HISTORY OF
HENRIE THE
FOVRTH;
With the battell at Shrewsburie,
betweene the King and Lord
Henry Percy, surnamed
Henrie Hotspur of
the North,
With the humorous conceits of Sir
Iohn Falstalffe.
AT LONDON,
Printed by P.S. for Andrew Wise, dwelling
in Paules Churchyard, at the signe of
the Angell. 1598.
THE HISTORIE OF
Henry the fourth.
21Enter the King, Lord Iohn of Lancaster, Earle of 32Westmerland, with others. 54SO
shaken as we are,
so wan with care,
65Find we a time for frighted peace to pant,
76And breath
short winded accents of new broiles
87To be commen
cte in
stronds a far remote:
98No more the thir
sty entrance of this
soile
109Shal dawbe her lips with her own childrens bloud,
1110No more
shall trenching war channel her
fields,
1211Nor brui
se her
flourets with the armed hoofes
1312Of ho
stile paces: tho
se oppo
sed eies,
1413Which like the meteors of a troubled heauen,
1514Al of one nature, of one
sub
stance bred,
1615Did lately meete in the inte
stine
shocke
1716And furious clo
se of ciuill butcherie,
1817Shall now in mutuall welbe
seeming rankes,
1918March all one way, and be no more oppos'd
2019Again
st acquaintance, kindred and allyes.
2120The edge of war, like an ill
sheathed knife,
2221No more
shall cut his mai
ster: therefore friends,
2322As far as to the
sepulcher of Chri
st,
2423Who
se
soldiour now, vnder who
se ble
ssed cro
sse
2524We are impre
ssed and ingag'd to
fight,
2625Forthwith a power of Engli
sh shall we leauy,
2726Who
se armes were moulded in their mothers wombe,
2827To cha
se the
se pagans in tho
se holy
fields,
2928Ouer who
se acres walkt tho
se ble
ssed feet,
3029Which 1400. yeares ago were naild,
3130For our aduantage on the bitter cro
sse.
3231But this our purpo
se now is twelue month old,
3332And bootele
sse tis to tell you we wil go.
3433Therefore we meet not nowe: then let me heare
3534Of you my gentle Co
sen We
stmerland,
3635What ye
sternight our coun
sell did decree
3736In forwarding this deere expedience.
3837West. My liege, this ha
ste was hot in que
stion,
3938And many limits of the charge
set down
4039But ye
sternight, when all athwart there came
4140A po
st from Wales, loden with heauy newes,
4241Who
se wor
st was that the noble Mortimer,
4342Leading the men of Herdfor
shire to
fight
4443Again
st the irregular, and wild Glendower,
4544Was by the rude hands of that Welchman taken,
4645A thou
sand of his people butchered,
4746Vpon who
se dead corpes there was
such mi
su
se,
4847Such bea
stly
shamele
sse transformation
4948By tho
se Welch-women done, as may not be
5049Without much
shame, retould, or
spoken of.
5150King. It
seemes then that the tidings of this broile,
5251Brake o
ff our bu
sine
sse for the holy land.
5352West. This matcht with other did, my gratious L.
5453For more vneuen and vnwelcome newes
5554Came from the North, and thus it did import,
5655On holly rode day, the gallant Hot
spur there,
5756Yong Harry Percy, and braue Archibold,
5857That euer valiant and approued Scot,
5958At Holmedon met, where they did
spend
6059A
sad and bloudy houre:
6160As by di
scharge of their artillery,
6261And
shape of likelihood the newes was told:
6362For he that brought them in the very heat
6463And pride of their contention, did take hor
se
6564Vncertaine of the i
ssue any way.
6665King. Here is deere, a true indu
strious friend,
6766Sir Walter Blunt new lighted from his hor
se,
Staind
of Henrie the fourth.
6867Staind with the variation of each
soile,
6968Betwixt that Holmedon and this
seat of ours:
7069And he hath brought vs
smothe and welcom newes,
7170The Earle of
Douglas is di
scom
fited,
7271Ten thou
sand bould Scots, two and twenty knights
7372Balkt in their own bloud. Did
sir Walter
see
7473On Holmedons plaines, of pri
soners Hot
spur tooke
7574Mordake Earle of Fife, and elde
st sonne
7675To beaten Douglas, and the Earle of Athol,
7776Of Murrey, Angus, and Menteith:
7877And is not this an honorable
spoile?
7978A gallant prize? Ha coo
sen, is it not?
In faith it is.
8079West. A conque
st for a Prince to boa
st of.
8180King. Yea, there thou mak
st me
sad, and mak
st me
sinne
8281In enuy, that my Lord Northumberland
8382Should be the father to
so ble
st a
sonne:
8483A
sonne, who is the theame of honors tongue,
8584Among
st a groue, the very
straighte
st plant,
8685Who is
sweet fortunes minion and her pride,
8786Whil
st I by looking on the prai
se of him
8887See ryot and di
shonour
staine the brow
8988Of my young Harry. O that it could be prou'd
9089That
some night tripping fairy had exchang'd,
9190In cradle clothes our children where they lay,
9291And cald mine Percy, his Plantagenet,
9392Then would I haue his Harry, and he mine:
9493But let him from my thoughts. What think you coo
se
9594Of this young Percies pride? The pri
soners
9695Which he in this aduenture hath
surprizd
9796To his own v
se, he keepes and
sends me word
9897I
shal haue none but Mordake Earle of Fife.
9998West. This is his vncles teaching. This is Worce
ster,
10099Maleuolent to you in all a
spe
cts,
101100Which makes him prune him
selfe, and bri
stle vp
102101The cre
st of youth again
st your dignity.
103102King. But I haue
sent for him to an
swere this:
104103And for this cau
se a while we mu
st negle
ct 105104Our holy purpo
se to Ieru
salem.
A.3 Coosen
The Historie
106105Coo
sen on wedne
sday next our councel we wil hold
107106At Wind
sore,
so informe the Lords:
108107But come your
selfe with
speed to vs againe,
109108For more is to be
said and to be done,
110109Then out of anger can be vttered.
Exeunt.
113111Enter prince of Wales, and Sir Iohn Falstaffe. 115112Falst. Now
Hal, what time of day is it lad?
116113Prince. Thou art
so fat-witted with drinking of olde
sacke,
117114and vnbuttoning thee after
supper, and
sleeping vpon benches
118115after noone; that thou ha
st forgotten to demaunde that truelie
119116which thou woulde
st trulie knowe. What a diuell ha
st thou to
120117do with the time of the daie? vnles houres were cups of
sacke,
121118and minutes capons, and clockes the tongues of Baudes, and
122119Dialles the
signes of leaping hou
ses, and the ble
ssed
sunne
123120him
selfe a faire hot wench in
flame-couloured ta
ffata; I
see no
124121rea
son why thou
should
st be
so
super
fluous to demaunde the
127123Falst. Indeede you come neere me nowe
Hal, for wee that
128124take pur
ses go by the moone and the
seuen
stars, and not by
129125Phoebus, he, that wandring knight
so faire: and I prethe
sweet
130126wag when thou art a king, as God
saue thy grace: maie
stie I
131127should
say, for grace thou wilt haue none.
134129Falst. No by my troth, not
so much as will
serue to bee pro
- 135130logue to an egge and butter.
136131Prin. Wel, how then? come roundly, roundly.
137132Falst. Marry then
sweet wag, when thou art king let not vs
138133that are
squiers of the nights bodie, bee called theeues of the
139134daies beauty: let vs be
Dianaes forre
sters, gentlemen of the
140135shade, minions of the moone, and let men
say wee be men of
141136good gouernement, being gouerned as the
sea is, by our noble
142137and cha
st mi
stre
sse the moone, vnder who
se countenaunce
144139Prince. Thou
saie
st well, and it holds wel to, for the fortune
145140of vs that are the moones men, doth ebbe and
flow like the
sea,
146141being gouerned as the
sea is by the moone, as for proofe. Now
a purse
of Henrie the fourth
147142a pur
se of gold mo
st re
solutely
snatcht on Munday night and
148143mo
st di
ssolutely
spent on tue
sday morning, got with
swearing,
149144lay by, and
spent with crying, bring in, now in as low an ebbe
151145as the foot of the ladder, and by and by in as high a
flow as the
153147Falst. By the Lord thou
sai
st true lad, and is not my ho
ste
sse
154148of the tauerne a mo
st sweet wench?
155149Prin. As the hony of
Hibla my old lad of the ca
stle, and is
156150not a bu
ffe Ierkin a mo
st sweet robe of durance?
157151Falst. How now, how nowe mad wag, what in thy quips
158152and thy quiddities? what a plague haue I to doe with a bu
ffe
160154Prince. Why what a poxe haue I to do with my ho
ste
sse of
162156Falst. Well, thou ha
st cald her to a reckoning many a time
164158Prince. Did I euer call for thee to pay thy part?
165159Falst. No, ile giue thee thy due, thou ha
st paid all there.
166160Prin. Yea and el
se where,
so far as my coine would
stretch,
167161and where it would not, I haue v
sed my credit.
168162Falst. Yea, and
so vs'd it that were it not here apparant that
169163thou art heire apparant. But I prethe
sweet wag,
shall there be
170164gallowes
standing in England when thou art king? and re
so
- 171165lution thus fubd as it is with the ru
sty curbe of olde father An
- 172166ticke the law, do not thou when thou art king hang a theefe.
175168Falst. Shall I? O rare! by the Lord ile be a braue iudge.
176169Prin. Thou iudge
st fal
se already, I meane thou
shalt haue
177170the hanging of the theeues, and
so become a rare hangman.
179171Falst. Well
Hall well, and in
some
sort it iumpes with my
180172humour, as well as waighting in the Court I can tell you.
182173Prince. For obtaining of
suites?
183174Falst. Yea, for obtaining of
suites, whereof the hangman
184175hath no leane wardrob. Zbloud I am as melancholy as a gyb
186177Prin. Or an old lyon, or a louers Lute.
187178Falst. Yea, or the drone of a Lincoln
shire bagpipe.
188179Prince. What
saie
st thou to a Hare, or the malancholy of
Mooreditch?
