| [00:00.30] | |
| [00:00.31] | Have you heard any imputation to the contrary? |
| [00:02.97] | Oh, no, no, no, no, no. |
| [00:04.80] | My reason in saying that he's a good man is to have you understand me that he is sufficient |
| [00:12.79] | 3,000 ducats. I think I may take his bond |
| [00:24.39] | With any loan, things can go wrong |
| [00:26.92] | Ships can sink |
| [00:28.34] | And that is precisely why anyone who lends money to a merchant |
| [00:32.37] | if only for the duration of an ocean voyage, needs to be compensated. |
| [00:36.53] | We usually call the compensation interest, the amount paid to the lender over and above the sum lent or "principal" |
| [00:48.09] | Overseas trade of the sort that Venice depended on couldn't operate without such transactions |
| [00:53.50] | And they remain the foundation of international trade to this day |
| [01:06.17] | But why does Shylock turn out to be such a villain |
| [01:10.29] | demanding literally "a pound of flesh", in effect Antonio's death if he can't fulfill his obligations? |
| [01:18.30] | Why is Shakespeare's moneylender so heartless, |
| [01:22.01] | the original of that bloodsucking financier who recurs time and again in western literature? |
| [01:29.09] |