Mercutio says it in Romeo and Juliet.
Mercutio is the character who yells the quote 'A plague on both your houses!' in the Shakespeare play, Romeo and Juliet.
It's from Romeo and Juliet, Act III Scene 1.
The quote does not appear in any Shakespeare play.
Shakespeare wasn't alive during the Gilded Age.
Shakespeare did not say that. It is an internet meme which has somehow become attached to Shakespeare.
Mercutio is the character who yells the quote 'A plague on both your houses!' in the Shakespeare play, Romeo and Juliet.
It's from Romeo and Juliet, Act III Scene 1.
The quote does not appear in any Shakespeare play.
The quote "Cry 'Havoc!' and let slip the dogs of war" is from William Shakespeare's play Julius Caesar. It is spoken by Mark Antony in Act 3, Scene 1, as a call to arms following the assassination of Caesar.
'Full of jealousy is guilt it spills itself in fearing to be spilt' ..this quote is inaccurate, the quote is ... "So full of artless jealousy is guilt, It spills itself in fearing to be spilt" by William Shakespeare....
Shakespeare wasn't alive during the Gilded Age.
"To be or not to be" is a quote from the play Hamlet by William Shakespeare.
The phrase "to be, or not to be" comes from William Shakespeare's Hamlet
It is from Henry V by Shakespeare.
Shakespeare did not say that. It is an internet meme which has somehow become attached to Shakespeare.
William Shakespeare; it is a line from Hamlet's soliloquy in the play 'Hamlet' (act 3, scene 1).
It is an oft quoted phrase but it is not from any of Shakespeare's plays.