The Second Part of Henry the Sixth
with the death of the Good Duke Hvmfrey
(First Folio)
by William
Shakespeare
Actus Primus. Scoena Prima.
Flourish of Trumpets: Then Hoboyes.
Enter King, Duke Humfrey, Salisbury, Warwicke, and Beauford on
the
one
side. The Queene, Suffolke, Yorke, Somerset, and Buckingham, on
the
other.
Suffolke. As by your high Imperiall Maiesty,
I had in charge at
my depart for France,
As Procurator to your Excellence,
To marry Princes
Margaret for your Grace;
So in the Famous Ancient City, Toures,
In
presence of the Kings of France, and Sicill,
The Dukes of Orleance, Calaber,
Britaigne, and Alanson,
Seuen Earles, twelue Barons, & twenty reuerend
Bishops
I haue perform'd my Taske, and was espous'd,
And humbly now vpon
my bended knee,
In sight of England, and her Lordly Peeres,
Deliuer vp my
Title in the Queene
To your most gracious hands, that are the Substance
Of
that great Shadow I did represent:
The happiest Gift, that euer Marquesse
gaue,
The Fairest Queene, that euer King receiu'd
King. Suffolke arise. Welcome Queene Margaret,
I can expresse
no kinder signe of Loue
Then this kinde kisse: O Lord, that lends me
life,
Lend me a heart repleate with thankfulnesse:
For thou hast giuen me
in this beauteous Face
A world of earthly blessings to my soule,
If
Simpathy of Loue vnite our thoughts
Queen. Great King of England, & my gracious Lord,
The
mutuall conference that my minde hath had,
By day, by night; waking, and in
my dreames,
In Courtly company, or at my Beades,
With you mine Alder
liefest Soueraigne,
Makes me the bolder to salute my King,
With ruder
termes, such as my wit affoords,
And ouer ioy of heart doth minister
King. Her sight did rauish, but her grace in Speech,
Her
words yclad with wisedomes Maiesty,
Makes me from Wondring, fall to Weeping
ioyes,
Such is the Fulnesse of my hearts content.
Lords, with one
cheerefull voice, Welcome my Loue
All kneel. Long liue Qu[eene]. Margaret, Englands happines
Queene. We thanke you all.
Florish
Suf. My Lord Protector, so it please your Grace,
Heere are the
Articles of contracted peace,
Betweene our Soueraigne, and the French King
Charles,
For eighteene moneths concluded by consent
Glo. Reads. Inprimis, It is agreed betweene the French
K[ing].
Charles, and William de la Pole Marquesse of
Suffolke,
Ambassador
for Henry King of England, That the said Henry
shal
espouse the Lady Margaret, daughter vnto Reignier King of
Naples,
Sicillia, and Ierusalem, and Crowne her Queene of
England, ere the thirtieth
of May next ensuing.
Item, That the Dutchy of Aniou, and the County of
Main,
shall be released and deliuered to the King her father
King. Vnkle, how now?
Glo. Pardon me gracious
Lord,
Some sodaine qualme hath strucke me at the heart,
And dim'd mine
eyes, that I can reade no further
King. Vnckle of Winchester, I pray read on
Win. Item, It is further agreed betweene them, That
the
Dutchesse of Aniou and Maine, shall be released and deliuered
ouer to
the King her Father, and shee sent ouer of the King of
Englands owne proper
Cost and Charges, without hauing any
Dowry
King. They please vs well. Lord Marques kneel down,
We heere
create thee the first Duke of Suffolke,
And girt thee with the Sword. Cosin
of Yorke,
We heere discharge your Grace from being Regent
I'th parts of
France, till terme of eighteene Moneths
Be full expyr'd. Thankes Vncle
Winchester,
Gloster, Yorke, Buckingham, Somerset,
Salisburie, and
Warwicke.
We thanke you all for this great fauour done,
In entertainment
to my Princely Queene.
Come, let vs in, and with all speede prouide
To see
her Coronation be perform'd.
Exit King, Queene, and Suffolke.
Manet the rest.
Glo. Braue Peeres of England, Pillars of the State,
To you Duke
Humfrey must vnload his greefe:
Your greefe, the common greefe of all the
Land.
What? did my brother Henry spend his youth,
His valour, coine, and
people in the warres?
Did he so often lodge in open field:
In Winters
cold, and Summers parching heate,
To conquer France, his true
inheritance?
And did my brother Bedford toyle his wits,
To keepe by policy
what Henrie got:
Haue you your selues, Somerset, Buckingham,
Braue Yorke,
Salisbury, and victorious Warwicke,
Receiud deepe scarres in France and
Normandie:
Or hath mine Vnckle Beauford, and my selfe,
With all the
Learned Counsell of the Realme,
Studied so long, sat in the Councell
house,
Early and late, debating too and fro
How France and Frenchmen might
be kept in awe,
And hath his Highnesse in his infancie,
Crowned in Paris
in despight of foes,
And shall these Labours, and these Honours dye?
Shall
Henries Conquest, Bedfords vigilance,
Your Deeds of Warre, and all our
Counsell dye?
O Peeres of England, shamefull is this League,
Fatall this
Marriage, cancelling your Fame,
Blotting your names from Bookes of
memory,
Racing the Charracters of your Renowne,
Defacing Monuments of
Conquer'd France,
Vndoing all as all had neuer bin
Car. Nephew, what meanes this passionate discourse?
This
preroration with such circumstance:
For France, 'tis ours; and we will keepe
it still
Glo. I Vnckle, we will keepe it, if we can:
But now it is
impossible we should.
Suffolke, the new made Duke that rules the
rost,
Hath giuen the Dutchy of Aniou and Mayne,
Vnto the poore King
Reignier, whose large style
Agrees not with the leannesse of his purse
Sal. Now by the death of him that dyed for all,
These
Counties were the Keyes of Normandie:
But wherefore weepes Warwicke, my
valiant sonne?
War. For greefe that they are past recouerie.
For
were there hope to conquer them againe,
My sword should shed hot blood, mine
eyes no teares.
Aniou and Maine? My selfe did win them both:
Those
Prouinces, these Armes of mine did conquer,
And are the Citties that I got
with wounds,
Deliuer'd vp againe with peacefull words?
Mort Dieu
Yorke. For Suffolkes Duke, may he be suffocate,
That dims the
Honor of this Warlike Isle:
France should haue torne and rent my very
hart,
Before I would haue yeelded to this League.
I neuer read but
Englands Kings haue had
Large summes of Gold, and Dowries with their
wiues,
And our King Henry giues away his owne,
To match with her that
brings no vantages
Hum. A proper iest, and neuer heard before,
That Suffolke
should demand a whole Fifteenth,
For Costs and Charges in transporting
her:
She should haue staid in France, and steru'd in France
Before
-
Car. My Lord of Gloster, now ye grow too hot,
It was the pleasure
of my Lord the King
Hum. My Lord of Winchester I know your minde.
'Tis not my
speeches that you do mislike:
But 'tis my presence that doth trouble
ye,
Rancour will out, proud Prelate, in thy face
I see thy furie: If I
longer stay,
We shall begin our ancient bickerings:
Lordings farewell, and
say when I am gone,
I prophesied, France will be lost ere long.
Exit Humfrey.
Car. So, there goes our Protector in a rage:
'Tis knowne to you he
is mine enemy:
Nay more, an enemy vnto you all,
And no great friend, I
feare me to the King;
Consider Lords, he is the next of blood,
And heyre
apparant to the English Crowne:
Had Henrie got an Empire by his
marriage,
And all the wealthy Kingdomes of the West,
There's reason he
should be displeas'd at it:
Looke to it Lords, let not his smoothing
words
Bewitch your hearts, be wise and circumspect.
What though the common
people fauour him,
Calling him, Humfrey the good Duke of Gloster,
Clapping
their hands, and crying with loud voyce,
Iesu maintaine your Royall
Excellence,
With God preserue the good Duke Humfrey:
I feare me Lords, for
all this flattering glosse,
He will be found a dangerous Protector
Buc. Why should he then protect our Soueraigne?
He being of
age to gouerne of himselfe.
Cosin of Somerset, ioyne you with me,
And
altogether with the Duke of Suffolke,
Wee'l quickly hoyse Duke Humfrey from
his seat
Car. This weighty businesse will not brooke delay,
Ile to the
Duke of Suffolke presently.
Exit Cardinall.
Som. Cosin of Buckingham, though Humfries pride
And greatnesse of
his place be greefe to vs,
Yet let vs watch the haughtie Cardinall,
His
insolence is more intollerable
Then all the Princes in the Land beside,
If
Gloster be displac'd, hee'l be Protector
Buc. Or thou, or I Somerset will be Protectors,
Despite Duke
Humfrey, or the Cardinall.
Exit Buckingham, and Somerset.
Sal. Pride went before, Ambition followes him.
While these do
labour for their owne preferment,
Behooues it vs to labor for the
Realme.
I neuer saw but Humfrey Duke of Gloster,
Did beare him like a
Noble Gentleman:
Oft haue I seene the haughty Cardinall,
More like a
Souldier then a man o'th' Church,
As stout and proud as he were Lord of
all,
Sweare like a Ruffian, and demeane himselfe
Vnlike the Ruler of a
Common-weale.
Warwicke my sonne, the comfort of my age,
Thy deeds, thy
plainnesse, and thy house-keeping,
Hath wonne the greatest fauour of the
Commons,
Excepting none but good Duke Humfrey.
And Brother Yorke, thy Acts
in Ireland,
In bringing them to ciuill Discipline:
Thy late exploits done
in the heart of France,
When thou wert Regent for our Soueraigne,
Haue
made thee fear'd and honor'd of the people,
Ioyne we together for the publike
good,
In what we can, to bridle and suppresse
The pride of Suffolke, and
the Cardinall,
With Somersets and Buckinghams Ambition,
And as we may,
cherish Duke Humfries deeds,
While they do tend the profit of the Land
War. So God helpe Warwicke, as he loues the Land,
And common
profit of his Countrey
Yor. And so sayes Yorke,
For he hath greatest cause
Salisbury. Then lets make hast away,
And looke vnto the
maine
Warwicke. Vnto the maine?
Oh Father, Maine is lost,
That
Maine, which by maine force Warwicke did winne,
And would haue kept, so long
as breath did last:
Main-chance father you meant, but I meant Maine,
Which
I will win from France, or else be slaine.
Exit Warwicke, and Salisbury. Manet Yorke.
Yorke. Aniou and Maine are giuen to the French,
Paris is lost, the
state of Normandie
Stands on a tickle point, now they are gone:
Suffolke
concluded on the Articles,
The Peeres agreed, and Henry was well
pleas'd,
To change two Dukedomes for a Dukes faire daughter.
I cannot
blame them all, what is't to them?
'Tis thine they giue away, and not their
owne.
Pirates may make cheape penyworths of their pillage,
And purchase
Friends, and giue to Curtezans,
Still reuelling like Lords till all be
gone,
While as the silly Owner of the goods
Weepes ouer them, and wrings
his haplesse hands,
And shakes his head, and trembling stands
aloofe,
While all is shar'd, and all is borne away,
Ready to sterue, and
dare not touch his owne.
So Yorke must sit, and fret, and bite his
tongue,
While his owne Lands are bargain'd for, and sold:
Me thinkes the
Realmes of England, France, & Ireland,
Beare that proportion to my flesh
and blood,
As did the fatall brand Althaea burnt,
Vnto the Princes heart
of Calidon:
Aniou and Maine both giuen vnto the French?
Cold newes for me:
for I had hope of France,
Euen as I haue of fertile Englands soile.
A day
will come, when Yorke shall claime his owne,
And therefore I will take the
Neuils parts,
And make a shew of loue to proud Duke Humfrey,
And when I
spy aduantage, claime the Crowne,
For that's the Golden marke I seeke to
hit:
Nor shall proud Lancaster vsurpe my right,
Nor hold the Scepter in
his childish Fist,
Nor weare the Diadem vpon his head,
Whose Church-like
humors fits not for a Crowne.
Then Yorke be still a-while, till time do
serue:
Watch thou, and wake when others be asleepe,
To prie into the
secrets of the State,
Till Henrie surfetting in ioyes of loue,
With his
new Bride, & Englands deere bought Queen,
And Humfrey with the Peeres be
falne at iarres:
Then will I raise aloft the Milke-white-Rose,
With whose
sweet smell the Ayre shall be perfum'd,
And in my Standard beare the Armes of
Yorke,
To grapple with the house of Lancaster,
And force perforce Ile make
him yeeld the Crowne,
Whose bookish Rule, hath pull'd faire England
downe.
Exit Yorke.
Enter Duke Humfrey and his wife Elianor.
Elia. Why droopes my Lord like ouer-ripen'd Corn,
Hanging the head
at Ceres plenteous load?
Why doth the Great Duke Humfrey knit his
browes,
As frowning at the Fauours of the world?
Why are thine eyes fixt
to the sullen earth,
Gazing on that which seemes to dimme thy sight?
What
seest thou there? King Henries Diadem,
Inchac'd with all the Honors of the
world?
If so, Gaze on, and grouell on thy face,
Vntill thy head be circled
with the same.
Put forth thy hand, reach at the glorious Gold.
What, is't
too short? Ile lengthen it with mine,
And hauing both together heau'd it
vp,
Wee'l both together lift our heads to heauen,
And neuer more abase our
sight so low,
As to vouchsafe one glance vnto the ground
Hum. O Nell, sweet Nell, if thou dost loue thy Lord,
Banish
the Canker of ambitious thoughts:
And may that thought, when I imagine
ill
Against my King and Nephew, vertuous Henry,
Be my last breathing in
this mortall world.
My troublous dreames this night, doth make me sad
Eli. What dream'd my Lord, tell me, and Ile requite it
With
sweet rehearsall of my mornings dreame?
Hum. Me thought this staffe
mine Office-badge in
Court
Was broke in twaine: by whom, I haue
forgot,
But as I thinke, it was by'th Cardinall,
And on the peeces of the
broken Wand
Were plac'd the heads of Edmond Duke of Somerset,
And William
de la Pole first Duke of Suffolke.
This was my dreame, what it doth bode God
knowes
Eli. Tut, this was nothing but an argument,
That he that
breakes a sticke of Glosters groue,
Shall loose his head for his
presumption.
But list to me my Humfrey, my sweete Duke:
Me thought I sate
in Seate of Maiesty,
In the Cathedrall Church of Westminster,
And in that
Chaire where Kings & Queens wer crownd,
Where Henrie and Dame Margaret
kneel'd to me,
And on my head did set the Diadem
Hum. Nay Elinor, then must I chide outright:
Presumptuous
Dame, ill-nurter'd Elianor,
Art thou not second Woman in the Realme?
And
the Protectors wife belou'd of him?
Hast thou not worldly pleasure at
command,
Aboue the reach or compasse of thy thought?
And wilt thou still
be hammering Treachery,
To tumble downe thy husband, and thy selfe,
From
top of Honor, to Disgraces feete?
Away from me, and let me heare no more
Elia. What, what, my Lord? Are you so chollericke
With
Elianor, for telling but her dreame?
Next time Ile keepe my dreames vnto my
selfe,
And not be check'd
Hum. Nay be not angry, I am pleas'd againe.
Enter
Messenger.
Mess. My Lord Protector, 'tis his Highnes pleasure,
You do prepare
to ride vnto S[aint]. Albons,
Where as the King and Queene do meane to
Hawke
Hu. I go. Come Nel thou wilt ride with vs?
Ex[it]. Hum[frey]
Eli. Yes my good Lord, Ile follow presently.
Follow I must, I
cannot go before,
While Gloster beares this base and humble minde.
Were I
a Man, a Duke, and next of blood,
I would remoue these tedious stumbling
blockes,
And smooth my way vpon their headlesse neckes.
And being a woman,
I will not be slacke
To play my part in Fortunes Pageant.
Where are you
there? Sir Iohn; nay feare not man,
We are alone, here's none but thee, &
I.
Enter Hume.
Hume. Iesus preserue your Royall Maiesty
Elia. What saist thou? Maiesty: I am but Grace
Hume. But by the grace of God, and Humes aduice,
Your Graces
Title shall be multiplied
Elia. What saist thou man? Hast thou as yet confer'd
With
Margerie Iordane the cunning Witch,
With Roger Bollingbrooke the
Coniurer?
And will they vndertake to do me good?
Hume. This they
haue promised to shew your Highnes
A Spirit rais'd from depth of vnder
ground,
That shall make answere to such Questions,
As by your Grace shall
be propounded him
Elianor. It is enough, Ile thinke vpon the Questions:
When
from Saint Albones we doe make returne,
Wee'le see these things effected to
the full.
Here Hume, take this reward, make merry man
With thy
Confederates in this weightie cause.
Exit Elianor
Hume. Hume must make merry with the Duchesse Gold:
Marry and
shall: but how now, Sir Iohn Hume?
Seale vp your Lips, and giue no words but
Mum,
The businesse asketh silent secrecie.
Dame Elianor giues Gold, to
bring the Witch:
Gold cannot come amisse, were she a Deuill.
Yet haue I
Gold flyes from another Coast:
I dare not say, from the rich
Cardinall,
And from the great and new-made Duke of Suffolke;
Yet I doe
finde it so: for to be plaine,
They (knowing Dame Elianors aspiring
humor)
Haue hyred me to vnder-mine the Duchesse,
And buzze these
Coniurations in her brayne.
They say, A craftie Knaue do's need no
Broker,
Yet am I Suffolke and the Cardinalls Broker.
Hume, if you take not
heed, you shall goe neere
To call them both a payre of craftie
Knaues.
Well, so it stands: and thus I feare at last,
Humes Knauerie will
be the Duchesse Wracke,
And her Attainture, will be Humphreyes fall:
Sort
how it will, I shall haue Gold for all.
Enter.
Enter three or foure Petitioners, the Armorers Man being one.
1.Pet. My Masters, let's stand close, my Lord Protector
will come
this way by and by, and then wee may
deliuer our Supplications in the
Quill
2.Pet. Marry the Lord protect him, for hee's a good
man, Iesu
blesse him.
Enter Suffolke, and Queene.
Peter. Here a comes me thinkes, and the Queene with
him: Ile be the
first sure
2.Pet. Come backe foole, this is the Duke of Suffolk,
and not
my Lord Protector
Suff. How now fellow: would'st any thing with me?
1.Pet. I pray my Lord pardon me, I tooke ye for my
Lord Protector
Queene. To my Lord Protector? Are your Supplications
to his
Lordship? Let me see them: what is thine?
1.Pet. Mine is, and't please
your Grace, against Iohn
Goodman, my Lord Cardinals Man, for keeping my
House,
and Lands, and Wife and all, from me
Suff. Thy Wife too? that's some Wrong indeede.
What's yours?
What's heere? Against the Duke of
Suffolke, for enclosing the Commons of
Melforde. How
now, Sir Knaue?
2.Pet. Alas Sir, I am but a poore
Petitioner of our
whole Towneship
Peter. Against my Master Thomas Horner, for saying,
That the
Duke of Yorke was rightfull Heire to the
Crowne
Queene. What say'st thou? Did the Duke of Yorke
say, hee was
rightfull Heire to the Crowne?
