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Richard III | |
by William Shakespeare | |
Characters in the Play | |
====================== | |
RICHARD, Duke of Gloucester, later King Richard III | |
LADY ANNE, widow of Edward, son to the late King Henry VI; later wife to Richard | |
KING EDWARD IV, brother to Richard | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH, Edward's wife, formerly the Lady Grey | |
Their sons: | |
PRINCE EDWARD | |
RICHARD, DUKE OF YORK | |
GEORGE, DUKE OF CLARENCE, brother to Edward and Richard | |
Clarence's BOY | |
Clarence's DAUGHTER | |
DUCHESS OF YORK, mother of Richard, Edward, and Clarence | |
QUEEN MARGARET, widow of King Henry VI | |
DUKE OF BUCKINGHAM | |
WILLIAM, LORD HASTINGS, Lord Chamberlain | |
LORD STANLEY, Earl of Derby | |
EARL RIVERS, brother to Queen Elizabeth | |
Sons of Queen Elizabeth by her former marriage: | |
LORD GREY | |
MARQUESS OF DORSET | |
SIR THOMAS VAUGHAN | |
Richard's supporters: | |
SIR WILLIAM CATESBY | |
SIR RICHARD RATCLIFFE | |
LORD LOVELL | |
DUKE OF NORFOLK | |
EARL OF SURREY | |
EARL OF RICHMOND, Henry Tudor, later King Henry VII | |
Richmond's supporters: | |
EARL OF OXFORD | |
SIR JAMES BLUNT | |
SIR WALTER HERBERT | |
SIR WILLIAM BRANDON | |
SIR CHRISTOPHER, a priest | |
ARCHBISHOP | |
CARDINAL | |
JOHN MORTON, BISHOP OF ELY | |
SIR ROBERT BRAKENBURY, Lieutenant of the Tower in London | |
JAMES TYRREL, gentleman | |
GENTLEMAN, attending Lady Anne | |
Two MURDERERS | |
KEEPER in the Tower | |
Three CITIZENS | |
LORD MAYOR of London | |
PURSUIVANT | |
SIR JOHN, a priest | |
SCRIVENER | |
PAGE | |
SHERIFF | |
Seven MESSENGERS | |
GHOSTS of King Henry VI, his son Prince Edward, Clarence, Rivers, Grey, Vaughan, the two Princes, Hastings, Lady Anne, and Buckingham | |
Guards, Tressel, Berkeley, Halberds, Gentlemen, Anthony Woodeville and Lord Scales (brothers to Queen Elizabeth), Two Bishops, Sir William Brandon, Lords, Attendants, Citizens, Aldermen, Councillors, Soldiers | |
ACT 1 | |
===== | |
Scene 1 | |
======= | |
[Enter Richard, Duke of Gloucester, alone.] | |
RICHARD | |
Now is the winter of our discontent | |
Made glorious summer by this son of York, | |
And all the clouds that loured 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 smoothed his wrinkled front; | |
And now, instead of mounting barbed 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 stamped and want love's majesty | |
To strut before a wanton ambling nymph; | |
I, that am curtailed of this fair proportion, | |
Cheated of feature by dissembling nature, | |
Deformed, unfinished, 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 see 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 mewed 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. | |
[Enter Clarence, guarded, and Brakenbury.] | |
Brother, good day. What means this armed guard | |
That waits upon your Grace? | |
CLARENCE His Majesty, | |
Tend'ring my person's safety, hath appointed | |
This conduct to convey me to the Tower. | |
RICHARD | |
Upon what cause? | |
CLARENCE Because my name is | |
George. | |
RICHARD | |
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 should be new christened 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 crossrow 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 | |
Hath moved his Highness to commit me now. | |
RICHARD | |
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 Woodeville, her brother there, | |
That made him send Lord Hastings to the Tower, | |
From whence this present day he is delivered? | |
We are not safe, Clarence; we are not safe. | |
CLARENCE | |
By heaven, I think there is no man secure | |
But the Queen's kindred and night-walking heralds | |
That trudge betwixt the King and Mistress Shore. | |
Heard you not what an humble suppliant | |
Lord Hastings was to her for his delivery? | |
RICHARD | |
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 favor with the King, | |
To be her men and wear her livery. | |
The jealous o'erworn widow and herself, | |
Since that our brother dubbed them gentlewomen, | |
Are mighty gossips in our 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 your brother. | |
RICHARD | |
Even so. An please your Worship, Brakenbury, | |
You may partake of anything 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 gentlefolks. | |
How say you, sir? Can you deny all this? | |
BRAKENBURY | |
With this, my lord, myself have naught to do. | |
RICHARD | |
Naught to do with Mistress Shore? I tell thee, | |
fellow, | |
He that doth naught with her, excepting one, | |
Were best to do it secretly, alone. | |
BRAKENBURY | |
I do beseech your Grace to pardon me, and withal | |
Forbear your conference with the noble duke. | |
CLARENCE | |
We know thy charge, Brakenbury, and will obey. | |
RICHARD | |
We are the Queen's abjects and must obey.-- | |
Brother, farewell. I will unto the King, | |
And whatsoe'er 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. | |
RICHARD | |
Well, your imprisonment shall not be long. | |
I will deliver you or else lie for you. | |
Meantime, have patience. | |
CLARENCE I must, perforce. Farewell. | |
[Exit Clarence, Brakenbury, and guard.] | |
RICHARD | |
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-delivered Hastings? | |
[Enter Lord Hastings.] | |
HASTINGS | |
Good time of day unto my gracious lord. | |
RICHARD | |
As much unto my good Lord Chamberlain. | |
Well are you welcome to the open air. | |
How hath your Lordship brooked 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. | |
RICHARD | |
No doubt, no doubt; and so shall Clarence too, | |
For they that were your enemies are his | |
And have prevailed as much on him as you. | |
HASTINGS | |
More pity that the eagles should be mewed, | |
Whiles kites and buzzards prey at liberty. | |
RICHARD 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. | |
RICHARD | |
Now, by Saint John, that 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. | |
Where is he, in his bed? | |
HASTINGS He is. | |
RICHARD | |
Go you before, and I will follow you. | |
[Exit Hastings.] | |
He cannot live, I hope, and must not die | |
Till George be packed with post-horse up to heaven. | |
I'll in to urge his hatred more to Clarence | |
With lies well steeled with weighty arguments, | |
And, if I fail 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 killed 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. | |
[He exits.] | |
Scene 2 | |
======= | |
[Enter the corse of Henry the Sixth on a bier, with | |
Halberds to guard it, Lady Anne being the mourner, | |
accompanied by Gentlemen.] | |
ANNE | |
Set down, set down your honorable load, | |
If honor may be shrouded in a hearse, | |
Whilst I awhile obsequiously lament | |
Th' untimely fall of virtuous Lancaster. | |
[They set down the bier.] | |
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 slaughtered son, | |
Stabbed 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. | |
O, cursed be the hand that made these holes; | |
Cursed 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 wolves, to spiders, toads, | |
Or any creeping venomed 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 be made | |
More miserable by the death of him | |
Than I am made by my young lord and thee.-- | |
Come now towards Chertsey with your holy load, | |
Taken from Paul's to be interred there. | |
[They take up the bier.] | |
And still, as you are weary of this weight, | |
Rest you, whiles I lament King Henry's corse. | |
[Enter Richard, Duke of Gloucester.] | |
RICHARD | |
Stay, you that bear the corse, and set it down. | |
ANNE | |
What black magician conjures up this fiend | |
To stop devoted charitable deeds? | |
RICHARD | |
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. | |
RICHARD | |
Unmannered dog, stand thou when I command!-- | |
Advance thy halberd higher than my breast, | |
Or by Saint Paul I'll strike thee to my foot | |
And spurn upon thee, beggar, for thy boldness. | |
[They set down the bier.] | |
ANNE, [to the Gentlemen and Halberds] | |
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 begone. | |
RICHARD | |
Sweet saint, for charity, be not so curst. | |
ANNE | |
Foul devil, for God's sake, hence, and trouble us | |
not, | |
For thou hast made the happy Earth thy hell, | |
Filled it with cursing cries and deep exclaims. | |
If thou delight to view thy heinous deeds, | |
Behold this pattern of thy butcheries. | |
[She points to the corpse.] | |
O, gentlemen, see, see dead Henry's wounds | |
Open their congealed 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 deeds, inhuman and unnatural, | |
Provokes this deluge most unnatural.-- | |
O God, which this blood mad'st, 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-governed arm hath butchered. | |
RICHARD | |
Lady, you know no rules of charity, | |
Which renders good for bad, blessings for curses. | |
ANNE | |
Villain, thou know'st nor law of God nor man. | |
No beast so fierce but knows some touch of pity. | |
RICHARD | |
But I know none, and therefore am no beast. | |
ANNE | |
O, wonderful, when devils tell the truth! | |
RICHARD | |
More wonderful, when angels are so angry. | |
Vouchsafe, divine perfection of a woman, | |
Of these supposed crimes to give me leave | |
By circumstance but to acquit myself. | |
ANNE | |
Vouchsafe, defused infection of a man, | |
Of these known evils but to give me leave | |
By circumstance to curse thy cursed self. | |
RICHARD | |
Fairer than tongue can name thee, let me have | |
Some patient leisure to excuse myself. | |
ANNE | |
Fouler than heart can think thee, thou canst make | |
No excuse current but to hang thyself. | |
RICHARD | |
By such despair I should accuse myself. | |
ANNE | |
And by despairing shalt thou stand excused | |
For doing worthy vengeance on thyself | |
That didst unworthy slaughter upon others. | |
RICHARD Say that I slew them not. | |
ANNE Then say they were not slain. | |
But dead they are, and, devilish slave, by thee. | |
RICHARD I did not kill your husband. | |
ANNE Why then, he is alive. | |
RICHARD | |
Nay, he is dead, and slain by Edward's hands. | |
ANNE | |
In thy foul throat thou liest. Queen Margaret saw | |
Thy murd'rous falchion smoking in his blood, | |
The which thou once didst bend against her breast, | |
But that thy brothers beat aside the point. | |
RICHARD | |
I was provoked by her sland'rous tongue, | |
That laid their guilt upon my guiltless shoulders. | |
ANNE | |
Thou wast provoked by thy bloody mind, | |
That never dream'st on aught but butcheries. | |
Didst thou not kill this king? | |
RICHARD I grant you. | |
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. | |
RICHARD | |
The better for the King of heaven that hath him. | |
ANNE | |
He is in heaven, where thou shalt never come. | |
RICHARD | |
Let him thank me, that holp to send him thither, | |
For he was fitter for that place than Earth. | |
ANNE | |
And thou unfit for any place but hell. | |
RICHARD | |
Yes, one place else, if you will hear me name it. | |
ANNE Some dungeon. | |
RICHARD Your bedchamber. | |
ANNE | |
Ill rest betide the chamber where thou liest! | |
RICHARD | |
So will it, madam, till I lie with you. | |
ANNE | |
I hope so. | |
RICHARD I know so. But, gentle Lady Anne, | |
To leave this keen encounter of our wits | |
And fall something into a slower method: | |
Is not the causer of the timeless deaths | |
Of these Plantagenets, Henry and Edward, | |
As blameful as the executioner? | |
ANNE | |
Thou wast the cause and most accursed effect. | |
RICHARD | |
Your beauty was the cause of that effect-- | |
Your beauty, that did haunt me in my sleep | |
To undertake the death of all the world, | |
So I might live one hour in your sweet bosom. | |
ANNE | |
If I thought that, I tell thee, homicide, | |
These nails should rend that beauty from my | |
cheeks. | |
RICHARD | |
These eyes could not endure that beauty's wrack. | |
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. | |
ANNE | |
Black night o'ershade thy day, and death thy life. | |
RICHARD | |
Curse not thyself, fair creature; thou art both. | |
ANNE | |
I would I were, to be revenged on thee. | |
RICHARD | |
It is a quarrel most unnatural | |
To be revenged on him that loveth thee. | |
ANNE | |
It is a quarrel just and reasonable | |
To be revenged on him that killed my husband. | |
RICHARD | |
He that bereft thee, lady, of thy husband | |
Did it to help thee to a better husband. | |
ANNE | |
His better doth not breathe upon the earth. | |
RICHARD | |
He lives that loves thee better than he could. | |
ANNE | |
Name him. | |
RICHARD Plantagenet. | |
ANNE Why, that was he. | |
RICHARD | |
The selfsame name, but one of better nature. | |
ANNE | |
Where is he? | |
RICHARD Here. [(She spits at him.)] Why dost | |
thou spit at me? | |
ANNE | |
Would it were mortal poison for thy sake. | |
RICHARD | |
Never came poison from so sweet a place. | |
ANNE | |
Never hung poison on a fouler toad. | |
Out of my sight! Thou dost infect mine eyes. | |
RICHARD | |
Thine eyes, sweet lady, have infected mine. | |
ANNE | |
Would they were basilisks' to strike thee dead. | |
RICHARD | |
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 aspects with store of childish drops. | |
These eyes, which 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 bedashed 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. [She looks scornfully at him.] | |
Teach not thy lip such scorn, for it was 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 breast | |
And let the soul forth that adoreth thee, | |
I lay it naked to the deadly stroke | |
And humbly beg the death upon my knee. | |
[He kneels and lays his breast open; | |
she offers at it with his sword.] | |
Nay, do not pause, for I did kill King Henry-- | |
But 'twas thy beauty that provoked me. | |
Nay, now dispatch; 'twas I that stabbed young | |
Edward-- | |
But 'twas thy heavenly face that set me on. | |
[She falls the sword.] | |
Take up the sword again, or take up me. | |
ANNE | |
Arise, dissembler. Though I wish thy death, | |
I will not be thy executioner. | |
RICHARD, [rising] | |
Then bid me kill myself, and I will do it. | |
ANNE | |
I have already. | |
RICHARD That was in thy rage. | |
Speak it again and, even with the word, | |
This hand, which for thy love did kill thy love, | |
Shall for thy love kill a far truer love. | |
To both their deaths shalt thou be accessory. | |
ANNE I would I knew thy heart. | |
RICHARD 'Tis figured in my tongue. | |
ANNE I fear me both are false. | |
RICHARD Then never was man true. | |
ANNE Well, well, put up your sword. | |
RICHARD Say then my peace is made. | |
ANNE That shalt thou know hereafter. | |
RICHARD But shall I live in hope? | |
ANNE All men I hope live so. | |
RICHARD Vouchsafe to wear this ring. | |
ANNE To take is not to give. | |
[He places the ring on her hand.] | |
RICHARD | |
Look how my ring encompasseth thy finger; | |
Even so thy breast encloseth my poor heart. | |
Wear both of them, for both of them are thine. | |
And if thy poor devoted servant may | |
But beg one favor at thy gracious hand, | |
Thou dost confirm his happiness forever. | |
ANNE What is it? | |
RICHARD | |
That it may please you leave these sad designs | |
To him that hath most cause to be a mourner, | |
And presently repair to Crosby House, | |
Where, after I have solemnly interred | |
At Chertsey monast'ry 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. | |
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. | |
RICHARD | |
Bid me farewell. | |
ANNE 'Tis more than you deserve; | |
But since you teach me how to flatter you, | |
Imagine I have said "farewell" already. | |
[Two exit with Anne. The bier is taken up.] | |
GENTLEMAN Towards Chertsey, noble lord? | |
RICHARD | |
No, to Whitefriars. There attend my coming. | |
[Halberds and gentlemen exit with corse.] | |
Was ever woman in this humor wooed? | |
Was ever woman in this humor won? | |
I'll have her, but I will not keep her long. | |
What, I that killed 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 my hatred by, | |
Having God, her conscience, and these bars against | |
me, | |
And I no friends 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 | |
Stabbed in my angry mood at Tewkesbury? | |
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 abase her eyes on me, | |
That cropped the golden prime of this sweet prince | |
And made her widow to a woeful bed? | |
On me, whose all not equals Edward's moiety? | |
On me, that halts and am misshapen 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 marv'lous proper man. | |
I'll be at charges for a looking glass | |
And entertain a score or two of tailors | |
To study fashions to adorn my body. | |
Since I am crept in favor with myself, | |
I 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. | |
[He exits.] | |
Scene 3 | |
======= | |
[Enter Queen Elizabeth, the Lord Marquess of Dorset, | |
Lord Rivers, and Lord Grey.] | |
RIVERS | |
Have patience, madam. There's no doubt his | |
Majesty | |
Will soon recover his accustomed health. | |
GREY | |
In that you brook it ill, it makes him worse. | |
Therefore, for God's sake, entertain good comfort | |
And cheer his Grace with quick and merry eyes. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
If he were dead, what would betide on me? | |
GREY | |
No other harm but loss of such a lord. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
The loss of such a lord includes all harms. | |
GREY | |
The heavens have blessed you with a goodly son | |
To be your comforter when he is gone. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
Ah, 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 he shall be Protector? | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
It is determined, not concluded yet; | |
But so it must be if the King miscarry. | |
[Enter Buckingham and Lord Stanley, Earl of Derby.] | |
GREY | |
Here comes the lord of Buckingham, and Derby. | |
