The First Part of Henry the Fourth
with the Life and Death of Henry Sirnamed
Hot-Spvrre
(First Folio)
by William
Shakespeare
Actus Primus. Scoena Prima.
Enter the King, Lord Iohn of Lancaster, Earle of
Westmerland,
with
others.
King. So shaken as we are, so wan with care,
Finde we a time for
frighted Peace to pant,
And breath shortwinded accents of new broils
To be
commenc'd in Stronds a-farre remote:
No more the thirsty entrance of this
Soile,
Shall daube her lippes with her owne childrens blood:
No more shall
trenching Warre channell her fields,
Nor bruise her Flowrets with the Armed
hoofes
Of hostile paces. Those opposed eyes,
Which like the Meteors of a
troubled Heauen,
All of one Nature, of one Substance bred,
Did lately
meete in the intestine shocke,
And furious cloze of ciuill Butchery,
Shall
now in mutuall well-beseeming rankes
March all one way, and be no more
oppos'd
Against Acquaintance, Kindred, and Allies.
The edge of Warre, like
an ill-sheathed knife,
No more shall cut his Master. Therefore Friends,
As
farre as to the Sepulcher of Christ,
Whose Souldier now vnder whose blessed
Crosse
We are impressed and ingag'd to fight,
Forthwith a power of English
shall we leuie,
Whose armes were moulded in their Mothers wombe,
To chace
these Pagans in those holy Fields,
Ouer whose Acres walk'd those blessed
feete
Which fourteene hundred yeares ago were nail'd
For our aduantage on
the bitter Crosse.
But this our purpose is a tweluemonth old,
And
bootlesse 'tis to tell you we will go:
Therefore we meete not now. Then let
me heare
Of you my gentle Cousin Westmerland,
What yesternight our
Councell did decree,
In forwarding this deere expedience
West. My Liege: This haste was hot in question,
And many
limits of the Charge set downe
But yesternight: when all athwart there
came
A Post from Wales, loaden with heauy Newes;
Whose worst was, That the
Noble Mortimer,
Leading the men of Herefordshire to fight
Against the
irregular and wilde Glendower,
Was by the rude hands of that Welshman
taken,
And a thousand of his people butchered:
Vpon whose dead corpes
there was such misuse,
Such beastly, shamelesse transformation,
By those
Welshwomen done, as may not be
(Without much shame) re-told or spoken of
King. It seemes then, that the tidings of this broile,
Brake
off our businesse for the Holy land
West. This matcht with other like, my gracious Lord,
Farre
more vneuen and vnwelcome Newes
Came from the North, and thus it did
report:
On Holy-roode day, the gallant Hotspurre there,
Young Harry Percy,
and braue Archibald,
That euer-valiant and approoued Scot,
At Holmeden
met, where they did spend
A sad and bloody houre:
As by discharge of their
Artillerie,
And shape of likely-hood the newes was told:
For he that
brought them, in the very heate
And pride of their contention, did take
horse,
Vncertaine of the issue any way
King. Heere is a deere and true industrious friend,
Sir
Walter Blunt, new lighted from his Horse,
Strain'd with the variation of each
soyle,
Betwixt that Holmedon, and this Seat of ours:
And he hath brought
vs smooth and welcome newes.
The Earle of Dowglas is discomfited,
Ten
thousand bold Scots, two and twenty Knights
Balk'd in their owne blood did
Sir Walter see
On Holmedons Plaines. Of Prisoners, Hotspurre tooke
Mordake
Earle of Fife, and eldest sonne
To beaten Dowglas, and the Earle of
Atholl,
Of Murry, Angus, and Menteith.
And is not this an honourable
spoyle?
A gallant prize? Ha Cosin, is it not? Infaith it is
West. A Conquest for a Prince to boast of
King. Yea, there thou mak'st me sad, & mak'st me sin,
In
enuy, that my Lord Northumberland
Should be the Father of so blest a
Sonne:
A Sonne, who is the Theame of Honors tongue;
Among'st a Groue, the
very straightest Plant,
Who is sweet Fortunes Minion, and her
Pride:
Whil'st I by looking on the praise of him,
See Ryot and Dishonor
staine the brow
Of my yong Harry. O that it could be prou'd,
That some
Night-tripping-Faiery, had exchang'd
In Cradle-clothes, our Children where
they lay,
And call'd mine Percy, his Plantagenet:
Then would I haue his
Harry, and he mine:
But let him from my thoughts. What thinke you Coze
Of
this young Percies pride? The Prisoners
Which he in this aduenture hath
surpriz'd,
To his owne vse he keepes, and sends me word
I shall haue none
but Mordake Earle of Fife
West. This is his Vnckles teaching. This is
Worcester
Maleuolent to you in all Aspects:
Which makes him prune
himselfe, and bristle vp
The crest of Youth against your Dignity
King. But I haue sent for him to answer this:
And for this
cause a-while we must neglect
Our holy purpose to Ierusalem.
Cosin, on
Wednesday next, our Councell we will hold
At Windsor, and so informe the
Lords:
But come your selfe with speed to vs againe,
For more is to be
saide, and to be done,
Then out of anger can be vttered
West. I will my Liege.
Exeunt.
Scaena Secunda.
Enter Henry Prince of Wales, Sir Iohn Falstaffe, and Pointz.
Fal. Now Hal, what time of day is it Lad?
Prince. Thou art
so fat-witted with drinking of olde
Sacke, and vnbuttoning thee after Supper,
and sleeping
vpon Benches in the afternoone, that thou hast forgotten
to
demand that truely, which thou wouldest truly know.
What a diuell hast thou
to do with the time of the day?
vnlesse houres were cups of Sacke, and
minutes Capons,
and clockes the tongues of Bawdes, and dialls the
signes
of Leaping-houses, and the blessed Sunne himselfe a faire
hot Wench
in Flame-coloured Taffata; I see no reason,
why thou shouldest bee so
superfluous, to demaund the
time of the day
Fal. Indeed you come neere me now Hal, for we that
take
Purses, go by the Moone and seuen Starres, and not
by Phoebus hee, that
wand'ring Knight so faire. And I
prythee sweet Wagge, when thou art King, as
God saue
thy Grace, Maiesty I should say, for Grace thou wilte
haue
none
Prin. What, none?
Fal. No, not so much as will serue
to be Prologue to
an Egge and Butter
Prin. Well, how then? Come roundly, roundly
Fal. Marry then, sweet Wagge, when thou art King,
let not vs
that are Squires of the Nights bodie, bee call'd
Theeues of the Dayes
beautie. Let vs be Dianaes Forresters,
Gentlemen of the Shade, Minions of the
Moone;
and let men say, we be men of good Gouernment, being
gouerned as
the Sea, by our noble and chast mistris the
Moone, vnder whose countenance we
steale
Prin. Thou say'st well, and it holds well too: for
the
fortune of vs that are the Moones men, doeth ebbe and
flow like the
Sea, beeing gouerned as the Sea is, by the
Moone: as for proofe. Now a Purse
of Gold most resolutely
snatch'd on Monday night, and most
dissolutely
spent on Tuesday Morning; got with swearing, Lay by:
and spent
with crying, Bring in: now, in as low an ebbe
as the foot of the Ladder, and
by and by in as high a flow
as the ridge of the Gallowes
Fal. Thou say'st true Lad: and is not my Hostesse of
the
Tauerne a most sweet Wench?
Prin. As is the hony, my old Lad of the
Castle: and is
not a Buffe Ierkin a most sweet robe of durance?
Fal. How now? how now mad Wagge? What in thy
quips and thy quiddities? What a
plague haue I to doe
with a Buffe-Ierkin?
Prin. Why, what a poxe
haue I to doe with my Hostesse
of the Tauerne?
Fal. Well, thou hast
call'd her to a reck'ning many a
time and oft
Prin. Did I euer call for thee to pay thy part?
Fal.
No, Ile giue thee thy due, thou hast paid al there
Prin. Yea and elsewhere, so farre as my Coine would
stretch,
and where it would not, I haue vs'd my credit
Fal. Yea, and so vs'd it, that were it heere apparant,
that
thou art Heire apparant. But I prythee sweet Wag,
shall there be Gallowes
standing in England when thou
art King? and resolution thus fobb'd as it is,
with the rustie
curbe of old Father Anticke the Law? Doe not thou
when
thou art a King, hang a Theefe
Prin. No, thou shalt
Fal. Shall I? O rare! Ile be a braue Iudge
Prin. Thou iudgest false already. I meane, thou shalt
haue
the hanging of the Theeues, and so become a rare
Hangman
Fal. Well Hal, well: and in some sort it iumpes with
my
humour, as well as waiting in the Court, I can tell
you
Prin. For obtaining of suites?
Fal. Yea, for obtaining
of suites, whereof the Hangman
hath no leane Wardrobe. I am as Melancholly as
a
Gyb-Cat, or a lugg'd Beare
Prin. Or an old Lyon, or a Louers Lute
Fal. Yea, or the Drone of a Lincolnshire Bagpipe
Prin. What say'st thou to a Hare, or the Melancholly
of Moore
Ditch?
Fal. Thou hast the most vnsauoury smiles, and art indeed
the
most comparatiue rascallest sweet yong Prince.
But Hal, I prythee trouble me
no more with vanity, I wold
thou and I knew, where a Commodity of good
names
were to be bought: an olde Lord of the Councell rated
me the other
day in the street about you sir; but I mark'd
him not, and yet hee talk'd
very wisely, but I regarded
him not, and yet he talkt wisely, and in the
street too
Prin. Thou didst well: for no man regards it
Fal. O, thou hast damnable iteration, and art indeede
able to
corrupt a Saint. Thou hast done much harme vnto
me Hall, God forgiue thee for
it. Before I knew thee
Hal, I knew nothing: and now I am (if a man shold
speake
truly) little better then one of the wicked. I must giue ouer
this
life, and I will giue it ouer: and I do not, I am a
Villaine. Ile be damn'd
for neuer a Kings sonne in Christendome
Prin. Where shall we take a purse to morrow, Iacke?
Fal. Where thou wilt Lad, Ile make one: and I doe
not, call me Villaine, and
baffle me
Prin. I see a good amendment of life in thee: From
Praying,
to Purse-taking
Fal. Why, Hal, 'tis my Vocation Hal: 'Tis no sin for a
man to
labour in his Vocation
Pointz. Now shall wee know if Gads hill haue set a
Watch. O,
if men were to be saued by merit, what hole
in Hell were hot enough for him?
This is the most omnipotent
Villaine, that euer cryed, Stand, to a true
man
Prin. Good morrow Ned
Poines. Good morrow sweet Hal. What saies Monsieur
remorse?
What sayes Sir Iohn Sacke and Sugar:
Iacke? How agrees the Diuell and thee
about thy Soule,
that thou soldest him on Good-Friday last, for a Cup
of
Madera, and a cold Capons legge?
Prin. Sir Iohn stands to his
word, the diuel shall haue
his bargaine, for he was neuer yet a Breaker of
Prouerbs:
He will giue the diuell his due
Poin. Then art thou damn'd for keeping thy word with
the
diuell
Prin. Else he had damn'd cozening the diuell
Poy. But my Lads, my Lads, to morrow morning, by
foure a
clocke early at Gads hill, there are Pilgrimes going
to Canterbury with rich
Offerings, and Traders riding
to London with fat Purses. I haue vizards for
you
all; you haue horses for your selues: Gads-hill lyes to
night in
Rochester, I haue bespoke Supper to morrow in
Eastcheape; we may doe it as
secure as sleepe: if you will
go, I will stuffe your Purses full of Crownes:
if you will
not, tarry at home and be hang'd
Fal. Heare ye Yedward, if I tarry at home and go not,
Ile
hang you for going
Poy. You will chops
Fal. Hal, wilt thou make one?
Prin. Who, I rob? I a
Theefe? Not I
Fal. There's neither honesty, manhood, nor good fellowship
in
thee, nor thou cam'st not of the blood-royall,
if thou dar'st not stand for
ten shillings
Prin. Well then, once in my dayes Ile be a mad-cap
Fal. Why, that's well said
Prin. Well, come what will, Ile tarry at home
Fal. Ile be a Traitor then, when thou art King
Prin. I care not
Poyn. Sir Iohn, I prythee leaue the Prince & me alone,
I
will lay him downe such reasons for this aduenture, that
he shall go
Fal. Well, maist thou haue the Spirit of perswasion;
and he
the eares of profiting, that what thou speakest,
may moue; and what he heares
may be beleeued, that the
true Prince, may (for recreation sake) proue a
false theefe;
for the poore abuses of the time, want countenance.
Farwell,
you shall finde me in Eastcheape
Prin. Farwell the latter Spring. Farewell
Alhollown
Summer
Poy. Now, my good sweet Hony Lord, ride with vs
to morrow. I
haue a iest to execute, that I cannot mannage
alone. Falstaffe, Haruey,
Rossill, and Gads-hill, shall
robbe those men that wee haue already
way-layde, your
selfe and I, wil not be there: and when they haue the
booty,
if you and I do not rob them, cut this head from my
shoulders
Prin. But how shal we part with them in setting forth?
Poyn. Why, we wil set forth before or after them, and
appoint them a place of
meeting, wherin it is at our pleasure
to faile; and then will they aduenture
vppon the exploit
themselues, which they shall haue no sooner
atchieued,
but wee'l set vpon them
Prin. I, but tis like that they will know vs by our
horses,
by our habits, and by euery other appointment to
be our selues
Poy. Tut our horses they shall not see, Ile tye them in
the
wood, our vizards wee will change after wee leaue
them: and sirrah, I haue
Cases of Buckram for the nonce,
to immaske our noted outward garments
Prin. But I doubt they will be too hard for vs
Poin. Well, for two of them, I know them to bee as
true bred
Cowards as euer turn'd backe: and for the third
if he fight longer then he
sees reason, Ile forswear Armes.
The vertue of this Iest will be, the
incomprehensible lyes
that this fat Rogue will tell vs, when we meete at
Supper:
how thirty at least he fought with, what Wardes, what
blowes, what
extremities he endured; and in the reproofe
of this, lyes the iest
Prin. Well, Ile goe with thee, prouide vs all
things
necessary, and meete me to morrow night in Eastcheape,
there Ile
sup. Farewell
Poyn. Farewell, my Lord.
Exit Pointz
Prin. I know you all, and will a-while vphold
The vnyoak'd humor of
your idlenesse:
Yet heerein will I imitate the Sunne,
Who doth permit the
base contagious cloudes
To smother vp his Beauty from the world,
That when
he please againe to be himselfe,
Being wanted, he may be more wondred
at,
By breaking through the foule and vgly mists
Of vapours, that did
seeme to strangle him.
If all the yeare were playing holidaies,
To sport,
would be as tedious as to worke;
But when they seldome come, they wisht-for
come,
And nothing pleaseth but rare accidents.
So when this loose
behauiour I throw off,
And pay the debt I neuer promised;
By how much
better then my word I am,
By so much shall I falsifie mens hopes,
And like
bright Mettall on a sullen ground:
My reformation glittering o're my
fault,
Shall shew more goodly, and attract more eyes,
Then that which hath
no foyle to set it off.
Ile so offend, to make offence a skill,
Redeeming
time, when men thinke least I will.
Scoena Tertia.
Enter the King, Northumberland, Worcester, Hotspurre, Sir
Walter
Blunt,
and others.
King. My blood hath beene too cold and temperate,
Vnapt to stirre
at these indignities,
And you haue found me; for accordingly,
You tread
vpon my patience: But be sure,
I will from henceforth rather be my
Selfe,
Mighty, and to be fear'd, then my condition
Which hath beene smooth
as Oyle, soft as yong Downe,
And therefore lost that Title of
respect,
Which the proud soule ne're payes, but to the proud
Wor. Our house (my Soueraigne Liege) little deserues
The
scourge of greatnesse to be vsed on it,
And that same greatnesse too, which
our owne hands
Haue holpe to make so portly
Nor. My Lord
King. Worcester get thee gone: for I do see
Danger and
disobedience in thine eye.
O sir, your presence is too bold and
peremptory,
And Maiestie might neuer yet endure
The moody Frontier of a
seruant brow,
You haue good leaue to leaue vs. When we need
Your vse and
counsell, we shall send for you.
You were about to speake
North. Yea, my good Lord.
Those Prisoners in your Highnesse
demanded,
Which Harry Percy heere at Holmedon tooke,
Were (as he sayes)
not with such strength denied
As was deliuered to your Maiesty:
Who either
through enuy, or misprision,
Was guilty of this fault; and not my Sonne
Hot. My Liege, I did deny no Prisoners.
But, I remember when
the fight was done,
When I was dry with Rage, and extreame
Toyle,
Breathlesse, and Faint, leaning vpon my Sword,
Came there a
certaine Lord, neat and trimly drest;
Fresh as a Bride-groome, and his Chin
new reapt,
Shew'd like a stubble Land at Haruest home.
He was perfumed
like a Milliner,
And 'twixt his Finger and his Thumbe, he held
A
Pouncet-box: which euer and anon
He gaue his Nose, and took't away
againe:
Who therewith angry, when it next came there,
Tooke it in Snuffe.
And still he smil'd and talk'd:
And as the Souldiers bare dead bodies
by,
He call'd them vntaught Knaues, Vnmannerly,
To bring a slouenly
vnhandsome Coarse
Betwixt the Winde, and his Nobility.
With many Holiday
and Lady tearme
He question'd me: Among the rest, demanded
My Prisoners,
in your Maiesties behalfe.
I then, all-smarting, with my wounds being
cold,
(To be so pestered with a Popingay)
Out of my Greefe, and my
Impatience,
Answer'd (neglectingly) I know not what,
He should, or should
not: For he made me mad,
To see him shine so briske, and smell so
sweet,
And talke so like a Waiting-Gentlewoman,
Of Guns, & Drums, and
Wounds: God saue the marke;
And telling me, the Soueraign'st thing on
earth
Was Parmacity, for an inward bruise:
And that it was great pitty, so
it was,
That villanous Salt-peter should be digg'd
Out of the Bowels of
the harmlesse Earth,
Which many a good Tall Fellow had destroy'd
So
Cowardly. And but for these vile Gunnes,
He would himselfe haue beene a
Souldier.
