Shakespeare Plays and Sonnets
The Life and Death of Richard the Second
Players:
- King Richard the Second
- John of Gaunt
- Edmund of Langley, Duke of York
- Henry Bolingbroke, Duke of Hereford; later Henry IV
- Duke of Aumerle
- Thomas Mowbray, Duke of Norfolk
- Duke of Surrey
- Earl of Salisbury
- Lord Berkeley
- Bushy
- Bagot
- Green
- Earl of Northumberland
- Henry Percy, called Hotspur
- Lord Ross
- Lord Willoughby
- Lord Fitzwater
- Bishop of Carlisle
- Abbot of Westminster
- Lord Marshal
- Sir Stephen Scoop
- Sir Pierce of Exton
- Welsh Captain
- Queen to King Richard
- Duchess of Gloucester
- Duchess of York
- Lady attending the Queen
- Lords, Heralds, Officers, Soldiers
- Gardeners, Keepers, Messengers
- Groom and other Attendants
ACT I, SCENE I.
London. KING RICHARD II's palace.
[Enter KING RICHARD II, JOHN OF GAUNT,
with other Nobles and Attendants]
KING RICHARD II:
- Old John of Gaunt, time-honour'd Lancaster,
- Hast thou, according to thy oath and band,
- Brought hither Henry Hereford thy bold son,
- Here to make good the boisterous late appeal,
- Which then our leisure would not let us hear,
- Against the Duke of Norfolk, Thomas Mowbray?
JOHN OF GAUNT:
- I have, my liege.
KING RICHARD II:
- Tell me, moreover, hast thou sounded him,
- If he appeal the duke on ancient malice;
- Or worthily, as a good subject should,
- On some known ground of treachery in him?
JOHN OF GAUNT:
- As near as I could sift him on that argument,
- On some apparent danger seen in him
- Aim'd at your highness, no inveterate malice.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Many years of happy days befal
- My gracious sovereign, my most loving liege!
THOMAS MOWBRAY:
- Each day still better other's happiness;
- Until the heavens, envying earth's good hap,
- Add an immortal title to your crown!
KING RICHARD II:
- We thank you both: yet one but flatters us,
- As well appeareth by the cause you come;
- Namely to appeal each other of high treason.
- Cousin of Hereford, what dost thou object
- Against the Duke of Norfolk, Thomas Mowbray?
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- First, heaven be the record to my speech!
- In the devotion of a subject's love,
- Tendering the precious safety of my prince,
- And free from other misbegotten hate,
- Come I appellant to this princely presence.
- Now, Thomas Mowbray, do I turn to thee,
- And mark my greeting well; for what I speak
- My body shall make good upon this earth,
- Or my divine soul answer it in heaven.
- Thou art a traitor and a miscreant,
- Too good to be so and too bad to live,
- Since the more fair and crystal is the sky,
- The uglier seem the clouds that in it fly.
- Once more, the more to aggravate the note,
- With a foul traitor's name stuff I thy throat;
- And wish, so please my sovereign, ere I move,
- What my tongue speaks my right drawn sword may prove.
THOMAS MOWBRAY:
- Let not my cold words here accuse my zeal:
- 'Tis not the trial of a woman's war,
- The bitter clamour of two eager tongues,
- Can arbitrate this cause betwixt us twain;
- The blood is hot that must be cool'd for this:
- Yet can I not of such tame patience boast
- As to be hush'd and nought at all to say:
- First, the fair reverence of your highness curbs me
- From giving reins and spurs to my free speech;
- Which else would post until it had return'd
- These terms of treason doubled down his throat.
- Setting aside his high blood's royalty,
- And let him be no kinsman to my liege,
- I do defy him, and I spit at him;
- Call him a slanderous coward and a villain:
- Which to maintain I would allow him odds,
- And meet him, were I tied to run afoot
- Even to the frozen ridges of the Alps,
- Or any other ground inhabitable,
- Where ever Englishman durst set his foot.
- Mean time let this defend my loyalty,
- By all my hopes, most falsely doth he lie.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Pale trembling coward, there I throw my gage,
- Disclaiming here the kindred of the king,
- And lay aside my high blood's royalty,
- Which fear, not reverence, makes thee to except.
- If guilty dread have left thee so much strength
- As to take up mine honour's pawn, then stoop:
- By that and all the rites of knighthood else,
- Will I make good against thee, arm to arm,
- What I have spoke, or thou canst worse devise.
THOMAS MOWBRAY:
- I take it up; and by that sword I swear
- Which gently laid my knighthood on my shoulder,
- I'll answer thee in any fair degree,
- Or chivalrous design of knightly trial:
- And when I mount, alive may I not light,
- If I be traitor or unjustly fight!
KING RICHARD II:
- What doth our cousin lay to Mowbray's charge?
- It must be great that can inherit us
- So much as of a thought of ill in him.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Look, what I speak, my life shall prove it true;
- That Mowbray hath received eight thousand nobles
- In name of lendings for your highness' soldiers,
- The which he hath detain'd for lewd employments,
- Like a false traitor and injurious villain.
- Besides I say and will in battle prove,
- Or here or elsewhere to the furthest verge
- That ever was survey'd by English eye,
- That all the treasons for these eighteen years
- Complotted and contrived in this land
- Fetch from false Mowbray their first head and spring.
- Further I say and further will maintain
- Upon his bad life to make all this good,
- That he did plot the Duke of Gloucester's death,
- Suggest his soon-believing adversaries,
- And consequently, like a traitor coward,
- Sluiced out his innocent soul through streams of blood:
- Which blood, like sacrificing Abel's, cries,
- Even from the tongueless caverns of the earth,
- To me for justice and rough chastisement;
- And, by the glorious worth of my descent,
- This arm shall do it, or this life be spent.
KING RICHARD II:
- How high a pitch his resolution soars!
- Thomas of Norfolk, what say'st thou to this?
THOMAS MOWBRAY:
- O, let my sovereign turn away his face
- And bid his ears a little while be deaf,
- Till I have told this slander of his blood,
- How God and good men hate so foul a liar.
KING RICHARD II:
- Mowbray, impartial are our eyes and ears:
- Were he my brother, nay, my kingdom's heir,
- As he is but my father's brother's son,
- Now, by my sceptre's awe, I make a vow,
- Such neighbour nearness to our sacred blood
- Should nothing privilege him, nor partialize
- The unstooping firmness of my upright soul:
- He is our subject, Mowbray; so art thou:
- Free speech and fearless I to thee allow.
THOMAS MOWBRAY:
- Then, Bolingbroke, as low as to thy heart,
- Through the false passage of thy throat, thou liest.
- Three parts of that receipt I had for Calais
- Disbursed I duly to his highness' soldiers;
- The other part reserved I by consent,
- For that my sovereign liege was in my debt
- Upon remainder of a dear account,
- Since last I went to France to fetch his queen:
- Now swallow down that lie. For Gloucester's death,
- I slew him not; but to my own disgrace
- Neglected my sworn duty in that case.
- For you, my noble Lord of Lancaster,
- The honourable father to my foe
- Once did I lay an ambush for your life,
- A trespass that doth vex my grieved soul
- But ere I last received the sacrament
- I did confess it, and exactly begg'd
- Your grace's pardon, and I hope I had it.
- This is my fault: as for the rest appeall'd,
- It issues from the rancour of a villain,
- A recreant and most degenerate traitor
- Which in myself I boldly will defend;
- And interchangeably hurl down my gage
- Upon this overweening traitor's foot,
- To prove myself a loyal gentleman
- Even in the best blood chamber'd in his bosom.
- In haste whereof, most heartily I pray
- Your highness to assign our trial day.
KING RICHARD II:
- Wrath-kindled gentlemen, be ruled by me;
- Let's purge this choler without letting blood:
- This we prescribe, though no physician;
- Deep malice makes too deep incision;
- Forget, forgive; conclude and be agreed;
- Our doctors say this is no month to bleed.
- Good uncle, let this end where it begun;
- We'll calm the Duke of Norfolk, you your son.
JOHN OF GAUNT:
- To be a make-peace shall become my age:
- Throw down, my son, the Duke of Norfolk's gage.
KING RICHARD II:
- And, Norfolk, throw down his.
JOHN OF GAUNT:
- When, Harry, when?
- Obedience bids I should not bid again.
KING RICHARD II:
- Norfolk, throw down, we bid; there is no boot.
THOMAS MOWBRAY:
- Myself I throw, dread sovereign, at thy foot.
- My life thou shalt command, but not my shame:
- The one my duty owes; but my fair name,
- Despite of death that lives upon my grave,
- To dark dishonour's use thou shalt not have.
- I am disgraced, impeach'd and baffled here,
- Pierced to the soul with slander's venom'd spear,
- The which no balm can cure but his heart-blood
- Which breathed this poison.
KING RICHARD II:
- Rage must be withstood:
- Give me his gage: lions make leopards tame.
THOMAS MOWBRAY:
- Yea, but not change his spots: take but my shame.
- And I resign my gage. My dear dear lord,
- The purest treasure mortal times afford
- Is spotless reputation: that away,
- Men are but gilded loam or painted clay.
- A jewel in a ten-times-barr'd-up chest
- Is a bold spirit in a loyal breast.
- Mine honour is my life; both grow in one:
- Take honour from me, and my life is done:
- Then, dear my liege, mine honour let me try;
- In that I live and for that will I die.
KING RICHARD II:
- Cousin, throw up your gage; do you begin.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- O, God defend my soul from such deep sin!
- Shall I seem crest-fall'n in my father's sight?
- Or with pale beggar-fear impeach my height
- Before this out-dared dastard? Ere my tongue
- Shall wound my honour with such feeble wrong,
- Or sound so base a parle, my teeth shall tear
- The slavish motive of recanting fear,
- And spit it bleeding in his high disgrace,
- Where shame doth harbour, even in Mowbray's face.
-
[Exit JOHN OF GAUNT]
KING RICHARD II:
- We were not born to sue, but to command;
- Which since we cannot do to make you friends,
- Be ready, as your lives shall answer it,
- At Coventry, upon Saint Lambert's day:
- There shall your swords and lances arbitrate
- The swelling difference of your settled hate:
- Since we can not atone you, we shall see
- Justice design the victor's chivalry.
- Lord marshal, command our officers at arms
- Be ready to direct these home alarms.
-
[Exeunt]
ACT I, SCENE II.
The DUKE OF LANCASTER'S palace.
[Enter JOHN OF GAUNT with DUCHESS]
JOHN OF GAUNT:
- Alas, the part I had in Woodstock's blood
- Doth more solicit me than your exclaims,
- To stir against the butchers of his life!
- But since correction lieth in those hands
- Which made the fault that we cannot correct,
- Put we our quarrel to the will of heaven;
- Who, when they see the hours ripe on earth,
- Will rain hot vengeance on offenders' heads.
DUCHESS:
- Finds brotherhood in thee no sharper spur?
- Hath love in thy old blood no living fire?
- Edward's seven sons, whereof thyself art one,
- Were as seven vials of his sacred blood,
- Or seven fair branches springing from one root:
- Some of those seven are dried by nature's course,
- Some of those branches by the Destinies cut;
- But Thomas, my dear lord, my life, my Gloucester,
- One vial full of Edward's sacred blood,
- One flourishing branch of his most royal root,
- Is crack'd, and all the precious liquor spilt,
- Is hack'd down, and his summer leaves all faded,
- By envy's hand and murder's bloody axe.
- Ah, Gaunt, his blood was thine! that bed, that womb,
- That metal, that self-mould, that fashion'd thee
- Made him a man; and though thou livest and breathest,
- Yet art thou slain in him: thou dost consent
- In some large measure to thy father's death,
- In that thou seest thy wretched brother die,
- Who was the model of thy father's life.
- Call it not patience, Gaunt; it is despair:
- In suffering thus thy brother to be slaughter'd,
- Thou showest the naked pathway to thy life,
- Teaching stern murder how to butcher thee:
- That which in mean men we intitle patience
- Is pale cold cowardice in noble breasts.
- What shall I say? to safeguard thine own life,
- The best way is to venge my Gloucester's death.
JOHN OF GAUNT:
- God's is the quarrel; for God's substitute,
- His deputy anointed in His sight,
- Hath caused his death: the which if wrongfully,
- Let heaven revenge; for I may never lift
- An angry arm against His minister.
DUCHESS:
- Where then, alas, may I complain myself?
JOHN OF GAUNT:
- To God, the widow's champion and defence.
DUCHESS:
- Why, then, I will. Farewell, old Gaunt.
- Thou goest to Coventry, there to behold
- Our cousin Hereford and fell Mowbray fight:
- O, sit my husband's wrongs on Hereford's spear,
- That it may enter butcher Mowbray's breast!
- Or, if misfortune miss the first career,
- Be Mowbray's sins so heavy in his bosom,
- They may break his foaming courser's back,
- And throw the rider headlong in the lists,
- A caitiff recreant to my cousin Hereford!
- Farewell, old Gaunt: thy sometimes brother's wife
- With her companion grief must end her life.
JOHN OF GAUNT:
- Sister, farewell; I must to Coventry:
- As much good stay with thee as go with me!
DUCHESS:
- Yet one word more: grief boundeth where it falls,
- Not with the empty hollowness, but weight:
- I take my leave before I have begun,
- For sorrow ends not when it seemeth done.
- Commend me to thy brother, Edmund York.
- Lo, this is all:--nay, yet depart not so;
- Though this be all, do not so quickly go;
- I shall remember more. Bid him--ah, what?--
- With all good speed at Plashy visit me.
- Alack, and what shall good old York there see
- But empty lodgings and unfurnish'd walls,
- Unpeopled offices, untrodden stones?
- And what hear there for welcome but my groans?
- Therefore commend me; let him not come there,
- To seek out sorrow that dwells every where.
- Desolate, desolate, will I hence and die:
- The last leave of thee takes my weeping eye.
-
[Exeunt]
ACT I, SCENE III.
The lists at Coventry.
[Enter the Lord Marshal and the DUKE OF AUMERLE]
Lord Marshal:
- My Lord Aumerle, is Harry Hereford arm'd?
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Yea, at all points; and longs to enter in.
Lord Marshal:
- The Duke of Norfolk, sprightfully and bold,
- Stays but the summons of the appellant's trumpet.
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Why, then, the champions are prepared, and stay
- For nothing but his majesty's approach.
-
[The trumpets sound, and KING RICHARD enters with his nobles,
JOHN OF GAUNT, BUSHY, BAGOT, GREEN, and others.
When they are set, enter THOMAS MOWBRAY in arms,
defendant, with a Herald]
KING RICHARD II:
- Marshal, demand of yonder champion
- The cause of his arrival here in arms:
- Ask him his name and orderly proceed
- To swear him in the justice of his cause.
