The Third Part of Henry the Sixth
with the death of the Duke of Yorke
(First Folio)
by William
Shakespeare
Actus Primus. Scoena Prima.
Alarum.
Enter Plantagenet, Edward, Richard, Norfolke, Mountague,
Warwicke,
and
Souldiers.
Warwicke. I Wonder how the King escap'd our hands?
Pl. While
we pursu'd the Horsmen of y North,
He slyly stole away, and left his
men:
Whereat the great Lord of Northumberland,
Whose Warlike eares could
neuer brooke retreat,
Chear'd vp the drouping Army, and himselfe.
Lord
Clifford and Lord Stafford all a-brest
Charg'd our maine Battailes Front: and
breaking in,
Were by the Swords of common Souldiers slaine
Edw. Lord Staffords Father, Duke of Buckingham,
Is either
slaine or wounded dangerous.
I cleft his Beauer with a down-right
blow:
That this is true (Father) behold his blood
Mount. And Brother, here's the Earle of Wiltshires
blood,
Whom I encountred as the Battels ioyn'd
Rich. Speake thou for me, and tell them what I did
Plan. Richard hath best deseru'd of all my sonnes:
But is
your Grace dead, my Lord of Somerset?
Nor. Such hope haue all the line
of Iohn of Gaunt
Rich. Thus do I hope to shake King Henries head
Warw. And so doe I, victorious Prince of Yorke.
Before I see
thee seated in that Throne,
Which now the House of Lancaster vsurpes,
I
vow by Heauen, these eyes shall neuer close.
This is the Pallace of the
fearefull King,
And this the Regall Seat: possesse it Yorke,
For this is
thine, and not King Henries Heires
Plant. Assist me then, sweet Warwick, and I will,
For hither
we haue broken in by force
Norf. Wee'le all assist you: he that flyes, shall dye
Plant. Thankes gentle Norfolke, stay by me my Lords,
And
Souldiers stay and lodge by me this Night.
They goe vp.
Warw. And when the King comes, offer him no violence,
Vnlesse he
seeke to thrust you out perforce
Plant. The Queene this day here holds her Parliament,
But
little thinkes we shall be of her counsaile,
By words or blowes here let vs
winne our right
Rich. Arm'd as we are, let's stay within this House
Warw. The bloody Parliament shall this be call'd,
Vnlesse
Plantagenet, Duke of Yorke, be King,
And bashfull Henry depos'd, whose
Cowardize
Hath made vs by-words to our enemies
Plant. Then leaue me not, my Lords be resolute,
I meane to
take possession of my Right
Warw. Neither the King, nor he that loues him best,
The
prowdest hee that holds vp Lancaster,
Dares stirre a Wing, if Warwick shake
his Bells.
Ile plant Plantagenet, root him vp who dares:
Resolue thee
Richard, clayme the English Crowne.
Flourish. Enter King Henry, Clifford, Northumberland,
Westmerland,
Exeter,
and the rest.
Henry. My Lords, looke where the sturdie Rebell sits,
Euen in the
Chayre of State: belike he meanes,
Backt by the power of Warwicke, that false
Peere,
To aspire vnto the Crowne, and reigne as King.
Earle of
Northumberland, he slew thy Father,
And thine, Lord Clifford, & you both
haue vow'd reuenge
On him, his sonnes, his fauorites, and his friends
Northumb. If I be not, Heauens be reueng'd on me
Clifford. The hope thereof, makes Clifford mourne
in
Steele
Westm. What, shall we suffer this? lets pluck him down,
My
heart for anger burnes, I cannot brooke it
Henry. Be patient, gentle Earle of Westmerland
Clifford. Patience is for Poultroones, such as he:
He durst
not sit there, had your Father liu'd.
My gracious Lord, here in the
Parliament
Let vs assayle the Family of Yorke
North. Well hast thou spoken, Cousin be it so
Henry. Ah, know you not the Citie fauours them,
And they haue
troupes of Souldiers at their beck?
Westm. But when the Duke is
slaine, they'le quickly
flye
Henry. Farre be the thought of this from Henries heart,
To
make a Shambles of the Parliament House.
Cousin of Exeter, frownes, words,
and threats,
Shall be the Warre that Henry meanes to vse.
Thou factious
Duke of Yorke descend my Throne,
And kneele for grace and mercie at my
feet,
I am thy Soueraigne
Yorke. I am thine
Exet. For shame come downe, he made thee Duke of
Yorke
Yorke. It was my Inheritance, as the Earledome was
Exet. Thy Father was a Traytor to the Crowne
Warw. Exeter thou art a Traytor to the Crowne,
In following
this vsurping Henry
Clifford. Whom should hee follow, but his
naturall
King?
Warw. True Clifford, that's Richard Duke of
Yorke
Henry. And shall I stand, and thou sit in my Throne?
Yorke. It must and shall be so, content thy selfe
Warw. Be Duke of Lancaster, let him be King
Westm. He is both King, and Duke of Lancaster,
And that the
Lord of Westmerland shall maintaine
Warw. And Warwick shall disproue it. You forget,
That we are
those which chas'd you from the field,
And slew your Fathers, and with
Colours spread
Marcht through the Citie to the Pallace Gates
Northumb. Yes Warwicke, I remember it to my griefe,
And by
his Soule, thou and thy House shall rue it
Westm. Plantagenet, of thee and these thy Sonnes,
Thy
Kinsmen, and thy Friends, Ile haue more liues
Then drops of bloud were in my
Fathers Veines
Cliff. Vrge it no more, lest that in stead of words,
I send
thee, Warwicke, such a Messenger,
As shall reuenge his death, before I
stirre
Warw. Poore Clifford, how I scorne his worthlesse
Threats
Plant. Will you we shew our Title to the Crowne?
If not, our
Swords shall pleade it in the field
Henry. What Title hast thou Traytor to the Crowne?
My Father
was as thou art, Duke of Yorke,
Thy Grandfather Roger Mortimer, Earle of
March.
I am the Sonne of Henry the Fift,
Who made the Dolphin and the
French to stoupe,
And seiz'd vpon their Townes and Prouinces
Warw. Talke not of France, sith thou hast lost it all
Henry. The Lord Protector lost it, and not I:
When I was
crown'd, I was but nine moneths old
Rich. You are old enough now,
And yet me thinkes you
loose:
Father teare the Crowne from the Vsurpers Head
Edward. Sweet Father doe so, set it on your Head
Mount. Good Brother,
As thou lou'st and honorest
Armes,
Let's fight it out, and not stand cauilling thus
Richard. Sound Drummes and Trumpets, and the
King will
flye
Plant. Sonnes peace
Henry. Peace thou, and giue King Henry leaue to
speake
Warw. Plantagenet shal speake first: Heare him Lords,
And be
you silent and attentiue too,
For he that interrupts him, shall not liue
Hen. Think'st thou, that I will leaue my Kingly
Throne,
Wherein my Grandsire and my Father sat?
No: first shall Warre
vnpeople this my Realme;
I, and their Colours often borne in France,
And
now in England, to our hearts great sorrow,
Shall be my Winding-sheet. Why
faint you Lords?
My Title's good, and better farre then his
Warw. Proue it Henry, and thou shalt be King
Hen. Henry the Fourth by Conquest got the Crowne
Plant. 'Twas by Rebellion against his King
Henry. I know not what to say, my Titles weake:
Tell me, may
not a King adopt an Heire?
Plant. What then?
Henry. And if
he may, then am I lawfull King:
For Richard, in the view of many
Lords,
Resign'd the Crowne to Henry the Fourth,
Whose Heire my Father was,
and I am his
Plant. He rose against him, being his Soueraigne,
And made
him to resigne his Crowne perforce
Warw. Suppose, my Lords, he did it vnconstrayn'd,
Thinke you
'twere preiudiciall to his Crowne?
Exet. No: for he could not so
resigne his Crowne,
But that the next Heire should succeed and reigne
Henry. Art thou against vs, Duke of Exeter?
Exet. His
is the right, and therefore pardon me
Plant. Why whisper you, my Lords, and answer not?
Exet. My Conscience tells me he is lawfull King
Henry. All will reuolt from me, and turne to him
Northumb. Plantagenet, for all the Clayme thou lay'st,
Thinke
not, that Henry shall be so depos'd
Warw. Depos'd he shall be, in despight of all
Northumb. Thou art deceiu'd:
'Tis not thy Southerne
power
Of Essex, Norfolke, Suffolke, nor of Kent,
Which makes thee thus
presumptuous and prowd,
Can set the Duke vp in despight of me
Clifford. King Henry, be thy Title right or wrong,
Lord
Clifford vowes to fight in thy defence:
May that ground gape, and swallow me
aliue,
Where I shall kneele to him that slew my Father
Henry. Oh Clifford, how thy words reuiue my heart
Plant. Henry of Lancaster, resigne thy Crowne:
What mutter
you, or what conspire you Lords?
Warw. Doe right vnto this Princely
Duke of Yorke,
Or I will fill the House with armed men,
And ouer the
Chayre of State, where now he sits,
Write vp his Title with vsurping
blood.
He stampes with his foot, and the Souldiers shew themselues.
Henry. My Lord of Warwick, heare but one word,
Let me for this my
life time reigne as King
Plant. Confirme the Crowne to me and to mine Heires,
And thou
shalt reigne in quiet while thou liu'st
Henry. I am content: Richard Plantagenet
Enioy the Kingdome
after my decease
Clifford. What wrong is this vnto the Prince,
your
Sonne?
Warw. What good is this to England, and
himselfe?
Westm. Base, fearefull, and despayring Henry
Clifford. How hast thou iniur'd both thy selfe and vs?
Westm. I cannot stay to heare these Articles
Northumb. Nor I
Clifford. Come Cousin, let vs tell the Queene these
Newes
Westm. Farwell faint-hearted and degenerate King,
In whose
cold blood no sparke of Honor bides
Northumb. Be thou a prey vnto the House of Yorke,
And dye in
Bands, for this vnmanly deed
Cliff. In dreadfull Warre may'st thou be ouercome,
Or liue in
peace abandon'd and despis'd
Warw. Turne this way Henry, and regard them not
Exeter. They seeke reuenge, and therefore will
not
yeeld?
Henry. Ah Exeter
Warw. Why should you sigh, my Lord?
Henry. Not for my
selfe Lord Warwick, but my Sonne,
Whom I vnnaturally shall
dis-inherite.
But be it as it may: I here entayle
The Crowne to thee and
to thine Heires for euer,
Conditionally, that heere thou take an Oath,
To
cease this Ciuill Warre: and whil'st I liue,
To honor me as thy King, and
Soueraigne:
And neyther by Treason nor Hostilitie,
To seeke to put me
downe, and reigne thy selfe
Plant. This Oath I willingly take, and will performe
Warw. Long liue King Henry: Plantagenet embrace
him
Henry. And long liue thou, and these thy forward
Sonnes
Plant. Now Yorke and Lancaster are reconcil'd
Exet. Accurst be he that seekes to make them foes.
Senet. Here they come downe.
Plant. Farewell my gracious Lord, Ile to my Castle
Warw. And Ile keepe London with my Souldiers
Norf. And I to Norfolke with my followers
Mount. And I vnto the Sea, from whence I came
Henry. And I with griefe and sorrow to the Court.
Enter the
Queene.
Exeter. Heere comes the Queene,
Whose Lookes bewray her
anger:
Ile steale away
Henry. Exeter so will I
Queene. Nay, goe not from me, I will follow thee
Henry. Be patient gentle Queene, and I will stay
Queene. Who can be patient in such extreames?
Ah wretched
man, would I had dy'de a Maid?
And neuer seene thee, neuer borne thee
Sonne,
Seeing thou hast prou'd so vnnaturall a Father.
Hath he deseru'd to
loose his Birth-right thus?
Hadst thou but lou'd him halfe so well as
I,
Or felt that paine which I did for him once,
Or nourisht him, as I did
with my blood;
Thou would'st haue left thy dearest heart-blood
there,
Rather then haue made that sauage Duke thine Heire,
And
dis-inherited thine onely Sonne
Prince. Father, you cannot dis-inherite me:
If you be King,
why should not I succeede?
Henry. Pardon me Margaret, pardon me sweet
Sonne,
The Earle of Warwick and the Duke enforc't me
Quee. Enforc't thee? Art thou King, and wilt be forc't?
I
shame to heare thee speake: ah timorous Wretch,
Thou hast vndone thy selfe,
thy Sonne, and me,
And giu'n vnto the House of Yorke such head,
As thou
shalt reigne but by their sufferance.
To entayle him and his Heires vnto the
Crowne,
What is it, but to make thy Sepulcher,
And creepe into it farre
before thy time?
Warwick is Chancelor, and the Lord of Callice,
Sterne
Falconbridge commands the Narrow Seas,
The Duke is made Protector of the
Realme,
And yet shalt thou be safe? Such safetie findes
The trembling
Lambe, inuironned with Wolues.
Had I beene there, which am a silly
Woman,
The Souldiers should haue toss'd me on their Pikes,
Before I would
haue granted to that Act.
But thou preferr'st thy Life, before thine
Honor.
And seeing thou do'st, I here diuorce my selfe,
Both from thy Table
Henry, and thy Bed,
Vntill that Act of Parliament be repeal'd,
Whereby my
Sonne is dis-inherited.
The Northerne Lords, that haue forsworne thy
Colours,
Will follow mine, if once they see them spread:
And spread they
shall be, to thy foule disgrace,
And vtter ruine of the House of
Yorke.
Thus doe I leaue thee: Come Sonne, let's away,
Our Army is ready;
come, wee'le after them
Henry. Stay gentle Margaret, and heare me speake
Queene. Thou hast spoke too much already: get thee
gone
Henry. Gentle Sonne Edward, thou wilt stay me?
Queene.
I, to be murther'd by his Enemies
Prince. When I returne with victorie to the field,
Ile see
your Grace: till then, Ile follow her
Queene. Come Sonne away, we may not linger thus
Henry. Poore Queene,
How loue to me, and to her
Sonne,
Hath made her breake out into termes of Rage.
Reueng'd may she be
on that hatefull Duke,
Whose haughtie spirit, winged with desire,
Will
cost my Crowne, and like an emptie Eagle,
Tyre on the flesh of me, and of my
Sonne.
The losse of those three Lords torments my heart:
Ile write vnto
them, and entreat them faire;
Come Cousin, you shall be the Messenger
Exet. And I, I hope, shall reconcile them all.
Enter.
Flourish. Enter Richard, Edward, and Mountague.
Richard. Brother, though I bee youngest, giue mee
leaue
Edward. No, I can better play the Orator
Mount. But I haue reasons strong and forceable.
Enter the
Duke of Yorke.
Yorke. Why how now Sonnes, and Brother, at a strife?
What is your
Quarrell? how began it first?
Edward. No Quarrell, but a slight
Contention
Yorke. About what?
Rich. About that which concernes
your Grace and vs,
The Crowne of England, Father, which is yours
Yorke. Mine Boy? not till King Henry be dead
Richard. Your Right depends not on his life, or death
Edward. Now you are Heire, therefore enioy it now:
By giuing
the House of Lancaster leaue to breathe,
It will out-runne you, Father, in
the end
Yorke. I tooke an Oath, that hee should quietly
reigne
Edward. But for a Kingdome any Oath may be broken:
I would
breake a thousand Oathes, to reigne one yeere
Richard. No: God forbid your Grace should be forsworne
Yorke. I shall be, if I clayme by open Warre
Richard. Ile proue the contrary, if you'le heare
mee
speake
Yorke. Thou canst not, Sonne: it is impossible
Richard. An Oath is of no moment, being not tooke
Before a
true and lawfull Magistrate,
That hath authoritie ouer him that
sweares.
Henry had none, but did vsurpe the place.
Then seeing 'twas he
that made you to depose,
Your Oath, my Lord, is vaine and
friuolous.
Therefore to Armes: and Father doe but thinke,
How sweet a
thing it is to weare a Crowne,
Within whose Circuit is Elizium,
And all
that Poets faine of Blisse and Ioy.
Why doe we linger thus? I cannot
rest,
Vntill the White Rose that I weare, be dy'de
Euen in the luke-warme
blood of Henries heart
Yorke. Richard ynough: I will be King, or dye.
Brother, thou
shalt to London presently,
And whet on Warwick to this Enterprise.
Thou
Richard shalt to the Duke of Norfolke,
And tell him priuily of our
intent.
You Edward shall vnto my Lord Cobham,
With whom the Kentishmen
will willingly rise.
In them I trust: for they are Souldiors,
Wittie,
courteous, liberall, full of spirit.
While you are thus imploy'd, what
resteth more?
But that I seeke occasion how to rise,
And yet the King not
priuie to my Drift,
Nor any of the House of Lancaster.
Enter Gabriel.
But stay, what Newes? Why comm'st thou in such
poste?
Gabriel.
The Queene,
With all the Northerne Earles and Lords,
Intend here to
besiege you in your Castle.
She is hard by, with twentie thousand men:
And
therefore fortifie your Hold, my Lord
Yorke. I, with my Sword.
What? think'st thou, that we feare
them?
Edward and Richard, you shall stay with me,
My Brother Mountague
shall poste to London.
Let Noble Warwicke, Cobham, and the rest,
Whom we
haue left Protectors of the King,
With powrefull Pollicie strengthen
themselues,
And trust not simple Henry, nor his Oathes
Mount. Brother, I goe: Ile winne them, feare it not.
And thus
most humbly I doe take my leaue.
Exit Mountague.
Enter Mortimer, and his Brother.
York. Sir Iohn, and Sir Hugh Mortimer, mine Vnckles,
You are come
to Sandall in a happie houre.
The Armie of the Queene meane to besiege vs
Iohn. Shee shall not neede, wee'le meete her in the
field
Yorke. What, with fiue thousand men?
Richard. I, with
fiue hundred, Father, for a neede.
A Woman's generall: what should we
feare?
A March afarre off.
Edward. I heare their Drummes:
Let's set our men in order,
And
issue forth, and bid them Battaile straight
Yorke. Fiue men to twentie: though the oddes be great,
I
doubt not, Vnckle, of our Victorie.
Many a Battaile haue I wonne in
France,
When as the Enemie hath beene tenne to one:
Why should I not now
haue the like successe?
Alarum. Exit.
Enter Rutland, and his Tutor.
Rutland. Ah, whither shall I flye, to scape their hands?
Ah Tutor,
looke where bloody Clifford comes.
Enter Clifford.
Clifford. Chaplaine away, thy Priesthood saues thy life.
