Othello
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:12:01
...what conjuration
and what mighty magic--

:12:06
--for such proceedings am l
charged withal -- l won his daughter.

:12:11
A maiden never bold...
:12:13
...of spirit so still and quiet
that her motion blushed at herself...

:12:17
...and she, in spite of nature,
to fall in love...

:12:19
...with what she feared to look on!
:12:21
l do beseech you, send for the lady...
:12:24
...and let her speak of me
before her father.

:12:26
lf you do find me foul in her report...
:12:29
...the trust, the office l do hold
of you, not only take away...

:12:33
...but let your sentence even
fall upon my life.

:12:40
Fetch Desdemona.
:12:52
Her father loved me...
:12:55
...oft invited me...
:12:57
...still questioned me the story
of my life from year to year...

:13:01
...the battles, sieges, fortunes
that l have passed.

:13:05
Even from my boyish days...
:13:08
...to the moment
he bade me tell it.

:13:10
Wherein l spoke of
most disastrous chances...

:13:12
...of moving accidents by
flood and field...

:13:15
...hair-breadth escapes
in the imminent deadly breach...

:13:19
...of being taken by the insolent foe...
:13:22
...and sold to slavery.
:13:25
And of the cannibals that
each other eat...

:13:27
...the Anthropophagi...
:13:29
...and men whose heads do grow
beneath their shoulders.

:13:33
These things to hear
would Desdemona seriously incline.

:13:36
And with a greedy ear
devour up my discourse...

:13:42
...which I observing...
:13:44
...took once a pliant hour...
:13:46
...and found means to draw
from her a prayer of earnest heart...

:13:50
...which I would
all my pilgrimage dilate.

:13:53
She gave me for my pains...
:13:57
...a world of sighs.
:13:59
She swore, in faith, 'twas strange...

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