This bald, vnioynted Chat of his (my Lord)
Made me to answer
indirectly (as I said.)
And I beseech you, let not this report
Come
currant for an Accusation,
Betwixt my Loue, and your high Maiesty
Blunt. The circumstance considered, good my Lord,
What euer
Harry Percie then had said,
To such a person, and in such a place,
At such
a time, with all the rest retold,
May reasonably dye, and neuer rise
To do
him wrong, or any way impeach
What then he said, so he vnsay it now
King. Why yet doth deny his Prisoners,
But with Prouiso and
Exception,
That we at our owne charge, shall ransome straight
His
Brother-in-Law, the foolish Mortimer,
Who (in my soule) hath wilfully
betraid
The liues of those, that he did leade to Fight,
Against the great
Magitian, damn'd Glendower:
Whose daughter (as we heare) the Earle of
March
Hath lately married. Shall our Coffers then,
Be emptied, to redeeme
a Traitor home?
Shall we buy Treason? and indent with Feares,
When they
haue lost and forfeyted themselues.
No: on the barren Mountaine let him
sterue:
For I shall neuer hold that man my Friend,
Whose tongue shall aske
me for one peny cost
To ransome home reuolted Mortimer
Hot. Reuolted Mortimer?
He neuer did fall off, my Soueraigne
Liege,
But by the chance of Warre: to proue that true,
Needs no more but
one tongue. For all those Wounds,
Those mouthed Wounds, which valiantly he
tooke,
When on the gentle Seuernes siedgie banke,
In single Opposition
hand to hand,
He did confound the best part of an houre
In changing
hardiment with great Glendower:
Three times they breath'd, and three times
did they drink
Vpon agreement, of swift Seuernes flood;
Who then
affrighted with their bloody lookes,
Ran fearefully among the trembling
Reeds,
And hid his crispe-head in the hollow banke,
Blood-stained with
these Valiant Combatants.
Neuer did base and rotten Policy
Colour her
working with such deadly wounds;
Nor neuer could the Noble
Mortimer
Receiue so many, and all willingly:
Then let him not be sland'red
with Reuolt
King. Thou do'st bely him Percy, thou dost bely him;
He neuer
did encounter with Glendower:
I tell thee, he durst as well haue met the
diuell alone,
As Owen Glendower for an enemy.
Art thou not asham'd? But
Sirrah, henceforth
Let me not heare you speake of Mortimer.
Send me your
Prisoners with the speediest meanes,
Or you shall heare in such a kinde from
me
As will displease ye. My Lord Northumberland,
We License your departure
with your sonne,
Send vs your Prisoners, or you'l heare of it.
Exit King.
Hot. And if the diuell come and roare for them
I will not send
them. I will after straight
And tell him so: for I will ease my
heart,
Although it be with hazard of my head
Nor. What? drunke with choller? stay & pause
awhile,
Heere comes your Vnckle.
Enter Worcester.
Hot. Speake of Mortimer?
Yes, I will speake of him, and let my
soule
Want mercy, if I do not ioyne with him.
In his behalfe, Ile empty
all these Veines,
And shed my deere blood drop by drop i'th dust,
But I
will lift the downfall Mortimer
As high i'th Ayre, as this Vnthankfull
King,
As this Ingrate and Cankred Bullingbrooke
Nor. Brother, the King hath made your Nephew mad
Wor.
Who strooke this heate vp after I was gone?
Hot. He will (forsooth)
haue all my Prisoners:
And when I vrg'd the ransom once againe
Of my Wiues
Brother, then his cheeke look'd pale,
And on my face he turn'd an eye of
death,
Trembling euen at the name of Mortimer
Wor. I cannot blame him: was he not proclaim'd
By Richard
that dead is, the next of blood?
Nor. He was: I heard the
Proclamation,
And then it was, when the vnhappy King
(Whose wrongs in vs
God pardon) did set forth
Vpon his Irish Expedition:
From whence he
intercepted, did returne
To be depos'd, and shortly murthered
Wor. And for whose death, we in the worlds wide mouth
Liue
scandaliz'd, and fouly spoken of
Hot. But soft I pray you; did King Richard then
Proclaime my
brother Mortimer,
Heyre to the Crowne?
Nor. He did, my selfe did
heare it
Hot. Nay then I cannot blame his Cousin King,
That wish'd him
on the barren Mountaines staru'd.
But shall it be, that you that set the
Crowne
Vpon the head of this forgetfull man,
And for his sake, wore the
detested blot
Of murtherous subornation? Shall it be,
That you a world of
curses vndergoe,
Being the Agents, or base second meanes,
The Cords, the
Ladder, or the Hangman rather?
O pardon, if that I descend so low,
To shew
the Line, and the Predicament
Wherein you range vnder this subtill
King.
Shall it for shame, be spoken in these dayes,
Or fill vp Chronicles
in time to come,
That men of your Nobility and Power,
Did gage them both
in an vniust behalfe
(As Both of you, God pardon it, haue done)
To put
downe Richard, that sweet louely Rose,
And plant this Thorne, this Canker
Bullingbrooke?
And shall it in more shame be further spoken,
That you are
fool'd, discarded, and shooke off
By him, for whom these shames ye
vnderwent?
No: yet time serues, wherein you may redeeme
Your banish'd
Honors, and restore your selues
Into the good Thoughts of the world
againe.
Reuenge the geering and disdain'd contempt
Of this proud King, who
studies day and night
To answer all the Debt he owes vnto you,
Euen with
the bloody Payment of your deaths:
Therefore I say-
Wor. Peace
Cousin, say no more.
And now I will vnclaspe a Secret booke,
And to your
quicke conceyuing Discontents,
Ile reade you Matter, deepe and
dangerous,
As full of perill and aduenturous Spirit,
As to o're-walke a
Current, roaring loud
On the vnstedfast footing of a Speare
Hot. If he fall in, good night, or sinke or swimme:
Send
danger from the East vnto the West,
So Honor crosse it from the North to
South,
And let them grapple: The blood more stirres
To rowze a Lyon, then
to start a Hare
Nor. Imagination of some great exploit,
Driues him beyond the
bounds of Patience
Hot. By heauen, me thinkes it were an easie leap,
To plucke
bright Honor from the pale-fac'd Moone,
Or diue into the bottome of the
deepe,
Where Fadome-line could neuer touch the ground,
And plucke vp
drowned Honor by the Lockes:
So he that doth redeeme her thence, might
weare
Without Co-riuall, all her Dignities:
But out vpon this halfe-fac'd
Fellowship
Wor. He apprehends a World of Figures here,
But not the forme
of what he should attend:
Good Cousin giue me audience for a-while,
And
list to me
Hot. I cry you mercy
Wor. Those same Noble Scottes
That are your Prisoners
Hot. Ile keepe them all.
By heauen, he shall not haue a Scot
of them:
No, if a Scot would saue his Soule, he shall not.
Ile keepe them,
by this Hand
Wor. You start away,
And lend no eare vnto my
purposes.
Those Prisoners you shall keepe
Hot. Nay, I will: that's flat:
He said, he would not ransome
Mortimer:
Forbad my tongue to speake of Mortimer.
But I will finde him
when he lyes asleepe,
And in his eare, Ile holla Mortimer.
Nay, Ile haue a
Starling shall be taught to speake
Nothing but Mortimer, and giue it
him,
To keepe his anger still in motion
Wor. Heare you Cousin: a word
Hot. All studies heere I solemnly defie,
Saue how to gall and
pinch this Bullingbrooke,
And that same Sword and Buckler Prince of
Wales.
But that I thinke his Father loues him not,
And would be glad he
met with some mischance,
I would haue poyson'd him with a pot of Ale
Wor. Farewell Kinsman: Ile talke to you
When you are better
temper'd to attend
Nor. Why what a Waspe-tongu'd & impatient foole
Art thou,
to breake into this Womans mood,
Tying thine eare to no tongue but thine
owne?
Hot. Why look you, I am whipt & scourg'd with
rods,
Netled, and stung with Pismires, when I heare
Of this vile
Politician Bullingbrooke.
In Richards time: What de'ye call the place?
A
plague vpon't, it is in Gloustershire:
'Twas, where the madcap Duke his Vncle
kept,
His Vncle Yorke, where I first bow'd my knee
Vnto this King of
Smiles, this Bullingbrooke:
When you and he came backe from Rauenspurgh
Nor. At Barkley Castle
Hot. You say true:
Why what a caudie deale of
curtesie,
This fawning Grey-hound then did proffer me,
Looke when his
infant Fortune came to age,
And gentle Harry Percy, and kinde Cousin:
O,
the Diuell take such Couzeners, God forgiue me,
Good Vncle tell your tale,
for I haue done
Wor. Nay, if you haue not, too't againe,
Wee'l stay your
leysure
Hot. I haue done insooth
Wor. Then once more to your Scottish Prisoners.
Deliuer them
vp without their ransome straight,
And make the Dowglas sonne your onely
meane
For powres in Scotland: which for diuers reasons
Which I shall send
you written, be assur'd
Will easily be granted you, my Lord.
Your Sonne in
Scotland being thus imploy'd,
Shall secretly into the bosome creepe
Of
that same noble Prelate, well belou'd,
The Archbishop
Hot. Of Yorke, is't not?
Wor. True, who beares
hard
His Brothers death at Bristow, the Lord Scroope.
I speake not this in
estimation,
As what I thinke might be, but what I know
Is ruminated,
plotted, and set downe,
And onely stayes but to behold the face
Of that
occasion that shall bring it on
Hot. I smell it:
Vpon my life, it will do wond'rous well
Nor. Before the game's a-foot, thou still let'st slip
Hot. Why, it cannot choose but be a Noble plot,
And then the
power of Scotland, and of Yorke
To ioyne with Mortimer, Ha
Wor. And so they shall
Hot. Infaith it is exceedingly well aym'd
Wor. And 'tis no little reason bids vs speed,
To saue our
heads, by raising of a Head:
For, beare our selues as euen as we can,
The
King will alwayes thinke him in our debt,
And thinke, we thinke our selues
vnsatisfied,
Till he hath found a time to pay vs home.
And see already,
how he doth beginne
To make vs strangers to his lookes of loue
Hot. He does, he does; wee'l be reueng'd on him
Wor. Cousin, farewell. No further go in this,
Then I by
Letters shall direct your course
When time is ripe, which will be
sodainly:
Ile steale to Glendower, and loe, Mortimer,
Where you, and
Dowglas, and our powres at once,
As I will fashion it, shall happily
meete,
To beare our fortunes in our owne strong armes,
Which now we hold
at much vncertainty
Nor. Farewell good Brother, we shall thriue, I trust
Hot. Vncle, adieu: O let the houres be short,
Till fields,
and blowes, and grones, applaud our sport.
Exit
Actus Secundus. Scena Prima.
Enter a Carrier with a Lanterne in his hand.
1.Car. Heigh-ho, an't be not foure by the day, Ile be
hang'd.
Charles waine is ouer the new Chimney, and yet
our horse not packt. What
Ostler?
Ost. Anon, anon
1.Car. I prethee Tom, beate Cuts Saddle, put a few
Flockes in
the point: the poore Iade is wrung in the withers,
out of all cesse.
Enter
another Carrier.
2.Car. Pease and Beanes are as danke here as a Dog,
and this is the
next way to giue poore Iades the Bottes:
This house is turned vpside downe
since Robin the Ostler
dyed
1.Car. Poore fellow neuer ioy'd since the price of oats
rose,
it was the death of him
2.Car. I thinke this is the most villanous house in al
London
rode for Fleas: I am stung like a Tench
1.Car. Like a Tench? There is ne're a King in
Christendome,
could be better bit, then I haue beene since the
first
Cocke
2.Car. Why, you will allow vs ne're a Iourden, and
then we
leake in your Chimney: and your Chamber-lye
breeds Fleas like a Loach
1.Car. What Ostler, come away, and be hangd: come
away
2.Car. I haue a Gammon of Bacon, and two razes of
Ginger, to
be deliuered as farre as Charing-crosse
1.Car. The Turkies in my Pannier are quite starued.
What
Ostler? A plague on thee, hast thou neuer an eye in
thy head? Can'st not
heare? And t'were not as good a
deed as drinke, to break the pate of thee, I
am a very Villaine.
Come and be hang'd, hast no faith in thee?
Enter
Gads-hill.
Gad. Good-morrow Carriers. What's a clocke?
Car. I thinke it
be two a clocke
Gad. I prethee lend me thy Lanthorne to see my Gelding
in the
stable
1.Car. Nay soft I pray ye, I know a trick worth two
of
that
Gad. I prethee lend me thine
2.Car. I, when, canst tell? Lend mee thy Lanthorne
(quoth-a)
marry Ile see thee hang'd first
Gad. Sirra Carrier: What time do you mean to come
to
London?
2.Car. Time enough to goe to bed with a Candle, I
warrant
thee. Come neighbour Mugges, wee'll call vp
the Gentlemen, they will along
with company, for they
haue great charge.
Exeunt.
Enter Chamberlaine.
Gad. What ho, Chamberlaine?
Cham. At hand quoth
Pick-purse
Gad. That's euen as faire, as at hand quoth the
Chamberlaine:
For thou variest no more from picking of Purses,
then giuing
direction, doth from labouring. Thou
lay'st the plot, how
Cham. Good morrow Master Gads-Hill, it holds currant
that I
told you yesternight. There's a Franklin in the
wilde of Kent, hath brought
three hundred Markes with
him in Gold: I heard him tell it to one of his
company last
night at Supper; a kinde of Auditor, one that hath
abundance
of charge too (God knowes what) they are vp already,
and call
for Egges and Butter. They will away
presently
Gad. Sirra, if they meete not with S[aint]. Nicholas
Clarks,
Ile giue thee this necke
Cham. No, Ile none of it: I prythee keep that for
the
Hangman, for I know thou worshipst S[aint]. Nicholas as truly
as a man
of falshood may
Gad. What talkest thou to me of the Hangman? If I
hang, Ile
make a fat payre of Gallowes. For, if I hang,
old Sir Iohn hangs with mee,
and thou know'st hee's no
Starueling. Tut, there are other Troians that y
dream'st
not of, the which (for sport sake) are content to doe
the
Profession some grace; that would (if matters should bee
look'd into)
for their owne Credit sake, make all Whole.
I am ioyned with no
Foot-land-Rakers, No Long-staffe
six-penny strikers, none of these
mad
Mustachio-purple-hu'd-Maltwormes,
but with Nobility, and
Tranquilitie;
Bourgomasters, and great Oneyers, such as can holde in,
such
as will strike sooner then speake; and speake sooner
then drinke, and drinke
sooner then pray: and yet I lye,
for they pray continually vnto their Saint
the Commonwealth;
or rather, not to pray to her, but prey on her: for
they
ride vp & downe on her, and make hir their Boots
Cham. What, the Commonwealth their Bootes? Will
she hold out
water in foule way?
Gad. She will, she will; Iustice hath liquor'd
her. We
steale as in a Castle, cocksure: we haue the receit of
Fernseede,
we walke inuisible
Cham. Nay, I thinke rather, you are more beholding
to the
Night, then to the Fernseed, for your walking inuisible
Gad. Giue me thy hand.
Thou shalt haue a share in our
purpose,
As I am a true man
Cham. Nay, rather let mee haue it, as you are a
false
Theefe
Gad. Goe too: Homo is a common name to all men.
Bid the
Ostler bring the Gelding out of the stable. Farewell,
ye muddy Knaue.
Exeunt.
Scaena Secunda.
Enter Prince, Poynes, and Peto.
Poines. Come shelter, shelter, I haue remoued Falstafs
Horse, and
he frets like a gum'd Veluet
Prin. Stand close.
Enter Falstaffe.
Fal. Poines, Poines, and be hang'd Poines
Prin. Peace ye fat-kidney'd Rascall, what a brawling
dost
thou keepe
Fal. What Poines. Hal?
Prin. He is walk'd vp to the
top of the hill, Ile go seek
him
Fal. I am accurst to rob in that Theefe company: that
Rascall
hath remoued my Horse, and tied him I know not
where. If I trauell but foure
foot by the squire further a
foote, I shall breake my winde. Well, I doubt
not but
to dye a faire death for all this, if I scape hanging for
killing
that Rogue, I haue forsworne his company hourely
any time this two
and twenty yeare, & yet I am bewitcht
with the Rogues company. If the
Rascall haue not giuen
me medicines to make me loue him, Ile be hang'd; it
could
not be else: I haue drunke Medicines. Poines, Hal, a
Plague vpon you
both. Bardolph, Peto: Ile starue ere I
rob a foote further. And 'twere not as
good a deede as to
drinke, to turne True-man, and to leaue these Rogues,
I
am the veriest Varlet that euer chewed with a Tooth.
Eight yards of
vneuen ground, is threescore & ten miles
afoot with me: and the
stony-hearted Villaines knowe it
well enough. A plague vpon't, when Theeues
cannot be
true one to another.
They Whistle.
Whew: a plague light vpon you all. Giue my Horse you
Rogues: giue me my
Horse, and be hang'd
Prin. Peace ye fat guttes, lye downe, lay thine eare
close to
the ground, and list if thou can heare the tread of
Trauellers
Fal. Haue you any Leauers to lift me vp again being
downe?
Ile not beare mine owne flesh so far afoot again,
for all the coine in thy
Fathers Exchequer. What a plague
meane ye to colt me thus?
Prin.
Thou ly'st, thou art not colted, thou art vncolted
Fal. I prethee good Prince Hal, help me to my horse,
good
Kings sonne
Prin. Out you Rogue, shall I be your Ostler?
Fal. Go
hang thy selfe in thine owne heire-apparant-Garters:
If I be tane, Ile peach
for this: and I haue not
Ballads made on all, and sung to filthy tunes, let a
Cup of
Sacke be my poyson: when a iest is so forward, & a foote
too, I
hate it.
Enter Gads-hill.
Gad. Stand
Fal. So I do against my will
Poin. O 'tis our Setter, I know his voyce:
Bardolfe, what
newes?
Bar. Case ye, case ye; on with your Vizards, there's
mony of
the Kings comming downe the hill, 'tis going
to the Kings Exchequer
Fal. You lie you rogue, 'tis going to the Kings Tauern
Gad. There's enough to make vs all
Fal. To be hang'd
Prin. You foure shall front them in the narrow Lane:
Ned and
I, will walke lower; if they scape from your encounter,
then they light on
vs
Peto. But how many be of them?
