Shakespeare Plays and Sonnets
King Henry the Sixth, Part Two
Players:
- King Henry the Sixth
- Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester
- Cardinal Beaufort
- Richard Plantagenet, Duke of York
- Edward, Earl of March
- Richard, Duke of Gloucester
- Duke of Somerset
- Duke of Suffolk
- Duke of Buckingham
- Lord Clifford
- Young Clifford
- Earl of Salisbury
- Earl of Warwick
- Lord Scales
- Lord Say
- Sir Humphrey Stafford
- Sir John Stanley
- Sir William Vaux
- Matthew Goffe
- Walter Whitmore
- A Sea Captain, Master, and Master's Mate
- Two Gentlemen, prisoners with Suffolk
- John Hume and John Southwell
- Bolingbroke
- Thomas Horner
- Peter
- Clerk of Chatham
- Mayor of St. Alban's
- Simpcox
- Jack Cade
- George Bevis
- John Holland
- Dick the Butcher,Smith the Weaver, Michael, etc.
- Alexander Iden
- Two Murderers
- Margaret, Queen of King Henry
- Margery Jourdain
- Wife of Simpcox
- Lords, Ladies, and Attendants
- Herald, Petitioner, Aldermen
- A Beadle, Sheriff, and Officers
- Citizens, Prentices, Falconers, Guards, Soldiers, Messengers, etc.
- A Spirit
ACT I, SCENE I.
London. The palace.
[Flourish of trumpets: then hautboys.
Enter KING HENRY VI, GLOUCESTER, SALISBURY, WARWICK, and
CARDINAL, on the one side; QUEEN MARGARET, SUFFOLK, YORK,
SOMERSET, and BUCKINGHAM, on the other]
SUFFOLK:
As by your high imperial majesty
- I had in charge at my depart for France,
- As procurator to your excellence,
- To marry Princess Margaret for your grace,
- So, in the famous ancient city, Tours,
- In presence of the Kings of France and Sicil,
- The Dukes of Orleans, Calaber, Bretagne and Alencon,
- Seven earls, twelve barons and twenty reverend bishops,
- I have perform'd my task and was espoused:
- And humbly now upon my bended knee,
- In sight of England and her lordly peers,
- Deliver up my title in the queen
- To your most gracious hands, that are the substance
- Of that great shadow I did represent;
- The happiest gift that ever marquess gave,
- The fairest queen that ever king received.
KING HENRY VI:
Suffolk, arise. Welcome, Queen Margaret:
- I can express no kinder sign of love
- Than this kind kiss. O Lord, that lends me life,
- Lend me a heart replete with thankfulness!
- For thou hast given me in this beauteous face
- A world of earthly blessings to my soul,
- If sympathy of love unite our thoughts.
QUEEN MARGARET:
Great King of England and my gracious lord,
- The mutual conference that my mind hath had,
- By day, by night, waking and in my dreams,
- In courtly company or at my beads,
- With you, mine alder-liefest sovereign,
- Makes me the bolder to salute my king
- With ruder terms, such as my wit affords
- And over-joy of heart doth minister.
KING HENRY VI:
Her sight did ravish; but her grace in speech,
- Her words y-clad with wisdom's majesty,
- Makes me from wondering fall to weeping joys;
- Such is the fulness of my heart's content.
- Lords, with one cheerful voice welcome my love.
All:
[Kneeling]
- Long live Queen Margaret, England's
- happiness!
QUEEN MARGARET:
We thank you all.
-
[Flourish]
SUFFOLK:
My lord protector, so it please your grace,
- Here are the articles of contracted peace
- Between our sovereign and the French king Charles,
- For eighteen months concluded by consent.
GLOUCESTER:
[Reads]
- 'Imprimis, it is agreed between the French
- king Charles, and William de la Pole, Marquess of
- Suffolk, ambassador for Henry King of England, that
- the said Henry shall espouse the Lady Margaret,
- daughter unto Reignier King of Naples, Sicilia and
- Jerusalem, and crown her Queen of England ere the
- thirtieth of May next ensuing. Item, that the duchy
- of Anjou and the county of Maine shall be released
- and delivered to the king her father'--
-
[Lets the paper fall]
KING HENRY VI:
Uncle, how now!
GLOUCESTER:
Pardon me, gracious lord;
- Some sudden qualm hath struck me at the heart
- And dimm'd mine eyes, that I can read no further.
KING HENRY VI:
Uncle of Winchester, I pray, read on.
CARDINAL:
[Reads]
- 'Item, It is further agreed between them,
- that the duchies of Anjou and Maine shall be
- released and delivered over to the king her father,
- and she sent over of the King of England's own
- proper cost and charges, without having any dowry.'
GLOUCESTER:
Brave peers of England, pillars of the state,
- To you Duke Humphrey must unload his grief,
- Your grief, the common grief of all the land.
- What! did my brother Henry spend his youth,
- His valour, coin and people, in the wars?
- Did he so often lodge in open field,
- In winter's cold and summer's parching heat,
- To conquer France, his true inheritance?
- And did my brother Bedford toil his wits,
- To keep by policy what Henry got?
- Have you yourselves, Somerset, Buckingham,
- Brave York, Salisbury, and victorious Warwick,
- Received deep scars in France and Normandy?
- Or hath mine uncle Beaufort and myself,
- With all the learned council of the realm,
- Studied so long, sat in the council-house
- Early and late, debating to and fro
- How France and Frenchmen might be kept in awe,
- And had his highness in his infancy
- Crowned in Paris in despite of foes?
- And shall these labours and these honours die?
- Shall Henry's conquest, Bedford's vigilance,
- Your deeds of war and all our counsel die?
- O peers of England, shameful is this league!
- Fatal this marriage, cancelling your fame,
- Blotting your names from books of memory,
- Razing the characters of your renown,
- Defacing monuments of conquer'd France,
- Undoing all, as all had never been!
CARDINAL:
Nephew, what means this passionate discourse,
- This peroration with such circumstance?
- For France, 'tis ours; and we will keep it still.
GLOUCESTER:
Ay, uncle, we will keep it, if we can;
- But now it is impossible we should:
- Suffolk, the new-made duke that rules the roast,
- Hath given the duchy of Anjou and Maine
- Unto the poor King Reignier, whose large style
- Agrees not with the leanness of his purse.
SALISBURY:
Now, by the death of Him that died for all,
- These counties were the keys of Normandy.
- But wherefore weeps Warwick, my valiant son?
WARWICK:
For grief that they are past recovery:
- For, were there hope to conquer them again,
- My sword should shed hot blood, mine eyes no tears.
- Anjou and Maine! myself did win them both;
- Those provinces these arms of mine did conquer:
- And are the cities, that I got with wounds,
- Delivered up again with peaceful words?
- Mort Dieu!
YORK:
For Suffolk's duke, may he be suffocate,
- That dims the honour of this warlike isle!
- France should have torn and rent my very heart,
- Before I would have yielded to this league.
- I never read but England's kings have had
- Large sums of gold and dowries with their wives:
- And our King Henry gives away his own,
- To match with her that brings no vantages.
GLOUCESTER:
A proper jest, and never heard before,
- That Suffolk should demand a whole fifteenth
- For costs and charges in transporting her!
- She should have stayed in France and starved
- in France, Before--
CARDINAL:
My Lord of Gloucester, now ye grow too hot:
- It was the pleasure of my lord the King.
GLOUCESTER:
My Lord of Winchester, I know your mind;
- 'Tis not my speeches that you do mislike,
- But 'tis my presence that doth trouble ye.
- Rancour will out: proud prelate, in thy face
- I see thy fury: if I longer stay,
- We shall begin our ancient bickerings.
- Lordings, farewell; and say, when I am gone,
- I prophesied France will be lost ere long.
-
[Exit]
CARDINAL:
So, there goes our protector in a rage.
- 'Tis known to you he is mine enemy,
- Nay, more, an enemy unto you all,
- And no great friend, I fear me, to the king.
- Consider, lords, he is the next of blood,
- And heir apparent to the English crown:
- Had Henry got an empire by his marriage,
- And all the wealthy kingdoms of the west,
- There's reason he should be displeased at it.
- Look to it, lords! let not his smoothing words
- Bewitch your hearts; be wise and circumspect.
- What though the common people favour him,
- Calling him 'Humphrey, the good Duke of
- Gloucester,'
- Clapping their hands, and crying with loud voice,
- 'Jesu maintain your royal excellence!'
- With 'God preserve the good Duke Humphrey!'
- I fear me, lords, for all this flattering gloss,
- He will be found a dangerous protector.
BUCKINGHAM:
Why should he, then, protect our sovereign,
- He being of age to govern of himself?
- Cousin of Somerset, join you with me,
- And all together, with the Duke of Suffolk,
- We'll quickly hoise Duke Humphrey from his seat.
CARDINAL:
This weighty business will not brook delay:
- I'll to the Duke of Suffolk presently.
-
[Exit]
SOMERSET:
Cousin of Buckingham, though Humphrey's pride
- And greatness of his place be grief to us,
- Yet let us watch the haughty cardinal:
- His insolence is more intolerable
- Than all the princes in the land beside:
- If Gloucester be displaced, he'll be protector.
SALISBURY:
Pride went before, ambition follows him.
- While these do labour for their own preferment,
- Behoves it us to labour for the realm.
- I never saw but Humphrey Duke of Gloucester
- Did bear him like a noble gentleman.
- Oft have I seen the haughty cardinal,
- More like a soldier than a man o' the church,
- As stout and proud as he were lord of all,
- Swear like a ruffian and demean himself
- Unlike the ruler of a commonweal.
- Warwick, my son, the comfort of my age,
- Thy deeds, thy plainness and thy housekeeping,
- Hath won the greatest favour of the commons,
- Excepting none but good Duke Humphrey:
- And, brother York, thy acts in Ireland,
- In bringing them to civil discipline,
- Thy late exploits done in the heart of France,
- When thou wert regent for our sovereign,
- Have made thee fear'd and honour'd of the people:
- Join we together, for the public good,
- In what we can, to bridle and suppress
- The pride of Suffolk and the cardinal,
- With Somerset's and Buckingham's ambition;
- And, as we may, cherish Duke Humphrey's deeds,
- While they do tend the profit of the land.
WARWICK:
So God help Warwick, as he loves the land,
- And common profit of his country!
YORK:
[Aside]
- And so says York, for he hath greatest cause.
SALISBURY:
Then let's make haste away, and look unto the main.
YORK:
Anjou and Maine are given to the French;
- Paris is lost; the state of Normandy
- Stands on a tickle point, now they are gone:
- Suffolk concluded on the articles,
- The peers agreed, and Henry was well pleased
- To change two dukedoms for a duke's fair daughter.
- I cannot blame them all: what is't to them?
- 'Tis thine they give away, and not their own.
- Pirates may make cheap pennyworths of their pillage
- And purchase friends and give to courtezans,
- Still revelling like lords till all be gone;
- While as the silly owner of the goods
- Weeps over them and wrings his hapless hands
- And shakes his head and trembling stands aloof,
- While all is shared and all is borne away,
- Ready to starve and dare not touch his own:
- So York must sit and fret and bite his tongue,
- While his own lands are bargain'd for and sold.
- Methinks the realms of England, France and Ireland
- Bear that proportion to my flesh and blood
- As did the fatal brand Althaea burn'd
- Unto the prince's heart of Calydon.
- Anjou and Maine both given unto the French!
- Cold news for me, for I had hope of France,
- Even as I have of fertile England's soil.
- A day will come when York shall claim his own;
- And therefore I will take the Nevils' parts
- And make a show of love to proud Duke Humphrey,
- And, when I spy advantage, claim the crown,
- For that's the golden mark I seek to hit:
- Nor shall proud Lancaster usurp my right,
- Nor hold the sceptre in his childish fist,
- Nor wear the diadem upon his head,
- Whose church-like humours fits not for a crown.
- Then, York, be still awhile, till time do serve:
- Watch thou and wake when others be asleep,
- To pry into the secrets of the state;
- Till Henry, surfeiting in joys of love,
- With his new bride and England's dear-bought queen,
- And Humphrey with the peers be fall'n at jars:
- Then will I raise aloft the milk-white rose,
- With whose sweet smell the air shall be perfumed;
- And in my standard bear the arms of York
- To grapple with the house of Lancaster;
- And, force perforce, I'll make him yield the crown,
- Whose bookish rule hath pull'd fair England down.
-
[Exit]
ACT I, SCENE II.
GLOUCESTER'S house.
[Enter GLOUCESTER and his DUCHESS]
DUCHESS:
Why droops my lord, like over-ripen'd corn,
- Hanging the head at Ceres' plenteous load?
- Why doth the great Duke Humphrey knit his brows,
- As frowning at the favours of the world?
- Why are thine eyes fixed to the sullen earth,
- Gazing on that which seems to dim thy sight?
- What seest thou there? King Henry's diadem,
- Enchased with all the honours of the world?
- If so, gaze on, and grovel on thy face,
- Until thy head be circled with the same.
- Put forth thy hand, reach at the glorious gold.
- What, is't too short? I'll lengthen it with mine:
- And, having both together heaved it up,
- We'll both together lift our heads to heaven,
- And never more abase our sight so low
- As to vouchsafe one glance unto the ground.
GLOUCESTER:
O Nell, sweet Nell, if thou dost love thy lord,
- Banish the canker of ambitious thoughts.
- And may that thought, when I imagine ill
- Against my king and nephew, virtuous Henry,
- Be my last breathing in this mortal world!
- My troublous dream this night doth make me sad.
DUCHESS:
What dream'd my lord? tell me, and I'll requite it
- With sweet rehearsal of my morning's dream.
GLOUCESTER:
Methought this staff, mine office-badge in court,
- Was broke in twain; by whom I have forgot,
- But, as I think, it was by the cardinal;
- And on the pieces of the broken wand
- Were placed the heads of Edmund Duke of Somerset,
- And William de la Pole, first duke of Suffolk.
- This was my dream: what it doth bode, God knows.
DUCHESS:
Tut, this was nothing but an argument
- That he that breaks a stick of Gloucester's grove
- Shall lose his head for his presumption.
- But list to me, my Humphrey, my sweet duke:
- Methought I sat in seat of majesty
- In the cathedral church of Westminster,
- And in that chair where kings and queens are crown'd;
- Where Henry and dame Margaret kneel'd to me
- And on my head did set the diadem.
GLOUCESTER:
Nay, Eleanor, then must I chide outright:
- Presumptuous dame, ill-nurtured Eleanor,
- Art thou not second woman in the realm,
- And the protector's wife, beloved of him?
- Hast thou not worldly pleasure at command,
- Above the reach or compass of thy thought?
- And wilt thou still be hammering treachery,
- To tumble down thy husband and thyself
- From top of honour to disgrace's feet?
- Away from me, and let me hear no more!
DUCHESS:
What, what, my lord! are you so choleric
- With Eleanor, for telling but her dream?
- Next time I'll keep my dreams unto myself,
- And not be cheque'd.
GLOUCESTER:
Nay, be not angry; I am pleased again.
-
[Enter Messenger]
Messenger:
My lord protector, 'tis his highness' pleasure
- You do prepare to ride unto Saint Alban's,
- Where as the king and queen do mean to hawk.
GLOUCESTER:
I go. Come, Nell, thou wilt ride with us?
HUME:
Jesus preserve your royal majesty!
DUCHESS:
What say'st thou? majesty! I am but grace.
HUME:
But, by the grace of God, and Hume's advice,
- Your grace's title shall be multiplied.
DUCHESS:
What say'st thou, man? hast thou as yet conferr'd
- With Margery Jourdain, the cunning witch,
- With Roger Bolingbroke, the conjurer?
- And will they undertake to do me good?
HUME:
This they have promised, to show your highness
- A spirit raised from depth of under-ground,
- That shall make answer to such questions
- As by your grace shall be propounded him.
DUCHESS:
It is enough; I'll think upon the questions:
- When from St. Alban's we do make return,
- We'll see these things effected to the full.
- Here, Hume, take this reward; make merry, man,
- With thy confederates in this weighty cause.
-
[Exit]
HUME:
Hume must make merry with the duchess' gold;
- Marry, and shall. But how now, Sir John Hume!
- Seal up your lips, and give no words but mum:
- The business asketh silent secrecy.
- Dame Eleanor gives gold to bring the witch:
- Gold cannot come amiss, were she a devil.
- Yet have I gold flies from another coast;
- I dare not say, from the rich cardinal
- And from the great and new-made Duke of Suffolk,
- Yet I do find it so; for to be plain,
- They, knowing Dame Eleanor's aspiring humour,
- Have hired me to undermine the duchess
- And buz these conjurations in her brain.
- They say 'A crafty knave does need no broker;'
- Yet am I Suffolk and the cardinal's broker.
- Hume, if you take not heed, you shall go near
- To call them both a pair of crafty knaves.
- Well, so it stands; and thus, I fear, at last
- Hume's knavery will be the duchess' wreck,
- And her attainture will be Humphrey's fall:
- Sort how it will, I shall have gold for all.
