Othello
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:42:01
And good lieutenant...
:42:05
...l think you think l love you.
:42:10
l have well approved it, sir.
:42:12
l'll tell you what you shall do.
:42:15
Our general's wife is now the general.
:42:19
Confess yourself freely to Desdemona.
:42:21
lmportune her. She'll help
to put you in your place again.

:42:25
This broken joint
between you and her husband...

:42:28
...entreat her to splinter.
:42:30
And my fortunes
against any lay worth naming...

:42:34
...this crack of your love shall
grow stronger than it was before.

:42:40
You advise me well.
:42:42
l protest, in the sincerity of love
and honest kindness.

:42:46
l think it freely.
:42:54
Good night, lieutenant.
:42:56
l must to the watch.
:42:58
Good night, honest lago.
:43:06
How am l then a villain...
:43:08
...when this advice is free l give
and honest...

:43:11
...probal to thinking, and indeed
the course to win the Moor again?

:43:15
His soul is so enfettered
to Desdemona's love...

:43:19
...that she may make, unmake,
do what she list...

:43:23
...even as her appetite shall
play the god with his weak function.

:43:27
How am l then a villain
to counsel Cassio...

:43:30
...to this parallel course,
directed to his good?

:43:34
Divinity of hell!
:43:37
When devils will the blackest sins
put on, they do suggest at first...

:43:42
...with heavenly shows, as l do now.
:43:44
For whiles this honest fool plies
Desdemona to repair his fortunes...

:43:49
...and she for him
pleads strongly to the Moor...

:43:52
...l'll pour this pestilence
into his ear...

:43:55
...that she repeals him for
her body's lust...

:43:59
...and by how much she strives
to do him good...


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