Gad. Some eight or
ten
Fal. Will they not rob vs?
Prin. What, a Coward Sir
Iohn Paunch?
Fal. Indeed I am not Iohn of Gaunt your
Grandfather;
but yet no Coward, Hal
Prin. Wee'l leaue that to the proofe
Poin. Sirra Iacke, thy horse stands behinde the hedg,
when
thou need'st him, there thou shalt finde him. Farewell,
and stand fast
Fal. Now cannot I strike him, if I should be hang'd
Prin. Ned, where are our disguises?
Poin. Heere hard
by: Stand close
Fal. Now my Masters, happy man be his dole, say I:
euery man
to his businesse.
Enter Trauellers
Tra. Come Neighbor: the boy shall leade our Horses
downe the
hill: Wee'l walke a-foot a while, and ease our
Legges
Theeues. Stay
Tra. Iesu blesse vs
Fal. Strike down with them, cut the villains throats;
a
whorson Caterpillars: Bacon-fed Knaues, they hate vs
youth; downe with them,
fleece them
Tra. O, we are vndone, both we and ours for euer
Fal. Hang ye gorbellied knaues, are you vndone? No
ye Fat
Chuffes, I would your store were heere. On Bacons,
on, what ye knaues? Yong
men must liue, you are
Grand Iurers, are ye? Wee'l iure ye ifaith.
Heere they rob them, and binde them. Enter the Prince and Poines.
Prin. The Theeues haue bound the True-men: Now
could thou and I rob
the Theeues, and go merily to London,
it would be argument for a Weeke,
Laughter for a
Moneth, and a good iest for euer
Poynes. Stand close, I heare them comming.
Enter Theeues
againe.
Fal. Come my Masters, let vs share, and then to horsse
before day:
and the Prince and Poynes bee not two arrand
Cowards, there's no equity
stirring. There's no moe
valour in that Poynes, than in a wilde Ducke
Prin. Your money
Poin. Villaines.
As they are sharing, the Prince and Poynes set vpon them. They
all
run
away, leauing the booty behind them.
Prince. Got with much ease. Now merrily to Horse:
The Theeues are
scattred, and possest with fear so strongly,
that they dare not meet each
other: each takes his fellow
for an Officer. Away good Ned, Falstaffe sweates
to
death, and Lards the leane earth as he walkes along: wer't
not for
laughing, I should pitty him
Poin. How the Rogue roar'd.
Exeunt.
Scoena Tertia.
Enter Hotspurre solus, reading a Letter.
But for mine owne part, my Lord. I could bee well contented to
be there,
in respect of the loue I beare your house.
He could be contented: Why is he
not then? in respect of
the loue he beares our house. He shewes in this, he
loues
his owne Barne better then he loues our house. Let me
see some more.
The purpose you vndertake is dangerous.
Why that's certaine: 'Tis dangerous
to take a Colde, to
sleepe, to drinke: but I tell you (my Lord foole) out
of
this Nettle, Danger; we plucke this Flower, Safety. The
purpose you
vndertake is dangerous, the Friends you haue named
vncertaine, the Time it
selfe vnsorted, and your whole
Plot too light, for the counterpoize of so
great an Opposition.
Say you so, say you so: I say vnto you againe, you are
a
shallow cowardly Hinde, and you Lye. What a lackebraine
is this? I
protest, our plot is as good a plot as euer
was laid; our Friend true and
constant: A good Plotte,
good Friends, and full of expectation: An excellent
plot,
very good Friends. What a Frosty-spirited rogue is this?
Why, my
Lord of Yorke commends the plot, and the
generall course of the action. By
this hand, if I were now
by this Rascall, I could braine him with his Ladies
Fan.
Is there not my Father, my Vncle, and my Selfe, Lord
Edmund Mortimer,
my Lord of Yorke, and Owen Glendour?
Is there not besides, the Dowglas? Haue
I not all their letters,
to meete me in Armes by the ninth of the next
Moneth?
and are they not some of them set forward already?
What a Pagan
Rascall is this? An Infidell. Ha, you shall
see now in very sincerity of
Feare and Cold heart, will he
to the King, and lay open all our proceedings.
O, I could
diuide my selfe, and go to buffets, for mouing such a dish
of
skim'd Milk with so honourable an Action. Hang him,
let him tell the King we
are prepared. I will set forwards
to night.
Enter his Lady.
How now Kate, I must leaue you within these two hours
La. O my good Lord, why are you thus alone?
For what offence
haue I this fortnight bin
A banish'd woman from my Harries bed?
Tell me
(sweet Lord) what is't that takes from thee
Thy stomacke, pleasure, and thy
golden sleepe?
Why dost thou bend thine eyes vpon the earth?
And start so
often when thou sitt'st alone?
Why hast thou lost the fresh blood in thy
cheekes?
And giuen my Treasures and my rights of thee,
To thicke-ey'd
musing, and curst melancholly?
In my faint-slumbers, I by thee haue
watcht,
And heard thee murmore tales of Iron Warres:
Speake tearmes of
manage to thy bounding Steed,
Cry courage to the field. And thou hast
talk'd
Of Sallies, and Retires; Trenches, Tents,
Of Palizadoes, Frontiers,
Parapets,
Of Basiliskes, of Canon, Culuerin,
Of Prisoners ransome, and of
Souldiers slaine,
And all the current of a headdy fight.
Thy spirit within
thee hath beene so at Warre,
And thus hath so bestirr'd thee in thy
sleepe,
That beds of sweate hath stood vpon thy Brow,
Like bubbles in a
late-disturbed Streame;
And in thy face strange motions haue
appear'd,
Such as we see when men restraine their breath
On some great
sodaine hast. O what portents are these?
Some heauie businesse hath my Lord
in hand,
And I must know it: else he loues me not
Hot. What ho; Is Gilliams with the Packet gone?
Ser.
He is my Lord, an houre agone
Hot. Hath Butler brought those horses fro[m] the
Sheriffe?
Ser. One horse, my Lord, he brought euen now
Hot. What Horse? A Roane, a crop eare, is it not
Ser. It is my Lord
Hot. That Roane shall be my Throne. Well, I will
backe him
straight. Esperance, bid Butler lead him forth
into the Parke
La. But heare you, my lord
Hot. What say'st thou my Lady?
La. What is it carries
you away?
Hot. Why, my horse (my Loue) my horse
La. Out you mad-headed Ape, a Weazell hath not
such a deale
of Spleene, as you are tost with. In sooth Ile
know your businesse Harry,
that I will. I feare my Brother
Mortimer doth stirre about his Title, and
hath sent
for you to line his enterprize. But if you go-
Hot. So
farre a foot, I shall be weary, Loue
La. Come, come, you Paraquito, answer me directly
vnto this
question, that I shall aske. Indeede Ile breake
thy little finger Harry, if
thou wilt not tel me true
Hot. Away, away you trifler: Loue, I loue thee not,
I care
not for thee Kate: this is no world
To play with Mammets, and to tilt with
lips.
We must haue bloodie Noses, and crack'd Crownes,
And passe them
currant too. Gods me, my horse.
What say'st thou Kate? what wold'st thou haue
with me?
La. Do ye not loue me? Do ye not indeed?
Well, do not
then. For since you loue me not,
I will not loue my selfe. Do you not loue
me?
Nay, tell me if thou speak'st in iest, or no
Hot. Come, wilt thou see me ride?
And when I am a horsebacke,
I will sweare
I loue thee infinitely. But hearke you Kate,
I must not haue
you henceforth, question me,
Whether I go: nor reason whereabout.
Whether
I must, I must: and to conclude,
This Euening must I leaue thee, gentle
Kate.
I know you wise, but yet no further wise
Then Harry Percies wife.
Constant you are,
But yet a woman: and for secrecie,
No Lady closer. For I
will beleeue
Thou wilt not vtter what thou do'st not know,
And so farre
wilt I trust thee, gentle Kate
La. How so farre?
Hot. Not an inch further. But harke
you Kate,
Whither I go, thither shall you go too:
To day will I set forth,
to morrow you.
Will this content you Kate?
La. It must of
force.
Exeunt.
Scena Quarta.
Enter Prince and Poines.
Prin. Ned, prethee come out of that fat roome, & lend
me thy
hand to laugh a little
Poines. Where hast bene Hall?
Prin. With three or
foure Logger-heads, amongst 3.
or fourescore Hogsheads. I haue sounded the
verie base
string of humility. Sirra, I am sworn brother to a leash
of
Drawers, and can call them by their names, as Tom, Dicke,
and Francis.
They take it already vpon their confidence,
that though I be but Prince of
Wales, yet I am the King
of Curtesie: telling me flatly I am no proud Iack
like Falstaffe,
but a Corinthian, a lad of mettle, a good boy, and
when I
am King of England, I shall command al the good
Laddes in East-cheape. They
call drinking deepe, dying
Scarlet; and when you breath in your watering,
then
they cry hem, and bid you play it off. To conclude, I am
so good a
proficient in one quarter of an houre, that I can
drinke with any Tinker in
his owne Language during my
life. I tell thee Ned, thou hast lost much honor,
that thou
wer't not with me in this action: but sweet Ned, to
sweeten
which name of Ned, I giue thee this peniworth of Sugar,
clapt euen
now into my hand by an vnder Skinker,
one that neuer spake other English in
his life, then Eight
shillings and six pence, and, You are welcome: with this
shril
addition, Anon, Anon sir, Score a Pint of Bastard in the
Halfe
Moone, or so. But Ned, to driue away time till Falstaffe
come, I prythee doe
thou stand in some by-roome,
while I question my puny Drawer, to what end hee
gaue
me the Sugar, and do neuer leaue calling Francis, that his
Tale to me
may be nothing but, Anon: step aside, and Ile
shew thee a President
Poines. Francis
Prin. Thou art perfect
Poin. Francis.
Enter Drawer.
Fran. Anon, anon sir; looke downe into the Pomgarnet,
Ralfe
Prince. Come hither Francis
Fran. My Lord
Prin. How long hast thou to serue, Francis?
Fran.
Forsooth fiue yeares, and as much as to-
Poin. Francis
Fran. Anon, anon sir
Prin. Fiue yeares: Berlady a long Lease for the clinking
of
Pewter. But Francis, darest thou be so valiant, as
to play the coward with
thy Indenture, & show it a faire
paire of heeles, and run from
it?
Fran. O Lord sir, Ile be sworne vpon all the Books in
England,
I could finde in my heart
Poin. Francis
Fran. Anon, anon sir
Prin. How old art thou, Francis?
Fran. Let me see,
about Michaelmas next I shalbe-
Poin. Francis
Fran. Anon sir, pray you stay a little, my Lord
Prin. Nay but harke you Francis, for the Sugar thou
gauest
me, 'twas a penyworth, was't not?
Fran. O Lord sir, I would it had
bene two
Prin. I will giue thee for it a thousand pound: Aske
me when
thou wilt, and thou shalt haue it
Poin. Francis
Fran. Anon, anon
Prin. Anon Francis? No Francis, but to morrow Francis:
or
Francis, on thursday: or indeed Francis when thou
wilt. But Francis
Fran. My Lord
Prin. Wilt thou rob this Leatherne Ierkin, Christall
button,
Not-pated, Agat ring, Puke stocking, Caddice
garter, Smooth tongue, Spanish
pouch
Fran. O Lord sir, who do you meane?
Prin. Why then
your browne Bastard is your onely
drinke: for looke you Francis, your white
Canuas doublet
will sulley. In Barbary sir, it cannot come to so much
Fran. What sir?
Poin. Francis
Prin. Away you Rogue, dost thou heare them call?
Heere they both call him, the Drawer stands amazed, not knowing
which
way
to go.
Enter Vintner.
Vint. What, stand'st thou still, and hear'st such a calling?
Looke
to the Guests within: My Lord, olde Sir
Iohn with halfe a dozen more, are at
the doore: shall I let
them in?
Prin. Let them alone awhile, and
then open the doore.
Poines.
Enter Poines.
Poin. Anon, anon sir
Prin. Sirra, Falstaffe and the rest of the Theeues, are
at
the doore, shall we be merry?
Poin. As merrie as Crickets my
Lad. But harke yee,
What cunning match haue you made this iest of
the
Drawer? Come, what's the issue?
Prin. I am now of all humors,
that haue shewed themselues
humors, since the old dayes of goodman Adam,
to
the pupill age of this present twelue a clock at midnight.
What's a
clocke Francis?
Fran. Anon, anon sir
Prin. That euer this Fellow should haue fewer words
then a
Parret, and yet the sonne of a Woman. His industry
is vp-staires and
down-staires, his eloquence the parcell
of a reckoning. I am not yet of
Percies mind, the Hotspurre
of the North, he that killes me some sixe or
seauen
dozen of Scots at a Breakfast, washes his hands, and saies
to his
wife; Fie vpon this quiet life, I want worke. O my
sweet Harry sayes she, how
many hast thou kill'd to day?
Giue my Roane horse a drench (sayes hee) and
answeres,
some fourteene, an houre after: a trifle, a trifle. I
prethee
call in Falstaffe, Ile play Percy, and that damn'd Brawne
shall
play Dame Mortimer his wife. Riuo, sayes the drunkard.
Call in Ribs, call in
Tallow.
Enter Falstaffe.
Poin. Welcome Iacke, where hast thou beene?
Fal. A plague of
all Cowards I say, and a Vengeance
too, marry and Amen. Giue me a cup of
Sacke Boy. Ere
I leade this life long, Ile sowe nether stockes, and
mend
them too. A plague of all cowards. Giue me a Cup of
Sacke, Rogue. Is
there no Vertue extant?
Prin. Didst thou neuer see Titan kisse a dish
of Butter,
pittifull hearted Titan that melted at the sweete Tale of
the
Sunne? If thou didst, then behold that compound
Fal. You Rogue, heere's Lime in this Sacke too: there
is
nothing but Roguery to be found in Villanous man; yet
a Coward is worse then
a Cup of Sack with lime. A villanous
Coward, go thy wayes old Iacke, die when
thou
wilt, if manhood, good manhood be not forgot vpon the
face of the
earth, then am I a shotten Herring: there liues
not three good men vnhang'd
in England, & one of them
is fat, and growes old, God helpe the while, a
bad world I
say. I would I were a Weauer, I could sing all manner
of
songs. A plague of all Cowards, I say still
Prin. How now Woolsacke, what mutter you?
Fal. A Kings
Sonne? If I do not beate thee out of thy
Kingdome with a dagger of Lath, and
driue all thy Subiects
afore thee like a flocke of Wilde-geese, Ile
neuer
weare haire on my face more. You Prince of Wales?
Prin. Why
you horson round man? what's the matter?
Fal. Are you not a Coward?
Answer me to that, and
Poines there?
Prin. Ye fat paunch, and yee
call mee Coward, Ile
stab thee
Fal. I call thee Coward? Ile see thee damn'd ere I call
the
Coward: but I would giue a thousand pound I could
run as fast as thou canst.
You are straight enough in the
shoulders, you care not who sees your backe:
Call you
that backing of your friends? a plague vpon such backing:
giue me
them that will face me. Giue me a Cup
of Sack, I am a Rogue if I drunke to
day
Prin. O Villaine, thy Lippes are scarce wip'd, since
thou
drunk'st last
Falst. All's one for that.
He drinkes.
A plague of all Cowards still, say I
Prince. What's the matter?
Falst. What's the matter?
here be foure of vs, haue
ta'ne a thousand pound this Morning
Prince. Where is it, Iack? where is it?
Falst. Where
is it? taken from vs, it is: a hundred
vpon poore foure of vs
Prince. What, a hundred, man?
Falst. I am a Rogue, if
I were not at halfe Sword with
a dozen of them two houres together. I haue
scaped by
miracle. I am eight times thrust through the Doublet,
foure
through the Hose, my Buckler cut through and
through, my Sword hackt like a
Hand-saw, ecce signum.
I neuer dealt better since I was a man: all would not
doe.
A plague of all Cowards: let them speake; if they speake
more or
lesse then truth, they are villaines, and the sonnes
of darknesse
Prince. Speake sirs, how was it?
Gad. We foure set
vpon some dozen
Falst. Sixteene, at least, my Lord
Gad. And bound them
Peto. No, no, they were not bound
Falst. You Rogue, they were bound, euery man of
them, or I am
a Iew else, an Ebrew Iew
Gad. As we were sharing, some sixe or seuen fresh men
set
vpon vs
Falst. And vnbound the rest, and then come in the
other
Prince. What, fought yee with them all?
Falst. All? I
know not what yee call all: but if I
fought not with fiftie of them, I am a
bunch of Radish:
if there were not two or three and fiftie vpon poore
olde
Iack, then am I no two-legg'd Creature
Poin. Pray Heauen, you haue not murthered some of
them
Falst. Nay, that's past praying for, I haue pepper'd
two of
them: Two I am sure I haue payed, two Rogues
in Buckrom Sutes. I tell thee
what, Hal, if I tell thee a
Lye, spit in my face, call me Horse: thou knowest
my olde
word: here I lay, and thus I bore my point; foure Rogues
in
Buckrom let driue at me
Prince. What, foure? thou sayd'st but two, euen now
Falst. Foure Hal, I told thee foure
Poin. I, I, he said foure
Falst. These foure came all a-front, and mainely thrust
at
me; I made no more adoe, but tooke all their seuen
points in my Targuet,
thus
Prince. Seuen? why there were but foure, euen now
Falst. In buckrom
Poin. I, foure, in Buckrom Sutes
Falst. Seuen, by these Hilts, or I am a Villaine else
Prin. Prethee let him alone, we shall haue more anon
Falst. Doest thou heare me, Hal?
Prin. I, and marke
thee too, Iack
Falst. Doe so, for it is worth the listning too: these
nine
in Buckrom, that I told thee of
Prin. So, two more alreadie
Falst. Their Points being broken
Poin. Downe fell his Hose
Falst. Began to giue me ground: but I followed me
close, came
in foot and hand; and with a thought, seuen of
the eleuen I pay'd
Prin. O monstrous! eleuen Buckrom men growne
out of
two?