As for the
Brat of this accursed Duke,
Whose Father slew my Father, he shall dye
Tutor. And I, my Lord, will beare him company
Clifford. Souldiers, away with him
Tutor. Ah Clifford, murther not this innocent Child,
Least
thou be hated both of God and Man.
Enter.
Clifford. How now? is he dead alreadie?
Or is it feare, that makes
him close his eyes?
Ile open them
Rutland. So looks the pent-vp Lyon o're the Wretch,
That
trembles vnder his deuouring Pawes:
And so he walkes, insulting o're his
Prey,
And so he comes, to rend his Limbes asunder.
Ah gentle Clifford,
kill me with thy Sword,
And not with such a cruell threatning Looke.
Sweet
Clifford heare me speake, before I dye:
I am too meane a subiect for thy
Wrath,
Be thou reueng'd on men, and let me liue
Clifford. In vaine thou speak'st, poore Boy:
My Fathers blood
hath stopt the passage
Where thy words should enter
Rutland. Then let my Fathers blood open it againe,
He is a
man, and Clifford cope with him
Clifford. Had I thy Brethren here, their liues and thine
Were
not reuenge sufficient for me:
No, if I digg'd vp thy fore-fathers
Graues,
And hung their rotten Coffins vp in Chaynes,
It could not slake
mine ire, nor ease my heart.
The sight of any of the House of Yorke,
Is as
a furie to torment my Soule:
And till I root out their accursed Line,
And
leaue not one aliue, I liue in Hell.
Therefore-
Rutland. Oh let me
pray, before I take my death:
To thee I pray; sweet Clifford pitty me
Clifford. Such pitty as my Rapiers point affords
Rutland. I neuer did thee harme: why wilt thou
slay
me?
Clifford. Thy Father hath
Rutland. But 'twas ere I was borne.
Thou hast one Sonne, for
his sake pitty me,
Least in reuenge thereof, sith God is iust,
He be as
miserably slaine as I.
Ah, let me liue in Prison all my dayes,
And when I
giue occasion of offence,
Then let me dye, for now thou hast no cause
Clifford. No cause? thy Father slew my Father:
therefore
dye
Rutland. Dij faciant laudis summa sit ista tuæ
Clifford. Plantagenet, I come Plantagenet:
And this thy
Sonnes blood cleauing to my Blade,
Shall rust vpon my Weapon, till thy
blood
Congeal'd with this, doe make me wipe off both.
Enter.
Alarum. Enter Richard, Duke of Yorke.
Yorke. The Army of the Queene hath got the field:
My Vnckles both
are slaine, in rescuing me;
And all my followers, to the eager foe
Turne
back, and flye, like Ships before the Winde,
Or Lambes pursu'd by
hunger-starued Wolues.
My Sonnes, God knowes what hath bechanced them:
But
this I know, they haue demean'd themselues
Like men borne to Renowne, by Life
or Death.
Three times did Richard make a Lane to me,
And thrice cry'de,
Courage Father, fight it out:
And full as oft came Edward to my side,
With
Purple Faulchion, painted to the Hilt,
In blood of those that had encountred
him:
And when the hardyest Warriors did retyre,
Richard cry'de, Charge,
and giue no foot of ground,
And cry'de, A Crowne, or else a glorious
Tombe,
A Scepter, or an Earthly Sepulchre.
With this we charg'd againe:
but out alas,
We bodg'd againe, as I haue seene a Swan
With bootlesse
labour swimme against the Tyde,
And spend her strength with ouer-matching
Waues.
A short Alarum within.
Ah hearke, the fatall followers doe pursue,
And I am faint, and cannot
flye their furie:
And were I strong, I would not shunne their furie,
The
Sands are numbred, that makes vp my Life,
Here must I stay, and here my Life
must end.
Enter the Queene, Clifford, Northumberland, the young
Prince,
and
Souldiers.
Come bloody Clifford, rough Northumberland,
I dare your quenchlesse furie
to more rage:
I am your Butt, and I abide your Shot
Northumb. Yeeld to our mercy, proud Plantagenet
Clifford. I, to such mercy, as his ruthlesse Arme
With
downe-right payment, shew'd vnto my Father.
Now Phæton hath tumbled from his
Carre,
And made an Euening at the Noone-tide Prick
Yorke. My ashes, as the Phoenix, may bring forth
A Bird, that
will reuenge vpon you all:
And in that hope, I throw mine eyes to
Heauen,
Scorning what ere you can afflict me with.
Why come you not? what,
multitudes, and feare?
Cliff. So Cowards fight, when they can flye no
further,
So Doues doe peck the Faulcons piercing Tallons,
So desperate
Theeues, all hopelesse of their Liues,
Breathe out Inuectiues 'gainst the
Officers
Yorke. Oh Clifford, but bethinke thee once againe,
And in thy
thought ore-run my former time:
And if thou canst, for blushing, view this
face,
And bite thy tongue, that slanders him with Cowardice,
Whose frowne
hath made thee faint and flye ere this
Clifford. I will not bandie with thee word for word,
But
buckler with thee blowes twice two for one
Queene. Hold valiant Clifford, for a thousand causes
I would
prolong a while the Traytors Life:
Wrath makes him deafe; speake thou
Northumberland
Northumb. Hold Clifford, doe not honor him so much,
To prick
thy finger, though to wound his heart.
What valour were it, when a Curre doth
grinne,
For one to thrust his Hand betweene his Teeth,
When he might
spurne him with his Foot away?
It is Warres prize, to take all
Vantages,
And tenne to one, is no impeach of Valour
Clifford. I, I, so striues the Woodcocke with the
Gynne
Northumb. So doth the Connie struggle in the
Net
York. So triumph Theeues vpon their conquer'd Booty,
So True
men yeeld with Robbers, so o're-matcht
Northumb. What would your Grace haue done vnto
him
now?
Queene. Braue Warriors, Clifford and Northumberland,
Come make
him stand vpon this Mole-hill here,
That raught at Mountaines with
out-stretched Armes,
Yet parted but the shadow with his Hand.
What, was it
you that would be Englands King?
Was't you that reuell'd in our
Parliament,
And made a Preachment of your high Descent?
Where are your
Messe of Sonnes, to back you now?
The wanton Edward, and the lustie
George?
And where's that valiant Crook-back Prodigie,
Dickie, your Boy,
that with his grumbling voyce
Was wont to cheare his Dad in Mutinies?
Or
with the rest, where is your Darling, Rutland?
Looke Yorke, I stayn'd this
Napkin with the blood
That valiant Clifford, with his Rapiers point,
Made
issue from the Bosome of the Boy:
And if thine eyes can water for his
death,
I giue thee this to drie thy Cheekes withall.
Alas poore Yorke, but
that I hate thee deadly,
I should lament thy miserable state.
I prythee
grieue, to make me merry, Yorke.
What, hath thy fierie heart so parcht thine
entrayles,
That not a Teare can fall, for Rutlands death?
Why art thou
patient, man? thou should'st be mad:
And I, to make thee mad, doe mock thee
thus.
Stampe, raue, and fret, that I may sing and dance.
Thou would'st be
fee'd, I see, to make me sport:
Yorke cannot speake, vnlesse he weare a
Crowne.
A Crowne for Yorke; and Lords, bow lowe to him:
Hold you his
hands, whilest I doe set it on.
I marry Sir, now lookes he like a King:
I,
this is he that tooke King Henries Chaire,
And this is he was his adopted
Heire.
But how is it, that great Plantagenet
Is crown'd so soone, and
broke his solemne Oath?
As I bethinke me, you should not be King,
Till our
King Henry had shooke hands with Death.
And will you pale your head in
Henries Glory,
And rob his Temples of the Diademe,
Now in his Life,
against your holy Oath?
Oh 'tis a fault too too vnpardonable.
Off with the
Crowne; and with the Crowne, his Head,
And whilest we breathe, take time to
doe him dead
Clifford. That is my Office, for my Fathers sake
Queene. Nay stay, let's heare the Orizons hee
makes
Yorke. Shee-Wolfe of France,
But worse then Wolues of
France,
Whose Tongue more poysons then the Adders Tooth:
How ill-beseeming
is it in thy Sex,
To triumph like an Amazonian Trull,
Vpon their Woes,
whom Fortune captiuates?
But that thy Face is Vizard-like,
vnchanging,
Made impudent with vse of euill deedes.
I would assay, prowd
Queene, to make thee blush.
To tell thee whence thou cam'st, of whom
deriu'd,
Were shame enough, to shame thee,
Wert thou not
shamelesse.
Thy Father beares the type of King of Naples,
Of both the
Sicils, and Ierusalem,
Yet not so wealthie as an English Yeoman.
Hath that
poore Monarch taught thee to insult?
It needes not, nor it bootes thee not,
prowd Queene,
Vnlesse the Adage must be verify'd,
That Beggers mounted,
runne their Horse to death.
'Tis Beautie that doth oft make Women
prowd,
But God he knowes, thy share thereof is small.
'Tis Vertue, that
doth make them most admir'd,
The contrary, doth make thee wondred at.
'Tis
Gouernment that makes them seeme Diuine,
The want thereof, makes thee
abhominable.
Thou art as opposite to euery good,
As the Antipodes are vnto
vs,
Or as the South to the Septentrion.
Oh Tygres Heart, wrapt in a Womans
Hide,
How could'st thou drayne the Life-blood of the Child,
To bid the
Father wipe his eyes withall,
And yet be seene to beare a Womans
face?
Women are soft, milde, pittifull, and flexible;
Thou, sterne,
obdurate, flintie, rough, remorselesse.
Bidst thou me rage? why now thou hast
thy wish.
Would'st haue me weepe? why now thou hast thy will.
For raging
Wind blowes vp incessant showers,
And when the Rage allayes, the Raine
begins.
These Teares are my sweet Rutlands Obsequies,
And euery drop cryes
vengeance for his death,
'Gainst thee fell Clifford, and thee false
French-woman
Northumb. Beshrew me, but his passions moues me so,
That
hardly can I check my eyes from Teares
Yorke. That Face of his,
The hungry Caniballs would not haue
toucht,
Would not haue stayn'd with blood:
But you are more inhumane, more
inexorable,
Oh, tenne times more then Tygers of Hyrcania.
See, ruthlesse
Queene, a haplesse Fathers Teares:
This Cloth thou dipd'st in blood of my
sweet Boy,
And I with Teares doe wash the blood away.
Keepe thou the
Napkin, and goe boast of this,
And if thou tell'st the heauie storie
right,
Vpon my Soule, the hearers will shed Teares:
Yea, euen my Foes will
shed fast-falling Teares,
And say, Alas, it was a pittious deed.
There,
take the Crowne, and with the Crowne, my Curse,
And in thy need, such comfort
come to thee,
As now I reape at thy too cruell hand.
Hard-hearted
Clifford, take me from the World,
My Soule to Heauen, my Blood vpon your
Heads
Northumb. Had he been slaughter-man to all my Kinne,
I should
not for my Life but weepe with him,
To see how inly Sorrow gripes his
Soule
Queen. What, weeping ripe, my Lord Northumberland?
Thinke but
vpon the wrong he did vs all,
And that will quickly drie thy melting
Teares
Clifford. Heere's for my Oath, heere's for my
Fathers
Death
Queene. And heere's to right our gentle-hearted
King
Yorke. Open thy Gate of Mercy, gracious God,
My Soule flyes
through these wounds, to seeke out thee
Queene. Off with his Head, and set it on Yorke Gates,
So
Yorke may ouer-looke the Towne of Yorke.
Flourish. Exit.
A March. Enter Edward, Richard, and their power.
Edward. I wonder how our Princely Father scap't:
Or whether he be
scap't away, or no,
From Cliffords and Northumberlands pursuit?
Had he
been ta'ne, we should haue heard the newes;
Had he beene slaine, we should
haue heard the newes:
Or had he scap't, me thinkes we should haue
heard
The happy tidings of his good escape.
How fares my Brother? why is
he so sad?
Richard. I cannot ioy, vntill I be resolu'd
Where our
right valiant Father is become.
I saw him in the Battaile range about,
And
watcht him how he singled Clifford forth.
Me thought he bore him in the
thickest troupe,
As doth a Lyon in a Heard of Neat,
Or as a Beare
encompass'd round with Dogges:
Who hauing pincht a few, and made them
cry,
The rest stand all aloofe, and barke at him.
So far'd our Father with
his Enemies,
So fled his Enemies my Warlike Father:
Me thinkes 'tis prize
enough to be his Sonne.
See how the Morning opes her golden Gates,
And
takes her farwell of the glorious Sunne.
How well resembles it the prime of
Youth,
Trimm'd like a Yonker, prauncing to his Loue?
Ed. Dazle mine
eyes, or doe I see three Sunnes?
Rich. Three glorious Sunnes, each one
a perfect Sunne,
Not seperated with the racking Clouds,
But seuer'd in a
pale cleare-shining Skye.
See, see, they ioyne, embrace, and seeme to
kisse,
As if they vow'd some League inuiolable.
Now are they but one
Lampe, one Light, one Sunne:
In this, the Heauen figures some euent
Edward. 'Tis wondrous strange,
The like yet neuer heard
of.
I thinke it cites vs (Brother) to the field,
That wee, the Sonnes of
braue Plantagenet,
Each one alreadie blazing by our meedes,
Should
notwithstanding ioyne our Lights together,
And ouer-shine the Earth, as this
the World.
What ere it bodes, hence-forward will I beare
Vpon my Targuet
three faire shining Sunnes
Richard. Nay, beare three Daughters:
By your leaue, I speake
it,
You loue the Breeder better then the Male.
Enter one blowing.
But what art thou, whose heauie Lookes fore-tell
Some dreadfull story
hanging on thy Tongue?
Mess. Ah, one that was a wofull looker
on,
When as the Noble Duke of Yorke was slaine,
Your Princely Father, and
my louing Lord
Edward. Oh speake no more, for I haue heard too
much
Richard. Say how he dy'de, for I will heare it all
Mess. Enuironed he was with many foes,
And stood against
them, as the hope of Troy
Against the Greekes, that would haue entred
Troy.
But Hercules himselfe must yeeld to oddes:
And many stroakes, though
with a little Axe,
Hewes downe and fells the hardest-tymber'd Oake.
By
many hands your Father was subdu'd,
But onely slaught'red by the irefull
Arme
Of vn-relenting Clifford, and the Queene:
Who crown'd the gracious
Duke in high despight,
Laugh'd in his face: and when with griefe he
wept,
The ruthlesse Queene gaue him, to dry his Cheekes,
A Napkin, steeped
in the harmelesse blood
Of sweet young Rutland, by rough Clifford
slaine:
And after many scornes, many foule taunts,
They tooke his Head,
and on the Gates of Yorke
They set the same, and there it doth
remaine,
The saddest spectacle that ere I view'd
Edward. Sweet Duke of Yorke, our Prop to leane vpon,
Now thou
art gone, wee haue no Staffe, no Stay.
Oh Clifford, boyst'rous Clifford, thou
hast slaine
The flowre of Europe, for his Cheualrie,
And trecherously hast
thou vanquisht him,
For hand to hand he would haue vanquisht thee.
Now my
Soules Pallace is become a Prison:
Ah, would she breake from hence, that this
my body
Might in the ground be closed vp in rest:
For neuer henceforth
shall I ioy againe:
Neuer, oh neuer shall I see more ioy
Rich. I cannot weepe: for all my bodies moysture
Scarse
serues to quench my Furnace-burning hart:
Nor can my tongue vnloade my hearts
great burthen,
For selfe-same winde that I should speake withall,
Is
kindling coales that fires all my brest,
And burnes me vp with flames, that
tears would quench.
To weepe, is to make lesse the depth of greefe:
Teares
then for Babes; Blowes, and Reuenge for mee.
Richard, I beare thy name, Ile
venge thy death,
Or dye renowned by attempting it
Ed. His name that valiant Duke hath left with thee:
His
Dukedome, and his Chaire with me is left
Rich. Nay, if thou be that Princely Eagles Bird,
Shew thy
descent by gazing 'gainst the Sunne:
For Chaire and Dukedome, Throne and
Kingdome say,
Either that is thine, or else thou wer't not his.
March. Enter Warwicke, Marquesse Mountacute, and their Army.
Warwick. How now faire Lords? What faire? What
newes
abroad?
Rich. Great Lord of Warwicke, if we should recompt
Our
balefull newes, and at each words deliuerance
Stab Poniards in our flesh,
till all were told,
The words would adde more anguish then the wounds.
O
valiant Lord, the Duke of Yorke is slaine
Edw. O Warwicke, Warwicke, that Plantagenet
Which held thee
deerely, as his Soules Redemption,
Is by the sterne Lord Clifford done to
death
War. Ten dayes ago, I drown'd these newes in teares.
And now
to adde more measure to your woes,
I come to tell you things sith then
befalne.
After the bloody Fray at Wakefield fought,
Where your braue
Father breath'd his latest gaspe,
Tydings, as swiftly as the Postes could
runne,
Were brought me of your Losse, and his Depart.
I then in London,
keeper of the King,
Muster'd my Soldiers, gathered flockes of
Friends,
Marcht toward S[aint]. Albons, to intercept the Queene,
Bearing
the King in my behalfe along:
For by my Scouts, I was aduertised
That she
was comming with a full intent
To dash our late Decree in
Parliament,
Touching King Henries Oath, and your Succession:
Short Tale to
make, we at S[aint]. Albons met,
Our Battailes ioyn'd, and both sides
fiercely fought:
But whether 'twas the coldnesse of the King,
Who look'd
full gently on his warlike Queene,
That robb'd my Soldiers of their heated
Spleene.
Or whether 'twas report of her successe,
Or more then common
feare of Cliffords Rigour,
Who thunders to his Captiues, Blood and
Death,
I cannot iudge: but to conclude with truth,
Their Weapons like to
Lightning, came and went:
Our Souldiers like the Night-Owles lazie
flight,
Or like a lazie Thresher with a Flaile,
Fell gently downe, as if
they strucke their Friends.
I cheer'd them vp with iustice of our
Cause,
With promise of high pay, and great Rewards:
But all in vaine, they
had no heart to fight,
And we (in them) no hope to win the day,
So that we
fled: the King vnto the Queene,
Lord George, your Brother, Norfolke, and my
Selfe,
In haste, post haste, are come to ioyne with you:
For in the
Marches heere we heard you were,
Making another Head, to fight againe
Ed. Where is the Duke of Norfolke, gentle Warwick?
And when
came George from Burgundy to England?
