Othello
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1:32:00
l don't think there
is any such woman.

1:32:03
Yes...
1:32:06
...a dozen.
1:32:07
But l do think it is their
husbands' faults if wives do fall.

1:32:12
Say that they slack their duties...
1:32:15
...and pour our treasures
into foreign laps.

1:32:18
Or else break out in peevish jealousies,
throwing restraint upon us.

1:32:23
Or say they strike us.
1:32:25
Why, we have galls...
1:32:27
...and though we have some grace,
yet have we some revenge.

1:32:33
Let husbands know their wives
have sense like them.

1:32:38
They see and smell...
1:32:40
...and have their palates both for
sweet and sour as husbands have.

1:32:45
What is it that they do
when they change us for others?

1:32:49
ls it sport?
1:32:52
l think it is.
1:32:54
And doth affection breed it?
1:32:57
l think it doth.
1:33:00
ls it frailty that thus errs?
1:33:03
l think so too.
1:33:07
And have not we affections...
1:33:09
...desires for sport,
and frailty as men have?

1:33:13
Then let them use us well.
1:33:15
Else let them know the ills we do,
their ills instruct us so.

1:33:26
Good night.
1:33:34
-Be near at hand, l may miscarry in it.
-Here, at thy hand...

1:33:38
...be bold, and take thy stand.
1:33:47
'Tis but a man gone.
Forth my sword, he dies!

1:33:52
lf Cassio do remain, he hath a daily
beauty in his life that makes me ugly.

1:33:56
Besides, he may unfold me to the Moor...
1:33:58
...there stand l in much peril.
No, he must die.


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