The First Part of Henry the
Sixth
(First Folio)
by William
Shakespeare
Actus Primus. Scoena Prima.
Dead March.
Enter the Funerall of King Henry the Fift, attended on by the
Duke
of
Bedford, Regent of France; the Duke of Gloster, Protector;
the
Duke of
Exeter Warwicke, the Bishop of Winchester, and the Duke
of
Somerset.
Bedford. Hung be y heauens with black, yield day to night;
Comets
importing change of Times and States,
Brandish your crystall Tresses in the
Skie,
And with them scourge the bad reuolting Stars,
That haue consented
vnto Henries death:
King Henry the Fift, too famous to liue long,
England
ne're lost a King of so much worth
Glost. England ne're had a King vntill his time:
Vertue he
had, deseruing to command,
His brandisht Sword did blinde men with his
beames,
His Armes spred wider then a Dragons Wings:
His sparkling Eyes,
repleat with wrathfull fire,
More dazled and droue back his Enemies,
Then
mid-day Sunne, fierce bent against their faces.
What should I say? his Deeds
exceed all speech:
He ne're lift vp his Hand, but conquered
Exe. We mourne in black, why mourn we not in blood?
Henry is
dead, and neuer shall reuiue:
Vpon a Woodden Coffin we attend;
And Deaths
dishonourable Victorie,
We with our stately presence glorifie,
Like
Captiues bound to a Triumphant Carre.
What? shall we curse the Planets of
Mishap,
That plotted thus our Glories ouerthrow?
Or shall we thinke the
subtile-witted French,
Coniurers and Sorcerers, that afraid of him,
By
Magick Verses haue contriu'd his end
Winch. He was a King, blest of the King of Kings.
Vnto the
French, the dreadfull Iudgement-Day
So dreadfull will not be, as was his
sight.
The Battailes of the Lord of Hosts he fought:
The Churches Prayers
made him so prosperous
Glost. The Church? where is it?
Had not Church-men
pray'd,
His thred of Life had not so soone decay'd.
None doe you like, but
an effeminate Prince,
Whom like a Schoole-boy you may ouer-awe
Winch. Gloster, what ere we like, thou art Protector,
And
lookest to command the Prince and Realme.
Thy Wife is prowd, she holdeth thee
in awe,
More then God or Religious Church-men may
Glost. Name not Religion, for thou lou'st the Flesh,
And
ne're throughout the yeere to Church thou go'st,
Except it be to pray against
thy foes
Bed. Cease, cease these Iarres, & rest your minds in
peace:
Let's to the Altar: Heralds wayt on vs;
In stead of Gold, wee'le
offer vp our Armes,
Since Armes auayle not, now that Henry's
dead,
Posteritie await for wretched yeeres,
When at their Mothers moistned
eyes, Babes shall suck,
Our Ile be made a Nourish of salt Teares,
And none
but Women left to wayle the dead.
Henry the Fift, thy Ghost I
inuocate:
Prosper this Realme, keepe it from Ciuill Broyles,
Combat with
aduerse Planets in the Heauens;
A farre more glorious Starre thy Soule will
make,
Then Iulius Cæsar, or bright-
Enter a Messenger.
Mess. My honourable Lords, health to you all:
Sad tidings bring I
to you out of France,
Of losse, of slaughter, and discomfiture:
Guyen,
Champaigne, Rheimes, Orleance,
Paris Guysors, Poictiers, are all quite
lost
Bedf. What say'st thou man, before dead Henry's
Coarse?
Speake softly, or the losse of those great Townes
Will make him
burst his Lead, and rise from death
Glost. Is Paris lost? is Roan yeelded vp?
If Henry were
recall'd to life againe,
These news would cause him once more yeeld the
Ghost
Exe. How were they lost? what trecherie was vs'd?
Mess. No trecherie, but want of Men and Money.
Amongst the Souldiers this is
muttered,
That here you maintaine seuerall Factions:
And whil'st a Field
should be dispatcht and fought,
You are disputing of your Generals.
One
would haue lingring Warres, with little cost;
Another would flye swift, but
wanteth Wings:
A third thinkes, without expence at all,
By guilefull faire
words, Peace may be obtayn'd.
Awake, awake, English Nobilitie,
Let not
slouth dimme your Honors, new begot;
Cropt are the Flower-de-Luces in your
Armes
Of Englands Coat, one halfe is cut away
Exe. Were our Teares wanting to this Funerall,
These Tidings
would call forth her flowing Tides
Bedf. Me they concerne, Regent I am of France:
Giue me my
steeled Coat, Ile fight for France.
Away with these disgracefull wayling
Robes;
Wounds will I lend the French, in stead of Eyes,
To weepe their
intermissiue Miseries.
Enter to them another Messenger.
Mess. Lords view these Letters, full of bad mischance.
France is
reuolted from the English quite,
Except some petty Townes, of no
import.
The Dolphin Charles is crowned King in Rheimes:
The Bastard of
Orleance with him is ioyn'd:
Reynold, Duke of Aniou, doth take his
part,
The Duke of Alanson flyeth to his side.
Enter.
Exe. The Dolphin crown'd King? all flye to him?
O whither shall we
flye from this reproach?
Glost. We will not flye, but to our enemies
throats.
Bedford, if thou be slacke, Ile fight it out
Bed. Gloster, why doubtst thou of my forwardnesse?
An Army
haue I muster'd in my thoughts,
Wherewith already France is
ouer-run.
Enter another Messenger.
Mes. My gracious Lords, to adde to your laments,
Wherewith you now
bedew King Henries hearse,
I must informe you of a dismall fight,
Betwixt
the stout Lord Talbot, and the French
Win. What? wherein Talbot ouercame, is't so?
3.Mes. O
no: wherein Lord Talbot was o'rethrown:
The circumstance Ile tell you more at
large.
The tenth of August last, this dreadfull Lord,
Retyring from the
Siege of Orleance,
Hauing full scarce six thousand in his troupe,
By three
and twentie thousand of the French
Was round incompassed, and set vpon:
No
leysure had he to enranke his men.
He wanted Pikes to set before his
Archers:
In stead whereof, sharpe Stakes pluckt out of Hedges
They pitched
in the ground confusedly,
To keepe the Horsemen off, from breaking
in.
More then three houres the fight continued:
Where valiant Talbot,
aboue humane thought,
Enacted wonders with his Sword and Lance.
Hundreds
he sent to Hell, and none durst stand him:
Here, there, and euery where
enrag'd, he slew.
The French exclaym'd, the Deuill was in Armes,
All the
whole Army stood agaz'd on him.
His Souldiers spying his vndaunted
Spirit,
A Talbot, a Talbot, cry'd out amaine,
And rusht into the Bowels of
the Battaile.
Here had the Conquest fully been seal'd vp,
If Sir Iohn
Falstaffe had not play'd the Coward.
He being in the Vauward, plac't
behinde,
With purpose to relieue and follow them,
Cowardly fled, not
hauing struck one stroake.
Hence grew the generall wrack and
massacre:
Enclosed were they with their Enemies.
A base Wallon, to win the
Dolphins grace,
Thrust Talbot with a Speare into the Back,
Whom all
France, with their chiefe assembled strength,
Durst not presume to looke once
in the face
Bedf. Is Talbot slaine then? I will slay my selfe,
For liuing
idly here, in pompe and ease,
Whil'st such a worthy Leader, wanting
ayd,
Vnto his dastard foe-men is betray'd
3.Mess. O no, he liues, but is tooke Prisoner,
And Lord
Scales with him, and Lord Hungerford:
Most of the rest slaughter'd, or tooke
likewise
Bedf. His Ransome there is none but I shall pay.
Ile hale the
Dolphin headlong from his Throne,
His Crowne shall be the Ransome of my
friend:
Foure of their Lords Ile change for one of ours.
Farwell my
Masters, to my Taske will I,
Bonfires in France forthwith I am to make,
To
keepe our great Saint Georges Feast withall.
Ten thousand Souldiers with me I
will take,
Whose bloody deeds shall make all Europe quake
3.Mess. So you had need, for Orleance is besieg'd,
The
English Army is growne weake and faint:
The Earle of Salisbury craueth
supply,
And hardly keepes his men from mutinie,
Since they so few, watch
such a multitude
Exe. Remember Lords your Oathes to Henry sworne:
Eyther to
quell the Dolphin vtterly,
Or bring him in obedience to your yoake
Bedf. I doe remember it, and here take my leaue,
To goe about
my preparation.
Exit Bedford.
Glost. Ile to the Tower with all the hast I can,
To view th'
Artillerie and Munition,
And then I will proclayme young Henry King.
Exit Gloster.
Exe. To Eltam will I, where the young King is,
Being ordayn'd his
speciall Gouernor,
And for his safetie there Ile best deuise.
Enter.
Winch. Each hath his Place and Function to attend:
I am left out;
for me nothing remaines:
But long I will not be Iack out of Office.
The
King from Eltam I intend to send,
And sit at chiefest Sterne of publique
Weale.
Enter.
Sound a Flourish.
Enter Charles, Alanson, and Reigneir, marching with Drum
and
Souldiers.
Charles. Mars his true mouing, euen as in the Heauens,
So in the
Earth, to this day is not knowne.
Late did he shine vpon the English
side:
Now we are Victors, vpon vs he smiles.
What Townes of any moment,
but we haue?
At pleasure here we lye, neere Orleance:
Otherwhiles, the
famisht English, like pale Ghosts,
Faintly besiege vs one houre in a
moneth
Alan. They want their Porredge, & their fat Bul
Beeues:
Eyther they must be dyeted like Mules,
And haue their Prouender
ty'd to their mouthes,
Or pitteous they will looke, like drowned Mice
Reigneir. Let's rayse the Siege: why liue we idly
here?
Talbot is taken, whom we wont to feare:
Remayneth none but
mad-brayn'd Salisbury,
And he may well in fretting spend his gall,
Nor men
nor Money hath he to make Warre
Charles. Sound, sound Alarum, we will rush on them.
Now for
the honour of the forlorne French:
Him I forgiue my death, that killeth
me,
When he sees me goe back one foot, or flye.
Exeunt.
Here Alarum, they are beaten back by the English, with great
losse.
Enter Charles, Alanson, and Reigneir.
Charles. Who euer saw the like? what men haue I?
Dogges, Cowards,
Dastards: I would ne're haue fled,
But that they left me 'midst my
Enemies
Reigneir. Salisbury is a desperate Homicide,
He fighteth as
one weary of his life:
The other Lords, like Lyons wanting foode,
Doe rush
vpon vs as their hungry prey
Alanson. Froysard, a Countreyman of ours, records,
England
all Oliuers and Rowlands breed,
During the time Edward the third did
raigne:
More truly now may this be verified;
For none but Samsons and
Goliasses
It sendeth forth to skirmish: one to tenne?
Leane raw-bon'd
Rascals, who would e'er suppose,
They had such courage and
audacitie?
Charles. Let's leaue this Towne,
For they are
hayre-brayn'd Slaues,
And hunger will enforce them to be more eager:
Of
old I know them; rather with their Teeth
The Walls they'le teare downe, then
forsake the Siege
Reigneir. I thinke by some odde Gimmors or Deuice
Their Armes
are set, like Clocks, still to strike on;
Else ne're could they hold out so
as they doe:
By my consent, wee'le euen let them alone
Alanson. Be it so.
Enter the Bastard of Orleance.
Bastard. Where's the Prince Dolphin? I haue newes
for him
Dolph. Bastard of Orleance, thrice welcome to vs
Bast. Me thinks your looks are sad, your chear appal'd.
Hath
the late ouerthrow wrought this offence?
Be not dismay'd, for succour is at
hand:
A holy Maid hither with me I bring,
Which by a Vision sent to her
from Heauen,
Ordayned is to rayse this tedious Siege,
And driue the
English forth the bounds of France:
The spirit of deepe Prophecie she
hath,
Exceeding the nine Sibyls of old Rome:
What's past, and what's to
come, she can descry.
Speake, shall I call her in? beleeue my words,
For
they are certaine, and vnfallible
Dolph. Goe call her in: but first, to try her skill,
Reignier
stand thou as Dolphin in my place;
Question her prowdly, let thy Lookes be
sterne,
By this meanes shall we sound what skill she hath.
Enter Ioane
Puzel.
Reigneir. Faire Maid, is't thou wilt doe these
wondrous
feats?
Puzel. Reignier, is't thou that thinkest to beguile
me?
Where is the Dolphin? Come, come from behinde,
I know thee well,
though neuer seene before.
Be not amaz'd, there's nothing hid from me;
In
priuate will I talke with thee apart:
Stand back you Lords, and giue vs leaue
a while
Reigneir. She takes vpon her brauely at first dash
Puzel. Dolphin, I am by birth a Shepheards Daughter,
My wit
vntrayn'd in any kind of Art:
Heauen and our Lady gracious hath it
pleas'd
To shine on my contemptible estate.
Loe, whilest I wayted on my
tender Lambes,
And to Sunnes parching heat display'd my cheekes,
Gods
Mother deigned to appeare to me,
And in a Vision full of Maiestie,
Will'd
me to leaue my base Vocation,
And free my Countrey from Calamitie:
Her
ayde she promis'd, and assur'd successe.
In compleat Glory shee reueal'd her
selfe:
And whereas I was black and swart before,
With those cleare Rayes,
which shee infus'd on me,
That beautie am I blest with, which you may
see.
Aske me what question thou canst possible,
And I will answer
vnpremeditated:
My Courage trie by Combat, if thou dar'st,
And thou shalt
finde that I exceed my Sex.
Resolue on this, thou shalt be fortunate,
If
thou receiue me for thy Warlike Mate
Dolph. Thou hast astonisht me with thy high termes:
Onely
this proofe Ile of thy Valour make,
In single Combat thou shalt buckle with
me;
And if thou vanquishest, thy words are true,
Otherwise I renounce all
confidence
Puzel. I am prepar'd: here is my keene-edg'd Sword,
Deckt
with fine Flower-de-Luces on each side,
The which at Touraine, in S[aint].
Katherines Church-yard,
Out of a great deale of old Iron, I chose forth
Dolph. Then come a Gods name, I feare no woman
Puzel. And while I liue, Ile ne're flye from a man.
Here they fight, and Ioane de Puzel ouercomes.
Dolph. Stay, stay thy hands, thou art an Amazon,
And fightest with
the Sword of Debora
Puzel. Christs Mother helpes me, else I were too
weake
Dolph. Who e're helps thee, 'tis thou that must help
me:
Impatiently I burne with thy desire,
My heart and hands thou hast at
once subdu'd.
Excellent Puzel, if thy name be so,
Let me thy seruant, and
not Soueraigne be,
'Tis the French Dolphin sueth to thee thus
Puzel. I must not yeeld to any rights of Loue,
For my
Profession's sacred from aboue:
When I haue chased all thy Foes from
hence,
Then will I thinke vpon a recompence
Dolph. Meane time looke gracious on thy prostrate
Thrall
Reigneir. My Lord me thinkes is very long in talke
Alans. Doubtlesse he shriues this woman to her smock,
Else
ne're could he so long protract his speech
Reigneir. Shall wee disturbe him, since hee keepes
no
meane?
Alan. He may meane more then we poor men do
know,
These women are shrewd tempters with their tongues
Reigneir. My Lord, where are you? what deuise you on?
Shall
we giue o're Orleance, or no?
Puzel. Why no, I say: distrustfull
Recreants,
Fight till the last gaspe: Ile be your guard
Dolph. What shee sayes, Ile confirme: wee'le fight
it out
Puzel. Assign'd am I to be the English Scourge.
This night
the Siege assuredly Ile rayse:
Expect Saint Martins Summer, Halcyons
dayes,
Since I haue entred into these Warres.
Glory is like a Circle in
the Water,
Which neuer ceaseth to enlarge it selfe,
Till by broad
spreading, it disperse to naught.
With Henries death, the English Circle
ends,
Dispersed are the glories it included:
Now am I like that prowd
insulting Ship,
Which Cæsar and his fortune bare at once
Dolph. Was Mahomet inspired with a Doue?
Thou with an Eagle
art inspired then.
Helen, the Mother of Great Constantine,
Nor yet
S[aint]. Philips daughters were like thee.
Bright Starre of Venus, falne
downe on the Earth,
How may I reuerently worship thee enough?
Alanson. Leaue off delayes, and let vs rayse the
Siege
Reigneir. Woman, do what thou canst to saue our honors,
Driue
them from Orleance, and be immortaliz'd
Dolph. Presently wee'le try: come, let's away about it,
No
Prophet will I trust, if shee proue false.
Exeunt.
