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- First Citizen:
- Before we proceed any further, hear me speak.
- All:
- Speak, speak.
- First Citizen:
- You are all resolved rather to die than to famish?
- All:
- Resolved. resolved.
- First Citizen:
- First, you know Caius Marcius is chief enemy to the people.
- All:
- We know't, we know't.
- First Citizen:
- Let us kill him, and we'll have corn at our own price.
- Is't a verdict?
- All:
- No more talking on't; let it be done: away, away!
- Second Citizen:
- One word, good citizens.
- First Citizen:
- We are accounted poor citizens, the patricians good.
- What authority surfeits on would relieve us: if they
- would yield us but the superfluity, while it were
- wholesome, we might guess they relieved us humanely;
- but they think we are too dear: the leanness that
- afflicts us, the object of our misery, is as an
- inventory to particularise their abundance; our
- sufferance is a gain to them Let us revenge this with
- our pikes, ere we become rakes: for the gods know I
- speak this in hunger for bread, not in thirst for revenge.
- Second Citizen:
- Would you proceed especially against Caius Marcius?
- All:
- Against him first: he's a very dog to the commonalty.
- Second Citizen:
- Consider you what services he has done for his country?
- First Citizen:
- Very well; and could be content to give him good
- report fort, but that he pays himself with being proud.
- Second Citizen:
- Nay, but speak not maliciously.
- First Citizen:
- I say unto you, what he hath done famously, he did
- it to that end: though soft-conscienced men can be
- content to say it was for his country he did it to
- please his mother and to be partly proud; which he
- is, even till the altitude of his virtue.
- Second Citizen:
- What he cannot help in his nature, you account a
- vice in him. You must in no way say he is covetous.
- First Citizen:
- If I must not, I need not be barren of accusations;
- he hath faults, with surplus, to tire in repetition.
- What shouts are these? The other side o' the city
- is risen: why stay we prating here? to the Capitol!
- All:
- Come, come.
- First Citizen:
- Soft! who comes here?
- Second Citizen:
- Worthy Menenius Agrippa; one that hath always loved
- the people.
- First Citizen:
- He's one honest enough: would all the rest were so!
- MENENIUS:
- What work's, my countrymen, in hand? where go you
- With bats and clubs? The matter? speak, I pray you.
- First Citizen:
- Our business is not unknown to the senate; they have
- had inkling this fortnight what we intend to do,
- which now we'll show 'em in deeds. They say poor
- suitors have strong breaths: they shall know we
- have strong arms too.
- MENENIUS:
- Why, masters, my good friends, mine honest neighbours,
- Will you undo yourselves?
- First Citizen:
- We cannot, sir, we are undone already.
- MENENIUS:
- I tell you, friends, most charitable care
- Have the patricians of you. For your wants,
- Your suffering in this dearth, you may as well
- Strike at the heaven with your staves as lift them
- Against the Roman state, whose course will on
- The way it takes, cracking ten thousand curbs
- Of more strong link asunder than can ever
- Appear in your impediment. For the dearth,
- The gods, not the patricians, make it, and
- Your knees to them, not arms, must help. Alack,
- You are transported by calamity
- Thither where more attends you, and you slander
- The helms o' the state, who care for you like fathers,
- When you curse them as enemies.
- First Citizen:
- Care for us! True, indeed! They ne'er cared for us
- yet: suffer us to famish, and their store-houses
- crammed with grain; make edicts for usury, to
- support usurers; repeal daily any wholesome act
- established against the rich, and provide more
- piercing statutes daily, to chain up and restrain
- the poor. If the wars eat us not up, they will; and
- there's all the love they bear us.
- MENENIUS:
- Either you must
- Confess yourselves wondrous malicious,
- Or be accused of folly. I shall tell you
- A pretty tale: it may be you have heard it;
- But, since it serves my purpose, I will venture
- To stale 't a little more.
- First Citizen:
- Well, I'll hear it, sir: yet you must not think to
- fob off our disgrace with a tale: but, an 't please
- you, deliver.
- MENENIUS:
- There was a time when all the body's members
- Rebell'd against the belly, thus accused it:
- That only like a gulf it did remain
- I' the midst o' the body, idle and unactive,
- Still cupboarding the viand, never bearing
- Like labour with the rest, where the other instruments
- Did see and hear, devise, instruct, walk, feel,
- And, mutually participate, did minister
- Unto the appetite and affection common
- Of the whole body. The belly answer'd--
- First Citizen:
- Well, sir, what answer made the belly?
- MENENIUS:
- Sir, I shall tell you. With a kind of smile,
- Which ne'er came from the lungs, but even thus--
- For, look you, I may make the belly smile
- As well as speak--it tauntingly replied
- To the discontented members, the mutinous parts
- That envied his receipt; even so most fitly
- As you malign our senators for that
- They are not such as you.
- First Citizen:
- Your belly's answer? What!
- The kingly-crowned head, the vigilant eye,
- The counsellor heart, the arm our soldier,
- Our steed the leg, the tongue our trumpeter.
- With other muniments and petty helps
- In this our fabric, if that they--
- MENENIUS:
- What then?
- 'Fore me, this fellow speaks! What then? what then?
- First Citizen:
- Should by the cormorant belly be restrain'd,
- Who is the sink o' the body,--
- MENENIUS:
- Well, what then?
- First Citizen:
- The former agents, if they did complain,
- What could the belly answer?
- MENENIUS:
- I will tell you
- If you'll bestow a small--of what you have little--
- Patience awhile, you'll hear the belly's answer.
- First Citizen:
- Ye're long about it.
- MENENIUS:
- Note me this, good friend;
- Your most grave belly was deliberate,
- Not rash like his accusers, and thus answer'd:
- 'True is it, my incorporate friends,' quoth he,
- 'That I receive the general food at first,
- Which you do live upon; and fit it is,
- Because I am the store-house and the shop
- Of the whole body: but, if you do remember,
- I send it through the rivers of your blood,
- Even to the court, the heart, to the seat o' the brain;
- And, through the cranks and offices of man,
- The strongest nerves and small inferior veins
- From me receive that natural competency
- Whereby they live: and though that all at once,
- You, my good friends,'--this says the belly, mark me,--
- First Citizen:
- Ay, sir; well, well.
- MENENIUS:
- 'Though all at once cannot
- See what I do deliver out to each,
- Yet I can make my audit up, that all
- From me do back receive the flour of all,
- And leave me but the bran.' What say you to't?
- First Citizen:
- It was an answer: how apply you this?
- MENENIUS:
- The senators of Rome are this good belly,
- And you the mutinous members; for examine
- Their counsels and their cares, digest things rightly
- Touching the weal o' the common, you shall find
- No public benefit which you receive
- But it proceeds or comes from them to you
- And no way from yourselves. What do you think,
- You, the great toe of this assembly?
- First Citizen:
- I the great toe! why the great toe?
- MENENIUS:
- For that, being one o' the lowest, basest, poorest,
- Of this most wise rebellion, thou go'st foremost:
- Thou rascal, that art worst in blood to run,
- Lead'st first to win some vantage.
- But make you ready your stiff bats and clubs:
- Rome and her rats are at the point of battle;
- The one side must have bale.
- Hail, noble Marcius!
- MARCIUS:
- Thanks. What's the matter, you dissentious rogues,
- That, rubbing the poor itch of your opinion,
- Make yourselves scabs?
- First Citizen:
- We have ever your good word.
- MARCIUS:
- He that will give good words to thee will flatter
- Beneath abhorring. What would you have, you curs,
- That like nor peace nor war? the one affrights you,
- The other makes you proud. He that trusts to you,
- Where he should find you lions, finds you hares;
- Where foxes, geese: you are no surer, no,
- Than is the coal of fire upon the ice,
- Or hailstone in the sun. Your virtue is
- To make him worthy whose offence subdues him
- And curse that justice did it.
- Who deserves greatness
- Deserves your hate; and your affections are
- A sick man's appetite, who desires most that
- Which would increase his evil. He that depends
- Upon your favours swims with fins of lead
- And hews down oaks with rushes. Hang ye! Trust Ye?
- With every minute you do change a mind,
- And call him noble that was now your hate,
- Him vile that was your garland. What's the matter,
- That in these several places of the city
- You cry against the noble senate, who,
- Under the gods, keep you in awe, which else
- Would feed on one another? What's their seeking?
- MENENIUS:
- For corn at their own rates; whereof, they say,
- The city is well stored.
- MARCIUS:
- Hang 'em! They say!
- They'll sit by the fire, and presume to know
- What's done i' the Capitol; who's like to rise,
- Who thrives and who declines; side factions
- and give out
- Conjectural marriages; making parties strong
- And feebling such as stand not in their liking
- Below their cobbled shoes. They say there's
- grain enough!
- Would the nobility lay aside their ruth,
- And let me use my sword, I'll make a quarry
- With thousands of these quarter'd slaves, as high
- As I could pick my lance.
- MENENIUS:
- Nay, these are almost thoroughly persuaded;
- For though abundantly they lack discretion,
- Yet are they passing cowardly. But, I beseech you,
- What says the other troop?
- MARCIUS:
- They are dissolved: hang 'em!
- They said they were an-hungry; sigh'd forth proverbs,
- That hunger broke stone walls, that dogs must eat,
- That meat was made for mouths, that the gods sent not
- Corn for the rich men only: with these shreds
- They vented their complainings; which being answer'd,
- And a petition granted them, a strange one--
- To break the heart of generosity,
- And make bold power look pale--they threw their caps
- As they would hang them on the horns o' the moon,
- Shouting their emulation.
- MENENIUS:
- What is granted them?
- MARCIUS:
- Five tribunes to defend their vulgar wisdoms,
- Of their own choice: one's Junius Brutus,
- Sicinius Velutus, and I know not--'Sdeath!
- The rabble should have first unroof'd the city,
- Ere so prevail'd with me: it will in time
- Win upon power and throw forth greater themes
- For insurrection's arguing.
- MENENIUS:
- This is strange.
- MARCIUS:
- Go, get you home, you fragments!
- Messenger:
- Where's Caius Marcius?
- MARCIUS:
- Here: what's the matter?
- Messenger:
- The news is, sir, the Volsces are in arms.
- MARCIUS:
- I am glad on 't: then we shall ha' means to vent
- Our musty superfluity. See, our best elders.
- First Senator:
- Marcius, 'tis true that you have lately told us;
- The Volsces are in arms.
- MARCIUS:
- They have a leader,
- Tullus Aufidius, that will put you to 't.
- I sin in envying his nobility,
- And were I any thing but what I am,
- I would wish me only he.
- COMINIUS:
- You have fought together.
- MARCIUS:
- Were half to half the world by the ears and he.
- Upon my party, I'ld revolt to make
- Only my wars with him: he is a lion
- That I am proud to hunt.
- First Senator:
- Then, worthy Marcius,
- Attend upon Cominius to these wars.
- COMINIUS:
- It is your former promise.
- MARCIUS:
- Sir, it is;
- And I am constant. Titus Lartius, thou
- Shalt see me once more strike at Tullus' face.
- What, art thou stiff? stand'st out?
- TITUS:
- No, Caius Marcius;
- I'll lean upon one crutch and fight with t'other,
- Ere stay behind this business.
- MENENIUS:
- O, true-bred!
- First Senator:
- Your company to the Capitol; where, I know,
- Our greatest friends attend us.
- TITUS:
- COMINIUS:
- Noble Marcius!
- First Senator:
- MARCIUS:
- Nay, let them follow:
- The Volsces have much corn; take these rats thither
- To gnaw their garners. Worshipful mutiners,
- Your valour puts well forth: pray, follow.
- SICINIUS:
- Was ever man so proud as is this Marcius?
- BRUTUS:
- He has no equal.
- SICINIUS:
- When we were chosen tribunes for the people,--
- BRUTUS:
- Mark'd you his lip and eyes?
- SICINIUS:
- Nay. but his taunts.
- BRUTUS:
- Being moved, he will not spare to gird the gods.
- SICINIUS:
- Be-mock the modest moon.
- BRUTUS:
- The present wars devour him: he is grown
- Too proud to be so valiant.
- SICINIUS:
- Such a nature,
- Tickled with good success, disdains the shadow
- Which he treads on at noon: but I do wonder
- His insolence can brook to be commanded
- Under Cominius.
- BRUTUS:
- Fame, at the which he aims,
- In whom already he's well graced, can not
- Better be held nor more attain'd than by
- A place below the first: for what miscarries
- Shall be the general's fault, though he perform
- To the utmost of a man, and giddy censure
- Will then cry out of Marcius 'O if he
- Had borne the business!'
- SICINIUS:
- Besides, if things go well,
- Opinion that so sticks on Marcius shall
- Of his demerits rob Cominius.
- BRUTUS:
- Come:
- Half all Cominius' honours are to Marcius.
- Though Marcius earned them not, and all his faults
- To Marcius shall be honours, though indeed
- In aught he merit not.
- SICINIUS:
- Let's hence, and hear
- How the dispatch is made, and in what fashion,
- More than his singularity, he goes
- Upon this present action.
- BRUTUS:
- Lets along.
- First Senator:
- So, your opinion is, Aufidius,
- That they of Rome are entered in our counsels
- And know how we proceed.
- AUFIDIUS:
- Is it not yours?
- What ever have been thought on in this state,
- That could be brought to bodily act ere Rome
- Had circumvention? 'Tis not four days gone
- Since I heard thence; these are the words: I think
- I have the letter here; yes, here it is.
- 'They have press'd a power, but it is not known
- Whether for east or west: the dearth is great;
- The people mutinous; and it is rumour'd,
- Cominius, Marcius your old enemy,
- Who is of Rome worse hated than of you,
- And Titus Lartius, a most valiant Roman,
- These three lead on this preparation
- Whither 'tis bent: most likely 'tis for you:
- Consider of it.'
- First Senator:
- Our army's in the field
- We never yet made doubt but Rome was ready
- To answer us.
- AUFIDIUS:
- Nor did you think it folly
- To keep your great pretences veil'd till when
- They needs must show themselves; which
- in the hatching,
- It seem'd, appear'd to Rome. By the discovery.
- We shall be shorten'd in our aim, which was
- To take in many towns ere almost Rome
- Should know we were afoot.
- Second Senator:
- Noble Aufidius,
- Take your commission; hie you to your bands:
- Let us alone to guard Corioli:
- If they set down before 's, for the remove
- Bring your army; but, I think, you'll find
- They've not prepared for us.
- AUFIDIUS:
- O, doubt not that;
- I speak from certainties. Nay, more,
- Some parcels of their power are forth already,
- And only hitherward. I leave your honours.
- If we and Caius Marcius chance to meet,
- 'Tis sworn between us we shall ever strike
- Till one can do no more.
- All:
- The gods assist you!
- AUFIDIUS:
- And keep your honours safe!
- First Senator:
- Farewell.
- Second Senator:
- Farewell.
- All:
- Farewell.
- VOLUMNIA:
- I pray you, daughter, sing; or express yourself in a
- more comfortable sort: if my son were my husband, I
- should freelier rejoice in that absence wherein he
- won honour than in the embracements of his bed where
- he would show most love. When yet he was but
- tender-bodied and the only son of my womb, when
- youth with comeliness plucked all gaze his way, when
- for a day of kings' entreaties a mother should not
- sell him an hour from her beholding, I, considering
- how honour would become such a person. that it was
- no better than picture-like to hang by the wall, if
- renown made it not stir, was pleased to let him seek
- danger where he was like to find fame. To a cruel
- war I sent him; from whence he returned, his brows
- bound with oak. I tell thee, daughter, I sprang not
- more in joy at first hearing he was a man-child
- than now in first seeing he had proved himself a
- man.
- VIRGILIA:
- But had he died in the business, madam; how then?
- VOLUMNIA:
- Then his good report should have been my son; I
- therein would have found issue. Hear me profess
- sincerely: had I a dozen sons, each in my love
- alike and none less dear than thine and my good
- Marcius, I had rather had eleven die nobly for their
- country than one voluptuously surfeit out of action.
- Gentlewoman:
- Madam, the Lady Valeria is come to visit you.
- VIRGILIA:
- Beseech you, give me leave to retire myself.
- VOLUMNIA:
- Indeed, you shall not.
- Methinks I hear hither your husband's drum,
- See him pluck Aufidius down by the hair,
- As children from a bear, the Volsces shunning him:
- Methinks I see him stamp thus, and call thus:
- 'Come on, you cowards! you were got in fear,
- Though you were born in Rome:' his bloody brow
- With his mail'd hand then wiping, forth he goes,
- Like to a harvest-man that's task'd to mow
- Or all or lose his hire.
- VIRGILIA:
- His bloody brow! O Jupiter, no blood!
- VOLUMNIA:
- Away, you fool! it more becomes a man
- Than gilt his trophy: the breasts of Hecuba,
- When she did suckle Hector, look'd not lovelier
- Than Hector's forehead when it spit forth blood
- At Grecian sword, contemning. Tell Valeria,
- We are fit to bid her welcome.
- VIRGILIA:
- Heavens bless my lord from fell Aufidius!
- VOLUMNIA:
- He'll beat Aufidius 'head below his knee
- And tread upon his neck.
- VALERIA:
- My ladies both, good day to you.
- VOLUMNIA:
- Sweet madam.
- VIRGILIA:
- I am glad to see your ladyship.
- VALERIA:
- How do you both? you are manifest house-keepers.
- What are you sewing here? A fine spot, in good
- faith. How does your little son?
- VIRGILIA:
- I thank your ladyship; well, good madam.
- VOLUMNIA:
- He had rather see the swords, and hear a drum, than
- look upon his school-master.
- VALERIA:
- O' my word, the father's son: I'll swear,'tis a
- very pretty boy. O' my troth, I looked upon him o'
- Wednesday half an hour together: has such a
- confirmed countenance. I saw him run after a gilded
- butterfly: and when he caught it, he let it go
- again; and after it again; and over and over he
- comes, and again; catched it again; or whether his
- fall enraged him, or how 'twas, he did so set his
- teeth and tear it; O, I warrant it, how he mammocked
- it!
- VOLUMNIA:
- One on 's father's moods.
- VALERIA:
- Indeed, la, 'tis a noble child.
- VIRGILIA:
- A crack, madam.
- VALERIA:
- Come, lay aside your stitchery; I must have you play
- the idle husewife with me this afternoon.
- VIRGILIA:
- No, good madam; I will not out of doors.
- VALERIA:
- Not out of doors!
- VOLUMNIA:
- She shall, she shall.
- VIRGILIA:
- Indeed, no, by your patience; I'll not over the
- threshold till my lord return from the wars.
- VALERIA:
- Fie, you confine yourself most unreasonably: come,
- you must go visit the good lady that lies in.
- VIRGILIA:
- I will wish her speedy strength, and visit her with
- my prayers; but I cannot go thither.
- VOLUMNIA:
- Why, I pray you?
- VIRGILIA:
- 'Tis not to save labour, nor that I want love.
- VALERIA:
- You would be another Penelope: yet, they say, all
- the yarn she spun in Ulysses' absence did but fill
- Ithaca full of moths. Come; I would your cambric
- were sensible as your finger, that you might leave
- pricking it for pity. Come, you shall go with us.
- VIRGILIA:
- No, good madam, pardon me; indeed, I will not forth.
- VALERIA:
- In truth, la, go with me; and I'll tell you
- excellent news of your husband.
- VIRGILIA:
- O, good madam, there can be none yet.
- VALERIA:
- Verily, I do not jest with you; there came news from
- him last night.
- VIRGILIA:
- Indeed, madam?
- VALERIA:
- In earnest, it's true; I heard a senator speak it.
- Thus it is: the Volsces have an army forth; against
- whom Cominius the general is gone, with one part of
- our Roman power: your lord and Titus Lartius are set
- down before their city Corioli; they nothing doubt
- prevailing and to make it brief wars. This is true,
- on mine honour; and so, I pray, go with us.
- VIRGILIA:
- Give me excuse, good madam; I will obey you in every
- thing hereafter.
- VOLUMNIA:
- Let her alone, lady: as she is now, she will but
- disease our better mirth.
- VALERIA:
- In troth, I think she would. Fare you well, then.
- Come, good sweet lady. Prithee, Virgilia, turn thy
- solemness out o' door. and go along with us.
- VIRGILIA:
- No, at a word, madam; indeed, I must not. I wish
- you much mirth.
- VALERIA:
- Well, then, farewell.
- MARCIUS:
- Yonder comes news. A wager they have met.
- LARTIUS:
- My horse to yours, no.
- MARCIUS:
- 'Tis done.
- LARTIUS:
- Agreed.
- MARCIUS:
- Say, has our general met the enemy?
- Messenger:
- They lie in view; but have not spoke as yet.
- LARTIUS:
- So, the good horse is mine.
- MARCIUS:
- I'll buy him of you.
- LARTIUS:
- No, I'll nor sell nor give him: lend you him I will
- For half a hundred years. Summon the town.
- MARCIUS:
- How far off lie these armies?
- Messenger:
- Within this mile and half.
- MARCIUS:
- Then shall we hear their 'larum, and they ours.
- Now, Mars, I prithee, make us quick in work,
- That we with smoking swords may march from hence,
- To help our fielded friends! Come, blow thy blast.
- Tutus Aufidius, is he within your walls?
- First Senator:
- No, nor a man that fears you less than he,
- That's lesser than a little.
- Hark! our drums
- Are bringing forth our youth. We'll break our walls,
- Rather than they shall pound us up: our gates,
- Which yet seem shut, we, have but pinn'd with rushes;
- They'll open of themselves.
- Hark you. far off!
- There is Aufidius; list, what work he makes
- Amongst your cloven army.
- MARCIUS:
- O, they are at it!
- LARTIUS:
- Their noise be our instruction. Ladders, ho!
- MARCIUS:
- They fear us not, but issue forth their city.
- Now put your shields before your hearts, and fight
- With hearts more proof than shields. Advance,
- brave Titus:
- They do disdain us much beyond our thoughts,
- Which makes me sweat with wrath. Come on, my fellows:
- He that retires I'll take him for a Volsce,
- And he shall feel mine edge.
- MARCIUS:
- All the contagion of the south light on you,
- You shames of Rome! you herd of--Boils and plagues
- Plaster you o'er, that you may be abhorr'd
- Further than seen and one infect another
- Against the wind a mile! You souls of geese,
- That bear the shapes of men, how have you run
- From slaves that apes would beat! Pluto and hell!
- All hurt behind; backs red, and faces pale
- With flight and agued fear! Mend and charge home,
- Or, by the fires of heaven, I'll leave the foe
- And make my wars on you: look to't: come on;
- If you'll stand fast, we'll beat them to their wives,
- As they us to our trenches followed.
- So, now the gates are ope: now prove good seconds:
- 'Tis for the followers fortune widens them,
- Not for the fliers: mark me, and do the like.
- First Soldier:
- Fool-hardiness; not I.
- Second Soldier:
- Nor I.
- First Soldier:
- See, they have shut him in.
- All:
- To the pot, I warrant him.
- LARTIUS:
- What is become of Marcius?
- All:
- Slain, sir, doubtless.
- First Soldier:
- Following the fliers at the very heels,
- With them he enters; who, upon the sudden,
- Clapp'd to their gates: he is himself alone,
- To answer all the city.
- LARTIUS:
- O noble fellow!
- Who sensibly outdares his senseless sword,
- And, when it bows, stands up. Thou art left, Marcius:
- A carbuncle entire, as big as thou art,
- Were not so rich a jewel. Thou wast a soldier
- Even to Cato's wish, not fierce and terrible
- Only in strokes; but, with thy grim looks and
- The thunder-like percussion of thy sounds,
- Thou madst thine enemies shake, as if the world
- Were feverous and did tremble.
- First Soldier:
- Look, sir.
- LARTIUS:
- O,'tis Marcius!
- Let's fetch him off, or make remain alike.
- First Roman:
- This will I carry to Rome.
- Second Roman:
- And I this.
- Third Roman:
- A murrain on't! I took this for silver.
- MARCIUS:
- See here these movers that do prize their hours
- At a crack'd drachm! Cushions, leaden spoons,
- Irons of a doit, doublets that hangmen would
- Bury with those that wore them, these base slaves,
- Ere yet the fight be done, pack up: down with them!
- And hark, what noise the general makes! To him!
- There is the man of my soul's hate, Aufidius,
- Piercing our Romans: then, valiant Titus, take
- Convenient numbers to make good the city;
- Whilst I, with those that have the spirit, will haste
- To help Cominius.
- LARTIUS:
- Worthy sir, thou bleed'st;
- Thy exercise hath been too violent for
- A second course of fight.
- MARCIUS:
- Sir, praise me not;
- My work hath yet not warm'd me: fare you well:
- The blood I drop is rather physical
- Than dangerous to me: to Aufidius thus
- I will appear, and fight.
- LARTIUS:
- Now the fair goddess, Fortune,
- Fall deep in love with thee; and her great charms
- Misguide thy opposers' swords! Bold gentleman,
- Prosperity be thy page!
- MARCIUS:
- Thy friend no less
- Than those she placeth highest! So, farewell.
- LARTIUS:
- Thou worthiest Marcius!
- Go, sound thy trumpet in the market-place;
- Call thither all the officers o' the town,
- Where they shall know our mind: away!
- COMINIUS:
- Breathe you, my friends: well fought;
- we are come off
- Like Romans, neither foolish in our stands,
- Nor cowardly in retire: believe me, sirs,
- We shall be charged again. Whiles we have struck,
- By interims and conveying gusts we have heard
- The charges of our friends. Ye Roman gods!
- Lead their successes as we wish our own,
- That both our powers, with smiling
- fronts encountering,
- May give you thankful sacrifice.
- Thy news?
- Messenger:
- The citizens of Corioli have issued,
- And given to Lartius and to Marcius battle:
- I saw our party to their trenches driven,
- And then I came away.
- COMINIUS:
- Though thou speak'st truth,
- Methinks thou speak'st not well.
- How long is't since?
- Messenger:
- Above an hour, my lord.
- COMINIUS:
- 'Tis not a mile; briefly we heard their drums:
- How couldst thou in a mile confound an hour,
- And bring thy news so late?
- Messenger:
- Spies of the Volsces
- Held me in chase, that I was forced to wheel
- Three or four miles about, else had I, sir,
- Half an hour since brought my report.
- COMINIUS:
- Who's yonder,
- That does appear as he were flay'd? O gods
- He has the stamp of Marcius; and I have
- Before-time seen him thus.
- MARCIUS:
- COMINIUS:
- The shepherd knows not thunder from a tabour
- More than I know the sound of Marcius' tongue
- From every meaner man.
- MARCIUS:
- Come I too late?
- COMINIUS:
- Ay, if you come not in the blood of others,
- But mantled in your own.
- MARCIUS:
- O, let me clip ye
- In arms as sound as when I woo'd, in heart
- As merry as when our nuptial day was done,
- And tapers burn'd to bedward!
- COMINIUS:
- Flower of warriors,
- How is it with Titus Lartius?
- MARCIUS:
- As with a man busied about decrees:
- Condemning some to death, and some to exile;
- Ransoming him, or pitying, threatening the other;
- Holding Corioli in the name of Rome,
- Even like a fawning greyhound in the leash,
- To let him slip at will.
- COMINIUS:
- Where is that slave
- Which told me they had beat you to your trenches?
- Where is he? call him hither.
- MARCIUS:
- Let him alone;
- He did inform the truth: but for our gentlemen,
- The common file--a plague! tribunes for them!--
- The mouse ne'er shunn'd the cat as they did budge
- From rascals worse than they.
- COMINIUS:
- But how prevail'd you?
- MARCIUS:
- Will the time serve to tell? I do not think.
- Where is the enemy? are you lords o' the field?
- If not, why cease you till you are so?
- COMINIUS:
- Marcius,
- We have at disadvantage fought and did
- Retire to win our purpose.
- MARCIUS:
- How lies their battle? know you on which side
- They have placed their men of trust?
- COMINIUS:
- As I guess, Marcius,
- Their bands i' the vaward are the Antiates,
- Of their best trust; o'er them Aufidius,
- Their very heart of hope.
- MARCIUS:
- I do beseech you,
- By all the battles wherein we have fought,
- By the blood we have shed together, by the vows
- We have made to endure friends, that you directly
- Set me against Aufidius and his Antiates;
- And that you not delay the present, but,
- Filling the air with swords advanced and darts,
- We prove this very hour.
- COMINIUS:
- Though I could wish
- You were conducted to a gentle bath
- And balms applied to, you, yet dare I never
- Deny your asking: take your choice of those
- That best can aid your action.
- MARCIUS:
- Those are they
- That most are willing. If any such be here--
- As it were sin to doubt--that love this painting
- Wherein you see me smear'd; if any fear
- Lesser his person than an ill report;
- If any think brave death outweighs bad life
- And that his country's dearer than himself;
- Let him alone, or so many so minded,
- Wave thus, to express his disposition,
- And follow Marcius.
- O, me alone! make you a sword of me?
- If these shows be not outward, which of you
- But is four Volsces? none of you but is
- Able to bear against the great Aufidius
- A shield as hard as his. A certain number,
- Though thanks to all, must I select
- from all: the rest
- Shall bear the business in some other fight,
- As cause will be obey'd. Please you to march;
- And four shall quickly draw out my command,
- Which men are best inclined.
- COMINIUS:
- March on, my fellows:
- Make good this ostentation, and you shall
- Divide in all with us.
- LARTIUS:
- So, let the ports be guarded: keep your duties,
- As I have set them down. If I do send, dispatch
- Those centuries to our aid: the rest will serve
- For a short holding: if we lose the field,
- We cannot keep the town.
- Lieutenant:
- Fear not our care, sir.
- LARTIUS:
- Hence, and shut your gates upon's.
- Our guider, come; to the Roman camp conduct us.
- MARCIUS:
- I'll fight with none but thee; for I do hate thee
- Worse than a promise-breaker.
- AUFIDIUS:
- We hate alike:
- Not Afric owns a serpent I abhor
- More than thy fame and envy. Fix thy foot.
- MARCIUS:
- Let the first budger die the other's slave,
- And the gods doom him after!
- AUFIDIUS:
- If I fly, Marcius,
- Holloa me like a hare.
- MARCIUS:
- Within these three hours, Tullus,
- Alone I fought in your Corioli walls,
- And made what work I pleased: 'tis not my blood
- Wherein thou seest me mask'd; for thy revenge
- Wrench up thy power to the highest.
- AUFIDIUS:
- Wert thou the Hector
- That was the whip of your bragg'd progeny,
- Thou shouldst not scape me here.
- Officious, and not valiant, you have shamed me
- In your condemned seconds.
- COMINIUS:
- If I should tell thee o'er this thy day's work,
- Thou'ldst not believe thy deeds: but I'll report it
- Where senators shall mingle tears with smiles,
- Where great patricians shall attend and shrug,
- I' the end admire, where ladies shall be frighted,
- And, gladly quaked, hear more; where the
- dull tribunes,
- That, with the fusty plebeians, hate thine honours,
- Shall say against their hearts 'We thank the gods
- Our Rome hath such a soldier.'
- Yet camest thou to a morsel of this feast,
- Having fully dined before.
- LARTIUS:
- O general,
- Here is the steed, we the caparison:
- Hadst thou beheld--
- MARCIUS:
- Pray now, no more: my mother,
- Who has a charter to extol her blood,
- When she does praise me grieves me. I have done
- As you have done; that's what I can; induced
- As you have been; that's for my country:
- He that has but effected his good will
- Hath overta'en mine act.
- COMINIUS:
- You shall not be
- The grave of your deserving; Rome must know
- The value of her own: 'twere a concealment
- Worse than a theft, no less than a traducement,
- To hide your doings; and to silence that,
- Which, to the spire and top of praises vouch'd,
- Would seem but modest: therefore, I beseech you
- In sign of what you are, not to reward
- What you have done--before our army hear me.
- MARCIUS:
- I have some wounds upon me, and they smart
- To hear themselves remember'd.
- COMINIUS:
- Should they not,
- Well might they fester 'gainst ingratitude,
- And tent themselves with death. Of all the horses,
- Whereof we have ta'en good and good store, of all
- The treasure in this field achieved and city,
- We render you the tenth, to be ta'en forth,
- Before the common distribution, at
- Your only choice.
- MARCIUS:
- I thank you, general;
- But cannot make my heart consent to take
- A bribe to pay my sword: I do refuse it;
- And stand upon my common part with those
- That have beheld the doing.
- MARCIUS:
- May these same instruments, which you profane,
- Never sound more! when drums and trumpets shall
- I' the field prove flatterers, let courts and cities be
- Made all of false-faced soothing!
- When steel grows soft as the parasite's silk,
- Let him be made a coverture for the wars!
- No more, I say! For that I have not wash'd
- My nose that bled, or foil'd some debile wretch.--
- Which, without note, here's many else have done,--
- You shout me forth
- In acclamations hyperbolical;
- As if I loved my little should be dieted
- In praises sauced with lies.
- COMINIUS:
- Too modest are you;
- More cruel to your good report than grateful
- To us that give you truly: by your patience,
- If 'gainst yourself you be incensed, we'll put you,
- Like one that means his proper harm, in manacles,
- Then reason safely with you. Therefore, be it known,
- As to us, to all the world, that Caius Marcius
- Wears this war's garland: in token of the which,
- My noble steed, known to the camp, I give him,
- With all his trim belonging; and from this time,
- For what he did before Corioli, call him,
- With all the applause and clamour of the host,
- CAIUS MARCIUS CORIOLANUS! Bear
- The addition nobly ever!
- All:
- Caius Marcius Coriolanus!
- CORIOLANUS:
- I will go wash;
- And when my face is fair, you shall perceive
- Whether I blush or no: howbeit, I thank you.
- I mean to stride your steed, and at all times
- To undercrest your good addition
- To the fairness of my power.
- COMINIUS:
- So, to our tent;
- Where, ere we do repose us, we will write
- To Rome of our success. You, Titus Lartius,
- Must to Corioli back: send us to Rome
- The best, with whom we may articulate,
- For their own good and ours.
- LARTIUS:
- I shall, my lord.
- CORIOLANUS:
- The gods begin to mock me. I, that now
- Refused most princely gifts, am bound to beg
- Of my lord general.
- COMINIUS:
- Take't; 'tis yours. What is't?
- CORIOLANUS:
- I sometime lay here in Corioli
- At a poor man's house; he used me kindly:
- He cried to me; I saw him prisoner;
- But then Aufidius was within my view,
- And wrath o'erwhelm'd my pity: I request you
- To give my poor host freedom.
- COMINIUS:
- O, well begg'd!
- Were he the butcher of my son, he should
- Be free as is the wind. Deliver him, Titus.
- LARTIUS:
- Marcius, his name?
- CORIOLANUS:
- By Jupiter! forgot.
- I am weary; yea, my memory is tired.
- Have we no wine here?
- COMINIUS:
- Go we to our tent:
- The blood upon your visage dries; 'tis time
- It should be look'd to: come.
- AUFIDIUS:
- The town is ta'en!
- First Soldier:
- 'Twill be deliver'd back on good condition.
- AUFIDIUS:
- Condition!
- I would I were a Roman; for I cannot,
- Being a Volsce, be that I am. Condition!
- What good condition can a treaty find
- I' the part that is at mercy? Five times, Marcius,
- I have fought with thee: so often hast thou beat me,
- And wouldst do so, I think, should we encounter
- As often as we eat. By the elements,
- If e'er again I meet him beard to beard,
- He's mine, or I am his: mine emulation
- Hath not that honour in't it had; for where
- I thought to crush him in an equal force,
- True sword to sword, I'll potch at him some way
- Or wrath or craft may get him.
- First Soldier:
- He's the devil.
- AUFIDIUS:
- Bolder, though not so subtle. My valour's poison'd
- With only suffering stain by him; for him
- Shall fly out of itself: nor sleep nor sanctuary,
- Being naked, sick, nor fane nor Capitol,
- The prayers of priests nor times of sacrifice,
- Embarquements all of fury, shall lift up
- Their rotten privilege and custom 'gainst
- My hate to Marcius: where I find him, were it
- At home, upon my brother's guard, even there,
- Against the hospitable canon, would I
- Wash my fierce hand in's heart. Go you to the city;
- Learn how 'tis held; and what they are that must
- Be hostages for Rome.
- First Soldier:
- Will not you go?
- AUFIDIUS:
- I am attended at the cypress grove: I pray you--
- 'Tis south the city mills--bring me word thither
- How the world goes, that to the pace of it
- I may spur on my journey.
- First Soldier:
- I shall, sir.
- MENENIUS:
- The augurer tells me we shall have news to-night.
- BRUTUS:
- Good or bad?
- MENENIUS:
- Not according to the prayer of the people, for they
- love not Marcius.
- SICINIUS:
- Nature teaches beasts to know their friends.
- MENENIUS:
- Pray you, who does the wolf love?
- SICINIUS:
- The lamb.
- MENENIUS:
- Ay, to devour him; as the hungry plebeians would the
- noble Marcius.
- BRUTUS:
- He's a lamb indeed, that baes like a bear.
- MENENIUS:
- He's a bear indeed, that lives like a lamb. You two
- are old men: tell me one thing that I shall ask you.
- Both:
- Well, sir.
- MENENIUS:
- In what enormity is Marcius poor in, that you two
- have not in abundance?
- BRUTUS:
- He's poor in no one fault, but stored with all.
- SICINIUS:
- Especially in pride.
- BRUTUS:
- And topping all others in boasting.
- MENENIUS:
- This is strange now: do you two know how you are
- censured here in the city, I mean of us o' the
- right-hand file? do you?
- Both:
- Why, how are we censured?
- MENENIUS:
- Because you talk of pride now,--will you not be angry?
- Both:
- Well, well, sir, well.
- MENENIUS:
- Why, 'tis no great matter; for a very little thief of
- occasion will rob you of a great deal of patience:
- give your dispositions the reins, and be angry at
- your pleasures; at the least if you take it as a
- pleasure to you in being so. You blame Marcius for
- being proud?
- BRUTUS:
- We do it not alone, sir.
- MENENIUS:
- I know you can do very little alone; for your helps
- are many, or else your actions would grow wondrous
- single: your abilities are too infant-like for
- doing much alone. You talk of pride: O that you
- could turn your eyes toward the napes of your necks,
- and make but an interior survey of your good selves!
- O that you could!
- BRUTUS:
- What then, sir?
- MENENIUS:
- Why, then you should discover a brace of unmeriting,
- proud, violent, testy magistrates, alias fools, as
- any in Rome.
- SICINIUS:
- Menenius, you are known well enough too.
- MENENIUS:
- I am known to be a humorous patrician, and one that
- loves a cup of hot wine with not a drop of allaying
- Tiber in't; said to be something imperfect in
- favouring the first complaint; hasty and tinder-like
- upon too trivial motion; one that converses more
- with the buttock of the night than with the forehead
- of the morning: what I think I utter, and spend my
- malice in my breath. Meeting two such wealsmen as
- you are--I cannot call you Lycurguses--if the drink
- you give me touch my palate adversely, I make a
- crooked face at it. I can't say your worships have
- delivered the matter well, when I find the ass in
- compound with the major part of your syllables: and
- though I must be content to bear with those that say
- you are reverend grave men, yet they lie deadly that
- tell you you have good faces. If you see this in
- the map of my microcosm, follows it that I am known
- well enough too? what barm can your bisson
- conspectuities glean out of this character, if I be
- known well enough too?
- BRUTUS:
- Come, sir, come, we know you well enough.
- MENENIUS:
- You know neither me, yourselves nor any thing. You
- are ambitious for poor knaves' caps and legs: you
- wear out a good wholesome forenoon in hearing a
- cause between an orange wife and a fosset-seller;
- and then rejourn the controversy of three pence to a
- second day of audience. When you are hearing a
- matter between party and party, if you chance to be
- pinched with the colic, you make faces like
- mummers; set up the bloody flag against all
- patience; and, in roaring for a chamber-pot,
- dismiss the controversy bleeding the more entangled
- by your hearing: all the peace you make in their
- cause is, calling both the parties knaves. You are
- a pair of strange ones.
- BRUTUS:
- Come, come, you are well understood to be a
- perfecter giber for the table than a necessary
- bencher in the Capitol.
- MENENIUS:
- Our very priests must become mockers, if they shall
- encounter such ridiculous subjects as you are. When
- you speak best unto the purpose, it is not worth the
- wagging of your beards; and your beards deserve not
- so honourable a grave as to stuff a botcher's
- cushion, or to be entombed in an ass's pack-
- saddle. Yet you must be saying, Marcius is proud;
- who in a cheap estimation, is worth predecessors
- since Deucalion, though peradventure some of the
- best of 'em were hereditary hangmen. God-den to
- your worships: more of your conversation would
- infect my brain, being the herdsmen of the beastly
- plebeians: I will be bold to take my leave of you.
- How now, my as fair as noble ladies,--and the moon,
- were she earthly, no nobler,--whither do you follow
- your eyes so fast?
- VOLUMNIA:
- Honourable Menenius, my boy Marcius approaches; for
- the love of Juno, let's go.
- MENENIUS:
- Ha! Marcius coming home!
- VOLUMNIA:
- Ay, worthy Menenius; and with most prosperous
- approbation.
- MENENIUS:
- Take my cap, Jupiter, and I thank thee. Hoo!
- Marcius coming home!
- VOLUMNIA:
- Nay,'tis true.
- VOLUMNIA:
- Look, here's a letter from him: the state hath
- another, his wife another; and, I think, there's one
- at home for you.
- MENENIUS:
- I will make my very house reel tonight: a letter for
- me!
- VIRGILIA:
- Yes, certain, there's a letter for you; I saw't.
- MENENIUS:
- A letter for me! it gives me an estate of seven
- years' health; in which time I will make a lip at
- the physician: the most sovereign prescription in
- Galen is but empiricutic, and, to this preservative,
- of no better report than a horse-drench. Is he
- not wounded? he was wont to come home wounded.
- VIRGILIA:
- O, no, no, no.
- VOLUMNIA:
- O, he is wounded; I thank the gods for't.
- MENENIUS:
- So do I too, if it be not too much: brings a'
- victory in his pocket? the wounds become him.
- VOLUMNIA:
- On's brows: Menenius, he comes the third time home
- with the oaken garland.
- MENENIUS:
- Has he disciplined Aufidius soundly?
- VOLUMNIA:
- Titus Lartius writes, they fought together, but
- Aufidius got off.
- MENENIUS:
- And 'twas time for him too, I'll warrant him that:
- an he had stayed by him, I would not have been so
- fidiused for all the chests in Corioli, and the gold
- that's in them. Is the senate possessed of this?
- VOLUMNIA:
- Good ladies, let's go. Yes, yes, yes; the senate
- has letters from the general, wherein he gives my
- son the whole name of the war: he hath in this
- action outdone his former deeds doubly
- VALERIA:
- In troth, there's wondrous things spoke of him.
- MENENIUS:
- Wondrous! ay, I warrant you, and not without his
- true purchasing.
- VIRGILIA:
- The gods grant them true!
- VOLUMNIA:
- True! pow, wow.
- MENENIUS:
- True! I'll be sworn they are true.
- Where is he wounded?
- God save your good worships! Marcius is coming
- home: he has more cause to be proud. Where is he wounded?
- VOLUMNIA:
- I' the shoulder and i' the left arm there will be
- large cicatrices to show the people, when he shall
- stand for his place. He received in the repulse of
- Tarquin seven hurts i' the body.
- MENENIUS:
- One i' the neck, and two i' the thigh,--there's
- nine that I know.
- VOLUMNIA:
- He had, before this last expedition, twenty-five
- wounds upon him.
- MENENIUS:
- Now it's twenty-seven: every gash was an enemy's grave.
- Hark! the trumpets.
- VOLUMNIA:
- These are the ushers of Marcius: before him he
- carries noise, and behind him he leaves tears:
- Death, that dark spirit, in 's nervy arm doth lie;
- Which, being advanced, declines, and then men die.
- Herald:
- Know, Rome, that all alone Marcius did fight
- Within Corioli gates: where he hath won,
- With fame, a name to Caius Marcius; these
- In honour follows Coriolanus.
- Welcome to Rome, renowned Coriolanus!
- All:
- Welcome to Rome, renowned Coriolanus!
- CORIOLANUS:
- No more of this; it does offend my heart:
- Pray now, no more.
- COMINIUS:
- Look, sir, your mother!
- CORIOLANUS:
- O,
- You have, I know, petition'd all the gods
- For my prosperity!
- VOLUMNIA:
- Nay, my good soldier, up;
- My gentle Marcius, worthy Caius, and
- By deed-achieving honour newly named,--
- What is it?--Coriolanus must I call thee?--
- But O, thy wife!
- CORIOLANUS:
- My gracious silence, hail!
- Wouldst thou have laugh'd had I come coffin'd home,
- That weep'st to see me triumph? Ay, my dear,
- Such eyes the widows in Corioli wear,
- And mothers that lack sons.
- MENENIUS:
- Now, the gods crown thee!
- CORIOLANUS:
- And live you yet?
- O my sweet lady, pardon.
- VOLUMNIA:
- I know not where to turn: O, welcome home:
- And welcome, general: and ye're welcome all.
- MENENIUS:
- A hundred thousand welcomes. I could weep
- And I could laugh, I am light and heavy. Welcome.
- A curse begin at very root on's heart,
- That is not glad to see thee! You are three
- That Rome should dote on: yet, by the faith of men,
- We have some old crab-trees here
- at home that will not
- Be grafted to your relish. Yet welcome, warriors:
- We call a nettle but a nettle and
- The faults of fools but folly.
- COMINIUS:
- Ever right.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Menenius ever, ever.
- Herald:
- Give way there, and go on!
- CORIOLANUS:
- VOLUMNIA:
- I have lived
- To see inherited my very wishes
- And the buildings of my fancy: only
- There's one thing wanting, which I doubt not but
- Our Rome will cast upon thee.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Know, good mother,
- I had rather be their servant in my way,
- Than sway with them in theirs.
- COMINIUS:
- On, to the Capitol!
- BRUTUS:
- All tongues speak of him, and the bleared sights
- Are spectacled to see him: your prattling nurse
- Into a rapture lets her baby cry
- While she chats him: the kitchen malkin pins
- Her richest lockram 'bout her reechy neck,
- Clambering the walls to eye him: stalls, bulks, windows,
- Are smother'd up, leads fill'd, and ridges horsed
- With variable complexions, all agreeing
- In earnestness to see him: seld-shown flamens
- Do press among the popular throngs and puff
- To win a vulgar station: or veil'd dames
- Commit the war of white and damask in
- Their nicely-gawded cheeks to the wanton spoil
- Of Phoebus' burning kisses: such a pother
- As if that whatsoever god who leads him
- Were slily crept into his human powers
- And gave him graceful posture.
- SICINIUS:
- On the sudden,
- I warrant him consul.
- BRUTUS:
- Then our office may,
- During his power, go sleep.
- SICINIUS:
- He cannot temperately transport his honours
- From where he should begin and end, but will
- Lose those he hath won.
- BRUTUS:
- In that there's comfort.
- SICINIUS:
- Doubt not
- The commoners, for whom we stand, but they
- Upon their ancient malice will forget
- With the least cause these his new honours, which
- That he will give them make I as little question
- As he is proud to do't.
- BRUTUS:
- I heard him swear,
- Were he to stand for consul, never would he
- Appear i' the market-place nor on him put
- The napless vesture of humility;
- Nor showing, as the manner is, his wounds
- To the people, beg their stinking breaths.
- SICINIUS:
- 'Tis right.
- BRUTUS:
- It was his word: O, he would miss it rather
- Than carry it but by the suit of the gentry to him,
- And the desire of the nobles.
- SICINIUS:
- I wish no better
- Than have him hold that purpose and to put it
- In execution.
- BRUTUS:
- 'Tis most like he will.
- SICINIUS:
- It shall be to him then as our good wills,
- A sure destruction.
- BRUTUS:
- So it must fall out
- To him or our authorities. For an end,
- We must suggest the people in what hatred
- He still hath held them; that to's power he would
- Have made them mules, silenced their pleaders and
- Dispropertied their freedoms, holding them,
- In human action and capacity,
- Of no more soul nor fitness for the world
- Than camels in the war, who have their provand
- Only for bearing burdens, and sore blows
- For sinking under them.
- SICINIUS:
- This, as you say, suggested
- At some time when his soaring insolence
- Shall touch the people--which time shall not want,
- If he be put upon 't; and that's as easy
- As to set dogs on sheep--will be his fire
- To kindle their dry stubble; and their blaze
- Shall darken him for ever.
- BRUTUS:
- What's the matter?
- Messenger:
- You are sent for to the Capitol. 'Tis thought
- That Marcius shall be consul:
- I have seen the dumb men throng to see him and
- The blind to bear him speak: matrons flung gloves,
- Ladies and maids their scarfs and handkerchers,
- Upon him as he pass'd: the nobles bended,
- As to Jove's statue, and the commons made
- A shower and thunder with their caps and shouts:
- I never saw the like.
- BRUTUS:
- Let's to the Capitol;
- And carry with us ears and eyes for the time,
- But hearts for the event.
- SICINIUS:
- Have with you.
- First Officer:
- Come, come, they are almost here. How many stand
- for consulships?
- Second Officer:
- Three, they say: but 'tis thought of every one
- Coriolanus will carry it.
- First Officer:
- That's a brave fellow; but he's vengeance proud, and
- loves not the common people.
- Second Officer:
- Faith, there had been many great men that have
- flattered the people, who ne'er loved them; and there
- be many that they have loved, they know not
- wherefore: so that, if they love they know not why,
- they hate upon no better a ground: therefore, for
- Coriolanus neither to care whether they love or hate
- him manifests the true knowledge he has in their
- disposition; and out of his noble carelessness lets
- them plainly see't.
- First Officer:
- If he did not care whether he had their love or no,
- he waved indifferently 'twixt doing them neither
- good nor harm: but he seeks their hate with greater
- devotion than can render it him; and leaves
- nothing undone that may fully discover him their
- opposite. Now, to seem to affect the malice and
- displeasure of the people is as bad as that which he
- dislikes, to flatter them for their love.
- Second Officer:
- He hath deserved worthily of his country: and his
- ascent is not by such easy degrees as those who,
- having been supple and courteous to the people,
- bonneted, without any further deed to have them at
- an into their estimation and report: but he hath so
- planted his honours in their eyes, and his actions
- in their hearts, that for their tongues to be
- silent, and not confess so much, were a kind of
- ingrateful injury; to report otherwise, were a
- malice, that, giving itself the lie, would pluck
- reproof and rebuke from every ear that heard it.
- First Officer:
- No more of him; he is a worthy man: make way, they
- are coming.
- MENENIUS:
- Having determined of the Volsces and
- To send for Titus Lartius, it remains,
- As the main point of this our after-meeting,
- To gratify his noble service that
- Hath thus stood for his country: therefore,
- please you,
- Most reverend and grave elders, to desire
- The present consul, and last general
- In our well-found successes, to report
- A little of that worthy work perform'd
- By Caius Marcius Coriolanus, whom
- We met here both to thank and to remember
- With honours like himself.
- First Senator:
- Speak, good Cominius:
- Leave nothing out for length, and make us think
- Rather our state's defective for requital
- Than we to stretch it out.
- Masters o' the people,
- We do request your kindest ears, and after,
- Your loving motion toward the common body,
- To yield what passes here.
- SICINIUS:
- We are convented
- Upon a pleasing treaty, and have hearts
- Inclinable to honour and advance
- The theme of our assembly.
- BRUTUS:
- Which the rather
- We shall be blest to do, if he remember
- A kinder value of the people than
- He hath hereto prized them at.
- MENENIUS:
- That's off, that's off;
- I would you rather had been silent. Please you
- To hear Cominius speak?
- BRUTUS:
- Most willingly;
- But yet my caution was more pertinent
- Than the rebuke you give it.
- MENENIUS:
- He loves your people
- But tie him not to be their bedfellow.
- Worthy Cominius, speak.
- Nay, keep your place.
- First Senator:
- Sit, Coriolanus; never shame to hear
- What you have nobly done.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Your horror's pardon:
- I had rather have my wounds to heal again
- Than hear say how I got them.
- BRUTUS:
- Sir, I hope
- My words disbench'd you not.
- CORIOLANUS:
- No, sir: yet oft,
- When blows have made me stay, I fled from words.
- You soothed not, therefore hurt not: but
- your people,
- I love them as they weigh.
- MENENIUS:
- Pray now, sit down.
- CORIOLANUS:
- I had rather have one scratch my head i' the sun
- When the alarum were struck than idly sit
- To hear my nothings monster'd.
- MENENIUS:
- Masters of the people,
- Your multiplying spawn how can he flatter--
- That's thousand to one good one--when you now see
- He had rather venture all his limbs for honour
- Than one on's ears to hear it? Proceed, Cominius.
- COMINIUS:
- I shall lack voice: the deeds of Coriolanus
- Should not be utter'd feebly. It is held
- That valour is the chiefest virtue, and
- Most dignifies the haver: if it be,
- The man I speak of cannot in the world
- Be singly counterpoised. At sixteen years,
- When Tarquin made a head for Rome, he fought
- Beyond the mark of others: our then dictator,
- Whom with all praise I point at, saw him fight,
- When with his Amazonian chin he drove
- The bristled lips before him: be bestrid
- An o'er-press'd Roman and i' the consul's view
- Slew three opposers: Tarquin's self he met,
- And struck him on his knee: in that day's feats,
- When he might act the woman in the scene,
- He proved best man i' the field, and for his meed
- Was brow-bound with the oak. His pupil age
- Man-enter'd thus, he waxed like a sea,
- And in the brunt of seventeen battles since
- He lurch'd all swords of the garland. For this last,
- Before and in Corioli, let me say,
- I cannot speak him home: he stopp'd the fliers;
- And by his rare example made the coward
- Turn terror into sport: as weeds before
- A vessel under sail, so men obey'd
- And fell below his stem: his sword, death's stamp,
- Where it did mark, it took; from face to foot
- He was a thing of blood, whose every motion
- Was timed with dying cries: alone he enter'd
- The mortal gate of the city, which he painted
- With shunless destiny; aidless came off,
- And with a sudden reinforcement struck
- Corioli like a planet: now all's his:
- When, by and by, the din of war gan pierce
- His ready sense; then straight his doubled spirit
- Re-quicken'd what in flesh was fatigate,
- And to the battle came he; where he did
- Run reeking o'er the lives of men, as if
- 'Twere a perpetual spoil: and till we call'd
- Both field and city ours, he never stood
- To ease his breast with panting.
- MENENIUS:
- Worthy man!
- First Senator:
- He cannot but with measure fit the honours
- Which we devise him.
- COMINIUS:
- Our spoils he kick'd at,
- And look'd upon things precious as they were
- The common muck of the world: he covets less
- Than misery itself would give; rewards
- His deeds with doing them, and is content
- To spend the time to end it.
- MENENIUS:
- He's right noble:
- Let him be call'd for.
- First Senator:
- Call Coriolanus.
- Officer:
- He doth appear.
- MENENIUS:
- The senate, Coriolanus, are well pleased
- To make thee consul.
- CORIOLANUS:
- I do owe them still
- My life and services.
- MENENIUS:
- It then remains
- That you do speak to the people.
- CORIOLANUS:
- I do beseech you,
- Let me o'erleap that custom, for I cannot
- Put on the gown, stand naked and entreat them,
- For my wounds' sake, to give their suffrage: please you
- That I may pass this doing.
- SICINIUS:
- Sir, the people
- Must have their voices; neither will they bate
- One jot of ceremony.
- MENENIUS:
- Put them not to't:
- Pray you, go fit you to the custom and
- Take to you, as your predecessors have,
- Your honour with your form.
- CORIOLANUS:
- It is apart
- That I shall blush in acting, and might well
- Be taken from the people.
- BRUTUS:
- Mark you that?
- CORIOLANUS:
- To brag unto them, thus I did, and thus;
- Show them the unaching scars which I should hide,
- As if I had received them for the hire
- Of their breath only!
- MENENIUS:
- Do not stand upon't.
- We recommend to you, tribunes of the people,
- Our purpose to them: and to our noble consul
- Wish we all joy and honour.
- Senators:
- To Coriolanus come all joy and honour!
- BRUTUS:
- You see how he intends to use the people.
- SICINIUS:
- May they perceive's intent! He will require them,
- As if he did contemn what he requested
- Should be in them to give.
- BRUTUS:
- Come, we'll inform them
- Of our proceedings here: on the marketplace,
- I know, they do attend us.
- First Citizen:
- Once, if he do require our voices, we ought not to deny him.
- Second Citizen:
- We may, sir, if we will.
- Third Citizen:
- We have power in ourselves to do it, but it is a
- power that we have no power to do; for if he show us
- his wounds and tell us his deeds, we are to put our
- tongues into those wounds and speak for them; so, if
- he tell us his noble deeds, we must also tell him
- our noble acceptance of them. Ingratitude is
- monstrous, and for the multitude to be ingrateful,
- were to make a monster of the multitude: of the
- which we being members, should bring ourselves to be
- monstrous members.
- First Citizen:
- And to make us no better thought of, a little help
- will serve; for once we stood up about the corn, he
- himself stuck not to call us the many-headed multitude.
- Third Citizen:
- We have been called so of many; not that our heads
- are some brown, some black, some auburn, some bald,
- but that our wits are so diversely coloured: and
- truly I think if all our wits were to issue out of
- one skull, they would fly east, west, north, south,
- and their consent of one direct way should be at
- once to all the points o' the compass.
- Second Citizen:
- Think you so? Which way do you judge my wit would
- fly?
- Third Citizen:
- Nay, your wit will not so soon out as another man's
- will;'tis strongly wedged up in a block-head, but
- if it were at liberty, 'twould, sure, southward.
- Second Citizen:
- Why that way?
- Third Citizen:
- To lose itself in a fog, where being three parts
- melted away with rotten dews, the fourth would return
- for conscience sake, to help to get thee a wife.
- Second Citizen:
- You are never without your tricks: you may, you may.
- Third Citizen:
- Are you all resolved to give your voices? But
- that's no matter, the greater part carries it. I
- say, if he would incline to the people, there was
- never a worthier man.
- Here he comes, and in the gown of humility: mark his
- behavior. We are not to stay all together, but to
- come by him where he stands, by ones, by twos, and
- by threes. He's to make his requests by
- particulars; wherein every one of us has a single
- honour, in giving him our own voices with our own
- tongues: therefore follow me, and I direct you how
- you shall go by him.
- All:
- Content, content.
- MENENIUS:
- O sir, you are not right: have you not known
- The worthiest men have done't?
- CORIOLANUS:
- What must I say?
- 'I Pray, sir'--Plague upon't! I cannot bring
- My tongue to such a pace:--'Look, sir, my wounds!
- I got them in my country's service, when
- Some certain of your brethren roar'd and ran
- From the noise of our own drums.'
- MENENIUS:
- O me, the gods!
- You must not speak of that: you must desire them
- To think upon you.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Think upon me! hang 'em!
- I would they would forget me, like the virtues
- Which our divines lose by 'em.
- MENENIUS:
- You'll mar all:
- I'll leave you: pray you, speak to 'em, I pray you,
- In wholesome manner.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Bid them wash their faces
- And keep their teeth clean.
- So, here comes a brace.
- You know the cause, air, of my standing here.
- Third Citizen:
- We do, sir; tell us what hath brought you to't.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Mine own desert.
- Second Citizen:
- Your own desert!
- CORIOLANUS:
- Ay, but not mine own desire.
- Third Citizen:
- How not your own desire?
- CORIOLANUS:
- No, sir,'twas never my desire yet to trouble the
- poor with begging.
- Third Citizen:
- You must think, if we give you any thing, we hope to
- gain by you.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Well then, I pray, your price o' the consulship?
- First Citizen:
- The price is to ask it kindly.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Kindly! Sir, I pray, let me ha't: I have wounds to
- show you, which shall be yours in private. Your
- good voice, sir; what say you?
- Second Citizen:
- You shall ha' it, worthy sir.
- CORIOLANUS:
- A match, sir. There's in all two worthy voices
- begged. I have your alms: adieu.
- Third Citizen:
- But this is something odd.
- Second Citizen:
- An 'twere to give again,--but 'tis no matter.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Pray you now, if it may stand with the tune of your
- voices that I may be consul, I have here the
- customary gown.
- Fourth Citizen:
- You have deserved nobly of your country, and you
- have not deserved nobly.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Your enigma?
- Fourth Citizen:
- You have been a scourge to her enemies, you have
- been a rod to her friends; you have not indeed loved
- the common people.
- CORIOLANUS:
- You should account me the more virtuous that I have
- not been common in my love. I will, sir, flatter my
- sworn brother, the people, to earn a dearer
- estimation of them; 'tis a condition they account
- gentle: and since the wisdom of their choice is
- rather to have my hat than my heart, I will practise
- the insinuating nod and be off to them most
- counterfeitly; that is, sir, I will counterfeit the
- bewitchment of some popular man and give it
- bountiful to the desirers. Therefore, beseech you,
- I may be consul.
- Fifth Citizen:
- We hope to find you our friend; and therefore give
- you our voices heartily.
- Fourth Citizen:
- You have received many wounds for your country.
- CORIOLANUS:
- I will not seal your knowledge with showing them. I
- will make much of your voices, and so trouble you no further.
- Both Citizens:
- The gods give you joy, sir, heartily!
- CORIOLANUS:
- Most sweet voices!
- Better it is to die, better to starve,
- Than crave the hire which first we do deserve.
- Why in this woolvish toge should I stand here,
- To beg of Hob and Dick, that do appear,
- Their needless vouches? Custom calls me to't:
- What custom wills, in all things should we do't,
- The dust on antique time would lie unswept,
- And mountainous error be too highly heapt
- For truth to o'er-peer. Rather than fool it so,
- Let the high office and the honour go
- To one that would do thus. I am half through;
- The one part suffer'd, the other will I do.
- Here come more voices.
- Your voices: for your voices I have fought;
- Watch'd for your voices; for Your voices bear
- Of wounds two dozen odd; battles thrice six
- I have seen and heard of; for your voices have
- Done many things, some less, some more your voices:
- Indeed I would be consul.
- Sixth Citizen:
- He has done nobly, and cannot go without any honest
- man's voice.
- Seventh Citizen:
- Therefore let him be consul: the gods give him joy,
- and make him good friend to the people!
- All Citizens:
- Amen, amen. God save thee, noble consul!
- CORIOLANUS:
- Worthy voices!
- MENENIUS:
- You have stood your limitation; and the tribunes
- Endue you with the people's voice: remains
- That, in the official marks invested, you
- Anon do meet the senate.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Is this done?
- SICINIUS:
- The custom of request you have discharged:
- The people do admit you, and are summon'd
- To meet anon, upon your approbation.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Where? at the senate-house?
- SICINIUS:
- There, Coriolanus.
- CORIOLANUS:
- May I change these garments?
- SICINIUS:
- You may, sir.
- CORIOLANUS:
- That I'll straight do; and, knowing myself again,
- Repair to the senate-house.
- MENENIUS:
- I'll keep you company. Will you along?
- BRUTUS:
- We stay here for the people.
- SICINIUS:
- Fare you well.
- He has it now, and by his looks methink
- 'Tis warm at 's heart.
- BRUTUS:
- With a proud heart he wore his humble weeds.
- will you dismiss the people?
- SICINIUS:
- How now, my masters! have you chose this man?
- First Citizen:
- He has our voices, sir.
- BRUTUS:
- We pray the gods he may deserve your loves.
- Second Citizen:
- Amen, sir: to my poor unworthy notice,
- He mock'd us when he begg'd our voices.
- Third Citizen:
- Certainly
- He flouted us downright.
- First Citizen:
- No,'tis his kind of speech: he did not mock us.
- Second Citizen:
- Not one amongst us, save yourself, but says
- He used us scornfully: he should have show'd us
- His marks of merit, wounds received for's country.
- SICINIUS:
- Why, so he did, I am sure.
- Citizens:
- No, no; no man saw 'em.
- Third Citizen:
- He said he had wounds, which he could show
- in private;
- And with his hat, thus waving it in scorn,
- 'I would be consul,' says he: 'aged custom,
- But by your voices, will not so permit me;
- Your voices therefore.' When we granted that,
- Here was 'I thank you for your voices: thank you:
- Your most sweet voices: now you have left
- your voices,
- I have no further with you.' Was not this mockery?
- SICINIUS:
- Why either were you ignorant to see't,
- Or, seeing it, of such childish friendliness
- To yield your voices?
- BRUTUS:
- Could you not have told him
- As you were lesson'd, when he had no power,
- But was a petty servant to the state,
- He was your enemy, ever spake against
- Your liberties and the charters that you bear
- I' the body of the weal; and now, arriving
- A place of potency and sway o' the state,
- If he should still malignantly remain
- Fast foe to the plebeii, your voices might
- Be curses to yourselves? You should have said
- That as his worthy deeds did claim no less
- Than what he stood for, so his gracious nature
- Would think upon you for your voices and
- Translate his malice towards you into love,
- Standing your friendly lord.
- SICINIUS:
- Thus to have said,
- As you were fore-advised, had touch'd his spirit
- And tried his inclination; from him pluck'd
- Either his gracious promise, which you might,
- As cause had call'd you up, have held him to
- Or else it would have gall'd his surly nature,
- Which easily endures not article
- Tying him to aught; so putting him to rage,
- You should have ta'en the advantage of his choler
- And pass'd him unelected.
- BRUTUS:
- Did you perceive
- He did solicit you in free contempt
- When he did need your loves, and do you think
- That his contempt shall not be bruising to you,
- When he hath power to crush? Why, had your bodies
- No heart among you? or had you tongues to cry
- Against the rectorship of judgment?
- SICINIUS:
- Have you
- Ere now denied the asker? and now again
- Of him that did not ask, but mock, bestow
- Your sued-for tongues?
- Third Citizen:
- He's not confirm'd; we may deny him yet.
- Second Citizen:
- And will deny him:
- I'll have five hundred voices of that sound.
- First Citizen:
- I twice five hundred and their friends to piece 'em.
- BRUTUS:
- Get you hence instantly, and tell those friends,
- They have chose a consul that will from them take
- Their liberties; make them of no more voice
- Than dogs that are as often beat for barking
- As therefore kept to do so.
- SICINIUS:
- Let them assemble,
- And on a safer judgment all revoke
- Your ignorant election; enforce his pride,
- And his old hate unto you; besides, forget not
- With what contempt he wore the humble weed,
- How in his suit he scorn'd you; but your loves,
- Thinking upon his services, took from you
- The apprehension of his present portance,
- Which most gibingly, ungravely, he did fashion
- After the inveterate hate he bears you.
- BRUTUS:
- Lay
- A fault on us, your tribunes; that we laboured,
- No impediment between, but that you must
- Cast your election on him.
- SICINIUS:
- Say, you chose him
- More after our commandment than as guided
- By your own true affections, and that your minds,
- Preoccupied with what you rather must do
- Than what you should, made you against the grain
- To voice him consul: lay the fault on us.
- BRUTUS:
- Ay, spare us not. Say we read lectures to you.
- How youngly he began to serve his country,
- How long continued, and what stock he springs of,
- The noble house o' the Marcians, from whence came
- That Ancus Marcius, Numa's daughter's son,
- Who, after great Hostilius, here was king;
- Of the same house Publius and Quintus were,
- That our beat water brought by conduits hither;
- And
- Twice being
- Was his great ancestor.
- SICINIUS:
- One thus descended,
- That hath beside well in his person wrought
- To be set high in place, we did commend
- To your remembrances: but you have found,
- Scaling his present bearing with his past,
- That he's your fixed enemy, and revoke
- Your sudden approbation.
- BRUTUS:
- Say, you ne'er had done't--
- Harp on that still--but by our putting on;
- And presently, when you have drawn your number,
- Repair to the Capitol.
- All:
- We will so: almost all
- Repent in their election.
- BRUTUS:
- Let them go on;
- This mutiny were better put in hazard,
- Than stay, past doubt, for greater:
- If, as his nature is, he fall in rage
- With their refusal, both observe and answer
- The vantage of his anger.
- SICINIUS:
- To the Capitol, come:
- We will be there before the stream o' the people;
- And this shall seem, as partly 'tis, their own,
- Which we have goaded onward.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Tullus Aufidius then had made new head?
- LARTIUS:
- He had, my lord; and that it was which caused
- Our swifter composition.
- CORIOLANUS:
- So then the Volsces stand but as at first,
- Ready, when time shall prompt them, to make road.
- Upon's again.
- COMINIUS:
- They are worn, lord consul, so,
- That we shall hardly in our ages see
- Their banners wave again.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Saw you Aufidius?
- LARTIUS:
- On safe-guard he came to me; and did curse
- Against the Volsces, for they had so vilely
- Yielded the town: he is retired to Antium.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Spoke he of me?
- LARTIUS:
- He did, my lord.
- CORIOLANUS:
- How? what?
- LARTIUS:
- How often he had met you, sword to sword;
- That of all things upon the earth he hated
- Your person most, that he would pawn his fortunes
- To hopeless restitution, so he might
- Be call'd your vanquisher.
- CORIOLANUS:
- At Antium lives he?
- LARTIUS:
- At Antium.
- CORIOLANUS:
- I wish I had a cause to seek him there,
- To oppose his hatred fully. Welcome home.
- Behold, these are the tribunes of the people,
- The tongues o' the common mouth: I do despise them;
- For they do prank them in authority,
- Against all noble sufferance.
- SICINIUS:
- Pass no further.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Ha! what is that?
- BRUTUS:
- It will be dangerous to go on: no further.
- CORIOLANUS:
- What makes this change?
- MENENIUS:
- The matter?
- COMINIUS:
- Hath he not pass'd the noble and the common?
- BRUTUS:
- Cominius, no.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Have I had children's voices?
- First Senator:
- Tribunes, give way; he shall to the market-place.
- BRUTUS:
- The people are incensed against him.
- SICINIUS:
- Stop,
- Or all will fall in broil.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Are these your herd?
- Must these have voices, that can yield them now
- And straight disclaim their tongues? What are
- your offices?
- You being their mouths, why rule you not their teeth?
- Have you not set them on?
- MENENIUS:
- Be calm, be calm.
- CORIOLANUS:
- It is a purposed thing, and grows by plot,
- To curb the will of the nobility:
- Suffer't, and live with such as cannot rule
- Nor ever will be ruled.
- BRUTUS:
- Call't not a plot:
- The people cry you mock'd them, and of late,
- When corn was given them gratis, you repined;
- Scandal'd the suppliants for the people, call'd them
- Time-pleasers, flatterers, foes to nobleness.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Why, this was known before.
- BRUTUS:
- Not to them all.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Have you inform'd them sithence?
- BRUTUS:
- How! I inform them!
- CORIOLANUS:
- You are like to do such business.
- BRUTUS:
- Not unlike,
- Each way, to better yours.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Why then should I be consul? By yond clouds,
- Let me deserve so ill as you, and make me
- Your fellow tribune.
- SICINIUS:
- You show too much of that
- For which the people stir: if you will pass
- To where you are bound, you must inquire your way,
- Which you are out of, with a gentler spirit,
- Or never be so noble as a consul,
- Nor yoke with him for tribune.
- MENENIUS:
- Let's be calm.
- COMINIUS:
- The people are abused; set on. This paltering
- Becomes not Rome, nor has Coriolanus
- Deserved this so dishonour'd rub, laid falsely
- I' the plain way of his merit.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Tell me of corn!
- This was my speech, and I will speak't again--
- MENENIUS:
- Not now, not now.
- First Senator:
- Not in this heat, sir, now.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Now, as I live, I will. My nobler friends,
- I crave their pardons:
- For the mutable, rank-scented many, let them
- Regard me as I do not flatter, and
- Therein behold themselves: I say again,
- In soothing them, we nourish 'gainst our senate
- The cockle of rebellion, insolence, sedition,
- Which we ourselves have plough'd for, sow'd,
- and scatter'd,
- By mingling them with us, the honour'd number,
- Who lack not virtue, no, nor power, but that
- Which they have given to beggars.
- MENENIUS:
- Well, no more.
- First Senator:
- No more words, we beseech you.
- CORIOLANUS:
- How! no more!
- As for my country I have shed my blood,
- Not fearing outward force, so shall my lungs
- Coin words till their decay against those measles,
- Which we disdain should tatter us, yet sought
- The very way to catch them.
- BRUTUS:
- You speak o' the people,
- As if you were a god to punish, not
- A man of their infirmity.
- SICINIUS:
- 'Twere well
- We let the people know't.
- MENENIUS:
- What, what? his choler?
- CORIOLANUS:
- Choler!
- Were I as patient as the midnight sleep,
- By Jove, 'twould be my mind!
- SICINIUS:
- It is a mind
- That shall remain a poison where it is,
- Not poison any further.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Shall remain!
- Hear you this Triton of the minnows? mark you
- His absolute 'shall'?
- COMINIUS:
- 'Twas from the canon.
- CORIOLANUS:
- 'Shall'!
- O good but most unwise patricians! why,
- You grave but reckless senators, have you thus
- Given Hydra here to choose an officer,
- That with his peremptory 'shall,' being but
- The horn and noise o' the monster's, wants not spirit
- To say he'll turn your current in a ditch,
- And make your channel his? If he have power
- Then vail your ignorance; if none, awake
- Your dangerous lenity. If you are learn'd,
- Be not as common fools; if you are not,
- Let them have cushions by you. You are plebeians,
- If they be senators: and they are no less,
- When, both your voices blended, the great'st taste
- Most palates theirs. They choose their magistrate,
- And such a one as he, who puts his 'shall,'
- His popular 'shall' against a graver bench
- Than ever frown in Greece. By Jove himself!
- It makes the consuls base: and my soul aches
- To know, when two authorities are up,
- Neither supreme, how soon confusion
- May enter 'twixt the gap of both and take
- The one by the other.
- COMINIUS:
- Well, on to the market-place.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Whoever gave that counsel, to give forth
- The corn o' the storehouse gratis, as 'twas used
- Sometime in Greece,--
- MENENIUS:
- Well, well, no more of that.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Though there the people had more absolute power,
- I say, they nourish'd disobedience, fed
- The ruin of the state.
- BRUTUS:
- Why, shall the people give
- One that speaks thus their voice?
- CORIOLANUS:
- I'll give my reasons,
- More worthier than their voices. They know the corn
- Was not our recompense, resting well assured
- That ne'er did service for't: being press'd to the war,
- Even when the navel of the state was touch'd,
- They would not thread the gates. This kind of service
- Did not deserve corn gratis. Being i' the war
- Their mutinies and revolts, wherein they show'd
- Most valour, spoke not for them: the accusation
- Which they have often made against the senate,
- All cause unborn, could never be the motive
- Of our so frank donation. Well, what then?
- How shall this bisson multitude digest
- The senate's courtesy? Let deeds express
- What's like to be their words: 'we did request it;
- We are the greater poll, and in true fear
- They gave us our demands.' Thus we debase
- The nature of our seats and make the rabble
- Call our cares fears; which will in time
- Break ope the locks o' the senate and bring in
- The crows to peck the eagles.
- MENENIUS:
- Come, enough.
- BRUTUS:
- Enough, with over-measure.
- CORIOLANUS:
- No, take more:
- What may be sworn by, both divine and human,
- Seal what I end withal! This double worship,
- Where one part does disdain with cause, the other
- Insult without all reason, where gentry, title, wisdom,
- Cannot conclude but by the yea and no
- Of general ignorance,--it must omit
- Real necessities, and give way the while
- To unstable slightness: purpose so barr'd,
- it follows,
- Nothing is done to purpose. Therefore, beseech you,--
- You that will be less fearful than discreet,
- That love the fundamental part of state
- More than you doubt the change on't, that prefer
- A noble life before a long, and wish
- To jump a body with a dangerous physic
- That's sure of death without it, at once pluck out
- The multitudinous tongue; let them not lick
- The sweet which is their poison: your dishonour
- Mangles true judgment and bereaves the state
- Of that integrity which should become't,
- Not having the power to do the good it would,
- For the in which doth control't.
- BRUTUS:
- Has said enough.
- SICINIUS:
- Has spoken like a traitor, and shall answer
- As traitors do.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Thou wretch, despite o'erwhelm thee!
- What should the people do with these bald tribunes?
- On whom depending, their obedience fails
- To the greater bench: in a rebellion,
- When what's not meet, but what must be, was law,
- Then were they chosen: in a better hour,
- Let what is meet be said it must be meet,
- And throw their power i' the dust.
- BRUTUS:
- Manifest treason!
- SICINIUS:
- This a consul? no.
- BRUTUS:
- The aediles, ho!
- Let him be apprehended.
- SICINIUS:
- Go, call the people:
- in whose name myself
- Attach thee as a traitorous innovator,
- A foe to the public weal: obey, I charge thee,
- And follow to thine answer.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Hence, old goat!
- Senators, &C:
- We'll surety him.
- COMINIUS:
- Aged sir, hands off.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Hence, rotten thing! or I shall shake thy bones
- Out of thy garments.
- SICINIUS:
- Help, ye citizens!
- MENENIUS:
- On both sides more respect.
- SICINIUS:
- Here's he that would take from you all your power.
- BRUTUS:
- Seize him, AEdiles!
- Citizens:
- Down with him! down with him!
- Senators, &C:
- Weapons, weapons, weapons!
- 'Tribunes!' 'Patricians!' 'Citizens!' 'What, ho!'
- 'Sicinius!' 'Brutus!' 'Coriolanus!' 'Citizens!'
- 'Peace, peace, peace!' 'Stay, hold, peace!'
- MENENIUS:
- What is about to be? I am out of breath;
- Confusion's near; I cannot speak. You, tribunes
- To the people! Coriolanus, patience!
- Speak, good Sicinius.
- SICINIUS:
- Hear me, people; peace!
- Citizens:
- Let's hear our tribune: peace Speak, speak, speak.
- SICINIUS:
- You are at point to lose your liberties:
- Marcius would have all from you; Marcius,
- Whom late you have named for consul.
- MENENIUS:
- Fie, fie, fie!
- This is the way to kindle, not to quench.
- First Senator:
- To unbuild the city and to lay all flat.
- SICINIUS:
- What is the city but the people?
- Citizens:
- True,
- The people are the city.
- BRUTUS:
- By the consent of all, we were establish'd
- The people's magistrates.
- Citizens:
- You so remain.
- MENENIUS:
- And so are like to do.
- COMINIUS:
- That is the way to lay the city flat;
- To bring the roof to the foundation,
- And bury all, which yet distinctly ranges,
- In heaps and piles of ruin.
- SICINIUS:
- This deserves death.
- BRUTUS:
- Or let us stand to our authority,
- Or let us lose it. We do here pronounce,
- Upon the part o' the people, in whose power
- We were elected theirs, Marcius is worthy
- Of present death.
- SICINIUS:
- Therefore lay hold of him;
- Bear him to the rock Tarpeian, and from thence
- Into destruction cast him.
- BRUTUS:
- AEdiles, seize him!
- Citizens:
- Yield, Marcius, yield!
- MENENIUS:
- Hear me one word;
- Beseech you, tribunes, hear me but a word.
- AEdile:
- Peace, peace!
- MENENIUS:
- BRUTUS:
- Sir, those cold ways,
- That seem like prudent helps, are very poisonous
- Where the disease is violent. Lay hands upon him,
- And bear him to the rock.
- CORIOLANUS:
- No, I'll die here.
- There's some among you have beheld me fighting:
- Come, try upon yourselves what you have seen me.
- MENENIUS:
- Down with that sword! Tribunes, withdraw awhile.
- BRUTUS:
- Lay hands upon him.
- COMINIUS:
- Help Marcius, help,
- You that be noble; help him, young and old!
- Citizens:
- Down with him, down with him!
- MENENIUS:
- Go, get you to your house; be gone, away!
- All will be naught else.
- Second Senator:
- Get you gone.
- COMINIUS:
- Stand fast;
- We have as many friends as enemies.
- MENENIUS:
- Sham it be put to that?
- First Senator:
- The gods forbid!
- I prithee, noble friend, home to thy house;
- Leave us to cure this cause.
- MENENIUS:
- For 'tis a sore upon us,
- You cannot tent yourself: be gone, beseech you.
- COMINIUS:
- Come, sir, along with us.
- CORIOLANUS:
- I would they were barbarians--as they are,
- Though in Rome litter'd--not Romans--as they are not,
- Though calved i' the porch o' the Capitol--
- MENENIUS:
- Be gone;
- Put not your worthy rage into your tongue;
- One time will owe another.
- CORIOLANUS:
- On fair ground
- I could beat forty of them.
- COMINIUS:
- I could myself
- Take up a brace o' the best of them; yea, the
- two tribunes:
- But now 'tis odds beyond arithmetic;
- And manhood is call'd foolery, when it stands
- Against a falling fabric. Will you hence,
- Before the tag return? whose rage doth rend
- Like interrupted waters and o'erbear
- What they are used to bear.
- MENENIUS:
- Pray you, be gone:
- I'll try whether my old wit be in request
- With those that have but little: this must be patch'd
- With cloth of any colour.
- COMINIUS:
- Nay, come away.
- A Patrician:
- This man has marr'd his fortune.
- MENENIUS:
- His nature is too noble for the world:
- He would not flatter Neptune for his trident,
- Or Jove for's power to thunder. His heart's his mouth:
- What his breast forges, that his tongue must vent;
- And, being angry, does forget that ever
- He heard the name of death.
- Here's goodly work!
- Second Patrician:
- I would they were abed!
- MENENIUS:
- I would they were in Tiber! What the vengeance!
- Could he not speak 'em fair?
- SICINIUS:
- Where is this viper
- That would depopulate the city and
- Be every man himself?
- MENENIUS:
- You worthy tribunes,--
- SICINIUS:
- He shall be thrown down the Tarpeian rock
- With rigorous hands: he hath resisted law,
- And therefore law shall scorn him further trial
- Than the severity of the public power
- Which he so sets at nought.
- First Citizen:
- He shall well know
- The noble tribunes are the people's mouths,
- And we their hands.
- Citizens:
- He shall, sure on't.
- MENENIUS:
- Sir, sir,--
- SICINIUS:
- Peace!
- MENENIUS:
- Do not cry havoc, where you should but hunt
- With modest warrant.
- SICINIUS:
- Sir, how comes't that you
- Have holp to make this rescue?
- MENENIUS:
- Hear me speak:
- As I do know the consul's worthiness,
- So can I name his faults,--
- SICINIUS:
- Consul! what consul?
- MENENIUS:
- The consul Coriolanus.
- BRUTUS:
- He consul!
- Citizens:
- No, no, no, no, no.
- MENENIUS:
- If, by the tribunes' leave, and yours, good people,
- I may be heard, I would crave a word or two;
- The which shall turn you to no further harm
- Than so much loss of time.
- SICINIUS:
- Speak briefly then;
- For we are peremptory to dispatch
- This viperous traitor: to eject him hence
- Were but one danger, and to keep him here
- Our certain death: therefore it is decreed
- He dies to-night.
- MENENIUS:
- Now the good gods forbid
- That our renowned Rome, whose gratitude
- Towards her deserved children is enroll'd
- In Jove's own book, like an unnatural dam
- Should now eat up her own!
- SICINIUS:
- He's a disease that must be cut away.
- MENENIUS:
- O, he's a limb that has but a disease;
- Mortal, to cut it off; to cure it, easy.
- What has he done to Rome that's worthy death?
- Killing our enemies, the blood he hath lost--
- Which, I dare vouch, is more than that he hath,
- By many an ounce--he dropp'd it for his country;
- And what is left, to lose it by his country,
- Were to us all, that do't and suffer it,
- A brand to the end o' the world.
- SICINIUS:
- This is clean kam.
- BRUTUS:
- Merely awry: when he did love his country,
- It honour'd him.
- MENENIUS:
- The service of the foot
- Being once gangrened, is not then respected
- For what before it was.
- BRUTUS:
- We'll hear no more.
- Pursue him to his house, and pluck him thence:
- Lest his infection, being of catching nature,
- Spread further.
- MENENIUS:
- One word more, one word.
- This tiger-footed rage, when it shall find
- The harm of unscann'd swiftness, will too late
- Tie leaden pounds to's heels. Proceed by process;
- Lest parties, as he is beloved, break out,
- And sack great Rome with Romans.
- BRUTUS:
- If it were so,--
- SICINIUS:
- What do ye talk?
- Have we not had a taste of his obedience?
- Our aediles smote? ourselves resisted? Come.
- MENENIUS:
- Consider this: he has been bred i' the wars
- Since he could draw a sword, and is ill school'd
- In bolted language; meal and bran together
- He throws without distinction. Give me leave,
- I'll go to him, and undertake to bring him
- Where he shall answer, by a lawful form,
- In peace, to his utmost peril.
- First Senator:
- Noble tribunes,
- It is the humane way: the other course
- Will prove too bloody, and the end of it
- Unknown to the beginning.
- SICINIUS:
- Noble Menenius,
- Be you then as the people's officer.
- Masters, lay down your weapons.
- BRUTUS:
- Go not home.
- SICINIUS:
- Meet on the market-place. We'll attend you there:
- Where, if you bring not Marcius, we'll proceed
- In our first way.
- MENENIUS:
- I'll bring him to you.
- Let me desire your company: he must come,
- Or what is worst will follow.
- First Senator:
- Pray you, let's to him.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Let them puff all about mine ears, present me
- Death on the wheel or at wild horses' heels,
- Or pile ten hills on the Tarpeian rock,
- That the precipitation might down stretch
- Below the beam of sight, yet will I still
- Be thus to them.
- A Patrician:
- You do the nobler.
- CORIOLANUS:
- I muse my mother
- Does not approve me further, who was wont
- To call them woollen vassals, things created
- To buy and sell with groats, to show bare heads
- In congregations, to yawn, be still and wonder,
- When one but of my ordinance stood up
- To speak of peace or war.
- I talk of you:
- Why did you wish me milder? would you have me
- False to my nature? Rather say I play
- The man I am.
- VOLUMNIA:
- O, sir, sir, sir,
- I would have had you put your power well on,
- Before you had worn it out.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Let go.
- VOLUMNIA:
- You might have been enough the man you are,
- With striving less to be so; lesser had been
- The thwartings of your dispositions, if
- You had not show'd them how ye were disposed
- Ere they lack'd power to cross you.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Let them hang.
- A Patrician:
- Ay, and burn too.
- MENENIUS:
- Come, come, you have been too rough, something
- too rough;
- You must return and mend it.
- First Senator:
- There's no remedy;
- Unless, by not so doing, our good city
- Cleave in the midst, and perish.
- VOLUMNIA:
- Pray, be counsell'd:
- I have a heart as little apt as yours,
- But yet a brain that leads my use of anger
- To better vantage.
- MENENIUS:
- Well said, noble woman?
- Before he should thus stoop to the herd, but that
- The violent fit o' the time craves it as physic
- For the whole state, I would put mine armour on,
- Which I can scarcely bear.
- CORIOLANUS:
- What must I do?
- MENENIUS:
- Return to the tribunes.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Well, what then? what then?
- MENENIUS:
- Repent what you have spoke.
- CORIOLANUS:
- For them! I cannot do it to the gods;
- Must I then do't to them?
- VOLUMNIA:
- You are too absolute;
- Though therein you can never be too noble,
- But when extremities speak. I have heard you say,
- Honour and policy, like unsever'd friends,
- I' the war do grow together: grant that, and tell me,
- In peace what each of them by the other lose,
- That they combine not there.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Tush, tush!
- MENENIUS:
- A good demand.
- VOLUMNIA:
- If it be honour in your wars to seem
- The same you are not, which, for your best ends,
- You adopt your policy, how is it less or worse,
- That it shall hold companionship in peace
- With honour, as in war, since that to both
- It stands in like request?
- CORIOLANUS:
- Why force you this?
- VOLUMNIA:
- Because that now it lies you on to speak
- To the people; not by your own instruction,
- Nor by the matter which your heart prompts you,
- But with such words that are but rooted in
- Your tongue, though but bastards and syllables
- Of no allowance to your bosom's truth.
- Now, this no more dishonours you at all
- Than to take in a town with gentle words,
- Which else would put you to your fortune and
- The hazard of much blood.
- I would dissemble with my nature where
- My fortunes and my friends at stake required
- I should do so in honour: I am in this,
- Your wife, your son, these senators, the nobles;
- And you will rather show our general louts
- How you can frown than spend a fawn upon 'em,
- For the inheritance of their loves and safeguard
- Of what that want might ruin.
- MENENIUS:
- Noble lady!
- Come, go with us; speak fair: you may salve so,
- Not what is dangerous present, but the loss
- Of what is past.
- VOLUMNIA:
- I prithee now, my son,
- Go to them, with this bonnet in thy hand;
- And thus far having stretch'd it--here be with them--
- Thy knee bussing the stones--for in such business
- Action is eloquence, and the eyes of the ignorant
- More learned than the ears--waving thy head,
- Which often, thus, correcting thy stout heart,
- Now humble as the ripest mulberry
- That will not hold the handling: or say to them,
- Thou art their soldier, and being bred in broils
- Hast not the soft way which, thou dost confess,
- Were fit for thee to use as they to claim,
- In asking their good loves, but thou wilt frame
- Thyself, forsooth, hereafter theirs, so far
- As thou hast power and person.
- MENENIUS:
- This but done,
- Even as she speaks, why, their hearts were yours;
- For they have pardons, being ask'd, as free
- As words to little purpose.
- VOLUMNIA:
- Prithee now,
- Go, and be ruled: although I know thou hadst rather
- Follow thine enemy in a fiery gulf
- Than flatter him in a bower. Here is Cominius.
- COMINIUS:
- I have been i' the market-place; and, sir,'tis fit
- You make strong party, or defend yourself
- By calmness or by absence: all's in anger.
- MENENIUS:
- Only fair speech.
- COMINIUS:
- I think 'twill serve, if he
- Can thereto frame his spirit.
- VOLUMNIA:
- He must, and will
- Prithee now, say you will, and go about it.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Must I go show them my unbarbed sconce?
- Must I with base tongue give my noble heart
- A lie that it must bear? Well, I will do't:
- Yet, were there but this single plot to lose,
- This mould of Marcius, they to dust should grind it
- And throw't against the wind. To the market-place!
- You have put me now to such a part which never
- I shall discharge to the life.
- COMINIUS:
- Come, come, we'll prompt you.
- VOLUMNIA:
- I prithee now, sweet son, as thou hast said
- My praises made thee first a soldier, so,
- To have my praise for this, perform a part
- Thou hast not done before.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Well, I must do't:
- Away, my disposition, and possess me
- Some harlot's spirit! my throat of war be turn'd,
- Which quired with my drum, into a pipe
- Small as an eunuch, or the virgin voice
- That babies lulls asleep! the smiles of knaves
- Tent in my cheeks, and schoolboys' tears take up
- The glasses of my sight! a beggar's tongue
- Make motion through my lips, and my arm'd knees,
- Who bow'd but in my stirrup, bend like his
- That hath received an alms! I will not do't,
- Lest I surcease to honour mine own truth
- And by my body's action teach my mind
- A most inherent baseness.
- VOLUMNIA:
- At thy choice, then:
- To beg of thee, it is my more dishonour
- Than thou of them. Come all to ruin; let
- Thy mother rather feel thy pride than fear
- Thy dangerous stoutness, for I mock at death
- With as big heart as thou. Do as thou list
- Thy valiantness was mine, thou suck'dst it from me,
- But owe thy pride thyself.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Pray, be content:
- Mother, I am going to the market-place;
- Chide me no more. I'll mountebank their loves,
- Cog their hearts from them, and come home beloved
- Of all the trades in Rome. Look, I am going:
- Commend me to my wife. I'll return consul;
- Or never trust to what my tongue can do
- I' the way of flattery further.
- VOLUMNIA:
- Do your will.
- COMINIUS:
- Away! the tribunes do attend you: arm yourself
- To answer mildly; for they are prepared
- With accusations, as I hear, more strong
- Than are upon you yet.
- CORIOLANUS:
- The word is 'mildly.' Pray you, let us go:
- Let them accuse me by invention, I
- Will answer in mine honour.
- MENENIUS:
- Ay, but mildly.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Well, mildly be it then. Mildly!
- BRUTUS:
- In this point charge him home, that he affects
- Tyrannical power: if he evade us there,
- Enforce him with his envy to the people,
- And that the spoil got on the Antiates
- Was ne'er distributed.
- What, will he come?
- AEdile:
- He's coming.
- BRUTUS:
- How accompanied?
- AEdile:
- With old Menenius, and those senators
- That always favour'd him.
- SICINIUS:
- Have you a catalogue
- Of all the voices that we have procured
- Set down by the poll?
- AEdile:
- I have; 'tis ready.
- SICINIUS:
- Have you collected them by tribes?
- AEdile:
- I have.
- SICINIUS:
- Assemble presently the people hither;
- And when they bear me say 'It shall be so
- I' the right and strength o' the commons,' be it either
- For death, for fine, or banishment, then let them
- If I say fine, cry 'Fine;' if death, cry 'Death.'
- Insisting on the old prerogative
- And power i' the truth o' the cause.
- AEdile:
- I shall inform them.
- BRUTUS:
- And when such time they have begun to cry,
- Let them not cease, but with a din confused
- Enforce the present execution
- Of what we chance to sentence.
- AEdile:
- Very well.
- SICINIUS:
- Make them be strong and ready for this hint,
- When we shall hap to give 't them.
- BRUTUS:
- Go about it.
- Put him to choler straight: he hath been used
- Ever to conquer, and to have his worth
- Of contradiction: being once chafed, he cannot
- Be rein'd again to temperance; then he speaks
- What's in his heart; and that is there which looks
- With us to break his neck.
- SICINIUS:
- Well, here he comes.
- MENENIUS:
- Calmly, I do beseech you.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Ay, as an ostler, that for the poorest piece
- Will bear the knave by the volume. The honour'd gods
- Keep Rome in safety, and the chairs of justice
- Supplied with worthy men! plant love among 's!
- Throng our large temples with the shows of peace,
- And not our streets with war!
- First Senator:
- Amen, amen.
- MENENIUS:
- A noble wish.
- SICINIUS:
- Draw near, ye people.
- AEdile:
- List to your tribunes. Audience: peace, I say!
- CORIOLANUS:
- First, hear me speak.
- Both Tribunes:
- Well, say. Peace, ho!
- CORIOLANUS:
- Shall I be charged no further than this present?
- Must all determine here?
- SICINIUS:
- I do demand,
- If you submit you to the people's voices,
- Allow their officers and are content
- To suffer lawful censure for such faults
- As shall be proved upon you?
- CORIOLANUS:
- I am content.
- MENENIUS:
- Lo, citizens, he says he is content:
- The warlike service he has done, consider; think
- Upon the wounds his body bears, which show
- Like graves i' the holy churchyard.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Scratches with briers,
- Scars to move laughter only.
- MENENIUS:
- Consider further,
- That when he speaks not like a citizen,
- You find him like a soldier: do not take
- His rougher accents for malicious sounds,
- But, as I say, such as become a soldier,
- Rather than envy you.
- COMINIUS:
- Well, well, no more.
- CORIOLANUS:
- What is the matter
- That being pass'd for consul with full voice,
- I am so dishonour'd that the very hour
- You take it off again?
- SICINIUS:
- Answer to us.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Say, then: 'tis true, I ought so.
- SICINIUS:
- We charge you, that you have contrived to take
- From Rome all season'd office and to wind
- Yourself into a power tyrannical;
- For which you are a traitor to the people.
- CORIOLANUS:
- How! traitor!
- MENENIUS:
- Nay, temperately; your promise.
- CORIOLANUS:
- The fires i' the lowest hell fold-in the people!
- Call me their traitor! Thou injurious tribune!
- Within thine eyes sat twenty thousand deaths,
- In thy hand clutch'd as many millions, in
- Thy lying tongue both numbers, I would say
- 'Thou liest' unto thee with a voice as free
- As I do pray the gods.
- SICINIUS:
- Mark you this, people?
- Citizens:
- To the rock, to the rock with him!
- SICINIUS:
- Peace!
- We need not put new matter to his charge:
- What you have seen him do and heard him speak,
- Beating your officers, cursing yourselves,
- Opposing laws with strokes and here defying
- Those whose great power must try him; even this,
- So criminal and in such capital kind,
- Deserves the extremest death.
- BRUTUS:
- But since he hath
- Served well for Rome,--
- CORIOLANUS:
- What do you prate of service?
- BRUTUS:
- I talk of that, that know it.
- CORIOLANUS:
- You?
- MENENIUS:
- Is this the promise that you made your mother?
- COMINIUS:
- Know, I pray you,--
- CORIOLANUS:
- I know no further:
- Let them pronounce the steep Tarpeian death,
- Vagabond exile, raying, pent to linger
- But with a grain a day, I would not buy
- Their mercy at the price of one fair word;
- Nor cheque my courage for what they can give,
- To have't with saying 'Good morrow.'
- SICINIUS:
- For that he has,
- As much as in him lies, from time to time
- Envied against the people, seeking means
- To pluck away their power, as now at last
- Given hostile strokes, and that not in the presence
- Of dreaded justice, but on the ministers
- That do distribute it; in the name o' the people
- And in the power of us the tribunes, we,
- Even from this instant, banish him our city,
- In peril of precipitation
- From off the rock Tarpeian never more
- To enter our Rome gates: i' the people's name,
- I say it shall be so.
- Citizens:
- It shall be so, it shall be so; let him away:
- He's banish'd, and it shall be so.
- COMINIUS:
- Hear me, my masters, and my common friends,--
- SICINIUS:
- He's sentenced; no more hearing.
- COMINIUS:
- Let me speak:
- I have been consul, and can show for Rome
- Her enemies' marks upon me. I do love
- My country's good with a respect more tender,
- More holy and profound, than mine own life,
- My dear wife's estimate, her womb's increase,
- And treasure of my loins; then if I would
- Speak that,--
- SICINIUS:
- We know your drift: speak what?
- BRUTUS:
- There's no more to be said, but he is banish'd,
- As enemy to the people and his country:
- It shall be so.
- Citizens:
- It shall be so, it shall be so.
- CORIOLANUS:
- You common cry of curs! whose breath I hate
- As reek o' the rotten fens, whose loves I prize
- As the dead carcasses of unburied men
- That do corrupt my air, I banish you;
- And here remain with your uncertainty!
- Let every feeble rumour shake your hearts!
- Your enemies, with nodding of their plumes,
- Fan you into despair! Have the power still
- To banish your defenders; till at length
- Your ignorance, which finds not till it feels,
- Making not reservation of yourselves,
- Still your own foes, deliver you as most
- Abated captives to some nation
- That won you without blows! Despising,
- For you, the city, thus I turn my back:
- There is a world elsewhere.
- AEdile:
- The people's enemy is gone, is gone!
- Citizens:
- Our enemy is banish'd! he is gone! Hoo! hoo!
- SICINIUS:
- Go, see him out at gates, and follow him,
- As he hath followed you, with all despite;
- Give him deserved vexation. Let a guard
- Attend us through the city.
- Citizens:
- Come, come; let's see him out at gates; come.
- The gods preserve our noble tribunes! Come.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Come, leave your tears: a brief farewell: the beast
- With many heads butts me away. Nay, mother,
- Where is your ancient courage? you were used
- To say extremity was the trier of spirits;
- That common chances common men could bear;
- That when the sea was calm all boats alike
- Show'd mastership in floating; fortune's blows,
- When most struck home, being gentle wounded, craves
- A noble cunning: you were used to load me
- With precepts that would make invincible
- The heart that conn'd them.
- VIRGILIA:
- O heavens! O heavens!
- CORIOLANUS:
- Nay! prithee, woman,--
- VOLUMNIA:
- Now the red pestilence strike all trades in Rome,
- And occupations perish!
- CORIOLANUS:
- What, what, what!
- I shall be loved when I am lack'd. Nay, mother.
- Resume that spirit, when you were wont to say,
- If you had been the wife of Hercules,
- Six of his labours you'ld have done, and saved
- Your husband so much sweat. Cominius,
- Droop not; adieu. Farewell, my wife, my mother:
- I'll do well yet. Thou old and true Menenius,
- Thy tears are salter than a younger man's,
- And venomous to thine eyes. My sometime general,
- I have seen thee stem, and thou hast oft beheld
- Heart-hardening spectacles; tell these sad women
- 'Tis fond to wail inevitable strokes,
- As 'tis to laugh at 'em. My mother, you wot well
- My hazards still have been your solace: and
- Believe't not lightly--though I go alone,
- Like to a lonely dragon, that his fen
- Makes fear'd and talk'd of more than seen--your son
- Will or exceed the common or be caught
- With cautelous baits and practise.
- VOLUMNIA:
- My first son.
- Whither wilt thou go? Take good Cominius
- With thee awhile: determine on some course,
- More than a wild exposture to each chance
- That starts i' the way before thee.
- CORIOLANUS:
- O the gods!
- COMINIUS:
- I'll follow thee a month, devise with thee
- Where thou shalt rest, that thou mayst hear of us
- And we of thee: so if the time thrust forth
- A cause for thy repeal, we shall not send
- O'er the vast world to seek a single man,
- And lose advantage, which doth ever cool
- I' the absence of the needer.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Fare ye well:
- Thou hast years upon thee; and thou art too full
- Of the wars' surfeits, to go rove with one
- That's yet unbruised: bring me but out at gate.
- Come, my sweet wife, my dearest mother, and
- My friends of noble touch, when I am forth,
- Bid me farewell, and smile. I pray you, come.
- While I remain above the ground, you shall
- Hear from me still, and never of me aught
- But what is like me formerly.
- MENENIUS:
- That's worthily
- As any ear can hear. Come, let's not weep.
- If I could shake off but one seven years
- From these old arms and legs, by the good gods,
- I'ld with thee every foot.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Give me thy hand: Come.
- SICINIUS:
- Bid them all home; he's gone, and we'll no further.
- The nobility are vex'd, whom we see have sided
- In his behalf.
- BRUTUS:
- Now we have shown our power,
- Let us seem humbler after it is done
- Than when it was a-doing.
- SICINIUS:
- Bid them home:
- Say their great enemy is gone, and they
- Stand in their ancient strength.
- BRUTUS:
- Dismiss them home.
- Here comes his mother.
- SICINIUS:
- Let's not meet her.
- BRUTUS:
- Why?
- SICINIUS:
- They say she's mad.
- BRUTUS:
- They have ta'en note of us: keep on your way.
- VOLUMNIA:
- O, ye're well met: the hoarded plague o' the gods
- Requite your love!
- MENENIUS:
- Peace, peace; be not so loud.
- VOLUMNIA:
- If that I could for weeping, you should hear,--
- Nay, and you shall hear some.
- Will you be gone?
- VIRGILIA:
- SICINIUS:
- Are you mankind?
- VOLUMNIA:
- Ay, fool; is that a shame? Note but this fool.
- Was not a man my father? Hadst thou foxship
- To banish him that struck more blows for Rome
- Than thou hast spoken words?
- SICINIUS:
- O blessed heavens!
- VOLUMNIA:
- More noble blows than ever thou wise words;
- And for Rome's good. I'll tell thee what; yet go:
- Nay, but thou shalt stay too: I would my son
- Were in Arabia, and thy tribe before him,
- His good sword in his hand.
- SICINIUS:
- What then?
- VIRGILIA:
- What then!
- He'ld make an end of thy posterity.
- VOLUMNIA:
- Bastards and all.
- Good man, the wounds that he does bear for Rome!
- MENENIUS:
- Come, come, peace.
- SICINIUS:
- I would he had continued to his country
- As he began, and not unknit himself
- The noble knot he made.
- BRUTUS:
- I would he had.
- VOLUMNIA:
- 'I would he had'! 'Twas you incensed the rabble:
- Cats, that can judge as fitly of his worth
- As I can of those mysteries which heaven
- Will not have earth to know.
- BRUTUS:
- Pray, let us go.
- VOLUMNIA:
- Now, pray, sir, get you gone:
- You have done a brave deed. Ere you go, hear this:--
- As far as doth the Capitol exceed
- The meanest house in Rome, so far my son--
- This lady's husband here, this, do you see--
- Whom you have banish'd, does exceed you all.
- BRUTUS:
- Well, well, we'll leave you.
- SICINIUS:
- Why stay we to be baited
- With one that wants her wits?
- VOLUMNIA:
- Take my prayers with you.
- I would the gods had nothing else to do
- But to confirm my curses! Could I meet 'em
- But once a-day, it would unclog my heart
- Of what lies heavy to't.
- MENENIUS:
- You have told them home;
- And, by my troth, you have cause. You'll sup with me?
- VOLUMNIA:
- Anger's my meat; I sup upon myself,
- And so shall starve with feeding. Come, let's go:
- Leave this faint puling and lament as I do,
- In anger, Juno-like. Come, come, come.
- MENENIUS:
- Fie, fie, fie!
- Roman:
- I know you well, sir, and you know
- me: your name, I think, is Adrian.
- Volsce:
- It is so, sir: truly, I have forgot you.
- Roman:
- I am a Roman; and my services are,
- as you are, against 'em: know you me yet?
- Volsce:
- Nicanor? no.
- Roman:
- The same, sir.
- Volsce:
- You had more beard when I last saw you; but your
- favour is well approved by your tongue. What's the
- news in Rome? I have a note from the Volscian state,
- to find you out there: you have well saved me a
- day's journey.
- Roman:
- There hath been in Rome strange insurrections; the
- people against the senators, patricians, and nobles.
- Volsce:
- Hath been! is it ended, then? Our state thinks not
- so: they are in a most warlike preparation, and
- hope to come upon them in the heat of their division.
- Roman:
- The main blaze of it is past, but a small thing
- would make it flame again: for the nobles receive
- so to heart the banishment of that worthy
- Coriolanus, that they are in a ripe aptness to take
- all power from the people and to pluck from them
- their tribunes for ever. This lies glowing, I can
- tell you, and is almost mature for the violent
- breaking out.
- Volsce:
- Coriolanus banished!
- Roman:
- Banished, sir.
- Volsce:
- You will be welcome with this intelligence, Nicanor.
- Roman:
- The day serves well for them now. I have heard it
- said, the fittest time to corrupt a man's wife is
- when she's fallen out with her husband. Your noble
- Tullus Aufidius will appear well in these wars, his
- great opposer, Coriolanus, being now in no request
- of his country.
- Volsce:
- He cannot choose. I am most fortunate, thus
- accidentally to encounter you: you have ended my
- business, and I will merrily accompany you home.
- Roman:
- I shall, between this and supper, tell you most
- strange things from Rome; all tending to the good of
- their adversaries. Have you an army ready, say you?
- Volsce:
- A most royal one; the centurions and their charges,
- distinctly billeted, already in the entertainment,
- and to be on foot at an hour's warning.
- Roman:
- I am joyful to hear of their readiness, and am the
- man, I think, that shall set them in present action.
- So, sir, heartily well met, and most glad of your company.
- Volsce:
- You take my part from me, sir; I have the most cause
- to be glad of yours.
- Roman:
- Well, let us go together.
- CORIOLANUS:
- A goodly city is this Antium. City,
- 'Tis I that made thy widows: many an heir
- Of these fair edifices 'fore my wars
- Have I heard groan and drop: then know me not,
- Lest that thy wives with spits and boys with stones
- In puny battle slay me.
- Save you, sir.
- Citizen:
- And you.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Direct me, if it be your will,
- Where great Aufidius lies: is he in Antium?
- Citizen:
- He is, and feasts the nobles of the state
- At his house this night.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Which is his house, beseech you?
- Citizen:
- This, here before you.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Thank you, sir: farewell.
- O world, thy slippery turns! Friends now fast sworn,
- Whose double bosoms seem to wear one heart,
- Whose house, whose bed, whose meal, and exercise,
- Are still together, who twin, as 'twere, in love
- Unseparable, shall within this hour,
- On a dissension of a doit, break out
- To bitterest enmity: so, fellest foes,
- Whose passions and whose plots have broke their sleep,
- To take the one the other, by some chance,
- Some trick not worth an egg, shall grow dear friends
- And interjoin their issues. So with me:
- My birth-place hate I, and my love's upon
- This enemy town. I'll enter: if he slay me,
- He does fair justice; if he give me way,
- I'll do his country service.
- First Servingman:
- Wine, wine, wine! What service
- is here! I think our fellows are asleep.
- Second Servingman:
- Where's Cotus? my master calls
- for him. Cotus!
- CORIOLANUS:
- A goodly house: the feast smells well; but I
- Appear not like a guest.
- First Servingman:
- What would you have, friend? whence are you?
- Here's no place for you: pray, go to the door.
- CORIOLANUS:
- I have deserved no better entertainment,
- In being Coriolanus.
- Second Servingman:
- Whence are you, sir? Has the porter his eyes in his
- head; that he gives entrance to such companions?
- Pray, get you out.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Away!
- Second Servingman:
- Away! get you away.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Now thou'rt troublesome.
- Second Servingman:
- Are you so brave? I'll have you talked with anon.
- Third Servingman:
- What fellow's this?
- First Servingman:
- A strange one as ever I looked on: I cannot get him
- out of the house: prithee, call my master to him.
- Third Servingman:
- What have you to do here, fellow? Pray you, avoid
- the house.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Let me but stand; I will not hurt your hearth.
- Third Servingman:
- What are you?
- CORIOLANUS:
- A gentleman.
- Third Servingman:
- A marvellous poor one.
- CORIOLANUS:
- True, so I am.
- Third Servingman:
- Pray you, poor gentleman, take up some other
- station; here's no place for you; pray you, avoid: come.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Follow your function, go, and batten on cold bits.
- Third Servingman:
- What, you will not? Prithee, tell my master what a
- strange guest he has here.
- Second Servingman:
- And I shall.
- Third Servingman:
- Where dwellest thou?
- CORIOLANUS:
- Under the canopy.
- Third Servingman:
- Under the canopy!
- CORIOLANUS:
- Ay.
- Third Servingman:
- Where's that?
- CORIOLANUS:
- I' the city of kites and crows.
- Third Servingman:
- I' the city of kites and crows! What an ass it is!
- Then thou dwellest with daws too?
- CORIOLANUS:
- No, I serve not thy master.
- Third Servingman:
- How, sir! do you meddle with my master?
- CORIOLANUS:
- Ay; 'tis an honester service than to meddle with thy
- mistress. Thou pratest, and pratest; serve with thy
- trencher, hence!
- AUFIDIUS:
- Where is this fellow?
- Second Servingman:
- Here, sir: I'ld have beaten him like a dog, but for
- disturbing the lords within.
- AUFIDIUS:
- Whence comest thou? what wouldst thou? thy name?
- Why speak'st not? speak, man: what's thy name?
- CORIOLANUS:
- If, Tullus,
- Not yet thou knowest me, and, seeing me, dost not
- Think me for the man I am, necessity
- Commands me name myself.
- AUFIDIUS:
- What is thy name?
- CORIOLANUS:
- A name unmusical to the Volscians' ears,
- And harsh in sound to thine.
- AUFIDIUS:
- Say, what's thy name?
- Thou hast a grim appearance, and thy face
- Bears a command in't; though thy tackle's torn.
- Thou show'st a noble vessel: what's thy name?
- CORIOLANUS:
- Prepare thy brow to frown: know'st
- thou me yet?
- AUFIDIUS:
- I know thee not: thy name?
- CORIOLANUS:
- My name is Caius Marcius, who hath done
- To thee particularly and to all the Volsces
- Great hurt and mischief; thereto witness may
- My surname, Coriolanus: the painful service,
- The extreme dangers and the drops of blood
- Shed for my thankless country are requited
- But with that surname; a good memory,
- And witness of the malice and displeasure
- Which thou shouldst bear me: only that name remains;
- The cruelty and envy of the people,
- Permitted by our dastard nobles, who
- Have all forsook me, hath devour'd the rest;
- And suffer'd me by the voice of slaves to be
- Whoop'd out of Rome. Now this extremity
- Hath brought me to thy hearth; not out of hope--
- Mistake me not--to save my life, for if
- I had fear'd death, of all the men i' the world
- I would have 'voided thee, but in mere spite,
- To be full quit of those my banishers,
- Stand I before thee here. Then if thou hast
- A heart of wreak in thee, that wilt revenge
- Thine own particular wrongs and stop those maims
- Of shame seen through thy country, speed
- thee straight,
- And make my misery serve thy turn: so use it
- That my revengeful services may prove
- As benefits to thee, for I will fight
- Against my canker'd country with the spleen
- Of all the under fiends. But if so be
- Thou darest not this and that to prove more fortunes
- Thou'rt tired, then, in a word, I also am
- Longer to live most weary, and present
- My throat to thee and to thy ancient malice;
- Which not to cut would show thee but a fool,
- Since I have ever follow'd thee with hate,
- Drawn tuns of blood out of thy country's breast,
- And cannot live but to thy shame, unless
- It be to do thee service.
- AUFIDIUS:
- O Marcius, Marcius!
- Each word thou hast spoke hath weeded from my heart
- A root of ancient envy. If Jupiter
- Should from yond cloud speak divine things,
- And say 'Tis true,' I'ld not believe them more
- Than thee, all noble Marcius. Let me twine
- Mine arms about that body, where against
- My grained ash an hundred times hath broke
- And scarr'd the moon with splinters: here I clip
- The anvil of my sword, and do contest
- As hotly and as nobly with thy love
- As ever in ambitious strength I did
- Contend against thy valour. Know thou first,
- I loved the maid I married; never man
- Sigh'd truer breath; but that I see thee here,
- Thou noble thing! more dances my rapt heart
- Than when I first my wedded mistress saw
- Bestride my threshold. Why, thou Mars! I tell thee,
- We have a power on foot; and I had purpose
- Once more to hew thy target from thy brawn,
- Or lose mine arm fort: thou hast beat me out
- Twelve several times, and I have nightly since
- Dreamt of encounters 'twixt thyself and me;
- We have been down together in my sleep,
- Unbuckling helms, fisting each other's throat,
- And waked half dead with nothing. Worthy Marcius,
- Had we no quarrel else to Rome, but that
- Thou art thence banish'd, we would muster all
- From twelve to seventy, and pouring war
- Into the bowels of ungrateful Rome,
- Like a bold flood o'er-bear. O, come, go in,
- And take our friendly senators by the hands;
- Who now are here, taking their leaves of me,
- Who am prepared against your territories,
- Though not for Rome itself.
- CORIOLANUS:
- You bless me, gods!
- AUFIDIUS:
- Therefore, most absolute sir, if thou wilt have
- The leading of thine own revenges, take
- The one half of my commission; and set down--
- As best thou art experienced, since thou know'st
- Thy country's strength and weakness,--thine own ways;
- Whether to knock against the gates of Rome,
- Or rudely visit them in parts remote,
- To fright them, ere destroy. But come in:
- Let me commend thee first to those that shall
- Say yea to thy desires. A thousand welcomes!
- And more a friend than e'er an enemy;
- Yet, Marcius, that was much. Your hand: most welcome!
- First Servingman:
- Here's a strange alteration!
- Second Servingman:
- By my hand, I had thought to have strucken him with
- a cudgel; and yet my mind gave me his clothes made a
- false report of him.
- First Servingman:
- What an arm he has! he turned me about with his
- finger and his thumb, as one would set up a top.
- Second Servingman:
- Nay, I knew by his face that there was something in
- him: he had, sir, a kind of face, methought,--I
- cannot tell how to term it.
- First Servingman:
- He had so; looking as it were--would I were hanged,
- but I thought there was more in him than I could think.
- Second Servingman:
- So did I, I'll be sworn: he is simply the rarest
- man i' the world.
- First Servingman:
- I think he is: but a greater soldier than he you wot on.
- Second Servingman:
- Who, my master?
- First Servingman:
- Nay, it's no matter for that.
- Second Servingman:
- Worth six on him.
- First Servingman:
- Nay, not so neither: but I take him to be the
- greater soldier.
- Second Servingman:
- Faith, look you, one cannot tell how to say that:
- for the defence of a town, our general is excellent.
- First Servingman:
- Ay, and for an assault too.
- Third Servingman:
- O slaves, I can tell you news,-- news, you rascals!
- First Servingman:
- What, what, what? let's partake.
- Third Servingman:
- I would not be a Roman, of all nations; I had as
- lieve be a condemned man.
- First Servingman:
- Wherefore? wherefore?
- Third Servingman:
- Why, here's he that was wont to thwack our general,
- Caius Marcius.
- First Servingman:
- Why do you say 'thwack our general '?
- Third Servingman:
- I do not say 'thwack our general;' but he was always
- good enough for him.
- Second Servingman:
- Come, we are fellows and friends: he was ever too
- hard for him; I have heard him say so himself.
- First Servingman:
- He was too hard for him directly, to say the troth
- on't: before Corioli he scotched him and notched
- him like a carbon ado.
- Second Servingman:
- An he had been cannibally given, he might have
- broiled and eaten him too.
- First Servingman:
- But, more of thy news?
- Third Servingman:
- Why, he is so made on here within, as if he were son
- and heir to Mars; set at upper end o' the table; no
- question asked him by any of the senators, but they
- stand bald before him: our general himself makes a
- mistress of him: sanctifies himself with's hand and
- turns up the white o' the eye to his discourse. But
- the bottom of the news is that our general is cut i'
- the middle and but one half of what he was
- yesterday; for the other has half, by the entreaty
- and grant of the whole table. He'll go, he says,
- and sowl the porter of Rome gates by the ears: he
- will mow all down before him, and leave his passage polled.
- Second Servingman:
- And he's as like to do't as any man I can imagine.
- Third Servingman:
- Do't! he will do't; for, look you, sir, he has as
- many friends as enemies; which friends, sir, as it
- were, durst not, look you, sir, show themselves, as
- we term it, his friends whilst he's in directitude.
- First Servingman:
- Directitude! what's that?
- Third Servingman:
- But when they shall see, sir, his crest up again,
- and the man in blood, they will out of their
- burrows, like conies after rain, and revel all with
- him.
- First Servingman:
- But when goes this forward?
- Third Servingman:
- To-morrow; to-day; presently; you shall have the
- drum struck up this afternoon: 'tis, as it were, a
- parcel of their feast, and to be executed ere they
- wipe their lips.
- Second Servingman:
- Why, then we shall have a stirring world again.
- This peace is nothing, but to rust iron, increase
- tailors, and breed ballad-makers.
- First Servingman:
- Let me have war, say I; it exceeds peace as far as
- day does night; it's spritely, waking, audible, and
- full of vent. Peace is a very apoplexy, lethargy;
- mulled, deaf, sleepy, insensible; a getter of more
- bastard children than war's a destroyer of men.
- Second Servingman:
- 'Tis so: and as war, in some sort, may be said to
- be a ravisher, so it cannot be denied but peace is a
- great maker of cuckolds.
- First Servingman:
- Ay, and it makes men hate one another.
- Third Servingman:
- Reason; because they then less need one another.
- The wars for my money. I hope to see Romans as cheap
- as Volscians. They are rising, they are rising.
- All:
- In, in, in, in!
- SICINIUS:
- We hear not of him, neither need we fear him;
- His remedies are tame i' the present peace
- And quietness of the people, which before
- Were in wild hurry. Here do we make his friends
- Blush that the world goes well, who rather had,
- Though they themselves did suffer by't, behold
- Dissentious numbers pestering streets than see
- Our tradesmen with in their shops and going
- About their functions friendly.
- BRUTUS:
- We stood to't in good time.
- Is this Menenius?
- SICINIUS:
- 'Tis he,'tis he: O, he is grown most kind of late.
- Both Tribunes:
- Hail sir!
- MENENIUS:
- Hail to you both!
- SICINIUS:
- Your Coriolanus
- Is not much miss'd, but with his friends:
- The commonwealth doth stand, and so would do,
- Were he more angry at it.
- MENENIUS:
- All's well; and might have been much better, if
- He could have temporized.
- SICINIUS:
- Where is he, hear you?
- MENENIUS:
- Nay, I hear nothing: his mother and his wife
- Hear nothing from him.
- Citizens:
- The gods preserve you both!
- SICINIUS:
- God-den, our neighbours.
- BRUTUS:
- God-den to you all, god-den to you all.
- First Citizen:
- Ourselves, our wives, and children, on our knees,
- Are bound to pray for you both.
- SICINIUS:
- Live, and thrive!
- BRUTUS:
- Farewell, kind neighbours: we wish'd Coriolanus
- Had loved you as we did.
- Citizens:
- Now the gods keep you!
- Both Tribunes:
- Farewell, farewell.
- SICINIUS:
- This is a happier and more comely time
- Than when these fellows ran about the streets,
- Crying confusion.
- BRUTUS:
- Caius Marcius was
- A worthy officer i' the war; but insolent,
- O'ercome with pride, ambitious past all thinking,
- Self-loving,--
- SICINIUS:
- And affecting one sole throne,
- Without assistance.
- MENENIUS:
- I think not so.
- SICINIUS:
- We should by this, to all our lamentation,
- If he had gone forth consul, found it so.
- BRUTUS:
- The gods have well prevented it, and Rome
- Sits safe and still without him.
- AEdile:
- Worthy tribunes,
- There is a slave, whom we have put in prison,
- Reports, the Volsces with two several powers
- Are enter'd in the Roman territories,
- And with the deepest malice of the war
- Destroy what lies before 'em.
- MENENIUS:
- 'Tis Aufidius,
- Who, hearing of our Marcius' banishment,
- Thrusts forth his horns again into the world;
- Which were inshell'd when Marcius stood for Rome,
- And durst not once peep out.
- SICINIUS:
- Come, what talk you
- Of Marcius?
- BRUTUS:
- Go see this rumourer whipp'd. It cannot be
- The Volsces dare break with us.
- MENENIUS:
- Cannot be!
- We have record that very well it can,
- And three examples of the like have been
- Within my age. But reason with the fellow,
- Before you punish him, where he heard this,
- Lest you shall chance to whip your information
- And beat the messenger who bids beware
- Of what is to be dreaded.
- SICINIUS:
- Tell not me:
- I know this cannot be.
- BRUTUS:
- Not possible.
- Messenger:
- The nobles in great earnestness are going
- All to the senate-house: some news is come
- That turns their countenances.
- SICINIUS:
- 'Tis this slave;--
- Go whip him, 'fore the people's eyes:--his raising;
- Nothing but his report.
- Messenger:
- Yes, worthy sir,
- The slave's report is seconded; and more,
- More fearful, is deliver'd.
- SICINIUS:
- What more fearful?
- Messenger:
- It is spoke freely out of many mouths--
- How probable I do not know--that Marcius,
- Join'd with Aufidius, leads a power 'gainst Rome,
- And vows revenge as spacious as between
- The young'st and oldest thing.
- SICINIUS:
- This is most likely!
- BRUTUS:
- Raised only, that the weaker sort may wish
- Good Marcius home again.
- SICINIUS:
- The very trick on't.
- MENENIUS:
- This is unlikely:
- He and Aufidius can no more atone
- Than violentest contrariety.
- Second Messenger:
- You are sent for to the senate:
- A fearful army, led by Caius Marcius
- Associated with Aufidius, rages
- Upon our territories; and have already
- O'erborne their way, consumed with fire, and took
- What lay before them.
- COMINIUS:
- O, you have made good work!
- MENENIUS:
- What news? what news?
- COMINIUS:
- You have holp to ravish your own daughters and
- To melt the city leads upon your pates,
- To see your wives dishonour'd to your noses,--
- MENENIUS:
- What's the news? what's the news?
- COMINIUS:
- Your temples burned in their cement, and
- Your franchises, whereon you stood, confined
- Into an auger's bore.
- MENENIUS:
- Pray now, your news?
- You have made fair work, I fear me.--Pray, your news?--
- If Marcius should be join'd with Volscians,--
- COMINIUS:
- If!
- He is their god: he leads them like a thing
- Made by some other deity than nature,
- That shapes man better; and they follow him,
- Against us brats, with no less confidence
- Than boys pursuing summer butterflies,
- Or butchers killing flies.
- MENENIUS:
- You have made good work,
- You and your apron-men; you that stood so up much
- on the voice of occupation and
- The breath of garlic-eaters!
- COMINIUS:
- He will shake
- Your Rome about your ears.
- MENENIUS:
- As Hercules
- Did shake down mellow fruit.
- You have made fair work!
- BRUTUS:
- But is this true, sir?
- COMINIUS:
- Ay; and you'll look pale
- Before you find it other. All the regions
- Do smilingly revolt; and who resist
- Are mock'd for valiant ignorance,
- And perish constant fools. Who is't can blame him?
- Your enemies and his find something in him.
- MENENIUS:
- We are all undone, unless
- The noble man have mercy.
- COMINIUS:
- Who shall ask it?
- The tribunes cannot do't for shame; the people
- Deserve such pity of him as the wolf
- Does of the shepherds: for his best friends, if they
- Should say 'Be good to Rome,' they charged him even
- As those should do that had deserved his hate,
- And therein show'd like enemies.
- MENENIUS:
- 'Tis true:
- If he were putting to my house the brand
- That should consume it, I have not the face
- To say 'Beseech you, cease.' You have made fair hands,
- You and your crafts! you have crafted fair!
- COMINIUS:
- You have brought
- A trembling upon Rome, such as was never
- So incapable of help.
- Both Tribunes:
- Say not we brought it.
- MENENIUS:
- How! Was it we? we loved him but, like beasts
- And cowardly nobles, gave way unto your clusters,
- Who did hoot him out o' the city.
- COMINIUS:
- But I fear
- They'll roar him in again. Tullus Aufidius,
- The second name of men, obeys his points
- As if he were his officer: desperation
- Is all the policy, strength and defence,
- That Rome can make against them.
- MENENIUS:
- Here come the clusters.
- And is Aufidius with him? You are they
- That made the air unwholesome, when you cast
- Your stinking greasy caps in hooting at
- Coriolanus' exile. Now he's coming;
- And not a hair upon a soldier's head
- Which will not prove a whip: as many coxcombs
- As you threw caps up will he tumble down,
- And pay you for your voices. 'Tis no matter;
- if he could burn us all into one coal,
- We have deserved it.
- Citizens:
- Faith, we hear fearful news.
- First Citizen:
- For mine own part,
- When I said, banish him, I said 'twas pity.
- Second Citizen:
- And so did I.
- Third Citizen:
- And so did I; and, to say the truth, so did very
- many of us: that we did, we did for the best; and
- though we willingly consented to his banishment, yet
- it was against our will.
- COMINIUS:
- Ye re goodly things, you voices!
- MENENIUS:
- You have made
- Good work, you and your cry! Shall's to the Capitol?
- COMINIUS:
- O, ay, what else?
- SICINIUS:
- Go, masters, get you home; be not dismay'd:
- These are a side that would be glad to have
- This true which they so seem to fear. Go home,
- And show no sign of fear.
- First Citizen:
- The gods be good to us! Come, masters, let's home.
- I ever said we were i' the wrong when we banished
- him.
- Second Citizen:
- So did we all. But, come, let's home.
- BRUTUS:
- I do not like this news.
- SICINIUS:
- Nor I.
- BRUTUS:
- Let's to the Capitol. Would half my wealth
- Would buy this for a lie!
- SICINIUS:
- Pray, let us go.
- AUFIDIUS:
- Do they still fly to the Roman?
- Lieutenant:
- I do not know what witchcraft's in him, but
- Your soldiers use him as the grace 'fore meat,
- Their talk at table, and their thanks at end;
- And you are darken'd in this action, sir,
- Even by your own.
- AUFIDIUS:
- I cannot help it now,
- Unless, by using means, I lame the foot
- Of our design. He bears himself more proudlier,
- Even to my person, than I thought he would
- When first I did embrace him: yet his nature
- In that's no changeling; and I must excuse
- What cannot be amended.
- Lieutenant:
- Yet I wish, sir,--
- I mean for your particular,--you had not
- Join'd in commission with him; but either
- Had borne the action of yourself, or else
- To him had left it solely.
- AUFIDIUS:
- I understand thee well; and be thou sure,
- when he shall come to his account, he knows not
- What I can urge against him. Although it seems,
- And so he thinks, and is no less apparent
- To the vulgar eye, that he bears all things fairly.
- And shows good husbandry for the Volscian state,
- Fights dragon-like, and does achieve as soon
- As draw his sword; yet he hath left undone
- That which shall break his neck or hazard mine,
- Whene'er we come to our account.
- Lieutenant:
- Sir, I beseech you, think you he'll carry Rome?
- AUFIDIUS:
- All places yield to him ere he sits down;
- And the nobility of Rome are his:
- The senators and patricians love him too:
- The tribunes are no soldiers; and their people
- Will be as rash in the repeal, as hasty
- To expel him thence. I think he'll be to Rome
- As is the osprey to the fish, who takes it
- By sovereignty of nature. First he was
- A noble servant to them; but he could not
- Carry his honours even: whether 'twas pride,
- Which out of daily fortune ever taints
- The happy man; whether defect of judgment,
- To fail in the disposing of those chances
- Which he was lord of; or whether nature,
- Not to be other than one thing, not moving
- From the casque to the cushion, but commanding peace
- Even with the same austerity and garb
- As he controll'd the war; but one of these--
- As he hath spices of them all, not all,
- For I dare so far free him--made him fear'd,
- So hated, and so banish'd: but he has a merit,
- To choke it in the utterance. So our virtues
- Lie in the interpretation of the time:
- And power, unto itself most commendable,
- Hath not a tomb so evident as a chair
- To extol what it hath done.
- One fire drives out one fire; one nail, one nail;
- Rights by rights falter, strengths by strengths do fail.
- Come, let's away. When, Caius, Rome is thine,
- Thou art poor'st of all; then shortly art thou mine.
- MENENIUS:
- No, I'll not go: you hear what he hath said
- Which was sometime his general; who loved him
- In a most dear particular. He call'd me father:
- But what o' that? Go, you that banish'd him;
- A mile before his tent fall down, and knee
- The way into his mercy: nay, if he coy'd
- To hear Cominius speak, I'll keep at home.
- COMINIUS:
- He would not seem to know me.
- MENENIUS:
- Do you hear?
- COMINIUS:
- Yet one time he did call me by my name:
- I urged our old acquaintance, and the drops
- That we have bled together. Coriolanus
- He would not answer to: forbad all names;
- He was a kind of nothing, titleless,
- Till he had forged himself a name o' the fire
- Of burning Rome.
- MENENIUS:
- Why, so: you have made good work!
- A pair of tribunes that have rack'd for Rome,
- To make coals cheap,--a noble memory!
- COMINIUS:
- I minded him how royal 'twas to pardon
- When it was less expected: he replied,
- It was a bare petition of a state
- To one whom they had punish'd.
- MENENIUS:
- Very well:
- Could he say less?
- COMINIUS:
- I offer'd to awaken his regard
- For's private friends: his answer to me was,
- He could not stay to pick them in a pile
- Of noisome musty chaff: he said 'twas folly,
- For one poor grain or two, to leave unburnt,
- And still to nose the offence.
- MENENIUS:
- For one poor grain or two!
- I am one of those; his mother, wife, his child,
- And this brave fellow too, we are the grains:
- You are the musty chaff; and you are smelt
- Above the moon: we must be burnt for you.
- SICINIUS:
- Nay, pray, be patient: if you refuse your aid
- In this so never-needed help, yet do not
- Upbraid's with our distress. But, sure, if you
- Would be your country's pleader, your good tongue,
- More than the instant army we can make,
- Might stop our countryman.
- MENENIUS:
- No, I'll not meddle.
- SICINIUS:
- Pray you, go to him.
- MENENIUS:
- What should I do?
- BRUTUS:
- Only make trial what your love can do
- For Rome, towards Marcius.
- MENENIUS:
- Well, and say that Marcius
- Return me, as Cominius is return'd,
- Unheard; what then?
- But as a discontented friend, grief-shot
- With his unkindness? say't be so?
- SICINIUS:
- Yet your good will
- must have that thanks from Rome, after the measure
- As you intended well.
- MENENIUS:
- I'll undertake 't:
- I think he'll hear me. Yet, to bite his lip
- And hum at good Cominius, much unhearts me.
- He was not taken well; he had not dined:
- The veins unfill'd, our blood is cold, and then
- We pout upon the morning, are unapt
- To give or to forgive; but when we have stuff'd
- These and these conveyances of our blood
- With wine and feeding, we have suppler souls
- Than in our priest-like fasts: therefore I'll watch him
- Till he be dieted to my request,
- And then I'll set upon him.
- BRUTUS:
- You know the very road into his kindness,
- And cannot lose your way.
- MENENIUS:
- Good faith, I'll prove him,
- Speed how it will. I shall ere long have knowledge
- Of my success.
- COMINIUS:
- He'll never hear him.
- SICINIUS:
- Not?
- COMINIUS:
- I tell you, he does sit in gold, his eye
- Red as 'twould burn Rome; and his injury
- The gaoler to his pity. I kneel'd before him;
- 'Twas very faintly he said 'Rise;' dismiss'd me
- Thus, with his speechless hand: what he would do,
- He sent in writing after me; what he would not,
- Bound with an oath to yield to his conditions:
- So that all hope is vain.
- Unless his noble mother, and his wife;
- Who, as I hear, mean to solicit him
- For mercy to his country. Therefore, let's hence,
- And with our fair entreaties haste them on.
- First Senator:
- Stay: whence are you?
- Second Senator:
- Stand, and go back.
- MENENIUS:
- You guard like men; 'tis well: but, by your leave,
- I am an officer of state, and come
- To speak with Coriolanus.
- First Senator:
- From whence?
- MENENIUS:
- From Rome.
- First Senator:
- You may not pass, you must return: our general
- Will no more hear from thence.
- Second Senator:
- You'll see your Rome embraced with fire before
- You'll speak with Coriolanus.
- MENENIUS:
- Good my friends,
- If you have heard your general talk of Rome,
- And of his friends there, it is lots to blanks,
- My name hath touch'd your ears it is Menenius.
- First Senator:
- Be it so; go back: the virtue of your name
- Is not here passable.
- MENENIUS:
- I tell thee, fellow,
- The general is my lover: I have been
- The book of his good acts, whence men have read
- His name unparallel'd, haply amplified;
- For I have ever verified my friends,
- Of whom he's chief, with all the size that verity
- Would without lapsing suffer: nay, sometimes,
- Like to a bowl upon a subtle ground,
- I have tumbled past the throw; and in his praise
- Have almost stamp'd the leasing: therefore, fellow,
- I must have leave to pass.
- First Senator:
- Faith, sir, if you had told as many lies in his
- behalf as you have uttered words in your own, you
- should not pass here; no, though it were as virtuous
- to lie as to live chastely. Therefore, go back.
- MENENIUS:
- Prithee, fellow, remember my name is Menenius,
- always factionary on the party of your general.
- Second Senator:
- Howsoever you have been his liar, as you say you
- have, I am one that, telling true under him, must
- say, you cannot pass. Therefore, go back.
- MENENIUS:
- Has he dined, canst thou tell? for I would not
- speak with him till after dinner.
- First Senator:
- You are a Roman, are you?
- MENENIUS:
- I am, as thy general is.
- First Senator:
- Then you should hate Rome, as he does. Can you,
- when you have pushed out your gates the very
- defender of them, and, in a violent popular
- ignorance, given your enemy your shield, think to
- front his revenges with the easy groans of old
- women, the virginal palms of your daughters, or with
- the palsied intercession of such a decayed dotant as
- you seem to be? Can you think to blow out the
- intended fire your city is ready to flame in, with
- such weak breath as this? No, you are deceived;
- therefore, back to Rome, and prepare for your
- execution: you are condemned, our general has sworn
- you out of reprieve and pardon.
- MENENIUS:
- Sirrah, if thy captain knew I were here, he would
- use me with estimation.
- Second Senator:
- Come, my captain knows you not.
- MENENIUS:
- I mean, thy general.
- First Senator:
- My general cares not for you. Back, I say, go; lest
- I let forth your half-pint of blood; back,--that's
- the utmost of your having: back.
- MENENIUS:
- Nay, but, fellow, fellow,--
- CORIOLANUS:
- What's the matter?
- MENENIUS:
- Now, you companion, I'll say an errand for you:
- You shall know now that I am in estimation; you shall
- perceive that a Jack guardant cannot office me from
- my son Coriolanus: guess, but by my entertainment
- with him, if thou standest not i' the state of
- hanging, or of some death more long in
- spectatorship, and crueller in suffering; behold now
- presently, and swoon for what's to come upon thee.
- The glorious gods sit in hourly synod about thy
- particular prosperity, and love thee no worse than
- thy old father Menenius does! O my son, my son!
- thou art preparing fire for us; look thee, here's
- water to quench it. I was hardly moved to come to
- thee; but being assured none but myself could move
- thee, I have been blown out of your gates with
- sighs; and conjure thee to pardon Rome, and thy
- petitionary countrymen. The good gods assuage thy
- wrath, and turn the dregs of it upon this varlet
- here,--this, who, like a block, hath denied my
- access to thee.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Away!
- MENENIUS:
- How! away!
- CORIOLANUS:
- Wife, mother, child, I know not. My affairs
- Are servanted to others: though I owe
- My revenge properly, my remission lies
- In Volscian breasts. That we have been familiar,
- Ingrate forgetfulness shall poison, rather
- Than pity note how much. Therefore, be gone.
- Mine ears against your suits are stronger than
- Your gates against my force. Yet, for I loved thee,
- Take this along; I writ it for thy sake
- And would have rent it. Another word, Menenius,
- I will not hear thee speak. This man, Aufidius,
- Was my beloved in Rome: yet thou behold'st!
- AUFIDIUS:
- You keep a constant temper.
- First Senator:
- Now, sir, is your name Menenius?
- Second Senator:
- 'Tis a spell, you see, of much power: you know the
- way home again.
- First Senator:
- Do you hear how we are shent for keeping your
- greatness back?
- Second Senator:
- What cause, do you think, I have to swoon?
- MENENIUS:
- I neither care for the world nor your general: for
- such things as you, I can scarce think there's any,
- ye're so slight. He that hath a will to die by
- himself fears it not from another: let your general
- do his worst. For you, be that you are, long; and
- your misery increase with your age! I say to you,
- as I was said to, Away!
- First Senator:
- A noble fellow, I warrant him.
- Second Senator:
- The worthy fellow is our general: he's the rock, the
- oak not to be wind-shaken.
- CORIOLANUS:
- We will before the walls of Rome tomorrow
- Set down our host. My partner in this action,
- You must report to the Volscian lords, how plainly
- I have borne this business.
- AUFIDIUS:
- Only their ends
- You have respected; stopp'd your ears against
- The general suit of Rome; never admitted
- A private whisper, no, not with such friends
- That thought them sure of you.
- CORIOLANUS:
- This last old man,
- Whom with a crack'd heart I have sent to Rome,
- Loved me above the measure of a father;
- Nay, godded me, indeed. Their latest refuge
- Was to send him; for whose old love I have,
- Though I show'd sourly to him, once more offer'd
- The first conditions, which they did refuse
- And cannot now accept; to grace him only
- That thought he could do more, a very little
- I have yielded to: fresh embassies and suits,
- Nor from the state nor private friends, hereafter
- Will I lend ear to. Ha! what shout is this?
- Shall I be tempted to infringe my vow
- In the same time 'tis made? I will not.
- My wife comes foremost; then the honour'd mould
- Wherein this trunk was framed, and in her hand
- The grandchild to her blood. But, out, affection!
- All bond and privilege of nature, break!
- Let it be virtuous to be obstinate.
- What is that curt'sy worth? or those doves' eyes,
- Which can make gods forsworn? I melt, and am not
- Of stronger earth than others. My mother bows;
- As if Olympus to a molehill should
- In supplication nod: and my young boy
- Hath an aspect of intercession, which
- Great nature cries 'Deny not.' let the Volsces
- Plough Rome and harrow Italy: I'll never
- Be such a gosling to obey instinct, but stand,
- As if a man were author of himself
- And knew no other kin.
- VIRGILIA:
- My lord and husband!
- CORIOLANUS:
- These eyes are not the same I wore in Rome.
- VIRGILIA:
- The sorrow that delivers us thus changed
- Makes you think so.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Like a dull actor now,
- I have forgot my part, and I am out,
- Even to a full disgrace. Best of my flesh,
- Forgive my tyranny; but do not say
- For that 'Forgive our Romans.' O, a kiss
- Long as my exile, sweet as my revenge!
- Now, by the jealous queen of heaven, that kiss
- I carried from thee, dear; and my true lip
- Hath virgin'd it e'er since. You gods! I prate,
- And the most noble mother of the world
- Leave unsaluted: sink, my knee, i' the earth;
- Of thy deep duty more impression show
- Than that of common sons.
- VOLUMNIA:
- O, stand up blest!
- Whilst, with no softer cushion than the flint,
- I kneel before thee; and unproperly
- Show duty, as mistaken all this while
- Between the child and parent.
- CORIOLANUS:
- What is this?
- Your knees to me? to your corrected son?
