| Line from Shakespeare | Title of Work | Author, Actor, Artist |
| 'Present mirth hath ____. What's to come is still unsure.' --Twelfth Night | |
| 'Tell him his commandment is fulfill'd, that ____: Where should we have our thanks?' --Hamlet | |
| 'What do you call the play?' ''____''--Hamlet | |
| 'I am but mad ____: when the wind is southerly I know a hawk from a handsaw.' --Hamlet | |
| 'To sleep, perchance to dream- ay there's the rub, for in this sleep of death ___'--Hamlet | |
| 'Cry 'Caesar!' Speak, Caesar is turn'd to hear' 'Beware ___' | |
| '____, ladies, ____, men were decievers ever' --Much Ado About Nothing | |
| 'How goes the night, boy?' '____. I have not heard the clock.'--Macbeth | |
| 'By the pricking of my thumbs, ____' --Macbeth | |
| '____ creeps in this petty place from day to day, to the last syllable of recorded time'--Macbeth | |
| 'It is a tale told by an idiot, full of ____, signifying nothing'--Macbeth | |
| 'The royal banner, and all quality, pride, ____ of glorious war!'--Othello | |
| 'Now is the ____ made glorious summer by this son of York'--Richard III | |
| 'How beauteous mankind is! O ____. That has such people in't!'--The Tempest | |
| 'We few, we happy few, we ____. For he today that sheds his blood with me, shall be my brother'--Henry V | |
| 'Cry havoc! and let slip ____, that this foul deed shall smell above the earth with carrion men, groaning for burial'--Julius Caesar | |