:24:00
They shall be apprehended
by and by.
:24:02
How smooth and even
they do bear themselves,
:24:05
as if allegiance in their bosoms sat
crowned with faith and constant loyalty.
:24:09
The king hath note of all they intend by
interception which they dream not of.
:24:13
Nay, but the man
that was his bedfellow,
:24:16
whom he hath dulled and cloyed
with gracious favors...
:24:18
That he should,
for a foreign purse,
:24:22
so sell his sovereign's life
to death and treachery. [clatter]
:24:33
Now sits the wind fair,
and we will aboard. [chuckles]
:24:43
My lord of Cambridge
and my kind lord of Masham...
:24:46
and you, my gentle knight,
give me your thoughts.
:24:48
Think you not that
the powers we bear with us...
:24:51
will cut their passage
through the force of France?
:24:54
No doubt, my liege, if each man
do his best. I doubt not that.
:24:58
Never was monarch better feared
and loved than is your majesty.
:25:01
We therefore have great
cause of thankfulness.
:25:05
Uncle of Exeter, enlarge the
man committed yesterday...
:25:09
that railed against
our person.
:25:11
We consider it was excess of
wine that set him on, [all chuckle]
:25:15
And on his more advice
we pardon him.
:25:17
That's mercy,
but too much security.
:25:20
Let him be punished, lest example breed
by his sufferance, more of such a kind.
:25:25
Oh, let us yet be merciful.
:25:29
So may your highness,
and yet punish too.
:25:33
Sir, you show great mercy
if you give him life...
:25:35
after the taste
of much correction.
:25:38
Alas, your too much love
and care of me...
:25:41
are heavy orisons
against this poor wretch.
:25:44
If little faults proceeding on
distemper shall not be winked at,
:25:50
how shall we stretch our eye
when capital crimes, chewed,
:25:56
swallowed and digested,
appear before us?