Peter. That my Mistresse was? No
forsooth: my Master
said, That he was, and that the King was an Vsurper
Suff. Who is there?
Enter Seruant.
Take this fellow in, and send for his Master with a Purseuant
presently:
wee'le heare more of your matter before
the King.
Enter.
Queene. And as for you that loue to be protected
Vnder the Wings of
our Protectors Grace,
Begin your Suites anew, and sue to him.
Teare the Supplication.
Away, base Cullions: Suffolke let them goe
All. Come, let's be gone.
Enter.
Queene. My Lord of Suffolke, say, is this the guise?
Is this the
Fashions in the Court of England?
Is this the Gouernment of Britaines
Ile?
And this the Royaltie of Albions King?
What, shall King Henry be a
Pupill still,
Vnder the surly Glosters Gouernance?
Am I a Queene in Title
and in Stile,
And must be made a Subiect to a Duke?
I tell thee Poole,
when in the Citie Tours
Thou ran'st a-tilt in honor of my Loue,
And
stol'st away the Ladies hearts of France;
I thought King Henry had resembled
thee,
In Courage, Courtship, and Proportion:
But all his minde is bent to
Holinesse,
To number Aue-Maries on his Beades:
His Champions, are the
Prophets and Apostles,
His Weapons, holy Sawes of sacred Writ,
His Studie
is his Tilt-yard, and his Loues
Are brazen Images of Canonized Saints.
I
would the Colledge of the Cardinalls
Would chuse him Pope, and carry him to
Rome,
And set the Triple Crowne vpon his Head;
That were a State fit for
his Holinesse
Suff. Madame be patient: as I was cause
Your Highnesse came
to England, so will I
In England worke your Graces full content
Queene. Beside the haughtie Protector, haue we Beauford
The
imperious Churchman; Somerset, Buckingham,
And grumbling Yorke: and not the
least of these,
But can doe more in England then the King
Suff. And he of these, that can doe most of all,
Cannot doe
more in England then the Neuils:
Salisbury and Warwick are no simple
Peeres
Queene. Not all these Lords do vex me halfe so much,
As that
prowd Dame, the Lord Protectors Wife:
She sweepes it through the Court with
troups of Ladies,
More like an Empresse, then Duke Humphreyes
Wife:
Strangers in Court, doe take her for the Queene:
She beares a Dukes
Reuenewes on her backe,
And in her heart she scornes our Pouertie:
Shall I
not liue to be aueng'd on her?
Contemptuous base-borne Callot as she
is,
She vaunted 'mongst her Minions t' other day,
The very trayne of her
worst wearing Gowne,
Was better worth then all my Fathers Lands,
Till
Suffolke gaue two Dukedomes for his Daughter
Suff. Madame, my selfe haue lym'd a Bush for her,
And plac't
a Quier of such enticing Birds,
That she will light to listen to the
Layes,
And neuer mount to trouble you againe.
So let her rest: and Madame
list to me,
For I am bold to counsaile you in this;
Although we fancie not
the Cardinall,
Yet must we ioyne with him and with the Lords,
Till we haue
brought Duke Humphrey in disgrace.
As for the Duke of Yorke, this late
Complaint
Will make but little for his benefit:
So one by one wee'le weed
them all at last,
And you your selfe shall steere the happy
Helme.
Enter.
Sound a Sennet.
Enter the King, Duke Humfrey, Cardinall, Buckingham,
Yorke,
Salisbury,
Warwicke, and the Duchesse.
King. For my part, Noble Lords, I care not which,
Or Somerset, or
Yorke, all's one to me
Yorke. If Yorke haue ill demean'd himselfe in France,
Then
let him be denay'd the Regentship
Som. If Somerset be vnworthy of the Place,
Let Yorke be
Regent, I will yeeld to him
Warw. Whether your Grace be worthy, yea or no,
Dispute not
that, Yorke is the worthyer
Card. Ambitious Warwicke, let thy betters speake
Warw. The Cardinall's not my better in the field
Buck. All in this presence are thy betters, Warwicke
Warw. Warwicke may liue to be the best of all
Salisb. Peace Sonne, and shew some reason Buckingham
Why
Somerset should be preferr'd in this?
Queene. Because the King
forsooth will haue it so
Humf. Madame, the King is old enough himselfe
To giue his
Censure: These are no Womens matters
Queene. If he be old enough, what needs your Grace
To be
Protector of his Excellence?
Humf. Madame, I am Protector of the
Realme,
And at his pleasure will resigne my Place
Suff. Resigne it then, and leaue thine insolence.
Since thou
wert King; as who is King, but thou?
The Common-wealth hath dayly run to
wrack,
The Dolphin hath preuayl'd beyond the Seas,
And all the Peeres and
Nobles of the Realme
Haue beene as Bond-men to thy Soueraigntie
Card. The Commons hast thou rackt, the Clergies Bags
Are
lanke and leane with thy Extortions
Som. Thy sumptuous Buildings, and thy Wiues Attyre
Haue cost
a masse of publique Treasurie
Buck. Thy Crueltie in execution
Vpon Offendors, hath exceeded
Law,
And left thee to the mercy of the Law
Queene. Thy sale of Offices and Townes in France,
If they
were knowne, as the suspect is great,
Would make thee quickly hop without thy
Head.
Exit Humfrey.
Giue me my Fanne: what, Mynion, can ye not?
She giues the Duchesse a box on the eare.
I cry you mercy, Madame: was it you?
Duch. Was't I? yea, I it was,
prowd French-woman:
Could I come neere your Beautie with my Nayles,
I
could set my ten Commandements in your face
King. Sweet Aunt be quiet, 'twas against her will
Duch. Against her will, good King? looke to't in
time,
Shee'le hamper thee, and dandle thee like a Baby:
Though in this
place most Master weare no Breeches,
She shall not strike Dame Elianor
vnreueng'd.
Exit Elianor.
Buck. Lord Cardinall, I will follow Elianor,
And listen after
Humfrey, how he proceedes:
Shee's tickled now, her Fume needs no
spurres,
Shee'le gallop farre enough to her destruction.
Exit Buckingham.
Enter Humfrey.
Humf. Now Lords, my Choller being ouer-blowne,
With walking once
about the Quadrangle,
I come to talke of Common-wealth Affayres.
As for
your spightfull false Obiections,
Proue them, and I lye open to the
Law:
But God in mercie so deale with my Soule,
As I in dutie loue my King
and Countrey.
But to the matter that we haue in hand:
I say, my
Soueraigne, Yorke is meetest man
To be your Regent in the Realme of
France
Suff. Before we make election, giue me leaue
To shew some
reason, of no little force,
That Yorke is most vnmeet of any man
Yorke. Ile tell thee, Suffolke, why I am vnmeet.
First, for I
cannot flatter thee in Pride:
Next, if I be appointed for the Place,
My
Lord of Somerset will keepe me here,
Without Discharge, Money, or
Furniture,
Till France be wonne into the Dolphins hands:
Last time I
danc't attendance on his will,
Till Paris was besieg'd, famisht, and lost
Warw. That can I witnesse, and a fouler fact
Did neuer
Traytor in the Land commit
Suff. Peace head-strong Warwicke
Warw. Image of Pride, why should I hold my peace?
Enter
Armorer and his Man.
Suff. Because here is a man accused of Treason,
Pray God the Duke
of Yorke excuse himselfe
Yorke. Doth any one accuse Yorke for a Traytor?
King.
What mean'st thou, Suffolke? tell me, what are
these?
Suff. Please
it your Maiestie, this is the man
That doth accuse his Master of High
Treason;
His words were these: That Richard, Duke of Yorke,
Was rightfull
Heire vnto the English Crowne,
And that your Maiestie was an Vsurper
King. Say man, were these thy words?
Armorer. And't
shall please your Maiestie, I neuer sayd
nor thought any such matter: God is
my witnesse, I am
falsely accus'd by the Villaine
Peter. By these tenne bones, my Lords, hee did speake
them to
me in the Garret one Night, as wee were scowring
my Lord of Yorkes Armor
Yorke. Base Dunghill Villaine, and Mechanicall,
Ile haue thy
Head for this thy Traytors speech:
I doe beseech your Royall Maiestie,
Let
him haue all the rigor of the Law
Armorer. Alas, my Lord, hang me if euer I spake the
words: my
accuser is my Prentice, and when I did correct
him for his fault the other
day, he did vow vpon his
knees he would be euen with me: I haue good
witnesse
of this; therefore I beseech your Maiestie, doe not cast
away an
honest man for a Villaines accusation
King. Vnckle, what shall we say to this in law?
Humf.
This doome, my Lord, if I may iudge:
Let Somerset be Regent o're the
French,
Because in Yorke this breedes suspition;
And let these haue a day
appointed them
For single Combat, in conuenient place,
For he hath
witnesse of his seruants malice:
This is the Law, and this Duke Humfreyes
doome
Som. I humbly thanke your Royall Maiestie
Armorer. And I accept the Combat willingly
Peter. Alas, my Lord, I cannot fight; for Gods sake
pitty my
case: the spight of man preuayleth against me.
O Lord haue mercy vpon me, I
shall neuer be able to
fight a blow: O Lord my heart
Humf. Sirrha, or you must fight, or else be hang'd
King. Away with them to Prison: and the day of
Combat, shall
be the last of the next moneth. Come
Somerset, wee'le see thee sent away.
Flourish. Exeunt.
Enter the Witch, the two Priests, and Bullingbrooke.
Hume. Come my Masters, the Duchesse I tell you expects
performance
of your promises
Bulling. Master Hume, we are therefore prouided: will
her
Ladyship behold and heare our Exorcismes?
Hume. I, what else? feare
you not her courage
Bulling. I haue heard her reported to be a Woman of
an
inuincible spirit: but it shall be conuenient, Master
Hume, that you be by
her aloft, while wee be busie below;
and so I pray you goe in Gods Name, and
leaue vs.
Exit Hume.
Mother Iordan, be you prostrate, and grouell on the
Earth; Iohn Southwell
reade you, and let vs to our worke.
Enter Elianor aloft.
Elianor. Well said my Masters, and welcome all: To
this geere, the
sooner the better
Bullin. Patience, good Lady, Wizards know their times:
Deepe
Night, darke Night, the silent of the Night,
The time of Night when Troy was
set on fire,
The time when Screech-owles cry, and Bandogs howle,
And
Spirits walke, and Ghosts breake vp their Graues;
That time best fits the
worke we haue in hand.
Madame, sit you, and feare not: whom wee rayse,
Wee
will make fast within a hallow'd Verge.
Here doe the Ceremonies belonging, and make the Circle,
Bullingbrooke
or
Southwell reades, Coniuro te, &c. It Thunders and
Lightens
terribly: then
the Spirit riseth.
Spirit. Ad sum
Witch. Asmath, by the eternall God,
Whose name and power thou
tremblest at,
Answere that I shall aske: for till thou speake,
Thou shalt
not passe from hence
Spirit. Aske what thou wilt; that I had sayd, and
done
Bulling. First of the King: What shall of him become?
Spirit. The Duke yet liues, that Henry shall depose:
But him out-liue, and
dye a violent death
Bulling. What fates await the Duke of Suffolke?
Spirit. By Water shall he dye, and take his end
Bulling. What shall befall the Duke of Somerset?
Spirit. Let him shun Castles,
Safer shall he be vpon the sandie
Plaines,
Then where Castles mounted stand.
Haue done, for more I hardly
can endure
Bulling. Discend to Darknesse, and the burning Lake:
False
Fiend auoide.
Thunder and Lightning. Exit Spirit.
Enter the Duke of Yorke and the Duke of Buckingham with their
Guard,
and
breake in.
Yorke. Lay hands vpon these Traytors, and their trash:
Beldam I
thinke we watcht you at an ynch.
What Madame, are you there? the King &
Commonweale
Are deepely indebted for this peece of paines;
My Lord
Protector will, I doubt it not,
See you well guerdon'd for these good
deserts
Elianor. Not halfe so bad as thine to Englands
King,
Iniurious Duke, that threatest where's no cause
Buck. True Madame, none at all: what call you this?
Away with
them, let them be clapt vp close,
And kept asunder: you Madame shall with
vs.
Stafford take her to thee.
Wee'le see your Trinkets here all
forth-comming.
All away.
Enter.
Yorke. Lord Buckingham, me thinks you watcht her well:
A pretty
Plot, well chosen to build vpon.
Now pray my Lord, let's see the Deuils
Writ.
What haue we here?
Reades.
The Duke yet liues, that Henry shall depose:
But him out-liue, and dye a
violent death.
Why this is iust, Aio aeacida Romanos vincere posso.
Well,
to the rest:
Tell me what fate awaits the Duke of Suffolke?
By Water shall
he dye, and take his end.
What shall betide the Duke of Somerset?
Let him
shunne Castles,
Safer shall he be vpon the sandie Plaines,
Then where
Castles mounted stand.
Come, come, my Lords,
These Oracles are hardly
attain'd,
And hardly vnderstood.
The King is now in progresse towards
Saint Albones,
With him, the Husband of this louely Lady:
Thither goes
these Newes,
As fast as Horse can carry them:
A sorry Breakfast for my
Lord Protector
Buck. Your Grace shal giue me leaue, my Lord of York,
To be
the Poste, in hope of his reward
Yorke. At your pleasure, my good Lord.
Who's within there,
hoe?
Enter a Seruingman.
Inuite my Lords of Salisbury and Warwick
To suppe with me to morrow Night.
Away.
Exeunt.
Enter the King, Queene, Protector, Cardinall, and Suffolke,
with
Faulkners
hallowing.
Queene. Beleeue me Lords, for flying at the Brooke,
I saw not
better sport these seuen yeeres day:
Yet by your leaue, the Winde was very
high,
And ten to one, old Ioane had not gone out
King. But what a point, my Lord, your Faulcon made,
And what
a pytch she flew aboue the rest:
To see how God in all his Creatures
workes,
Yea Man and Birds are fayne of climbing high
Suff. No maruell, and it like your Maiestie,
My Lord
Protectors Hawkes doe towre so well,
They know their Master loues to be
aloft,
And beares his thoughts aboue his Faulcons Pitch
Glost. My Lord, 'tis but a base ignoble minde,
That mounts no
higher then a Bird can sore:
Card. I thought as much, hee would be
aboue the
Clouds
Glost. I my Lord Cardinall, how thinke you by that?
Were it
not good your Grace could flye to Heauen?
King. The Treasurie of
euerlasting Ioy
Card. Thy Heauen is on Earth, thine Eyes & Thoughts
Beat
on a Crowne, the Treasure of thy Heart,
Pernitious Protector, dangerous
Peere,
That smooth'st it so with King and Common-weale
Glost. What, Cardinall?
Is your Priest-hood growne
peremptorie?
Tantæne animis Coelestibus iræ, Church-men so hot?
Good
Vnckle hide such mallice:
With such Holynesse can you doe it?
Suff.
No mallice Sir, no more then well becomes
So good a Quarrell, and so bad a
Peere
Glost. As who, my Lord?
Suff. Why, as you, my
Lord,
An't like your Lordly Lords Protectorship
Glost. Why Suffolke, England knowes thine insolence
Queene. And thy Ambition, Gloster
King. I prythee peace, good Queene,
And whet not on these
furious Peeres,
For blessed are the Peace-makers on Earth
Card. Let me be blessed for the Peace I make
Against this
prowd Protector with my Sword
Glost. Faith holy Vnckle, would't were come to that
Card. Marry, when thou dar'st
Glost. Make vp no factious numbers for the matter,
In thine
owne person answere thy abuse
Card. I, where thou dar'st not peepe:
And if thou dar'st,
this Euening,
On the East side of the Groue
King. How now, my Lords?
Card. Beleeue me, Cousin
Gloster,
Had not your man put vp the Fowle so suddenly,
We had had more
sport.
Come with thy two-hand Sword
Glost. True Vnckle, are ye aduis'd?
The East side of the
Groue:
Cardinall, I am with you
King. Why how now, Vnckle Gloster?
Glost. Talking of
Hawking; nothing else, my Lord.
Now by Gods Mother, Priest,
Ile shaue your
Crowne for this,
Or all my Fence shall fayle
Card. Medice teipsum, Protector see to't well, protect
your
selfe
King. The Windes grow high,
So doe your Stomacks,
Lords:
How irkesome is this Musick to my heart?
When such Strings iarre,
what hope of Harmony?
I pray my Lords let me compound this strife.
Enter
one crying a Miracle
Glost. What meanes this noyse?
Fellow, what Miracle do'st
thou proclayme?
One. A Miracle, a Miracle
Suffolke. Come to the King, and tell him what Miracle
One. Forsooth, a blinde man at Saint Albones Shrine,
Within
this halfe houre hath receiu'd his sight,
A man that ne're saw in his life
before
King. Now God be prays'd, that to beleeuing Soules
Giues
Light in Darknesse, Comfort in Despaire.
Enter the Maior of Saint Albones,
and his Brethren, bearing the
man
betweene two in a Chayre.
Card. Here comes the Townes-men, on Procession,
To present your
Highnesse with the man
King. Great is his comfort in this Earthly Vale,
Although by
his sight his sinne be multiplyed
Glost. Stand by, my Masters, bring him neere the King,
His
Highnesse pleasure is to talke with him
King. Good-fellow, tell vs here the circumstance,
That we for
thee may glorifie the Lord.
What, hast thou beene long blinde, and now
restor'd?
Simpc. Borne blinde, and't please your Grace
Wife. I indeede was he
Suff. What Woman is this?
Wife. His Wife, and't like
your Worship
Glost. Hadst thou been his Mother, thou could'st haue
better
told
King. Where wert thou borne?
Simpc. At Barwick in the
North, and't like your
Grace
King. Poore Soule,
Gods goodnesse hath beene great to
thee:
Let neuer Day nor Night vnhallowed passe,
But still remember what
the Lord hath done
Queene. Tell me, good-fellow,
Cam'st thou here by Chance, or
of Deuotion,
To this holy Shrine?
Simpc. God knowes of pure
Deuotion,
Being call'd a hundred times, and oftner,
In my sleepe, by good
Saint Albon:
Who said; Symon, come; come offer at my Shrine,
And I will
helpe thee
Wife. Most true, forsooth:
And many time and oft my selfe
haue heard a Voyce,
To call him so
Card. What, art thou lame?
Simpc. I, God Almightie
helpe me
Suff. How cam'st thou so?
Simpc. A fall off of a
Tree
Wife. A Plum-tree, Master
Glost. How long hast thou beene blinde?
Simpc. O borne
so, Master
Glost. What, and would'st climbe a Tree?
Simpc. But
that in all my life, when I was a youth
Wife. Too true, and bought his climbing very deare
Glost. 'Masse, thou lou'dst Plummes well, that
would'st
venture so
Simpc. Alas, good Master, my Wife desired some
Damsons, and
made me climbe, with danger of my
Life
Glost. A subtill Knaue, but yet it shall not serue:
Let me
see thine Eyes; winck now, now open them,
In my opinion, yet thou seest not
well
Simpc. Yes Master, cleare as day, I thanke God and
Saint
Albones
Glost. Say'st thou me so: what Colour is this
Cloake
of?