- Then let the pebbles on the hungry beach
- Fillip the stars; then let the mutinous winds
- Strike the proud cedars 'gainst the fiery sun;
- Murdering impossibility, to make
- What cannot be, slight work.
- VOLUMNIA:
- Thou art my warrior;
- I holp to frame thee. Do you know this lady?
- CORIOLANUS:
- The noble sister of Publicola,
- The moon of Rome, chaste as the icicle
- That's curdied by the frost from purest snow
- And hangs on Dian's temple: dear Valeria!
- VOLUMNIA:
- This is a poor epitome of yours,
- Which by the interpretation of full time
- May show like all yourself.
- CORIOLANUS:
- The god of soldiers,
- With the consent of supreme Jove, inform
- Thy thoughts with nobleness; that thou mayst prove
- To shame unvulnerable, and stick i' the wars
- Like a great sea-mark, standing every flaw,
- And saving those that eye thee!
- VOLUMNIA:
- Your knee, sirrah.
- CORIOLANUS:
- That's my brave boy!
- VOLUMNIA:
- Even he, your wife, this lady, and myself,
- Are suitors to you.
- CORIOLANUS:
- I beseech you, peace:
- Or, if you'ld ask, remember this before:
- The thing I have forsworn to grant may never
- Be held by you denials. Do not bid me
- Dismiss my soldiers, or capitulate
- Again with Rome's mechanics: tell me not
- Wherein I seem unnatural: desire not
- To ally my rages and revenges with
- Your colder reasons.
- VOLUMNIA:
- O, no more, no more!
- You have said you will not grant us any thing;
- For we have nothing else to ask, but that
- Which you deny already: yet we will ask;
- That, if you fail in our request, the blame
- May hang upon your hardness: therefore hear us.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Aufidius, and you Volsces, mark; for we'll
- Hear nought from Rome in private. Your request?
- VOLUMNIA:
- Should we be silent and not speak, our raiment
- And state of bodies would bewray what life
- We have led since thy exile. Think with thyself
- How more unfortunate than all living women
- Are we come hither: since that thy sight,
- which should
- Make our eyes flow with joy, hearts dance
- with comforts,
- Constrains them weep and shake with fear and sorrow;
- Making the mother, wife and child to see
- The son, the husband and the father tearing
- His country's bowels out. And to poor we
- Thine enmity's most capital: thou barr'st us
- Our prayers to the gods, which is a comfort
- That all but we enjoy; for how can we,
- Alas, how can we for our country pray.
- Whereto we are bound, together with thy victory,
- Whereto we are bound? alack, or we must lose
- The country, our dear nurse, or else thy person,
- Our comfort in the country. We must find
- An evident calamity, though we had
- Our wish, which side should win: for either thou
- Must, as a foreign recreant, be led
- With manacles thorough our streets, or else
- triumphantly tread on thy country's ruin,
- And bear the palm for having bravely shed
- Thy wife and children's blood. For myself, son,
- I purpose not to wait on fortune till
- These wars determine: if I cannot persuade thee
- Rather to show a noble grace to both parts
- Than seek the end of one, thou shalt no sooner
- March to assault thy country than to tread--
- Trust to't, thou shalt not--on thy mother's womb,
- That brought thee to this world.
- VIRGILIA:
- Ay, and mine,
- That brought you forth this boy, to keep your name
- Living to time.
- Young MARCIUS:
- A' shall not tread on me;
- I'll run away till I am bigger, but then I'll fight.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Not of a woman's tenderness to be,
- Requires nor child nor woman's face to see.
- I have sat too long.
- VOLUMNIA:
- Nay, go not from us thus.
- If it were so that our request did tend
- To save the Romans, thereby to destroy
- The Volsces whom you serve, you might condemn us,
- As poisonous of your honour: no; our suit
- Is that you reconcile them: while the Volsces
- May say 'This mercy we have show'd;' the Romans,
- 'This we received;' and each in either side
- Give the all-hail to thee and cry 'Be blest
- For making up this peace!' Thou know'st, great son,
- The end of war's uncertain, but this certain,
- That, if thou conquer Rome, the benefit
- Which thou shalt thereby reap is such a name,
- Whose repetition will be dogg'd with curses;
- Whose chronicle thus writ: 'The man was noble,
- But with his last attempt he wiped it out;
- Destroy'd his country, and his name remains
- To the ensuing age abhorr'd.' Speak to me, son:
- Thou hast affected the fine strains of honour,
- To imitate the graces of the gods;
- To tear with thunder the wide cheeks o' the air,
- And yet to charge thy sulphur with a bolt
- That should but rive an oak. Why dost not speak?
- Think'st thou it honourable for a noble man
- Still to remember wrongs? Daughter, speak you:
- He cares not for your weeping. Speak thou, boy:
- Perhaps thy childishness will move him more
- Than can our reasons. There's no man in the world
- More bound to 's mother; yet here he lets me prate
- Like one i' the stocks. Thou hast never in thy life
- Show'd thy dear mother any courtesy,
- When she, poor hen, fond of no second brood,
- Has cluck'd thee to the wars and safely home,
- Loaden with honour. Say my request's unjust,
- And spurn me back: but if it be not so,
- Thou art not honest; and the gods will plague thee,
- That thou restrain'st from me the duty which
- To a mother's part belongs. He turns away:
- Down, ladies; let us shame him with our knees.
- To his surname Coriolanus 'longs more pride
- Than pity to our prayers. Down: an end;
- This is the last: so we will home to Rome,
- And die among our neighbours. Nay, behold 's:
- This boy, that cannot tell what he would have
- But kneels and holds up bands for fellowship,
- Does reason our petition with more strength
- Than thou hast to deny 't. Come, let us go:
- This fellow had a Volscian to his mother;
- His wife is in Corioli and his child
- Like him by chance. Yet give us our dispatch:
- I am hush'd until our city be a-fire,
- And then I'll speak a little.
- CORIOLANUS:
- O mother, mother!
- What have you done? Behold, the heavens do ope,
- The gods look down, and this unnatural scene
- They laugh at. O my mother, mother! O!
- You have won a happy victory to Rome;
- But, for your son,--believe it, O, believe it,
- Most dangerously you have with him prevail'd,
- If not most mortal to him. But, let it come.
- Aufidius, though I cannot make true wars,
- I'll frame convenient peace. Now, good Aufidius,
- Were you in my stead, would you have heard
- A mother less? or granted less, Aufidius?
- AUFIDIUS:
- I was moved withal.
- CORIOLANUS:
- I dare be sworn you were:
- And, sir, it is no little thing to make
- Mine eyes to sweat compassion. But, good sir,
- What peace you'll make, advise me: for my part,
- I'll not to Rome, I'll back with you; and pray you,
- Stand to me in this cause. O mother! wife!
- AUFIDIUS:
- CORIOLANUS:
- Ay, by and by;
- But we will drink together; and you shall bear
- A better witness back than words, which we,
- On like conditions, will have counter-seal'd.
- Come, enter with us. Ladies, you deserve
- To have a temple built you: all the swords
- In Italy, and her confederate arms,
- Could not have made this peace.
- MENENIUS:
- See you yond coign o' the Capitol, yond
- corner-stone?
- SICINIUS:
- Why, what of that?
- MENENIUS:
- If it be possible for you to displace it with your
- little finger, there is some hope the ladies of
- Rome, especially his mother, may prevail with him.
- But I say there is no hope in't: our throats are
- sentenced and stay upon execution.
- SICINIUS:
- Is't possible that so short a time can alter the
- condition of a man!
- MENENIUS:
- There is differency between a grub and a butterfly;
- yet your butterfly was a grub. This Marcius is grown
- from man to dragon: he has wings; he's more than a
- creeping thing.
- SICINIUS:
- He loved his mother dearly.
- MENENIUS:
- So did he me: and he no more remembers his mother
- now than an eight-year-old horse. The tartness
- of his face sours ripe grapes: when he walks, he
- moves like an engine, and the ground shrinks before
- his treading: he is able to pierce a corslet with
- his eye; talks like a knell, and his hum is a
- battery. He sits in his state, as a thing made for
- Alexander. What he bids be done is finished with
- his bidding. He wants nothing of a god but eternity
- and a heaven to throne in.
- SICINIUS:
- Yes, mercy, if you report him truly.
- MENENIUS:
- I paint him in the character. Mark what mercy his
- mother shall bring from him: there is no more mercy
- in him than there is milk in a male tiger; that
- shall our poor city find: and all this is long of
- you.
- SICINIUS:
- The gods be good unto us!
- MENENIUS:
- No, in such a case the gods will not be good unto
- us. When we banished him, we respected not them;
- and, he returning to break our necks, they respect not us.
- Messenger:
- Sir, if you'ld save your life, fly to your house:
- The plebeians have got your fellow-tribune
- And hale him up and down, all swearing, if
- The Roman ladies bring not comfort home,
- They'll give him death by inches.
- SICINIUS:
- What's the news?
- Second Messenger:
- Good news, good news; the ladies have prevail'd,
- The Volscians are dislodged, and Marcius gone:
- A merrier day did never yet greet Rome,
- No, not the expulsion of the Tarquins.
- SICINIUS:
- Friend,
- Art thou certain this is true? is it most certain?
- Second Messenger:
- As certain as I know the sun is fire:
- Where have you lurk'd, that you make doubt of it?
- Ne'er through an arch so hurried the blown tide,
- As the recomforted through the gates. Why, hark you!
- The trumpets, sackbuts, psalteries and fifes,
- Tabours and cymbals and the shouting Romans,
- Make the sun dance. Hark you!
- MENENIUS:
- This is good news:
- I will go meet the ladies. This Volumnia
- Is worth of consuls, senators, patricians,
- A city full; of tribunes, such as you,
- A sea and land full. You have pray'd well to-day:
- This morning for ten thousand of your throats
- I'd not have given a doit. Hark, how they joy!
- SICINIUS:
- First, the gods bless you for your tidings; next,
- Accept my thankfulness.
- Second Messenger:
- Sir, we have all
- Great cause to give great thanks.
- SICINIUS:
- They are near the city?
- Second Messenger:
- Almost at point to enter.
- SICINIUS:
- We will meet them,
- And help the joy.
- First Senator:
- Behold our patroness, the life of Rome!
- Call all your tribes together, praise the gods,
- And make triumphant fires; strew flowers before them:
- Unshout the noise that banish'd Marcius,
- Repeal him with the welcome of his mother;
- Cry 'Welcome, ladies, welcome!'
- All:
- Welcome, ladies, Welcome!
- AUFIDIUS:
- Go tell the lords o' the city I am here:
- Deliver them this paper: having read it,
- Bid them repair to the market place; where I,
- Even in theirs and in the commons' ears,
- Will vouch the truth of it. Him I accuse
- The city ports by this hath enter'd and
- Intends to appear before the people, hoping
- To purge herself with words: dispatch.
- Most welcome!
- First Conspirator:
- How is it with our general?
- AUFIDIUS:
- Even so
- As with a man by his own alms empoison'd,
- And with his charity slain.
- Second Conspirator:
- Most noble sir,
- If you do hold the same intent wherein
- You wish'd us parties, we'll deliver you
- Of your great danger.
- AUFIDIUS:
- Sir, I cannot tell:
- We must proceed as we do find the people.
- Third Conspirator:
- The people will remain uncertain whilst
- 'Twixt you there's difference; but the fall of either
- Makes the survivor heir of all.
- AUFIDIUS:
- I know it;
- And my pretext to strike at him admits
- A good construction. I raised him, and I pawn'd
- Mine honour for his truth: who being so heighten'd,
- He water'd his new plants with dews of flattery,
- Seducing so my friends; and, to this end,
- He bow'd his nature, never known before
- But to be rough, unswayable and free.
- Third Conspirator:
- Sir, his stoutness
- When he did stand for consul, which he lost
- By lack of stooping,--
- AUFIDIUS:
- That I would have spoke of:
- Being banish'd for't, he came unto my hearth;
- Presented to my knife his throat: I took him;
- Made him joint-servant with me; gave him way
- In all his own desires; nay, let him choose
- Out of my files, his projects to accomplish,
- My best and freshest men; served his designments
- In mine own person; holp to reap the fame
- Which he did end all his; and took some pride
- To do myself this wrong: till, at the last,
- I seem'd his follower, not partner, and
- He waged me with his countenance, as if
- I had been mercenary.
- First Conspirator:
- So he did, my lord:
- The army marvell'd at it, and, in the last,
- When he had carried Rome and that we look'd
- For no less spoil than glory,--
- AUFIDIUS:
- There was it:
- For which my sinews shall be stretch'd upon him.
- At a few drops of women's rheum, which are
- As cheap as lies, he sold the blood and labour
- Of our great action: therefore shall he die,
- And I'll renew me in his fall. But, hark!
- First Conspirator:
- Your native town you enter'd like a post,
- And had no welcomes home: but he returns,
- Splitting the air with noise.
- Second Conspirator:
- And patient fools,
- Whose children he hath slain, their base throats tear
- With giving him glory.
- Third Conspirator:
- Therefore, at your vantage,
- Ere he express himself, or move the people
- With what he would say, let him feel your sword,
- Which we will second. When he lies along,
- After your way his tale pronounced shall bury
- His reasons with his body.
- AUFIDIUS:
- Say no more:
- Here come the lords.
- All The Lords:
- You are most welcome home.
- AUFIDIUS:
- I have not deserved it.
- But, worthy lords, have you with heed perused
- What I have written to you?
- Lords:
- We have.
- First Lord:
- And grieve to hear't.
- What faults he made before the last, I think
- Might have found easy fines: but there to end
- Where he was to begin and give away
- The benefit of our levies, answering us
- With our own charge, making a treaty where
- There was a yielding,--this admits no excuse.
- AUFIDIUS:
- He approaches: you shall hear him.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Hail, lords! I am return'd your soldier,
- No more infected with my country's love
- Than when I parted hence, but still subsisting
- Under your great command. You are to know
- That prosperously I have attempted and
- With bloody passage led your wars even to
- The gates of Rome. Our spoils we have brought home
- Do more than counterpoise a full third part
- The charges of the action. We have made peace
- With no less honour to the Antiates
- Than shame to the Romans: and we here deliver,
- Subscribed by the consuls and patricians,
- Together with the seal o' the senate, what
- We have compounded on.
- AUFIDIUS:
- Read it not, noble lords;
- But tell the traitor, in the high'st degree
- He hath abused your powers.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Traitor! how now!
- AUFIDIUS:
- Ay, traitor, Marcius!
- CORIOLANUS:
- Marcius!
- AUFIDIUS:
- Ay, Marcius, Caius Marcius: dost thou think
- I'll grace thee with that robbery, thy stol'n name
- Coriolanus in Corioli?
- You lords and heads o' the state, perfidiously
- He has betray'd your business, and given up,
- For certain drops of salt, your city Rome,
- I say 'your city,' to his wife and mother;
- Breaking his oath and resolution like
- A twist of rotten silk, never admitting
- Counsel o' the war, but at his nurse's tears
- He whined and roar'd away your victory,
- That pages blush'd at him and men of heart
- Look'd wondering each at other.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Hear'st thou, Mars?
- AUFIDIUS:
- Name not the god, thou boy of tears!
- CORIOLANUS:
- Ha!
- AUFIDIUS:
- No more.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Measureless liar, thou hast made my heart
- Too great for what contains it. Boy! O slave!
- Pardon me, lords, 'tis the first time that ever
- I was forced to scold. Your judgments, my grave lords,
- Must give this cur the lie: and his own notion--
- Who wears my stripes impress'd upon him; that
- Must bear my beating to his grave--shall join
- To thrust the lie unto him.
- First Lord:
- Peace, both, and hear me speak.
- CORIOLANUS:
- Cut me to pieces, Volsces; men and lads,
- Stain all your edges on me. Boy! false hound!
- If you have writ your annals true, 'tis there,
- That, like an eagle in a dove-cote, I
- Flutter'd your Volscians in Corioli:
- Alone I did it. Boy!
- AUFIDIUS:
- Why, noble lords,
- Will you be put in mind of his blind fortune,
- Which was your shame, by this unholy braggart,
- 'Fore your own eyes and ears?
- All Conspirators:
- Let him die for't.
- All The People:
- 'Tear him to pieces.' 'Do it presently.' 'He kill'd
- my son.' 'My daughter.' 'He killed my cousin
- Marcus.' 'He killed my father.'
- Second Lord:
- Peace, ho! no outrage: peace!
- The man is noble and his fame folds-in
- This orb o' the earth. His last offences to us
- Shall have judicious hearing. Stand, Aufidius,
- And trouble not the peace.
- CORIOLANUS:
- O that I had him,
- With six Aufidiuses, or more, his tribe,
- To use my lawful sword!
- AUFIDIUS:
- Insolent villain!
- All Conspirators:
- Kill, kill, kill, kill, kill him!
- Lords:
- Hold, hold, hold, hold!
- AUFIDIUS:
- My noble masters, hear me speak.
- First Lord:
- O Tullus,--
- Second Lord:
- Thou hast done a deed whereat valour will weep.
- Third Lord:
- Tread not upon him. Masters all, be quiet;
- Put up your swords.
- AUFIDIUS:
- My lords, when you shall know--as in this rage,
- Provoked by him, you cannot--the great danger
- Which this man's life did owe you, you'll rejoice
- That he is thus cut off. Please it your honours
- To call me to your senate, I'll deliver
- Myself your loyal servant, or endure
- Your heaviest censure.
- First Lord:
- Bear from hence his body;
- And mourn you for him: let him be regarded
- As the most noble corse that ever herald
- Did follow to his urn.
- Second Lord:
- His own impatience
- Takes from Aufidius a great part of blame.
- Let's make the best of it.
- AUFIDIUS:
- My rage is gone;
- And I am struck with sorrow. Take him up.
- Help, three o' the chiefest soldiers; I'll be one.
- Beat thou the drum, that it speak mournfully:
- Trail your steel pikes. Though in this city he
- Hath widow'd and unchilded many a one,
- Which to this hour bewail the injury,
- Yet he shall have a noble memory. Assist.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Now is the winter of our discontent
- Made glorious summer by this sun of York;
- And all the clouds that lour'd upon our house
- In the deep bosom of the ocean buried.
- Now are our brows bound with victorious wreaths;
- Our bruised arms hung up for monuments;
- Our stern alarums changed to merry meetings,
- Our dreadful marches to delightful measures.
- Grim-visaged war hath smooth'd his wrinkled front;
- And now, instead of mounting barded steeds
- To fright the souls of fearful adversaries,
- He capers nimbly in a lady's chamber
- To the lascivious pleasing of a lute.
- But I, that am not shaped for sportive tricks,
- Nor made to court an amorous looking-glass;
- I, that am rudely stamp'd, and want love's majesty
- To strut before a wanton ambling nymph;
- I, that am curtail'd of this fair proportion,
- Cheated of feature by dissembling nature,
- Deformed, unfinish'd, sent before my time
- Into this breathing world, scarce half made up,
- And that so lamely and unfashionable
- That dogs bark at me as I halt by them;
- Why, I, in this weak piping time of peace,
- Have no delight to pass away the time,
- Unless to spy my shadow in the sun
- And descant on mine own deformity:
- And therefore, since I cannot prove a lover,
- To entertain these fair well-spoken days,
- I am determined to prove a villain
- And hate the idle pleasures of these days.
- Plots have I laid, inductions dangerous,
- By drunken prophecies, libels and dreams,
- To set my brother Clarence and the king
- In deadly hate the one against the other:
- And if King Edward be as true and just
- As I am subtle, false and treacherous,
- This day should Clarence closely be mew'd up,
- About a prophecy, which says that 'G'
- Of Edward's heirs the murderer shall be.
- Dive, thoughts, down to my soul: here
- Clarence comes.
- Brother, good day; what means this armed guard
- That waits upon your grace?
- CLARENCE:
- His majesty
- Tendering my person's safety, hath appointed
- This conduct to convey me to the Tower.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Upon what cause?
- CLARENCE:
- Because my name is George.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Alack, my lord, that fault is none of yours;
- He should, for that, commit your godfathers:
- O, belike his majesty hath some intent
- That you shall be new-christen'd in the Tower.
- But what's the matter, Clarence? may I know?
- CLARENCE:
- Yea, Richard, when I know; for I protest
- As yet I do not: but, as I can learn,
- He hearkens after prophecies and dreams;
- And from the cross-row plucks the letter G.
- And says a wizard told him that by G
- His issue disinherited should be;
- And, for my name of George begins with G,
- It follows in his thought that I am he.
- These, as I learn, and such like toys as these
- Have moved his highness to commit me now.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Why, this it is, when men are ruled by women:
- 'Tis not the king that sends you to the Tower:
- My Lady Grey his wife, Clarence, 'tis she
- That tempers him to this extremity.
- Was it not she and that good man of worship,
- Anthony Woodville, her brother there,
- That made him send Lord Hastings to the Tower,
- From whence this present day he is deliver'd?
- We are not safe, Clarence; we are not safe.
- CLARENCE:
- By heaven, I think there's no man is secure
- But the queen's kindred and night-walking heralds
- That trudge betwixt the king and Mistress Shore.
- Heard ye not what an humble suppliant
- Lord hastings was to her for his delivery?
- GLOUCESTER:
- Humbly complaining to her deity
- Got my lord chamberlain his liberty.
- I'll tell you what; I think it is our way,
- If we will keep in favour with the king,
- To be her men and wear her livery:
- The jealous o'erworn widow and herself,
- Since that our brother dubb'd them gentlewomen.
- Are mighty gossips in this monarchy.
- BRAKENBURY:
- I beseech your graces both to pardon me;
- His majesty hath straitly given in charge
- That no man shall have private conference,
- Of what degree soever, with his brother.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Even so; an't please your worship, Brakenbury,
- You may partake of any thing we say:
- We speak no treason, man: we say the king
- Is wise and virtuous, and his noble queen
- Well struck in years, fair, and not jealous;
- We say that Shore's wife hath a pretty foot,
- A cherry lip, a bonny eye, a passing pleasing tongue;
- And that the queen's kindred are made gentle-folks:
- How say you sir? Can you deny all this?
- BRAKENBURY:
- With this, my lord, myself have nought to do.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Naught to do with mistress Shore! I tell thee, fellow,
- He that doth naught with her, excepting one,
- Were best he do it secretly, alone.
- BRAKENBURY:
- What one, my lord?
- GLOUCESTER:
- Her husband, knave: wouldst thou betray me?
- BRAKENBURY:
- I beseech your grace to pardon me, and withal
- Forbear your conference with the noble duke.
- CLARENCE:
- We know thy charge, Brakenbury, and will obey.
- GLOUCESTER:
- We are the queen's abjects, and must obey.
- Brother, farewell: I will unto the king;
- And whatsoever you will employ me in,
- Were it to call King Edward's widow sister,
- I will perform it to enfranchise you.
- Meantime, this deep disgrace in brotherhood
- Touches me deeper than you can imagine.
- CLARENCE:
- I know it pleaseth neither of us well.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Well, your imprisonment shall not be long;
- Meantime, have patience.
- CLARENCE:
- I must perforce. Farewell.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Go, tread the path that thou shalt ne'er return.
- Simple, plain Clarence! I do love thee so,
- That I will shortly send thy soul to heaven,
- If heaven will take the present at our hands.
- But who comes here? the new-deliver'd Hastings?
- HASTINGS:
- Good time of day unto my gracious lord!
- GLOUCESTER:
- As much unto my good lord chamberlain!
- Well are you welcome to the open air.
- How hath your lordship brook'd imprisonment?
- HASTINGS:
- With patience, noble lord, as prisoners must:
- But I shall live, my lord, to give them thanks
- That were the cause of my imprisonment.
- GLOUCESTER:
- No doubt, no doubt; and so shall Clarence too;
- For they that were your enemies are his,
- And have prevail'd as much on him as you.
- HASTINGS:
- More pity that the eagle should be mew'd,
- While kites and buzzards prey at liberty.
- GLOUCESTER:
- What news abroad?
- HASTINGS:
- No news so bad abroad as this at home;
- The King is sickly, weak and melancholy,
- And his physicians fear him mightily.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Now, by Saint Paul, this news is bad indeed.
- O, he hath kept an evil diet long,
- And overmuch consumed his royal person:
- 'Tis very grievous to be thought upon.
- What, is he in his bed?
- HASTINGS:
- He is.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Go you before, and I will follow you.
- He cannot live, I hope; and must not die
- Till George be pack'd with post-horse up to heaven.
- I'll in, to urge his hatred more to Clarence,
- With lies well steel'd with weighty arguments;
- And, if I fall not in my deep intent,
- Clarence hath not another day to live:
- Which done, God take King Edward to his mercy,
- And leave the world for me to bustle in!
- For then I'll marry Warwick's youngest daughter.
- What though I kill'd her husband and her father?
- The readiest way to make the wench amends
- Is to become her husband and her father:
- The which will I; not all so much for love
- As for another secret close intent,
- By marrying her which I must reach unto.
- But yet I run before my horse to market:
- Clarence still breathes; Edward still lives and reigns:
- When they are gone, then must I count my gains.
- LADY ANNE:
- Set down, set down your honourable load,
- If honour may be shrouded in a hearse,
- Whilst I awhile obsequiously lament
- The untimely fall of virtuous Lancaster.
- Poor key-cold figure of a holy king!
- Pale ashes of the house of Lancaster!
- Thou bloodless remnant of that royal blood!
- Be it lawful that I invocate thy ghost,
- To hear the lamentations of Poor Anne,
- Wife to thy Edward, to thy slaughter'd son,
- Stabb'd by the selfsame hand that made these wounds!
- Lo, in these windows that let forth thy life,
- I pour the helpless balm of my poor eyes.
- Cursed be the hand that made these fatal holes!
- Cursed be the heart that had the heart to do it!
- Cursed the blood that let this blood from hence!
- More direful hap betide that hated wretch,
- That makes us wretched by the death of thee,
- Than I can wish to adders, spiders, toads,
- Or any creeping venom'd thing that lives!
- If ever he have child, abortive be it,
- Prodigious, and untimely brought to light,
- Whose ugly and unnatural aspect
- May fright the hopeful mother at the view;
- And that be heir to his unhappiness!
- If ever he have wife, let her he made
- A miserable by the death of him
- As I am made by my poor lord and thee!
- Come, now towards Chertsey with your holy load,
- Taken from Paul's to be interred there;
- And still, as you are weary of the weight,
- Rest you, whiles I lament King Henry's corse.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Stay, you that bear the corse, and set it down.
- LADY ANNE:
- What black magician conjures up this fiend,
- To stop devoted charitable deeds?
- GLOUCESTER:
- Villains, set down the corse; or, by Saint Paul,
- I'll make a corse of him that disobeys.
- Gentleman:
- My lord, stand back, and let the coffin pass.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Unmanner'd dog! stand thou, when I command:
- Advance thy halbert higher than my breast,
- Or, by Saint Paul, I'll strike thee to my foot,
- And spurn upon thee, beggar, for thy boldness.
- LADY ANNE:
- What, do you tremble? are you all afraid?
- Alas, I blame you not; for you are mortal,
- And mortal eyes cannot endure the devil.
- Avaunt, thou dreadful minister of hell!
- Thou hadst but power over his mortal body,
- His soul thou canst not have; therefore be gone.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Sweet saint, for charity, be not so curst.
- LADY ANNE:
- Foul devil, for God's sake, hence, and trouble us not;
- For thou hast made the happy earth thy hell,
- Fill'd it with cursing cries and deep exclaims.
- If thou delight to view thy heinous deeds,
- Behold this pattern of thy butcheries.
- O, gentlemen, see, see! dead Henry's wounds
- Open their congeal'd mouths and bleed afresh!
- Blush, Blush, thou lump of foul deformity;
- For 'tis thy presence that exhales this blood
- From cold and empty veins, where no blood dwells;
- Thy deed, inhuman and unnatural,
- Provokes this deluge most unnatural.
- O God, which this blood madest, revenge his death!
- O earth, which this blood drink'st revenge his death!
- Either heaven with lightning strike the
- murderer dead,
- Or earth, gape open wide and eat him quick,
- As thou dost swallow up this good king's blood
- Which his hell-govern'd arm hath butchered!
- GLOUCESTER:
- Lady, you know no rules of charity,
- Which renders good for bad, blessings for curses.
- LADY ANNE:
- Villain, thou know'st no law of God nor man:
- No beast so fierce but knows some touch of pity.
- GLOUCESTER:
- But I know none, and therefore am no beast.
- LADY ANNE:
- O wonderful, when devils tell the truth!
- GLOUCESTER:
- More wonderful, when angels are so angry.
- Vouchsafe, divine perfection of a woman,
- Of these supposed-evils, to give me leave,
- By circumstance, but to acquit myself.
- LADY ANNE:
- Vouchsafe, defused infection of a man,
- For these known evils, but to give me leave,
- By circumstance, to curse thy cursed self.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Fairer than tongue can name thee, let me have
- Some patient leisure to excuse myself.
- LADY ANNE:
- Fouler than heart can think thee, thou canst make
- No excuse current, but to hang thyself.
- GLOUCESTER:
- By such despair, I should accuse myself.
- LADY ANNE:
- And, by despairing, shouldst thou stand excused;
- For doing worthy vengeance on thyself,
- Which didst unworthy slaughter upon others.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Say that I slew them not?
- LADY ANNE:
- Why, then they are not dead:
- But dead they are, and devilish slave, by thee.
- GLOUCESTER:
- I did not kill your husband.
- LADY ANNE:
- Why, then he is alive.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Nay, he is dead; and slain by Edward's hand.
- LADY ANNE:
- In thy foul throat thou liest: Queen Margaret saw
- Thy murderous falchion smoking in his blood;
- The which thou once didst bend against her breast,
- But that thy brothers beat aside the point.
- GLOUCESTER:
- I was provoked by her slanderous tongue,
- which laid their guilt upon my guiltless shoulders.
- LADY ANNE:
- Thou wast provoked by thy bloody mind.
- Which never dreamt on aught but butcheries:
- Didst thou not kill this king?
- GLOUCESTER:
- I grant ye.
- LADY ANNE:
- Dost grant me, hedgehog? then, God grant me too
- Thou mayst be damned for that wicked deed!
- O, he was gentle, mild, and virtuous!
- GLOUCESTER:
- The fitter for the King of heaven, that hath him.
- LADY ANNE:
- He is in heaven, where thou shalt never come.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Let him thank me, that holp to send him thither;
- For he was fitter for that place than earth.
- LADY ANNE:
- And thou unfit for any place but hell.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Yes, one place else, if you will hear me name it.
- LADY ANNE:
- Some dungeon.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Your bed-chamber.
- LADY ANNE:
- I'll rest betide the chamber where thou liest!
- GLOUCESTER:
- So will it, madam till I lie with you.
- LADY ANNE:
- I hope so.
- GLOUCESTER:
- I know so. But, gentle Lady Anne,
- To leave this keen encounter of our wits,
- And fall somewhat into a slower method,
- Is not the causer of the timeless deaths
- Of these Plantagenets, Henry and Edward,
- As blameful as the executioner?
- LADY ANNE:
- Thou art the cause, and most accursed effect.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Your beauty was the cause of that effect;
- Your beauty: which did haunt me in my sleep
- To undertake the death of all the world,
- So I might live one hour in your sweet bosom.
- LADY ANNE:
- If I thought that, I tell thee, homicide,
- These nails should rend that beauty from my cheeks.
- GLOUCESTER:
- These eyes could never endure sweet beauty's wreck;
- You should not blemish it, if I stood by:
- As all the world is cheered by the sun,
- So I by that; it is my day, my life.
- LADY ANNE:
- Black night o'ershade thy day, and death thy life!
- GLOUCESTER:
- Curse not thyself, fair creature thou art both.
- LADY ANNE:
- I would I were, to be revenged on thee.
- GLOUCESTER:
- It is a quarrel most unnatural,
- To be revenged on him that loveth you.
- LADY ANNE:
- It is a quarrel just and reasonable,
- To be revenged on him that slew my husband.
- GLOUCESTER:
- He that bereft thee, lady, of thy husband,
- Did it to help thee to a better husband.
- LADY ANNE:
- His better doth not breathe upon the earth.
- GLOUCESTER:
- He lives that loves thee better than he could.
- LADY ANNE:
- Name him.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Plantagenet.
- LADY ANNE:
- Why, that was he.
- GLOUCESTER:
- The selfsame name, but one of better nature.
- LADY ANNE:
- Where is he?
- GLOUCESTER:
- Here.
- Why dost thou spit at me?
- LADY ANNE:
- Would it were mortal poison, for thy sake!
- GLOUCESTER:
- Never came poison from so sweet a place.
- LADY ANNE:
- Never hung poison on a fouler toad.
- Out of my sight! thou dost infect my eyes.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Thine eyes, sweet lady, have infected mine.
- LADY ANNE:
- Would they were basilisks, to strike thee dead!
- GLOUCESTER:
- I would they were, that I might die at once;
- For now they kill me with a living death.
- Those eyes of thine from mine have drawn salt tears,
- Shamed their aspect with store of childish drops:
- These eyes that never shed remorseful tear,
- No, when my father York and Edward wept,
- To hear the piteous moan that Rutland made
- When black-faced Clifford shook his sword at him;
- Nor when thy warlike father, like a child,
- Told the sad story of my father's death,
- And twenty times made pause to sob and weep,
- That all the standers-by had wet their cheeks
- Like trees bedash'd with rain: in that sad time
- My manly eyes did scorn an humble tear;
- And what these sorrows could not thence exhale,
- Thy beauty hath, and made them blind with weeping.
- I never sued to friend nor enemy;
- My tongue could never learn sweet smoothing word;
- But now thy beauty is proposed my fee,
- My proud heart sues, and prompts my tongue to speak.
- Teach not thy lips such scorn, for they were made
- For kissing, lady, not for such contempt.
- If thy revengeful heart cannot forgive,
- Lo, here I lend thee this sharp-pointed sword;
- Which if thou please to hide in this true bosom.
- And let the soul forth that adoreth thee,
- I lay it naked to the deadly stroke,
- And humbly beg the death upon my knee.
- Nay, do not pause; for I did kill King Henry,
- But 'twas thy beauty that provoked me.
- Nay, now dispatch; 'twas I that stabb'd young Edward,
- But 'twas thy heavenly face that set me on.
- Take up the sword again, or take up me.
- LADY ANNE:
- Arise, dissembler: though I wish thy death,
- I will not be the executioner.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Then bid me kill myself, and I will do it.
- LADY ANNE:
- I have already.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Tush, that was in thy rage:
- Speak it again, and, even with the word,
- That hand, which, for thy love, did kill thy love,
- Shall, for thy love, kill a far truer love;
- To both their deaths thou shalt be accessary.
- LADY ANNE:
- I would I knew thy heart.
- GLOUCESTER:
- 'Tis figured in my tongue.
- LADY ANNE:
- I fear me both are false.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Then never man was true.
- LADY ANNE:
- Well, well, put up your sword.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Say, then, my peace is made.
- LADY ANNE:
- That shall you know hereafter.
- GLOUCESTER:
- But shall I live in hope?
- LADY ANNE:
- All men, I hope, live so.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Vouchsafe to wear this ring.
- LADY ANNE:
- To take is not to give.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Look, how this ring encompasseth finger.
- Even so thy breast encloseth my poor heart;
- Wear both of them, for both of them are thine.
- And if thy poor devoted suppliant may
- But beg one favour at thy gracious hand,
- Thou dost confirm his happiness for ever.
- LADY ANNE:
- What is it?
- GLOUCESTER:
- That it would please thee leave these sad designs
- To him that hath more cause to be a mourner,
- And presently repair to Crosby Place;
- Where, after I have solemnly interr'd
- At Chertsey monastery this noble king,
- And wet his grave with my repentant tears,
- I will with all expedient duty see you:
- For divers unknown reasons. I beseech you,
- Grant me this boon.
- LADY ANNE:
- With all my heart; and much it joys me too,
- To see you are become so penitent.
- Tressel and Berkeley, go along with me.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Bid me farewell.
- LADY ANNE:
- 'Tis more than you deserve;
- But since you teach me how to flatter you,
- Imagine I have said farewell already.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Sirs, take up the corse.
- GENTLEMEN:
- Towards Chertsey, noble lord?
- GLOUCESTER:
- No, to White-Friars; there attend my coining.
- Was ever woman in this humour woo'd?
- Was ever woman in this humour won?
- I'll have her; but I will not keep her long.
- What! I, that kill'd her husband and his father,
- To take her in her heart's extremest hate,
- With curses in her mouth, tears in her eyes,
- The bleeding witness of her hatred by;
- Having God, her conscience, and these bars
- against me,
- And I nothing to back my suit at all,
- But the plain devil and dissembling looks,
- And yet to win her, all the world to nothing!
- Ha!
- Hath she forgot already that brave prince,
- Edward, her lord, whom I, some three months since,
- Stabb'd in my angry mood at Tewksbury?
- A sweeter and a lovelier gentleman,
- Framed in the prodigality of nature,
- Young, valiant, wise, and, no doubt, right royal,
- The spacious world cannot again afford
- And will she yet debase her eyes on me,
- That cropp'd the golden prime of this sweet prince,
- And made her widow to a woful bed?
- On me, whose all not equals Edward's moiety?
- On me, that halt and am unshapen thus?
- My dukedom to a beggarly denier,
- I do mistake my person all this while:
- Upon my life, she finds, although I cannot,
- Myself to be a marvellous proper man.
- I'll be at charges for a looking-glass,
- And entertain some score or two of tailors,
- To study fashions to adorn my body:
- Since I am crept in favour with myself,
- Will maintain it with some little cost.
- But first I'll turn yon fellow in his grave;
- And then return lamenting to my love.
- Shine out, fair sun, till I have bought a glass,
- That I may see my shadow as I pass.
- RIVERS:
- Have patience, madam: there's no doubt his majesty
- Will soon recover his accustom'd health.
- GREY:
- In that you brook it in, it makes him worse:
- Therefore, for God's sake, entertain good comfort,
- And cheer his grace with quick and merry words.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- If he were dead, what would betide of me?
- RIVERS:
- No other harm but loss of such a lord.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- The loss of such a lord includes all harm.
- GREY:
- The heavens have bless'd you with a goodly son,
- To be your comforter when he is gone.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Oh, he is young and his minority
- Is put unto the trust of Richard Gloucester,
- A man that loves not me, nor none of you.
- RIVERS:
- Is it concluded that he shall be protector?
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- It is determined, not concluded yet:
- But so it must be, if the king miscarry.
- GREY:
- Here come the lords of Buckingham and Derby.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Good time of day unto your royal grace!
- DERBY:
- God make your majesty joyful as you have been!
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- The Countess Richmond, good my Lord of Derby.
- To your good prayers will scarcely say amen.
- Yet, Derby, notwithstanding she's your wife,
- And loves not me, be you, good lord, assured
- I hate not you for her proud arrogance.
- DERBY:
- I do beseech you, either not believe
- The envious slanders of her false accusers;
- Or, if she be accused in true report,
- Bear with her weakness, which, I think proceeds
- From wayward sickness, and no grounded malice.
- RIVERS:
- Saw you the king to-day, my Lord of Derby?
- DERBY:
- But now the Duke of Buckingham and I
- Are come from visiting his majesty.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- What likelihood of his amendment, lords?
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Madam, good hope; his grace speaks cheerfully.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- God grant him health! Did you confer with him?
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Madam, we did: he desires to make atonement
- Betwixt the Duke of Gloucester and your brothers,
- And betwixt them and my lord chamberlain;
- And sent to warn them to his royal presence.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Would all were well! but that will never be
- I fear our happiness is at the highest.
- GLOUCESTER:
- They do me wrong, and I will not endure it:
- Who are they that complain unto the king,
- That I, forsooth, am stern, and love them not?
- By holy Paul, they love his grace but lightly
- That fill his ears with such dissentious rumours.
- Because I cannot flatter and speak fair,
- Smile in men's faces, smooth, deceive and cog,
- Duck with French nods and apish courtesy,
- I must be held a rancorous enemy.
- Cannot a plain man live and think no harm,
- But thus his simple truth must be abused
- By silken, sly, insinuating Jacks?
- RIVERS:
- To whom in all this presence speaks your grace?
- GLOUCESTER:
- To thee, that hast nor honesty nor grace.
- When have I injured thee? when done thee wrong?
- Or thee? or thee? or any of your faction?
- A plague upon you all! His royal person,--
- Whom God preserve better than you would wish!--
- Cannot be quiet scarce a breathing-while,
- But you must trouble him with lewd complaints.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Brother of Gloucester, you mistake the matter.
- The king, of his own royal disposition,
- And not provoked by any suitor else;
- Aiming, belike, at your interior hatred,
- Which in your outward actions shows itself
- Against my kindred, brothers, and myself,
- Makes him to send; that thereby he may gather
- The ground of your ill-will, and so remove it.
- GLOUCESTER:
- I cannot tell: the world is grown so bad,
- That wrens make prey where eagles dare not perch:
- Since every Jack became a gentleman
- There's many a gentle person made a Jack.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Come, come, we know your meaning, brother
- Gloucester;
- You envy my advancement and my friends':
- God grant we never may have need of you!
- GLOUCESTER:
- Meantime, God grants that we have need of you:
- Your brother is imprison'd by your means,
- Myself disgraced, and the nobility
- Held in contempt; whilst many fair promotions
- Are daily given to ennoble those
- That scarce, some two days since, were worth a noble.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- By Him that raised me to this careful height
- From that contented hap which I enjoy'd,
- I never did incense his majesty
- Against the Duke of Clarence, but have been
- An earnest advocate to plead for him.
- My lord, you do me shameful injury,
- Falsely to draw me in these vile suspects.
- GLOUCESTER:
- You may deny that you were not the cause
- Of my Lord Hastings' late imprisonment.
- RIVERS:
- She may, my lord, for--
- GLOUCESTER:
- She may, Lord Rivers! why, who knows not so?
- She may do more, sir, than denying that:
- She may help you to many fair preferments,
- And then deny her aiding hand therein,
- And lay those honours on your high deserts.
- What may she not? She may, yea, marry, may she--
- RIVERS:
- What, marry, may she?
- GLOUCESTER:
- What, marry, may she! marry with a king,
- A bachelor, a handsome stripling too:
- I wis your grandam had a worser match.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- My Lord of Gloucester, I have too long borne
- Your blunt upbraidings and your bitter scoffs:
- By heaven, I will acquaint his majesty
- With those gross taunts I often have endured.
- I had rather be a country servant-maid
- Than a great queen, with this condition,
- To be thus taunted, scorn'd, and baited at:
- Small joy have I in being England's queen.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- And lessen'd be that small, God, I beseech thee!
- Thy honour, state and seat is due to me.
- GLOUCESTER:
- What! threat you me with telling of the king?
- Tell him, and spare not: look, what I have said
- I will avouch in presence of the king:
- I dare adventure to be sent to the Tower.
- 'Tis time to speak; my pains are quite forgot.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Out, devil! I remember them too well:
- Thou slewest my husband Henry in the Tower,
- And Edward, my poor son, at Tewksbury.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Ere you were queen, yea, or your husband king,
- I was a pack-horse in his great affairs;
- A weeder-out of his proud adversaries,
- A liberal rewarder of his friends:
- To royalize his blood I spilt mine own.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Yea, and much better blood than his or thine.
- GLOUCESTER:
- In all which time you and your husband Grey
- Were factious for the house of Lancaster;
- And, Rivers, so were you. Was not your husband
- In Margaret's battle at Saint Alban's slain?
- Let me put in your minds, if you forget,
- What you have been ere now, and what you are;
- Withal, what I have been, and what I am.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- A murderous villain, and so still thou art.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Poor Clarence did forsake his father, Warwick;
- Yea, and forswore himself,--which Jesu pardon!--
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Which God revenge!
- GLOUCESTER:
- To fight on Edward's party for the crown;
- And for his meed, poor lord, he is mew'd up.
- I would to God my heart were flint, like Edward's;
- Or Edward's soft and pitiful, like mine
- I am too childish-foolish for this world.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Hie thee to hell for shame, and leave the world,
- Thou cacodemon! there thy kingdom is.
- RIVERS:
- My Lord of Gloucester, in those busy days
- Which here you urge to prove us enemies,
- We follow'd then our lord, our lawful king:
- So should we you, if you should be our king.
- GLOUCESTER:
- If I should be! I had rather be a pedlar:
- Far be it from my heart, the thought of it!
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- As little joy, my lord, as you suppose
- You should enjoy, were you this country's king,
- As little joy may you suppose in me.
- That I enjoy, being the queen thereof.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- A little joy enjoys the queen thereof;
- For I am she, and altogether joyless.
- I can no longer hold me patient.
- Hear me, you wrangling pirates, that fall out
- In sharing that which you have pill'd from me!
- Which of you trembles not that looks on me?
- If not, that, I being queen, you bow like subjects,
- Yet that, by you deposed, you quake like rebels?
- O gentle villain, do not turn away!
- GLOUCESTER:
- Foul wrinkled witch, what makest thou in my sight?
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- But repetition of what thou hast marr'd;
- That will I make before I let thee go.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Wert thou not banished on pain of death?
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- I was; but I do find more pain in banishment
- Than death can yield me here by my abode.
- A husband and a son thou owest to me;
- And thou a kingdom; all of you allegiance:
- The sorrow that I have, by right is yours,
- And all the pleasures you usurp are mine.
- GLOUCESTER:
- The curse my noble father laid on thee,
- When thou didst crown his warlike brows with paper
- And with thy scorns drew'st rivers from his eyes,
- And then, to dry them, gavest the duke a clout
- Steep'd in the faultless blood of pretty Rutland--
- His curses, then from bitterness of soul
- Denounced against thee, are all fall'n upon thee;
- And God, not we, hath plagued thy bloody deed.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- So just is God, to right the innocent.
- HASTINGS:
- O, 'twas the foulest deed to slay that babe,
- And the most merciless that e'er was heard of!
- RIVERS:
- Tyrants themselves wept when it was reported.
- DORSET:
- No man but prophesied revenge for it.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Northumberland, then present, wept to see it.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- What were you snarling all before I came,
- Ready to catch each other by the throat,
- And turn you all your hatred now on me?
- Did York's dread curse prevail so much with heaven?
- That Henry's death, my lovely Edward's death,
- Their kingdom's loss, my woful banishment,
- Could all but answer for that peevish brat?
- Can curses pierce the clouds and enter heaven?
- Why, then, give way, dull clouds, to my quick curses!
- If not by war, by surfeit die your king,
- As ours by murder, to make him a king!
- Edward thy son, which now is Prince of Wales,
- For Edward my son, which was Prince of Wales,
- Die in his youth by like untimely violence!
- Thyself a queen, for me that was a queen,
- Outlive thy glory, like my wretched self!
- Long mayst thou live to wail thy children's loss;
- And see another, as I see thee now,
- Deck'd in thy rights, as thou art stall'd in mine!
- Long die thy happy days before thy death;
- And, after many lengthen'd hours of grief,
- Die neither mother, wife, nor England's queen!
- Rivers and Dorset, you were standers by,
- And so wast thou, Lord Hastings, when my son
- Was stabb'd with bloody daggers: God, I pray him,
- That none of you may live your natural age,
- But by some unlook'd accident cut off!
- GLOUCESTER:
- Have done thy charm, thou hateful wither'd hag!
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- And leave out thee? stay, dog, for thou shalt hear me.
- If heaven have any grievous plague in store
- Exceeding those that I can wish upon thee,
- O, let them keep it till thy sins be ripe,
- And then hurl down their indignation
- On thee, the troubler of the poor world's peace!
- The worm of conscience still begnaw thy soul!
- Thy friends suspect for traitors while thou livest,
- And take deep traitors for thy dearest friends!
- No sleep close up that deadly eye of thine,
- Unless it be whilst some tormenting dream
- Affrights thee with a hell of ugly devils!
- Thou elvish-mark'd, abortive, rooting hog!
- Thou that wast seal'd in thy nativity
- The slave of nature and the son of hell!
- Thou slander of thy mother's heavy womb!
- Thou loathed issue of thy father's loins!
- Thou rag of honour! thou detested--
- GLOUCESTER:
- Margaret.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Richard!
- GLOUCESTER:
- Ha!
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- I call thee not.
- GLOUCESTER:
- I cry thee mercy then, for I had thought
- That thou hadst call'd me all these bitter names.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Why, so I did; but look'd for no reply.
- O, let me make the period to my curse!
- GLOUCESTER:
- 'Tis done by me, and ends in 'Margaret.'
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Thus have you breathed your curse against yourself.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Poor painted queen, vain flourish of my fortune!
- Why strew'st thou sugar on that bottled spider,
- Whose deadly web ensnareth thee about?
- Fool, fool! thou whet'st a knife to kill thyself.
- The time will come when thou shalt wish for me
- To help thee curse that poisonous bunchback'd toad.
- HASTINGS:
- False-boding woman, end thy frantic curse,
- Lest to thy harm thou move our patience.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Foul shame upon you! you have all moved mine.
- RIVERS:
- Were you well served, you would be taught your duty.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- To serve me well, you all should do me duty,
- Teach me to be your queen, and you my subjects:
- O, serve me well, and teach yourselves that duty!
- DORSET:
- Dispute not with her; she is lunatic.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Peace, master marquess, you are malapert:
- Your fire-new stamp of honour is scarce current.
- O, that your young nobility could judge
- What 'twere to lose it, and be miserable!
- They that stand high have many blasts to shake them;
- And if they fall, they dash themselves to pieces.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Good counsel, marry: learn it, learn it, marquess.
- DORSET:
- It toucheth you, my lord, as much as me.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Yea, and much more: but I was born so high,
- Our aery buildeth in the cedar's top,
- And dallies with the wind and scorns the sun.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- And turns the sun to shade; alas! alas!
- Witness my son, now in the shade of death;
- Whose bright out-shining beams thy cloudy wrath
- Hath in eternal darkness folded up.
- Your aery buildeth in our aery's nest.
- O God, that seest it, do not suffer it!
- As it was won with blood, lost be it so!
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Have done! for shame, if not for charity.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Urge neither charity nor shame to me:
- Uncharitably with me have you dealt,
- And shamefully by you my hopes are butcher'd.
- My charity is outrage, life my shame
- And in that shame still live my sorrow's rage.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Have done, have done.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- O princely Buckingham I'll kiss thy hand,
- In sign of league and amity with thee:
- Now fair befal thee and thy noble house!
- Thy garments are not spotted with our blood,
- Nor thou within the compass of my curse.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Nor no one here; for curses never pass
- The lips of those that breathe them in the air.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- I'll not believe but they ascend the sky,
- And there awake God's gentle-sleeping peace.
- O Buckingham, take heed of yonder dog!
- Look, when he fawns, he bites; and when he bites,
- His venom tooth will rankle to the death:
- Have not to do with him, beware of him;
- Sin, death, and hell have set their marks on him,
- And all their ministers attend on him.
- GLOUCESTER:
- What doth she say, my Lord of Buckingham?
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Nothing that I respect, my gracious lord.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- What, dost thou scorn me for my gentle counsel?
- And soothe the devil that I warn thee from?
- O, but remember this another day,
- When he shall split thy very heart with sorrow,
- And say poor Margaret was a prophetess!
- Live each of you the subjects to his hate,
- And he to yours, and all of you to God's!
- HASTINGS:
- My hair doth stand on end to hear her curses.
- RIVERS:
- And so doth mine: I muse why she's at liberty.
- GLOUCESTER:
- I cannot blame her: by God's holy mother,
- She hath had too much wrong; and I repent
- My part thereof that I have done to her.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- I never did her any, to my knowledge.
- GLOUCESTER:
- But you have all the vantage of her wrong.
- I was too hot to do somebody good,
- That is too cold in thinking of it now.
- Marry, as for Clarence, he is well repaid,
- He is frank'd up to fatting for his pains
- God pardon them that are the cause of it!
- RIVERS:
- A virtuous and a Christian-like conclusion,
- To pray for them that have done scathe to us.
- GLOUCESTER:
- So do I ever:
- being well-advised.
- For had I cursed now, I had cursed myself.
- CATESBY:
- Madam, his majesty doth call for you,
- And for your grace; and you, my noble lords.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Catesby, we come. Lords, will you go with us?
- RIVERS:
- Madam, we will attend your grace.
- GLOUCESTER:
- I do the wrong, and first begin to brawl.
- The secret mischiefs that I set abroach
- I lay unto the grievous charge of others.
- Clarence, whom I, indeed, have laid in darkness,
- I do beweep to many simple gulls
- Namely, to Hastings, Derby, Buckingham;
- And say it is the queen and her allies
- That stir the king against the duke my brother.
- Now, they believe it; and withal whet me
- To be revenged on Rivers, Vaughan, Grey:
- But then I sigh; and, with a piece of scripture,
- Tell them that God bids us do good for evil:
- And thus I clothe my naked villany
- With old odd ends stolen out of holy writ;
- And seem a saint, when most I play the devil.
- But, soft! here come my executioners.
- How now, my hardy, stout resolved mates!
- Are you now going to dispatch this deed?
- First Murderer:
- We are, my lord; and come to have the warrant
- That we may be admitted where he is.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Well thought upon; I have it here about me.
- When you have done, repair to Crosby Place.
- But, sirs, be sudden in the execution,
- Withal obdurate, do not hear him plead;
- For Clarence is well-spoken, and perhaps
- May move your hearts to pity if you mark him.
- First Murderer:
- Tush!
- Fear not, my lord, we will not stand to prate;
- Talkers are no good doers: be assured
- We come to use our hands and not our tongues.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Your eyes drop millstones, when fools' eyes drop tears:
- I like you, lads; about your business straight;
- Go, go, dispatch.
- First Murderer:
- We will, my noble lord.
- BRAKENBURY:
- Why looks your grace so heavily today?
- CLARENCE:
- O, I have pass'd a miserable night,
- So full of ugly sights, of ghastly dreams,
- That, as I am a Christian faithful man,
- I would not spend another such a night,
- Though 'twere to buy a world of happy days,
- So full of dismal terror was the time!
- BRAKENBURY:
- What was your dream? I long to hear you tell it.
- CLARENCE:
- Methoughts that I had broken from the Tower,
- And was embark'd to cross to Burgundy;
- And, in my company, my brother Gloucester;
- Who from my cabin tempted me to walk
- Upon the hatches: thence we looked toward England,
- And cited up a thousand fearful times,
- During the wars of York and Lancaster
- That had befall'n us. As we paced along
- Upon the giddy footing of the hatches,
- Methought that Gloucester stumbled; and, in falling,
- Struck me, that thought to stay him, overboard,
- Into the tumbling billows of the main.
- Lord, Lord! methought, what pain it was to drown!
- What dreadful noise of waters in mine ears!
- What ugly sights of death within mine eyes!
- Methought I saw a thousand fearful wrecks;
- Ten thousand men that fishes gnaw'd upon;
- Wedges of gold, great anchors, heaps of pearl,
- Inestimable stones, unvalued jewels,
- All scatter'd in the bottom of the sea:
- Some lay in dead men's skulls; and, in those holes
- Where eyes did once inhabit, there were crept,
- As 'twere in scorn of eyes, reflecting gems,
- Which woo'd the slimy bottom of the deep,
- And mock'd the dead bones that lay scatter'd by.
- BRAKENBURY:
- Had you such leisure in the time of death
- To gaze upon the secrets of the deep?
- CLARENCE:
- Methought I had; and often did I strive
- To yield the ghost: but still the envious flood
- Kept in my soul, and would not let it forth
- To seek the empty, vast and wandering air;
- But smother'd it within my panting bulk,
- Which almost burst to belch it in the sea.
- BRAKENBURY:
- Awaked you not with this sore agony?
- CLARENCE:
- O, no, my dream was lengthen'd after life;
- O, then began the tempest to my soul,
- Who pass'd, methought, the melancholy flood,
- With that grim ferryman which poets write of,
- Unto the kingdom of perpetual night.
- The first that there did greet my stranger soul,
- Was my great father-in-law, renowned Warwick;
- Who cried aloud, 'What scourge for perjury
- Can this dark monarchy afford false Clarence?'
- And so he vanish'd: then came wandering by
- A shadow like an angel, with bright hair
- Dabbled in blood; and he squeak'd out aloud,
- 'Clarence is come; false, fleeting, perjured Clarence,
- That stabb'd me in the field by Tewksbury;
- Seize on him, Furies, take him to your torments!'
- With that, methoughts, a legion of foul fiends
- Environ'd me about, and howled in mine ears
- Such hideous cries, that with the very noise
- I trembling waked, and for a season after
- Could not believe but that I was in hell,
- Such terrible impression made the dream.
- BRAKENBURY:
- No marvel, my lord, though it affrighted you;
- I promise, I am afraid to hear you tell it.
- CLARENCE:
- O Brakenbury, I have done those things,
- Which now bear evidence against my soul,
- For Edward's sake; and see how he requites me!
- O God! if my deep prayers cannot appease thee,
- But thou wilt be avenged on my misdeeds,
- Yet execute thy wrath in me alone,
- O, spare my guiltless wife and my poor children!
- I pray thee, gentle keeper, stay by me;
- My soul is heavy, and I fain would sleep.
- BRAKENBURY:
- I will, my lord: God give your grace good rest!
- Sorrow breaks seasons and reposing hours,
- Makes the night morning, and the noon-tide night.
- Princes have but their tides for their glories,
- An outward honour for an inward toil;
- And, for unfelt imagination,
- They often feel a world of restless cares:
- So that, betwixt their tides and low names,
- There's nothing differs but the outward fame.
- First Murderer:
- Ho! who's here?
- BRAKENBURY:
- In God's name what are you, and how came you hither?
- First Murderer:
- I would speak with Clarence, and I came hither on my legs.
- BRAKENBURY:
- Yea, are you so brief?
- Second Murderer:
- O sir, it is better to be brief than tedious. Show
- him our commission; talk no more.
- BRAKENBURY:
- I am, in this, commanded to deliver
- The noble Duke of Clarence to your hands:
- I will not reason what is meant hereby,
- Because I will be guiltless of the meaning.
- Here are the keys, there sits the duke asleep:
- I'll to the king; and signify to him
- That thus I have resign'd my charge to you.
- First Murderer:
- Do so, it is a point of wisdom: fare you well.
- Second Murderer:
- What, shall we stab him as he sleeps?
- First Murderer:
- No; then he will say 'twas done cowardly, when he wakes.
- Second Murderer:
- When he wakes! why, fool, he shall never wake till
- the judgment-day.
- First Murderer:
- Why, then he will say we stabbed him sleeping.
- Second Murderer:
- The urging of that word 'judgment' hath bred a kind
- of remorse in me.
- First Murderer:
- What, art thou afraid?
- Second Murderer:
- Not to kill him, having a warrant for it; but to be
- damned for killing him, from which no warrant can defend us.
- First Murderer:
- I thought thou hadst been resolute.
- Second Murderer:
- So I am, to let him live.
- First Murderer:
- Back to the Duke of Gloucester, tell him so.
- Second Murderer:
- I pray thee, stay a while: I hope my holy humour
- will change; 'twas wont to hold me but while one
- would tell twenty.
- First Murderer:
- How dost thou feel thyself now?
- Second Murderer:
- 'Faith, some certain dregs of conscience are yet
- within me.
- First Murderer:
- Remember our reward, when the deed is done.
- Second Murderer:
- 'Zounds, he dies: I had forgot the reward.
- First Murderer:
- Where is thy conscience now?
- Second Murderer:
- In the Duke of Gloucester's purse.
- First Murderer:
- So when he opens his purse to give us our reward,
- thy conscience flies out.
- Second Murderer:
- Let it go; there's few or none will entertain it.
- First Murderer:
- How if it come to thee again?
- Second Murderer:
- I'll not meddle with it: it is a dangerous thing: it
- makes a man a coward: a man cannot steal, but it
- accuseth him; he cannot swear, but it cheques him;
- he cannot lie with his neighbour's wife, but it
- detects him: 'tis a blushing shamefast spirit that
- mutinies in a man's bosom; it fills one full of
- obstacles: it made me once restore a purse of gold
- that I found; it beggars any man that keeps it: it
- is turned out of all towns and cities for a
- dangerous thing; and every man that means to live
- well endeavours to trust to himself and to live
- without it.
- First Murderer:
- 'Zounds, it is even now at my elbow, persuading me
- not to kill the duke.
- Second Murderer:
- Take the devil in thy mind, and relieve him not: he
- would insinuate with thee but to make thee sigh.
- First Murderer:
- Tut, I am strong-framed, he cannot prevail with me,
- I warrant thee.
- Second Murderer:
- Spoke like a tail fellow that respects his
- reputation. Come, shall we to this gear?
- First Murderer:
- Take him over the costard with the hilts of thy
- sword, and then we will chop him in the malmsey-butt
- in the next room.
- Second Murderer:
- O excellent devise! make a sop of him.
- First Murderer:
- Hark! he stirs: shall I strike?
- Second Murderer:
- No, first let's reason with him.
- CLARENCE:
- Where art thou, keeper? give me a cup of wine.
- Second murderer:
- You shall have wine enough, my lord, anon.
- CLARENCE:
- In God's name, what art thou?
- Second Murderer:
- A man, as you are.
- CLARENCE:
- But not, as I am, royal.
- Second Murderer:
- Nor you, as we are, loyal.
- CLARENCE:
- Thy voice is thunder, but thy looks are humble.
- Second Murderer:
- My voice is now the king's, my looks mine own.
- CLARENCE:
- How darkly and how deadly dost thou speak!
- Your eyes do menace me: why look you pale?
- Who sent you hither? Wherefore do you come?
- Both:
- To, to, to--
- CLARENCE:
- To murder me?
- Both:
- Ay, ay.
- CLARENCE:
- You scarcely have the hearts to tell me so,
- And therefore cannot have the hearts to do it.
- Wherein, my friends, have I offended you?
- First Murderer:
- Offended us you have not, but the king.
- CLARENCE:
- I shall be reconciled to him again.
- Second Murderer:
- Never, my lord; therefore prepare to die.
- CLARENCE:
- Are you call'd forth from out a world of men
- To slay the innocent? What is my offence?
- Where are the evidence that do accuse me?
- What lawful quest have given their verdict up
- Unto the frowning judge? or who pronounced
- The bitter sentence of poor Clarence' death?
- Before I be convict by course of law,
- To threaten me with death is most unlawful.
- I charge you, as you hope to have redemption
- By Christ's dear blood shed for our grievous sins,
- That you depart and lay no hands on me
- The deed you undertake is damnable.
- First Murderer:
- What we will do, we do upon command.
- Second Murderer:
- And he that hath commanded is the king.
- CLARENCE:
- Erroneous vassal! the great King of kings
- Hath in the tables of his law commanded
- That thou shalt do no murder: and wilt thou, then,
- Spurn at his edict and fulfil a man's?
- Take heed; for he holds vengeance in his hands,
- To hurl upon their heads that break his law.
- Second Murderer:
- And that same vengeance doth he hurl on thee,
- For false forswearing and for murder too:
- Thou didst receive the holy sacrament,
- To fight in quarrel of the house of Lancaster.
- First Murderer:
- And, like a traitor to the name of God,
- Didst break that vow; and with thy treacherous blade
- Unrip'dst the bowels of thy sovereign's son.
- Second Murderer:
- Whom thou wert sworn to cherish and defend.
- First Murderer:
- How canst thou urge God's dreadful law to us,
- When thou hast broke it in so dear degree?
- CLARENCE:
- Alas! for whose sake did I that ill deed?
- For Edward, for my brother, for his sake: Why, sirs,
- He sends ye not to murder me for this
- For in this sin he is as deep as I.
- If God will be revenged for this deed.
- O, know you yet, he doth it publicly,
- Take not the quarrel from his powerful arm;
- He needs no indirect nor lawless course
- To cut off those that have offended him.
- First Murderer:
- Who made thee, then, a bloody minister,
- When gallant-springing brave Plantagenet,
- That princely novice, was struck dead by thee?
- CLARENCE:
- My brother's love, the devil, and my rage.
- First Murderer:
- Thy brother's love, our duty, and thy fault,
- Provoke us hither now to slaughter thee.
- CLARENCE:
- Oh, if you love my brother, hate not me;
- I am his brother, and I love him well.
- If you be hired for meed, go back again,
- And I will send you to my brother Gloucester,
- Who shall reward you better for my life
- Than Edward will for tidings of my death.
- Second Murderer:
- You are deceived, your brother Gloucester hates you.
- CLARENCE:
- O, no, he loves me, and he holds me dear:
- Go you to him from me.
- Both:
- Ay, so we will.
- CLARENCE:
- Tell him, when that our princely father York
- Bless'd his three sons with his victorious arm,
- And charged us from his soul to love each other,
- He little thought of this divided friendship:
- Bid Gloucester think of this, and he will weep.
- First Murderer:
- Ay, millstones; as be lesson'd us to weep.
- CLARENCE:
- O, do not slander him, for he is kind.
- First Murderer:
- Right,
- As snow in harvest. Thou deceivest thyself:
- 'Tis he that sent us hither now to slaughter thee.
- CLARENCE:
- It cannot be; for when I parted with him,
- He hugg'd me in his arms, and swore, with sobs,
- That he would labour my delivery.
- Second Murderer:
- Why, so he doth, now he delivers thee
- From this world's thraldom to the joys of heaven.
- First Murderer:
- Make peace with God, for you must die, my lord.
- CLARENCE:
- Hast thou that holy feeling in thy soul,
- To counsel me to make my peace with God,
- And art thou yet to thy own soul so blind,
- That thou wilt war with God by murdering me?
- Ah, sirs, consider, he that set you on
- To do this deed will hate you for the deed.
- Second Murderer:
- What shall we do?
- CLARENCE:
- Relent, and save your souls.
- First Murderer:
- Relent! 'tis cowardly and womanish.
- CLARENCE:
- Not to relent is beastly, savage, devilish.
- Which of you, if you were a prince's son,
- Being pent from liberty, as I am now,
- if two such murderers as yourselves came to you,
- Would not entreat for life?
- My friend, I spy some pity in thy looks:
- O, if thine eye be not a flatterer,
- Come thou on my side, and entreat for me,
- As you would beg, were you in my distress
- A begging prince what beggar pities not?
- Second Murderer:
- Look behind you, my lord.
- First Murderer:
- Take that, and that: if all this will not do,
- I'll drown you in the malmsey-butt within.
- Second Murderer:
- A bloody deed, and desperately dispatch'd!
- How fain, like Pilate, would I wash my hands
- Of this most grievous guilty murder done!
- First Murderer:
- How now! what mean'st thou, that thou help'st me not?
- By heavens, the duke shall know how slack thou art!
- Second Murderer:
- I would he knew that I had saved his brother!
- Take thou the fee, and tell him what I say;
- For I repent me that the duke is slain.
- First Murderer:
- So do not I: go, coward as thou art.
- Now must I hide his body in some hole,
- Until the duke take order for his burial:
- And when I have my meed, I must away;
- For this will out, and here I must not stay.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Why, so: now have I done a good day's work:
- You peers, continue this united league:
- I every day expect an embassage
- From my Redeemer to redeem me hence;
- And now in peace my soul shall part to heaven,
- Since I have set my friends at peace on earth.
- Rivers and Hastings, take each other's hand;
- Dissemble not your hatred, swear your love.
- RIVERS:
- By heaven, my heart is purged from grudging hate:
- And with my hand I seal my true heart's love.
- HASTINGS:
- So thrive I, as I truly swear the like!
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Take heed you dally not before your king;
- Lest he that is the supreme King of kings
- Confound your hidden falsehood, and award
- Either of you to be the other's end.
- HASTINGS:
- So prosper I, as I swear perfect love!
- RIVERS:
- And I, as I love Hastings with my heart!
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Madam, yourself are not exempt in this,
- Nor your son Dorset, Buckingham, nor you;
- You have been factious one against the other,
- Wife, love Lord Hastings, let him kiss your hand;
- And what you do, do it unfeignedly.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Here, Hastings; I will never more remember
- Our former hatred, so thrive I and mine!
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Dorset, embrace him; Hastings, love lord marquess.
- DORSET:
- This interchange of love, I here protest,
- Upon my part shall be unviolable.
- HASTINGS:
- And so swear I, my lord
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Now, princely Buckingham, seal thou this league
- With thy embracements to my wife's allies,
- And make me happy in your unity.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Whenever Buckingham doth turn his hate
- On you or yours,
- but with all duteous love
- Doth cherish you and yours, God punish me
- With hate in those where I expect most love!
- When I have most need to employ a friend,
- And most assured that he is a friend
- Deep, hollow, treacherous, and full of guile,
- Be he unto me! this do I beg of God,
- When I am cold in zeal to yours.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- A pleasing cordial, princely Buckingham,
- is this thy vow unto my sickly heart.
- There wanteth now our brother Gloucester here,
- To make the perfect period of this peace.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- And, in good time, here comes the noble duke.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Good morrow to my sovereign king and queen:
- And, princely peers, a happy time of day!
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Happy, indeed, as we have spent the day.
- Brother, we done deeds of charity;
- Made peace enmity, fair love of hate,
- Between these swelling wrong-incensed peers.
- GLOUCESTER:
- A blessed labour, my most sovereign liege:
- Amongst this princely heap, if any here,
- By false intelligence, or wrong surmise,
- Hold me a foe;
- If I unwittingly, or in my rage,
- Have aught committed that is hardly borne
- By any in this presence, I desire
- To reconcile me to his friendly peace:
- 'Tis death to me to be at enmity;
- I hate it, and desire all good men's love.
- First, madam, I entreat true peace of you,
- Which I will purchase with my duteous service;
- Of you, my noble cousin Buckingham,
- If ever any grudge were lodged between us;
- Of you, Lord Rivers, and, Lord Grey, of you;
- That without desert have frown'd on me;
- Dukes, earls, lords, gentlemen; indeed, of all.
- I do not know that Englishman alive
- With whom my soul is any jot at odds
- More than the infant that is born to-night
- I thank my God for my humility.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- A holy day shall this be kept hereafter:
- I would to God all strifes were well compounded.
- My sovereign liege, I do beseech your majesty
- To take our brother Clarence to your grace.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Why, madam, have I offer'd love for this
- To be so bouted in this royal presence?
- Who knows not that the noble duke is dead?
- You do him injury to scorn his corse.
- RIVERS:
- Who knows not he is dead! who knows he is?
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- All seeing heaven, what a world is this!
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Look I so pale, Lord Dorset, as the rest?
- DORSET:
- Ay, my good lord; and no one in this presence
- But his red colour hath forsook his cheeks.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Is Clarence dead? the order was reversed.
- GLOUCESTER:
- But he, poor soul, by your first order died,
- And that a winged Mercury did bear:
- Some tardy cripple bore the countermand,
- That came too lag to see him buried.
- God grant that some, less noble and less loyal,
- Nearer in bloody thoughts, but not in blood,
- Deserve not worse than wretched Clarence did,
- And yet go current from suspicion!
- DORSET:
- A boon, my sovereign, for my service done!
- KING EDWARD IV:
- I pray thee, peace: my soul is full of sorrow.
- DORSET:
- I will not rise, unless your highness grant.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Then speak at once what is it thou demand'st.
- DORSET:
- The forfeit, sovereign, of my servant's life;
- Who slew to-day a righteous gentleman
- Lately attendant on the Duke of Norfolk.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Have a tongue to doom my brother's death,
- And shall the same give pardon to a slave?
- My brother slew no man; his fault was thought,
- And yet his punishment was cruel death.
- Who sued to me for him? who, in my rage,
- Kneel'd at my feet, and bade me be advised
- Who spake of brotherhood? who spake of love?
- Who told me how the poor soul did forsake
- The mighty Warwick, and did fight for me?
- Who told me, in the field by Tewksbury
- When Oxford had me down, he rescued me,
- And said, 'Dear brother, live, and be a king'?
- Who told me, when we both lay in the field
- Frozen almost to death, how he did lap me
- Even in his own garments, and gave himself,
- All thin and naked, to the numb cold night?
- All this from my remembrance brutish wrath
- Sinfully pluck'd, and not a man of you
- Had so much grace to put it in my mind.
- But when your carters or your waiting-vassals
- Have done a drunken slaughter, and defaced
- The precious image of our dear Redeemer,
- You straight are on your knees for pardon, pardon;
- And I unjustly too, must grant it you
- But for my brother not a man would speak,
- Nor I, ungracious, speak unto myself
- For him, poor soul. The proudest of you all
- Have been beholding to him in his life;
- Yet none of you would once plead for his life.
- O God, I fear thy justice will take hold
- On me, and you, and mine, and yours for this!
- Come, Hastings, help me to my closet.
- Oh, poor Clarence!
- GLOUCESTER:
- This is the fruit of rashness! Mark'd you not
- How that the guilty kindred of the queen
- Look'd pale when they did hear of Clarence' death?
- O, they did urge it still unto the king!
- God will revenge it. But come, let us in,
- To comfort Edward with our company.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- We wait upon your grace.
- Boy:
- Tell me, good grandam, is our father dead?
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- No, boy.
- Boy:
- Why do you wring your hands, and beat your breast,
- And cry 'O Clarence, my unhappy son!'
- Girl:
- Why do you look on us, and shake your head,
- And call us wretches, orphans, castaways
- If that our noble father be alive?
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- My pretty cousins, you mistake me much;
- I do lament the sickness of the king.
- As loath to lose him, not your father's death;
- It were lost sorrow to wail one that's lost.
- Boy:
- Then, grandam, you conclude that he is dead.
- The king my uncle is to blame for this:
- God will revenge it; whom I will importune
- With daily prayers all to that effect.
- Girl:
- And so will I.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Peace, children, peace! the king doth love you well:
- Incapable and shallow innocents,
- You cannot guess who caused your father's death.
- Boy:
- Grandam, we can; for my good uncle Gloucester
- Told me, the king, provoked by the queen,
- Devised impeachments to imprison him :
- And when my uncle told me so, he wept,
- And hugg'd me in his arm, and kindly kiss'd my cheek;
- Bade me rely on him as on my father,
- And he would love me dearly as his child.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Oh, that deceit should steal such gentle shapes,
- And with a virtuous vizard hide foul guile!
- He is my son; yea, and therein my shame;
- Yet from my dugs he drew not this deceit.
- Boy:
- Think you my uncle did dissemble, grandam?
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Ay, boy.
- Boy:
- I cannot think it. Hark! what noise is this?
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Oh, who shall hinder me to wail and weep,
- To chide my fortune, and torment myself?
- I'll join with black despair against my soul,
- And to myself become an enemy.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- What means this scene of rude impatience?
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- To make an act of tragic violence:
- Edward, my lord, your son, our king, is dead.
- Why grow the branches now the root is wither'd?
- Why wither not the leaves the sap being gone?
- If you will live, lament; if die, be brief,
- That our swift-winged souls may catch the king's;
- Or, like obedient subjects, follow him
- To his new kingdom of perpetual rest.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Ah, so much interest have I in thy sorrow
- As I had title in thy noble husband!
- I have bewept a worthy husband's death,
- And lived by looking on his images:
- But now two mirrors of his princely semblance
- Are crack'd in pieces by malignant death,
- And I for comfort have but one false glass,
- Which grieves me when I see my shame in him.
- Thou art a widow; yet thou art a mother,
- And hast the comfort of thy children left thee:
- But death hath snatch'd my husband from mine arms,
- And pluck'd two crutches from my feeble limbs,
- Edward and Clarence. O, what cause have I,
- Thine being but a moiety of my grief,
- To overgo thy plaints and drown thy cries!
- Boy:
- Good aunt, you wept not for our father's death;
- How can we aid you with our kindred tears?
- Girl:
- Our fatherless distress was left unmoan'd;
- Your widow-dolour likewise be unwept!
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Give me no help in lamentation;
- I am not barren to bring forth complaints
- All springs reduce their currents to mine eyes,
- That I, being govern'd by the watery moon,
- May send forth plenteous tears to drown the world!
- Oh for my husband, for my dear lord Edward!
- Children:
- Oh for our father, for our dear lord Clarence!
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Alas for both, both mine, Edward and Clarence!
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- What stay had I but Edward? and he's gone.
- Children:
- What stay had we but Clarence? and he's gone.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- What stays had I but they? and they are gone.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Was never widow had so dear a loss!
- Children:
- Were never orphans had so dear a loss!
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Was never mother had so dear a loss!
- Alas, I am the mother of these moans!
- Their woes are parcell'd, mine are general.
- She for an Edward weeps, and so do I;
- I for a Clarence weep, so doth not she:
- These babes for Clarence weep and so do I;
- I for an Edward weep, so do not they:
- Alas, you three, on me, threefold distress'd,
- Pour all your tears! I am your sorrow's nurse,
- And I will pamper it with lamentations.
- DORSET:
- Comfort, dear mother: God is much displeased
- That you take with unthankfulness, his doing:
- In common worldly things, 'tis call'd ungrateful,
- With dull unwilligness to repay a debt
- Which with a bounteous hand was kindly lent;
- Much more to be thus opposite with heaven,
- For it requires the royal debt it lent you.
- RIVERS:
- Madam, bethink you, like a careful mother,
- Of the young prince your son: send straight for him
- Let him be crown'd; in him your comfort lives:
- Drown desperate sorrow in dead Edward's grave,
- And plant your joys in living Edward's throne.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Madam, have comfort: all of us have cause
- To wail the dimming of our shining star;
- But none can cure their harms by wailing them.
- Madam, my mother, I do cry you mercy;
- I did not see your grace: humbly on my knee
- I crave your blessing.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- God bless thee; and put meekness in thy mind,
- Love, charity, obedience, and true duty!
- GLOUCESTER:
- BUCKINGHAM:
- You cloudy princes and heart-sorrowing peers,
- That bear this mutual heavy load of moan,
- Now cheer each other in each other's love
- Though we have spent our harvest of this king,
- We are to reap the harvest of his son.
- The broken rancour of your high-swoln hearts,
- But lately splinter'd, knit, and join'd together,
- Must gently be preserved, cherish'd, and kept:
- Me seemeth good, that, with some little train,
- Forthwith from Ludlow the young prince be fetch'd
- Hither to London, to be crown'd our king.
- RIVERS:
- Why with some little train, my Lord of Buckingham?
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Marry, my lord, lest, by a multitude,
- The new-heal'd wound of malice should break out,
- Which would be so much the more dangerous
- By how much the estate is green and yet ungovern'd:
- Where every horse bears his commanding rein,
- And may direct his course as please himself,
- As well the fear of harm, as harm apparent,
- In my opinion, ought to be prevented.
- GLOUCESTER:
- I hope the king made peace with all of us
- And the compact is firm and true in me.
- RIVERS:
- And so in me; and so, I think, in all:
- Yet, since it is but green, it should be put
- To no apparent likelihood of breach,
- Which haply by much company might be urged:
- Therefore I say with noble Buckingham,
- That it is meet so few should fetch the prince.
- HASTINGS:
- And so say I.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Then be it so; and go we to determine
- Who they shall be that straight shall post to Ludlow.
- Madam, and you, my mother, will you go
- To give your censures in this weighty business?
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- With all our harts.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- My lord, whoever journeys to the Prince,
- For God's sake, let not us two be behind;
- For, by the way, I'll sort occasion,
- As index to the story we late talk'd of,
- To part the queen's proud kindred from the king.
- GLOUCESTER:
- My other self, my counsel's consistory,
- My oracle, my prophet! My dear cousin,
- I, like a child, will go by thy direction.
- Towards Ludlow then, for we'll not stay behind.
- First Citizen:
- Neighbour, well met: whither away so fast?
- Second Citizen:
- I promise you, I scarcely know myself:
- Hear you the news abroad?
- First Citizen:
- Ay, that the king is dead.
- Second Citizen:
- Bad news, by'r lady; seldom comes the better:
- I fear, I fear 'twill prove a troublous world.
- Third Citizen:
- Neighbours, God speed!
- First Citizen:
- Give you good morrow, sir.
- Third Citizen:
- Doth this news hold of good King Edward's death?
- Second Citizen:
- Ay, sir, it is too true; God help the while!
- Third Citizen:
- Then, masters, look to see a troublous world.
- First Citizen:
- No, no; by God's good grace his son shall reign.
- Third Citizen:
- Woe to the land that's govern'd by a child!
- Second Citizen:
- In him there is a hope of government,
- That in his nonage council under him,
- And in his full and ripen'd years himself,
- No doubt, shall then and till then govern well.
- First Citizen:
- So stood the state when Henry the Sixth
- Was crown'd in Paris but at nine months old.
- Third Citizen:
- Stood the state so? No, no, good friends, God wot;
- For then this land was famously enrich'd
- With politic grave counsel; then the king
- Had virtuous uncles to protect his grace.
- First Citizen:
- Why, so hath this, both by the father and mother.
- Third Citizen:
- Better it were they all came by the father,
- Or by the father there were none at all;
- For emulation now, who shall be nearest,
- Will touch us all too near, if God prevent not.
- O, full of danger is the Duke of Gloucester!
- And the queen's sons and brothers haught and proud:
- And were they to be ruled, and not to rule,
- This sickly land might solace as before.
- First Citizen:
- Come, come, we fear the worst; all shall be well.
- Third Citizen:
- When clouds appear, wise men put on their cloaks;
- When great leaves fall, the winter is at hand;
- When the sun sets, who doth not look for night?
- Untimely storms make men expect a dearth.
- All may be well; but, if God sort it so,
- 'Tis more than we deserve, or I expect.
- Second Citizen:
- Truly, the souls of men are full of dread:
- Ye cannot reason almost with a man
- That looks not heavily and full of fear.
- Third Citizen:
- Before the times of change, still is it so:
- By a divine instinct men's minds mistrust
- Ensuing dangers; as by proof, we see
- The waters swell before a boisterous storm.
- But leave it all to God. whither away?
- Second Citizen:
- Marry, we were sent for to the justices.
- Third Citizen:
- And so was I: I'll bear you company.
- ARCHBISHOP OF YORK:
- Last night, I hear, they lay at Northampton;
- At Stony-Stratford will they be to-night:
- To-morrow, or next day, they will be here.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- I long with all my heart to see the prince:
- I hope he is much grown since last I saw him.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- But I hear, no; they say my son of York
- Hath almost overta'en him in his growth.
- YORK:
- Ay, mother; but I would not have it so.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Why, my young cousin, it is good to grow.
- YORK:
- Grandam, one night, as we did sit at supper,
- My uncle Rivers talk'd how I did grow
- More than my brother: 'Ay,' quoth my uncle
- Gloucester,
- 'Small herbs have grace, great weeds do grow apace:'
- And since, methinks, I would not grow so fast,
- Because sweet flowers are slow and weeds make haste.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Good faith, good faith, the saying did not hold
- In him that did object the same to thee;
- He was the wretched'st thing when he was young,
- So long a-growing and so leisurely,
- That, if this rule were true, he should be gracious.
- ARCHBISHOP OF YORK:
- Why, madam, so, no doubt, he is.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- I hope he is; but yet let mothers doubt.
- YORK:
- Now, by my troth, if I had been remember'd,
- I could have given my uncle's grace a flout,
- To touch his growth nearer than he touch'd mine.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- How, my pretty York? I pray thee, let me hear it.
- YORK:
- Marry, they say my uncle grew so fast
- That he could gnaw a crust at two hours old
- 'Twas full two years ere I could get a tooth.
- Grandam, this would have been a biting jest.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- I pray thee, pretty York, who told thee this?
- YORK:
- Grandam, his nurse.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- His nurse! why, she was dead ere thou wert born.
- YORK:
- If 'twere not she, I cannot tell who told me.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- A parlous boy: go to, you are too shrewd.
- ARCHBISHOP OF YORK:
- Good madam, be not angry with the child.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Pitchers have ears.
- ARCHBISHOP OF YORK:
- Here comes a messenger. What news?
- Messenger:
- Such news, my lord, as grieves me to unfold.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- How fares the prince?
- Messenger:
- Well, madam, and in health.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- What is thy news then?
- Messenger:
- Lord Rivers and Lord Grey are sent to Pomfret,
- With them Sir Thomas Vaughan, prisoners.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Who hath committed them?
- Messenger:
- The mighty dukes
- Gloucester and Buckingham.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- For what offence?
- Messenger:
- The sum of all I can, I have disclosed;
- Why or for what these nobles were committed
- Is all unknown to me, my gracious lady.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Ay me, I see the downfall of our house!
- The tiger now hath seized the gentle hind;
- Insulting tyranny begins to jet
- Upon the innocent and aweless throne:
- Welcome, destruction, death, and massacre!
- I see, as in a map, the end of all.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Accursed and unquiet wrangling days,
- How many of you have mine eyes beheld!
- My husband lost his life to get the crown;
- And often up and down my sons were toss'd,
- For me to joy and weep their gain and loss:
- And being seated, and domestic broils
- Clean over-blown, themselves, the conquerors.
- Make war upon themselves; blood against blood,
- Self against self: O, preposterous
- And frantic outrage, end thy damned spleen;
- Or let me die, to look on death no more!
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Come, come, my boy; we will to sanctuary.
- Madam, farewell.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- I'll go along with you.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- You have no cause.
- ARCHBISHOP OF YORK:
- My gracious lady, go;
- And thither bear your treasure and your goods.
- For my part, I'll resign unto your grace
- The seal I keep: and so betide to me
- As well I tender you and all of yours!
- Come, I'll conduct you to the sanctuary.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Welcome, sweet prince, to London, to your chamber.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Welcome, dear cousin, my thoughts' sovereign
- The weary way hath made you melancholy.
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- No, uncle; but our crosses on the way
- Have made it tedious, wearisome, and heavy
- I want more uncles here to welcome me.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Sweet prince, the untainted virtue of your years
- Hath not yet dived into the world's deceit
- Nor more can you distinguish of a man
- Than of his outward show; which, God he knows,
- Seldom or never jumpeth with the heart.
- Those uncles which you want were dangerous;
- Your grace attended to their sugar'd words,
- But look'd not on the poison of their hearts :
- God keep you from them, and from such false friends!
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- God keep me from false friends! but they were none.
- GLOUCESTER:
- My lord, the mayor of London comes to greet you.
- Lord Mayor:
- God bless your grace with health and happy days!
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- I thank you, good my lord; and thank you all.
- I thought my mother, and my brother York,
- Would long ere this have met us on the way
- Fie, what a slug is Hastings, that he comes not
- To tell us whether they will come or no!
- BUCKINGHAM:
- And, in good time, here comes the sweating lord.
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- Welcome, my lord: what, will our mother come?
- HASTINGS:
- On what occasion, God he knows, not I,
- The queen your mother, and your brother York,
- Have taken sanctuary: the tender prince
- Would fain have come with me to meet your grace,
- But by his mother was perforce withheld.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Fie, what an indirect and peevish course
- Is this of hers! Lord cardinal, will your grace
- Persuade the queen to send the Duke of York
- Unto his princely brother presently?
- If she deny, Lord Hastings, go with him,
- And from her jealous arms pluck him perforce.
- CARDINAL:
- My Lord of Buckingham, if my weak oratory
- Can from his mother win the Duke of York,
- Anon expect him here; but if she be obdurate
- To mild entreaties, God in heaven forbid
- We should infringe the holy privilege
- Of blessed sanctuary! not for all this land
- Would I be guilty of so deep a sin.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- You are too senseless--obstinate, my lord,
- Too ceremonious and traditional
- Weigh it but with the grossness of this age,
- You break not sanctuary in seizing him.
- The benefit thereof is always granted
- To those whose dealings have deserved the place,
- And those who have the wit to claim the place:
- This prince hath neither claim'd it nor deserved it;
- And therefore, in mine opinion, cannot have it:
- Then, taking him from thence that is not there,
- You break no privilege nor charter there.
- Oft have I heard of sanctuary men;
- But sanctuary children ne'er till now.
- CARDINAL:
- My lord, you shall o'er-rule my mind for once.
- Come on, Lord Hastings, will you go with me?
- HASTINGS:
- I go, my lord.
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- Good lords, make all the speedy haste you may.
- Say, uncle Gloucester, if our brother come,
- Where shall we sojourn till our coronation?
- GLOUCESTER:
- Where it seems best unto your royal self.
- If I may counsel you, some day or two
- Your highness shall repose you at the Tower:
- Then where you please, and shall be thought most fit
- For your best health and recreation.
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- I do not like the Tower, of any place.
- Did Julius Caesar build that place, my lord?
- BUCKINGHAM:
- He did, my gracious lord, begin that place;
- Which, since, succeeding ages have re-edified.
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- Is it upon record, or else reported
- Successively from age to age, he built it?
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Upon record, my gracious lord.
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- But say, my lord, it were not register'd,
- Methinks the truth should live from age to age,
- As 'twere retail'd to all posterity,
- Even to the general all-ending day.
- GLOUCESTER:
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- What say you, uncle?
- GLOUCESTER:
- I say, without characters, fame lives long.
- Thus, like the formal vice, Iniquity,
- I moralize two meanings in one word.
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- That Julius Caesar was a famous man;
- With what his valour did enrich his wit,
- His wit set down to make his valour live
- Death makes no conquest of this conqueror;
- For now he lives in fame, though not in life.
- I'll tell you what, my cousin Buckingham,--
- BUCKINGHAM:
- What, my gracious lord?
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- An if I live until I be a man,
- I'll win our ancient right in France again,
- Or die a soldier, as I lived a king.
- GLOUCESTER:
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Now, in good time, here comes the Duke of York.
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- Richard of York! how fares our loving brother?
- YORK:
- Well, my dread lord; so must I call you now.
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- Ay, brother, to our grief, as it is yours:
- Too late he died that might have kept that title,
- Which by his death hath lost much majesty.
- GLOUCESTER:
- How fares our cousin, noble Lord of York?
- YORK:
- I thank you, gentle uncle. O, my lord,
- You said that idle weeds are fast in growth
- The prince my brother hath outgrown me far.
- GLOUCESTER:
- He hath, my lord.
- YORK:
- And therefore is he idle?
- GLOUCESTER:
- O, my fair cousin, I must not say so.
- YORK:
- Then is he more beholding to you than I.
- GLOUCESTER:
- He may command me as my sovereign;
- But you have power in me as in a kinsman.
- YORK:
- I pray you, uncle, give me this dagger.
- GLOUCESTER:
- My dagger, little cousin? with all my heart.
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- A beggar, brother?
- YORK:
- Of my kind uncle, that I know will give;
- And being but a toy, which is no grief to give.
- GLOUCESTER:
- A greater gift than that I'll give my cousin.
- YORK:
- A greater gift! O, that's the sword to it.
- GLOUCESTER:
- A gentle cousin, were it light enough.
- YORK:
- O, then, I see, you will part but with light gifts;
- In weightier things you'll say a beggar nay.
- GLOUCESTER:
- It is too heavy for your grace to wear.
- YORK:
- I weigh it lightly, were it heavier.
- GLOUCESTER:
- What, would you have my weapon, little lord?
- YORK:
- I would, that I might thank you as you call me.
- GLOUCESTER:
- How?
- YORK:
- Little.
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- My Lord of York will still be cross in talk:
- Uncle, your grace knows how to bear with him.
- YORK:
- You mean, to bear me, not to bear with me:
- Uncle, my brother mocks both you and me;
- Because that I am little, like an ape,
- He thinks that you should bear me on your shoulders.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- With what a sharp-provided wit he reasons!
- To mitigate the scorn he gives his uncle,
- He prettily and aptly taunts himself:
- So cunning and so young is wonderful.
- GLOUCESTER:
- My lord, will't please you pass along?
- Myself and my good cousin Buckingham
- Will to your mother, to entreat of her
- To meet you at the Tower and welcome you.
- YORK:
- What, will you go unto the Tower, my lord?
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- My lord protector needs will have it so.
- YORK:
- I shall not sleep in quiet at the Tower.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Why, what should you fear?
- YORK:
- Marry, my uncle Clarence' angry ghost:
- My grandam told me he was murdered there.
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- I fear no uncles dead.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Nor none that live, I hope.
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- An if they live, I hope I need not fear.
- But come, my lord; and with a heavy heart,
- Thinking on them, go I unto the Tower.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Think you, my lord, this little prating York
- Was not incensed by his subtle mother
- To taunt and scorn you thus opprobriously?
- GLOUCESTER:
- No doubt, no doubt; O, 'tis a parlous boy;
- Bold, quick, ingenious, forward, capable
- He is all the mother's, from the top to toe.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Well, let them rest. Come hither, Catesby.
- Thou art sworn as deeply to effect what we intend
- As closely to conceal what we impart:
- Thou know'st our reasons urged upon the way;
- What think'st thou? is it not an easy matter
- To make William Lord Hastings of our mind,
- For the instalment of this noble duke
- In the seat royal of this famous isle?
- CATESBY:
- He for his father's sake so loves the prince,
- That he will not be won to aught against him.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- What think'st thou, then, of Stanley? what will he?
- CATESBY:
- He will do all in all as Hastings doth.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Well, then, no more but this: go, gentle Catesby,
- And, as it were far off sound thou Lord Hastings,
- How doth he stand affected to our purpose;
- And summon him to-morrow to the Tower,
- To sit about the coronation.
- If thou dost find him tractable to us,
- Encourage him, and show him all our reasons:
- If he be leaden, icy-cold, unwilling,
- Be thou so too; and so break off your talk,
- And give us notice of his inclination:
- For we to-morrow hold divided councils,
- Wherein thyself shalt highly be employ'd.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Commend me to Lord William: tell him, Catesby,
- His ancient knot of dangerous adversaries
- To-morrow are let blood at Pomfret-castle;
- And bid my friend, for joy of this good news,
- Give mistress Shore one gentle kiss the more.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Good Catesby, go, effect this business soundly.
- CATESBY:
- My good lords both, with all the heed I may.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Shall we hear from you, Catesby, ere we sleep?
- CATESBY:
- You shall, my lord.
- GLOUCESTER:
- At Crosby Place, there shall you find us both.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Now, my lord, what shall we do, if we perceive
- Lord Hastings will not yield to our complots?
- GLOUCESTER:
- Chop off his head, man; somewhat we will do:
- And, look, when I am king, claim thou of me
- The earldom of Hereford, and the moveables
- Whereof the king my brother stood possess'd.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- I'll claim that promise at your grace's hands.
- GLOUCESTER:
- And look to have it yielded with all willingness.
- Come, let us sup betimes, that afterwards
- We may digest our complots in some form.
- Messenger:
- What, ho! my lord!
- HASTINGS:
- Messenger:
- A messenger from the Lord Stanley.
- HASTINGS:
- What is't o'clock?
- Messenger:
- Upon the stroke of four.
- HASTINGS:
- Cannot thy master sleep these tedious nights?
- Messenger:
- So it should seem by that I have to say.
- First, he commends him to your noble lordship.
- HASTINGS:
- And then?
- Messenger:
- And then he sends you word
- He dreamt to-night the boar had razed his helm:
- Besides, he says there are two councils held;
- And that may be determined at the one
- which may make you and him to rue at the other.
- Therefore he sends to know your lordship's pleasure,
- If presently you will take horse with him,
- And with all speed post with him toward the north,
- To shun the danger that his soul divines.
- HASTINGS:
- Go, fellow, go, return unto thy lord;
- Bid him not fear the separated councils
- His honour and myself are at the one,
- And at the other is my servant Catesby
- Where nothing can proceed that toucheth us
- Whereof I shall not have intelligence.
- Tell him his fears are shallow, wanting instance:
- And for his dreams, I wonder he is so fond
- To trust the mockery of unquiet slumbers
- To fly the boar before the boar pursues,
- Were to incense the boar to follow us
- And make pursuit where he did mean no chase.
- Go, bid thy master rise and come to me
- And we will both together to the Tower,
- Where, he shall see, the boar will use us kindly.
- Messenger:
- My gracious lord, I'll tell him what you say.
- CATESBY:
- Many good morrows to my noble lord!
- HASTINGS:
- Good morrow, Catesby; you are early stirring
- What news, what news, in this our tottering state?
- CATESBY:
- It is a reeling world, indeed, my lord;
- And I believe twill never stand upright
- Tim Richard wear the garland of the realm.
- HASTINGS:
- How! wear the garland! dost thou mean the crown?
- CATESBY:
- Ay, my good lord.
- HASTINGS:
- I'll have this crown of mine cut from my shoulders
- Ere I will see the crown so foul misplaced.
- But canst thou guess that he doth aim at it?
- CATESBY:
- Ay, on my life; and hopes to find forward
- Upon his party for the gain thereof:
- And thereupon he sends you this good news,
- That this same very day your enemies,
- The kindred of the queen, must die at Pomfret.
- HASTINGS:
- Indeed, I am no mourner for that news,
- Because they have been still mine enemies:
- But, that I'll give my voice on Richard's side,
- To bar my master's heirs in true descent,
- God knows I will not do it, to the death.
- CATESBY:
- God keep your lordship in that gracious mind!
- HASTINGS:
- But I shall laugh at this a twelve-month hence,
- That they who brought me in my master's hate
- I live to look upon their tragedy.
- I tell thee, Catesby--
- CATESBY:
- What, my lord?
- HASTINGS:
- Ere a fortnight make me elder,
- I'll send some packing that yet think not on it.
- CATESBY:
- 'Tis a vile thing to die, my gracious lord,
- When men are unprepared and look not for it.
- HASTINGS:
- O monstrous, monstrous! and so falls it out
- With Rivers, Vaughan, Grey: and so 'twill do
- With some men else, who think themselves as safe
- As thou and I; who, as thou know'st, are dear
- To princely Richard and to Buckingham.
- CATESBY:
- The princes both make high account of you;
- For they account his head upon the bridge.
- HASTINGS:
- I know they do; and I have well deserved it.
- Come on, come on; where is your boar-spear, man?
- Fear you the boar, and go so unprovided?
- STANLEY:
- My lord, good morrow; good morrow, Catesby:
- You may jest on, but, by the holy rood,
- I do not like these several councils, I.
- HASTINGS:
- My lord,
- I hold my life as dear as you do yours;
- And never in my life, I do protest,
- Was it more precious to me than 'tis now:
- Think you, but that I know our state secure,
- I would be so triumphant as I am?
- STANLEY:
- The lords at Pomfret, when they rode from London,
- Were jocund, and supposed their state was sure,
- And they indeed had no cause to mistrust;
- But yet, you see how soon the day o'ercast.
- This sudden stag of rancour I misdoubt:
- Pray God, I say, I prove a needless coward!
- What, shall we toward the Tower? the day is spent.
- HASTINGS:
- Come, come, have with you. Wot you what, my lord?
- To-day the lords you talk of are beheaded.
- LORD STANLEY:
- They, for their truth, might better wear their heads
- Than some that have accused them wear their hats.
- But come, my lord, let us away.
- HASTINGS:
- Go on before; I'll talk with this good fellow.
- How now, sirrah! how goes the world with thee?
- Pursuivant:
- The better that your lordship please to ask.
- HASTINGS:
- I tell thee, man, 'tis better with me now
- Than when I met thee last where now we meet:
- Then was I going prisoner to the Tower,
- By the suggestion of the queen's allies;
- But now, I tell thee--keep it to thyself--
- This day those enemies are put to death,
- And I in better state than e'er I was.
- Pursuivant:
- God hold it, to your honour's good content!
- HASTINGS:
- Gramercy, fellow: there, drink that for me.
- Pursuivant:
- God save your lordship!
- Priest:
- Well met, my lord; I am glad to see your honour.
- HASTINGS:
- I thank thee, good Sir John, with all my heart.
- I am in your debt for your last exercise;
- Come the next Sabbath, and I will content you.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- What, talking with a priest, lord chamberlain?
- Your friends at Pomfret, they do need the priest;
- Your honour hath no shriving work in hand.
- HASTINGS:
- Good faith, and when I met this holy man,
- Those men you talk of came into my mind.
- What, go you toward the Tower?
- BUCKINGHAM:
- I do, my lord; but long I shall not stay
- I shall return before your lordship thence.
- HASTINGS:
- 'Tis like enough, for I stay dinner there.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- HASTINGS:
- I'll wait upon your lordship.
- RATCLIFF:
- Come, bring forth the prisoners.
- RIVERS:
- Sir Richard Ratcliff, let me tell thee this:
- To-day shalt thou behold a subject die
- For truth, for duty, and for loyalty.
- GREY:
- God keep the prince from all the pack of you!
- A knot you are of damned blood-suckers!
- VAUGHAN:
- You live that shall cry woe for this after.
- RATCLIFF:
- Dispatch; the limit of your lives is out.
- RIVERS:
- O Pomfret, Pomfret! O thou bloody prison,
- Fatal and ominous to noble peers!
- Within the guilty closure of thy walls
- Richard the second here was hack'd to death;
- And, for more slander to thy dismal seat,
- We give thee up our guiltless blood to drink.
- GREY:
- Now Margaret's curse is fall'n upon our heads,
- For standing by when Richard stabb'd her son.
- RIVERS:
- Then cursed she Hastings, then cursed she Buckingham,
- Then cursed she Richard. O, remember, God
- To hear her prayers for them, as now for us
- And for my sister and her princely sons,
- Be satisfied, dear God, with our true blood,
- Which, as thou know'st, unjustly must be spilt.
- RATCLIFF:
- Make haste; the hour of death is expiate.
- RIVERS:
- Come, Grey, come, Vaughan, let us all embrace:
- And take our leave, until we meet in heaven.
- HASTINGS:
- My lords, at once: the cause why we are met
- Is, to determine of the coronation.
- In God's name, speak: when is the royal day?
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Are all things fitting for that royal time?
- DERBY:
- It is, and wants but nomination.
- BISHOP OF ELY:
- To-morrow, then, I judge a happy day.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Who knows the lord protector's mind herein?
- Who is most inward with the royal duke?
- BISHOP OF ELY:
- Your grace, we think, should soonest know his mind.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Who, I, my lord I we know each other's faces,
- But for our hearts, he knows no more of mine,
- Than I of yours;
- Nor I no more of his, than you of mine.
- Lord Hastings, you and he are near in love.
- HASTINGS:
- I thank his grace, I know he loves me well;
- But, for his purpose in the coronation.
- I have not sounded him, nor he deliver'd
- His gracious pleasure any way therein:
- But you, my noble lords, may name the time;
- And in the duke's behalf I'll give my voice,
- Which, I presume, he'll take in gentle part.
- BISHOP OF ELY:
- Now in good time, here comes the duke himself.
- GLOUCESTER:
- My noble lords and cousins all, good morrow.
- I have been long a sleeper; but, I hope,
- My absence doth neglect no great designs,
- Which by my presence might have been concluded.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Had not you come upon your cue, my lord
- William Lord Hastings had pronounced your part,--
- I mean, your voice,--for crowning of the king.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Than my Lord Hastings no man might be bolder;
- His lordship knows me well, and loves me well.
- HASTINGS:
- I thank your grace.
- GLOUCESTER:
- My lord of Ely!
- BISHOP OF ELY:
- My lord?
- GLOUCESTER:
- When I was last in Holborn,
- I saw good strawberries in your garden there
- I do beseech you send for some of them.
- BISHOP OF ELY:
- Marry, and will, my lord, with all my heart.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Cousin of Buckingham, a word with you.
- Catesby hath sounded Hastings in our business,
- And finds the testy gentleman so hot,
- As he will lose his head ere give consent
- His master's son, as worshipful as he terms it,
- Shall lose the royalty of England's throne.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Withdraw you hence, my lord, I'll follow you.
- DERBY:
- We have not yet set down this day of triumph.
- To-morrow, in mine opinion, is too sudden;
- For I myself am not so well provided
- As else I would be, were the day prolong'd.
- BISHOP OF ELY:
- Where is my lord protector? I have sent for these
- strawberries.
- HASTINGS:
- His grace looks cheerfully and smooth to-day;
- There's some conceit or other likes him well,
- When he doth bid good morrow with such a spirit.
- I think there's never a man in Christendom
- That can less hide his love or hate than he;
- For by his face straight shall you know his heart.
- DERBY:
- What of his heart perceive you in his face
- By any likelihood he show'd to-day?
- HASTINGS:
- Marry, that with no man here he is offended;
- For, were he, he had shown it in his looks.
- DERBY:
- I pray God he be not, I say.
- GLOUCESTER:
- I pray you all, tell me what they deserve
- That do conspire my death with devilish plots
- Of damned witchcraft, and that have prevail'd
- Upon my body with their hellish charms?
- HASTINGS:
- The tender love I bear your grace, my lord,
- Makes me most forward in this noble presence
- To doom the offenders, whatsoever they be
- I say, my lord, they have deserved death.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Then be your eyes the witness of this ill:
- See how I am bewitch'd; behold mine arm
- Is, like a blasted sapling, wither'd up:
- And this is Edward's wife, that monstrous witch,
- Consorted with that harlot strumpet Shore,
- That by their witchcraft thus have marked me.
- HASTINGS:
- If they have done this thing, my gracious lord--
- GLOUCESTER:
- If I thou protector of this damned strumpet--
- Tellest thou me of 'ifs'? Thou art a traitor:
- Off with his head! Now, by Saint Paul I swear,
- I will not dine until I see the same.
- Lovel and Ratcliff, look that it be done:
- The rest, that love me, rise and follow me.
- HASTINGS:
- Woe, woe for England! not a whit for me;
- For I, too fond, might have prevented this.
- Stanley did dream the boar did raze his helm;
- But I disdain'd it, and did scorn to fly:
- Three times to-day my foot-cloth horse did stumble,
- And startled, when he look'd upon the Tower,
- As loath to bear me to the slaughter-house.
- O, now I want the priest that spake to me:
- I now repent I told the pursuivant
- As 'twere triumphing at mine enemies,
- How they at Pomfret bloodily were butcher'd,
- And I myself secure in grace and favour.
- O Margaret, Margaret, now thy heavy curse
- Is lighted on poor Hastings' wretched head!
- RATCLIFF:
- Dispatch, my lord; the duke would be at dinner:
- Make a short shrift; he longs to see your head.
- HASTINGS:
- O momentary grace of mortal men,
- Which we more hunt for than the grace of God!
- Who builds his hopes in air of your good looks,
- Lives like a drunken sailor on a mast,
- Ready, with every nod, to tumble down
- Into the fatal bowels of the deep.
- LOVEL:
- Come, come, dispatch; 'tis bootless to exclaim.
- HASTINGS:
- O bloody Richard! miserable England!
- I prophesy the fearful'st time to thee
- That ever wretched age hath look'd upon.
- Come, lead me to the block; bear him my head.
- They smile at me that shortly shall be dead.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Come, cousin, canst thou quake, and change thy colour,
- Murder thy breath in the middle of a word,
- And then begin again, and stop again,
- As if thou wert distraught and mad with terror?
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Tut, I can counterfeit the deep tragedian;
- Speak and look back, and pry on every side,
- Tremble and start at wagging of a straw,
- Intending deep suspicion: ghastly looks
- Are at my service, like enforced smiles;
- And both are ready in their offices,
- At any time, to grace my stratagems.
- But what, is Catesby gone?
- GLOUCESTER:
- He is; and, see, he brings the mayor along.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Lord mayor,--
- GLOUCESTER:
- Look to the drawbridge there!
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Hark! a drum.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Catesby, o'erlook the walls.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Lord mayor, the reason we have sent--
- GLOUCESTER:
- Look back, defend thee, here are enemies.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- God and our innocency defend and guard us!
- GLOUCESTER:
- Be patient, they are friends, Ratcliff and Lovel.
- LOVEL:
- Here is the head of that ignoble traitor,
- The dangerous and unsuspected Hastings.
- GLOUCESTER:
- So dear I loved the man, that I must weep.
- I took him for the plainest harmless creature
- That breathed upon this earth a Christian;
- Made him my book wherein my soul recorded
- The history of all her secret thoughts:
- So smooth he daub'd his vice with show of virtue,
- That, his apparent open guilt omitted,
- I mean, his conversation with Shore's wife,
- He lived from all attainder of suspect.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Well, well, he was the covert'st shelter'd traitor
- That ever lived.
- Would you imagine, or almost believe,
- Were't not that, by great preservation,
- We live to tell it you, the subtle traitor
- This day had plotted, in the council-house
- To murder me and my good Lord of Gloucester?
- Lord Mayor:
- What, had he so?
- GLOUCESTER:
- What, think You we are Turks or infidels?
- Or that we would, against the form of law,
- Proceed thus rashly to the villain's death,
- But that the extreme peril of the case,
- The peace of England and our persons' safety,
- Enforced us to this execution?
- Lord Mayor:
- Now, fair befall you! he deserved his death;
- And you my good lords, both have well proceeded,
- To warn false traitors from the like attempts.
- I never look'd for better at his hands,
- After he once fell in with Mistress Shore.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Yet had not we determined he should die,
- Until your lordship came to see his death;
- Which now the loving haste of these our friends,
- Somewhat against our meaning, have prevented:
- Because, my lord, we would have had you heard
- The traitor speak, and timorously confess
- The manner and the purpose of his treason;
- That you might well have signified the same
- Unto the citizens, who haply may
- Misconstrue us in him and wail his death.
- Lord Mayor:
- But, my good lord, your grace's word shall serve,
- As well as I had seen and heard him speak
- And doubt you not, right noble princes both,
- But I'll acquaint our duteous citizens
- With all your just proceedings in this cause.
- GLOUCESTER:
- And to that end we wish'd your lord-ship here,
- To avoid the carping censures of the world.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- But since you come too late of our intents,
- Yet witness what you hear we did intend:
- And so, my good lord mayor, we bid farewell.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Go, after, after, cousin Buckingham.
- The mayor towards Guildhall hies him in all post:
- There, at your meet'st advantage of the time,
- Infer the bastardy of Edward's children:
- Tell them how Edward put to death a citizen,
- Only for saying he would make his son
- Heir to the crown; meaning indeed his house,
- Which, by the sign thereof was termed so.
- Moreover, urge his hateful luxury
- And bestial appetite in change of lust;
- Which stretched to their servants, daughters, wives,
- Even where his lustful eye or savage heart,
- Without control, listed to make his prey.
- Nay, for a need, thus far come near my person:
- Tell them, when that my mother went with child
- Of that unsatiate Edward, noble York
- My princely father then had wars in France
- And, by just computation of the time,
- Found that the issue was not his begot;
- Which well appeared in his lineaments,
- Being nothing like the noble duke my father:
- But touch this sparingly, as 'twere far off,
- Because you know, my lord, my mother lives.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Fear not, my lord, I'll play the orator
- As if the golden fee for which I plead
- Were for myself: and so, my lord, adieu.
- GLOUCESTER:
- If you thrive well, bring them to Baynard's Castle;
- Where you shall find me well accompanied
- With reverend fathers and well-learned bishops.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- I go: and towards three or four o'clock
- Look for the news that the Guildhall affords.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Go, Lovel, with all speed to Doctor Shaw;
- Go thou to Friar Penker; bid them both
- Meet me within this hour at Baynard's Castle.
- Now will I in, to take some privy order,
- To draw the brats of Clarence out of sight;
- And to give notice, that no manner of person
- At any time have recourse unto the princes.
- Scrivener:
- This is the indictment of the good Lord Hastings;
- Which in a set hand fairly is engross'd,
- That it may be this day read over in Paul's.
- And mark how well the sequel hangs together:
- Eleven hours I spent to write it over,
- For yesternight by Catesby was it brought me;
- The precedent was full as long a-doing:
- And yet within these five hours lived Lord Hastings,
- Untainted, unexamined, free, at liberty
- Here's a good world the while! Why who's so gross,
- That seeth not this palpable device?
- Yet who's so blind, but says he sees it not?
- Bad is the world; and all will come to nought,
- When such bad dealings must be seen in thought.
- GLOUCESTER:
- How now, my lord, what say the citizens?
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Now, by the holy mother of our Lord,
- The citizens are mum and speak not a word.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Touch'd you the bastardy of Edward's children?
- BUCKINGHAM:
- I did; with his contract with Lady Lucy,
- And his contract by deputy in France;
- The insatiate greediness of his desires,
- And his enforcement of the city wives;
- His tyranny for trifles; his own bastardy,
- As being got, your father then in France,
- His resemblance, being not like the duke;
- Withal I did infer your lineaments,
- Being the right idea of your father,
- Both in your form and nobleness of mind;
- Laid open all your victories in Scotland,
- Your dicipline in war, wisdom in peace,
- Your bounty, virtue, fair humility:
- Indeed, left nothing fitting for the purpose
- Untouch'd, or slightly handled, in discourse
- And when mine oratory grew to an end
- I bid them that did love their country's good
- Cry 'God save Richard, England's royal king!'
- GLOUCESTER:
- Ah! and did they so?
- BUCKINGHAM:
- No, so God help me, they spake not a word;
- But, like dumb statues or breathing stones,
- Gazed each on other, and look'd deadly pale.
- Which when I saw, I reprehended them;
- And ask'd the mayor what meant this wilful silence:
- His answer was, the people were not wont
- To be spoke to but by the recorder.
- Then he was urged to tell my tale again,
- 'Thus saith the duke, thus hath the duke inferr'd;'
- But nothing spake in warrant from himself.
- When he had done, some followers of mine own,
- At the lower end of the hall, hurl'd up their caps,
- And some ten voices cried 'God save King Richard!'
- And thus I took the vantage of those few,
- 'Thanks, gentle citizens and friends,' quoth I;
- 'This general applause and loving shout
- Argues your wisdoms and your love to Richard:'
- And even here brake off, and came away.
- GLOUCESTER:
- What tongueless blocks were they! would not they speak?
- BUCKINGHAM:
- No, by my troth, my lord.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Will not the mayor then and his brethren come?
- BUCKINGHAM:
- The mayor is here at hand: intend some fear;
- Be not you spoke with, but by mighty suit:
- And look you get a prayer-book in your hand,
- And stand betwixt two churchmen, good my lord;
- For on that ground I'll build a holy descant:
- And be not easily won to our request:
- Play the maid's part, still answer nay, and take it.
- GLOUCESTER:
- I go; and if you plead as well for them
- As I can say nay to thee for myself,
- No doubt well bring it to a happy issue.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Go, go, up to the leads; the lord mayor knocks.
- Welcome my lord; I dance attendance here;
- I think the duke will not be spoke withal.
- Here comes his servant: how now, Catesby,
- What says he?
- CATESBY:
- My lord: he doth entreat your grace;
- To visit him to-morrow or next day:
- He is within, with two right reverend fathers,
- Divinely bent to meditation;
- And no worldly suit would he be moved,
- To draw him from his holy exercise.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Return, good Catesby, to thy lord again;
- Tell him, myself, the mayor and citizens,
- In deep designs and matters of great moment,
- No less importing than our general good,
- Are come to have some conference with his grace.
- CATESBY:
- I'll tell him what you say, my lord.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Ah, ha, my lord, this prince is not an Edward!
- He is not lolling on a lewd day-bed,
- But on his knees at meditation;
- Not dallying with a brace of courtezans,
- But meditating with two deep divines;
- Not sleeping, to engross his idle body,
- But praying, to enrich his watchful soul:
- Happy were England, would this gracious prince
- Take on himself the sovereignty thereof:
- But, sure, I fear, we shall ne'er win him to it.
- Lord Mayor:
- Marry, God forbid his grace should say us nay!
- BUCKINGHAM:
- I fear he will.
- How now, Catesby, what says your lord?
- CATESBY:
- My lord,
- He wonders to what end you have assembled
- Such troops of citizens to speak with him,
- His grace not being warn'd thereof before:
- My lord, he fears you mean no good to him.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Sorry I am my noble cousin should
- Suspect me, that I mean no good to him:
- By heaven, I come in perfect love to him;
- And so once more return and tell his grace.
- When holy and devout religious men
- Are at their beads, 'tis hard to draw them thence,
- So sweet is zealous contemplation.
- Lord Mayor:
- See, where he stands between two clergymen!
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Two props of virtue for a Christian prince,
- To stay him from the fall of vanity:
- And, see, a book of prayer in his hand,
- True ornaments to know a holy man.
- Famous Plantagenet, most gracious prince,
- Lend favourable ears to our request;
- And pardon us the interruption
- Of thy devotion and right Christian zeal.
- GLOUCESTER:
- My lord, there needs no such apology:
- I rather do beseech you pardon me,
- Who, earnest in the service of my God,
- Neglect the visitation of my friends.
- But, leaving this, what is your grace's pleasure?
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Even that, I hope, which pleaseth God above,
- And all good men of this ungovern'd isle.
- GLOUCESTER:
- I do suspect I have done some offence
- That seems disgracious in the city's eyes,
- And that you come to reprehend my ignorance.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- You have, my lord: would it might please your grace,
- At our entreaties, to amend that fault!
- GLOUCESTER:
- Else wherefore breathe I in a Christian land?
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Then know, it is your fault that you resign
- The supreme seat, the throne majestical,
- The scepter'd office of your ancestors,
- Your state of fortune and your due of birth,
- The lineal glory of your royal house,
- To the corruption of a blemished stock:
- Whilst, in the mildness of your sleepy thoughts,
- Which here we waken to our country's good,
- This noble isle doth want her proper limbs;
- Her face defaced with scars of infamy,
- Her royal stock graft with ignoble plants,
- And almost shoulder'd in the swallowing gulf
- Of blind forgetfulness and dark oblivion.
- Which to recure, we heartily solicit
- Your gracious self to take on you the charge
- And kingly government of this your land,
- Not as protector, steward, substitute,
- Or lowly factor for another's gain;
- But as successively from blood to blood,
- Your right of birth, your empery, your own.
- For this, consorted with the citizens,
- Your very worshipful and loving friends,
- And by their vehement instigation,
- In this just suit come I to move your grace.
- GLOUCESTER:
- I know not whether to depart in silence,
- Or bitterly to speak in your reproof.
- Best fitteth my degree or your condition
- If not to answer, you might haply think
- Tongue-tied ambition, not replying, yielded
- To bear the golden yoke of sovereignty,
- Which fondly you would here impose on me;
- If to reprove you for this suit of yours,
- So season'd with your faithful love to me.
- Then, on the other side, I cheque'd my friends.
- Therefore, to speak, and to avoid the first,
- And then, in speaking, not to incur the last,
- Definitively thus I answer you.
- Your love deserves my thanks; but my desert
- Unmeritable shuns your high request.
- First if all obstacles were cut away,
- And that my path were even to the crown,
- As my ripe revenue and due by birth
- Yet so much is my poverty of spirit,
- So mighty and so many my defects,
- As I had rather hide me from my greatness,
- Being a bark to brook no mighty sea,
- Than in my greatness covet to be hid,
- And in the vapour of my glory smother'd.
- But, God be thank'd, there's no need of me,
- And much I need to help you, if need were;
- The royal tree hath left us royal fruit,
- Which, mellow'd by the stealing hours of time,
- Will well become the seat of majesty,
- And make, no doubt, us happy by his reign.
- On him I lay what you would lay on me,
- The right and fortune of his happy stars;
- Which God defend that I should wring from him!
- BUCKINGHAM:
- My lord, this argues conscience in your grace;
- But the respects thereof are nice and trivial,
- All circumstances well considered.
- You say that Edward is your brother's son:
- So say we too, but not by Edward's wife;
- For first he was contract to Lady Lucy--
- Your mother lives a witness to that vow--
- And afterward by substitute betroth'd
- To Bona, sister to the King of France.
- These both put by a poor petitioner,
- A care-crazed mother of a many children,
- A beauty-waning and distressed widow,
- Even in the afternoon of her best days,
- Made prize and purchase of his lustful eye,
- Seduced the pitch and height of all his thoughts
- To base declension and loathed bigamy
- By her, in his unlawful bed, he got
- This Edward, whom our manners term the prince.
- More bitterly could I expostulate,
- Save that, for reverence to some alive,
- I give a sparing limit to my tongue.
- Then, good my lord, take to your royal self
- This proffer'd benefit of dignity;
- If non to bless us and the land withal,
- Yet to draw forth your noble ancestry
- From the corruption of abusing times,
- Unto a lineal true-derived course.
- Lord Mayor:
- Do, good my lord, your citizens entreat you.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Refuse not, mighty lord, this proffer'd love.
- CATESBY:
- O, make them joyful, grant their lawful suit!
- GLOUCESTER:
- Alas, why would you heap these cares on me?
- I am unfit for state and majesty;
- I do beseech you, take it not amiss;
- I cannot nor I will not yield to you.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- If you refuse it,--as, in love and zeal,
- Loath to depose the child, Your brother's son;
- As well we know your tenderness of heart
- And gentle, kind, effeminate remorse,
- Which we have noted in you to your kin,
- And egally indeed to all estates,--
- Yet whether you accept our suit or no,
- Your brother's son shall never reign our king;
- But we will plant some other in the throne,
- To the disgrace and downfall of your house:
- And in this resolution here we leave you.--
- Come, citizens: 'zounds! I'll entreat no more.
- GLOUCESTER:
- O, do not swear, my lord of Buckingham.
- CATESBY:
- Call them again, my lord, and accept their suit.
- ANOTHER:
- Do, good my lord, lest all the land do rue it.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Would you enforce me to a world of care?
- Well, call them again. I am not made of stone,
- But penetrable to your. kind entreats,
- Albeit against my conscience and my soul.
- Cousin of Buckingham, and you sage, grave men,
- Since you will buckle fortune on my back,
- To bear her burthen, whether I will or no,
- I must have patience to endure the load:
- But if black scandal or foul-faced reproach
- Attend the sequel of your imposition,
- Your mere enforcement shall acquittance me
- From all the impure blots and stains thereof;
- For God he knows, and you may partly see,
- How far I am from the desire thereof.
- Lord Mayor:
- God bless your grace! we see it, and will say it.
- GLOUCESTER:
- In saying so, you shall but say the truth.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Then I salute you with this kingly title:
- Long live Richard, England's royal king!
- Lord Mayor:
- Amen.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- To-morrow will it please you to be crown'd?
- GLOUCESTER:
- Even when you please, since you will have it so.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- To-morrow, then, we will attend your grace:
- And so most joyfully we take our leave.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Come, let us to our holy task again.
- Farewell, good cousin; farewell, gentle friends.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Who meets us here? my niece Plantagenet
- Led in the hand of her kind aunt of Gloucester?
- Now, for my life, she's wandering to the Tower,
- On pure heart's love to greet the tender princes.
- Daughter, well met.
- LADY ANNE:
- God give your graces both
- A happy and a joyful time of day!
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- As much to you, good sister! Whither away?
- LADY ANNE:
- No farther than the Tower; and, as I guess,
- Upon the like devotion as yourselves,
- To gratulate the gentle princes there.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Kind sister, thanks: we'll enter all together.
- And, in good time, here the lieutenant comes.
- Master lieutenant, pray you, by your leave,
- How doth the prince, and my young son of York?
- BRAKENBURY:
- Right well, dear madam. By your patience,
- I may not suffer you to visit them;
- The king hath straitly charged the contrary.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- The king! why, who's that?
- BRAKENBURY:
- I cry you mercy: I mean the lord protector.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- The Lord protect him from that kingly title!
- Hath he set bounds betwixt their love and me?
- I am their mother; who should keep me from them?
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- I am their fathers mother; I will see them.
- LADY ANNE:
- Their aunt I am in law, in love their mother:
- Then bring me to their sights; I'll bear thy blame
- And take thy office from thee, on my peril.
- BRAKENBURY:
- No, madam, no; I may not leave it so:
- I am bound by oath, and therefore pardon me.
- LORD STANLEY:
- Let me but meet you, ladies, one hour hence,
- And I'll salute your grace of York as mother,
- And reverend looker on, of two fair queens.
- Come, madam, you must straight to Westminster,
- There to be crowned Richard's royal queen.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- O, cut my lace in sunder, that my pent heart
- May have some scope to beat, or else I swoon
- With this dead-killing news!
- LADY ANNE:
- Despiteful tidings! O unpleasing news!
- DORSET:
- Be of good cheer: mother, how fares your grace?
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- O Dorset, speak not to me, get thee hence!
- Death and destruction dog thee at the heels;
- Thy mother's name is ominous to children.
- If thou wilt outstrip death, go cross the seas,
- And live with Richmond, from the reach of hell
- Go, hie thee, hie thee from this slaughter-house,
- Lest thou increase the number of the dead;
- And make me die the thrall of Margaret's curse,
- Nor mother, wife, nor England's counted queen.
- LORD STANLEY:
- Full of wise care is this your counsel, madam.
- Take all the swift advantage of the hours;
- You shall have letters from me to my son
- To meet you on the way, and welcome you.
- Be not ta'en tardy by unwise delay.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- O ill-dispersing wind of misery!
- O my accursed womb, the bed of death!
- A cockatrice hast thou hatch'd to the world,
- Whose unavoided eye is murderous.
- LORD STANLEY:
- Come, madam, come; I in all haste was sent.
- LADY ANNE:
- And I in all unwillingness will go.
- I would to God that the inclusive verge
- Of golden metal that must round my brow
- Were red-hot steel, to sear me to the brain!
- Anointed let me be with deadly venom,
- And die, ere men can say, God save the queen!
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Go, go, poor soul, I envy not thy glory
- To feed my humour, wish thyself no harm.
- LADY ANNE:
- No! why? When he that is my husband now
- Came to me, as I follow'd Henry's corse,
- When scarce the blood was well wash'd from his hands
- Which issued from my other angel husband
- And that dead saint which then I weeping follow'd;
- O, when, I say, I look'd on Richard's face,
- This was my wish: 'Be thou,' quoth I, ' accursed,
- For making me, so young, so old a widow!
- And, when thou wed'st, let sorrow haunt thy bed;
- And be thy wife--if any be so mad--
- As miserable by the life of thee
- As thou hast made me by my dear lord's death!
- Lo, ere I can repeat this curse again,
- Even in so short a space, my woman's heart
- Grossly grew captive to his honey words
- And proved the subject of my own soul's curse,
- Which ever since hath kept my eyes from rest;
- For never yet one hour in his bed
- Have I enjoy'd the golden dew of sleep,
- But have been waked by his timorous dreams.
- Besides, he hates me for my father Warwick;
- And will, no doubt, shortly be rid of me.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Poor heart, adieu! I pity thy complaining.
- LADY ANNE:
- No more than from my soul I mourn for yours.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Farewell, thou woful welcomer of glory!
- LADY ANNE:
- Adieu, poor soul, that takest thy leave of it!
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Stay, yet look back with me unto the Tower.
- Pity, you ancient stones, those tender babes
- Whom envy hath immured within your walls!
- Rough cradle for such little pretty ones!
- Rude ragged nurse, old sullen playfellow
- For tender princes, use my babies well!
- So foolish sorrow bids your stones farewell.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Stand all apart Cousin of Buckingham!
- BUCKINGHAM:
- My gracious sovereign?
- KING RICHARD III:
- Give me thy hand.
- Thus high, by thy advice
- And thy assistance, is King Richard seated;
- But shall we wear these honours for a day?
- Or shall they last, and we rejoice in them?
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Still live they and for ever may they last!
- KING RICHARD III:
- O Buckingham, now do I play the touch,
- To try if thou be current gold indeed
- Young Edward lives: think now what I would say.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Say on, my loving lord.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Why, Buckingham, I say, I would be king,
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Why, so you are, my thrice renowned liege.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Ha! am I king? 'tis so: but Edward lives.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- True, noble prince.
- KING RICHARD III:
- O bitter consequence,
- That Edward still should live! 'True, noble prince!'
- Cousin, thou wert not wont to be so dull:
- Shall I be plain? I wish the bastards dead;
- And I would have it suddenly perform'd.
- What sayest thou? speak suddenly; be brief.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Your grace may do your pleasure.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Tut, tut, thou art all ice, thy kindness freezeth:
- Say, have I thy consent that they shall die?
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Give me some breath, some little pause, my lord
- Before I positively herein:
- I will resolve your grace immediately.
- CATESBY:
- KING RICHARD III:
- I will converse with iron-witted fools
- And unrespective boys: none are for me
- That look into me with considerate eyes:
- High-reaching Buckingham grows circumspect.
- Boy!
- Page:
- My lord?
- KING RICHARD III:
- Know'st thou not any whom corrupting gold
- Would tempt unto a close exploit of death?
- Page:
- My lord, I know a discontented gentleman,
- Whose humble means match not his haughty mind:
- Gold were as good as twenty orators,
- And will, no doubt, tempt him to any thing.
- KING RICHARD III:
- What is his name?
- Page:
- His name, my lord, is Tyrrel.
- KING RICHARD III:
- I partly know the man: go, call him hither.
- The deep-revolving witty Buckingham
- No more shall be the neighbour to my counsel:
- Hath he so long held out with me untired,
- And stops he now for breath?
- How now! what news with you?
- STANLEY:
- My lord, I hear the Marquis Dorset's fled
- To Richmond, in those parts beyond the sea
- Where he abides.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Catesby!
- CATESBY:
- My lord?
- KING RICHARD III:
- Rumour it abroad
- That Anne, my wife, is sick and like to die:
- I will take order for her keeping close.
- Inquire me out some mean-born gentleman,
- Whom I will marry straight to Clarence' daughter:
- The boy is foolish, and I fear not him.
- Look, how thou dream'st! I say again, give out
- That Anne my wife is sick and like to die:
- About it; for it stands me much upon,
- To stop all hopes whose growth may damage me.
- I must be married to my brother's daughter,
- Or else my kingdom stands on brittle glass.
- Murder her brothers, and then marry her!
- Uncertain way of gain! But I am in
- So far in blood that sin will pluck on sin:
- Tear-falling pity dwells not in this eye.
- Is thy name Tyrrel?
- TYRREL:
- James Tyrrel, and your most obedient subject.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Art thou, indeed?
- TYRREL:
- Prove me, my gracious sovereign.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Darest thou resolve to kill a friend of mine?
- TYRREL:
- Ay, my lord;
- But I had rather kill two enemies.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Why, there thou hast it: two deep enemies,
- Foes to my rest and my sweet sleep's disturbers
- Are they that I would have thee deal upon:
- Tyrrel, I mean those bastards in the Tower.
- TYRREL:
- Let me have open means to come to them,
- And soon I'll rid you from the fear of them.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Thou sing'st sweet music. Hark, come hither, Tyrrel
- Go, by this token: rise, and lend thine ear:
- There is no more but so: say it is done,
- And I will love thee, and prefer thee too.
- TYRREL:
- 'Tis done, my gracious lord.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Shall we hear from thee, Tyrrel, ere we sleep?
- TYRREL:
- Ye shall, my Lord.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- My Lord, I have consider'd in my mind
- The late demand that you did sound me in.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Well, let that pass. Dorset is fled to Richmond.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- I hear that news, my lord.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Stanley, he is your wife's son well, look to it.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- My lord, I claim your gift, my due by promise,
- For which your honour and your faith is pawn'd;
- The earldom of Hereford and the moveables
- The which you promised I should possess.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Stanley, look to your wife; if she convey
- Letters to Richmond, you shall answer it.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- What says your highness to my just demand?
- KING RICHARD III:
- As I remember, Henry the Sixth
- Did prophesy that Richmond should be king,
- When Richmond was a little peevish boy.
- A king, perhaps, perhaps,--
- BUCKINGHAM:
- My lord!
- KING RICHARD III:
- How chance the prophet could not at that time
- Have told me, I being by, that I should kill him?
- BUCKINGHAM:
- My lord, your promise for the earldom,--
- KING RICHARD III:
- Richmond! When last I was at Exeter,
- The mayor in courtesy show'd me the castle,
- And call'd it Rougemont: at which name I started,
- Because a bard of Ireland told me once
- I should not live long after I saw Richmond.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- My Lord!
- KING RICHARD III:
- Ay, what's o'clock?
- BUCKINGHAM:
- I am thus bold to put your grace in mind
- Of what you promised me.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Well, but what's o'clock?
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Upon the stroke of ten.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Well, let it strike.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Why let it strike?
- KING RICHARD III:
- Because that, like a Jack, thou keep'st the stroke
- Betwixt thy begging and my meditation.
- I am not in the giving vein to-day.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Why, then resolve me whether you will or no.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Tut, tut,
- Thou troublest me; am not in the vein.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Is it even so? rewards he my true service
- With such deep contempt made I him king for this?
- O, let me think on Hastings, and be gone
- To Brecknock, while my fearful head is on!
- TYRREL:
- The tyrannous and bloody deed is done.
- The most arch of piteous massacre
- That ever yet this land was guilty of.
- Dighton and Forrest, whom I did suborn
- To do this ruthless piece of butchery,
- Although they were flesh'd villains, bloody dogs,
- Melting with tenderness and kind compassion
- Wept like two children in their deaths' sad stories.
- 'Lo, thus' quoth Dighton, 'lay those tender babes:'
- 'Thus, thus,' quoth Forrest, 'girdling one another
- Within their innocent alabaster arms:
- Their lips were four red roses on a stalk,
- Which in their summer beauty kiss'd each other.
- A book of prayers on their pillow lay;
- Which once,' quoth Forrest, 'almost changed my mind;
- But O! the devil'--there the villain stopp'd
- Whilst Dighton thus told on: 'We smothered
- The most replenished sweet work of nature,
- That from the prime creation e'er she framed.'
- Thus both are gone with conscience and remorse;
- They could not speak; and so I left them both,
- To bring this tidings to the bloody king.
- And here he comes.
- All hail, my sovereign liege!
- KING RICHARD III:
- Kind Tyrrel, am I happy in thy news?
- TYRREL:
- If to have done the thing you gave in charge
- Beget your happiness, be happy then,
- For it is done, my lord.
- KING RICHARD III:
- But didst thou see them dead?
- TYRREL:
- I did, my lord.
- KING RICHARD III:
- And buried, gentle Tyrrel?
- TYRREL:
- The chaplain of the Tower hath buried them;
- But how or in what place I do not know.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Come to me, Tyrrel, soon at after supper,
- And thou shalt tell the process of their death.
- Meantime, but think how I may do thee good,
- And be inheritor of thy desire.
- Farewell till soon.
- The son of Clarence have I pent up close;
- His daughter meanly have I match'd in marriage;
- The sons of Edward sleep in Abraham's bosom,
- And Anne my wife hath bid the world good night.
- Now, for I know the Breton Richmond aims
- At young Elizabeth, my brother's daughter,
- And, by that knot, looks proudly o'er the crown,
- To her I go, a jolly thriving wooer.
- CATESBY:
- My lord!
- KING RICHARD III:
- Good news or bad, that thou comest in so bluntly?
- CATESBY:
- Bad news, my lord: Ely is fled to Richmond;
- And Buckingham, back'd with the hardy Welshmen,
- Is in the field, and still his power increaseth.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Ely with Richmond troubles me more near
- Than Buckingham and his rash-levied army.
- Come, I have heard that fearful commenting
- Is leaden servitor to dull delay;
- Delay leads impotent and snail-paced beggary
- Then fiery expedition be my wing,
- Jove's Mercury, and herald for a king!
- Come, muster men: my counsel is my shield;
- We must be brief when traitors brave the field.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- So, now prosperity begins to mellow
- And drop into the rotten mouth of death.
- Here in these confines slily have I lurk'd,
- To watch the waning of mine adversaries.
- A dire induction am I witness to,
- And will to France, hoping the consequence
- Will prove as bitter, black, and tragical.
- Withdraw thee, wretched Margaret: who comes here?
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Ah, my young princes! ah, my tender babes!
- My unblown flowers, new-appearing sweets!
- If yet your gentle souls fly in the air
- And be not fix'd in doom perpetual,
- Hover about me with your airy wings
- And hear your mother's lamentation!
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Hover about her; say, that right for right
- Hath dimm'd your infant morn to aged night.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- So many miseries have crazed my voice,
- That my woe-wearied tongue is mute and dumb,
- Edward Plantagenet, why art thou dead?
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Plantagenet doth quit Plantagenet.
- Edward for Edward pays a dying debt.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Wilt thou, O God, fly from such gentle lambs,
- And throw them in the entrails of the wolf?
- When didst thou sleep when such a deed was done?
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- When holy Harry died, and my sweet son.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Blind sight, dead life, poor mortal living ghost,
- Woe's scene, world's shame, grave's due by life usurp'd,
- Brief abstract and record of tedious days,
- Rest thy unrest on England's lawful earth,
- Unlawfully made drunk with innocents' blood!
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- O, that thou wouldst as well afford a grave
- As thou canst yield a melancholy seat!
- Then would I hide my bones, not rest them here.
- O, who hath any cause to mourn but I?
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- If ancient sorrow be most reverend,
- Give mine the benefit of seniory,
- And let my woes frown on the upper hand.
- If sorrow can admit society,
- Tell o'er your woes again by viewing mine:
- I had an Edward, till a Richard kill'd him;
- I had a Harry, till a Richard kill'd him:
- Thou hadst an Edward, till a Richard kill'd him;
- Thou hadst a Richard, till a Richard killed him;
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- I had a Richard too, and thou didst kill him;
- I had a Rutland too, thou holp'st to kill him.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Thou hadst a Clarence too, and Richard kill'd him.
- From forth the kennel of thy womb hath crept
- A hell-hound that doth hunt us all to death:
- That dog, that had his teeth before his eyes,
- To worry lambs and lap their gentle blood,
- That foul defacer of God's handiwork,
- That excellent grand tyrant of the earth,
- That reigns in galled eyes of weeping souls,
- Thy womb let loose, to chase us to our graves.
- O upright, just, and true-disposing God,
- How do I thank thee, that this carnal cur
- Preys on the issue of his mother's body,
- And makes her pew-fellow with others' moan!
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- O Harry's wife, triumph not in my woes!
- God witness with me, I have wept for thine.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Bear with me; I am hungry for revenge,
- And now I cloy me with beholding it.
- Thy Edward he is dead, that stabb'd my Edward:
- Thy other Edward dead, to quit my Edward;
- Young York he is but boot, because both they
- Match not the high perfection of my loss:
- Thy Clarence he is dead that kill'd my Edward;
- And the beholders of this tragic play,
- The adulterate Hastings, Rivers, Vaughan, Grey,
- Untimely smother'd in their dusky graves.
- Richard yet lives, hell's black intelligencer,
- Only reserved their factor, to buy souls
- And send them thither: but at hand, at hand,
- Ensues his piteous and unpitied end:
- Earth gapes, hell burns, fiends roar, saints pray.
- To have him suddenly convey'd away.
- Cancel his bond of life, dear God, I prey,
- That I may live to say, The dog is dead!
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- O, thou didst prophesy the time would come
- That I should wish for thee to help me curse
- That bottled spider, that foul bunch-back'd toad!
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- I call'd thee then vain flourish of my fortune;
- I call'd thee then poor shadow, painted queen;
- The presentation of but what I was;
- The flattering index of a direful pageant;
- One heaved a-high, to be hurl'd down below;
- A mother only mock'd with two sweet babes;
- A dream of what thou wert, a breath, a bubble,
- A sign of dignity, a garish flag,
- To be the aim of every dangerous shot,
- A queen in jest, only to fill the scene.
- Where is thy husband now? where be thy brothers?
- Where are thy children? wherein dost thou, joy?
- Who sues to thee and cries 'God save the queen'?
- Where be the bending peers that flatter'd thee?
- Where be the thronging troops that follow'd thee?
- Decline all this, and see what now thou art:
- For happy wife, a most distressed widow;
- For joyful mother, one that wails the name;
- For queen, a very caitiff crown'd with care;
- For one being sued to, one that humbly sues;
- For one that scorn'd at me, now scorn'd of me;
- For one being fear'd of all, now fearing one;
- For one commanding all, obey'd of none.
- Thus hath the course of justice wheel'd about,
- And left thee but a very prey to time;
- Having no more but thought of what thou wert,
- To torture thee the more, being what thou art.
- Thou didst usurp my place, and dost thou not
- Usurp the just proportion of my sorrow?
- Now thy proud neck bears half my burthen'd yoke;
- From which even here I slip my weary neck,
- And leave the burthen of it all on thee.
- Farewell, York's wife, and queen of sad mischance:
- These English woes will make me smile in France.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- O thou well skill'd in curses, stay awhile,
- And teach me how to curse mine enemies!
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Forbear to sleep the nights, and fast the days;
- Compare dead happiness with living woe;
- Think that thy babes were fairer than they were,
- And he that slew them fouler than he is:
- Bettering thy loss makes the bad causer worse:
- Revolving this will teach thee how to curse.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- My words are dull; O, quicken them with thine!
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Thy woes will make them sharp, and pierce like mine.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Why should calamity be full of words?
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Windy attorneys to their client woes,
- Airy succeeders of intestate joys,
- Poor breathing orators of miseries!
- Let them have scope: though what they do impart
- Help not all, yet do they ease the heart.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- If so, then be not tongue-tied: go with me.
- And in the breath of bitter words let's smother
- My damned son, which thy two sweet sons smother'd.
- I hear his drum: be copious in exclaims.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Who intercepts my expedition?
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- O, she that might have intercepted thee,
- By strangling thee in her accursed womb
- From all the slaughters, wretch, that thou hast done!
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Hidest thou that forehead with a golden crown,
- Where should be graven, if that right were right,
- The slaughter of the prince that owed that crown,
- And the dire death of my two sons and brothers?
- Tell me, thou villain slave, where are my children?