BUCKINGHAM, [to Queen Elizabeth] | |
Good time of day unto your royal Grace. | |
STANLEY | |
God make your Majesty joyful, as you have been. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
The Countess Richmond, good my lord of Derby, | |
To your good prayer 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. | |
STANLEY | |
I do beseech you either not believe | |
The envious slanders of her false accusers, | |
Or if she be accused on true report, | |
Bear with her weakness, which I think proceeds | |
From wayward sickness and no grounded malice. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
Saw you the King today, my lord of Derby? | |
STANLEY | |
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 | |
Ay, madam. He desires to make atonement | |
Between the Duke of Gloucester and your brothers, | |
And between 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 height. | |
[Enter Richard, Duke of Gloucester, and Hastings.] | |
RICHARD | |
They do me wrong, and I will not endure it! | |
Who is it that complains 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 rumors. | |
Because I cannot flatter and look 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 | |
With silken, sly, insinuating Jacks? | |
GREY | |
To who in all this presence speaks your Grace? | |
RICHARD | |
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 Grace, | |
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, on his own royal disposition, | |
And not provoked by any suitor else, | |
Aiming belike at your interior hatred | |
That in your outward action shows itself | |
Against my children, brothers, and myself, | |
Makes him to send, that he may learn the ground. | |
RICHARD | |
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. | |
RICHARD | |
Meantime God grants that we have need of | |
you. | |
Our brother is imprisoned by your means, | |
Myself disgraced, and the nobility | |
Held in contempt, while great 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 enjoyed, | |
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. | |
RICHARD | |
You may deny that you were not the mean | |
Of my Lord Hastings' late imprisonment. | |
RIVERS She may, my lord, for-- | |
RICHARD | |
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 honors on your high desert. | |
What may she not? She may, ay, marry, may she-- | |
RIVERS What, marry, may she? | |
RICHARD | |
What, marry, may she? Marry with a king, | |
A bachelor, and a handsome stripling too. | |
Iwis, 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 | |
Of those gross taunts that oft I have endured. | |
I had rather be a country servant-maid | |
Than a great queen with this condition, | |
To be so baited, scorned, and stormed at. | |
[Enter old Queen Margaret, apart from the others.] | |
Small joy have I in being England's queen. | |
QUEEN MARGARET, [aside] | |
And lessened be that small, God I beseech Him! | |
Thy honor, state, and seat is due to me. | |
RICHARD, [to Queen Elizabeth] | |
What, threat you me with telling of the King? | |
Tell him and spare not. Look, what I have said, | |
I will avouch 't in presence of the King; | |
I dare adventure to be sent to th' Tower. | |
'Tis time to speak. My pains are quite forgot. | |
QUEEN MARGARET, [aside] | |
Out, devil! I do remember them too well: | |
Thou killed'st my husband Henry in the Tower, | |
And Edward, my poor son, at Tewkesbury. | |
RICHARD, [to Queen Elizabeth] | |
Ere you were queen, ay, or your husband king, | |
I was a packhorse in his great affairs, | |
A weeder-out of his proud adversaries, | |
A liberal rewarder of his friends. | |
To royalize his blood, I spent mine own. | |
QUEEN MARGARET, [aside] | |
Ay, and much better blood than his or thine. | |
RICHARD, [to Queen Elizabeth] | |
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 Albans slain? | |
Let me put in your minds, if you forget, | |
What you have been ere this, and what you are; | |
Withal, what I have been, and what I am. | |
QUEEN MARGARET, [aside] | |
A murd'rous villain, and so still thou art. | |
RICHARD, [to Queen Elizabeth] | |
Poor Clarence did forsake his father Warwick, | |
Ay, and forswore himself--which Jesu pardon!-- | |
QUEEN MARGARET, [aside] Which God revenge! | |
RICHARD | |
To fight on Edward's party for the crown; | |
And for his meed, poor lord, he is mewed 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, [aside] | |
Hie thee to hell for shame, and leave this 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 followed then our lord, our sovereign king. | |
So should we you, if you should be our king. | |
RICHARD | |
If I should be? I had rather be a peddler. | |
Far be it from my heart, the thought thereof. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
As little joy, my lord, as you suppose | |
You should enjoy were you this country's king, | |
As little joy you may suppose in me | |
That I enjoy, being the queen thereof. | |
QUEEN MARGARET, [aside] | |
As little joy enjoys the queen thereof, | |
For I am she, and altogether joyless. | |
I can no longer hold me patient. | |
[She steps forward.] | |
Hear me, you wrangling pirates, that fall out | |
In sharing that which you have pilled from me! | |
Which of you trembles not that looks on me? | |
If not, that I am queen, you bow like subjects, | |
Yet that, by you deposed, you quake like rebels.-- | |
Ah, gentle villain, do not turn away. | |
RICHARD | |
Foul, wrinkled witch, what mak'st thou in my | |
sight? | |
QUEEN MARGARET | |
But repetition of what thou hast marred. | |
That will I make before I let thee go. | |
RICHARD | |
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 ow'st to me; | |
[To Queen Elizabeth.] And thou a kingdom;--all | |
of you, allegiance. | |
This sorrow that I have by right is yours, | |
And all the pleasures you usurp are mine. | |
RICHARD | |
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, gav'st the Duke a clout | |
Steeped 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 woeful banishment, | |
Should 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! | |
Though not by war, by surfeit die your king, | |
As ours by murder to make him a king. | |
[To Queen Elizabeth.] Edward thy son, that now is | |
Prince of Wales, | |
For Edward our son, that 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 death | |
And see another, as I see thee now, | |
Decked in thy rights, as thou art stalled in mine. | |
Long die thy happy days before thy death, | |
And, after many lengthened 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 stabbed with bloody daggers. God I pray Him | |
That none of you may live his natural age, | |
But by some unlooked accident cut off. | |
RICHARD | |
Have done thy charm, thou hateful, withered 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 liv'st, | |
And take deep traitors for thy dearest friends. | |
No sleep close up that deadly eye of thine, | |
Unless it be while some tormenting dream | |
Affrights thee with a hell of ugly devils. | |
Thou elvish-marked, abortive, rooting hog, | |
Thou that wast sealed in thy nativity | |
The slave of nature and the son of hell, | |
Thou slander of thy heavy mother's womb, | |
Thou loathed issue of thy father's loins, | |
Thou rag of honor, thou detested-- | |
RICHARD Margaret. | |
QUEEN MARGARET Richard! | |
RICHARD Ha? | |
QUEEN MARGARET I call thee not. | |
RICHARD | |
I cry thee mercy, then, for I did think | |
That thou hadst called me all these bitter names. | |
QUEEN MARGARET | |
Why, so I did, but looked for no reply. | |
O, let me make the period to my curse! | |
RICHARD | |
'Tis done by me and ends in "Margaret." | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH, [to Queen Margaret] | |
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 day will come that thou shalt wish for me | |
To help thee curse this poisonous bunch-backed | |
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, [to Rivers] | |
Dispute not with her; she is lunatic. | |
QUEEN MARGARET | |
Peace, Master Marquess, you are malapert. | |
Your fire-new stamp of honor 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. | |
RICHARD | |
Good counsel, marry.--Learn it, learn it, marquess. | |
DORSET | |
It touches you, my lord, as much as me. | |
RICHARD | |
Ay, and much more; but I was born so high. | |
Our aerie 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 aerie buildeth in our aerie's nest. | |
O God, that seest it, do not suffer it! | |
As it is won with blood, lost be it so. | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
Peace, peace, for shame, if not for charity. | |
QUEEN MARGARET | |
Urge neither charity nor shame to me. | |
[Addressing the others.] Uncharitably with me have | |
you dealt, | |
And shamefully my hopes by you are butchered. | |
My charity is outrage, life my shame, | |
And in that shame still live my sorrows' 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 befall 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 will not think but they ascend the sky, | |
And there awake God's gentle sleeping peace. | |
[Aside to Buckingham.] 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. | |
RICHARD | |
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. [She exits.] | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
My hair doth stand an end to hear her curses. | |
RIVERS | |
And so doth mine. I muse why she's at liberty. | |
RICHARD | |
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. | |
RICHARD | |
Yet 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 franked up to fatting for his pains. | |
God pardon them that are the cause thereof. | |
RIVERS | |
A virtuous and a Christian-like conclusion | |
To pray for them that have done scathe to us. | |
RICHARD | |
So do I ever--[(speaks to himself)] being well advised, | |
For had I cursed now, I had cursed myself. | |
[Enter Catesby.] | |
CATESBY | |
Madam, his Majesty doth call for you,-- | |
And for your Grace,--and yours, my gracious | |
lords. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
Catesby, I come.--Lords, will you go with me? | |
RIVERS We wait upon your Grace. | |
[All but Richard, Duke of Gloucester exit.] | |
RICHARD | |
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, who I indeed have cast in darkness, | |
I do beweep to many simple gulls, | |
Namely, to Derby, Hastings, Buckingham, | |
And tell them 'tis 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, Dorset, 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 villainy | |
With odd old ends stol'n forth of Holy Writ, | |
And seem a saint when most I play the devil. | |
[Enter two Murderers.] | |
But soft, here come my executioners.-- | |
How now, my hardy, stout, resolved mates? | |
Are you now going to dispatch this thing? | |
MURDERER | |
We are, my lord, and come to have the warrant | |
That we may be admitted where he is. | |
RICHARD | |
Well thought upon. I have it here about me. | |
[He gives a paper.] | |
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. | |
MURDERER | |
Tut, tut, my lord, we will not stand to prate. | |
Talkers are no good doers. Be assured | |
We go to use our hands and not our tongues. | |
RICHARD | |
Your eyes drop millstones when fools' eyes fall | |
tears. | |
I like you lads. About your business straight. | |
Go, go, dispatch. | |
MURDERERS We will, my noble lord. | |
[They exit.] | |
Scene 4 | |
======= | |
[Enter Clarence and Keeper.] | |
KEEPER | |
Why looks your Grace so heavily today? | |
CLARENCE | |
O, I have passed a miserable night, | |
So full of fearful dreams, of ugly sights, | |
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. | |
KEEPER | |
What was your dream, my lord? I pray you tell me. | |
CLARENCE | |
Methoughts that I had broken from the Tower | |
And was embarked 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 heavy 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. | |
O Lord, methought what pain it was to drown, | |
What dreadful noise of waters in my ears, | |
What sights of ugly death within my eyes. | |
Methoughts I saw a thousand fearful wracks, | |
A thousand men that fishes gnawed upon, | |
Wedges of gold, great anchors, heaps of pearl, | |
Inestimable stones, unvalued jewels, | |
All scattered in the bottom of the sea. | |
Some lay in dead men's skulls, and in the holes | |
Where eyes did once inhabit, there were crept-- | |
As 'twere in scorn of eyes--reflecting gems, | |
That wooed the slimy bottom of the deep | |
And mocked the dead bones that lay scattered by. | |
KEEPER | |
Had you such leisure in the time of death | |
To gaze upon these secrets of the deep? | |
CLARENCE | |
Methought I had, and often did I strive | |
To yield the ghost, but still the envious flood | |
Stopped in my soul and would not let it forth | |
To find the empty, vast, and wand'ring air, | |
But smothered it within my panting bulk, | |
Who almost burst to belch it in the sea. | |
KEEPER | |
Awaked you not in this sore agony? | |
CLARENCE | |
No, no, my dream was lengthened after life. | |
O, then began the tempest to my soul. | |
I passed, methought, the melancholy flood, | |
With that sour 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 spake aloud "What scourge for perjury | |
Can this dark monarchy afford false Clarence?" | |
And so he vanished. Then came wand'ring by | |
A shadow like an angel, with bright hair | |
Dabbled in blood, and he shrieked out aloud | |
"Clarence is come--false, fleeting, perjured | |
Clarence, | |
That stabbed me in the field by Tewkesbury. | |
Seize on him, furies. Take him unto torment." | |
With that, methoughts, a legion of foul fiends | |
Environed me 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 my dream. | |
KEEPER | |
No marvel, lord, though it affrighted you. | |
I am afraid, methinks, to hear you tell it. | |
CLARENCE | |
Ah keeper, keeper, I have done these things, | |
That now give 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!-- | |
Keeper, I prithee sit by me awhile. | |
My soul is heavy, and I fain would sleep. | |
KEEPER | |
I will, my lord. God give your Grace good rest. | |
[Clarence sleeps.] | |
[Enter Brakenbury the Lieutenant.] | |
BRAKENBURY | |
Sorrow breaks seasons and reposing hours, | |
Makes the night morning, and the noontide night. | |
Princes have but their titles for their glories, | |
An outward honor for an inward toil, | |
And, for unfelt imaginations, | |
They often feel a world of restless cares, | |
So that between their titles and low name | |
There's nothing differs but the outward fame. | |
[Enter two Murderers.] | |
FIRST MURDERER Ho, who's here? | |
BRAKENBURY | |
What wouldst thou, fellow? And how cam'st thou | |
hither? | |
SECOND MURDERER I would speak with Clarence, and I | |
came hither on my legs. | |
BRAKENBURY What, so brief? | |
FIRST MURDERER 'Tis better, sir, than to be tedious.-- | |
Let him see our commission, and talk no more. | |
[Brakenbury reads the commission.] | |
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 from the meaning. | |
There lies the Duke asleep, and there the keys. | |
[He hands them keys.] | |
I'll to the King and signify to him | |
That thus I have resigned to you my charge. | |
FIRST MURDERER You may, sir. 'Tis a point of wisdom. | |
Fare you well. | |
[Brakenbury and the Keeper exit.] | |
SECOND MURDERER What, shall I stab him as he | |
sleeps? | |
FIRST MURDERER No. He'll say 'twas done cowardly, | |
when he wakes. | |
SECOND MURDERER Why, he shall never wake until the | |
great Judgment Day. | |
FIRST MURDERER Why, then he'll 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, | |
but to be damned for killing him, from the which | |
no warrant can defend me. | |
FIRST MURDERER I thought thou hadst been resolute. | |
SECOND MURDERER So I am--to let him live. | |
FIRST MURDERER I'll back to the Duke of Gloucester | |
and tell him so. | |
SECOND MURDERER Nay, I prithee stay a little. I hope | |
this passionate humor of mine will change. It was | |
wont to hold me but while one tells 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's done. | |
SECOND MURDERER Zounds, he dies! I had forgot the | |
reward. | |
FIRST MURDERER Where's thy conscience now? | |
SECOND MURDERER O, in the Duke of Gloucester's | |
purse. | |
FIRST MURDERER When he opens his purse to give us | |
our reward, thy conscience flies out. | |
SECOND MURDERER 'Tis no matter. Let it go. There's | |
few or none will entertain it. | |
FIRST MURDERER What if it come to thee again? | |
SECOND MURDERER I'll not meddle with it. It makes a | |
man a coward: a man cannot steal but it accuseth | |
him; a man cannot swear but it checks him; a man | |
cannot lie with his neighbor's wife but it detects | |
him. 'Tis a blushing, shamefaced spirit that mutinies | |
in a man's bosom. It fills a man full of | |
obstacles. It made me once restore a purse of gold | |
that by chance I found. It beggars any man that | |
keeps it. It is turned out of towns and cities for a | |
dangerous thing, and every man that means to live | |
well endeavors to trust to himself and live without it. | |
FIRST MURDERER Zounds, 'tis even now at my elbow, | |
persuading me not to kill the Duke. | |
SECOND MURDERER Take the devil in thy mind, and | |
believe him not. He would insinuate with thee but | |
to make thee sigh. | |
FIRST MURDERER I am strong-framed. He cannot prevail | |
with me. | |
SECOND MURDERER Spoke like a tall man that respects | |
thy reputation. Come, shall we fall to work? | |
FIRST MURDERER Take him on the costard with the | |
hilts of thy sword, and then throw him into the | |
malmsey butt in the next room. | |
SECOND MURDERER O, excellent device--and make a | |
sop of him! | |
FIRST MURDERER Soft, he wakes. | |
SECOND MURDERER Strike! | |
FIRST MURDERER No, we'll reason with him. | |
[Clarence wakes.] | |
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? | |
FIRST MURDERER A man, as you are. | |