Lord Marshal:
- In God's name and the king's, say who thou art
- And why thou comest thus knightly clad in arms,
- Against what man thou comest, and what thy quarrel:
- Speak truly, on thy knighthood and thy oath;
- As so defend thee heaven and thy valour!
KING RICHARD II:
- Marshal, ask yonder knight in arms,
- Both who he is and why he cometh hither
- Thus plated in habiliments of war,
- And formally, according to our law,
- Depose him in the justice of his cause.
Lord Marshal:
- What is thy name? and wherefore comest thou hither,
- Before King Richard in his royal lists?
- Against whom comest thou? and what's thy quarrel?
- Speak like a true knight, so defend thee heaven!
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Harry of Hereford, Lancaster and Derby
- Am I; who ready here do stand in arms,
- To prove, by God's grace and my body's valour,
- In lists, on Thomas Mowbray, Duke of Norfolk,
- That he is a traitor, foul and dangerous,
- To God of heaven, King Richard and to me;
- And as I truly fight, defend me heaven!
Lord Marshal:
- On pain of death, no person be so bold
- Or daring-hardy as to touch the lists,
- Except the marshal and such officers
- Appointed to direct these fair designs.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Lord marshal, let me kiss my sovereign's hand,
- And bow my knee before his majesty:
- For Mowbray and myself are like two men
- That vow a long and weary pilgrimage;
- Then let us take a ceremonious leave
- And loving farewell of our several friends.
Lord Marshal:
- The appellant in all duty greets your highness,
- And craves to kiss your hand and take his leave.
KING RICHARD II:
- We will descend and fold him in our arms.
- Cousin of Hereford, as thy cause is right,
- So be thy fortune in this royal fight!
- Farewell, my blood; which if to-day thou shed,
- Lament we may, but not revenge thee dead.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- O let no noble eye profane a tear
- For me, if I be gored with Mowbray's spear:
- As confident as is the falcon's flight
- Against a bird, do I with Mowbray fight.
- My loving lord, I take my leave of you;
- Of you, my noble cousin, Lord Aumerle;
- Not sick, although I have to do with death,
- But lusty, young, and cheerly drawing breath.
- Lo, as at English feasts, so I regreet
- The daintiest last, to make the end most sweet:
- O thou, the earthly author of my blood,
- Whose youthful spirit, in me regenerate,
- Doth with a twofold vigour lift me up
- To reach at victory above my head,
- Add proof unto mine armour with thy prayers;
- And with thy blessings steel my lance's point,
- That it may enter Mowbray's waxen coat,
- And furbish new the name of John a Gaunt,
- Even in the lusty havior of his son.
JOHN OF GAUNT:
- God in thy good cause make thee prosperous!
- Be swift like lightning in the execution;
- And let thy blows, doubly redoubled,
- Fall like amazing thunder on the casque
- Of thy adverse pernicious enemy:
- Rouse up thy youthful blood, be valiant and live.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Mine innocency and Saint George to thrive!
THOMAS MOWBRAY:
- However God or fortune cast my lot,
- There lives or dies, true to King Richard's throne,
- A loyal, just and upright gentleman:
- Never did captive with a freer heart
- Cast off his chains of bondage and embrace
- His golden uncontroll'd enfranchisement,
- More than my dancing soul doth celebrate
- This feast of battle with mine adversary.
- Most mighty liege, and my companion peers,
- Take from my mouth the wish of happy years:
- As gentle and as jocund as to jest
- Go I to fight: truth hath a quiet breast.
KING RICHARD II:
- Farewell, my lord: securely I espy
- Virtue with valour couched in thine eye.
- Order the trial, marshal, and begin.
Lord Marshal:
- Harry of Hereford, Lancaster and Derby,
- Receive thy lance; and God defend the right!
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Strong as a tower in hope, I cry amen.
Lord Marshal:
- Go bear this lance to Thomas, Duke of Norfolk.
First Herald:
- Harry of Hereford, Lancaster and Derby,
- Stands here for God, his sovereign and himself,
- On pain to be found false and recreant,
- To prove the Duke of Norfolk, Thomas Mowbray,
- A traitor to his God, his king and him;
- And dares him to set forward to the fight.
Second Herald:
- Here standeth Thomas Mowbray, Duke of Norfolk,
- On pain to be found false and recreant,
- Both to defend himself and to approve
- Henry of Hereford, Lancaster, and Derby,
- To God, his sovereign and to him disloyal;
- Courageously and with a free desire
- Attending but the signal to begin.
Lord Marshal:
- Sound, trumpets; and set forward, combatants.
-
[A charge sounded]
- Stay, the king hath thrown his warder down.
KING RICHARD II:
- Let them lay by their helmets and their spears,
- And both return back to their chairs again:
- Withdraw with us: and let the trumpets sound
- While we return these dukes what we decree.
-
[A long flourish]
- Draw near,
- And list what with our council we have done.
- For that our kingdom's earth should not be soil'd
- With that dear blood which it hath fostered;
- And for our eyes do hate the dire aspect
- Of civil wounds plough'd up with neighbours' sword;
- And for we think the eagle-winged pride
- Of sky-aspiring and ambitious thoughts,
- With rival-hating envy, set on you
- To wake our peace, which in our country's cradle
- Draws the sweet infant breath of gentle sleep;
- Which so roused up with boisterous untuned drums,
- With harsh resounding trumpets' dreadful bray,
- And grating shock of wrathful iron arms,
- Might from our quiet confines fright fair peace
- And make us wade even in our kindred's blood,
- Therefore, we banish you our territories:
- You, cousin Hereford, upon pain of life,
- Till twice five summers have enrich'd our fields
- Shall not regreet our fair dominions,
- But tread the stranger paths of banishment.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Your will be done: this must my comfort be,
- Sun that warms you here shall shine on me;
- And those his golden beams to you here lent
- Shall point on me and gild my banishment.
KING RICHARD II:
- Norfolk, for thee remains a heavier doom,
- Which I with some unwillingness pronounce:
- The sly slow hours shall not determinate
- The dateless limit of thy dear exile;
- The hopeless word of 'never to return'
- Breathe I against thee, upon pain of life.
THOMAS MOWBRAY:
- A heavy sentence, my most sovereign liege,
- And all unlook'd for from your highness' mouth:
- A dearer merit, not so deep a maim
- As to be cast forth in the common air,
- Have I deserved at your highness' hands.
- The language I have learn'd these forty years,
- My native English, now I must forego:
- And now my tongue's use is to me no more
- Than an unstringed viol or a harp,
- Or like a cunning instrument cased up,
- Or, being open, put into his hands
- That knows no touch to tune the harmony:
- Within my mouth you have engaol'd my tongue,
- Doubly portcullis'd with my teeth and lips;
- And dull unfeeling barren ignorance
- Is made my gaoler to attend on me.
- I am too old to fawn upon a nurse,
- Too far in years to be a pupil now:
- What is thy sentence then but speechless death,
- Which robs my tongue from breathing native breath?
KING RICHARD II:
- It boots thee not to be compassionate:
- After our sentence plaining comes too late.
THOMAS MOWBRAY:
- Then thus I turn me from my country's light,
- To dwell in solemn shades of endless night.
KING RICHARD II:
- Return again, and take an oath with thee.
- Lay on our royal sword your banish'd hands;
- Swear by the duty that you owe to God--
- Our part therein we banish with yourselves--
- To keep the oath that we administer:
- You never shall, so help you truth and God!
- Embrace each other's love in banishment;
- Nor never look upon each other's face;
- Nor never write, regreet, nor reconcile
- This louring tempest of your home-bred hate;
- Nor never by advised purpose meet
- To plot, contrive, or complot any ill
- 'Gainst us, our state, our subjects, or our land.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- I swear.
THOMAS MOWBRAY:
- And I, to keep all this.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Norfolk, so far as to mine enemy:--
- By this time, had the king permitted us,
- One of our souls had wander'd in the air.
- Banish'd this frail sepulchre of our flesh,
- As now our flesh is banish'd from this land:
- Confess thy treasons ere thou fly the realm;
- Since thou hast far to go, bear not along
- The clogging burthen of a guilty soul.
THOMAS MOWBRAY:
- No, Bolingbroke: if ever I were traitor,
- My name be blotted from the book of life,
- And I from heaven banish'd as from hence!
- But what thou art, God, thou, and I do know;
- And all too soon, I fear, the king shall rue.
- Farewell, my liege. Now no way can I stray;
- Save back to England, all the world's my way.
-
[Exit]
KING RICHARD II:
- Uncle, even in the glasses of thine eyes
- I see thy grieved heart: thy sad aspect
- Hath from the number of his banish'd years
- Pluck'd four away.
-
[To HENRY BOLINGBROKE]
- Six frozen winter spent,
- Return with welcome home from banishment.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- How long a time lies in one little word!
- Four lagging winters and four wanton springs
- End in a word: such is the breath of kings.
JOHN OF GAUNT:
- I thank my liege, that in regard of me
- He shortens four years of my son's exile:
- But little vantage shall I reap thereby;
- For, ere the six years that he hath to spend
- Can change their moons and bring their times about
- My oil-dried lamp and time-bewasted light
- Shall be extinct with age and endless night;
- My inch of taper will be burnt and done,
- And blindfold death not let me see my son.
KING RICHARD II:
- Why uncle, thou hast many years to live.
JOHN OF GAUNT:
- But not a minute, king, that thou canst give:
- Shorten my days thou canst with sullen sorrow,
- And pluck nights from me, but not lend a morrow;
- Thou canst help time to furrow me with age,
- But stop no wrinkle in his pilgrimage;
- Thy word is current with him for my death,
- But dead, thy kingdom cannot buy my breath.
KING RICHARD II:
- Thy son is banish'd upon good advice,
- Whereto thy tongue a party-verdict gave:
- Why at our justice seem'st thou then to lour?
JOHN OF GAUNT:
- Things sweet to taste prove in digestion sour.
- You urged me as a judge; but I had rather
- You would have bid me argue like a father.
- O, had it been a stranger, not my child,
- To smooth his fault I should have been more mild:
- A partial slander sought I to avoid,
- And in the sentence my own life destroy'd.
- Alas, I look'd when some of you should say,
- I was too strict to make mine own away;
- But you gave leave to my unwilling tongue
- Against my will to do myself this wrong.
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Cousin, farewell: what presence must not know,
- From where you do remain let paper show.
Lord Marshal:
- My lord, no leave take I; for I will ride,
- As far as land will let me, by your side.
JOHN OF GAUNT:
- O, to what purpose dost thou hoard thy words,
- That thou return'st no greeting to thy friends?
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- I have too few to take my leave of you,
- When the tongue's office should be prodigal
- To breathe the abundant dolour of the heart.
JOHN OF GAUNT:
- Thy grief is but thy absence for a time.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Joy absent, grief is present for that time.
JOHN OF GAUNT:
- What is six winters? they are quickly gone.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- To men in joy; but grief makes one hour ten.
JOHN OF GAUNT:
- Call it a travel that thou takest for pleasure.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- My heart will sigh when I miscall it so,
- Which finds it an inforced pilgrimage.
JOHN OF GAUNT:
- The sullen passage of thy weary steps
- Esteem as foil wherein thou art to set
- The precious jewel of thy home return.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Nay, rather, every tedious stride I make
- Will but remember me what a deal of world
- I wander from the jewels that I love.
- Must I not serve a long apprenticehood
- To foreign passages, and in the end,
- Having my freedom, boast of nothing else
- But that I was a journeyman to grief?
JOHN OF GAUNT:
- All places that the eye of heaven visits
- Are to a wise man ports and happy havens.
- Teach thy necessity to reason thus;
- There is no virtue like necessity.
- Think not the king did banish thee,
- But thou the king. Woe doth the heavier sit,
- Where it perceives it is but faintly borne.
- Go, say I sent thee forth to purchase honour
- And not the king exiled thee; or suppose
- Devouring pestilence hangs in our air
- And thou art flying to a fresher clime:
- Look, what thy soul holds dear, imagine it
- To lie that way thou go'st, not whence thou comest:
- Suppose the singing birds musicians,
- The grass whereon thou tread'st the presence strew'd,
- The flowers fair ladies, and thy steps no more
- Than a delightful measure or a dance;
- For gnarling sorrow hath less power to bite
- The man that mocks at it and sets it light.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- O, who can hold a fire in his hand
- By thinking on the frosty Caucasus?
- Or cloy the hungry edge of appetite
- By bare imagination of a feast?
- Or wallow naked in December snow
- By thinking on fantastic summer's heat?
- O, no! the apprehension of the good
- Gives but the greater feeling to the worse:
- Fell sorrow's tooth doth never rankle more
- Than when he bites, but lanceth not the sore.
JOHN OF GAUNT:
- Come, come, my son, I'll bring thee on thy way:
- Had I thy youth and cause, I would not stay.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Then, England's ground, farewell; sweet soil, adieu;
- My mother, and my nurse, that bears me yet!
- Where'er I wander, boast of this I can,
- Though banish'd, yet a trueborn Englishman.
-
[Exeunt]
ACT I, SCENE IV.
The court.
[Enter KING RICHARD II, with BAGOT and GREEN at one door; and the DUKE OF AUMERLE at another]
KING RICHARD II:
- We did observe. Cousin Aumerle,
- How far brought you high Hereford on his way?
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- I brought high Hereford, if you call him so,
- But to the next highway, and there I left him.
KING RICHARD II:
- And say, what store of parting tears were shed?
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Faith, none for me; except the north-east wind,
- Which then blew bitterly against our faces,
- Awaked the sleeping rheum, and so by chance
- Did grace our hollow parting with a tear.
KING RICHARD II:
- What said our cousin when you parted with him?
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- 'Farewell:'
- And, for my heart disdained that my tongue
- Should so profane the word, that taught me craft
- To counterfeit oppression of such grief
- That words seem'd buried in my sorrow's grave.
- Marry, would the word 'farewell' have lengthen'd hours
- And added years to his short banishment,
- He should have had a volume of farewells;
- But since it would not, he had none of me.
KING RICHARD II:
- He is our cousin, cousin; but 'tis doubt,
- When time shall call him home from banishment,
- Whether our kinsman come to see his friends.
- Ourself and Bushy, Bagot here and Green
- Observed his courtship to the common people;
- How he did seem to dive into their hearts
- With humble and familiar courtesy,
- What reverence he did throw away on slaves,
- Wooing poor craftsmen with the craft of smiles
- And patient underbearing of his fortune,
- As 'twere to banish their affects with him.
- Off goes his bonnet to an oyster-wench;
- A brace of draymen bid God speed him well
- And had the tribute of his supple knee,
- With 'Thanks, my countrymen, my loving friends;'
- As were our England in reversion his,
- And he our subjects' next degree in hope.
GREEN:
- Well, he is gone; and with him go these thoughts.
- Now for the rebels which stand out in Ireland,
- Expedient manage must be made, my liege,
- Ere further leisure yield them further means
- For their advantage and your highness' loss.