The Historie
190181Falst. Thou ha
st the mo
st vn
sauory
smiles, and art indeed
191182the mo
st comparatiue ra
scallie
st sweer yong Prince. But
Hal,
192183I prethe trouble me no more with vanitie, I woulde to God
193184thou and I knewe where a commodity of good names were
194185to be bought: an olde Lorde of the councell rated me the o
- 195186ther day in the
street about you
sir, but I markt him not, and
196187yet he talkt very wi
sely, but I regarded him not, and yet hee
197188talkt wi
sely and in the
street to.
198189Prin. Thou did
st well, for wi
sedome cries out in the
streets
190and no man regards it.
199191Falst. O thou ha
st damnable iteration, and art indeed able
200192to corrupt a
saint: thou ha
st done much harme vpon me
Hal,
201193God forgiue thee for it: before I knewe thee
Hal, I knewe no
- 202194thing, and now am I, if a man
should
speake trulie, little better
203195then one of the wicked: I mu
st giue ouer this life, and I will
204196giue it ouer: by the Lord and I doe not, I am a villaine, ile bee
205197damnd for neuer a kings
sonne in Chri
stendom.
207198Prin. Where
shal we take a pur
se to morrow Iacke?
208199Falst. Zounds where thou wilt lad, ile make one, an I do not
209200call me villaine and ba
ffell me.
210201Prin. I
see a good amendment of life in thee, from praying
212203Fal. Why
Hall, tis my vocation
Hall, tis no
sinne for a man
213204to labor in his vocation.
Enter Poines. 214205Poynes nowe
shall we knowe if Gad
shill haue
set a match.
215206O if men were to be
saued by merit, what hole in hell were hot
216207enough for him? this is the mo
st omnipotent villaine that euer
217208cried,
stand, to a true man.
219210Poines. Good morrow
sweete
Hal. What
saies Mon
sieur
220211remor
se? what
saies
sir Iohn Sacke, and Sugar Iacke? howe
221212agrees the Diuell and thee about thy
soule that thou
soulde
st 222213him on good friday la
st, for a cup of Medera and a cold capons
224215Prince. Sir Iohn
stands to his word, the diuell
shall haue his
225216bargaine, for he was neuer yet a breaker of prouerbes: he will
226217giue the diuell his due.
Poines
of Henrie the fourth.
227218Poynes. Then art thou damnd for keeping thy word with
229220Prince. El
se hee had bin damnd for coo
sening the diuell.
230221Poy. But my lads, my lads, to morrow morning, by foure a
231222clocke early at Gad
shill, there are pilgrims going to Cantur
- 232223burie with rich o
fferings, and traders riding to London with fat
233224pur
ses. I haue vizards for you al you haue hor
ses for your
selues,
234225Gad
shill lies to night in Roche
ster, I haue be
spoke
supper to
235226morrow night in Ea
stcheape: we may do it as
secure as
sleepe,
236227if you will go I will
stu
ffe your pur
ses full of crownes: if you will
238228not, tarie at home and be hangd.
239229Falst. Heare ye Yedward, if I tarry at home and go not, ile
242232Falst. Hal, wilt thou make one?
243233Prince. Who I rob, I a thiefe? not I by my faith.
244234Falst. Theres neither hone
stie, manhood, nor good fellow
ship
245235in thee, nor thou cam
st not of the bloud roiall, if thou dare
st not
246236stand for ten
shillings.
247237Prince. Well then, once in my dayes ile be a madcap.
248238Falst. Why thats well
said.
249239Prince. Well, come what wil, ile tarrie at home.
250240Falst. By the lord, ile be a traitor then, when thou art king.
252242Po. Sir Iohn, I preethe leaue the prince and mee alone, I will
253243lay him downe
such rea
sons for this aduenture that he
shall go.
255244Falst. Well, God giue thee the
spirit of per
swa
sion, and him
256245the eares of pro
fiting, that what thou
speake
st, may moue, and
257246what he heares, may be beleeued, that the true prince may (for
258247recreation
sake) proue a fal
se thiefe, for the poore abu
ses of the
259248time want countenance: farewel, you
shal
find me in Ea
stcheap
261249Prin. Farewel the latter
spring, farewel Alhallowne
summer.
263250Poin. Now my good
sweete hony Lord, ride with vs to mor
- 264251row. I haue a iea
st to execute, that I cannot mannage alone.
265252Fal
stal
ffe, Haruey, Ro
ssill, and Gad
shil,
shal rob tho
se men that
266253we haue already way-laid, your
selfe and I will not bee there:
267254and when they haue the bootie, if you and I doe not rob them,
269255cut this head o
ff from my
shoulders.
B.i. Prin.
The Historie
270256Prin. How
shall we part with them in
setting forth?
271257Po. Why, we wil
set forth before or after them, and appoint
272258them a place of meeting, wherein it is at our plea
sure to faile;
273259and then wil they aduenture vpõ the exploit them
selues, which
274260they
shal haue no
sooner atchieued but weele
set vpon them.
276261Prin. Yea, but tis like that they wil know vs by our hor
ses, by
277262our habits, and by euery other appointment to be our
selues.
279263Po. Tut, our hor
ses they
shal not
see, ile tie them in the wood,
280264our vizards wee wil change after wee leaue them: and
sirrha, I
281265haue ca
ses of Buckrom for the nonce, to imma
ske our noted
283267Prin. Yea, but I doubt they wil be too hard for vs.
284268Po. Wel, for two of them, I know them to bee as true bred
285269cowards as euer turnd backe: and for the third, if he
fight longer
286270then he
sees rea
son, ile for
sweare armes. The vertue of this iea
st 287271wil be the incomprehen
sible lies, that this
same fat rogue wil tel
288272vs when we meet at
supper, how thirtie at lea
st he fought with,
289273what wardes, what blowes, what extremities he indured, and in
290274the reproofe of this liues the ie
st.
292275Prin. Well, ile goe with thee, prouide vs all thinges nece
s- 293276sarie, and meete me to morrow night in Ea
stcheape, there ile
Exit Poines.
296279Prin. I know you all, and wil a while vphold
297280The vnyokt humour of your idlenes,
298281Yet herein wil I imitate the
sunne,
299282Who doth permit the ba
se contagious clouds
300283To
smother vp his beautie from the world,
301284That when he plea
se againe to be him
selfe,
302285Being wanted he may be more wondred at
303286By breaking through the foule and ougly mi
sts
304287Of vapours, that did
seeme to
strangle him.
305288If all the yeere were playing holly-dayes,
306289To
sport would be as tedious as to worke;
307290But when they
seldome come, they wi
sht for come,
308291And nothing plea
seth but rare accidents:
309292So when this loo
se behauiour I throw o
ff,
310293And pay the debt I neuer promi
sed,
By
of Henrie the fourth.
311294By how much better then my word I am,
312295By
so much
shall I fal
sifie mens hopes,
313296And like bright mettal on a
sullein ground,
314297My reformation glittring ore my fault,
315298Shal
shew more goodly, and attra
ct more eyes
316299Then that which hath no foile to
set it o
ff.
317300Ile
so o
ffend, to make o
ffence a
skill,
318301Redeeming time when men thinke lea
st I wil.
Exit.
320302Enter the King, Northumberland, Worcester, Hotspur, 321303sir Walter blunt, with others. 322304King. My blood hath bin too colde and temperate,
323305Vnapt to
stir at the
se indignities,
324306And you haue found me, for accordingly
325307You tread vpon my patience, but be
sure
326308I will from henceforth rather be my
selfe
327309Mightie, and to be fearde, then my condition
328310Which hath bin
smooth as oile,
soft as yong downe,
329311And therefore lo
st that title of re
spe
ct,
330312Which the proud
soule neare payes but to the proud.
331313Wor. Our hou
se (my
soueraigne liege) little de
serues
332314The
scourge of greatnes to be v
sd on it,
333315And that
same greatne
sse to, which our owne hands
334316Haue holpe to make
so portly.
Nor. My Lord.
336317King. Worce
ster get thee gone, for I do
see
337318Danger, and di
sobedience in thine eie:
338319O
sir, your pre
sence is too bold and peremptorie,
339320And Maie
stie might neuer yet endure
340321The moodie frontier of a
seruant browe,
341322You haue good leaue to leaue vs, when we need
342323Your v
se and coun
sel we
shall
send for you.
Exit Wor.
343324You were about to
speake.
344325North. Yea my good Lord.
345326Tho
se pri
soners in your highnes name demanded,
346327Which Harry Percy here at Holmedon tooke,
347328Were as he
saies, not with
such
strength denied
348329As is deliuered to your maie
stie.
349330Either enuie therefore, or mi
spri
sion,
350331Is guiltie of this fault, and not my
sonne.
B.ii. Hotsp.
The Historie
351332Hotsp. My liege, I did denie no pri
soners,
352333But I remember when the
fight was done,
353334When I was drie with rage, and extreame toile,
354335Breathles and faint, leaning vpon my
sword,
355336Came there a certaine Lord, neat and trimly dre
st,
356337Fre
sh as a bridegroome, and his chin new rept,
357338Shewd like a
stubble land at harue
st home,
358339He was perfumed like a Milliner,
359340And twixt his
finger and his thumbe he helde
360341A pouncet boxe, which euer and anon
361342He gaue his no
se, and tookt away againe,
362343Who therewith angry, when it next came there
363344Tooke it in
snu
ffe, and
still hee
smild and talkt:
364345And as the
souldiours bore dead bodies by,
365346He cald them vntaught knaues, vnmanerlie,
366347To bring a
slouenly vnhand
some coar
se
367348Betwixt the winde and his nobilitie:
368349With many holly-day and ladie termes
369350He que
stioned me, among
st the re
st demanded
370351My pri
soners in your Maie
sties behalfe.
371352I then, all
smarting with my wounds being cold,
372353To be
so pe
stred with a Popingay,
373354Out of my griefe and my impacience
374355An
swerd negle
ctingly, I know not what
375356He
should, or he
should not, for he made me mad
376357To
see him
shine
so briske, and
smell
so
sweet,
377358And talke
so like a waiting gentlewoman,
378359Of guns, and drums, and wounds, God
saue the mark:
379360And telling me the
soueraigne
st thing on earth
380361Was Parmacitie, for an inward brui
se,
381362And that it was great pitty,
so it was,
382363This villanous
saltpeeter,
should be digd
383364Out of the bowels of the harmeles earth,
384365Which many a good tall fellow had de
stroyed
385366So cowardly, and but for the
se vile guns
386367He would him
selfe haue beene a
souldior.