CLARENCE But not, as I am, royal. | |
FIRST MURDERER Nor you, as we are, loyal. | |
CLARENCE | |
Thy voice is thunder, but thy looks are humble. | |
FIRST 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? | |
SECOND MURDERER 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 drawn forth among a world of men | |
To slay the innocent? What is my offense? | |
Where is the evidence that doth 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 our king. | |
CLARENCE | |
Erroneous vassals, the great King of kings | |
Hath in the table of His law commanded | |
That thou shalt do no murder. Will you then | |
Spurn at His edict and fulfill a man's? | |
Take heed, for He holds vengeance in His hand | |
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 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 | |
Unrippedst the bowels of thy sovereign's son. | |
SECOND MURDERER | |
Whom thou wast sworn to cherish and defend. | |
FIRST MURDERER | |
How canst thou urge God's dreadful law to us | |
When thou hast broke it in such dear degree? | |
CLARENCE | |
Alas! For whose sake did I that ill deed? | |
For Edward, for my brother, for his sake. | |
He sends you not to murder me for this, | |
For in that sin he is as deep as I. | |
If God will be avenged for the deed, | |
O, know you yet He doth it publicly! | |
Take not the quarrel from His powerful arm; | |
He needs no indirect or 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 faults | |
Provoke us hither now to slaughter thee. | |
CLARENCE | |
If you do love my brother, hate not me. | |
I am his brother, and I love him well. | |
If you are 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. | |
FIRST MURDERER Ay, so we will. | |
CLARENCE | |
Tell him, when that our princely father York | |
Blessed his three sons with his victorious arm, | |
He little thought of this divided friendship. | |
Bid Gloucester think of this, and he will weep. | |
FIRST MURDERER | |
Ay, millstones, as he lessoned us to weep. | |
CLARENCE | |
O, do not slander him, for he is kind. | |
FIRST MURDERER | |
Right, as snow in harvest. Come, you deceive | |
yourself. | |
'Tis he that sends us to destroy you here. | |
CLARENCE | |
It cannot be, for he bewept my fortune, | |
And hugged me in his arms, and swore with sobs | |
That he would labor my delivery. | |
FIRST MURDERER | |
Why, so he doth, when he delivers you | |
From this Earth's thralldom to the joys of heaven. | |
SECOND MURDERER | |
Make peace with God, for you must die, my lord. | |
CLARENCE | |
Have you that holy feeling in your souls | |
To counsel me to make my peace with God, | |
And are you yet to your own souls so blind | |
That you will war with God by murd'ring me? | |
O sirs, consider: they that set you on | |
To do this deed will hate you for the deed. | |
SECOND MURDERER, [to First Murderer] | |
What shall we do? | |
CLARENCE Relent, and save your souls. | |
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? Ay, you would beg, | |
Were you in my distress. | |
FIRST MURDERER | |
Relent? No. 'Tis cowardly and womanish. | |
CLARENCE | |
Not to relent is beastly, savage, devilish. | |
[To Second Murderer.] 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. | |
A begging prince what beggar pities not? | |
SECOND MURDERER Look behind you, my lord. | |
FIRST MURDERER | |
Take that, and that. [(Stabs him.)] If all this will not | |
do, | |
I'll drown you in the malmsey butt within. | |
[He exits with the body.] | |
SECOND MURDERER | |
A bloody deed, and desperately dispatched. | |
How fain, like Pilate, would I wash my hands | |
Of this most grievous murder. | |
[Enter First Murderer.] | |
FIRST MURDERER | |
How now? What mean'st thou that thou help'st me | |
not? | |
By heavens, the Duke shall know how slack you | |
have been. | |
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. [He exits.] | |
FIRST MURDERER | |
So do not I. Go, coward as thou art. | |
Well, I'll go hide the body in some hole | |
Till that the Duke give order for his burial. | |
And when I have my meed, I will away, | |
For this will out, and then I must not stay. | |
[He exits.] | |
ACT 2 | |
===== | |
Scene 1 | |
======= | |
[Flourish. Enter King Edward, sick, Queen Elizabeth, | |
Lord Marquess Dorset, Rivers, Hastings, Buckingham, | |
Woodeville, Grey, and Scales.] | |
KING EDWARD | |
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 more in peace my soul shall part to heaven | |
Since I have made my friends at peace on Earth. | |
Rivers and Hastings, take each other's hand. | |
Dissemble not your hatred. Swear your love. | |
RIVERS, [taking Hastings' hand] | |
By heaven, my soul 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 | |
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, [to Queen Elizabeth] | |
Madam, yourself is not exempt from this,-- | |
Nor you, 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 | |
There, Hastings, I will never more remember | |
Our former hatred, so thrive I and mine. | |
[Hastings kisses her hand.] | |
KING EDWARD | |
Dorset, embrace him.--Hastings, love Lord | |
Marquess. | |
DORSET | |
This interchange of love, I here protest, | |
Upon my part shall be inviolable. | |
HASTINGS And so swear I. [They embrace.] | |
KING EDWARD | |
Now, princely Buckingham, seal thou this league | |
With thy embracements to my wife's allies | |
And make me happy in your unity. | |
BUCKINGHAM, [to Queen Elizabeth] | |
Whenever Buckingham doth turn his hate | |
Upon your Grace, 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 love to you or yours. | |
[Queen Elizabeth and Buckingham embrace.] | |
KING EDWARD | |
A pleasing cordial, princely Buckingham, | |
Is this thy vow unto my sickly heart. | |
There wanteth now our brother Gloucester here | |
To make the blessed period of this peace. | |
BUCKINGHAM And in good time | |
Here comes Sir Richard Ratcliffe and the Duke. | |
[Enter Ratcliffe, and Richard, Duke of Gloucester.] | |
RICHARD | |
Good morrow to my sovereign king and queen, | |
And, princely peers, a happy time of day. | |
KING EDWARD | |
Happy indeed, as we have spent the day. | |
Gloucester, we have done deeds of charity, | |
Made peace of enmity, fair love of hate, | |
Between these swelling, wrong-incensed peers. | |
RICHARD | |
A blessed labor, my most sovereign lord. | |
Among 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 and you, Lord Rivers and of Dorset, | |
That all without desert have frowned on me;-- | |
Of you, Lord Woodeville and Lord Scales;--of you, | |
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 tonight. | |
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 lord, I do beseech your Highness | |
To take our brother Clarence to your grace. | |
RICHARD | |
Why, madam, have I offered love for this, | |
To be so flouted in this royal presence? | |
Who knows not that the gentle duke is dead? | |
[They all start.] | |
You do him injury to scorn his corse. | |
KING EDWARD | |
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 man in the presence | |
But his red color hath forsook his cheeks. | |
KING EDWARD | |
Is Clarence dead? The order was reversed. | |
RICHARD | |
But he, poor man, by your first order died, | |
And that a winged Mercury did bear. | |
Some tardy cripple bare the countermand, | |
That came too lag to see him buried. | |
God grant that some, less noble and less loyal, | |
Nearer in bloody thoughts, and not in blood, | |
Deserve not worse than wretched Clarence did, | |
And yet go current from suspicion. | |
[Enter Lord Stanley, Earl of Derby.] | |
STANLEY, [kneeling] | |
A boon, my sovereign, for my service done. | |
KING EDWARD | |
I prithee, peace. My soul is full of sorrow. | |
STANLEY | |
I will not rise unless your Highness hear me. | |
KING EDWARD | |
Then say at once what is it thou requests. | |
STANLEY | |
The forfeit, sovereign, of my servant's life, | |
Who slew today a riotous gentleman | |
Lately attendant on the Duke of Norfolk. | |
KING EDWARD | |
Have I a tongue to doom my brother's death, | |
And shall that tongue give pardon to a slave? | |
My brother killed no man; his fault was thought, | |
And yet his punishment was bitter death. | |
Who sued to me for him? Who, in my wrath, | |
Kneeled at my feet, and bade me be advised? | |
Who spoke of brotherhood? Who spoke 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 at Tewkesbury, | |
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 garments and did give himself, | |
All thin and naked, to the numb-cold night? | |
All this from my remembrance brutish wrath | |
Sinfully plucked, 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. | |
[Stanley rises.] | |
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 beg 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.-- | |
Ah, poor Clarence. | |
[Some exit with King and Queen.] | |
RICHARD | |
This is the fruits of rashness. Marked you not | |
How that the guilty kindred of the Queen | |
Looked pale when they did hear of Clarence' death? | |
O, they did urge it still unto the King. | |
God will revenge it. Come, lords, will you go | |
To comfort Edward with our company? | |
BUCKINGHAM We wait upon your Grace. | |
[They exit.] | |
Scene 2 | |
======= | |
[Enter the old Duchess of York with the two | |
children of Clarence.] | |
BOY | |
Good grandam, tell us, is our father dead? | |
DUCHESS No, boy. | |
DAUGHTER | |
Why do you weep so oft, and beat your breast, | |
And cry "O Clarence, my unhappy son"? | |
BOY | |
Why do you look on us and shake your head, | |
And call us orphans, wretches, castaways, | |
If that our noble father were alive? | |
DUCHESS | |
My pretty cousins, you mistake me both. | |
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, you conclude, my grandam, he is dead. | |
The King mine uncle is to blame for it. | |
God will revenge it, whom I will importune | |
With earnest prayers, all to that effect. | |
DAUGHTER And so will I. | |
DUCHESS | |
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 to it by the Queen, | |
Devised impeachments to imprison him; | |
And when my uncle told me so, he wept, | |
And pitied me, and kindly kissed my cheek, | |
Bade me rely on him as on my father, | |
And he would love me dearly as a child. | |
DUCHESS | |
Ah, that deceit should steal such gentle shape, | |
And with a virtuous visor hide deep vice. | |
He is my son, ay, and therein my shame, | |
Yet from my dugs he drew not this deceit. | |
BOY | |
Think you my uncle did dissemble, grandam? | |
DUCHESS Ay, boy. | |
BOY | |
I cannot think it. Hark, what noise is this? | |
[Enter Queen Elizabeth with her hair about her ears, | |
Rivers and Dorset after her.] | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
Ah, 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 | |
What means this scene of rude impatience? | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
To make an act of tragic violence. | |
Edward, my lord, thy son, our king, is dead. | |
Why grow the branches when the root is gone? | |
Why wither not the leaves that want their sap? | |
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 ne'er-changing night. | |
DUCHESS | |
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 with looking on his images; | |
But now two mirrors of his princely semblance | |
Are cracked in pieces by malignant death, | |
And I, for comfort, have but one false glass | |
That 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, | |
But death hath snatched my husband from mine | |
arms | |
And plucked two crutches from my feeble hands, | |
Clarence and Edward. O, what cause have I, | |
Thine being but a moiety of my moan, | |
To overgo thy woes and drown thy cries! | |
BOY, [to Queen Elizabeth] | |
Ah, aunt, you wept not for our father's death. | |
How can we aid you with our kindred tears? | |
DAUGHTER, [to Queen Elizabeth] | |
Our fatherless distress was left unmoaned. | |
Your widow-dolor 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 governed by the watery moon, | |
May send forth plenteous tears to drown the world. | |
Ah, for my husband, for my dear lord Edward! | |
CHILDREN | |
Ah, for our father, for our dear lord Clarence! | |
DUCHESS | |
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 | |
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 | |
Was never mother had so dear a loss. | |
Alas, I am the mother of these griefs. | |
Their woes are parceled; mine is 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 distressed, | |
Pour all your tears. I am your sorrow's nurse, | |
And I will pamper it with lamentation. | |
DORSET, [to Queen Elizabeth] | |
Comfort, dear mother. God is much displeased | |
That you take with unthankfulness His doing. | |
In common worldly things, 'tis called ungrateful | |
With dull unwillingness 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 crowned. In him your comfort lives. | |
Drown desperate sorrow in dead Edward's grave | |
And plant your joys in living Edward's throne. | |
[Enter Richard, Duke of Gloucester, Buckingham, Lord | |
Stanley, Earl of Derby, Hastings, and Ratcliffe.] | |
RICHARD, [to Queen Elizabeth] | |
Sister, have comfort. All of us have cause | |
To wail the dimming of our shining star, | |
But none can help our 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. [He kneels.] | |
DUCHESS | |
God bless thee, and put meekness in thy breast, | |
Love, charity, obedience, and true duty. | |
RICHARD, [standing] | |
Amen. [Aside.] And make me die a good old man! | |
That is the butt end of a mother's blessing; | |
I marvel that her Grace did leave it out. | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
You cloudy princes and heart-sorrowing peers | |
That bear this heavy mutual 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 rancor of your high-swoll'n hates, | |
But lately splintered, knit, and joined together, | |
Must gently be preserved, cherished, and kept. | |
Meseemeth good that with some little train | |
Forthwith from Ludlow the young prince be fet | |
Hither to London, to be crowned our king. | |
RIVERS | |
Why "with some little train," my lord of | |
Buckingham? | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
Marry, my lord, lest by a multitude | |
The new-healed wound of malice should break out, | |
Which would be so much the more dangerous | |
By how much the estate is green and yet | |
ungoverned. | |
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. | |
RICHARD | |
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. | |
RICHARD | |
Then be it so, and go we to determine | |
Who they shall be that straight shall post to | |
Ludlow.-- | |
Madam, and you, my sister, will you go | |
To give your censures in this business? | |
[All but Buckingham and Richard exit.] | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
My lord, whoever journeys to the Prince, | |
For God's sake let not us two stay at home. | |
For by the way I'll sort occasion, | |
As index to the story we late talked of, | |
To part the Queen's proud kindred from the Prince. | |
RICHARD | |
My other self, my council's consistory, | |
My oracle, my prophet, my dear cousin, | |
I, as a child, will go by thy direction. | |
Toward Ludlow then, for we'll not stay behind. | |
[They exit.] | |
Scene 3 | |
======= | |
[Enter one Citizen at one door, and another at the other.] | |
FIRST CITIZEN | |
Good morrow, neighbor, whither away so fast? | |
SECOND CITIZEN | |
I promise you I scarcely know myself. | |
Hear you the news abroad? | |
FIRST CITIZEN Yes, that the King is dead. | |
SECOND CITIZEN | |
Ill news, by 'r Lady. Seldom comes the better. | |
I fear, I fear, 'twill prove a giddy world. | |
[Enter another Citizen.] | |
THIRD CITIZEN | |
Neighbors, God speed. | |
FIRST CITIZEN Give you good morrow, sir. | |
THIRD CITIZEN | |
Doth the 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 that land that's governed by a child. | |
SECOND CITIZEN | |
In him there is a hope of government, | |
Which, in his nonage, council under him, | |
And, in his full and ripened years, himself, | |
No doubt shall then, and till then, govern well. | |
FIRST CITIZEN | |
So stood the state when Henry the Sixth | |
Was crowned 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 enriched | |
With politic grave counsel; then the King | |
Had virtuous uncles to protect his Grace. | |
FIRST CITIZEN | |
Why, so hath this, both by his father and mother. | |
THIRD CITIZEN | |
Better it were they all came by his father, | |
Or by his father there were none at all, | |
For emulation who shall now 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 will be well. | |
THIRD CITIZEN | |
When clouds are seen, wise men put on their | |
cloaks; | |
When great leaves fall, then winter is at hand; | |
When the sun sets, who doth not look for night? | |
Untimely storms makes 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 hearts of men are full of fear. | |
You cannot reason almost with a man | |
That looks not heavily and full of dread. | |
THIRD CITIZEN | |
Before the days of change, still is it so. | |
By a divine instinct, men's minds mistrust | |
Ensuing danger, as by proof we see | |
The water swell before a boist'rous 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. | |
[They exit.] | |
Scene 4 | |
======= | |
[Enter Archbishop, the young Duke of York, | |
Queen Elizabeth, and the Duchess of York.] | |
ARCHBISHOP | |
Last night, I hear, they lay at Stony Stratford, | |
And at Northampton they do rest tonight. | |
Tomorrow or next day they will be here. | |
DUCHESS | |
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 | |
Has almost overta'en him in his growth. | |
YORK | |
Ay, mother, but I would not have it so. | |
DUCHESS | |
Why, my good cousin? It is good to grow. | |
YORK | |
Grandam, one night as we did sit at supper, | |
My uncle Rivers talked 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 | |