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Thou toad, thou toad, where is thy brother Clarence?
- And little Ned Plantagenet, his son?
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Where is kind Hastings, Rivers, Vaughan, Grey?
- KING RICHARD III:
- A flourish, trumpets! strike alarum, drums!
- Let not the heavens hear these tell-tale women
- Rail on the Lord's enointed: strike, I say!
- Either be patient, and entreat me fair,
- Or with the clamorous report of war
- Thus will I drown your exclamations.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Art thou my son?
- KING RICHARD III:
- Ay, I thank God, my father, and yourself.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Then patiently hear my impatience.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Madam, I have a touch of your condition,
- Which cannot brook the accent of reproof.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- O, let me speak!
- KING RICHARD III:
- Do then: but I'll not hear.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- I will be mild and gentle in my speech.
- KING RICHARD III:
- And brief, good mother; for I am in haste.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Art thou so hasty? I have stay'd for thee,
- God knows, in anguish, pain and agony.
- KING RICHARD III:
- And came I not at last to comfort you?
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- No, by the holy rood, thou know'st it well,
- Thou camest on earth to make the earth my hell.
- A grievous burthen was thy birth to me;
- Tetchy and wayward was thy infancy;
- Thy school-days frightful, desperate, wild, and furious,
- Thy prime of manhood daring, bold, and venturous,
- Thy age confirm'd, proud, subdued, bloody,
- treacherous,
- More mild, but yet more harmful, kind in hatred:
- What comfortable hour canst thou name,
- That ever graced me in thy company?
- KING RICHARD III:
- Faith, none, but Humphrey Hour, that call'd
- your grace
- To breakfast once forth of my company.
- If I be so disgracious in your sight,
- Let me march on, and not offend your grace.
- Strike the drum.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- I prithee, hear me speak.
- KING RICHARD III:
- You speak too bitterly.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Hear me a word;
- For I shall never speak to thee again.
- KING RICHARD III:
- So.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Either thou wilt die, by God's just ordinance,
- Ere from this war thou turn a conqueror,
- Or I with grief and extreme age shall perish
- And never look upon thy face again.
- Therefore take with thee my most heavy curse;
- Which, in the day of battle, tire thee more
- Than all the complete armour that thou wear'st!
- My prayers on the adverse party fight;
- And there the little souls of Edward's children
- Whisper the spirits of thine enemies
- And promise them success and victory.
- Bloody thou art, bloody will be thy end;
- Shame serves thy life and doth thy death attend.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Though far more cause, yet much less spirit to curse
- Abides in me; I say amen to all.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Stay, madam; I must speak a word with you.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- I have no more sons of the royal blood
- For thee to murder: for my daughters, Richard,
- They shall be praying nuns, not weeping queens;
- And therefore level not to hit their lives.
- KING RICHARD III:
- You have a daughter call'd Elizabeth,
- Virtuous and fair, royal and gracious.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- And must she die for this? O, let her live,
- And I'll corrupt her manners, stain her beauty;
- Slander myself as false to Edward's bed;
- Throw over her the veil of infamy:
- So she may live unscarr'd of bleeding slaughter,
- I will confess she was not Edward's daughter.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Wrong not her birth, she is of royal blood.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- To save her life, I'll say she is not so.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Her life is only safest in her birth.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- And only in that safety died her brothers.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Lo, at their births good stars were opposite.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- No, to their lives bad friends were contrary.
- KING RICHARD III:
- All unavoided is the doom of destiny.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- True, when avoided grace makes destiny:
- My babes were destined to a fairer death,
- If grace had bless'd thee with a fairer life.
- KING RICHARD III:
- You speak as if that I had slain my cousins.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Cousins, indeed; and by their uncle cozen'd
- Of comfort, kingdom, kindred, freedom, life.
- Whose hand soever lanced their tender hearts,
- Thy head, all indirectly, gave direction:
- No doubt the murderous knife was dull and blunt
- Till it was whetted on thy stone-hard heart,
- To revel in the entrails of my lambs.
- But that still use of grief makes wild grief tame,
- My tongue should to thy ears not name my boys
- Till that my nails were anchor'd in thine eyes;
- And I, in such a desperate bay of death,
- Like a poor bark, of sails and tackling reft,
- Rush all to pieces on thy rocky bosom.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Madam, so thrive I in my enterprise
- And dangerous success of bloody wars,
- As I intend more good to you and yours,
- Than ever you or yours were by me wrong'd!
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- What good is cover'd with the face of heaven,
- To be discover'd, that can do me good?
- KING RICHARD III:
- The advancement of your children, gentle lady.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Up to some scaffold, there to lose their heads?
- KING RICHARD III:
- No, to the dignity and height of honour
- The high imperial type of this earth's glory.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Flatter my sorrows with report of it;
- Tell me what state, what dignity, what honour,
- Canst thou demise to any child of mine?
- KING RICHARD III:
- Even all I have; yea, and myself and all,
- Will I withal endow a child of thine;
- So in the Lethe of thy angry soul
- Thou drown the sad remembrance of those wrongs
- Which thou supposest I have done to thee.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Be brief, lest that be process of thy kindness
- Last longer telling than thy kindness' date.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Then know, that from my soul I love thy daughter.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- My daughter's mother thinks it with her soul.
- KING RICHARD III:
- What do you think?
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- That thou dost love my daughter from thy soul:
- So from thy soul's love didst thou love her brothers;
- And from my heart's love I do thank thee for it.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Be not so hasty to confound my meaning:
- I mean, that with my soul I love thy daughter,
- And mean to make her queen of England.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Say then, who dost thou mean shall be her king?
- KING RICHARD III:
- Even he that makes her queen who should be else?
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- What, thou?
- KING RICHARD III:
- I, even I: what think you of it, madam?
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- How canst thou woo her?
- KING RICHARD III:
- That would I learn of you,
- As one that are best acquainted with her humour.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- And wilt thou learn of me?
- KING RICHARD III:
- Madam, with all my heart.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Send to her, by the man that slew her brothers,
- A pair of bleeding-hearts; thereon engrave
- Edward and York; then haply she will weep:
- Therefore present to her--as sometime Margaret
- Did to thy father, steep'd in Rutland's blood,--
- A handkerchief; which, say to her, did drain
- The purple sap from her sweet brother's body
- And bid her dry her weeping eyes therewith.
- If this inducement force her not to love,
- Send her a story of thy noble acts;
- Tell her thou madest away her uncle Clarence,
- Her uncle Rivers; yea, and, for her sake,
- Madest quick conveyance with her good aunt Anne.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Come, come, you mock me; this is not the way
- To win our daughter.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- There is no other way
- Unless thou couldst put on some other shape,
- And not be Richard that hath done all this.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Say that I did all this for love of her.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Nay, then indeed she cannot choose but hate thee,
- Having bought love with such a bloody spoil.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Look, what is done cannot be now amended:
- Men shall deal unadvisedly sometimes,
- Which after hours give leisure to repent.
- If I did take the kingdom from your sons,
- To make amends, Ill give it to your daughter.
- If I have kill'd the issue of your womb,
- To quicken your increase, I will beget
- Mine issue of your blood upon your daughter
- A grandam's name is little less in love
- Than is the doting title of a mother;
- They are as children but one step below,
- Even of your mettle, of your very blood;
- Of an one pain, save for a night of groans
- Endured of her, for whom you bid like sorrow.
- Your children were vexation to your youth,
- But mine shall be a comfort to your age.
- The loss you have is but a son being king,
- And by that loss your daughter is made queen.
- I cannot make you what amends I would,
- Therefore accept such kindness as I can.
- Dorset your son, that with a fearful soul
- Leads discontented steps in foreign soil,
- This fair alliance quickly shall call home
- To high promotions and great dignity:
- The king, that calls your beauteous daughter wife.
- Familiarly shall call thy Dorset brother;
- Again shall you be mother to a king,
- And all the ruins of distressful times
- Repair'd with double riches of content.
- What! we have many goodly days to see:
- The liquid drops of tears that you have shed
- Shall come again, transform'd to orient pearl,
- Advantaging their loan with interest
- Of ten times double gain of happiness.
- Go, then my mother, to thy daughter go
- Make bold her bashful years with your experience;
- Prepare her ears to hear a wooer's tale
- Put in her tender heart the aspiring flame
- Of golden sovereignty; acquaint the princess
- With the sweet silent hours of marriage joys
- And when this arm of mine hath chastised
- The petty rebel, dull-brain'd Buckingham,
- Bound with triumphant garlands will I come
- And lead thy daughter to a conqueror's bed;
- To whom I will retail my conquest won,
- And she shall be sole victress, Caesar's Caesar.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- What were I best to say? her father's brother
- Would be her lord? or shall I say, her uncle?
- Or, he that slew her brothers and her uncles?
- Under what title shall I woo for thee,
- That God, the law, my honour and her love,
- Can make seem pleasing to her tender years?
- KING RICHARD III:
- Infer fair England's peace by this alliance.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Which she shall purchase with still lasting war.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Say that the king, which may command, entreats.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- That at her hands which the king's King forbids.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Say, she shall be a high and mighty queen.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- To wail the tide, as her mother doth.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Say, I will love her everlastingly.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- But how long shall that title 'ever' last?
- KING RICHARD III:
- Sweetly in force unto her fair life's end.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- But how long fairly shall her sweet lie last?
- KING RICHARD III:
- So long as heaven and nature lengthens it.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- So long as hell and Richard likes of it.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Say, I, her sovereign, am her subject love.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- But she, your subject, loathes such sovereignty.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Be eloquent in my behalf to her.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- An honest tale speeds best being plainly told.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Then in plain terms tell her my loving tale.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Plain and not honest is too harsh a style.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Your reasons are too shallow and too quick.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- O no, my reasons are too deep and dead;
- Too deep and dead, poor infants, in their grave.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Harp not on that string, madam; that is past.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Harp on it still shall I till heart-strings break.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Now, by my George, my garter, and my crown,--
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Profaned, dishonour'd, and the third usurp'd.
- KING RICHARD III:
- I swear--
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- By nothing; for this is no oath:
- The George, profaned, hath lost his holy honour;
- The garter, blemish'd, pawn'd his knightly virtue;
- The crown, usurp'd, disgraced his kingly glory.
- if something thou wilt swear to be believed,
- Swear then by something that thou hast not wrong'd.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Now, by the world--
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- 'Tis full of thy foul wrongs.
- KING RICHARD III:
- My father's death--
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Thy life hath that dishonour'd.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Then, by myself--
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Thyself thyself misusest.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Why then, by God--
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- God's wrong is most of all.
- If thou hadst fear'd to break an oath by Him,
- The unity the king thy brother made
- Had not been broken, nor my brother slain:
- If thou hadst fear'd to break an oath by Him,
- The imperial metal, circling now thy brow,
- Had graced the tender temples of my child,
- And both the princes had been breathing here,
- Which now, two tender playfellows to dust,
- Thy broken faith hath made a prey for worms.
- What canst thou swear by now?
- KING RICHARD III:
- The time to come.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- That thou hast wronged in the time o'erpast;
- For I myself have many tears to wash
- Hereafter time, for time past wrong'd by thee.
- The children live, whose parents thou hast
- slaughter'd,
- Ungovern'd youth, to wail it in their age;
- The parents live, whose children thou hast butcher'd,
- Old wither'd plants, to wail it with their age.
- Swear not by time to come; for that thou hast
- Misused ere used, by time misused o'erpast.
- KING RICHARD III:
- As I intend to prosper and repent,
- So thrive I in my dangerous attempt
- Of hostile arms! myself myself confound!
- Heaven and fortune bar me happy hours!
- Day, yield me not thy light; nor, night, thy rest!
- Be opposite all planets of good luck
- To my proceedings, if, with pure heart's love,
- Immaculate devotion, holy thoughts,
- I tender not thy beauteous princely daughter!
- In her consists my happiness and thine;
- Without her, follows to this land and me,
- To thee, herself, and many a Christian soul,
- Death, desolation, ruin and decay:
- It cannot be avoided but by this;
- It will not be avoided but by this.
- Therefore, good mother,--I must can you so--
- Be the attorney of my love to her:
- Plead what I will be, not what I have been;
- Not my deserts, but what I will deserve:
- Urge the necessity and state of times,
- And be not peevish-fond in great designs.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Shall I be tempted of the devil thus?
- KING RICHARD III:
- Ay, if the devil tempt thee to do good.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Shall I forget myself to be myself?
- KING RICHARD III:
- Ay, if yourself's remembrance wrong yourself.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- But thou didst kill my children.
- KING RICHARD III:
- But in your daughter's womb I bury them:
- Where in that nest of spicery they shall breed
- Selves of themselves, to your recomforture.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Shall I go win my daughter to thy will?
- KING RICHARD III:
- And be a happy mother by the deed.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- I go. Write to me very shortly.
- And you shall understand from me her mind.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Bear her my true love's kiss; and so, farewell.
- Relenting fool, and shallow, changing woman!
- How now! what news?
- RATCLIFF:
- My gracious sovereign, on the western coast
- Rideth a puissant navy; to the shore
- Throng many doubtful hollow-hearted friends,
- Unarm'd, and unresolved to beat them back:
- 'Tis thought that Richmond is their admiral;
- And there they hull, expecting but the aid
- Of Buckingham to welcome them ashore.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Some light-foot friend post to the Duke of Norfolk:
- Ratcliff, thyself, or Catesby; where is he?
- CATESBY:
- Here, my lord.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Fly to the duke:
- Post thou to Salisbury
- When thou comest thither--
- Dull, unmindful villain,
- Why stand'st thou still, and go'st not to the duke?
- CATESBY:
- First, mighty sovereign, let me know your mind,
- What from your grace I shall deliver to him.
- KING RICHARD III:
- O, true, good Catesby: bid him levy straight
- The greatest strength and power he can make,
- And meet me presently at Salisbury.
- CATESBY:
- I go.
- RATCLIFF:
- What is't your highness' pleasure I shall do at
- Salisbury?
- KING RICHARD III:
- Why, what wouldst thou do there before I go?
- RATCLIFF:
- Your highness told me I should post before.
- KING RICHARD III:
- My mind is changed, sir, my mind is changed.
- How now, what news with you?
- STANLEY:
- None good, my lord, to please you with the hearing;
- Nor none so bad, but it may well be told.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Hoyday, a riddle! neither good nor bad!
- Why dost thou run so many mile about,
- When thou mayst tell thy tale a nearer way?
- Once more, what news?
- STANLEY:
- Richmond is on the seas.
- KING RICHARD III:
- There let him sink, and be the seas on him!
- White-liver'd runagate, what doth he there?
- STANLEY:
- I know not, mighty sovereign, but by guess.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Well, sir, as you guess, as you guess?
- STANLEY:
- Stirr'd up by Dorset, Buckingham, and Ely,
- He makes for England, there to claim the crown.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Is the chair empty? is the sword unsway'd?
- Is the king dead? the empire unpossess'd?
- What heir of York is there alive but we?
- And who is England's king but great York's heir?
- Then, tell me, what doth he upon the sea?
- STANLEY:
- Unless for that, my liege, I cannot guess.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Unless for that he comes to be your liege,
- You cannot guess wherefore the Welshman comes.
- Thou wilt revolt, and fly to him, I fear.
- STANLEY:
- No, mighty liege; therefore mistrust me not.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Where is thy power, then, to beat him back?
- Where are thy tenants and thy followers?
- Are they not now upon the western shore.
- Safe-conducting the rebels from their ships!
- STANLEY:
- No, my good lord, my friends are in the north.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Cold friends to Richard: what do they in the north,
- When they should serve their sovereign in the west?
- STANLEY:
- They have not been commanded, mighty sovereign:
- Please it your majesty to give me leave,
- I'll muster up my friends, and meet your grace
- Where and what time your majesty shall please.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Ay, ay. thou wouldst be gone to join with Richmond:
- I will not trust you, sir.
- STANLEY:
- Most mighty sovereign,
- You have no cause to hold my friendship doubtful:
- I never was nor never will be false.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Well,
- Go muster men; but, hear you, leave behind
- Your son, George Stanley: look your faith be firm.
- Or else his head's assurance is but frail.
- STANLEY:
- So deal with him as I prove true to you.
- Messenger:
- My gracious sovereign, now in Devonshire,
- As I by friends am well advertised,
- Sir Edward Courtney, and the haughty prelate
- Bishop of Exeter, his brother there,
- With many more confederates, are in arms.
- Second Messenger:
- My liege, in Kent the Guildfords are in arms;
- And every hour more competitors
- Flock to their aid, and still their power increaseth.
- Third Messenger:
- My lord, the army of the Duke of Buckingham--
- KING RICHARD III:
- Out on you, owls! nothing but songs of death?
- Take that, until thou bring me better news.
- Third Messenger:
- The news I have to tell your majesty
- Is, that by sudden floods and fall of waters,
- Buckingham's army is dispersed and scatter'd;
- And he himself wander'd away alone,
- No man knows whither.
- KING RICHARD III:
- I cry thee mercy:
- There is my purse to cure that blow of thine.
- Hath any well-advised friend proclaim'd
- Reward to him that brings the traitor in?
- Third Messenger:
- Such proclamation hath been made, my liege.
- Fourth Messenger:
- Sir Thomas Lovel and Lord Marquis Dorset,
- 'Tis said, my liege, in Yorkshire are in arms.
- Yet this good comfort bring I to your grace,
- The Breton navy is dispersed by tempest:
- Richmond, in Yorkshire, sent out a boat
- Unto the shore, to ask those on the banks
- If they were his assistants, yea or no;
- Who answer'd him, they came from Buckingham.
- Upon his party: he, mistrusting them,
- Hoisted sail and made away for Brittany.
- KING RICHARD III:
- March on, march on, since we are up in arms;
- If not to fight with foreign enemies,
- Yet to beat down these rebels here at home.
- CATESBY:
- My liege, the Duke of Buckingham is taken;
- That is the best news: that the Earl of Richmond
- Is with a mighty power landed at Milford,
- Is colder tidings, yet they must be told.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Away towards Salisbury! while we reason here,
- A royal battle might be won and lost
- Some one take order Buckingham be brought
- To Salisbury; the rest march on with me.
- DERBY:
- Sir Christopher, tell Richmond this from me:
- That in the sty of this most bloody boar
- My son George Stanley is frank'd up in hold:
- If I revolt, off goes young George's head;
- The fear of that withholds my present aid.
- But, tell me, where is princely Richmond now?
- CHRISTOPHER:
- At Pembroke, or at Harford-west, in Wales.
- DERBY:
- What men of name resort to him?
- CHRISTOPHER:
- Sir Walter Herbert, a renowned soldier;
- Sir Gilbert Talbot, Sir William Stanley;
- Oxford, redoubted Pembroke, Sir James Blunt,
- And Rice ap Thomas with a valiant crew;
- And many more of noble fame and worth:
- And towards London they do bend their course,
- If by the way they be not fought withal.
- DERBY:
- Return unto thy lord; commend me to him:
- Tell him the queen hath heartily consented
- He shall espouse Elizabeth her daughter.
- These letters will resolve him of my mind. Farewell.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Will not King Richard let me speak with him?
- Sheriff:
- No, my good lord; therefore be patient.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Hastings, and Edward's children, Rivers, Grey,
- Holy King Henry, and thy fair son Edward,
- Vaughan, and all that have miscarried
- By underhand corrupted foul injustice,
- If that your moody discontented souls
- Do through the clouds behold this present hour,
- Even for revenge mock my destruction!
- This is All-Souls' day, fellows, is it not?
- Sheriff:
- It is, my lord.
- BUCKINGHAM:
- Why, then All-Souls' day is my body's doomsday.
- This is the day that, in King Edward's time,
- I wish't might fall on me, when I was found
- False to his children or his wife's allies
- This is the day wherein I wish'd to fall
- By the false faith of him I trusted most;
- This, this All-Souls' day to my fearful soul
- Is the determined respite of my wrongs:
- That high All-Seer that I dallied with
- Hath turn'd my feigned prayer on my head
- And given in earnest what I begg'd in jest.
- Thus doth he force the swords of wicked men
- To turn their own points on their masters' bosoms:
- Now Margaret's curse is fallen upon my head;
- 'When he,' quoth she, 'shall split thy heart with sorrow,
- Remember Margaret was a prophetess.'
- Come, sirs, convey me to the block of shame;
- Wrong hath but wrong, and blame the due of blame.
- RICHMOND:
- Fellows in arms, and my most loving friends,
- Bruised underneath the yoke of tyranny,
- Thus far into the bowels of the land
- Have we march'd on without impediment;
- And here receive we from our father Stanley
- Lines of fair comfort and encouragement.
- The wretched, bloody, and usurping boar,
- That spoil'd your summer fields and fruitful vines,
- Swills your warm blood like wash, and makes his trough
- In your embowell'd bosoms, this foul swine
- Lies now even in the centre of this isle,
- Near to the town of Leicester, as we learn
- From Tamworth thither is but one day's march.
- In God's name, cheerly on, courageous friends,
- To reap the harvest of perpetual peace
- By this one bloody trial of sharp war.
- OXFORD:
- Every man's conscience is a thousand swords,
- To fight against that bloody homicide.
- HERBERT:
- I doubt not but his friends will fly to us.
- BLUNT:
- He hath no friends but who are friends for fear.
- Which in his greatest need will shrink from him.
- RICHMOND:
- All for our vantage. Then, in God's name, march:
- True hope is swift, and flies with swallow's wings:
- Kings it makes gods, and meaner creatures kings.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Here pitch our tents, even here in Bosworth field.
- My Lord of Surrey, why look you so sad?
- SURREY:
- My heart is ten times lighter than my looks.
- KING RICHARD III:
- My Lord of Norfolk,--
- NORFOLK:
- Here, most gracious liege.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Norfolk, we must have knocks; ha! must we not?
- NORFOLK:
- We must both give and take, my gracious lord.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Up with my tent there! here will I lie tonight;
- But where to-morrow? Well, all's one for that.
- Who hath descried the number of the foe?
- NORFOLK:
- Six or seven thousand is their utmost power.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Why, our battalion trebles that account:
- Besides, the king's name is a tower of strength,
- Which they upon the adverse party want.
- Up with my tent there! Valiant gentlemen,
- Let us survey the vantage of the field
- Call for some men of sound direction
- Let's want no discipline, make no delay,
- For, lords, to-morrow is a busy day.
- RICHMOND:
- The weary sun hath made a golden set,
- And by the bright track of his fiery car,
- Gives signal, of a goodly day to-morrow.
- Sir William Brandon, you shall bear my standard.
- Give me some ink and paper in my tent
- I'll draw the form and model of our battle,
- Limit each leader to his several charge,
- And part in just proportion our small strength.
- My Lord of Oxford, you, Sir William Brandon,
- And you, Sir Walter Herbert, stay with me.
- The Earl of Pembroke keeps his regiment:
- Good Captain Blunt, bear my good night to him
- And by the second hour in the morning
- Desire the earl to see me in my tent:
- Yet one thing more, good Blunt, before thou go'st,
- Where is Lord Stanley quarter'd, dost thou know?
- BLUNT:
- Unless I have mista'en his colours much,
- Which well I am assured I have not done,
- His regiment lies half a mile at least
- South from the mighty power of the king.
- RICHMOND:
- If without peril it be possible,
- Good Captain Blunt, bear my good-night to him,
- And give him from me this most needful scroll.
- BLUNT:
- Upon my life, my lord, I'll under-take it;
- And so, God give you quiet rest to-night!
- RICHMOND:
- Good night, good Captain Blunt. Come gentlemen,
- Let us consult upon to-morrow's business
- In to our tent; the air is raw and cold.
- KING RICHARD III:
- What is't o'clock?
- CATESBY:
- It's supper-time, my lord;
- It's nine o'clock.
- KING RICHARD III:
- I will not sup to-night.
- Give me some ink and paper.
- What, is my beaver easier than it was?
- And all my armour laid into my tent?
- CATESBY:
- If is, my liege; and all things are in readiness.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Good Norfolk, hie thee to thy charge;
- Use careful watch, choose trusty sentinels.
- NORFOLK:
- I go, my lord.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Stir with the lark to-morrow, gentle Norfolk.
- NORFOLK:
- I warrant you, my lord.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Catesby!
- CATESBY:
- My lord?
- KING RICHARD III:
- Send out a pursuivant at arms
- To Stanley's regiment; bid him bring his power
- Before sunrising, lest his son George fall
- Into the blind cave of eternal night.
- Fill me a bowl of wine. Give me a watch.
- Saddle white Surrey for the field to-morrow.
- Look that my staves be sound, and not too heavy.
- Ratcliff!
- RATCLIFF:
- My lord?
- KING RICHARD III:
- Saw'st thou the melancholy Lord Northumberland?
- RATCLIFF:
- Thomas the Earl of Surrey, and himself,
- Much about cock-shut time, from troop to troop
- Went through the army, cheering up the soldiers.
- KING RICHARD III:
- So, I am satisfied. Give me a bowl of wine:
- I have not that alacrity of spirit,
- Nor cheer of mind, that I was wont to have.
- Set it down. Is ink and paper ready?
- RATCLIFF:
- It is, my lord.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Bid my guard watch; leave me.
- Ratcliff, about the mid of night come to my tent
- And help to arm me. Leave me, I say.
- DERBY:
- Fortune and victory sit on thy helm!
- RICHMOND:
- All comfort that the dark night can afford
- Be to thy person, noble father-in-law!
- Tell me, how fares our loving mother?
- DERBY:
- I, by attorney, bless thee from thy mother
- Who prays continually for Richmond's good:
- So much for that. The silent hours steal on,
- And flaky darkness breaks within the east.
- In brief,--for so the season bids us be,--
- Prepare thy battle early in the morning,
- And put thy fortune to the arbitrement
- Of bloody strokes and mortal-staring war.
- I, as I may--that which I would I cannot,--
- With best advantage will deceive the time,
- And aid thee in this doubtful shock of arms:
- But on thy side I may not be too forward
- Lest, being seen, thy brother, tender George,
- Be executed in his father's sight.
- Farewell: the leisure and the fearful time
- Cuts off the ceremonious vows of love
- And ample interchange of sweet discourse,
- Which so long sunder'd friends should dwell upon:
- God give us leisure for these rites of love!
- Once more, adieu: be valiant, and speed well!
- RICHMOND:
- Good lords, conduct him to his regiment:
- I'll strive, with troubled thoughts, to take a nap,
- Lest leaden slumber peise me down to-morrow,
- When I should mount with wings of victory:
- Once more, good night, kind lords and gentlemen.
- O Thou, whose captain I account myself,
- Look on my forces with a gracious eye;
- Put in their hands thy bruising irons of wrath,
- That they may crush down with a heavy fall
- The usurping helmets of our adversaries!
- Make us thy ministers of chastisement,
- That we may praise thee in the victory!
- To thee I do commend my watchful soul,
- Ere I let fall the windows of mine eyes:
- Sleeping and waking, O, defend me still!
- Ghost of Prince Edward:
- Ghost of King Henry VI:
- Ghost of CLARENCE:
- Ghost of RIVERS:
- Ghost of GREY:
- Ghost of VAUGHAN:
- All:
- Ghost of HASTINGS:
- Ghosts of young Princes:
- Ghost of LADY ANNE:
- Ghost of BUCKINGHAM:
- KING RICHARD III:
- Give me another horse: bind up my wounds.
- Have mercy, Jesu!--Soft! I did but dream.
- O coward conscience, how dost thou afflict me!
- The lights burn blue. It is now dead midnight.
- Cold fearful drops stand on my trembling flesh.
- What do I fear? myself? there's none else by:
- Richard loves Richard; that is, I am I.
- Is there a murderer here? No. Yes, I am:
- Then fly. What, from myself? Great reason why:
- Lest I revenge. What, myself upon myself?
- Alack. I love myself. Wherefore? for any good
- That I myself have done unto myself?
- O, no! alas, I rather hate myself
- For hateful deeds committed by myself!
- I am a villain: yet I lie. I am not.
- Fool, of thyself speak well: fool, do not flatter.
- My conscience hath a thousand several tongues,
- And every tongue brings in a several tale,
- And every tale condemns me for a villain.
- Perjury, perjury, in the high'st degree
- Murder, stem murder, in the direst degree;
- All several sins, all used in each degree,
- Throng to the bar, crying all, Guilty! guilty!
- I shall despair. There is no creature loves me;
- And if I die, no soul shall pity me:
- Nay, wherefore should they, since that I myself
- Find in myself no pity to myself?
- Methought the souls of all that I had murder'd
- Came to my tent; and every one did threat
- To-morrow's vengeance on the head of Richard.
- RATCLIFF:
- My lord!
- KING RICHARD III:
- 'Zounds! who is there?
- RATCLIFF:
- Ratcliff, my lord; 'tis I. The early village-cock
- Hath twice done salutation to the morn;
- Your friends are up, and buckle on their armour.
- KING RICHARD III:
- O Ratcliff, I have dream'd a fearful dream!
- What thinkest thou, will our friends prove all true?
- RATCLIFF:
- No doubt, my lord.
- KING RICHARD III:
- O Ratcliff, I fear, I fear,--
- RATCLIFF:
- Nay, good my lord, be not afraid of shadows.
- KING RICHARD III:
- By the apostle Paul, shadows to-night
- Have struck more terror to the soul of Richard
- Than can the substance of ten thousand soldiers
- Armed in proof, and led by shallow Richmond.
- It is not yet near day. Come, go with me;
- Under our tents I'll play the eaves-dropper,
- To see if any mean to shrink from me.
- LORDS:
- Good morrow, Richmond!
- RICHMOND:
- Cry mercy, lords and watchful gentlemen,
- That you have ta'en a tardy sluggard here.
- LORDS:
- How have you slept, my lord?
- RICHMOND:
- The sweetest sleep, and fairest-boding dreams
- That ever enter'd in a drowsy head,
- Have I since your departure had, my lords.
- Methought their souls, whose bodies Richard murder'd,
- Came to my tent, and cried on victory:
- I promise you, my soul is very jocund
- In the remembrance of so fair a dream.
- How far into the morning is it, lords?
- LORDS:
- Upon the stroke of four.
- RICHMOND:
- Why, then 'tis time to arm and give direction.
- More than I have said, loving countrymen,
- The leisure and enforcement of the time
- Forbids to dwell upon: yet remember this,
- God and our good cause fight upon our side;
- The prayers of holy saints and wronged souls,
- Like high-rear'd bulwarks, stand before our faces;
- Richard except, those whom we fight against
- Had rather have us win than him they follow:
- For what is he they follow? truly, gentlemen,
- A bloody tyrant and a homicide;
- One raised in blood, and one in blood establish'd;
- One that made means to come by what he hath,
- And slaughter'd those that were the means to help him;
- Abase foul stone, made precious by the foil
- Of England's chair, where he is falsely set;
- One that hath ever been God's enemy:
- Then, if you fight against God's enemy,
- God will in justice ward you as his soldiers;
- If you do sweat to put a tyrant down,
- You sleep in peace, the tyrant being slain;
- If you do fight against your country's foes,
- Your country's fat shall pay your pains the hire;
- If you do fight in safeguard of your wives,
- Your wives shall welcome home the conquerors;
- If you do free your children from the sword,
- Your children's children quit it in your age.
- Then, in the name of God and all these rights,
- Advance your standards, draw your willing swords.
- For me, the ransom of my bold attempt
- Shall be this cold corpse on the earth's cold face;
- But if I thrive, the gain of my attempt
- The least of you shall share his part thereof.
- Sound drums and trumpets boldly and cheerfully;
- God and Saint George! Richmond and victory!
- KING RICHARD III:
- What said Northumberland as touching Richmond?
- RATCLIFF:
- That he was never trained up in arms.
- KING RICHARD III:
- He said the truth: and what said Surrey then?
- RATCLIFF:
- He smiled and said 'The better for our purpose.'
- KING RICHARD III:
- He was in the right; and so indeed it is.
- Ten the clock there. Give me a calendar.
- Who saw the sun to-day?
- RATCLIFF:
- Not I, my lord.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Then he disdains to shine; for by the book
- He should have braved the east an hour ago
- A black day will it be to somebody. Ratcliff!
- RATCLIFF:
- My lord?
- KING RICHARD III:
- The sun will not be seen to-day;
- The sky doth frown and lour upon our army.
- I would these dewy tears were from the ground.
- Not shine to-day! Why, what is that to me
- More than to Richmond? for the selfsame heaven
- That frowns on me looks sadly upon him.
- NORFOLK:
- Arm, arm, my lord; the foe vaunts in the field.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Come, bustle, bustle; caparison my horse.
- Call up Lord Stanley, bid him bring his power:
- I will lead forth my soldiers to the plain,
- And thus my battle shall be ordered:
- My foreward shall be drawn out all in length,
- Consisting equally of horse and foot;
- Our archers shall be placed in the midst
- John Duke of Norfolk, Thomas Earl of Surrey,
- Shall have the leading of this foot and horse.
- They thus directed, we will follow
- In the main battle, whose puissance on either side
- Shall be well winged with our chiefest horse.
- This, and Saint George to boot! What think'st thou, Norfolk?
- NORFOLK:
- A good direction, warlike sovereign.
- This found I on my tent this morning.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Messenger:
- My lord, he doth deny to come.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Off with his son George's head!
- NORFOLK:
- My lord, the enemy is past the marsh
- After the battle let George Stanley die.
- KING RICHARD III:
- A thousand hearts are great within my bosom:
- Advance our standards, set upon our foes
- Our ancient word of courage, fair Saint George,
- Inspire us with the spleen of fiery dragons!
- Upon them! victory sits on our helms.
- CATESBY:
- Rescue, my Lord of Norfolk, rescue, rescue!
- The king enacts more wonders than a man,
- Daring an opposite to every danger:
- His horse is slain, and all on foot he fights,
- Seeking for Richmond in the throat of death.
- Rescue, fair lord, or else the day is lost!
- KING RICHARD III:
- A horse! a horse! my kingdom for a horse!
- CATESBY:
- Withdraw, my lord; I'll help you to a horse.
- KING RICHARD III:
- Slave, I have set my life upon a cast,
- And I will stand the hazard of the die:
- I think there be six Richmonds in the field;
- Five have I slain to-day instead of him.
- A horse! a horse! my kingdom for a horse!
- RICHMOND:
- God and your arms be praised, victorious friends,
- The day is ours, the bloody dog is dead.
- DERBY:
- Courageous Richmond, well hast thou acquit thee.
- Lo, here, this long-usurped royalty
- From the dead temples of this bloody wretch
- Have I pluck'd off, to grace thy brows withal:
- Wear it, enjoy it, and make much of it.
- RICHMOND:
- Great God of heaven, say Amen to all!
- But, tell me, is young George Stanley living?
- DERBY:
- He is, my lord, and safe in Leicester town;
- Whither, if it please you, we may now withdraw us.
- RICHMOND:
- What men of name are slain on either side?
- DERBY:
- John Duke of Norfolk, Walter Lord Ferrers,
- Sir Robert Brakenbury, and Sir William Brandon.
- RICHMOND:
- Inter their bodies as becomes their births:
- Proclaim a pardon to the soldiers fled
- That in submission will return to us:
- And then, as we have ta'en the sacrament,
- We will unite the white rose and the red:
- Smile heaven upon this fair conjunction,
- That long have frown'd upon their enmity!
- What traitor hears me, and says not amen?
- England hath long been mad, and scarr'd herself;
- The brother blindly shed the brother's blood,
- The father rashly slaughter'd his own son,
- The son, compell'd, been butcher to the sire:
- All this divided York and Lancaster,
- Divided in their dire division,
- O, now, let Richmond and Elizabeth,
- The true succeeders of each royal house,
- By God's fair ordinance conjoin together!
- And let their heirs, God, if thy will be so.
- Enrich the time to come with smooth-faced peace,
- With smiling plenty and fair prosperous days!
- Abate the edge of traitors, gracious Lord,
- That would reduce these bloody days again,
- And make poor England weep in streams of blood!
- Let them not live to taste this land's increase
- That would with treason wound this fair land's peace!
- Now civil wounds are stopp'd, peace lives again:
- That she may long live here, God say amen!
- KING RICHARD II:
- Old John of Gaunt, time-honour'd Lancaster,
- Hast thou, according to thy oath and band,
- Brought hither Henry Hereford thy bold son,
- Here to make good the boisterous late appeal,
- Which then our leisure would not let us hear,
- Against the Duke of Norfolk, Thomas Mowbray?
- JOHN OF GAUNT:
- I have, my liege.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Tell me, moreover, hast thou sounded him,
- If he appeal the duke on ancient malice;
- Or worthily, as a good subject should,
- On some known ground of treachery in him?
- JOHN OF GAUNT:
- As near as I could sift him on that argument,
- On some apparent danger seen in him
- Aim'd at your highness, no inveterate malice.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Then call them to our presence; face to face,
- And frowning brow to brow, ourselves will hear
- The accuser and the accused freely speak:
- High-stomach'd are they both, and full of ire,
- In rage deaf as the sea, hasty as fire.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Many years of happy days befal
- My gracious sovereign, my most loving liege!
- THOMAS MOWBRAY:
- Each day still better other's happiness;
- Until the heavens, envying earth's good hap,
- Add an immortal title to your crown!
- KING RICHARD II:
- We thank you both: yet one but flatters us,
- As well appeareth by the cause you come;
- Namely to appeal each other of high treason.
- Cousin of Hereford, what dost thou object
- Against the Duke of Norfolk, Thomas Mowbray?
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- First, heaven be the record to my speech!
- In the devotion of a subject's love,
- Tendering the precious safety of my prince,
- And free from other misbegotten hate,
- Come I appellant to this princely presence.
- Now, Thomas Mowbray, do I turn to thee,
- And mark my greeting well; for what I speak
- My body shall make good upon this earth,
- Or my divine soul answer it in heaven.
- Thou art a traitor and a miscreant,
- Too good to be so and too bad to live,
- Since the more fair and crystal is the sky,
- The uglier seem the clouds that in it fly.
- Once more, the more to aggravate the note,
- With a foul traitor's name stuff I thy throat;
- And wish, so please my sovereign, ere I move,
- What my tongue speaks my right drawn sword may prove.
- THOMAS MOWBRAY:
- Let not my cold words here accuse my zeal:
- 'Tis not the trial of a woman's war,
- The bitter clamour of two eager tongues,
- Can arbitrate this cause betwixt us twain;
- The blood is hot that must be cool'd for this:
- Yet can I not of such tame patience boast
- As to be hush'd and nought at all to say:
- First, the fair reverence of your highness curbs me
- From giving reins and spurs to my free speech;
- Which else would post until it had return'd
- These terms of treason doubled down his throat.
- Setting aside his high blood's royalty,
- And let him be no kinsman to my liege,
- I do defy him, and I spit at him;
- Call him a slanderous coward and a villain:
- Which to maintain I would allow him odds,
- And meet him, were I tied to run afoot
- Even to the frozen ridges of the Alps,
- Or any other ground inhabitable,
- Where ever Englishman durst set his foot.
- Mean time let this defend my loyalty,
- By all my hopes, most falsely doth he lie.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Pale trembling coward, there I throw my gage,
- Disclaiming here the kindred of the king,
- And lay aside my high blood's royalty,
- Which fear, not reverence, makes thee to except.
- If guilty dread have left thee so much strength
- As to take up mine honour's pawn, then stoop:
- By that and all the rites of knighthood else,
- Will I make good against thee, arm to arm,
- What I have spoke, or thou canst worse devise.
- THOMAS MOWBRAY:
- I take it up; and by that sword I swear
- Which gently laid my knighthood on my shoulder,
- I'll answer thee in any fair degree,
- Or chivalrous design of knightly trial:
- And when I mount, alive may I not light,
- If I be traitor or unjustly fight!
- KING RICHARD II:
- What doth our cousin lay to Mowbray's charge?
- It must be great that can inherit us
- So much as of a thought of ill in him.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Look, what I speak, my life shall prove it true;
- That Mowbray hath received eight thousand nobles
- In name of lendings for your highness' soldiers,
- The which he hath detain'd for lewd employments,
- Like a false traitor and injurious villain.
- Besides I say and will in battle prove,
- Or here or elsewhere to the furthest verge
- That ever was survey'd by English eye,
- That all the treasons for these eighteen years
- Complotted and contrived in this land
- Fetch from false Mowbray their first head and spring.
- Further I say and further will maintain
- Upon his bad life to make all this good,
- That he did plot the Duke of Gloucester's death,
- Suggest his soon-believing adversaries,
- And consequently, like a traitor coward,
- Sluiced out his innocent soul through streams of blood:
- Which blood, like sacrificing Abel's, cries,
- Even from the tongueless caverns of the earth,
- To me for justice and rough chastisement;
- And, by the glorious worth of my descent,
- This arm shall do it, or this life be spent.
- KING RICHARD II:
- How high a pitch his resolution soars!
- Thomas of Norfolk, what say'st thou to this?
- THOMAS MOWBRAY:
- O, let my sovereign turn away his face
- And bid his ears a little while be deaf,
- Till I have told this slander of his blood,
- How God and good men hate so foul a liar.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Mowbray, impartial are our eyes and ears:
- Were he my brother, nay, my kingdom's heir,
- As he is but my father's brother's son,
- Now, by my sceptre's awe, I make a vow,
- Such neighbour nearness to our sacred blood
- Should nothing privilege him, nor partialize
- The unstooping firmness of my upright soul:
- He is our subject, Mowbray; so art thou:
- Free speech and fearless I to thee allow.
- THOMAS MOWBRAY:
- Then, Bolingbroke, as low as to thy heart,
- Through the false passage of thy throat, thou liest.
- Three parts of that receipt I had for Calais
- Disbursed I duly to his highness' soldiers;
- The other part reserved I by consent,
- For that my sovereign liege was in my debt
- Upon remainder of a dear account,
- Since last I went to France to fetch his queen:
- Now swallow down that lie. For Gloucester's death,
- I slew him not; but to my own disgrace
- Neglected my sworn duty in that case.
- For you, my noble Lord of Lancaster,
- The honourable father to my foe
- Once did I lay an ambush for your life,
- A trespass that doth vex my grieved soul
- But ere I last received the sacrament
- I did confess it, and exactly begg'd
- Your grace's pardon, and I hope I had it.
- This is my fault: as for the rest appeall'd,
- It issues from the rancour of a villain,
- A recreant and most degenerate traitor
- Which in myself I boldly will defend;
- And interchangeably hurl down my gage
- Upon this overweening traitor's foot,
- To prove myself a loyal gentleman
- Even in the best blood chamber'd in his bosom.
- In haste whereof, most heartily I pray
- Your highness to assign our trial day.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Wrath-kindled gentlemen, be ruled by me;
- Let's purge this choler without letting blood:
- This we prescribe, though no physician;
- Deep malice makes too deep incision;
- Forget, forgive; conclude and be agreed;
- Our doctors say this is no month to bleed.
- Good uncle, let this end where it begun;
- We'll calm the Duke of Norfolk, you your son.
- JOHN OF GAUNT:
- To be a make-peace shall become my age:
- Throw down, my son, the Duke of Norfolk's gage.
- KING RICHARD II:
- And, Norfolk, throw down his.
- JOHN OF GAUNT:
- When, Harry, when?
- Obedience bids I should not bid again.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Norfolk, throw down, we bid; there is no boot.
- THOMAS MOWBRAY:
- Myself I throw, dread sovereign, at thy foot.
- My life thou shalt command, but not my shame:
- The one my duty owes; but my fair name,
- Despite of death that lives upon my grave,
- To dark dishonour's use thou shalt not have.
- I am disgraced, impeach'd and baffled here,
- Pierced to the soul with slander's venom'd spear,
- The which no balm can cure but his heart-blood
- Which breathed this poison.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Rage must be withstood:
- Give me his gage: lions make leopards tame.
- THOMAS MOWBRAY:
- Yea, but not change his spots: take but my shame.
- And I resign my gage. My dear dear lord,
- The purest treasure mortal times afford
- Is spotless reputation: that away,
- Men are but gilded loam or painted clay.
- A jewel in a ten-times-barr'd-up chest
- Is a bold spirit in a loyal breast.
- Mine honour is my life; both grow in one:
- Take honour from me, and my life is done:
- Then, dear my liege, mine honour let me try;
- In that I live and for that will I die.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Cousin, throw up your gage; do you begin.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- O, God defend my soul from such deep sin!
- Shall I seem crest-fall'n in my father's sight?
- Or with pale beggar-fear impeach my height
- Before this out-dared dastard? Ere my tongue
- Shall wound my honour with such feeble wrong,
- Or sound so base a parle, my teeth shall tear
- The slavish motive of recanting fear,
- And spit it bleeding in his high disgrace,
- Where shame doth harbour, even in Mowbray's face.
- KING RICHARD II:
- We were not born to sue, but to command;
- Which since we cannot do to make you friends,
- Be ready, as your lives shall answer it,
- At Coventry, upon Saint Lambert's day:
- There shall your swords and lances arbitrate
- The swelling difference of your settled hate:
- Since we can not atone you, we shall see
- Justice design the victor's chivalry.
- Lord marshal, command our officers at arms
- Be ready to direct these home alarms.
- JOHN OF GAUNT:
- Alas, the part I had in Woodstock's blood
- Doth more solicit me than your exclaims,
- To stir against the butchers of his life!
- But since correction lieth in those hands
- Which made the fault that we cannot correct,
- Put we our quarrel to the will of heaven;
- Who, when they see the hours ripe on earth,
- Will rain hot vengeance on offenders' heads.
- DUCHESS:
- Finds brotherhood in thee no sharper spur?
- Hath love in thy old blood no living fire?
- Edward's seven sons, whereof thyself art one,
- Were as seven vials of his sacred blood,
- Or seven fair branches springing from one root:
- Some of those seven are dried by nature's course,
- Some of those branches by the Destinies cut;
- But Thomas, my dear lord, my life, my Gloucester,
- One vial full of Edward's sacred blood,
- One flourishing branch of his most royal root,
- Is crack'd, and all the precious liquor spilt,
- Is hack'd down, and his summer leaves all faded,
- By envy's hand and murder's bloody axe.
- Ah, Gaunt, his blood was thine! that bed, that womb,
- That metal, that self-mould, that fashion'd thee
- Made him a man; and though thou livest and breathest,
- Yet art thou slain in him: thou dost consent
- In some large measure to thy father's death,
- In that thou seest thy wretched brother die,
- Who was the model of thy father's life.
- Call it not patience, Gaunt; it is despair:
- In suffering thus thy brother to be slaughter'd,
- Thou showest the naked pathway to thy life,
- Teaching stern murder how to butcher thee:
- That which in mean men we intitle patience
- Is pale cold cowardice in noble breasts.
- What shall I say? to safeguard thine own life,
- The best way is to venge my Gloucester's death.
- JOHN OF GAUNT:
- God's is the quarrel; for God's substitute,
- His deputy anointed in His sight,
- Hath caused his death: the which if wrongfully,
- Let heaven revenge; for I may never lift
- An angry arm against His minister.
- DUCHESS:
- Where then, alas, may I complain myself?
- JOHN OF GAUNT:
- To God, the widow's champion and defence.
- DUCHESS:
- Why, then, I will. Farewell, old Gaunt.
- Thou goest to Coventry, there to behold
- Our cousin Hereford and fell Mowbray fight:
- O, sit my husband's wrongs on Hereford's spear,
- That it may enter butcher Mowbray's breast!
- Or, if misfortune miss the first career,
- Be Mowbray's sins so heavy in his bosom,
- They may break his foaming courser's back,
- And throw the rider headlong in the lists,
- A caitiff recreant to my cousin Hereford!
- Farewell, old Gaunt: thy sometimes brother's wife
- With her companion grief must end her life.
- JOHN OF GAUNT:
- Sister, farewell; I must to Coventry:
- As much good stay with thee as go with me!
- DUCHESS:
- Yet one word more: grief boundeth where it falls,
- Not with the empty hollowness, but weight:
- I take my leave before I have begun,
- For sorrow ends not when it seemeth done.
- Commend me to thy brother, Edmund York.
- Lo, this is all:--nay, yet depart not so;
- Though this be all, do not so quickly go;
- I shall remember more. Bid him--ah, what?--
- With all good speed at Plashy visit me.
- Alack, and what shall good old York there see
- But empty lodgings and unfurnish'd walls,
- Unpeopled offices, untrodden stones?
- And what hear there for welcome but my groans?
- Therefore commend me; let him not come there,
- To seek out sorrow that dwells every where.
- Desolate, desolate, will I hence and die:
- The last leave of thee takes my weeping eye.
- Lord Marshal:
- My Lord Aumerle, is Harry Hereford arm'd?
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Yea, at all points; and longs to enter in.
- Lord Marshal:
- The Duke of Norfolk, sprightfully and bold,
- Stays but the summons of the appellant's trumpet.
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Why, then, the champions are prepared, and stay
- For nothing but his majesty's approach.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Marshal, demand of yonder champion
- The cause of his arrival here in arms:
- Ask him his name and orderly proceed
- To swear him in the justice of his cause.
- Lord Marshal:
- In God's name and the king's, say who thou art
- And why thou comest thus knightly clad in arms,
- Against what man thou comest, and what thy quarrel:
- Speak truly, on thy knighthood and thy oath;
- As so defend thee heaven and thy valour!
- THOMAS MOWBRAY:
- My name is Thomas Mowbray, Duke of Norfolk;
- Who hither come engaged by my oath--
- Which God defend a knight should violate!--
- Both to defend my loyalty and truth
- To God, my king and my succeeding issue,
- Against the Duke of Hereford that appeals me
- And, by the grace of God and this mine arm,
- To prove him, in defending of myself,
- A traitor to my God, my king, and me:
- And as I truly fight, defend me heaven!
- KING RICHARD II:
- Marshal, ask yonder knight in arms,
- Both who he is and why he cometh hither
- Thus plated in habiliments of war,
- And formally, according to our law,
- Depose him in the justice of his cause.
- Lord Marshal:
- What is thy name? and wherefore comest thou hither,
- Before King Richard in his royal lists?
- Against whom comest thou? and what's thy quarrel?
- Speak like a true knight, so defend thee heaven!
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Harry of Hereford, Lancaster and Derby
- Am I; who ready here do stand in arms,
- To prove, by God's grace and my body's valour,
- In lists, on Thomas Mowbray, Duke of Norfolk,
- That he is a traitor, foul and dangerous,
- To God of heaven, King Richard and to me;
- And as I truly fight, defend me heaven!
- Lord Marshal:
- On pain of death, no person be so bold
- Or daring-hardy as to touch the lists,
- Except the marshal and such officers
- Appointed to direct these fair designs.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Lord marshal, let me kiss my sovereign's hand,
- And bow my knee before his majesty:
- For Mowbray and myself are like two men
- That vow a long and weary pilgrimage;
- Then let us take a ceremonious leave
- And loving farewell of our several friends.
- Lord Marshal:
- The appellant in all duty greets your highness,
- And craves to kiss your hand and take his leave.
- KING RICHARD II:
- We will descend and fold him in our arms.
- Cousin of Hereford, as thy cause is right,
- So be thy fortune in this royal fight!
- Farewell, my blood; which if to-day thou shed,
- Lament we may, but not revenge thee dead.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- O let no noble eye profane a tear
- For me, if I be gored with Mowbray's spear:
- As confident as is the falcon's flight
- Against a bird, do I with Mowbray fight.
- My loving lord, I take my leave of you;
- Of you, my noble cousin, Lord Aumerle;
- Not sick, although I have to do with death,
- But lusty, young, and cheerly drawing breath.
- Lo, as at English feasts, so I regreet
- The daintiest last, to make the end most sweet:
- O thou, the earthly author of my blood,
- Whose youthful spirit, in me regenerate,
- Doth with a twofold vigour lift me up
- To reach at victory above my head,
- Add proof unto mine armour with thy prayers;
- And with thy blessings steel my lance's point,
- That it may enter Mowbray's waxen coat,
- And furbish new the name of John a Gaunt,
- Even in the lusty havior of his son.
- JOHN OF GAUNT:
- God in thy good cause make thee prosperous!
- Be swift like lightning in the execution;
- And let thy blows, doubly redoubled,
- Fall like amazing thunder on the casque
- Of thy adverse pernicious enemy:
- Rouse up thy youthful blood, be valiant and live.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Mine innocency and Saint George to thrive!
- THOMAS MOWBRAY:
- However God or fortune cast my lot,
- There lives or dies, true to King Richard's throne,
- A loyal, just and upright gentleman:
- Never did captive with a freer heart
- Cast off his chains of bondage and embrace
- His golden uncontroll'd enfranchisement,
- More than my dancing soul doth celebrate
- This feast of battle with mine adversary.
- Most mighty liege, and my companion peers,
- Take from my mouth the wish of happy years:
- As gentle and as jocund as to jest
- Go I to fight: truth hath a quiet breast.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Farewell, my lord: securely I espy
- Virtue with valour couched in thine eye.
- Order the trial, marshal, and begin.
- Lord Marshal:
- Harry of Hereford, Lancaster and Derby,
- Receive thy lance; and God defend the right!
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Strong as a tower in hope, I cry amen.
- Lord Marshal:
- Go bear this lance to Thomas, Duke of Norfolk.
- First Herald:
- Harry of Hereford, Lancaster and Derby,
- Stands here for God, his sovereign and himself,
- On pain to be found false and recreant,
- To prove the Duke of Norfolk, Thomas Mowbray,
- A traitor to his God, his king and him;
- And dares him to set forward to the fight.
- Second Herald:
- Here standeth Thomas Mowbray, Duke of Norfolk,
- On pain to be found false and recreant,
- Both to defend himself and to approve
- Henry of Hereford, Lancaster, and Derby,
- To God, his sovereign and to him disloyal;
- Courageously and with a free desire
- Attending but the signal to begin.
- Lord Marshal:
- Sound, trumpets; and set forward, combatants.
- Stay, the king hath thrown his warder down.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Let them lay by their helmets and their spears,
- And both return back to their chairs again:
- Withdraw with us: and let the trumpets sound
- While we return these dukes what we decree.
- Draw near,
- And list what with our council we have done.
- For that our kingdom's earth should not be soil'd
- With that dear blood which it hath fostered;
- And for our eyes do hate the dire aspect
- Of civil wounds plough'd up with neighbours' sword;
- And for we think the eagle-winged pride
- Of sky-aspiring and ambitious thoughts,
- With rival-hating envy, set on you
- To wake our peace, which in our country's cradle
- Draws the sweet infant breath of gentle sleep;
- Which so roused up with boisterous untuned drums,
- With harsh resounding trumpets' dreadful bray,
- And grating shock of wrathful iron arms,
- Might from our quiet confines fright fair peace
- And make us wade even in our kindred's blood,
- Therefore, we banish you our territories:
- You, cousin Hereford, upon pain of life,
- Till twice five summers have enrich'd our fields
- Shall not regreet our fair dominions,
- But tread the stranger paths of banishment.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Your will be done: this must my comfort be,
- Sun that warms you here shall shine on me;
- And those his golden beams to you here lent
- Shall point on me and gild my banishment.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Norfolk, for thee remains a heavier doom,
- Which I with some unwillingness pronounce:
- The sly slow hours shall not determinate
- The dateless limit of thy dear exile;
- The hopeless word of 'never to return'
- Breathe I against thee, upon pain of life.
- THOMAS MOWBRAY:
- A heavy sentence, my most sovereign liege,
- And all unlook'd for from your highness' mouth:
- A dearer merit, not so deep a maim
- As to be cast forth in the common air,
- Have I deserved at your highness' hands.
- The language I have learn'd these forty years,
- My native English, now I must forego:
- And now my tongue's use is to me no more
- Than an unstringed viol or a harp,
- Or like a cunning instrument cased up,
- Or, being open, put into his hands
- That knows no touch to tune the harmony:
- Within my mouth you have engaol'd my tongue,
- Doubly portcullis'd with my teeth and lips;
- And dull unfeeling barren ignorance
- Is made my gaoler to attend on me.
- I am too old to fawn upon a nurse,
- Too far in years to be a pupil now:
- What is thy sentence then but speechless death,
- Which robs my tongue from breathing native breath?
- KING RICHARD II:
- It boots thee not to be compassionate:
- After our sentence plaining comes too late.
- THOMAS MOWBRAY:
- Then thus I turn me from my country's light,
- To dwell in solemn shades of endless night.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Return again, and take an oath with thee.
- Lay on our royal sword your banish'd hands;
- Swear by the duty that you owe to God--
- Our part therein we banish with yourselves--
- To keep the oath that we administer:
- You never shall, so help you truth and God!
- Embrace each other's love in banishment;
- Nor never look upon each other's face;
- Nor never write, regreet, nor reconcile
- This louring tempest of your home-bred hate;
- Nor never by advised purpose meet
- To plot, contrive, or complot any ill
- 'Gainst us, our state, our subjects, or our land.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- I swear.
- THOMAS MOWBRAY:
- And I, to keep all this.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Norfolk, so far as to mine enemy:--
- By this time, had the king permitted us,
- One of our souls had wander'd in the air.
- Banish'd this frail sepulchre of our flesh,
- As now our flesh is banish'd from this land:
- Confess thy treasons ere thou fly the realm;
- Since thou hast far to go, bear not along
- The clogging burthen of a guilty soul.
- THOMAS MOWBRAY:
- No, Bolingbroke: if ever I were traitor,
- My name be blotted from the book of life,
- And I from heaven banish'd as from hence!
- But what thou art, God, thou, and I do know;
- And all too soon, I fear, the king shall rue.
- Farewell, my liege. Now no way can I stray;
- Save back to England, all the world's my way.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Uncle, even in the glasses of thine eyes
- I see thy grieved heart: thy sad aspect
- Hath from the number of his banish'd years
- Pluck'd four away.
- Six frozen winter spent,
- Return with welcome home from banishment.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- How long a time lies in one little word!
- Four lagging winters and four wanton springs
- End in a word: such is the breath of kings.
- JOHN OF GAUNT:
- I thank my liege, that in regard of me
- He shortens four years of my son's exile:
- But little vantage shall I reap thereby;
- For, ere the six years that he hath to spend
- Can change their moons and bring their times about
- My oil-dried lamp and time-bewasted light
- Shall be extinct with age and endless night;
- My inch of taper will be burnt and done,
- And blindfold death not let me see my son.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Why uncle, thou hast many years to live.
- JOHN OF GAUNT:
- But not a minute, king, that thou canst give:
- Shorten my days thou canst with sullen sorrow,
- And pluck nights from me, but not lend a morrow;
- Thou canst help time to furrow me with age,
- But stop no wrinkle in his pilgrimage;
- Thy word is current with him for my death,
- But dead, thy kingdom cannot buy my breath.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Thy son is banish'd upon good advice,
- Whereto thy tongue a party-verdict gave:
- Why at our justice seem'st thou then to lour?
- JOHN OF GAUNT:
- Things sweet to taste prove in digestion sour.
- You urged me as a judge; but I had rather
- You would have bid me argue like a father.
- O, had it been a stranger, not my child,
- To smooth his fault I should have been more mild:
- A partial slander sought I to avoid,
- And in the sentence my own life destroy'd.
- Alas, I look'd when some of you should say,
- I was too strict to make mine own away;
- But you gave leave to my unwilling tongue
- Against my will to do myself this wrong.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Cousin, farewell; and, uncle, bid him so:
- Six years we banish him, and he shall go.
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Cousin, farewell: what presence must not know,
- From where you do remain let paper show.
- Lord Marshal:
- My lord, no leave take I; for I will ride,
- As far as land will let me, by your side.
- JOHN OF GAUNT:
- O, to what purpose dost thou hoard thy words,
- That thou return'st no greeting to thy friends?
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- I have too few to take my leave of you,
- When the tongue's office should be prodigal
- To breathe the abundant dolour of the heart.
- JOHN OF GAUNT:
- Thy grief is but thy absence for a time.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Joy absent, grief is present for that time.
- JOHN OF GAUNT:
- What is six winters? they are quickly gone.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- To men in joy; but grief makes one hour ten.
- JOHN OF GAUNT:
- Call it a travel that thou takest for pleasure.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- My heart will sigh when I miscall it so,
- Which finds it an inforced pilgrimage.
- JOHN OF GAUNT:
- The sullen passage of thy weary steps
- Esteem as foil wherein thou art to set
- The precious jewel of thy home return.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Nay, rather, every tedious stride I make
- Will but remember me what a deal of world
- I wander from the jewels that I love.
- Must I not serve a long apprenticehood
- To foreign passages, and in the end,
- Having my freedom, boast of nothing else
- But that I was a journeyman to grief?
- JOHN OF GAUNT:
- All places that the eye of heaven visits
- Are to a wise man ports and happy havens.
- Teach thy necessity to reason thus;
- There is no virtue like necessity.
- Think not the king did banish thee,
- But thou the king. Woe doth the heavier sit,
- Where it perceives it is but faintly borne.
- Go, say I sent thee forth to purchase honour
- And not the king exiled thee; or suppose
- Devouring pestilence hangs in our air
- And thou art flying to a fresher clime:
- Look, what thy soul holds dear, imagine it
- To lie that way thou go'st, not whence thou comest:
- Suppose the singing birds musicians,
- The grass whereon thou tread'st the presence strew'd,
- The flowers fair ladies, and thy steps no more
- Than a delightful measure or a dance;
- For gnarling sorrow hath less power to bite
- The man that mocks at it and sets it light.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- O, who can hold a fire in his hand
- By thinking on the frosty Caucasus?
- Or cloy the hungry edge of appetite
- By bare imagination of a feast?
- Or wallow naked in December snow
- By thinking on fantastic summer's heat?
- O, no! the apprehension of the good
- Gives but the greater feeling to the worse:
- Fell sorrow's tooth doth never rankle more
- Than when he bites, but lanceth not the sore.
- JOHN OF GAUNT:
- Come, come, my son, I'll bring thee on thy way:
- Had I thy youth and cause, I would not stay.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Then, England's ground, farewell; sweet soil, adieu;
- My mother, and my nurse, that bears me yet!
- Where'er I wander, boast of this I can,
- Though banish'd, yet a trueborn Englishman.
- KING RICHARD II:
- We did observe. Cousin Aumerle,
- How far brought you high Hereford on his way?
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- I brought high Hereford, if you call him so,
- But to the next highway, and there I left him.
- KING RICHARD II:
- And say, what store of parting tears were shed?
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Faith, none for me; except the north-east wind,
- Which then blew bitterly against our faces,
- Awaked the sleeping rheum, and so by chance
- Did grace our hollow parting with a tear.
- KING RICHARD II:
- What said our cousin when you parted with him?
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- 'Farewell:'
- And, for my heart disdained that my tongue
- Should so profane the word, that taught me craft
- To counterfeit oppression of such grief
- That words seem'd buried in my sorrow's grave.
- Marry, would the word 'farewell' have lengthen'd hours
- And added years to his short banishment,
- He should have had a volume of farewells;
- But since it would not, he had none of me.
- KING RICHARD II:
- He is our cousin, cousin; but 'tis doubt,
- When time shall call him home from banishment,
- Whether our kinsman come to see his friends.
- Ourself and Bushy, Bagot here and Green
- Observed his courtship to the common people;
- How he did seem to dive into their hearts
- With humble and familiar courtesy,
- What reverence he did throw away on slaves,
- Wooing poor craftsmen with the craft of smiles
- And patient underbearing of his fortune,
- As 'twere to banish their affects with him.
- Off goes his bonnet to an oyster-wench;
- A brace of draymen bid God speed him well
- And had the tribute of his supple knee,
- With 'Thanks, my countrymen, my loving friends;'
- As were our England in reversion his,
- And he our subjects' next degree in hope.
- GREEN:
- Well, he is gone; and with him go these thoughts.
- Now for the rebels which stand out in Ireland,
- Expedient manage must be made, my liege,
- Ere further leisure yield them further means
- For their advantage and your highness' loss.
- KING RICHARD II:
- We will ourself in person to this war:
- And, for our coffers, with too great a court
- And liberal largess, are grown somewhat light,
- We are inforced to farm our royal realm;
- The revenue whereof shall furnish us
- For our affairs in hand: if that come short,
- Our substitutes at home shall have blank charters;
- Whereto, when they shall know what men are rich,
- They shall subscribe them for large sums of gold
- And send them after to supply our wants;
- For we will make for Ireland presently.
- Bushy, what news?
- BUSHY:
- Old John of Gaunt is grievous sick, my lord,
- Suddenly taken; and hath sent post haste
- To entreat your majesty to visit him.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Where lies he?
- BUSHY:
- At Ely House.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Now put it, God, in the physician's mind
- To help him to his grave immediately!
- The lining of his coffers shall make coats
- To deck our soldiers for these Irish wars.
- Come, gentlemen, let's all go visit him:
- Pray God we may make haste, and come too late!
- All:
- Amen.
- JOHN OF GAUNT:
- Will the king come, that I may breathe my last
- In wholesome counsel to his unstaid youth?
- DUKE OF YORK:
- Vex not yourself, nor strive not with your breath;
- For all in vain comes counsel to his ear.
- JOHN OF GAUNT:
- O, but they say the tongues of dying men
- Enforce attention like deep harmony:
- Where words are scarce, they are seldom spent in vain,
- For they breathe truth that breathe their words in pain.
- He that no more must say is listen'd more
- Than they whom youth and ease have taught to glose;
- More are men's ends mark'd than their lives before:
- The setting sun, and music at the close,
- As the last taste of sweets, is sweetest last,
- Writ in remembrance more than things long past:
- Though Richard my life's counsel would not hear,
- My death's sad tale may yet undeaf his ear.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- No; it is stopp'd with other flattering sounds,
- As praises, of whose taste the wise are fond,
- Lascivious metres, to whose venom sound
- The open ear of youth doth always listen;
- Report of fashions in proud Italy,
- Whose manners still our tardy apish nation
- Limps after in base imitation.
- Where doth the world thrust forth a vanity--
- So it be new, there's no respect how vile--
- That is not quickly buzzed into his ears?
- Then all too late comes counsel to be heard,
- Where will doth mutiny with wit's regard.
- Direct not him whose way himself will choose:
- 'Tis breath thou lack'st, and that breath wilt thou lose.
- JOHN OF GAUNT:
- Methinks I am a prophet new inspired
- And thus expiring do foretell of him:
- His rash fierce blaze of riot cannot last,
- For violent fires soon burn out themselves;
- Small showers last long, but sudden storms are short;
- He tires betimes that spurs too fast betimes;
- With eager feeding food doth choke the feeder:
- Light vanity, insatiate cormorant,
- Consuming means, soon preys upon itself.
- This royal throne of kings, this scepter'd isle,
- This earth of majesty, this seat of Mars,
- This other Eden, demi-paradise,
- This fortress built by Nature for herself
- Against infection and the hand of war,
- This happy breed of men, this little world,
- This precious stone set in the silver sea,
- Which serves it in the office of a wall,
- Or as a moat defensive to a house,
- Against the envy of less happier lands,
- This blessed plot, this earth, this realm, this England,
- This nurse, this teeming womb of royal kings,
- Fear'd by their breed and famous by their birth,
- Renowned for their deeds as far from home,
- For Christian service and true chivalry,
- As is the sepulchre in stubborn Jewry,
- Of the world's ransom, blessed Mary's Son,
- This land of such dear souls, this dear dear land,
- Dear for her reputation through the world,
- Is now leased out, I die pronouncing it,
- Like to a tenement or pelting farm:
- England, bound in with the triumphant sea
- Whose rocky shore beats back the envious siege
- Of watery Neptune, is now bound in with shame,
- With inky blots and rotten parchment bonds:
- That England, that was wont to conquer others,
- Hath made a shameful conquest of itself.
- Ah, would the scandal vanish with my life,
- How happy then were my ensuing death!
- DUKE OF YORK:
- The king is come: deal mildly with his youth;
- For young hot colts being raged do rage the more.
- QUEEN:
- How fares our noble uncle, Lancaster?
- KING RICHARD II:
- What comfort, man? how is't with aged Gaunt?
- JOHN OF GAUNT:
- O how that name befits my composition!
- Old Gaunt indeed, and gaunt in being old:
- Within me grief hath kept a tedious fast;
- And who abstains from meat that is not gaunt?
- For sleeping England long time have I watch'd;
- Watching breeds leanness, leanness is all gaunt:
- The pleasure that some fathers feed upon,
- Is my strict fast; I mean, my children's looks;
- And therein fasting, hast thou made me gaunt:
- Gaunt am I for the grave, gaunt as a grave,
- Whose hollow womb inherits nought but bones.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Can sick men play so nicely with their names?
- JOHN OF GAUNT:
- No, misery makes sport to mock itself:
- Since thou dost seek to kill my name in me,
- I mock my name, great king, to flatter thee.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Should dying men flatter with those that live?
- JOHN OF GAUNT:
- No, no, men living flatter those that die.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Thou, now a-dying, say'st thou flatterest me.
- JOHN OF GAUNT:
- O, no! thou diest, though I the sicker be.
- KING RICHARD II:
- I am in health, I breathe, and see thee ill.
- JOHN OF GAUNT:
- Now He that made me knows I see thee ill;
- Ill in myself to see, and in thee seeing ill.
- Thy death-bed is no lesser than thy land
- Wherein thou liest in reputation sick;
- And thou, too careless patient as thou art,
- Commit'st thy anointed body to the cure
- Of those physicians that first wounded thee:
- A thousand flatterers sit within thy crown,
- Whose compass is no bigger than thy head;
- And yet, incaged in so small a verge,
- The waste is no whit lesser than thy land.
- O, had thy grandsire with a prophet's eye
- Seen how his son's son should destroy his sons,
- From forth thy reach he would have laid thy shame,
- Deposing thee before thou wert possess'd,
- Which art possess'd now to depose thyself.
- Why, cousin, wert thou regent of the world,
- It were a shame to let this land by lease;
- But for thy world enjoying but this land,
- Is it not more than shame to shame it so?
- Landlord of England art thou now, not king:
- Thy state of law is bondslave to the law; And thou--
- KING RICHARD II:
- A lunatic lean-witted fool,
- Presuming on an ague's privilege,
- Darest with thy frozen admonition
- Make pale our cheek, chasing the royal blood
- With fury from his native residence.
- Now, by my seat's right royal majesty,
- Wert thou not brother to great Edward's son,
- This tongue that runs so roundly in thy head
- Should run thy head from thy unreverent shoulders.
- JOHN OF GAUNT:
- O, spare me not, my brother Edward's son,
- For that I was his father Edward's son;
- That blood already, like the pelican,
- Hast thou tapp'd out and drunkenly caroused:
- My brother Gloucester, plain well-meaning soul,
- Whom fair befal in heaven 'mongst happy souls!
- May be a precedent and witness good
- That thou respect'st not spilling Edward's blood:
- Join with the present sickness that I have;
- And thy unkindness be like crooked age,
- To crop at once a too long wither'd flower.
- Live in thy shame, but die not shame with thee!
- These words hereafter thy tormentors be!
- Convey me to my bed, then to my grave:
- Love they to live that love and honour have.
- KING RICHARD II:
- And let them die that age and sullens have;
- For both hast thou, and both become the grave.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- I do beseech your majesty, impute his words
- To wayward sickliness and age in him:
- He loves you, on my life, and holds you dear
- As Harry Duke of Hereford, were he here.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Right, you say true: as Hereford's love, so his;
- As theirs, so mine; and all be as it is.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- My liege, old Gaunt commends him to your majesty.
- KING RICHARD II:
- What says he?
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Nay, nothing; all is said
- His tongue is now a stringless instrument;
- Words, life and all, old Lancaster hath spent.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- Be York the next that must be bankrupt so!
- Though death be poor, it ends a mortal woe.
- KING RICHARD II:
- The ripest fruit first falls, and so doth he;
- His time is spent, our pilgrimage must be.
- So much for that. Now for our Irish wars:
- We must supplant those rough rug-headed kerns,
- Which live like venom where no venom else
- But only they have privilege to live.
- And for these great affairs do ask some charge,
- Towards our assistance we do seize to us
- The plate, corn, revenues and moveables,
- Whereof our uncle Gaunt did stand possess'd.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- How long shall I be patient? ah, how long
- Shall tender duty make me suffer wrong?
- Not Gloucester's death, nor Hereford's banishment
- Not Gaunt's rebukes, nor England's private wrongs,
- Nor the prevention of poor Bolingbroke
- About his marriage, nor my own disgrace,
- Have ever made me sour my patient cheek,
- Or bend one wrinkle on my sovereign's face.
- I am the last of noble Edward's sons,
- Of whom thy father, Prince of Wales, was first:
- In war was never lion raged more fierce,
- In peace was never gentle lamb more mild,
- Than was that young and princely gentleman.
- His face thou hast, for even so look'd he,
- Accomplish'd with the number of thy hours;
- But when he frown'd, it was against the French
- And not against his friends; his noble hand
- Did will what he did spend and spent not that
- Which his triumphant father's hand had won;
- His hands were guilty of no kindred blood,
- But bloody with the enemies of his kin.
- O Richard! York is too far gone with grief,
- Or else he never would compare between.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Why, uncle, what's the matter?
- DUKE OF YORK:
- O my liege,
- Pardon me, if you please; if not, I, pleased
- Not to be pardon'd, am content withal.
- Seek you to seize and gripe into your hands
- The royalties and rights of banish'd Hereford?
- Is not Gaunt dead, and doth not Hereford live?
- Was not Gaunt just, and is not Harry true?
- Did not the one deserve to have an heir?
- Is not his heir a well-deserving son?
- Take Hereford's rights away, and take from Time
- His charters and his customary rights;
- Let not to-morrow then ensue to-day;
- Be not thyself; for how art thou a king
- But by fair sequence and succession?
- Now, afore God--God forbid I say true!--
- If you do wrongfully seize Hereford's rights,
- Call in the letters patent that he hath
- By his attorneys-general to sue
- His livery, and deny his offer'd homage,
- You pluck a thousand dangers on your head,
- You lose a thousand well-disposed hearts
- And prick my tender patience, to those thoughts
- Which honour and allegiance cannot think.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Think what you will, we seize into our hands
- His plate, his goods, his money and his lands.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- I'll not be by the while: my liege, farewell:
- What will ensue hereof, there's none can tell;
- But by bad courses may be understood
- That their events can never fall out good.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Go, Bushy, to the Earl of Wiltshire straight:
- Bid him repair to us to Ely House
- To see this business. To-morrow next
- We will for Ireland; and 'tis time, I trow:
- And we create, in absence of ourself,
- Our uncle York lord governor of England;
- For he is just and always loved us well.
- Come on, our queen: to-morrow must we part;
- Be merry, for our time of stay is short
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Well, lords, the Duke of Lancaster is dead.
- LORD ROSS:
- And living too; for now his son is duke.
- LORD WILLOUGHBY:
- Barely in title, not in revenue.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Richly in both, if justice had her right.
- LORD ROSS:
- My heart is great; but it must break with silence,
- Ere't be disburden'd with a liberal tongue.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Nay, speak thy mind; and let him ne'er speak more
- That speaks thy words again to do thee harm!
- LORD WILLOUGHBY:
- Tends that thou wouldst speak to the Duke of Hereford?
- If it be so, out with it boldly, man;
- Quick is mine ear to hear of good towards him.
- LORD ROSS:
- No good at all that I can do for him;
- Unless you call it good to pity him,
- Bereft and gelded of his patrimony.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Now, afore God, 'tis shame such wrongs are borne
- In him, a royal prince, and many moe
- Of noble blood in this declining land.
- The king is not himself, but basely led
- By flatterers; and what they will inform,
- Merely in hate, 'gainst any of us all,
- That will the king severely prosecute
- 'Gainst us, our lives, our children, and our heirs.
- LORD ROSS:
- The commons hath he pill'd with grievous taxes,
- And quite lost their hearts: the nobles hath he fined
- For ancient quarrels, and quite lost their hearts.
- LORD WILLOUGHBY:
- And daily new exactions are devised,
- As blanks, benevolences, and I wot not what:
- But what, o' God's name, doth become of this?
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Wars have not wasted it, for warr'd he hath not,
- But basely yielded upon compromise
- That which his noble ancestors achieved with blows:
- More hath he spent in peace than they in wars.
- LORD ROSS:
- The Earl of Wiltshire hath the realm in farm.
- LORD WILLOUGHBY:
- The king's grown bankrupt, like a broken man.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Reproach and dissolution hangeth over him.
- LORD ROSS:
- He hath not money for these Irish wars,
- His burthenous taxations notwithstanding,
- But by the robbing of the banish'd duke.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- His noble kinsman: most degenerate king!
- But, lords, we hear this fearful tempest sing,
- Yet see no shelter to avoid the storm;
- We see the wind sit sore upon our sails,
- And yet we strike not, but securely perish.
- LORD ROSS:
- We see the very wreck that we must suffer;
- And unavoided is the danger now,
- For suffering so the causes of our wreck.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Not so; even through the hollow eyes of death
- I spy life peering; but I dare not say
- How near the tidings of our comfort is.
- LORD WILLOUGHBY:
- Nay, let us share thy thoughts, as thou dost ours.
- LORD ROSS:
- Be confident to speak, Northumberland:
- We three are but thyself; and, speaking so,
- Thy words are but as thoughts; therefore, be bold.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Then thus: I have from Port le Blanc, a bay
- In Brittany, received intelligence
- That Harry Duke of Hereford, Rainold Lord Cobham,
- That late broke from the Duke of Exeter,
- His brother, Archbishop late of Canterbury,
- Sir Thomas Erpingham, Sir John Ramston,
- Sir John Norbery, Sir Robert Waterton and Francis Quoint,
- All these well furnish'd by the Duke of Bretagne
- With eight tall ships, three thousand men of war,
- Are making hither with all due expedience
- And shortly mean to touch our northern shore:
- Perhaps they had ere this, but that they stay
- The first departing of the king for Ireland.
- If then we shall shake off our slavish yoke,
- Imp out our drooping country's broken wing,
- Redeem from broking pawn the blemish'd crown,
- Wipe off the dust that hides our sceptre's gilt
- And make high majesty look like itself,
- Away with me in post to Ravenspurgh;
- But if you faint, as fearing to do so,
- Stay and be secret, and myself will go.
- LORD ROSS:
- To horse, to horse! urge doubts to them that fear.
- LORD WILLOUGHBY:
- Hold out my horse, and I will first be there.
- BUSHY:
- Madam, your majesty is too much sad:
- You promised, when you parted with the king,
- To lay aside life-harming heaviness
- And entertain a cheerful disposition.
- QUEEN:
- To please the king I did; to please myself
- I cannot do it; yet I know no cause
- Why I should welcome such a guest as grief,
- Save bidding farewell to so sweet a guest
- As my sweet Richard: yet again, methinks,
- Some unborn sorrow, ripe in fortune's womb,
- Is coming towards me, and my inward soul
- With nothing trembles: at some thing it grieves,
- More than with parting from my lord the king.
- BUSHY:
- Each substance of a grief hath twenty shadows,
- Which shows like grief itself, but is not so;
- For sorrow's eye, glazed with blinding tears,
- Divides one thing entire to many objects;
- Like perspectives, which rightly gazed upon
- Show nothing but confusion, eyed awry
- Distinguish form: so your sweet majesty,
- Looking awry upon your lord's departure,
- Find shapes of grief, more than himself, to wail;
- Which, look'd on as it is, is nought but shadows
- Of what it is not. Then, thrice-gracious queen,
- More than your lord's departure weep not: more's not seen;
- Or if it be, 'tis with false sorrow's eye,
- Which for things true weeps things imaginary.
- QUEEN:
- It may be so; but yet my inward soul
- Persuades me it is otherwise: howe'er it be,
- I cannot but be sad; so heavy sad
- As, though on thinking on no thought I think,
- Makes me with heavy nothing faint and shrink.
- BUSHY:
- 'Tis nothing but conceit, my gracious lady.
- QUEEN:
- 'Tis nothing less: conceit is still derived
- From some forefather grief; mine is not so,
- For nothing had begot my something grief;
- Or something hath the nothing that I grieve:
- 'Tis in reversion that I do possess;
- But what it is, that is not yet known; what
- I cannot name; 'tis nameless woe, I wot.
- GREEN:
- God save your majesty! and well met, gentlemen:
- I hope the king is not yet shipp'd for Ireland.
- QUEEN:
- Why hopest thou so? 'tis better hope he is;
- For his designs crave haste, his haste good hope:
- Then wherefore dost thou hope he is not shipp'd?
- GREEN:
- That he, our hope, might have retired his power,
- And driven into despair an enemy's hope,
- Who strongly hath set footing in this land:
- The banish'd Bolingbroke repeals himself,
- And with uplifted arms is safe arrived
- At Ravenspurgh.
- QUEEN:
- Now God in heaven forbid!
- GREEN:
- Ah, madam, 'tis too true: and that is worse,
- The Lord Northumberland, his son young Henry Percy,
- The Lords of Ross, Beaumond, and Willoughby,
- With all their powerful friends, are fled to him.
- BUSHY:
- Why have you not proclaim'd Northumberland
- And all the rest revolted faction traitors?
- GREEN:
- We have: whereupon the Earl of Worcester
- Hath broke his staff, resign'd his stewardship,
- And all the household servants fled with him
- To Bolingbroke.
- QUEEN:
- So, Green, thou art the midwife to my woe,
- And Bolingbroke my sorrow's dismal heir:
- Now hath my soul brought forth her prodigy,
- And I, a gasping new-deliver'd mother,
- Have woe to woe, sorrow to sorrow join'd.
- BUSHY:
- Despair not, madam.
- QUEEN:
- Who shall hinder me?
- I will despair, and be at enmity
- With cozening hope: he is a flatterer,
- A parasite, a keeper back of death,
- Who gently would dissolve the bands of life,
- Which false hope lingers in extremity.
- GREEN:
- Here comes the Duke of York.
- QUEEN:
- With signs of war about his aged neck:
- O, full of careful business are his looks!
- Uncle, for God's sake, speak comfortable words.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- Should I do so, I should belie my thoughts:
- Comfort's in heaven; and we are on the earth,
- Where nothing lives but crosses, cares and grief.
- Your husband, he is gone to save far off,
- Whilst others come to make him lose at home:
- Here am I left to underprop his land,
- Who, weak with age, cannot support myself:
- Now comes the sick hour that his surfeit made;
- Now shall he try his friends that flatter'd him.
- Servant:
- My lord, your son was gone before I came.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- He was? Why, so! go all which way it will!
- The nobles they are fled, the commons they are cold,
- And will, I fear, revolt on Hereford's side.
- Sirrah, get thee to Plashy, to my sister Gloucester;
- Bid her send me presently a thousand pound:
- Hold, take my ring.
- Servant:
- My lord, I had forgot to tell your lordship,
- To-day, as I came by, I called there;
- But I shall grieve you to report the rest.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- What is't, knave?
- Servant:
- An hour before I came, the duchess died.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- God for his mercy! what a tide of woes
- Comes rushing on this woeful land at once!
- I know not what to do: I would to God,
- So my untruth had not provoked him to it,
- The king had cut off my head with my brother's.
- What, are there no posts dispatch'd for Ireland?
- How shall we do for money for these wars?
- Come, sister,--cousin, I would say--pray, pardon me.
- Go, fellow, get thee home, provide some carts
- And bring away the armour that is there.
- Gentlemen, will you go muster men?
- If I know how or which way to order these affairs
- Thus thrust disorderly into my hands,
- Never believe me. Both are my kinsmen:
- The one is my sovereign, whom both my oath
- And duty bids defend; the other again
- Is my kinsman, whom the king hath wrong'd,
- Whom conscience and my kindred bids to right.
- Well, somewhat we must do. Come, cousin, I'll
- Dispose of you.
- Gentlemen, go, muster up your men,
- And meet me presently at Berkeley.
- I should to Plashy too;
- But time will not permit: all is uneven,
- And every thing is left at six and seven.
- BUSHY:
- The wind sits fair for news to go to Ireland,
- But none returns. For us to levy power
- Proportionable to the enemy
- Is all unpossible.
- GREEN:
- Besides, our nearness to the king in love
- Is near the hate of those love not the king.
- BAGOT:
- And that's the wavering commons: for their love
- Lies in their purses, and whoso empties them
- By so much fills their hearts with deadly hate.
- BUSHY:
- Wherein the king stands generally condemn'd.
- BAGOT:
- If judgement lie in them, then so do we,
- Because we ever have been near the king.
- GREEN:
- Well, I will for refuge straight to Bristol castle:
- The Earl of Wiltshire is already there.
- BUSHY:
- Thither will I with you; for little office
- The hateful commons will perform for us,
- Except like curs to tear us all to pieces.
- Will you go along with us?
- BAGOT:
- No; I will to Ireland to his majesty.
- Farewell: if heart's presages be not vain,
- We three here art that ne'er shall meet again.
- BUSHY:
- That's as York thrives to beat back Bolingbroke.
- GREEN:
- Alas, poor duke! the task he undertakes
- Is numbering sands and drinking oceans dry:
- Where one on his side fights, thousands will fly.
- Farewell at once, for once, for all, and ever.
- BUSHY:
- Well, we may meet again.
- BAGOT:
- I fear me, never.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- How far is it, my lord, to Berkeley now?
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Believe me, noble lord,
- I am a stranger here in Gloucestershire:
- These high wild hills and rough uneven ways
- Draws out our miles, and makes them wearisome,
- And yet your fair discourse hath been as sugar,
- Making the hard way sweet and delectable.
- But I bethink me what a weary way
- From Ravenspurgh to Cotswold will be found
- In Ross and Willoughby, wanting your company,
- Which, I protest, hath very much beguiled
- The tediousness and process of my travel:
- But theirs is sweetened with the hope to have
- The present benefit which I possess;
- And hope to joy is little less in joy
- Than hope enjoy'd: by this the weary lords
- Shall make their way seem short, as mine hath done
- By sight of what I have, your noble company.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Of much less value is my company
- Than your good words. But who comes here?
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- It is my son, young Harry Percy,
- Sent from my brother Worcester, whencesoever.
- Harry, how fares your uncle?
- HENRY PERCY:
- I had thought, my lord, to have learn'd his health of you.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Why, is he not with the queen?
- HENRY PERCY:
- No, my good Lord; he hath forsook the court,
- Broken his staff of office and dispersed
- The household of the king.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- What was his reason?
- He was not so resolved when last we spake together.
- HENRY PERCY:
- Because your lordship was proclaimed traitor.
- But he, my lord, is gone to Ravenspurgh,
- To offer service to the Duke of Hereford,
- And sent me over by Berkeley, to discover
- What power the Duke of York had levied there;
- Then with directions to repair to Ravenspurgh.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Have you forgot the Duke of Hereford, boy?
- HENRY PERCY:
- No, my good lord, for that is not forgot
- Which ne'er I did remember: to my knowledge,
- I never in my life did look on him.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Then learn to know him now; this is the duke.
- HENRY PERCY:
- My gracious lord, I tender you my service,
- Such as it is, being tender, raw and young:
- Which elder days shall ripen and confirm
- To more approved service and desert.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- I thank thee, gentle Percy; and be sure
- I count myself in nothing else so happy
- As in a soul remembering my good friends;
- And, as my fortune ripens with thy love,
- It shall be still thy true love's recompense:
- My heart this covenant makes, my hand thus seals it.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- How far is it to Berkeley? and what stir
- Keeps good old York there with his men of war?
- HENRY PERCY:
- There stands the castle, by yon tuft of trees,
- Mann'd with three hundred men, as I have heard;
- And in it are the Lords of York, Berkeley, and Seymour;
- None else of name and noble estimate.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Here come the Lords of Ross and Willoughby,
- Bloody with spurring, fiery-red with haste.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Welcome, my lords. I wot your love pursues
- A banish'd traitor: all my treasury
- Is yet but unfelt thanks, which more enrich'd
- Shall be your love and labour's recompense.
- LORD ROSS:
- Your presence makes us rich, most noble lord.
- LORD WILLOUGHBY:
- And far surmounts our labour to attain it.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Evermore thanks, the exchequer of the poor;
- Which, till my infant fortune comes to years,
- Stands for my bounty. But who comes here?
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- It is my Lord of Berkeley, as I guess.
- LORD BERKELEY:
- My Lord of Hereford, my message is to you.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- My lord, my answer is--to Lancaster;
- And I am come to seek that name in England;
- And I must find that title in your tongue,
- Before I make reply to aught you say.
- LORD BERKELEY:
- Mistake me not, my lord; 'tis not my meaning
- To raze one title of your honour out:
- To you, my lord, I come, what lord you will,
- From the most gracious regent of this land,
- The Duke of York, to know what pricks you on
- To take advantage of the absent time
- And fright our native peace with self-born arms.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- I shall not need transport my words by you;
- Here comes his grace in person. My noble uncle!
- DUKE OF YORK:
- Show me thy humble heart, and not thy knee,
- Whose duty is deceiveable and false.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- My gracious uncle--
- DUKE OF YORK:
- Tut, tut!
- Grace me no grace, nor uncle me no uncle:
- I am no traitor's uncle; and that word 'grace.'
- In an ungracious mouth is but profane.
- Why have those banish'd and forbidden legs
- Dared once to touch a dust of England's ground?
- But then more 'why?' why have they dared to march
- So many miles upon her peaceful bosom,
- Frighting her pale-faced villages with war
- And ostentation of despised arms?
- Comest thou because the anointed king is hence?
- Why, foolish boy, the king is left behind,
- And in my loyal bosom lies his power.
- Were I but now the lord of such hot youth
- As when brave Gaunt, thy father, and myself
- Rescued the Black Prince, that young Mars of men,
- From forth the ranks of many thousand French,
- O, then how quickly should this arm of mine.
- Now prisoner to the palsy, chastise thee
- And minister correction to thy fault!
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- My gracious uncle, let me know my fault:
- On what condition stands it and wherein?
- DUKE OF YORK:
- Even in condition of the worst degree,
- In gross rebellion and detested treason:
- Thou art a banish'd man, and here art come
- Before the expiration of thy time,
- In braving arms against thy sovereign.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- As I was banish'd, I was banish'd Hereford;
- But as I come, I come for Lancaster.
- And, noble uncle, I beseech your grace
- Look on my wrongs with an indifferent eye:
- You are my father, for methinks in you
- I see old Gaunt alive; O, then, my father,
- Will you permit that I shall stand condemn'd
- A wandering vagabond; my rights and royalties
- Pluck'd from my arms perforce and given away
- To upstart unthrifts? Wherefore was I born?
- If that my cousin king be King of England,
- It must be granted I am Duke of Lancaster.
- You have a son, Aumerle, my noble cousin;
- Had you first died, and he been thus trod down,
- He should have found his uncle Gaunt a father,
- To rouse his wrongs and chase them to the bay.
- I am denied to sue my livery here,
- And yet my letters-patents give me leave:
- My father's goods are all distrain'd and sold,
- And these and all are all amiss employ'd.
- What would you have me do? I am a subject,
- And I challenge law: attorneys are denied me;
- And therefore, personally I lay my claim
- To my inheritance of free descent.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- The noble duke hath been too much abused.
- LORD ROSS:
- It stands your grace upon to do him right.
- LORD WILLOUGHBY:
- Base men by his endowments are made great.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- My lords of England, let me tell you this:
- I have had feeling of my cousin's wrongs
- And laboured all I could to do him right;
- But in this kind to come, in braving arms,
- Be his own carver and cut out his way,
- To find out right with wrong, it may not be;
- And you that do abet him in this kind
- Cherish rebellion and are rebels all.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- The noble duke hath sworn his coming is
- But for his own; and for the right of that
- We all have strongly sworn to give him aid;
- And let him ne'er see joy that breaks that oath!
- DUKE OF YORK:
- Well, well, I see the issue of these arms:
- I cannot mend it, I must needs confess,
- Because my power is weak and all ill left:
- But if I could, by Him that gave me life,
- I would attach you all and make you stoop
- Unto the sovereign mercy of the king;
- But since I cannot, be it known to you
- I do remain as neuter. So, fare you well;
- Unless you please to enter in the castle
- And there repose you for this night.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- An offer, uncle, that we will accept:
- But we must win your grace to go with us
- To Bristol castle, which they say is held
- By Bushy, Bagot and their complices,
- The caterpillars of the commonwealth,
- Which I have sworn to weed and pluck away.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- It may be I will go with you: but yet I'll pause;
- For I am loath to break our country's laws.
- Nor friends nor foes, to me welcome you are:
- Things past redress are now with me past care.
- Captain:
- My lord of Salisbury, we have stay'd ten days,
- And hardly kept our countrymen together,
- And yet we hear no tidings from the king;
- Therefore we will disperse ourselves: farewell.
- EARL OF SALISBURY:
- Stay yet another day, thou trusty Welshman:
- The king reposeth all his confidence in thee.
- Captain:
- 'Tis thought the king is dead; we will not stay.
- The bay-trees in our country are all wither'd
- And meteors fright the fixed stars of heaven;
- The pale-faced moon looks bloody on the earth
- And lean-look'd prophets whisper fearful change;
- Rich men look sad and ruffians dance and leap,
- The one in fear to lose what they enjoy,
- The other to enjoy by rage and war:
- These signs forerun the death or fall of kings.
- Farewell: our countrymen are gone and fled,
- As well assured Richard their king is dead.
- EARL OF SALISBURY:
- Ah, Richard, with the eyes of heavy mind
- I see thy glory like a shooting star
- Fall to the base earth from the firmament.
- Thy sun sets weeping in the lowly west,
- Witnessing storms to come, woe and unrest:
- Thy friends are fled to wait upon thy foes,
- And crossly to thy good all fortune goes.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Bring forth these men.
- Bushy and Green, I will not vex your souls--
- Since presently your souls must part your bodies--
- With too much urging your pernicious lives,
- For 'twere no charity; yet, to wash your blood
- From off my hands, here in the view of men
- I will unfold some causes of your deaths.
- You have misled a prince, a royal king,
- A happy gentleman in blood and lineaments,
- By you unhappied and disfigured clean:
- You have in manner with your sinful hours
- Made a divorce betwixt his queen and him,
- Broke the possession of a royal bed
- And stain'd the beauty of a fair queen's cheeks
- With tears drawn from her eyes by your foul wrongs.
- Myself, a prince by fortune of my birth,
- Near to the king in blood, and near in love
- Till you did make him misinterpret me,
- Have stoop'd my neck under your injuries,
- And sigh'd my English breath in foreign clouds,
- Eating the bitter bread of banishment;
- Whilst you have fed upon my signories,
- Dispark'd my parks and fell'd my forest woods,
- From my own windows torn my household coat,
- Razed out my imprese, leaving me no sign,
- Save men's opinions and my living blood,
- To show the world I am a gentleman.
- This and much more, much more than twice all this,
- Condemns you to the death. See them deliver'd over
- To execution and the hand of death.
- BUSHY:
- More welcome is the stroke of death to me
- Than Bolingbroke to England. Lords, farewell.
- GREEN:
- My comfort is that heaven will take our souls
- And plague injustice with the pains of hell.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- My Lord Northumberland, see them dispatch'd.
- Uncle, you say the queen is at your house;
- For God's sake, fairly let her be entreated:
- Tell her I send to her my kind commends;
- Take special care my greetings be deliver'd.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- A gentleman of mine I have dispatch'd
- With letters of your love to her at large.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Thank, gentle uncle. Come, lords, away.
- To fight with Glendower and his complices:
- Awhile to work, and after holiday.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Barkloughly castle call they this at hand?
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Yea, my lord. How brooks your grace the air,
- After your late tossing on the breaking seas?
- KING RICHARD II:
- Needs must I like it well: I weep for joy
- To stand upon my kingdom once again.
- Dear earth, I do salute thee with my hand,
- Though rebels wound thee with their horses' hoofs:
- As a long-parted mother with her child
- Plays fondly with her tears and smiles in meeting,
- So, weeping, smiling, greet I thee, my earth,
- And do thee favours with my royal hands.
- Feed not thy sovereign's foe, my gentle earth,
- Nor with thy sweets comfort his ravenous sense;
- But let thy spiders, that suck up thy venom,
- And heavy-gaited toads lie in their way,
- Doing annoyance to the treacherous feet
- Which with usurping steps do trample thee:
- Yield stinging nettles to mine enemies;
- And when they from thy bosom pluck a flower,
- Guard it, I pray thee, with a lurking adder
- Whose double tongue may with a mortal touch
- Throw death upon thy sovereign's enemies.
- Mock not my senseless conjuration, lords:
- This earth shall have a feeling and these stones
- Prove armed soldiers, ere her native king
- Shall falter under foul rebellion's arms.
- BISHOP OF CARLISLE:
- Fear not, my lord: that Power that made you king
- Hath power to keep you king in spite of all.
- The means that heaven yields must be embraced,
- And not neglected; else, if heaven would,
- And we will not, heaven's offer we refuse,
- The proffer'd means of succor and redress.
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- He means, my lord, that we are too remiss;
- Whilst Bolingbroke, through our security,
- Grows strong and great in substance and in power.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Discomfortable cousin! know'st thou not
- That when the searching eye of heaven is hid,
- Behind the globe, that lights the lower world,
- Then thieves and robbers range abroad unseen
- In murders and in outrage, boldly here;
- But when from under this terrestrial ball
- He fires the proud tops of the eastern pines
- And darts his light through every guilty hole,
- Then murders, treasons and detested sins,
- The cloak of night being pluck'd from off their backs,
- Stand bare and naked, trembling at themselves?
- So when this thief, this traitor, Bolingbroke,
- Who all this while hath revell'd in the night
- Whilst we were wandering with the antipodes,
- Shall see us rising in our throne, the east,
- His treasons will sit blushing in his face,
- Not able to endure the sight of day,
- But self-affrighted tremble at his sin.
- Not all the water in the rough rude sea
- Can wash the balm off from an anointed king;
- The breath of worldly men cannot depose
- The deputy elected by the Lord:
- For every man that Bolingbroke hath press'd
- To lift shrewd steel against our golden crown,
- God for his Richard hath in heavenly pay
- A glorious angel: then, if angels fight,
- Weak men must fall, for heaven still guards the right.
- Welcome, my lord how far off lies your power?
- EARL OF SALISBURY:
- Nor near nor farther off, my gracious lord,
- Than this weak arm: discomfort guides my tongue
- And bids me speak of nothing but despair.
- One day too late, I fear me, noble lord,
- Hath clouded all thy happy days on earth:
- O, call back yesterday, bid time return,
- And thou shalt have twelve thousand fighting men!
- To-day, to-day, unhappy day, too late,
- O'erthrows thy joys, friends, fortune and thy state:
- For all the Welshmen, hearing thou wert dead.
- Are gone to Bolingbroke, dispersed and fled.
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Comfort, my liege; why looks your grace so pale?
- KING RICHARD II:
- But now the blood of twenty thousand men
- Did triumph in my face, and they are fled;
- And, till so much blood thither come again,
- Have I not reason to look pale and dead?
- All souls that will be safe fly from my side,
- For time hath set a blot upon my pride.
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Comfort, my liege; remember who you are.
- KING RICHARD II:
- I had forgot myself; am I not king?
- Awake, thou coward majesty! thou sleepest.
- Is not the king's name twenty thousand names?
- Arm, arm, my name! a puny subject strikes
- At thy great glory. Look not to the ground,
- Ye favourites of a king: are we not high?
- High be our thoughts: I know my uncle York
- Hath power enough to serve our turn. But who comes here?
- SIR STEPHEN SCROOP:
- More health and happiness betide my liege
- Than can my care-tuned tongue deliver him!
- KING RICHARD II:
- Mine ear is open and my heart prepared;
- The worst is worldly loss thou canst unfold.
- Say, is my kingdom lost? why, 'twas my care
- And what loss is it to be rid of care?
- Strives Bolingbroke to be as great as we?
- Greater he shall not be; if he serve God,
- We'll serve Him too and be his fellow so:
- Revolt our subjects? that we cannot mend;
- They break their faith to God as well as us:
- Cry woe, destruction, ruin and decay:
- The worst is death, and death will have his day.
- SIR STEPHEN SCROOP:
- Glad am I that your highness is so arm'd
- To bear the tidings of calamity.
- Like an unseasonable stormy day,
- Which makes the silver rivers drown their shores,
- As if the world were all dissolved to tears,
- So high above his limits swells the rage
- Of Bolingbroke, covering your fearful land
- With hard bright steel and hearts harder than steel.
- White-beards have arm'd their thin and hairless scalps
- Against thy majesty; boys, with women's voices,
- Strive to speak big and clap their female joints
- In stiff unwieldy arms against thy crown:
- The very beadsmen learn to bend their bows
- Of double-fatal yew against thy state;
- Yea, distaff-women manage rusty bills
- Against thy seat: both young and old rebel,
- And all goes worse than I have power to tell.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Too well, too well thou tell'st a tale so ill.
- Where is the Earl of Wiltshire? where is Bagot?
- What is become of Bushy? where is Green?
- That they have let the dangerous enemy
- Measure our confines with such peaceful steps?
- If we prevail, their heads shall pay for it:
- I warrant they have made peace with Bolingbroke.
- SIR STEPHEN SCROOP:
- Peace have they made with him indeed, my lord.
- KING RICHARD II:
- O villains, vipers, damn'd without redemption!
- Dogs, easily won to fawn on any man!
- Snakes, in my heart-blood warm'd, that sting my heart!
- Three Judases, each one thrice worse than Judas!
- Would they make peace? terrible hell make war
- Upon their spotted souls for this offence!
- SIR STEPHEN SCROOP:
- Sweet love, I see, changing his property,
- Turns to the sourest and most deadly hate:
- Again uncurse their souls; their peace is made
- With heads, and not with hands; those whom you curse
- Have felt the worst of death's destroying wound
- And lie full low, graved in the hollow ground.
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Is Bushy, Green, and the Earl of Wiltshire dead?
- SIR STEPHEN SCROOP:
- Ay, all of them at Bristol lost their heads.
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Where is the duke my father with his power?
- KING RICHARD II:
- No matter where; of comfort no man speak:
- Let's talk of graves, of worms, and epitaphs;
- Make dust our paper and with rainy eyes
- Write sorrow on the bosom of the earth,
- Let's choose executors and talk of wills:
- And yet not so, for what can we bequeath
- Save our deposed bodies to the ground?
- Our lands, our lives and all are Bolingbroke's,
- And nothing can we call our own but death
- And that small model of the barren earth
- Which serves as paste and cover to our bones.
- For God's sake, let us sit upon the ground
- And tell sad stories of the death of kings;
- How some have been deposed; some slain in war,
- Some haunted by the ghosts they have deposed;
- Some poison'd by their wives: some sleeping kill'd;
- All murder'd: for within the hollow crown
- That rounds the mortal temples of a king
- Keeps Death his court and there the antic sits,
- Scoffing his state and grinning at his pomp,
- Allowing him a breath, a little scene,
- To monarchize, be fear'd and kill with looks,
- Infusing him with self and vain conceit,
- As if this flesh which walls about our life,
- Were brass impregnable, and humour'd thus
- Comes at the last and with a little pin
- Bores through his castle wall, and farewell king!
- Cover your heads and mock not flesh and blood
- With solemn reverence: throw away respect,
- Tradition, form and ceremonious duty,
- For you have but mistook me all this while:
- I live with bread like you, feel want,
- Taste grief, need friends: subjected thus,
- How can you say to me, I am a king?
- BISHOP OF CARLISLE:
- My lord, wise men ne'er sit and wail their woes,
- But presently prevent the ways to wail.
- To fear the foe, since fear oppresseth strength,
- Gives in your weakness strength unto your foe,
- And so your follies fight against yourself.
- Fear and be slain; no worse can come to fight:
- And fight and die is death destroying death;
- Where fearing dying pays death servile breath.
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- My father hath a power; inquire of him
- And learn to make a body of a limb.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Thou chidest me well: proud Bolingbroke, I come
- To change blows with thee for our day of doom.
- This ague fit of fear is over-blown;
- An easy task it is to win our own.
- Say, Scroop, where lies our uncle with his power?
- Speak sweetly, man, although thy looks be sour.
- SIR STEPHEN SCROOP:
- Men judge by the complexion of the sky
- The state and inclination of the day:
- So may you by my dull and heavy eye,
- My tongue hath but a heavier tale to say.
- I play the torturer, by small and small
- To lengthen out the worst that must be spoken:
- Your uncle York is join'd with Bolingbroke,
- And all your northern castles yielded up,
- And all your southern gentlemen in arms
- Upon his party.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Thou hast said enough.
- Beshrew thee, cousin, which didst lead me forth
- Of that sweet way I was in to despair!
- What say you now? what comfort have we now?
- By heaven, I'll hate him everlastingly
- That bids me be of comfort any more.
- Go to Flint castle: there I'll pine away;
- A king, woe's slave, shall kingly woe obey.
- That power I have, discharge; and let them go
- To ear the land that hath some hope to grow,
- For I have none: let no man speak again
- To alter this, for counsel is but vain.
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- My liege, one word.
- KING RICHARD II:
- He does me double wrong
- That wounds me with the flatteries of his tongue.
- Discharge my followers: let them hence away,
- From Richard's night to Bolingbroke's fair day.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- So that by this intelligence we learn
- The Welshmen are dispersed, and Salisbury
- Is gone to meet the king, who lately landed
- With some few private friends upon this coast.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- The news is very fair and good, my lord:
- Richard not far from hence hath hid his head.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- It would beseem the Lord Northumberland
- To say 'King Richard:' alack the heavy day
- When such a sacred king should hide his head.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Your grace mistakes; only to be brief
- Left I his title out.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- The time hath been,
- Would you have been so brief with him, he would
- Have been so brief with you, to shorten you,
- For taking so the head, your whole head's length.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Mistake not, uncle, further than you should.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- Take not, good cousin, further than you should.
- Lest you mistake the heavens are o'er our heads.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- I know it, uncle, and oppose not myself
- Against their will. But who comes here?
- Welcome, Harry: what, will not this castle yield?
- HENRY PERCY:
- The castle royally is mann'd, my lord,
- Against thy entrance.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Royally!
- Why, it contains no king?
- HENRY PERCY:
- Yes, my good lord,
- It doth contain a king; King Richard lies
- Within the limits of yon lime and stone:
- And with him are the Lord Aumerle, Lord Salisbury,
- Sir Stephen Scroop, besides a clergyman
- Of holy reverence; who, I cannot learn.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- O, belike it is the Bishop of Carlisle.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Noble lords,
- Go to the rude ribs of that ancient castle;
- Through brazen trumpet send the breath of parley
- Into his ruin'd ears, and thus deliver:
- Henry Bolingbroke
- On both his knees doth kiss King Richard's hand
- And sends allegiance and true faith of heart
- To his most royal person, hither come
- Even at his feet to lay my arms and power,
- Provided that my banishment repeal'd
- And lands restored again be freely granted:
- If not, I'll use the advantage of my power
- And lay the summer's dust with showers of blood
- Rain'd from the wounds of slaughter'd Englishmen:
- The which, how far off from the mind of Bolingbroke
- It is, such crimson tempest should bedrench
- The fresh green lap of fair King Richard's land,
- My stooping duty tenderly shall show.
- Go, signify as much, while here we march
- Upon the grassy carpet of this plain.
- Let's march without the noise of threatening drum,
- That from this castle's tatter'd battlements
- Our fair appointments may be well perused.
- Methinks King Richard and myself should meet
- With no less terror than the elements
- Of fire and water, when their thundering shock
- At meeting tears the cloudy cheeks of heaven.
- Be he the fire, I'll be the yielding water:
- The rage be his, whilst on the earth I rain
- My waters; on the earth, and not on him.
- March on, and mark King Richard how he looks.
- See, see, King Richard doth himself appear,
- As doth the blushing discontented sun
- From out the fiery portal of the east,
- When he perceives the envious clouds are bent
- To dim his glory and to stain the track
- Of his bright passage to the occident.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- Yet looks he like a king: behold, his eye,
- As bright as is the eagle's, lightens forth
- Controlling majesty: alack, alack, for woe,
- That any harm should stain so fair a show!
- KING RICHARD II:
- We are amazed; and thus long have we stood
- To watch the fearful bending of thy knee,
- Because we thought ourself thy lawful king:
- And if we be, how dare thy joints forget
- To pay their awful duty to our presence?
- If we be not, show us the hand of God
- That hath dismissed us from our stewardship;
- For well we know, no hand of blood and bone
- Can gripe the sacred handle of our sceptre,
- Unless he do profane, steal, or usurp.
- And though you think that all, as you have done,
- Have torn their souls by turning them from us,
- And we are barren and bereft of friends;
- Yet know, my master, God omnipotent,
- Is mustering in his clouds on our behalf
- Armies of pestilence; and they shall strike
- Your children yet unborn and unbegot,
- That lift your vassal hands against my head
- And threat the glory of my precious crown.
- Tell Bolingbroke--for yond methinks he stands--
- That every stride he makes upon my land
- Is dangerous treason: he is come to open
- The purple testament of bleeding war;
- But ere the crown he looks for live in peace,
- Ten thousand bloody crowns of mothers' sons
- Shall ill become the flower of England's face,
- Change the complexion of her maid-pale peace
- To scarlet indignation and bedew
- Her pastures' grass with faithful English blood.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- The king of heaven forbid our lord the king
- Should so with civil and uncivil arms
- Be rush'd upon! Thy thrice noble cousin
- Harry Bolingbroke doth humbly kiss thy hand;
- And by the honourable tomb he swears,
- That stands upon your royal grandsire's bones,
- And by the royalties of both your bloods,
- Currents that spring from one most gracious head,
- And by the buried hand of warlike Gaunt,
- And by the worth and honour of himself,
- Comprising all that may be sworn or said,
- His coming hither hath no further scope
- Than for his lineal royalties and to beg
- Enfranchisement immediate on his knees:
- Which on thy royal party granted once,
- His glittering arms he will commend to rust,
- His barbed steeds to stables, and his heart
- To faithful service of your majesty.
- This swears he, as he is a prince, is just;
- And, as I am a gentleman, I credit him.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Northumberland, say thus the king returns:
- His noble cousin is right welcome hither;
- And all the number of his fair demands
- Shall be accomplish'd without contradiction:
- With all the gracious utterance thou hast
- Speak to his gentle hearing kind commends.
- We do debase ourselves, cousin, do we not,
- To look so poorly and to speak so fair?
- Shall we call back Northumberland, and send
- Defiance to the traitor, and so die?
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- No, good my lord; let's fight with gentle words
- Till time lend friends and friends their helpful swords.
- KING RICHARD II:
- O God, O God! that e'er this tongue of mine,
- That laid the sentence of dread banishment
- On yon proud man, should take it off again
- With words of sooth! O that I were as great
- As is my grief, or lesser than my name!
- Or that I could forget what I have been,
- Or not remember what I must be now!
- Swell'st thou, proud heart? I'll give thee scope to beat,
- Since foes have scope to beat both thee and me.
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Northumberland comes back from Bolingbroke.
- KING RICHARD II:
- What must the king do now? must he submit?
- The king shall do it: must he be deposed?
- The king shall be contented: must he lose
- The name of king? o' God's name, let it go:
- I'll give my jewels for a set of beads,
- My gorgeous palace for a hermitage,
- My gay apparel for an almsman's gown,
- My figured goblets for a dish of wood,
- My sceptre for a palmer's walking staff,
- My subjects for a pair of carved saints
- And my large kingdom for a little grave,
- A little little grave, an obscure grave;
- Or I'll be buried in the king's highway,
- Some way of common trade, where subjects' feet
- May hourly trample on their sovereign's head;
- For on my heart they tread now whilst I live;
- And buried once, why not upon my head?
- Aumerle, thou weep'st, my tender-hearted cousin!
- We'll make foul weather with despised tears;
- Our sighs and they shall lodge the summer corn,
- And make a dearth in this revolting land.
- Or shall we play the wantons with our woes,
- And make some pretty match with shedding tears?
- As thus, to drop them still upon one place,
- Till they have fretted us a pair of graves
- Within the earth; and, therein laid,--there lies
- Two kinsmen digg'd their graves with weeping eyes.
- Would not this ill do well? Well, well, I see
- I talk but idly, and you laugh at me.
- Most mighty prince, my Lord Northumberland,
- What says King Bolingbroke? will his majesty
- Give Richard leave to live till Richard die?
- You make a leg, and Bolingbroke says ay.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- My lord, in the base court he doth attend
- To speak with you; may it please you to come down.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Down, down I come; like glistering Phaethon,
- Wanting the manage of unruly jades.
- In the base court? Base court, where kings grow base,
- To come at traitors' calls and do them grace.
- In the base court? Come down? Down, court!
- down, king!
- For night-owls shriek where mounting larks
- should sing.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- What says his majesty?
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Sorrow and grief of heart
- Makes him speak fondly, like a frantic man
- Yet he is come.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Stand all apart,
- And show fair duty to his majesty.
- My gracious lord,--
- KING RICHARD II:
- Fair cousin, you debase your princely knee
- To make the base earth proud with kissing it:
- Me rather had my heart might feel your love
- Than my unpleased eye see your courtesy.
- Up, cousin, up; your heart is up, I know,
- Thus high at least, although your knee be low.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- My gracious lord, I come but for mine own.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Your own is yours, and I am yours, and all.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- So far be mine, my most redoubted lord,
- As my true service shall deserve your love.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Well you deserve: they well deserve to have,
- That know the strong'st and surest way to get.
- Uncle, give me your hands: nay, dry your eyes;
- Tears show their love, but want their remedies.
- Cousin, I am too young to be your father,
- Though you are old enough to be my heir.
- What you will have, I'll give, and willing too;
- For do we must what force will have us do.
- Set on towards London, cousin, is it so?
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Yea, my good lord.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Then I must not say no.
- QUEEN:
- What sport shall we devise here in this garden,
- To drive away the heavy thought of care?
- Lady:
- Madam, we'll play at bowls.
- QUEEN:
- 'Twill make me think the world is full of rubs,
- And that my fortune rubs against the bias.
- Lady:
- Madam, we'll dance.
- QUEEN:
- My legs can keep no measure in delight,
- When my poor heart no measure keeps in grief:
- Therefore, no dancing, girl; some other sport.
- Lady:
- Madam, we'll tell tales.
- QUEEN:
- Of sorrow or of joy?
- Lady:
- Of either, madam.
- QUEEN:
- Of neither, girl:
- For of joy, being altogether wanting,
- It doth remember me the more of sorrow;
- Or if of grief, being altogether had,
- It adds more sorrow to my want of joy:
- For what I have I need not to repeat;
- And what I want it boots not to complain.
- Lady:
- Madam, I'll sing.
- QUEEN:
- 'Tis well that thou hast cause
- But thou shouldst please me better, wouldst thou weep.
- Lady:
- I could weep, madam, would it do you good.
- QUEEN:
- And I could sing, would weeping do me good,
- And never borrow any tear of thee.
- But stay, here come the gardeners:
- Let's step into the shadow of these trees.
- My wretchedness unto a row of pins,
- They'll talk of state; for every one doth so
- Against a change; woe is forerun with woe.
- Gardener:
- Go, bind thou up yon dangling apricocks,
- Which, like unruly children, make their sire
- Stoop with oppression of their prodigal weight:
- Give some supportance to the bending twigs.
- Go thou, and like an executioner,
- Cut off the heads of too fast growing sprays,
- That look too lofty in our commonwealth:
- All must be even in our government.
- You thus employ'd, I will go root away
- The noisome weeds, which without profit suck
- The soil's fertility from wholesome flowers.
- Servant:
- Why should we in the compass of a pale
- Keep law and form and due proportion,
- Showing, as in a model, our firm estate,
- When our sea-walled garden, the whole land,
- Is full of weeds, her fairest flowers choked up,
- Her fruit-trees all upturned, her hedges ruin'd,
- Her knots disorder'd and her wholesome herbs
- Swarming with caterpillars?
- Gardener:
- Hold thy peace:
- He that hath suffer'd this disorder'd spring
- Hath now himself met with the fall of leaf:
- The weeds which his broad-spreading leaves did shelter,
- That seem'd in eating him to hold him up,
- Are pluck'd up root and all by Bolingbroke,
- I mean the Earl of Wiltshire, Bushy, Green.
- Servant:
- What, are they dead?
- Gardener:
- They are; and Bolingbroke
- Hath seized the wasteful king. O, what pity is it
- That he had not so trimm'd and dress'd his land
- As we this garden! We at time of year
- Do wound the bark, the skin of our fruit-trees,
- Lest, being over-proud in sap and blood,
- With too much riches it confound itself:
- Had he done so to great and growing men,
- They might have lived to bear and he to taste
- Their fruits of duty: superfluous branches
- We lop away, that bearing boughs may live:
- Had he done so, himself had borne the crown,
- Which waste of idle hours hath quite thrown down.
- Servant:
- What, think you then the king shall be deposed?
- Gardener:
- Depress'd he is already, and deposed
- 'Tis doubt he will be: letters came last night
- To a dear friend of the good Duke of York's,
- That tell black tidings.
- QUEEN:
- O, I am press'd to death through want of speaking!
- Thou, old Adam's likeness, set to dress this garden,
- How dares thy harsh rude tongue sound this unpleasing news?
- What Eve, what serpent, hath suggested thee
- To make a second fall of cursed man?
- Why dost thou say King Richard is deposed?
- Darest thou, thou little better thing than earth,
- Divine his downfall? Say, where, when, and how,
- Camest thou by this ill tidings? speak, thou wretch.
- Gardener:
- Pardon me, madam: little joy have I
- To breathe this news; yet what I say is true.
- King Richard, he is in the mighty hold
- Of Bolingbroke: their fortunes both are weigh'd:
- In your lord's scale is nothing but himself,
- And some few vanities that make him light;
- But in the balance of great Bolingbroke,
- Besides himself, are all the English peers,
- And with that odds he weighs King Richard down.
- Post you to London, and you will find it so;
- I speak no more than every one doth know.
- QUEEN:
- Nimble mischance, that art so light of foot,
- Doth not thy embassage belong to me,
- And am I last that knows it? O, thou think'st
- To serve me last, that I may longest keep
- Thy sorrow in my breast. Come, ladies, go,
- To meet at London London's king in woe.
- What, was I born to this, that my sad look
- Should grace the triumph of great Bolingbroke?
- Gardener, for telling me these news of woe,
- Pray God the plants thou graft'st may never grow.
- GARDENER:
- Poor queen! so that thy state might be no worse,
- I would my skill were subject to thy curse.
- Here did she fall a tear; here in this place
- I'll set a bank of rue, sour herb of grace:
- Rue, even for ruth, here shortly shall be seen,
- In the remembrance of a weeping queen.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Call forth Bagot.
- Now, Bagot, freely speak thy mind;
- What thou dost know of noble Gloucester's death,
- Who wrought it with the king, and who perform'd
- The bloody office of his timeless end.
- BAGOT:
- Then set before my face the Lord Aumerle.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Cousin, stand forth, and look upon that man.
- BAGOT:
- My Lord Aumerle, I know your daring tongue
- Scorns to unsay what once it hath deliver'd.
- In that dead time when Gloucester's death was plotted,
- I heard you say, 'Is not my arm of length,
- That reacheth from the restful English court
- As far as Calais, to mine uncle's head?'
- Amongst much other talk, that very time,
- I heard you say that you had rather refuse
- The offer of an hundred thousand crowns
- Than Bolingbroke's return to England;
- Adding withal how blest this land would be
- In this your cousin's death.
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Princes and noble lords,
- What answer shall I make to this base man?
- Shall I so much dishonour my fair stars,
- On equal terms to give him chastisement?
- Either I must, or have mine honour soil'd
- With the attainder of his slanderous lips.
- There is my gage, the manual seal of death,
- That marks thee out for hell: I say, thou liest,
- And will maintain what thou hast said is false
- In thy heart-blood, though being all too base
- To stain the temper of my knightly sword.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Bagot, forbear; thou shalt not take it up.
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Excepting one, I would he were the best
- In all this presence that hath moved me so.
- LORD FITZWATER:
- If that thy valour stand on sympathy,
- There is my gage, Aumerle, in gage to thine:
- By that fair sun which shows me where thou stand'st,
- I heard thee say, and vauntingly thou spakest it
- That thou wert cause of noble Gloucester's death.
- If thou deny'st it twenty times, thou liest;
- And I will turn thy falsehood to thy heart,
- Where it was forged, with my rapier's point.
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Thou darest not, coward, live to see that day.
- LORD FITZWATER:
- Now by my soul, I would it were this hour.
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Fitzwater, thou art damn'd to hell for this.
- HENRY PERCY:
- Aumerle, thou liest; his honour is as true
- In this appeal as thou art all unjust;
- And that thou art so, there I throw my gage,
- To prove it on thee to the extremest point
- Of mortal breathing: seize it, if thou darest.
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- An if I do not, may my hands rot off
- And never brandish more revengeful steel
- Over the glittering helmet of my foe!
- Lord:
- I task the earth to the like, forsworn Aumerle;
- And spur thee on with full as many lies
- As may be holloa'd in thy treacherous ear
- From sun to sun: there is my honour's pawn;
- Engage it to the trial, if thou darest.
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Who sets me else? by heaven, I'll throw at all:
- I have a thousand spirits in one breast,
- To answer twenty thousand such as you.
- DUKE OF SURREY:
- My Lord Fitzwater, I do remember well
- The very time Aumerle and you did talk.
- LORD FITZWATER:
- 'Tis very true: you were in presence then;
- And you can witness with me this is true.
- DUKE OF SURREY:
- As false, by heaven, as heaven itself is true.
- LORD FITZWATER:
- Surrey, thou liest.
- DUKE OF SURREY:
- Dishonourable boy!
- That lie shall lie so heavy on my sword,
- That it shall render vengeance and revenge
- Till thou the lie-giver and that lie do lie
- In earth as quiet as thy father's skull:
- In proof whereof, there is my honour's pawn;
- Engage it to the trial, if thou darest.
- LORD FITZWATER:
- How fondly dost thou spur a forward horse!
- If I dare eat, or drink, or breathe, or live,
- I dare meet Surrey in a wilderness,
- And spit upon him, whilst I say he lies,
- And lies, and lies: there is my bond of faith,
- To tie thee to my strong correction.
- As I intend to thrive in this new world,
- Aumerle is guilty of my true appeal:
- Besides, I heard the banish'd Norfolk say
- That thou, Aumerle, didst send two of thy men
- To execute the noble duke at Calais.
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Some honest Christian trust me with a gage
- That Norfolk lies: here do I throw down this,
- If he may be repeal'd, to try his honour.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- These differences shall all rest under gage
- Till Norfolk be repeal'd: repeal'd he shall be,
- And, though mine enemy, restored again
- To all his lands and signories: when he's return'd,
- Against Aumerle we will enforce his trial.
- BISHOP OF CARLISLE:
- That honourable day shall ne'er be seen.
- Many a time hath banish'd Norfolk fought
- For Jesu Christ in glorious Christian field,
- Streaming the ensign of the Christian cross
- Against black pagans, Turks, and Saracens:
- And toil'd with works of war, retired himself
- To Italy; and there at Venice gave
- His body to that pleasant country's earth,
- And his pure soul unto his captain Christ,
- Under whose colours he had fought so long.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Why, bishop, is Norfolk dead?
- BISHOP OF CARLISLE:
- As surely as I live, my lord.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Sweet peace conduct his sweet soul to the bosom
- Of good old Abraham! Lords appellants,
- Your differences shall all rest under gage
- Till we assign you to your days of trial.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- Great Duke of Lancaster, I come to thee
- From plume-pluck'd Richard; who with willing soul
- Adopts thee heir, and his high sceptre yields
- To the possession of thy royal hand:
- Ascend his throne, descending now from him;
- And long live Henry, fourth of that name!
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- In God's name, I'll ascend the regal throne.
- BISHOP OF CARLISLE:
- Marry. God forbid!
- Worst in this royal presence may I speak,
- Yet best beseeming me to speak the truth.
- Would God that any in this noble presence
- Were enough noble to be upright judge
- Of noble Richard! then true noblesse would
- Learn him forbearance from so foul a wrong.
- What subject can give sentence on his king?
- And who sits here that is not Richard's subject?
- Thieves are not judged but they are by to hear,
- Although apparent guilt be seen in them;
- And shall the figure of God's majesty,
- His captain, steward, deputy-elect,
- Anointed, crowned, planted many years,
- Be judged by subject and inferior breath,
- And he himself not present? O, forfend it, God,
- That in a Christian climate souls refined
- Should show so heinous, black, obscene a deed!
- I speak to subjects, and a subject speaks,
- Stirr'd up by God, thus boldly for his king:
- My Lord of Hereford here, whom you call king,
- Is a foul traitor to proud Hereford's king:
- And if you crown him, let me prophesy:
- The blood of English shall manure the ground,
- And future ages groan for this foul act;
- Peace shall go sleep with Turks and infidels,
- And in this seat of peace tumultuous wars
- Shall kin with kin and kind with kind confound;
- Disorder, horror, fear and mutiny
- Shall here inhabit, and this land be call'd
- The field of Golgotha and dead men's skulls.
- O, if you raise this house against this house,
- It will the woefullest division prove
- That ever fell upon this cursed earth.
- Prevent it, resist it, let it not be so,
- Lest child, child's children, cry against you woe!
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Well have you argued, sir; and, for your pains,
- Of capital treason we arrest you here.
- My Lord of Westminster, be it your charge
- To keep him safely till his day of trial.
- May it please you, lords, to grant the commons' suit.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Fetch hither Richard, that in common view
- He may surrender; so we shall proceed
- Without suspicion.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- I will be his conduct.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Lords, you that here are under our arrest,
- Procure your sureties for your days of answer.
- Little are we beholding to your love,
- And little look'd for at your helping hands.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Alack, why am I sent for to a king,
- Before I have shook off the regal thoughts
- Wherewith I reign'd? I hardly yet have learn'd
- To insinuate, flatter, bow, and bend my limbs:
- Give sorrow leave awhile to tutor me
- To this submission. Yet I well remember
- The favours of these men: were they not mine?
- Did they not sometime cry, 'all hail!' to me?
- So Judas did to Christ: but he, in twelve,
- Found truth in all but one: I, in twelve thousand, none.
- God save the king! Will no man say amen?
- Am I both priest and clerk? well then, amen.
- God save the king! although I be not he;
- And yet, amen, if heaven do think him me.
- To do what service am I sent for hither?
- DUKE OF YORK:
- To do that office of thine own good will
- Which tired majesty did make thee offer,
- The resignation of thy state and crown
- To Henry Bolingbroke.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Give me the crown. Here, cousin, seize the crown;
- Here cousin:
- On this side my hand, and on that side yours.
- Now is this golden crown like a deep well
- That owes two buckets, filling one another,
- The emptier ever dancing in the air,
- The other down, unseen and full of water:
- That bucket down and full of tears am I,
- Drinking my griefs, whilst you mount up on high.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- I thought you had been willing to resign.
- KING RICHARD II:
- My crown I am; but still my griefs are mine:
- You may my glories and my state depose,
- But not my griefs; still am I king of those.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Part of your cares you give me with your crown.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Your cares set up do not pluck my cares down.
- My care is loss of care, by old care done;
- Your care is gain of care, by new care won:
- The cares I give I have, though given away;
- They tend the crown, yet still with me they stay.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Are you contented to resign the crown?
- KING RICHARD II:
- Ay, no; no, ay; for I must nothing be;
- Therefore no no, for I resign to thee.
- Now mark me, how I will undo myself;
- I give this heavy weight from off my head
- And this unwieldy sceptre from my hand,
- The pride of kingly sway from out my heart;
- With mine own tears I wash away my balm,
- With mine own hands I give away my crown,
- With mine own tongue deny my sacred state,
- With mine own breath release all duty's rites:
- All pomp and majesty I do forswear;
- My manors, rents, revenues I forego;
- My acts, decrees, and statutes I deny:
- God pardon all oaths that are broke to me!
- God keep all vows unbroke that swear to thee!
- Make me, that nothing have, with nothing grieved,
- And thou with all pleased, that hast all achieved!
- Long mayst thou live in Richard's seat to sit,
- And soon lie Richard in an earthly pit!
- God save King Harry, unking'd Richard says,
- And send him many years of sunshine days!
- What more remains?
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- No more, but that you read
- These accusations and these grievous crimes
- Committed by your person and your followers
- Against the state and profit of this land;
- That, by confessing them, the souls of men
- May deem that you are worthily deposed.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Must I do so? and must I ravel out
- My weaved-up folly? Gentle Northumberland,
- If thy offences were upon record,
- Would it not shame thee in so fair a troop
- To read a lecture of them? If thou wouldst,
- There shouldst thou find one heinous article,
- Containing the deposing of a king
- And cracking the strong warrant of an oath,
- Mark'd with a blot, damn'd in the book of heaven:
- Nay, all of you that stand and look upon,
- Whilst that my wretchedness doth bait myself,
- Though some of you with Pilate wash your hands
- Showing an outward pity; yet you Pilates
- Have here deliver'd me to my sour cross,
- And water cannot wash away your sin.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- My lord, dispatch; read o'er these articles.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Mine eyes are full of tears, I cannot see:
- And yet salt water blinds them not so much
- But they can see a sort of traitors here.
- Nay, if I turn mine eyes upon myself,
- I find myself a traitor with the rest;
- For I have given here my soul's consent
- To undeck the pompous body of a king;
- Made glory base and sovereignty a slave,
- Proud majesty a subject, state a peasant.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- My lord,--
- KING RICHARD II:
- No lord of thine, thou haught insulting man,
- Nor no man's lord; I have no name, no title,
- No, not that name was given me at the font,
- But 'tis usurp'd: alack the heavy day,
- That I have worn so many winters out,
- And know not now what name to call myself!
- O that I were a mockery king of snow,
- Standing before the sun of Bolingbroke,
- To melt myself away in water-drops!
- Good king, great king, and yet not greatly good,
- An if my word be sterling yet in England,
- Let it command a mirror hither straight,
- That it may show me what a face I have,
- Since it is bankrupt of his majesty.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Go some of you and fetch a looking-glass.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Read o'er this paper while the glass doth come.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Fiend, thou torment'st me ere I come to hell!
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Urge it no more, my Lord Northumberland.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- The commons will not then be satisfied.
- KING RICHARD II:
- They shall be satisfied: I'll read enough,
- When I do see the very book indeed
- Where all my sins are writ, and that's myself.
- Give me the glass, and therein will I read.
- No deeper wrinkles yet? hath sorrow struck
- So many blows upon this face of mine,
- And made no deeper wounds? O flattering glass,
- Like to my followers in prosperity,
- Thou dost beguile me! Was this face the face
- That every day under his household roof
- Did keep ten thousand men? was this the face
- That, like the sun, did make beholders wink?
- Was this the face that faced so many follies,
- And was at last out-faced by Bolingbroke?
- A brittle glory shineth in this face:
- As brittle as the glory is the face;
- For there it is, crack'd in a hundred shivers.
- Mark, silent king, the moral of this sport,
- How soon my sorrow hath destroy'd my face.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- The shadow of your sorrow hath destroy'd
- The shadow or your face.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Say that again.
- The shadow of my sorrow! ha! let's see:
- 'Tis very true, my grief lies all within;
- And these external manners of laments
- Are merely shadows to the unseen grief
- That swells with silence in the tortured soul;
- There lies the substance: and I thank thee, king,
- For thy great bounty, that not only givest
- Me cause to wail but teachest me the way
- How to lament the cause. I'll beg one boon,
- And then be gone and trouble you no more.
- Shall I obtain it?
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Name it, fair cousin.
- KING RICHARD II:
- 'Fair cousin'? I am greater than a king:
- For when I was a king, my flatterers
- Were then but subjects; being now a subject,
- I have a king here to my flatterer.
- Being so great, I have no need to beg.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Yet ask.
- KING RICHARD II:
- And shall I have?
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- You shall.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Then give me leave to go.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Whither?
- KING RICHARD II:
- Whither you will, so I were from your sights.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Go, some of you convey him to the Tower.
- KING RICHARD II:
- O, good! convey? conveyers are you all,
- That rise thus nimbly by a true king's fall.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- On Wednesday next we solemnly set down
- Our coronation: lords, prepare yourselves.
- Abbot:
- A woeful pageant have we here beheld.
- BISHOP OF CARLISLE:
- The woe's to come; the children yet unborn.
- Shall feel this day as sharp to them as thorn.
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- You holy clergymen, is there no plot
- To rid the realm of this pernicious blot?
- Abbot:
- My lord,
- Before I freely speak my mind herein,
- You shall not only take the sacrament
- To bury mine intents, but also to effect
- Whatever I shall happen to devise.
- I see your brows are full of discontent,
- Your hearts of sorrow and your eyes of tears:
- Come home with me to supper; and I'll lay
- A plot shall show us all a merry day.
- QUEEN:
- This way the king will come; this is the way
- To Julius Caesar's ill-erected tower,
- To whose flint bosom my condemned lord
- Is doom'd a prisoner by proud Bolingbroke:
- Here let us rest, if this rebellious earth
- Have any resting for her true king's queen.
- But soft, but see, or rather do not see,
- My fair rose wither: yet look up, behold,
- That you in pity may dissolve to dew,
- And wash him fresh again with true-love tears.
- Ah, thou, the model where old Troy did stand,
- Thou map of honour, thou King Richard's tomb,
- And not King Richard; thou most beauteous inn,
- Why should hard-favour'd grief be lodged in thee,
- When triumph is become an alehouse guest?
- KING RICHARD II:
- Join not with grief, fair woman, do not so,
- To make my end too sudden: learn, good soul,
- To think our former state a happy dream;
- From which awaked, the truth of what we are
- Shows us but this: I am sworn brother, sweet,
- To grim Necessity, and he and I
- Will keep a league till death. Hie thee to France
- And cloister thee in some religious house:
- Our holy lives must win a new world's crown,
- Which our profane hours here have stricken down.
- QUEEN:
- What, is my Richard both in shape and mind
- Transform'd and weaken'd? hath Bolingbroke deposed
- Thine intellect? hath he been in thy heart?
- The lion dying thrusteth forth his paw,
- And wounds the earth, if nothing else, with rage
- To be o'erpower'd; and wilt thou, pupil-like,
- Take thy correction mildly, kiss the rod,
- And fawn on rage with base humility,
- Which art a lion and a king of beasts?
- KING RICHARD II:
- A king of beasts, indeed; if aught but beasts,
- I had been still a happy king of men.
- Good sometime queen, prepare thee hence for France:
- Think I am dead and that even here thou takest,
- As from my death-bed, thy last living leave.
- In winter's tedious nights sit by the fire
- With good old folks and let them tell thee tales
- Of woeful ages long ago betid;
- And ere thou bid good night, to quit their griefs,
- Tell thou the lamentable tale of me
- And send the hearers weeping to their beds:
- For why, the senseless brands will sympathize
- The heavy accent of thy moving tongue
- And in compassion weep the fire out;
- And some will mourn in ashes, some coal-black,
- For the deposing of a rightful king.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- My lord, the mind of Bolingbroke is changed:
- You must to Pomfret, not unto the Tower.
- And, madam, there is order ta'en for you;
- With all swift speed you must away to France.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Northumberland, thou ladder wherewithal
- The mounting Bolingbroke ascends my throne,
- The time shall not be many hours of age
- More than it is ere foul sin gathering head
- Shalt break into corruption: thou shalt think,
- Though he divide the realm and give thee half,
- It is too little, helping him to all;
- And he shall think that thou, which know'st the way
- To plant unrightful kings, wilt know again,
- Being ne'er so little urged, another way
- To pluck him headlong from the usurped throne.
- The love of wicked men converts to fear;
- That fear to hate, and hate turns one or both
- To worthy danger and deserved death.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- My guilt be on my head, and there an end.
- Take leave and part; for you must part forthwith.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Doubly divorced! Bad men, you violate
- A twofold marriage, 'twixt my crown and me,
- And then betwixt me and my married wife.
- Let me unkiss the oath 'twixt thee and me;
- And yet not so, for with a kiss 'twas made.
- Part us, Northumberland; I toward the north,
- Where shivering cold and sickness pines the clime;
- My wife to France: from whence, set forth in pomp,
- She came adorned hither like sweet May,
- Sent back like Hallowmas or short'st of day.
- QUEEN:
- And must we be divided? must we part?
- KING RICHARD II:
- Ay, hand from hand, my love, and heart from heart.
- QUEEN:
- Banish us both and send the king with me.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- That were some love but little policy.
- QUEEN:
- Then whither he goes, thither let me go.
- KING RICHARD II:
- So two, together weeping, make one woe.
- Weep thou for me in France, I for thee here;
- Better far off than near, be ne'er the near.
- Go, count thy way with sighs; I mine with groans.
- QUEEN:
- So longest way shall have the longest moans.
- KING RICHARD II:
- Twice for one step I'll groan, the way being short,
- And piece the way out with a heavy heart.
- Come, come, in wooing sorrow let's be brief,
- Since, wedding it, there is such length in grief;
- One kiss shall stop our mouths, and dumbly part;
- Thus give I mine, and thus take I thy heart.
- QUEEN:
- Give me mine own again; 'twere no good part
- To take on me to keep and kill thy heart.
- So, now I have mine own again, be gone,
- That I might strive to kill it with a groan.
- KING RICHARD II:
- We make woe wanton with this fond delay:
- Once more, adieu; the rest let sorrow say.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- My lord, you told me you would tell the rest,
- When weeping made you break the story off,
- of our two cousins coming into London.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- Where did I leave?
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- At that sad stop, my lord,
- Where rude misgovern'd hands from windows' tops
- Threw dust and rubbish on King Richard's head.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- Then, as I said, the duke, great Bolingbroke,
- Mounted upon a hot and fiery steed
- Which his aspiring rider seem'd to know,
- With slow but stately pace kept on his course,
- Whilst all tongues cried 'God save thee,
- Bolingbroke!'
- You would have thought the very windows spake,
- So many greedy looks of young and old
- Through casements darted their desiring eyes
- Upon his visage, and that all the walls
- With painted imagery had said at once
- 'Jesu preserve thee! welcome, Bolingbroke!'
- Whilst he, from the one side to the other turning,
- Bareheaded, lower than his proud steed's neck,
- Bespake them thus: 'I thank you, countrymen:'
- And thus still doing, thus he pass'd along.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Alack, poor Richard! where rode he the whilst?
- DUKE OF YORK:
- As in a theatre, the eyes of men,
- After a well-graced actor leaves the stage,
- Are idly bent on him that enters next,
- Thinking his prattle to be tedious;
- Even so, or with much more contempt, men's eyes
- Did scowl on gentle Richard; no man cried 'God save him!'
- No joyful tongue gave him his welcome home:
- But dust was thrown upon his sacred head:
- Which with such gentle sorrow he shook off,
- His face still combating with tears and smiles,
- The badges of his grief and patience,
- That had not God, for some strong purpose, steel'd
- The hearts of men, they must perforce have melted
- And barbarism itself have pitied him.
- But heaven hath a hand in these events,
- To whose high will we bound our calm contents.
- To Bolingbroke are we sworn subjects now,
- Whose state and honour I for aye allow.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Here comes my son Aumerle.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- Aumerle that was;
- But that is lost for being Richard's friend,
- And, madam, you must call him Rutland now:
- I am in parliament pledge for his truth
- And lasting fealty to the new-made king.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Welcome, my son: who are the violets now
- That strew the green lap of the new come spring?
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Madam, I know not, nor I greatly care not:
- God knows I had as lief be none as one.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- Well, bear you well in this new spring of time,
- Lest you be cropp'd before you come to prime.
- What news from Oxford? hold those justs and triumphs?
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- For aught I know, my lord, they do.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- You will be there, I know.
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- If God prevent not, I purpose so.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- What seal is that, that hangs without thy bosom?
- Yea, look'st thou pale? let me see the writing.
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- My lord, 'tis nothing.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- No matter, then, who see it;
- I will be satisfied; let me see the writing.
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- I do beseech your grace to pardon me:
- It is a matter of small consequence,
- Which for some reasons I would not have seen.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- Which for some reasons, sir, I mean to see.
- I fear, I fear,--
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- What should you fear?
- 'Tis nothing but some bond, that he is enter'd into
- For gay apparel 'gainst the triumph day.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- Bound to himself! what doth he with a bond
- That he is bound to? Wife, thou art a fool.
- Boy, let me see the writing.
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- I do beseech you, pardon me; I may not show it.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- I will be satisfied; let me see it, I say.
- Treason! foul treason! Villain! traitor! slave!
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- What is the matter, my lord?
- DUKE OF YORK:
- Ho! who is within there?
- Saddle my horse.
- God for his mercy, what treachery is here!
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Why, what is it, my lord?
- DUKE OF YORK:
- Give me my boots, I say; saddle my horse.
- Now, by mine honour, by my life, by my troth,
- I will appeach the villain.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- What is the matter?
- DUKE OF YORK:
- Peace, foolish woman.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- I will not peace. What is the matter, Aumerle.
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Good mother, be content; it is no more
- Than my poor life must answer.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Thy life answer!
- DUKE OF YORK:
- Bring me my boots: I will unto the king.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Strike him, Aumerle. Poor boy, thou art amazed.
