The Second Part of Henry the Fourth
Containing his Death: and the Coronation of King Henry the
Fifth
(First Folio)
by William
Shakespeare
Actus Primus. Scoena Prima.
INDVCTION.
Enter Rumour.
Open your Eares: For which of you will stop
The vent of Hearing, when
loud Rumor speakes?
I, from the Orient, to the drooping West
(Making the
winde my Post-horse) still vnfold
The Acts commenced on this Ball of
Earth.
Vpon my Tongue, continuall Slanders ride,
The which, in euery
Language, I pronounce,
Stuffing the Eares of them with false Reports:
I
speake of Peace, while couert Enmitie
(Vnder the smile of Safety) wounds the
World:
And who but Rumour, who but onely I
Make fearfull Musters, and
prepar'd Defence,
Whil'st the bigge yeare, swolne with some other
griefes,
Is thought with childe, by the sterne Tyrant, Warre,
And no such
matter? Rumour, is a Pipe
Blowne by Surmises, Ielousies, Coniectures;
And
of so easie, and so plaine a stop,
That the blunt Monster, with vncounted
heads,
The still discordant, wauering Multitude,
Can play vpon it. But
what neede I thus
My well-knowne Body to Anathomize
Among my houshold? Why
is Rumour heere?
I run before King Harries victory,
Who in a bloodie field
by Shrewsburie
Hath beaten downe yong Hotspurre, and his
Troopes,
Quenching the flame of bold Rebellion,
Euen with the Rebels
blood. But what meane I
To speake so true at first? My Office is
To noyse
abroad, that Harry Monmouth fell
Vnder the Wrath of Noble Hotspurres
Sword:
And that the King, before the Dowglas Rage
Stoop'd his Annointed
head, as low as death.
This haue I rumour'd through the
peasant-Townes,
Betweene the Royall Field of Shrewsburie,
And this
Worme-eaten-Hole of ragged Stone,
Where Hotspurres Father, old
Northumberland,
Lyes crafty sicke. The Postes come tyring on,
And not a
man of them brings other newes
Then they haue learn'd of Me. From Rumours
Tongues,
They bring smooth-Comforts-false, worse then
True-wrongs.
Enter.
Scena Secunda.
Enter Lord Bardolfe, and the Porter.
L.Bar. Who keepes the Gate heere hoa?
Where is the Earle?
Por. What shall I say you are?
Bar. Tell thou the Earle
That the
Lord Bardolfe doth attend him heere
Por. His Lordship is walk'd forth into the Orchard,
Please it
your Honor, knocke but at the Gate,
And he himselfe will answer.
Enter
Northumberland.
L.Bar. Heere comes the Earle
Nor. What newes Lord Bardolfe? Eu'ry minute now
Should be the
Father of some Stratagem;
The Times are wilde: Contention (like a
Horse
Full of high Feeding) madly hath broke loose,
And beares downe all
before him
L.Bar. Noble Earle,
I bring you certaine newes from
Shrewsbury
Nor. Good, and heauen will
L.Bar. As good as heart can wish:
The King is almost wounded
to the death:
And in the Fortune of my Lord your Sonne,
Prince Harrie
slaine out-right: and both the Blunts
Kill'd by the hand of Dowglas. Yong
Prince Iohn,
And Westmerland, and Stafford, fled the Field.
And Harrie
Monmouth's Brawne (the Hulke Sir Iohn)
Is prisoner to your Sonne. O, such a
Day,
(So fought, so follow'd, and so fairely wonne)
Came not, till now, to
dignifie the Times
Since Cęsars Fortunes
Nor. How is this deriu'd?
Saw you the Field? Came you from
Shrewsbury?
L.Bar. I spake with one (my L[ord].) that came fro[m]
thence,
A Gentleman well bred, and of good name,
That freely render'd me
these newes for true
Nor. Heere comes my Seruant Trauers, whom I sent
On Tuesday
last, to listen after Newes.
Enter Trauers.
L.Bar. My Lord, I ouer-rod him on the way,
And he is furnish'd with
no certainties,
More then he (haply) may retaile from me
Nor. Now Trauers, what good tidings comes fro[m] you?
Tra. My Lord, Sir Iohn Vmfreuill turn'd me backe
With ioyfull tydings; and
(being better hors'd)
Out-rod me. After him, came spurring head
A
Gentleman (almost fore-spent with speed)
That stopp'd by me, to breath his
bloodied horse.
He ask'd the way to Chester: And of him
I did demand what
Newes from Shrewsbury:
He told me, that Rebellion had ill lucke,
And that
yong Harry Percies Spurre was cold.
With that he gaue his able Horse the
head,
And bending forwards strooke his able heeles
Against the panting
sides of his poore Iade
Vp to the Rowell head, and starting so,
He seem'd
in running, to deuoure the way,
Staying no longer question
North. Ha? Againe:
Said he yong Harrie Percyes Spurre was
cold?
(Of Hot-Spurre, cold-Spurre?) that Rebellion,
Had met ill
lucke?
L.Bar. My Lord: Ile tell you what,
If my yong Lord your
Sonne, haue not the day,
Vpon mine Honor, for a silken point
Ile giue my
Barony. Neuer talke of it
Nor. Why should the Gentleman that rode by Trauers
Giue then
such instances of Losse?
L.Bar. Who, he?
He was some hielding
Fellow, that had stolne
The Horse he rode-on: and vpon my life
Speake at
aduenture. Looke, here comes more Newes.
Enter Morton.
Nor. Yea, this mans brow, like to a Title-leafe,
Fore-tels the
Nature of a Tragicke Volume:
So lookes the Strond, when the Imperious
Flood
Hath left a witnest Vsurpation.
Say Morton, did'st thou come from
Shrewsbury?
Mor. I ran from Shrewsbury (my Noble Lord)
Where
hatefull death put on his vgliest Maske
To fright our party
North. How doth my Sonne, and Brother?
Thou trembl'st; and
the whitenesse in thy Cheeke
Is apter then thy Tongue, to tell thy
Errand.
Euen such a man, so faint, so spiritlesse,
So dull, so dead in
looke, so woe-be-gone,
Drew Priams Curtaine, in the dead of night,
And
would haue told him, Halfe his Troy was burn'd.
But Priam found the Fire, ere
he his Tongue:
And I, my Percies death, ere thou report'st it.
This, thou
would'st say: Your Sonne did thus, and thus:
Your Brother, thus. So fought
the Noble Dowglas,
Stopping my greedy eare, with their bold deeds.
But in
the end (to stop mine Eare indeed)
Thou hast a Sigh, to blow away this
Praise,
Ending with Brother, Sonne, and all are dead
Mor. Dowglas is liuing, and your Brother, yet:
But for my
Lord, your Sonne
North. Why, he is dead.
See what a ready tongue Suspition
hath:
He that but feares the thing, he would not know,
Hath by Instinct,
knowledge from others Eyes,
That what he feard, is chanc'd. Yet speake
(Morton)
Tell thou thy Earle, his Diuination Lies,
And I will take it, as
a sweet Disgrace,
And make thee rich, for doing me such wrong
Mor. You are too great, to be (by me) gainsaid:
Your Spirit
is too true, your Feares too certaine
North. Yet for all this, say not that Percies dead.
I see a
strange Confession in thine Eye:
Thou shak'st thy head, and hold'st it Feare,
or Sinne,
To speake a truth. If he be slaine, say so:
The Tongue offends
not, that reports his death:
And he doth sinne that doth belye the
dead:
Not he, which sayes the dead is not aliue:
Yet the first bringer of
vnwelcome Newes
Hath but a loosing Office: and his Tongue,
Sounds euer
after as a sullen Bell
Remembred, knolling a departing Friend
L.Bar. I cannot thinke (my Lord) your son is dead
Mor. I am sorry, I should force you to beleeue
That, which I
would to heauen, I had not seene.
But these mine eyes, saw him in bloody
state,
Rend'ring faint quittance (wearied, and out-breath'd)
To Henrie
Monmouth, whose swift wrath beate downe
The neuer-daunted Percie to the
earth,
From whence (with life) he neuer more sprung vp.
In few; his death
(whose spirit lent a fire,
Euen to the dullest Peazant in his Campe)
Being
bruited once, tooke fire and heate away
From the best temper'd Courage in his
Troopes.
For from his Mettle, was his Party steel'd;
Which once, in him
abated, all the rest
Turn'd on themselues, like dull and heauy Lead:
And
as the Thing, that's heauy in it selfe,
Vpon enforcement, flyes with greatest
speede,
So did our Men, heauy in Hotspurres losse,
Lend to this weight,
such lightnesse with their Feare,
That Arrowes fled not swifter toward their
ayme,
Then did our Soldiers (ayming at their safety)
Fly from the field.
Then was that Noble Worcester
Too soone ta'ne prisoner: and that furious
Scot,
(The bloody Dowglas) whose well-labouring sword
Had three times
slaine th' appearance of the King,
Gan vaile his stomacke, and did grace the
shame
Of those that turn'd their backes: and in his flight,
Stumbling in
Feare, was tooke. The summe of all,
Is, that the King hath wonne: and hath
sent out
A speedy power, to encounter you my Lord,
Vnder the Conduct of
yong Lancaster
And Westmerland. This is the Newes at full
North. For this, I shall haue time enough to mourne.
In
Poyson, there is Physicke: and this newes
(Hauing beene well) that would haue
made me sicke,
Being sicke, haue in some measure, made me well.
And as the
Wretch, whose Feauer-weakned ioynts,
Like strengthlesse Hindges, buckle vnder
life,
Impatient of his Fit, breakes like a fire
Out of his keepers armes:
Euen so, my Limbes
(Weak'ned with greefe) being now inrag'd with
greefe,
Are thrice themselues. Hence therefore thou nice crutch,
A scalie
Gauntlet now, with ioynts of Steele
Must gloue this hand. And hence thou
sickly Quoife,
Thou art a guard too wanton for the head,
Which Princes,
flesh'd with Conquest, ayme to hit.
Now binde my Browes with Iron and
approach
The ragged'st houre, that Time and Spight dare bring
To frowne
vpon th' enrag'd Northumberland.
Let Heauen kisse Earth: now let not Natures
hand
Keepe the wilde Flood confin'd: Let Order dye,
And let the world no
longer be a stage
To feede Contention in a ling'ring Act:
But let one
spirit of the First-borne Caine
Reigne in all bosomes, that each heart being
set
On bloody Courses, the rude Scene may end,
And darknesse be the burier
of the dead
L.Bar. Sweet Earle, diuorce not wisedom from your Honor
Mor. The liues of all your louing Complices
Leane-on your
health, the which if you giue-o're
To stormy Passion, must perforce
decay.
You cast th' euent of Warre (my Noble Lord)
And summ'd the accompt
of Chance, before you said
Let vs make head: It was your presurmize,
That
in the dole of blowes, your Son might drop.
You knew he walk'd o're perils,
on an edge
More likely to fall in, then to get o're:
You were aduis'd his
flesh was capeable
Of Wounds, and Scarres; and that his forward
Spirit
Would lift him, where most trade of danger rang'd,
Yet did you say
go forth: and none of this
(Though strongly apprehended) could
restraine
The stiffe-borne Action: What hath then befalne?
Or what hath
this bold enterprize bring forth,
More then that Being, which was like to
be?
L.Bar. We all that are engaged to this losse,
Knew that we
ventur'd on such dangerous Seas,
That if we wrought out life, was ten to
one:
And yet we ventur'd for the gaine propos'd,
Choak'd the respect of
likely perill fear'd,
And since we are o're-set, venture againe.
Come, we
will all put forth; Body, and Goods,
Mor. 'Tis more then time: And (my
most Noble Lord)
I heare for certaine, and do speake the truth:
The gentle
Arch-bishop of Yorke is vp
With well appointed Powres: he is a man
Who
with a double Surety bindes his Followers.
My Lord (your Sonne) had onely but
the Corpes,
But shadowes, and the shewes of men to fight.
For that same
word (Rebellion) did diuide
The action of their bodies, from their
soules,
And they did fight with queasinesse, constrain'd
As men drinke
Potions; that their Weapons only
Seem'd on our side: but for their Spirits
and Soules,
This word (Rebellion) it had froze them vp,
As Fish are in a
Pond. But now the Bishop
Turnes Insurrection to Religion,
Suppos'd
sincere, and holy in his Thoughts:
He's follow'd both with Body, and with
Minde:
And doth enlarge his Rising, with the blood
Of faire King Richard,
scrap'd from Pomfret stones,
Deriues from heauen, his Quarrell, and his
Cause:
Tels them, he doth bestride a bleeding Land,
Gasping for life,
vnder great Bullingbrooke,
And more, and lesse, do flocke to follow him
North. I knew of this before. But to speake truth,
This
present greefe had wip'd it from my minde.
Go in with me, and councell euery
man
The aptest way for safety, and reuenge:
Get Posts, and Letters, and
make Friends with speed,
Neuer so few, nor neuer yet more need.
Exeunt.
Scena Tertia.
Enter Falstaffe, and Page.
Fal. Sirra, you giant, what saies the Doct[or]. to my water?
Pag. He said sir, the water it selfe was a good healthy
water: but for the
party that ow'd it, he might haue more
diseases then he knew for
Fal. Men of all sorts take a pride to gird at mee: the
braine
of this foolish compounded Clay-man, is not able
to inuent any thing that
tends to laughter, more then I
inuent, or is inuented on me. I am not onely
witty in my
selfe, but the cause that wit is in other men. I doe
heere
walke before thee, like a Sow, that hath o'rewhelm'd all
her Litter,
but one. If the Prince put thee into my Seruice
for any other reason, then to
set mee off, why then I
haue no iudgement. Thou horson Mandrake, thou
art
fitter to be worne in my cap, then to wait at my heeles. I
was neuer
mann'd with an Agot till now: but I will sette
you neyther in Gold, nor
Siluer, but in vilde apparell, and
send you backe againe to your Master, for
a Iewell. The
Iuuenall (the Prince your Master) whose Chin is not
yet
fledg'd, I will sooner haue a beard grow in the Palme of
my hand, then
he shall get one on his cheeke: yet he will
not sticke to say, his Face is a
Face-Royall. Heauen may
finish it when he will, it is not a haire amisse yet:
he may
keepe it still at a Face-Royall, for a Barber shall neuer
earne six
pence out of it; and yet he will be crowing, as if
he had writ man euer since
his Father was a Batchellour.
He may keepe his owne Grace, but he is almost
out of
mine, I can assure him. What said M[aster]. Dombledon, about
the
Satten for my short Cloake, and Slops?
Pag. He said sir, you should
procure him better Assurance,
then Bardolfe: he wold not take his Bond &
yours,
he lik'd not the Security
Fal. Let him bee damn'd like the Glutton, may his
Tongue be
hotter, a horson Achitophel; a
Rascally-yea-forsooth-knaue,
to beare a
Gentleman in hand, and then
stand vpon Security? The horson smooth-pates doe
now
weare nothing but high shoes, and bunches of Keyes at
their girdles:
and if a man is through with them in honest
Taking-vp, then they must stand
vpon Securitie: I
had as liefe they would put Rats-bane in my mouth,
as
offer to stoppe it with Security. I look'd hee should haue
sent me two
and twenty yards of Satten (as I am true
Knight) and he sends me Security.
Well, he may sleep in
Security, for he hath the horne of Abundance: and
the
lightnesse of his Wife shines through it, and yet cannot
he see,
though he haue his owne Lanthorne to light him.
Where's Bardolfe?
Pag. He's gone into Smithfield to buy your worship
a horse
Fal. I bought him in Paules, and hee'l buy mee a horse
in
Smithfield. If I could get mee a wife in the Stewes, I
were Mann'd, Hors'd,
and Wiu'd.
Enter Chiefe Iustice, and Seruant.
Pag. Sir, heere comes the Nobleman that committed
the Prince for
striking him, about Bardolfe
Fal. Wait close, I will not see him
Ch.Iust. What's he that goes there?
Ser. Falstaffe,
and't please your Lordship
Iust. He that was in question for the Robbery?
Ser. He
my Lord, but he hath since done good seruice
at Shrewsbury: and (as I heare)
is now going with some
Charge, to the Lord Iohn of Lancaster
Iust. What to Yorke? Call him backe againe
Ser. Sir Iohn Falstaffe
Fal. Boy, tell him, I am deafe
Pag. You must speake lowder, my Master is deafe
Iust. I am sure he is, to the hearing of any thing good.
Go
plucke him by the Elbow, I must speake with him
Ser. Sir Iohn
Fal. What? a yong knaue and beg? Is there not wars? Is
there
not imployment? Doth not the K[ing]. lack subiects? Do
not the Rebels want
Soldiers? Though it be a shame to be
on any side but one, it is worse shame
to begge, then to
be on the worst side, were it worse then the name of
Rebellion
can tell how to make it
Ser. You mistake me Sir
Fal. Why sir? Did I say you were an honest man? Setting
my
Knight-hood, and my Souldiership aside, I had
lyed in my throat, if I had
said so
Ser. I pray you (Sir) then set your Knighthood and
your
Souldier-ship aside, and giue mee leaue to tell you,
you lye in your throat,
if you say I am any other then an
honest man
Fal. I giue thee leaue to tell me so? I lay a-side that
which
growes to me? If thou get'st any leaue of me, hang
me: if thou tak'st leaue,
thou wer't better be hang'd: you
Hunt-counter, hence: Auant
Ser. Sir, my Lord would speake with you
Iust. Sir Iohn Falstaffe, a word with you
Fal. My good Lord: giue your Lordship good time of
the day. I
am glad to see your Lordship abroad: I heard
say your Lordship was sicke. I
hope your Lordship goes
abroad by aduise. Your Lordship (though not clean
past
your youth) hath yet some smack of age in you: some rellish
of the
saltnesse of Time, and I most humbly beseech
your Lordship, to haue a
reuerend care of your health
Iust. Sir Iohn, I sent you before your Expedition,
to
Shrewsburie
Fal. If it please your Lordship, I heare his Maiestie
is
return'd with some discomfort from Wales
Iust. I talke not of his Maiesty: you would not come
when I
sent for you?
Fal. And I heare moreouer, his Highnesse is falne
into
this same whorson Apoplexie
Iust. Well, heauen mend him. I pray let me speak with you
Fal. This Apoplexie is (as I take it) a kind of Lethargie,
a
sleeping of the blood, a horson Tingling
Iust. What tell you me of it? be it as it is
Fal. It hath it originall from much greefe; from study
and
perturbation of the braine. I haue read the cause of
his effects in Galen. It
is a kinde of deafenesse
Iust. I thinke you are falne into the disease: For you
heare
not what I say to you
Fal. Very well (my Lord) very well: rather an't please
you)
it is the disease of not Listning, the malady of not
Marking, that I am
troubled withall
Iust. To punish you by the heeles, would amend the
attention
of your eares, & I care not if I be your Physitian
Fal. I am as
poore as Iob, my Lord; but not so Patient:
your Lordship may minister the
Potion of imprisonment
to me, in respect of Pouertie: but how I should bee
your
Patient, to follow your prescriptions, the wise may make
some dram of
a scruple, or indeede, a scruple it selfe
Iust. I sent for you (when there were matters against
you for
your life) to come speake with me
Fal. As I was then aduised by my learned Councel, in
the
lawes of this Land-seruice, I did not come
Iust. Wel, the truth is (sir Iohn) you liue in great
infamy
Fal. He that buckles him in my belt, ca[n]not liue in lesse
Iust. Your Meanes is very slender, and your wast great
Fal. I would it were otherwise: I would my Meanes
were
greater, and my waste slenderer
Iust. You haue misled the youthfull Prince
Fal. The yong Prince hath misled mee. I am the Fellow
with
the great belly, and he my Dogge
Iust. Well, I am loth to gall a new-heal'd wound: your
daies
seruice at Shrewsbury, hath a little gilded ouer
your Nights exploit on
Gads-hill. You may thanke the
vnquiet time, for your quiet o're-posting that
Action
Fal. My Lord?
