Henry VI, Part 3 (Folio 1, 1623)
Not Peer Reviewed
160
The third Part of Henry the Sixt.
¶
Enter a Noble man.
1640Nob. My gracious Lord, Henry your Foe is taken,
¶And brought your Prisoner to your Pallace Gate.
¶King. See that he be conuey'd vnto the Tower:
¶And goe wee Brothers to the man that tooke him,
1645Widow goe you along: Lords vse her honourable.
¶
Exeunt._
¶
Manet Richard.
¶Would he were wasted, Marrow, Bones, and all,
1650That from his Loynes no hopefull Branch may spring,
¶And yet, betweene my Soules desire, and me,
¶The lustfull Edwards Title buryed,
¶Is Clarence, Henry, and his Sonne young Edward,
¶To take their Roomes, ere I can place my selfe:
¶A cold premeditation for my purpose.
¶Why then I doe but dreame on Soueraigntie,
¶Like one that stands vpon a Promontorie,
¶Wishing his foot were equall with his eye,
¶And chides the Sea, that sunders him from thence,
¶Saying, hee'le lade it dry, to haue his way:
1665And so I chide the meanes that keepes me from it,
¶My Eyes too quicke, my Heart o're-weenes too much,
1670Well, say there is no Kingdome then for Richard:
¶What other Pleasure can the World affoord?
¶Ile make my Heauen in a Ladies Lappe,
¶And decke my Body in gay Ornaments,
¶And 'witch sweet Ladies with my Words and Lookes.
1675Oh miserable Thought! and more vnlikely,
¶Then to accomplish twentie Golden Crownes.
¶Why Loue forswore me in my Mothers Wombe:
¶Shee did corrupt frayle Nature with some Bribe,
1680To shrinke mine Arme vp like a wither'd Shrub,
¶To make an enuious Mountaine on my Back,
¶Where sits Deformitie to mocke my Body;
¶To dis-proportion me in euery part:
1685Like to a Chaos, or an vn-lick'd Beare-whelpe,
¶And am I then a man to be belou'd?
¶Then since this Earth affoords no Ioy to me,
1690But to command, to check, to o're-beare such,
¶Ile make my Heauen, to dreame vpon the Crowne,
¶And whiles I liue, t'account this World but Hell,
¶Vntill my mis-shap'd Trunke, that beares this Head,
1695Be round impaled with a glorious Crowne.
¶And yet I know not how to get the Crowne,
¶For many Liues stand betweene me and home:
¶And I, like one lost in a Thornie Wood,
¶That rents the Thornes, and is rent with the Thornes,
1700Seeking a way, and straying from the way,
¶Not knowing how to finde the open Ayre,
¶But toyling desperately to finde it out,
¶And from that torment I will free my selfe,
1705Or hew my way out with a bloody Axe.
¶And cry, Content, to that which grieues my Heart,
¶And wet my Cheekes with artificiall Teares,
¶And frame my Face to all occasions.
1710Ile drowne more Saylers then the Mermaid shall,
¶Ile play the Orator as well as Nestor,
¶And like a Synon, take another Troy.
1715I can adde Colours to the Camelion,
¶Change shapes with Proteus, for aduantages,
¶And set the murtherous Macheuill to Schoole.
¶Can I doe this, and cannot get a Crowne?
¶Tut, were it farther off, Ile plucke it downe.
Exit.
1720
Flourish.
¶
Enter Lewis the French King, his Sister Bona, his
¶
Lewis sits, and riseth vp againe.
1725Lewis. Faire Queene of England, worthy Margaret,
¶Sit downe with vs: it ill befits thy State,
¶Marg. No, mightie King of France: now Margaret
¶Great Albions Queene, in former Golden dayes:
¶But now mischance hath trod my Title downe,
¶And with dis-honor layd me on the ground,
¶Where I must take like Seat vnto my fortune,
1735And to my humble Seat conforme my selfe.
¶deepe despaire?
¶And stops my tongue, while heart is drown'd in cares.
¶Yeeld not thy necke to Fortunes yoake,
¶Ouer all mischance.
1745Be plaine, Queene Margaret, and tell thy griefe,
¶It shall be eas'd, if France can yeeld reliefe.
¶Reuiue my drooping thoughts,
1750Now therefore be it knowne to Noble Lewis,
¶Is, of a King, become a banisht man,
¶And forc'd to liue in Scotland a Forlorne;
¶While prowd ambitious Edward, Duke of Yorke,
1755Vsurpes the Regall Title, and the Seat
¶Of Englands true anoynted lawfull King.
¶This is the cause that I, poore Margaret,
¶With this my Sonne, Prince Edward, Henries Heire,
¶Am come to craue thy iust and lawfull ayde:
1760And if thou faile vs, all our hope is done.
¶Scotland hath will to helpe, but cannot helpe:
Our