War. Some six miles off the Duke
is with the Soldiers,
And for your Brother he was lately sent
From your
kinde Aunt Dutchesse of Burgundie,
With ayde of Souldiers to this needfull
Warre
Rich. 'Twas oddes belike, when valiant Warwick fled;
Oft haue
I heard his praises in Pursuite,
But ne're till now, his Scandall of
Retire
War. Nor now my Scandall Richard, dost thou heare:
For thou
shalt know this strong right hand of mine,
Can plucke the Diadem from faint
Henries head,
And wring the awefull Scepter from his Fist,
Were he as
famous, and as bold in Warre,
As he is fam'd for Mildnesse, Peace, and
Prayer
Rich. I know it well Lord Warwick, blame me not,
'Tis loue I
beare thy glories make me speake:
But in this troublous time, what's to be
done?
Shall we go throw away our Coates of Steele,
And wrap our bodies in
blacke mourning Gownes,
Numb'ring our Aue-Maries with our Beads?
Or shall
we on the Helmets of our Foes
Tell our Deuotion with reuengefull Armes?
If
for the last, say I, and to it Lords
War. Why therefore Warwick came to seek you out,
And
therefore comes my Brother Mountague:
Attend me Lords, the proud insulting
Queene,
With Clifford, and the haught Northumberland,
And of their
Feather, many moe proud Birds,
Haue wrought the easie-melting King, like
Wax.
He swore consent to your Succession,
His Oath enrolled in the
Parliament.
And now to London all the crew are gone,
To frustrate both his
Oath, and what beside
May make against the house of Lancaster.
Their power
(I thinke) is thirty thousand strong:
Now, if the helpe of Norfolke, and my
selfe,
With all the Friends that thou braue Earle of March,
Among'st the
louing Welshmen can'st procure,
Will but amount to fiue and twenty
thousand,
Why Via, to London will we march,
And once againe, bestride our
foaming Steeds,
And once againe cry Charge vpon our Foes,
But neuer once
againe turne backe and flye
Rich. I, now me thinks I heare great Warwick speak;
Ne're may
he liue to see a Sun-shine day,
That cries Retire, if Warwicke bid him
stay
Ed. Lord Warwicke, on thy shoulder will I leane,
And when
thou failst (as God forbid the houre)
Must Edward fall, which perill heauen
forefend
War. No longer Earle of March, but Duke of Yorke:
The next
degree, is Englands Royall Throne:
For King of England shalt thou be
proclaim'd
In euery Burrough as we passe along,
And he that throwes not vp
his cap for ioy,
Shall for the Fault make forfeit of his head.
King
Edward, valiant Richard Mountague:
Stay we no longer, dreaming of
Renowne.
But sound the Trumpets, and about our Taske
Rich. Then Clifford, were thy heart as hard as Steele,
As
thou hast shewne it flintie by thy deeds,
I come to pierce it, or to giue
thee mine
Ed. Then strike vp Drums, God and S[aint]. George for
vs.
Enter a Messenger.
War. How now? what newes?
Mes. The Duke of Norfolke sends
you word by me,
The Queene is comming with a puissant Hoast,
And craues
your company, for speedy counsell
War. Why then it sorts, braue Warriors, let's away.
Exeunt. Omnes.
Flourish. Enter the King, the Queene, Clifford, Northum[berland]
and
Yong
Prince, with Drumme and Trumpettes.
Qu. Welcome my Lord, to this braue town of Yorke,
Yonders the head
of that Arch-enemy,
That sought to be incompast with your Crowne.
Doth not
the obiect cheere your heart, my Lord
K. I, as the rockes cheare them that feare their wrack,
To
see this sight, it irkes my very soule:
With-hold reuenge (deere God) 'tis
not my fault,
Nor wittingly haue I infring'd my Vow
Clif. My gracious Liege, this too much lenity
And harmfull
pitty must be layd aside:
To whom do Lyons cast their gentle Lookes?
Not
to the Beast, that would vsurpe their Den.
Whose hand is that the Forrest
Beare doth licke?
Not his that spoyles her yong before her face.
Who
scapes the lurking Serpents mortall sting?
Not he that sets his foot vpon her
backe.
The smallest Worme will turne, being troden on,
And Doues will
pecke in safegard of their Brood.
Ambitious Yorke, did leuell at thy
Crowne,
Thou smiling, while he knit his angry browes.
He but a Duke, would
haue his Sonne a King,
And raise his issue like a louing Sire.
Thou being
a King, blest with a goodly sonne,
Did'st yeeld consent to disinherit
him:
Which argued thee a most vnlouing Father.
Vnreasonable Creatures feed
their young,
And though mans face be fearefull to their eyes,
Yet in
protection of their tender ones,
Who hath not seene them euen with those
wings,
Which sometime they haue vs'd with fearfull flight,
Make warre with
him that climb'd vnto their nest,
Offering their owne liues in their yongs
defence?
For shame, my Liege, make them your President:
Were it not pitty
that this goodly Boy
Should loose his Birth-right by his Fathers
fault,
And long heereafter say vnto his childe,
What my great Grandfather,
and Grandsire got,
My carelesse Father fondly gaue away.
Ah, what a shame
were this? Looke on the Boy,
And let his manly face, which
promiseth
Successefull Fortune steele thy melting heart,
To hold thine
owne, and leaue thine owne with him
King. Full well hath Clifford plaid the Orator,
Inferring
arguments of mighty force:
But Clifford tell me, did'st thou neuer
heare,
That things ill got, had euer bad successe.
And happy alwayes was
it for that Sonne,
Whose Father for his hoording went to hell:
Ile leaue
my Sonne my Vertuous deeds behinde,
And would my Father had left me no
more:
For all the rest is held at such a Rate,
As brings a thousand fold
more care to keepe,
Then in possession any iot of pleasure.
Ah Cosin
Yorke, would thy best Friends did know,
How it doth greeue me that thy head
is heere
Qu. My Lord cheere vp your spirits, our foes are nye,
And
this soft courage makes your Followers faint:
You promist Knighthood to our
forward sonne,
Vnsheath your sword, and dub him presently.
Edward, kneele
downe
King. Edward Plantagenet, arise a Knight,
And learne this
Lesson; Draw thy Sword in right
Prin. My gracious Father, by your Kingly leaue,
Ile draw it
as Apparant to the Crowne,
And in that quarrell, vse it to the death
Clif. Why that is spoken like a toward Prince.
Enter a
Messenger.
Mess. Royall Commanders, be in readinesse,
For with a Band of
thirty thousand men,
Comes Warwicke backing of the Duke of Yorke,
And in
the Townes as they do march along,
Proclaimes him King, and many flye to
him,
Darraigne your battell, for they are at hand
Clif. I would your Highnesse would depart the field,
The
Queene hath best successe when you are absent
Qu. I good my Lord, and leaue vs to our Fortune
King. Why, that's my fortune too, therefore Ile stay
North. Be it with resolution then to fight
Prin. My Royall Father, cheere these Noble Lords,
And hearten
those that fight in your defence:
Vnsheath your Sword, good Father: Cry
S[aint]. George.
March. Enter Edward, Warwicke, Richard, Clarence, Norfolke,
Mountague,
and
Soldiers.
Edw. Now periur'd Henry, wilt thou kneel for grace?
And set thy
Diadem vpon my head?
Or bide the mortall Fortune of the field
Qu. Go rate thy Minions, proud insulting Boy,
Becomes it thee
to be thus bold in termes,
Before thy Soueraigne, and thy lawfull
King?
Ed. I am his King, and he should bow his knee:
I was adopted
Heire by his consent
Cla. Since when, his Oath is broke: for as I heare,
You that
are King, though he do weare the Crowne,
Haue caus'd him by new Act of
Parliament,
To blot out me, and put his owne Sonne in
Clif. And reason too,
Who should succeede the Father, but the
Sonne
Rich. Are you there Butcher? O, I cannot speake
Clif. I Crooke-back, here I stand to answer thee,
Or any he,
the proudest of thy sort
Rich. 'Twas you that kill'd yong Rutland, was it not?
Clif. I, and old Yorke, and yet not satisfied
Rich. For Gods sake Lords giue signall to the fight
War. What say'st thou Henry,
Wilt thou yeeld the
Crowne?
Qu. Why how now long-tongu'd Warwicke, dare you speak?
When
you and I, met at S[aint]. Albons last,
Your legges did better seruice then
your hands
War. Then 'twas my turne to fly, and now 'tis thine:
Clif. You said so much before, and yet you fled
War. 'Twas not your valor Clifford droue me thence
Nor. No, nor your manhood that durst make you stay
Rich. Northumberland, I hold thee reuerently,
Breake off the
parley, for scarse I can refraine
The execution of my big-swolne
heart
Vpon that Clifford, that cruell Child-killer
Clif. I slew thy Father, cal'st thou him a Child?
Rich. I like a Dastard, and a treacherous Coward,
As thou didd'st kill our
tender Brother Rutland,
But ere Sunset, Ile make thee curse the deed
King. Haue done with words (my Lords) and heare
me speake
Qu. Defie them then, or els hold close thy lips
King. I prythee giue no limits to my Tongue,
I am a King, and
priuiledg'd to speake
Clif. My Liege, the wound that bred this meeting here,
Cannot
be cur'd by Words, therefore be still
Rich. Then Executioner vnsheath thy sword:
By him that made
vs all, I am resolu'd,
That Cliffords Manhood, lyes vpon his tongue
Ed. Say Henry, shall I haue my right, or no:
A thousand men
haue broke their Fasts to day,
That ne're shall dine, vnlesse thou yeeld the
Crowne
War. If thou deny, their Blood vpon thy head,
For Yorke in
iustice put's his Armour on
Pr.Ed. If that be right, which Warwick saies is right,
There
is no wrong, but euery thing is right
War. Who euer got thee, there thy Mother stands,
For well I
wot, thou hast thy Mothers tongue
Qu. But thou art neyther like thy Sire nor Damme,
But like a
foule mishapen Stygmaticke,
Mark'd by the Destinies to be auoided,
As
venome Toades, or Lizards dreadfull stings
Rich. Iron of Naples, hid with English gilt,
Whose Father
beares the Title of a King,
(As if a Channell should be call'd the
Sea)
Sham'st thou not, knowing whence thou art extraught,
To let thy
tongue detect thy base-borne heart
Ed. A wispe of straw were worth a thousand Crowns,
To make
this shamelesse Callet know her selfe:
Helen of Greece was fayrer farre then
thou,
Although thy Husband may be Menelaus;
And ne're was Agamemnons
Brother wrong'd
By that false Woman, as this King by thee.
His Father
reuel'd in the heart of France,
And tam'd the King, and made the Dolphin
stoope:
And had he match'd according to his State,
He might haue kept that
glory to this day.
But when he tooke a begger to his bed,
And grac'd thy
poore Sire with his Bridall day,
Euen then that Sun-shine brew'd a showre for
him,
That washt his Fathers fortunes forth of France,
And heap'd sedition
on his Crowne at home:
For what hath broach'd this tumult but thy
Pride?
Had'st thou bene meeke, our Title still had slept,
And we in pitty
of the Gentle King,
Had slipt our Claime, vntill another Age
Cla. But when we saw, our Sunshine made thy Spring,
And that
thy Summer bred vs no increase,
We set the Axe to thy vsurping Roote:
And
though the edge hath something hit our selues,
Yet know thou, since we haue
begun to strike,
Wee'l neuer leaue, till we haue hewne thee downe,
Or
bath'd thy growing, with our heated bloods
Edw. And in this resolution, I defie thee,
Not willing any
longer Conference,
Since thou denied'st the gentle King to speake.
Sound
Trumpets, let our bloody Colours waue,
And either Victorie, or else a
Graue
Qu. Stay Edward
Ed. No wrangling Woman, wee'l no longer stay,
These words
will cost ten thousand liues this day.
Exeunt. omnes.
Alarum. Excursions. Enter Warwicke.
War. Fore-spent with Toile, as Runners with a Race,
I lay me downe
a little while to breath:
For strokes receiu'd, and many blowes
repaid,
Haue robb'd my strong knit sinewes of their strength,
And spight
of spight, needs must I rest a-while.
Enter Edward running.
Ed. Smile gentle heauen, or strike vngentle death,
For this world
frownes, and Edwards Sunne is clowded
War. How now my Lord, what happe? what hope of
good?
Enter
Clarence
Cla. Our hap is losse, our hope but sad dispaire,
Our rankes
are broke, and ruine followes vs.
What counsaile giue you? whether shall we
flye?
Ed. Bootlesse is flight, they follow vs with Wings,
And weake
we are, and cannot shun pursuite.
Enter Richard.
Rich. Ah Warwicke, why hast y withdrawn thy selfe?
Thy Brothers
blood the thirsty earth hath drunk,
Broach'd with the Steely point of
Cliffords Launce:
And in the very pangs of death, he cryde,
Like to a
dismall Clangor heard from farre,
Warwicke, reuenge; Brother, reuenge my
death.
So vnderneath the belly of their Steeds,
That stain'd their
Fetlockes in his smoaking blood,
The Noble Gentleman gaue vp the ghost
War. Then let the earth be drunken with our blood:
Ile kill
my Horse, because I will not flye:
Why stand we like soft-hearted women
heere,
Wayling our losses, whiles the Foe doth Rage,
And looke vpon, as if
the Tragedie
Were plaid in iest, by counterfetting Actors.
Heere on my
knee, I vow to God aboue,
Ile neuer pawse againe, neuer stand still,
Till
either death hath clos'd these eyes of mine,
Or Fortune giuen me measure of
Reuenge
Ed. Oh Warwicke, I do bend my knee with thine,
And in this
vow do chaine my soule to thine:
And ere my knee rise from the Earths cold
face,
I throw my hands, mine eyes, my heart to thee,
Thou setter vp, and
plucker downe of Kings:
Beseeching thee (if with thy will it stands)
That
to my Foes this body must be prey,
Yet that thy brazen gates of heauen may
ope,
And giue sweet passage to my sinfull soule.
Now Lords, take leaue
vntill we meete againe,
Where ere it be, in heauen, or in earth
Rich. Brother,
Giue me thy hand, and gentle Warwicke,
Let
me imbrace thee in my weary armes:
I that did neuer weepe, now melt with
wo,
That Winter should cut off our Spring-time so
War. Away, away:
Once more sweet Lords farwell
Cla. Yet let vs altogether to our Troopes,
And giue them
leaue to flye, that will not stay:
And call them Pillars that will stand to
vs:
And if we thriue, promise them such rewards
As Victors weare at the
Olympian Games.
This may plant courage in their quailing breasts,
For yet
is hope of Life and Victory:
Foreslow no longer, make we hence amaine.
Exeunt.
Excursions. Enter Richard and Clifford.
Rich. Now Clifford, I haue singled thee alone,
Suppose this arme is
for the Duke of Yorke,
And this for Rutland, both bound to reuenge,
Wer't
thou inuiron'd with a Brazen wall
Clif. Now Richard, I am with thee heere alone,
This is the
hand that stabb'd thy Father Yorke,
And this the hand, that slew thy Brother
Rutland,
And here's the heart, that triumphs in their death,
And cheeres
these hands, that slew thy Sire and Brother,
To execute the like vpon thy
selfe,
And so haue at thee.
They Fight, Warwicke comes, Clifford
flies.
Rich. Nay Warwicke, single out some other Chace,
For I my selfe
will hunt this Wolfe to death.
Exeunt.
Alarum. Enter King Henry alone.
Hen. This battell fares like to the mornings Warre,
When dying
clouds contend, with growing light,
What time the Shepheard blowing of his
nailes,
Can neither call it perfect day, nor night.
Now swayes it this
way, like a Mighty Sea,
Forc'd by the Tide, to combat with the Winde:
Now
swayes it that way, like the selfe-same Sea,
Forc'd to retyre by furie of the
Winde.
Sometime, the Flood preuailes; and than the Winde:
Now, one the
better: then, another best;
Both tugging to be Victors, brest to
brest:
Yet neither Conqueror, nor Conquered.
So is the equall poise of
this fell Warre.
Heere on this Mole-hill will I sit me downe,
To whom God
will, there be the Victorie:
For Margaret my Queene, and Clifford too
Haue
chid me from the Battell: Swearing both,
They prosper best of all when I am
thence.
Would I were dead, if Gods good will were so;
For what is in this
world, but Greefe and Woe.
Oh God! me thinkes it were a happy life,
To be
no better then a homely Swaine,
To sit vpon a hill, as I do now,
To carue
out Dialls queintly, point by point,
Thereby to see the Minutes how they
runne:
How many makes the Houre full compleate,
How many Houres brings
about the Day,
How many Dayes will finish vp the Yeare,
How many Yeares, a
Mortall man may liue.
When this is knowne, then to diuide the Times:
So
many Houres, must I tend my Flocke;
So many Houres, must I take my
Rest:
So many Houres, must I Contemplate:
So many Houres, must I Sport my
selfe:
So many Dayes, my Ewes haue bene with yong:
So many weekes, ere the
poore Fooles will Eane:
So many yeares, ere I shall sheere the Fleece:
So
Minutes, Houres, Dayes, Monthes, and Yeares,
Past ouer to the end they were
created,
Would bring white haires, vnto a Quiet graue.
Ah! what a life
were this? How sweet? how louely?
Giues not the Hawthorne bush a sweeter
shade
To Shepheards, looking on their silly Sheepe,
Then doth a rich
Imbroider'd Canopie
To Kings, that feare their Subiects treacherie?
Oh
yes, it doth; a thousand fold it doth.
And to conclude, the Shepherds homely
Curds,
His cold thinne drinke out of his Leather Bottle,
His wonted
sleepe, vnder a fresh trees shade,
All which secure, and sweetly he
enioyes,
Is farre beyond a Princes Delicates:
His Viands sparkling in a
Golden Cup,
His bodie couched in a curious bed,
When Care, Mistrust, and
Treason waits on him.
Alarum. Enter a Sonne that hath kill'd his Father, at one doore:
and
a
Father that hath kill'd his Sonne at another doore.
Son. Ill blowes the winde that profits no body,
This man whom hand
to hand I slew in fight,
May be possessed with some store of Crownes,
And
I that (haply) take them from him now,
May yet (ere night) yeeld both my Life
and them
To some man else, as this dead man doth me.
Who's this? Oh God!
It is my Fathers face,
Whom in this Conflict, I (vnwares) haue kill'd:
Oh
heauy times! begetting such Euents.