387368This bald vnioynted chat of his (my Lord)
388369I an
swered indire
ctly (as I
said)
And
of Henrie the fourth.
389370And I be
seech you, let not his report
390371Come currant for an accu
sation
391372Betwixt my loue and your high maie
stie.
392373Blunt. The circum
stance con
sidered, good my lord,
393374What ere Lord
Harry Percie then had
said
394375To
such a per
son, and in
such a place,
395376At
such a time, with all the re
st retold,
396377May rea
sonably die, and neuer ri
se
397378To do him wrong, or any way impeach
398379What then he
said,
so he vn
say it now.
399380King. Why yet he doth denie his pri
soners,
400381But with proui
so and exception,
401382That we at our owne charge
shall ran
some
straight
402383His brother in law, the fooli
sh Mortimer,
403384Who on my
soule, hath wilfully betraid
404385The liues of tho
se, that he did lead to
fight
405386Again
st that great Magitian, damnd Glendower,
406387Who
se daughter as we heare, that Earle of March
407388Hath lately married:
shall our co
ffers then
408389Be emptied, to redeeme a traitor home?
409390Shall we buy trea
son? and indent with feares
410391When they haue lo
st and forfeited them
selues?
411392No, on the barren mountaines let him
starue:
412393For I
shall neuer hold that man my friend,
413394Who
se tongue
shall a
ske me for one penny co
st 414395To ran
some home reuolted Mortimer,
416397He neuer did fall o
ff, my
soueraigne liege
417398But by the chance of war, to proue that true
418399Needs no more but one tongue: for all tho
se wounds,
419400Tho
se mouthed wounds which valiantly he tooke,
420401When on the gentle Seuerns
siedgie banke,
421402In
single oppo
sition hand to hand,
422403He did confound the be
st part of an houre,
423404In changing hardiment with great Glendower,
424405Three times they breathd, & three times did they drinke
425406Vpon agreement of
swift Seuerns
floud,
426407Who then a
ffrighted with their bloudie lookes,
B.iii Ran
The Historie.
427408Ran fearefully among the trembling reedes,
428409And hid his cri
spe-head in the hollow banke,
429410Bloud-
stained with the
se valiant combatants,
430411Neuer did bare and rotten pollicy
431412Colour her working with
such deadly wounds,
432413Nor neuer could the noble Mortimer
433414Receiue
so many, and all willingly,
434415Then let not him be
slandered with reuolt.
435416King. Thou do
st bely him Percy, thou do
st bely him,
436417He neuer did encounter with Glendower:
437418I tel thee, he dur
st as well haue met the diuell alone,
438419As Owen Glendower for an enemy.
439420Art thou not a
sham'd? but
sirrha, henceforth
440421Let me not heare you
speake of Mortimer:
441422Send me your pri
soners with the
speedie
st meanes,
442423Or you
shal heare in
such a kind from me
443424As will di
splea
se you. My Lord Northumberland:
444425We licence your departure with your
sonne,
445426Send vs your pri
soners, or you wil heare of it.
Exit King
446427Hot. And if the diuel come and rore for them
447428I wil not
send them: I will after
straight
448429And tel him
so, for I will ea
se my hart,
449430Albeit I make a hazard of my head.
450431Nor. What? dronk with choler,
stay, & pau
se a while,
451432Here comes your vncle.
Enter Wor. 452433Hot. Speake of Mortimer?
453434Zounds I will
speake of him, and let my
soule
454435Want mercy if I do not ioine with him:
455436Yea on his part, ile empty all the
se vaines,
456437And
shed my deere bloud, drop by drop in the du
st,
457438But
I will lift the down-trod Mortimer
458439As high in the aire as this vnthankefull king,
459440As this ingrate and cankred Bullingbrooke.
460441Nor. Brother, the king hath made your nephew mad.
461442Wor. Who
strooke this heat vp after I was gone?
462443Hot. He wil for
sooth haue all my pri
soners,
463444And when I vrg'd the ran
some once againe
464445Of my wiues brother, then his cheeke lookt pale,
And
of Henrie the fourth.
465446And on my face he turn'd an eie of death,
466447Trembling euen at the name of Mortimer.
467448Worst. I cannot blame him, was not he proclaim'd
468449By Richard that dead is, the next of bloud?
469450North. He was, I heard the proclamation:
470451And then it was, when the vnhappy king,
471452(Who
se wrongs in vs God pardon) did
set forth
472453Vpon his Iri
sh expedition;
473454From whence he intercepted, did returne
474455To be depos'd, and
shortly murdered.
475456Worst. And for who
se death, we in the worlds wide mouth
476457Liue
scandaliz'd and fouly
spoken of.
477458Hot. But
soft,
I pray you did king Richard then
478459Proclaime my brother Edmund Mortimer
480461North. He did, my
selfe did heare it.
481462Hot. Nay then I cannot blame his coo
sen king,
482463That wi
sht him on the barren mountaines
starue,
483464But
shal it be that you that
set the crowne
484465Vpon the head of this forgetful man,
485466And for his
sake weare the dete
sted blot
486467Of murtherous
subornation?
shal it be
487468That you a world of cur
ses vndergo,
488469Being the agents, or ba
se
second meanes,
489470The cordes, the ladder, or the hangman rather,
490471O pardon me, that I de
scend
so low,
491472To
shew the line and the predicament,
492473Wherein you range vnder this
subtil king!
493474Shall it for
shame be
spoken in the
se daies,
494475Or
fil vp Chronicles in time to come,
495476That men of your nobility and power
496477Did gage them both in an vniu
st behalfe,
497478(As both of you God pardon it, haue done)
498479To put down Richard, that
sweet louely Ro
se,
499480And plant this thorne, this canker Bullingbrooke?
500481And
shal it in more
shame be further
spoken,
501482That you are foold, di
scarded, and
shooke o
ff 502483By him, for whom the
se
shames ye vnderwent?
No,
The Historie.
503484No, yet time
serues, wherein you may redeeme
504485Your bani
sht honors, and re
store your
selues
505486Into the good thoughts of the world againe:
506487Reuenge the ieering and di
sdaind contempt
507488Of this proud king, who
studies day and night
508489To an
swere all the debt he owes to you,
509490Euen with the bloudie paiment of your deaths:
511492Wor. Peace coo
sen,
say no more.
512493And now I will vncla
spe a
secret booke,
513494And to your quicke conceiuing di
scontents
514495Ile reade you matter deepe and daungerous,
515496As full of perill and aduenterous
spirit,
516497As to orewalke a Current roring lowd,
517498On the vn
stedfa
st footing of a
speare.
518499Hot. If he fall in, god-night, or
sinke, or
swim,
519500Send danger from the Ea
st vnto the We
st.
520501So honor cro
sse it, from the North to South,
521502And let them grapple: O the bloud more
stirs
522503To rou
se a lyon than to
start a hare.
523504North. Imagination of
some great exploit
524505Driues him beyond the bounds of patience.
525506By heauen me thinkes it were an ea
sie leape,
526507To plucke bright honour from the palefac'd moone,
527508Or diue into the bottome of the deepe,
528509Where fadome line could neuer touch the ground,
529510And plucke vp drowned honour by the locks,
530511So he that doth redeeme her thence might weare
531512Without corriuall all her dignities,
532513But out vpon this halfe fac't fellow
ship.
533514Wor. He apprehends a world of
figures here,
534515But not the forme of what he
should attend,
535516Good coo
sen giue me audience for a while.
538518Wor. Tho
se
same noble Scots that are your pri
soners
540519Hot. Ile keepe them all;
541520By God he
shall not haue a Scot of them,
542521No, if a Scot would
saue his
soule he
shall not.
Ile
of Henry the fourth.
543522Ile keepe them by this hand.
545524And lend no eare vnto my purpo
ses:
546525Tho
se pri
soners you
shall keepe.
547526Hot. Nay I will: thats
flat:
548527He
said he would not ran
some Mortimer,
549528Forbad my tongue to
speake of Mortimer,
550529But I will
find him when he lies a
sleepe,
551530And in his eare ile hollow Mortimer:
552531Nay, ile haue a
starling
shalbe taught to
speake
553532Nothing but Mortimer, and giue it him
554533To keepe his anger
still in motion.
555534Wor. Heare you co
sen a word.
556535Hot. All
studies here I
solemnly de
fie,
557536Saue how to gall and pinch this Bullenbrooke,
558537And that
same
sword and buckler Prince of Wales,
559538But that I thinke his father loues him not,
560539And would be glad he met with
some mi
schance:
561540I would haue him poi
soned with a pot of ale.
562541Wor. Farewel kin
sman, ile talke to you
563542When you are better temperd to attend.
564543Nor. Why what a wa
spe-
stung and impatient foole
565544Art thou? to breake into this womans moode,
566545Tying thine eare to no toung but thine owne?
567546Hot. Why looke you, I am whipt and
scourg'd with rods,
568547Netled, and
stung with pi
smires, when I heare
569548Of this vile polititian Bullingbrooke,
570549In Richards time, what do you call the place?
571550A plague vpon it, it is in Gloce
ster
shire;
572551Twas where the mad-cap duke his vncle kept
573552His vncle Yorke, where I
fir
st bowed my knee
574553Vnto this king of
smiles, this Bullenbrooke:
575554Zbloud, when you and he came backe from Rauen
spurgh.
576555North. At Barkly ca
stle.
Hot. You
say true.
578556Why what a candy deale of curte
sie,
579557This fawning greyhound then did profer me,
580558Looke when his infant fortune came to age,
581559And gentle Harry Percy, and kind coo
sen:
C.1 O the
The history
582560O the diuill take
such coo
soners, god forgiue me,
583561Good vncle tell your tale, I haue done.
584562Wor. Nay, if you haue not, to it againe,
585563We wil
stay your lei
sure.
586564Hot. I haue done Ifaith.