KING RICHARD II:
- We will ourself in person to this war:
- And, for our coffers, with too great a court
- And liberal largess, are grown somewhat light,
- We are inforced to farm our royal realm;
- The revenue whereof shall furnish us
- For our affairs in hand: if that come short,
- Our substitutes at home shall have blank charters;
- Whereto, when they shall know what men are rich,
- They shall subscribe them for large sums of gold
- And send them after to supply our wants;
- For we will make for Ireland presently.
-
[Enter BUSHY]
- Bushy, what news?
BUSHY:
- Old John of Gaunt is grievous sick, my lord,
- Suddenly taken; and hath sent post haste
- To entreat your majesty to visit him.
KING RICHARD II:
- Where lies he?
KING RICHARD II:
- Now put it, God, in the physician's mind
- To help him to his grave immediately!
- The lining of his coffers shall make coats
- To deck our soldiers for these Irish wars.
- Come, gentlemen, let's all go visit him:
- Pray God we may make haste, and come too late!
ACT II, SCENE I.
Ely House.
[Enter JOHN OF GAUNT sick, with the DUKE OF YORK, & c]
JOHN OF GAUNT:
- Will the king come, that I may breathe my last
- In wholesome counsel to his unstaid youth?
DUKE OF YORK:
- Vex not yourself, nor strive not with your breath;
- For all in vain comes counsel to his ear.
JOHN OF GAUNT:
- O, but they say the tongues of dying men
- Enforce attention like deep harmony:
- Where words are scarce, they are seldom spent in vain,
- For they breathe truth that breathe their words in pain.
- He that no more must say is listen'd more
- Than they whom youth and ease have taught to glose;
- More are men's ends mark'd than their lives before:
- The setting sun, and music at the close,
- As the last taste of sweets, is sweetest last,
- Writ in remembrance more than things long past:
- Though Richard my life's counsel would not hear,
- My death's sad tale may yet undeaf his ear.
DUKE OF YORK:
- No; it is stopp'd with other flattering sounds,
- As praises, of whose taste the wise are fond,
- Lascivious metres, to whose venom sound
- The open ear of youth doth always listen;
- Report of fashions in proud Italy,
- Whose manners still our tardy apish nation
- Limps after in base imitation.
- Where doth the world thrust forth a vanity--
- So it be new, there's no respect how vile--
- That is not quickly buzzed into his ears?
- Then all too late comes counsel to be heard,
- Where will doth mutiny with wit's regard.
- Direct not him whose way himself will choose:
- 'Tis breath thou lack'st, and that breath wilt thou lose.
JOHN OF GAUNT:
- Methinks I am a prophet new inspired
- And thus expiring do foretell of him:
- His rash fierce blaze of riot cannot last,
- For violent fires soon burn out themselves;
- Small showers last long, but sudden storms are short;
- He tires betimes that spurs too fast betimes;
- With eager feeding food doth choke the feeder:
- Light vanity, insatiate cormorant,
- Consuming means, soon preys upon itself.
- This royal throne of kings, this scepter'd isle,
- This earth of majesty, this seat of Mars,
- This other Eden, demi-paradise,
- This fortress built by Nature for herself
- Against infection and the hand of war,
- This happy breed of men, this little world,
- This precious stone set in the silver sea,
- Which serves it in the office of a wall,
- Or as a moat defensive to a house,
- Against the envy of less happier lands,
- This blessed plot, this earth, this realm, this England,
- This nurse, this teeming womb of royal kings,
- Fear'd by their breed and famous by their birth,
- Renowned for their deeds as far from home,
- For Christian service and true chivalry,
- As is the sepulchre in stubborn Jewry,
- Of the world's ransom, blessed Mary's Son,
- This land of such dear souls, this dear dear land,
- Dear for her reputation through the world,
- Is now leased out, I die pronouncing it,
- Like to a tenement or pelting farm:
- England, bound in with the triumphant sea
- Whose rocky shore beats back the envious siege
- Of watery Neptune, is now bound in with shame,
- With inky blots and rotten parchment bonds:
- That England, that was wont to conquer others,
- Hath made a shameful conquest of itself.
- Ah, would the scandal vanish with my life,
- How happy then were my ensuing death!
-
[Enter KING RICHARD II and QUEEN, DUKE OF AUMERLE,
BUSHY, GREEN, BAGOT, LORD ROSS, and LORD WILLOUGHBY]
DUKE OF YORK:
- The king is come: deal mildly with his youth;
- For young hot colts being raged do rage the more.
QUEEN:
- How fares our noble uncle, Lancaster?
KING RICHARD II:
- What comfort, man? how is't with aged Gaunt?
JOHN OF GAUNT:
- O how that name befits my composition!
- Old Gaunt indeed, and gaunt in being old:
- Within me grief hath kept a tedious fast;
- And who abstains from meat that is not gaunt?
- For sleeping England long time have I watch'd;
- Watching breeds leanness, leanness is all gaunt:
- The pleasure that some fathers feed upon,
- Is my strict fast; I mean, my children's looks;
- And therein fasting, hast thou made me gaunt:
- Gaunt am I for the grave, gaunt as a grave,
- Whose hollow womb inherits nought but bones.
KING RICHARD II:
- Can sick men play so nicely with their names?
JOHN OF GAUNT:
- No, misery makes sport to mock itself:
- Since thou dost seek to kill my name in me,
- I mock my name, great king, to flatter thee.
KING RICHARD II:
- Should dying men flatter with those that live?
JOHN OF GAUNT:
- No, no, men living flatter those that die.
KING RICHARD II:
- Thou, now a-dying, say'st thou flatterest me.
JOHN OF GAUNT:
- O, no! thou diest, though I the sicker be.
KING RICHARD II:
- I am in health, I breathe, and see thee ill.
JOHN OF GAUNT:
- Now He that made me knows I see thee ill;
- Ill in myself to see, and in thee seeing ill.
- Thy death-bed is no lesser than thy land
- Wherein thou liest in reputation sick;
- And thou, too careless patient as thou art,
- Commit'st thy anointed body to the cure
- Of those physicians that first wounded thee:
- A thousand flatterers sit within thy crown,
- Whose compass is no bigger than thy head;
- And yet, incaged in so small a verge,
- The waste is no whit lesser than thy land.
- O, had thy grandsire with a prophet's eye
- Seen how his son's son should destroy his sons,
- From forth thy reach he would have laid thy shame,
- Deposing thee before thou wert possess'd,
- Which art possess'd now to depose thyself.
- Why, cousin, wert thou regent of the world,
- It were a shame to let this land by lease;
- But for thy world enjoying but this land,
- Is it not more than shame to shame it so?
- Landlord of England art thou now, not king:
- Thy state of law is bondslave to the law; And thou--
KING RICHARD II:
- A lunatic lean-witted fool,
- Presuming on an ague's privilege,
- Darest with thy frozen admonition
- Make pale our cheek, chasing the royal blood
- With fury from his native residence.
- Now, by my seat's right royal majesty,
- Wert thou not brother to great Edward's son,
- This tongue that runs so roundly in thy head
- Should run thy head from thy unreverent shoulders.
KING RICHARD II:
- And let them die that age and sullens have;
- For both hast thou, and both become the grave.
DUKE OF YORK:
- I do beseech your majesty, impute his words
- To wayward sickliness and age in him:
- He loves you, on my life, and holds you dear
- As Harry Duke of Hereford, were he here.
KING RICHARD II:
- Right, you say true: as Hereford's love, so his;
- As theirs, so mine; and all be as it is.
-
[Enter NORTHUMBERLAND]
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- My liege, old Gaunt commends him to your majesty.
KING RICHARD II:
- What says he?
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Nay, nothing; all is said
- His tongue is now a stringless instrument;
- Words, life and all, old Lancaster hath spent.
DUKE OF YORK:
- Be York the next that must be bankrupt so!
- Though death be poor, it ends a mortal woe.
KING RICHARD II:
- The ripest fruit first falls, and so doth he;
- His time is spent, our pilgrimage must be.
- So much for that. Now for our Irish wars:
- We must supplant those rough rug-headed kerns,
- Which live like venom where no venom else
- But only they have privilege to live.
- And for these great affairs do ask some charge,
- Towards our assistance we do seize to us
- The plate, corn, revenues and moveables,
- Whereof our uncle Gaunt did stand possess'd.
DUKE OF YORK:
- How long shall I be patient? ah, how long
- Shall tender duty make me suffer wrong?
- Not Gloucester's death, nor Hereford's banishment
- Not Gaunt's rebukes, nor England's private wrongs,
- Nor the prevention of poor Bolingbroke
- About his marriage, nor my own disgrace,
- Have ever made me sour my patient cheek,
- Or bend one wrinkle on my sovereign's face.
- I am the last of noble Edward's sons,
- Of whom thy father, Prince of Wales, was first:
- In war was never lion raged more fierce,
- In peace was never gentle lamb more mild,
- Than was that young and princely gentleman.
- His face thou hast, for even so look'd he,
- Accomplish'd with the number of thy hours;
- But when he frown'd, it was against the French
- And not against his friends; his noble hand
- Did will what he did spend and spent not that
- Which his triumphant father's hand had won;
- His hands were guilty of no kindred blood,
- But bloody with the enemies of his kin.
- O Richard! York is too far gone with grief,
- Or else he never would compare between.
KING RICHARD II:
- Why, uncle, what's the matter?
DUKE OF YORK:
- O my liege,
- Pardon me, if you please; if n ot, I, pleased
- Not to be pardon'd, am content withal.
- Seek you to seize and gripe into your hands
- The royalties and rights of banish'd Hereford?
- Is not Gaunt dead, and doth not Hereford live?
- Was not Gaunt just, and is not Harry true?
- Did not the one deserve to have an heir?
- Is not his heir a well-deserving son?
- Take Hereford's rights away, and take from Time
- His charters and his customary rights;
- Let not to-morrow then ensue to-day;
- Be not thyself; for how art thou a king
- But by fair sequence and succession?
- Now, afore God--God forbid I say true!--
- If you do wrongfully seize Hereford's rights,
- Call in the letters patent that he hath
- By his attorneys-general to sue
- His livery, and deny his offer'd homage,
- You pluck a thousand dangers on your head,
- You lose a thousand well-disposed hearts
- And prick my tender patience, to those thoughts
- Which honour and allegiance cannot think.
KING RICHARD II:
- Think what you will, we seize into our hands
- His plate, his goods, his money and his lands.
DUKE OF YORK:
- I'll not be by the while: my liege, farewell:
- What will ensue hereof, there's none can tell;
- But by bad courses may be understood
- That their events can never fall out good.
-
[Exit]
KING RICHARD II:
- Go, Bushy, to the Earl of Wiltshire straight:
- Bid him repair to us to Ely House
- To see this business. To-morrow next
- We will for Ireland; and 'tis time, I trow:
- And we create, in absence of ourself,
- Our uncle York lord governor of England;
- For he is just and always loved us well.
- Come on, our queen: to-morrow must we part;
- Be merry, for our time of stay is short
-
[Flourish. Exeunt KING RICHARD II, QUEEN,
DUKE OF AUMERLE, BUSHY, GREEN, and BAGOT]
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Well, lords, the Duke of Lancaster is dead.
LORD ROSS:
- And living too; for now his son is duke.
LORD WILLOUGHBY:
- Barely in title, not in revenue.
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Richly in both, if justice had her right.
LORD ROSS:
- My heart is great; but it must break with silence,
- Ere't be disburden'd with a liberal tongue.
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Nay, speak thy mind; and let him ne'er speak more
- That speaks thy words again to do thee harm!
LORD WILLOUGHBY:
- Tends that thou wouldst speak to the Duke of Hereford?
- If it be so, out with it boldly, man;
- Quick is mine ear to hear of good towards him.
LORD ROSS:
- No good at all that I can do for him;
- Unless you call it good to pity him,
- Bereft and gelded of his patrimony.
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Now, afore God, 'tis shame such wrongs are borne
- In him, a royal prince, and many moe
- Of noble blood in this declining land.
- The king is not himself, but basely led
- By flatterers; and what they will inform,
- Merely in hate, 'gainst any of us all,
- That will the king severely prosecute
- 'Gainst us, our lives, our children, and our heirs.
LORD ROSS:
- The commons hath he pill'd with grievous taxes,
- And quite lost their hearts: the nobles hath he fined
- For ancient quarrels, and quite lost their hearts.
LORD WILLOUGHBY:
- And daily new exactions are devised,
- As blanks, benevolences, and I wot not what:
- But what, o' God's name, doth become of this?
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Wars have not wasted it, for warr'd he hath not,
- But basely yielded upon compromise
- That which his noble ancestors achieved with blows:
- More hath he spent in peace than they in wars.
LORD ROSS:
- The Earl of Wiltshire hath the realm in farm.
LORD WILLOUGHBY:
- The king's grown bankrupt, like a broken man.
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Reproach and dissolution hangeth over him.
LORD ROSS:
- He hath not money for these Irish wars,
- His burthenous taxations notwithstanding,
- But by the robbing of the banish'd duke.
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- His noble kinsman: most degenerate king!
- But, lords, we hear this fearful tempest sing,
- Yet see no shelter to avoid the storm;
- We see the wind sit sore upon our sails,
- And yet we strike not, but securely perish.
LORD ROSS:
- We see the very wreck that we must suffer;
- And unavoided is the danger now,
- For suffering so the causes of our wreck.
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Not so; even through the hollow eyes of death
- I spy life peering; but I dare not say
- How near the tidings of our comfort is.
LORD WILLOUGHBY:
- Nay, let us share thy thoughts, as thou dost ours.
LORD ROSS:
- Be confident to speak, Northumberland:
- We three are but thyself; and, speaking so,
- Thy words are but as thoughts; therefore, be bold.
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Then thus: I have from Port le Blanc, a bay
- In Brittany, received intelligence
- That Harry Duke of Hereford, Rainold Lord Cobham,
- That late broke from the Duke of Exeter,
- His brother, Archbishop late of Canterbury,
- Sir Thomas Erpingham, Sir John Ramston,
- Sir John Norbery, Sir Robert Waterton and Francis Quoint,
- All these well furnish'd by the Duke of Bretagne
- With eight tall ships, three thousand men of war,
- Are making hither with all due expedience
- And shortly mean to touch our northern shore:
- Perhaps they had ere this, but that they stay
- The first departing of the king for Ireland.
- If then we shall shake off our slavish yoke,
- Imp out our drooping country's broken wing,
- Redeem from broking pawn the blemish'd crown,
- Wipe off the dust that hides our sceptre's gilt
- And make high majesty look like itself,
- Away with me in post to Ravenspurgh;
- But if you faint, as fearing to do so,
- Stay and be secret, and myself will go.
LORD ROSS:
- To horse, to horse! urge doubts to them that fear.