Enter Gloster, with his Seruing-men.
Glost. I am come to suruey the Tower this day;
Since Henries death,
I feare there is Conueyance:
Where be these Warders, that they wait not
here?
Open the Gates, 'tis Gloster that calls
1.Warder. Who's there, that knocks so imperiously?
Glost.1.Man. It is the Noble Duke of Gloster
2.Warder. Who ere he be, you may not be let in
1.Man. Villaines, answer you so the Lord Protector?
1.Warder. The Lord protect him, so we answer him,
We doe no otherwise then
wee are will'd
Glost. Who willed you? or whose will stands but mine?
There's
none Protector of the Realme, but I:
Breake vp the Gates, Ile be your
warrantize;
Shall I be flowted thus by dunghill Groomes?
Glosters men rush at the Tower Gates, and Wooduile the
Lieutenant
speakes
within.
Wooduile. What noyse is this? what Traytors haue
wee
here?
Glost. Lieutenant, is it you whose voyce I heare?
Open the
Gates, here's Gloster that would enter
Wooduile. Haue patience Noble Duke, I may not open,
The
Cardinall of Winchester forbids:
From him I haue expresse
commandement,
That thou nor none of thine shall be let in
Glost. Faint-hearted Wooduile, prizest him 'fore me?
Arrogant
Winchester, that haughtie Prelate,
Whom Henry our late Soueraigne ne're could
brooke?
Thou art no friend to God, or to the King:
Open the Gates, or Ile
shut thee out shortly
Seruingmen. Open the Gates vnto the Lord Protector,
Or wee'le
burst them open, if that you come not quickly.
Enter to the Protector at the
Tower Gates, Winchester and his men
in
Tawney Coates.
Winchest. How now ambitious Vmpheir, what meanes
this?
Glost. Piel'd Priest, doo'st thou command me to be
shut out?
Winch.
I doe, thou most vsurping Proditor,
And not Protector of the King or
Realme
Glost. Stand back thou manifest Conspirator,
Thou that
contriued'st to murther our dead Lord,
Thou that giu'st Whores Indulgences to
sinne,
Ile canuas thee in thy broad Cardinalls Hat,
If thou proceed in
this thy insolence
Winch. Nay, stand thou back, I will not budge a foot:
This be
Damascus, be thou cursed Cain,
To slay thy Brother Abel, if thou wilt
Glost. I will not slay thee, but Ile driue thee back:
Thy
Scarlet Robes, as a Childs bearing Cloth,
Ile vse, to carry thee out of this
place
Winch. Doe what thou dar'st, I beard thee to thy
face
Glost. What? am I dar'd, and bearded to my face?
Draw men,
for all this priuiledged place,
Blew Coats to Tawny Coats. Priest, beware
your Beard,
I meane to tugge it, and to cuffe you soundly.
Vnder my feet I
stampe thy Cardinalls Hat:
In spight of Pope, or dignities of Church,
Here
by the Cheekes Ile drag thee vp and downe
Winch. Gloster, thou wilt answere this before the
Pope
Glost. Winchester Goose, I cry, a Rope, a Rope.
Now beat them
hence, why doe you let them stay?
Thee Ile chase hence, thou Wolfe in Sheepes
array.
Out Tawney-Coates, out Scarlet Hypocrite.
Here Glosters men beat out the Cardinalls men, and enter in
the
hurly-burly the Maior of London, and his Officers.
Maior. Fye Lords, that you being supreme Magistrates,
Thus
contumeliously should breake the Peace
Glost. Peace Maior, thou know'st little of my wrongs:
Here's
Beauford, that regards nor God nor King,
Hath here distrayn'd the Tower to
his vse
Winch. Here's Gloster, a Foe to Citizens,
One that still
motions Warre, and neuer Peace,
O're-charging your free Purses with large
Fines;
That seekes to ouerthrow Religion,
Because he is Protector of the
Realme;
And would haue Armour here out of the Tower,
To Crowne himselfe
King, and suppresse the Prince
Glost. I will not answer thee with words, but blowes.
Here they skirmish againe.
Maior. Naught rests for me, in this tumultuous strife,
But to make
open Proclamation.
Come Officer, as lowd as e're thou canst, cry:
All
manner of men, assembled here in Armes this day,
against Gods Peace and the
Kings, wee charge and command
you, in his Highnesse Name, to repayre to your
seuerall dwelling
places, and not to weare, handle, or vse any Sword,
Weapon,
or Dagger hence-forward, vpon paine of death
Glost. Cardinall, Ile be no breaker of the Law:
But we shall
meet, and breake our minds at large
Winch. Gloster, wee'le meet to thy cost, be sure:
Thy
heart-blood I will haue for this dayes worke
Maior. Ile call for Clubs, if you will not away:
This
Cardinall's more haughtie then the Deuill
Glost. Maior farewell: thou doo'st but what thou
may'st
Winch. Abhominable Gloster, guard thy Head,
For I intend to
haue it ere long.
Exeunt.
Maior. See the Coast clear'd, and then we will depart.
Good God,
these Nobles should such stomacks beare,
I my selfe fight not once in fortie
yeere.
Exeunt.
Enter the Master Gunner of Orleance, and his Boy.
M.Gunner. Sirrha, thou know'st how Orleance is besieg'd,
And how
the English haue the Suburbs wonne
Boy. Father I know, and oft haue shot at them,
How e're
vnfortunate, I miss'd my ayme
M.Gunner. But now thou shalt not. Be thou rul'd by me:
Chiefe
Master Gunner am I of this Towne,
Something I must doe to procure me
grace:
The Princes espyals haue informed me,
How the English, in the
Suburbs close entrencht,
Went through a secret Grate of Iron Barres,
In
yonder Tower, to ouer-peere the Citie,
And thence discouer, how with most
aduantage
They may vex vs with Shot or with Assault.
To intercept this
inconuenience,
A Peece of Ordnance 'gainst it I haue plac'd,
And euen
these three dayes haue I watcht,
If I could see them. Now doe thou
watch,
For I can stay no longer.
If thou spy'st any, runne and bring me
word,
And thou shalt finde me at the Gouernors.
Enter.
Boy. Father, I warrant you, take you no care,
Ile neuer trouble
you, if I may spye them.
Enter.
Enter Salisbury and Talbot on the Turrets, with others.
Salisb. Talbot, my life, my ioy, againe return'd?
How wert thou
handled, being Prisoner?
Or by what meanes got's thou to be
releas'd?
Discourse I prethee on this Turrets top
Talbot. The Earle of Bedford had a Prisoner,
Call'd the braue
Lord Ponton de Santrayle,
For him was I exchang'd, and ransom'd.
But with
a baser man of Armes by farre,
Once in contempt they would haue barter'd
me:
Which I disdaining, scorn'd, and craued death,
Rather then I would be
so pil'd esteem'd:
In fine, redeem'd I was as I desir'd.
But O, the
trecherous Falstaffe wounds my heart,
Whom with my bare fists I would
execute,
If I now had him brought into my power
Salisb. Yet tell'st thou not, how thou wert entertain'd
Tal. With scoffes and scornes, and contumelious taunts,
In
open Market-place produc't they me,
To be a publique spectacle to
all:
Here, sayd they, is the Terror of the French,
The Scar-Crow that
affrights our Children so.
Then broke I from the Officers that led me,
And
with my nayles digg'd stones out of the ground,
To hurle at the beholders of
my shame.
My grisly countenance made others flye,
None durst come neere,
for feare of suddaine death.
In Iron Walls they deem'd me not secure:
So
great feare of my Name 'mongst them were spread,
That they suppos'd I could
rend Barres of Steele,
And spurne in pieces Posts of Adamant.
Wherefore a
guard of chosen Shot I had,
That walkt about me euery Minute while:
And if
I did but stirre out of my Bed,
Ready they were to shoot me to the
heart.
Enter the Boy with a Linstock.
Salisb. I grieue to heare what torments you endur'd,
But we will be
reueng'd sufficiently.
Now it is Supper time in Orleance:
Here, through
this Grate, I count each one,
And view the Frenchmen how they
fortifie:
Let vs looke in, the sight will much delight thee:
Sir Thomas
Gargraue, and Sir William Glansdale,
Let me haue your expresse
opinions,
Where is best place to make our Batt'ry next?
Gargraue. I
thinke at the North Gate, for there stands
Lords
Glansdale. And I heere, at the Bulwarke of the
Bridge
Talb. For ought I see, this Citie must be famisht,
Or with
light Skirmishes enfeebled.
Here they shot, and Salisbury falls downe.
Salisb. O Lord haue mercy on vs, wretched sinners
Gargraue. O Lord haue mercy on me, wofull man
Talb. What chance is this, that suddenly hath crost
vs?
Speake Salisbury; at least, if thou canst, speake:
How far'st thou,
Mirror of all Martiall men?
One of thy Eyes, and thy Cheekes side struck
off?
Accursed Tower, accursed fatall Hand,
That hath contriu'd this wofull
Tragedie.
In thirteene Battailes, Salisbury o'recame:
Henry the Fift he
first trayn'd to the Warres.
Whil'st any Trumpe did sound, or Drum struck
vp,
His Sword did ne're leaue striking in the field.
Yet liu'st thou
Salisbury? though thy speech doth fayle,
One Eye thou hast to looke to Heauen
for grace.
The Sunne with one Eye vieweth all the World.
Heauen be thou
gracious to none aliue,
If Salisbury wants mercy at thy hands.
Beare hence
his Body, I will helpe to bury it.
Sir Thomas Gargraue, hast thou any
life?
Speake vnto Talbot, nay, looke vp to him.
Salisbury cheare thy
Spirit with this comfort,
Thou shalt not dye whiles-
He beckens with his
hand, and smiles on me:
As who should say, When I am dead and
gone,
Remember to auenge me on the French.
Plantaginet I will, and like
thee,
Play on the Lute, beholding the Townes burne:
Wretched shall France
be onely in my Name.
Here an Alarum, and it Thunders and Lightens.
What stirre is this? what tumult's in the Heauens?
Whence commeth this
Alarum, and the noyse?
Enter a Messenger.
Mess. My Lord, my Lord, the French haue gather'd head.
The Dolphin,
with one Ioane de Puzel ioyn'd,
A holy Prophetesse, new risen vp,
Is come
with a great Power, to rayse the Siege.
Here Salisbury lifteth himselfe vp, and groanes.
Talb. Heare, heare, how dying Salisbury doth groane,
It irkes his
heart he cannot be reueng'd.
Frenchmen, Ile be a Salisbury to you.
Puzel
or Pussel, Dolphin or Dog-fish,
Your hearts Ile stampe out with my Horses
heeles,
And make a Quagmire of your mingled braines.
Conuey me Salisbury
into his Tent,
And then wee'le try what these dastard Frenchmen dare.
Alarum. Exeunt.
Here an Alarum againe, and Talbot pursueth the Dolphin, and
driueth
him:
Then enter Ioane de Puzel, driuing Englishmen before her.
Then
enter
Talbot.
Talb. Where is my strength, my valour, and my force?
Our English
Troupes retyre, I cannot stay them,
A Woman clad in Armour chaseth
them.
Enter Puzel.
Here, here shee comes. Ile haue a bowt with thee:
Deuill, or Deuils Dam,
Ile coniure thee:
Blood will I draw on thee, thou art a Witch,
And
straightway giue thy Soule to him thou seru'st
Puzel. Come, come, 'tis onely I that must disgrace
thee.
Here they fight.
Talb. Heauens, can you suffer Hell so to preuayle?
My brest Ile
burst with straining of my courage,
And from my shoulders crack my Armes
asunder,
But I will chastise this high-minded Strumpet.
They fight againe.
Puzel. Talbot farwell, thy houre is not yet come,
I must goe
Victuall Orleance forthwith:
A short Alarum: then enter the Towne with Souldiers.
O're-take me if thou canst, I scorne thy strength.
Goe, goe, cheare vp thy
hungry-starued men,
Helpe Salisbury to make his Testament,
This Day is
ours, as many more shall be.
Enter.
Talb. My thoughts are whirled like a Potters Wheele,
I know not
where I am, nor what I doe:
A Witch by feare, not force, like
Hannibal,
Driues back our troupes, and conquers as she lists:
So Bees with
smoake, and Doues with noysome stench,
Are from their Hyues and Houses driuen
away.
They call'd vs, for our fiercenesse, English Dogges,
Now like to
Whelpes, we crying runne away.
A short Alarum.
Hearke Countreymen, eyther renew the fight,
Or teare the Lyons out of
Englands Coat;
Renounce your Soyle, giue Sheepe in Lyons stead:
Sheepe run
not halfe so trecherous from the Wolfe,
Or Horse or Oxen from the
Leopard,
As you flye from your oft-subdued slaues.
Alarum. Here another Skirmish.
It will not be, retyre into your Trenches:
You all consented vnto
Salisburies death,
For none would strike a stroake in his reuenge.
Puzel
is entred into Orleance,
In spight of vs, or ought that we could doe.
O
would I were to dye with Salisbury,
The shame hereof, will make me hide my
head.
Exit Talbot.
Alarum, Retreat, Flourish.
Enter on the Walls, Puzel, Dolphin, Reigneir, Alanson, and
Souldiers.
Puzel. Aduance our wauing Colours on the Walls,
Rescu'd is Orleance
from the English.
Thus Ioane de Puzel hath perform'd her word
Dolph. Diuinest Creature, Astrea's Daughter,
How shall I
honour thee for this successe?
Thy promises are like Adonis Garden,
That
one day bloom'd, and fruitfull were the next.
France, triumph in thy glorious
Prophetesse,
Recouer'd is the Towne of Orleance,
More blessed hap did
ne're befall our State
Reigneir. Why ring not out the Bells alowd,
Throughout the
Towne?
Dolphin command the Citizens make Bonfires,
And feast and banquet
in the open streets,
To celebrate the ioy that God hath giuen vs
Alans. All France will be repleat with mirth and ioy,
When
they shall heare how we haue play'd the men
Dolph. 'Tis Ioane, not we, by whom the day is wonne:
For
which, I will diuide my Crowne with her,
And all the Priests and Fryers in my
Realme,
Shall in procession sing her endlesse prayse.
A statelyer Pyramis
to her Ile reare,
Then Rhodophe's or Memphis euer was.
In memorie of her,
when she is dead,
Her Ashes, in an Vrne more precious
Then the
rich-iewel'd Coffer of Darius,
Transported, shall be at high
Festiuals
Before the Kings and Queenes of France.
No longer on Saint
Dennis will we cry,
But Ioane de Puzel shall be France's Saint.
Come in,
and let vs Banquet Royally,
After this Golden Day of Victorie.
Flourish. Exeunt.
Actus Secundus. Scena Prima.
Enter a Sergeant of a Band, with two Sentinels.
Ser. Sirs, take your places, and be vigilant:
If any noyse or
Souldier you perceiue
Neere to the walles, by some apparant signe
Let vs
haue knowledge at the Court of Guard
Sent. Sergeant you shall. Thus are poore Seruitors
(When
others sleepe vpon their quiet beds)
Constrain'd to watch in darknesse,
raine, and cold.
Enter Talbot, Bedford, and Burgundy, with scaling Ladders:
Their
Drummes
beating a Dead March.
Tal. Lord Regent, and redoubted Burgundy,
By whose approach, the
Regions of Artoys,
Wallon, and Picardy, are friends to vs:
This happy
night, the Frenchmen are secure,
Hauing all day carows'd and
banquetted,
Embrace we then this opportunitie,
As fitting best to
quittance their deceite,
Contriu'd by Art, and balefull Sorcerie
Bed. Coward of France, how much he wrongs his
fame,
Dispairing of his owne armes fortitude,
To ioyne with Witches, and
the helpe of Hell
Bur. Traitors haue neuer other company.
But what's that
Puzell whom they tearme so pure?
Tal. A Maid, they say
Bed. A Maid? And be so martiall?
Bur. Pray God she
proue not masculine ere long:
If vnderneath the Standard of the French
She
carry Armour, as she hath begun
Tal. Well, let them practise and conuerse with spirits.
God
is our Fortresse, in whose conquering name
Let vs resolue to scale their
flinty bulwarkes
Bed. Ascend braue Talbot, we will follow thee
Tal. Not altogether: Better farre I guesse,
That we do make
our entrance seuerall wayes:
That if it chance the one of vs do faile,
The
other yet may rise against their force
Bed. Agreed; Ile to yond corner
Bur. And I to this
Tal. And heere will Talbot mount, or make his graue.
Now
Salisbury, for thee and for the right
Of English Henry, shall this night
appeare
How much in duty, I am bound to both
Sent. Arme, arme, the enemy doth make assault.
