:08:01
	- What dost want thou?
- My pocket was picked!
:08:04
	Why, Sir John, what do you think
that I keep thieves in my house?
:08:08
	- Leave! I know thee, even now!
- I know you, Sir John!
:08:13
	You owe me money, and now you
pick a quarrel to belique me of it.
:08:19
	This house's turned
bawdy-house.
:08:21
	- A bawdy-house sayest thee?
- Yea, and they pick pockets!
:08:26
	But for having 12 or 14 maidens
who live honestly...
:08:29
	...by sewing, thou sayest I own
a bawdy-house. What a world!
:08:35
	Canst one sleep fearing not for
the fate of one's purse?
:08:40
	Sir John, you owe money here!
:08:42
	What didst thou lose, Jack?
:08:45
	- 'Tis no trifle offence, some' 40.
- What sayest thou?
:08:49
	And a seal ring of my
grandfather's, worth 40 mark.
:08:54
	You owe so much money, Jack,
you hath forgotten.
:08:59
	1st: A capon, 2s. 2d.
Sauce, 4p.
:09:03
	Sack, two gallons, 5s. 8p.
:09:07
	Anchovies and sack after
supper, 2s. 6d.
:09:10
	- Bread, 0s. 1/2 d.
- O monstrous!
:09:13
	Come, don't burden me
with thou ill mood.
:09:18
	I forgive thee.
I'll have some sack!
:09:23
	God forgive thee for it.
:09:26
	Before I knew thee, I knew
nothing, and now am I...
:09:30
	If a man should speak truly,
little better than of the wicked.
:09:34
	I was as virtuously given as a
gentleman need to be, enough.
:09:38
	Swore little, diced not above
seven times a week, went to...
:09:42
	...a bawdy-house not above
once in a quarter... of an hour.
:09:46
	Company, villanous company
hath been the spoil of me.
:09:49
	An I have not forgotten what
the inside of a church is made...
:09:52
	...of, I am a pepper-corn,
a brower's horse, a church!
:09:59
	Well, I repent.