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A Midsummer Night’s Dream (2016) [Full Movie] [Vertical Drama]Full EP - Full
Transcript
00:00:27You
00:00:30To be continued...
00:01:09To be continued...
00:01:56To be continued...
00:02:07Four days will quickly steep themselves in night
00:02:10Four nights will quickly dream away the time
00:02:14And then the moon
00:02:16Like to a silver bow
00:02:18New bent in heaven
00:02:20Shall behold the night of our
00:02:22Solemnities
00:02:29Hippolyta
00:02:30I wooed thee with my sword
00:02:33And won thy love doing the injuries
00:02:50But I will wed thee in another key
00:02:52With pomp
00:02:55With triumph
00:02:56And with reveling
00:03:09To be continued...
00:03:36I don't know.
00:03:49Happy Bethesius, our renowned Duke.
00:03:53Thanks, good Aegeus. What's the news with thee?
00:03:56Full of vexation, come I, with complaint against my child, my daughter Hermia.
00:04:01Stand forth, Demetrius.
00:04:03My noble lord, this man hath my consent to marry her.
00:04:07Stand forth, Lysander.
00:04:13And, my gracious Duke, this man hath bewitched the bosom of my child.
00:04:18He hath by moonlight at her window sung, with feigning voice verses of feigning love.
00:04:25Tomorrow is Saint Valentine's Day, all in the morning betime.
00:04:33And I am made at your window to be your valentine.
00:04:41With cunning hast thou filched my daughter's heart, turned her obedience, which is due to me, to stubborn harshness.
00:04:51So, my gracious Duke, I beg the ancient privilege of Athens.
00:04:56As she is mine, I may dispose of her.
00:05:01She'll be either to this gentleman or to her death.
00:05:11What say you, Hermia, be advised, fair maid, to you, your father should be as a god.
00:05:17Demetrius is a worthy gentleman.
00:05:19So is Lysander.
00:05:24I do entreat your grace to pardon me.
00:05:26I know not by what power I may bold.
00:05:29But I beseech your grace that I may know the worst that may befall me in this case, if I
00:05:34refuse to wed Demetrius.
00:05:39To die the death.
00:05:44Relent, sweet Hermia.
00:05:46And Lysander, yield thy crazed title to my certain right.
00:05:49You have her father's love, Demetrius.
00:05:51Let me have Hermia's.
00:05:53Do you marry him?
00:05:59For you, fair Hermia, look you arm yourself to fit your fancies to your father's will.
00:06:05Or else the law of Athens yields you up.
00:06:10To death.
00:06:34I, me, for all that I could ever read,
00:06:36the course of true love never did run smooth.
00:06:45Hear me, Hermia.
00:06:50I have a widow aunt, a dowager of great revenue, and she hath no child.
00:06:54From Athens is a house remote seven leagues, and she respects me as her only son.
00:07:00There, gentle Hermia, may I marry thee, and to that place the sharp Athenian law cannot pursue us.
00:07:07If thou lovest me, then steal forth thy father's house later tonight, and in the wood, two leagues without the
00:07:15town, there will I stay for thee.
00:07:18My good Lysander, come midnight truly, will I meet with thee.
00:07:21Keep promise, love.
00:07:23Oh, look, here comes Helena.
00:07:28Godspeed, fair Helena.
00:07:30Whither away?
00:07:32Call you me fair?
00:07:34Fair again unsay.
00:07:35Demetrius loves your fair.
00:07:37Ooh, happy fair.
00:07:39Sickness is catching.
00:07:41Oh, a favour so, yours would I catch fair, Hermia, ere I go.
00:07:46My ear should catch your voice, my eye your eye, my tongue should catch your tongue.
00:07:51Sweet melody.
00:07:53Oh, teach me how you look, and with what art you sway the motion of Demetrius' heart.
00:07:58I frown upon him, yet he loves me still.
00:08:00Oh, that you'll frown to teach my smile such skill.
00:08:03The more I hate, the more he follows me.
00:08:04The more I love, the more he hateth me.
00:08:06His folly, Helena, is no fault of mine.
00:08:11None but your beauty, would that fault were mine.
00:08:14Take comfort, you know more she'll see my face.
00:08:18Lysander and myself will fly this place.
00:08:23Helen, to you our minds we will reveal.
00:08:26Through Athens' gates have we devised a steel.
00:08:29And thence from Athens, turn away our eyes to seek new friends and stranger companies.
00:08:37Farewell, sweet playfellow.
00:08:42Pray thou for us, and good luck grant thee thou, Demetrius.
00:08:46Keep word, Lysander.
00:08:48We must starve our sight from lovers' food till later deep midnight.
00:08:51I will, my Hermia.
00:08:56Helena.
00:08:59Adele.
00:09:00As you on him, Demetrius, don't on you.
00:09:03As you on him, Demetrius, don't on you.
00:09:07Through Athens, I am not as fair as she.
00:09:11But what of that?
00:09:13Demetrius thinks not so.
00:09:17Love looks not with the eyes, but with the mind.
00:09:20And therefore is winged Cupid painted blind.
00:09:23For ere Demetrius looked on Hermia's eye,
00:09:26and he hailed down oaths that he was only mine.
00:09:34I will go tell him of fair Hermia's flight.
00:09:38And into the wood will he this very night pursue her.
00:09:42And for this intelligence, if I have thanks, it is a dear expense.
00:09:46But herein mean I to enrich my pain.
00:09:49To have his sight thither, and back again.
00:10:11To have his eyes!
00:10:12To take theyards of visit her,
00:10:15at least close to my capacity.
00:10:20BOSTER!
00:10:21Oh, good evening!
00:10:25Oh, do you good evening, William?
00:10:27Good evening, 20, good master Page.
00:10:33Missed this one, dear.
00:10:38I'll fix my resolution.
00:10:44Help from Athens' cause.
00:10:49Trust me now.
00:10:51Out of the silence.
00:10:53Yet I pegged the welcome.
00:10:55All right, all right.
00:10:56And in the modesty.
00:11:01Hey!
00:11:02Well done.
00:11:04Is all our company here?
00:11:07You are best to call them generally, man by man, according to the script.
00:11:11Here is the scroll of every man's name which is thought fit through all Athens to play in our interlude
00:11:18before the Duke and Duchess on his wedding day.
00:11:20At night.
00:11:21Ooh.
00:11:22Our play is the most lamentable comedy and most cruel death of Pyramus and Thisbe.
00:11:30Now, answer as I call you.
00:11:34Nick Bottom, the weaver.
00:11:36Ready?
00:11:36You, Nick Bottom, are set down for Pyramus.
00:11:40Oh.
00:11:41What is Pyramus?
00:11:42A lover or a tyrant?
00:11:43A lover.
00:11:44That kills himself.
00:11:45Most gallant for love.
00:11:46Oh.
00:11:47Oh, that will ask some tears in the true performing of it.
00:11:50If I do it, let the audience look to their eyes.
00:11:54Yeah.
00:11:54Yeah.
00:11:54I shall move storms.
00:11:56I will condole in some measure.
00:11:58Oh.
00:11:59Oh.
00:12:00To the rest.
00:12:03Francis Flute.
00:12:04You...
00:12:04My chief humour is for a tyrant.
00:12:07Oh, I could play Hercules rarely.
00:12:09Or a part to tear a cat in to make all split.
00:12:11The raging rocks and shivering shocks shall break the locks of prison gates.
00:12:19Ha, ha, ha, ha.
00:12:21I...
00:12:22And Fribus Carl shall shine from far and make and mar the foolish face.