Iust. But since all is wel, keep it so:
wake not a sleeping Wolfe
Fal. To wake a Wolfe, is as bad as to smell a Fox
Iu. What? you are as a candle, the better part burnt
out
Fal. A Wassell-Candle, my Lord; all Tallow: if I did
say of
wax, my growth would approue the truth
Iust. There is not a white haire on your face, but shold
haue
his effect of grauity
Fal. His effect of grauy, grauy, grauy
Iust. You follow the yong Prince vp and downe, like
his euill
Angell
Fal. Not so (my Lord) your ill Angell is light: but I
hope,
he that lookes vpon mee, will take mee without,
weighing: and yet, in some
respects I grant, I cannot go:
I cannot tell. Vertue is of so little regard
in these Costormongers,
that true valor is turn'd Beare-heard.
Pregnancie
is made a Tapster, and hath his quicke wit wasted in
giuing
Recknings: all the other gifts appertinent to man
(as the malice of this Age
shapes them) are not woorth a
Gooseberry. You that are old, consider not the
capacities
of vs that are yong: you measure the heat of our Liuers,
with
the bitternes of your gals: & we that are in the
vaward of our youth, I
must confesse, are wagges too
Iust. Do you set downe your name in the scrowle of
youth,
that are written downe old, with all the Charracters
of age? Haue you not a
moist eye? a dry hand? a yellow
cheeke? a white beard? a decreasing leg? an
incresing
belly? Is not your voice broken? your winde short? your
wit
single? and euery part about you blasted with Antiquity?
and wil you cal your
selfe yong? Fy, fy, fy, sir Iohn
Fal. My Lord, I was borne with a white head, & somthing
a
round belly. For my voice, I haue lost it with hallowing
and singing of
Anthemes. To approue my youth
farther, I will not: the truth is, I am onely
olde in iudgement
and vnderstanding: and he that will caper with mee
for a
thousand Markes, let him lend me the mony, & haue
at him. For the boxe of
th' eare that the Prince gaue you,
he gaue it like a rude Prince, and you
tooke it like a sensible
Lord. I haue checkt him for it, and the yong Lion
repents:
Marry not in ashes and sacke-cloath, but in new
Silke, and old
Sacke
Iust. Wel, heauen send the Prince a better companion
Fal. Heauen send the Companion a better Prince: I
cannot rid
my hands of him
Iust. Well, the King hath seuer'd you and Prince Harry,
I
heare you are going with Lord Iohn of Lancaster, against
the Archbishop, and
the Earle of Northumberland
Fal. Yes, I thanke your pretty sweet wit
for it: but
looke you pray, (all you that kisse my Ladie Peace, at
home)
that our Armies ioyn not in a hot day: for if I take
but two shirts out with
me, and I meane not to sweat
extraordinarily:
if it bee a hot day, if I
brandish any thing
but my Bottle, would I might neuer spit white
againe:
There is not a daungerous Action can peepe out his head,
but I am
thrust vpon it. Well, I cannot last euer
Iust. Well, be honest, be honest, and heauen blesse
your
Expedition
Fal. Will your Lordship lend mee a thousand pound,
to furnish
me forth?
Iust. Not a peny, not a peny: you are too impatient
to
beare crosses. Fare you well. Commend mee to my
Cosin Westmerland
Fal. If I do, fillop me with a three-man-Beetle. A man
can no
more separate Age and Couetousnesse, then he can
part yong limbes and
letchery: but the Gowt galles the
one, and the pox pinches the other; and so
both the Degrees
preuent my curses. Boy?
Page. Sir
Fal. What money is in my purse?
Page. Seuen groats,
and two pence
Fal. I can get no remedy against this Consumption of
the
purse. Borrowing onely lingers, and lingers it out,
but the disease is
incureable. Go beare this letter to my
Lord of Lancaster, this to the Prince,
this to the Earle of
Westmerland, and this to old Mistris Vrsula, whome
I
haue weekly sworne to marry, since I perceiu'd the first
white haire on
my chin. About it: you know where to
finde me. A pox of this Gowt, or a Gowt
of this Poxe:
for the one or th' other playes the rogue with my great
toe:
It is no matter, if I do halt, I haue the warres for my
colour, and my
Pension shall seeme the more reasonable.
A good wit will make vse of any
thing: I will turne diseases
to commodity.
Exeunt.
Scena Quarta.
Enter Archbishop, Hastings, Mowbray, and Lord Bardolfe.
Ar. Thus haue you heard our causes, & kno our Means:
And my
most noble Friends, I pray you all
Speake plainly your opinions of our
hopes,
And first (Lord Marshall) what say you to it?
Mow. I well
allow the occasion of our Armes,
But gladly would be better satisfied,
How
(in our Meanes) we should aduance our selues
To looke with forhead bold and
big enough
Vpon the Power and puisance of the King
Hast. Our present Musters grow vpon the File
To fiue and
twenty thousand men of choice:
And our Supplies, liue largely in the
hope
Of great Northumberland, whose bosome burnes
With an incensed Fire of
Iniuries
L.Bar. The question then (Lord Hastings) standeth
thus
Whether our present fiue and twenty thousand
May hold-vp-head,
without Northumberland:
Hast. With him, we may
L.Bar. I marry, there's the point:
But if without him we be
thought to feeble,
My iudgement is, we should not step too farre
Till we
had his Assistance by the hand.
For in a Theame so bloody fac'd, as
this,
Coniecture, Expectation, and Surmise
Of Aydes incertaine, should not
be admitted
Arch. 'Tis very true Lord Bardolfe, for indeed
It was yong
Hotspurres case, at Shrewsbury
L.Bar. It was (my Lord) who lin'd himself with hope,
Eating
the ayre, on promise of Supply,
Flatt'ring himselfe with Proiect of a
power,
Much smaller, then the smallest of his Thoughts,
And so with great
imagination
(Proper to mad men) led his Powers to death,
And (winking)
leap'd into destruction
Hast. But (by your leaue) it neuer yet did hurt,
To lay downe
likely-hoods, and formes of hope
L.Bar. Yes, if this present quality of warre,
Indeed the
instant action: a cause on foot,
Liues so in hope: As in an early
Spring,
We see th' appearing buds, which to proue fruite,
Hope giues not
so much warrant, as Dispaire
That Frosts will bite them. When we meane to
build,
We first suruey the Plot, then draw the Modell,
And when we see the
figure of the house,
Then must we rate the cost of the Erection,
Which if
we finde out-weighes Ability,
What do we then, but draw a-new the
Modell
In fewer offices? Or at least, desist
To builde at all? Much more,
in this great worke,
(Which is (almost) to plucke a Kingdome downe,
And
set another vp) should we suruey
The plot of Situation, and the
Modell;
Consent vpon a sure Foundation:
Question Surueyors, know our owne
estate,
How able such a Worke to vndergo,
To weigh against his Opposite?
Or else,
We fortifie in Paper, and in Figures,
Vsing the Names of men,
instead of men:
Like one, that drawes the Modell of a house
Beyond his
power to builde it; who (halfe through)
Giues o're, and leaues his
part-created Cost
A naked subiect to the Weeping Clouds,
And waste, for
churlish Winters tyranny
Hast. Grant that our hopes (yet likely of faire byrth)
Should
be still-borne: and that we now possest
The vtmost man of expectation:
I
thinke we are a Body strong enough
(Euen as we are) to equall with the
King
L.Bar. What is the King but fiue & twenty
thousand?
Hast. To vs no more: nay not so much Lord
Bardolf.
For0his diuisions (as the Times do braul)
Are in three Heads: one
Power against the French,
And one against Glendower: Perforce a third
Must
take vp vs: So is the vnfirme King
In three diuided: and his Coffers
sound
With hollow Pouerty, and Emptinesse
Ar. That he should draw his seuerall strengths togither
And
come against vs in full puissance
Need not be dreaded
Hast. If he should do so,
He leaues his backe vnarm'd, the
French, and Welch
Baying him at the heeles: neuer feare that
L.Bar. Who is it like should lead his Forces hither?
Hast. The Duke of Lancaster, and Westmerland:
Against the Welsh himselfe, and
Harrie Monmouth.
But who is substituted 'gainst the French,
I haue no
certaine notice
Arch. Let vs on:
And publish the occasion of our
Armes.
The Common-wealth is sicke of their owne Choice,
Their ouer-greedy
loue hath surfetted:
An habitation giddy, and vnsure
Hath he that buildeth
on the vulgar heart.
O thou fond Many, with what loud applause
Did'st thou
beate heauen with blessing Bullingbrooke,
Before he was, what thou would'st
haue him be?
And being now trimm'd in thine owne desires,
Thou (beastly
Feeder) art so full of him,
That thou prouok'st thy selfe to cast him
vp.
So, so, (thou common Dogge) did'st thou disgorge
Thy glutton-bosome of
the Royall Richard,
And now thou would'st eate thy dead vomit vp,
And
howl'st to finde it. What trust is in these Times?
They, that when Richard
liu'd, would haue him dye,
Are now become enamour'd on his graue.
Thou
that threw'st dust vpon his goodly head
When through proud London he came
sighing on,
After th' admired heeles of Bullingbrooke,
Cri'st now, O
Earth, yeeld vs that King againe,
And take thou this (O thoughts of men
accurs'd)
``Past, and to Come, seemes best; things Present, worst
Mow. Shall we go draw our numbers, and set on?
Hast.
We are Times subiects, and Time bids, be gon.
Actus Secundus. Scoena Prima.
Enter Hostesse, with two Officers, Fang, and Snare.
Hostesse. Mr. Fang, haue you entred the Action?
Fang. It is
enter'd
Hostesse. Wher's your Yeoman? Is it a lusty yeoman?
Will he
stand to it?
Fang. Sirrah, where's Snare?
Hostesse. I, I,
good M[aster]. Snare
Snare. Heere, heere
Fang. Snare, we must Arrest Sir Iohn Falstaffe
Host. I good M[aster]. Snare, I haue enter'd him, and all
Sn. It may chance cost some of vs our liues: he wil
stab
Hostesse. Alas the day: take heed of him: he stabd me
in mine
owne house, and that most beastly: he cares not
what mischeefe he doth, if
his weapon be out. Hee will
foyne like any diuell, he will spare neither man,
woman,
nor childe
Fang. If I can close with him, I care not for his thrust
Hostesse. No, nor I neither: Ile be at your elbow
Fang. If I but fist him once: if he come but within
my
Vice
Host. I am vndone with his going: I warrant he is
an
infinitiue thing vpon my score. Good M[aster]. Fang hold him
sure: good
M[aster]. Snare let him not scape, he comes
continuantly
to Py-Corner
(sauing your manhoods) to buy a saddle,
and hee is indited to dinner to the
Lubbars head in
Lombardstreet, to M[aster]. Smoothes the Silkman. I pra' ye,
since
my Exion is enter'd, and my Case so openly known to the
world, let
him be brought in to his answer: A 100. Marke
is a long one, for a poore lone
woman to beare: & I haue
borne, and borne, and borne, and haue bin fub'd
off, and
fub'd-off, from this day to that day, that it is a shame to
be
thought on. There is no honesty in such dealing, vnles
a woman should be made
an Asse and a Beast, to beare euery
Knaues wrong.
Enter Falstaffe and Bardolfe.
Yonder he comes, and that arrant Malmesey-Nose Bardolfe
with him. Do your
Offices, do your offices: M[aster]. Fang, &
M[aster].
Snare, do me, do
me, do me your Offices
Fal. How now? whose Mare's dead? what's the matter?
Fang. Sir Iohn, I arrest you, at the suit of Mist. Quickly
Falst. Away Varlets, draw Bardolfe: Cut me off the
Villaines
head: throw the Queane in the Channel
Host. Throw me in the channell? Ile throw thee there.
Wilt
thou? wilt thou? thou bastardly rogue. Murder, murder,
O thou Hony-suckle
villaine, wilt thou kill Gods officers,
and the Kings? O thou hony-seed
Rogue, thou art
a honyseed, a Man-queller, and a woman-queller
Falst. Keep them off, Bardolfe
Fang. A rescu, a rescu
Host. Good people bring a rescu. Thou wilt not? thou
wilt
not? Do, do thou Rogue: Do thou Hempseed
Page. Away you Scullion, you Rampallian, you
Fustillirian:
Ile tucke your Catastrophe.
Enter Ch. Iustice.
Iust. What's the matter? Keepe the Peace here, hoa
Host. Good my Lord be good to mee. I beseech you
stand to
me
Ch.Iust. How now sir Iohn? What are you brauling here?
Doth
this become your place, your time, and businesse?
You should haue bene well
on your way to Yorke.
Stand from him Fellow; wherefore hang'st vpon
him?
Host. Oh my most worshipfull Lord, and't please your
Grace, I
am a poore widdow of Eastcheap, and he is arrested
at my suit
Ch.Iust. For what summe?
Host. It is more then for
some (my Lord) it is for all: all
I haue, he hath eaten me out of house and
home; hee hath
put all my substance into that fat belly of his: but I
will
haue some of it out againe, or I will ride thee o' Nights,
like the
Mare
Falst. I thinke I am as like to ride the Mare, if I haue
any
vantage of ground, to get vp
Ch.Iust. How comes this, Sir Iohn? Fy, what a man of
good
temper would endure this tempest of exclamation?
Are you not asham'd to
inforce a poore Widdowe to so
rough a course, to come by her owne?
Falst. What is the grosse summe that I owe thee?
Host. Marry (if thou
wer't an honest man) thy selfe, &
the mony too. Thou didst sweare to mee
vpon a parcell
gilt Goblet, sitting in my Dolphin-chamber at the
round
table, by a sea-cole fire, on Wednesday in Whitson week,
when the
Prince broke thy head for lik'ning him to a singing
man of Windsor; Thou
didst sweare to me then (as I
was washing thy wound) to marry me, and make
mee my
Lady thy wife. Canst y deny it? Did not goodwife Keech
the Butchers
wife come in then, and cal me gossip Quickly?
comming in to borrow a messe of
Vinegar: telling vs,
she had a good dish of Prawnes: whereby y didst desire
to
eat some: whereby I told thee they were ill for a greene
wound? And
didst not thou (when she was gone downe
staires) desire me to be no more
familiar with such poore
people, saying, that ere long they should call me
Madam?
And did'st y not kisse me, and bid mee fetch thee 30.s? I
put thee
now to thy Book-oath, deny it if thou canst?
Fal. My Lord, this is a
poore mad soule: and she sayes
vp & downe the town, that her eldest son
is like you. She
hath bin in good case, & the truth is, pouerty hath
distracted
her: but for these foolish Officers, I beseech you, I
may haue
redresse against them
Iust. Sir Iohn, sir Iohn, I am well acquainted with
your
maner of wrenching the true cause, the false way. It is not
a
confident brow, nor the throng of wordes, that come
with such (more then
impudent) sawcines from you, can
thrust me from a leuell consideration, I
know you ha' practis'd
vpon the easie-yeelding spirit of this woman
Host. Yes in troth my Lord
Iust. Prethee peace: pay her the debt you owe her, and
vnpay
the villany you haue done her: the one you may do
with sterling mony, &
the other with currant repentance
Fal. My Lord, I will not vndergo this sneape without
reply.
You call honorable Boldnes, impudent Sawcinesse:
If a man wil curt'sie, and
say nothing, he is vertuous: No,
my Lord (your humble duty reme[m]bred) I
will not be your
sutor. I say to you, I desire deliu'rance from these
Officers
being vpon hasty employment in the Kings Affaires
Iust. You speake, as hauing power to do wrong: But
answer in
the effect of your Reputation, and satisfie the
poore woman
Falst. Come hither Hostesse.
Enter M[aster]. Gower]
Ch.Iust. Now Master Gower; What newes?
Gow. The King (my Lord) and
Henrie Prince of Wales
Are neere at hand: The rest the Paper telles
Falst. As I am a Gentleman
Host. Nay, you said so before
Fal. As I am a Gentleman. Come, no more words of it
Host. By this Heauenly ground I tread on, I must be
faine to pawne both my
Plate, and the Tapistry of my dyning
Chambers
Fal. Glasses, glasses, is the onely drinking: and for
thy
walles a pretty slight Drollery, or the Storie of the
Prodigall, or the
Germane hunting in Waterworke, is
worth a thousand of these Bed-hangings, and
these Flybitten
Tapistries. Let it be tenne pound (if thou canst.)
Come,
if it were not for thy humors, there is not a better
Wench in England. Go,
wash thy face, and draw thy
Action: Come, thou must not bee in this humour
with
me, come, I know thou was't set on to this
Host. Prethee (Sir Iohn) let it be but twenty Nobles,
I loath
to pawne my Plate, in good earnest la
Fal. Let it alone, Ile make other shift: you'l be a
fool
still
Host. Well, you shall haue it although I pawne my
Gowne. I
hope you'l come to Supper: You'l pay me altogether?
Fal. Will I liue?
Go with her, with her: hooke-on,
hooke-on
Host. Will you haue Doll Teare-sheet meet you at
supper?
Fal. No more words. Let's haue her
Ch.Iust. I haue heard bitter newes
Fal. What's the newes (my good Lord?)
Ch.Iu. Where lay
the King last night?
Mes. At Basingstoke my Lord
Fal. I hope (my Lord) all's well. What is the newes
my
Lord?
Ch.Iust. Come all his Forces backe?
Mes. No: Fifteene
hundred Foot, fiue hundred Horse
Are march'd vp to my Lord of
Lancaster,
Against Northumberland, and the Archbishop
Fal. Comes the King backe from Wales, my noble L[ord]?
Ch.Iust. You shall haue Letters of me presently.
Come, go along with me, good
M[aster]. Gowre
Fal. My Lord
Ch.Iust. What's the matter?
Fal. Master Gowre, shall I
entreate you with mee to
dinner?
Gow. I must waite vpon my good
Lord heere.
I thanke you, good Sir Iohn
Ch.Iust. Sir Iohn, you loyter heere too long being you
are to
take Souldiers vp, in Countries as you go
Fal. Will you sup with me, Master Gowre?
Ch.Iust. What
foolish Master taught you these manners,
Sir Iohn?
Fal. Master
Gower, if they become mee not, hee was a
Foole that taught them mee. This is
the right Fencing
grace (my Lord) tap for tap, and so part faire
Ch.Iust. Now the Lord lighten thee, thou art a
great
Foole.
Exeunt.
Scena Secunda.
Enter Prince Henry, Pointz, Bardolfe, and Page.
Prin. Trust me, I am exceeding weary
Poin. Is it come to that? I had thought wearines durst
not
haue attach'd one of so high blood
Prin. It doth me: though it discolours the complexion
of my
Greatnesse to acknowledge it. Doth it not shew
vildely in me, to desire small
Beere?
Poin. Why, a Prince should not be so loosely studied,
as to
remember so weake a Composition
Prince. Belike then, my Appetite was not Princely
got: for
(in troth) I do now remember the poore Creature,
Small Beere. But indeede
these humble considerations
make me out of loue with my Greatnesse. What
a
disgrace is it to me, to remember thy name? Or to know
thy face to
morrow? Or to take note how many paire of
Silk stockings y hast? (Viz. these,
and those that were thy
peach-colour'd ones:) Or to beare the Inuentorie of
thy
shirts, as one for superfluity, and one other, for vse. But
that the
Tennis-Court-keeper knowes better then I, for
it is a low ebbe of Linnen with
thee, when thou kept'st
not Racket there, as thou hast not done a great
while, because
the rest of thy Low Countries, haue made a shift to
eate vp
thy Holland
Poin. How ill it followes, after you haue labour'd so
hard,
you should talke so idlely? Tell me how many good
yong Princes would do so,
their Fathers lying so sicke, as
yours is?