-
[Exit]
ACT I, SCENE III.
The palace.
[Enter three or four Petitioners, PETER, the Armourer's man, being one]
First Petitioner:
My masters, let's stand close: my lord protector
- will come this way by and by, and then we may deliver
- our supplications in the quill.
PETER:
Here a' comes, methinks, and the queen with him.
- I'll be the first, sure.
Second Petitioner:
Come back, fool; this is the Duke of Suffolk, and
- not my lord protector.
SUFFOLK:
How now, fellow! would'st anything with me?
First Petitioner:
I pray, my lord, pardon me; I took ye for my lord
- protector.
QUEEN MARGARET:
[Reading]
- 'To my Lord Protector!' Are your
- supplications to his lordship? Let me see them:
- what is thine?
First Petitioner:
Mine is, an't please your grace, against John
- Goodman, my lord cardinal's man, for keeping my
- house, and lands, and wife and all, from me.
SUFFOLK:
Thy wife, too! that's some wrong, indeed. What's
- yours? What's here!
-
[Reads]
- 'Against the Duke of Suffolk, for enclosing the
- commons of Melford.' How now, sir knave!
Second Petitioner:
Alas, sir, I am but a poor petitioner of our whole township.
PETER:
[Giving his petition]
- Against my master, Thomas
- Horner, for saying that the Duke of York was rightful
- heir to the crown.
QUEEN MARGARET:
What sayst thou? did the Duke of York say he was
- rightful heir to the crown?
PETER:
That my master was? no, forsooth: my master said
- that he was, and that the king was an usurper.
QUEEN MARGARET:
And as for you, that love to be protected
- Under the wings of our protector's grace,
- Begin your suits anew, and sue to him.
-
[Tears the supplication]
- Away, base cullions! Suffolk, let them go.
All:
Come, let's be gone.
-
[Exeunt]
QUEEN MARGARET:
My Lord of Suffolk, say, is this the guise,
- Is this the fashion in the court of England?
- Is this the government of Britain's isle,
- And this the royalty of Albion's king?
- What shall King Henry be a pupil still
- Under the surly Gloucester's governance?
- Am I a queen in title and in style,
- And must be made a subject to a duke?
- I tell thee, Pole, when in the city Tours
- Thou ran'st a tilt in honour of my love
- And stolest away the ladies' hearts of France,
- I thought King Henry had resembled thee
- In courage, courtship and proportion:
- But all his mind is bent to holiness,
- To number Ave-Maries on his beads;
- His champions are the prophets and apostles,
- His weapons holy saws of sacred writ,
- His study is his tilt-yard, and his loves
- Are brazen images of canonized saints.
- I would the college of the cardinals
- Would choose him pope, and carry him to Rome,
- And set the triple crown upon his head:
- That were a state fit for his holiness.
SUFFOLK:
Madam, be patient: as I was cause
- Your highness came to England, so will I
- In England work your grace's full content.
QUEEN MARGARET:
Beside the haughty protector, have we Beaufort,
- The imperious churchman, Somerset, Buckingham,
- And grumbling York: and not the least of these
- But can do more in England than the king.
SUFFOLK:
And he of these that can do most of all
- Cannot do more in England than the Nevils:
- Salisbury and Warwick are no simple peers.
QUEEN MARGARET:
Not all these lords do vex me half so much
- As that proud dame, the lord protector's wife.
- She sweeps it through the court with troops of ladies,
- More like an empress than Duke Humphrey's wife:
- Strangers in court do take her for the queen:
- She bears a duke's revenues on her back,
- And in her heart she scorns our poverty:
- Shall I not live to be avenged on her?
- Contemptuous base-born callet as she is,
- She vaunted 'mongst her minions t'other day,
- The very train of her worst wearing gown
- Was better worth than all my father's lands,
- Till Suffolk gave two dukedoms for his daughter.
SUFFOLK:
Madam, myself have limed a bush for her,
- And placed a quire of such enticing birds,
- That she will light to listen to the lays,
- And never mount to trouble you again.
- So, let her rest: and, madam, list to me;
- For I am bold to counsel you in this.
- Although we fancy not the cardinal,
- Yet must we join with him and with the lords,
- Till we have brought Duke Humphrey in disgrace.
- As for the Duke of York, this late complaint
- Will make but little for his benefit.
- So, one by one, we'll weed them all at last,
- And you yourself shall steer the happy helm.
-
[Sound a sennet.]
-
[Enter KING HENRY VI, GLOUCESTER, CARDINAL, BUCKINGHAM, YORK,
SOMERSET, SALISBURY, WARWICK, and the DUCHESS]
KING HENRY VI:
For my part, noble lords, I care not which;
- Or Somerset or York, all's one to me.
YORK:
If York have ill demean'd himself in France,
- Then let him be denay'd the regentship.
SOMERSET:
If Somerset be unworthy of the place,
- Let York be regent; I will yield to him.
WARWICK:
Whether your grace be worthy, yea or no,
- Dispute not that: York is the worthier.
CARDINAL:
Ambitious Warwick, let thy betters speak.
WARWICK:
The cardinal's not my better in the field.
BUCKINGHAM:
All in this presence are thy betters, Warwick.
WARWICK:
Warwick may live to be the best of all.
SALISBURY:
Peace, son! and show some reason, Buckingham,
- Why Somerset should be preferred in this.
QUEEN MARGARET:
Because the king, forsooth, will have it so.
GLOUCESTER:
Madam, the king is old enough himself
- To give his censure: these are no women's matters.
QUEEN MARGARET:
If he be old enough, what needs your grace
- To be protector of his excellence?
GLOUCESTER:
Madam, I am protector of the realm;
- And, at his pleasure, will resign my place.
SUFFOLK:
Resign it then and leave thine insolence.
- Since thou wert king--as who is king but thou?--
- The commonwealth hath daily run to wreck;
- The Dauphin hath prevail'd beyond the seas;
- And all the peers and nobles of the realm
- Have been as bondmen to thy sovereignty.
CARDINAL:
The commons hast thou rack'd; the clergy's bags
- Are lank and lean with thy extortions.
SOMERSET:
Thy sumptuous buildings and thy wife's attire
- Have cost a mass of public treasury.
BUCKINGHAM:
Thy cruelty in execution
- Upon offenders, hath exceeded law,
- And left thee to the mercy of the law.
DUCHESS:
Was't I! yea, I it was, proud Frenchwoman:
- Could I come near your beauty with my nails,
- I'd set my ten commandments in your face.
KING HENRY VI:
Sweet aunt, be quiet; 'twas against her will.
DUCHESS:
Against her will! good king, look to't in time;
- She'll hamper thee, and dandle thee like a baby:
- Though in this place most master wear no breeches,
- She shall not strike Dame Eleanor unrevenged.
-
[Exit]
BUCKINGHAM:
Lord cardinal, I will follow Eleanor,
- And listen after Humphrey, how he proceeds:
- She's tickled now; her fume needs no spurs,
- She'll gallop far enough to her destruction.
-
[Exit]
-
[Re-enter GLOUCESTER]
GLOUCESTER:
Now, lords, my choler being over-blown
- With walking once about the quadrangle,
- I come to talk of commonwealth affairs.
- As for your spiteful false objections,
- Prove them, and I lie open to the law:
- But God in mercy so deal with my soul,
- As I in duty love my king and country!
- But, to the matter that we have in hand:
- I say, my sovereign, York is meetest man
- To be your regent in the realm of France.
SUFFOLK:
Before we make election, give me leave
- To show some reason, of no little force,
- That York is most unmeet of any man.
YORK:
I'll tell thee, Suffolk, why I am unmeet:
- First, for I cannot flatter thee in pride;
- Next, if I be appointed for the place,
- My Lord of Somerset will keep me here,
- Without discharge, money, or furniture,
- Till France be won into the Dauphin's hands:
- Last time, I danced attendance on his will
- Till Paris was besieged, famish'd, and lost.
WARWICK:
That can I witness; and a fouler fact
- Did never traitor in the land commit.
SUFFOLK:
Peace, headstrong Warwick!
SUFFOLK:
Because here is a man accused of treason:
- Pray God the Duke of York excuse himself!
YORK:
Doth any one accuse York for a traitor?
KING HENRY VI:
What mean'st thou, Suffolk; tell me, what are these?
SUFFOLK:
Please it your majesty, this is the man
- That doth accuse his master of high treason:
- His words were these: that Richard, Duke of York,
- Was rightful heir unto the English crown
- And that your majesty was a usurper.
KING HENRY VI:
Say, man, were these thy words?
HORNER:
An't shall please your majesty, I never said nor
- thought any such matter: God is my witness, I am
- falsely accused by the villain.
PETER:
By these ten bones, my lords, he did speak them to
- me in the garret one night, as we were scouring my
- Lord of York's armour.
YORK:
Base dunghill villain and mechanical,
- I'll have thy head for this thy traitor's speech.
- I do beseech your royal majesty,
- Let him have all the rigor of the law.
HORNER:
Alas, my lord, hang me, if ever I spake the words.
- My accuser is my 'prentice; and when I did correct
- him for his fault the other day, he did vow upon his
- knees he would be even with me: I have good
- witness of this: therefore I beseech your majesty,
- do not cast away an honest man for a villain's
- accusation.
KING HENRY VI:
Uncle, what shall we say to this in law?
GLOUCESTER:
This doom, my lord, if I may judge:
- Let Somerset be regent over the French,
- Because in York this breeds suspicion:
- And let these have a day appointed them
- For single combat in convenient place,
- For he hath witness of his servant's malice:
- This is the law, and this Duke Humphrey's doom.
SOMERSET:
I humbly thank your royal majesty.
HORNER:
And I accept the combat willingly.
PETER:
Alas, my lord, I cannot fight; for God's sake, pity
- my case. The spite of man prevaileth against me. O
- Lord, have mercy upon me! I shall never be able to
- fight a blow. O Lord, my heart!
GLOUCESTER:
Sirrah, or you must fight, or else be hang'd.
KING HENRY VI:
Away with them to prison; and the day of combat
- shall be the last of the next month. Come,
- Somerset, we'll see thee sent away.
-
[Flourish. Exeunt]
ACT I, SCENE IV.
GLOUCESTER's garden.
[Enter MARGARET JOURDAIN, HUME, SOUTHWELL, and BOLINGBROKE]
HUME:
Come, my masters; the duchess, I tell you, expects
- performance of your promises.
BOLINGBROKE:
Master Hume, we are therefore provided: will her
- ladyship behold and hear our exorcisms?
HUME:
Ay, what else? fear you not her courage.
DUCHESS:
Well said, my masters; and welcome all. To this
- gear the sooner the better.
BOLINGBROKE:
Patience, good lady; wizards know their times:
- Deep night, dark night, the silent of the night,
- The time of night when Troy was set on fire;
- The time when screech-owls cry and ban-dogs howl,
- And spirits walk and ghosts break up their graves,
- That time best fits the work we have in hand.
- Madam, sit you and fear not: whom we raise,
- We will make fast within a hallow'd verge.
-
[Here they do the ceremonies belonging, and make the circle;
BOLINGBROKE or SOUTHWELL reads, Conjuro te, & c.
It thunders and lightens terribly; then the Spirit riseth]
MARGARET JOURDAIN:
Asmath,
- By the eternal God, whose name and power
- Thou tremblest at, answer that I shall ask;
- For, till thou speak, thou shalt not pass from hence.
Spirit:
Ask what thou wilt. That I had said and done!
BOLINGBROKE:
'First of the king: what shall of him become?'
-
[Reading out of a paper]
BOLINGBROKE:
'What fates await the Duke of Suffolk?'
Spirit:
By water shall he die, and take his end.
BOLINGBROKE:
'What shall befall the Duke of Somerset?'
Spirit:
Let him shun castles;
- Safer shall he be upon the sandy plains
- Than where castles mounted stand.
- Have done, for more I hardly can endure.
YORK:
Lay hands upon these traitors and their trash.
- Beldam, I think we watch'd you at an inch.
- What, madam, are you there? the king and commonweal
- Are deeply indebted for this piece of pains:
- My lord protector will, I doubt it not,
- See you well guerdon'd for these good deserts.
DUCHESS:
Not half so bad as thine to England's king,
- Injurious duke, that threatest where's no cause.
BUCKINGHAM:
True, madam, none at all: what call you this?
- Away with them! let them be clapp'd up close.
- And kept asunder. You, madam, shall with us.
- Stafford, take her to thee.
-
[Exeunt above DUCHESS and HUME, guarded]
- We'll see your trinkets here all forthcoming.
- All, away!
-
[Exeunt guard with MARGARET JOURDAIN, SOUTHWELL, & c]
YORK:
Lord Buckingham, methinks, you watch'd her well:
- A pretty plot, well chosen to build upon!
- Now, pray, my lord, let's see the devil's writ.
- What have we here?
-
[Reads]
- 'The duke yet lives, that Henry shall depose;
- But him outlive, and die a violent death.'
- Why, this is just
- 'Aio te, AEacida, Romanos vincere posse.'
- Well, to the rest:
- 'Tell me what fate awaits the Duke of Suffolk?
- By water shall he die, and take his end.
- What shall betide the Duke of Somerset?
- Let him shun castles;
- Safer shall he be upon the sandy plains
- Than where castles mounted stand.'
- Come, come, my lords;
- These oracles are hardly attain'd,
- And hardly understood.
- The king is now in progress towards Saint Alban's,
- With him the husband of this lovely lady:
- Thither go these news, as fast as horse can
- carry them:
- A sorry breakfast for my lord protector.
BUCKINGHAM:
Your grace shall give me leave, my Lord of York,
- To be the post, in hope of his reward.
YORK:
At your pleasure, my good lord. Who's within
- there, ho!
-
[Enter a Servingman]
- Invite my Lords of Salisbury and Warwick
- To sup with me to-morrow night. Away!
-
[Exeunt]
ACT II, SCENE I.
Saint Alban's.
[Enter KING HENRY VI, QUEEN MARGARET, GLOUCESTER, CARDINAL,
and SUFFOLK, with Falconers halloing]
QUEEN MARGARET:
Believe me, lords, for flying at the brook,
- I saw not better sport these seven years' day:
- Yet, by your leave, the wind was very high;
- And, ten to one, old Joan had not gone out.
KING HENRY VI:
But what a point, my lord, your falcon made,
- And what a pitch she flew above the rest!
- To see how God in all his creatures works!
- Yea, man and birds are fain of climbing high.
SUFFOLK:
No marvel, an it like your majesty,
- My lord protector's hawks do tower so well;
- They know their master loves to be aloft,
- And bears his thoughts above his falcon's pitch.
GLOUCESTER:
My lord, 'tis but a base ignoble mind
- That mounts no higher than a bird can soar.
CARDINAL:
I thought as much; he would be above the clouds.
GLOUCESTER:
Ay, my lord cardinal? how think you by that?
- Were it not good your grace could fly to heaven?
KING HENRY VI:
The treasury of everlasting joy.
CARDINAL:
Thy heaven is on earth; thine eyes and thoughts
- Beat on a crown, the treasure of thy heart;
- Pernicious protector, dangerous peer,
- That smooth'st it so with king and commonweal!
GLOUCESTER:
What, cardinal, is your priesthood grown peremptory?
- Tantaene animis coelestibus irae?
- Churchmen so hot? good uncle, hide such malice;
- With such holiness can you do it?
SUFFOLK:
No malice, sir; no more than well becomes
- So good a quarrel and so bad a peer.
GLOUCESTER:
As who, my lord?
SUFFOLK:
Why, as you, my lord,
- An't like your lordly lord-protectorship.
GLOUCESTER:
Why, Suffolk, England knows thine insolence.
QUEEN MARGARET:
And thy ambition, Gloucester.
KING HENRY VI:
I prithee, peace, good queen,
- And whet not on these furious peers;
- For blessed are the peacemakers on earth.
CARDINAL:
Let me be blessed for the peace I make,
- Against this proud protector, with my sword!
GLOUCESTER:
[Aside to CARDINAL]
- Faith, holy uncle, would
- 'twere come to that!
CARDINAL:
[Aside to GLOUCESTER]
- Marry, when thou darest.
GLOUCESTER:
[Aside to CARDINAL]
- Make up no factious
- numbers for the matter;
- In thine own person answer thy abuse.
CARDINAL:
[Aside to GLOUCESTER]
- Ay, where thou darest
- not peep: an if thou darest,
- This evening, on the east side of the grove.
KING HENRY VI:
How now, my lords!
CARDINAL:
Believe me, cousin Gloucester,
- Had not your man put up the fowl so suddenly,
- We had had more sport.
-
[Aside to GLOUCESTER]
- Come with thy two-hand sword.
CARDINAL:
[Aside to GLOUCESTER]
- Are ye advised? the
- east side of the grove?
GLOUCESTER:
[Aside to CARDINAL]
- Cardinal, I am with you.
KING HENRY VI:
Why, how now, uncle Gloucester!
GLOUCESTER:
Talking of hawking; nothing else, my lord.