Falst. But as the Deuill would haue it, three
mis-begotten
Knaues, in Kendall Greene, came at my Back, and
let driue at
me; for it was so darke, Hal, that thou could'st
not see thy Hand
Prin. These Lyes are like the Father that begets them,
grosse
as a Mountaine, open, palpable. Why thou Claybrayn'd
Guts, thou Knotty-pated
Foole, thou Horson obscene
greasie Tallow Catch
Falst. What, art thou mad? art thou mad? is not the
truth,
the truth?
Prin. Why, how could'st thou know these men in
Kendall
Greene, when it was so darke, thou could'st not
see thy Hand? Come, tell vs
your reason: what say'st thou
to this?
Poin. Come, your reason
Iack, your reason
Falst. What, vpon compulsion? No: were I at the
Strappado, or
all the Racks in the World, I would not
tell you on compulsion. Giue you a
reason on compulsion?
If Reasons were as plentie as Black-berries, I
would
giue no man a Reason vpon compulsion, I
Prin. Ile be no longer guiltie of this sinne. This
sanguine
Coward, this Bed-presser, this Hors-back-breaker,
this huge Hill
of Flesh
Falst. Away you Starueling, you Elfe-skin, you dried
Neats
tongue, Bulles-pissell, you stocke-fish: O for breth
to vtter. What is like
thee? You Tailors yard, you sheath
you Bow-case, you vile standing tucke
Prin. Well, breath a-while, and then to't againe: and
when
thou hast tyr'd thy selfe in base comparisons, heare
me speake but thus
Poin. Marke Iacke
Prin. We two, saw you foure set on foure and bound
them, and
were Masters of their Wealth: mark now how
a plaine Tale shall put you downe.
Then did we two, set
on you foure, and with a word, outfac'd you from
your
prize, and haue it: yea, and can shew it you in the House.
And
Falstaffe, you caried your Guts away as nimbly, with
as quicke dexteritie,
and roared for mercy, and still ranne
and roar'd, as euer I heard Bull-Calfe.
What a Slaue art
thou, to hacke thy sword as thou hast done, and then
say
it was in fight. What trick? what deuice? what starting
hole canst
thou now find out, to hide thee from this open
and apparant shame?
Poines. Come, let's heare Iacke: What tricke hast
thou now?
Fal. I
knew ye as well as he that made ye. Why heare
ye my Masters, was it for me to
kill the Heire apparant?
Should I turne vpon the true Prince? Why, thou
knowest
I am as valiant as Hercules: but beware Instinct, the Lion
will
not touch the true Prince: Instinct is a great matter.
I was a Coward on
Instinct: I shall thinke the better of
my selfe, and thee, during my life: I,
for a valiant Lion,
and thou for a true Prince. But Lads, I am glad you
haue
the Mony. Hostesse, clap to the doores: watch to night,
pray to
morrow. Gallants, Lads, Boyes, Harts of Gold,
all the good Titles of
Fellowship come to you. What,
shall we be merry? shall we haue a Play
extempory
Prin. Content, and the argument shall be, thy runing
away
Fal. A, no more of that Hall, and thou louest me.
Enter Hostesse
Host. My Lord, the Prince?
Prin. How now my Lady the
Hostesse, what say'st
thou to me?
Hostesse. Marry, my Lord, there
is a Noble man of the
Court at doore would speake with you: hee sayes,
hee
comes from your Father
Prin. Giue him as much as will make him a Royall
man, and
send him backe againe to my Mother
Falst. What manner of man is hee?
Hostesse. An old
man
Falst. What doth Grauitie out of his Bed at Midnight?
Shall I
giue him his answere?
Prin. Prethee doe Iacke
Falst. 'Faith, and Ile send him packing.
Enter.
Prince. Now Sirs: you fought faire; so did you
Peto, so did you
Bardol: you are Lyons too, you ranne
away vpon instinct: you will not touch
the true Prince;
no, fie
Bard. 'Faith, I ranne when I saw others runne
Prin. Tell mee now in earnest, how came Falstaffes
Sword so
hackt?
Peto. Why, he hackt it with his Dagger, and said, hee
would
sweare truth out of England, but hee would make
you beleeue it was done in
fight, and perswaded vs to doe
the like
Bard. Yea, and to tickle our Noses with Spear-grasse,
to make
them bleed, and then to beslubber our garments
with it, and sweare it was the
blood of true men. I did
that I did not this seuen yeeres before, I blusht to
heare
his monstrous deuices
Prin. O Villaine, thou stolest a Cup of Sacke
eighteene
yeeres agoe, and wert taken with the manner, and
euer since thou
hast blusht extempore: thou hadst fire
and sword on thy side, and yet thou
ranst away; what
instinct hadst thou for it?
Bard. My Lord, doe you
see these Meteors? doe you
behold these Exhalations?
Prin. I
doe
Bard. What thinke you they portend?
Prin. Hot Liuers,
and cold Purses
Bard. Choler, my Lord, if rightly taken
Prin. No, if rightly taken, Halter.
Enter Falstaffe.
Heere comes leane Iacke, heere comes bare-bone. How
now my sweet Creature
of Bombast, how long is't agoe,
Iacke, since thou saw'st thine owne
Knee?
Falst. My owne Knee? When I was about thy yeeres
(Hal) I was
not an Eagles Talent in the Waste, I could
haue crept into any Aldermans
Thumbe-Ring: a plague
of sighing and griefe, it blowes a man vp like a
Bladder.
There's villanous Newes abroad; heere was Sir Iohn
Braby from
your Father; you must goe to the Court in
the Morning. The same mad fellow of
the North, Percy;
and hee of Wales, that gaue Amamon the Bastinado,
and
made Lucifer Cuckold, and swore the Deuill his true
Liege-man vpon the Crosse
of a Welch-hooke; what a
plague call you him?
Poin. O,
Glendower
Falst. Owen, Owen; the same, and his Sonne in Law
Mortimer,
and old Northumberland, and the sprightly
Scot of Scots, Dowglas, that runnes
a Horse-backe vp a
Hill perpendicular
Prin. Hee that rides at high speede, and with a Pistoll
kills
a Sparrow flying
Falst. You haue hit it
Prin. So did he neuer the Sparrow
Falst. Well, that Rascall hath good mettall in him,
hee will
not runne
Prin. Why, what a Rascall art thou then, to prayse him
so for
running?
Falst. A Horse-backe (ye Cuckoe) but a foot hee will
not
budge a foot
Prin. Yes Iacke, vpon instinct
Falst. I grant ye, vpon instinct: Well, hee is there too,
and
one Mordake, and a thousand blew-Cappes more.
Worcester is stolne away by
Night: thy Fathers Beard is
turn'd white with the Newes; you may buy Land
now
as cheape as stinking Mackrell
Prin. Then 'tis like, if there come a hot Sunne, and
this
ciuill buffetting hold, wee shall buy Maiden-heads as
they buy
Hob-nayles, by the Hundreds
Falst. By the Masse Lad, thou say'st true, it is like
wee
shall haue good trading that way. But tell me Hal, art
not thou
horrible afear'd? thou being Heire apparant,
could the World picke thee out
three such Enemyes againe,
as that Fiend Dowglas, that Spirit Percy, and
that
Deuill Glendower? Art not thou horrible afraid? Doth
not thy blood
thrill at it?
Prin. Not a whit: I lacke some of thy instinct
Falst. Well, thou wilt be horrible chidde to morrow,
when
thou commest to thy Father: if thou doe loue me,
practise an answere
Prin. Doe thou stand for my Father, and examine mee
vpon the
particulars of my Life
Falst. Shall I? content: This Chayre shall bee my
State, this
Dagger my Scepter, and this Cushion my
Crowne
Prin. Thy State is taken for a Ioyn'd-Stoole, thy
Golden
Scepter for a Leaden Dagger, and thy precious rich
Crowne, for a
pittifull bald Crowne
Falst. Well, and the fire of Grace be not quite out of
thee
now shalt thou be moued. Giue me a Cup of Sacke
to make mine eyes looke
redde, that it may be thought I
haue wept, for I must speake in passion, and
I will doe it
in King Cambyses vaine
Prin. Well, heere is my Legge
Falst. And heere is my speech: stand aside Nobilitie
Hostesse. This is excellent sport, yfaith
Falst. Weepe not, sweet Queene, for trickling teares
are
vaine
Hostesse. O the Father, how hee holdes his
countenance?
Falst. For Gods sake Lords, conuey my trustfull
Queen,
For teares doe stop the floud-gates of her eyes
Hostesse. O rare, he doth it as like one of these
harlotry
Players, as euer I see
Falst. Peace good Pint-pot, peace good Tickle-braine.
Harry,
I doe not onely maruell where thou spendest thy
time; but also, how thou art
accompanied: For though
the Camomile, the more it is troden, the faster it
growes;
yet Youth, the more it is wasted, the sooner it weares.
Thou art
my Sonne: I haue partly thy Mothers Word,
partly my Opinion; but chiefely, a
villanous tricke of
thine Eye, and a foolish hanging of thy nether Lippe,
that
doth warrant me. If then thou be Sonne to mee, heere
lyeth the point:
why, being Sonne to me, art thou so
poynted at? Shall the blessed Sonne of
Heauen proue a
Micher, and eate Black-berryes? a question not to bee
askt.
Shall the Sonne of England proue a Theefe, and
take Purses? a question to be
askt. There is a thing,
Harry, which thou hast often heard of, and it is
knowne to
many in our Land, by the Name of Pitch: this Pitch (as
ancient
Writers doe report) doth defile; so doth the companie
thou keepest: for
Harry, now I doe not speake to
thee in Drinke, but in Teares; not in
Pleasure, but in Passion;
not in Words onely, but in Woes also: and
yet
there is a vertuous man, whom I haue often noted in thy
companie, but
I know not his Name
Prin. What manner of man, and it like your Maiestie?
Falst. A goodly portly man yfaith, and a corpulent,
of a chearefull Looke, a
pleasing Eye, and a most noble
Carriage, and as I thinke, his age some
fiftie, or (byrlady)
inclining to threescore; and now I remember mee,
his
Name is Falstaffe: if that man should be lewdly giuen,
hee deceiues
mee; for Harry, I see Vertue in his Lookes.
If then the Tree may be knowne by
the Fruit, as the Fruit
by the Tree, then peremptorily I speake it, there is
Vertue
in that Falstaffe: him keepe with, the rest banish. And
tell mee
now, thou naughtie Varlet, tell mee, where hast
thou beene this
moneth?
Prin. Do'st thou speake like a King? doe thou stand
for
mee, and Ile play my Father
Falst. Depose me: if thou do'st it halfe so grauely,
so
maiestically, both in word and matter, hang me vp by the
heeles for a
Rabbet-sucker, or a Poulters Hare
Prin. Well, heere I am set
Falst. And heere I stand: iudge my Masters
Prin. Now Harry, whence come you?
Falst. My Noble
Lord, from East-cheape
Prin. The complaints I heare of thee, are grieuous
Falst. Yfaith, my Lord, they are false: Nay, Ile tickle
ye
for a young Prince
Prin. Swearest thou, vngracious Boy? henceforth
ne're looke
on me: thou art violently carryed away from
Grace: there is a Deuill haunts
thee, in the likenesse of a
fat old Man; a Tunne of Man is thy Companion:
Why
do'st thou conuerse with that Trunke of Humors, that
Boulting-Hutch of
Beastlinesse, that swolne Parcell of
Dropsies, that huge Bombard of Sacke,
that stuft Cloakebagge
of Guts, that rosted Manning Tree Oxe with
the
Pudding in his Belly, that reuerend Vice, that grey iniquitie,
that
Father Ruffian, that Vanitie in yeeres? wherein
is he good, but to taste
Sacke, and drinke it? wherein
neat and cleanly, but to carue a Capon, and eat
it? wherein
Cunning, but in Craft? wherein Craftie, but in
Villanie?
wherein Villanous, but in all things? wherein worthy,
but in
nothing?
Falst. I would your Grace would take me with you:
whom
meanes your Grace?
Prince. That villanous abhominable mis-leader
of
Youth, Falstaffe, that old white-bearded Sathan
Falst. My Lord, the man I know
Prince. I know thou do'st
Falst. But to say, I know more harme in him then in
my selfe,
were to say more then I know. That hee is olde
(the more the pittie) his
white hayres doe witnesse it:
but that hee is (sauing your reuerence) a
Whore-master,
that I vtterly deny. If Sacke and Sugar bee a fault,
Heauen
helpe the Wicked: if to be olde and merry, be a
sinne, then many an olde
Hoste that I know, is damn'd:
if to be fat, be to be hated, then Pharaohs
leane Kine are
to be loued. No, my good Lord, banish Peto,
banish
Bardolph, banish Poines: but for sweete Iacke Falstaffe,
kinde
Iacke Falstaffe, true Iacke Falstaffe, valiant Iacke Falstaffe,
and therefore
more valiant, being as hee is olde Iack
Falstaffe, banish not him thy Harryes
companie, banish
not him thy Harryes companie; banish plumpe Iacke,
and
banish all the World
Prince. I doe, I will.
Enter Bardolph running.
Bard. O, my Lord, my Lord, the Sherife, with a most
monstrous
Watch, is at the doore
Falst. Out you Rogue, play out the Play: I haue much
to say
in the behalfe of that Falstaffe.
Enter the Hostesse.
Hostesse. O, my Lord, my Lord
Falst. Heigh, heigh, the Deuill rides vpon a
Fiddlesticke:
what's the matter?
Hostesse. The Sherife and all the
Watch are at the
doore: they are come to search the House, shall I
let
them in?
Falst. Do'st thou heare Hal, neuer call a true peece
of
Gold a Counterfeit: thou art essentially made, without
seeming so
Prince. And thou a naturall Coward, without instinct
Falst. I deny your Maior: if you will deny the
Sherife, so:
if not, let him enter. If I become not a Cart
as well as another man, a
plague on my bringing vp: I
hope I shall as soone be strangled with a Halter,
as another
Prince. Goe hide thee behinde the Arras, the rest
walke vp
aboue. Now my Masters, for a true Face and
good Conscience
Falst. Both which I haue had: but their date is out,
and
therefore Ile hide me.
Enter.
Prince. Call in the Sherife.
Enter Sherife and the Carrier.
Prince. Now Master Sherife, what is your will with
mee?
She. First pardon me, my Lord. A Hue and Cry hath
followed certaine men vnto
this house
Prince. What men?
She. One of them is well knowne, my
gracious Lord,
a grosse fat man
Car. As fat as Butter
Prince. The man, I doe assure you, is not heere,
For I my
selfe at this time haue imploy'd him:
And Sherife, I will engage my word to
thee,
That I will by to morrow Dinner time,
Send him to answere thee, or
any man,
For any thing he shall be charg'd withall:
And so let me entreat
you, leaue the house
She. I will, my Lord: there are two Gentlemen
Haue in this
Robberie lost three hundred Markes
Prince. It may be so: if he haue robb'd these men,
He shall
be answerable: and so farewell
She. Good Night, my Noble Lord
Prince. I thinke it is good Morrow, is it not?
She.
Indeede, my Lord, I thinke it be two a Clocke.
Enter.
Prince. This oyly Rascall is knowne as well as Poules:
goe call him
forth
Peto. Falstaffe? fast asleepe behinde the Arras, and
snorting
like a Horse
Prince. Harke, how hard he fetches breath: search
his
Pockets.
He searcheth his Pockets, and findeth certaine Papers.
Prince. What hast thou found?
Peto. Nothing but Papers, my
Lord
Prince. Let's see, what be they? reade them
Peto. Item, a Capon. ii.s.ii.d.
Item, Sawce iiii.d.
Item,
Sacke, two Gallons. v.s.viii.d.
Item, Anchoues and Sacke after Supper.
ii.s.vi.d.
Item, Bread. ob
Prince. O monstrous, but one halfe penny-worth of
Bread to
this intollerable deale of Sacke? What there is
else, keepe close, wee'le
reade it at more aduantage: there
let him sleepe till day. Ile to the Court
in the Morning:
Wee must all to the Warres, and thy place shall be
honorable.
Ile procure this fat Rogue a Charge of Foot,
and I know his
death will be a Match of Twelue-score.
The Money shall be pay'd backe againe
with aduantage.
Be with me betimes in the Morning: and so good
morrow
Peto
Peto. Good morrow, good my Lord.
Exeunt.
Actus Tertius. Scena Prima.
Enter Hotspurre, Worcester, Lord Mortimer, Owen Glendower.
Mort. These promises are faire, the parties sure,
And our induction
full of prosperous hope
Hotsp. Lord Mortimer, and Cousin Glendower,
Will you sit
downe?
And Vnckle Worcester; a plague vpon it,
I haue forgot the Mappe
Glend. No, here it is:
Sit Cousin Percy, sit good Cousin
Hotspurre:
For by that Name, as oft as Lancaster doth speake of you,
His
Cheekes looke pale, and with a rising sigh,
He wisheth you in Heauen
Hotsp. And you in Hell, as oft as he heares Owen
Glendower
spoke of
Glend. I cannot blame him: At my Natiuitie,
The front of
Heauen was full of fierie shapes,
Of burning Cressets: and at my
Birth,
The frame and foundation of the Earth
Shak'd like a Coward
Hotsp. Why so it would haue done at the same season,
if your
Mothers Cat had but kitten'd, though your selfe
had neuer beene borne
Glend. I say the Earth did shake when I was borne
Hotsp. And I say the Earth was not of my minde,
If you
suppose, as fearing you, it shooke
Glend. The heauens were all on fire, the Earth
did
tremble
Hotsp. Oh, then the Earth shooke
To see the Heauens on
fire,
And not in feare of your Natiuitie.
Diseased Nature oftentimes
breakes forth
In strange eruptions; and the teeming Earth
Is with a kinde
of Collick pincht and vext,
By the imprisoning of vnruly Winde
Within her
Wombe: which for enlargement striuing,
Shakes the old Beldame Earth, and
tombles downe
Steeples, and mosse-growne Towers. At your Birth,
Our
Grandam Earth, hauing this distemperature,
In passion shooke
Glend. Cousin: of many men
I doe not beare these Crossings:
Giue me leaue
To tell you once againe, that at my Birth
The front of
Heauen was full of fierie shapes,
The Goates ranne from the Mountaines, and
the Heards
Were strangely clamorous to the frighted fields:
These signes
haue markt me extraordinarie,
And all the courses of my Life doe shew,
I
am not in the Roll of common men.
