Much Ado About Nothing
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:55:13
It is so.
:55:15
The Count Claudio shall marry
the daughter of Leonato.

:55:18
Yea, my lord, but I can cross it.
:55:20
Any bar, any cross, any impediment
will be medicinable to me.

:55:25
I am sick in displeasure to him...
:55:27
...and whatsoever comes athwart
his affection ranges evenly with mine.

:55:31
How canst thou cross this marriage?
:55:32
Not honestly, my lord, but so covertly
that no dishonesty shall appear in me.

:55:38
Show me briefly how.
:55:39
I think I told your lordship a year since,
how much I am in the favor of Margaret...

:55:43
-...the waiting gentlewoman to Hero.
-I remember.

:55:46
I can, at any unseasonable instant of the night...
:55:49
...appoint her to look out
at her lady's chamber window.

:55:52
What life is in that
to be the death of this marriage?

:55:54
Well, the poison of that lies in you to temper.
:56:28
Gallants.
:56:30
I am not...
:56:31
...as I have been.
:56:33
So say l.
:56:35
Methinks you are sadder.
:56:39
I hope he be in love.
:56:43
Old signior, walk aside with me.
:56:44
I have studied some wise words
to speak to you...

:56:47
...which these hobby-horses must not hear.
:56:54
For my life, to break with him about Beatrice.
:56:58
My lord and brother, God save you.

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