Comparison of William Shakespeare Double Falsehood 2.3 to William Shakespeare
Summary

William Shakespeare Double Falsehood 2.3 has 146 lines, and 30% of them have weak matches at magnitude 10 to 14 in William Shakespeare. 70% of the lines have no match. On average, each line has 0.83 weak matches.

William Shakespeare

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11

Double Falsehood 2.3: 9

Begins to sicken in this black reflection.
11

Julius Caesar 4.2: 20

When love begins to sicken and decay
13

Double Falsehood 2.3: 18

But Pleasure is too strong for Reason’s curb;
13

All's Well That Ends Well 5.3: 7

When oil and fire, too strong for reason’s force, [continues next]
13

Double Falsehood 2.3: 19

And Conscience sinks o’erpower’d with Beauty’s sweets.
13

All's Well That Ends Well 5.3: 7

[continues previous] When oil and fire, too strong for reason’s force,
12

All's Well That Ends Well 5.3: 8

[continues previous] O’erbears it, and burns on. My honor’d lady,
10

Double Falsehood 2.3: 24

Fie, my good lord; why would you wait without?
10

Merry Wives of Windsor 3.3: 57

Pray you come near. If I suspect without cause, why then make sport at me, then let me be your jest, I deserve it. How now? Whither bear you this? [continues next]
10

Double Falsehood 2.3: 25

If you suspect your welcome, I have brought
10

Merry Wives of Windsor 3.3: 57

[continues previous] Pray you come near. If I suspect without cause, why then make sport at me, then let me be your jest, I deserve it. How now? Whither bear you this?
10

Double Falsehood 2.3: 38

Has with a lover’s eye beheld your beauty;
10

Love's Labour's Lost 4.3: 310

It adds a precious seeing to the eye:
10

Love's Labour's Lost 4.3: 311

A lover’s eyes will gaze an eagle blind.
11

Double Falsehood 2.3: 43

Which when you know, you cannot rate too dear.
11

Sonnet 13: 13

O, none but unthrifts: dear my love, you know [continues next]
11

Sonnet 13: 14

You had a father, let your son say so. [continues next]
11

Double Falsehood 2.3: 44

My father, on my knees I do beseech you
10

Pericles 4.4: 7

Where our scenes seems to live. I do beseech you [continues next]
11

Sonnet 13: 13

[continues previous] O, none but unthrifts: dear my love, you know
11

Sonnet 13: 14

[continues previous] You had a father, let your son say so.
10

King Lear 1.4: 143

Of other your new pranks. I do beseech you [continues next]
10

King Lear 1.4: 144

To understand my purposes aright, [continues next]
10

Romeo and Juliet 3.5: 158

Good father, I beseech you on my knees,
10

Timon of Athens 2.2: 34

I do beseech you, good my lords, keep on,
10

Timon of Athens 3.5: 88

Must it be so? It must not be. My lords,
10

Timon of Athens 3.5: 89

I do beseech you know me.
10

Troilus and Cressida 3.2: 81

My lord, I do beseech you pardon me,
10

Double Falsehood 2.3: 45

To pause one moment on your daughter’s ruin.
10

Pericles 4.4: 8

[continues previous] To learn of me, who stand i’ th’ gaps to teach you,
10

King Lear 1.4: 144

[continues previous] To understand my purposes aright,
10

Double Falsehood 2.3: 46

I vow, my heart ev’n bleeds, that I must thank you
10

Much Ado About Nothing 5.1: 148

Fare you well, boy, you know my mind. I will leave you now to your gossip-like humor. You break jests as braggards do their blades, which, God be thank’d, hurt not. My lord, for your many courtesies I thank you. I must discontinue your company. Your brother the bastard is fled from Messina. You have among you kill’d a sweet and innocent lady. For my Lord Lack-beard there, he and I shall meet, and till then peace be with him. [continues next]
10

Winter's Tale 3.3: 51

To loss, and what may follow! Weep I cannot,
10

Winter's Tale 3.3: 52

But my heart bleeds; and most accurs’d am I
10

Henry IV Part 2 2.2: 13

By this hand, thou thinkest me as far in the devil’s book as thou and Falstaff, for obduracy and persistency. Let the end try the man. But I tell thee, my heart bleeds inwardly that my father is so sick, and keeping such vile company as thou art hath in reason taken from me all ostentation of sorrow.
10

