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About this text

  • Title: Henry V (Quarto 1, 1600)
  • Editor: James D. Mardock
  • ISBN: 978-1-55058-409-7

    Copyright James D. Mardock. This text may be freely used for educational, non-profit purposes; for all other uses contact the Editor.
    Author: William Shakespeare
    Editor: James D. Mardock
    Peer Reviewed

    Henry V (Quarto 1, 1600)

    0.1THE
    CRONICLE
    History of Henry the fift,
    With his battell fought at Agin Court in
    0.5 France. Togither with Auntient
    Pistoll.
    As it hath bene sundry times playd by the Right honorable
    the Lord Chamberlaine his Servants.
    LONDON
    0.10Printed by Thomas Creede, for Tho. Milling-
    ton, and Iohn Busby. And are to be
    sold at his house in Carter Lane, next
    the Powle head. 1600.
    The Chronicle Historie
    0.15of Henry the fift: with his battel fought
    at Agin Court in France. Togither with
    Auncient Pistoll.
    Enter King Henry, Exeter, 2. Bishops, Clarence, and other
    143.1Attendants.
    Exeter.
    SHall I call in Thambassadors my Liege?
    King. Not yet my Cousin, til we be resolude
    149.1Of some serious matters touching vs and France.
    Bi. God and his Angels guard your sacred throne,
    And make you long become it.
    155King. Shure we thank you. And good my Lord proceed
    Why the Lawe Salicke which they haue in France,
    Or should or should not, stop vs in our clayme:
    160And God forbid my wise and learned Lord,
    That you should fashion, frame, or wrest the same.
    165For God doth know how many now in health,
    Shall drop their blood in approbation,
    Of what your reuerence shall incite vs too.
    Therefore take heed how you impawne our person.
    How you awake the sleeping sword of warre:
    170We charge you in the name of God take heed.
    After this coniuration, speake my Lord:
    And we will iudge, note, and beleeue in heart,
    That what you speake, is washt as pure
    As sin in baptisme.
    A 2
    180Then heare me gracious soueraigne, and you peeres,
    Which owe your liues, your faith and seruices
    To this imperiall throne.
    There is no bar to stay your highnesse claime to France
    But one, which they produce from Faramount,
    No female shall succeed in salicke land,
    Which salicke land the French vniustly gloze
    To be the realme of France:
    And Faramont the founder of this law and female barre:
    190Yet their owne writers faithfully affirme
    That the land salicke lyes in Germany,
    Betweene the flouds of Sabeck and of Elme,
    Where Charles the fift hauing subdude the Saxons
    There left behind, and setled certaine French,
    195Who holding in disdaine the Germaine women,
    For some dishonest maners of their liues,
    Establisht there this lawe. To wit,
    No female shall succeed in salicke land:
    Which salicke land as I said before,
    200Is at this time in Germany called Mesene:
    Thus doth it well appeare the salicke lawe
    Was not deuised for the realme of France,
    Nor did the French possesse the salicke land,
    Vntill 400. one and twentie yeares
    205After the function of king Faramont,
    Godly supposed the founder of this lawe:
    Hugh Capet also that vsurpt the crowne,
    To fine his title with some showe of truth,
    220When in pure truth it was corrupt and naught:
    Conuaid himselfe as heire to the Lady Inger,
    Daughter to Charles, the foresaid Duke of Loraine,
    So that as cleare as is the sommers Sun,
    King Pippins title and Hugh Capets claime,
    235King Charles his satisfaction all appeare,
    To hold in right and title of the female:
    So do the Lords of France vntil this day,
    Howbeit they would hold vp this salick lawe
    To
    of Henry the fift.
    To bar your highnesse claiming from the female,
    240And rather choose to hide them in a net,
    Then amply to imbace their crooked causes,
    Vsurpt from you and your progenitors.
    K. May we with right & conscience make this (claime?
    Bi. The sin vpon my head dread soueraigne.
    245For in the booke of Numbers is it writ,
    When the sonne dies, let the inheritance
    Descend vnto the daughter.
    Noble Lord stand for your owne,
    Vnwinde your bloody flagge,
    250Go my dread Lord to your great graunsirs graue,
    From whom you clayme:
    And your great Vncle Edward the blacke Prince,
    Who on the French ground playd a Tragedy
    Making defeat on the full power of France,
    255Whilest his most mighty father on a hill,
    Stood smiling to behold his Lyons whelpe,
    Foraging blood of French Nobilitie.
    O Noble English that could entertaine
    With halfe their Forces the full power of France:
    260And let an other halfe stand laughing by,
    All out of worke, and cold for action.
    King. We must not onely arme vs against the French,
    But lay downe our proportion for the Scot,
    285Who will make rode vpon vs with all aduantgages.
    Bi. The Marches gracious soueraigne, shalbe sufficient
    To guard your England from the pilfering borderers.
    290King. We do not meane the coursing sneakers onely,
    But feare the mayne entendement of the Scot,
    For you shall read, neuer my great grandfather
    Vnmaskt his power for France,
    295But that the Scot on his vnfurnisht Kingdome,
    Came pouring like the Tide into a breach,
    300That England being empty of defences,
    Hath shooke and trembled at the brute hereof.
    Bi. She hath bin then more feared then hurt my Lord:
    A 3 For
    The Chronicle Historie
    For heare her but examplified by her selfe,
    When all her chiualry hath bene in France
    305And she a mourning widow of her Nobles,
    She hath her selfe not only well defended,
    But taken and impounded as a stray, the king of Scots,
    Whom like a caytiffe she did leade to France,
    310Filling your Chronicles as rich with praise
    As is the owse and bottome of the sea
    With sunken wrack and shiplesse treasurie.
    Lord. There is a saying very old and true,
    If you will France win,
    Then with Scotland first begin:
    315For once the Eagle, England being in pray,
    To his vnfurnish nest the weazel Scot
    Would suck her egs, playing the mouse in absence of the (cat:
    To spoyle and hauock more than she can eat.
    320Exe. It followes then, the cat must stay at home,
    Yet that is but a curst necessitie,
    Since we haue trappes to catch the petty theeues:
    Whilste that the armed hand doth fight abroad
    325The aduised head controlles at home:
    For gouernment though high or lowe, being put into parts,
    Congrueth with a mutuall content like musicke.
    330Bi. True: therefore doth heauen diuide the fate of man
    in diuers functions.
    Whereto is added as an ayme or but, obedience:
    For so liue the honey Bees, creatures that by awe
    Ordaine an act of order to a peopeld Kingdome:
    They haue a King and officers of sort,
    Where some like Magistrates correct at home:
    Others like Marchants venture trade abroad:
    340Others like souldiers armed in their stings,
    Make boote vpon the sommers veluet bud:
    Which pillage they with mery march bring home
    To the tent royall of their Emperour,
    Who busied in his maiestie, behold
    345The singing masons building roofes of gold:
    The
    of Henry the fifth.
    The ciuell citizens lading vp the honey,
    The sad eyde Iustice with his surly humme,
    350Deliuering vp to executors pale, the lazy caning Drone.
    This I infer, that 20. actions once a foote,
    351.1May all end in one moment.
    As many Arrowes losed seuerall wayes, flye to one marke:
    355As many seuerall wayes meete in one towne:
    As many fresh streames run in one selfe sea:
    As many lines close in the dyall center:
    So may a thousand actions once a foote,
    End in one moment, and be all well borne without defect.
    360Therefore my Liege to France,
    Diuide your happy England into foure,
    Of which take you one quarter into France,
    And you withall, shall make all Gallia shake.
    If we with thrice that power left at home,
    365Cannot defend our owne doore from the dogge,
    Let vs be beaten, and from henceforth lose
    The name of pollicy and hardinesse.
    Ki. Call in the messenger sent frō the Dolphin,
    370And by your ayde, the noble sinewes of our land,
    France being ours, weele bring it to our awe,
    Or breake it all in peeces:
    Eyther our Chronicles shal with full mouth speak
    Freely of our acts,
    Or else like toonglesse mutes
    380Not worshipt with a paper Epitaph:
    Enter Thambassadors from France.
    Now are we well prepared to know the Dolphins pleasure,
    For we heare your comming is from him.
    385Ambassa. Pleaseth your Maiestie to giue vs leaue
    Freely to render what we haue in charge:
    Or shall I sparingly shew a farre off,
    The Dolphins pleasure and our Embassage?
    King. We are no tyrant, but a Christian King,
    390To whom our spirit is as subiect,
    As are our wretches fettered in our prisons.
    There-
    The Chronicle Historie
    Therefore freely and with vncurbed boldnesse
    Tell vs the Dolphins minde.
    Ambas. Then this in fine the Dolphin saith,
    395Whereas you clayme certaine Townes in France,
    From your predecessor king Edward the third,
    397.1This he returnes.
    He saith, theres nought in France that can be with a nimble
    Galliard wonne: you cannot reuel into Dukedomes there:
    Therefore he sendeth meeter for your study,
    This tunne of treasure: and in lieu of this,
    405Desires to let the Dukedomes that you craue
    Heare no more from you: This the Dolphin saith.
    King. What treasure Vncle?
    Exe. Tennis balles my Liege.
    King. We are glad the Dolphin is so pleasant with vs,
    410Your message and his present we accept:
    When we haue matched our rackets to these balles,
    We will by Gods grace play such a set,
    Shall strike his fathers crowne into the hazard.
    Tell him he hath made a match with such a wrangler,
    415That all the Courts of France shall be disturbd with chases.
    And we vnderstand him well, how he comes ore vs
    With our wilder dayes, not measuring what vse we made
    of them.
    We neuer valued this poore seate of England.
    420And therefore gaue our selues to barbarous licence:
    As tis common seene that men are merriest when they are
    from home.
    But tell the Dolphin we will keepe our state,
    Be like a King, mightie and commaund,
    425When we do rowse vs in throne of France:
    For this haue we laid by our Maiestie
    And plodded lide a man for working dayes.