Cry, S[aint]. George, A Talbot.
The French leape ore the walles in their shirts. Enter
seuerall
wayes,
Bastard, Alanson, Reignier, halfe ready, and halfe
vnready.
Alan. How now my Lords? what all vnreadie so?
Bast. Vnready?
I and glad we scap'd so well
Reig. 'Twas time (I trow) to wake and leaue our beds,
Hearing
Alarums at our Chamber doores
Alan. Of all exploits since first I follow'd Armes,
Nere
heard I of a warlike enterprize
More venturous, or desperate then this
Bast. I thinke this Talbot be a Fiend of Hell
Reig. If not of Hell, the Heauens sure fauour him
Alans. Here commeth Charles, I maruell how he sped?
Enter
Charles and Ioane.
Bast. Tut, holy Ioane was his defensiue Guard
Charl. Is this thy cunning, thou deceitfull Dame?
Didst thou
at first, to flatter vs withall,
Make vs partakers of a little gayne,
That
now our losse might be ten times so much?
Ioane. Wherefore is Charles
impatient with his friend?
At all times will you haue my Power
alike?
Sleeping or waking, must I still preuayle,
Or will you blame and
lay the fault on me?
Improuident Souldiors, had your Watch been good,
This
sudden Mischiefe neuer could haue falne
Charl. Duke of Alanson, this was your default,
That being
Captaine of the Watch to Night,
Did looke no better to that weightie
Charge
Alans. Had all your Quarters been as safely kept,
As that
whereof I had the gouernment,
We had not beene thus shamefully surpriz'd
Bast. Mine was secure
Reig. And so was mine, my Lord
Charl. And for my selfe, most part of all this Night
Within
her Quarter, and mine owne Precinct,
I was imploy'd in passing to and
fro,
About relieuing of the Centinels.
Then how, or which way, should they
first breake in?
Ioane. Question (my Lords) no further of the
case,
How or which way; 'tis sure they found some place,
But weakely
guarded, where the breach was made:
And now there rests no other shift but
this,
To gather our Souldiors, scatter'd and disperc't,
And lay new
Platformes to endammage them.
Exeunt.
Alarum. Enter a Souldier, crying, a Talbot, a Talbot: they
flye,
leauing
their Clothes behind.
Sould. Ile be so bold to take what they haue left:
The Cry of
Talbot serues me for a Sword,
For I haue loaden me with many
Spoyles,
Vsing no other Weapon but his Name.
Enter.
Enter Talbot, Bedford, Burgundie.
Bedf. The Day begins to breake, and Night is fled,
Whose pitchy
Mantle ouer-vayl'd the Earth.
Here sound Retreat, and cease our hot
pursuit.
Retreat.
Talb. Bring forth the Body of old Salisbury,
And here aduance it in
the Market-Place,
The middle Centure of this cursed Towne.
Now haue I
pay'd my Vow vnto his Soule:
For euery drop of blood was drawne from
him,
There hath at least fiue Frenchmen dyed to night.
And that hereafter
Ages may behold
What ruine happened in reuenge of him,
Within their
chiefest Temple Ile erect
A Tombe, wherein his Corps shall be
interr'd:
Vpon the which, that euery one may reade,
Shall be engrau'd the
sacke of Orleance,
The trecherous manner of his mournefull death,
And what
a terror he had beene to France.
But Lords, in all our bloudy Massacre,
I
muse we met not with the Dolphins Grace,
His new-come Champion, vertuous
Ioane of Acre,
Nor any of his false Confederates
Bedf. 'Tis thought Lord Talbot, when the fight began,
Rows'd
on the sudden from their drowsie Beds,
They did amongst the troupes of armed
men,
Leape o're the Walls for refuge in the field
Burg. My selfe, as farre as I could well discerne,
For
smoake, and duskie vapours of the night,
Am sure I scar'd the Dolphin and his
Trull,
When Arme in Arme they both came swiftly running,
Like to a payre
of louing Turtle-Doues,
That could not liue asunder day or night.
After
that things are set in order here,
Wee'le follow them with all the power we
haue.
Enter a Messenger.
Mess. All hayle, my Lords: which of this Princely trayne
Call ye
the Warlike Talbot, for his Acts
So much applauded through the Realme of
France?
Talb. Here is the Talbot, who would speak with him?
Mess. The vertuous Lady, Countesse of Ouergne,
With modestie admiring thy
Renowne,
By me entreats (great Lord) thou would'st vouchsafe
To visit her
poore Castle where she lyes,
That she may boast she hath beheld the
man,
Whose glory fills the World with lowd report
Burg. Is it euen so? Nay, then I see our Warres
Will turne
vnto a peacefull Comick sport,
When Ladyes craue to be encountred
with.
You may not (my Lord) despise her gentle suit
Talb. Ne're trust me then: for when a World of men
Could not
preuayle with all their Oratorie,
Yet hath a Womans kindnesse
ouer-rul'd:
And therefore tell her, I returne great thankes,
And in
submission will attend on her.
Will not your Honors beare me
company?
Bedf. No, truly, 'tis more then manners will:
And I haue
heard it sayd, Vnbidden Guests
Are often welcommest when they are gone
Talb. Well then, alone (since there's no remedie)
I meane to
proue this Ladyes courtesie.
Come hither Captaine, you perceiue my minde.
Whispers.
Capt. I doe my Lord, and meane accordingly.
Exeunt.
Enter Countesse.
Count. Porter, remember what I gaue in charge,
And when you haue
done so, bring the Keyes to me
Port. Madame, I will.
Enter.
Count. The Plot is layd, if all things fall out right,
I shall as
famous be by this exploit,
As Scythian Tomyris by Cyrus death.
Great is
the rumour of this dreadfull Knight,
And his atchieuements of no lesse
account:
Faine would mine eyes be witnesse with mine eares,
To giue their
censure of these rare reports.
Enter Messenger and Talbot.
Mess. Madame, according as your Ladyship desir'd,
By Message
crau'd, so is Lord Talbot come
Count. And he is welcome: what? is this the man?
Mess.
Madame, it is
Count. Is this the Scourge of France?
Is this the Talbot, so
much fear'd abroad?
That with his Name the Mothers still their Babes?
I
see Report is fabulous and false.
I thought I should haue seene some
Hercules,
A second Hector, for his grim aspect,
And large proportion of
his strong knit Limbes.
Alas, this is a Child, a silly Dwarfe:
It cannot
be, this weake and writhled shrimpe
Should strike such terror to his
Enemies
Talb. Madame, I haue beene bold to trouble you:
But since
your Ladyship is not at leysure,
Ile sort some other time to visit you
Count. What meanes he now?
Goe aske him, whither he
goes?
Mess. Stay my Lord Talbot, for my Lady craues,
To know the
cause of your abrupt departure?
Talb. Marry, for that shee's in a
wrong beleefe,
I goe to certifie her Talbot's here.
Enter Porter with
Keyes.
Count. If thou be he, then art thou Prisoner
Talb. Prisoner? to whom?
Count. To me, blood-thirstie
Lord:
And for that cause I trayn'd thee to my House.
Long time thy shadow
hath been thrall to me,
For in my Gallery thy Picture hangs:
But now the
substance shall endure the like,
And I will chayne these Legges and Armes of
thine,
That hast by Tyrannie these many yeeres
Wasted our Countrey, slaine
our Citizens,
And sent our Sonnes and Husbands captiuate
Talb. Ha, ha, ha
Count. Laughest thou Wretch?
Thy mirth shall turne to
moane
Talb. I laugh to see your Ladyship so fond,
To thinke, that
you haue ought but Talbots shadow,
Whereon to practise your seueritie
Count. Why? art not thou the man?
Talb. I am
indeede
Count. Then haue I substance too
Talb. No, no, I am but shadow of my selfe:
You are deceiu'd,
my substance is not here;
For what you see, is but the smallest part,
And
least proportion of Humanitie:
I tell you Madame, were the whole Frame
here,
It is of such a spacious loftie pitch,
Your Roofe were not
sufficient to contayn't
Count. This is a Riddling Merchant for the nonce,
He will be
here, and yet he is not here:
How can these contrarieties agree?
Talb. That will I shew you presently.
Winds his Horne, Drummes strike vp, a Peale of Ordenance:
Enter
Souldiors.
How say you Madame? are you now perswaded,
That Talbot is but shadow of
himselfe?
These are his substance, sinewes, armes, and strength,
With
which he yoaketh your rebellious Neckes,
Razeth your Cities, and subuerts
your Townes,
And in a moment makes them desolate
Count. Victorious Talbot, pardon my abuse,
I finde thou art
no lesse then Fame hath bruited,
And more then may be gathered by thy
shape.
Let my presumption not prouoke thy wrath,
For I am sorry, that with
reuerence
I did not entertaine thee as thou art
Talb. Be not dismay'd, faire Lady, nor misconster
The minde
of Talbot, as you did mistake
The outward composition of his body.
What
you haue done, hath not offended me:
Nor other satisfaction doe I
craue,
But onely with your patience, that we may
Taste of your Wine, and
see what Cates you haue,
For Souldiers stomacks alwayes serue them well
Count. With all my heart, and thinke me honored,
To feast so
great a Warrior in my House.
Exeunt.
Enter Richard Plantagenet, Warwick, Somerset, Poole, and others.
Yorke. Great Lords and Gentlemen,
What meanes this silence?
Dare
no man answer in a Case of Truth?
Suff. Within the Temple Hall we were
too lowd,
The Garden here is more conuenient
York. Then say at once, if I maintain'd the Truth:
Or else
was wrangling Somerset in th' error?
Suff. Faith I haue beene a Truant
in the Law,
And neuer yet could frame my will to it,
And therefore frame
the Law vnto my will
Som. Iudge you, my Lord of Warwicke, then betweene
vs
War. Between two Hawks, which flyes the higher pitch,
Between
two Dogs, which hath the deeper mouth,
Between two Blades, which beares the
better temper,
Between two Horses, which doth beare him best,
Between two
Girles, which hath the merryest eye,
I haue perhaps some shallow spirit of
Iudgement:
But in these nice sharpe Quillets of the Law,
Good faith I am
no wiser then a Daw
York. Tut, tut, here is a mannerly forbearance:
The truth
appeares so naked on my side,
That any purblind eye may find it out
Som. And on my side it is so well apparrell'd,
So cleare, so
shining, and so euident,
That it will glimmer through a blind-mans eye
York. Since you are tongue-ty'd, and so loth to speake,
In
dumbe significants proclayme your thoughts:
Let him that is a true-borne
Gentleman,
And stands vpon the honor of his birth,
If he suppose that I
haue pleaded truth,
From off this Bryer pluck a white Rose with me
Som. Let him that is no Coward, nor no Flatterer,
But dare
maintaine the partie of the truth,
Pluck a red Rose from off this Thorne with
me
War. I loue no Colours: and without all colour
Of base
insinuating flatterie,
I pluck this white Rose with Plantagenet
Suff. I pluck this red Rose, with young Somerset,
And say
withall, I thinke he held the right
Vernon. Stay Lords and Gentlemen, and pluck no more
Till you
conclude, that he vpon whose side
The fewest Roses are cropt from the
Tree,
Shall yeeld the other in the right opinion
Som. Good Master Vernon, it is well obiected:
If I haue
fewest, I subscribe in silence
York. And I
Vernon. Then for the truth, and plainnesse of the Case,
I
pluck this pale and Maiden Blossome here,
Giuing my Verdict on the white Rose
side
Som. Prick not your finger as you pluck it off,
Least
bleeding, you doe paint the white Rose red,
And fall on my side so against
your will
Vernon. If I, my Lord, for my opinion bleed,
Opinion shall be
Surgeon to my hurt,
And keepe me on the side where still I am
Som. Well, well, come on, who else?
Lawyer. Vnlesse my
Studie and my Bookes be false,
The argument you held, was wrong in you;
In
signe whereof, I pluck a white Rose too
Yorke. Now Somerset, where is your argument?
Som. Here
in my Scabbard, meditating, that
Shall dye your white Rose in a bloody
red
York. Meane time your cheeks do counterfeit our Roses:
For
pale they looke with feare, as witnessing
The truth on our side
Som. No Plantagenet:
Tis not for feare, but anger, that thy
cheekes
Blush for pure shame, to counterfeit our Roses,
And yet thy tongue
will not confesse thy error
Yorke. Hath not thy Rose a Canker, Somerset?
Som. Hath
not thy Rose a Thorne, Plantagenet?
Yorke. I, sharpe and piercing to
maintaine his truth,
Whiles thy consuming Canker eates his falsehood
Som. Well, Ile find friends to weare my bleeding Roses,
That
shall maintaine what I haue said is true,
Where false Plantagenet dare not be
seene
Yorke. Now by this Maiden Blossome in my hand,
I scorne thee
and thy fashion, peeuish Boy
Suff. Turne not thy scornes this way, Plantagenet
Yorke. Prowd Poole, I will, and scorne both him and
thee
Suff. Ile turne my part thereof into thy throat
Som. Away, away, good William de la Poole,
We grace the
Yeoman, by conuersing with him
Warw. Now by Gods will thou wrong'st him, Somerset:
His
Grandfather was Lyonel Duke of Clarence,
Third Sonne to the third Edward King
of England:
Spring Crestlesse Yeomen from so deepe a Root?
Yorke.
He beares him on the place's Priuiledge,
Or durst not for his crauen heart
say thus
Som. By him that made me, Ile maintaine my words
On any Plot
of Ground in Christendome.
Was not thy Father, Richard, Earle of
Cambridge,
For Treason executed in our late Kings dayes?
And by his
Treason, stand'st not thou attainted,
Corrupted, and exempt from ancient
Gentry?
His Trespas yet liues guiltie in thy blood,
And till thou be
restor'd, thou art a Yeoman
Yorke. My Father was attached, not attainted,
Condemn'd to
dye for Treason, but no Traytor;
And that Ile proue on better men then
Somerset,
Were growing time once ripened to my will.
For your partaker
Poole, and you your selfe,
Ile note you in my Booke of Memorie,
To scourge
you for this apprehension:
Looke to it well, and say you are well warn'd
Som. Ah, thou shalt finde vs ready for thee still:
And know
vs by these Colours for thy Foes,
For these, my friends in spight of thee
shall weare
Yorke. And by my Soule, this pale and angry Rose,
As
Cognizance of my blood-drinking hate,
Will I for euer, and my Faction
weare,
Vntill it wither with me to my Graue,
Or flourish to the height of
my Degree
Suff. Goe forward, and be choak'd with thy ambition:
And so
farwell, vntill I meet thee next.
Enter.
Som. Haue with thee Poole: Farwell ambitious Richard.
Enter.
Yorke. How I am brau'd, and must perforce endure
it?
Warw. This blot that they obiect against your House,
Shall be whipt out in
the next Parliament,
Call'd for the Truce of Winchester and
Gloucester:
And if thou be not then created Yorke,
I will not liue to be
accounted Warwicke.
Meane time, in signall of my loue to thee,
Against
prowd Somerset, and William Poole,
Will I vpon thy partie weare this
Rose.
And here I prophecie: this brawle to day,
Growne to this faction in
the Temple Garden,
Shall send betweene the Red-Rose and the White,
A
thousand Soules to Death and deadly Night
Yorke. Good Master Vernon, I am bound to you,
That you on my
behalfe would pluck a Flower
Ver. In your behalfe still will I weare the same
Lawyer. And so will I
Yorke. Thankes gentle.
Come, let vs foure to Dinner: I dare
say,
This Quarrell will drinke Blood another day.
Exeunt.
Enter Mortimer, brought in a Chayre, and Iaylors.
Mort. Kind Keepers of my weake decaying Age,
Let dying Mortimer
here rest himselfe.
Euen like a man new haled from the Wrack,
So fare my
Limbes with long Imprisonment:
And these gray Locks, the Pursuiuants of
death,
Nestor-like aged, in an Age of Care,
Argue the end of Edmund
Mortimer.
These Eyes like Lampes, whose wasting Oyle is spent,
Waxe dimme,
as drawing to their Exigent.
Weake Shoulders, ouer-borne with burthening
Griefe,
And pyth-lesse Armes, like to a withered Vine,
That droupes his
sappe-lesse Branches to the ground.
Yet are these Feet, whose strength-lesse
stay is numme,
(Vnable to support this Lumpe of Clay)
Swift-winged with
desire to get a Graue,
As witting I no other comfort haue.
But tell me,
Keeper, will my Nephew come?
Keeper. Richard Plantagenet, my Lord,
will come:
We sent vnto the Temple, vnto his Chamber,
And answer was
return'd, that he will come
Mort. Enough: my Soule shall then be satisfied.