Double Falsehood 2.3: 47

For your past tenderness; and yet distrust
10

Much Ado About Nothing 5.1: 148

[continues previous] Fare you well, boy, you know my mind. I will leave you now to your gossip-like humor. You break jests as braggards do their blades, which, God be thank’d, hurt not. My lord, for your many courtesies I thank you. I must discontinue your company. Your brother the bastard is fled from Messina. You have among you kill’d a sweet and innocent lady. For my Lord Lack-beard there, he and I shall meet, and till then peace be with him.
10

Double Falsehood 2.3: 52

Your harsh commands; or to my charge lay that
10

Henry VI Part 1 3.1: 4

Or aught intend’st to lay unto my charge,
10

Double Falsehood 2.3: 54

Prithee, fear neither the one, nor the other: I tell thee, girl, there’s more fear than danger. For my own part, as soon as thou art married to this noble lord, my fears will be over.
10

Romeo and Juliet 3.4: 21

She shall be married to this noble earl.
10

Double Falsehood 2.3: 57

Of this high honor. Once there was a time,
10

Two Noble Kinsmen 3.3: 39

A pretty brown wench ’tis. There was a time [continues next]
10

Coriolanus 1.1: 52

There was a time when all the body’s members [continues next]
10

Double Falsehood 2.3: 58

When to have heard my lord Henriquez’ vows,
10

Two Noble Kinsmen 3.3: 40

[continues previous] When young men went a-hunting, and a wood,
10

Coriolanus 1.1: 52

[continues previous] There was a time when all the body’s members
12

Double Falsehood 2.3: 62

Was long since given to the injur’d Julio.
10

Double Falsehood 2.3: 81

To truth, to honor, and poor injur’d Julio?
12

Double Falsehood 5.2: 215

’Till I can give it to the injur’d Julio.
11

Double Falsehood 2.3: 63

Why then, by my consent e’en take it back again. Thou, like a simple wench, hast given thy affections to a fellow, that does not care a farthing for them. One, that has left thee for a jaunt to court; as who should say, “I’ll get a place now; ’tis time enough to marry, when I’m turn’d out of it.”
11

Henry VI Part 2 4.7: 50

Nay, he nods at us, as who should say, I’ll be even with you. I’ll see if his head will stand steadier on a pole, or no. Take him away, and behead him.
10

Double Falsehood 2.3: 81

To truth, to honor, and poor injur’d Julio?
10

Double Falsehood 2.3: 62

Was long since given to the injur’d Julio.
10

Double Falsehood 5.2: 215

’Till I can give it to the injur’d Julio.
10

Double Falsehood 2.3: 82

O think, my lord, how much this Julio loves you;
10

Coriolanus 2.3: 162

How in his suit he scorn’d you; but your loves, [continues next]
10

Coriolanus 2.3: 163

Thinking upon his services, took from you [continues next]
10

Double Falsehood 2.3: 83

Recall his services, his well-tried faith;
10

Coriolanus 2.3: 163

[continues previous] Thinking upon his services, took from you
10

Double Falsehood 2.3: 89

Mistaken youth! This very hour he robs thee
10

Sonnet 79: 8

He robs thee of, and pays it thee again. [continues next]
10

Double Falsehood 2.3: 90

Of all thy heart holds dear. ’Tis so Henriquez
10

Sonnet 79: 8

[continues previous] He robs thee of, and pays it thee again.
11

Double Falsehood 2.3: 95

Mad; mad. Stark mad, by this light.
10

Much Ado About Nothing 5.4: 91

A miracle! Here’s our own hands against our hearts. Come, I will have thee, but by this light, I take thee for pity. [continues next]
11

Winter's Tale 3.2: 170

And then run mad indeed — stark mad! For all
10

King John 2.1: 561

Mad world, mad kings, mad composition!
10

Double Falsehood 2.3: 96

I but begin to be so. I conjure you,
10

Much Ado About Nothing 5.4: 91

[continues previous] A miracle! Here’s our own hands against our hearts. Come, I will have thee, but by this light, I take thee for pity.
10