From London, by the King was I prest
forth,
My Father being the Earle of Warwickes man,
Came on the part of
Yorke, prest by his Master:
And I, who at his hands receiu'd my life,
Haue
by my hands, of Life bereaued him.
Pardon me God, I knew not what I
did:
And pardon Father, for I knew not thee.
My Teares shall wipe away
these bloody markes:
And no more words, till they haue flow'd their fill
King. O pitteous spectacle! O bloody Times!
Whiles Lyons
Warre, and battaile for their Dennes,
Poore harmlesse Lambes abide their
enmity.
Weepe wretched man: Ile ayde thee Teare for Teare,
And let our
hearts and eyes, like Ciuill Warre,
Be blinde with teares, and break
ore-charg'd with griefe
Enter Father, bearing of his Sonne.
Fa. Thou that so stoutly hath resisted me,
Giue me thy Gold, if
thou hast any Gold:
For I haue bought it with an hundred blowes.
But let
me see: Is this our Foe-mans face?
Ah, no, no, no, it is mine onely
Sonne.
Ah Boy, if any life be left in thee,
Throw vp thine eye: see, see,
what showres arise,
Blowne with the windie Tempest of my heart,
Vpon thy
wounds, that killes mine Eye, and Heart.
O pitty God, this miserable
Age!
What Stratagems? how fell? how Butcherly?
Erreoneous, mutinous, and
vnnaturall,
This deadly quarrell daily doth beget?
O Boy! thy Father gaue
thee life too soone,
And hath bereft thee of thy life too late
King. Wo aboue wo: greefe, more the[n] common greefe
O that
my death would stay these ruthfull deeds:
O pitty, pitty, gentle heauen
pitty:
The Red Rose and the White are on his face,
The fatall Colours of
our striuing Houses:
The one, his purple Blood right well resembles,
The
other his pale Cheekes (me thinkes) presenteth:
Wither one Rose, and let the
other flourish:
If you contend, a thousand liues must wither
Son. How will my Mother, for a Fathers death
Take on with me,
and ne're be satisfi'd?
Fa. How will my Wife, for slaughter of my
Sonne,
Shed seas of Teares, and ne're be satisfi'd?
King. How will
the Country, for these woful chances,
Mis-thinke the King, and not be
satisfied?
Son. Was euer sonne, so rew'd a Fathers death?
Fath. Was euer Father so bemoan'd his Sonne?
Hen. Was euer King so
greeu'd for Subiects woe?
Much is your sorrow; Mine, ten times so much
Son. Ile beare thee hence, where I may weepe my fill
Fath. These armes of mine shall be thy winding sheet:
My
heart (sweet Boy) shall be thy Sepulcher,
For from my heart, thine Image
ne're shall go.
My sighing brest, shall be thy Funerall bell;
And so
obsequious will thy Father be,
Men for the losse of thee, hauing no
more,
As Priam was for all his Valiant Sonnes,
Ile beare thee hence, and
let them fight that will,
For I haue murthered where I should not kill.
Exit
Hen. Sad-hearted-men, much ouergone with Care;
Heere sits a King,
more wofull then you are.
Alarums. Excursions. Enter the Queen, the Prince, and Exeter.
Prin. Fly Father, flye: for all your Friends are fled.
And Warwicke
rages like a chafed Bull:
Away, for death doth hold vs in pursuite
Qu. Mount you my Lord, towards Barwicke post amaine:
Edward
and Richard like a brace of Grey-hounds,
Hauing the fearfull flying Hare in
sight,
With fiery eyes, sparkling for very wrath,
And bloody steele graspt
in their yrefull hands
Are at our backes, and therefore hence amaine
Exet. Away: for vengeance comes along with them.
Nay, stay
not to expostulate, make speed,
Or else come after, Ile away before
Hen. Nay take me with thee, good sweet Exeter:
Not that I
feare to stay, but loue to go
Whether the Queene intends. Forward, away.
Exeunt.
A lowd alarum. Enter Clifford Wounded.
Clif. Heere burnes my Candle out; I, heere it dies,
Which whiles it
lasted, gaue King Henry light.
O Lancaster! I feare thy ouerthrow,
More
then my Bodies parting with my Soule:
My Loue and Feare, glew'd many Friends
to thee,
And now I fall. Thy tough Commixtures melts,
Impairing Henry,
strength'ning misproud Yorke;
And whether flye the Gnats, but to the
Sunne?
And who shines now, but Henries Enemies?
O Phoebus! had'st thou
neuer giuen consent,
That Phæton should checke thy fiery Steeds,
Thy
burning Carre neuer had scorch'd the earth.
And Henry, had'st thou sway'd as
Kings should do,
Or as thy Father, and his Father did,
Giuing no ground
vnto the house of Yorke,
They neuer then had sprung like Sommer Flyes:
I,
and ten thousand in this lucklesse Realme,
Had left no mourning Widdowes for
our death,
And thou this day, had'st kept thy Chaire in peace.
For what
doth cherrish Weeds, but gentle ayre?
And what makes Robbers bold, but too
much lenity?
Bootlesse are Plaints, and Curelesse are my Wounds:
No way to
flye, no strength to hold out flight:
The Foe is mercilesse, and will not
pitty:
For at their hands I haue deseru'd no pitty.
The ayre hath got into
my deadly Wounds,
And much effuse of blood, doth make me faint:
Come
Yorke, and Richard, Warwicke, and the rest,
I stab'd your Fathers bosomes;
Split my brest.
Alarum & Retreat. Enter Edward, Warwicke, Richard, and
Soldiers,
Montague,
& Clarence.
Ed. Now breath we Lords, good fortune bids vs pause,
And smooth the
frownes of War, with peacefull lookes:
Some Troopes pursue the bloody-minded
Queene,
That led calme Henry, though he were a King,
As doth a Saile,
fill'd with a fretting Gust
Command an Argosie to stemme the Waues.
But
thinke you (Lords) that Clifford fled with them?
War. No, 'tis
impossible he should escape:
(For though before his face I speake the
words)
Your Brother Richard markt him for the Graue.
And wheresoere he is,
hee's surely dead.
Clifford grones
Rich. Whose soule is that which takes hir heauy leaue?
A deadly
grone, like life and deaths departing.
See who it is
Ed. And now the Battailes ended,
If Friend or Foe, let him be
gently vsed
Rich. Reuoke that doome of mercy, for 'tis Clifford,
Who not
contented that he lopp'd the Branch
In hewing Rutland, when his leaues put
forth,
But set his murth'ring knife vnto the Roote,
From whence that
tender spray did sweetly spring,
I meane our Princely Father, Duke of
Yorke
War. From off the gates of Yorke, fetch down y head,
Your
Fathers head, which Clifford placed there:
In stead whereof, let this supply
the roome,
Measure for measure, must be answered
Ed. Bring forth that fatall Schreechowle to our house,
That
nothing sung but death, to vs and ours:
Now death shall stop his dismall
threatning sound,
And his ill-boading tongue, no more shall speake
War. I thinke his vnderstanding is bereft:
Speake Clifford,
dost thou know who speakes to thee?
Darke cloudy death ore-shades his beames
of life,
And he nor sees, nor heares vs, what we say
Rich. O would he did, and so (perhaps) he doth,
'Tis but his
policy to counterfet,
Because he would auoid such bitter taunts
Which in
the time of death he gaue our Father
Cla. If so thou think'st,
Vex him with eager Words
Rich. Clifford, aske mercy, and obtaine no grace
Ed. Clifford, repent in bootlesse penitence
War. Clifford, deuise excuses for thy faults
Cla. While we deuise fell Tortures for thy faults
Rich. Thou didd'st loue Yorke, and I am son to Yorke
Edw. Thou pittied'st Rutland, I will pitty thee
Cla. Where's Captaine Margaret, to fence you now?
War.
They mocke thee Clifford,
Sweare as thou was't wont
Ric. What, not an Oath? Nay then the world go's hard
When
Clifford cannot spare his Friends an oath:
I know by that he's dead, and by
my Soule,
If this right hand would buy two houres life,
That I (in all
despight) might rayle at him,
This hand should chop it off: & with the
issuing Blood
Stifle the Villaine, whose vnstanched thirst
Yorke, and yong
Rutland could not satisfie
War. I, but he's dead. Of with the Traitors
head,
And reare it in the place your Fathers stands.
And now to London
with Triumphant march,
There to be crowned Englands Royall King:
From
whence, shall Warwicke cut the Sea to France,
And aske the Ladie Bona for thy
Queene:
So shalt thou sinow both these Lands together,
And hauing France
thy Friend, thou shalt not dread
The scattred Foe, that hopes to rise
againe:
For though they cannot greatly sting to hurt,
Yet looke to haue
them buz to offend thine eares:
First, will I see the Coronation,
And then
to Britanny Ile crosse the Sea,
To effect this marriage, so it please my
Lord
Ed. Euen as thou wilt sweet Warwicke, let it bee:
For in thy
shoulder do I builde my Seate;
And neuer will I vndertake the
thing
Wherein thy counsaile and consent is wanting:
Richard, I will create
thee Duke of Gloucester,
And George of Clarence; Warwicke as our
Selfe,
Shall do, and vndo as him pleaseth best
Rich. Let me be Duke of Clarence, George of Gloster,
For
Glosters Dukedome is too ominous
War. Tut, that's a foolish obseruation:
Richard, be Duke of
Gloster: Now to London,
To see these Honors in possession.
Exeunt.
Enter Sinklo, and Humfrey, with Crosse-bowes in their hands.
Sink. Vnder this thicke growne brake, wee'l shrowd our selues:
For
through this Laund anon the Deere will come,
And in this couert will we make
our Stand,
Culling the principall of all the Deere
Hum. Ile stay aboue the hill, so both may shoot
Sink. That cannot be, the noise of thy Crosse-bow
Will scarre
the Heard, and so my shoot is lost:
Heere stand we both, and ayme we at the
best:
And for the time shall not seeme tedious,
Ile tell thee what befell
me on a day,
In this selfe-place, where now we meane to stand
Sink. Heere comes a man, let's stay till he be past:
Enter
the King with a Prayer booke.
Hen. From Scotland am I stolne euen of pure loue,
To greet mine
owne Land with my wishfull sight:
No Harry, Harry, 'tis no Land of
thine,
Thy place is fill'd, thy Scepter wrung from thee,
Thy Balme washt
off, wherewith thou was Annointed:
No bending knee will call thee Cæsar
now,
No humble suters prease to speake for right:
No, not a man comes for
redresse of thee:
For how can I helpe them, and not my selfe?
Sink.
I, heere's a Deere, whose skin's a Keepers Fee:
This is the quondam King;
Let's seize vpon him
Hen. Let me embrace the sower Aduersaries,
For Wise men say,
it is the wisest course
Hum. Why linger we? Let vs lay hands vpon him
Sink. Forbeare a-while, wee'l heare a little more
Hen. My Queene and Son are gone to France for aid:
And (as I
heare) the great Commanding Warwicke
I: thither gone, to craue the French
Kings Sister
To wife for Edward. If this newes be true,
Poore Queene, and
Sonne, your labour is but lost:
For Warwicke is a subtle Orator:
And Lewis
a Prince soone wonne with mouing words:
By this account then, Margaret may
winne him,
For she's a woman to be pittied much:
Her sighes will make a
batt'ry in his brest,
Her teares will pierce into a Marble heart:
The
Tyger will be milde, whiles she doth mourne;
And Nero will be tainted with
remorse,
To heare and see her plaints, her Brinish Teares.
I, but shee's
come to begge, Warwicke to giue:
Shee on his left side, crauing ayde for
Henrie;
He on his right, asking a wife for Edward.
Shee Weepes, and sayes,
her Henry is depos'd:
He Smiles, and sayes, his Edward is instaul'd;
That
she (poore Wretch) for greefe can speake no more:
Whiles Warwicke tels his
Title, smooths the Wrong,
Inferreth arguments of mighty strength,
And in
conclusion winnes the King from her,
With promise of his Sister, and what
else,
To strengthen and support King Edwards place.
O Margaret, thus
'twill be, and thou (poore soule)
Art then forsaken, as thou went'st
forlorne
Hum. Say, what art thou talk'st of Kings & Queens?
King. More then I seeme, and lesse then I was born to:
A man at least, for
lesse I should not be:
And men may talke of Kings, and why not I?
Hum. I, but thou talk'st, as if thou wer't a King
King. Why so I am (in Minde) and that's enough
Hum. But if thou be a King, where is thy Crowne?
King.
My Crowne is in my heart, not on my head:
Not deck'd with Diamonds, and
Indian stones:
Nor to be seene: my Crowne, is call'd Content,
A Crowne it
is, that sildome Kings enioy
Hum. Well, if you be a King crown'd with Content,
Your Crowne
Content, and you, must be contented
To go along with vs. For (as we
thinke)
You are the king King Edward hath depos'd:
And we his subiects,
sworne in all Allegeance,
Will apprehend you, as his Enemie
King. But did you neuer sweare, and breake an Oath
Hum. No, neuer such an Oath, nor will not now
King. Where did you dwell when I was K[ing]. of
England?
Hum. Heere in this Country, where we now remaine
King. I was annointed King at nine monthes old,
My Father,
and my Grandfather were Kings:
And you were sworne true Subiects vnto
me:
And tell me then, haue you not broke your Oathes?
Sin. No, for
we were Subiects, but while you wer king
King. Why? Am I dead? Do I
not breath a Man?
Ah simple men, you know not what you sweare:
Looke, as I
blow this Feather from my Face,
And as the Ayre blowes it to me
againe,
Obeying with my winde when I do blow,
And yeelding to another,
when it blowes,
Commanded alwayes by the greater gust:
Such is the
lightnesse of you, common men.
But do not breake your Oathes, for of that
sinne,
My milde intreatie shall not make you guiltie.
Go where you will,
the king shall be commanded,
And be you kings, command, and Ile obey
Sinklo. We are true Subiects to the king,
King Edward
King. So would you be againe to Henrie,
If he were seated as
king Edward is
Sinklo. We charge you in Gods name & the Kings,
To go
with vs vnto the Officers
King. In Gods name lead, your Kings name be obeyd,
And what
God will, that let your King performe.
And what he will, I humbly yeeld
vnto.
Exeunt.
Enter K[ing]. Edward, Gloster, Clarence, Lady Gray.
King. Brother of Gloster, at S[aint]. Albons field
This Ladyes
Husband, Sir Richard Grey, was slaine,
His Land then seiz'd on by the
Conqueror,
Her suit is now, to repossesse those Lands,
Which wee in
Iustice cannot well deny,
Because in Quarrell of the House of Yorke,
The
worthy Gentleman did lose his Life
Rich. Your Highnesse shall doe well to graunt her suit:
It
were dishonor to deny it her
King. It were no lesse, but yet Ile make a pawse
Rich. Yea, is it so:
I see the Lady hath a thing to
graunt,
Before the King will graunt her humble suit
Clarence. Hee knowes the Game, how true hee keepes
the
winde?
Rich. Silence
King. Widow, we will consider of your suit,
And come some
other time to know our minde
Wid. Right gracious Lord, I cannot brooke delay:
May it
please your Highnesse to resolue me now,
And what your pleasure is, shall
satisfie me
Rich. I Widow? then Ile warrant you all your Lands,
And if
what pleases him, shall pleasure you:
Fight closer, or good faith you'le
catch a Blow
Clarence. I feare her not, vnlesse she chance to fall
Rich. God forbid that, for hee'le take vantages
King. How many Children hast thou, Widow? tell
me
Clarence. I thinke he meanes to begge a Child of her
Rich. Nay then whip me: hee'le rather giue her two
Wid. Three, my most gracious Lord
Rich. You shall haue foure, if you'le be rul'd by him
King. 'Twere pittie they should lose their Fathers
Lands
Wid. Be pittifull, dread Lord, and graunt it then
King. Lords giue vs leaue, Ile trye this Widowes
wit
Rich. I, good leaue haue you, for you will haue leaue,
Till
Youth take leaue, and leaue you to the Crutch
King. Now tell me, Madame, doe you loue
your
Children?
Wid. I, full as dearely as I loue my selfe
King. And would you not doe much to doe them
good?
Wid. To doe them good, I would sustayne some
harme
King. Then get your Husbands Lands, to doe them
good
Wid. Therefore I came vnto your Maiestie
King. Ile tell you how these Lands are to be got
Wid. So shall you bind me to your Highnesse seruice
King. What seruice wilt thou doe me, if I giue them?
Wid. What you command, that rests in me to doe
King. But you will take exceptions to my Boone
Wid. No, gracious Lord, except I cannot doe it
King. I, but thou canst doe what I meane to aske
Wid. Why then I will doe what your Grace commands
Rich. Hee plyes her hard, and much Raine weares
the
Marble
Clar. As red as fire? nay then, her Wax must melt
Wid. Why stoppes my Lord? shall I not heare
my
Taske?
King. An easie Taske, 'tis but to loue a King
Wid. That's soone perform'd, because I am a Subiect
King. Why then, thy Husbands Lands I freely giue
thee
Wid. I take my leaue with many thousand thankes
Rich. The Match is made, shee seales it with a Cursie
King. But stay thee, 'tis the fruits of loue I meane
Wid. The fruits of Loue, I meane, my louing Liege
King. I, but I feare me in another sence.
What Loue, think'st
thou, I sue so much to get?
Wid. My loue till death, my humble thanks,
my prayers,
That loue which Vertue begges, and Vertue graunts
King. No, by my troth, I did not meane such loue
Wid. Why then you meane not, as I thought you did
King. But now you partly may perceiue my minde
Wid. My minde will neuer graunt what I perceiue
Your
Highnesse aymes at, if I ayme aright
King. To tell thee plaine, I ayme to lye with thee
Wid. To tell you plaine, I had rather lye in Prison
King. Why then thou shalt not haue thy Husbands
Lands
Wid. Why then mine Honestie shall be my Dower,
For by that
losse, I will not purchase them
King. Therein thou wrong'st thy Children mightily
Wid. Herein your Highnesse wrongs both them & me:
But
mightie Lord, this merry inclination
Accords not with the sadnesse of my
suit:
Please you dismisse me, eyther with I, or no
King. I, if thou wilt say I to my request:
No, if thou do'st
say No to my demand
Wid. Then No, my Lord: my suit is at an end
Rich. The Widow likes him not, shee knits her
Browes
Clarence. Hee is the bluntest Wooer in Christendome
King. Her Looks doth argue her replete with Modesty,
Her
Words doth shew her Wit incomparable,
All her perfections challenge
Soueraigntie,
One way, or other, shee is for a King,
And shee shall be my
Loue, or else my Queene.