00:12:29Ha, ha, ha.
00:12:31Oh, yeah, this was lofty.
00:12:34Yeah, now, name the rest of the players.
00:12:38Francis Flute, the bellows, Minda.
00:12:40Here, Mistress Quince.
00:12:42Flute, you must take Thisbe on you.
00:12:44Oh, what is Thisbe, a wandering knight?
00:12:47It is the lady that Pyramus must love.
00:12:50Oh, ho, ho, ho, ho, ho.
00:12:52There he is.
00:12:53To thine own self be true.
00:12:55Oh, yeah, good.
00:12:56Oh, oh, oh, and I may hide my face.
00:12:59Let me play Thisbe, too.
00:13:01Yeah, now, speak in a monstrous little voice.
00:13:03Ah, Pyramus, my lover, dear.
00:13:06My Thisbe, dear.
00:13:07Oh, ho, ho, Emily, dear.
00:13:09No, you must play Pyramus and flute, You Thisbe.
00:13:13Yeah, well, proceed.
00:13:16Robin Starveling, the tailor.
00:13:18Tom Snout, the tinker.
00:13:20Here, Mistress Quince.
00:13:21Robin Starveling, you must play Thisbe's mother.
00:13:24Oh.
00:13:24Tom Snout, Pyramus's father, myself, Pyramus's mother, and, um...
00:13:32Snug, you join us.
00:13:35You, the lion's pot.
00:13:37And here, I hope, is a play fitted.
00:13:39Oh, ho, ho, ho, ho.
00:13:41Have you the lion's pot written?
00:13:42Pray you, if it be, give it me, from slower study.
00:13:45Oh, you may do it extempel.
00:13:48For it is nothing but roaring.
00:13:49Oh, let me play the lion, too.
00:13:52Yeah, I will roar that I will do any man's heart good to hear me.
00:13:55Yeah, I will roar that I will make the duke say,
00:13:57Let him roar again, let him roar again.
00:14:00And you should do it too terribly.
00:14:02You would fright the Duchess and the ladies that they would shriek.
00:14:05And that were enough to slay us all.
00:14:07That would slay us.
00:14:09Yeah, every mother's son.
00:14:10No, no, I will aggravate my voice
00:14:14so that I will roar you as gently as any sucking dove.
00:14:17Yeah, yeah.
00:14:18I will roar you into any nighting game.
00:14:23Isn't it this? Isn't it this?
00:14:27No.
00:14:30See? Told you.
00:14:32You must play no part but Pyramus.
00:14:36Yeah, well, I will undertake it.
00:14:38Yeah.
00:14:38Ooh.
00:14:39What beard would I best have played in?
00:14:41Oh.
00:14:42Why, what you will?
00:14:43I will discharge it in either your straw-colour beard,
00:14:47your orange tawny beard,
00:14:49your purple-ing-grain beard,
00:14:50or your French crown-colour beard,
00:14:52your perfect yellow.
00:14:53Some of your French crowns have no hair at all.
00:14:56And then you will play it bare-faced.
00:14:58Ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha!
00:15:01Ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha
00:15:03-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha
00:15:04-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha.
00:15:09Oh, masters, here are your parts.
00:15:12Now, I entreat you, request you, desire you,
00:15:17con them, and meet me in the palace
00:15:19word of mile without the town by moonlight.
00:15:21There will we rehearse.
00:15:23For if we meet in the city,
00:15:24we will be docked with company and our devices known.
00:15:27I pray you, fail me not.
00:15:30At the Duke's Oak we meet.
00:15:32We will, and there we may rehearse
00:15:34most obscenely and courageously.
00:15:37But take pains.
00:15:38Be perfect.
00:15:40Adieu.
00:15:41Adieu.
00:15:42Adieu.
00:15:45Adieu.
00:15:46Adieu.
00:15:47Adieu.
00:15:48Adieu.
00:15:50Adieu.
00:15:52Cut the door.
00:15:54Adieu.
00:15:58Adieu.
00:16:10S против.
00:16:11Adieu.
00:16:11I don't know.
00:16:43I don't know.
00:17:20I don't know.
00:17:27I don't know.
00:17:37I don't know.
00:17:39I don't know.
00:18:09I don't know.
00:18:10I don't know.
00:19:07I don't know.
00:19:11I don't know.
00:20:15I don't know.
00:20:20I don't know.
00:21:16I don't know.
00:21:24I don't know.
00:21:48I don't know.
00:22:09I don't know.
00:22:16I don't know.
00:22:45I don't know.
00:23:11I don't know.
00:23:17I don't know.
00:23:49That very time.
00:23:50I know.
00:23:52I don't know.
00:24:27I don't know.
00:24:47I don't know.
00:25:12I don't know.
00:25:24I don't know.
00:25:27I don't know.
00:25:28I don't know.
00:25:32I don't know.
00:25:33I don't know.
00:25:36I don't know.
00:25:45I don't know.
00:25:48I don't know.
00:26:01I don't know.
00:26:04I don't know.
00:26:07I don't know.
00:26:13I don't know.
00:26:16I don't know.
00:26:18I don't know.
00:26:28I don't know.
00:26:29I don't know.
00:27:02I don't know.
00:27:03What thou seest,
00:27:04when thou dost wake,
00:27:07do it for thy true love.
00:27:10Take.
00:27:38Take thou some of it,
00:27:39and seek thou through this grove.
00:27:42A sweet Athenian lady is in love
00:27:45with a disdainful youth.
00:27:47Anoint his eyes,
00:27:48but do it when the next thing he aspires may be the lady.
00:27:52Thou shalt know the man
00:27:53by the Athenian garments he hath on.
00:27:57Affect it with some care,
00:27:59that he may be the lady.
00:27:59May prove more fond on her
00:28:01than she upon her love.
00:28:04And look thou meet me ere the first cockcrow.
00:28:07Fear not, my lord.
00:28:08Your servant shall do so.
00:28:19When thou wakest,
00:28:20it is thy dear.
00:28:24Wake when some vile thing is near.
00:28:44Fair love,
00:28:45I faked with wandering in the wood.
00:28:48And, to speak truth,
00:28:50I have forgot our way.
00:28:52Be it so, Lysander,
00:28:54find you out of bed,
00:28:55for I upon this bank will rest my head.
00:28:57Or one turf shall serve as pillow for us both.
00:28:59One heart,
00:29:00one bed,
00:29:01two bosoms,
00:29:01and one troth.
00:29:02Two bosoms.
00:29:04Interchain it with an oath,
00:29:06so then,
00:29:07two bosoms,
00:29:08and a single troth.
00:29:10Lysander riddles very prettily.
00:29:13Lie further off yet.
00:29:15Do not lie so near.
00:29:16Amen.
00:29:18Amen to that fair prayer, say I.
00:29:20And then,
00:29:23end life,
00:29:24when I end loyalty.
00:29:34Night and silence who is here.
00:29:37Weeds of Athens he doth wear.
00:29:39Here is my bed.
00:29:41Sleep,
00:29:42give thee all his rest.
00:29:44And,
00:29:45with half that wish,
00:29:46the wish's eyes be pressed.
00:29:55Sure,
00:29:57on thy eyes I throw,
00:29:58oh,
00:29:59the power this charm doth owe.
00:30:04Stay further.
00:30:05Kill me, sweet Demetrius.
00:30:07I charge thee hence,
00:30:08and do not haunt me thus.
00:30:10Oh,
00:30:11but thou darling leave me,
00:30:12do not so.