- Hence, villain! never more come in my sight.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- Give me my boots, I say.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Why, York, what wilt thou do?
- Wilt thou not hide the trespass of thine own?
- Have we more sons? or are we like to have?
- Is not my teeming date drunk up with time?
- And wilt thou pluck my fair son from mine age,
- And rob me of a happy mother's name?
- Is he not like thee? is he not thine own?
- DUKE OF YORK:
- Thou fond mad woman,
- Wilt thou conceal this dark conspiracy?
- A dozen of them here have ta'en the sacrament,
- And interchangeably set down their hands,
- To kill the king at Oxford.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- He shall be none;
- We'll keep him here: then what is that to him?
- DUKE OF YORK:
- Away, fond woman! were he twenty times my son,
- I would appeach him.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Hadst thou groan'd for him
- As I have done, thou wouldst be more pitiful.
- But now I know thy mind; thou dost suspect
- That I have been disloyal to thy bed,
- And that he is a bastard, not thy son:
- Sweet York, sweet husband, be not of that mind:
- He is as like thee as a man may be,
- Not like to me, or any of my kin,
- And yet I love him.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- Make way, unruly woman!
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- After, Aumerle! mount thee upon his horse;
- Spur post, and get before him to the king,
- And beg thy pardon ere he do accuse thee.
- I'll not be long behind; though I be old,
- I doubt not but to ride as fast as York:
- And never will I rise up from the ground
- Till Bolingbroke have pardon'd thee. Away, be gone!
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Can no man tell me of my unthrifty son?
- 'Tis full three months since I did see him last;
- If any plague hang over us, 'tis he.
- I would to God, my lords, he might be found:
- Inquire at London, 'mongst the taverns there,
- For there, they say, he daily doth frequent,
- With unrestrained loose companions,
- Even such, they say, as stand in narrow lanes,
- And beat our watch, and rob our passengers;
- Which he, young wanton and effeminate boy,
- Takes on the point of honour to support
- So dissolute a crew.
- HENRY PERCY:
- My lord, some two days since I saw the prince,
- And told him of those triumphs held at Oxford.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- And what said the gallant?
- HENRY PERCY:
- His answer was, he would unto the stews,
- And from the common'st creature pluck a glove,
- And wear it as a favour; and with that
- He would unhorse the lustiest challenger.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- As dissolute as desperate; yet through both
- I see some sparks of better hope, which elder years
- May happily bring forth. But who comes here?
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Where is the king?
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- What means our cousin, that he stares and looks
- So wildly?
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- God save your grace! I do beseech your majesty,
- To have some conference with your grace alone.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Withdraw yourselves, and leave us here alone.
- What is the matter with our cousin now?
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- For ever may my knees grow to the earth,
- My tongue cleave to my roof within my mouth
- Unless a pardon ere I rise or speak.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Intended or committed was this fault?
- If on the first, how heinous e'er it be,
- To win thy after-love I pardon thee.
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Then give me leave that I may turn the key,
- That no man enter till my tale be done.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Have thy desire.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Villain, I'll make thee safe.
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Stay thy revengeful hand; thou hast no cause to fear.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- What is the matter, uncle? speak;
- Recover breath; tell us how near is danger,
- That we may arm us to encounter it.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- Peruse this writing here, and thou shalt know
- The treason that my haste forbids me show.
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Remember, as thou read'st, thy promise pass'd:
- I do repent me; read not my name there
- My heart is not confederate with my hand.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- It was, villain, ere thy hand did set it down.
- I tore it from the traitor's bosom, king;
- Fear, and not love, begets his penitence:
- Forget to pity him, lest thy pity prove
- A serpent that will sting thee to the heart.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- O heinous, strong and bold conspiracy!
- O loyal father of a treacherous son!
- Thou sheer, immaculate and silver fountain,
- From when this stream through muddy passages
- Hath held his current and defiled himself!
- Thy overflow of good converts to bad,
- And thy abundant goodness shall excuse
- This deadly blot in thy digressing son.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- So shall my virtue be his vice's bawd;
- And he shall spend mine honour with his shame,
- As thriftless sons their scraping fathers' gold.
- Mine honour lives when his dishonour dies,
- Or my shamed life in his dishonour lies:
- Thou kill'st me in his life; giving him breath,
- The traitor lives, the true man's put to death.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- What shrill-voiced suppliant makes this eager cry?
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- A woman, and thy aunt, great king; 'tis I.
- Speak with me, pity me, open the door.
- A beggar begs that never begg'd before.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Our scene is alter'd from a serious thing,
- And now changed to 'The Beggar and the King.'
- My dangerous cousin, let your mother in:
- I know she is come to pray for your foul sin.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- If thou do pardon, whosoever pray,
- More sins for this forgiveness prosper may.
- This fester'd joint cut off, the rest rest sound;
- This let alone will all the rest confound.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- O king, believe not this hard-hearted man!
- Love loving not itself none other can.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- Thou frantic woman, what dost thou make here?
- Shall thy old dugs once more a traitor rear?
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Sweet York, be patient. Hear me, gentle liege.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Rise up, good aunt.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Not yet, I thee beseech:
- For ever will I walk upon my knees,
- And never see day that the happy sees,
- Till thou give joy; until thou bid me joy,
- By pardoning Rutland, my transgressing boy.
- DUKE OF AUMERLE:
- Unto my mother's prayers I bend my knee.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- Against them both my true joints bended be.
- Ill mayst thou thrive, if thou grant any grace!
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Pleads he in earnest? look upon his face;
- His eyes do drop no tears, his prayers are in jest;
- His words come from his mouth, ours from our breast:
- He prays but faintly and would be denied;
- We pray with heart and soul and all beside:
- His weary joints would gladly rise, I know;
- Our knees shall kneel till to the ground they grow:
- His prayers are full of false hypocrisy;
- Ours of true zeal and deep integrity.
- Our prayers do out-pray his; then let them have
- That mercy which true prayer ought to have.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Good aunt, stand up.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Nay, do not say, 'stand up;'
- Say, 'pardon' first, and afterwards 'stand up.'
- And if I were thy nurse, thy tongue to teach,
- 'Pardon' should be the first word of thy speech.
- I never long'd to hear a word till now;
- Say 'pardon,' king; let pity teach thee how:
- The word is short, but not so short as sweet;
- No word like 'pardon' for kings' mouths so meet.
- DUKE OF YORK:
- Speak it in French, king; say, 'pardonne moi.'
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Dost thou teach pardon pardon to destroy?
- Ah, my sour husband, my hard-hearted lord,
- That set'st the word itself against the word!
- Speak 'pardon' as 'tis current in our land;
- The chopping French we do not understand.
- Thine eye begins to speak; set thy tongue there;
- Or in thy piteous heart plant thou thine ear;
- That hearing how our plaints and prayers do pierce,
- Pity may move thee 'pardon' to rehearse.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Good aunt, stand up.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- I do not sue to stand;
- Pardon is all the suit I have in hand.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- I pardon him, as God shall pardon me.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- O happy vantage of a kneeling knee!
- Yet am I sick for fear: speak it again;
- Twice saying 'pardon' doth not pardon twain,
- But makes one pardon strong.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- With all my heart
- I pardon him.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- A god on earth thou art.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- But for our trusty brother-in-law and the abbot,
- With all the rest of that consorted crew,
- Destruction straight shall dog them at the heels.
- Good uncle, help to order several powers
- To Oxford, or where'er these traitors are:
- They shall not live within this world, I swear,
- But I will have them, if I once know where.
- Uncle, farewell: and, cousin too, adieu:
- Your mother well hath pray'd, and prove you true.
- DUCHESS OF YORK:
- Come, my old son: I pray God make thee new.
- EXTON:
- Didst thou not mark the king, what words he spake,
- 'Have I no friend will rid me of this living fear?'
- Was it not so?
- Servant:
- These were his very words.
- EXTON:
- 'Have I no friend?' quoth he: he spake it twice,
- And urged it twice together, did he not?
- Servant:
- He did.
- EXTON:
- And speaking it, he wistly look'd on me,
- And who should say, 'I would thou wert the man'
- That would divorce this terror from my heart;'
- Meaning the king at Pomfret. Come, let's go:
- I am the king's friend, and will rid his foe.
- KING RICHARD II:
- I have been studying how I may compare
- This prison where I live unto the world:
- And for because the world is populous
- And here is not a creature but myself,
- I cannot do it; yet I'll hammer it out.
- My brain I'll prove the female to my soul,
- My soul the father; and these two beget
- A generation of still-breeding thoughts,
- And these same thoughts people this little world,
- In humours like the people of this world,
- For no thought is contented. The better sort,
- As thoughts of things divine, are intermix'd
- With scruples and do set the word itself
- Against the word:
- As thus, 'Come, little ones,' and then again,
- 'It is as hard to come as for a camel
- To thread the postern of a small needle's eye.'
- Thoughts tending to ambition, they do plot
- Unlikely wonders; how these vain weak nails
- May tear a passage through the flinty ribs
- Of this hard world, my ragged prison walls,
- And, for they cannot, die in their own pride.
- Thoughts tending to content flatter themselves
- That they are not the first of fortune's slaves,
- Nor shall not be the last; like silly beggars
- Who sitting in the stocks refuge their shame,
- That many have and others must sit there;
- And in this thought they find a kind of ease,
- Bearing their own misfortunes on the back
- Of such as have before endured the like.
- Thus play I in one person many people,
- And none contented: sometimes am I king;
- Then treasons make me wish myself a beggar,
- And so I am: then crushing penury
- Persuades me I was better when a king;
- Then am I king'd again: and by and by
- Think that I am unking'd by Bolingbroke,
- And straight am nothing: but whate'er I be,
- Nor I nor any man that but man is
- With nothing shall be pleased, till he be eased
- With being nothing. Music do I hear?
- Ha, ha! keep time: how sour sweet music is,
- When time is broke and no proportion kept!
- So is it in the music of men's lives.
- And here have I the daintiness of ear
- To cheque time broke in a disorder'd string;
- But for the concord of my state and time
- Had not an ear to hear my true time broke.
- I wasted time, and now doth time waste me;
- For now hath time made me his numbering clock:
- My thoughts are minutes; and with sighs they jar
- Their watches on unto mine eyes, the outward watch,
- Whereto my finger, like a dial's point,
- Is pointing still, in cleansing them from tears.
- Now sir, the sound that tells what hour it is
- Are clamorous groans, which strike upon my heart,
- Which is the bell: so sighs and tears and groans
- Show minutes, times, and hours: but my time
- Runs posting on in Bolingbroke's proud joy,
- While I stand fooling here, his Jack o' the clock.
- This music mads me; let it sound no more;
- For though it have holp madmen to their wits,
- In me it seems it will make wise men mad.
- Yet blessing on his heart that gives it me!
- For 'tis a sign of love; and love to Richard
- Is a strange brooch in this all-hating world.
- Groom:
- Hail, royal prince!
- KING RICHARD II:
- Thanks, noble peer;
- The cheapest of us is ten groats too dear.
- What art thou? and how comest thou hither,
- Where no man never comes but that sad dog
- That brings me food to make misfortune live?
- Groom:
- I was a poor groom of thy stable, king,
- When thou wert king; who, travelling towards York,
- With much ado at length have gotten leave
- To look upon my sometimes royal master's face.
- O, how it yearn'd my heart when I beheld
- In London streets, that coronation-day,
- When Bolingbroke rode on roan Barbary,
- That horse that thou so often hast bestrid,
- That horse that I so carefully have dress'd!
- KING RICHARD II:
- Rode he on Barbary? Tell me, gentle friend,
- How went he under him?
- Groom:
- So proudly as if he disdain'd the ground.
- KING RICHARD II:
- So proud that Bolingbroke was on his back!
- That jade hath eat bread from my royal hand;
- This hand hath made him proud with clapping him.
- Would he not stumble? would he not fall down,
- Since pride must have a fall, and break the neck
- Of that proud man that did usurp his back?
- Forgiveness, horse! why do I rail on thee,
- Since thou, created to be awed by man,
- Wast born to bear? I was not made a horse;
- And yet I bear a burthen like an ass,
- Spurr'd, gall'd and tired by jouncing Bolingbroke.
- Keeper:
- Fellow, give place; here is no longer stay.
- KING RICHARD II:
- If thou love me, 'tis time thou wert away.
- Groom:
- What my tongue dares not, that my heart shall say.
- Keeper:
- My lord, will't please you to fall to?
- KING RICHARD II:
- Taste of it first, as thou art wont to do.
- Keeper:
- My lord, I dare not: Sir Pierce of Exton, who
- lately came from the king, commands the contrary.
- KING RICHARD II:
- The devil take Henry of Lancaster and thee!
- Patience is stale, and I am weary of it.
- Keeper:
- Help, help, help!
- KING RICHARD II:
- How now! what means death in this rude assault?
- Villain, thy own hand yields thy death's instrument.
- Go thou, and fill another room in hell.
- That hand shall burn in never-quenching fire
- That staggers thus my person. Exton, thy fierce hand
- Hath with the king's blood stain'd the king's own land.
- Mount, mount, my soul! thy seat is up on high;
- Whilst my gross flesh sinks downward, here to die.
- EXTON:
- As full of valour as of royal blood:
- Both have I spill'd; O would the deed were good!
- For now the devil, that told me I did well,
- Says that this deed is chronicled in hell.
- This dead king to the living king I'll bear
- Take hence the rest, and give them burial here.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Kind uncle York, the latest news we hear
- Is that the rebels have consumed with fire
- Our town of Cicester in Gloucestershire;
- But whether they be ta'en or slain we hear not.
- Welcome, my lord what is the news?
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- First, to thy sacred state wish I all happiness.
- The next news is, I have to London sent
- The heads of Oxford, Salisbury, Blunt, and Kent:
- The manner of their taking may appear
- At large discoursed in this paper here.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- We thank thee, gentle Percy, for thy pains;
- And to thy worth will add right worthy gains.
- LORD FITZWATER:
- My lord, I have from Oxford sent to London
- The heads of Brocas and Sir Bennet Seely,
- Two of the dangerous consorted traitors
- That sought at Oxford thy dire overthrow.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Thy pains, Fitzwater, shall not be forgot;
- Right noble is thy merit, well I wot.
- HENRY PERCY:
- The grand conspirator, Abbot of Westminster,
- With clog of conscience and sour melancholy
- Hath yielded up his body to the grave;
- But here is Carlisle living, to abide
- Thy kingly doom and sentence of his pride.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Carlisle, this is your doom:
- Choose out some secret place, some reverend room,
- More than thou hast, and with it joy thy life;
- So as thou livest in peace, die free from strife:
- For though mine enemy thou hast ever been,
- High sparks of honour in thee have I seen.
- EXTON:
- Great king, within this coffin I present
- Thy buried fear: herein all breathless lies
- The mightiest of thy greatest enemies,
- Richard of Bordeaux, by me hither brought.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Exton, I thank thee not; for thou hast wrought
- A deed of slander with thy fatal hand
- Upon my head and all this famous land.
- EXTON:
- From your own mouth, my lord, did I this deed.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- They love not poison that do poison need,
- Nor do I thee: though I did wish him dead,
- I hate the murderer, love him murdered.
- The guilt of conscience take thou for thy labour,
- But neither my good word nor princely favour:
- With Cain go wander through shades of night,
- And never show thy head by day nor light.
- Lords, I protest, my soul is full of woe,
- That blood should sprinkle me to make me grow:
- Come, mourn with me for that I do lament,
- And put on sullen black incontinent:
- I'll make a voyage to the Holy Land,
- To wash this blood off from my guilty hand:
- March sadly after; grace my mournings here;
- In weeping after this untimely bier.
- SAMPSON:
- Gregory, o' my word, we'll not carry coals.
- GREGORY:
- No, for then we should be colliers.
- SAMPSON:
- I mean, an we be in choler, we'll draw.
- GREGORY:
- Ay, while you live, draw your neck out o' the collar.
- SAMPSON:
- I strike quickly, being moved.
- GREGORY:
- But thou art not quickly moved to strike.
- SAMPSON:
- A dog of the house of Montague moves me.
- GREGORY:
- To move is to stir; and to be valiant is to stand:
- therefore, if thou art moved, thou runn'st away.
- SAMPSON:
- A dog of that house shall move me to stand: I will
- take the wall of any man or maid of Montague's.
- GREGORY:
- That shows thee a weak slave; for the weakest goes
- to the wall.
- SAMPSON:
- True; and therefore women, being the weaker vessels,
- are ever thrust to the wall: therefore I will push
- Montague's men from the wall, and thrust his maids
- to the wall.
- GREGORY:
- The quarrel is between our masters and us their men.
- SAMPSON:
- 'Tis all one, I will show myself a tyrant: when I
- have fought with the men, I will be cruel with the
- maids, and cut off their heads.
- GREGORY:
- The heads of the maids?
- SAMPSON:
- Ay, the heads of the maids, or their maidenheads;
- take it in what sense thou wilt.
- GREGORY:
- They must take it in sense that feel it.
- SAMPSON:
- Me they shall feel while I am able to stand: and
- 'tis known I am a pretty piece of flesh.
- GREGORY:
- 'Tis well thou art not fish; if thou hadst, thou
- hadst been poor John. Draw thy tool! here comes
- two of the house of the Montagues.
- SAMPSON:
- My naked weapon is out: quarrel, I will back thee.
- GREGORY:
- How! turn thy back and run?
- SAMPSON:
- Fear me not.
- GREGORY:
- No, marry; I fear thee!
- SAMPSON:
- Let us take the law of our sides; let them begin.
- GREGORY:
- I will frown as I pass by, and let them take it as
- they list.
- SAMPSON:
- Nay, as they dare. I will bite my thumb at them;
- which is a disgrace to them, if they bear it.
- ABRAHAM:
- Do you bite your thumb at us, sir?
- SAMPSON:
- I do bite my thumb, sir.
- ABRAHAM:
- Do you bite your thumb at us, sir?
- SAMPSON:
- GREGORY:
- No.
- SAMPSON:
- No, sir, I do not bite my thumb at you, sir, but I
- bite my thumb, sir.
- GREGORY:
- Do you quarrel, sir?
- ABRAHAM:
- Quarrel sir! no, sir.
- SAMPSON:
- If you do, sir, I am for you: I serve as good a man as you.
- ABRAHAM:
- No better.
- SAMPSON:
- Well, sir.
- GREGORY:
- Say 'better:' here comes one of my master's kinsmen.
- SAMPSON:
- Yes, better, sir.
- ABRAHAM:
- You lie.
- SAMPSON:
- Draw, if you be men. Gregory, remember thy swashing blow.
- BENVOLIO:
- Part, fools!
- Put up your swords; you know not what you do.
- TYBALT:
- What, art thou drawn among these heartless hinds?
- Turn thee, Benvolio, look upon thy death.
- BENVOLIO:
- I do but keep the peace: put up thy sword,
- Or manage it to part these men with me.
- TYBALT:
- What, drawn, and talk of peace! I hate the word,
- As I hate hell, all Montagues, and thee:
- Have at thee, coward!
- First Citizen:
- Clubs, bills, and partisans! strike! beat them down!
- Down with the Capulets! down with the Montagues!
- CAPULET:
- What noise is this? Give me my long sword, ho!
- LADY CAPULET:
- A crutch, a crutch! why call you for a sword?
- CAPULET:
- My sword, I say! Old Montague is come,
- And flourishes his blade in spite of me.
- MONTAGUE:
- Thou villain Capulet,--Hold me not, let me go.
- LADY MONTAGUE:
- Thou shalt not stir a foot to seek a foe.
- PRINCE:
- Rebellious subjects, enemies to peace,
- Profaners of this neighbour-stained steel,--
- Will they not hear? What, ho! you men, you beasts,
- That quench the fire of your pernicious rage
- With purple fountains issuing from your veins,
- On pain of torture, from those bloody hands
- Throw your mistemper'd weapons to the ground,
- And hear the sentence of your moved prince.
- Three civil brawls, bred of an airy word,
- By thee, old Capulet, and Montague,
- Have thrice disturb'd the quiet of our streets,
- And made Verona's ancient citizens
- Cast by their grave beseeming ornaments,
- To wield old partisans, in hands as old,
- Canker'd with peace, to part your canker'd hate:
- If ever you disturb our streets again,
- Your lives shall pay the forfeit of the peace.
- For this time, all the rest depart away:
- You Capulet; shall go along with me:
- And, Montague, come you this afternoon,
- To know our further pleasure in this case,
- To old Free-town, our common judgment-place.
- Once more, on pain of death, all men depart.
- MONTAGUE:
- Who set this ancient quarrel new abroach?
- Speak, nephew, were you by when it began?
- BENVOLIO:
- Here were the servants of your adversary,
- And yours, close fighting ere I did approach:
- I drew to part them: in the instant came
- The fiery Tybalt, with his sword prepared,
- Which, as he breathed defiance to my ears,
- He swung about his head and cut the winds,
- Who nothing hurt withal hiss'd him in scorn:
- While we were interchanging thrusts and blows,
- Came more and more and fought on part and part,
- Till the prince came, who parted either part.
- LADY MONTAGUE:
- O, where is Romeo? saw you him to-day?
- Right glad I am he was not at this fray.
- BENVOLIO:
- Madam, an hour before the worshipp'd sun
- Peer'd forth the golden window of the east,
- A troubled mind drave me to walk abroad;
- Where, underneath the grove of sycamore
- That westward rooteth from the city's side,
- So early walking did I see your son:
- Towards him I made, but he was ware of me
- And stole into the covert of the wood:
- I, measuring his affections by my own,
- That most are busied when they're most alone,
- Pursued my humour not pursuing his,
- And gladly shunn'd who gladly fled from me.
- MONTAGUE:
- Many a morning hath he there been seen,
- With tears augmenting the fresh morning dew.
- Adding to clouds more clouds with his deep sighs;
- But all so soon as the all-cheering sun
- Should in the furthest east begin to draw
- The shady curtains from Aurora's bed,
- Away from the light steals home my heavy son,
- And private in his chamber pens himself,
- Shuts up his windows, locks far daylight out
- And makes himself an artificial night:
- Black and portentous must this humour prove,
- Unless good counsel may the cause remove.
- BENVOLIO:
- My noble uncle, do you know the cause?
- MONTAGUE:
- I neither know it nor can learn of him.
- BENVOLIO:
- Have you importuned him by any means?
- MONTAGUE:
- Both by myself and many other friends:
- But he, his own affections' counsellor,
- Is to himself--I will not say how true--
- But to himself so secret and so close,
- So far from sounding and discovery,
- As is the bud bit with an envious worm,
- Ere he can spread his sweet leaves to the air,
- Or dedicate his beauty to the sun.
- Could we but learn from whence his sorrows grow.
- We would as willingly give cure as know.
- BENVOLIO:
- See, where he comes: so please you, step aside;
- I'll know his grievance, or be much denied.
- MONTAGUE:
- I would thou wert so happy by thy stay,
- To hear true shrift. Come, madam, let's away.
- BENVOLIO:
- Good-morrow, cousin.
- ROMEO:
- Is the day so young?
- BENVOLIO:
- But new struck nine.
- ROMEO:
- Ay me! sad hours seem long.
- Was that my father that went hence so fast?
- BENVOLIO:
- It was. What sadness lengthens Romeo's hours?
- ROMEO:
- Not having that, which, having, makes them short.
- BENVOLIO:
- In love?
- ROMEO:
- Out--
- BENVOLIO:
- Of love?
- ROMEO:
- Out of her favour, where I am in love.
- BENVOLIO:
- Alas, that love, so gentle in his view,
- Should be so tyrannous and rough in proof!
- ROMEO:
- Alas, that love, whose view is muffled still,
- Should, without eyes, see pathways to his will!
- Where shall we dine? O me! What fray was here?
- Yet tell me not, for I have heard it all.
- Here's much to do with hate, but more with love.
- Why, then, O brawling love! O loving hate!
- O any thing, of nothing first create!
- O heavy lightness! serious vanity!
- Mis-shapen chaos of well-seeming forms!
- Feather of lead, bright smoke, cold fire,
- sick health!
- Still-waking sleep, that is not what it is!
- This love feel I, that feel no love in this.
- Dost thou not laugh?
- BENVOLIO:
- No, coz, I rather weep.
- ROMEO:
- Good heart, at what?
- BENVOLIO:
- At thy good heart's oppression.
- ROMEO:
- Why, such is love's transgression.
- Griefs of mine own lie heavy in my breast,
- Which thou wilt propagate, to have it prest
- With more of thine: this love that thou hast shown
- Doth add more grief to too much of mine own.
- Love is a smoke raised with the fume of sighs;
- Being purged, a fire sparkling in lovers' eyes;
- Being vex'd a sea nourish'd with lovers' tears:
- What is it else? a madness most discreet,
- A choking gall and a preserving sweet.
- Farewell, my coz.
- BENVOLIO:
- Soft! I will go along;
- An if you leave me so, you do me wrong.
- ROMEO:
- Tut, I have lost myself; I am not here;
- This is not Romeo, he's some other where.
- BENVOLIO:
- Tell me in sadness, who is that you love.
- ROMEO:
- What, shall I groan and tell thee?
- BENVOLIO:
- Groan! why, no.
- But sadly tell me who.
- ROMEO:
- Bid a sick man in sadness make his will:
- Ah, word ill urged to one that is so ill!
- In sadness, cousin, I do love a woman.
- BENVOLIO:
- I aim'd so near, when I supposed you loved.
- ROMEO:
- A right good mark-man! And she's fair I love.
- BENVOLIO:
- A right fair mark, fair coz, is soonest hit.
- ROMEO:
- Well, in that hit you miss: she'll not be hit
- With Cupid's arrow; she hath Dian's wit;
- And, in strong proof of chastity well arm'd,
- From love's weak childish bow she lives unharm'd.
- She will not stay the siege of loving terms,
- Nor bide the encounter of assailing eyes,
- Nor ope her lap to saint-seducing gold:
- O, she is rich in beauty, only poor,
- That when she dies with beauty dies her store.
- BENVOLIO:
- Then she hath sworn that she will still live chaste?
- ROMEO:
- She hath, and in that sparing makes huge waste,
- For beauty starved with her severity
- Cuts beauty off from all posterity.
- She is too fair, too wise, wisely too fair,
- To merit bliss by making me despair:
- She hath forsworn to love, and in that vow
- Do I live dead that live to tell it now.
- BENVOLIO:
- Be ruled by me, forget to think of her.
- ROMEO:
- O, teach me how I should forget to think.
- BENVOLIO:
- By giving liberty unto thine eyes;
- Examine other beauties.
- ROMEO:
- 'Tis the way
- To call hers exquisite, in question more:
- These happy masks that kiss fair ladies' brows
- Being black put us in mind they hide the fair;
- He that is strucken blind cannot forget
- The precious treasure of his eyesight lost:
- Show me a mistress that is passing fair,
- What doth her beauty serve, but as a note
- Where I may read who pass'd that passing fair?
- Farewell: thou canst not teach me to forget.
- BENVOLIO:
- I'll pay that doctrine, or else die in debt.
- CAPULET:
- But Montague is bound as well as I,
- In penalty alike; and 'tis not hard, I think,
- For men so old as we to keep the peace.
- PARIS:
- Of honourable reckoning are you both;
- And pity 'tis you lived at odds so long.
- But now, my lord, what say you to my suit?
- CAPULET:
- But saying o'er what I have said before:
- My child is yet a stranger in the world;
- She hath not seen the change of fourteen years,
- Let two more summers wither in their pride,
- Ere we may think her ripe to be a bride.
- PARIS:
- Younger than she are happy mothers made.
- CAPULET:
- And too soon marr'd are those so early made.
- The earth hath swallow'd all my hopes but she,
- She is the hopeful lady of my earth:
- But woo her, gentle Paris, get her heart,
- My will to her consent is but a part;
- An she agree, within her scope of choice
- Lies my consent and fair according voice.
- This night I hold an old accustom'd feast,
- Whereto I have invited many a guest,
- Such as I love; and you, among the store,
- One more, most welcome, makes my number more.
- At my poor house look to behold this night
- Earth-treading stars that make dark heaven light:
- Such comfort as do lusty young men feel
- When well-apparell'd April on the heel
- Of limping winter treads, even such delight
- Among fresh female buds shall you this night
- Inherit at my house; hear all, all see,
- And like her most whose merit most shall be:
- Which on more view, of many mine being one
- May stand in number, though in reckoning none,
- Come, go with me.
- Go, sirrah, trudge about
- Through fair Verona; find those persons out
- Whose names are written there, and to them say,
- My house and welcome on their pleasure stay.
- Servant:
- Find them out whose names are written here! It is
- written, that the shoemaker should meddle with his
- yard, and the tailor with his last, the fisher with
- his pencil, and the painter with his nets; but I am
- sent to find those persons whose names are here
- writ, and can never find what names the writing
- person hath here writ. I must to the learned.--In good time.
- BENVOLIO:
- Tut, man, one fire burns out another's burning,
- One pain is lessen'd by another's anguish;
- Turn giddy, and be holp by backward turning;
- One desperate grief cures with another's languish:
- Take thou some new infection to thy eye,
- And the rank poison of the old will die.
- ROMEO:
- Your plaintain-leaf is excellent for that.
- BENVOLIO:
- For what, I pray thee?
- ROMEO:
- For your broken shin.
- BENVOLIO:
- Why, Romeo, art thou mad?
- ROMEO:
- Not mad, but bound more than a mad-man is;
- Shut up in prison, kept without my food,
- Whipp'd and tormented and--God-den, good fellow.
- Servant:
- God gi' god-den. I pray, sir, can you read?
- ROMEO:
- Ay, mine own fortune in my misery.
- Servant:
- Perhaps you have learned it without book: but, I
- pray, can you read any thing you see?
- ROMEO:
- Ay, if I know the letters and the language.
- Servant:
- Ye say honestly: rest you merry!
- ROMEO:
- Stay, fellow; I can read.
- 'Signior Martino and his wife and daughters;
- County Anselme and his beauteous sisters; the lady
- widow of Vitravio; Signior Placentio and his lovely
- nieces; Mercutio and his brother Valentine; mine
- uncle Capulet, his wife and daughters; my fair niece
- Rosaline; Livia; Signior Valentio and his cousin
- Tybalt, Lucio and the lively Helena.' A fair
- assembly: whither should they come?
- Servant:
- Up.
- ROMEO:
- Whither?
- Servant:
- To supper; to our house.
- ROMEO:
- Whose house?
- Servant:
- My master's.
- ROMEO:
- Indeed, I should have ask'd you that before.
- Servant:
- Now I'll tell you without asking: my master is the
- great rich Capulet; and if you be not of the house
- of Montagues, I pray, come and crush a cup of wine.
- Rest you merry!
- BENVOLIO:
- At this same ancient feast of Capulet's
- Sups the fair Rosaline whom thou so lovest,
- With all the admired beauties of Verona:
- Go thither; and, with unattainted eye,
- Compare her face with some that I shall show,
- And I will make thee think thy swan a crow.
- ROMEO:
- When the devout religion of mine eye
- Maintains such falsehood, then turn tears to fires;
- And these, who often drown'd could never die,
- Transparent heretics, be burnt for liars!
- One fairer than my love! the all-seeing sun
- Ne'er saw her match since first the world begun.
- BENVOLIO:
- Tut, you saw her fair, none else being by,
- Herself poised with herself in either eye:
- But in that crystal scales let there be weigh'd
- Your lady's love against some other maid
- That I will show you shining at this feast,
- And she shall scant show well that now shows best.
- ROMEO:
- I'll go along, no such sight to be shown,
- But to rejoice in splendor of mine own.
- LADY CAPULET:
- Nurse, where's my daughter? call her forth to me.
- Nurse:
- Now, by my maidenhead, at twelve year old,
- I bade her come. What, lamb! what, ladybird!
- God forbid! Where's this girl? What, Juliet!
- JULIET:
- How now! who calls?
- Nurse:
- Your mother.
- JULIET:
- Madam, I am here.
- What is your will?
- LADY CAPULET:
- This is the matter:--Nurse, give leave awhile,
- We must talk in secret:--nurse, come back again;
- I have remember'd me, thou's hear our counsel.
- Thou know'st my daughter's of a pretty age.
- Nurse:
- Faith, I can tell her age unto an hour.
- LADY CAPULET:
- She's not fourteen.
- Nurse:
- I'll lay fourteen of my teeth,--
- And yet, to my teeth be it spoken, I have but four--
- She is not fourteen. How long is it now
- To Lammas-tide?
- LADY CAPULET:
- A fortnight and odd days.
- Nurse:
- Even or odd, of all days in the year,
- Come Lammas-eve at night shall she be fourteen.
- Susan and she--God rest all Christian souls!--
- Were of an age: well, Susan is with God;
- She was too good for me: but, as I said,
- On Lammas-eve at night shall she be fourteen;
- That shall she, marry; I remember it well.
- 'Tis since the earthquake now eleven years;
- And she was wean'd,--I never shall forget it,--
- Of all the days of the year, upon that day:
- For I had then laid wormwood to my dug,
- Sitting in the sun under the dove-house wall;
- My lord and you were then at Mantua:--
- Nay, I do bear a brain:--but, as I said,
- When it did taste the wormwood on the nipple
- Of my dug and felt it bitter, pretty fool,
- To see it tetchy and fall out with the dug!
- Shake quoth the dove-house: 'twas no need, I trow,
- To bid me trudge:
- And since that time it is eleven years;
- For then she could stand alone; nay, by the rood,
- She could have run and waddled all about;
- For even the day before, she broke her brow:
- And then my husband--God be with his soul!
- A' was a merry man--took up the child:
- 'Yea,' quoth he, 'dost thou fall upon thy face?
- Thou wilt fall backward when thou hast more wit;
- Wilt thou not, Jule?' and, by my holidame,
- The pretty wretch left crying and said 'Ay.'
- To see, now, how a jest shall come about!
- I warrant, an I should live a thousand years,
- I never should forget it: 'Wilt thou not, Jule?' quoth he;
- And, pretty fool, it stinted and said 'Ay.'
- LADY CAPULET:
- Enough of this; I pray thee, hold thy peace.
- Nurse:
- Yes, madam: yet I cannot choose but laugh,
- To think it should leave crying and say 'Ay.'
- And yet, I warrant, it had upon its brow
- A bump as big as a young cockerel's stone;
- A parlous knock; and it cried bitterly:
- 'Yea,' quoth my husband,'fall'st upon thy face?
- Thou wilt fall backward when thou comest to age;
- Wilt thou not, Jule?' it stinted and said 'Ay.'
- JULIET:
- And stint thou too, I pray thee, nurse, say I.
- Nurse:
- Peace, I have done. God mark thee to his grace!
- Thou wast the prettiest babe that e'er I nursed:
- An I might live to see thee married once,
- I have my wish.
- LADY CAPULET:
- Marry, that 'marry' is the very theme
- I came to talk of. Tell me, daughter Juliet,
- How stands your disposition to be married?
- JULIET:
- It is an honour that I dream not of.
- Nurse:
- An honour! were not I thine only nurse,
- I would say thou hadst suck'd wisdom from thy teat.
- LADY CAPULET:
- Well, think of marriage now; younger than you,
- Here in Verona, ladies of esteem,
- Are made already mothers: by my count,
- I was your mother much upon these years
- That you are now a maid. Thus then in brief:
- The valiant Paris seeks you for his love.
- Nurse:
- A man, young lady! lady, such a man
- As all the world--why, he's a man of wax.
- LADY CAPULET:
- Verona's summer hath not such a flower.
- Nurse:
- Nay, he's a flower; in faith, a very flower.
- LADY CAPULET:
- What say you? can you love the gentleman?
- This night you shall behold him at our feast;
- Read o'er the volume of young Paris' face,
- And find delight writ there with beauty's pen;
- Examine every married lineament,
- And see how one another lends content
- And what obscured in this fair volume lies
- Find written in the margent of his eyes.
- This precious book of love, this unbound lover,
- To beautify him, only lacks a cover:
- The fish lives in the sea, and 'tis much pride
- For fair without the fair within to hide:
- That book in many's eyes doth share the glory,
- That in gold clasps locks in the golden story;
- So shall you share all that he doth possess,
- By having him, making yourself no less.
- Nurse:
- No less! nay, bigger; women grow by men.
- LADY CAPULET:
- Speak briefly, can you like of Paris' love?
- JULIET:
- I'll look to like, if looking liking move:
- But no more deep will I endart mine eye
- Than your consent gives strength to make it fly.
- Servant:
- Madam, the guests are come, supper served up, you
- called, my young lady asked for, the nurse cursed in
- the pantry, and every thing in extremity. I must
- hence to wait; I beseech you, follow straight.
- LADY CAPULET:
- We follow thee.
- Juliet, the county stays.
- Nurse:
- Go, girl, seek happy nights to happy days.
- ROMEO:
- What, shall this speech be spoke for our excuse?
- Or shall we on without a apology?
- BENVOLIO:
- The date is out of such prolixity:
- We'll have no Cupid hoodwink'd with a scarf,
- Bearing a Tartar's painted bow of lath,
- Scaring the ladies like a crow-keeper;
- Nor no without-book prologue, faintly spoke
- After the prompter, for our entrance:
- But let them measure us by what they will;
- We'll measure them a measure, and be gone.
- ROMEO:
- Give me a torch: I am not for this ambling;
- Being but heavy, I will bear the light.
- MERCUTIO:
- Nay, gentle Romeo, we must have you dance.
- ROMEO:
- Not I, believe me: you have dancing shoes
- With nimble soles: I have a soul of lead
- So stakes me to the ground I cannot move.
- MERCUTIO:
- You are a lover; borrow Cupid's wings,
- And soar with them above a common bound.
- ROMEO:
- I am too sore enpierced with his shaft
- To soar with his light feathers, and so bound,
- I cannot bound a pitch above dull woe:
- Under love's heavy burden do I sink.
- MERCUTIO:
- And, to sink in it, should you burden love;
- Too great oppression for a tender thing.
- ROMEO:
- Is love a tender thing? it is too rough,
- Too rude, too boisterous, and it pricks like thorn.
- MERCUTIO:
- If love be rough with you, be rough with love;
- Prick love for pricking, and you beat love down.
- Give me a case to put my visage in:
- A visor for a visor! what care I
- What curious eye doth quote deformities?
- Here are the beetle brows shall blush for me.
- BENVOLIO:
- Come, knock and enter; and no sooner in,
- But every man betake him to his legs.
- ROMEO:
- A torch for me: let wantons light of heart
- Tickle the senseless rushes with their heels,
- For I am proverb'd with a grandsire phrase;
- I'll be a candle-holder, and look on.
- The game was ne'er so fair, and I am done.
- MERCUTIO:
- Tut, dun's the mouse, the constable's own word:
- If thou art dun, we'll draw thee from the mire
- Of this sir-reverence love, wherein thou stick'st
- Up to the ears. Come, we burn daylight, ho!
- ROMEO:
- Nay, that's not so.
- MERCUTIO:
- I mean, sir, in delay
- We waste our lights in vain, like lamps by day.
- Take our good meaning, for our judgment sits
- Five times in that ere once in our five wits.
- ROMEO:
- And we mean well in going to this mask;
- But 'tis no wit to go.
- MERCUTIO:
- Why, may one ask?
- ROMEO:
- I dream'd a dream to-night.
- MERCUTIO:
- And so did I.
- ROMEO:
- Well, what was yours?
- MERCUTIO:
- That dreamers often lie.
- ROMEO:
- In bed asleep, while they do dream things true.
- MERCUTIO:
- O, then, I see Queen Mab hath been with you.
- She is the fairies' midwife, and she comes
- In shape no bigger than an agate-stone
- On the fore-finger of an alderman,
- Drawn with a team of little atomies
- Athwart men's noses as they lie asleep;
- Her wagon-spokes made of long spiders' legs,
- The cover of the wings of grasshoppers,
- The traces of the smallest spider's web,
- The collars of the moonshine's watery beams,
- Her whip of cricket's bone, the lash of film,
- Her wagoner a small grey-coated gnat,
- Not so big as a round little worm
- Prick'd from the lazy finger of a maid;
- Her chariot is an empty hazel-nut
- Made by the joiner squirrel or old grub,
- Time out o' mind the fairies' coachmakers.
- And in this state she gallops night by night
- Through lovers' brains, and then they dream of love;
- O'er courtiers' knees, that dream on court'sies straight,
- O'er lawyers' fingers, who straight dream on fees,
- O'er ladies ' lips, who straight on kisses dream,
- Which oft the angry Mab with blisters plagues,
- Because their breaths with sweetmeats tainted are:
- Sometime she gallops o'er a courtier's nose,
- And then dreams he of smelling out a suit;
- And sometime comes she with a tithe-pig's tail
- Tickling a parson's nose as a' lies asleep,
- Then dreams, he of another benefice:
- Sometime she driveth o'er a soldier's neck,
- And then dreams he of cutting foreign throats,
- Of breaches, ambuscadoes, Spanish blades,
- Of healths five-fathom deep; and then anon
- Drums in his ear, at which he starts and wakes,
- And being thus frighted swears a prayer or two
- And sleeps again. This is that very Mab
- That plats the manes of horses in the night,
- And bakes the elflocks in foul sluttish hairs,
- Which once untangled, much misfortune bodes:
- This is the hag, when maids lie on their backs,
- That presses them and learns them first to bear,
- Making them women of good carriage:
- This is she--
- ROMEO:
- Peace, peace, Mercutio, peace!
- Thou talk'st of nothing.
- MERCUTIO:
- True, I talk of dreams,
- Which are the children of an idle brain,
- Begot of nothing but vain fantasy,
- Which is as thin of substance as the air
- And more inconstant than the wind, who wooes
- Even now the frozen bosom of the north,
- And, being anger'd, puffs away from thence,
- Turning his face to the dew-dropping south.
- BENVOLIO:
- This wind, you talk of, blows us from ourselves;
- Supper is done, and we shall come too late.
- ROMEO:
- I fear, too early: for my mind misgives
- Some consequence yet hanging in the stars
- Shall bitterly begin his fearful date
- With this night's revels and expire the term
- Of a despised life closed in my breast
- By some vile forfeit of untimely death.
- But He, that hath the steerage of my course,
- Direct my sail! On, lusty gentlemen.
- BENVOLIO:
- Strike, drum.
- First Servant:
- Where's Potpan, that he helps not to take away? He
- shift a trencher? he scrape a trencher!
- Second Servant:
- When good manners shall lie all in one or two men's
- hands and they unwashed too, 'tis a foul thing.
- First Servant:
- Away with the joint-stools, remove the
- court-cupboard, look to the plate. Good thou, save
- me a piece of marchpane; and, as thou lovest me, let
- the porter let in Susan Grindstone and Nell.
- Antony, and Potpan!
- Second Servant:
- Ay, boy, ready.
- First Servant:
- You are looked for and called for, asked for and
- sought for, in the great chamber.
- Second Servant:
- We cannot be here and there too. Cheerly, boys; be
- brisk awhile, and the longer liver take all.
- CAPULET:
- Welcome, gentlemen! ladies that have their toes
- Unplagued with corns will have a bout with you.
- Ah ha, my mistresses! which of you all
- Will now deny to dance? she that makes dainty,
- She, I'll swear, hath corns; am I come near ye now?
- Welcome, gentlemen! I have seen the day
- That I have worn a visor and could tell
- A whispering tale in a fair lady's ear,
- Such as would please: 'tis gone, 'tis gone, 'tis gone:
- You are welcome, gentlemen! come, musicians, play.
- A hall, a hall! give room! and foot it, girls.
- More light, you knaves; and turn the tables up,
- And quench the fire, the room is grown too hot.
- Ah, sirrah, this unlook'd-for sport comes well.
- Nay, sit, nay, sit, good cousin Capulet;
- For you and I are past our dancing days:
- How long is't now since last yourself and I
- Were in a mask?
- Second Capulet:
- By'r lady, thirty years.
- CAPULET:
- What, man! 'tis not so much, 'tis not so much:
- 'Tis since the nuptials of Lucentio,
- Come pentecost as quickly as it will,
- Some five and twenty years; and then we mask'd.
- Second Capulet:
- 'Tis more, 'tis more, his son is elder, sir;
- His son is thirty.
- CAPULET:
- Will you tell me that?
- His son was but a ward two years ago.
- ROMEO:
- Servant:
- I know not, sir.
- ROMEO:
- O, she doth teach the torches to burn bright!
- It seems she hangs upon the cheek of night
- Like a rich jewel in an Ethiope's ear;
- Beauty too rich for use, for earth too dear!
- So shows a snowy dove trooping with crows,
- As yonder lady o'er her fellows shows.
- The measure done, I'll watch her place of stand,
- And, touching hers, make blessed my rude hand.
- Did my heart love till now? forswear it, sight!
- For I ne'er saw true beauty till this night.
- TYBALT:
- This, by his voice, should be a Montague.
- Fetch me my rapier, boy. What dares the slave
- Come hither, cover'd with an antic face,
- To fleer and scorn at our solemnity?
- Now, by the stock and honour of my kin,
- To strike him dead, I hold it not a sin.
- CAPULET:
- Why, how now, kinsman! wherefore storm you so?
- TYBALT:
- Uncle, this is a Montague, our foe,
- A villain that is hither come in spite,
- To scorn at our solemnity this night.
- CAPULET:
- Young Romeo is it?
- TYBALT:
- 'Tis he, that villain Romeo.
- CAPULET:
- Content thee, gentle coz, let him alone;
- He bears him like a portly gentleman;
- And, to say truth, Verona brags of him
- To be a virtuous and well-govern'd youth:
- I would not for the wealth of all the town
- Here in my house do him disparagement:
- Therefore be patient, take no note of him:
- It is my will, the which if thou respect,
- Show a fair presence and put off these frowns,
- And ill-beseeming semblance for a feast.
- TYBALT:
- It fits, when such a villain is a guest:
- I'll not endure him.
- CAPULET:
- He shall be endured:
- What, goodman boy! I say, he shall: go to;
- Am I the master here, or you? go to.
- You'll not endure him! God shall mend my soul!
- You'll make a mutiny among my guests!
- You will set cock-a-hoop! you'll be the man!
- TYBALT:
- Why, uncle, 'tis a shame.
- CAPULET:
- Go to, go to;
- You are a saucy boy: is't so, indeed?
- This trick may chance to scathe you, I know what:
- You must contrary me! marry, 'tis time.
- Well said, my hearts! You are a princox; go:
- Be quiet, or--More light, more light! For shame!
- I'll make you quiet. What, cheerly, my hearts!
- TYBALT:
- Patience perforce with wilful choler meeting
- Makes my flesh tremble in their different greeting.
- I will withdraw: but this intrusion shall
- Now seeming sweet convert to bitter gall.
- ROMEO:
- JULIET:
- Good pilgrim, you do wrong your hand too much,
- Which mannerly devotion shows in this;
- For saints have hands that pilgrims' hands do touch,
- And palm to palm is holy palmers' kiss.
- ROMEO:
- Have not saints lips, and holy palmers too?
- JULIET:
- Ay, pilgrim, lips that they must use in prayer.
- ROMEO:
- O, then, dear saint, let lips do what hands do;
- They pray, grant thou, lest faith turn to despair.
- JULIET:
- Saints do not move, though grant for prayers' sake.
- ROMEO:
- Then move not, while my prayer's effect I take.
- Thus from my lips, by yours, my sin is purged.
- JULIET:
- Then have my lips the sin that they have took.
- ROMEO:
- Sin from thy lips? O trespass sweetly urged!
- Give me my sin again.
- JULIET:
- You kiss by the book.
- Nurse:
- Madam, your mother craves a word with you.
- ROMEO:
- What is her mother?
- Nurse:
- Marry, bachelor,
- Her mother is the lady of the house,
- And a good lady, and a wise and virtuous
- I nursed her daughter, that you talk'd withal;
- I tell you, he that can lay hold of her
- Shall have the chinks.
- ROMEO:
- Is she a Capulet?
- O dear account! my life is my foe's debt.
- BENVOLIO:
- Away, begone; the sport is at the best.
- ROMEO:
- Ay, so I fear; the more is my unrest.
- CAPULET:
- Nay, gentlemen, prepare not to be gone;
- We have a trifling foolish banquet towards.
- Is it e'en so? why, then, I thank you all
- I thank you, honest gentlemen; good night.
- More torches here! Come on then, let's to bed.
- Ah, sirrah, by my fay, it waxes late:
- I'll to my rest.
- JULIET:
- Come hither, nurse. What is yond gentleman?
- Nurse:
- The son and heir of old Tiberio.
- JULIET:
- What's he that now is going out of door?
- Nurse:
- Marry, that, I think, be young Petrucio.
- JULIET:
- What's he that follows there, that would not dance?
- Nurse:
- I know not.
- JULIET:
- Go ask his name: if he be married.
- My grave is like to be my wedding bed.
- Nurse:
- His name is Romeo, and a Montague;
- The only son of your great enemy.
- JULIET:
- My only love sprung from my only hate!
- Too early seen unknown, and known too late!
- Prodigious birth of love it is to me,
- That I must love a loathed enemy.
- Nurse:
- What's this? what's this?
- JULIET:
- A rhyme I learn'd even now
- Of one I danced withal.
- Nurse:
- Anon, anon!
- Come, let's away; the strangers all are gone.
- Chorus:
- Now old desire doth in his death-bed lie,
- And young affection gapes to be his heir;
- That fair for which love groan'd for and would die,
- With tender Juliet match'd, is now not fair.
- Now Romeo is beloved and loves again,
- Alike betwitched by the charm of looks,
- But to his foe supposed he must complain,
- And she steal love's sweet bait from fearful hooks:
- Being held a foe, he may not have access
- To breathe such vows as lovers use to swear;
- And she as much in love, her means much less
- To meet her new-beloved any where:
- But passion lends them power, time means, to meet
- Tempering extremities with extreme sweet.
- ROMEO:
- Can I go forward when my heart is here?
- Turn back, dull earth, and find thy centre out.
- BENVOLIO:
- Romeo! my cousin Romeo!
- MERCUTIO:
- He is wise;
- And, on my lie, hath stol'n him home to bed.
- BENVOLIO:
- He ran this way, and leap'd this orchard wall:
- Call, good Mercutio.
- MERCUTIO:
- Nay, I'll conjure too.
- Romeo! humours! madman! passion! lover!
- Appear thou in the likeness of a sigh:
- Speak but one rhyme, and I am satisfied;
- Cry but 'Ay me!' pronounce but 'love' and 'dove;'
- Speak to my gossip Venus one fair word,
- One nick-name for her purblind son and heir,
- Young Adam Cupid, he that shot so trim,
- When King Cophetua loved the beggar-maid!
- He heareth not, he stirreth not, he moveth not;
- The ape is dead, and I must conjure him.
- I conjure thee by Rosaline's bright eyes,
- By her high forehead and her scarlet lip,
- By her fine foot, straight leg and quivering thigh
- And the demesnes that there adjacent lie,
- That in thy likeness thou appear to us!
- BENVOLIO:
- And if he hear thee, thou wilt anger him.
- MERCUTIO:
- This cannot anger him: 'twould anger him
- To raise a spirit in his mistress' circle
- Of some strange nature, letting it there stand
- Till she had laid it and conjured it down;
- That were some spite: my invocation
- Is fair and honest, and in his mistress' name
- I conjure only but to raise up him.
- BENVOLIO:
- Come, he hath hid himself among these trees,
- To be consorted with the humorous night:
- Blind is his love and best befits the dark.
- MERCUTIO:
- If love be blind, love cannot hit the mark.
- Now will he sit under a medlar tree,
- And wish his mistress were that kind of fruit
- As maids call medlars, when they laugh alone.
- Romeo, that she were, O, that she were
- An open et caetera, thou a poperin pear!
- Romeo, good night: I'll to my truckle-bed;
- This field-bed is too cold for me to sleep:
- Come, shall we go?
- BENVOLIO:
- Go, then; for 'tis in vain
- To seek him here that means not to be found.
- ROMEO:
- He jests at scars that never felt a wound.
- But, soft! what light through yonder window breaks?
- It is the east, and Juliet is the sun.
- Arise, fair sun, and kill the envious moon,
- Who is already sick and pale with grief,
- That thou her maid art far more fair than she:
- Be not her maid, since she is envious;
- Her vestal livery is but sick and green
- And none but fools do wear it; cast it off.
- It is my lady, O, it is my love!
- O, that she knew she were!
- She speaks yet she says nothing: what of that?
- Her eye discourses; I will answer it.
- I am too bold, 'tis not to me she speaks:
- Two of the fairest stars in all the heaven,
- Having some business, do entreat her eyes
- To twinkle in their spheres till they return.
- What if her eyes were there, they in her head?
- The brightness of her cheek would shame those stars,
- As daylight doth a lamp; her eyes in heaven
- Would through the airy region stream so bright
- That birds would sing and think it were not night.
- See, how she leans her cheek upon her hand!
- O, that I were a glove upon that hand,
- That I might touch that cheek!
- JULIET:
- Ay me!
- ROMEO:
- She speaks:
- O, speak again, bright angel! for thou art
- As glorious to this night, being o'er my head
- As is a winged messenger of heaven
- Unto the white-upturned wondering eyes
- Of mortals that fall back to gaze on him
- When he bestrides the lazy-pacing clouds
- And sails upon the bosom of the air.
- JULIET:
- O Romeo, Romeo! wherefore art thou Romeo?
- Deny thy father and refuse thy name;
- Or, if thou wilt not, be but sworn my love,
- And I'll no longer be a Capulet.
- ROMEO:
- JULIET:
- 'Tis but thy name that is my enemy;
- Thou art thyself, though not a Montague.
- What's Montague? it is nor hand, nor foot,
- Nor arm, nor face, nor any other part
- Belonging to a man. O, be some other name!
- What's in a name? that which we call a rose
- By any other name would smell as sweet;
- So Romeo would, were he not Romeo call'd,
- Retain that dear perfection which he owes
- Without that title. Romeo, doff thy name,
- And for that name which is no part of thee
- Take all myself.
- ROMEO:
- I take thee at thy word:
- Call me but love, and I'll be new baptized;
- Henceforth I never will be Romeo.
- JULIET:
- What man art thou that thus bescreen'd in night
- So stumblest on my counsel?
- ROMEO:
- By a name
- I know not how to tell thee who I am:
- My name, dear saint, is hateful to myself,
- Because it is an enemy to thee;
- Had I it written, I would tear the word.
- JULIET:
- My ears have not yet drunk a hundred words
- Of that tongue's utterance, yet I know the sound:
- Art thou not Romeo and a Montague?
- ROMEO:
- Neither, fair saint, if either thee dislike.
- JULIET:
- How camest thou hither, tell me, and wherefore?
- The orchard walls are high and hard to climb,
- And the place death, considering who thou art,
- If any of my kinsmen find thee here.
- ROMEO:
- With love's light wings did I o'er-perch these walls;
- For stony limits cannot hold love out,
- And what love can do that dares love attempt;
- Therefore thy kinsmen are no let to me.
- JULIET:
- If they do see thee, they will murder thee.
- ROMEO:
- Alack, there lies more peril in thine eye
- Than twenty of their swords: look thou but sweet,
- And I am proof against their enmity.
- JULIET:
- I would not for the world they saw thee here.
- ROMEO:
- I have night's cloak to hide me from their sight;
- And but thou love me, let them find me here:
- My life were better ended by their hate,
- Than death prorogued, wanting of thy love.
- JULIET:
- By whose direction found'st thou out this place?
- ROMEO:
- By love, who first did prompt me to inquire;
- He lent me counsel and I lent him eyes.
- I am no pilot; yet, wert thou as far
- As that vast shore wash'd with the farthest sea,
- I would adventure for such merchandise.
- JULIET:
- Thou know'st the mask of night is on my face,
- Else would a maiden blush bepaint my cheek
- For that which thou hast heard me speak to-night
- Fain would I dwell on form, fain, fain deny
- What I have spoke: but farewell compliment!
- Dost thou love me? I know thou wilt say 'Ay,'
- And I will take thy word: yet if thou swear'st,
- Thou mayst prove false; at lovers' perjuries
- Then say, Jove laughs. O gentle Romeo,
- If thou dost love, pronounce it faithfully:
- Or if thou think'st I am too quickly won,
- I'll frown and be perverse an say thee nay,
- So thou wilt woo; but else, not for the world.
- In truth, fair Montague, I am too fond,
- And therefore thou mayst think my 'havior light:
- But trust me, gentleman, I'll prove more true
- Than those that have more cunning to be strange.
- I should have been more strange, I must confess,
- But that thou overheard'st, ere I was ware,
- My true love's passion: therefore pardon me,
- And not impute this yielding to light love,
- Which the dark night hath so discovered.
- ROMEO:
- Lady, by yonder blessed moon I swear
- That tips with silver all these fruit-tree tops--
- JULIET:
- O, swear not by the moon, the inconstant moon,
- That monthly changes in her circled orb,
- Lest that thy love prove likewise variable.
- ROMEO:
- What shall I swear by?
- JULIET:
- Do not swear at all;
- Or, if thou wilt, swear by thy gracious self,
- Which is the god of my idolatry,
- And I'll believe thee.
- ROMEO:
- If my heart's dear love--
- JULIET:
- Well, do not swear: although I joy in thee,
- I have no joy of this contract to-night:
- It is too rash, too unadvised, too sudden;
- Too like the lightning, which doth cease to be
- Ere one can say 'It lightens.' Sweet, good night!
- This bud of love, by summer's ripening breath,
- May prove a beauteous flower when next we meet.
- Good night, good night! as sweet repose and rest
- Come to thy heart as that within my breast!
- ROMEO:
- O, wilt thou leave me so unsatisfied?
- JULIET:
- What satisfaction canst thou have to-night?
- ROMEO:
- The exchange of thy love's faithful vow for mine.
- JULIET:
- I gave thee mine before thou didst request it:
- And yet I would it were to give again.
- ROMEO:
- Wouldst thou withdraw it? for what purpose, love?
- JULIET:
- But to be frank, and give it thee again.
- And yet I wish but for the thing I have:
- My bounty is as boundless as the sea,
- My love as deep; the more I give to thee,
- The more I have, for both are infinite.
- I hear some noise within; dear love, adieu!
- Anon, good nurse! Sweet Montague, be true.
- Stay but a little, I will come again.
- ROMEO:
- O blessed, blessed night! I am afeard.
- Being in night, all this is but a dream,
- Too flattering-sweet to be substantial.
- JULIET:
- Three words, dear Romeo, and good night indeed.
- If that thy bent of love be honourable,
- Thy purpose marriage, send me word to-morrow,
- By one that I'll procure to come to thee,
- Where and what time thou wilt perform the rite;
- And all my fortunes at thy foot I'll lay
- And follow thee my lord throughout the world.
- Nurse:
- JULIET:
- I come, anon.--But if thou mean'st not well,
- I do beseech thee--
- Nurse:
- JULIET:
- By and by, I come:--
- To cease thy suit, and leave me to my grief:
- To-morrow will I send.
- ROMEO:
- So thrive my soul--
- JULIET:
- A thousand times good night!
- ROMEO:
- A thousand times the worse, to want thy light.
- Love goes toward love, as schoolboys from
- their books,
- But love from love, toward school with heavy looks.
- JULIET:
- Hist! Romeo, hist! O, for a falconer's voice,
- To lure this tassel-gentle back again!
- Bondage is hoarse, and may not speak aloud;
- Else would I tear the cave where Echo lies,
- And make her airy tongue more hoarse than mine,
- With repetition of my Romeo's name.
- ROMEO:
- It is my soul that calls upon my name:
- How silver-sweet sound lovers' tongues by night,
- Like softest music to attending ears!
- JULIET:
- Romeo!
- ROMEO:
- My dear?
- JULIET:
- At what o'clock to-morrow
- Shall I send to thee?
- ROMEO:
- At the hour of nine.
- JULIET:
- I will not fail: 'tis twenty years till then.
- I have forgot why I did call thee back.
- ROMEO:
- Let me stand here till thou remember it.
- JULIET:
- I shall forget, to have thee still stand there,
- Remembering how I love thy company.
- ROMEO:
- And I'll still stay, to have thee still forget,
- Forgetting any other home but this.
- JULIET:
- 'Tis almost morning; I would have thee gone:
- And yet no further than a wanton's bird;
- Who lets it hop a little from her hand,
- Like a poor prisoner in his twisted gyves,
- And with a silk thread plucks it back again,
- So loving-jealous of his liberty.
- ROMEO:
- I would I were thy bird.
- JULIET:
- Sweet, so would I:
- Yet I should kill thee with much cherishing.
- Good night, good night! parting is such
- sweet sorrow,
- That I shall say good night till it be morrow.
- ROMEO:
- Sleep dwell upon thine eyes, peace in thy breast!
- Would I were sleep and peace, so sweet to rest!
- Hence will I to my ghostly father's cell,
- His help to crave, and my dear hap to tell.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- The grey-eyed morn smiles on the frowning night,
- Chequering the eastern clouds with streaks of light,
- And flecked darkness like a drunkard reels
- From forth day's path and Titan's fiery wheels:
- Now, ere the sun advance his burning eye,
- The day to cheer and night's dank dew to dry,
- I must up-fill this osier cage of ours
- With baleful weeds and precious-juiced flowers.
- The earth that's nature's mother is her tomb;
- What is her burying grave that is her womb,
- And from her womb children of divers kind
- We sucking on her natural bosom find,
- Many for many virtues excellent,
- None but for some and yet all different.
- O, mickle is the powerful grace that lies
- In herbs, plants, stones, and their true qualities:
- For nought so vile that on the earth doth live
- But to the earth some special good doth give,
- Nor aught so good but strain'd from that fair use
- Revolts from true birth, stumbling on abuse:
- Virtue itself turns vice, being misapplied;
- And vice sometimes by action dignified.
- Within the infant rind of this small flower
- Poison hath residence and medicine power:
- For this, being smelt, with that part cheers each part;
- Being tasted, slays all senses with the heart.
- Two such opposed kings encamp them still
- In man as well as herbs, grace and rude will;
- And where the worser is predominant,
- Full soon the canker death eats up that plant.
- ROMEO:
- Good morrow, father.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Benedicite!
- What early tongue so sweet saluteth me?
- Young son, it argues a distemper'd head
- So soon to bid good morrow to thy bed:
- Care keeps his watch in every old man's eye,
- And where care lodges, sleep will never lie;
- But where unbruised youth with unstuff'd brain
- Doth couch his limbs, there golden sleep doth reign:
- Therefore thy earliness doth me assure
- Thou art up-roused by some distemperature;
- Or if not so, then here I hit it right,
- Our Romeo hath not been in bed to-night.
- ROMEO:
- That last is true; the sweeter rest was mine.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- God pardon sin! wast thou with Rosaline?
- ROMEO:
- With Rosaline, my ghostly father? no;
- I have forgot that name, and that name's woe.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- That's my good son: but where hast thou been, then?
- ROMEO:
- I'll tell thee, ere thou ask it me again.
- I have been feasting with mine enemy,
- Where on a sudden one hath wounded me,
- That's by me wounded: both our remedies
- Within thy help and holy physic lies:
- I bear no hatred, blessed man, for, lo,
- My intercession likewise steads my foe.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Be plain, good son, and homely in thy drift;
- Riddling confession finds but riddling shrift.
- ROMEO:
- Then plainly know my heart's dear love is set
- On the fair daughter of rich Capulet:
- As mine on hers, so hers is set on mine;
- And all combined, save what thou must combine
- By holy marriage: when and where and how
- We met, we woo'd and made exchange of vow,
- I'll tell thee as we pass; but this I pray,
- That thou consent to marry us to-day.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Holy Saint Francis, what a change is here!
- Is Rosaline, whom thou didst love so dear,
- So soon forsaken? young men's love then lies
- Not truly in their hearts, but in their eyes.
- Jesu Maria, what a deal of brine
- Hath wash'd thy sallow cheeks for Rosaline!
- How much salt water thrown away in waste,
- To season love, that of it doth not taste!
- The sun not yet thy sighs from heaven clears,
- Thy old groans ring yet in my ancient ears;
- Lo, here upon thy cheek the stain doth sit
- Of an old tear that is not wash'd off yet:
- If e'er thou wast thyself and these woes thine,
- Thou and these woes were all for Rosaline:
- And art thou changed? pronounce this sentence then,
- Women may fall, when there's no strength in men.
- ROMEO:
- Thou chid'st me oft for loving Rosaline.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- For doting, not for loving, pupil mine.
- ROMEO:
- And bad'st me bury love.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Not in a grave,
- To lay one in, another out to have.
- ROMEO:
- I pray thee, chide not; she whom I love now
- Doth grace for grace and love for love allow;
- The other did not so.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- O, she knew well
- Thy love did read by rote and could not spell.
- But come, young waverer, come, go with me,
- In one respect I'll thy assistant be;
- For this alliance may so happy prove,
- To turn your households' rancour to pure love.
- ROMEO:
- O, let us hence; I stand on sudden haste.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Wisely and slow; they stumble that run fast.
- MERCUTIO:
- Where the devil should this Romeo be?
- Came he not home to-night?
- BENVOLIO:
- Not to his father's; I spoke with his man.
- MERCUTIO:
- Ah, that same pale hard-hearted wench, that Rosaline.
- Torments him so, that he will sure run mad.
- BENVOLIO:
- Tybalt, the kinsman of old Capulet,
- Hath sent a letter to his father's house.
- MERCUTIO:
- A challenge, on my life.
- BENVOLIO:
- Romeo will answer it.
- MERCUTIO:
- Any man that can write may answer a letter.
- BENVOLIO:
- Nay, he will answer the letter's master, how he
- dares, being dared.
- MERCUTIO:
- Alas poor Romeo! he is already dead; stabbed with a
- white wench's black eye; shot through the ear with a
- love-song; the very pin of his heart cleft with the
- blind bow-boy's butt-shaft: and is he a man to
- encounter Tybalt?
- BENVOLIO:
- Why, what is Tybalt?
- MERCUTIO:
- More than prince of cats, I can tell you. O, he is
- the courageous captain of compliments. He fights as
- you sing prick-song, keeps time, distance, and
- proportion; rests me his minim rest, one, two, and
- the third in your bosom: the very butcher of a silk
- button, a duellist, a duellist; a gentleman of the
- very first house, of the first and second cause:
- ah, the immortal passado! the punto reverso! the
- hai!
- BENVOLIO:
- The what?
- MERCUTIO:
- The pox of such antic, lisping, affecting
- fantasticoes; these new tuners of accents! 'By Jesu,
- a very good blade! a very tall man! a very good
- whore!' Why, is not this a lamentable thing,
- grandsire, that we should be thus afflicted with
- these strange flies, these fashion-mongers, these
- perdona-mi's, who stand so much on the new form,
- that they cannot at ease on the old bench? O, their
- bones, their bones!
- BENVOLIO:
- Here comes Romeo, here comes Romeo.
- MERCUTIO:
- Without his roe, like a dried herring: flesh, flesh,
- how art thou fishified! Now is he for the numbers
- that Petrarch flowed in: Laura to his lady was but a
- kitchen-wench; marry, she had a better love to
- be-rhyme her; Dido a dowdy; Cleopatra a gipsy;
- Helen and Hero hildings and harlots; Thisbe a grey
- eye or so, but not to the purpose. Signior
- Romeo, bon jour! there's a French salutation
- to your French slop. You gave us the counterfeit
- fairly last night.
- ROMEO:
- Good morrow to you both. What counterfeit did I give you?
- MERCUTIO:
- The ship, sir, the slip; can you not conceive?
- ROMEO:
- Pardon, good Mercutio, my business was great; and in
- such a case as mine a man may strain courtesy.
- MERCUTIO:
- That's as much as to say, such a case as yours
- constrains a man to bow in the hams.
- ROMEO:
- Meaning, to court'sy.
- MERCUTIO:
- Thou hast most kindly hit it.
- ROMEO:
- A most courteous exposition.
- MERCUTIO:
- Nay, I am the very pink of courtesy.
- ROMEO:
- Pink for flower.
- MERCUTIO:
- Right.
- ROMEO:
- Why, then is my pump well flowered.
- MERCUTIO:
- Well said: follow me this jest now till thou hast
- worn out thy pump, that when the single sole of it
- is worn, the jest may remain after the wearing sole singular.
- ROMEO:
- O single-soled jest, solely singular for the
- singleness.
- MERCUTIO:
- Come between us, good Benvolio; my wits faint.
- ROMEO:
- Switch and spurs, switch and spurs; or I'll cry a match.
- MERCUTIO:
- Nay, if thy wits run the wild-goose chase, I have
- done, for thou hast more of the wild-goose in one of
- thy wits than, I am sure, I have in my whole five:
- was I with you there for the goose?
- ROMEO:
- Thou wast never with me for any thing when thou wast
- not there for the goose.
- MERCUTIO:
- I will bite thee by the ear for that jest.
- ROMEO:
- Nay, good goose, bite not.
- MERCUTIO:
- Thy wit is a very bitter sweeting; it is a most
- sharp sauce.
- ROMEO:
- And is it not well served in to a sweet goose?
- MERCUTIO:
- O here's a wit of cheveril, that stretches from an
- inch narrow to an ell broad!
- ROMEO:
- I stretch it out for that word 'broad;' which added
- to the goose, proves thee far and wide a broad goose.
- MERCUTIO:
- Why, is not this better now than groaning for love?
- now art thou sociable, now art thou Romeo; now art
- thou what thou art, by art as well as by nature:
- for this drivelling love is like a great natural,
- that runs lolling up and down to hide his bauble in a hole.
- BENVOLIO:
- Stop there, stop there.
- MERCUTIO:
- Thou desirest me to stop in my tale against the hair.
- BENVOLIO:
- Thou wouldst else have made thy tale large.
- MERCUTIO:
- O, thou art deceived; I would have made it short:
- for I was come to the whole depth of my tale; and
- meant, indeed, to occupy the argument no longer.
- ROMEO:
- Here's goodly gear!
- MERCUTIO:
- A sail, a sail!
- BENVOLIO:
- Two, two; a shirt and a smock.
- Nurse:
- Peter!
- PETER:
- Anon!
- Nurse:
- My fan, Peter.
- MERCUTIO:
- Good Peter, to hide her face; for her fan's the
- fairer face.
- Nurse:
- God ye good morrow, gentlemen.
- MERCUTIO:
- God ye good den, fair gentlewoman.
- Nurse:
- Is it good den?
- MERCUTIO:
- 'Tis no less, I tell you, for the bawdy hand of the
- dial is now upon the prick of noon.
- Nurse:
- Out upon you! what a man are you!
- ROMEO:
- One, gentlewoman, that God hath made for himself to
- mar.
- Nurse:
- By my troth, it is well said; 'for himself to mar,'
- quoth a'? Gentlemen, can any of you tell me where I
- may find the young Romeo?
- ROMEO:
- I can tell you; but young Romeo will be older when
- you have found him than he was when you sought him:
- I am the youngest of that name, for fault of a worse.
- Nurse:
- You say well.
- MERCUTIO:
- Yea, is the worst well? very well took, i' faith;
- wisely, wisely.
- Nurse:
- if you be he, sir, I desire some confidence with
- you.
- BENVOLIO:
- She will indite him to some supper.
- MERCUTIO:
- A bawd, a bawd, a bawd! so ho!
- ROMEO:
- What hast thou found?
- MERCUTIO:
- No hare, sir; unless a hare, sir, in a lenten pie,
- that is something stale and hoar ere it be spent.
- An old hare hoar,
- And an old hare hoar,
- Is very good meat in lent
- But a hare that is hoar
- Is too much for a score,
- When it hoars ere it be spent.
- Romeo, will you come to your father's? we'll
- to dinner, thither.
- ROMEO:
- I will follow you.
- MERCUTIO:
- Farewell, ancient lady; farewell,
- 'lady, lady, lady.'
- Nurse:
- Marry, farewell! I pray you, sir, what saucy
- merchant was this, that was so full of his ropery?
- ROMEO:
- A gentleman, nurse, that loves to hear himself talk,
- and will speak more in a minute than he will stand
- to in a month.
- Nurse:
- An a' speak any thing against me, I'll take him
- down, an a' were lustier than he is, and twenty such
- Jacks; and if I cannot, I'll find those that shall.
- Scurvy knave! I am none of his flirt-gills; I am
- none of his skains-mates. And thou must stand by
- too, and suffer every knave to use me at his pleasure?
- PETER:
- I saw no man use you a pleasure; if I had, my weapon
- should quickly have been out, I warrant you: I dare
- draw as soon as another man, if I see occasion in a
- good quarrel, and the law on my side.
- Nurse:
- Now, afore God, I am so vexed, that every part about
- me quivers. Scurvy knave! Pray you, sir, a word:
- and as I told you, my young lady bade me inquire you
- out; what she bade me say, I will keep to myself:
- but first let me tell ye, if ye should lead her into
- a fool's paradise, as they say, it were a very gross
- kind of behavior, as they say: for the gentlewoman
- is young; and, therefore, if you should deal double
- with her, truly it were an ill thing to be offered
- to any gentlewoman, and very weak dealing.
- ROMEO:
- Nurse, commend me to thy lady and mistress. I
- protest unto thee--
- Nurse:
- Good heart, and, i' faith, I will tell her as much:
- Lord, Lord, she will be a joyful woman.
- ROMEO:
- What wilt thou tell her, nurse? thou dost not mark me.
- Nurse:
- I will tell her, sir, that you do protest; which, as
- I take it, is a gentlemanlike offer.
- ROMEO:
- Bid her devise
- Some means to come to shrift this afternoon;
- And there she shall at Friar Laurence' cell
- Be shrived and married. Here is for thy pains.
- Nurse:
- No truly sir; not a penny.
- ROMEO:
- Go to; I say you shall.
- Nurse:
- This afternoon, sir? well, she shall be there.
- ROMEO:
- And stay, good nurse, behind the abbey wall:
- Within this hour my man shall be with thee
- And bring thee cords made like a tackled stair;
- Which to the high top-gallant of my joy
- Must be my convoy in the secret night.
- Farewell; be trusty, and I'll quit thy pains:
- Farewell; commend me to thy mistress.
- Nurse:
- Now God in heaven bless thee! Hark you, sir.
- ROMEO:
- What say'st thou, my dear nurse?
- Nurse:
- Is your man secret? Did you ne'er hear say,
- Two may keep counsel, putting one away?
- ROMEO:
- I warrant thee, my man's as true as steel.
- NURSE:
- Well, sir; my mistress is the sweetest lady--Lord,
- Lord! when 'twas a little prating thing:--O, there
- is a nobleman in town, one Paris, that would fain
- lay knife aboard; but she, good soul, had as lief
- see a toad, a very toad, as see him. I anger her
- sometimes and tell her that Paris is the properer
- man; but, I'll warrant you, when I say so, she looks
- as pale as any clout in the versal world. Doth not
- rosemary and Romeo begin both with a letter?
- ROMEO:
- Ay, nurse; what of that? both with an R.
- Nurse:
- Ah. mocker! that's the dog's name; R is for
- the--No; I know it begins with some other
- letter:--and she hath the prettiest sententious of
- it, of you and rosemary, that it would do you good
- to hear it.
- ROMEO:
- Commend me to thy lady.
- Nurse:
- Ay, a thousand times.
- Peter!
- PETER:
- Anon!
- Nurse:
- Peter, take my fan, and go before and apace.
- JULIET:
- The clock struck nine when I did send the nurse;
- In half an hour she promised to return.
- Perchance she cannot meet him: that's not so.
- O, she is lame! love's heralds should be thoughts,
- Which ten times faster glide than the sun's beams,
- Driving back shadows over louring hills:
- Therefore do nimble-pinion'd doves draw love,
- And therefore hath the wind-swift Cupid wings.
- Now is the sun upon the highmost hill
- Of this day's journey, and from nine till twelve
- Is three long hours, yet she is not come.
- Had she affections and warm youthful blood,
- She would be as swift in motion as a ball;
- My words would bandy her to my sweet love,
- And his to me:
- But old folks, many feign as they were dead;
- Unwieldy, slow, heavy and pale as lead.
- O God, she comes!
- O honey nurse, what news?
- Hast thou met with him? Send thy man away.
- Nurse:
- Peter, stay at the gate.
- JULIET:
- Now, good sweet nurse,--O Lord, why look'st thou sad?
- Though news be sad, yet tell them merrily;
- If good, thou shamest the music of sweet news
- By playing it to me with so sour a face.
- Nurse:
- I am a-weary, give me leave awhile:
- Fie, how my bones ache! what a jaunt have I had!
- JULIET:
- I would thou hadst my bones, and I thy news:
- Nay, come, I pray thee, speak; good, good nurse, speak.
- Nurse:
- Jesu, what haste? can you not stay awhile?
- Do you not see that I am out of breath?
- JULIET:
- How art thou out of breath, when thou hast breath
- To say to me that thou art out of breath?
- The excuse that thou dost make in this delay
- Is longer than the tale thou dost excuse.
- Is thy news good, or bad? answer to that;
- Say either, and I'll stay the circumstance:
- Let me be satisfied, is't good or bad?
- Nurse:
- Well, you have made a simple choice; you know not
- how to choose a man: Romeo! no, not he; though his
- face be better than any man's, yet his leg excels
- all men's; and for a hand, and a foot, and a body,
- though they be not to be talked on, yet they are
- past compare: he is not the flower of courtesy,
- but, I'll warrant him, as gentle as a lamb. Go thy
- ways, wench; serve God. What, have you dined at home?
- JULIET:
- No, no: but all this did I know before.
- What says he of our marriage? what of that?
- Nurse:
- Lord, how my head aches! what a head have I!
- It beats as it would fall in twenty pieces.
- My back o' t' other side,--O, my back, my back!
- Beshrew your heart for sending me about,
- To catch my death with jaunting up and down!
- JULIET:
- I' faith, I am sorry that thou art not well.
- Sweet, sweet, sweet nurse, tell me, what says my love?
- Nurse:
- Your love says, like an honest gentleman, and a
- courteous, and a kind, and a handsome, and, I
- warrant, a virtuous,--Where is your mother?
- JULIET:
- Where is my mother! why, she is within;
- Where should she be? How oddly thou repliest!
- 'Your love says, like an honest gentleman,
- Where is your mother?'
- Nurse:
- O God's lady dear!
- Are you so hot? marry, come up, I trow;
- Is this the poultice for my aching bones?
- Henceforward do your messages yourself.
- JULIET:
- Here's such a coil! come, what says Romeo?
- Nurse:
- Have you got leave to go to shrift to-day?
- JULIET:
- I have.
- Nurse:
- Then hie you hence to Friar Laurence' cell;
- There stays a husband to make you a wife:
- Now comes the wanton blood up in your cheeks,
- They'll be in scarlet straight at any news.
- Hie you to church; I must another way,
- To fetch a ladder, by the which your love
- Must climb a bird's nest soon when it is dark:
- I am the drudge and toil in your delight,
- But you shall bear the burden soon at night.
- Go; I'll to dinner: hie you to the cell.
- JULIET:
- Hie to high fortune! Honest nurse, farewell.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- So smile the heavens upon this holy act,
- That after hours with sorrow chide us not!
- ROMEO:
- Amen, amen! but come what sorrow can,
- It cannot countervail the exchange of joy
- That one short minute gives me in her sight:
- Do thou but close our hands with holy words,
- Then love-devouring death do what he dare;
- It is enough I may but call her mine.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- These violent delights have violent ends
- And in their triumph die, like fire and powder,
- Which as they kiss consume: the sweetest honey
- Is loathsome in his own deliciousness
- And in the taste confounds the appetite:
- Therefore love moderately; long love doth so;
- Too swift arrives as tardy as too slow.
- Here comes the lady: O, so light a foot
- Will ne'er wear out the everlasting flint:
- A lover may bestride the gossamer
- That idles in the wanton summer air,
- And yet not fall; so light is vanity.
- JULIET:
- Good even to my ghostly confessor.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Romeo shall thank thee, daughter, for us both.
- JULIET:
- As much to him, else is his thanks too much.
- ROMEO:
- Ah, Juliet, if the measure of thy joy
- Be heap'd like mine and that thy skill be more
- To blazon it, then sweeten with thy breath
- This neighbour air, and let rich music's tongue
- Unfold the imagined happiness that both
- Receive in either by this dear encounter.
- JULIET:
- Conceit, more rich in matter than in words,
- Brags of his substance, not of ornament:
- They are but beggars that can count their worth;
- But my true love is grown to such excess
- I cannot sum up sum of half my wealth.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Come, come with me, and we will make short work;
- For, by your leaves, you shall not stay alone
- Till holy church incorporate two in one.
- BENVOLIO:
- I pray thee, good Mercutio, let's retire:
- The day is hot, the Capulets abroad,
- And, if we meet, we shall not scape a brawl;
- For now, these hot days, is the mad blood stirring.
- MERCUTIO:
- Thou art like one of those fellows that when he
- enters the confines of a tavern claps me his sword
- upon the table and says 'God send me no need of
- thee!' and by the operation of the second cup draws
- it on the drawer, when indeed there is no need.
- BENVOLIO:
- Am I like such a fellow?
- MERCUTIO:
- Come, come, thou art as hot a Jack in thy mood as
- any in Italy, and as soon moved to be moody, and as
- soon moody to be moved.
- BENVOLIO:
- And what to?
- MERCUTIO:
- Nay, an there were two such, we should have none
- shortly, for one would kill the other. Thou! why,
- thou wilt quarrel with a man that hath a hair more,
- or a hair less, in his beard, than thou hast: thou
- wilt quarrel with a man for cracking nuts, having no
- other reason but because thou hast hazel eyes: what
- eye but such an eye would spy out such a quarrel?
- Thy head is as fun of quarrels as an egg is full of
- meat, and yet thy head hath been beaten as addle as
- an egg for quarrelling: thou hast quarrelled with a
- man for coughing in the street, because he hath
- wakened thy dog that hath lain asleep in the sun:
- didst thou not fall out with a tailor for wearing
- his new doublet before Easter? with another, for
- tying his new shoes with old riband? and yet thou
- wilt tutor me from quarrelling!
- BENVOLIO:
- An I were so apt to quarrel as thou art, any man
- should buy the fee-simple of my life for an hour and a quarter.
- MERCUTIO:
- The fee-simple! O simple!
- BENVOLIO:
- By my head, here come the Capulets.
- MERCUTIO:
- By my heel, I care not.
- TYBALT:
- Follow me close, for I will speak to them.
- Gentlemen, good den: a word with one of you.
- MERCUTIO:
- And but one word with one of us? couple it with
- something; make it a word and a blow.
- TYBALT:
- You shall find me apt enough to that, sir, an you
- will give me occasion.
- MERCUTIO:
- Could you not take some occasion without giving?
- TYBALT:
- Mercutio, thou consort'st with Romeo,--
- MERCUTIO:
- Consort! what, dost thou make us minstrels? an
- thou make minstrels of us, look to hear nothing but
- discords: here's my fiddlestick; here's that shall
- make you dance. 'Zounds, consort!
- BENVOLIO:
- We talk here in the public haunt of men:
- Either withdraw unto some private place,
- And reason coldly of your grievances,
- Or else depart; here all eyes gaze on us.
- MERCUTIO:
- Men's eyes were made to look, and let them gaze;
- I will not budge for no man's pleasure, I.
- TYBALT:
- Well, peace be with you, sir: here comes my man.
- MERCUTIO:
- But I'll be hanged, sir, if he wear your livery:
- Marry, go before to field, he'll be your follower;
- Your worship in that sense may call him 'man.'
- TYBALT:
- Romeo, the hate I bear thee can afford
- No better term than this,--thou art a villain.
- ROMEO:
- Tybalt, the reason that I have to love thee
- Doth much excuse the appertaining rage
- To such a greeting: villain am I none;
- Therefore farewell; I see thou know'st me not.
- TYBALT:
- Boy, this shall not excuse the injuries
- That thou hast done me; therefore turn and draw.
- ROMEO:
- I do protest, I never injured thee,
- But love thee better than thou canst devise,
- Till thou shalt know the reason of my love:
- And so, good Capulet,--which name I tender
- As dearly as my own,--be satisfied.
- MERCUTIO:
- O calm, dishonourable, vile submission!
- Alla stoccata carries it away.
- Tybalt, you rat-catcher, will you walk?
- TYBALT:
- What wouldst thou have with me?
- MERCUTIO:
- Good king of cats, nothing but one of your nine
- lives; that I mean to make bold withal, and as you
- shall use me hereafter, drybeat the rest of the
- eight. Will you pluck your sword out of his pitcher
- by the ears? make haste, lest mine be about your
- ears ere it be out.
- TYBALT:
- I am for you.
- ROMEO:
- Gentle Mercutio, put thy rapier up.
- MERCUTIO:
- Come, sir, your passado.
- ROMEO:
- Draw, Benvolio; beat down their weapons.
- Gentlemen, for shame, forbear this outrage!
- Tybalt, Mercutio, the prince expressly hath
- Forbidden bandying in Verona streets:
- Hold, Tybalt! good Mercutio!
- MERCUTIO:
- I am hurt.
- A plague o' both your houses! I am sped.
- Is he gone, and hath nothing?
- BENVOLIO:
- What, art thou hurt?
- MERCUTIO:
- Ay, ay, a scratch, a scratch; marry, 'tis enough.
- Where is my page? Go, villain, fetch a surgeon.
- ROMEO:
- Courage, man; the hurt cannot be much.
- MERCUTIO:
- No, 'tis not so deep as a well, nor so wide as a
- church-door; but 'tis enough,'twill serve: ask for
- me to-morrow, and you shall find me a grave man. I
- am peppered, I warrant, for this world. A plague o'
- both your houses! 'Zounds, a dog, a rat, a mouse, a
- cat, to scratch a man to death! a braggart, a
- rogue, a villain, that fights by the book of
- arithmetic! Why the devil came you between us? I
- was hurt under your arm.
- ROMEO:
- I thought all for the best.
- MERCUTIO:
- Help me into some house, Benvolio,
- Or I shall faint. A plague o' both your houses!
- They have made worms' meat of me: I have it,
- And soundly too: your houses!
- ROMEO:
- This gentleman, the prince's near ally,
- My very friend, hath got his mortal hurt
- In my behalf; my reputation stain'd
- With Tybalt's slander,--Tybalt, that an hour
- Hath been my kinsman! O sweet Juliet,
- Thy beauty hath made me effeminate
- And in my temper soften'd valour's steel!
- BENVOLIO:
- O Romeo, Romeo, brave Mercutio's dead!
- That gallant spirit hath aspired the clouds,
- Which too untimely here did scorn the earth.
- ROMEO:
- This day's black fate on more days doth depend;
- This but begins the woe, others must end.
- BENVOLIO:
- Here comes the furious Tybalt back again.
- ROMEO:
- Alive, in triumph! and Mercutio slain!
- Away to heaven, respective lenity,
- And fire-eyed fury be my conduct now!
- Now, Tybalt, take the villain back again,
- That late thou gavest me; for Mercutio's soul
- Is but a little way above our heads,
- Staying for thine to keep him company:
- Either thou, or I, or both, must go with him.
- TYBALT:
- Thou, wretched boy, that didst consort him here,
- Shalt with him hence.
- ROMEO:
- This shall determine that.
- BENVOLIO:
- Romeo, away, be gone!
- The citizens are up, and Tybalt slain.
- Stand not amazed: the prince will doom thee death,
- If thou art taken: hence, be gone, away!
- ROMEO:
- O, I am fortune's fool!
- BENVOLIO:
- Why dost thou stay?
- First Citizen:
- Which way ran he that kill'd Mercutio?
- Tybalt, that murderer, which way ran he?
- BENVOLIO:
- There lies that Tybalt.
- First Citizen:
- Up, sir, go with me;
- I charge thee in the princes name, obey.
- PRINCE:
- Where are the vile beginners of this fray?
- BENVOLIO:
- O noble prince, I can discover all
- The unlucky manage of this fatal brawl:
- There lies the man, slain by young Romeo,
- That slew thy kinsman, brave Mercutio.
- LADY CAPULET:
- Tybalt, my cousin! O my brother's child!
- O prince! O cousin! husband! O, the blood is spilt
- O my dear kinsman! Prince, as thou art true,
- For blood of ours, shed blood of Montague.
- O cousin, cousin!
- PRINCE:
- Benvolio, who began this bloody fray?
- BENVOLIO:
- Tybalt, here slain, whom Romeo's hand did slay;
- Romeo that spoke him fair, bade him bethink
- How nice the quarrel was, and urged withal
- Your high displeasure: all this uttered
- With gentle breath, calm look, knees humbly bow'd,
- Could not take truce with the unruly spleen
- Of Tybalt deaf to peace, but that he tilts
- With piercing steel at bold Mercutio's breast,
- Who all as hot, turns deadly point to point,
- And, with a martial scorn, with one hand beats
- Cold death aside, and with the other sends
- It back to Tybalt, whose dexterity,
- Retorts it: Romeo he cries aloud,
- 'Hold, friends! friends, part!' and, swifter than
- his tongue,
- His agile arm beats down their fatal points,
- And 'twixt them rushes; underneath whose arm
- An envious thrust from Tybalt hit the life
- Of stout Mercutio, and then Tybalt fled;
- But by and by comes back to Romeo,
- Who had but newly entertain'd revenge,
- And to 't they go like lightning, for, ere I
- Could draw to part them, was stout Tybalt slain.
- And, as he fell, did Romeo turn and fly.
- This is the truth, or let Benvolio die.
- LADY CAPULET:
- He is a kinsman to the Montague;
- Affection makes him false; he speaks not true:
- Some twenty of them fought in this black strife,
- And all those twenty could but kill one life.
- I beg for justice, which thou, prince, must give;
- Romeo slew Tybalt, Romeo must not live.
- PRINCE:
- Romeo slew him, he slew Mercutio;
- Who now the price of his dear blood doth owe?
- MONTAGUE:
- Not Romeo, prince, he was Mercutio's friend;
- His fault concludes but what the law should end,
- The life of Tybalt.
- PRINCE:
- And for that offence
- Immediately we do exile him hence:
- I have an interest in your hate's proceeding,
- My blood for your rude brawls doth lie a-bleeding;
- But I'll amerce you with so strong a fine
- That you shall all repent the loss of mine:
- I will be deaf to pleading and excuses;
- Nor tears nor prayers shall purchase out abuses:
- Therefore use none: let Romeo hence in haste,
- Else, when he's found, that hour is his last.
- Bear hence this body and attend our will:
- Mercy but murders, pardoning those that kill.
- JULIET:
- Gallop apace, you fiery-footed steeds,
- Towards Phoebus' lodging: such a wagoner
- As Phaethon would whip you to the west,
- And bring in cloudy night immediately.
- Spread thy close curtain, love-performing night,
- That runaway's eyes may wink and Romeo
- Leap to these arms, untalk'd of and unseen.
- Lovers can see to do their amorous rites
- By their own beauties; or, if love be blind,
- It best agrees with night. Come, civil night,
- Thou sober-suited matron, all in black,
- And learn me how to lose a winning match,
- Play'd for a pair of stainless maidenhoods:
- Hood my unmann'd blood, bating in my cheeks,
- With thy black mantle; till strange love, grown bold,
- Think true love acted simple modesty.
- Come, night; come, Romeo; come, thou day in night;
- For thou wilt lie upon the wings of night
- Whiter than new snow on a raven's back.
- Come, gentle night, come, loving, black-brow'd night,
- Give me my Romeo; and, when he shall die,
- Take him and cut him out in little stars,
- And he will make the face of heaven so fine
- That all the world will be in love with night
- And pay no worship to the garish sun.
- O, I have bought the mansion of a love,
- But not possess'd it, and, though I am sold,
- Not yet enjoy'd: so tedious is this day
- As is the night before some festival
- To an impatient child that hath new robes
- And may not wear them. O, here comes my nurse,
- And she brings news; and every tongue that speaks
- But Romeo's name speaks heavenly eloquence.
- Now, nurse, what news? What hast thou there? the cords
- That Romeo bid thee fetch?
- Nurse:
- Ay, ay, the cords.
- JULIET:
- Ay me! what news? why dost thou wring thy hands?
- Nurse:
- Ah, well-a-day! he's dead, he's dead, he's dead!
- We are undone, lady, we are undone!
- Alack the day! he's gone, he's kill'd, he's dead!
- JULIET:
- Can heaven be so envious?
- Nurse:
- Romeo can,
- Though heaven cannot: O Romeo, Romeo!
- Who ever would have thought it? Romeo!
- JULIET:
- What devil art thou, that dost torment me thus?
- This torture should be roar'd in dismal hell.
- Hath Romeo slain himself? say thou but 'I,'
- And that bare vowel 'I' shall poison more
- Than the death-darting eye of cockatrice:
- I am not I, if there be such an I;
- Or those eyes shut, that make thee answer 'I.'
- If he be slain, say 'I'; or if not, no:
- Brief sounds determine of my weal or woe.
- Nurse:
- I saw the wound, I saw it with mine eyes,--
- God save the mark!--here on his manly breast:
- A piteous corse, a bloody piteous corse;
- Pale, pale as ashes, all bedaub'd in blood,
- All in gore-blood; I swounded at the sight.
- JULIET:
- O, break, my heart! poor bankrupt, break at once!
- To prison, eyes, ne'er look on liberty!
- Vile earth, to earth resign; end motion here;
- And thou and Romeo press one heavy bier!
- Nurse:
- O Tybalt, Tybalt, the best friend I had!
- O courteous Tybalt! honest gentleman!
- That ever I should live to see thee dead!
- JULIET:
- What storm is this that blows so contrary?
- Is Romeo slaughter'd, and is Tybalt dead?
- My dear-loved cousin, and my dearer lord?
- Then, dreadful trumpet, sound the general doom!
- For who is living, if those two are gone?
- Nurse:
- Tybalt is gone, and Romeo banished;
- Romeo that kill'd him, he is banished.
- JULIET:
- O God! did Romeo's hand shed Tybalt's blood?
- Nurse:
- It did, it did; alas the day, it did!
- JULIET:
- O serpent heart, hid with a flowering face!
- Did ever dragon keep so fair a cave?
- Beautiful tyrant! fiend angelical!
- Dove-feather'd raven! wolvish-ravening lamb!
- Despised substance of divinest show!
- Just opposite to what thou justly seem'st,
- A damned saint, an honourable villain!
- O nature, what hadst thou to do in hell,
- When thou didst bower the spirit of a fiend
- In moral paradise of such sweet flesh?
- Was ever book containing such vile matter
- So fairly bound? O that deceit should dwell
- In such a gorgeous palace!
- Nurse:
- There's no trust,
- No faith, no honesty in men; all perjured,
- All forsworn, all naught, all dissemblers.
- Ah, where's my man? give me some aqua vitae:
- These griefs, these woes, these sorrows make me old.
- Shame come to Romeo!
- JULIET:
- Blister'd be thy tongue
- For such a wish! he was not born to shame:
- Upon his brow shame is ashamed to sit;
- For 'tis a throne where honour may be crown'd
- Sole monarch of the universal earth.
- O, what a beast was I to chide at him!
- Nurse:
- Will you speak well of him that kill'd your cousin?
- JULIET:
- Shall I speak ill of him that is my husband?
- Ah, poor my lord, what tongue shall smooth thy name,
- When I, thy three-hours wife, have mangled it?
- But, wherefore, villain, didst thou kill my cousin?
- That villain cousin would have kill'd my husband:
- Back, foolish tears, back to your native spring;
- Your tributary drops belong to woe,
- Which you, mistaking, offer up to joy.
- My husband lives, that Tybalt would have slain;
- And Tybalt's dead, that would have slain my husband:
- All this is comfort; wherefore weep I then?
- Some word there was, worser than Tybalt's death,
- That murder'd me: I would forget it fain;
- But, O, it presses to my memory,
- Like damned guilty deeds to sinners' minds:
- 'Tybalt is dead, and Romeo--banished;'
- That 'banished,' that one word 'banished,'
- Hath slain ten thousand Tybalts. Tybalt's death
- Was woe enough, if it had ended there:
- Or, if sour woe delights in fellowship
- And needly will be rank'd with other griefs,
- Why follow'd not, when she said 'Tybalt's dead,'
- Thy father, or thy mother, nay, or both,
- Which modern lamentations might have moved?
- But with a rear-ward following Tybalt's death,
- 'Romeo is banished,' to speak that word,
- Is father, mother, Tybalt, Romeo, Juliet,
- All slain, all dead. 'Romeo is banished!'
- There is no end, no limit, measure, bound,
- In that word's death; no words can that woe sound.
- Where is my father, and my mother, nurse?
- Nurse:
- Weeping and wailing over Tybalt's corse:
- Will you go to them? I will bring you thither.
- JULIET:
- Wash they his wounds with tears: mine shall be spent,
- When theirs are dry, for Romeo's banishment.
- Take up those cords: poor ropes, you are beguiled,
- Both you and I; for Romeo is exiled:
- He made you for a highway to my bed;
- But I, a maid, die maiden-widowed.
- Come, cords, come, nurse; I'll to my wedding-bed;
- And death, not Romeo, take my maidenhead!
- Nurse:
- Hie to your chamber: I'll find Romeo
- To comfort you: I wot well where he is.
- Hark ye, your Romeo will be here at night:
- I'll to him; he is hid at Laurence' cell.
- JULIET:
- O, find him! give this ring to my true knight,
- And bid him come to take his last farewell.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Romeo, come forth; come forth, thou fearful man:
- Affliction is enamour'd of thy parts,
- And thou art wedded to calamity.
- ROMEO:
- Father, what news? what is the prince's doom?
- What sorrow craves acquaintance at my hand,
- That I yet know not?
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Too familiar
- Is my dear son with such sour company:
- I bring thee tidings of the prince's doom.
- ROMEO:
- What less than dooms-day is the prince's doom?
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- A gentler judgment vanish'd from his lips,
- Not body's death, but body's banishment.
- ROMEO:
- Ha, banishment! be merciful, say 'death;'
- For exile hath more terror in his look,
- Much more than death: do not say 'banishment.'
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Hence from Verona art thou banished:
- Be patient, for the world is broad and wide.
- ROMEO:
- There is no world without Verona walls,
- But purgatory, torture, hell itself.
- Hence-banished is banish'd from the world,
- And world's exile is death: then banished,
- Is death mis-term'd: calling death banishment,
- Thou cutt'st my head off with a golden axe,
- And smilest upon the stroke that murders me.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- O deadly sin! O rude unthankfulness!
- Thy fault our law calls death; but the kind prince,
- Taking thy part, hath rush'd aside the law,
- And turn'd that black word death to banishment:
- This is dear mercy, and thou seest it not.
- ROMEO:
- 'Tis torture, and not mercy: heaven is here,
- Where Juliet lives; and every cat and dog
- And little mouse, every unworthy thing,
- Live here in heaven and may look on her;
- But Romeo may not: more validity,
- More honourable state, more courtship lives
- In carrion-flies than Romeo: they my seize
- On the white wonder of dear Juliet's hand
- And steal immortal blessing from her lips,
- Who even in pure and vestal modesty,
- Still blush, as thinking their own kisses sin;
- But Romeo may not; he is banished:
- Flies may do this, but I from this must fly:
- They are free men, but I am banished.
- And say'st thou yet that exile is not death?
- Hadst thou no poison mix'd, no sharp-ground knife,
- No sudden mean of death, though ne'er so mean,
- But 'banished' to kill me?--'banished'?
- O friar, the damned use that word in hell;
- Howlings attend it: how hast thou the heart,
- Being a divine, a ghostly confessor,
- A sin-absolver, and my friend profess'd,
- To mangle me with that word 'banished'?
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Thou fond mad man, hear me but speak a word.
- ROMEO:
- O, thou wilt speak again of banishment.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- I'll give thee armour to keep off that word:
- Adversity's sweet milk, philosophy,
- To comfort thee, though thou art banished.
- ROMEO:
- Yet 'banished'? Hang up philosophy!
- Unless philosophy can make a Juliet,
- Displant a town, reverse a prince's doom,
- It helps not, it prevails not: talk no more.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- O, then I see that madmen have no ears.
- ROMEO:
- How should they, when that wise men have no eyes?
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Let me dispute with thee of thy estate.
- ROMEO:
- Thou canst not speak of that thou dost not feel:
- Wert thou as young as I, Juliet thy love,
- An hour but married, Tybalt murdered,
- Doting like me and like me banished,
- Then mightst thou speak, then mightst thou tear thy hair,
- And fall upon the ground, as I do now,
- Taking the measure of an unmade grave.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Arise; one knocks; good Romeo, hide thyself.
- ROMEO:
- Not I; unless the breath of heartsick groans,
- Mist-like, infold me from the search of eyes.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Hark, how they knock! Who's there? Romeo, arise;
- Thou wilt be taken. Stay awhile! Stand up;
- Run to my study. By and by! God's will,
- What simpleness is this! I come, I come!
- Who knocks so hard? whence come you? what's your will?
- Nurse:
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Welcome, then.
- Nurse:
- O holy friar, O, tell me, holy friar,
- Where is my lady's lord, where's Romeo?
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- There on the ground, with his own tears made drunk.
- Nurse:
- O, he is even in my mistress' case,
- Just in her case! O woful sympathy!
- Piteous predicament! Even so lies she,
- Blubbering and weeping, weeping and blubbering.
- Stand up, stand up; stand, and you be a man:
- For Juliet's sake, for her sake, rise and stand;
- Why should you fall into so deep an O?
- ROMEO:
- Nurse!
- Nurse:
- Ah sir! ah sir! Well, death's the end of all.
- ROMEO:
- Spakest thou of Juliet? how is it with her?
- Doth she not think me an old murderer,
- Now I have stain'd the childhood of our joy
- With blood removed but little from her own?
- Where is she? and how doth she? and what says
- My conceal'd lady to our cancell'd love?
- Nurse:
- O, she says nothing, sir, but weeps and weeps;
- And now falls on her bed; and then starts up,
- And Tybalt calls; and then on Romeo cries,
- And then down falls again.
- ROMEO:
- As if that name,
- Shot from the deadly level of a gun,
- Did murder her; as that name's cursed hand
- Murder'd her kinsman. O, tell me, friar, tell me,
- In what vile part of this anatomy
- Doth my name lodge? tell me, that I may sack
- The hateful mansion.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Hold thy desperate hand:
- Art thou a man? thy form cries out thou art:
- Thy tears are womanish; thy wild acts denote
- The unreasonable fury of a beast:
- Unseemly woman in a seeming man!
- Or ill-beseeming beast in seeming both!
- Thou hast amazed me: by my holy order,
- I thought thy disposition better temper'd.
- Hast thou slain Tybalt? wilt thou slay thyself?
- And stay thy lady too that lives in thee,
- By doing damned hate upon thyself?
- Why rail'st thou on thy birth, the heaven, and earth?
- Since birth, and heaven, and earth, all three do meet
- In thee at once; which thou at once wouldst lose.
- Fie, fie, thou shamest thy shape, thy love, thy wit;
- Which, like a usurer, abound'st in all,
- And usest none in that true use indeed
- Which should bedeck thy shape, thy love, thy wit:
- Thy noble shape is but a form of wax,
- Digressing from the valour of a man;
- Thy dear love sworn but hollow perjury,
- Killing that love which thou hast vow'd to cherish;
- Thy wit, that ornament to shape and love,
- Misshapen in the conduct of them both,
- Like powder in a skitless soldier's flask,
- Is set afire by thine own ignorance,
- And thou dismember'd with thine own defence.
- What, rouse thee, man! thy Juliet is alive,
- For whose dear sake thou wast but lately dead;
- There art thou happy: Tybalt would kill thee,
- But thou slew'st Tybalt; there are thou happy too:
- The law that threaten'd death becomes thy friend
- And turns it to exile; there art thou happy:
- A pack of blessings lights up upon thy back;
- Happiness courts thee in her best array;
- But, like a misbehaved and sullen wench,
- Thou pout'st upon thy fortune and thy love:
- Take heed, take heed, for such die miserable.
- Go, get thee to thy love, as was decreed,
- Ascend her chamber, hence and comfort her:
- But look thou stay not till the watch be set,
- For then thou canst not pass to Mantua;
- Where thou shalt live, till we can find a time
- To blaze your marriage, reconcile your friends,
- Beg pardon of the prince, and call thee back
- With twenty hundred thousand times more joy
- Than thou went'st forth in lamentation.
- Go before, nurse: commend me to thy lady;
- And bid her hasten all the house to bed,
- Which heavy sorrow makes them apt unto:
- Romeo is coming.
- Nurse:
- O Lord, I could have stay'd here all the night
- To hear good counsel: O, what learning is!
- My lord, I'll tell my lady you will come.
- ROMEO:
- Do so, and bid my sweet prepare to chide.
- Nurse:
- Here, sir, a ring she bid me give you, sir:
- Hie you, make haste, for it grows very late.
- ROMEO:
- How well my comfort is revived by this!
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Go hence; good night; and here stands all your state:
- Either be gone before the watch be set,
- Or by the break of day disguised from hence:
- Sojourn in Mantua; I'll find out your man,
- And he shall signify from time to time
- Every good hap to you that chances here:
- Give me thy hand; 'tis late: farewell; good night.
- ROMEO:
- But that a joy past joy calls out on me,
- It were a grief, so brief to part with thee: Farewell.
- CAPULET:
- Things have fall'n out, sir, so unluckily,
- That we have had no time to move our daughter:
- Look you, she loved her kinsman Tybalt dearly,
- And so did I:--Well, we were born to die.
- 'Tis very late, she'll not come down to-night:
- I promise you, but for your company,
- I would have been a-bed an hour ago.
- PARIS:
- These times of woe afford no time to woo.
- Madam, good night: commend me to your daughter.
- LADY CAPULET:
- I will, and know her mind early to-morrow;
- To-night she is mew'd up to her heaviness.
- CAPULET:
- Sir Paris, I will make a desperate tender
- Of my child's love: I think she will be ruled
- In all respects by me; nay, more, I doubt it not.
- Wife, go you to her ere you go to bed;
- Acquaint her here of my son Paris' love;
- And bid her, mark you me, on Wednesday next--
- But, soft! what day is this?
- PARIS:
- Monday, my lord,
- CAPULET:
- Monday! ha, ha! Well, Wednesday is too soon,
- O' Thursday let it be: o' Thursday, tell her,
- She shall be married to this noble earl.
- Will you be ready? do you like this haste?
- We'll keep no great ado,--a friend or two;
- For, hark you, Tybalt being slain so late,
- It may be thought we held him carelessly,
- Being our kinsman, if we revel much:
- Therefore we'll have some half a dozen friends,
- And there an end. But what say you to Thursday?
- PARIS:
- My lord, I would that Thursday were to-morrow.
- CAPULET:
- Well get you gone: o' Thursday be it, then.
- Go you to Juliet ere you go to bed,
- Prepare her, wife, against this wedding-day.
- Farewell, my lord. Light to my chamber, ho!
- Afore me! it is so very very late,
- That we may call it early by and by.
- Good night.
- JULIET:
- Wilt thou be gone? it is not yet near day:
- It was the nightingale, and not the lark,
- That pierced the fearful hollow of thine ear;
- Nightly she sings on yon pomegranate-tree:
- Believe me, love, it was the nightingale.
- ROMEO:
- It was the lark, the herald of the morn,
- No nightingale: look, love, what envious streaks
- Do lace the severing clouds in yonder east:
- Night's candles are burnt out, and jocund day
- Stands tiptoe on the misty mountain tops.
- I must be gone and live, or stay and die.
- JULIET:
- Yon light is not day-light, I know it, I:
- It is some meteor that the sun exhales,
- To be to thee this night a torch-bearer,
- And light thee on thy way to Mantua:
- Therefore stay yet; thou need'st not to be gone.
- ROMEO:
- Let me be ta'en, let me be put to death;
- I am content, so thou wilt have it so.
- I'll say yon grey is not the morning's eye,
- 'Tis but the pale reflex of Cynthia's brow;
- Nor that is not the lark, whose notes do beat
- The vaulty heaven so high above our heads:
- I have more care to stay than will to go:
- Come, death, and welcome! Juliet wills it so.
- How is't, my soul? let's talk; it is not day.
- JULIET:
- It is, it is: hie hence, be gone, away!
- It is the lark that sings so out of tune,
- Straining harsh discords and unpleasing sharps.
- Some say the lark makes sweet division;
- This doth not so, for she divideth us:
- Some say the lark and loathed toad change eyes,
- O, now I would they had changed voices too!
- Since arm from arm that voice doth us affray,
- Hunting thee hence with hunt's-up to the day,
- O, now be gone; more light and light it grows.
- ROMEO:
- More light and light; more dark and dark our woes!
- Nurse:
- Madam!
- JULIET:
- Nurse?
- Nurse:
- Your lady mother is coming to your chamber:
- The day is broke; be wary, look about.
- JULIET:
- Then, window, let day in, and let life out.
- ROMEO:
- Farewell, farewell! one kiss, and I'll descend.
- JULIET:
- Art thou gone so? love, lord, ay, husband, friend!
- I must hear from thee every day in the hour,
- For in a minute there are many days:
- O, by this count I shall be much in years
- Ere I again behold my Romeo!
- ROMEO:
- Farewell!
- I will omit no opportunity
- That may convey my greetings, love, to thee.
- JULIET:
- O think'st thou we shall ever meet again?
- ROMEO:
- I doubt it not; and all these woes shall serve
- For sweet discourses in our time to come.
- JULIET:
- O God, I have an ill-divining soul!
- Methinks I see thee, now thou art below,
- As one dead in the bottom of a tomb:
- Either my eyesight fails, or thou look'st pale.
- ROMEO:
- And trust me, love, in my eye so do you:
- Dry sorrow drinks our blood. Adieu, adieu!
- JULIET:
- O fortune, fortune! all men call thee fickle:
- If thou art fickle, what dost thou with him.
- That is renown'd for faith? Be fickle, fortune;
- For then, I hope, thou wilt not keep him long,
- But send him back.
- LADY CAPULET:
- JULIET:
- Who is't that calls? is it my lady mother?
- Is she not down so late, or up so early?
- What unaccustom'd cause procures her hither?
- LADY CAPULET:
- Why, how now, Juliet!
- JULIET:
- Madam, I am not well.
- LADY CAPULET:
- Evermore weeping for your cousin's death?
- What, wilt thou wash him from his grave with tears?
- An if thou couldst, thou couldst not make him live;
- Therefore, have done: some grief shows much of love;
- But much of grief shows still some want of wit.
- JULIET:
- Yet let me weep for such a feeling loss.
- LADY CAPULET:
- So shall you feel the loss, but not the friend
- Which you weep for.
- JULIET:
- Feeling so the loss,
- Cannot choose but ever weep the friend.
- LADY CAPULET:
- Well, girl, thou weep'st not so much for his death,
- As that the villain lives which slaughter'd him.
- JULIET:
- What villain madam?
- LADY CAPULET:
- That same villain, Romeo.
- JULIET:
- LADY CAPULET:
- That is, because the traitor murderer lives.
- JULIET:
- Ay, madam, from the reach of these my hands:
- Would none but I might venge my cousin's death!
- LADY CAPULET:
- We will have vengeance for it, fear thou not:
- Then weep no more. I'll send to one in Mantua,
- Where that same banish'd runagate doth live,
- Shall give him such an unaccustom'd dram,
- That he shall soon keep Tybalt company:
- And then, I hope, thou wilt be satisfied.
- JULIET:
- Indeed, I never shall be satisfied
- With Romeo, till I behold him--dead--
- Is my poor heart for a kinsman vex'd.
- Madam, if you could find out but a man
- To bear a poison, I would temper it;
- That Romeo should, upon receipt thereof,
- Soon sleep in quiet. O, how my heart abhors
- To hear him named, and cannot come to him.
- To wreak the love I bore my cousin
- Upon his body that slaughter'd him!
- LADY CAPULET:
- Find thou the means, and I'll find such a man.
- But now I'll tell thee joyful tidings, girl.
- JULIET:
- And joy comes well in such a needy time:
- What are they, I beseech your ladyship?
- LADY CAPULET:
- Well, well, thou hast a careful father, child;
- One who, to put thee from thy heaviness,
- Hath sorted out a sudden day of joy,
- That thou expect'st not nor I look'd not for.
- JULIET:
- Madam, in happy time, what day is that?
- LADY CAPULET:
- Marry, my child, early next Thursday morn,
- The gallant, young and noble gentleman,
- The County Paris, at Saint Peter's Church,
- Shall happily make thee there a joyful bride.
- JULIET:
- Now, by Saint Peter's Church and Peter too,
- He shall not make me there a joyful bride.
- I wonder at this haste; that I must wed
- Ere he, that should be husband, comes to woo.
- I pray you, tell my lord and father, madam,
- I will not marry yet; and, when I do, I swear,
- It shall be Romeo, whom you know I hate,
- Rather than Paris. These are news indeed!
- LADY CAPULET:
- Here comes your father; tell him so yourself,
- And see how he will take it at your hands.
- CAPULET:
- When the sun sets, the air doth drizzle dew;
- But for the sunset of my brother's son
- It rains downright.
- How now! a conduit, girl? what, still in tears?
- Evermore showering? In one little body
- Thou counterfeit'st a bark, a sea, a wind;
- For still thy eyes, which I may call the sea,
- Do ebb and flow with tears; the bark thy body is,
- Sailing in this salt flood; the winds, thy sighs;
- Who, raging with thy tears, and they with them,
- Without a sudden calm, will overset
- Thy tempest-tossed body. How now, wife!
- Have you deliver'd to her our decree?
- LADY CAPULET:
- Ay, sir; but she will none, she gives you thanks.
- I would the fool were married to her grave!
- CAPULET:
- Soft! take me with you, take me with you, wife.
- How! will she none? doth she not give us thanks?
- Is she not proud? doth she not count her blest,
- Unworthy as she is, that we have wrought
- So worthy a gentleman to be her bridegroom?
- JULIET:
- Not proud, you have; but thankful, that you have:
- Proud can I never be of what I hate;
- But thankful even for hate, that is meant love.
- CAPULET:
- How now, how now, chop-logic! What is this?
- 'Proud,' and 'I thank you,' and 'I thank you not;'
- And yet 'not proud,' mistress minion, you,
- Thank me no thankings, nor, proud me no prouds,
- But fettle your fine joints 'gainst Thursday next,
- To go with Paris to Saint Peter's Church,
- Or I will drag thee on a hurdle thither.
- Out, you green-sickness carrion! out, you baggage!
- You tallow-face!
- LADY CAPULET:
- Fie, fie! what, are you mad?
- JULIET:
- Good father, I beseech you on my knees,
- Hear me with patience but to speak a word.
- CAPULET:
- Hang thee, young baggage! disobedient wretch!
- I tell thee what: get thee to church o' Thursday,
- Or never after look me in the face:
- Speak not, reply not, do not answer me;
- My fingers itch. Wife, we scarce thought us blest
- That God had lent us but this only child;
- But now I see this one is one too much,
- And that we have a curse in having her:
- Out on her, hilding!
- Nurse:
- God in heaven bless her!
- You are to blame, my lord, to rate her so.
- CAPULET:
- And why, my lady wisdom? hold your tongue,
- Good prudence; smatter with your gossips, go.
- Nurse:
- I speak no treason.
- CAPULET:
- O, God ye god-den.
- Nurse:
- May not one speak?
- CAPULET:
- Peace, you mumbling fool!
- Utter your gravity o'er a gossip's bowl;
- For here we need it not.
- LADY CAPULET:
- You are too hot.
- CAPULET:
- God's bread! it makes me mad:
- Day, night, hour, tide, time, work, play,
- Alone, in company, still my care hath been
- To have her match'd: and having now provided
- A gentleman of noble parentage,
- Of fair demesnes, youthful, and nobly train'd,
- Stuff'd, as they say, with honourable parts,
- Proportion'd as one's thought would wish a man;
- And then to have a wretched puling fool,
- A whining mammet, in her fortune's tender,
- To answer 'I'll not wed; I cannot love,
- I am too young; I pray you, pardon me.'
- But, as you will not wed, I'll pardon you:
- Graze where you will you shall not house with me:
- Look to't, think on't, I do not use to jest.
- Thursday is near; lay hand on heart, advise:
- An you be mine, I'll give you to my friend;
- And you be not, hang, beg, starve, die in
- the streets,
- For, by my soul, I'll ne'er acknowledge thee,
- Nor what is mine shall never do thee good:
- Trust to't, bethink you; I'll not be forsworn.
- JULIET:
- Is there no pity sitting in the clouds,
- That sees into the bottom of my grief?
- O, sweet my mother, cast me not away!
- Delay this marriage for a month, a week;
- Or, if you do not, make the bridal bed
- In that dim monument where Tybalt lies.
- LADY CAPULET:
- Talk not to me, for I'll not speak a word:
- Do as thou wilt, for I have done with thee.
- JULIET:
- O God!--O nurse, how shall this be prevented?
- My husband is on earth, my faith in heaven;
- How shall that faith return again to earth,
- Unless that husband send it me from heaven
- By leaving earth? comfort me, counsel me.
- Alack, alack, that heaven should practise stratagems
- Upon so soft a subject as myself!
- What say'st thou? hast thou not a word of joy?
- Some comfort, nurse.
- Nurse:
- Faith, here it is.
- Romeo is banish'd; and all the world to nothing,
- That he dares ne'er come back to challenge you;
- Or, if he do, it needs must be by stealth.
- Then, since the case so stands as now it doth,
- I think it best you married with the county.
- O, he's a lovely gentleman!
- Romeo's a dishclout to him: an eagle, madam,
- Hath not so green, so quick, so fair an eye
- As Paris hath. Beshrew my very heart,
- I think you are happy in this second match,
- For it excels your first: or if it did not,
- Your first is dead; or 'twere as good he were,
- As living here and you no use of him.
- JULIET:
- Speakest thou from thy heart?
- Nurse:
- And from my soul too;
- Or else beshrew them both.
- JULIET:
- Amen!
- Nurse:
- What?
- JULIET:
- Well, thou hast comforted me marvellous much.
- Go in: and tell my lady I am gone,
- Having displeased my father, to Laurence' cell,
- To make confession and to be absolved.
- Nurse:
- Marry, I will; and this is wisely done.
- JULIET:
- Ancient damnation! O most wicked fiend!
- Is it more sin to wish me thus forsworn,
- Or to dispraise my lord with that same tongue
- Which she hath praised him with above compare
- So many thousand times? Go, counsellor;
- Thou and my bosom henceforth shall be twain.
- I'll to the friar, to know his remedy:
- If all else fail, myself have power to die.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- On Thursday, sir? the time is very short.
- PARIS:
- My father Capulet will have it so;
- And I am nothing slow to slack his haste.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- You say you do not know the lady's mind:
- Uneven is the course, I like it not.
- PARIS:
- Immoderately she weeps for Tybalt's death,
- And therefore have I little talk'd of love;
- For Venus smiles not in a house of tears.
- Now, sir, her father counts it dangerous
- That she doth give her sorrow so much sway,
- And in his wisdom hastes our marriage,
- To stop the inundation of her tears;
- Which, too much minded by herself alone,
- May be put from her by society:
- Now do you know the reason of this haste.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- PARIS:
- Happily met, my lady and my wife!
- JULIET:
- That may be, sir, when I may be a wife.
- PARIS:
- That may be must be, love, on Thursday next.
- JULIET:
- What must be shall be.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- That's a certain text.
- PARIS:
- Come you to make confession to this father?
- JULIET:
- To answer that, I should confess to you.
- PARIS:
- Do not deny to him that you love me.
- JULIET:
- I will confess to you that I love him.
- PARIS:
- So will ye, I am sure, that you love me.
- JULIET:
- If I do so, it will be of more price,
- Being spoke behind your back, than to your face.
- PARIS:
- Poor soul, thy face is much abused with tears.
- JULIET:
- The tears have got small victory by that;
- For it was bad enough before their spite.
- PARIS:
- Thou wrong'st it, more than tears, with that report.
- JULIET:
- That is no slander, sir, which is a truth;
- And what I spake, I spake it to my face.
- PARIS:
- Thy face is mine, and thou hast slander'd it.
- JULIET:
- It may be so, for it is not mine own.
- Are you at leisure, holy father, now;
- Or shall I come to you at evening mass?
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- My leisure serves me, pensive daughter, now.
- My lord, we must entreat the time alone.
- PARIS:
- God shield I should disturb devotion!
- Juliet, on Thursday early will I rouse ye:
- Till then, adieu; and keep this holy kiss.
- JULIET:
- O shut the door! and when thou hast done so,
- Come weep with me; past hope, past cure, past help!
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Ah, Juliet, I already know thy grief;
- It strains me past the compass of my wits:
- I hear thou must, and nothing may prorogue it,
- On Thursday next be married to this county.
- JULIET:
- Tell me not, friar, that thou hear'st of this,
- Unless thou tell me how I may prevent it:
- If, in thy wisdom, thou canst give no help,
- Do thou but call my resolution wise,
- And with this knife I'll help it presently.
- God join'd my heart and Romeo's, thou our hands;
- And ere this hand, by thee to Romeo seal'd,
- Shall be the label to another deed,
- Or my true heart with treacherous revolt
- Turn to another, this shall slay them both:
- Therefore, out of thy long-experienced time,
- Give me some present counsel, or, behold,
- 'Twixt my extremes and me this bloody knife
- Shall play the umpire, arbitrating that
- Which the commission of thy years and art
- Could to no issue of true honour bring.
- Be not so long to speak; I long to die,
- If what thou speak'st speak not of remedy.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Hold, daughter: I do spy a kind of hope,
- Which craves as desperate an execution.
- As that is desperate which we would prevent.
- If, rather than to marry County Paris,
- Thou hast the strength of will to slay thyself,
- Then is it likely thou wilt undertake
- A thing like death to chide away this shame,
- That copest with death himself to scape from it:
- And, if thou darest, I'll give thee remedy.
- JULIET:
- O, bid me leap, rather than marry Paris,
- From off the battlements of yonder tower;
- Or walk in thievish ways; or bid me lurk
- Where serpents are; chain me with roaring bears;
- Or shut me nightly in a charnel-house,
- O'er-cover'd quite with dead men's rattling bones,
- With reeky shanks and yellow chapless skulls;
- Or bid me go into a new-made grave
- And hide me with a dead man in his shroud;
- Things that, to hear them told, have made me tremble;
- And I will do it without fear or doubt,
- To live an unstain'd wife to my sweet love.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Hold, then; go home, be merry, give consent
- To marry Paris: Wednesday is to-morrow:
- To-morrow night look that thou lie alone;
- Let not thy nurse lie with thee in thy chamber:
- Take thou this vial, being then in bed,
- And this distilled liquor drink thou off;
- When presently through all thy veins shall run
- A cold and drowsy humour, for no pulse
- Shall keep his native progress, but surcease:
- No warmth, no breath, shall testify thou livest;
- The roses in thy lips and cheeks shall fade
- To paly ashes, thy eyes' windows fall,
- Like death, when he shuts up the day of life;
- Each part, deprived of supple government,
- Shall, stiff and stark and cold, appear like death:
- And in this borrow'd likeness of shrunk death
- Thou shalt continue two and forty hours,
- And then awake as from a pleasant sleep.
- Now, when the bridegroom in the morning comes
- To rouse thee from thy bed, there art thou dead:
- Then, as the manner of our country is,
- In thy best robes uncover'd on the bier
- Thou shalt be borne to that same ancient vault
- Where all the kindred of the Capulets lie.
- In the mean time, against thou shalt awake,
- Shall Romeo by my letters know our drift,
- And hither shall he come: and he and I
- Will watch thy waking, and that very night
- Shall Romeo bear thee hence to Mantua.
- And this shall free thee from this present shame;
- If no inconstant toy, nor womanish fear,
- Abate thy valour in the acting it.
- JULIET:
- Give me, give me! O, tell not me of fear!
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Hold; get you gone, be strong and prosperous
- In this resolve: I'll send a friar with speed
- To Mantua, with my letters to thy lord.
- JULIET:
- Love give me strength! and strength shall help afford.
- Farewell, dear father!
- CAPULET:
- So many guests invite as here are writ.
- Sirrah, go hire me twenty cunning cooks.
- Second Servant:
- You shall have none ill, sir; for I'll try if they
- can lick their fingers.
- CAPULET:
- How canst thou try them so?
- Second Servant:
- Marry, sir, 'tis an ill cook that cannot lick his
- own fingers: therefore he that cannot lick his
- fingers goes not with me.
- CAPULET:
- Go, be gone.
- We shall be much unfurnished for this time.
- What, is my daughter gone to Friar Laurence?
- Nurse:
- Ay, forsooth.
- CAPULET:
- Well, he may chance to do some good on her:
- A peevish self-will'd harlotry it is.
- Nurse:
- See where she comes from shrift with merry look.
- CAPULET:
- How now, my headstrong! where have you been gadding?
- JULIET:
- Where I have learn'd me to repent the sin
- Of disobedient opposition
- To you and your behests, and am enjoin'd
- By holy Laurence to fall prostrate here,
- And beg your pardon: pardon, I beseech you!
- Henceforward I am ever ruled by you.
- CAPULET:
- Send for the county; go tell him of this:
- I'll have this knot knit up to-morrow morning.
- JULIET:
- I met the youthful lord at Laurence' cell;
- And gave him what becomed love I might,
- Not step o'er the bounds of modesty.
- CAPULET:
- Why, I am glad on't; this is well: stand up:
- This is as't should be. Let me see the county;
- Ay, marry, go, I say, and fetch him hither.
- Now, afore God! this reverend holy friar,
- Our whole city is much bound to him.
- JULIET:
- Nurse, will you go with me into my closet,
- To help me sort such needful ornaments
- As you think fit to furnish me to-morrow?
- LADY CAPULET:
- No, not till Thursday; there is time enough.
- CAPULET:
- Go, nurse, go with her: we'll to church to-morrow.
- LADY CAPULET:
- We shall be short in our provision:
- 'Tis now near night.
- CAPULET:
- Tush, I will stir about,
- And all things shall be well, I warrant thee, wife:
- Go thou to Juliet, help to deck up her;
- I'll not to bed to-night; let me alone;
- I'll play the housewife for this once. What, ho!
- They are all forth. Well, I will walk myself
- To County Paris, to prepare him up
- Against to-morrow: my heart is wondrous light,
- Since this same wayward girl is so reclaim'd.
- JULIET:
- Ay, those attires are best: but, gentle nurse,
- I pray thee, leave me to myself to-night,
- For I have need of many orisons
- To move the heavens to smile upon my state,
- Which, well thou know'st, is cross, and full of sin.
- LADY CAPULET:
- What, are you busy, ho? need you my help?
- JULIET:
- No, madam; we have cull'd such necessaries
- As are behoveful for our state to-morrow:
- So please you, let me now be left alone,
- And let the nurse this night sit up with you;
- For, I am sure, you have your hands full all,
- In this so sudden business.
- LADY CAPULET:
- Good night:
- Get thee to bed, and rest; for thou hast need.
- JULIET:
- Farewell! God knows when we shall meet again.
- I have a faint cold fear thrills through my veins,
- That almost freezes up the heat of life:
- I'll call them back again to comfort me:
- Nurse! What should she do here?
- My dismal scene I needs must act alone.
- Come, vial.
- What if this mixture do not work at all?
- Shall I be married then to-morrow morning?
- No, no: this shall forbid it: lie thou there.
- What if it be a poison, which the friar
- Subtly hath minister'd to have me dead,
- Lest in this marriage he should be dishonour'd,
- Because he married me before to Romeo?
- I fear it is: and yet, methinks, it should not,
- For he hath still been tried a holy man.
- How if, when I am laid into the tomb,
- I wake before the time that Romeo
- Come to redeem me? there's a fearful point!
- Shall I not, then, be stifled in the vault,
- To whose foul mouth no healthsome air breathes in,
- And there die strangled ere my Romeo comes?
- Or, if I live, is it not very like,
- The horrible conceit of death and night,
- Together with the terror of the place,--
- As in a vault, an ancient receptacle,
- Where, for these many hundred years, the bones
- Of all my buried ancestors are packed:
- Where bloody Tybalt, yet but green in earth,
- Lies festering in his shroud; where, as they say,
- At some hours in the night spirits resort;--
- Alack, alack, is it not like that I,
- So early waking, what with loathsome smells,
- And shrieks like mandrakes' torn out of the earth,
- That living mortals, hearing them, run mad:--
- O, if I wake, shall I not be distraught,
- Environed with all these hideous fears?
- And madly play with my forefather's joints?
- And pluck the mangled Tybalt from his shroud?
- And, in this rage, with some great kinsman's bone,
- As with a club, dash out my desperate brains?
- O, look! methinks I see my cousin's ghost
- Seeking out Romeo, that did spit his body
- Upon a rapier's point: stay, Tybalt, stay!
- Romeo, I come! this do I drink to thee.
- LADY CAPULET:
- Hold, take these keys, and fetch more spices, nurse.
- Nurse:
- They call for dates and quinces in the pastry.
- CAPULET:
- Come, stir, stir, stir! the second cock hath crow'd,
- The curfew-bell hath rung, 'tis three o'clock:
- Look to the baked meats, good Angelica:
- Spare not for the cost.
- Nurse:
- Go, you cot-quean, go,
- Get you to bed; faith, You'll be sick to-morrow
- For this night's watching.
- CAPULET:
- No, not a whit: what! I have watch'd ere now
- All night for lesser cause, and ne'er been sick.
- LADY CAPULET:
- Ay, you have been a mouse-hunt in your time;
- But I will watch you from such watching now.
- CAPULET:
- A jealous hood, a jealous hood!
- Now, fellow,
- What's there?
- First Servant:
- Things for the cook, sir; but I know not what.
- CAPULET:
- Make haste, make haste.
- Sirrah, fetch drier logs:
- Call Peter, he will show thee where they are.
- Second Servant:
- I have a head, sir, that will find out logs,
- And never trouble Peter for the matter.
- CAPULET:
- Mass, and well said; a merry whoreson, ha!
- Thou shalt be logger-head. Good faith, 'tis day:
- The county will be here with music straight,
- For so he said he would: I hear him near.
- Nurse! Wife! What, ho! What, nurse, I say!
- Go waken Juliet, go and trim her up;
- I'll go and chat with Paris: hie, make haste,
- Make haste; the bridegroom he is come already:
- Make haste, I say.
- Nurse:
- Mistress! what, mistress! Juliet! fast, I warrant her, she:
- Why, lamb! why, lady! fie, you slug-a-bed!
- Why, love, I say! madam! sweet-heart! why, bride!
- What, not a word? you take your pennyworths now;
- Sleep for a week; for the next night, I warrant,
- The County Paris hath set up his rest,
- That you shall rest but little. God forgive me,
- Marry, and amen, how sound is she asleep!
- I must needs wake her. Madam, madam, madam!
- Ay, let the county take you in your bed;
- He'll fright you up, i' faith. Will it not be?
- What, dress'd! and in your clothes! and down again!
- I must needs wake you; Lady! lady! lady!
- Alas, alas! Help, help! my lady's dead!
- O, well-a-day, that ever I was born!
- Some aqua vitae, ho! My lord! my lady!
- LADY CAPULET:
- What noise is here?
- Nurse:
- O lamentable day!
- LADY CAPULET:
- What is the matter?
- Nurse:
- Look, look! O heavy day!
- LADY CAPULET:
- O me, O me! My child, my only life,
- Revive, look up, or I will die with thee!
- Help, help! Call help.
- CAPULET:
- For shame, bring Juliet forth; her lord is come.
- Nurse:
- She's dead, deceased, she's dead; alack the day!
- LADY CAPULET:
- Alack the day, she's dead, she's dead, she's dead!
- CAPULET:
- Ha! let me see her: out, alas! she's cold:
- Her blood is settled, and her joints are stiff;
- Life and these lips have long been separated:
- Death lies on her like an untimely frost
- Upon the sweetest flower of all the field.
- Nurse:
- O lamentable day!
- LADY CAPULET:
- O woful time!
- CAPULET:
- Death, that hath ta'en her hence to make me wail,
- Ties up my tongue, and will not let me speak.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Come, is the bride ready to go to church?
- CAPULET:
- Ready to go, but never to return.
- O son! the night before thy wedding-day
- Hath Death lain with thy wife. There she lies,
- Flower as she was, deflowered by him.
- Death is my son-in-law, Death is my heir;
- My daughter he hath wedded: I will die,
- And leave him all; life, living, all is Death's.
- PARIS:
- Have I thought long to see this morning's face,
- And doth it give me such a sight as this?
- LADY CAPULET:
- Accursed, unhappy, wretched, hateful day!
- Most miserable hour that e'er time saw
- In lasting labour of his pilgrimage!
- But one, poor one, one poor and loving child,
- But one thing to rejoice and solace in,
- And cruel death hath catch'd it from my sight!
- Nurse:
- O woe! O woful, woful, woful day!
- Most lamentable day, most woful day,
- That ever, ever, I did yet behold!
- O day! O day! O day! O hateful day!
- Never was seen so black a day as this:
- O woful day, O woful day!
- PARIS:
- Beguiled, divorced, wronged, spited, slain!
- Most detestable death, by thee beguil'd,
- By cruel cruel thee quite overthrown!
- O love! O life! not life, but love in death!
- CAPULET:
- Despised, distressed, hated, martyr'd, kill'd!
- Uncomfortable time, why camest thou now
- To murder, murder our solemnity?
- O child! O child! my soul, and not my child!
- Dead art thou! Alack! my child is dead;
- And with my child my joys are buried.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Peace, ho, for shame! confusion's cure lives not
- In these confusions. Heaven and yourself
- Had part in this fair maid; now heaven hath all,
- And all the better is it for the maid:
- Your part in her you could not keep from death,
- But heaven keeps his part in eternal life.
- The most you sought was her promotion;
- For 'twas your heaven she should be advanced:
- And weep ye now, seeing she is advanced
- Above the clouds, as high as heaven itself?
- O, in this love, you love your child so ill,
- That you run mad, seeing that she is well:
- She's not well married that lives married long;
- But she's best married that dies married young.
- Dry up your tears, and stick your rosemary
- On this fair corse; and, as the custom is,
- In all her best array bear her to church:
- For though fond nature bids us an lament,
- Yet nature's tears are reason's merriment.
- CAPULET:
- All things that we ordained festival,
- Turn from their office to black funeral;
- Our instruments to melancholy bells,
- Our wedding cheer to a sad burial feast,
- Our solemn hymns to sullen dirges change,
- Our bridal flowers serve for a buried corse,
- And all things change them to the contrary.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Sir, go you in; and, madam, go with him;
- And go, Sir Paris; every one prepare
- To follow this fair corse unto her grave:
- The heavens do lour upon you for some ill;
- Move them no more by crossing their high will.
- First Musician:
- Faith, we may put up our pipes, and be gone.
- Nurse:
- Honest goodfellows, ah, put up, put up;
- For, well you know, this is a pitiful case.
- First Musician:
- Ay, by my troth, the case may be amended.
- PETER:
- Musicians, O, musicians, 'Heart's ease, Heart's
- ease:' O, an you will have me live, play 'Heart's ease.'
- First Musician:
- Why 'Heart's ease?'
- PETER:
- O, musicians, because my heart itself plays 'My
- heart is full of woe:' O, play me some merry dump,
- to comfort me.
- First Musician:
- Not a dump we; 'tis no time to play now.
- PETER:
- You will not, then?
- First Musician:
- No.
- PETER:
- I will then give it you soundly.
- First Musician:
- What will you give us?
- PETER:
- No money, on my faith, but the gleek;
- I will give you the minstrel.
- First Musician:
- Then I will give you the serving-creature.
- PETER:
- Then will I lay the serving-creature's dagger on
- your pate. I will carry no crotchets: I'll re you,
- I'll fa you; do you note me?
- First Musician:
- An you re us and fa us, you note us.
- Second Musician:
- Pray you, put up your dagger, and put out your wit.
- PETER:
- Then have at you with my wit! I will dry-beat you
- with an iron wit, and put up my iron dagger. Answer
- me like men:
- 'When griping grief the heart doth wound,
- And doleful dumps the mind oppress,
- Then music with her silver sound'--
- why 'silver sound'? why 'music with her silver
- sound'? What say you, Simon Catling?
- Musician:
- Marry, sir, because silver hath a sweet sound.
- PETER:
- Pretty! What say you, Hugh Rebeck?
- Second Musician:
- I say 'silver sound,' because musicians sound for silver.
- PETER:
- Pretty too! What say you, James Soundpost?
- Third Musician:
- Faith, I know not what to say.
- PETER:
- O, I cry you mercy; you are the singer: I will say
- for you. It is 'music with her silver sound,'
- because musicians have no gold for sounding:
- 'Then music with her silver sound
- With speedy help doth lend redress.'
- First Musician:
- What a pestilent knave is this same!
- Second Musician:
- Hang him, Jack! Come, we'll in here; tarry for the
- mourners, and stay dinner.
- ROMEO:
- If I may trust the flattering truth of sleep,
- My dreams presage some joyful news at hand:
- My bosom's lord sits lightly in his throne;
- And all this day an unaccustom'd spirit
- Lifts me above the ground with cheerful thoughts.
- I dreamt my lady came and found me dead--
- Strange dream, that gives a dead man leave
- to think!--
- And breathed such life with kisses in my lips,
- That I revived, and was an emperor.
- Ah me! how sweet is love itself possess'd,
- When but love's shadows are so rich in joy!
- News from Verona!--How now, Balthasar!
- Dost thou not bring me letters from the friar?
- How doth my lady? Is my father well?
- How fares my Juliet? that I ask again;
- For nothing can be ill, if she be well.
- BALTHASAR:
- Then she is well, and nothing can be ill:
- Her body sleeps in Capel's monument,
- And her immortal part with angels lives.
- I saw her laid low in her kindred's vault,
- And presently took post to tell it you:
- O, pardon me for bringing these ill news,
- Since you did leave it for my office, sir.
- ROMEO:
- Is it even so? then I defy you, stars!
- Thou know'st my lodging: get me ink and paper,
- And hire post-horses; I will hence to-night.
- BALTHASAR:
- I do beseech you, sir, have patience:
- Your looks are pale and wild, and do import
- Some misadventure.
- ROMEO:
- Tush, thou art deceived:
- Leave me, and do the thing I bid thee do.
- Hast thou no letters to me from the friar?
- BALTHASAR:
- No, my good lord.
- ROMEO:
- No matter: get thee gone,
- And hire those horses; I'll be with thee straight.
- Well, Juliet, I will lie with thee to-night.
- Let's see for means: O mischief, thou art swift
- To enter in the thoughts of desperate men!
- I do remember an apothecary,--
- And hereabouts he dwells,--which late I noted
- In tatter'd weeds, with overwhelming brows,
- Culling of simples; meagre were his looks,
- Sharp misery had worn him to the bones:
- And in his needy shop a tortoise hung,
- An alligator stuff'd, and other skins
- Of ill-shaped fishes; and about his shelves
- A beggarly account of empty boxes,
- Green earthen pots, bladders and musty seeds,
- Remnants of packthread and old cakes of roses,
- Were thinly scatter'd, to make up a show.
- Noting this penury, to myself I said
- 'An if a man did need a poison now,
- Whose sale is present death in Mantua,
- Here lives a caitiff wretch would sell it him.'
- O, this same thought did but forerun my need;
- And this same needy man must sell it me.
- As I remember, this should be the house.
- Being holiday, the beggar's shop is shut.
- What, ho! apothecary!
- Apothecary:
- Who calls so loud?
- ROMEO:
- Come hither, man. I see that thou art poor:
- Hold, there is forty ducats: let me have
- A dram of poison, such soon-speeding gear
- As will disperse itself through all the veins
- That the life-weary taker may fall dead
- And that the trunk may be discharged of breath
- As violently as hasty powder fired
- Doth hurry from the fatal cannon's womb.
- Apothecary:
- Such mortal drugs I have; but Mantua's law
- Is death to any he that utters them.
- ROMEO:
- Art thou so bare and full of wretchedness,
- And fear'st to die? famine is in thy cheeks,
- Need and oppression starveth in thine eyes,
- Contempt and beggary hangs upon thy back;
- The world is not thy friend nor the world's law;
- The world affords no law to make thee rich;
- Then be not poor, but break it, and take this.
- Apothecary:
- My poverty, but not my will, consents.
- ROMEO:
- I pay thy poverty, and not thy will.
- Apothecary:
- Put this in any liquid thing you will,
- And drink it off; and, if you had the strength
- Of twenty men, it would dispatch you straight.
- ROMEO:
- There is thy gold, worse poison to men's souls,
- Doing more murders in this loathsome world,
- Than these poor compounds that thou mayst not sell.
- I sell thee poison; thou hast sold me none.
- Farewell: buy food, and get thyself in flesh.
- Come, cordial and not poison, go with me
- To Juliet's grave; for there must I use thee.
- FRIAR JOHN:
- Holy Franciscan friar! brother, ho!
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- This same should be the voice of Friar John.
