 I know not why I'm so sad. It weirdies me. You say it weirdies you. How I caught it, found it, came by it. What stuff is made of? Where of it is born? I am to learn. And such a want with sadness makes me feel. I have much to do to know myself. Your might is tossing on the ocean. There where your ark races would portly sail, like seeing yours and rich burgers on flood, or as it were the pageants of the sea, you over-peer the petty traffickers that curts into them, do their reverence as they fly by them, with their woven wings. Believe me, sir, had I such a venture forth, the better part of my affections would be with my bones abroad. I should be still, plucking the grass to see where sits the wind. Period and maps, reports and peers and roles, and every object that might make me fear misfortune to my ventures, out of doubt would make me sad. My wind, cooling my wrath would blow me to an egg you, when I thought what harm or wind too great might do it see. I should not see the sandy hourglass run, but I should think of shallows and of flats, and see my wealthy Andrew Dot in sand, veiling her high top lower than her ribs to kiss her burial. Should I go to church and see the holy edifice of stone, and not go think me straight of dangerous rocks, which, touching but my gentle vessel's side, would scatter all her spices on the stream, and robe the roaring waters with my silks, and in a word, but even now worth this, and now worth nothing? Shall I have the thought to think on this, and shall I lack the thought that such a thing, the chance would make me sad? Tell not me I know Antonio is sad to think upon his merchandise. Believe me, no. I think my fortune is for it. My adventures are not in one bottle trusted, nor to one place, nor is my whole estate upon the fortune of this present year. Therefore, my merchandise makes me not sad. Why, then, you are in love. Five, five. Not in love, neither. Let us say you are sad. Because you are not married. And towards easy to laugh, then let us say you were married because you were not sad. Now, by two-headed Janice, nature hath framed strange fellows in her time. Some that will ever walk peak through their eyes and laugh like parrots in a bagpiper. And others have such a vinegar aspect, and there and there show their teeth in the way of smile, and nests of swear, but just be laughable. Here comes the son of your most noble kinsman. Grandiano and Lorenzo? Very well. We need you now with better company. I would have stayed till I had made you marry, if worthy your friends had not prevented me. Your worth is very dear in my regard. I take it your own business calls on you and you embrace the patience of the man. Good morrow, my good lords. If he's both, when shall we laugh, say when? You grow exceedingly strange, must it be so? We'll make our leisure to attend on yours. My lord Bassanio, since you have found Antonio, we too will leave. But at dinner time, I pray, you have in mind what we must meet. I will not fail you. Senior Antonio, you, uh... you look done well. You have too much respect upon the world. They lose at the Dubai with much care. We mean you are, uh... marvelously changed. I hope the world is a world, Bassanio. A stage where every man must play a part, and mine a sad one. Well, let me play the fool then. With merc and laughter, let old wrinkles come. I'd rather my litter heat with wine than my heart cool with mortifying groans. Why should a man whose blood is warm within sit like his grandson or cut an alabaster and sleep when he wakes, creeping into the jaunas by being peeved and shit? I tell you what, Antonio. I love thee, and it is my love for thee that speaks. There are a sort of men whose visages do creed and mantle like a standing pond and do a wilful stillness entertained to be dressed in an opinion of wisdom, gravity, profound deceit. As if to say, I answer oracle, and when I open my lips, let no dog bark. My dear Antonio, I do know of thee who are therefore only reputed wise for saying nothing, which I'm sure they should speak when almost damned those ears would bother their schools. More on this in other times. Fish not with this melancholy cape, this fool's gut and this opinion. Ah, good rest. Thank thee well a while. I'll end my dissertation after dinner. Well, we will review then till dinner time. I must speak. One of these same dumb wise men for Raffiano never lets me speak. Well, peaking company but two years more, so we'll level the sound of that own voice. Is that anything now? Raffiano speaks an infinite deal of nothing. More than any man in all of Venice. His reasons are as two cranes of wheat hidden in two bushels of jack. He shall seek all day, very kindly, and when you have them, they're not worth the search. Well, tell me now, what lady is the same whom you store a secret code of image that you today swore to tell me of? Who's none of those you, Antonio? How much I have disables minus state, but something showing you more swelling forth than my faint means with grant continues. To you, Antonio, I owe the most in money and love. And from your love I owe warranted to a burden on my plots and purposes how to get clear of all the debts I owe. My praying goodness, Antonio, let me know it. And if it stand as you yourself still do within the eye of honor, be assured, my purse, my person, my most extremist means that I'll unlock to your cave. In my school days, when I had lost one shaft, I shot his fellow of the self-same flight the self-same way, with more advice and watch to find the other four. And by venturing both, I found both, I urged this child to prove because what follows in pure innocence I owe you much, and like a willful youth that which I owe is lost. But if you please or shoot another arrow that self-way with you to shoot the first, I do not doubt as I will watch the aim or to find both, or to bring another hazard back again, and thankfully rest, dead or for the first. You know me well, and herein spend but time to wind about my love with circumstances. And in making doubt, you do mean now more wrong in making question of my iron most than had you made ways to all I have. Do but say to me what I can do. But it was in your knowledge why we can be done. And I am pressed onto it. Therefore speak. In Belmont is a lady rich in facts. An ant she is fair, and fairer than that word of wondrous virtues. Sometimes from her eyes I did receive fair, speechless messages. Her name is Portia. Nothing undervalued to Cato's thought. Fruits of Portia. Nor is the wide world ignorant of her work. For the four winds blow in from every coast renowned in sutures. Her son, Locke, sang on her temples like a golden fleece, which makes her seat of Belmont culture's strand, and many Jason's someone's pressure to her. Well, my Antonio, had I but the means to hold a rival place with one of them, I have a mind that presages me such threat I should questionless be Portia. And thou knowest all my fortunes are at sea. Neither have I money nor commodity to raise a present son. Therefore go forth. Try what my credit can in Venice do. That should be wrapped even to the uttermost to furnish thee to Belmont, to fair Portia. Go, presently inquire, and so will I where money is. And I no mistake will have it of my trust or for my sake. Extrovert, Nerissa, my little body is a weary of this great world. You would be sweet, madam, if your miseries were in the same abundance as your good fortunes are. And yet for all I see they are as sick that surf it with too much as they that starve with nothing. It is no mean happiness, therefore, to be seated in the mean. Superfluity comes sooner by white hairs, but competency lives longer. Good sentences. They're well pronounced. They would be better if well followed. If to-do were as easy as to know what were good to do, chapels had been churches and poor men's cottages, princes' palaces. It is a good divine that follows his own instructions. I can easier teach twenty what were good to be done than be one of the twenty to follow my own teachings. The brain may devise laws for the blood, but a hot temper leaps over a cold decree. And yet this reasoning is not in the fashion to choose me a husband. Oh, me, the word choose. I can neither choose whom I would nor refuse, whom I dislike. And so is the will of a living daughter curved by the will of a dead father. Is it not hard, Marissa, that I cannot choose one nor refuse none? Your father was ever virtuous, and holy men, at their death, have good inspirations. Therefore, the lottery that he hath devised in these three chests of gold, silver and lead, whereof who chooses his meaning chooses you, will no doubt never be chosen by any rightly, but one shall rightly love. But what warmth is there in your affection towards any of these princely suitors that are already found? I pray thee, overname them, and ask thou names them I will describe them, and according to my description, level at my affection. First, there is with me a fathered prince. That's a cult indeed. He doth nothing but talk of his horse. I am much afraid his mother play false with his myth. There is the county palatine. He doth nothing but frown. He hears merry tales and smiles not. I fear he will prove the weeping philosopher when he grows old, being so full of unmanily sadness in his youth. I had rather be married to a death's head with a bone in his mouth than to either of these. God defend me from these two. How like you, the French lord, Monsieur Le Bon. God made him, therefore, let it pass for a man. But in truth, I know it is a sin to be a marker, but he, why, he hath a horse better than the Neapolitan's, a better bad habit of frowning than the Count Palatine. He is every man in no man. If a throsel sing, he falls straight capering. He will fence with his own shadow. If I should marry him, I should marry twenty husbands. Let's say you then to Falconbridge, the old baron of England. You know, I say nothing to him, for he understands not me nor I him. He hath neither Latin, French, nor Italian. He is a proper man's picture. But alas, who can converse with a dumb show? How like you, the young chairman, the Duke of Sassini's nephew, very violent in the morning when he is sober and most violent in the afternoon when he is drunk. When he is best, he is a little