Simpc. Red Master, Red as Blood
Glost. Why that's well said: What Colour is my
Gowne
of?
Simpc. Black forsooth, Coale-Black, as Iet
King. Why then, thou know'st what Colour Iet is
of?
Suff. And yet I thinke, Iet did he neuer see
Glost. But Cloakes and Gownes, before this day, a
many
Wife. Neuer before this day, in all his life
Glost. Tell me Sirrha, what's my Name?
Simpc. Alas
Master, I know not
Glost. What's his Name?
Simpc. I know not
Glost. Nor his?
Simpc. No indeede, Master
Glost. What's thine owne Name?
Simpc. Saunder
Simpcoxe, and if it please you, Master
Glost. Then Saunder, sit there,
The lying'st Knaue in
Christendome.
If thou hadst beene borne blinde,
Thou might'st as well haue
knowne all our Names,
As thus to name the seuerall Colours we doe
weare.
Sight may distinguish of Colours:
But suddenly to nominate them
all,
It is impossible.
My Lords, Saint Albone here hath done a
Miracle:
And would ye not thinke it, Cunning to be great,
That could
restore this Cripple to his Legges againe
Simpc. O Master, that you could?
Glost. My Masters of
Saint Albones,
Haue you not Beadles in your Towne,
And Things call'd
Whippes?
Maior. Yes, my Lord, if it please your Grace
Glost. Then send for one presently
Maior. Sirrha, goe fetch the Beadle hither
straight.
Enter.
Glost. Now fetch me a Stoole hither by and by.
Now Sirrha, if you
meane to saue your selfe from Whipping,
leape me ouer this Stoole, and runne
away
Simpc. Alas Master, I am not able to stand alone:
You goe
about to torture me in vaine.
Enter a Beadle with Whippes.
Glost. Well Sir, we must haue you finde your Legges.
Sirrha Beadle,
whippe him till he leape ouer that same
Stoole
Beadle. I will, my Lord.
Come on Sirrha, off with your
Doublet, quickly
Simpc. Alas Master, what shall I doe? I am not able
to
stand.
After the Beadle hath hit him once, he leapes ouer the Stoole,
and
runnes
away: and they follow, and cry, A Miracle.
King. O God, seest thou this, and bearest so long?
Queene.
It made me laugh, to see the Villaine runne
Glost. Follow the Knaue, and take this Drab away
Wife. Alas Sir, we did it for pure need
Glost. Let the[m] be whipt through euery Market Towne,
Till
they come to Barwick, from whence they came.
Enter.
Card. Duke Humfrey ha's done a Miracle to day
Suff. True: made the Lame to leape and flye away
Glost. But you haue done more Miracles then I:
You made in a
day, my Lord, whole Townes to flye.
Enter Buckingham.
King. What Tidings with our Cousin Buckingham?
Buck. Such as
my heart doth tremble to vnfold:
A sort of naughtie persons, lewdly
bent,
Vnder the Countenance and Confederacie
Of Lady Elianor, the
Protectors Wife,
The Ring-leader and Head of all this Rout,
Haue practis'd
dangerously against your State,
Dealing with Witches and with
Coniurers,
Whom we haue apprehended in the Fact,
Raysing vp wicked Spirits
from vnder ground,
Demanding of King Henries Life and Death,
And other of
your Highnesse Priuie Councell,
As more at large your Grace shall
vnderstand
Card. And so my Lord Protector, by this meanes
Your Lady is
forth-comming, yet at London.
This Newes I thinke hath turn'd your Weapons
edge;
'Tis like, my Lord, you will not keepe your houre
Glost. Ambitious Church-man, leaue to afflict my
heart:
Sorrow and griefe haue vanquisht all my powers;
And vanquisht as I
am, I yeeld to thee,
Or to the meanest Groome
King. O God, what mischiefes work the wicked ones?
Heaping
confusion on their owne heads thereby
Queene. Gloster, see here the Taincture of thy Nest,
And
looke thy selfe be faultlesse, thou wert best
Glost. Madame, for my selfe, to Heauen I doe appeale,
How I
haue lou'd my King, and Common-weale:
And for my Wife, I know not how it
stands,
Sorry I am to heare what I haue heard,
Noble shee is: but if shee
haue forgot
Honor and Vertue, and conuers't with such,
As like to Pytch,
defile Nobilitie;
I banish her my Bed, and Companie,
And giue her as a
Prey to Law and Shame,
That hath dis-honored Glosters honest Name
King. Well, for this Night we will repose vs here:
To morrow
toward London, back againe,
To looke into this Businesse thorowly,
And
call these foule Offendors to their Answeres;
And poyse the Cause in Iustice
equall Scales,
Whose Beame stands sure, whose rightful cause preuailes.
Flourish. Exeunt.
Enter Yorke, Salisbury, and Warwick.
Yorke. Now my good Lords of Salisbury & Warwick,
Our simple
Supper ended, giue me leaue,
In this close Walke, to satisfie my selfe,
In
crauing your opinion of my Title,
Which is infallible, to Englands Crowne
Salisb. My Lord, I long to heare it at full
Warw. Sweet Yorke begin: and if thy clayme be good,
The
Neuills are thy Subiects to command
Yorke. Then thus:
Edward the third, my Lords, had seuen
Sonnes:
The first, Edward the Black-Prince, Prince of Wales;
The second,
William of Hatfield; and the third,
Lionel, Duke of Clarence; next to
whom,
Was Iohn of Gaunt, the Duke of Lancaster;
The fift, was Edmond
Langley, Duke of Yorke;
The sixt, was Thomas of Woodstock, Duke of
Gloster;
William of Windsor was the seuenth, and last.
Edward the
Black-Prince dyed before his Father,
And left behinde him Richard, his onely
Sonne,
Who after Edward the third's death, raign'd as King,
Till Henry
Bullingbrooke, Duke of Lancaster,
The eldest Sonne and Heire of Iohn of
Gaunt,
Crown'd by the Name of Henry the fourth,
Seiz'd on the Realme,
depos'd the rightfull King,
Sent his poore Queene to France, from whence she
came,
And him to Pumfret; where, as all you know,
Harmelesse Richard was
murthered traiterously
Warw. Father, the Duke hath told the truth;
Thus got the
House of Lancaster the Crowne
Yorke. Which now they hold by force, and not by right:
For
Richard, the first Sonnes Heire, being dead,
The Issue of the next Sonne
should haue reign'd
Salisb. But William of Hatfield dyed without an
Heire
Yorke. The third Sonne, Duke of Clarence,
From whose Line I
clayme the Crowne,
Had Issue Phillip, a Daughter,
Who marryed Edmond
Mortimer, Earle of March:
Edmond had Issue, Roger, Earle of March;
Roger
had Issue, Edmond, Anne, and Elianor
Salisb. This Edmond, in the Reigne of Bullingbrooke,
As I
haue read, layd clayme vnto the Crowne,
And but for Owen Glendour, had beene
King;
Who kept him in Captiuitie, till he dyed.
But, to the rest
Yorke. His eldest Sister, Anne,
My Mother, being Heire vnto
the Crowne,
Marryed Richard, Earle of Cambridge,
Who was to Edmond
Langley,
Edward the thirds fift Sonnes Sonne;
By her I clayme the
Kingdome:
She was Heire to Roger, Earle of March,
Who was the Sonne of
Edmond Mortimer,
Who marryed Phillip, sole Daughter
Vnto Lionel, Duke of
Clarence.
So, if the Issue of the elder Sonne
Succeed before the younger,
I am King
Warw. What plaine proceedings is more plain then this?
Henry
doth clayme the Crowne from Iohn of Gaunt,
The fourth Sonne, Yorke claymes it
from the third:
Till Lionels Issue fayles, his should not reigne.
It
fayles not yet, but flourishes in thee,
And in thy Sonnes, faire slippes of
such a Stock.
Then Father Salisbury, kneele we together,
And in this
priuate Plot be we the first,
That shall salute our rightfull
Soueraigne
With honor of his Birth-right to the Crowne
Both. Long liue our Soueraigne Richard, Englands
King
Yorke. We thanke you Lords:
But I am not your King, till I be
Crown'd,
And that my Sword be stayn'd
With heart-blood of the House of
Lancaster:
And that's not suddenly to be perform'd,
But with aduice and
silent secrecie.
Doe you as I doe in these dangerous dayes,
Winke at the
Duke of Suffolkes insolence,
At Beaufords Pride, at Somersets Ambition,
At
Buckingham, and all the Crew of them,
Till they haue snar'd the Shepheard of
the Flock,
That vertuous Prince, the good Duke Humfrey:
'Tis that they
seeke; and they, in seeking that,
Shall finde their deaths, if Yorke can
prophecie
Salisb. My Lord, breake we off; we know your minde
at
full
Warw. My heart assures me, that the Earle of Warwick
Shall
one day make the Duke of Yorke a King
Yorke. And Neuill, this I doe assure my selfe,
Richard
shall liue to make the Earle of Warwick
The greatest man in England, but the
King.
Exeunt.
Sound Trumpets. Enter the King and State, with Guard, to
banish
the
Duchesse.
King. Stand forth Dame Elianor Cobham,
Glosters Wife:
In sight
of God, and vs, your guilt is great,
Receiue the Sentence of the Law for
sinne,
Such as by Gods Booke are adiudg'd to death.
You foure from hence
to Prison, back againe;
From thence, vnto the place of Execution:
The
Witch in Smithfield shall be burnt to ashes,
And you three shall be strangled
on the Gallowes.
You Madame, for you are more Nobly borne,
Despoyled of
your Honor in your Life,
Shall, after three dayes open Penance done,
Liue
in your Countrey here, in Banishment,
With Sir Iohn Stanly, in the Ile of
Man
Elianor. Welcome is Banishment, welcome were my
Death
Glost. Elianor, the Law thou seest hath iudged thee,
I cannot
iustifie whom the Law condemnes:
Mine eyes are full of teares, my heart of
griefe.
Ah Humfrey, this dishonor in thine age,
Will bring thy head with
sorrow to the ground.
I beseech your Maiestie giue me leaue to goe;
Sorrow
would sollace, and mine Age would ease
King. Stay Humfrey, Duke of Gloster,
Ere thou goe, giue vp
thy Staffe,
Henry will to himselfe Protector be,
And God shall be my hope,
my stay, my guide,
And Lanthorne to my feete:
And goe in peace, Humfrey,
no lesse belou'd,
Then when thou wert Protector to thy King
Queene. I see no reason, why a King of yeeres
Should be to be
protected like a Child,
God and King Henry gouerne Englands Realme:
Giue
vp your Staffe, Sir, and the King his Realme
Glost. My Staffe? Here, Noble Henry, is my Staffe:
As
willingly doe I the same resigne,
As ere thy Father Henry made it
mine;
And euen as willingly at thy feete I leaue it,
As others would
ambitiously receiue it.
Farewell good King: when I am dead, and gone,
May
honorable Peace attend thy Throne.
Exit Gloster.
Queene. Why now is Henry King, and Margaret Queen,
And Humfrey,
Duke of Gloster, scarce himselfe,
That beares so shrewd a mayme: two Pulls at
once;
His Lady banisht, and a Limbe lopt off.
This Staffe of Honor raught,
there let it stand,
Where it best fits to be, in Henries hand
Suff. Thus droupes this loftie Pyne, & hangs his
sprayes,
Thus Elianors Pride dyes in her youngest dayes
Yorke. Lords, let him goe. Please it your Maiestie,
This is
the day appointed for the Combat,
And ready are the Appellant and
Defendant,
The Armorer and his Man, to enter the Lists,
So please your
Highnesse to behold the fight
Queene. I, good my Lord: for purposely therefore
Left I the
Court, to see this Quarrell try'de
King. A Gods Name see the Lysts and all things fit,
Here let
them end it, and God defend the right
Yorke. I neuer saw a fellow worse bestead,
Or more afraid to
fight, then is the Appellant,
The seruant of this Armorer, my Lords.
Enter
at one Doore the Armorer and his Neighbors, drinking to
him so
much, that
hee is drunke; and he enters with a Drumme before
him, and his
Staffe,
with a Sand-bagge fastened to it: and at the other Doore his
Man,
with a
Drumme and Sand-bagge, and Prentices drinking to him.
1.Neighbor. Here Neighbour Horner, I drinke to you
in a Cup of
Sack; and feare not Neighbor, you shall doe
well enough
2.Neighbor. And here Neighbour, here's a Cuppe
of
Charneco
3.Neighbor. And here's a Pot of good Double-Beere
Neighbor:
drinke, and feare not your Man
Armorer. Let it come yfaith, and Ile pledge you all,
and a
figge for Peter
1.Prent. Here Peter, I drinke to thee, and be not afraid
2.Prent. Be merry Peter, and feare not thy Master,
Fight for
credit of the Prentices
Peter. I thanke you all: drinke, and pray for me, I pray
you,
for I thinke I haue taken my last Draught in this
World. Here Robin, and if I
dye, I giue thee my Aporne;
and Will, thou shalt haue my Hammer: and here
Tom,
take all the Money that I haue. O Lord blesse me, I pray
God, for I
am neuer able to deale with my Master, hee
hath learnt so much fence
already
Salisb. Come, leaue your drinking, and fall to
blowes.
Sirrha, what's thy Name?
Peter. Peter forsooth
Salisb. Peter? what more?
Peter. Thumpe
Salisb. Thumpe? Then see thou thumpe thy Master
well
Armorer. Masters, I am come hither as it were vpon
my Mans
instigation, to proue him a Knaue, and my selfe
an honest man: and touching
the Duke of Yorke, I will
take my death, I neuer meant him any ill, nor the
King,
nor the Queene: and therefore Peter haue at thee with a
downe-right
blow
Yorke. Dispatch, this Knaues tongue begins to double.
Sound
Trumpets, Alarum to the Combattants.
They fight, and Peter strikes him downe.
Armorer. Hold Peter, hold, I confesse, I confesse Treason
Yorke. Take away his Weapon: Fellow thanke God,
and the good
Wine in thy Masters way
Peter. O God, haue I ouercome mine Enemies in this
presence?
O Peter, thou hast preuayl'd in right
King. Goe, take hence that Traytor from our sight,
For by his
death we doe perceiue his guilt,
And God in Iustice hath reueal'd to
vs
The truth and innocence of this poore fellow,
Which he had thought to
haue murther'd wrongfully.
Come fellow, follow vs for thy Reward.
Sound a flourish. Exeunt.
Enter Duke Humfrey and his Men in Mourning Cloakes.
Glost. Thus sometimes hath the brightest day a Cloud:
And after
Summer, euermore succeedes
Barren Winter, with his wrathfull nipping
Cold;
So Cares and Ioyes abound, as Seasons fleet.
Sirs, what's a
Clock?
Seru. Tenne, my Lord
Glost. Tenne is the houre that was appointed me,
To watch the
comming of my punisht Duchesse:
Vnneath may shee endure the Flintie
Streets,
To treade them with her tender-feeling feet.
Sweet Nell, ill can
thy Noble Minde abrooke
The abiect People, gazing on thy face,
With
enuious Lookes laughing at thy shame,
That erst did follow thy prowd
Chariot-Wheeles,
When thou didst ride in triumph through the streets.
But
soft, I thinke she comes, and Ile prepare
My teare-stayn'd eyes, to see her
Miseries.
Enter the Duchesse in a white Sheet, and a Taper burning in
her
hand, with
the Sherife and Officers.
Seru. So please your Grace, wee'le take her from the
Sherife
Gloster. No, stirre not for your liues, let her passe
by
Elianor. Come you, my Lord, to see my open shame?
Now thou
do'st Penance too. Looke how they gaze,
See how the giddy multitude doe
point,
And nodde their heads, and throw their eyes on thee.
Ah Gloster,
hide thee from their hatefull lookes,
And in thy Closet pent vp, rue my
shame,
And banne thine Enemies, both mine and thine
Glost. Be patient, gentle Nell, forget this griefe
Elianor. Ah Gloster, teach me to forget my selfe:
For whilest
I thinke I am thy married Wife,
And thou a Prince, Protector of this
Land;
Me thinkes I should not thus be led along,
Mayl'd vp in shame, with
Papers on my back,
And follow'd with a Rabble, that reioyce
To see my
teares, and heare my deepe-fet groanes.
The ruthlesse Flint doth cut my
tender feet,
And when I start, the enuious people laugh,
And bid me be
aduised how I treade.
Ah Humfrey, can I beare this shamefull
yoake?
Trowest thou, that ere Ile looke vpon the World,
Or count them
happy, that enioyes the Sunne?
No: Darke shall be my Light, and Night my
Day.
To thinke vpon my Pompe, shall be my Hell.
Sometime Ile say, I am
Duke Humfreyes Wife,
And he a Prince, and Ruler of the Land:
Yet so he
rul'd, and such a Prince he was,
As he stood by, whilest I, his forlorne
Duchesse,
Was made a wonder, and a pointing stock
To euery idle Rascall
follower.
But be thou milde, and blush not at my shame,
Nor stirre at
nothing, till the Axe of Death
Hang ouer thee, as sure it shortly
will.
For Suffolke, he that can doe all in all
With her, that hateth thee
and hates vs all,
And Yorke, and impious Beauford, that false Priest,
Haue
all lym'd Bushes to betray thy Wings,
And flye thou how thou canst, they'le
tangle thee.
But feare not thou, vntill thy foot be snar'd,
Nor neuer
seeke preuention of thy foes
Glost. Ah Nell, forbeare: thou aymest all awry.
I must
offend, before I be attainted:
And had I twentie times so many foes,
And
each of them had twentie times their power,
All these could not procure me
any scathe,
So long as I am loyall, true, and crimelesse.
Would'st haue me
rescue thee from this reproach?
Why yet thy scandall were not wipt
away,
But I in danger for the breach of Law.
Thy greatest helpe is quiet,
gentle Nell:
I pray thee sort thy heart to patience,
These few dayes
wonder will be quickly worne.
Enter a Herald.
Her. I summon your Grace to his Maiesties Parliament,
Holden at
Bury, the first of this next Moneth
Glost. And my consent ne're ask'd herein before?
This is
close dealing. Well, I will be there.
My Nell, I take my leaue: and Master
Sherife,
Let not her Penance exceede the Kings Commission
Sh. And't please your Grace, here my Commission stayes:
And
Sir Iohn Stanly is appointed now,
To take her with him to the Ile of Man
Glost. Must you, Sir Iohn, protect my Lady here?
Stanly. So am I giuen in charge, may't please your
Grace
Glost. Entreat her not the worse, in that I pray
You vse her
well: the World may laugh againe,
And I may liue to doe you kindnesse, if you
doe it her.
And so Sir Iohn, farewell
Elianor. What, gone my Lord, and bid me not farewell?
Glost. Witnesse my teares, I cannot stay to speake.
Exit Gloster.