Poore
Gentleman, his wrong doth equall mine.
Since Henry Monmouth first began to
reigne,
Before whose Glory I was great in Armes,
This loathsome
sequestration haue I had;
And euen since then, hath Richard beene
obscur'd,
Depriu'd of Honor and Inheritance.
But now, the Arbitrator of
Despaires,
Iust Death, kinde Vmpire of mens miseries,
With sweet
enlargement doth dismisse me hence:
I would his troubles likewise were
expir'd,
That so he might recouer what was lost.
Enter Richard.
Keeper. My Lord, your louing Nephew now is come
Mor. Richard Plantagenet, my friend, is he come?
Rich.
I, Noble Vnckle, thus ignobly vs'd,
Your Nephew, late despised Richard,
comes
Mort. Direct mine Armes, I may embrace his Neck,
And in his
Bosome spend my latter gaspe.
Oh tell me when my Lippes doe touch his
Cheekes,
That I may kindly giue one fainting Kisse.
And now declare sweet
Stem from Yorkes great Stock,
Why didst thou say of late thou wert
despis'd?
Rich. First, leane thine aged Back against mine Arme,
And
in that ease, Ile tell thee my Disease.
This day in argument vpon a
Case,
Some words there grew 'twixt Somerset and me:
Among which tearmes,
he vs'd his lauish tongue,
And did vpbrayd me with my Fathers death;
Which
obloquie set barres before my tongue,
Else with the like I had requited
him.
Therefore good Vnckle, for my Fathers sake,
In honor of a true
Plantagenet,
And for Alliance sake, declare the cause
My Father, Earle of
Cambridge, lost his Head
Mort. That cause (faire Nephew) that imprison'd me,
And hath
detayn'd me all my flowring Youth,
Within a loathsome Dungeon, there to
pyne,
Was cursed Instrument of his decease
Rich. Discouer more at large what cause that was,
For I am
ignorant, and cannot guesse
Mort. I will, if that my fading breath permit,
And Death
approach not, ere my Tale be done.
Henry the Fourth, Grandfather to this
King,
Depos'd his Nephew Richard, Edwards Sonne,
The first begotten, and
the lawfull Heire
Of Edward King, the Third of that Descent.
During whose
Reigne, the Percies of the North,
Finding his Vsurpation most
vniust,
Endeuour'd my aduancement to the Throne.
The reason mou'd these
Warlike Lords to this,
Was, for that (young Richard thus remou'd,
Leauing
no Heire begotten of his Body)
I was the next by Birth and Parentage:
For
by my Mother, I deriued am
From Lionel Duke of Clarence, third Sonne
To
King Edward the Third; whereas hee,
From Iohn of Gaunt doth bring his
Pedigree,
Being but fourth of that Heroick Lyne.
But marke: as in this
haughtie great attempt,
They laboured, to plant the rightfull Heire,
I
lost my Libertie, and they their Liues.
Long after this, when Henry the
Fift
(Succeeding his Father Bullingbrooke) did reigne;
Thy Father, Earle
of Cambridge, then deriu'd
From famous Edmund Langley, Duke of
Yorke,
Marrying my Sister, that thy Mother was;
Againe, in pitty of my
hard distresse,
Leuied an Army, weening to redeeme,
And haue install'd me
in the Diademe:
But as the rest, so fell that Noble Earle,
And was
beheaded. Thus the Mortimers,
In whom the Title rested, were supprest
Rich. Of which, my Lord, your Honor is the last
Mort. True; and thou seest, that I no Issue haue,
And that my
fainting words doe warrant death:
Thou art my Heire; the rest, I wish thee
gather:
But yet be wary in thy studious care
Rich. Thy graue admonishments preuayle with me:
But yet me
thinkes, my Fathers execution
Was nothing lesse then bloody Tyranny
Mort. With silence, Nephew, be thou pollitick,
Strong fixed
is the House of Lancaster,
And like a Mountaine, not to be remou'd.
But
now thy Vnckle is remouing hence,
As Princes doe their Courts, when they are
cloy'd
With long continuance in a setled place
Rich. O Vnckle, would some part of my young yeeres
Might but
redeeme the passage of your Age
Mort. Thou do'st then wrong me, as y slaughterer doth,
Which
giueth many Wounds, when one will kill.
Mourne not, except thou sorrow for my
good,
Onely giue order for my Funerall.
And so farewell, and faire be all
thy hopes,
And prosperous be thy Life in Peace and Warre.
Dyes.
Rich. And Peace, no Warre, befall thy parting Soule.
In Prison hast
thou spent a Pilgrimage,
And like a Hermite ouer-past thy dayes.
Well, I
will locke his Councell in my Brest,
And what I doe imagine, let that
rest.
Keepers conuey him hence, and I my selfe
Will see his Buryall better
then his Life.
Enter.
Here dyes the duskie Torch of Mortimer,
Choakt with Ambition of the meaner
sort.
And for those Wrongs, those bitter Iniuries,
Which Somerset hath
offer'd to my House,
I doubt not, but with Honor to redresse.
And
therefore haste I to the Parliament,
Eyther to be restored to my Blood,
Or
make my will th' aduantage of my good.
Enter.
Actus Tertius. Scena Prima.
Flourish. Enter King, Exeter, Gloster, Winchester,
Warwick.
Somerset,
Suffolk, Richard Plantagenet. Gloster offers to put vp
a Bill:
Winchester
snatches it, teares it.
Winch. Com'st thou with deepe premeditated Lines?
With written
Pamphlets, studiously deuis'd?
Humfrey of Gloster, if thou canst
accuse,
Or ought intend'st to lay vnto my charge,
Doe it without
inuention, suddenly,
As I with sudden, and extemporall speech,
Purpose to
answer what thou canst obiect
Glo. Presumptuous Priest, this place co[m]mands my
patie[n]ce,
Or thou should'st finde thou hast dis-honor'd me.
Thinke not,
although in Writing I preferr'd
The manner of thy vile outragious
Crymes,
That therefore I haue forg'd, or am not able
Verbatim to rehearse
the Methode of my Penne.
No Prelate, such is thy audacious
wickednesse,
Thy lewd, pestiferous, and dissentious prancks,
As very
Infants prattle of thy pride.
Thou art a most pernitious Vsurer,
Froward
by nature, Enemie to Peace,
Lasciuious, wanton, more then well beseemes
A
man of thy Profession, and Degree.
And for thy Trecherie, what's more
manifest?
In that thou layd'st a Trap to take my Life,
As well at London
Bridge, as at the Tower.
Beside, I feare me, if thy thoughts were
sifted,
The King, thy Soueraigne, is not quite exempt
From enuious mallice
of thy swelling heart
Winch. Gloster, I doe defie thee. Lords vouchsafe
To giue me
hearing what I shall reply.
If I were couetous, ambitious, or peruerse,
As
he will haue me: how am I so poore?
Or how haps it, I seeke not to
aduance
Or rayse my selfe? but keepe my wonted Calling.
And for
Dissention, who preferreth Peace
More then I doe? except I be
prouok'd.
No, my good Lords, it is not that offends,
It is not that, that
hath incens'd the Duke:
It is because no one should sway but hee,
No one,
but hee, should be about the King;
And that engenders Thunder in his
breast,
And makes him rore these Accusations forth.
But he shall know I am
as good
Glost. As good?
Thou Bastard of my Grandfather
Winch. I, Lordly Sir: for what are you, I pray,
But one
imperious in anothers Throne?
Glost. Am I not Protector, sawcie
Priest?
Winch. And am not I a Prelate of the Church?
Glost.
Yes, as an Out-law in a Castle keepes,
And vseth it, to patronage his
Theft
Winch. Vnreuerent Glocester
Glost. Thou art reuerent,
Touching thy Spirituall Function,
not thy Life
Winch. Rome shall remedie this
Warw. Roame thither then.
My Lord, it were your dutie to
forbeare
Som. I, see the Bishop be not ouer-borne:
Me thinkes my Lord
should be Religious,
And know the Office that belongs to such
Warw. Me thinkes his Lordship should be humbler,
It fitteth
not a Prelate so to plead
Som. Yes, when his holy State is toucht so neere
Warw. State holy, or vnhallow'd, what of that?
Is not his
Grace Protector to the King?
Rich. Plantagenet I see must hold his
tongue,
Least it be said, Speake Sirrha when you should:
Must your bold
Verdict enter talke with Lords?
Else would I haue a fling at Winchester
King. Vnckles of Gloster, and of Winchester,
The speciall
Watch-men of our English Weale,
I would preuayle, if Prayers might
preuayle,
To ioyne your hearts in loue and amitie.
Oh, what a Scandall is
it to our Crowne,
That two such Noble Peeres as ye should iarre?
Beleeue
me, Lords, my tender yeeres can tell,
Ciuill dissention is a viperous
Worme,
That gnawes the Bowels of the Common-wealth.
A noyse within, Downe with the Tawny-Coats.
King. What tumult's this?
Warw. An Vprore, I dare
warrant,
Begun through malice of the Bishops men.
A noyse againe, Stones, Stones.
Enter Maior.
Maior. Oh my good Lords, and vertuous Henry,
Pitty the Citie of
London, pitty vs:
The Bishop, and the Duke of Glosters men,
Forbidden late
to carry any Weapon,
Haue fill'd their Pockets full of peeble stones;
And
banding themselues in contrary parts,
Doe pelt so fast at one anothers
Pate,
That many haue their giddy braynes knockt out:
Our Windowes are
broke downe in euery Street,
And we, for feare, compell'd to shut our
Shops.
Enter in skirmish with bloody Pates.
King. We charge you, on allegeance to our selfe,
To hold your
slaughtring hands, and keepe the Peace:
Pray' Vnckle Gloster mittigate this
strife
1.Seruing. Nay, if we be forbidden Stones, wee'le fall
to it
with our Teeth
2.Seruing. Doe what ye dare, we are as resolute.
Skirmish againe.
Glost. You of my household, leaue this peeuish broyle,
And set this
vnaccustom'd fight aside
3.Seru. My Lord, we know your Grace to be a man
Iust, and
vpright; and for your Royall Birth,
Inferior to none, but to his
Maiestie:
And ere that we will suffer such a Prince,
So kinde a Father of
the Common-weale,
To be disgraced by an Inke-horne Mate,
Wee and our Wiues
and Children all will fight,
And haue our bodyes slaughtred by thy foes
1.Seru. I, and the very parings of our Nayles
Shall pitch a
Field when we are dead.
Begin againe.
Glost. Stay, stay, I say:
And if you loue me, as you say you
doe,
Let me perswade you to forbeare a while
King. Oh, how this discord doth afflict my Soule.
Can you, my
Lord of Winchester, behold
My sighes and teares, and will not once
relent?
Who should be pittifull, if you be not?
Or who should study to
preferre a Peace,
If holy Church-men take delight in broyles?
Warw.
Yeeld my Lord Protector, yeeld Winchester,
Except you meane with obstinate
repulse
To slay your Soueraigne, and destroy the Realme.
You see what
Mischiefe, and what Murther too,
Hath beene enacted through your
enmitie:
Then be at peace, except ye thirst for blood
Winch. He shall submit, or I will neuer yeeld
Glost. Compassion on the King commands me stoupe,
Or I would
see his heart out, ere the Priest
Should euer get that priuiledge of me
Warw. Behold my Lord of Winchester, the Duke
Hath banisht
moodie discontented fury,
As by his smoothed Browes it doth appeare:
Why
looke you still so sterne, and tragicall?
Glost. Here Winchester, I
offer thee my Hand
King. Fie Vnckle Beauford, I haue heard you preach,
That
Mallice was a great and grieuous sinne:
And will not you maintaine the thing
you teach?
But proue a chiefe offendor in the same
Warw. Sweet King: the Bishop hath a kindly gyrd:
For shame my
Lord of Winchester relent;
What, shall a Child instruct you what to
doe?
Winch. Well, Duke of Gloster, I will yeeld to thee
Loue for
thy Loue, and Hand for Hand I giue
Glost. I, but I feare me with a hollow Heart.
See here my
Friends and louing Countreymen,
This token serueth for a Flagge of
Truce,
Betwixt our selues, and all our followers:
So helpe me God, as I
dissemble not
Winch. So helpe me God, as I intend it not
King. Oh louing Vnckle, kinde Duke of Gloster,
How ioyfull am
I made by this Contract.
Away my Masters, trouble vs no more,
But ioyne in
friendship, as your Lords haue done
1.Seru. Content, Ile to the Surgeons
2.Seru. And so will I
3.Seru. And I will see what Physick the Tauerne affords.
Exeunt.
Warw. Accept this Scrowle, most gracious Soueraigne,
Which in the
Right of Richard Plantagenet,
We doe exhibite to your Maiestie
Glo. Well vrg'd, my Lord of Warwick: for sweet Prince,
And if
your Grace marke euery circumstance,
You haue great reason to doe Richard
right,
Especially for those occasions
At Eltam Place I told your
Maiestie
King. And those occasions, Vnckle, were of force:
Therefore
my louing Lords, our pleasure is,
That Richard be restored to his Blood
Warw. Let Richard be restored to his Blood,
So shall his
Fathers wrongs be recompenc't
Winch. As will the rest, so willeth Winchester
King. If Richard will be true, not that all alone,
But all
the whole Inheritance I giue,
That doth belong vnto the House of
Yorke,
From whence you spring, by Lineall Descent
Rich. Thy humble seruant vowes obedience,
And humble seruice,
till the point of death
King. Stoope then, and set your Knee against my Foot,
And in
reguerdon of that dutie done,
I gyrt thee with the valiant Sword of
Yorke:
Rise Richard, like a true Plantagenet,
And rise created Princely
Duke of Yorke
Rich. And so thriue Richard, as thy foes may fall,
And as my
dutie springs, so perish they,
That grudge one thought against your
Maiesty
All. Welcome high Prince, the mighty Duke of Yorke
Som. Perish base Prince, ignoble Duke of Yorke
Glost. Now will it best auaile your Maiestie,
To crosse the
Seas, and to be Crown'd in France:
The presence of a King engenders
loue
Amongst his Subiects, and his loyall Friends,
As it dis-animates his
Enemies
King. When Gloster sayes the word, King Henry goes,
For
friendly counsaile cuts off many Foes
Glost. Your Ships alreadie are in readinesse.
Senet. Flourish. Exeunt.
Manet Exeter.
Exet. I, we may march in England, or in France,
Not seeing what is
likely to ensue:
This late dissention growne betwixt the Peeres,
Burnes
vnder fained ashes of forg'd loue,
And will at last breake out into a
flame,
As festred members rot but by degree,
Till bones and flesh and
sinewes fall away,
So will this base and enuious discord breed.
And now I
feare that fatall Prophecie,
Which in the time of Henry, nam'd the
Fift,
Was in the mouth of euery sucking Babe,
That Henry borne at Monmouth
should winne all,
And Henry borne at Windsor, loose all:
Which is so
plaine, that Exeter doth wish,
His dayes may finish, ere that haplesse
time.
Enter.
Scoena Secunda.
Enter Pucell disguis'd, with foure Souldiors with Sacks vpon
their
backs.
Pucell. These are the Citie Gates, the Gates of Roan,
Through
which our Pollicy must make a breach.
Take heed, be wary how you place your
words,
Talke like the vulgar sort of Market men,
That come to gather Money
for their Corne.
If we haue entrance, as I hope we shall,
And that we
finde the slouthfull Watch but weake,
Ile by a signe giue notice to our
friends,
That Charles the Dolphin may encounter them
Souldier. Our Sacks shall be a meane to sack the City,
And we
be Lords and Rulers ouer Roan,
Therefore wee'le knock.
Knock.
Watch. Che la
Pucell. Peasauns la pouure gens de Fraunce,
Poore Market
folkes that come to sell their Corne
Watch. Enter, goe in, the Market Bell is rung
Pucell. Now Roan, Ile shake thy Bulwarkes to the
ground.
Exeunt.
Enter Charles, Bastard, Alanson.
Charles. Saint Dennis blesse this happy Stratageme,
And once againe
wee'le sleepe secure in Roan
Bastard. Here entred Pucell, and her Practisants:
Now she is
there, how will she specifie?
Here is the best and safest passage in
Reig. By thrusting out a Torch from yonder Tower,
Which once
discern'd, shewes that her meaning is,
No way to that (for weaknesse) which
she entred.
Enter Pucell on the top, thrusting out a Torch burning.