587565Wor. Then once more to your Scotti
sh pri
soners,
588566Deliuer them vp without their ran
some
straight,
589567And make the Douglas
sonne your only meane
590568For Powers in Scotland, which for diuers rea
sons
591569Which I
shall
send you written, be a
ssur'd
592570Wil ea
sely be granted you my Lord.
593571Your
sonne in Scotland being thus emploied,
594572Shal
secretly into the bo
some creepe
595573Of that
same noble prelat welbelou'd,
597575Hot. Of Yorke, is it not?
598576Wor. True, who beares hard
599577His brothers death at Bri
stow the lord Scroop,
600578I
speake not this in e
stimation,
601579As what I thinke might be, but what I know
602580Is ruminated, plotted, and
set downe,
603581And onely
staies but to behold the face
604582Of that occa
sion that
shal bring it on.
605583Hot. I
smell it. Vpon my life it will do well.
607584Nort. Before the game is afoote thou
still let
st slip.
608585Hot. Why, it cannot chu
se but be a noble plot,
609586And then the power of Scotland, and of Yorke,
610587To ioine with Mortimer, ha.
612589Hot. In faith it is exceedingly well aimd.
613590Wor. And tis no little rea
son bids vs
speed,
614591To
saue our heads by rai
sing of a head,
615592For beare our
selues as euen as we can,
616593The king will alwaies thinke him in our debt,
617594And thinke we thinke our
selues vn
sati
sfied,
618595Till he hath found a time to pay vs home.
619596And
see already how he doth begin
620597To make vs
strangers to his lookes of loue.
Hot.
of Henry the fourth.
621598Hot. He does, he does, weele be reueng'd on him.
622599Worst. Coo
sen farewell. No further go in this,
623600Then I by letters
shall dire
ct your cour
se
624601When time is ripe, which will be
suddenly,
625602Ile
steale to Glendower, and Lo: Mortimer,
626603Where you and Douglas, and our powres at once,
627604As I will fa
shion it
shall happily meete,
628605To beare our fortunes in our own
strong armes,
629606Which now we hold at much vncertainty.
630607Nor. Farewell good brother, we
shall thriue I tru
st.
631608Hot. Vncle adieu: O let the houres be
short,
632609Till
fields, and blowes, and grones, applaud our
sport.
Exeunt 634610Enter a Carrier with a lanterne in his hand 6356111 Car. Heigh ho. An it be not foure by the day ile be hangd,
636612Charles waine is ouer the new Chimney, and yet our hor
se not
6396151 Car. I preethe Tom beat Cuts
saddle, put a few
flockes in
640616the point, poore iade is wroong in the withers, out of all ce
sse.
6436182 Car. Pea
se and beanes are as danke here as a dog, and that
644619is the next way to giue poore iades the bots: this hou
se is turned
645620vp
side downe
since Robin O
stler died.
6476211 Car. Poore fellow neuer ioied
since the pri
se of Oates ro
se,
648622it was the death of him.
6496232 Car. I thinke this be the mo
st villainons hou
se in al London
650624road for
fleas, I am
stung like a Tench.
6516251 Car. Like a Tench, by the Ma
sse there is nere a King chri
- 652626sten could be better bit then I haue bin
since the
fir
st cocke.
6546272 Car. Why they will allowe vs nere a Iordane, and then we
655628leake in your chimney, and your chamber-lie breedes
fleas like
6576301 Car. What O
stler, come away and be hangd, come away.
6596312 Car. I haue a gammon of bacon, and two razes of Gin
- 660632ger, to be deliuered as far as Charing cro
sse.
6616331 Car Gods bodie, the Turkies in my Panier are quite
star
- 662634ued: what O
stler? a plague on thee, ha
st thou neuer an eie in thy
663635head? can
st not heare, and twere not as good deede as drinke to
C2 break
The history
664636break the pate on thee, I am a very villaine, come and be hangd,
667639Gadshill. Good morrow Cariers, whats a clocke?
668640Car. I thinke it be two a clocke.
669641Gad. I prethe lend me thy lanterne, to
see my gelding in the
6716431 Car. Nay by God
soft, I knowe a tricke worth two of that
673645Gad. I pray thee lend me thine.
6746462 Car. I when can
st tell? lend me thy lanterne (quoth he) mar
- 675647ry ile
see thee hangd
fir
st.
676648Gad. Sirrha Carrier, what time doe you meane to come to
6786502 Car. Time enough to go to bed with a candle, I warrant
679651thee, come neighbour Mugs, weele call vp the Gentlemen,
680652they will along with company, for they haue great charge.
682653Enter Chamberlaine. Exeunt. 683654Gad. What ho: Chamberlaine.
684655Cham. At hand quoth pickepur
se.
685656Gad. Thats euen as faire as at hand quoth the Chamberlaine:
686657for thou varie
st no more from picking of pur
ses, then giuing di
- 687658re
ction doth from labouring: thou laie
st the plot how.
689659Cham. Good morrow mai
ster Gad
shill, it holdes currant that
690660I tolde you ye
sternight, ther's a Frankelin in the wilde of Kent
691661hath brought three hundred Markes with him in golde, I heard
692662him tell it to one of his company la
st night at
supper, a kinde of
693663Auditor, one that hath abundance of charge too, God knowes
694664what, they are vp already, and cal for Egges and butter, they wil
697666Gad. Sirrha, if they meete not with Saint Nicholas clearkes,
698667ile giue thee this necke.
699668Cham. No, ile none of it, I pray thee keepe that for the hang
- 700669man, for I know thou wor
shippe
st Saint Nicholas, as trulie as
702671Ga. What talke
st thou to me of the hãgman? if I hang, ile make
703672a fat paire of Gallowes: for if I hang, olde
sir Iohn hangs with
704673me, and thou knowe
st hee is no
starueling: tut, there are other
Troians
of Henrie the fourth.
705674Troians that thou dream
st not of, the which for
sport
sake are
706675content to do the profe
ssion,
some grace, that would (if matters
707676should be lookt into) for their owne credit
sake make all whole.
709677I am ioyned with no footlande rakers, no long-
sta
ffe
sixpennie
710678strikers, none of the
se mad mu
stachio purplehewd maltworms,
711679but with nobilitie, and tranquilitie, Burgoma
sters and great
712680Oneyres,
such as can hold in
such as wil
strike
sooner then
speak,
713681and
speake
sooner then drinke, and drinke
sooner then pray, and
714682yet (zoundes) I lie, for they pray continuallie to their Saint the
715683Common-wealth, or rather not pray to her, but pray on her, for
717684they ride vp and downe on her, and make her their bootes.
718685Cham. What, the Common-wealth their bootes? will
shee
719686hold out water in foule way?
720687Gad. She will,
she will, Iu
stice hath liquord her: we
steale as
721688in a Ca
stell cock
sure: wee haue the receyte of Ferne
seede, wee
723690Cham. Nay by my fayth,
I thinke you are more beholding to
724691the night then to Ferne
seed, for your walking inui
sible.
726692Gad. Giue mee thy hand, thou
shalt haue a
share in our pur
- 728693cha
se, as I am a true man.
729694Cham. Nay rather let me haue it, as you are a fal
se theefe.
731695Gad. Go to,
homo is a common name to al men: bid the O
stler
732696bring my gelding out of the
stable, farewel you muddy knaue.
735697Enter Prince, Poines, and Peto, &c. 736698Po. Come
shelter,
shelter, I haue remoude Fal
stal
ffes hor
se,
737699and he frets like a gumd Veluet.
Enter Falstalffe.
740701Falst. Poynes, Poynes, and be hangd Poynes.
741702Prin. Peace ye fat-kidneyd ra
scal, what a brawling do
st thou
743704Falst. Wheres Poynes Hall?
744705Prin. He is walkt vp to the top of the hill,
Ile go
seeke him.
746706Falst. I am accur
st to rob in that theeues companie, the ra
scal
747707hath remooued my hor
se, and tied him I knowe not where, if I
748708trauell but foure foote by the
squire further a foote, I
shall breake
749709my winde. Well, I doubt not but to die a faire death for all
750710this, if I
scape hanging for killing that rogue. I haue for
sworne
751711his companie hourly any time this xxii. yeares, and yet I am be
- C.iii. witcht
The Historie
752712witcht with the rogues companie. If the ra
scall haue not gi
- 754713uen me medicines to make mee loue him, ile be hangd. It could
755714not be el
se, I haue drunke medicines, Poynes, Hall, a plague
756715vpon you both. Bardoll, Peto, ile
starue ere ile rob a foote
757716further, and twere not as good a deede as drinke to turne true
- 758717man, and to leaue the
se rogues, I am the verie
st varlet that euer
759718chewed with a tooth: eight yeardes of vneuen ground is three
- 760719score and ten myles a foote with mee, and the
stonie hearted
761720villaines knowe it well inough, a plague vpon it when theeues
762721can not be true one to another:
764723Whew, a plague vpon you all, giue mee my hor
se you rogues,
765724giue me my hor
se and be hangd:
766725Prin. Peace ye fat guts, lie downe, laie thine eare clo
se to the
767726ground, and li
st if thou can
st heare the treade of trauellers.
769727Falst. Haue you any leauers to lift me vp againe being down,
770728zbloud ile not beare mine owne
fle
sh so farre a foote againe for
771729all the coine in thy fathers Exchequer
: What a plague meane
773731Prin. Thou lie
st, thou art not colted, thou art vncolted.
774732Falst. I preethe good prince, Hal, helpe me to my hor
se, good
776734Prin. Out ye rogue,
shall I be your O
stler?
777735Falst. Hang thy
selfe in thine owne heire apparant garters,
778736if
I be tane, ile peach for this: and I haue not Ballads made on
779737you all, and
sung to
filthie tunes, let a cuppe of
sacke bee my
780738poy
son, when a iea
st is
so forward, and a foote too I hate it.
783740Gad. Stand.
Falst. So I do again
st my will.
785741Po. O tis our
setter, I know his voice, Bardoll, what newes.
787742Bar. Ca
se yee, ca
se yee on with your vizards, theres money
788743of the kings comming downe the hill, tis going to the Kings
790745Falst. You lie ye rougue, tis going to the kings Tauerne.
