The Taming of the Shrew
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:14:04
Signor Gremio!
:14:06
A truce to our enmity,
For the time it profits us better to be friends.

:14:10
This matter toucheth us both.
:14:12
We may yet again
have access to our fair mistress

:14:15
And be happy rivals for Bianca's love,
:14:17
If we labour to effect one thing especially.
:14:20
- What's that, I pray?
- Marry, sir, to get a husband for her sister.

:14:23
A husband? A devil.
:14:25
- I say a husband.
- I say a devil.

:14:27
Now thinkest thou, Hortensio,
though her father be very rich,

:14:32
any man is such a fool as to be married to hell?
:14:35
No!
:14:38
Rush, Gremio. Though it pass your patience
and mine to endure her loud alarums,

:14:43
why, man, there be good fellows in the world,
if one could but light on them,

:14:49
would take her with all her faults,
for the sake of her father's fortune.

:14:53
I would not do it for a mine of gold.
:14:56
Help Katharina to a hus...band
and we help Bianca to become a wife.

:15:02
Thine or mine?
:15:03
He that runs fastest gets the ring.
How say you, Signor Gremio?

:15:06
- I am agreed. There must be such a man.
- Yes.

:15:11
I would give the best horse in Padua
:15:13
to whoever would thoroughly woo her,
wed her, bed her, and rid the house of her.

:15:17
There must be such a man.
:15:20
There must be such a man.
:15:27
- There must be such a man.
- Out of my path!

:15:33
- O, Grumio!
- Huh?

:15:36
Here, sirrah Grumio, knock, I say.
:15:39
Knock, sir? Whom should I knock?
:15:42
Aha!
:15:43
Is there any man has rebused your worship?
:15:45
Villain, I say, knock me here soundly.
:15:48
Knock you where, sir?
:15:50
Knock me at my friend Hortensio's gate,
And rap me well, or I'll knock your knave's pate.

:15:56
Ah! My master is grown quarrelsome.
:15:58
I should knock you first,
And then I know after who comes by the worst.


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