Where is the Liuing, clipt in with the
Sea,
That chides the Bankes of England, Scotland, and Wales,
Which calls
me Pupill, or hath read to me?
And bring him out, that is but Womans
Sonne,
Can trace me in the tedious wayes of Art,
And hold me pace in deepe
experiments
Hotsp. I thinke there's no man speakes better Welsh:
Ile to
Dinner
Mort. Peace cousin Percy, you will make him mad
Glend. I can call Spirits from the vastie Deepe
Hotsp. Why so can I, or so can any man:
But will they come,
when you doe call for them?
Glend. Why, I can teach thee, Cousin, to
command the
Deuill
Hotsp. And I can teach thee, Cousin, to shame the Deuil,
By
telling truth. Tell truth, and shame the Deuill.
If thou haue power to rayse
him, bring him hither,
And Ile be sworne, I haue power to shame him
hence.
Oh, while you liue, tell truth, and shame the Deuill
Mort. Come, come, no more of this vnprofitable
Chat
Glend. Three times hath Henry Bullingbrooke made head
Against
my Power: thrice from the Banks of Wye,
And sandy-bottom'd Seuerne, haue I
hent him
Bootlesse home, and Weather-beaten backe
Hotsp. Home without Bootes,
And in foule Weather too,
How
scapes he Agues in the Deuils name?
Glend. Come, heere's the
Mappe:
Shall wee diuide our Right,
According to our three-fold order
ta'ne?
Mort. The Arch-Deacon hath diuided it
Into three Limits,
very equally:
England, from Trent, and Seuerne. hitherto,
By South and
East, is to my part assign'd:
All Westward, Wales, beyond the Seuerne
shore,
And all the fertile Land within that bound,
To Owen Glendower: And
deare Couze, to you
The remnant Northward, lying off from Trent.
And our
Indentures Tripartite are drawne:
Which being sealed enterchangeably,
(A
Businesse that this Night may execute)
To morrow, Cousin Percy, you and
I,
And my good Lord of Worcester, will set forth,
To meete your Father,
and the Scottish Power,
As is appointed vs at Shrewsbury.
My Father
Glendower is not readie yet,
Nor shall wee neede his helpe these foureteene
dayes:
Within that space, you may haue drawne together
Your Tenants,
Friends, and neighbouring Gentlemen
Glend. A shorter time shall send me to you, Lords:
And in my
Conduct shall your Ladies come,
From whom you now must steale, and take no
leaue,
For there will be a World of Water shed,
Vpon the parting of your
Wiues and you
Hotsp. Me thinks my Moity, North from Burton here,
In
quantitie equals not one of yours:
See, how this Riuer comes me cranking
in,
And cuts me from the best of all my Land,
A huge halfe Moone, a
monstrous Cantle out.
Ile haue the Currant in this place damn'd vp,
And
here the smug and Siluer Trent shall runne,
In a new Channell, faire and
euenly:
It shall not winde with such a deepe indent,
To rob me of so rich
a Bottome here
Glend. Not winde? it shall, it must, you see it doth
Mort. Yea, but marke how he beares his course,
And runnes me
vp, with like aduantage on the other side,
Gelding the opposed Continent as
much,
As on the other side it takes from you
Worc. Yea, but a little Charge will trench him here,
And on
this North side winne this Cape of Land,
And then he runnes straight and
euen
Hotsp. Ile haue it so, a little Charge will doe it
Glend. Ile not haue it alter'd
Hotsp. Will not you?
Glend. No, nor you shall not
Hotsp. Who shall say me nay?
Glend. Why, that will
I
Hotsp. let me not vnderstand you then, speake it in
Welsh
Glend. I can speake English, Lord, as well as you:
For I was
trayn'd vp in the English Court;
Where, being but young, I framed to the
Harpe
Many an English Dittie, louely well,
And gaue the Tongue a helpefull
Ornament;
A Vertue that was neuer seene in you
Hotsp. Marry, and I am glad of it with all my heart,
I had
rather be a Kitten, and cry mew,
Then one of these same Meeter
Ballad-mongers:
I had rather heare a Brazen Candlestick turn'd,
Or a dry
Wheele grate on the Axle-tree,
And that would set my teeth nothing an
edge,
Nothing so much, as mincing Poetrie;
'Tis like the forc't gate of a
shuffling Nagge
Glend. Come, you shall haue Trent turn'd
Hotsp. I doe not care: Ile giue thrice so much Land
To any
well-deseruing friend;
But in the way of Bargaine, marke ye me,
Ile cauill
on the ninth part of a hayre.
Are the Indentures drawne? shall we be
gone?
Glend. The Moone shines faire,
You may away by Night:
Ile
haste the Writer; and withall,
Breake with your Wiues, of your departure
hence:
I am afraid my Daughter will runne madde,
So much she doteth on her
Mortimer.
Enter.
Mort. Fie, Cousin Percy, how you crosse my Father
Hotsp. I cannot chuse: sometime he angers me,
With telling me
of the Moldwarpe and the Ant,
Of the Dreamer Merlin, and his
Prophecies;
And of a Dragon, and a finne-lesse Fish,
A clip-wing'd
Griffin, and a moulten Rauen,
A couching Lyon, and a ramping Cat,
And such
a deale of skimble-skamble Stuffe,
As puts me from my Faith. I tell you
what,
He held me last Night, at least, nine howres,
In reckning vp the
seuerall Deuils Names,
That were his Lacqueyes:
I cry'd hum, and well, goe
too,
But mark'd him not a word. O, he is as tedious
As a tyred Horse, a
rayling Wife,
Worse then a smoakie House. I had rather liue
With Cheese
and Garlick in a Windmill farre,
Then feede on Cates, and haue him talke to
me,
In any Summer-House in Christendome
Mort. In faith he was a worthy Gentleman,
Exceeding well
read, and profited,
In strange Concealements:
Valiant as a Lyon, and
wondrous affable,
And as Bountifull, as Mynes of India.
Shall I tell you,
Cousin,
He holds your temper in a high respect,
And curbes himselfe, euen
of his naturall scope,
When you doe crosse his humor: 'faith he does.
I
warrant you, that man is not aliue,
Might so haue tempted him, as you haue
done,
Without the taste of danger, and reproofe:
But doe not vse it oft,
let me entreat you
Worc. In faith, my Lord, you are too wilfull blame,
And since
your comming hither, haue done enough,
To put him quite besides his
patience.
You must needes learne, Lord, to amend this fault:
Though
sometimes it shew Greatnesse, Courage, Blood,
And that's the dearest grace it
renders you;
Yet oftentimes it doth present harsh Rage,
Defect of Manners,
want of Gouernment,
Pride, Haughtinesse, Opinion, and Disdaine:
The least
of which, haunting a Nobleman,
Loseth mens hearts, and leaues behinde a
stayne
Vpon the beautie of all parts besides,
Beguiling them of
commendation
Hotsp. Well, I am school'd:
Good-manners be your
speede;
Heere come your Wiues, and let vs take our leaue.
Enter Glendower,
with the Ladies.
Mort. This is the deadly spight, that angers me,
My Wife can speake
no English, I no Welsh
Glend. My Daughter weepes, shee'le not part with you,
Shee'le
be a Souldier too, shee'le to the Warres
Mort. Good Father tell her, that she and my Aunt Percy
Shall
follow in your Conduct speedily.
Glendower speakes to her in Welsh, and she answeres him in the
same.
Glend. Shee is desperate heere:
A peeuish selfe-will'd
Harlotry,
One that no perswasion can doe good vpon.
The Lady speakes in Welsh.
Mort. I vnderstand thy Lookes: that pretty Welsh
Which thou powr'st
down from these swelling Heauens,
I am too perfect in: and but for
shame,
In such a parley should I answere thee.
The Lady againe in welsh.
Mort. I vnderstand thy Kisses, and thou mine,
And that's a feeling
disputation:
But I will neuer be a Truant, Loue,
Till I haue learn'd thy
Language: for thy tongue
Makes Welsh as sweet as Ditties highly
penn'd,
Sung by a faire Queene in a Summers Bowre,
With rauishing Diuision
to her Lute
Glend. Nay, if thou melt, then will she runne madde.
The Lady speakes againe in Welsh.
Mort. O, I am Ignorance it selfe in this
Glend. She bids you,
On the wanton Rushes lay you
downe,
And rest your gentle Head vpon her Lappe,
And she will sing the
Song that pleaseth you,
And on your Eye-lids Crowne the God of
Sleepe,
Charming your blood with pleasing heauinesse;
Making such
difference betwixt Wake and Sleepe,
As is the difference betwixt Day and
Night,
The houre before the Heauenly Harneis'd Teeme
Begins his Golden
Progresse in the East
Mort. With all my heart Ile sit, and heare her sing:
By that
time will our Booke, I thinke, be drawne
Glend. Doe so:
And those Musitians that shall play to
you,
Hang in the Ayre a thousand Leagues from thence;
And straight they
shall be here: sit, and attend
Hotsp. Come Kate, thou art perfect in lying downe:
Come,
quicke, quicke, that I may lay my Head in thy
Lappe
Lady. Goe, ye giddy-Goose.
The Musicke playes.
Hotsp. Now I perceiue the Deuill vnderstands Welsh,
And 'tis no
maruell he is so humorous:
Byrlady hee's a good Musitian
Lady. Then would you be nothing but Musicall,
For you are
altogether gouerned by humors:
Lye still ye Theefe, and heare the Lady sing
in Welsh
Hotsp. I had rather heare (Lady) my Brach howle in
Irish
Lady. Would'st haue thy Head broken?
Hotsp. No
Lady. Then be still
Hotsp. Neyther, 'tis a Womans fault
Lady. Now God helpe thee
Hotsp. To the Welsh Ladies Bed
Lady. What's that?
Hotsp. Peace, shee sings.
Heere the Lady sings a Welsh Song.
Hotsp. Come, Ile haue your Song too
Lady. Not mine, in good sooth
Hotsp. Not yours, in good sooth?
You sweare like a
Comfit-makers Wife:
Not you, in good sooth; and, as true as I liue;
And,
as God shall mend me; and, as sure as day:
And giuest such Sarcenet suretie
for thy Oathes,
As if thou neuer walk'st further then Finsbury.
Sweare me,
Kate, like a Lady, as thou art,
A good mouth-filling Oath: and leaue in
sooth,
And such protest of Pepper Ginger-bread,
To Veluet-Guards, and
Sunday-Citizens.
Come, sing
Lady. I will not sing
Hotsp. 'Tis the next way to turne Taylor, or be
Redbrest
teacher: and the Indentures be drawne, Ile away
within these two
howres: and so come in, when yee
will.
Enter.
Glend. Come, come, Lord Mortimer, you are as slow,
As hot Lord
Percy is on fire to goe.
By this our Booke is drawne: wee'le but
seale,
And then to Horse immediately
Mort. With all my heart.
Exeunt.
Scaena Secunda.
Enter the King, Prince of Wales, and others.
King. Lords, giue vs leaue:
The Prince of Wales, and I,
Must
haue some priuate conference:
But be neere at hand,
For wee shall
presently haue neede of you.
Exeunt. Lords.
I know not whether Heauen will haue it so,
For some displeasing seruice I
haue done;
That in his secret Doome, out of my Blood,
Hee'le breede
Reuengement, and a Scourge for me:
But thou do'st in thy passages of
Life,
Make me beleeue, that thou art onely mark'd
For the hot vengeance,
and the Rod of heauen
To punish my Mistreadings. Tell me else,
Could such
inordinate and low desires,
Such poore, such bare, such lewd, such meane
attempts,
Such barren pleasures, rude societie,
As thou art matcht
withall, and grafted too,
Accompanie the greatnesse of thy blood,
And hold
their leuell with thy Princely heart?
Prince. So please your Maiesty,
I would I could
Quit all offences with as cleare excuse,
As well as I am
doubtlesse I can purge
My selfe of many I am charg'd withall:
Yet such
extenuation let me begge,
As in reproofe of many Tales deuis'd,
Which oft
the Eare of Greatnesse needes must heare,
By smiling Pick-thankes, and base
Newes-mongers;
I may for some things true, wherein my youth
Hath faultie
wandred, and irregular,
Finde pardon on my true submission
King. Heauen pardon thee:
Yet let me wonder, Harry,
At thy
affections, which doe hold a Wing
Quite from the flight of all thy
ancestors.
Thy place in Councell thou hast rudely lost,
Which by thy
younger Brother is supply'de;
And art almost an alien to the hearts
Of all
the Court and Princes of my blood.
The hope and expectation of thy time
Is
ruin'd, and the Soule of euery man
Prophetically doe fore-thinke thy
fall.
Had I so lauish of my presence beene,
So common hackney'd in the
eyes of men,
So stale and cheape to vulgar Company;
Opinion, that did
helpe me to the Crowne,
Had still kept loyall to possession,
And left me
in reputelesse banishment,
A fellow of no marke, nor likelyhood.
By being
seldome seene, I could not stirre,
But like a Comet, I was wondred
at,
That men would tell their Children, This is hee:
Others would say;
Where, Which is Bullingbrooke.
And then I stole all Courtesie from
Heauen,
And drest my selfe in such Humilitie,
That I did plucke Allegeance
from mens hearts,
Lowd Showts and Salutations from their mouthes,
Euen in
the presence of the Crowned King.
Thus I did keepe my Person fresh and
new,
My Presence like a Robe Pontificall,
Ne're seene, but wondred at: and
so my State,
Seldome but sumptuous, shewed like a Feast,
And wonne by
rarenesse such Solemnitie.
The skipping King hee ambled vp and downe,
With
shallow Iesters, and rash Bauin Wits,
Soone kindled, and soone burnt, carded
his state,
Mingled his Royaltie with Carping Fooles,
Had his great Name
prophaned with their Scornes,
And gaue his Countenance, against his
Name,
To laugh at gybing Boyes, and stand the push
Of euery Beardlesse
vaine Comparatiue;
Grew a Companion to the common Streetes,
Enfeoff'd
himselfe to Popularitie:
That being dayly swallowed by mens Eyes,
They
surfeted with Honey, and began to loathe
The taste of Sweetnesse, whereof a
little
More then a little, is by much too much.
So when he had occasion to
be seene,
He was but as the Cuckow is in Iune,
Heard, not regarded: seene
but with such Eyes,
As sicke and blunted with Communitie,
Affoord no
extraordinarie Gaze,
Such as is bent on Sunne-like Maiestie,
When it
shines seldome in admiring Eyes:
But rather drowz'd, and hung their eye-lids
downe,
Slept in his Face, and rendred such aspect
As Cloudie men vse to
doe to their aduersaries,
Being with his presence glutted, gorg'd, and
full.
And in that very Line, Harry, standest thou:
For thou hast lost thy
Princely Priuiledge,
With vile participation. Not an Eye
But is awearie of
thy common sight,
Saue mine, which hath desir'd to see thee more:
Which
now doth that I would not haue it doe,
Make blinde it selfe with foolish
tendernesse
Prince. I shall hereafter, my thrice gracious Lord,
Be more
my selfe
King. For all the World,
As thou art to this houre, was
Richard then,
When I from France set foot at Rauenspurgh;
And euen as I
was then, is Percy now:
Now by my Scepter, and my Soule to boot,
He hath
more worthy interest to the State
Then thou, the shadow of Succession;
For
of no Right, nor colour like to Right.
He doth fill fields with Harneis in
the Realme,
Turnes head against the Lyons armed Iawes;
And being no more
in debt to yeeres, then thou,
Leades ancient Lords, and reuerent Bishops
on
To bloody Battailes, and to brusing Armes.
What neuer-dying Honor hath
he got,
Against renowned Dowglas? whose high Deedes,
Whose hot Incursions,
and great Name in Armes,
Holds from all Souldiers chiefe Maioritie,
And
Militarie Title Capitall.
Through all the Kingdomes that acknowledge
Christ,
Thrice hath the Hotspur Mars, in swathing Clothes,
This Infant
Warrior, in his Enterprises,
Discomfited great Dowglas, ta'ne him
once,
Enlarged him, and made a friend of him,
To fill the mouth of deepe
Defiance vp,
And shake the peace and safetie of our Throne.
And what say
you to this? Percy, Northumberland,
The Arch-bishops Grace of Yorke, Dowglas,
Mortimer,
Capitulate against vs, and are vp.
But wherefore doe I tell
these Newes to thee?
Why, Harry, doe I tell thee of my Foes,
Which art my
neer'st and dearest Enemie?
Thou, that art like enough, through vassall
Feare,
Base Inclination, and the start of Spleene,
To fight against me
vnder Percies pay,
To dogge his heeles, and curtsie at his frownes,
To
shew how much thou art degenerate
Prince. Doe not thinke so, you shall not finde it so:
And
Heauen forgiue them, that so much haue sway'd
Your Maiesties good thoughts
away from me:
I will redeeme all this on Percies head,
And in the closing
of some glorious day,
Be bold to tell you, that I am your Sonne,
When I
will weare a Garment all of Blood,
And staine my fauours in a bloody
Maske:
Which washt away, shall scowre my shame with it.
And that shall be
the day, when ere it lights,
That this same Child of Honor and
Renowne.
This gallant Hotspur, this all-praysed Knight.
And your
vnthought-of Harry chance to meet:
For euery Honor sitting on his
Helme,
Would they were multitudes, and on my head
My shames redoubled. For
the time will come,
That I shall make this Northerne Youth exchange
His
glorious Deedes for my Indignities:
Percy is but my Factor, good my
Lord,
To engrosse vp glorious Deedes on my behalfe:
And I will call him to
so strict account,
That he shall render euery Glory vp,
Yea, euen the
sleightest worship of his time,
Or I will teare the Reckoning from his
Heart.
This, in the Name of Heauen, I promise here:
The which, if I
performe, and doe suruiue,
I doe beseech your Maiestie, may salue
The
long-growne Wounds of my intemperature:
If not, the end of Life cancells all
Bands,
And I will dye a hundred thousand Deaths,
Ere breake the smallest
parcell of this Vow
King. A hundred thousand Rebels dye in this:
Thou shalt haue
Charge, and soueraigne trust herein.