791746Gad. Theres inough to make vs all:
793748Prin. Sirs you foure
shall front them in the narrowe lane: Ned
794749Poines, and I wil walke lower, if they
scape from your encoun
- ter
of Henrie the fourth.
795750ter, then they light on vs.
796751Peto. How many be there of them?
798753Fal Zounds will they not rob vs?
799754Prin. What, a coward
sir Iohn paunch.
800755Fal. In deed I am not Iohn of Gaunt your grandfather, but
802757Prin. Well, we leaue that to the proofe.
803758Po. Sirrha Iacke, thy hor
se
standes behinde the hedge, when
804759thou need
st him, there thou
shalt
find him: farewel &
stand fa
st.
806760Fal. Now can not I
strike him if I
should be hangd.
807761Prin. Ned, where are our di
sgui
ses?
808762Po. Here, hard by,
stand clo
se.
809763Fal. Now my mai
sters, happie man bee his dole,
say I, euerie
810764man to his bu
sine
sse.
Enter the trauailers. 812765Trauel. Come neighbour, the boy
shal lead our hor
ses down
813766the hill, weele walke a foote a while and ea
se our legs.
815767Theeues. Stand.
Trauel. Ie
sus ble
sse vs.
817768Falst. Strike, downe with them, cut the villaines throates, a
818769hore
son Caterpillars, bacon-fed knaues, they hate vs youth,
819770downe with them,
fleece them.
820771Tra. O we are vndone, both we and ours for euer.
821772Fal. Hang ye gorbellied knaues, are ye vndone, no yee fatte
822773chu
ffes, I would your
store were here: on bacons on, what yee
823774knaues yong men mu
st liue, you are grand iurers, are ye, weele
825776Here they rob them and bind them. Exeunt. 826777Enter the prince and Poynes. 827778Prin. The theeues haue bound the true men, nowe coulde
828779thou and I rob the theeues, and go merilie to London, it would
829780be argument for a week, laughter for a month, and a good ie
st 831782Po. Stand clo
se, I heare them comming.
832783Enter the theeues againe. 833784Fal. Come my mai
sters, let vs
share and then to hor
se before
834785day, and the Prince and Poines bee not two arrant cowardes
835786theres no equitie
stirring, theres no more valour in that Poynes,
Prin.
The Historie
839788As they are sharing the Prince & Poins set vpon them, they all runne away, and
838790Poin. Villaines.
Falstaffe after a blow or two runs away 840791 too, leauing the bootie behind them. 841792Prin. Got with much ea
se. Now merrily to hor
se: the theeues
842793are all
scattered, and po
sse
st with feare
so
strongly, that they dare
843794not meete each other, each takes his fellow for an o
fficer, awaie
844795good Ned, Fal
stal
ffe
sweates to death, and lards the leane earth
845796as he walkes along, wert not for laughing I
should pittie him.
847797Poynes. How the rogue roard.
Exeunt.
849798Enter Hotspur solus reading a letter. But for mine own part my Lord I could be well contented to bee
851800there, in respect of the loue I beare your house.
852801 He could be contented, why is hee not then? in the re
spe
ct of
853802the loue he beares our hou
se: he
shewes in this, he loues his own
854803barne better then he loues our hou
se. Let me
see
some more.
The purpose you vndertake is dangerous,
856805Why thats certaine, tis daungerous to take a cold, to
sleepe, to
857806drinke, but I tell you (my Lord foole) out of this nettle danger, we
858807plucke this
flower
safetie.
The purpose you vndertake is dangerous, the friends you haue na-
860809med vncertaine, the time it selfe vnsorted, and your whole plot too 861810light, for the counterpoyse of so great an opposition.
862811 Say you
so,
say you
so, I
say vnto you againe, you are a
shal
- 863812low cowardly hind, and you lie: what a lacke braine is this? by
864813the Lord our plot is a good plot, as euer was laid, our friends true
865814and con
stant: a good plot, good friends, and ful of expe
ctation: an
866815excellent plot, verie good friends; what a fro
sty
spirited rogue is
867816this? why my Lord of York commends the plot, and the gene
- 869817rall cour
se of the A
ction. Zoundes and I were nowe by this ra
s- 870818call I could braine him with his Ladies fanne. Is there not my
871819father, my vncle, and my
selfe; Lord Edmond Mortimer, my
872820Lord of Yorke, and Owen Glendower: is there not be
sides the
873821Dowglas, haue I not all their letters to meete me in armes by the
874822ninth of the next month, and are they not
some of them
set for
- 875823ward alreadie? What a pagan ra
scall is this, an in
fidell? Ha, you
876824shall
see now in very
sinceritie of feare and cold heart, will hee to
878825the King, and lay open all our proceedings? O I could deuide
my
of Henrie the fourth.
879826my
selfe, and go to bu
ffets, for mouing
such a di
sh of
skim milke
880827with
so honorable an a
ction. Hang him, let him tell the king, we
881828are prepared: I will
set forward to night.
Enter his Lady.
884829How now Kate, I mu
st leaue you within the
se two houres.
885830Lady. O my good Lord, why are you thus alone?
886831For what o
ffence haue I this fortnight bin
887832A bani
sht woman from my Harries bed?
888833Tel me
sweet Lord, what i
st that takes from thee
889834Thy
stomacke, plea
sure, and thy goulden
sleepe?
890835Why do
st thou bend thine eies vpon the earth?
891836And
start
so often when thou
sit
st alone?
892837Why ha
st thou lo
st the fre
sh bloud in thy cheekes?
893838And giuen my trea
sures and my rights of thee
894839To thicke eyde mu
sing, and cur
st melancholy?
895840In thy faint
slumbers I by thee haue watcht,
896841And heard the murmur, tales of yron wars,
897842Speake tearmes of mannage to thy bounding
steed,
898843Cry courage to the
field. And thou ha
st talkt
899844Of
sallies, and retyres of trenches tents,
900845Of pallizadoes, frontiers, parapets,
901846Of ba
sili
sks, of canon, culuerin,
902847Of pri
soners ran
some, and of
soldiors
slaine,
903848And all the currents of a heddy
fight.
904849Thy
spirit within thee hath bin
so at war,
905850And thus hath
so be
stird thee in thy
sleepe,
906851That beads of
sweat haue
stood vpon thy brow
907852Like bubbles in a late di
sturbed
streame
908853And in thy face
strange motions haue appeard,
909854Such as we
see when men re
straine their breath,
910855On
some great
suddain he
st. O what portents are the
se?
911856Some heauy bu
sine
sse hath my Lord in hand,
912857And I mu
st know it el
se he loues me not.
913858Hot. What ho, is Gilliams with the packet gone?
914859Ser. He is my Lord, an houre ago.
915860Hot. Hath Butler brought tho
se hor
ses from the Sheri
ffe?
916861Ser. One hor
se my Lord he brought euen now.
917862Hot. What hor
se, Roane? a cropeare is it not?
D1 Hot.
of Henrie the fourth.
919864Hot. That roane
shall be my throne. Wel, I will backe him
920865straight: O E
sperance, bid Butler lead him forth into the parke.
922866La. But heare you my Lord.
923867Hot. What
sai
st thou my Lady?
924868La. What is it carries you away?
925869Hot. Why, my hor
se (my loue) my hor
se.
926870La. Out you madhedded ape, a weazel hath not
such a deale
927871of
spleene as you are to
st with. In faith ile knowe your bu
sine
sse
928872Harry that I will,
I feare my brother Mortimer doth
stir about
929873his title, and hath
sent for you to line his enterpri
se, but if you go.
931874Hot. So far a foot I
shal be weary loue.
932875La. Come, come you Paraquito, an
swere me dire
ctly vnto
933876this que
stion that I a
ske, in faith ile breake thy little
finger Har
- 934877ry and if thou wilt not tel me all things true.
935878Hot. Away, away you tri
fler, loue, I loue thee not,
936879I care not for thee Kate, this is no world
937880To play with mammets, and to tilt with lips,
938881We mu
st haue bloudy no
ses, and crackt crownes,
939882And pa
sse them currant too: gods me my hor
se:
940883What
sai
st thou Kate? what would
st thou haue with me?
941884La. Do you not loue me? do you not indeed?
942885Wel, do not then, for
since you loue me not
943886I will not loue my
selfe. Do you not loue me?
944887Nay tel me if you
speake in ie
st or no?
945888Hot. Come, wilt thou
see me ride?
946889And when I am a hor
sebacke I will
sweare
947890I loue thee in
finitely. But harke you Kate,
948891I mu
st not haue you henceforth que
stion me
949892Whither I go, nor rea
son where about,
950893Whither I mu
st, I mu
st, and to conclude
951894This euening mu
st I leaue you gentle Kate,
952895I know you wi
se, but yet no farther wi
se
953896Then Harry Percies wife, con
stant you are,
954897But yet a woman, and for
secrecy
955898No Lady clo
ser, for I well beleeue
956899Thou wilt not vtter what thou do
st not know,
957900And
so far wil I tru
st thee gentle Kate.
Hot.
The Historie
959902Hot. Not an inch further, but harke you Kate,
960903Whither I go, thither
shal you go too:
961904To day will I
set forth, to morrow you,
962905Will this content you Kate?
Exeunt
965907Enter Prince and Poines. 966908Prin. Ned, preethe come out of that fat roome, and lende me
967909thy hand to laugh a little.
968910Poi. Where ha
st bin Hal?
969911Prin. With three or foure loggerheades, amonge
st three or
970912foure
score hog
sheades. I haue
sounded the verie ba
se
string of
971913humilitie. Sirrha, I am
sworne brother to a lea
sh of drawers, and
972914can call them all by their chri
sten names, as Tom, Dicke, and
973915Francis, they take it already vpon their
saluation, that though I
974916be but prince of Wales, yet I am the king of Curte
sie, and tel me
975917flatly I am no proud Iacke like Fal
stal
ffe, but a Corinthian, a lad
976918of metall, a good boy (by the Lord
so they call me) and when I
977919am king of England I
shall command all the good lads in Ea
st- 978920cheape. They call drinking deepe, dying
scarlet, and when you
979921breath in your watering they cry hem, and bid you play it o
ff.