Prin. Shall I tell thee
one thing, Pointz?
Poin. Yes: and let it be an excellent good
thing
Prin. It shall serue among wittes of no higher breeding
then
thine
Poin. Go to: I stand the push of your one thing, that
you'l
tell
Prin. Why, I tell thee, it is not meet, that I should be
sad
now my Father is sicke: albeit I could tell to thee (as
to one it pleases me,
for fault of a better, to call my friend)
I could be sad, and sad indeed
too
Poin. Very hardly, vpon such a subiect
Prin. Thou think'st me as farre in the Diuels Booke, as
thou,
and Falstaffe, for obduracie and persistencie. Let the
end try the man. But I
tell thee, my hart bleeds inwardly,
that my Father is so sicke: and keeping
such vild company
as thou art, hath in reason taken from me, all
ostentation
of sorrow
Poin. The reason?
Prin. What would'st thou think of
me, if I shold weep?
Poin. I would thinke thee a most Princely
hypocrite
Prin. It would be euery mans thought: and thou art
a blessed
Fellow, to thinke as euery man thinkes: neuer a
mans thought in the world,
keepes the Rode-way better
then thine: euery man would thinke me an Hypocrite
indeede.
And what accites your most worshipful thought
to thinke
so?
Poin. Why, because you haue beene so lewde, and so
much
ingraffed to Falstaffe
Prin. And to thee
Pointz. Nay, I am well spoken of, I can heare it with
mine
owne eares: the worst that they can say of me is, that
I am a second Brother,
and that I am a proper Fellowe of
my hands: and those two things I confesse I
canot helpe.
Looke, looke, here comes Bardolfe
Prince. And the Boy that I gaue Falstaffe, he had him
from me
Christian, and see if the fat villain haue not transform'd
him Ape.
Enter
Bardolfe.
Bar. Saue your Grace
Prin. And yours, most Noble Bardolfe
Poin. Come you pernitious Asse, you bashfull Foole,
must you
be blushing? Wherefore blush you now? what
a Maidenly man at Armes are you
become? Is it such a
matter to get a Pottle-pots Maiden-head?
Page.
He call'd me euen now (my Lord) through a red
Lattice, and I could discerne
no part of his face from the
window: at last I spy'd his eyes, and me thought
he had
made two holes in the Ale-wiues new Petticoat, &
peeped
through
Prin. Hath not the boy profited?
Bar. Away, you horson
vpright Rabbet, away
Page. Away, you rascally Altheas dreame, away
Prin. Instruct vs Boy: what dreame, Boy?
Page. Marry
(my Lord) Althea dream'd, she was deliuer'd
of a Firebrand, and therefore I
call him hir dream
Prince. A Crownes-worth of good Interpretation:
There it is,
Boy
Poin. O that this good Blossome could bee kept from
Cankers:
Well, there is six pence to preserue thee
Bard. If you do not make him be hang'd among you,
the
gallowes shall be wrong'd
Prince. And how doth thy Master, Bardolph?
Bar. Well,
my good Lord: he heard of your Graces
comming to Towne. There's a Letter for
you
Poin. Deliuer'd with good respect: And how doth
the
Martlemas, your Master?
Bard. In bodily health Sir
Poin. Marry, the immortall part needes a Physitian:
but that
moues not him: though that bee sicke, it dyes
not
Prince. I do allow this Wen to bee as familiar with
me, as my
dogge: and he holds his place, for looke you
he writes
Poin.
Letter.
Iohn Falstaffe Knight: (Euery man must
know that, as oft as hee hath
occasion to name himselfe:)
Euen like those that are kinne to the King, for
they neuer
pricke their finger, but they say, there is som of the
kings
blood spilt. How comes that (sayes he) that takes vpon
him not to
conceiue? the answer is as ready as a borrowed
cap: I am the Kings poore
Cosin, Sir
Prince. Nay, they will be kin to vs, but they wil fetch
it
from Iaphet. But to the Letter: - Sir Iohn Falstaffe,
Knight, to the Sonne of
the King, neerest his Father, Harrie
Prince of Wales, greeting
Poin. Why this is a Certificate
Prin. Peace.
I will imitate the honourable Romaines in
breuitie
Poin. Sure he meanes breuity in breath: short-winded.
I
commend me to thee, I commend thee, and I leaue thee. Bee
not too familiar
with Pointz, for hee misuses thy Fauours so
much, that he sweares thou art to
marrie his Sister Nell. Repent
at idle times as thou mayst, and so
farewell.
Thine, by yea and no: which is as much as to say, as thou
vsest
him. Iacke Falstaffe with my Familiars:
Iohn with my Brothers and Sister:
& Sir
Iohn, with all Europe.
My Lord, I will steepe this Letter in
Sack, and make him
eate it
Prin. That's to make him eate twenty of his Words.
But do you
vse me thus Ned? Must I marry your Sister?
Poin. May the Wench haue no
worse Fortune. But I
neuer said so
Prin. Well, thus we play the Fooles with the time, &
the
spirits of the wise, sit in the clouds, and mocke vs: Is
your Master heere in
London?
Bard. Yes my Lord
Prin. Where suppes he? Doth the old Bore, feede in
the old
Franke?
Bard. At the old place my Lord, in East-cheape
Prin. What Company?
Page. Ephesians my Lord, of the
old Church
Prin. Sup any women with him?
Page. None my Lord, but
old Mistris Quickly, and M[istris].
Doll Teare-sheet
Prin. What Pagan may that be?
Page. A proper
Gentlewoman, Sir, and a Kinswoman
of my Masters
Prin. Euen such Kin, as the Parish Heyfors are to
the
Towne-Bull?
Shall we steale vpon them (Ned) at Supper?
Poin.
I am your shadow, my Lord, Ile follow you
Prin. Sirrah, you boy, and Bardolph, no word to your
Master
that I am yet in Towne.
There's for your silence
Bar. I haue no tongue, sir
Page. And for mine Sir, I will gouerne it
Prin. Fare ye well: go.
This Doll Teare-sheet should be some
Rode
Poin. I warrant you, as common as the way betweene
S[aint].
Albans, and London
Prin. How might we see Falstaffe bestow himselfe to
night, in
his true colours, and not our selues be seene?
Poin. Put on two
Leather Ierkins, and Aprons, and
waite vpon him at his Table, like
Drawers
Prin. From a God, to a Bull? A heauie declension: It
was
Ioues case. From a Prince, to a Prentice, a low transformation,
that shall be
mine: for in euery thing, the purpose
must weigh with the folly. Follow me
Ned.
Exeunt.
Scena Tertia.
Enter Northumberland, his Ladie, and Harrie Percies Ladie.
North. I prethee louing Wife, and gentle Daughter,
Giue an euen way
vnto my rough Affaires:
Put not you on the visage of the Times,
And be
like them to Percie, troublesome
Wife. I haue giuen ouer, I will speak no more,
Do what you
will: your Wisedome, be your guide
North. Alas (sweet Wife) my Honor is at pawne,
And but my
going, nothing can redeeme it
La. Oh yet, for heauens sake, go not to these Warrs;
The Time
was (Father) when you broke your word,
When you were more endeer'd to it,
then now,
When your owne Percy, when my heart-deereHarry,
Threw many a
Northward looke, to see his Father
Bring vp his Powres: but he did long in
vaine.
Who then perswaded you to stay at home?
There were two Honors lost;
Yours, and your Sonnes.
For Yours, may heauenly glory brighten it:
For
His, it stucke vpon him, as the Sunne
In the gray vault of Heauen: and by his
Light
Did all the Cheualrie of England moue
To do braue Acts. He was
(indeed) the Glasse
Wherein the Noble-Youth did dresse themselues.
He had
no Legges, that practic'd not his Gate:
And speaking thicke (which Nature
made his blemish)
Became the Accents of the Valiant.
For those that could
speake low, and tardily,
Would turne their owne Perfection, to Abuse,
To
seeme like him. So that in Speech, in Gate,
In Diet, in Affections of
delight,
In Militarie Rules, Humors of Blood,
He was the Marke, and
Glasse, Coppy, and Booke,
That fashion'd others. And him, O wondrous!
him,
O Miracle of Men! Him did you leaue
(Second to none) vn-seconded by
you,
To looke vpon the hideous God of Warre,
In dis-aduantage, to abide a
field,
Where nothing but the sound of Hotspurs Name
Did seeme defensible:
so you left him.
Neuer, O neuer doe his Ghost the wrong,
To hold your
Honor more precise and nice
With others, then with him. Let them
alone:
The Marshall and the Arch-bishop are strong.
Had my sweet Harry had
but halfe their Numbers,
To day might I (hanging on Hotspurs Necke)
Haue
talk'd of Monmouth's Graue
North. Beshrew your heart,
(Faire Daughter) you doe draw my
Spirits from me,
With new lamenting ancient Ouer-sights.
But I must goe,
and meet with Danger there,
Or it will seeke me in another place,
And
finde me worse prouided
Wife. O flye to Scotland,
Till that the Nobles, and the armed
Commons,
Haue of their Puissance made a little taste
Lady. If they get ground, and vantage of the King,
Then ioyne
you with them, like a Ribbe of Steele,
To make Strength stronger. But, for
all our loues,
First let them trye themselues. So did your Sonne,
He was
so suffer'd; so came I a Widow:
And neuer shall haue length of Life
enough,
To raine vpon Remembrance with mine Eyes,
That it may grow, and
sprowt, as high as Heauen,
For Recordation to my Noble Husband
North. Come, come, go in with me: 'tis with my Minde
As with
the Tyde, swell'd vp vnto his height,
That makes a still-stand, running
neyther way.
Faine would I goe to meet the Arch-bishop,
But many thousand
Reasons hold me backe.
I will resolue for Scotland: there am I,
Till Time
and Vantage craue my company.
Exeunt.
Scaena Quarta.
Enter two Drawers.
1.Drawer. What hast thou brought there? Apple-Iohns?
Thou know'st
Sir Iohn cannot endure an Apple-Iohn
2.Draw. Thou say'st true: the Prince once set a Dish
of
Apple-Iohns before him, and told him there were fiue
more Sir Iohns: and,
putting off his Hat, said, I will now
take my leaue of these sixe drie,
round, old-wither'd
Knights. It anger'd him to the heart: but hee hath
forgot
that
1.Draw. Why then couer, and set them downe: and
see if thou
canst finde out Sneakes Noyse; Mistris Teare-sheet
would faine haue some
Musique
2.Draw. Sirrha, heere will be the Prince, and Master
Points,
anon: and they will put on two of our Ierkins,
and Aprons, and Sir Iohn must
not know of it: Bardolph
hath brought word
1.Draw. Then here will be old Vtis: it will be an
excellent
stratagem
2.Draw. Ile see if I can finde out Sneake.
Enter.
Enter Hostesse, and Dol.
Host. Sweet-heart, me thinkes now you are in an excellent
good
temperalitie: your Pulsidge beates as extraordinarily,
as heart would desire;
and your Colour
(I warrant you) is as red as any Rose: But you haue
drunke
too much Canaries, and that's a maruellous searching
Wine; and it perfumes
the blood, ere wee can say
what's this. How doe you now?
Dol.
Better then I was: Hem
Host. Why that was well said: A good heart's worth
Gold.
Looke, here comes Sir Iohn.
Enter Falstaffe.
Falst. When Arthur first in Court - (emptie the Iordan)
and was a
worthy King: How now Mistris Dol?
Host. Sick of a Calme: yea,
good-sooth
Falst. So is all her Sect: if they be once in a Calme,
they
are sick
Dol. You muddie Rascall, is that all the comfort you
giue
me?
Falst. You make fat Rascalls, Mistris Dol
Dol. I make them? Gluttonie and Diseases make
them, I make
them not
Falst. If the Cooke make the Gluttonie, you helpe to
make the
Diseases (Dol) we catch of you (Dol) we catch
of you: Grant that, my poore
Vertue, grant that
Dol. I marry, our Chaynes, and our Iewels
Falst. Your Brooches, Pearles, and Owches: For to
serue
brauely, is to come halting off: you know, to come
off the Breach, with his
Pike bent brauely, and to Surgerie
brauely; to venture vpon the
charg'd-Chambers
brauely
Host. Why this is the olde fashion: you two neuer
meete, but
you fall to some discord: you are both (in
good troth) as Rheumatike as two
drie Tostes, you cannot
one beare with anothers Confirmities. What
the
good-yere? One must beare, and that must bee you:
you are the weaker
Vessell; as they say, the emptier
Vessell
Dol. Can a weake emptie Vessell beare such a huge
full
Hogs-head? There's a whole Marchants Venture
of Burdeux-Stuffe in him: you
haue not seene a Hulke
better stufft in the Hold. Come, Ile be friends with
thee
Iacke: Thou art going to the Warres, and whether I
shall euer see
thee againe, or no, there is no body
cares.
Enter Drawer.
Drawer. Sir, Ancient Pistoll is below, and would
speake with
you
Dol. Hang him, swaggering Rascall, let him not
come hither:
it is the foule-mouth'dst Rogue in England
Host. If hee swagger, let him not come here: I must
liue
amongst my Neighbors, Ile no Swaggerers: I am
in good name, and fame, with
the very best: shut the
doore, there comes no Swaggerers heere: I haue
not
liu'd all this while, to haue swaggering now: shut the
doore, I pray
you
Falst. Do'st thou heare, Hostesse?
Host. 'Pray you
pacifie your selfe (Sir Iohn) there comes
no Swaggerers heere
Falst. Do'st thou heare? it is mine Ancient
Host. Tilly-fally (Sir Iohn) neuer tell me, your
ancient
Swaggerer comes not in my doores. I was before Master
Tisick the
Deputie, the other day: and as hee said to me,
it was no longer agoe then
Wednesday last: Neighbour
Quickly (sayes hee;) Master Dombe, our Minister,
was by
then: Neighbour Quickly (sayes hee) receiue those that
are Ciuill;
for (sayth hee) you are in an ill Name: now
hee said so, I can tell
whereupon: for (sayes hee) you are
an honest Woman, and well thought on;
therefore take
heede what Guests you receiue: Receiue (sayes hee)
no
swaggering Companions. There comes none heere. You
would blesse you to
heare what hee said. No, Ile no
Swaggerers
Falst. Hee's no Swaggerer (Hostesse:) a tame Cheater,
hee:
you may stroake him as gently, as a Puppie Greyhound:
hee will not swagger
with a Barbarie Henne, if
her feathers turne backe in any shew of resistance.
Call
him vp (Drawer.)
Host. Cheater, call you him? I will barre no
honest
man my house, nor no Cheater: but I doe not loue swaggering;
I am
the worse when one sayes, swagger: Feele
Masters, how I shake: looke you, I
warrant you
Dol. So you doe, Hostesse
Host. Doe I? yea, in very truth doe I, if it were an
Aspen
Leafe: I cannot abide Swaggerers.
Enter Pistol, and Bardolph and his
Boy.
Pist. 'Saue you, Sir Iohn
Falst. Welcome Ancient Pistol. Here (Pistol) I charge
you
with a Cup of Sacke: doe you discharge vpon mine
Hostesse
Pist. I will discharge vpon her (Sir Iohn) with
two
Bullets
Falst. She is Pistoll-proofe (Sir) you shall hardly
offend
her
Host. Come, Ile drinke no Proofes, nor no Bullets: I
will
drinke no more then will doe me good, for no mans
pleasure, I
Pist. Then to you (Mistris Dorothie) I will charge
you
Dol. Charge me? I scorne you (scuruie Companion)
what? you
poore, base, rascally, cheating, lacke-Linnen-Mate:
away you mouldie Rogue,
away; I am meat for
your Master
Pist. I know you, Mistris Dorothie
Dol. Away you Cut-purse Rascall, you filthy Bung,
away: By
this Wine, Ile thrust my Knife in your mouldie
Chappes, if you play the
sawcie Cuttle with me. Away
you Bottle-Ale Rascall, you Basket-hilt stale
Iugler, you.
Since when, I pray you, Sir? what, with two Points on
your
shoulder? much
Pist. I will murther your Ruffe, for this
Host. No, good Captaine Pistol: not heere,
sweete
Captaine
Dol. Captaine? thou abhominable damn'd Cheater,
art thou not
asham'd to be call'd Captaine? If Captaines
were of my minde, they would
trunchion you out, for taking
their Names vpon you, before you haue earn'd
them.
You a Captaine? you slaue, for what? for tearing a poore
Whores
Ruffe in a Bawdy-house? Hee a Captaine? hang
him Rogue, hee liues vpon
mouldie stew'd-Pruines, and
dry'de Cakes. A Captaine? These Villaines will
make
the word Captaine odious: Therefore Captaines had
neede looke to
it
Bard. 'Pray thee goe downe, good Ancient
Falst. Hearke thee hither, Mistris Dol
Pist. Not I: I tell thee what, Corporall Bardolph, I
could
teare her: Ile be reueng'd on her
Page. 'Pray thee goe downe
Pist. Ile see her damn'd first: to Pluto's damn'd Lake,
to
the Infernall Deepe, where Erebus and Tortures vilde
also. Hold Hooke and
Line, say I: Downe: downe
Dogges, downe Fates: haue wee not Hiren
here?
Host. Good Captaine Peesel be quiet, it is very late:
I
beseeke you now, aggrauate your Choler
Pist. These be good Humors indeede. Shall PackHorses,
and
hollow-pamper'd Iades of Asia, which cannot
goe but thirtie miles a day,
compare with Cęsar, and
with Caniballs, and Troian Greekes? nay, rather
damne
them with King Cerberus, and let the Welkin roare: shall
wee fall
foule for Toyes?
Host. By my troth Captaine, these are very
bitter
words
Bard. Be gone, good Ancient: this will grow to a
Brawle
anon
Pist. Die men, like Dogges; giue Crownes like Pinnes:
Haue we
not Hiren here?
Host. On my word (Captaine) there's none such
here.
What the good-yere, doe you thinke I would denye her?
I pray be
quiet
Pist. Then feed, and be fat (my faire Calipolis.) Come,
giue
me some Sack, Si fortune me tormente, sperato me contente.
Feare wee
broad-sides? No, let the Fiend giue fire:
Giue me some Sack: and Sweet-heart
lye thou there:
Come wee to full Points here, and are et cetera's
nothing?
Fal. Pistol, I would be quiet
Pist. Sweet Knight, I kisse thy Neaffe: what? wee haue
seene
the seuen Starres
Dol. Thrust him downe stayres, I cannot endure such
a Fustian
Rascall
Pist. Thrust him downe stayres? know we not
Galloway
Nagges?
Fal. Quoit him downe (Bardolph) like a
shoue-groat
shilling: nay, if hee doe nothing but speake nothing,
hee
shall be nothing here
Bard. Come, get you downe stayres
Pist. What? shall wee haue Incision? shall wee embrew?
then
Death rocke me asleepe, abridge my dolefull
dayes: why then let grieuous,
gastly, gaping Wounds,
vntwin'd the Sisters three: Come Atropos, I say
Host. Here's good stuffe toward
Fal. Giue me my Rapier, Boy
Dol. I prethee Iack, I prethee doe not draw
Fal. Get you downe stayres
Host. Here's a goodly tumult: Ile forsweare keeping
house,
before Ile be in these tirrits, and frights. So: Murther
I warrant now. Alas,
alas, put vp your naked Weapons,
put vp your naked Weapons
Dol. I prethee Iack be quiet, the Rascall is gone: ah,
you
whorson little valiant Villaine, you
Host. Are you not hurt i'th' Groyne? me thought hee
made a
shrewd Thrust at your Belly
Fal. Haue you turn'd him out of doores?