Pucell. Behold, this is the happy Wedding Torch,
That ioyneth Roan
vnto her Countreymen,
But burning fatall to the Talbonites
Bastard. See Noble Charles the Beacon of our friend,
The
burning Torch in yonder Turret stands
Charles. Now shine it like a Commet of Reuenge,
A Prophet to
the fall of all our Foes
Reig. Deferre no time, delayes haue dangerous ends,
Enter and
cry, the Dolphin, presently,
And then doe execution on the Watch.
Alarum.
An Alarum. Talbot in an Excursion.
Talb. France, thou shalt rue this Treason with thy teares,
If
Talbot but suruiue thy Trecherie.
Pucell that Witch, that damned
Sorceresse,
Hath wrought this Hellish Mischiefe vnawares,
That hardly we
escap't the Pride of France.
Enter.
An Alarum: Excursions. Bedford brought in sicke in a Chayre.
Enter Talbot and Burgonie without: within, Pucell, Charles,
Bastard,
and
Reigneir on the Walls.
Pucell. God morrow Gallants, want ye Corn for Bread?
I thinke the
Duke of Burgonie will fast,
Before hee'le buy againe at such a rate.
'Twas
full of Darnell: doe you like the taste?
Burg. Scoffe on vile Fiend,
and shamelesse Curtizan,
I trust ere long to choake thee with thine
owne,
And make thee curse the Haruest of that Corne
Charles. Your Grace may starue (perhaps) before that
time
Bedf. Oh let no words, but deedes, reuenge this Treason
Pucell. What will you doe, good gray-beard?
Breake a Launce,
and runne a-Tilt at Death,
Within a Chayre
Talb. Foule Fiend of France, and Hag of all
despight,
Incompass'd with thy lustfull Paramours,
Becomes it thee to
taunt his valiant Age,
And twit with Cowardise a man halfe dead?
Damsell,
Ile haue a bowt with you againe,
Or else let Talbot perish with this
shame
Pucell. Are ye so hot, Sir: yet Pucell hold thy peace,
If
Talbot doe but Thunder, Raine will follow.
They whisper together in counsell.
God speed the Parliament: who shall be the Speaker?
Talb. Dare yee
come forth, and meet vs in the field?
Pucell. Belike your Lordship
takes vs then for fooles,
To try if that our owne be ours, or no
Talb. I speake not to that rayling Hecate,
But vnto thee
Alanson, and the rest.
Will ye, like Souldiors, come and fight it
out?
Alans. Seignior no
Talb. Seignior hang: base Muleters of France,
Like Pesant
foot-Boyes doe they keepe the Walls,
And dare not take vp Armes, like
Gentlemen
Pucell. Away Captaines, let's get vs from the Walls,
For
Talbot meanes no goodnesse by his Lookes.
God b'uy my Lord, we came but to
tell you
That wee are here.
Exeunt. from the Walls.
Talb. And there will we be too, ere it be long,
Or else reproach be
Talbots greatest fame.
Vow Burgonie, by honor of thy House,
Prickt on by
publike Wrongs sustain'd in France,
Either to get the Towne againe, or
dye.
And I, as sure as English Henry liues,
And as his Father here was
Conqueror;
As sure as in this late betrayed Towne,
Great Cordelions Heart
was buryed;
So sure I sweare, to get the Towne, or dye
Burg. My Vowes are equall partners with thy
Vowes
Talb. But ere we goe, regard this dying Prince,
The valiant
Duke of Bedford: Come my Lord,
We will bestow you in some better
place,
Fitter for sicknesse, and for crasie age
Bedf. Lord Talbot, doe not so dishonour me:
Here will I sit,
before the Walls of Roan,
And will be partner of your weale or woe
Burg. Couragious Bedford, let vs now perswade you
Bedf. Not to be gone from hence: for once I read,
That stout
Pendragon, in his Litter sick,
Came to the field, and vanquished his
foes.
Me thinkes I should reuiue the Souldiors hearts,
Because I euer
found them as my selfe
Talb. Vndaunted spirit in a dying breast,
Then be it so:
Heauens keepe old Bedford safe.
And now no more adoe, braue Burgonie,
But
gather we our Forces out of hand,
And set vpon our boasting
Enemie.
Enter.
An Alarum: Excursions. Enter Sir Iohn Falstaffe, and a Captaine.
Capt. Whither away Sir Iohn Falstaffe, in such haste?
Falst.
Whither away? to saue my selfe by flight,
We are like to haue the ouerthrow
againe
Capt. What? will you flye, and leaue Lord Talbot?
Falst. I, all the Talbots in the World, to saue my life.
Enter.
Capt. Cowardly Knight, ill fortune follow thee.
Enter.
Retreat. Excursions. Pucell, Alanson, and Charles flye.
Bedf. Now quiet Soule, depart when Heauen please,
For I haue seene
our Enemies ouerthrow.
What is the trust or strength of foolish man?
They
that of late were daring with their scoffes,
Are glad and faine by flight to
saue themselues.
Bedford dyes, and is carryed in by two in his Chaire.
An Alarum. Enter Talbot, Burgonie, and the rest.
Talb. Lost, and recouered in a day againe,
This is a double Honor,
Burgonie:
Yet Heauens haue glory for this Victorie
Burg. Warlike and Martiall Talbot, Burgonie
Inshrines thee in
his heart, and there erects
Thy noble Deeds, as Valors Monuments
Talb. Thanks gentle Duke: but where is Pucel now?
I thinke
her old Familiar is asleepe.
Now where's the Bastards braues, and Charles his
glikes?
What all amort? Roan hangs her head for griefe,
That such a
valiant Company are fled.
Now will we take some order in the
Towne,
Placing therein some expert Officers,
And then depart to Paris, to
the King,
For there young Henry with his Nobles lye
Burg. What wills Lord Talbot, pleaseth Burgonie
Talb. But yet before we goe, let's not forget
The Noble Duke
of Bedford, late deceas'd,
But see his Exequies fulfill'd in Roan.
A
brauer Souldier neuer couched Launce,
A gentler Heart did neuer sway in
Court.
But Kings and mightiest Potentates must die,
For that's the end of
humane miserie.
Exeunt.
Scaena Tertia.
Enter Charles, Bastard, Alanson, Pucell.
Pucell. Dismay not (Princes) at this accident,
Nor grieue that Roan
is so recouered:
Care is no cure, but rather corrosiue,
For things that
are not to be remedy'd.
Let frantike Talbot triumph for a while,
And like
a Peacock sweepe along his tayle,
Wee'le pull his Plumes, and take away his
Trayne,
If Dolphin and the rest will be but rul'd
Charles. We haue been guided by thee hitherto,
And of thy
Cunning had no diffidence,
One sudden Foyle shall neuer breed distrust
Bastard. Search out thy wit for secret pollicies,
And we will
make thee famous through the World
Alans. Wee'le set thy Statue in some holy place,
And haue
thee reuerenc't like a blessed Saint.
Employ thee then, sweet Virgin, for our
good
Pucell. Then thus it must be, this doth Ioane deuise:
By
faire perswasions, mixt with sugred words,
We will entice the Duke of
Burgonie
To leaue the Talbot, and to follow vs
Charles. I marry Sweeting, if we could doe that,
France were
no place for Henryes Warriors,
Nor should that Nation boast it so with
vs,
But be extirped from our Prouinces
Alans. For euer should they be expuls'd from France,
And not
haue Title of an Earledome here
Pucell. Your Honors shall perceiue how I will worke,
To bring
this matter to the wished end.
Drumme sounds a farre off.
Hearke, by the sound of Drumme you may perceiue
Their Powers are marching
vnto Paris-ward.
Here sound an English March.
There goes the Talbot with his Colours spred,
And all the Troupes of
English after him.
French March.
Now in the Rereward comes the Duke and his:
Fortune in fauor makes him
lagge behinde.
Summon a Parley, we will talke with him.
Trumpets sound a Parley.
Charles. A Parley with the Duke of Burgonie
Burg. Who craues a Parley with the Burgonie?
Pucell.
The Princely Charles of France, thy Countreyman
Burg. What say'st thou Charles? for I am marching
hence
Charles. Speake Pucell, and enchaunt him with thy
words
Pucell. Braue Burgonie, vndoubted hope of France,
Stay, let
thy humble Hand-maid speake to thee
Burg. Speake on, but be not ouer-tedious
Pucell. Looke on thy Country, look on fertile France,
And see
the Cities and the Townes defac't,
By wasting Ruine of the cruell Foe,
As
lookes the Mother on her lowly Babe,
When Death doth close his tender-dying
Eyes.
See, see the pining Maladie of France:
Behold the Wounds, the most
vnnaturall Wounds,
Which thou thy selfe hast giuen her wofull Brest.
Oh
turne thy edged Sword another way,
Strike those that hurt, and hurt not those
that helpe:
One drop of Blood drawne from thy Countries Bosome,
Should
grieue thee more then streames of forraine gore.
Returne thee therefore with
a floud of Teares,
And wash away thy Countries stayned Spots
Burg. Either she hath bewitcht me with her words,
Or Nature
makes me suddenly relent
Pucell. Besides, all French and France exclaimes on
thee,
Doubting thy Birth and lawfull Progenie.
Who ioyn'st thou with, but
with a Lordly Nation,
That will not trust thee, but for profits sake?
When
Talbot hath set footing once in France,
And fashion'd thee that Instrument of
Ill,
Who then, but English Henry, will be Lord,
And thou be thrust out,
like a Fugitiue?
Call we to minde, and marke but this for proofe:
Was not
the Duke of Orleance thy Foe?
And was he not in England Prisoner?
But when
they heard he was thine Enemie,
They set him free, without his Ransome
pay'd,
In spight of Burgonie and all his friends.
See then, thou fight'st
against thy Countreymen,
And ioyn'st with them will be thy
slaughter-men.
Come, come, returne; returne thou wandering Lord,
Charles
and the rest will take thee in their armes
Burg. I am vanquished:
These haughtie wordes of hers
Haue
batt'red me like roaring Cannon-shot,
And made me almost yeeld vpon my
knees.
Forgiue me Countrey, and sweet Countreymen:
And Lords accept this
heartie kind embrace.
My Forces and my Power of Men are yours.
So farwell
Talbot, Ile no longer trust thee
Pucell. Done like a Frenchman: turne and turne againe
Charles. Welcome braue Duke, thy friendship makes
vs
fresh
Bastard. And doth beget new Courage in our
Breasts
Alans. Pucell hath brauely play'd her part in this,
And doth
deserue a Coronet of Gold
Charles. Now let vs on, my Lords,
And ioyne our
Powers,
And seeke how we may preiudice the Foe.
Exeunt.
Scoena Quarta.
Enter the King, Gloucester, Winchester, Yorke,
Suffolke,
Somerset,
Warwicke, Exeter: To them, with his Souldiors,
Talbot.
Talb. My gracious Prince, and honorable Peeres,
Hearing of your
arriuall in this Realme,
I haue a while giuen Truce vnto my Warres,
To doe
my dutie to my Soueraigne.
In signe whereof, this Arme, that hath
reclaym'd
To your obedience, fiftie Fortresses,
Twelue Cities, and seuen
walled Townes of strength,
Beside fiue hundred Prisoners of esteeme;
Lets
fall his Sword before your Highnesse feet:
And with submissiue loyaltie of
heart
Ascribes the Glory of his Conquest got,
First to my God, and next
vnto your Grace
King. Is this the Lord Talbot, Vnckle Gloucester,
That hath
so long beene resident in France?
Glost. Yes, if it please your
Maiestie, my Liege
King. Welcome braue Captaine, and victorious Lord.
When I was
young (as yet I am not old)
I doe remember how my Father said,
A stouter
Champion neuer handled Sword.
Long since we were resolued of your
truth,
Your faithfull seruice, and your toyle in Warre:
Yet neuer haue you
tasted our Reward,
Or beene reguerdon'd with so much as Thanks,
Because
till now, we neuer saw your face.
Therefore stand vp, and for these good
deserts,
We here create you Earle of Shrewsbury,
And in our Coronation
take your place.
Senet. Flourish. Exeunt.
Manet Vernon and Basset.
Vern. Now Sir, to you that were so hot at Sea,
Disgracing of these
Colours that I weare,
In honor of my Noble Lord of Yorke
Dar'st thou
maintaine the former words thou spak'st?
Bass. Yes Sir, as well as you
dare patronage
The enuious barking of your sawcie Tongue,
Against my Lord
the Duke of Somerset
Vern. Sirrha, thy Lord I honour as he is
Bass. Why, what is he? as good a man as Yorke
Vern. Hearke ye: not so: in witnesse take ye that.
Strikes him.
Bass. Villaine, thou knowest
The Law of Armes is such,
That who
so drawes a Sword, 'tis present death,
Or else this Blow should broach thy
dearest Bloud.
But Ile vnto his Maiestie, and craue,
I may haue libertie
to venge this Wrong,
When thou shalt see, Ile meet thee to thy cost
Vern. Well miscreant, Ile be there as soone as you,
And after
meete you, sooner then you would.
Exeunt.
Actus Quartus. Scena Prima.
Enter King, Glocester, Winchester, Yorke, Suffolke,
Somerset,
Warwicke,
Talbot, and Gouernor Exeter.
Glo. Lord Bishop set the Crowne vpon his head
Win. God saue King Henry of that name the sixt
Glo. Now Gouernour of Paris take your oath,
That you elect no
other King but him;
Esteeme none Friends, but such as are his Friends,
And
none your Foes, but such as shall pretend
Malicious practises against his
State:
This shall ye do, so helpe you righteous God.
Enter Falstaffe.
Fal. My gracious Soueraigne, as I rode from Calice,
To haste vnto
your Coronation:
A Letter was deliuer'd to my hands,
Writ to your Grace,
from th' Duke of Burgundy
Tal. Shame to the Duke of Burgundy, and thee:
I vow'd (base
Knight) when I did meete the next,
To teare the Garter from thy Crauens
legge,
Which I haue done, because (vnworthily)
Thou was't installed in
that High Degree.
Pardon me Princely Henry, and the rest:
This Dastard, at
the battell of Poictiers,
When (but in all) I was sixe thousand
strong,
And that the French were almost ten to one,
Before we met, or that
a stroke was giuen,
Like to a trustie Squire, did run away.
In which
assault, we lost twelue hundred men.
My selfe, and diuers Gentlemen
beside,
Were there surpriz'd, and taken prisoners.
Then iudge (great
Lords) if I haue done amisse:
Or whether that such Cowards ought to
weare
This Ornament of Knighthood, yea or no?
Glo. To say the
truth, this fact was infamous,
And ill beseeming any common man;
Much more
a Knight, a Captaine, and a Leader
Tal. When first this Order was ordain'd my Lords,
Knights of
the Garter were of Noble birth;
Valiant, and Vertuous, full of haughtie
Courage,
Such as were growne to credit by the warres:
Not fearing Death,
nor shrinking for Distresse,
But alwayes resolute, in most extreames.
He
then, that is not furnish'd in this sort,
Doth but vsurpe the Sacred name of
Knight,
Prophaning this most Honourable Order,
And should (if I were
worthy to be Iudge)
Be quite degraded, like a Hedge-borne Swaine,
That
doth presume to boast of Gentle blood
K. Staine to thy Countrymen, thou hear'st thy doom:
Be
packing therefore, thou that was't a knight:
Henceforth we banish thee on
paine of death.
And now Lord Protector, view the Letter
Sent from our
Vnckle Duke of Burgundy
Glo. What meanes his Grace, that he hath chaung'd
his
Stile?
No more but plaine and bluntly? (To the King.)
Hath he forgot he is
his Soueraigne?
Or doth this churlish Superscription
Pretend some
alteration in good will?
What's heere? I haue vpon especiall cause,
Mou'd
with compassion of my Countries wracke,
Together with the pittifull
complaints
Of such as your oppression feedes vpon,
Forsaken your
pernitious Faction,
And ioyn'd with Charles, the rightfull king of
France.
O monstrous Treachery: Can this be so?
That in alliance, amity,
and oathes,
There should be found such false dissembling guile?
King. What? doth my Vnckle Burgundy reuolt?
Glo. He doth my Lord, and
is become your foe
King. Is that the worst this Letter doth containe?
Glo. It is the worst, and all (my Lord) he writes
King. Why then Lord Talbot there shal talk with him,
And giue
him chasticement for this abuse.
How say you (my Lord) are you not
content?
Tal. Content, my Liege? Yes: But y I am preuented,
I
should haue begg'd I might haue bene employd
King. Then gather strength, and march vnto
him
straight:
Let him perceiue how ill we brooke his Treason,
And what
offence it is to flout his Friends
Tal. I go my Lord, in heart desiring still
You may behold
confusion of your foes.