980922To conclude, I am
so good a pro
ficiẽt in one quarter of an houre
981923that I can drinke with any Tinker in his owne language, during
982924my life. I tell thee Ned thou ha
st lo
st much honour, that thou
984925wert not with me in this a
ction; but
sweete Ned, to
sweeten
985926which name of Ned, I giue thee this peniworth of
sugar, clapt e
- 986927uen now into my hand by an vnder
skinker, one that neuer
spake
987928other Engli
sh in his life then eight
shillings and
sixe pence, and
988929you are welcome, with this
shrill addition, anon, anon
sir;
skore a
989930pint of ba
stard in the halfe moone, or
so. But Ned, to driue a
- 990931waie the time till Fal
stal
ffe come: I preethe doe thou
stande in
991932some by-roome, while I que
stion my puny drawer to what end
992933he gaue me the
sugar, and do thou neuer leaue calling Frances,
993934that his tale to me may bee nothing but anon,
step a
side and ile
996936Po. Frances.
Prin. Thou art perfe
ct.
997937Prin. Frances.
Enter Drawer. 1000938Fran. Anon, anon
sir. Looke downe into the Pomgarnet,
D2 Prin.
The Historie
Fran. My Lord.
1004941Prin. How long ha
st thou to
serue Frances?
1005942Fran. For
sooth,
fiue yeeres, and as much as to.
1008945Prin. Fiue yeare, berlady a long lea
se for the clinking of pew
- 1009946ter; but Frances, dare
st thou be
so valiant, as to play the cowarde
1010947with thy Indenture, and
shewe it a faire paire of heeles, and run
1012949Fran. O Lord
sir, ile be
sworne vpon all the bookes in Eng
- 1013950land, I could
find in my hart.
1014951Poin. Frances.
Fran. Anon
sir.
1016952Prin. How old art thou Frances?
1017953Fran. Let me
see, about Michelmas next I
shalbe.
1019955Fran. Anon
sir, pray
stay a little my Lord.
1020956Prin. Nay but harke you Frances, for the
sugar thou gaue
st 1021957me, twas a peniworth, wa
st not?
1022958Fran. O Lord, I would it had bin two.
1023959Prince. I will giue thee for it a thou
sand pound, a
ske me when
1024960thou wilt, and thou
shalt haue it,
1025961Poin. Frances.
Fran. Anon, anon.
1027962Prin. Anon Frances, no Frances, but to morrow Frances: or
1028963Frances a Thur
sday; or indeede Fraunces when thou wilt. But
1031966Prin. Wilt thou rob this leathern Ierkin, cri
stall button, not
- 1032967pated, agat ring, puke
stocking, Caddice garter,
smothe tongue,
1034969Fran. O Lord
sir, who do you meane?
1035970Prin. Why then your brown ba
stard is your only drinke? for
1036971looke you Fraunces, your white canuas doublet will
sulley. In
1037972Barbary
sir, it cannot come to
so much.
1038973Fran. What
sir?
Poin. Frances.
1040974Prin. Away you rogue, do
st thou not heare them cal.
1041975 Here they both cal him, the Drawer stands amazed not knowing 1042976which way to go. Enter Vintner. 1044977Vint. What
stand
st thou
stil and hear
st such a calling? looke
to
of Henrie the fourth.
1045978to the gue
sts within. My Lord, old
sir Iohn with halfe a douzen
1046979more are at the doore,
shal I let them in?
1048980Pri. Let them alone awhile, and then open the doore:
Poines.
Enter Poines.
1052982Prince. Sirrha, Fal
stal
ffe and the re
st of the theeues are at the
1054984Po. As merry as Crickets my lad, but harke ye, what cunning
1055985match haue you made with this ie
st of the Drawer: come whats
1057987Prin. I am now of all humors, that haue
shewed them
selues
1058988humors
since the oulde dayes of good man Adam, to the pupill
1059989age of this pre
sent twelue a clocke at midnight. Whats a clocke
1062992Pr. That euer this fellowe
should haue fewer wordes then a
1063993Parrat, and yet the
sonne of a woman. His indu
strie is vp
staires
1064994and down
staires, his eloquence the parcel of a reckoning. I am
1065995not yet of Percyes minde, the Hot
spur of the North, he that kils
1066996mee
some
sixe or
seuen douzen of Scots at a breakefa
st: wa
shes
1067997his handes, and
saies to his wife,
fie vpon this quiet life, I want
1068998worke. O my
sweet Harry
saies
she! how manie ha
st thou kild
1069999to day? Giue my roane hor
se a drench (
sayes hee) and aun
- 10701000sweres
some foureteene, an houre after: a tri
fle, a tri
fle. I preethe
10721001call in Fal
stal
ffe, ile play Percy, and that damnde brawne
shall
10731002play dame Mortimer his wife.
Riuo saies the drunkarde: call in
10761005Poin. Welcome Iacke, where ha
st thou bin?
10771006Falst. A plague of al cowards I
say, and a vengeance too, mar
- 10781007ry and Amen: giue me a cup of
sacke boy. Eare I lead this life
10791008long, ile
sow neather
stocks and mend them, and foote them too.
10801009A plague of all cowards. Giue me a cup of
sacke rogue, is there
10821011Prin. Did
st thou neuer
see Titan ki
sse a di
sh of butter, pittifull
10831012harted Titan that melted at the
sweet tale of the
sonnes, if thou
10841013did
st, then behold that compound.
D3 Falst.
of Henrie the fourth.
10851014Falst. You rogue, heeres lime in this
sacke too: there is no
- 10861015thing but rogery to be found in villanous man, yet a cowarde is
10871016wor
se then a cup of
sacke with lime in it. A villanous cowarde.
10881017Go thy waies old Iacke, die when thou wilt, if manhood, good
10891018manhood be not forgot vpon the face of the earth, then am I a
10901019shotten herring: there liues not three good men vnhangde in
10911020England, and one of them is fat, and growes old, God helpe the
10921021while, a bad world
I say, I would I were a weauer. I could
sing
10941022p
salmes, or any thing. A plague of all cowards
I say
still.
10951023Prin. How now Wol
sacke, what mutter you?
10961024Falst. A kings
sonne, if
I do not beat thee out of thy kingdom
10971025with a dagger of lath, and driue all thy
subie
cts afore thee like a
10981026flock of wild gee
se, ile neuer weare haire on my face more, you
11001028Prin. Why you hore
son round-man, whats the matter?
11011029Falst. Are not you a cowarde? aun
swere mee to that, and
11031031Poin. Zoundes ye fat paunch, and ye call me cowarde by the
11051033Falst. I call thee cowarde, ile
see thee damnde ere I call thee
11061034coward, but
I woulde giue a thou
sand pound
I coulde runne as
11071035fa
st as thou can
st. You are
streight enough in the
shoulders, you
11081036care not who
sees your backe: call you that backing of your
11091037friends, a plague vpon
such backing, giue me them that will
11101038face me, giue me a cup of
sacke. I am a rogue if I drunke to day.
11121039Prin. O villain, thy lips are
scar
se wipt
since thou drunk
st la
st.
He drinketh.
11151041A plague of all cowards
still
say I.
11171043Falst. Whats the matter, there be foure of vs here haue tane a
11191045Prin. Where is it Iacke, where is it?
11201046Fal. Where is it? taken from vs it is: a hundred vppon poore
11231049Falst. I am a rogue if
I were not at halfe
sword with a douzen
11241050of them two houres together.
I haue
scapt by myracle.
I am
11251051eight times thru
st through the doublet, foure through the ho
se,
my
The Historie.
11261052my buckler cut through and through, my
sworde hackt like a
11271053hand
saw,
ecce signum. I neuer dealt better
since I was a man, al
11281054would not do. A plague of all cowards, let them
speake, if they
11291055speake more or le
sse then truth, they are villains, and the
sonnes
11331058Ross. We foure
set vpon
some douzen.
11341059Falst. Sixteene at lea
st my Lord.
11361061Peto. No, no, they were not bound.
11371062Falst. You rogue they were bounde euerie man of them, or
11391064Ross. As we were
sharing,
some
sixe or
seuen fre
sh men
set
11411066Falst. And vnbound the re
st, and then come in the other.
11431067Prin. What, fought you with them all?
11441068Falst. Al, I know not what you cal al, but if I fought not with
11451069fiftie of them I am a bunch of radi
sh: if there were not two or
11461070three and
fiftie vpon poore olde Iacke, then am I no two legd
11481072Prin. Pray God you haue not murdred
some of them.
11501073Falst. Nay, thats pa
st praying for, I haue pepperd two of them.
11511074Two
I am
sure I haue paied, two rogues in buckrom
sutes: I tel
11521075thee what Hall, if I tell thee a lie,
spit in my face; call me hor
se,
11531076thou knowe
st my olde warde: here I lay, and thus I bore my
11541077poynt, foure rogues in Buckrom let driue at me.
11561078Prin What foure? thou
said
st but two euen now.
11571079Falst. Foure Hal, I told thee foure.
11591081Fal. The
se foure came all a front, and mainely thru
st at me,
11601082I made me no more adoe, but tooke all their
seuen points in my
11621084Prin. Seuen, why there were but foure euen now.
11651087Falst. Seuen by the
se hilts, or I am a villaine el
se.
11661088Pr. Preethe let him alone, we
shall haue more anon.
Prin.
The Historie.
11681090Prince. I, and marke thee to iacke.
11691091Falst. Do
so, for it is worth the li
stning to, the
se nine in Buck
- 1092rom that I told thee of.
11721094Falst. Their points being broken.
11741096Falst. Began to giue me ground: but I followed me clo
se, came
11751097in, foot, and hand, and with a thought,
seuen of the eleuen I paid.
11771098Prin. O mon
strous! eleuen Buckrom men growne out of two.
11791099Fal. But as the diuell would haue it, three mi
sbegotten knaues
11801100in Kendall greene came at my backe, and let driue at mee, for it
11811101was
so darke Hal, that thou coulde
st not
see thy hand.
11831102Prin. The
se lies are like their father that begets them, gro
sse as
11841103a mountaine, open, palpable. Why thou clay-braind guts, thou
11851104knotty-pated foole, thou hore
son ob
scene grea
sie tallow-catch.