Say, that King Edward take thee for his
Queene?
Wid. 'Tis better said then done, my gracious Lord:
I am a
subiect fit to ieast withall,
But farre vnfit to be a Soueraigne
King. Sweet Widow, by my State I sweare to thee,
I speake no
more then what my Soule intends,
And that is, to enioy thee for my Loue
Wid. And that is more then I will yeeld vnto:
I know, I am
too meane to be your Queene,
And yet too good to be your Concubine
King. You cauill, Widow, I did meane my Queene
Wid. 'Twill grieue your Grace, my Sonnes should call
you
Father
King. No more, then when my Daughters
Call thee
Mother.
Thou art a Widow, and thou hast some Children,
And by Gods Mother,
I being but a Batchelor,
Haue other-some. Why, 'tis a happy thing,
To be
the Father vnto many Sonnes:
Answer no more, for thou shalt be my Queene
Rich. The Ghostly Father now hath done his Shrift
Clarence. When hee was made a Shriuer, 'twas for shift
King. Brothers, you muse what Chat wee two haue
had
Rich. The Widow likes it not, for shee lookes very
sad
King. You'ld thinke it strange, if I should marrie
her
Clarence. To who, my Lord?
King. Why Clarence, to my
selfe
Rich. That would be tenne dayes wonder at the least
Clarence. That's a day longer then a Wonder lasts
Rich. By so much is the Wonder in extremes
King. Well, ieast on Brothers: I can tell you both,
Her suit
is graunted for her Husbands Lands.
Enter a Noble man
Nob. My gracious Lord, Henry your Foe is taken,
And brought
your Prisoner to your Pallace Gate
King. See that he be conuey'd vnto the Tower:
And goe wee
Brothers to the man that tooke him,
To question of his apprehension.
Widow
goe you along: Lords vse her honourable.
Exeunt.
Manet Richard.
Rich. I, Edward will vse Women honourably:
Would he were wasted,
Marrow, Bones, and all,
That from his Loynes no hopefull Branch may
spring,
To crosse me from the Golden time I looke for:
And yet, betweene
my Soules desire, and me,
The lustfull Edwards Title buryed,
Is Clarence,
Henry, and his Sonne young Edward,
And all the vnlook'd-for Issue of their
Bodies,
To take their Roomes, ere I can place my selfe:
A cold
premeditation for my purpose.
Why then I doe but dreame on
Soueraigntie,
Like one that stands vpon a Promontorie,
And spyes a
farre-off shore, where hee would tread,
Wishing his foot were equall with his
eye,
And chides the Sea, that sunders him from thence,
Saying, hee'le lade
it dry, to haue his way:
So doe I wish the Crowne, being so farre off,
And
so I chide the meanes that keepes me from it,
And so (I say) Ile cut the
Causes off,
Flattering me with impossibilities:
My Eyes too quicke, my
Heart o're-weenes too much,
Vnlesse my Hand and Strength could equall
them.
Well, say there is no Kingdome then for Richard:
What other Pleasure
can the World affoord?
Ile make my Heauen in a Ladies Lappe,
And decke my
Body in gay Ornaments,
And 'witch sweet Ladies with my Words and
Lookes.
Oh miserable Thought! and more vnlikely,
Then to accomplish
twentie Golden Crownes.
Why Loue forswore me in my Mothers Wombe:
And for
I should not deale in her soft Lawes,
Shee did corrupt frayle Nature with
some Bribe,
To shrinke mine Arme vp like a wither'd Shrub,
To make an
enuious Mountaine on my Back,
Where sits Deformitie to mocke my Body;
To
shape my Legges of an vnequall size,
To dis-proportion me in euery
part:
Like to a Chaos, or an vn-lick'd Beare-whelpe,
That carryes no
impression like the Damme.
And am I then a man to be belou'd?
Oh monstrous
fault, to harbour such a thought.
Then since this Earth affoords no Ioy to
me,
But to command, to check, to o're-beare such,
As are of better Person
then my selfe:
Ile make my Heauen, to dreame vpon the Crowne,
And whiles I
liue, t' account this World but Hell,
Vntill my mis-shap'd Trunke, that
beares this Head,
Be round impaled with a glorious Crowne.
And yet I know
not how to get the Crowne,
For many Liues stand betweene me and home:
And
I, like one lost in a Thornie Wood,
That rents the Thornes, and is rent with
the Thornes,
Seeking a way, and straying from the way,
Not knowing how to
finde the open Ayre,
But toyling desperately to finde it out,
Torment my
selfe, to catch the English Crowne:
And from that torment I will free my
selfe,
Or hew my way out with a bloody Axe.
Why I can smile, and murther
whiles I smile,
And cry, Content, to that which grieues my Heart,
And wet
my Cheekes with artificiall Teares,
And frame my Face to all
occasions.
Ile drowne more Saylers then the Mermaid shall,
Ile slay more
gazers then the Basiliske,
Ile play the Orator as well as Nestor,
Deceiue
more slyly then Vlisses could,
And like a Synon, take another Troy.
I can
adde Colours to the Camelion,
Change shapes with Proteus, for
aduantages,
And set the murtherous Macheuill to Schoole.
Can I doe this,
and cannot get a Crowne?
Tut, were it farther off, Ile plucke it
downe.
Enter.
Flourish. Enter Lewis the French King, his Sister Bona,
his
Admirall,
call'd Bourbon: Prince Edward, Queene Margaret, and the
Earle of
Oxford.
Lewis sits, and riseth vp againe.
Lewis. Faire Queene of England, worthy Margaret,
Sit downe with vs:
it ill befits thy State,
And Birth, that thou should'st stand, while Lewis
doth sit
Marg. No, mightie King of France: now Margaret
Must strike
her sayle, and learne a while to serue,
Where Kings command. I was (I must
confesse)
Great Albions Queene, in former Golden dayes:
But now mischance
hath trod my Title downe,
And with dis-honor layd me on the ground,
Where
I must take like Seat vnto my fortune,
And to my humble Seat conforme my
selfe
Lewis. Why say, faire Queene, whence springs this
deepe
despaire?
Marg. From such a cause, as fills mine eyes with
teares,
And stops my tongue, while heart is drown'd in cares
Lewis. What ere it be, be thou still like thy selfe,
And sit
thee by our side.
Seats her by him.
Yeeld not thy necke to Fortunes yoake,
But let thy dauntlesse minde still
ride in triumph,
Ouer all mischance.
Be plaine, Queene Margaret, and tell
thy griefe,
It shall be eas'd, if France can yeeld reliefe
Marg. Those gracious words
Reuiue my drooping
thoughts,
And giue my tongue-ty'd sorrowes leaue to speake.
Now therefore
be it knowne to Noble Lewis,
That Henry, sole possessor of my Loue,
Is, of
a King, become a banisht man,
And forc'd to liue in Scotland a
Forlorne;
While prowd ambitious Edward, Duke of Yorke,
Vsurpes the Regall
Title, and the Seat
Of Englands true anoynted lawfull King.
This is the
cause that I, poore Margaret,
With this my Sonne, Prince Edward, Henries
Heire,
Am come to craue thy iust and lawfull ayde:
And if thou faile vs,
all our hope is done.
Scotland hath will to helpe, but cannot helpe:
Our
People, and our Peeres, are both mis-led,
Our Treasure seiz'd, our Souldiors
put to flight,
And (as thou seest) our selues in heauie plight
Lewis. Renowned Queene,
With patience calme the
Storme,
While we bethinke a meanes to breake it off
Marg. The more wee stay, the stronger growes our
Foe
Lewis. The more I stay, the more Ile succour thee
Marg. O, but impatience waiteth on true sorrow.
And see where
comes the breeder of my sorrow.
Enter Warwicke.
Lewis. What's hee approacheth boldly to our presence?
Marg.
Our Earle of Warwicke, Edwards greatest
Friend
Lewis. Welcome braue Warwicke, what brings thee
to
France?
Hee descends. Shee ariseth.
Marg. I now begins a second Storme to rise,
For this is hee that
moues both Winde and Tyde
Warw. From worthy Edward, King of Albion,
My Lord and
Soueraigne, and thy vowed Friend,
I come (in Kindnesse, and vnfayned
Loue)
First, to doe greetings to thy Royall Person,
And then to craue a
League of Amitie:
And lastly, to confirme that Amitie
With Nuptiall Knot,
if thou vouchsafe to graunt
That vertuous Lady Bona, thy faire Sister,
To
Englands King, in lawfull Marriage
Marg. If that goe forward, Henries hope is done
Warw. And gracious Madame,
Speaking to Bona.
In our Kings behalfe,
I am commanded, with your leaue and fauor,
Humbly
to kisse your Hand, and with my Tongue
To tell the passion of my Soueraignes
Heart;
Where Fame, late entring at his heedfull Eares,
Hath plac'd thy
Beauties Image, and thy Vertue
Marg. King Lewis, and Lady Bona, heare me speake,
Before you
answer Warwicke. His demand
Springs not from Edwards well-meant honest
Loue,
But from Deceit, bred by Necessitie:
For how can Tyrants safely
gouerne home,
Vnlesse abroad they purchase great allyance?
To proue him
Tyrant, this reason may suffice,
That Henry liueth still: but were hee
dead,
Yet here Prince Edward stands, King Henries Sonne.
Looke therefore
Lewis, that by this League and Mariage
Thou draw not on thy Danger, and
Dis-honor:
For though Vsurpers sway the rule a while,
Yet Heau'ns are
iust, and Time suppresseth Wrongs
Warw. Iniurious Margaret
Edw. And why not Queene?
Warw. Because thy Father
Henry did vsurpe,
And thou no more art Prince, then shee is Queene
Oxf. Then Warwicke disanulls great Iohn of Gaunt,
Which did
subdue the greatest part of Spaine;
And after Iohn of Gaunt, Henry the
Fourth,
Whose Wisdome was a Mirror to the wisest:
And after that wise
Prince, Henry the Fift,
Who by his Prowesse conquered all France:
From
these, our Henry lineally descends
Warw. Oxford, how haps it in this smooth discourse,
You told
not, how Henry the Sixt hath lost
All that, which Henry the Fift had
gotten:
Me thinkes these Peeres of France should smile at that.
But for
the rest: you tell a Pedigree
Of threescore and two yeeres, a silly
time
To make prescription for a Kingdomes worth
Oxf. Why Warwicke, canst thou speak against thy Liege,
Whom
thou obeyd'st thirtie and six yeeres,
And not bewray thy Treason with a
Blush?
Warw. Can Oxford, that did euer fence the right,
Now buckler
Falsehood with a Pedigree?
For shame leaue Henry, and call Edward King
Oxf. Call him my King, by whose iniurious doome
My elder
Brother, the Lord Aubrey Vere
Was done to death? and more then so, my
Father,
Euen in the downe-fall of his mellow'd yeeres,
When Nature brought
him to the doore of Death?
No Warwicke, no: while Life vpholds this
Arme,
This Arme vpholds the House of Lancaster
Warw. And I the House of Yorke
Lewis. Queene Margaret, Prince Edward, and Oxford,
Vouchsafe
at our request, to stand aside,
While I vse further conference with
Warwicke.
They stand aloofe.
Marg. Heauens graunt, that Warwickes wordes bewitch
him not
Lew. Now Warwicke, tell me euen vpon thy conscience
Is Edward
your true King? for I were loth
To linke with him, that were not lawfull
chosen
Warw. Thereon I pawne my Credit, and mine Honor
Lewis. But is hee gracious in the Peoples eye?
Warw.
The more, that Henry was vnfortunate
Lewis. Then further: all dissembling set aside,
Tell me for
truth, the measure of his Loue
Vnto our Sister Bona
War. Such it seemes,
As may beseeme a Monarch like
himselfe.
My selfe haue often heard him say, and sweare,
That this his
Loue was an externall Plant,
Whereof the Root was fixt in Vertues
ground,
The Leaues and Fruit maintain'd with Beauties Sunne,
Exempt from
Enuy, but not from Disdaine,
Vnlesse the Lady Bona quit his paine
Lewis. Now Sister, let vs heare your firme resolue
Bona. Your graunt, or your denyall, shall be mine.
Yet I
confesse, that often ere this day,
Speaks to War[wicke].
When I haue heard your Kings desert recounted,
Mine eare hath tempted
iudgement to desire
Lewis. Then Warwicke, thus:
Our Sister shall be
Edwards.
And now forthwith shall Articles be drawne,
Touching the Ioynture
that your King must make,
Which with her Dowrie shall be
counter-poys'd:
Draw neere, Queene Margaret, and be a witnesse,
That Bona
shall be Wife to the English King
Pr.Edw. To Edward, but not to the English King
Marg. Deceitfull Warwicke, it was thy deuice,
By this
alliance to make void my suit:
Before thy comming, Lewis was Henries
friend
Lewis. And still is friend to him, and Margaret.
But if your
Title to the Crowne by weake,
As may appeare by Edwards good
successe:
Then 'tis but reason, that I be releas'd
From giuing ayde, which
late I promised.
Yet shall you haue all kindnesse at my hand,
That your
Estate requires, and mine can yeeld
Warw. Henry now liues in Scotland, at his ease;
Where hauing
nothing, nothing can he lose.
And as for you your selfe (our quondam
Queene)
You haue a Father able to maintaine you,
And better 'twere, you
troubled him, then France
Mar. Peace impudent, and shamelesse Warwicke,
Proud setter
vp, and puller downe of Kings,
I will not hence, till with my Talke and
Teares
(Both full of Truth) I make King Lewis behold
Thy slye conueyance,
and thy Lords false loue,
Post blowing a horne Within.
For both of you are Birds of selfe-same Feather
Lewes. Warwicke, this is some poste to vs, or thee.
Enter the
Poste.
Post. My Lord Ambassador,
These Letters are for you.
Speakes to Warwick,
Sent from your Brother Marquesse Montague.
These from our King, vnto your
Maiesty.
To Lewis.
And Madam, these for you:
To Margaret
From whom, I know not.
They all reade their Letters.
Oxf. I like it well, that our faire Queene and Mistris
Smiles at
her newes, while Warwicke frownes at his
Prince Ed. Nay marke how Lewis stampes as he were
netled. I
hope, all's for the best
Lew. Warwicke, what are thy Newes?
And yours, faire
Queene
Mar. Mine such, as fill my heart with vnhop'd ioyes
War. Mine full of sorrow, and hearts discontent
Lew. What? has your King married the Lady Grey?
And now to
sooth your Forgery, and his,
Sends me a Paper to perswade me Patience?
Is
this th' Alliance that he seekes with France?
Dare he presume to scorne vs in
this manner?
Mar. I told your Maiesty as much before:
This proueth
Edwards Loue, and Warwickes honesty
War. King Lewis, I heere protest in sight of heauen,
And by
the hope I haue of heauenly blisse,
That I am cleere from this misdeed of
Edwards;
No more my King, for he dishonors me,
But most himselfe, if he
could see his shame.
Did I forget, that by the House of Yorke
My Father
came vntimely to his death?
Did I let passe th' abuse done to my
Neece?
Did I impale him with the Regall Crowne?
Did I put Henry from his
Natiue Right?
And am I guerdon'd at the last, with Shame?
Shame on
himselfe, for my Desert is Honor.
And to repaire my Honor lost for him,
I
heere renounce him, and returne to Henry.
My Noble Queene, let former grudges
passe,
And henceforth, I am thy true Seruitour:
I will reuenge his wrong
to Lady Bona,
And replant Henry in his former state
Mar. Warwicke,
These words haue turn'd my Hate, to
Loue,
And I forgiue, and quite forget old faults,
And ioy that thou
becom'st King Henries Friend
War. So much his Friend, I, his Vnfained Friend,
That if King
Lewis vouchsafe to furnish vs
With some few Bands of chosen Soldiours,
Ile
vndertake to Land them on our Coast,
And force the Tyrant from his seat by
Warre.
'Tis not his new-made Bride shall succour him.
And as for Clarence,
as my Letters tell me,
Hee's very likely now to fall from him,
For
matching more for wanton Lust, then Honor,
Or then for strength and safety of
our Country
Bona. Deere Brother, how shall Bona be reueng'd,
But by thy
helpe to this distressed Queene?
Mar. Renowned Prince, how shall Poore
Henry liue,
Vnlesse thou rescue him from foule dispaire?
Bona. My
quarrel, and this English Queens, are one
War. And mine faire Lady Bona, ioynes with yours
Lew. And mine, with hers, and thine, and
Margarets.
Therefore, at last, I firmely am resolu'd
You shall haue
ayde
Mar. Let me giue humble thankes for all, at once
Lew. Then Englands Messenger, returne in Poste,
And tell
false Edward, thy supposed King,
That Lewis of France, is sending ouer
Maskers
To reuell it with him, and his new Bride.
Thou seest what's past,
go feare thy King withall
Bona. Tell him, in hope hee'l proue a widower shortly,
I
weare the Willow Garland for his sake
Mar. Tell him, my mourning weeds are layde aside,
And I am
ready to put Armor on
War. Tell him from me, that he hath done me wrong,
And
therefore Ile vn-Crowne him, er't be long.
There's thy reward, be gone.
Exit Post.
Lew. But Warwicke,
Thou and Oxford, with fiue thousand men
Shall
crosse the Seas, and bid false Edward battaile:
And as occasion serues, this
Noble Queen
And Prince, shall follow with a fresh Supply.
Yet ere thou go,
but answer me one doubt:
What Pledge haue we of thy firme Loyalty?
War. This shall assure my constant Loyalty,
That if our Queene, and this
young Prince agree,
Ile ioyne mine eldest daughter, and my Ioy,
To him
forthwith, in holy Wedlocke bands
Mar. Yes, I agree, and thanke you for your Motion.
Sonne
Edward, she is Faire and Vertuous,
Therefore delay not, giue thy hand to
Warwicke,
And with thy hand, thy faith irreuocable,
That onely Warwickes
daughter shall be thine
Prin.Ed. Yes, I accept her, for she well deserues it,
And
heere to pledge my Vow, I giue my hand.
He giues his hand to Warw[icke].
Lew. Why stay we now? These soldiers shalbe leuied,
And thou Lord
Bourbon, our High Admirall
Shall waft them ouer with our Royall Fleete.
I
long till Edward fall by Warres mischance,
For mocking Marriage with a Dame
of France.
Exeunt. Manet Warwicke.
War. I came from Edward as Ambassador,
But I returne his sworne and
mortall Foe:
Matter of Marriage was the charge he gaue me,
But dreadfull
Warre shall answer his demand.
