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The Lamp And The Bell: A Drama In Five Acts, a play by Edna St Vincent Millay

Prologue

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_ [Anselmo and Luigi]

ANSELMO.
What think you,--lies there any truth in the tale
The King will wed again?

LUIGI.
Why not, Anselmo?
A king is no less lonely than a collier
When his wife dies, And his young daughter there,
For all her being a princess, is no less
A motherless child, and cries herself to sleep
Night after night, as noisily as any,
You may be sure.

ANSELMO.
A motherless child loves not,
They say, the second mother. Though the King
May find him comfort in another face,--
As it is well he should--the child, I fancy,
Is not so lonely as she is distraught
With grief for the dead Queen, and will not lightly
Be parted from her tears.

LUIGI.
If tales be true,
The woman hath a daughter, near the age
Of his, will be a playmate for the Princess.

CURTAIN _

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