Henry IV, Part 2 (Quarto 1, 1598).
Not Peer Reviewed
Henry the fourth.
¶And the deuision of our amitie.
¶Figuring the natures of the times deceast:
1500The which obseru'd, a man may prophecie,
¶With a neere ayme of the maine chance of things,
¶As yet not come to life, who in their seedes,
¶And weake beginning lie intreasured:
¶Such thinges become the hatch and broode of time,
¶That great Northumberland then false to him,
¶Which should not find a ground to roote vpon
¶And that same word euen now cries out on vs:
¶War. It cannot be my Lord,
¶Rumour doth double like the voice, and eccho
¶The numbers of the feared, please it your grace,
¶To go to bedde: vpon my soule, my Lord,
1520The Powers that you alreadie haue sent foorth,
¶To comfort you the more, I haue receiued,
¶A certain instance that Glendour is dead:
¶Your Maiestie hath beene this fortnight ill,
¶And were these inward warres once out of hand,
¶We would (deare Lords) vnto the holy land.
exeunt
¶
Enter Iustice Shallow, and Iustice
Silence.
E5
Shal.
