:13:02
	And for an earnest of a greater
honour, he bade me call thee...
:13:06
	...Thane of Cawdor.
:13:10
	What?
:13:13
	Can the devil speak true?
:13:16
	He lives. Why do you
dress me in borrowed robes?
:13:20
	Who was the thane lives yet,
but that life he deserves to lose.
:13:25
	Treasons capital, confessed
and proved, have overthrown him.
:13:39
	Glamis, and Thane of Cawdor.
:13:43
	The greatest is behind.
:13:47
	Thanks for your pains.
:13:54
	Do you not hope
your children shall be kings?
:13:57
	Those that gave Cawdor to me,
promised no less to them.
:14:02
	That, trusted home, might yet
enkindle you unto the crown...
:14:08
	...besides the Thane of Cawdor.
:14:13
	Often, to win us to our harm,
instruments of darkness tell truths.
:14:18
	Win us with honest trifles,
to betray us in deepest consequence.
:14:29
	This supernatural soliciting
cannot be ill...
:14:33
	... cannot be good.
:14:36
	If ill, why hath it given me earnest
of success, commencing in a truth?
:14:44
	I am Thane of Cawdor.
:14:50
	If good, why do I yield
to that suggestion...
:14:54
	... whose horrid image doth unfix
my hair and make my seated heart...
:14:59
	... knock at my ribs
against the use of nature?