Enter Blunt.
How now good Blunt? thy Lookes are full of speed
Blunt. So hath the Businesse that I come to speake of.
Lord
Mortimer of Scotland hath sent word,
That Dowglas and the English Rebels
met
The eleuenth of this moneth, at Shrewsbury:
A mightie and a fearefull
Head they are,
(If Promises be kept on euery hand)
As euer offered foule
play in a State
King. The earle of Westmerland set forth to day:
With him my
sonne, Lord Iohn of Lancaster,
For this aduertisement is fiue dayes
old.
On Wednesday next, Harry thou shalt set forward:
On thursday, wee our
selues will march.
Our meeting is Bridgenorth: and Harry, you shall
march
Through Glocestershire: by which account,
Our Businesse valued some
twelue dayes hence,
Our generall Forces at Bridgenorth shall meete.
Our
Hands are full of Businesse: let's away,
Aduantage feedes him fat, while men
delay.
Exeunt.
Scena Tertia.
Enter Falstaffe and Bardolph.
Falst. Bardolph, am I not falne away vilely, since this
last
action? doe I not bate? doe I not dwindle? Why
my skinne hangs about me like
an olde Ladies loose
Gowne: I am withered like an olde Apple Iohn.
Well,
Ile repent, and that suddenly, while I am in some liking:
I shall be
out of heart shortly, and then I shall haue no
strength to repent. And i haue
not forgotten what the
in-side of a Church is made of, I am a Pepper-Corne,
a
Brewers Horse, the in-side of a Church. Company, villanous
Company hath
beene the spoyle of me
Bard. Sir Iohn, you are so fretfull, you cannot liue
long
Falst. Why there is it: Come, sing me a bawdy Song,
make me
merry; I was as vertuously giuen, as a Gentleman
need to be; vertuous enough,
swore little, dic'd not
aboue seuen times a weeke, went to a Bawdy-house
not
aboue once in a quarter of an houre, payd Money that I
borrowed, three
or foure times; liued well, and in good
compasse: and now I liue out of all
order, out of compasse
Bard. Why, you are so fat, Sir Iohn, that you must
needes bee
out of of all compasse; out all reasonable
compasse, Sir Iohn
Falst. Doe thou amend thy Face, and Ile amend thy
Life: Thou
art our Admirall, thou bearest the Lanterne
in the Poope, but 'tis in the
Nose of thee; thou art the
Knight of the burning Lampe
Bard. Why, Sir Iohn, my Face does you no harme
Falst. No, Ile be sworne: I make as good vse of it, as
many a
man doth of a Deaths-Head, or a Memento Mori.
I neuer see thy Face, but I
thinke vpon Hell fire, and Diues
that liued in Purple; for there he is in his
Robes burning,
burning. If thou wert any way giuen to vertue, I
would
sweare by thy Face; my Oath should bee, By this Fire:
But thou art
altogether giuen ouer; and wert indeede,
but for the Light in thy Face, the
Sunne of vtter Darkenesse.
When thou ran'st vp Gads-Hill in the Night,
to
catch my Horse, if I did not thinke that thou hadst beene
an Ignis
fatuus, or a Ball of Wild-fire, there's no Purchase
in Money. O, thou art a
perpetuall Triumph, an euerlasting
Bone-fire-Light: thou hast saued me a
thousand
Markes in Linkes and Torches, walking with thee in the
Night
betwixt Tauerne and Tauerne: But the Sack that
thou hast drunke me, would
haue bought me Lights as
good cheape, as the dearest Chandlers in Europe. I
haue
maintain'd that Salamander of yours with fire, any time
this two and
thirtie yeeres, Heauen reward me for it
Bard. I would my Face were in your Belly
Falst. So should I be sure to be heart-burn'd.
Enter
Hostesse.
How now, Dame Partlet the Hen, haue you enquir'd yet
who pick'd my
Pocket?
Hostesse. Why Sir Iohn, what doe you thinke, Sir Iohn?
doe
you thinke I keepe Theeues in my House? I haue
search'd, I haue enquired, so
haz my Husband, Man by
Man, Boy by Boy, Seruant by Seruant: the tight of
a
hayre was neuer lost in my house before
Falst. Ye lye Hostesse: Bardolph was shau'd, and lost
many a
hayre; and Ile be sworne my Pocket was pick'd:
goe to, you are a Woman,
goe
Hostesse. Who I? I defie thee: I was neuer call'd so
in mine
owne house before
Falst. Goe to, I know you well enough
Hostesse. No, sir Iohn, you doe not know me, Sir Iohn:
I know
you, Sir Iohn: you owe me Money, Sir Iohn, and
now you picke a quarrell, to
beguile me of it: I bought
you a dozen of Shirts to your Backe
Falst. Doulas, filthy Doulas: I haue giuen them
away to
Bakers Wiues, and they haue made Boulters of
them
Hostesse. Now as I am a true Woman, Holland of
eight
shillings an Ell: You owe Money here besides, Sir Iohn,
for your
Dyet, and by-Drinkings, and Money lent you,
foure and twentie pounds
Falst. Hee had his part of it, let him pay
Hostesse. Hee? alas hee is poore, hee hath nothing
Falst. How? Poore? Looke vpon his Face: What call
you Rich?
Let them coyne his Nose, let them coyne his
Cheekes, Ile not pay a Denier.
What, will you make a
Younker of me? Shall I not take mine ease in mine
Inne,
but I shall haue my Pocket pick'd? I haue lost a Seale-Ring
of my
Grand-fathers, worth fortie marke
Hostesse. I haue heard the Prince tell him, I know not
how
oft, that that Ring was Copper
Falst. How? the Prince is a Iacke, a Sneake-Cuppe:
and if hee
were heere, I would cudgell him like a Dogge,
if hee would say so.
Enter
the Prince marching, and Falstaffe meets him, playing on his
Trunchion like a
Fife.
Falst. How now Lad? is the Winde in that Doore?
Must we all
march?
Bard. Yea, two and two, Newgate fashion
Hostesse. My Lord, I pray you heare me
Prince. What say'st thou, Mistresse Quickly? How
does thy
Husband? I loue him well, hee is an honest
man
Hostesse. Good, my Lord, heare mee
Falst. Prethee let her alone, and list to mee
Prince. What say'st thou, Iacke?
Falst. The other
Night I fell asleepe heere behind the
Arras, and had my Pocket pickt: this
House is turn'd
Bawdy-house, they picke Pockets
Prince. What didst thou lose, Iacke?
Falst. Wilt thou
beleeue me, Hal? Three or foure Bonds
of fortie pound apeece, and a
Seale-Ring of my Grand-fathers
Prince. A Trifle, some eight-penny matter
Host. So I told him, my Lord; and I said, I heard your
Grace
say so: and (my Lord) hee speakes most vilely of
you, like a foule-mouth'd
man as hee is, and said, hee
would cudgell you
Prince. What hee did not?
Host. There's neyther Faith,
Truth, nor Woman-hood
in me else
Falst. There's no more faith in thee then a stu'de Prune;
nor
no more truth in thee, then in a drawne Fox: and for
Wooman-hood, Maid-marian
may be the Deputies wife
of the Ward to thee. Go you nothing: go
Host. Say, what thing? what thing?
Falst. What thing?
why a thing to thanke heauen on
Host. I am no thing to thanke heauen on, I wold thou
shouldst
know it: I am an honest mans wife: and setting
thy Knighthood aside, thou art
a knaue to call me so
Falst. Setting thy woman-hood aside, thou art a beast
to say
otherwise
Host. Say, what beast, thou knaue thou?
Fal. What
beast? Why an Otter
Prin. An Otter, sir Iohn? Why an Otter?
Fal. Why?
She's neither fish nor flesh; a man knowes
not where to haue her
Host. Thou art vniust man in saying so; thou, or anie
man
knowes where to haue me, thou knaue thou
Prince. Thou say'st true Hostesse, and he slanders thee
most
grossely
Host. So he doth you, my Lord, and sayde this other
day, You
ought him a thousand pound
Prince. Sirrah, do I owe you a thousand pound?
Falst.
A thousand pound Hal? A Million. Thy loue is
worth a Million: thou ow'st me
thy loue
Host. Nay my Lord, he call'd you Iacke, and said hee
would
cudgell you
Fal. Did I, Bardolph?
Bar. Indeed Sir Iohn, you said
so
Fal. Yea, if he said my Ring was Copper
Prince. I say 'tis Copper. Dar'st thou bee as good as
thy
word now?
Fal. Why Hal? thou know'st, as thou art but a man,
I
dare: but, as thou art a Prince, I feare thee, as I feare the
roaring of
the Lyons Whelpe
Prince. And why not as the Lyon?
Fal. The King
himselfe is to bee feared as the Lyon:
Do'st thou thinke Ile feare thee, as I
feare thy Father? nay
if I do, let my Girdle breake
Prin. O, if it should, how would thy guttes fall about
thy
knees. But sirra: There's no roome for Faith, Truth,
nor Honesty, in this
bosome of thine: it is all fill'd vppe
with Guttes and Midriffe. Charge an
honest Woman
with picking thy pocket? Why thou horson impudent
imbost
Rascall, if there were any thing in thy Pocket but
Tauerne Recknings,
Memorandums of Bawdie-houses,
and one poore peny-worth of Sugar-candie to
make thee
long-winded: if thy pocket were enrich'd with anie
other
iniuries but these, I am a Villaine: And yet you will
stand to it,
you will not Pocket vp wrong. Art thou not
asham'd?
Fal. Do'st thou
heare Hal? Thou know'st in the state
of Innocency, Adam fell: and what should
poore Iacke
Falstaffe do, in the dayes of Villany? Thou seest, I haue
more
flesh then another man, and therefore more frailty.
You confesse then you
pickt my Pocket?
Prin. It appeares so by the Story
Fal. Hostesse, I forgiue thee:
Go make ready Breakfast, loue
thy Husband,
Looke to thy Seruants, and cherish thy Guests:
Thou shalt
find me tractable to any honest reason:
Thou seest, I am pacified
still.
Nay, I prethee be gone.
Exit Hostesse.
Now Hal, to the newes at Court for the Robbery, Lad?
How is that
answered?
Prin. O my sweet Beefe:
I must still be good Angell to
thee.
The Monie is paid backe againe
Fal. O, I do not like that paying backe, 'tis a
double
Labour
Prin. I am good Friends with my Father, and may
do
anything
Fal. Rob me the Exchequer the first thing thou do'st,
and do
it with vnwash'd hands too
Bard. Do my Lord
Prin. I haue procured thee Iacke, A Charge of Foot
Fal. I would it had beene of Horse. Where shal I finde
one
that can steale well? O, for a fine theefe of two and
twentie, or thereabout:
I am heynously vnprouided. Wel
God be thanked for these Rebels, they offend
none but
the Vertuous. I laud them, I praise them
Prin. Bardolph
Bar. My Lord
Prin. Go beare this Letter to Lord Iohn of Lancaster
To my
Brother Iohn. This to my Lord of Westmerland,
Go Peto, to horse: for thou,
and I,
Haue thirtie miles to ride yet ere dinner time.
Iacke, meet me
tomorrow in the Temple Hall
At two a clocke in the afternoone,
There shalt
thou know thy Charge, and there receiue
Money and Order for their
Furniture.
The Land is burning, Percie stands on hye,
And either they, or
we must lower lye
Fal. Rare words! braue world.
Hostesse, my breakfast,
come:
Oh, I could wish this Tauerne were my drumme.
Exeunt. omnes.
Actus Quartus. Scoena Prima.
Enter Harrie Hotspurre, Worcester, and Dowglas.
Hot. Well said, my Noble Scot, if speaking truth
In this fine Age,
were not thought flatterie,
Such attribution should the Dowglas haue,
As
not a Souldiour of this seasons stampe,
Should go so generall currant through
the world.
By heauen I cannot flatter: I defie
The Tongues of Soothers.
But a Brauer place
In my hearts loue, hath no man then your Selfe.
Nay,
taske me to my word: approue me Lord
Dow. Thou art the King of Honor:
No man so potent breathes
vpon the ground,
But I will Beard him.
Enter a Messenger.
Hot. Do so, and 'tis well. What letters hast there?
I can but
thanke you
Mess. These Letters come from your Father
Hot. Letters from him?
Why comes he not himselfe?
Mes. He cannot come, my Lord,
He is greeuous sicke
Hot. How? haz he the leysure to be sicke now,
In such a
iustling time? Who leades his power?
Vnder whose Gouernment come they
along?
Mess. His Letters beares his minde, not I his minde
Wor. I prethee tell me, doth he keepe his Bed?
Mess.
He did, my Lord, foure dayes ere I set forth:
And at the time of my departure
thence,
He was much fear'd by his Physician
Wor. I would the state of time had first beene whole,
Ere he
by sicknesse had beene visited:
His health was neuer better worth then
now
Hotsp. Sicke now? droope now? this sicknes doth infect
The
very Life-blood of our Enterprise,
'Tis catching hither, euen to our
Campe.
He writes me here, that inward sicknesse,
And that his friends by
deputation
Could not so soone be drawne: nor did he thinke it meet,
To lay
so dangerous and deare a trust
On any Soule remou'd, but on his owne.
Yet
doth he giue vs bold aduertisement,
That with our small coniunction we should
on,
To see how Fortune is dispos'd to vs:
For, as he writes, there is no
quailing now,
Because the King is certainely possest
Of all our purposes.
What say you to it?
Wor. Your Fathers sicknesse is a mayme to vs
Hotsp. A perillous Gash, a very Limme lopt off:
And yet, in
faith, it is not his present want
Seemes more then we shall finde it.
Were
it good, to set the exact wealth of all our states
All at one Cast? To set so
rich a mayne
On the nice hazard of one doubtfull houre,
It were not good:
for therein should we reade
The very Bottome, and the Soule of Hope,
The
very List, the very vtmost Bound
Of all our fortunes
Dowg. Faith, and so wee should,
Where now remaines a sweet
reuersion.
We may boldly spend, vpon the hope
Of what is to come in:
A
comfort of retyrement liues in this
Hotsp. A Randeuous, a Home to flye vnto,
If that the Deuill
and Mischance looke bigge
Vpon the Maydenhead of our Affaires
Wor. But yet I would your Father had beene here:
The qualitie
and Heire of our Attempt
Brookes no diuision: It will be thought
By some,
that know not why he is away,
That wisedome, loyaltie, and meere
dislike
Of our proceedings, kept the Earle from hence.
And thinke, how
such an apprehension
May turne the tyde of fearefull Faction,
And breede a
kinde of question in our cause:
For well you know, wee of the offring
side,
Must keepe aloofe from strict arbitrement,
And stop all sight-holes,
euery loope, from whence
The eye of reason may prie in vpon vs:
This
absence of your Father drawes a Curtaine,
That shewes the ignorant a kinde of
feare,
Before not dreamt of
Hotsp. You strayne too farre.
I rather of his absence make
this vse:
It lends a Lustre, and more great Opinion,
A larger Dare to your
great Enterprize,
Then if the Earle were here: for men must thinke,
If we
without his helpe, can make a Head
To push against the Kingdome; with his
helpe,
We shall o're-turne it topsie-turuy downe:
Yet all goes well, yet
all our ioynts are whole
Dowg. As heart can thinke:
There is not such a word spoke of
in Scotland,
At this Dreame of Feare.
Enter Sir Richard Vernon.
Hotsp. My Cousin Vernon, welcome by my Soule
Vern. Pray God my newes be worth a welcome, Lord.
The Earle
of Westmerland, seuen thousand strong,
Is marching hither-wards, with Prince
Iohn
Hotsp. No harme: what more?
Vern. And further, I haue
learn'd,
The King himselfe in person hath set forth,
Or hither-wards
intended speedily,
With strong and mightie preparation
Hotsp. He shall be welcome too.
Where is his Sonne,
The
nimble-footed Mad-Cap, Prince of Wales,
And his Cumrades, that daft the World
aside,
And bid it passe?
Vern. All furnisht, all in Armes,
All
plum'd like Estridges, that with the Winde
Bayted like Eagles, hauing lately
bath'd,
Glittering in Golden Coates, like Images,
As full of spirit as the
Moneth of May,
And gorgeous as the Sunne at Mid-summer,
Wanton as
youthfull Goates, wilde as young Bulls.
I saw young Harry with his Beuer
on,
His Cushes on his thighes, gallantly arm'd,
Rise from the ground like
feathered Mercury,
And vaulted with such ease into his Seat,
As if an
Angell dropt downe from the Clouds,
To turne and winde a fierie
Pegasus,
And witch the World with Noble Horsemanship
Hotsp. No more, no more,
Worse then the Sunne in
March:
This prayse doth nourish Agues: let them come.
They come like
Sacrifices in their trimme,
And to the fire-ey'd Maid of smoakie
Warre,
All hot, and bleeding, will wee offer them:
The mayled Mars shall
on his Altar sit
Vp to the eares in blood. I am on fire,
To heare this
rich reprizall is so nigh,
And yet not ours. Come, let me take my
Horse,
Who is to beare me like a Thunder-bolt,
Against the bosome of the
Prince of Wales.
Harry to Harry, shall not Horse to Horse
Meete, and ne're
part, till one drop downe a Coarse?
Oh, that Glendower were come
Ver. There is more newes:
I learned in Worcester, as I rode
along,
He cannot draw his Power this fourteene dayes
Dowg. That's the worst Tidings that I heare of
yet
Wor. I by my faith, that beares a frosty sound
Hotsp. What may the Kings whole Battaile
reach
vnto?
Ver. To thirty thousand
Hot. Forty let it be,
My Father and Glendower being both
away,
The powres of vs, may serue so great a day.
Come, let vs take a
muster speedily:
Doomesday is neere; dye all, dye merrily
Dow. Talke not of dying, I am out of feare
Of death, or
deaths hand, for this one halfe yeare.
Exeunt. Omnes.
Scaena Secunda.
Enter Falstaffe and Bardolph.
Falst. Bardolph, get thee before to Couentry, fill me a
Bottle of
Sack, our Souldiers shall march through: wee'le
to Sutton-cop-hill to
Night
Bard. Will you giue me Money, Captaine?
