Dataline int64 1 111k | Play stringclasses 36
values | PlayerLinenumber float64 1 405 ⌀ | ActSceneLine stringlengths 5 8 ⌀ | Player stringclasses 934
values | PlayerLine stringlengths 1 1.03k |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2,701 | Henry IV | 8 | 5.1.63 | EARL OF WORCESTER | Grew by our feeding to so great a bulk |
2,702 | Henry IV | 8 | 5.1.64 | EARL OF WORCESTER | That even our love durst not come near your sight |
2,703 | Henry IV | 8 | 5.1.65 | EARL OF WORCESTER | For fear of swallowing, but with nimble wing |
2,704 | Henry IV | 8 | 5.1.66 | EARL OF WORCESTER | We were enforced, for safety sake, to fly |
2,705 | Henry IV | 8 | 5.1.67 | EARL OF WORCESTER | Out of sight and raise this present head, |
2,706 | Henry IV | 8 | 5.1.68 | EARL OF WORCESTER | Whereby we stand opposed by such means |
2,707 | Henry IV | 8 | 5.1.69 | EARL OF WORCESTER | As you yourself have forged against yourself |
2,708 | Henry IV | 8 | 5.1.70 | EARL OF WORCESTER | By unkind usage, dangerous countenance, |
2,709 | Henry IV | 8 | 5.1.71 | EARL OF WORCESTER | And violation of all faith and troth |
2,710 | Henry IV | 8 | 5.1.72 | EARL OF WORCESTER | Sworn to us in your younger enterprise. |
2,711 | Henry IV | 9 | 5.1.73 | KING HENRY IV | These things indeed you have articulate, |
2,712 | Henry IV | 9 | 5.1.74 | KING HENRY IV | Proclaim'd at market-crosses, read in churches, |
2,713 | Henry IV | 9 | 5.1.75 | KING HENRY IV | To face the garment of rebellion |
2,714 | Henry IV | 9 | 5.1.76 | KING HENRY IV | With some fine colour that may please the eye |
2,715 | Henry IV | 9 | 5.1.77 | KING HENRY IV | Of fickle changelings and poor discontents, |
2,716 | Henry IV | 9 | 5.1.78 | KING HENRY IV | Which gape and rub the elbow at the news |
2,717 | Henry IV | 9 | 5.1.79 | KING HENRY IV | Of hurlyburly innovation: |
2,718 | Henry IV | 9 | 5.1.80 | KING HENRY IV | And never yet did insurrection want |
2,719 | Henry IV | 9 | 5.1.81 | KING HENRY IV | Such water-colours to impaint his cause, |
2,720 | Henry IV | 9 | 5.1.82 | KING HENRY IV | Nor moody beggars, starving for a time |
2,721 | Henry IV | 9 | 5.1.83 | KING HENRY IV | Of pellmell havoc and confusion. |
2,722 | Henry IV | 10 | 5.1.84 | PRINCE HENRY | In both your armies there is many a soul |
2,723 | Henry IV | 10 | 5.1.85 | PRINCE HENRY | Shall pay full dearly for this encounter, |
2,724 | Henry IV | 10 | 5.1.86 | PRINCE HENRY | If once they join in trial. Tell your nephew, |
2,725 | Henry IV | 10 | 5.1.87 | PRINCE HENRY | The Prince of Wales doth join with all the world |
2,726 | Henry IV | 10 | 5.1.88 | PRINCE HENRY | In praise of Henry Percy: by my hopes, |
2,727 | Henry IV | 10 | 5.1.89 | PRINCE HENRY | This present enterprise set off his head, |
2,728 | Henry IV | 10 | 5.1.90 | PRINCE HENRY | I do not think a braver gentleman, |
2,729 | Henry IV | 10 | 5.1.91 | PRINCE HENRY | More active-valiant or more valiant-young, |
2,730 | Henry IV | 10 | 5.1.92 | PRINCE HENRY | More daring or more bold, is now alive |
2,731 | Henry IV | 10 | 5.1.93 | PRINCE HENRY | To grace this latter age with noble deeds. |