LORD WILLOUGHBY:
- Hold out my horse, and I will first be there.
-
[Exeunt]
ACT II, SCENE II.
The palace.
[Enter QUEEN, BUSHY, and BAGOT]
BUSHY:
- Madam, your majesty is too much sad:
- You promised, when you parted with the king,
- To lay aside life-harming heaviness
- And entertain a cheerful disposition.
QUEEN:
- To please the king I did; to please myself
- I cannot do it; yet I know no cause
- Why I should welcome such a guest as grief,
- Save bidding farewell to so sweet a guest
- As my sweet Richard: yet again, methinks,
- Some unborn sorrow, ripe in fortune's womb,
- Is coming towards me, and my inward soul
- With nothing trembles: at some thing it grieves,
- More than with parting from my lord the king.
BUSHY:
- Each substance of a grief hath twenty shadows,
- Which shows like grief itself, but is not so;
- For sorrow's eye, glazed with blinding tears,
- Divides one thing entire to many objects;
- Like perspectives, which rightly gazed upon
- Show nothing but confusion, eyed awry
- Distinguish form: so your sweet majesty,
- Looking awry upon your lord's departure,
- Find shapes of grief, more than himself, to wail;
- Which, look'd on as it is, is nought but shadows
- Of what it is not. Then, thrice-gracious queen,
- More than your lord's departure weep not: more's not seen;
- Or if it be, 'tis with false sorrow's eye,
- Which for things true weeps things imaginary.
QUEEN:
- It may be so; but yet my inward soul
- Persuades me it is otherwise: howe'er it be,
- I cannot but be sad; so heavy sad
- As, though on thinking on no thought I think,
- Makes me with heavy nothing faint and shrink.
BUSHY:
- 'Tis nothing but conceit, my gracious lady.
QUEEN:
- 'Tis nothing less: conceit is still derived
- From some forefather grief; mine is not so,
- For nothing had begot my something grief;
- Or something hath the nothing that I grieve:
- 'Tis in reversion that I do possess;
- But what it is, that is not yet known; what
- I cannot name; 'tis nameless woe, I wot.
-
[Enter GREEN]
GREEN:
- God save your majesty! and well met, gentlemen:
- I hope the king is not yet shipp'd for Ireland.
QUEEN:
- Why hopest thou so? 'tis better hope he is;
- For his designs crave haste, his haste good hope:
- Then wherefore dost thou hope he is not shipp'd?
GREEN:
- That he, our hope, might have retired his power,
- And driven into despair an enemy's hope,
- Who strongly hath set footing in this land:
- The banish'd Bolingbroke repeals himself,
- And with uplifted arms is safe arrived
- At Ravenspurgh.
QUEEN:
- Now God in heaven forbid!
GREEN:
- Ah, madam, 'tis too true: and that is worse,
- The Lord Northumberland, his son young Henry Percy,
- The Lords of Ross, Beaumond, and Willoughby,
- With all their powerful friends, are fled to him.
BUSHY:
- Why have you not proclaim'd Northumberland
- And all the rest revolted faction traitors?
GREEN:
- We have: whereupon the Earl of Worcester
- Hath broke his staff, resign'd his stewardship,
- And all the household servants fled with him
- To Bolingbroke.
QUEEN:
- So, Green, thou art the midwife to my woe,
- And Bolingbroke my sorrow's dismal heir:
- Now hath my soul brought forth her prodigy,
- And I, a gasping new-deliver'd mother,
- Have woe to woe, sorrow to sorrow join'd.
BUSHY:
- Despair not, madam.
QUEEN:
- Who shall hinder me?
- I will despair, and be at enmity
- With cozening hope: he is a flatterer,
- A parasite, a keeper back of death,
- Who gently would dissolve the bands of life,
- Which false hope lingers in extremity.
-
[Enter DUKE OF YORK]
GREEN:
- Here comes the Duke of York.
QUEEN:
- With signs of war about his aged neck:
- O, full of careful business are his looks!
- Uncle, for God's sake, speak comfortable words.
DUKE OF YORK:
- Should I do so, I should belie my thoughts:
- Comfort's in heaven; and we are on the earth,
- Where nothing lives but crosses, cares and grief.
- Your husband, he is gone to save far off,
- Whilst others come to make him lose at home:
- Here am I left to underprop his land,
- Who, weak with age, cannot support myself:
- Now comes the sick hour that his surfeit made;
- Now shall he try his friends that flatter'd him.
-
[Enter a Servant]
Servant:
- My lord, your son was gone before I came.
DUKE OF YORK:
- He was? Why, so! go all which way it will!
- The nobles they are fled, the commons they are cold,
- And will, I fear, revolt on Hereford's side.
- Sirrah, get thee to Plashy, to my sister Gloucester;
- Bid her send me presently a thousand pound:
- Hold, take my ring.
Servant:
- My lord, I had forgot to tell your lordship,
- To-day, as I came by, I called there;
- But I shall grieve you to report the rest.
DUKE OF YORK:
- What is't, knave?
Servant:
- An hour before I came, the duchess died.
BUSHY:
- The wind sits fair for news to go to Ireland,
- But none returns. For us to levy power
- Proportionable to the enemy
- Is all unpossible.
GREEN:
- Besides, our nearness to the king in love
- Is near the hate of those love not the king.
BAGOT:
- And that's the wavering commons: for their love
- Lies in their purses, and whoso empties them
- By so much fills their hearts with deadly hate.
BUSHY:
- Wherein the king stands generally condemn'd.
BAGOT:
- If judgement lie in them, then so do we,
- Because we ever have been near the king.
GREEN:
- Well, I will for refuge straight to Bristol castle:
- The Earl of Wiltshire is already there.
BUSHY:
- Thither will I with you; for little office
- The hateful commons will perform for us,
- Except like curs to tear us all to pieces.
- Will you go along with us?
BAGOT:
- No; I will to Ireland to his majesty.
- Farewell: if heart's presages be not vain,
- We three here art that ne'er shall meet again.
BUSHY:
- That's as York thrives to beat back Bolingbroke.
GREEN:
- Alas, poor duke! the task he undertakes
- Is numbering sands and drinking oceans dry:
- Where one on his side fights, thousands will fly.
- Farewell at once, for once, for all, and ever.
BUSHY:
- Well, we may meet again.
BAGOT:
- I fear me, never.
-
[Exeunt]
ACT II, SCENE III.
Wilds in Gloucestershire.
[Enter HENRY BOLINGBROKE and NORTHUMBERLAND, with Forces]
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- How far is it, my lord, to Berkeley now?
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Believe me, noble lord,
- I am a stranger here in Gloucestershire:
- These high wild hills and rough uneven ways
- Draws out our miles, and makes them wearisome,
- And yet your fair discourse hath been as sugar,
- Making the hard way sweet and delectable.
- But I bethink me what a weary way
- From Ravenspurgh to Cotswold will be found
- In Ross and Willoughby, wanting your company,
- Which, I protest, hath very much beguiled
- The tediousness and process of my travel:
- But theirs is sweetened with the hope to have
- The present benefit which I possess;
- And hope to joy is little less in joy
- Than hope enjoy'd: by this the weary lords
- Shall make their way seem short, as mine hath done
- By sight of what I have, your noble company.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Of much less value is my company
- Than your good words. But who comes here?
-
[Enter HENRY PERCY]
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- It is my son, young Harry Percy,
- Sent from my brother Worcester, whencesoever.
- Harry, how fares your uncle?
HENRY PERCY:
- I had thought, my lord, to have learn'd his health of you.
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Why, is he not with the queen?
HENRY PERCY:
- No, my good Lord; he hath forsook the court,
- Broken his staff of office and dispersed
- The household of the king.
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- What was his reason?
- He was not so resolved when last we spake together.
HENRY PERCY:
- Because your lordship was proclaimed traitor.
- But he, my lord, is gone to Ravenspurgh,
- To offer service to the Duke of Hereford,
- And sent me over by Berkeley, to discover
- What power the Duke of York had levied there;
- Then with directions to repair to Ravenspurgh.
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Have you forgot the Duke of Hereford, boy?
HENRY PERCY:
- No, my good lord, for that is not forgot
- Which ne'er I did remember: to my knowledge,
- I never in my life did look on him.
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Then learn to know him now; this is the duke.
HENRY PERCY:
- My gracious lord, I tender you my service,
- Such as it is, being tender, raw and young:
- Which elder days shall ripen and confirm
- To more approved service and desert.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- I thank thee, gentle Percy; and be sure
- I count myself in nothing else so happy
- As in a soul remembering my good friends;
- And, as my fortune ripens with thy love,
- It shall be still thy true love's recompense:
- My heart this covenant makes, my hand thus seals it.
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- How far is it to Berkeley? and what stir
- Keeps good old York there with his men of war?
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Here come the Lords of Ross and Willoughby,
- Bloody with spurring, fiery-red with haste.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Welcome, my lords. I wot your love pursues
- A banish'd traitor: all my treasury
- Is yet but unfelt thanks, which more enrich'd
- Shall be your love and labour's recompense.
LORD ROSS:
- Your presence makes us rich, most noble lord.
LORD WILLOUGHBY:
- And far surmounts our labour to attain it.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Evermore thanks, the exchequer of the poor;
- Which, till my infant fortune comes to years,
- Stands for my bounty. But who comes here?
-
[Enter LORD BERKELEY]
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- It is my Lord of Berkeley, as I guess.
LORD BERKELEY:
- My Lord of Hereford, my message is to you.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- My lord, my answer is--to Lancaster;
- And I am come to seek that name in England;
- And I must find that title in your tongue,
- Before I make reply to aught you say.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- I shall not need transport my words by you;
- Here comes his grace in person. My noble uncle!
-
[Kneels]
DUKE OF YORK:
- Show me thy humble heart, and not thy knee,
- Whose duty is deceiveable and false.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- My gracious uncle--
DUKE OF YORK:
- Tut, tut!
- Grace me no grace, nor uncle me no uncle:
- I am no traitor's uncle; and that word 'grace.'
- In an ungracious mouth is but profane.
- Why have those banish'd and forbidden legs
- Dared once to touch a dust of England's ground?
- But then more 'why?' why have they dared to march
- So many miles upon her peaceful bosom,
- Frighting her pale-faced villages with war
- And ostentation of despised arms?
- Comest thou because the anointed king is hence?
- Why, foolish boy, the king is left behind,
- And in my loyal bosom lies his power.
- Were I but now the lord of such hot youth
- As when brave Gaunt, thy father, and myself
- Rescued the Black Prince, that young Mars of men,
- From forth the ranks of many thousand French,
- O, then how quickly should this arm of mine.
- Now prisoner to the palsy, chastise thee
- And minister correction to thy fault!
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- My gracious uncle, let me know my fault:
- On what condition stands it and wherein?
DUKE OF YORK:
- Even in condition of the worst degree,
- In gross rebellion and detested treason:
- Thou art a banish'd man, and here art come
- Before the expiration of thy time,
- In braving arms against thy sovereign.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- As I was banish'd, I was banish'd Hereford;
- But as I come, I come for Lancaster.
- And, noble uncle, I beseech your grace
- Look on my wrongs with an indifferent eye:
- You are my father, for methinks in you
- I see old Gaunt alive; O, then, my father,
- Will you permit that I shall stand condemn'd
- A wandering vagabond; my rights and royalties
- Pluck'd from my arms perforce and given away
- To upstart unthrifts? Wherefore was I born?
- If that my cousin king be King of England,
- It must be granted I am Duke of Lancaster.
- You have a son, Aumerle, my noble cousin;
- Had you first died, and he been thus trod down,
- He should have found his uncle Gaunt a father,
- To rouse his wrongs and chase them to the bay.
- I am denied to sue my livery here,
- And yet my letters-patents give me leave:
- My father's goods are all distrain'd and sold,
- And these and all are all amiss employ'd.
- What would you have me do? I am a subject,
- And I challenge law: attorneys are denied me;
- And therefore, personally I lay my claim
- To my inheritance of free descent.
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- The noble duke hath been too much abused.
LORD ROSS:
- It stands your grace upon to do him right.
LORD WILLOUGHBY:
- Base men by his endowments are made great.
DUKE OF YORK:
- My lords of England, let me tell you this:
- I have had feeling of my cousin's wrongs
- And laboured all I could to do him right;
- But in this kind to come, in braving arms,
- Be his own carver and cut out his way,
- To find out right with wrong, it may not be;
- And you that do abet him in this kind
- Cherish rebellion and are rebels all.
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- The noble duke hath sworn his coming is
- But for his own; and for the right of that
- We all have strongly sworn to give him aid;
- And let him ne'er see joy that breaks that oath!
DUKE OF YORK:
- Well, well, I see the issue of these arms:
- I cannot mend it, I must needs confess,
- Because my power is weak and all ill left:
- But if I could, by Him that gave me life,
- I would attach you all and make you stoop
- Unto the sovereign mercy of the king;
- But since I cannot, be it known to you
- I do remain as neuter. So, fare you well;
- Unless you please to enter in the castle
- And there repose you for this night.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- An offer, uncle, that we will accept:
- But we must win your grace to go with us
- To Bristol castle, which they say is held
- By Bushy, Bagot and their complices,
- The caterpillars of the commonwealth,
- Which I have sworn to weed and pluck away.
DUKE OF YORK:
- It may be I will go with you: but yet I'll pause;
- For I am loath to break our country's laws.
- Nor friends nor foes, to me welcome you are:
- Things past redress are now with me past care.
-
[Exeunt]
ACT II, SCENE IV.
A camp in Wales.
[Enter EARL OF SALISBURY and a Welsh Captain]
Captain:
- My lord of Salisbury, we have stay'd ten days,
- And hardly kept our countrymen together,
- And yet we hear no tidings from the king;
- Therefore we will disperse ourselves: farewell.
EARL OF SALISBURY:
- Stay yet another day, thou trusty Welshman:
- The king reposeth all his confidence in thee.
Captain:
- 'Tis thought the king is dead; we will not stay.
- The bay-trees in our country are all wither'd
- And meteors fright the fixed stars of heaven;
- The pale-faced moon looks bloody on the earth
- And lean-look'd prophets whisper fearful change;
- Rich men look sad and ruffians dance and leap,
- The one in fear to lose what they enjoy,
- The other to enjoy by rage and war:
- These signs forerun the death or fall of kings.
- Farewell: our countrymen are gone and fled,
- As well assured Richard their king is dead.
-
[Exit]
EARL OF SALISBURY:
- Ah, Richard, with the eyes of heavy mind
- I see thy glory like a shooting star
- Fall to the base earth from the firmament.
- Thy sun sets weeping in the lowly west,
- Witnessing storms to come, woe and unrest:
- Thy friends are fled to wait upon thy foes,
- And crossly to thy good all fortune goes.
-
[Exit]
ACT III, SCENE I.
