About Death * 50 Shakespeare Quotes About Science * 50 Shakespeare Quotes About War * 50 Shakespeare Quotes for Weddings * Shakespeare Dream Quotes * Shakespeare Friendship Quotes * Shakespeare Goodbye Quotes * Shakespeare Love Quotes * Shakespeare Quotes About Birds * Shakespeare Quotes About Flowers * Shakespeare On Birthdays * Shakespeare Quotes About Drink * Shakespeare Quotes About Food * Funniest Shakespeare Quotes * Shakespeare’s Quotes on Life * Literature Quotes * African Proverbs * Arabic Proverbs * Chinese Proverbs * Japanese Proverbs * Love Proverbs * Proverbs About Women * Proverbs In English * Bible Quotes About Love * Philosopher Love Quotes * Love Quotes By Writers * Movie Love Quotes * Quotes About Shakespeare * Love Quotes By Poets * Oscar Wilde Quotes * Jane Austen Quotes * Charles Dickens Quotes * Edgar Allan Poe Quotes * Emily Dickinson Quotes * George Orwell Quotes * JK Rowling Quotes * Oscar Wilde Love Quotes * Socrates Quotes * William Blake Quotes * Mark Twain Quotes * Total29 * Facebook0 * Twitter11 * WhatsApp0 * Pinterest0 * Email2 * Print1 © 2004 – 2022 NoSweat Digital Ltd, 124 City Road, London EC1V 2NX * Youtube * Twitter * Facebook * Instagram * Pinterest * About * Contact * Site Map * SiteWhale * Privacy Scroll to top Send this to a friend SendCancel ✕ Do not sell or share my personal information. You have chosen to opt-out of the sale or sharing of your information from this site and any of its affiliates. To opt back in please click the "Customize my ad experience" link. This site collects information through the use of cookies and other tracking tools. Cookies and these tools do not contain any information that personally identifies a user, but personal information that would be stored about you may be linked to the information stored in and obtained from them. This information would be used and shared for Analytics, Ad Serving, Interest Based Advertising, among other purposes. For more information please visit this site's Privacy Policy. CANCEL CONTINUE . Information from your device can be used to personalize your ad experience. Do not sell or share my personal information. A Raptive Partner Site