6. Neither a borrower nor a lender be!
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The literal meaning of this phrase is that lending money is always dangerous. Sometimes, when people are unable to pay you back, you take help from your friends due to that failed deal. On the other side, it is disgusting to borrow money, because it indicates that you are living outside of your resources and means. Also, this phrase refers to Laertes, who, with a poison-tipped sword, injures Hamlet and then exchanges swords accidently with Hamlet and is poisoned by his own sword. In this way, he is a lender and borrower of swords. A lent sword kills him during his fight for a borrowed cause.
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