11871105Falst. What art thou mad? art thou mad? is not the truth the
11891107Pr. Why, how could
st thou know the
se men in Kendal greene
11901108when it was
so darke thou could
st not
see thy hand, come tell vs
11911109your rea
son. What
saye
st thou to this?
11931110Po. Come your rea
son, Iacke, your rea
son.
11941111Falst. What, vppon compul
sion: Zoundes, and I were at the
11951112strappado, or all the rackes in the worlde, I would not tell you on
11961113compul
sion. Giue you a rea
son on compul
sion? if rea
sons were
11971114as plentifull as blackberries, I would giue no man a rea
son vppon
11991116Prin. Ile be no longer guiltie of this
sinne. This
sanguine co
- 12001117ward, this bed-pre
sser, this hor
se-backe-breaker, this huge hill
12021119Fa. Zbloud you
starueling, you el
sskin, you dried neat
stong, you
12031120bul
spizzle, you
stock
fish: O for breath to vtter what is like thee,
12041121you tailers yard, you
sheath, you bowca
se, you vile
standing tuck.
12061122Prin. Wel, breath a while, and then to it againe, and when thou
12071123ha
st tired thy
selfe in ba
se compari
sons heare mee
speake but this.
12101125Prin. We two
saw you foure
set on foure, and bound them and
12111126were mai
sters of their wealth: marke now how a plaine tale
shall
12121127put you downe, then did wee two
set on you foure, and with a
worde,
of Henry the fourth.
12131128worde outfac't you from your prize, & haue it, yea & can
shew
12141129it you here in the hou
se: and Fal
stal
ffe you carried your guts a
- 12151130way as nimbly, with as quicke dexteritie, & roard for mercy, and
12161131stil run and roard, as euer I heard bul-calf. What a
slaue art thou
12181132to hacke thy
sworde as thou ha
st done? and then
say it was in
12191133fight. What tricke? what deuice? what
starting hole can
st thou
12201134now
find out, to hide thee from this open and apparant
shame?
12221135Po. Come, lets heare iacke, what tricke ha
st thou now?
12241136Falst. By the Lord, I knew ye as wel as he that made ye. Why
12251137heare you my mai
sters, was it for me to kill the heire apparant?
12261138should I turne vpon the true prince? why thou knowe
st I am as
12271139valiant as Hercules: but beware in
stin
ct, the lion will not touch
12281140the true prince, in
stin
ct is a great matter. I was now a cowarde
12291141on in
stin
ct, I
shall thinke the better of my
selfe, and thee during
12301142my life; I for a valiant lion, and thou for a true prince: but by
12311143the Lord, lads, I am glad you haue the money, Ho
ste
sse clap to
12321144the doores, watch to night, pray to morrowe, gallants, lads,
12331145boyes, hearts of golde, all the titles of good fellow
ship come
12341146to you. What
shall wee bee merrie,
shall wee haue a play ex
- 12361148Prin. Content, and the argument
shall bee thy running away.
12381149Falst. A, no more of that Hal and thou loue
st me.
Enter hostesse 12411151Prin. How now my lady the ho
ste
sse, what
sai
st thou to me?
12431152Ho. Marry my Lo. there is a noble man of the court at doore
12441153would
speake with you: he
saies he commes from your father.
12461154Prin. Giue him as much as will make him a royall man, and
12471155send him backe againe to my mother.
12501158Falst. What doth grauitie out of his bed at midnight? Shall I
Fa. Faith and ile send him packing.
12541162Prin. Now
sirs, birlady you fought faire,
so did you Peto,
so
12551163did you Bardol, you are lions, to you ran away vpon in
stin
ct, you
12561164will not touch the true prince, no
fie.
12581165Bar. Faith I ran when I
saw others runne.
E Prin.
The history
12591166Prin. Faith tell me now in earne
st, how came Fal
stal
ffs
sword
12611168Peto. Why, he hackt it with his dagger, and
said hee woulde
12621169sweare truth out of England, but hee would make you beleeue
12631170it was done in
fight, and per
swaded vs to do the like.
12651171Bar. Yea, and to tickle our no
ses with
spearegra
sse, to make
12661172them bleed, and then to be
slubber our garments with it, and
12671173sweare it was the blood of true men. I did that I did not this
se
- 12681174uen yeare before, I blu
sht to heare his mon
strous deuices.
12701175Prin. O villaine, thou
stole
st a cup of Sacke eighteene yeares
12711176ago, and wert taken with the maner, and euer
since thou ha
st 12721177blu
sht extempore, thou had
st fire and
sword on thy
side, and yet
12731178thou ran
st away, what in
stin
ct had
st thou for it?
12751179Bar. My Lord do you
see the
se meteors? do you behold the
se
12781181Bar. What thinke you they portend?
12791182Prin. Hot liuers, and cold pur
ses.
12801183Bar. Choler, my Lord, if rightly taken.
12811185Prin. No if rightly taken halter. Here commes leane iacke, here
12831186commes bare bone: how now my
sweete creature of bumba
st,
12841187how long i
st ago iacke
since thou
sawe
st thine owne knee?
12861188Fal. My owne knee, when I was about thy yeares (Hall) I was
12871189not an Eagles talent in the wa
ste, I could haue crept into anie
12881190Aldermans thumbe ring: a plague of
sighing and grief, it blowes
12891191a man vp like a bladder. Thers villainous newes abroade, heere
12901192was
sir Iohn Bracy, from your father: you mu
st to the court in
12921193the morning. That
same mad fellow of the North Percie, and
12931194he of Wales that gaue Amamon the ba
stinado, and made Luci
- 12941195fer cuckold, and
swore the diuel his true liegeman vpõ the cro
sse
12951196of a Wel
sh hooke: what a plague call you him?
12981198Falst. Owen, Owen, the
same, and his
sonne in lawe Morti
- 12991199mer, and olde Northumberland, and that
sprightly Scot of
13001200Scottes, Dowglas, that runnes a hor
sebacke vp a hill perpendi
- 13021202Prin. He that rides at high
speede, and with his pi
stoll killes a
Falst.
of Henry the fourth.
13051205Prin. So did he neuer the
sparrow.
13061206Fal. Well, that ra
scall hath good mettall in him, hee will not
13081208Prin. Why, what a ra
scall art thou then, to prai
se him
so for
13101210Fal. A hor
sebacke (ye cuckoe) but a foote hee will not budge
13131213Falst. I grant ye vpon in
stin
ct: well hee is there to, and one
13141214Mordacke, and a thou
sand blew caps more. Worce
ster is
stolne
13151215away to night, thy fathers beard is turnd white with the newes,
13161216you may buy land now as cheape as
stinking Mackrel.
13181217Prin. Why then, it is like if there come a hote Iune, and this
13191218ciuill bu
ffeting hold, we
shall buy maidenheads as they buy hob
13211220Falst. By the ma
sse lad thou
saie
st true, it is like wee
shall haue
13221221good trading that way: but tell mee Hall, art not thou horrible
13231222afearde? thou being heire apparant, could the world picke thee
13241223out three
such enemies againe? as that
fiend Dowglas, that
spi
- 13251224rit Percy, and that diuel Glendower, art thou not horribly afraid?
13281226Prin. Not a whit ifaith, I lacke
some of thy in
stin
ct.
13291227Falst. Well thou wilt bee horriblie chidde to morrowe when
13301228thou comme
st to thy father, if thou loue mee pra
cti
se an aun
- 13321230Prin. Do thou
stand for my father and examine me vpon the
13341232Falst. Shall I: content. This chaire
shall be my
state, this dag
- 13351233ger my
scepter, and this cu
shion my crowne.
13371234Prin. Thy
state is taken for a ioynd
stoole, thy golden
scepter
13381235for a leaden dagger, and thy precious rich crowne for a pittifull
13401237Falst. Well, and the
fire of grace bee not quite out of thee
13411238nowe
shalt thou be mooued. Giue me a cup of Sacke to make
13421239my eyes looke redde, that it maie bee thought I haue wept,
13431240for I mu
st speake in pa
ssion, and I will doe it in king Cambi
ses
E2 Prin.
The history
13461243Falst. And here is my
speech;
stand a
side Nobilitie.
13471244Host. O Ie
su, this is excellent
sport ifaith.
13481245Falst. Weepe not
sweet Queene, for trickling teares are vain.
13501246Host. O the father, how he holds his countenance?
13521247Fal. For Gods
sake Lords, conuay my tru
stfull Queene,
13531248For teares do
stop the
floudgates of her eyes.
13541249Host. O Ie
su, he doth it as like one of the
se harlotrie plaiers as
13561251Falst. Peace good pint-pot, peace good tickle-braine.
13571252Harrie, I doe not onelie maruaile where thou
spende
st thy
13581253time, but al
so how thou art accompanied. For though the cam
- 13591254momill the more it is troden on, the fa
ster it growes:
so youth
13601255the more it is wa
sted, the
sooner it weares: that thou art my
son
13611256I haue partly thy mothers worde, partlie my owne opinion, but
13621257chie
flie a villainous tricke of thine eye, and a fooli
sh hanging
13631258of thy neather lippe, that dooth warrant me.
If then thou bee
13641259sonne to mee, heere lies the poynt, why beeing
sonne to me, art
13651260thou
so pointed at?
shal the ble
ssed
sunne of heauen proue a mi
- 13671261cher, and eat black-berries? a que
stion not to be a
skt. Shall the
13681262sonne of England proue a theefe, and take pur
ses? a que
stion to
13691263be a
skt. There is a thing Harry, which thou ha
st often heard of,
13701264and it is knowne to many in our land by the name of pitch. This
13711265pitch (as ancient writers do report) doth de
file,
so doth the com
- 13731266panie thou keepe
st: for Harrie now, I do not
speake to thee in
13741267drinke, but in teares; not in plea
sure but in pa
ssion: not in words
13751268onely, but in woes al
so: and yet there is a vertuous man, whom
13761269I haue often noted in thy companie, but I know not his name.
13781270Prin. What maner of man and it like your Maie
stie?