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 his rule were true, he should be gracious. | |
YORK | |
And so no doubt he is, my gracious madam. | |
DUCHESS | |
I hope he is, but yet let mothers doubt. | |
YORK | |
Now, by my troth, if I had been remembered, | |
I could have given my uncle's Grace a flout | |
To touch his growth nearer than he touched mine. | |
DUCHESS | |
How, my young York? I prithee 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 | |
I prithee, pretty York, who told thee this? | |
YORK Grandam, his nurse. | |
DUCHESS | |
His nurse? Why, she was dead ere thou wast born. | |
YORK | |
If 'twere not she, I cannot tell who told me. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
A parlous boy! Go to, you are too shrewd. | |
DUCHESS | |
Good madam, be not angry with the child. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH Pitchers have ears. | |
[Enter a Messenger.] | |
ARCHBISHOP Here comes a messenger.--What news? | |
MESSENGER | |
Such news, my lord, as grieves me to report. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH How doth the Prince? | |
MESSENGER Well, madam, and in health. | |
DUCHESS What is thy news? | |
MESSENGER | |
Lord Rivers and Lord Grey are sent to Pomfret, | |
And, with them, Sir Thomas Vaughan, prisoners. | |
DUCHESS Who hath committed them? | |
MESSENGER | |
The mighty dukes, Gloucester and Buckingham. | |
ARCHBISHOP For what offense? | |
MESSENGER | |
The sum of all I can, I have disclosed. | |
Why, or for what, the nobles were committed | |
Is all unknown to me, my gracious lord. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
Ay me! I see the ruin of my house. | |
The tiger now hath seized the gentle hind. | |
Insulting tyranny begins to jut | |
Upon the innocent and aweless throne. | |
Welcome, destruction, blood, and massacre. | |
I see, as in a map, the end of all. | |
DUCHESS | |
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 tossed | |
For me to joy, and weep, their gain and loss. | |
And being seated, and domestic broils | |
Clean overblown, themselves the conquerors | |
Make war upon themselves, brother to brother, | |
Blood to blood, self against self. O, preposterous | |
And frantic outrage, end thy damned spleen, | |
Or let me die, to look on Earth no more. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH, [to York] | |
Come, come, my boy. We will to sanctuary.-- | |
Madam, farewell. | |
DUCHESS Stay, I will go with you. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
You have no cause. | |
ARCHBISHOP, [to Queen Elizabeth] 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. | |
Go. I'll conduct you to the sanctuary. | |
[They exit.] | |
ACT 3 | |
===== | |
Scene 1 | |
======= | |
[The trumpets sound. Enter young Prince Edward, | |
Richard Duke of Gloucester, Buckingham, | |
the Cardinal, Catesby, and others.] | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
Welcome, sweet prince, to London, to your chamber. | |
RICHARD, [to Prince] | |
Welcome, dear cousin, my thoughts' sovereign. | |
The weary way hath made you melancholy. | |
PRINCE | |
No, uncle, but our crosses on the way | |
Have made it tedious, wearisome, and heavy. | |
I want more uncles here to welcome me. | |
RICHARD | |
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 sugared words | |
But looked not on the poison of their hearts. | |
God keep you from them, and from such false | |
friends. | |
PRINCE | |
God keep me from false friends, but they were none. | |
RICHARD | |
My lord, the Mayor of London comes to greet you. | |
[Enter Lord Mayor with others.] | |
MAYOR | |
God bless your Grace with health and happy days. | |
PRINCE | |
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! | |
[Enter Lord Hastings.] | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
And in good time here comes the sweating lord. | |
PRINCE | |
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 claimed 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, never till now. | |
CARDINAL | |
My lord, you shall o'errule my mind for once.-- | |
Come on, Lord Hastings, will you go with me? | |
HASTINGS I go, my lord. | |
PRINCE | |
Good lords, make all the speedy haste you may. | |
[The Cardinal and Hastings exit.] | |
Say, uncle Gloucester, if our brother come, | |
Where shall we sojourn till our coronation? | |
RICHARD | |
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 | |
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 | |
Is it upon record, or else reported | |
Successively from age to age, he built it? | |
BUCKINGHAM Upon record, my gracious lord. | |
PRINCE | |
But say, my lord, it were not registered, | |
Methinks the truth should live from age to age, | |
As 'twere retailed to all posterity, | |
Even to the general all-ending day. | |
RICHARD, [aside] | |
So wise so young, they say, do never live long. | |
PRINCE What say you, uncle? | |
RICHARD | |
I say, without characters fame lives long. | |
[Aside.] Thus, like the formal Vice, Iniquity, | |
I moralize two meanings in one word. | |
PRINCE | |
That Julius Caesar was a famous man. | |
With what his valor did enrich his wit, | |
His wit set down to make his valor 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 | |
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. | |
RICHARD, [aside] | |
Short summers lightly have a forward spring. | |
[Enter young Duke of York, Hastings, and the | |
Cardinal.] | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
Now in good time here comes the Duke of York. | |
PRINCE | |
Richard of York, how fares our loving brother? | |
YORK | |
Well, my dread lord--so must I call you now. | |
PRINCE | |
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. | |
RICHARD | |
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. | |
RICHARD | |
He hath, my lord. | |
YORK And therefore is he idle? | |
RICHARD | |
O my fair cousin, I must not say so. | |
YORK | |
Then he is more beholding to you than I. | |
RICHARD | |
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. | |
RICHARD | |
My dagger, little cousin? With all my heart. | |
PRINCE A beggar, brother? | |
YORK | |
Of my kind uncle, that I know will give, | |
And being but a toy, which is no grief to give. | |
RICHARD | |
A greater gift than that I'll give my cousin. | |
YORK | |
A greater gift? O, that's the sword to it. | |
RICHARD | |
Ay, 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. | |
RICHARD | |
It is too heavy for your Grace to wear. | |
YORK | |
I weigh it lightly, were it heavier. | |
RICHARD | |
What, would you have my weapon, little lord? | |
YORK | |
I would, that I might thank you as you call me. | |
RICHARD How? | |
YORK Little. | |
PRINCE | |
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, [aside] | |
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. | |
RICHARD, [to Prince] | |
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, [to Prince] | |
What, will you go unto the Tower, my lord? | |
PRINCE | |
My Lord Protector needs will have it so. | |
YORK | |
I shall not sleep in quiet at the Tower. | |
RICHARD Why, what should you fear? | |
YORK | |
Marry, my uncle Clarence' angry ghost. | |
My grandam told me he was murdered there. | |
PRINCE I fear no uncles dead. | |
RICHARD Nor none that live, I hope. | |
PRINCE | |
An if they live, I hope I need not fear. | |
[To York.] But come, my lord. With a heavy heart, | |
Thinking on them, go I unto the Tower. | |
[A sennet. Prince Edward, the Duke of York, | |
and Hastings exit. Richard, Buckingham, | |
and Catesby remain.] | |
BUCKINGHAM, [to Richard] | |
Think you, my lord, this little prating York | |
Was not incensed by his subtle mother | |
To taunt and scorn you thus opprobriously? | |
RICHARD | |
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 knowest our reasons, urged upon the way. | |
What thinkest thou? Is it not an easy matter | |
To make William Lord Hastings of our mind | |
For the installment 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? Will not 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 he doth stand affected to our purpose | |
And summon him tomorrow to the Tower | |
To sit about the coronation. | |
If thou dost find him tractable to us, | |
Encourage him and tell him all our reasons. | |
If he be leaden, icy, cold, unwilling, | |
Be thou so too, and so break off the talk, | |
And give us notice of his inclination; | |
For we tomorrow hold divided councils, | |
Wherein thyself shalt highly be employed. | |
RICHARD | |
Commend me to Lord William. Tell him, Catesby, | |
His ancient knot of dangerous adversaries | |
Tomorrow are let blood at Pomfret Castle, | |
And bid my lord, 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 can. | |
RICHARD | |
Shall we hear from you, Catesby, ere we sleep? | |
CATESBY You shall, my lord. | |
RICHARD | |
At Crosby House, there shall you find us both. | |
[Catesby exits.] | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
Now, my lord, what shall we do if we perceive | |
Lord Hastings will not yield to our complots? | |
RICHARD | |
Chop off his head. Something we will determine. | |
And look when I am king, claim thou of me | |
The earldom of Hereford, and all the movables | |
Whereof the King my brother was possessed. | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
I'll claim that promise at your Grace's hand. | |
RICHARD | |
And look to have it yielded with all kindness. | |
Come, let us sup betimes, that afterwards | |
We may digest our complots in some form. | |
[They exit.] | |
Scene 2 | |
======= | |
[Enter a Messenger to the door of Hastings.] | |
MESSENGER, [knocking] My lord, my lord. | |
HASTINGS, [within] Who knocks? | |
MESSENGER One from the Lord Stanley. | |
HASTINGS, [within] What is 't o'clock? | |
MESSENGER Upon the stroke of four. | |
[Enter Lord Hastings.] | |
HASTINGS | |
Cannot my Lord Stanley sleep these tedious nights? | |
MESSENGER | |
So it appears by that I have to say. | |
First, he commends him to your noble self. | |
HASTINGS What then? | |
MESSENGER | |
Then certifies your Lordship that this night | |
He dreamt the boar had razed off his helm. | |
Besides, he says there are two councils kept, | |
And that may be determined at the one | |
Which may make you and him to rue at th' other. | |
Therefore he sends to know your Lordship's | |
pleasure, | |
If you will presently 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 council. | |
His Honor and myself are at the one, | |
And at the other is my good friend Catesby, | |
Where nothing can proceed that toucheth us | |
Whereof I shall not have intelligence. | |
Tell him his fears are shallow, without instance. | |
And for his dreams, I wonder he's so simple | |
To trust the mock'ry 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 | |
I'll go, my lord, and tell him what you say. [He exits.] | |
[Enter Catesby.] | |
CATESBY | |
Many good morrows to my noble lord. | |
HASTINGS | |
Good morrow, Catesby. You are early stirring. | |
What news, what news in this our tott'ring state? | |
CATESBY | |
It is a reeling world indeed, my lord, | |
And I believe will never stand upright | |
Till 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 | |
Before I'll 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 you 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 my adversaries. | |
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 which brought me in my master's hate, | |
I live to look upon their tragedy. | |
Well, Catesby, ere a fortnight make me older | |
I'll send some packing that yet think not on 't. | |
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 that 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-- | |
[Aside.] For they account his head upon the Bridge. | |
HASTINGS | |
I know they do, and I have well deserved it. | |
[Enter Lord Stanley.] | |
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 days, I do protest, | |
Was it so precious to me as '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 states were sure, | |
And they indeed had no cause to mistrust; | |
But yet you see how soon the day o'ercast. | |
This sudden stab of rancor 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? | |
Today the lords you talked of are beheaded. | |
STANLEY | |
They, for their truth, might better wear their heads | |
Than some that have accused them wear their hats. | |
But come, my lord, let's away. | |
[Enter a Pursuivant.] | |
HASTINGS | |
Go on before. I'll talk with this good fellow. | |
[Lord Stanley and Catesby exit.] | |
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 thou met'st me 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 Honor's good content! | |
HASTINGS | |
Gramercy, fellow. There, drink that for me. | |
[Throws him his purse.] | |
PURSUIVANT I thank your Honor. [Pursuivant exits.] | |
[Enter a Priest.] | |
PRIEST | |
Well met, my lord. I am glad to see your Honor. | |
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. | |
PRIEST I'll wait upon your Lordship. [Priest exits.] | |
[Enter Buckingham.] | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
What, talking with a priest, Lord Chamberlain? | |
Your friends at Pomfret, they do need the priest; | |
Your Honor hath no shriving work in hand. | |
HASTINGS | |
Good faith, and when I met this holy man, | |
The men you talk of came into my mind. | |
What, go you toward the Tower? | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
I do, my lord, but long I cannot stay there. | |
I shall return before your Lordship thence. | |
HASTINGS | |
Nay, like enough, for I stay dinner there. | |
BUCKINGHAM, [aside] | |
And supper too, although thou know'st it not.-- | |
Come, will you go? | |
HASTINGS I'll wait upon your Lordship. | |
[They exit.] | |
Scene 3 | |
======= | |
[Enter Sir Richard Ratcliffe, with Halberds, carrying the | |
nobles Rivers, Grey, and Vaughan to death at Pomfret.] | |
RIVERS | |
Sir Richard Ratcliffe, let me tell thee this: | |
Today shalt thou behold a subject die | |
For truth, for duty, and for loyalty. | |
GREY, [to Ratcliffe] | |
God bless the Prince from all the pack of you! | |
A knot you are of damned bloodsuckers. | |
VAUGHAN, [to Ratcliffe] | |
You live that shall cry woe for this hereafter. | |
RATCLIFFE | |
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 hacked to death, | |
And, for more slander to thy dismal seat, | |
We give to thee our guiltless blood to drink. | |
GREY | |
Now Margaret's curse is fall'n upon our heads, | |
When she exclaimed on Hastings, you, and I, | |
For standing by when Richard stabbed her son. | |
RIVERS | |
Then cursed she Richard. Then cursed she | |
Buckingham. | |
Then cursed she Hastings. O, remember, God, | |
To hear her prayer 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. | |
RATCLIFFE | |
Make haste. The hour of death is expiate. | |
RIVERS | |
Come, Grey. Come, Vaughan. Let us here embrace. | |
[They embrace.] | |
Farewell until we meet again in heaven. | |
[They exit.] | |
Scene 4 | |
======= | |
[Enter Buckingham, Lord Stanley, Earl of Derby, | |
Hastings, Bishop of Ely, Norfolk, Ratcliffe, Lovell, with | |
others, at a table.] | |
HASTINGS | |
Now, noble peers, the cause why we are met | |
Is to determine of the coronation. | |
In God's name, speak. When is the royal day? | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
Is all things ready for the royal time? | |
STANLEY | |
It is, and wants but nomination. | |
ELY | |
Tomorrow, then, I judge a happy day. | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
Who knows the Lord Protector's mind herein? | |
Who is most inward with the noble duke? | |
ELY | |
Your Grace, we think, should soonest know his | |
mind. | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
We know each other's faces; for our hearts, | |
He knows no more of mine than I of yours, | |
Or I of his, my lord, 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 delivered | |
His gracious pleasure any way therein. | |
But you, my honorable 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. | |
[Enter Richard, Duke of Gloucester.] | |
ELY | |
In happy time here comes the Duke himself. | |
RICHARD | |
My noble lords and cousins all, good morrow. | |
I have been long a sleeper; but I trust | |
My absence doth neglect no great design | |
Which by my presence might have been concluded. | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
Had you not come upon your cue, my lord, | |
William Lord Hastings had pronounced your part-- | |
I mean your voice for crowning of the King. | |
RICHARD | |
Than my Lord Hastings no man might be bolder. | |
His Lordship knows me well and loves me well.-- | |
My lord of Ely, when I was last in Holborn | |
I saw good strawberries in your garden there; | |
I do beseech you, send for some of them. | |
ELY | |
Marry and will, my lord, with all my heart. | |
[Exit Bishop of Ely.] | |
RICHARD | |
Cousin of Buckingham, a word with you. | |
[They move aside.] | |
Catesby hath sounded Hastings in our business | |
And finds the testy gentleman so hot | |
That he will lose his head ere give consent | |
His master's child, as worshipfully he terms it, | |
Shall lose the royalty of England's throne. | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
Withdraw yourself awhile. I'll go with you. | |
[Richard and Buckingham exit.] | |
STANLEY | |
We have not yet set down this day of triumph. | |
Tomorrow, in my judgment, is too sudden, | |
For I myself am not so well provided | |
As else I would be, were the day prolonged. | |
[Enter the Bishop of Ely.] | |
ELY | |
Where is my lord the Duke of Gloucester? | |
I have sent for these strawberries. | |
HASTINGS | |
His Grace looks cheerfully and smooth this | |
morning. | |
There's some conceit or other likes him well | |
When that he bids good morrow with such spirit. | |
I think there's never a man in Christendom | |
Can lesser hide his love or hate than he, | |
For by his face straight shall you know his heart. | |