-
[Aside to CARDINAL]
- Now, by God's mother, priest, I'll shave your crown for this,
- Or all my fence shall fail.
CARDINAL:
[Aside to GLOUCESTER]
- Medice, teipsum--
- Protector, see to't well, protect yourself.
GLOUCESTER:
What means this noise?
- Fellow, what miracle dost thou proclaim?
Townsman:
A miracle! a miracle!
SUFFOLK:
Come to the king and tell him what miracle.
Townsman:
Forsooth, a blind man at Saint Alban's shrine,
- Within this half-hour, hath received his sight;
- A man that ne'er saw in his life before.
KING HENRY VI:
Now, God be praised, that to believing souls
- Gives light in darkness, comfort in despair!
-
[Enter the Mayor of Saint Alban's and his brethren,
bearing SIMPCOX, between two in a chair, SIMPCOX's Wife following]
CARDINAL:
Here comes the townsmen on procession,
- To present your highness with the man.
KING HENRY VI:
Great is his comfort in this earthly vale,
- Although by his sight his sin be multiplied.
GLOUCESTER:
Stand by, my masters: bring him near the king;
- His highness' pleasure is to talk with him.
KING HENRY VI:
Good fellow, tell us here the circumstance,
- That we for thee may glorify the Lord.
- What, hast thou been long blind and now restored?
SIMPCOX:
Born blind, an't please your grace.
Wife:
Ay, indeed, was he.
SUFFOLK:
What woman is this?
Wife:
His wife, an't like your worship.
GLOUCESTER:
Hadst thou been his mother, thou couldst have
- better told.
KING HENRY VI:
Where wert thou born?
SIMPCOX:
At Berwick in the north, an't like your grace.
KING HENRY VI:
Poor soul, God's goodness hath been great to thee:
- Let never day nor night unhallow'd pass,
- But still remember what the Lord hath done.
QUEEN MARGARET:
Tell me, good fellow, camest thou here by chance,
- Or of devotion, to this holy shrine?
SIMPCOX:
God knows, of pure devotion; being call'd
- A hundred times and oftener, in my sleep,
- By good Saint Alban; who said, 'Simpcox, come,
- Come, offer at my shrine, and I will help thee.'
Wife:
Most true, forsooth; and many time and oft
- Myself have heard a voice to call him so.
CARDINAL:
What, art thou lame?
SIMPCOX:
Ay, God Almighty help me!
SUFFOLK:
How camest thou so?
SIMPCOX:
A fall off of a tree.
Wife:
A plum-tree, master.
GLOUCESTER:
How long hast thou been blind?
SIMPCOX:
Born so, master.
GLOUCESTER:
What, and wouldst climb a tree?
SIMPCOX:
But that in all my life, when I was a youth.
Wife:
Too true; and bought his climbing very dear.
GLOUCESTER:
Mass, thou lovedst plums well, that wouldst
- venture so.
SIMPCOX:
Alas, good master, my wife desired some damsons,
- And made me climb, with danger of my life.
GLOUCESTER:
A subtle knave! but yet it shall not serve.
- Let me see thine eyes: wink now: now open them:
- In my opinion yet thou seest not well.
SIMPCOX:
Yes, master, clear as day, I thank God and
- Saint Alban.
GLOUCESTER:
Say'st thou me so? What colour is this cloak of?
SIMPCOX:
Red, master; red as blood.
GLOUCESTER:
Why, that's well said. What colour is my gown of?
SIMPCOX:
Black, forsooth: coal-black as jet.
KING HENRY VI:
Why, then, thou know'st what colour jet is of?
SUFFOLK:
And yet, I think, jet did he never see.
GLOUCESTER:
But cloaks and gowns, before this day, a many.
Wife:
Never, before this day, in all his life.
GLOUCESTER:
Tell me, sirrah, what's my name?
SIMPCOX:
Alas, master, I know not.
GLOUCESTER:
What's his name?
SIMPCOX:
No, indeed, master.
GLOUCESTER:
What's thine own name?
SIMPCOX:
Saunder Simpcox, an if it please you, master.
GLOUCESTER:
Then, Saunder, sit there, the lyingest knave in
- Christendom. If thou hadst been born blind, thou
- mightest as well have known all our names as thus to
- name the several colours we do wear. Sight may
- distinguish of colours, but suddenly to nominate them
- all, it is impossible. My lords, Saint Alban here
- hath done a miracle; and would ye not think his
- cunning to be great, that could restore this cripple
- to his legs again?
SIMPCOX:
O master, that you could!
GLOUCESTER:
My masters of Saint Alban's, have you not beadles in
- your town, and things called whips?
Mayor:
Yes, my lord, if it please your grace.
GLOUCESTER:
Then send for one presently.
Mayor:
Sirrah, go fetch the beadle hither straight.
-
[Exit an Attendant]
GLOUCESTER:
Now fetch me a stool hither by and by. Now, sirrah,
- if you mean to save yourself from whipping, leap me
- over this stool and run away.
GLOUCESTER:
Well, sir, we must have you find your legs. Sirrah
- beadle, whip him till he leap over that same stool.
Beadle:
I will, my lord. Come on, sirrah; off with your
- doublet quickly.
KING HENRY VI:
O God, seest Thou this, and bearest so long?
QUEEN MARGARET:
It made me laugh to see the villain run.
GLOUCESTER:
Follow the knave; and take this drab away.
Wife:
Alas, sir, we did it for pure need.
CARDINAL:
Duke Humphrey has done a miracle to-day.
SUFFOLK:
True; made the lame to leap and fly away.
GLOUCESTER:
But you have done more miracles than I;
- You made in a day, my lord, whole towns to fly.
-
[Enter BUCKINGHAM]
KING HENRY VI:
What tidings with our cousin Buckingham?
BUCKINGHAM:
Such as my heart doth tremble to unfold.
- A sort of naughty persons, lewdly bent,
- Under the countenance and confederacy
- Of Lady Eleanor, the protector's wife,
- The ringleader and head of all this rout,
- Have practised dangerously against your state,
- Dealing with witches and with conjurers:
- Whom we have apprehended in the fact;
- Raising up wicked spirits from under ground,
- Demanding of King Henry's life and death,
- And other of your highness' privy-council;
- As more at large your grace shall understand.
CARDINAL:
[Aside to GLOUCESTER]
- And so, my lord protector,
- by this means
- Your lady is forthcoming yet at London.
- This news, I think, hath turn'd your weapon's edge;
- 'Tis like, my lord, you will not keep your hour.
GLOUCESTER:
Ambitious churchman, leave to afflict my heart:
- Sorrow and grief have vanquish'd all my powers;
- And, vanquish'd as I am, I yield to thee,
- Or to the meanest groom.
KING HENRY VI:
O God, what mischiefs work the wicked ones,
- Heaping confusion on their own heads thereby!
QUEEN MARGARET:
Gloucester, see here the tainture of thy nest.
- And look thyself be faultless, thou wert best.
GLOUCESTER:
Madam, for myself, to heaven I do appeal,
- How I have loved my king and commonweal:
- And, for my wife, I know not how it stands;
- Sorry I am to hear what I have heard:
- Noble she is, but if she have forgot
- Honour and virtue and conversed with such
- As, like to pitch, defile nobility,
- I banish her my bed and company
- And give her as a prey to law and shame,
- That hath dishonour'd Gloucester's honest name.
KING HENRY VI:
Well, for this night we will repose us here:
- To-morrow toward London back again,
- To look into this business thoroughly
- And call these foul offenders to their answers
- And poise the cause in justice' equal scales,
- Whose beam stands sure, whose rightful cause prevails.
-
[Flourish. Exeunt]
ACT II, SCENE II.
London. YORK'S garden.
[Enter YORK, SALISBURY, and WARWICK]
YORK:
Now, my good Lords of Salisbury and Warwick,
- Our simple supper ended, give me leave
- In this close walk to satisfy myself,
- In craving your opinion of my title,
- Which is infallible, to England's crown.
SALISBURY:
My lord, I long to hear it at full.
WARWICK:
Sweet York, begin: and if thy claim be good,
- The Nevils are thy subjects to command.
YORK:
Then thus:
- Edward the Third, my lords, had seven sons:
- The first, Edward the Black Prince, Prince of Wales;
- The second, William of Hatfield, and the third,
- Lionel Duke of Clarence: next to whom
- Was John of Gaunt, the Duke of Lancaster;
- The fifth was Edmund Langley, Duke of York;
- The sixth was Thomas of Woodstock, Duke of Gloucester;
- William of Windsor was the seventh and last.
- Edward the Black Prince died before his father
- And left behind him Richard, his only son,
- Who after Edward the Third's death reign'd as king;
- Till Henry Bolingbroke, Duke of Lancaster,
- The eldest son and heir of John of Gaunt,
- Crown'd by the name of Henry the Fourth,
- Seized on the realm, deposed the rightful king,
- Sent his poor queen to France, from whence she came,
- And him to Pomfret; where, as all you know,
- Harmless Richard was murder'd traitorously.
WARWICK:
Father, the duke hath told the truth:
- Thus got the house of Lancaster the crown.
YORK:
Which now they hold by force and not by right;
- For Richard, the first son's heir, being dead,
- The issue of the next son should have reign'd.
SALISBURY:
But William of Hatfield died without an heir.
YORK:
The third son, Duke of Clarence, from whose line
- I claimed the crown, had issue, Philippe, a daughter,
- Who married Edmund Mortimer, Earl of March:
- Edmund had issue, Roger Earl of March;
- Roger had issue, Edmund, Anne and Eleanor.
SALISBURY:
This Edmund, in the reign of Bolingbroke,
- As I have read, laid claim unto the crown;
- And, but for Owen Glendower, had been king,
- Who kept him in captivity till he died.
- But to the rest.
YORK:
His eldest sister, Anne,
- My mother, being heir unto the crown
- Married Richard Earl of Cambridge; who was son
- To Edmund Langley, Edward the Third's fifth son.
- By her I claim the kingdom: she was heir
- To Roger Earl of March, who was the son
- Of Edmund Mortimer, who married Philippe,
- Sole daughter unto Lionel Duke of Clarence:
- So, if the issue of the elder son
- Succeed before the younger, I am king.
WARWICK:
What plain proceeding is more plain than this?
- Henry doth claim the crown from John of Gaunt,
- The fourth son; York claims it from the third.
- Till Lionel's issue fails, his should not reign:
- It fails not yet, but flourishes in thee
- And in thy sons, fair slips of such a stock.
- Then, father Salisbury, kneel we together;
- And in this private plot be we the first
- That shall salute our rightful sovereign
- With honour of his birthright to the crown.
Both:
Long live our sovereign Richard, England's king!
YORK:
We thank you, lords. But I am not your king
- Till I be crown'd and that my sword be stain'd
- With heart-blood of the house of Lancaster;
- And that's not suddenly to be perform'd,
- But with advice and silent secrecy.
- Do you as I do in these dangerous days:
- Wink at the Duke of Suffolk's insolence,
- At Beaufort's pride, at Somerset's ambition,
- At Buckingham and all the crew of them,
- Till they have snared the shepherd of the flock,
- That virtuous prince, the good Duke Humphrey:
- 'Tis that they seek, and they in seeking that
- Shall find their deaths, if York can prophesy.
SALISBURY:
My lord, break we off; we know your mind at full.
WARWICK:
My heart assures me that the Earl of Warwick
- Shall one day make the Duke of York a king.
YORK:
And, Nevil, this I do assure myself:
- Richard shall live to make the Earl of Warwick
- The greatest man in England but the king.
-
[Exeunt]
ACT II, SCENE III.
A hall of justice.
[Sound trumpets.
Enter KING HENRY VI, QUEEN MARGARET, GLOUCESTER, YORK, SUFFOLK, and SALISBURY;
the DUCHESS, MARGARET JOURDAIN, SOUTHWELL, HUME, and BOLINGBROKE, under guard]
KING HENRY VI:
Stand forth, Dame Eleanor Cobham, Gloucester's wife:
- In sight of God and us, your guilt is great:
- Receive the sentence of the law for sins
- Such as by God's book are adjudged to death.
- You four, from hence to prison back again;
- From thence unto the place of execution:
- The witch in Smithfield shall be burn'd to ashes,
- And you three shall be strangled on the gallows.
- You, madam, for you are more nobly born,
- Despoiled of your honour in your life,
- Shall, after three days' open penance done,
- Live in your country here in banishment,
- With Sir John Stanley, in the Isle of Man.
DUCHESS:
Welcome is banishment; welcome were my death.
KING HENRY VI:
Stay, Humphrey Duke of Gloucester: ere thou go,
- Give up thy staff: Henry will to himself
- Protector be; and God shall be my hope,
- My stay, my guide and lantern to my feet:
- And go in peace, Humphrey, no less beloved
- Than when thou wert protector to thy King.
QUEEN MARGARET:
I see no reason why a king of years
- Should be to be protected like a child.
- God and King Henry govern England's realm.
- Give up your staff, sir, and the king his realm.
GLOUCESTER:
My staff? here, noble Henry, is my staff:
- As willingly do I the same resign
- As e'er thy father Henry made it mine;
- And even as willingly at thy feet I leave it
- As others would ambitiously receive it.
- Farewell, good king: when I am dead and gone,
- May honourable peace attend thy throne!
-
[Exit]
QUEEN MARGARET:
Why, now is Henry king, and Margaret queen;
- And Humphrey Duke of Gloucester scarce himself,
- That bears so shrewd a maim; two pulls at once;
- His lady banish'd, and a limb lopp'd off.
- This staff of honour raught, there let it stand
- Where it best fits to be, in Henry's hand.
SUFFOLK:
Thus droops this lofty pine and hangs his sprays;
- Thus Eleanor's pride dies in her youngest days.
YORK:
Lords, let him go. Please it your majesty,
- This is the day appointed for the combat;
- And ready are the appellant and defendant,
- The armourer and his man, to enter the lists,
- So please your highness to behold the fight.
QUEEN MARGARET:
Ay, good my lord; for purposely therefore
- Left I the court, to see this quarrel tried.
KING HENRY VI:
O God's name, see the lists and all things fit:
- Here let them end it; and God defend the right!
YORK:
I never saw a fellow worse bested,
- Or more afraid to fight, than is the appellant,
- The servant of this armourer, my lords.
-
[Enter at one door, HORNER, the Armourer, and his Neighbours,
drinking to him so much that he is drunk; and he enters with a
drum before him and his staff with a sand-bag fastened to it;
and at the other door PETER, his man, with a drum and sand-bag,
and 'Prentices drinking to him]
First Neighbour:
Here, neighbour Horner, I drink to you in a cup of
- sack: and fear not, neighbour, you shall do well enough.
Second Neighbour:
And here, neighbour, here's a cup of charneco.
Third Neighbour:
And here's a pot of good double beer, neighbour:
- drink, and fear not your man.
HORNER:
Let it come, i' faith, and I'll pledge you all; and
- a fig for Peter!
- First 'Prentice Here, Peter, I drink to thee: and be not afraid.
- Second 'Prentice Be merry, Peter, and fear not thy master: fight
- for credit of the 'prentices.
PETER:
I thank you all: drink, and pray for me, I pray
- you; for I think I have taken my last draught in
- this world. Here, Robin, an if I die, I give thee
- my apron: and, Will, thou shalt have my hammer:
- and here, Tom, take all the money that I have. O
- Lord bless me! I pray God! for I am never able to
- deal with my master, he hath learnt me so much fence already.
SALISBURY:
Come, leave your drinking, and fall to blows.
- Sirrah, what's thy name?
SALISBURY:
Peter! what more?
SALISBURY:
Thump! then see thou thump thy master well.
HORNER:
Masters, I am come hither, as it were, upon my man's
- instigation, to prove him a knave and myself an
- honest man: and touching the Duke of York, I will
- take my death, I never meant him any ill, nor the
- king, nor the queen: and therefore, Peter, have at
- thee with a downright blow!
HORNER:
Hold, Peter, hold! I confess, I confess treason.
-
[Dies]
YORK:
Take away his weapon. Fellow, thank God, and the
- good wine in thy master's way.
PETER:
O God, have I overcome mine enemy in this presence?
- O Peter, thou hast prevailed in right!
ACT II, SCENE IV.
A street.
[Enter GLOUCESTER and his Servingmen, in mourning cloaks]
GLOUCESTER:
Thus sometimes hath the brightest day a cloud;
- And after summer evermore succeeds
- Barren winter, with his wrathful nipping cold:
- So cares and joys abound, as seasons fleet.
- Sirs, what's o'clock?
GLOUCESTER:
Ten is the hour that was appointed me
- To watch the coming of my punish'd duchess:
- Uneath may she endure the flinty streets,
- To tread them with her tender-feeling feet.
- Sweet Nell, ill can thy noble mind abrook
- The abject people gazing on thy face,
- With envious looks, laughing at thy shame,
- That erst did follow thy proud chariot-wheels
- When thou didst ride in triumph through the streets.
- But, soft! I think she comes; and I'll prepare
- My tear-stain'd eyes to see her miseries.