Had he none else to make a stale but
me?
Then none but I, shall turne his Iest to Sorrow.
I was the Cheefe that
rais'd him to the Crowne,
And Ile be Cheefe to bring him downe againe:
Not
that I pitty Henries misery,
But seeke Reuenge on Edwards
mockery.
Enter.
Enter Richard, Clarence, Somerset, and Mountague.
Rich. Now tell me Brother Clarence, what thinke you
Of this new
Marriage with the Lady Gray?
Hath not our Brother made a worthy
choice?
Cla. Alas, you know, tis farre from hence to France,
How
could he stay till Warwicke made returne?
Som. My Lords, forbeare this
talke: heere comes the
King.
Flourish. Enter King Edward, Lady Grey, Penbrooke,
Stafford,
Hastings:
foure stand on one side, and foure on the other.
Rich. And his well-chosen Bride
Clarence. I minde to tell him plainly what I thinke
King. Now Brother of Clarence,
How like you our
Choyce,
That you stand pensiue, as halfe malecontent?
Clarence. As
well as Lewis of France,
Or the Earle of Warwicke,
Which are so weake of
courage, and in iudgement,
That they'le take no offence at our abuse
King. Suppose they take offence without a cause:
They are but
Lewis and Warwicke, I am Edward,
Your King and Warwickes, and must haue my
will
Rich. And shall haue your will, because our King:
Yet hastie
Marriage seldome proueth well
King. Yea, Brother Richard, are you offended too?
Rich. Not I: no:
God forbid, that I should wish them seuer'd,
Whom God
hath ioyn'd together:
I, and 'twere pittie, to sunder them,
That yoake so
well together
King. Setting your skornes, and your mislike aside,
Tell me
some reason, why the Lady Grey
Should not become my Wife, and Englands
Queene?
And you too, Somerset, and Mountague,
Speake freely what you
thinke
Clarence. Then this is mine opinion:
That King Lewis becomes
your Enemie,
For mocking him about the Marriage
Of the Lady Bona
Rich. And Warwicke, doing what you gaue in charge,
Is now
dis-honored by this new Marriage
King. What, if both Lewis and Warwick be appeas'd,
By such
inuention as I can deuise?
Mount. Yet, to haue ioyn'd with France in
such alliance,
Would more haue strength'ned this our Commonwealth
'Gainst
forraine stormes, then any home-bred Marriage
Hast. Why, knowes not Mountague, that of it selfe,
England is
safe, if true within it selfe?
Mount. But the safer, when 'tis back'd
with France
Hast. 'Tis better vsing France, then trusting France:
Let vs
be back'd with God, and with the Seas,
Which he hath giu'n for fence
impregnable,
And with their helpes, onely defend our selues:
In them, and
in our selues, our safetie lyes
Clar. For this one speech, Lord Hastings well deserues
To
haue the Heire of the Lord Hungerford
King. I, what of that? it was my will, and graunt,
And for
this once, my Will shall stand for Law
Rich. And yet me thinks, your Grace hath not done well,
To
giue the Heire and Daughter of Lord Scales
Vnto the Brother of your louing
Bride;
Shee better would haue fitted me, or Clarence:
But in your Bride
you burie Brotherhood
Clar. Or else you would not haue bestow'd the Heire
Of the
Lord Bonuill on your new Wiues Sonne,
And leaue your Brothers to goe speede
elsewhere
King. Alas, poore Clarence: is it for a Wife
That thou art
malecontent? I will prouide thee
Clarence. In chusing for your selfe,
You shew'd your
iudgement:
Which being shallow, you shall giue me leaue
To play the Broker
in mine owne behalfe;
And to that end, I shortly minde to leaue you
King. Leaue me, or tarry, Edward will be King,
And not be
ty'd vnto his Brothers will
Lady Grey. My Lords, before it pleas'd his Maiestie
To rayse
my State to Title of a Queene,
Doe me but right, and you must all
confesse,
That I was not ignoble of Descent,
And meaner then my selfe haue
had like fortune.
But as this Title honors me and mine,
So your dislikes,
to whom I would be pleasing,
Doth cloud my ioyes with danger, and with
sorrow
King. My Loue, forbeare to fawne vpon their frownes:
What
danger, or what sorrow can befall thee,
So long as Edward is thy constant
friend,
And their true Soueraigne, whom they must obey?
Nay, whom they
shall obey, and loue thee too,
Vnlesse they seeke for hatred at my
hands:
Which if they doe, yet will I keepe thee safe,
And they shall feele
the vengeance of my wrath
Rich. I heare, yet say not much, but thinke the more.
Enter a
Poste
King. Now Messenger, what Letters, or what Newes
from
France?
Post. My Soueraigne Liege, no Letters, & few words,
But
such, as I (without your speciall pardon)
Dare not relate
King. Goe too, wee pardon thee:
Therefore, in briefe, tell me
their words,
As neere as thou canst guesse them.
What answer makes King
Lewis vnto our Letters?
Post. At my depart, these were his very
words:
Goe tell false Edward, the supposed King,
That Lewis of France is
sending ouer Maskers,
To reuell it with him, and his new Bride
King. Is Lewis so braue? belike he thinkes me Henry.
But what
said Lady Bona to my Marriage?
Post. These were her words, vtt'red
with mild disdaine:
Tell him, in hope hee'le proue a Widower shortly,
Ile
weare the Willow Garland for his sake
King. I blame not her; she could say little lesse:
She had
the wrong. But what said Henries Queene?
For I haue heard, that she was there
in place
Post. Tell him (quoth she)
My mourning Weedes are
done,
And I am readie to put Armour on
King. Belike she minds to play the Amazon.
But what said
Warwicke to these iniuries?
Post. He, more incens'd against your
Maiestie,
Then all the rest, discharg'd me with these words:
Tell him from
me, that he hath done me wrong,
And therefore Ile vncrowne him, er't be
long
King. Ha? durst the Traytor breath out so prowd words?
Well,
I will arme me, being thus fore-warn'd:
They shall haue Warres, and pay for
their presumption.
But say, is Warwicke friends with Margaret?
Post. I, gracious Soueraigne,
They are so link'd in friendship,
That yong
Prince Edward marryes Warwicks Daughter
Clarence. Belike, the elder;
Clarence will haue the
younger.
Now Brother King farewell, and sit you fast,
For I will hence to
Warwickes other Daughter,
That though I want a Kingdome, yet in Marriage
I
may not proue inferior to your selfe.
You that loue me, and Warwicke, follow
me.
Exit Clarence, and Somerset followes.
Rich. Not I:
My thoughts ayme at a further matter:
I stay not
for the loue of Edward, but the Crowne
King. Clarence and Somerset both gone to Warwicke?
Yet am I
arm'd against the worst can happen:
And haste is needfull in this desp'rate
case.
Pembrooke and Stafford, you in our behalfe
Goe leuie men, and make
prepare for Warre;
They are alreadie, or quickly will be landed:
My selfe
in person will straight follow you.
Exeunt. Pembrooke and Stafford.
But ere I goe, Hastings and Mountague
Resolue my doubt: you twaine, of all
the rest,
Are neere to Warwicke, by bloud, and by allyance:
Tell me, if
you loue Warwicke more then me;
If it be so, then both depart to him:
I
rather wish you foes, then hollow friends.
But if you minde to hold your true
obedience,
Giue me assurance with some friendly Vow,
That I may neuer haue
you in suspect
Mount. So God helpe Mountague, as hee proues
true
Hast. And Hastings, as hee fauours Edwards cause
King. Now, Brother Richard, will you stand by vs?
Rich. I, in despight of all that shall withstand you
King. Why so: then am I sure of Victorie.
Now therefore let
vs hence, and lose no howre,
Till wee meet Warwicke, with his forreine
powre.
Exeunt.
Enter Warwicke and Oxford in England, with French Souldiors.
Warw. Trust me, my Lord, all hitherto goes well,
The common people
by numbers swarme to vs.
Enter Clarence and Somerset.
But see where Somerset and Clarence comes:
Speake suddenly, my Lords, are
wee all friends?
Clar. Feare not that, my Lord
Warw. Then gentle Clarence, welcome vnto Warwicke,
And
welcome Somerset: I hold it cowardize,
To rest mistrustfull, where a Noble
Heart
Hath pawn'd an open Hand, in signe of Loue;
Else might I thinke,
that Clarence, Edwards Brother,
Were but a fained friend to our
proceedings:
But welcome sweet Clarence, my Daughter shall be thine.
And
now, what rests? but in Nights Couerture,
Thy Brother being carelessely
encamp'd,
His Souldiors lurking in the Towne about,
And but attended by a
simple Guard,
Wee may surprize and take him at our pleasure,
Our Scouts
haue found the aduenture very easie:
That as Vlysses, and stout
Diomede,
With sleight and manhood stole to Rhesus Tents,
And brought from
thence the Thracian fatall Steeds;
So wee, well couer'd with the Nights black
Mantle,
At vnawares may beat downe Edwards Guard,
And seize himselfe: I
say not, slaughter him,
For I intend but onely to surprize him.
You that
will follow me to this attempt,
Applaud the Name of Henry, with your
Leader.
They all cry, Henry.
Why then, let's on our way in silent sort,
For Warwicke and his friends,
God and Saint George.
Exeunt.
Enter three Watchmen to guard the Kings Tent.
1.Watch. Come on my Masters, each man take his stand,
The King by
this, is set him downe to sleepe
2.Watch. What, will he not to Bed?
1.Watch. Why, no:
for he hath made a solemne Vow,
Neuer to lye and take his naturall
Rest,
Till Warwicke, or himselfe, be quite supprest
2.Watch. To morrow then belike shall be the day,
If Warwicke
be so neere as men report
3.Watch. But say, I pray, what Noble man is that,
That with
the King here resteth in his Tent?
1.Watch. 'Tis the Lord Hastings,
the Kings chiefest
friend
3.Watch. O, is it so? but why commands the King,
That his
chiefe followers lodge in Townes about him,
While he himselfe keepes in the
cold field?
2.Watch. 'Tis the more honour, because more dangerous
3.Watch. I, but giue me worship, and quietnesse,
I like it
better then a dangerous honor.
If Warwicke knew in what estate he
stands,
'Tis to be doubted if he would waken him
1.Watch. Vnlesse our Halberds did shut vp his passage
2.Watch. I: wherefore else guard we his Royall Tent,
But to
defend his Person from Night-foes?
Enter Warwicke, Clarence, Oxford,
Somerset, and French
Souldiors, silent
all.
Warw. This is his Tent, and see where stand his Guard:
Courage my
Masters: Honor now, or neuer:
But follow me, and Edward shall be ours
1.Watch. Who goes there?
2.Watch. Stay, or thou
dyest.
Warwicke and the rest cry all, Warwicke, Warwicke, and set
vpon
the
Guard, who flye, crying, Arme, Arme, Warwicke and the
rest
following them.
The Drumme playing, and Trumpet sounding. Enter Warwicke,
Somerset,
and
the rest, bringing the King out in his Gowne, sitting in a
Chaire:
Richard
and Hastings flyes ouer the Stage
Som. What are they that flye there?
Warw. Richard and
Hastings: let them goe, heere is
the Duke
K.Edw. The Duke?
Why Warwicke, when wee parted,
Thou
call'dst me King
Warw. I, but the case is alter'd.
When you disgrac'd me in my
Embassade,
Then I degraded you from being King,
And come now to create you
Duke of Yorke.
Alas, how should you gouerne any Kingdome,
That know not
how to vse Embassadors,
Nor how to be contented with one Wife,
Nor how to
vse your Brothers Brotherly,
Nor how to studie for the Peoples
Welfare,
Nor how to shrowd your selfe from Enemies?
K.Edw. Yea,
Brother of Clarence,
Art thou here too?
Nay then I see, that Edward needs
must downe.
Yet Warwicke, in despight of all mischance,
Of thee thy selfe,
and all thy Complices,
Edward will alwayes beare himselfe as King:
Though
Fortunes mallice ouerthrow my State,
My minde exceedes the compasse of her
Wheele
Warw. Then for his minde, be Edward Englands King,
Takes off his Crowne.
But Henry now shall weare the English Crowne,
And be true King indeede:
thou but the shadow.
My Lord of Somerset, at my request,
See that
forthwith Duke Edward be conuey'd
Vnto my Brother Arch-Bishop of
Yorke:
When I haue fought with Pembrooke, and his fellowes,
Ile follow
you, and tell what answer
Lewis and the Lady Bona send to him.
Now for
a-while farewell good Duke of Yorke.
They leade him out forcibly.
K.Ed. What Fates impose, that men must needs abide;
It boots not to
resist both winde and tide.
Exeunt.
Oxf. What now remaines my Lords for vs to do,
But march to London
with our Soldiers?
War. I, that's the first thing that we haue to
do,
To free King Henry from imprisonment,
And see him seated in the Regall
Throne.
Enter.
Enter Riuers, and Lady Gray.
Riu. Madam, what makes you in this sodain change?
Gray. Why
Brother Riuers, are you yet to learne
What late misfortune is befalne King
Edward?
Riu. What losse of some pitcht battell
Against
Warwicke?
Gray. No, but the losse of his owne Royall person
Riu. Then is my Soueraigne slaine?
Gray. I almost
slaine, for he is taken prisoner,
Either betrayd by falshood of his
Guard,
Or by his Foe surpriz'd at vnawares:
And as I further haue to
vnderstand,
Is new committed to the Bishop of Yorke,
Fell Warwickes
Brother, and by that our Foe
Riu. These Newes I must confesse are full of greefe,
Yet
gracious Madam, beare it as you may,
Warwicke may loose, that now hath wonne
the day
Gray. Till then, faire hope must hinder liues decay:
And I
the rather waine me from dispaire
For loue of Edwards Off-spring in my
wombe:
This is it that makes me bridle passion,
And beare with Mildnesse
my misfortunes crosse:
I, I, for this I draw in many a teare,
And stop the
rising of blood-sucking sighes,
Least with my sighes or teares, I blast or
drowne
King Edwards Fruite, true heyre to th' English Crowne
Riu. But Madam,
Where is Warwicke then become?
Gray. I am inform'd that he comes towards London,
To set the Crowne once more
on Henries head,
Guesse thou the rest, King Edwards Friends must
downe.
But to preuent the Tyrants violence,
(For trust not him that hath
once broken Faith)
Ile hence forthwith vnto the Sanctuary,
To saue (at
least) the heire of Edwards right:
There shall I rest secure from force and
fraud:
Come therefore let vs flye, while we may flye,
If Warwicke take vs,
we are sure to dye.
Exeunt.
Enter Richard, Lord Hastings, and Sir William Stanley.
Rich. Now my Lord Hastings, and Sir William Stanley
Leaue off to
wonder why I drew you hither,
Into this cheefest Thicket of the
Parke.
Thus stand the case: you know our King, my Brother,
Is prisoner to
the Bishop here, at whose hands
He hath good vsage, and great liberty,
And
often but attended with weake guard,
Come hunting this way to disport
himselfe.
I haue aduertis'd him by secret meanes,
That if about this houre
he make this way,
Vnder the colour of his vsuall game,
He shall heere
finde his Friends with Horse and Men,
To set him free from his
Captiuitie.
Enter King Edward, and a Huntsman with him.
Huntsman. This way my Lord,
For this way lies the Game
King Edw. Nay this way man,
See where the Huntsmen
stand.
Now Brother of Gloster, Lord Hastings, and the rest,
Stand you thus
close to steale the Bishops Deere?
Rich. Brother, the time and case,
requireth hast,
Your horse stands ready at the Parke-corner
King Ed. But whether shall we then?
Hast. To Lyn my
Lord,
And shipt from thence to Flanders
Rich. Wel guest beleeue me, for that was my meaning
K.Ed. Stanley, I will requite thy forwardnesse
Rich. But wherefore stay we? 'tis no time to talke
K.Ed. Huntsman, what say'st thou?
Wilt thou go
along?
Hunts. Better do so, then tarry and be hang'd
Rich. Come then away, lets ha no more adoo
K.Ed. Bishop farwell,
Sheeld thee from Warwickes
frowne,
And pray that I may re-possesse the Crowne.
Exeunt.
Flourish. Enter King Henry the sixt, Clarence, Warwicke,
Somerset,
young
Henry, Oxford, Mountague, and Lieutenant.
K.Hen. M[aster]. Lieutenant, now that God and Friends
Haue shaken
Edward from the Regall seate,
And turn'd my captiue state to libertie,
My
feare to hope, my sorrowes vnto ioyes,
At our enlargement what are thy due
Fees?
Lieu. Subiects may challenge nothing of their Sou'rains
But,
if an humble prayer may preuaile,
I then craue pardon of your Maiestie
K.Hen. For what, Lieutenant? For well vsing me?
Nay, be thou
sure, Ile well requite thy kindnesse.
For that it made my imprisonment, a
pleasure:
I, such a pleasure, as incaged Birds
Conceiue; when after many
moody Thoughts,
At last, by Notes of Houshold harmonie,
They quite forget
their losse of Libertie.
But Warwicke, after God, thou set'st me free,
And
chiefely therefore, I thanke God, and thee,
He was the Author, thou the
Instrument.
Therefore that I may conquer Fortunes spight,
By liuing low,
where Fortune cannot hurt me,
And that the people of this blessed Land
May
not be punisht with my thwarting starres,
Warwicke, although my Head still
weare the Crowne,
I here resigne my Gouernment to thee,
For thou art
fortunate in all thy deeds
Warw. Your Grace hath still beene fam'd for vertuous,
And now
may seeme as wise as vertuous,
By spying and auoiding Fortunes malice,
For
few men rightly temper with the Starres:
Yet in this one thing let me blame
your Grace,
For chusing me, when Clarence is in place
Clar. No Warwicke, thou art worthy of the sway,
To whom the
Heau'ns in thy Natiuitie,
Adiudg'd an Oliue Branch, and Lawrell Crowne,
As
likely to be blest in Peace and Warre:
And therefore I yeeld thee my free
consent
Warw. And I chuse Clarence onely for Protector
King. Warwick and Clarence, giue me both your Hands:
Now
ioyne your Hands, & with your Hands your Hearts,
That no dissention
hinder Gouernment:
I make you both Protectors of this Land,
While I my
selfe will lead a priuate Life,
And in deuotion spend my latter dayes,
To
sinnes rebuke, and my Creators prayse
Warw. What answeres Clarence to his
Soueraignes
will?