Enter Vernon and Bassit.
Ver. Grant me the Combate, gracious Soueraigne
Bas. And me (my Lord) grant me the Combate too
Yorke. This is my Seruant, heare him Noble Prince
Som. And this is mine (sweet Henry) fauour him
King. Be patient Lords, and giue them leaue to speak.
Say
Gentlemen, what makes you thus exclaime,
And wherefore craue you Combate? Or
with whom?
Ver. With him (my Lord) for he hath done me wrong
Bas. And I with him, for he hath done me wrong
King. What is that wrong, wherof you both complain
First let
me know, and then Ile answer you
Bas. Crossing the Sea, from England into France,
This Fellow
heere with enuious carping tongue,
Vpbraided me about the Rose I
weare,
Saying, the sanguine colour of the Leaues
Did represent my Masters
blushing cheekes:
When stubbornly he did repugne the truth,
About a
certaine question in the Law,
Argu'd betwixt the Duke of Yorke, and
him:
With other vile and ignominious tearmes.
In confutation of which rude
reproach,
And in defence of my Lords worthinesse,
I craue the benefit of
Law of Armes
Ver. And that is my petition (Noble Lord:)
For though he
seeme with forged queint conceite
To set a glosse vpon his bold
intent,
Yet know (my Lord) I was prouok'd by him,
And he first tooke
exceptions at this badge,
Pronouncing that the palenesse of this
Flower,
Bewray'd the faintnesse of my Masters heart
Yorke. Will not this malice Somerset be left?
Som.
Your priuate grudge my Lord of York, wil out,
Though ne're so cunningly you
smother it
King. Good Lord, what madnesse rules in
brainesicke
men,
When for so slight and friuolous a cause,
Such
factious aemulations shall arise?
Good Cosins both of Yorke and
Somerset,
Quiet your selues (I pray) and be at peace
Yorke. Let this dissention first be tried by fight,
And then
your Highnesse shall command a Peace
Som. The quarrell toucheth none but vs alone,
Betwixt our
selues let vs decide it then
Yorke. There is my pledge, accept it Somerset
Ver. Nay, let it rest where it began at first
Bass. Confirme it so, mine honourable Lord
Glo. Confirme it so? Confounded be your strife,
And perish ye
with your audacious prate,
Presumptuous vassals, are you not asham'd
With
this immodest clamorous outrage,
To trouble and disturbe the King, and
Vs?
And you my Lords, me thinkes you do not well
To beare with their
peruerse Obiections:
Much lesse to take occasion from their mouthes,
To
raise a mutiny betwixt your selues.
Let me perswade you take a better
course
Exet. It greeues his Highnesse,
Good my Lords, be Friends
King. Come hither you that would be Combatants:
Henceforth I
charge you, as you loue our fauour,
Quite to forget this Quarrell, and the
cause.
And you my Lords: Remember where we are,
In France, amongst a
fickle wauering Nation:
If they perceyue dissention in our lookes,
And
that within our selues we disagree;
How will their grudging stomackes be
prouok'd
To wilfull Disobedience, and Rebell?
Beside, What infamy will
there arise,
When Forraigne Princes shall be certified,
That for a toy, a
thing of no regard,
King Henries Peeres, and cheefe Nobility,
Destroy'd
themselues, and lost the Realme of France?
Oh thinke vpon the Conquest of my
Father,
My tender yeares, and let vs not forgoe
That for a trifle, that
was bought with blood.
Let me be Vmper in this doubtfull strife:
I see no
reason if I weare this Rose,
That any one should therefore be suspitious
I
more incline to Somerset, than Yorke:
Both are my kinsmen, and I loue them
both.
As well they may vpbray'd me with my Crowne,
Because (forsooth) the
King of Scots is Crown'd.
But your discretions better can perswade,
Then I
am able to instruct or teach:
And therefore, as we hither came in
peace,
So let vs still continue peace, and loue.
Cosin of Yorke, we
institute your Grace
To be our Regent in these parts of France:
And good
my Lord of Somerset, vnite
Your Troopes of horsemen, with his Bands of
foote,
And like true Subiects, sonnes of your Progenitors,
Go cheerefully
together, and digest
Your angry Choller on your Enemies.
Our Selfe, my
Lord Protector, and the rest,
After some respit, will returne to
Calice;
From thence to England, where I hope ere long
To be presented by
your Victories,
With Charles, Alanson, and that Traiterous rout.
Exeunt. Manet Yorke, Warwick, Exeter, Vernon.
War. My Lord of Yorke, I promise you the King
Prettily (me thought)
did play the Orator
Yorke. And so he did, but yet I like it not,
In that he
weares the badge of Somerset
War. Tush, that was but his fancie, blame him not,
I dare
presume (sweet Prince) he thought no harme
York. And if I wish he did. But let it rest,
Other affayres
must now be managed.
Exeunt.
Flourish. Manet Exeter.
Exet. Well didst thou Richard to suppresse thy voice:
For had the
passions of thy heart burst out,
I feare we should haue seene decipher'd
there
More rancorous spight, more furious raging broyles,
Then yet can be
imagin'd or suppos'd:
But howsoere, no simple man that sees
This iarring
discord of Nobilitie,
This shouldering of each other in the Court,
This
factious bandying of their Fauourites,
But that it doth presage some ill
euent.
'Tis much, when Scepters are in Childrens hands:
But more, when
Enuy breeds vnkinde deuision,
There comes the ruine, there begins
confusion.
Enter.
Enter Talbot with Trumpe and Drumme, before Burdeaux.
Talb. Go to the Gates of Burdeaux Trumpeter,
Summon their Generall
vnto the Wall.
Sounds.
Enter Generall aloft.
English Iohn Talbot (Captaines) call you forth,
Seruant in Armes to Harry
King of England,
And thus he would. Open your Citie Gates,
Be humble to
vs, call my Soueraigne yours,
And do him homage as obedient Subiects,
And
Ile withdraw me, and my bloody power.
But if you frowne vpon this proffer'd
Peace,
You tempt the fury of my three attendants,
Leane Famine, quartering
Steele, and climbing Fire,
Who in a moment, eeuen with the earth,
Shall
lay your stately, and ayre-brauing Towers,
If you forsake the offer of their
loue
Cap. Thou ominous and fearefull Owle of death,
Our Nations
terror, and their bloody scourge,
The period of thy Tyranny
approacheth,
On vs thou canst not enter but by death:
For I protest we are
well fortified,
And strong enough to issue out and fight.
If thou retire,
the Dolphin well appointed,
Stands with the snares of Warre to tangle
thee.
On either hand thee, there are squadrons pitcht,
To wall thee from
the liberty of Flight;
And no way canst thou turne thee for redresse,
But
death doth front thee with apparant spoyle,
And pale destruction meets thee
in the face:
Ten thousand French haue tane the Sacrament,
To ryue their
dangerous Artillerie
Vpon no Christian soule but English Talbot:
Loe,
there thou standst a breathing valiant man
Of an inuincible vnconquer'd
spirit:
This is the latest Glorie of thy praise,
That I thy enemy dew thee
withall:
For ere the Glasse that now begins to runne,
Finish the processe
of his sandy houre,
These eyes that see thee now well coloured,
Shall see
thee withered, bloody, pale, and dead.
Drum a farre off.
Harke, harke, the Dolphins drumme, a warning bell,
Sings heauy Musicke to
thy timorous soule,
And mine shall ring thy dire departure out.
Exit
Tal. He Fables not, I heare the enemie:
Out some light Horsemen,
and peruse their Wings.
O negligent and heedlesse Discipline,
How are we
park'd and bounded in a pale?
A little Heard of Englands timorous
Deere,
Maz'd with a yelping kennell of French Curres.
If we be English
Deere, be then in blood,
Not Rascall-like to fall downe with a pinch,
But
rather moodie mad: And desperate Stagges,
Turne on the bloody Hounds with
heads of Steele,
And make the Cowards stand aloofe at bay:
Sell euery man
his life as deere as mine,
And they shall finde deere Deere of vs my
Friends.
God, and S[aint]. George, Talbot and Englands right,
Prosper our
Colours in this dangerous fight.
Enter a Messenger that meets Yorke. Enter
Yorke with Trumpet,
and many
Soldiers.
Yorke. Are not the speedy scouts return'd againe,
That dog'd the
mighty Army of the Dolphin?
Mess. They are return'd my Lord, and giue
it out,
That he is march'd to Burdeaux with his power
To fight with Talbot
as he march'd along.
By your espyals were discouered
Two mightier Troopes
then that the Dolphin led,
Which ioyn'd with him, and made their march for
Burdeaux
Yorke. A plague vpon that Villaine Somerset,
That thus
delayes my promised supply
Of horsemen, that were leuied for this
siege.
Renowned Talbot doth expect my ayde,
And I am lowted by a Traitor
Villaine,
And cannot helpe the noble Cheualier:
God comfort him in this
necessity:
If he miscarry, farewell Warres in France.
Enter another
Messenger
2.Mes. Thou Princely Leader of our English strength,
Neuer so
needfull on the earth of France,
Spurre to the rescue of the Noble
Talbot,
Who now is girdled with a waste of Iron,
And hem'd about with grim
destruction:
To Burdeaux warlike Duke, to Burdeaux Yorke,
Else farwell
Talbot, France, and Englands honor
Yorke. O God, that Somerset who in proud heart
Doth stop my
Cornets, were in Talbots place,
So should wee saue a valiant Gentleman,
By
forfeyting a Traitor, and a Coward:
Mad ire, and wrathfull fury makes me
weepe,
That thus we dye, while remisse Traitors sleepe
Mes. O send some succour to the distrest Lord
Yorke. He dies, we loose: I breake my warlike word:
We
mourne, France smiles: We loose, they dayly get,
All long of this vile
Traitor Somerset
Mes. Then God take mercy on braue Talbots soule,
And on his
Sonne yong Iohn, who two houres since,
I met in trauaile toward his warlike
Father;
This seuen yeeres did not Talbot see his sonne,
And now they meete
where both their liues are done
Yorke. Alas, what ioy shall noble Talbot haue,
To bid his
yong sonne welcome to his Graue:
Away, vexation almost stoppes my
breath,
That sundred friends greete in the houre of death.
Lucie farewell,
no more my fortune can,
But curse the cause I cannot ayde the man.
Maine,
Bloys, Poytiers, and Toures, are wonne away,
Long all of Somerset, and his
delay.
Exit
Mes. Thus while the Vulture of sedition,
Feedes in the bosome of
such great Commanders,
Sleeping neglection doth betray to losse:
The
Conquest of our scarse-cold Conqueror,
That euer-liuing man of
Memorie,
Henrie the fift: Whiles they each other crosse,
Liues, Honours,
Lands, and all, hurrie to losse.
Enter Somerset with his Armie.
Som. It is too late, I cannot send them now:
This expedition was by
Yorke and Talbot,
Too rashly plotted. All our generall force,
Might with a
sally of the very Towne
Be buckled with: the ouer-daring Talbot
Hath
sullied all his glosse of former Honor
By this vnheedfull, desperate, wilde
aduenture:
Yorke set him on to fight, and dye in shame,
That Talbot dead,
great Yorke might beare the name
Cap. Heere is Sir William Lucie, who with me
Set from our
ore-matcht forces forth for ayde
Som. How now Sir William, whether were you sent?
Lu.
Whether my Lord, from bought & sold L[ord]. Talbot,
Who ring'd about with
bold aduersitie,
Cries out for noble Yorke and Somerset,
To beate
assayling death from his weake Regions,
And whiles the honourable Captaine
there
Drops bloody swet from his warre-wearied limbes,
And in aduantage
lingring lookes for rescue,
You his false hopes, the trust of Englands
honor,
Keepe off aloofe with worthlesse emulation:
Let not your priuate
discord keepe away
The leuied succours that should lend him ayde,
While he
renowned Noble Gentleman
Yeeld vp his life vnto a world of oddes.
Orleance
the Bastard, Charles, Burgundie,
Alanson, Reignard, compasse him
about,
And Talbot perisheth by your default
Som. Yorke set him on, Yorke should haue sent him
ayde
Luc. And Yorke as fast vpon your Grace exclaimes,
Swearing
that you with-hold his leuied hoast,
Collected for this expidition
Som. York lyes: He might haue sent, & had the Horse:
I
owe him little Dutie, and lesse Loue,
And take foule scorne to fawne on him
by sending
Lu. The fraud of England, not the force of France,
Hath now
intrapt the Noble-minded Talbot:
Neuer to England shall he beare his
life,
But dies betraid to fortune by your strife
Som. Come go, I will dispatch the Horsemen strait:
Within
sixe houres, they will be at his ayde
Lu. Too late comes rescue, he is tane or slaine,
For flye he
could not, if he would haue fled:
And flye would Talbot neuer though he
might
Som. If he be dead, braue Talbot then adieu
Lu. His Fame liues in the world. His Shame in you.
Exeunt.
Enter Talbot and his Sonne.
Tal. O yong Iohn Talbot, I did send for thee
To tutor thee in
stratagems of Warre,
That Talbots name might be in thee reuiu'd,
When
saplesse Age, and weake vnable limbes
Should bring thy Father to his drooping
Chaire.
But O malignant and ill-boading Starres,
Now thou art come vnto a
Feast of death,
A terrible and vnauoyded danger:
Therefore deere Boy,
mount on my swiftest horse,
And Ile direct thee how thou shalt escape
By
sodaine flight. Come, dally not, be gone
Iohn. Is my name Talbot? and am I your Sonne?
And shall I
flye? O, if you loue my Mother,
Dishonor not her Honorable Name,
To make a
Bastard, and a Slaue of me:
The World will say, he is not Talbots
blood,
That basely fled, when Noble Talbot stood
Talb. Flye, to reuenge my death, if I be slaine
Iohn. He that flyes so, will ne're returne againe
Talb. If we both stay, we both are sure to dye
Iohn. Then let me stay, and Father doe you flye:
Your losse
is great, so your regard should be;
My worth vnknowne, no losse is knowne in
me.
Vpon my death, the French can little boast;
In yours they will, in you
all hopes are lost.
Flight cannot stayne the Honor you haue wonne,
But
mine it will, that no Exploit haue done.
You fled for Vantage, euery one will
sweare:
But if I bow, they'le say it was for feare.
There is no hope that
euer I will stay,
If the first howre I shrinke and run away:
Here on my
knee I begge Mortalitie,
Rather then Life, preseru'd with Infamie
Talb. Shall all thy Mothers hopes lye in one Tombe?
Iohn. I, rather then Ile shame my Mothers Wombe
Talb. Vpon my Blessing I command thee goe
Iohn. To fight I will, but not to flye the Foe
Talb. Part of thy Father may be sau'd in thee
Iohn. No part of him, but will be shame in mee
Talb. Thou neuer hadst Renowne, nor canst not lose it
Iohn. Yes, your renowned Name: shall flight abuse it?
Talb. Thy Fathers charge shal cleare thee from y staine
Iohn. You cannot witnesse for me, being slaine.
If Death be
so apparant, then both flye
Talb. And leaue my followers here to fight and dye?
My Age
was neuer tainted with such shame
Iohn. And shall my Youth be guiltie of such blame?
No more
can I be seuered from your side,
Then can your selfe, your selfe in twaine
diuide:
Stay, goe, doe what you will, the like doe I;
For liue I will not,
if my Father dye
Talb. Then here I take my leaue of thee, faire Sonne,
Borne
to eclipse thy Life this afternoone:
Come, side by side, together liue and
dye,
And Soule with Soule from France to Heauen flye.
Enter.
Alarum: Excursions, wherein Talbots Sonne is hemm'd about,
and
Talbot
rescues him.
Talb. Saint George, and Victory; fight Souldiers, fight:
The Regent
hath with Talbot broke his word,
And left vs to the rage of France his
Sword.
Where is Iohn Talbot? pawse, and take thy breath,
I gaue thee Life,
and rescu'd thee from Death
Iohn. O twice my Father, twice am I thy Sonne:
The Life thou
gau'st me first, was lost and done,
Till with thy Warlike Sword, despight of
Fate,
To my determin'd time thou gau'st new date
Talb. When fro[m] the Dolphins Crest thy Sword struck
fire,
It warm'd thy Fathers heart with prowd desire
Of bold-fac't
Victorie. Then Leaden Age,
Quicken'd with Youthfull Spleene, and Warlike
Rage,
Beat downe Alanson, Orleance, Burgundie,
And from the Pride of
Gallia rescued thee.