2,732 | Henry IV | 10 | 5.1.94 | PRINCE HENRY | For my part, I may speak it to my shame, |
2,733 | Henry IV | 10 | 5.1.95 | PRINCE HENRY | I have a truant been to chivalry, |
2,734 | Henry IV | 10 | 5.1.96 | PRINCE HENRY | And so I hear he doth account me too, |
2,735 | Henry IV | 10 | 5.1.97 | PRINCE HENRY | Yet this before my father's majesty-- |
2,736 | Henry IV | 10 | 5.1.98 | PRINCE HENRY | I am content that he shall take the odds |
2,737 | Henry IV | 10 | 5.1.99 | PRINCE HENRY | Of his great name and estimation, |
2,738 | Henry IV | 10 | 5.1.100 | PRINCE HENRY | And will, to save the blood on either side, |
2,739 | Henry IV | 10 | 5.1.101 | PRINCE HENRY | Try fortune with him in a single fight. |
2,740 | Henry IV | 11 | 5.1.102 | KING HENRY IV | And, Prince of Wales, so dare we venture thee, |
2,741 | Henry IV | 11 | 5.1.103 | KING HENRY IV | Albeit considerations infinite |
2,742 | Henry IV | 11 | 5.1.104 | KING HENRY IV | Do make against it. No, good Worcester, no, |
2,743 | Henry IV | 11 | 5.1.105 | KING HENRY IV | We love our people well, even those we love |
2,744 | Henry IV | 11 | 5.1.106 | KING HENRY IV | That are misled upon your cousin's part, |
2,745 | Henry IV | 11 | 5.1.107 | KING HENRY IV | And, will they take the offer of our grace, |
2,746 | Henry IV | 11 | 5.1.108 | KING HENRY IV | Both he and they and you, every man |
2,747 | Henry IV | 11 | 5.1.109 | KING HENRY IV | Shall be my friend again and I'll be his: |
2,748 | Henry IV | 11 | 5.1.110 | KING HENRY IV | So tell your cousin, and bring me word |
2,749 | Henry IV | 11 | 5.1.111 | KING HENRY IV | What he will do: but if he will not yield, |
2,750 | Henry IV | 11 | 5.1.112 | KING HENRY IV | Rebuke and dread correction wait on us |
2,751 | Henry IV | 11 | 5.1.113 | KING HENRY IV | And they shall do their office. So, be gone, |
2,752 | Henry IV | 11 | 5.1.114 | KING HENRY IV | We will not now be troubled with reply: |
2,753 | Henry IV | 11 | 5.1.115 | KING HENRY IV | We offer fair, take it advisedly. |
2,754 | Henry IV | 11 | null | KING HENRY IV | Exeunt WORCESTER and VERNON |
2,755 | Henry IV | 12 | 5.1.116 | PRINCE HENRY | It will not be accepted, on my life: |
2,756 | Henry IV | 12 | 5.1.117 | PRINCE HENRY | The Douglas and the Hotspur both together |
2,757 | Henry IV | 12 | 5.1.118 | PRINCE HENRY | Are confident against the world in arms. |
2,758 | Henry IV | 13 | 5.1.119 | KING HENRY IV | Hence, therefore, every leader to his charge, |
2,759 | Henry IV | 13 | 5.1.120 | KING HENRY IV | For, on their answer, will we set on them: |
2,760 | Henry IV | 13 | 5.1.121 | KING HENRY IV | And God befriend us, as our cause is just! |
2,761 | Henry IV | 13 | null | KING HENRY IV | Exeunt all but PRINCE HENRY and FALSTAFF |
2,762 | Henry IV | 14 | 5.1.122 | FALSTAFF | Hal, if thou see me down in the battle and bestride |
2,763 | Henry IV | 14 | 5.1.123 | FALSTAFF | me, so, 'tis a point of friendship. |
2,764 | Henry IV | 15 | 5.1.124 | PRINCE HENRY | Nothing but a colossus can do thee that friendship. |
2,765 | Henry IV | 15 | 5.1.125 | PRINCE HENRY | Say thy prayers, and farewell. |
2,766 | Henry IV | 16 | 5.1.126 | FALSTAFF | I would 'twere bed-time, Hal, and all well. |