Clar. That he consents, if Warwicke yeeld
consent,
For on thy fortune I repose my selfe
Warw. Why then, though loth, yet must I be content:
Wee'le
yoake together, like a double shadow
To Henries Body, and supply his
place;
I meane, in bearing weight of Gouernment,
While he enioyes the
Honor, and his ease.
And Clarence, now then it is more then
needfull,
Forthwith that Edward be pronounc'd a Traytor,
And all his Lands
and Goods confiscate
Clar. What else? and that Succession be determined
Warw. I, therein Clarence shall not want his part
King. But with the first, of all your chiefe affaires,
Let me
entreat (for I command no more)
That Margaret your Queene, and my Sonne
Edward,
Be sent for, to returne from France with speed:
For till I see
them here, by doubtfull feare,
My ioy of libertie is halfe eclips'd
Clar. It shall bee done, my Soueraigne, with all
speede
King. My Lord of Somerset, what Youth is that,
Of whom you
seeme to haue so tender care?
Somers. My Liege, it is young Henry,
Earle of Richmond
King. Come hither, Englands Hope:
Layes his Hand on his Head.
If secret Powers suggest but truth
To my diuining thoughts,
This
prettie Lad will proue our Countries blisse.
His Lookes are full of peacefull
Maiestie,
His Head by nature fram'd to weare a Crowne,
His Hand to wield a
Scepter, and himselfe
Likely in time to blesse a Regall Throne:
Make much
of him, my Lords; for this is hee
Must helpe you more, then you are hurt by
mee.
Enter a Poste.
Warw. What newes, my friend?
Poste. That Edward is escaped
from your Brother,
And fled (as hee heares since) to Burgundie
Warw. Vnsauorie newes: but how made he escape?
Poste.
He was conuey'd by Richard, Duke of Gloster,
And the Lord Hastings, who
attended him
In secret ambush, on the Forrest side,
And from the Bishops
Huntsmen rescu'd him:
For Hunting was his dayly Exercise
Warw. My Brother was too carelesse of his charge.
But let vs
hence, my Soueraigne, to prouide
A salue for any sore, that may betide.
Exeunt.
Manet Somerset, Richmond, and Oxford.
Som. My Lord, I like not of this flight of Edwards:
For doubtlesse,
Burgundie will yeeld him helpe,
And we shall haue more Warres befor't be
long.
As Henries late presaging Prophecie
Did glad my heart, with hope of
this young Richmond:
So doth my heart mis-giue me, in these
Conflicts,
What may befall him, to his harme and ours.
Therefore, Lord
Oxford, to preuent the worst,
Forthwith wee'le send him hence to
Brittanie,
Till stormes be past of Ciuill Enmitie
Oxf. I: for if Edward re-possesse the Crowne,
'Tis like that
Richmond, with the rest, shall downe
Som. It shall be so: he shall to Brittanie.
Come therefore,
let's about it speedily.
Exeunt.
Flourish. Enter Edward, Richard, Hastings, and Souldiers.
Edw. Now Brother Richard, Lord Hastings, and the rest,
Yet thus
farre Fortune maketh vs amends,
And sayes, that once more I shall
enterchange
My wained state, for Henries Regall Crowne.
Well haue we
pass'd, and now re-pass'd the Seas,
And brought desired helpe from
Burgundie.
What then remaines, we being thus arriu'd
From Rauenspurre
Hauen, before the Gates of Yorke,
But that we enter, as into our
Dukedome?
Rich. The Gates made fast?
Brother, I like not
this.
For many men that stumble at the Threshold,
Are well fore-told, that
danger lurkes within
Edw. Tush man, aboadments must not now affright vs:
By faire
or foule meanes we must enter in,
For hither will our friends repaire to
vs
Hast. My Liege, Ile knocke once more, to
summon
them.
Enter on the Walls, the Maior of Yorke, and his Brethren.
Maior. My Lords,
We were fore-warned of your comming,
And shut
the Gates, for safetie of our selues;
For now we owe allegeance vnto
Henry
Edw. But, Master Maior, if Henry be your King,
Yet Edward, at
the least, is Duke of Yorke
Maior. True, my good Lord, I know you for no
lesse
Edw. Why, and I challenge nothing but my Dukedome,
As being
well content with that alone
Rich. But when the Fox hath once got in his Nose,
Hee'le
soone finde meanes to make the Body follow
Hast. Why, Master Maior, why stand you in a doubt?
Open the
Gates, we are King Henries friends
Maior. I, say you so? the Gates shall then be opened.
He descends.
Rich. A wise stout Captaine, and soone perswaded
Hast. The good old man would faine that all were wel,
So
'twere not long of him: but being entred,
I doubt not I, but we shall soone
perswade
Both him, and all his Brothers, vnto reason.
Enter the Maior, and
two Aldermen.
Edw. So, Master Maior: these Gates must not be shut,
But in the
Night, or in the time of Warre.
What, feare not man, but yeeld me vp the
Keyes,
Takes his Keyes.
For Edward will defend the Towne, and thee,
And all those friends, that
deine to follow mee.
March. Enter Mountgomerie, with Drumme and Souldiers.
Rich. Brother, this is Sir Iohn Mountgomerie,
Our trustie friend,
vnlesse I be deceiu'd
Edw. Welcome Sir Iohn: but why come you in
Armes?
Mount. To helpe King Edward in his time of storme,
As euery loyall Subiect
ought to doe
Edw. Thankes good Mountgomerie:
But we now forget our Title
to the Crowne,
And onely clayme our Dukedome,
Till God please to send the
rest
Mount. Then fare you well, for I will hence againe,
I came to
serue a King, and not a Duke:
Drummer strike vp, and let vs march away.
The Drumme begins to march.
Edw. Nay stay, Sir Iohn, a while, and wee'le debate
By what safe
meanes the Crowne may be recouer'd
Mount. What talke you of debating? in few words,
If you'le
not here proclaime your selfe our King,
Ile leaue you to your fortune, and be
gone,
To keepe them back, that come to succour you.
Why shall we fight, if
you pretend no Title?
Rich. Why Brother, wherefore stand you on
nice
points?
Edw. When wee grow stronger,
Then wee'le make our
Clayme:
Till then, 'tis wisdome to conceale our meaning
Hast. Away with scrupulous Wit, now Armes must
rule
Rich. And fearelesse minds clyme soonest vnto
Crowns.
Brother, we will proclaime you out of hand,
The bruit thereof will
bring you many friends
Edw. Then be it as you will: for 'tis my right,
And Henry but
vsurpes the Diademe
Mount. I, now my Soueraigne speaketh like himselfe,
And now
will I be Edwards Champion
Hast. Sound Trumpet, Edward shal be here proclaim'd:
Come,
fellow Souldior, make thou proclamation.
Flourish. Sound.
Soul. Edward the Fourth, by the Grace of God, King of
England and
France, and Lord of Ireland, &c
Mount. And whosoe're gainsayes King Edwards right,
By this I
challenge him to single fight.
Throwes downe his Gauntlet.
All. Long liue Edward the Fourth
Edw. Thankes braue Mountgomery,
And thankes vnto you
all:
If fortune serue me, Ile requite this kindnesse.
Now for this Night,
let's harbor here in Yorke:
And when the Morning Sunne shall rayse his
Carre
Aboue the Border of this Horizon,
Wee'le forward towards Warwicke,
and his Mates;
For well I wot, that Henry is no Souldier.
Ah froward
Clarence, how euill it beseemes thee,
To flatter Henry, and forsake thy
Brother?
Yet as wee may, wee'le meet both thee and Warwicke.
Come on braue
Souldiors: doubt not of the Day,
And that once gotten, doubt not of large
Pay.
Exeunt.
Flourish. Enter the King, Warwicke, Mountague, Clarence,
Oxford,
and
Somerset.
War. What counsaile, Lords? Edward from Belgia,
With hastie
Germanes, and blunt Hollanders,
Hath pass'd in safetie through the Narrow
Seas,
And with his troupes doth march amaine to London,
And many giddie
people flock to him
King. Let's leuie men, and beat him backe againe
Clar. A little fire is quickly trodden out,
Which being
suffer'd, Riuers cannot quench
War. In Warwickshire I haue true-hearted friends,
Not
mutinous in peace, yet bold in Warre,
Those will I muster vp: and thou Sonne
Clarence
Shalt stirre vp in Suffolke, Norfolke, and in Kent,
The Knights
and Gentlemen, to come with thee.
Thou Brother Mountague, in
Buckingham,
Northampton, and in Leicestershire, shalt find
Men well
enclin'd to heare what thou command'st.
And thou, braue Oxford, wondrous well
belou'd,
In Oxfordshire shalt muster vp thy friends.
My Soueraigne, with
the louing Citizens,
Like to his Iland, gyrt in with the Ocean,
Or modest
Dyan, circled with her Nymphs,
Shall rest in London, till we come to
him:
Faire Lords take leaue, and stand not to reply.
Farewell my
Soueraigne
King. Farewell my Hector, and my Troyes true hope
Clar. In signe of truth, I kisse your Highnesse Hand
King. Well-minded Clarence, be thou fortunate
Mount. Comfort, my Lord, and so I take my leaue
Oxf. And thus I seale my truth, and bid adieu
King. Sweet Oxford, and my louing Mountague,
And all at once,
once more a happy farewell
War. Farewell, sweet Lords, let's meet at Couentry.
Exeunt.
King. Here at the Pallace will I rest a while.
Cousin of Exeter,
what thinkes your Lordship?
Me thinkes, the Power that Edward hath in
field,
Should not be able to encounter mine
Exet. The doubt is, that he will seduce the rest
King. That's not my feare, my meed hath got me fame:
I haue
not stopt mine eares to their demands,
Nor posted off their suites with slow
delayes,
My pittie hath beene balme to heale their wounds,
My mildnesse
hath allay'd their swelling griefes,
My mercie dry'd their water-flowing
teares.
I haue not been desirous of their wealth,
Nor much opprest them
with great Subsidies,
Nor forward of reuenge, though they much err'd.
Then
why should they loue Edward more then me?
No Exeter, these Graces challenge
Grace:
And when the Lyon fawnes vpon the Lambe,
The Lambe will neuer cease
to follow him.
Shout within, A Lancaster, A Lancaster.
Exet. Hearke, hearke, my Lord, what Shouts are
these?
Enter
Edward and his Souldiers.
Edw. Seize on the shamefac'd Henry, beare him hence,
And once
againe proclaime vs King of England.
You are the Fount, that makes small
Brookes to flow,
Now stops thy Spring, my Sea shall suck them dry,
And
swell so much the higher, by their ebbe.
Hence with him to the Tower, let him
not speake.
Exit with King Henry.
And Lords, towards Couentry bend we our course,
Where peremptorie Warwicke
now remaines:
The Sunne shines hot, and if we vse delay,
Cold biting
Winter marres our hop'd-for Hay
Rich. Away betimes, before his forces ioyne,
And take the
great-growne Traytor vnawares:
Braue Warriors, march amaine towards
Couentry.
Exeunt.
Enter Warwicke, the Maior of Couentry, two Messengers, and
others vpon
the
Walls.
War. Where is the Post that came from valiant Oxford?
How farre
hence is thy Lord, mine honest fellow?
Mess .1. By this at Dunsmore,
marching hitherward
War. How farre off is our Brother Mountague?
Where is the
Post that came from Mountague?
Mess. 2. By this at Daintry, with a
puissant troope.
Enter Someruile.
War. Say Someruile, what sayes my louing Sonne?
And by thy guesse,
how nigh is Clarence now?
Someru. At Southam I did leaue him with his
forces,
And doe expect him here some two howres hence
War. Then Clarence is at hand, I heare his Drumme
Someru. It is not his, my Lord, here Southam lyes:
The Drum
your Honor heares, marcheth from Warwicke
War. Who should that be? belike vnlook'd for friends
Someru. They are at hand, and you shall quickly know.
March. Flourish. Enter Edward, Richard, and Souldiers.
Edw. Goe, Trumpet, to the Walls, and sound a Parle
Rich. See how the surly Warwicke mans the Wall
War. Oh vnbid spight, is sportfull Edward come?
Where slept
our Scouts, or how are they seduc'd,
That we could heare no newes of his
repayre
Edw. Now Warwicke, wilt thou ope the Citie Gates,
Speake
gentle words, and humbly bend thy Knee,
Call Edward King, and at his hands
begge Mercy,
And he shall pardon thee these Outrages?
War. Nay
rather, wilt thou draw thy forces hence,
Confesse who set thee vp, and pluckt
thee downe,
Call Warwicke Patron, and be penitent,
And thou shalt still
remaine the Duke of Yorke
Rich. I thought at least he would haue said the King,
Or did
he make the Ieast against his will?
War. Is not a Dukedome, Sir, a
goodly gift?
Rich. I, by my faith, for a poore Earle to giue,
Ile
doe thee seruice for so good a gift
War. 'Twas I that gaue the Kingdome to thy Brother
Edw. Why then 'tis mine, if but by Warwickes gift
War. Thou art no Atlas for so great a weight:
And Weakeling,
Warwicke takes his gift againe,
And Henry is my King, Warwicke his
Subiect
Edw. But Warwickes King is Edwards Prisoner:
And gallant
Warwicke, doe but answer this,
What is the Body, when the Head is
off?
Rich. Alas, that Warwicke had no more fore-cast,
But whiles he
thought to steale the single Ten,
The King was slyly finger'd from the
Deck:
You left poore Henry at the Bishops Pallace,
And tenne to one you'le
meet him in the Tower
Edw. 'Tis euen so, yet you are Warwicke still
Rich. Come Warwicke,
Take the time, kneele downe, kneele
downe:
Nay when? strike now, or else the Iron cooles
War. I had rather chop this Hand off at a blow,
And with the
other, fling it at thy face,
Then beare so low a sayle, to strike to thee
Edw. Sayle how thou canst,
Haue Winde and Tyde thy
friend,
This Hand, fast wound about thy coale-black hayre,
Shall, whiles
thy Head is warme, and new cut off,
Write in the dust this Sentence with thy
blood,
Wind-changing Warwicke now can change no more.
Enter Oxford, with
Drumme and Colours.
War. Oh chearefull Colours, see where Oxford comes
Oxf. Oxford, Oxford, for Lancaster
Rich. The Gates are open, let vs enter too
Edw. So other foes may set vpon our backs.
Stand we in good
array: for they no doubt
Will issue out againe, and bid vs battaile;
If
not, the Citie being but of small defence,
Wee'le quickly rowze the Traitors
in the same
War. Oh welcome Oxford, for we want thy helpe.
Enter
Mountague, with Drumme and Colours.
Mount. Mountague, Mountague, for Lancaster
Rich. Thou and thy Brother both shall buy this Treason
Euen
with the dearest blood your bodies beare
Edw. The harder matcht, the greater Victorie,
My minde
presageth happy gaine, and Conquest.
Enter Somerset, with Drumme and
Colours.
Som. Somerset, Somerset, for Lancaster
Rich. Two of thy Name, both Dukes of Somerset,
Haue sold
their Liues vnto the House of Yorke,
And thou shalt be the third, if this
Sword hold.
Enter Clarence, with Drumme and Colours.
War. And loe, where George of Clarence sweepes along,
Of force
enough to bid his Brother Battaile:
With whom, in vpright zeale to right,
preuailes
More then the nature of a Brothers Loue.
Come Clarence, come:
thou wilt, if Warwicke call
Clar. Father of Warwicke, know you what this meanes?
Looke
here, I throw my infamie at thee:
I will not ruinate my Fathers House,
Who
gaue his blood to lyme the stones together,
And set vp Lancaster. Why,
trowest thou, Warwicke,
That Clarence is so harsh, so blunt,
vnnaturall,
To bend the fatall Instruments of Warre
Against his Brother,
and his lawfull King.
Perhaps thou wilt obiect my holy Oath:
To keepe that
Oath, were more impietie,
Then Iephah, when he sacrific'd his Daughter.
I
am so sorry for my Trespas made,
That to deserue well at my Brothers
hands,
I here proclayme my selfe thy mortall foe:
With resolution,
wheresoe're I meet thee,
(As I will meet thee, if thou stirre abroad)
To
plague thee, for thy foule mis-leading me.
And so, prowd-hearted Warwicke, I
defie thee,
And to my Brother turne my blushing Cheekes.
Pardon me Edward,
I will make amends:
And Richard, doe not frowne vpon my faults,
For I will
henceforth be no more vnconstant
Edw. Now welcome more, and ten times more belou'd,
Then if
thou neuer hadst deseru'd our hate
Rich. Welcome good Clarence, this is Brother-like
Warw. Oh passing Traytor, periur'd and vniust
Edw. What Warwicke,
Wilt thou leaue the Towne, and
fight?
Or shall we beat the Stones about thine Eares?
Warw. Alas, I
am not coop'd here for defence:
I will away towards Barnet presently,
And
bid thee Battaile, Edward, if thou dar'st
Edw. Yes Warwicke, Edward dares, and leads the way:
Lords to
the field: Saint George, and Victorie.
Exeunt.
March. Warwicke and his companie followes.
Alarum, and Excursions. Enter Edward bringing forth Warwicke
wounded.
Edw. So, lye thou there: dye thou, and dye our feare,
For Warwicke
was a Bugge that fear'd vs all.
Now Mountague sit fast, I seeke for
thee,
That Warwickes Bones may keepe thine companie.
Enter.
Warw. Ah, who is nigh? come to me, friend, or foe,
And tell me who
is Victor, Yorke, or Warwicke?
Why aske I that? my mangled body shewes,
My
blood, my want of strength, my sicke heart shewes,
That I must yeeld my body
to the Earth,
And by my fall, the conquest to my foe.
Thus yeelds the
Cedar to the Axes edge,
Whose Armes gaue shelter to the Princely
Eagle,
Vnder whose shade the ramping Lyon slept,
Whose top-branch
ouer-peer'd Ioues spreading Tree,
And kept low Shrubs from Winters pow'rfull
Winde.
These Eyes, that now are dim'd with Deaths black Veyle,
Haue beene
as piercing as the Mid-day Sunne,
To search the secret Treasons of the
World:
The Wrinckles in my Browes, now fill'd with blood,
Were lik'ned oft
to Kingly Sepulchers:
For who liu'd King, but I could digge his Graue?
And
who durst smile, when Warwicke bent his Brow?
Loe, now my Glory smear'd in
dust and blood.
My Parkes, my Walkes, my Mannors that I had,
Euen now
forsake me; and of all my Lands,
Is nothing left me, but my bodies
length.
Why, what is Pompe, Rule, Reigne, but Earth and Dust?