Elianor. Art thou gone to? all comfort goe with thee,
For none
abides with me: my Ioy, is Death;
Death, at whose Name I oft haue beene
afear'd,
Because I wish'd this Worlds eternitie.
Stanley, I prethee goe,
and take me hence,
I care not whither, for I begge no fauor;
Onely conuey
me where thou art commanded
Stanley. Why, Madame, that is to the Ile of Man,
There to be
vs'd according to your State
Elianor. That's bad enough, for I am but reproach:
And shall
I then be vs'd reproachfully?
Stanley. Like to a Duchesse, and Duke
Humfreyes Lady,
According to that State you shall be vs'd
Elianor. Sherife farewell, and better then I fare,
Although
thou hast beene Conduct of my shame
Sherife. It is my Office, and Madame pardon me
Elianor. I, I, farewell, thy Office is discharg'd:
Come
Stanley, shall we goe?
Stanley. Madame, your Penance done,
Throw
off this Sheet,
And goe we to attyre you for our Iourney
Elianor. My shame will not be shifted with my Sheet:
No, it
will hang vpon my richest Robes,
And shew it selfe, attyre me how I
can.
Goe, leade the way, I long to see my Prison.
Exeunt.
Sound a Senet. Enter King, Queene, Cardinall, Suffolke,
Yorke,
Buckingham,
Salisbury, and Warwicke, to the Parliament.
King. I muse my Lord of Gloster is not come:
'Tis not his wont to
be the hindmost man,
What e're occasion keepes him from vs now
Queene. Can you not see? or will ye not obserue
The
strangenesse of his alter'd Countenance?
With what a Maiestie he beares
himselfe,
How insolent of late he is become,
How prowd, how peremptorie,
and vnlike himselfe.
We know the time since he was milde and affable,
And
if we did but glance a farre-off Looke,
Immediately he was vpon his
Knee,
That all the Court admir'd him for submission.
But meet him now, and
be it in the Morne,
When euery one will giue the time of day,
He knits his
Brow, and shewes an angry Eye,
And passeth by with stiffe vnbowed
Knee,
Disdaining dutie that to vs belongs.
Small Curres are not regarded
when they grynne,
But great men tremble when the Lyon rores,
And Humfrey
is no little Man in England.
First note, that he is neere you in
discent,
And should you fall, he is the next will mount.
Me seemeth then,
it is no Pollicie,
Respecting what a rancorous minde he beares,
And his
aduantage following your decease,
That he should come about your Royall
Person,
Or be admitted to your Highnesse Councell.
By flatterie hath he
wonne the Commons hearts:
And when he please to make Commotion,
'Tis to be
fear'd they all will follow him.
Now 'tis the Spring, and Weeds are
shallow-rooted,
Suffer them now, and they'le o're-grow the Garden,
And
choake the Herbes for want of Husbandry.
The reuerent care I beare vnto my
Lord,
Made me collect these dangers in the Duke.
If it be fond, call it a
Womans feare:
Which feare, if better Reasons can supplant,
I will
subscribe, and say I wrong'd the Duke.
My Lord of Suffolke, Buckingham, and
Yorke,
Reproue my allegation, if you can,
Or else conclude my words
effectuall
Suff. Well hath your Highnesse seene into this Duke:
And had
I first beene put to speake my minde,
I thinke I should haue told your Graces
Tale.
The Duchesse, by his subornation,
Vpon my Life began her diuellish
practises:
Or if he were not priuie to those Faults,
Yet by reputing of
his high discent,
As next the King, he was successiue Heire,
And such high
vaunts of his Nobilitie,
Did instigate the Bedlam braine-sick Duchesse,
By
wicked meanes to frame our Soueraignes fall.
Smooth runnes the Water, where
the Brooke is deepe,
And in his simple shew he harbours Treason.
The Fox
barkes not, when he would steale the Lambe.
No, no, my Soueraigne, Glouster
is a man
Vnsounded yet, and full of deepe deceit
Card. Did he not, contrary to forme of Law,
Deuise strange
deaths, for small offences done?
Yorke. And did he not, in his
Protectorship,
Leuie great summes of Money through the Realme,
For
Souldiers pay in France, and neuer sent it?
By meanes whereof, the Townes
each day reuolted
Buck. Tut, these are petty faults to faults vnknowne,
Which
time will bring to light in smooth Duke Humfrey
King. My Lords at once: the care you haue of vs,
To mowe
downe Thornes that would annoy our Foot,
Is worthy prayse: but shall I speake
my conscience,
Our Kinsman Gloster is as innocent,
From meaning Treason to
our Royall Person,
As is the sucking Lambe, or harmelesse Doue:
The Duke
is vertuous, milde, and too well giuen,
To dreame on euill, or to worke my
downefall
Qu. Ah what's more dangerous, then this fond affiance?
Seemes
he a Doue? his feathers are but borrow'd,
For hee's disposed as the hatefull
Rauen.
Is he a Lambe? his Skinne is surely lent him,
For hee's enclin'd as
is the rauenous Wolues.
Who cannot steale a shape, that meanes
deceit?
Take heed, my Lord, the welfare of vs all,
Hangs on the cutting
short that fraudfull man.
Enter Somerset
Som. All health vnto my gracious Soueraigne
King. Welcome Lord Somerset: What Newes
from
France?
Som. That all your Interest in those
Territories,
Is vtterly bereft you: all is lost
King. Cold Newes, Lord Somerset: but Gods will be
done
Yorke. Cold Newes for me: for I had hope of France,
As
firmely as I hope for fertile England.
Thus are my Blossomes blasted in the
Bud,
And Caterpillers eate my Leaues away:
But I will remedie this geare
ere long,
Or sell my Title for a glorious Graue.
Enter Gloucester.
Glost. All happinesse vnto my Lord the King:
Pardon, my Liege, that
I haue stay'd so long
Suff. Nay Gloster, know that thou art come too soone,
Vnlesse
thou wert more loyall then thou art:
I doe arrest thee of High Treason
here
Glost. Well Suffolke, thou shalt not see me blush,
Nor change
my Countenance for this Arrest:
A Heart vnspotted, is not easily
daunted.
The purest Spring is not so free from mudde,
As I am cleare from
Treason to my Soueraigne.
Who can accuse me? wherein am I guiltie?
Yorke. 'Tis thought, my Lord,
That you tooke Bribes of France,
And being
Protector, stay'd the Souldiers pay,
By meanes whereof, his Highnesse hath
lost France
Glost. Is it but thought so?
What are they that thinke
it?
I neuer rob'd the Souldiers of their pay,
Nor euer had one penny Bribe
from France.
So helpe me God, as I haue watcht the Night,
I, Night by
Night, in studying good for England.
That Doyt that ere I wrested from the
King,
Or any Groat I hoorded to my vse,
Be brought against me at my Tryall
day.
No: many a Pound of mine owne proper store,
Because I would not taxe
the needie Commons,
Haue I dis-pursed to the Garrisons,
And neuer ask'd
for restitution
Card. It serues you well, my Lord, to say so much
Glost. I say no more then truth, so helpe me God
Yorke. In your Protectorship, you did deuise
Strange Tortures
for Offendors, neuer heard of,
That England was defam'd by Tyrannie
Glost. Why 'tis well known, that whiles I was
Protector,
Pittie was all the fault that was in me:
For I should melt at
an Offendors teares,
And lowly words were Ransome for their fault:
Vnlesse
it were a bloody Murtherer,
Or foule felonious Theefe, that fleec'd poore
passengers,
I neuer gaue them condigne punishment.
Murther indeede, that
bloodie sinne, I tortur'd
Aboue the Felon, or what Trespas else
Suff. My Lord, these faults are easie, quickly answer'd:
But
mightier Crimes are lay'd vnto your charge,
Whereof you cannot easily purge
your selfe.
I doe arrest you in his Highnesse Name,
And here commit you to
my Lord Cardinall
To keepe, vntill your further time of Tryall
King. My Lord of Gloster, 'tis my speciall hope,
That you
will cleare your selfe from all suspence,
My Conscience tells me you are
innocent
Glost. Ah gracious Lord, these dayes are dangerous:
Vertue is
choakt with foule Ambition,
And Charitie chas'd hence by Rancours
hand;
Foule Subornation is predominant,
And Equitie exil'd your Highnesse
Land.
I know, their Complot is to haue my Life:
And if my death might make
this Iland happy,
And proue the Period of their Tyrannie,
I would expend
it with all willingnesse.
But mine is made the Prologue to their Play:
For
thousands more, that yet suspect no perill,
Will not conclude their plotted
Tragedie.
Beaufords red sparkling eyes blab his hearts mallice,
And
Suffolks cloudie Brow his stormie hate;
Sharpe Buckingham vnburthens with his
tongue,
The enuious Load that lyes vpon his heart:
And dogged Yorke, that
reaches at the Moone,
Whose ouer-weening Arme I haue pluckt back,
By false
accuse doth leuell at my Life.
And you, my Soueraigne Lady, with the
rest,
Causelesse haue lay'd disgraces on my head,
And with your best
endeuour haue stirr'd vp
My liefest Liege to be mine Enemie:
I, all of you
haue lay'd your heads together,
My selfe had notice of your
Conuenticles,
And all to make away my guiltlesse Life.
I shall not want
false Witnesse, to condemne me,
Nor store of Treasons, to augment my
guilt:
The ancient Prouerbe will be well effected,
A Staffe is quickly
found to beat a Dogge
Card. My Liege, his rayling is intollerable.
If those that
care to keepe your Royall Person
From Treasons secret Knife, and Traytors
Rage,
Be thus vpbrayded, chid, and rated at,
And the Offendor graunted
scope of speech,
'Twill make them coole in zeale vnto your Grace
Suff. Hath he not twit our Soueraigne Lady here
With
ignominious words, though Clarkely coucht?
As if she had suborned some to
sweare
False allegations, to o'rethrow his state
Qu. But I can giue the loser leaue to chide
Glost. Farre truer spoke then meant: I lose indeede,
Beshrew
the winners, for they play'd me false,
And well such losers may haue leaue to
speake
Buck. Hee'le wrest the sence, and hold vs here all day.
Lord
Cardinall, he is your Prisoner
Card. Sirs, take away the Duke, and guard him sure
Glost. Ah, thus King Henry throwes away his Crutch,
Before
his Legges be firme to beare his Body.
Thus is the Shepheard beaten from thy
side,
And Wolues are gnarling, who shall gnaw thee first.
Ah that my feare
were false, ah that it were;
For good King Henry, thy decay I feare.
Exit Gloster.
King. My Lords, what to your wisdomes seemeth best,
Doe, or vndoe,
as if our selfe were here
Queene. What, will your Highnesse leaue the
Parliament?
King. I Margaret: my heart is drown'd with
griefe,
Whose floud begins to flowe within mine eyes;
My Body round engyrt
with miserie:
For what's more miserable then Discontent?
Ah Vnckle
Humfrey, in thy face I see
The Map of Honor, Truth, and Loyaltie:
And yet,
good Humfrey, is the houre to come,
That ere I prou'd thee false, or fear'd
thy faith.
What lowring Starre now enuies thy estate?
That these great
Lords, and Margaret our Queene,
Doe seeke subuersion of thy harmelesse
Life.
Thou neuer didst them wrong, nor no man wrong:
And as the Butcher
takes away the Calfe,
And binds the Wretch, and beats it when it
strayes,
Bearing it to the bloody Slaughter-house;
Euen so remorselesse
haue they borne him hence:
And as the Damme runnes lowing vp and
downe,
Looking the way her harmelesse young one went,
And can doe naught
but wayle her Darlings losse;
Euen so my selfe bewayles good Glosters
case
With sad vnhelpefull teares, and with dimn'd eyes;
Looke after him,
and cannot doe him good:
So mightie are his vowed Enemies.
His fortunes I
will weepe, and 'twixt each groane,
Say, who's a Traytor? Gloster he is
none.
Enter.
Queene. Free Lords:
Cold Snow melts with the Sunnes hot
Beames:
Henry, my Lord, is cold in great Affaires,
Too full of foolish
pittie: and Glosters shew
Beguiles him, as the mournefull Crocodile
With
sorrow snares relenting passengers;
Or as the Snake, roll'd in a flowring
Banke,
With shining checker'd slough doth sting a Child,
That for the
beautie thinkes it excellent.
Beleeue me Lords, were none more wise then
I,
And yet herein I iudge mine owne Wit good;
This Gloster should be
quickly rid the World,
To rid vs from the feare we haue of him
Card. That he should dye, is worthie pollicie,
But yet we
want a Colour for his death:
'Tis meet he be condemn'd by course of Law
Suff. But in my minde, that were no pollicie:
The King will
labour still to saue his Life,
The Commons haply rise, to saue his
Life;
And yet we haue but triuiall argument,
More then mistrust, that
shewes him worthy death
Yorke. So that by this, you would not haue him dye
Suff. Ah Yorke, no man aliue, so faine as I
Yorke. 'Tis Yorke that hath more reason for his death.
But my
Lord Cardinall, and you my Lord of Suffolke,
Say as you thinke, and speake it
from your Soules:
Wer't not all one, an emptie Eagle were set,
To guard
the Chicken from a hungry Kyte,
As place Duke Humfrey for the Kings
Protector?
Queene. So the poore Chicken should be sure of death
Suff. Madame 'tis true: and wer't not madnesse then,
To make
the Fox surueyor of the Fold?
Who being accus'd a craftie Murtherer,
His
guilt should be but idly posted ouer,
Because his purpose is not
executed.
No: let him dye, in that he is a Fox,
By nature prou'd an Enemie
to the Flock,
Before his Chaps be stayn'd with Crimson blood,
As Humfrey
prou'd by Reasons to my Liege.
And doe not stand on Quillets how to slay
him:
Be it by Gynnes, by Snares, by Subtletie,
Sleeping, or Waking, 'tis
no matter how,
So he be dead; for that is good deceit,
Which mates him
first, that first intends deceit
Queene. Thrice Noble Suffolke, 'tis resolutely spoke
Suff. Not resolute, except so much were done,
For things are
often spoke, and seldome meant,
But that my heart accordeth with my
tongue,
Seeing the deed is meritorious,
And to preserue my Soueraigne from his
Foe,
Say but the word, and I will be his Priest
Card. But I would haue him dead, my Lord of Suffolke,
Ere you
can take due Orders for a Priest:
Say you consent, and censure well the
deed,
And Ile prouide his Executioner,
I tender so the safetie of my
Liege
Suff. Here is my Hand, the deed is worthy doing
Queene. And so say I
Yorke. And I: and now we three haue spoke it,
It skills not
greatly who impugnes our doome.
Enter a Poste.
Post. Great Lords, from Ireland am I come amaine,
To signifie, that
Rebels there are vp,
And put the Englishmen vnto the Sword.
Send Succours
(Lords) and stop the Rage betime,
Before the Wound doe grow vncurable;
For
being greene, there is great hope of helpe
Card. A Breach that craues a quick expedient stoppe.
What
counsaile giue you in this weightie cause?
Yorke. That Somerset be
sent as Regent thither:
'Tis meet that luckie Ruler be imploy'd,
Witnesse
the fortune he hath had in France
Som. If Yorke, with all his farre-fet pollicie,
Had beene the
Regent there, in stead of me,
He neuer would haue stay'd in France so
long
Yorke. No, not to lose it all, as thou hast done.
I rather
would haue lost my Life betimes,
Then bring a burthen of dis-honour
home,
By staying there so long, till all were lost.
Shew me one skarre,
character'd on thy Skinne,
Mens flesh preseru'd so whole, doe seldome
winne
Qu. Nay then, this sparke will proue a raging fire,
If Wind
and Fuell be brought, to feed it with:
No more, good Yorke; sweet Somerset be
still.
Thy fortune, Yorke, hadst thou beene Regent there,
Might happily
haue prou'd farre worse then his
Yorke. What, worse then naught? nay, then a shame
take
all
Somerset. And in the number, thee, that wishest
shame
Card. My Lord of Yorke, trie what your fortune is:
Th'
vnciuill Kernes of Ireland are in Armes,
And temper Clay with blood of
Englishmen.
To Ireland will you leade a Band of men,
Collected choycely,
from each Countie some,
And trie your hap against the Irishmen?
Yorke. I will, my Lord, so please his Maiestie
Suff. Why, our Authoritie is his consent,
And what we doe
establish, he confirmes:
Then, Noble Yorke, take thou this Taske in hand
Yorke. I am content: Prouide me Souldiers, Lords,
Whiles I
take order for mine owne affaires
Suff. A charge, Lord Yorke, that I will see perform'd.
But
now returne we to the false Duke Humfrey
Card. No more of him: for I will deale with him,
That
henceforth he shall trouble vs no more:
And so breake off, the day is almost
spent,
Lord Suffolke, you and I must talke of that euent
Yorke. My Lord of Suffolke, within foureteene dayes
At
Bristow I expect my Souldiers,
For there Ile shippe them all for Ireland
Suff. Ile see it truly done, my Lord of Yorke.
Exeunt.
Manet Yorke.
Yorke. Now Yorke, or neuer, steele thy fearfull thoughts,
And
change misdoubt to resolution;
Be that thou hop'st to be, or what thou
art;
Resigne to death, it is not worth th' enioying:
Let pale-fac't feare
keepe with the meane-borne man,
And finde no harbor in a Royall
heart.
Faster the[n] Spring-time showres, comes thoght on thoght,
And not
a thought, but thinkes on Dignitie.
My Brayne, more busie then the laboring
Spider,
Weaues tedious Snares to trap mine Enemies.
Well Nobles, well:
'tis politikely done,
To send me packing with an Hoast of men:
I feare me,
you but warme the starued Snake,
Who cherisht in your breasts, will sting
your hearts.
'Twas men I lackt, and you will giue them me;
I take it
kindly: yet be well assur'd,
You put sharpe Weapons in a mad-mans
hands.
Whiles I in Ireland nourish a mightie Band,
I will stirre vp in
England some black Storme,
Shall blowe ten thousand Soules to Heauen, or
Hell:
And this fell Tempest shall not cease to rage,
Vntill the Golden
Circuit on my Head,
Like to the glorious Sunnes transparant Beames,
Doe
calme the furie of this mad-bred Flawe.
And for a minister of my intent,
I
haue seduc'd a head-strong Kentishman,
Iohn Cade of Ashford,
To make
Commotion, as full well he can,
Vnder the title of Iohn Mortimer.
In
Ireland haue I seene this stubborne Cade
Oppose himselfe against a Troupe of
Kernes,
And fought so long, till that his thighes with Darts
Were almost
like a sharpe-quill'd Porpentine:
And in the end being rescued, I haue
seene
Him capre vpright, like a wilde Morisco,
Shaking the bloody Darts,
as he his Bells.
Full often, like a shag-hayr'd craftie Kerne,
Hath he
conuersed with the Enemie,
And vndiscouer'd, come to me againe,
And giuen
me notice of their Villanies.
This Deuill here shall be my substitute;
For
that Iohn Mortimer, which now is dead,
In face, in gate, in speech he doth
resemble.
