Campanadas a medianoche
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:16:12
Let there be no noise made,
my gentle friends.

:16:15
Unless some dull and favourable
hand will whisper...

:16:18
...music to my weary spirit.
:16:22
Call for the music
in the other room!

:16:31
I fear the people...
:16:33
...for, it hast seen montruos
deliveries from Nature.

:16:38
Seasons hast changed their
weather, as if the year...

:16:41
...would have leaped some
months.

:16:42
The river hardly hath any
water running...

:16:47
...and the old wise man, he who
speak'st of past times...

:16:51
...says the same
happened but once before...

:16:53
...when' the great king
Edward was sick, close to death.

:17:04
How many of my poorest
subjects are at this hour asleep?

:17:11
O, gentle sleep, Nature's
soft nurse...

:17:17
...how I have frighted thee,
that thou no more wilt weigh...

:17:21
...my eyelids down, and steep
my senses in forgetfulness?

:17:26
Why, rather, sleep, liest
thou in smoky cribs, upon'...

:17:30
...uneasy pallets stretching thee,
and hush'd with buzzing night...

:17:34
...flies to thy slumber,
than in the perfum'd chambers...

:17:38
...of the great, under canopies
of costly state, and lull'd with...

:17:42
...sounds of sweetest melody?
:17:46
O, thou dull god, why liest
thou with the vile...

:17:50
...in loathsome beds, and leav'st
the kingly couch a watch-case...

:17:54
...or a common larum bell?
:17:58
Wilt thou upon the high mast
seal up the ship-boy's eyes...


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