worse than a man and when he is worst, he is a little better than a beast. If he should offer to choose and choose the right casket, you should refuse to perform your father's will if you should refuse to accept him. Therefore, for fear of the worst, I pray thee, set a deep glass of reddish wine on the contrary casket for if the devil be within in that temptation without I know, he will choose it. I'll do anything to recite it. I'll be married to a sponge. Need not fear me for having any of these lords. They have acquainted me with their determinations which is indeed to return to their homes and to trouble you with no more suit unless you may be one by some other sort than your father's imposition depending on the casket. If I live to be as old as Sibyla, I'll die as chaste as Diana unless I be obtained by the manner of my father's will. I am glad this parcel of war is so reasonable but there is not one among them but I do doubt on his very absence and I pray God grant them fair departure. Remember, lady, in your father's time, a Venetian, a scholar and a soldier who came here in the company of the Marquis of Moporod. Yes, yes, it was Bassanio. As I think so, what is he called? True, ladon, was the best deserving, fair lady. I remember him well and I remember him worthy of thy praise. How strange a seat for you, madam, to take their leave and there's a fourth that comes from the Prince of Morocco. He'll be here tonight. If I could bid the fifth welcome with so good a heart as I can bid the other four farewell, I should be glad of his approach. If he had an indision of a saint and the complexion of a devil, I'd rather he would try me than whide me. Come, Larissa, Sira, go before whilst we shut the gates upon one lure, another knocks at the door. Three thousand dollars. Well, I, sir, for three months. For three months. For the witch, as I told you, Antonio shall be bound. Antonio shall become bound. May you stead me? Will you pleasure me? Shall I know your answer? Three thousand dollars for three months and Antonio bound. Your answer to that. Antonio is a good man. Have you heard any of you take me to the contrary? Oh, no, no, no. My meaning in saying he is a good man is to have you understand me that he is sufficient, yet his means are in supposition. He has an argosy bound for tripless, another to the Indies. I understand more over upon the Rialto he has a third to Mexico, a fourth for England and other ventures he has swaned through the road. But ships are aboard, sailors but men. There'll be land rats and water rats, water thieves and land thieves. I mean pirates. There is the peril of water, winds and rocks. The man is not withstanding sufficient. Three thousand dollars. I think I may take his bound. Not be assured, you may. I will be assured I may and that I may be assured I will be thinking. May I speak to Antonio? It pleases you to die with us. Ah, yes, to smell pork, to eat of the habitation with your prophet, the Nazarene, counter the devil in it. Ah, I will buy with you, sell with you, talk with you, walk with you and so following, but I will not eat with you, drink with you, no pray with you. What news on the Rialto? Who is he comes here? Mr. Ciro Antonio. How like a falling public he looks. I hate him for he is Christian. But more for that than most implicitly he lends up money gratis and brings down the rate of use of him with us in Venice. If I can catch him once upon the hip I would feed fat the ancient Karanjai baggy. He hates our sacred nation and he rails even there where merchants do congregate most on me, my bargains and my well-won thrift which he calls interrest. Curses be my tribe if I forgive you. Shalom, you're here. I am debating of my present store and by the near guess of my memory I cannot instantly raise up the full price of 3,000 bucks. What of that? Tuvo, a wealthy Hebrew my tribe would furnish me but so how many months do you desire? God rest you fair good senior. Your worship was the last man in our mouths. Shalom. Although I neither lend nor borrow by taking nor by giving the excess yet to supply the right wants of my friend I will break a custom. Is he yet possessed of how much you work? I have 3,000 bucks. And for 3 months? I have forgot. 3 months you told me so. Let's see your bond. And let me see but hear you mythology neither lend nor borrow upon the debtors. I do not ever use it. When Jacob graced his uncle Layden's sheep this Jacob from our holy Abram was as his wise mother wrote on his behalf the third possessor. He was the third. And what of him? Did he take interest? No, not take interest. Not as you would say directly as his father did. When Layden and himself were compromised that all the inlings which were streaked or pie should fall to Jacob's high the youths being rank at the end of autumn turned to the rest. And when the work of generation was between these woody grievance and the act a skillful shepherd healed me certain wives and indeed of doing kind he stocked them up before the fulsome youths who then conceiving did in any time fall party colored lambs and these were Jacob's. This was a way to thrive and he was blessed and thrift his blessing if men steer it not. This was a venture sir that Jacob served for one not in his hand to bring to pass but swayed in fashion by the hand of heaven. Was this inserted to make interest good or is your golden silver you losing rams? I cannot tell, I make it breathe this fast but not me, senor. How could you this, Bassanio? The devil can cite scripture for his purpose. An evil soul producing holy winds is like a villain with a smiling cheek a goodly apple rotting at the heart. Oh what a goodly outside fulsome. Ah, thousand dockets, it is a good round sum. Three months from twelve, then let me see the rate. Shylock, will we be holding to you? Senor Antonio, many a time and often a realto you have rated me about my monies and my usancies. Still have I borne it with a patient shrug for sufferance is the badge of all our tribe. You call me misbeliever, cock-frogged dog, in spit upon my Jewish cavity and all for the use of that which is my own. Now it appears you need my help. Go to them. You come to me and you say, Shylock, we would have monies. You say so. You who did not write his room upon my beard and foot me as you spurn a stranger cur over your threshold. Monies is your suit. What should I say to you? Should I not say that a dog, monie, is it possible for a cur to lend three thousand dockets? Or should I bend low and in abundance key with bated breath and whispered humbleness say this? Fair sir, you spit on me on Wednesday last. Another day that you spurned me. Another time you called me dog and for these curtesies I'll lend you thus much money. I am as like to call thee so again to spit on thee again, to spurn thee too. If thou would lend this money, lend it nice to thy friends. For when did friendship take a breed for bearing metal of his friend? No, but lending this to thine enemy. Who if he break, you may as with better face exact the penalty. Why, look you, how you snore. I'd be treasured to you and have your love. Forget the shame you have stained me with. Supply your present wants and take no doubt of usance for my mind is and you'll not hear me. This is kind of awful. This were cleanest. This kind is well as sure. Go with me to the notary. Seal me then your single bond and in a merry sport if you remain in art on such a day, in such a place, such sum or sums as expressed in the condition let the forfeit be nominated for an equal pound of your fair flesh to be cut off and taken into what part of your body pleases me. I will seal to such bond and say there is much kindness in the Jew. You shall not seal to such a bond for me. I'll rather dwell in my necessity. Why, fear not, man. Then these two months a month before this bond expires I do expect twice three times return of the value of this bond. What these Christians are this own heart that is teaches them suspect the thoughts of others. I pray you tell me if you should break his day what should I gain by the exaction of the forfeiture? A pound of man's flesh is not so estimable profitable neither as the flesh of mutton's beef's and gold's. I say to buy his favor I extend his friendship if he will take it so if not a due and for my love I pray you wrong me not. Yes, Shaila I will seal to this bond and meet me at the notary give them direction for our merry bond and I will go and purse the docket straight see to my house left in the fifth garden and presently I will be with you. Hyde, Mr. Joe. He's in a villain's mind. Ah, come on. In this there can be no dismay my ship's from home much before the day miss like me not for my complexion the shadow delivery of the burnish son to whom I am a neighbor at near bread. Bring me the farthest creature northward born but thevises by our scare calls the icicles and let us make incision for your love to prove whose blood is reddest his or mine I tell thee, lady, this aspect of mine hath feared the valiant and by my love I swear the best regarded virgins of our climb have loved it too I would not change this hue except to steal your thoughts, my gentle queen. In terms of choice I am not solely led by a nice direction of the maiden's eyes besides the lottery of my destiny bars me the rights of voluntary choosing but if my father had not scanted me and hedged me by his wits to yield myself his wife who wins me by that means I told you yourself, renowned prince then stood as fair as any comeer I have looked down yet for my affections Yeah, even for that I thank you therefore I pray lead me to the gaskets to dry my fortune by this scimitar that slew the sulphur in a Persian prince that won three fields of sultan's solemn honor I would outstare the sturdest eyes that look outbraed if the heart most bearing on this earth pluck the young sucking cult from the she-bear Yay, mock the lion when he rose for prey to win me, baby if Hercules and Lycus play at dice which is the better man the greater thrill may turn by fortune from the weaker hand so is our sight he's beaten by his page and so may I blind fortune leading me miss that which one unworthy of may attain and die with grieving You must take your chance and either not attempt to choose at all or swear before you