00:30:13Stay,
00:30:13on thy peril.
00:30:14I alone will go.
00:30:17I am out of breath in this fun chase.
00:30:21The more my prayer,
00:30:22the lesser is my grace.
00:30:25Happy is Hermia,
00:30:27whereso as she lies,
00:30:28for she hath blessed
00:30:30and attractive eyes.
00:30:33How came her eyes so bright?
00:30:35Well,
00:30:36not with salt tears.
00:30:37If so,
00:30:38mine are often awash than hers.
00:30:42No.
00:30:43No.
00:30:44I am as ugly as a bear.
00:30:48For beasts that meet me,
00:30:50run away from fear.
00:30:52Who is here?
00:30:55That's Lysander.
00:30:56On the ground.
00:30:58Dead?
00:30:59Or asleep?
00:31:00I see no blood,
00:31:02no wound.
00:31:03Lysander,
00:31:03if you live,
00:31:05good sir,
00:31:06awake.
00:31:14And run through fire,
00:31:16I will for thy sweet sake.
00:31:19Transparent Helena.
00:31:21Nature shows our heart,
00:31:22that through thy bosom
00:31:23makes me see thy heart.
00:31:25Where is Demetrius?
00:31:26Oh,
00:31:27how fit a word
00:31:28is that vile name
00:31:29to perish on my sword.
00:31:31Do not say so,
00:31:32Lysander,
00:31:32say not so.
00:31:33What though he love your Hermia,
00:31:35Lord,
00:31:36what though?
00:31:37Yet Hermia still loves you,
00:31:39then be content.
00:31:40Content with Hermia?
00:31:41No.
00:31:42I do repent the tedious minutes
00:31:43I with her have spent.
00:31:45Not Hermia,
00:31:46but Helena,
00:31:47I love.
00:31:48Who will not change a raven
00:31:49for a dove.
00:31:51Wherefore was I
00:31:52to this keen mockery born?
00:31:54And when at your hands
00:31:55did I deserve this scorn?
00:31:57Is it not enough?
00:31:58Is it not enough,
00:31:59young man,
00:32:00that I did never,
00:32:01no,
00:32:01nor never can,
00:32:03deserve a sweet look
00:32:04from Demetrius' eye,
00:32:05but you must flout
00:32:06my insufficiency?
00:32:08Now fare you well.
00:32:09Beforece,
00:32:10I must confess,
00:32:10I thought you lord
00:32:11of more true gentleness.
00:32:12Things growing
00:32:13are not ripe
00:32:13until their season.
00:32:15So I, being young,
00:32:16till now ripe not to reason.
00:32:18The lady
00:32:18if one man refused
00:32:19should have been known,
00:32:20therefore be abused.
00:32:21And touching now
00:32:22the point of human skill,
00:32:23reason pick up
00:32:24the martial to my will
00:32:26be fair.
00:32:28Help me, Lysander!
00:32:29Help me!
00:32:31I...
00:32:32me
00:32:33have a pity
00:32:33but a dream was here.
00:32:36Lysander...
00:32:37Lysander?
00:32:39What?
00:32:41Removed?
00:32:42Lysander?
00:32:43Lord!
00:32:46Lysander?
00:32:48Lysander?
00:32:50Lysander!
00:32:52Lysander!
00:32:53Lysander!
00:32:55This is a marvellous
00:32:57convenient place
00:32:58for our rehearsal.
00:33:03Lysander!
00:33:04Lysander!
00:33:05Lysander!
00:33:06Lysander!
00:33:08Lysander!
00:33:10Lysander!
00:33:11Lysander!
00:33:12Lysander!
00:33:13What hempen homespunce
00:33:15have we swaggering here?
00:33:17So near to the cradle
00:33:18of the fairy queen.
00:33:20Mistress Quince,
00:33:21there are things
00:33:21in this comedy
00:33:22of Pyramus and Thisbe
00:33:23that will never please.
00:33:24First,
00:33:25Pyramus must draw a sword
00:33:27to kill himself
00:33:27which you ladies
00:33:28cannot abide.
00:33:29How wants are you that?
00:33:30By a lake in a parlour's fear.
00:33:33I believe we must leave
00:33:34the killing out
00:33:35when all is done.
00:33:36Not a whit.
00:33:37I have a device
00:33:37to make all well.
00:33:39Write me a prologue
00:33:40and let the prologue
00:33:41seem to say
00:33:41we will do no harm
00:33:43with our swords
00:33:44and that Pyramus
00:33:44is not killed indeed.
00:33:46And,
00:33:47for the more better assurance,
00:33:48tell them
00:33:49that I, Pyramus,
00:33:50am not Pyramus
00:33:51but Bottom the Weaver.
00:33:52This will put them
00:33:53out of fear.
00:33:55Will not you ladies
00:33:56be afeard of the lion?
00:33:58I fear it,
00:33:59I promise you.
00:34:00Just as you ought to consider
00:34:01with yourself
00:34:02to bring in God's shielders,
00:34:04a lion among ladies
00:34:05is a most dreadful thing.
00:34:07For there is not
00:34:07a more fearful wild fowl
00:34:08than your lion living.
00:34:10And we ought to look to it.
00:34:11Therefore,
00:34:11another prologue
00:34:12must tell
00:34:13that he's not a lion.
00:34:14No.
00:34:15You must name his name
00:34:16and half his face
00:34:17must be seen
00:34:18through the lion's neck.
00:34:19And he himself
00:34:20must speak through
00:34:21saying thus
00:34:21or to the same defect.
00:34:23Ladies
00:34:23or fair ladies,
00:34:26I would wish you
00:34:27or, er,
00:34:28I would request you
00:34:30or, er,
00:34:31I would entreat you.
00:34:33Yes, entreat.
00:34:34Entreat.
00:34:35Entreat.
00:34:35I would entreat you
00:34:36not to fear,
00:34:38not to tremble.
00:34:39My life
00:34:40for yours.
00:34:41If you think
00:34:42I come hither as a lion,
00:34:43it were pity of my life.
00:34:45no,
00:34:45I am no such thing.
00:34:47I
00:34:48am
00:34:48a man
00:34:50as
00:34:51other men
00:34:52are.
00:34:53And there indeed,
00:34:54let them name his name
00:34:55and tell them plainly
00:34:55he's snug the joiner.
00:34:58If that may be,
00:35:00then all is well.
00:35:01Come,
00:35:02sit down,
00:35:02every mother, son,
00:35:03and rehearse your parts.
00:35:05Pyramus,
00:35:06you begin.
00:35:07Now, when you have spoken
00:35:08your speech,
00:35:09enter into that break.
00:35:11And so,
00:35:12everyone,
00:35:13according to his cue.
00:35:15Speak,
00:35:16Pyramus.
00:35:18Thisbe,
00:35:19stand forth.
00:35:20yeah,
00:35:20yeah.
00:35:23No,
00:35:23just a little bit.
00:35:24A little bit.
00:35:26Oh,
00:35:26no,
00:35:26no.
00:35:27A little bit.
00:35:29There.
00:35:37Yeah,
00:35:58Thisbe.
