Richard II (Folio 1, 1623)
Peer Reviewed
44
The Life and Death of Richard the Second.
2635Dut. O happy vantage of a kneeling knee:
¶Yet am I sicke for feare: Speake it againe,
¶Twice saying Pardon, doth not pardon twaine,
¶But makes one pardon strong.
¶Bul. I pardon him with all my hart.
2640Dut. A God on earth thou art.
¶Good Vnckle helpe to order seuerall powres
2645To Oxford, or where ere these Traitors are:
¶But I will haue them, if I once know where.
¶Vnckle farewell, and Cosin adieu:
¶Your mother well hath praid, and proue you true.
¶
Exeunt.
¶
Enter Exton and Seruants.
2655Haue I no friend will rid me of this liuing feare:
¶Was it not so?
¶And vrg'd it twice together, did he not?
2660Ser. He did.
¶That would diuorce this terror from my heart,
¶Meaning the King at Pomfret: Come, let's goe;
2665I am the Kings Friend, and will rid his Foe.
Exit.
¶
Scæna Quarta.
¶
Enter Richard.
¶This Prison where I liue, vnto the World:
2670And for because the world is populous,
¶And heere is not a Creature, but my selfe,
¶I cannot do it: yet Ile hammer't out.
¶My Braine, Ile proue the Female to my Soule,
¶My Soule, the Father: and these two beget
2675A generation of still breeding Thoughts;
¶In humors, like the people of this world,
¶For no thought is contented. The better sort,
¶As thoughts of things Diuine, are intermixt
¶Against the Faith: as thus: Come litle ones: & then again,
¶It is as hard to come, as for a Camell
¶To thred the posterne of a Needles eye.
¶Thoughts tending to Ambition, they do plot
2685Vnlikely wonders; how these vaine weake nailes
¶Of this hard world, my ragged prison walles:
¶And for they cannot, dye in their owne pride.
¶Thoughts tending to Content, flatter themselues,
¶And in this Thought, they finde a kind of ease,
2695Bearing their owne misfortune on the backe
¶Of such as haue before indur'd the like.
¶Thus play I in one Prison, many people,
¶And none contented. Sometimes am I King;
¶Perswades me, I was better when a King:
¶Then am I king'd againe: and by and by,
¶Thinke that I am vn-king'd by Bullingbrooke,
2705Nor I, nor any man, that but man is,
¶With nothing shall be pleas'd, till he be eas'd
¶With being nothing. Musicke do I heare?
¶When Time is broke, and no Proportion kept?
2710So is it in the Musicke of mens liues:
¶But for the Concord of my State and Time,
¶Had not an eare to heare my true Time broke.
¶For now hath Time made me his numbring clocke;
¶My Thoughts, are minutes; and with Sighes they iarre,
¶Their watches on vnto mine eyes, the outward Watch,
¶Whereto my finger, like a Dialls point,
¶Are clamorous groanes, that strike vpon my heart,
¶Which is the bell: so Sighes, and Teares, and Grones,
¶Shew Minutes, Houres, and Times: but my Time
2725Runs poasting on, in Bullingbrookes proud ioy,
¶While I stand fooling heere, his iacke o'th' Clocke.
¶For though it haue holpe madmen to their wits,
¶For 'tis a signe of loue, and loue to Richard,
¶Is a strange Brooch, in this all-hating world.
¶
Enter Groome.
¶Groo. Haile Royall Prince.
2735Rich. Thankes Noble Peere,
¶The cheapest of vs, is ten groates too deere.
¶What art thou? And how com'st thou hither?
¶Where no man euer comes, but that sad dogge
¶That brings me food, to make misfortune liue?
2740Groo. I was a poore Groome of thy Stable (King)
¶When thou wer't King: who trauelling towards Yorke,
¶With much adoo, at length haue gotten leaue
¶O how it yern'd my heart, when I beheld
2745In London streets, that Coronation day,
¶When Bullingbrooke rode on Roane Barbary,
¶Rich. Rode he on Barbary? Tell me gentle Friend,
2750How went he vnder him?
¶Rich. So proud, that Bullingbrooke was on his backe;
¶That Iade hath eate bread from my Royall hand.
¶This hand hath made him proud with clapping him.
2755Would he not stumble? Would he not fall downe
¶(Since Pride must haue a fall) and breake the necke
¶Of that proud man, that did vsurpe his backe?
¶Since thou created to be aw'd by man
2760Was't borne to beare? I was not made a horse,
And
