Richard the Third (Quarto 1, 1597)
Peer Reviewed
THE TRAGEDY OF
King Richard the third.
Containing,
His treacherous Plots against his brother Clarence: the pittiefull murther of his iunocent nephewes: his tyrannicall vsurpation: with the whole course of his detested life, and most deserued death.
As it hath beene lately Acted by the
Right honourable the Lord Chamber-
laine his seruants.
AT LONDON
¶Printed by Valentine Sims, for Andrew Wise,
dwelling in Paules Chuch-yard, at the
Signe of the Angell.
1597.
¶
¶NOw is the winter of our discontent,
Enter Richard Duke of Glocester solus.
5And all the cloudes that lowrd vpon our house,
¶In the deepe bosome of the Ocean buried.
¶Now are our browes bound with victorious wreathes,
¶Our bruised armes hung vp for monuments,
¶Our sterne alarmes changd to merry meetings,
10Our dreadfull marches to delightfull measures.
¶He capers nimbly in a Ladies chamber,
¶To strut before a wanton ambling Nymph:
20I that am curtaild of this faire proportion,
¶Into this breathing world scarce halfe made vp,
25That dogs barke at me as I halt by them:
¶Why I in this weake piping time of peace
¶And descant on mine owne deformity:
30And therefore since I cannot prooue a louer
¶I am determined to prooue a villaine,
¶Plots haue I laid inductious dangerous,
35By drunken Prophesies, libels and dreames,
¶To set my brother Clarence and the King
¶In deadly hate the one against the other.
¶And if King Edward be as true and iust,
¶About a Prophecy which saies that G.
¶Of Edwards heires the murtherers shall be.
Heere Clarence comes,
45Brother, good dayes, what meanes this armed gard
¶That waites vpon your grace?
¶ po nted
This conduct to conuay me to the tower.
¶Glo. Alacke my Lord that fault is none of yours,
¶He should for that commit your Godfathers:
55But vvhats the matter Clarence may I know?
¶As yet I doe not, but as I can learne,
¶He harkens after Prophecies and dreames,
¶And for my name of George begins with G,
¶It followes in his thought that I am he.
65Haue moued his highnes to commit me now.
¶Glo. Why this it is when men are rulde by women,
¶Tis not the King that sends you to the tower,
¶My Lady Gray his wife, Clarence tis she,
¶That tempers him to this extremity,
¶Anthony Wooduile her brother there,
¶From whence this present day he is deliuered?
¶But the Queenes kindred and night-walking Heralds,
¶Heard ye not what an humble suppliant
¶Lord Hastings was to her for his deliuery.
80Glo. Humbly complaining to her deity,
¶Got my Lord Chamberlaine his liberty.
¶Ile tell you what, I thinke it is our way,
¶If we will keepe in fauour with the King,
¶To be her men and weare her liuery.
85The iealous oreworne widdow and her selfe,
¶Since that our brother dubd them gentlewomen,
¶Are mighty gossips in this monarchy.
90That no man shall haue priuate conference,
¶Of what degree soeuer with his brother.
¶You may pertake of any thing we say:
95Is wise and vertuous, and his noble Queene
¶Well stroke in yeres, faire and not iealous.
¶We say that Shores wife hath a prety foote,
¶And that the Queenes kindred are made gentlefolks.
¶He that doth naught with her, excepting one
110Your conference with the noble Duke.
¶Cla. We know thy charge Brokenbury and will obey,
¶Brother farewell, I will vnto the King,
¶And whatsoeuer you will imploy me in,
¶I will performe it to enfranchise you,
¶Meane time this deepe disgrace in brotherhood,
¶Touches me deeper then you can imagine.
¶I will deliuer you or lie for you,
¶Meane time haue patience.
125Simple plaine Clarence I doe loue thee so,
¶If heauen will take the present at our hands:
¶But who comes here the new deliuered hastings?
130Hast. Good time of day vnto my gratious Lord:
¶Glo. As much vnto my good Lord Chamberlaine:
¶Well are you welcome to the open aire,
135But I shall liue my Lord to giue them thankes
¶For they that were your enemies are his,
¶And haue preuaild as much on him as you.
¶Glo. What newes abroad?
¶The King is sickly, weake and melancholy,
¶Glo. Now by Saint Paul this newes is bad indeede,
¶Oh he hath kept an euill diet long,
¶Tis very grieuous to be thought vpon:
150What is he in his bed?
¶Hast. He is.
¶He cannot liue I hope, and must not die,
¶Ile in to vrge his hatred more to Clarence,
¶With lies well steeld with weighty arguments,
¶And if I faile not in my deepe intent,
¶Clarence hath not an other day to liue
160Which done, God take King Edward to his mercy,
¶For then Ile marry Warwicks yongest daughter:
¶What though I kild her husband and her father,
¶The readiest way to make the wench amends,
165Is to become her husband and her father:
¶The which will I, not all so much for loue,
¶By marrying her which I must reach vnto.
¶But yet I run before my horse to market:
¶When they are gone then must I count my gaines.
Exit.
¶
Enter Lady Anne with the hearse of Harry the 6.
¶The vntimely fall of vertuous Lancaster:
¶Poore kei-cold figure of a holy King,
¶Be it lawfull that I inuocate thy ghost,
¶To heare the lamentations of poore Anne,
¶Lo in those windowes that let foorth thy life,
¶Curst be the heart that had the heart to doe it.
¶More direfull hap betide that hated wretch,
¶That makes vs wretched by the death of thee:
¶Or any creeping venomde thing that liues.
195If euer he haue child abortiue be it,
¶Prodigious and vntimely brought to light:
¶May fright the hopefull mother at the view.
200If euer he haue wife, let her be made
¶As miserable by the death of him,
¶As I am made by my poore Lord and thee.
¶Come now towards Chertsey with your holy loade,
¶Taken from Paules to be interred there:
205And still as you are weary of the waight,
¶La. What blacke magitian coniures vp this fiend,
¶Aduance thy halbert higher than my brest,
¶Or by Saint Paul Ile strike thee to my foote,
¶And spurne vpon thee begger for thy boldnes.
¶La. What doe you tremble, are you all afraid?
220Alas, I blame you not, for you are mortall,
¶And mortall eies cannot endure the diuell.
¶Auaunt thou dreadfull minister of hell,
¶Thou hadst but power ouer his mortall body,
¶For thou hast made the happy earth thy hell:
¶Fild it with cursing cries and deepe exclaimes.
230If thou delight to view thy hainous deedes,
¶Behold this patterne of thy butcheries.
¶Open their congeald mouthes and bleede a fresh.
235For tis thy presence that exhales this bloud,
¶From cold and empty veines where no bloud dwells.
¶Thy deed inhumane and vnnaturall,
¶Prouokes this deluge most vnnaturall.
¶Oh God which this bloud madest, reuenge his death,
240Oh earth which this bloud drinkst, reuenge his death:
¶Either heauen with lightning strike the murtherer dead,
¶Or earth gape open wide and eate him quicke.
¶Which his hell-gouernd arme hath butchered.
245Glo. Lady you know no rules of charity,
¶Voutsafe deuine perfection of a woman,
¶For these knowne euils but to giue me leaue,
¶Glo. Fairer then tongue can name thee, let me haue
265For doing worthy vengeance on thy selfe,
¶La. Why then they are not dead,
270Glo. I did not kill your husband.
¶La. Why then he is aliue.
275Thy bloudy faulchion smoking in his bloud,
¶But that thy brothers beat aside the point.
¶Which neuer dreamt on ought but butcheries,
¶Didst thou not kill this King.
Glo.I grant yea.
¶Thou maiest be damnd for that wicked deede,
¶Oh he was gentle, milde, and vertuous.
¶Glo. The fitter for the King of Heauen that hath him.
¶For he was fitter for that place then earth,
¶La. And thou vnfit for any place but hell.
¶Glo. Yes one place els if you will heare me name it.
¶Glo. So will it Madame till I lie with you.
¶To leaue this keen incounter of our wits,
¶Is not the causer of the timeles deaths,
¶Of these Plantagenets Henry and Edward,
305As blamefull as the executioner.
¶Your beauty which did haunt me in my sleepe:
¶To vndertake the death of all the world
¶La. If I thought that I tell thee homicide,
315As all the world is cheered by the sonne,
¶So I by that, it is my day, my life.
320La. I would I were to be reuenged on thee.
¶To be reuengd on him that loueth you.
¶To be reuengd on him that slew my husband.
325Glo. He that bereft thee Lady of thy husband,
¶Did it to helpe thee to a better husband.
¶La. His better doth not breath vpon the earth.
¶Glo. Go to, he liues that loues you better then he could.
¶La. Why that was hee.
¶Glo. Heere.
¶Glo. I would they were that I might die at once,
¶For now they kill me with a liuing death:
¶I neuer sued to friend nor enemy,
360But now thy beauty is proposde my fee:
365If thy reuengefull heart cannot forgiue,
¶And let the soule forth that adoreth thee:
¶I laie it naked to the deadly stroke,
370And humbly beg the death vpon my knee.
¶Nay, doe not pawse, twas I that kild your husband,
¶But twas thy beauty that prouoked me:
¶Nay now dispatch twas I that kild King Henry:
¶Take vp the sword againe or take vp me.
¶I will not be the executioner.
¶La. I haue already.
¶Speake it againe, and euen with the word,
¶That hand which for thy loue did kill thy loue,
385Shall for thy loue, kill a farre truer loue:
¶La. I would I knew thy heart.
¶Glo. Tis figured in my tongue.
390Glo. Then neuer was man true.
¶Glo. Say then my peace is made.
396.1La. To take is not to giue.
¶Weare both of them for both of them are thine,
400And if thy poore deuoted suppliant may
¶But beg one fauour at thy gratious hand,
¶La. What is it?
405To him that hath more cause to be a mourner,
¶And presently repaire to Crosbie place,
¶Where after I haue solemnly interred
¶And wet his graue with my repentant teares,
410I will with all expedient dutie see you:
¶Grant me this boone.
¶La. With all my heart, and much it ioies me too,
415Tressi}ll and Barkley go along with me.
¶Glo. Bid me farewell.
¶But since you teach me how to flatter you,
¶Imagine I haue said farewell already.
Exit.
¶Glo. No, to white Friers there attend my comming.
425Was euer woman in this humor wonne:
¶Ile haue her, but I will not keepe her long.
¶What I that kild her husband and his father,
¶To take her in her hearts extreamest hate:
¶With curses in her mouth, teares in her eies,
¶And I nothing to backe my suite at all,
¶And yet to win her all the world to nothing. Hah
¶Hath she forgot already that braue Prince
¶Stabd in my angry moode at Tewxbery,
¶A sweeter and a louelier gentleman,
440Framd in the prodigality of nature:
¶Young, valiant, wise, and no doubt right royall,
¶The spacious world cannot againe affoord:
¶That cropt the golden prime of this sweete Prince,
445And made her widdow to a wofull bed,
¶On me whose all not equals Edwards moity,
¶On me that halt, and am vnshapen thus.
¶My Dukedome to a beggerly denier.
450Vpon my life she findes, although I cannot
¶My selfe, to be a merueilous proper man.
455Since I am crept in fauour with my selfe,
¶But first Ile turne yon fellow in his graue,
¶And then returne lamenting to my loue.
Exit.
¶
Enter Queene, Lord Riuers, Gray.
¶Therefore for Gods sake entertaine good comfort,
¶And cheere his grace quick and mery words,
¶Qu. If he were dead what would betide of me.
¶To be your comforter when he is gone.
475Qu. Oh he is young, and his minority
¶A man that loues not me nor none of you.
¶Qu. It is determinde, not concluded yet,
( Enter Buck. Darby
¶Gr. Here come the Lords of Buckingham and Darby.
¶Buck. Good time of day vnto your royall grace.
¶I hate not you for her proud arrogance.
¶Beare with her weakenes which I thinke proceedes
495Ry. Saw you the King to day, my Lo: of Darby?