By this, I shall perceiue the Commons minde,
How they affect the
House and Clayme of Yorke.
Say he be taken, rackt, and tortured;
I know,
no paine they can inflict vpon him,
Will make him say, I mou'd him to those
Armes.
Say that he thriue, as 'tis great like he will,
Why then from
Ireland come I with my strength,
And reape the Haruest which that Rascall
sow'd.
For Humfrey; being dead, as he shall be,
And Henry put apart: the
next for me.
Enter.
Enter two or three running ouer the Stage, from the Murther
of
Duke
Humfrey.
1. Runne to my Lord of Suffolke: let him know
We haue dispatcht the
Duke, as he commanded
2. Oh, that it were to doe: what haue we done?
Didst euer
heare a man so penitent?
Enter Suffolke.
1. Here comes my Lord
Suff. Now Sirs, haue you dispatcht this thing?
1. I,
my good Lord, hee's dead
Suff. Why that's well said. Goe, get you to my House,
I will
reward you for this venturous deed:
The King and all the Peeres are here at
hand.
Haue you layd faire the Bed? Is all things well,
According as I gaue
directions?
1. 'Tis, my good Lord
Suff. Away, be gone.
Exeunt.
Sound Trumpets. Enter the King, the Queene, Cardinall,
Suffolke,
Somerset,
with Attendants.
King. Goe call our Vnckle to our presence straight:
Say, we intend
to try his Grace to day,
If he be guiltie, as 'tis published
Suff. Ile call him presently, my Noble Lord.
Enter
King. Lords take your places: and I pray you all
Proceed no
straiter 'gainst our Vnckle Gloster,
Then from true euidence, of good
esteeme,
He be approu'd in practise culpable
Queene. God forbid any Malice should preuayle,
That
faultlesse may condemne a Noble man:
Pray God he may acquit him of
suspition
King. I thanke thee Nell, these wordes content
mee
much.
Enter Suffolke.
How now? why look'st thou pale? why tremblest thou?
Where is our Vnckle?
what's the matter, Suffolke?
Suff. Dead in his Bed, my Lord: Gloster
is dead
Queene. Marry God forfend
Card. Gods secret Iudgement: I did dreame to Night,
The Duke
was dumbe, and could not speake a word.
King sounds.
Qu. How fares my Lord? Helpe Lords, the King is
dead
Som. Rere vp his Body, wring him by the Nose
Qu. Runne, goe, helpe, helpe: Oh Henry ope thine eyes
Suff. He doth reuiue againe, Madame be patient
King. Oh Heauenly God
Qu. How fares my gracious Lord?
Suff. Comfort my
Soueraigne, gracious Henry comfort
King. What, doth my Lord of Suffolke comfort me?
Came he
right now to sing a Rauens Note,
Whose dismall tune bereft my Vitall
powres:
And thinkes he, that the chirping of a Wren,
By crying comfort
from a hollow breast,
Can chase away the first-conceiued sound?
Hide not
thy poyson with such sugred words,
Lay not thy hands on me: forbeare I
say,
Their touch affrights me as a Serpents sting.
Thou balefull
Messenger, out of my sight:
Vpon thy eye-balls, murderous Tyrannie
Sits in
grim Maiestie, to fright the World.
Looke not vpon me, for thine eyes are
wounding;
Yet doe not goe away: come Basiliske,
And kill the innocent
gazer with thy sight:
For in the shade of death, I shall finde ioy;
In
life, but double death, now Gloster's dead
Queene. Why do you rate my Lord of Suffolke thus?
Although
the Duke was enemie to him,
Yet he most Christian-like laments his
death:
And for my selfe, Foe as he was to me,
Might liquid teares, or
heart-offending groanes,
Or blood-consuming sighes recall his Life;
I
would be blinde with weeping, sicke with grones,
Looke pale as Prim-rose with
blood-drinking sighes,
And all to haue the Noble Duke aliue.
What know I
how the world may deeme of me?
For it is knowne we were but hollow
Friends:
It may be iudg'd I made the Duke away,
So shall my name with
Slanders tongue be wounded,
And Princes Courts be fill'd with my
reproach:
This get I by his death: Aye me vnhappie,
To be a Queene, and
Crown'd with infamie
King. Ah woe is me for Gloster, wretched man
Queen. Be woe for me, more wretched then he is.
What, Dost
thou turne away, and hide thy face?
I am no loathsome Leaper, looke on
me.
What? Art thou like the Adder waxen deafe?
Be poysonous too, and kill
thy forlorne Queene.
Is all thy comfort shut in Glosters Tombe?
Why then
Dame Elianor was neere thy ioy.
Erect his Statue, and worship it,
And make
my Image but an Ale-house signe.
Was I for this nye wrack'd vpon the
Sea,
And twice by aukward winde from Englands banke
Droue backe againe
vnto my Natiue Clime.
What boaded this? but well fore-warning winde
Did
seeme to say, seeke not a Scorpions Nest,
Nor set no footing on this vnkinde
Shore.
What did I then? But curst the gentle gusts,
And he that loos'd
them forth their Brazen Caues,
And bid them blow towards Englands blessed
shore,
Or turne our Sterne vpon a dreadfull Rocke:
Yet aeolus would not be
a murtherer,
But left that hatefull office vnto thee.
The pretty vaulting
Sea refus'd to drowne me,
Knowing that thou wouldst haue me drown'd on
shore
With teares as salt as Sea, through thy vnkindnesse.
The splitting
Rockes cowr'd in the sinking sands,
And would not dash me with their ragged
sides,
Because thy flinty heart more hard then they,
Might in thy Pallace,
perish Elianor.
As farre as I could ken thy Chalky Cliffes,
When from thy
Shore, the Tempest beate vs backe,
I stood vpon the Hatches in the
storme:
And when the duskie sky, began to rob
My earnest-gaping-sight of
thy Lands view,
I tooke a costly Iewell from my necke,
A Hart it was bound
in with Diamonds,
And threw it towards thy Land: The Sea receiu'd it,
And
so I wish'd thy body might my Heart:
And euen with this, I lost faire
Englands view,
And bid mine eyes be packing with my Heart,
And call'd them
blinde and duskie Spectacles,
For loosing ken of Albions wished Coast.
How
often haue I tempted Suffolkes tongue
(The agent of thy foule
inconstancie)
To sit and watch me as Ascanius did,
When he to madding Dido
would vnfold
His Fathers Acts, commenc'd in burning Troy.
Am I not witcht
like her? Or thou not false like him?
Aye me, I can no more: Dye
Elinor,
For Henry weepes, that thou dost liue so long.
Noyse within. Enter Warwicke, and many Commons.
War. It is reported, mighty Soueraigne,
That good Duke Humfrey
Traiterously is murdred
By Suffolke, and the Cardinall Beaufords
meanes:
The Commons like an angry Hiue of Bees
That want their Leader,
scatter vp and downe,
And care not who they sting in his reuenge.
My selfe
haue calm'd their spleenfull mutinie,
Vntill they heare the order of his
death
King. That he is dead good Warwick, 'tis too true,
But how he
dyed, God knowes, not Henry:
Enter his Chamber, view his breathlesse
Corpes,
And comment then vpon his sodaine death
War. That shall I do my Liege; Stay Salsburie
With the rude
multitude, till I returne
King. O thou that iudgest all things, stay my thoghts:
My
thoughts, that labour to perswade my soule,
Some violent hands were laid on
Humfries life:
If my suspect be false, forgiue me God,
For iudgement onely
doth belong to thee:
Faine would I go to chafe his palie lips,
With twenty
thousand kisses, and to draine
Vpon his face an Ocean of salt teares,
To
tell my loue vnto his dumbe deafe trunke,
And with my fingers feele his hand,
vnfeeling:
But all in vaine are these meane Obsequies,
Bed put forth.
And to suruey his dead and earthy Image:
What were it but to make my
sorrow greater?
Warw. Come hither gracious Soueraigne, view
this
body
King. That is to see how deepe my graue is made,
For with his
soule fled all my worldly solace:
For seeing him, I see my life in death
War. As surely as my soule intends to liue
With that dread
King that tooke our state vpon him,
To free vs from his Fathers wrathfull
curse,
I do beleeue that violent hands were laid
Vpon the life of this
thrice-famed Duke
Suf. A dreadfull Oath, sworne with a solemn tongue:
What
instance giues Lord Warwicke for his vow
War. See how the blood is setled in his face.
Oft haue I
seene a timely-parted Ghost,
Of ashy semblance, meager, pale, and
bloodlesse,
Being all descended to the labouring heart,
Who in the
Conflict that it holds with death,
Attracts the same for aydance 'gainst the
enemy,
Which with the heart there cooles, and ne're returneth,
To blush
and beautifie the Cheeke againe.
But see, his face is blacke, and full of
blood:
His eye-balles further out, than when he liued,
Staring full
gastly, like a strangled man:
His hayre vprear'd, his nostrils stretcht with
strugling:
His hands abroad display'd, as one that graspt
And tugg'd for
Life, and was by strength subdude.
Looke on the sheets his haire (you see) is
sticking,
His well proportion'd Beard, made ruffe and rugged,
Like to the
Summers Corne by Tempest lodged:
It cannot be but he was murdred
heere,
The least of all these signes were probable
Suf. Why Warwicke, who should do the D[uke]. to death?
My
selfe and Beauford had him in protection,
And we I hope sir, are no
murtherers
War. But both of you were vowed D[uke]. Humfries foes,
And
you (forsooth) had the good Duke to keepe:
Tis like you would not feast him
like a friend,
And 'tis well seene, he found an enemy
Queen. Than you belike suspect these Noblemen,
As guilty of
Duke Humfries timelesse death
Warw. Who finds the Heyfer dead, and bleeding fresh,
And sees
fast-by, a Butcher with an Axe,
But will suspect, 'twas he that made the
slaughter?
Who finds the Partridge in the Puttocks Nest,
But may imagine
how the Bird was dead,
Although the Kyte soare with vnbloudied Beake?
Euen
so suspitious is this Tragedie
Qu. Are you the Butcher, Suffolk? where's your Knife?
Is
Beauford tearm'd a Kyte? where are his Tallons?
Suff. I weare no
Knife, to slaughter sleeping men,
But here's a vengefull Sword, rusted with
ease,
That shall be scowred in his rancorous heart,
That slanders me with
Murthers Crimson Badge.
Say, if thou dar'st, prowd Lord of
Warwickshire,
That I am faultie in Duke Humfreyes death
Warw. What dares not Warwick, if false Suffolke
dare
him?
Qu. He dares not calme his contumelious Spirit,
Nor
cease to be an arrogant Controller,
Though Suffolke dare him twentie thousand
times
Warw. Madame be still: with reuerence may I say,
For euery
word you speake in his behalfe,
Is slander to your Royall Dignitie
Suff. Blunt-witted Lord, ignoble in demeanor,
If euer Lady
wrong'd her Lord so much,
Thy Mother tooke into her blamefull Bed
Some
sterne vntutur'd Churle; and Noble Stock
Was graft with Crab-tree slippe,
whose Fruit thou art,
And neuer of the Neuils Noble Race
Warw. But that the guilt of Murther bucklers thee,
And I
should rob the Deaths-man of his Fee,
Quitting thee thereby of ten thousand
shames,
And that my Soueraignes presence makes me milde,
I would, false
murd'rous Coward, on thy Knee
Make thee begge pardon for thy passed
speech,
And say, it was thy Mother that thou meant'st,
That thou thy selfe
wast borne in Bastardie;
And after all this fearefull Homage done,
Giue
thee thy hyre, and send thy Soule to Hell,
Pernicious blood-sucker of
sleeping men
Suff. Thou shalt be waking, while I shed thy blood,
If from
this presence thou dar'st goe with me
Warw. Away euen now, or I will drag thee hence:
Vnworthy
though thou art, Ile cope with thee,
And doe some seruice to Duke Humfreyes
Ghost.
Exeunt.
King. What stronger Brest-plate then a heart vntainted?
Thrice is
he arm'd, that hath his Quarrell iust;
And he but naked, though lockt vp in
Steele,
Whose Conscience with Iniustice is corrupted.
A noyse within.
Queene. What noyse is this?
Enter Suffolke and Warwicke, with their
Weapons drawne.
King. Why how now Lords?
Your wrathfull Weapons drawne,
Here in
our presence? Dare you be so bold?
Why what tumultuous clamor haue we
here?
Suff. The trayt'rous Warwick, with the men of Bury,
Set all
vpon me, mightie Soueraigne.
Enter Salisbury.
Salisb. Sirs stand apart, the King shall know your
minde.
Dread
Lord, the Commons send you word by me,
Vnlesse Lord Suffolke straight be done
to death,
Or banished faire Englands Territories,
They will by violence
teare him from your Pallace,
And torture him with grieuous lingring
death.
They say, by him the good Duke Humfrey dy'de:
They say, in him they
feare your Highnesse death;
And meere instinct of Loue and Loyaltie,
Free
from a stubborne opposite intent,
As being thought to contradict your
liking,
Makes them thus forward in his Banishment.
They say, in care of
your most Royall Person,
That if your Highnesse should intend to
sleepe,
And charge, that no man should disturbe your rest,
In paine of
your dislike, or paine of death;
Yet not withstanding such a strait
Edict,
Were there a Serpent seene, with forked Tongue,
That slyly glyded
towards your Maiestie,
It were but necessarie you were wak't:
Least being
suffer'd in that harmefull slumber,
The mortall Worme might make the sleepe
eternall.
And therefore doe they cry, though you forbid,
That they will
guard you, where you will, or no,
From such fell Serpents as false Suffolke
is;
With whose inuenomed and fatall sting,
Your louing Vnckle, twentie
times his worth,
They say is shamefully bereft of life
Commons within. An answer from the King, my Lord
of
Salisbury
Suff. 'Tis like the Commons, rude vnpolisht Hindes,
Could
send such Message to their Soueraigne:
But you, my Lord, were glad to be
imploy'd,
To shew how queint an Orator you are.
But all the Honor
Salisbury hath wonne,
Is, that he was the Lord Embassador,
Sent from a
sort of Tinkers to the King
Within. An answer from the King, or wee will all
breake
in
King. Goe Salisbury, and tell them all from me,
I thanke them
for their tender louing care;
And had I not beene cited so by them,
Yet
did I purpose as they doe entreat:
For sure, my thoughts doe hourely
prophecie,
Mischance vnto my State by Suffolkes meanes.
And therefore by
his Maiestie I sweare,
Whose farre-vnworthie Deputie I am,
He shall not
breathe infection in this ayre,
But three dayes longer, on the paine of
death
Qu. Oh Henry, let me pleade for gentle Suffolke
King. Vngentle Queene, to call him gentle Suffolke.
No more I
say: if thou do'st pleade for him,
Thou wilt but adde encrease vnto my
Wrath.
Had I but sayd, I would haue kept my Word;
But when I sweare, it is
irreuocable:
If after three dayes space thou here bee'st found,
On any
ground that I am Ruler of,
The World shall not be Ransome for thy
Life.
Come Warwicke, come good Warwicke, goe with mee,
I haue great
matters to impart to thee.
Enter.
Qu. Mischance and Sorrow goe along with you,
Hearts Discontent, and
sowre Affliction,
Be play-fellowes to keepe you companie:
There's two of
you, the Deuill make a third,
And three-fold Vengeance tend vpon your
steps
Suff. Cease, gentle Queene, these Execrations,
And let thy
Suffolke take his heauie leaue
Queen. Fye Coward woman, and soft harted wretch,
Hast thou
not spirit to curse thine enemy
Suf. A plague vpon them: wherefore should I
cursse
them?
Would curses kill, as doth the Mandrakes grone,
I would
inuent as bitter searching termes,
As curst, as harsh, and horrible to
heare,
Deliuer'd strongly through my fixed teeth,
With full as many signes
of deadly hate,
As leane-fac'd enuy in her loathsome caue.
My tongue
should stumble in mine earnest words,
Mine eyes should sparkle like the
beaten Flint,
Mine haire be fixt an end, as one distract:
I, euery ioynt
should seeme to curse and ban,
And euen now my burthen'd heart would
breake
Should I not curse them. Poyson be their drinke.
Gall, worse then
Gall, the daintiest that they taste:
Their sweetest shade, a groue of
Cypresse Trees:
Their cheefest Prospect, murd'ring Basiliskes:
Their
softest Touch, as smart as Lyzards stings:
Their Musicke, frightfull as the
Serpents hisse,
And boading Screech-Owles, make the Consort full.
All the
foule terrors in darke seated hell -
Q. Enough sweet Suffolke, thou
torment'st thy selfe,
And these dread curses like the Sunne 'gainst
glasse,
Or like an ouer-charged Gun, recoile,
And turnes the force of them
vpon thy selfe
Suf. You bad me ban, and will you bid me leaue?
Now by the
ground that I am banish'd from,
Well could I curse away a Winters
night,
Though standing naked on a Mountaine top,
Where byting cold would
neuer let grasse grow,
And thinke it but a minute spent in sport
Qu. Oh, let me intreat thee cease, giue me thy hand,
That I
may dew it with my mournfull teares:
Nor let the raine of heauen wet this
place,
To wash away my wofull Monuments.
Oh, could this kisse be printed
in thy hand,
That thou might'st thinke vpon these by the Seale,
Through
whom a thousand sighes are breath'd for thee.
So get thee gone, that I may
know my greefe,
'Tis but surmiz'd, whiles thou art standing by,
As one
that surfets, thinking on a want:
I will repeale thee, or be well
assur'd,
Aduenture to be banished my selfe:
And banished I am, if but from
thee.
Go, speake not to me; euen now be gone.
Oh go not yet. Euen thus,
two Friends condemn'd,
Embrace, and kisse, and take ten thousand
leaues,
Loather a hundred times to part then dye;
Yet now farewell, and
farewell Life with thee
Suf. Thus is poore Suffolke ten times banished,
Once by the
King, and three times thrice by thee.
'Tis not the Land I care for, wer't
thou thence,
A Wildernesse is populous enough,
So Suffolke had thy
heauenly company:
For where thou art, there is the World it selfe,
With
euery seuerall pleasure in the World:
And where thou art not,
Desolation.
I can no more: Liue thou to ioy thy life;
My selfe no ioy in
nought, but that thou liu'st.
Enter Vaux.
Queene. Whether goes Vaux so fast? What newes I
prethee?
Vaux. To signifie vnto his Maiesty,
That Cardinal Beauford is at point of
death:
For sodainly a greeuous sicknesse tooke him,
That makes him gaspe,
and stare, and catch the aire,
Blaspheming God, and cursing men on
earth.
Sometime he talkes, as if Duke Humfries Ghost
Were by his side:
Sometime, he calles the King,
And whispers to his pillow, as to him,
The
secrets of his ouer-charged soule,
And I am sent to tell his
Maiestie,
That euen now he cries alowd for him
Qu. Go tell this heauy Message to the King.
Exit
Aye me! What is this World? What newes are these?
But wherefore greeue I
at an houres poore losse,
Omitting Suffolkes exile, my soules
Treasure?