Bard. Yes Sir:
the Rascall's drunke: you haue hurt
him (Sir) in the shoulder
Fal. A Rascall to braue me
Dol. Ah, you sweet little Rogue, you: alas, poore Ape,
how
thou sweat'st? Come, let me wipe thy Face: Come
on, you whorson Chops: Ah
Rogue, I loue thee: Thou
art as valorous as Hector of Troy, worth fiue of
Agamemnon,
and tenne times better then the nine Worthies: ah
Villaine
Fal. A rascally Slaue, I will tosse the Rogue in a Blanket
Dol. Doe, if thou dar'st for thy heart: if thou doo'st,
Ile
canuas thee betweene a paire of Sheetes.
Enter Musique.
Page. The Musique is come, Sir
Fal. Let them play: play Sirs. Sit on my Knee, Dol.
A
Rascall, bragging Slaue: the Rogue fled from me like
Quick-siluer
Dol. And thou followd'st him like a Church: thou
whorson
little tydie Bartholmew Bore-pigge, when wilt
thou leaue fighting on dayes,
and foyning on nights, and
begin to patch vp thine old Body for
Heauen?
Enter the Prince and Poines disguis'd.
Fal. Peace (good Dol) doe not speake like a Deathshead:
doe not bid
me remember mine end
Dol. Sirrha, what humor is the Prince of?
Fal. A good
shallow young fellow: hee would haue
made a good Pantler, hee would haue
chipp'd Bread
well
Dol. They say Poines hath a good Wit
Fal. Hee a good Wit? hang him Baboone, his Wit is
as thicke
as Tewksburie Mustard: there is no more conceit
in him, then is in a
Mallet
Dol. Why doth the Prince loue him so then?
Fal.
Because their Legges are both of a bignesse: and
hee playes at Quoits well,
and eates Conger and Fennell,
and drinkes off Candles ends for Flap-dragons,
and rides
the wilde-Mare with the Boyes, and iumpes vpon
Ioyn'dstooles,
and sweares with a good grace, and weares his
Boot very
smooth, like vnto the Signe of the Legge; and
breedes no bate with telling of
discreete stories: and such
other Gamboll Faculties hee hath, that shew a
weake
Minde, and an able Body, for the which the Prince admits
him; for
the Prince himselfe is such another: the
weight of an hayre will turne the
Scales betweene their
Haberdepois
Prince. Would not this Naue of a Wheele haue his
Eares cut
off?
Poin. Let vs beat him before his Whore
Prince. Looke, if the wither'd Elder hath not his Poll
claw'd
like a Parrot
Poin. Is it not strange, that Desire should so many
yeeres
out-liue performance?
Fal. Kisse me Dol
Prince. Saturne and Venus this yeere in Coniunction?
What
sayes the Almanack to that?
Poin. And looke whether the fierie Trigon,
his Man,
be not lisping to his Masters old Tables, his Note-Booke,
his
Councell-keeper?
Fal. Thou do'st giue me flatt'ring Busses
Dol. Nay truely, I kisse thee with a most constant
heart
Fal. I am olde, I am olde
Dol. I loue thee better, then I loue ere a scuruie young
Boy
of them all
Fal. What Stuffe wilt thou haue a Kirtle of? I shall
receiue
Money on Thursday: thou shalt haue a Cappe
to morrow. A merrie Song, come: it
growes late,
wee will to Bed. Thou wilt forget me, when I am
gone
Dol. Thou wilt set me a weeping, if thou say'st so:
proue
that euer I dresse my selfe handsome, till thy returne:
well, hearken the
end
Fal. Some Sack, Francis
Prin. Poin. Anon, anon, Sir
Fal. Ha? a Bastard Sonne of the Kings? And art not
thou
Poines, his Brother?
Prince. Why thou Globe of sinfull Continents,
what
a life do'st thou lead?
Fal. A better then thou: I am a
Gentleman, thou art
a Drawer
Prince. Very true, Sir: and I come to draw you out
by the
Eares
Host. Oh, the Lord preserue thy good Grace: Welcome
to
London. Now Heauen blesse that sweete Face
of thine: what, are you come from
Wales?
Fal. Thou whorson mad Compound of Maiestie: by
this light
Flesh, and corrupt Blood, thou art welcome
Dol. How? you fat Foole, I scorne you
Poin. My Lord, hee will driue you out of your reuenge,
and
turne all to a merryment, if you take not the
heat
Prince. You whorson Candle-myne you, how vildly
did you
speake of me euen now, before this honest, vertuous,
ciuill
Gentlewoman?
Host. 'Blessing on your good heart, and so shee is
by
my troth
Fal. Didst thou heare me?
Prince. Yes: and you knew
me, as you did when you
ranne away by Gads-hill: you knew I was at your
back,
and spoke it on purpose, to trie my patience
Fal. No, no, no: not so: I did not thinke, thou wast
within
hearing
Prince. I shall driue you then to confesse the wilfull
abuse,
and then I know how to handle you
Fal. No abuse (Hall) on mine Honor, no abuse
Prince. Not to disprayse me? and call me Pantler,
and
Bread-chopper, and I know not what?
Fal. No abuse
(Hal.)
Poin. No abuse?
Fal. No abuse (Ned) in the World:
honest Ned none.
I disprays'd him before the Wicked, that the Wicked
might
not fall in loue with him: In which doing, I haue
done the part of a carefull
Friend, and a true Subiect, and
thy Father is to giue me thankes for it. No
abuse (Hal:)
none (Ned) none; no Boyes, none
Prince. See now whether pure Feare, and entire
Cowardise,
doth not make thee wrong this vertuous Gentlewoman,
to close
with vs? Is shee of the Wicked? Is thine
Hostesse heere, of the Wicked? Or is
the Boy of the
Wicked? Or honest Bardolph (whose Zeale burnes in his
Nose)
of the Wicked?
Poin. Answere thou dead Elme, answere
Fal. The Fiend hath prickt downe Bardolph irrecouerable,
and
his Face is Lucifers Priuy-Kitchin, where hee
doth nothing but rost
Mault-Wormes: for the Boy,
there is a good Angell about him, but the Deuill
outbids
him too
Prince. For the Women?
Fal. For one of them, shee is
in Hell alreadie, and
burnes poore Soules: for the other, I owe her
Money;
and whether shee bee damn'd for that, I know
not
Host. No, I warrant you
Fal. No, I thinke thou art not: I thinke thou art quit
for
that. Marry, there is another Indictment vpon thee,
for suffering flesh to
bee eaten in thy house, contrary to
the Law, for the which I thinke thou wilt
howle
Host. All Victuallers doe so: What is a Ioynt of
Mutton, or
two, in a whole Lent?
Prince. You, Gentlewoman
Dol. What sayes your Grace?
Falst. His Grace sayes
that, which his flesh rebells
against
Host. Who knocks so lowd at doore? Looke to the
doore there,
Francis?
Enter Peto.
Prince. Peto, how now? what newes?
Peto. The King, your
Father, is at Westminster,
And there are twentie weake and wearied
Postes,
Come from the North: and as I came along,
I met, and ouer-tooke a
dozen Captaines,
Bare-headed, sweating, knocking at the Tauernes,
And
asking euery one for Sir Iohn Falstaffe
Prince. By Heauen (Poines) I feele me much to blame,
So idly
to prophane the precious time,
When Tempest of Commotion, like the
South,
Borne with black Vapour, doth begin to melt,
And drop vpon our bare
vnarmed heads.
Giue me my Sword, and Cloake:
Falstaffe, good
night.
Enter.
Falst. Now comes in the sweetest Morsell of the
night, and wee must
hence, and leaue it vnpickt. More
knocking at the doore? How now? what's the
matter?
Bard. You must away to Court, Sir, presently,
A dozen
Captaines stay at doore for you
Falst. Pay the Musitians, Sirrha: farewell Hostesse,
farewell
Dol. You see (my good Wenches) how men of
Merit are sought after: the
vndeseruer may sleepe, when
the man of Action is call'd on. Farewell good
Wenches:
if I be not sent away poste, I will see you againe, ere I
goe
Dol. I cannot speake: if my heart bee not readie
to burst-
Well (sweete Iacke) haue a care of thy
selfe
Falst. Farewell, farewell.
Enter.
Host. Well, fare thee well: I haue knowne thee
these twentie nine
yeeres, come Pescod-time: but an
honester, and truer-hearted man- Well, fare
thee
well
Bard. Mistris Teare-sheet
Host. What's the matter?
Bard. Bid Mistris Teare-sheet
come to my Master
Host. Oh runne Dol, runne: runne, good Dol.
Exeunt.
Actus Tertius. Scena Prima.
Enter the King, with a Page.
King. Goe, call the Earles of Surrey, and of Warwick:
But ere they
come, bid them ore-reade these Letters,
And well consider of them: make good
speed.
Enter.
How many thousand of my poorest Subiects
Are at this howre asleepe? O
Sleepe, O gentle Sleepe,
Natures soft Nurse, how haue I frighted
thee,
That thou no more wilt weigh my eye-lids downe,
And steepe my Sences
in Forgetfulnesse?
Why rather (Sleepe) lyest thou in smoakie Cribs,
Vpon
vneasie Pallads stretching thee,
And huisht with bussing Night, flyes to thy
slumber,
Then in the perfum'd Chambers of the Great?
Vnder the Canopies of
costly State,
And lull'd with sounds of sweetest Melodie?
O thou dull God,
why lyest thou with the vilde,
In loathsome Beds, and leau'st the Kingly
Couch,
A Watch-case, or a common Larum-Bell?
Wilt thou, vpon the high and
giddie Mast,
Seale vp the Ship-boyes Eyes, and rock his Braines,
In Cradle
of the rude imperious Surge,
And in the visitation of the Windes,
Who take
the Ruffian Billowes by the top,
Curling their monstrous heads, and hanging
them
With deaff'ning Clamors in the slipp'ry Clouds,
That with the hurley,
Death it selfe awakes?
Canst thou (O partiall Sleepe) giue thy Repose
To
the wet Sea-Boy, in an houre so rude:
And in the calmest, and most stillest
Night,
With all appliances, and meanes to boote,
Deny it to a King? Then
happy Lowe, lye downe,
Vneasie lyes the Head, that weares a Crowne.
Enter
Warwicke and Surrey.
War. Many good-morrowes to your Maiestie
King. Is it good-morrow, Lords?
War. 'Tis One a Clock,
and past
King. Why then good-morrow to you all (my Lords:)
Haue you
read o're the Letters that I sent you?
War. We haue (my
Liege.)
King. Then you perceiue the Body of our Kingdome,
How foule
it is: what ranke Diseases grow,
And with what danger, neere the Heart of
it?
War. It is but as a Body, yet distemper'd,
Which to his former
strength may be restor'd,
With good aduice, and little Medicine:
My Lord
Northumberland will soone be cool'd
King. Oh Heauen, that one might read the Book of Fate,
And
see the reuolution of the Times
Make Mountaines leuell, and the
Continent
(Wearie of solide firmenesse) melt it selfe
Into the Sea: and
other Times, to see
The beachie Girdle of the Ocean
Too wide for Neptunes
hippes; how Chances mocks
And Changes fill the Cuppe of Alteration
With
diuers Liquors. 'Tis not tenne yeeres gone,
Since Richard, and
Northumberland, great friends,
Did feast together; and in two yeeres
after,
Were they at Warres. It is but eight yeeres since,
This Percie was
the man, neerest my Soule,
Who, like a Brother, toyl'd in my Affaires,
And
layd his Loue and Life vnder my foot:
Yea, for my sake, euen to the eyes of
Richard
Gaue him defiance. But which of you was by
(You Cousin Neuil, as I
may remember)
When Richard, with his Eye, brim-full of Teares,
(Then
check'd, and rated by Northumberland)
Did speake these words (now prou'd a
Prophecie:)
Northumberland, thou Ladder, by the which
My Cousin
Bullingbrooke ascends my Throne:
(Though then, Heauen knowes, I had no such
intent,
But that necessitie so bow'd the State,
That I and Greatnesse were
compell'd to kisse:)
The Time shall come (thus did hee follow it)
The Time
will come, that foule Sinne gathering head,
Shall breake into Corruption: so
went on,
Fore-telling this same Times Condition,
And the diuision of our
Amitie
War. There is a Historie in all mens Liues,
Figuring the
nature of the Times deceas'd:
The which obseru'd, a man may prophecie
With
a neere ayme, of the maine chance of things,
As yet not come to Life, which
in their Seedes
And weake beginnings lye entreasured:
Such things become
the Hatch and Brood of Time;
And by the necessarie forme of this,
King
Richard might create a perfect guesse,
That great Northumberland, then false
to him,
Would of that Seed, grow to a greater falsenesse,
Which should not
finde a ground to roote vpon,
Vnlesse on you
King. Are these things then Necessities?
Then let vs meete
them like Necessities;
And that same word, euen now cryes out on vs:
They
say, the Bishop and Northumberland
Are fiftie thousand strong
War. It cannot be (my Lord:)
Rumor doth double, like the
Voice, and Eccho,
The numbers of the feared. Please it your Grace
To goe
to bed, vpon my Life (my Lord)
The Pow'rs that you alreadie haue sent
forth,
Shall bring this Prize in very easily.
To comfort you the more, I
haue receiu'd
A certaine instance, that Glendour is dead.
Your Maiestie
hath beene this fort-night ill,
And these vnseason'd howres perforce must
adde
Vnto your Sicknesse
King. I will take your counsaile:
And were these inward
Warres once out of hand,
Wee would (deare Lords) vnto the Holy-Land.
Exeunt.
Scena Secunda.
Enter Shallow and Silence: with Mouldie, Shadow, Wart,
Feeble,
Bull-calfe.
Shal. Come-on, come-on, come-on: giue mee your
Hand, Sir; giue mee
your Hand, Sir: an early stirrer, by
the Rood. And how doth my good Cousin
Silence?
Sil. Good-morrow, good Cousin Shallow
Shal. And how doth my Cousin, your Bed-fellow?
and your
fairest Daughter, and mine, my God-Daughter
Ellen?
Sil. Alas, a
blacke Ouzell (Cousin Shallow.)
Shal. By yea and nay, Sir. I dare say
my Cousin William
is become a good Scholler? hee is at Oxford still, is
hee
not?
Sil. Indeede Sir, to my cost
Shal. Hee must then to the Innes of Court shortly: I
was once
of Clements Inne; where (I thinke) they will
talke of mad Shallow yet
Sil. You were call'd lustie Shallow then (Cousin.)
Shal. I was call'd any thing: and I would haue done
any thing indeede too,
and roundly too. There was I, and
little Iohn Doit of Staffordshire, and
blacke George Bare,
and Francis Pick-bone, and Will Squele a Cotsal-man,
you
had not foure such Swindge-bucklers in all the Innes of
Court againe:
And I may say to you, wee knew where
the Bona-Roba's were, and had the best
of them all at
commandement. Then was Iacke Falstaffe (now Sir Iohn)
a
Boy, and Page to Thomas Mowbray, Duke of Norfolke
Sil. This Sir Iohn (Cousin) that comes hither anon
about
Souldiers?
Shal. The same Sir Iohn, the very same: I saw
him
breake Scoggan's Head at the Court-Gate, when hee was
a Crack, not
thus high: and the very same day did I fight
with one Sampson Stock-fish, a
Fruiterer, behinde Greyes-Inne.
Oh the mad dayes that I haue spent! and to
see
how many of mine olde Acquaintance are dead?
Sil. Wee shall all
follow (Cousin.)
Shal. Certaine: 'tis certaine: very sure, very
sure:
Death is certaine to all, all shall dye. How a good Yoke
of Bullocks
at Stamford Fayre?
Sil. Truly Cousin, I was not there
Shal. Death is certaine. Is old Double of your Towne
liuing
yet?
Sil. Dead, Sir
Shal. Dead? See, see: hee drew a good Bow: and
dead? hee shot
a fine shoote. Iohn of Gaunt loued
him well, and betted much Money on his
head. Dead?
hee would haue clapt in the Clowt at Twelue-score, and
carryed
you a fore-hand Shaft at foureteene, and foureteene
and a halfe, that it
would haue done a mans heart
good to see. How a score of Ewes now?
Sil. Thereafter as they be: a score of good Ewes
may be worth tenne
pounds
Shal. And is olde Double dead?
Enter Bardolph and his
Boy.
Sil. Heere come two of Sir Iohn Falstaffes Men (as
I
thinke.)
Shal. Good-morrow, honest Gentlemen
Bard. I beseech you, which is Iustice Shallow?
Shal. I
am Robert Shallow (Sir) a poore Esquire of this
Countie, and one of the Kings
Iustices of the Peace:
What is your good pleasure with me?
Bard. My
Captaine (Sir) commends him to you:
my Captaine, Sir Iohn Falstaffe: a tall
Gentleman, and a
most gallant Leader
Shal. Hee greetes me well: (Sir) I knew him a
good
Back-Sword-man. How doth the good Knight?
may I aske, how my Lady his Wife
doth?
Bard. Sir, pardon: a Souldier is better accommodated,
then
with a Wife
Shal. It is well said, Sir; and it is well said,
indeede,
too: Better accommodated? it is good, yea indeede is
it: good
phrases are surely, and euery where very commendable.
Accommodated, it comes
of Accommodo:
very good, a good Phrase
Bard. Pardon, Sir, I haue heard the word. Phrase
call you it?
by this Day, I know not the Phrase: but
I will maintaine the Word with my
Sword, to bee a
Souldier-like Word, and a Word of exceeding good
Command.
Accommodated: that is, when a man is
(as they say) accommodated: or, when a
man is, being
whereby he thought to be accommodated, which is an
excellent
thing.
Enter Falstaffe.
Shal. It is very iust: Looke, heere comes good Sir
Iohn. Giue me
your hand, giue me your Worships good
hand: Trust me, you looke well: and
beare your yeares
very well. Welcome, good Sir Iohn
Fal. I am glad to see you well, good M[aster]. Robert
Shallow:
Master Sure-card as I thinke?
Shal. No sir Iohn, it is my
Cosin Silence: in Commission
with mee
Fal. Good M[aster]. Silence, it well befits you should be
of
the peace
Sil. Your good Worship is welcome
Fal. Fye, this is hot weather (Gentlemen) haue you
prouided
me heere halfe a dozen of sufficient men?
Shal. Marry haue we sir:
Will you sit?
Fal. Let me see them, I beseech you
Shal. Where's the Roll? Where's the Roll? Where's
the Roll?
Let me see, let me see, let me see: so, so, so, so:
yea marry Sir. Raphe
Mouldie: let them appeare as I call:
let them do so, let them do so: Let mee
see, Where is
Mouldie?
Moul. Heere, if it please you
Shal. What thinke you (Sir Iohn) a good limb'd fellow:
yong,
strong, and of good friends
Fal. Is thy name Mouldie?
Moul. Yea, if it please
you
Fal. 'Tis the more time thou wert vs'd
Shal. Ha, ha, ha, most excellent. Things that are
mouldie,
lacke vse: very singular good. Well saide Sir Iohn,
very well
said
Fal. Pricke him
Moul. I was prickt well enough before, if you could
haue let
me alone: my old Dame will be vndone now, for
one to doe her Husbandry, and
her Drudgery; you need
not to haue prickt me, there are other men fitter to
goe
out, then I
Fal. Go too: peace Mouldie, you shall goe. Mouldie,
it is
time you were spent
Moul. Spent?