Falst. Lay
out, lay out
Bard. This Bottle makes an Angell
Falst. And if it doe, take it for thy labour: and if it
make
twentie, take them all, Ile answere the Coynage.
Bid my Lieutenant Peto meete
me at the Townes end
Bard. I will Captaine: farewell.
Enter.
Falst. If I be not asham'd of my Souldiers, I am a
sowc't-Gurnet: I
haue mis-vs'd the Kings Presse damnably.
I haue got, in exchange of a hundred
and fiftie
Souldiers, three hundred and odde Pounds. I presse me
none but
good House-holders, Yeomens Sonnes: enquire
me out contracted Batchelers,
such as had beene ask'd
twice on the Banes: such a Commoditie of warme
slaues,
as had as lieue heare the Deuill, as a Drumme; such as
feare the
report of a Caliuer, worse then a struck-Foole,
or a hurt wilde-Ducke. I
prest me none but such Tostes
and Butter, with Hearts in their Bellyes no
bigger then
Pinnes heads, and they haue bought out their seruices:
And
now, my whole Charge consists of Ancients, Corporals,
Lieutenants, Gentlemen
of Companies, Slaues as
ragged a Lazarus in the painted Cloth, where the
Gluttons
Dogges licked his Sores; and such, as indeed were
neuer
Souldiers, but dis-carded vniust Seruingmen, younger
Sonnes to younger
Brothers, reuolted Tapsters and
Ostlers, Trade-falne, the Cankers of a calme
World, and
long Peace, tenne times more dis-honorable ragged,
then an
old-fac'd Ancient; and such haue I to fill vp the
roomes of them that haue
bought out their seruices: that
you would thinke, that I had a hundred and
fiftie totter'd
Prodigalls, lately come from Swine-keeping, from
eating
Draffe and Huskes. A mad fellow met me on the way,
and told me, I
had vnloaded all the Gibbets, and prest the
dead bodyes. No eye hath seene
such skar-Crowes: Ile
not march through Couentry with them, that's flat.
Nay,
and the Villaines march wide betwixt the Legges, as if
they had Gyues
on; for indeede, I had the most of them
out of Prison. There's not a Shirt
and a halfe in all my
Company: and the halfe Shirt is two Napkins tackt
together,
and throwne ouer the shoulders like a Heralds
Coat, without
sleeues: and the Shirt, to say the truth,
stolne from my Host of S[aint].
Albones, or the Red-Nose
Inne-keeper of Dauintry. But that's all one, they'le
finde
Linnen enough on euery Hedge.
Enter the Prince, and the Lord of
Westmerland.
Prince. How now blowne Iack? how now Quilt?
Falst. What Hal?
How now mad Wag, what a Deuill
do'st thou in Warwickshire? My good Lord of
Westmerland,
I cry you mercy, I thought your Honour had already
beene at
Shrewsbury
West. 'Faith, Sir Iohn, 'tis more then time that I
were
there, and you too: but my Powers are there alreadie.
The King, I can
tell you, lookes for vs all: we must away
all to Night
Falst. Tut, neuer feare me, I am as vigilant as a Cat,
to
steale Creame
Prince. I thinke to steale Creame indeed, for thy theft
hath
alreadie made thee Butter: but tell me, Iack, whose
fellowes are these that
come after?
Falst. Mine, Hal, mine
Prince. I did neuer see such pittifull Rascals
Falst. Tut, tut, good enough to tosse: foode for
Powder,
foode for Powder: they'le fill a Pit, as well as better:
tush man,
mortall men, mortall men
Westm. I, but Sir Iohn, me thinkes they are exceeding
poore
and bare, too beggarly
Falst. Faith, for their pouertie, I know not where they
had
that; and for their barenesse, I am sure they neuer
learn'd that of me
Prince. No, Ile be sworne, vnlesse you call three fingers
on
the Ribbes bare. But sirra, make haste, Percy is already
in the field
Falst. What, is the King encamp'd?
Westm. Hee is, Sir
Iohn, I feare wee shall stay too
long
Falst. Well, to the latter end of a Fray, and the
beginning
of a Feast, fits a dull fighter, and a keene Guest.
Exeunt.
Scoena Tertia.
Enter Hotspur, Worcester, Dowglas, and Vernon.
Hotsp. Wee'le fight with him to Night
Worc. It may not be
Dowg. You giue him then aduantage
Vern. Not a whit
Hotsp. Why say you so? lookes he not for supply?
Vern.
So doe wee
Hotsp. His is certaine, ours is doubtfull
Worc. Good Cousin be aduis'd, stirre not to night
Vern. Doe not, my Lord
Dowg. You doe not counsaile well:
You speake it out of feare,
and cold heart
Vern. Doe me no slander, Dowglas: by my Life,
And I dare well
maintaine it with my Life,
If well-respected Honor bid me on,
I hold as
little counsaile with weake feare,
As you, my Lord, or any Scot that this day
liues.
Let it be seene to morrow in the Battell,
Which of vs feares
Dowg. Yea, or to night
Vern. Content
Hotsp. To night, say I
Vern. Come, come, it may not be.
I wonder much, being me[n]
of such great leading as you are
That you fore-see not what
impediments
Drag backe our expedition: certaine Horse
Of my Cousin Vernons
are not yet come vp,
Your Vnckle Worcesters Horse came but to day,
And now
their pride and mettall is asleepe,
Their courage with hard labour tame and
dull,
That not a Horse is halfe the halfe of himselfe
Hotsp. So are the Horses of the Enemie
In generall iourney
bated, and brought low:
The better part of ours are full of rest
Worc. The number of the King exceedeth ours:
For Gods sake,
Cousin, stay till all come in.
The Trumpet sounds a Parley. Enter Sir Walter Blunt.
Blunt. I come with gracious offers from the King,
If you vouchsafe
me hearing, and respect
Hotsp. Welcome, Sir Walter Blunt:
And would to God you were
of our determination.
Some of vs loue you well: and euen those some
Enuie your great deseruings,
and good name,
Because you are not of our qualitie,
But stand against vs
like an Enemie
Blunt. And Heauen defend, but still I should stand so,
So
long as out of Limit, and true Rule,
You stand against anoynted
Maiestie.
But to my Charge.
The King hath sent to know
The nature of
your Griefes, and whereupon
You coniure from the Brest of Ciuill
Peace,
Such bold Hostilitie, teaching his dutious Land
Audacious Crueltie.
If that the King
Haue any way your good Deserts forgot,
Which he
confesseth to be manifold,
He bids you name your Griefes, and with all
speed
You shall haue your desires, with interest;
And Pardon absolute for
your selfe, and these,
Herein mis-led, by your suggestion
Hotsp. The King is kinde:
And well wee know, the
King
Knowes at what time to promise, when to pay.
My Father, my Vnckle,
and my selfe,
Did giue him that same Royaltie he weares:
And when he was
not sixe and twentie strong,
Sicke in the Worlds regard, wretched, and
low,
A poore vnminded Out-law, sneaking home,
My Father gaue him welcome
to the shore:
And when he heard him sweare, and vow to God,
He came but to
be Duke of Lancaster,
To sue his Liuerie, and begge his Peace,
With teares
of Innocencie, and tearmes of Zeale;
My Father, in kinde heart and pitty
mou'd,
Swore him assistance, and perform'd it too.
Now, when the Lords and
Barons of the Realme
Perceiu'd Northumberland did leane to him,
The more
and lesse came in with Cap and Knee,
Met him in Boroughs, Cities,
Villages,
Attended him on Bridges, stood in Lanes,
Layd Gifts before him,
proffer'd him their Oathes,
Gaue him their Heires, as Pages followed
him,
Euen at the heeles, in golden multitudes.
He presently, as Greatnesse
knowes it selfe,
Step me a little higher then his Vow
Made to my Father,
while his blood was poore,
Vpon the naked shore at Rauenspurgh:
And now
(forsooth) takes on him to reforme
Some certaine Edicts, and some strait
Decrees,
That lay too heauie on the Common-wealth;
Cryes out vpon abuses,
seemes to weepe
Ouer his Countries Wrongs: and by this Face,
This seeming
Brow of Iustice, did he winne
The hearts of all that hee did angle
for.
Proceeded further, cut me off the Heads
Of all the Fauorites, that
the absent King
In deputation left behinde him heere,
When hee was
personall in the Irish Warre
Blunt. Tut, I came not to hear this
Hotsp. Then to the point.
In short time after, hee depos'd
the King.
Soone after that, depriu'd him of his Life:
And in the neck of
that, task't the whole State.
To make that worse, suffer'd his Kinsman
March,
Who is, if euery Owner were plac'd,
Indeede his King, to be engag'd
in Wales,
There, without Ransome, to lye forfeited:
Disgrac'd me in my
happie Victories,
Sought to intrap me by intelligence,
Rated my Vnckle
from the Councell-Boord,
In rage dismiss'd my Father from the Court,
Broke
Oath on Oath, committed Wrong on Wrong,
And in conclusion, droue vs to seeke
out
This Head of safetie; and withall, to prie
Into his Title: the which
wee finde
Too indirect, for long continuance
Blunt. Shall I returne this answer to the King?
Hotsp.
Not so, Sir Walter.
Wee'le with-draw a while:
Goe to the King, and let
there be impawn'd
Some suretie for a safe returne againe,
And in the
Morning early shall my Vnckle
Bring him our purpose: and so farewell
Blunt. I would you would accept of Grace and Loue
Hotsp. And't may be, so wee shall
Blunt. Pray Heauen you doe.
Exeunt.
Scena Quarta.
Enter the Arch-Bishop of Yorke, and Sir Michell.
Arch. Hie, good Sir Michell, beare this sealed Briefe
With winged
haste to the Lord Marshall,
This to my Cousin Scroope, and all the rest
To
whom they are directed.
If you knew how much they doe import,
You would
make haste
Sir Mich. My good Lord, I guesse their tenor
Arch. Like enough you doe.
To morrow, good Sir Michell, is a
day,
Wherein the fortune of ten thousand men
Must bide the touch. For Sir,
at Shrewsbury,
As I am truly giuen to vnderstand,
The King, with mightie
and quick-raysed Power,
Meetes with Lord Harry: and I feare, Sir
Michell,
What with the sicknesse of Northumberland,
Whose Power was in the
first proportion;
And what with Owen Glendowers absence thence,
Who with
them was rated firmely too,
And comes not in, ouer-rul'd by Prophecies,
I
feare the Power of Percy is too weake,
To wage an instant tryall with the
King
Sir Mich. Why, my good Lord, you need not feare,
There is
Dowglas, and Lord Mortimer
Arch. No, Mortimer is not there
Sir Mic. But there is Mordake, Vernon, Lord Harry Percy,
And
there is my Lord of Worcester,
And a Head of gallant Warriors,
Noble
Gentlemen
Arch. And so there is, but yet the King hath Drawne
The
speciall head of all the Land together:
The Prince of Wales, Lord Iohn of
Lancaster,
The Noble Westmerland, and warlike Blunt;
And many moe
Corriuals, and deare men
Of estimation, and command in Armes
Sir M. Doubt not my Lord, he shall be well oppos'd
Arch. I hope no lesse? Yet needfull 'tis to feare,
And to preuent the worst,
Sir Michell speed;
For if Lord Percy thriue not, ere the King
Dismisse his
power, he meanes to visit vs:
For he hath heard of our Confederacie,
And,
'tis but Wisedome to make strong against him:
Therefore make hast, I must go
write againe
To other Friends: and so farewell, Sir Michell.
Exeunt.
Actus Quintus. Scena Prima.
Enter the King, Prince of Wales, Lord Iohn of Lancaster, Earle
of
Westmerland, Sir Walter Blunt, and Falstaffe.
King. How bloodily the Sunne begins to peere
Aboue yon busky hill:
the day lookes pale
At his distemperature
Prin. The Southerne
winde
Doth play the Trumpet to his purposes,
And by his hollow whistling
in the Leaues,
Fortels a Tempest, and a blust'ring day
King. Then with the losers let it sympathize,
For nothing can
seeme foule to those that win.
The Trumpet sounds.
Enter Worcester.
King. How now my Lord of Worster? 'Tis not well
That you and I
should meet vpon such tearmes,
As now we meet. You haue deceiu'd our
trust,
And made vs doffe our easie Robes of Peace,
To crush our old limbes
in vngentle Steele:
This is not well, my Lord, this is not well.
What say
you to it? Will you againe vnknit
This churlish knot of all-abhorred
Warre?
And moue in the obedient Orbe againe,
Where you did giue a faire
and naturall light,
And be no more an exhall'd Meteor,
A prodigie of
Feare, and a Portent
Of broached Mischeefe, to the vnborne Times?
Wor. Heare me, my Liege:
For mine owne part, I could be well content
To
entertaine the Lagge-end of my life
With quiet houres: For I do protest,
I
haue not sought the day of this dislike
King. You haue not sought it: how comes it then?
Fal.
Rebellion lay in his way, and he found it
Prin. Peace, Chewet, peace
Wor. It pleas'd your Maiesty, to turne your lookes
Of Fauour,
from my Selfe, and all our House;
And yet I must remember you my Lord,
We
were the first, and dearest of your Friends:
For you, my staffe of Office did
I breake
In Richards time, and poasted day and night
To meete you on the
way, and kisse your hand,
When yet you were in place, and in
account
Nothing so strong and fortunate, as I;
It was my Selfe, my
Brother, and his Sonne,
That brought you home, and boldly did out-dare
The
danger of the time. You swore to vs,
And you did sweare that Oath at
Doncaster,
That you did nothing of purpose 'gainst the State,
Nor claime
no further, then your new-falne right,
The seate of Gaunt, Dukedome of
Lancaster,
To this, we sware our aide: But in short space,
It rain'd downe
Fortune showring on your head,
And such a floud of Greatnesse fell on
you,
What with our helpe, what with the absent King.
What with the
iniuries of wanton time,
The seeming sufferances that you had borne,
And
the contrarious Windes that held the King
So long in the vnlucky Irish
Warres,
That all in England did repute him dead:
And from this swarme of
faire aduantages,
You tooke occasion to be quickly woo'd,
To gripe the
generall sway into your hand,
Forgot your Oath to vs at Doncaster,
And
being fed by vs, you vs'd vs so,
As that vngentle gull the Cuckowes
Bird,
Vseth the Sparrow, did oppresse our Nest
Grew by our Feeding, to so
great a builke,
That euen our Loue durst not come neere your sight
For
feare of swallowing: But with nimble wing
We were infor'd for safety sake, to
flye
Out of your sight, and raise this present Head,
Whereby we stand
opposed by such meanes
As you your selfe, haue forg'd against your
selfe,
By vnkinde vsage, dangerous countenance,
And violation of all faith
and troth
Sworne to vs in yonger enterprize
Kin. These things indeed you haue articulated,
Proclaim'd at
Market Crosses, read in Churches,
To face the Garment of Rebellion
With
some fine colour, that may please the eye
Of fickle Changelings, and poore
Discontents,
Which gape, and rub the Elbow at the newes
Of hurly burly
Innouation:
And neuer yet did Insurrection want
Such water-colours, to
impaint his cause:
Nor moody Beggars, staruing for a time
Of pell-mell
hauocke, and confusion
Prin. In both our Armies, there is many a soule
Shall pay
full dearely for this encounter,
If once they ioyne in triall. Tell your
Nephew,
The Prince of Wales doth ioyne with all the world
In praise of
Henry Percie: By my Hopes,
This present enterprize set off his head,
I do
not thinke a brauer Gentleman,
More actiue, valiant, or more valiant
yong,
More daring, or more bold, is now aliue,
To grace this latter Age
with Noble deeds.
For my part, I may speake it to my shame,
I haue a
Truant beene to Chiualry,
And so I heare, he doth account me too:
Yet this
before my Fathers Maiesty,
I am content that he shall take the oddes
Of
his great name and estimation,
And will, to saue the blood on either
side,
Try fortune with him, in a Single Fight
King. And Prince of Wales, so dare we venter thee,
Albeit,
considerations infinite
Do make against it: No good Worster, no,
We loue
our people well; euen those we loue
That are misled vpon your Cousins
part:
And will they take the offer of our Grace:
Both he, and they, and
you; yea euery man
Shall be my Friend againe, and Ile be his.
So tell your
Cousin, and bring me word,
What he will do. But if he will not
yeeld,
Rebuke and dread correction waite on vs,
And they shall do their
Office. So bee gone,
We will not now be troubled with reply,
We offer
faire, take it aduisedly.
Exit Worcester.
Prin. It will not be accepted, on my life,
The Dowglas and the
Hotspurre both together,
Are confident against the world in Armes
King. Hence therefore, euery Leader to his charge,
For on
their answer will we set on them;
And God befriend vs, as our cause is
iust.
Exeunt.
Manet Prince and Falstaffe.
Fal. Hal, if thou see me downe in the battell,
And bestride me, so;
'tis a point of friendship
Prin. Nothing but a Colossus can do thee that frendship
Say
thy prayers, and farewell
Fal. I would it were bed time Hal, and all well
Prin. Why, thou ow'st heauen a death
Falst. 'Tis not due yet: I would bee loath to pay him
before
his day. What neede I bee so forward with him,
that call's not on me? Well,
'tis no matter, Honor prickes
me on. But how if Honour pricke me off when I
come
on? How then? Can Honour set too a legge? No: or an
arme? No: Or take
away the greefe of a wound? No.
Honour hath no skill in Surgerie, then? No.
What is Honour
A word. What is that word Honour? Ayre: A
trim reckoning.
Who hath it? He that dy'de a Wednesday.
Doth he feele it? No. Doth hee heare
it? No. Is it
insensible then? yea, to the dead. But wil it not liue
with
the liuing? No. Why? Detraction wil not suffer it, therfore
Ile none
of it. Honour is a meere Scutcheon, and so
ends my Catechisme.
Enter.
Scena Secunda.
Enter Worcester, and Sir Richard Vernon.
Wor. O no, my Nephew must not know, Sir Richard,
The liberall kinde
offer of the King
Ver. 'Twere best he did
Wor. Then we are all vndone.