Why onely Suffolke mourne I not for thee?
And with the Southerne
clouds, contend in teares?
Theirs for the earths encrease, mine for my
sorrowes.
Now get thee hence, the King thou know'st is comming,
If thou be
found by me, thou art but dead
Suf. If I depart from thee, I cannot liue,
And in thy sight
to dye, what were it else,
But like a pleasant slumber in thy lap?
Heere
could I breath my soule into the ayre,
As milde and gentle as the
Cradle-babe,
Dying with mothers dugge betweene it's lips.
Where from thy
sight, I should be raging mad,
And cry out for thee to close vp mine
eyes:
To haue thee with thy lippes to stop my mouth:
So should'st thou
eyther turne my flying soule,
Or I should breathe it so into thy body,
And
then it liu'd in sweete Elizium.
To dye by thee, were but to dye in
iest,
From thee to dye, were torture more then death:
Oh let me stay,
befall what may befall
Queen. Away: Though parting be a fretfull corosiue,
It is
applyed to a deathfull wound.
To France sweet Suffolke: Let me heare from
thee:
For wheresoere thou art in this worlds Globe,
Ile haue an Iris that
shall finde thee out
Suf. I go
Qu. And take my heart with thee
Suf. A Iewell lockt into the wofulst Caske,
That euer did
containe a thing of worth,
Euen as a splitted Barke, so sunder we:
This
way fall I to death
Qu. This way for me.
Exeunt.
Enter the King, Salisbury, and Warwicke, to the Cardinal in bed.
King. How fare's my Lord? Speake Beauford to thy
Soueraigne
Ca. If thou beest death, Ile giue thee Englands
Treasure,
Enough to purchase such another Island,
So thou wilt let me
liue, and feele no paine
King. Ah, what a signe it is of euill life,
Where death's
approach is seene so terrible
War. Beauford, it is thy Soueraigne speakes to thee
Beau. Bring me vnto my Triall when you will.
Dy'de he not in
his bed? Where should he dye?
Can I make men liue where they will or
no?
Oh torture me no more, I will confesse.
Aliue againe? Then shew me
where he is,
Ile giue a thousand pound to looke vpon him.
He hath no eyes,
the dust hath blinded them.
Combe downe his haire; looke, looke, it stands
vpright,
Like Lime-twigs set to catch my winged soule:
Giue me some
drinke, and bid the Apothecarie
Bring the strong poyson that I bought of
him
King. Oh thou eternall mouer of the heauens,
Looke with a
gentle eye vpon this Wretch,
Oh beate away the busie medling Fiend,
That
layes strong siege vnto this wretches soule,
And from his bosome purge this
blacke dispaire
War. See how the pangs of death do make him grin
Sal. Disturbe him not, let him passe peaceably
King. Peace to his soule, if Gods good pleasure be.
Lord
Card'nall, if thou think'st on heauens blisse,
Hold vp thy hand, make signall
of thy hope.
He dies and makes no signe: Oh God forgiue him
War. So bad a death, argues a monstrous life
King. Forbeare to iudge, for we are sinners all.
Close vp his
eyes, and draw the Curtaine close,
And let vs all to Meditation.
Exeunt.
Alarum. Fight at Sea. Ordnance goes off.
Enter Lieutenant, Suffolke, and others.
Lieu. The gaudy blabbing and remorsefull day,
Is crept into the
bosome of the Sea:
And now loud houling Wolues arouse the Iades
That
dragge the Tragicke melancholy night:
Who with their drowsie, slow, and
flagging wings
Cleape dead-mens graues, and from their misty Iawes,
Breath
foule contagious darknesse in the ayre:
Therefore bring forth the Souldiers
of our prize,
For whilst our Pinnace Anchors in the Downes,
Heere shall
they make their ransome on the sand,
Or with their blood staine this
discoloured shore.
Maister, this Prisoner freely giue I thee,
And thou
that art his Mate, make boote of this:
The other Walter Whitmore is thy
share
1.Gent. What is my ransome Master, let me know
Ma. A thousand Crownes, or else lay down your head
Mate. And so much shall you giue, or off goes yours
Lieu. What thinke you much to pay 2000. Crownes,
And beare
the name and port of Gentlemen?
Cut both the Villaines throats, for dy you
shall:
The liues of those which we haue lost in fight,
Be counter-poys'd
with such a pettie summe
1.Gent. Ile giue it sir, and therefore spare my life
2.Gent. And so will I, and write home for it straight
Whitm. I lost mine eye in laying the prize aboord,
And
therefore to reuenge it, shalt thou dye,
And so should these, if I might haue
my will
Lieu. Be not so rash, take ransome, let him liue
Suf. Looke on my George, I am a Gentleman,
Rate me at what
thou wilt, thou shalt be payed
Whit. And so am I: my name is Walter Whitmore.
How now? why
starts thou? What doth death affright?
Suf. Thy name affrights me, in
whose sound is death:
A cunning man did calculate my birth,
And told me
that by Water I should dye:
Yet let not this make thee be
bloody-minded,
Thy name is Gualtier, being rightly sounded
Whit. Gualtier or Walter, which it is I care not,
Neuer yet
did base dishonour blurre our name,
But with our sword we wip'd away the
blot.
Therefore, when Merchant-like I sell reuenge,
Broke be my sword, my
Armes torne and defac'd,
And I proclaim'd a Coward through the world
Suf. Stay Whitmore, for thy Prisoner is a Prince,
The Duke of
Suffolke, William de la Pole
Whit. The Duke of Suffolke, muffled vp in ragges?
Suf.
I, but these ragges are no part of the Duke
Lieu. But Ioue was neuer slaine as thou shalt be,
Obscure and
lowsie Swaine, King Henries blood
Suf. The honourable blood of Lancaster
Must not be shed by
such a iaded Groome:
Hast thou not kist thy hand, and held my
stirrop?
Bare-headed plodded by my foot-cloth Mule,
And thought thee happy
when I shooke my head.
How often hast thou waited at my cup,
Fed from my
Trencher, kneel'd downe at the boord,
When I haue feasted with Queene
Margaret?
Remember it, and let it make thee Crest-falne,
I, and alay this
thy abortiue Pride:
How in our voyding Lobby hast thou stood,
And duly
wayted for my comming forth?
This hand of mine hath writ in thy
behalfe,
And therefore shall it charme thy riotous tongue
Whit. Speak Captaine, shall I stab the forlorn Swain
Lieu. First let my words stab him, as he hath me
Suf. Base slaue, thy words are blunt, and so art thou
Lieu. Conuey him hence, and on our long boats side,
Strike
off his head
Suf. Thou dar'st not for thy owne
Lieu. Poole, Sir Poole? Lord,
I kennell, puddle, sinke, whose
filth and dirt
Troubles the siluer Spring, where England drinkes:
Now will
I dam vp this thy yawning mouth,
For swallowing the Treasure of the
Realme.
Thy lips that kist the Queene, shall sweepe the ground:
And thou
that smil'dst at good Duke Humfries death,
Against the senselesse windes
shall grin in vaine,
Who in contempt shall hisse at thee againe.
And
wedded be thou to the Hagges of hell,
For daring to affye a mighty
Lord
Vnto the daughter of a worthlesse King,
Hauing neyther Subiect,
Wealth, nor Diadem:
By diuellish policy art thou growne great,
And like
ambitious Sylla ouer-gorg'd,
With gobbets of thy Mother-bleeding heart.
By
thee Aniou and Maine were sold to France.
The false reuolting Normans
thorough thee,
Disdaine to call vs Lord, and Piccardie
Hath slaine their
Gouernors, surpriz'd our Forts,
And sent the ragged Souldiers wounded
home.
The Princely Warwicke, and the Neuils all,
Whose dreadfull swords
were neuer drawne in vaine,
As hating thee, and rising vp in armes.
And
now the House of Yorke thrust from the Crowne,
By shamefull murther of a
guiltlesse King,
And lofty proud incroaching tyranny,
Burnes with
reuenging fire, whose hopefull colours
Aduance our halfe-fac'd Sunne,
striuing to shine;
Vnder the which is writ, Inuitis nubibus.
The Commons
heere in Kent are vp in armes,
And to conclude, Reproach and Beggerie,
Is
crept into the Pallace of our King,
And all by thee: away, conuey him
hence
Suf. O that I were a God, to shoot forth Thunder
Vpon these
paltry, seruile, abiect Drudges:
Small things make base men proud. This
Villaine heere,
Being Captaine of a Pinnace, threatens more
Then Bargulus
the strong Illyrian Pyrate.
Drones sucke not Eagles blood, but rob
Bee-hiues:
It is impossible that I should dye
By such a lowly Vassall as
thy selfe.
Thy words moue Rage, and not remorse in me:
I go of Message
from the Queene to France:
I charge thee waft me safely crosse the
Channell
Lieu. Water:
W. Come Suffolke, I must waft thee
to
thy death
Suf. Pine gelidus timor occupat artus, it is thee I feare
Wal. Thou shalt haue cause to feare before I leaue
thee.
What, are ye danted now? Now will ye stoope
1.Gent. My gracious Lord intreat him, speak him fair
Suf. Suffolkes Imperiall tongue is sterne and rough:
Vs'd to
command, vntaught to pleade for fauour.
Farre be it, we should honor such as
these
With humble suite: no, rather let my head
Stoope to the blocke, then
these knees bow to any,
Saue to the God of heauen, and to my King:
And
sooner dance vpon a bloody pole,
Then stand vncouer'd to the Vulgar
Groome.
True Nobility, is exempt from feare:
More can I beare, then you
dare execute
Lieu. Hale him away, and let him talke no more:
Come
Souldiers, shew what cruelty ye can
Suf. That this my death may neuer be forgot.
Great men oft
dye by vilde Bezonions.
A Romane Sworder, and Bandetto slaue
Murder'd
sweet Tully. Brutus Bastard hand
Stab'd Iulius Cæsar. Sauage
Islanders
Pompey the Great, and Suffolke dyes by Pyrats.
Exit Water with Suffolke.
Lieu. And as for these whose ransome we haue set,
It is our
pleasure one of them depart:
Therefore come you with vs, and let him go.
Exit Lieutenant, and the rest.
Manet the first Gent. Enter Walter with the body.
Wal. There let his head, and liuelesse bodie lye,
Vntill the Queene
his Mistris bury it.
Exit Walter
1.Gent. O barbarous and bloudy spectacle,
His body will I
beare vnto the King:
If he reuenge it not, yet will his Friends,
So will
the Queene, that liuing, held him deere.
Enter Beuis, and Iohn Holland.
Beuis. Come and get thee a sword, though made of a
Lath, they haue
bene vp these two dayes
Hol. They haue the more neede to sleepe now then
Beuis. I tell thee, Iacke Cade the Cloathier, meanes
to
dresse the Common-wealth and turne it, and set a new
nap vpon it
Hol. So he had need, for 'tis thred-bare. Well, I say,
it was
neuer merrie world in England, since Gentlemen
came vp
Beuis. O miserable Age: Vertue is not regarded
in
Handy-crafts men
Hol. The Nobilitie thinke scorne to goe in Leather
Aprons
Beuis. Nay more, the Kings Councell are no good
Workemen
Hol. True: and yet it is said, Labour in thy Vocation:
which
is as much to say, as let the Magistrates be labouring
men, and therefore
should we be Magistrates
Beuis. Thou hast hit it: for there's no better signe of
a
braue minde, then a hard hand
Hol. I see them, I see them: There's Bests Sonne, the
Tanner
of Wingham
Beuis. Hee shall haue the skinnes of our enemies, to
make
Dogges Leather of
Hol. And Dicke the Butcher
Beuis. Then is sin strucke downe like an Oxe, and
iniquities
throate cut like a Calfe
Hol. And Smith the Weauer
Beu. Argo, their thred of life is spun
Hol. Come, come, let's fall in with them.
Drumme. Enter Cade, Dicke Butcher, Smith the Weauer, and a
Sawyer,
with
infinite numbers.
Cade. Wee Iohn Cade, so tearm'd of our supposed Father
But. Or rather of stealing a Cade of Herrings
Cade. For our enemies shall faile before vs, inspired
with
the spirit of putting down Kings and Princes. Command
silence
But. Silence
Cade. My Father was a Mortimer
But. He was an honest man, and a good Bricklayer
Cade. My mother a Plantagenet
Butch. I knew her well, she was a Midwife
Cade. My wife descended of the Lacies
But. She was indeed a Pedlers daughter, & sold
many
Laces
Weauer. But now of late, not able to trauell with her
furr'd
Packe, she washes buckes here at home
Cade. Therefore am I of an honorable house
But. I by my faith, the field is honourable, and there
was he
borne, vnder a hedge: for his Father had neuer a
house but the Cage
Cade. Valiant I am
Weauer. A must needs, for beggery is valiant
Cade. I am able to endure much
But. No question of that: for I haue seene him whipt
three
Market dayes together
Cade. I feare neither sword, nor fire
Wea. He neede not feare the sword, for his Coate is
of
proofe
But. But me thinks he should stand in feare of fire,
being
burnt i'th hand for stealing of Sheepe
Cade. Be braue then, for your Captaine is Braue, and
Vowes
Reformation. There shall be in England, seuen
halfe peny Loaues sold for a
peny: the three hoop'd pot,
shall haue ten hoopes, and I wil make it Fellony
to drink
small Beere. All the Realme shall be in Common, and in
Cheapside
shall my Palfrey go to grasse: and when I am
King, as King I will be
All. God saue your Maiesty
Cade. I thanke you good people. There shall bee no
mony, all
shall eate and drinke on my score, and I will
apparrell them all in one
Liuery, that they may agree like
Brothers, and worship me their Lord
But. The first thing we do, let's kill all the Lawyers
Cade. Nay, that I meane to do. Is not this a
lamentable
thing, that of the skin of an innocent Lambe should
be made
Parchment; that Parchment being scribeld ore,
should vndoe a man. Some say
the Bee stings, but I say,
'tis the Bees waxe: for I did but seale once to a
thing, and
I was neuer mine owne man since. How now? Who's
there?
Enter
a Clearke.
Weauer. The Clearke of Chartam: hee can write and
reade, and cast
accompt
Cade. O monstrous
Wea. We tooke him setting of boyes Copies
Cade. Here's a Villaine
Wea. Ha's a Booke in his pocket with red Letters in't
Cade. Nay then he is a Coniurer
But. Nay, he can make Obligations, and write Court
hand
Cade. I am sorry for't: The man is a proper man of
mine
Honour: vnlesse I finde him guilty he shall not die.
Come hither sirrah, I
must examine thee: What is thy
name?
Clearke. Emanuell
But. They vse to writ it on the top of Letters: 'Twill
go
hard with you
Cade. Let me alone: Dost thou vse to write thy name?
Or hast
thou a marke to thy selfe, like a honest plain dealing
man?
Clearke. Sir I thanke God, I haue bin so well brought
vp, that I can write my
name
All. He hath confest: away with him: he's a Villaine
and a
Traitor
Cade. Away with him I say: Hang him with his Pen
and
Inke-horne about his necke.
Exit one with the Clearke
Enter Michael.
Mich. Where's our Generall?
Cade. Heere I am thou particular
fellow
Mich. Fly, fly, fly, Sir Humfrey Stafford and his brother
are
hard by, with the Kings Forces
Cade. Stand villaine, stand, or Ile fell thee downe: he
shall
be encountred with a man as good as himselfe. He
is but a Knight, is
a?
Mich. No
Cade. To equall him I will make my selfe a knight,
presently;
Rise vp Sir Iohn Mortimer. Now haue at him.
Enter Sir Humfrey
Stafford, and his Brother, with Drum and
Soldiers.
Staf. Rebellious Hinds, the filth and scum of Kent,
Mark'd for the
Gallowes: Lay your Weapons downe,
Home to your Cottages: forsake this
Groome.
The King is mercifull, if you reuolt
Bro. But angry, wrathfull, and inclin'd to blood,
If you go
forward: therefore yeeld, or dye
Cade. As for these silken-coated slaues I passe not,
It is to
you good people, that I speake,
Ouer whom (in time to come) I hope to
raigne:
For I am rightfull heyre vnto the Crowne
Staff. Villaine, thy Father was a Playsterer,
And thou thy
selfe a Sheareman, art thou not?
Cade. And Adam was a Gardiner
Bro. And what of that?
Cade. Marry, this Edmund
Mortimer Earle of March,
married the Duke of Clarence daughter, did he
not?
Staf. I sir
Cade. By her he had two children at one birth
Bro. That's false
Cade. I, there's the question; But I say, 'tis true:
The
elder of them being put to nurse,
Was by a begger-woman stolne away,
And
ignorant of his birth and parentage,
Became a Bricklayer, when he came to
age.
His sonne am I, deny it if you can
But. Nay, 'tis too true, therefore he shall be King
Wea. Sir, he made a Chimney in my Fathers house, &
the
brickes are aliue at this day to testifie it: therefore
deny it not
Staf. And will you credit this base Drudges Wordes,
that
speakes he knowes not what
All. I marry will we: therefore get ye gone
Bro. Iacke Cade, the D[uke]. of York hath taught you this
Cade. He lyes, for I inuented it my selfe. Go too
Sirrah,
tell the King from me, that for his Fathers sake Henry
the fift,
(in whose time, boyes went to Span-counter
for French Crownes) I am content
he shall raigne, but Ile
be Protector ouer him
Butcher. And furthermore, wee'l haue the Lord Sayes
head, for
selling the Dukedome of Maine
Cade And good reason: for thereby is England main'd
And faine
to go with a staffe, but that my puissance holds
it vp. Fellow-Kings, I tell
you, that that Lord Say hath
gelded the Commonwealth, and made it an Eunuch:
&
more then that, he can speake French, and therefore hee is
a
Traitor
Staf. O grosse and miserable ignorance
Cade. Nay answer if you can: The Frenchmen are our
enemies:
go too then, I ask but this: Can he that speaks
with the tongue of an enemy,
be a good Councellour, or
no?
All. No, no, and therefore wee'l haue
his head
Bro. Well, seeing gentle words will not preuayle,
Assaile
them with the Army of the King
Staf. Herald away, and throughout euery Towne,
Proclaime them
Traitors that are vp with Cade,
That those which flye before the battell
ends,
May euen in their Wiues and Childrens sight,
Be hang'd vp for
example at their doores:
And you that be the Kings Friends follow
me.
Enter.
Cade. And you that loue the Commons, follow me:
Now shew your
selues men, 'tis for Liberty.
We will not leaue one Lord, one
Gentleman:
Spare none, but such as go in clouted shooen,
For they are
thrifty honest men, and such
As would (but that they dare not) take our
parts
But. They are all in order, and march toward vs
Cade. But then are we in order, when we are most out
of
order. Come, march forward.
Alarums to the fight, wherein both the Staffords are slaine.
Enter
Cade
and the rest.
Cade. Where's Dicke, the Butcher of Ashford?