Shallow. Peace, fellow, peace; stand
aside: Know you
where you are? For the other sir Iohn: Let me see:
Simon
Shadow
Fal. I marry, let me haue him to sit vnder: he's like to
be a
cold souldier
Shal. Where's Shadow?
Shad. Heere sir
Fal. Shadow, whose sonne art thou?
Shad. My Mothers
sonne, Sir
Falst. Thy Mothers sonne: like enough, and thy
Fathers
shadow: so the sonne of the Female, is the shadow
of the Male: it
is often so indeede, but not of the Fathers
substance
Shal. Do you like him, sir Iohn?
Falst. Shadow will
serue for Summer: pricke him: For
wee haue a number of shadowes to fill vppe
the Muster-Booke
Shal. Thomas Wart?
Falst. Where's he?
Wart.
Heere sir
Falst. Is thy name Wart?
Wart. Yea sir
Fal. Thou art a very ragged Wart
Shal. Shall I pricke him downe,
Sir Iohn?
Falst. It
were superfluous: for his apparrel is built vpon
his backe, and the whole
frame stands vpon pins: prick
him no more
Shal. Ha, ha, ha, you can do it sir: you can doe it:
I
commend you well.
Francis Feeble
Feeble. Heere sir
Shal. What Trade art thou Feeble?
Feeble. A Womans
Taylor sir
Shal. Shall I pricke him, sir?
Fal. You may:
But if
he had beene a mans Taylor, he would haue prick'd
you. Wilt thou make as many
holes in an enemies Battaile,
as thou hast done in a Womans
petticote?
Feeble. I will doe my good will sir, you can haue
no
more
Falst. Well said, good Womans Tailour: Well sayde
Couragious
Feeble: thou wilt bee as valiant as the wrathfull
Doue, or most magnanimous
Mouse. Pricke the womans
Taylour well Master Shallow, deepe Maister
Shallow
Feeble. I would Wart might haue gone sir
Fal. I would thou wert a mans Tailor, that y might'st
mend
him, and make him fit to goe. I cannot put him to
a priuate souldier, that is
the Leader of so many thousands.
Let that suffice, most Forcible Feeble
Feeble. It shall suffice
Falst. I am bound to thee, reuerend Feeble. Who is
the
next?
Shal. Peter Bulcalfe of the Greene
Falst. Yea marry, let vs see Bulcalfe
Bul. Heere sir
Fal. Trust me, a likely Fellow. Come, pricke me Bulcalfe
till
he roare againe
Bul. Oh, good my Lord Captaine
Fal. What? do'st thou roare before th'art prickt
Bul. Oh sir, I am a diseased man
Fal. What disease hast thou?
Bul. A whorson cold sir,
a cough sir, which I caught
with Ringing in the Kings affayres, vpon his
Coronation
day, sir
Fal. Come, thou shalt go to the Warres in a Gowne:
we will
haue away thy Cold, and I will take such order,
that thy friends shall ring
for thee. Is heere all?
Shal. There is two more called then your
number:
you must haue but foure heere sir, and so I pray you go in
with me
to dinner
Fal. Come, I will goe drinke with you, but I cannot
tarry
dinner. I am glad to see you in good troth, Master
Shallow
Shal. O sir Iohn, doe you remember since wee lay all
night in
the Winde-mill, in S[aint]. Georges Field
Falstaffe. No more of that good Master Shallow: No
more of
that
Shal. Ha? it was a merry night. And is Iane
Nightworke
aliue?
Fal. She liues, M[aster]. Shallow
Shal. She neuer could away with me
Fal. Neuer, neuer: she would alwayes say shee could
not abide
M[aster]. Shallow
Shal. I could anger her to the heart: shee was then
a
Bona-Roba. Doth she hold her owne well
Fal. Old, old, M[aster]. Shallow
Shal. Nay, she must be old, she cannot choose but be
old:
certaine shee's old: and had Robin Night-worke, by
old Night-worke, before I
came to Clements Inne
Sil. That's fiftie fiue yeeres agoe
Shal. Hah, Cousin Silence, that thou hadst seene that,
that
this Knight and I haue seene: hah, Sir Iohn, said I
well?
Falst.
Wee haue heard the Chymes at mid-night, Master
Shallow
Shal. That wee haue, that wee haue; in faith, Sir Iohn,
wee
haue: our watch-word was, Hem-Boyes. Come,
let's to Dinner; come, let's to
Dinner: Oh the dayes that
wee haue seene. Come, come
Bul. Good Master Corporate Bardolph, stand my
friend, and
heere is foure Harry tenne shillings in French
Crownes for you: in very
truth, sir, I had as lief be hang'd
sir, as goe: and yet, for mine owne part,
sir, I do not care;
but rather, because I am vnwilling, and for mine
owne
part, haue a desire to stay with my friends: else, sir, I did
not
care, for mine owne part, so much
Bard. Go-too: stand aside
Mould. And good Master Corporall Captaine, for my
old Dames
sake, stand my friend: shee hath no body to
doe any thing about her, when I
am gone: and she is old,
and cannot helpe her selfe: you shall haue fortie,
sir
Bard. Go-too: stand aside
Feeble. I care not, a man can die but once: wee owe a
death.
I will neuer beare a base minde: if it be my destinie,
so: if it be not, so:
no man is too good to serue his
Prince: and let it goe which way it will, he
that dies this
yeere, is quit for the next
Bard. Well said, thou art a good fellow
Feeble. Nay, I will beare no base minde
Falst. Come sir, which men shall I haue?
Shal. Foure
of which you please
Bard. Sir, a word with you: I haue three pound, to
free
Mouldie and Bull-calfe
Falst. Go-too: well
Shal. Come, sir Iohn, which foure will you haue?
Falst. Doe you chuse for me
Shal. Marry then, Mouldie, Bull-calfe, Feeble, and
Shadow
Falst. Mouldie, and Bull-calfe: for you Mouldie, stay
at
home, till you are past seruice: and for your part, Bull-calfe,
grow till you
come vnto it: I will none of you
Shal. Sir Iohn, Sir Iohn, doe not your selfe wrong, they
are
your likelyest men, and I would haue you seru'd with
the best
Falst. Will you tell me (Master Shallow) how to chuse
a man?
Care I for the Limbe, the Thewes, the stature,
bulke, and bigge assemblance
of a man? giue mee the
spirit (Master Shallow.) Where's Wart? you see
what
a ragged appearance it is: hee shall charge you, and
discharge you,
with the motion of a Pewterers Hammer:
come off, and on, swifter then hee
that gibbets on
the Brewers Bucket. And this same halfe-fac'd
fellow,
Shadow, giue me this man: hee presents no marke to the
Enemie, the
foe-man may with as great ayme leuell at
the edge of a Pen-knife: and for a
Retrait, how swiftly
will this Feeble, the Womans Taylor, runne off. O,
giue
me the spare men, and spare me the great ones. Put me a
Calyuer into
Warts hand, Bardolph
Bard. Hold Wart, Trauerse: thus, thus, thus
Falst. Come, manage me your Calyuer: so: very well,
go-too,
very good, exceeding good. O, giue me alwayes
a little, leane, old, chopt,
bald Shot. Well said Wart, thou
art a good Scab: hold, there is a Tester for
thee
Shal. Hee is not his Crafts-master, hee doth not doe
it
right. I remember at Mile-end-Greene, when I lay
at Clements Inne, I was then
Sir Dagonet in Arthurs
Show: there was a little quiuer fellow, and hee
would
manage you his Peece thus: and hee would about,
and about, and come
you in, and come you in: Rah,
tah, tah, would hee say, Bownce would hee say,
and
away againe would hee goe, and againe would he come:
I shall neuer see
such a fellow
Falst. These fellowes will doe well, Master Shallow.
Farewell
Master Silence, I will not vse many wordes with
you: fare you well, Gentlemen
both: I thanke you:
I must a dozen mile to night. Bardolph, giue the
Souldiers
Coates
Shal. Sir Iohn, Heauen blesse you, and prosper your
Affaires,
and send vs Peace. As you returne, visit
my house. Let our old acquaintance
be renewed: peraduenture
I will with you to the Court
Falst. I would you would, Master Shallow
Shal. Go-too: I haue spoke at a word. Fare
you
well.
Enter.
Falst. Fare you well, gentle Gentlemen. On Bardolph,
leade the men
away. As I returne, I will fetch off
these Iustices: I doe see the bottome of
Iustice Shallow.
How subiect wee old men are to this vice of Lying?
This
same staru'd Iustice hath done nothing but
prate to me of the wildenesse of
his Youth, and the
Feates hee hath done about Turnball-street, and
euery
third word a Lye, duer pay'd to the hearer, then the
Turkes Tribute.
I doe remember him at Clements Inne,
like a man made after Supper, of a
Cheese-paring. When
hee was naked, hee was, for all the world, like a
forked
Radish, with a Head fantastically caru'd vpon it with a
Knife. Hee
was so forlorne, that his Dimensions (to
any thicke sight) were inuincible.
Hee was the very
Genius of Famine: hee came euer in the rere-ward of
the
Fashion: And now is this Vices Dagger become a
Squire, and talkes as
familiarly of Iohn of Gaunt, as if
hee had beene sworne Brother to him: and
Ile be sworne
hee neuer saw him but once in the Tilt-yard, and then
he
burst his Head, for crowding among the Marshals men.
I saw it, and told
Iohn of Gaunt, hee beat his owne
Name, for you might haue truss'd him and all
his Apparrell
into an Eele-skinne: the Case of a Treble Hoeboy
was a
Mansion for him: a Court: and now hath
hee Land, and Beeues. Well, I will be
acquainted with
him, if I returne: and it shall goe hard, but I will
make
him a Philosophers two Stones to me. If the young
Dace be a Bayt for
the old Pike, I see no reason, in the
Law of Nature, but I may snap at him.
Let time shape,
and there an end.
Exeunt.
Actus Quartus. Scena Prima.
Enter the Arch-bishop, Mowbray, Hastings, Westmerland,
Coleuile.
Bish. What is this Forrest call'd?
Hast. 'Tis Gaultree
Forrest, and't shall please your
Grace
Bish. Here stand (my Lords) and send discouerers forth,
To
know the numbers of our Enemies
Hast. Wee haue sent forth alreadie
Bish. 'Tis well done.
My Friends, and Brethren (in these
great Affaires)
I must acquaint you, that I haue receiu'd
New-dated
Letters from Northumberland:
Their cold intent, tenure, and substance
thus.
Here doth hee wish his Person, with such Powers
As might hold
sortance with his Qualitie,
The which hee could not leuie: whereupon
Hee
is retyr'd, to ripe his growing Fortunes,
To Scotland; and concludes in
heartie prayers,
That your Attempts may ouer-liue the hazard,
And
fearefull meeting of their Opposite
Mow. Thus do the hopes we haue in him, touch ground,
And dash
themselues to pieces.
Enter a Messenger.
Hast. Now? what newes?
Mess. West of this Forrest, scarcely
off a mile,
In goodly forme, comes on the Enemie:
And by the ground they
hide, I iudge their number
Vpon, or neere, the rate of thirtie thousand
Mow. The iust proportion that we gaue them out.
Let vs
sway-on, and face them in the field.
Enter Westmerland.
Bish. What well-appointed Leader fronts vs here?
Mow. I
thinke it is my Lord of Westmerland
West. Health, and faire greeting from our Generall,
The
Prince, Lord Iohn, and Duke of Lancaster
Bish. Say on (my Lord of Westmerland) in peace:
What doth
concerne your comming?
West. Then (my Lord)
Vnto your Grace doe I
in chiefe addresse
The substance of my Speech. If that Rebellion
Came like
it selfe, in base and abiect Routs,
Led on by bloodie Youth, guarded with
Rage,
And countenanc'd by Boyes, and Beggerie:
I say, if damn'd Commotion
so appeare,
In his true, natiue, and most proper shape,
You (Reuerend
Father, and these Noble Lords)
Had not beene here, to dresse the ougly
forme
Of base, and bloodie Insurrection,
With your faire Honors. You, Lord
Arch-bishop,
Whose Sea is by a Ciuill Peace maintain'd,
Whose Beard, the
Siluer Hand of Peace hath touch'd,
Whose Learning, and good Letters, Peace
hath tutor'd,
Whose white Inuestments figure Innocence,
The Doue, and very
blessed Spirit of Peace.
Wherefore doe you so ill translate your
selfe,
Out of the Speech of Peace, that beares such grace,
Into the harsh
and boystrous Tongue of Warre?
Turning your Bookes to Graues, your Inke to
Blood,
Your Pennes to Launces, and your Tongue diuine
To a lowd Trumpet,
and a Point of Warre
Bish. Wherefore doe I this? so the Question stands.
Briefely
to this end: Wee are all diseas'd,
And with our surfetting, and wanton
howres,
Haue brought our selues into a burning Feuer,
And wee must bleede
for it: of which Disease,
Our late King Richard (being infected) dy'd.
But
(my most Noble Lord of Westmerland)
I take not on me here as a
Physician,
Nor doe I, as an Enemie to Peace,
Troope in the Throngs of
Militarie men:
But rather shew a while like fearefull Warre,
To dyet ranke
Mindes, sicke of happinesse,
And purge th' obstructions, which begin to
stop
Our very Veines of Life: heare me more plainely.
I haue in equall
ballance iustly weigh'd,
What wrongs our Arms may do, what wrongs we
suffer,
And finde our Griefes heauier then our Offences.
Wee see which way
the streame of Time doth runne,
And are enforc'd from our most quiet
there,
By the rough Torrent of Occasion,
And haue the summarie of all our
Griefes
(When time shall serue) to shew in Articles;
Which long ere this,
wee offer'd to the King,
And might, by no Suit, gayne our Audience:
When
wee are wrong'd, and would vnfold our Griefes,
Wee are deny'd accesse vnto
his Person,
Euen by those men, that most haue done vs wrong.
The dangers
of the dayes but newly gone,
Whose memorie is written on the Earth
With
yet appearing blood; and the examples
Of euery Minutes instance (present
now)
Hath put vs in these ill-beseeming Armes:
Not to breake Peace, or any
Branch of it,
But to establish here a Peace indeede,
Concurring both in
Name and Qualitie
West. When euer yet was your Appeale deny'd?
Wherein haue you
beene galled by the King?
What Peere hath beene suborn'd, to grate on
you,
That you should seale this lawlesse bloody Booke
Of forg'd Rebellion,
with a Seale diuine?
Bish. My Brother generall, the
Common-wealth,
I make my Quarrell, in particular
West. There is no neede of any such redresse:
Or if there
were, it not belongs to you
Mow. Why not to him in part, and to vs all,
That feele the
bruizes of the dayes before,
And suffer the Condition of these Times
To
lay a heauie and vnequall Hand vpon our Honors?
West. O my good Lord
Mowbray,
Construe the Times to their Necessities,
And you shall say
(indeede) it is the Time,
And not the King, that doth you iniuries.
Yet
for your part, it not appeares to me,
Either from the King, or in the present
Time,
That you should haue an ynch of any ground
To build a Griefe on:
were you not restor'd
To all the Duke of Norfolkes Seignories,
Your Noble,
and right well-remembred Fathers?
Mow. What thing, in Honor, had my
Father lost,
That need to be reuiu'd, and breath'd in me?
The King that
lou'd him, as the State stood then,
Was forc'd, perforce compell'd to banish
him:
And then, that Henry Bullingbrooke and hee
Being mounted, and both
rowsed in their Seates,
Their neighing Coursers daring of the
Spurre,
Their armed Staues in charge, their Beauers downe,
Their eyes of
fire, sparkling through sights of Steele,
And the lowd Trumpet blowing them
together:
Then, then, when there was nothing could haue stay'd
My Father
from the Breast of Bullingbrooke;
O, when the King did throw his Warder
downe,
(His owne Life hung vpon the Staffe hee threw)
Then threw hee downe
himselfe, and all their Liues,
That by Indictment, and by dint of
Sword,
Haue since mis-carryed vnder Bullingbrooke
West. You speak (Lord Mowbray) now you know not what.
The
Earle of Hereford was reputed then
In England the most valiant
Gentleman.
Who knowes, on whom Fortune would then haue smil'd?
But if your
Father had beene Victor there,
Hee ne're had borne it out of Couentry.
For
all the Countrey, in a generall voyce,
Cry'd hate vpon him: and all their
prayers, and loue,
Were set on Herford, whom they doted on,
And bless'd,
and grac'd, and did more then the King.
But this is meere digression from my
purpose.
Here come I from our Princely Generall,
To know your Griefes; to
tell you, from his Grace,
That hee will giue you Audience: and wherein
It
shall appeare, that your demands are iust,
You shall enioy them, euery thing
set off,
That might so much as thinke you Enemies
Mow. But hee hath forc'd vs to compell this Offer,
And it
proceedes from Pollicy, not Loue
West. Mowbray, you ouer-weene to take it so:
This Offer comes
from Mercy, not from Feare.
For loe, within a Ken our Army lyes,
Vpon mine
Honor, all too confident
To giue admittance to a thought of feare.
Our
Battaile is more full of Names then yours,
Our Men more perfect in the vse of
Armes,
Our Armor all as strong, our Cause the best;
Then Reason will, our
hearts should be as good.
Say you not then, our Offer is compell'd
Mow. Well, by my will, wee shall admit no Parley
West. That argues but the shame of your offence:
A rotten
Case abides no handling
Hast. Hath the Prince Iohn a full Commission,
In very ample
vertue of his Father,
To heare, and absolutely to determine
Of what
Conditions wee shall stand vpon?
West. That is intended in the
Generals Name:
I muse you make so slight a Question
Bish. Then take (my Lord of Westmerland) this Schedule,
For
this containes our generall Grieuances:
Each seuerall Article herein
redress'd,
All members of our Cause, both here, and hence,
That are
insinewed to this Action,
Acquitted by a true substantiall forme,
And
present execution of our wills,
To vs, and to our purposes confin'd,
Wee
come within our awfull Banks againe,
And knit our Powers to the Arme of
Peace
West. This will I shew the Generall. Please you Lords,
In
sight of both our Battailes, wee may meete
At either end in peace: which
Heauen so frame,
Or to the place of difference call the Swords,
Which must
decide it
Bish. My Lord, wee will doe so
Mow. There is a thing within my Bosome tells me,
That no
Conditions of our Peace can stand
Hast. Feare you not, that if wee can make our Peace
Vpon such
large termes, and so absolute,
As our Conditions shall consist vpon,
Our
Peace shall stand as firme as Rockie Mountaines
Mow. I, but our valuation shall be such,
That euery slight,
and false-deriued Cause,
Yea, euery idle, nice, and wanton Reason,
Shall,
to the King, taste of this Action:
That were our Royall faiths, Martyrs in
Loue,
Wee shall be winnowed with so rough a winde,
That euen our Corne
shall seeme as light as Chaffe,
And good from bad finde no partition
Bish. No, no (my Lord) note this: the King is wearie
Of
daintie, and such picking Grieuances:
For hee hath found, to end one doubt by
Death,
Reuiues two greater in the Heires of Life.
And therefore will hee
wipe his Tables cleane,
And keepe no Tell-tale to his Memorie,
That may
repeat, and Historie his losse,
To new remembrance. For full well hee
knowes,
Hee cannot so precisely weede this Land,
As his mis-doubts present
occasion:
His foes are so en-rooted with his friends,
That plucking to
vnfixe an Enemie,
Hee doth vnfasten so, and shake a friend.
So that this
Land, like an offensiue wife,
That hath enrag'd him on, to offer
strokes,
As he is striking, holds his Infant vp,
And hangs resolu'd
Correction in the Arme,
That was vprear'd to execution
Hast. Besides, the King hath wasted all his Rods,
On late
Offenders, that he now doth lacke
The very Instruments of Chasticement:
So
that his power, like to a Fanglesse Lion
May offer, but not hold
Bish. 'Tis very true:
And therefore be assur'd (my good Lord
Marshal)
If we do now make our attonement well,
Our Peace, will (like a
broken Limbe vnited)
Grow stronger, for the breaking
Mow. Be it so:
Heere is return'd my Lord of
Westmerland.