Macbeth 4.1: 48

I conjure you, by that which you profess [continues next]
10

Double Falsehood 2.3: 97

By all the tender interests of nature,
10

Macbeth 4.1: 48

[continues previous] I conjure you, by that which you profess
13

Double Falsehood 2.3: 98

By the chaste love ’twixt you, and my dear mother,
13

All's Well That Ends Well 5.3: 291

Deadly divorce step between me and you! [continues next]
13

All's Well That Ends Well 5.3: 292

O my dear mother, do I see you living? [continues next]
13

Double Falsehood 2.3: 99

(O holy heav’n, that she were living now!)
13

All's Well That Ends Well 5.3: 292

[continues previous] O my dear mother, do I see you living?
10

Double Falsehood 2.3: 101

I’ve heard my mother say a thousand times,
10

Two Gentlemen of Verona 4.4: 89

For I have heard him say a thousand times
10

Henry VI Part 3 5.6: 70

For I have often heard my mother say
11

Double Falsehood 2.3: 103

But when the conflict was ’twixt love and duty,
11

Edward III 2.1: 342

Of love and duty twixt thyself and me;
11

Double Falsehood 2.3: 113

Go to, you’re a fool. No doubt, you have old stories enough to undo you. What, you can’t throw yourself away but by precedent, ha? You will needs be married to one, that will none of you? You will be happy no body’s way but your own, forsooth. But, d’ye mark me, spare your tongue for the future; (and that’s using you hardly too, to bid you spare what you have a great deal too much of) go, go your ways, and d’ye hear, get ready within these two days to be married to a husband you don’t deserve. Do it, or, by my dead father’s soul, you are no acquaintance of mine.
11

Edward III 4.2: 72

I will accept of nought but fire and sword,
11

Edward III 4.2: 73

Except, within these two days, six of them,
11

All's Well That Ends Well 3.2: 61

The fellow has a deal of that too much,
10

As You Like It 4.1: 78

Ay, go your ways, go your ways; I knew what you would prove; my friends told me as much, and I thought no less. That flattering tongue of yours won me. ’Tis but one cast away, and so come death! Two a’ clock is your hour?
10

Cymbeline 1.4: 35

You are a great deal abus’d in too bold a persuasion, and I doubt not you sustain what y’ are worthy of by your attempt.
11

Measure for Measure 4.2: 100

The contents of this is the return of the Duke. You shall anon over-read it at your pleasure; where you shall find, within these two days he will be here. This is a thing that Angelo knows not, for he this very day receives letters of strange tenor, perchance of the Duke’s death, perchance entering into some monastery, but by chance nothing of what is writ. Look, th’ unfolding star calls up the shepherd. Put not ...
10

Merry Wives of Windsor 4.1: 45

It is qui, quae, quod: if you forget your qui’s, your quae’s, and your quod’s, you must be preeches. Go your ways and play, go.
11

Winter's Tale 1.1: 6

You pay a great deal too dear for what’s given freely.
10

Henry IV Part 2 Epilogue: 1

First my fear, then my cur’sy, last my speech. My fear, is your displeasure, my cur’sy, my duty, and my speech, to beg your pardons. If you look for a good speech now, you undo me, for what I have to say is of mine own making, and what indeed (I should say) will (I doubt) prove mine own marring. But to the purpose, and so to the venture. Be it known to you, as it is very well, I was lately here in the end of a displeasing play, to ...
10

Richard II 3.3: 205

Though you are old enough to be my heir.
10

Richard II 3.3: 206

What you will have, I’ll give, and willing too,
10

Othello 3.3: 475

Within these three days let me hear thee say
10

Double Falsehood 2.3: 116

No way for my escape, but through the flames.
10

Cardenio 3.1: 106

Art thou yet ignorant? There is no way
10

Cardenio 3.1: 107

But through my bosom.
11

Double Falsehood 2.3: 127

My worthy neighbor, I am much in fortune’s favor to find you thus alone. I have a suit to you.
11

Much Ado About Nothing 2.2: 6

I think I told your lordship a year since, how much I am in the favor of Margaret, the waiting-gentlewoman to Hero.
10

Pericles 4.6: 35

I cannot be offended with my trade. Please you to name it. [continues next]
11

Othello 5.1: 82

I am sorry to find you thus; I have been to seek you.
10

Double Falsehood 2.3: 128

Please to name it, sir.
10

Pericles 4.6: 35

[continues previous] I cannot be offended with my trade. Please you to name it.
10