¶Dar. But now the Duke of Buckingham and I
¶Qu. With likelihood of his amendment Lords?
500Qu. God grant him health, did you confer with him.
¶Betwixt the Duke of Glocester and your brothers,
¶And betwixt them and my Lord chamberlaine,
505Qu. Would all were well, but that will neuer be.
¶I feare our happines is at the highest.
Enter Glocester.
¶Glo. They doe me wrong and I will not endure it,
¶Who are they that complaines vnto the King,
¶By holy Paul they loue his grace but lightly,
¶Smile in mens faces, smoothe, dcceiue and cog,
¶I must be held a rankerous enimy.
¶Cannot a plaine man liue and thinke no harme,
¶When haue I iniured thee, when done thee wrong,
¶Or thee or thee or any of your faction:
¶A plague vpon you all. His royall person
¶Cannot be quiet scarce a breathing while,
¶But you must trouble him with lewd complaints.
¶Ayming belike at your interiour hatred,
¶Makes him to send that thereby he may gather
The ground of your ill will and to remoue it.
¶That wrens make pray where Eagles dare not pearch,
¶Since euery Iacke became a Gentleman:
¶Theres many a gentle person made a Iacke.
¶Qu. Come come, we know your meaning brother Gl.
540You enuy my aduancement and my friends,
¶God graunt we neuer may haue neede of you.
¶Glo. Meane time God grants that we haue neede of you,
¶Our brother is imprisoned by your meanes,
545Held in contempt, whilst many faire promotions,
¶Are daily giuen to enoble those
¶From that contented hap which I enioyd,
¶Against the Duke of Clarence: but haue beene,
¶An earnest aduocate to pleade for him.
¶My Lord you doe me shamefull iniury,
¶Ryu. She may my Lord.
¶She may doe more Sir then denying that:
560She may helpe you to many faire preferments,
¶And then deny her ayding hand therein,
¶Iwis your Grandam had a worser match.
¶Your blunt vpbraidings and your bitter scoffes,
570By heauen I will acquaint his Maiesty
¶I had rather be a countrey seruant maid,
¶Then a great Queene with this condition,
575Small ioy haue I in being Englands Queene.
¶Glo. What? threat you me with telling of the King,
¶I will auouch in presence of the King:
¶Tis time to speake, my paines are quite forgot.
¶Qu. Mar. Out diuell I remember them too well,
¶And Edward my poore sonne at Teuxbery.
¶Glo. Ere you were Queene, yea or your husband King.
590I was a packhorse in his great affaires,
¶A weeder out of his proud aduersaries,
¶A liberall rewarder of his friends:
¶To royalize his bloud I spilt mine owne.
¶Qu. Mar. Yea and much better bloud then his or thine.
¶Glo. In all which time you and your husband Gray,
¶And Ryuers, so were you, was not your husband
¶In Margarets battaile at Saint Albones slaine:
600Let me put in your mindes, if yours forget
¶What you haue beene ere now, and what you are.
¶Withall, what I haue been, and what I am.
¶Glo. To fight on Edwards party for the crowne,
¶And for his meede poore Lo: he is mewed vppe:
¶I would to God my heart were flint like Edwards,
610Or Edwards soft and pittifull like mine,
¶Thou Cacodemon, there thy kingdome is.
615Which here you vrge to proue vs enemies,
¶We followed then our Lo: our lawfull King,
¶Farre be it from my heart the thought of it.
¶You should enioy, were you this countries King,
¶That I enioy being the Queene thereof.
¶Qu. M . A little ioy enioies the Queene thereof,
¶I can no longer hold me patient:
¶Heare me you wrangling Pyrats that fall out,
¶In sharing that which you haue pild from me:
¶Which of you trembles not that lookes on me?
630If not, that I being Queene you bow like subiects,
¶Yet that by you deposde you quake like rebels:
¶O gentle villaine doe not turne away.
635That will I make before I let thee go:
640And thou a kingdome, all of you allegeance:
¶The sorrow that I haue by right is yours,
¶When thou didst crowne his warlike browes with paper,
¶And then to drie them gau'st the Duke a clout,
650And God, not we, hath plagde thy bloudy deede.
¶Ready to catch each other by the throat,
¶And turne you all your hatred now on me?
¶That Henries death my louely Edwards death,
¶Can curses pierce the clouds and enter heauen?
665Why then giue way dull cloudes to my quicke curses:
¶If not, by war, by surfet die your King,
¶As ours by murder to make him a King.
¶Edward thy sonne which now is Prince of Wales,
¶For Edward my sonne which was Prince of Wales,
670Die in his youth by like vntimely violence,
¶Thy selfe a Queene, for me that was a Queene,
¶Outliue thy glory like my wretched selfe:
675Deckt in thy rights, as thou art stald in mine:
¶Long die thy happy daies before thy death,
¶And after many lengthened houres of griefe,
¶Die neither mother, wife, nor Englands Queene:
¶Was stabd with bloudy daggers, god I pray him,
¶That none of you may liue your naturall age,
¶Glo. Haue done thy charme thou hatefull withred hag.
¶If heauen haue any grieuous plague in store,
¶O let them keepe it till thy sinnes be ripe,
¶And then hurle downe their indignation
690On thee the troubler of the poore worlds peace:
¶And take deepe traitors for thy dearest friends:
¶Affrights thee with a hell of vgly diuels.
¶Thou eluish markt abortiue rooting hog,
700Thou slaunder of thy mothers heauy wombe,
¶Thou rag of honour, thou detested, &c.
¶Glo. Margaret.
705Qu. M . I call thee not.
¶Glo. Then I crie thee mercy, for I had thought
¶O Let me make the period to my curse.
710Glo. Tis done by me, and ends in Margaret.
¶Lest to thy harme thou moue our patience.
¶Teach me to be your Queene, and you my subiects:
¶O that your young nobility could iudge,
¶Our aiery buildeth in the Cedars top,
¶Hath in eternall darkenes foulded vp:
¶Your aiery buildeth in our aieries nest,
¶Vncharitably with me haue you dealt,
¶And shamefully by you my hopes are butcherd,
¶My charity is outrage, life my shame,
¶Buck. Haue done.
¶In signe of league and amity with thee:
¶Now faire befall thee and thy Princely house,
755Thy garments are not spotted with our bloud,
¶The lips of those that breath them in the aire.
760And there awake gods gentle sleeping peace.
¶O Buckingham beware of yonder dog,
¶Looke when he fawnes, he bites, and when he bites,
¶His venome tooth will rackle thee to death,
¶Haue not to doe with him, beware of him:
765Sinne, death and hell, haue set their markes on him,
¶And all their ministers attend on him.
¶And sooth the diuell that I warne thee from:
¶O but remember this another day,
775Liue each of you the subiects of his hate,
¶And he to your, and all of you to Gods.
Exit.
¶Glo. I cannot blame her by gods holy mother,
780She hath had too much wrong, and I repent
¶My part thereof that I haue done.
¶Qu. I neuer did her any to my knowledge.
¶Glo. But you haue all the vantage of this wrong.
¶I was too hoat to doe some body good,
785That is too cold in thinking of it now:
¶Marry as for Clarence he is well repaid,
¶He is franckt vp to fatting for his paines,
¶God pardon them that are the cause of it.
790To pray for them that haue done scathe to vs.
¶And for your Grace, and you my noble Lo:
¶Qu Catesby we come, Lords will you go with vs.
¶I lay vnto the grieuous charge of others:
¶Clarence whom I indeed haue laid in darkenes,
¶I doe beweepe to many simple guls:
805Namely to Hastings, Darby, Buckingham,
¶And say it is the Queene and her allies,
¶Now they beleeue me, and withall whet me,
¶To be reuenged on Ryuers, Vaughan, Gray:
¶Tell them that God bids vs doe good for euill:
¶And thus I clothe my naked villany,
¶With old odde ends stolne out of holy writ,
¶Are you now going to dispatch this deede.
¶Execu. We are my Lord, and come to haue the warrant,
820That we may be admitted where he is.
¶Glo. It was well thought vpon, I haue it here about me,
¶When you haue done repaire to Crosby place;
¶Withall, obdurate, doe not heare him pleade,
825For Clarence is well spoken, and perhaps,
¶May, moue your harts to pitty if you marke him.
¶We come to vse our hands, and not our tongues.
¶I like you lads, about your busines.
Exeunt.
¶
Enter Clarence, Brokenbury.
840That as I am a christian faithfull man,
¶Though twere to buy a world of happy daies,
¶Brok. What was your dreame, I long to heare you tell it.
845Cla. Me thoughts I was imbarkt for Burgundy,
¶And in my company my brother Glocester,
¶Who from my cabbine tempted me to walke,
¶Vpon the hatches thence we lookt toward England,
850And cited vp a thousand fearefull times,
¶During the wars of Yorke and Lancaster:
¶That had befallen vs, as we pact along,
¶Vpon the giddy footing of the hatches:
855Stroke me that thought to stay him ouer board,
¶Into the tumbling billowes of the maine.
¶Lord, Lord, me thought what paine it was to drowne,
¶What dreadfull noise of waters in my eares,
¶What vgly sights of death within my eies:
¶Wedges of gold, great anchors, heapes of pearle,
¶Where eies did once inhabite, there were crept
¶As twere in scorne of eies reflecting gems,
¶Which woed the slimy bottome of the deepe,
¶And mockt the dead bones that lay scattered by.
¶To gaze vpon the secrets of the deepe?
¶Kept in my soule, and would not let it foorth,
¶But smothered it within my panting bulke,
¶Cla. O no, my dreame was lengthned after life,
¶Who past me thought the melancholy floud,
¶With that grim ferriman, which Poets write of,
¶Vnto the kingdome of perpetuall night:
885Was my great father in law renowmed Warwicke,
¶Who cried alowd what scourge for periury.
¶Can this darke monarchy affoord false Clarence,
¶A shadow like an angell in bright haire,
890Dabled in bloud, and he squakt out alowd,
¶Clarence is come, false, fleeting, periurd Clarence,
¶That stabd me in the field by Teuxbery:
¶Seaze on him furies, take him to your torments,
¶With that me thoughts a legion of foule fiends
895Enuirond me about, and howled in mine eares
¶Such hideous cries, that with the very noise
¶Could not beleeue but that I was in hell,
900Bro. No marueile my Lo: though it affrighted you,
¶I promise you, I am afraid to heare you tell it.
¶I pray thee gentle keeper stay by me,
¶Makes the night morning, and the noonetide night,
915Princes haue but their titles for their glories,
¶An outward honour, for an inward toile,
¶And for vnfelt imagination,
¶So that betwixt their titles and lowe names,
920Theres nothing differs but the outward fame.
¶
The murtherers enter.
¶In Gods name what are you, and how came you hither?
¶Shew him our commission, talke no more.
He readeth it.
930Bro. I am in this commanded to deliuer
¶The noble Duke of Clarence to your hands,
¶I will not reason what is meant hereby,
¶Because I wilbe guiltles of the meaning:
935Ile to his Maiesty, and certifie his Grace,
¶That thus I haue resignd my charge to you.
When he wakes.
¶2 When he wakes,
Why foole he shall neuer wake till the iudgement day.
¶2 The vrging of that word Iudgement, hath bred
945A kind of remorse in me.
¶1 What art thou afraid.
¶2 Not to kill him hauing a warrant for it, but to be dānd
¶For killing him, from which no warrant can defend vs.
¶Change, twas wont to hold me but while one would tel xx.
¶1 Remember our reward when the deede is done.
9602 Zounds he dies, I had forgot the reward.
¶Thy conscience flies out.
9652 Let it go, theres few or none will entertaine it,
¶1 How if it come to thee againe?
¶2 Ile not meddle with it, it is a dangerous thing,
It makes a man a coward: A man cannot steale,
970He cannot lie with his neighbors wife, but it detects
¶It beggers any man that keepes it: it is turned out of all
975Townes and Citties for a dangerous thing, and euery
¶Man that meanes to liue wel, endeuors to trust to
980Not to kill the Duke.