- Welcome from Mantua: what says Romeo?
- Or, if his mind be writ, give me his letter.
- FRIAR JOHN:
- Going to find a bare-foot brother out
- One of our order, to associate me,
- Here in this city visiting the sick,
- And finding him, the searchers of the town,
- Suspecting that we both were in a house
- Where the infectious pestilence did reign,
- Seal'd up the doors, and would not let us forth;
- So that my speed to Mantua there was stay'd.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Who bare my letter, then, to Romeo?
- FRIAR JOHN:
- I could not send it,--here it is again,--
- Nor get a messenger to bring it thee,
- So fearful were they of infection.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Unhappy fortune! by my brotherhood,
- The letter was not nice but full of charge
- Of dear import, and the neglecting it
- May do much danger. Friar John, go hence;
- Get me an iron crow, and bring it straight
- Unto my cell.
- FRIAR JOHN:
- Brother, I'll go and bring it thee.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Now must I to the monument alone;
- Within three hours will fair Juliet wake:
- She will beshrew me much that Romeo
- Hath had no notice of these accidents;
- But I will write again to Mantua,
- And keep her at my cell till Romeo come;
- Poor living corse, closed in a dead man's tomb!
- PARIS:
- Give me thy torch, boy: hence, and stand aloof:
- Yet put it out, for I would not be seen.
- Under yond yew-trees lay thee all along,
- Holding thine ear close to the hollow ground;
- So shall no foot upon the churchyard tread,
- Being loose, unfirm, with digging up of graves,
- But thou shalt hear it: whistle then to me,
- As signal that thou hear'st something approach.
- Give me those flowers. Do as I bid thee, go.
- PAGE:
- PARIS:
- Sweet flower, with flowers thy bridal bed I strew,--
- O woe! thy canopy is dust and stones;--
- Which with sweet water nightly I will dew,
- Or, wanting that, with tears distill'd by moans:
- The obsequies that I for thee will keep
- Nightly shall be to strew thy grave and weep.
- The boy gives warning something doth approach.
- What cursed foot wanders this way to-night,
- To cross my obsequies and true love's rite?
- What with a torch! muffle me, night, awhile.
- ROMEO:
- Give me that mattock and the wrenching iron.
- Hold, take this letter; early in the morning
- See thou deliver it to my lord and father.
- Give me the light: upon thy life, I charge thee,
- Whate'er thou hear'st or seest, stand all aloof,
- And do not interrupt me in my course.
- Why I descend into this bed of death,
- Is partly to behold my lady's face;
- But chiefly to take thence from her dead finger
- A precious ring, a ring that I must use
- In dear employment: therefore hence, be gone:
- But if thou, jealous, dost return to pry
- In what I further shall intend to do,
- By heaven, I will tear thee joint by joint
- And strew this hungry churchyard with thy limbs:
- The time and my intents are savage-wild,
- More fierce and more inexorable far
- Than empty tigers or the roaring sea.
- BALTHASAR:
- I will be gone, sir, and not trouble you.
- ROMEO:
- So shalt thou show me friendship. Take thou that:
- Live, and be prosperous: and farewell, good fellow.
- BALTHASAR:
- ROMEO:
- Thou detestable maw, thou womb of death,
- Gorged with the dearest morsel of the earth,
- Thus I enforce thy rotten jaws to open,
- And, in despite, I'll cram thee with more food!
- PARIS:
- This is that banish'd haughty Montague,
- That murder'd my love's cousin, with which grief,
- It is supposed, the fair creature died;
- And here is come to do some villanous shame
- To the dead bodies: I will apprehend him.
- Stop thy unhallow'd toil, vile Montague!
- Can vengeance be pursued further than death?
- Condemned villain, I do apprehend thee:
- Obey, and go with me; for thou must die.
- ROMEO:
- I must indeed; and therefore came I hither.
- Good gentle youth, tempt not a desperate man;
- Fly hence, and leave me: think upon these gone;
- Let them affright thee. I beseech thee, youth,
- Put not another sin upon my head,
- By urging me to fury: O, be gone!
- By heaven, I love thee better than myself;
- For I come hither arm'd against myself:
- Stay not, be gone; live, and hereafter say,
- A madman's mercy bade thee run away.
- PARIS:
- I do defy thy conjurations,
- And apprehend thee for a felon here.
- ROMEO:
- Wilt thou provoke me? then have at thee, boy!
- PAGE:
- O Lord, they fight! I will go call the watch.
- PARIS:
- O, I am slain!
- If thou be merciful,
- Open the tomb, lay me with Juliet.
- ROMEO:
- In faith, I will. Let me peruse this face.
- Mercutio's kinsman, noble County Paris!
- What said my man, when my betossed soul
- Did not attend him as we rode? I think
- He told me Paris should have married Juliet:
- Said he not so? or did I dream it so?
- Or am I mad, hearing him talk of Juliet,
- To think it was so? O, give me thy hand,
- One writ with me in sour misfortune's book!
- I'll bury thee in a triumphant grave;
- A grave? O no! a lantern, slaughter'd youth,
- For here lies Juliet, and her beauty makes
- This vault a feasting presence full of light.
- Death, lie thou there, by a dead man interr'd.
- How oft when men are at the point of death
- Have they been merry! which their keepers call
- A lightning before death: O, how may I
- Call this a lightning? O my love! my wife!
- Death, that hath suck'd the honey of thy breath,
- Hath had no power yet upon thy beauty:
- Thou art not conquer'd; beauty's ensign yet
- Is crimson in thy lips and in thy cheeks,
- And death's pale flag is not advanced there.
- Tybalt, liest thou there in thy bloody sheet?
- O, what more favour can I do to thee,
- Than with that hand that cut thy youth in twain
- To sunder his that was thine enemy?
- Forgive me, cousin! Ah, dear Juliet,
- Why art thou yet so fair? shall I believe
- That unsubstantial death is amorous,
- And that the lean abhorred monster keeps
- Thee here in dark to be his paramour?
- For fear of that, I still will stay with thee;
- And never from this palace of dim night
- Depart again: here, here will I remain
- With worms that are thy chamber-maids; O, here
- Will I set up my everlasting rest,
- And shake the yoke of inauspicious stars
- From this world-wearied flesh. Eyes, look your last!
- Arms, take your last embrace! and, lips, O you
- The doors of breath, seal with a righteous kiss
- A dateless bargain to engrossing death!
- Come, bitter conduct, come, unsavoury guide!
- Thou desperate pilot, now at once run on
- The dashing rocks thy sea-sick weary bark!
- Here's to my love!
- O true apothecary!
- Thy drugs are quick. Thus with a kiss I die.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Saint Francis be my speed! how oft to-night
- Have my old feet stumbled at graves! Who's there?
- BALTHASAR:
- Here's one, a friend, and one that knows you well.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Bliss be upon you! Tell me, good my friend,
- What torch is yond, that vainly lends his light
- To grubs and eyeless skulls? as I discern,
- It burneth in the Capel's monument.
- BALTHASAR:
- It doth so, holy sir; and there's my master,
- One that you love.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Who is it?
- BALTHASAR:
- Romeo.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- How long hath he been there?
- BALTHASAR:
- Full half an hour.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Go with me to the vault.
- BALTHASAR:
- I dare not, sir
- My master knows not but I am gone hence;
- And fearfully did menace me with death,
- If I did stay to look on his intents.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Stay, then; I'll go alone. Fear comes upon me:
- O, much I fear some ill unlucky thing.
- BALTHASAR:
- As I did sleep under this yew-tree here,
- I dreamt my master and another fought,
- And that my master slew him.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- Romeo!
- Alack, alack, what blood is this, which stains
- The stony entrance of this sepulchre?
- What mean these masterless and gory swords
- To lie discolour'd by this place of peace?
- Romeo! O, pale! Who else? what, Paris too?
- And steep'd in blood? Ah, what an unkind hour
- Is guilty of this lamentable chance!
- The lady stirs.
- JULIET:
- O comfortable friar! where is my lord?
- I do remember well where I should be,
- And there I am. Where is my Romeo?
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- I hear some noise. Lady, come from that nest
- Of death, contagion, and unnatural sleep:
- A greater power than we can contradict
- Hath thwarted our intents. Come, come away.
- Thy husband in thy bosom there lies dead;
- And Paris too. Come, I'll dispose of thee
- Among a sisterhood of holy nuns:
- Stay not to question, for the watch is coming;
- Come, go, good Juliet,
- I dare no longer stay.
- JULIET:
- Go, get thee hence, for I will not away.
- What's here? a cup, closed in my true love's hand?
- Poison, I see, hath been his timeless end:
- O churl! drunk all, and left no friendly drop
- To help me after? I will kiss thy lips;
- Haply some poison yet doth hang on them,
- To make die with a restorative.
- Thy lips are warm.
- First Watchman:
- JULIET:
- Yea, noise? then I'll be brief. O happy dagger!
- This is thy sheath;
- there rust, and let me die.
- PAGE:
- This is the place; there, where the torch doth burn.
- First Watchman:
- The ground is bloody; search about the churchyard:
- Go, some of you, whoe'er you find attach.
- Pitiful sight! here lies the county slain,
- And Juliet bleeding, warm, and newly dead,
- Who here hath lain these two days buried.
- Go, tell the prince: run to the Capulets:
- Raise up the Montagues: some others search:
- We see the ground whereon these woes do lie;
- But the true ground of all these piteous woes
- We cannot without circumstance descry.
- Second Watchman:
- Here's Romeo's man; we found him in the churchyard.
- First Watchman:
- Hold him in safety, till the prince come hither.
- Third Watchman:
- Here is a friar, that trembles, sighs and weeps:
- We took this mattock and this spade from him,
- As he was coming from this churchyard side.
- First Watchman:
- A great suspicion: stay the friar too.
- PRINCE:
- What misadventure is so early up,
- That calls our person from our morning's rest?
- CAPULET:
- What should it be, that they so shriek abroad?
- LADY CAPULET:
- The people in the street cry Romeo,
- Some Juliet, and some Paris; and all run,
- With open outcry toward our monument.
- PRINCE:
- What fear is this which startles in our ears?
- First Watchman:
- Sovereign, here lies the County Paris slain;
- And Romeo dead; and Juliet, dead before,
- Warm and new kill'd.
- PRINCE:
- Search, seek, and know how this foul murder comes.
- First Watchman:
- Here is a friar, and slaughter'd Romeo's man;
- With instruments upon them, fit to open
- These dead men's tombs.
- CAPULET:
- O heavens! O wife, look how our daughter bleeds!
- This dagger hath mista'en--for, lo, his house
- Is empty on the back of Montague,--
- And it mis-sheathed in my daughter's bosom!
- LADY CAPULET:
- O me! this sight of death is as a bell,
- That warns my old age to a sepulchre.
- PRINCE:
- Come, Montague; for thou art early up,
- To see thy son and heir more early down.
- MONTAGUE:
- Alas, my liege, my wife is dead to-night;
- Grief of my son's exile hath stopp'd her breath:
- What further woe conspires against mine age?
- PRINCE:
- Look, and thou shalt see.
- MONTAGUE:
- O thou untaught! what manners is in this?
- To press before thy father to a grave?
- PRINCE:
- Seal up the mouth of outrage for a while,
- Till we can clear these ambiguities,
- And know their spring, their head, their
- true descent;
- And then will I be general of your woes,
- And lead you even to death: meantime forbear,
- And let mischance be slave to patience.
- Bring forth the parties of suspicion.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- I am the greatest, able to do least,
- Yet most suspected, as the time and place
- Doth make against me of this direful murder;
- And here I stand, both to impeach and purge
- Myself condemned and myself excused.
- PRINCE:
- Then say at once what thou dost know in this.
- FRIAR LAURENCE:
- I will be brief, for my short date of breath
- Is not so long as is a tedious tale.
- Romeo, there dead, was husband to that Juliet;
- And she, there dead, that Romeo's faithful wife:
- I married them; and their stol'n marriage-day
- Was Tybalt's dooms-day, whose untimely death
- Banish'd the new-made bridegroom from the city,
- For whom, and not for Tybalt, Juliet pined.
- You, to remove that siege of grief from her,
- Betroth'd and would have married her perforce
- To County Paris: then comes she to me,
- And, with wild looks, bid me devise some mean
- To rid her from this second marriage,
- Or in my cell there would she kill herself.
- Then gave I her, so tutor'd by my art,
- A sleeping potion; which so took effect
- As I intended, for it wrought on her
- The form of death: meantime I writ to Romeo,
- That he should hither come as this dire night,
- To help to take her from her borrow'd grave,
- Being the time the potion's force should cease.
- But he which bore my letter, Friar John,
- Was stay'd by accident, and yesternight
- Return'd my letter back. Then all alone
- At the prefixed hour of her waking,
- Came I to take her from her kindred's vault;
- Meaning to keep her closely at my cell,
- Till I conveniently could send to Romeo:
- But when I came, some minute ere the time
- Of her awaking, here untimely lay
- The noble Paris and true Romeo dead.
- She wakes; and I entreated her come forth,
- And bear this work of heaven with patience:
- But then a noise did scare me from the tomb;
- And she, too desperate, would not go with me,
- But, as it seems, did violence on herself.
- All this I know; and to the marriage
- Her nurse is privy: and, if aught in this
- Miscarried by my fault, let my old life
- Be sacrificed, some hour before his time,
- Unto the rigour of severest law.
- PRINCE:
- We still have known thee for a holy man.
- Where's Romeo's man? what can he say in this?
- BALTHASAR:
- I brought my master news of Juliet's death;
- And then in post he came from Mantua
- To this same place, to this same monument.
- This letter he early bid me give his father,
- And threatened me with death, going in the vault,
- I departed not and left him there.
- PRINCE:
- Give me the letter; I will look on it.
- Where is the county's page, that raised the watch?
- Sirrah, what made your master in this place?
- PAGE:
- He came with flowers to strew his lady's grave;
- And bid me stand aloof, and so I did:
- Anon comes one with light to ope the tomb;
- And by and by my master drew on him;
- And then I ran away to call the watch.
- PRINCE:
- This letter doth make good the friar's words,
- Their course of love, the tidings of her death:
- And here he writes that he did buy a poison
- Of a poor 'pothecary, and therewithal
- Came to this vault to die, and lie with Juliet.
- Where be these enemies? Capulet! Montague!
- See, what a scourge is laid upon your hate,
- That heaven finds means to kill your joys with love.
- And I for winking at your discords too
- Have lost a brace of kinsmen: all are punish'd.
- CAPULET:
- O brother Montague, give me thy hand:
- This is my daughter's jointure, for no more
- Can I demand.
- MONTAGUE:
- But I can give thee more:
- For I will raise her statue in pure gold;
- That while Verona by that name is known,
- There shall no figure at such rate be set
- As that of true and faithful Juliet.
- CAPULET:
- As rich shall Romeo's by his lady's lie;
- Poor sacrifices of our enmity!
- PRINCE:
- A glooming peace this morning with it brings;
- The sun, for sorrow, will not show his head:
- Go hence, to have more talk of these sad things;
- Some shall be pardon'd, and some punished:
- For never was a story of more woe
- Than this of Juliet and her Romeo.
- WARWICK:
- I wonder how the king escaped our hands.
- YORK:
- While we pursued the horsemen of the north,
- He slily stole away and left his men:
- Whereat the great Lord of Northumberland,
- Whose warlike ears could never brook retreat,
- Cheer'd up the drooping army; and himself,
- Lord Clifford and Lord Stafford, all abreast,
- Charged our main battle's front, and breaking in
- Were by the swords of common soldiers slain.
- EDWARD:
- Lord Stafford's father, Duke of Buckingham,
- Is either slain or wounded dangerously;
- I cleft his beaver with a downright blow:
- That this is true, father, behold his blood.
- MONTAGUE:
- And, brother, here's the Earl of Wiltshire's blood,
- Whom I encounter'd as the battles join'd.
- RICHARD:
- Speak thou for me and tell them what I did.
- YORK:
- Richard hath best deserved of all my sons.
- But is your grace dead, my Lord of Somerset?
- NORFOLK:
- Such hope have all the line of John of Gaunt!
- RICHARD:
- Thus do I hope to shake King Henry's head.
- WARWICK:
- And so do I. Victorious Prince of York,
- Before I see thee seated in that throne
- Which now the house of Lancaster usurps,
- I vow by heaven these eyes shall never close.
- This is the palace of the fearful king,
- And this the regal seat: possess it, York;
- For this is thine and not King Henry's heirs'
- YORK:
- Assist me, then, sweet Warwick, and I will;
- For hither we have broken in by force.
- NORFOLK:
- We'll all assist you; he that flies shall die.
- YORK:
- Thanks, gentle Norfolk: stay by me, my lords;
- And, soldiers, stay and lodge by me this night.
- WARWICK:
- And when the king comes, offer no violence,
- Unless he seek to thrust you out perforce.
- YORK:
- The queen this day here holds her parliament,
- But little thinks we shall be of her council:
- By words or blows here let us win our right.
- RICHARD:
- Arm'd as we are, let's stay within this house.
- WARWICK:
- The bloody parliament shall this be call'd,
- Unless Plantagenet, Duke of York, be king,
- And bashful Henry deposed, whose cowardice
- Hath made us by-words to our enemies.
- YORK:
- Then leave me not, my lords; be resolute;
- I mean to take possession of my right.
- WARWICK:
- Neither the king, nor he that loves him best,
- The proudest he that holds up Lancaster,
- Dares stir a wing, if Warwick shake his bells.
- I'll plant Plantagenet, root him up who dares:
- Resolve thee, Richard; claim the English crown.
- KING HENRY VI:
- My lords, look where the sturdy rebel sits,
- Even in the chair of state: belike he means,
- Back'd by the power of Warwick, that false peer,
- To aspire unto the crown and reign as king.
- Earl of Northumberland, he slew thy father.
- And thine, Lord Clifford; and you both have vow'd revenge
- On him, his sons, his favourites and his friends.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- If I be not, heavens be revenged on me!
- CLIFFORD:
- The hope thereof makes Clifford mourn in steel.
- WESTMORELAND:
- What, shall we suffer this? let's pluck him down:
- My heart for anger burns; I cannot brook it.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Be patient, gentle Earl of Westmoreland.
- CLIFFORD:
- Patience is for poltroons, such as he:
- He durst not sit there, had your father lived.
- My gracious lord, here in the parliament
- Let us assail the family of York.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Well hast thou spoken, cousin: be it so.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Ah, know you not the city favours them,
- And they have troops of soldiers at their beck?
- EXETER:
- But when the duke is slain, they'll quickly fly.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Far be the thought of this from Henry's heart,
- To make a shambles of the parliament-house!
- Cousin of Exeter, frowns, words and threats
- Shall be the war that Henry means to use.
- Thou factious Duke of York, descend my throne,
- and kneel for grace and mercy at my feet;
- I am thy sovereign.
- YORK:
- I am thine.
- EXETER:
- For shame, come down: he made thee Duke of York.
- YORK:
- 'Twas my inheritance, as the earldom was.
- EXETER:
- Thy father was a traitor to the crown.
- WARWICK:
- Exeter, thou art a traitor to the crown
- In following this usurping Henry.
- CLIFFORD:
- Whom should he follow but his natural king?
- WARWICK:
- True, Clifford; and that's Richard Duke of York.
- KING HENRY VI:
- And shall I stand, and thou sit in my throne?
- YORK:
- It must and shall be so: content thyself.
- WARWICK:
- Be Duke of Lancaster; let him be king.
- WESTMORELAND:
- He is both king and Duke of Lancaster;
- And that the Lord of Westmoreland shall maintain.
- WARWICK:
- And Warwick shall disprove it. You forget
- That we are those which chased you from the field
- And slew your fathers, and with colours spread
- March'd through the city to the palace gates.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Yes, Warwick, I remember it to my grief;
- And, by his soul, thou and thy house shall rue it.
- WESTMORELAND:
- Plantagenet, of thee and these thy sons,
- Thy kinsman and thy friends, I'll have more lives
- Than drops of blood were in my father's veins.
- CLIFFORD:
- Urge it no more; lest that, instead of words,
- I send thee, Warwick, such a messenger
- As shall revenge his death before I stir.
- WARWICK:
- Poor Clifford! how I scorn his worthless threats!
- YORK:
- Will you we show our title to the crown?
- If not, our swords shall plead it in the field.
- KING HENRY VI:
- What title hast thou, traitor, to the crown?
- Thy father was, as thou art, Duke of York;
- Thy grandfather, Roger Mortimer, Earl of March:
- I am the son of Henry the Fifth,
- Who made the Dauphin and the French to stoop
- And seized upon their towns and provinces.
- WARWICK:
- Talk not of France, sith thou hast lost it all.
- KING HENRY VI:
- The lord protector lost it, and not I:
- When I was crown'd I was but nine months old.
- RICHARD:
- You are old enough now, and yet, methinks, you lose.
- Father, tear the crown from the usurper's head.
- EDWARD:
- Sweet father, do so; set it on your head.
- MONTAGUE:
- Good brother, as thou lovest and honourest arms,
- Let's fight it out and not stand cavilling thus.
- RICHARD:
- Sound drums and trumpets, and the king will fly.
- YORK:
- Sons, peace!
- KING HENRY VI:
- Peace, thou! and give King Henry leave to speak.
- WARWICK:
- Plantagenet shall speak first: hear him, lords;
- And be you silent and attentive too,
- For he that interrupts him shall not live.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Think'st thou that I will leave my kingly throne,
- Wherein my grandsire and my father sat?
- No: first shall war unpeople this my realm;
- Ay, and their colours, often borne in France,
- And now in England to our heart's great sorrow,
- Shall be my winding-sheet. Why faint you, lords?
- My title's good, and better far than his.
- WARWICK:
- Prove it, Henry, and thou shalt be king.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Henry the Fourth by conquest got the crown.
- YORK:
- 'Twas by rebellion against his king.
- KING HENRY VI:
- YORK:
- What then?
- KING HENRY VI:
- An if he may, then am I lawful king;
- For Richard, in the view of many lords,
- Resign'd the crown to Henry the Fourth,
- Whose heir my father was, and I am his.
- YORK:
- He rose against him, being his sovereign,
- And made him to resign his crown perforce.
- WARWICK:
- Suppose, my lords, he did it unconstrain'd,
- Think you 'twere prejudicial to his crown?
- EXETER:
- No; for he could not so resign his crown
- But that the next heir should succeed and reign.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Art thou against us, Duke of Exeter?
- EXETER:
- His is the right, and therefore pardon me.
- YORK:
- Why whisper you, my lords, and answer not?
- EXETER:
- My conscience tells me he is lawful king.
- KING HENRY VI:
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Plantagenet, for all the claim thou lay'st,
- Think not that Henry shall be so deposed.
- WARWICK:
- Deposed he shall be, in despite of all.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Thou art deceived: 'tis not thy southern power,
- Of Essex, Norfolk, Suffolk, nor of Kent,
- Which makes thee thus presumptuous and proud,
- Can set the duke up in despite of me.
- CLIFFORD:
- King Henry, be thy title right or wrong,
- Lord Clifford vows to fight in thy defence:
- May that ground gape and swallow me alive,
- Where I shall kneel to him that slew my father!
- KING HENRY VI:
- O Clifford, how thy words revive my heart!
- YORK:
- Henry of Lancaster, resign thy crown.
- What mutter you, or what conspire you, lords?
- WARWICK:
- Do right unto this princely Duke of York,
- Or I will fill the house with armed men,
- And over the chair of state, where now he sits,
- Write up his title with usurping blood.
- KING HENRY VI:
- My Lord of Warwick, hear me but one word:
- Let me for this my life-time reign as king.
- YORK:
- Confirm the crown to me and to mine heirs,
- And thou shalt reign in quiet while thou livest.
- KING HENRY VI:
- I am content: Richard Plantagenet,
- Enjoy the kingdom after my decease.
- CLIFFORD:
- What wrong is this unto the prince your son!
- WARWICK:
- What good is this to England and himself!
- WESTMORELAND:
- Base, fearful and despairing Henry!
- CLIFFORD:
- How hast thou injured both thyself and us!
- WESTMORELAND:
- I cannot stay to hear these articles.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Nor I.
- CLIFFORD:
- Come, cousin, let us tell the queen these news.
- WESTMORELAND:
- Farewell, faint-hearted and degenerate king,
- In whose cold blood no spark of honour bides.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Be thou a prey unto the house of York,
- And die in bands for this unmanly deed!
- CLIFFORD:
- In dreadful war mayst thou be overcome,
- Or live in peace abandon'd and despised!
- WARWICK:
- Turn this way, Henry, and regard them not.
- EXETER:
- They seek revenge and therefore will not yield.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Ah, Exeter!
- WARWICK:
- Why should you sigh, my lord?
- KING HENRY VI:
- Not for myself, Lord Warwick, but my son,
- Whom I unnaturally shall disinherit.
- But be it as it may: I here entail
- The crown to thee and to thine heirs for ever;
- Conditionally, that here thou take an oath
- To cease this civil war, and, whilst I live,
- To honour me as thy king and sovereign,
- And neither by treason nor hostility
- To seek to put me down and reign thyself.
- YORK:
- This oath I willingly take and will perform.
- WARWICK:
- Long live King Henry! Plantagenet embrace him.
- KING HENRY VI:
- And long live thou and these thy forward sons!
- YORK:
- Now York and Lancaster are reconciled.
- EXETER:
- Accursed be he that seeks to make them foes!
- YORK:
- Farewell, my gracious lord; I'll to my castle.
- WARWICK:
- And I'll keep London with my soldiers.
- NORFOLK:
- And I to Norfolk with my followers.
- MONTAGUE:
- And I unto the sea from whence I came.
- KING HENRY VI:
- And I, with grief and sorrow, to the court.
- EXETER:
- Here comes the queen, whose looks bewray her anger:
- I'll steal away.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Exeter, so will I.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Nay, go not from me; I will follow thee.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Be patient, gentle queen, and I will stay.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Who can be patient in such extremes?
- Ah, wretched man! would I had died a maid
- And never seen thee, never borne thee son,
- Seeing thou hast proved so unnatural a father
- Hath he deserved to lose his birthright thus?
- Hadst thou but loved him half so well as I,
- Or felt that pain which I did for him once,
- Or nourish'd him as I did with my blood,
- Thou wouldst have left thy dearest heart-blood there,
- Rather than have that savage duke thine heir
- And disinherited thine only son.
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- Father, you cannot disinherit me:
- If you be king, why should not I succeed?
- KING HENRY VI:
- Pardon me, Margaret; pardon me, sweet son:
- The Earl of Warwick and the duke enforced me.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Enforced thee! art thou king, and wilt be forced?
- I shame to hear thee speak. Ah, timorous wretch!
- Thou hast undone thyself, thy son and me;
- And given unto the house of York such head
- As thou shalt reign but by their sufferance.
- To entail him and his heirs unto the crown,
- What is it, but to make thy sepulchre
- And creep into it far before thy time?
- Warwick is chancellor and the lord of Calais;
- Stern Falconbridge commands the narrow seas;
- The duke is made protector of the realm;
- And yet shalt thou be safe? such safety finds
- The trembling lamb environed with wolves.
- Had I been there, which am a silly woman,
- The soldiers should have toss'd me on their pikes
- Before I would have granted to that act.
- But thou preferr'st thy life before thine honour:
- And seeing thou dost, I here divorce myself
- Both from thy table, Henry, and thy bed,
- Until that act of parliament be repeal'd
- Whereby my son is disinherited.
- The northern lords that have forsworn thy colours
- Will follow mine, if once they see them spread;
- And spread they shall be, to thy foul disgrace
- And utter ruin of the house of York.
- Thus do I leave thee. Come, son, let's away;
- Our army is ready; come, we'll after them.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Stay, gentle Margaret, and hear me speak.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Thou hast spoke too much already: get thee gone.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Gentle son Edward, thou wilt stay with me?
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Ay, to be murder'd by his enemies.
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- When I return with victory from the field
- I'll see your grace: till then I'll follow her.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Come, son, away; we may not linger thus.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Poor queen! how love to me and to her son
- Hath made her break out into terms of rage!
- Revenged may she be on that hateful duke,
- Whose haughty spirit, winged with desire,
- Will cost my crown, and like an empty eagle
- Tire on the flesh of me and of my son!
- The loss of those three lords torments my heart:
- I'll write unto them and entreat them fair.
- Come, cousin you shall be the messenger.
- EXETER:
- And I, I hope, shall reconcile them all.
- 3 KING HENRY VI
- RICHARD:
- Brother, though I be youngest, give me leave.
- EDWARD:
- No, I can better play the orator.
- MONTAGUE:
- But I have reasons strong and forcible.
- YORK:
- Why, how now, sons and brother! at a strife?
- What is your quarrel? how began it first?
- EDWARD:
- No quarrel, but a slight contention.
- YORK:
- About what?
- RICHARD:
- About that which concerns your grace and us;
- The crown of England, father, which is yours.
- YORK:
- Mine boy? not till King Henry be dead.
- RICHARD:
- Your right depends not on his life or death.
- EDWARD:
- Now you are heir, therefore enjoy it now:
- By giving the house of Lancaster leave to breathe,
- It will outrun you, father, in the end.
- YORK:
- I took an oath that he should quietly reign.
- EDWARD:
- But for a kingdom any oath may be broken:
- I would break a thousand oaths to reign one year.
- RICHARD:
- No; God forbid your grace should be forsworn.
- YORK:
- I shall be, if I claim by open war.
- RICHARD:
- I'll prove the contrary, if you'll hear me speak.
- YORK:
- Thou canst not, son; it is impossible.
- RICHARD:
- An oath is of no moment, being not took
- Before a true and lawful magistrate,
- That hath authority over him that swears:
- Henry had none, but did usurp the place;
- Then, seeing 'twas he that made you to depose,
- Your oath, my lord, is vain and frivolous.
- Therefore, to arms! And, father, do but think
- How sweet a thing it is to wear a crown;
- Within whose circuit is Elysium
- And all that poets feign of bliss and joy.
- Why do we finger thus? I cannot rest
- Until the white rose that I wear be dyed
- Even in the lukewarm blood of Henry's heart.
- YORK:
- Richard, enough; I will be king, or die.
- Brother, thou shalt to London presently,
- And whet on Warwick to this enterprise.
- Thou, Richard, shalt to the Duke of Norfolk,
- And tell him privily of our intent.
- You Edward, shall unto my Lord Cobham,
- With whom the Kentishmen will willingly rise:
- In them I trust; for they are soldiers,
- Witty, courteous, liberal, full of spirit.
- While you are thus employ'd, what resteth more,
- But that I seek occasion how to rise,
- And yet the king not privy to my drift,
- Nor any of the house of Lancaster?
- But, stay: what news? Why comest thou in such post?
- Messenger:
- The queen with all the northern earls and lords
- Intend here to besiege you in your castle:
- She is hard by with twenty thousand men;
- And therefore fortify your hold, my lord.
- YORK:
- Ay, with my sword. What! think'st thou that we fear them?
- Edward and Richard, you shall stay with me;
- My brother Montague shall post to London:
- Let noble Warwick, Cobham, and the rest,
- Whom we have left protectors of the king,
- With powerful policy strengthen themselves,
- And trust not simple Henry nor his oaths.
- MONTAGUE:
- Brother, I go; I'll win them, fear it not:
- And thus most humbly I do take my leave.
- Sir John and Sir Hugh Mortimer, mine uncles,
- You are come to Sandal in a happy hour;
- The army of the queen mean to besiege us.
- JOHN MORTIMER:
- She shall not need; we'll meet her in the field.
- YORK:
- What, with five thousand men?
- RICHARD:
- Ay, with five hundred, father, for a need:
- A woman's general; what should we fear?
- EDWARD:
- I hear their drums: let's set our men in order,
- And issue forth and bid them battle straight.
- YORK:
- Five men to twenty! though the odds be great,
- I doubt not, uncle, of our victory.
- Many a battle have I won in France,
- When as the enemy hath been ten to one:
- Why should I not now have the like success?
- 3 KING HENRY VI
- RUTLAND:
- Ah, whither shall I fly to 'scape their hands?
- Ah, tutor, look where bloody Clifford comes!
- CLIFFORD:
- Chaplain, away! thy priesthood saves thy life.
- As for the brat of this accursed duke,
- Whose father slew my father, he shall die.
- Tutor:
- And I, my lord, will bear him company.
- CLIFFORD:
- Soldiers, away with him!
- Tutor:
- Ah, Clifford, murder not this innocent child,
- Lest thou be hated both of God and man!
- CLIFFORD:
- How now! is he dead already? or is it fear
- That makes him close his eyes? I'll open them.
- RUTLAND:
- So looks the pent-up lion o'er the wretch
- That trembles under his devouring paws;
- And so he walks, insulting o'er his prey,
- And so he comes, to rend his limbs asunder.
- Ah, gentle Clifford, kill me with thy sword,
- And not with such a cruel threatening look.
- Sweet Clifford, hear me speak before I die.
- I am too mean a subject for thy wrath:
- Be thou revenged on men, and let me live.
- CLIFFORD:
- In vain thou speak'st, poor boy; my father's blood
- Hath stopp'd the passage where thy words should enter.
- RUTLAND:
- Then let my father's blood open it again:
- He is a man, and, Clifford, cope with him.
- CLIFFORD:
- Had thy brethren here, their lives and thine
- Were not revenge sufficient for me;
- No, if I digg'd up thy forefathers' graves
- And hung their rotten coffins up in chains,
- It could not slake mine ire, nor ease my heart.
- The sight of any of the house of York
- Is as a fury to torment my soul;
- And till I root out their accursed line
- And leave not one alive, I live in hell.
- Therefore--
- RUTLAND:
- O, let me pray before I take my death!
- To thee I pray; sweet Clifford, pity me!
- CLIFFORD:
- Such pity as my rapier's point affords.
- RUTLAND:
- I never did thee harm: why wilt thou slay me?
- CLIFFORD:
- Thy father hath.
- RUTLAND:
- But 'twas ere I was born.
- Thou hast one son; for his sake pity me,
- Lest in revenge thereof, sith God is just,
- He be as miserably slain as I.
- Ah, let me live in prison all my days;
- And when I give occasion of offence,
- Then let me die, for now thou hast no cause.
- CLIFFORD:
- No cause!
- Thy father slew my father; therefore, die.
- RUTLAND:
- Di faciant laudis summa sit ista tuae!
- CLIFFORD:
- Plantagenet! I come, Plantagenet!
- And this thy son's blood cleaving to my blade
- Shall rust upon my weapon, till thy blood,
- Congeal'd with this, do make me wipe off both.
- 3 KING HENRY VI
- YORK:
- The army of the queen hath got the field:
- My uncles both are slain in rescuing me;
- And all my followers to the eager foe
- Turn back and fly, like ships before the wind
- Or lambs pursued by hunger-starved wolves.
- My sons, God knows what hath bechanced them:
- But this I know, they have demean'd themselves
- Like men born to renown by life or death.
- Three times did Richard make a lane to me.
- And thrice cried 'Courage, father! fight it out!'
- And full as oft came Edward to my side,
- With purple falchion, painted to the hilt
- In blood of those that had encounter'd him:
- And when the hardiest warriors did retire,
- Richard cried 'Charge! and give no foot of ground!'
- And cried 'A crown, or else a glorious tomb!
- A sceptre, or an earthly sepulchre!'
- With this, we charged again: but, out, alas!
- We bodged again; as I have seen a swan
- With bootless labour swim against the tide
- And spend her strength with over-matching waves.
- Ah, hark! the fatal followers do pursue;
- And I am faint and cannot fly their fury:
- And were I strong, I would not shun their fury:
- The sands are number'd that make up my life;
- Here must I stay, and here my life must end.
- Come, bloody Clifford, rough Northumberland,
- I dare your quenchless fury to more rage:
- I am your butt, and I abide your shot.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Yield to our mercy, proud Plantagenet.
- CLIFFORD:
- Ay, to such mercy as his ruthless arm,
- With downright payment, show'd unto my father.
- Now Phaethon hath tumbled from his car,
- And made an evening at the noontide prick.
- YORK:
- My ashes, as the phoenix, may bring forth
- A bird that will revenge upon you all:
- And in that hope I throw mine eyes to heaven,
- Scorning whate'er you can afflict me with.
- Why come you not? what! multitudes, and fear?
- CLIFFORD:
- So cowards fight when they can fly no further;
- So doves do peck the falcon's piercing talons;
- So desperate thieves, all hopeless of their lives,
- Breathe out invectives 'gainst the officers.
- YORK:
- O Clifford, but bethink thee once again,
- And in thy thought o'er-run my former time;
- And, if though canst for blushing, view this face,
- And bite thy tongue, that slanders him with cowardice
- Whose frown hath made thee faint and fly ere this!
- CLIFFORD:
- I will not bandy with thee word for word,
- But buckle with thee blows, twice two for one.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Hold, valiant Clifford! for a thousand causes
- I would prolong awhile the traitor's life.
- Wrath makes him deaf: speak thou, Northumberland.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Hold, Clifford! do not honour him so much
- To prick thy finger, though to wound his heart:
- What valour were it, when a cur doth grin,
- For one to thrust his hand between his teeth,
- When he might spurn him with his foot away?
- It is war's prize to take all vantages;
- And ten to one is no impeach of valour.
- CLIFFORD:
- Ay, ay, so strives the woodcock with the gin.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- So doth the cony struggle in the net.
- YORK:
- So triumph thieves upon their conquer'd booty;
- So true men yield, with robbers so o'ermatch'd.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- What would your grace have done unto him now?
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Brave warriors, Clifford and Northumberland,
- Come, make him stand upon this molehill here,
- That raught at mountains with outstretched arms,
- Yet parted but the shadow with his hand.
- What! was it you that would be England's king?
- Was't you that revell'd in our parliament,
- And made a preachment of your high descent?
- Where are your mess of sons to back you now?
- The wanton Edward, and the lusty George?
- And where's that valiant crook-back prodigy,
- Dicky your boy, that with his grumbling voice
- Was wont to cheer his dad in mutinies?
- Or, with the rest, where is your darling Rutland?
- Look, York: I stain'd this napkin with the blood
- That valiant Clifford, with his rapier's point,
- Made issue from the bosom of the boy;
- And if thine eyes can water for his death,
- I give thee this to dry thy cheeks withal.
- Alas poor York! but that I hate thee deadly,
- I should lament thy miserable state.
- I prithee, grieve, to make me merry, York.
- What, hath thy fiery heart so parch'd thine entrails
- That not a tear can fall for Rutland's death?
- Why art thou patient, man? thou shouldst be mad;
- And I, to make thee mad, do mock thee thus.
- Stamp, rave, and fret, that I may sing and dance.
- Thou wouldst be fee'd, I see, to make me sport:
- York cannot speak, unless he wear a crown.
- A crown for York! and, lords, bow low to him:
- Hold you his hands, whilst I do set it on.
- Ay, marry, sir, now looks he like a king!
- Ay, this is he that took King Henry's chair,
- And this is he was his adopted heir.
- But how is it that great Plantagenet
- Is crown'd so soon, and broke his solemn oath?
- As I bethink me, you should not be king
- Till our King Henry had shook hands with death.
- And will you pale your head in Henry's glory,
- And rob his temples of the diadem,
- Now in his life, against your holy oath?
- O, 'tis a fault too too unpardonable!
- Off with the crown, and with the crown his head;
- And, whilst we breathe, take time to do him dead.
- CLIFFORD:
- That is my office, for my father's sake.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Nay, stay; lets hear the orisons he makes.
- YORK:
- She-wolf of France, but worse than wolves of France,
- Whose tongue more poisons than the adder's tooth!
- How ill-beseeming is it in thy sex
- To triumph, like an Amazonian trull,
- Upon their woes whom fortune captivates!
- But that thy face is, vizard-like, unchanging,
- Made impudent with use of evil deeds,
- I would assay, proud queen, to make thee blush.
- To tell thee whence thou camest, of whom derived,
- Were shame enough to shame thee, wert thou not shameless.
- Thy father bears the type of King of Naples,
- Of both the Sicils and Jerusalem,
- Yet not so wealthy as an English yeoman.
- Hath that poor monarch taught thee to insult?
- It needs not, nor it boots thee not, proud queen,
- Unless the adage must be verified,
- That beggars mounted run their horse to death.
- 'Tis beauty that doth oft make women proud;
- But, God he knows, thy share thereof is small:
- 'Tis virtue that doth make them most admired;
- The contrary doth make thee wonder'd at:
- 'Tis government that makes them seem divine;
- The want thereof makes thee abominable:
- Thou art as opposite to every good
- As the Antipodes are unto us,
- Or as the south to the septentrion.
- O tiger's heart wrapt in a woman's hide!
- How couldst thou drain the life-blood of the child,
- To bid the father wipe his eyes withal,
- And yet be seen to bear a woman's face?
- Women are soft, mild, pitiful and flexible;
- Thou stern, obdurate, flinty, rough, remorseless.
- Bids't thou me rage? why, now thou hast thy wish:
- Wouldst have me weep? why, now thou hast thy will:
- For raging wind blows up incessant showers,
- And when the rage allays, the rain begins.
- These tears are my sweet Rutland's obsequies:
- And every drop cries vengeance for his death,
- 'Gainst thee, fell Clifford, and thee, false
- Frenchwoman.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Beshrew me, but his passion moves me so
- That hardly can I cheque my eyes from tears.
- YORK:
- That face of his the hungry cannibals
- Would not have touch'd, would not have stain'd with blood:
- But you are more inhuman, more inexorable,
- O, ten times more, than tigers of Hyrcania.
- See, ruthless queen, a hapless father's tears:
- This cloth thou dip'dst in blood of my sweet boy,
- And I with tears do wash the blood away.
- Keep thou the napkin, and go boast of this:
- And if thou tell'st the heavy story right,
- Upon my soul, the hearers will shed tears;
- Yea even my foes will shed fast-falling tears,
- And say 'Alas, it was a piteous deed!'
- There, take the crown, and, with the crown, my curse;
- And in thy need such comfort come to thee
- As now I reap at thy too cruel hand!
- Hard-hearted Clifford, take me from the world:
- My soul to heaven, my blood upon your heads!
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Had he been slaughter-man to all my kin,
- I should not for my life but weep with him.
- To see how inly sorrow gripes his soul.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- What, weeping-ripe, my Lord Northumberland?
- Think but upon the wrong he did us all,
- And that will quickly dry thy melting tears.
- CLIFFORD:
- Here's for my oath, here's for my father's death.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- And here's to right our gentle-hearted king.
- YORK:
- Open Thy gate of mercy, gracious God!
- My soul flies through these wounds to seek out Thee.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Off with his head, and set it on York gates;
- So York may overlook the town of York.
- 3 KING HENRY VI
- EDWARD:
- I wonder how our princely father 'scaped,
- Or whether he be 'scaped away or no
- From Clifford's and Northumberland's pursuit:
- Had he been ta'en, we should have heard the news;
- Had he been slain, we should have heard the news;
- Or had he 'scaped, methinks we should have heard
- The happy tidings of his good escape.
- How fares my brother? why is he so sad?
- RICHARD:
- I cannot joy, until I be resolved
- Where our right valiant father is become.
- I saw him in the battle range about;
- And watch'd him how he singled Clifford forth.
- Methought he bore him in the thickest troop
- As doth a lion in a herd of neat;
- Or as a bear, encompass'd round with dogs,
- Who having pinch'd a few and made them cry,
- The rest stand all aloof, and bark at him.
- So fared our father with his enemies;
- So fled his enemies my warlike father:
- Methinks, 'tis prize enough to be his son.
- See how the morning opes her golden gates,
- And takes her farewell of the glorious sun!
- How well resembles it the prime of youth,
- Trimm'd like a younker prancing to his love!
- EDWARD:
- Dazzle mine eyes, or do I see three suns?
- RICHARD:
- Three glorious suns, each one a perfect sun;
- Not separated with the racking clouds,
- But sever'd in a pale clear-shining sky.
- See, see! they join, embrace, and seem to kiss,
- As if they vow'd some league inviolable:
- Now are they but one lamp, one light, one sun.
- In this the heaven figures some event.
- EDWARD:
- 'Tis wondrous strange, the like yet never heard of.
- I think it cites us, brother, to the field,
- That we, the sons of brave Plantagenet,
- Each one already blazing by our meeds,
- Should notwithstanding join our lights together
- And over-shine the earth as this the world.
- Whate'er it bodes, henceforward will I bear
- Upon my target three fair-shining suns.
- RICHARD:
- Nay, bear three daughters: by your leave I speak it,
- You love the breeder better than the male.
- But what art thou, whose heavy looks foretell
- Some dreadful story hanging on thy tongue?
- Messenger:
- Ah, one that was a woful looker-on
- When as the noble Duke of York was slain,
- Your princely father and my loving lord!
- EDWARD:
- O, speak no more, for I have heard too much.
- RICHARD:
- Say how he died, for I will hear it all.
- Messenger:
- Environed he was with many foes,
- And stood against them, as the hope of Troy
- Against the Greeks that would have enter'd Troy.
- But Hercules himself must yield to odds;
- And many strokes, though with a little axe,
- Hew down and fell the hardest-timber'd oak.
- By many hands your father was subdued;
- But only slaughter'd by the ireful arm
- Of unrelenting Clifford and the queen,
- Who crown'd the gracious duke in high despite,
- Laugh'd in his face; and when with grief he wept,
- The ruthless queen gave him to dry his cheeks
- A napkin steeped in the harmless blood
- Of sweet young Rutland, by rough Clifford slain:
- And after many scorns, many foul taunts,
- They took his head, and on the gates of York
- They set the same; and there it doth remain,
- The saddest spectacle that e'er I view'd.
- EDWARD:
- Sweet Duke of York, our prop to lean upon,
- Now thou art gone, we have no staff, no stay.
- O Clifford, boisterous Clifford! thou hast slain
- The flower of Europe for his chivalry;
- And treacherously hast thou vanquish'd him,
- For hand to hand he would have vanquish'd thee.
- Now my soul's palace is become a prison:
- Ah, would she break from hence, that this my body
- Might in the ground be closed up in rest!
- For never henceforth shall I joy again,
- Never, O never shall I see more joy!
- RICHARD:
- I cannot weep; for all my body's moisture
- Scarce serves to quench my furnace-burning heart:
- Nor can my tongue unload my heart's great burthen;
- For selfsame wind that I should speak withal
- Is kindling coals that fires all my breast,
- And burns me up with flames that tears would quench.
- To weep is to make less the depth of grief:
- Tears then for babes; blows and revenge for me
- Richard, I bear thy name; I'll venge thy death,
- Or die renowned by attempting it.
- EDWARD:
- His name that valiant duke hath left with thee;
- His dukedom and his chair with me is left.
- RICHARD:
- Nay, if thou be that princely eagle's bird,
- Show thy descent by gazing 'gainst the sun:
- For chair and dukedom, throne and kingdom say;
- Either that is thine, or else thou wert not his.
- WARWICK:
- How now, fair lords! What fare? what news abroad?
- RICHARD:
- Great Lord of Warwick, if we should recount
- Our baleful news, and at each word's deliverance
- Stab poniards in our flesh till all were told,
- The words would add more anguish than the wounds.
- O valiant lord, the Duke of York is slain!
- EDWARD:
- O Warwick, Warwick! that Plantagenet,
- Which held three dearly as his soul's redemption,
- Is by the stern Lord Clifford done to death.
- WARWICK:
- Ten days ago I drown'd these news in tears;
- And now, to add more measure to your woes,
- I come to tell you things sith then befall'n.
- After the bloody fray at Wakefield fought,
- Where your brave father breathed his latest gasp,
- Tidings, as swiftly as the posts could run,
- Were brought me of your loss and his depart.
- I, then in London keeper of the king,
- Muster'd my soldiers, gather'd flocks of friends,
- And very well appointed, as I thought,
- March'd toward Saint Alban's to intercept the queen,
- Bearing the king in my behalf along;
- For by my scouts I was advertised
- That she was coming with a full intent
- To dash our late decree in parliament
- Touching King Henry's oath and your succession.
- Short tale to make, we at Saint Alban's met
- Our battles join'd, and both sides fiercely fought:
- But whether 'twas the coldness of the king,
- Who look'd full gently on his warlike queen,
- That robb'd my soldiers of their heated spleen;
- Or whether 'twas report of her success;
- Or more than common fear of Clifford's rigour,
- Who thunders to his captives blood and death,
- I cannot judge: but to conclude with truth,
- Their weapons like to lightning came and went;
- Our soldiers', like the night-owl's lazy flight,
- Or like an idle thresher with a flail,
- Fell gently down, as if they struck their friends.
- I cheer'd them up with justice of our cause,
- With promise of high pay and great rewards:
- But all in vain; they had no heart to fight,
- And we in them no hope to win the day;
- So that we fled; the king unto the queen;
- Lord George your brother, Norfolk and myself,
- In haste, post-haste, are come to join with you:
- For in the marches here we heard you were,
- Making another head to fight again.
- EDWARD:
- Where is the Duke of Norfolk, gentle Warwick?
- And when came George from Burgundy to England?
- WARWICK:
- Some six miles off the duke is with the soldiers;
- And for your brother, he was lately sent
- From your kind aunt, Duchess of Burgundy,
- With aid of soldiers to this needful war.
- RICHARD:
- 'Twas odds, belike, when valiant Warwick fled:
- Oft have I heard his praises in pursuit,
- But ne'er till now his scandal of retire.
- WARWICK:
- Nor now my scandal, Richard, dost thou hear;
- For thou shalt know this strong right hand of mine
- Can pluck the diadem from faint Henry's head,
- And wring the awful sceptre from his fist,
- Were he as famous and as bold in war
- As he is famed for mildness, peace, and prayer.
- RICHARD:
- I know it well, Lord Warwick; blame me not:
- 'Tis love I bear thy glories makes me speak.
- But in this troublous time what's to be done?
- Shall we go throw away our coats of steel,
- And wrap our bodies in black mourning gowns,
- Numbering our Ave-Maries with our beads?
- Or shall we on the helmets of our foes
- Tell our devotion with revengeful arms?
- If for the last, say ay, and to it, lords.
- WARWICK:
- Why, therefore Warwick came to seek you out;
- And therefore comes my brother Montague.
- Attend me, lords. The proud insulting queen,
- With Clifford and the haught Northumberland,
- And of their feather many more proud birds,
- Have wrought the easy-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 think, is thirty thousand strong:
- Now, if the help of Norfolk and myself,
- With all the friends that thou, brave Earl of March,
- Amongst the loving Welshmen canst procure,
- Will but amount to five and twenty thousand,
- Why, Via! to London will we march amain,
- And once again bestride our foaming steeds,
- And once again cry 'Charge upon our foes!'
- But never once again turn back and fly.
- RICHARD:
- Ay, now methinks I hear great Warwick speak:
- Ne'er may he live to see a sunshine day,
- That cries 'Retire,' if Warwick bid him stay.
- EDWARD:
- Lord Warwick, on thy shoulder will I lean;
- And when thou fail'st--as God forbid the hour!--
- Must Edward fall, which peril heaven forfend!
- WARWICK:
- No longer Earl of March, but Duke of York:
- The next degree is England's royal throne;
- For King of England shalt thou be proclaim'd
- In every borough as we pass along;
- And he that throws not up his cap for joy
- Shall for the fault make forfeit of his head.
- King Edward, valiant Richard, Montague,
- Stay we no longer, dreaming of renown,
- But sound the trumpets, and about our task.
- RICHARD:
- Then, Clifford, were thy heart as hard as steel,
- As thou hast shown it flinty by thy deeds,
- I come to pierce it, or to give thee mine.
- EDWARD:
- Then strike up drums: God and Saint George for us!
- WARWICK:
- How now! what news?
- Messenger:
- The Duke of Norfolk sends you word by me,
- The queen is coming with a puissant host;
- And craves your company for speedy counsel.
- WARWICK:
- Why then it sorts, brave warriors, let's away.
- 3 KING HENRY VI
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Welcome, my lord, to this brave town of York.
- Yonder's the head of that arch-enemy
- That sought to be encompass'd with your crown:
- Doth not the object cheer your heart, my lord?
- KING HENRY VI:
- Ay, as the rocks cheer them that fear their wreck:
- To see this sight, it irks my very soul.
- Withhold revenge, dear God! 'tis not my fault,
- Nor wittingly have I infringed my vow.
- CLIFFORD:
- My gracious liege, this too much lenity
- And harmful pity must be laid aside.
- To whom do lions cast their gentle looks?
- Not to the beast that would usurp their den.
- Whose hand is that the forest bear doth lick?
- Not his that spoils her young before her face.
- Who 'scapes the lurking serpent's mortal sting?
- Not he that sets his foot upon her back.
- The smallest worm will turn being trodden on,
- And doves will peck in safeguard of their brood.
- Ambitious York doth level at thy crown,
- Thou smiling while he knit his angry brows:
- He, but a duke, would have his son a king,
- And raise his issue, like a loving sire;
- Thou, being a king, blest with a goodly son,
- Didst yield consent to disinherit him,
- Which argued thee a most unloving father.
- Unreasonable creatures feed their young;
- And though man's face be fearful to their eyes,
- Yet, in protection of their tender ones,
- Who hath not seen them, even with those wings
- Which sometime they have used with fearful flight,
- Make war with him that climb'd unto their nest,
- Offer their own lives in their young's defence?
- For shame, my liege, make them your precedent!
- Were it not pity that this goodly boy
- Should lose his birthright by his father's fault,
- And long hereafter say unto his child,
- 'What my great-grandfather and his grandsire got
- My careless father fondly gave away'?
- Ah, what a shame were this! Look on the boy;
- And let his manly face, which promiseth
- Successful fortune, steel thy melting heart
- To hold thine own and leave thine own with him.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Full well hath Clifford play'd the orator,
- Inferring arguments of mighty force.
- But, Clifford, tell me, didst thou never hear
- That things ill-got had ever bad success?
- And happy always was it for that son
- Whose father for his hoarding went to hell?
- I'll leave my son my virtuous deeds behind;
- 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 keep
- Than in possession and jot of pleasure.
- Ah, cousin York! would thy best friends did know
- How it doth grieve me that thy head is here!
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- My lord, cheer up your spirits: our foes are nigh,
- And this soft courage makes your followers faint.
- You promised knighthood to our forward son:
- Unsheathe your sword, and dub him presently.
- Edward, kneel down.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Edward Plantagenet, arise a knight;
- And learn this lesson, draw thy sword in right.
- PRINCE:
- My gracious father, by your kingly leave,
- I'll draw it as apparent to the crown,
- And in that quarrel use it to the death.
- CLIFFORD:
- Why, that is spoken like a toward prince.
- Messenger:
- Royal commanders, be in readiness:
- For with a band of thirty thousand men
- Comes Warwick, backing of the Duke of York;
- And in the towns, as they do march along,
- Proclaims him king, and many fly to him:
- Darraign your battle, for they are at hand.
- CLIFFORD:
- I would your highness would depart the field:
- The queen hath best success when you are absent.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Ay, good my lord, and leave us to our fortune.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Why, that's my fortune too; therefore I'll stay.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- Be it with resolution then to fight.
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- My royal father, cheer these noble lords
- And hearten those that fight in your defence:
- Unsheathe your sword, good father; cry 'Saint George!'
- EDWARD:
- Now, perjured Henry! wilt thou kneel for grace,
- And set thy diadem upon my head;
- Or bide the mortal fortune of the field?
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Go, rate thy minions, proud insulting boy!
- Becomes it thee to be thus bold in terms
- Before thy sovereign and thy lawful king?
- EDWARD:
- I am his king, and he should bow his knee;
- I was adopted heir by his consent:
- Since when, his oath is broke; for, as I hear,
- You, that are king, though he do wear the crown,
- Have caused him, by new act of parliament,
- To blot out me, and put his own son in.
- CLIFFORD:
- And reason too:
- Who should succeed the father but the son?
- RICHARD:
- Are you there, butcher? O, I cannot speak!
- CLIFFORD:
- Ay, crook-back, here I stand to answer thee,
- Or any he the proudest of thy sort.
- RICHARD:
- 'Twas you that kill'd young Rutland, was it not?
- CLIFFORD:
- Ay, and old York, and yet not satisfied.
- RICHARD:
- For God's sake, lords, give signal to the fight.
- WARWICK:
- What say'st thou, Henry, wilt thou yield the crown?
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Why, how now, long-tongued Warwick! dare you speak?
- When you and I met at Saint Alban's last,
- Your legs did better service than your hands.
- WARWICK:
- Then 'twas my turn to fly, and now 'tis thine.
- CLIFFORD:
- You said so much before, and yet you fled.
- WARWICK:
- 'Twas not your valour, Clifford, drove me thence.
- NORTHUMBERLAND:
- No, nor your manhood that durst make you stay.
- RICHARD:
- Northumberland, I hold thee reverently.
- Break off the parley; for scarce I can refrain
- The execution of my big-swoln heart
- Upon that Clifford, that cruel child-killer.
- CLIFFORD:
- I slew thy father, call'st thou him a child?
- RICHARD:
- Ay, like a dastard and a treacherous coward,
- As thou didst kill our tender brother Rutland;
- But ere sunset I'll make thee curse the deed.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Have done with words, my lords, and hear me speak.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Defy them then, or else hold close thy lips.
- KING HENRY VI:
- I prithee, give no limits to my tongue:
- I am a king, and privileged to speak.
- CLIFFORD:
- My liege, the wound that bred this meeting here
- Cannot be cured by words; therefore be still.
- RICHARD:
- Then, executioner, unsheathe thy sword:
- By him that made us all, I am resolved
- that Clifford's manhood lies upon his tongue.
- EDWARD:
- Say, Henry, shall I have my right, or no?
- A thousand men have broke their fasts to-day,
- That ne'er shall dine unless thou yield the crown.
- WARWICK:
- If thou deny, their blood upon thy head;
- For York in justice puts his armour on.
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- If that be right which Warwick says is right,
- There is no wrong, but every thing is right.
- RICHARD:
- Whoever got thee, there thy mother stands;
- For, well I wot, thou hast thy mother's tongue.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- But thou art neither like thy sire nor dam;
- But like a foul mis-shapen stigmatic,
- Mark'd by the destinies to be avoided,
- As venom toads, or lizards' dreadful stings.
- RICHARD:
- Iron of Naples hid with English gilt,
- Whose father bears the title of a king,--
- As if a channel should be call'd the sea,--
- Shamest thou not, knowing whence thou art extraught,
- To let thy tongue detect thy base-born heart?
- EDWARD:
- A wisp of straw were worth a thousand crowns,
- To make this shameless callet know herself.
- Helen of Greece was fairer far than thou,
- Although thy husband may be Menelaus;
- And ne'er was Agamemnon's brother wrong'd
- By that false woman, as this king by thee.
- His father revell'd in the heart of France,
- And tamed the king, and made the dauphin stoop;
- And had he match'd according to his state,
- He might have kept that glory to this day;
- But when he took a beggar to his bed,
- And graced thy poor sire with his bridal-day,
- Even then that sunshine brew'd a shower for him,
- That wash'd his father's fortunes forth of France,
- And heap'd sedition on his crown at home.
- For what hath broach'd this tumult but thy pride?
- Hadst thou been meek, our title still had slept;
- And we, in pity of the gentle king,
- Had slipp'd our claim until another age.
- GEORGE:
- But when we saw our sunshine made thy spring,
- And that thy summer bred us no increase,
- We set the axe to thy usurping root;
- And though the edge hath something hit ourselves,
- Yet, know thou, since we have begun to strike,
- We'll never leave till we have hewn thee down,
- Or bathed thy growing with our heated bloods.
- EDWARD:
- And, in this resolution, I defy thee;
- Not willing any longer conference,
- Since thou deniest the gentle king to speak.
- Sound trumpets! let our bloody colours wave!
- And either victory, or else a grave.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Stay, Edward.
- EDWARD:
- No, wrangling woman, we'll no longer stay:
- These words will cost ten thousand lives this day.
- 3 KING HENRY VI
- WARWICK:
- Forspent with toil, as runners with a race,
- I lay me down a little while to breathe;
- For strokes received, and many blows repaid,
- Have robb'd my strong-knit sinews of their strength,
- And spite of spite needs must I rest awhile.
- EDWARD:
- Smile, gentle heaven! or strike, ungentle death!
- For this world frowns, and Edward's sun is clouded.
- WARWICK:
- How now, my lord! what hap? what hope of good?
- GEORGE:
- Our hap is loss, our hope but sad despair;
- Our ranks are broke, and ruin follows us:
- What counsel give you? whither shall we fly?
- EDWARD:
- Bootless is flight, they follow us with wings;
- And weak we are and cannot shun pursuit.
- RICHARD:
- Ah, Warwick, why hast thou withdrawn thyself?
- Thy brother's blood the thirsty earth hath drunk,
- Broach'd with the steely point of Clifford's lance;
- And in the very pangs of death he cried,
- Like to a dismal clangour heard from far,
- 'Warwick, revenge! brother, revenge my death!'
- So, underneath the belly of their steeds,
- That stain'd their fetlocks in his smoking blood,
- The noble gentleman gave up the ghost.
- WARWICK:
- Then let the earth be drunken with our blood:
- I'll kill my horse, because I will not fly.
- Why stand we like soft-hearted women here,
- Wailing our losses, whiles the foe doth rage;
- And look upon, as if the tragedy
- Were play'd in jest by counterfeiting actors?
- Here on my knee I vow to God above,
- I'll never pause again, never stand still,
- Till either death hath closed these eyes of mine
- Or fortune given me measure of revenge.
- EDWARD:
- O Warwick, I do bend my knee with thine;
- And in this vow do chain my soul to thine!
- And, ere my knee rise from the earth's cold face,
- I throw my hands, mine eyes, my heart to thee,
- Thou setter up and plucker down of kings,
- Beseeching thee, if with they will it stands
- That to my foes this body must be prey,
- Yet that thy brazen gates of heaven may ope,
- And give sweet passage to my sinful soul!
- Now, lords, take leave until we meet again,
- Where'er it be, in heaven or in earth.
- RICHARD:
- Brother, give me thy hand; and, gentle Warwick,
- Let me embrace thee in my weary arms:
- I, that did never weep, now melt with woe
- That winter should cut off our spring-time so.
- WARWICK:
- Away, away! Once more, sweet lords farewell.
- GEORGE:
- Yet let us all together to our troops,
- And give them leave to fly that will not stay;
- And call them pillars that will stand to us;
- And, if we thrive, promise them such rewards
- As victors wear at the Olympian games:
- This may plant courage in their quailing breasts;
- For yet is hope of life and victory.
- Forslow no longer, make we hence amain.
- 3 KING HENRY VI
- RICHARD:
- Now, Clifford, I have singled thee alone:
- Suppose this arm is for the Duke of York,
- And this for Rutland; both bound to revenge,
- Wert thou environ'd with a brazen wall.
- CLIFFORD:
- Now, Richard, I am with thee here alone:
- This is the hand that stabb'd thy father York;
- And this the hand that slew thy brother Rutland;
- And here's the heart that triumphs in their death
- And cheers these hands that slew thy sire and brother
- To execute the like upon thyself;
- And so, have at thee!
- RICHARD:
- Nay Warwick, single out some other chase;
- For I myself will hunt this wolf to death.
- 3 KING HENRY VI
- KING HENRY VI:
- This battle fares like to the morning's war,
- When dying clouds contend with growing light,
- What time the shepherd, blowing of his nails,
- Can neither call it perfect day nor night.
- Now sways it this way, like a mighty sea
- Forced by the tide to combat with the wind;
- Now sways it that way, like the selfsame sea
- Forced to retire by fury of the wind:
- Sometime the flood prevails, and then the wind;
- Now one the better, then another best;
- Both tugging to be victors, breast to breast,
- Yet neither conqueror nor conquered:
- So is the equal of this fell war.
- Here on this molehill will I sit me down.
- To whom God will, there be the victory!
- For Margaret my queen, and Clifford too,
- Have chid me from the battle; swearing both
- They prosper best of all when I am thence.
- Would I were dead! if God's good will were so;
- For what is in this world but grief and woe?
- O God! methinks it were a happy life,
- To be no better than a homely swain;
- To sit upon a hill, as I do now,
- To carve out dials quaintly, point by point,
- Thereby to see the minutes how they run,
- How many make the hour full complete;
- How many hours bring about the day;
- How many days will finish up the year;
- How many years a mortal man may live.
- When this is known, then to divide the times:
- So many hours must I tend my flock;
- So many hours must I take my rest;
- So many hours must I contemplate;
- So many hours must I sport myself;
- So many days my ewes have been with young;
- So many weeks ere the poor fools will ean:
- So many years ere I shall shear the fleece:
- So minutes, hours, days, months, and years,
- Pass'd over to the end they were created,
- Would bring white hairs unto a quiet grave.
- Ah, what a life were this! how sweet! how lovely!
- Gives not the hawthorn-bush a sweeter shade
- To shepherds looking on their silly sheep,
- Than doth a rich embroider'd canopy
- To kings that fear their subjects' treachery?
- O, yes, it doth; a thousand-fold it doth.
- And to conclude, the shepherd's homely curds,
- His cold thin drink out of his leather bottle.
- His wonted sleep under a fresh tree's shade,
- All which secure and sweetly he enjoys,
- Is far beyond a prince's delicates,
- His viands sparkling in a golden cup,
- His body couched in a curious bed,
- When care, mistrust, and treason waits on him.
- Son:
- Ill blows the wind that profits nobody.
- This man, whom hand to hand I slew in fight,
- May be possessed with some store of crowns;
- And I, that haply take them from him now,
- May yet ere night yield both my life and them
- To some man else, as this dead man doth me.
- Who's this? O God! it is my father's face,
- Whom in this conflict I unwares have kill'd.
- O heavy times, begetting such events!
- From London by the king was I press'd forth;
- My father, being the Earl of Warwick's man,
- Came on the part of York, press'd by his master;
- And I, who at his hands received my life, him
- Have by my hands of life bereaved him.
- Pardon me, God, I knew not what I did!
- And pardon, father, for I knew not thee!
- My tears shall wipe away these bloody marks;
- And no more words till they have flow'd their fill.
- KING HENRY VI:
- O piteous spectacle! O bloody times!
- Whiles lions war and battle for their dens,
- Poor harmless lambs abide their enmity.
- Weep, wretched man, I'll aid thee tear for tear;
- And let our hearts and eyes, like civil war,
- Be blind with tears, and break o'ercharged with grief.
- Father:
- Thou that so stoutly hast resisted me,
- Give me thy gold, if thou hast any gold:
- For I have bought it with an hundred blows.
- But let me see: is this our foeman's face?
- Ah, no, no, no, it is mine only son!
- Ah, boy, if any life be left in thee,
- Throw up thine eye! see, see what showers arise,
- Blown with the windy tempest of my heart,
- Upon thy words, that kill mine eye and heart!
- O, pity, God, this miserable age!
- What stratagems, how fell, how butcherly,
- Erroneous, mutinous and unnatural,
- This deadly quarrel daily doth beget!
- O boy, thy father gave thee life too soon,
- And hath bereft thee of thy life too late!
- KING HENRY VI:
- Woe above woe! grief more than common grief!
- O that my death would stay these ruthful deeds!
- O pity, pity, gentle heaven, pity!
- The red rose and the white are on his face,
- The fatal colours of our striving houses:
- The one his purple blood right well resembles;
- The other his pale cheeks, methinks, presenteth:
- Wither one rose, and let the other flourish;
- If you contend, a thousand lives must wither.
- Son:
- How will my mother for a father's death
- Take on with me and ne'er be satisfied!
- Father:
- How will my wife for slaughter of my son
- Shed seas of tears and ne'er be satisfied!
- KING HENRY VI:
- How will the country for these woful chances
- Misthink the king and not be satisfied!
- Son:
- Was ever son so rued a father's death?
- Father:
- Was ever father so bemoan'd his son?
- KING HENRY VI:
- Was ever king so grieved for subjects' woe?
- Much is your sorrow; mine ten times so much.
- Son:
- I'll bear thee hence, where I may weep my fill.
- Father:
- These arms of mine shall be thy winding-sheet;
- My heart, sweet boy, shall be thy sepulchre,
- For from my heart thine image ne'er shall go;
- My sighing breast shall be thy funeral bell;
- And so obsequious will thy father be,
- Even for the loss of thee, having no more,
- As Priam was for all his valiant sons.
- I'll bear thee hence; and let them fight that will,
- For I have murdered where I should not kill.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Sad-hearted men, much overgone with care,
- Here sits a king more woful than you are.
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- Fly, father, fly! for all your friends are fled,
- And Warwick rages like a chafed bull:
- Away! for death doth hold us in pursuit.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Mount you, my lord; towards Berwick post amain:
- Edward and Richard, like a brace of greyhounds
- Having the fearful flying hare in sight,
- With fiery eyes sparkling for very wrath,
- And bloody steel grasp'd in their ireful hands,
- Are at our backs; and therefore hence amain.
- EXETER:
- Away! for vengeance comes along with them:
- Nay, stay not to expostulate, make speed;
- Or else come after: I'll away before.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Nay, take me with thee, good sweet Exeter:
- Not that I fear to stay, but love to go
- Whither the queen intends. Forward; away!
- 3 KING HENRY VI
- CLIFFORD:
- Here burns my candle out; ay, here it dies,
- Which, whiles it lasted, gave King Henry light.
- O Lancaster, I fear thy overthrow
- More than my body's parting with my soul!
- My love and fear glued many friends to thee;
- And, now I fall, thy tough commixture melts.
- Impairing Henry, strengthening misproud York,
- The common people swarm like summer flies;
- And whither fly the gnats but to the sun?
- And who shines now but Henry's enemies?
- O Phoebus, hadst thou never given consent
- That Phaethon should cheque thy fiery steeds,
- Thy burning car never had scorch'd the earth!
- And, Henry, hadst thou sway'd as kings should do,
- Or as thy father and his father did,
- Giving no ground unto the house of York,
- They never then had sprung like summer flies;
- I and ten thousand in this luckless realm
- Had left no mourning widows for our death;
- And thou this day hadst kept thy chair in peace.
- For what doth cherish weeds but gentle air?
- And what makes robbers bold but too much lenity?
- Bootless are plaints, and cureless are my wounds;
- No way to fly, nor strength to hold out flight:
- The foe is merciless, and will not pity;
- For at their hands I have deserved no pity.
- The air hath got into my deadly wounds,
- And much effuse of blood doth make me faint.
- Come, York and Richard, Warwick and the rest;
- I stabb'd your fathers' bosoms, split my breast.
- EDWARD:
- Now breathe we, lords: good fortune bids us pause,
- And smooth the frowns of war with peaceful looks.
- Some troops pursue the bloody-minded queen,
- That led calm Henry, though he were a king,
- As doth a sail, fill'd with a fretting gust,
- Command an argosy to stem the waves.
- But think you, lords, that Clifford fled with them?
- WARWICK:
- No, 'tis impossible he should escape,
- For, though before his face I speak the words
- Your brother Richard mark'd him for the grave:
- And wheresoe'er he is, he's surely dead.
- EDWARD:
- Whose soul is that which takes her heavy leave?
- RICHARD:
- A deadly groan, like life and death's departing.
- EDWARD:
- See who it is: and, now the battle's ended,
- If friend or foe, let him be gently used.
- RICHARD:
- Revoke that doom of mercy, for 'tis Clifford;
- Who not contented that he lopp'd the branch
- In hewing Rutland when his leaves put forth,
- But set his murdering knife unto the root
- From whence that tender spray did sweetly spring,
- I mean our princely father, Duke of York.
- WARWICK:
- From off the gates of York fetch down the head,
- Your father's head, which Clifford placed there;
- Instead whereof let this supply the room:
- Measure for measure must be answered.
- EDWARD:
- Bring forth that fatal screech-owl to our house,
- That nothing sung but death to us and ours:
- Now death shall stop his dismal threatening sound,
- And his ill-boding tongue no more shall speak.
- WARWICK:
- I think his understanding is bereft.
- Speak, Clifford, dost thou know who speaks to thee?
- Dark cloudy death o'ershades his beams of life,
- And he nor sees nor hears us what we say.
- RICHARD:
- O, would he did! and so perhaps he doth:
- 'Tis but his policy to counterfeit,
- Because he would avoid such bitter taunts
- Which in the time of death he gave our father.
- GEORGE:
- If so thou think'st, vex him with eager words.
- RICHARD:
- Clifford, ask mercy and obtain no grace.
- EDWARD:
- Clifford, repent in bootless penitence.
- WARWICK:
- Clifford, devise excuses for thy faults.
- GEORGE:
- While we devise fell tortures for thy faults.
- RICHARD:
- Thou didst love York, and I am son to York.
- EDWARD:
- Thou pitied'st Rutland; I will pity thee.
- GEORGE:
- Where's Captain Margaret, to fence you now?
- WARWICK:
- They mock thee, Clifford: swear as thou wast wont.
- RICHARD:
- What, not an oath? nay, then the world goes hard
- When Clifford cannot spare his friends an oath.
- I know by that he's dead; and, by my soul,
- If this right hand would buy two hour's life,
- That I in all despite might rail at him,
- This hand should chop it off, and with the
- issuing blood
- Stifle the villain whose unstanched thirst
- York and young Rutland could not satisfy.
- WARWICK:
- Ay, but he's dead: off with the traitor's head,
- And rear it in the place your father's stands.
- And now to London with triumphant march,
- There to be crowned England's royal king:
- From whence shall Warwick cut the sea to France,
- And ask the Lady Bona for thy queen:
- So shalt thou sinew both these lands together;
- And, having France thy friend, thou shalt not dread
- The scatter'd foe that hopes to rise again;
- For though they cannot greatly sting to hurt,
- Yet look to have them buzz to offend thine ears.
- First will I see the coronation;
- And then to Brittany I'll cross the sea,
- To effect this marriage, so it please my lord.
- EDWARD:
- Even as thou wilt, sweet Warwick, let it be;
- For in thy shoulder do I build my seat,
- And never will I undertake the thing
- Wherein thy counsel and consent is wanting.
- Richard, I will create thee Duke of Gloucester,
- And George, of Clarence: Warwick, as ourself,
- Shall do and undo as him pleaseth best.
- RICHARD:
- Let me be Duke of Clarence, George of Gloucester;
- For Gloucester's dukedom is too ominous.
- WARWICK:
- Tut, that's a foolish observation:
- Richard, be Duke of Gloucester. Now to London,
- To see these honours in possession.
- 3 KING HENRY VI
- First Keeper:
- Under this thick-grown brake we'll shroud ourselves;
- For through this laund anon the deer will come;
- And in this covert will we make our stand,
- Culling the principal of all the deer.
- Second Keeper:
- I'll stay above the hill, so both may shoot.
- First Keeper:
- That cannot be; the noise of thy cross-bow
- Will scare the herd, and so my shoot is lost.
- Here stand we both, and aim we at the best:
- And, for the time shall not seem tedious,
- I'll tell thee what befell me on a day
- In this self-place where now we mean to stand.
- Second Keeper:
- Here comes a man; let's stay till he be past.
- KING HENRY VI:
- From Scotland am I stol'n, even of pure love,
- To greet mine own land with my wishful sight.
- No, Harry, Harry, 'tis no land of thine;
- Thy place is fill'd, thy sceptre wrung from thee,
- Thy balm wash'd off wherewith thou wast anointed:
- No bending knee will call thee Caesar now,
- No humble suitors press to speak for right,
- No, not a man comes for redress of thee;
- For how can I help them, and not myself?
- First Keeper:
- Ay, here's a deer whose skin's a keeper's fee:
- This is the quondam king; let's seize upon him.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Let me embrace thee, sour adversity,
- For wise men say it is the wisest course.
- Second Keeper:
- Why linger we? let us lay hands upon him.
- First Keeper:
- Forbear awhile; we'll hear a little more.
- KING HENRY VI:
- My queen and son are gone to France for aid;
- And, as I hear, the great commanding Warwick
- Is thither gone, to crave the French king's sister
- To wife for Edward: if this news be true,
- Poor queen and son, your labour is but lost;
- For Warwick is a subtle orator,
- And Lewis a prince soon won with moving words.
- By this account then Margaret may win him;
- For she's a woman to be pitied much:
- Her sighs will make a battery in his breast;
- Her tears will pierce into a marble heart;
- The tiger will be mild whiles she doth mourn;
- And Nero will be tainted with remorse,
- To hear and see her plaints, her brinish tears.
- Ay, but she's come to beg, Warwick to give;
- She, on his left side, craving aid for Henry,
- He, on his right, asking a wife for Edward.
- She weeps, and says her Henry is deposed;
- He smiles, and says his Edward is install'd;
- That she, poor wretch, for grief can speak no more;
- Whiles Warwick tells his title, smooths the wrong,
- Inferreth arguments of mighty strength,
- And in conclusion wins the king from her,
- With promise of his sister, and what else,
- To strengthen and support King Edward's place.
- O Margaret, thus 'twill be; and thou, poor soul,
- Art then forsaken, as thou went'st forlorn!
- Second Keeper:
- Say, what art thou that talk'st of kings and queens?
- KING HENRY VI:
- More than I seem, and less than I was born to:
- A man at least, for less I should not be;
- And men may talk of kings, and why not I?
- Second Keeper:
- Ay, but thou talk'st as if thou wert a king.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Why, so I am, in mind; and that's enough.
- Second Keeper:
- But, if thou be a king, where is thy crown?
- KING HENRY VI:
- My crown is in my heart, not on my head;
- Not decked with diamonds and Indian stones,
- Nor to be seen: my crown is called content:
- A crown it is that seldom kings enjoy.
- Second Keeper:
- Well, if you be a king crown'd with content,
- Your crown content and you must be contented
- To go along with us; for as we think,
- You are the king King Edward hath deposed;
- And we his subjects sworn in all allegiance
- Will apprehend you as his enemy.
- KING HENRY VI:
- But did you never swear, and break an oath?
- Second Keeper:
- No, never such an oath; nor will not now.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Where did you dwell when I was King of England?
- Second Keeper:
- Here in this country, where we now remain.
- KING HENRY VI:
- I was anointed king at nine months old;
- My father and my grandfather were kings,
- And you were sworn true subjects unto me:
- And tell me, then, have you not broke your oaths?
- First Keeper:
- No;
- For we were subjects but while you were king.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Why, am I dead? do I not breathe a man?
- Ah, simple men, you know not what you swear!
- Look, as I blow this feather from my face,
- And as the air blows it to me again,
- Obeying with my wind when I do blow,
- And yielding to another when it blows,
- Commanded always by the greater gust;
- Such is the lightness of you common men.
- But do not break your oaths; for of that sin
- My mild entreaty shall not make you guilty.
- Go where you will, the king shall be commanded;
- And be you kings, command, and I'll obey.
- First Keeper:
- We are true subjects to the king, King Edward.
- KING HENRY VI:
- So would you be again to Henry,
- If he were seated as King Edward is.
- First Keeper:
- We charge you, in God's name, and the king's,
- To go with us unto the officers.
- KING HENRY VI:
- In God's name, lead; your king's name be obey'd:
- And what God will, that let your king perform;
- And what he will, I humbly yield unto.
- 3 KING HENRY VI
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Brother of Gloucester, at Saint Alban's field
- This lady's husband, Sir Richard Grey, was slain,
- His lands then seized on by the conqueror:
- Her suit is now to repossess those lands;
- Which we in justice cannot well deny,
- Because in quarrel of the house of York
- The worthy gentleman did lose his life.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Your highness shall do well to grant her suit;
- It were dishonour to deny it her.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- It were no less; but yet I'll make a pause.
- GLOUCESTER:
- CLARENCE:
- GLOUCESTER:
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Widow, we will consider of your suit;
- And come some other time to know our mind.
- LADY GREY:
- Right gracious lord, I cannot brook delay:
- May it please your highness to resolve me now;
- And what your pleasure is, shall satisfy me.
- GLOUCESTER:
- CLARENCE:
- GLOUCESTER:
- KING EDWARD IV:
- How many children hast thou, widow? tell me.
- CLARENCE:
- GLOUCESTER:
- LADY GREY:
- Three, my most gracious lord.
- GLOUCESTER:
- KING EDWARD IV:
- 'Twere pity they should lose their father's lands.
- LADY GREY:
- Be pitiful, dread lord, and grant it then.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Lords, give us leave: I'll try this widow's wit.
- GLOUCESTER:
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Now tell me, madam, do you love your children?
- LADY GREY:
- Ay, full as dearly as I love myself.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- And would you not do much to do them good?
- LADY GREY:
- To do them good, I would sustain some harm.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Then get your husband's lands, to do them good.
- LADY GREY:
- Therefore I came unto your majesty.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- I'll tell you how these lands are to be got.
- LADY GREY:
- So shall you bind me to your highness' service.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- What service wilt thou do me, if I give them?
- LADY GREY:
- What you command, that rests in me to do.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- But you will take exceptions to my boon.
- LADY GREY:
- No, gracious lord, except I cannot do it.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Ay, but thou canst do what I mean to ask.
- LADY GREY:
- Why, then I will do what your grace commands.
- GLOUCESTER:
- CLARENCE:
- LADY GREY:
- Why stops my lord, shall I not hear my task?
- KING EDWARD IV:
- An easy task; 'tis but to love a king.
- LADY GREY:
- That's soon perform'd, because I am a subject.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Why, then, thy husband's lands I freely give thee.
- LADY GREY:
- I take my leave with many thousand thanks.
- GLOUCESTER:
- KING EDWARD IV:
- But stay thee, 'tis the fruits of love I mean.
- LADY GREY:
- The fruits of love I mean, my loving liege.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Ay, but, I fear me, in another sense.
- What love, think'st thou, I sue so much to get?
- LADY GREY:
- My love till death, my humble thanks, my prayers;
- That love which virtue begs and virtue grants.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- No, by my troth, I did not mean such love.
- LADY GREY:
- Why, then you mean not as I thought you did.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- But now you partly may perceive my mind.
- LADY GREY:
- My mind will never grant what I perceive
- Your highness aims at, if I aim aright.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- To tell thee plain, I aim to lie with thee.
- LADY GREY:
- To tell you plain, I had rather lie in prison.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Why, then thou shalt not have thy husband's lands.
- LADY GREY:
- Why, then mine honesty shall be my dower;
- For by that loss I will not purchase them.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Therein thou wrong'st thy children mightily.
- LADY GREY:
- Herein your highness wrongs both them and me.
- But, mighty lord, this merry inclination
- Accords not with the sadness of my suit:
- Please you dismiss me either with 'ay' or 'no.'
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Ay, if thou wilt say 'ay' to my request;
- No if thou dost say 'no' to my demand.
- LADY GREY:
- Then, no, my lord. My suit is at an end.
- GLOUCESTER:
- CLARENCE:
- KING EDWARD IV:
- LADY GREY:
- 'Tis better said than done, my gracious lord:
- I am a subject fit to jest withal,
- But far unfit to be a sovereign.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Sweet widow, by my state I swear to thee
- I speak no more than what my soul intends;
- And that is, to enjoy thee for my love.
- LADY GREY:
- And that is more than I will yield unto:
- I know I am too mean to be your queen,
- And yet too good to be your concubine.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- You cavil, widow: I did mean, my queen.
- LADY GREY:
- 'Twill grieve your grace my sons should call you father.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- No more than when my daughters call thee mother.
- Thou art a widow, and thou hast some children;
- And, by God's mother, I, being but a bachelor,
- Have other some: why, 'tis a happy thing
- To be the father unto many sons.
- Answer no more, for thou shalt be my queen.
- GLOUCESTER:
- CLARENCE:
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Brothers, you muse what chat we two have had.
- GLOUCESTER:
- The widow likes it not, for she looks very sad.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- You'll think it strange if I should marry her.
- CLARENCE:
- To whom, my lord?
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Why, Clarence, to myself.
- GLOUCESTER:
- That would be ten days' wonder at the least.
- CLARENCE:
- That's a day longer than a wonder lasts.
- GLOUCESTER:
- By so much is the wonder in extremes.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Well, jest on, brothers: I can tell you both
- Her suit is granted for her husband's lands.
- Nobleman:
- My gracious lord, Henry your foe is taken,
- And brought your prisoner to your palace gate.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- See that he be convey'd unto the Tower:
- And go we, brothers, to the man that took him,
- To question of his apprehension.
- Widow, go you along. Lords, use her honourably.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Ay, Edward will use women honourably.
- Would he were wasted, marrow, bones and all,
- That from his loins no hopeful branch may spring,
- To cross me from the golden time I look for!
- And yet, between my soul's desire and me--
- The lustful Edward's title buried--
- Is Clarence, Henry, and his son young Edward,
- And all the unlook'd for issue of their bodies,
- To take their rooms, ere I can place myself:
- A cold premeditation for my purpose!
- Why, then, I do but dream on sovereignty;
- Like one that stands upon a promontory,
- And spies a far-off shore where he would tread,
- Wishing his foot were equal with his eye,
- And chides the sea that sunders him from thence,
- Saying, he'll lade it dry to have his way:
- So do I wish the crown, being so far off;
- And so I chide the means that keeps me from it;
- And so I say, I'll cut the causes off,
- Flattering me with impossibilities.
- My eye's too quick, my heart o'erweens too much,
- Unless my hand and strength could equal them.
- Well, say there is no kingdom then for Richard;
- What other pleasure can the world afford?
- I'll make my heaven in a lady's lap,
- And deck my body in gay ornaments,
- And witch sweet ladies with my words and looks.
- O miserable thought! and more unlikely
- Than to accomplish twenty golden crowns!
- Why, love forswore me in my mother's womb:
- And, for I should not deal in her soft laws,
- She did corrupt frail nature with some bribe,
- To shrink mine arm up like a wither'd shrub;
- To make an envious mountain on my back,
- Where sits deformity to mock my body;
- To shape my legs of an unequal size;
- To disproportion me in every part,
- Like to a chaos, or an unlick'd bear-whelp
- That carries no impression like the dam.
- And am I then a man to be beloved?
- O monstrous fault, to harbour such a thought!
- Then, since this earth affords no joy to me,
- But to command, to cheque, to o'erbear such
- As are of better person than myself,
- I'll make my heaven to dream upon the crown,
- And, whiles I live, to account this world but hell,
- Until my mis-shaped trunk that bears this head
- Be round impaled with a glorious crown.
- And yet I know not how to get the crown,
- For many lives stand between me and home:
- And I,--like one lost in a thorny wood,
- That rends the thorns and is rent with the thorns,
- Seeking a way and straying from the way;
- Not knowing how to find the open air,
- But toiling desperately to find it out,--
- Torment myself to catch the English crown:
- And from that torment I will free myself,
- Or hew my way out with a bloody axe.
- Why, I can smile, and murder whiles I smile,
- And cry 'Content' to that which grieves my heart,
- And wet my cheeks with artificial tears,
- And frame my face to all occasions.
- I'll drown more sailors than the mermaid shall;
- I'll slay more gazers than the basilisk;
- I'll play the orator as well as Nestor,
- Deceive more slily than Ulysses could,
- And, like a Sinon, take another Troy.
- I can add colours to the chameleon,
- Change shapes with Proteus for advantages,
- And set the murderous Machiavel to school.
- Can I do this, and cannot get a crown?
- Tut, were it farther off, I'll pluck it down.
- 3 KING HENRY VI
- KING LEWIS XI:
- Fair Queen of England, worthy Margaret,
- Sit down with us: it ill befits thy state
- And birth, that thou shouldst stand while Lewis doth sit.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- No, mighty King of France: now Margaret
- Must strike her sail and learn awhile to serve
- Where kings command. I was, I must confess,
- Great Albion's queen in former golden days:
- But now mischance hath trod my title down,
- And with dishonour laid me on the ground;
- Where I must take like seat unto my fortune,
- And to my humble seat conform myself.
- KING LEWIS XI:
- Why, say, fair queen, whence springs this deep despair?
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- From such a cause as fills mine eyes with tears
- And stops my tongue, while heart is drown'd in cares.
- KING LEWIS XI:
- Whate'er it be, be thou still like thyself,
- And sit thee by our side:
- Yield not thy neck
- To fortune's yoke, but let thy dauntless mind
- Still ride in triumph over all mischance.
- Be plain, Queen Margaret, and tell thy grief;
- It shall be eased, if France can yield relief.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Those gracious words revive my drooping thoughts
- And give my tongue-tied sorrows leave to speak.
- Now, therefore, be it known to noble Lewis,
- That Henry, sole possessor of my love,
- Is of a king become a banish'd man,
- And forced to live in Scotland a forlorn;
- While proud ambitious Edward Duke of York
- Usurps the regal title and the seat
- Of England's true-anointed lawful king.
- This is the cause that I, poor Margaret,
- With this my son, Prince Edward, Henry's heir,
- Am come to crave thy just and lawful aid;
- And if thou fail us, all our hope is done:
- Scotland hath will to help, but cannot help;
- Our people and our peers are both misled,
- Our treasures seized, our soldiers put to flight,
- And, as thou seest, ourselves in heavy plight.
- KING LEWIS XI:
- Renowned queen, with patience calm the storm,
- While we bethink a means to break it off.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- The more we stay, the stronger grows our foe.
- KING LEWIS XI:
- The more I stay, the more I'll succor thee.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- O, but impatience waiteth on true sorrow.
- And see where comes the breeder of my sorrow!
- KING LEWIS XI:
- What's he approacheth boldly to our presence?
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Our Earl of Warwick, Edward's greatest friend.
- KING LEWIS XI:
- Welcome, brave Warwick! What brings thee to France?
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Ay, now begins a second storm to rise;
- For this is he that moves both wind and tide.
- WARWICK:
- From worthy Edward, King of Albion,
- My lord and sovereign, and thy vowed friend,
- I come, in kindness and unfeigned love,
- First, to do greetings to thy royal person;
- And then to crave a league of amity;
- And lastly, to confirm that amity
- With a nuptial knot, if thou vouchsafe to grant
- That virtuous Lady Bona, thy fair sister,
- To England's king in lawful marriage.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- WARWICK:
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- King Lewis and Lady Bona, hear me speak,
- Before you answer Warwick. His demand
- Springs not from Edward's well-meant honest love,
- But from deceit bred by necessity;
- For how can tyrants safely govern home,
- Unless abroad they purchase great alliance?
- To prove him tyrant this reason may suffice,
- That Henry liveth still: but were he dead,
- Yet here Prince Edward stands, King Henry's son.
- Look, therefore, Lewis, that by this league and marriage
- Thou draw not on thy danger and dishonour;
- For though usurpers sway the rule awhile,
- Yet heavens are just, and time suppresseth wrongs.
- WARWICK:
- Injurious Margaret!
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- And why not queen?
- WARWICK:
- Because thy father Henry did usurp;
- And thou no more are prince than she is queen.
- OXFORD:
- Then Warwick disannuls great John of Gaunt,
- Which did subdue the greatest part of Spain;
- And, after John of Gaunt, Henry the Fourth,
- Whose wisdom was a mirror to the wisest;
- And, after that wise prince, Henry the Fifth,
- Who by his prowess conquered all France:
- From these our Henry lineally descends.
- WARWICK:
- Oxford, how haps it, in this smooth discourse,
- You told not how Henry the Sixth hath lost
- All that which Henry Fifth had gotten?
- Methinks these peers of France should smile at that.
- But for the rest, you tell a pedigree
- Of threescore and two years; a silly time
- To make prescription for a kingdom's worth.
- OXFORD:
- Why, Warwick, canst thou speak against thy liege,
- Whom thou obeyed'st thirty and six years,
- And not bewray thy treason with a blush?
- WARWICK:
- Can Oxford, that did ever fence the right,
- Now buckler falsehood with a pedigree?
- For shame! leave Henry, and call Edward king.
- OXFORD:
- Call him my king by whose injurious doom
- My elder brother, the Lord Aubrey Vere,
- Was done to death? and more than so, my father,
- Even in the downfall of his mellow'd years,
- When nature brought him to the door of death?
- No, Warwick, no; while life upholds this arm,
- This arm upholds the house of Lancaster.
- WARWICK:
- And I the house of York.
- KING LEWIS XI:
- Queen Margaret, Prince Edward, and Oxford,
- Vouchsafe, at our request, to stand aside,
- While I use further conference with Warwick.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Heavens grant that Warwick's words bewitch him not!
- KING LEWIS XI:
- Now Warwick, tell me, even upon thy conscience,
- Is Edward your true king? for I were loath
- To link with him that were not lawful chosen.
- WARWICK:
- Thereon I pawn my credit and mine honour.
- KING LEWIS XI:
- But is he gracious in the people's eye?
- WARWICK:
- The more that Henry was unfortunate.
- KING LEWIS XI:
- Then further, all dissembling set aside,
- Tell me for truth the measure of his love
- Unto our sister Bona.
- WARWICK:
- Such it seems
- As may beseem a monarch like himself.
- Myself have often heard him say and swear
- That this his love was an eternal plant,
- Whereof the root was fix'd in virtue's ground,
- The leaves and fruit maintain'd with beauty's sun,
- Exempt from envy, but not from disdain,
- Unless the Lady Bona quit his pain.
- KING LEWIS XI:
- Now, sister, let us hear your firm resolve.
- BONA:
- Your grant, or your denial, shall be mine:
- Yet I confess that often ere this day,
- When I have heard your king's desert recounted,
- Mine ear hath tempted judgment to desire.
- KING LEWIS XI:
- Then, Warwick, thus: our sister shall be Edward's;
- And now forthwith shall articles be drawn
- Touching the jointure that your king must make,
- Which with her dowry shall be counterpoised.
- Draw near, Queen Margaret, and be a witness
- That Bona shall be wife to the English king.
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- To Edward, but not to the English king.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Deceitful Warwick! it was thy device
- By this alliance to make void my suit:
- Before thy coming Lewis was Henry's friend.
- KING LEWIS XI:
- And still is friend to him and Margaret:
- But if your title to the crown be weak,
- As may appear by Edward's good success,
- Then 'tis but reason that I be released
- From giving aid which late I promised.
- Yet shall you have all kindness at my hand
- That your estate requires and mine can yield.
- WARWICK:
- Henry now lives in Scotland at his ease,
- Where having nothing, nothing can he lose.
- And as for you yourself, our quondam queen,
- You have a father able to maintain you;
- And better 'twere you troubled him than France.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Peace, impudent and shameless Warwick, peace,
- Proud setter up and puller down of kings!
- I will not hence, till, with my talk and tears,
- Both full of truth, I make King Lewis behold
- Thy sly conveyance and thy lord's false love;
- For both of you are birds of selfsame feather.
- KING LEWIS XI:
- Warwick, this is some post to us or thee.
- Post:
- OXFORD:
- I like it well that our fair queen and mistress
- Smiles at her news, while Warwick frowns at his.
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- Nay, mark how Lewis stamps, as he were nettled:
- I hope all's for the best.
- KING LEWIS XI:
- Warwick, what are thy news? and yours, fair queen?
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Mine, such as fill my heart with unhoped joys.
- WARWICK:
- Mine, full of sorrow and heart's discontent.
- KING LEWIS XI:
- What! has your king married the Lady Grey!
- And now, to soothe your forgery and his,
- Sends me a paper to persuade me patience?
- Is this the alliance that he seeks with France?
- Dare he presume to scorn us in this manner?
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- I told your majesty as much before:
- This proveth Edward's love and Warwick's honesty.
- WARWICK:
- King Lewis, I here protest, in sight of heaven,
- And by the hope I have of heavenly bliss,
- That I am clear from this misdeed of Edward's,
- No more my king, for he dishonours me,
- But most himself, if he could see his shame.
- Did I forget that by the house of York
- My father came untimely to his death?
- Did I let pass the abuse done to my niece?
- Did I impale him with the regal crown?
- Did I put Henry from his native right?
- And am I guerdon'd at the last with shame?
- Shame on himself! for my desert is honour:
- And to repair my honour lost for him,
- I here renounce him and return to Henry.
- My noble queen, let former grudges pass,
- And henceforth I am thy true servitor:
- I will revenge his wrong to Lady Bona,
- And replant Henry in his former state.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Warwick, these words have turn'd my hate to love;
- And I forgive and quite forget old faults,
- And joy that thou becomest King Henry's friend.
- WARWICK:
- So much his friend, ay, his unfeigned friend,
- That, if King Lewis vouchsafe to furnish us
- With some few bands of chosen soldiers,
- I'll undertake to land them on our coast
- And force the tyrant from his seat by war.
- 'Tis not his new-made bride shall succor him:
- And as for Clarence, as my letters tell me,
- He's very likely now to fall from him,
- For matching more for wanton lust than honour,
- Or than for strength and safety of our country.
- BONA:
- Dear brother, how shall Bona be revenged
- But by thy help to this distressed queen?
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Renowned prince, how shall poor Henry live,
- Unless thou rescue him from foul despair?
- BONA:
- My quarrel and this English queen's are one.
- WARWICK:
- And mine, fair lady Bona, joins with yours.
- KING LEWIS XI:
- And mine with hers, and thine, and Margaret's.
- Therefore at last I firmly am resolved
- You shall have aid.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Let me give humble thanks for all at once.
- KING LEWIS XI:
- Then, England's messenger, return in post,
- And tell false Edward, thy supposed king,
- That Lewis of France is sending over masquers
- To revel it with him and his new bride:
- Thou seest what's past, go fear thy king withal.
- BONA:
- Tell him, in hope he'll prove a widower shortly,
- I'll wear the willow garland for his sake.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Tell him, my mourning weeds are laid aside,
- And I am ready to put armour on.
- WARWICK:
- Tell him from me that he hath done me wrong,
- And therefore I'll uncrown him ere't be long.
- There's thy reward: be gone.
- KING LEWIS XI:
- But, Warwick,
- Thou and Oxford, with five thousand men,
- Shall cross the seas, and bid false Edward battle;
- And, as occasion serves, this noble queen
- And prince shall follow with a fresh supply.
- Yet, ere thou go, but answer me one doubt,
- What pledge have we of thy firm loyalty?
- WARWICK:
- This shall assure my constant loyalty,
- That if our queen and this young prince agree,
- I'll join mine eldest daughter and my joy
- To him forthwith in holy wedlock bands.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Yes, I agree, and thank you for your motion.
- Son Edward, she is fair and virtuous,
- Therefore delay not, give thy hand to Warwick;
- And, with thy hand, thy faith irrevocable,
- That only Warwick's daughter shall be thine.
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- Yes, I accept her, for she well deserves it;
- And here, to pledge my vow, I give my hand.
- KING LEWIS XI:
- Why stay we now? These soldiers shall be levied,
- And thou, Lord Bourbon, our high admiral,
- Shalt waft them over with our royal fleet.
- I long till Edward fall by war's mischance,
- For mocking marriage with a dame of France.
- WARWICK:
- I came from Edward as ambassador,
- But I return his sworn and mortal foe:
- Matter of marriage was the charge he gave me,
- But dreadful war shall answer his demand.
- Had he none else to make a stale but me?
- Then none but I shall turn his jest to sorrow.
- I was the chief that raised him to the crown,
- And I'll be chief to bring him down again:
- Not that I pity Henry's misery,
- But seek revenge on Edward's mockery.
- 3 KING HENRY VI
- GLOUCESTER:
- Now tell me, brother Clarence, what think you
- Of this new marriage with the Lady Grey?
- Hath not our brother made a worthy choice?
- CLARENCE:
- Alas, you know, 'tis far from hence to France;
- How could he stay till Warwick made return?
- SOMERSET:
- My lords, forbear this talk; here comes the king.
- GLOUCESTER:
- And his well-chosen bride.
- CLARENCE:
- I mind to tell him plainly what I think.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Now, brother of Clarence, how like you our choice,
- That you stand pensive, as half malcontent?
- CLARENCE:
- As well as Lewis of France, or the Earl of Warwick,
- Which are so weak of courage and in judgment
- That they'll take no offence at our abuse.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Suppose they take offence without a cause,
- They are but Lewis and Warwick: I am Edward,
- Your king and Warwick's, and must have my will.
- GLOUCESTER:
- And shall have your will, because our king:
- Yet hasty marriage seldom proveth well.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Yea, brother Richard, are you offended too?
- GLOUCESTER:
- Not I:
- No, God forbid that I should wish them sever'd
- Whom God hath join'd together; ay, and 'twere pity
- To sunder them that yoke so well together.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Setting your scorns and your mislike aside,
- Tell me some reason why the Lady Grey
- Should not become my wife and England's queen.
- And you too, Somerset and Montague,
- Speak freely what you think.
- CLARENCE:
- Then this is mine opinion: that King Lewis
- Becomes your enemy, for mocking him
- About the marriage of the Lady Bona.
- GLOUCESTER:
- And Warwick, doing what you gave in charge,
- Is now dishonoured by this new marriage.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- What if both Lewis and Warwick be appeased
- By such invention as I can devise?
- MONTAGUE:
- Yet, to have join'd with France in such alliance
- Would more have strengthen'd this our commonwealth
- 'Gainst foreign storms than any home-bred marriage.
- HASTINGS:
- Why, knows not Montague that of itself
- England is safe, if true within itself?
- MONTAGUE:
- But the safer when 'tis back'd with France.
- HASTINGS:
- 'Tis better using France than trusting France:
- Let us be back'd with God and with the seas
- Which He hath given for fence impregnable,
- And with their helps only defend ourselves;
- In them and in ourselves our safety lies.
- CLARENCE:
- For this one speech Lord Hastings well deserves
- To have the heir of the Lord Hungerford.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Ay, what of that? it was my will and grant;
- And for this once my will shall stand for law.
- GLOUCESTER:
- And yet methinks your grace hath not done well,
- To give the heir and daughter of Lord Scales
- Unto the brother of your loving bride;
- She better would have fitted me or Clarence:
- But in your bride you bury brotherhood.
- CLARENCE:
- Or else you would not have bestow'd the heir
- Of the Lord Bonville on your new wife's son,
- And leave your brothers to go speed elsewhere.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Alas, poor Clarence! is it for a wife
- That thou art malcontent? I will provide thee.
- CLARENCE:
- In choosing for yourself, you show'd your judgment,
- Which being shallow, you give me leave
- To play the broker in mine own behalf;
- And to that end I shortly mind to leave you.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Leave me, or tarry, Edward will be king,
- And not be tied unto his brother's will.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- My lords, before it pleased his majesty
- To raise my state to title of a queen,
- Do me but right, and you must all confess
- That I was not ignoble of descent;
- And meaner than myself have had like fortune.
- But as this title honours me and mine,
- So your dislike, to whom I would be pleasing,
- Doth cloud my joys with danger and with sorrow.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- My love, forbear to fawn upon their frowns:
- What danger or what sorrow can befall thee,
- So long as Edward is thy constant friend,
- And their true sovereign, whom they must obey?
- Nay, whom they shall obey, and love thee too,
- Unless they seek for hatred at my hands;
- Which if they do, yet will I keep thee safe,
- And they shall feel the vengeance of my wrath.
- GLOUCESTER:
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Now, messenger, what letters or what news
- From France?
- Post:
- My sovereign liege, no letters; and few words,
- But such as I, without your special pardon,
- Dare not relate.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Go to, we pardon thee: therefore, in brief,
- Tell me their words as near as thou canst guess them.
- What answer makes King Lewis unto our letters?
- Post:
- At my depart, these were his very words:
- 'Go tell false Edward, thy supposed king,
- That Lewis of France is sending over masquers
- To revel it with him and his new bride.'
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Is Lewis so brave? belike he thinks me Henry.
- But what said Lady Bona to my marriage?
- Post:
- These were her words, utter'd with mad disdain:
- 'Tell him, in hope he'll prove a widower shortly,
- I'll wear the willow garland for his sake.'
- KING EDWARD IV:
- I blame not her, she could say little less;
- She had the wrong. But what said Henry's queen?
- For I have heard that she was there in place.
- Post:
- 'Tell him,' quoth she, 'my mourning weeds are done,
- And I am ready to put armour on.'
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Belike she minds to play the Amazon.
- But what said Warwick to these injuries?
- Post:
- He, more incensed against your majesty
- Than all the rest, discharged me with these words:
- 'Tell him from me that he hath done me wrong,
- And therefore I'll uncrown him ere't be long.'
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Ha! durst the traitor breathe out so proud words?
- Well I will arm me, being thus forewarn'd:
- They shall have wars and pay for their presumption.
- But say, is Warwick friends with Margaret?
- Post:
- Ay, gracious sovereign; they are so link'd in
- friendship
- That young Prince Edward marries Warwick's daughter.
- CLARENCE:
- Belike the elder; Clarence will have the younger.
- Now, brother king, farewell, and sit you fast,
- For I will hence to Warwick's other daughter;
- That, though I want a kingdom, yet in marriage
- I may not prove inferior to yourself.
- You that love me and Warwick, follow me.
- GLOUCESTER:
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Clarence and Somerset both gone to Warwick!
- Yet am I arm'd against the worst can happen;
- And haste is needful in this desperate case.
- Pembroke and Stafford, you in our behalf
- Go levy men, and make prepare for war;
- They are already, or quickly will be landed:
- Myself in person will straight follow you.
- But, ere I go, Hastings and Montague,
- Resolve my doubt. You twain, of all the rest,
- Are near to Warwick by blood and by alliance:
- Tell me if you love Warwick more than me?
- If it be so, then both depart to him;
- I rather wish you foes than hollow friends:
- But if you mind to hold your true obedience,
- Give me assurance with some friendly vow,
- That I may never have you in suspect.
- MONTAGUE:
- So God help Montague as he proves true!
- HASTINGS:
- And Hastings as he favours Edward's cause!
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Now, brother Richard, will you stand by us?
- GLOUCESTER:
- Ay, in despite of all that shall withstand you.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Why, so! then am I sure of victory.
- Now therefore let us hence; and lose no hour,
- Till we meet Warwick with his foreign power.
- 3 KING HENRY VI
- WARWICK:
- Trust me, my lord, all hitherto goes well;
- The common people by numbers swarm to us.
- But see where Somerset and Clarence come!
- Speak suddenly, my lords, are we all friends?
- CLARENCE:
- Fear not that, my lord.
- WARWICK:
- Then, gentle Clarence, welcome unto Warwick;
- And welcome, Somerset: I hold it cowardice
- To rest mistrustful where a noble heart
- Hath pawn'd an open hand in sign of love;
- Else might I think that Clarence, Edward's brother,
- Were but a feigned friend to our proceedings:
- But welcome, sweet Clarence; my daughter shall be thine.
- And now what rests but, in night's coverture,
- Thy brother being carelessly encamp'd,
- His soldiers lurking in the towns about,
- And but attended by a simple guard,
- We may surprise and take him at our pleasure?
- Our scouts have found the adventure very easy:
- That as Ulysses and stout Diomede
- With sleight and manhood stole to Rhesus' tents,
- And brought from thence the Thracian fatal steeds,
- So we, well cover'd with the night's black mantle,
- At unawares may beat down Edward's guard
- And seize himself; I say not, slaughter him,
- For I intend but only to surprise him.
- You that will follow me to this attempt,
- Applaud the name of Henry with your leader.
- Why, then, let's on our way in silent sort:
- For Warwick and his friends, God and Saint George!
- 3 KING HENRY VI
- First Watchman:
- Come on, my masters, each man take his stand:
- The king by this is set him down to sleep.
- Second Watchman:
- What, will he not to bed?
- First Watchman:
- Why, no; for he hath made a solemn vow
- Never to lie and take his natural rest
- Till Warwick or himself be quite suppress'd.
- Second Watchman:
- To-morrow then belike shall be the day,
- If Warwick be so near as men report.
- Third Watchman:
- But say, I pray, what nobleman is that
- That with the king here resteth in his tent?
- First Watchman:
- 'Tis the Lord Hastings, the king's chiefest friend.
- Third Watchman:
- O, is it so? But why commands the king
- That his chief followers lodge in towns about him,
- While he himself keeps in the cold field?
- Second Watchman:
- 'Tis the more honour, because more dangerous.
- Third Watchman:
- Ay, but give me worship and quietness;
- I like it better than a dangerous honour.
- If Warwick knew in what estate he stands,
- 'Tis to be doubted he would waken him.
- First Watchman:
- Unless our halberds did shut up his passage.
- Second Watchman:
- Ay, wherefore else guard we his royal tent,
- But to defend his person from night-foes?
- WARWICK:
- This is his tent; and see where stand his guard.
- Courage, my masters! honour now or never!
- But follow me, and Edward shall be ours.
- First Watchman:
- Who goes there?
- Second Watchman:
- Stay, or thou diest!
- SOMERSET:
- What are they that fly there?
- WARWICK:
- Richard and Hastings: let them go; here is The duke.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- The duke! Why, Warwick, when we parted,
- Thou call'dst me king.
- WARWICK:
- Ay, but the case is alter'd:
- When you disgraced me in my embassade,
- Then I degraded you from being king,
- And come now to create you Duke of York.
- Alas! how should you govern any kingdom,
- That know not how to use ambassadors,
- Nor how to be contented with one wife,
- Nor how to use your brothers brotherly,
- Nor how to study for the people's welfare,
- Nor how to shroud yourself from enemies?
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Yea, brother of Clarence, are thou here too?
- Nay, then I see that Edward needs must down.
- Yet, Warwick, in despite of all mischance,
- Of thee thyself and all thy complices,
- Edward will always bear himself as king:
- Though fortune's malice overthrow my state,
- My mind exceeds the compass of her wheel.
- WARWICK:
- Then, for his mind, be Edward England's king:
- But Henry now shall wear the English crown,
- And be true king indeed, thou but the shadow.
- My Lord of Somerset, at my request,
- See that forthwith Duke Edward be convey'd
- Unto my brother, Archbishop of York.
- When I have fought with Pembroke and his fellows,
- I'll follow you, and tell what answer
- Lewis and the Lady Bona send to him.
- Now, for a while farewell, good Duke of York.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- What fates impose, that men must needs abide;
- It boots not to resist both wind and tide.
- OXFORD:
- What now remains, my lords, for us to do
- But march to London with our soldiers?
- WARWICK:
- Ay, that's the first thing that we have to do;
- To free King Henry from imprisonment
- And see him seated in the regal throne.
- 3 KING HENRY VI
- RIVERS:
- Madam, what makes you in this sudden change?
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Why brother Rivers, are you yet to learn
- What late misfortune is befall'n King Edward?
- RIVERS:
- What! loss of some pitch'd battle against Warwick?
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- No, but the loss of his own royal person.
- RIVERS:
- Then is my sovereign slain?
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Ay, almost slain, for he is taken prisoner,
- Either betray'd by falsehood of his guard
- Or by his foe surprised at unawares:
- And, as I further have to understand,
- Is new committed to the Bishop of York,
- Fell Warwick's brother and by that our foe.
- RIVERS:
- These news I must confess are full of grief;
- Yet, gracious madam, bear it as you may:
- Warwick may lose, that now hath won the day.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Till then fair hope must hinder life's decay.
- And I the rather wean me from despair
- For love of Edward's offspring in my womb:
- This is it that makes me bridle passion
- And bear with mildness my misfortune's cross;
- Ay, ay, for this I draw in many a tear
- And stop the rising of blood-sucking sighs,
- Lest with my sighs or tears I blast or drown
- King Edward's fruit, true heir to the English crown.
- RIVERS:
- But, madam, where is Warwick then become?
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- I am inform'd that he comes towards London,
- To set the crown once more on Henry's head:
- Guess thou the rest; King Edward's friends must down,
- But, to prevent the tyrant's violence,--
- For trust not him that hath once broken faith,--
- I'll hence forthwith unto the sanctuary,
- To save at least the heir of Edward's right:
- There shall I rest secure from force and fraud.
- Come, therefore, let us fly while we may fly:
- If Warwick take us we are sure to die.
- 3 KING HENRY VI
- GLOUCESTER:
- Now, my Lord Hastings and Sir William Stanley,
- Leave off to wonder why I drew you hither,
- Into this chiefest thicket of the park.
- Thus stands the case: you know our king, my brother,
- Is prisoner to the bishop here, at whose hands
- He hath good usage and great liberty,
- And, often but attended with weak guard,
- Comes hunting this way to disport himself.
- I have advertised him by secret means
- That if about this hour he make his way
- Under the colour of his usual game,
- He shall here find his friends with horse and men
- To set him free from his captivity.
- Huntsman:
- This way, my lord; for this way lies the game.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Nay, this way, man: see where the huntsmen stand.
- Now, brother of Gloucester, Lord Hastings, and the rest,
- Stand you thus close, to steal the bishop's deer?
- GLOUCESTER:
- Brother, the time and case requireth haste:
- Your horse stands ready at the park-corner.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- But whither shall we then?
- HASTINGS:
- To Lynn, my lord,
- And ship from thence to Flanders.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Well guess'd, believe me; for that was my meaning.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Stanley, I will requite thy forwardness.
- GLOUCESTER:
- But wherefore stay we? 'tis no time to talk.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Huntsman, what say'st thou? wilt thou go along?
- Huntsman:
- Better do so than tarry and be hang'd.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Come then, away; let's ha' no more ado.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Bishop, farewell: shield thee from Warwick's frown;
- And pray that I may repossess the crown.
- 3 KING HENRY VI
- KING HENRY VI:
- Master lieutenant, now that God and friends
- Have shaken Edward from the regal seat,
- And turn'd my captive state to liberty,
- My fear to hope, my sorrows unto joys,
- At our enlargement what are thy due fees?
- Lieutenant:
- Subjects may challenge nothing of their sovereigns;
- But if an humble prayer may prevail,
- I then crave pardon of your majesty.
- KING HENRY VI:
- For what, lieutenant? for well using me?
- Nay, be thou sure I'll well requite thy kindness,
- For that it made my imprisonment a pleasure;
- Ay, such a pleasure as incaged birds
- Conceive when after many moody thoughts
- At last by notes of household harmony
- They quite forget their loss of liberty.
- But, Warwick, after God, thou set'st me free,
- And chiefly therefore I thank God and thee;
- He was the author, thou the instrument.
- Therefore, that I may conquer fortune's spite
- By living low, where fortune cannot hurt me,
- And that the people of this blessed land
- May not be punish'd with my thwarting stars,
- Warwick, although my head still wear the crown,
- I here resign my government to thee,
- For thou art fortunate in all thy deeds.
- WARWICK:
- Your grace hath still been famed for virtuous;
- And now may seem as wise as virtuous,
- By spying and avoiding fortune's malice,
- For few men rightly temper with the stars:
- Yet in this one thing let me blame your grace,
- For choosing me when Clarence is in place.
- CLARENCE:
- No, Warwick, thou art worthy of the sway,
- To whom the heavens in thy nativity
- Adjudged an olive branch and laurel crown,
- As likely to be blest in peace and war;
- And therefore I yield thee my free consent.
- WARWICK:
- And I choose Clarence only for protector.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Warwick and Clarence give me both your hands:
- Now join your hands, and with your hands your hearts,
- That no dissension hinder government:
- I make you both protectors of this land,
- While I myself will lead a private life
- And in devotion spend my latter days,
- To sin's rebuke and my Creator's praise.
- WARWICK:
- What answers Clarence to his sovereign's will?
- CLARENCE:
- That he consents, if Warwick yield consent;
- For on thy fortune I repose myself.
- WARWICK:
- Why, then, though loath, yet must I be content:
- We'll yoke together, like a double shadow
- To Henry's body, and supply his place;
- I mean, in bearing weight of government,
- While he enjoys the honour and his ease.
- And, Clarence, now then it is more than needful
- Forthwith that Edward be pronounced a traitor,
- And all his lands and goods be confiscate.
- CLARENCE:
- What else? and that succession be determined.
- WARWICK:
- Ay, therein Clarence shall not want his part.
- KING HENRY VI:
- But, with the first of all your chief affairs,
- Let me entreat, for I command no more,
- That Margaret your queen and my son Edward
- Be sent for, to return from France with speed;
- For, till I see them here, by doubtful fear
- My joy of liberty is half eclipsed.
- CLARENCE:
- It shall be done, my sovereign, with all speed.
- KING HENRY VI:
- My Lord of Somerset, what youth is that,
- Of whom you seem to have so tender care?
- SOMERSET:
- My liege, it is young Henry, earl of Richmond.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Come hither, England's hope.
- If secret powers
- Suggest but truth to my divining thoughts,
- This pretty lad will prove our country's bliss.
- His looks are full of peaceful majesty,
- His head by nature framed to wear a crown,
- His hand to wield a sceptre, and himself
- Likely in time to bless a regal throne.
- Make much of him, my lords, for this is he
- Must help you more than you are hurt by me.
- WARWICK:
- What news, my friend?
- Post:
- That Edward is escaped from your brother,
- And fled, as he hears since, to Burgundy.
- WARWICK:
- Unsavoury news! but how made he escape?
- Post:
- He was convey'd by Richard Duke of Gloucester
- And the Lord Hastings, who attended him
- In secret ambush on the forest side
- And from the bishop's huntsmen rescued him;
- For hunting was his daily exercise.
- WARWICK:
- My brother was too careless of his charge.
- But let us hence, my sovereign, to provide
- A salve for any sore that may betide.
- SOMERSET:
- My lord, I like not of this flight of Edward's;
- For doubtless Burgundy will yield him help,
- And we shall have more wars before 't be long.
- As Henry's late presaging prophecy
- Did glad my heart with hope of this young Richmond,
- So doth my heart misgive me, in these conflicts
- What may befall him, to his harm and ours:
- Therefore, Lord Oxford, to prevent the worst,
- Forthwith we'll send him hence to Brittany,
- Till storms be past of civil enmity.
- OXFORD:
- Ay, for if Edward repossess the crown,
- 'Tis like that Richmond with the rest shall down.
- SOMERSET:
- It shall be so; he shall to Brittany.
- Come, therefore, let's about it speedily.
- 3 KING HENRY VI
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Now, brother Richard, Lord Hastings, and the rest,
- Yet thus far fortune maketh us amends,
- And says that once more I shall interchange
- My waned state for Henry's regal crown.
- Well have we pass'd and now repass'd the seas
- And brought desired help from Burgundy:
- What then remains, we being thus arrived
- From Ravenspurgh haven before the gates of York,
- But that we enter, as into our dukedom?
- GLOUCESTER:
- The gates made fast! Brother, I like not this;
- For many men that stumble at the threshold
- Are well foretold that danger lurks within.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Tush, man, abodements must not now affright us:
- By fair or foul means we must enter in,
- For hither will our friends repair to us.
- HASTINGS:
- My liege, I'll knock once more to summon them.
- Mayor:
- My lords, we were forewarned of your coming,
- And shut the gates for safety of ourselves;
- For now we owe allegiance unto Henry.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- But, master mayor, if Henry be your king,
- Yet Edward at the least is Duke of York.
- Mayor:
- True, my good lord; I know you for no less.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Why, and I challenge nothing but my dukedom,
- As being well content with that alone.
- GLOUCESTER:
- HASTINGS:
- Why, master mayor, why stand you in a doubt?
- Open the gates; we are King Henry's friends.
- Mayor:
- Ay, say you so? the gates shall then be open'd.
- GLOUCESTER:
- A wise stout captain, and soon persuaded!
- HASTINGS:
- The good old man would fain that all were well,
- So 'twere not 'long of him; but being enter'd,
- I doubt not, I, but we shall soon persuade
- Both him and all his brothers unto reason.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- So, master mayor: these gates must not be shut
- But in the night or in the time of war.
- What! fear not, man, but yield me up the keys;
- For Edward will defend the town and thee,
- And all those friends that deign to follow me.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Brother, this is Sir John Montgomery,
- Our trusty friend, unless I be deceived.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Welcome, Sir John! But why come you in arms?
- MONTAGUE:
- To help King Edward in his time of storm,
- As every loyal subject ought to do.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Thanks, good Montgomery; but we now forget
- Our title to the crown and only claim
- Our dukedom till God please to send the rest.
- MONTAGUE:
- Then fare you well, for I will hence again:
- I came to serve a king and not a duke.
- Drummer, strike up, and let us march away.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Nay, stay, Sir John, awhile, and we'll debate
- By what safe means the crown may be recover'd.
- MONTAGUE:
- What talk you of debating? in few words,
- If you'll not here proclaim yourself our king,
- I'll leave you to your fortune and be gone
- To keep them back that come to succor you:
- Why shall we fight, if you pretend no title?
- GLOUCESTER:
- Why, brother, wherefore stand you on nice points?
- KING EDWARD IV:
- When we grow stronger, then we'll make our claim:
- Till then, 'tis wisdom to conceal our meaning.
- HASTINGS:
- Away with scrupulous wit! now arms must rule.
- GLOUCESTER:
- And fearless minds climb soonest unto crowns.
- Brother, we will proclaim you out of hand:
- The bruit thereof will bring you many friends.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Then be it as you will; for 'tis my right,
- And Henry but usurps the diadem.
- MONTAGUE:
- Ay, now my sovereign speaketh like himself;
- And now will I be Edward's champion.
- HASTINGS:
- Sound trumpet; Edward shall be here proclaim'd:
- Come, fellow-soldier, make thou proclamation.
- Soldier:
- Edward the Fourth, by the grace of God, king of
- England and France, and lord of Ireland, &c.
- MONTAGUE:
- And whosoe'er gainsays King Edward's right,
- By this I challenge him to single fight.
- All:
- Long live Edward the Fourth!
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Thanks, brave Montgomery; and thanks unto you all:
- If fortune serve me, I'll requite this kindness.
- Now, for this night, let's harbour here in York;
- And when the morning sun shall raise his car
- Above the border of this horizon,
- We'll forward towards Warwick and his mates;
- For well I wot that Henry is no soldier.
- Ah, froward Clarence! how evil it beseems thee
- To flatter Henry and forsake thy brother!
- Yet, as we may, we'll meet both thee and Warwick.
- Come on, brave soldiers: doubt not of the day,
- And, that once gotten, doubt not of large pay.
- 3 KING HENRY VI
- WARWICK:
- What counsel, lords? Edward from Belgia,
- With hasty Germans and blunt Hollanders,
- Hath pass'd in safety through the narrow seas,
- And with his troops doth march amain to London;
- And many giddy people flock to him.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Let's levy men, and beat him back again.
- CLARENCE:
- A little fire is quickly trodden out;
- Which, being suffer'd, rivers cannot quench.
- WARWICK:
- In Warwickshire I have true-hearted friends,
- Not mutinous in peace, yet bold in war;
- Those will I muster up: and thou, son Clarence,
- Shalt stir up in Suffolk, Norfolk, and in Kent,
- The knights and gentlemen to come with thee:
- Thou, brother Montague, in Buckingham,
- Northampton and in Leicestershire, shalt find
- Men well inclined to hear what thou command'st:
- And thou, brave Oxford, wondrous well beloved,
- In Oxfordshire shalt muster up thy friends.
- My sovereign, with the loving citizens,
- Like to his island girt in with the ocean,
- Or modest Dian circled with her nymphs,
- Shall rest in London till we come to him.
- Fair lords, take leave and stand not to reply.
- Farewell, my sovereign.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Farewell, my Hector, and my Troy's true hope.
- CLARENCE:
- In sign of truth, I kiss your highness' hand.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Well-minded Clarence, be thou fortunate!
- MONTAGUE:
- Comfort, my lord; and so I take my leave.
- OXFORD:
- And thus I seal my truth, and bid adieu.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Sweet Oxford, and my loving Montague,
- And all at once, once more a happy farewell.
- WARWICK:
- Farewell, sweet lords: let's meet at Coventry.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Here at the palace I will rest awhile.
- Cousin of Exeter, what thinks your lordship?
- Methinks the power that Edward hath in field
- Should not be able to encounter mine.
- EXETER:
- The doubt is that he will seduce the rest.
- KING HENRY VI:
- That's not my fear; my meed hath got me fame:
- I have not stopp'd mine ears to their demands,
- Nor posted off their suits with slow delays;
- My pity hath been balm to heal their wounds,
- My mildness hath allay'd their swelling griefs,
- My mercy dried their water-flowing tears;
- I have not been desirous of their wealth,
- Nor much oppress'd them with great subsidies.
- Nor forward of revenge, though they much err'd:
- Then why should they love Edward more than me?
- No, Exeter, these graces challenge grace:
- And when the lion fawns upon the lamb,
- The lamb will never cease to follow him.
- EXETER:
- Hark, hark, my lord! what shouts are these?
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Seize on the shame-faced Henry, bear him hence;
- And once again proclaim us King of England.
- You are the fount that makes small brooks to flow:
- Now stops thy spring; my sea sha$l suck them dry,
- And swell so much the higher by their ebb.
- Hence with him to the Tower; let him not speak.
- And, lords, towards Coventry bend we our course
- Where peremptory Warwick now remains:
- The sun shines hot; and, if we use delay,
- Cold biting winter mars our hoped-for hay.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Away betimes, before his forces join,
- And take the great-grown traitor unawares:
- Brave warriors, march amain towards Coventry.
- 3 KING HENRY VI
- WARWICK:
- Where is the post that came from valiant Oxford?
- How far hence is thy lord, mine honest fellow?
- First Messenger:
- By this at Dunsmore, marching hitherward.
- WARWICK:
- How far off is our brother Montague?
- Where is the post that came from Montague?
- Second Messenger:
- By this at Daintry, with a puissant troop.
- WARWICK:
- Say, Somerville, what says my loving son?
- And, by thy guess, how nigh is Clarence now?
- SOMERSET:
- At Southam I did leave him with his forces,
- And do expect him here some two hours hence.
- WARWICK:
- Then Clarence is at hand, I hear his drum.
- SOMERSET:
- It is not his, my lord; here Southam lies:
- The drum your honour hears marcheth from Warwick.
- WARWICK:
- Who should that be? belike, unlook'd-for friends.
- SOMERSET:
- They are at hand, and you shall quickly know.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Go, trumpet, to the walls, and sound a parle.
- GLOUCESTER:
- See how the surly Warwick mans the wall!
- WARWICK:
- O unbid spite! is sportful Edward come?
- Where slept our scouts, or how are they seduced,
- That we could hear no news of his repair?
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Now, Warwick, wilt thou ope the city gates,
- Speak gentle words and humbly bend thy knee,
- Call Edward king and at his hands beg mercy?
- And he shall pardon thee these outrages.
- WARWICK:
- Nay, rather, wilt thou draw thy forces hence,
- Confess who set thee up and pluck'd thee own,
- Call Warwick patron and be penitent?
- And thou shalt still remain the Duke of York.
- GLOUCESTER:
- I thought, at least, he would have said the king;
- Or did he make the jest against his will?
- WARWICK:
- Is not a dukedom, sir, a goodly gift?
- GLOUCESTER:
- Ay, by my faith, for a poor earl to give:
- I'll do thee service for so good a gift.
- WARWICK:
- 'Twas I that gave the kingdom to thy brother.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Why then 'tis mine, if but by Warwick's gift.
- WARWICK:
- Thou art no Atlas for so great a weight:
- And weakling, Warwick takes his gift again;
- And Henry is my king, Warwick his subject.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- But Warwick's king is Edward's prisoner:
- And, gallant Warwick, do but answer this:
- What is the body when the head is off?
- GLOUCESTER:
- Alas, that Warwick had no more forecast,
- But, whiles he thought to steal the single ten,
- The king was slily finger'd from the deck!
- You left poor Henry at the Bishop's palace,
- And, ten to one, you'll meet him in the Tower.
- EDWARD:
- 'Tis even so; yet you are Warwick still.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Come, Warwick, take the time; kneel down, kneel down:
- Nay, when? strike now, or else the iron cools.
- WARWICK:
- I had rather chop this hand off at a blow,
- And with the other fling it at thy face,
- Than bear so low a sail, to strike to thee.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Sail how thou canst, have wind and tide thy friend,
- This hand, fast wound about thy coal-black hair
- Shall, whiles thy head is warm and new cut off,
- Write in the dust this sentence with thy blood,
- 'Wind-changing Warwick now can change no more.'
- WARWICK:
- O cheerful colours! see where Oxford comes!
- OXFORD:
- Oxford, Oxford, for Lancaster!
- GLOUCESTER:
- The gates are open, let us enter too.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- So other foes may set upon our backs.
- Stand we in good array; for they no doubt
- Will issue out again and bid us battle:
- If not, the city being but of small defence,
- We'll quickly rouse the traitors in the same.
- WARWICK:
- O, welcome, Oxford! for we want thy help.
- MONTAGUE:
- Montague, Montague, for Lancaster!
- GLOUCESTER:
- Thou and thy brother both shall buy this treason
- Even with the dearest blood your bodies bear.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- The harder match'd, the greater victory:
- My mind presageth happy gain and conquest.
- SOMERSET:
- Somerset, Somerset, for Lancaster!
- GLOUCESTER:
- Two of thy name, both Dukes of Somerset,
- Have sold their lives unto the house of York;
- And thou shalt be the third if this sword hold.
- WARWICK:
- And lo, where George of Clarence sweeps along,
- Of force enough to bid his brother battle;
- With whom an upright zeal to right prevails
- More than the nature of a brother's love!
- Come, Clarence, come; thou wilt, if Warwick call.
- CLARENCE:
- Father of Warwick, know you what this means?
- Look here, I throw my infamy at thee
- I will not ruinate my father's house,
- Who gave his blood to lime the stones together,
- And set up Lancaster. Why, trow'st thou, Warwick,
- That Clarence is so harsh, so blunt, unnatural,
- To bend the fatal instruments of war
- Against his brother and his lawful king?
- Perhaps thou wilt object my holy oath:
- To keep that oath were more impiety
- Than Jephthah's, when he sacrificed his daughter.
- I am so sorry for my trespass made
- That, to deserve well at my brother's hands,
- I here proclaim myself thy mortal foe,
- With resolution, wheresoe'er I meet thee--
- As I will meet thee, if thou stir abroad--
- To plague thee for thy foul misleading me.
- And so, proud-hearted Warwick, I defy thee,
- And to my brother turn my blushing cheeks.
- Pardon me, Edward, I will make amends:
- And, Richard, do not frown upon my faults,
- For I will henceforth be no more unconstant.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Now welcome more, and ten times more beloved,
- Than if thou never hadst deserved our hate.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Welcome, good Clarence; this is brotherlike.
- WARWICK:
- O passing traitor, perjured and unjust!
- KING EDWARD IV:
- What, Warwick, wilt thou leave the town and fight?
- Or shall we beat the stones about thine ears?
- WARWICK:
- Alas, I am not coop'd here for defence!
- I will away towards Barnet presently,
- And bid thee battle, Edward, if thou darest.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Yes, Warwick, Edward dares, and leads the way.
- Lords, to the field; Saint George and victory!
- 3 KING HENRY VI
- KING EDWARD IV:
- So, lie thou there: die thou, and die our fear;
- For Warwick was a bug that fear'd us all.
- Now, Montague, sit fast; I seek for thee,
- That Warwick's bones may keep thine company.
- WARWICK:
- Ah, who is nigh? come to me, friend or foe,
- And tell me who is victor, York or Warwick?
- Why ask I that? my mangled body shows,
- My blood, my want of strength, my sick heart shows.
- That I must yield my body to the earth
- And, by my fall, the conquest to my foe.
- Thus yields the cedar to the axe's edge,
- Whose arms gave shelter to the princely eagle,
- Under whose shade the ramping lion slept,
- Whose top-branch overpeer'd Jove's spreading tree
- And kept low shrubs from winter's powerful wind.
- These eyes, that now are dimm'd with death's black veil,
- Have been as piercing as the mid-day sun,
- To search the secret treasons of the world:
- The wrinkles in my brows, now filled with blood,
- Were liken'd oft to kingly sepulchres;
- For who lived king, but I could dig his grave?
- And who durst mine when Warwick bent his brow?
- Lo, now my glory smear'd in dust and blood!
- My parks, my walks, my manors that I had.
- Even now forsake me, and of all my lands
- Is nothing left me but my body's length.
- Why, what is pomp, rule, reign, but earth and dust?
- And, live we how we can, yet die we must.
- SOMERSET:
- Ah, Warwick, Warwick! wert thou as we are.
- We might recover all our loss again;
- The queen from France hath brought a puissant power:
- Even now we heard the news: ah, could'st thou fly!
- WARWICK:
- Why, then I would not fly. Ah, Montague,
- If thou be there, sweet brother, take my hand.
- And with thy lips keep in my soul awhile!
- Thou lovest me not; for, brother, if thou didst,
- Thy tears would wash this cold congealed blood
- That glues my lips and will not let me speak.
- Come quickly, Montague, or I am dead.
- SOMERSET:
- Ah, Warwick! Montague hath breathed his last;
- And to the latest gasp cried out for Warwick,
- And said 'Commend me to my valiant brother.'
- And more he would have said, and more he spoke,
- Which sounded like a clamour in a vault,
- That mought not be distinguished; but at last
- I well might hear, delivered with a groan,
- 'O, farewell, Warwick!'
- WARWICK:
- Sweet rest his soul! Fly, lords, and save yourselves;
- For Warwick bids you all farewell to meet in heaven.
- OXFORD:
- Away, away, to meet the queen's great power!
- 3 KING HENRY VI
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Thus far our fortune keeps an upward course,
- And we are graced with wreaths of victory.
- But, in the midst of this bright-shining day,
- I spy a black, suspicious, threatening cloud,
- That will encounter with our glorious sun,
- Ere he attain his easeful western bed:
- I mean, my lords, those powers that the queen
- Hath raised in Gallia have arrived our coast
- And, as we hear, march on to fight with us.
- CLARENCE:
- A little gale will soon disperse that cloud
- And blow it to the source from whence it came:
- The very beams will dry those vapours up,
- For every cloud engenders not a storm.
- GLOUCESTER:
- The queen is valued thirty thousand strong,
- And Somerset, with Oxford fled to her:
- If she have time to breathe be well assured
- Her faction will be full as strong as ours.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- We are advertised by our loving friends
- That they do hold their course toward Tewksbury:
- We, having now the best at Barnet field,
- Will thither straight, for willingness rids way;
- And, as we march, our strength will be augmented
- In every county as we go along.
- Strike up the drum; cry 'Courage!' and away.
- 3 KING HENRY VI
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Great lords, wise men ne'er sit and wail their loss,
- But cheerly seek how to redress their harms.
- What though the mast be now blown overboard,
- The cable broke, the holding-anchor lost,
- And half our sailors swallow'd in the flood?
- Yet lives our pilot still. Is't meet that he
- Should leave the helm and like a fearful lad
- With tearful eyes add water to the sea
- And give more strength to that which hath too much,
- Whiles, in his moan, the ship splits on the rock,
- Which industry and courage might have saved?
- Ah, what a shame! ah, what a fault were this!
- Say Warwick was our anchor; what of that?
- And Montague our topmost; what of him?
- Our slaughter'd friends the tackles; what of these?
- Why, is not Oxford here another anchor?
- And Somerset another goodly mast?
- The friends of France our shrouds and tacklings?
- And, though unskilful, why not Ned and I
- For once allow'd the skilful pilot's charge?
- We will not from the helm to sit and weep,
- But keep our course, though the rough wind say no,
- From shelves and rocks that threaten us with wreck.
- As good to chide the waves as speak them fair.
- And what is Edward but ruthless sea?
- What Clarence but a quicksand of deceit?
- And Richard but a ragged fatal rock?
- All these the enemies to our poor bark.
- Say you can swim; alas, 'tis but a while!
- Tread on the sand; why, there you quickly sink:
- Bestride the rock; the tide will wash you off,
- Or else you famish; that's a threefold death.
- This speak I, lords, to let you understand,
- If case some one of you would fly from us,
- That there's no hoped-for mercy with the brothers
- More than with ruthless waves, with sands and rocks.
- Why, courage then! what cannot be avoided
- 'Twere childish weakness to lament or fear.
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- Methinks a woman of this valiant spirit
- Should, if a coward heard her speak these words,
- Infuse his breast with magnanimity
- And make him, naked, foil a man at arms.
- I speak not this as doubting any here
- For did I but suspect a fearful man
- He should have leave to go away betimes,
- Lest in our need he might infect another
- And make him of like spirit to himself.
- If any such be here--as God forbid!--
- Let him depart before we need his help.
- OXFORD:
- Women and children of so high a courage,
- And warriors faint! why, 'twere perpetual shame.
- O brave young prince! thy famous grandfather
- Doth live again in thee: long mayst thou live
- To bear his image and renew his glories!
- SOMERSET:
- And he that will not fight for such a hope.
- Go home to bed, and like the owl by day,
- If he arise, be mock'd and wonder'd at.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Thanks, gentle Somerset; sweet Oxford, thanks.
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- And take his thanks that yet hath nothing else.
- Messenger:
- Prepare you, lords, for Edward is at hand.
- Ready to fight; therefore be resolute.
- OXFORD:
- I thought no less: it is his policy
- To haste thus fast, to find us unprovided.
- SOMERSET:
- But he's deceived; we are in readiness.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- This cheers my heart, to see your forwardness.
- OXFORD:
- Here pitch our battle; hence we will not budge.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Brave followers, yonder stands the thorny wood,
- Which, by the heavens' assistance and your strength,
- Must by the roots be hewn up yet ere night.
- I need not add more fuel to your fire,
- For well I wot ye blaze to burn them out
- Give signal to the fight, and to it, lords!
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Lords, knights, and gentlemen, what I should say
- My tears gainsay; for every word I speak,
- Ye see, I drink the water of mine eyes.
- Therefore, no more but this: Henry, your sovereign,
- Is prisoner to the foe; his state usurp'd,
- His realm a slaughter-house, his subjects slain,
- His statutes cancell'd and his treasure spent;
- And yonder is the wolf that makes this spoil.
- You fight in justice: then, in God's name, lords,
- Be valiant and give signal to the fight.
- 3 KING HENRY VI
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Now here a period of tumultuous broils.
- Away with Oxford to Hames Castle straight:
- For Somerset, off with his guilty head.
- Go, bear them hence; I will not hear them speak.
- OXFORD:
- For my part, I'll not trouble thee with words.
- SOMERSET:
- Nor I, but stoop with patience to my fortune.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- So part we sadly in this troublous world,
- To meet with joy in sweet Jerusalem.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Is proclamation made, that who finds Edward
- Shall have a high reward, and he his life?
- GLOUCESTER:
- It is: and lo, where youthful Edward comes!
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Bring forth the gallant, let us hear him speak.
- What! can so young a thorn begin to prick?
- Edward, what satisfaction canst thou make
- For bearing arms, for stirring up my subjects,
- And all the trouble thou hast turn'd me to?
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- Speak like a subject, proud ambitious York!
- Suppose that I am now my father's mouth;
- Resign thy chair, and where I stand kneel thou,
- Whilst I propose the selfsame words to thee,
- Which traitor, thou wouldst have me answer to.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Ah, that thy father had been so resolved!
- GLOUCESTER:
- That you might still have worn the petticoat,
- And ne'er have stol'n the breech from Lancaster.
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- Let AEsop fable in a winter's night;
- His currish riddles sort not with this place.
- GLOUCESTER:
- By heaven, brat, I'll plague ye for that word.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Ay, thou wast born to be a plague to men.
- GLOUCESTER:
- For God's sake, take away this captive scold.
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- Nay, take away this scolding crookback rather.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Peace, wilful boy, or I will charm your tongue.
- CLARENCE:
- Untutor'd lad, thou art too malapert.
- PRINCE EDWARD:
- I know my duty; you are all undutiful:
- Lascivious Edward, and thou perjured George,
- And thou mis-shapen Dick, I tell ye all
- I am your better, traitors as ye are:
- And thou usurp'st my father's right and mine.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Take that, thou likeness of this railer here.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Sprawl'st thou? take that, to end thy agony.
- CLARENCE:
- And there's for twitting me with perjury.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- O, kill me too!
- GLOUCESTER:
- Marry, and shall.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Hold, Richard, hold; for we have done too much.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Why should she live, to fill the world with words?
- KING EDWARD IV:
- What, doth she swoon? use means for her recovery.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Clarence, excuse me to the king my brother;
- I'll hence to London on a serious matter:
- Ere ye come there, be sure to hear some news.
- CLARENCE:
- What? what?
- GLOUCESTER:
- The Tower, the Tower.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- O Ned, sweet Ned! speak to thy mother, boy!
- Canst thou not speak? O traitors! murderers!
- They that stabb'd Caesar shed no blood at all,
- Did not offend, nor were not worthy blame,
- If this foul deed were by to equal it:
- He was a man; this, in respect, a child:
- And men ne'er spend their fury on a child.
- What's worse than murderer, that I may name it?
- No, no, my heart will burst, and if I speak:
- And I will speak, that so my heart may burst.
- Butchers and villains! bloody cannibals!
- How sweet a plant have you untimely cropp'd!
- You have no children, butchers! if you had,
- The thought of them would have stirr'd up remorse:
- But if you ever chance to have a child,
- Look in his youth to have him so cut off
- As, deathmen, you have rid this sweet young prince!
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Away with her; go, bear her hence perforce.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Nay, never bear me hence, dispatch me here,
- Here sheathe thy sword, I'll pardon thee my death:
- What, wilt thou not? then, Clarence, do it thou.
- CLARENCE:
- By heaven, I will not do thee so much ease.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Good Clarence, do; sweet Clarence, do thou do it.
