:49:00
...and honesty...
:49:02
...and weighest thy words
before thou givest them breath.
:49:05
Therefore, these stops of thine
fright me the more.
:49:08
For Cassio, l dare be sworn
l think that he is honest.
:49:12
l think so too.
:49:13
Men should be what they seem.
:49:15
Or those that be not,
would they might seem none.
:49:17
Certain, men should be
what they seem.
:49:19
Why then, l think Cassio's
an honest man.
:49:22
Nay, yet there's more in this!
:49:24
l prithee, speak to me as to
thy thinkings.
:49:26
As thou dost ruminate, give thy
worst of thoughts the worst of words.
:49:30
l do beseech you--
:49:33
Though l perchance am
vicious in my guess...
:49:36
...as l confess, it is my
nature's plague to spy into abuses...
:49:40
...and oft my jealousy...
:49:43
...shapes faults that are not.
:49:46
l entreat you then, it were not for
your quiet nor your good...
:49:50
...nor for my manhood, honesty and
wisdom to let you know my thoughts.
:49:55
What dost thou mean?
:49:57
Good name in man and woman,
dear my lord...
:50:01
...is the immediate jewel
of their souls.
:50:04
Who steals my purse,
steals trash.
:50:07
'Tis something, nothing.
'Twas mine, 'tis his...
:50:10
...has been slave to thousands.
:50:12
But he that filches from me
my good name...
:50:15
...robs me of that
which not enriches him...
:50:18
...and makes me poor indeed.
:50:22
By heaven, l'll know thy thought.
:50:26
You cannot, if my heart
were in your hand.
:50:28
Nor shall not,
while 'tis in my custody.
:50:32
O, beware, my lord, of jealousy!
:50:35
'Tis the green-eyed monster
that doth mock the meat it feeds on.
:50:40
Why?
:50:44
Why is this?
:50:47
Thinkest thou l'd make
a life of jealousy...
:50:51
...to follow still the changes of
the moon with fresh suspicions? No!
:50:56
To be once in doubt
is once to be resolved.