Double Falsehood 2.3: 129

Sir, I have long held you in singular esteem: and what I shall now say, will be a proof of it. You know, sir, I have but one son.
10

Sir Thomas More 1.2: 62

You know, sir, I have many heavy friends,
10

Love's Labour's Lost 5.2: 244

O for your reason! Quickly, sir, I long!
10

Love's Labour's Lost 5.2: 245

You have a double tongue within your mask,
10

Two Gentlemen of Verona 2.4: 34

I know it well, sir; you have an exchequer of words and, I think, no other treasure to give your followers; for it appears by their bare liveries that they live by your bare words.
14

Double Falsehood 2.3: 133

Such as it is, the whole reversion is my son’s. He is now engaged in his attendance on our master, the Duke. But e’er he went, he left with me the secret of his heart, his love for your fair daughter. For your consent, he said, ’twas ready. I took a night, indeed, to think upon it, and now have brought you mine; and am come to bind the contract with half my fortune in present, the whole some time hence, and, in the mean while, my hearty blessing. Ha? What say you to’t, Don Bernard?
10

Double Falsehood 2.3: 139

What, am I mock’d in this business, Don Bernard?
10

Double Falsehood 3.2: 122

And wish you joy and honor. Hold, Don Bernard,
10

Double Falsehood 3.2: 163

And tend her, as you would the world’s best treasure.
10

Double Falsehood 3.2: 164

Don Bernard, this wild tumult soon will cease,
11

Double Falsehood 5.2: 4

Why, he mourns like a man. Don Bernard, you [continues next]
10

Double Falsehood 5.2: 38

On this good task. Don Bernard finds beneath
10

Sir Thomas More 3.2: 13

He’s gone to Rotterdam; peace go with him!
10

Sir Thomas More 3.2: 14

He left me heavy when he went from hence;
10

Merry Wives of Windsor 2.2: 82

... I come to her with any detection in my hand, my desires had instance and argument to commend themselves. I could drive her then from the ward of her purity, her reputation, her marriage vow, and a thousand other her defenses, which now are too too strongly embattled against me. What say you to’t, Sir John?
10

Coriolanus 1.1: 102

And leave me but the bran.” What say you to’t?
10

Troilus and Cressida 2.2: 7

Shall be strook off.” Hector, what say you to’t?
14

Troilus and Cressida 3.3: 266

What say you to’t?
12

Troilus and Cressida 3.3: 267

God buy you, with all my heart.
11

Double Falsehood 2.3: 134

Why, really, neighbor, — I must own, I have heard something of this matter.
11

Double Falsehood 5.2: 4

[continues previous] Why, he mourns like a man. Don Bernard, you
10

Pericles 4.6: 44

Why, your herb-woman, she that sets seeds and roots of shame and iniquity. O, you have heard something of my power, and so stand aloof for more serious wooing. But I protest to thee, pretty one, my authority shall not see thee, or else look friendly upon thee. Come bring me to some private place. Come, come.
11

Double Falsehood 2.3: 138

Very long ago, neighbor. On Tuesday last.
11

Henry IV Part 2 1.1: 29

On Tuesday last to listen after news.
11

Macbeth 2.4: 11

Even like the deed that’s done. On Tuesday last,
10

Double Falsehood 2.3: 139

What, am I mock’d in this business, Don Bernard?
10

Double Falsehood 2.3: 133

... he said, ’twas ready. I took a night, indeed, to think upon it, and now have brought you mine; and am come to bind the contract with half my fortune in present, the whole some time hence, and, in the mean while, my hearty blessing. Ha? What say you to’t, Don Bernard?
10

Double Falsehood 3.2: 122

And wish you joy and honor. Hold, Don Bernard,
10

Double Falsehood 3.2: 164

Don Bernard, this wild tumult soon will cease,
10

Double Falsehood 5.2: 4

Why, he mourns like a man. Don Bernard, you
10

Double Falsehood 5.2: 38

On this good task. Don Bernard finds beneath
11

Double Falsehood 2.3: 140

Not mock’d, good Camillo, not mock’d: but in love-matters, you know, there are abundance of changes in half an hour. Time, time, neighbor, plays tricks with all of us.
11