choose if you choose wrong never to speak to lady afterward in way of marriage therefore be advised Nor will not Tom bring me onto my chance First forward to the temple after dinner your hazard shall be made with fortune then to make it less so person as to one man serve me to run from this Jew my master the fiend is that my elbow attempts me saying to me that's a lot cargo good good, that's a lot cargo take this dog run away take heed on this lasla take heed on this garbo for as a fore said on this lasla do not run scorn running with dying news well the courageous fiend bids me here says the fiend away says the fiend says the fiend well my conscience hanging about the neck of my heart says very wise so to me to me on this friend lasla being an honest man's son rather an honest woman's son for indeed my father did something smack something grow to had a kind of taste well my conscience says on this lasla fudge not says the fiend says my conscience conscience says you counsel well being say I do you counsel well to be ruled by my conscience I should stay with the Jew who God bless the Marcus a kind of devil and to run from the Jew I should be ruled by the fiend who skipping your reference devil himself certainly the Jew is the very devil incarnation in my conscience but a kind of hard conscience to offer to counsel me to stay with the Jew the fiend gives the more friendly counsel I will run fiend I yield the retro command I will run master young man which is the way to master jews this is my truly god father who being more than sand blind high gravel blind knows me not master master young gentleman I pray your wage against the way to master jews turn up at the right and at the next turning but at the next turning of all in your life at the very next turning turn of no hand or turn down directly to the jews house my god son this will be a hard way to find do you know whether one lasla that dwells with him talk you a young master lasla mark me now now I will raise the lives talk you a young master lasla no master sir but a poor man's son his father though I say it myself god be thanked is an honest exceeding poor man and well to live well let his father be what he will we talk of young master lasla of your worship friend and lasla sir I pray you ergo old man ergo I beseech you talk you a young master lasla of lasla and it please your master ship ergo master lasla talk no more young master lasla young gentleman is indeed according to the fates and destinies and such odd sayings the sisters three such branches of learning is indeed decease or to put it in plain terms gone to heaven Mary God forbid the boy was the very staff of my age my very prop do I look like a casual or a whole close up a staff or a prop do you know me father alack the day young gentleman I know you not but I pray you tell me is my boy god rest his soul alive or dead do you not know me father sir I am sand blind I know you not indeed hydra eyes you might fail in annoying me is a wise father let his own child well old man I'll give you news of your son give me your blessing truth will come to light murder cannot be in long and Sunday but in the end truth will out I pray you sir stand up I am sure you are not Lancelot my boy I pray you let's have a little more fooling about it give me your blessing I am Lancelot your boy that was your son that is your child that shall be I cannot think you are my son I know not what I so think of that but I am Lancelot the jews man and I am sure that Marjorie your wife is my mother he is Marjorie indeed I will not be sworn if thou art Lancelot then now art my own flesh and blood oh the lord may he worship be what a beard thou hast got thou hast more hair on thy chin than daven my line horse hast on his tail it should appear then that daven's tail goes backwards for he had more hair his tail than I have of my face when I last saw him Lord how thou art changed how does that one I master agree I have brought him a present how agree you now brought him a present give him a halter I am famished in his service you can tell every finger I have with my ribs give me your present to one master Bassanio who indeed gives rare new liveries for if I serve not him I will run as far as God has any ground oh rare fortune here comes the man before I am a Jew if I serve the Jew any longer you may do so but let it be so hasty that supper be ready at the farthest by five o'clock see these letters delivered and desire across the island coming on to my lovely to him father I bless your worship Grandma C what's thou up with me here's my son sir a poor boy not a poor boy sir the rich Jew's man that would sir as my father shall specify he has a great infection as one would say to serve indeed the sort of the long is that my the Jew having I do serve the Jew and have a desire as my father shall specify he and his master saving your worships reverence are scarce catered in very brief the truth of the matter is that the Jew having done me wrong to cause me as my father being I hope an old man shall fruitify unto you I have a dish of dubs that I would bestow upon your worship and my suit is to be brief but the suit is important unto myself as your worship shall know from this honest old man and though I say it yet old man yet poor man my father one's feet for both what would you serve you sir that is the very defect of the matter sir I know thee well a child like that master spoke with me this day and had preferred thee to be preferment to leave a rich Jew's service to become the follower of so poor a gentleman that has to obtain thy suit go follow with that something leave with that old man sir and require my lodging out see it done come father there's no way I have no tongue in my head why is there being a man in a lineage don't have a fair calm which developeth a swear upon a book I will have good fortune go to a simple line of life a small tribe of little wives alas fifteen wives is nothing eleven widows and nine maids is a simple coming in for one man one rice oh and the imperil of my life with the edge of a feather bed these are simple steeps well if fortune be a woman she's a good wife for this business father I'll be rid of the take my people to Jew and I'll be quickly done with I good leader I don't think of this these things being bought and orderly bestowed return and haste granted feast tonight my vested theme in acquaintance highly go oh where's your master younger sir he was oh senior basalia I'm a senior you haven't dated that's not what I mean I must go with you to Belmont well then you must but here's the it's a word too wild parts that become the happily enough and insurgized cars appear not false but where thou art not known that they show something too liberal praise you take pain to allay with some cold drops of monstery thy skipping spirit let's do thy wild behavior I do misconstrued in the place I go to and lose my hopes my dear basamio hear me if I do not put on a sober habit talk with respect swear but now and then wear prayer books in my pocket looked a nearly name bore on grace to say put mine eyes thus with my hand sigh and say amen use all observance of civility like one studied in a sad appearance to please his grand damn oh never trust me bore well we shall see you buried okay but I barred tonight you shall not judge me by what we do tonight no that's more pity I wouldn't treat you rather to put on your boldest suit of murder for we have friends that's purpose marriage but very well I have some business oh I'm not just tolerant of the rest but we will visit you at supper time I will please my father so our house is hell and how a married double bit you're out of some taste of tediousness but very well is a docket for thee and long slot soon at supper shall they see Lorenzo who is every master's guest give him this letter do it secretly and so farewell I would not have my father see me in talk with thee adieu here's to exhibit my tongue most beautiful pagan if a christian did not play the naven get the eye in a much deceived adieu there are well good plans a lot I am not to his manners oh Lorenzo if thou keep promise I will end this strike become a christian and their loving wife nay we will slink away in supper time disguise us at my lodging and return all in an hour we've not made good preparations we have not arranged to have torch bearers just vile unless it may be elegantly arranged and better in my mind not undertook it's now but four o'clock we have two hours to furnish us oh friend long slot what's the news? if you shall break up with it shall choose to signify in faith to the fair hand and whiter than the paper it rid on is the fair hand that bricked I love news in faith why don't you sir oh with a ghost thou marry sir to my old master the Jew who's up tonight with my new master the christian oh hold here take this tell gentle jessica I will not fail her speak it privately oh devil friends will you prepare me for the mask tonight I am provided with a torch bearer hi mary I'll be gone about it straight and so will I be me and gratiana gratiana's laughing somehow she's good with you sir was not that letter from fair jessica I must say it's totally off she has directed how I shall take her from her father's house what gold and jewels she has ferned with what pagan suits she hath in readiness care that you her father go to heaven will be for his gentle daughter's sake and never dare miss fortune cross her foot under this excuse and she is issue to a faithless Jew now if you can't go with me prove this as thou ghost there jessica she'll be my torch bearer thy eyes shall be thy judge the difference of old shyness can be somehow what jessica thou shalt not go and die since thou has come with me what jessica and sleep and snore and run the parallel what jessica I say who be the call I do not be the call your worship was wont tell me that I could do nothing without pity call you what is your will I'll be forth to suffer jessica there are my keys where should I go I'm not big for love they flatter me but yet I don't hate to feed upon a prodigal Christian jessica my girl look to my house look to my house make sure that no ungrifty names enter thank you so go my young master will expect your approach so do I ease we have conspired together I will not