| Code |
Character |
Lines |
First Line |
|
| M-500 |
Brabantio | 21 |
Oh thou foule Theefe, |
|
| M-501 |
Iago | 29 |
And what's he then, (That saies I play the Villaine?) |
|
| M-502 |
Iago | 19 |
How poore are they that have not Patience? |
|
| M-503 |
Iago | 27 |
O Sir content you. |
|
| M-504 |
Iago | 27 |
That Cassio loves her, I do well beleev't: |
|
| M-505 |
Iago | 22 |
Thus do I ever make my Foole, my purse: |
|
| M-506 |
Iago | 14 (prose) |
Vertue? A figge, 'tis in our selves that we are |
|
| M-507 |
Othello | 23 |
Behold, I have a weapon: |
|
| M-508 |
Othello | 23 |
Had it pleas’d Heaven, (I heere looke grim as hell.) |
|
| M-509 |
Othello | 43 |
Her Father lov'd me, oft invited me: |
|
| M-510 |
Othello | 23 |
It is the Cause, it is the Cause (my Soule) |
|
| M-511 |
Othello | 20 |
Soft you; a word or two before you goe: (I have done the State some service, and they know't:) |
|
| M-512 |
Othello | 22 |
That’s a fault: That Handkerchiefe (’Tis true: There’s Magicke in the web of it:) |
|
| M-513 |
Othello | 22 |
This Fellow’s of exceeding honesty, (Must be to loath her. Oh Curse of Marriage!) |
|
| M-514 |
Othello | 17 |
Why? why is this? (Think'st thou, I'ld make a Life of Jealousie;) |
|
| M-515 |
Rodorigo | 21 |
Sir, I will answere any thing. But I beseech you (To the grosse claspes of a Lascivious Moore:) |
|
| W-500 |
Æmilia | 20 |
Yes, a dozen: and as many to'th'vantage, as (But I do thinke it is their Husbands faults) |
|
| W-501 |
Desdemona | 17 |
Alas Iago, (What shall I do to win my Lord againe?) |
|
| W-502 |
Desdemona | 20 |
He saies he will returne incontinent, (My Mother had a Maid call'd Barbarie) |
|