STANLEY | |
What of his heart perceive you in his face | |
By any livelihood he showed today? | |
HASTINGS | |
Marry, that with no man here he is offended, | |
For were he, he had shown it in his looks. | |
[Enter Richard and Buckingham.] | |
RICHARD | |
I pray you all, tell me what they deserve | |
That do conspire my death with devilish plots | |
Of damned witchcraft, and that have prevailed | |
Upon my body with their hellish charms? | |
HASTINGS | |
The tender love I bear your Grace, my lord, | |
Makes me most forward in this princely presence | |
To doom th' offenders, whosoe'er they be. | |
I say, my lord, they have deserved death. | |
RICHARD | |
Then be your eyes the witness of their evil. | |
[He shows his arm.] | |
Look how I am bewitched! Behold mine arm | |
Is like a blasted sapling withered 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 deed, my noble lord-- | |
RICHARD | |
If? Thou protector of this damned strumpet, | |
Talk'st thou to 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.-- | |
Lovell and Ratcliffe, look that it be done.-- | |
The rest that love me, rise and follow me. | |
[They exit. Lovell and Ratcliffe remain, | |
with the Lord Hastings.] | |
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, | |
And I did scorn it and disdain to fly. | |
Three times today my foot-cloth horse did stumble, | |
And started when he looked upon the Tower, | |
As loath to bear me to the slaughterhouse. | |
O, now I need the priest that spake to me! | |
I now repent I told the pursuivant, | |
As too triumphing, how mine enemies | |
Today at Pomfret bloodily were butchered, | |
And I myself secure in grace and favor. | |
O Margaret, Margaret, now thy heavy curse | |
Is lighted on poor Hastings' wretched head. | |
RATCLIFFE | |
Come, come, dispatch. 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 hope 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. | |
LOVELL | |
Come, come, dispatch. 'Tis bootless to exclaim. | |
HASTINGS | |
O bloody Richard! Miserable England, | |
I prophesy the fearfull'st time to thee | |
That ever wretched age hath looked upon.-- | |
Come, lead me to the block. Bear him my head. | |
They smile at me who shortly shall be dead. | |
[They exit.] | |
Scene 5 | |
======= | |
[Enter Richard and Buckingham, in rotten armor, | |
marvelous ill-favored.] | |
RICHARD | |
Come, cousin, canst thou quake and change thy | |
color, | |
Murder thy breath in middle of a word, | |
And then again begin, and stop again, | |
As if thou were 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? | |
RICHARD | |
He is; and see he brings the Mayor along. | |
[Enter the Mayor and Catesby.] | |
BUCKINGHAM Lord Mayor-- | |
RICHARD Look to the drawbridge there! | |
BUCKINGHAM Hark, a drum! | |
RICHARD Catesby, o'erlook the walls. | |
[Catesby exits.] | |
BUCKINGHAM Lord Mayor, the reason we have sent-- | |
RICHARD | |
Look back! Defend thee! Here are enemies. | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
God and our innocence defend and guard us! | |
[Enter Lovell and Ratcliffe, with Hastings' head.] | |
RICHARD | |
Be patient. They are friends, Ratcliffe and Lovell. | |
LOVELL | |
Here is the head of that ignoble traitor, | |
The dangerous and unsuspected Hastings. | |
RICHARD | |
So dear I loved the man that I must weep. | |
I took him for the plainest harmless creature | |
That breathed upon the Earth a Christian; | |
Made him my book, wherein my soul recorded | |
The history of all her secret thoughts. | |
So smooth he daubed 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 suspects. | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
Well, well, he was the covert'st sheltered traitor | |
That ever lived.-- | |
Would you imagine, or almost believe, | |
Were 't not that by great preservation | |
We live to tell it, that the subtle traitor | |
This day had plotted, in the council house, | |
To murder me and my good lord of Gloucester? | |
MAYOR Had he done so? | |
RICHARD | |
What, think you we are Turks or infidels? | |
Or that we would, against the form of law, | |
Proceed thus rashly in 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? | |
MAYOR | |
Now fair befall you! He deserved his death, | |
And your good Graces both have well proceeded | |
To warn false traitors from the like attempts. | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
I never looked for better at his hands | |
After he once fell in with Mistress Shore. | |
Yet had we not determined he should die | |
Until your Lordship came to see his end | |
(Which now the loving haste of these our friends, | |
Something against our meanings, have prevented), | |
Because, my lord, I would have had you heard | |
The traitor speak and timorously confess | |
The manner and the purpose of his treasons, | |
That you might well have signified the same | |
Unto the citizens, who haply may | |
Misconster us in him, and wail his death. | |
MAYOR | |
But, my good lord, your Graces' words shall serve | |
As well as I had seen and heard him speak; | |
And do not doubt, right noble princes both, | |
But I'll acquaint our duteous citizens | |
With all your just proceedings in this case. | |
RICHARD | |
And to that end we wished your Lordship here, | |
T' avoid the censures of the carping world. | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
Which since you come too late of our intent, | |
Yet witness what you hear we did intend. | |
And so, my good Lord Mayor, we bid farewell. | |
[Mayor exits.] | |
RICHARD | |
Go after, after, cousin Buckingham. | |
The Mayor towards Guildhall hies him in all post. | |
There, at your meetest vantage 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 unto their servants, daughters, | |
wives, | |
Even where his raging eye or savage heart, | |
Without control, lusted to make a prey. | |
Nay, for a need, thus far come near my person: | |
Tell them when that my mother went with child | |
Of that insatiate Edward, noble York | |
My princely father then had wars in France, | |
And, by true 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. | |
Yet touch this sparingly, as 'twere far off, | |
Because, my lord, you know my mother lives. | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
Doubt 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. | |
RICHARD | |
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. | |
[Buckingham exits.] | |
RICHARD | |
Go, Lovell, with all speed to Doctor Shaa. | |
[To Ratcliffe.] Go thou to Friar Penker. Bid them | |
both | |
Meet me within this hour at Baynard's Castle. | |
[Ratcliffe and Lovell exit.] | |
Now will I go to take some privy order | |
To draw the brats of Clarence out of sight, | |
And to give order that no manner person | |
Have any time recourse unto the Princes. | |
[He exits.] | |
Scene 6 | |
======= | |
[Enter a Scrivener.] | |
SCRIVENER | |
Here is the indictment of the good Lord Hastings, | |
Which in a set hand fairly is engrossed, | |
That it may be today read o'er in Paul's. | |
And mark how well the sequel hangs together: | |
Eleven hours I have spent to write it over, | |
For yesternight by Catesby was it sent me; | |
The precedent was full as long a-doing, | |
And yet within these five hours Hastings lived, | |
Untainted, unexamined, free, at liberty. | |
Here's a good world the while! Who is so gross | |
That cannot see this palpable device? | |
Yet who so bold but says he sees it not? | |
Bad is the world, and all will come to naught | |
When such ill dealing must be seen in thought. | |
[He exits.] | |
Scene 7 | |
======= | |
[Enter Richard and Buckingham at several doors.] | |
RICHARD | |
How now, how now? What say the citizens? | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
Now, by the holy mother of our Lord, | |
The citizens are mum, say not a word. | |
RICHARD | |
Touched you the bastardy of Edward's children? | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
I did; with his contract with Lady Lucy | |
And his contract by deputy in France; | |
Th' unsatiate greediness of his desire | |
And his enforcement of the city wives; | |
His tyranny for trifles; his own bastardy, | |
As being got, your father then in France, | |
And 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 discipline in war, wisdom in peace, | |
Your bounty, virtue, fair humility; | |
Indeed, left nothing fitting for your purpose | |
Untouched or slightly handled in discourse. | |
And when mine oratory drew toward end, | |
I bid them that did love their country's good | |
Cry "God save Richard, England's royal king!" | |
RICHARD And did they so? | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
No. So God help me, they spake not a word | |
But, like dumb statues or breathing stones, | |
Stared each on other and looked deadly pale; | |
Which when I saw, I reprehended them | |
And asked the Mayor what meant this willful silence. | |
His answer was, the people were not used | |
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 | |
inferred"-- | |
But nothing spoke in warrant from himself. | |
When he had done, some followers of mine own, | |
At lower end of the hall, hurled 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 cheerful shout | |
Argues your wisdoms and your love to Richard"-- | |
And even here brake off and came away. | |
RICHARD | |
What tongueless blocks were they! Would they not | |
speak? | |
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 between two churchmen, good my lord, | |
For on that ground I'll make a holy descant. | |
And be not easily won to our requests. | |
Play the maid's part: still answer "nay," and take it. | |
RICHARD | |
I go. An if you plead as well for them | |
As I can say "nay" to thee for myself, | |
No doubt we bring it to a happy issue. | |
[Knocking within.] | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
Go, go, up to the leads. The Lord Mayor knocks. | |
[Richard exits.] | |
[Enter the Mayor and Citizens.] | |
Welcome, my lord. I dance attendance here. | |
I think the Duke will not be spoke withal. | |
[Enter Catesby.] | |
Now, Catesby, what says your lord to my request? | |
CATESBY | |
He doth entreat your Grace, my noble lord, | |
To visit him tomorrow or next day. | |
He is within, with two right reverend fathers, | |
Divinely bent to meditation, | |
And in no worldly suits would he be moved | |
To draw him from his holy exercise. | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
Return, good Catesby, to the gracious duke. | |
Tell him myself, the Mayor, and aldermen, | |
In deep designs, in matter of great moment | |
No less importing than our general good, | |
Are come to have some conference with his Grace. | |
CATESBY | |
I'll signify so much unto him straight. [He exits.] | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
Ah ha, my lord, this prince is not an Edward! | |
He is not lolling on a lewd love-bed, | |
But on his knees at meditation; | |
Not dallying with a brace of courtesans, | |
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 virtuous prince | |
Take on his Grace the sovereignty thereof. | |
But sure I fear we shall not win him to it. | |
MAYOR | |
Marry, God defend his Grace should say us nay. | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
I fear he will. Here Catesby comes again. | |
[Enter Catesby.] | |
Now, Catesby, what says his Grace? | |
CATESBY | |
He wonders to what end you have assembled | |
Such troops of citizens to come to him, | |
His Grace not being warned thereof before. | |
He fears, my lord, 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, we come to him in perfect love, | |
And so once more return and tell his Grace. | |
[Catesby exits.] | |
When holy and devout religious men | |
Are at their beads, 'tis much to draw them thence, | |
So sweet is zealous contemplation. | |
[Enter Richard aloft, between two Bishops.] | |
[Catesby reenters.] | |
MAYOR | |
See where his Grace stands, 'tween 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 favorable ear to our requests, | |
And pardon us the interruption | |
Of thy devotion and right Christian zeal. | |
RICHARD | |
My lord, there needs no such apology. | |
I do beseech your Grace to pardon me, | |
Who, earnest in the service of my God, | |
Deferred 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 ungoverned isle. | |
RICHARD | |
I do suspect I have done some offense | |
That seems disgracious in the city's eye, | |
And that you come to reprehend my ignorance. | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
You have, my lord. Would it might please your | |
Grace, | |
On our entreaties, to amend your fault. | |
RICHARD | |
Else wherefore breathe I in a Christian land? | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
Know, then, it is your fault that you resign | |
The supreme seat, the throne majestical, | |
The sceptered 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, | |
Whiles in the mildness of your sleepy thoughts, | |
Which here we waken to our country's good, | |
The noble isle doth want her proper limbs-- | |
Her face defaced with scars of infamy, | |
Her royal stock graft with ignoble plants, | |
And almost shouldered in the swallowing gulf | |
Of dark forgetfulness and deep 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 cause come I to move your Grace. | |
RICHARD | |
I cannot tell if 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 seasoned with your faithful love to me, | |
Then on the other side I checked 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 the ripe revenue and due of birth, | |
Yet so much is my poverty of spirit, | |
So mighty and so many my defects, | |
That I would 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 vapor of my glory smothered. | |
But, God be thanked, there is no need of me, | |
And much I need to help you, were there need. | |
The royal tree hath left us royal fruit, | |
Which, mellowed 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 that 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 was he contract to Lady Lucy-- | |
Your mother lives a witness to his vow-- | |
And afterward by substitute betrothed | |
To Bona, sister to the King of France. | |
These both put off, a poor petitioner, | |
A care-crazed mother to a many sons, | |
A beauty-waning and distressed widow, | |
Even in the afternoon of her best days, | |
Made prize and purchase of his wanton eye, | |
Seduced the pitch and height of his degree | |
To base declension and loathed bigamy. | |
By her in his unlawful bed he got | |
This Edward, whom our manners call "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 proffered benefit of dignity, | |
If not 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. | |
MAYOR | |
Do, good my lord. Your citizens entreat you. | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
Refuse not, mighty lord, this proffered love. | |
CATESBY | |
O, make them joyful. Grant their lawful suit. | |
RICHARD | |
Alas, why would you heap this care 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 kindred | |
And equally indeed to all estates-- | |
Yet know, whe'er 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. | |
RICHARD | |
O, do not swear, my lord of Buckingham! | |
[Buckingham and some others exit.] | |
CATESBY | |
Call him again, sweet prince. Accept their suit. | |
If you deny them, all the land will rue it. | |
RICHARD | |
Will you enforce me to a world of cares? | |
Call them again. I am not made of stones, | |
But penetrable to your kind entreaties, | |
Albeit against my conscience and my soul. | |
[Enter Buckingham and the rest.] | |
Cousin of Buckingham and sage, grave men, | |
Since you will buckle Fortune on my back, | |
To bear her burden, whe'er 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 doth know, and you may partly see, | |
How far I am from the desire of this. | |
MAYOR | |
God bless your Grace! We see it and will say it. | |
RICHARD | |
In saying so, you shall but say the truth. | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
Then I salute you with this royal title: | |
Long live Richard, England's worthy king! | |
ALL Amen. | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
Tomorrow may it please you to be crowned? | |
RICHARD | |
Even when you please, for you will have it so. | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
Tomorrow, then, we will attend your Grace, | |
And so most joyfully we take our leave. | |
RICHARD, [to the Bishops] | |
Come, let us to our holy work again.-- | |
Farewell, my cousin. Farewell, gentle friends. | |
[They exit.] | |
ACT 4 | |
===== | |
Scene 1 | |
======= | |
[Enter Queen Elizabeth, with the Duchess of York, and | |
the Lord Marquess of Dorset, at one door; Anne, | |
Duchess of Gloucester with Clarence's daughter, at | |
another door.] | |
DUCHESS | |
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 prince.-- | |
Daughter, well met. | |
ANNE God give your Graces both | |
A happy and a joyful time of day. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
As much to you, good sister. Whither away? | |
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. | |
[Enter Brakenbury, the Lieutenant.] | |
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 strictly charged the contrary. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
The King? Who's that? | |
BRAKENBURY I mean, the Lord Protector. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
The Lord protect him from that kingly title! | |
Hath he set bounds between their love and me? | |
I am their mother. Who shall bar me from them? | |
DUCHESS | |
I am their father's mother. I will see them. | |
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. | |
[Brakenbury the Lieutenant exits.] | |
[Enter Stanley.] | |
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. | |
[To Anne.] Come, madam, you must straight to | |
Westminster, | |