Enter Westmerland.
West. The Prince is here at hand: pleaseth your Lordship
To meet
his Grace, iust distance 'tweene our Armies?
Mow. Your Grace of Yorke,
in heauen's name then
forward
Bish. Before, and greet his Grace (my Lord) we come.
Enter
Prince Iohn.
Iohn. You are wel encountred here (my cosin Mowbray)
Good day to
you, gentle Lord Archbishop,
And so to you Lord Hastings, and to all.
My
Lord of Yorke, it better shew'd with you,
When that your Flocke (assembled by
the Bell)
Encircled you, to heare with reuerence
Your exposition on the
holy Text,
Then now to see you heere an Iron man
Chearing a rowt of Rebels
with your Drumme,
Turning the Word, to Sword; and Life to death:
That man
that sits within a Monarches heart,
And ripens in the Sunne-shine of his
fauor,
Would hee abuse the Countenance of the King,
Alack, what Mischiefes
might hee set abroach,
In shadow of such Greatnesse? With you, Lord
Bishop,
It is euen so. Who hath not heard it spoken,
How deepe you were
within the Bookes of Heauen?
To vs, the Speaker in his Parliament;
To vs,
th' imagine Voyce of Heauen it selfe:
The very Opener, and
Intelligencer,
Betweene the Grace, the Sanctities of Heauen;
And our dull
workings. O, who shall beleeue,
But you mis-vse the reuerence of your
Place,
Employ the Countenance, and Grace of Heauen,
As a false Fauorite
doth his Princes Name,
In deedes dis-honorable? You haue taken vp,
Vnder
the counterfeited Zeale of Heauen,
The Subiects of Heauens Substitute, my
Father,
And both against the Peace of Heauen, and him,
Haue here
vp-swarmed them
Bish. Good my Lord of Lancaster,
I am not here against your
Fathers Peace:
But (as I told my Lord of Westmerland)
The Time
(mis-order'd) doth in common sence
Crowd vs, and crush vs, to this monstrous
Forme,
To hold our safetie vp. I sent your Grace
The parcels, and
particulars of our Griefe,
The which hath been with scorne shou'd from the
Court:
Whereon this Hydra-Sonne of Warre is borne,
Whose dangerous eyes
may well be charm'd asleepe,
With graunt of our most iust and right
desires;
And true Obedience, of this Madnesse cur'd,
Stoope tamely to the
foot of Maiestie
Mow. If not, wee readie are to trye our fortunes,
To the last
man
Hast. And though wee here fall downe,
Wee haue Supplyes, to
second our Attempt:
If they mis-carry, theirs shall second them.
And so,
successe of Mischiefe shall be borne,
And Heire from Heire shall hold this
Quarrell vp,
Whiles England shall haue generation
Iohn. You are too shallow (Hastings)
Much too shallow,
To
sound the bottome of the after-Times
West. Pleaseth your Grace, to answere them directly,
How
farre-forth you doe like their Articles
Iohn. I like them all, and doe allow them well:
And sweare
here, by the honor of my blood,
My Fathers purposes haue beene
mistooke,
And some, about him, haue too lauishly
Wrested his meaning, and
Authoritie.
My Lord, these Griefes shall be with speed redrest:
Vpon my
Life, they shall. If this may please you,
Discharge your Powers vnto their
seuerall Counties,
As wee will ours: and here, betweene the Armies,
Let's
drinke together friendly, and embrace,
That all their eyes may beare those
Tokens home,
Of our restored Loue, and Amitie
Bish. I take your Princely word, for these redresses
Iohn. I giue it you, and will maintaine my word:
And
thereupon I drinke vnto your Grace
Hast. Goe Captaine, and deliuer to the Armie
This newes of
Peace: let them haue pay, and part:
I know, it will well please them.
High
thee Captaine.
Enter.
Bish. To you, my Noble Lord of Westmerland
West. I pledge your Grace:
And if you knew what paines I haue
bestow'd,
To breede this present Peace,
You would drinke freely: but my
loue to ye,
Shall shew it selfe more openly hereafter
Bish. I doe not doubt you
West. I am glad of it.
Health to my Lord, and gentle Cousin
Mowbray
Mow. You wish me health in very happy season,
For I am, on
the sodaine, something ill
Bish. Against ill Chances, men are euer merry,
But heauinesse
fore-runnes the good euent
West. Therefore be merry (Cooze) since sodaine sorrow
Serues
to say thus: some good thing comes to morrow
Bish. Beleeue me, I am passing light in spirit
Mow. So much the worse, if your owne Rule be true
Iohn. The word of Peace is render'd: hearke how
they
showt
Mow. This had been chearefull, after Victorie
Bish. A Peace is of the nature of a Conquest:
For then both
parties nobly are subdu'd,
And neither partie looser
Iohn. Goe (my Lord)
And let our Army be discharged
too:
And good my Lord (so please you) let our Traines
March by vs, that
wee may peruse the men
Enter.
Wee should haue coap'd withall
Bish. Goe, good Lord Hastings:
And ere they be dismiss'd, let
them march by.
Enter.
Iohn. I trust (Lords) wee shall lye to night together.
Enter
Westmerland.
Now Cousin, wherefore stands our Army still?
West. The Leaders
hauing charge from you to stand,
Will not goe off, vntill they heare you
speake
Iohn. They know their duties.
Enter Hastings.
Hast. Our Army is dispers'd:
Like youthfull Steeres, vnyoak'd, they
tooke their course
East, West, North, South: or like a Schoole, broke
vp,
Each hurryes towards his home, and sporting place
West. Good tidings (my Lord Hastings) for the which,
I doe
arrest thee (Traytor) of high Treason:
And you Lord Arch-bishop, and you Lord
Mowbray,
Of Capitall Treason, I attach you both
Mow. Is this proceeding iust, and honorable?
West. Is
your Assembly so?
Bish. Will you thus breake your faith?
Iohn. I pawn'd thee none:
I promis'd you redresse of these same
Grieuances
Whereof you did complaine; which, by mine Honor,
I will
performe, with a most Christian care.
But for you (Rebels) looke to taste the
due
Meet for Rebellion, and such Acts as yours.
Most shallowly did you
these Armes commence,
Fondly brought here, and foolishly sent
hence.
Strike vp our Drummes, pursue the scatter'd stray,
Heauen, and not
wee, haue safely fought to day.
Some guard these Traitors to the Block of
Death,
Treasons true Bed, and yeelder vp of breath.
Exeunt.
Enter Falstaffe and Colleuile.
Falst. What's your Name, Sir? of what Condition are
you? and of
what place, I pray?
Col. I am a Knight, Sir:
And my Name is
Colleuile of the Dale
Falst. Well then, Colleuile is your Name, a Knight is
your
Degree, and your Place, the Dale. Colleuile shall
still be your Name, a
Traytor your Degree, and the Dungeon
your Place, a place deepe enough: so
shall you be
still Colleuile of the Dale
Col. Are not you Sir Iohn Falstaffe?
Falst. As good a
man as he sir, who ere I am: doe yee
yeelde sir, or shall I sweate for you?
if I doe sweate, they
are the drops of thy Louers, and they weep for thy
death,
therefore rowze vp Feare and Trembling, and do obseruance
to my
mercy
Col. I thinke you are Sir Iohn Falstaffe, & in that
thought
yeeld me
Fal. I haue a whole Schoole of tongues in this belly of
mine,
and not a Tongue of them all, speakes anie other
word but my name: and I had
but a belly of any indifferencie,
I were simply the most actiue fellow in
Europe:
my wombe, my wombe, my wombe vndoes mee. Heere
comes our
Generall.
Enter Prince Iohn, and Westmerland.
Iohn. The heat is past, follow no farther now:
Call in the Powers,
good Cousin Westmerland.
Now Falstaffe, where haue you beene all this
while?
When euery thing is ended, then you come.
These tardie Tricks of
yours will (on my life)
One time, or other, breake some Gallowes back
Falst. I would bee sorry (my Lord) but it should bee
thus: I
neuer knew yet, but rebuke and checke was the
reward of Valour. Doe you
thinke me a Swallow, an Arrow,
or a Bullet? Haue I, in my poore and olde
Motion,
the expedition of Thought? I haue speeded hither with
the very
extremest ynch of possibilitie. I haue fowndred
nine score and odde Postes:
and heere (trauell-tainted
as I am) haue, in my pure and immaculate Valour,
taken
Sir Iohn Colleuile of the Dale, a most furious Knight, and
valorous
Enemie: But what of that? hee saw mee, and
yeelded: that I may iustly say
with the hooke-nos'd
fellow of Rome, I came, saw, and ouer-came
Iohn. It was more of his Courtesie, then your deseruing
Falst. I know not: heere hee is, and heere I yeeld
him: and I
beseech your Grace, let it be book'd, with
the rest of this dayes deedes; or
I sweare, I will haue it
in a particular Ballad, with mine owne Picture on
the top
of it (Colleuile kissing my foot:) To the which course, if
I be
enforc'd, if you do not all shew like gilt two-pences
to me; and I, in the
cleare Skie of Fame, o're-shine you
as much as the Full Moone doth the
Cynders of the Element
(which shew like Pinnes-heads to her) beleeue
not
the Word of the Noble: therefore let mee haue right,
and let desert
mount
Iohn. Thine's too heauie to mount
Falst. Let it shine then
Iohn. Thine's too thick to shine
Falst. Let it doe something (my good Lord) that may
doe me
good, and call it what you will
Iohn. Is thy Name Colleuile?
Col. It is (my
Lord.)
Iohn. A famous Rebell art thou, Colleuile
Falst. And a famous true Subiect tooke him
Col. I am (my Lord) but as my Betters are,
That led me
hither: had they beene rul'd by me,
You should haue wonne them dearer then
you haue
Falst. I know not how they sold themselues, but thou
like a
kinde fellow, gau'st thy selfe away; and I thanke
thee, for thee.
Enter
Westmerland.
Iohn. Haue you left pursuit?
West. Retreat is made, and
Execution stay'd
Iohn. Send Colleuile, with his Confederates,
To Yorke, to
present Execution.
Blunt, leade him hence, and see you guard him sure.
Exit with Colleuile.
And now dispatch we toward the Court (my Lords)
I heare the King, my
Father, is sore sicke.
Our Newes shall goe before vs, to his
Maiestie,
Which (Cousin) you shall beare, to comfort him:
And wee with
sober speede will follow you
Falst. My Lord, I beseech you, giue me leaue to goe
through
Gloucestershire: and when you come to Court,
stand my good Lord, 'pray, in
your good report
Iohn. Fare you well, Falstaffe: I, in my condition,
Shall
better speake of you, then you deserue.
Enter.
Falst. I would you had but the wit: 'twere better
then your
Dukedome. Good faith, this same young sober-blooded
Boy doth not loue me, nor
a man cannot
make him laugh: but that's no maruaile, hee drinkes no
Wine.
There's neuer any of these demure Boyes come
to any proofe: for thinne Drinke
doth so ouer-coole
their blood, and making many Fish-Meales, that
they
fall into a kinde of Male Greene-sicknesse: and then,
when they
marry, they get Wenches. They are generally
Fooles, and Cowards; which some
of vs should be too,
but for inflamation. A good Sherris-Sack hath a
two-fold
operation in it: it ascends me into the Braine, dryes
me there
all the foolish, and dull, and cruddie Vapours,
which enuiron it: makes it
apprehensiue, quicke, forgetiue,
full of nimble, fierie, and delectable
shapes; which
deliuer'd o're to the Voyce, the Tongue, which is the
Birth,
becomes excellent Wit. The second propertie of
your excellent Sherris, is,
the warming of the Blood:
which before (cold, and setled) left the Liuer
white, and
pale; which is the Badge of Pusillanimitie, and Cowardize:
but
the Sherris warmes it, and makes it course
from the inwards, to the parts
extremes: it illuminateth
the Face, which (as a Beacon) giues warning to all
the
rest of this little Kingdome (Man) to Arme: and then
the Vitall
Commoners, and in-land pettie Spirits, muster
me all to their Captaine, the
Heart; who great, and pufft
vp with his Retinue, doth any Deed of Courage:
and this
Valour comes of Sherris. So, that skill in the Weapon
is nothing,
without Sack (for that sets it a-worke:) and
Learning, a meere Hoord of Gold,
kept by a Deuill, till
Sack commences it, and sets it in act, and vse.
Hereof
comes it, that Prince Harry is valiant: for the cold blood
hee did
naturally inherite of his Father, hee hath, like
leane, stirrill, and bare
Land, manured, husbanded, and
tyll'd, with excellent endeauour of drinking
good, and
good store of fertile Sherris, that hee is become very hot,
and
valiant. If I had a thousand Sonnes, the first Principle
I would teach them,
should be to forsweare thinne Potations,
and to addict themselues to
Sack.
Enter Bardolph.
How now Bardolph?
Bard. The Armie is discharged all, and gone
Falst. Let them goe: Ile through Gloucestershire,
and there
will I visit Master Robert Shallow, Esquire: I
haue him alreadie tempering
betweene my finger and my
thombe, and shortly will I seale with him. Come
away.
Exeunt.
Scena Secunda.
Enter King, Warwicke, Clarence, Gloucester.
King. Now Lords, if Heauen doth giue successefull end
To this
Debate, that bleedeth at our doores,
Wee will our Youth lead on to higher
Fields,
And draw no Swords, but what are sanctify'd.
Our Nauie is
addressed, our Power collected,
Our Substitutes, in absence, well
inuested,
And euery thing lyes leuell to our wish;
Onely wee want a little
personall Strength:
And pawse vs, till these Rebels, now a-foot,
Come
vnderneath the yoake of Gouernment
War. Both which we doubt not, but your Maiestie
Shall soone
enioy
King. Humphrey (my Sonne of Gloucester) where is
the Prince,
your Brother?
Glo. I thinke hee's gone to hunt (my Lord) at
Windsor
King. And how accompanied?
Glo. I doe not know (my
Lord.)
King. Is not his Brother, Thomas of Clarence,
with
him?
Glo. No (my good Lord) hee is in presence heere
Clar. What would my Lord, and Father?
King. Nothing
but well to thee, Thomas of Clarence.
How chance thou art not with the
Prince, thy Brother?
Hee loues thee, and thou do'st neglect him
(Thomas.)
Thou hast a better place in his Affection,
Then all thy
Brothers: cherish it (my Boy)
And Noble Offices thou may'st effect
Of
Mediation (after I am dead)
Betweene his Greatnesse, and thy other
Brethren.
Therefore omit him not: blunt not his Loue,
Nor loose the good
aduantage of his Grace,
By seeming cold, or carelesse of his will.
For hee
is gracious, if hee be obseru'd:
Hee hath a Teare for Pitie, and a
Hand
Open (as Day) for melting Charitie:
Yet notwithstanding, being
incens'd, hee's Flint,
As humorous as Winter, and as sudden,
As Flawes
congealed in the Spring of day.
His temper therefore must be well
obseru'd:
Chide him for faults, and doe it reuerently,
When you perceiue
his blood enclin'd to mirth:
But being moodie, giue him Line, and
scope,
Till that his passions (like a Whale on ground)
Confound themselues
with working. Learne this Thomas,
And thou shalt proue a shelter to thy
friends,
A Hoope of Gold, to binde thy Brothers in:
That the vnited
Vessell of their Blood
(Mingled with Venome of Suggestion,
As force,
perforce, the Age will powre it in)
Shall neuer leake, though it doe worke as
strong
As Aconitum, or rash Gun-powder
Clar. I shall obserue him with all care, and loue
King. Why art thou not at Windsor with him (Thomas?)
Clar. Hee is not there to day: hee dines in London
King. And how accompanyed? Canst thou tell
that?
Clar. With Pointz, and other his continuall followers
King. Most subiect is the fattest Soyle to Weedes:
And hee
(the Noble Image of my Youth)
Is ouer-spread with them: therefore my
griefe
Stretches it selfe beyond the howre of death.
The blood weepes from
my heart, when I doe shape
(In formes imaginarie) th' vnguided Dayes,
And
rotten Times, that you shall looke vpon,
When I am sleeping with my
Ancestors.
For when his head-strong Riot hath no Curbe,
When Rage and
hot-Blood are his Counsailors,
When Meanes and lauish Manners meete
together;
Oh, with what Wings shall his Affections flye
Towards fronting
Perill, and oppos'd Decay?
War. My gracious Lord, you looke beyond him
quite:
The Prince but studies his Companions,
Like a strange Tongue:
wherein, to gaine the Language,
'Tis needfull, that the most immodest
word
Be look'd vpon, and learn'd: which once attayn'd,
Your Highnesse
knowes, comes to no farther vse,
But to be knowne, and hated. So, like grosse
termes,
The Prince will, in the perfectnesse of time,
Cast off his
followers: and their memorie
Shall as a Patterne, or a Measure, liue,
By
which his Grace must mete the liues of others,
Turning past-euills to
aduantages
King. 'Tis seldome, when the Bee doth leaue her Combe
In the
dead Carrion.
Enter Westmerland.
Who's heere? Westmerland?
West. Health to my Soueraigne, and new
happinesse
Added to that, that I am to deliuer.
Prince Iohn, your Sonne,
doth kisse your Graces Hand:
Mowbray, the Bishop, Scroope, Hastings, and
all,
Are brought to the Correction of your Law.
There is not now a Rebels
Sword vnsheath'd,
But Peace puts forth her Oliue euery where:
The manner
how this Action hath beene borne,
Here (at more leysure) may your Highnesse
reade,
With euery course, in his particular
King. O Westmerland, thou art a Summer Bird,
Which euer in
the haunch of Winter sings
The lifting vp of day.
Enter Harcourt.
Looke, heere's more newes
Harc. From Enemies, Heauen keepe your Maiestie:
And when they
stand against you, may they fall,
As those that I am come to tell you
of.
The Earle Northumberland, and the Lord Bardolfe,
With a great Power of
English, and of Scots,
Are by the Sherife of Yorkeshire ouerthrowne:
The
manner, and true order of the fight,
This Packet (please it you) containes at
large
King. And wherefore should these good newes
Make me
sicke?
Will Fortune neuer come with both hands full,
But write her faire
words still in foulest Letters?
Shee eyther giues a Stomack, and no
Foode,
(Such are the poore, in health) or else a Feast,
And takes away the
Stomack (such are the Rich,
That haue aboundance, and enioy it not.)
I
should reioyce now, at this happy newes,
And now my Sight fayles, and my
Braine is giddie.
O me, come neere me, now I am much ill
Glo. Comfort your Maiestie
Cla. Oh, my Royall Father
West. My Soueraigne Lord, cheare vp your selfe, looke
vp
War. Be patient (Princes) you doe know, these Fits
Are with
his Highnesse very ordinarie.
Stand from him, giue him ayre:
Hee'le
straight be well
Clar. No, no, hee cannot long hold out: these pangs,
Th'
incessant care, and labour of his Minde,
Hath wrought the Mure, that should
confine it in,
So thinne, that Life lookes through, and will breake out
Glo. The people feare me: for they doe obserue
Vnfather'd
Heires, and loathly Births of Nature:
The Seasons change their manners, as
the Yeere
Had found some Moneths asleepe, and leap'd them ouer
Clar. The Riuer hath thrice flow'd, no ebbe betweene:
And the
old folke (Times doting Chronicles)
Say it did so, a little time
before
That our great Grand-sire Edward sick'd, and dy'de
War. Speake lower (Princes) for the King recouers
Glo. This Apoplexie will (certaine) be his end
King. I pray you take me vp, and beare me hence
Into some
other Chamber: softly 'pray.