Bristol. Before the castle.
[Enter HENRY BOLINGBROKE, DUKE OF YORK, NORTHUMBERLAND, LORD ROSS,
HENRY PERCY, LORD WILLOUGHBY, with BUSHY and GREEN, prisoners]
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Bring forth these men.
- Bushy and Green, I will not vex your souls--
- Since presently your souls must part your bodies--
- With too much urging your pernicious lives,
- For 'twere no charity; yet, to wash your blood
- From off my hands, here in the view of men
- I will unfold some causes of your deaths.
- You have misled a prince, a royal king,
- A happy gentleman in blood and lineaments,
- By you unhappied and disfigured clean:
- You have in manner with your sinful hours
- Made a divorce betwixt his queen and him,
- Broke the possession of a royal bed
- And stain'd the beauty of a fair queen's cheeks
- With tears drawn from her eyes by your foul wrongs.
- Myself, a prince by fortune of my birth,
- Near to the king in blood, and near in love
- Till you did make him misinterpret me,
- Have stoop'd my neck under your injuries,
- And sigh'd my English breath in foreign clouds,
- Eating the bitter bread of banishment;
- Whilst you have fed upon my signories,
- Dispark'd my parks and fell'd my forest woods,
- From my own windows torn my household coat,
- Razed out my imprese, leaving me no sign,
- Save men's opinions and my living blood,
- To show the world I am a gentleman.
- This and much more, much more than twice all this,
- Condemns you to the death. See them deliver'd over
- To execution and the hand of death.
BUSHY:
- More welcome is the stroke of death to me
- Than Bolingbroke to England. Lords, farewell.
GREEN:
- My comfort is that heaven will take our souls
- And plague injustice with the pains of hell.
DUKE OF YORK:
- A gentleman of mine I have dispatch'd
- With letters of your love to her at large.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Thank, gentle uncle. Come, lords, away.
- To fight with Glendower and his complices:
- Awhile to work, and after holiday.
-
[Exeunt]
ACT III, SCENE II.
The coast of Wales. A castle in view.
[Drums; flourish and colours. Enter KING RICHARD II,
the BISHOP OF CARLISLE, DUKE OF AUMERLE, and Soldiers]
KING RICHARD II:
- Barkloughly castle call they this at hand?
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Yea, my lord. How brooks your grace the air,
- After your late tossing on the breaking seas?
KING RICHARD II:
- Needs must I like it well: I weep for joy
- To stand upon my kingdom once again.
- Dear earth, I do salute thee with my hand,
- Though rebels wound thee with their horses' hoofs:
- As a long-parted mother with her child
- Plays fondly with her tears and smiles in meeting,
- So, weeping, smiling, greet I thee, my earth,
- And do thee favours with my royal hands.
- Feed not thy sovereign's foe, my gentle earth,
- Nor with thy sweets comfort his ravenous sense;
- But let thy spiders, that suck up thy venom,
- And heavy-gaited toads lie in their way,
- Doing annoyance to the treacherous feet
- Which with usurping steps do trample thee:
- Yield stinging nettles to mine enemies;
- And when they from thy bosom pluck a flower,
- Guard it, I pray thee, with a lurking adder
- Whose double tongue may with a mortal touch
- Throw death upon thy sovereign's enemies.
- Mock not my senseless conjuration, lords:
- This earth shall have a feeling and these stones
- Prove armed soldiers, ere her native king
- Shall falter under foul rebellion's arms.
BISHOP OF CARLISLE:
- Fear not, my lord: that Power that made you king
- Hath power to keep you king in spite of all.
- The means that heaven yields must be embraced,
- And not neglected; else, if heaven would,
- And we will not, heaven's offer we refuse,
- The proffer'd means of succor and redress.
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- He means, my lord, that we are too remiss;
- Whilst Bolingbroke, through our security,
- Grows strong and great in substance and in power.
EARL OF SALISBURY:
- Nor near nor farther off, my gracious lord,
- Than this weak arm: discomfort guides my tongue
- And bids me speak of nothing but despair.
- One day too late, I fear me, noble lord,
- Hath clouded all thy happy days on earth:
- O, call back yesterday, bid time return,
- And thou shalt have twelve thousand fighting men!
- To-day, to-day, unhappy day, too late,
- O'erthrows thy joys, friends, fortune and thy state:
- For all the Welshmen, hearing thou wert dead.
- Are gone to Bolingbroke, dispersed and fled.
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Comfort, my liege; why looks your grace so pale?
KING RICHARD II:
- But now the blood of twenty thousand men
- Did triumph in my face, and they are fled;
- And, till so much blood thither come again,
- Have I not reason to look pale and dead?
- All souls that will be safe fly from my side,
- For time hath set a blot upon my pride.
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Comfort, my liege; remember who you are.
SIR STEPHEN SCROOP:
- More health and happiness betide my liege
- Than can my care-tuned tongue deliver him!
KING RICHARD II:
- Mine ear is open and my heart prepared;
- The worst is worldly loss thou canst unfold.
- Say, is my kingdom lost? why, 'twas my care
- And what loss is it to be rid of care?
- Strives Bolingbroke to be as great as we?
- Greater he shall not be; if he serve God,
- We'll serve Him too and be his fellow so:
- Revolt our subjects? that we cannot mend;
- They break their faith to God as well as us:
- Cry woe, destruction, ruin and decay:
- The worst is death, and death will have his day.
SIR STEPHEN SCROOP:
- Glad am I that your highness is so arm'd
- To bear the tidings of calamity.
- Like an unseasonable stormy day,
- Which makes the silver rivers drown their shores,
- As if the world were all dissolved to tears,
- So high above his limits swells the rage
- Of Bolingbroke, covering your fearful land
- With hard bright steel and hearts harder than steel.
- White-beards have arm'd their thin and hairless scalps
- Against thy majesty; boys, with women's voices,
- Strive to speak big and clap their female joints
- In stiff unwieldy arms against thy crown:
- The very beadsmen learn to bend their bows
- Of double-fatal yew against thy state;
- Yea, distaff-women manage rusty bills
- Against thy seat: both young and old rebel,
- And all goes worse than I have power to tell.
KING RICHARD II:
- Too well, too well thou tell'st a tale so ill.
- Where is the Earl of Wiltshire? where is Bagot?
- What is become of Bushy? where is Green?
- That they have let the dangerous enemy
- Measure our confines with such peaceful steps?
- If we prevail, their heads shall pay for it:
- I warrant they have made peace with Bolingbroke.
SIR STEPHEN SCROOP:
- Peace have they made with him indeed, my lord.
KING RICHARD II:
- O villains, vipers, damn'd without redemption!
- Dogs, easily won to fawn on any man!
- Snakes, in my heart-blood warm'd, that sting my heart!
- Three Judases, each one thrice worse than Judas!
- Would they make peace? terrible hell make war
- Upon their spotted souls for this offence!
SIR STEPHEN SCROOP:
- Sweet love, I see, changing his property,
- Turns to the sourest and most deadly hate:
- Again uncurse their souls; their peace is made
- With heads, and not with hands; those whom you curse
- Have felt the worst of death's destroying wound
- And lie full low, graved in the hollow ground.
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Is Bushy, Green, and the Earl of Wiltshire dead?
SIR STEPHEN SCROOP:
- Ay, all of them at Bristol lost their heads.
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Where is the duke my father with his power?
KING RICHARD II:
- No matter where; of comfort no man speak:
- Let's talk of graves, of worms, and epitaphs;
- Make dust our paper and with rainy eyes
- Write sorrow on the bosom of the earth,
- Let's choose executors and talk of wills:
- And yet not so, for what can we bequeath
- Save our deposed bodies to the ground?
- Our lands, our lives and all are Bolingbroke's,
- And nothing can we call our own but death
- And that small model of the barren earth
- Which serves as paste and cover to our bones.
- For God's sake, let us sit upon the ground
- And tell sad stories of the death of kings;
- How some have been deposed; some slain in war,
- Some haunted by the ghosts they have deposed;
- Some poison'd by their wives: some sleeping kill'd;
- All murder'd: for within the hollow crown
- That rounds the mortal temples of a king
- Keeps Death his court and there the antic sits,
- Scoffing his state and grinning at his pomp,
- Allowing him a breath, a little scene,
- To monarchize, be fear'd and kill with looks,
- Infusing him with self and vain conceit,
- As if this flesh which walls about our life,
- Were brass impregnable, and humour'd thus
- Comes at the last and with a little pin
- Bores through his castle wall, and farewell king!
- Cover your heads and mock not flesh and blood
- With solemn reverence: throw away respect,
- Tradition, form and ceremonious duty,
- For you have but mistook me all this while:
- I live with bread like you, feel want,
- Taste grief, need friends: subjected thus,
- How can you say to me, I am a king?
BISHOP OF CARLISLE:
- My lord, wise men ne'er sit and wail their woes,
- But presently prevent the ways to wail.
- To fear the foe, since fear oppresseth strength,
- Gives in your weakness strength unto your foe,
- And so your follies fight against yourself.
- Fear and be slain; no worse can come to fight:
- And fight and die is death destroying death;
- Where fearing dying pays death servile breath.
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- My father hath a power; inquire of him
- And learn to make a body of a limb.
KING RICHARD II:
- Thou chidest me well: proud Bolingbroke, I come
- To change blows with thee for our day of doom.
- This ague fit of fear is over-blown;
- An easy task it is to win our own.
- Say, Scroop, where lies our uncle with his power?
- Speak sweetly, man, although thy looks be sour.
SIR STEPHEN SCROOP:
- Men judge by the complexion of the sky
- The state and inclination of the day:
- So may you by my dull and heavy eye,
- My tongue hath but a heavier tale to say.
- I play the torturer, by small and small
- To lengthen out the worst that must be spoken:
- Your uncle York is join'd with Bolingbroke,
- And all your northern castles yielded up,
- And all your southern gentlemen in arms
- Upon his party.
KING RICHARD II:
- Thou hast said enough.
- Beshrew thee, cousin, which didst lead me forth
-
[To DUKE OF AUMERLE]
- Of that sweet way I was in to despair!
- What say you now? what comfort have we now?
- By heaven, I'll hate him everlastingly
- That bids me be of comfort any more.
- Go to Flint castle: there I'll pine away;
- A king, woe's slave, shall kingly woe obey.
- That power I have, discharge; and let them go
- To ear the land that hath some hope to grow,
- For I have none: let no man speak again
- To alter this, for counsel is but vain.
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- My liege, one word.
KING RICHARD II:
- He does me double wrong
- That wounds me with the flatteries of his tongue.
- Discharge my followers: let them hence away,
- From Richard's night to Bolingbroke's fair day.
-
[Exeunt]
ACT III, SCENE III.
Wales. Before Flint castle.
[Enter, with drum and colours, HENRY BOLINGBROKE,
DUKE OF YORK, NORTHUMBERLAND, Attendants, and forces]
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- So that by this intelligence we learn
- The Welshmen are dispersed, and Salisbury
- Is gone to meet the king, who lately landed
- With some few private friends upon this coast.
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- The news is very fair and good, my lord:
- Richard not far from hence hath hid his head.
DUKE OF YORK:
- It would beseem the Lord Northumberland
- To say 'King Richard:' alack the heavy day
- When such a sacred king should hide his head.
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Your grace mistakes; only to be brief
- Left I his title out.
DUKE OF YORK:
- The time hath been,
- Would you have been so brief with him, he would
- Have been so brief with you, to shorten you,
- For taking so the head, your whole head's length.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Mistake not, uncle, further than you should.
DUKE OF YORK:
- Take not, good cousin, further than you should.
- Lest you mistake the heavens are o'er our heads.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- I know it, uncle, and oppose not myself
- Against their will. But who comes here?
-
[Enter HENRY PERCY]
- Welcome, Harry: what, will not this castle yield?
HENRY PERCY:
- The castle royally is mann'd, my lord,
- Against thy entrance.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Royally!
- Why, it contains no king?
HENRY PERCY:
- Yes, my good lord,
- It doth contain a king; King Richard lies
- Within the limits of yon lime and stone:
- And with him are the Lord Aumerle, Lord Salisbury,
- Sir Stephen Scroop, besides a clergyman
- Of holy reverence; who, I cannot learn.
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- O, belike it is the Bishop of Carlisle.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Noble lords,
- Go to the rude ribs of that ancient castle;
- Through brazen trumpet send the breath of parley
- Into his ruin'd ears, and thus deliver:
- Henry Bolingbroke
- On both his knees doth kiss King Richard's hand
- And sends allegiance and true faith of heart
- To his most royal person, hither come
- Even at his feet to lay my arms and power,
- Provided that my banishment repeal'd
- And lands restored again be freely granted:
- If not, I'll use the advantage of my power
- And lay the summer's dust with showers of blood
- Rain'd from the wounds of slaughter'd Englishmen:
- The which, how far off from the mind of Bolingbroke
- It is, such crimson tempest should bedrench
- The fresh green lap of fair King Richard's land,
- My stooping duty tenderly shall show.
- Go, signify as much, while here we march
- Upon the grassy carpet of this plain.
- Let's march without the noise of threatening drum,
- That from this castle's tatter'd battlements
- Our fair appointments may be well perused.
- Methinks King Richard and myself should meet
- With no less terror than the elements
- Of fire and water, when their thundering shock
- At meeting tears the cloudy cheeks of heaven.
- Be he the fire, I'll be the yielding water:
- The rage be his, whilst on the earth I rain
- My waters; on the earth, and not on him.
- March on, and mark King Richard how he looks.
-
[Parle without, and answer within. Then a flourish.
Enter on the walls, KING RICHARD II, the BISHOP OF CARLISLE,
DUKE OF AUMERLE, SIR STEPHEN SCROOP, and EARL OF SALISBURY]
- See, see, King Richard doth himself appear,
- As doth the blushing discontented sun
- From out the fiery portal of the east,
- When he perceives the envious clouds are bent
- To dim his glory and to stain the track
- Of his bright passage to the occident.
DUKE OF YORK:
- Yet looks he like a king: behold, his eye,
- As bright as is the eagle's, lightens forth
- Controlling majesty: alack, alack, for woe,
- That any harm should stain so fair a show!
KING RICHARD II:
- We are amazed; and thus long have we stood
- To watch the fearful bending of thy knee,
-
[To NORTHUMBERLAND]
- Because we thought ourself thy lawful king:
- And if we be, how dare thy joints forget
- To pay their awful duty to our presence?
- If we be not, show us the hand of God
- That hath dismissed us from our stewardship;
- For well we know, no hand of blood and bone
- Can gripe the sacred handle of our sceptre,
- Unless he do profane, steal, or usurp.
- And though you think that all, as you have done,
- Have torn their souls by turning them from us,
- And we are barren and bereft of friends;
- Yet know, my master, God omnipotent,
- Is mustering in his clouds on our behalf
- Armies of pestilence; and they shall strike
- Your children yet unborn and unbegot,
- That lift your vassal hands against my head
- And threat the glory of my precious crown.