- CLARENCE:
- Didst thou not hear me swear I would not do it?
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- Ay, but thou usest to forswear thyself:
- 'Twas sin before, but now 'tis charity.
- What, wilt thou not? Where is that devil's butcher,
- Hard-favour'd Richard? Richard, where art thou?
- Thou art not here: murder is thy alms-deed;
- Petitioners for blood thou ne'er put'st back.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Away, I say; I charge ye, bear her hence.
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- So come to you and yours, as to this Prince!
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Where's Richard gone?
- CLARENCE:
- To London, all in post; and, as I guess,
- To make a bloody supper in the Tower.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- He's sudden, if a thing comes in his head.
- Now march we hence: discharge the common sort
- With pay and thanks, and let's away to London
- And see our gentle queen how well she fares:
- By this, I hope, she hath a son for me.
- 3 KING HENRY VI
- GLOUCESTER:
- Good day, my lord. What, at your book so hard?
- KING HENRY VI:
- Ay, my good lord:--my lord, I should say rather;
- 'Tis sin to flatter; 'good' was little better:
- 'Good Gloucester' and 'good devil' were alike,
- And both preposterous; therefore, not 'good lord.'
- GLOUCESTER:
- Sirrah, leave us to ourselves: we must confer.
- KING HENRY VI:
- So flies the reckless shepherd from the wolf;
- So first the harmless sheep doth yield his fleece
- And next his throat unto the butcher's knife.
- What scene of death hath Roscius now to act?
- GLOUCESTER:
- Suspicion always haunts the guilty mind;
- The thief doth fear each bush an officer.
- KING HENRY VI:
- The bird that hath been limed in a bush,
- With trembling wings misdoubteth every bush;
- And I, the hapless male to one sweet bird,
- Have now the fatal object in my eye
- Where my poor young was limed, was caught and kill'd.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Why, what a peevish fool was that of Crete,
- That taught his son the office of a fowl!
- An yet, for all his wings, the fool was drown'd.
- KING HENRY VI:
- I, Daedalus; my poor boy, Icarus;
- Thy father, Minos, that denied our course;
- The sun that sear'd the wings of my sweet boy
- Thy brother Edward, and thyself the sea
- Whose envious gulf did swallow up his life.
- Ah, kill me with thy weapon, not with words!
- My breast can better brook thy dagger's point
- Than can my ears that tragic history.
- But wherefore dost thou come? is't for my life?
- GLOUCESTER:
- Think'st thou I am an executioner?
- KING HENRY VI:
- A persecutor, I am sure, thou art:
- If murdering innocents be executing,
- Why, then thou art an executioner.
- GLOUCESTER:
- Thy son I kill'd for his presumption.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Hadst thou been kill'd when first thou didst presume,
- Thou hadst not lived to kill a son of mine.
- And thus I prophesy, that many a thousand,
- Which now mistrust no parcel of my fear,
- And many an old man's sigh and many a widow's,
- And many an orphan's water-standing eye--
- Men for their sons, wives for their husbands,
- And orphans for their parents timeless death--
- Shall rue the hour that ever thou wast born.
- The owl shriek'd at thy birth,--an evil sign;
- The night-crow cried, aboding luckless time;
- Dogs howl'd, and hideous tempest shook down trees;
- The raven rook'd her on the chimney's top,
- And chattering pies in dismal discords sung.
- Thy mother felt more than a mother's pain,
- And, yet brought forth less than a mother's hope,
- To wit, an indigested and deformed lump,
- Not like the fruit of such a goodly tree.
- Teeth hadst thou in thy head when thou wast born,
- To signify thou camest to bite the world:
- And, if the rest be true which I have heard,
- Thou camest--
- GLOUCESTER:
- I'll hear no more: die, prophet in thy speech:
- For this amongst the rest, was I ordain'd.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Ay, and for much more slaughter after this.
- God forgive my sins, and pardon thee!
- GLOUCESTER:
- What, will the aspiring blood of Lancaster
- Sink in the ground? I thought it would have mounted.
- See how my sword weeps for the poor king's death!
- O, may such purple tears be alway shed
- From those that wish the downfall of our house!
- If any spark of life be yet remaining,
- Down, down to hell; and say I sent thee thither:
- I, that have neither pity, love, nor fear.
- Indeed, 'tis true that Henry told me of;
- For I have often heard my mother say
- I came into the world with my legs forward:
- Had I not reason, think ye, to make haste,
- And seek their ruin that usurp'd our right?
- The midwife wonder'd and the women cried
- 'O, Jesus bless us, he is born with teeth!'
- And so I was; which plainly signified
- That I should snarl and bite and play the dog.
- Then, since the heavens have shaped my body so,
- Let hell make crook'd my mind to answer it.
- I have no brother, I am like no brother;
- And this word 'love,' which graybeards call divine,
- Be resident in men like one another
- And not in me: I am myself alone.
- Clarence, beware; thou keep'st me from the light:
- But I will sort a pitchy day for thee;
- For I will buz abroad such prophecies
- That Edward shall be fearful of his life,
- And then, to purge his fear, I'll be thy death.
- King Henry and the prince his son are gone:
- Clarence, thy turn is next, and then the rest,
- Counting myself but bad till I be best.
- I'll throw thy body in another room
- And triumph, Henry, in thy day of doom.
- 3 KING HENRY VI
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Once more we sit in England's royal throne,
- Re-purchased with the blood of enemies.
- What valiant foemen, like to autumn's corn,
- Have we mow'd down, in tops of all their pride!
- Three Dukes of Somerset, threefold renown'd
- For hardy and undoubted champions;
- Two Cliffords, as the father and the son,
- And two Northumberlands; two braver men
- Ne'er spurr'd their coursers at the trumpet's sound;
- With them, the two brave bears, Warwick and Montague,
- That in their chains fetter'd the kingly lion
- And made the forest tremble when they roar'd.
- Thus have we swept suspicion from our seat
- And made our footstool of security.
- Come hither, Bess, and let me kiss my boy.
- Young Ned, for thee, thine uncles and myself
- Have in our armours watch'd the winter's night,
- Went all afoot in summer's scalding heat,
- That thou mightst repossess the crown in peace;
- And of our labours thou shalt reap the gain.
- GLOUCESTER:
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Clarence and Gloucester, love my lovely queen;
- And kiss your princely nephew, brothers both.
- CLARENCE:
- The duty that I owe unto your majesty
- I seal upon the lips of this sweet babe.
- QUEEN ELIZABETH:
- Thanks, noble Clarence; worthy brother, thanks.
- GLOUCESTER:
- And, that I love the tree from whence thou sprang'st,
- Witness the loving kiss I give the fruit.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Now am I seated as my soul delights,
- Having my country's peace and brothers' loves.
- CLARENCE:
- What will your grace have done with Margaret?
- Reignier, her father, to the king of France
- Hath pawn'd the Sicils and Jerusalem,
- And hither have they sent it for her ransom.
- KING EDWARD IV:
- Away with her, and waft her hence to France.
- And now what rests but that we spend the time
- With stately triumphs, mirthful comic shows,
- Such as befits the pleasure of the court?
- Sound drums and trumpets! farewell sour annoy!
- For here, I hope, begins our lasting joy.
- ARCHIDAMUS:
- If you shall chance, Camillo, to visit Bohemia, on
- the like occasion whereon my services are now on
- foot, you shall see, as I have said, great
- difference betwixt our Bohemia and your Sicilia.
- CAMILLO:
- I think, this coming summer, the King of Sicilia
- means to pay Bohemia the visitation which he justly owes him.
- ARCHIDAMUS:
- Wherein our entertainment shall shame us we will be
- justified in our loves; for indeed--
- CAMILLO:
- Beseech you,--
- ARCHIDAMUS:
- Verily, I speak it in the freedom of my knowledge:
- we cannot with such magnificence--in so rare--I know
- not what to say. We will give you sleepy drinks,
- that your senses, unintelligent of our insufficience,
- may, though they cannot praise us, as little accuse
- us.
- CAMILLO:
- You pay a great deal too dear for what's given freely.
- ARCHIDAMUS:
- Believe me, I speak as my understanding instructs me
- and as mine honesty puts it to utterance.
- CAMILLO:
- Sicilia cannot show himself over-kind to Bohemia.
- They were trained together in their childhoods; and
- there rooted betwixt them then such an affection,
- which cannot choose but branch now. Since their
- more mature dignities and royal necessities made
- separation of their society, their encounters,
- though not personal, have been royally attorneyed
- with interchange of gifts, letters, loving
- embassies; that they have seemed to be together,
- though absent, shook hands, as over a vast, and
- embraced, as it were, from the ends of opposed
- winds. The heavens continue their loves!
- ARCHIDAMUS:
- I think there is not in the world either malice or
- matter to alter it. You have an unspeakable
- comfort of your young prince Mamillius: it is a
- gentleman of the greatest promise that ever came
- into my note.
- CAMILLO:
- I very well agree with you in the hopes of him: it
- is a gallant child; one that indeed physics the
- subject, makes old hearts fresh: they that went on
- crutches ere he was born desire yet their life to
- see him a man.
- ARCHIDAMUS:
- Would they else be content to die?
- CAMILLO:
- Yes; if there were no other excuse why they should
- desire to live.
- ARCHIDAMUS:
- If the king had no son, they would desire to live
- on crutches till he had one.
- POLIXENES:
- Nine changes of the watery star hath been
- The shepherd's note since we have left our throne
- Without a burthen: time as long again
- Would be find up, my brother, with our thanks;
- And yet we should, for perpetuity,
- Go hence in debt: and therefore, like a cipher,
- Yet standing in rich place, I multiply
- With one 'We thank you' many thousands moe
- That go before it.
- LEONTES:
- Stay your thanks a while;
- And pay them when you part.
- POLIXENES:
- Sir, that's to-morrow.
- I am question'd by my fears, of what may chance
- Or breed upon our absence; that may blow
- No sneaping winds at home, to make us say
- 'This is put forth too truly:' besides, I have stay'd
- To tire your royalty.
- LEONTES:
- We are tougher, brother,
- Than you can put us to't.
- POLIXENES:
- No longer stay.
- LEONTES:
- One seven-night longer.
- POLIXENES:
- Very sooth, to-morrow.
- LEONTES:
- We'll part the time between's then; and in that
- I'll no gainsaying.
- POLIXENES:
- Press me not, beseech you, so.
- There is no tongue that moves, none, none i' the world,
- So soon as yours could win me: so it should now,
- Were there necessity in your request, although
- 'Twere needful I denied it. My affairs
- Do even drag me homeward: which to hinder
- Were in your love a whip to me; my stay
- To you a charge and trouble: to save both,
- Farewell, our brother.
- LEONTES:
- Tongue-tied, our queen?
- speak you.
- HERMIONE:
- I had thought, sir, to have held my peace until
- You have drawn oaths from him not to stay. You, sir,
- Charge him too coldly. Tell him, you are sure
- All in Bohemia's well; this satisfaction
- The by-gone day proclaim'd: say this to him,
- He's beat from his best ward.
- LEONTES:
- Well said, Hermione.
- HERMIONE:
- To tell, he longs to see his son, were strong:
- But let him say so then, and let him go;
- But let him swear so, and he shall not stay,
- We'll thwack him hence with distaffs.
- Yet of your royal presence I'll adventure
- The borrow of a week. When at Bohemia
- You take my lord, I'll give him my commission
- To let him there a month behind the gest
- Prefix'd for's parting: yet, good deed, Leontes,
- I love thee not a jar o' the clock behind
- What lady-she her lord. You'll stay?
- POLIXENES:
- No, madam.
- HERMIONE:
- Nay, but you will?
- POLIXENES:
- I may not, verily.
- HERMIONE:
- Verily!
- You put me off with limber vows; but I,
- Though you would seek to unsphere the
- stars with oaths,
- Should yet say 'Sir, no going.' Verily,
- You shall not go: a lady's 'Verily' 's
- As potent as a lord's. Will you go yet?
- Force me to keep you as a prisoner,
- Not like a guest; so you shall pay your fees
- When you depart, and save your thanks. How say you?
- My prisoner? or my guest? by your dread 'Verily,'
- One of them you shall be.
- POLIXENES:
- Your guest, then, madam:
- To be your prisoner should import offending;
- Which is for me less easy to commit
- Than you to punish.
- HERMIONE:
- Not your gaoler, then,
- But your kind hostess. Come, I'll question you
- Of my lord's tricks and yours when you were boys:
- You were pretty lordings then?
- POLIXENES:
- We were, fair queen,
- Two lads that thought there was no more behind
- But such a day to-morrow as to-day,
- And to be boy eternal.
- HERMIONE:
- Was not my lord
- The verier wag o' the two?
- POLIXENES:
- We were as twinn'd lambs that did frisk i' the sun,
- And bleat the one at the other: what we changed
- Was innocence for innocence; we knew not
- The doctrine of ill-doing, nor dream'd
- That any did. Had we pursued that life,
- And our weak spirits ne'er been higher rear'd
- With stronger blood, we should have answer'd heaven
- Boldly 'not guilty;' the imposition clear'd
- Hereditary ours.
- HERMIONE:
- By this we gather
- You have tripp'd since.
- POLIXENES:
- O my most sacred lady!
- Temptations have since then been born to's; for
- In those unfledged days was my wife a girl;
- Your precious self had then not cross'd the eyes
- Of my young play-fellow.
- HERMIONE:
- Grace to boot!
- Of this make no conclusion, lest you say
- Your queen and I are devils: yet go on;
- The offences we have made you do we'll answer,
- If you first sinn'd with us and that with us
- You did continue fault and that you slipp'd not
- With any but with us.
- LEONTES:
- Is he won yet?
- HERMIONE:
- He'll stay my lord.
- LEONTES:
- At my request he would not.
- Hermione, my dearest, thou never spokest
- To better purpose.
- HERMIONE:
- Never?
- LEONTES:
- Never, but once.
- HERMIONE:
- What! have I twice said well? when was't before?
- I prithee tell me; cram's with praise, and make's
- As fat as tame things: one good deed dying tongueless
- Slaughters a thousand waiting upon that.
- Our praises are our wages: you may ride's
- With one soft kiss a thousand furlongs ere
- With spur we beat an acre. But to the goal:
- My last good deed was to entreat his stay:
- What was my first? it has an elder sister,
- Or I mistake you: O, would her name were Grace!
- But once before I spoke to the purpose: when?
- Nay, let me have't; I long.
- LEONTES:
- Why, that was when
- Three crabbed months had sour'd themselves to death,
- Ere I could make thee open thy white hand
- And clap thyself my love: then didst thou utter
- 'I am yours for ever.'
- HERMIONE:
- 'Tis grace indeed.
- Why, lo you now, I have spoke to the purpose twice:
- The one for ever earn'd a royal husband;
- The other for some while a friend.
- LEONTES:
- MAMILLIUS:
- Ay, my good lord.
- LEONTES:
- I' fecks!
- Why, that's my bawcock. What, hast
- smutch'd thy nose?
- They say it is a copy out of mine. Come, captain,
- We must be neat; not neat, but cleanly, captain:
- And yet the steer, the heifer and the calf
- Are all call'd neat.--Still virginalling
- Upon his palm!--How now, you wanton calf!
- Art thou my calf?
- MAMILLIUS:
- Yes, if you will, my lord.
- LEONTES:
- Thou want'st a rough pash and the shoots that I have,
- To be full like me: yet they say we are
- Almost as like as eggs; women say so,
- That will say anything but were they false
- As o'er-dyed blacks, as wind, as waters, false
- As dice are to be wish'd by one that fixes
- No bourn 'twixt his and mine, yet were it true
- To say this boy were like me. Come, sir page,
- Look on me with your welkin eye: sweet villain!
- Most dear'st! my collop! Can thy dam?--may't be?--
- Affection! thy intention stabs the centre:
- Thou dost make possible things not so held,
- Communicatest with dreams;--how can this be?--
- With what's unreal thou coactive art,
- And fellow'st nothing: then 'tis very credent
- Thou mayst co-join with something; and thou dost,
- And that beyond commission, and I find it,
- And that to the infection of my brains
- And hardening of my brows.
- POLIXENES:
- What means Sicilia?
- HERMIONE:
- He something seems unsettled.
- POLIXENES:
- How, my lord!
- What cheer? how is't with you, best brother?
- HERMIONE:
- You look as if you held a brow of much distraction
- Are you moved, my lord?
- LEONTES:
- No, in good earnest.
- How sometimes nature will betray its folly,
- Its tenderness, and make itself a pastime
- To harder bosoms! Looking on the lines
- Of my boy's face, methoughts I did recoil
- Twenty-three years, and saw myself unbreech'd,
- In my green velvet coat, my dagger muzzled,
- Lest it should bite its master, and so prove,
- As ornaments oft do, too dangerous:
- How like, methought, I then was to this kernel,
- This squash, this gentleman. Mine honest friend,
- Will you take eggs for money?
- MAMILLIUS:
- No, my lord, I'll fight.
- LEONTES:
- You will! why, happy man be's dole! My brother,
- Are you so fond of your young prince as we
- Do seem to be of ours?
- POLIXENES:
- If at home, sir,
- He's all my exercise, my mirth, my matter,
- Now my sworn friend and then mine enemy,
- My parasite, my soldier, statesman, all:
- He makes a July's day short as December,
- And with his varying childness cures in me
- Thoughts that would thick my blood.
- LEONTES:
- So stands this squire
- Officed with me: we two will walk, my lord,
- And leave you to your graver steps. Hermione,
- How thou lovest us, show in our brother's welcome;
- Let what is dear in Sicily be cheap:
- Next to thyself and my young rover, he's
- Apparent to my heart.
- HERMIONE:
- If you would seek us,
- We are yours i' the garden: shall's attend you there?
- LEONTES:
- To your own bents dispose you: you'll be found,
- Be you beneath the sky.
- I am angling now,
- Though you perceive me not how I give line.
- Go to, go to!
- How she holds up the neb, the bill to him!
- And arms her with the boldness of a wife
- To her allowing husband!
- Gone already!
- Inch-thick, knee-deep, o'er head and
- ears a fork'd one!
- Go, play, boy, play: thy mother plays, and I
- Play too, but so disgraced a part, whose issue
- Will hiss me to my grave: contempt and clamour
- Will be my knell. Go, play, boy, play.
- There have been,
- Or I am much deceived, cuckolds ere now;
- And many a man there is, even at this present,
- Now while I speak this, holds his wife by the arm,
- That little thinks she has been sluiced in's absence
- And his pond fish'd by his next neighbour, by
- Sir Smile, his neighbour: nay, there's comfort in't
- Whiles other men have gates and those gates open'd,
- As mine, against their will. Should all despair
- That have revolted wives, the tenth of mankind
- Would hang themselves. Physic for't there is none;
- It is a bawdy planet, that will strike
- Where 'tis predominant; and 'tis powerful, think it,
- From east, west, north and south: be it concluded,
- No barricado for a belly; know't;
- It will let in and out the enemy
- With bag and baggage: many thousand on's
- Have the disease, and feel't not. How now, boy!
- MAMILLIUS:
- I am like you, they say.
- LEONTES:
- Why that's some comfort. What, Camillo there?
- CAMILLO:
- Ay, my good lord.
- LEONTES:
- Go play, Mamillius; thou'rt an honest man.
- Camillo, this great sir will yet stay longer.
- CAMILLO:
- You had much ado to make his anchor hold:
- When you cast out, it still came home.
- LEONTES:
- Didst note it?
- CAMILLO:
- He would not stay at your petitions: made
- His business more material.
- LEONTES:
- Didst perceive it?
- They're here with me already, whispering, rounding
- 'Sicilia is a so-forth:' 'tis far gone,
- When I shall gust it last. How came't, Camillo,
- That he did stay?
- CAMILLO:
- At the good queen's entreaty.
- LEONTES:
- At the queen's be't: 'good' should be pertinent
- But, so it is, it is not. Was this taken
- By any understanding pate but thine?
- For thy conceit is soaking, will draw in
- More than the common blocks: not noted, is't,
- But of the finer natures? by some severals
- Of head-piece extraordinary? lower messes
- Perchance are to this business purblind? say.
- CAMILLO:
- Business, my lord! I think most understand
- Bohemia stays here longer.
- LEONTES:
- Ha!
- CAMILLO:
- Stays here longer.
- LEONTES:
- Ay, but why?
- CAMILLO:
- To satisfy your highness and the entreaties
- Of our most gracious mistress.
- LEONTES:
- Satisfy!
- The entreaties of your mistress! satisfy!
- Let that suffice. I have trusted thee, Camillo,
- With all the nearest things to my heart, as well
- My chamber-councils, wherein, priest-like, thou
- Hast cleansed my bosom, I from thee departed
- Thy penitent reform'd: but we have been
- Deceived in thy integrity, deceived
- In that which seems so.
- CAMILLO:
- Be it forbid, my lord!
- LEONTES:
- To bide upon't, thou art not honest, or,
- If thou inclinest that way, thou art a coward,
- Which hoxes honesty behind, restraining
- From course required; or else thou must be counted
- A servant grafted in my serious trust
- And therein negligent; or else a fool
- That seest a game play'd home, the rich stake drawn,
- And takest it all for jest.
- CAMILLO:
- My gracious lord,
- I may be negligent, foolish and fearful;
- In every one of these no man is free,
- But that his negligence, his folly, fear,
- Among the infinite doings of the world,
- Sometime puts forth. In your affairs, my lord,
- If ever I were wilful-negligent,
- It was my folly; if industriously
- I play'd the fool, it was my negligence,
- Not weighing well the end; if ever fearful
- To do a thing, where I the issue doubted,
- Where of the execution did cry out
- Against the non-performance, 'twas a fear
- Which oft infects the wisest: these, my lord,
- Are such allow'd infirmities that honesty
- Is never free of. But, beseech your grace,
- Be plainer with me; let me know my trespass
- By its own visage: if I then deny it,
- 'Tis none of mine.
- LEONTES:
- Ha' not you seen, Camillo,--
- But that's past doubt, you have, or your eye-glass
- Is thicker than a cuckold's horn,--or heard,--
- For to a vision so apparent rumour
- Cannot be mute,--or thought,--for cogitation
- Resides not in that man that does not think,--
- My wife is slippery? If thou wilt confess,
- Or else be impudently negative,
- To have nor eyes nor ears nor thought, then say
- My wife's a hobby-horse, deserves a name
- As rank as any flax-wench that puts to
- Before her troth-plight: say't and justify't.
- CAMILLO:
- I would not be a stander-by to hear
- My sovereign mistress clouded so, without
- My present vengeance taken: 'shrew my heart,
- You never spoke what did become you less
- Than this; which to reiterate were sin
- As deep as that, though true.
- LEONTES:
- Is whispering nothing?
- Is leaning cheek to cheek? is meeting noses?
- Kissing with inside lip? stopping the career
- Of laughing with a sigh?--a note infallible
- Of breaking honesty--horsing foot on foot?
- Skulking in corners? wishing clocks more swift?
- Hours, minutes? noon, midnight? and all eyes
- Blind with the pin and web but theirs, theirs only,
- That would unseen be wicked? is this nothing?
- Why, then the world and all that's in't is nothing;
- The covering sky is nothing; Bohemia nothing;
- My wife is nothing; nor nothing have these nothings,
- If this be nothing.
- CAMILLO:
- Good my lord, be cured
- Of this diseased opinion, and betimes;
- For 'tis most dangerous.
- LEONTES:
- Say it be, 'tis true.
- CAMILLO:
- No, no, my lord.
- LEONTES:
- It is; you lie, you lie:
- I say thou liest, Camillo, and I hate thee,
- Pronounce thee a gross lout, a mindless slave,
- Or else a hovering temporizer, that
- Canst with thine eyes at once see good and evil,
- Inclining to them both: were my wife's liver
- Infected as her life, she would not live
- The running of one glass.
- CAMILLO:
- Who does infect her?
- LEONTES:
- Why, he that wears her like a medal, hanging
- About his neck, Bohemia: who, if I
- Had servants true about me, that bare eyes
- To see alike mine honour as their profits,
- Their own particular thrifts, they would do that
- Which should undo more doing: ay, and thou,
- His cupbearer,--whom I from meaner form
- Have benched and reared to worship, who mayst see
- Plainly as heaven sees earth and earth sees heaven,
- How I am galled,--mightst bespice a cup,
- To give mine enemy a lasting wink;
- Which draught to me were cordial.
- CAMILLO:
- Sir, my lord,
- I could do this, and that with no rash potion,
- But with a lingering dram that should not work
- Maliciously like poison: but I cannot
- Believe this crack to be in my dread mistress,
- So sovereignly being honourable.
- I have loved thee,--
- LEONTES:
- Make that thy question, and go rot!
- Dost think I am so muddy, so unsettled,
- To appoint myself in this vexation, sully
- The purity and whiteness of my sheets,
- Which to preserve is sleep, which being spotted
- Is goads, thorns, nettles, tails of wasps,
- Give scandal to the blood o' the prince my son,
- Who I do think is mine and love as mine,
- Without ripe moving to't? Would I do this?
- Could man so blench?
- CAMILLO:
- I must believe you, sir:
- I do; and will fetch off Bohemia for't;
- Provided that, when he's removed, your highness
- Will take again your queen as yours at first,
- Even for your son's sake; and thereby for sealing
- The injury of tongues in courts and kingdoms
- Known and allied to yours.
- LEONTES:
- Thou dost advise me
- Even so as I mine own course have set down:
- I'll give no blemish to her honour, none.
- CAMILLO:
- My lord,
- Go then; and with a countenance as clear
- As friendship wears at feasts, keep with Bohemia
- And with your queen. I am his cupbearer:
- If from me he have wholesome beverage,
- Account me not your servant.
- LEONTES:
- This is all:
- Do't and thou hast the one half of my heart;
- Do't not, thou split'st thine own.
- CAMILLO:
- I'll do't, my lord.
- LEONTES:
- I will seem friendly, as thou hast advised me.
- CAMILLO:
- O miserable lady! But, for me,
- What case stand I in? I must be the poisoner
- Of good Polixenes; and my ground to do't
- Is the obedience to a master, one
- Who in rebellion with himself will have
- All that are his so too. To do this deed,
- Promotion follows. If I could find example
- Of thousands that had struck anointed kings
- And flourish'd after, I'ld not do't; but since
- Nor brass nor stone nor parchment bears not one,
- Let villany itself forswear't. I must
- Forsake the court: to do't, or no, is certain
- To me a break-neck. Happy star, reign now!
- Here comes Bohemia.
- POLIXENES:
- This is strange: methinks
- My favour here begins to warp. Not speak?
- Good day, Camillo.
- CAMILLO:
- Hail, most royal sir!
- POLIXENES:
- What is the news i' the court?
- CAMILLO:
- None rare, my lord.
- POLIXENES:
- The king hath on him such a countenance
- As he had lost some province and a region
- Loved as he loves himself: even now I met him
- With customary compliment; when he,
- Wafting his eyes to the contrary and falling
- A lip of much contempt, speeds from me and
- So leaves me to consider what is breeding
- That changeth thus his manners.
- CAMILLO:
- I dare not know, my lord.
- POLIXENES:
- How! dare not! do not. Do you know, and dare not?
- Be intelligent to me: 'tis thereabouts;
- For, to yourself, what you do know, you must.
- And cannot say, you dare not. Good Camillo,
- Your changed complexions are to me a mirror
- Which shows me mine changed too; for I must be
- A party in this alteration, finding
- Myself thus alter'd with 't.
- CAMILLO:
- There is a sickness
- Which puts some of us in distemper, but
- I cannot name the disease; and it is caught
- Of you that yet are well.
- POLIXENES:
- How! caught of me!
- Make me not sighted like the basilisk:
- I have look'd on thousands, who have sped the better
- By my regard, but kill'd none so. Camillo,--
- As you are certainly a gentleman, thereto
- Clerk-like experienced, which no less adorns
- Our gentry than our parents' noble names,
- In whose success we are gentle,--I beseech you,
- If you know aught which does behove my knowledge
- Thereof to be inform'd, imprison't not
- In ignorant concealment.
- CAMILLO:
- I may not answer.
- POLIXENES:
- A sickness caught of me, and yet I well!
- I must be answer'd. Dost thou hear, Camillo,
- I conjure thee, by all the parts of man
- Which honour does acknowledge, whereof the least
- Is not this suit of mine, that thou declare
- What incidency thou dost guess of harm
- Is creeping toward me; how far off, how near;
- Which way to be prevented, if to be;
- If not, how best to bear it.
- CAMILLO:
- Sir, I will tell you;
- Since I am charged in honour and by him
- That I think honourable: therefore mark my counsel,
- Which must be even as swiftly follow'd as
- I mean to utter it, or both yourself and me
- Cry lost, and so good night!
- POLIXENES:
- On, good Camillo.
- CAMILLO:
- I am appointed him to murder you.
- POLIXENES:
- By whom, Camillo?
- CAMILLO:
- By the king.
- POLIXENES:
- For what?
- CAMILLO:
- He thinks, nay, with all confidence he swears,
- As he had seen't or been an instrument
- To vice you to't, that you have touch'd his queen
- Forbiddenly.
- POLIXENES:
- O, then my best blood turn
- To an infected jelly and my name
- Be yoked with his that did betray the Best!
- Turn then my freshest reputation to
- A savour that may strike the dullest nostril
- Where I arrive, and my approach be shunn'd,
- Nay, hated too, worse than the great'st infection
- That e'er was heard or read!
- CAMILLO:
- Swear his thought over
- By each particular star in heaven and
- By all their influences, you may as well
- Forbid the sea for to obey the moon
- As or by oath remove or counsel shake
- The fabric of his folly, whose foundation
- Is piled upon his faith and will continue
- The standing of his body.
- POLIXENES:
- How should this grow?
- CAMILLO:
- I know not: but I am sure 'tis safer to
- Avoid what's grown than question how 'tis born.
- If therefore you dare trust my honesty,
- That lies enclosed in this trunk which you
- Shall bear along impawn'd, away to-night!
- Your followers I will whisper to the business,
- And will by twos and threes at several posterns
- Clear them o' the city. For myself, I'll put
- My fortunes to your service, which are here
- By this discovery lost. Be not uncertain;
- For, by the honour of my parents, I
- Have utter'd truth: which if you seek to prove,
- I dare not stand by; nor shall you be safer
- Than one condemn'd by the king's own mouth, thereon
- His execution sworn.
- POLIXENES:
- I do believe thee:
- I saw his heart in 's face. Give me thy hand:
- Be pilot to me and thy places shall
- Still neighbour mine. My ships are ready and
- My people did expect my hence departure
- Two days ago. This jealousy
- Is for a precious creature: as she's rare,
- Must it be great, and as his person's mighty,
- Must it be violent, and as he does conceive
- He is dishonour'd by a man which ever
- Profess'd to him, why, his revenges must
- In that be made more bitter. Fear o'ershades me:
- Good expedition be my friend, and comfort
- The gracious queen, part of his theme, but nothing
- Of his ill-ta'en suspicion! Come, Camillo;
- I will respect thee as a father if
- Thou bear'st my life off hence: let us avoid.
- CAMILLO:
- It is in mine authority to command
- The keys of all the posterns: please your highness
- To take the urgent hour. Come, sir, away.
- HERMIONE:
- Take the boy to you: he so troubles me,
- 'Tis past enduring.
- First Lady:
- Come, my gracious lord,
- Shall I be your playfellow?
- MAMILLIUS:
- No, I'll none of you.
- First Lady:
- Why, my sweet lord?
- MAMILLIUS:
- You'll kiss me hard and speak to me as if
- I were a baby still. I love you better.
- Second Lady:
- And why so, my lord?
- MAMILLIUS:
- Not for because
- Your brows are blacker; yet black brows, they say,
- Become some women best, so that there be not
- Too much hair there, but in a semicircle
- Or a half-moon made with a pen.
- Second Lady:
- Who taught you this?
- MAMILLIUS:
- I learnt it out of women's faces. Pray now
- What colour are your eyebrows?
- First Lady:
- Blue, my lord.
- MAMILLIUS:
- Nay, that's a mock: I have seen a lady's nose
- That has been blue, but not her eyebrows.
- First Lady:
- Hark ye;
- The queen your mother rounds apace: we shall
- Present our services to a fine new prince
- One of these days; and then you'ld wanton with us,
- If we would have you.
- Second Lady:
- She is spread of late
- Into a goodly bulk: good time encounter her!
- HERMIONE:
- What wisdom stirs amongst you? Come, sir, now
- I am for you again: pray you, sit by us,
- And tell 's a tale.
- MAMILLIUS:
- Merry or sad shall't be?
- HERMIONE:
- As merry as you will.
- MAMILLIUS:
- A sad tale's best for winter: I have one
- Of sprites and goblins.
- HERMIONE:
- Let's have that, good sir.
- Come on, sit down: come on, and do your best
- To fright me with your sprites; you're powerful at it.
- MAMILLIUS:
- There was a man--
- HERMIONE:
- Nay, come, sit down; then on.
- MAMILLIUS:
- Dwelt by a churchyard: I will tell it softly;
- Yond crickets shall not hear it.
- HERMIONE:
- Come on, then,
- And give't me in mine ear.
- LEONTES:
- Was he met there? his train? Camillo with him?
- First Lord:
- Behind the tuft of pines I met them; never
- Saw I men scour so on their way: I eyed them
- Even to their ships.
- LEONTES:
- How blest am I
- In my just censure, in my true opinion!
- Alack, for lesser knowledge! how accursed
- In being so blest! There may be in the cup
- A spider steep'd, and one may drink, depart,
- And yet partake no venom, for his knowledge
- Is not infected: but if one present
- The abhorr'd ingredient to his eye, make known
- How he hath drunk, he cracks his gorge, his sides,
- With violent hefts. I have drunk,
- and seen the spider.
- Camillo was his help in this, his pander:
- There is a plot against my life, my crown;
- All's true that is mistrusted: that false villain
- Whom I employ'd was pre-employ'd by him:
- He has discover'd my design, and I
- Remain a pinch'd thing; yea, a very trick
- For them to play at will. How came the posterns
- So easily open?
- First Lord:
- By his great authority;
- Which often hath no less prevail'd than so
- On your command.
- LEONTES:
- I know't too well.
- Give me the boy: I am glad you did not nurse him:
- Though he does bear some signs of me, yet you
- Have too much blood in him.
- HERMIONE:
- What is this? sport?
- LEONTES:
- Bear the boy hence; he shall not come about her;
- Away with him! and let her sport herself
- With that she's big with; for 'tis Polixenes
- Has made thee swell thus.
- HERMIONE:
- But I'ld say he had not,
- And I'll be sworn you would believe my saying,
- Howe'er you lean to the nayward.
- LEONTES:
- You, my lords,
- Look on her, mark her well; be but about
- To say 'she is a goodly lady,' and
- The justice of your bearts will thereto add
- 'Tis pity she's not honest, honourable:'
- Praise her but for this her without-door form,
- Which on my faith deserves high speech, and straight
- The shrug, the hum or ha, these petty brands
- That calumny doth use--O, I am out--
- That mercy does, for calumny will sear
- Virtue itself: these shrugs, these hums and ha's,
- When you have said 'she's goodly,' come between
- Ere you can say 'she's honest:' but be 't known,
- From him that has most cause to grieve it should be,
- She's an adulteress.
- HERMIONE:
- Should a villain say so,
- The most replenish'd villain in the world,
- He were as much more villain: you, my lord,
- Do but mistake.
- LEONTES:
- You have mistook, my lady,
- Polixenes for Leontes: O thou thing!
- Which I'll not call a creature of thy place,
- Lest barbarism, making me the precedent,
- Should a like language use to all degrees
- And mannerly distinguishment leave out
- Betwixt the prince and beggar: I have said
- She's an adulteress; I have said with whom:
- More, she's a traitor and Camillo is
- A federary with her, and one that knows
- What she should shame to know herself
- But with her most vile principal, that she's
- A bed-swerver, even as bad as those
- That vulgars give bold'st titles, ay, and privy
- To this their late escape.
- HERMIONE:
- No, by my life.
- Privy to none of this. How will this grieve you,
- When you shall come to clearer knowledge, that
- You thus have publish'd me! Gentle my lord,
- You scarce can right me throughly then to say
- You did mistake.
- LEONTES:
- No; if I mistake
- In those foundations which I build upon,
- The centre is not big enough to bear
- A school-boy's top. Away with her! to prison!
- He who shall speak for her is afar off guilty
- But that he speaks.
- HERMIONE:
- There's some ill planet reigns:
- I must be patient till the heavens look
- With an aspect more favourable. Good my lords,
- I am not prone to weeping, as our sex
- Commonly are; the want of which vain dew
- Perchance shall dry your pities: but I have
- That honourable grief lodged here which burns
- Worse than tears drown: beseech you all, my lords,
- With thoughts so qualified as your charities
- Shall best instruct you, measure me; and so
- The king's will be perform'd!
- LEONTES:
- Shall I be heard?
- HERMIONE:
- Who is't that goes with me? Beseech your highness,
- My women may be with me; for you see
- My plight requires it. Do not weep, good fools;
- There is no cause: when you shall know your mistress
- Has deserved prison, then abound in tears
- As I come out: this action I now go on
- Is for my better grace. Adieu, my lord:
- I never wish'd to see you sorry; now
- I trust I shall. My women, come; you have leave.
- LEONTES:
- Go, do our bidding; hence!
- First Lord:
- Beseech your highness, call the queen again.
- ANTIGONUS:
- Be certain what you do, sir, lest your justice
- Prove violence; in the which three great ones suffer,
- Yourself, your queen, your son.
- First Lord:
- For her, my lord,
- I dare my life lay down and will do't, sir,
- Please you to accept it, that the queen is spotless
- I' the eyes of heaven and to you; I mean,
- In this which you accuse her.
- ANTIGONUS:
- If it prove
- She's otherwise, I'll keep my stables where
- I lodge my wife; I'll go in couples with her;
- Than when I feel and see her no farther trust her;
- For every inch of woman in the world,
- Ay, every dram of woman's flesh is false, If she be.
- LEONTES:
- Hold your peaces.
- First Lord:
- Good my lord,--
- ANTIGONUS:
- It is for you we speak, not for ourselves:
- You are abused and by some putter-on
- That will be damn'd for't; would I knew the villain,
- I would land-damn him. Be she honour-flaw'd,
- I have three daughters; the eldest is eleven
- The second and the third, nine, and some five;
- If this prove true, they'll pay for't:
- by mine honour,
- I'll geld 'em all; fourteen they shall not see,
- To bring false generations: they are co-heirs;
- And I had rather glib myself than they
- Should not produce fair issue.
- LEONTES:
- Cease; no more.
- You smell this business with a sense as cold
- As is a dead man's nose: but I do see't and feel't
- As you feel doing thus; and see withal
- The instruments that feel.
- ANTIGONUS:
- If it be so,
- We need no grave to bury honesty:
- There's not a grain of it the face to sweeten
- Of the whole dungy earth.
- LEONTES:
- What! lack I credit?
- First Lord:
- I had rather you did lack than I, my lord,
- Upon this ground; and more it would content me
- To have her honour true than your suspicion,
- Be blamed for't how you might.
- LEONTES:
- Why, what need we
- Commune with you of this, but rather follow
- Our forceful instigation? Our prerogative
- Calls not your counsels, but our natural goodness
- Imparts this; which if you, or stupefied
- Or seeming so in skill, cannot or will not
- Relish a truth like us, inform yourselves
- We need no more of your advice: the matter,
- The loss, the gain, the ordering on't, is all
- Properly ours.
- ANTIGONUS:
- And I wish, my liege,
- You had only in your silent judgment tried it,
- Without more overture.
- LEONTES:
- How could that be?
- Either thou art most ignorant by age,
- Or thou wert born a fool. Camillo's flight,
- Added to their familiarity,
- Which was as gross as ever touch'd conjecture,
- That lack'd sight only, nought for approbation
- But only seeing, all other circumstances
- Made up to the deed, doth push on this proceeding:
- Yet, for a greater confirmation,
- For in an act of this importance 'twere
- Most piteous to be wild, I have dispatch'd in post
- To sacred Delphos, to Apollo's temple,
- Cleomenes and Dion, whom you know
- Of stuff'd sufficiency: now from the oracle
- They will bring all; whose spiritual counsel had,
- Shall stop or spur me. Have I done well?
- First Lord:
- Well done, my lord.
- LEONTES:
- Though I am satisfied and need no more
- Than what I know, yet shall the oracle
- Give rest to the minds of others, such as he
- Whose ignorant credulity will not
- Come up to the truth. So have we thought it good
- From our free person she should be confined,
- Lest that the treachery of the two fled hence
- Be left her to perform. Come, follow us;
- We are to speak in public; for this business
- Will raise us all.
- ANTIGONUS:
- PAULINA:
- The keeper of the prison, call to him;
- let him have knowledge who I am.
- Good lady,
- No court in Europe is too good for thee;
- What dost thou then in prison?
- Now, good sir,
- You know me, do you not?
- Gaoler:
- For a worthy lady
- And one whom much I honour.
- PAULINA:
- Pray you then,
- Conduct me to the queen.
- Gaoler:
- I may not, madam:
- To the contrary I have express commandment.
- PAULINA:
- Here's ado,
- To lock up honesty and honour from
- The access of gentle visitors!
- Is't lawful, pray you,
- To see her women? any of them? Emilia?
- Gaoler:
- So please you, madam,
- To put apart these your attendants, I
- Shall bring Emilia forth.
- PAULINA:
- I pray now, call her.
- Withdraw yourselves.
- Gaoler:
- And, madam,
- I must be present at your conference.
- PAULINA:
- Well, be't so, prithee.
- Here's such ado to make no stain a stain
- As passes colouring.
- Dear gentlewoman,
- How fares our gracious lady?
- EMILIA:
- As well as one so great and so forlorn
- May hold together: on her frights and griefs,
- Which never tender lady hath born greater,
- She is something before her time deliver'd.
- PAULINA:
- A boy?
- EMILIA:
- A daughter, and a goodly babe,
- Lusty and like to live: the queen receives
- Much comfort in't; says 'My poor prisoner,
- I am innocent as you.'
- PAULINA:
- I dare be sworn
- These dangerous unsafe lunes i' the king,
- beshrew them!
- He must be told on't, and he shall: the office
- Becomes a woman best; I'll take't upon me:
- If I prove honey-mouth'd let my tongue blister
- And never to my red-look'd anger be
- The trumpet any more. Pray you, Emilia,
- Commend my best obedience to the queen:
- If she dares trust me with her little babe,
- I'll show't the king and undertake to be
- Her advocate to the loud'st. We do not know
- How he may soften at the sight o' the child:
- The silence often of pure innocence
- Persuades when speaking fails.
- EMILIA:
- Most worthy madam,
- Your honour and your goodness is so evident
- That your free undertaking cannot miss
- A thriving issue: there is no lady living
- So meet for this great errand. Please your ladyship
- To visit the next room, I'll presently
- Acquaint the queen of your most noble offer;
- Who but to-day hammer'd of this design,
- But durst not tempt a minister of honour,
- Lest she should be denied.
- PAULINA:
- Tell her, Emilia.
- I'll use that tongue I have: if wit flow from't
- As boldness from my bosom, let 't not be doubted
- I shall do good.
- EMILIA:
- Now be you blest for it!
- I'll to the queen: please you,
- come something nearer.
- Gaoler:
- Madam, if't please the queen to send the babe,
- I know not what I shall incur to pass it,
- Having no warrant.
- PAULINA:
- You need not fear it, sir:
- This child was prisoner to the womb and is
- By law and process of great nature thence
- Freed and enfranchised, not a party to
- The anger of the king nor guilty of,
- If any be, the trespass of the queen.
- Gaoler:
- I do believe it.
- PAULINA:
- Do not you fear: upon mine honour,
- I will stand betwixt you and danger.
- LEONTES:
- Nor night nor day no rest: it is but weakness
- To bear the matter thus; mere weakness. If
- The cause were not in being,--part o' the cause,
- She the adulteress; for the harlot king
- Is quite beyond mine arm, out of the blank
- And level of my brain, plot-proof; but she
- I can hook to me: say that she were gone,
- Given to the fire, a moiety of my rest
- Might come to me again. Who's there?
- First Servant:
- My lord?
- LEONTES:
- How does the boy?
- First Servant:
- He took good rest to-night;
- 'Tis hoped his sickness is discharged.
- LEONTES:
- To see his nobleness!
- Conceiving the dishonour of his mother,
- He straight declined, droop'd, took it deeply,
- Fasten'd and fix'd the shame on't in himself,
- Threw off his spirit, his appetite, his sleep,
- And downright languish'd. Leave me solely: go,
- See how he fares.
- Fie, fie! no thought of him:
- The thought of my revenges that way
- Recoil upon me: in himself too mighty,
- And in his parties, his alliance; let him be
- Until a time may serve: for present vengeance,
- Take it on her. Camillo and Polixenes
- Laugh at me, make their pastime at my sorrow:
- They should not laugh if I could reach them, nor
- Shall she within my power.
- First Lord:
- You must not enter.
- PAULINA:
- Nay, rather, good my lords, be second to me:
- Fear you his tyrannous passion more, alas,
- Than the queen's life? a gracious innocent soul,
- More free than he is jealous.
- ANTIGONUS:
- That's enough.
- Second Servant:
- Madam, he hath not slept tonight; commanded
- None should come at him.
- PAULINA:
- Not so hot, good sir:
- I come to bring him sleep. 'Tis such as you,
- That creep like shadows by him and do sigh
- At each his needless heavings, such as you
- Nourish the cause of his awaking: I
- Do come with words as medicinal as true,
- Honest as either, to purge him of that humour
- That presses him from sleep.
- LEONTES:
- What noise there, ho?
- PAULINA:
- No noise, my lord; but needful conference
- About some gossips for your highness.
- LEONTES:
- How!
- Away with that audacious lady! Antigonus,
- I charged thee that she should not come about me:
- I knew she would.
- ANTIGONUS:
- I told her so, my lord,
- On your displeasure's peril and on mine,
- She should not visit you.
- LEONTES:
- What, canst not rule her?
- PAULINA:
- From all dishonesty he can: in this,
- Unless he take the course that you have done,
- Commit me for committing honour, trust it,
- He shall not rule me.
- ANTIGONUS:
- La you now, you hear:
- When she will take the rein I let her run;
- But she'll not stumble.
- PAULINA:
- Good my liege, I come;
- And, I beseech you, hear me, who profess
- Myself your loyal servant, your physician,
- Your most obedient counsellor, yet that dare
- Less appear so in comforting your evils,
- Than such as most seem yours: I say, I come
- From your good queen.
- LEONTES:
- Good queen!
- PAULINA:
- Good queen, my lord,
- Good queen; I say good queen;
- And would by combat make her good, so were I
- A man, the worst about you.
- LEONTES:
- Force her hence.
- PAULINA:
- Let him that makes but trifles of his eyes
- First hand me: on mine own accord I'll off;
- But first I'll do my errand. The good queen,
- For she is good, hath brought you forth a daughter;
- Here 'tis; commends it to your blessing.
- LEONTES:
- Out!
- A mankind witch! Hence with her, out o' door:
- A most intelligencing bawd!
- PAULINA:
- Not so:
- I am as ignorant in that as you
- In so entitling me, and no less honest
- Than you are mad; which is enough, I'll warrant,
- As this world goes, to pass for honest.
- LEONTES:
- Traitors!
- Will you not push her out? Give her the bastard.
- Thou dotard! thou art woman-tired, unroosted
- By thy dame Partlet here. Take up the bastard;
- Take't up, I say; give't to thy crone.
- PAULINA:
- For ever
- Unvenerable be thy hands, if thou
- Takest up the princess by that forced baseness
- Which he has put upon't!
- LEONTES:
- He dreads his wife.
- PAULINA:
- So I would you did; then 'twere past all doubt
- You'ld call your children yours.
- LEONTES:
- A nest of traitors!
- ANTIGONUS:
- I am none, by this good light.
- PAULINA:
- Nor I, nor any
- But one that's here, and that's himself, for he
- The sacred honour of himself, his queen's,
- His hopeful son's, his babe's, betrays to slander,
- Whose sting is sharper than the sword's;
- and will not--
- For, as the case now stands, it is a curse
- He cannot be compell'd to't--once remove
- The root of his opinion, which is rotten
- As ever oak or stone was sound.
- LEONTES:
- A callat
- Of boundless tongue, who late hath beat her husband
- And now baits me! This brat is none of mine;
- It is the issue of Polixenes:
- Hence with it, and together with the dam
- Commit them to the fire!
- PAULINA:
- It is yours;
- And, might we lay the old proverb to your charge,
- So like you, 'tis the worse. Behold, my lords,
- Although the print be little, the whole matter
- And copy of the father, eye, nose, lip,
- The trick of's frown, his forehead, nay, the valley,
- The pretty dimples of his chin and cheek,
- His smiles,
- The very mould and frame of hand, nail, finger:
- And thou, good goddess Nature, which hast made it
- So like to him that got it, if thou hast
- The ordering of the mind too, 'mongst all colours
- No yellow in't, lest she suspect, as he does,
- Her children not her husband's!
- LEONTES:
- A gross hag
- And, lozel, thou art worthy to be hang'd,
- That wilt not stay her tongue.
- ANTIGONUS:
- Hang all the husbands
- That cannot do that feat, you'll leave yourself
- Hardly one subject.
- LEONTES:
- Once more, take her hence.
- PAULINA:
- A most unworthy and unnatural lord
- Can do no more.
- LEONTES:
- I'll ha' thee burnt.
- PAULINA:
- I care not:
- It is an heretic that makes the fire,
- Not she which burns in't. I'll not call you tyrant;
- But this most cruel usage of your queen,
- Not able to produce more accusation
- Than your own weak-hinged fancy, something savours
- Of tyranny and will ignoble make you,
- Yea, scandalous to the world.
- LEONTES:
- On your allegiance,
- Out of the chamber with her! Were I a tyrant,
- Where were her life? she durst not call me so,
- If she did know me one. Away with her!
- PAULINA:
- I pray you, do not push me; I'll be gone.
- Look to your babe, my lord; 'tis yours:
- Jove send her
- A better guiding spirit! What needs these hands?
- You, that are thus so tender o'er his follies,
- Will never do him good, not one of you.
- So, so: farewell; we are gone.
- LEONTES:
- Thou, traitor, hast set on thy wife to this.
- My child? away with't! Even thou, that hast
- A heart so tender o'er it, take it hence
- And see it instantly consumed with fire;
- Even thou and none but thou. Take it up straight:
- Within this hour bring me word 'tis done,
- And by good testimony, or I'll seize thy life,
- With what thou else call'st thine. If thou refuse
- And wilt encounter with my wrath, say so;
- The bastard brains with these my proper hands
- Shall I dash out. Go, take it to the fire;
- For thou set'st on thy wife.
- ANTIGONUS:
- I did not, sir:
- These lords, my noble fellows, if they please,
- Can clear me in't.
- Lords:
- We can: my royal liege,
- He is not guilty of her coming hither.
- LEONTES:
- You're liars all.
- First Lord:
- Beseech your highness, give us better credit:
- We have always truly served you, and beseech you
- So to esteem of us, and on our knees we beg,
- As recompense of our dear services
- Past and to come, that you do change this purpose,
- Which being so horrible, so bloody, must
- Lead on to some foul issue: we all kneel.
- LEONTES:
- I am a feather for each wind that blows:
- Shall I live on to see this bastard kneel
- And call me father? better burn it now
- Than curse it then. But be it; let it live.
- It shall not neither. You, sir, come you hither;
- You that have been so tenderly officious
- With Lady Margery, your midwife there,
- To save this bastard's life,--for 'tis a bastard,
- So sure as this beard's grey,
- --what will you adventure
- To save this brat's life?
- ANTIGONUS:
- Any thing, my lord,
- That my ability may undergo
- And nobleness impose: at least thus much:
- I'll pawn the little blood which I have left
- To save the innocent: any thing possible.
- LEONTES:
- It shall be possible. Swear by this sword
- Thou wilt perform my bidding.
- ANTIGONUS:
- I will, my lord.
- LEONTES:
- Mark and perform it, see'st thou! for the fail
- Of any point in't shall not only be
- Death to thyself but to thy lewd-tongued wife,
- Whom for this time we pardon. We enjoin thee,
- As thou art liege-man to us, that thou carry
- This female bastard hence and that thou bear it
- To some remote and desert place quite out
- Of our dominions, and that there thou leave it,
- Without more mercy, to its own protection
- And favour of the climate. As by strange fortune
- It came to us, I do in justice charge thee,
- On thy soul's peril and thy body's torture,
- That thou commend it strangely to some place
- Where chance may nurse or end it. Take it up.
- ANTIGONUS:
- I swear to do this, though a present death
- Had been more merciful. Come on, poor babe:
- Some powerful spirit instruct the kites and ravens
- To be thy nurses! Wolves and bears, they say
- Casting their savageness aside have done
- Like offices of pity. Sir, be prosperous
- In more than this deed does require! And blessing
- Against this cruelty fight on thy side,
- Poor thing, condemn'd to loss!
- LEONTES:
- No, I'll not rear
- Another's issue.
- Servant:
- Please your highness, posts
- From those you sent to the oracle are come
- An hour since: Cleomenes and Dion,
- Being well arrived from Delphos, are both landed,
- Hasting to the court.
- First Lord:
- So please you, sir, their speed
- Hath been beyond account.
- LEONTES:
- Twenty-three days
- They have been absent: 'tis good speed; foretells
- The great Apollo suddenly will have
- The truth of this appear. Prepare you, lords;
- Summon a session, that we may arraign
- Our most disloyal lady, for, as she hath
- Been publicly accused, so shall she have
- A just and open trial. While she lives
- My heart will be a burthen to me. Leave me,
- And think upon my bidding.
- CLEOMENES:
- The climate's delicate, the air most sweet,
- Fertile the isle, the temple much surpassing
- The common praise it bears.
- DION:
- I shall report,
- For most it caught me, the celestial habits,
- Methinks I so should term them, and the reverence
- Of the grave wearers. O, the sacrifice!
- How ceremonious, solemn and unearthly
- It was i' the offering!
- CLEOMENES:
- But of all, the burst
- And the ear-deafening voice o' the oracle,
- Kin to Jove's thunder, so surprised my sense.
- That I was nothing.
- DION:
- If the event o' the journey
- Prove as successful to the queen,--O be't so!--
- As it hath been to us rare, pleasant, speedy,
- The time is worth the use on't.
- CLEOMENES:
- Great Apollo
- Turn all to the best! These proclamations,
- So forcing faults upon Hermione,
- I little like.
- DION:
- The violent carriage of it
- Will clear or end the business: when the oracle,
- Thus by Apollo's great divine seal'd up,
- Shall the contents discover, something rare
- Even then will rush to knowledge. Go: fresh horses!
- And gracious be the issue!
- LEONTES:
- This sessions, to our great grief we pronounce,
- Even pushes 'gainst our heart: the party tried
- The daughter of a king, our wife, and one
- Of us too much beloved. Let us be clear'd
- Of being tyrannous, since we so openly
- Proceed in justice, which shall have due course,
- Even to the guilt or the purgation.
- Produce the prisoner.
- Officer:
- It is his highness' pleasure that the queen
- Appear in person here in court. Silence!
- LEONTES:
- Read the indictment.
- Officer:
- HERMIONE:
- Since what I am to say must be but that
- Which contradicts my accusation and
- The testimony on my part no other
- But what comes from myself, it shall scarce boot me
- To say 'not guilty:' mine integrity
- Being counted falsehood, shall, as I express it,
- Be so received. But thus: if powers divine
- Behold our human actions, as they do,
- I doubt not then but innocence shall make
- False accusation blush and tyranny
- Tremble at patience. You, my lord, best know,
- Who least will seem to do so, my past life
- Hath been as continent, as chaste, as true,
- As I am now unhappy; which is more
- Than history can pattern, though devised
- And play'd to take spectators. For behold me
- A fellow of the royal bed, which owe
- A moiety of the throne a great king's daughter,
- The mother to a hopeful prince, here standing
- To prate and talk for life and honour 'fore
- Who please to come and hear. For life, I prize it
- As I weigh grief, which I would spare: for honour,
- 'Tis a derivative from me to mine,
- And only that I stand for. I appeal
- To your own conscience, sir, before Polixenes
- Came to your court, how I was in your grace,
- How merited to be so; since he came,
- With what encounter so uncurrent I
- Have strain'd to appear thus: if one jot beyond
- The bound of honour, or in act or will
- That way inclining, harden'd be the hearts
- Of all that hear me, and my near'st of kin
- Cry fie upon my grave!
- LEONTES:
- I ne'er heard yet
- That any of these bolder vices wanted
- Less impudence to gainsay what they did
- Than to perform it first.
- HERMIONE:
- That's true enough;
- Through 'tis a saying, sir, not due to me.
- LEONTES:
- You will not own it.
- HERMIONE:
- More than mistress of
- Which comes to me in name of fault, I must not
- At all acknowledge. For Polixenes,
- With whom I am accused, I do confess
- I loved him as in honour he required,
- With such a kind of love as might become
- A lady like me, with a love even such,
- So and no other, as yourself commanded:
- Which not to have done I think had been in me
- Both disobedience and ingratitude
- To you and toward your friend, whose love had spoke,
- Even since it could speak, from an infant, freely
- That it was yours. Now, for conspiracy,
- I know not how it tastes; though it be dish'd
- For me to try how: all I know of it
- Is that Camillo was an honest man;
- And why he left your court, the gods themselves,
- Wotting no more than I, are ignorant.
- LEONTES:
- You knew of his departure, as you know
- What you have underta'en to do in's absence.
- HERMIONE:
- Sir,
- You speak a language that I understand not:
- My life stands in the level of your dreams,
- Which I'll lay down.
- LEONTES:
- Your actions are my dreams;
- You had a bastard by Polixenes,
- And I but dream'd it. As you were past all shame,--
- Those of your fact are so--so past all truth:
- Which to deny concerns more than avails; for as
- Thy brat hath been cast out, like to itself,
- No father owning it,--which is, indeed,
- More criminal in thee than it,--so thou
- Shalt feel our justice, in whose easiest passage
- Look for no less than death.
- HERMIONE:
- Sir, spare your threats:
- The bug which you would fright me with I seek.
- To me can life be no commodity:
- The crown and comfort of my life, your favour,
- I do give lost; for I do feel it gone,
- But know not how it went. My second joy
- And first-fruits of my body, from his presence
- I am barr'd, like one infectious. My third comfort
- Starr'd most unluckily, is from my breast,
- The innocent milk in its most innocent mouth,
- Haled out to murder: myself on every post
- Proclaimed a strumpet: with immodest hatred
- The child-bed privilege denied, which 'longs
- To women of all fashion; lastly, hurried
- Here to this place, i' the open air, before
- I have got strength of limit. Now, my liege,
- Tell me what blessings I have here alive,
- That I should fear to die? Therefore proceed.
- But yet hear this: mistake me not; no life,
- I prize it not a straw, but for mine honour,
- Which I would free, if I shall be condemn'd
- Upon surmises, all proofs sleeping else
- But what your jealousies awake, I tell you
- 'Tis rigor and not law. Your honours all,
- I do refer me to the oracle:
- Apollo be my judge!
- First Lord:
- This your request
- Is altogether just: therefore bring forth,
- And in Apollos name, his oracle.
- HERMIONE:
- The Emperor of Russia was my father:
- O that he were alive, and here beholding
- His daughter's trial! that he did but see
- The flatness of my misery, yet with eyes
- Of pity, not revenge!
- Officer:
- You here shall swear upon this sword of justice,
- That you, Cleomenes and Dion, have
- Been both at Delphos, and from thence have brought
- The seal'd-up oracle, by the hand deliver'd
- Of great Apollo's priest; and that, since then,
- You have not dared to break the holy seal
- Nor read the secrets in't.
- CLEOMENES:
- All this we swear.
- LEONTES:
- Break up the seals and read.
- Officer:
- Lords:
- Now blessed be the great Apollo!
- HERMIONE:
- Praised!
- LEONTES:
- Hast thou read truth?
- Officer:
- Ay, my lord; even so
- As it is here set down.
- LEONTES:
- There is no truth at all i' the oracle:
- The sessions shall proceed: this is mere falsehood.
- Servant:
- My lord the king, the king!
- LEONTES:
- What is the business?
- Servant:
- O sir, I shall be hated to report it!
- The prince your son, with mere conceit and fear
- Of the queen's speed, is gone.
- LEONTES:
- How! gone!
- Servant:
- Is dead.
- LEONTES:
- Apollo's angry; and the heavens themselves
- Do strike at my injustice.
- How now there!
- PAULINA:
- This news is mortal to the queen: look down
- And see what death is doing.
- LEONTES:
- Take her hence:
- Her heart is but o'ercharged; she will recover:
- I have too much believed mine own suspicion:
- Beseech you, tenderly apply to her
- Some remedies for life.
- Apollo, pardon
- My great profaneness 'gainst thine oracle!
- I'll reconcile me to Polixenes,
- New woo my queen, recall the good Camillo,
- Whom I proclaim a man of truth, of mercy;
- For, being transported by my jealousies
- To bloody thoughts and to revenge, I chose
- Camillo for the minister to poison
- My friend Polixenes: which had been done,
- But that the good mind of Camillo tardied
- My swift command, though I with death and with
- Reward did threaten and encourage him,
- Not doing 't and being done: he, most humane
- And fill'd with honour, to my kingly guest
- Unclasp'd my practise, quit his fortunes here,
- Which you knew great, and to the hazard
- Of all encertainties himself commended,
- No richer than his honour: how he glisters
- Thorough my rust! and how his pity
- Does my deeds make the blacker!
- PAULINA:
- Woe the while!
- O, cut my lace, lest my heart, cracking it,
- Break too.
- First Lord:
- What fit is this, good lady?
- PAULINA:
- What studied torments, tyrant, hast for me?
- What wheels? racks? fires? what flaying? boiling?
- In leads or oils? what old or newer torture
- Must I receive, whose every word deserves
- To taste of thy most worst? Thy tyranny
- Together working with thy jealousies,
- Fancies too weak for boys, too green and idle
- For girls of nine, O, think what they have done
- And then run mad indeed, stark mad! for all
- Thy by-gone fooleries were but spices of it.
- That thou betray'dst Polixenes,'twas nothing;
- That did but show thee, of a fool, inconstant
- And damnable ingrateful: nor was't much,
- Thou wouldst have poison'd good Camillo's honour,
- To have him kill a king: poor trespasses,
- More monstrous standing by: whereof I reckon
- The casting forth to crows thy baby-daughter
- To be or none or little; though a devil
- Would have shed water out of fire ere done't:
- Nor is't directly laid to thee, the death
- Of the young prince, whose honourable thoughts,
- Thoughts high for one so tender, cleft the heart
- That could conceive a gross and foolish sire
- Blemish'd his gracious dam: this is not, no,
- Laid to thy answer: but the last,--O lords,
- When I have said, cry 'woe!' the queen, the queen,
- The sweet'st, dear'st creature's dead,
- and vengeance for't
- Not dropp'd down yet.
- First Lord:
- The higher powers forbid!
- PAULINA:
- I say she's dead; I'll swear't. If word nor oath
- Prevail not, go and see: if you can bring
- Tincture or lustre in her lip, her eye,
- Heat outwardly or breath within, I'll serve you
- As I would do the gods. But, O thou tyrant!
- Do not repent these things, for they are heavier
- Than all thy woes can stir; therefore betake thee
- To nothing but despair. A thousand knees
- Ten thousand years together, naked, fasting,
- Upon a barren mountain and still winter
- In storm perpetual, could not move the gods
- To look that way thou wert.
- LEONTES:
- Go on, go on
- Thou canst not speak too much; I have deserved
- All tongues to talk their bitterest.
- First Lord:
- Say no more:
- Howe'er the business goes, you have made fault
- I' the boldness of your speech.
- PAULINA:
- I am sorry for't:
- All faults I make, when I shall come to know them,
- I do repent. Alas! I have show'd too much
- The rashness of a woman: he is touch'd
- To the noble heart. What's gone and what's past help
- Should be past grief: do not receive affliction
- At my petition; I beseech you, rather
- Let me be punish'd, that have minded you
- Of what you should forget. Now, good my liege
- Sir, royal sir, forgive a foolish woman:
- The love I bore your queen--lo, fool again!--
- I'll speak of her no more, nor of your children;
- I'll not remember you of my own lord,
- Who is lost too: take your patience to you,
- And I'll say nothing.
- LEONTES:
- Thou didst speak but well
- When most the truth; which I receive much better
- Than to be pitied of thee. Prithee, bring me
- To the dead bodies of my queen and son:
- One grave shall be for both: upon them shall
- The causes of their death appear, unto
- Our shame perpetual. Once a day I'll visit
- The chapel where they lie, and tears shed there
- Shall be my recreation: so long as nature
- Will bear up with this exercise, so long
- I daily vow to use it. Come and lead me
- Unto these sorrows.
- ANTIGONUS:
- Thou art perfect then, our ship hath touch'd upon
- The deserts of Bohemia?
- Mariner:
- Ay, my lord: and fear
- We have landed in ill time: the skies look grimly
- And threaten present blusters. In my conscience,
- The heavens with that we have in hand are angry
- And frown upon 's.
- ANTIGONUS:
- Their sacred wills be done! Go, get aboard;
- Look to thy bark: I'll not be long before
- I call upon thee.
- Mariner:
- Make your best haste, and go not
- Too far i' the land: 'tis like to be loud weather;
- Besides, this place is famous for the creatures
- Of prey that keep upon't.
- ANTIGONUS:
- Go thou away:
- I'll follow instantly.
- Mariner:
- I am glad at heart
- To be so rid o' the business.
- ANTIGONUS:
- Come, poor babe:
- I have heard, but not believed,
- the spirits o' the dead
- May walk again: if such thing be, thy mother
- Appear'd to me last night, for ne'er was dream
- So like a waking. To me comes a creature,
- Sometimes her head on one side, some another;
- I never saw a vessel of like sorrow,
- So fill'd and so becoming: in pure white robes,
- Like very sanctity, she did approach
- My cabin where I lay; thrice bow'd before me,
- And gasping to begin some speech, her eyes
- Became two spouts: the fury spent, anon
- Did this break-from her: 'Good Antigonus,
- Since fate, against thy better disposition,
- Hath made thy person for the thrower-out
- Of my poor babe, according to thine oath,
- Places remote enough are in Bohemia,
- There weep and leave it crying; and, for the babe
- Is counted lost for ever, Perdita,
- I prithee, call't. For this ungentle business
- Put on thee by my lord, thou ne'er shalt see
- Thy wife Paulina more.' And so, with shrieks
- She melted into air. Affrighted much,
- I did in time collect myself and thought
- This was so and no slumber. Dreams are toys:
- Yet for this once, yea, superstitiously,
- I will be squared by this. I do believe
- Hermione hath suffer'd death, and that
- Apollo would, this being indeed the issue
- Of King Polixenes, it should here be laid,
- Either for life or death, upon the earth
- Of its right father. Blossom, speed thee well!
- There lie, and there thy character: there these;
- Which may, if fortune please, both breed thee, pretty,
- And still rest thine. The storm begins; poor wretch,
- That for thy mother's fault art thus exposed
- To loss and what may follow! Weep I cannot,
- But my heart bleeds; and most accursed am I
- To be by oath enjoin'd to this. Farewell!
- The day frowns more and more: thou'rt like to have
- A lullaby too rough: I never saw
- The heavens so dim by day. A savage clamour!
- Well may I get aboard! This is the chase:
- I am gone for ever.
- Shepherd:
- I would there were no age between sixteen and
- three-and-twenty, or that youth would sleep out the
- rest; for there is nothing in the between but
- getting wenches with child, wronging the ancientry,
- stealing, fighting--Hark you now! Would any but
- these boiled brains of nineteen and two-and-twenty
- hunt this weather? They have scared away two of my
- best sheep, which I fear the wolf will sooner find
- than the master: if any where I have them, 'tis by
- the seaside, browsing of ivy. Good luck, an't be thy
- will what have we here! Mercy on 's, a barne a very
- pretty barne! A boy or a child, I wonder? A
- pretty one; a very pretty one: sure, some 'scape:
- though I am not bookish, yet I can read
- waiting-gentlewoman in the 'scape. This has been
- some stair-work, some trunk-work, some
- behind-door-work: they were warmer that got this
- than the poor thing is here. I'll take it up for
- pity: yet I'll tarry till my son come; he hallooed
- but even now. Whoa, ho, hoa!
- Clown:
- Hilloa, loa!
- Shepherd:
- What, art so near? If thou'lt see a thing to talk
- on when thou art dead and rotten, come hither. What
- ailest thou, man?
- Clown:
- I have seen two such sights, by sea and by land!
- but I am not to say it is a sea, for it is now the
- sky: betwixt the firmament and it you cannot thrust
- a bodkin's point.
- Shepherd:
- Why, boy, how is it?
- Clown:
- I would you did but see how it chafes, how it rages,
- how it takes up the shore! but that's not the
- point. O, the most piteous cry of the poor souls!
- sometimes to see 'em, and not to see 'em; now the
- ship boring the moon with her main-mast, and anon
- swallowed with yest and froth, as you'ld thrust a
- cork into a hogshead. And then for the
- land-service, to see how the bear tore out his
- shoulder-bone; how he cried to me for help and said
- his name was Antigonus, a nobleman. But to make an
- end of the ship, to see how the sea flap-dragoned
- it: but, first, how the poor souls roared, and the
- sea mocked them; and how the poor gentleman roared
- and the bear mocked him, both roaring louder than
- the sea or weather.
- Shepherd:
- Name of mercy, when was this, boy?
- Clown:
- Now, now: I have not winked since I saw these
- sights: the men are not yet cold under water, nor
- the bear half dined on the gentleman: he's at it
- now.
- Shepherd:
- Would I had been by, to have helped the old man!
- Clown:
- I would you had been by the ship side, to have
- helped her: there your charity would have lacked footing.
- Shepherd:
- Heavy matters! heavy matters! but look thee here,
- boy. Now bless thyself: thou mettest with things
- dying, I with things newborn. Here's a sight for
- thee; look thee, a bearing-cloth for a squire's
- child! look thee here; take up, take up, boy;
- open't. So, let's see: it was told me I should be
- rich by the fairies. This is some changeling:
- open't. What's within, boy?
- Clown:
- You're a made old man: if the sins of your youth
- are forgiven you, you're well to live. Gold! all gold!
- Shepherd:
- This is fairy gold, boy, and 'twill prove so: up
- with't, keep it close: home, home, the next way.
- We are lucky, boy; and to be so still requires
- nothing but secrecy. Let my sheep go: come, good
- boy, the next way home.
- Clown:
- Go you the next way with your findings. I'll go see
- if the bear be gone from the gentleman and how much
- he hath eaten: they are never curst but when they
- are hungry: if there be any of him left, I'll bury
- it.
- Shepherd:
- That's a good deed. If thou mayest discern by that
- which is left of him what he is, fetch me to the
- sight of him.
- Clown:
- Marry, will I; and you shall help to put him i' the ground.
- Shepherd:
- 'Tis a lucky day, boy, and we'll do good deeds on't.
- Time:
- I, that please some, try all, both joy and terror
- Of good and bad, that makes and unfolds error,
- Now take upon me, in the name of Time,
- To use my wings. Impute it not a crime
- To me or my swift passage, that I slide
- O'er sixteen years and leave the growth untried
- Of that wide gap, since it is in my power
- To o'erthrow law and in one self-born hour
- To plant and o'erwhelm custom. Let me pass
- The same I am, ere ancient'st order was
- Or what is now received: I witness to
- The times that brought them in; so shall I do
- To the freshest things now reigning and make stale
- The glistering of this present, as my tale
- Now seems to it. Your patience this allowing,
- I turn my glass and give my scene such growing
- As you had slept between: Leontes leaving,
- The effects of his fond jealousies so grieving
- That he shuts up himself, imagine me,
- Gentle spectators, that I now may be
- In fair Bohemia, and remember well,
- I mentioned a son o' the king's, which Florizel
- I now name to you; and with speed so pace
- To speak of Perdita, now grown in grace
- Equal with wondering: what of her ensues
- I list not prophecy; but let Time's news
- Be known when 'tis brought forth.
- A shepherd's daughter,
- And what to her adheres, which follows after,
- Is the argument of Time. Of this allow,
- If ever you have spent time worse ere now;
- If never, yet that Time himself doth say
- He wishes earnestly you never may.
- POLIXENES:
- I pray thee, good Camillo, be no more importunate:
- 'tis a sickness denying thee any thing; a death to
- grant this.
- CAMILLO:
- It is fifteen years since I saw my country: though
- I have for the most part been aired abroad, I
- desire to lay my bones there. Besides, the penitent
- king, my master, hath sent for me; to whose feeling
- sorrows I might be some allay, or I o'erween to
- think so, which is another spur to my departure.
- POLIXENES:
- As thou lovest me, Camillo, wipe not out the rest of
- thy services by leaving me now: the need I have of
- thee thine own goodness hath made; better not to
- have had thee than thus to want thee: thou, having
- made me businesses which none without thee can
- sufficiently manage, must either stay to execute
- them thyself or take away with thee the very
- services thou hast done; which if I have not enough
- considered, as too much I cannot, to be more
- thankful to thee shall be my study, and my profit
- therein the heaping friendships. Of that fatal
- country, Sicilia, prithee speak no more; whose very
- naming punishes me with the remembrance of that
- penitent, as thou callest him, and reconciled king,
- my brother; whose loss of his most precious queen
- and children are even now to be afresh lamented.
- Say to me, when sawest thou the Prince Florizel, my
- son? Kings are no less unhappy, their issue not
- being gracious, than they are in losing them when
- they have approved their virtues.
- CAMILLO:
- Sir, it is three days since I saw the prince. What
- his happier affairs may be, are to me unknown: but I
- have missingly noted, he is of late much retired
- from court and is less frequent to his princely
- exercises than formerly he hath appeared.
- POLIXENES:
- I have considered so much, Camillo, and with some
- care; so far that I have eyes under my service which
- look upon his removedness; from whom I have this
- intelligence, that he is seldom from the house of a
- most homely shepherd; a man, they say, that from
- very nothing, and beyond the imagination of his
- neighbours, is grown into an unspeakable estate.
- CAMILLO:
- I have heard, sir, of such a man, who hath a
- daughter of most rare note: the report of her is
- extended more than can be thought to begin from such a cottage.
- POLIXENES:
- That's likewise part of my intelligence; but, I
- fear, the angle that plucks our son thither. Thou
- shalt accompany us to the place; where we will, not
- appearing what we are, have some question with the
- shepherd; from whose simplicity I think it not
- uneasy to get the cause of my son's resort thither.
- Prithee, be my present partner in this business, and
- lay aside the thoughts of Sicilia.
- CAMILLO:
- I willingly obey your command.
- POLIXENES:
- My best Camillo! We must disguise ourselves.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- When daffodils begin to peer,
- With heigh! the doxy over the dale,
- Why, then comes in the sweet o' the year;
- For the red blood reigns in the winter's pale.
- The white sheet bleaching on the hedge,
- With heigh! the sweet birds, O, how they sing!
- Doth set my pugging tooth on edge;
- For a quart of ale is a dish for a king.
- The lark, that tirra-lyra chants,
- With heigh! with heigh! the thrush and the jay,
- Are summer songs for me and my aunts,
- While we lie tumbling in the hay.
- I have served Prince Florizel and in my time
- wore three-pile; but now I am out of service:
- But shall I go mourn for that, my dear?
- The pale moon shines by night:
- And when I wander here and there,
- I then do most go right.
- If tinkers may have leave to live,
- And bear the sow-skin budget,
- Then my account I well may, give,
- And in the stocks avouch it.
- My traffic is sheets; when the kite builds, look to
- lesser linen. My father named me Autolycus; who
- being, as I am, littered under Mercury, was likewise
- a snapper-up of unconsidered trifles. With die and
- drab I purchased this caparison, and my revenue is
- the silly cheat. Gallows and knock are too powerful
- on the highway: beating and hanging are terrors to
- me: for the life to come, I sleep out the thought
- of it. A prize! a prize!
- Clown:
- Let me see: every 'leven wether tods; every tod
- yields pound and odd shilling; fifteen hundred
- shorn. what comes the wool to?
- AUTOLYCUS:
- Clown:
- I cannot do't without counters. Let me see; what am
- I to buy for our sheep-shearing feast? Three pound
- of sugar, five pound of currants, rice,--what will
- this sister of mine do with rice? But my father
- hath made her mistress of the feast, and she lays it
- on. She hath made me four and twenty nose-gays for
- the shearers, three-man-song-men all, and very good
- ones; but they are most of them means and bases; but
- one puritan amongst them, and he sings psalms to
- horn-pipes. I must have saffron to colour the warden
- pies; mace; dates?--none, that's out of my note;
- nutmegs, seven; a race or two of ginger, but that I
- may beg; four pound of prunes, and as many of
- raisins o' the sun.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- O that ever I was born!
- Clown:
- I' the name of me--
- AUTOLYCUS:
- O, help me, help me! pluck but off these rags; and
- then, death, death!
- Clown:
- Alack, poor soul! thou hast need of more rags to lay
- on thee, rather than have these off.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- O sir, the loathsomeness of them offends me more
- than the stripes I have received, which are mighty
- ones and millions.
- Clown:
- Alas, poor man! a million of beating may come to a
- great matter.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- I am robbed, sir, and beaten; my money and apparel
- ta'en from me, and these detestable things put upon
- me.
- Clown:
- What, by a horseman, or a footman?
- AUTOLYCUS:
- A footman, sweet sir, a footman.
- Clown:
- Indeed, he should be a footman by the garments he
- has left with thee: if this be a horseman's coat,
- it hath seen very hot service. Lend me thy hand,
- I'll help thee: come, lend me thy hand.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- O, good sir, tenderly, O!
- Clown:
- Alas, poor soul!
- AUTOLYCUS:
- O, good sir, softly, good sir! I fear, sir, my
- shoulder-blade is out.
- Clown:
- How now! canst stand?
- AUTOLYCUS:
- Clown:
- Dost lack any money? I have a little money for thee.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- No, good sweet sir; no, I beseech you, sir: I have
- a kinsman not past three quarters of a mile hence,
- unto whom I was going; I shall there have money, or
- any thing I want: offer me no money, I pray you;
- that kills my heart.
- Clown:
- What manner of fellow was he that robbed you?
- AUTOLYCUS:
- A fellow, sir, that I have known to go about with
- troll-my-dames; I knew him once a servant of the
- prince: I cannot tell, good sir, for which of his
- virtues it was, but he was certainly whipped out of the court.
- Clown:
- His vices, you would say; there's no virtue whipped
- out of the court: they cherish it to make it stay
- there; and yet it will no more but abide.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- Vices, I would say, sir. I know this man well: he
- hath been since an ape-bearer; then a
- process-server, a bailiff; then he compassed a
- motion of the Prodigal Son, and married a tinker's
- wife within a mile where my land and living lies;
- and, having flown over many knavish professions, he
- settled only in rogue: some call him Autolycus.
- Clown:
- Out upon him! prig, for my life, prig: he haunts
- wakes, fairs and bear-baitings.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- Very true, sir; he, sir, he; that's the rogue that
- put me into this apparel.
- Clown:
- Not a more cowardly rogue in all Bohemia: if you had
- but looked big and spit at him, he'ld have run.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- I must confess to you, sir, I am no fighter: I am
- false of heart that way; and that he knew, I warrant
- him.
- Clown:
- How do you now?
- AUTOLYCUS:
- Sweet sir, much better than I was; I can stand and
- walk: I will even take my leave of you, and pace
- softly towards my kinsman's.
- Clown:
- Shall I bring thee on the way?
- AUTOLYCUS:
- No, good-faced sir; no, sweet sir.
- Clown:
- Then fare thee well: I must go buy spices for our
- sheep-shearing.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- Prosper you, sweet sir!
- Your purse is not hot enough to purchase your spice.
- I'll be with you at your sheep-shearing too: if I
- make not this cheat bring out another and the
- shearers prove sheep, let me be unrolled and my name
- put in the book of virtue!
- Jog on, jog on, the foot-path way,
- And merrily hent the stile-a:
- A merry heart goes all the day,
- Your sad tires in a mile-a.
- FLORIZEL:
- These your unusual weeds to each part of you
- Do give a life: no shepherdess, but Flora
- Peering in April's front. This your sheep-shearing
- Is as a meeting of the petty gods,
- And you the queen on't.
- PERDITA:
- Sir, my gracious lord,
- To chide at your extremes it not becomes me:
- O, pardon, that I name them! Your high self,
- The gracious mark o' the land, you have obscured
- With a swain's wearing, and me, poor lowly maid,
- Most goddess-like prank'd up: but that our feasts
- In every mess have folly and the feeders
- Digest it with a custom, I should blush
- To see you so attired, sworn, I think,
- To show myself a glass.
- FLORIZEL:
- I bless the time
- When my good falcon made her flight across
- Thy father's ground.
- PERDITA:
- Now Jove afford you cause!
- To me the difference forges dread; your greatness
- Hath not been used to fear. Even now I tremble
- To think your father, by some accident,
- Should pass this way as you did: O, the Fates!
- How would he look, to see his work so noble
- Vilely bound up? What would he say? Or how
- Should I, in these my borrow'd flaunts, behold
- The sternness of his presence?
- FLORIZEL:
- Apprehend
- Nothing but jollity. The gods themselves,
- Humbling their deities to love, have taken
- The shapes of beasts upon them: Jupiter
- Became a bull, and bellow'd; the green Neptune
- A ram, and bleated; and the fire-robed god,
- Golden Apollo, a poor humble swain,
- As I seem now. Their transformations
- Were never for a piece of beauty rarer,
- Nor in a way so chaste, since my desires
- Run not before mine honour, nor my lusts
- Burn hotter than my faith.
- PERDITA:
- O, but, sir,
- Your resolution cannot hold, when 'tis
- Opposed, as it must be, by the power of the king:
- One of these two must be necessities,
- Which then will speak, that you must
- change this purpose,
- Or I my life.
- FLORIZEL:
- Thou dearest Perdita,
- With these forced thoughts, I prithee, darken not
- The mirth o' the feast. Or I'll be thine, my fair,
- Or not my father's. For I cannot be
- Mine own, nor any thing to any, if
- I be not thine. To this I am most constant,
- Though destiny say no. Be merry, gentle;
- Strangle such thoughts as these with any thing
- That you behold the while. Your guests are coming:
- Lift up your countenance, as it were the day
- Of celebration of that nuptial which
- We two have sworn shall come.
- PERDITA:
- O lady Fortune,
- Stand you auspicious!
- FLORIZEL:
- See, your guests approach:
- Address yourself to entertain them sprightly,
- And let's be red with mirth.
- Shepherd:
- Fie, daughter! when my old wife lived, upon
- This day she was both pantler, butler, cook,
- Both dame and servant; welcomed all, served all;
- Would sing her song and dance her turn; now here,
- At upper end o' the table, now i' the middle;
- On his shoulder, and his; her face o' fire
- With labour and the thing she took to quench it,
- She would to each one sip. You are retired,
- As if you were a feasted one and not
- The hostess of the meeting: pray you, bid
- These unknown friends to's welcome; for it is
- A way to make us better friends, more known.
- Come, quench your blushes and present yourself
- That which you are, mistress o' the feast: come on,
- And bid us welcome to your sheep-shearing,
- As your good flock shall prosper.
- PERDITA:
- POLIXENES:
- Shepherdess,
- A fair one are you--well you fit our ages
- With flowers of winter.
- PERDITA:
- Sir, the year growing ancient,
- Not yet on summer's death, nor on the birth
- Of trembling winter, the fairest
- flowers o' the season
- Are our carnations and streak'd gillyvors,
- Which some call nature's bastards: of that kind
- Our rustic garden's barren; and I care not
- To get slips of them.
- POLIXENES:
- Wherefore, gentle maiden,
- Do you neglect them?
- PERDITA:
- For I have heard it said
- There is an art which in their piedness shares
- With great creating nature.
- POLIXENES:
- Say there be;
- Yet nature is made better by no mean
- But nature makes that mean: so, over that art
- Which you say adds to nature, is an art
- That nature makes. You see, sweet maid, we marry
- A gentler scion to the wildest stock,
- And make conceive a bark of baser kind
- By bud of nobler race: this is an art
- Which does mend nature, change it rather, but
- The art itself is nature.
- PERDITA:
- So it is.
- POLIXENES:
- Then make your garden rich in gillyvors,
- And do not call them bastards.
- PERDITA:
- I'll not put
- The dibble in earth to set one slip of them;
- No more than were I painted I would wish
- This youth should say 'twere well and only therefore
- Desire to breed by me. Here's flowers for you;
- Hot lavender, mints, savoury, marjoram;
- The marigold, that goes to bed wi' the sun
- And with him rises weeping: these are flowers
- Of middle summer, and I think they are given
- To men of middle age. You're very welcome.
- CAMILLO:
- I should leave grazing, were I of your flock,
- And only live by gazing.
- PERDITA:
- Out, alas!
- You'd be so lean, that blasts of January
- Would blow you through and through.
- Now, my fair'st friend,
- I would I had some flowers o' the spring that might
- Become your time of day; and yours, and yours,
- That wear upon your virgin branches yet
- Your maidenheads growing: O Proserpina,
- For the flowers now, that frighted thou let'st fall
- From Dis's waggon! daffodils,
- That come before the swallow dares, and take
- The winds of March with beauty; violets dim,
- But sweeter than the lids of Juno's eyes
- Or Cytherea's breath; pale primroses
- That die unmarried, ere they can behold
- Bight Phoebus in his strength--a malady
- Most incident to maids; bold oxlips and
- The crown imperial; lilies of all kinds,
- The flower-de-luce being one! O, these I lack,
- To make you garlands of, and my sweet friend,
- To strew him o'er and o'er!
- FLORIZEL:
- What, like a corse?
- PERDITA:
- No, like a bank for love to lie and play on;
- Not like a corse; or if, not to be buried,
- But quick and in mine arms. Come, take your flowers:
- Methinks I play as I have seen them do
- In Whitsun pastorals: sure this robe of mine
- Does change my disposition.
- FLORIZEL:
- What you do
- Still betters what is done. When you speak, sweet.
- I'ld have you do it ever: when you sing,
- I'ld have you buy and sell so, so give alms,
- Pray so; and, for the ordering your affairs,
- To sing them too: when you do dance, I wish you
- A wave o' the sea, that you might ever do
- Nothing but that; move still, still so,
- And own no other function: each your doing,
- So singular in each particular,
- Crowns what you are doing in the present deed,
- That all your acts are queens.
- PERDITA:
- O Doricles,
- Your praises are too large: but that your youth,
- And the true blood which peepeth fairly through't,
- Do plainly give you out an unstain'd shepherd,
- With wisdom I might fear, my Doricles,
- You woo'd me the false way.
- FLORIZEL:
- I think you have
- As little skill to fear as I have purpose
- To put you to't. But come; our dance, I pray:
- Your hand, my Perdita: so turtles pair,
- That never mean to part.
- PERDITA:
- I'll swear for 'em.
- POLIXENES:
- This is the prettiest low-born lass that ever
- Ran on the green-sward: nothing she does or seems
- But smacks of something greater than herself,
- Too noble for this place.
- CAMILLO:
- He tells her something
- That makes her blood look out: good sooth, she is
- The queen of curds and cream.
- Clown:
- Come on, strike up!
- DORCAS:
- Mopsa must be your mistress: marry, garlic,
- To mend her kissing with!
- MOPSA:
- Now, in good time!
- Clown:
- Not a word, a word; we stand upon our manners.
- Come, strike up!
- POLIXENES:
- Pray, good shepherd, what fair swain is this
- Which dances with your daughter?
- Shepherd:
- They call him Doricles; and boasts himself
- To have a worthy feeding: but I have it
- Upon his own report and I believe it;
- He looks like sooth. He says he loves my daughter:
- I think so too; for never gazed the moon
- Upon the water as he'll stand and read
- As 'twere my daughter's eyes: and, to be plain.
- I think there is not half a kiss to choose
- Who loves another best.
- POLIXENES:
- She dances featly.
- Shepherd:
- So she does any thing; though I report it,
- That should be silent: if young Doricles
- Do light upon her, she shall bring him that
- Which he not dreams of.
- Servant:
- O master, if you did but hear the pedlar at the
- door, you would never dance again after a tabour and
- pipe; no, the bagpipe could not move you: he sings
- several tunes faster than you'll tell money; he
- utters them as he had eaten ballads and all men's
- ears grew to his tunes.
- Clown:
- He could never come better; he shall come in. I
- love a ballad but even too well, if it be doleful
- matter merrily set down, or a very pleasant thing
- indeed and sung lamentably.
- Servant:
- He hath songs for man or woman, of all sizes; no
- milliner can so fit his customers with gloves: he
- has the prettiest love-songs for maids; so without
- bawdry, which is strange; with such delicate
- burthens of dildos and fadings, 'jump her and thump
- her;' and where some stretch-mouthed rascal would,
- as it were, mean mischief and break a foul gap into
- the matter, he makes the maid to answer 'Whoop, do me
- no harm, good man;' puts him off, slights him, with
- 'Whoop, do me no harm, good man.'
- POLIXENES:
- This is a brave fellow.
- Clown:
- Believe me, thou talkest of an admirable conceited
- fellow. Has he any unbraided wares?
- Servant:
- He hath ribbons of an the colours i' the rainbow;
- points more than all the lawyers in Bohemia can
- learnedly handle, though they come to him by the
- gross: inkles, caddisses, cambrics, lawns: why, he
- sings 'em over as they were gods or goddesses; you
- would think a smock were a she-angel, he so chants
- to the sleeve-hand and the work about the square on't.
- Clown:
- Prithee bring him in; and let him approach singing.
- PERDITA:
- Forewarn him that he use no scurrilous words in 's tunes.
- Clown:
- You have of these pedlars, that have more in them
- than you'ld think, sister.
- PERDITA:
- Ay, good brother, or go about to think.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- Lawn as white as driven snow;
- Cyprus black as e'er was crow;
- Gloves as sweet as damask roses;
- Masks for faces and for noses;
- Bugle bracelet, necklace amber,
- Perfume for a lady's chamber;
- Golden quoifs and stomachers,
- For my lads to give their dears:
- Pins and poking-sticks of steel,
- What maids lack from head to heel:
- Come buy of me, come; come buy, come buy;
- Buy lads, or else your lasses cry: Come buy.
- Clown:
- If I were not in love with Mopsa, thou shouldst take
- no money of me; but being enthralled as I am, it
- will also be the bondage of certain ribbons and gloves.
- MOPSA:
- I was promised them against the feast; but they come
- not too late now.
- DORCAS:
- He hath promised you more than that, or there be liars.
- MOPSA:
- He hath paid you all he promised you; may be, he has
- paid you more, which will shame you to give him again.
- Clown:
- Is there no manners left among maids? will they
- wear their plackets where they should bear their
- faces? Is there not milking-time, when you are
- going to bed, or kiln-hole, to whistle off these
- secrets, but you must be tittle-tattling before all
- our guests? 'tis well they are whispering: clamour
- your tongues, and not a word more.
- MOPSA:
- I have done. Come, you promised me a tawdry-lace
- and a pair of sweet gloves.
- Clown:
- Have I not told thee how I was cozened by the way
- and lost all my money?
- AUTOLYCUS:
- And indeed, sir, there are cozeners abroad;
- therefore it behoves men to be wary.
- Clown:
- Fear not thou, man, thou shalt lose nothing here.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- I hope so, sir; for I have about me many parcels of charge.
- Clown:
- What hast here? ballads?
- MOPSA:
- Pray now, buy some: I love a ballad in print o'
- life, for then we are sure they are true.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- Here's one to a very doleful tune, how a usurer's
- wife was brought to bed of twenty money-bags at a
- burthen and how she longed to eat adders' heads and
- toads carbonadoed.
- MOPSA:
- Is it true, think you?
- AUTOLYCUS:
- Very true, and but a month old.
- DORCAS:
- Bless me from marrying a usurer!
- AUTOLYCUS:
- Here's the midwife's name to't, one Mistress
- Tale-porter, and five or six honest wives that were
- present. Why should I carry lies abroad?
- MOPSA:
- Pray you now, buy it.
- Clown:
- Come on, lay it by: and let's first see moe
- ballads; we'll buy the other things anon.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- Here's another ballad of a fish, that appeared upon
- the coast on Wednesday the four-score of April,
- forty thousand fathom above water, and sung this
- ballad against the hard hearts of maids: it was
- thought she was a woman and was turned into a cold
- fish for she would not exchange flesh with one that
- loved her: the ballad is very pitiful and as true.
- DORCAS:
- Is it true too, think you?
- AUTOLYCUS:
- Five justices' hands at it, and witnesses more than
- my pack will hold.
- Clown:
- Lay it by too: another.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- This is a merry ballad, but a very pretty one.
- MOPSA:
- Let's have some merry ones.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- Why, this is a passing merry one and goes to
- the tune of 'Two maids wooing a man:' there's
- scarce a maid westward but she sings it; 'tis in
- request, I can tell you.
- MOPSA:
- We can both sing it: if thou'lt bear a part, thou
- shalt hear; 'tis in three parts.
- DORCAS:
- We had the tune on't a month ago.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- I can bear my part; you must know 'tis my
- occupation; have at it with you.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- Get you hence, for I must go
- Where it fits not you to know.
- DORCAS:
- Whither?
- MOPSA:
- O, whither?
- DORCAS:
- Whither?
- MOPSA:
- It becomes thy oath full well,
- Thou to me thy secrets tell.
- DORCAS:
- Me too, let me go thither.
- MOPSA:
- Or thou goest to the orange or mill.
- DORCAS:
- If to either, thou dost ill.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- Neither.
- DORCAS:
- What, neither?
- AUTOLYCUS:
- Neither.
- DORCAS:
- Thou hast sworn my love to be.
- MOPSA:
- Thou hast sworn it more to me:
- Then whither goest? say, whither?
- Clown:
- We'll have this song out anon by ourselves: my
- father and the gentlemen are in sad talk, and we'll
- not trouble them. Come, bring away thy pack after
- me. Wenches, I'll buy for you both. Pedlar, let's
- have the first choice. Follow me, girls.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- And you shall pay well for 'em.
- Will you buy any tape,
- Or lace for your cape,
- My dainty duck, my dear-a?
- Any silk, any thread,
- Any toys for your head,
- Of the new'st and finest, finest wear-a?
- Come to the pedlar;
- Money's a medler.
- That doth utter all men's ware-a.
- Servant:
- Master, there is three carters, three shepherds,
- three neat-herds, three swine-herds, that have made
- themselves all men of hair, they call themselves
- Saltiers, and they have a dance which the wenches
- say is a gallimaufry of gambols, because they are
- not in't; but they themselves are o' the mind, if it
- be not too rough for some that know little but
- bowling, it will please plentifully.
- Shepherd:
- Away! we'll none on 't: here has been too much
- homely foolery already. I know, sir, we weary you.
- POLIXENES:
- You weary those that refresh us: pray, let's see
- these four threes of herdsmen.
- Servant:
- One three of them, by their own report, sir, hath
- danced before the king; and not the worst of the
- three but jumps twelve foot and a half by the squier.
- Shepherd:
- Leave your prating: since these good men are
- pleased, let them come in; but quickly now.
- Servant:
- Why, they stay at door, sir.
- POLIXENES:
- O, father, you'll know more of that hereafter.
- Is it not too far gone? 'Tis time to part them.
- He's simple and tells much.
- How now, fair shepherd!
- Your heart is full of something that does take
- Your mind from feasting. Sooth, when I was young
- And handed love as you do, I was wont
- To load my she with knacks: I would have ransack'd
- The pedlar's silken treasury and have pour'd it
- To her acceptance; you have let him go
- And nothing marted with him. If your lass
- Interpretation should abuse and call this
- Your lack of love or bounty, you were straited
- For a reply, at least if you make a care
- Of happy holding her.
- FLORIZEL:
- Old sir, I know
- She prizes not such trifles as these are:
- The gifts she looks from me are pack'd and lock'd
- Up in my heart; which I have given already,
- But not deliver'd. O, hear me breathe my life
- Before this ancient sir, who, it should seem,
- Hath sometime loved! I take thy hand, this hand,
- As soft as dove's down and as white as it,
- Or Ethiopian's tooth, or the fann'd
- snow that's bolted
- By the northern blasts twice o'er.
- POLIXENES:
- What follows this?
- How prettily the young swain seems to wash
- The hand was fair before! I have put you out:
- But to your protestation; let me hear
- What you profess.
- FLORIZEL:
- Do, and be witness to 't.
- POLIXENES:
- And this my neighbour too?
- FLORIZEL:
- And he, and more
- Than he, and men, the earth, the heavens, and all:
- That, were I crown'd the most imperial monarch,
- Thereof most worthy, were I the fairest youth
- That ever made eye swerve, had force and knowledge
- More than was ever man's, I would not prize them
- Without her love; for her employ them all;
- Commend them and condemn them to her service
- Or to their own perdition.
- POLIXENES:
- Fairly offer'd.
- CAMILLO:
- This shows a sound affection.
- Shepherd:
- But, my daughter,
- Say you the like to him?
- PERDITA:
- I cannot speak
- So well, nothing so well; no, nor mean better:
- By the pattern of mine own thoughts I cut out
- The purity of his.
- Shepherd:
- Take hands, a bargain!
- And, friends unknown, you shall bear witness to 't:
- I give my daughter to him, and will make
- Her portion equal his.
- FLORIZEL:
- O, that must be
- I' the virtue of your daughter: one being dead,
- I shall have more than you can dream of yet;
- Enough then for your wonder. But, come on,
- Contract us 'fore these witnesses.
- Shepherd:
- Come, your hand;
- And, daughter, yours.
- POLIXENES:
- Soft, swain, awhile, beseech you;
- Have you a father?
- FLORIZEL:
- I have: but what of him?
- POLIXENES:
- Knows he of this?
- FLORIZEL:
- He neither does nor shall.
- POLIXENES:
- Methinks a father
- Is at the nuptial of his son a guest
- That best becomes the table. Pray you once more,
- Is not your father grown incapable
- Of reasonable affairs? is he not stupid
- With age and altering rheums? can he speak? hear?
- Know man from man? dispute his own estate?
- Lies he not bed-rid? and again does nothing
- But what he did being childish?
- FLORIZEL:
- No, good sir;
- He has his health and ampler strength indeed
- Than most have of his age.
- POLIXENES:
- By my white beard,
- You offer him, if this be so, a wrong
- Something unfilial: reason my son
- Should choose himself a wife, but as good reason
- The father, all whose joy is nothing else
- But fair posterity, should hold some counsel
- In such a business.
- FLORIZEL:
- I yield all this;
- But for some other reasons, my grave sir,
- Which 'tis not fit you know, I not acquaint
- My father of this business.
- POLIXENES:
- Let him know't.
- FLORIZEL:
- He shall not.
- POLIXENES:
- Prithee, let him.
- FLORIZEL:
- No, he must not.
- Shepherd:
- Let him, my son: he shall not need to grieve
- At knowing of thy choice.
- FLORIZEL:
- Come, come, he must not.
- Mark our contract.
- POLIXENES:
- Mark your divorce, young sir,
- Whom son I dare not call; thou art too base
- To be acknowledged: thou a sceptre's heir,
- That thus affect'st a sheep-hook! Thou old traitor,
- I am sorry that by hanging thee I can
- But shorten thy life one week. And thou, fresh piece
- Of excellent witchcraft, who of force must know
- The royal fool thou copest with,--
- Shepherd:
- O, my heart!
- POLIXENES:
- I'll have thy beauty scratch'd with briers, and made
- More homely than thy state. For thee, fond boy,
- If I may ever know thou dost but sigh
- That thou no more shalt see this knack, as never
- I mean thou shalt, we'll bar thee from succession;
- Not hold thee of our blood, no, not our kin,
- Far than Deucalion off: mark thou my words:
- Follow us to the court. Thou churl, for this time,
- Though full of our displeasure, yet we free thee
- From the dead blow of it. And you, enchantment.--
- Worthy enough a herdsman: yea, him too,
- That makes himself, but for our honour therein,
- Unworthy thee,--if ever henceforth thou
- These rural latches to his entrance open,
- Or hoop his body more with thy embraces,
- I will devise a death as cruel for thee
- As thou art tender to't.
- PERDITA:
- Even here undone!
- I was not much afeard; for once or twice
- I was about to speak and tell him plainly,
- The selfsame sun that shines upon his court
- Hides not his visage from our cottage but
- Looks on alike. Will't please you, sir, be gone?
- I told you what would come of this: beseech you,
- Of your own state take care: this dream of mine,--
- Being now awake, I'll queen it no inch farther,
- But milk my ewes and weep.
- CAMILLO:
- Why, how now, father!
- Speak ere thou diest.
- Shepherd:
- I cannot speak, nor think
- Nor dare to know that which I know. O sir!
- You have undone a man of fourscore three,
- That thought to fill his grave in quiet, yea,
- To die upon the bed my father died,
- To lie close by his honest bones: but now
- Some hangman must put on my shroud and lay me
- Where no priest shovels in dust. O cursed wretch,
- That knew'st this was the prince,
- and wouldst adventure
- To mingle faith with him! Undone! undone!
- If I might die within this hour, I have lived
- To die when I desire.
- FLORIZEL:
- Why look you so upon me?
- I am but sorry, not afeard; delay'd,
- But nothing alter'd: what I was, I am;
- More straining on for plucking back, not following
- My leash unwillingly.
- CAMILLO:
- Gracious my lord,
- You know your father's temper: at this time
- He will allow no speech, which I do guess
- You do not purpose to him; and as hardly
- Will he endure your sight as yet, I fear:
- Then, till the fury of his highness settle,
- Come not before him.
- FLORIZEL:
- I not purpose it.
- I think, Camillo?
- CAMILLO:
- Even he, my lord.
- PERDITA:
- How often have I told you 'twould be thus!
- How often said, my dignity would last
- But till 'twere known!
- FLORIZEL:
- It cannot fail but by
- The violation of my faith; and then
- Let nature crush the sides o' the earth together
- And mar the seeds within! Lift up thy looks:
- From my succession wipe me, father; I
- Am heir to my affection.
- CAMILLO:
- Be advised.
- FLORIZEL:
- I am, and by my fancy: if my reason
- Will thereto be obedient, I have reason;
- If not, my senses, better pleased with madness,
- Do bid it welcome.
- CAMILLO:
- This is desperate, sir.
- FLORIZEL:
- So call it: but it does fulfil my vow;
- I needs must think it honesty. Camillo,
- Not for Bohemia, nor the pomp that may
- Be thereat glean'd, for all the sun sees or
- The close earth wombs or the profound sea hides
- In unknown fathoms, will I break my oath
- To this my fair beloved: therefore, I pray you,
- As you have ever been my father's honour'd friend,
- When he shall miss me,--as, in faith, I mean not
- To see him any more,--cast your good counsels
- Upon his passion; let myself and fortune
- Tug for the time to come. This you may know
- And so deliver, I am put to sea
- With her whom here I cannot hold on shore;
- And most opportune to our need I have
- A vessel rides fast by, but not prepared
- For this design. What course I mean to hold
- Shall nothing benefit your knowledge, nor
- Concern me the reporting.
- CAMILLO:
- O my lord!
- I would your spirit were easier for advice,
- Or stronger for your need.
- FLORIZEL:
- Hark, Perdita
- I'll hear you by and by.
- CAMILLO:
- He's irremoveable,
- Resolved for flight. Now were I happy, if
- His going I could frame to serve my turn,
- Save him from danger, do him love and honour,
- Purchase the sight again of dear Sicilia
- And that unhappy king, my master, whom
- I so much thirst to see.
- FLORIZEL:
- Now, good Camillo;
- I am so fraught with curious business that
- I leave out ceremony.
- CAMILLO:
- Sir, I think
- You have heard of my poor services, i' the love
- That I have borne your father?
- FLORIZEL:
- Very nobly
- Have you deserved: it is my father's music
- To speak your deeds, not little of his care
- To have them recompensed as thought on.
- CAMILLO:
- Well, my lord,
- If you may please to think I love the king
- And through him what is nearest to him, which is
- Your gracious self, embrace but my direction:
- If your more ponderous and settled project
- May suffer alteration, on mine honour,
- I'll point you where you shall have such receiving
- As shall become your highness; where you may
- Enjoy your mistress, from the whom, I see,
- There's no disjunction to be made, but by--
- As heavens forefend!--your ruin; marry her,
- And, with my best endeavours in your absence,
- Your discontenting father strive to qualify
- And bring him up to liking.
- FLORIZEL:
- How, Camillo,
- May this, almost a miracle, be done?
- That I may call thee something more than man
- And after that trust to thee.
- CAMILLO:
- Have you thought on
- A place whereto you'll go?
- FLORIZEL:
- Not any yet:
- But as the unthought-on accident is guilty
- To what we wildly do, so we profess
- Ourselves to be the slaves of chance and flies
- Of every wind that blows.
- CAMILLO:
- Then list to me:
- This follows, if you will not change your purpose
- But undergo this flight, make for Sicilia,
- And there present yourself and your fair princess,
- For so I see she must be, 'fore Leontes:
- She shall be habited as it becomes
- The partner of your bed. Methinks I see
- Leontes opening his free arms and weeping
- His welcomes forth; asks thee the son forgiveness,
- As 'twere i' the father's person; kisses the hands
- Of your fresh princess; o'er and o'er divides him
- 'Twixt his unkindness and his kindness; the one
- He chides to hell and bids the other grow
- Faster than thought or time.
- FLORIZEL:
- Worthy Camillo,
- What colour for my visitation shall I
- Hold up before him?
- CAMILLO:
- Sent by the king your father
- To greet him and to give him comforts. Sir,
- The manner of your bearing towards him, with
- What you as from your father shall deliver,
- Things known betwixt us three, I'll write you down:
- The which shall point you forth at every sitting
- What you must say; that he shall not perceive
- But that you have your father's bosom there
- And speak his very heart.
- FLORIZEL:
- I am bound to you:
- There is some sap in this.
- CAMILLO:
- A cause more promising
- Than a wild dedication of yourselves
- To unpath'd waters, undream'd shores, most certain
- To miseries enough; no hope to help you,
- But as you shake off one to take another;
- Nothing so certain as your anchors, who
- Do their best office, if they can but stay you
- Where you'll be loath to be: besides you know
- Prosperity's the very bond of love,
- Whose fresh complexion and whose heart together
- Affliction alters.
- PERDITA:
- One of these is true:
- I think affliction may subdue the cheek,
- But not take in the mind.
- CAMILLO:
- Yea, say you so?
- There shall not at your father's house these
- seven years
- Be born another such.
- FLORIZEL:
- My good Camillo,
- She is as forward of her breeding as
- She is i' the rear our birth.
- CAMILLO:
- I cannot say 'tis pity
- She lacks instructions, for she seems a mistress
- To most that teach.
- PERDITA:
- Your pardon, sir; for this
- I'll blush you thanks.
- FLORIZEL:
- My prettiest Perdita!
- But O, the thorns we stand upon! Camillo,
- Preserver of my father, now of me,
- The medicine of our house, how shall we do?
- We are not furnish'd like Bohemia's son,
- Nor shall appear in Sicilia.
- CAMILLO:
- My lord,
- Fear none of this: I think you know my fortunes
- Do all lie there: it shall be so my care
- To have you royally appointed as if
- The scene you play were mine. For instance, sir,
- That you may know you shall not want, one word.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- Ha, ha! what a fool Honesty is! and Trust, his
- sworn brother, a very simple gentleman! I have sold
- all my trumpery; not a counterfeit stone, not a
- ribbon, glass, pomander, brooch, table-book, ballad,
- knife, tape, glove, shoe-tie, bracelet, horn-ring,
- to keep my pack from fasting: they throng who
- should buy first, as if my trinkets had been
- hallowed and brought a benediction to the buyer:
- by which means I saw whose purse was best in
- picture; and what I saw, to my good use I
- remembered. My clown, who wants but something to
- be a reasonable man, grew so in love with the
- wenches' song, that he would not stir his pettitoes
- till he had both tune and words; which so drew the
- rest of the herd to me that all their other senses
- stuck in ears: you might have pinched a placket, it
- was senseless; 'twas nothing to geld a codpiece of a
- purse; I could have filed keys off that hung in
- chains: no hearing, no feeling, but my sir's song,
- and admiring the nothing of it. So that in this
- time of lethargy I picked and cut most of their
- festival purses; and had not the old man come in
- with a whoo-bub against his daughter and the king's
- son and scared my choughs from the chaff, I had not
- left a purse alive in the whole army.
- CAMILLO:
- Nay, but my letters, by this means being there
- So soon as you arrive, shall clear that doubt.
- FLORIZEL:
- And those that you'll procure from King Leontes--
- CAMILLO:
- Shall satisfy your father.
- PERDITA:
- Happy be you!
- All that you speak shows fair.
- CAMILLO:
- Who have we here?
- We'll make an instrument of this, omit
- Nothing may give us aid.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- If they have overheard me now, why, hanging.
- CAMILLO:
- How now, good fellow! why shakest thou so? Fear
- not, man; here's no harm intended to thee.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- I am a poor fellow, sir.
- CAMILLO:
- Why, be so still; here's nobody will steal that from
- thee: yet for the outside of thy poverty we must
- make an exchange; therefore discase thee instantly,
- --thou must think there's a necessity in't,--and
- change garments with this gentleman: though the
- pennyworth on his side be the worst, yet hold thee,
- there's some boot.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- I am a poor fellow, sir.
- I know ye well enough.
- CAMILLO:
- Nay, prithee, dispatch: the gentleman is half
- flayed already.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- Are you in earnest, sir?
- I smell the trick on't.
- FLORIZEL:
- Dispatch, I prithee.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- Indeed, I have had earnest: but I cannot with
- conscience take it.
- CAMILLO:
- Unbuckle, unbuckle.
- Fortunate mistress,--let my prophecy
- Come home to ye!--you must retire yourself
- Into some covert: take your sweetheart's hat
- And pluck it o'er your brows, muffle your face,
- Dismantle you, and, as you can, disliken
- The truth of your own seeming; that you may--
- For I do fear eyes over--to shipboard
- Get undescried.
- PERDITA:
- I see the play so lies
- That I must bear a part.
- CAMILLO:
- No remedy.
- Have you done there?
- FLORIZEL:
- Should I now meet my father,
- He would not call me son.
- CAMILLO:
- Nay, you shall have no hat.
- Come, lady, come. Farewell, my friend.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- Adieu, sir.
- FLORIZEL:
- O Perdita, what have we twain forgot!
- Pray you, a word.
- CAMILLO:
- FLORIZEL:
- Fortune speed us!
- Thus we set on, Camillo, to the sea-side.
- CAMILLO:
- The swifter speed the better.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- I understand the business, I hear it: to have an
- open ear, a quick eye, and a nimble hand, is
- necessary for a cut-purse; a good nose is requisite
- also, to smell out work for the other senses. I see
- this is the time that the unjust man doth thrive.
- What an exchange had this been without boot! What
- a boot is here with this exchange! Sure the gods do
- this year connive at us, and we may do any thing
- extempore. The prince himself is about a piece of
- iniquity, stealing away from his father with his
- clog at his heels: if I thought it were a piece of
- honesty to acquaint the king withal, I would not
- do't: I hold it the more knavery to conceal it;
- and therein am I constant to my profession.
- Aside, aside; here is more matter for a hot brain:
- every lane's end, every shop, church, session,
- hanging, yields a careful man work.
- Clown:
- See, see; what a man you are now!
- There is no other way but to tell the king
- she's a changeling and none of your flesh and blood.
- Shepherd:
- Nay, but hear me.
- Clown:
- Nay, but hear me.
- Shepherd:
- Go to, then.
- Clown:
- She being none of your flesh and blood, your flesh
- and blood has not offended the king; and so your
- flesh and blood is not to be punished by him. Show
- those things you found about her, those secret
- things, all but what she has with her: this being
- done, let the law go whistle: I warrant you.
- Shepherd:
- I will tell the king all, every word, yea, and his
- son's pranks too; who, I may say, is no honest man,
- neither to his father nor to me, to go about to make
- me the king's brother-in-law.
- Clown:
- Indeed, brother-in-law was the farthest off you
- could have been to him and then your blood had been
- the dearer by I know how much an ounce.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- Shepherd:
- Well, let us to the king: there is that in this
- fardel will make him scratch his beard.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- Clown:
- Pray heartily he be at palace.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- Shepherd:
- To the palace, an it like your worship.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- Your affairs there, what, with whom, the condition
- of that fardel, the place of your dwelling, your
- names, your ages, of what having, breeding, and any
- thing that is fitting to be known, discover.
- Clown:
- We are but plain fellows, sir.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- A lie; you are rough and hairy. Let me have no
- lying: it becomes none but tradesmen, and they
- often give us soldiers the lie: but we pay them for
- it with stamped coin, not stabbing steel; therefore
- they do not give us the lie.
- Clown:
- Your worship had like to have given us one, if you
- had not taken yourself with the manner.
- Shepherd:
- Are you a courtier, an't like you, sir?
- AUTOLYCUS:
- Whether it like me or no, I am a courtier. Seest
- thou not the air of the court in these enfoldings?
- hath not my gait in it the measure of the court?
- receives not thy nose court-odor from me? reflect I
- not on thy baseness court-contempt? Thinkest thou,
- for that I insinuate, or toaze from thee thy
- business, I am therefore no courtier? I am courtier
- cap-a-pe; and one that will either push on or pluck
- back thy business there: whereupon I command thee to
- open thy affair.
- Shepherd:
- My business, sir, is to the king.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- What advocate hast thou to him?
- Shepherd:
- I know not, an't like you.
- Clown:
- Advocate's the court-word for a pheasant: say you
- have none.
- Shepherd:
- None, sir; I have no pheasant, cock nor hen.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- How blessed are we that are not simple men!
- Yet nature might have made me as these are,
- Therefore I will not disdain.
- Clown:
- This cannot be but a great courtier.
- Shepherd:
- His garments are rich, but he wears
- them not handsomely.
- Clown:
- He seems to be the more noble in being fantastical:
- a great man, I'll warrant; I know by the picking
- on's teeth.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- The fardel there? what's i' the fardel?
- Wherefore that box?
- Shepherd:
- Sir, there lies such secrets in this fardel and box,
- which none must know but the king; and which he
- shall know within this hour, if I may come to the
- speech of him.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- Age, thou hast lost thy labour.
- Shepherd:
- Why, sir?
- AUTOLYCUS:
- The king is not at the palace; he is gone aboard a
- new ship to purge melancholy and air himself: for,
- if thou beest capable of things serious, thou must
- know the king is full of grief.
- Shepard:
- So 'tis said, sir; about his son, that should have
- married a shepherd's daughter.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- If that shepherd be not in hand-fast, let him fly:
- the curses he shall have, the tortures he shall
- feel, will break the back of man, the heart of monster.
- Clown:
- Think you so, sir?
- AUTOLYCUS:
- Not he alone shall suffer what wit can make heavy
- and vengeance bitter; but those that are germane to
- him, though removed fifty times, shall all come
- under the hangman: which though it be great pity,
- yet it is necessary. An old sheep-whistling rogue a
- ram-tender, to offer to have his daughter come into
- grace! Some say he shall be stoned; but that death
- is too soft for him, say I draw our throne into a
- sheep-cote! all deaths are too few, the sharpest too easy.
- Clown:
- Has the old man e'er a son, sir, do you hear. an't
- like you, sir?
- AUTOLYCUS:
- He has a son, who shall be flayed alive; then
- 'nointed over with honey, set on the head of a
- wasp's nest; then stand till he be three quarters
- and a dram dead; then recovered again with
- aqua-vitae or some other hot infusion; then, raw as
- he is, and in the hottest day prognostication
- proclaims, shall be be set against a brick-wall, the
- sun looking with a southward eye upon him, where he
- is to behold him with flies blown to death. But what
- talk we of these traitorly rascals, whose miseries
- are to be smiled at, their offences being so
- capital? Tell me, for you seem to be honest plain
- men, what you have to the king: being something
- gently considered, I'll bring you where he is
- aboard, tender your persons to his presence,
- whisper him in your behalfs; and if it be in man
- besides the king to effect your suits, here is man
- shall do it.
- Clown:
- He seems to be of great authority: close with him,
- give him gold; and though authority be a stubborn
- bear, yet he is oft led by the nose with gold: show
- the inside of your purse to the outside of his hand,
- and no more ado. Remember 'stoned,' and 'flayed alive.'
- Shepherd:
- An't please you, sir, to undertake the business for
- us, here is that gold I have: I'll make it as much
- more and leave this young man in pawn till I bring it you.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- After I have done what I promised?
- Shepherd:
- Ay, sir.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- Well, give me the moiety. Are you a party in this business?
- Clown:
- In some sort, sir: but though my case be a pitiful
- one, I hope I shall not be flayed out of it.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- O, that's the case of the shepherd's son: hang him,
- he'll be made an example.
- Clown:
- Comfort, good comfort! We must to the king and show
- our strange sights: he must know 'tis none of your
- daughter nor my sister; we are gone else. Sir, I
- will give you as much as this old man does when the
- business is performed, and remain, as he says, your
- pawn till it be brought you.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- I will trust you. Walk before toward the sea-side;
- go on the right hand: I will but look upon the
- hedge and follow you.
- Clown:
- We are blest in this man, as I may say, even blest.
- Shepherd:
- Let's before as he bids us: he was provided to do us good.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- If I had a mind to be honest, I see Fortune would
- not suffer me: she drops booties in my mouth. I am
- courted now with a double occasion, gold and a means
- to do the prince my master good; which who knows how
- that may turn back to my advancement? I will bring
- these two moles, these blind ones, aboard him: if he
- think it fit to shore them again and that the
- complaint they have to the king concerns him
- nothing, let him call me rogue for being so far
- officious; for I am proof against that title and
- what shame else belongs to't. To him will I present
- them: there may be matter in it.
- CLEOMENES:
- Sir, you have done enough, and have perform'd
- A saint-like sorrow: no fault could you make,
- Which you have not redeem'd; indeed, paid down
- More penitence than done trespass: at the last,
- Do as the heavens have done, forget your evil;
- With them forgive yourself.
- LEONTES:
- Whilst I remember
- Her and her virtues, I cannot forget
- My blemishes in them, and so still think of
- The wrong I did myself; which was so much,
- That heirless it hath made my kingdom and
- Destroy'd the sweet'st companion that e'er man
- Bred his hopes out of.
- PAULINA:
- True, too true, my lord:
- If, one by one, you wedded all the world,
- Or from the all that are took something good,
- To make a perfect woman, she you kill'd
- Would be unparallel'd.
- LEONTES:
- I think so. Kill'd!
- She I kill'd! I did so: but thou strikest me
- Sorely, to say I did; it is as bitter
- Upon thy tongue as in my thought: now, good now,
- Say so but seldom.
- CLEOMENES:
- Not at all, good lady:
- You might have spoken a thousand things that would
- Have done the time more benefit and graced
- Your kindness better.
- PAULINA:
- You are one of those
- Would have him wed again.
- DION:
- If you would not so,
- You pity not the state, nor the remembrance
- Of his most sovereign name; consider little
- What dangers, by his highness' fail of issue,
- May drop upon his kingdom and devour
- Incertain lookers on. What were more holy
- Than to rejoice the former queen is well?
- What holier than, for royalty's repair,
- For present comfort and for future good,
- To bless the bed of majesty again
- With a sweet fellow to't?
- PAULINA:
- There is none worthy,
- Respecting her that's gone. Besides, the gods
- Will have fulfill'd their secret purposes;
- For has not the divine Apollo said,
- Is't not the tenor of his oracle,
- That King Leontes shall not have an heir
- Till his lost child be found? which that it shall,
- Is all as monstrous to our human reason
- As my Antigonus to break his grave
- And come again to me; who, on my life,
- Did perish with the infant. 'Tis your counsel
- My lord should to the heavens be contrary,
- Oppose against their wills.
- Care not for issue;
- The crown will find an heir: great Alexander
- Left his to the worthiest; so his successor
- Was like to be the best.
- LEONTES:
- Good Paulina,
- Who hast the memory of Hermione,
- I know, in honour, O, that ever I
- Had squared me to thy counsel! then, even now,
- I might have look'd upon my queen's full eyes,
- Have taken treasure from her lips--
- PAULINA:
- And left them
- More rich for what they yielded.
- LEONTES:
- Thou speak'st truth.
- No more such wives; therefore, no wife: one worse,
- And better used, would make her sainted spirit
- Again possess her corpse, and on this stage,
- Where we're offenders now, appear soul-vex'd,
- And begin, 'Why to me?'
- PAULINA:
- Had she such power,
- She had just cause.
- LEONTES:
- She had; and would incense me
- To murder her I married.
- PAULINA:
- I should so.
- Were I the ghost that walk'd, I'ld bid you mark
- Her eye, and tell me for what dull part in't
- You chose her; then I'ld shriek, that even your ears
- Should rift to hear me; and the words that follow'd
- Should be 'Remember mine.'
- LEONTES:
- Stars, stars,
- And all eyes else dead coals! Fear thou no wife;
- I'll have no wife, Paulina.
- PAULINA:
- Will you swear
- Never to marry but by my free leave?
- LEONTES:
- Never, Paulina; so be blest my spirit!
- PAULINA:
- Then, good my lords, bear witness to his oath.
- CLEOMENES:
- You tempt him over-much.
- PAULINA:
- Unless another,
- As like Hermione as is her picture,
- Affront his eye.
- CLEOMENES:
- Good madam,--
- PAULINA:
- I have done.
- Yet, if my lord will marry,--if you will, sir,
- No remedy, but you will,--give me the office
- To choose you a queen: she shall not be so young
- As was your former; but she shall be such
- As, walk'd your first queen's ghost,
- it should take joy
- To see her in your arms.
- LEONTES:
- My true Paulina,
- We shall not marry till thou bid'st us.
- PAULINA:
- That
- Shall be when your first queen's again in breath;
- Never till then.
- Gentleman:
- One that gives out himself Prince Florizel,
- Son of Polixenes, with his princess, she
- The fairest I have yet beheld, desires access
- To your high presence.
- LEONTES:
- What with him? he comes not
- Like to his father's greatness: his approach,
- So out of circumstance and sudden, tells us
- 'Tis not a visitation framed, but forced
- By need and accident. What train?
- Gentleman:
- But few,
- And those but mean.
- LEONTES:
- His princess, say you, with him?
- Gentleman:
- Ay, the most peerless piece of earth, I think,
- That e'er the sun shone bright on.
- PAULINA:
- O Hermione,
- As every present time doth boast itself
- Above a better gone, so must thy grave
- Give way to what's seen now! Sir, you yourself
- Have said and writ so, but your writing now
- Is colder than that theme, 'She had not been,
- Nor was not to be equall'd;'--thus your verse
- Flow'd with her beauty once: 'tis shrewdly ebb'd,
- To say you have seen a better.
- Gentleman:
- Pardon, madam:
- The one I have almost forgot,--your pardon,--
- The other, when she has obtain'd your eye,
- Will have your tongue too. This is a creature,
- Would she begin a sect, might quench the zeal
- Of all professors else, make proselytes
- Of who she but bid follow.
- PAULINA:
- How! not women?
- Gentleman:
- Women will love her, that she is a woman
- More worth than any man; men, that she is
- The rarest of all women.
- LEONTES:
- Go, Cleomenes;
- Yourself, assisted with your honour'd friends,
- Bring them to our embracement. Still, 'tis strange
- He thus should steal upon us.
- PAULINA:
- Had our prince,
- Jewel of children, seen this hour, he had pair'd
- Well with this lord: there was not full a month
- Between their births.
- LEONTES:
- Prithee, no more; cease; thou know'st
- He dies to me again when talk'd of: sure,
- When I shall see this gentleman, thy speeches
- Will bring me to consider that which may
- Unfurnish me of reason. They are come.
- Your mother was most true to wedlock, prince;
- For she did print your royal father off,
- Conceiving you: were I but twenty-one,
- Your father's image is so hit in you,
- His very air, that I should call you brother,
- As I did him, and speak of something wildly
- By us perform'd before. Most dearly welcome!
- And your fair princess,--goddess!--O, alas!
- I lost a couple, that 'twixt heaven and earth
- Might thus have stood begetting wonder as
- You, gracious couple, do: and then I lost--
- All mine own folly--the society,
- Amity too, of your brave father, whom,
- Though bearing misery, I desire my life
- Once more to look on him.
- FLORIZEL:
- By his command
- Have I here touch'd Sicilia and from him
- Give you all greetings that a king, at friend,
- Can send his brother: and, but infirmity
- Which waits upon worn times hath something seized
- His wish'd ability, he had himself
- The lands and waters 'twixt your throne and his
- Measured to look upon you; whom he loves--
- He bade me say so--more than all the sceptres
- And those that bear them living.
- LEONTES:
- O my brother,
- Good gentleman! the wrongs I have done thee stir
- Afresh within me, and these thy offices,
- So rarely kind, are as interpreters
- Of my behind-hand slackness. Welcome hither,
- As is the spring to the earth. And hath he too
- Exposed this paragon to the fearful usage,
- At least ungentle, of the dreadful Neptune,
- To greet a man not worth her pains, much less
- The adventure of her person?
- FLORIZEL:
- Good my lord,
- She came from Libya.
- LEONTES:
- Where the warlike Smalus,
- That noble honour'd lord, is fear'd and loved?
- FLORIZEL:
- Most royal sir, from thence; from him, whose daughter
- His tears proclaim'd his, parting with her: thence,
- A prosperous south-wind friendly, we have cross'd,
- To execute the charge my father gave me
- For visiting your highness: my best train
- I have from your Sicilian shores dismiss'd;
- Who for Bohemia bend, to signify
- Not only my success in Libya, sir,
- But my arrival and my wife's in safety
- Here where we are.
- LEONTES:
- The blessed gods
- Purge all infection from our air whilst you
- Do climate here! You have a holy father,
- A graceful gentleman; against whose person,
- So sacred as it is, I have done sin:
- For which the heavens, taking angry note,
- Have left me issueless; and your father's blest,
- As he from heaven merits it, with you
- Worthy his goodness. What might I have been,
- Might I a son and daughter now have look'd on,
- Such goodly things as you!
- Lord:
- Most noble sir,
- That which I shall report will bear no credit,
- Were not the proof so nigh. Please you, great sir,
- Bohemia greets you from himself by me;
- Desires you to attach his son, who has--
- His dignity and duty both cast off--
- Fled from his father, from his hopes, and with
- A shepherd's daughter.
- LEONTES:
- Where's Bohemia? speak.
- Lord:
- Here in your city; I now came from him:
- I speak amazedly; and it becomes
- My marvel and my message. To your court
- Whiles he was hastening, in the chase, it seems,
- Of this fair couple, meets he on the way
- The father of this seeming lady and
- Her brother, having both their country quitted
- With this young prince.
- FLORIZEL:
- Camillo has betray'd me;
- Whose honour and whose honesty till now
- Endured all weathers.
- Lord:
- Lay't so to his charge:
- He's with the king your father.
- LEONTES:
- Who? Camillo?
- Lord:
- Camillo, sir; I spake with him; who now
- Has these poor men in question. Never saw I
- Wretches so quake: they kneel, they kiss the earth;
- Forswear themselves as often as they speak:
- Bohemia stops his ears, and threatens them
- With divers deaths in death.
- PERDITA:
- O my poor father!
- The heaven sets spies upon us, will not have
- Our contract celebrated.
- LEONTES:
- You are married?
- FLORIZEL:
- We are not, sir, nor are we like to be;
- The stars, I see, will kiss the valleys first:
- The odds for high and low's alike.
- LEONTES:
- My lord,
- Is this the daughter of a king?
- FLORIZEL:
- She is,
- When once she is my wife.
- LEONTES:
- That 'once' I see by your good father's speed
- Will come on very slowly. I am sorry,
- Most sorry, you have broken from his liking
- Where you were tied in duty, and as sorry
- Your choice is not so rich in worth as beauty,
- That you might well enjoy her.
- FLORIZEL:
- Dear, look up:
- Though Fortune, visible an enemy,
- Should chase us with my father, power no jot
- Hath she to change our loves. Beseech you, sir,
- Remember since you owed no more to time
- Than I do now: with thought of such affections,
- Step forth mine advocate; at your request
- My father will grant precious things as trifles.
- LEONTES:
- Would he do so, I'ld beg your precious mistress,
- Which he counts but a trifle.
- PAULINA:
- Sir, my liege,
- Your eye hath too much youth in't: not a month
- 'Fore your queen died, she was more worth such gazes
- Than what you look on now.
- LEONTES:
- I thought of her,
- Even in these looks I made.
- But your petition
- Is yet unanswer'd. I will to your father:
- Your honour not o'erthrown by your desires,
- I am friend to them and you: upon which errand
- I now go toward him; therefore follow me
- And mark what way I make: come, good my lord.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- Beseech you, sir, were you present at this relation?
- First Gentleman:
- I was by at the opening of the fardel, heard the old
- shepherd deliver the manner how he found it:
- whereupon, after a little amazedness, we were all
- commanded out of the chamber; only this methought I
- heard the shepherd say, he found the child.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- I would most gladly know the issue of it.
- First Gentleman:
- I make a broken delivery of the business; but the
- changes I perceived in the king and Camillo were
- very notes of admiration: they seemed almost, with
- staring on one another, to tear the cases of their
- eyes; there was speech in their dumbness, language
- in their very gesture; they looked as they had heard
- of a world ransomed, or one destroyed: a notable
- passion of wonder appeared in them; but the wisest
- beholder, that knew no more but seeing, could not
- say if the importance were joy or sorrow; but in the
- extremity of the one, it must needs be.
- Here comes a gentleman that haply knows more.
- The news, Rogero?
- Second Gentleman:
- Nothing but bonfires: the oracle is fulfilled; the
- king's daughter is found: such a deal of wonder is
- broken out within this hour that ballad-makers
- cannot be able to express it.
- Here comes the Lady Paulina's steward: he can
- deliver you more. How goes it now, sir? this news
- which is called true is so like an old tale, that
- the verity of it is in strong suspicion: has the king
- found his heir?
- Third Gentleman:
- Most true, if ever truth were pregnant by
- circumstance: that which you hear you'll swear you
- see, there is such unity in the proofs. The mantle
- of Queen Hermione's, her jewel about the neck of it,
- the letters of Antigonus found with it which they
- know to be his character, the majesty of the
- creature in resemblance of the mother, the affection
- of nobleness which nature shows above her breeding,
- and many other evidences proclaim her with all
- certainty to be the king's daughter. Did you see
- the meeting of the two kings?
- Second Gentleman:
- No.
- Third Gentleman:
- Then have you lost a sight, which was to be seen,
- cannot be spoken of. There might you have beheld one
- joy crown another, so and in such manner that it
- seemed sorrow wept to take leave of them, for their
- joy waded in tears. There was casting up of eyes,
- holding up of hands, with countenances of such
- distraction that they were to be known by garment,
- not by favour. Our king, being ready to leap out of
- himself for joy of his found daughter, as if that
- joy were now become a loss, cries 'O, thy mother,
- thy mother!' then asks Bohemia forgiveness; then
- embraces his son-in-law; then again worries he his
- daughter with clipping her; now he thanks the old
- shepherd, which stands by like a weather-bitten
- conduit of many kings' reigns. I never heard of such
- another encounter, which lames report to follow it
- and undoes description to do it.
- Second Gentleman:
- What, pray you, became of Antigonus, that carried
- hence the child?
- Third Gentleman:
- Like an old tale still, which will have matter to
- rehearse, though credit be asleep and not an ear
- open. He was torn to pieces with a bear: this
- avouches the shepherd's son; who has not only his
- innocence, which seems much, to justify him, but a
- handkerchief and rings of his that Paulina knows.
- First Gentleman:
- What became of his bark and his followers?
- Third Gentleman:
- Wrecked the same instant of their master's death and
- in the view of the shepherd: so that all the
- instruments which aided to expose the child were
- even then lost when it was found. But O, the noble
- combat that 'twixt joy and sorrow was fought in
- Paulina! She had one eye declined for the loss of
- her husband, another elevated that the oracle was
- fulfilled: she lifted the princess from the earth,
- and so locks her in embracing, as if she would pin
- her to her heart that she might no more be in danger
- of losing.
- First Gentleman:
- The dignity of this act was worth the audience of
- kings and princes; for by such was it acted.
- Third Gentleman:
- One of the prettiest touches of all and that which
- angled for mine eyes, caught the water though not
- the fish, was when, at the relation of the queen's
- death, with the manner how she came to't bravely
- confessed and lamented by the king, how
- attentiveness wounded his daughter; till, from one
- sign of dolour to another, she did, with an 'Alas,'
- I would fain say, bleed tears, for I am sure my
- heart wept blood. Who was most marble there changed
- colour; some swooned, all sorrowed: if all the world
- could have seen 't, the woe had been universal.
- First Gentleman:
- Are they returned to the court?
- Third Gentleman:
- No: the princess hearing of her mother's statue,
- which is in the keeping of Paulina,--a piece many
- years in doing and now newly performed by that rare
- Italian master, Julio Romano, who, had he himself
- eternity and could put breath into his work, would
- beguile Nature of her custom, so perfectly he is her
- ape: he so near to Hermione hath done Hermione that
- they say one would speak to her and stand in hope of
- answer: thither with all greediness of affection
- are they gone, and there they intend to sup.
- Second Gentleman:
- I thought she had some great matter there in hand;
- for she hath privately twice or thrice a day, ever
- since the death of Hermione, visited that removed
- house. Shall we thither and with our company piece
- the rejoicing?
- First Gentleman:
- Who would be thence that has the benefit of access?
- every wink of an eye some new grace will be born:
- our absence makes us unthrifty to our knowledge.
- Let's along.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- Now, had I not the dash of my former life in me,
- would preferment drop on my head. I brought the old
- man and his son aboard the prince: told him I heard
- them talk of a fardel and I know not what: but he
- at that time, overfond of the shepherd's daughter,
- so he then took her to be, who began to be much
- sea-sick, and himself little better, extremity of
- weather continuing, this mystery remained
- undiscovered. But 'tis all one to me; for had I
- been the finder out of this secret, it would not
- have relished among my other discredits.
- Here come those I have done good to against my will,
- and already appearing in the blossoms of their fortune.
- Shepherd:
- Come, boy; I am past moe children, but thy sons and
- daughters will be all gentlemen born.
- Clown:
- You are well met, sir. You denied to fight with me
- this other day, because I was no gentleman born.
- See you these clothes? say you see them not and
- think me still no gentleman born: you were best say
- these robes are not gentlemen born: give me the
- lie, do, and try whether I am not now a gentleman born.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- I know you are now, sir, a gentleman born.
- Clown:
- Ay, and have been so any time these four hours.
- Shepherd:
- And so have I, boy.
- Clown:
- So you have: but I was a gentleman born before my
- father; for the king's son took me by the hand, and
- called me brother; and then the two kings called my
- father brother; and then the prince my brother and
- the princess my sister called my father father; and
- so we wept, and there was the first gentleman-like
- tears that ever we shed.
- Shepherd:
- We may live, son, to shed many more.
- Clown:
- Ay; or else 'twere hard luck, being in so
- preposterous estate as we are.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- I humbly beseech you, sir, to pardon me all the
- faults I have committed to your worship and to give
- me your good report to the prince my master.
- Shepherd:
- Prithee, son, do; for we must be gentle, now we are
- gentlemen.
- Clown:
- Thou wilt amend thy life?
- AUTOLYCUS:
- Ay, an it like your good worship.
- Clown:
- Give me thy hand: I will swear to the prince thou
- art as honest a true fellow as any is in Bohemia.
- Shepherd:
- You may say it, but not swear it.
- Clown:
- Not swear it, now I am a gentleman? Let boors and
- franklins say it, I'll swear it.
- Shepherd:
- How if it be false, son?
- Clown:
- If it be ne'er so false, a true gentleman may swear
- it in the behalf of his friend: and I'll swear to
- the prince thou art a tall fellow of thy hands and
- that thou wilt not be drunk; but I know thou art no
- tall fellow of thy hands and that thou wilt be
- drunk: but I'll swear it, and I would thou wouldst
- be a tall fellow of thy hands.
- AUTOLYCUS:
- I will prove so, sir, to my power.
- Clown:
- Ay, by any means prove a tall fellow: if I do not
- wonder how thou darest venture to be drunk, not
- being a tall fellow, trust me not. Hark! the kings
- and the princes, our kindred, are going to see the
- queen's picture. Come, follow us: we'll be thy
- good masters.
- LEONTES:
- O grave and good Paulina, the great comfort
- That I have had of thee!
- PAULINA:
- What, sovereign sir,
- I did not well I meant well. All my services
- You have paid home: but that you have vouchsafed,
- With your crown'd brother and these your contracted
- Heirs of your kingdoms, my poor house to visit,
- It is a surplus of your grace, which never
- My life may last to answer.
- LEONTES:
- O Paulina,
- We honour you with trouble: but we came
- To see the statue of our queen: your gallery
- Have we pass'd through, not without much content
- In many singularities; but we saw not
- That which my daughter came to look upon,
- The statue of her mother.
- PAULINA:
- As she lived peerless,
- So her dead likeness, I do well believe,
- Excels whatever yet you look'd upon
- Or hand of man hath done; therefore I keep it
- Lonely, apart. But here it is: prepare
- To see the life as lively mock'd as ever
- Still sleep mock'd death: behold, and say 'tis well.
- I like your silence, it the more shows off
- Your wonder: but yet speak; first, you, my liege,
- Comes it not something near?
- LEONTES:
- Her natural posture!
- Chide me, dear stone, that I may say indeed
- Thou art Hermione; or rather, thou art she
- In thy not chiding, for she was as tender
- As infancy and grace. But yet, Paulina,
- Hermione was not so much wrinkled, nothing
- So aged as this seems.
- POLIXENES:
- O, not by much.
- PAULINA:
- So much the more our carver's excellence;
- Which lets go by some sixteen years and makes her
- As she lived now.
- LEONTES:
- As now she might have done,
- So much to my good comfort, as it is
- Now piercing to my soul. O, thus she stood,
- Even with such life of majesty, warm life,
- As now it coldly stands, when first I woo'd her!
- I am ashamed: does not the stone rebuke me
- For being more stone than it? O royal piece,
- There's magic in thy majesty, which has
- My evils conjured to remembrance and
- From thy admiring daughter took the spirits,
- Standing like stone with thee.
- PERDITA:
- And give me leave,
- And do not say 'tis superstition, that
- I kneel and then implore her blessing. Lady,
- Dear queen, that ended when I but began,
- Give me that hand of yours to kiss.
- PAULINA:
- O, patience!
- The statue is but newly fix'd, the colour's Not dry.
- CAMILLO:
- My lord, your sorrow was too sore laid on,
- Which sixteen winters cannot blow away,
- So many summers dry; scarce any joy
- Did ever so long live; no sorrow
- But kill'd itself much sooner.
- POLIXENES:
- Dear my brother,
- Let him that was the cause of this have power
- To take off so much grief from you as he
- Will piece up in himself.
- PAULINA:
- Indeed, my lord,
- If I had thought the sight of my poor image
- Would thus have wrought you,--for the stone is mine--
- I'ld not have show'd it.
- LEONTES:
- Do not draw the curtain.
- PAULINA:
- No longer shall you gaze on't, lest your fancy
- May think anon it moves.
- LEONTES:
- Let be, let be.
- Would I were dead, but that, methinks, already--
- What was he that did make it? See, my lord,
- Would you not deem it breathed? and that those veins
- Did verily bear blood?
- POLIXENES:
- Masterly done:
- The very life seems warm upon her lip.
- LEONTES:
- The fixture of her eye has motion in't,
- As we are mock'd with art.
- PAULINA:
- I'll draw the curtain:
- My lord's almost so far transported that
- He'll think anon it lives.
- LEONTES:
- O sweet Paulina,
- Make me to think so twenty years together!
- No settled senses of the world can match
- The pleasure of that madness. Let 't alone.
- PAULINA:
- I am sorry, sir, I have thus far stirr'd you: but
- I could afflict you farther.
- LEONTES:
- Do, Paulina;
- For this affliction has a taste as sweet
- As any cordial comfort. Still, methinks,
- There is an air comes from her: what fine chisel
- Could ever yet cut breath? Let no man mock me,
- For I will kiss her.
- PAULINA:
- Good my lord, forbear:
- The ruddiness upon her lip is wet;
- You'll mar it if you kiss it, stain your own
- With oily painting. Shall I draw the curtain?
- LEONTES:
- No, not these twenty years.
- PERDITA:
- So long could I
- Stand by, a looker on.