And liue we
how we can, yet dye we must.
Enter Oxford and Somerset.
Som. Ah Warwicke, Warwicke, wert thou as we are,
We might recouer
all our Losse againe:
The Queene from France hath brought a puissant
power.
Euen now we heard the newes: ah, could'st thou flye
Warw. Why then I would not flye. Ah Mountague,
If thou be
there, sweet Brother, take my Hand,
And with thy Lippes keepe in my Soule a
while.
Thou lou'st me not: for, Brother, if thou did'st,
Thy teares would
wash this cold congealed blood,
That glewes my Lippes, and will not let me
speake.
Come quickly Mountague, or I am dead
Som. Ah Warwicke, Mountague hath breath'd his last,
And to
the latest gaspe, cry'd out for Warwicke:
And said, Commend me to my valiant
Brother.
And more he would haue said, and more he spoke,
Which sounded
like a Cannon in a Vault,
That mought not be distinguisht: but at last,
I
well might heare, deliuered with a groane,
Oh farewell Warwicke
Warw. Sweet rest his Soule:
Flye Lords, and saue your
selues,
For Warwicke bids you all farewell, to meet in Heauen
Oxf. Away, away, to meet the Queenes great power.
Here they beare away his Body. Exeunt.
Flourish. Enter King Edward in triumph, with Richard, Clarence,
and
the
rest.
King. Thus farre our fortune keepes an vpward course,
And we are
grac'd with wreaths of Victorie:
But in the midst of this bright-shining
Day,
I spy a black suspicious threatning Cloud,
That will encounter with
our glorious Sunne,
Ere he attaine his easefull Westerne Bed:
I meane, my
Lords, those powers that the Queene
Hath rays'd in Gallia, haue arriued our
Coast,
And, as we heare, march on to fight with vs
Clar. A little gale will soone disperse that Cloud,
And blow
it to the Source from whence it came,
Thy very Beames will dry those Vapours
vp,
For euery Cloud engenders not a Storme
Rich. The Queene is valued thirtie thousand strong,
And
Somerset, with Oxford, fled to her:
If she haue time to breathe, be well
assur'd
Her faction will be full as strong as ours
King. We are aduertis'd by our louing friends,
That they doe
hold their course toward Tewksbury.
We hauing now the best at Barnet
field,
Will thither straight, for willingnesse rids way,
And as we march,
our strength will be augmented:
In euery Countie as we goe along,
Strike
vp the Drumme, cry courage, and away.
Exeunt.
Flourish. March. Enter the Queene, young Edward, Somerset,
Oxford,
and
Souldiers.
Qu. Great Lords, wise men ne'r sit and waile their losse,
But
chearely seeke how to redresse their harmes.
What though the Mast be now
blowne ouer-boord,
The Cable broke, the holding-Anchor lost,
And halfe our
Saylors swallow'd in the flood?
Yet liues our Pilot still. Is't meet, that
hee
Should leaue the Helme, and like a fearefull Lad,
With tearefull Eyes
adde Water to the Sea,
And giue more strength to that which hath too
much,
Whiles in his moane, the Ship splits on the Rock,
Which Industrie
and Courage might haue sau'd?
Ah what a shame, ah what a fault were
this.
Say Warwicke was our Anchor: what of that?
And Mountague our
Top-Mast: what of him?
Our slaught'red friends, the Tackles: what of
these?
Why is not Oxford here, another Anchor?
And Somerset, another
goodly Mast?
The friends of France our Shrowds and Tacklings?
And though
vnskilfull, why not Ned and I,
For once allow'd the skilfull Pilots
Charge?
We will not from the Helme, to sit and weepe,
But keepe our Course
(though the rough Winde say no)
From Shelues and Rocks, that threaten vs with
Wrack.
As good to chide the Waues, as speake them faire.
And what is
Edward, but a ruthlesse Sea?
What Clarence, but a Quick-sand of
Deceit?
And Richard, but a raged fatall Rocke?
All these, the Enemies to
our poore Barke.
Say you can swim, alas 'tis but a while:
Tread on the
Sand, why there you quickly sinke,
Bestride the Rock, the Tyde will wash you
off,
Or else you famish, that's a three-fold Death.
This speake I (Lords)
to let you vnderstand,
If case some one of you would flye from vs,
That
there's no hop'd-for Mercy with the Brothers,
More then with ruthlesse Waues,
with Sands and Rocks.
Why courage then, what cannot be auoided,
'Twere
childish weakenesse to lament, or feare
Prince. Me thinkes a Woman of this valiant Spirit,
Should, if
a Coward heard her speake these words,
Infuse his Breast with
Magnanimitie,
And make him, naked, foyle a man at Armes.
I speake not
this, as doubting any here:
For did I but suspect a fearefull man,
He
should haue leaue to goe away betimes,
Least in our need he might infect
another,
And make him of like spirit to himselfe.
If any such be here, as
God forbid,
Let him depart, before we neede his helpe
Oxf. Women and Children of so high a courage,
And Warriors
faint, why 'twere perpetuall shame.
Oh braue young Prince: thy famous
Grandfather
Doth liue againe in thee; long may'st thou liue,
To beare his
Image, and renew his Glories
Som. And he that will not fight for such a hope,
Goe home to
Bed, and like the Owle by day,
If he arise, be mock'd and wondred at
Qu. Thankes gentle Somerset, sweet Oxford thankes
Prince. And take his thankes, that yet hath
nothing
else.
Enter a Messenger.
Mess. Prepare you Lords, for Edward is at hand,
Readie to fight:
therefore be resolute
Oxf. I thought no lesse: it is his Policie,
To haste thus
fast, to finde vs vnprouided
Som. But hee's deceiu'd, we are in readinesse
Qu. This cheares my heart, to see your forwardnesse
Oxf. Here pitch our Battaile, hence we will not budge.
Flourish, and march. Enter Edward, Richard, Clarence, and
Souldiers.
Edw. Braue followers, yonder stands the thornie Wood,
Which by the
Heauens assistance, and your strength,
Must by the Roots be hew'ne vp yet ere
Night.
I need not adde more fuell to your fire,
For well I wot, ye blaze,
to burne them out:
Giue signall to the fight, and to it Lords
Qu. Lords, Knights, and Gentlemen, what I should say,
My
teares gaine-say: for euery word I speake,
Ye see I drinke the water of my
eye.
Therefore no more but this: Henry your Soueraigne
Is Prisoner to the
Foe, his State vsurp'd,
His Realme a slaughter-house, his Subiects
slaine,
His Statutes cancell'd, and his Treasure spent:
And yonder is the
Wolfe, that makes this spoyle.
You fight in Iustice: then in Gods Name,
Lords,
Be valiant, and giue signall to the fight.
Alarum, Retreat, Excursions. Exeunt.
Flourish. Enter Edward, Richard, Queene, Clarence, Oxford,
Somerset.
Edw. Now here a period of tumultuous Broyles.
Away with Oxford, to
Hames Castle straight:
For Somerset, off with his guiltie Head.
Goe beare
them hence, I will not heare them speake
Oxf. For my part, Ile not trouble thee with words
Som. Nor I, but stoupe with patience to my fortune.
Exeunt.
Qu. So part we sadly in this troublous World,
To meet with Ioy in
sweet Ierusalem
Edw. Is Proclamation made, That who finds Edward,
Shall haue
a high Reward, and he his Life?
Rich. It is, and loe where youthfull
Edward comes.
Enter the Prince.
Edw. Bring forth the Gallant, let vs heare him speake.
What? can so
young a Thorne begin to prick?
Edward, what satisfaction canst thou
make,
For bearing Armes, for stirring vp my Subiects,
And all the trouble
thou hast turn'd me to?
Prince. Speake like a Subiect, prowd ambitious
Yorke.
Suppose that I am now my Fathers Mouth,
Resigne thy Chayre, and
where I stand, kneele thou,
Whil'st I propose the selfe-same words to
thee,
Which (Traytor) thou would'st haue me answer to
Qu. Ah, that thy Father had beene so resolu'd
Rich. That you might still haue worne the Petticoat,
And
ne're haue stolne the Breech from Lancaster
Prince. Let Aesop fable in a Winters Night,
His Currish
Riddles sorts not with this place
Rich. By Heauen, Brat, Ile plague ye for that word
Qu. I, thou wast borne to be a plague to men
Rich. For Gods sake, take away this Captiue Scold
Prince. Nay, take away this scolding Crooke-backe,
rather
Edw. Peace wilfull Boy, or I will charme your tongue
Clar. Vntutor'd Lad, thou art too malapert
Prince. I know my dutie, you are all vndutifull:
Lasciuious
Edward, and thou periur'd George,
And thou mis-shapen Dicke, I tell ye
all,
I am your better, Traytors as ye are,
And thou vsurp'st my Fathers
right and mine
Edw. Take that, the likenesse of this Rayler here.
Stabs him.
Rich. Sprawl'st thou? take that, to end thy agonie.
Rich[ard]. stabs him.
Clar. And ther's for twitting me with periurie.
Clar[ence]. stabs him.
Qu. Oh, kill me too
Rich. Marry, and shall.
Offers to kill her.
Edw. Hold, Richard, hold, for we haue done too much
Rich. Why should shee liue, to fill the World with
words
Edw. What? doth shee swowne? vse meanes for her
recouerie
Rich. Clarence excuse me to the King my Brother:
Ile hence to
London on a serious matter,
Ere ye come there, be sure to heare some
newes
Cla. What? what?
Rich. Tower, the Tower.
Enter.
Qu. Oh Ned, sweet Ned, speake to thy Mother Boy.
Can'st thou not
speake? O Traitors, Murtherers!
They that stabb'd Cæsar, shed no blood at
all:
Did not offend, nor were not worthy Blame,
If this foule deed were
by, to equall it.
He was a Man; this (in respect) a Childe,
And Men, ne're
spend their fury on a Childe.
What's worse then Murtherer, that I may name
it?
No, no, my heart will burst, and if I speake,
And I will speake, that
so my heart may burst.
Butchers and Villaines, bloudy Caniballes,
How
sweet a Plant haue you vntimely cropt:
You haue no children (Butchers) if you
had,
The thought of them would haue stirr'd vp remorse,
But if you euer
chance to haue a Childe,
Looke in his youth to haue him so cut off.
As
deathsmen you haue rid this sweet yong Prince
King. Away with her, go beare her hence perforce
Qu. Nay, neuer beare me hence, dispatch me heere:
Here sheath
thy Sword, Ile pardon thee my death:
What? wilt thou not? Then Clarence do it
thou
Cla. By heauen, I will not do thee so much ease
Qu. Good Clarence do: sweet Clarence do thou do it
Cla. Did'st thou not heare me sweare I would not do
it?
Qu. I, but thou vsest to forsweare thy selfe.
'Twas Sin before,
but now 'tis Charity
What wilt y not? Where is that diuels butcher
Richard?
Hard fauor'd Richard? Richard, where art thou?
Thou art not
heere; Murther is thy Almes-deed:
Petitioners for Blood, thou ne're put'st
backe
Ed. Away I say, I charge ye beare her hence,
Qu. So
come to you, and yours, as to this Prince.
Exit Queene.
Ed. Where's Richard gone
Cla. To London all in post, and as I guesse,
To make a bloody
Supper in the Tower
Ed. He's sodaine if a thing comes in his head.
Now march we
hence, discharge the common sort
With Pay and Thankes, and let's away to
London,
And see our gentle Queene how well she fares,
By this (I hope) she
hath a Sonne for me.
Enter.
Enter Henry the sixt, and Richard, with the Lieutenant on the
Walles.
Rich. Good day, my Lord, what at your Booke so
hard?
Hen.
I my good Lord: my Lord I should say rather,
Tis sinne to flatter, Good was
little better:
'Good Gloster, and good Deuill, were alike,
And both
preposterous: therefore, not Good Lord
Rich. Sirra, leaue vs to our selues, we must conferre
Hen. So flies the wreaklesse shepherd from y Wolfe:
So first
the harmlesse Sheepe doth yeeld his Fleece,
And next his Throate, vnto the
Butchers Knife.
What Scene of death hath Rossius now to Acte?
Rich.
Suspition alwayes haunts the guilty minde,
The Theefe doth feare each bush an
Officer,
Hen. The Bird that hath bin limed in a bush,
With
trembling wings misdoubteth euery bush;
And I the haplesse Male to one sweet
Bird,
Haue now the fatall Obiect in my eye,
Where my poore yong was lim'd,
was caught, and kill'd
Rich. Why what a peeuish Foole was that of Creet,
That taught
his Sonne the office of a Fowle,
And yet for all his wings, the Foole was
drown'd
Hen. I Dedalus, my poore Boy Icarus,
Thy Father Minos, that
deni'de our course,
The Sunne that sear'd the wings of my sweet Boy.
Thy
Brother Edward, and thy Selfe, the Sea
Whose enuious Gulfe did swallow vp his
life:
Ah, kill me with thy Weapon, not with words,
My brest can better
brooke thy Daggers point,
Then can my eares that Tragicke History.
But
wherefore dost thou come? Is't for my Life?
Rich. Think'st thou I am
an Executioner?
Hen. A Persecutor I am sure thou art,
If murthering
Innocents be Executing,
Why then thou art an Executioner
Rich. Thy Son I kill'd for his presumption
Hen. Hadst thou bin kill'd, when first y didst presume,
Thou
had'st not liu'd to kill a Sonne of mine:
And thus I prophesie, that many a
thousand,
Which now mistrust no parcell of my feare,
And many an old mans
sighe, and many a Widdowes,
And many an Orphans water-standing-eye,
Men
for their Sonnes, Wiues for their Husbands,
Orphans, for their Parents
timeles death,
Shall rue the houre that euer thou was't borne.
The Owle
shriek'd at thy birth, an euill signe,
The Night-Crow cry'de, aboding
lucklesse time,
Dogs howl'd, and hiddeous Tempest shook down Trees:
The
Rauen rook'd her on the Chimnies top,
And chatt'ring Pies in dismall Discords
sung:
Thy Mother felt more then a Mothers paine,
And yet brought forth
lesse then a Mothers hope,
To wit, an indigested and deformed lumpe,
Not
like the fruit of such a goodly Tree.
Teeth had'st thou in thy head, when
thou was't borne,
To signifie, thou cam'st to bite the world:
And if the
rest be true, which I haue heard,
Thou cam'st-
Rich. Ile heare no
more:
Dye Prophet in thy speech,
Stabbes him.
For this (among'st the rest) was I ordain'd
Hen. I, and for much more slaughter after this,
O God forgiue
my sinnes, and pardon thee.
Dyes.
Rich. What? will the aspiring blood of Lancaster
Sinke in the
ground? I thought it would haue mounted.
See how my sword weepes for the
poore Kings death.
O may such purple teares be alway shed
From those that
wish the downfall of our house.
If any sparke of Life be yet
remaining,
Downe, downe to hell, and say I sent thee thither.
Stabs him againe.
I that haue neyther pitty, loue, nor feare,
Indeed 'tis true that Henrie
told me of:
For I haue often heard my Mother say,
I came into the world
with my Legges forward.
Had I not reason (thinke ye) to make hast,
And
seeke their Ruine, that vsurp'd our Right?
The Midwife wonder'd, and the
Women cri'de
O Iesus blesse vs, he is borne with teeth,
And so I was,
which plainly signified,
That I should snarle, and bite, and play the
dogge:
Then since the Heauens haue shap'd my Body so,
Let Hell make
crook'd my Minde to answer it.
I haue no Brother, I am like no
Brother:
And this word (Loue) which Gray-beards call Diuine,
Be resident
in men like one another,
And not in me: I am my selfe alone.
Clarence
beware, thou keept'st me from the Light,
But I will sort a pitchy day for
thee:
For I will buzze abroad such Prophesies,
That Edward shall be
fearefull of his life,
And then to purge his feare, Ile be thy death.
King
Henry, and the Prince his Son are gone,
Clarence thy turne is next, and then
the rest,
Counting my selfe but bad, till I be best.
Ile throw thy body in
another roome,
And Triumph Henry, in thy day of Doome.
Enter.
Flourish. Enter King, Queene, Clarence, Richard, Hastings,
Nurse,
and
Attendants.
King. Once more we sit in Englands Royall Throne,
Re-purchac'd with
the Blood of Enemies:
What valiant Foe-men, like to Autumnes Corne,
Haue
we mow'd downe in tops of all their pride?
Three Dukes of Somerset, threefold
Renowne,
For hardy and vndoubted Champions:
Two Cliffords, as the Father
and the Sonne,
And two Northumberlands: two brauer men,
Ne're spurr'd
their Coursers at the Trumpets sound.
With them, the two braue Beares,
Warwick & Montague,
That in their Chaines fetter'd the Kingly
Lyon,
And made the Forrest tremble when they roar'd.
Thus haue we swept
Suspition from our Seate,
And made our Footstoole of Security.
Come hither
Besse, and let me kisse my Boy:
Yong Ned, for thee, thine Vnckles, and my
selfe,
Haue in our Armors watcht the Winters night,
Went all afoote in
Summers scalding heate,
That thou might'st repossesse the Crowne in
peace,
And of our Labours thou shalt reape the gaine
Rich. Ile blast his Haruest, if your head were laid,
For yet
I am not look'd on in the world.
This shoulder was ordain'd so thicke, to
heaue,
And heaue it shall some waight, or breake my backe,
Worke thou the
way, and that shalt execute
King. Clarence and Gloster, loue my louely Queene,
And kis
your Princely Nephew Brothers both
Cla. The duty that I owe vnto your Maiesty,
I Seale vpon the
lips of this sweet Babe
Cla. Thanke Noble Clarence, worthy brother thanks
Rich. And that I loue the tree fro[m] whence y
sprang'st:
Witnesse the louing kisse I giue the Fruite,
To say the truth,
so Iudas kist his master,
And cried all haile, when as he meant all harme
King. Now am I seated as my soule delights,
Hauing my
Countries peace, and Brothers loues
Cla. What will your Grace haue done with Margaret,
Reynard
her Father, to the King of France
Hath pawn'd the Sicils and
Ierusalem,
And hither haue they sent it for her ransome
King. Away with her, and waft her hence to France:
And now
what rests, but that we spend the time
With stately Triumphes, mirthfull
Comicke shewes,
Such as befits the pleasure of the Court.
Sound Drums and
Trumpets, farwell sowre annoy,
For heere I hope begins our lasting ioy.
Exeunt. omnes
FINIS. The third Part of Henry the Sixt, with the death of the
Duke
of
YORKE.