    But we will rise there with so full of glory,
    That we will dazell all the eyes of France,
    430I strike the Dolphin blinde to looke on vs,
    And tell him this, his mock hath turnd his balles to gun (stones,
    And
    of Henry the fift.
    And his soule shall sit sore charged for the wastfull(vengeance
    That shall flye from them. For this his mocke
    435Shall mocke many a wife out of their deare husbands.
    Mocke mothers from their sonnes, mocke Castles downe,
    I some are yet vngotten and vnborne,
    That shall haue cause to curse the Dolphins scorne.
    But this lyes all within the will of God, to whom we doo (appeale,
    440And in whose name tel you the Dolphin we are cōming on
    To venge vs as we may, and to put forth our hand
    In a rightfull cause: so get you hence, and tell your Prince,
    445His Iest will sauour but of shallow wit,
    When thousands weepe, more then did laugh at it.
    Conuey them with safe conduct: see them hence.
    Exe. This was a merry message.
    450King. We hope to make the sender blush at it:
    455Therefore let our collectiō for the wars be soone prouided:
    For God before, weell check the Dolphin at his fathers (doore.
    460Therefore let euery man now taske his thought,
    That this faire action may on foote be brought.
    Exeunt omnes.
    505Enter Nim and Bardolfe.
    Bar. Godmorrow Corporall Nim.
    Nim. Godmorrow Lieftenant Bardolfe.
    Bar. What is antient Pistoll and thee friends yet?
    508.1Nim. I cannot tell, things must be as they may:
    I dare not fight, but I will winke and hold out mine Iron:
    It is a simple one, but what tho; it will serue to toste cheese,
    And it will endure cold as an other mans sword will,
    And theres the humor of it.
    514.1Bar. Yfaith mistresse quickly did thee great wrong,
    For thou weart troth plight to her.
    B Nim. I
    The Chronicle Historie
    Nim. I must do as I may, tho patience be a tyred mare,
    Yet sheel plod, and some say kniues haue edges,
    525And men may sleepe and haue their throtes about them
    At that time, and there is the humour of it.
    515Bar. Come yfaith, Ile bestow a breakfast to make Pistoll
    And thee friendes. What a plague should we carrie kniues
    515.1To cut our owne throates.
    Nim. Yfaith Ile liue as long as I may, thats the certaine of it.
    And when I cannot liue any longer, Ile do as I may,
    520And theres my rest, and the randeuous of it.
    530Enter Pistoll and Hostes Quickly, his wife.
    530.1Bar. Godmorrow ancient Pistoll.
    Here comes ancient Pistoll, I prithee Nim be quiet.
    Nim. How do you my Hoste?
    Pist.Base slaue, callest thou me hoste?
    Now by gads lugges I sweare, I scorne the title,
    535Nor shall my Nell keepe lodging.
    Host. No by my troath not I,
    For we cānot bed nor boord halfe a score honest gētlewomē
    That liue honestly by the prick of their needle,
    But it is thought straight we keepe a bawdy-house.
    539.1O Lord heeres Corporall Nims, now shall
    We haue wilful adultry and murther committed:
    541.1Good Corporall Nim shew the valour of a man,
    And put vp your sword.
    Nim. Push.
    544.1Pist. What dost thou push, thou prickeard cur of Iseland?
    Nim. Will you shog off? I would haue you solus.
    550Pist. Solus egregious dog, that solus in thy throte,
    And in thy lungs, and which is worse, within
    Thy mesfull mouth, I do retort that solus in thy
    Bowels, and in thy Iaw, perdie: for I can talke,
    And Pistolls flashing firy cock is vp.
    Nim. I am not Barbasom, you cannot coniure me:
    I haue an humour Pistoll to knock you indifferently well,
    And you fall foule with me Pistoll, Ile scoure you with my
    Rapier
    of Henry the fift.
    Rapier in faire termes. If you will walke off a little,
    560Ile prick your guts a litle in good termes,
    And theres the humour of it.
    Pist. O braggard vile, and damned furious wight,
    The Graue doth gape, and groaning
    Death is neare, therefore exall.
    563.1 They drawe.
    565Bar. Heare me, he that strikes the first blow,
    Ile kill him, as I am a souldier.
    Pist. An oath of mickle might, and fury shall abate.
    Nim. Ile cut your throat at one time or an other in faire (termes,
    And theres the humor of it.
    Pist. Couple gorge is the word, I thee defie agen:
    A damned hound, thinkst thou my spouse to get?
    575No, to the powdering tub of infamy,
    Fetch forth the lazar kite of Cresides kinde,
    Doll Tear-sheete, she by name, and her espowse
    I haue, and I will hold, the quandom quickly,
    For the onely she and Paco, there it is inough.
    580Enter the Boy.
    Boy. Hostes you must come straight to my maister,
    And you Host Pistoll. Good Bardolfe
    Put thy nose between the sheets, and do the office of a(warming pan.
    Host. By my troath heele yeeld the crow a pudding one (of these dayes.
    586.1Ile go to him, husband youle come?
    Bar. Come Pistoll be friends.
    Nim prithee be friends, and if thou wilt not be
    Enemies with me too.
    Ni. I shal haue my eight shillings I woon of you at beating?
    Pist. Base is the slaue that payes.
    Nim. That now I will haue, and theres the humor of it.
    Pist. As manhood shall compound. They draw.
    Bar. He that strikes the first blow,
    600Ile kill him by this sword.
    Pist. Sword is an oath, and oathes must haue their course.
    B 2 Nim.
    The Chronicle Historie
    601.1Nim. I shall haue my eight shillings I wonne of you at
    beating?
    605Pist. A noble shalt thou haue, and readie pay,
    And liquor likewise will giue to thee,
    And friendship shall combind and brotherhood:
    Ile liue by Nim as Nim shall liue by me:
    Is not this iust? for I shall Sutler be
    Vnto the Campe, and profit will occrue.
    Nim. I shall haue my noble?
    Pist. In cash most truly paid.
    Nim. Why theres the humour of it.
    Enter Hostes.
    615Hostes. As euer you came of men come in,
    Sir Iohn poore soule is so troubled
    With a burning tashan contigian feuer, tis wonderfull.
    625Pist. Let us condoll the knight: for lamkins we will liue.
    625.1Exeunt omnes.
    Enter Exeter and Gloster.
    Glost. Before God my Lord, his Grace is too bold to trust
    these traytors.
    Exe. They shalbe apprehended by and by.
    635Glost. I but the man that was his bedfellow
    Whom he hath cloyed and graced with princely fauours
    That he should for a forraine purse, to sell
    His Soueraignes life to death and trechery.
    638.1Exe. O the Lord of Massham.
    640Enter the King and three Lords.
    King. Now sirs the windes faire, and we wil aboord;
    My Lord of Cambridge, and my Lord of Massham,
    And you my gentle Knight, giue me your thoughts,
    Do you not thinke the power we beare with vs,
    645Will make vs conquerors in the field of France?
    Massha. No doubt my Liege, if each man do his best.
    Cam. Neuer
    of Henry the fift.
    Cam. Neuer was Monarch better feared and loued then
    655 is your maiestie.
    Gray. Euen those that were your fathers enemies
    Haue steeped their galles in honey for your sake.
    King. We therefore haue great cause of thankfulnesse,
    And shall forget the office of our hands:
    Sooner then reward and merit,
    According to their cause and worthinesse.
    665Massha. So seruice shall with steeled sinewes shine,
    And labour shall refresh it selfe with hope
    To do your Grace incessant seruice.
    King. Vncle of Exeter, enlarge the man
    Committed yesterday, that rayled against our person,
    We consider it was the heate of wine that set him on,
    And on his more aduice we pardon him.
    Massha. That is mercie, but too much securitie:
    Let him bee punisht Soueraigne, least the example of (him
    675Breed more of such a kinde.
    King. O let vs yet be mercifull.
    Cam. So may your highnesse, and punish too.
    Gray. You shew great mercie if you giue him lilfe,
    After the taste of his correction.
    680King. Alas your too much care and loue of me
    Are heauy orisons gainst the poore wretch,
    If litle faults proceeding on distemper should not bee (winked at,
    How should we stretch our eye, when capitall crimes,
    Chewed, swallowed and disgested, appeare before vs:
    685Well yet enlarge the man, tho Cambridge and the rest
    In their deare loues, and tender preseruation of our state,
    Would haue him punisht.
    Now to our French causes.
    Who are the late Commissioners?
    690Cam. Me one my Lord, your highnesse bad me aske for
    it to day.
    B 3 Masha. So
    The Chronicle Historie
    Mash. So did you me my Soueraigne.
    Gray. And me my Lord.
    King. Then Richard Earle of Cambridge there is yours.
    695There is yours my Lord of Masham.
    And sir Thomas Gray knight of Northumberland, this same is (yours:
    Read them, and know we know your worthinesse.
    Vnckle Exeter I will aboord to night.
    Why how now Gentlemen, why change you colour?
    700What see you in those papers
    That hath so chased your blood out of apparance?
    705Cam. I do confesse my fault, and do submit me
    To your highnesse mercie.
    Mash. To which we all appeale.
    King. The mercy which was quit in vs but late,
    By your owne reasons is forstald and done:
    710You must not dare for shame to aske for mercy,
    For your owne conscience turne vpon your bosomes,
    As dogs vpon their maisters worrying them.
    See you my Princes, and my noble Peeres,
    These English monsters:
    My Lord of Cambridge here,
    715You know how apt we were to grace him,
    In all things belonging to his honour:
    And this vilde man hath for a fewe light crownes,
    Lightly conspired and sworne vnto the practises of France:
    720To kill vs here in Hampton. To the which,
    This knight no lesse in bountie bound to vs
    Then Cambridge is, haah likewise sworne.