But. Heere
sir
Cade. They fell before thee like Sheepe and Oxen, &
thou
behaued'st thy selfe, as if thou hadst beene in thine
owne Slaughter-house:
Therfore thus will I reward thee,
the Lent shall bee as long againe as it is,
and thou shalt
haue a License to kill for a hundred lacking one
But. I desire no more
Cade. And to speake truth, thou deseru'st no lesse.
This
Monument of the victory will I beare, and the bodies
shall be dragg'd at my
horse heeles, till I do come to
London, where we will haue the Maiors sword
born before
vs
But. If we meane to thriue, and do good, breake open
the
Gaoles, and let out the Prisoners
Cade. Feare not that I warrant thee. Come, let's
march
towards London.
Exeunt.
Enter the King with a Supplication, and the Queene with
Suffolkes
head,
the Duke of Buckingham, and the Lord Say.
Queene. Oft haue I heard that greefe softens the mind,
And makes it
fearefull and degenerate,
Thinke therefore on reuenge, and cease to
weepe.
But who can cease to weepe, and looke on this.
Heere may his head
lye on my throbbing brest:
But where's the body that I should
imbrace?
Buc. What answer makes your Grace to the
Rebells
Supplication?
King. Ile send some holy Bishop to
intreat:
For God forbid, so many simple soules
Should perish by the Sword.
And I my selfe,
Rather then bloody Warre shall cut them short,
Will parley
with Iacke Cade their Generall.
But stay, Ile read it ouer once againe
Qu. Ah barbarous villaines: Hath this louely face,
Rul'd like
a wandering Plannet ouer me,
And could it not inforce them to relent,
That
were vnworthy to behold the same
King. Lord Say, Iacke Cade hath sworne to haue thy
head
Say. I, but I hope your Highnesse shall haue his
King. How now Madam?
Still lamenting and mourning for
Suffolkes death?
I feare me (Loue) if that I had beene dead,
Thou would'st
not haue mourn'd so much for me
Qu. No my Loue, I should not mourne, but dye
for
thee.
Enter a Messenger.
King. How now? What newes? Why com'st thou in
such haste?
Mes. The Rebels are in Southwarke: Fly my Lord:
Iacke Cade proclaimes
himselfe Lord Mortimer,
Descended from the Duke of Clarence house,
And
calles your Grace Vsurper, openly,
And vowes to Crowne himselfe in
Westminster.
His Army is a ragged multitude
Of Hindes and Pezants, rude
and mercilesse:
Sir Humfrey Stafford, and his Brothers death,
Hath giuen
them heart and courage to proceede:
All Schollers, Lawyers, Courtiers,
Gentlemen,
They call false Catterpillers, and intend their death
Kin. Oh gracelesse men: they know not what they do
Buck. My gracious Lord, retire to Killingworth,
Vntill a
power be rais'd to put them downe
Qu. Ah were the Duke of Suffolke now aliue,
These Kentish
Rebels would be soone appeas'd
King. Lord Say, the Traitors hateth thee,
Therefore away with
vs to Killingworth
Say. So might your Graces person be in danger.
The sight of
me is odious in their eyes:
And therefore in this Citty will I stay,
And
liue alone as secret as I may.
Enter another Messenger.
Mess. Iacke Cade hath gotten London-bridge.
The Citizens flye and
forsake their houses:
The Rascall people, thirsting after prey,
Ioyne with
the Traitor, and they ioyntly sweare
To spoyle the City, and your Royall
Court
Buc. Then linger not my Lord, away, take horse
King. Come Margaret, God our hope will succor vs
Qu. My hope is gone, now Suffolke is deceast
King. Farewell my Lord, trust not the Kentish Rebels
Buc. Trust no body for feare you betraid
Say. The trust I haue, is in mine innocence,
And therefore am
I bold and resolute.
Exeunt.
Enter Lord Scales vpon the Tower walking. Then enters two
or
three
Citizens below.
Scales. How now? Is Iacke Cade slaine?
1.Cit. No my Lord,
nor likely to be slaine:
For they haue wonne the Bridge,
Killing all those
that withstand them:
The L[ord]. Maior craues ayd of your Honor from the
Tower
To defend the City from the Rebels
Scales. Such ayd as I can spare you shall command,
But I am
troubled heere with them my selfe,
The Rebels haue assay'd to win the
Tower.
But get you to Smithfield, and gather head,
And thither I will send
you Mathew Goffe.
Fight for your King, your Countrey, and your Liues,
And
so farwell, for I must hence againe.
Exeunt.
Enter Iacke Cade and the rest, and strikes his staffe on London
stone.
Cade. Now is Mortimer Lord of this City,
And heere sitting vpon
London Stone,
I charge and command, that of the Cities cost
The pissing
Conduit run nothing but Clarret Wine
This first yeare of our raigne.
And
now henceforward it shall be Treason for any,
That calles me other then Lord
Mortimer.
Enter a Soldier running.
Soul. Iacke Cade, Iacke Cade
Cade. Knocke him downe there.
They kill him.
But. If this Fellow be wise, hee'l neuer call yee Iacke
Cade more,
I thinke he hath a very faire warning
Dicke. My Lord, there's an Army gathered together
in
Smithfield
Cade. Come, then let's go fight with them:
But first, go and
set London Bridge on fire,
And if you can, burne downe the Tower
too.
Come, let's away.
Exeunt. omnes.
Alarums. Mathew Goffe is slain, and all the rest. Then enter
Iacke
Cade,
with his Company.
Cade. So sirs: now go some and pull down the Sauoy:
Others to'th
Innes of Court, downe with them all
But. I haue a suite vnto your Lordship
Cade. Bee it a Lordshippe, thou shalt haue it for
that
word
But. Onely that the Lawes of England may come out
of your
mouth
Iohn. Masse 'twill be sore Law then, for he was thrust
in the
mouth with a Speare, and 'tis not whole yet
Smith. Nay Iohn, it wil be stinking Law, for his
breath
stinkes with eating toasted cheese
Cade. I haue thought vpon it, it shall bee so. Away,
burne
all the Records of the Realme, my mouth shall be
the Parliament of
England
Iohn. Then we are like to haue biting Statutes
Vnlesse his
teeth be pull'd out
Cade. And hence-forward all things shall be in Common.
Enter
a Messenger.
Mes. My Lord, a prize, a prize, heeres the Lord Say,
which sold the
Townes in France. He that made vs pay
one and twenty Fifteenes, and one
shilling to the pound,
the last Subsidie.
Enter George, with the Lord
Say.
Cade. Well, hee shall be beheaded for it ten times:
Ah thou Say,
thou Surge, nay thou Buckram Lord, now
art thou within point-blanke of our
Iurisdiction Regall.
What canst thou answer to my Maiesty, for giuing vp
of
Normandie vnto Mounsieur Basimecu, the Dolphine of
France? Be it knowne
vnto thee by these presence, euen
the presence of Lord Mortimer, that I am
the Beesome
that must sweepe the Court cleane of such filth as thou
art:
Thou hast most traiterously corrupted the youth of
the Realme, in erecting a
Grammar Schoole: and whereas
before, our Fore-fathers had no other Bookes but
the
Score and the Tally, thou hast caused printing to be vs'd,
and
contrary to the King, his Crowne, and Dignity, thou
hast built a Paper-Mill.
It will be prooued to thy Face,
that thou hast men about thee, that vsually
talke of a
Nowne and a Verbe, and such abhominable wordes, as
no Christian
eare can endure to heare. Thou hast appointed
Iustices of Peace, to call
poore men before them, about
matters they were not able to answer.
Moreouer,
thou hast put them in prison, and because they could not
reade,
thou hast hang'd them, when (indeede) onely for
that cause they haue beene
most worthy to liue. Thou
dost ride in a foot-cloth, dost thou not?
Say. What of that?
Cade. Marry, thou ought'st not to let thy horse
weare
a Cloake, when honester men then thou go in their Hose
and
Doublets
Dicke. And worke in their shirt to, as my selfe for
example,
that am a butcher
Say. You men of Kent
Dic. What say you of Kent
Say. Nothing but this: 'Tis bona terra, mala gens
Cade. Away with him, away with him, he speaks Latine
Say. Heare me but speake, and beare mee wher'e
you
will:
Kent, in the Commentaries Cæsar writ,
Is term'd the ciuel'st
place of all this Isle:
Sweet is the Country, because full of Riches,
The
People Liberall, Valiant, Actiue, Wealthy,
Which makes me hope you are not
void of pitty.
I sold not Maine, I lost not Normandie,
Yet to recouer them
would loose my life:
Iustice with fauour haue I alwayes done,
Prayres and
Teares haue mou'd me, Gifts could neuer.
When haue I ought exacted at your
hands?
Kent to maintaine, the King, the Realme and you,
Large gifts haue I
bestow'd on learned Clearkes,
Because my Booke preferr'd me to the
King.
And seeing Ignorance is the curse of God,
Knowledge the Wing
wherewith we flye to heauen.
Vnlesse you be possest with diuellish
spirits,
You cannot but forbeare to murther me:
This Tongue hath parlied
vnto Forraigne Kings
For your behoofe
Cade. Tut, when struck'st thou one blow in the field?
Say. Great men haue reaching hands: oft haue I struck
Those that I neuer saw,
and strucke them dead
Geo. O monstrous Coward! What, to come
behinde
Folkes?
Say. These cheekes are pale for watching for your
good
Cade. Giue him a box o'th' eare, and that wil make 'em
red
againe
Say. Long sitting to determine poore mens causes,
Hath made
me full of sicknesse and diseases
Cade. Ye shall haue a hempen Candle then, & the help
of
hatchet
Dicke. Why dost thou quiuer man?
Say. The Palsie, and
not feare prouokes me
Cade. Nay, he noddes at vs, as who should say, Ile be
euen
with you. Ile see if his head will stand steddier on
a pole, or no: Take him
away, and behead him
Say. Tell me: wherein haue I offended most?
Haue I affected
wealth, or honor? Speake.
Are my Chests fill'd vp with extorted Gold?
Is
my Apparrell sumptuous to behold?
Whom haue I iniur'd, that ye seeke my
death?
These hands are free from guiltlesse bloodshedding,
This breast
from harbouring foule deceitfull thoughts.
O let me liue
Cade. I feele remorse in my selfe with his words: but
Ile
bridle it: he shall dye, and it bee but for pleading so
well for his life.
Away with him, he ha's a Familiar vnder
his Tongue, he speakes not a Gods
name. Goe, take
him away I say, and strike off his head presently, and
then
breake into his Sonne in Lawes house, Sir Iames Cromer,
and strike
off his head, and bring them both vppon two
poles hither
All. It shall be done
Say. Ah Countrimen: If when you make your prair's,
God should
be so obdurate as your selues:
How would it fare with your departed
soules,
And therefore yet relent, and saue my life
Cade. Away with him, and do as I command ye: the
proudest
Peere in the Realme, shall not weare a head on
his shoulders, vnlesse he pay
me tribute: there shall not
a maid be married, but she shall pay to me her
Maydenhead
ere they haue it: Men shall hold of mee in Capite.
And we
charge and command, that their wiues be as free
as heart can wish, or tongue
can tell
Dicke. My Lord,
When shall we go to Cheapside, and take vp
commodities
vpon our billes?
Cade. Marry presently
All. O braue.
Enter one with the heads.
Cade. But is not this brauer:
Let them kisse one another: For they
lou'd well
When they were aliue. Now part them againe,
Least they consult
about the giuing vp
Of some more Townes in France. Soldiers,
Deferre the
spoile of the Citie vntill night:
For with these borne before vs, in steed of
Maces,
Will we ride through the streets, & at euery Corner
Haue them
kisse. Away.
Exit
Alarum, and Retreat. Enter againe Cade, and all his rabblement.
Cade. Vp Fish-streete, downe Saint Magnes corner,
kill and knocke
downe, throw them into Thames:
Sound a parley.
What noise is this I heare?
Dare any be so bold to sound Retreat or
Parley
When I command them kill?
Enter Buckingham, and old Clifford.
Buc. I heere they be, that dare and will disturb thee:
Know Cade,
we come Ambassadors from the King
Vnto the Commons, whom thou hast
misled,
And heere pronounce free pardon to them all,
That will forsake
thee, and go home in peace
Clif. What say ye Countrimen, will ye relent
And yeeld to
mercy, whil'st 'tis offered you,
Or let a rabble leade you to your
deaths.
Who loues the King, and will imbrace his pardon,
Fling vp his cap,
and say, God saue his Maiesty.
Who hateth him, and honors not his
Father,
Henry the fift, that made all France to quake,
Shake he his weapon
at vs, and passe by
All. God saue the King, God saue the King
Cade. What Buckingham and Clifford are ye so braue?
And you
base Pezants, do ye beleeue him, will you needs
be hang'd with your Pardons
about your neckes? Hath
my sword therefore broke through London gates,
that
you should leaue me at the White-heart in Southwarke.
I thought ye
would neuer haue giuen out these Armes til
you had recouered your ancient
Freedome. But you are
all Recreants and Dastards, and delight to liue in
slauerie
to the Nobility. Let them breake your backes with burthens,
take
your houses ouer your heads, rauish your
Wiues and Daughters before your
faces. For me, I will
make shift for one, and so Gods Cursse light vppon
you
all
All. Wee'l follow Cade,
Wee'l follow Cade
Clif. Is Cade the sonne of Henry the fift,
That thus you do
exclaime you'l go with him.
Will he conduct you through the heart of
France,
And make the meanest of you Earles and Dukes?
Alas, he hath no
home, no place to flye too:
Nor knowes he how to liue, but by the
spoile,
Vnlesse by robbing of your Friends, and vs.
Wer't not a shame,
that whilst you liue at iarre,
The fearfull French, whom you late
vanquished
Should make a start ore-seas, and vanquish you?
Me thinkes
alreadie in this ciuill broyle,
I see them Lording it in London
streets,
Crying Villiago vnto all they meete.
Better ten thousand
base-borne Cades miscarry,
Then you should stoope vnto a Frenchmans
mercy.
To France, to France, and get what you haue lost:
Spare England,
for it is your Natiue Coast:
Henry hath mony, you are strong and
manly:
God on our side, doubt not of Victorie
All. A Clifford, a Clifford,
Wee'l follow the King, and
Clifford
Cade. Was euer Feather so lightly blowne too & fro,
as
this multitude? The name of Henry the fift, hales them
to an hundred
mischiefes, and makes them leaue mee desolate.
I see them lay their heades
together to surprize
me. My sword make way for me, for heere is no
staying:
in despight of the diuels and hell, haue through the
verie
middest of you, and heauens and honor be witnesse, that
no want of
resolution in mee, but onely my Followers
base and ignominious treasons,
makes me betake mee to
my heeles.
Exit
Buck. What, is he fled? Go some and follow him,
And he that brings
his head vnto the King,
Shall haue a thousand Crownes for his reward.
Exeunt. some of them.
Follow me souldiers, wee'l deuise a meane,
To reconcile you all vnto the
King.
Exeunt. omnes.
Sound Trumpets. Enter King, Queene, and Somerset on the Tarras.
King. Was euer King that ioy'd an earthly Throne,
And could command
no more content then I?
No sooner was I crept out of my Cradle,
But I was
made a King, at nine months olde.
Was neuer Subiect long'd to be a
King,
As I do long and wish to be a Subiect.
Enter Buckingham and
Clifford.
Buc. Health and glad tydings to your Maiesty
Kin. Why Buckingham, is the Traitor Cade surpris'd?
Or is he
but retir'd to make him strong?
Enter Multitudes with Halters about their
Neckes
Clif. He is fled my Lord, and all his powers do yeeld,
And
humbly thus with halters on their neckes,
Expect your Highnesse doome of
life, or death
King. Then heauen set ope thy euerlasting gates,
To
entertaine my vowes of thankes and praise.
Souldiers, this day haue you
redeem'd your liues,
And shew'd how well you loue your Prince &
Countrey:
Continue still in this so good a minde,
And Henry though he be
infortunate,
Assure your selues will neuer be vnkinde:
And so with
thankes, and pardon to you all,
I do dismisse you to your seuerall
Countries
All. God saue the King, God saue the King.
Enter a
Messenger.
Mes. Please it your Grace to be aduertised,
The Duke of Yorke is
newly come from Ireland,
And with a puissant and a mighty power
Of
Gallow-glasses and stout Kernes,
Is marching hitherward in proud
array,
And still proclaimeth as he comes along,
His Armes are onely to
remoue from thee
The Duke of Somerset, whom he tearmes a Traitor
King. Thus stands my state, 'twixt Cade and
Yorke
distrest,
Like to a Ship, that hauing scap'd a Tempest,
Is
straight way calme, and boorded with a Pyrate.
But now is Cade driuen backe,
his men dispierc'd,
And now is Yorke in Armes, to second him.
I pray thee
Buckingham go and meete him,
And aske him what's the reason of these
Armes:
Tell him, Ile send Duke Edmund to the Tower,
And Somerset we will
commit thee thither,
Vntill his Army be dismist from him
Somerset. My Lord,
Ile yeelde my selfe to prison
willingly,
Or vnto death, to do my Countrey good
King. In any case, be not to rough in termes,
For he is
fierce, and cannot brooke hard Language
Buc. I will my Lord, and doubt not so to deale,
As all things
shall redound vnto your good
King. Come wife, let's in, and learne to gouern better,
For
yet may England curse my wretched raigne.
Flourish. Exeunt.
Enter Cade.
Cade. Fye on Ambitions: fie on my selfe, that haue a
sword, and yet
am ready to famish. These fiue daies haue
I hid me in these Woods, and durst
not peepe out, for all
the Country is laid for me: but now am I so hungry,
that
if I might haue a Lease of my life for a thousand yeares, I
could
stay no longer. Wherefore on a Bricke wall haue
I climb'd into this Garden,
to see if I can eate Grasse, or
picke a Sallet another while, which is not
amisse to coole
a mans stomacke this hot weather: and I think this
word
Sallet was borne to do me good: for many a time but for
a Sallet, my
brain-pan had bene cleft with a brown Bill;
and many a time when I haue beene
dry, & brauely marching,
it hath seru'd me insteede of a quart pot to
drinke
in: and now the word Sallet must serue me to feed on.
Enter
Iden.
Iden. Lord, who would liue turmoyled in the Court,
And may enioy
such quiet walkes as these?
This small inheritance my Father left
me,
Contenteth me, and worth a Monarchy.
I seeke not to waxe great by
others warning,
Or gather wealth I care not with what enuy:
Sufficeth,
that I haue maintaines my state,
And sends the poore well pleased from my
gate
Cade. Heere's the Lord of the soile come to seize me
for a
stray, for entering his Fee-simple without leaue. A
Villaine, thou wilt
betray me, and get a 1000. Crownes
of the King by carrying my head to him,
but Ile make
thee eate Iron like an Ostridge, and swallow my Sword
like a
great pin ere thou and I part
Iden. Why rude Companion, whatsoere thou be,
I know thee not,
why then should I betray thee?
Is't not enough to breake into my
Garden,
And like a Theefe to come to rob my grounds:
Climbing my walles
inspight of me the Owner,
But thou wilt braue me with these sawcie
termes?
