'If spirits can assume both form and suit,'
This quote comes from a famous play by shakespeare
"Still so cruel?"
The last line of the poem on Shakespeare's grave is "and curst be he who moves my bones."
It is a line from William Shakespeares Hamlet. Most of William Shakespeares plays are still famous now as he is regarded as the greatest writer in the English Language.
Are you asking whether there is a line in another Shakespeare play, which is not Romeo and Juliet, which is a lot like a line which is in Romeo and Juliet? If so, it would help our enquiry if we had an idea what line from Romeo and Juliet you are thinking of. There are some famous similarities between lines in Shakespeare's plays Richard III, Titus Andronicus and Henry VI, but not so with Romeo and Juliet.
The Winter of Our Discontent
Type your answer here... 10; doesn't rhyme
Richard, the future king.
The meaning or insult 'Blinking idiot' comes from Shakespeares Play 'Merchant of Venice' Thankyou for looking up Shakespeares plays they are a great historian play!
The line that separates the day and night is called the "TERMINATOR". it is a grey moving line
Yorick. And he is part of one of the most misquoted lines - (usually misquoted as "Alas, Poor Yorick, I knew him well." The correct line is - "Alas, poor Yorick, I knew him Horatio."
to be or not to be that is the questionthe plays the thing wherein we'll catch the conscience of the king.tis a fair thought to lie between a maids legsfrom hamlet