¶2 Take the diuell in thy minde, and beleeue him not,
983.1I warrant thee.
985Come shall we to this geere.
¶Cla. Where art thou keeper, giue me a cup of wine.
995Cla. In Gods name what art thou.
¶Cla. But not as I am, royall.
¶2 Nor you as we are, loyall.
¶Cla. Thy voice is thunder, but thy lookes are humble.
¶Tell me who are you, wherefore come you hither?
¶Am. To, to, to.
¶And therefore cannot haue the hearts to doe it.
¶Wherein my friends haue I offended you?
10101 Offended vs you haue not, but the King.
¶2 Neuer my Lo: therfore prepare to die.
¶Cla. Are you cald foorth from out a world of men
¶To slay the innocent? what is my offence.
1015Where are the euidence that doe accuse me:
¶What lawfull quest haue giuen their verdict vp
¶Vnto the frowning Iudge, or who pronounst
¶The bitter sentence of poore Clarence death,
¶Before I be conuict by course of law?
1020To threaten me with death, is most vnlawfull:
¶I charge you as you hope to haue redemption,
¶That you depart and lay no hands on me,
¶The deede you vndertake is damnable.
10252 And he that hath commanded, is the King.
¶Hath in the tables of his law commanded,
¶That thou shalt doe no murder, and wilt thou then
¶Spurne at his edict, and fulfill a mans?
1030Take heede, for he holds vengeance in his hands,
¶To hurle vpon their heads that breake his law.
¶1 And like a traitor to the name of God,
¶Didst breake that vowe, and with thy trecherous blade,
¶For Edward, for my brother, for his sake:
1045For in this sinne he is as deepe as I:
¶If God will be reuenged for this deede,
¶Take not the quarrell from his powerfull arme,
1050To cut off those that haue offended him.
¶When gallant springing braue Plantagenet,
¶That Princely Nouice was stroke dead by thee?
¶Cla. My brothers loue, the diuell, and my rage.
10551 Thy brothers loue, the diuell and thy fault
¶Haue brought vs hither now to murder thee.
¶Cla. Oh if you loue my brother, hate not me,
¶I am his brother, and I loue him well:
¶If you be hirde for meede, go backe againe,
¶Who will reward you better for my life,
¶Then Edward will for tydings of my death.
1065Cla. Oh no, he loues me, and he holds me deare,
¶Go you to him from me.
¶Cla. Tell him, when that our princely father Yorke,
1069.1And chargd vs from his soule, to loue each other,
1070He little thought of this deuided friendship.
¶Bid Glocester thinke of this, and he will weepe.
¶Cla. It cannot be, for when I parted with him,
¶That he would labour my deliuery.
¶From this worlds thraldome, to the ioies of heauen,
¶To counsell me to make my peace with God;
¶That thou wilt war with God, by murdring me?
¶To doe this deede, will hate you for this deede.
¶Oh if thy eye be not a flatterer,
1100Come thou on my side, and intreat for me,
¶A begging Prince, what begger pitties not?
¶How faine like Pilate would I wash my hand,
¶Of this most grieuous guilty murder done.
¶Take thou the fee, and tell him what I say,
¶For I repent me that the Duke is slaine.
Exit.
¶1 So doe not I, go coward as thou art:
¶Vntill the Duke take order for his buriall:
¶And when I haue my meede I must away,
Exeunt.
¶
Enter King, Queene, Hastings, Ryuers, Dorcet, &c.
¶Kin. So, now I haue done a good daies worke,
1125You peeres continue this vnited league,
¶From my redeemer to redeeme me hence:
¶Since I haue set my friends at peace on earth:
1130Riuers and Hastings, take each others hand,
¶Riu. By heauen, my heart is purgd from grudging hate,
¶And with my hand I seale my true hearts loue.
1135Kin. Take heede you dally not before your King,
¶Confound your hidden falshood and award
¶Either of you to be the others end.
¶You haue beene factious one against the other:
1145And what you doe, doe it vnfainedly.
¶Our former hatred so thriue I and mine.
¶Vpon my part, shal be vnuiolable.
¶With thy embracements to my wiues allies,
1155And make me happy in your vnity.
¶Buc. When euer Buckingham doth turne his hate,
¶On you or yours, but with all duteous loue
1160When I haue most neede to imploy a friend,
¶Deepe, hollow, trecherous, and full of guile
¶Be he vnto me, this doe I begge of God,
¶When I am cold in zeale to you or yours.
¶Is this thy vow vnto my sickly heart:
¶There wanteth now our brother Glocester here,
¶To make the perfect period of this peace.
Enter Glocest.
¶Buc. And in good time here comes the noble Duke.
¶And Princely peeres, a happy time of day.
1175Brother we haue done deedes of charity:
¶Made peace of enmity, faire loue of hate,
¶Amongst this princely heape, if any here
¶Hold me a foe, if I vnwittingly or in my rage,
¶Haue ought committed that is hardly borne
¶To reconcile me to his friendly peace,
1185Tis death to me to be at enmity.
¶I hate it, and desire all good mens loue.
¶First Madam I intreate true peace of you,
¶Of you my noble Coosen Buckingham,
1190If euer any grudge were logde betweene vs.
¶Of you Lo: Riuers, and Lord Gray of you,
¶That all without desert haue frownd on me,
¶Dukes, Earles, Lords, gentlemen, indeed of all:
1195I doe not know that English man aliue,
¶With whom my soule is any iotte at oddes,
¶More then the infant that is borne to night:
¶I thanke my God for my humility.
1200I would to God all strifes were well compounded,
¶To take our brother Clarence to your Grace.
¶Glo. Why Madame, haue I offred loue for this,
1205Who knowes not that the noble Duke is dead,
¶Ryu. Who knowes not he is dead? who knowes he is?
¶But his red couler hath forsooke his cheekes.
1215And that a wingled Mercury did beare,
¶Some tardy cripple bore the countermaund,
¶That came too lag to see him buried:
¶Neerer in bloudy thoughts, but not in blond:
Enter Darby.
¶Who slew to day a riotous gentleman,
¶Lately attendant on the Duke of Norfolke.
1230Kin. Haue I a tongue to doome my brothers death,
¶My brother slew no man, his fault was thought,
¶Who sued to me for him? who in my rage,
1235Kneeld at my feete and bad me be aduisde?
¶Who spake of Brotherhood? who of loue?
¶The mighty Warwicke, and did fight for me:
¶Who tolde me in the field by Teuxbery,
1240When Oxford had me downe, he rescued me,
¶And said deare brother, liue and be a King?
¶Who told me when we both lay in the field,
¶Frozen almost to death, how he did lappe me
¶Euen in his owne garments, and gaue himselfe
1245All thin and naked to the numbcold night?
¶All this from my remembrance brutish wrath
¶Sinfully puckt, and not a man of you
¶Had so much grace to put it in my minde.
¶The pretious image of oure deare Redeemer,
¶You straight are on your knees for pardon pardon,
¶But for my brother, not a man would speake,
¶Haue beene beholding to him in his life:
¶Yet none of you would once pleade for his life:
¶Oh God I feare thy Iustice will take hold
1260On me, and you, and mine, and yours for this.
( Exit.
¶How that the guilty kindred of the Queene,
1265Lookt pale when they did heare of Clarence death?
¶Oh they did vrge it still vnto the King,
¶God will reuenge it. But come lets in
¶To comfort Edward with our company.
Exeunt.
¶
Enter Dutches of Yorke, with Clarence Children.
¶Boy. Tell me good Granam, is our father dead?
¶Dut. No boy.
¶And crie, Oh Clarence my vnhappy sonne?
¶And call vs wretches, Orphanes, castawaies,
¶If that our noble father be aliue?
¶As loth to loose him, not your fathers death:
¶Boy. Then Granam you conclude that he is dead,
1285The King my Vnckle is too blame for this:
¶God will reuenge it, whom I will importune
¶With daily praiers, all to that effect.
¶Dut. Peace children, peace, the King doth loue you wel,
1290Incapable and shallow innocents,
¶Tould me, the King prouoked by the Queene,
1295And when he tould me so, he wept,
¶And hugd me in his arme, and kindly kist my checke,
¶And bad me rely on him as in my father,
¶And he would loue me dearely as his child.
1300And with a vertuous visard hide foule guile:
¶Yet from my dugs he drew not this deceit.
¶Dut. I boy.
¶To chide my fortune, and torment my selfe?
¶And to my selfe become an enemy.
¶Qu. To make an act of tragicke violence:
¶Edward, my Lord, your sonne our King is dead.
1315Why grow the branches, now the roote is witherd?
¶Why wither not the leaues, the sap being gone?
¶If you will liue, lament: if die, be briefe:
¶Or like obedient subiects, follow him
¶As I had title in thy noble husband:
¶I haue bewept a worthy husbands death,
¶And liu'd by looking on his images.
1325Bnt now two mirrours of his Princely semblance,
¶Are crackt in pieces by malignant death:
¶Thou art a widdow, yet thou art a mother,
1330And hast the comfort of thy children left thee:
¶But death hath snatcht my children from mine armes,
¶And pluckt two crutches from my feeble limmes,
¶Edward and Clarence, Oh what cause haue I
¶Then, being but moity of my griefe,
1335To ouergo thy plaints and drowne thy cries?
¶Boy. Good Aunt, you wept not for our fathers death,
¶How can we aide you with our kindreds teares.
¶Your widdowes dolours likewise be vnwept.
1340Qu. Giue me no help in lamentation,
¶I am not barren to bring foorth laments:
¶All springs reduce their currents to mine eies,
¶That I being gouernd by the watry moane,
¶May send foorth plenteous teares to drowne the world:
1345Oh for my husband, for my eire Lo: Edward.
¶Ambo Oh for our father, for our deare Lo: Clarence.
¶Dut. Alas for both, both mine Edward and Clarence.
¶Alas, I am the mother of these mones,
1355Their woes are parceld, mine are generall:
¶She for Edward weepes, and so doe I:
1358.1I for an Edward weepe, so doe not they.
¶And I will pamper it with lamentations.
Enter Glocest.
with others.
¶But none can cure their harmes by wailing them,
¶Madame my mother, I doe crie you mercy,
1380I did not see your Grace, humbly on my knee
¶I craue your blessing.
¶Loue, charity, obedience, and true duety.
¶Glo. Amen, and make me die a good old man,
1385Thats the butt end of a mothers blessing:
¶I maruell why her Grace did leaue it out.
¶That beare this mutuall heauy lode of moane:
¶Now cheare each other, in each others loue:
¶The broken rancour of your high swolne hearts,
¶But lately splinterd, knit, and ioynde etogether,
¶Forthwith from Ludlow the yong Prince be fetcht
¶Hither to London, to be crownd our King.
¶Madame, and you my mother will you go,
¶Buck. My Lord who euer iourneies to the Prince,
1425As index to the story we late talkt of,
¶To part the Queenes proud kindred from the King.
¶My Oracle, my Prophet, my deare Cosen:
¶I like a childe will go by thy direction:
1430Towards Ludlow then, for we will not stay behinde.
¶
Enter two Cittizens.
¶1 Heare you the newes abroad?
¶2 I, that the King is dead.
1440I feare, I feare, twill prooue a troublous world.
Ent. ano-
ther Citt.
¶3 Cit. Good morrow neighbours.
¶Doth this newes hold of good King Edwards death?
¶3 Woe to that land thats gouernd by a childe.
¶2 In him there is a hope of gouernement,
1450That in his nonage counsell vnder him,
¶And in his full and ripened yeres himselfe,
¶No doubt shall then, and till then gouerne well.
¶Was crownd at Paris, but at ix. moneths olde.
¶For then this land was famously enricht
¶With pollitike graue counsell: then the King
¶Had vertuous Vnckles to protect his Grace.
¶2 So hath this, both by the father and mother.