say you shall see a mask but if you do it will not be for nothing that my nose fell of bleeding on black Monday last at six o'clock in the morning falling out of that as Wednesday four years in the afternoon are there masks jessica a lot of my goals and when you hear the sound of the drum the vile squeal of the rhyming clamor not you up to the casements then nor thrust or head into the public streets to gaze upon foolish Christians in varnished cases but stop my house's ills I need my casements by Jacob's staff I don't mind if you sleep forth tonight before me sir say I will come I won't go before you sir mistress go to window for all this there will come a Christian line will be worth a Jew's eye what says that fool or hay does all this it is words were farewell mistress nothing else the patch is kind enough but a big fever snail slow in profits and sleeps by day more than the wild cat trolls I'm not with me therefore I part with him and part with him into one who would have to help waste his borrowed purse so jessica go in do as I need you that's fine that's fine a proverb never stand in thrifty mind back up that's in the words of Lorenzo desires to make stand the lovers never run before the clock who rise from a beast of that same keen appetite the Gucci sits down who is the force that Duff untread again his tees measure to the same unabated fire the Gucci did taste them first all things that are are with more spirit chased than enjoyed so how like the younger summer puddle the adorned bar puts her in a bag hobbed and braced I like the part of the bus she returned over with her grits rabbit sails lead, rank, and feathered by the stubborn women it was Lorenzo who wore this hair after it was Lorenzo who patience for my mom's abode not I but my parents have made you wait I want to show people to you to play the thieves for love all watches long for you then but approach here dwells my fallen Jew who's with me oh we could all swear that I do know your tongue Lorenzo and my love Lorenzo and my love indeed for whom am I so much but now who knows what you wear so whether I am yours as an in my thoughts are witness to the devil house here, catch this casket it is worth the pain I'm glad to the night you do not look on me I am much ashamed of my exchange but I love this blonde lovers cannot see the pretty qualities of themselves in it for if they could cube themselves and blush to see me thus transform into a boy you send for you must be my torch bearer what? must I hold the candle to my chains? they in themselves do soothe are too too light why, to an office of discovery love I should be obscured so are you sweet even in the lovely garnish of a boy but come at once for the close night I'll play the runaway and we are staid for it for Sanio's Feast I'll wake fast the doors and kill myself with some more duckets if you would be strict now by my hood Genki no one knows you through me but I must learn heartily for she is wise if I can judge at her there she is if that mine I be through and true she is as she has proved herself and therefore like herself wise, fair and true shall she be placed in my constant soul what? now come my gentle friend's awake I'm asking you makes by this time for us to say senior Antonio I have sent 20 out to seek for you oh I'm glad on it I desire no more delight in being under sail and gone tonight first a gold to this inscription bears who to this me shall gain what many men desire second silver which this promise carries who to this me shall get as much as he deserve dull lead with warning all his blood who to this me must giz and hazard all he have now if I do choose the right the one of them contains my picture Prince choose that then I am yours with all some God direct my judgment let me see I shall survey the inscriptions back again what says this lead in casket who to this me must give and hazard all he have must give what for lead for lead this casket threatens men who hazard all do so in hopes of gaining fair advantages a golden mind stoops not to show the draught so then no give nor hazard all for lead what says the silver with her virgin hue who to this me shall get as much as he deserves as much as he deserves pause there Morocco and weigh thy value with an even hand thou be as rated by thy estimation thou dost deserve enough not enough may not extend as far as to the lead and yet to be a fear of my deserving what but a weak disabling of myself as much as I deserve well that's the lady I do in birth deserve her and in fortunes and in graces qualities of breathing and more than this love I do deserve what if I swayed no further but chose here let's see once more this saying draved in gold who to this me shall gain what many men desire as the lady the whole world desires her from the four corners of the earth they come to kiss this shrine this mortal breathing saint the hookenian deserts and the vasty wilds of Arabia are as thorough fares now for princes to come and view fair Porsche whose ambitious head spits in the face of heaven is no far out to spot the princes they come as over a brook to see fair Porsche needs her heaven to picture is it like the lead contains her it's what damn nation to think so base a thought it's what too gross to rip herself off in the obscure grave or shall I think in silver she's a mjord ten times undermined to try gold oh sinful thought never so the richer gem was set in worse than gold they have in England a coin to bears the figure of an angel stamped in gold but that's engraved upon but here an angel in a golden bed lies all within for here I do choose and thrive as I may and in my form lie there than I am yours what is this carrying death within whose empty either is a written scroll but glisters is not gold often you have heard that told many a man his life had sold but my outside to behold gilded tombs do worms enfold had you been as wise as bold young in limbs in judgment old your answer had not been in scrolled very well your suit is cold indeed welcome frost ado I have to grieve the heart to make a tedious leave thus losers part my passion choose me so with this grass piano in their ship I am sure Lorenzo is not I thought he was ready for Duchess the ship was under sail and there the Duchess was given to understand that in a gondola we're seeing together Lorenzo and his Amorous Jessica besides Antonio certified the Duchess they were not with Pisano in his ship I never heard of passion so confused so strange you did utter in the streets of double duck and stone anguish there miscarried a vessel of our country richly fraught thought upon Antonio when he told me and wished in silence that it were not his would you tell Antonio what you hear yet do not suddenly what may grieve him a kinder gentleman treads up the earth I saw Bassano in Antonio part Bassano told him he would make some speed of his return he answered do not so slubber not business for my sake Bassano but stay the very wiping of the time as for the Jews bond which he had with me let it not enter in your mind of love be merry and employ your chiefest thoughts to courtship and such fair ostents of love as shall conveniently become you there and even there is I being big with tears turning his face he put his hand behind him and with affection wondrous sensible he rubbed Bassano's hand and so they parted I think he only loves the world for him not really let us go and find him out and quicken his embrace of heaviness with some delight or other do we so behold there stand the casket's noble prince if you choose that wherein I am contained strength shall our nuptial rights be solemnized but if you fail without more speech my lord you must be gone from hence immediately I am enjoined by oath to observe three things first to unfold to anyone which casket to us I chose next if I fail never in my never immediately to leave you I shall be gone to these injunctions everyone does swear that comes to hazard for my worthless self so have I addressed me fortune now to my heart's hope and to Bassano who chooses me must give him hazard all he had you shall look for I give my hazard to the golden sea who chooses me shall gain what many men desire might be meant by the full multitude that choose my show not learning more than the fond I of teach which ties not to the interior but like the market builds in the weather on the outward wall even in the force and the road specialty not choose what many men desire because I will not jump with common spirits and the rape me with barbarous multitudes silver treasure house tell me again what title found us there shall get as much as he deserves and well said to you for who shall go about to cause infortune and be honorable without the stamp of merit that none presumed to wear an undeserved dignity states and degrees and offices were not derived croply but purchased by the merit of the merit how many then would cause how many be commanded that command how much low peasantry would then be gleaned from the true seed of honor and how much and the ruin of the times to be new varnished and to my choice I shall get as much as he deserves I will assume he deserves get me a key for this my fortunes here for that what you find there portrait of her a blinking idiot presenting me a schedule I will read it to him like I've vowed before deserving to choose if me shall get as much as he deserves then I deserve no more than a fool's head is at my prize am I deserves no better to what friend and judge are distinct offices and are opposed in natures the fire seven times tried this seven times tried that judgmentis that he never choose a miss some there believe that shadows this such a butter shadows this there be fools of I there is silver dover and so is this wife you will get I will be your head so be gone you are a sin shall appear by the time I linger here one whose head I came to woo at you I'll keep my old patiently and raw it is the moth all these deliberate fools when they do choose they have to wisdom by their wit saying is now having goes by destiny would you one who comes before to signify the approaching of his lord from whom he bringeth sensible greets to it besides commands incurred to his breath gifts of rich value yet I have not seen so lightly an ambassador of love a day in April never came