    But oh what shall I say to thee false man,
    Thou cruell ingratefull and inhumane creature,
    725Thou that didst beare the key of all my counsell,
    That knewst the very secrets of my heart,
    That almost mightest a coyned me into gold,
    Wouldest thou a practisde on me for thy vse:
    Can it be possible that out of thee
    730Should proceed one sparke that might annoy my finger?
    Tis
    of Henry the fift.
    Tis so strange, that tho the truth doth showe as grose
    As black from white, mine eye wil scarcely see it.
    Their faults are open, arrest them to the answer of the lawe,
    And God acquit them of their practises.
    Exe. I arrest thee of high treason,
    By the name of Richard, Earle of Cambridge.
    I arest thee of high treason,
    By the name of Henry, Lord of Masham.
    I arest thee of high treason,
    By the name of Thomas Gray, knight of Northumberland.
    780Mash. Our purposes God iustly hath discouered,
    And I repent my fault more then my death,
    Which I beseech your maiestie forgiue,
    Altho my body pay the price of it.
    795King. God quit you in his mercy. Heare your sentence.
    You haue conspired against our royall person,
    Ioyned with an enemy proclaimed and fixed.
    And frō his coffers receiued the golden earnest of our death
    Touching our person we seeke no redresse.
    But we our kingdomes safetie must so tender
    805Whose ruine you haue sought,
    That to our lawes we do deliuer you.
    Get ye therefore hence: poore miserable creatures to your (death,
    The taste whereof, God in his mercy giue you
    Patience to endure, and true repentance of all your deeds (amisse:
    810Beare them hence.
    Exit three Lords.
    Now Lords to France. The enterprise whereof,
    Shall be to you as vs, successiuely.
    Since God cut off this dangerous treason lurking in our way
    Cheerly to sea, the signes of war aduance:
    No King of England, if not King of France.
    Exit omnes.
    Enter
    The Chronicle Historie
    Enter Nim, Pistoll, Bardolfe, Hostes and a Boy.
    Host. I prethy sweete heart, let me bring thee so farre as ( Stanes.
    824.1Pist. No fur, no fur.
    Bar. Well sir Iohn is gone. God be with him.
    Host. I, he is in Arthors bosom, if euer any were:
    He went away as if it were a crysombd childe,
    835Betweene twelue and one,
    Iust at turning of the tide:
    835.1His nose was as sharpe as a pen:
    For when I saw him fumble with the sheetes,
    And talk of floures, and smile vpō his fingers ends
    I knew there was no way but one.
    How now sir Iohn quoth I?
    And he cryed three times, God, God, God,
    Now I to comfort him, bad him not think of God,
    I hope there was no such need.
    Then he bad me put more cloathes at his feete:
    845And I felt to them, and they were as cold as any stone:
    And to his knees, and they were as cold as any stone.
    And so vpward, and vpward, and all was as cold as any stone.
    Nim. They say he cride out on Sack.
    Host. I that he did.
    850Boy. And of women.
    Host. No that he did not.
    Boy. Yes that he did: and he sed they were diuels incarnat.
    Host. Indeed carnation was a colour he neuer loued.
    854.1Nom. Well he did cry out on women.
    Host. Indeed he did in some sort handle women,
    But then he was rumaticke, and talkt of the whore of( Babylon.
    Boy. Hostes do you remember he saw a Flea stand
    Vpon Bardolfes Nose, and sed it was a black soule
    Burning in hell fire?
    Bar.
    of Henry the fift.
    862.1Bar. Well, God be with him,
    865That was all the wealth I got in his seruice.
    Nim. Shall we shog off?
    The king wil be gone from Southampton.
    Pist. Cleare vp thy cristalles,
    Looke to my chattels and my moueables.
    870Trust none: the word is pitch and pay:
    Mens words are wafer cakes,
    And hold fast is the only dog my deare.
    Therefore cophetua be thy counsellor,
    872.1Touch her soft lips and part.
    Bar. Farewell hostes.
    880Nim. I cannot kis: and theres the humor of it.
    But adieu.
    880.1Pist. Keepe fast thy buggle boe.
    Exit omnes.
    Enter King of France, Bourbon, Dolphin,
    and others.
    887.1King. Now you Lords of Orleance,
    Of Bourbon, and of Berry,
    You see the King of England is not slack,
    For he is footed on this land alreadie.
    Dolphin. My gratious Lord, tis meet we all goe (foorth,
    And arme vs against the foe:
    910And view the weak & sickly parts of France:
    But let vs do it with no show of feare,
    No with no more, then if we heard
    England were busied with a Moris dance.
    For my good Lord, she is so idley kingd,
    915Her scepter so fantistically borne,
    So guided by a shallow humorous youth,
    That feare attends her not.
    Con. O Peace Prince Dolphin, you deceiue your selfe,
    C Question
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    920Question your grace the late Embassador,
    With what regard he heard his Embassage,
    How well supplied with aged Counsellours,
    922.1And how his resolution andswered him,
    You then would say that Harry was not wilde.
    King. Well thinke we Harry strong:
    938.1And strongly arme vs to preuent the foe.
    Con. My Lord here is an Embassador
    From the King of England.
    Kin. Bid him come in.
    960You see this chase is hotly followed Lords.
    Dol. My gracious father, cut vp this English short,
    Selfe loue my Liege is not so vile a thing,
    As self neglecting.
    Enter Exeter.
    King. From our brother England?
    970Exe. From him, and thus he greets your Maiestie:
    He wils you in the name of God Almightie,
    That you deuest your selfe and lay apart
    That borrowed tytle, which by gift of heauen,
    Of lawe of nature, and of nations, longs
    975To him and to his heires, namely the crowne
    And all wide stretched titles that belongs
    Vnto the Crowne of France, that you may know
    Tis no sinister, nor no awkeward claime,
    980Pickt from the worm holes of old vanisht dayes,
    Nor from the dust of old obliuion rackte,
    He sends you these most memorable lynes,
    In euery branch truly demonstrated:
    Willing you ouerlooke this pedigree,
    985And when you finde him euenly deriued
    From his most famed and famous ancestors,
    Edward the third, he bids you then resigne
    Your crowne and kingdome, indirectly held
    From him, the natiue and true challenger.
    King.
    of Henry the fift.
    990King. If not, what followes?
    Exe. Bloody cōstraint, for if you hide the crown
    Euen in your hearts, there will he rake for it:
    Therefore in fierce tempest is he comming,
    In thunder, and in earthquake, like a Ioue,
    995That if requiring faile, he will compell it:
    And on your heads turnes he the widowes teares,
    1000The Orphanes cries, the dead mens bones,
    The pining maydens grones.
    For husbands, fathers, and distressed louers,
    Which shall be swallowed in this controuersie.
    This is his claime, his threatning, and my message,
    1005Vnles the Dolphin be in presence here,
    To whom expresly we bring greeting too.
    1010Dol. For the Dolphin? I stand here for him,
    What to heare from England.
    Exe. Scorn & defiance, slight regard, contempt,
    And any thing that may not misbecome
    The mightie sender, doth he prise you at:
    1015Thus saith my king. Vnles your fathers highnesse
    Sweeten the bitter mocke you sent his Maiestie,
    Heele call you to so loud an answere for it,
    That caues and wombely vaultes of France
    1020Shall chide your trespasse, and return your mock,
    In second accent of his ordenance.
    Dol. Say that my father render faire reply,
    It is against my will:
    For I desire nothing so much,
    As oddes with England.
    1025And for that cause according to his youth
    I did present him with those Paris balles.
    Exe. Heele make your Paris Louer shake for it,
    Were it the mistresse Court of mightie Europe.
    And be assured, youle finde a difference
    1030As we his subiects haue in wonder found:
    C 2 Betweene
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    Betweene his yonger dayes and these he musters now,
    Now he wayes time euen to the latest graine,
    Which you shall finde in your owne losses
    If he stay in France.
    1034.1King. Well for vs, you shall returne our answere backe
    To our brother England.
    Exit omnes.
    Enter Nim, Bardolfe, Pistoll, Boy.
    1119.1Nim. Before God here is hote seruice.
    Pist. Tis hot indeed, blowes go and come,
    Gods vassals drop and die.
    1126.1Nim. Tis honor, and theres the humor of it.
    Boy. Would I were in London:
    1130Ide giue all my honor for a pot of Ale.
    Pist. And I. If wishes would preuaile,
    I would not stay, but thither would I hie.
    Enter Flewellen and beates them in.
    Flew. Godes plud vp to the breaches
    You rascals, will you not vp to the breaches?
    1140Nim. Abate thy rage sweete knight,
    Abate thy rage.
    1141.1Boy. Well I would I were once from them:
    They would haue me as familiar
    With mens pockets, as their gloues, and their
    Handkerchers, they will steale any thing.
    Bardolfe stole a Lute case, carryed it three mile,
    1160And sold it for three hapence.
    Nim stole a fier shouell.
    I knew by that, they meant to carry coales:
    Well, if they will not leaue me,
    I meane to leaue them.
    1170ExitNim, Bardolfe, Pistoll, and the Boy.
    Enter Gower.
    Gower. Gaptain Flewellen, you must come strait
    To the Mines, to the Duke of Gloster.
    Looke
    of Henry the fift.
    1175Fleu. Looke you, tell the Duke it is not so good
    To come to the mines: the concuaueties is otherwise,
    You may discusse to the Duke, the enemy is digd
    1180Himselfe fiue yardes vnder the countermines:
    By Iesus I thinke heele blowe vp all
    If there be no better direction.
    Enter the King and his Lords alarum.
    1260King. How yet resolues the Gouernour of the Towne?
    This is the latest parley weele admit:
    Therefore to our best mercie giue your selues,
    Or like to men proud of destruction, defie vs to our worst,
    For as I am a souldier, a name that in my thoughts
    1265Becomes me best, if we begin the battery once againe
    I will not leaue the halfe atchieued Harflew,
    Till in her ashes she be buried,
    The gates of mercie are all shut vp.