There to be crowned Richard's royal queen. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH Ah, cut my lace asunder | |
That my pent heart may have some scope to beat, | |
Or else I swoon with this dead-killing news! | |
ANNE | |
Despiteful tidings! O, unpleasing news! | |
DORSET, [to Queen Elizabeth] | |
Be of good cheer, mother. How fares your Grace? | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
O Dorset, speak not to me. Get thee gone. | |
Death and destruction dogs thee at thy 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 slaughterhouse, | |
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. | |
STANLEY | |
Full of wise care is this your counsel, madam. | |
[To Dorset.] Take all the swift advantage of the | |
hours. | |
You shall have letters from me to my son | |
In your behalf, to meet you on the way. | |
Be not ta'en tardy by unwise delay. | |
DUCHESS | |
O ill-dispersing wind of misery! | |
O my accursed womb, the bed of death! | |
A cockatrice hast thou hatched to the world, | |
Whose unavoided eye is murderous. | |
STANLEY, [to Anne] | |
Come, madam, come. I in all haste was sent. | |
ANNE | |
And I with all unwillingness will go. | |
O, would to God that the inclusive verge | |
Of golden metal that must round my brow | |
Were red-hot steel to sear me to the brains! | |
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 humor, wish thyself no harm. | |
ANNE | |
No? Why? When he that is my husband now | |
Came to me as I followed Henry's corse, | |
When scarce the blood was well washed from his | |
hands | |
Which issued from my other angel husband | |
And that dear saint which then I weeping followed-- | |
O, when, I say, I looked 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 wedd'st, let sorrow haunt thy bed; | |
And be thy wife, if any be so mad, | |
More miserable by the life of thee | |
Than thou hast made me by my dear lord's death. | |
Lo, ere I can repeat this curse again, | |
Within so small a time my woman's heart | |
Grossly grew captive to his honey words | |
And proved the subject of mine own soul's curse, | |
Which hitherto hath held my eyes from rest, | |
For never yet one hour in his bed | |
Did I enjoy the golden dew of sleep, | |
But with his timorous dreams was still awaked. | |
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. | |
ANNE | |
No more than with my soul I mourn for yours. | |
DORSET | |
Farewell, thou woeful welcomer of glory. | |
ANNE | |
Adieu, poor soul that tak'st thy leave of it. | |
DUCHESS, [to Dorset] | |
Go thou to Richmond, and good fortune guide thee. | |
[To Anne.] Go thou to Richard, and good angels | |
tend thee. | |
[To Queen Elizabeth.] Go thou to sanctuary, and | |
good thoughts possess thee. | |
I to my grave, where peace and rest lie with me. | |
Eighty-odd years of sorrow have I seen, | |
And each hour's joy wracked with a week of teen. | |
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 sorrows bids your stones farewell. | |
[They exit.] | |
Scene 2 | |
======= | |
[Sound a sennet. Enter Richard in pomp; Buckingham, | |
Catesby, Ratcliffe, Lovell, and others, including a Page.] | |
RICHARD | |
Stand all apart.--Cousin of Buckingham. | |
[The others move aside.] | |
BUCKINGHAM My gracious sovereign. | |
RICHARD | |
Give me thy hand. | |
[Here he ascendeth the throne. Sound trumpets.] | |
Thus high, by thy advice | |
And thy assistance is King Richard seated. | |
But shall we wear these glories for a day, | |
Or shall they last and we rejoice in them? | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
Still live they, and forever let them last. | |
RICHARD | |
Ah, Buckingham, now do I play the touch, | |
To try if thou be current gold indeed: | |
Young Edward lives; think now what I would speak. | |
BUCKINGHAM Say on, my loving lord. | |
RICHARD | |
Why, Buckingham, I say I would be king. | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
Why so you are, my thrice-renowned lord. | |
RICHARD | |
Ha! Am I king? 'Tis so--but Edward lives. | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
True, noble prince. | |
RICHARD O bitter consequence | |
That Edward still should live "true noble prince"! | |
Cousin, thou wast not wont to be so dull. | |
Shall I be plain? I wish the bastards dead, | |
And I would have it suddenly performed. | |
What sayst thou now? Speak suddenly. Be brief. | |
BUCKINGHAM Your Grace may do your pleasure. | |
RICHARD | |
Tut, tut, thou art all ice; thy kindness freezes. | |
Say, have I thy consent that they shall die? | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
Give me some little breath, some pause, dear lord, | |
Before I positively speak in this. | |
I will resolve you herein presently. | |
[Buckingham exits.] | |
CATESBY, [aside to the other Attendants] | |
The King is angry. See, he gnaws his lip. | |
RICHARD, [aside] | |
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, [coming forward] My lord? | |
RICHARD | |
Know'st thou not any whom corrupting gold | |
Will tempt unto a close exploit of death? | |
PAGE | |
I know a discontented gentleman | |
Whose humble means match not his haughty spirit. | |
Gold were as good as twenty orators, | |
And will, no doubt, tempt him to anything. | |
RICHARD | |
What is his name? | |
PAGE His name, my lord, is Tyrrel. | |
RICHARD | |
I partly know the man. Go, call him hither, boy. | |
[Page exits.] | |
[Aside.] The deep-revolving witty Buckingham | |
No more shall be the neighbor to my counsels. | |
Hath he so long held out with me, untired, | |
And stops he now for breath? Well, be it so. | |
[Enter Stanley.] | |
How now, Lord Stanley, what's the news? | |
STANLEY Know, my loving lord, | |
The Marquess Dorset, as I hear, is fled | |
To Richmond, in the parts where he abides. | |
[He walks aside.] | |
RICHARD | |
Come hither, Catesby. Rumor it abroad | |
That Anne my wife is very grievous sick. | |
I will take order for her keeping close. | |
Inquire me out some mean poor 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 queen is sick and like to die. | |
About it, for it stands me much upon | |
To stop all hopes whose growth may damage me. | |
[Catesby exits.] | |
[Aside.] 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. | |
[Enter Tyrrel.] | |
Is thy name Tyrrel? | |
TYRREL | |
James Tyrrel, and your most obedient subject. | |
RICHARD | |
Art thou indeed? | |
TYRREL Prove me, my gracious lord. | |
RICHARD | |
Dar'st thou resolve to kill a friend of mine? | |
TYRREL | |
Please you. But I had rather kill two enemies. | |
RICHARD | |
Why then, 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. | |
RICHARD | |
Thou sing'st sweet music. Hark, come hither, Tyrrel. | |
[Tyrrel approaches Richard and kneels.] | |
Go, by this token. Rise, and lend thine ear. | |
[Tyrrel rises, and Richard whispers | |
to him. Then Tyrrel steps back.] | |
There is no more but so. Say it is done, | |
And I will love thee and prefer thee for it. | |
TYRREL I will dispatch it straight. [He exits.] | |
[Enter Buckingham.] | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
My lord, I have considered in my mind | |
The late request that you did sound me in. | |
RICHARD | |
Well, let that rest. Dorset is fled to Richmond. | |
BUCKINGHAM I hear the news, my lord. | |
RICHARD | |
Stanley, he is your wife's son. Well, look unto it. | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
My lord, I claim the gift, my due by promise, | |
For which your honor and your faith is pawned-- | |
Th' earldom of Hereford and the movables | |
Which you have promised I shall possess. | |
RICHARD | |
Stanley, look to your wife. If she convey | |
Letters to Richmond, you shall answer it. | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
What says your Highness to my just request? | |
RICHARD | |
I do remember me, Henry the Sixth | |
Did prophesy that Richmond should be king, | |
When Richmond was a little peevish boy. | |
A king perhaps-- | |
BUCKINGHAM My lord-- | |
RICHARD | |
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-- | |
RICHARD | |
Richmond! When last I was at Exeter, | |
The Mayor in courtesy showed me the castle | |
And called 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-- | |
RICHARD Ay, what's o'clock? | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
I am thus bold to put your Grace in mind | |
Of what you promised me. | |
RICHARD Well, but what's o'clock? | |
BUCKINGHAM Upon the stroke of ten. | |
RICHARD Well, let it strike. | |
BUCKINGHAM Why let it strike? | |
RICHARD | |
Because that, like a jack, thou keep'st the stroke | |
Betwixt thy begging and my meditation. | |
I am not in the giving vein today. | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
Why then, resolve me whether you will or no. | |
RICHARD | |
Thou troublest me; I am not in the vein. | |
[He exits, and is followed by all but Buckingham.] | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
And is it thus? Repays he my deep service | |
With such contempt? Made I him king for this? | |
O, let me think on Hastings and be gone | |
To Brecknock, while my fearful head is on! | |
[He exits.] | |
Scene 3 | |
======= | |
[Enter Tyrrel.] | |
TYRREL | |
The tyrannous and bloody act is done, | |
The most arch deed of piteous massacre | |
That ever yet this land was guilty of. | |
Dighton and Forrest, who I did suborn | |
To do this piece of ruthless butchery, | |
Albeit they were fleshed villains, bloody dogs, | |
Melted with tenderness and mild compassion, | |
Wept like two children in their deaths' sad story. | |
"O thus," quoth Dighton, "lay the gentle babes." | |
"Thus, thus," quoth Forrest, "girdling one another | |
Within their alabaster innocent arms. | |
Their lips were four red roses on a stalk, | |
And in their summer beauty kissed 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 stopped; | |
When Dighton thus told on: "We smothered | |
The most replenished sweet work of nature | |
That from the prime creation e'er she framed." | |
Hence both are gone with conscience and remorse; | |
They could not speak; and so I left them both | |
To bear this tidings to the bloody king. | |
[Enter Richard.] | |
And here he comes.--All health, my sovereign lord. | |
RICHARD | |
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. | |
RICHARD But did'st thou see them dead? | |
TYRREL | |
I did, my lord. | |
RICHARD And buried, gentle Tyrrel? | |
TYRREL | |
The chaplain of the Tower hath buried them, | |
But where, to say the truth, I do not know. | |
RICHARD | |
Come to me, Tyrrel, soon at after-supper, | |
When 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 then. | |
TYRREL I humbly take my leave. | |
[Tyrrel exits.] | |
RICHARD | |
The son of Clarence have I pent up close, | |
His daughter meanly have I matched in marriage, | |
The sons of Edward sleep in Abraham's bosom, | |
And Anne my wife hath bid this world goodnight. | |
Now, for I know the Breton Richmond aims | |
At young Elizabeth, my brother's daughter, | |
And by that knot looks proudly on the crown, | |
To her go I, a jolly thriving wooer. | |
[Enter Ratcliffe.] | |
RATCLIFFE My lord. | |
RICHARD | |
Good or bad news, that thou com'st in so bluntly? | |
RATCLIFFE | |
Bad news, my lord. Morton is fled to Richmond, | |
And Buckingham, backed with the hardy Welshmen, | |
Is in the field, and still his power increaseth. | |
RICHARD | |
Ely with Richmond troubles me more near | |
Than Buckingham and his rash-levied strength. | |
Come, I have learned 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. | |
Go, muster men. My counsel is my shield. | |
We must be brief when traitors brave the field. | |
[They exit.] | |
Scene 4 | |
======= | |
[Enter old Queen Margaret.] | |
QUEEN MARGARET | |
So now prosperity begins to mellow | |
And drop into the rotten mouth of death. | |
Here in these confines slyly have I lurked | |
To watch the waning of mine enemies. | |
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? [She steps aside.] | |
[Enter Duchess of York and Queen Elizabeth.] | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
Ah, my poor princes! Ah, my tender babes, | |
My unblown flowers, new-appearing sweets, | |
If yet your gentle souls fly in the air | |
And be not fixed in doom perpetual, | |
Hover about me with your airy wings | |
And hear your mother's lamentation. | |
QUEEN MARGARET, [aside] | |
Hover about her; say that right for right | |
Hath dimmed your infant morn to aged night. | |
DUCHESS | |
So many miseries have crazed my voice | |
That my woe-wearied tongue is still and mute. | |
Edward Plantagenet, why art thou dead? | |
QUEEN MARGARET, [aside] | |
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, [aside] | |
When holy Harry died, and my sweet son. | |
DUCHESS, [to Queen Elizabeth] | |
Dead life, blind sight, poor mortal living ghost, | |
Woe's scene, world's shame, grave's due by life | |
usurped, | |
Brief abstract and record of tedious days, | |
Rest thy unrest on England's lawful earth, | |
Unlawfully made drunk with innocent blood. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH, [as they both sit down] | |
Ah, that thou wouldst as soon afford a grave | |
As thou canst yield a melancholy seat, | |
Then would I hide my bones, not rest them here. | |
Ah, who hath any cause to mourn but we? | |
QUEEN MARGARET, [coming forward] | |
If ancient sorrow be most reverend, | |
Give mine the benefit of seigniory, | |
And let my griefs frown on the upper hand. | |
If sorrow can admit society, | |
Tell over your woes again by viewing mine. | |
I had an Edward till a Richard killed him; | |
I had a husband till a Richard killed him. | |
Thou hadst an Edward till a Richard killed him; | |
Thou hadst a Richard till a Richard killed him. | |
DUCHESS | |
I had a Richard too, and thou did'st kill him; | |
I had a Rutland too; thou holp'st to kill him. | |
QUEEN MARGARET | |
Thou hadst a Clarence too, and Richard killed him. | |
From forth the kennel of thy womb hath crept | |
A hellhound 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 excellent grand tyrant of the Earth, | |
That reigns in galled eyes of weeping souls; | |
That foul defacer of God's handiwork | |
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, [standing] | |
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 killed my Edward, | |
Thy other Edward dead, to quit my Edward; | |
Young York, he is but boot, because both they | |
Matched not the high perfection of my loss. | |
Thy Clarence he is dead that stabbed my Edward, | |
And the beholders of this frantic play, | |
Th' adulterate Hastings, Rivers, Vaughan, Grey, | |
Untimely smothered 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 conveyed from hence. | |
Cancel his bond of life, dear God I pray, | |
That I may live and say "The dog is dead." | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH, [standing] | |
O, thou didst prophesy the time would come | |
That I should wish for thee to help me curse | |
That bottled spider, that foul bunch-backed toad! | |
QUEEN MARGARET | |
I called thee then "vain flourish of my fortune." | |
I called 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 hurled down below, | |
A mother only mocked with two fair babes, | |
A dream of what thou wast, a garish flag | |
To be the aim of every dangerous shot, | |
A sign of dignity, a breath, a bubble, | |
A queen in jest, only to fill the scene. | |
Where is thy husband now? Where be thy brothers? | |
Where are thy two sons? Wherein dost thou joy? | |
Who sues and kneels and says "God save the | |
Queen?" | |
Where be the bending peers that flattered thee? | |
Where be the thronging troops that followed 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 one being sued to, one that humbly sues; | |
For queen, a very caitiff crowned with care; | |
For she that scorned at me, now scorned of me; | |
For she being feared of all, now fearing one; | |
For she commanding all, obeyed of none. | |
Thus hath the course of justice whirled about | |
And left thee but a very prey to time, | |
Having no more but thought of what thou wast | |
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 burdened yoke, | |
From which even here I slip my weary head | |
And leave the burden of it all on thee. | |
Farewell, York's wife, and queen of sad mischance. | |
These English woes shall make me smile in France. | |
[She begins to exit.] | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
O, thou well-skilled 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 sweeter 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. [Margaret exits.] | |
DUCHESS | |
Why should calamity be full of words? | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
Windy attorneys to their clients' woes, | |
Airy succeeders of intestate joys, | |
Poor breathing orators of miseries, | |
Let them have scope; though what they will impart | |
Help nothing else, yet do they ease the heart. | |
DUCHESS | |
If so, then be not tongue-tied. Go with me, | |
And in the breath of bitter words let's smother | |
My damned son that thy two sweet sons smothered. | |
[A trumpet sounds.] | |
[The trumpet sounds.] Be copious in exclaims. | |
[Enter King Richard and his train, including Catesby.] | |
RICHARD | |
Who intercepts me in my expedition? | |
DUCHESS | |
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, [to Richard] | |
Hid'st thou that forehead with a golden crown | |
Where should be branded, if that right were right, | |
The slaughter of the prince that owed that crown | |
And the dire death of my poor sons and brothers? | |
Tell me, thou villain-slave, where are my children? | |
DUCHESS, [to Richard] | |
Thou toad, thou toad, where is thy brother Clarence, | |
And little Ned Plantagenet his son? | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH, [to Richard] | |
Where is the gentle Rivers, Vaughan, Grey? | |
DUCHESS, [to Richard] Where is kind Hastings? | |
RICHARD | |
A flourish, trumpets! Strike alarum, drums! | |