The irefull Bastard Orleance, that drew blood
From
thee my Boy, and had the Maidenhood
Of thy first fight, I soone
encountred,
And interchanging blowes, I quickly shed
Some of his Bastard
blood, and in disgrace
Bespoke him thus: Contaminated, base,
And
mis-begotten blood, I spill of thine,
Meane and right poore, for that pure
blood of mine,
Which thou didst force from Talbot, my braue Boy.
Here
purposing the Bastard to destroy,
Came in strong rescue. Speake thy Fathers
care:
Art thou not wearie, Iohn? How do'st thou fare?
Wilt thou yet leaue
the Battaile, Boy, and flie,
Now thou art seal'd the Sonne of
Chiualrie?
Flye, to reuenge my death when I am dead,
The helpe of one
stands me in little stead.
Oh, too much folly is it, well I wot,
To hazard
all our liues in one small Boat.
If I to day dye not with Frenchmens
Rage,
To morrow I shall dye with mickle Age.
By me they nothing gaine, and
if I stay,
'Tis but the shortning of my Life one day.
In thee thy Mother
dyes, our Households Name,
My Deaths Reuenge, thy Youth, and Englands
Fame:
All these, and more, we hazard by thy stay;
All these are sau'd, if
thou wilt flye away
Iohn. The Sword of Orleance hath not made me smart,
These
words of yours draw Life-blood from my Heart.
On that aduantage, bought with
such a shame,
To saue a paltry Life, and slay bright Fame,
Before young
Talbot from old Talbot flye,
The Coward Horse that beares me, fall and
dye:
And like me to the pesant Boyes of France,
To be Shames scorne, and
subiect of Mischance.
Surely, by all the Glorie you haue wonne,
And if I
flye, I am not Talbots Sonne.
Then talke no more of flight, it is no
boot,
If Sonne to Talbot, dye at Talbots foot
Talb. Then follow thou thy desp'rate Syre of Creet,
Thou
Icarus, thy Life to me is sweet:
If thou wilt fight, fight by thy Fathers
side,
And commendable prou'd, let's dye in pride.
Enter.
Alarum. Excursions. Enter old Talbot led.
Talb. Where is my other Life? mine owne is gone.
O, where's young
Talbot? where is valiant Iohn?
Triumphant Death, smear'd with
Captiuitie,
Young Talbots Valour makes me smile at thee.
When he perceiu'd
me shrinke, and on my Knee,
His bloodie Sword he brandisht ouer mee,
And
like a hungry Lyon did commence
Rough deeds of Rage, and sterne
Impatience:
But when my angry Guardant stood alone,
Tendring my ruine, and
assayl'd of none,
Dizzie-ey'd Furie, and great rage of Heart,
Suddenly
made him from my side to start
Into the clustring Battaile of the
French:
And in that Sea of Blood, my Boy did drench
His ouer-mounting
Spirit; and there di'de
My Icarus, my Blossome, in his pride.
Enter with
Iohn Talbot, borne.
Seru. O my deare Lord, loe where your Sonne is borne
Tal. Thou antique Death, which laugh'st vs here to
scorn,
Anon from thy insulting Tyrannie,
Coupled in bonds of
perpetuitie,
Two Talbots winged through the lither Skie,
In thy despight
shall scape Mortalitie.
O thou whose wounds become hard fauoured
death,
Speake to thy father, ere thou yeeld thy breath,
Braue death by
speaking, whither he will or no:
Imagine him a Frenchman, and thy
Foe.
Poore Boy, he smiles, me thinkes, as who should say,
Had Death bene
French, then Death had dyed to day.
Come, come, and lay him in his Fathers
armes,
My spirit can no longer beare these harmes.
Souldiers adieu: I haue
what I would haue,
Now my old armes are yong Iohn Talbots graue.
Dyes
Enter Charles, Alanson, Burgundie, Bastard, and Pucell.
Char. Had Yorke and Somerset brought rescue in,
We should haue
found a bloody day of this
Bast. How the yong whelpe of Talbots raging wood,
Did flesh
his punie-sword in Frenchmens blood
Puc. Once I encountred him, and thus I said:
Thou Maiden
youth, be vanquisht by a Maide.
But with a proud Maiesticall high
scorne
He answer'd thus: Yong Talbot was not borne
To be the pillage of a
Giglot Wench:
So rushing in the bowels of the French,
He left me proudly,
as vnworthy fight
Bur. Doubtlesse he would haue made a noble Knight:
See where
he lyes inherced in the armes
Of the most bloody Nursser of his harmes
Bast. Hew them to peeces, hack their bones assunder,
Whose
life was Englands glory, Gallia's wonder
Char. Oh no forbeare: For that which we haue fled
During the
life, let vs not wrong it dead.
Enter Lucie.
Lu. Herald, conduct me to the Dolphins Tent,
To know who hath
obtain'd the glory of the day
Char. On what submissiue message art thou sent?
Lucy.
Submission Dolphin? Tis a meere French word:
We English Warriours wot not
what it meanes.
I come to know what Prisoners thou hast tane,
And to
suruey the bodies of the dead
Char. For prisoners askst thou? Hell our prison is.
But tell
me whom thou seek'st?
Luc. But where's the great Alcides of the
field,
Valiant Lord Talbot Earle of Shrewsbury?
Created for his rare
successe in Armes,
Great Earle of Washford, Waterford, and Valence,
Lord
Talbot of Goodrig and Vrchinfield,
Lord Strange of Blackmere, Lord Verdon of
Alton,
Lord Cromwell of Wingefield, Lord Furniuall of Sheffeild,
The
thrice victorious Lord of Falconbridge,
Knight of the Noble Order of S[aint].
George,
Worthy S[aint]. Michael, and the Golden Fleece,
Great Marshall to
Henry the sixt,
Of all his Warres within the Realme of France
Puc. Heere's a silly stately stile indeede:
The Turke that
two and fiftie Kingdomes hath,
Writes not so tedious a Stile as this.
Him
that thou magnifi'st with all these Titles,
Stinking and fly-blowne lyes
heere at our feete
Lucy. Is Talbot slaine, the Frenchmens only Scourge,
Your
Kingdomes terror, and blacke Nemesis?
Oh were mine eye-balles into Bullets
turn'd,
That I in rage might shoot them at your faces.
Oh, that I could
but call these dead to life,
It were enough to fright the Realme of
France.
Were but his Picture left amongst you here,
It would amaze the
prowdest of you all.
Giue me their Bodyes, that I may beare them
hence,
And giue them Buriall, as beseemes their worth
Pucel. I thinke this vpstart is old Talbots Ghost,
He speakes
with such a proud commanding spirit:
For Gods sake let him haue him, to keepe
them here,
They would but stinke, and putrifie the ayre
Char. Go take their bodies hence
Lucy. Ile beare them hence: but from their ashes shal
be
reard
A Phoenix that shall make all France affear'd
Char. So we be rid of them, do with him what y wilt.
And now
to Paris in this conquering vaine,
All will be ours, now bloody Talbots
slaine.
Enter.
Scena secunda.
SENNET.
Enter King, Glocester, and Exeter.
King. Haue you perus'd the Letters from the Pope,
The Emperor, and
the Earle of Arminack?
Glo. I haue my Lord, and their intent is
this,
They humbly sue vnto your Excellence,
To haue a godly peace
concluded of,
Betweene the Realmes of England, and of France
King. How doth your Grace affect their motion?
Glo.
Well (my good Lord) and as the only meanes
To stop effusion of our Christian
blood,
And stablish quietnesse on euery side
King. I marry Vnckle, for I alwayes thought
It was both
impious and vnnaturall,
That such immanity and bloody strife
Should reigne
among Professors of one Faith
Glo. Beside my Lord, the sooner to effect,
And surer binde
this knot of amitie,
The Earle of Arminacke neere knit to Charles,
A man
of great Authoritie in France,
Proffers his onely daughter to your
Grace,
In marriage, with a large and sumptuous Dowrie
King. Marriage Vnckle? Alas my yeares are yong:
And fitter is
my studie, and my Bookes,
Then wanton dalliance with a Paramour.
Yet call
th' Embassadors, and as you please,
So let them haue their answeres euery
one:
I shall be well content with any choyce
Tends to Gods glory, and my
Countries weale.
Enter Winchester, and three Ambassadors.
Exet. What, is my Lord of Winchester install'd,
And call'd vnto a
Cardinalls degree?
Then I perceiue, that will be verified
Henry the Fift
did sometime prophesie.
If once he come to be a Cardinall,
Hee'l make his
cap coequall with the Crowne
King. My Lords Ambassadors, your seuerall suites
Haue bin
consider'd and debated on,
Your purpose is both good and reasonable:
And
therefore are we certainly resolu'd,
To draw conditions of a friendly
peace,
Which by my Lord of Winchester we meane
Shall be transported
presently to France
Glo. And for the proffer of my Lord your Master,
I haue
inform'd his Highnesse so at large,
As liking of the Ladies vertuous
gifts,
Her Beauty, and the valew of her Dower,
He doth intend she shall be
Englands Queene
King. In argument and proofe of which contract,
Beare her
this Iewell, pledge of my affection.
And so my Lord Protector see them
guarded,
And safely brought to Douer, wherein ship'd
Commit them to the
fortune of the sea.
Exeunt.
Win. Stay my Lord Legate, you shall first receiue
The summe of
money which I promised
Should be deliuered to his Holinesse,
For cloathing
me in these graue Ornaments
Legat. I will attend vpon your Lordships leysure
Win. Now Winchester will not submit, I trow,
Or be inferiour
to the proudest Peere;
Humfrey of Gloster, thou shalt well perceiue,
That
neither in birth, or for authoritie,
The Bishop will be ouer-borne by
thee:
Ile either make thee stoope, and bend thy knee,
Or sacke this
Country with a mutiny.
Exeunt.
Scoena Tertia.
Enter Charles, Burgundy, Alanson, Bastard, Reignier, and Ione.
Char. These newes (my Lords) may cheere our
drooping
spirits:
'Tis said, the stout Parisians do reuolt,
And turne
againe vnto the warlike French
Alan. Then march to Paris Royall Charles of France,
And keepe
not backe your powers in dalliance
Pucel. Peace be amongst them if they turne to vs,
Else ruine
combate with their Pallaces.
Enter Scout.
Scout. Successe vnto our valiant Generall,
And happinesse to his
accomplices
Char. What tidings send our Scouts? I prethee speak
Scout. The English Army that diuided was
Into two parties, is
now conioyn'd in one,
And meanes to giue you battell presently
Char. Somewhat too sodaine Sirs, the warning is,
But we will
presently prouide for them
Bur. I trust the Ghost of Talbot is not there:
Now he is gone
my Lord, you neede not feare
Pucel. Of all base passions, Feare is most accurst.
Command
the Conquest Charles, it shall be thine:
Let Henry fret, and all the world
repine
Char. Then on my Lords, and France be fortunate.
Exeunt. Alarum. Excursions.
Enter Ione de Pucell.
Puc. The Regent conquers, and the Frenchmen flye.
Now helpe ye
charming Spelles and Periapts,
And ye choise spirits that admonish me,
And
giue me signes of future accidents.
Thunder.
You speedy helpers, that are substitutes
Vnder the Lordly Monarch of the
North,
Appeare, and ayde me in this enterprize.
Enter Fiends.
This speedy and quicke appearance argues proofe
Of your accustom'd
diligence to me.
Now ye Familiar Spirits, that are cull'd
Out of the
powerfull Regions vnder earth,
Helpe me this once, that France may get the
field.
They walke, and speake not.
Oh hold me not with silence ouer-long:
Where I was wont to feed you with
my blood,
Ile lop a member off, and giue it you,
In earnest of a further
benefit:
So you do condiscend to helpe me now.
They hang their heads.
No hope to haue redresse? My body shall
Pay recompence, if you will graunt
my suite.
They shake their heads.
Cannot my body, nor blood-sacrifice,
Intreate you to your wonted
furtherance?
Then take my soule; my body, soule, and all,
Before that
England giue the French the foyle.
They depart.
See, they forsake me. Now the time is come,
That France must vale her
lofty plumed Crest,
And let her head fall into Englands lappe.
My ancient
Incantations are too weake,
And hell too strong for me to buckle with:
Now
France, thy glory droopeth to the dust.
Enter.
Excursions. Burgundie and Yorke fight hand to hand. French flye.
Yorke. Damsell of France, I thinke I haue you fast,
Vnchaine your
spirits now with spelling Charmes,
And try if they can gaine your
liberty.
A goodly prize, fit for the diuels grace.
See how the vgly Witch
doth bend her browes,
As if with Circe, she would change my shape
Puc. Chang'd to a worser shape thou canst not be:
Yor.
Oh, Charles the Dolphin is a proper man,
No shape but his can please your
dainty eye
Puc. A plaguing mischeefe light on Charles, and thee,
And may
ye both be sodainly surpriz'd
By bloudy hands, in sleeping on your beds
Yorke. Fell banning Hagge, Inchantresse hold thy
tongue
Puc. I prethee giue me leaue to curse awhile
Yorke. Curse Miscreant, when thou comst to the stake
Exeunt.
Alarum. Enter Suffolke with Margaret in his hand.
Suff. Be what thou wilt, thou art my prisoner.
Gazes on her.
Oh Fairest Beautie, do not feare, nor flye:
For I will touch thee but with
reuerend hands,
I kisse these fingers for eternall peace,
And lay them
gently on thy tender side.
Who art thou, say? that I may honor thee
Mar. Margaret my name, and daughter to a King,
The King of
Naples, who so ere thou art
Suff. An Earle I am, and Suffolke am I call'd.
Be not
offended Natures myracle,
Thou art alotted to be tane by me:
So doth the
Swan her downie Signets saue,
Keeping them prisoner vnderneath his
wings:
Yet if this seruile vsage once offend,
Go, and be free againe, as
Suffolkes friend.
She is going
Oh stay: I haue no power to let her passe,
My hand would free her, but my
heart sayes no.
As playes the Sunne vpon the glassie streames,
Twinkling
another counterfetted beame,
So seemes this gorgeous beauty to mine
eyes.
Faine would I woe her, yet I dare not speake:
Ile call for Pen and
Inke, and write my minde:
Fye De la Pole, disable not thy selfe:
Hast not
a Tongue? Is she not heere?
Wilt thou be daunted at a Womans sight?
I:
Beauties Princely Maiesty is such,
'Confounds the tongue, and makes the
senses rough
Mar. Say Earle of Suffolke, if thy name be so,
What ransome
must I pay before I passe?
For I perceiue I am thy prisoner
Suf. How canst thou tell she will deny thy suite,
Before thou
make a triall of her loue?
M. Why speak'st thou not? What ransom must
I pay?
Suf. She's beautifull; and therefore to be Wooed:
She is a
Woman; therefore to be Wonne
Mar, Wilt thou accept of ransome, yea or no?
Suf. Fond
man, remember that thou hast a wife,
Then how can Margaret be thy
Paramour?
Mar. I were best to leaue him, for he will not heare
Suf. There all is marr'd: there lies a cooling card
Mar. He talkes at randon: sure the man is mad
Suf. And yet a dispensation may bee had
Mar. And yet I would that you would answer me
Suf. Ile win this Lady Margaret. For whom?
Why for my King:
Tush, that's a woodden thing
Mar. He talkes of wood: It is some Carpenter
Suf. Yet so my fancy may be satisfied,
And peace established
betweene these Realmes.
But there remaines a scruple in that too:
For
though her Father be the King of Naples,
Duke of Aniou and Mayne, yet is he
poore,
And our Nobility will scorne the match
Mar. Heare ye Captaine? Are you not at leysure?
Suf.
It shall be so, disdaine they ne're so much:
Henry is youthfull, and
will quickly yeeld.
Madam, I haue a secret to reueale
Mar. What though I be inthral'd, he seems a knight
And will
not any way dishonor me
Suf. Lady, vouchsafe to listen what I say
Mar. Perhaps I shall be rescu'd by the French,
And then I
need not craue his curtesie
Suf. Sweet Madam, giue me hearing in a cause
Mar. Tush, women haue bene captiuate ere now
Suf. Lady, wherefore talke you so?
Mar. I cry you
mercy, 'tis but Quid for Quo
Suf. Say gentle Princesse, would you not suppose
Your bondage
happy, to be made a Queene?
Mar. To be a Queene in bondage, is more
vile,
Than is a slaue, in base seruility:
For Princes should be free
Suf. And so shall you,
If happy Englands Royall King be
free
Mar. Why what concernes his freedome vnto mee?
Suf.
Ile vndertake to make thee Henries Queene,
To put a Golden Scepter in thy
hand,
And set a precious Crowne vpon thy head,
If thou wilt condiscend to
be my-
Mar. What?