-
[Enter the DUCHESS in a white sheet, and a taper burning in her hand;
with STANLEY, the Sheriff, and Officers]
Servant:
So please your grace, we'll take her from the sheriff.
GLOUCESTER:
No, stir not, for your lives; let her pass by.
DUCHESS:
Come you, my lord, to see my open shame?
- Now thou dost penance too. Look how they gaze!
- See how the giddy multitude do point,
- And nod their heads, and throw their eyes on thee!
- Ah, Gloucester, hide thee from their hateful looks,
- And, in thy closet pent up, rue my shame,
- And ban thine enemies, both mine and thine!
GLOUCESTER:
Be patient, gentle Nell; forget this grief.
DUCHESS:
Ah, Gloucester, teach me to forget myself!
- For whilst I think I am thy married wife
- And thou a prince, protector of this land,
- Methinks I should not thus be led along,
- Mail'd up in shame, with papers on my back,
- And followed with a rabble that rejoice
- To see my tears and hear my deep-fet groans.
- The ruthless flint doth cut my tender feet,
- And when I start, the envious people laugh
- And bid me be advised how I tread.
- Ah, Humphrey, can I bear this shameful yoke?
- Trow'st thou that e'er I'll look upon the world,
- Or count them happy that enjoy the sun?
- No; dark shall be my light and night my day;
- To think upon my pomp shall be my hell.
- Sometime I'll say, I am Duke Humphrey's wife,
- And he a prince and ruler of the land:
- Yet so he ruled and such a prince he was
- As he stood by whilst I, his forlorn duchess,
- Was made a wonder and a pointing-stock
- To every idle rascal follower.
- But be thou mild and blush not at my shame,
- Nor stir at nothing till the axe of death
- Hang over thee, as, sure, it shortly will;
- For Suffolk, he that can do all in all
- With her that hateth thee and hates us all,
- And York and impious Beaufort, that false priest,
- Have all limed bushes to betray thy wings,
- And, fly thou how thou canst, they'll tangle thee:
- But fear not thou, until thy foot be snared,
- Nor never seek prevention of thy foes.
GLOUCESTER:
Ah, Nell, forbear! thou aimest all awry;
- I must offend before I be attainted;
- And had I twenty times so many foes,
- And each of them had twenty times their power,
- All these could not procure me any scathe,
- So long as I am loyal, true and crimeless.
- Wouldst have me rescue thee from this reproach?
- Why, yet thy scandal were not wiped away
- But I in danger for the breach of law.
- Thy greatest help is quiet, gentle Nell:
- I pray thee, sort thy heart to patience;
- These few days' wonder will be quickly worn.
-
[Enter a Herald]
Herald:
I summon your grace to his majesty's parliament,
- Holden at Bury the first of this next month.
GLOUCESTER:
And my consent ne'er ask'd herein before!
- This is close dealing. Well, I will be there.
-
[Exit Herald]
- My Nell, I take my leave: and, master sheriff,
- Let not her penance exceed the king's commission.
Sheriff:
An't please your grace, here my commission stays,
- And Sir John Stanley is appointed now
- To take her with him to the Isle of Man.
GLOUCESTER:
Must you, Sir John, protect my lady here?
STANLEY:
So am I given in charge, may't please your grace.
GLOUCESTER:
Entreat her not the worse in that I pray
- You use her well: the world may laugh again;
- And I may live to do you kindness if
- You do it her: and so, Sir John, farewell!
DUCHESS:
What, gone, my lord, and bid me not farewell!
DUCHESS:
Art thou gone too? all comfort go with thee!
- For none abides with me: my joy is death;
- Death, at whose name I oft have been afear'd,
- Because I wish'd this world's eternity.
- Stanley, I prithee, go, and take me hence;
- I care not whither, for I beg no favour,
- Only convey me where thou art commanded.
STANLEY:
Why, madam, that is to the Isle of Man;
- There to be used according to your state.
DUCHESS:
That's bad enough, for I am but reproach:
- And shall I then be used reproachfully?
STANLEY:
Like to a duchess, and Duke Humphrey's lady;
- According to that state you shall be used.
DUCHESS:
Sheriff, farewell, and better than I fare,
- Although thou hast been conduct of my shame.
Sheriff:
It is my office; and, madam, pardon me.
DUCHESS:
Ay, ay, farewell; thy office is discharged.
- Come, Stanley, shall we go?
STANLEY:
Madam, your penance done, throw off this sheet,
- And go we to attire you for our journey.
DUCHESS:
My shame will not be shifted with my sheet:
- No, it will hang upon my richest robes
- And show itself, attire me how I can.
- Go, lead the way; I long to see my prison.
-
[Exeunt]
ACT III, SCENE I.
The Abbey at Bury St. Edmund's.
[Sound a sennet. Enter KING HENRY VI, QUEEN MARGARET, CARDINAL, SUFFOLK,
YORK, BUCKINGHAM, SALISBURY and WARWICK to the Parliament]
KING HENRY VI:
I muse my Lord of Gloucester is not come:
- 'Tis not his wont to be the hindmost man,
- Whate'er occasion keeps him from us now.
QUEEN MARGARET:
Can you not see? or will ye not observe
- The strangeness of his alter'd countenance?
- With what a majesty he bears himself,
- How insolent of late he is become,
- How proud, how peremptory, and unlike himself?
- We know the time since he was mild and affable,
- And if we did but glance a far-off look,
- Immediately he was upon his knee,
- That all the court admired him for submission:
- But meet him now, and, be it in the morn,
- When every one will give the time of day,
- He knits his brow and shows an angry eye,
- And passeth by with stiff unbowed knee,
- Disdaining duty that to us belongs.
- Small curs are not regarded when they grin;
- But great men tremble when the lion roars;
- And Humphrey is no little man in England.
- First note that he is near you in descent,
- And should you fall, he as the next will mount.
- Me seemeth then it is no policy,
- Respecting what a rancorous mind he bears
- And his advantage following your decease,
- That he should come about your royal person
- Or be admitted to your highness' council.
- By flattery hath he won the commons' hearts,
- And when he please to make commotion,
- 'Tis to be fear'd they all will follow him.
- Now 'tis the spring, and weeds are shallow-rooted;
- Suffer them now, and they'll o'ergrow the garden
- And choke the herbs for want of husbandry.
- The reverent care I bear unto my lord
- Made me collect these dangers in the duke.
- If it be fond, call it a woman's fear;
- Which fear if better reasons can supplant,
- I will subscribe and say I wrong'd the duke.
- My Lord of Suffolk, Buckingham, and York,
- Reprove my allegation, if you can;
- Or else conclude my words effectual.
SUFFOLK:
Well hath your highness seen into this duke;
- And, had I first been put to speak my mind,
- I think I should have told your grace's tale.
- The duchess, by his subornation,
- Upon my life, began her devilish practises:
- Or, if he were not privy to those faults,
- Yet, by reputing of his high descent,
- As next the king he was successive heir,
- And such high vaunts of his nobility,
- Did instigate the bedlam brain-sick duchess
- By wicked means to frame our sovereign's fall.
- Smooth runs the water where the brook is deep;
- And in his simple show he harbours treason.
- The fox barks not when he would steal the lamb.
- No, no, my sovereign; Gloucester is a man
- Unsounded yet and full of deep deceit.
CARDINAL:
Did he not, contrary to form of law,
- Devise strange deaths for small offences done?
YORK:
And did he not, in his protectorship,
- Levy great sums of money through the realm
- For soldiers' pay in France, and never sent it?
- By means whereof the towns each day revolted.
BUCKINGHAM:
Tut, these are petty faults to faults unknown.
- Which time will bring to light in smooth
- Duke Humphrey.
KING HENRY VI:
My lords, at once: the care you have of us,
- To mow down thorns that would annoy our foot,
- Is worthy praise: but, shall I speak my conscience,
- Our kinsman Gloucester is as innocent
- From meaning treason to our royal person
- As is the sucking lamb or harmless dove:
- The duke is virtuous, mild and too well given
- To dream on evil or to work my downfall.
QUEEN MARGARET:
Ah, what's more dangerous than this fond affiance!
- Seems he a dove? his feathers are but borrowed,
- For he's disposed as the hateful raven:
- Is he a lamb? his skin is surely lent him,
- For he's inclined as is the ravenous wolf.
- Who cannot steal a shape that means deceit?
- Take heed, my lord; the welfare of us all
- Hangs on the cutting short that fraudful man.
-
[Enter SOMERSET]
SOMERSET:
All health unto my gracious sovereign!
KING HENRY VI:
Welcome, Lord Somerset. What news from France?
SOMERSET:
That all your interest in those territories
- Is utterly bereft you; all is lost.
KING HENRY VI:
Cold news, Lord Somerset: but God's will be done!
YORK:
[Aside]
- Cold news for me; for I had hope of France
- As firmly as I hope for fertile England.
- Thus are my blossoms blasted in the bud
- And caterpillars eat my leaves away;
- But I will remedy this gear ere long,
- Or sell my title for a glorious grave.
-
[Enter GLOUCESTER]
GLOUCESTER:
All happiness unto my lord the king!
- Pardon, my liege, that I have stay'd so long.
SUFFOLK:
Nay, Gloucester, know that thou art come too soon,
- Unless thou wert more loyal than thou art:
- I do arrest thee of high treason here.
GLOUCESTER:
Well, Suffolk, thou shalt not see me blush
- Nor change my countenance for this arrest:
- A heart unspotted is not easily daunted.
- The purest spring is not so free from mud
- As I am clear from treason to my sovereign:
- Who can accuse me? wherein am I guilty?
YORK:
'Tis thought, my lord, that you took bribes of France,
- And, being protector, stayed the soldiers' pay;
- By means whereof his highness hath lost France.
GLOUCESTER:
Is it but thought so? what are they that think it?
- I never robb'd the soldiers of their pay,
- Nor ever had one penny bribe from France.
- So help me God, as I have watch'd the night,
- Ay, night by night, in studying good for England,
- That doit that e'er I wrested from the king,
- Or any groat I hoarded to my use,
- Be brought against me at my trial-day!
- No; many a pound of mine own proper store,
- Because I would not tax the needy commons,
- Have I disbursed to the garrisons,
- And never ask'd for restitution.
CARDINAL:
It serves you well, my lord, to say so much.
GLOUCESTER:
I say no more than truth, so help me God!
YORK:
In your protectorship you did devise
- Strange tortures for offenders never heard of,
- That England was defamed by tyranny.
GLOUCESTER:
Why, 'tis well known that, whiles I was
- protector,
- Pity was all the fault that was in me;
- For I should melt at an offender's tears,
- And lowly words were ransom for their fault.
- Unless it were a bloody murderer,
- Or foul felonious thief that fleeced poor passengers,
- I never gave them condign punishment:
- Murder indeed, that bloody sin, I tortured
- Above the felon or what trespass else.
SUFFOLK:
My lord, these faults are easy, quickly answered:
- But mightier crimes are laid unto your charge,
- Whereof you cannot easily purge yourself.
- I do arrest you in his highness' name;
- And here commit you to my lord cardinal
- To keep, until your further time of trial.
KING HENRY VI:
My lord of Gloucester, 'tis my special hope
- That you will clear yourself from all suspect:
- My conscience tells me you are innocent.
GLOUCESTER:
Ah, gracious lord, these days are dangerous:
- Virtue is choked with foul ambition
- And charity chased hence by rancour's hand;
- Foul subornation is predominant
- And equity exiled your highness' land.
- I know their complot is to have my life,
- And if my death might make this island happy,
- And prove the period of their tyranny,
- I would expend it with all willingness:
- But mine is made the prologue to their play;
- For thousands more, that yet suspect no peril,
- Will not conclude their plotted tragedy.
- Beaufort's red sparkling eyes blab his heart's malice,
- And Suffolk's cloudy brow his stormy hate;
- Sharp Buckingham unburthens with his tongue
- The envious load that lies upon his heart;
- And dogged York, that reaches at the moon,
- Whose overweening arm I have pluck'd back,
- By false accuse doth level at my life:
- And you, my sovereign lady, with the rest,
- Causeless have laid disgraces on my head,
- And with your best endeavour have stirr'd up
- My liefest liege to be mine enemy:
- Ay, all you have laid your heads together--
- Myself had notice of your conventicles--
- And all to make away my guiltless life.
- I shall not want false witness to condemn me,
- Nor store of treasons to augment my guilt;
- The ancient proverb will be well effected:
- 'A staff is quickly found to beat a dog.'
CARDINAL:
My liege, his railing is intolerable:
- If those that care to keep your royal person
- From treason's secret knife and traitors' rage
- Be thus upbraided, chid and rated at,
- And the offender granted scope of speech,
- 'Twill make them cool in zeal unto your grace.
SUFFOLK:
Hath he not twit our sovereign lady here
- With ignominious words, though clerkly couch'd,
- As if she had suborned some to swear
- False allegations to o'erthrow his state?
QUEEN MARGARET:
But I can give the loser leave to chide.
GLOUCESTER:
Far truer spoke than meant: I lose, indeed;
- Beshrew the winners, for they play'd me false!
- And well such losers may have leave to speak.
BUCKINGHAM:
He'll wrest the sense and hold us here all day:
- Lord cardinal, he is your prisoner.
CARDINAL:
Sirs, take away the duke, and guard him sure.
GLOUCESTER:
Ah! thus King Henry throws away his crutch
- Before his legs be firm to bear his body.
- Thus is the shepherd beaten from thy side,
- And wolves are gnarling who shall gnaw thee first.
- Ah, that my fear were false! ah, that it were!
- For, good King Henry, thy decay I fear.
-
[Exit, guarded]
KING HENRY VI:
My lords, what to your wisdoms seemeth best,
- Do or undo, as if ourself were here.
QUEEN MARGARET:
What, will your highness leave the parliament?
QUEEN MARGARET:
Free lords, cold snow melts with the sun's hot beams.
- Henry my lord is cold in great affairs,
- Too full of foolish pity, and Gloucester's show
- Beguiles him as the mournful crocodile
- With sorrow snares relenting passengers,
- Or as the snake roll'd in a flowering bank,
- With shining chequer'd slough, doth sting a child
- That for the beauty thinks it excellent.
- Believe me, lords, were none more wise than I--
- And yet herein I judge mine own wit good--
- This Gloucester should be quickly rid the world,
- To rid us of the fear we have of him.
CARDINAL:
That he should die is worthy policy;
- But yet we want a colour for his death:
- 'Tis meet he be condemn'd by course of law.
SUFFOLK:
But, in my mind, that were no policy:
- The king will labour still to save his life,
- The commons haply rise, to save his life;
- And yet we have but trivial argument,
- More than mistrust, that shows him worthy death.
YORK:
So that, by this, you would not have him die.
SUFFOLK:
Ah, York, no man alive so fain as I!
YORK:
'Tis York that hath more reason for his death.
- But, my lord cardinal, and you, my Lord of Suffolk,
- Say as you think, and speak it from your souls,
- Were't not all one, an empty eagle were set
- To guard the chicken from a hungry kite,
- As place Duke Humphrey for the king's protector?
QUEEN MARGARET:
So the poor chicken should be sure of death.
SUFFOLK:
Madam, 'tis true; and were't not madness, then,
- To make the fox surveyor of the fold?
- Who being accused a crafty murderer,
- His guilt should be but idly posted over,
- Because his purpose is not executed.
- No; let him die, in that he is a fox,
- By nature proved an enemy to the flock,
- Before his chaps be stain'd with crimson blood,
- As Humphrey, proved by reasons, to my liege.
- And do not stand on quillets how to slay him:
- Be it by gins, by snares, by subtlety,
- Sleeping or waking, 'tis no matter how,
- So he be dead; for that is good deceit
- Which mates him first that first intends deceit.
QUEEN MARGARET:
Thrice-noble Suffolk, 'tis resolutely spoke.
SUFFOLK:
Not resolute, except so much were done;
- For things are often spoke and seldom meant:
- But that my heart accordeth with my tongue,
- Seeing the deed is meritorious,
- And to preserve my sovereign from his foe,
- Say but the word, and I will be his priest.
CARDINAL:
But I would have him dead, my Lord of Suffolk,
- Ere you can take due orders for a priest:
- Say you consent and censure well the deed,
- And I'll provide his executioner,
- I tender so the safety of my liege.
SUFFOLK:
Here is my hand, the deed is worthy doing.
QUEEN MARGARET:
And so say I.
YORK:
And I and now we three have spoke it,
- It skills not greatly who impugns our doom.
-
[Enter a Post]
Post:
Great lords, from Ireland am I come amain,
- To signify that rebels there are up
- And put the Englishmen unto the sword:
- Send succors, lords, and stop the rage betime,
- Before the wound do grow uncurable;
- For, being green, there is great hope of help.
CARDINAL:
A breach that craves a quick expedient stop!
- What counsel give you in this weighty cause?
YORK:
That Somerset be sent as regent thither:
- 'Tis meet that lucky ruler be employ'd;
- Witness the fortune he hath had in France.
