Henry VI, Part 3 (Folio 1, 1623)
Not Peer Reviewed
¶
Enter Henry the sixt, and Richard, with the Lieutenant
¶on the Walles.
3075hard?
¶Tis sinne to flatter, Good was little better:
¶'Good Gloster, and good Deuill, were alike,
¶And both preposterous: therefore, not Good Lord.
¶And next his Throate, vnto the Butchers Knife.
¶The Theefe doth feare each bush an Officer,
3090Haue now the fatall Obiect in my eye,
¶Where my poore yong was lim'd, was caught, and kill'd.
¶That taught his Sonne the office of a Fowle,
¶And yet for all his wings, the Foole was drown'd.
3095Hen. I Dedalus, my poore Boy Icarus,
¶Thy Father Minos, that deni'de our course,
¶Thy Brother Edward, and thy Selfe, the Sea
3100Ah, kill me with thy Weapon, not with words,
¶My brest can better brooke thy Daggers point,
¶Then can my eares that Tragicke History.
¶But wherefore dost thou come? Is't for my Life?
¶If murthering Innocents be Executing,
¶Why then thou art an Executioner.
3110Thou had'st not liu'd to kill a Sonne of mine:
¶And many an old mans sighe, and many a Widdowes,
¶And many an Orphans water-standing-eye,
3115Men for their Sonnes, Wiues for their Husbands,
¶Orphans, for their Parents timeles death,
¶Shall rue the houre that euer thou was't borne.
¶The Rauen rook'd her on the Chimnies top,
¶Thy Mother felt more then a Mothers paine,
3125To wit, an indigested and deformed lumpe,
¶Not like the fruit of such a goodly Tree.
¶Teeth had'st thou in thy head, when thou was't borne,
¶And if the rest be true, which I haue heard,
3130Thou cam'st----
¶Rich. Ile heare no more:
3135O God forgiue my sinnes, and pardon thee.
Dyes.
¶Sinke in the ground? I thought it would haue mounted.
¶See how my sword weepes for the poore Kings death.
¶If any sparke of Life be yet remaining,
¶
Stabs him againe._
¶I that haue neyther pitty, loue, nor feare,
3145Indeed 'tis true that Henrie told me of:
¶For I haue often heard my Mother say,
¶I came into the world with my Legges forward.
3150The Midwife wonder'd, and the Women cri'de
3155Let Hell make crook'd my Minde to answer it.
¶I haue no Brother, I am like no Brother:
¶And this word (Loue) which Gray-beards call Diuine,
¶Be resident in men like one another,
¶And not in me: I am my selfe alone.
3160Clarence beware, thou keept'st me from the Light,
¶But I will sort a pitchy day for thee:
¶That Edward shall be fearefull of his life,
¶And then to purge his feare, Ile be thy death.
3165King Henry, and the Prince his Son are gone,
¶Clarence thy turne is next, and then the rest,
¶Ile throw thy body in another roome,
¶And Triumph Henry, in thy day of Doome.
Exit.