00:35:59dear but hark a voice stay thou but here a while and by and by i will to thee appear
00:36:05and then i'll
00:36:06go oh a stranger pyramus than air play dear i think larry must do for you must understand
00:36:15he goes but to see a noise that he heard and is to come again
00:36:27i'll meet thee pyramus in ninny's tomb nina's tomb man why you must not speak that yet
00:36:37sweet moon i thank thee for thy sunny beams i thank thee moon for shining now so bright
00:36:43for by thy gracious gold and glittering gleams i trust to take of choice this beside
00:36:49but stay for spite but now poor nightfall dreadful dole is here ice you see how can it be
00:36:57oh dented duck oh dear
00:37:04pyramus enter your queue is past it is never tire
00:37:11as true as truest horse that yet would never tire he said never tire
00:37:20as true as truest horse that yet would never tire
00:37:27if i were fair fair this be i will only thine
00:37:32oh oh monstrous
00:37:36oh strange
00:37:39we are haunted
00:37:40bless thee bottom
00:37:42thou art translated
00:37:44oh bottom
00:37:46they are changed what do i see on thee what do you see you see an ass head of your
00:37:52own do you
00:38:09oh
00:38:10oh
00:38:10oh
00:38:10oh
00:38:11oh
00:38:11oh
00:38:11oh
00:38:11What? Why'd you run away?
00:38:14Oh. Oh.
00:38:17This is a knavery of you to make me afeard.
00:38:22I see your knavery.
00:38:25This is to make an ass of me, to fright me, if you could.
00:38:32Well, I...
00:38:33I will walk up and down here, and I will sing.
00:38:37That they shall hear I am not afraid.
00:38:41The owl's old cock so black of hue
00:38:46With orange tawny bill
00:38:49The trossel with his note so true
00:38:54The wren with little quill
00:38:58The pinkster sparrow and the lark
00:39:04The plain song cuckoo grey
00:39:07Whose note for many a man doth mark
00:39:13And dares not answer
00:39:16Nay...
00:39:18Oh.
00:39:19What angel wakes me from my flowery bed?
00:39:26Good evening.
00:39:27I pray thee, gentle mortal, sing again.
00:39:31Oh.
00:39:33Mine ear is much enamoured of thy note
00:39:36So is my eye, enthralling to thy shame
00:39:42And thy fair virtue's force perforce
00:39:45Doth move me on the first view to see
00:39:49To swear...
00:39:50Oh, I love thee.
00:39:54Oh, me thinks, mistress, you should have little reason for that
00:39:59And yet, to say the truth, reason and love keep little company together nowadays
00:40:04Thou art as wise as thou art beautiful
00:40:10Not so, neither
00:40:13But if I had wit enough to get out of this wood
00:40:15I have enough to serve mine own town
00:40:17I have to!
00:40:17This wood do not desire to go
00:40:20Thou shalt remain here whether thou wilt or no
00:40:24I am a spirit of no common rate
00:40:27The summer still doth tend upon my state
00:40:30Oh, and I do love thee
00:40:33Oh, therefore
00:40:36Go with me
00:40:39I'll give thee fairest to attend on thee
00:40:42Oh.
00:40:43Peasblossom!
00:40:44Cobweb!
00:40:45Mother!
00:40:46Mother!
00:40:46Mother!
00:40:47Mother!
00:40:47Mother!
00:40:48Mother!
00:40:48Mother!
00:40:49Leggy!
00:40:49And I!
00:40:50And I!
00:40:50And I!
00:40:51Where shall we go?
00:40:51Hmm?
00:40:52Hmm?
00:40:52Be kind and courteous
00:40:54Oh!
00:40:55To this gentleman
00:40:58Oh!
00:41:00Your name I beseech you, sir
00:41:07Hop in his walks
00:41:10Oh!
00:41:10And gamble in his eyes
00:41:13Feed him with apricots
00:41:16Oh!
00:41:17And juberies
00:41:18Oh!
00:41:18With purple grapes
00:41:20Green figs
00:41:22Green figs
00:41:22The mulberries
00:41:23The honeybags
00:41:25Steal from the humble bees
00:41:27And for night tapers
00:41:30Crop their waxen thighs
00:41:33And light them at the fiery glowworm's eyes
00:41:37To have my love to bear
00:41:40And to arise
00:41:42Oh!
00:41:42Oh!
00:41:44Not to him elves
00:41:45And do him courtesies
00:41:48Hail
00:41:48Mortar
00:41:50I beseech your worship's name
00:41:53Cobweb
00:41:54Oh!
00:41:55I shall desire you of more acquaintance, good master Cobweb
00:41:58If I cut my finger, I shall make bold with you
00:42:04Your name, honest gentleman?
00:42:07Peace blossom
00:42:08Oh!
00:42:09I pray you commend me to mistress Squash your mother and master Pease God your father
00:42:15I beseech your name, sir
00:42:18Mustard Seat
00:42:19Aha!
00:42:20Good master Mustard Seat
00:42:22I know your patience well
00:42:23That same cowardly giant like ox beef hath devoured many a gentleman of your house, I promise you
00:42:29Tie up my lover's tongue
00:42:31Bring him silently
00:42:34Oh!
00:42:35Oh!
00:42:37Oh!
00:42:38Oh!
00:42:39Oh!
00:42:40Oh!
00:42:40No!
00:42:41Oh!
00:42:43Oh!
00:42:44Oh!
00:42:45Oh!
00:42:45Oh!
00:42:45Oh!
00:42:46Oh!
00:42:47Oh!
00:42:49Oh!
00:42:52Oh!
00:42:55Oh!
00:42:57Oh!
00:42:57Oh!
00:42:58Oh!
00:43:00My mistress with a monster is in love
00:43:03Oh!
00:43:03Oh!
00:43:06Oh!
00:43:06Come!
00:43:07Come!
00:43:08Near to her close and consecrated bower
00:43:11While she was in her dull and sleeping hour
00:43:14A crew of patchers
00:43:15Rude mechanicals that work for bread upon Athenian stalls
00:43:19were met together to rehearse a play
00:43:21intended for great Theseus' nuptial day.
00:43:24The shallowest thickskin of that barren sort
00:43:27who Pyramus presented in their sport
00:43:29forsook his scene and entered in a break.
00:43:32When I did him at this advantage take
00:43:35an asses and all, I fix it on his head.
00:43:39Anon, his thisbe must be answer-ed.
00:43:42And forth my mimic comes
00:43:45when they him spy.
00:43:49Ah-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha!
00:43:52Ah-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha!
00:43:55So were this sight. Away his fellows fly!
00:43:59When in that moment so it came to pass
00:44:02Titania waked and straightway laughed and asked!
00:44:06Ah-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha!
00:44:10This falls out better than I could devise.
00:44:14Hahahaha!
00:44:32If thou hast slain Lysander in his sleep, being old shoes in blood, plunge in the deep.
00:44:38It cannot be that thou hast murdered him.
00:44:40So should a murderer look, so dead, so grim.
00:44:43And so should the murdered look, and so should I, pierced through the heart with your stern cruelty.
00:44:50Yet you, the murderer, look as bright, as clear as yonder Venus in her glimmering sphere.
00:44:55But what's this to my Lysander? Where is he?
00:44:58Oh, good Demetrius, wilt thou give him me?
00:45:00You spend your passion on a misprized mood.
00:45:03I am not guilty of Lysander's blood, nor is he dead, for all that I can tell.
00:45:07I pray thee, tell me then that he is well.
00:45:11And if I could, what should I get there for?
00:45:13Privilege never to see me more.
00:45:14Now, I will follow you in this fierce vein, and therefore, at your side, I will remain.
00:45:22But sorrows, heaviness, but heavier grow.
00:45:30Stay close.
00:45:31This is the same Athenian.
00:45:33Um, that was the woman, but not this the man.
00:45:41What hast thou done?
00:45:43Thou hast mistaken quite, and laid the love juice on some true love site.
