Campanadas a medianoche
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:28:07
Harry...
:28:11
...I do not only marvel where
thou spendest thy time...

:28:16
...but also how thou art
accompanied.

:28:18
He doth it as like one of these
harlotry players as ever I see!

:28:23
Quiet, hostess!
That thou art my son, I have...

:28:26
...partly thy mother's word,
partly my own opinion...

:28:30
...but chiefly a villanous trick
of thine eye, and a foolish...

:28:34
...hanging of thy nether lip.
:28:37
Why, being son to me...
:28:40
...art thou so pointed at?
:28:43
There is a thing, which thou
hast often heard of...

:28:46
...the pitch, doth defile, so doth
the company thou keepest.

:28:51
And yet, there is a virtuous
man whom I have often noted...

:28:54
...in thy company,
I know not his name.

:28:57
What manner of man...?
:29:00
A goodly portly man, and a
corpulent, of a cheerful look...

:29:04
...a pleasing eye and a most
noble carriage.

:29:07
As I think his age,
some 50 or 60...

:29:11
...and now I remember me,
his name is...

:29:13
Falstaff.
:29:15
If that man should be lewdly
given, he deceiveth me...

:29:19
...for I see virtue in his looks,
him keep with...

:29:22
...the rest banish.
- Dost thou speak like a king?

:29:27
Do thou stand for me,
and I'll play my father.

:29:30
Depose me?
:29:34
- Well, here I am set.
- And here I stand.

:29:37
- Harry, whence come you?
- My noble lord, from Eastcheap.

:29:40
The complaints I hear of
thee are grievous.

:29:43
They are false. I'll trickle
ye for a young prince, i'faith.

:29:46
There is a devil haunts thee, in
the likeness of a fat old man...

:29:50
...a tun of man is thy
companion.

:29:53
Why dost thou converse with
that trunk of humours...

:29:56
...that bolting-hutch of
beastliness...

:29:59
...that huge bombard of sack...

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