SOMERSET:
If York, with all his far-fet policy,
- Had been the regent there instead of me,
- He never would have stay'd in France so long.
YORK:
No, not to lose it all, as thou hast done:
- I rather would have lost my life betimes
- Than bring a burthen of dishonour home
- By staying there so long till all were lost.
- Show me one scar character'd on thy skin:
- Men's flesh preserved so whole do seldom win.
QUEEN MARGARET:
Nay, then, this spark will prove a raging fire,
- If wind and fuel be brought to feed it with:
- No more, good York; sweet Somerset, be still:
- Thy fortune, York, hadst thou been regent there,
- Might happily have proved far worse than his.
YORK:
What, worse than nought? nay, then, a shame take all!
SOMERSET:
And, in the number, thee that wishest shame!
CARDINAL:
My Lord of York, try what your fortune is.
- The uncivil kerns of Ireland are in arms
- And temper clay with blood of Englishmen:
- To Ireland will you lead a band of men,
- Collected choicely, from each county some,
- And try your hap against the Irishmen?
YORK:
I will, my lord, so please his majesty.
SUFFOLK:
Why, our authority is his consent,
- And what we do establish he confirms:
- Then, noble York, take thou this task in hand.
YORK:
I am content: provide me soldiers, lords,
- Whiles I take order for mine own affairs.
SUFFOLK:
A charge, Lord York, that I will see perform'd.
- But now return we to the false Duke Humphrey.
CARDINAL:
No more of him; for I will deal with him
- That henceforth he shall trouble us no more.
- And so break off; the day is almost spent:
- Lord Suffolk, you and I must talk of that event.
YORK:
My Lord of Suffolk, within fourteen days
- At Bristol I expect my soldiers;
- For there I'll ship them all for Ireland.
SUFFOLK:
I'll see it truly done, my Lord of York.
-
[Exeunt all but YORK]
YORK:
Now, York, or never, steel thy fearful thoughts,
- And change misdoubt to resolution:
- Be that thou hopest to be, or what thou art
- Resign to death; it is not worth the enjoying:
- Let pale-faced fear keep with the mean-born man,
- And find no harbour in a royal heart.
- Faster than spring-time showers comes thought
- on thought,
- And not a thought but thinks on dignity.
- My brain more busy than the labouring spider
- Weaves tedious snares to trap mine enemies.
- Well, nobles, well, 'tis politicly done,
- To send me packing with an host of men:
- I fear me you but warm the starved snake,
- Who, cherish'd in your breasts, will sting
- your hearts.
- 'Twas men I lack'd and you will give them me:
- I take it kindly; and yet be well assured
- You put sharp weapons in a madman's hands.
- Whiles I in Ireland nourish a mighty band,
- I will stir up in England some black storm
- Shall blow ten thousand souls to heaven or hell;
- And this fell tempest shall not cease to rage
- Until the golden circuit on my head,
- Like to the glorious sun's transparent beams,
- Do calm the fury of this mad-bred flaw.
- And, for a minister of my intent,
- I have seduced a headstrong Kentishman,
- John Cade of Ashford,
- To make commotion, as full well he can,
- Under the title of John Mortimer.
- In Ireland have I seen this stubborn Cade
- Oppose himself against a troop of kerns,
- And fought so long, till that his thighs with darts
- Were almost like a sharp-quill'd porpentine;
- And, in the end being rescued, I have seen
- Him caper upright like a wild Morisco,
- Shaking the bloody darts as he his bells.
- Full often, like a shag-hair'd crafty kern,
- Hath he conversed with the enemy,
- And undiscover'd come to me again
- And given me notice of their villanies.
- This devil here shall be my substitute;
- For that John Mortimer, which now is dead,
- In face, in gait, in speech, he doth resemble:
- By this I shall perceive the commons' mind,
- How they affect the house and claim of York.
- Say he be taken, rack'd and tortured,
- I know no pain they can inflict upon him
- Will make him say I moved him to those arms.
- Say that he thrive, as 'tis great like he will,
- Why, then from Ireland come I with my strength
- And reap the harvest which that rascal sow'd;
- For Humphrey being dead, as he shall be,
- And Henry put apart, the next for me.
-
[Exit]
ACT III, SCENE II.
Bury St. Edmund's. A room of state.
[Enter certain Murderers, hastily]
First Murderer:
Run to my Lord of Suffolk; let him know
- We have dispatch'd the duke, as he commanded.
Second Murderer:
O that it were to do! What have we done?
- Didst ever hear a man so penitent?
-
[Enter SUFFOLK]
First Murder:
Here comes my lord.
SUFFOLK:
Now, sirs, have you dispatch'd this thing?
First Murderer:
Ay, my good lord, he's dead.
SUFFOLK:
Why, that's well said. Go, get you to my house;
- I will reward you for this venturous deed.
- The king and all the peers are here at hand.
- Have you laid fair the bed? Is all things well,
- According as I gave directions?
First Murderer:
'Tis, my good lord.
SUFFOLK:
Away! be gone.
-
[Exeunt Murderers
Sound trumpets. Enter KING HENRY VI, QUEEN MARGARET, CARDINAL,
SOMERSET, with Attendants]
KING HENRY VI:
Go, call our uncle to our presence straight;
- Say we intend to try his grace to-day.
- If he be guilty, as 'tis published.
SUFFOLK:
I'll call him presently, my noble lord.
-
[Exit]
KING HENRY VI:
Lords, take your places; and, I pray you all,
- Proceed no straiter 'gainst our uncle Gloucester
- Than from true evidence of good esteem
- He be approved in practise culpable.
QUEEN MARGARET:
God forbid any malice should prevail,
- That faultless may condemn a nobleman!
- Pray God he may acquit him of suspicion!
KING HENRY VI:
I thank thee, Meg; these words content me much.
-
[Re-enter SUFFOLK]
- How now! why look'st thou pale? why tremblest thou?
- Where is our uncle? what's the matter, Suffolk?
SUFFOLK:
Dead in his bed, my lord; Gloucester is dead.
QUEEN MARGARET:
Marry, God forfend!
CARDINAL:
God's secret judgment: I did dream to-night
- The duke was dumb and could not speak a word.
-
[KING HENRY VI swoons]
QUEEN MARGARET:
How fares my lord? Help, lords! the king is dead.
SOMERSET:
Rear up his body; wring him by the nose.
QUEEN MARGARET:
Run, go, help, help! O Henry, ope thine eyes!
SUFFOLK:
He doth revive again: madam, be patient.
KING HENRY VI:
O heavenly God!
QUEEN MARGARET:
How fares my gracious lord?
SUFFOLK:
Comfort, my sovereign! gracious Henry, comfort!
KING HENRY VI:
What, doth my Lord of Suffolk comfort me?
- Came he right now to sing a raven's note,
- Whose dismal tune bereft my vital powers;
- And thinks he that the chirping of a wren,
- By crying comfort from a hollow breast,
- Can chase away the first-conceived sound?
- Hide not thy poison with such sugar'd words;
- Lay not thy hands on me; forbear, I say;
- Their touch affrights me as a serpent's sting.
- Thou baleful messenger, out of my sight!
- Upon thy eye-balls murderous tyranny
- Sits in grim majesty, to fright the world.
- Look not upon me, for thine eyes are wounding:
- Yet do not go away: come, basilisk,
- And kill the innocent gazer with thy sight;
- For in the shade of death I shall find joy;
- In life but double death, now Gloucester's dead.
QUEEN MARGARET:
Why do you rate my Lord of Suffolk thus?
- Although the duke was enemy to him,
- Yet he most Christian-like laments his death:
- And for myself, foe as he was to me,
- Might liquid tears or heart-offending groans
- Or blood-consuming sighs recall his life,
- I would be blind with weeping, sick with groans,
- Look pale as primrose with blood-drinking sighs,
- And all to have the noble duke alive.
- What know I how the world may deem of me?
- For it is known we were but hollow friends:
- It may be judged I made the duke away;
- So shall my name with slander's tongue be wounded,
- And princes' courts be fill'd with my reproach.
- This get I by his death: ay me, unhappy!
- To be a queen, and crown'd with infamy!
KING HENRY VI:
Ah, woe is me for Gloucester, wretched man!
WARWICK:
It is reported, mighty sovereign,
- That good Duke Humphrey traitorously is murder'd
- By Suffolk and the Cardinal Beaufort's means.
- The commons, like an angry hive of bees
- That want their leader, scatter up and down
- And care not who they sting in his revenge.
- Myself have calm'd their spleenful mutiny,
- Until they hear the order of his death.
KING HENRY VI:
That he is dead, good Warwick, 'tis too true;
- But how he died God knows, not Henry:
- Enter his chamber, view his breathless corpse,
- And comment then upon his sudden death.
WARWICK:
That shall I do, my liege. Stay, Salisbury,
- With the rude multitude till I return.
-
[Exit]
WARWICK:
Come hither, gracious sovereign, view this body.
KING HENRY VI:
That is to see how deep my grave is made;
- For with his soul fled all my worldly solace,
- For seeing him I see my life in death.
WARWICK:
As surely as my soul intends to live
- With that dread King that took our state upon him
- To free us from his father's wrathful curse,
- I do believe that violent hands were laid
- Upon the life of this thrice-famed duke.
SUFFOLK:
A dreadful oath, sworn with a solemn tongue!
- What instance gives Lord Warwick for his vow?
WARWICK:
See how the blood is settled in his face.
- Oft have I seen a timely-parted ghost,
- Of ashy semblance, meagre, pale and bloodless,
- Being all descended to the labouring heart;
- Who, in the conflict that it holds with death,
- Attracts the same for aidance 'gainst the enemy;
- Which with the heart there cools and ne'er returneth
- To blush and beautify the cheek again.
- But see, his face is black and full of blood,
- His eye-balls further out than when he lived,
- Staring full ghastly like a strangled man;
- His hair uprear'd, his nostrils stretched with struggling;
- His hands abroad display'd, as one that grasp'd
- And tugg'd for life and was by strength subdued:
- Look, on the sheets his hair you see, is sticking;
- His well-proportion'd beard made rough and rugged,
- Like to the summer's corn by tempest lodged.
- It cannot be but he was murder'd here;
- The least of all these signs were probable.
SUFFOLK:
Why, Warwick, who should do the duke to death?
- Myself and Beaufort had him in protection;
- And we, I hope, sir, are no murderers.
WARWICK:
But both of you were vow'd Duke Humphrey's foes,
- And you, forsooth, had the good duke to keep:
- 'Tis like you would not feast him like a friend;
- And 'tis well seen he found an enemy.
QUEEN MARGARET:
Then you, belike, suspect these noblemen
- As guilty of Duke Humphrey's timeless death.
WARWICK:
Who finds the heifer dead and bleeding fresh
- And sees fast by a butcher with an axe,
- But will suspect 'twas he that made the slaughter?
- Who finds the partridge in the puttock's nest,
- But may imagine how the bird was dead,
- Although the kite soar with unbloodied beak?
- Even so suspicious is this tragedy.
QUEEN MARGARET:
Are you the butcher, Suffolk? Where's your knife?
- Is Beaufort term'd a kite? Where are his talons?
WARWICK:
What dares not Warwick, if false Suffolk dare him?
QUEEN MARGARET:
He dares not calm his contumelious spirit
- Nor cease to be an arrogant controller,
- Though Suffolk dare him twenty thousand times.
WARWICK:
Madam, be still; with reverence may I say;
- For every word you speak in his behalf
- Is slander to your royal dignity.
SUFFOLK:
Blunt-witted lord, ignoble in demeanor!
- If ever lady wrong'd her lord so much,
- Thy mother took into her blameful bed
- Some stern untutor'd churl, and noble stock
- Was graft with crab-tree slip; whose fruit thou art,
- And never of the Nevils' noble race.
WARWICK:
But that the guilt of murder bucklers thee
- And I should rob the deathsman of his fee,
- Quitting thee thereby of ten thousand shames,
- And that my sovereign's presence makes me mild,
- I would, false murderous coward, on thy knee
- Make thee beg pardon for thy passed speech,
- And say it was thy mother that thou meant'st
- That thou thyself was born in bastardy;
- And after all this fearful homage done,
- Give thee thy hire and send thy soul to hell,
- Pernicious blood-sucker of sleeping men!
SUFFOLK:
Thou shall be waking well I shed thy blood,
- If from this presence thou darest go with me.
KING HENRY VI:
What stronger breastplate than a heart untainted!
- Thrice is he armed that hath his quarrel just,
- And he but naked, though lock'd up in steel
- Whose conscience with injustice is corrupted.
-
[A noise within]
KING HENRY VI:
Why, how now, lords! your wrathful weapons drawn
- Here in our presence! dare you be so bold?
- Why, what tumultuous clamour have we here?
SUFFOLK:
The traitorous Warwick with the men of Bury
- Set all upon me, mighty sovereign.
Commons:
[Within]
- An answer from the king, my
- Lord of Salisbury!
SUFFOLK:
'Tis like the commons, rude unpolish'd hinds,
- Could send such message to their sovereign:
- But you, my lord, were glad to be employ'd,
- To show how quaint an orator you are:
- But all the honour Salisbury hath won
- Is, that he was the lord ambassador
- Sent from a sort of tinkers to the king.
Commons:
[Within]
- An answer from the king, or we will all break in!
KING HENRY VI:
Go, Salisbury, and tell them all from me.
- I thank them for their tender loving care;
- And had I not been cited so by them,
- Yet did I purpose as they do entreat;
- For, sure, my thoughts do hourly prophesy
- Mischance unto my state by Suffolk's means:
- And therefore, by His majesty I swear,
- Whose far unworthy deputy I am,
- He shall not breathe infection in this air
- But three days longer, on the pain of death.
-
[Exit SALISBURY]
QUEEN MARGARET:
O Henry, let me plead for gentle Suffolk!
QUEEN MARGARET:
Mischance and sorrow go along with you!
- Heart's discontent and sour affliction
- Be playfellows to keep you company!
- There's two of you; the devil make a third!
- And threefold vengeance tend upon your steps!
SUFFOLK:
Cease, gentle queen, these execrations,
- And let thy Suffolk take his heavy leave.
QUEEN MARGARET:
Fie, coward woman and soft-hearted wretch!
- Hast thou not spirit to curse thine enemy?
SUFFOLK:
A plague upon them! wherefore should I curse them?
- Would curses kill, as doth the mandrake's groan,
- I would invent as bitter-searching terms,
- As curst, as harsh and horrible to hear,
- Deliver'd strongly through my fixed teeth,
- With full as many signs of deadly hate,
- As lean-faced Envy in her loathsome cave:
- My tongue should stumble in mine earnest words;
- Mine eyes should sparkle like the beaten flint;
- Mine hair be fixed on end, as one distract;
- Ay, every joint should seem to curse and ban:
- And even now my burthen'd heart would break,
- Should I not curse them. Poison be their drink!
- Gall, worse than gall, the daintiest that they taste!
- Their sweetest shade a grove of cypress trees!
- Their chiefest prospect murdering basilisks!
- Their softest touch as smart as lizards' sting!
- Their music frightful as the serpent's hiss,
- And boding screech-owls make the concert full!
- All the foul terrors in dark-seated hell--
QUEEN MARGARET:
Enough, sweet Suffolk; thou torment'st thyself;
- And these dread curses, like the sun 'gainst glass,
- Or like an overcharged gun, recoil,
- And turn the force of them upon thyself.
SUFFOLK:
You bade me ban, and will you bid me leave?
- Now, by the ground that I am banish'd from,
- Well could I curse away a winter's night,
- Though standing naked on a mountain top,
- Where biting cold would never let grass grow,
- And think it but a minute spent in sport.
QUEEN MARGARET:
O, let me entreat thee cease. Give me thy hand,
- That I may dew it with my mournful tears;
- Nor let the rain of heaven wet this place,
- To wash away my woful monuments.
- O, could this kiss be printed in thy hand,
- That thou mightst think upon these by the seal,
- Through whom a thousand sighs are breathed for thee!
- So, get thee gone, that I may know my grief;
- 'Tis but surmised whiles thou art standing by,
- As one that surfeits thinking on a want.
- I will repeal thee, or, be well assured,
- Adventure to be banished myself:
- And banished I am, if but from thee.
- Go; speak not to me; even now be gone.
- O, go not yet! Even thus two friends condemn'd
- Embrace and kiss and take ten thousand leaves,
- Loather a hundred times to part than die.
- Yet now farewell; and farewell life with thee!
SUFFOLK:
Thus is poor Suffolk ten times banished;
- Once by the king, and three times thrice by thee.
- 'Tis not the land I care for, wert thou thence;
- A wilderness is populous enough,
- So Suffolk had thy heavenly company:
- For where thou art, there is the world itself,
- With every several pleasure in the world,
- And where thou art not, desolation.
- I can no more: live thou to joy thy life;
- Myself no joy in nought but that thou livest.
-
[Enter VAUX]
QUEEN MARGARET:
Wither goes Vaux so fast? what news, I prithee?
