:31:03
	Dost sack induce gout,
or gout induce pus...
:31:07
	...for one and the other have
my foot in flames!
:31:11
	All the better if I am to be a
limp, I have fought for the king...
:31:15
	...ha, lads? For then my
pension would be more adecuate.
:31:19
	Wit seeks its own benefit, I
shall take advantage of this case.
:31:25
	Good night...
:31:27
	...Falstaff!
:31:30
	Now, when the sweetes
mouthful of the night is about...
:31:33
	...to reach me, I must
part without it.
:31:38
	Lad, let's go to Gloucester, to
see Master Robert Shallow...
:31:43
	...the knight. He stands held
firmly between my fingers.
:31:47
	I shall soon muzzle him.
:31:53
	When wilt thou stop'st the
fighting in the day, and the...
:31:55
	...feasting all the night, and
come to peace with the heavens?
:31:58
	Quiet, Doll, dost
speak not to me as to a skull...
:32:03
	...remind me not of my
last hour.
:32:07
	- Farewell, Dora.
- Well, sweet Jack.
:32:11
	- Farewell.
- Have a care of thyself.
:32:21
	- Who saw the Duke of Lancaster?
- I am here, brother.
:32:26
	Full of heaviness.
:32:28
	Rain within doors,
and none abroad?
:32:33
	- How doth the king?
- Exceedinly ill.
:32:43
	Why doth the crown lie
there upon his pillow?
:32:47
	She is a restless bedfellow.
:32:52
	O majesty...
:32:54
	...thou art like a rich armour
worn in the heat of the day...
:32:58
	...that scalds with safety.