Hamlet! (A little more than kin and less than kind)
Aside
idont know tell me
Shakespeare. It's the first line of his Sonnet 130.
This is the first line of Sonnet 18 by William Shakespeare. Shakespeare suggests that the memory of beauty will be immortalized in the sonnet. (see related question)
Curiously, this is a question which is almost impossible to answer. What people say in plays tells us about the characters, not about the authors. Shakespeare did not write the kinds of works in which he bared his soul. What is more, it was very dangerous in Shakespeare's time to hold opinions which did not coincide with the official line, so if he held any such opinions he would not dare to express them.
Aside
Aside from the line in A Midsummer Night's Dream, absolutely nothing.
Caliban's first line in Shakespeare's play "The Tempest" is "All the infections that the sun sends forth." This line expresses his bitterness and resentment towards his situation and the characters who have wronged him. It sets the tone for his complex relationship with power, colonization, and his own identity throughout the play.
an aside is when a character is speaking to the audience and in this play romeo saying "shall i hear more or shall i speak at this?" this is in act 3
idont know tell me
Shakespeare wrote several sonnets, you would have to be more specific.
In the play "Hamlet" by William Shakespeare, the line "The lady doth protest too much, methinks" is heard by the audience watching the play within the play, but the characters onstage do not hear it. This line reveals the queen's guilt in the murder of King Hamlet.
Shakespeare uses hallucinations in Macbeth to convey the psychological disintegration of the characters, particularly Macbeth himself. The hallucinations serve to blur the line between reality and illusion, adding a sense of unease and suspense to the play as the characters grapple with their inner demons and moral dilemmas. By showcasing the characters' fragile mental states, Shakespeare heightens the tension and drama of the unfolding events.
Shakespeare. It's the first line of his Sonnet 130.
This is the first line of Sonnet 18 by William Shakespeare. Shakespeare suggests that the memory of beauty will be immortalized in the sonnet. (see related question)
William Shakespeare, in Coriolanus ACT IV, SCENE IV, Line 27.
In Act 3 Scene 5 of Romeo and Juliet, the line "Wilt thou be gone? It is not yet near day: It was the nightingale, and not the lark," is part of a dialogue between Romeo and Juliet. It is not an aside, as the characters are speaking directly to each other, nor is it a soliloquy since other characters are present on stage.