VAUX:
To signify unto his majesty
- That Cardinal Beaufort is at point of death;
- For suddenly a grievous sickness took him,
- That makes him gasp and stare and catch the air,
- Blaspheming God and cursing men on earth.
- Sometimes he talks as if Duke Humphrey's ghost
- Were by his side; sometime he calls the king,
- And whispers to his pillow, as to him,
- The secrets of his overcharged soul;
- And I am sent to tell his majesty
- That even now he cries aloud for him.
QUEEN MARGARET:
Go tell this heavy message to the king.
-
[Exit VAUX]
- Ay me! what is this world! what news are these!
- But wherefore grieve I at an hour's poor loss,
- Omitting Suffolk's exile, my soul's treasure?
- Why only, Suffolk, mourn I not for thee,
- And with the southern clouds contend in tears,
- Theirs for the earth's increase, mine for my sorrows?
- Now get thee hence: the king, thou know'st, is coming;
- If thou be found by me, thou art but dead.
SUFFOLK:
If I depart from thee, I cannot live;
- And in thy sight to die, what were it else
- But like a pleasant slumber in thy lap?
- Here could I breathe my soul into the air,
- As mild and gentle as the cradle-babe
- Dying with mother's dug between its lips:
- Where, from thy sight, I should be raging mad,
- And cry out for thee to close up mine eyes,
- To have thee with thy lips to stop my mouth;
- So shouldst thou either turn my flying soul,
- Or I should breathe it so into thy body,
- And then it lived in sweet Elysium.
- To die by thee were but to die in jest;
- From thee to die were torture more than death:
- O, let me stay, befall what may befall!
QUEEN MARGARET:
Away! though parting be a fretful corrosive,
- It is applied to a deathful wound.
- To France, sweet Suffolk: let me hear from thee;
- For wheresoe'er thou art in this world's globe,
- I'll have an Iris that shall find thee out.
QUEEN MARGARET:
And take my heart with thee.
SUFFOLK:
A jewel, lock'd into the wofull'st cask
- That ever did contain a thing of worth.
- Even as a splitted bark, so sunder we
- This way fall I to death.
QUEEN MARGARET:
This way for me.
-
[Exeunt severally]
ACT III, SCENE III.
A bedchamber.
[Enter the KING, SALISBURY, WARWICK, to the CARDINAL in bed]
KING HENRY VI:
How fares my lord? speak, Beaufort, to
- thy sovereign.
CARDINAL:
If thou be'st death, I'll give thee England's treasure,
- Enough to purchase such another island,
- So thou wilt let me live, and feel no pain.
KING HENRY VI:
Ah, what a sign it is of evil life,
- Where death's approach is seen so terrible!
WARWICK:
Beaufort, it is thy sovereign speaks to thee.
CARDINAL:
Bring me unto my trial when you will.
- Died he not in his bed? where should he die?
- Can I make men live, whether they will or no?
- O, torture me no more! I will confess.
- Alive again? then show me where he is:
- I'll give a thousand pound to look upon him.
- He hath no eyes, the dust hath blinded them.
- Comb down his hair; look, look! it stands upright,
- Like lime-twigs set to catch my winged soul.
- Give me some drink; and bid the apothecary
- Bring the strong poison that I bought of him.
KING HENRY VI:
O thou eternal Mover of the heavens.
- Look with a gentle eye upon this wretch!
- O, beat away the busy meddling fiend
- That lays strong siege unto this wretch's soul.
- And from his bosom purge this black despair!
WARWICK:
See, how the pangs of death do make him grin!
SALISBURY:
Disturb him not; let him pass peaceably.
KING HENRY VI:
Peace to his soul, if God's good pleasure be!
- Lord cardinal, if thou think'st on heaven's bliss,
- Hold up thy hand, make signal of thy hope.
- He dies, and makes no sign. O God, forgive him!
WARWICK:
So bad a death argues a monstrous life.
KING HENRY VI:
Forbear to judge, for we are sinners all.
- Close up his eyes and draw the curtain close;
- And let us all to meditation.
-
[Exeunt]
ACT IV, SCENE I.
The coast of Kent.
[Alarum. Fight at sea. Ordnance goes off.
Enter a Captain, a Master, a Master's-mate, WALTER WHITMORE, and others;
with them SUFFOLK, and others, prisoners]
Captain:
The gaudy, blabbing and remorseful day
- Is crept into the bosom of the sea;
- And now loud-howling wolves arouse the jades
- That drag the tragic melancholy night;
- Who, with their drowsy, slow and flagging wings,
- Clip dead men's graves and from their misty jaws
- Breathe foul contagious darkness in the air.
- Therefore bring forth the soldiers of our prize;
- For, whilst our pinnace anchors in the Downs,
- Here shall they make their ransom on the sand,
- Or with their blood stain this discolour'd shore.
- Master, this prisoner freely give I thee;
- And thou that art his mate, make boot of this;
- The other, Walter Whitmore, is thy share.
First Gentleman:
What is my ransom, master? let me know.
Master:
A thousand crowns, or else lay down your head.
- Master's-Mate And so much shall you give, or off goes yours.
Captain:
What, think you much to pay two thousand crowns,
- And bear the name and port of gentlemen?
- Cut both the villains' throats; for die you shall:
- The lives of those which we have lost in fight
- Be counterpoised with such a petty sum!
First Gentleman:
I'll give it, sir; and therefore spare my life.
Second Gentleman:
And so will I and write home for it straight.
WHITMORE:
I lost mine eye in laying the prize aboard,
- And therefore to revenge it, shalt thou die;
-
[To SUFFOLK]
- And so should these, if I might have my will.
Captain:
Be not so rash; take ransom, let him live.
SUFFOLK:
Look on my George; I am a gentleman:
- Rate me at what thou wilt, thou shalt be paid.
WHITMORE:
And so am I; my name is Walter Whitmore.
- How now! why start'st thou? what, doth
- death affright?
SUFFOLK:
Thy name affrights me, in whose sound is death.
- A cunning man did calculate my birth
- And told me that by water I should die:
- Yet let not this make thee be bloody-minded;
- Thy name is Gaultier, being rightly sounded.
WHITMORE:
Gaultier or Walter, which it is, I care not:
- Never yet did base dishonour blur our name,
- But with our sword we wiped away the blot;
- Therefore, when merchant-like I sell revenge,
- Broke be my sword, my arms torn and defaced,
- And I proclaim'd a coward through the world!
SUFFOLK:
Stay, Whitmore; for thy prisoner is a prince,
- The Duke of Suffolk, William de la Pole.
WHITMORE:
The Duke of Suffolk muffled up in rags!
SUFFOLK:
Ay, but these rags are no part of the duke:
- Jove sometimes went disguised, and why not I?
Captain:
But Jove was never slain, as thou shalt be.
SUFFOLK:
Obscure and lowly swain, King Henry's blood,
- The honourable blood of Lancaster,
- Must not be shed by such a jaded groom.
- Hast thou not kiss'd thy hand and held my stirrup?
- Bare-headed plodded by my foot-cloth mule
- And thought thee happy when I shook my head?
- How often hast thou waited at my cup,
- Fed from my trencher, kneel'd down at the board.
- When I have feasted with Queen Margaret?
- Remember it and let it make thee crest-fall'n,
- Ay, and allay this thy abortive pride;
- How in our voiding lobby hast thou stood
- And duly waited for my coming forth?
- This hand of mine hath writ in thy behalf,
- And therefore shall it charm thy riotous tongue.
WHITMORE:
Speak, captain, shall I stab the forlorn swain?
Captain:
First let my words stab him, as he hath me.
SUFFOLK:
Base slave, thy words are blunt and so art thou.
Captain:
Convey him hence and on our longboat's side
- Strike off his head.
SUFFOLK:
Thou darest not, for thy own.
Captain:
Pool! Sir Pool! lord!
- Ay, kennel, puddle, sink; whose filth and dirt
- Troubles the silver spring where England drinks.
- Now will I dam up this thy yawning mouth
- For swallowing the treasure of the realm:
- Thy lips that kiss'd the queen shall sweep the ground;
- And thou that smiledst at good Duke Humphrey's death,
- Against the senseless winds shalt grin in vain,
- Who in contempt shall hiss at thee again:
- And wedded be thou to the hags of hell,
- For daring to affy a mighty lord
- Unto the daughter of a worthless king,
- Having neither subject, wealth, nor diadem.
- By devilish policy art thou grown great,
- And, like ambitious Sylla, overgorged
- With gobbets of thy mother's bleeding heart.
- By thee Anjou and Maine were sold to France,
- The false revolting Normans thorough thee
- Disdain to call us lord, and Picardy
- Hath slain their governors, surprised our forts,
- And sent the ragged soldiers wounded home.
- The princely Warwick, and the Nevils all,
- Whose dreadful swords were never drawn in vain,
- As hating thee, are rising up in arms:
- And now the house of York, thrust from the crown
- By shameful murder of a guiltless king
- And lofty proud encroaching tyranny,
- Burns with revenging fire; whose hopeful colours
- Advance our half-faced sun, striving to shine,
- Under the which is writ 'Invitis nubibus.'
- The commons here in Kent are up in arms:
- And, to conclude, reproach and beggary
- Is crept into the palace of our king.
- And all by thee. Away! convey him hence.
SUFFOLK:
O that I were a god, to shoot forth thunder
- Upon these paltry, servile, abject drudges!
- Small things make base men proud: this villain here,
- Being captain of a pinnace, threatens more
- Than Bargulus the strong Illyrian pirate.
- Drones suck not eagles' blood but rob beehives:
- It is impossible that I should die
- By such a lowly vassal as thyself.
- Thy words move rage and not remorse in me:
- I go of message from the queen to France;
- I charge thee waft me safely cross the Channel.
WHITMORE:
Come, Suffolk, I must waft thee to thy death.
SUFFOLK:
Gelidus timor occupat artus it is thee I fear.
WHITMORE:
Thou shalt have cause to fear before I leave thee.
- What, are ye daunted now? now will ye stoop?
First Gentleman:
My gracious lord, entreat him, speak him fair.
SUFFOLK:
Suffolk's imperial tongue is stern and rough,
- Used to command, untaught to plead for favour.
- Far be it we should honour such as these
- With humble suit: no, rather let my head
- Stoop to the block than these knees bow to any
- Save to the God of heaven and to my king;
- And sooner dance upon a bloody pole
- Than stand uncover'd to the vulgar groom.
- True nobility is exempt from fear:
- More can I bear than you dare execute.
Captain:
Hale him away, and let him talk no more.
WHITMORE:
There let his head and lifeless body lie,
- Until the queen his mistress bury it.
-
[Exit]
First Gentleman:
O barbarous and bloody spectacle!
- His body will I bear unto the king:
- If he revenge it not, yet will his friends;
- So will the queen, that living held him dear.
-
[Exit with the body]
ACT IV, SCENE II.
Blackheath.
[Enter GEORGE BEVIS and JOHN HOLLAND]
BEVIS:
Come, and get thee a sword, though made of a lath;
- they have been up these two days.
HOLLAND:
They have the more need to sleep now, then.
BEVIS:
I tell thee, Jack Cade the clothier means to dress
- the commonwealth, and turn it, and set a new nap upon it.
HOLLAND:
So he had need, for 'tis threadbare. Well, I say it
- was never merry world in England since gentlemen came up.
BEVIS:
O miserable age! virtue is not regarded in handicrafts-men.
HOLLAND:
The nobility think scorn to go in leather aprons.
BEVIS:
Nay, more, the king's council are no good workmen.
HOLLAND:
True; and yet it is said, labour in thy vocation;
- which is as much to say as, let the magistrates be
- labouring men; and therefore should we be
- magistrates.
BEVIS:
Thou hast hit it; for there's no better sign of a
- brave mind than a hard hand.
HOLLAND:
I see them! I see them! there's Best's son, the
- tanner of Wingham,--
BEVIS:
He shall have the skin of our enemies, to make
- dog's-leather of.
HOLLAND:
And Dick the Butcher,--
BEVIS:
Then is sin struck down like an ox, and iniquity's
- throat cut like a calf.
HOLLAND:
And Smith the weaver,--
BEVIS:
Argo, their thread of life is spun.
HOLLAND:
Come, come, let's fall in with them.
-
[Drum. Enter CADE, DICK the Butcher, SMITH the Weaver,
and a Sawyer, with infinite numbers]
CADE:
We John Cade, so termed of our supposed father,--
DICK:
[Aside]
- Or rather, of stealing a cade of herrings.
CADE:
For our enemies shall fall before us, inspired with
- the spirit of putting down kings and princes,
- --Command silence.
CADE:
My father was a Mortimer,--
DICK:
[Aside]
- He was an honest man, and a good
- bricklayer.
CADE:
My mother a Plantagenet,--
DICK:
[Aside]
- I knew her well; she was a midwife.
CADE:
My wife descended of the Lacies,--
DICK:
[Aside]
- She was, indeed, a pedler's daughter, and
- sold many laces.
SMITH:
[Aside]
- But now of late, notable to travel with her
- furred pack, she washes bucks here at home.
CADE:
Therefore am I of an honourable house.
DICK:
[Aside]
- Ay, by my faith, the field is honourable;
- and there was he borne, under a hedge, for his
- father had never a house but the cage.
SMITH:
[Aside]
- A' must needs; for beggary is valiant.
CADE:
I am able to endure much.
DICK:
[Aside]
- No question of that; for I have seen him
- whipped three market-days together.
CADE:
I fear neither sword nor fire.
SMITH:
[Aside]
- He need not fear the sword; for his coat is of proof.
DICK:
[Aside]
- But methinks he should stand in fear of
- fire, being burnt i' the hand for stealing of sheep.
CADE:
Be brave, then; for your captain is brave, and vows
- reformation. There shall be in England seven
- halfpenny loaves sold for a penny: the three-hooped
- pot; shall have ten hoops and I will make it felony
- to drink small beer: all the realm shall be in
- common; and in Cheapside shall my palfrey go to
- grass: and when I am king, as king I will be,--
All:
God save your majesty!
CADE:
I thank you, good people: there shall be no money;
- all shall eat and drink on my score; and I will
- apparel them all in one livery, that they may agree
- like brothers and worship me their lord.
DICK:
The first thing we do, let's kill all the lawyers.
SMITH:
The clerk of Chatham: he can write and read and
- cast accompt.
SMITH:
We took him setting of boys' copies.
SMITH:
Has a book in his pocket with red letters in't.
CADE:
Nay, then, he is a conjurer.
DICK:
Nay, he can make obligations, and write court-hand.
CADE:
I am sorry for't: the man is a proper man, of mine
- honour; unless I find him guilty, he shall not die.
- Come hither, sirrah, I must examine thee: what is thy name?
DICK:
They use to write it on the top of letters: 'twill
- go hard with you.
CADE:
Let me alone. Dost thou use to write thy name? or
- hast thou a mark to thyself, like an honest
- plain-dealing man?
CLERK:
Sir, I thank God, I have been so well brought up
- that I can write my name.
All:
He hath confessed: away with him! he's a villain
- and a traitor.
MICHAEL:
Where's our general?
CADE:
Here I am, thou particular fellow.
MICHAEL:
Fly, fly, fly! Sir Humphrey Stafford and his
- brother are hard by, with the king's forces.
CADE:
Stand, villain, stand, or I'll fell thee down. He
- shall be encountered with a man as good as himself:
- he is but a knight, is a'?
SIR HUMPHREY:
Rebellious hinds, the filth and scum of Kent,
- Mark'd for the gallows, lay your weapons down;
- Home to your cottages, forsake this groom:
- The king is merciful, if you revolt.
WILLIAM STAFFORD:
But angry, wrathful, and inclined to blood,
- If you go forward; therefore yield, or die.
CADE:
As for these silken-coated slaves, I pass not:
- It is to you, good people, that I speak,
- Over whom, in time to come, I hope to reign;
- For I am rightful heir unto the crown.
SIR HUMPHREY:
Villain, thy father was a plasterer;
- And thou thyself a shearman, art thou not?
CADE:
And Adam was a gardener.
WILLIAM STAFFORD:
And what of that?
CADE:
Marry, this: Edmund Mortimer, Earl of March.
- Married the Duke of Clarence' daughter, did he not?
CADE:
By her he had two children at one birth.
WILLIAM STAFFORD:
That's false.
CADE:
Ay, there's the question; but I say, 'tis true:
- The elder of them, being put to nurse,
- Was by a beggar-woman stolen away;
- And, ignorant of his birth and parentage,
- Became a bricklayer when he came to age:
- His son am I; deny it, if you can.
DICK:
Nay, 'tis too true; therefore he shall be king.
SMITH:
Sir, he made a chimney in my father's house, and
- the bricks are alive at this day to testify it;
- therefore deny it not.
SIR HUMPHREY:
And will you credit this base drudge's words,
- That speaks he knows not what?
All:
Ay, marry, will we; therefore get ye gone.
WILLIAM STAFFORD:
Jack Cade, the Duke of York hath taught you this.
CADE:
[Aside]
- He lies, for I invented it myself.
