A Yorkshire Tragedy (Third Folio, 1664)
Not Peer Reviewed
A York-Shire Tragedy.
81
¶
Enter his Wife brought in a Chair,
715band, now in the hands of unrelenting laws, my greatest
¶ Hus. How now? kind to me? did not I wound
¶thee, leave thee for dead?
¶You have been still unkind to me.
¶I did my murders roughly out of hand,
725A fine way now to kill me, thou hast given mine eyes
¶Seaven wounds apiece; now glides the devil from
¶Me, departs at every joint, heaves up my nails.
¶Oh catch him new torments, that were nere invented:
¶To make men act unnatural Tragedies,
¶To spread into a Father, and in fury,
¶Make him his childrens executioners,
¶Murder his wife, his servants, and who not?
735For that man's dark, where heaven is quite forgot.
¶For death I die, and for this have I long'd.
740Die, if the law could forgive as soon as I.
¶
Children laid out.
¶ Wife. Oh our two bleeding boyes
¶Laid forth upon the threshold.
¶Oh were it lawfull that your pretty souls
¶Might look from heaven into your fathers eyes,
¶And both your murders shoot upon my cheeks,
750But you are playing in the Angels laps,
¶And will not look on me,
¶Who void of grace, kill'd you in beggery.
¶Oh that I might my wishes now attain,
755Though I did beg with you, which thing I fear'd,
¶Oh 'twas the enemy my eyes so blear'd.
¶Oh would you could pray heaven me to forgive,
¶That will unto my end repentant live.
760And leave part with this.
¶ Officer. Come, will you go?
¶Farewell dear Wife, now thou and I must part,
765I of thy wrongs, repent me with my heart.
¶Farewell ye bloudy ashes of my boyes,
¶My punishments are their eternal joyes.
770Let every father look well into his deeds,
¶And then their heirs may prosper, while mine bleeds.
¶
Exeunt Husband with Officers.
¶Then former sorrows made me.
775 Mr. Oh kind Wife, be comforted,
¶One joy is yet unmurdered,
¶you have a boy at nurse, your joy's in him.
¶Heaven give my body strength, which is yet faint
780With much expence of bloud, and I will kneel,
¶Sue for his life, number up all my friends,
¶To plead for pardon for my dear husbandls life.
¶I shall bring news weighes heavier then the debt.
¶Two Brothers; the one in bond lies overthrown,
¶This, on a deadlier execution.
¶
FINIS.
F[1r]