Suf. His loue
Mar. I am vnworthy to be Henries wife
Suf. No gentle Madam, I vnworthy am
To woe so faire a Dame to
be his wife,
And haue no portion in the choice my selfe.
How say you
Madam, are ye so content?
Mar. And if my Father please, I am
content
Suf. Then call our Captaines and our Colours forth,
And
Madam, at your Fathers Castle walles,
Wee'l craue a parley, to conferre with
him.
Sound. Enter Reignier on the Walles.
See Reignier see, thy daughter prisoner
Reig. To whom?
Suf. To me
Reig. Suffolke, what remedy?
I am a Souldier, and vnapt to
weepe,
Or to exclaime on Fortunes ficklenesse
Suf. Yes, there is remedy enough my Lord,
Consent, and for
thy Honor giue consent,
Thy daughter shall be wedded to my King,
Whom I
with paine haue wooed and wonne thereto:
And this her easie held
imprisonment,
Hath gain'd thy daughter Princely libertie
Reig. Speakes Suffolke as he thinkes?
Suf. Faire
Margaret knowes,
That Suffolke doth not flatter, face, or faine
Reig. Vpon thy Princely warrant, I descend,
To giue thee
answer of thy iust demand
Suf. And heere I will expect thy comming.
Trumpets sound. Enter Reignier.
Reig. Welcome braue Earle into our Territories,
Command in Aniou
what your Honor pleases
Suf. Thankes Reignier, happy for so sweet a Childe,
Fit to be
made companion with a King:
What answer makes your Grace vnto my
suite?
Reig. Since thou dost daigne to woe her little worth,
To be
the Princely Bride of such a Lord:
Vpon condition I may quietly
Enioy mine
owne, the Country Maine and Aniou,
Free from oppression, or the stroke of
Warre,
My daughter shall be Henries, if he please
Suf. That is her ransome, I deliuer her,
And those two
Counties I will vndertake
Your Grace shall well and quietly enioy
Reig. And I againe in Henries Royall name,
As Deputy vnto
that gracious King,
Giue thee her hand for signe of plighted faith
Suf. Reignier of France, I giue thee Kingly thankes,
Because
this is in Trafficke of a King.
And yet me thinkes I could be well
content
To be mine owne Atturney in this case.
Ile ouer then to England
with this newes.
And make this marriage to be solemniz'd:
So farewell
Reignier, set this Diamond safe
In Golden Pallaces as it becomes
Reig. I do embrace thee, as I would embrace
The Christian
Prince King Henrie were he heere
Mar. Farewell my Lord, good wishes, praise, &
praiers,
Shall Suffolke euer haue of Margaret.
Shee is going.
Suf. Farwell sweet Madam: but hearke you Margaret,
No Princely
commendations to my King?
Mar. Such commendations as becomes a
Maide,
A Virgin, and his Seruant, say to him
Suf. Words sweetly plac'd, and modestie directed,
But Madame,
I must trouble you againe,
No louing Token to his Maiestie?
Mar.
Yes, my good Lord, a pure vnspotted heart,
Neuer yet taint with loue, I send
the King
Suf. And this withall.
Kisse her.
Mar. That for thy selfe, I will not so presume,
To send such
peeuish tokens to a King
Suf. Oh wert thou for my selfe: but Suffolke stay,
Thou
mayest not wander in that Labyrinth,
There Minotaurs and vgly Treasons
lurke,
Solicite Henry with her wonderous praise.
Bethinke thee on her
Vertues that surmount,
Mad naturall Graces that extinguish Art,
Repeate
their semblance often on the Seas,
That when thou com'st to kneele at Henries
feete,
Thou mayest bereaue him of his wits with wonder.
Exit
Enter Yorke, Warwicke, Shepheard, Pucell.
Yor. Bring forth that Sorceresse condemn'd to burne
Shep. Ah Ione, this kils thy Fathers heart out-right,
Haue I
sought euery Country farre and neere,
And now it is my chance to finde thee
out,
Must I behold thy timelesse cruell death:
Ah Ione, sweet daughter
Ione, Ile die with thee
Pucel. Decrepit Miser, base ignoble Wretch,
I am am descended
of a gentler blood.
Thou art no Father, nor no Friend of mine
Shep. Out, out: My Lords, and please you, 'tis not so
I did
beget her, all the Parish knowes:
Her Mother liueth yet, can testifie
She
was the first fruite of my Bach'ler-ship
War. Gracelesse, wilt thou deny thy Parentage?
Yorke.
This argues what her kinde of life hath beene,
Wicked and vile, and so her
death concludes
Shep. Fye Ione, that thou wilt be so obstacle:
God knowes,
thou art a collop of my flesh,
And for thy sake haue I shed many a
teare:
Deny me not, I prythee, gentle Ione
Pucell. Pezant auant. You haue suborn'd this man
Of purpose,
to obscure my Noble birth
Shep. 'Tis true, I gaue a Noble to the Priest,
The morne that
I was wedded to her mother.
Kneele downe and take my blessing, good my
Gyrle.
Wilt thou not stoope? Now cursed be the time
Of thy natiuitie: I
would the Milke
Thy mother gaue thee when thou suck'st her brest,
Had bin
a little Rats-bane for thy sake.
Or else, when thou didst keepe my Lambes
a-field,
I wish some rauenous Wolfe had eaten thee.
Doest thou deny thy
Father, cursed Drab?
O burne her, burne her, hanging is too
good.
Enter.
Yorke. Take her away, for she hath liu'd too long,
To fill the
world with vicious qualities
Puc. First let me tell you whom you haue condemn'd;
Not me,
begotten of a Shepheard Swaine,
But issued from the Progeny of
Kings.
Vertuous and Holy, chosen from aboue,
By inspiration of Celestiall
Grace,
To worke exceeding myracles on earth.
I neuer had to do with wicked
Spirits.
But you that are polluted with your lustes,
Stain'd with the
guiltlesse blood of Innocents,
Corrupt and tainted with a thousand
Vices:
Because you want the grace that others haue,
You iudge it straight
a thing impossible
To compasse Wonders, but by helpe of diuels.
No
misconceyued, Ione of Aire hath beene
A Virgin from her tender
infancie,
Chaste, and immaculate in very thought,
Whose Maiden-blood thus
rigorously effus'd,
Will cry for Vengeance, at the Gates of Heauen
Yorke. I, I: away with her to execution
War. And hearke ye sirs: because she is a Maide,
Spare for no
Faggots, let there be enow:
Place barrelles of pitch vpon the fatall
stake,
That so her torture may be shortned
Puc. Will nothing turne your vnrelenting hearts?
Then Ione
discouer thine infirmity,
That warranteth by Law, to be thy priuiledge.
I
am with childe ye bloody Homicides:
Murther not then the Fruite within my
Wombe,
Although ye hale me to a violent death
Yor. Now heauen forfend, the holy Maid with child?
War. The greatest miracle that ere ye wrought.
Is all your strict
precisenesse come to this?
Yorke. She and the Dolphin haue bin
iugling,
I did imagine what would be her refuge
War. Well go too, we'll haue no Bastards liue,
Especially
since Charles must Father it
Puc. You are deceyu'd, my childe is none of his,
It was
Alanson that inioy'd my loue
Yorke. Alanson that notorious Macheuile?
It dyes, and if it
had a thousand liues
Puc. Oh giue me leaue, I haue deluded you,
'Twas neyther
Charles, nor yet the Duke I nam'd,
But Reignier King of Naples that
preuayl'd
War. A married man, that's most intollerable
Yor. Why here's a Gyrle: I think she knowes not wel
(There
were so many) whom she may accuse
War. It's signe she hath beene liberall and free
Yor. And yet forsooth she is a Virgin pure.
Strumpet, thy
words condemne thy Brat, and thee.
Vse no intreaty, for it is in vaine
Pu. Then lead me hence: with whom I leaue my curse.
May neuer
glorious Sunne reflex his beames
Vpon the Countrey where you make
abode:
But darknesse, and the gloomy shade of death
Inuiron you, till
Mischeefe and Dispaire,
Driue you to break your necks, or hang your
selues.
Exit
Enter Cardinall.
Yorke. Breake thou in peeces, and consume to ashes,
Thou fowle
accursed minister of Hell
Car. Lord Regent, I do greete your Excellence
With Letters of
Commission from the King.
For know my Lords, the States of
Christendome,
Mou'd with remorse of these out-ragious broyles,
Haue
earnestly implor'd a generall peace,
Betwixt our Nation, and the aspyring
French;
And heere at hand, the Dolphin and his Traine
Approacheth, to
conferre about some matter
Yorke. Is all our trauell turn'd to this effect,
After the
slaughter of so many Peeres,
So many Captaines, Gentlemen, and
Soldiers,
That in this quarrell haue beene ouerthrowne,
And sold their
bodyes for their Countryes benefit,
Shall we at last conclude effeminate
peace?
Haue we not lost most part of all the Townes,
By Treason, Falshood,
and by Treacherie,
Our great Progenitors had conquered:
Oh Warwicke,
Warwicke, I foresee with greefe
The vtter losse of all the Realme of
France
War. Be patient Yorke, if we conclude a Peace
It shall be
with such strict and seuere Couenants,
As little shall the Frenchmen gaine
thereby.
Enter Charles, Alanson, Bastard, Reignier.
Char. Since Lords of England, it is thus agreed,
That peacefull
truce shall be proclaim'd in France,
We come to be informed by your
selues,
What the conditions of that league must be
Yorke. Speake Winchester, for boyling choller chokes
The
hollow passage of my poyson'd voyce,
By sight of these our balefull
enemies
Win. Charles, and the rest, it is enacted thus:
That in
regard King Henry giues consent,
Of meere compassion, and of lenity,
To
ease your Countrie of distressefull Warre,
And suffer you to breath in
fruitfull peace,
You shall become true Liegemen to his Crowne.
And
Charles, vpon condition thou wilt sweare
To pay him tribute, and submit thy
selfe,
Thou shalt be plac'd as Viceroy vnder him,
And still enioy thy
Regall dignity
Alan. Must he be then as shadow of himselfe?
Adorne his
Temples with a Coronet,
And yet in substance and authority,
Retaine but
priuiledge of a priuate man?
This proffer is absurd, and reasonlesse
Char. 'Tis knowne already that I am possest
With more then
halfe the Gallian Territories,
And therein reuerenc'd for their lawfull
King.
Shall I for lucre of the rest vn-vanquisht,
Detract so much from
that prerogatiue,
As to be call'd but Viceroy of the whole?
No Lord
Ambassador, Ile rather keepe
That which I haue, than coueting for more
Be
cast from possibility of all
Yorke. Insulting Charles, hast thou by secret meanes
Vs'd
intercession to obtaine a league,
And now the matter growes to
compremize,
Stand'st thou aloofe vpon Comparison.
Either accept the Title
thou vsurp'st,
Of benefit proceeding from our King,
And not of any
challenge of Desert,
Or we will plague thee with incessant Warres
Reig. My Lord, you do not well in obstinacy,
To cauill in the
course of this Contract:
If once it be neglected, ten to one
We shall not
finde like opportunity
Alan. To say the truth, it is your policie,
To saue your
Subiects from such massacre
And ruthlesse slaughters as are dayly seene
By
our proceeding in Hostility,
And therefore take this compact of a
Truce,
Although you breake it, when your pleasure serues
War. How sayst thou Charles?
Shall our Condition
stand?
Char. It Shall:
Onely reseru'd, you claime no interest
In
any of our Townes of Garrison
Yor. Then sweare Allegeance to his Maiesty,
As thou art
Knight, neuer to disobey,
Nor be Rebellious to the Crowne of England,
Thou
nor thy Nobles, to the Crowne of England.
So, now dismisse your Army when ye
please:
Hang vp your Ensignes, let your Drummes be still,
For heere we
entertaine a solemne peace.
Exeunt.
Actus Quintus.
Enter Suffolke in conference with the King, Glocester, and Exeter.
King. Your wondrous rare description (noble Earle)
Of beauteous
Margaret hath astonish'd me:
Her vertues graced with externall gifts,
Do
breed Loues setled passions in my heart,
And like as rigour of tempestuous
gustes
Prouokes the mightiest Hulke against the tide,
So am I driuen by
breath of her Renowne,
Either to suffer Shipwracke, or arriue
Where I may
haue fruition of her Loue
Suf. Tush my good Lord, this superficiall tale,
Is but a
preface of her worthy praise:
The cheefe perfections of that louely
Dame,
(Had I sufficient skill to vtter them)
Would make a volume of
inticing lines,
Able to rauish any dull conceit.
And which is more, she is
not so Diuine,
So full repleate with choice of all delights,
But with as
humble lowlinesse of minde,
She is content to be at your command:
Command
I meane, of Vertuous chaste intents,
To Loue, and Honor Henry as her Lord
King. And otherwise, will Henry ne're presume:
Therefore my
Lord Protector, giue consent,
That Marg'ret may be Englands Royall Queene
Glo. So should I giue consent to flatter sinne,
You know (my
Lord) your Highnesse is betroath'd
Vnto another Lady of esteeme,
How shall
we then dispense with that contract,
And not deface your Honor with
reproach?
Suf. As doth a Ruler with vnlawfull Oathes,
Or one that
at a Triumph, hauing vow'd
To try his strength, forsaketh yet the
Listes
By reason of his Aduersaries oddes.
A poore Earles daughter is
vnequall oddes,
And therefore may be broke without offence
Gloucester. Why what (I pray) is Margaret more
then
that?
Her Father is no better than an Earle,
Although in glorious Titles
he excell
Suf. Yes my Lord, her Father is a King,
The King of Naples,
and Ierusalem,
And of such great Authoritie in France,
As his alliance
will confirme our peace,
And keepe the Frenchmen in Allegeance
Glo. And so the Earle of Arminacke may doe,
Because he is
neere Kinsman vnto Charles
Exet. Beside, his wealth doth warrant a liberal dower,
Where
Reignier sooner will receyue, than giue
Suf. A Dowre my Lords? Disgrace not so your King,
That he
should be so abiect, base, and poore,
To choose for wealth, and not for
perfect Loue.
Henry is able to enrich his Queene,
And not to seeke a
Queene to make him rich,
So worthlesse Pezants bargaine for their
Wiues,
As Market men for Oxen, Sheepe, or Horse.
Marriage is a matter of
more worth,
Then to be dealt in by Atturney-ship:
Not whom we will, but
whom his Grace affects,
Must be companion of his Nuptiall bed.
And
therefore Lords, since he affects her most,
Most of all these reasons bindeth
vs,
In our opinions she should be preferr'd.
For what is wedlocke forced?
but a Hell,
An Age of discord and continuall strife,
Whereas the contrarie
bringeth blisse,
And is a patterne of Celestiall peace.
Whom should we
match with Henry being a King,
But Margaret, that is daughter to a
King:
Her peerelesse feature, ioyned with her birth,
Approues her fit for
none, but for a King.
Her valiant courage, and vndaunted spirit,
(More
then in women commonly is seene)
Will answer our hope in issue of a
King.
For Henry, sonne vnto a Conqueror,
Is likely to beget more
Conquerors,
If with a Lady of so high resolue,
(As is faire Margaret) he
be link'd in loue.
Then yeeld my Lords, and heere conclude with mee,
That
Margaret shall be Queene, and none but shee
King. Whether it be through force of your report,
My Noble
Lord of Suffolke: Or for that
My tender youth was neuer yet attaint
With
any passion of inflaming Loue,
I cannot tell: but this I am assur'd,
I
feele such sharpe dissention in my breast,
Such fierce alarums both of Hope
and Feare,
As I am sicke with working of my thoughts.
Take therefore
shipping, poste my Lord to France,
Agree to any couenants, and
procure
That Lady Margaret do vouchsafe to come
To crosse the Seas to
England, and be crown'd
King Henries faithfull and annointed Queene.
For
your expences and sufficient charge,
Among the people gather vp a
tenth.
Be gone I say, for till you do returne,
I rest perplexed with a
thousand Cares.
And you (good Vnckle) banish all offence:
If you do
censure me, by what you were,
Not what you are, I know it will excuse
This
sodaine execution of my will.
And so conduct me, where from company,
I may
reuolue and ruminate my greefe.
Enter.
Glo. I greefe I feare me, both at first and last.
Exit Glocester.
Suf. Thus Suffolke hath preuail'd, and thus he goes
As did the
youthfull Paris once to Greece,
With hope to finde the like euent in
loue,
But prosper better than the Troian did:
Margaret shall now be
Queene, and rule the King:
But I will rule both her, the King, and
Realme.
Exit
FINIS. The first Part of Henry the Sixt.