- Tell Bolingbroke--for yond methinks he stands--
- That every stride he makes upon my land
- Is dangerous treason: he is come to open
- The purple testament of bleeding war;
- But ere the crown he looks for live in peace,
- Ten thousand bloody crowns of mothers' sons
- Shall ill become the flower of England's face,
- Change the complexion of her maid-pale peace
- To scarlet indignation and bedew
- Her pastures' grass with faithful English blood.
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- The king of heaven forbid our lord the king
- Should so with civil and uncivil arms
- Be rush'd upon! Thy thrice noble cousin
- Harry Bolingbroke doth humbly kiss thy hand;
- And by the honourable tomb he swears,
- That stands upon your royal grandsire's bones,
- And by the royalties of both your bloods,
- Currents that spring from one most gracious head,
- And by the buried hand of warlike Gaunt,
- And by the worth and honour of himself,
- Comprising all that may be sworn or said,
- His coming hither hath no further scope
- Than for his lineal royalties and to beg
- Enfranchisement immediate on his kn ees:
- Which on thy royal party granted once,
- His glittering arms he will commend to rust,
- His barbed steeds to stables, and his heart
- To faithful service of your majesty.
- This swears he, as he is a prince, is just;
- And, as I am a gentleman, I credit him.
KING RICHARD II:
- Northumberland, say thus the king returns:
- His noble cousin is right welcome hither;
- And all the number of his fair demands
- Shall be accomplish'd without contradiction:
- With all the gracious utterance thou hast
- Speak to his gentle hearing kind commends.
- We do debase ourselves, cousin, do we not,
-
[To DUKE OF AUMERLE]
- To look so poorly and to speak so fair?
- Shall we call back Northumberland, and send
- Defiance to the traitor, and so die?
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- No, good my lord; let's fight with gentle words
- Till time lend friends and friends their helpful swords.
KING RICHARD II:
- O God, O God! that e'er this tongue of mine,
- That laid the sentence of dread banishment
- On yon proud man, should take it off again
- With words of sooth! O that I were as great
- As is my grief, or lesser than my name!
- Or that I could forget what I have been,
- Or not remember what I must be now!
- Swell'st thou, proud heart? I'll give thee scope to beat,
- Since foes have scope to beat both thee and me.
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Northumberland comes back from Bolingbroke.
KING RICHARD II:
- What must the king do now? must he submit?
- The king shall do it: must he be deposed?
- The king shall be contented: must he lose
- The name of king? o' God's name, let it go:
- I'll give my jewels for a set of beads,
- My gorgeous palace for a hermitage,
- My gay apparel for an almsman's gown,
- My figured goblets for a dish of wood,
- My sceptre for a palmer's walking staff,
- My subjects for a pair of carved saints
- And my large kingdom for a little grave,
- A little little grave, an obscure grave;
- Or I'll be buried in the king's highway,
- Some way of common trade, where subjects' feet
- May hourly trample on their sovereign's head;
- For on my heart they tread now whilst I live;
- And buried once, why not upon my head?
- Aumerle, thou weep'st, my tender-hearted cousin!
- We'll make foul weather with despised tears;
- Our sighs and they shall lodge the summer corn,
- And make a dearth in this revolting land.
- Or shall we play the wantons with our woes,
- And make some pretty match with shedding tears?
- As thus, to drop them still upon one place,
- Till they have fretted us a pair of graves
- Within the earth; and, therein laid,--there lies
- Two kinsmen digg'd their graves with weeping eyes.
- Would not this ill do well? Well, well, I see
- I talk but idly, and you laugh at me.
- Most mighty prince, my Lord Northumberland,
- What says King Bolingbroke? will his majesty
- Give Richard leave to live till Richard die?
- You make a leg, and Bolingbroke says ay.
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- My lord, in the base court he doth attend
- To speak with you; may it please you to come down.
KING RICHARD II:
- Down, down I come; like glistering Phaethon,
- Wanting the manage of unruly jades.
- In the base court? Base court, where kings grow base,
- To come at traitors' calls and do them grace.
- In the base court? Come down? Down, court!
- down, king!
- For night-owls shriek where mounting larks
- should sing.
-
[Exeunt from above]
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- What says his majesty?
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Stand all apart,
- And show fair duty to his majesty.
-
[He kneels down]
- My gracious lord,--
KING RICHARD II:
- Fair cousin, you debase your princely knee
- To make the base earth proud with kissing it:
- Me rather had my heart might feel your love
- Than my unpleased eye see your courtesy.
- Up, cousin, up; your heart is up, I know,
- Thus high at least, although your knee be low.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- My gracious lord, I come but for mine own.
KING RICHARD II:
- Your own is yours, and I am yours, and all.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- So far be mine, my most redoubted lord,
- As my true service shall deserve your love.
KING RICHARD II:
- Well you deserve: they well deserve to have,
- That know the strong'st and surest way to get.
- Uncle, give me your hands: nay, dry your eyes;
- Tears show their love, but want their remedies.
- Cousin, I am too young to be your father,
- Though you are old enough to be my heir.
- What you will have, I'll give, and willing too;
- For do we must what force will have us do.
- Set on towards London, cousin, is it so?
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Yea, my good lord.
KING RICHARD II:
- Then I must not say no.
-
[Flourish. Exeunt]
ACT III, SCENE IV.
LANGLEY. The DUKE OF YORK's garden.
[Enter the QUEEN and two Ladies]
QUEEN:
- What sport shall we devise here in this garden,
- To drive away the heavy thought of care?
Lady:
- Madam, we'll play at bowls.
QUEEN:
- 'Twill make me think the world is full of rubs,
- And that my fortune rubs against the bias.
Lady:
- Madam, we'll dance.
QUEEN:
- My legs can keep no measure in delight,
- When my poor heart no measure keeps in grief:
- Therefore, no dancing, girl; some other sport.
Lady:
- Madam, we'll tell tales.
QUEEN:
- Of sorrow or of joy?
QUEEN:
- Of neither, girl:
- For of joy, being altogether wanting,
- It doth remember me the more of sorrow;
- Or if of grief, being altogether had,
- It adds more sorrow to my want of joy:
- For what I have I need not to repeat;
- And what I want it boots not to complain.
QUEEN:
- 'Tis well that thou hast cause
- But thou shouldst please me better, wouldst thou weep.
Lady:
- I could weep, madam, would it do you good.
Gardener:
- Go, bind thou up yon dangling apricocks,
- Which, like unruly children, make their sire
- Stoop with oppression of their prodigal weight:
- Give some supportance to the bending twigs.
- Go thou, and like an executioner,
- Cut off the heads of too fast growing sprays,
- That look too lofty in our commonwealth:
- All must be even in our government.
- You thus employ'd, I will go root away
- The noisome weeds, which without profit suck
- The soil's fertility from wholesome flowers.
Servant:
- Why should we in the compass of a pale
- Keep law and form and due proportion,
- Showing, as in a model, our firm estate,
- When our sea-walled garden, the whole land,
- Is full of weeds, her fairest flowers choked up,
- Her fruit-trees all upturned, her hedges ruin'd,
- Her knots disorder'd and her wholesome herbs
- Swarming with caterpillars?
Gardener:
- Hold thy peace:
- He that hath suffer'd this disorder'd spring
- Hath now himself met with the fall of leaf:
- The weeds which his broad-spreading leaves did shelter,
- That seem'd in eating him to hold him up,
- Are pluck'd up root and all by Bolingbroke,
- I mean the Earl of Wiltshire, Bushy, Green.
Servant:
- What, are they dead?
Gardener:
- They are; and Bolingbroke
- Hath seized the wasteful king. O, what pity is it
- That he had not so trimm'd and dress'd his land
- As we this garden! We at time of year
- Do wound the bark, the skin of our fruit-trees,
- Lest, being over-proud in sap and blood,
- With too much riches it confound itself:
- Had he done so to great and growing men,
- They might have lived to bear and he to taste
- Their fruits of duty: superfluous branches
- We lop away, that bearing boughs may live:
- Had he done so, himself had borne the crown,
- Which waste of idle hours hath quite thrown down.
Servant:
- What, think you then the king shall be deposed?
Gardener:
- Depress'd he is already, and deposed
- 'Tis doubt he will be: letters came last night
- To a dear friend of the good Duke of York's,
- That tell black tidings.
QUEEN:
- O, I am press'd to death through want of speaking!
-
[Coming forward]
- Thou, old Adam's likeness, set to dress this garden,
- How dares thy harsh rude tongue sound this unpleasing news?
- What Eve, what serpent, hath suggested thee
- To make a second fall of cursed man?
- Why dost thou say King Richard is deposed?
- Darest thou, thou little better thing than earth,
- Divine his downfall? Say, where, when, and how,
- Camest thou by this ill tidings? speak, thou wretch.
Gardener:
- Pardon me, madam: little joy have I
- To breathe this news; yet what I say is true.
- King Richard, he is in the mighty hold
- Of Bolingbroke: their fortunes both are weigh'd:
- In your lord's scale is nothing but himself,
- And some few vanities that make him light;
- But in the balance of great Bolingbroke,
- Besides himself, are all the English peers,
- And with that odds he weighs King Richard down.
- Post you to London, and you will find it so;
- I speak no more than every one doth know.
GARDENER:
- Poor queen! so that thy state might be no worse,
- I would my skill were subject to thy curse.
- Here did she fall a tear; here in this place
- I'll set a bank of rue, sour herb of grace:
- Rue, even for ruth, here shortly shall be seen,
- In the remembrance of a weeping queen.
-
[Exeunt]
ACT IV, SCENE I.
Westminster Hall.
[Enter, as to the Parliament, HENRY BOLINGBROKE, DUKE OF AUMERLE,
NORTHUMBERLAND, HENRY PERCY, LORD FITZWATER, DUKE OF SURREY,
the BISHOP OF CARLISLE, the Abbot Of Westminster,
and another Lord, Herald, Officers, and BAGOT]
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Call forth Bagot.
- Now, Bagot, freely speak thy mind;
- What thou dost know of noble Gloucester's death,
- Who wrought it with the king, and who perform'd
- The bloody office of his timeless end.
BAGOT:
- Then set before my face the Lord Aumerle.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Cousin, stand forth, and look upon that man.
BAGOT:
- My Lord Aumerle, I know your daring tongue
- Scorns to unsay what once it hath deliver'd.
- In that dead time when Gloucester's death was plotted,
- I heard you say, 'Is not my arm of length,
- That reacheth from the restful English court
- As far as Calais, to mine uncle's head?'
- Amongst much other talk, that very time,
- I heard you say that you had rather refuse
- The offer of an hundred thousand crowns
- Than Bolingbroke's return to England;
- Adding withal how blest this land would be
- In this your cousin's death.
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Princes and noble lords,
- What answer shall I make to this base man?
- Shall I so much dishonour my fair stars,
- On equal terms to give him chastisement?
- Either I must, or have mine honour soil'd
- With the attainder of his slanderous lips.
- There is my gage, the manual seal of death,
- That marks thee out for hell: I say, thou liest,
- And will maintain what thou hast said is false
- In thy heart-blood, though being all too base
- To stain the temper of my knightly sword.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Bagot, forbear; thou shalt not take it up.
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Excepting one, I would he were the best
- In all this presence that hath moved me so.
LORD FITZWATER:
- If that thy valour stand on sympathy,
- There is my gage, Aumerle, in gage to thine:
- By that fair sun which shows me where thou stand'st,
- I heard thee say, and vauntingly thou spakest it
- That thou wert cause of noble Gloucester's death.
- If thou deny'st it twenty times, thou liest;
- And I will turn thy falsehood to thy heart,
- Where it was forged, with my rapier's point.
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Thou darest not, coward, live to see that day.
LORD FITZWATER:
- Now by my soul, I would it were this hour.
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Fitzwater, thou art damn'd to hell for this.
HENRY PERCY:
- Aumerle, thou liest; his honour is as true
- In this appeal as thou art all unjust;
- And that thou art so, there I throw my gage,
- To prove it on thee to the extremest point
- Of mortal breathing: seize it, if thou darest.
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- An if I do not, may my hands rot off
- And never brandish more revengeful steel
- Over the glittering helmet of my foe!
Lord:
- I task the earth to the like, forsworn Aumerle;
- And spur thee on with full as many lies
- As may be holloa'd in thy treacherous ear
- From sun to sun: there is my honour's pawn;
- Engage it to the trial, if thou darest.
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Who sets me else? by heaven, I'll throw at all:
- I have a thousand spirits in one breast,
- To answer twenty thousand such as you.
DUKE OF SURREY:
- My Lord Fitzwater, I do remember well
- The very time Aumerle and you did talk.
LORD FITZWATER:
- 'Tis very true: you were in presence then;
- And you can witness with me this is true.
DUKE OF SURREY:
- As false, by heaven, as heaven itself is true.
LORD FITZWATER:
- Surrey, thou liest.
DUKE OF SURREY:
- Dishonourable boy!
- That lie shall lie so heavy on my sword,
- That it shall render vengeance and revenge
- Till thou the lie-giver and that lie do lie
- In earth as quiet as thy father's skull:
- In proof whereof, there is my honour's pawn;
- Engage it to the trial, if thou darest.
LORD FITZWATER:
- How fondly dost thou spur a forward horse!
- If I dare eat, or drink, or breathe, or live,
- I dare meet Surrey in a wilderness,
- And spit upon him, whilst I say he lies,
- And lies, and lies: there is my bond of faith,
- To tie thee to my strong correction.
- As I intend to thrive in this new world,
- Aumerle is guilty of my true appeal:
- Besides, I heard the banish'd Norfolk say
- That thou, Aumerle, didst send two of thy men
- To execute the noble duke at Calais.
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Some honest Christian trust me with a gage
- That Norfolk lies: here do I throw down this,
- If he may be repeal'd, to try his honour.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- These differences shall all rest under gage
- Till Norfolk be repeal'd: repeal'd he shall be,
- And, though mine enemy, restored again
- To all his lands and signories: when he's return'd,
- Against Aumerle we will enforce his trial.
BISHOP OF CARLISLE:
- That honourable day shall ne'er be seen.
- Many a time hath banish'd Norfolk fought
- For Jesu Christ in glorious Christian field,
- Streaming the ensign of the Christian cross
- Against black pagans, Turks, and Saracens:
- And toil'd with works of war, retired himself
- To Italy; and there at Venice gave
- His body to that pleasant country's earth,
- And his pure soul unto his captain Christ,
- Under whose colours he had fought so long.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Why, bishop, is Norfolk dead?
BISHOP OF CARLISLE:
- As surely as I live, my lord.
