paroles de chanson Hamlet: Act 5 - Scene 1 - John Gielgud
A
churchyard
near
the
castle.
Two
gravediggers
pause
in
their
work
Is
she
to
be
buried
in
Christian
burial
When
she
wilfully
seeks
her
own
salvation?
I
tell
thee
she
is.
Therefore
make
her
grave
straight
The
crown
will
set
on
her
and
finds
it
Christian
burial
How
can
that
be,
unless
she
drowned
herself
in
her
own
defense?
Why,
it
is
found
so
It
must
be
so
offended,
it
cannot
be
else.
For
here
lies
The
point.
If
I
drown
myself
wittingly,
it
argues
an
Act.
And
an
act
hath
three
branches.
It
is
to
act,
to
Do,
to
perform.
Argal,
she
drowned
herself
wittingly
Nay,
but
hear
you,
Goodman
Delver
Give
me
leave.
Here
lies
the
water.
Good.
Here
stands
the
man
Good.
If
the
man
go
to
this
water
and
drown
himself,
it
is
Willy-nilly
he
goes.
Mark
ye
that.
But
if
the
water
come
To
him
and
drown
him,
he
drowns
not
himself.
Argal,
he
that
Is
not
guilty
of
his
own
death
shortens
not
his
own
life
But
is
this
law?
Ay,
marry,
it
is.
Crowners
quest
law
Will
you
ha'
the
truth
on't?
If
this
had
not
been
a
gentlewoman
She
should
have
been
buried
out
o'
Christian
burial
Why
there
thou
say'st.
And
the
more
pity
the
great
folk
should
have
Countenance,
in
this
world,
that
drown
or
hang
themselves
more
than
Their
even
Christian.
Come,
my
spade.
There's
No
ancient
gentlemen
but
gardeners,
ditchers
And
grave-makers.
They
hold
up
Adam's
profession
Was
he
a
gentleman?
A'
was
the
first
that
ever
bore
arms
Why,
he
had
none
What?
Art
a
heathen?
How
dost
thou
understand
the
scripture?
The
Scripture
says
Adam
did.
Could
he
dig
without
arms?
I'll
put
another
question
to
thee.
If
thou
Answer'st
me
not
to
the
purpose,
confess
thyself
Go
to
What
is
he
that
builds
stronger
than
either
The
mason,
the
shipwright,
or
the
carpenter?
The
gallows-maker,
for
that
outlives
a
thousand
tenants
I
like
thy
wit
well.
In
good
faith,
the
gallows
does
well
But
how
does
it
well?
It
does
well
to
those
that
do
ill.
Now
Thou
dost
ill
to
say
the
gallows
is
built
stronger
than
the
church
Argal,
the
gallows
may
do
well
to
thee.
Come,
to't
again
Who
builds
stronger
than
a
mason,
a
shipwright,
or
a
carpenter?
Ay,
tell
me
that,
and
unyoke
Marry,
now
I
can
tell
To
it
'Mass,
I
cannot
tell
Cudgel
thy
brains
no
more
about
it,
for
your
dull
ass
will
Not
mend
his
pace
with
beating.
And
when
you're
asked
this
Question
next,
say
"A
grave-maker.
The
houses
he
makes
last
Till
Doomsday."
Go,
get
thee
to
yon.
Fetch
me
a
stoup
o'
liquor
1 Hamlet: Act 5 - Scene 2, "Come Hamlet, Come and Take This Hand" (Claudius) [Part III]
2 Hamlet: Act 5 - Scene 2, "Your Lordship is Right Welcome..." (Osric) [Part II]
3 Hamlet: Act 5 - Scene 2
4 Hamlet: Act 5 - Scene 1, "But Soft, But Soft!" (Hamlet) [Part IV]
5 Hamlet: Act 5 - Scene 1, "Alas Poor Yorick!" (Hamlet) [Part III]
6 Hamlet: Act 5 - Scene 2, "Where is This Sight?" (Fortinbras) [Part IV]
7 Hamlet: Act 5 - Scene 5
8 Hamlet: Act 4 - Scene 5, "Where is the Beauteous Majesty" Opheila (Part II)
9 Hamlet: Act 4 - Scene 5, "O' Thou Vile King" (Laertes) [Part III]
10 Hamlet: Act 4 - Scene 5, "O' Heat Dry Up My Brains" (Laertes) [Part IV]
11 Hamlet: Act 4 - Scene 6
12 Hamlet: Act 4 - Scene 7
13 Hamlet: Act 4 - Scene 7, "I Bought an Unction of a Mountebank..." (Laertes) [Part II]
14 Hamlet: Act 4 - Scene 7, "There is a Willow Grows Aslant..." (Gertrude) [Part III]
15 Hamlet: Act 5 - Scene 1
16 Hamlet: Act 5 - Scene 1, "In Youth When I Did Love..." (Clown) [Part II]
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