Let not the heavens hear these telltale women | |
Rail on the Lord's anointed. Strike, I say! | |
[Flourish. Alarums.] | |
Either be patient and entreat me fair, | |
Or with the clamorous report of war | |
Thus will I drown your exclamations. | |
DUCHESS Art thou my son? | |
RICHARD | |
Ay, I thank God, my father, and yourself. | |
DUCHESS | |
Then patiently hear my impatience. | |
RICHARD | |
Madam, I have a touch of your condition, | |
That cannot brook the accent of reproof. | |
DUCHESS | |
O, let me speak! | |
RICHARD Do then, but I'll not hear. | |
DUCHESS | |
I will be mild and gentle in my words. | |
RICHARD | |
And brief, good mother, for I am in haste. | |
DUCHESS | |
Art thou so hasty? I have stayed for thee, | |
God knows, in torment and in agony. | |
RICHARD | |
And came I not at last to comfort you? | |
DUCHESS | |
No, by the Holy Rood, thou know'st it well. | |
Thou cam'st on Earth to make the Earth my hell. | |
A grievous burden was thy birth to me; | |
Tetchy and wayward was thy infancy; | |
Thy school days frightful, desp'rate, wild, and | |
furious; | |
Thy prime of manhood daring, bold, and venturous; | |
Thy age confirmed, proud, subtle, sly, and bloody, | |
More mild, but yet more harmful, kind in hatred. | |
What comfortable hour canst thou name, | |
That ever graced me with thy company? | |
RICHARD | |
Faith, none but Humfrey Hower, that called your | |
Grace | |
To breakfast once, forth of my company. | |
If I be so disgracious in your eye, | |
Let me march on and not offend you, madam.-- | |
Strike up the drum. | |
DUCHESS I prithee, hear me speak. | |
RICHARD | |
You speak too bitterly. | |
DUCHESS Hear me a word, | |
For I shall never speak to thee again. | |
RICHARD So. | |
DUCHESS | |
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 nevermore behold thy face again. | |
Therefore take with thee my most grievous curse, | |
Which in the day of battle tire thee more | |
Than all the complete armor 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. | |
[She exits.] | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
Though far more cause, yet much less spirit to | |
curse | |
Abides in me. I say amen to her. | |
RICHARD | |
Stay, madam. I must talk a word with you. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
I have no more sons of the royal blood | |
For thee to slaughter. For my daughters, Richard, | |
They shall be praying nuns, not weeping queens, | |
And therefore level not to hit their lives. | |
RICHARD | |
You have a daughter called 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 unscarred of bleeding slaughter, | |
I will confess she was not Edward's daughter. | |
RICHARD | |
Wrong not her birth. She is a royal princess. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
To save her life, I'll say she is not so. | |
RICHARD | |
Her life is safest only in her birth. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
And only in that safety died her brothers. | |
RICHARD | |
Lo, at their birth good stars were opposite. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
No, to their lives ill friends were contrary. | |
RICHARD | |
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 blessed thee with a fairer life. | |
RICHARD | |
You speak as if that I had slain my cousins. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
Cousins, indeed, and by their uncle cozened | |
Of comfort, kingdom, kindred, freedom, life. | |
Whose hand soever launched their tender hearts, | |
Thy head, all indirectly, gave direction. | |
No doubt the murd'rous 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 anchored in thine eyes, | |
And I, in such a desp'rate bay of death, | |
Like a poor bark of sails and tackling reft, | |
Rush all to pieces on thy rocky bosom. | |
RICHARD | |
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 by me were harmed! | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
What good is covered with the face of heaven, | |
To be discovered, that can do me good? | |
RICHARD | |
Th' advancement of your children, gentle lady. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
Up to some scaffold, there to lose their heads. | |
RICHARD | |
Unto the dignity and height of fortune, | |
The high imperial type of this Earth's glory. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
Flatter my sorrow with report of it. | |
Tell me what state, what dignity, what honor, | |
Canst thou demise to any child of mine? | |
RICHARD | |
Even all I have--ay, 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 the process of thy kindness | |
Last longer telling than thy kindness' date. | |
RICHARD | |
Then know that from my soul I love thy daughter. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
My daughter's mother thinks it with her soul. | |
RICHARD 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. | |
RICHARD | |
Be not so hasty to confound my meaning. | |
I mean that with my soul I love thy daughter | |
And do intend to make her Queen of England. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
Well then, who dost thou mean shall be her king? | |
RICHARD | |
Even he that makes her queen. Who else should be? | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
What, thou? | |
RICHARD Even so. How think you of it? | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
How canst thou woo her? | |
RICHARD That would I learn of you, | |
As one being best acquainted with her humor. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH And wilt thou learn of me? | |
RICHARD 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 will she weep. | |
Therefore present to her--as sometime Margaret | |
Did to thy father, steeped in Rutland's blood-- | |
A handkerchief, which say to her did drain | |
The purple sap from her sweet brother's body, | |
And bid her wipe her weeping eyes withal. | |
If this inducement move her not to love, | |
Send her a letter of thy noble deeds; | |
Tell her thou mad'st away her uncle Clarence, | |
Her uncle Rivers, ay, and for her sake | |
Mad'st quick conveyance with her good aunt Anne. | |
RICHARD | |
You mock me, madam. This is not the way | |
To win your 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. | |
RICHARD | |
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. | |
RICHARD | |
Look what is done cannot be now amended. | |
Men shall deal unadvisedly sometimes, | |
Which after-hours gives leisure to repent. | |
If I did take the kingdom from your sons, | |
To make amends I'll give it to your daughter. | |
If I have killed 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 metal, of your very blood, | |
Of all 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 | |
Repaired 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, transformed to orient pearl, | |
Advantaging their love 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 th' 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-brained 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 victoress, 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 honor, and her love | |
Can make seem pleasing to her tender years? | |
RICHARD | |
Infer fair England's peace by this alliance. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
Which she shall purchase with still-lasting war. | |
RICHARD | |
Tell her the King, that may command, entreats-- | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
That, at her hands, which the King's King forbids. | |
RICHARD | |
Say she shall be a high and mighty queen. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
To vail the title, as her mother doth. | |
RICHARD | |
Say I will love her everlastingly. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
But how long shall that title "ever" last? | |
RICHARD | |
Sweetly in force unto her fair life's end. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
But how long fairly shall her sweet life last? | |
RICHARD | |
As long as heaven and nature lengthens it. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
As long as hell and Richard likes of it. | |
RICHARD | |
Say I, her sovereign, am her subject low. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
But she, your subject, loathes such sovereignty. | |
RICHARD | |
Be eloquent in my behalf to her. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
An honest tale speeds best being plainly told. | |
RICHARD | |
Then plainly to her tell my loving tale. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
Plain and not honest is too harsh a style. | |
RICHARD | |
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 graves. | |
RICHARD | |
Harp not on that string, madam; that is past. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
Harp on it still shall I till heart-strings break. | |
RICHARD | |
Now by my George, my Garter, and my crown-- | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
Profaned, dishonored, and the third usurped. | |
RICHARD | |
I swear-- | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH By nothing, for this is no oath. | |
Thy George, profaned, hath lost his lordly honor; | |
Thy Garter, blemished, pawned his knightly virtue; | |
Thy crown, usurped, disgraced his kingly glory. | |
If something thou wouldst swear to be believed, | |
Swear then by something that thou hast not | |
wronged. | |
RICHARD | |
Then, by myself-- | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH Thyself is self-misused. | |
RICHARD | |
Now, by the world-- | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH 'Tis full of thy foul wrongs. | |
RICHARD | |
My father's death-- | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH Thy life hath it dishonored. | |
RICHARD | |
Why then, by God. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH God's wrong is most of all. | |
If thou didst fear to break an oath with Him, | |
The unity the King my husband made | |
Thou hadst not broken, nor my brothers died. | |
If thou hadst feared to break an oath by Him, | |
Th' imperial metal circling now thy head | |
Had graced the tender temples of my child, | |
And both the Princes had been breathing here, | |
Which now, two tender bedfellows for dust, | |
Thy broken faith hath made the prey for worms. | |
What canst thou swear by now? | |
RICHARD 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 wronged by thee. | |
The children live whose fathers thou hast | |
slaughtered, | |
Ungoverned youth, to wail it in their age; | |
The parents live whose children thou hast | |
butchered, | |
Old barren plants, to wail it with their age. | |
Swear not by time to come, for that thou hast | |
Misused ere used, by times ill-used o'erpast. | |
RICHARD | |
As I intend to prosper and repent, | |
So thrive I in my dangerous affairs | |
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 proceeding if, with dear 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 myself and thee, | |
Herself, the land, 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, dear mother--I must call 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 found in great designs. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
Shall I be tempted of the devil thus? | |
RICHARD | |
Ay, if the devil tempt you to do good. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
Shall I forget myself to be myself? | |
RICHARD | |
Ay, if your self's remembrance wrong yourself. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH Yet thou didst kill my children. | |
RICHARD | |
But in your daughter's womb I bury them, | |
Where, in that nest of spicery, they will breed | |
Selves of themselves, to your recomforture. | |
QUEEN ELIZABETH | |
Shall I go win my daughter to thy will? | |
RICHARD | |
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. | |
RICHARD | |
Bear her my true love's kiss; and so, farewell. | |
[Queen exits.] | |
Relenting fool and shallow, changing woman! | |
[Enter Ratcliffe.] | |
How now, what news? | |
RATCLIFFE | |
Most mighty sovereign, on the western coast | |
Rideth a puissant navy. To our shores | |
Throng many doubtful hollow-hearted friends, | |
Unarmed 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. | |
RICHARD | |
Some light-foot friend post to the Duke of | |
Norfolk-- | |
Ratcliffe thyself, or Catesby. Where is he? | |
CATESBY | |
Here, my good lord. | |
RICHARD Catesby, fly to the Duke. | |
CATESBY | |
I will, my lord, with all convenient haste. | |
RICHARD | |
Ratcliffe, come hither. Post to Salisbury.When thou com'st thither--[To Catesby.] Dull, | |
unmindful villain, | |
Why stay'st thou here and go'st not to the Duke? | |
CATESBY | |
First, mighty liege, tell me your Highness' pleasure, | |
What from your Grace I shall deliver to him. | |
RICHARD | |
O true, good Catesby. Bid him levy straight | |
The greatest strength and power that he can make | |
And meet me suddenly at Salisbury. | |
CATESBY I go. [He exits.] | |
RATCLIFFE | |
What, may it please you, shall I do at Salisbury? | |
RICHARD | |
Why, what wouldst thou do there before I go? | |
RATCLIFFE | |
Your Highness told me I should post before. | |
RICHARD | |
My mind is changed. | |
[Enter Lord Stanley.] | |
Stanley, what news with you? | |
STANLEY | |
None good, my liege, to please you with the hearing, | |
Nor none so bad but well may be reported. | |
RICHARD | |
Hoyday, a riddle! Neither good nor bad. | |
What need'st thou run so many miles about | |
When thou mayst tell thy tale the nearest way? | |
Once more, what news? | |
STANLEY Richmond is on the seas. | |
RICHARD | |
There let him sink, and be the seas on him! | |
White-livered runagate, what doth he there? | |
STANLEY | |
I know not, mighty sovereign, but by guess. | |
RICHARD Well, as you guess? | |
STANLEY | |
Stirred up by Dorset, Buckingham, and Morton, | |
He makes for England, here to claim the crown. | |
RICHARD | |
Is the chair empty? Is the sword unswayed? | |
Is the King dead, the empire unpossessed? | |
What heir of York is there alive but we? | |
And who is England's king but great York's heir? | |
Then tell me, what makes he upon the seas? | |
STANLEY | |
Unless for that, my liege, I cannot guess. | |
RICHARD | |
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, my good lord. Therefore mistrust me not. | |
RICHARD | |
Where is thy power, then, to beat him back? | |
Where be 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. | |
RICHARD | |
Cold friends to me. What do they in the north | |
When they should serve their sovereign in the west? | |
STANLEY | |
They have not been commanded, mighty king. | |
Pleaseth your Majesty to give me leave, | |
I'll muster up my friends and meet your Grace | |
Where and what time your Majesty shall please. | |
RICHARD | |
Ay, thou wouldst be gone to join with Richmond, | |
But I'll not trust thee. | |
STANLEY Most mighty sovereign, | |
You have no cause to hold my friendship doubtful. | |
I never was nor never will be false. | |
RICHARD | |
Go then and muster men, but leave behind | |
Your son George Stanley. Look your heart be firm, | |
Or else his head's assurance is but frail. | |
STANLEY | |
So deal with him as I prove true to you. | |
[Stanley exits.] | |
[Enter a Messenger.] | |
FIRST 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 elder brother, | |
With many more confederates are in arms. | |
[Enter another Messenger.] | |
SECOND MESSENGER | |
In Kent, my liege, the Guilfords are in arms, | |
And every hour more competitors | |
Flock to the rebels, and their power grows strong. | |
[Enter another Messenger.] | |
THIRD MESSENGER | |
My lord, the army of great Buckingham-- | |
RICHARD | |
Out on you, owls! Nothing but songs of death. | |
[He striketh him.] | |
There, take thou that till thou bring 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 scattered, | |
And he himself wandered away alone, | |
No man knows whither. | |
RICHARD I cry thee mercy. | |
There is my purse to cure that blow of thine. | |
[He gives money.] | |
Hath any well-advised friend proclaimed | |
Reward to him that brings the traitor in? | |
THIRD MESSENGER | |
Such proclamation hath been made, my lord. | |
[Enter another Messenger.] | |
FOURTH MESSENGER | |
Sir Thomas Lovell and Lord Marquess Dorset, | |
'Tis said, my liege, in Yorkshire are in arms. | |
But this good comfort bring I to your Highness: | |
The Breton navy is dispersed by tempest. | |
Richmond, in Dorsetshire, sent out a boat | |
Unto the shore to ask those on the banks | |
If they were his assistants, yea, or no-- | |
Who answered him they came from Buckingham | |
Upon his party. He, mistrusting them, | |
Hoised sail and made his course again for Brittany. | |
RICHARD | |
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. | |
[Enter Catesby.] | |
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. | |
RICHARD | |
Away towards Salisbury! While we reason here, | |
A royal battle might be won and lost. | |
Someone take order Buckingham be brought | |
To Salisbury. The rest march on with me. | |
[Flourish. They exit.] | |
Scene 5 | |
======= | |
[Enter Stanley, Earl of Derby, and Sir Christopher.] | |
STANLEY | |
Sir Christopher, tell Richmond this from me: | |
That in the sty of the most deadly boar | |
My son George Stanley is franked up in hold; | |
If I revolt, off goes young George's head; | |
The fear of that holds off my present aid. | |
So get thee gone. Commend me to thy lord. | |
Withal, say that the Queen hath heartily consented | |
He should espouse Elizabeth her daughter. | |
But tell me, where is princely Richmond now? | |
CHRISTOPHER | |
At Pembroke, or at Ha'rfordwest in Wales. | |
STANLEY 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 other of great name and worth; | |
And towards London do they bend their power, | |
If by the way they be not fought withal. | |
STANLEY, [giving Sir Christopher a paper] | |
Well, hie thee to thy lord. I kiss his hand. | |
My letter will resolve him of my mind. | |
Farewell. | |
[They exit.] | |