Cade. Braue thee? I by the best blood that euer
was
broach'd, and beard thee to. Looke on mee well, I haue
eate no meate
these fiue dayes, yet come thou and thy
fiue men, and if I doe not leaue you
all as dead as a doore
naile, I pray God I may neuer eate grasse more
Iden. Nay, it shall nere be said, while England stands,
That
Alexander Iden an Esquire of Kent,
Tooke oddes to combate a poore famisht
man.
Oppose thy stedfast gazing eyes to mine,
See if thou canst out-face
me with thy lookes:
Set limbe to limbe, and thou art farre the lesser:
Thy
hand is but a finger to my fist,
Thy legge a sticke compared with this
Truncheon,
My foote shall fight with all the strength thou hast,
And if
mine arme be heaued in the Ayre,
Thy graue is digg'd already in the
earth:
As for words, whose greatnesse answer's words,
Let this my sword
report what speech forbeares
Cade. By my Valour: the most compleate Champion
that euer I
heard. Steele, if thou turne the edge, or
cut not out the burly bon'd Clowne
in chines of Beefe,
ere thou sleepe in thy Sheath, I beseech Ioue on my
knees
thou mayst be turn'd to Hobnailes.
Heere they Fight.
O I am slaine, Famine and no other hath slaine me, let ten
thousand
diuelles come against me, and giue me but the
ten meales I haue lost, and
I'de defie them all. Wither
Garden, and be henceforth a burying place to all
that do
dwell in this house, because the vnconquered soule of
Cade is
fled
Iden. Is't Cade that I haue slain, that monstrous
traitor?
Sword, I will hallow thee for this thy deede,
And hang thee o're
my Tombe, when I am dead.
Ne're shall this blood be wiped from thy
point,
But thou shalt weare it as a Heralds coate,
To emblaze the Honor
that thy Master got
Cade. Iden farewell, and be proud of thy victory: Tell
Kent
from me, she hath lost her best man, and exhort all
the World to be Cowards:
For I that neuer feared any,
am vanquished by Famine, not by Valour.
Dyes.
Id. How much thou wrong'st me, heauen be my iudge;
Die damned
Wretch, the curse of her that bare thee:
And as I thrust thy body in with my
sword,
So wish I, I might thrust thy soule to hell.
Hence will I dragge
thee headlong by the heeles
Vnto a dunghill, which shall be thy graue,
And
there cut off thy most vngracious head,
Which I will beare in triumph to the
King,
Leauing thy trunke for Crowes to feed vpon.
Enter.
Enter Yorke, and his Army of Irish, with Drum and Colours.
Yor. From Ireland thus comes York to claim his right,
And plucke
the Crowne from feeble Henries head.
Ring Belles alowd, burne Bonfires cleare
and bright
To entertaine great Englands lawfull King.
Ah Sancta Maiestas!
who would not buy thee deere?
Let them obey, that knowes not how to
Rule.
This hand was made to handle nought but Gold.
I cannot giue due
action to my words,
Except a Sword or Scepter ballance it.
A Scepter shall
it haue, haue I a soule,
On which Ile tosse the Fleure-de-Luce of
France.
Enter Buckingham.
Whom haue we heere? Buckingham to disturbe me?
The king hath sent him
sure: I must dissemble
Buc. Yorke, if thou meanest wel, I greet thee well
Yor. Humfrey of Buckingham, I accept thy greeting.
Art thou a
Messenger, or come of pleasure
Buc. A Messenger from Henry, our dread Liege,
To know the
reason of these Armes in peace.
Or why, thou being a Subiect, as I
am,
Against thy Oath, and true Allegeance sworne,
Should raise so great a
power without his leaue?
Or dare to bring thy Force so neere the
Court?
Yor. Scarse can I speake, my Choller is so great.
Oh I could
hew vp Rockes, and fight with Flint,
I am so angry at these abiect
tearmes.
And now like Aiax Telamonius,
On Sheepe or Oxen could I spend my
furie.
I am farre better borne then is the king:
More like a King, more
Kingly in my thoughts.
But I must make faire weather yet a while,
Till
Henry be more weake, and I more strong.
Buckingham, I prethee pardon
me,
That I haue giuen no answer all this while:
My minde was troubled with
deepe Melancholly.
The cause why I haue brought this Armie hither,
Is to
remoue proud Somerset from the King,
Seditious to his Grace, and to the
State
Buc. That is too much presumption on thy part:
But if thy
Armes be to no other end,
The King hath yeelded vnto thy demand:
The Duke
of Somerset is in the Tower
Yorke. Vpon thine Honor is he Prisoner?
Buck. Vpon
mine Honor he is Prisoner
Yorke. Then Buckingham I do dismisse my Powres.
Souldiers, I
thanke you all: disperse your selues:
Meet me to morrow in S[aint]. Georges
Field,
You shall haue pay, and euery thing you wish.
And let my
Soueraigne, vertuous Henry,
Command my eldest sonne, nay all my sonnes,
As
pledges of my Fealtie and Loue,
Ile send them all as willing as I
liue:
Lands, Goods, Horse, Armor, any thing I haue
Is his to vse, so
Somerset may die
Buc. Yorke, I commend this kinde submission,
We twaine will
go into his Highnesse Tent.
Enter King and Attendants.
King. Buckingham, doth Yorke intend no harme to vs
That thus he
marcheth with thee arme in arme?
Yorke. In all submission and
humility,
Yorke doth present himselfe vnto your Highnesse
K. Then what intends these Forces thou dost bring?
Yor. To heaue the Traitor Somerset from hence,
And fight against that
monstrous Rebell Cade,
Who since I heard to be discomfited.
Enter Iden
with Cades head.
Iden. If one so rude, and of so meane condition
May passe into the
presence of a King:
Loe, I present your Grace a Traitors head,
The head of
Cade, whom I in combat slew
King. The head of Cade? Great God, how iust art thou?
Oh let
me view his Visage being dead,
That liuing wrought me such exceeding
trouble.
Tell me my Friend, art thou the man that slew him?
Iden. I
was, an't like your Maiesty
King. How art thou call'd? And what is thy degree?
Iden. Alexander Iden, that's my name,
A poore Esquire of Kent, that loues his
King
Buc. So please it you my Lord, 'twere not amisse
He were
created Knight for his good seruice
King. Iden, kneele downe, rise vp a Knight:
We giue thee for
reward a thousand Markes,
And will, that thou henceforth attend on vs
Iden. May Iden liue to merit such a bountie,
And neuer liue
but true vnto his Liege.
Enter Queene and Somerset.
K. See Buckingham, Somerset comes with th' Queene,
Go bid her hide
him quickly from the Duke
Qu. For thousand Yorkes he shall not hide his head,
But
boldly stand, and front him to his face
Yor. How now? is Somerset at libertie?
Then Yorke vnloose thy
long imprisoned thoughts,
And let thy tongue be equall with thy
heart.
Shall I endure the sight of Somerset?
False King, why hast thou
broken faith with me,
Knowing how hardly I can brooke abuse?
King did I
call thee? No: thou art not King:
Not fit to gouerne and rule
multitudes,
Which dar'st not, no nor canst not rule a Traitor.
That Head
of thine doth not become a Crowne:
Thy Hand is made to graspe a Palmers
staffe,
And not to grace an awefull Princely Scepter.
That Gold, must
round engirt these browes of mine,
Whose Smile and Frowne, like to Achilles
Speare
Is able with the change, to kill and cure.
Heere is hand to hold a
Scepter vp,
And with the same to acte controlling Lawes:
Giue place: by
heauen thou shalt rule no more
O're him, whom heauen created for thy
Ruler
Som. O monstrous Traitor! I arrest thee Yorke
Of Capitall
Treason 'gainst the King and Crowne:
Obey audacious Traitor, kneele for
Grace
York. Wold'st haue me kneele? First let me ask of thee,
If
they can brooke I bow a knee to man:
Sirrah, call in my sonne to be my
bale:
I know ere they will haue me go to Ward,
They'l pawne their swords
of my infranchisement
Qu. Call hither Clifford, bid him come amaine,
To say, if
that the Bastard boyes of Yorke
Shall be the Surety for their Traitor
Father
Yorke. O blood-bespotted Neopolitan,
Out-cast of Naples,
Englands bloody Scourge,
The sonnes of Yorke, thy betters in their
birth,
Shall be their Fathers baile, and bane to those
That for my Surety
will refuse the Boyes.
Enter Edward and Richard.
See where they come, Ile warrant they'l make it good.
Enter Clifford.
Qu. And here comes Clifford to deny their baile
Clif. Health, and all happinesse to my Lord the King
Yor. I thanke thee Clifford: Say, what newes with thee?
Nay,
do not fright vs with an angry looke:
We are thy Soueraigne Clifford, kneele
againe;
For thy mistaking so, We pardon thee
Clif. This is my King Yorke, I do not mistake,
But thou
mistakes me much to thinke I do,
To Bedlem with him, is the man growne
mad
King. I Clifford, a Bedlem and ambitious humor
Makes him
oppose himselfe against his King
Clif. He is a Traitor, let him to the Tower,
And chop away
that factious pate of his
Qu. He is arrested, but will not obey:
His sonnes (he sayes)
shall giue their words for him
Yor. Will you not Sonnes?
Edw. I Noble Father, if our
words will serue
Rich. And if words will not, then our Weapons shal
Clif. Why what a brood of Traitors haue we heere?
Yorke. Looke in a Glasse, and call thy Image so.
I am thy King, and thou a
false-heart Traitor:
Call hither to the stake my two braue Beares,
That
with the very shaking of their Chaines,
They may astonish these fell-lurking
Curres,
Bid Salsbury and Warwicke come to me.
Enter the Earles of
Warwicke, and Salisbury.
Clif. Are these thy Beares? Wee'l bate thy Bears to death,
And
manacle the Berard in their Chaines,
If thou dar'st bring them to the bayting
place
Rich. Oft haue I seene a hot ore-weening Curre,
Run backe and
bite, because he was with-held,
Who being suffer'd with the Beares fell
paw,
Hath clapt his taile, betweene his legges and cride,
And such a peece
of seruice will you do,
If you oppose your selues to match Lord Warwicke
Clif. Hence heape of wrath, foule indigested lumpe,
As
crooked in thy manners, as thy shape
Yor. Nay we shall heate you thorowly anon
Clif. Take heede least by your heate you burne
your
selues:
King. Why Warwicke, hath thy knee forgot to
bow?
Old Salsbury, shame to thy siluer haire,
Thou mad misleader of thy
brain-sicke sonne,
What wilt thou on thy death-bed play the Ruffian?
And
seeke for sorrow with thy Spectacles?
Oh where is Faith? Oh, where is
Loyalty?
If it be banisht from the frostie head,
Where shall it finde a
harbour in the earth?
Wilt thou go digge a graue to finde out Warre,
And
shame thine honourable Age with blood?
Why art thou old, and want'st
experience?
Or wherefore doest abuse it, if thou hast it?
For shame in
dutie bend thy knee to me,
That bowes vnto the graue with mickle age
Sal. My Lord, I haue considered with my selfe
The Title of
this most renowned Duke,
And in my conscience, do repute his grace
The
rightfull heyre to Englands Royall seate
King. Hast thou not sworne Allegeance vnto me?
Sal. I
haue
Ki. Canst thou dispense with heauen for such an oath?
Sal. It is great sinne, to sweare vnto a sinne:
But greater sinne to keepe a
sinfull oath:
Who can be bound by any solemne Vow
To do a murd'rous deede,
to rob a man,
To force a spotlesse Virgins Chastitie,
To reaue the Orphan
of his Patrimonie,
To wring the Widdow from her custom'd right,
And haue
no other reason for this wrong,
But that he was bound by a solemne
Oath?
Qu. A subtle Traitor needs no Sophister
King. Call Buckingham, and bid him arme himselfe
Yorke. Call Buckingham, and all the friends thou hast,
I am
resolu'd for death and dignitie
Old Clif. The first I warrant thee, if dreames proue
true
War. You were best to go to bed, and dreame againe,
To keepe
thee from the Tempest of the field
Old Clif. I am resolu'd to beare a greater storme,
Then any
thou canst coniure vp to day:
And that Ile write vpon thy Burgonet,
Might
I but know thee by thy housed Badge
War. Now by my Fathers badge, old Neuils Crest,
The rampant
Beare chain'd to the ragged staffe,
This day Ile weare aloft my
Burgonet,
As on a Mountaine top, the Cedar shewes,
That keepes his leaues
inspight of any storme,
Euen to affright thee with the view thereof
Old Clif. And from thy Burgonet Ile rend thy Beare,
And tread
it vnder foot with all contempt,
Despight the Bearard, that protects the
Beare
Yo.Clif. And so to Armes victorious Father,
To quell the
Rebels, and their Complices
Rich. Fie, Charitie for shame, speake not in spight,
For you
shall sup with Iesu Christ to night
Yo.Clif. Foule stygmaticke that's more then thou
canst
tell
Ric. If not in heauen, you'l surely sup in hell.
Exeunt.
Enter Warwicke.
War. Clifford of Cumberland, 'tis Warwicke calles:
And if thou dost
not hide thee from the Beare,
Now when the angrie Trumpet sounds
alarum,
And dead mens cries do fill the emptie ayre,
Clifford I say, come
forth and fight with me,
Proud Northerne Lord, Clifford of
Cumberland,
Warwicke is hoarse with calling thee to armes.
Enter
Yorke.
War. How now my Noble Lord? What all a-foot
Yor. The deadly handed Clifford slew my Steed:
But match to
match I haue encountred him,
And made a prey for Carrion Kytes and
Crowes
Euen of the bonnie beast he loued so well.
Enter Clifford.
War. Of one or both of vs the time is come
Yor. Hold Warwick: seek thee out some other chace
For I my
selfe must hunt this Deere to death
War. Then nobly Yorke, 'tis for a Crown thou fightst:
As I
intend Clifford to thriue to day,
It greeues my soule to leaue thee
vnassail'd.
Exit War.
Clif. What seest thou in me Yorke?
Why dost thou pause?
Yorke. With thy braue bearing should I be in loue,
But that thou art so fast
mine enemie
Clif. Nor should thy prowesse want praise & esteeme,
But
that 'tis shewne ignobly, and in Treason
Yorke. So let it helpe me now against thy sword,
As I in
iustice, and true right expresse it
Clif. My soule and bodie on the action both
Yor. A dreadfull lay, addresse thee instantly
Clif. La fin Corrone les eumenes
Yor. Thus Warre hath giuen thee peace, for y art still,
Peace
with his soule, heauen if it be thy will.
Enter yong Clifford.
Clif. Shame and Confusion all is on the rout,
Feare frames
disorder, and disorder wounds
Where it should guard. O Warre, thou sonne of
hell,
Whom angry heauens do make their minister,
Throw in the frozen
bosomes of our part,
Hot Coales of Vengeance. Let no Souldier flye.
He
that is truly dedicate to Warre,
Hath no selfe-loue: nor he that loues
himselfe,
Hath not essentially, but by circumstance
The name of Valour. O
let the vile world end,
And the premised Flames of the Last day,
Knit
earth and heauen together.
Now let the generall Trumpet blow his
blast,
Particularities, and pettie sounds
To cease. Was't thou ordain'd
(deere Father)
To loose thy youth in peace, and to atcheeue
The Siluer
Liuery of aduised Age,
And in thy Reuerence, and thy Chaire-dayes, thus
To
die in Ruffian battell? Euen at this sight,
My heart is turn'd to stone: and
while 'tis mine,
It shall be stony. Yorke, not our old men spares:
No more
will I their Babes, Teares Virginall,
Shall be to me, euen as the Dew to
Fire,
And Beautie, that the Tyrant oft reclaimes,
Shall to my flaming
wrath, be Oyle and Flax:
Henceforth, I will not haue to do with
pitty.
Meet I an infant of the house of Yorke,
Into as many gobbits will I
cut it
As wilde Medea yong Absirtis did.
In cruelty, will I seeke out my
Fame.
Come thou new ruine of olde Cliffords house:
As did Aeneas old
Anchyses beare,
So beare I thee vpon my manly shoulders:
But then, Aeneas
bare a liuing loade;
Nothing so heauy as these woes of mine.
Enter
Richard, and Somerset to fight.
Rich. So lye thou there:
For vnderneath an Ale-house paltry
signe,
The Castle in S[aint]. Albons, Somerset
Hath made the Wizard famous
in his death:
Sword, hold thy temper; Heart, be wrathfull still:
Priests
pray for enemies, but Princes kill.
Fight. Excursions.
Enter King, Queene, and others.
Qu. Away my Lord, you are slow, for shame away
King. Can we outrun the Heauens? Good Margaret
stay
Qu. What are you made of? You'l nor fight nor fly:
Now is it
manhood, wisedome, and defence,
To giue the enemy way, and to secure vs
By
what we can, which can no more but flye.
Alarum a farre off.
If you be tane, we then should see the bottome
Of all our Fortunes: but if
we haply scape,
(As well we may, if not through your neglect)
We shall to
London get, where you are lou'd,
And where this breach now in our Fortunes
made
May readily be stopt.
Enter Clifford.
Clif. But that my hearts on future mischeefe set,
I would speake
blasphemy ere bid you flye:
But flye you must: Vncureable
discomfite
Reignes in the hearts of all our present parts.
Away for your
releefe, and we will liue
To see their day, and them our Fortune
giue.
Away my Lord, away.
Exeunt.
Alarum. Retreat. Enter Yorke, Richard, Warwicke, and Soldiers,
with Drum
&
Colours.
Yorke. Of Salsbury, who can report of him,
That Winter Lyon, who in
rage forgets
Aged contusions, and all brush of Time:
And like a Gallant,
in the brow of youth,
Repaires him with Occasion. This happy day
Is not it
selfe, nor haue we wonne one foot,
If Salsbury be lost
Rich. My Noble Father:
Three times to day I holpe him to his
horse,
Three times bestrid him: Thrice I led him off,
Perswaded him from
any further act:
But still where danger was, still there I met him,
And
like rich hangings in a homely house,
So was his Will, in his old feeble
body,
But Noble as he is, looke where he comes.
Enter Salisbury.
Sal. Now by my Sword, well hast thou fought to day:
By'th' Masse so
did we all. I thanke you Richard.
God knowes how long it is I haue to
liue:
And it hath pleas'd him that three times to day
You haue defended me
from imminent death.
Well Lords, we haue not got that which we haue,
'Tis
not enough our foes are this time fled,
Being opposites of such repayring
Nature
Yorke. I know our safety is to follow them,
For (as I heare)
the King is fled to London,
To call a present Court of Parliament:
Let vs
pursue him ere the Writs go forth.
What sayes Lord Warwicke, shall we after
them?
War. After them: nay before them if we can:
Now by my hand
(Lords) 'twas a glorious day.
Saint Albons battell wonne by famous
Yorke,
Shall be eterniz'd in all Age to come.
Sound Drumme and Trumpets,
and to London all,
And more such dayes as these, to vs befall.
Exeunt.
FINIS. The second Part of Henry the Sixt, with the death of the
Good
Duke
HVMFREY.