14603 Better it were they all came by the father,
¶Or by the father there were none at all:
¶Will touch vs all too neare, if God preuent not.
¶Oh full of danger is the Duke of Glocester,
1465And the Queenes kindred hauty and proud,
¶And were they to be rulde, and not to rule,
1470When great leaues fall, the winter is at hand:
¶Vntimely stormes, make men expect a darth:
¶Tis more then we deserue or I expect.
¶That lookes not heauily, and full of feare.
¶But leaue it all to God: whither away?
¶
Enter Cardinall, Dutches of Yorke, Quee. young Yorke.
¶At Stonistratford will they be to night,
1490To morrow or next day, they will be here.
¶Hath almost ouertane him in his growth.
¶My Vnckle Riuers talkt how I did grow
¶More then my brother. I quoth my Nnckle Glocester,
1500Small herbes haue grace, great weedes grow apace,
¶In him that did obiect the same to thee:
1505He was the wretchedst thing when he was young,
¶That if this were a true rule, he should be gratious.
1510Yor. Now by my troth if I had beene remembred,
¶I could haue giuen my Vnckles grace a flout,
¶Dut. How my prety Yorke? I pray thee let me heare it.
¶That he could gnaw a crust at two houres olde:
¶Twas full two yeares ere I could get a tooth.
¶Granam this would haue heene a biting iest.
What newes Lo: Marques?
¶Dor. Such newes my Lo: as grieues me to vnfolde.
¶Qu. How fares the Prince?
1530Dor. Well Madame, and in health.
¶Dut. What is thy newes then?
¶With them, Sir Thomas Vaughan, prisoners.
1535Dut. Who hath committed them?
¶Car. For what offence.
¶Why, or for what, these nobles were committed,
1540Is all vnknowen to me my gratious Lady.
¶The tyger now hath ceazd the gentle hinde:
¶Insulting tyranny beginnes to iet,
¶I see as in a mappe the ende of all.
¶How many of you haue mine eies beheld?
¶My husband lost his life to get the crowne,
¶Cleane ouerblowne themselues, the conquerours
¶And frantike outrage, ende thy damned spleene,
¶Or let me die to looke on death no more.
1560Dut. Ile go along with you.
¶Car. My gratious Lady go,
¶And thither beare your treasure and your goods,
¶For my part, Ile resigne vnto your Grace
¶As well I tender you and all of yours:
¶Come Ile conduct you to the sanctuary.
Exeunt.
¶
The Trumpets sound. Enter young Prince, the Dukes of Glo-
1570
cester, and Buckingham, Cardinall, &c.
1575The weary way hath made you melancholy.
¶Haue made it tedious, wearisome, and heauy:
¶I want more Vnckles here to welcome me.
¶Glo. Sweete Prince, the vntainted vertue of your yeres,
1580Hath not yet diued into the worlds deceit:
¶Then of his outward shew, which God he knowes,
¶Seldome or neuer iumpeth with the heart:
¶Those Vnckles which you want, were dangerous,
1585Your Grace attended to their sugred words,
¶But lookt not on the poison of their hearts:
¶Glo. My Lo, the Maior of London comes to greete you.
¶
Enter Lord Maior.
1595Prin. I thanke you good my Lo: and thanke you all:
¶I thought my mother, and my brother Yorke,
¶Would long ere this haue met vs on the way:
¶To tell vs whether they will come, or no.
( Enter L. Hast.
¶Pri. Welcome my Lo: what will our mother come?
¶The Queene your mother and your brother Yorke
¶Haue taken sanctuary: The tender Prince
¶Would faine haue come with me, to meete your Grace,
¶But by his mother was perforce withheld.
¶Is this of hers? Lo: Cardinall will your grace
¶Vnto his Princely brother presently?
1615And from her iealous armes plucke him perforce.
¶Car. My Lo: of Buckingham, if my weake oratory
¶Can from his mother winne the Duke of Yorke,
¶Anone expect him here: but if she be obdurate
¶To milde entreaties, God in heauen forbid
1620We should infringe the holy priuiledge
¶Too ceremonious and traditionall:
¶The benefit thereof is alwaies granted
¶And those who haue the wit to claime the place.
1630This Prince hath neither claimed it, nor deserued it,
¶And therefore in mine opinion, cannot haue it.
¶Then taking him from thence that is not there,
¶You breake no priuiledge nor charter there:
¶Oft haue I heard of sanctuary men,
1635But sanctuary children neuer till now.
¶Come on Lo: Hastings will you go with me?
¶Hast. I go my Lord.
1640Say Vnckle Glocester, if our brother come,
¶If I may councell you, some day or two,
¶For your best health and recreation.
¶Prin. I doe not like the tower of any place:
¶Did Iulius Cæsar build that place my Lord?
¶Buc. He did, my gratious Lo: begin that place,
¶Prin. Is it vpon record, or els reported
¶Successiuely from age to age he built it?
¶Buc. Vpon record my gratious Lo:
1655Me thinkes the truth should liue from age to age,
¶As twere retailde to all posterity,
¶Euen to the generall all-ending day.
¶Thus like the formall vice iniquity,
¶I morallize two meanings in one word.
¶With what his valour did enrich his wit,
1665His wit set downe to make his valure liue:
¶Death makes no conquest of this conquerour,
¶For now he liues in fame though not in life:
¶Ile tell you what my Cosen Buckingham.
¶Buc. What my gratious Lord?
1670Prin. And if I liue vntill I be a man,
¶Ile winne our auncient right in France againe,
¶
Enter young Yorke, Hastings, Cardinall.
1675Buc. Now in good time here comes the Duke of Yorke.
¶Pri. Rich. of Yorke how fares our louing brother?
1680Pri. I brother to our griefe as it is yours:
¶Too late he died that might haue kept that title,
¶Yor. I thanke you gentle Vnckle. O my Lo:
¶The Prince my brother hath outgrowen me farre.
¶Glo. He hath my Lo:
¶Yor. And therfore is he idle?
1690Yor. Then he is more beholding to you then I.
¶But you haue power in me as in a kinseman.
¶Yor. I pray you Vnckle giue me this dagger.
1695Pri. A begger brother?
¶Yor. Of my kind Vnckle that I know will giue,
¶And being but a toy, which is no griefe to giue.
¶In weightier things youle say a begger nay.
¶Glo. It is too heauy for your Grace to weare.
¶Yor. I weigh it lightly were it heauier.
1705Glo. What would you haue my weapon little Lord?
¶Yor. I would, that I might thanke you as you call me.
¶Vnckle your grace knowes how to beare with him.
¶Yor. You meane to beare me, not to beare with me:
¶Vnckle, my brother mockes both you and me,
¶Because that I am little like an Ape,
¶To mittigate the scorne he giues his Vnckle:
¶He pretely and aptly taunts himselfe,
¶So cunning and so young is wonderfull.
¶Will to your mother, to entreate of her,
¶To meete you at the tower, and welcome you.
¶Yor. What will you go vnto the tower my Lo?
¶My Granam tolde me he was murdred there.
1730Pri. I feare no Vnckles dead.
¶Glo. Nor none that liue, I hope.
¶Pri And if they liue, I hope I neede not feare:
¶But come my Lo: with a heauy heart
¶Thinking on them, go I vnto the tower.
¶Buc. Thinke you my Lo: this little prating Yorke,
1740Glo. No doubt, no doubt, Oh tis a perillous boy,
¶Bold, quicke, ingenious, forward, capable,
¶He is all the mothers, from the top to toe.
¶Thou art sworne as deepely to effect what we intend,
1745As closely to conceale what we impart.
¶To make William Lo: Hastings of our minde,
¶For the instalement of this noble Duke,
1750In the seate royall of this famous Ile?
¶That he will not be wonne to ought against him.
¶Buck. Well then no more but this:
¶Go gentle Catesby, and as it were a farre off,
¶Vnto our purpose, if he be willing,
¶If he be leaden, icie, cold, vnwilling,
¶And giue vs notice of his inclination:
¶For we to morrow hold deuided counsels,
¶Glo. Commend me to Lo: William, tell him Catesby,
1770His auncient knot of dangerous aduersaries
¶To morrow are let bloud at Pomfret Castle,
¶And bid my friend for ioy of this good newes,
1775Cat. My good Lo: both, with all the heede I may.
¶William Lo: Hastings will not yeeld to our complots?
1785And looke when I am King, claime thou of me
¶The Earledome of Hereford and the moueables,
¶Glo. And looke to haue it yeelded with all willingnes:
1790Come let vs suppe betimes, that afterwards
Exeunt.
¶
Enter a Messenger to Lo: Hastings.
1795Mes. What ho my Lord.
¶Hast. Who knockes at the dore.
¶Hast. Whats a clocke?
¶He dreamt to night the beare had raste his helme:
¶And that may be determined at the one,
1810Which may make you and him to rewe at the other,
1815Hast. Go fellow go, returne vnto thy Lord,
¶His honour and my selfe are at the one,
¶And at the other, is my seruant Catesby:
¶Where nothing can proceede that toucheth vs,
1820Whereof I shall not haue intelligence.
¶And for his dreames, I wonder he is so fond,
¶To flie the boare, before the boare pursues vs,
1825Were to incense the boare to follow vs,
¶And we will both together to the tower,
¶Cat. Many good morrowes to my noble Lo:
1835What newes what newes, in this our tottering state?
¶Cat. It is a reeling world indeede my Lo:
¶And I beleeue it will neuer stand vpright,
¶Till Richard weare the garland of the Realme.
¶Cat. I my good Lord.
1845Cat. Vpon my life my Lo: and hopes to find you forward
¶Vpon his party for the gaine thereof,
¶And thereupon he sends you this good newes,
¶That this same very day, your enemies,
¶The kindred of the Queene must die at Pomfret.
1850Hast. Indeede I am no mourner for that newes,
¶But that Ile giue my voice on Richards side,
¶God knowes I will not doe it to the death.
¶That they who brought me in my Masters hate,
¶I liue to looke vpon their tragedy:
1860.1I tell thee Catesby.
Cat. What my Lord?
¶Hast. Ere a fortnight make me elder,
¶Cat. Tis a vile thing to die my gratious Lord,
¶When men are vnprepard and looke not for it.
1865With Riuers, Vaughan, Gray, and so twill doe
¶As thou, and I, who as thou knowest are deare
¶To Princely Richard, and to Buckingham.
¶Cat. The Princes both make high account of you,
1870For they account his head vpon the bridge.
¶
Enter Lord Stanley.
¶What my Lo: where is your boare-speare man?
¶Feare you the boare and go so vnprouided?
1875Stan. My Lo: good morrow: good morrow Catesby:
¶Hast. My Lo: I hould my life as deare as you doe yours,
¶And neuer in my life I doe protest,
1880Was it more pretious to me then it is now:
¶I would be so triumphant as I am?
¶But come my Lo: shall we to the tower?
¶This day those men you talkt of, are beheaded.
¶Sta. They for their truth might better weare their heads,
1895But come my Lo: let vs away.
Enter Hastin.
a Purssuant.
¶Hast. I tell thee fellow tis better with me now.
¶Then was I going prisoner to the tower,
1905But now I tell thee (keepe it to thy selfe.)
¶This day those enemies are put to death,
¶And I in better state then euer I was.
¶Pur. God hold it to your honors good content.
¶Come the next sabaoth and I will content you.
He whis-
( pers in his eare.
¶
Enter Buckingham.
¶Your friends at Pomfret they doe need the priest
¶Your honour hath no shriuing worke in hand.
¶Hast. Good faith and when I met this holy man,
¶Those men you talke of came into my minde:
1925What, go you to the tower my Lord?
1930Come shall we go along?
Exeunt.
¶
Enter Sir Richard Ratliffe, with the Lo: Riuers,
¶
Gray, and Vaughan, prisoners.
1935Ryu. Sir Richard Ratliffe let me tell thee this:
¶For truth, for duty, and for loyalty.
¶Gray. God keepe the Prince from all the packe of you:
¶A knot you are of damned bloudsuckers.