- Go to, sirrah, tell the king from me, that, for his
- father's sake, Henry the Fifth, in whose time boys
- went to span-counter for French crowns, I am content
- he shall reign; but I'll be protector over him.
DICK:
And furthermore, well have the Lord Say's head for
- selling the dukedom of Maine.
CADE:
And good reason; for thereby is England mained, and
- fain to go with a staff, but that my puissance holds
- it up. Fellow kings, I tell you that that Lord Say
- hath gelded the commonwealth, and made it an eunuch:
- and more than that, he can speak French; and
- therefore he is a traitor.
SIR HUMPHREY:
O gross and miserable ignorance!
CADE:
Nay, answer, if you can: the Frenchmen are our
- enemies; go to, then, I ask but this: can he that
- speaks with the tongue of an enemy be a good
- counsellor, or no?
All:
No, no; and therefore we'll have his head.
WILLIAM STAFFORD:
Well, seeing gentle words will not prevail,
- Assail them with the army of the king.
CADE:
And you that love the commons, follow me.
- Now show yourselves men; 'tis for liberty.
- We will not leave one lord, one gentleman:
- Spare none but such as go in clouted shoon;
- For they are thrifty honest men, and such
- As would, but that they dare not, take our parts.
DICK:
They are all in order and march toward us.
CADE:
But then are we in order when we are most
- out of order. Come, march forward.
-
[Exeunt]
ACT IV, SCENE III.
Another part of Blackheath.
[Alarums to the fight,
wherein SIR HUMPHREY and WILLIAM STAFFORD are slain.
Enter CADE and the rest]
CADE:
Where's Dick, the butcher of Ashford?
CADE:
They fell before thee like sheep and oxen, and thou
- behavedst thyself as if thou hadst been in thine own
- slaughter-house: therefore thus will I reward thee,
- the Lent shall be as long again as it is; and thou
- shalt have a licence to kill for a hundred lacking
- one.
DICK:
If we mean to thrive and do good, break open the
- gaols and let out the prisoners.
CADE:
Fear not that, I warrant thee. Come, let's march
- towards London.
-
[Exeunt]
ACT IV, SCENE IV.
London. The palace.
[Enter KING HENRY VI with a supplication,
and the QUEEN with SUFFOLK'S head, BUCKINGHAM and Lord SAY]
QUEEN MARGARET:
Oft have I heard that grief softens the mind,
- And makes it fearful and degenerate;
- Think therefore on revenge and cease to weep.
- But who can cease to weep and look on this?
- Here may his head lie on my throbbing breast:
- But where's the body that I should embrace?
BUCKINGHAM:
What answer makes your grace to the rebels'
- supplication?
KING HENRY VI:
I'll send some holy bishop to entreat;
- For God forbid so many simple souls
- Should perish by the sword! And I myself,
- Rather than bloody war shall cut them short,
- Will parley with Jack Cade their general:
- But stay, I'll read it over once again.
QUEEN MARGARET:
Ah, barbarous villains! hath this lovely face
- Ruled, like a wandering planet, over me,
- And could it not enforce them to relent,
- That were unworthy to behold the same?
KING HENRY VI:
Lord Say, Jack Cade hath sworn to have thy head.
SAY:
Ay, but I hope your highness shall have his.
KING HENRY VI:
How now, madam!
- Still lamenting and mourning for Suffolk's death?
- I fear me, love, if that I had been dead,
- Thou wouldst not have mourn'd so much for me.
QUEEN MARGARET:
No, my love, I should not mourn, but die for thee.
-
[Enter a Messenger]
KING HENRY VI:
How now! what news? why comest thou in such haste?
Messenger:
The rebels are in Southwark; fly, my lord!
- Jack Cade proclaims himself Lord Mortimer,
- Descended from the Duke of Clarence' house,
- And calls your grace usurper openly
- And vows to crown himself in Westminster.
- His army is a ragged multitude
- Of hinds and peasants, rude and merciless:
- Sir Humphrey Stafford and h is brother's death
- Hath given them heart and courage to proceed:
- All scholars, lawyers, courtiers, gentlemen,
- They call false caterpillars, and intend their death.
KING HENRY VI:
O graceless men! they know not what they do.
BUCKINGHAM:
My gracious lord, return to Killingworth,
- Until a power be raised to put them down.
QUEEN MARGARET:
Ah, were the Duke of Suffolk now alive,
- These Kentish rebels would be soon appeased!
KING HENRY VI:
Lord Say, the traitors hate thee;
- Therefore away with us to Killingworth.
Messenger:
Jack Cade hath gotten London bridge:
- The citizens fly and forsake their houses:
- The rascal people, thirsting after prey,
- Join with the traitor, and they jointly swear
- To spoil the city and your royal court.
BUCKINGHAM:
Then linger not, my lord, away, take horse.
KING HENRY VI:
Come, Margaret; God, our hope, will succor us.
QUEEN MARGARET:
My hope is gone, now Suffolk is deceased.
KING HENRY VI:
Farewell, my lord: trust not the Kentish rebels.
BUCKINGHAM:
Trust nobody, for fear you be betray'd.
SAY:
The trust I have is in mine innocence,
- And therefore am I bold and resolute.
-
[Exeunt]
ACT IV, SCENE V.
London. The Tower.
[Enter SCALES upon the Tower, walking.
Then enter two or three Citizens below]
SCALES:
How now! is Jack Cade slain?
First Citizen:
No, my lord, nor likely to be slain; for they have
- won the bridge, killing all those that withstand
- them: the lord mayor craves aid of your honour from
- the Tower, to defend the city from the rebels.
SCALES:
Such aid as I can spare you shall command;
- But I am troubled here with them myself;
- The rebels have assay'd to win the Tower.
- But get you to Smithfield, and gather head,
- And thither I will send you Matthew Goffe;
- Fight for your king, your country and your lives;
- And so, farewell, for I must hence again.
-
[Exeunt]
ACT IV, SCENE VI.
London. Cannon Street.
[Enter CADE and the rest, and strikes his staff on London-stone]
Soldier:
Jack Cade! Jack Cade!
CADE:
Knock him down there.
-
[They kill him]
SMITH:
If this fellow be wise, he'll never call ye Jack
- Cade more: I think he hath a very fair warning.
DICK:
My lord, there's an army gathered together in
- Smithfield.
CADE:
Come, then, let's go fight with them; but first, go
- and set London bridge on fire; and, if you can, burn
- down the Tower too. Come, let's away.
-
[Exeunt]
ACT IV, SCENE VII.
London. Smithfield.
[Alarums. MATTHEW GOFFE is slain, and all the rest.
Then enter CADE, with his company.]
CADE:
So, sirs: now go some and pull down the Savoy;
- others to the inns of court; down with them all.
DICK:
I have a suit unto your lordship.
CADE:
Be it a lordship, thou shalt have it for that word.
DICK:
Only that the laws of England may come out of your mouth.
HOLLAND:
[Aside]
- Mass, 'twill be sore law, then; for he was
- thrust in the mouth with a spear, and 'tis not whole
- yet.
SMITH:
[Aside]
- Nay, John, it will be stinking law for his
- breath stinks with eating toasted cheese.
CADE:
I have thought upon it, it shall be so. Away, burn
- all the records of the realm: my mouth shall be
- the parliament of England.
HOLLAND:
[Aside]
- Then we are like to have biting statutes,
- unless his teeth be pulled out.
CADE:
And henceforward all things shall be in common.
-
[Enter a Messenger]
CADE:
Well, he shall be beheaded for it ten times. Ah,
- thou say, thou serge, nay, thou buckram lord! now
- art thou within point-blank of our jurisdiction
- regal. What canst thou answer to my majesty for
- giving up of Normandy unto Mounsieur Basimecu, the
- dauphin of France? Be it known unto thee by these
- presence, even the presence of Lord Mortimer, that I
- am the besom that must sweep the court clean of such
- filth as thou art. Thou hast most traitorously
- corrupted the youth of the realm in erecting a
- grammar school; and whereas, before, our forefathers
- had no other books but the score and the tally, thou
- hast caused printing to be used, and, contrary to
- the king, his crown and dignity, thou hast built a
- paper-mill. It will be proved to thy face that thou
- hast men about thee that usually talk of a noun and
- a verb, and such abominable words as no Christian
- ear can endure to hear. Thou hast appointed
- justices of peace, to call poor men before them
- about matters they were not able to answer.
- Moreover, thou hast put them in prison; and because
- they could not read, thou hast hanged them; when,
- indeed, only for that cause they have been most
- worthy to live. Thou dost ride in a foot-cloth, dost thou not?
CADE:
Marry, thou oughtest not to let thy horse wear a
- cloak, when honester men than thou go in their hose
- and doublets.
DICK:
And work in their shirt too; as myself, for example,
- that am a butcher.
DICK:
What say you of Kent?
SAY:
Nothing but this; 'tis 'bona terra, mala gens.'
CADE:
Away with him, away with him! he speaks Latin.
SAY:
Hear me but speak, and bear me where you will.
- Kent, in the Commentaries Caesar writ,
- Is term'd the civil'st place of this isle:
- Sweet is the country, because full of riches;
- The people liberal, valiant, active, wealthy;
- Which makes me hope you are not void of pity.
- I sold not Maine, I lost not Normandy,
- Yet, to recover them, would lose my life.
- Justice with favour have I always done;
- Prayers and tears have moved me, gifts could never.
- When have I aught exacted at your hands,
- But to maintain the king, the realm and you?
- Large gifts have I bestow'd on learned clerks,
- Because my book preferr'd me to the king,
- And seeing ignorance is the curse of God,
- Knowledge the wing wherewith we fly to heaven,
- Unless you be possess'd with devilish spirits,
- You cannot but forbear to murder me:
- This tongue hath parley'd unto foreign kings
- For your behoof,--
CADE:
Tut, when struck'st thou one blow in the field?
SAY:
Great men have reaching hands: oft have I struck
- Those that I never saw and struck them dead.
BEVIS:
O monstrous coward! what, to come behind folks?
SAY:
These cheeks are pale for watching for your good.
CADE:
Give him a box o' the ear and that will make 'em red again.
SAY:
Long sitting to determine poor men's causes
- Hath made me full of sickness and diseases.
CADE:
Ye shall have a hempen caudle, then, and the help of hatchet.
DICK:
Why dost thou quiver, man?
SAY:
The palsy, and not fear, provokes me.
CADE:
Nay, he nods at us, as who should say, I'll be even
- with you: I'll see if his head will stand steadier
- on a pole, or no. Take him away, and behead him.
SAY:
Tell me wherein have I offended most?
- Have I affected wealth or honour? speak.
- Are my chests fill'd up with extorted gold?
- Is my apparel sumptuous to behold?
- Whom have I injured, that ye seek my death?
- These hands are free from guiltless bloodshedding,
- This breast from harbouring foul deceitful thoughts.
- O, let me live!
CADE:
[Aside]
- I feel remorse in myself with his words;
- but I'll bridle it: he shall die, an it be but for
- pleading so well for his life. Away with him! he
- has a familiar under his tongue; he speaks not o'
- God's name. Go, take him away, I say, and strike
- off his head presently; and then break into his
- son-in-law's house, Sir James Cromer, and strike off
- his head, and bring them both upon two poles hither.
SAY:
Ah, countrymen! if when you make your prayers,
- God should be so obdurate as yourselves,
- How would it fare with your departed souls?
- And therefore yet relent, and save my life.
DICK:
My lord, when shall we go to Cheapside and take up
- commodities upon our bills?
CADE:
But is not this braver? Let them kiss one another,
- for they loved well when they were alive. Now part
- them again, lest they consult about the giving up of
- some more towns in France. Soldiers, defer the
- spoil of the city until night: for with these borne
- before us, instead of maces, will we ride through
- the streets, and at every corner have them kiss. Away!
-
[Exeunt]
ACT IV, SCENE VIII.
Southwark.
[Alarum and retreat. Enter CADE and all his rabblement]
BUCKINGHAM:
Ay, here they be that dare and will disturb thee:
- Know, Cade, we come ambassadors from the king
- Unto the commons whom thou hast misled;
- And here pronounce free pardon to them all
- That will forsake thee and go home in peace.
CLIFFORD:
What say ye, countrymen? will ye relent,
- And yield to mercy whilst 'tis offer'd you;
- Or let a rebel lead you to your deaths?
- Who loves the king and will embrace his pardon,
- Fling up his cap, and say 'God save his majesty!'
- Who hateth him and honours not his father,
- Henry the Fifth, that made all France to quake,
- Shake he his weapon at us and pass by.
All:
God save the king! God save the king!
CADE:
What, Buckingham and Clifford, are ye so brave? And
- you, base peasants, do ye believe him? will you
- needs be hanged with your pardons about your necks?
- Hath my sword therefore broke through London gates,
- that you should leave me at the White Hart in
- Southwark? I thought ye would never have given out
- these arms till you had recovered your ancient
- freedom: but you are all recreants and dastards,
- and delight to live in slavery to the nobility. Let
- them break your backs with burthens, take your
- houses over your heads, ravish your wives and
- daughters before your faces: for me, I will make
- shift for one; and so, God's curse light upon you
- all!
All:
We'll follow Cade, we'll follow Cade!
CLIFFORD:
Is Cade the son of Henry the Fifth,
- That thus you do exclaim you'll go with him?
- Will he conduct you through the heart of France,
- And make the meanest of you earls and dukes?
- Alas, he hath no home, no place to fly to;
- Nor knows he how to live but by the spoil,
- Unless by robbing of your friends and us.
- Were't not a shame, that whilst you live at jar,
- The fearful French, whom you late vanquished,
- Should make a start o'er seas and vanquish you?
- Methinks already in this civil broil
- I see them lording it in London streets,
- Crying 'Villiago!' unto all they meet.
- Better ten thousand base-born Cades miscarry
- Than you should stoop unto a Frenchman's mercy.
- To France, to France, and get what you have lost;
- Spare England, for it is your native coast;
- Henry hath money, you are strong and manly;
- God on our side, doubt not of victory.
All:
A Clifford! a Clifford! we'll follow the king and Clifford.
CADE:
Was ever feather so lightly blown to and fro as this
- multitude? The name of Henry the Fifth hales them
- to an hundred mischiefs, and makes them leave me
- desolate. I see them lay their heads together to
- surprise me. My sword make way for me, for here is
- no staying. In despite of the devils and hell, have
- through the very middest of you? and heavens and
- honour be witness, that no want of resolution in me.
- but only my followers' base and ignominious
- treasons, makes me betake me to my heels.
-
[Exit]
BUCKINGHAM:
What, is he fled? Go some, and follow him;
- And he that brings his head unto the king
- Shall have a thousand crowns for his reward.
-
[Exeunt some of them]
- Follow me, soldiers: we'll devise a mean
- To reconcile you all unto the king.
-
[Exeunt]
ACT IV, SCENE IX. Kenilworth Castle.
[Sound Trumpets. Enter KING HENRY VI, QUEEN MARGARET, and SOMERSET, on the terrace]
BUCKINGHAM:
Health and glad tidings to your majesty!
CLIFFORD:
He is fled, my lord, and all his powers do yield;
- And humbly thus, with halters on their necks,
- Expect your highness' doom of life or death.
KING HENRY VI:
Then, heaven, set ope thy everlasting gates,
- To entertain my vows of thanks and praise!
- Soldiers, this day have you redeemed your lives,
- And show'd how well you love your prince and country:
- Continue still in this so good a mind,
- And Henry, though he be infortunate,
- Assure yourselves, will never be unkind:
- And so, with thanks and pardon to you all,
- I do dismiss you to your several countries.
All:
God save the king! God save the king!
-
[Enter a Messenger]
Messenger:
Please it your grace to be advertised
- The Duke of York is newly come from Ireland,
- And with a puissant and a mighty power
- Of gallowglasses and stout kerns
- Is marching hitherward in proud array,
- And still proclaimeth, as he comes along,
- His arms are only to remove from thee
- The Duke of Somerset, whom he terms traitor.
KING HENRY VI:
Thus stands my state, 'twixt Cade and York distress'd.
- Like to a ship that, having 'scaped a tempest,
- Is straightway calm'd and boarded with a pirate:
- But now is Cade driven back, his men dispersed;
- And now is York in arms to second him.
- I pray thee, Buckingham, go and meet him,
- And ask him what's the reason of these arms.
- Tell him I'll send Duke Edmund to the Tower;
- And, Somerset, we'll commit thee thither,
- Until his army be dismiss'd from him.
SOMERSET:
My lord,
- I'll yield myself to prison willingly,
- Or unto death, to do my country good.
KING HENRY VI:
In any case, be not too rough in terms;
- For he is fierce and cannot brook hard language.
BUCKINGHAM:
I will, my lord; and doubt not so to deal
- As all things shall redound unto your good.
KING HENRY VI:
Come, wife, let's in, and learn to govern better;
- For yet may England curse my wretched reign.
-
[Flourish. Exeunt]
ACT IV, SCENE X. Kent. IDEN's garden.