2,767 | Henry IV | 17 | 5.1.127 | PRINCE HENRY | Why, thou owest God a death. |
2,768 | Henry IV | 17 | null | PRINCE HENRY | Exit PRINCE HENRY |
2,769 | Henry IV | 18 | 5.1.128 | FALSTAFF | 'Tis not due yet, I would be loath to pay him before |
2,770 | Henry IV | 18 | 5.1.129 | FALSTAFF | his day. What need I be so forward with him that |
2,771 | Henry IV | 18 | 5.1.130 | FALSTAFF | calls not on me? Well, 'tis no matter, honour pricks |
2,772 | Henry IV | 18 | 5.1.131 | FALSTAFF | me on. Yea, but how if honour prick me off when I |
2,773 | Henry IV | 18 | 5.1.132 | FALSTAFF | come on? how then? Can honour set to a leg? no: or |
2,774 | Henry IV | 18 | 5.1.133 | FALSTAFF | an arm? no: or take away the grief of a wound? no. |
2,775 | Henry IV | 18 | 5.1.134 | FALSTAFF | Honour hath no skill in surgery, then? no. What is |
2,776 | Henry IV | 18 | 5.1.135 | FALSTAFF | honour? a word. What is in that word honour? what |
2,777 | Henry IV | 18 | 5.1.136 | FALSTAFF | is that honour? air. A trim reckoning! Who hath it? |
2,778 | Henry IV | 18 | 5.1.137 | FALSTAFF | he that died o' Wednesday. Doth he feel it? no. |
2,779 | Henry IV | 18 | 5.1.138 | FALSTAFF | Doth he hear it? no. 'Tis insensible, then. Yea, |
2,780 | Henry IV | 18 | 5.1.139 | FALSTAFF | to the dead. But will it not live with the living? |
2,781 | Henry IV | 18 | 5.1.140 | FALSTAFF | no. Why? detraction will not suffer it. Therefore |
2,782 | Henry IV | 18 | 5.1.141 | FALSTAFF | I'll none of it. Honour is a mere scutcheon: and so |
2,783 | Henry IV | 18 | 5.1.142 | FALSTAFF | ends my catechism. |
2,784 | Henry IV | 18 | null | FALSTAFF | Exit |
2,785 | Henry IV | 18 | null | FALSTAFF | SCENE II. The rebel camp. |
2,786 | Henry IV | 18 | null | FALSTAFF | Enter WORCESTER and VERNON |
2,787 | Henry IV | 1 | 5.2.1 | EARL OF WORCESTER | O, no, my nephew must not know, Sir Richard, |
2,788 | Henry IV | 1 | 5.2.2 | EARL OF WORCESTER | The liberal and kind offer of the king. |
2,789 | Henry IV | 2 | 5.2.3 | VERNON | 'Twere best he did. |
2,790 | Henry IV | 3 | 5.2.4 | EARL OF WORCESTER | Then are we all undone. |
2,791 | Henry IV | 3 | 5.2.5 | EARL OF WORCESTER | It is not possible, it cannot be, |
2,792 | Henry IV | 3 | 5.2.6 | EARL OF WORCESTER | The king should keep his word in loving us, |
2,793 | Henry IV | 3 | 5.2.7 | EARL OF WORCESTER | He will suspect us still and find a time |
2,794 | Henry IV | 3 | 5.2.8 | EARL OF WORCESTER | To punish this offence in other faults: |
2,795 | Henry IV | 3 | 5.2.9 | EARL OF WORCESTER | Suspicion all our lives shall be stuck full of eyes, |
2,796 | Henry IV | 3 | 5.2.10 | EARL OF WORCESTER | For treason is but trusted like the fox, |
2,797 | Henry IV | 3 | 5.2.11 | EARL OF WORCESTER | Who, ne'er so tame, so cherish'd and lock'd up, |
2,798 | Henry IV | 3 | 5.2.12 | EARL OF WORCESTER | Will have a wild trick of his ancestors. |
2,799 | Henry IV | 3 | 5.2.13 | EARL OF WORCESTER | Look how we can, or sad or merrily, |
2,800 | Henry IV | 3 | 5.2.14 | EARL OF WORCESTER | Interpretation will misquote our looks, |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.