¶Fatall and ominous to noble peeres.
1945Within the guilty closure of thy wals
¶Richatd the second here was hackt to death:
Then curst she Richard. Oh remember God,
1955To heare her praiers for them as now for vs,
1960Ryu. Come Gray, come Vaughan, let vs all imbrace
¶And take our leaue vntill we meete in heauen.
Exeunt.
¶
Enter the Lords to Councell.
¶Is to determine of the coronation:
¶In Gods name say, when is this royall day?
1970Buc. Are all things fitting for that royall time?
¶Buc. Who knowes the Lo: protectors mind herein?
¶Who is most inward with the noble Duke.
¶Buc Who I my Lo? we know each others faces:
¶But for our harts, he knowes no more of mine,
¶Then I of yours: nor I no more of his, then you of mine:
1980Lo: Hastings you and he are neere in loue.
¶Hast. I thanke his Grace, I know he loues me well:
¶But for his purpose in the coronation:
¶I haue not sounded him nor he deliuerd
¶His Graces pleasure any way therein:
1985But you my noble Lo: may name the time,
¶And in the Dukes behalfe, Ile giue my voice,
¶Which I presume he will take in Gentle part.
¶I haue beene long a sleeper, but I hope
¶Which by my presence might haue been concluded.
¶Buc. Had not you come vpon your kew my Lo:
¶I meane your voice for crowning of the King.
¶His Lordship knowes me well, and loues me well.
1998.1Hast. I thanke your Grace.
Glo. When I was last in Holborne:
¶Bish. I go my Lord.
¶Shall loose the roialty of Englands throane.
¶To morrow in mine opinion is too sodaine:
2015As els I would be, were the day prolonged.
2020Theres some conceit or other likes him well,
¶I thinke there is neuer a man in christendome,
2025Dar. What of his heart perceiue you in his face,
¶By any likelihood he shewed to day?
¶Hast. Mary, that with no man here he is offended.
¶For if he were, he would haue shewen it in his lookes.
¶Of damned witchcraft, and that haue preuaild,
¶Vpon my body with their hellish charmes?
¶Hast. The tender loue I beare your grace my Lord,
¶To doome the offenders whatsoeuer they be:
¶See how I am bewitcht, behold mine arme
¶This is that Edwards wife, that monstrous witch,
¶That by their witchcraft, thus haue marked me.
¶Hast. If they haue done this thing my gratious Lo:
¶Telst thou me of iffes? thou art a traitor.
¶Off with his head. Now by Saint Paule,
¶I will not dine to day I sweare,
2050The rest that loue me, come and follow me.
Exeunt.
manet
Cat with Ha.
¶Ha Wo wo for England, not a whit for me:
¶For I too fond might haue preuented this:
2055Stanley did dreame the boare did race his helme,
¶And startled when he lookt vpon the tower,
¶I now repent I tolde the Pursiuant,
¶As twere triumphing at mine enemies:
¶How they at Pomfret bloudily were butcherd,
2065Oh Margaret Margaret: now thy heauy curse,
2070Which we more hunt for, then the grace of heauen:
¶Who buildes his hopes in aire of your faire lookes,
¶Ready with euery nod to tumble downe
¶Into the fatall bowels of the deepe.
¶Come leade me to the blocke, beare him my head,
Exeunt.
¶
Enter Duke of Glocester and Buckingham in armour.
¶Murther thy breath in middle of a word,
¶And then beginne againe, and stop againe,
¶As if thou wert distraught and mad with terror.
¶Buc. Tut feare not me.
2090I can counterfait the deepe Tragedian:
¶Speake, and looke backe, and prie on euery side:
¶And both are ready in their offices
Enter Maior.
¶Glo. Here comes the Maior.
2097.1Buc. Let me alone to entertaine him. Lo: Maior,
2100Glo. Looke to the drawbridge there.
¶Glo. Catesby ouerlooke the wals.
¶Buck. Harke, I heare a drumme.
¶Glo. Looke backe, defend thee, here are enemies.
2105.1Glo. O, O, be quiet, it is Catesby.
¶Cat. Here is the head of that ignoble traitor,
¶That breathed vpon this earth a christian,
2112.1Looke ye my Lo: Maior.
¶Made him my booke, wherein my soule recorded,
¶That his apparant open guilt omitted:
¶I meane his conuersation with Shores wife,
2120That euer liu'd, would you haue imagined,
¶We liue to tell it you? The subtile traitor
¶Had this day plotted in the councell house,
2125To murder me, and my good Lord of Glocester.
¶Glo. What thinke you we are Turkes or Infidels,
¶Or that we would against the forme of lawe,
¶Proceede thus rashly to the villaines death,
2130But that the extreame perill of the case,
¶Inforst vs to this execution.
¶And you my good Lords both, haue well proceeded
2135To warne false traitours from the like attempts:
¶I neuer lookt for better at his hands,
¶Somewhat against our meaning haue preuented,
¶Because, my Lord, we would haue had you heard
¶Vnto the Citizens, who happily may
2150And doubt you not, right noble Princes both,
¶But Ile acquaint your dutious citizens,
¶To auoyde the carping censures of the world.
2160The Maior towards Guildhall hies him in all post,
¶There at your meetst aduantage of the time,
¶Inferre the bastardy of Edwards children:
¶Tell them how Edward put to death a Cittizen,
2165Heire to the Crowne, meaning (indeede) his house,
¶Moreouer, vrge his hatefull luxurie,
¶Without controll listed to make his prey:
¶Nay for a neede thus farre, come neere my person.
¶Tell them, when that my mother went with childe
¶Of that vnsatiate Edward, noble Yorke
2175My princely father then had warres in Fraunce,
¶And by iust computation of the tyme
¶Which well appeared in his lineaments,
¶Being nothing like the noble Duke my father:
2180But touch this sparingly as it were farre off,
¶Because you know, my Lord, my mother liues.
¶Buck. Feare not, my Lord, Ile play the Orator,
¶As if the golden fee for which I pleade
¶Were for my selfe.
¶Where you shall finde me well accompanyed,
¶Wyth reuerend fathers and well learned Bishops.
¶Buc. About three or foure a clocke look to heare
¶What news Guildhall affordeth, and so my Lord farewell.
2195To draw the brats of Clarence out of sight,
¶And to giue notice, that no maner of person
¶At any tyme haue recourse vnto the Princes.
Exit.
¶
Enter a Scriuener with a paper in his hand.
¶This is the indictment of the good Lord Hastings,
¶That it may be this day read ouer in Paules:
¶And marke how well the sequele hangs together,
¶Eleuen houres I spent to wryte it ouer,
¶For yesternight by Catesby was it brought me,
2205The president was full as long a doyng,
¶Vntaynted, vnexamined, free, at liberty:
¶That sees not this palpable deuice?
¶Bad is the world, and all will come to naught,
¶
Enter Glocester at one doore, Buckingham at another.
2215Buc. Now by the holy mother of our Lord,
¶The Citizens are mumme, and speake not a word.
¶His tyranny for trifles, his owne bastardy,
¶As beyng got, your father then in Fraunce:
2225Withall I did inferre your lineaments,
¶Beyng the right Idea of your father,
¶Laid open all your victories in Scotland:
2230Your bounty, vertue, faire humility:
¶Indeede left nothing fitting for the purpose
¶And when mine oratory grew to an ende.
¶I bid them that did loue their countries good,
¶Gazde each on other and lookt deadly pale:
2240Which when I saw, I reprehended them,
¶And askt the Maior, what meant this wilfull silence?
¶His answere was, the people were not wont
¶To be spoke to, but by the Recorder.
¶Then he was vrgde to tell my tale againe:
2245Thus, saith the Duke, thus hath the Duke inferd:
¶When he had done, some followers of mine owne
¶At the lower end of the Hall, hurld vp their caps,
¶Thankes louing Cittizens and friends quoth I,
¶Argues your wisedomes and your loue to Richard:
¶And so brake off and came away.
2255.1Buc. No by my troth my Lo:
¶Glo. Will not the Maior then, and his brethren come.
2260And looke you get a praier booke in your hand,
¶And stand betwixt two churchmen good my Lo:
¶For on that ground Ile build a holy descant:
¶Play the maides part, say no, but take it.
2270Now my L. Maior, I dance attendance heare,
2275Cates. My Lord, he doth intreat your grace
¶To visit him to morrow or next daie,
¶He is within with two right reuerend fathers,
¶Diuinely bent to meditation,
¶And in no worldly suite would he be mou'd,
¶Buck. Returne good Catesby to thy Lord againe,
¶Tell him my selfe, the Maior and Cittizens,
¶In deepe designes and matters of great moment,
2285Are come to haue some conference with his grace.
¶Buck. A ha my Lord this prince is not an Edward :
¶He is not lulling on a lewd day bed,
¶But on his knees at meditation:
2290Not dalying with a brace of Curtizans,
¶But meditating with two deepe Diuines:
¶But praying to inrich his watchfull soule.
¶Happy were England, would this gracious prince
¶What saies your Lord?
¶Such troupes of Cittizens to speake with him,
¶His grace not being warnd thereof before,
2305My Lord, he feares you meane no good to him.
¶Suspect me that I meane no good to him.
¶By heauen I come in perfect loue to him,
2310When hollie and deuout religious men,
¶Are at their beads, tis hard to draw them thence,
¶So sweet is zealous contemplation.
¶
Enter Rich. with two bishops a loste.
¶To staie him from the fall of vanitie,
2320Famous Plantaganet, most gracious prince,
¶Lend fauorable eares to our request,
¶And pardon vs the interruption
2325I rather do beseech you pardon me,
¶Neglect the visitation of my friends,
¶But leauing this, what is your graces pleasure?
2330And all good men of this vngouerned Ile.
¶And that you come to reprehend my ignorance.
¶At our entreaties to amend that fault.
¶The lineall glorie of your roiall house,
2345Which here we waken to our countries good,
¶This noble Ile doth want her proper limbes,
¶Her face defac't with scars of infamie,
¶Which to recure we hartily solicit,
2355Or lowlie factor for anothers gaine:
¶Your right of birth, your Emperie, your owne:
¶For this consorted with the Citizens
¶Your verie worshipfull and louing frinds,
2360And by their vehement instigation,
¶Or bitterlie to speake in your reproofe,
¶Best fitteth my degree or your condition:
¶And that my path were euen to the crown,
¶As my ripe reuenew and dew by birth,
¶So mightie and so many my defects,
¶As I had rather hide me from my greatnes,
¶Beeing a Barke to brooke no mightie sea,
¶Then in my greatnes couet to be hid,
2385And in the vapour of my glorie smotherd:
¶But God be thanked there's no need of me,
¶And much I need to helpe you if need were,
¶The roiall tree hath left vs roiall fruit,
¶Which mellowed by the stealing houres of time,
¶And make no doubt vs happie by his raigne,
¶On him I laie what you would laie on me:
¶The right and fortune of his happie stars,
¶Which God defend that I should wring from him.
¶But the respects thereof are nice and triuiall,
¶So saie we to, but not by Edwards wife,
2400For first he was contract to lady Lucy,
¶These both put by a poore petitioner
2405A care-crazd mother of a many children,
¶Euen in the afternoone of her best daies
¶Seduc't the pitch and height of al his thoughts,
¶By her in his vnlawfull bed he got.
¶This Edward whom our maners terme the prince,
¶More bitterlie could I expostulate,
¶Saue that for reuerence to some aliue
2415I giue a sparing limit to my tongue:
¶Then good my Lord, take to your royall selfe,
¶This proffered benefit of dignitie:
¶Yet to draw out your royall stocke,
2420From the corruption of abusing time,
¶Maior. Do good my Lord, your Cittizens entreat you.
¶I am vnfit for state and dignitie,
¶I cannot nor I will not yeeld to you.
¶As well we know your tendernes of heart,
¶And gentle kind effeminate remorse,
¶Which wee haue noted in you to your kin,
¶And egallie indeed to all estates,
2435Yet whether you accept our suite or no,
¶But we will plant some other in the throane,
¶And in this resolution here we leaue you.