00:45:50About the wood go swifter than the wind, and Helena of Athens, who look thou find.
00:45:55By some illusion, see thou bring her here.
00:45:58I'll charm his eyes against she.
00:46:00Do appear.
00:46:01I go, I go, look how I go.
00:46:03Swifter than arrow from the tartan.
00:46:05Go!
00:46:07The flower of this purple dye, hit with Cupid's archery, sink an apple of his eye.
00:46:24Captain of a fairy band, Helena is here at hand, and the youth mistook by me, pleading for a lover's
00:46:31fee.
00:46:33Shall we their fond pageant see?
00:46:38Lord, what fools these mortals be?
00:46:41Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha.
00:46:43See, there, don't you.
00:46:46Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh.
00:46:49Weave oaths with oaths, and you can nothing wait.
00:46:52Why should you think that I should move in scorn?
00:46:55Look, when I bow, I weep.
00:46:59My vows newborn.
00:47:01I need to advise your cunning more and more.
00:47:03These vows are Hermes.
00:47:05Will you give her all?
00:47:06I had no judgment unto her, I swore.
00:47:08Nor none of my mind, now you give me more.
00:47:10Demetrius loves her, and he loves not you.
00:47:14Lysander.
00:47:16Godlike.
00:47:17Nymph.
00:47:19Perfect. Divine.
00:47:21Nymph?
00:47:22To what my love shall I compare thine eye?
00:47:25You are unkind, Demetrius, be not so for you.
00:47:28Love Hermia, this you know I know.
00:47:29Crystal is muddy.
00:47:31Oh, how ripe and sure thy lips, those kissing cherries tempting grow.
00:47:38That pure congealed white, how torus snow, fanned with the eastern wind, turns to a crow when thou holdest up
00:47:45thy hand.
00:47:47Oh, let me kiss.
00:47:48Kiss?
00:47:48This prince is of pure white.
00:47:51Now seal my bliss.
00:47:53Oh, spite.
00:47:54Oh, hell.
00:47:55I see you are all bent to set against me for your merriment.
00:47:59If you were men, as men you are in show, you would not use a gentle lady's soul.
00:48:05Oh, Lysander.
00:48:09Lysander lose thy Hermia, I will numb.
00:48:11If e'er I loved her, all that love is gone.
00:48:14My heart to her, but as guest-wise sojourned.
00:48:18And now Terzander is at home returned.
00:48:31Oh, Helen.
00:48:39Goddess, nymph, perfect, divine, to what, my love, shall I compare thine eye?
00:48:46You both are rivals, and love Hermia.
00:48:49And are both rivals to mock Helena.
00:48:52Thou art not by mine eye, like Sander found.
00:48:55Mine ear, I thank it, brought me to thy sound.
00:48:57But why, am kindly, didst thou leave me so?
00:48:59I shall stay, whom love doth press to go.
00:49:02What love could press Lysander from my side?
00:49:05Lysander's love, that would not let him bide.
00:49:08Fair Helena, who more engilds the night than all yon fiery oes and eyes of light.
00:49:12You speak not as you think.
00:49:14Cannot be.
00:49:15No.
00:49:16She is one of this confederacy.
00:49:18Now I perceive they have conjoined all three to fashionist false sport in spite of me.
00:49:23Durious Hermia, most ungrateful maid.
00:49:26Have you conspired?
00:49:27Have you with these contrived to bait me with this foul derision?
00:49:31And will you rent our ancient love asunder to join with men in scorning your poor friend?
00:49:37It is not friendly, it is not maidenly.
00:49:39I understand not what you mean by this.
00:49:41I do.
00:49:43Persever counterfeit sad looks.
00:49:44Make mouths upon me when I turn my back.
00:49:48But fare you well.
00:49:50It is partly my own fault.
00:49:51Which death or absence soon shall rent thee.
00:49:55Stay gentle Helena.
00:49:57Hear my excuse.
00:49:58My love, my life, my soul.
00:50:00Fair Helena.
00:50:00Oh, excellent.
00:50:02Oh.
00:50:02I say I love thee more than he can do.
00:50:04If thou say so, withdraw and prove it too.
00:50:07Quick, come.
00:50:08Lysander, where to tend all this?
00:50:10Hang off, thou cat.
00:50:12Thou burr, vile thing let loose, or I will shake thee from me like a serpent.
00:50:16Why are you going so rude?
00:50:17What change is this, sweet love?
00:50:19Thy love?
00:50:20Out, tawny tartar, out.
00:50:22Out, loathed medicine.
00:50:24Oh, hated potion.
00:50:26Hence.
00:50:26Oh, do you not jest?
00:50:28Am not I, Hermia?
00:50:29How about you, Lysander?
00:50:35Be certain.
00:50:37Nothing truer, tis no jest.
00:50:39That I do hate thee.
00:50:41And love Helena.
00:50:44Oh, me.
00:50:45You, juggler.
00:50:48You canker blossom.
00:50:49You thief of love.
00:50:51Fine, in faith.
00:50:53Have you no modesty?
00:50:54No maiden shame?
00:50:56No touch of bashfulness?
00:50:58What?
00:50:58Will you tear impatient answers from my gentle tongue?
00:51:02Fine.
00:51:03Fine, you counterfeit.
00:51:05You puppet, you.
00:51:08Puppet?
00:51:09Why so?
00:51:12Ay, that way goes the game.
00:51:15Now I perceive she hath made compare with us suchers.
00:51:20She hath urged her height.
00:51:21So, are you groan this high in his esteem because I am so dwarfish and so low?
00:51:27I pray you, though you mock me, gentlemen, let her not hurt me.
00:51:31I was never cursed.
00:51:33I have no gift at all in truishness.
00:51:35I am a right maid.
00:51:37My cowardice.
00:51:37How low am I, thou painted maypole?
00:51:41Speak.
00:51:42How low am I?
00:51:43I am not yet so low, but that my nails can reach unto thine eyes.
00:51:51When she is angry, she is keen and shrewd.
00:51:53She was a vixen when she went to school.
00:51:55And now she'd be by little, she is fierce.
00:51:58Little again.
00:51:59Nothing for you.
00:52:00Little.
00:52:01Get you gone, you whore.
00:52:07Take on.
00:52:11Try hurt her, strike her, kill her dead.
00:52:14No, Dimitrius, no.
00:52:21Good, Harmia.
00:52:24Do not be so bitter with her.
00:52:27I evermore did love you, Harmia.
00:52:29Did ever keep your counsels, never wronged you.
00:52:32Save that.
00:52:36Did love it to Dimitrius.
00:52:38I told him of your stout into this wood.
00:52:41He followed you.
00:52:43For love, I followed him.
00:52:45But he has chipped me heads and threatened me to strike me,
00:52:50spurn me, nay, to kill me too.
00:53:25To Athens will I bear my folly back and follow you no further.
00:53:31You see how simple and how fond I am?
00:53:34Why?
00:53:34Get you gone.
00:53:36Who is that hinders you?
00:53:37The foolish heart that I leave here behind.
00:53:41What?
00:53:42With Lysander?
00:53:44With Dimitrius!
00:53:46Be not afraid, ye shall not claim thee, Helena.
00:53:48No, sir, you shall not, though you take her part.
00:53:51You are too officious in her behalf that scorned your services.
00:53:54Let her alone.
00:53:55Her?
00:53:56Speak not of Helena, take not her part.
00:53:59For if thou dost intend never so little show of love to her,
00:54:02thou shalt abide.
00:54:03Well, now she holds me not.