    What say you, will you yeeld and this auoyd,
    Or guiltie in defence be thus destroyd?
    Enter Gouernour.
    Gouer. Our expectation hath this day an end:
    1305The Dolphin whom of succour we entreated,
    Returnes vs word, his powers are not yet ready,
    To raise so great a siege: therefore dread King,
    We yeeld our towne and liues to thy soft mercie:
    Enter our gates, dispose of vs and ours,
    1310For we no longer are defensiue now.
    1320Enter Katherine, Allice.
    Kate. Allice venecia, vous aues cates en,
    Vou parte fort bon Angloys englatara,
    1325Coman sae palla vou la main en francoy.
    C 3 Allice. La
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    Allice. La main madam de han.
    Kate. E da bras.
    1340Allice. De arma madam.
    Kate. Le main da han la bras de arma.
    1331.1Allice. Owye madam.
    1350Kate. E Coman sa pella vow la menton a la coll.
    Allice. De neck, e de cin, madam.
    Kate. E de neck, e de cin, e de code.
    1341.1Allice. De cudie ma foy Ie oblye, mais Ie remembre,
    1335Le tude, o de elbo madam.
    1360Kate. Ecowte Ie rehersera, towt cella que Iac apoandre,
    De han, de arma, de neck, du cin, e de bilbo.
    1360.1Allice. De elbo madam.
    Kate. O Iesu, Iea obloye ma foy, ecoute Ie recontera
    De han, de arma, de neck, de cin, e de elbo, e ca bon.
    1355Allice. Ma foy madam, vow parla au se bon Angloys
    Asie vous aues ettue en Englatara.
    Kate. Par la grace de deu an pettie tanes, Ie parle milleur
    Coman se pella vou le peid e le robe.
    Allice. Le foot, e le con.
    Kate. Le fot, e le con, ô Iesu! Ie ne vew poinct parle,
    Sie plus deuant le che cheualires de franca,
    Pur one million ma foy.
    Allice. Madam, de foote, e le con.
    Kate. O et ill ausie, ecowte Allice, de han, de arma,
    De neck, de cin, le foote, e de con.
    1375Allice. Cet fort bon madam.
    Kate. Aloues a diner.
    Exit omnes.
    Enter King of France Lord Constable, the Dolphin,
    and Burbon.
    1380King. Tis certaine he is past the Riuer Some.
    Con. Mordeu ma via: Shall a few spranes of vs,
    The
    of Henry the fift.
    1385The emptying of our fathers luxerie,
    Outgrow their grafters.
    Bur. Normanes, basterd Normanes, mor du
    1390And if they passe vnfought withall,
    Ile sell my Dukedome for a foggy farme
    In that short nooke Ile of England.
    Const. Why whence haue they this mettall?
    1395Is not their clymate raw, foggy and colde.
    On whom as in disdaine, the Sunne lookes pale?
    Can barley broath, a drench for swolne Iades
    Their sodden water decockt such liuely blood?
    1400And shall our quick blood spirited with wine
    Seeme frosty? O for honour of our names,
    Let vs not hang like frozen Iicesickles
    Vpon our houses tops, while they a more frosty clymate
    Sweate drops of youthfull blood.
    King. Constable dispatch, send Montioy forth,
    To know what willing raunsome he will giue?
    Sonne Dolphin you shall stay in Rone with me.
    1445Dol. Not so I do beseech your Maiestie.
    1445.1King. Well, I say it shalbe so.
    Exeunt omnes.
    Enter Gower.
    Go. How now Captain Flewellen, come you frō the bridge?
    Flew. By Iesus thers excellēt seruice cōmitted at ye bridge.
    1455Gour. Is the Duke of Exeter safe?
    Flew. The duke of Exeter is a mā whom I loue, & I honor,
    And I worship, with my soule, and my heart, and my life,
    And my lands and my liuings,
    And my vttermost powers.
    The Duke is looke you,
    God be praised and pleased for it, no harme in the worell.
    1460He is maintain the bridge very gallently: there is an Ensigne
    There,
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    There, I do not know how you call him, but by Iesus I think
    He is as valient a man as Marke Anthonie, he doth maintain
    the bridge most gallantly: yet he is a man of no reckoning:
    1465But I did see him do gallant seruice.
    Gouer. How do you call him?
    Flew. His name is ancient Pistoll.
    Gouer. I know him not.
    Enter Ancient Pistoll.
    1470Flew. Do you not know him, here comes the man.
    Pist. Captaine, I thee beseech to do me fauour,
    The Duke of Exeter doth loue thee well.
    Flew. I, and I praise God I haue merrited some loue at (his hands.
    1475Pist. Bardolfe a souldier, one of buxsome valour,
    Hath by furious fate
    And giddy Fortunes fickle wheele,
    That Godes blinde that stands vpon the rowling restlesse(stone.
    Flew. By your patience ancient Pistoll,
    Fortune, looke you is painted,
    1480Plind with a mufler before her eyes,
    To signifie to you, that Fortune is plind:
    And she is moreouer painted with a wheele,
    Which is the morall that Fortune is turning,
    And inconstant, and variation; and mutabilities:
    And her fate is fixed at a sphericall stone
    1485Which roules, and roules, and roules:
    Surely the Poet is make an excellēt descriptiō of Fortune.
    Fortune looke you is and excellent morall.
    Pist. Fortune is Bardolfes foe, and frownes on him,
    For he hath stolne a packs, and hanged must he be:
    A damned death, let gallowes gape for dogs,
    1490Let man go free, and let not death his windpipe stop.
    But
    of Henry the fift
    But Exeter hath giuen the doome of death,
    For packs of pettie price:
    Therefore go speake, the Duke will heare thy voyce,
    And let not Bardolfes vitall threed be cut,
    With edge of penny cord, and vile approach.
    1495Speake Captaine for his life, and I will thee requite.
    Flew. Captain Pistoll, I partly vnderstand your meaning.
    Pist. Why then reioyce therefore.
    1500Flew. Certainly Antient Pistol, tis not a thing to reioyce at,
    For if he were my owne brother, I would wish the Duke
    To do his pleasure, and put him to executions: for look you,
    Disciplines ought to be kept, they ought to be kept.
    Pist. Die and be damned, and figa for thy friendship.
    1505Flew. That is good.
    Pist. The figge of Spaine within thy Iawe.
    Flew. That is very well.
    1507.1Pist. I say the fig within thy bowels and thy durty maw.
    Exit Pistoll.
    Fle. Captain Gour, cannot you hear it lighten & thunder?
    Gour. Why is this the Ancient you told me of?
    I remember him now, he is a bawd, a cutpurse.
    1510Flew. By Iesus hee is vtter as praue words vpon the bridge
    As you shall desire to see in a sommers day, but its all one,
    What he hath sed to me, looke you, is all one.
    Go. Why this is a gull, a foole, a rogue that goes to the wars
    1515Only to grace himselfe at his returne to London:
    And such fellowes as he,
    Are perfect in great Commaunders names.
    They will learne by rote where seruices were done,
    At such and such a sconce, at such a breach,
    At such a conuoy: who came off brauely, who was shot,
    1520Who disgraced, what termes the enemie stood on.
    And this they con perfectly in phrase of warre,
    Which they trick vp with new tuned oathes, & what a berd
    Of the Generalls cut, and a horid shout of the campe
    D Will
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    Will do among the foming bottles and alewasht wits
    1525Is wonderfull to be thought on: but you must learne
    To know such slaunders of this age,
    Or else you may maruellously be mistooke.
    Flew. Certain captain Gower, it is not the man, looke you,
    1530That I did take him to be: but when time shall serue,
    I shall tell him a litle of my desires: here comes his Maiestie.
    Enter King, Clarence, Gloster and others.
    King. How now Flewellen, come you from the bridge?
    Flew. I and it shall please your Maiestie,
    1540There is excellent seruice at the bridge.
    1545King. What men haue you lost Flewellen?
    1545.1Flew. And it shall please your Maiestie,
    The partition of the aduersarie hath bene great,
    Very reasonable great: but for our own parts, like you now,
    I thinke we haue lost neuer a man, vnlesse it be one
    For robbing of a church, one Bardolfe, if your Maiestie
    1550Know the man, his face is full of whelkes and knubs,
    And pumples, and his breath blowes at his nose
    Like a cole, sometimes red, sometimes plew:
    But god be praised, now his nose is executed, & his fire out.
    1555King. We would haue all offenders so cut off,
    And we here giue expresse commaundment,
    That there be nothing taken from the villages but paid for,
    None of the French abused,
    Or abraided with disdainfull language:
    For when cruelty and lenitie play for a Kingdome,
    1560The gentlest gamester is the sooner winner.
    Enter French Herauld.
    Hera. You know me by my habit.
    Ki. Well thē, we know thee, what shuld we know of thee?
    Hera. My maisters minde.
    King. Vnfold it.
    Heral. Go thee vnto Harry of England, and tell him,
    1570Aduantage is a better souldier then rashnesse:
    Altho
    of Henry the fift.
    1570.1Altho we did seeme dead, we did but slumber.
    Now we speake vpon our kue, and our voyce is imperiall,
    England shall repent her folly: see her rashnesse,
    1575And admire our sufferance. Which to raunsome,
    His pettinesse would bow vnder:
    1580For the effusion of our blood, his army is too weake:
    For the disgrace we have borne, himselfe
    Kneeling at our feete, a weake and worthlesse satisfaction.
    To this, adde defyance. So much from the king my maister.
    King. What is thy name? we know thy qualitie.
    Herald. Montioy.
    King. Thou dost thy office faire, returne thee backe,
    1590And tell thy King, I do not seeke him now:
    But could be well content, without impeach,
    To march on to Callis: for to say the sooth,
    Though tis no wisdome to confesse so much
    Vnto an enemie of craft and vantage.