It is not possible, it cannot
be,
The King would keepe his word in louing vs,
He will suspect vs still,
and finde a time
To punish this offence in others faults:
Supposition, all
our liues, shall be stucke full of eyes;
For Treason is but trusted like the
Foxe,
Who ne're so tame, so cherisht, and lock'd vp,
Will haue a wilde
tricke of his Ancestors:
Looke how he can, or sad or
merrily,
Interpretation will misquote our lookes,
And we shall feede like
Oxen at a stall,
The better cherisht, still the nearer death.
My Nephewes
Trespasse may be well forgot,
It hath the excuse of youth, and heate of
blood,
And an adopted name of Priuiledge,
A haire-brain'd Hotspurre,
gouern'd by a Spleene:
All his offences liue vpon my head,
And on his
Fathers. We did traine him on,
And his corruption being tane from vs,
We
as the Spring of all, shall pay for all:
Therefore good Cousin, let not Harry
know
In any case, the offer of the King
Ver. Deliuer what you will, Ile say 'tis so.
Heere comes your
Cosin.
Enter Hotspurre.
Hot. My Vnkle is return'd,
Deliuer vp my Lord of
Westmerland.
Vnkle, what newes?
Wor. The King will bid you battell
presently
Dow. Defie him by the Lord of Westmerland
Hot. Lord
Dowglas: Go you and tell him so
Dow. Marry and shall, and verie willingly.
Exit Dowglas.
Wor. There is no seeming mercy in the King
Hot. Did you begge any? God forbid
Wor. I told him gently of our greeuances,
Of his
Oath-breaking: which he mended thus,
By now forswearing that he is
forsworne,
He cals vs Rebels, Traitors, and will scourge
With haughty
armes, this hatefull name in vs.
Enter Dowglas.
Dow. Arme Gentlemen, to Armes, for I haue thrown
A braue defiance
in King Henries teeth:
And Westmerland that was ingag'd did beare
it,
Which cannot choose but bring him quickly on
Wor. The Prince of Wales stept forth before the king,
And
Nephew, challeng'd you to single fight
Hot. O, would the quarrell lay vpon our heads,
And that no
man might draw short breath to day,
But I and Harry Monmouth. Tell me, tell
mee,
How shew'd his Talking? Seem'd it in contempt?
Ver. No, by my
Soule: I neuer in my life
Did heare a Challenge vrg'd more
modestly,
Vnlesse a Brother should a Brother dare
To gentle exercise, and
proofe of Armes.
He gaue you all the Duties of a Man,
Trimm'd vp your
praises with a Princely tongue,
Spoke your deseruings like a
Chronicle,
Making you euer better then his praise,
By still dispraising
praise, valew'd with you:
And which became him like a Prince indeed,
He
made a blushing citall of himselfe,
And chid his Trewant youth with such a
Grace,
As if he mastred there a double spirit
Of teaching, and of learning
instantly:
There did he pause. But let me tell the World,
If he out-liue
the enuie of this day,
England did neuer owe so sweet a hope,
So much
misconstrued in his Wantonnesse,
Hot. Cousin, I thinke thou art
enamored
On his Follies: neuer did I heare
Of any Prince so wilde at
Liberty.
But be he as he will, yet once ere night,
I will imbrace him with
a Souldiers arme,
That he shall shrinke vnder my curtesie.
Arme, arme with
speed. And Fellow's, Soldiers, Friends,
Better consider what you haue to
do,
That I that haue not well the gift of Tongue,
Can lift your blood vp
with perswasion.
Enter a Messenger.
Mes. My Lord, heere are Letters for you
Hot. I cannot reade them now.
O Gentlemen, the time of life
is short;
To spend that shortnesse basely, were too long.
If life did ride
vpon a Dials point,
Still ending at the arriuall of an houre,
And if we
liue, we liue to treade on Kings:
If dye; braue death, when Princes dye with
vs.
Now for our Consciences, the Armes is faire,
When the intent for
bearing them is iust.
Enter another Messenger.
Mes. My Lord prepare, the King comes on apace
Hot. I thanke him, that he cuts me from my tale:
For I
professe not talking: Onely this,
Let each man do his best. And heere I draw
a Sword,
Whose worthy temper I intend to staine
With the best blood that I
can meete withall,
In the aduenture of this perillous day.
Now Esperance
Percy, and set on:
Sound all the lofty Instruments of Warre,
And by that
Musicke, let vs all imbrace:
For heauen to earth, some of vs neuer
shall,
A second time do such a curtesie.
They embrace, the trumpets sound, the King entereth with his
power,
alarum
vnto the battell. Then enter Dowglas, and Sir Walter Blunt.
Blu. What is thy name, that in battel thus y crossest me?
What
honor dost thou seeke vpon my head?
Dow. Know then my name is
Dowglas,
And I do haunt thee in the Battell thus,
Because some tell me,
that thou art a King
Blunt. They tell thee true
Dow. The Lord of Stafford deere to day hath bought
Thy
likenesse: for insted of thee King Harry,
This Sword hath ended him, so shall
it thee,
Vnlesse thou yeeld thee as a Prisoner
Blu. I was not borne to yeeld, thou haughty Scot,
And thou
shalt finde a King that will reuenge
Lords Staffords death.
Fight, Blunt is slaine, then enters Hotspur.
Hot. O Dowglas, hadst thou fought at Holmedon thus
I neuer had
triumphed o're a Scot
Dow. All's done, all's won, here breathles lies the
king
Hot. Where?
Dow. Heere
Hot. This Dowglas? No, I know this face full well:
A gallant
Knight he was, his name was Blunt,
Semblably furnish'd like the King
himselfe
Dow. Ah foole: go with thy soule whether it goes,
A borrowed
Title hast thou bought too deere.
Why didst thou tell me, that thou wer't a
King?
Hot. The King hath many marching in his Coats
Dow. Now by my Sword, I will kill all his Coates,
Ile murder
all his Wardrobe peece by peece,
Vntill I meet the King
Hot. Vp, and away,
Our Souldiers stand full fairely for the
day.
Exeunt.
Alarum, and enter Falstaffe solus.
Fal. Though I could scape shot-free at London, I fear
the shot
heere: here's no scoring, but vpon the pate. Soft
who are you? Sir Walter
Blunt, there's Honour for you:
here's no vanity, I am as hot as molten Lead,
and as heauy
too; heauen keepe Lead out of mee, I neede no more
weight
then mine owne Bowelles. I haue led my rag of
Muffins where they are
pepper'd: there's not three of my
150. left aliue, and they for the Townes
end, to beg during
life. But who comes heere?
Enter the Prince
Pri. What, stand'st thou idle here? Lend me thy sword,
Many a
Nobleman lies starke and stiffe
Vnder the hooues of vaunting
enemies,
Whose deaths are vnreueng'd. Prethy lend me thy sword
Fal.
O Hal, I prethee giue me leaue to breath awhile:
Turke Gregory neuer did such
deeds in Armes, as I haue
done this day. I haue paid Percy, I haue made him
sure
Prin. He is indeed, and liuing to kill thee:
I prethee lend
me thy sword
Falst. Nay Hal, is Percy bee aliue, thou getst not my
Sword;
but take my Pistoll if thou wilt
Prin. Giue it me: What, is it in the case?
Fal. I Hal,
'tis hot: There's that will Sacke a City.
The Prince drawes out a Bottle of Sacke.
Prin. What, is it a time to iest and dally now.
Enter.
Throwes it at him.
Fal. If Percy be aliue, Ile pierce him: if he do come in
my way,
so: if he do not, if I come in his (willingly) let
him make a Carbonado of
me. I like not such grinning
honour as Sir Walter hath: Giue mee life, which
if I can
saue, so: if not, honour comes vnlook'd for, and ther's
an
end.
Exit
Scena Tertia.
Alarum, excursions, enter the King, the Prince, Lord Iohn
of
Lancaster,
and Earle of Westmerland.
King. I prethee Harry withdraw thy selfe, thou bleedest
too much:
Lord Iohn of Lancaster, go you with him
P.Ioh. Not I, My Lord, vnlesse I did bleed too
Prin. I beseech your Maiesty make vp,
Least your retirement
do amaze your friends
King. I will do so:
My Lord of Westmerland leade him to his
Tent
West. Come my Lord, Ile leade you to your Tent
Prin. Lead me my Lord? I do not need your helpe;
And heauen
forbid a shallow scratch should driue
The Prince of Wales from such a field
as this,
Where stain'd Nobility lyes troden on,
And Rebels Armes triumph
in massacres
Ioh. We breath too long: Come cosin Westmerland,
Our duty
this way lies, for heauens sake come
Prin. By heauen thou hast deceiu'd me Lancaster,
I did not
thinke thee Lord of such a spirit:
Before, I lou'd thee as a Brother,
Iohn;
But now, I do respect thee as my Soule
King. I saw him hold Lord Percy at the point,
With lustier
maintenance then I did looke for
Of such an vngrowne Warriour
Prin. O this Boy, lends mettall to vs all.
Enter.
Enter Dowglas.
Dow. Another King? They grow like Hydra's heads:
I am the Dowglas,
fatall to all those
That weare those colours on them. What art thou
That
counterfeit'st the person of a King?
King. The King himselfe: who
Dowglas grieues at hart
So many of his shadowes thou hast met,
And not the
very King. I haue two Boyes
Seeke Percy and thy selfe about the Field:
But
seeing thou fall'st on me so luckily,
I will assay thee: so defend thy
selfe
Dow. I feare thou art another counterfeit:
And yet infaith
thou bear'st thee like a King:
But mine I am sure thou art, whoere thou
be,
And thus I win thee.
They fight, the K[ing]. being in danger, Enter Prince.
Prin. Hold vp thy head vile Scot, or thou art like
Neuer to hold it
vp againe: the Spirits
Of valiant Sherly, Stafford, Blunt, are in my
Armes;
it is the Prince of Wales that threatens thee,
Who neuer promiseth,
but he meanes to pay.
They Fight, Dowglas flyeth.
Cheerely My Lord: how fare's your Grace?
Sir Nicolas Gawsey hath for
succour sent,
And so hath Clifton: Ile to Clifton straight
King. Stay, and breath awhile.
Thou hast redeem'd thy lost
opinion,
And shew'd thou mak'st some tender of my life
In this faire
rescue thou hast brought to mee
Prin. O heauen, they did me too much iniury,
That euer said I
hearkned to your death.
If it were so, I might haue let alone
The
insulting hand of Dowglas ouer you,
Which would haue bene as speedy in your
end,
As all the poysonous Potions in the world,
And sau'd the Treacherous
labour of your Sonne
K. Make vp to Clifton, Ile to Sir Nicholas Gausey.
Exit
Enter Hotspur.
Hot. If I mistake not, thou art Harry Monmouth
Prin. Thou speak'st as if I would deny my name
Hot. My name is Harrie Percie
Prin. Why then I see a very valiant rebel of that name.
I am
the Prince of Wales, and thinke not Percy,
To share with me in glory any
more:
Two Starres keepe not their motion in one Sphere,
Nor can one
England brooke a double reigne,
Of Harry Percy, and the Prince of Wales
Hot. Nor shall it Harry, for the houre is come
To end the one
of vs; and would to heauen,
Thy name in Armes, were now as great as mine
Prin. Ile make it greater, ere I part from thee,
And all the
budding Honors on thy Crest,
Ile crop, to make a Garland for my head
Hot. I can no longer brooke thy Vanities.
Fight.
Enter Falstaffe.
Fal. Well said Hal, to it Hal. Nay you shall finde no
Boyes play
heere, I can tell you.
Enter Dowglas, he fights with Falstaffe, who fals down
as if he
were dead.
The Prince killeth Percie.
Hot. Oh Harry, thou hast rob'd me of my youth:
I better brooke the
losse of brittle life,
Then those proud Titles thou hast wonne of me,
They
wound my thoghts worse, then the sword my flesh:
But thought's the slaue of
Life, and Life, Times foole;
And Time, that takes suruey of all the
world,
Must haue a stop. O, I could Prophesie,
But that the Earth, and the
cold hand of death,
Lyes on my Tongue: No Percy, thou art dust
And food
for-
Prin. For Wormes, braue Percy. Farewell great
heart:
Ill-weau'd Ambition, how much art thou shrunke?
When that this
bodie did containe a spirit,
A Kingdome for it was too small a bound:
But
now two paces of the vilest Earth
Is roome enough. This Earth that beares the
dead,
Beares not aliue so stout a Gentleman.
If thou wer't sensible of
curtesie,
I should not make so great a shew of Zeale.
But let my fauours
hide thy mangled face,
And euen in thy behalfe, Ile thanke my selfe
For
doing these fayre Rites of Tendernesse.
Adieu, and take thy praise with thee
to heauen,
Thy ignomy sleepe with thee in the graue,
But not remembred in
thy Epitaph.
What? Old Acquaintance? Could not all this flesh
Keepe in a
little life? Poore Iacke, farewell:
I could haue better spar'd a better
man.
O, I should haue a heauy misse of thee,
If I were much in loue with
Vanity.
Death hath not strucke so fat a Deere to day,
Though many dearer
in this bloody Fray:
Imbowell'd will I see thee by and by,
Till then, in
blood, by Noble Percie lye.
Enter.
Falstaffe riseth vp.
Falst. Imbowell'd? If thou imbowell mee to day, Ile
giue you leaue
to powder me, and eat me too to morow.
'Twas time to counterfet, or that
hotte Termagant Scot,
had paid me scot and lot too. Counterfeit? I am no
counterfeit;
to dye, is to be a counterfeit, for hee is but
the
counterfeit of a man, who hath not the life of a man: But
to
counterfeit dying, when a man thereby liueth, is to be
no counterfeit, but
the true and perfect image of life indeede.
The better part of Valour, is
Discretion; in the
which better part, I haue saued my life. I am affraide
of
this Gun-powder Percy though he be dead. How if hee
should counterfeit
too, and rise? I am afraid hee would
proue the better counterfeit: therefore
Ile make him sure:
yea, and Ile sweare I kill'd him. Why may not hee rise
as
well as I: Nothing confutes me but eyes, and no-bodie
sees me.
Therefore sirra, with a new wound in your thigh
come you along me.
Takes Hotspurre on his backe.
Enter Prince and Iohn of Lancaster.
Prin. Come Brother Iohn, full brauely hast thou flesht
thy Maiden
sword
Iohn. But soft, who haue we heere?
Did you not tell me this
Fat man was dead?
Prin. I did, I saw him dead,
Breathlesse, and
bleeding on the ground: Art thou aliue?
Or is it fantasie that playes vpon
our eye-sight?
I prethee speake, we will not trust our eyes
Without our
eares. Thou art not what thou seem'st
Fal. No, that's certaine: I am not a double man: but
if I be
not Iacke Falstaffe, then am I a Iacke: There is Percy,
if your Father will
do me any Honor, so: if not, let him
kill the next Percie himselfe. I looke
to be either Earle or
Duke, I can assure you
Prin. Why, Percy I kill'd my selfe, and saw thee dead
Fal. Did'st thou? Lord, Lord, how the world is giuen
to
Lying? I graunt you I was downe, and out of breath,
and so was he, but we
rose both at an instant, and fought
a long houre by Shrewsburie clocke. If I
may bee beleeued,
so: if not, let them that should reward Valour,
beare
the sinne vpon their owne heads. Ile take't on my death
I gaue him
this wound in the Thigh: if the man were aliue,
and would deny it, I would
make him eate a peece
of my sword
Iohn. This is the strangest Tale that e're I heard
Prin. This is the strangest Fellow, Brother Iohn.
Come bring
your luggage Nobly on your backe:
For my part, if a lye may do thee
grace,
Ile gil'd it with the happiest tearmes I haue.
A Retreat is sounded.
The Trumpets sound Retreat, the day is ours:
Come Brother, let's to the
highest of the field,
To see what Friends are liuing, who are dead.
Exeunt.
Fal. Ile follow as they say, for Reward. Hee that rewards
me,
heauen reward him. If I do grow great again,
Ile grow lesse? For Ile purge,
and leaue Sacke, and liue
cleanly, as a Nobleman should do.
Exit
Scaena Quarta.
The Trumpets sound.
Enter the King, Prince of Wales, Lord Iohn of Lancaster, Earle
of
Westmerland, with Worcester & Vernon Prisoners.
King. Thus euer did Rebellion finde Rebuke.
Ill-spirited Worcester,
did we not send Grace,
Pardon, and tearmes of Loue to all of you?
And
would'st thou turne our offers contrary?
Misuse the tenor of thy Kinsmans
trust?
Three Knights vpon our party slaine to day,
A Noble Earle, and many
a creature else,
Had beene aliue this houre,
If like a Christian thou
had'st truly borne
Betwixt our Armies, true Intelligence
Wor. What I haue done, my safety vrg'd me to,
And I embrace
this fortune patiently,
Since not to be auoyded, it fals on mee
King. Beare Worcester to death, and Vernon too:
Other
offenders we will pause vpon.
Exit Worcester and Vernon.
How goes the Field?
Prin. The Noble Scot Lord Dowglas, when hee
saw
The fortune of the day quite turn'd from him,
The Noble Percy slaine,
and all his men,
Vpon the foot of feare, fled with the rest;
And falling
from a hill, he was so bruiz'd
That the pursuers tooke him. At my Tent
The
Dowglas is, and I beseech your Grace,
I may dispose of him
King. With all my heart
Prin. Then Brother Iohn of Lancaster,
To you this honourable
bounty shall belong:
Go to the Dowglas, and deliuer him
Vp to his
pleasure, ransomlesse and free:
His Valour shewne vpon our Crests to
day,
Hath taught vs how to cherish such high deeds,
Euen in the bosome of
our Aduersaries
King. Then this remaines: that we diuide our Power.
You Sonne
Iohn, and my Cousin Westmerland
Towards Yorke shall bend you, with your
deerest speed
To meet Northumberland, and the Prelate Scroope,
Who (as we
heare) are busily in Armes.
My Selfe, and you Sonne Harry will towards
Wales,
To fight with Glendower, and the Earle of March.
Rebellion in this
Land shall lose his way,
Meeting the Checke of such another day:
And since
this Businesse so faire is done,
Let vs not leaue till all our owne be
wonne.
Exeunt.
FINIS. The First Part of Henry the Fourth, with the Life and
Death
of
HENRY Sirnamed HOT-SPVRRE.