00:54:04Follow, if thou darest, to try whose right of thine or mine is most in Helena.
00:54:09Follow, nay, I'll go with thee, cheek by drow.
00:54:15You, mistress, all this coil is long of you.
00:54:18Your hands than mine are quicker for a fray.
00:54:21My legs are longer, though.
00:54:23To run away!
00:54:25I'm amazed.
00:54:26I know not what to say.
00:54:52Oh, those things do best please me.
00:54:55That befall preposterously.
00:55:01But so far am I glad it so did sort,
00:55:04as this there jungling I esteem a sport.
00:55:08Thou seest.
00:55:08These lovers seek a place to fight.
00:55:11High, therefore, Robin, overcast the night,
00:55:14till o'er their brows death counterfeiting sleep,
00:55:16with leaden legs and batty wings doth creep.
00:55:22Then crush this herb into Lysander's eye,
00:55:26whose liquor hath this virtuous property
00:55:29to take from thence all error with his might
00:55:32and make his eyeballs roll with wonted sight.
00:55:36When they next wake,
00:55:38all this derision shall seem a dream
00:55:40and fruitless vision.
00:55:42As I,
00:55:43in this affair to thee employ,
00:55:46I'll to my queen
00:55:47and find her sleeping, boy.
00:55:51And then I will her charmed eye
00:55:54release from monster's view.
00:55:57And all things shall be peace.
00:56:07Run away!
00:56:10Coward!
00:56:12I love bled!
00:56:13Speak!
00:56:15Get some bush!
00:56:18You must not hide thy head.
00:56:25Beatleth constraineth me.
00:56:29Constraineth me!
00:56:40Fallen am I in dark, uneven way.
00:56:49Oh, weary night.
00:56:51Oh, long and tedious night.
00:56:53Sleep.
00:56:54There's sometimes chaps.
00:56:59Never so weary.
00:57:01Never so unwell.
00:57:07Cupid is a knavish lad.
00:57:10Thus to make poor females mad.
00:57:13I have one come, three more.
00:57:15Two of both kinds
00:57:16and make up four.
00:57:22When thou wakest,
00:57:25thou takest true delight
00:57:27in the sight
00:57:28of thy former
00:57:31lady's eye.
00:57:33Jack shall have Jill,
00:57:35naught shall go well.
00:57:37The man shall have his mare again
00:57:39and all shall be well.
00:57:44You, I will urge thy mortal
00:57:48grossness so.
00:58:00Come, sit thee down
00:58:03upon this flowery bed
00:58:05while I thy amiable cheeks
00:58:08do coy
00:58:10and stick musk roses
00:58:13in thy sleek, smooth head
00:58:16and kiss thy fur large ears.
00:58:25My gentle joy.
00:58:34Where's Pease Blossom?
00:58:37Ready.
00:58:38Scratch my head,
00:58:40Pease Blossom.
00:58:47Where's Monsieur Cobweb?
00:58:49Ready.
00:58:51Good Monsieur,
00:58:52bring me a honey bag,
00:58:54senor.
00:58:58Where's Monsieur Mustard Seed?
00:59:02What's your will?
00:59:03Nothing, good Monsieur,
00:59:05but to help Pease Blossom
00:59:06to scratch.
00:59:09I muster the fathers, Monsieur,
00:59:12for me thinks I'm marvellous
00:59:13hairy about the face.
00:59:15Now say, sweet love,
00:59:19what thou desirest to eat.
00:59:22So, lady,
00:59:24I could from him,
00:59:25I could munch you
00:59:27good dry oats.
00:59:29He thinks I have a great desire
00:59:31to a bottle of hay.
00:59:32Good hay, sweet hay,
00:59:34hath no fellow.
00:59:37I have a venturous fairy
00:59:39shall seek the squirrel's halt
00:59:42and fetch thee
00:59:44new nuts.
00:59:48I'd rather have a handful
00:59:49or two of dried peas.
00:59:54But I pray you,
00:59:56let none of your people
00:59:57stir me.
00:59:58I have an exposition of sleep
01:00:01come upon me.
01:00:03Sleep thou.
01:00:06And I will wind thee
01:00:08in my arms.
01:00:12Fairies, be gone
01:00:14and be always away.
01:00:19So doth the woodbine
01:00:21the sweet honeysuttle
01:00:24gently entwist
01:00:25the female ivy
01:00:27so enrings
01:00:28the barky fingers
01:00:30of the elm.
01:00:32Oh, how I love thee.
01:00:35How I doubt on thee.
01:00:51I do begin to pity.
01:01:01Be as thou wast
01:01:04wont to be.
01:01:05See as thou wast
01:01:08wont to see.
01:01:09Now, my Titania,
01:01:12wake you,
01:01:13my sweet queen.
01:01:27oh, my Oba-Wan.
01:01:30What visions have I seen?
01:01:33Oh, he thought I was enamoured
01:01:35with an ass.
01:01:37There lies your love.
01:01:42How came these things to pass?
01:01:46Oh, how my eyes
01:01:48to loathe your visage now!
01:01:50But thou and I
01:01:53are new in Amity
01:01:54and will tomorrow midnight
01:01:56solemnly dance
01:01:58in Duke Theseus' house triumphantly
01:02:00and bring
01:02:01to that lord
01:02:03his true destiny.
01:02:05Fairy king,
01:02:06attend and mock.
01:02:07I do hear
01:02:09the morning lark.
01:02:11Then my queen,
01:02:14in silence sad
01:02:15trip we
01:02:16after the nightshade.
01:02:17We the globe
01:02:18can come puss soon,
01:02:20swifter
01:02:20than the wandering moon.
01:02:22We are spirits
01:02:23of another sort
01:02:24and I
01:02:25with the morning's love
01:02:26have oft made sport.
01:02:28And like a forest
01:02:29to the groves
01:02:30may tread even
01:02:31to the eastern gate
01:02:32all fiery red
01:02:33opening on Neptune
01:02:34with fair-blessed beams
01:02:36turns into yellow gold
01:02:39his soft green streams.
01:02:58But soft.
01:03:00What nymphs are these?
01:03:06Pardon, my lord.
01:03:07No doubt you rose up early
01:03:08to observe the rite of May.
01:03:11And hearing our intent
01:03:12came here
01:03:13in grace of our solemnity.
01:03:16For speak, Aegeus,
01:03:17is not this the day
01:03:18that Hermia
01:03:19should give answer
01:03:19of her choice?
01:03:20It is, my lord.
01:03:24I pray you all stand up.
01:03:28I know you two
01:03:29are rival enemies.
01:03:30How comes this gentle
01:03:31concord in the world?
01:03:33My lord,
01:03:34I shall reply amazedly.
01:03:35Half sleep, half waking.
01:03:38But as yet, I swear...
01:03:39Enough, enough.
01:03:41My lord, you have enough.
01:03:43I beg the law,
01:03:44the law upon his head.
01:03:48They would have stolen away.
01:03:49But...
01:03:50They would, Demetrius.
01:03:52Thereby,
01:03:53to have defeated
01:03:53you and me.
01:03:56My good lord,
01:03:57I want not by what power,
01:03:58but by some power.
01:03:59It is.
01:04:00My love to Hermia
01:04:02melted as the snow.
01:04:04Seems to me now
01:04:05is the remembrance
01:04:06of an idle gourd
01:04:07which in my childhood
01:04:08I did vote upon.
01:04:10And all the faith,
01:04:11the virtue of my heart,
01:04:13the object
01:04:14and the pleasure
01:04:15of my eyes,
01:04:17only Helena.
