Richard II (Folio 1, 1623)
Peer Reviewed
¶
Scena Secunda.
1360
Enter Richard, Aumerle, Carlile, and Souldiers.
¶Au. Yea, my Lord: how brooks your Grace the ayre,
1365To stand vpon my Kingdome once againe.
¶Deere Earth, I doe salute thee with my hand,
¶Though Rebels wound thee with their Horses hoofes:
¶As a long parted Mother with her Child,
¶Playes fondly with her teares, and smiles in meeting;
1370So weeping, smiling, greet I thee my Earth,
¶And doe thee fauor with my Royall hands.
¶Feed not thy Soueraignes Foe, my gentle Earth,
¶Nor with thy Sweetes, comfort his rauenous sence:
¶But let thy Spiders, that suck vp thy Venome,
1375And heauie-gated Toades lye in their way,
¶Doing annoyance to the trecherous feete,
¶Yeeld stinging Nettles to mine Enemies;
¶And when they from thy Bosome pluck a Flower,
1380Guard it I prethee with a lurking Adder,
¶Whose double tongue may with a mortall touch
¶Throw death vpon thy Soueraignes Enemies.
1385Proue armed Souldiers, ere her Natiue King
¶Shall falter vnder foule Rebellious Armes.
¶Car. Feare not my Lord, that Power that made you King
¶Hath power to keepe you King, in spight of all.
¶That when the searching Eye of Heauen is hid
¶Behind the Globe, that lights the lower World,
1395Then Theeues and Robbers raunge abroad vnseene,
¶In Murthers and in Out-rage bloody here:
¶But when from vnder this Terrestriall Ball
¶He fires the prowd tops of the Easterne Pines,
¶And darts his Lightning through eu'ry guiltie hole,
¶(The Cloake of Night being pluckt from off their backs)
¶So when this Theefe, this Traytor Bullingbrooke,
¶Who all this while hath reuell'd in the Night,
¶Not able to endure the sight of Day;
¶Not all the Water in the rough rude Sea
1410Can wash the Balme from an anoynted King;
¶The breath of worldly men cannot depose
¶The Deputie elected by the Lord:
¶For euery man that Bullingbrooke hath prest,
1415Heauen for his Richard hath in heauenly pay
¶A glorious Angell: then if Angels fight,
¶
Enter Salisbury.
¶Welcome my Lord, how farre off lyes your Power?
1420Salisb. Nor neere, nor farther off, my gracious Lord,
¶Then this weake arme; discomfort guides my tongue,
¶One day too late, I feare (my Noble Lord)
¶Hath clouded all thy happie dayes on Earth:
1425Oh call backe Yesterday, bid Time returne,
¶To day, to day, vnhappie day too late
¶Orethrowes thy Ioyes, Friends, Fortune, and thy State;
¶For all the Welchmen hearing thou wert dead,
¶pale?
¶Did triumph in my face, and they are fled,
1435And till so much blood thither come againe,
¶Haue I not reason to looke pale, and dead?
¶For Time hath set a blot vpon my pride.
¶Aum. Comfort my Liege, remember who you are.
¶Is not the Kings Name fortie thousand Names?
¶At thy great glory. Looke not to the ground,
1445Ye Fauorites of a King: are wee not high?
¶High be our thoughts: I know my Vnckle Yorke
¶But who comes here?
Enter Scroope.
1450Then can my care-tun'd tongue deliuer him.
¶Rich. Mine eare is open, and my heart prepar'd:
¶Say, Is my Kingdome lost? why 'twas my Care:
1455Striues Bullingbrooke to be as Great as wee?
¶Reuolt our Subiects? That we cannot mend,
¶They breake their Faith to God, as well as vs:
¶The worst is Death, and Death will haue his day.
¶To beare the tidings of Calamitie.
1465Which make the Siluer Riuers drowne their Shores,
¶So high, aboue his Limits, swells the Rage
¶Of Bullingbrooke, couering your fearefull Land
¶With hard bright Steele, and hearts harder then Steele:
¶Striue to speake bigge, and clap their female ioints
¶Thy very Beads-men learne to bend their Bowes
1475Of double fatall Eugh: against thy State
¶Against thy Seat both young and old rebell,
¶And all goes worse then I haue power to tell.
1480Where is the Earle of Wiltshire? where is Bagot?
¶What is become of Bushie? where is Greene?
¶That they haue let the dangerous Enemie
¶If we preuaile, their heads shall pay for it.
1485I warrant they haue made peace with Bullingbrooke.
¶Scroope. Peace haue they made with him indeede (my
¶Lord.)
¶Rich. Oh Villains, Vipers, damn'd without redemption,
¶Dogges, easily woon to fawne on any man,
1490Snakes in my heart blood warm'd, that sting my heart,
¶Would they make peace? terrible Hell make warre
¶Vpon their spotted Soules for this Offence.
¶Againe vncurse their Soules; their peace is made
¶And lye full low, grau'd in the hollow ground.
¶dead?
¶Aum. Where is the Duke my Father with his Power?
1505Let's talke of Graues, of Wormes, and Epitaphs,
¶Make Dust our Paper, and with Raynie eyes
¶Write Sorrow on the Bosome of the Earth.
¶Let's chuse Executors, and talke of Wills:
¶And yet not so; for what can we bequeath,
1510Saue our deposed bodies to the ground?
¶Our Lands, our Liues, and all are Bullingbrookes,
¶And nothing can we call our owne, but Death,
¶And that small Modell of the barren Earth,
¶Some haunted by the Ghosts they haue depos'd,
1520All murther'd. For within the hollow Crowne
¶That rounds the mortall Temples of a King,
¶Keepes Death his Court, and there the Antique sits
¶Scoffing his State, and grinning at his Pompe,
¶Allowing him a breath, a little Scene,
1525To Monarchize, be fear'd, and kill with lookes,
¶As if this Flesh, which walls about our Life,
¶Comes at the last, and with a little Pinne
1530Bores through his Castle Walls, and farwell King.
¶Couer your heads, and mock not flesh and blood
¶Tradition, Forme, and Ceremonious dutie,
¶For you haue but mistooke me all this while:
1535I liue with Bread like you, feele Want,
¶How can you say to me, I am a King?
¶But presently preuent the wayes to waile:
¶And fight and die, is death destroying death,
¶Where fearing, dying, payes death seruile breath.
1545Aum. My Father hath a Power, enquire of him,
¶And learne to make a Body of a Limbe.
¶To change Blowes with thee, for our day of Doome:
¶This ague fit of feare is ouer-blowne,
¶Say Scroope, where lyes our Vnckle with his Power?
¶Scroope. Men iudge by the complexion of the Skie
¶The state and inclination of the day;
1555So may you by my dull and heauie Eye:
¶My Tongue hath but a heauier Tale to say:
¶Your Vnckle Yorke is ioyn'd with Bullingbrooke,
1560And all your Northerne Castles yeelded vp,
¶And all your Southerne Gentlemen in Armes
¶Vpon his Faction.
¶By Heauen Ile hate him euerlastingly,
¶That bids me be of comfort any more.
¶Goe to Flint Castle, there Ile pine away,
¶That Power I haue, discharge, and let 'em goe
¶To eare the Land, that hath some hope to grow,
¶For I haue none. Let no man speake againe
¶To alter this, for counsaile is but vaine.
1575Aum. My Liege, one word.
¶Rich. He does me double wrong,
¶That wounds me with the flatteries of his tongue.
¶Discharge my followers: let them hence away,
¶From Richards Night, to Bullingbrookes faire Day.
1580
Exeunt.