ACT 5 | |
===== | |
Scene 1 | |
======= | |
[Enter Buckingham, with Sheriff and Halberds, led to | |
execution.] | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
Will not King Richard let me speak with him? | |
SHERIFF | |
No, my good lord. Therefore be patient. | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
Hastings and Edward's children, Grey and Rivers, | |
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, fellow, is it not? | |
SHERIFF It is. | |
BUCKINGHAM | |
Why, then, All Souls' Day is my body's doomsday. | |
This is the day which, in King Edward's time, | |
I wished might fall on me when I was found | |
False to his children and his wife's allies. | |
This is the day wherein I wished to fall | |
By the false faith of him whom most I trusted. | |
This, this All Souls' Day to my fearful soul | |
Is the determined respite of my wrongs. | |
That high All-seer which I dallied with | |
Hath turned my feigned prayer on my head | |
And given in earnest what I begged in jest. | |
Thus doth he force the swords of wicked men | |
To turn their own points in their masters' bosoms. | |
Thus Margaret's curse falls heavy on my neck: | |
"When he," quoth she, "shall split thy heart with | |
sorrow, | |
Remember Margaret was a prophetess."-- | |
Come, lead me, officers, to the block of shame. | |
Wrong hath but wrong, and blame the due of blame. | |
[Buckingham exits with Officers.] | |
Scene 2 | |
======= | |
[Enter Richmond, Oxford, Blunt, Herbert, and others, | |
with Drum and Colors.] | |
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 marched on without impediment, | |
And here receive we from our father Stanley | |
Lines of fair comfort and encouragement. | |
The wretched, bloody, and usurping boar, | |
That spoiled your summer fields and fruitful vines, | |
Swills your warm blood like wash, and makes his | |
trough | |
In your embowelled bosoms--this foul swine | |
Is now even in the center 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 men | |
To fight against this guilty homicide. | |
HERBERT | |
I doubt not but his friends will turn to us. | |
BLUNT | |
He hath no friends but what are friends for fear, | |
Which in his dearest need will fly 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. | |
[All exit.] | |
Scene 3 | |
======= | |
[Enter King Richard, in arms, with Norfolk, Ratcliffe, and | |
the Earl of Surrey, with Soldiers.] | |
RICHARD | |
Here pitch our tent, even here in Bosworth field. | |
[Soldiers begin to pitch the tent.] | |
My lord of Surrey, why look you so sad? | |
SURREY | |
My heart is ten times lighter than my looks. | |
RICHARD | |
My lord of Norfolk-- | |
NORFOLK Here, most gracious liege. | |
RICHARD | |
Norfolk, we must have knocks, ha, must we not? | |
NORFOLK | |
We must both give and take, my loving lord. | |
RICHARD | |
Up with my tent!--Here will I lie tonight. | |
But where tomorrow? Well, all's one for that. | |
Who hath descried the number of the traitors? | |
NORFOLK | |
Six or seven thousand is their utmost power. | |
RICHARD | |
Why, our battalia trebles that account. | |
Besides, the King's name is a tower of strength | |
Which they upon the adverse faction want.-- | |
Up with the tent!--Come, noble gentlemen, | |
Let us survey the vantage of the ground. | |
Call for some men of sound direction; | |
Let's lack no discipline, make no delay, | |
For, lords, tomorrow is a busy day. | |
[The tent now in place, they exit.] | |
[Enter Richmond, Sir William Brandon, Oxford, | |
Dorset, Herbert, Blunt, and others who set up | |
Richmond's tent.] | |
RICHMOND | |
The weary sun hath made a golden set, | |
And by the bright track of his fiery car | |
Gives token of a goodly day tomorrow.-- | |
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 power.-- | |
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 goodnight to him, | |
And by the second hour in the morning | |
Desire the Earl to see me in my tent. | |
Yet one thing more, good captain, do for me. | |
Where is Lord Stanley quartered, do you know? | |
BLUNT | |
Unless I have mista'en his colors 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, | |
Sweet Blunt, make some good means to speak with | |
him, | |
And give him from me this most needful note. | |
[He gives a paper.] | |
BLUNT | |
Upon my life, my lord, I'll undertake it, | |
And so God give you quiet rest tonight. | |
RICHMOND | |
Good night, good Captain Blunt. [Blunt exits.] | |
Come, gentlemen, | |
Let us consult upon tomorrow's business. | |
Into my tent. The dew is raw and cold. | |
[Richmond, Brandon, Dorset, Herbert, and Oxford | |
withdraw into the tent. The others exit.] | |
[Enter to his tent Richard, Ratcliffe, Norfolk, and | |
Catesby, with Soldiers.] | |
RICHARD What is 't o'clock? | |
CATESBY | |
It's suppertime, my lord. It's nine o'clock. | |
RICHARD | |
I will not sup tonight. Give me some ink and paper. | |
What, is my beaver easier than it was, | |
And all my armor laid into my tent? | |
CATESBY | |
It is, my liege, and all things are in readiness. | |
RICHARD | |
Good Norfolk, hie thee to thy charge. | |
Use careful watch. Choose trusty sentinels. | |
NORFOLK I go, my lord. | |
RICHARD | |
Stir with the lark tomorrow, gentle Norfolk. | |
NORFOLK I warrant you, my lord. [He exits.] | |
RICHARD Catesby. | |
CATESBY My lord. | |
RICHARD 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. [Catesby exits.] | |
[To Soldiers.] Fill me a bowl of wine. Give me a | |
watch. | |
Saddle white Surrey for the field tomorrow. | |
Look that my staves be sound and not too heavy.-- | |
Ratcliffe. | |
RATCLIFFE My lord. | |
RICHARD | |
Sawst thou the melancholy Lord Northumberland? | |
RATCLIFFE | |
Thomas the Earl of Surrey and himself, | |
Much about cockshut time, from troop to troop | |
Went through the army cheering up the soldiers. | |
RICHARD | |
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. | |
[Wine is brought.] | |
Set it down. Is ink and paper ready? | |
RATCLIFFE | |
It is, my lord. | |
RICHARD Bid my guard watch. Leave me. | |
Ratcliffe, about the mid of night come to my tent | |
And help to arm me. Leave me, I say. | |
[Ratcliffe exits. Richard sleeps in his tent, | |
which is guarded by Soldiers.] | |
[Enter Stanley, Earl of Derby to Richmond in his tent.] | |
STANLEY | |
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? | |
STANLEY | |
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 arbitrament | |
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-sundered 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 tomorrow | |
When I should mount with wings of victory. | |
Once more, good night, kind lords and gentlemen. | |
[All but Richmond leave his tent and exit.] | |
[Richmond kneels.] | |
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! [Sleeps.] | |
[Enter the Ghost of young Prince Edward, son to Harry | |
the Sixth.] | |
GHOST OF EDWARD, [to Richard] | |
Let me sit heavy on thy soul tomorrow. | |
Think how thou stabbed'st me in my prime of | |
youth | |
At Tewkesbury. Despair therefore, and die! | |
[(To Richmond.)] Be cheerful, Richmond, for the | |
wronged souls | |
Of butchered princes fight in thy behalf. | |
King Henry's issue, Richmond, comforts thee. | |
[He exits.] | |
[Enter the Ghost of Henry the Sixth.] | |
GHOST OF HENRY, [to Richard] | |
When I was mortal, my anointed body | |
By thee was punched full of deadly holes. | |
Think on the Tower and me. Despair and die! | |
Harry the Sixth bids thee despair and die. | |
[(To Richmond.)] Virtuous and holy, be thou conqueror. | |
Harry, that prophesied thou shouldst be king, | |
Doth comfort thee in thy sleep. Live and flourish. | |
[He exits.] | |
[Enter the Ghost of Clarence.] | |
GHOST OF CLARENCE, [to Richard] | |
Let me sit heavy in thy soul tomorrow, | |
I, that was washed to death with fulsome wine, | |
Poor Clarence, by thy guile betrayed to death. | |
Tomorrow in the battle think on me, | |
And fall thy edgeless sword. Despair and die! | |
[(To Richmond.)] Thou offspring of the house of | |
Lancaster, | |
The wronged heirs of York do pray for thee. | |
Good angels guard thy battle. Live and flourish. | |
[He exits.] | |
[Enter the Ghosts of Rivers, Grey, and Vaughan.] | |
GHOST OF RIVERS, [to Richard] | |
Let me sit heavy in thy soul tomorrow, | |
Rivers, that died at Pomfret. Despair and die! | |
GHOST OF GREY, [to Richard] | |
Think upon Grey, and let thy soul despair! | |
GHOST OF VAUGHAN, [to Richard] | |
Think upon Vaughan, and with guilty fear | |
Let fall thy lance. Despair and die! | |
ALL, [to Richmond] | |
Awake, and think our wrongs in Richard's bosom | |
Will conquer him. Awake, and win the day. | |
[They exit.] | |
[Enter the Ghosts of the two young Princes.] | |
GHOSTS OF PRINCES, [to Richard] | |
Dream on thy cousins smothered in the Tower. | |
Let us be lead within thy bosom, Richard, | |
And weigh thee down to ruin, shame, and death. | |
Thy nephews' souls bid thee despair and die. | |
[(To Richmond.)] Sleep, Richmond, sleep in peace | |
and wake in joy. | |
Good angels guard thee from the boar's annoy. | |
Live, and beget a happy race of kings. | |
Edward's unhappy sons do bid thee flourish. | |
[They exit.] | |
[Enter the Ghost of Hastings.] | |
GHOST OF HASTINGS, [to Richard] | |
Bloody and guilty, guiltily awake, | |
And in a bloody battle end thy days. | |
Think on Lord Hastings. Despair and die! | |
[(To Richmond.)] Quiet, untroubled soul, awake, awake. | |
Arm, fight, and conquer for fair England's sake. | |
[He exits.] | |
[Enter the Ghost of Lady Anne his wife.] | |
GHOST OF ANNE, [to Richard] | |
Richard, thy wife, that wretched Anne thy wife, | |
That never slept a quiet hour with thee, | |
Now fills thy sleep with perturbations. | |
Tomorrow, in the battle, think on me, | |
And fall thy edgeless sword. Despair and die! | |
[(To Richmond.)] Thou quiet soul, sleep thou a quiet | |
sleep. | |
Dream of success and happy victory. | |
Thy adversary's wife doth pray for thee. [She exits.] | |
[Enter the Ghost of Buckingham.] | |
GHOST OF BUCKINGHAM, [to Richard] | |
The first was I that helped thee to the crown; | |
The last was I that felt thy tyranny. | |
O, in the battle think on Buckingham, | |
And die in terror of thy guiltiness. | |
Dream on, dream on, of bloody deeds and death. | |
Fainting, despair; despairing, yield thy breath. | |
[(To Richmond.)] I died for hope ere I could lend | |
thee aid, | |
But cheer thy heart, and be thou not dismayed. | |
God and good angels fight on Richmond's side, | |
And Richard fall in height of all his pride. | |
[He exits.] | |
[Richard starteth up out of a dream.] | |
RICHARD | |
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 highest degree; | |
Murder, stern 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 will pity me. | |
And wherefore should they, since that I myself | |
Find in myself no pity to myself? | |
Methought the souls of all that I had murdered | |
Came to my tent, and every one did threat | |
Tomorrow's vengeance on the head of Richard. | |
[Enter Ratcliffe.] | |
RATCLIFFE My lord. | |
RICHARD Zounds, who is there? | |
RATCLIFFE | |
Ratcliffe, my lord, 'tis I. The early village cock | |
Hath twice done salutation to the morn. | |
Your friends are up and buckle on their armor. | |
RICHARD | |
O Ratcliffe, I have dreamed a fearful dream! | |
What think'st thou, will our friends prove all true? | |
RATCLIFFE | |
No doubt, my lord. | |
RICHARD O Ratcliffe, I fear, I fear. | |
RATCLIFFE | |
Nay, good my lord, be not afraid of shadows. | |
RICHARD | |
By the apostle Paul, shadows tonight | |
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. | |
'Tis not yet near day. Come, go with me. | |
Under our tents I'll play the eavesdropper | |
To see if any mean to shrink from me. | |
[Richard and Ratcliffe exit.] | |
[Enter the Lords to Richmond, in his tent.] | |
LORDS Good morrow, Richmond. | |
RICHMOND | |
Cry mercy, lords and watchful gentlemen, | |
That you have ta'en a tardy sluggard here. | |
A LORD How have you slept, my lord? | |
RICHMOND | |
The sweetest sleep and fairest-boding dreams | |
That ever entered in a drowsy head | |
Have I since your departure had, my lords. | |
Methought their souls whose bodies Richard | |
murdered | |
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? | |
A LORD Upon the stroke of four. | |
RICHMOND, [leaving the tent] | |
Why, then 'tis time to arm and give direction. | |
His oration to his soldiers. | |
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-reared 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 established; | |
One that made means to come by what he hath, | |
And slaughtered those that were the means to help | |
him; | |
A base 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 quits 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! | |
[They exit.] | |
[Enter King Richard, Ratcliffe, and Soldiers.] | |
RICHARD | |
What said Northumberland as touching Richmond? | |
RATCLIFFE | |
That he was never trained up in arms. | |
RICHARD | |
He said the truth. And what said Surrey then? | |
RATCLIFFE | |
He smiled and said "The better for our purpose." | |
RICHARD | |
He was in the right, and so indeed it is. | |
[The clock striketh.] | |
Tell the clock there. Give me a calendar. | |
[He looks in an almanac.] | |
Who saw the sun today? | |
RATCLIFFE Not I, my lord. | |
RICHARD | |
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. | |
Ratcliffe! | |
RATCLIFFE | |
My lord. | |
RICHARD The sun will not be seen today. | |
The sky doth frown and lour upon our army. | |
I would these dewy tears were from the ground. | |
Not shine today? Why, what is that to me | |
More than to Richmond, for the selfsame heaven | |
That frowns on me looks sadly upon him. | |
[Enter Norfolk.] | |
NORFOLK | |
Arm, arm, my lord. The foe vaunts in the field. | |
RICHARD | |
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. | |
[He sheweth him a paper.] | |
This found I on my tent this morning. | |
RICHARD [reads] | |
Jockey of Norfolk, be not so bold. | |
For Dickon thy master is bought and sold. | |
A thing devised by the enemy.-- | |
Go, gentlemen, every man unto his charge. | |
Let not our babbling dreams affright our souls. | |
Conscience is but a word that cowards use, | |
Devised at first to keep the strong in awe. | |
Our strong arms be our conscience, swords our law. | |
March on. Join bravely. Let us to it pell mell, | |
If not to heaven, then hand in hand to hell. | |
His oration to his army. | |
What shall I say more than I have inferred? | |
Remember whom you are to cope withal, | |
A sort of vagabonds, rascals, and runaways, | |
A scum of Bretons and base lackey peasants, | |
Whom their o'ercloyed country vomits forth | |
To desperate adventures and assured destruction. | |
You sleeping safe, they bring to you unrest; | |
You having lands and blessed with beauteous wives, | |
They would restrain the one, distain the other. | |
And who doth lead them but a paltry fellow, | |
Long kept in Brittany at our mother's cost, | |
A milksop, one that never in his life | |
Felt so much cold as overshoes in snow? | |
Let's whip these stragglers o'er the seas again, | |
Lash hence these overweening rags of France, | |
These famished beggars weary of their lives, | |
Who, but for dreaming on this fond exploit, | |
For want of means, poor rats, had hanged | |
themselves. | |
If we be conquered, let men conquer us, | |
And not these bastard Bretons, whom our fathers | |
Have in their own land beaten, bobbed, and | |
thumped, | |
And in record left them the heirs of shame. | |
Shall these enjoy our lands, lie with our wives, | |
Ravish our daughters? [Drum afar off.] | |
Hark, I hear their drum. | |
Fight, gentlemen of England.--Fight, bold | |
yeomen.-- | |
Draw, archers; draw your arrows to the head.-- | |
Spur your proud horses hard, and ride in blood. | |
Amaze the welkin with your broken staves.-- | |
[Enter a Messenger.] | |
What says Lord Stanley? Will he bring his power? | |
MESSENGER My lord, he doth deny to come. | |
RICHARD Off with his son George's head! | |
NORFOLK | |
My lord, the enemy is past the marsh. | |
After the battle let George Stanley die. | |
RICHARD | |
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. | |
[They exit.] | |
Scene 4 | |
======= | |
[Alarum. Excursions. Enter Norfolk, with Soldiers, and | |
Catesby.] | |
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. | |
[Norfolk exits with Soldiers.] | |
[Alarums. Enter Richard.] | |
RICHARD | |
A horse, a horse, my kingdom for a horse! | |
CATESBY | |
Withdraw, my lord. I'll help you to a horse. | |
RICHARD | |
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 today instead of him. | |
A horse, a horse, my kingdom for a horse! | |
[They exit.] | |
Scene 5 | |
======= | |
[Alarum. Enter Richard and Richmond. They fight. | |
Richard is slain. Then retreat being sounded, Richmond | |
exits, and Richard's body is removed. Flourish. Enter | |
Richmond, Stanley, Earl of Derby, bearing the crown, | |
with other Lords, and Soldiers.] | |
RICHMOND | |
God and your arms be praised, victorious friends! | |
The day is ours; the bloody dog is dead. | |
STANLEY, [offering him the crown] | |
Courageous Richmond, well hast thou acquit thee. | |
Lo, here this long-usurped royalty | |
From the dead temples of this bloody wretch | |
Have I plucked 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? | |
STANLEY | |
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? | |
STANLEY | |
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 frowned upon their enmity. | |
What traitor hears me and says not "Amen"? | |
England hath long been mad and scarred herself: | |
The brother blindly shed the brother's blood; | |
The father rashly slaughtered his own son; | |
The son, compelled, 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 stopped, peace lives again. | |
That she may long live here, God say amen. | |
[They exit.] |