    1595My souldiers are with sicknesse much infeebled,
    My Army lessoned, and those fewe I haue,
    Almost no better then so many French:
    Who when they were in heart, I tell thee Herauld,
    I thought vpon one paire of English legges,
    1600Did march three French mens.
    Yet forgiue me God, that I do brag thus:
    This your heire of France hath blowne this vice in me.
    I must repent, go tell thy maister here I am,
    My raunsome is this frayle and worthlesse body,
    1605My Army but a weake and sickly guarde.
    Yet God before, we will come on,
    If France and such an other neighbour stood in our way:
    1610If we may passe, we will: if we be hindered,
    We shal your tawny ground with your red blood discolour.
    So Montioy get you gone, there is for your paines:
    The sum of all our answere is but this,
    We would not seeke a battle as we are:
    D 2 Nor
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    1615Nor as we are, we say we will not shun it.
    Herauld. I shall deliuer so: thanks to your Maiestie.
    Glos. My Liege, I hope they will not come vpon vs now.
    1620King. We are in Gods hand brother, not in theirs:
    To night we will encampe beyond the bridge,
    And on to morrow bid them march away.
    Enter Burbon, Constable, Orleance, Gebon.
    Const. Tut I haue the best armour in the world.
    Orleance. You haue an excellent armour,
    But let my horse haue his due.
    1628.1Burbon. Now you talke of a horse, I haue a steed like the
    Palfrey of the sun, nothing but pure ayre and fire,
    And hath none of this dull element of earth within him.
    Orleance. He is of the colour of the Nutmeg.
    1645Bur. And of the heate, a the Ginger.
    1660Turne all the sands into eloquent tongues,
    And my horse is argument for them all:
    1665I once writ a Sonnet in the praise of my horse,
    And began thus. Wonder of nature.
    Con. I haue heard a Sonnet begin so,
    In the praise of ones Mistresse.
    Burb. Why then did they immitate that
    Which I writ in praise of my horse,
    1670For my horse is my mistresse.
    Con. Ma foy the other day, me thought
    Your mistresse shooke you shrewdly.
    Bur. I bearing me. I tell thee Lord Constable,
    My mistresse weares her owne haire.
    Con. I could make as good a boast of that,
    If I had had a sow to my mistresse.
    Bur. Tut thou wilt make vse of any thing.
    Con. Yet I do not vse my horse for my mistresse.
    Bur. Will it neuer be morning?
    Ile ride too morrow a mile,
    And my way shalbe paued with English faces.
    Con. By
    of Henry the fift.
    Con. By my faith so will not I,
    For fear I be outfaced of my way.
    1715Bur. Well ile go arme my selfe, hay.
    Gebon. The Duke of Burbon longs for morning
    Or. I he longs to eate the English.
    Con. I thinke heele eate all he killes.
    1740Orle. O peace, ill will neuer said well.
    Con. Ile cap that prouerbe,
    With there is flattery in friendship.
    Or. O sir, I can answere that,
    With giue the diuel his due.
    Con. Haue at the eye of that prouerbe,
    With a Iogge of the diuel.
    Or. Well the Duke of Burbon, is simply,
    The most actiue Gentleman of France.
    1725Con. Doing his actiuitie, and heele stil be doing.
    Or. He neuer did hurt as I heard off.
    Con. No I warrant you, nor neuer will.
    Or. I hold him to be exceeding valiant.
    1730Con. I was told so by one that knows him better thē you.
    Or. Whose that?
    Con. Why he told me so himselfe:
    And said he cared not who knew it.
    Or. Well who will go with me to hazard,
    For a hundred English prisoners?
    Con. You must go to hazard your selfe,
    Before you haue them.
    Enter a Messenger.
    Mess. My Lords, the English lye within a hundred
    Paces of your Tent.
    1755Con. Who hath measured the ground?
    Mess. The Lord Granpeere.
    Con. A valiant man, a. an expert Gentleman.
    1785Come, come away:
    1785.1The Sun is hie, and we weare out the day. Exit omnes.
    D 3 Enter
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    Enter the King disguised, to him Pistoll.
    Pist. Ke ve la?
    King. A friend.
    1885Pist. Discus vnto me, art thou Gentleman?
    Or art thou common, base, and popeler?
    King. No sir, I am a Gentleman of a Company.
    Pist. Trailes thou the puissant pike?
    King. Euen so sir. What are you?
    1890Pist. As good a gentleman as the Emperour.
    King. O then thou art better then the King?
    Pist. The kings a bago, and a hart of gold.
    Pist. A lad of life, an impe of fame:
    Of parents good, of fist most valiant:
    I kis his durtie shoe: and from my hart strings
    1895I love the louely bully. What is thy name?
    King. Harry le Roy.
    Pist. Le Roy, a Cornish man:
    Art thou of Cornish crew?
    Kin. No sir, I am a Wealchman.
    Pist. A Wealchman: knowst thou Flewellen?
    1900Kin. I sir, he is my kinsman.
    1905Pist. Art thou his friend?
    1905.1Kin. I sir.
    Pist. Figa for thee then: my name is Pistoll.
    1910Kin. It sorts well with your fiercenesse.
    Pist. Pistoll is my name.
    Exit Pistoll.
    Enter Gower and Flewellen.
    Gour. Captaine Flewellen.
    Flew. In the name of Iesu speake lewer.
    It is the greatest folly in the worell, when the auncient
    Prerogatiues of the warres be not kept.
    1920I warrant you, if you looke into the warres of the Romanes,
    You shall finde no tittle tattle, nor bible bable there:
    But
    of Henry the fift.
    But you shall finde the cares, and the feares,
    And the ceremonies, to be otherwise.
    Gour. Why the enemy is loud: you heard him all night.
    Flew. Godes sollud, if the enemy be an Asse & a Foole,
    And a prating cocks-come, is it meet that we be also a foole,
    And a prating cocks-come, in your conscience now?
    1930Gour. Ile speake lower.
    Flew. I beseech you do, good Captaine Gower.
    1931.1Exit Gower, and Flewellen.
    Kin. Tho it appeare a litle out of fashion,
    Yet theres much care in this.
    Enter three Souldiers.
    1. Soul. Is not that the morning yonder?
    19402. Soul. I we see the beginning,
    God knowes whether we shall see the end or no.
    3. Soul. Well I thinke the king could wish himselfe
    1965Vp to the necke in the middle of the Thames,
    And so I would he were, at all aduentures, and I with him.
    1941.1Kin. Now masters god morrow, what cheare?
    3. S. Ifaith small cheer some of vs is like to haue,
    Ere this day ende.
    Kin. Why fear nothing man, the king is frolike.
    1941.52. S. I he may be, for he hath no such cause as we
    Kin. Nay say not so, he is a man as we are.
    The Violet smels to him as to vs:
    Therefore if he see reasons, he feares as we do.
    2. Sol. But the king hath a heauy reckoning to make,
    If his cause be not good: when all those soules
    Whose bodies shall be slaughtered here,
    1985Shall ioyne together at the latter day,
    And say I dyed at such a place. Some swearing:
    Some their wiues rawly left:
    Some leauing their children poore behind them.
    Now
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    Now if his cause be bad, I think it will be a greeuous matter(to him.
    King. Why so you may say, if a man send his seruant
    1998.1As Factor into another Countrey,
    And he by any meanes miscarry,
    You may say the businesse of the maister,
    Was the author of his seruants misfortune.
    1995Or if a sonne be imployd by his father,
    1995.1And he fall into any leaud action, you may say the father
    Was the author of his sonnes damnation.
    But the master is not to answere for his seruants,
    The father for his sonne, nor the king for his subiects:
    2005For they purpose not their deaths, whē they craue their ser-(uices:
    Some there are that haue the gift of premeditated
    2010Murder on them:
    Others the broken seale of Forgery, in beguiling maydens.
    Now if these outstrip the lawe,
    Yet they cannot excape Gods punishment.
    War is Gods Beadel. War is Gods vengeance:
    Euery mans seruice is the kings:
    But euery mans soule is his owne.
    2025Therfore I would haue euery soldier examine himselfe,
    And wash euery moath out of his conscience:
    That in so doing, he may be the readier for death:
    Or not dying, why the time was well spent,
    Wherein such preparation was made.
    3. Lord. Yfaith he saies true:
    2035Euery mans fault on his owne head,
    I would not haue the king answere for me.
    Yet I intend to fight lustily for him.
    King. Well, I heard the king, he wold not be ransomde.
    20402. L. I he said so, to make vs fight:
    But when our throates be cut, he may be ransomde,
    And we neuer the wiser.
    King. If I liue to see that, Ile neuer trust his word againe.
    2. Lord.
    of Henry the fift.
    20452. Sol. Mas youle pay him then, tis a great displeasure
    That an elder gun, can do against a cannon,
    Or a subiect against a monarke.
    Youle nere take his word again, your a nasse goe.
    King. Your reproofe is somewhat too bitter:
    Were it not at this time I could be angry.
    2. Sol. Why let it be a quarrell if thou wilt.
    King. How shall I know thee?
    20602. Sol. Here is my gloue, which if euer I see in thy hat,
    Ile challenge thee, and strike thee.
    2066.1Kin. Here is likewise another of mine,
    And assure thee ile weare it.
    2. Sol. Thou dar'st as well be hangd.
    3. Sol. Be friends you fooles,
    We haue French quarrels anow in hand:
    2071.1We haue no need of English broyles.
    Kin. Tis no treason to cut French crownes,
    For to morrow the king himselfe wil be a clipper.
    Exit the Souldiers.
    2073.1Enter the King, Gloster, Epingam, and
    Attendants.
    K. O God of battels steele my souldiers harts,
    Take from them now the sence of rekconing,
    That the apposed multitudes which stand before them,
    2143.1May not appall their courage.