01:04:26Aegeus,
01:04:26I will overbear
01:04:27your will.
01:04:28For in the temple
01:04:29by and by with us,
01:04:30these couples
01:04:31shall eternally
01:04:32be knit.
01:04:35And for the morning
01:04:36now is something worn,
01:04:37our purposed hunting
01:04:37shall be set aside.
01:04:39Away with us
01:04:39to Athens.
01:04:40Three and three,
01:04:42we'll hold a feast
01:04:43in great solemnity.
01:04:44Uncouple in the
01:04:45Western Valley,
01:04:46let them go.
01:04:58Now these things
01:04:59seem small
01:05:00and undistinguishable
01:05:01like far-off mountains
01:05:03turn it into clouds.
01:05:05It seems to me
01:05:05that yet we sleep,
01:05:06we dream.
01:05:12now.
01:05:23Hey-ho.
01:05:26Mistress Quence.
01:05:28Flute.
01:05:31Oh, God's my life.
01:05:34Stolen hence
01:05:35and left me asleep.
01:05:41I've had a most rare vision.
01:05:45I've had a dream
01:05:46past the wit of man
01:05:47to say what dream it was.
01:05:50Me thought I was...
01:05:53Oh, there is no man
01:05:54can tell what.
01:05:56No, me thought I was...
01:05:59Me thought I...
01:06:01Oh, man,
01:06:02it's been a patched fool
01:06:03if you will offer
01:06:04to say what my dream was.
01:06:16I will get Mistress Quence
01:06:18to write the ballad
01:06:19of this dream.
01:06:21Yes, yes.
01:06:22It should be called
01:06:23Bottom's Dream,
01:06:24for it hath no bottom.
01:06:26And I will sing it
01:06:27in the latter end
01:06:28of the play
01:06:29before the joke.
01:06:30The play!
01:06:31The joke!
01:06:52Where are these lads?
01:06:57Walter!
01:06:58Oh, where are these lads?
01:07:01The most courageous day.
01:07:05We are transported.
01:07:17Oh, Mom's happy hour!
01:07:21The old mechanicals!
01:07:25Whee!
01:07:29Get your apparel.
01:07:31Good strings,
01:07:32new ribbons.
01:07:33The duke hath dined.
01:07:35The duke hath dined!
01:07:36Oh!
01:08:07Here come the lovers, full of joy and mirth.
01:08:51Me thinks I see these things with parted eye, when everything seems double.
01:08:57So, me thinks now I have found Demetrius, like a jewel, mine own, but not mine own.
01:09:05Are you sure that we are?
01:09:09Tis strange, O Theseus, that these lovers speak of.
01:09:13More strange than true.
01:09:15I never may believe these antique fables, nor these fairy toys.
01:09:21Lovers and madmen have such seething brains, such shaping fantasies,
01:09:24that apprehend more than cool reason ever comprehends.
01:09:28So in the night, imagining some fear, how easy is a bush supposed to bear?
01:09:33But all the story of the night told over.
01:09:58What revels are in hand?
01:10:00Is there no play to ease the anguish of a torturing hour?
01:10:04It's a brief how many sports are ripe.
01:10:07What masks?
01:10:10What dances shall we have?
01:10:15A tedious brief scene of young Pyramus and his love, Thisby.
01:10:18Very tragical mirth.
01:10:22Merry and tragical.
01:10:25Tedious and brief.
01:10:27No, no, no, no, my noble lord, it's not for you.
01:10:32We will hear it.
01:10:44Ah, hard-handed folk that work in Athens here,
01:10:47which never labored in their minds till now.
01:11:04If we offend, it is with our goodwill
01:11:10that you should think we come not to offend but with goodwill.
01:11:15To show our simple skill.
01:11:18That is the true beginning of our end.
01:11:23Consider then, we come,
01:11:27but in despite,
01:11:28we do not come as minding to content you.
01:11:31Our true intent is,
01:11:34all for your delight we are not here,
01:11:39that you should here repent you.
01:11:43The actors are at hand,
01:11:46and by their show,
01:11:48you shall know all
01:11:50that you are like to know.
01:12:00She hath read her prologue like a rough cult.
01:12:03She knows not to stop.
01:12:05Her speech was like a tangled chain,
01:12:07nothing impaired,
01:12:08but all disordered.
01:12:12Who is next?
01:12:38In this same interlude,
01:12:41it doth befall that I,
01:12:43one snout by name,
01:12:45present a wall,
01:12:47and such a wall as I would have you think
01:12:50that had in it a crannied hole or chink
01:12:53through which the lovers,
01:12:56Pyramus and Thisbe,
01:12:57did whisper often,
01:12:59very secretly.
01:13:01This loam,
01:13:02this rough cast,
01:13:03and this stone doth show
01:13:05that I am that same wall.
01:13:07The truth is so.
01:13:17O grim-looked night,
01:13:20O night with hue so black,
01:13:23O night,
01:13:24whichever art when day is not,
01:13:27O night,
01:13:28O night,
01:13:29alack,
01:13:30alack,
01:13:31alack,
01:13:32I fear my Thisbe's promise
01:13:34is forgot,
01:13:35and thou,
01:13:36O wall,
01:13:37O sweet,
01:13:39O lovely wall,
01:13:40which standest between
01:13:42her father's ground and mine.
01:13:45Thou wall,
01:13:46O wall,
01:13:47O sweet and lovely wall,
01:13:49show me thy chink
01:13:51to blink through
01:13:52with mine eye.
01:13:56Thanks,
01:13:57courteous wall.
01:13:58Jove shield thee well for this.
01:14:02What see I?
01:14:04No Thisbe do I see.
01:14:06O wicked wall,
01:14:08through whom I see no bliss.
01:14:10Cursed be thy stones
01:14:11for thus deceiving me.
01:14:13The wall,
01:14:14methinks being sensible,
01:14:15should curse again.
01:14:17No,
01:14:17in truth,
01:14:18sir,
01:14:18he should not.
01:14:21Hmm?
01:14:23Deceiving me
01:14:24is Thisbe's cue.
01:14:25She is to enter now,
01:14:26and I am to spy her
01:14:27through the wall.
01:14:30You shall see.
01:14:31Well,
01:14:31Pat,
01:14:31as I told you.
01:14:32No, no, no,
01:14:32bottom.
01:14:33Yonder she comes.
01:14:34Bottom,
01:14:34bottom.
01:14:36Yonder she comes.
01:14:39Oh,
01:14:40where is Pyramus,
01:14:42most lily-white of you?
01:14:47Full oftest thou heard
01:14:48my moans
01:14:48for part of my home.
01:14:51My cherry lips
01:14:51often kissed
01:14:52thy stones,
01:14:53thy stones
01:14:54with lime
01:14:55and hair
01:14:56knit up in me.
01:14:57I see a voice.
01:14:58Now,
01:14:58when I to the chink
01:14:59to spy,
01:15:00and I can hear
01:15:00my Thisbe's face.
01:15:04Thisbe!
01:15:05My love!
01:15:07Thou art,
01:15:08my love,
01:15:08I think.
01:15:09Oh,
01:15:09kiss me
01:15:10through the whole
01:15:11of this vile wall.
01:15:12All right.
01:15:14No,
01:15:14I can't really do it.
01:15:15I can't do it.
01:15:15I kiss the walls
01:15:17whole,
01:15:18not your lips
01:15:19at all.
01:15:19Wilt thou
01:15:20at Ninny's tomb
01:15:21Ninny's tomb
01:15:22meet me
01:15:23straightway?