Let there be no noyse made (my gentle
friends)
Vnlesse some dull and fauourable hand
Will whisper Musicke to my
wearie Spirit
War. Call for the Musicke in the other Roome
King. Set me the Crowne vpon my Pillow here
Clar. His eye is hollow, and hee changes much
War. Lesse noyse, lesse noyse.
Enter Prince Henry.
P.Hen. Who saw the Duke of Clarence?
Clar. I am here
(Brother) full of heauinesse
P.Hen. How now? Raine within doores, and none
abroad? How
doth the King?
Glo. Exceeding ill
P.Hen. Heard hee the good newes yet?
Tell it him
Glo. Hee alter'd much, vpon the hearing it
P.Hen. If hee be sicke with Ioy,
Hee'le recouer without
Physicke
War. Not so much noyse (my Lords)
Sweet Prince speake
lowe,
The King, your Father, is dispos'd to sleepe
Clar. Let vs with-draw into the other Roome
War. Wil't please your Grace to goe along with vs?
P.Hen. No: I will sit, and watch here, by the King.
Why doth the Crowne lye
there, vpon his Pillow,
Being so troublesome a Bed-fellow?
O pollish'd
Perturbation! Golden Care!
That keep'st the Ports of Slumber open wide,
To
many a watchfull Night: sleepe with it now,
Yet not so sound, and halfe so
deepely sweete,
As hee whose Brow (with homely Biggen bound)
Snores out
the Watch of Night. O Maiestie!
When thou do'st pinch thy Bearer, thou do'st
sit
Like a rich Armor, worne in heat of day,
That scald'st with safetie:
by his Gates of breath,
There lyes a dowlney feather, which stirres
not:
Did hee suspire, that light and weightlesse dowlne
Perforce must
moue. My gracious Lord, my Father,
This sleepe is sound indeede: this is a
sleepe,
That from this Golden Rigoll hath diuorc'd
So many English Kings.
Thy due, from me,
Is Teares, and heauie Sorrowes of the Blood,
Which
Nature, Loue, and filiall tendernesse,
Shall (O deare Father) pay thee
plenteously.
My due, from thee, is this Imperiall Crowne,
Which (as
immediate from thy Place, and Blood)
Deriues it selfe to me. Loe, heere it
sits,
Which Heauen shall guard:
And put the worlds whole strength into one
gyant Arme,
It shall not force this Lineall Honor from me.
This, from
thee, will I to mine leaue,
As 'tis left to me.
Enter.
Enter Warwicke, Gloucester, Clarence.
King. Warwicke, Gloucester, Clarence
Clar. Doth the King call?
War. What would your
Maiestie? how fares your
Grace?
King. Why did you leaue me here
alone (my Lords?)
Cla. We left the Prince (my Brother) here (my
Liege)
Who vndertooke to sit and watch by you
King. The Prince of Wales? where is hee? let mee
see him
War. This doore is open, hee is gone this way
Glo. Hee came not through the Chamber where wee
stayd
King. Where is the Crowne? who tooke it from
my
Pillow?
War. When wee with-drew (my Liege) wee left
it
heere
King. The Prince hath ta'ne it hence:
Goe seeke him
out.
Is hee so hastie, that hee doth suppose
My sleepe, my death? Finde
him (my Lord of Warwick)
Chide him hither: this part of his conioynes
With
my disease, and helpes to end me.
See Sonnes, what things you are:
How
quickly Nature falls into reuolt,
When Gold becomes her Obiect?
For this,
the foolish ouer-carefull Fathers
Haue broke their sleepes with
thoughts,
Their braines with care, their bones with industry.
For this,
they haue ingrossed and pyl'd vp
The canker'd heapes of strange-atchieued
Gold:
For this, they haue beene thoughtfull, to inuest
Their Sonnes with
Arts, and Martiall Exercises:
When, like the Bee, culling from euery
flower
The vertuous Sweetes, our Thighes packt with Wax,
Our Mouthes with
Honey, wee bring it to the Hiue;
And like the Bees, are murthered for our
paines.
This bitter taste yeelds his engrossements,
To the ending
Father.
Enter Warwicke.
Now, where is hee, that will not stay so long,
Till his Friend Sicknesse
hath determin'd me?
War. My Lord, I found the Prince in the next
Roome,
Washing with kindly Teares his gentle Cheekes,
With such a deepe
demeanure, in great sorrow,
That Tyranny, which neuer quafft but
blood,
Would (by beholding him) haue wash'd his Knife
With gentle
eye-drops. Hee is comming hither
King. But wherefore did hee take away the Crowne?
Enter
Prince Henry.
Loe, where hee comes. Come hither to me (Harry.)
Depart the Chamber, leaue
vs heere alone.
Enter.
P.Hen. I neuer thought to heare you speake againe
King. Thy wish was Father (Harry) to that thought:
I stay too
long by thee, I wearie thee.
Do'st thou so hunger for my emptie
Chayre,
That thou wilt needes inuest thee with mine Honors,
Before thy
howre be ripe? O foolish Youth!
Thou seek'st the Greatnesse, that will
ouer-whelme thee.
Stay but a little: for my Cloud of Dignitie
Is held from
falling, with so weake a winde,
That it will quickly drop: my Day is
dimme.
Thou hast stolne that, which after some few howres
Were thine,
without offence: and at my death
Thou hast seal'd vp my expectation.
Thy
Life did manifest, thou lou'dst me not,
And thou wilt haue me dye assur'd of
it.
Thou hid'st a thousand Daggers in thy thoughts,
Which thou hast
whetted on thy stonie heart,
To stab at halfe an howre of my Life.
What?
canst thou not forbeare me halfe an howre?
Then get thee gone, and digge my
graue thy selfe,
And bid the merry Bels ring to thy eare
That thou art
Crowned, not that I am dead.
Let all the Teares, that should bedew my
Hearse
Be drops of Balme, to sanctifie thy head:
Onely compound me with
forgotten dust.
Giue that, which gaue thee life, vnto the Wormes:
Plucke
downe my Officers, breake my Decrees;
For now a time is come, to mocke at
Forme.
Henry the fift is Crown'd: Vp Vanity,
Downe Royall State: All you
sage Counsailors, hence:
And to the English Court, assemble now
From eu'ry
Region, Apes of Idlenesse.
Now neighbor-Confines, purge you of your
Scum:
Haue you a Ruffian that will sweare? drinke? dance?
Reuell the
night? Rob? Murder? and commit
The oldest sinnes, the newest kinde of
wayes?
Be happy, he will trouble you no more:
England, shall double
gill'd, his trebble guilt.
England, shall giue him Office, Honor,
Might:
For the Fift Harry, from curb'd License pluckes
The muzzle of
Restraint; and the wilde Dogge
Shall flesh his tooth in euery Innocent.
O
my poore Kingdome (sicke, with ciuill blowes)
When that my Care could not
with-hold thy Ryots,
What wilt thou do, when Ryot is thy Care?
O, thou
wilt be a Wildernesse againe,
Peopled with Wolues (thy old
Inhabitants.)
Prince. O pardon me (my Liege)
But for my
Teares,
The most Impediments vnto my Speech,
I had fore-stall'd this
deere, and deepe Rebuke,
Ere you (with greefe) had spoke, and I had
heard
The course of it so farre. There is your Crowne,
And he that weares
the Crowne immortally,
Long guard it yours. If I affect it more,
Then as
your Honour, and as your Renowne,
Let me no more from this Obedience
rise,
Which my most true, and inward duteous Spirit
Teacheth this
prostrate, and exteriour bending.
Heauen witnesse with me, when I heere came
in,
And found no course of breath within your Maiestie,
How cold it
strooke my heart. If I do faine,
O let me, in my present wildenesse,
dye,
And neuer liue, to shew th' incredulous World,
The Noble change that
I haue purposed.
Comming to looke on you, thinking you dead,
(And dead
almost (my Liege) to thinke you were)
I spake vnto the Crowne (as hauing
sense)
And thus vpbraided it. The Care on thee depending,
Hath fed vpon
the body of my Father,
Therefore, thou best of Gold, art worst of
Gold.
Other, lesse fine in Charract, is more precious,
Preseruing life, in
Med'cine potable:
But thou, most Fine, most Honour'd, most Renown'd,
Hast
eate the Bearer vp.
Thus (my Royall Liege)
Accusing it, I put it on my
Head,
To try with it (as with an Enemie,
That had before my face murdred
my Father)
The Quarrell of a true Inheritor.
But if it did infect my blood
with Ioy,
Or swell my Thoughts, to any straine of Pride,
If any Rebell, or
vaine spirit of mine,
Did, with the least Affection of a Welcome,
Giue
entertainment to the might of it,
Let heauen, for euer, keepe it from my
head,
And make me, as the poorest Vassaile is,
That doth with awe, and
terror kneele to it
King. O my Sonne!
Heauen put it in thy minde to take it
hence,
That thou might'st ioyne the more, thy Fathers loue,
Pleading so
wisely, in excuse of it.
Come hither Harrie, sit thou by my bedde,
And
heare (I thinke, the very latest Counsell
That euer I shall breath: Heauen
knowes, my Sonne)
By what by-pathes, and indirect crook'd-wayes
I met this
Crowne: and I my selfe know well
How troublesome it sate vpon my head.
To
thee, it shall descend with better Quiet,
Better Opinion, better
Confirmation:
For all the soyle of the Atchieuement goes
With me, into the
Earth. It seem'd in mee,
But as an Honour snatch'd with boyst'rous
hand,
And I had many liuing, to vpbraide
My gaine of it, by their
Assistances,
Which dayly grew to Quarrell, and to Blood-shed,
Wounding
supposed Peace.
All these bold Feares,
Thou seest (with perill) I haue
answered:
For all my Reigne, hath beene but as a Scene
Acting that
argument. And now my death
Changes the Moode: For what in me, was
purchas'd,
Falles vpon thee, in a more Fayrer sort.
So thou, the Garland
wear'st successiuely.
Yet, though thou stand'st more sure, then I could
do,
Thou art not firme enough, since greefes are greene:
And all thy
Friends, which thou must make thy Friends
Haue but their stings, and teeth,
newly tak'n out,
By whose fell working, I was first aduanc'd,
And by whose
power, I well might lodge a Feare
To be againe displac'd. Which to
auoyd,
I cut them off: and had a purpose now
To leade out many to the Holy
Land;
Least rest, and lying still, might make them looke
Too neere vnto my
State.
Therefore (my Harrie)
Be it thy course to busie giddy
Mindes
With Forraigne Quarrels: that Action hence borne out,
May waste the
memory of the former dayes.
More would I, but my Lungs are wasted so,
That
strength of Speech it vtterly deni'de mee.
How I came by the Crowne, O heauen
forgiue:
And grant it may, with thee, in true peace liue
Prince. My gracious Liege:
You wonne it, wore it: kept it,
gaue it me,
Then plaine and right must my possession be;
Which I, with
more, then with a Common paine,
'Gainst all the World, will rightfully
maintaine.
Enter Lord Iohn of Lancaster, and Warwicke.
King. Looke, looke,
Heere comes my Iohn of Lancaster:
Iohn. Health, Peace, and Happinesse,
To my Royall Father
King. Thou bring'st me happinesse and Peace
(Sonne
Iohn:)
But health (alacke) with youthfull wings is flowne
From this bare,
wither'd Trunke. Vpon thy sight
My worldly businesse makes a period.
Where
is my Lord of Warwicke?
Prin. My Lord of Warwicke
King. Doth any name particular, belong
Vnto the Lodging,
where I first did swoon'd?
War. 'Tis call'd Ierusalem, my Noble
Lord
King. Laud be to heauen:
Euen there my life must end.
It
hath beene prophesi'de to me many yeares,
I should not dye, but in
Ierusalem:
Which (vainly) I suppos'd the Holy-Land.
But beare me to that
Chamber, there Ile lye:
In that Ierusalem, shall Harry dye.
Exeunt.
Actus Quintus. Scoena Prima.
Enter Shallow, Silence, Falstaffe, Bardolfe, Page, and Dauie.
Shal. By Cocke and Pye, you shall not away to night.
What Dauy, I
say
Fal. You must excuse me, M[aster]. Robert Shallow
Shal. I will not excuse you: you shall not be
excused.
Excuses shall not be admitted: there is no excuse shall
serue:
you shall not be excus'd.
Why Dauie
Dauie. Heere sir
Shal. Dauy, Dauy, Dauy, let me see (Dauy) let me see:
William
Cooke, bid him come hither. Sir Iohn, you shal
not be excus'd
Dauy. Marry sir, thus: those Precepts cannot bee
seru'd: and
againe sir, shall we sowe the head-land with
Wheate?
Shal. With red
Wheate Dauy. But for William Cook:
are there no yong Pigeons?
Dauy.
Yes Sir.
Heere is now the Smithes note, for Shooing,
And Plough-Irons
Shal. Let it be cast, and payde: Sir Iohn, you shall
not be
excus'd
Dauy. Sir, a new linke to the Bucket must needes bee
had: And
Sir, doe you meane to stoppe any of Williams
Wages, about the Sacke he lost
the other day, at Hinckley
Fayre?
Shal. He shall answer it:
Some
Pigeons Dauy, a couple of short-legg'd Hennes: a
ioynt of Mutton, and any
pretty little tine Kickshawes,
tell William Cooke
Dauy. Doth the man of Warre, stay all night sir?
Shal.
Yes Dauy:
I will vse him well. A Friend i'th Court, is better then a
penny
in purse. Vse his men well Dauy, for they are arrant
Knaues, and will
backe-bite
Dauy. No worse then they are bitten, sir: For they
haue
maruellous fowle linnen
Shallow. Well conceited Dauy: about thy Businesse,
Dauy
Dauy. I beseech you sir,
To countenance William Visor of
Woncot, against Clement
Perkes of the hill
Shal. There are many Complaints Dauy, against that
Visor,
that Visor is an arrant Knaue, on my knowledge
Dauy. I graunt your Worship, that he is a knaue (Sir:)
But
yet heauen forbid Sir, but a Knaue should haue some
Countenance, at his
Friends request. An honest man sir,
is able to speake for himselfe, when a
Knaue is not. I haue
seru'd your Worshippe truely sir, these eight yeares:
and
if I cannot once or twice in a Quarter beare out a knaue,
against an
honest man, I haue but a very litle credite with
your Worshippe. The Knaue is
mine honest Friend Sir,
therefore I beseech your Worship, let him bee
Countenanc'd
Shal. Go too,
I say he shall haue no wrong: Looke about
Dauy.
Where are you Sir Iohn? Come, off with your Boots.
Giue me your hand
M[aster]. Bardolfe
Bard. I am glad to see your Worship
Shal. I thanke thee, with all my heart, kinde
Master
Bardolfe: and welcome my tall Fellow:
Come Sir Iohn
Falstaffe. Ile follow you, good Master Robert
Shallow.
Bardolfe, looke to our Horsses. If I were saw'de into
Quantities,
I should make foure dozen of such bearded
Hermites staues, as Master Shallow.
It is a wonderfull
thing to see the semblable Coherence of his mens
spirits,
and his: They, by obseruing of him, do beare themselues
like
foolish Iustices: Hee, by conuersing with them, is
turn'd into a Iustice-like
Seruingman. Their spirits are
so married in Coniunction, with the
participation of Society,
that they flocke together in consent, like so
many
Wilde-Geese. If I had a suite to Mayster Shallow, I
would humour his
men, with the imputation of beeing
neere their Mayster. If to his Men, I
would currie with
Maister Shallow, that no man could better command
his
Seruants. It is certaine, that either wise bearing, or
ignorant
Carriage is caught, as men take diseases, one of
another:
therefore, let men take heede of their Companie.
I will deuise matter enough
out of this Shallow, to
keepe Prince Harry in continuall Laughter, the
wearing
out of sixe Fashions (which is foure Tearmes) or two Actions,
and
he shall laugh with Interuallums. O it is much
that a Lye (with a slight
Oath) and a iest (with a sadde
brow) will doe, with a Fellow, that neuer had
the Ache
in his shoulders. O you shall see him laugh, till his Face
be
like a wet Cloake, ill laid vp
Shal. Sir Iohn
Falst. I come Master Shallow, I come Master Shallow.
Exeunt.
Scena Secunda.
Enter the Earle of Warwicke, and the Lord Chiefe Iustice.
Warwicke. How now, my Lord Chiefe Iustice, whether
away?
Ch.Iust. How doth the King?
Warw. Exceeding well: his Cares
Are
now, all ended
Ch.Iust. I hope, not dead
Warw. Hee's walk'd the way of Nature,
And to our purposes, he
liues no more
Ch.Iust. I would his Maiesty had call'd me with him,
The
seruice, that I truly did his life,
Hath left me open to all iniuries
War. Indeed I thinke the yong King loues you not
Ch.Iust. I know he doth not, and do arme my selfe
To welcome
the condition of the Time,
Which cannot looke more hideously vpon me,
Then
I haue drawne it in my fantasie.
Enter Iohn of Lancaster, Gloucester, and
Clarence.
War. Heere come the heauy Issue of dead Harrie:
O, that the liuing
Harrie had the temper
Of him, the worst of these three Gentlemen:
How many
Nobles then, should hold their places,
That must strike saile, to Spirits of
vilde sort?
Ch.Iust. Alas, I feare, all will be ouer-turn'd
Iohn. Good morrow Cosin Warwick, good morrow
Glou. Cla. Good morrow, Cosin
Iohn. We meet, like men, that had forgot to speake
War. We do remember: but our Argument
Is all too heauy, to
admit much talke
Ioh. Well: Peace be with him, that hath made vs heauy
Ch.Iust. Peace be with vs, least we be heauier
Glou. O, good my Lord, you haue lost a friend indeed:
And I
dare sweare, you borrow not that face
Of seeming sorrow, it is sure your
owne
Iohn. Though no man be assur'd what grace to finde,
You stand
in coldest expectation.
I am the sorrier, would 'twere otherwise
Cla. Wel, you must now speake Sir Iohn Falstaffe faire,
Which
swimmes against your streame of Quality
Ch.Iust. Sweet Princes: what I did, I did in Honor,
Led by
th' Imperiall Conduct of my Soule,
And neuer shall you see, that I will
begge
A ragged, and fore-stall'd Remission.
If Troth, and vpright
Innocency fayle me,
Ile to the King (my Master) that is dead,
And tell
him, who hath sent me after him
War. Heere comes the Prince.
Enter Prince Henrie.
Ch.Iust. Good morrow: and heauen saue your Maiesty
Prince.
This new, and gorgeous Garment, Maiesty,
Sits not so easie on me, as you
thinke.
Brothers, you mixe your Sadnesse with some Feare:
This is the
English, not the Turkish Court:
Not Amurah, an Amurah succeeds,
But Harry,
Harry: Yet be sad (good Brothers)
For (to speake truth) it very well becomes
you:
Sorrow, so Royally in you appeares,
That I will deeply put the
Fashion on,
And weare it in my heart. Why then be sad,
But entertaine no
more of it (good Brothers)
Then a ioynt burthen, laid vpon vs all.
For me,
by Heauen (I bid you be assur'd)
Ile be your Father, and your Brother
too:
Let me but beare your Loue, Ile beare your Cares;
But weepe that
Harrie's dead, and so will I.
But Harry liues, that shall conuert those
Teares
By number, into houres of Happinesse
Iohn, &c. We hope no other from your Maiesty
Prin. You all looke strangely on me: and you most,
You are (I
thinke) assur'd, I loue you not
Ch.Iust. I am assur'd (if I be measur'd rightly)
Your Maiesty
hath no iust cause to hate mee
Pr. No? How might a Prince of my great hopes forget
So great
Indignities you laid vpon me?