    O not to day, not to day ô God,
    2145Thinke on the fault my father made,
    In compassing the crowne.
    I Richards bodie haue interred new,
    And on it hath bestowd more contrite teares,
    Then from it issued forced drops of blood:
    2150A hundred men haue I in yearly pay,
    E Which
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    Which euery day their withered hands hold vp
    To heauen to pardon blood,
    And I haue built two chanceries, more wil I do:
    Tho all that I can do, is all too litle.
    Enter Gloster.
    2160Glost. My Lord.
    King. My brother Glosters voyce.
    2161.1Glost. My Lord, the Army stayes vpon your presence.
    King. Stay Gloster, stay, and I will go with thee,
    The day my friends, and all things stayes for me.
    Enter Clarence, Gloster, Exeter, and Salisburie.
    2237.1War. My Lords the French are very strong.
    2245Exe. There is fiue to one, and yet they all are fresh.
    War. Of fighting men they haue full fortie thousand.
    Sal. The oddes is all too great. Farewell kind Lords:
    2250Braue Clarence, and my Lord of Gloster,
    My Lord of Warwicke, and to all farewell.
    2255Clar. Farewell kind Lord, fight valiantly to day,
    And yet in truth, I do thee wrong,
    For thou art made on the rrue sparkes of honour.
    Enter King.
    War. O would we had but ten thousand men
    Now at this instant, that doth not worke in England.
    King. Whose that, that wishes so, my Cousen Warwick?
    Gods will, I would not loose the honour
    One man would share from me,
    2266.1Not for my Kingdome.
    No faith my Cousen, wish not one man more,
    Rather proclaime it presently through our campe,
    That he that hath no stomacke to this feast,
    2280Let him depart, his pasport shall bee drawne,
    And crownes for conuoy put into his purse,
    We
    of Henry the fift.
    We would not die in that mans company,
    That feares his fellowship to die with vs.
    This day is called the day of Cryspin,
    He that outliues this day, and sees old age,
    Shall stand a tiptoe when this day is named,
    And rowse him at the name of Cryspin.
    2285He that outliues this day, and comes safe home,
    Shall yearely on the vygill feast his friends,
    2290And say, to morrow is S. Cryspines day:
    Then shall we in their flowing bowles
    Be newly remembred. Harry the King,
    Bedford and Exeter, Clarence and Gloster,
    Warwick and Yorke.
    2295Familiar in their mouthes as houshold words.
    This story shall the good man tell his sonne,
    And from this day, vnto the generall doome:
    But we in it shall be remembred.
    We fewe, we happie fewe, we bond of brothers,
    For he to day that sheads his blood by mine,
    2305Shalbe my brother: be he nere so base,
    This day shall gentle his condition.
    Then shall he strip his sleeues, and shew his skars
    2291.1And say, these wounds I had on Crispines day:
    And Gentlemen in England now a bed,
    Shall thinke themselues accurst,
    And hold their manhood cheape,
    While any speake that fought with vs
    2310Vpon Saint Crispines day.
    Glost. My gracious Lord,
    The French is in the field.
    2315Kin. Why all things are ready, if our minds be so.
    War. Perish the man whose mind is backward now.
    King. Thou dost not wish more help frō England cousen?
    War. Gods will my Liege, would you and I alone,
    2320Without more helpe, might fight this battle out.
    E 2 King. Why
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    Why well said. That doth please me better,
    Then to wish me one. You know your charge,
    God be with you all.
    Enter the Herald from the French.
    2325Herald. Once more I come to know of thee king Henry,
    What thou wilt giue for raunsome?
    2335Kin. Who hath sent thee now?
    Her. The Constable of France.
    Kin. I prethy beare my former answer backe:
    Bid them atchieue me, and then sell my bones.
    Good God, why should they mock good fellows(thus?
    2340The man that once did sell the Lions skin,
    While the beast liued, was kild with hunting him.
    A many of our bodies shall no doubt
    Finde graues within your realme of France:
    Tho buried in your dunghils, we shalbe famed,
    For there the Sun shall greete them,
    And draw vp their honors reaking vp to heauen,
    Leauing their earthly parts to choke your clyme:
    2350The smel wherof, shall breed a plague in France:
    Marke then abundant valour in our English,
    That being dead, like to the bullets crasing,
    Breakes forth into a second course of mischiefe,
    Killing in relaps of mortalitie:
    2355Let me speake proudly,
    Ther's not a peece of feather in our campe,
    2360Good argument I hope we shall not flye:
    And time hath worne vs into slouendry.
    But by the mas, our hearts are in the trim,
    And my poore souldiers tel me, yet ere night
    Thayle be in fresher robes, or they will plucke
    2365The gay new cloathes ore your French souldiers eares,
    And turne them out of seruice. If they do this,
    As if it please God they shall,
    Then shall our ransome soone be leuied.
    Saue
    of Henry the fift.
    Saue thou thy labour Herauld:
    2370Come thou no more for ransom, gentle Herauld.
    They shal haue nought I sweare, but these my bones:
    Which if they haue, as I wil leave am them,
    Will yeeld them litle, tell the Constable.
    Her. I shall deliuer so.
    2375Exit Herauld.
    Yorke. My gracious Lord, vpon my knee I craue,
    2380The leading of the vaward.
    Kin. Take it braue Yorke. Come souldiers lets away:
    And as thou pleasest God, dispose the day.
    Exit.
    Enter the foure French Lords.
    Ge. O diabello.
    Const. Mor du ma vie.
    2461.1Or. O what a day is this!
    2460Bur. O Iour dei houte all is gone, all is lost.
    Con. We are inough yet liuing in the field,
    To smother vp the English,
    2480If any order might be thought vpon.
    Bur. A plague of order, once more to the field,
    2481.1And he that will not follow Burbon now,
    Let him go home, and with his cap in hand,
    Like a bace leno hold the chamber doore,
    Why least by a slaue no gentler then my dog,
    2481.5His fairest daughter is contamuracke.
    Con. Disorder that hath spoyld vs, right vs now,
    Come we in heapes, weele offer vp our liues
    Vnto these English, or else die with fame.
    Come, come along,
    2481.10Lets dye with honour, our shame doth last too long.
    Exit omnes.
    E 3 Enter
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    2385Enter Pistoll, the French man, and the Boy.
    Pist. Eyld cur, eyld cur.
    French. O Monsire, ie vous en pree aues petie de moy.
    Pist. Moy shall not serue. I will haue fortie moys.
    2405Boy aske him his name.
    Boy. Comant ettes vous apelles?
    French. Monsier Fer.
    Boy. He saies his name is Master Fer.
    2410Pist. Ile Fer him, and ferit him, and ferke him:
    Boy discus the same in French.
    Boy. Sir I do not know, whats French
    For fer, ferit and fearkt.
    Pist. Bid him prepare, for I wil cut his throate.
    Boy. Feate, vou preat, ill voulles coupele votre gage.
    Pist. Ony e ma foy couple la gorge.
    Vnlesse thou giue to me egregious raunsome, dye.
    2419.1One poynt of a foxe.
    2415French. Qui dit ill monsiere.
    2415.1Ill ditye si vou ny vouly pa domy luy.
    Boy. La gran ransome, ill vou tueres.
    French. O Iee vous en pri pettit gentelhome, parle
    A cee, gran capataine, pour auez mercie
    A moy, ey Iee donerees pour mon ransome
    Cinquante ocios. Ie suyes vn gentelhome de France.
    2425Pist. What sayes he boy?
    Boy. Marry sir he sayes, he is a Gentleman of a great
    House, of France: and for his ransome,
    He will giue you 500. crownes.
    Pist. My fury shall abate,
    And I the Crownes will take.
    And as I suck blood, I will some mercie shew.
    Follow me cur.
    Exit omnes.
    Enter the King and his Nobles, Pistoll.
    2483.1King. What the French retire?
    Yet
    of Henry the fift.
    Yet all is not done, yet keepe the French the field.
    Exe. The Duke of Yorke commends him to your Grace.
    King. Liues he good Vncle, twise I sawe him downe,
    Twise vp againe:
    2490From helmet to the spurre, all bleeding ore.
    Exe. In which aray, braue souldier doth he lye,
    Larding the plaines and by his bloody side,
    Yoake fellow to his honour dying wounds,
    The noble Earle of Suffolke also lyes.
    2495Suffolke first dyde, and Yorke all hasted ore,
    Comes to him where in blood he lay steept,
    And takes him by the beard, kisses the gashes
    That bloodily did yane vpon his face,
    And cryde aloud, tary deare cousin Suffolke:
    2500My soule shall thine keep company in heauen:
    Tary deare soule awhile, then flie to rest:
    And in this glorious and well foughten field,
    We kept togither in our chiualdry.
    Vpon these words I came and cheerd them vp,
    He tooke me by the hand, said deare my Lord,
    Commend my seruice to my soueraigne.
    So did he turne, and ouer Suffolkes necke
    He threw his wounded arme, and so espoused to death,
    2510With blood he sealed. An argument
    Of neuer ending loue. The pretie and sweet maner of it,
    Forst those waters from me, which I would haue stopt,
    But I not so much of man in me,
    2515But all my mother came into my eyes,
    And gaue me vp to teares.
    Kin. I blame you not: for hearing you,
    I must conuert to teares.
    Alarum soundes.
    2520What new alarum is this?
    Bid euery souldier kill his prisoner.
    2522.1Pist. Couple gorge. Exit omnes.
    Enter
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    2525 Enter Flewellen, and Captaine Gower.
    Flew. Godes plud kil the boyes and the lugyge,
    Tis the arrants peece of knauery as can be desired,
    In the worell now, in your conscience now.
    2530Gour. Tis certaine, there is not a Boy left aliue,
    And the cowerdly rascals that ran from the battell,
    Themselues haue done this slaughter:
    Beside, they haue carried away and burnt,
    All that was in the kings Tent:
    Whervpon the king caused euery prisoners
    2535Throat to be cut. O he is a worthy king.