01:15:24Tide life,
01:15:25tide death.
01:15:26I come without delay.
01:15:28Ninny's tomb,
01:15:29I know.
01:15:31Thus
01:15:31have I
01:15:32wall,
01:15:33my part
01:15:33discharges so,
01:15:35and being done,
01:15:36thus wall,
01:15:37away doth go.
01:15:39Right.
01:15:51all my feet now.
01:15:54This is the silliest stuff
01:15:56that I have ever heard.
01:15:58Ha!
01:15:58I wonder if the lion
01:16:00we speak.
01:16:00One lion may,
01:16:02when many asses do.
01:16:03Ha!
01:16:05You ladies,
01:16:07you whose gentle hearts
01:16:08do fear
01:16:09the smallest,
01:16:10monstrous mouth
01:16:12that creeps
01:16:13on floor
01:16:13may now perchance
01:16:15both quake
01:16:16and tremble here
01:16:17when lion rough
01:16:18in wildest rage
01:16:20doth roar!
01:16:23Then know that I
01:16:24a snug,
01:16:24the joiner am.
01:16:26It's me,
01:16:27I'm snug.
01:16:28I'm snug.
01:16:28Get on with it.
01:16:31A lion fell,
01:16:33nor else
01:16:33no lion's dam.
01:16:35For if I should
01:16:36as lion
01:16:37come in strife
01:16:38into this place
01:16:39to a pity
01:16:40on my life.
01:16:44This lanthorn
01:16:46doth the horned
01:16:47moon present.
01:16:49He should have
01:16:49worn the horns
01:16:50on his head.
01:16:57This lanthorn
01:16:58doth the horned
01:17:00moon present.
01:17:01He is no crescent
01:17:02and his horns
01:17:03are invisible
01:17:03within the circumference.
01:17:05This lanthorn
01:17:06doth the horned
01:17:07moon present
01:17:07myself the man
01:17:09in the moon
01:17:09to seem to be.
01:17:11Ah, this is
01:17:12the greatest error
01:17:12of all the rest.
01:17:14The man should be
01:17:14in the lantern.
01:17:15How is it else
01:17:16the man in the moon?
01:17:16All I have to say
01:17:17is to tell you
01:17:18this lantern is the moon.
01:17:19I am the man
01:17:20in the moon,
01:17:21this thorn bush
01:17:22my thorn bush
01:17:23and this dog
01:17:23my dog.
01:17:34this is old
01:17:35minis too.
01:17:36Linus.
01:17:37But where is my love?
01:17:40Oh!
01:17:41Ah!
01:17:47Well, road line,
01:17:48well run,
01:17:49Thisbe.
01:17:52Well shone moon,
01:17:55well most line.
01:17:59Ah, and then came
01:18:01Pyramus
01:18:02and so the lion vanished.
01:18:09Sweet moon,
01:18:11I thank thee
01:18:12for thy sunny beams.
01:18:14I thank thee moon
01:18:15for shining now
01:18:16so bright.
01:18:18For by thy gracious
01:18:19golden glittering gleams
01:18:21I trust to take
01:18:23of truest Thisbe's sight.
01:18:26But stay.
01:18:27Oh, spite.
01:18:28But mark,
01:18:29poor night.
01:18:30What dreadful dole
01:18:31is here?
01:18:32Eyes,
01:18:33do you see?
01:18:34How can it be?
01:18:36Oh, dainty duck.
01:18:38Oh, dear.
01:18:40Thy mantle good.
01:18:42What?
01:18:43Stained with blood?
01:18:45Approach,
01:18:46ye furies,
01:18:47fail.
01:18:49Oh, face,
01:18:50come,
01:18:51come,
01:18:52cut thread and throm,
01:18:54quail,
01:18:55crush,
01:18:56conclude,
01:18:57and quell.
01:18:58Be sure of my heart,
01:19:00but I pity the man.
01:19:03Come,
01:19:04dear,
01:19:05come far,
01:19:07out sword,
01:19:09and wound
01:19:09the pap of Pyramus.
01:19:12Ay,
01:19:13that left pap
01:19:14where heart
01:19:15doth
01:19:16hold.
01:19:17Thus
01:19:18die I.
01:19:20Thus!
01:19:23Thus!
01:19:25Thus!
01:19:26Thus!
01:19:28Thus!
01:19:31Thus!
01:19:37Now!
01:19:39Thus!
01:19:40Now!
01:19:41Thus!
01:19:42my flame, my soul is in the sky. Tom, lose thy life. Moon, take thy flight. Take thy flight.
01:19:58No, Tom. Tom! Tom! Tom! Tom! Tom! Tom!
01:20:42No die, but an ace for him. Oh, here she comes, and her passion ends the play. Oh, she has
01:20:49spied him already with those sweet eyes.
01:20:53Asleep, my love. What? Dead, my dove. Oh, Pyramus, arise. Speak. Speak. Quite dumb. Dead. Dead.
01:21:14Dead. The tomb must cover thy sweet eyes. These lily lips. This cherry nose. These yellow
01:21:32cows, their cheeks are gone. Are gone.
01:22:01Lovers, make money. His eyes were green as leaves.
01:22:06Oh, sisters three, come to me with hands as pale as milk, lay them in gorse, and she was sure
01:22:14with shears his thread of silk.
01:22:37Tongue, not a word, come trusty sword, come blade, my breast in brute, and farewell friends, thus this be ends,
01:22:59adieu, adieu.
01:23:07Adieu.
01:23:38Adieu.
01:23:40Adieu.
01:23:47Adieu.
01:23:53Adieu.
01:23:56Adieu.
01:23:58Adieu.
01:23:58Adieu.
01:23:58Adieu.
01:23:59Adieu.
01:24:05Adieu.
01:24:12Adieu.
01:24:21Adieu.
01:24:30Adieu.
01:24:31Adieu.
01:24:48Adieu.
01:24:49Adieu.
01:24:59Adieu.
01:25:02Adieu.
01:25:04Adieu.
01:25:07Adieu.
01:25:14Adieu.
01:25:15Adieu.
01:25:17Adieu.
01:25:28Adieu.
01:25:29Adieu.
01:25:35Adieu.
01:25:42Adieu.
01:25:50Adieu.
01:25:52Adieu.
01:25:55Adieu.
01:25:55Adieu.
01:25:56Adieu.
01:25:58Adieu.
01:25:58Adieu.
01:26:02Adieu.
01:26:04Adieu.
01:26:09Adieu.
01:26:09Adieu.
01:26:20Never harm, no spell, no charm.
01:26:24Come, my lovely lady knight.
01:26:40Hand in hand with fairy grace, will we sing and bless this place?
01:27:33Now the people of it blessed, ever, shall in safety rest.
01:27:41Now the world's taking the present of us, in the grave and the poor and the poor.
01:27:47We only know how you come and live our world.
01:27:52And we come, we only can be with us.
01:27:58And we can see, in the deep we need.
01:28:04Sweet lover of the spring.
01:28:18Sweet lover of the spring.
01:28:34If we shadows have offended, think but this and all is mended.
01:28:39Then you have but slumbered here while these visions did appear.
01:28:44And this weak and idle theme, no more yielding but a dream.
01:28:49Oh, gentles, do not reprehend.
01:28:52If you pardon, we will mend.
01:28:55Else, da park, a liar call.
01:28:58So good night unto you all.
01:29:00Give me your hands if we be friends.
01:29:03And Robin shall with store amends.
01:29:06Oh, gentles, do not reprehend.
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