DUKE OF YORK:
- Great Duke of Lancaster, I come to thee
- From plume-pluck'd Richard; who with willing soul
- Adopts thee heir, and his high sceptre yields
- To the possession of thy royal hand:
- Ascend his throne, descending now from him;
- And long live Henry, fourth of that name!
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- In God's name, I'll ascend the regal throne.
BISHOP OF CARLISLE:
- Marry. God forbid!
- Worst in this royal presence may I speak,
- Yet best beseeming me to speak the truth.
- Would God that any in this noble presence
- Were enough noble to be upright judge
- Of noble Richard! then true noblesse would
- Learn him forbearance from so foul a wrong.
- What subject can give sentence on his king?
- And who sits here that is not Richard's subject?
- Thieves are not judged but they are by to hear,
- Although apparent guilt be seen in them;
- And shall the figure of God's majesty,
- His captain, steward, deputy-elect,
- Anointed, crowned, planted many years,
- Be judged by subject and inferior breath,
- And he himself not present? O, forfend it, God,
- That in a Christian climate souls refined
- Should show so heinous, black, obscene a deed!
- I speak to subjects, and a subject speaks,
- Stirr'd up by God, thus boldly for his king:
- My Lord of Hereford here, whom you call king,
- Is a foul traitor to proud Hereford's king:
- And if you crown him, let me prophesy:
- The blood of English shall manure the ground,
- And future ages groan for this foul act;
- Peace shall go sleep with Turks and infidels,
- And in this seat of peace tumultuous wars
- Shall kin with kin and kind with kind confound;
- Disorder, horror, fear and mutiny
- Shall here inhabit, and this land be call'd
- The field of Golgotha and dead men's skulls.
- O, if you raise this house against this house,
- It will the woefullest division prove
- That ever fell upon this cursed earth.
- Prevent it, resist it, let it not be so,
- Lest child, child's children, cry against you woe!
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Well have you argued, sir; and, for your pains,
- Of capital treason we arrest you here.
- My Lord of Westminster, be it your charge
- To keep him safely till his day of trial.
- May it please you, lords, to grant the commons' suit.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Fetch hither Richard, that in common view
- He may surrender; so we shall proceed
- Without suspicion.
DUKE OF YORK:
- I will be his conduct.
-
[Exit]
KING RICHARD II:
- Alack, why am I sent for to a king,
- Before I have shook off the regal thoughts
- Wherewith I reign'd? I hardly yet have learn'd
- To insinuate, flatter, bow, and bend my limbs:
- Give sorrow leave awhile to tutor me
- To this submission. Yet I well remember
- The favours of these men: were they not mine?
- Did they not sometime cry, 'all hail!' to me?
- So Judas did to Christ: but he, in twelve,
- Found truth in all but one: I, in twelve thousand, none.
- God save the king! Will no man say amen?
- Am I both priest and clerk? well then, amen.
- God save the king! although I be not he;
- And yet, amen, if heaven do think him me.
- To do what service am I sent for hither?
DUKE OF YORK:
- To do that office of thine own good will
- Which tired majesty did make thee offer,
- The resignation of thy state and crown
- To Henry Bolingbroke.
KING RICHARD II:
- Give me the crown. Here, cousin, seize the crown;
- Here cousin:
- On this side my hand, and on that side yours.
- Now is this golden crown like a deep well
- That owes two buckets, filling one another,
- The emptier ever dancing in the air,
- The other down, unseen and full of water:
- That bucket down and full of tears am I,
- Drinking my griefs, whilst you mount up on high.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- I thought you had been willing to resign.
KING RICHARD II:
- My crown I am; but still my griefs are mine:
- You may my glories and my state depose,
- But not my griefs; still am I king of those.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Part of your cares you give me with your crown.
KING RICHARD II:
- Your cares set up do not pluck my cares down.
- My care is loss of care, by old care done;
- Your care is gain of care, by new care won:
- The cares I give I have, though given away;
- They tend the crown, yet still with me they stay.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Are you contented to resign the crown?
KING RICHARD II:
- Ay, no; no, ay; for I must nothing be;
- Therefore no no, for I resign to thee.
- Now mark me, how I will undo myself;
- I give this heavy weight from off my head
- And this unwieldy sceptre from my hand,
- The pride of kingly sway from out my heart;
- With mine own tears I wash away my balm,
- With mine own hands I give away my crown,
- With mine own tongue deny my sacred state,
- With mine own breath release all duty's rites:
- All pomp and majesty I do forswear;
- My manors, rents, revenues I forego;
- My acts, decrees, and statutes I deny:
- God pardon all oaths that are broke to me!
- God keep all vows unbroke that swear to thee!
- Make me, that nothing have, with nothing grieved,
- And thou with all pleased, that hast all achieved!
- Long mayst thou live in Richard's seat to sit,
- And soon lie Richard in an earthly pit!
- God save King Harry, unking'd Richard says,
- And send him many years of sunshine days!
- What more remains?
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- No more, but that you read
- These accusations and these grievous crimes
- Committed by your person and your followers
- Against the state and profit of this land;
- That, by confessing them, the souls of men
- May deem that you are worthily deposed.
KING RICHARD II:
- Must I do so? and must I ravel out
- My weaved-up folly? Gentle Northumberland,
- If thy offences were upon record,
- Would it not shame thee in so fair a troop
- To read a lecture of them? If thou wouldst,
- There shouldst thou find one heinous article,
- Containing the deposing of a king
- And cracking the strong warrant of an oath,
- Mark'd with a blot, damn'd in the book of heaven:
- Nay, all of you that stand and look upon,
- Whilst that my wretchedness doth bait myself,
- Though some of you with Pilate wash your hands
- Showing an outward pity; yet you Pilates
- Have here deliver'd me to my sour cross,
- And water cannot wash away your sin.
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- My lord, dispatch; read o'er these articles.
KING RICHARD II:
- Mine eyes are full of tears, I cannot see:
- And yet salt water blinds them not so much
- But they can see a sort of traitors here.
- Nay, if I turn mine eyes upon myself,
- I find myself a traitor with the rest;
- For I have given here my soul's consent
- To undeck the pompous body of a king;
- Made glory base and sovereignty a slave,
- Proud majesty a subject, state a peasant.
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- My lord,--
KING RICHARD II:
- No lord of thine, thou haught insulting man,
- Nor no man's lord; I have no name, no title,
- No, not that name was given me at the font,
- But 'tis usurp'd: alack the heavy day,
- That I have worn so many winters out,
- And know not now what name to call myself!
- O that I were a mockery king of snow,
- Standing before the sun of Bolingbroke,
- To melt myself away in water-drops!
- Good king, great king, and yet not greatly good,
- An if my word be sterling yet in England,
- Let it command a mirror hither straight,
- That it may show me what a face I have,
- Since it is bankrupt of his majesty.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Go some of you and fetch a looking-glass.
-
[Exit an attendant]
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Read o'er this paper while the glass doth come.
KING RICHARD II:
- Fiend, thou torment'st me ere I come to hell!
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Urge it no more, my Lord Northumberland.
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- The commons will not then be satisfied.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- The shadow of your sorrow hath destroy'd
- The shadow or your face.
KING RICHARD II:
- Say that again.
- The shadow of my sorrow! ha! let's see:
- 'Tis very true, my grief lies all within;
- And these external manners of laments
- Are merely shadows to the unseen grief
- That swells with silence in the tortured soul;
- There lies the substance: and I thank thee, king,
- For thy great bounty, that not only givest
- Me cause to wail but teachest me the way
- How to lament the cause. I'll beg one boon,
- And then be gone and trouble you no more.
- Shall I obtain it?
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Name it, fair cousin.
KING RICHARD II:
- 'Fair cousin'? I am greater than a king:
- For when I was a king, my flatterers
- Were then but subjects; being now a subject,
- I have a king here to my flatterer.
- Being so great, I have no need to beg.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Yet ask.
KING RICHARD II:
- And shall I have?
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- You shall.
KING RICHARD II:
- Then give me leave to go.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Whither?
KING RICHARD II:
- Whither you will, so I were from your sights.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Go, some of you convey him to the Tower.
Abbot:
- A woeful pageant have we here beheld.
BISHOP OF CARLISLE:
- The woe's to come; the children yet unborn.
- Shall feel this day as sharp to them as thorn.
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- You holy clergymen, is there no plot
- To rid the realm of this pernicious blot?
Abbot:
- My lord,
- Before I freely speak my mind herein,
- You shall not only take the sacrament
- To bury mine intents, but also to effect
- Whatever I shall happen to devise.
- I see your brows are full of discontent,
- Your hearts of sorrow and your eyes of tears:
- Come home with me to supper; and I'll lay
- A plot shall show us all a merry day.
-
[Exeunt]
ACT V, SCENE I.
London. A street leading to the Tower.
[Enter QUEEN and Ladies]
KING RICHARD II:
- Join not with grief, fair woman, do not so,
- To make my end too sudden: learn, good soul,
- To think our former state a happy dream;
- From which awaked, the truth of what we are
- Shows us but this: I am sworn brother, sweet,
- To grim Necessity, and he and I
- Will keep a league till death. Hie thee to France
- And cloister thee in some religious house:
- Our holy lives must win a new world's crown,
- Which our profane hours here have stricken down.
QUEEN:
- What, is my Richard both in shape and mind
- Transform'd and weaken'd? hath Bolingbroke deposed
- Thine intellect? hath he been in thy heart?
- The lion dying thrusteth forth his paw,
- And wounds the earth, if nothing else, with rage
- To be o'erpower'd; and wilt thou, pupil-like,
- Take thy correction mildly, kiss the rod,
- And fawn on rage with base humility,
- Which art a lion and a king of beasts?
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- My lord, the mind of Bolingbroke is changed:
- You must to Pomfret, not unto the Tower.
- And, madam, there is order ta'en for you;
- With all swift speed you must away to France.
KING RICHARD II:
- Northumberland, thou ladder wherewithal
- The mounting Bolingbroke ascends my throne,
- The time shall not be many hours of age
- More than it is ere foul sin gathering head
- Shalt break into corruption: thou shalt think,
- Though he divide the realm and give thee half,
- It is too little, helping him to all;
- And he shall think that thou, which know'st the way
- To plant unrightful kings, wilt know again,
- Being ne'er so little urged, another way
- To pluck him headlong from the usurped throne.
- The love of wicked men converts to fear;
- That fear to hate, and hate turns one or both
- To worthy danger and deserved death.
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- My guilt be on my head, and there an end.
- Take leave and part; for you must part forthwith.
KING RICHARD II:
- Doubly divorced! Bad men, you violate
- A twofold marriage, 'twixt my crown and me,
- And then betwixt me and my married wife.
- Let me unkiss the oath 'twixt thee and me;
- And yet not so, for with a kiss 'twas made.
- Part us, Northumberland; I toward the north,
- Where shivering cold and sickness pines the clime;
- My wife to France: from whence, set forth in pomp,
- She came adorned hither like sweet May,
- Sent back like Hallowmas or short'st of day.
QUEEN:
- And must we be divided? must we part?
KING RICHARD II:
- Ay, hand from hand, my love, and heart from heart.
QUEEN:
- Banish us both and send the king with me.
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- That were some love but little policy.
QUEEN:
- Then whither he goes, thither let me go.
KING RICHARD II:
- So two, together weeping, make one woe.
- Weep thou for me in France, I for thee here;
- Better far off than near, be ne'er the near.
- Go, count thy way with sighs; I mine with groans.
QUEEN:
- So longest way shall have the longest moans.
KING RICHARD II:
- Twice for one step I'll groan, the way being short,
- And piece the way out with a heavy heart.
- Come, come, in wooing sorrow let's be brief,
- Since, wedding it, there is such length in grief;
- One kiss shall stop our mouths, and dumbly part;
- Thus give I mine, and thus take I thy heart.
QUEEN:
- Give me mine own again; 'twere no good part
- To take on me to keep and kill thy heart.
- So, now I have mine own again, be gone,
- That I might strive to kill it with a groan.
KING RICHARD II:
- We make woe wanton with this fond delay:
- Once more, adieu; the rest let sorrow say.
-
[Exeunt]
ACT V, SCENE II.
The DUKE OF YORK's palace.
[Enter DUKE OF YORK and DUCHESS OF YORK]
DUCHESS OF YORK:
- My lord, you told me you would tell the rest,
- When weeping made you break the story off,
- of our two cousins coming into London.
DUKE OF YORK:
- Where did I leave?
DUCHESS OF YORK:
- At that sad stop, my lord,
- Where rude misgovern'd hands from windows' tops
- Threw dust and rubbish on King Richard's head.
DUKE OF YORK:
- Then, as I said, the duke, great Bolingbroke,
- Mounted upon a hot and fiery steed
- Which his aspiring rider seem'd to know,
- With slow but stately pace kept on his course,
- Whilst all tongues cried 'God save thee,
- Bolingbroke!'
- You would have thought the very windows spake,
- So many greedy looks of young and old
- Through casements darted their desiring eyes
- Upon his visage, and that all the walls
- With painted imagery had said at once
- 'Jesu preserve thee! welcome, Bolingbroke!'
- Whilst he, from the one side to the other turning,
- Bareheaded, lower than his proud steed's neck,
- Bespake them thus: 'I thank you, countrymen:'
- And thus still doing, thus he pass'd along.
DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Alack, poor Richard! where rode he the whilst?
DUKE OF YORK:
- As in a theatre, the eyes of men,
- After a well-graced actor leaves the stage,
- Are idly bent on him that enters next,
- Thinking his prattle to be tedious;
- Even so, or with much more contempt, men's eyes
- Did scowl on gentle Richard; no man cried 'God save him!'
- No joyful tongue gave him his welcome home:
- But dust was thrown upon his sacred head:
- Which with such gentle sorrow he shook off,
- His face still combating with tears and smiles,
- The badges of his grief and patience,
- That had not God, for some strong purpose, steel'd
- The hearts of men, they must perforce have melted
- And barbarism itself have pitied him.
- But heaven hath a hand in these events,
- To whose high will we bound our calm contents.
- To Bolingbroke are we sworn subjects now,
- Whose state and honour I for aye allow.
DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Here comes my son Aumerle.
DUKE OF YORK:
- Aumerle that was;
- But that is lost for being Richard's friend,
- And, madam, you must call him Rutland now:
- I am in parliament pledge for his truth
- And lasting fealty to the new-made king.
-
[Enter DUKE OF AUMERLE]
DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Welcome, my son: who are the violets now
- That strew the green lap of the new come spring?
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Madam, I know not, nor I greatly care not:
- God knows I had as lief be none as one.
DUKE OF YORK:
- Well, bear you well in this new spring of time,
- Lest you be cropp'd before you come to prime.
- What news from Oxford? hold those justs and triumphs?
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- For aught I know, my lord, they do.
DUKE OF YORK:
- You will be there, I know.
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- If God prevent not, I purpose so.