    Flew. I he was born at Monmorth.
    Captain Gower, what call you the place where
    Alexander the big was borne?
    Gour. Alexander the great.
    2540Flew. Why I pray, is nat big great?
    As if I say, big or great, or magnanimous,
    I hope it is all one reconing,
    Saue the frase is a litle varation.
    Gour. I thinke Alexander the great
    Was borne at Macedon
    2545His father was called Philip of Macedon,
    As I take it.
    Flew. I thinke it was Macedon indeed where Alexander
    Was borne: looke you captaine Gower,
    And if you looke into the mappes of the worell well,
    You shall finde litle difference betweene
    Macedon and Monmorth. Looke you, there is
    A Riuer in Macedon, and there is also a Riuer
    In Monmorth, the Riuers name at Monmorth,
    Is called Wye.
    But tis out of my braine, what is the name of the other:
    But tis all one, tis so like, as my fingers is to my fingers,
    2555And there is Samons in both.
    2555.1Looke you captaine Gower, and you marke it,
    You
    of Henry the fift
    You shall finde our King is come after Alexander.
    God knowes, and you know, that Alexander in his
    Bowles, and his alles, and his wrath, and his displeasures,
    And indignations, was kill his friend Clitus.
    Gower. I but our King is not like him in that,
    For he neuer killd any of his friends.
    Flew. Looke you, tis not well done to take the tale out
    Of a mans mouth, ere it is made an end and finished:
    I speake in the comparisons, as Alexander is kill
    His friend Clitus: so our King being in his ripe
    2570Wits and iudgements, is turne away, the fat knite
    With the great belly doublet: I am forget his name.
    Gower. Sir Iohn Falstaffe.
    2575Flew. I, I thinke it is Sir Iohn Falstaffe indeed,
    I can tell you, theres good men borne at Monmorth.
    Enter King and the Lords.
    2580King. I was not angry since I came into France,
    Vntill this houre.
    Take a trumpet Herauld,
    And ride vnto the horsmen on yon hill:
    If they will fight with vs bid them come downe,
    Or leaue the field, they do offend our sight:
    2585Will they do neither, we will come to them,
    And make them skyr away, as fast
    As stones enforst from the old Assirian slings.
    Besides, weele cut the throats of those we haue,
    And not one aliue shall taste our mercy.
    Enter the Herauld.
    Gods will what meanes this? knowst thou not
    That we haue fined these bones of ours for ransome?
    Herald. I come great king for charitable fauour,
    To sort our Nobles from our common men,
    2602.1We may haue leaue to bury all our dead,
    Which in the field lye spoyled and troden on.
    Kin. I tell thee truly Herauld, I do not know whether
    F The
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    The day be ours or no:
    For yet a many of your French do keep the field.
    Hera. The day is yours.
    Kin. Praised be God therefore.
    What Castle call you that?
    Hera. We call it Agincourt.
    2620Kin. Then call we this the field of Agincourt.
    Fought on the day of Cryspin, Cryspin.
    Flew. Your grandfather of famous memorie,
    2622.1If your grace be remembred,
    2625Is do good seruice in France.
    Kin. Tis true Flewellen.
    Flew. Your Maiestie sayes verie true.
    2627.1And it please your Maiestie,
    The Wealchmen there was do good seruice,
    In a garden where Leekes did grow.
    And I thinke your Maiestie wil take no scorne,
    To weare a Leake in your cap vpon S. Dauies day.
    2635Kin. No Flewellen, for I am wealch as well as you.
    Flew. All the water in Wye wil not wash your wealch
    Blood out of you, God keep it, and preserue it,
    To his graces will and pleasure.
    2640Kin. Thankes good countryman.
    Flew. By Iesus I am your Maiesties countryman:
    I care not who know it, so long as your maiesty is an honest(man.
    2645K. God keep me so. Our Herald go with him,
    And bring vs the number of the scattred French.
    2648.1Exit Heralds.
    Call yonder souldier hither.
    2650Flew. You fellow come to the king.
    Kin. Fellow why doost thou weare that gloue in thy hat?
    Soul. And please your maiestie, tis a rascals that swagard
    With me the other day: and he hath one of mine,
    Which if euer I see, I haue sworne to strike him.
    So
    of Henry the fift.
    So hath he sworne the like to me.
    K. How think you Flewellen, is it lawfull he keep his oath?
    2662.1Fl. And it please your majesty, tis lawful he keep his vow.
    If he be periur'd once, he is as arrant a beggerly knaue,
    As treads vpon too blacke shues.
    Kin. His enemy may be a gentleman of worth.
    Flew. And if he be as good a gentleman as Lucifer
    And Belzebub, and the diuel himselfe,
    Tis meete he keepe his vowe.
    Kin. Well sirrha keep your word.
    Vnder what Captain seruest thou?
    Soul. Vnder Captaine Gower.
    Flew. Captaine Gower is a good Captaine:
    2680And hath good littrature in the warres.
    Kin. Go call him hither.
    Soul. I will my Lord. Exit souldier.
    Kin. Captain Flewellen, when Alonson and I was
    2685Downe together, I tooke this gloue off from his helmet,
    Here Flewellen, weare it. If any do challenge it,
    He is a friend of Alonsons,
    And an enemy to mee.
    Fle. Your maiestie doth me as great a fauour
    As can be desired in the harts of his subiects.
    2690I would see that man now that should chalenge this gloue:
    And it please God of his grace. I would but see him,
    That is all.
    Kin. Flewellen knowst thou Captaine Gower?
    2695Fle. Captaine Gower is my friend.
    And if it like your maiestie, I know him very well.
    Kin. Go call him hither.
    Flew. I will and it shall please your maiestie.
    2700Kin. Follow Flewellen closely at the heeles,
    The gloue he weares, it was the souldiers:
    F 2 It
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    It may be there will be harme betweene them,
    For I do know Flewellen valiant,
    And being toucht, as hot as gunpowder:
    2710And quickly will returne an iniury.
    Go see there be no harme betweene them.
    Enter Gower, Flewellen, and the Souldier.
    Flew. Captain Gower, in the name of Iesu,
    Come to his Maiestie, there is more good toward you,
    Then you can dreame off.
    2720Soul. Do you heare you sir? do you know this gloue?
    Flew. I know the the gloue is a gloue.
    Soul. Sir I know this, and thus I challenge it.
    He strikes him.
    Flew. Gode plut, and his. Captain Gower stand away:
    Ile giue treason his due presently.
    Enter the King, Warwicke, Clarence, and Exeter.
    2735Kin. How now, what is the matter?
    Flew. And it shall please your Maiestie,
    Here is the notablest peece of treason come to light,
    As you shall desire to see in a sommers day.
    Here is a rascall, beggerly rascall, is strike the gloue,
    Which your Maiestie tooke out of the helmet of Alonson:
    And your Maiestie will beare me witnes, and testimony,
    And auouchments, that this is the gloue.
    2745Soul. And it please your Maiestie, that was my gloue.
    He that I gaue it too in the night,
    Promised me to weare it in his hat:
    I promised to strike him if he did.
    I met that Gentleman, with my gloue in his hat,
    And I thinke I haue bene as good as my word.
    2750Flew. Your Maiestie heares, vnder your Maiesties
    Manhood, what a beggerly lowsie knaue it is.
    Kin. Let me see thy gloue. Looke you,
    This is the fellow of it.
    It was I indeed you promised to strike.
    And
    of Henry the fift.
    And thou thou hast giuen me most bitter words.
    How canst thou make vs amends?
    2762.1Flew. Let his necke answere it,
    If there be any marshals lawe in the worell.
    Soul. My Liege, all offences come from the heart:
    Neuer came any from mine to offend your Maiestie.
    You appeard to me as a common man:
    Witnesse the night, your garments, your lowlinesse,
    2770And whatsoeuer you receiued vnder that habit,
    I beseech your Maiestie impute it to your owne fault
    And not mine. For your selfe came not like your selfe:
    Had you bene as you seemed, I had made no offence.
    Therefore I beseech your grace to pardon me.
    Kin. Vncle, fill the gloue with crownes,
    2775And giue it to the souldier. Weare it fellow,
    As an honour in thy cap, till I do challenge it.
    Giue him the crownes. Come Captaine Flewellen,
    I must needs haue you friends.
    Flew. By Iesus, the fellow hath mettall enough
    2780In his belly. Harke you souldier, there is a shilling for you,
    And keep your selfe out of brawles & brables, & dissentiōs,
    And looke you, it shall be the better for you.
    Soul. Ile none of your money sir, not I.
    2785Flew. Why tis a good shilling man.
    Why should you be queamish? Your shoes are not so good:
    It will serue you to mend your shoes.
    2790Kin. What men of sort are taken vnckle?
    2795Exe. Charles Duke of Orleance, Nephew to the King.
    Iohn Duke of Burbon, and Lord Bowchquall.
    Of other Lords and Barrons, Knights and Squiers,
    Full fifteene hundred, besides common men.
    This note doth tell me of ten thousand
    2800French, that in the field lyes slaine.
    Of Nobles bearing banners in the field,
    F 3 Charles
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    Charles de le Brute, hie Constable of France.
    Iaques of Chattillian, Admirall of France.
    The Maister of the crosbows, Iohn Duke Alōson.
    Lord Ranbieres, hie Maister of France.
    The braue sir Gwigzard, Dolphin. Of Nobelle Charillas,
    Gran Prie, and Rosse, Fawconbridge and Foy.
    2818.1Gerard and Verton. Vandemant and Lestra.
    2820Here was a royall fellowship of death.
    Where is the number of our English dead?
    Edward the Duke of Yorke, the Earle of Suffolke,
    Sir Richard Ketley, Dauy Gam Esquier:
    And of all other, but fiue and twentie.
