Act,  scene

 1    1,   1|         your house, I tell you, quite disgusted;~You do the opposite
 2    1,   5|        good warm bed,~And slept quite undisturbed until next morning.~
 3    1,   6|         you candidly that she’s quite right.~Was such infatuation
 4    1,   6|     converse has transformed me quite; he weans~My heart from
 5    1,   6| fashioned on this model;~You’re quite sincere in boasting of his
 6    1,   6|         brother-inlaw, have you quite done?~Cleante~Yes.~Orgon~
 7    2,   2|         I fear his faith is not quite sound.~I havent noticed
 8    2,   2|      graces,~And that is riches quite beyond compare.~This match
 9    2,   3|     father is a crazy fool,~And quite bewitched with his Tartuffe?
10    2,   3|     help break off the match. I quite give in,~I’m ready to do
11    2,   4|   Valere~Madam, a piece of newsquite new to me—~Has just come
12    2,   4|        here.~Valere~No, no, I’m quite beside myself.~Dont hinder
13    2,   4|     scrape.~[To Valere]~Are you quite mad, to quarrel with her
14    2,   4|     Dorine [to Mariane]~Are you quite mad, to get in such a passion?~
15    3,   3|      Elmire [sitting down also]~Quite well; the fever soon let
16    3,   3|        is just a word from you,~Quite frank and open, hiding nothing
17    3,   3| especial favour,~To lay my soul quite open to your eyes,~And swear
18    4,   1|       house.~After his conduct, quite unparalleled,~All intercourse
19    4,   1|     heir?~If Heaven has made it quite impossible~Damis and you
20    4,   3|         Your blindness makes me quite astounded at you.~You are
21    4,   3|       gentle-natured;~Nor can I quite approve those savage prudes~
22    4,   3|   endured too long already,~And quite too long you’ve branded
23    4,   4|     when you think they’ve gone quite far enough,~It is for you
24    4,   5|         if I may express myself quite plainly,~I cannot trust
25    4,   5|      hard to come to this;~’Tis quite against my will I go so
26    4,   6|       the end, to see, and make quite certain,~And dont believe
27    4,   7|      Elmire [to Tartuffe]~’Twas quite against my character to
28    5,   1|         So! There you go again, quite off the handle!~In nothing
29    5,   3|       you’ll make me say things quite improper.~Madame Pernelle~
30    5,   3|    never should have pushed him quite so far.~Orgon~True; yet
31    5,   5|       Dorine [to Orgon]~You are quite wrong, you have no right
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