DUKE OF YORK:
- What seal is that, that hangs without thy bosom?
- Yea, look'st thou pale? let me see the writing.
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- My lord, 'tis nothing.
DUKE OF YORK:
- No matter, then, who see it;
- I will be satisfied; let me see the writing.
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- I do beseech your grace to pardon me:
- It is a matter of small consequence,
- Which for some reasons I would not have seen.
DUKE OF YORK:
- Which for some reasons, sir, I mean to see.
- I fear, I fear,--
DUCHESS OF YORK:
- What should you fear?
- 'Tis nothing but some bond, that he is enter'd into
- For gay apparel 'gainst the triumph day.
DUKE OF YORK:
- Bound to himself! what doth he with a bond
- That he is bound to? Wife, thou art a fool.
- Boy, let me see the writing.
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- I do beseech you, pardon me; I may not show it.
DUCHESS OF YORK:
- What is the matter, my lord?
DUKE OF YORK:
- Ho! who is within there?
-
[Enter a Servant]
- Saddle my horse.
- God for his mercy, what treachery is here!
DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Why, what is it, my lord?
DUKE OF YORK:
- Give me my boots, I say; saddle my horse.
- Now, by mine honour, by my life, by my troth,
- I will appeach the villain.
DUCHESS OF YORK:
- What is the matter?
DUKE OF YORK:
- Peace, foolish woman.
DUCHESS OF YORK:
- I will not peace. What is the matter, Aumerle.
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Good mother, be content; it is no more
- Than my poor life must answer.
DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Thy life answer!
DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Strike him, Aumerle. Poor boy, thou art amazed.
- Hence, villain! never more come in my sight.
DUKE OF YORK:
- Give me my boots, I say.
DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Why, York, what wilt thou do?
- Wilt thou not hide the trespass of thine own?
- Have we more sons? or are we like to have?
- Is not my teeming date drunk up with time?
- And wilt thou pluck my fair son from mine age,
- And rob me of a happy mother's name?
- Is he not like thee? is he not thine own?
DUKE OF YORK:
- Thou fond mad woman,
- Wilt thou conceal this dark conspiracy?
- A dozen of them here have ta'en the sacrament,
- And interchangeably set down their hands,
- To kill the king at Oxford.
DUCHESS OF YORK:
- He shall be none;
- We'll keep him here: then what is that to him?
DUKE OF YORK:
- Away, fond woman! were he twenty times my son,
- I would appeach him.
DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Hadst thou groan'd for him
- As I have done, thou wouldst be more pitiful.
- But now I know thy mind; thou dost suspect
- That I have been disloyal to thy bed,
- And that he is a bastard, not thy son:
- Sweet York, sweet husband, be not of that mind:
- He is as like thee as a man may be,
- Not like to me, or any of my kin,
- And yet I love him.
DUKE OF YORK:
- Make way, unruly woman!
-
[Exit]
DUCHESS OF YORK:
- After, Aumerle! mount thee upon his horse;
- Spur post, and get before him to the king,
- And beg thy pardon ere he do accuse thee.
- I'll not be long behind; though I be old,
- I doubt not but to ride as fast as York:
- And never will I rise up from the ground
- Till Bolingbroke have pardon'd thee. Away, be gone!
-
[Exeunt]
ACT V, SCENE III.
A royal palace.
[Enter HENRY BOLINGBROKE, HENRY PERCY, and other Lords]
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Can no man tell me of my unthrifty son?
- 'Tis full three months since I did see him last;
- If any plague hang over us, 'tis he.
- I would to God, my lords, he might be found:
- Inquire at London, 'mongst the taverns there,
- For there, they say, he daily doth frequent,
- With unrestrained loose companions,
- Even such, they say, as stand in narrow lanes,
- And beat our watch, and rob our passengers;
- Which he, young wanton and effeminate boy,
- Takes on the point of honour to support
- So dissolute a crew.
HENRY PERCY:
- My lord, some two days since I saw the prince,
- And told him of those triumphs held at Oxford.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- And what said the gallant?
HENRY PERCY:
- His answer was, he would unto the stews,
- And from the common'st creature pluck a glove,
- And wear it as a favour; and with that
- He would unhorse the lustiest challenger.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- As dissolute as desperate; yet through both
- I see some sparks of better hope, which elder years
- May happily bring forth. But who comes here?
-
[Enter DUKE OF AUMERLE]
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Where is the king?
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- What means our cousin, that he stares and looks
- So wildly?
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- God save your grace! I do beseech your majesty,
- To have some conference with your grace alone.
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- For ever may my knees grow to the earth,
- My tongue cleave to my roof within my mouth
- Unless a pardon ere I rise or speak.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Intended or committed was this fault?
- If on the first, how heinous e'er it be,
- To win thy after-love I pardon thee.
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Then give me leave that I may turn the key,
- That no man enter till my tale be done.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Have thy desire.
DUKE OF YORK:
-
[Within]
- My liege, beware; look to thyself;
- Thou hast a traitor in thy presence there.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Villain, I'll make thee safe.
-
[Drawing]
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Stay thy revengeful hand; thou hast no cause to fear.
DUKE OF YORK:
-
[Within]
- Open the door, secure, foolhardy king:
- Shall I for love speak treason to thy face?
- Open the door, or I will break it open.
-
[Enter DUKE OF YORK]
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- What is the matter, uncle? speak;
- Recover breath; tell us how near is danger,
- That we may arm us to encounter it.
DUKE OF YORK:
- Peruse this writing here, and thou shalt know
- The treason that my haste forbids me show.
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Remember, as thou read'st, thy promise pass'd:
- I do repent me; read not my name there
- My heart is not confederate with my hand.
DUKE OF YORK:
- It was, villain, ere thy hand did set it down.
- I tore it from the traitor's bosom, king;
- Fear, and not love, begets his penitence:
- Forget to pity him, lest thy pity prove
- A serpent that will sting thee to the heart.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- O heinous, strong and bold conspiracy!
- O loyal father of a treacherous son!
- Thou sheer, immaculate and silver fountain,
- From when this stream through muddy passages
- Hath held his current and defiled himself!
- Thy overflow of good converts to bad,
- And thy abundant goodness shall excuse
- This deadly blot in thy digressing son.
DUKE OF YORK:
- So shall my virtue be his vice's bawd;
- And he shall spend mine honour with his shame,
- As thriftless sons their scraping fathers' gold.
- Mine honour lives when his dishonour dies,
- Or my shamed life in his dishonour lies:
- Thou kill'st me in his life; giving him breath,
- The traitor lives, the true man's put to death.
DUCHESS OF YORK:
-
[Within]
- What ho, my liege! for God's sake,
- let me in.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- What shrill-voiced suppliant makes this eager cry?
DUCHESS OF YORK:
- A woman, and thy aunt, great king; 'tis I.
- Speak with me, pity me, open the door.
- A beggar begs that never begg'd before.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Our scene is alter'd from a serious thing,
- And now changed to 'The Beggar and the King.'
- My dangerous cousin, let your mother in:
- I know she is come to pray for your foul sin.
DUKE OF YORK:
- If thou do pardon, whosoever pray,
- More sins for this forgiveness prosper may.
- This fester'd joint cut off, the rest rest sound;
- This let alone will all the rest confound.
-
[Enter DUCHESS OF YORK]
DUCHESS OF YORK:
- O king, believe not this hard-hearted man!
- Love loving not itself none other can.
DUKE OF YORK:
- Thou frantic woman, what dost thou make here?
- Shall thy old dugs once more a traitor rear?
DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Sweet York, be patient. Hear me, gentle liege.
-
[Kneels]
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Rise up, good aunt.
DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Not yet, I thee beseech:
- For ever will I walk upon my knees,
- And never see day that the happy sees,
- Till thou give joy; until thou bid me joy,
- By pardoning Rutland, my transgressing boy.
DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Unto my mother's prayers I bend my knee.
DUKE OF YORK:
- Against them both my true joints bended be.
- Ill mayst thou thrive, if thou grant any grace!
DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Pleads he in earnest? look upon his face;
- His eyes do drop no tears, his prayers are in jest;
- His words come from his mouth, ours from our breast:
- He prays but faintly and would be denied;
- We pray with heart and soul and all beside:
- His weary joints would gladly rise, I know;
- Our knees shall kneel till to the ground they grow:
- His prayers are full of false hypocrisy;
- Ours of true zeal and deep integrity.
- Our prayers do out-pray his; then let them have
- That mercy which true prayer ought to have.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Good aunt, stand up.
DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Nay, do not say, 'stand up;'
- Say, 'pardon' first, and afterwards 'stand up.'
- And if I were thy nurse, thy tongue to teach,
- 'Pardon' should be the first word of thy speech.
- I never long'd to hear a word till now;
- Say 'pardon,' king; let pity teach thee how:
- The word is short, but not so short as sweet;
- No word like 'pardon' for kings' mouths so meet.
DUKE OF YORK:
- Speak it in French, king; say, 'pardonne moi.'
DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Dost thou teach pardon pardon to destroy?
- Ah, my sour husband, my hard-hearted lord,
- That set'st the word itself against the word!
- Speak 'pardon' as 'tis current in our land;
- The chopping French we do not understand.
- Thine eye begins to speak; set thy tongue there;
- Or in thy piteous heart plant thou thine ear;
- That hearing how our plaints and prayers do pierce,
- Pity may move thee 'pardon' to rehearse.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Good aunt, stand up.
DUCHESS OF YORK:
- I do not sue to stand;
- Pardon is all the suit I have in hand.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- I pardon him, as God shall pardon me.
DUCHESS OF YORK:
- O happy vantage of a kneeling knee!
- Yet am I sick for fear: speak it again;
- Twice saying 'pardon' doth not pardon twain,
- But makes one pardon strong.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- With all my heart
- I pardon him.
DUCHESS OF YORK:
- A god on earth thou art.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- But for our trusty brother-in-law and the abbot,
- With all the rest of that consorted crew,
- Destruction straight shall dog them at the heels.
- Good uncle, help to order several powers
- To Oxford, or where'er these traitors are:
- They shall not live within this world, I swear,
- But I will have them, if I once know where.
- Uncle, farewell: and, cousin too, adieu:
- Your mother well hath pray'd, and prove you true.
DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Come, my old son: I pray God make thee new.
-
[Exeunt]
ACT V, SCENE IV.
The same.
[Enter EXTON and Servant]
EXTON:
- Didst thou not mark the king, what words he spake,
- 'Have I no friend will rid me of this living fear?'
- Was it not so?
Servant:
- These were his very words.
EXTON:
- 'Have I no friend?' quoth he: he spake it twice,
- And urged it twice together, did he not?
EXTON:
- And speaking it, he wistly look'd on me,
- And who should say, 'I would thou wert the man'
- That would divorce this terror from my heart;'
- Meaning the king at Pomfret. Come, let's go:
- I am the king's friend, and will rid his foe.
-
[Exeunt]
ACT V, SCENE V.
Pomfret castle.
[Enter KING RICHARD]
Groom:
- Hail, royal prince!
KING RICHARD II:
- Thanks, noble peer;
- The cheapest of us is ten groats too dear.
- What art thou? and how comest thou hither,
- Where no man never comes but that sad dog
- That brings me food to make misfortune live?
Groom:
- I was a poor groom of thy stable, king,
- When thou wert king; who, travelling towards York,
- With much ado at length have gotten leave
- To look upon my sometimes royal master's face.
- O, how it yearn'd my heart when I beheld
- In London streets, that coronation-day,
- When Bolingbroke rode on roan Barbary,
- That horse that thou so often hast bestrid,
- That horse that I so carefully have dress'd!
KING RICHARD II:
- Rode he on Barbary? Tell me, gentle friend,
- How went he under him?
Groom:
- So proudly as if he disdain'd the ground.
Keeper:
- Fellow, give place; here is no longer stay.
KING RICHARD II:
- If thou love me, 'tis time thou wert away.
Groom:
- What my tongue dares not, that my heart shall say.
-
[Exit]
Keeper:
- My lord, will't please you to fall to?
KING RICHARD II:
- Taste of it first, as thou art wont to do.
Keeper:
- My lord, I dare not: Sir Pierce of Exton, who
- lately came from the king, commands the contrary.
KING RICHARD II:
- The devil take Henry of Lancaster and thee!
- Patience is stale, and I am weary of it.
-
[Beats the keeper]
EXTON:
- As full of valour as of royal blood:
- Both have I spill'd; O would the deed were good!
- For now the devil, that told me I did well,
- Says that this deed is chronicled in hell.
- This dead king to the living king I'll bear
- Take hence the rest, and give them burial here.
-
[Exeunt]
ACT V, SCENE VI.
Windsor castle.
[Flourish. Enter HENRY BOLINGBROKE, DUKE OF YORK,
with other Lords, and Attendants]
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Kind uncle York, the latest news we hear
- Is that the rebels have consumed with fire
- Our town of Cicester in Gloucestershire;
- But whether they be ta'en or slain we hear not.
-
[Enter NORTHUMBERLAND]
- Welcome, my lord what is the news?
NORTHUMBERLAND:
- First, to thy sacred state wish I all happiness.
- The next news is, I have to London sent
- The heads of Oxford, Salisbury, Blunt, and Kent:
- The manner of their taking may appear
- At large discoursed in this paper here.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- We thank thee, gentle Percy, for thy pains;
- And to thy worth will add right worthy gains.
-
[Enter LORD FITZWATER]
LORD FITZWATER:
- My lord, I have from Oxford sent to London
- The heads of Brocas and Sir Bennet Seely,
- Two of the dangerous consorted traitors
- That sought at Oxford thy dire overthrow.
HENRY PERCY:
- The grand conspirator, Abbot of Westminster,
- With clog of conscience and sour melancholy
- Hath yielded up his body to the grave;
- But here is Carlisle living, to abide
- Thy kingly doom and sentence of his pride.
EXTON:
- Great king, within this coffin I present
- Thy buried fear: herein all breathless lies
- The mightiest of thy greatest enemies,
- Richard of Bordeaux, by me hither brought.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Exton, I thank thee not; for thou hast wrought
- A deed of slander with thy fatal hand
- Upon my head and all this famous land.
EXTON:
- From your own mouth, my lord, did I this deed.
HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- They love not poison that do poison need,
- Nor do I thee: though I did wish him dead,
- I hate the murderer, love him murdered.
- The guilt of conscience take thou for thy labour,
- But neither my good word nor princely favour:
- With Cain go wander through shades of night,
- And never show thy head by day nor light.
- Lords, I protest, my soul is full of woe,
- That blood should sprinkle me to make me grow:
- Come, mourn with me for that I do lament,
- And put on sullen black incontinent:
- I'll make a voyage to the Holy Land,
- To wash this blood off from my guilty hand:
- March sadly after; grace my mournings here;
- In weeping after this untimely bier.
-
[Exeunt]