    O God thy arme was here,
    And vnto thee alone, ascribe we praise.
    When without strategem,
    And in euen shock of battle, was euer heard
    2830So great, and litle losse, on one part and an other.
    Take it God, for it is onely thine.
    Exe. Tis wonderfull.
    King. Come let vs go on procession through the camp:
    2835Let it be death proclaimed to any man,
    To boast hereof, or take the praise from God,
    Which is his due.
    Flew. Is it lawful, and it please your Maiestie,
    To tell how many is kild?
    2840King. Yes Flewellen, but with this acknowledgement,
    That God fought for vs.
    Flew. Yes in my conscience, he did vs great good.
    King. Let there be sung, Nououes and te Deum.
    2845The dead with charitie enterred in clay:
    Weele then to Calice, and to England then,
    Where nere from France, arriude more happier men.
    Exit omnes.
    Enter Gower, and Flewellen.
    Gower. But why do you weare your Leeke to day?
    Saint
    of Henry the fift.
    Saint Dauies day is past?
    2900Flew. There is occasion Captaine Gower,
    Looke you why, and wherefore,
    The other day looke you, Pistolles
    Which you know is a man of no merites
    In the worell, is come where I was the other day,
    2905And brings bread and sault, and bids me
    Eate my Leeke: twas in a place, looke you,
    Where I could moue no discentions:
    But if I can see him, I shall tell him,
    A litle of my desires.
    Gow. Here a comes, swelling like a Turkecocke.
    Enter Pistoll.
    Flew. Tis no matter for his swelling, and his turkecocks,
    2915God plesse you Antient Pistoll, you scall,
    Beggerly, lowsie knaue, God plesse you.
    Pist. Ha, art thou bedlem?
    Dost thou thurst base Troyan,
    To haue me folde vp Parcas fatall web?
    Hence, I am qualmish at the smell of Leeke.
    2920Flew. Antient Pistoll. I would desire you because
    It doth not agree with your stomache, and your appetite,
    And your digestions, to eate this Leeke.
    Pist. Not for Cadwalleder and all his goates.
    Flew. There is one goate for you Antient Pistol.
    He strikes him.
    Pist. Bace Troyan, thou shall dye.
    2930Flew. I, I know I shall dye, meane time, I would
    Desire you to liue and eate this Leeke.
    Gower. Inough Captaine, you haue astonisht him.
    Flew. Astonisht him, by Iesu, Ile beate his head
    Foure dayes, and foure nights, but Ile
    Make him eate some part of my Leeke.
    Pist. Well must I byte?
    Flew. I
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    Flew. I out of question or doubt, or ambiguities
    2942.1You must byte.
    Pist. Good good.
    Flew. I Leekes are good, Antient Pistoll.
    There is a shilling for you to heale your bloody coxkome.
    Pist. Me a shilling.
    Flew. If you will not take it,
    I haue an other Leeke for you.
    Pist. I take thy shilling in earnest of reconing.
    2960Flew. If I owe you any thing, ile pay you in cudgels,
    You shalbe a woodmonger,
    And by cudgels, God bwy you,
    Antient Pistoll, God blesse you,
    And heale your broken pate.
    2962.1Antient Pistoll, if you see Leekes an other time,
    Mocke at them, that is all: God bwy you.
    Exit Flewellen.
    Pist. All hell shall stir for this.
    2975Doth Fortune play the huswye with me now?
    Is honour cudgeld from my warlike lines?
    Well France farwell, newes haue I certainly
    That Doll is sicke. One mallydie of France,
    2977.1The warres affordeth nought, home will I trug.
    Bawd will I turne, and vse the slyte of hand:
    2980To England will I steale,
    And there Ile steale.
    And patches will I get vnto these skarres,
    And sweare I gat them in the Gallia warres.
    Exit Pistoll.
    Enter at one doore, the King of England and his Lords. And at
    the other doore, the King of France, Queene Katherine, the
    Duke of Burbon, and others.
    Harry. Peace to this meeting, wherefore we are met.
    And
    of Henry the fift.
    And to our brorher France, Faire time of day.
    2990Faire health vnto our louely cousen Katherine.
    And as a branch, and member of this stock:
    We do salute you Duke of Burgondie.
    Fran. Brother of England, right ioyous are we to behold
    Your face, so are we Princes English euery one.
    Duk. With pardon vnto both your mightines.
    Let it not displease you, if I demaund
    3020What rub or bar hath thus far hindred you,
    3020.1To keepe you from the gentle speech of peace?
    3055Har. If Duke of Burgondy, you wold haue peace,
    You must buy that peace,
    According as we haue drawne our articles.
    3065Fran. We haue but with a cursenary eye,
    Oreviewd them pleaseth your Grace,
    To let some of your Counsell sit with vs,
    3070We shall returne our peremptory answere.
    Har. Go Lords, and sit with them,
    3071.1And bring vs answere backe.
    Yet leaue our cousen Katherine here behind.
    3083.1France. Withall our hearts.
    Exit King and the Lords. Manet, Hrry, Kathe-
    3086.1rine, and the Gentlewoman.
    Hate. Now Kate, you haue a blunt wooer here
    Left with you.
    If I could win thee at leapfrog,
    Or with vawting with my armour on my backe,
    Into my saddle,
    Without brag be it spoken,
    3128.1Ide make compare with any.
    But leauing that Kate,
    If thou takest me now,
    Thou shalt haue me at the worst:
    G And
    The Chronicle Historie
    3220And in wearing, thou shalt haue me better and better.
    Thou shalt haue a face that is not worth sun-burning.
    3136.1But doost thou thinke, that thou and I,
    Betweene Saint Denis,
    3195And Saint George, shall get a boy,
    That shall goe to Constantinople,
    And take the great Turke by the beard, ha Kate?
    Kate. Is it possible dat me sall
    Loue de enemie de France.
    3160Harry. No Kate, tis vnpossible
    You should loue the enemie of France:
    For Kate, I loue France so well,
    That Ile not leaue a Village,
    Ile haue it all mine: then Kate,
    When France is mine,
    And I am yours,
    Then France is yours,
    3165And you are mine.
    Kate. I cannot tell wat is dat.
    Harry. No Kate,
    Why Ile tell it you in French.
    Which will hang vpon my tongue, like a bride
    On her new married Husband.
    Let me see, Saint Dennis be my speed.
    Quan France et mon.
    3172.1Kate. Dat is, when France is yours.
    Harry. Et vous ettes amoy.
    Kate. And I am to you.
    Harry. Douck France ettes a vous:
    Kate. Den France sall be mine.
    3172.5Harry. Et Ie suyues a vous.
    Kate. And you will be to me.
    Har. Wilt beleeue me Kate? tis easier for me
    To conquer the kingdome, thē speak so much
    More French.
    A
    of Henry the fift.
    Kate. A your Maiesty has false France inough
    To deceiue de best Lady in France.
    Harry. No faith Kate not I. But Kate,
    3178.1In plaine termes, do you loue me?
    Kate. I cannot tell.
    Harry. No, can any of your neighbours tell?
    Ile aske them.
    3185Come Kate, I know you loue me.
    And soone when you are in your closset,
    Youle question this Lady of me.
    But I pray thee sweete Kate, vse me mercifully,
    3190Because I loue thee cruelly.
    3140That I shall dye Kate, is sure:
    But for thy loue, by the Lord neuer.
    3140.1What Wench,
    A straight backe will growe crooked.
    3150A round eye will growe hollowe.
    A great leg will waxe small,
    A curld pate proue balde:
    But a good heart Kate, is the sun and the moone,
    And rather the Sun and not the Moone
    And therefore Kate take me,
    3155Take a souldier: take a souldier,
    Take a King.
    3155.1Therefore tell me Kate, wilt thou haue me?
    3235Kate. Dat is as please the King my father.
    Harry. Nay it will please him:
    Nay it shall please him Kate.
    And vpon that condition Kate Ile kisse you.
    3245Ka. O mon du Ie ne voudroy faire quelke chosse
    Pour toute le monde,
    Ce ne poynt votree fachion en fouor.
    Harry. What saies she Lady?
    Lady. Dat it is not de fasion en France,
    3250For de maides, before da be married to
    G 3 Ma
    The Chronicle Historie
    May foy ie oblye, what is to bassie?
    Har. To kis, to kis. O that tis not the
    Fashion in Frannce, for the maydes to kis
    Before they are married.
    3255Lady. Owye see votree grace.
    Har. Well, weele breake that custome.
    Therefore Kate patience perforce and yeeld.
    Before God Kate, you haue witchcraft
    In your kisses:
    And may perswade with me more,
    3265Then all the French Councell.
    Your father is returned.
    Enter the King of France, and
    3270the Lordes.
    3270.1How now my Lords?
    3320France. Brother of England,
    We haue orered the Articles,
    3320.1And haue agreed to all that we in sedule had.
    Exe. Only he hath not subscribed this,
    Where your maiestie demaunds,
    That the king of France hauing any occasion
    To write for matter of graunt,
    Shall name your highnesse, in this forme:
    And with this addition in French.
    3330Nostre tresher filz, Henry Roy D'anglaterre,
    E heare de France. And thus in Latin:
    Preclarissimus filius noster Henricus Rex Anglie,
    Et heres Francie.
    Fran. Nor this haue we so nicely stood vpon,
    3333.1But you faire brother may intreat the same.
    3335Har. Why then let this among the rest,
    3335.1Haue his full course: And withall,
    Your daughter Katherine in mariage.
    France.
    of Henry the fift.
    3337.1Fran. This and what else,
    Your maiestie shall craue.
    God that disposeth all, giue you much ioy.
    Har. Why then faire Katherine,
    3337.5Come giue me thy hand:
    Our mariage will we present solemnise,
    And end our hatred by a bond of loue.
    Then will I sweare to Kate, and Kate to mee:
    3365And may our vowes once made, vnbroken bee.
    FINIS.