2440Come Citizens, zounds ile intreat no more.
¶Glo. Would you inforce me to a world of care:
¶Well, call them againe, I am not made of stones,
2445But penetrable to your kind intreates,
¶Since you will buckle fortune on my backe,
2450To beare her burthen whether I will or no,
¶I must haue patience to indure the lode,
¶Your meere inforcement shall acquittance mee
2455From all the impure blots and staines thereof,
¶For God he knowes, and you may partly see,
¶How farre I am from the desire thereof.
¶Long liue Richard, Englands royall king.
¶Mayor. Amen.
¶Buck. To morrow then we will attend your grace.
¶Farewel good coosine, farwel gentle friends.
Exeunt.
¶
Enter Quee. mother, Duchesse of Yorke, Marques Dorset, at
¶Duch. Who meets vs heere, my neece Plantagenet?
¶Vpon the like deuotion as your selues,
¶To gratulate the tender Princes there.
¶And in good time here the Lieutenant comes.
¶M. Lieutenant, pray you by your leaue,
¶How fares the Prince?
2490Lieu. Wel Madam, and in health, but by your leaue,
¶The King hath straightlie charged the contrarie.
¶Lieu. I crie you mercie, I meane the Lord protector.
2495Qu. The Lord protect him from that Kinglie title:
¶Hath he set boundes betwixt their loue and me:
¶I am their mother, who should keepe me from them?
2500Duch.glo. Their aunt I am in law, in loue their mother:
¶Then feare not thou, Ile beare thy blame,
¶And take thy office from thee on my perill.
¶I am bound by oath, I may not doe it.
Enter L. Stanlie.
¶Stan. Let me but meete you Ladies an houre hence,
¶And Ile salute your grace of Yorke, as Mother :
¶And reuerente looker on, of two faire Queenes.
¶There to be crowned, Richards royall Queene.
¶With this dead killing newes.
¶Dor. Madam, haue comfort, how fares your grace?
¶Death and destruction dogge thee at the heeles,
2520Thy Mothers name is ominous to children,
¶And liue with Richmond, from the reach of hell,
¶Nor Mother, Wife, nor Englands counted Queene.
¶Take all the swift aduantage of the time,
2530To meete you on the way, and welcome you,
¶Be not tane tardie, by vnwise delaie:
¶O my accursed wombe, the bed of death,
¶A Cocatrice hast thou hatch to thc world,
2535Whose vnauoided eye is murtherous.
¶Duch. And I in all vnwillingnes will go,
¶I would to God that the inclusiue verge,
¶Of golden mettall that must round my browe,
¶Annointed let me be with deadlie poyson,
¶Came to me as I followed Henries course,
¶And that dead saint, which then, I weeping followed,
2550O, when I say, I lookt on Richatds face,
¶And be thy wife, if any be so madde,
2555As miserable by the death of thee,
¶As thou hast made me by my deare Lordes death,
¶Loe, eare I can repeate this curse againe,
¶For neuer yet, one houre in his bed,
¶Haue I enioyed the golden dew of sleepe,
¶But haue bene waked by his timerous dreames,
2565Besides, he hates me for my father Warwicke,
¶And will no doubt, shortlie be rid of me.
2570Dor. Farewell, thou wofull welcomer of glorie.
¶Du.yor. Go thou to Richmond, and good fortune guide thee.
¶Go thou to Richard, and good Angels garde thee,
¶I to my graue where peace and rest lie with me,
¶And each houres ioy wrackt with a weeke of teene.
¶
ham, Catesby with other Nobles.
¶Giue me thy hand:
Here he ascendeth
the throne.
¶Thus high by thy aduice
And thy assistance is king Richard seated:
¶King Ri. O Buckingham, now do I plaie the touch,
¶To trie if thou be currant gold indeed:
2600Young Edward liues: thinke now what I would say.
2605Buc. True noble prince.
2610And I would haue it suddenlie performde.
¶I wil resolue your grace immediatlie.
Exit.
2620And vnrespectiue boies, none are for me
¶That looke into me with considerate eies :
¶Boy, high reaching Buckingham growes circumspect.
¶Boy. My Lord.
¶Would tempt vnto a close exploit of death.
¶Whose humble meanes match not his haughtie mind,
¶Gould were as good as twentie Orators,
2630And will no doubt tempt him to any thing.
¶King. What is his name.
¶Boy. His name my Lord is Tirrell.
2635The deepe reuoluing wittie Buckingham,
¶Hath he so long held out with me vntirde
2640How now, what neewes vvith you?
¶ abides.
King. Rumor it abroad
2645That Anne my wife is sicke and like to die,
¶I will take order for her keeping close:
¶Enquire me out some meane borne gentleman,
¶Whom I will marrie straight to Clarence daughter,
¶The boy is foolish, and I feare not him:
¶About it, for it stands me much vpon
¶I must be married to my brothers daughter,
¶Murther her brothers, and then marrie her,
¶Vncertaine vvaie of gaine, but I am in
¶Is thy name Tirrill?
¶King Art thou indeed?
¶Tir. I my Lord, but I had rather kill two enemies.
2670Are they that I would haue thee deale vpon:
¶Tir. Let me haue open meanes to come to them,
¶And soone ile rid you from the feare of them.
¶And I will loue thee and prefer thee too.
¶Tir. Tis done my gracious lord.
¶The late demand that you did sound me in.
¶Buck I heare that newes my lord.
¶For which your honor and your faith is pawnd,
¶The Earledome of Herford and the moueables,
2695Did prophecie that Richmond should be king,
¶When Richmond was a little peeuish boy:
¶A king perhaps, perhaps.
Buck. My lord.
2697.1King How chance the prophet could not at that time,
¶Haue told me I being by, that I should kill him.
¶And called it Ruge-mount, at which name I started,
¶Because a Bard of Ireland told me once
¶Buck. My lord.
.10King. I, whats a clocke?
¶Buck. I am thus bold to put your grace in mind
¶Of what you promisd me.
¶King. Wel, but whats a clocke?
¶Betwixt thy begging and my meditation,
¶I am not in the giuing vaine to day.
¶With such deepe contempt, made I him king for this?
¶O let me thinke on Hastings and be gone
¶To Brecnock while my fearefull head is on.
Exit.
¶
Enter Sir Francis Tirrell.
2705Tyr. The tyrranous and bloudie deed is done,
¶That euer yet this land was guiltie of,
¶To do this ruthles peece of butcherie,
2710Although they were flesht villains, bloudie dogs,
¶Lo thus quoth Dighton laie those tender babes,
¶Thus thus quoth Forrest girdling on another,
2715Within their innocent alablaster armes,
¶A booke of praiers on their pillow laie,
2720But oh the Diuell their the villaine stopt,
¶That from the prime creation euer he framed,
¶To bring this tidings to the bloudie king.
Enter Ki. Richard.
¶And here he comes, all haile my soueraigne leige.
¶King. Kind Tirrell am I happie in thy newes.
2730Tyr. If to haue done the thing you giue in charge,
¶For it is done my Lord.
¶Tir. I did my Lord.
2735King. And buried gentle Tirrell?
¶Tir. The Chaplaine of the tower hath buried them,
¶But how or in what place I do not know.
2740Meane time but thinke how I may do thee good.
¶Farewel til soone.
2745His daughter meanelie haue I matcht in mariage,
¶And Anne my wife hath bid the world godnight,
¶Now for I know the Brittaine Richmond aimes
¶At young Elizabeth, my brothers daughter,
2750And by that knot lookes proudly ore the crowne,
¶To her I go a iollie thriuing wooer,
Enter Catesby.
¶Cat. My Lord.
¶Cates. Bad newes my lord, Ely is fled to Richmond,
¶And Buckingham backt with the hardie Welchmen,
¶King. Ely with Richmond troubles me more neare
2760Then Buckingham and his rash leuied armie:
¶Come I haue heard that feareful commenting,
¶Is leaden seruitor to dull delaie,
¶Delaie leades impotent and snaile-pact beggerie,
¶Then fierie expedition be my wing,
2765Ioues Mercurie and Herald for a king :
¶We must be briefe when traitors braue the field.
Exeunt.
2770
Enter Queene Margaret sola.
¶And drop into the rotten mouth of Death:
¶To watch the waining of mine aduersaries:
¶And wil to Fraunce, hoping the consequence
¶Wil prooue as bitter, blacke and tragical.
¶Withdraw thee wretched Margaret, who comes here?
¶
Enter the Qu. and the Dutchesse of Yorke.
2780Qu. Ah my young princes, ah my tender babes!
¶My vnblowne flowers, new appearing sweets,
¶If yet your gentle soules flie in the ayre
¶And be not fixt in doome perpetual,
¶Houer about me with your aierie winges,
2785And heare your mothers lamentation.
¶Hath dimd your infant morne, to aged night.
¶And throw them in the intrailes of the Wolfe:
¶Vnlawfullie made drunke with innocents bloud.
2805O who hath anie cause to mourne but I!
¶That my woe-wearied toong is mute and dumbe.
¶Edward Plantagenet, whie art thou dead?
¶Giue mine the benefite of signorie,
¶And let my woes frowne on the vpper hand,
2809.1Tell ouer your woes againe by vewing mine,
2810I had an Edward, till a Richard kild him:
¶I had a Richard, till a Ricard kild him:
¶Thou hadst a Richard, till a Richard kild him.
¶From forth the kennell of thy wombe hath crept,
¶A hel-hound that doeth hunt vs all to death,
2820That dogge, that had his teeth before his eyes,
¶To worrie lambes, and lap their gentle blouds,
¶That foule defacer of Gods handie worke,
¶How doe I thanke thee, that this carnal curre,
¶And makes her puefellow with others mone.
2830Duch. O, Harries wifes triumph not in my woes,
¶God witnes with me, I haue wept for thine.
¶Qu.Mar. Beare with me, I am hungrie for reuenge,
¶And now I cloie me with beholding it,
¶Thy Edward, he is dead, that stabd my Edward,
2835Thy other Edward dead, to quitte my Edward,
¶Yong Yorke, he is but boote because both they
¶Thy Clarence he is dead, that kild my Edward,
¶And the beholders of this tragicke plaie,
2840The adulterate Hastings, Riuers, Vaughan, Gray,
¶Richard yet liues, hels blacke intelligencer,
¶And send them thether, but at hand at handes,
2845ensues his piteous, and vnpittied end,
¶Earth gapes, hell burnes, fiendes roare, saintes praie,
¶To haue him suddenly conueied away.
¶Cancell his bond of life, deare God I pray,
¶That I may liue to say, the dog is dead.
¶That botteld spider, that foule bunch-backt toade.
¶I cald thee then, poore shadow, painted Queene,
2855The presentation of, but what I was,
¶The flattering Index of a direfull pageant,
¶One heaued a high, to be hurld downe belowe,
¶A mother onelie, mockt with two sweete babes,
¶A dreame of which thou wert a breath, a bubble,
2860To be the aime of euerie dangerous shot,
¶Where is thy husband now, where be thy brothers?
¶Where are thy children, wherein doest thou ioye?
¶Where be the bending peeres that flattered thee?
¶Where be the thronging troopes that followed thee?
¶decline all this, and see what now thou art,
2870For ioyfull Mother, one that wailes the name,
¶For Queene, a verie caitiue crownd with care,
2875For one commaunding all, obeyed of none,
¶And left thee but, a verie praie to time,
¶Hauing no more, but thought of what thou wert,
¶To torture thee the more, being what thou art,
¶Now thy proud necke, beares halfe my burthened yoke,
¶From which, euen here, I slippe my wearie necke,
¶And leaue the burthen of it all on thee :
¶And teach me how to curse mine enemies.
¶Thinke that thy babes were fairer then they were,
¶And he that slew them fouler then he is,
¶Reuoluing this, wil teach thee how to curse.
2895Qu. My words are dul, O quicken them with thine.
