Much Ado About Nothing
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:03:39
He hath borne himself beyond
the promise of his age...

:03:42
...doing, in the figure of a lamb,
the feats of a lion.

:03:46
Is Signior Mountanto returned
from the wars or no?

:03:50
I know none of that name, lady.
:03:52
My cousin means Signior Benedick of Padua.
:03:56
He's returned and as pleasant as ever he was.
:03:58
I pray you, how many hath he killed
and eaten in these wars?

:04:03
But how many hath he killed?
:04:04
For indeed I promised to eat all of his killing.
:04:08
He hath done good service
and a good soldier too, lady.

:04:11
And a good soldier to a lady.
:04:14
-But what is he to a lord?
-A lord to a lord.

:04:18
A man to a man,
stuffed with all honorable virtues.

:04:21
It is so, indeed.
:04:23
He is no less than a stuffed man.
:04:26
You must not, sir, mistake my niece.
:04:28
There is a kind of merry war
betwixt Signior Benedick and her.

:04:33
They never meet but there's
a skirmish of wit between them.

:04:37
Who is his companion now?
:04:39
He hath every month a new sworn brother.
:04:42
He is most in the company
of the right noble Claudio.

:04:45
O, lord!
:04:47
He will hang upon him like a disease.
:04:50
He is sooner caught than the pestilence,
and the taker runs presently mad.

:04:55
God help the noble Claudio!
:04:57
If he have caught the Benedick...
:04:59
...it will cost him a thousand pound
ere he be cured.


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