Much Ado About Nothing
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1:07:03
Confirmed!
1:07:06
Would the two princes lie, and Claudio lie?
1:07:11
Hence from her! Let her die!
1:07:16
Hear me a little.
1:07:18
Lady, what man is he you are accused of?
1:07:22
They know that do accuse me. I know none.
1:07:25
There is some strange misprision in the princes.
1:07:28
Two of them have the very bent of honor.
1:07:31
If their wisdom's been misled in this,
the practice of it lives in John the bastard.

1:07:35
If they wrong her honor,
the proudest of them shall well hear of it.

1:07:39
Pause awhile,
and let my counsel sway you in this case.

1:07:44
Your daughter here the princes left for dead.
1:07:48
Let her awhile be secretly kept in,
and publish it...

1:07:52
...that she is dead indeed.
1:07:55
What shall become of this?
1:07:57
She dying, as it must be so maintained...
1:08:01
...upon the instant that she was accused...
1:08:03
...shall be lamented, pitied...
1:08:07
...and excused of every hearer.
1:08:10
So will it fare with Claudio.
1:08:12
When he shall hear she died upon his words...
1:08:16
...the idea of her life...
1:08:18
...shall sweetly creep into
his study of imagination...

1:08:22
...and every lovely organ of her life...
1:08:25
...shall come appareled in more precious habit,
than when she lived indeed.

1:08:31
Then shall he mourn...
1:08:34
...and wish he had not so accused her.
1:08:37
Signior Leonato, let the friar advise you.
1:08:41
Being that I flow in grief...
1:08:45
...the smallest twine may lead me.
1:08:49
'Tis well consented.
1:08:52
Presently away.
1:08:54
Come, lady.
1:08:57
Die to live.
1:08:59
This wedding-day perhaps is but prolonged.

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