so sweet to show how costly some of his hand as this forespur comes before his lord no more I pray thee I am half a fear that would say to thee they'll spend such high day waiting praising him come call Marissa for I long to see quick cupid's post that comes so manily Bassanio a ship of rich lady wracked on the narrow seas the good ones I think they call the place a very dangerous flat and fatal where the carcasses of many a tall ship lie buried as they say if my gossip report be an honest woman of her word why in a gossip in that is ever not ginger or may the neighbors believe she wept for the death of a third husband drew men without any slips of prolixity or crossing the plain highways of talk but the good Antonio the honest Antonio that I had a title good enough to keep his name public what say is that by the end does he have lost a ship it might prove the end of his losses let me say amen but times to that that's the devil cross my prayer for here he comes in the likeness of a Jew how shall I look? you know none so well none so well as you with my daughter's life that certain eye for my part knew the tailor that made the wing she flew with all and shall I look where his own car knew the bird was fledged and then it is the complexion of all to leave the doubt is that it for you? that's certain of the devil may be your judge all flesh and blood to redone out upon it all carry it Rebellion at these years I say my daughter is my flesh and blood there is more difference between eye flesh and verse than between jet and ivory more between your bloods than there is red wine and reddish but can you tell us do you hear whether Antonio have had any losses seen or known? there I have another bad match the bankrupt the prodigal the darescares show his hand upon the realtor a beggar who's used to count so small upon the mart let him look to his body he was one to call me usual let him look to him he was one to lend out money as a Christian courtesy let him look to his body well I am sure if he forfeited that will not take his flesh what's that good for? to bait fish with all to feed nothing else it will feed my revenge he had disgraced me and hindered me half a million at my losses marked at my gains scorned my nation haunted my bargains called my friends heated my enemies at what's his reason? hath not Jew eyes hath marked a Jew hands organs dimensions senses passions hath been the same food hurt with the same weapons subject to the same diseases here by the same means war and cold by the same winter and summer as a Christian is if you prick us do we not plead if you tickle us do we not laugh? if you poison us do we not die if you roam us shall we not have revenge? if you're too wrong a Christian what is his humility? his suffering be like Christian execute and it shall go hard but I will for you both would have been up and down to seek him comes another of a tribe a third cannot be matched unless the devil itself turns Jew now too what news from general hath thou seen my ghost? I often came where I appear of her but hey there, there, there it's the 2000 Darkity Frankfurt the curse never fell well I'm not trying till now I I never felt it till now some doctors and doctors of the precious, precious jewels the jewels in there why so? what is spent in the search the thief gone with so much and so much to find the thief and no satisfaction no revenge no, no ill-loved story life on my shoulders no size for the library no tears my shit other men have ill-loved too Antonio as I heard in Genoa what, what, ill-loved, ill-loved as an Argosy cast away coming from Triplus I thank God is it true? I spoke to some of the sailors that escaped the wreck I thank you good news, good news good news very general in Genoa your daughter spent in one night as I heard two thousand dockets yes, this is the dagger in me I shall never see my gold again four score dockets I decided four score dockets there came divers of Antonio's creditors in my company to Venice that swear we cannot choose but break I am very glad of it I am playing him I am torturing him I am glad of it one of them showed me a ring he had of your daughter for a monkey now to partner now tortures me too it was my turquoise I had it of layer when I was a bachelor I will not have given it for a little bit of monkeys but Antonio is certainly undone that's true that's certainly true a phoenix you speak him a four night before I will have he forfeit although he not in Venice I will make what merchandise I will go to meet me at our synagogue go to my company therefore for there there is something tells me but it is not love I would not lose you and you know yourself hate counsels not in such a quality but less you should not understand me well yet a woman have no tongue but thought I would detain you here some month or two before you ventured for me I can teach you how to choose right oh swan miss me you will make me wish a sin that I had been foresworn be sure your eyes they have cruised me and divided me one half of me is yours and the other half yours my own I would say but if mine then yours and so all yours is to draw the time to stay you from election let me choose or as I am I live upon the rack but let me to my fortune and the caskets away then you have to make his choice then if you lose he makes a swan like end fading in music Harrison may stand more proper my eye shall be the stream that better for him in what is music then then music is even as the flourish when true subjects found to a new crowned monarch but such it is as are those dorset sounds in break of day that creep into the dream bridegroom's ear and summon him to marriage now he goes live thou I live with much much more dismay I knew the fights and thou that makes the frame be least themselves the world is still deceived with ordinance in law what plea so tainted and corrupt and yet being seasoned with a gracious voice scares the show people in religion what damned error with some sober brow of blessed and to prove it with a text hiding the grossness with fair ornament there is no vice so simple but assumes some mark of grocery wanders out in parks how many cowards whose hearts are all this false this terrace of sand where yet upon their chins the veers of Hercules and frowning bars who inward search have livers whiteness milk thus ornament is but the guileless shore to a most dangerous sea the beauty is scar failing in Indian beauty in a word which cutting values do put on to entrap the wisest therefore thou godly gold hard foods remind us I will none of these know none of thee thou pale common drudge between man and man but thou thou meager lid rather threatened to see and doth promise off thou paleness moves me more than elephants hear true thou joy there be the consequence doubtful thoughts of ration grace despair and shuddering fear green-eyed jealousy for love immoderate allay thy ecstasy in measure rain thy joy scant this excess I feel too much thy blessing make it less for fear I surf it what find thou here fair porches counterfeit what demigod has come so near creation move these eyes here I sever lips parted with sugar breath so sweet to barge and sundress of sweet friends here in her hairs the painter plays the spider let woven a golden mesh to entrap the hearts of men faster than nascent cobblers but her eyes how did he seem to do those having made one he thinks it should have power to steer both his and leave itself unperfished yet look how far the substance of my praise wronged his shadow and underpriced so far the shadow that's left behind the substance here's the scroll the consumments and summary of my fortune you that choose not by the view chance as fair and choose as true since this fortune falls to you be content and seek no new if you be well pleased with this and hold your fortune for your bliss turn you of where your lady is and claim her the love in his a gentle scroll fair lady while your leave I come by note to give to receive like one of two contending in a prize who thinks you have done well in people's eyes hearing applause universal shout still gazing in the doubt whether these peels of praise be heard or no so thrice fair lady stand lie even so as doubtful whether what I see be true until confirmed and signed and ratified by you you see me lord Bassanio where I stand such as I am though for myself I would not be ambitious in my wish to wish myself much better and yet for you I would be troubled twenty times myself a thousand times more fair ten thousand times more rich that only to stand high in your account I might in virtues beauties living friends exceed account but the full sum of me is sum of something which determine gross is an unlessened girl unscored unpracticed happy in this she is not yet so old but she may learn happier in this she is not bread so dull but she can learn myself and what is mine to you and yours is now converted but now I was master of this fair mansion master of these servants and queen or myself and even now but now this house these servants and the same myself are yours my lord's I give them with this ring which when you part from lose or give away let it presage the ruin of your love can be my vantage to explain on you nothing you have for half me of all words only my blood speaks to you in my veins and there is such a confusion in my heart my beloved prince sat out of fear among the buzzing and pleased with multitude where every something being planned together turns to a wild of nothing a save of joy expressed and not expressed but when this ring part from this finger oh then be bold to save Bassanio's day my lord Bassanio and my gentle lady I wish you all the joy that one can wish and when your honor is being to solemnize the bargain of your fate I do beseech you that on that day I may be married too with all my heart so now I can save my life thank you my lord you have got me on my lord can look at swift as yours you be held to mistress I be held to maid you love I love your fortune suit upon the caskets there so in mine as the matter stands so in owing wooing oaths of love I have a promise of this fair one here to have her love provided that your fortune achieved her mistress is true madam it is so you stand pleased with all and do you, Bassanio need to think yes, think my