[Enter CADE]
CADE:
Fie on ambition! fie on myself, that have a sword,
- and yet am ready to famish! These five days have I
- hid me in these woods and durst not peep out, for
- all the country is laid for me; but now am I so
- hungry that if I might have a lease of my life for a
- thousand years I could stay no longer. Wherefore,
- on a brick wall have I climbed into this garden, to
- see if I can eat grass, or pick a sallet another
- while, which is not amiss to cool a man's stomach
- this hot weather. And I think this word 'sallet'
- was born to do me good: for many a time, but for a
- sallet, my brainpan had been cleft with a brown
- bill; and many a time, when I have been dry and
- bravely marching, it hath served me instead of a
- quart pot to drink in; and now the word 'sallet'
- must serve me to feed on.
-
[Enter IDEN]
IDEN:
Lord, who would live turmoiled in the court,
- And may enjoy such quiet walks as these?
- This small inheritance my father left me
- Contenteth me, and worth a monarchy.
- I seek not to wax great by others' waning,
- Or gather wealth, I care not, with what envy:
- Sufficeth that I have maintains my state
- And sends the poor well pleased from my gate.
CADE:
Here's the lord of the soil come to seize me for a
- stray, for entering his fee-simple without leave.
- Ah, villain, thou wilt betray me, and get a thousand
- crowns of the king carrying my head to him: but
- I'll make thee eat iron like an ostrich, and swallow
- my sword like a great pin, ere thou and I part.
IDEN:
Why, rude companion, whatsoe'er thou be,
- I know thee not; why, then, should I betray thee?
- Is't not enough to break into my garden,
- And, like a thief, to come to rob my grounds,
- Climbing my walls in spite of me the owner,
- But thou wilt brave me with these saucy terms?
CADE:
Brave thee! ay, by the best blood that ever was
- broached, and beard thee too. Look on me well: I
- have eat no meat these five days; yet, come thou and
- thy five men, and if I do not leave you all as dead
- as a doornail, I pray God I may never eat grass more.
IDEN:
Nay, it shall ne'er be said, while England stands,
- That Alexander Iden, an esquire of Kent,
- Took odds to combat a poor famish'd man.
- Oppose thy steadfast-gazing eyes to mine,
- See if thou canst outface me with thy looks:
- Set limb to limb, and thou art far the lesser;
- Thy hand is but a finger to my fist,
- Thy leg a stick compared with this truncheon;
- My foot shall fight with all the strength thou hast;
- And if mine arm be heaved in the air,
- Thy grave is digg'd already in the earth.
- As for words, whose greatness answers words,
- Let this my sword report what speech forbears.
IDEN:
Is't Cade that I have slain, that monstrous traitor?
- Sword, I will hollow thee for this thy deed,
- And hang thee o'er my tomb when I am dead:
- Ne'er shall this blood be wiped from thy point;
- But thou shalt wear it as a herald's coat,
- To emblaze the honour that thy master got.
CADE:
Iden, farewell, and be proud of thy victory. Tell
- Kent from me, she hath lost her best man, and exhort
- all the world to be cowards; for I, that never
- feared any, am vanquished by famine, not by valour.
-
[Dies]
IDEN:
How much thou wrong'st me, heaven be my judge.
- Die, damned wretch, the curse of her that bare thee;
- And as I thrust thy body in with my sword,
- So wish I, I might thrust thy soul to hell.
- Hence will I drag thee headlong by the heels
- Unto a dunghill which shall be thy grave,
- And there cut off thy most ungracious head;
- Which I will bear in triumph to the king,
- Leaving thy trunk for crows to feed upon.
-
[Exit]
ACT V, SCENE I.
Fields between Dartford and Blackheath.
[Enter YORK, and his army of Irish, with drum and colours]
YORK:
From Ireland thus comes York to claim his right,
- And pluck the crown from feeble Henry's head:
- Ring, bells, aloud; burn, bonfires, clear and bright,
- To entertain great England's lawful king.
- Ah! sancta majestas, who would not buy thee dear?
- Let them obey that know not how to rule;
- This hand was made to handle naught but gold.
- I cannot give due action to my words,
- Except a sword or sceptre balance it:
- A sceptre shall it have, have I a soul,
- On which I'll toss the flower-de-luce of France.
-
[Enter BUCKINGHAM]
- Whom have we here? Buckingham, to disturb me?
- The king hath sent him, sure: I must dissemble.
BUCKINGHAM:
York, if thou meanest well, I greet thee well.
YORK:
Humphrey of Buckingham, I accept thy greeting.
- Art thou a messenger, or come of pleasure?
BUCKINGHAM:
A messenger from Henry, our dread liege,
- To know the reason of these arms in peace;
- Or why thou, being a subject as I am,
- Against thy oath and true allegiance sworn,
- Should raise so great a power without his leave,
- Or dare to bring thy force so near the court.
YORK:
[Aside]
- Scarce can I speak, my choler is so great:
- O, I could hew up rocks and fight with flint,
- I am so angry at these abject terms;
- And now, like Ajax Telamonius,
- On sheep or oxen could I spend my fury.
- I am far better born than is the king,
- More like a king, more kingly in my thoughts:
- But I must make fair weather yet a while,
- Till Henry be more weak and I more strong,--
- Buckingham, I prithee, pardon me,
- That I have given no answer all this while;
- My mind was troubled with deep melancholy.
- The cause why I have brought this army hither
- Is to remove proud Somerset from the king,
- Seditious to his grace and to the state.
BUCKINGHAM:
That is too much presumption on thy part:
- But if thy arms be to no other end,
- The king hath yielded unto thy demand:
- The Duke of Somerset is in the Tower.
YORK:
Upon thine honour, is he prisoner?
BUCKINGHAM:
Upon mine honour, he is prisoner.
YORK:
Then, Buckingham, I do dismiss my powers.
- Soldiers, I thank you all; disperse yourselves;
- Meet me to-morrow in St. George's field,
- You shall have pay and every thing you wish.
- And let my sovereign, virtuous Henry,
- Command my eldest son, nay, all my sons,
- As pledges of my fealty and love;
- I'll send them all as willing as I live:
- Lands, goods, horse, armour, any thing I have,
- Is his to use, so Somerset may die.
KING HENRY VI:
Buckingham, doth York intend no harm to us,
- That thus he marcheth with thee arm in arm?
YORK:
In all submission and humility
- York doth present himself unto your highness.
KING HENRY VI:
Then what intends these forces thou dost bring?
IDEN:
If one so rude and of so mean condition
- May pass into the presence of a king,
- Lo, I present your grace a traitor's head,
- The head of Cade, whom I in combat slew.
KING HENRY VI:
The head of Cade! Great God, how just art Thou!
- O, let me view his visage, being dead,
- That living wrought me such exceeding trouble.
- Tell me, my friend, art thou the man that slew him?
IDEN:
I was, an't like your majesty.
KING HENRY VI:
How art thou call'd? and what is thy degree?
IDEN:
Alexander Iden, that's my name;
- A poor esquire of Kent, that loves his king.
BUCKINGHAM:
So please it you, my lord, 'twere not amiss
- He were created knight for his good service.
KING HENRY VI:
Iden, kneel down.
-
[He kneels]
- Rise up a knight.
- We give thee for reward a thousand marks,
- And will that thou henceforth attend on us.
KING HENRY VI:
See, Buckingham, Somerset comes with the queen:
- Go, bid her hide him quickly from the duke.
QUEEN MARGARET:
For thousand Yorks he shall not hide his head,
- But boldly stand and front him to his face.
YORK:
How now! is Somerset at liberty?
- Then, York, unloose thy long-imprison'd thoughts,
- And let thy tongue be equal with thy heart.
- Shall I endure the sight of Somerset?
- False king! why hast thou broken faith with me,
- Knowing how hardly I can brook abuse?
- King did I call thee? no, thou art not king,
- Not fit to govern and rule multitudes,
- Which darest not, no, nor canst not rule a traitor.
- That head of thine doth not become a crown;
- Thy hand is made to grasp a palmer's staff,
- And not to grace an awful princely sceptre.
- That gold must round engirt these brows of mine,
- Whose smile and frown, like to Achilles' spear,
- Is able with the change to kill and cure.
- Here is a hand to hold a sceptre up
- And with the same to act controlling laws.
- Give place: by heaven, thou shalt rule no more
- O'er him whom heaven created for thy ruler.
SOMERSET:
O monstrous traitor! I arrest thee, York,
- Of capital treason 'gainst the king and crown;
- Obey, audacious traitor; kneel for grace.
YORK:
Wouldst have me kneel? first let me ask of these,
- If they can brook I bow a knee to man.
- Sirrah, call in my sons to be my bail;
-
[Exit Attendant]
- I know, ere they will have me go to ward,
- They'll pawn their swords for my enfranchisement.
QUEEN MARGARET:
Call hither Clifford! bid him come amain,
- To say if that the bastard boys of York
- Shall be the surety for their traitor father.
-
[Exit BUCKINGHAM]
QUEEN MARGARET:
And here comes Clifford to deny their bail.
CLIFFORD:
Health and all happiness to my lord the king!
-
[Kneels]
YORK:
I thank thee, Clifford: say, what news with thee?
- Nay, do not fright us with an angry look;
- We are thy sovereign, Clifford, kneel again;
- For thy mistaking so, we pardon thee.
CLIFFORD:
This is my king, York, I do not mistake;
- But thou mistakest me much to think I do:
- To Bedlam with him! is the man grown mad?
KING HENRY VI:
Ay, Clifford; a bedlam and ambitious humour
- Makes him oppose himself against his king.
CLIFFORD:
He is a traitor; let him to the Tower,
- And chop away that factious pate of his.
QUEEN MARGARET:
He is arrested, but will not obey;
- His sons, he says, shall give their words for him.
YORK:
Will you not, sons?
EDWARD:
Ay, noble father, if our words will serve.
RICHARD:
And if words will not, then our weapons shall.
CLIFFORD:
Why, what a brood of traitors have we here!
CLIFFORD:
Are these thy bears? we'll bait thy bears to death.
- And manacle the bear-ward in their chains,
- If thou darest bring them to the baiting place.
RICHARD:
Oft have I seen a hot o'erweening cur
- Run back and bite, because he was withheld;
- Who, being suffer'd with the bear's fell paw,
- Hath clapp'd his tail between his legs and cried:
- And such a piece of service will you do,
- If you oppose yourselves to match Lord Warwick.
CLIFFORD:
Hence, heap of wrath, foul indigested lump,
- As crooked in thy manners as thy shape!
YORK:
Nay, we shall heat you thoroughly anon.
CLIFFORD:
Take heed, lest by your heat you burn yourselves.
KING HENRY VI:
Why, Warwick, hath thy knee forgot to bow?
- Old Salisbury, shame to thy silver hair,
- Thou mad misleader of thy brain-sick son!
- What, wilt thou on thy death-bed play the ruffian,
- And seek for sorrow with thy spectacles?
- O, where is faith? O, where is loyalty?
- If it be banish'd from the frosty head,
- Where shall it find a harbour in the earth?
- Wilt thou go dig a grave to find out war,
- And shame thine honourable age with blood?
- Why art thou old, and want'st experience?
- Or wherefore dost abuse it, if thou hast it?
- For shame! in duty bend thy knee to me
- That bows unto the grave with mickle age.
SALISBURY:
My lord, I have consider'd with myself
- The title of this most renowned duke;
- And in my conscience do repute his grace
- The rightful heir to England's royal seat.
KING HENRY VI:
Hast thou not sworn allegiance unto me?
KING HENRY VI:
Canst thou dispense with heaven for such an oath?
SALISBURY:
It is great sin to swear unto a sin,
- But greater sin to keep a sinful oath.
- Who can be bound by any solemn vow
- To do a murderous deed, to rob a man,
- To force a spotless virgin's chastity,
- To reave the orphan of his patrimony,
- To wring the widow from her custom'd right,
- And have no other reason for this wrong
- But that he was bound by a solemn oath?
QUEEN MARGARET:
A subtle traitor needs no sophister.
KING HENRY VI:
Call Buckingham, and bid him arm himself.
YORK:
Call Buckingham, and all the friends thou hast,
- I am resolved for death or dignity.
CLIFFORD:
The first I warrant thee, if dreams prove true.
WARWICK:
You were best to go to bed and dream again,
- To keep thee from the tempest of the field.
CLIFFORD:
I am resolved to bear a greater storm
- Than any thou canst conjure up to-day;
- And that I'll write upon thy burgonet,
- Might I but know thee by thy household badge.
WARWICK:
Now, by my father's badge, old Nevil's crest,
- The rampant bear chain'd to the ragged staff,
- This day I'll wear aloft my burgonet,
- As on a mountain top the cedar shows
- That keeps his leaves in spite of any storm,
- Even to affright thee with the view thereof.
CLIFFORD:
And from thy burgonet I'll rend thy bear
- And tread it under foot with all contempt,
- Despite the bear-ward that protects the bear.
YOUNG CLIFFORD:
And so to arms, victorious father,
- To quell the rebels and their complices.
RICHARD:
Fie! charity, for shame! speak not in spite,
- For you shall sup with Jesu Christ to-night.
YOUNG CLIFFORD:
Foul stigmatic, that's more than thou canst tell.
RICHARD:
If not in heaven, you'll surely sup in hell.
-
[Exeunt severally]
ACT V, SCENE II.
Saint Alban's.
[Alarums to the battle. Enter WARWICK]
WARWICK:
Clifford of Cumberland, 'tis Warwick calls:
- And if thou dost not hide thee from the bear,
- Now, when the angry trumpet sounds alarum
- And dead men's cries do fill the empty air,
- Clifford, I say, come forth and fight with me:
- Proud northern lord, Clifford of Cumberland,
- Warwick is hoarse with calling thee to arms.
-
[Enter YORK]
- How now, my noble lord? what, all afoot?
YORK:
The deadly-handed Clifford slew my steed,
- But match to match I have encounter'd him
- And made a prey for carrion kites and crows
- Even of the bonny beast he loved so well.
-
[Enter CLIFFORD]
WARWICK:
Of one or both of us the time is come.
YORK:
Hold, Warwick, seek thee out some other chase,
- For I myself must hunt this deer to death.
WARWICK:
Then, nobly, York; 'tis for a crown thou fight'st.
- As I intend, Clifford, to thrive to-day,
- It grieves my soul to leave thee unassail'd.
-
[Exit]
CLIFFORD:
What seest thou in me, York? why dost thou pause?
YORK:
With thy brave bearing should I be in love,
- But that thou art so fast mine enemy.
CLIFFORD:
Nor should thy prowess want praise and esteem,
- But that 'tis shown ignobly and in treason.
YORK:
So let it help me now against thy sword
- As I in justice and true right express it.
CLIFFORD:
My soul and body on the action both!
CLIFFORD:
La fin couronne les oeuvres.
-
[Dies]
YORK:
Thus war hath given thee peace, for thou art still.
- Peace with his soul, heaven, if it be thy will!
-
[Exit]
-
[Enter YOUNG CLIFFORD]
QUEEN MARGARET:
Away, my lord! you are slow; for shame, away!
KING HENRY VI:
Can we outrun the heavens? good Margaret, stay.
YOUNG CLIFFORD:
But that my heart's on future mischief set,
- I would speak blasphemy ere bid you fly:
- But fly you must; uncurable discomfit
- Reigns in the hearts of all our present parts.
- Away, for your relief! and we will live
- To see their day and them our fortune give:
- Away, my lord, away!
-
[Exeunt]
ACT V, SCENE III.
Fields near St. Alban's.
[Alarum. Retreat. Enter YORK, RICHARD,
WARWICK, and Soldiers, with drum and colours]
YORK:
Of Salisbury, who can report of him,
- That winter lion, who in rage forgets
- Aged contusions and all brush of time,
- And, like a gallant in the brow of youth,
- Repairs him with occasion? This happy day
- Is not itself, nor have we won one foot,
- If Salisbury be lost.
RICHARD:
My noble father,
- Three times to-day I holp him to his horse,
- Three times bestrid him; thrice I led him off,
- Persuaded him from any further act:
- But still, where danger was, still there I met him;
- And like rich hangings in a homely house,
- So was his will in his old feeble body.
- But, noble as he is, look where he comes.
-
[Enter SALISBURY]
SALISBURY:
Now, by my sword, well hast thou fought to-day;
- By the mass, so did we all. I thank you, Richard:
- God knows how long it is I have to live;
- And it hath pleased him that three times to-day
- You have defended me from imminent death.
- Well, lords, we have not got that which we have:
- 'Tis not enough our foes are this time fled,
- Being opposites of such repairing nature.
YORK:
I know our safety is to follow them;
- For, as I hear, the king is fled to London,
- To call a present court of parliament.
- Let us pursue him ere the writs go forth.
- What says Lord Warwick? shall we after them?
WARWICK:
After them! nay, before them, if we can.
- Now, by my faith, lords, 'twas a glorious day:
- Saint Alban's battle won by famous York
- Shall be eternized in all age to come.
- Sound drums and trumpets, and to London all:
- And more such days as these to us befall!
-
[Exeunt]