1 |
Can anyone help me with the best Shakespeare quotes? Posted by abhishekabhibose on Jun 21, 2009. |
William Shakespeare Group
2 |
Well, I don't know about 'best'. What do you mean? Do you mean 'the best things Shakespeare ever wrote'? (if you do, then it's completely down to your own - or my own - opinion: there'll be very little consensus!). If, though, you mean the most famous quotations from Shakespeare, there are hundreds. Hamlet asks "To be or not to be? That is the question", before he later exclaims "Alas, poor Yorick. I knew him, Horatio". Juliet, frustrated, is forced to wonder of her new love, 'O Romeo, Romeo! Wherefore art thou Romeo?' Henry V begins with the famous chorus "O for a muse of fire...", and eventually commands his men to go "Once more unto the breach, dear friends, once more". Macbeth asks 'Is this a dagger that I see before me?' And on top of those big ones, there are hundreds of smaller quotes that are just as famous. I love this little paragraph, written by Bernard Levin, which'll give you a few ideas:
Posted by robertwilliam on Jun 21, 2009. |
3 |
He who has injured thee was either stronger or weaker than thee. If weaker, spare him; if stronger, spare thyself. And say to all the world, THIS WAS A MAN! How poor are they who have not patience! What wound did ever heal but by degrees. Posted by epollock on Jun 23, 2009. |
4 |
That first quote, "He who has injured thee..." isn't Shakespeare, I don't think. It's Seneca. Posted by robertwilliam on Jun 24, 2009. |
5 |
I consulted various Shakespeare sources that Shakespeare was the original source of the quote. Posted by epollock on Jun 24, 2009. |
6 |
William Faulkner must have thought this one was a really good since he found perhaps his most famous title in it:
Very memorable phrase, "sound and fury," in reading both Shakespeare and Faulkner. Posted by mshurn on Jul 10, 2009. |