lord I wish I may much honor to be married we'll play to the first boy for a thousand decades who comes here? Lorenzo and is it for now? my own musician friend, Solaria Lorenzo, Solaria, what do you do? nice to meet you my very friends welcome so to find an entirely welcome thank you your honor my purpose was not to have seen you here but meeting with Solaria on the way she didn't treat me past all saying you need to come with her along I did my lord and I have reason for it see right, oh no come in I'm afraid they're coming on my good friend not sick my lord unless it be in mine nor well unless in mine his life and there will show you he's a stay Lorenzo cheer young stranger, bitter welcome your hand Solaria what news from Bassanio? how about the royal hurch of good Antonio you'll be glad of our successes we the jacians we won the fleece I wish you had won the fleece but there are some shrewd contents in Yonsei paper that steals the color from Bassanio's cheek some dear friend dead else nothing in this world could turn so much the constitution of any constant man what worse than worse would leave Bassanio I am half yourself and I must freely have the half of anything that this same paper brings you sweet watcher of the unpleasantest words that ever was a paper gentle lady when I at first impart my love to you I freely told you all the wealth I had branded in my veins I was a gentleman and then I told you truth and yet dear lady rating myself as nothing you shall see how much I was a briar but when I said my state was nothing I should then have told you that I was worse than nothing indeed I have engaged myself to a dear friend engaged my friend to his mere enemy to feed my means here is a letter lady the paper as the body of my friend and every word in it gave me womb I knew when you might not know but is it true Samaria had all his ventures failed what not one hit from Tripoli's from Mexico from England from Lisbon's Barbarian India not one vessel scared the dreadful touch of Russia's barry rocks not one my lord besides it should appear that if he had the precious money to discharge the Jew he would not take it for the despair the form of man so keen and greedy to confound a man he plies the Duchess morning and night and doesn't preach the freedom of the same if they deny him justice 20 marches the Duchess herself and the Magnificos have all persuaded with him but none can drive him from his envious plea of forfeiture of justice in his bond when I was with him I had heard he was swear to his country that he would rather have Antonio's flesh 20 times the value than some would need to know him and I know my lord that if law, authority and power deny not it will go hard with poor Antonio is it to a dear friend that is thus in trouble the dearest friend to me with the kindest man what sum will owe he the Jew 3,000 nuggets what? no more 6,000 in deface the bond double 6,000 then treble that before a friend of this description shall lose her hair through the Sonia's thought first with me to church and all my wife and then away to them is to your friend for never shall you lie by Porsche's side with an unquiet soul you shall have gold to pay the petty debt 20 times over when it is paid bring your true friend along my maid Marissa in my self mean time will live as maids and widows come away for you shall head upon your wedding day bid your friends welcome show a merry cheer since you are dear bot I would love you dear but let me hear the letter from your friend my ships of all miscarried my creditors cruel my estate is very low my bond to the Jew is forfeit and since in paying it it is impossible I should live all debts are clear between you and I and by my good see you at my death I was standing use your pleasure if your love did not persuade you to come I'll let you know in my letter love dispatch all business and be gone but since I have a good need go away I will make haste but no bed shall ever guilty of my stay no rest be interposing twist us twin against my bond I have sworn an oath that I will have my bond thou callst me a dog before thou hadst cause but since I am a dog beware my friends the Duchess shall grant me justice I pray you hear me speak I will have my bond I will not hear this had my bond now speak no more the Duchess cannot deny the course of law strangers have with us in Venice if it be denied we much impeach the justice of the state no therefore go these these griefs and losses so great in me that I should hardly spare upon the flush tomorrow to my bloody creditor I pray God Bassanio come to see me play his death and then I care not it is to your hands my boss until my lord's return for my own part I have told heaven breathed a secret vow to live in prayer in contemplation only attended by Narissa here until her husband's and my lord's return there is a monastery that is off and there we will arrive I do desire you not to deny this imposition to which my love and some necessity now lays upon you madam with all my heart I shall obey you at all fair commence I very well will be shall meet again there thoughts and happy hours attend on you I wish your leadership all hearts content I thank you for your wish and am pleased to wish it back on you very well Jessica as I have ever found the honest truth so let me find these still take this same lecture and use that all the endeavor of a man in speed to casualty see I'll render this into my cousin's hands Dr. Valaria and look what note and garments he doth give thee bring them I pray thee with imagined speed unto the fairy which trades to Venice wait no time in words but get thee gone I shall be there before thee madam I go with all convenient speed yet no not of we shall see our husbands before they think of us they shall do the same but that they shall think we are accomplished with what we lack a human wreck she came upon pity for any kind of mercy I have heard your grace have taken great pains to qualify his rigorous course but since he stands out with no lawful means how does that mean to read I do oppose my patience to his superior and am armed to suffer with a quietness of spirit or a hearing and rage fill one call the June to the court it's ready at the door now but least this fashion of their vats to the last hour of acts and then she stops though it's sure their mercy and remorse more strange than is their strange appearance and where are they now exact this penalty which is a pound of this poor merchant's flesh that holds it at all you lose the forefeature but touched be too injustice in love forgive a portion of the principal glance seeing an eye of pity on his losses better have late so wade on his back and now depress a world merchant down and block commensuration of the state from Rossy Rosens and rough hearts of Flint stubborn Turks and charters never trained to offices of tender courtesy we all expect to tend to land to Jew I have possessed your grace upon a purpose and by a holy Sabbath have I sworn to have the Jew and forfeit if you deny it and let the danger light upon your charter and your city's freedom you'll ask me why I'd rather choose to have a wade of carrying flesh than to receive three thousand dockets I'm not an accident but say it is my humor is the answer why did my house be troubled with a rat and I'd be pleased to give ten thousand dockets to have it baked but are you answered yet some men there are but not the keeping some that are mad when they do hold a cat and others when the bagpipe sings in the nose cannot contain their urine for affection, lust, or passion swings it to the mood of what it likes or loves now for your answer as there is no firm reason to be rendered why you cannot buy a gaping cat why he a harmless necessary cat why he a woollen bagpipe but a force must yield to such an irritable shame as to offend himself being offended so can I give no reason nor will not more than a logic hate and a certain loathing I bear for Antonio that I follow thus this loosing suit against him are you answered this is no answer thou unfeeling man to excuse the current of thy cruelty I am not bound to please thee with my answers do all men kill the things they do not love hey tell me man a thing I will tell the hatred first what? what's thou have a servant sting thee twice I pray you think you question with the Jew you may as well stand upon the beach and bid the main flood bane of duty will heighten you may as well use question with the wolf as to why he may be you bleep for the lair as well forbid the mountain pines wagging their high tops to make no noise when they are fretted by the gusts of heavy no I beseech you make no more offers use no farther means give me the judgment and the Jew as well thy three thousand dockets here is six if every docket in six thousand dockets were in six parts and each part of the docket I would not draw them and have my body for mercy pen to be done but judgment shall I dread doing no wrong you have among you many a purchased slave which like your asses your dogs and your mules you use an object an enslaved part because you bought them shall I say to you let them be free marry them to your heirs let their beds be made and their pallets seasoned with such views you will answer the slaves are ours so do I answer you on the flesh which I demand of you is dearly bought to his mind and I will have it if you deny me fight on your law there is no force in the decrees of death I make a smistest court I talk to a stretch post to determine this come here today lady the stage without a messenger with letters from the doctor and newcomers from Padua bring the letter call the messenger what may I hear again the fish will have my blood blood, gold and all a thousand is for me one drop of blood me this for death the weakest kind of fruit falls for me on the ground so let me you can be no better employing a signo than to live still right by that from Padua, from Malaria from both my lady Malaria, greet your groups why does I stand with a knife at the ready forgot the forger from that bankrupt not on my soul, but on my soul past you thou mayest thy knife keen but no metal can there hath the keenness of thy sharp envy what, you know prayers fiercely no none the thou hast which not to make be thou damned and miserable dog and for thy life let