- PAULINA:
- Either forbear,
- Quit presently the chapel, or resolve you
- For more amazement. If you can behold it,
- I'll make the statue move indeed, descend
- And take you by the hand; but then you'll think--
- Which I protest against--I am assisted
- By wicked powers.
- LEONTES:
- What you can make her do,
- I am content to look on: what to speak,
- I am content to hear; for 'tis as easy
- To make her speak as move.
- PAULINA:
- It is required
- You do awake your faith. Then all stand still;
- On: those that think it is unlawful business
- I am about, let them depart.
- LEONTES:
- Proceed:
- No foot shall stir.
- PAULINA:
- Music, awake her; strike!
- 'Tis time; descend; be stone no more; approach;
- Strike all that look upon with marvel. Come,
- I'll fill your grave up: stir, nay, come away,
- Bequeath to death your numbness, for from him
- Dear life redeems you. You perceive she stirs:
- Start not; her actions shall be holy as
- You hear my spell is lawful: do not shun her
- Until you see her die again; for then
- You kill her double. Nay, present your hand:
- When she was young you woo'd her; now in age
- Is she become the suitor?
- LEONTES:
- O, she's warm!
- If this be magic, let it be an art
- Lawful as eating.
- POLIXENES:
- She embraces him.
- CAMILLO:
- She hangs about his neck:
- If she pertain to life let her speak too.
- POLIXENES:
- Ay, and make't manifest where she has lived,
- Or how stolen from the dead.
- PAULINA:
- That she is living,
- Were it but told you, should be hooted at
- Like an old tale: but it appears she lives,
- Though yet she speak not. Mark a little while.
- Please you to interpose, fair madam: kneel
- And pray your mother's blessing. Turn, good lady;
- Our Perdita is found.
- HERMIONE:
- You gods, look down
- And from your sacred vials pour your graces
- Upon my daughter's head! Tell me, mine own.
- Where hast thou been preserved? where lived? how found
- Thy father's court? for thou shalt hear that I,
- Knowing by Paulina that the oracle
- Gave hope thou wast in being, have preserved
- Myself to see the issue.
- PAULINA:
- There's time enough for that;
- Lest they desire upon this push to trouble
- Your joys with like relation. Go together,
- You precious winners all; your exultation
- Partake to every one. I, an old turtle,
- Will wing me to some wither'd bough and there
- My mate, that's never to be found again,
- Lament till I am lost.
- LEONTES:
- O, peace, Paulina!
- Thou shouldst a husband take by my consent,
- As I by thine a wife: this is a match,
- And made between's by vows. Thou hast found mine;
- But how, is to be question'd; for I saw her,
- As I thought, dead, and have in vain said many
- A prayer upon her grave. I'll not seek far--
- For him, I partly know his mind--to find thee
- An honourable husband. Come, Camillo,
- And take her by the hand, whose worth and honesty
- Is richly noted and here justified
- By us, a pair of kings. Let's from this place.
- What! look upon my brother: both your pardons,
- That e'er I put between your holy looks
- My ill suspicion. This is your son-in-law,
- And son unto the king, who, heavens directing,
- Is troth-plight to your daughter. Good Paulina,
- Lead us from hence, where we may leisurely
- Each one demand an answer to his part
- Perform'd in this wide gap of time since first
- We were dissever'd: hastily lead away.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Escalus.
- ESCALUS:
- My lord.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Of government the properties to unfold,
- Would seem in me to affect speech and discourse;
- Since I am put to know that your own science
- Exceeds, in that, the lists of all advice
- My strength can give you: then no more remains,
- But that to your sufficiency, as your Worth is able,
- And let them work. The nature of our people,
- Our city's institutions, and the terms
- For common justice, you're as pregnant in
- As art and practise hath enriched any
- That we remember. There is our commission,
- From which we would not have you warp. Call hither,
- I say, bid come before us Angelo.
- What figure of us think you he will bear?
- For you must know, we have with special soul
- Elected him our absence to supply,
- Lent him our terror, dress'd him with our love,
- And given his deputation all the organs
- Of our own power: what think you of it?
- ESCALUS:
- If any in Vienna be of worth
- To undergo such ample grace and honour,
- It is Lord Angelo.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Look where he comes.
- ANGELO:
- Always obedient to your grace's will,
- I come to know your pleasure.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Angelo,
- There is a kind of character in thy life,
- That to the observer doth thy history
- Fully unfold. Thyself and thy belongings
- Are not thine own so proper as to waste
- Thyself upon thy virtues, they on thee.
- Heaven doth with us as we with torches do,
- Not light them for themselves; for if our virtues
- Did not go forth of us, 'twere all alike
- As if we had them not. Spirits are not finely touch'd
- But to fine issues, nor Nature never lends
- The smallest scruple of her excellence
- But, like a thrifty goddess, she determines
- Herself the glory of a creditor,
- Both thanks and use. But I do bend my speech
- To one that can my part in him advertise;
- Hold therefore, Angelo:--
- In our remove be thou at full ourself;
- Mortality and mercy in Vienna
- Live in thy tongue and heart: old Escalus,
- Though first in question, is thy secondary.
- Take thy commission.
- ANGELO:
- Now, good my lord,
- Let there be some more test made of my metal,
- Before so noble and so great a figure
- Be stamp'd upon it.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- No more evasion:
- We have with a leaven'd and prepared choice
- Proceeded to you; therefore take your honours.
- Our haste from hence is of so quick condition
- That it prefers itself and leaves unquestion'd
- Matters of needful value. We shall write to you,
- As time and our concernings shall importune,
- How it goes with us, and do look to know
- What doth befall you here. So, fare you well;
- To the hopeful execution do I leave you
- Of your commissions.
- ANGELO:
- Yet give leave, my lord,
- That we may bring you something on the way.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- My haste may not admit it;
- Nor need you, on mine honour, have to do
- With any scruple; your scope is as mine own
- So to enforce or qualify the laws
- As to your soul seems good. Give me your hand:
- I'll privily away. I love the people,
- But do not like to stage me to their eyes:
- Through it do well, I do not relish well
- Their loud applause and Aves vehement;
- Nor do I think the man of safe discretion
- That does affect it. Once more, fare you well.
- ANGELO:
- The heavens give safety to your purposes!
- ESCALUS:
- Lead forth and bring you back in happiness!
- DUKE:
- I thank you. Fare you well.
- ESCALUS:
- I shall desire you, sir, to give me leave
- To have free speech with you; and it concerns me
- To look into the bottom of my place:
- A power I have, but of what strength and nature
- I am not yet instructed.
- ANGELO:
- 'Tis so with me. Let us withdraw together,
- And we may soon our satisfaction have
- Touching that point.
- ESCALUS:
- I'll wait upon your honour.
- LUCIO:
- If the duke with the other dukes come not to
- composition with the King of Hungary, why then all
- the dukes fall upon the king.
- First Gentleman:
- Heaven grant us its peace, but not the King of
- Hungary's!
- Second Gentleman:
- Amen.
- LUCIO:
- Thou concludest like the sanctimonious pirate, that
- went to sea with the Ten Commandments, but scraped
- one out of the table.
- Second Gentleman:
- 'Thou shalt not steal'?
- LUCIO:
- Ay, that he razed.
- First Gentleman:
- Why, 'twas a commandment to command the captain and
- all the rest from their functions: they put forth
- to steal. There's not a soldier of us all, that, in
- the thanksgiving before meat, do relish the petition
- well that prays for peace.
- Second Gentleman:
- I never heard any soldier dislike it.
- LUCIO:
- I believe thee; for I think thou never wast where
- grace was said.
- Second Gentleman:
- No? a dozen times at least.
- First Gentleman:
- What, in metre?
- LUCIO:
- In any proportion or in any language.
- First Gentleman:
- I think, or in any religion.
- LUCIO:
- Ay, why not? Grace is grace, despite of all
- controversy: as, for example, thou thyself art a
- wicked villain, despite of all grace.
- First Gentleman:
- Well, there went but a pair of shears between us.
- LUCIO:
- I grant; as there may between the lists and the
- velvet. Thou art the list.
- First Gentleman:
- And thou the velvet: thou art good velvet; thou'rt
- a three-piled piece, I warrant thee: I had as lief
- be a list of an English kersey as be piled, as thou
- art piled, for a French velvet. Do I speak
- feelingly now?
- LUCIO:
- I think thou dost; and, indeed, with most painful
- feeling of thy speech: I will, out of thine own
- confession, learn to begin thy health; but, whilst I
- live, forget to drink after thee.
- First Gentleman:
- I think I have done myself wrong, have I not?
- Second Gentleman:
- Yes, that thou hast, whether thou art tainted or free.
- LUCIO:
- Behold, behold. where Madam Mitigation comes! I
- have purchased as many diseases under her roof as come to--
- Second Gentleman:
- To what, I pray?
- LUCIO:
- Judge.
- Second Gentleman:
- To three thousand dolours a year.
- First Gentleman:
- Ay, and more.
- LUCIO:
- A French crown more.
- First Gentleman:
- Thou art always figuring diseases in me; but thou
- art full of error; I am sound.
- LUCIO:
- Nay, not as one would say, healthy; but so sound as
- things that are hollow: thy bones are hollow;
- impiety has made a feast of thee.
- First Gentleman:
- How now! which of your hips has the most profound sciatica?
- MISTRESS OVERDONE:
- Well, well; there's one yonder arrested and carried
- to prison was worth five thousand of you all.
- Second Gentleman:
- Who's that, I pray thee?
- MISTRESS OVERDONE:
- Marry, sir, that's Claudio, Signior Claudio.
- First Gentleman:
- Claudio to prison? 'tis not so.
- MISTRESS OVERDONE:
- Nay, but I know 'tis so: I saw him arrested, saw
- him carried away; and, which is more, within these
- three days his head to be chopped off.
- LUCIO:
- But, after all this fooling, I would not have it so.
- Art thou sure of this?
- MISTRESS OVERDONE:
- I am too sure of it: and it is for getting Madam
- Julietta with child.
- LUCIO:
- Believe me, this may be: he promised to meet me two
- hours since, and he was ever precise in
- promise-keeping.
- Second Gentleman:
- Besides, you know, it draws something near to the
- speech we had to such a purpose.
- First Gentleman:
- But, most of all, agreeing with the proclamation.
- LUCIO:
- Away! let's go learn the truth of it.
- MISTRESS OVERDONE:
- Thus, what with the war, what with the sweat, what
- with the gallows and what with poverty, I am
- custom-shrunk.
- How now! what's the news with you?
- POMPEY:
- Yonder man is carried to prison.
- MISTRESS OVERDONE:
- Well; what has he done?
- POMPEY:
- A woman.
- MISTRESS OVERDONE:
- But what's his offence?
- POMPEY:
- Groping for trouts in a peculiar river.
- MISTRESS OVERDONE:
- What, is there a maid with child by him?
- POMPEY:
- No, but there's a woman with maid by him. You have
- not heard of the proclamation, have you?
- MISTRESS OVERDONE:
- What proclamation, man?
- POMPEY:
- All houses in the suburbs of Vienna must be plucked down.
- MISTRESS OVERDONE:
- And what shall become of those in the city?
- POMPEY:
- They shall stand for seed: they had gone down too,
- but that a wise burgher put in for them.
- MISTRESS OVERDONE:
- But shall all our houses of resort in the suburbs be
- pulled down?
- POMPEY:
- To the ground, mistress.
- MISTRESS OVERDONE:
- Why, here's a change indeed in the commonwealth!
- What shall become of me?
- POMPEY:
- Come; fear you not: good counsellors lack no
- clients: though you change your place, you need not
- change your trade; I'll be your tapster still.
- Courage! there will be pity taken on you: you that
- have worn your eyes almost out in the service, you
- will be considered.
- MISTRESS OVERDONE:
- What's to do here, Thomas tapster? let's withdraw.
- POMPEY:
- Here comes Signior Claudio, led by the provost to
- prison; and there's Madam Juliet.
- CLAUDIO:
- Fellow, why dost thou show me thus to the world?
- Bear me to prison, where I am committed.
- Provost:
- I do it not in evil disposition,
- But from Lord Angelo by special charge.
- CLAUDIO:
- Thus can the demigod Authority
- Make us pay down for our offence by weight
- The words of heaven; on whom it will, it will;
- On whom it will not, so; yet still 'tis just.
- LUCIO:
- Why, how now, Claudio! whence comes this restraint?
- CLAUDIO:
- From too much liberty, my Lucio, liberty:
- As surfeit is the father of much fast,
- So every scope by the immoderate use
- Turns to restraint. Our natures do pursue,
- Like rats that ravin down their proper bane,
- A thirsty evil; and when we drink we die.
- LUCIO:
- If could speak so wisely under an arrest, I would
- send for certain of my creditors: and yet, to say
- the truth, I had as lief have the foppery of freedom
- as the morality of imprisonment. What's thy
- offence, Claudio?
- CLAUDIO:
- What but to speak of would offend again.
- LUCIO:
- What, is't murder?
- CLAUDIO:
- No.
- LUCIO:
- Lechery?
- CLAUDIO:
- Call it so.
- Provost:
- Away, sir! you must go.
- CLAUDIO:
- One word, good friend. Lucio, a word with you.
- LUCIO:
- A hundred, if they'll do you any good.
- Is lechery so look'd after?
- CLAUDIO:
- Thus stands it with me: upon a true contract
- I got possession of Julietta's bed:
- You know the lady; she is fast my wife,
- Save that we do the denunciation lack
- Of outward order: this we came not to,
- Only for propagation of a dower
- Remaining in the coffer of her friends,
- From whom we thought it meet to hide our love
- Till time had made them for us. But it chances
- The stealth of our most mutual entertainment
- With character too gross is writ on Juliet.
- LUCIO:
- With child, perhaps?
- CLAUDIO:
- Unhappily, even so.
- And the new deputy now for the duke--
- Whether it be the fault and glimpse of newness,
- Or whether that the body public be
- A horse whereon the governor doth ride,
- Who, newly in the seat, that it may know
- He can command, lets it straight feel the spur;
- Whether the tyranny be in his place,
- Or in his emmence that fills it up,
- I stagger in:--but this new governor
- Awakes me all the enrolled penalties
- Which have, like unscour'd armour, hung by the wall
- So long that nineteen zodiacs have gone round
- And none of them been worn; and, for a name,
- Now puts the drowsy and neglected act
- Freshly on me: 'tis surely for a name.
- LUCIO:
- I warrant it is: and thy head stands so tickle on
- thy shoulders that a milkmaid, if she be in love,
- may sigh it off. Send after the duke and appeal to
- him.
- CLAUDIO:
- I have done so, but he's not to be found.
- I prithee, Lucio, do me this kind service:
- This day my sister should the cloister enter
- And there receive her approbation:
- Acquaint her with the danger of my state:
- Implore her, in my voice, that she make friends
- To the strict deputy; bid herself assay him:
- I have great hope in that; for in her youth
- There is a prone and speechless dialect,
- Such as move men; beside, she hath prosperous art
- When she will play with reason and discourse,
- And well she can persuade.
- LUCIO:
- I pray she may; as well for the encouragement of the
- like, which else would stand under grievous
- imposition, as for the enjoying of thy life, who I
- would be sorry should be thus foolishly lost at a
- game of tick-tack. I'll to her.
- CLAUDIO:
- I thank you, good friend Lucio.
- LUCIO:
- Within two hours.
- CLAUDIO:
- Come, officer, away!
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- No, holy father; throw away that thought;
- Believe not that the dribbling dart of love
- Can pierce a complete bosom. Why I desire thee
- To give me secret harbour, hath a purpose
- More grave and wrinkled than the aims and ends
- Of burning youth.
- FRIAR THOMAS:
- May your grace speak of it?
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- My holy sir, none better knows than you
- How I have ever loved the life removed
- And held in idle price to haunt assemblies
- Where youth, and cost, and witless bravery keeps.
- I have deliver'd to Lord Angelo,
- A man of stricture and firm abstinence,
- My absolute power and place here in Vienna,
- And he supposes me travell'd to Poland;
- For so I have strew'd it in the common ear,
- And so it is received. Now, pious sir,
- You will demand of me why I do this?
- FRIAR THOMAS:
- Gladly, my lord.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- We have strict statutes and most biting laws.
- The needful bits and curbs to headstrong weeds,
- Which for this nineteen years we have let slip;
- Even like an o'ergrown lion in a cave,
- That goes not out to prey. Now, as fond fathers,
- Having bound up the threatening twigs of birch,
- Only to stick it in their children's sight
- For terror, not to use, in time the rod
- Becomes more mock'd than fear'd; so our decrees,
- Dead to infliction, to themselves are dead;
- And liberty plucks justice by the nose;
- The baby beats the nurse, and quite athwart
- Goes all decorum.
- FRIAR THOMAS:
- It rested in your grace
- To unloose this tied-up justice when you pleased:
- And it in you more dreadful would have seem'd
- Than in Lord Angelo.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- I do fear, too dreadful:
- Sith 'twas my fault to give the people scope,
- 'Twould be my tyranny to strike and gall them
- For what I bid them do: for we bid this be done,
- When evil deeds have their permissive pass
- And not the punishment. Therefore indeed, my father,
- I have on Angelo imposed the office;
- Who may, in the ambush of my name, strike home,
- And yet my nature never in the fight
- To do in slander. And to behold his sway,
- I will, as 'twere a brother of your order,
- Visit both prince and people: therefore, I prithee,
- Supply me with the habit and instruct me
- How I may formally in person bear me
- Like a true friar. More reasons for this action
- At our more leisure shall I render you;
- Only, this one: Lord Angelo is precise;
- Stands at a guard with envy; scarce confesses
- That his blood flows, or that his appetite
- Is more to bread than stone: hence shall we see,
- If power change purpose, what our seemers be.
- ISABELLA:
- And have you nuns no farther privileges?
- FRANCISCA:
- Are not these large enough?
- ISABELLA:
- Yes, truly; I speak not as desiring more;
- But rather wishing a more strict restraint
- Upon the sisterhood, the votarists of Saint Clare.
- LUCIO:
- ISABELLA:
- Who's that which calls?
- FRANCISCA:
- It is a man's voice. Gentle Isabella,
- Turn you the key, and know his business of him;
- You may, I may not; you are yet unsworn.
- When you have vow'd, you must not speak with men
- But in the presence of the prioress:
- Then, if you speak, you must not show your face,
- Or, if you show your face, you must not speak.
- He calls again; I pray you, answer him.
- ISABELLA:
- Peace and prosperity! Who is't that calls
- LUCIO:
- Hail, virgin, if you be, as those cheek-roses
- Proclaim you are no less! Can you so stead me
- As bring me to the sight of Isabella,
- A novice of this place and the fair sister
- To her unhappy brother Claudio?
- ISABELLA:
- Why 'her unhappy brother'? let me ask,
- The rather for I now must make you know
- I am that Isabella and his sister.
- LUCIO:
- Gentle and fair, your brother kindly greets you:
- Not to be weary with you, he's in prison.
- ISABELLA:
- Woe me! for what?
- LUCIO:
- For that which, if myself might be his judge,
- He should receive his punishment in thanks:
- He hath got his friend with child.
- ISABELLA:
- Sir, make me not your story.
- LUCIO:
- It is true.
- I would not--though 'tis my familiar sin
- With maids to seem the lapwing and to jest,
- Tongue far from heart--play with all virgins so:
- I hold you as a thing ensky'd and sainted.
- By your renouncement an immortal spirit,
- And to be talk'd with in sincerity,
- As with a saint.
- ISABELLA:
- You do blaspheme the good in mocking me.
- LUCIO:
- Do not believe it. Fewness and truth, 'tis thus:
- Your brother and his lover have embraced:
- As those that feed grow full, as blossoming time
- That from the seedness the bare fallow brings
- To teeming foison, even so her plenteous womb
- Expresseth his full tilth and husbandry.
- ISABELLA:
- Some one with child by him? My cousin Juliet?
- LUCIO:
- Is she your cousin?
- ISABELLA:
- Adoptedly; as school-maids change their names
- By vain though apt affection.
- LUCIO:
- She it is.
- ISABELLA:
- O, let him marry her.
- LUCIO:
- This is the point.
- The duke is very strangely gone from hence;
- Bore many gentlemen, myself being one,
- In hand and hope of action: but we do learn
- By those that know the very nerves of state,
- His givings-out were of an infinite distance
- From his true-meant design. Upon his place,
- And with full line of his authority,
- Governs Lord Angelo; a man whose blood
- Is very snow-broth; one who never feels
- The wanton stings and motions of the sense,
- But doth rebate and blunt his natural edge
- With profits of the mind, study and fast.
- He--to give fear to use and liberty,
- Which have for long run by the hideous law,
- As mice by lions--hath pick'd out an act,
- Under whose heavy sense your brother's life
- Falls into forfeit: he arrests him on it;
- And follows close the rigour of the statute,
- To make him an example. All hope is gone,
- Unless you have the grace by your fair prayer
- To soften Angelo: and that's my pith of business
- 'Twixt you and your poor brother.
- ISABELLA:
- Doth he so seek his life?
- LUCIO:
- Has censured him
- Already; and, as I hear, the provost hath
- A warrant for his execution.
- ISABELLA:
- Alas! what poor ability's in me
- To do him good?
- LUCIO:
- Assay the power you have.
- ISABELLA:
- My power? Alas, I doubt--
- LUCIO:
- Our doubts are traitors
- And make us lose the good we oft might win
- By fearing to attempt. Go to Lord Angelo,
- And let him learn to know, when maidens sue,
- Men give like gods; but when they weep and kneel,
- All their petitions are as freely theirs
- As they themselves would owe them.
- ISABELLA:
- I'll see what I can do.
- LUCIO:
- But speedily.
- ISABELLA:
- I will about it straight;
- No longer staying but to give the mother
- Notice of my affair. I humbly thank you:
- Commend me to my brother: soon at night
- I'll send him certain word of my success.
- LUCIO:
- I take my leave of you.
- ISABELLA:
- Good sir, adieu.
- ANGELO:
- We must not make a scarecrow of the law,
- Setting it up to fear the birds of prey,
- And let it keep one shape, till custom make it
- Their perch and not their terror.
- ESCALUS:
- Ay, but yet
- Let us be keen, and rather cut a little,
- Than fall, and bruise to death. Alas, this gentleman
- Whom I would save, had a most noble father!
- Let but your honour know,
- Whom I believe to be most strait in virtue,
- That, in the working of your own affections,
- Had time cohered with place or place with wishing,
- Or that the resolute acting of your blood
- Could have attain'd the effect of your own purpose,
- Whether you had not sometime in your life
- Err'd in this point which now you censure him,
- And pull'd the law upon you.
- ANGELO:
- 'Tis one thing to be tempted, Escalus,
- Another thing to fall. I not deny,
- The jury, passing on the prisoner's life,
- May in the sworn twelve have a thief or two
- Guiltier than him they try. What's open made to justice,
- That justice seizes: what know the laws
- That thieves do pass on thieves? 'Tis very pregnant,
- The jewel that we find, we stoop and take't
- Because we see it; but what we do not see
- We tread upon, and never think of it.
- You may not so extenuate his offence
- For I have had such faults; but rather tell me,
- When I, that censure him, do so offend,
- Let mine own judgment pattern out my death,
- And nothing come in partial. Sir, he must die.
- ESCALUS:
- Be it as your wisdom will.
- ANGELO:
- Where is the provost?
- Provost:
- Here, if it like your honour.
- ANGELO:
- See that Claudio
- Be executed by nine to-morrow morning:
- Bring him his confessor, let him be prepared;
- For that's the utmost of his pilgrimage.
- ESCALUS:
- ELBOW:
- Come, bring them away: if these be good people in
- a commonweal that do nothing but use their abuses in
- common houses, I know no law: bring them away.
- ANGELO:
- How now, sir! What's your name? and what's the matter?
- ELBOW:
- If it Please your honour, I am the poor duke's
- constable, and my name is Elbow: I do lean upon
- justice, sir, and do bring in here before your good
- honour two notorious benefactors.
- ANGELO:
- Benefactors? Well; what benefactors are they? are
- they not malefactors?
- ELBOW:
- If it? please your honour, I know not well what they
- are: but precise villains they are, that I am sure
- of; and void of all profanation in the world that
- good Christians ought to have.
- ESCALUS:
- This comes off well; here's a wise officer.
- ANGELO:
- Go to: what quality are they of? Elbow is your
- name? why dost thou not speak, Elbow?
- POMPEY:
- He cannot, sir; he's out at elbow.
- ANGELO:
- What are you, sir?
- ELBOW:
- He, sir! a tapster, sir; parcel-bawd; one that
- serves a bad woman; whose house, sir, was, as they
- say, plucked down in the suburbs; and now she
- professes a hot-house, which, I think, is a very ill house too.
- ESCALUS:
- How know you that?
- ELBOW:
- My wife, sir, whom I detest before heaven and your honour,--
- ESCALUS:
- How? thy wife?
- ELBOW:
- Ay, sir; whom, I thank heaven, is an honest woman,--
- ESCALUS:
- Dost thou detest her therefore?
- ELBOW:
- I say, sir, I will detest myself also, as well as
- she, that this house, if it be not a bawd's house,
- it is pity of her life, for it is a naughty house.
- ESCALUS:
- How dost thou know that, constable?
- ELBOW:
- Marry, sir, by my wife; who, if she had been a woman
- cardinally given, might have been accused in
- fornication, adultery, and all uncleanliness there.
- ESCALUS:
- By the woman's means?
- ELBOW:
- Ay, sir, by Mistress Overdone's means: but as she
- spit in his face, so she defied him.
- POMPEY:
- Sir, if it please your honour, this is not so.
- ELBOW:
- Prove it before these varlets here, thou honourable
- man; prove it.
- ESCALUS:
- Do you hear how he misplaces?
- POMPEY:
- Sir, she came in great with child; and longing,
- saving your honour's reverence, for stewed prunes;
- sir, we had but two in the house, which at that very
- distant time stood, as it were, in a fruit-dish, a
- dish of some three-pence; your honours have seen
- such dishes; they are not China dishes, but very
- good dishes,--
- ESCALUS:
- Go to, go to: no matter for the dish, sir.
- POMPEY:
- No, indeed, sir, not of a pin; you are therein in
- the right: but to the point. As I say, this
- Mistress Elbow, being, as I say, with child, and
- being great-bellied, and longing, as I said, for
- prunes; and having but two in the dish, as I said,
- Master Froth here, this very man, having eaten the
- rest, as I said, and, as I say, paying for them very
- honestly; for, as you know, Master Froth, I could
- not give you three-pence again.
- FROTH:
- No, indeed.
- POMPEY:
- Very well: you being then, if you be remembered,
- cracking the stones of the foresaid prunes,--
- FROTH:
- Ay, so I did indeed.
- POMPEY:
- Why, very well; I telling you then, if you be
- remembered, that such a one and such a one were past
- cure of the thing you wot of, unless they kept very
- good diet, as I told you,--
- FROTH:
- All this is true.
- POMPEY:
- Why, very well, then,--
- ESCALUS:
- Come, you are a tedious fool: to the purpose. What
- was done to Elbow's wife, that he hath cause to
- complain of? Come me to what was done to her.
- POMPEY:
- Sir, your honour cannot come to that yet.
- ESCALUS:
- No, sir, nor I mean it not.
- POMPEY:
- Sir, but you shall come to it, by your honour's
- leave. And, I beseech you, look into Master Froth
- here, sir; a man of four-score pound a year; whose
- father died at Hallowmas: was't not at Hallowmas,
- Master Froth?
- FROTH:
- All-hallond eve.
- POMPEY:
- Why, very well; I hope here be truths. He, sir,
- sitting, as I say, in a lower chair, sir; 'twas in
- the Bunch of Grapes, where indeed you have a delight
- to sit, have you not?
- FROTH:
- I have so; because it is an open room and good for winter.
- POMPEY:
- Why, very well, then; I hope here be truths.
- ANGELO:
- This will last out a night in Russia,
- When nights are longest there: I'll take my leave.
- And leave you to the hearing of the cause;
- Hoping you'll find good cause to whip them all.
- ESCALUS:
- I think no less. Good morrow to your lordship.
- Now, sir, come on: what was done to Elbow's wife, once more?
- POMPEY:
- Once, sir? there was nothing done to her once.
- ELBOW:
- I beseech you, sir, ask him what this man did to my wife.
- POMPEY:
- I beseech your honour, ask me.
- ESCALUS:
- Well, sir; what did this gentleman to her?
- POMPEY:
- I beseech you, sir, look in this gentleman's face.
- Good Master Froth, look upon his honour; 'tis for a
- good purpose. Doth your honour mark his face?
- ESCALUS:
- Ay, sir, very well.
- POMPEY:
- Nay; I beseech you, mark it well.
- ESCALUS:
- Well, I do so.
- POMPEY:
- Doth your honour see any harm in his face?
- ESCALUS:
- Why, no.
- POMPEY:
- I'll be supposed upon a book, his face is the worst
- thing about him. Good, then; if his face be the
- worst thing about him, how could Master Froth do the
- constable's wife any harm? I would know that of
- your honour.
- ESCALUS:
- He's in the right. Constable, what say you to it?
- ELBOW:
- First, an it like you, the house is a respected
- house; next, this is a respected fellow; and his
- mistress is a respected woman.
- POMPEY:
- By this hand, sir, his wife is a more respected
- person than any of us all.
- ELBOW:
- Varlet, thou liest; thou liest, wicked varlet! the
- time has yet to come that she was ever respected
- with man, woman, or child.
- POMPEY:
- Sir, she was respected with him before he married with her.
- ESCALUS:
- Which is the wiser here? Justice or Iniquity? Is
- this true?
- ELBOW:
- O thou caitiff! O thou varlet! O thou wicked
- Hannibal! I respected with her before I was married
- to her! If ever I was respected with her, or she
- with me, let not your worship think me the poor
- duke's officer. Prove this, thou wicked Hannibal, or
- I'll have mine action of battery on thee.
- ESCALUS:
- If he took you a box o' the ear, you might have your
- action of slander too.
- ELBOW:
- Marry, I thank your good worship for it. What is't
- your worship's pleasure I shall do with this wicked caitiff?
- ESCALUS:
- Truly, officer, because he hath some offences in him
- that thou wouldst discover if thou couldst, let him
- continue in his courses till thou knowest what they
- are.
- ELBOW:
- Marry, I thank your worship for it. Thou seest, thou
- wicked varlet, now, what's come upon thee: thou art
- to continue now, thou varlet; thou art to continue.
- ESCALUS:
- Where were you born, friend?
- FROTH:
- Here in Vienna, sir.
- ESCALUS:
- Are you of fourscore pounds a year?
- FROTH:
- Yes, an't please you, sir.
- ESCALUS:
- So. What trade are you of, sir?
- POMPHEY:
- Tapster; a poor widow's tapster.
- ESCALUS:
- Your mistress' name?
- POMPHEY:
- Mistress Overdone.
- ESCALUS:
- Hath she had any more than one husband?
- POMPEY:
- Nine, sir; Overdone by the last.
- ESCALUS:
- Nine! Come hither to me, Master Froth. Master
- Froth, I would not have you acquainted with
- tapsters: they will draw you, Master Froth, and you
- will hang them. Get you gone, and let me hear no
- more of you.
- FROTH:
- I thank your worship. For mine own part, I never
- come into any room in a tap-house, but I am drawn
- in.
- ESCALUS:
- Well, no more of it, Master Froth: farewell.
- Come you hither to me, Master tapster. What's your
- name, Master tapster?
- POMPEY:
- Pompey.
- ESCALUS:
- What else?
- POMPEY:
- Bum, sir.
- ESCALUS:
- Troth, and your bum is the greatest thing about you;
- so that in the beastliest sense you are Pompey the
- Great. Pompey, you are partly a bawd, Pompey,
- howsoever you colour it in being a tapster, are you
- not? come, tell me true: it shall be the better for you.
- POMPEY:
- Truly, sir, I am a poor fellow that would live.
- ESCALUS:
- How would you live, Pompey? by being a bawd? What
- do you think of the trade, Pompey? is it a lawful trade?
- POMPEY:
- If the law would allow it, sir.
- ESCALUS:
- But the law will not allow it, Pompey; nor it shall
- not be allowed in Vienna.
- POMPEY:
- Does your worship mean to geld and splay all the
- youth of the city?
- ESCALUS:
- No, Pompey.
- POMPEY:
- Truly, sir, in my poor opinion, they will to't then.
- If your worship will take order for the drabs and
- the knaves, you need not to fear the bawds.
- ESCALUS:
- There are pretty orders beginning, I can tell you:
- it is but heading and hanging.
- POMPEY:
- If you head and hang all that offend that way but
- for ten year together, you'll be glad to give out a
- commission for more heads: if this law hold in
- Vienna ten year, I'll rent the fairest house in it
- after three-pence a bay: if you live to see this
- come to pass, say Pompey told you so.
- ESCALUS:
- Thank you, good Pompey; and, in requital of your
- prophecy, hark you: I advise you, let me not find
- you before me again upon any complaint whatsoever;
- no, not for dwelling where you do: if I do, Pompey,
- I shall beat you to your tent, and prove a shrewd
- Caesar to you; in plain dealing, Pompey, I shall
- have you whipt: so, for this time, Pompey, fare you well.
- POMPEY:
- I thank your worship for your good counsel:
- but I shall follow it as the flesh and fortune shall
- better determine.
- Whip me? No, no; let carman whip his jade:
- The valiant heart is not whipt out of his trade.
- ESCALUS:
- Come hither to me, Master Elbow; come hither, Master
- constable. How long have you been in this place of constable?
- ELBOW:
- Seven year and a half, sir.
- ESCALUS:
- I thought, by your readiness in the office, you had
- continued in it some time. You say, seven years together?
- ELBOW:
- And a half, sir.
- ESCALUS:
- Alas, it hath been great pains to you. They do you
- wrong to put you so oft upon 't: are there not men
- in your ward sufficient to serve it?
- ELBOW:
- Faith, sir, few of any wit in such matters: as they
- are chosen, they are glad to choose me for them; I
- do it for some piece of money, and go through with
- all.
- ESCALUS:
- Look you bring me in the names of some six or seven,
- the most sufficient of your parish.
- ELBOW:
- To your worship's house, sir?
- ESCALUS:
- To my house. Fare you well.
- What's o'clock, think you?
- Justice:
- Eleven, sir.
- ESCALUS:
- I pray you home to dinner with me.
- Justice:
- I humbly thank you.
- ESCALUS:
- It grieves me for the death of Claudio;
- But there's no remedy.
- Justice:
- Lord Angelo is severe.
- ESCALUS:
- It is but needful:
- Mercy is not itself, that oft looks so;
- Pardon is still the nurse of second woe:
- But yet,--poor Claudio! There is no remedy.
- Come, sir.
- Servant:
- He's hearing of a cause; he will come straight
- I'll tell him of you.
- Provost:
- Pray you, do.
- I'll know
- His pleasure; may be he will relent. Alas,
- He hath but as offended in a dream!
- All sects, all ages smack of this vice; and he
- To die for't!
- ANGELO:
- Now, what's the matter. Provost?
- Provost:
- Is it your will Claudio shall die tomorrow?
- ANGELO:
- Did not I tell thee yea? hadst thou not order?
- Why dost thou ask again?
- Provost:
- Lest I might be too rash:
- Under your good correction, I have seen,
- When, after execution, judgment hath
- Repented o'er his doom.
- ANGELO:
- Go to; let that be mine:
- Do you your office, or give up your place,
- And you shall well be spared.
- Provost:
- I crave your honour's pardon.
- What shall be done, sir, with the groaning Juliet?
- She's very near her hour.
- ANGELO:
- Dispose of her
- To some more fitter place, and that with speed.
- Servant:
- Here is the sister of the man condemn'd
- Desires access to you.
- ANGELO:
- Hath he a sister?
- Provost:
- Ay, my good lord; a very virtuous maid,
- And to be shortly of a sisterhood,
- If not already.
- ANGELO:
- Well, let her be admitted.
- See you the fornicatress be removed:
- Let have needful, but not lavish, means;
- There shall be order for't.
- Provost:
- God save your honour!
- ANGELO:
- Stay a little while.
- You're welcome: what's your will?
- ISABELLA:
- I am a woeful suitor to your honour,
- Please but your honour hear me.
- ANGELO:
- Well; what's your suit?
- ISABELLA:
- There is a vice that most I do abhor,
- And most desire should meet the blow of justice;
- For which I would not plead, but that I must;
- For which I must not plead, but that I am
- At war 'twixt will and will not.
- ANGELO:
- Well; the matter?
- ISABELLA:
- I have a brother is condemn'd to die:
- I do beseech you, let it be his fault,
- And not my brother.
- Provost:
- ANGELO:
- Condemn the fault and not the actor of it?
- Why, every fault's condemn'd ere it be done:
- Mine were the very cipher of a function,
- To fine the faults whose fine stands in record,
- And let go by the actor.
- ISABELLA:
- O just but severe law!
- I had a brother, then. Heaven keep your honour!
- LUCIO:
- ISABELLA:
- Must he needs die?
- ANGELO:
- Maiden, no remedy.
- ISABELLA:
- Yes; I do think that you might pardon him,
- And neither heaven nor man grieve at the mercy.
- ANGELO:
- I will not do't.
- ISABELLA:
- But can you, if you would?
- ANGELO:
- Look, what I will not, that I cannot do.
- ISABELLA:
- But might you do't, and do the world no wrong,
- If so your heart were touch'd with that remorse
- As mine is to him?
- ANGELO:
- He's sentenced; 'tis too late.
- LUCIO:
- ISABELLA:
- Too late? why, no; I, that do speak a word.
- May call it back again. Well, believe this,
- No ceremony that to great ones 'longs,
- Not the king's crown, nor the deputed sword,
- The marshal's truncheon, nor the judge's robe,
- Become them with one half so good a grace
- As mercy does.
- If he had been as you and you as he,
- You would have slipt like him; but he, like you,
- Would not have been so stern.
- ANGELO:
- Pray you, be gone.
- ISABELLA:
- I would to heaven I had your potency,
- And you were Isabel! should it then be thus?
- No; I would tell what 'twere to be a judge,
- And what a prisoner.
- LUCIO:
- ANGELO:
- Your brother is a forfeit of the law,
- And you but waste your words.
- ISABELLA:
- Alas, alas!
- Why, all the souls that were were forfeit once;
- And He that might the vantage best have took
- Found out the remedy. How would you be,
- If He, which is the top of judgment, should
- But judge you as you are? O, think on that;
- And mercy then will breathe within your lips,
- Like man new made.
- ANGELO:
- Be you content, fair maid;
- It is the law, not I condemn your brother:
- Were he my kinsman, brother, or my son,
- It should be thus with him: he must die tomorrow.
- ISABELLA:
- To-morrow! O, that's sudden! Spare him, spare him!
- He's not prepared for death. Even for our kitchens
- We kill the fowl of season: shall we serve heaven
- With less respect than we do minister
- To our gross selves? Good, good my lord, bethink you;
- Who is it that hath died for this offence?
- There's many have committed it.
- LUCIO:
- ANGELO:
- The law hath not been dead, though it hath slept:
- Those many had not dared to do that evil,
- If the first that did the edict infringe
- Had answer'd for his deed: now 'tis awake
- Takes note of what is done; and, like a prophet,
- Looks in a glass, that shows what future evils,
- Either new, or by remissness new-conceived,
- And so in progress to be hatch'd and born,
- Are now to have no successive degrees,
- But, ere they live, to end.
- ISABELLA:
- Yet show some pity.
- ANGELO:
- I show it most of all when I show justice;
- For then I pity those I do not know,
- Which a dismiss'd offence would after gall;
- And do him right that, answering one foul wrong,
- Lives not to act another. Be satisfied;
- Your brother dies to-morrow; be content.
- ISABELLA:
- So you must be the first that gives this sentence,
- And he, that suffer's. O, it is excellent
- To have a giant's strength; but it is tyrannous
- To use it like a giant.
- LUCIO:
- ISABELLA:
- Could great men thunder
- As Jove himself does, Jove would ne'er be quiet,
- For every pelting, petty officer
- Would use his heaven for thunder;
- Nothing but thunder! Merciful Heaven,
- Thou rather with thy sharp and sulphurous bolt
- Split'st the unwedgeable and gnarled oak
- Than the soft myrtle: but man, proud man,
- Drest in a little brief authority,
- Most ignorant of what he's most assured,
- His glassy essence, like an angry ape,
- Plays such fantastic tricks before high heaven
- As make the angels weep; who, with our spleens,
- Would all themselves laugh mortal.
- LUCIO:
- Provost:
- ISABELLA:
- We cannot weigh our brother with ourself:
- Great men may jest with saints; 'tis wit in them,
- But in the less foul profanation.
- LUCIO:
- Thou'rt i' the right, girl; more o, that.
- ISABELLA:
- That in the captain's but a choleric word,
- Which in the soldier is flat blasphemy.
- LUCIO:
- ANGELO:
- Why do you put these sayings upon me?
- ISABELLA:
- Because authority, though it err like others,
- Hath yet a kind of medicine in itself,
- That skins the vice o' the top. Go to your bosom;
- Knock there, and ask your heart what it doth know
- That's like my brother's fault: if it confess
- A natural guiltiness such as is his,
- Let it not sound a thought upon your tongue
- Against my brother's life.
- ANGELO:
- ISABELLA:
- Gentle my lord, turn back.
- ANGELO:
- I will bethink me: come again tomorrow.
- ISABELLA:
- Hark how I'll bribe you: good my lord, turn back.
- ANGELO:
- How! bribe me?
- ISABELLA:
- Ay, with such gifts that heaven shall share with you.
- LUCIO:
- ISABELLA:
- Not with fond shekels of the tested gold,
- Or stones whose rates are either rich or poor
- As fancy values them; but with true prayers
- That shall be up at heaven and enter there
- Ere sun-rise, prayers from preserved souls,
- From fasting maids whose minds are dedicate
- To nothing temporal.
- ANGELO:
- Well; come to me to-morrow.
- LUCIO:
- ISABELLA:
- Heaven keep your honour safe!
- ANGELO:
- ISABELLA:
- At what hour to-morrow
- Shall I attend your lordship?
- ANGELO:
- At any time 'fore noon.
- ISABELLA:
- 'Save your honour!
- ANGELO:
- From thee, even from thy virtue!
- What's this, what's this? Is this her fault or mine?
- The tempter or the tempted, who sins most?
- Ha!
- Not she: nor doth she tempt: but it is I
- That, lying by the violet in the sun,
- Do as the carrion does, not as the flower,
- Corrupt with virtuous season. Can it be
- That modesty may more betray our sense
- Than woman's lightness? Having waste ground enough,
- Shall we desire to raze the sanctuary
- And pitch our evils there? O, fie, fie, fie!
- What dost thou, or what art thou, Angelo?
- Dost thou desire her foully for those things
- That make her good? O, let her brother live!
- Thieves for their robbery have authority
- When judges steal themselves. What, do I love her,
- That I desire to hear her speak again,
- And feast upon her eyes? What is't I dream on?
- O cunning enemy, that, to catch a saint,
- With saints dost bait thy hook! Most dangerous
- Is that temptation that doth goad us on
- To sin in loving virtue: never could the strumpet,
- With all her double vigour, art and nature,
- Once stir my temper; but this virtuous maid
- Subdues me quite. Even till now,
- When men were fond, I smiled and wonder'd how.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Hail to you, provost! so I think you are.
- Provost:
- I am the provost. What's your will, good friar?
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Bound by my charity and my blest order,
- I come to visit the afflicted spirits
- Here in the prison. Do me the common right
- To let me see them and to make me know
- The nature of their crimes, that I may minister
- To them accordingly.
- Provost:
- I would do more than that, if more were needful.
- Look, here comes one: a gentlewoman of mine,
- Who, falling in the flaws of her own youth,
- Hath blister'd her report: she is with child;
- And he that got it, sentenced; a young man
- More fit to do another such offence
- Than die for this.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- When must he die?
- Provost:
- As I do think, to-morrow.
- I have provided for you: stay awhile,
- And you shall be conducted.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Repent you, fair one, of the sin you carry?
- JULIET:
- I do; and bear the shame most patiently.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- I'll teach you how you shall arraign your conscience,
- And try your penitence, if it be sound,
- Or hollowly put on.
- JULIET:
- I'll gladly learn.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Love you the man that wrong'd you?
- JULIET:
- Yes, as I love the woman that wrong'd him.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- So then it seems your most offenceful act
- Was mutually committed?
- JULIET:
- Mutually.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Then was your sin of heavier kind than his.
- JULIET:
- I do confess it, and repent it, father.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- 'Tis meet so, daughter: but lest you do repent,
- As that the sin hath brought you to this shame,
- Which sorrow is always towards ourselves, not heaven,
- Showing we would not spare heaven as we love it,
- But as we stand in fear,--
- JULIET:
- I do repent me, as it is an evil,
- And take the shame with joy.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- There rest.
- Your partner, as I hear, must die to-morrow,
- And I am going with instruction to him.
- Grace go with you, Benedicite!
- JULIET:
- Must die to-morrow! O injurious love,
- That respites me a life, whose very comfort
- Is still a dying horror!
- Provost:
- 'Tis pity of him.
- ANGELO:
- When I would pray and think, I think and pray
- To several subjects. Heaven hath my empty words;
- Whilst my invention, hearing not my tongue,
- Anchors on Isabel: Heaven in my mouth,
- As if I did but only chew his name;
- And in my heart the strong and swelling evil
- Of my conception. The state, whereon I studied
- Is like a good thing, being often read,
- Grown fear'd and tedious; yea, my gravity,
- Wherein--let no man hear me--I take pride,
- Could I with boot change for an idle plume,
- Which the air beats for vain. O place, O form,
- How often dost thou with thy case, thy habit,
- Wrench awe from fools and tie the wiser souls
- To thy false seeming! Blood, thou art blood:
- Let's write good angel on the devil's horn:
- 'Tis not the devil's crest.
- How now! who's there?
- Servant:
- One Isabel, a sister, desires access to you.
- ANGELO:
- Teach her the way.
- O heavens!
- Why does my blood thus muster to my heart,
- Making both it unable for itself,
- And dispossessing all my other parts
- Of necessary fitness?
- So play the foolish throngs with one that swoons;
- Come all to help him, and so stop the air
- By which he should revive: and even so
- The general, subject to a well-wish'd king,
- Quit their own part, and in obsequious fondness
- Crowd to his presence, where their untaught love
- Must needs appear offence.
- How now, fair maid?
- ISABELLA:
- I am come to know your pleasure.
- ANGELO:
- That you might know it, would much better please me
- Than to demand what 'tis. Your brother cannot live.
- ISABELLA:
- Even so. Heaven keep your honour!
- ANGELO:
- Yet may he live awhile; and, it may be,
- As long as you or I yet he must die.
- ISABELLA:
- Under your sentence?
- ANGELO:
- Yea.
- ISABELLA:
- When, I beseech you? that in his reprieve,
- Longer or shorter, he may be so fitted
- That his soul sicken not.
- ANGELO:
- Ha! fie, these filthy vices! It were as good
- To pardon him that hath from nature stolen
- A man already made, as to remit
- Their saucy sweetness that do coin heaven's image
- In stamps that are forbid: 'tis all as easy
- Falsely to take away a life true made
- As to put metal in restrained means
- To make a false one.
- ISABELLA:
- 'Tis set down so in heaven, but not in earth.
- ANGELO:
- Say you so? then I shall pose you quickly.
- Which had you rather, that the most just law
- Now took your brother's life; or, to redeem him,
- Give up your body to such sweet uncleanness
- As she that he hath stain'd?
- ISABELLA:
- Sir, believe this,
- I had rather give my body than my soul.
- ANGELO:
- I talk not of your soul: our compell'd sins
- Stand more for number than for accompt.
- ISABELLA:
- How say you?
- ANGELO:
- Nay, I'll not warrant that; for I can speak
- Against the thing I say. Answer to this:
- I, now the voice of the recorded law,
- Pronounce a sentence on your brother's life:
- Might there not be a charity in sin
- To save this brother's life?
- ISABELLA:
- Please you to do't,
- I'll take it as a peril to my soul,
- It is no sin at all, but charity.
- ANGELO:
- Pleased you to do't at peril of your soul,
- Were equal poise of sin and charity.
- ISABELLA:
- That I do beg his life, if it be sin,
- Heaven let me bear it! you granting of my suit,
- If that be sin, I'll make it my morn prayer
- To have it added to the faults of mine,
- And nothing of your answer.
- ANGELO:
- Nay, but hear me.
- Your sense pursues not mine: either you are ignorant,
- Or seem so craftily; and that's not good.
- ISABELLA:
- Let me be ignorant, and in nothing good,
- But graciously to know I am no better.
- ANGELO:
- Thus wisdom wishes to appear most bright
- When it doth tax itself; as these black masks
- Proclaim an enshield beauty ten times louder
- Than beauty could, display'd. But mark me;
- To be received plain, I'll speak more gross:
- Your brother is to die.
- ISABELLA:
- So.
- ANGELO:
- And his offence is so, as it appears,
- Accountant to the law upon that pain.
- ISABELLA:
- True.
- ANGELO:
- Admit no other way to save his life,--
- As I subscribe not that, nor any other,
- But in the loss of question,--that you, his sister,
- Finding yourself desired of such a person,
- Whose credit with the judge, or own great place,
- Could fetch your brother from the manacles
- Of the all-building law; and that there were
- No earthly mean to save him, but that either
- You must lay down the treasures of your body
- To this supposed, or else to let him suffer;
- What would you do?
- ISABELLA:
- As much for my poor brother as myself:
- That is, were I under the terms of death,
- The impression of keen whips I'ld wear as rubies,
- And strip myself to death, as to a bed
- That longing have been sick for, ere I'ld yield
- My body up to shame.
- ANGELO:
- Then must your brother die.
- ISABELLA:
- And 'twere the cheaper way:
- Better it were a brother died at once,
- Than that a sister, by redeeming him,
- Should die for ever.
- ANGELO:
- Were not you then as cruel as the sentence
- That you have slander'd so?
- ISABELLA:
- Ignomy in ransom and free pardon
- Are of two houses: lawful mercy
- Is nothing kin to foul redemption.
- ANGELO:
- You seem'd of late to make the law a tyrant;
- And rather proved the sliding of your brother
- A merriment than a vice.
- ISABELLA:
- O, pardon me, my lord; it oft falls out,
- To have what we would have, we speak not what we mean:
- I something do excuse the thing I hate,
- For his advantage that I dearly love.
- ANGELO:
- We are all frail.
- ISABELLA:
- Else let my brother die,
- If not a feodary, but only he
- Owe and succeed thy weakness.
- ANGELO:
- Nay, women are frail too.
- ISABELLA:
- Ay, as the glasses where they view themselves;
- Which are as easy broke as they make forms.
- Women! Help Heaven! men their creation mar
- In profiting by them. Nay, call us ten times frail;
- For we are soft as our complexions are,
- And credulous to false prints.
- ANGELO:
- I think it well:
- And from this testimony of your own sex,--
- Since I suppose we are made to be no stronger
- Than faults may shake our frames,--let me be bold;
- I do arrest your words. Be that you are,
- That is, a woman; if you be more, you're none;
- If you be one, as you are well express'd
- By all external warrants, show it now,
- By putting on the destined livery.
- ISABELLA:
- I have no tongue but one: gentle my lord,
- Let me entreat you speak the former language.
- ANGELO:
- Plainly conceive, I love you.
- ISABELLA:
- My brother did love Juliet,
- And you tell me that he shall die for it.
- ANGELO:
- He shall not, Isabel, if you give me love.
- ISABELLA:
- I know your virtue hath a licence in't,
- Which seems a little fouler than it is,
- To pluck on others.
- ANGELO:
- Believe me, on mine honour,
- My words express my purpose.
- ISABELLA:
- Ha! little honour to be much believed,
- And most pernicious purpose! Seeming, seeming!
- I will proclaim thee, Angelo; look for't:
- Sign me a present pardon for my brother,
- Or with an outstretch'd throat I'll tell the world aloud
- What man thou art.
- ANGELO:
- Who will believe thee, Isabel?
- My unsoil'd name, the austereness of my life,
- My vouch against you, and my place i' the state,
- Will so your accusation overweigh,
- That you shall stifle in your own report
- And smell of calumny. I have begun,
- And now I give my sensual race the rein:
- Fit thy consent to my sharp appetite;
- Lay by all nicety and prolixious blushes,
- That banish what they sue for; redeem thy brother
- By yielding up thy body to my will;
- Or else he must not only die the death,
- But thy unkindness shall his death draw out
- To lingering sufferance. Answer me to-morrow,
- Or, by the affection that now guides me most,
- I'll prove a tyrant to him. As for you,
- Say what you can, my false o'erweighs your true.
- ISABELLA:
- To whom should I complain? Did I tell this,
- Who would believe me? O perilous mouths,
- That bear in them one and the self-same tongue,
- Either of condemnation or approof;
- Bidding the law make court'sy to their will:
- Hooking both right and wrong to the appetite,
- To follow as it draws! I'll to my brother:
- Though he hath fallen by prompture of the blood,
- Yet hath he in him such a mind of honour.
- That, had he twenty heads to tender down
- On twenty bloody blocks, he'ld yield them up,
- Before his sister should her body stoop
- To such abhorr'd pollution.
- Then, Isabel, live chaste, and, brother, die:
- More than our brother is our chastity.
- I'll tell him yet of Angelo's request,
- And fit his mind to death, for his soul's rest.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- So then you hope of pardon from Lord Angelo?
- CLAUDIO:
- The miserable have no other medicine
- But only hope:
- I've hope to live, and am prepared to die.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Be absolute for death; either death or life
- Shall thereby be the sweeter. Reason thus with life:
- If I do lose thee, I do lose a thing
- That none but fools would keep: a breath thou art,
- Servile to all the skyey influences,
- That dost this habitation, where thou keep'st,
- Hourly afflict: merely, thou art death's fool;
- For him thou labour'st by thy flight to shun
- And yet runn'st toward him still. Thou art not noble;
- For all the accommodations that thou bear'st
- Are nursed by baseness. Thou'rt by no means valiant;
- For thou dost fear the soft and tender fork
- Of a poor worm. Thy best of rest is sleep,
- And that thou oft provokest; yet grossly fear'st
- Thy death, which is no more. Thou art not thyself;
- For thou exist'st on many a thousand grains
- That issue out of dust. Happy thou art not;
- For what thou hast not, still thou strivest to get,
- And what thou hast, forget'st. Thou art not certain;
- For thy complexion shifts to strange effects,
- After the moon. If thou art rich, thou'rt poor;
- For, like an ass whose back with ingots bows,
- Thou bear's thy heavy riches but a journey,
- And death unloads thee. Friend hast thou none;
- For thine own bowels, which do call thee sire,
- The mere effusion of thy proper loins,
- Do curse the gout, serpigo, and the rheum,
- For ending thee no sooner. Thou hast nor youth nor age,
- But, as it were, an after-dinner's sleep,
- Dreaming on both; for all thy blessed youth
- Becomes as aged, and doth beg the alms
- Of palsied eld; and when thou art old and rich,
- Thou hast neither heat, affection, limb, nor beauty,
- To make thy riches pleasant. What's yet in this
- That bears the name of life? Yet in this life
- Lie hid moe thousand deaths: yet death we fear,
- That makes these odds all even.
- CLAUDIO:
- I humbly thank you.
- To sue to live, I find I seek to die;
- And, seeking death, find life: let it come on.
- ISABELLA:
- Provost:
- Who's there? come in: the wish deserves a welcome.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Dear sir, ere long I'll visit you again.
- CLAUDIO:
- Most holy sir, I thank you.
- ISABELLA:
- My business is a word or two with Claudio.
- Provost:
- And very welcome. Look, signior, here's your sister.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Provost, a word with you.
- Provost:
- As many as you please.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Bring me to hear them speak, where I may be concealed.
- CLAUDIO:
- Now, sister, what's the comfort?
- ISABELLA:
- Why,
- As all comforts are; most good, most good indeed.
- Lord Angelo, having affairs to heaven,
- Intends you for his swift ambassador,
- Where you shall be an everlasting leiger:
- Therefore your best appointment make with speed;
- To-morrow you set on.
- CLAUDIO:
- Is there no remedy?
- ISABELLA:
- None, but such remedy as, to save a head,
- To cleave a heart in twain.
- CLAUDIO:
- But is there any?
- ISABELLA:
- Yes, brother, you may live:
- There is a devilish mercy in the judge,
- If you'll implore it, that will free your life,
- But fetter you till death.
- CLAUDIO:
- Perpetual durance?
- ISABELLA:
- Ay, just; perpetual durance, a restraint,
- Though all the world's vastidity you had,
- To a determined scope.
- CLAUDIO:
- But in what nature?
- ISABELLA:
- In such a one as, you consenting to't,
- Would bark your honour from that trunk you bear,
- And leave you naked.
- CLAUDIO:
- Let me know the point.
- ISABELLA:
- O, I do fear thee, Claudio; and I quake,
- Lest thou a feverous life shouldst entertain,
- And six or seven winters more respect
- Than a perpetual honour. Darest thou die?
- The sense of death is most in apprehension;
- And the poor beetle, that we tread upon,
- In corporal sufferance finds a pang as great
- As when a giant dies.
- CLAUDIO:
- Why give you me this shame?
- Think you I can a resolution fetch
- From flowery tenderness? If I must die,
- I will encounter darkness as a bride,
- And hug it in mine arms.
- ISABELLA:
- There spake my brother; there my father's grave
- Did utter forth a voice. Yes, thou must die:
- Thou art too noble to conserve a life
- In base appliances. This outward-sainted deputy,
- Whose settled visage and deliberate word
- Nips youth i' the head and follies doth emmew
- As falcon doth the fowl, is yet a devil
- His filth within being cast, he would appear
- A pond as deep as hell.
- CLAUDIO:
- The prenzie Angelo!
- ISABELLA:
- O, 'tis the cunning livery of hell,
- The damned'st body to invest and cover
- In prenzie guards! Dost thou think, Claudio?
- If I would yield him my virginity,
- Thou mightst be freed.
- CLAUDIO:
- O heavens! it cannot be.
- ISABELLA:
- Yes, he would give't thee, from this rank offence,
- So to offend him still. This night's the time
- That I should do what I abhor to name,
- Or else thou diest to-morrow.
- CLAUDIO:
- Thou shalt not do't.
- ISABELLA:
- O, were it but my life,
- I'ld throw it down for your deliverance
- As frankly as a pin.
- CLAUDIO:
- Thanks, dear Isabel.
- ISABELLA:
- Be ready, Claudio, for your death tomorrow.
- CLAUDIO:
- Yes. Has he affections in him,
- That thus can make him bite the law by the nose,
- When he would force it? Sure, it is no sin,
- Or of the deadly seven, it is the least.
- ISABELLA:
- Which is the least?
- CLAUDIO:
- If it were damnable, he being so wise,
- Why would he for the momentary trick
- Be perdurably fined? O Isabel!
- ISABELLA:
- What says my brother?
- CLAUDIO:
- Death is a fearful thing.
- ISABELLA:
- And shamed life a hateful.
- CLAUDIO:
- Ay, but to die, and go we know not where;
- To lie in cold obstruction and to rot;
- This sensible warm motion to become
- A kneaded clod; and the delighted spirit
- To bathe in fiery floods, or to reside
- In thrilling region of thick-ribbed ice;
- To be imprison'd in the viewless winds,
- And blown with restless violence round about
- The pendent world; or to be worse than worst
- Of those that lawless and incertain thought
- Imagine howling: 'tis too horrible!
- The weariest and most loathed worldly life
- That age, ache, penury and imprisonment
- Can lay on nature is a paradise
- To what we fear of death.
- ISABELLA:
- Alas, alas!
- CLAUDIO:
- Sweet sister, let me live:
- What sin you do to save a brother's life,
- Nature dispenses with the deed so far
- That it becomes a virtue.
- ISABELLA:
- O you beast!
- O faithless coward! O dishonest wretch!
- Wilt thou be made a man out of my vice?
- Is't not a kind of incest, to take life
- From thine own sister's shame? What should I think?
- Heaven shield my mother play'd my father fair!
- For such a warped slip of wilderness
- Ne'er issued from his blood. Take my defiance!
- Die, perish! Might but my bending down
- Reprieve thee from thy fate, it should proceed:
- I'll pray a thousand prayers for thy death,
- No word to save thee.
- CLAUDIO:
- Nay, hear me, Isabel.
- ISABELLA:
- O, fie, fie, fie!
- Thy sin's not accidental, but a trade.
- Mercy to thee would prove itself a bawd:
- 'Tis best thou diest quickly.
- CLAUDIO:
- O hear me, Isabella!
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Vouchsafe a word, young sister, but one word.
- ISABELLA:
- What is your will?
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Might you dispense with your leisure, I would by and
- by have some speech with you: the satisfaction I
- would require is likewise your own benefit.
- ISABELLA:
- I have no superfluous leisure; my stay must be
- stolen out of other affairs; but I will attend you awhile.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Son, I have overheard what hath passed between you
- and your sister. Angelo had never the purpose to
- corrupt her; only he hath made an essay of her
- virtue to practise his judgment with the disposition
- of natures: she, having the truth of honour in her,
- hath made him that gracious denial which he is most
- glad to receive. I am confessor to Angelo, and I
- know this to be true; therefore prepare yourself to
- death: do not satisfy your resolution with hopes
- that are fallible: tomorrow you must die; go to
- your knees and make ready.
- CLAUDIO:
- Let me ask my sister pardon. I am so out of love
- with life that I will sue to be rid of it.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Hold you there: farewell.
- Provost, a word with you!
- Provost:
- What's your will, father
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- That now you are come, you will be gone. Leave me
- awhile with the maid: my mind promises with my
- habit no loss shall touch her by my company.
- Provost:
- In good time.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- The hand that hath made you fair hath made you good:
- the goodness that is cheap in beauty makes beauty
- brief in goodness; but grace, being the soul of
- your complexion, shall keep the body of it ever
- fair. The assault that Angelo hath made to you,
- fortune hath conveyed to my understanding; and, but
- that frailty hath examples for his falling, I should
- wonder at Angelo. How will you do to content this
- substitute, and to save your brother?
- ISABELLA:
- I am now going to resolve him: I had rather my
- brother die by the law than my son should be
- unlawfully born. But, O, how much is the good duke
- deceived in Angelo! If ever he return and I can
- speak to him, I will open my lips in vain, or
- discover his government.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- That shall not be much amiss: Yet, as the matter
- now stands, he will avoid your accusation; he made
- trial of you only. Therefore fasten your ear on my
- advisings: to the love I have in doing good a
- remedy presents itself. I do make myself believe
- that you may most uprighteously do a poor wronged
- lady a merited benefit; redeem your brother from
- the angry law; do no stain to your own gracious
- person; and much please the absent duke, if
- peradventure he shall ever return to have hearing of
- this business.
- ISABELLA:
- Let me hear you speak farther. I have spirit to do
- anything that appears not foul in the truth of my spirit.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Virtue is bold, and goodness never fearful. Have
- you not heard speak of Mariana, the sister of
- Frederick the great soldier who miscarried at sea?
- ISABELLA:
- I have heard of the lady, and good words went with her name.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- She should this Angelo have married; was affianced
- to her by oath, and the nuptial appointed: between
- which time of the contract and limit of the
- solemnity, her brother Frederick was wrecked at sea,
- having in that perished vessel the dowry of his
- sister. But mark how heavily this befell to the
- poor gentlewoman: there she lost a noble and
- renowned brother, in his love toward her ever most
- kind and natural; with him, the portion and sinew of
- her fortune, her marriage-dowry; with both, her
- combinate husband, this well-seeming Angelo.
- ISABELLA:
- Can this be so? did Angelo so leave her?
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Left her in her tears, and dried not one of them
- with his comfort; swallowed his vows whole,
- pretending in her discoveries of dishonour: in few,
- bestowed her on her own lamentation, which she yet
- wears for his sake; and he, a marble to her tears,
- is washed with them, but relents not.
- ISABELLA:
- What a merit were it in death to take this poor maid
- from the world! What corruption in this life, that
- it will let this man live! But how out of this can she avail?
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- It is a rupture that you may easily heal: and the
- cure of it not only saves your brother, but keeps
- you from dishonour in doing it.
- ISABELLA:
- Show me how, good father.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- This forenamed maid hath yet in her the continuance
- of her first affection: his unjust unkindness, that
- in all reason should have quenched her love, hath,
- like an impediment in the current, made it more
- violent and unruly. Go you to Angelo; answer his
- requiring with a plausible obedience; agree with
- his demands to the point; only refer yourself to
- this advantage, first, that your stay with him may
- not be long; that the time may have all shadow and
- silence in it; and the place answer to convenience.
- This being granted in course,--and now follows
- all,--we shall advise this wronged maid to stead up
- your appointment, go in your place; if the encounter
- acknowledge itself hereafter, it may compel him to
- her recompense: and here, by this, is your brother
- saved, your honour untainted, the poor Mariana
- advantaged, and the corrupt deputy scaled. The maid
- will I frame and make fit for his attempt. If you
- think well to carry this as you may, the doubleness
- of the benefit defends the deceit from reproof.
- What think you of it?
- ISABELLA:
- The image of it gives me content already; and I
- trust it will grow to a most prosperous perfection.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- It lies much in your holding up. Haste you speedily
- to Angelo: if for this night he entreat you to his
- bed, give him promise of satisfaction. I will
- presently to Saint Luke's: there, at the moated
- grange, resides this dejected Mariana. At that
- place call upon me; and dispatch with Angelo, that
- it may be quickly.
- ISABELLA:
- I thank you for this comfort. Fare you well, good father.
- ELBOW:
- Nay, if there be no remedy for it, but that you will
- needs buy and sell men and women like beasts, we
- shall have all the world drink brown and white bastard.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- O heavens! what stuff is here
- POMPEY:
- 'Twas never merry world since, of two usuries, the
- merriest was put down, and the worser allowed by
- order of law a furred gown to keep him warm; and
- furred with fox and lamb-skins too, to signify, that
- craft, being richer than innocency, stands for the facing.
- ELBOW:
- Come your way, sir. 'Bless you, good father friar.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- And you, good brother father. What offence hath
- this man made you, sir?
- ELBOW:
- Marry, sir, he hath offended the law: and, sir, we
- take him to be a thief too, sir; for we have found
- upon him, sir, a strange picklock, which we have
- sent to the deputy.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Fie, sirrah! a bawd, a wicked bawd!
- The evil that thou causest to be done,
- That is thy means to live. Do thou but think
- What 'tis to cram a maw or clothe a back
- From such a filthy vice: say to thyself,
- From their abominable and beastly touches
- I drink, I eat, array myself, and live.
- Canst thou believe thy living is a life,
- So stinkingly depending? Go mend, go mend.
- POMPEY:
- Indeed, it does stink in some sort, sir; but yet,
- sir, I would prove--
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Nay, if the devil have given thee proofs for sin,
- Thou wilt prove his. Take him to prison, officer:
- Correction and instruction must both work
- Ere this rude beast will profit.
- ELBOW:
- He must before the deputy, sir; he has given him
- warning: the deputy cannot abide a whoremaster: if
- he be a whoremonger, and comes before him, he were
- as good go a mile on his errand.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- That we were all, as some would seem to be,
- From our faults, as faults from seeming, free!
- ELBOW:
- His neck will come to your waist,--a cord, sir.
- POMPEY:
- I spy comfort; I cry bail. Here's a gentleman and a
- friend of mine.
- LUCIO:
- How now, noble Pompey! What, at the wheels of
- Caesar? art thou led in triumph? What, is there
- none of Pygmalion's images, newly made woman, to be
- had now, for putting the hand in the pocket and
- extracting it clutch'd? What reply, ha? What
- sayest thou to this tune, matter and method? Is't
- not drowned i' the last rain, ha? What sayest
- thou, Trot? Is the world as it was, man? Which is
- the way? Is it sad, and few words? or how? The
- trick of it?
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Still thus, and thus; still worse!
- LUCIO:
- How doth my dear morsel, thy mistress? Procures she
- still, ha?
- POMPEY:
- Troth, sir, she hath eaten up all her beef, and she
- is herself in the tub.
- LUCIO:
- Why, 'tis good; it is the right of it; it must be
- so: ever your fresh whore and your powdered bawd:
- an unshunned consequence; it must be so. Art going
- to prison, Pompey?
- POMPEY:
- Yes, faith, sir.
- LUCIO:
- Why, 'tis not amiss, Pompey. Farewell: go, say I
- sent thee thither. For debt, Pompey? or how?
- ELBOW:
- For being a bawd, for being a bawd.
- LUCIO:
- Well, then, imprison him: if imprisonment be the
- due of a bawd, why, 'tis his right: bawd is he
- doubtless, and of antiquity too; bawd-born.
- Farewell, good Pompey. Commend me to the prison,
- Pompey: you will turn good husband now, Pompey; you
- will keep the house.
- POMPEY:
- I hope, sir, your good worship will be my bail.
- LUCIO:
- No, indeed, will I not, Pompey; it is not the wear.
- I will pray, Pompey, to increase your bondage: If
- you take it not patiently, why, your mettle is the
- more. Adieu, trusty Pompey. 'Bless you, friar.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- And you.
- LUCIO:
- Does Bridget paint still, Pompey, ha?
- ELBOW:
- Come your ways, sir; come.
- POMPEY:
- You will not bail me, then, sir?
- LUCIO:
- Then, Pompey, nor now. What news abroad, friar?
- what news?
- ELBOW:
- Come your ways, sir; come.
- LUCIO:
- Go to kennel, Pompey; go.
- What news, friar, of the duke?
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- I know none. Can you tell me of any?
- LUCIO:
- Some say he is with the Emperor of Russia; other
- some, he is in Rome: but where is he, think you?
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- I know not where; but wheresoever, I wish him well.
- LUCIO:
- It was a mad fantastical trick of him to steal from
- the state, and usurp the beggary he was never born
- to. Lord Angelo dukes it well in his absence; he
- puts transgression to 't.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- He does well in 't.
- LUCIO:
- A little more lenity to lechery would do no harm in
- him: something too crabbed that way, friar.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- It is too general a vice, and severity must cure it.
- LUCIO:
- Yes, in good sooth, the vice is of a great kindred;
- it is well allied: but it is impossible to extirp
- it quite, friar, till eating and drinking be put
- down. They say this Angelo was not made by man and
- woman after this downright way of creation: is it
- true, think you?
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- How should he be made, then?
- LUCIO:
- Some report a sea-maid spawned him; some, that he
- was begot between two stock-fishes. But it is
- certain that when he makes water his urine is
- congealed ice; that I know to be true: and he is a
- motion generative; that's infallible.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- You are pleasant, sir, and speak apace.
- LUCIO:
- Why, what a ruthless thing is this in him, for the
- rebellion of a codpiece to take away the life of a
- man! Would the duke that is absent have done this?
- Ere he would have hanged a man for the getting a
- hundred bastards, he would have paid for the nursing
- a thousand: he had some feeling of the sport: he
- knew the service, and that instructed him to mercy.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- I never heard the absent duke much detected for
- women; he was not inclined that way.
- LUCIO:
- O, sir, you are deceived.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- 'Tis not possible.
- LUCIO:
- Who, not the duke? yes, your beggar of fifty; and
- his use was to put a ducat in her clack-dish: the
- duke had crotchets in him. He would be drunk too;
- that let me inform you.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- You do him wrong, surely.
- LUCIO:
- Sir, I was an inward of his. A shy fellow was the
- duke: and I believe I know the cause of his
- withdrawing.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- What, I prithee, might be the cause?
- LUCIO:
- No, pardon; 'tis a secret must be locked within the
- teeth and the lips: but this I can let you
- understand, the greater file of the subject held the
- duke to be wise.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Wise! why, no question but he was.
- LUCIO:
- A very superficial, ignorant, unweighing fellow.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Either this is the envy in you, folly, or mistaking:
- the very stream of his life and the business he hath
- helmed must upon a warranted need give him a better
- proclamation. Let him be but testimonied in his own
- bringings-forth, and he shall appear to the
- envious a scholar, a statesman and a soldier.
- Therefore you speak unskilfully: or if your
- knowledge be more it is much darkened in your malice.
- LUCIO:
- Sir, I know him, and I love him.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Love talks with better knowledge, and knowledge with
- dearer love.
- LUCIO:
- Come, sir, I know what I know.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- I can hardly believe that, since you know not what
- you speak. But, if ever the duke return, as our
- prayers are he may, let me desire you to make your
- answer before him. If it be honest you have spoke,
- you have courage to maintain it: I am bound to call
- upon you; and, I pray you, your name?
- LUCIO:
- Sir, my name is Lucio; well known to the duke.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- He shall know you better, sir, if I may live to
- report you.
- LUCIO:
- I fear you not.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- O, you hope the duke will return no more; or you
- imagine me too unhurtful an opposite. But indeed I
- can do you little harm; you'll forswear this again.
- LUCIO:
- I'll be hanged first: thou art deceived in me,
- friar. But no more of this. Canst thou tell if
- Claudio die to-morrow or no?
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Why should he die, sir?
- LUCIO:
- Why? For filling a bottle with a tundish. I would
- the duke we talk of were returned again: the
- ungenitured agent will unpeople the province with
- continency; sparrows must not build in his
- house-eaves, because they are lecherous. The duke
- yet would have dark deeds darkly answered; he would
- never bring them to light: would he were returned!
- Marry, this Claudio is condemned for untrussing.
- Farewell, good friar: I prithee, pray for me. The
- duke, I say to thee again, would eat mutton on
- Fridays. He's not past it yet, and I say to thee,
- he would mouth with a beggar, though she smelt brown
- bread and garlic: say that I said so. Farewell.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- No might nor greatness in mortality
- Can censure 'scape; back-wounding calumny
- The whitest virtue strikes. What king so strong
- Can tie the gall up in the slanderous tongue?
- But who comes here?
- ESCALUS:
- Go; away with her to prison!
- MISTRESS OVERDONE:
- Good my lord, be good to me; your honour is accounted
- a merciful man; good my lord.
- ESCALUS:
- Double and treble admonition, and still forfeit in
- the same kind! This would make mercy swear and play
- the tyrant.
- Provost:
- A bawd of eleven years' continuance, may it please
- your honour.
- MISTRESS OVERDONE:
- My lord, this is one Lucio's information against me.
- Mistress Kate Keepdown was with child by him in the
- duke's time; he promised her marriage: his child
- is a year and a quarter old, come Philip and Jacob:
- I have kept it myself; and see how he goes about to abuse me!
- ESCALUS:
- That fellow is a fellow of much licence: let him be
- called before us. Away with her to prison! Go to;
- no more words.
- Provost, my brother Angelo will not be altered;
- Claudio must die to-morrow: let him be furnished
- with divines, and have all charitable preparation.
- if my brother wrought by my pity, it should not be
- so with him.
- Provost:
- So please you, this friar hath been with him, and
- advised him for the entertainment of death.
- ESCALUS:
- Good even, good father.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Bliss and goodness on you!
- ESCALUS:
- Of whence are you?
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Not of this country, though my chance is now
- To use it for my time: I am a brother
- Of gracious order, late come from the See
- In special business from his holiness.
- ESCALUS:
- What news abroad i' the world?
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- None, but that there is so great a fever on
- goodness, that the dissolution of it must cure it:
- novelty is only in request; and it is as dangerous
- to be aged in any kind of course, as it is virtuous
- to be constant in any undertaking. There is scarce
- truth enough alive to make societies secure; but
- security enough to make fellowships accurst: much
- upon this riddle runs the wisdom of the world. This
- news is old enough, yet it is every day's news. I
- pray you, sir, of what disposition was the duke?
- ESCALUS:
- One that, above all other strifes, contended
- especially to know himself.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- What pleasure was he given to?
- ESCALUS:
- Rather rejoicing to see another merry, than merry at
- any thing which professed to make him rejoice: a
- gentleman of all temperance. But leave we him to
- his events, with a prayer they may prove prosperous;
- and let me desire to know how you find Claudio
- prepared. I am made to understand that you have
- lent him visitation.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- He professes to have received no sinister measure
- from his judge, but most willingly humbles himself
- to the determination of justice: yet had he framed
- to himself, by the instruction of his frailty, many
- deceiving promises of life; which I by my good
- leisure have discredited to him, and now is he
- resolved to die.
- ESCALUS:
- You have paid the heavens your function, and the
- prisoner the very debt of your calling. I have
- laboured for the poor gentleman to the extremest
- shore of my modesty: but my brother justice have I
- found so severe, that he hath forced me to tell him
- he is indeed Justice.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- If his own life answer the straitness of his
- proceeding, it shall become him well; wherein if he
- chance to fail, he hath sentenced himself.
- ESCALUS:
- I am going to visit the prisoner. Fare you well.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Peace be with you!
- He who the sword of heaven will bear
- Should be as holy as severe;
- Pattern in himself to know,
- Grace to stand, and virtue go;
- More nor less to others paying
- Than by self-offences weighing.
- Shame to him whose cruel striking
- Kills for faults of his own liking!
- Twice treble shame on Angelo,
- To weed my vice and let his grow!
- O, what may man within him hide,
- Though angel on the outward side!
- How may likeness made in crimes,
- Making practise on the times,
- To draw with idle spiders' strings
- Most ponderous and substantial things!
- Craft against vice I must apply:
- With Angelo to-night shall lie
- His old betrothed but despised;
- So disguise shall, by the disguised,
- Pay with falsehood false exacting,
- And perform an old contracting.
- MARIANA:
- Break off thy song, and haste thee quick away:
- Here comes a man of comfort, whose advice
- Hath often still'd my brawling discontent.
- I cry you mercy, sir; and well could wish
- You had not found me here so musical:
- Let me excuse me, and believe me so,
- My mirth it much displeased, but pleased my woe.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- 'Tis good; though music oft hath such a charm
- To make bad good, and good provoke to harm.
- I pray, you, tell me, hath any body inquired
- for me here to-day? much upon this time have
- I promised here to meet.
- MARIANA:
- You have not been inquired after:
- I have sat here all day.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- I do constantly believe you. The time is come even
- now. I shall crave your forbearance a little: may
- be I will call upon you anon, for some advantage to yourself.
- MARIANA:
- I am always bound to you.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Very well met, and well come.
- What is the news from this good deputy?
- ISABELLA:
- He hath a garden circummured with brick,
- Whose western side is with a vineyard back'd;
- And to that vineyard is a planched gate,
- That makes his opening with this bigger key:
- This other doth command a little door
- Which from the vineyard to the garden leads;
- There have I made my promise
- Upon the heavy middle of the night
- To call upon him.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- But shall you on your knowledge find this way?
- ISABELLA:
- I have ta'en a due and wary note upon't:
- With whispering and most guilty diligence,
- In action all of precept, he did show me
- The way twice o'er.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Are there no other tokens
- Between you 'greed concerning her observance?
- ISABELLA:
- No, none, but only a repair i' the dark;
- And that I have possess'd him my most stay
- Can be but brief; for I have made him know
- I have a servant comes with me along,
- That stays upon me, whose persuasion is
- I come about my brother.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- 'Tis well borne up.
- I have not yet made known to Mariana
- A word of this. What, ho! within! come forth!
- I pray you, be acquainted with this maid;
- She comes to do you good.
- ISABELLA:
- I do desire the like.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Do you persuade yourself that I respect you?
- MARIANA:
- Good friar, I know you do, and have found it.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Take, then, this your companion by the hand,
- Who hath a story ready for your ear.
- I shall attend your leisure: but make haste;
- The vaporous night approaches.
- MARIANA:
- Will't please you walk aside?
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- O place and greatness! millions of false eyes
- Are stuck upon thee: volumes of report
- Run with these false and most contrarious quests
- Upon thy doings: thousand escapes of wit
- Make thee the father of their idle dreams
- And rack thee in their fancies.
- Welcome, how agreed?
- ISABELLA:
- She'll take the enterprise upon her, father,
- If you advise it.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- It is not my consent,
- But my entreaty too.
- ISABELLA:
- Little have you to say
- When you depart from him, but, soft and low,
- 'Remember now my brother.'
- MARIANA:
- Fear me not.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Nor, gentle daughter, fear you not at all.
- He is your husband on a pre-contract:
- To bring you thus together, 'tis no sin,
- Sith that the justice of your title to him
- Doth flourish the deceit. Come, let us go:
- Our corn's to reap, for yet our tithe's to sow.
- Provost:
- Come hither, sirrah. Can you cut off a man's head?
- POMPEY:
- If the man be a bachelor, sir, I can; but if he be a
- married man, he's his wife's head, and I can never
- cut off a woman's head.
- Provost:
- Come, sir, leave me your snatches, and yield me a
- direct answer. To-morrow morning are to die Claudio
- and Barnardine. Here is in our prison a common
- executioner, who in his office lacks a helper: if
- you will take it on you to assist him, it shall
- redeem you from your gyves; if not, you shall have
- your full time of imprisonment and your deliverance
- with an unpitied whipping, for you have been a
- notorious bawd.
- POMPEY:
- Sir, I have been an unlawful bawd time out of mind;
- but yet I will be content to be a lawful hangman. I
- would be glad to receive some instruction from my
- fellow partner.
- Provost:
- What, ho! Abhorson! Where's Abhorson, there?
- ABHORSON:
- Do you call, sir?
- Provost:
- Sirrah, here's a fellow will help you to-morrow in
- your execution. If you think it meet, compound with
- him by the year, and let him abide here with you; if
- not, use him for the present and dismiss him. He
- cannot plead his estimation with you; he hath been a bawd.
- ABHORSON:
- A bawd, sir? fie upon him! he will discredit our mystery.
- Provost:
- Go to, sir; you weigh equally; a feather will turn
- the scale.
- POMPEY:
- Pray, sir, by your good favour,--for surely, sir, a
- good favour you have, but that you have a hanging
- look,--do you call, sir, your occupation a mystery?
- ABHORSON:
- Ay, sir; a mystery
- POMPEY:
- Painting, sir, I have heard say, is a mystery; and
- your whores, sir, being members of my occupation,
- using painting, do prove my occupation a mystery:
- but what mystery there should be in hanging, if I
- should be hanged, I cannot imagine.
- ABHORSON:
- Sir, it is a mystery.
- POMPEY:
- Proof?
- ABHORSON:
- Every true man's apparel fits your thief: if it be
- too little for your thief, your true man thinks it
- big enough; if it be too big for your thief, your
- thief thinks it little enough: so every true man's
- apparel fits your thief.
- Provost:
- Are you agreed?
- POMPEY:
- Sir, I will serve him; for I do find your hangman is
- a more penitent trade than your bawd; he doth
- oftener ask forgiveness.
- Provost:
- You, sirrah, provide your block and your axe
- to-morrow four o'clock.
- ABHORSON:
- Come on, bawd; I will instruct thee in my trade; follow.
- POMPEY:
- I do desire to learn, sir: and I hope, if you have
- occasion to use me for your own turn, you shall find
- me yare; for truly, sir, for your kindness I owe you
- a good turn.
- Provost:
- Call hither Barnardine and Claudio:
- The one has my pity; not a jot the other,
- Being a murderer, though he were my brother.
- Look, here's the warrant, Claudio, for thy death:
- 'Tis now dead midnight, and by eight to-morrow
- Thou must be made immortal. Where's Barnardine?
- CLAUDIO:
- As fast lock'd up in sleep as guiltless labour
- When it lies starkly in the traveller's bones:
- He will not wake.
- Provost:
- Who can do good on him?
- Well, go, prepare yourself.
- But, hark, what noise?
- Heaven give your spirits comfort!
- By and by.
- I hope it is some pardon or reprieve
- For the most gentle Claudio.
- Welcome father.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- The best and wholesomest spirts of the night
- Envelope you, good Provost! Who call'd here of late?
- Provost:
- None, since the curfew rung.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Not Isabel?
- Provost:
- No.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- They will, then, ere't be long.
- Provost:
- What comfort is for Claudio?
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- There's some in hope.
- Provost:
- It is a bitter deputy.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Not so, not so; his life is parallel'd
- Even with the stroke and line of his great justice:
- He doth with holy abstinence subdue
- That in himself which he spurs on his power
- To qualify in others: were he meal'd with that
- Which he corrects, then were he tyrannous;
- But this being so, he's just.
- Now are they come.
- This is a gentle provost: seldom when
- The steeled gaoler is the friend of men.
- How now! what noise? That spirit's possessed with haste
- That wounds the unsisting postern with these strokes.
- Provost:
- There he must stay until the officer
- Arise to let him in: he is call'd up.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Have you no countermand for Claudio yet,
- But he must die to-morrow?
- Provost:
- None, sir, none.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- As near the dawning, provost, as it is,
- You shall hear more ere morning.
- Provost:
- Happily
- You something know; yet I believe there comes
- No countermand; no such example have we:
- Besides, upon the very siege of justice
- Lord Angelo hath to the public ear
- Profess'd the contrary.
- This is his lordship's man.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- And here comes Claudio's pardon.
- Messenger:
- Provost:
- I shall obey him.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Provost:
- I told you. Lord Angelo, belike thinking me remiss
- in mine office, awakens me with this unwonted
- putting-on; methinks strangely, for he hath not used it before.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Pray you, let's hear.
- Provost:
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- What is that Barnardine who is to be executed in the
- afternoon?
- Provost:
- A Bohemian born, but here nursed un and bred; one
- that is a prisoner nine years old.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- How came it that the absent duke had not either
- delivered him to his liberty or executed him? I
- have heard it was ever his manner to do so.
- Provost:
- His friends still wrought reprieves for him: and,
- indeed, his fact, till now in the government of Lord
- Angelo, came not to an undoubtful proof.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- It is now apparent?
- Provost:
- Most manifest, and not denied by himself.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Hath he born himself penitently in prison? how
- seems he to be touched?
- Provost:
- A man that apprehends death no more dreadfully but
- as a drunken sleep; careless, reckless, and fearless
- of what's past, present, or to come; insensible of
- mortality, and desperately mortal.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- He wants advice.
- Provost:
- He will hear none: he hath evermore had the liberty
- of the prison; give him leave to escape hence, he
- would not: drunk many times a day, if not many days
- entirely drunk. We have very oft awaked him, as if
- to carry him to execution, and showed him a seeming
- warrant for it: it hath not moved him at all.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- More of him anon. There is written in your brow,
- provost, honesty and constancy: if I read it not
- truly, my ancient skill beguiles me; but, in the
- boldness of my cunning, I will lay myself in hazard.
- Claudio, whom here you have warrant to execute, is
- no greater forfeit to the law than Angelo who hath
- sentenced him. To make you understand this in a
- manifested effect, I crave but four days' respite;
- for the which you are to do me both a present and a
- dangerous courtesy.
- Provost:
- Pray, sir, in what?
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- In the delaying death.
- Provost:
- A lack, how may I do it, having the hour limited,
- and an express command, under penalty, to deliver
- his head in the view of Angelo? I may make my case
- as Claudio's, to cross this in the smallest.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- By the vow of mine order I warrant you, if my
- instructions may be your guide. Let this Barnardine
- be this morning executed, and his head born to Angelo.
- Provost:
- Angelo hath seen them both, and will discover the favour.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- O, death's a great disguiser; and you may add to it.
- Shave the head, and tie the beard; and say it was
- the desire of the penitent to be so bared before his
- death: you know the course is common. If any thing
- fall to you upon this, more than thanks and good
- fortune, by the saint whom I profess, I will plead
- against it with my life.
- Provost:
- Pardon me, good father; it is against my oath.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Were you sworn to the duke, or to the deputy?
- Provost:
- To him, and to his substitutes.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- You will think you have made no offence, if the duke
- avouch the justice of your dealing?
- Provost:
- But what likelihood is in that?
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Not a resemblance, but a certainty. Yet since I see
- you fearful, that neither my coat, integrity, nor
- persuasion can with ease attempt you, I will go
- further than I meant, to pluck all fears out of you.
- Look you, sir, here is the hand and seal of the
- duke: you know the character, I doubt not; and the
- signet is not strange to you.
- Provost:
- I know them both.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- The contents of this is the return of the duke: you
- shall anon over-read it at your pleasure; where you
- shall find, within these two days he will be here.
- This is a thing that Angelo knows not; for he this
- very day receives letters of strange tenor;
- perchance of the duke's death; perchance entering
- into some monastery; but, by chance, nothing of what
- is writ. Look, the unfolding star calls up the
- shepherd. Put not yourself into amazement how these
- things should be: all difficulties are but easy
- when they are known. Call your executioner, and off
- with Barnardine's head: I will give him a present
- shrift and advise him for a better place. Yet you
- are amazed; but this shall absolutely resolve you.
- Come away; it is almost clear dawn.
- POMPEY:
- I am as well acquainted here as I was in our house
- of profession: one would think it were Mistress
- Overdone's own house, for here be many of her old
- customers. First, here's young Master Rash; he's in
- for a commodity of brown paper and old ginger,
- ninescore and seventeen pounds; of which he made
- five marks, ready money: marry, then ginger was not
- much in request, for the old women were all dead.
- Then is there here one Master Caper, at the suit of
- Master Three-pile the mercer, for some four suits of
- peach-coloured satin, which now peaches him a
- beggar. Then have we here young Dizy, and young
- Master Deep-vow, and Master Copperspur, and Master
- Starve-lackey the rapier and dagger man, and young
- Drop-heir that killed lusty Pudding, and Master
- Forthlight the tilter, and brave Master Shooty the
- great traveller, and wild Half-can that stabbed
- Pots, and, I think, forty more; all great doers in
- our trade, and are now 'for the Lord's sake.'
- ABHORSON:
- Sirrah, bring Barnardine hither.
- POMPEY:
- Master Barnardine! you must rise and be hanged.
- Master Barnardine!
- ABHORSON:
- What, ho, Barnardine!
- BARNARDINE:
- POMPEY:
- Your friends, sir; the hangman. You must be so
- good, sir, to rise and be put to death.
- BARNARDINE:
- ABHORSON:
- Tell him he must awake, and that quickly too.
- POMPEY:
- Pray, Master Barnardine, awake till you are
- executed, and sleep afterwards.
- ABHORSON:
- Go in to him, and fetch him out.
- POMPEY:
- He is coming, sir, he is coming; I hear his straw rustle.
- ABHORSON:
- Is the axe upon the block, sirrah?
- POMPEY:
- Very ready, sir.
- BARNARDINE:
- How now, Abhorson? what's the news with you?
- ABHORSON:
- Truly, sir, I would desire you to clap into your
- prayers; for, look you, the warrant's come.
- BARNARDINE:
- You rogue, I have been drinking all night; I am not
- fitted for 't.
- POMPEY:
- O, the better, sir; for he that drinks all night,
- and is hanged betimes in the morning, may sleep the
- sounder all the next day.
- ABHORSON:
- Look you, sir; here comes your ghostly father: do
- we jest now, think you?
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Sir, induced by my charity, and hearing how hastily
- you are to depart, I am come to advise you, comfort
- you and pray with you.
- BARNARDINE:
- Friar, not I I have been drinking hard all night,
- and I will have more time to prepare me, or they
- shall beat out my brains with billets: I will not
- consent to die this day, that's certain.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- O, sir, you must: and therefore I beseech you
- Look forward on the journey you shall go.
- BARNARDINE:
- I swear I will not die to-day for any man's
- persuasion.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- But hear you.
- BARNARDINE:
- Not a word: if you have any thing to say to me,
- come to my ward; for thence will not I to-day.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Unfit to live or die: O gravel heart!
- After him, fellows; bring him to the block.
- Provost:
- Now, sir, how do you find the prisoner?
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- A creature unprepared, unmeet for death;
- And to transport him in the mind he is
- Were damnable.
- Provost:
- Here in the prison, father,
- There died this morning of a cruel fever
- One Ragozine, a most notorious pirate,
- A man of Claudio's years; his beard and head
- Just of his colour. What if we do omit
- This reprobate till he were well inclined;
- And satisfy the deputy with the visage
- Of Ragozine, more like to Claudio?
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- O, 'tis an accident that heaven provides!
- Dispatch it presently; the hour draws on
- Prefix'd by Angelo: see this be done,
- And sent according to command; whiles I
- Persuade this rude wretch willingly to die.
- Provost:
- This shall be done, good father, presently.
- But Barnardine must die this afternoon:
- And how shall we continue Claudio,
- To save me from the danger that might come
- If he were known alive?
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Let this be done.
- Put them in secret holds, both Barnardine and Claudio:
- Ere twice the sun hath made his journal greeting
- To the under generation, you shall find
- Your safety manifested.
- Provost:
- I am your free dependant.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Quick, dispatch, and send the head to Angelo.
- Now will I write letters to Angelo,--
- The provost, he shall bear them, whose contents
- Shall witness to him I am near at home,
- And that, by great injunctions, I am bound
- To enter publicly: him I'll desire
- To meet me at the consecrated fount
- A league below the city; and from thence,
- By cold gradation and well-balanced form,
- We shall proceed with Angelo.
- Provost:
- Here is the head; I'll carry it myself.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Convenient is it. Make a swift return;
- For I would commune with you of such things
- That want no ear but yours.
- Provost:
- I'll make all speed.
- ISABELLA:
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- The tongue of Isabel. She's come to know
- If yet her brother's pardon be come hither:
- But I will keep her ignorant of her good,
- To make her heavenly comforts of despair,
- When it is least expected.
- ISABELLA:
- Ho, by your leave!
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Good morning to you, fair and gracious daughter.
- ISABELLA:
- The better, given me by so holy a man.
- Hath yet the deputy sent my brother's pardon?
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- He hath released him, Isabel, from the world:
- His head is off and sent to Angelo.
- ISABELLA:
- Nay, but it is not so.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- It is no other: show your wisdom, daughter,
- In your close patience.
- ISABELLA:
- O, I will to him and pluck out his eyes!
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- You shall not be admitted to his sight.
- ISABELLA:
- Unhappy Claudio! wretched Isabel!
- Injurious world! most damned Angelo!
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- This nor hurts him nor profits you a jot;
- Forbear it therefore; give your cause to heaven.
- Mark what I say, which you shall find
- By every syllable a faithful verity:
- The duke comes home to-morrow; nay, dry your eyes;
- One of our convent, and his confessor,
- Gives me this instance: already he hath carried
- Notice to Escalus and Angelo,
- Who do prepare to meet him at the gates,
- There to give up their power. If you can, pace your wisdom
- In that good path that I would wish it go,
- And you shall have your bosom on this wretch,
- Grace of the duke, revenges to your heart,
- And general honour.
- ISABELLA:
- I am directed by you.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- This letter, then, to Friar Peter give;
- 'Tis that he sent me of the duke's return:
- Say, by this token, I desire his company
- At Mariana's house to-night. Her cause and yours
- I'll perfect him withal, and he shall bring you
- Before the duke, and to the head of Angelo
- Accuse him home and home. For my poor self,
- I am combined by a sacred vow
- And shall be absent. Wend you with this letter:
- Command these fretting waters from your eyes
- With a light heart; trust not my holy order,
- If I pervert your course. Who's here?
- LUCIO:
- Good even. Friar, where's the provost?
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Not within, sir.
- LUCIO:
- O pretty Isabella, I am pale at mine heart to see
- thine eyes so red: thou must be patient. I am fain
- to dine and sup with water and bran; I dare not for
- my head fill my belly; one fruitful meal would set
- me to 't. But they say the duke will be here
- to-morrow. By my troth, Isabel, I loved thy brother:
- if the old fantastical duke of dark corners had been
- at home, he had lived.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Sir, the duke is marvellous little beholding to your
- reports; but the best is, he lives not in them.
- LUCIO:
- Friar, thou knowest not the duke so well as I do:
- he's a better woodman than thou takest him for.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Well, you'll answer this one day. Fare ye well.
- LUCIO:
- Nay, tarry; I'll go along with thee
- I can tell thee pretty tales of the duke.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- You have told me too many of him already, sir, if
- they be true; if not true, none were enough.
- LUCIO:
- I was once before him for getting a wench with child.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Did you such a thing?
- LUCIO:
- Yes, marry, did I but I was fain to forswear it;
- they would else have married me to the rotten medlar.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Sir, your company is fairer than honest. Rest you well.
- LUCIO:
- By my troth, I'll go with thee to the lane's end:
- if bawdy talk offend you, we'll have very little of
- it. Nay, friar, I am a kind of burr; I shall stick.
- ESCALUS:
- Every letter he hath writ hath disvouched other.
- ANGELO:
- In most uneven and distracted manner. His actions
- show much like to madness: pray heaven his wisdom be
- not tainted! And why meet him at the gates, and
- redeliver our authorities there
- ESCALUS:
- I guess not.
- ANGELO:
- And why should we proclaim it in an hour before his
- entering, that if any crave redress of injustice,
- they should exhibit their petitions in the street?
- ESCALUS:
- He shows his reason for that: to have a dispatch of
- complaints, and to deliver us from devices
- hereafter, which shall then have no power to stand
- against us.
- ANGELO:
- Well, I beseech you, let it be proclaimed betimes
- i' the morn; I'll call you at your house: give
- notice to such men of sort and suit as are to meet
- him.
- ESCALUS:
- I shall, sir. Fare you well.
- ANGELO:
- Good night.
- This deed unshapes me quite, makes me unpregnant
- And dull to all proceedings. A deflower'd maid!
- And by an eminent body that enforced
- The law against it! But that her tender shame
- Will not proclaim against her maiden loss,
- How might she tongue me! Yet reason dares her no;
- For my authority bears of a credent bulk,
- That no particular scandal once can touch
- But it confounds the breather. He should have lived,
- Save that riotous youth, with dangerous sense,
- Might in the times to come have ta'en revenge,
- By so receiving a dishonour'd life
- With ransom of such shame. Would yet he had lived!
- A lack, when once our grace we have forgot,
- Nothing goes right: we would, and we would not.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- These letters at fit time deliver me
- The provost knows our purpose and our plot.
- The matter being afoot, keep your instruction,
- And hold you ever to our special drift;
- Though sometimes you do blench from this to that,
- As cause doth minister. Go call at Flavius' house,
- And tell him where I stay: give the like notice
- To Valentinus, Rowland, and to Crassus,
- And bid them bring the trumpets to the gate;
- But send me Flavius first.
- FRIAR PETER:
- It shall be speeded well.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- I thank thee, Varrius; thou hast made good haste:
- Come, we will walk. There's other of our friends
- Will greet us here anon, my gentle Varrius.
- ISABELLA:
- To speak so indirectly I am loath:
- I would say the truth; but to accuse him so,
- That is your part: yet I am advised to do it;
- He says, to veil full purpose.
- MARIANA:
- Be ruled by him.
- ISABELLA:
- Besides, he tells me that, if peradventure
- He speak against me on the adverse side,
- I should not think it strange; for 'tis a physic
- That's bitter to sweet end.
- MARIANA:
- I would Friar Peter--
- ISABELLA:
- O, peace! the friar is come.
- FRIAR PETER:
- Come, I have found you out a stand most fit,
- Where you may have such vantage on the duke,
- He shall not pass you. Twice have the trumpets sounded;
- The generous and gravest citizens
- Have hent the gates, and very near upon
- The duke is entering: therefore, hence, away!
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- My very worthy cousin, fairly met!
- Our old and faithful friend, we are glad to see you.
- ANGELO:
- Happy return be to your royal grace!
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Many and hearty thankings to you both.
- We have made inquiry of you; and we hear
- Such goodness of your justice, that our soul
- Cannot but yield you forth to public thanks,
- Forerunning more requital.
- ANGELO:
- You make my bonds still greater.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- O, your desert speaks loud; and I should wrong it,
- To lock it in the wards of covert bosom,
- When it deserves, with characters of brass,
- A forted residence 'gainst the tooth of time
- And razure of oblivion. Give me your hand,
- And let the subject see, to make them know
- That outward courtesies would fain proclaim
- Favours that keep within. Come, Escalus,
- You must walk by us on our other hand;
- And good supporters are you.
- FRIAR PETER:
- Now is your time: speak loud and kneel before him.
- ISABELLA:
- Justice, O royal duke! Vail your regard
- Upon a wrong'd, I would fain have said, a maid!
- O worthy prince, dishonour not your eye
- By throwing it on any other object
- Till you have heard me in my true complaint
- And given me justice, justice, justice, justice!
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Relate your wrongs; in what? by whom? be brief.
- Here is Lord Angelo shall give you justice:
- Reveal yourself to him.
- ISABELLA:
- O worthy duke,
- You bid me seek redemption of the devil:
- Hear me yourself; for that which I must speak
- Must either punish me, not being believed,
- Or wring redress from you. Hear me, O hear me, here!
- ANGELO:
- My lord, her wits, I fear me, are not firm:
- She hath been a suitor to me for her brother
- Cut off by course of justice,--
- ISABELLA:
- By course of justice!
- ANGELO:
- And she will speak most bitterly and strange.
- ISABELLA:
- Most strange, but yet most truly, will I speak:
- That Angelo's forsworn; is it not strange?
- That Angelo's a murderer; is 't not strange?
- That Angelo is an adulterous thief,
- An hypocrite, a virgin-violator;
- Is it not strange and strange?
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Nay, it is ten times strange.
- ISABELLA:
- It is not truer he is Angelo
- Than this is all as true as it is strange:
- Nay, it is ten times true; for truth is truth
- To the end of reckoning.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Away with her! Poor soul,
- She speaks this in the infirmity of sense.
- ISABELLA:
- O prince, I conjure thee, as thou believest
- There is another comfort than this world,
- That thou neglect me not, with that opinion
- That I am touch'd with madness! Make not impossible
- That which but seems unlike: 'tis not impossible
- But one, the wicked'st caitiff on the ground,
- May seem as shy, as grave, as just, as absolute
- As Angelo; even so may Angelo,
- In all his dressings, characts, titles, forms,
- Be an arch-villain; believe it, royal prince:
- If he be less, he's nothing; but he's more,
- Had I more name for badness.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- By mine honesty,
- If she be mad,--as I believe no other,--
- Her madness hath the oddest frame of sense,
- Such a dependency of thing on thing,
- As e'er I heard in madness.
- ISABELLA:
- O gracious duke,
- Harp not on that, nor do not banish reason
- For inequality; but let your reason serve
- To make the truth appear where it seems hid,
- And hide the false seems true.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Many that are not mad
- Have, sure, more lack of reason. What would you say?
- ISABELLA:
- I am the sister of one Claudio,
- Condemn'd upon the act of fornication
- To lose his head; condemn'd by Angelo:
- I, in probation of a sisterhood,
- Was sent to by my brother; one Lucio
- As then the messenger,--
- LUCIO:
- That's I, an't like your grace:
- I came to her from Claudio, and desired her
- To try her gracious fortune with Lord Angelo
- For her poor brother's pardon.
- ISABELLA:
- That's he indeed.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- You were not bid to speak.
- LUCIO:
- No, my good lord;
- Nor wish'd to hold my peace.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- I wish you now, then;
- Pray you, take note of it: and when you have
- A business for yourself, pray heaven you then
- Be perfect.
- LUCIO:
- I warrant your honour.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- The warrants for yourself; take heed to't.
- ISABELLA:
- This gentleman told somewhat of my tale,--
- LUCIO:
- Right.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- It may be right; but you are i' the wrong
- To speak before your time. Proceed.
- ISABELLA:
- I went
- To this pernicious caitiff deputy,--
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- That's somewhat madly spoken.
- ISABELLA:
- Pardon it;
- The phrase is to the matter.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Mended again. The matter; proceed.
- ISABELLA:
- In brief, to set the needless process by,
- How I persuaded, how I pray'd, and kneel'd,
- How he refell'd me, and how I replied,--
- For this was of much length,--the vile conclusion
- I now begin with grief and shame to utter:
- He would not, but by gift of my chaste body
- To his concupiscible intemperate lust,
- Release my brother; and, after much debatement,
- My sisterly remorse confutes mine honour,
- And I did yield to him: but the next morn betimes,
- His purpose surfeiting, he sends a warrant
- For my poor brother's head.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- This is most likely!
- ISABELLA:
- O, that it were as like as it is true!
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- By heaven, fond wretch, thou knowist not what thou speak'st,
- Or else thou art suborn'd against his honour
- In hateful practise. First, his integrity
- Stands without blemish. Next, it imports no reason
- That with such vehemency he should pursue
- Faults proper to himself: if he had so offended,
- He would have weigh'd thy brother by himself
- And not have cut him off. Some one hath set you on:
- Confess the truth, and say by whose advice
- Thou camest here to complain.
- ISABELLA:
- And is this all?
- Then, O you blessed ministers above,
- Keep me in patience, and with ripen'd time
- Unfold the evil which is here wrapt up
- In countenance! Heaven shield your grace from woe,
- As I, thus wrong'd, hence unbelieved go!
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- I know you'ld fain be gone. An officer!
- To prison with her! Shall we thus permit
- A blasting and a scandalous breath to fall
- On him so near us? This needs must be a practise.
- Who knew of Your intent and coming hither?
- ISABELLA:
- One that I would were here, Friar Lodowick.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- A ghostly father, belike. Who knows that Lodowick?
- LUCIO:
- My lord, I know him; 'tis a meddling friar;
- I do not like the man: had he been lay, my lord
- For certain words he spake against your grace
- In your retirement, I had swinged him soundly.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Words against me? this is a good friar, belike!
- And to set on this wretched woman here
- Against our substitute! Let this friar be found.
- LUCIO:
- But yesternight, my lord, she and that friar,
- I saw them at the prison: a saucy friar,
- A very scurvy fellow.
- FRIAR PETER:
- Blessed be your royal grace!
- I have stood by, my lord, and I have heard
- Your royal ear abused. First, hath this woman
- Most wrongfully accused your substitute,
- Who is as free from touch or soil with her
- As she from one ungot.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- We did believe no less.
- Know you that Friar Lodowick that she speaks of?
- FRIAR PETER:
- I know him for a man divine and holy;
- Not scurvy, nor a temporary meddler,
- As he's reported by this gentleman;
- And, on my trust, a man that never yet
- Did, as he vouches, misreport your grace.
- LUCIO:
- My lord, most villanously; believe it.
- FRIAR PETER:
- Well, he in time may come to clear himself;
- But at this instant he is sick my lord,
- Of a strange fever. Upon his mere request,
- Being come to knowledge that there was complaint
- Intended 'gainst Lord Angelo, came I hither,
- To speak, as from his mouth, what he doth know
- Is true and false; and what he with his oath
- And all probation will make up full clear,
- Whensoever he's convented. First, for this woman.
- To justify this worthy nobleman,
- So vulgarly and personally accused,
- Her shall you hear disproved to her eyes,
- Till she herself confess it.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Good friar, let's hear it.
- Do you not smile at this, Lord Angelo?
- O heaven, the vanity of wretched fools!
- Give us some seats. Come, cousin Angelo;
- In this I'll be impartial; be you judge
- Of your own cause. Is this the witness, friar?
- First, let her show her face, and after speak.
- MARIANA:
- Pardon, my lord; I will not show my face
- Until my husband bid me.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- What, are you married?
- MARIANA:
- No, my lord.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Are you a maid?
- MARIANA:
- No, my lord.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- A widow, then?
- MARIANA:
- Neither, my lord.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Why, you are nothing then: neither maid, widow, nor wife?
- LUCIO:
- My lord, she may be a punk; for many of them are
- neither maid, widow, nor wife.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Silence that fellow: I would he had some cause
- To prattle for himself.
- LUCIO:
- Well, my lord.
- MARIANA:
- My lord; I do confess I ne'er was married;
- And I confess besides I am no maid:
- I have known my husband; yet my husband
- Knows not that ever he knew me.
- LUCIO:
- He was drunk then, my lord: it can be no better.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- For the benefit of silence, would thou wert so too!
- LUCIO:
- Well, my lord.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- This is no witness for Lord Angelo.
- MARIANA:
- Now I come to't my lord
- She that accuses him of fornication,
- In self-same manner doth accuse my husband,
- And charges him my lord, with such a time
- When I'll depose I had him in mine arms
- With all the effect of love.
- ANGELO:
- Charges she more than me?
- MARIANA:
- Not that I know.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- No? you say your husband.
- MARIANA:
- Why, just, my lord, and that is Angelo,
- Who thinks he knows that he ne'er knew my body,
- But knows he thinks that he knows Isabel's.
- ANGELO:
- This is a strange abuse. Let's see thy face.
- MARIANA:
- My husband bids me; now I will unmask.
- This is that face, thou cruel Angelo,
- Which once thou sworest was worth the looking on;
- This is the hand which, with a vow'd contract,
- Was fast belock'd in thine; this is the body
- That took away the match from Isabel,
- And did supply thee at thy garden-house
- In her imagined person.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Know you this woman?
- LUCIO:
- Carnally, she says.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Sirrah, no more!
- LUCIO:
- Enough, my lord.
- ANGELO:
- My lord, I must confess I know this woman:
- And five years since there was some speech of marriage
- Betwixt myself and her; which was broke off,
- Partly for that her promised proportions
- Came short of composition, but in chief
- For that her reputation was disvalued
- In levity: since which time of five years
- I never spake with her, saw her, nor heard from her,
- Upon my faith and honour.
- MARIANA:
- Noble prince,
- As there comes light from heaven and words from breath,
- As there is sense in truth and truth in virtue,
- I am affianced this man's wife as strongly
- As words could make up vows: and, my good lord,
- But Tuesday night last gone in's garden-house
- He knew me as a wife. As this is true,
- Let me in safety raise me from my knees
- Or else for ever be confixed here,
- A marble monument!
- ANGELO:
- I did but smile till now:
- Now, good my lord, give me the scope of justice
- My patience here is touch'd. I do perceive
- These poor informal women are no more
- But instruments of some more mightier member
- That sets them on: let me have way, my lord,
- To find this practise out.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Ay, with my heart
- And punish them to your height of pleasure.
- Thou foolish friar, and thou pernicious woman,
- Compact with her that's gone, think'st thou thy oaths,
- Though they would swear down each particular saint,
- Were testimonies against his worth and credit
- That's seal'd in approbation? You, Lord Escalus,
- Sit with my cousin; lend him your kind pains
- To find out this abuse, whence 'tis derived.
- There is another friar that set them on;
- Let him be sent for.
- FRIAR PETER:
- Would he were here, my lord! for he indeed
- Hath set the women on to this complaint:
- Your provost knows the place where he abides
- And he may fetch him.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Go do it instantly.
- And you, my noble and well-warranted cousin,
- Whom it concerns to hear this matter forth,
- Do with your injuries as seems you best,
- In any chastisement: I for a while will leave you;
- But stir not you till you have well determined
- Upon these slanderers.
- ESCALUS:
- My lord, we'll do it throughly.
- Signior Lucio, did not you say you knew that
- Friar Lodowick to be a dishonest person?
- LUCIO:
- 'Cucullus non facit monachum:' honest in nothing
- but in his clothes; and one that hath spoke most
- villanous speeches of the duke.
- ESCALUS:
- We shall entreat you to abide here till he come and
- enforce them against him: we shall find this friar a
- notable fellow.
- LUCIO:
- As any in Vienna, on my word.
- ESCALUS:
- Call that same Isabel here once again; I would speak with her.
- Pray you, my lord, give me leave to question; you
- shall see how I'll handle her.
- LUCIO:
- Not better than he, by her own report.
- ESCALUS:
- Say you?
- LUCIO:
- Marry, sir, I think, if you handled her privately,
- she would sooner confess: perchance, publicly,
- she'll be ashamed.
- ESCALUS:
- I will go darkly to work with her.
- LUCIO:
- That's the way; for women are light at midnight.
- ESCALUS:
- Come on, mistress: here's a gentlewoman denies all
- that you have said.
- LUCIO:
- My lord, here comes the rascal I spoke of; here with
- the provost.
- ESCALUS:
- In very good time: speak not you to him till we
- call upon you.
- LUCIO:
- Mum.
- ESCALUS:
- Come, sir: did you set these women on to slander
- Lord Angelo? they have confessed you did.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- 'Tis false.
- ESCALUS:
- How! know you where you are?
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Respect to your great place! and let the devil
- Be sometime honour'd for his burning throne!
- Where is the duke? 'tis he should hear me speak.
- ESCALUS:
- The duke's in us; and we will hear you speak:
- Look you speak justly.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Boldly, at least. But, O, poor souls,
- Come you to seek the lamb here of the fox?
- Good night to your redress! Is the duke gone?
- Then is your cause gone too. The duke's unjust,
- Thus to retort your manifest appeal,
- And put your trial in the villain's mouth
- Which here you come to accuse.
- LUCIO:
- This is the rascal; this is he I spoke of.
- ESCALUS:
- Why, thou unreverend and unhallow'd friar,
- Is't not enough thou hast suborn'd these women
- To accuse this worthy man, but, in foul mouth
- And in the witness of his proper ear,
- To call him villain? and then to glance from him
- To the duke himself, to tax him with injustice?
- Take him hence; to the rack with him! We'll touse you
- Joint by joint, but we will know his purpose.
- What 'unjust'!
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Be not so hot; the duke
- Dare no more stretch this finger of mine than he
- Dare rack his own: his subject am I not,
- Nor here provincial. My business in this state
- Made me a looker on here in Vienna,
- Where I have seen corruption boil and bubble
- Till it o'er-run the stew; laws for all faults,
- But faults so countenanced, that the strong statutes
- Stand like the forfeits in a barber's shop,
- As much in mock as mark.
- ESCALUS:
- Slander to the state! Away with him to prison!
- ANGELO:
- What can you vouch against him, Signior Lucio?
- Is this the man that you did tell us of?
- LUCIO:
- 'Tis he, my lord. Come hither, goodman baldpate:
- do you know me?
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- I remember you, sir, by the sound of your voice: I
- met you at the prison, in the absence of the duke.
- LUCIO:
- O, did you so? And do you remember what you said of the duke?
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Most notedly, sir.
- LUCIO:
- Do you so, sir? And was the duke a fleshmonger, a
- fool, and a coward, as you then reported him to be?
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- You must, sir, change persons with me, ere you make
- that my report: you, indeed, spoke so of him; and
- much more, much worse.
- LUCIO:
- O thou damnable fellow! Did not I pluck thee by the
- nose for thy speeches?
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- I protest I love the duke as I love myself.
- ANGELO:
- Hark, how the villain would close now, after his
- treasonable abuses!
- ESCALUS:
- Such a fellow is not to be talked withal. Away with
- him to prison! Where is the provost? Away with him
- to prison! lay bolts enough upon him: let him
- speak no more. Away with those giglots too, and
- with the other confederate companion!
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- ANGELO:
- What, resists he? Help him, Lucio.
- LUCIO:
- Come, sir; come, sir; come, sir; foh, sir! Why, you
- bald-pated, lying rascal, you must be hooded, must
- you? Show your knave's visage, with a pox to you!
- show your sheep-biting face, and be hanged an hour!
- Will't not off?
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Thou art the first knave that e'er madest a duke.
- First, provost, let me bail these gentle three.
- Sneak not away, sir; for the friar and you
- Must have a word anon. Lay hold on him.
- LUCIO:
- This may prove worse than hanging.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- ANGELO:
- O my dread lord,
- I should be guiltier than my guiltiness,
- To think I can be undiscernible,
- When I perceive your grace, like power divine,
- Hath look'd upon my passes. Then, good prince,
- No longer session hold upon my shame,
- But let my trial be mine own confession:
- Immediate sentence then and sequent death
- Is all the grace I beg.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Come hither, Mariana.
- Say, wast thou e'er contracted to this woman?
- ANGELO:
- I was, my lord.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Go take her hence, and marry her instantly.
- Do you the office, friar; which consummate,
- Return him here again. Go with him, provost.
- ESCALUS:
- My lord, I am more amazed at his dishonour
- Than at the strangeness of it.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Come hither, Isabel.
- Your friar is now your prince: as I was then
- Advertising and holy to your business,
- Not changing heart with habit, I am still
- Attorney'd at your service.
- ISABELLA:
- O, give me pardon,
- That I, your vassal, have employ'd and pain'd
- Your unknown sovereignty!
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- You are pardon'd, Isabel:
- And now, dear maid, be you as free to us.
- Your brother's death, I know, sits at your heart;
- And you may marvel why I obscured myself,
- Labouring to save his life, and would not rather
- Make rash remonstrance of my hidden power
- Than let him so be lost. O most kind maid,
- It was the swift celerity of his death,
- Which I did think with slower foot came on,
- That brain'd my purpose. But, peace be with him!
- That life is better life, past fearing death,
- Than that which lives to fear: make it your comfort,
- So happy is your brother.
- ISABELLA:
- I do, my lord.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- For this new-married man approaching here,
- Whose salt imagination yet hath wrong'd
- Your well defended honour, you must pardon
- For Mariana's sake: but as he adjudged your brother,--
- Being criminal, in double violation
- Of sacred chastity and of promise-breach
- Thereon dependent, for your brother's life,--
- The very mercy of the law cries out
- Most audible, even from his proper tongue,
- 'An Angelo for Claudio, death for death!'
- Haste still pays haste, and leisure answers leisure;
- Like doth quit like, and MEASURE still FOR MEASURE.
- Then, Angelo, thy fault's thus manifested;
- Which, though thou wouldst deny, denies thee vantage.
- We do condemn thee to the very block
- Where Claudio stoop'd to death, and with like haste.
- Away with him!
- MARIANA:
- O my most gracious lord,
- I hope you will not mock me with a husband.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- It is your husband mock'd you with a husband.
- Consenting to the safeguard of your honour,
- I thought your marriage fit; else imputation,
- For that he knew you, might reproach your life
- And choke your good to come; for his possessions,
- Although by confiscation they are ours,
- We do instate and widow you withal,
- To buy you a better husband.
- MARIANA:
- O my dear lord,
- I crave no other, nor no better man.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Never crave him; we are definitive.
- MARIANA:
- Gentle my liege,--
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- You do but lose your labour.
- Away with him to death!
- Now, sir, to you.
- MARIANA:
- O my good lord! Sweet Isabel, take my part;
- Lend me your knees, and all my life to come
- I'll lend you all my life to do you service.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Against all sense you do importune her:
- Should she kneel down in mercy of this fact,
- Her brother's ghost his paved bed would break,
- And take her hence in horror.
- MARIANA:
- Isabel,
- Sweet Isabel, do yet but kneel by me;
- Hold up your hands, say nothing; I'll speak all.
- They say, best men are moulded out of faults;
- And, for the most, become much more the better
- For being a little bad: so may my husband.
- O Isabel, will you not lend a knee?
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- He dies for Claudio's death.
- ISABELLA:
- Most bounteous sir,
- Look, if it please you, on this man condemn'd,
- As if my brother lived: I partly think
- A due sincerity govern'd his deeds,
- Till he did look on me: since it is so,
- Let him not die. My brother had but justice,
- In that he did the thing for which he died:
- For Angelo,
- His act did not o'ertake his bad intent,
- And must be buried but as an intent
- That perish'd by the way: thoughts are no subjects;
- Intents but merely thoughts.
- MARIANA:
- Merely, my lord.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Your suit's unprofitable; stand up, I say.
- I have bethought me of another fault.
- Provost, how came it Claudio was beheaded
- At an unusual hour?
- Provost:
- It was commanded so.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Had you a special warrant for the deed?
- Provost:
- No, my good lord; it was by private message.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- For which I do discharge you of your office:
- Give up your keys.
- Provost:
- Pardon me, noble lord:
- I thought it was a fault, but knew it not;
- Yet did repent me, after more advice;
- For testimony whereof, one in the prison,
- That should by private order else have died,
- I have reserved alive.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- What's he?
- Provost:
- His name is Barnardine.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- I would thou hadst done so by Claudio.
- Go fetch him hither; let me look upon him.
- ESCALUS:
- I am sorry, one so learned and so wise
- As you, Lord Angelo, have still appear'd,
- Should slip so grossly, both in the heat of blood.
- And lack of temper'd judgment afterward.
- ANGELO:
- I am sorry that such sorrow I procure:
- And so deep sticks it in my penitent heart
- That I crave death more willingly than mercy;
- 'Tis my deserving, and I do entreat it.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Which is that Barnardine?
- Provost:
- This, my lord.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- There was a friar told me of this man.
- Sirrah, thou art said to have a stubborn soul.
- That apprehends no further than this world,
- And squarest thy life according. Thou'rt condemn'd:
- But, for those earthly faults, I quit them all;
- And pray thee take this mercy to provide
- For better times to come. Friar, advise him;
- I leave him to your hand. What muffled fellow's that?
- Provost:
- This is another prisoner that I saved.
- Who should have died when Claudio lost his head;
- As like almost to Claudio as himself.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- LUCIO:
- 'Faith, my lord. I spoke it but according to the
- trick. If you will hang me for it, you may; but I
- had rather it would please you I might be whipt.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Whipt first, sir, and hanged after.
- Proclaim it, provost, round about the city.
- Is any woman wrong'd by this lewd fellow,
- As I have heard him swear himself there's one
- Whom he begot with child, let her appear,
- And he shall marry her: the nuptial finish'd,
- Let him be whipt and hang'd.
- LUCIO:
- I beseech your highness, do not marry me to a whore.
- Your highness said even now, I made you a duke:
- good my lord, do not recompense me in making me a cuckold.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Upon mine honour, thou shalt marry her.
- Thy slanders I forgive; and therewithal
- Remit thy other forfeits. Take him to prison;
- And see our pleasure herein executed.
- LUCIO:
- Marrying a punk, my lord, is pressing to death,
- whipping, and hanging.
- DUKE VINCENTIO:
- Slandering a prince deserves it.
- She, Claudio, that you wrong'd, look you restore.
- Joy to you, Mariana! Love her, Angelo:
- I have confess'd her and I know her virtue.
- Thanks, good friend Escalus, for thy much goodness:
- There's more behind that is more gratulate.
- Thanks, provost, for thy care and secrecy:
- We shill employ thee in a worthier place.
- Forgive him, Angelo, that brought you home
- The head of Ragozine for Claudio's:
- The offence pardons itself. Dear Isabel,
- I have a motion much imports your good;
- Whereto if you'll a willing ear incline,
- What's mine is yours and what is yours is mine.
- So, bring us to our palace; where we'll show
- What's yet behind, that's meet you all should know.
- SLY:
- I'll pheeze you, in faith.
- Hostess:
- A pair of stocks, you rogue!
- SLY:
- Ye are a baggage: the Slys are no rogues; look in
- the chronicles; we came in with Richard Conqueror.
- Therefore paucas pallabris; let the world slide: sessa!
- Hostess:
- You will not pay for the glasses you have burst?
- SLY:
- No, not a denier. Go by, Jeronimy: go to thy cold
- bed, and warm thee.
- Hostess:
- I know my remedy; I must go fetch the
- third--borough.
- SLY:
- Third, or fourth, or fifth borough, I'll answer him
- by law: I'll not budge an inch, boy: let him come,
- and kindly.
- Lord:
- Huntsman, I charge thee, tender well my hounds:
- Brach Merriman, the poor cur is emboss'd;
- And couple Clowder with the deep--mouth'd brach.
- Saw'st thou not, boy, how Silver made it good
- At the hedge-corner, in the coldest fault?
- I would not lose the dog for twenty pound.
- First Huntsman:
- Why, Belman is as good as he, my lord;
- He cried upon it at the merest loss
- And twice to-day pick'd out the dullest scent:
- Trust me, I take him for the better dog.
- Lord:
- Thou art a fool: if Echo were as fleet,
- I would esteem him worth a dozen such.
- But sup them well and look unto them all:
- To-morrow I intend to hunt again.
- First Huntsman:
- I will, my lord.
- Lord:
- What's here? one dead, or drunk? See, doth he breathe?
- Second Huntsman:
- He breathes, my lord. Were he not warm'd with ale,
- This were a bed but cold to sleep so soundly.
- Lord:
- O monstrous beast! how like a swine he lies!
- Grim death, how foul and loathsome is thine image!
- Sirs, I will practise on this drunken man.
- What think you, if he were convey'd to bed,
- Wrapp'd in sweet clothes, rings put upon his fingers,
- A most delicious banquet by his bed,
- And brave attendants near him when he wakes,
- Would not the beggar then forget himself?
- First Huntsman:
- Believe me, lord, I think he cannot choose.
- Second Huntsman:
- It would seem strange unto him when he waked.
- Lord:
- Even as a flattering dream or worthless fancy.
- Then take him up and manage well the jest:
- Carry him gently to my fairest chamber
- And hang it round with all my wanton pictures:
- Balm his foul head in warm distilled waters
- And burn sweet wood to make the lodging sweet:
- Procure me music ready when he wakes,
- To make a dulcet and a heavenly sound;
- And if he chance to speak, be ready straight
- And with a low submissive reverence
- Say 'What is it your honour will command?'
- Let one attend him with a silver basin
- Full of rose-water and bestrew'd with flowers,
- Another bear the ewer, the third a diaper,
- And say 'Will't please your lordship cool your hands?'
- Some one be ready with a costly suit
- And ask him what apparel he will wear;
- Another tell him of his hounds and horse,
- And that his lady mourns at his disease:
- Persuade him that he hath been lunatic;
- And when he says he is, say that he dreams,
- For he is nothing but a mighty lord.
- This do and do it kindly, gentle sirs:
- It will be pastime passing excellent,
- If it be husbanded with modesty.
- First Huntsman:
- My lord, I warrant you we will play our part,
- As he shall think by our true diligence
- He is no less than what we say he is.
- Lord:
- Take him up gently and to bed with him;
- And each one to his office when he wakes.
- Sirrah, go see what trumpet 'tis that sounds:
- Belike, some noble gentleman that means,
- Travelling some journey, to repose him here.
- How now! who is it?
- Servant:
- An't please your honour, players
- That offer service to your lordship.
- Lord:
- Bid them come near.
- Now, fellows, you are welcome.
- Players:
- We thank your honour.
- Lord:
- Do you intend to stay with me tonight?
- A Player:
- So please your lordship to accept our duty.
- Lord:
- With all my heart. This fellow I remember,
- Since once he play'd a farmer's eldest son:
- 'Twas where you woo'd the gentlewoman so well:
- I have forgot your name; but, sure, that part
- Was aptly fitted and naturally perform'd.
- A Player:
- I think 'twas Soto that your honour means.
- Lord:
- 'Tis very true: thou didst it excellent.
- Well, you are come to me in a happy time;
- The rather for I have some sport in hand
- Wherein your cunning can assist me much.
- There is a lord will hear you play to-night:
- But I am doubtful of your modesties;
- Lest over-eyeing of his odd behavior,--
- For yet his honour never heard a play--
- You break into some merry passion
- And so offend him; for I tell you, sirs,
- If you should smile he grows impatient.
- A Player:
- Fear not, my lord: we can contain ourselves,
- Were he the veriest antic in the world.
- Lord:
- Go, sirrah, take them to the buttery,
- And give them friendly welcome every one:
- Let them want nothing that my house affords.
- Sirrah, go you to Barthol'mew my page,
- And see him dress'd in all suits like a lady:
- That done, conduct him to the drunkard's chamber;
- And call him 'madam,' do him obeisance.
- Tell him from me, as he will win my love,
- He bear himself with honourable action,
- Such as he hath observed in noble ladies
- Unto their lords, by them accomplished:
- Such duty to the drunkard let him do
- With soft low tongue and lowly courtesy,
- And say 'What is't your honour will command,
- Wherein your lady and your humble wife
- May show her duty and make known her love?'
- And then with kind embracements, tempting kisses,
- And with declining head into his bosom,
- Bid him shed tears, as being overjoy'd
- To see her noble lord restored to health,
- Who for this seven years hath esteem'd him
- No better than a poor and loathsome beggar:
- And if the boy have not a woman's gift
- To rain a shower of commanded tears,
- An onion will do well for such a shift,
- Which in a napkin being close convey'd
- Shall in despite enforce a watery eye.
- See this dispatch'd with all the haste thou canst:
- Anon I'll give thee more instructions.
- I know the boy will well usurp the grace,
- Voice, gait and action of a gentlewoman:
- I long to hear him call the drunkard husband,
- And how my men will stay themselves from laughter
- When they do homage to this simple peasant.
- I'll in to counsel them; haply my presence
- May well abate the over-merry spleen
- Which otherwise would grow into extremes.
- SLY:
- For God's sake, a pot of small ale.
- First Servant:
- Will't please your lordship drink a cup of sack?
- Second Servant:
- Will't please your honour taste of these conserves?
- Third Servant:
- What raiment will your honour wear to-day?
- SLY:
- I am Christophero Sly; call not me 'honour' nor
- 'lordship:' I ne'er drank sack in my life; and if
- you give me any conserves, give me conserves of
- beef: ne'er ask me what raiment I'll wear; for I
- have no more doublets than backs, no more stockings
- than legs, nor no more shoes than feet; nay,
- sometimes more feet than shoes, or such shoes as my
- toes look through the over-leather.
- Lord:
- Heaven cease this idle humour in your honour!
- O, that a mighty man of such descent,
- Of such possessions and so high esteem,
- Should be infused with so foul a spirit!
- SLY:
- What, would you make me mad? Am not I Christopher
- Sly, old Sly's son of Burtonheath, by birth a
- pedlar, by education a cardmaker, by transmutation a
- bear-herd, and now by present profession a tinker?
- Ask Marian Hacket, the fat ale-wife of Wincot, if
- she know me not: if she say I am not fourteen pence
- on the score for sheer ale, score me up for the
- lyingest knave in Christendom. What! I am not
- bestraught: here's--
- Third Servant:
- O, this it is that makes your lady mourn!
- Second Servant:
- O, this is it that makes your servants droop!
- Lord:
- Hence comes it that your kindred shuns your house,
- As beaten hence by your strange lunacy.
- O noble lord, bethink thee of thy birth,
- Call home thy ancient thoughts from banishment
- And banish hence these abject lowly dreams.
- Look how thy servants do attend on thee,
- Each in his office ready at thy beck.
- Wilt thou have music? hark! Apollo plays,
- And twenty caged nightingales do sing:
- Or wilt thou sleep? we'll have thee to a couch
- Softer and sweeter than the lustful bed
- On purpose trimm'd up for Semiramis.
- Say thou wilt walk; we will bestrew the ground:
- Or wilt thou ride? thy horses shall be trapp'd,
- Their harness studded all with gold and pearl.
- Dost thou love hawking? thou hast hawks will soar
- Above the morning lark or wilt thou hunt?
- Thy hounds shall make the welkin answer them
- And fetch shrill echoes from the hollow earth.
- First Servant:
- Say thou wilt course; thy greyhounds are as swift
- As breathed stags, ay, fleeter than the roe.
- Second Servant:
- Dost thou love pictures? we will fetch thee straight
- Adonis painted by a running brook,
- And Cytherea all in sedges hid,
- Which seem to move and wanton with her breath,
- Even as the waving sedges play with wind.
- Lord:
- We'll show thee Io as she was a maid,
- And how she was beguiled and surprised,
- As lively painted as the deed was done.
- Third Servant:
- Or Daphne roaming through a thorny wood,
- Scratching her legs that one shall swear she bleeds,
- And at that sight shall sad Apollo weep,
- So workmanly the blood and tears are drawn.
- Lord:
- Thou art a lord, and nothing but a lord:
- Thou hast a lady far more beautiful
- Than any woman in this waning age.
- First Servant:
- And till the tears that she hath shed for thee
- Like envious floods o'er-run her lovely face,
- She was the fairest creature in the world;
- And yet she is inferior to none.
- SLY:
- Am I a lord? and have I such a lady?
- Or do I dream? or have I dream'd till now?
- I do not sleep: I see, I hear, I speak;
- I smell sweet savours and I feel soft things:
- Upon my life, I am a lord indeed
- And not a tinker nor Christophero Sly.
- Well, bring our lady hither to our sight;
- And once again, a pot o' the smallest ale.
- Second Servant:
- Will't please your mightiness to wash your hands?
- O, how we joy to see your wit restored!
- O, that once more you knew but what you are!
- These fifteen years you have been in a dream;
- Or when you waked, so waked as if you slept.
- SLY:
- These fifteen years! by my fay, a goodly nap.
- But did I never speak of all that time?
- First Servant:
- O, yes, my lord, but very idle words:
- For though you lay here in this goodly chamber,
- Yet would you say ye were beaten out of door;
- And rail upon the hostess of the house;
- And say you would present her at the leet,
- Because she brought stone jugs and no seal'd quarts:
- Sometimes you would call out for Cicely Hacket.
- SLY:
- Ay, the woman's maid of the house.
- Third Servant:
- Why, sir, you know no house nor no such maid,
- Nor no such men as you have reckon'd up,
- As Stephen Sly and did John Naps of Greece
- And Peter Turph and Henry Pimpernell
- And twenty more such names and men as these
- Which never were nor no man ever saw.
- SLY:
- Now Lord be thanked for my good amends!
- ALL:
- Amen.
- SLY:
- I thank thee: thou shalt not lose by it.
- Page:
- How fares my noble lord?
- SLY:
- Marry, I fare well for here is cheer enough.
- Where is my wife?
- Page:
- Here, noble lord: what is thy will with her?
- SLY:
- Are you my wife and will not call me husband?
- My men should call me 'lord:' I am your goodman.
- Page:
- My husband and my lord, my lord and husband;
- I am your wife in all obedience.
- SLY:
- I know it well. What must I call her?
- Lord:
- Madam.
- SLY:
- Al'ce madam, or Joan madam?
- Lord:
- 'Madam,' and nothing else: so lords
- call ladies.
- SLY:
- Madam wife, they say that I have dream'd
- And slept above some fifteen year or more.
- Page:
- Ay, and the time seems thirty unto me,
- Being all this time abandon'd from your bed.
- SLY:
- 'Tis much. Servants, leave me and her alone.
- Madam, undress you and come now to bed.
- Page:
- Thrice noble lord, let me entreat of you
- To pardon me yet for a night or two,
- Or, if not so, until the sun be set:
- For your physicians have expressly charged,
- In peril to incur your former malady,
- That I should yet absent me from your bed:
- I hope this reason stands for my excuse.
- SLY:
- Ay, it stands so that I may hardly
- tarry so long. But I would be loath to fall into
- my dreams again: I will therefore tarry in
- despite of the flesh and the blood.
- Messenger:
- Your honour's players, heating your amendment,
- Are come to play a pleasant comedy;
- For so your doctors hold it very meet,
- Seeing too much sadness hath congeal'd your blood,
- And melancholy is the nurse of frenzy:
- Therefore they thought it good you hear a play
- And frame your mind to mirth and merriment,
- Which bars a thousand harms and lengthens life.
- SLY:
- Marry, I will, let them play it. Is not a
- comondy a Christmas gambold or a tumbling-trick?
- Page:
- No, my good lord; it is more pleasing stuff.
- SLY:
- What, household stuff?
- Page:
- It is a kind of history.
- SLY:
- Well, well see't. Come, madam wife, sit by my side
- and let the world slip: we shall ne'er be younger.
- LUCENTIO:
- Tranio, since for the great desire I had
- To see fair Padua, nursery of arts,
- I am arrived for fruitful Lombardy,
- The pleasant garden of great Italy;
- And by my father's love and leave am arm'd
- With his good will and thy good company,
- My trusty servant, well approved in all,
- Here let us breathe and haply institute
- A course of learning and ingenious studies.
- Pisa renown'd for grave citizens
- Gave me my being and my father first,
- A merchant of great traffic through the world,
- Vincetino come of Bentivolii.
- Vincetino's son brought up in Florence
- It shall become to serve all hopes conceived,
- To deck his fortune with his virtuous deeds:
- And therefore, Tranio, for the time I study,
- Virtue and that part of philosophy
- Will I apply that treats of happiness
- By virtue specially to be achieved.
- Tell me thy mind; for I have Pisa left
- And am to Padua come, as he that leaves
- A shallow plash to plunge him in the deep
- And with satiety seeks to quench his thirst.
- TRANIO:
- Mi perdonato, gentle master mine,
- I am in all affected as yourself;
- Glad that you thus continue your resolve
- To suck the sweets of sweet philosophy.
- Only, good master, while we do admire
- This virtue and this moral discipline,
- Let's be no stoics nor no stocks, I pray;
- Or so devote to Aristotle's cheques
- As Ovid be an outcast quite abjured:
- Balk logic with acquaintance that you have
- And practise rhetoric in your common talk;
- Music and poesy use to quicken you;
- The mathematics and the metaphysics,
- Fall to them as you find your stomach serves you;
- No profit grows where is no pleasure ta'en:
- In brief, sir, study what you most affect.
- LUCENTIO:
- Gramercies, Tranio, well dost thou advise.
- If, Biondello, thou wert come ashore,
- We could at once put us in readiness,
- And take a lodging fit to entertain
- Such friends as time in Padua shall beget.
- But stay a while: what company is this?
- TRANIO:
- Master, some show to welcome us to town.
- BAPTISTA:
- Gentlemen, importune me no farther,
- For how I firmly am resolved you know;
- That is, not bestow my youngest daughter
- Before I have a husband for the elder:
- If either of you both love Katharina,
- Because I know you well and love you well,
- Leave shall you have to court her at your pleasure.
- GREMIO:
- KATHARINA:
- I pray you, sir, is it your will
- To make a stale of me amongst these mates?
- HORTENSIO:
- Mates, maid! how mean you that? no mates for you,
- Unless you were of gentler, milder mould.
- KATHARINA:
- I'faith, sir, you shall never need to fear:
- I wis it is not half way to her heart;
- But if it were, doubt not her care should be
- To comb your noddle with a three-legg'd stool
- And paint your face and use you like a fool.
- HORTENSIA:
- From all such devils, good Lord deliver us!
- GREMIO:
- And me too, good Lord!
- TRANIO:
- Hush, master! here's some good pastime toward:
- That wench is stark mad or wonderful froward.
- LUCENTIO:
- But in the other's silence do I see
- Maid's mild behavior and sobriety.
- Peace, Tranio!
- TRANIO:
- Well said, master; mum! and gaze your fill.
- BAPTISTA:
- Gentlemen, that I may soon make good
- What I have said, Bianca, get you in:
- And let it not displease thee, good Bianca,
- For I will love thee ne'er the less, my girl.
- KATHARINA:
- A pretty peat! it is best
- Put finger in the eye, an she knew why.
- BIANCA:
- Sister, content you in my discontent.
- Sir, to your pleasure humbly I subscribe:
- My books and instruments shall be my company,
- On them to took and practise by myself.
- LUCENTIO:
- Hark, Tranio! thou may'st hear Minerva speak.
- HORTENSIO:
- Signior Baptista, will you be so strange?
- Sorry am I that our good will effects
- Bianca's grief.
- GREMIO:
- Why will you mew her up,
- Signior Baptista, for this fiend of hell,
- And make her bear the penance of her tongue?
- BAPTISTA:
- Gentlemen, content ye; I am resolved:
- Go in, Bianca:
- And for I know she taketh most delight
- In music, instruments and poetry,
- Schoolmasters will I keep within my house,
- Fit to instruct her youth. If you, Hortensio,
- Or Signior Gremio, you, know any such,
- Prefer them hither; for to cunning men
- I will be very kind, and liberal
- To mine own children in good bringing up:
- And so farewell. Katharina, you may stay;
- For I have more to commune with Bianca.
- KATHARINA:
- Why, and I trust I may go too, may I not? What,
- shall I be appointed hours; as though, belike, I
- knew not what to take and what to leave, ha?
- GREMIO:
- You may go to the devil's dam: your gifts are so
- good, here's none will hold you. Their love is not
- so great, Hortensio, but we may blow our nails
- together, and fast it fairly out: our cakes dough on
- both sides. Farewell: yet for the love I bear my
- sweet Bianca, if I can by any means light on a fit
- man to teach her that wherein she delights, I will
- wish him to her father.
- HORTENSIO:
- So will I, Signior Gremio: but a word, I pray.
- Though the nature of our quarrel yet never brooked
- parle, know now, upon advice, it toucheth us both,
- that we may yet again have access to our fair
- mistress and be happy rivals in Bianco's love, to
- labour and effect one thing specially.
- GREMIO:
- What's that, I pray?
- HORTENSIO:
- Marry, sir, to get a husband for her sister.
- GREMIO:
- A husband! a devil.
- HORTENSIO:
- I say, a husband.
- GREMIO:
- I say, a devil. Thinkest thou, Hortensio, though
- her father be very rich, any man is so very a fool
- to be married to hell?
- HORTENSIO:
- Tush, Gremio, though it pass your patience and mine
- to endure her loud alarums, why, man, there be good
- fellows in the world, an a man could light on them,
- would take her with all faults, and money enough.
- GREMIO:
- I cannot tell; but I had as lief take her dowry with
- this condition, to be whipped at the high cross
- every morning.
- HORTENSIO:
- Faith, as you say, there's small choice in rotten
- apples. But come; since this bar in law makes us
- friends, it shall be so far forth friendly
- maintained all by helping Baptista's eldest daughter
- to a husband we set his youngest free for a husband,
- and then have to't a fresh. Sweet Bianca! Happy man
- be his dole! He that runs fastest gets the ring.