¶Qu. Windie atturnies to your Client woes
¶Poore breathing Orators of miseries,
¶Let them haue scope, though what they do impart,
¶Helpe not at al, yet do they ease the hart.
2905And in the breath of bitter words lets smother
¶I heare his drum, be copious in exclaimes.
¶
Enter K. Richard marching with Drummes
and Trumpets.
¶King Who intercepts my expedition?
¶Where should be grauen, if that right were right,
2915The slaughter of the Prince that owed that Crowne,
¶Tel me thou villaine slaue, where are my children?
¶Duch. Thou tode, thou tode, where is thy brother Clarence?
2920And little Ned Plantagenet, his sonne?
¶Let not the heauens heare these tel-tale women
¶Either be patient, and intreat me faire,
¶Or with the clamorus report of war:
¶Thus will I drowne your exclamations.
¶Du. Then patiently here my impatience.
¶King. Madam I haue a touch of your condition,
¶Which cannot brooke the accent of reproofe.
2940God knowes in anguish, paine and agonie,
¶Thou camst on earth to make the earth my hell,
¶A greuous burthen was thy berth to me,
2945Techie and waiward was thy infancie,
¶Thy prime of manhood, daring, bold and venturous,
¶Thy age confirmed, proud, subtile, bloudie, trecherous,
2950What comfortable houre canst thou name
¶That euer grac't me in thy companie?
¶King. Faith none but Humphrey houre, that cald your grace
¶To breake fast once forth of my companie,
¶Let me march on, and not offend your grace.
¶King. Come, come, you art too bitter.
¶Eeare from this war thou turne a conqueror,
¶And neuer looke vpon thy face againe,
¶Which in the daie of battaile tire thee more
¶Then all the compleat armor that thou wearst,
2970My praiers on the aduerse partie fight,
¶And there the little soules of Edwards children,
¶Bloudie thou art, bloudie wil be thy end,
2975Shame serues thy life, and doth thy death attend.
Exit.
2980For thee to murther for my daughters Richard,
¶They shalbe praying nunnes not weeping Queenes,
¶And therefore leuell not to hit their liues.
¶King You have a daughter cald Elizabeth,
¶Vertuous and faire, roiall and gracious.
¶And ile corrupt her maners, staine her beautie,
¶Throw ouer her the vale of infamie,
¶Qu. No to their liues bad friends were contrarie,
¶My babes were destinde to a fairer death,
3000If grace had blest thee with a fairer life.
¶As I intend more good to you and yours,
¶Then euer you or yours were by me wrongd.
¶Qu. What good is couerd with rhe face of heauen,
3020To be discouerd that can do me good,
¶King The aduancement of your children mightie Ladie.
¶King No to the dignitie and height of honor,
¶The high imperial tipe of this earths glorie.
¶Tell me what state, what dignitie, what honor?
¶Will I withal endow a child of thine,
3030So in the Lethe of thy angrie soule,
¶Last longer telling then thy kindnes doe.
¶King. What do you thinke?
¶And from my harts loue I do thanke thee for it.
¶I meane that with my soule I loue thy daughter,
¶And meane to make her Queene of England.
¶Qu. What thou?
¶King I euen I, what thinke you of it Maddame?
¶King That would I learne of you.
¶As one that are best acquainted with her humor.
¶Qu. And wilt thou learn of me?
¶A paire of bleeding harts thereon ingraue,
¶Edward and Yorke, then happelie she wil weepe,
¶Did to thy father, a handkercher steept in Rutlands bloud,
¶And bid her drie her weeping eies therewith,
¶If this inducement force her not to loue,
¶Send her a storie of thy noble acts,
3065Tel her thou madst awaie her Vncle Clarence,
¶Her Vncle Riuers, yea, and for her sake
¶King Come, come, you mocke me, this is not the waie
¶To win your daughter.
3070Qu. There is no other waie
¶And not be Richard that hath done all this.
¶King Infer faire Englands peace by this alliance.
3130King Saie that the king which may command intreats.
¶Qu. That at her hands which the kings king forbids.
¶Qu. To waile the title as her mother doth.
¶King So long as heauen and nature lengthens it.
¶Qu. So long as hell and Richard likes of it.
¶King Be eloquent in my behalfe to her.
¶King Then in plaine termes tell her my louing tale.
¶Too deepe and dead poore infants in their graue.
¶King Now by my George, my Garter and my crown.
¶Qu. By nothing, for this is no oath.
3155The George prophand hath lost his holie honor,
¶The Garter blemisht pawnd his knightlie vertue,
¶King Now by the world.
¶Qu. Tis ful of thy foule wrongs.
¶King. My Fathers death.
¶King. Whie, then by God.
¶If thou hadst feard, to breake an oath by him,
¶The vnitie the king my brother made,
3170Had not bene broken, nor my brother slaine.
¶If thou hadst feard to breake an oath by him,
¶The emperiall mettall circling now thy brow,
¶Had grast the tender temples of my childe,
¶And both the princes had bene breathing heere,
3175Which now, two tender plaie-fellowes for dust,
¶Thy broken faith, hath made a praie for wormes.
¶King. By the time to come.
¶Hereafter time, for time, by the past wrongd,
¶Vngouernd youth, to waile it in their age,
3185Olde withered plantes, to waile it with their age,
¶Sweare not by time to come, for that thou hast,
¶So thriue I in my dangerous attempt,
¶Daye yeeld me not thy light, nor night thy rest,
¶Be opposite, all planets of good lucke,
¶To my proceedings, if with pure heartes loue,
3195Immaculate deuocion, holie thoughtes,
¶I tender not thy beauteous princelie daughter,
¶Without her followes to this land and me,
3200Sad desolation, ruine, and decaie,
¶It cannot be auoided but by this,
¶It will not be auoided but this :
¶Be the atturney of my loue to her.
3205Pleade what I will be, not what I haue bene,
¶Qu. Shall I be tempted of the diuell thus.
3210King. I, if the diuell tempt thee to doe good.
¶King. But in your daughters wombe, I buried them,
¶Selfes of themselues, to your recomfiture.
¶Qu. Shall I go winne my daughter to thy will.
¶King. And be a happie mother by the deede,
¶Throng manie doubtfull hollow harted friendes,
¶Vnarmd, and vnresolud to beate them backe:
¶Tis thought that Richmond is their admirall,
3230And there they hull, expecting but the aide,
¶Of Buckingham, to welcome them a shore.
¶Cat. Here my Lord.
¶When thou comst there, dull vnmindfull villaine,
¶What, from your grace, I shall deliuer them.
¶And meete me presentlie at Salisburie.
¶How now, what newes with you?
¶
Enter Darbie.
3255Nor none so bad, but it may well be told.
¶When thou maist tell thy tale a neerer way.
¶Once more, what newes?
3260Dar. Richmond is on the Seas.
¶White liuerd runnagate, what doeth he there?
¶He makes for England, there to claime the crowne.
¶What heire of Yorke is there aliue but we?
3270And who is Englands King, but great Yorkes heire, ?
3275Thou wilt reuolt, and flie to him I feare.
3280Safe conducting, the rebels from their ships.
¶Dar, No my good Lord, my friendes are in the North.
¶Ile muster vp my friendes and meete your grace,
3290I will not trust you Sir.
¶I neuer was, nor neuer will be false.
3295Your sonne George Stanlie, looke your faith be firme,
¶Dar. So deale with him, as I proue true to you.
¶
Enter a Messenger.
¶As I by friendes am well aduertised,
¶Sir William Courtney, and the haughtie Prelate,
¶Bishop of Exceter, his brother there,
¶With manie mo confederates, are in armes.
3305
Enter another Messenger.
¶Mes. My Liege, in Kent the Guilfordes are in armes,
¶And euerie houre more competitors,
¶
Enter another Messenger.
3310Mes. My Lord, the armie of the Duke of Buckingham.
¶
He striketh him.
¶Take that vntill thou bring me better newes.
3315My newes is that by sudden floud, and fall of water,
3320Ratcliffe reward him, for the blow I gaue him,
¶Hath any well aduised friend giuen out,
¶Rewardes for him that brings in Buckingham.
¶Mes. Such proclamation hath bene made my liege.
¶
Enter another Messenger.
¶Tis said my liege, are vp in armes,
¶Yet this good comfort bring I to your grace,
¶Who answered him, they came from Buckingham,
¶If not to fight with forreine enemies,
¶Yet to beate downe, these rebels here at home.
¶
Enter Catesbie.
¶Cat. My liege, the Duke of Buckingham is taken,
3340Thats the best newes, that the Earle of Richmond,
¶Is with a mightie power landed at Milford,
3345Some one take order, Buckingham be brought,
¶To Salisburie, the rest march on with me.
Exeunt.
¶
Entee Darbie, Sir Christopher.
¶My sonne George Stanlie is franckt vp in hold,
¶If I reuolt, off goes young Georges head,
¶The feare of that, with holdes my present aide,
¶But tell me, where is princelie Richmond now?
¶Sir Gilbert Talbot, Sir William Stanlie,
¶Oxford, redoubted Pembroke, Sir Iames Blunt,
¶Rice vp Thomas, with a valiant crew,
¶With many moe of noble fame and worth,
3365And towardes London they doe bend their course,
¶If by the way, they be not fought withall.
¶Dar. Retourne vnto thy Lord, commend me to him,
3367.1Tell him, the Queene hath hartelie consented,
¶Farewell.
Exeunt.
¶
Enter Buckingham to execution.
¶Rat. No my Lord, therefore be patient.
¶Holie king Henrie, and thy faire sonne Edward,
¶Vaughan, and all that haue miscarried,
¶By vnderhand corrupted, foule iniustice,
3380Doe through the cloudes, behold this present houre,
¶Euen for reuenge, mocke my destruction.
¶This is Alsoules day fellowes, is it not?
¶Rat. It is my Lord.
3385This is the day, that in king Edwards time,
¶I wisht might fall on me, when I was found,
¶This is the day, wherein I wisht to fall,
¶Is the determind respit of my wrongs:
¶That high al-seer, that I dallied with,
¶Hath turned my fained prayer on my head,
3395Thus doeth he force the swordes of wicked men,
¶Now Margarets curse, is fallen vpon my head,
¶Wrong hath but wrong, and blame the dew of blame.
¶
Enter Richmond with drums and trumpets.
¶Bruisd vnderneath the yoake of tyrannie,
¶Thus farre into the bowels of the land,
¶Haue we marcht on without impediment,
3410And here receiue we, from our Father Stanlie,
¶Lines of faire comfort, and incouragement,
¶The wretched, bloudie, and vsurping bore,
¶Swils your warme bloud like wash, and makes his trough,
¶Lies now euen in the center of this Ile,
¶Neare to the towne of Leycester as we learne:
¶From Tamworth thether, is but one dayes march.
¶In Gods name cheerelie on, couragious friendes,
3420To reape the haruest of perpetuall peace,
¶By this one bloudie triall of sharpe warre.
¶To fight against that bloudie homicide.
34253 Lo. He hath no friendes, but who are friendes for feare,
¶Rich. All for our vantage, then in Gods name march,
¶True hope is swift, and flies with Swallowes wings,
¶Kings it make Gods, and meaner creatures kings.
Exit.
¶
Enter King Richard, Norffolke, Ratcliffe,
¶
Catesbie, with others.
3435Cat, My hart is ten times lighter then my lookes.
¶King. Norffolke, come hether.
¶King. Vp with my tent there, here will I lie to night,
¶But where to morrow, well, all is one for that:
¶Who hath discried the number of the foe.
3445King. Whie our battalion trebles that account,
¶Which they vpon the aduerse partie want,
¶Vp with my tent there, valiant gentlemen,
¶Let vs suruey the vantage of the field,
¶Lets want no discipline, make no delaie,
¶For Lordes, to morrow is a busie day.
Exeunt.
¶
Enter Richmond with the Lordes, &c.