justice be accused thou almost makeest me waver in my faith hold the pinion with the fingers that the souls and animals abuse themselves in the trunks of pen thy tourist spirit, Governor Wolf who, hanged for human slaughter even from the gallows in his bell soul fleet and while thou lyest in thy unhallowed dam did abuse itself in thee for thy desires are the wolfish blood, starved and ravenous till thou canst rail the seal from all my body thou face thy lungs to speak so loud repair thy wit good youth, or it will fall into joyous ruin I stand here this letter from Malaria document a young and learned doctor to our court where is he? he attendeth here hard by to know your answer whether you'll admit him with all my heart go and keep your courteous conduct to this place but in the instant that your messenger came recitation was with me a young doctor of Rome his name is Balazar I acquainted him with the causing controversy between the Jew and Antonio the merchant we turned over many books together he is furnished with my opinion which, better with his own learning the breakers were of I cannot enough command comes with them at my importunity fill up and erase this request in my stead I leave them to your brilliant acceptance whose trial shall better publish his commendation I give the letter to Malaria what do you write? the doctor come give me your hands coming from old Malaria I do my lord, my lady you are welcome take your place present question in the court I am thoroughly informed of the cause which is the merchant here and which the Jew Antonio it will show up shy lock a strange nature is a suit you follow yet in such rule that the Venetian law cannot impugn you as you do proceed you stand within his danger do you not? I so he says do you confess the bond? I do then must the Jew be merciful? upon what compulsion must I tell me that the quality of mercy is not strained it dropeth as the gentle rain from heaven upon the place beneath it is twice blessed it blessed him with gifts and him with takes the mightiest in the mightiest it becomes the throne in honor better than his crown his scepter shows the force of temporal power the attribute to awe and majesty wherein doth sit the dread and fear of kings but mercy is above this scepter's way it is enthroned in the hearts of kings it is an attribute to God himself and earthly power doth then show likeest gods when mercy seasons justice therefore do though justice be thy plea consider this that in the course of justice none of us should see salvation we do pray for mercy and that same prayer doth teach us all to render the deeds of mercy I have spoke thus much to mitigate the justice of thy plea which if thou follow this strict court of Venice must needs give sentence against the merchant there my needs upon my head I crave the law be not able to discharge the money yes I hear a tender form in the court yay twice the sum it must appear that malice spares down truth and I beseech you rest once the law to your authority to do a great right do a little wrong and purpose cruel devil of his will it must not be there is no power in Venice can alter a decree established will be recorded for a president and many an error by the same example will rush into the state it cannot be and then come to judgment and then a wise normal judge how I do a comedy I pray you let me look upon the bomb here it is most reverent doctor here it is Shaila there is price thy money off with thee an oath an oath I have in heaven I purge thee on my soul no not for Venice why this bond is forfeit and lovely by this that you may claim a pound of flesh to be by him cut off mirrors the merchant's heart be merciful take price thy money bid me tear the bomb when it is paid according to the tenant it does not appear you are a noble judge you know the law your exposition in most sense I charge you by the law of which you are a well deserving pillar proceed to judgment by my soul I swear there is no power in the tongue of man to alter me I stand here on my bond you hardly beseech the court give it judgment why that must it is you must repair your bosom for his knife for the intent and purpose of the law have full relation to the penalty which here appear it do upon the bond is an up to right judge therefore lay bare your bosom is pressed so says the bond does it not noble judge nearest his heart those are the very words it is so are there balance here to weigh the flesh I have them read surgeon Shylock on your charge to stop his wounds lest he do bleed to death is it so nominated in the bond it is not so expressed but what of that much for charity I cannot find it it is not in the bond you merchant have you anything to say well little I am honored and well prepared give me your hand Bessonio grieve not that I have fallen to this for you for even fortune shows yourself more kind than is your custom but it is still her use to let a wretched man outlive as well to view with how I wrinkle brown age of poverty from which lingering penance of such misery that she cut me off commend me to your honorable wife tell her the process of Antonio's end tell her that I loved you speak fair of me in death and when the tale be told that Bessonio had not once a love I repent but not that you have lost a friend and he repents not that he pays this debt for you for if the Jew you cut but deep enough I pay a present with all my heart Antonio carried to a wife which is as dear to me as life itself but life itself my wife in all the world are not with me esteemed to both of thine life I would lose all I sacrifice them all here to this devil to deliver you the wife would give you little thanks for that if she would lie to me and make the offer I have a wife a protest I love I wish you were in heaven so I could retrieve some power and change this current Jew well that you should operate behind your back these these be the Christian husbands huh I have a daughter a word that any of the stock of parameters have been her husband rather than a Christian I pray you pursue a sentence a pound of that same merchant's flesh is thine the court awards it and the law does give it most rightful judge this flesh from all his breast the law allows it and the court awards it most learned judge a sentence can't give me here no jot of blood the words expressly are a pound of flesh take then thy bond take thou thy pound of flesh but in the cunning of it if thou dost shed the power of Christian blood thy lands and goods are by the laws of Venice confiscate unto the state of Venice what right judge Mark Jewin a learned judge is that the law thyself shall see the act for as thou vote is justice be assured thou shalt have justice more than thou desire'st a learned judge Mark Jewin a judge take this off and here's the money soft the Jew shall have all justice soft no haste he shall have nothing but a penalty all right judge Mark Jewin a learned judge therefore prepare thee to cut off the flesh a flesh if thou take this more or less than a just pound be it but so much as makes it light or heavy in the substance soft the division of the 20th part of what a poor scruple nay, if the scale do turn but in the estimation of a hair, thou dyest and all thy goods are confiscate a danger now if it ever have you on it yet why doth the Jew pass take thy thought from Jewin give me my principle and let me go I have principle and your principle shall I not have bear my principle thou shalt have nothing but the forfeiture to be so taken at thy peril Jew second Daniel I thank you Jew for teaching you that word don't leave him good in it I'll stay no longer for quite a few thus a Venice with a few gents and alien that by direct or indirect attempts he seek the life of any citizen the party against the which he doth contrive shall seize one half his goods the other half comes to the privy coffer of the state and the offenders life lies in the mercy of the Duchess only in which predicament I say thou standst for it appears by manifest preceding that indirectly and directly to thou hast contrive the life of the defendant and thou hast incurred the danger formally of the Duchess beg that thou hast leave to hand myself but thy will be forfeit to the state over thou hast not let the value of a core I know brings the first spirit I pardon thee thy life for thou ask it for half they fortune it is Antonio's the other half comes to the state which humbleness may drive unto a fine I am for the state not Antonio hey take my life and all pardon not that you take my house when you do take the property doth sustain my house take my life when you do take the means for where I live what mercy can you render to him Antonio a halter gratis nothing else for God's sake well my lady the Duchess and all the court to quit the fine for half his goods I am content and so he will let me have the other half in use to render upon his death to the gentleman that lately stole his daughter the other things provided for that presently he become a Christian the other that he do record a gift in the court of all he dies possessed unto his son Lorenzo and his daughter he shall do this unless I do recant the pardon I late pronounce it here but thou contented Jew what does thou say protect look draw the deed of gift I pray you you believe to go from inside not well send the deed after me I will sign it catch thee God but do it in christening there will be two god fathers of an item judge that would have ten more bring me to the gallows not the font if you desire your grace pardon I must await this night for Padua and it is me by presently set forth sorry your legions are not post one of the gentlemen I and my friend while you were wasting men to stay acquitted of previous penalties in lieu whereup three thousand ducats do unto the Jew we do freely cope your courteous pains with all in love and service for ever more he is well paid that is well satisfied and I delivering you and satisfied and therein do account myself well paid my mind has never yet more I pray you know me when we meet again I wish you well so I take my leave I do sir of course I must attend to further take some room with us as a tribute I pray you not to deny me any pardon you press me far and therefore I shall yield give your gloves I'll wear them for your sake and for