Henry V
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:27:03
by your own counsel
is suppressed and killed.

:27:06
You must not dare for shame
to talk of mercy!

:27:11
For your own reasons turn into your bosoms
as dogs upon their masters worrying you.

:27:21
- [Shouting]
- [All shouting]

:27:27
See you, my princes and my noble
peers, these English monsters.

:27:33
What shall I say to thee,
Lord Scroop,

:27:35
thou cruel, ingrateful,
:27:39
savage and inhuman creature?
:27:43
Thou knave thou!
:27:45
Thou that didst bear the key of all my counsels,
that knewest the very bottom of my soul,

:27:49
that almost mightst have
coined me into gold,

:27:51
which thou have practiced
on me for thy use.

:27:53
May it be possible
that foreign hire...

:27:56
could out of thee extract one spark
of evil that might annoy my finger?

:28:01
'Tis so strange...
:28:03
that though the truth of it stand
off as gross as black and white,

:28:07
my eye will scarcely see it.
:28:09
So... constant and unspotted
didst thou seem...

:28:15
that this thy fall
hath left a kind of blot...

:28:19
to mark
the full-fraught man...

:28:22
and best indued
with some suspicion.

:28:31
I will weep for thee.
:28:33
For this revolt of thine, methinks,
is like another fall of man.

:28:57
I arrest thee of high treason by the
name of Richard Earl of Cambridge.


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