¶And by the bright tracke of his fierie Carre,
¶Giues signall of a goodlie day to morrow,
3465The Earle of Pembroke keepe his regiment,
¶Good captaine Blunt, beare my good night to him,
¶And by the second houre in the morning,
¶Yet one thing more, good Blunt before thou goest:
3470Where is Lord Stanlie quarterd, doest thou know.
¶His regiment, lies halfe a mile at least,
¶South from the mightie power of the king.
¶Good captaine Blunt beare my good night to him,
¶Blunt. Vpon my life my Lord, Ile vndertake it.
3480Rich. Farewell, good Blunt.
¶Giue me some inke, and paper, in my tent,
3460Ile drawe the forme, and modle of our battel,
¶Limit each leader to his seuerall charge,
¶In to our tent, the aire is rawe and cold.
3485
Enter king Richard, Norff. Ratcliffe
Catesbie, &c.
¶K ng. What is a clocke.
3490What? is my beuer easier then it was?,
¶And all my armour laid into my tent?
¶Cat, It is my Liege, and all thinges are in readines.
¶King. Good Norffolke, hie thee to thy charge,
3495Norff. I goe my Lord.
¶King. Stur with the Larke to morrow gentle Norffolke.
¶Nor. I warrant you my Lord.
¶King. Catesby.
¶Rat. My lord.
¶To Stanleys regiment, bid him bring his power
¶Into the blind caue of eternal night.
¶Fill me a bowle of wine, giue me a watch,
3505Saddle white Surrey for the field to morrow,
¶Rat. My lord.
3510Much about cockshut time, from troupe to troupe
¶Went through the army cheering vp the soldiors.
¶I haue not that alacrity of spirit
¶Nor cheere of mind that I was wont to haue:
3515Set it down. Is inke and paper ready?
¶Rat. It is my lord.
¶King Bid my guard watch, leaue me.
¶Ratliffe about the mid of night come to my tent
¶And helpe to arme me: leaue me I say.
Exit . Ratliffe
3520
Enter Darby to Richmond in his tent.
¶Rich. All comfort that the darke night can afford,
¶Be to thy person noble father in law,
¶Tel me how fares our louing mother?
¶Who praies continuallie for Richmonds good,
3530Prepare thy battell earelie in the morning,
¶And put thy fortune to the arbitrement,
¶I as I may, that which I would, I cannot,
¶With best aduantage will deceiue the time,
3535And aide thee in this doubful shocke of armes,
¶But on thy side I may not be too forward,
¶Be executed in his fathers sight.
¶Farewel, the leasure and the fearefull time,
3540Cuts off the ceremonious vowes of loue,
¶Once more adiew, be valiant and speed well.
¶Ile striue with troubled thoughts to take a nap,
¶When I should mount with wings of victorie,
¶Once more good night kind Lords and gentlemen,
Exunt.
¶Looke on my forces with a gracious eie:
¶Put in their hands thy brusing Irons of wrath,
¶That they may crush downe with a heauie fall,
¶That we may praise thee in the victorie,
¶To thee I do commend my watchfull soule,
¶Eare I let fal the windowes of mine eies,
3560Sleeping and waking, oh defend me still!
¶
Enter the ghost of young Prince Edward, sonne
¶
Harry the sixt, to Ri.
¶Of Butchered princes fight in thy behalfe,
3570
Enter the ghost of Henry the sixt.
¶By thee was punched full of deadlie holes,
¶Thinke on the tower and me dispaire and die,
3575 To Rich. Vertuous and holie be thou conqueror,
¶
Enter the Goast of Clarence.
¶Poore Clarence by thy guile betraid to death:
¶Tomorrow in the battaile thinke on me,
3585The wronged heires of Yorke do pray for thee,
¶
Enter the ghosts of Riuers, Gray, Vaughan.
¶Riuers that died at Pomfret, dispaire and die,
¶Vaugh. Thinke vpon Vaughan, and with guiltie feare,
¶Let fall thy launce, dispaire and die.
3595Wel conquer him, awake and win the daie.
¶
Enter the ghosts of the two yong Princes.
¶Let vs be lead within thy bosome Richard,
¶And weigh thee down to ruine, shame, and death,
¶Good angels guard thee from the bores annoy,
¶Liue and beget a happie race of kings,
¶
Enter the ghost of Hastings.
¶Ghost Bloudie and guiltie, guiltilie awake,
¶And in a bloudie battaile end thy daies,
¶Arme, fight and conquer for faire Engiands sake.
¶
Enter the ghost of Lady Anne his wife.
3615Richard thy wife, that wretched Anne thy wife,
¶That neuer slept a quiet houre with thee,
¶Now fils thy sleepe with preturbations,
¶To morrow in the battaile thinke on me,
3625
Enter the Goast of Buckingham.
¶The first was I that helpt thee to the crown,
¶The last was I that felt thy tyrrannie,
¶O in the battaile thinke on Buckingham,
¶Dreame on, dreame on, of bloudie deeds and death,
¶ To Rich. I died for hope ere I could lend thee aid,
3635But cheare thy heart, and be thou not dismaid,
¶God and good angels fight on Richmons side,
¶And Richard fals in height of all his pride.
¶
Richard starteth vp out of a dreame.
¶The lights burne blew, it is now dead midnight,
3645Richard loues Richard, that is I and I,
¶Is there a murtherer here? no. Yes I am,
¶Alacke I loue my selfe, wherefore? for anie good
¶O no, alas I rather hate my selfe,
¶For hatefull deedes committed by my selfe,
¶I am a villaine, yet I lie I am not,
¶And euerie tongue brings in a seueral tale,
¶And euerie tale condemns me for a villaine,
¶Periurie, periurie, in the highest degree,
¶Throng to the barre, crying all guiltie, guiltie.
¶And if I die, no soule will pitie me:
¶Me thought the soules of all that I had murtherd,
¶Came to my tent, and euery one did threat,
¶To morrows vengeance on the head of Richard.
¶
Enter Ratcliffe.
3670Rat. My Lord.
¶King. Zoundes, who is there?
¶Rat. Ratcliffe, my Lord, tis I, the earlie village cocke,
¶Your friendes are vp, and buckle on their armor.
3674.1King. O Ratcliffe, I haue dreamd a fearefull dreame,
¶What thinkst thou, will our friendes proue all true?
¶Rat. No doubt my Lord.
3675King. O Ratcliffe, I feare, I feare.
3680Armed in proofe, and led by shallow Richmond.
¶Tis not yet neere day, come, go with me,
¶Vnder our tents Ile plaie the ease dropper,
Exeunt.
3685
Enter the Lordes to Richmond.
¶Rich. Crie mercie Lordes, and watchfull gentlemen,
¶That you haue tane a tardie sluggard here.
¶That euer entred in a drowsie head,
¶Haue I since your depature had my Lordes,
¶Came to my tent, and cried on victorie,
¶In the remembrance of so faire a dreame.
¶How farre into the morning is it Lordes?
¶Rich. Whie, then tis time to arme, and giue direction.
¶
His oration to his souldiers.
¶More then I haue said, louing countriemen,
¶The leasure and inforcement of the time,
3705Forbids to dwell vpon, yet remember this,
¶The praiers of holy Saints and wronged soules,
¶Like high reard bulwarkes, stand before our faces,
3710Had rather haue vs winne, then him they follow:
¶For, what is he they follow? truelie gentlemen,
¶A bloudie tirant, and a homicide.
¶One that made meanes to come by what he hath,
¶One that hath euer bene Gods enemie.
¶Then if you fight against Gods enemie,
¶If you doe sweate to put a tyrant downe,
¶If you doe fight against your countries foes,
¶Your countries fat, shall paie your paines the hire.
3725If you doe fight in safegard of your wiues,
¶Your wiues shall welcome home the conquerors.
¶If you doe free your children from the sword,
¶Your childrens children quits it in your age:
¶Then in the name of God and all these rightes,
¶For me, the raunsome of my bold attempt,
¶shall be this could corps on the earths cold face:
¶But if I thriue, the gaine of my attempt,
3735Sound drummes and trumpets boldlie, and cheerefullie,
¶God, and Saint George, Richmond, and victorie.
¶
Enter King Richard, Rat. &c.
¶Rat. That he was neuer trained vp in armes.
¶Tell the clocke there.
The clocke striketh.
¶Giue me a calender, who saw the Sunne to day?
3745Rat. Not I my Lord.
¶A blacke day will it be to some bodie Rat.
¶Rat. My Lord.
¶The skie doeth frowne, and lowre vpon our armie,
¶I would these dewie teares were from the ground,
3755That frownes on me, lookes sadlie vpon him.
¶
Enter Norffolke
¶Norff. Arme, arme, my Lord, the foe vaunts in the field.
¶Call vp Lord Standlie, bid him bring his power,
3760I will leade forth, my souldiers to the plaine,
¶And thus my battaile shall be ordered.
¶My foreward shall be drawen out all in length,
3765Iohn, Duke of Norffolke, Thomas Earle of Surrey,
¶They thus directed, we will follow,
3770This, and Saint George to bootes what thinkst thou Norffolke?
¶This found I on my tent this morning.
¶
Iocky of Norfolke be not so bould,
¶Go gentlemen euery man vnto his charge,
¶Let not our babling dreames affright our soules:
¶March on, ioine brauelie, let vs to it pell mell,
¶If not to heauen then hand in hand to hell.
3783.1
His Oration to his army.
3785Remember whom you are to cope withall,
¶Whom their orecloied country vomits forth,
¶You hauing lands and blest with beauteous wifes,
¶And who doth lead them but a paltrey fellow,?
¶Long kept in Brittaine at our mothers cost,
3795A milkesopt, one that neuer in his life
3800Who but for dreaming on this fond exploit,
¶For want of means poore rats had hangd themselues,
¶If we be conquered, let men conquer vs,
¶Haue in their own land beaten bobd and thumpt,
3805And in record left them the heires of shame.
¶Shall these enioy our lands, lie with our wiues?
¶Rauish our daughters, harke I heare their drum,
¶Fight gentlemen of England, fight bold yeomen,
3810Draw archers draw your arrowes to the head,
¶Spur your proud horses hard, and ride in bloud,
¶Amaze the welkin with your broken staues,
¶What saies lord Stanley, wil he bring his power?
3815Mes. My lord, he doth deny to come,
¶After the battaile let George Stanley die.
¶Our ancient word of courage, faire saint George
¶Vpon them victorie sits on our helmes.
Exeunt.
¶
Alarum, excursions, Enter Catesby.
¶The king enacts more wonders then a man,
¶Daring an opposite to euerie danger,
3830Seeking for Richmond in the throat of death,
¶
Enter Richard.
¶And I will stand the hazard of the die,
¶I thinke there be sixe Richmonds in the field,
¶ crowne, with other Lords, &c.
¶The daie is ours, the bloudie dog is dead.
¶From the dead temples of this bloudie wretch,
¶Haue I pluckt off to grace thy browes withall,
¶Weare it, enioy it, and make much of it.
3855But tell me, is yong George Stanley liuing.
¶
Iohn Duke of Norffolke, Water Lord Ferris, sir
3860 Robert Brookenbury, & sir William Brandon.
¶Rich. Inter their bodies as become their births,
¶Proclaime a pardon to the soldiers fled,
¶And then as we haue tane the sacrament,
3865We will vnite the white rose and the red,
¶Smile heauen vpon this faire coniunction,
¶That long haue frownd vpon their enmitie,
¶What traitor heares me and saies not Amen?
3870The brother blindlie shed the brothers bloud,
¶All this deuided Yorke and Lancaster,
¶Deuided in their dire deuision.
3875O now let Richmond and Elizabeth,
¶By Gods faire ordinance conioine together,
¶And let their heires (God if thy will be so)
¶Abate the edge of traitors gracious Lord,
¶That would reduce these bloudy daies againe,
¶And make poore England weepe in streames of bloud,
3885That would with treason wound this faire lands peace,
¶Now ciuill wounds are stopt, peace liues againe,
¶
FINIS.