your love I'll take this ring from you do not throw back your hand I'll take no more you in love shall not deny me this this ring? good sir alas it is a triangle I know myself to give you this I'll have nothing else but only this and now he thinks I have mine to it does more depends on this and not about it the dearest ring in Venice will I give you and find it out by proclamation only for this I bring your pardon I see sir you are the liberal in offer you taught me first to beg and now he thinks you teach me how a beggar should be answered good sir this ring was given to me by my wife when she put it on she made me vow that I should marry her sell nor give nor lose it that excuse serves many men to save their gifts and if your wife be not a mad woman and know how well I have deserved the ring she would not hold out any for ever for giving it to me well peace be with you ladies deserveings in my love with all you finally guessed your wife's commandant go I brought you out of the corner of the table give me the ring bring it up to Antonia's house away you may face come you and I will visit her presently and in the morning earlier we will both fly to a Belmont come Antonia fire the Jews house out give him this deed and let him sign it we will wait tonight and be a day before our husband's home this deed will be well welcomed to Lorenzo you are well received I will put this on air on more advice don't send you this ring and I can treat your company too that cannot be his ring I do most painfully accept and so I pray you tell him and furthermore I pray you show my youth old Shylock's house that's the way sir I would speak with you I will see if I can get your husband's ring which I did make him swear to keep forever how mace I warrant will have old swearing that they did give the rings away to men but we'll have face them and old swear them too away may face they'll know us where I'm a terror come with me sir will you show me to this house moon shines bright such a night when the winds did sweetly kiss the trees mounted on the trojan walls and cycled souls toward the grecian tents where crescent lay that night it's such a night to visit fearfully or truth to do kids have a lunch at a fair care of it and read the sea away it's such a night to apply it with a willow in her hand upon the wild sea banks and walk her love to coming end to carpet it's such a night to visit her old age in such a night did jessica steal from the wealthy jew and with an unfripped love did run from venice as far as belmont in such a night did young lorenzo swear he loved her well stealing her soul three thousand feet and her true one in such a night did pretty jessica slander her love and i would outmate you no one can who comes so fast in the silence of the night it's nice to find i bring word my mistress will before the break of day be here tell me she don't stray about my holy crosses when she kneels and prays i will not be wedlocked who comes with her hey i pray you to sign you a gift return he is not nor we have not heard from him signify within the house i pray you your mistress has a hand oh and bring your music forth into the air to move light sleep upon this bank here will we sit and let the sounds of music creep to the audience soft silence and a night in the touches of sweet harmony well sit jessica look how the floor of heaven is thickened and laid with patterns of bright gold there's not the smallest orb which thou beholds but in his motion like an angel sings still quietly unhygiturated such harmony is in immortal souls but lost this muddy bestia of decay got frozen we cannot hear it i'm never married you might hear sweet music the reason is your spirits are attentive for to what note wild and wandering herd or race of youthful and unhandled coals fetching mad bounds bellowing in name law which is the hot condition of their blood if they but hear a trumpet sound or any air of music touch their ears you shall perceive them make a mutual stand their savage eyes turn to a modest gaze a sweet power of music therefore the poets did fame that orpheus drew trees, stones and floods since not so stockish hard and full of rage but music for the timed up changes nature band that has no music in himself nor is not moved with concord of sweet sounds is fit for treasons stratogens and spoils the motions of his spirit are dull as night in his affections dark as air is no such fan he trusted and so shines a good deed in a naughty world and the moon shone we did not see the candle the greater the worry doth thin the less a substitute shines brightly as a king until the king be by then his state empties itself as stuck in in win brook into the main of waters music hot it's your music madam of the house nothing is good that I see without respect me thinks it sounds much sweeter than by day silence bestows that virtue on the ground the crow that sings sweetly as the lock when neither is attended and I think the nightingale should she sing by day when every goose is cackling would be caught no better a musician than the rent how made me by season seasoned are to their right phrase true perfection peace while the moon sleeps with andinian and would not be awaited that is the voice that I have much to see the horsesher he knows me as the blind man knows the cuckoo by the bad voice and truly welcome home we have been praying for our husband's welfare which speed we hope is better for our words are they returned madam they are not yet but there is come a messenger before to say goodbye to their coming go in the reserve give order to my servant that they take no note at all of our being accidents nor you the rent nor you your husband is at hand I fear of coming there are no telltales madam we do not this night we think this is what the day like sick just a little pair to the days such as the day is you are welcome this is the man this is antonio should it all sense to be much bound to him for as I hear he was much bound for you no more than him well actually so you are very welcome to our house it must appear in other ways than words therefore I stand this reading courtesy no but I don't think I swear you are doing wrong no in fact I gave it to a judge well I'm pretty well gelt that had it for my heart since you do take a lot so much of time I quarreled home already but what's the matter is that a few gold altruary that she didn't give me whose pose he was for all the world like countless poetry upon a night that loved me I gave it to a clerk a little scrubbed one no higher than myself the judges clerk who begged it as his fee I could not for my heart deny it I must be playing with you to part so slightly from your wife's first gift a thing that the world masters now you can give your wife too unkind I should be mad at it why I were about to cut my left hand off that's where I lost the ring that Bentley gets well Lord Bassani gave his ring away unto the judge who begged it and indeed deserved it too and the clerk who took some things right even mine and neither man nor master could take off but the two rings what ring would you receive to me if I could add a lie unto a false I would deny it but you see my finger that not the ring upon it it is gone even some boy is your false heart a sweet portion if you didn't know to whom I gave the ring if you didn't know for whom I gave the ring for what I gave the ring and how willingly I left the ring when love would be accepted but the ring you would have ain't the strength of your displeasure if you had known the virtue of the ring or half the worthiness that gave the ring would you all have this opportunity to go as pleased away even he that did not see me landing I was embossed to send it after him I was beset with shame and courtesy while other would not let him grab you so much for spirit candles of the night had you been there I think you would have beg the ring of me to give the word to the doctor an heir come near my house since he had got the jewel that I loved and that which you did swear to keep for me I will become as liberal as you I'll not deny the doctor anything I have no, not my body nor my husband's bed know him I shall I am well sure of it lie not to light from home watch me like artists if you've not if I be left alone then by my honor which is yet my own I do all morning of wits happy subject to these quarrels I would agree if you not you are welcome not to stand me I did once lend my body for as well which but for him that had your husband's ring had likeness carry I dare you bound again my soul on the forfeit that your lord will never more break faith advisable then you shall be this surety give him this and they can keep it better than the other my lord beside you swear to keep this ring my heaven it's just the same I gave the doctor I had it of him pardon me Visano for by this ring the doctor laid with me and pardon me my gentle gratiano for that same scrubbed one the doctor's clerk this is like the metting of highways in summer when the ways are fair enough what are we cobbles or we deserve it speak not so grossly doctor the nurse moves in store for you then you expect there you shall find three of your arevices are richly come to harbour suddenly you shall not know by what strange accident I chanced on the letter are you the doctor and I knew you were not and you were the clerk that made me huddle hi but the clerk had never means to do it unless he lived until he'd be a man good doctor you shall be my medical and when I am absent I'll let lie with my wife sweet lady you have given me life and living for here I'll be for certain that my ships have all come safely to road how now Lorenzo my clerk have some good comforts too for you and I'll gift them him without your fees special deed of gift what of his death I family means you've dropped men on the way of starving people it is almost morning and yet I am sure you are not satisfied with these offensive calls let us go in and charge us there upon interrogatories and we shall answer all things quickly let it be so and the first interrogatory to find her is she should be sworn on go to bed now being two hours today but with day come I would wish it dark and I would couch him with a doctor's clerk for while I live I'll hear no other thing so sore as keeping safe nurses ring