What? Rate? Rebuke? and roughly send to
Prison
Th' immediate Heire of England? Was this easie?
May this be wash'd
in Lethe, and forgotten?
Ch.Iust. I then did vse the Person of your
Father:
The Image of his power, lay then in me,
And in th' administration
of his Law,
Whiles I was busie for the Commonwealth,
Your Highnesse
pleased to forget my place,
The Maiesty, and power of Law, and
Iustice,
The Image of the King, whom I presented,
And strooke me in my
very Seate of Iudgement:
Whereon (as an Offender to your Father)
I gaue
bold way to my Authority,
And did commit you. If the deed were ill,
Be you
contented, wearing now the Garland,
To haue a Sonne, set your Decrees at
naught?
To plucke downe Iustice from your awefull Bench?
To trip the
course of Law, and blunt the Sword
That guards the peace, and safety of your
Person?
Nay more, to spurne at your most Royall Image,
And mocke your
workings, in a Second body?
Question your Royall Thoughts, make the case
yours:
Be now the Father, and propose a Sonne:
Heare your owne dignity so
much prophan'd,
See your most dreadfull Lawes, so loosely slighted;
Behold
your selfe, so by a Sonne disdained:
And then imagine me, taking your
part,
And in your power, soft silencing your Sonne:
After this cold
considerance, sentence me;
And, as you are a King, speake in your
State,
What I haue done, that misbecame my place,
My person, or my Lieges
Soueraigntie
Prin. You are right Iustice, and you weigh this
well:
Therefore still beare the Ballance, and the Sword:
And I do wish
your Honors may encrease,
Till you do liue, to see a Sonne of mine
Offend
you, and obey you, as I did.
So shall I liue, to speake my Fathers
words:
Happy am I, that haue a man so bold,
That dares do Iustice, on my
proper Sonne;
And no lesse happy, hauing such a Sonne,
That would deliuer
vp his Greatnesse so,
Into the hands of Iustice. You did commit me:
For
which, I do commit into your hand,
Th' vnstained Sword that you haue vs'd to
beare:
With this Remembrance; That you vse the same
With the like bold,
iust, and impartiall spirit
As you haue done 'gainst me. There is my
hand,
You shall be as a Father, to my Youth:
My voice shall sound, as you
do prompt mine eare,
And I will stoope, and humble my Intents,
To your
well-practis'd, wise Directions.
And Princes all, beleeue me, I beseech
you:
My Father is gone wilde into his Graue,
(For in his Tombe, lye my
Affections)
And with his Spirits, sadly I suruiue,
To mocke the
expectation of the World;
To frustrate Prophesies, and to race out
Rotten
Opinion, who hath writ me downe
After my seeming. The Tide of Blood in
me,
Hath prowdly flow'd in Vanity, till now.
Now doth it turne, and ebbe
backe to the Sea,
Where it shall mingle with the state of Floods,
And flow
henceforth in formall Maiesty.
Now call we our High Court of
Parliament,
And let vs choose such Limbes of Noble Counsaile,
That the
great Body of our State may go
In equall ranke, with the best gouern'd
Nation,
That Warre, or Peace, or both at once may be
As things acquainted
and familiar to vs,
In which you (Father) shall haue formost hand.
Our
Coronation done, we will accite
(As I before remembred) all our State,
And
heauen (consigning to my good intents)
No Prince, nor Peere, shall haue iust
cause to say,
Heauen shorten Harries happy life, one day.
Exeunt.
Scena Tertia.
Enter Falstaffe, Shallow, Silence, Bardolfe, Page, and Pistoll.
Shal. Nay, you shall see mine Orchard: where, in an
Arbor we will
eate a last yeares Pippin of my owne graffing,
with a dish of Carrawayes, and
so forth. (Come Cosin
Silence, and then to bed
Fal. You haue heere a goodly dwelling, and a rich
Shal. Barren, barren, barren: Beggers all, beggers all
Sir
Iohn: Marry, good ayre. Spread Dauy, spread Dauie:
Well said Dauie
Falst. This Dauie serues you for good vses: he is
your
Seruingman, and your Husband
Shal. A good Varlet, a good Varlet, a very good Varlet,
Sir
Iohn: I haue drunke too much Sacke at Supper. A
good Varlet. Now sit downe,
now sit downe: Come
Cosin
Sil. Ah sirra (quoth-a) we shall doe nothing but eate,
and
make good cheere, and praise heauen for the merrie
yeere: when flesh is
cheape, and Females deere, and lustie
Lads rome heere, and there: so merrily,
and euer among
so merrily
Fal. There's a merry heart, good M[aster]. Silence, Ile
giue
you a health for that anon
Shal. Good M[aster]. Bardolfe: some wine, Dauie
Da. Sweet sir, sit: Ile be with you anon: most sweete
sir,
sit. Master Page, good M[aster]. Page, sit: Proface. What
you want in meate,
wee'l haue in drinke: but you beare,
the heart's all
Shal. Be merry M[aster]. Bardolfe, and my little
Souldiour
there, be merry
Sil. Be merry, be merry, my wife ha's all.
For women are
Shrewes, both short, and tall:
'Tis merry in Hall, when Beards wagge
all;
And welcome merry Shrouetide. Be merry, be merry
Fal. I did not thinke M[aster]. Silence had bin a man of
this
Mettle
Sil. Who I? I haue beene merry twice and once, ere
now
Dauy. There is a dish of Lether-coats for you
Shal. Dauie
Dau. Your Worship: Ile be with you straight. A cup
of Wine,
sir?
Sil. A Cup of Wine, that's briske and fine, & drinke
vnto
the Leman mine: and a merry heart liues long-a
Fal. Well said, M[aster]. Silence
Sil. If we shall be merry, now comes in the sweete of
the
night
Fal. Health, and long life to you, M[aster]. Silence
Sil. Fill the Cuppe, and let it come. Ile pledge you a
mile
to the bottome
Shal. Honest Bardolfe, welcome: If thou want'st any
thing,
and wilt not call, beshrew thy heart. Welcome my
little tyne theefe, and
welcome indeed too: Ile drinke to
M[aster]. Bardolfe, and to all the
Cauileroes about London
Dau. I hope to see London, once ere I die
Bar. If I might see you there, Dauie
Shal. You'l cracke a quart together? Ha, will you
not
M[aster]. Bardolfe?
Bar. Yes Sir, in a pottle pot
Shal. I thanke thee: the knaue will sticke by thee, I
can
assure thee that. He will not out, he is true bred
Bar. And Ile sticke by him, sir
Shal. Why there spoke a King: lack nothing, be merry.
Looke,
who's at doore there, ho: who knockes?
Fal. Why now you haue done me
right
Sil. Do me right, and dub me Knight, Samingo. Is't
not
so?
Fal. 'Tis so
Sil. Is't so? Why then say an old man can do somwhat
Dau. If it please your Worshippe, there's one Pistoll
come
from the Court with newes
Fal. From the Court? Let him come in.
Enter Pistoll.
How now Pistoll?
Pist. Sir Iohn, 'saue you sir
Fal. What winde blew you hither, Pistoll?
Pist. Not
the ill winde which blowes none to good,
sweet Knight: Thou art now one of
the greatest men in
the Realme
Sil. Indeed, I thinke he bee, but Goodman Puffe of
Barson
Pist. Puffe? puffe in thy teeth, most recreant Coward
base.
Sir Iohn, I am thy Pistoll, and thy Friend: helter
skelter haue I rode to
thee, and tydings do I bring, and
luckie ioyes, and golden Times, and happie
Newes of
price
Fal. I prethee now deliuer them, like a man of this
World
Pist. A footra for the World, and Worldlings base,
I speake
of Affrica, and Golden ioyes
Fal. O base Assyrian Knight, what is thy newes?
Let King
Couitha know the truth thereof
Sil. And Robin-hood, Scarlet, and Iohn
Pist. Shall dunghill Curres confront the Hellicons?
And shall
good newes be baffel'd?
Then Pistoll lay thy head in Furies lappe
Shal. Honest Gentleman,
I know not your breeding
Pist. Why then Lament therefore
Shal. Giue me pardon, Sir.
If sir, you come with news from
the Court, I take it, there
is but two wayes, either to vtter them, or to
conceale
them. I am Sir, vnder the King, in some Authority
Pist. Vnder which King?
Bezonian, speake, or dye
Shal. Vnder King Harry
Pist. Harry the Fourth? or Fift?
Shal. Harry the
Fourth
Pist. A footra for thine Office.
Sir Iohn, thy tender
Lamb-kinne, now is King,
Harry the Fift's the man, I speake the
truth.
When Pistoll lyes, do this, and figge-me, like
The bragging
Spaniard
Fal. What, is the old King dead?
Pist. As naile in
doore.
The things I speake, are iust
Fal. Away Bardolfe, Sadle my Horse,
Master Robert Shallow,
choose what Office thou wilt
In the Land, 'tis thine. Pistol, I will double
charge thee
With Dignities
Bard. O ioyfull day:
I would not take a Knighthood for my
Fortune
Pist. What? I do bring good newes
Fal. Carrie Master Silence to bed: Master Shallow, my
Lord
Shallow, be what thou wilt, I am Fortunes Steward.
Get on thy Boots, wee'l
ride all night. Oh sweet Pistoll:
Away Bardolfe: Come Pistoll, vtter more to
mee: and
withall deuise something to do thy selfe good. Boote,
boote
Master Shallow, I know the young King is sick for
mee. Let vs take any mans
Horsses: The Lawes of England
are at my command'ment. Happie are they,
which
haue beene my Friendes: and woe vnto my Lord Chiefe
Iustice
Pist. Let Vultures vil'de seize on his Lungs also:
Where is
the life that late I led, say they?
Why heere it is, welcome those pleasant
dayes.
Exeunt.
Scena Quarta.
Enter Hostesse Quickly, Dol Teare-sheete, and Beadles.
Hostesse. No, thou arrant knaue: I would I might dy,
that I might
haue thee hang'd: Thou hast drawne my
shoulder out of ioynt
Off. The Constables haue deliuer'd her ouer to mee:
and shee
shall haue Whipping cheere enough, I warrant
her. There hath beene a man or
two (lately) kill'd about
her
Dol. Nut-hooke, nut-hooke, you Lye: Come on, Ile
tell thee
what, thou damn'd Tripe-visag'd Rascall, if the
Childe I now go with, do
miscarrie, thou had'st better
thou had'st strooke thy Mother, thou
Paper-fac'd Villaine
Host. O that Sir Iohn were come, hee would make
this a bloody
day to some body. But I would the Fruite
of her Wombe might miscarry
Officer. If it do, you shall haue a dozen of Cushions
againe,
you haue but eleuen now. Come, I charge you
both go with me: for the man is
dead, that you and Pistoll
beate among you
Dol. Ile tell thee what, thou thin man in a Censor; I
will
haue you as soundly swindg'd for this, you blewBottel'd
Rogue: you filthy
famish'd Correctioner, if you
be not swing'd, Ile forsweare halfe Kirtles
Off. Come, come, you shee-Knight-arrant, come
Host. O, that right should thus o'recome might. Wel
of
sufferance, comes ease
Dol. Come you Rogue, come:
Bring me to a Iustice
Host. Yes, come you staru'd Blood-hound
Dol. Goodman death, goodman Bones
Host. Thou Anatomy, thou
Dol. Come you thinne Thing:
Come you Rascall
Off. Very well.
Exeunt.
Scena Quinta.
Enter two Groomes.
1.Groo. More Rushes, more Rushes
2.Groo. The Trumpets haue sounded twice
1.Groo. It will be two of the Clocke, ere they come
from the
Coronation.
Exit Groo.
Enter Falstaffe, Shallow, Pistoll, Bardolfe, and Page.
Falstaffe. Stand heere by me, M[aster]. Robert Shallow, I will
make
the King do you Grace. I will leere vpon him, as
he comes by: and do but
marke the countenance that hee
will giue me
Pistol. Blesse thy Lungs, good Knight
Falst. Come heere Pistol, stand behind me. O if I had
had
time to haue made new Liueries, I would haue bestowed
the thousand pound I
borrowed of you. But it is
no matter, this poore shew doth better: this doth
inferre
the zeale I had to see him
Shal. It doth so
Falst. It shewes my earnestnesse in affection
Pist. It doth so
Fal. My deuotion
Pist. It doth, it doth, it doth
Fal. As it were, to ride day and night,
And not to
deliberate, not to remember,
Not to haue patience to shift me
Shal. It is most certaine
Fal. But to stand stained with Trauaile, and sweating
with
desire to see him, thinking of nothing else, putting
all affayres in
obliuion, as if there were nothing els to bee
done, but to see him
Pist. 'Tis semper idem: for obsque hoc nihil est. 'Tis all
in
euery part
Shal. 'Tis so indeed
Pist. My Knight, I will enflame thy Noble Liuer, and
make
thee rage. Thy Dol, and Helen of thy noble thoghts
is in base Durance, and
contagious prison: Hall'd thither
by most Mechanicall and durty hand. Rowze
vppe
Reuenge from Ebon den, with fell Alecto's Snake, for
Dol is in.
Pistol, speakes nought but troth
Fal. I will deliuer her
Pistol. There roar'd the Sea: and Trumpet
Clangour
sounds.
The Trumpets sound. Enter King Henrie the Fift, Brothers,
Lord
Chiefe
Iustice.
Falst. Saue thy Grace, King Hall, my Royall Hall
Pist. The heauens thee guard, and keepe, most royall
Impe of
Fame
Fal. 'Saue thee my sweet Boy
King. My Lord Chiefe Iustice, speake to that vaine
man
Ch.Iust. Haue you your wits?
Know you what 'tis you
speake?
Falst. My King, my Ioue; I speake to thee, my heart
King. I know thee not, old man: Fall to thy Prayers:
How ill
white haires become a Foole, and Iester?
I haue long dream'd of such a kinde
of man,
So surfeit-swell'd, so old, and so prophane:
But being awake, I do
despise my dreame.
Make lesse thy body (hence) and more thy Grace,
Leaue
gourmandizing; Know the Graue doth gape
For thee, thrice wider then for other
men.
Reply not to me, with a Foole-borne Iest,
Presume not, that I am the
thing I was,
For heauen doth know (so shall the world perceiue)
That I
haue turn'd away my former Selfe,
So will I those that kept me
Companie.
When thou dost heare I am, as I haue bin,
Approach me, and thou
shalt be as thou was't
The Tutor and the Feeder of my Riots:
Till then, I
banish thee, on paine of death,
As I haue done the rest of my
Misleaders,
Not to come neere our Person, by ten mile.
For competence of
life, I will allow you,
That lacke of meanes enforce you not to euill:
And
as we heare you do reforme your selues,
We will according to your strength,
and qualities,
Giue you aduancement. Be it your charge (my Lord)
To see
perform'd the tenure of our word. Set on.
Exit King.
Fal. Master Shallow, I owe you a thousand pound
Shal. I marry Sir Iohn, which I beseech you to let me
haue
home with me
Fal. That can hardly be, M[aster]. Shallow, do not you
grieue
at this: I shall be sent for in priuate to him: Looke you,
he must
seeme thus to the world: feare not your aduancement:
I will be the man yet,
that shall make you great
Shal. I cannot well perceiue how, vnlesse you should
giue me
your Doublet, and stuffe me out with Straw. I
beseech you, good Sir Iohn, let
mee haue fiue hundred of
my thousand
Fal. Sir, I will be as good as my word. This that you
heard,
was but a colour
Shall. A colour I feare, that you will dye in, Sir Iohn
Fal. Feare no colours, go with me to dinner:
Come Lieutenant
Pistol, come Bardolfe,
I shall be sent for soone at night
Ch.Iust. Go carry Sir Iohn Falstaffe to the Fleete,
Take all
his Company along with him
Fal. My Lord, my Lord
Ch.Iust. I cannot now speake, I will heare you soone:
Take
them away
Pist. Si fortuna me tormento, spera me contento.
Exit. Manent Lancaster and Chiefe Iustice
Iohn. I like this faire proceeding of the Kings:
He hath
intent his wonted Followers
Shall all be very well prouided for:
But all
are banisht, till their conuersations
Appeare more wise, and modest to the
world
Ch.Iust. And so they are
Iohn. The King hath call'd his Parliament,
My Lord
Ch.Iust. He hath
Iohn. I will lay oddes, that ere this yeere expire,
We beare
our Ciuill Swords, and Natiue fire
As farre as France. I heare a Bird so
sing,
Whose Musicke (to my thinking) pleas'd the King.
Come, will you
hence?
Exeunt.
FINIS.
EPILOGVE.
First, my Feare: then, my Curtsie: last, my Speech.
My Feare, is your
Displeasure: My Curtsie, my Dutie:
And my speech, to Begge your Pardons. If
you looke for a
good speech now, you vndoe me: For what I haue to say,
is
of mine owne making: and what (indeed) I should say, will
(I doubt)
prooue mine owne marring. But to the Purpose,
and so to the Venture. Be it
knowne to you (as it is very
well) I was lately heere in the end of a
displeasing Play, to pray
your
Patien for it, and to promise you a Better:
I did meane (indeede) to
pay you with
thi which if (like an ill Venture)
it come vnluckily home, I breake;
and you,
my Creditors lose. Heere I
promist you I would be, and heere I
commit my Bodie
to your Mercies: Bate
me some, and I will pay you some, and (as
most Debtors d
promise you
infinitely.
If my Tongue cannot entreate you to acquit me: will you
command
me to vse
my Legges? And yet that were but light payment, to Dance
out of
your debt:
But
a good Conscience, will make any possible
satisfaction, and so
will I. All
the
heere haue forgiuen me, if the
Gentlemen will not, then the
Gentlemen
do not agree with the Gentlewomen,
which was neuer seene
before, in such an
As
One word more, I beseech
you: if you be not too much cloid with
Fat Meate,
our humble Author will
continue the Story (with Sir Iohn in it) and
make yo
merry, with faire Katherine of France: where (for any thing I
know)
Fals
shall dye of a sweat, vnlesse already he be kill'd with your
hard
Opinions:
For Old-Castle dyed a Martyr, and this is not the man. My Tongue
is
wearie
when my Legs are too, I will bid you good night; and so
kneele
downe before
yo
But (indeed) to pray for the Queene.
THE ACTORS NAMES.
Rumour the Presentor.
King Henry the Fourth.
Prince
Henry, afterwards Crowned King Henrie the Fift.
Prince Iohn of
Lancaster.
Humphrey of Gloucester.
Thomas of
Clarence.
Sonnes to Henry the Fourth, & brethren to Henry
5.
Northumberland.
The Arch Byshop of
Yorke.
Mowbray.
Hastings.
Lord
Bardolfe.
Trauers.
Morton.
Coleuile.
Opposites
against King Henrie
the
Fourth.
Warwicke.
Westmerland.
Surrey.
Gowre.
Harecourt.
Lord
Chiefe Iustice.
Of the
Kings
Partie.
Shallow.
Silence.
Both
Country
Iustices.
Dauie, Seruant to Shallow.
Phang,
and Snare, 2.
Serieants
Mouldie.
Shadow.
Wart.
Feeble.
Bullcalfe.
Country
Soldiers
Pointz.
Falstaffe.
Bardolphe.
Pistoll.
Peto.
Page.
Irregular
Humorists.
Drawers
Beadles.
Groomes
Northumberlands
Wife.
Percies Widdow.
Hostesse Quickly.
Doll
Teare-sheete.
Epilogue. The Second Part of Henry the Fourth, Containing his
Death:
and
the Coronation of King Henry the Fift.