- How say you, Signior Gremio?
- GREMIO:
- I am agreed; and would I had given him the best
- horse in Padua to begin his wooing that would
- thoroughly woo her, wed her and bed her and rid the
- house of her! Come on.
- TRANIO:
- I pray, sir, tell me, is it possible
- That love should of a sudden take such hold?
- LUCENTIO:
- O Tranio, till I found it to be true,
- I never thought it possible or likely;
- But see, while idly I stood looking on,
- I found the effect of love in idleness:
- And now in plainness do confess to thee,
- That art to me as secret and as dear
- As Anna to the queen of Carthage was,
- Tranio, I burn, I pine, I perish, Tranio,
- If I achieve not this young modest girl.
- Counsel me, Tranio, for I know thou canst;
- Assist me, Tranio, for I know thou wilt.
- TRANIO:
- Master, it is no time to chide you now;
- Affection is not rated from the heart:
- If love have touch'd you, nought remains but so,
- 'Redime te captum quam queas minimo.'
- LUCENTIO:
- Gramercies, lad, go forward; this contents:
- The rest will comfort, for thy counsel's sound.
- TRANIO:
- Master, you look'd so longly on the maid,
- Perhaps you mark'd not what's the pith of all.
- LUCENTIO:
- O yes, I saw sweet beauty in her face,
- Such as the daughter of Agenor had,
- That made great Jove to humble him to her hand.
- When with his knees he kiss'd the Cretan strand.
- TRANIO:
- Saw you no more? mark'd you not how her sister
- Began to scold and raise up such a storm
- That mortal ears might hardly endure the din?
- LUCENTIO:
- Tranio, I saw her coral lips to move
- And with her breath she did perfume the air:
- Sacred and sweet was all I saw in her.
- TRANIO:
- Nay, then, 'tis time to stir him from his trance.
- I pray, awake, sir: if you love the maid,
- Bend thoughts and wits to achieve her. Thus it stands:
- Her eldest sister is so curst and shrewd
- That till the father rid his hands of her,
- Master, your love must live a maid at home;
- And therefore has he closely mew'd her up,
- Because she will not be annoy'd with suitors.
- LUCENTIO:
- Ah, Tranio, what a cruel father's he!
- But art thou not advised, he took some care
- To get her cunning schoolmasters to instruct her?
- TRANIO:
- Ay, marry, am I, sir; and now 'tis plotted.
- LUCENTIO:
- I have it, Tranio.
- TRANIO:
- Master, for my hand,
- Both our inventions meet and jump in one.
- LUCENTIO:
- Tell me thine first.
- TRANIO:
- You will be schoolmaster
- And undertake the teaching of the maid:
- That's your device.
- LUCENTIO:
- It is: may it be done?
- TRANIO:
- Not possible; for who shall bear your part,
- And be in Padua here Vincentio's son,
- Keep house and ply his book, welcome his friends,
- Visit his countrymen and banquet them?
- LUCENTIO:
- Basta; content thee, for I have it full.
- We have not yet been seen in any house,
- Nor can we lie distinguish'd by our faces
- For man or master; then it follows thus;
- Thou shalt be master, Tranio, in my stead,
- Keep house and port and servants as I should:
- I will some other be, some Florentine,
- Some Neapolitan, or meaner man of Pisa.
- 'Tis hatch'd and shall be so: Tranio, at once
- Uncase thee; take my colour'd hat and cloak:
- When Biondello comes, he waits on thee;
- But I will charm him first to keep his tongue.
- TRANIO:
- So had you need.
- In brief, sir, sith it your pleasure is,
- And I am tied to be obedient;
- For so your father charged me at our parting,
- 'Be serviceable to my son,' quoth he,
- Although I think 'twas in another sense;
- I am content to be Lucentio,
- Because so well I love Lucentio.
- LUCENTIO:
- Tranio, be so, because Lucentio loves:
- And let me be a slave, to achieve that maid
- Whose sudden sight hath thrall'd my wounded eye.
- Here comes the rogue.
- Sirrah, where have you been?
- BIONDELLO:
- Where have I been! Nay, how now! where are you?
- Master, has my fellow Tranio stolen your clothes? Or
- you stolen his? or both? pray, what's the news?
- LUCENTIO:
- Sirrah, come hither: 'tis no time to jest,
- And therefore frame your manners to the time.
- Your fellow Tranio here, to save my life,
- Puts my apparel and my countenance on,
- And I for my escape have put on his;
- For in a quarrel since I came ashore
- I kill'd a man and fear I was descried:
- Wait you on him, I charge you, as becomes,
- While I make way from hence to save my life:
- You understand me?
- BIONDELLO:
- I, sir! ne'er a whit.
- LUCENTIO:
- And not a jot of Tranio in your mouth:
- Tranio is changed into Lucentio.
- BIONDELLO:
- The better for him: would I were so too!
- TRANIO:
- So could I, faith, boy, to have the next wish after,
- That Lucentio indeed had Baptista's youngest daughter.
- But, sirrah, not for my sake, but your master's, I advise
- You use your manners discreetly in all kind of companies:
- When I am alone, why, then I am Tranio;
- But in all places else your master Lucentio.
- LUCENTIO:
- Tranio, let's go: one thing more rests, that
- thyself execute, to make one among these wooers: if
- thou ask me why, sufficeth, my reasons are both good
- and weighty.
- First Servant:
- My lord, you nod; you do not mind the play.
- SLY:
- Yes, by Saint Anne, do I. A good matter, surely:
- comes there any more of it?
- Page:
- My lord, 'tis but begun.
- SLY:
- 'Tis a very excellent piece of work, madam lady:
- would 'twere done!
- PETRUCHIO:
- Verona, for a while I take my leave,
- To see my friends in Padua, but of all
- My best beloved and approved friend,
- Hortensio; and I trow this is his house.
- Here, sirrah Grumio; knock, I say.
- GRUMIO:
- Knock, sir! whom should I knock? is there man has
- rebused your worship?
- PETRUCHIO:
- Villain, I say, knock me here soundly.
- GRUMIO:
- Knock you here, sir! why, sir, what am I, sir, that
- I should knock you here, sir?
- PETRUCHIO:
- Villain, I say, knock me at this gate
- And rap me well, or I'll knock your knave's pate.
- GRUMIO:
- My master is grown quarrelsome. I should knock
- you first,
- And then I know after who comes by the worst.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Will it not be?
- Faith, sirrah, an you'll not knock, I'll ring it;
- I'll try how you can sol, fa, and sing it.
- GRUMIO:
- Help, masters, help! my master is mad.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Now, knock when I bid you, sirrah villain!
- HORTENSIO:
- How now! what's the matter? My old friend Grumio!
- and my good friend Petruchio! How do you all at Verona?
- PETRUCHIO:
- Signior Hortensio, come you to part the fray?
- 'Con tutto il cuore, ben trovato,' may I say.
- HORTENSIO:
- 'Alla nostra casa ben venuto, molto honorato signor
- mio Petruchio.' Rise, Grumio, rise: we will compound
- this quarrel.
- GRUMIO:
- Nay, 'tis no matter, sir, what he 'leges in Latin.
- if this be not a lawful case for me to leave his
- service, look you, sir, he bid me knock him and rap
- him soundly, sir: well, was it fit for a servant to
- use his master so, being perhaps, for aught I see,
- two and thirty, a pip out? Whom would to God I had
- well knock'd at first, Then had not Grumio come by the worst.
- PETRUCHIO:
- A senseless villain! Good Hortensio,
- I bade the rascal knock upon your gate
- And could not get him for my heart to do it.
- GRUMIO:
- Knock at the gate! O heavens! Spake you not these
- words plain, 'Sirrah, knock me here, rap me here,
- knock me well, and knock me soundly'? And come you
- now with, 'knocking at the gate'?
- PETRUCHIO:
- Sirrah, be gone, or talk not, I advise you.
- HORTENSIO:
- Petruchio, patience; I am Grumio's pledge:
- Why, this's a heavy chance 'twixt him and you,
- Your ancient, trusty, pleasant servant Grumio.
- And tell me now, sweet friend, what happy gale
- Blows you to Padua here from old Verona?
- PETRUCHIO:
- Such wind as scatters young men through the world,
- To seek their fortunes farther than at home
- Where small experience grows. But in a few,
- Signior Hortensio, thus it stands with me:
- Antonio, my father, is deceased;
- And I have thrust myself into this maze,
- Haply to wive and thrive as best I may:
- Crowns in my purse I have and goods at home,
- And so am come abroad to see the world.
- HORTENSIO:
- Petruchio, shall I then come roundly to thee
- And wish thee to a shrewd ill-favour'd wife?
- Thou'ldst thank me but a little for my counsel:
- And yet I'll promise thee she shall be rich
- And very rich: but thou'rt too much my friend,
- And I'll not wish thee to her.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Signior Hortensio, 'twixt such friends as we
- Few words suffice; and therefore, if thou know
- One rich enough to be Petruchio's wife,
- As wealth is burden of my wooing dance,
- Be she as foul as was Florentius' love,
- As old as Sibyl and as curst and shrewd
- As Socrates' Xanthippe, or a worse,
- She moves me not, or not removes, at least,
- Affection's edge in me, were she as rough
- As are the swelling Adriatic seas:
- I come to wive it wealthily in Padua;
- If wealthily, then happily in Padua.
- GRUMIO:
- Nay, look you, sir, he tells you flatly what his
- mind is: Why give him gold enough and marry him to
- a puppet or an aglet-baby; or an old trot with ne'er
- a tooth in her head, though she have as many diseases
- as two and fifty horses: why, nothing comes amiss,
- so money comes withal.
- HORTENSIO:
- Petruchio, since we are stepp'd thus far in,
- I will continue that I broach'd in jest.
- I can, Petruchio, help thee to a wife
- With wealth enough and young and beauteous,
- Brought up as best becomes a gentlewoman:
- Her only fault, and that is faults enough,
- Is that she is intolerable curst
- And shrewd and froward, so beyond all measure
- That, were my state far worser than it is,
- I would not wed her for a mine of gold.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Hortensio, peace! thou know'st not gold's effect:
- Tell me her father's name and 'tis enough;
- For I will board her, though she chide as loud
- As thunder when the clouds in autumn crack.
- HORTENSIO:
- Her father is Baptista Minola,
- An affable and courteous gentleman:
- Her name is Katharina Minola,
- Renown'd in Padua for her scolding tongue.
- PETRUCHIO:
- I know her father, though I know not her;
- And he knew my deceased father well.
- I will not sleep, Hortensio, till I see her;
- And therefore let me be thus bold with you
- To give you over at this first encounter,
- Unless you will accompany me thither.
- GRUMIO:
- I pray you, sir, let him go while the humour lasts.
- O' my word, an she knew him as well as I do, she
- would think scolding would do little good upon him:
- she may perhaps call him half a score knaves or so:
- why, that's nothing; an he begin once, he'll rail in
- his rope-tricks. I'll tell you what sir, an she
- stand him but a little, he will throw a figure in
- her face and so disfigure her with it that she
- shall have no more eyes to see withal than a cat.
- You know him not, sir.
- HORTENSIO:
- Tarry, Petruchio, I must go with thee,
- For in Baptista's keep my treasure is:
- He hath the jewel of my life in hold,
- His youngest daughter, beautiful Binaca,
- And her withholds from me and other more,
- Suitors to her and rivals in my love,
- Supposing it a thing impossible,
- For those defects I have before rehearsed,
- That ever Katharina will be woo'd;
- Therefore this order hath Baptista ta'en,
- That none shall have access unto Bianca
- Till Katharina the curst have got a husband.
- GRUMIO:
- Katharina the curst!
- A title for a maid of all titles the worst.
- HORTENSIO:
- Now shall my friend Petruchio do me grace,
- And offer me disguised in sober robes
- To old Baptista as a schoolmaster
- Well seen in music, to instruct Bianca;
- That so I may, by this device, at least
- Have leave and leisure to make love to her
- And unsuspected court her by herself.
- GRUMIO:
- Here's no knavery! See, to beguile the old folks,
- how the young folks lay their heads together!
- Master, master, look about you: who goes there, ha?
- HORTENSIO:
- Peace, Grumio! it is the rival of my love.
- Petruchio, stand by a while.
- GRUMIO:
- A proper stripling and an amorous!
- GREMIO:
- O, very well; I have perused the note.
- Hark you, sir: I'll have them very fairly bound:
- All books of love, see that at any hand;
- And see you read no other lectures to her:
- You understand me: over and beside
- Signior Baptista's liberality,
- I'll mend it with a largess. Take your paper too,
- And let me have them very well perfumed
- For she is sweeter than perfume itself
- To whom they go to. What will you read to her?
- LUCENTIO:
- Whate'er I read to her, I'll plead for you
- As for my patron, stand you so assured,
- As firmly as yourself were still in place:
- Yea, and perhaps with more successful words
- Than you, unless you were a scholar, sir.
- GREMIO:
- O this learning, what a thing it is!
- GRUMIO:
- O this woodcock, what an ass it is!
- PETRUCHIO:
- Peace, sirrah!
- HORTENSIO:
- Grumio, mum! God save you, Signior Gremio.
- GREMIO:
- And you are well met, Signior Hortensio.
- Trow you whither I am going? To Baptista Minola.
- I promised to inquire carefully
- About a schoolmaster for the fair Bianca:
- And by good fortune I have lighted well
- On this young man, for learning and behavior
- Fit for her turn, well read in poetry
- And other books, good ones, I warrant ye.
- HORTENSIO:
- 'Tis well; and I have met a gentleman
- Hath promised me to help me to another,
- A fine musician to instruct our mistress;
- So shall I no whit be behind in duty
- To fair Bianca, so beloved of me.
- GREMIO:
- Beloved of me; and that my deeds shall prove.
- GRUMIO:
- And that his bags shall prove.
- HORTENSIO:
- Gremio, 'tis now no time to vent our love:
- Listen to me, and if you speak me fair,
- I'll tell you news indifferent good for either.
- Here is a gentleman whom by chance I met,
- Upon agreement from us to his liking,
- Will undertake to woo curst Katharina,
- Yea, and to marry her, if her dowry please.
- GREMIO:
- So said, so done, is well.
- Hortensio, have you told him all her faults?
- PETRUCHIO:
- I know she is an irksome brawling scold:
- If that be all, masters, I hear no harm.
- GREMIO:
- No, say'st me so, friend? What countryman?
- PETRUCHIO:
- Born in Verona, old Antonio's son:
- My father dead, my fortune lives for me;
- And I do hope good days and long to see.
- GREMIO:
- O sir, such a life, with such a wife, were strange!
- But if you have a stomach, to't i' God's name:
- You shall have me assisting you in all.
- But will you woo this wild-cat?
- PETRUCHIO:
- Will I live?
- GRUMIO:
- Will he woo her? ay, or I'll hang her.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Why came I hither but to that intent?
- Think you a little din can daunt mine ears?
- Have I not in my time heard lions roar?
- Have I not heard the sea puff'd up with winds
- Rage like an angry boar chafed with sweat?
- Have I not heard great ordnance in the field,
- And heaven's artillery thunder in the skies?
- Have I not in a pitched battle heard
- Loud 'larums, neighing steeds, and trumpets' clang?
- And do you tell me of a woman's tongue,
- That gives not half so great a blow to hear
- As will a chestnut in a farmer's fire?
- Tush, tush! fear boys with bugs.
- GRUMIO:
- For he fears none.
- GREMIO:
- Hortensio, hark:
- This gentleman is happily arrived,
- My mind presumes, for his own good and ours.
- HORTENSIO:
- I promised we would be contributors
- And bear his charging of wooing, whatsoe'er.
- GREMIO:
- And so we will, provided that he win her.
- GRUMIO:
- I would I were as sure of a good dinner.
- TRANIO:
- Gentlemen, God save you. If I may be bold,
- Tell me, I beseech you, which is the readiest way
- To the house of Signior Baptista Minola?
- BIONDELLO:
- He that has the two fair daughters: is't he you mean?
- TRANIO:
- Even he, Biondello.
- GREMIO:
- Hark you, sir; you mean not her to--
- TRANIO:
- Perhaps, him and her, sir: what have you to do?
- PETRUCHIO:
- Not her that chides, sir, at any hand, I pray.
- TRANIO:
- I love no chiders, sir. Biondello, let's away.
- LUCENTIO:
- Well begun, Tranio.
- HORTENSIO:
- Sir, a word ere you go;
- Are you a suitor to the maid you talk of, yea or no?
- TRANIO:
- And if I be, sir, is it any offence?
- GREMIO:
- No; if without more words you will get you hence.
- TRANIO:
- Why, sir, I pray, are not the streets as free
- For me as for you?
- GREMIO:
- But so is not she.
- TRANIO:
- For what reason, I beseech you?
- GREMIO:
- For this reason, if you'll know,
- That she's the choice love of Signior Gremio.
- HORTENSIO:
- That she's the chosen of Signior Hortensio.
- TRANIO:
- Softly, my masters! if you be gentlemen,
- Do me this right; hear me with patience.
- Baptista is a noble gentleman,
- To whom my father is not all unknown;
- And were his daughter fairer than she is,
- She may more suitors have and me for one.
- Fair Leda's daughter had a thousand wooers;
- Then well one more may fair Bianca have:
- And so she shall; Lucentio shall make one,
- Though Paris came in hope to speed alone.
- GREMIO:
- What! this gentleman will out-talk us all.
- LUCENTIO:
- Sir, give him head: I know he'll prove a jade.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Hortensio, to what end are all these words?
- HORTENSIO:
- Sir, let me be so bold as ask you,
- Did you yet ever see Baptista's daughter?
- TRANIO:
- No, sir; but hear I do that he hath two,
- The one as famous for a scolding tongue
- As is the other for beauteous modesty.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Sir, sir, the first's for me; let her go by.
- GREMIO:
- Yea, leave that labour to great Hercules;
- And let it be more than Alcides' twelve.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Sir, understand you this of me in sooth:
- The youngest daughter whom you hearken for
- Her father keeps from all access of suitors,
- And will not promise her to any man
- Until the elder sister first be wed:
- The younger then is free and not before.
- TRANIO:
- If it be so, sir, that you are the man
- Must stead us all and me amongst the rest,
- And if you break the ice and do this feat,
- Achieve the elder, set the younger free
- For our access, whose hap shall be to have her
- Will not so graceless be to be ingrate.
- HORTENSIO:
- Sir, you say well and well you do conceive;
- And since you do profess to be a suitor,
- You must, as we do, gratify this gentleman,
- To whom we all rest generally beholding.
- TRANIO:
- Sir, I shall not be slack: in sign whereof,
- Please ye we may contrive this afternoon,
- And quaff carouses to our mistress' health,
- And do as adversaries do in law,
- Strive mightily, but eat and drink as friends.
- GRUMIO:
- O excellent motion! Fellows, let's be gone.
- HORTENSIO:
- The motion's good indeed and be it so,
- Petruchio, I shall be your ben venuto.
- BIANCA:
- Good sister, wrong me not, nor wrong yourself,
- To make a bondmaid and a slave of me;
- That I disdain: but for these other gawds,
- Unbind my hands, I'll pull them off myself,
- Yea, all my raiment, to my petticoat;
- Or what you will command me will I do,
- So well I know my duty to my elders.
- KATHARINA:
- Of all thy suitors, here I charge thee, tell
- Whom thou lovest best: see thou dissemble not.
- BIANCA:
- Believe me, sister, of all the men alive
- I never yet beheld that special face
- Which I could fancy more than any other.
- KATHARINA:
- Minion, thou liest. Is't not Hortensio?
- BIANCA:
- If you affect him, sister, here I swear
- I'll plead for you myself, but you shall have
- him.
- KATHARINA:
- O then, belike, you fancy riches more:
- You will have Gremio to keep you fair.
- BIANCA:
- Is it for him you do envy me so?
- Nay then you jest, and now I well perceive
- You have but jested with me all this while:
- I prithee, sister Kate, untie my hands.
- KATHARINA:
- If that be jest, then all the rest was so.
- BAPTISTA:
- Why, how now, dame! whence grows this insolence?
- Bianca, stand aside. Poor girl! she weeps.
- Go ply thy needle; meddle not with her.
- For shame, thou helding of a devilish spirit,
- Why dost thou wrong her that did ne'er wrong thee?
- When did she cross thee with a bitter word?
- KATHARINA:
- Her silence flouts me, and I'll be revenged.
- BAPTISTA:
- What, in my sight? Bianca, get thee in.
- KATHARINA:
- What, will you not suffer me? Nay, now I see
- She is your treasure, she must have a husband;
- I must dance bare-foot on her wedding day
- And for your love to her lead apes in hell.
- Talk not to me: I will go sit and weep
- Till I can find occasion of revenge.
- BAPTISTA:
- Was ever gentleman thus grieved as I?
- But who comes here?
- GREMIO:
- Good morrow, neighbour Baptista.
- BAPTISTA:
- Good morrow, neighbour Gremio.
- God save you, gentlemen!
- PETRUCHIO:
- And you, good sir! Pray, have you not a daughter
- Call'd Katharina, fair and virtuous?
- BAPTISTA:
- I have a daughter, sir, called Katharina.
- GREMIO:
- You are too blunt: go to it orderly.
- PETRUCHIO:
- You wrong me, Signior Gremio: give me leave.
- I am a gentleman of Verona, sir,
- That, hearing of her beauty and her wit,
- Her affability and bashful modesty,
- Her wondrous qualities and mild behavior,
- Am bold to show myself a forward guest
- Within your house, to make mine eye the witness
- Of that report which I so oft have heard.
- And, for an entrance to my entertainment,
- I do present you with a man of mine,
- Cunning in music and the mathematics,
- To instruct her fully in those sciences,
- Whereof I know she is not ignorant:
- Accept of him, or else you do me wrong:
- His name is Licio, born in Mantua.
- BAPTISTA:
- You're welcome, sir; and he, for your good sake.
- But for my daughter Katharina, this I know,
- She is not for your turn, the more my grief.
- PETRUCHIO:
- I see you do not mean to part with her,
- Or else you like not of my company.
- BAPTISTA:
- Mistake me not; I speak but as I find.
- Whence are you, sir? what may I call your name?
- PETRUCHIO:
- Petruchio is my name; Antonio's son,
- A man well known throughout all Italy.
- BAPTISTA:
- I know him well: you are welcome for his sake.
- GREMIO:
- Saving your tale, Petruchio, I pray,
- Let us, that are poor petitioners, speak too:
- Baccare! you are marvellous forward.
- PETRUCHIO:
- O, pardon me, Signior Gremio; I would fain be doing.
- GREMIO:
- I doubt it not, sir; but you will curse your
- wooing. Neighbour, this is a gift very grateful, I am
- sure of it. To express the like kindness, myself,
- that have been more kindly beholding to you than
- any, freely give unto you this young scholar,
- that hath been long studying at Rheims; as cunning
- in Greek, Latin, and other languages, as the other
- in music and mathematics: his name is Cambio; pray,
- accept his service.
- BAPTISTA:
- A thousand thanks, Signior Gremio.
- Welcome, good Cambio.
- But, gentle sir, methinks you walk like a stranger:
- may I be so bold to know the cause of your coming?
- TRANIO:
- Pardon me, sir, the boldness is mine own,
- That, being a stranger in this city here,
- Do make myself a suitor to your daughter,
- Unto Bianca, fair and virtuous.
- Nor is your firm resolve unknown to me,
- In the preferment of the eldest sister.
- This liberty is all that I request,
- That, upon knowledge of my parentage,
- I may have welcome 'mongst the rest that woo
- And free access and favour as the rest:
- And, toward the education of your daughters,
- I here bestow a simple instrument,
- And this small packet of Greek and Latin books:
- If you accept them, then their worth is great.
- BAPTISTA:
- Lucentio is your name; of whence, I pray?
- TRANIO:
- Of Pisa, sir; son to Vincentio.
- BAPTISTA:
- A mighty man of Pisa; by report
- I know him well: you are very welcome, sir,
- Take you the lute, and you the set of books;
- You shall go see your pupils presently.
- Holla, within!
- Sirrah, lead these gentlemen
- To my daughters; and tell them both,
- These are their tutors: bid them use them well.
- We will go walk a little in the orchard,
- And then to dinner. You are passing welcome,
- And so I pray you all to think yourselves.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Signior Baptista, my business asketh haste,
- And every day I cannot come to woo.
- You knew my father well, and in him me,
- Left solely heir to all his lands and goods,
- Which I have better'd rather than decreased:
- Then tell me, if I get your daughter's love,
- What dowry shall I have with her to wife?
- BAPTISTA:
- After my death the one half of my lands,
- And in possession twenty thousand crowns.
- PETRUCHIO:
- And, for that dowry, I'll assure her of
- Her widowhood, be it that she survive me,
- In all my lands and leases whatsoever:
- Let specialties be therefore drawn between us,
- That covenants may be kept on either hand.
- BAPTISTA:
- Ay, when the special thing is well obtain'd,
- That is, her love; for that is all in all.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Why, that is nothing: for I tell you, father,
- I am as peremptory as she proud-minded;
- And where two raging fires meet together
- They do consume the thing that feeds their fury:
- Though little fire grows great with little wind,
- Yet extreme gusts will blow out fire and all:
- So I to her and so she yields to me;
- For I am rough and woo not like a babe.
- BAPTISTA:
- Well mayst thou woo, and happy be thy speed!
- But be thou arm'd for some unhappy words.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Ay, to the proof; as mountains are for winds,
- That shake not, though they blow perpetually.
- BAPTISTA:
- How now, my friend! why dost thou look so pale?
- HORTENSIO:
- For fear, I promise you, if I look pale.
- BAPTISTA:
- What, will my daughter prove a good musician?
- HORTENSIO:
- I think she'll sooner prove a soldier
- Iron may hold with her, but never lutes.
- BAPTISTA:
- Why, then thou canst not break her to the lute?
- HORTENSIO:
- Why, no; for she hath broke the lute to me.
- I did but tell her she mistook her frets,
- And bow'd her hand to teach her fingering;
- When, with a most impatient devilish spirit,
- 'Frets, call you these?' quoth she; 'I'll fume
- with them:'
- And, with that word, she struck me on the head,
- And through the instrument my pate made way;
- And there I stood amazed for a while,
- As on a pillory, looking through the lute;
- While she did call me rascal fiddler
- And twangling Jack; with twenty such vile terms,
- As had she studied to misuse me so.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Now, by the world, it is a lusty wench;
- I love her ten times more than e'er I did:
- O, how I long to have some chat with her!
- BAPTISTA:
- Well, go with me and be not so discomfited:
- Proceed in practise with my younger daughter;
- She's apt to learn and thankful for good turns.
- Signior Petruchio, will you go with us,
- Or shall I send my daughter Kate to you?
- PETRUCHIO:
- I pray you do.
- I will attend her here,
- And woo her with some spirit when she comes.
- Say that she rail; why then I'll tell her plain
- She sings as sweetly as a nightingale:
- Say that she frown, I'll say she looks as clear
- As morning roses newly wash'd with dew:
- Say she be mute and will not speak a word;
- Then I'll commend her volubility,
- And say she uttereth piercing eloquence:
- If she do bid me pack, I'll give her thanks,
- As though she bid me stay by her a week:
- If she deny to wed, I'll crave the day
- When I shall ask the banns and when be married.
- But here she comes; and now, Petruchio, speak.
- Good morrow, Kate; for that's your name, I hear.
- KATHARINA:
- Well have you heard, but something hard of hearing:
- They call me Katharina that do talk of me.
- PETRUCHIO:
- You lie, in faith; for you are call'd plain Kate,
- And bonny Kate and sometimes Kate the curst;
- But Kate, the prettiest Kate in Christendom
- Kate of Kate Hall, my super-dainty Kate,
- For dainties are all Kates, and therefore, Kate,
- Take this of me, Kate of my consolation;
- Hearing thy mildness praised in every town,
- Thy virtues spoke of, and thy beauty sounded,
- Yet not so deeply as to thee belongs,
- Myself am moved to woo thee for my wife.
- KATHARINA:
- Moved! in good time: let him that moved you hither
- Remove you hence: I knew you at the first
- You were a moveable.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Why, what's a moveable?
- KATHARINA:
- A join'd-stool.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Thou hast hit it: come, sit on me.
- KATHARINA:
- Asses are made to bear, and so are you.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Women are made to bear, and so are you.
- KATHARINA:
- No such jade as you, if me you mean.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Alas! good Kate, I will not burden thee;
- For, knowing thee to be but young and light--
- KATHARINA:
- Too light for such a swain as you to catch;
- And yet as heavy as my weight should be.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Should be! should--buzz!
- KATHARINA:
- Well ta'en, and like a buzzard.
- PETRUCHIO:
- O slow-wing'd turtle! shall a buzzard take thee?
- KATHARINA:
- Ay, for a turtle, as he takes a buzzard.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Come, come, you wasp; i' faith, you are too angry.
- KATHARINA:
- If I be waspish, best beware my sting.
- PETRUCHIO:
- My remedy is then, to pluck it out.
- KATHARINA:
- Ay, if the fool could find it where it lies,
- PETRUCHIO:
- Who knows not where a wasp does
- wear his sting? In his tail.
- KATHARINA:
- In his tongue.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Whose tongue?
- KATHARINA:
- Yours, if you talk of tails: and so farewell.
- PETRUCHIO:
- What, with my tongue in your tail? nay, come again,
- Good Kate; I am a gentleman.
- KATHARINA:
- That I'll try.
- PETRUCHIO:
- I swear I'll cuff you, if you strike again.
- KATHARINA:
- So may you lose your arms:
- If you strike me, you are no gentleman;
- And if no gentleman, why then no arms.
- PETRUCHIO:
- A herald, Kate? O, put me in thy books!
- KATHARINA:
- What is your crest? a coxcomb?
- PETRUCHIO:
- A combless cock, so Kate will be my hen.
- KATHARINA:
- No cock of mine; you crow too like a craven.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Nay, come, Kate, come; you must not look so sour.
- KATHARINA:
- It is my fashion, when I see a crab.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Why, here's no crab; and therefore look not sour.
- KATHARINA:
- There is, there is.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Then show it me.
- KATHARINA:
- Had I a glass, I would.
- PETRUCHIO:
- What, you mean my face?
- KATHARINA:
- Well aim'd of such a young one.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Now, by Saint George, I am too young for you.
- KATHARINA:
- Yet you are wither'd.
- PETRUCHIO:
- 'Tis with cares.
- KATHARINA:
- I care not.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Nay, hear you, Kate: in sooth you scape not so.
- KATHARINA:
- I chafe you, if I tarry: let me go.
- PETRUCHIO:
- No, not a whit: I find you passing gentle.
- 'Twas told me you were rough and coy and sullen,
- And now I find report a very liar;
- For thou are pleasant, gamesome, passing courteous,
- But slow in speech, yet sweet as spring-time flowers:
- Thou canst not frown, thou canst not look askance,
- Nor bite the lip, as angry wenches will,
- Nor hast thou pleasure to be cross in talk,
- But thou with mildness entertain'st thy wooers,
- With gentle conference, soft and affable.
- Why does the world report that Kate doth limp?
- O slanderous world! Kate like the hazel-twig
- Is straight and slender and as brown in hue
- As hazel nuts and sweeter than the kernels.
- O, let me see thee walk: thou dost not halt.
- KATHARINA:
- Go, fool, and whom thou keep'st command.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Did ever Dian so become a grove
- As Kate this chamber with her princely gait?
- O, be thou Dian, and let her be Kate;
- And then let Kate be chaste and Dian sportful!
- KATHARINA:
- Where did you study all this goodly speech?
- PETRUCHIO:
- It is extempore, from my mother-wit.
- KATHARINA:
- A witty mother! witless else her son.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Am I not wise?
- KATHARINA:
- Yes; keep you warm.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Marry, so I mean, sweet Katharina, in thy bed:
- And therefore, setting all this chat aside,
- Thus in plain terms: your father hath consented
- That you shall be my wife; your dowry 'greed on;
- And, Will you, nill you, I will marry you.
- Now, Kate, I am a husband for your turn;
- For, by this light, whereby I see thy beauty,
- Thy beauty, that doth make me like thee well,
- Thou must be married to no man but me;
- For I am he am born to tame you Kate,
- And bring you from a wild Kate to a Kate
- Conformable as other household Kates.
- Here comes your father: never make denial;
- I must and will have Katharina to my wife.
- BAPTISTA:
- Now, Signior Petruchio, how speed you with my daughter?
- PETRUCHIO:
- How but well, sir? how but well?
- It were impossible I should speed amiss.
- BAPTISTA:
- Why, how now, daughter Katharina! in your dumps?
- KATHARINA:
- Call you me daughter? now, I promise you
- You have show'd a tender fatherly regard,
- To wish me wed to one half lunatic;
- A mad-cup ruffian and a swearing Jack,
- That thinks with oaths to face the matter out.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Father, 'tis thus: yourself and all the world,
- That talk'd of her, have talk'd amiss of her:
- If she be curst, it is for policy,
- For she's not froward, but modest as the dove;
- She is not hot, but temperate as the morn;
- For patience she will prove a second Grissel,
- And Roman Lucrece for her chastity:
- And to conclude, we have 'greed so well together,
- That upon Sunday is the wedding-day.
- KATHARINA:
- I'll see thee hang'd on Sunday first.
- GREMIO:
- Hark, Petruchio; she says she'll see thee
- hang'd first.
- TRANIO:
- Is this your speeding? nay, then, good night our part!
- PETRUCHIO:
- Be patient, gentlemen; I choose her for myself:
- If she and I be pleased, what's that to you?
- 'Tis bargain'd 'twixt us twain, being alone,
- That she shall still be curst in company.
- I tell you, 'tis incredible to believe
- How much she loves me: O, the kindest Kate!
- She hung about my neck; and kiss on kiss
- She vied so fast, protesting oath on oath,
- That in a twink she won me to her love.
- O, you are novices! 'tis a world to see,
- How tame, when men and women are alone,
- A meacock wretch can make the curstest shrew.
- Give me thy hand, Kate: I will unto Venice,
- To buy apparel 'gainst the wedding-day.
- Provide the feast, father, and bid the guests;
- I will be sure my Katharina shall be fine.
- BAPTISTA:
- I know not what to say: but give me your hands;
- God send you joy, Petruchio! 'tis a match.
- GREMIO:
- Amen, say we: we will be witnesses.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Father, and wife, and gentlemen, adieu;
- I will to Venice; Sunday comes apace:
- We will have rings and things and fine array;
- And kiss me, Kate, we will be married o'Sunday.
- GREMIO:
- Was ever match clapp'd up so suddenly?
- BAPTISTA:
- Faith, gentlemen, now I play a merchant's part,
- And venture madly on a desperate mart.
- TRANIO:
- 'Twas a commodity lay fretting by you:
- 'Twill bring you gain, or perish on the seas.
- BAPTISTA:
- The gain I seek is, quiet in the match.
- GREMIO:
- No doubt but he hath got a quiet catch.
- But now, Baptists, to your younger daughter:
- Now is the day we long have looked for:
- I am your neighbour, and was suitor first.
- TRANIO:
- And I am one that love Bianca more
- Than words can witness, or your thoughts can guess.
- GREMIO:
- Youngling, thou canst not love so dear as I.
- TRANIO:
- Graybeard, thy love doth freeze.
- GREMIO:
- But thine doth fry.
- Skipper, stand back: 'tis age that nourisheth.
- TRANIO:
- But youth in ladies' eyes that flourisheth.
- BAPTISTA:
- Content you, gentlemen: I will compound this strife:
- 'Tis deeds must win the prize; and he of both
- That can assure my daughter greatest dower
- Shall have my Bianca's love.
- Say, Signior Gremio, What can you assure her?
- GREMIO:
- First, as you know, my house within the city
- Is richly furnished with plate and gold;
- Basins and ewers to lave her dainty hands;
- My hangings all of Tyrian tapestry;
- In ivory coffers I have stuff'd my crowns;
- In cypress chests my arras counterpoints,
- Costly apparel, tents, and canopies,
- Fine linen, Turkey cushions boss'd with pearl,
- Valance of Venice gold in needlework,
- Pewter and brass and all things that belong
- To house or housekeeping: then, at my farm
- I have a hundred milch-kine to the pail,
- Sixscore fat oxen standing in my stalls,
- And all things answerable to this portion.
- Myself am struck in years, I must confess;
- And if I die to-morrow, this is hers,
- If whilst I live she will be only mine.
- TRANIO:
- That 'only' came well in. Sir, list to me:
- I am my father's heir and only son:
- If I may have your daughter to my wife,
- I'll leave her houses three or four as good,
- Within rich Pisa walls, as any one
- Old Signior Gremio has in Padua;
- Besides two thousand ducats by the year
- Of fruitful land, all which shall be her jointure.
- What, have I pinch'd you, Signior Gremio?
- GREMIO:
- Two thousand ducats by the year of land!
- My land amounts not to so much in all:
- That she shall have; besides an argosy
- That now is lying in Marseilles' road.
- What, have I choked you with an argosy?
- TRANIO:
- Gremio, 'tis known my father hath no less
- Than three great argosies; besides two galliases,
- And twelve tight galleys: these I will assure her,
- And twice as much, whate'er thou offer'st next.
- GREMIO:
- Nay, I have offer'd all, I have no more;
- And she can have no more than all I have:
- If you like me, she shall have me and mine.
- TRANIO:
- Why, then the maid is mine from all the world,
- By your firm promise: Gremio is out-vied.
- BAPTISTA:
- I must confess your offer is the best;
- And, let your father make her the assurance,
- She is your own; else, you must pardon me,
- if you should die before him, where's her dower?
- TRANIO:
- That's but a cavil: he is old, I young.
- GREMIO:
- And may not young men die, as well as old?
- BAPTISTA:
- Well, gentlemen,
- I am thus resolved: on Sunday next you know
- My daughter Katharina is to be married:
- Now, on the Sunday following, shall Bianca
- Be bride to you, if you this assurance;
- If not, Signior Gremio:
- And so, I take my leave, and thank you both.
- GREMIO:
- Adieu, good neighbour.
- Now I fear thee not:
- Sirrah young gamester, your father were a fool
- To give thee all, and in his waning age
- Set foot under thy table: tut, a toy!
- An old Italian fox is not so kind, my boy.
- TRANIO:
- A vengeance on your crafty wither'd hide!
- Yet I have faced it with a card of ten.
- 'Tis in my head to do my master good:
- I see no reason but supposed Lucentio
- Must get a father, call'd 'supposed Vincentio;'
- And that's a wonder: fathers commonly
- Do get their children; but in this case of wooing,
- A child shall get a sire, if I fail not of my cunning.
- LUCENTIO:
- Fiddler, forbear; you grow too forward, sir:
- Have you so soon forgot the entertainment
- Her sister Katharina welcomed you withal?
- HORTENSIO:
- But, wrangling pedant, this is
- The patroness of heavenly harmony:
- Then give me leave to have prerogative;
- And when in music we have spent an hour,
- Your lecture shall have leisure for as much.
- LUCENTIO:
- Preposterous ass, that never read so far
- To know the cause why music was ordain'd!
- Was it not to refresh the mind of man
- After his studies or his usual pain?
- Then give me leave to read philosophy,
- And while I pause, serve in your harmony.
- HORTENSIO:
- Sirrah, I will not bear these braves of thine.
- BIANCA:
- Why, gentlemen, you do me double wrong,
- To strive for that which resteth in my choice:
- I am no breeching scholar in the schools;
- I'll not be tied to hours nor 'pointed times,
- But learn my lessons as I please myself.
- And, to cut off all strife, here sit we down:
- Take you your instrument, play you the whiles;
- His lecture will be done ere you have tuned.
- HORTENSIO:
- You'll leave his lecture when I am in tune?
- LUCENTIO:
- That will be never: tune your instrument.
- BIANCA:
- Where left we last?
- LUCENTIO:
- Here, madam:
- 'Hic ibat Simois; hic est Sigeia tellus;
- Hic steterat Priami regia celsa senis.'
- BIANCA:
- Construe them.
- LUCENTIO:
- 'Hic ibat,' as I told you before, 'Simois,' I am
- Lucentio, 'hic est,' son unto Vincentio of Pisa,
- 'Sigeia tellus,' disguised thus to get your love;
- 'Hic steterat,' and that Lucentio that comes
- a-wooing, 'Priami,' is my man Tranio, 'regia,'
- bearing my port, 'celsa senis,' that we might
- beguile the old pantaloon.
- HORTENSIO:
- Madam, my instrument's in tune.
- BIANCA:
- Let's hear. O fie! the treble jars.
- LUCENTIO:
- Spit in the hole, man, and tune again.
- BIANCA:
- Now let me see if I can construe it: 'Hic ibat
- Simois,' I know you not, 'hic est Sigeia tellus,' I
- trust you not; 'Hic steterat Priami,' take heed
- he hear us not, 'regia,' presume not, 'celsa senis,'
- despair not.
- HORTENSIO:
- Madam, 'tis now in tune.
- LUCENTIO:
- All but the base.
- HORTENSIO:
- The base is right; 'tis the base knave that jars.
- How fiery and forward our pedant is!
- Now, for my life, the knave doth court my love:
- Pedascule, I'll watch you better yet.
- BIANCA:
- In time I may believe, yet I mistrust.
- LUCENTIO:
- Mistrust it not: for, sure, AEacides
- Was Ajax, call'd so from his grandfather.
- BIANCA:
- I must believe my master; else, I promise you,
- I should be arguing still upon that doubt:
- But let it rest. Now, Licio, to you:
- Good masters, take it not unkindly, pray,
- That I have been thus pleasant with you both.
- HORTENSIO:
- You may go walk, and give me leave a while:
- My lessons make no music in three parts.
- LUCENTIO:
- Are you so formal, sir? well, I must wait,
- And watch withal; for, but I be deceived,
- Our fine musician groweth amorous.
- HORTENSIO:
- Madam, before you touch the instrument,
- To learn the order of my fingering,
- I must begin with rudiments of art;
- To teach you gamut in a briefer sort,
- More pleasant, pithy and effectual,
- Than hath been taught by any of my trade:
- And there it is in writing, fairly drawn.
- BIANCA:
- Why, I am past my gamut long ago.
- HORTENSIO:
- Yet read the gamut of Hortensio.
- BIANCA:
- Servant:
- Mistress, your father prays you leave your books
- And help to dress your sister's chamber up:
- You know to-morrow is the wedding-day.
- BIANCA:
- Farewell, sweet masters both; I must be gone.
- LUCENTIO:
- Faith, mistress, then I have no cause to stay.
- HORTENSIO:
- But I have cause to pry into this pedant:
- Methinks he looks as though he were in love:
- Yet if thy thoughts, Bianca, be so humble
- To cast thy wandering eyes on every stale,
- Seize thee that list: if once I find thee ranging,
- Hortensio will be quit with thee by changing.
- BAPTISTA:
- KATHARINA:
- No shame but mine: I must, forsooth, be forced
- To give my hand opposed against my heart
- Unto a mad-brain rudesby full of spleen;
- Who woo'd in haste and means to wed at leisure.
- I told you, I, he was a frantic fool,
- Hiding his bitter jests in blunt behavior:
- And, to be noted for a merry man,
- He'll woo a thousand, 'point the day of marriage,
- Make feasts, invite friends, and proclaim the banns;
- Yet never means to wed where he hath woo'd.
- Now must the world point at poor Katharina,
- And say, 'Lo, there is mad Petruchio's wife,
- If it would please him come and marry her!'
- TRANIO:
- Patience, good Katharina, and Baptista too.
- Upon my life, Petruchio means but well,
- Whatever fortune stays him from his word:
- Though he be blunt, I know him passing wise;
- Though he be merry, yet withal he's honest.
- KATHARINA:
- Would Katharina had never seen him though!
- BAPTISTA:
- Go, girl; I cannot blame thee now to weep;
- For such an injury would vex a very saint,
- Much more a shrew of thy impatient humour.
- BIONDELLO:
- Master, master! news, old news, and such news as
- you never heard of!
- BAPTISTA:
- Is it new and old too? how may that be?
- BIONDELLO:
- Why, is it not news, to hear of Petruchio's coming?
- BAPTISTA:
- Is he come?
- BIONDELLO:
- Why, no, sir.
- BAPTISTA:
- What then?
- BIONDELLO:
- He is coming.
- BAPTISTA:
- When will he be here?
- BIONDELLO:
- When he stands where I am and sees you there.
- TRANIO:
- But say, what to thine old news?
- BIONDELLO:
- Why, Petruchio is coming in a new hat and an old
- jerkin, a pair of old breeches thrice turned, a pair
- of boots that have been candle-cases, one buckled,
- another laced, an old rusty sword ta'en out of the
- town-armory, with a broken hilt, and chapeless;
- with two broken points: his horse hipped with an
- old mothy saddle and stirrups of no kindred;
- besides, possessed with the glanders and like to mose
- in the chine; troubled with the lampass, infected
- with the fashions, full of wingdalls, sped with
- spavins, rayed with yellows, past cure of the fives,
- stark spoiled with the staggers, begnawn with the
- bots, swayed in the back and shoulder-shotten;
- near-legged before and with, a half-chequed bit
- and a head-stall of sheeps leather which, being
- restrained to keep him from stumbling, hath been
- often burst and now repaired with knots; one girth
- six time pieced and a woman's crupper of velure,
- which hath two letters for her name fairly set down
- in studs, and here and there pieced with packthread.
- BAPTISTA:
- Who comes with him?
- BIONDELLO:
- O, sir, his lackey, for all the world caparisoned
- like the horse; with a linen stock on one leg and a
- kersey boot-hose on the other, gartered with a red
- and blue list; an old hat and 'the humour of forty
- fancies' pricked in't for a feather: a monster, a
- very monster in apparel, and not like a Christian
- footboy or a gentleman's lackey.
- TRANIO:
- 'Tis some odd humour pricks him to this fashion;
- Yet oftentimes he goes but mean-apparell'd.
- BAPTISTA:
- I am glad he's come, howsoe'er he comes.
- BIONDELLO:
- Why, sir, he comes not.
- BAPTISTA:
- Didst thou not say he comes?
- BIONDELLO:
- Who? that Petruchio came?
- BAPTISTA:
- Ay, that Petruchio came.
- BIONDELLO:
- No, sir, I say his horse comes, with him on his back.
- BAPTISTA:
- Why, that's all one.
- BIONDELLO:
- Nay, by Saint Jamy,
- I hold you a penny,
- A horse and a man
- Is more than one,
- And yet not many.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Come, where be these gallants? who's at home?
- BAPTISTA:
- You are welcome, sir.
- PETRUCHIO:
- And yet I come not well.
- BAPTISTA:
- And yet you halt not.
- TRANIO:
- Not so well apparell'd
- As I wish you were.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Were it better, I should rush in thus.
- But where is Kate? where is my lovely bride?
- How does my father? Gentles, methinks you frown:
- And wherefore gaze this goodly company,
- As if they saw some wondrous monument,
- Some comet or unusual prodigy?
- BAPTISTA:
- Why, sir, you know this is your wedding-day:
- First were we sad, fearing you would not come;
- Now sadder, that you come so unprovided.
- Fie, doff this habit, shame to your estate,
- An eye-sore to our solemn festival!
- TRANIO:
- And tells us, what occasion of import
- Hath all so long detain'd you from your wife,
- And sent you hither so unlike yourself?
- PETRUCHIO:
- Tedious it were to tell, and harsh to hear:
- Sufficeth I am come to keep my word,
- Though in some part enforced to digress;
- Which, at more leisure, I will so excuse
- As you shall well be satisfied withal.
- But where is Kate? I stay too long from her:
- The morning wears, 'tis time we were at church.
- TRANIO:
- See not your bride in these unreverent robes:
- Go to my chamber; Put on clothes of mine.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Not I, believe me: thus I'll visit her.
- BAPTISTA:
- But thus, I trust, you will not marry her.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Good sooth, even thus; therefore ha' done with words:
- To me she's married, not unto my clothes:
- Could I repair what she will wear in me,
- As I can change these poor accoutrements,
- 'Twere well for Kate and better for myself.
- But what a fool am I to chat with you,
- When I should bid good morrow to my bride,
- And seal the title with a lovely kiss!
- TRANIO:
- He hath some meaning in his mad attire:
- We will persuade him, be it possible,
- To put on better ere he go to church.
- BAPTISTA:
- I'll after him, and see the event of this.
- TRANIO:
- But to her love concerneth us to add
- Her father's liking: which to bring to pass,
- As I before unparted to your worship,
- I am to get a man,--whate'er he be,
- It skills not much. we'll fit him to our turn,--
- And he shall be Vincentio of Pisa;
- And make assurance here in Padua
- Of greater sums than I have promised.
- So shall you quietly enjoy your hope,
- And marry sweet Bianca with consent.
- LUCENTIO:
- Were it not that my fellow-school-master
- Doth watch Bianca's steps so narrowly,
- 'Twere good, methinks, to steal our marriage;
- Which once perform'd, let all the world say no,
- I'll keep mine own, despite of all the world.
- TRANIO:
- That by degrees we mean to look into,
- And watch our vantage in this business:
- We'll over-reach the greybeard, Gremio,
- The narrow-prying father, Minola,
- The quaint musician, amorous Licio;
- All for my master's sake, Lucentio.
- Signior Gremio, came you from the church?
- GREMIO:
- As willingly as e'er I came from school.
- TRANIO:
- And is the bride and bridegroom coming home?
- GREMIO:
- A bridegroom say you? 'tis a groom indeed,
- A grumbling groom, and that the girl shall find.
- TRANIO:
- Curster than she? why, 'tis impossible.
- GREMIO:
- Why he's a devil, a devil, a very fiend.
- TRANIO:
- Why, she's a devil, a devil, the devil's dam.
- GREMIO:
- Tut, she's a lamb, a dove, a fool to him!
- I'll tell you, Sir Lucentio: when the priest
- Should ask, if Katharina should be his wife,
- 'Ay, by gogs-wouns,' quoth he; and swore so loud,
- That, all-amazed, the priest let fall the book;
- And, as he stoop'd again to take it up,
- The mad-brain'd bridegroom took him such a cuff
- That down fell priest and book and book and priest:
- 'Now take them up,' quoth he, 'if any list.'
- TRANIO:
- What said the wench when he rose again?
- GREMIO:
- Trembled and shook; for why, he stamp'd and swore,
- As if the vicar meant to cozen him.
- But after many ceremonies done,
- He calls for wine: 'A health!' quoth he, as if
- He had been aboard, carousing to his mates
- After a storm; quaff'd off the muscadel
- And threw the sops all in the sexton's face;
- Having no other reason
- But that his beard grew thin and hungerly
- And seem'd to ask him sops as he was drinking.
- This done, he took the bride about the neck
- And kiss'd her lips with such a clamorous smack
- That at the parting all the church did echo:
- And I seeing this came thence for very shame;
- And after me, I know, the rout is coming.
- Such a mad marriage never was before:
- Hark, hark! I hear the minstrels play.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Gentlemen and friends, I thank you for your pains:
- I know you think to dine with me to-day,
- And have prepared great store of wedding cheer;
- But so it is, my haste doth call me hence,
- And therefore here I mean to take my leave.
- BAPTISTA:
- Is't possible you will away to-night?
- PETRUCHIO:
- I must away to-day, before night come:
- Make it no wonder; if you knew my business,
- You would entreat me rather go than stay.
- And, honest company, I thank you all,
- That have beheld me give away myself
- To this most patient, sweet and virtuous wife:
- Dine with my father, drink a health to me;
- For I must hence; and farewell to you all.
- TRANIO:
- Let us entreat you stay till after dinner.
- PETRUCHIO:
- It may not be.
- GREMIO:
- Let me entreat you.
- PETRUCHIO:
- It cannot be.
- KATHARINA:
- Let me entreat you.
- PETRUCHIO:
- I am content.
- KATHARINA:
- Are you content to stay?
- PETRUCHIO:
- I am content you shall entreat me stay;
- But yet not stay, entreat me how you can.
- KATHARINA:
- Now, if you love me, stay.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Grumio, my horse.
- GRUMIO:
- Ay, sir, they be ready: the oats have eaten the horses.
- KATHARINA:
- Nay, then,
- Do what thou canst, I will not go to-day;
- No, nor to-morrow, not till I please myself.
- The door is open, sir; there lies your way;
- You may be jogging whiles your boots are green;
- For me, I'll not be gone till I please myself:
- 'Tis like you'll prove a jolly surly groom,
- That take it on you at the first so roundly.
- PETRUCHIO:
- O Kate, content thee; prithee, be not angry.
- KATHARINA:
- I will be angry: what hast thou to do?
- Father, be quiet; he shall stay my leisure.
- GREMIO:
- Ay, marry, sir, now it begins to work.
- KATARINA:
- Gentlemen, forward to the bridal dinner:
- I see a woman may be made a fool,
- If she had not a spirit to resist.
- PETRUCHIO:
- They shall go forward, Kate, at thy command.
- Obey the bride, you that attend on her;
- Go to the feast, revel and domineer,
- Carouse full measure to her maidenhead,
- Be mad and merry, or go hang yourselves:
- But for my bonny Kate, she must with me.
- Nay, look not big, nor stamp, nor stare, nor fret;
- I will be master of what is mine own:
- She is my goods, my chattels; she is my house,
- My household stuff, my field, my barn,
- My horse, my ox, my ass, my any thing;
- And here she stands, touch her whoever dare;
- I'll bring mine action on the proudest he
- That stops my way in Padua. Grumio,
- Draw forth thy weapon, we are beset with thieves;
- Rescue thy mistress, if thou be a man.
- Fear not, sweet wench, they shall not touch
- thee, Kate:
- I'll buckler thee against a million.
- BAPTISTA:
- Nay, let them go, a couple of quiet ones.
- GREMIO:
- Went they not quickly, I should die with laughing.
- TRANIO:
- Of all mad matches never was the like.
- LUCENTIO:
- Mistress, what's your opinion of your sister?
- BIANCA:
- That, being mad herself, she's madly mated.
- GREMIO:
- I warrant him, Petruchio is Kated.
- BAPTISTA:
- Neighbours and friends, though bride and
- bridegroom wants
- For to supply the places at the table,
- You know there wants no junkets at the feast.
- Lucentio, you shall supply the bridegroom's place:
- And let Bianca take her sister's room.
- TRANIO:
- Shall sweet Bianca practise how to bride it?
- BAPTISTA:
- She shall, Lucentio. Come, gentlemen, let's go.
- GRUMIO:
- Fie, fie on all tired jades, on all mad masters, and
- all foul ways! Was ever man so beaten? was ever
- man so rayed? was ever man so weary? I am sent
- before to make a fire, and they are coming after to
- warm them. Now, were not I a little pot and soon
- hot, my very lips might freeze to my teeth, my
- tongue to the roof of my mouth, my heart in my
- belly, ere I should come by a fire to thaw me: but
- I, with blowing the fire, shall warm myself; for,
- considering the weather, a taller man than I will
- take cold. Holla, ho! Curtis.
- CURTIS:
- Who is that calls so coldly?
- GRUMIO:
- A piece of ice: if thou doubt it, thou mayst slide
- from my shoulder to my heel with no greater a run
- but my head and my neck. A fire good Curtis.
- CURTIS:
- Is my master and his wife coming, Grumio?
- GRUMIO:
- O, ay, Curtis, ay: and therefore fire, fire; cast
- on no water.
- CURTIS:
- Is she so hot a shrew as she's reported?
- GRUMIO:
- She was, good Curtis, before this frost: but, thou
- knowest, winter tames man, woman and beast; for it
- hath tamed my old master and my new mistress and
- myself, fellow Curtis.
- CURTIS:
- Away, you three-inch fool! I am no beast.
- GRUMIO:
- Am I but three inches? why, thy horn is a foot; and
- so long am I at the least. But wilt thou make a
- fire, or shall I complain on thee to our mistress,
- whose hand, she being now at hand, thou shalt soon
- feel, to thy cold comfort, for being slow in thy hot office?
- CURTIS:
- I prithee, good Grumio, tell me, how goes the world?
- GRUMIO:
- A cold world, Curtis, in every office but thine; and
- therefore fire: do thy duty, and have thy duty; for
- my master and mistress are almost frozen to death.
- CURTIS:
- There's fire ready; and therefore, good Grumio, the news.
- GRUMIO:
- Why, 'Jack, boy! ho! boy!' and as much news as
- will thaw.
- CURTIS:
- Come, you are so full of cony-catching!
- GRUMIO:
- Why, therefore fire; for I have caught extreme cold.
- Where's the cook? is supper ready, the house
- trimmed, rushes strewed, cobwebs swept; the
- serving-men in their new fustian, their white
- stockings, and every officer his wedding-garment on?
- Be the jacks fair within, the jills fair without,
- the carpets laid, and every thing in order?
- CURTIS:
- All ready; and therefore, I pray thee, news.
- GRUMIO:
- First, know, my horse is tired; my master and
- mistress fallen out.
- CURTIS:
- How?
- GRUMIO:
- Out of their saddles into the dirt; and thereby
- hangs a tale.
- CURTIS:
- Let's ha't, good Grumio.
- GRUMIO:
- Lend thine ear.
- CURTIS:
- Here.
- GRUMIO:
- There.
- CURTIS:
- This is to feel a tale, not to hear a tale.
- GRUMIO:
- And therefore 'tis called a sensible tale: and this
- cuff was but to knock at your ear, and beseech
- listening. Now I begin: Imprimis, we came down a
- foul hill, my master riding behind my mistress,--
- CURTIS:
- Both of one horse?
- GRUMIO:
- What's that to thee?
- CURTIS:
- Why, a horse.
- GRUMIO:
- Tell thou the tale: but hadst thou not crossed me,
- thou shouldst have heard how her horse fell and she
- under her horse; thou shouldst have heard in how
- miry a place, how she was bemoiled, how he left her
- with the horse upon her, how he beat me because
- her horse stumbled, how she waded through the dirt
- to pluck him off me, how he swore, how she prayed,
- that never prayed before, how I cried, how the
- horses ran away, how her bridle was burst, how I
- lost my crupper, with many things of worthy memory,
- which now shall die in oblivion and thou return
- unexperienced to thy grave.
- CURTIS:
- By this reckoning he is more shrew than she.
- GRUMIO:
- Ay; and that thou and the proudest of you all shall
- find when he comes home. But what talk I of this?
- Call forth Nathaniel, Joseph, Nicholas, Philip,
- Walter, Sugarsop and the rest: let their heads be
- sleekly combed their blue coats brushed and their
- garters of an indifferent knit: let them curtsy
- with their left legs and not presume to touch a hair
- of my master's horse-tail till they kiss their
- hands. Are they all ready?
- CURTIS:
- They are.
- GRUMIO:
- Call them forth.
- CURTIS:
- Do you hear, ho? you must meet my master to
- countenance my mistress.
- GRUMIO:
- Why, she hath a face of her own.
- CURTIS:
- Who knows not that?
- GRUMIO:
- Thou, it seems, that calls for company to
- countenance her.
- CURTIS:
- I call them forth to credit her.
- GRUMIO:
- Why, she comes to borrow nothing of them.
- NATHANIEL:
- Welcome home, Grumio!
- PHILIP:
- How now, Grumio!
- JOSEPH:
- What, Grumio!
- NICHOLAS:
- Fellow Grumio!
- NATHANIEL:
- How now, old lad?
- GRUMIO:
- Welcome, you;--how now, you;-- what, you;--fellow,
- you;--and thus much for greeting. Now, my spruce
- companions, is all ready, and all things neat?
- NATHANIEL:
- All things is ready. How near is our master?
- GRUMIO:
- E'en at hand, alighted by this; and therefore be
- not--Cock's passion, silence! I hear my master.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Where be these knaves? What, no man at door
- To hold my stirrup nor to take my horse!
- Where is Nathaniel, Gregory, Philip?
- ALL SERVING-MEN:
- Here, here, sir; here, sir.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Here, sir! here, sir! here, sir! here, sir!
- You logger-headed and unpolish'd grooms!
- What, no attendance? no regard? no duty?
- Where is the foolish knave I sent before?
- GRUMIO:
- Here, sir; as foolish as I was before.
- PETRUCHIO:
- You peasant swain! you whoreson malt-horse drudge!
- Did I not bid thee meet me in the park,
- And bring along these rascal knaves with thee?
- GRUMIO:
- Nathaniel's coat, sir, was not fully made,
- And Gabriel's pumps were all unpink'd i' the heel;
- There was no link to colour Peter's hat,
- And Walter's dagger was not come from sheathing:
- There were none fine but Adam, Ralph, and Gregory;
- The rest were ragged, old, and beggarly;
- Yet, as they are, here are they come to meet you.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Go, rascals, go, and fetch my supper in.
- Where is the life that late I led--
- Where are those--Sit down, Kate, and welcome.--
- Sound, sound, sound, sound!
- Why, when, I say? Nay, good sweet Kate, be merry.
- Off with my boots, you rogues! you villains, when?
- It was the friar of orders grey,
- As he forth walked on his way:--
- Out, you rogue! you pluck my foot awry:
- Take that, and mend the plucking off the other.
- Be merry, Kate. Some water, here; what, ho!
- Where's my spaniel Troilus? Sirrah, get you hence,
- And bid my cousin Ferdinand come hither:
- One, Kate, that you must kiss, and be acquainted with.
- Where are my slippers? Shall I have some water?
- Come, Kate, and wash, and welcome heartily.
- You whoreson villain! will you let it fall?
- KATHARINA:
- Patience, I pray you; 'twas a fault unwilling.
- PETRUCHIO:
- A whoreson beetle-headed, flap-ear'd knave!
- Come, Kate, sit down; I know you have a stomach.
- Will you give thanks, sweet Kate; or else shall I?
- What's this? mutton?
- First Servant:
- Ay.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Who brought it?
- PETER:
- I.
- PETRUCHIO:
- 'Tis burnt; and so is all the meat.
- What dogs are these! Where is the rascal cook?
- How durst you, villains, bring it from the dresser,
- And serve it thus to me that love it not?
- Theretake it to you, trenchers, cups, and all;
- You heedless joltheads and unmanner'd slaves!
- What, do you grumble? I'll be with you straight.
- KATHARINA:
- I pray you, husband, be not so disquiet:
- The meat was well, if you were so contented.
- PETRUCHIO:
- I tell thee, Kate, 'twas burnt and dried away;
- And I expressly am forbid to touch it,
- For it engenders choler, planteth anger;
- And better 'twere that both of us did fast,
- Since, of ourselves, ourselves are choleric,
- Than feed it with such over-roasted flesh.
- Be patient; to-morrow 't shall be mended,
- And, for this night, we'll fast for company:
- Come, I will bring thee to thy bridal chamber.
- NATHANIEL:
- Peter, didst ever see the like?
- PETER:
- He kills her in her own humour.
- GRUMIO:
- Where is he?
- CURTIS:
- In her chamber, making a sermon of continency to her;
- And rails, and swears, and rates, that she, poor soul,
- Knows not which way to stand, to look, to speak,
- And sits as one new-risen from a dream.
- Away, away! for he is coming hither.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Thus have I politicly begun my reign,
- And 'tis my hope to end successfully.
- My falcon now is sharp and passing empty;
- And till she stoop she must not be full-gorged,
- For then she never looks upon her lure.
- Another way I have to man my haggard,
- To make her come and know her keeper's call,
- That is, to watch her, as we watch these kites
- That bate and beat and will not be obedient.
- She eat no meat to-day, nor none shall eat;
- Last night she slept not, nor to-night she shall not;
- As with the meat, some undeserved fault
- I'll find about the making of the bed;
- And here I'll fling the pillow, there the bolster,
- This way the coverlet, another way the sheets:
- Ay, and amid this hurly I intend
- That all is done in reverend care of her;
- And in conclusion she shall watch all night:
- And if she chance to nod I'll rail and brawl
- And with the clamour keep her still awake.
- This is a way to kill a wife with kindness;
- And thus I'll curb her mad and headstrong humour.
- He that knows better how to tame a shrew,
- Now let him speak: 'tis charity to show.
- TRANIO:
- Is't possible, friend Licio, that Mistress Bianca
- Doth fancy any other but Lucentio?
- I tell you, sir, she bears me fair in hand.
- HORTENSIO:
- Sir, to satisfy you in what I have said,
- Stand by and mark the manner of his teaching.
- LUCENTIO:
- Now, mistress, profit you in what you read?
- BIANCA:
- What, master, read you? first resolve me that.
- LUCENTIO:
- I read that I profess, the Art to Love.
- BIANCA:
- And may you prove, sir, master of your art!
- LUCENTIO:
- While you, sweet dear, prove mistress of my heart!
- HORTENSIO:
- Quick proceeders, marry! Now, tell me, I pray,
- You that durst swear at your mistress Bianca
- Loved none in the world so well as Lucentio.
- TRANIO:
- O despiteful love! unconstant womankind!
- I tell thee, Licio, this is wonderful.
- HORTENSIO:
- Mistake no more: I am not Licio,
- Nor a musician, as I seem to be;
- But one that scorn to live in this disguise,
- For such a one as leaves a gentleman,
- And makes a god of such a cullion:
- Know, sir, that I am call'd Hortensio.
- TRANIO:
- Signior Hortensio, I have often heard
- Of your entire affection to Bianca;
- And since mine eyes are witness of her lightness,
- I will with you, if you be so contented,
- Forswear Bianca and her love for ever.
- HORTENSIO:
- See, how they kiss and court! Signior Lucentio,
- Here is my hand, and here I firmly vow
- Never to woo her no more, but do forswear her,
- As one unworthy all the former favours
- That I have fondly flatter'd her withal.
- TRANIO:
- And here I take the unfeigned oath,
- Never to marry with her though she would entreat:
- Fie on her! see, how beastly she doth court him!
- HORTENSIO:
- Would all the world but he had quite forsworn!
- For me, that I may surely keep mine oath,
- I will be married to a wealthy widow,
- Ere three days pass, which hath as long loved me
- As I have loved this proud disdainful haggard.
- And so farewell, Signior Lucentio.
- Kindness in women, not their beauteous looks,
- Shall win my love: and so I take my leave,
- In resolution as I swore before.
- TRANIO:
- Mistress Bianca, bless you with such grace
- As 'longeth to a lover's blessed case!
- Nay, I have ta'en you napping, gentle love,
- And have forsworn you with Hortensio.
- BIANCA:
- Tranio, you jest: but have you both forsworn me?
- TRANIO:
- Mistress, we have.
- LUCENTIO:
- Then we are rid of Licio.
- TRANIO:
- I' faith, he'll have a lusty widow now,
- That shall be wood and wedded in a day.
- BIANCA:
- God give him joy!
- TRANIO:
- Ay, and he'll tame her.
- BIANCA:
- He says so, Tranio.
- TRANIO:
- Faith, he is gone unto the taming-school.
- BIANCA:
- The taming-school! what, is there such a place?
- TRANIO:
- Ay, mistress, and Petruchio is the master;
- That teacheth tricks eleven and twenty long,
- To tame a shrew and charm her chattering tongue.
- BIONDELLO:
- O master, master, I have watch'd so long
- That I am dog-weary: but at last I spied
- An ancient angel coming down the hill,
- Will serve the turn.
- TRANIO:
- What is he, Biondello?
- BIONDELLO:
- Master, a mercatante, or a pedant,
- I know not what; but format in apparel,
- In gait and countenance surely like a father.
- LUCENTIO:
- And what of him, Tranio?
- TRANIO:
- If he be credulous and trust my tale,
- I'll make him glad to seem Vincentio,
- And give assurance to Baptista Minola,
- As if he were the right Vincentio
- Take in your love, and then let me alone.
- Pedant:
- God save you, sir!
- TRANIO:
- And you, sir! you are welcome.
- Travel you far on, or are you at the farthest?
- Pedant:
- Sir, at the farthest for a week or two:
- But then up farther, and as for as Rome;
- And so to Tripoli, if God lend me life.
- TRANIO:
- What countryman, I pray?
- Pedant:
- Of Mantua.
- TRANIO:
- Of Mantua, sir? marry, God forbid!
- And come to Padua, careless of your life?
- Pedant:
- My life, sir! how, I pray? for that goes hard.
- TRANIO:
- 'Tis death for any one in Mantua
- To come to Padua. Know you not the cause?
- Your ships are stay'd at Venice, and the duke,
- For private quarrel 'twixt your duke and him,
- Hath publish'd and proclaim'd it openly:
- 'Tis, marvel, but that you are but newly come,
- You might have heard it else proclaim'd about.
- Pedant:
- Alas! sir, it is worse for me than so;
- For I have bills for money by exchange
- From Florence and must here deliver them.
- TRANIO:
- Well, sir, to do you courtesy,
- This will I do, and this I will advise you:
- First, tell me, have you ever been at Pisa?
- Pedant:
- Ay, sir, in Pisa have I often been,
- Pisa renowned for grave citizens.
- TRANIO:
- Among them know you one Vincentio?
- Pedant:
- I know him not, but I have heard of him;
- A merchant of incomparable wealth.
- TRANIO:
- He is my father, sir; and, sooth to say,
- In countenance somewhat doth resemble you.
- BIONDELLO:
- TRANIO:
- To save your life in this extremity,
- This favour will I do you for his sake;
- And think it not the worst of an your fortunes
- That you are like to Sir Vincentio.
- His name and credit shall you undertake,
- And in my house you shall be friendly lodged:
- Look that you take upon you as you should;
- You understand me, sir: so shall you stay
- Till you have done your business in the city:
- If this be courtesy, sir, accept of it.
- Pedant:
- O sir, I do; and will repute you ever
- The patron of my life and liberty.
- TRANIO:
- Then go with me to make the matter good.
- This, by the way, I let you understand;
- my father is here look'd for every day,
- To pass assurance of a dower in marriage
- 'Twixt me and one Baptista's daughter here:
- In all these circumstances I'll instruct you:
- Go with me to clothe you as becomes you.
- GRUMIO:
- No, no, forsooth; I dare not for my life.
- KATHARINA:
- The more my wrong, the more his spite appears:
- What, did he marry me to famish me?
- Beggars, that come unto my father's door,
- Upon entreaty have a present aims;
- If not, elsewhere they meet with charity:
- But I, who never knew how to entreat,
- Nor never needed that I should entreat,
- Am starved for meat, giddy for lack of sleep,
- With oath kept waking and with brawling fed:
- And that which spites me more than all these wants,
- He does it under name of perfect love;
- As who should say, if I should sleep or eat,
- 'Twere deadly sickness or else present death.
- I prithee go and get me some repast;
- I care not what, so it be wholesome food.
- GRUMIO:
- What say you to a neat's foot?
- KATHARINA:
- 'Tis passing good: I prithee let me have it.
- GRUMIO:
- I fear it is too choleric a meat.
- How say you to a fat tripe finely broil'd?
- KATHARINA:
- I like it well: good Grumio, fetch it me.
- GRUMIO:
- I cannot tell; I fear 'tis choleric.
- What say you to a piece of beef and mustard?
- KATHARINA:
- A dish that I do love to feed upon.
- GRUMIO:
- Ay, but the mustard is too hot a little.
- KATHARINA:
- Why then, the beef, and let the mustard rest.
- GRUMIO:
- Nay then, I will not: you shall have the mustard,
- Or else you get no beef of Grumio.
- KATHARINA:
- Then both, or one, or any thing thou wilt.
- GRUMIO:
- Why then, the mustard without the beef.
- KATHARINA:
- Go, get thee gone, thou false deluding slave,
- That feed'st me with the very name of meat:
- Sorrow on thee and all the pack of you,
- That triumph thus upon my misery!
- Go, get thee gone, I say.
- PETRUCHIO:
- How fares my Kate? What, sweeting, all amort?
- HORTENSIO:
- Mistress, what cheer?
- KATHARINA:
- Faith, as cold as can be.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Pluck up thy spirits; look cheerfully upon me.
- Here love; thou see'st how diligent I am
- To dress thy meat myself and bring it thee:
- I am sure, sweet Kate, this kindness merits thanks.
- What, not a word? Nay, then thou lovest it not;
- And all my pains is sorted to no proof.
- Here, take away this dish.
- KATHARINA:
- I pray you, let it stand.
- PETRUCHIO:
- The poorest service is repaid with thanks;
- And so shall mine, before you touch the meat.
- KATHARINA:
- I thank you, sir.
- HORTENSIO:
- Signior Petruchio, fie! you are to blame.
- Come, mistress Kate, I'll bear you company.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Haberdasher:
- Here is the cap your worship did bespeak.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Why, this was moulded on a porringer;
- A velvet dish: fie, fie! 'tis lewd and filthy:
- Why, 'tis a cockle or a walnut-shell,
- A knack, a toy, a trick, a baby's cap:
- Away with it! come, let me have a bigger.
- KATHARINA:
- I'll have no bigger: this doth fit the time,
- And gentlewomen wear such caps as these
- PETRUCHIO:
- When you are gentle, you shall have one too,
- And not till then.
- HORTENSIO:
- KATHARINA:
- Why, sir, I trust I may have leave to speak;
- And speak I will; I am no child, no babe:
- Your betters have endured me say my mind,
- And if you cannot, best you stop your ears.
- My tongue will tell the anger of my heart,
- Or else my heart concealing it will break,
- And rather than it shall, I will be free
- Even to the uttermost, as I please, in words.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Why, thou say'st true; it is a paltry cap,
- A custard-coffin, a bauble, a silken pie:
- I love thee well, in that thou likest it not.
- KATHARINA:
- Love me or love me not, I like the cap;
- And it I will have, or I will have none.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Thy gown? why, ay: come, tailor, let us see't.
- O mercy, God! what masquing stuff is here?
- What's this? a sleeve? 'tis like a demi-cannon:
- What, up and down, carved like an apple-tart?
- Here's snip and nip and cut and slish and slash,
- Like to a censer in a barber's shop:
- Why, what, i' devil's name, tailor, call'st thou this?
- HORTENSIO:
- Tailor:
- You bid me make it orderly and well,
- According to the fashion and the time.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Marry, and did; but if you be remember'd,
- I did not bid you mar it to the time.
- Go, hop me over every kennel home,
- For you shall hop without my custom, sir:
- I'll none of it: hence! make your best of it.
- KATHARINA:
- I never saw a better-fashion'd gown,
- More quaint, more pleasing, nor more commendable:
- Belike you mean to make a puppet of me.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Why, true; he means to make a puppet of thee.
- Tailor:
- She says your worship means to make
- a puppet of her.
- PETRUCHIO:
- O monstrous arrogance! Thou liest, thou thread,
- thou thimble,
- Thou yard, three-quarters, half-yard, quarter, nail!
- Thou flea, thou nit, thou winter-cricket thou!
- Braved in mine own house with a skein of thread?
- Away, thou rag, thou quantity, thou remnant;
- Or I shall so be-mete thee with thy yard
- As thou shalt think on prating whilst thou livest!
- I tell thee, I, that thou hast marr'd her gown.
- Tailor:
- Your worship is deceived; the gown is made
- Just as my master had direction:
- Grumio gave order how it should be done.
- GRUMIO:
- I gave him no order; I gave him the stuff.
- Tailor:
- But how did you desire it should be made?
- GRUMIO:
- Marry, sir, with needle and thread.
- Tailor:
- But did you not request to have it cut?
- GRUMIO:
- Thou hast faced many things.
- Tailor:
- I have.
- GRUMIO:
- Face not me: thou hast braved many men; brave not
- me; I will neither be faced nor braved. I say unto
- thee, I bid thy master cut out the gown; but I did
- not bid him cut it to pieces: ergo, thou liest.
- Tailor:
- Why, here is the note of the fashion to testify
- PETRUCHIO:
- Read it.
- GRUMIO:
- The note lies in's throat, if he say I said so.
- Tailor:
- GRUMIO:
- Master, if ever I said loose-bodied gown, sew me in
- the skirts of it, and beat me to death with a bottom
- of brown thread: I said a gown.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Proceed.
- Tailor:
- GRUMIO:
- I confess the cape.
- Tailor:
- GRUMIO:
- I confess two sleeves.
- Tailor:
- PETRUCHIO:
- Ay, there's the villany.
- GRUMIO:
- Error i' the bill, sir; error i' the bill.
- I commanded the sleeves should be cut out and
- sewed up again; and that I'll prove upon thee,
- though thy little finger be armed in a thimble.
- Tailor:
- This is true that I say: an I had thee
- in place where, thou shouldst know it.
- GRUMIO:
- I am for thee straight: take thou the
- bill, give me thy mete-yard, and spare not me.
- HORTENSIO:
- God-a-mercy, Grumio! then he shall have no odds.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Well, sir, in brief, the gown is not for me.
- GRUMIO:
- You are i' the right, sir: 'tis for my mistress.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Go, take it up unto thy master's use.
- GRUMIO:
- Villain, not for thy life: take up my mistress'
- gown for thy master's use!
- PETRUCHIO:
- Why, sir, what's your conceit in that?
- GRUMIO:
- O, sir, the conceit is deeper than you think for:
- Take up my mistress' gown to his master's use!
- O, fie, fie, fie!
- PETRUCHIO:
- HORTENSIO:
- Tailor, I'll pay thee for thy gown tomorrow:
- Take no unkindness of his hasty words:
- Away! I say; commend me to thy master.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Well, come, my Kate; we will unto your father's
- Even in these honest mean habiliments:
- Our purses shall be proud, our garments poor;
- For 'tis the mind that makes the body rich;
- And as the sun breaks through the darkest clouds,
- So honour peereth in the meanest habit.
- What is the jay more precious than the lark,
- Because his fathers are more beautiful?
- Or is the adder better than the eel,
- Because his painted skin contents the eye?
- O, no, good Kate; neither art thou the worse
- For this poor furniture and mean array.
- if thou account'st it shame. lay it on me;
- And therefore frolic: we will hence forthwith,
- To feast and sport us at thy father's house.
- Go, call my men, and let us straight to him;
- And bring our horses unto Long-lane end;
- There will we mount, and thither walk on foot
- Let's see; I think 'tis now some seven o'clock,
- And well we may come there by dinner-time.
- KATHARINA:
- I dare assure you, sir, 'tis almost two;
- And 'twill be supper-time ere you come there.
- PETRUCHIO:
- It shall be seven ere I go to horse:
- Look, what I speak, or do, or think to do,
- You are still crossing it. Sirs, let't alone:
- I will not go to-day; and ere I do,
- It shall be what o'clock I say it is.
- HORTENSIO:
- TRANIO:
- Sir, this is the house: please it you that I call?
- Pedant:
- Ay, what else? and but I be deceived
- Signior Baptista may remember me,
- Near twenty years ago, in Genoa,
- Where we were lodgers at the Pegasus.
- TRANIO:
- 'Tis well; and hold your own, in any case,
- With such austerity as 'longeth to a father.
- Pedant:
- I warrant you.
- But, sir, here comes your boy;
- 'Twere good he were school'd.
- TRANIO:
- Fear you not him. Sirrah Biondello,
- Now do your duty throughly, I advise you:
- Imagine 'twere the right Vincentio.
- BIONDELLO:
- Tut, fear not me.
- TRANIO:
- But hast thou done thy errand to Baptista?
- BIONDELLO:
- I told him that your father was at Venice,
- And that you look'd for him this day in Padua.
- TRANIO:
- Thou'rt a tall fellow: hold thee that to drink.
- Here comes Baptista: set your countenance, sir.
- Signior Baptista, you are happily met.
- Sir, this is the gentleman I told you of:
- I pray you stand good father to me now,
- Give me Bianca for my patrimony.
- Pedant:
- Soft son!
- Sir, by your leave: having come to Padua
- To gather in some debts, my son Lucentio
- Made me acquainted with a weighty cause
- Of love between your daughter and himself:
- And, for the good report I hear of you
- And for the love he beareth to your daughter
- And she to him, to stay him not too long,
- I am content, in a good father's care,
- To have him match'd; and if you please to like
- No worse than I, upon some agreement
- Me shall you find ready and willing
- With one consent to have her so bestow'd;
- For curious I cannot be with you,
- Signior Baptista, of whom I hear so well.
- BAPTISTA:
- Sir, pardon me in what I have to say:
- Your plainness and your shortness please me well.
- Right true it is, your son Lucentio here
- Doth love my daughter and she loveth him,
- Or both dissemble deeply their affections:
- And therefore, if you say no more than this,
- That like a father you will deal with him
- And pass my daughter a sufficient dower,
- The match is made, and all is done:
- Your son shall have my daughter with consent.
- TRANIO:
- I thank you, sir. Where then do you know best
- We be affied and such assurance ta'en
- As shall with either part's agreement stand?
- BAPTISTA:
- Not in my house, Lucentio; for, you know,
- Pitchers have ears, and I have many servants:
- Besides, old Gremio is hearkening still;
- And happily we might be interrupted.
- TRANIO:
- Then at my lodging, an it like you:
- There doth my father lie; and there, this night,
- We'll pass the business privately and well.
- Send for your daughter by your servant here:
- My boy shall fetch the scrivener presently.
- The worst is this, that, at so slender warning,
- You are like to have a thin and slender pittance.
- BAPTISTA:
- It likes me well. Biondello, hie you home,
- And bid Bianca make her ready straight;
- And, if you will, tell what hath happened,
- Lucentio's father is arrived in Padua,
- And how she's like to be Lucentio's wife.
- BIONDELLO:
- I pray the gods she may with all my heart!
- TRANIO:
- Dally not with the gods, but get thee gone.
- Signior Baptista, shall I lead the way?
- Welcome! one mess is like to be your cheer:
- Come, sir; we will better it in Pisa.
- BAPTISTA:
- I follow you.
- BIONDELLO:
- Cambio!
- LUCENTIO:
- What sayest thou, Biondello?
- BIONDELLO:
- You saw my master wink and laugh upon you?
- LUCENTIO:
- Biondello, what of that?
- BIONDELLO:
- Faith, nothing; but has left me here behind, to
- expound the meaning or moral of his signs and tokens.
- LUCENTIO:
- I pray thee, moralize them.
- BIONDELLO:
- Then thus. Baptista is safe, talking with the
- deceiving father of a deceitful son.
- LUCENTIO:
- And what of him?
- BIONDELLO:
- His daughter is to be brought by you to the supper.
- LUCENTIO:
- And then?
- BIONDELLO:
- The old priest of Saint Luke's church is at your
- command at all hours.
- LUCENTIO:
- And what of all this?
- BIONDELLO:
- I cannot tell; expect they are busied about a
- counterfeit assurance: take you assurance of her,
- 'cum privilegio ad imprimendum solum:' to the
- church; take the priest, clerk, and some sufficient
- honest witnesses: If this be not that you look for,
- I have no more to say, But bid Bianca farewell for
- ever and a day.
- LUCENTIO:
- Hearest thou, Biondello?
- BIONDELLO:
- I cannot tarry: I knew a wench married in an
- afternoon as she went to the garden for parsley to
- stuff a rabbit; and so may you, sir: and so, adieu,
- sir. My master hath appointed me to go to Saint
- Luke's, to bid the priest be ready to come against
- you come with your appendix.
- LUCENTIO:
- I may, and will, if she be so contented:
- She will be pleased; then wherefore should I doubt?
- Hap what hap may, I'll roundly go about her:
- It shall go hard if Cambio go without her.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Come on, i' God's name; once more toward our father's.
- Good Lord, how bright and goodly shines the moon!
- KATHARINA:
- The moon! the sun: it is not moonlight now.
- PETRUCHIO:
- I say it is the moon that shines so bright.
- KATHARINA:
- I know it is the sun that shines so bright.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Now, by my mother's son, and that's myself,
- It shall be moon, or star, or what I list,
- Or ere I journey to your father's house.
- Go on, and fetch our horses back again.
- Evermore cross'd and cross'd; nothing but cross'd!
- HORTENSIO:
- Say as he says, or we shall never go.
- KATHARINA:
- Forward, I pray, since we have come so far,
- And be it moon, or sun, or what you please:
- An if you please to call it a rush-candle,
- Henceforth I vow it shall be so for me.
- PETRUCHIO:
- I say it is the moon.
- KATHARINA:
- I know it is the moon.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Nay, then you lie: it is the blessed sun.
- KATHARINA:
- Then, God be bless'd, it is the blessed sun:
- But sun it is not, when you say it is not;
- And the moon changes even as your mind.
- What you will have it named, even that it is;
- And so it shall be so for Katharina.
- HORTENSIO:
- Petruchio, go thy ways; the field is won.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Well, forward, forward! thus the bowl should run,
- And not unluckily against the bias.
- But, soft! company is coming here.
- Good morrow, gentle mistress: where away?
- Tell me, sweet Kate, and tell me truly too,
- Hast thou beheld a fresher gentlewoman?
- Such war of white and red within her cheeks!
- What stars do spangle heaven with such beauty,
- As those two eyes become that heavenly face?
- Fair lovely maid, once more good day to thee.
- Sweet Kate, embrace her for her beauty's sake.
- HORTENSIO:
- A' will make the man mad, to make a woman of him.
- KATHARINA:
- Young budding virgin, fair and fresh and sweet,
- Whither away, or where is thy abode?
- Happy the parents of so fair a child;
- Happier the man, whom favourable stars
- Allot thee for his lovely bed-fellow!
- PETRUCHIO:
- Why, how now, Kate! I hope thou art not mad:
- This is a man, old, wrinkled, faded, wither'd,
- And not a maiden, as thou say'st he is.
- KATHARINA:
- Pardon, old father, my mistaking eyes,
- That have been so bedazzled with the sun
- That everything I look on seemeth green:
- Now I perceive thou art a reverend father;
- Pardon, I pray thee, for my mad mistaking.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Do, good old grandsire; and withal make known
- Which way thou travellest: if along with us,
- We shall be joyful of thy company.
- VINCENTIO:
- Fair sir, and you my merry mistress,
- That with your strange encounter much amazed me,
- My name is call'd Vincentio; my dwelling Pisa;
- And bound I am to Padua; there to visit
- A son of mine, which long I have not seen.
- PETRUCHIO:
- What is his name?
- VINCENTIO:
- Lucentio, gentle sir.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Happily we met; the happier for thy son.
- And now by law, as well as reverend age,
- I may entitle thee my loving father:
- The sister to my wife, this gentlewoman,
- Thy son by this hath married. Wonder not,
- Nor be grieved: she is of good esteem,
- Her dowery wealthy, and of worthy birth;
- Beside, so qualified as may beseem
- The spouse of any noble gentleman.
- Let me embrace with old Vincentio,
- And wander we to see thy honest son,
- Who will of thy arrival be full joyous.
- VINCENTIO:
- But is it true? or else is it your pleasure,
- Like pleasant travellers, to break a jest
- Upon the company you overtake?
- HORTENSIO:
- I do assure thee, father, so it is.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Come, go along, and see the truth hereof;
- For our first merriment hath made thee jealous.
- HORTENSIO:
- Well, Petruchio, this has put me in heart.
- Have to my widow! and if she be froward,
- Then hast thou taught Hortensio to be untoward.
- BIONDELLO:
- Softly and swiftly, sir; for the priest is ready.
- LUCENTIO:
- I fly, Biondello: but they may chance to need thee
- at home; therefore leave us.
- BIONDELLO:
- Nay, faith, I'll see the church o' your back; and
- then come back to my master's as soon as I can.
- GREMIO:
- I marvel Cambio comes not all this while.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Sir, here's the door, this is Lucentio's house:
- My father's bears more toward the market-place;
- Thither must I, and here I leave you, sir.
- VINCENTIO:
- You shall not choose but drink before you go:
- I think I shall command your welcome here,
- And, by all likelihood, some cheer is toward.
- GREMIO:
- They're busy within; you were best knock louder.
- Pedant:
- What's he that knocks as he would beat down the gate?
- VINCENTIO:
- Is Signior Lucentio within, sir?
- Pedant:
- He's within, sir, but not to be spoken withal.
- VINCENTIO:
- What if a man bring him a hundred pound or two, to
- make merry withal?
- Pedant:
- Keep your hundred pounds to yourself: he shall
- need none, so long as I live.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Nay, I told you your son was well beloved in Padua.
- Do you hear, sir? To leave frivolous circumstances,
- I pray you, tell Signior Lucentio that his father is
- come from Pisa, and is here at the door to speak with him.
- Pedant:
- Thou liest: his father is come from Padua and here
- looking out at the window.
- VINCENTIO:
- Art thou his father?
- Pedant:
- Ay, sir; so his mother says, if I may believe her.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Pedant:
- Lay hands on the villain: I believe a' means to
- cozen somebody in this city under my countenance.
- BIONDELLO:
- I have seen them in the church together: God send
- 'em good shipping! But who is here? mine old
- master Vincentio! now we are undone and brought to nothing.
- VINCENTIO:
- BIONDELLO:
- Hope I may choose, sir.
- VINCENTIO:
- Come hither, you rogue. What, have you forgot me?
- BIONDELLO:
- Forgot you! no, sir: I could not forget you, for I
- never saw you before in all my life.
- VINCENTIO:
- What, you notorious villain, didst thou never see
- thy master's father, Vincentio?
- BIONDELLO:
- What, my old worshipful old master? yes, marry, sir:
- see where he looks out of the window.
- VINCENTIO:
- Is't so, indeed.
- BIONDELLO:
- Help, help, help! here's a madman will murder me.
- Pedant:
- Help, son! help, Signior Baptista!
- PETRUCHIO:
- Prithee, Kate, let's stand aside and see the end of
- this controversy.
- TRANIO:
- Sir, what are you that offer to beat my servant?
- VINCENTIO:
- What am I, sir! nay, what are you, sir? O immortal
- gods! O fine villain! A silken doublet! a velvet
- hose! a scarlet cloak! and a copatain hat! O, I
- am undone! I am undone! while I play the good
- husband at home, my son and my servant spend all at
- the university.
- TRANIO:
- How now! what's the matter?
- BAPTISTA:
- What, is the man lunatic?
- TRANIO:
- Sir, you seem a sober ancient gentleman by your
- habit, but your words show you a madman. Why, sir,
- what 'cerns it you if I wear pearl and gold? I
- thank my good father, I am able to maintain it.
- VINCENTIO:
- Thy father! O villain! he is a sailmaker in Bergamo.
- BAPTISTA:
- You mistake, sir, you mistake, sir. Pray, what do
- you think is his name?
- VINCENTIO:
- His name! as if I knew not his name: I have brought
- him up ever since he was three years old, and his
- name is Tranio.
- Pedant:
- Away, away, mad ass! his name is Lucentio and he is
- mine only son, and heir to the lands of me, Signior Vincentio.
- VINCENTIO:
- Lucentio! O, he hath murdered his master! Lay hold
- on him, I charge you, in the duke's name. O, my
- son, my son! Tell me, thou villain, where is my son Lucentio?
- TRANIO:
- Call forth an officer.
- Carry this mad knave to the gaol. Father Baptista,
- I charge you see that he be forthcoming.
- VINCENTIO:
- Carry me to the gaol!
- GREMIO:
- Stay, officer: he shall not go to prison.
- BAPTISTA:
- Talk not, Signior Gremio: I say he shall go to prison.
- GREMIO:
- Take heed, Signior Baptista, lest you be
- cony-catched in this business: I dare swear this
- is the right Vincentio.
- Pedant:
- Swear, if thou darest.
- GREMIO:
- Nay, I dare not swear it.
- TRANIO:
- Then thou wert best say that I am not Lucentio.
- GREMIO:
- Yes, I know thee to be Signior Lucentio.
- BAPTISTA:
- Away with the dotard! to the gaol with him!
- VINCENTIO:
- Thus strangers may be hailed and abused: O
- monstrous villain!
- BIONDELLO:
- O! we are spoiled and--yonder he is: deny him,
- forswear him, or else we are all undone.
- LUCENTIO:
- VINCENTIO:
- Lives my sweet son?
- BIANCA:
- Pardon, dear father.
- BAPTISTA:
- How hast thou offended?
- Where is Lucentio?
- LUCENTIO:
- Here's Lucentio,
- Right son to the right Vincentio;
- That have by marriage made thy daughter mine,
- While counterfeit supposes bleared thine eyne.
- GREMIO:
- Here's packing, with a witness to deceive us all!
- VINCENTIO:
- Where is that damned villain Tranio,
- That faced and braved me in this matter so?
- BAPTISTA:
- Why, tell me, is not this my Cambio?
- BIANCA:
- Cambio is changed into Lucentio.
- LUCENTIO:
- Love wrought these miracles. Bianca's love
- Made me exchange my state with Tranio,
- While he did bear my countenance in the town;
- And happily I have arrived at the last
- Unto the wished haven of my bliss.
- What Tranio did, myself enforced him to;
- Then pardon him, sweet father, for my sake.
- VINCENTIO:
- I'll slit the villain's nose, that would have sent
- me to the gaol.
- BAPTISTA:
- But do you hear, sir? have you married my daughter
- without asking my good will?
- VINCENTIO:
- Fear not, Baptista; we will content you, go to: but
- I will in, to be revenged for this villany.
- BAPTISTA:
- And I, to sound the depth of this knavery.
- LUCENTIO:
- Look not pale, Bianca; thy father will not frown.
- GREMIO:
- My cake is dough; but I'll in among the rest,
- Out of hope of all, but my share of the feast.
- KATHARINA:
- Husband, let's follow, to see the end of this ado.
- PETRUCHIO:
- First kiss me, Kate, and we will.
- KATHARINA:
- What, in the midst of the street?
- PETRUCHIO:
- What, art thou ashamed of me?
- KATHARINA:
- No, sir, God forbid; but ashamed to kiss.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Why, then let's home again. Come, sirrah, let's away.
- KATHARINA:
- Nay, I will give thee a kiss: now pray thee, love, stay.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Is not this well? Come, my sweet Kate:
- Better once than never, for never too late.
- LUCENTIO:
- At last, though long, our jarring notes agree:
- And time it is, when raging war is done,
- To smile at scapes and perils overblown.
- My fair Bianca, bid my father welcome,
- While I with self-same kindness welcome thine.
- Brother Petruchio, sister Katharina,
- And thou, Hortensio, with thy loving widow,
- Feast with the best, and welcome to my house:
- My banquet is to close our stomachs up,
- After our great good cheer. Pray you, sit down;
- For now we sit to chat as well as eat.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Nothing but sit and sit, and eat and eat!
- BAPTISTA:
- Padua affords this kindness, son Petruchio.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Padua affords nothing but what is kind.
- HORTENSIO:
- For both our sakes, I would that word were true.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Now, for my life, Hortensio fears his widow.
- Widow:
- Then never trust me, if I be afeard.
- PETRUCHIO:
- You are very sensible, and yet you miss my sense:
- I mean, Hortensio is afeard of you.
- Widow:
- He that is giddy thinks the world turns round.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Roundly replied.
- KATHARINA:
- Mistress, how mean you that?
- Widow:
- Thus I conceive by him.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Conceives by me! How likes Hortensio that?
- HORTENSIO:
- My widow says, thus she conceives her tale.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Very well mended. Kiss him for that, good widow.
- KATHARINA:
- 'He that is giddy thinks the world turns round:'
- I pray you, tell me what you meant by that.
- Widow:
- Your husband, being troubled with a shrew,
- Measures my husband's sorrow by his woe:
- And now you know my meaning,
- KATHARINA:
- A very mean meaning.
- Widow:
- Right, I mean you.
- KATHARINA:
- And I am mean indeed, respecting you.
- PETRUCHIO:
- To her, Kate!
- HORTENSIO:
- To her, widow!
- PETRUCHIO:
- A hundred marks, my Kate does put her down.
- HORTENSIO:
- That's my office.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Spoke like an officer; ha' to thee, lad!
- BAPTISTA:
- How likes Gremio these quick-witted folks?
- GREMIO:
- Believe me, sir, they butt together well.
- BIANCA:
- Head, and butt! an hasty-witted body
- Would say your head and butt were head and horn.
- VINCENTIO:
- Ay, mistress bride, hath that awaken'd you?
- BIANCA:
- Ay, but not frighted me; therefore I'll sleep again.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Nay, that you shall not: since you have begun,
- Have at you for a bitter jest or two!
- BIANCA:
- Am I your bird? I mean to shift my bush;
- And then pursue me as you draw your bow.
- You are welcome all.
- PETRUCHIO:
- She hath prevented me. Here, Signior Tranio.
- This bird you aim'd at, though you hit her not;
- Therefore a health to all that shot and miss'd.
- TRANIO:
- O, sir, Lucentio slipp'd me like his greyhound,
- Which runs himself and catches for his master.
- PETRUCHIO:
- A good swift simile, but something currish.
- TRANIO:
- 'Tis well, sir, that you hunted for yourself:
- 'Tis thought your deer does hold you at a bay.
- BAPTISTA:
- O ho, Petruchio! Tranio hits you now.
- LUCENTIO:
- I thank thee for that gird, good Tranio.
- HORTENSIO:
- Confess, confess, hath he not hit you here?
- PETRUCHIO:
- A' has a little gall'd me, I confess;
- And, as the jest did glance away from me,
- 'Tis ten to one it maim'd you two outright.
- BAPTISTA:
- Now, in good sadness, son Petruchio,
- I think thou hast the veriest shrew of all.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Well, I say no: and therefore for assurance
- Let's each one send unto his wife;
- And he whose wife is most obedient
- To come at first when he doth send for her,
- Shall win the wager which we will propose.
- HORTENSIO:
- Content. What is the wager?
- LUCENTIO:
- Twenty crowns.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Twenty crowns!
- I'll venture so much of my hawk or hound,
- But twenty times so much upon my wife.
- LUCENTIO:
- A hundred then.
- HORTENSIO:
- Content.
- PETRUCHIO:
- A match! 'tis done.
- HORTENSIO:
- Who shall begin?
- LUCENTIO:
- That will I.
- Go, Biondello, bid your mistress come to me.
- BIONDELLO:
- I go.
- BAPTISTA:
- Son, I'll be your half, Bianca comes.
- LUCENTIO:
- I'll have no halves; I'll bear it all myself.
- How now! what news?
- BIONDELLO:
- Sir, my mistress sends you word
- That she is busy and she cannot come.
- PETRUCHIO:
- How! she is busy and she cannot come!
- Is that an answer?
- GREMIO:
- Ay, and a kind one too:
- Pray God, sir, your wife send you not a worse.
- PETRUCHIO:
- I hope better.
- HORTENSIO:
- Sirrah Biondello, go and entreat my wife
- To come to me forthwith.
- PETRUCHIO:
- O, ho! entreat her!
- Nay, then she must needs come.
- HORTENSIO:
- I am afraid, sir,
- Do what you can, yours will not be entreated.
- Now, where's my wife?
- BIONDELLO:
- She says you have some goodly jest in hand:
- She will not come: she bids you come to her.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Worse and worse; she will not come! O vile,
- Intolerable, not to be endured!
- Sirrah Grumio, go to your mistress;
- Say, I command her to come to me.
- HORTENSIO:
- I know her answer.
- PETRUCHIO:
- What?
- HORTENSIO:
- She will not.
- PETRUCHIO:
- The fouler fortune mine, and there an end.
- BAPTISTA:
- Now, by my holidame, here comes Katharina!
- KATHARINA:
- What is your will, sir, that you send for me?
- PETRUCHIO:
- Where is your sister, and Hortensio's wife?
- KATHARINA:
- They sit conferring by the parlor fire.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Go fetch them hither: if they deny to come.
- Swinge me them soundly forth unto their husbands:
- Away, I say, and bring them hither straight.
- LUCENTIO:
- Here is a wonder, if you talk of a wonder.
- HORTENSIO:
- And so it is: I wonder what it bodes.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Marry, peace it bodes, and love and quiet life,
- And awful rule and right supremacy;
- And, to be short, what not, that's sweet and happy?
- BAPTISTA:
- Now, fair befal thee, good Petruchio!
- The wager thou hast won; and I will add
- Unto their losses twenty thousand crowns;
- Another dowry to another daughter,
- For she is changed, as she had never been.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Nay, I will win my wager better yet
- And show more sign of her obedience,
- Her new-built virtue and obedience.
- See where she comes and brings your froward wives
- As prisoners to her womanly persuasion.
- Katharina, that cap of yours becomes you not:
- Off with that bauble, throw it under-foot.
- Widow:
- Lord, let me never have a cause to sigh,
- Till I be brought to such a silly pass!
- BIANCA:
- Fie! what a foolish duty call you this?
- LUCENTIO:
- I would your duty were as foolish too:
- The wisdom of your duty, fair Bianca,
- Hath cost me an hundred crowns since supper-time.
- BIANCA:
- The more fool you, for laying on my duty.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Katharina, I charge thee, tell these headstrong women
- What duty they do owe their lords and husbands.
- Widow:
- Come, come, you're mocking: we will have no telling.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Come on, I say; and first begin with her.
- Widow:
- She shall not.
- PETRUCHIO:
- I say she shall: and first begin with her.
- KATHARINA:
- Fie, fie! unknit that threatening unkind brow,
- And dart not scornful glances from those eyes,
- To wound thy lord, thy king, thy governor:
- It blots thy beauty as frosts do bite the meads,
- Confounds thy fame as whirlwinds shake fair buds,
- And in no sense is meet or amiable.
- A woman moved is like a fountain troubled,
- Muddy, ill-seeming, thick, bereft of beauty;
- And while it is so, none so dry or thirsty
- Will deign to sip or touch one drop of it.
- Thy husband is thy lord, thy life, thy keeper,
- Thy head, thy sovereign; one that cares for thee,
- And for thy maintenance commits his body
- To painful labour both by sea and land,
- To watch the night in storms, the day in cold,
- Whilst thou liest warm at home, secure and safe;
- And craves no other tribute at thy hands
- But love, fair looks and true obedience;
- Too little payment for so great a debt.
- Such duty as the subject owes the prince
- Even such a woman oweth to her husband;
- And when she is froward, peevish, sullen, sour,
- And not obedient to his honest will,
- What is she but a foul contending rebel
- And graceless traitor to her loving lord?
- I am ashamed that women are so simple
- To offer war where they should kneel for peace;
- Or seek for rule, supremacy and sway,
- When they are bound to serve, love and obey.
- Why are our bodies soft and weak and smooth,
- Unapt to toil and trouble in the world,
- But that our soft conditions and our hearts
- Should well agree with our external parts?
- Come, come, you froward and unable worms!
- My mind hath been as big as one of yours,
- My heart as great, my reason haply more,
- To bandy word for word and frown for frown;
- But now I see our lances are but straws,
- Our strength as weak, our weakness past compare,
- That seeming to be most which we indeed least are.
- Then vail your stomachs, for it is no boot,
- And place your hands below your husband's foot:
- In token of which duty, if he please,
- My hand is ready; may it do him ease.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Why, there's a wench! Come on, and kiss me, Kate.
- LUCENTIO:
- Well, go thy ways, old lad; for thou shalt ha't.
- VINCENTIO:
- 'Tis a good hearing when children are toward.
- LUCENTIO:
- But a harsh hearing when women are froward.
- PETRUCHIO:
- Come, Kate, we'll to bed.
- We three are married, but you two are sped.
- 'Twas I won the wager, though you hit the white;
- And, being a winner, God give you good night!
- HORTENSIO:
- Now, go thy ways; thou hast tamed a curst shrew.
- LUCENTIO:
- 'Tis a wonder, by your leave, she will be tamed so.
- Master:
- Boatswain!
- Boatswain:
- Here, master: what cheer?
- Master:
- Good, speak to the mariners: fall to't, yarely,
- or we run ourselves aground: bestir, bestir.
- Boatswain:
- Heigh, my hearts! cheerly, cheerly, my hearts!
- yare, yare! Take in the topsail. Tend to the
- master's whistle. Blow, till thou burst thy wind,
- if room enough!
- ALONSO:
- Good boatswain, have care. Where's the master?
- Play the men.
- Boatswain:
- I pray now, keep below.
- ANTONIO:
- Where is the master, boatswain?
- Boatswain:
- Do you not hear him? You mar our labour: keep your
- cabins: you do assist the storm.
- GONZALO:
- Nay, good, be patient.
- Boatswain:
- When the sea is. Hence! What cares these roarers
- for the name of king? To cabin: silence! trouble us not.
- GONZALO:
- Good, yet remember whom thou hast aboard.
- Boatswain:
- None that I more love than myself. You are a
- counsellor; if you can command these elements to
- silence, and work the peace of the present, we will
- not hand a rope more; use your authority: if you
- cannot, give thanks you have lived so long, and make
- yourself ready in your cabin for the mischance of
- the hour, if it so hap. Cheerly, good hearts! Out
- of our way, I say.
- GONZALO:
- I have great comfort from this fellow: methinks he
- hath no drowning mark upon him; his complexion is
- perfect gallows. Stand fast, good Fate, to his
- hanging: make the rope of his destiny our cable,
- for our own doth little advantage. If he be not
- born to be hanged, our case is miserable.
- Boatswain:
- Down with the topmast! yare! lower, lower! Bring
- her to try with main-course.
- A plague upon this howling! they are louder than
- the weather or our office.
- Yet again! what do you here? Shall we give o'er
- and drown? Have you a mind to sink?
- SEBASTIAN:
- A pox o' your throat, you bawling, blasphemous,
- incharitable dog!
- Boatswain:
- Work you then.
- ANTONIO:
- Hang, cur! hang, you whoreson, insolent noisemaker!
- We are less afraid to be drowned than thou art.
- GONZALO:
- I'll warrant him for drowning; though the ship were
- no stronger than a nutshell and as leaky as an
- unstanched wench.
- Boatswain:
- Lay her a-hold, a-hold! set her two courses off to
- sea again; lay her off.
- Mariners:
- All lost! to prayers, to prayers! all lost!
- Boatswain:
- What, must our mouths be cold?
- GONZALO:
- The king and prince at prayers! let's assist them,
- For our case is as theirs.
- SEBASTIAN:
- I'm out of patience.
- ANTONIO:
- We are merely cheated of our lives by drunkards:
- This wide-chapp'd rascal--would thou mightst lie drowning
- The washing of ten tides!
- GONZALO:
- He'll be hang'd yet,
- Though every drop of water swear against it
- And gape at widest to glut him.
- ANTONIO:
- Let's all sink with the king.
- SEBASTIAN:
- Let's take leave of him.
- GONZALO:
- Now would I give a thousand furlongs of sea for an
- acre of barren ground, long heath, brown furze, any
- thing. The wills above be done! but I would fain
- die a dry death.
- MIRANDA:
- If by your art, my dearest father, you have
- Put the wild waters in this roar, allay them.
- The sky, it seems, would pour down stinking pitch,
- But that the sea, mounting to the welkin's cheek,
- Dashes the fire out. O, I have suffered
- With those that I saw suffer: a brave vessel,
- Who had, no doubt, some noble creature in her,
- Dash'd all to pieces. O, the cry did knock
- Against my very heart. Poor souls, they perish'd.
- Had I been any god of power, I would
- Have sunk the sea within the earth or ere
- It should the good ship so have swallow'd and
- The fraughting souls within her.
- PROSPERO:
- Be collected:
- No more amazement: tell your piteous heart
- There's no harm done.
- MIRANDA:
- O, woe the day!
- PROSPERO:
- No harm.
- I have done nothing but in care of thee,
- Of thee, my dear one, thee, my daughter, who
- Art ignorant of what thou art, nought knowing
- Of whence I am, nor that I am more better
- Than Prospero, master of a full poor cell,
- And thy no greater father.
- MIRANDA:
- More to know
- Did never meddle with my thoughts.
- PROSPERO:
- 'Tis time
- I should inform thee farther. Lend thy hand,
- And pluck my magic garment from me. So:
- Lie there, my art. Wipe thou thine eyes; have comfort.
- The direful spectacle of the wreck, which touch'd
- The very virtue of compassion in thee,
- I have with such provision in mine art
- So safely ordered that there is no soul--
- No, not so much perdition as an hair
- Betid to any creature in the vessel
- Which thou heard'st cry, which thou saw'st sink. Sit down;
- For thou must now know farther.
- MIRANDA:
- You have often
- Begun to tell me what I am, but stopp'd
- And left me to a bootless inquisition,
- Concluding 'Stay: not yet.'
- PROSPERO:
- The hour's now come;
- The very minute bids thee ope thine ear;
- Obey and be attentive. Canst thou remember
- A time before we came unto this cell?
- I do not think thou canst, for then thou wast not
- Out three years old.
- MIRANDA:
- Certainly, sir, I can.
- PROSPERO:
- By what? by any other house or person?
- Of any thing the image tell me that
- Hath kept with thy remembrance.
- MIRANDA:
- 'Tis far off
- And rather like a dream than an assurance
- That my remembrance warrants. Had I not
- Four or five women once that tended me?
- PROSPERO:
- Thou hadst, and more, Miranda. But how is it
- That this lives in thy mind? What seest thou else
- In the dark backward and abysm of time?
- If thou remember'st aught ere thou camest here,
- How thou camest here thou mayst.
- MIRANDA:
- But that I do not.
- PROSPERO:
- Twelve year since, Miranda, twelve year since,
- Thy father was the Duke of Milan and
- A prince of power.
- MIRANDA:
- Sir, are not you my father?
- PROSPERO:
- Thy mother was a piece of virtue, and
- She said thou wast my daughter; and thy father
- Was Duke of Milan; and thou his only heir
- And princess no worse issued.
- MIRANDA:
- O the heavens!
- What foul play had we, that we came from thence?
- Or blessed was't we did?
- PROSPERO:
- Both, both, my girl:
- By foul play, as thou say'st, were we heaved thence,
- But blessedly holp hither.
- MIRANDA:
- O, my heart bleeds
- To think o' the teen that I have turn'd you to,
- Which is from my remembrance! Please you, farther.
- PROSPERO:
- My brother and thy uncle, call'd Antonio--
- I pray thee, mark me--that a brother should
- Be so perfidious!--he whom next thyself
- Of all the world I loved and to him put
- The manage of my state; as at that time
- Through all the signories it was the first
- And Prospero the prime duke, being so reputed
- In dignity, and for the liberal arts
- Without a parallel; those being all my study,
- The government I cast upon my brother
- And to my state grew stranger, being transported
- And rapt in secret studies. Thy false uncle--
- Dost thou attend me?
- MIRANDA:
- Sir, most heedfully.
- PROSPERO:
- Being once perfected how to grant suits,
- How to deny them, who to advance and who
- To trash for over-topping, new created
- The creatures that were mine, I say, or changed 'em,
- Or else new form'd 'em; having both the key
- Of officer and office, set all hearts i' the state
- To what tune pleased his ear; that now he was
- The ivy which had hid my princely trunk,
- And suck'd my verdure out on't. Thou attend'st not.
- MIRANDA:
- O, good sir, I do.
- PROSPERO:
- I pray thee, mark me.
- I, thus neglecting worldly ends, all dedicated
- To closeness and the bettering of my mind
- With that which, but by being so retired,
- O'er-prized all popular rate, in my false brother
- Awaked an evil nature; and my trust,
- Like a good parent, did beget of him
- A falsehood in its contrary as great
- As my trust was; which had indeed no limit,
- A confidence sans bound. He being thus lorded,
- Not only with what my revenue yielded,
- But what my power might else exact, like one
- Who having into truth, by telling of it,
- Made such a sinner of his memory,
- To credit his own lie, he did believe
- He was indeed the duke; out o' the substitution
- And executing the outward face of royalty,
- With all prerogative: hence his ambition growing--
- Dost thou hear?
- MIRANDA:
- Your tale, sir, would cure deafness.
- PROSPERO:
- To have no screen between this part he play'd
- And him he play'd it for, he needs will be
- Absolute Milan. Me, poor man, my library
- Was dukedom large enough: of temporal royalties
- He thinks me now incapable; confederates--
- So dry he was for sway--wi' the King of Naples
- To give him annual tribute, do him homage,
- Subject his coronet to his crown and bend
- The dukedom yet unbow'd--alas, poor Milan!--
- To most ignoble stooping.
- MIRANDA:
- O the heavens!
- PROSPERO:
- Mark his condition and the event; then tell me
- If this might be a brother.
- MIRANDA:
- I should sin
- To think but nobly of my grandmother:
- Good wombs have borne bad sons.
- PROSPERO:
- Now the condition.
- The King of Naples, being an enemy
- To me inveterate, hearkens my brother's suit;
- Which was, that he, in lieu o' the premises
- Of homage and I know not how much tribute,
- Should presently extirpate me and mine
- Out of the dukedom and confer fair Milan
- With all the honours on my brother: whereon,
- A treacherous army levied, one midnight
- Fated to the purpose did Antonio open
- The gates of Milan, and, i' the dead of darkness,
- The ministers for the purpose hurried thence
- Me and thy crying self.
- MIRANDA:
- Alack, for pity!
- I, not remembering how I cried out then,
- Will cry it o'er again: it is a hint
- That wrings mine eyes to't.
- PROSPERO:
- Hear a little further
- And then I'll bring thee to the present business
- Which now's upon's; without the which this story
- Were most impertinent.
- MIRANDA:
- Wherefore did they not
- That hour destroy us?
- PROSPERO:
- Well demanded, wench:
- My tale provokes that question. Dear, they durst not,
- So dear the love my people bore me, nor set
- A mark so bloody on the business, but
- With colours fairer painted their foul ends.
- In few, they hurried us aboard a bark,
- Bore us some leagues to sea; where they prepared
- A rotten carcass of a boat, not rigg'd,
- Nor tackle, sail, nor mast; the very rats
- Instinctively had quit it: there they hoist us,
- To cry to the sea that roar'd to us, to sigh
- To the winds whose pity, sighing back again,
- Did us but loving wrong.
- MIRANDA:
- Alack, what trouble
- Was I then to you!
- PROSPERO:
- O, a cherubim
- Thou wast that did preserve me. Thou didst smile.
- Infused with a fortitude from heaven,
- When I have deck'd the sea with drops full salt,
- Under my burthen groan'd; which raised in me
- An undergoing stomach, to bear up
- Against what should ensue.
- MIRANDA:
- How came we ashore?
- PROSPERO:
- By Providence divine.
- Some food we had and some fresh water that
- A noble Neapolitan, Gonzalo,
- Out of his charity, being then appointed
- Master of this design, did give us, with
- Rich garments, linens, stuffs and necessaries,
- Which since have steaded much; so, of his gentleness,
- Knowing I loved my books, he furnish'd me
- From mine own library with volumes that
- I prize above my dukedom.
- MIRANDA:
- Would I might
- But ever see that man!
- PROSPERO:
- Now I arise:
- Sit still, and hear the last of our sea-sorrow.
- Here in this island we arrived; and here
- Have I, thy schoolmaster, made thee more profit
- Than other princesses can that have more time
- For vainer hours and tutors not so careful.
- MIRANDA:
- Heavens thank you for't! And now, I pray you, sir,
- For still 'tis beating in my mind, your reason
- For raising this sea-storm?
- PROSPERO:
- Know thus far forth.
- By accident most strange, bountiful Fortune,
- Now my dear lady, hath mine enemies
- Brought to this shore; and by my prescience
- I find my zenith doth depend upon
- A most auspicious star, whose influence
- If now I court not but omit, my fortunes
- Will ever after droop. Here cease more questions:
- Thou art inclined to sleep; 'tis a good dulness,
- And give it way: I know thou canst not choose.
- Come away, servant, come. I am ready now.
- Approach, my Ariel, come.
- ARIEL:
- All hail, great master! grave sir, hail! I come
- To answer thy best pleasure; be't to fly,
- To swim, to dive into the fire, to ride
- On the curl'd clouds, to thy strong bidding task
- Ariel and all his quality.
- PROSPERO:
- Hast thou, spirit,
- Perform'd to point the tempest that I bade thee?
- ARIEL:
- To every article.
- I boarded the king's ship; now on the beak,
- Now in the waist, the deck, in every cabin,
- I flamed amazement: sometime I'ld divide,
- And burn in many places; on the topmast,
- The yards and bowsprit, would I flame distinctly,
- Then meet and join. Jove's lightnings, the precursors
- O' the dreadful thunder-claps, more momentary
- And sight-outrunning were not; the fire and cracks
- Of sulphurous roaring the most mighty Neptune
- Seem to besiege and make his bold waves tremble,
- Yea, his dread trident shake.
- PROSPERO:
- My brave spirit!
- Who was so firm, so constant, that this coil
- Would not infect his reason?
- ARIEL:
- Not a soul
- But felt a fever of the mad and play'd
- Some tricks of desperation. All but mariners
- Plunged in the foaming brine and quit the vessel,
- Then all afire with me: the king's son, Ferdinand,
- With hair up-staring,--then like reeds, not hair,--
- Was the first man that leap'd; cried, 'Hell is empty
- And all the devils are here.'
- PROSPERO:
- Why that's my spirit!
- But was not this nigh shore?
- ARIEL:
- Close by, my master.
- PROSPERO:
- But are they, Ariel, safe?
- ARIEL:
- Not a hair perish'd;
- On their sustaining garments not a blemish,
- But fresher than before: and, as thou badest me,
- In troops I have dispersed them 'bout the isle.
- The king's son have I landed by himself;
- Whom I left cooling of the air with sighs
- In an odd angle of the isle and sitting,
- His arms in this sad knot.
- PROSPERO:
- Of the king's ship
- The mariners say how thou hast disposed
- And all the rest o' the fleet.
- ARIEL:
- Safely in harbour
- Is the king's ship; in the deep nook, where once
- Thou call'dst me up at midnight to fetch dew
- From the still-vex'd Bermoothes, there she's hid:
- The mariners all under hatches stow'd;
- Who, with a charm join'd to their suffer'd labour,
- I have left asleep; and for the rest o' the fleet
- Which I dispersed, they all have met again
- And are upon the Mediterranean flote,
- Bound sadly home for Naples,
- Supposing that they saw the king's ship wreck'd
- And his great person perish.
- PROSPERO:
- Ariel, thy charge
- Exactly is perform'd: but there's more work.
- What is the time o' the day?
- ARIEL:
- Past the mid season.
- PROSPERO:
- At least two glasses. The time 'twixt six and now
- Must by us both be spent most preciously.
- ARIEL:
- Is there more toil? Since thou dost give me pains,
- Let me remember thee what thou hast promised,
- Which is not yet perform'd me.
- PROSPERO:
- How now? moody?
- What is't thou canst demand?
- ARIEL:
- My liberty.
- PROSPERO:
- Before the time be out? no more!
- ARIEL:
- I prithee,
- Remember I have done thee worthy service;
- Told thee no lies, made thee no mistakings, served
- Without or grudge or grumblings: thou didst promise
- To bate me a full year.
- PROSPERO:
- Dost thou forget
- From what a torment I did free thee?
- ARIEL:
- No.
- PROSPERO:
- Thou dost, and think'st it much to tread the ooze
- Of the salt deep,
- To run upon the sharp wind of the north,
- To do me business in the veins o' the earth
- When it is baked with frost.
- ARIEL:
- I do not, sir.
- PROSPERO:
- Thou liest, malignant thing! Hast thou forgot
- The foul witch Sycorax, who with age and envy
- Was grown into a hoop? hast thou forgot her?
- ARIEL:
- No, sir.
- PROSPERO:
- Thou hast. Where was she born? speak; tell me.
- ARIEL:
- Sir, in Argier.
- PROSPERO:
- O, was she so? I must
- Once in a month recount what thou hast been,
- Which thou forget'st. This damn'd witch Sycorax,
- For mischiefs manifold and sorceries terrible
- To enter human hearing, from Argier,
- Thou know'st, was banish'd: for one thing she did
- They would not take her life. Is not this true?
- ARIEL:
- Ay, sir.
- PROSPERO:
- This blue-eyed hag was hither brought with child
- And here was left by the sailors. Thou, my slave,
- As thou report'st thyself, wast then her servant;
- And, for thou wast a spirit too delicate
- To act her earthy and abhorr'd commands,
- Refusing her grand hests, she did confine thee,
- By help of her more potent ministers
- And in her most unmitigable rage,
- Into a cloven pine; within which rift
- Imprison'd thou didst painfully remain
- A dozen years; within which space she died
- And left thee there; where thou didst vent thy groans
- As fast as mill-wheels strike. Then was this island--
- Save for the son that she did litter here,
- A freckled whelp hag-born--not honour'd with
- A human shape.
- ARIEL:
- Yes, Caliban her son.
- PROSPERO:
- Dull thing, I say so; he, that Caliban
- Whom now I keep in service. Thou best know'st
- What torment I did find thee in; thy groans
- Did make wolves howl and penetrate the breasts
- Of ever angry bears: it was a torment
- To lay upon the damn'd, which Sycorax
- Could not again undo: it was mine art,
- When I arrived and heard thee, that made gape
- The pine and let thee out.
- ARIEL:
- I thank thee, master.
- PROSPERO:
- If thou more murmur'st, I will rend an oak
- And peg thee in his knotty entrails till
- Thou hast howl'd away twelve winters.
- ARIEL:
- Pardon, master;
- I will be correspondent to command
- And do my spiriting gently.
- PROSPERO:
- Do so, and after two days
- I will discharge thee.
- ARIEL:
- That's my noble master!
- What shall I do? say what; what shall I do?
- PROSPERO:
- Go make thyself like a nymph o' the sea: be subject
- To no sight but thine and mine, invisible
- To every eyeball else. Go take this shape
- And hither come in't: go, hence with diligence!
- Awake, dear heart, awake! thou hast slept well; Awake!
- MIRANDA:
- The strangeness of your story put
- Heaviness in me.
- PROSPERO:
- Shake it off. Come on;
- We'll visit Caliban my slave, who never
- Yields us kind answer.
- MIRANDA:
- 'Tis a villain, sir,
- I do not love to look on.
- PROSPERO:
- But, as 'tis,
- We cannot miss him: he does make our fire,
- Fetch in our wood and serves in offices
- That profit us. What, ho! slave! Caliban!
- Thou earth, thou! speak.
- CALIBAN:
- PROSPERO:
- Come forth, I say! there's other business for thee:
- Come, thou tortoise! when?
- Fine apparition! My quaint Ariel,
- Hark in thine ear.
- ARIEL:
- My lord it shall be done.
- PROSPERO:
- Thou poisonous slave, got by the devil himself
- Upon thy wicked dam, come forth!
- CALIBAN:
- As wicked dew as e'er my mother brush'd
- With raven's feather from unwholesome fen
- Drop on you both! a south-west blow on ye
- And blister you all o'er!
- PROSPERO:
- For this, be sure, to-night thou shalt have cramps,
- Side-stitches that shall pen thy breath up; urchins
- Shall, for that vast of night that they may work,
- All exercise on thee; thou shalt be pinch'd
- As thick as honeycomb, each pinch more stinging
- Than bees that made 'em.
- CALIBAN:
- I must eat my dinner.
- This island's mine, by Sycorax my mother,
- Which thou takest from me. When thou camest first,
- Thou strokedst me and madest much of me, wouldst give me
- Water with berries in't, and teach me how
- To name the bigger light, and how the less,
- That burn by day and night: and then I loved thee
- And show'd thee all the qualities o' the isle,
- The fresh springs, brine-pits, barren place and fertile:
- Cursed be I that did so! All the charms
- Of Sycorax, toads, beetles, bats, light on you!
- For I am all the subjects that you have,
- Which first was mine own king: and here you sty me
- In this hard rock, whiles you do keep from me
- The rest o' the island.
- PROSPERO:
- Thou most lying slave,
- Whom stripes may move, not kindness! I have used thee,
- Filth as thou art, with human care, and lodged thee
- In mine own cell, till thou didst seek to violate
- The honour of my child.
- CALIBAN:
- O ho, O ho! would't had been done!
- Thou didst prevent me; I had peopled else
- This isle with Calibans.
- PROSPERO:
- Abhorred slave,
- Which any print of goodness wilt not take,
- Being capable of all ill! I pitied thee,
- Took pains to make thee speak, taught thee each hour
- One thing or other: when thou didst not, savage,
- Know thine own meaning, but wouldst gabble like
- A thing most brutish, I endow'd thy purposes
- With words that made them known. But thy vile race,
- Though thou didst learn, had that in't which
- good natures
- Could not abide to be with; therefore wast thou
- Deservedly confined into this rock,
- Who hadst deserved more than a prison.
- CALIBAN:
- You taught me language; and my profit on't
- Is, I know how to curse. The red plague rid you
- For learning me your language!
- PROSPERO:
- Hag-seed, hence!
- Fetch us in fuel; and be quick, thou'rt best,
- To answer other business. Shrug'st thou, malice?
- If thou neglect'st or dost unwillingly
- What I command, I'll rack thee with old cramps,
- Fill all thy bones with aches, make thee roar
- That beasts shall tremble at thy din.
- CALIBAN:
- No, pray thee.
- I must obey: his art is of such power,
- It would control my dam's god, Setebos,
- and make a vassal of him.
- PROSPERO:
- So, slave; hence!
- Come unto these yellow sands,
- And then take hands:
- Courtsied when you have and kiss'd
- The wild waves whist,
- Foot it featly here and there;
- And, sweet sprites, the burthen bear.
- Hark, hark!
- FERDINAND:
- Where should this music be? i' the air or the earth?
- It sounds no more: and sure, it waits upon
- Some god o' the island. Sitting on a bank,
- Weeping again the king my father's wreck,
- This music crept by me upon the waters,
- Allaying both their fury and my passion
- With its sweet air: thence I have follow'd it,
- Or it hath drawn me rather. But 'tis gone.
- No, it begins again.
- Full fathom five thy father lies;
- Of his bones are coral made;
- Those are pearls that were his eyes:
- Nothing of him that doth fade
- But doth suffer a sea-change
- Into something rich and strange.
- Sea-nymphs hourly ring his knell
- Hark! now I hear them,--Ding-dong, bell.
- FERDINAND:
- The ditty does remember my drown'd father.
- This is no mortal business, nor no sound
- That the earth owes. I hear it now above me.
- PROSPERO:
- The fringed curtains of thine eye advance
- And say what thou seest yond.
- MIRANDA:
- What is't? a spirit?
- Lord, how it looks about! Believe me, sir,
- It carries a brave form. But 'tis a spirit.
- PROSPERO:
- No, wench; it eats and sleeps and hath such senses
- As we have, such. This gallant which thou seest
- Was in the wreck; and, but he's something stain'd
- With grief that's beauty's canker, thou mightst call him
- A goodly person: he hath lost his fellows
- And strays about to find 'em.
- MIRANDA:
- I might call him
- A thing divine, for nothing natural
- I ever saw so noble.
- PROSPERO:
- FERDINAND:
- Most sure, the goddess
- On whom these airs attend! Vouchsafe my prayer
- May know if you remain upon this island;
- And that you will some good instruction give
- How I may bear me here: my prime request,
- Which I do last pronounce, is, O you wonder!
- If you be maid or no?
- MIRANDA:
- No wonder, sir;
- But certainly a maid.
- FERDINAND:
- My language! heavens!
- I am the best of them that speak this speech,
- Were I but where 'tis spoken.
- PROSPERO:
- How? the best?
- What wert thou, if the King of Naples heard thee?
- FERDINAND:
- A single thing, as I am now, that wonders
- To hear thee speak of Naples. He does hear me;
- And that he does I weep: myself am Naples,
- Who with mine eyes, never since at ebb, beheld
- The king my father wreck'd.
- MIRANDA:
- Alack, for mercy!
- FERDINAND:
- Yes, faith, and all his lords; the Duke of Milan
- And his brave son being twain.
- PROSPERO:
- MIRANDA:
- Why speaks my father so ungently? This
- Is the third man that e'er I saw, the first
- That e'er I sigh'd for: pity move my father
- To be inclined my way!
- FERDINAND:
- O, if a virgin,
- And your affection not gone forth, I'll make you
- The queen of Naples.
- PROSPERO:
- Soft, sir! one word more.
- They are both in either's powers; but this swift business
- I must uneasy make, lest too light winning
- Make the prize light.
- One word more; I charge thee
- That thou attend me: thou dost here usurp
- The name thou owest not; and hast put thyself
- Upon this island as a spy, to win it
- From me, the lord on't.
- FERDINAND:
- No, as I am a man.
- MIRANDA:
- There's nothing ill can dwell in such a temple:
- If the ill spirit have so fair a house,
- Good things will strive to dwell with't.
- PROSPERO:
- Follow me.
- Speak not you for him; he's a traitor. Come;
- I'll manacle thy neck and feet together:
- Sea-water shalt thou drink; thy food shall be
- The fresh-brook muscles, wither'd roots and husks
- Wherein the acorn cradled. Follow.
- FERDINAND:
- No;
- I will resist such entertainment till
- Mine enemy has more power.
- MIRANDA:
- O dear father,
- Make not too rash a trial of him, for
- He's gentle and not fearful.
- PROSPERO:
- What? I say,
- My foot my tutor? Put thy sword up, traitor;
- Who makest a show but darest not strike, thy conscience
- Is so possess'd with guilt: come from thy ward,
- For I can here disarm thee with this stick
- And make thy weapon drop.
- MIRANDA:
- Beseech you, father.
- PROSPERO:
- Hence! hang not on my garments.
- MIRANDA:
- Sir, have pity;
- I'll be his surety.
- PROSPERO:
- Silence! one word more
- Shall make me chide thee, if not hate thee. What!
- An advocate for an imposter! hush!
- Thou think'st there is no more such shapes as he,
- Having seen but him and Caliban: foolish wench!
- To the most of men this is a Caliban
- And they to him are angels.
- MIRANDA:
- My affections
- Are then most humble; I have no ambition
- To see a goodlier man.
- PROSPERO:
- Come on; obey:
- Thy nerves are in their infancy again
- And have no vigour in them.
- FERDINAND:
- So they are;
- My spirits, as in a dream, are all bound up.
- My father's loss, the weakness which I feel,
- The wreck of all my friends, nor this man's threats,
- To whom I am subdued, are but light to me,
- Might I but through my prison once a day
- Behold this maid: all corners else o' the earth
- Let liberty make use of; space enough
- Have I in such a prison.
- PROSPERO:
- MIRANDA:
- Be of comfort;
- My father's of a better nature, sir,
- Than he appears by speech: this is unwonted
- Which now came from him.
- PROSPERO:
- Thou shalt be free
- As mountain winds: but then exactly do
- All points of my command.
- ARIEL:
- To the syllable.
- PROSPERO:
- Come, follow. Speak not for him.
- GONZALO:
- Beseech you, sir, be merry; you have cause,
- So have we all, of joy; for our escape
- Is much beyond our loss. Our hint of woe
- Is common; every day some sailor's wife,
- The masters of some merchant and the merchant
- Have just our theme of woe; but for the miracle,
- I mean our preservation, few in millions
- Can speak like us: then wisely, good sir, weigh
- Our sorrow with our comfort.
- ALONSO:
- Prithee, peace.
- SEBASTIAN:
- He receives comfort like cold porridge.
- ANTONIO:
- The visitor will not give him o'er so.
- SEBASTIAN:
- Look he's winding up the watch of his wit;
- by and by it will strike.
- GONZALO:
- Sir,--
- SEBASTIAN:
- One: tell.
- GONZALO:
- When every grief is entertain'd that's offer'd,
- Comes to the entertainer--
- SEBASTIAN:
- A dollar.
- GONZALO:
- Dolour comes to him, indeed: you
- have spoken truer than you purposed.
- SEBASTIAN:
- You have taken it wiselier than I meant you should.
- GONZALO:
- Therefore, my lord,--
- ANTONIO:
- Fie, what a spendthrift is he of his tongue!
- ALONSO:
- I prithee, spare.
- GONZALO:
- Well, I have done: but yet,--
- SEBASTIAN:
- He will be talking.
- ANTONIO:
- Which, of he or Adrian, for a good
- wager, first begins to crow?
- SEBASTIAN:
- The old cock.
- ANTONIO:
- The cockerel.
- SEBASTIAN:
- Done. The wager?
- ANTONIO:
- A laughter.
- SEBASTIAN:
- A match!
- ADRIAN:
- Though this island seem to be desert,--
- SEBASTIAN:
- Ha, ha, ha! So, you're paid.
- ADRIAN:
- Uninhabitable and almost inaccessible,--
- SEBASTIAN:
- Yet,--
- ADRIAN:
- Yet,--
- ANTONIO:
- He could not miss't.
- ADRIAN:
- It must needs be of subtle, tender and delicate
- temperance.
- ANTONIO:
- Temperance was a delicate wench.
- SEBASTIAN:
- Ay, and a subtle; as he most learnedly delivered.
- ADRIAN:
- The air breathes upon us here most sweetly.
- SEBASTIAN:
- As if it had lungs and rotten ones.
- ANTONIO:
- Or as 'twere perfumed by a fen.
- GONZALO:
- Here is everything advantageous to life.
- ANTONIO:
- True; save means to live.
- SEBASTIAN:
- Of that there's none, or little.
- GONZALO:
- How lush and lusty the grass looks! how green!
- ANTONIO:
- The ground indeed is tawny.
- SEBASTIAN:
- With an eye of green in't.
- ANTONIO:
- He misses not much.
- SEBASTIAN:
- No; he doth but mistake the truth totally.
- GONZALO:
- But the rarity of it is,--which is indeed almost
- beyond credit,--
- SEBASTIAN:
- As many vouched rarities are.
- GONZALO:
- That our garments, being, as they were, drenched in
- the sea, hold notwithstanding their freshness and
- glosses, being rather new-dyed than stained with
- salt water.
- ANTONIO:
- If but one of his pockets could speak, would it not
- say he lies?
- SEBASTIAN:
- Ay, or very falsely pocket up his report
- GONZALO:
- Methinks our garments are now as fresh as when we
- put them on first in Afric, at the marriage of
- the king's fair daughter Claribel to the King of Tunis.
- SEBASTIAN:
- 'Twas a sweet marriage, and we prosper well in our return.
- ADRIAN:
- Tunis was never graced before with such a paragon to
- their queen.
- GONZALO:
- Not since widow Dido's time.
- ANTONIO:
- Widow! a pox o' that! How came that widow in?
- widow Dido!
- SEBASTIAN:
- What if he had said 'widower AEneas' too? Good Lord,
- how you take it!
- ADRIAN:
- 'Widow Dido' said you? you make me study of that:
- she was of Carthage, not of Tunis.
- GONZALO:
- This Tunis, sir, was Carthage.
- ADRIAN:
- Carthage?
- GONZALO:
- I assure you, Carthage.
- SEBASTIAN:
- His word is more than the miraculous harp; he hath
- raised the wall and houses too.
- ANTONIO:
- What impossible matter will he make easy next?
- SEBASTIAN:
- I think he will carry this island home in his pocket
- and give it his son for an apple.
- ANTONIO:
- And, sowing the kernels of it in the sea, bring
- forth more islands.
- GONZALO:
- Ay.
- ANTONIO:
- Why, in good time.
- GONZALO:
- Sir, we were talking that our garments seem now
- as fresh as when we were at Tunis at the marriage
- of your daughter, who is now queen.
- ANTONIO:
- And the rarest that e'er came there.
- SEBASTIAN:
- Bate, I beseech you, widow Dido.
- ANTONIO:
- O, widow Dido! ay, widow Dido.
- GONZALO:
- Is not, sir, my doublet as fresh as the first day I
- wore it? I mean, in a sort.
- ANTONIO:
- That sort was well fished for.
- GONZALO:
- When I wore it at your daughter's marriage?
- ALONSO:
- You cram these words into mine ears against
- The stomach of my sense. Would I had never
- Married my daughter there! for, coming thence,
- My son is lost and, in my rate, she too,
- Who is so far from Italy removed
- I ne'er again shall see her. O thou mine heir
- Of Naples and of Milan, what strange fish
- Hath made his meal on thee?
- FRANCISCO:
- Sir, he may live:
- I saw him beat the surges under him,
- And ride upon their backs; he trod the water,
- Whose enmity he flung aside, and breasted
- The surge most swoln that met him; his bold head
- 'Bove the contentious waves he kept, and oar'd
- Himself with his good arms in lusty stroke
- To the shore, that o'er his wave-worn basis bow'd,
- As stooping to relieve him: I not doubt
- He came alive to land.
- ALONSO:
- No, no, he's gone.
- SEBASTIAN:
- Sir, you may thank yourself for this great loss,
- That would not bless our Europe with your daughter,
- But rather lose her to an African;
- Where she at least is banish'd from your eye,
- Who hath cause to wet the grief on't.
- ALONSO:
- Prithee, peace.
- SEBASTIAN:
- You were kneel'd to and importuned otherwise
- By all of us, and the fair soul herself
- Weigh'd between loathness and obedience, at
- Which end o' the beam should bow. We have lost your
- son,
- I fear, for ever: Milan and Naples have
- More widows in them of this business' making
- Than we bring men to comfort them:
- The fault's your own.
- ALONSO:
- So is the dear'st o' the loss.
- GONZALO:
- My lord Sebastian,
- The truth you speak doth lack some gentleness
- And time to speak it in: you rub the sore,
- When you should bring the plaster.
- SEBASTIAN:
- Very well.
- ANTONIO:
- And most chirurgeonly.
- GONZALO:
- It is foul weather in us all, good sir,
- When you are cloudy.
- SEBASTIAN:
- Foul weather?
- ANTONIO:
- Very foul.
- GONZALO:
- Had I plantation of this isle, my lord,--
- ANTONIO:
- He'ld sow't with nettle-seed.
- SEBASTIAN:
- Or docks, or mallows.
- GONZALO:
- And were the king on't, what would I do?
- SEBASTIAN:
- 'Scape being drunk for want of wine.
- GONZALO:
- I' the commonwealth I would by contraries
- Execute all things; for no kind of traffic
- Would I admit; no name of magistrate;
- Letters should not be known; riches, poverty,
- And use of service, none; contract, succession,
- Bourn, bound of land, tilth, vineyard, none;
- No use of metal, corn, or wine, or oil;
- No occupation; all men idle, all;
- And women too, but innocent and pure;
- No sovereignty;--
- SEBASTIAN:
- Yet he would be king on't.
- ANTONIO:
- The latter end of his commonwealth forgets the
- beginning.
- GONZALO:
- All things in common nature should produce
- Without sweat or endeavour: treason, felony,
- Sword, pike, knife, gun, or need of any engine,
- Would I not have; but nature should bring forth,
- Of its own kind, all foison, all abundance,
- To feed my innocent people.
- SEBASTIAN:
- No marrying 'mong his subjects?
- ANTONIO:
- None, man; all idle: whores and knaves.
- GONZALO:
- I would with such perfection govern, sir,
- To excel the golden age.
- SEBASTIAN:
- God save his majesty!
- ANTONIO:
- Long live Gonzalo!
- GONZALO:
- And,--do you mark me, sir?
- ALONSO:
- Prithee, no more: thou dost talk nothing to me.
- GONZALO:
- I do well believe your highness; and
- did it to minister occasion to these gentlemen,
- who are of such sensible and nimble lungs that
- they always use to laugh at nothing.
- ANTONIO:
- 'Twas you we laughed at.
- GONZALO:
- Who in this kind of merry fooling am nothing
- to you: so you may continue and laugh at
- nothing still.
- ANTONIO:
- What a blow was there given!
- SEBASTIAN:
- An it had not fallen flat-long.
- GONZALO:
- You are gentlemen of brave metal; you would lift
- the moon out of her sphere, if she would continue
- in it five weeks without changing.
- SEBASTIAN:
- We would so, and then go a bat-fowling.
- ANTONIO:
- Nay, good my lord, be not angry.
- GONZALO:
- No, I warrant you; I will not adventure
- my discretion so weakly. Will you laugh
- me asleep, for I am very heavy?
- ANTONIO:
- Go sleep, and hear us.
- ALONSO:
- What, all so soon asleep! I wish mine eyes
- Would, with themselves, shut up my thoughts: I find
- They are inclined to do so.
- SEBASTIAN:
- Please you, sir,
- Do not omit the heavy offer of it:
- It seldom visits sorrow; when it doth,
- It is a comforter.
- ANTONIO:
- We two, my lord,
- Will guard your person while you take your rest,
- And watch your safety.
- ALONSO:
- Thank you. Wondrous heavy.
- SEBASTIAN:
- What a strange drowsiness possesses them!
- ANTONIO:
- It is the quality o' the climate.
- SEBASTIAN:
- Why
- Doth it not then our eyelids sink? I find not
- Myself disposed to sleep.
- ANTONIO:
- Nor I; my spirits are nimble.
- They fell together all, as by consent;
- They dropp'd, as by a thunder-stroke. What might,
- Worthy Sebastian? O, what might?--No more:--
- And yet me thinks I see it in thy face,
- What thou shouldst be: the occasion speaks thee, and
- My strong imagination sees a crown
- Dropping upon thy head.
- SEBASTIAN:
- What, art thou waking?
- ANTONIO:
- Do you not hear me speak?
- SEBASTIAN:
- I do; and surely
- It is a sleepy language and thou speak'st
- Out of thy sleep. What is it thou didst say?
- This is a strange repose, to be asleep
- With eyes wide open; standing, speaking, moving,
- And yet so fast asleep.
- ANTONIO:
- Noble Sebastian,
- Thou let'st thy fortune sleep--die, rather; wink'st
- Whiles thou art waking.
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