This scene, containing the famous quotation "Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown" takes place in the king's bedchamber, where he is suffering from insomnia. The Folio text does not indicate what palace the king is in at the time.
Act 1 Scene 2
Two different plays: Henry IV Part 1, Act 1 Scene 2 and Henry V, Act III Scene 7
King Henry V. Act III, Scene 7. It's also used in King Henry IV (Part One) Act I Scene 2.
King Henry from Shakespeare's Henry The Fourth ( Part 2, Act 3, scene 1, 26-31)
Part of a play (Section) Part of a play (Section)
Dick the butcher in Henry VI Part 2 Act 4, scene 4 71-78.
He appears three times, in four different scenes. First he appears to Marcellus, Bernardo and Horatio in Act one Scene 1. He later appears to them with Hamlet in Act 1 Scene 4. Hamlet follows the ghost offstage then reappears chasing him in Act 1 Scene 5. The two scenes are part of the same appearance. Finally, the ghost appears briefly in the closet scene, Act 3 Scene 4.
The term is two words "crime scene" (location of a criminal act).
Kill them.The character Dick, in Henry VI, part II, act iv, scene ii, saysThe first thing we do, let's kill all the lawyers!
None. The phrase 'He hath eaten me out of house and home" is from Henry IV Part 2 Act 2 Scene 1
The correct phrase is Give the devil his dueIt means people should be correctly credited and praised when they do good, even though they are generally bad. I may berate a local politician as a rogue and a scoundrel, and then say, "but to give the devil his due he did do ....."It is a quotation from Shakespeare's plays King Henry V, Act III, Scene 7 and King Henry IV Part I Act I Scene II.
Romeo and Juliet hold conversations in Act I Scene 5, Act II Scene 2, Act II Scene 6 and Act III Scene 5.