Romeo and Juliet 2.5: 2

In half an hour she promised to return.
11

Double Falsehood 2.3: 141

Time, sir! What tell you me of time? Come, I see how this goes. Can a little time take a man by the shoulder, and shake off his honor? Let me tell you, neighbor, it must either be a strong wind, or a very mellow honesty that drops so easily. Time, quoth’a?
10

Julius Caesar 4.3: 8

That every nice offense should bear his comment.
10

Julius Caesar 4.3: 9

Let me tell you, Cassius, you yourself
11

King Lear 4.6: 127

O ho, are you there with me? No eyes in your head, nor no money in your purse? Your eyes are in a heavy case, your purse in a light, yet you see how this world goes.
11

King Lear 4.6: 128

I see it feelingly.
10

King Lear 4.6: 129

What, art mad? A man may see how this world goes with no eyes. Look with thine ears; see how yond justice rails upon yond simple thief. Hark in thine ear: change places, and handy-dandy, which is the justice, which is the thief? Thou hast seen a farmer’s dog bark at a beggar?
12

Double Falsehood 2.3: 142

Look’e, Camillo; will you please to put your indignation in your pocket for half a moment, while I tell you the whole truth of the matter. My daughter, you must know, is such a tender soul, she cannot possibly see a Duke’s younger son without falling desperately in love with him. Now, you know, neighbor, when greatness rides post after a man of ...
12

Twelfth Night 5.1: 19

Put your grace in your pocket, sir, for this once, and let your flesh and blood obey it.
10

Double Falsehood 2.3: 143

I profess, a fox might earth in the hollowness of your heart, neighbor, and there’s an end. If I were to give a bad conscience its true likeness, it should be drawn after a very near neighbor to a certain poor neighbor of yours. — Neighbor! With a pox!
10

Cardenio 3.1: 34

Well, you have killed me, sir, and there’s an
10

Double Falsehood 1.2: 157

We shall hear soon what his father will do, and so proceed accordingly. I have no great heart to the business, neither will I with any violence oppose it: but leave it to that power which rules in these conjunctions, and there’s an end. Come, haste we homeward, girl.
10

Double Falsehood 5.2: 1

Ay, then your grace had had a son more; he, a daughter; and I, an heir: but let it be as ’tis, I cannot mend it; one way or other, I shall rub it over, with rubbing to my grave, and there’s an end on’t.
10

Cymbeline 3.1: 68

... Make pastime with us a day or two, or longer. If you seek us afterwards in other terms, you shall find us in our salt-water girdle. If you beat us out of it, it is yours; if you fall in the adventure, our crows shall fare the better for you; and there’s an end.
10

Much Ado About Nothing 2.1: 50

Come, come, do you think I do not know you by your excellent wit? Can virtue hide itself? Go to, mum, you are he. Graces will appear, and there’s an end.
10

Henry IV Part 1 5.3: 41

... If he do come in my way, so; if he do not, if I come in his willingly, let him make a carbonado of me. I like not such grinning honor as Sir Walter hath. Give me life, which if I can save, so; if not, honor comes unlook’d for, and there’s an end.
10

Henry V 2.1: 4

... time shall serve, there shall be smiles — but that shall be as it may. I dare not fight, but I will wink and hold out mine iron. It is a simple one, but what though? It will toast cheese, and it will endure cold as another man’s sword will; and there’s an end.
11

Double Falsehood 2.3: 145

... nothing, I will hear nothing. As for what you have to say, if it comes from your heart, ’tis a lie before you speak it. I’ll to Leonora; and if I find her in the same story, why, I shall believe your wife was true to you, and your daughter is your own. Fare you well.
11

As You Like It 1.2: 119

Shall we go, coz? Ay. Fare you well, fair gentleman. [continues next]
10

Merchant of Venice 1.1: 109

Thou shalt not know the sound of thine own tongue.
10

Merchant of Venice 1.1: 110

Fare you well! I’ll grow a talker for this gear.
11

Merchant of Venice 2.7: 73

Fare you well, your suit is cold.”
11

Double Falsehood 2.3: 146

Ay, but two words must go to that bargain. It happens, that I am at present of opinion my daughter shall receive no more company to day; at least, no such visits as yours.
11

As You Like It 1.2: 119

[continues previous] Shall we go, coz? Ay. Fare you well, fair gentleman.