13801271Fal. A goodly portly man ifayth, and a corpulent of a cheerful
13811272looke, a plea
sing eie, and a mo
st noble cariage, and as I thinke
13821273his age
some
fiftie, or birladie inclining to three
score, and nowe
13831274I remember me, his name is
Falstalffe, if that man
shoulde bee
13841275lewdly giuen, hee deceiueth me. For Harry, I
see vertue in his
13851276lookes: if then the tree may bee knowne by the fruit, as the fruit
13871277by the tree, then peremptorily I
speake it, there is vertue in that
13881278Falstalffe, him keepe with, the re
st bani
sh, and tell me now thou
13891279naughtie varlet, tell me where ha
st thou beene this month?
Pr.
of Henrie the fourth.
13911280Prin. Do
st thou
speake like a king, do thou
stand for me, and
13931282Fal. Depo
se me, if thou do
st it halfe
so grauely,
so maie
stical
- 13941283ly, both in word and matter, hang me vp by the heeles for a rab
- 13971286Fal. And here I
stand, iudge my mai
sters.
13981287Prin. Now Harry, whence come you?
13991288Fal. My noble Lord from Ea
stcheape.
14001289Prin. The complaints I heare of thee are greeuous.
14011290Fal. Zbloud my Lord they are fal
se: nay ile tickle ye for a yong
14031292Prin. Sweare
st thou vngratious boy, hence forth nere looke
14041293on me, thou art violently carried awaie from grace, there is a di
- 14051294uell haunts thee in the likene
sse of an olde fat man, a tun of man
14061295is thy companion: why doe
st thou conuer
se with that trunke of
14071296humours, that boultinghutch of bea
stline
sse, that
swolne parcell
14091297of drop
sies that huge bombard of
sacke, that
stuft cloakebag of
14101298guts, that ro
sted Manningtre Oxe with the pudding in his belly,
14111299that reuerent vice, that gray iniquity, that father ru
ffian, that va
- 14121300nity in yeares, wherein is he good, but to ta
st sacke and drinke it?
14131301wherein neat and clenly, but to carue a capon and eat it? wherein
14151302cunning, but in craft? wherein crafty, but in villany? wherein villa
- 14161303nous, but in al things? where in worthy, but in nothing?
14181304Fal. I would your grace would take me with you, whome
14201306Prin. That villanous abhominable mi
sleader of youth, Fal
- 14211307stal
ffe, that olde white bearded Sathan.
14241310Fal. But to
say I knowe more harme in him then in my
selfe,
14251311were to
say more then I know: that he is olde the more the pit
- 14261312tie, his white haires doe witne
sse it, but that he is
sauing your re
- 14271313uerence, a whorema
ster, that I vtterlie denie: if
sacke and
sugar
14281314be a fault, God helpe the wicked; if to be olde and merry be a
sin,
14301315then many an old ho
st that I know is damnd: if to be fat be to be
14311316hated, then Pharaos lane kine are to be loued. No my good lord
14321317bani
sh Peto, bani
sh Bardoll, bani
sh Poines, but for
sweet Iacke
E3 Falstalffe
The Historie
14331318Fal
stal
ffe, kinde Iacke Fal
stal
ffe, true Iacke Fal
stal
ffe, valiant
14341319Iacke Fal
stal
ffe, & therfore more valiant being as he is old Iacke
14361320Fal
stal
ffe, bani
sh not him thy Harries companie, bani
sh not
14371321him thy Harries companie, bani
sh plumpe Iacke, and bani
sh all
Enter Bardoll running.
14411324Bar. O my Lord, my Lord, the Sheri
ffe with a mo
st mon
strous
14431326Falst. Out ye rogue, play out the play, I haue much to
say in
14471330Prin. Heigh, heigh, the Deuil rides vpon a
fiddle
sticke, whats
14491332Host. The Sheri
ffe and al the watch are at the doore, they are
14501333come to
search the hou
se,
shall I let them in?
14521334Falst. Doe
st thou heare Hal? neuer call a true piece of golde a
14531335counterfet, thou art e
ssentially made without
seeming
so.
14551336Prin. And thou a naturall coward without in
stin
ct.
14571337Falst. I deny your Maior, if you wil deny the Sheri
ffe
so, if not,
14581338let him enter.
If I become not a Cart as well as another man, a
14591339plague on my bringing vp, I hope
I shall as
soone bee
strangled
14621341Prin. Go hide thee behind the Arras, the re
st walke vp aboue,
14631342now my ma
sters for a true face, and good con
science.
14651343Falst. Both which
I haue had, but their date is out, and there
- 14691347Prin. Now ma
ster Sheri
ffe, what is your wil with me?
14711348Sher. Fir
st pardon me my Lord. A hue and crie hath followed
14741351Sher. One of them is well known my gratious Lorde, a gro
sse
14771354Prin. The man I do a
ssure you is not here,
14781355For
I my
selfe at this time haue emploid him:
And
of Henrie the fourth.
14791356And Sheri
ffe, I will ingage my word to thee,
14801357That I will by to morrow dinner time
14811358Send him to an
swere thee or any man,
14821359For any thing he
shall be charg'd withal,
14831360And
so let me intreat you leaue the hou
se.
14841361Sher. I will my Lord: there are two gentlemen
14851362Haue in this robbery lo
st 300. markes.
14861363Prin. It may be
so: if he haue robd the
se men
14871364He
shal be an
swerable, and
so farewell.
14891366Prin. I thinke it is god morrow is it not?
14901367She. Indeed my Lord I thinke it be two a clocke.
Exit 14921368Prin. This oylie ra
scall is knowne as well as Poules: goe call
14941370Peto. Fal
stal
ffe: fa
st a
sleepe behind the Arras, and
snorting
14961372Prin. Harke how hard he fetches breath,
search his pockets.
14981373He searcheth his pocket, and findeth certaine papers. 15011375Pet. Nothing but papers my Lord.
15021376Prin. Lets
see what they be, read them.
15051379Item
sacke two gallons.
v.s,viij,d.
15061380Item anchaues and
sacke after
supper.
2,s,vj,d.
15081382 O mon
strous! but one halfepeniworth of bread to this intolle
- 15091383rable deale of
sack? what there is el
se keepe clo
se, weel read it at
15101384more aduantage; there let him
sleepe till day, ile to the court in
15111385the morning. We mu
st all to the wars, and thy place
shal be ho
- 15121386norable.
Ile procure this fat rogue a charge of foot, and
I know
15141387his death will bee a march of twelue
skore, the money
shall bee
15151388paid backe againe with aduantage; bee with me betimes in the
15161389morning, and
so good morrow Peto.
15181390Peto. Good morrow good my Lord.
Exeunt 15201391Enter Hotspur, Worcester, Lord Mortimer, 15221393Mor. The
se promi
ses are faire, the parties
sure,
And
The Historie
15231394And our indu
ction ful of pro
sperous hope.
15241395Hot. Lord Mortimer, and coo
sen Glendower wil you
sit down?
15261396and Vncle Worce
ster; a plague vpon it I haue forgot the map.
15281397Glendow. No here it is;
sit Coo
sen Percy,
sit good Coo
sen
15291398Hot
spur, for by that name as oft as Lanca
ster doth
speake of you,
15311399his cheeke lookes pale, and with a ri
sing
sigh hee wi
sheth you in
15331401Hot. And you in hell, as oft as he heares Owen Glendower
15351403Glen. I cannot blame him; at my natiuity
15361404The front of heauen was full of
fiery
shapes
15371405Of burning cre
ssets, and at my birth
15381406The frame and huge foundation of the earth
15401408Hot. Why
so it woulde haue done at the
same
sea
son if your
15411409mothers cat had but kittend, though your
selfe had neuer beene
15431411Glen. I say the earth did
shake when
I was borne.
15441412Hot. And
I say the earth was not of my mind,
15451413If you
suppo
se as fearing you it
shooke.
15461414Glen. The heauens were all on
fire, the earth did tremble,
15481415Hot. Oh then the earth
shooke to
see the heauens on
fire,
15501416And not in feare of your natiuity,
15511417Di
sea
sed nature oftentimes breakes forth,
15521418In
strange eruptions, oft the teeming earth
15531419Is with a kind of collicke pincht and vext,
15541420By the impri
soning of vnruly wind
15551421Within her vvombe, vvhich for enlargement
striuing
15561422Shakes the old Beldame earth, and topples down
15571423Steeples and mo
ssegrovvn towers. At your birth
15581424Our Grandam earth, hauing this di
stemprature
15611427I do not beare the
se cro
ssings, giue me leaue
15621428To tell you once againe that at my birth
15631429The front of heauen vvas full of
fiery
shapes,
15641430The goates ran from the mountaines, and the heards
15651431Were
strangely clamorous to the frighted
fields.
These
of Henrie the fourth
15661432The
se
signes haue markt me extraordinary,
15671433And all the cour
ses of my life do
shew
15681434I am not in the roule of commen men:
15691435Where is he liuing clipt in with the
sea,
15701436That chides the bancks of England, Scotland, Wales,
15711437Which cals me pupil or hath read to me?
15721438And bring him out that is but womans
sonne?
15731439Can trace me in the tedious waies of Arte,
15741440And hold me pace in deepe experiments.
15751441Hot. I thinke theres no man
speakes better Wel
sh:
15771443Mor. Peace coo
sen Percy, you wil make him mad.
15781444Glen. I can cal
spirits from the va
sty deepe.
15791445Hot. Why
so can I, or
so can any man,
15801446But wil they come when you do cal for them
15811447Glen. Why I can teach you coo
sen to command the Deuil.
15831448Hot. And I can teach thee coo
se to
shame the deuil,
15841449By telling truth. Tel truth and
shame the deuil:
15851450If thou haue power to rai
se him bring him hither,
15861451And ile be
sworne I haue power to
shame him hence:
15871452Oh while you liue tel truth and
shame the deuil.
15881453Mor. Come, come, no more of this vnpro
fitable chat.
15901454Glen. Three times hath Henry Bullenbrooke made head
15911455Again
st my power, thrice from the bankes of Wye,
15921456And
sandy bottomd Seuerne haue I
sent him
15931457Booteles home, and weather beaten backe.
15941458Hot. Home without bootes, and in foule weather too,
15961459How
scapes he agues in the deuils name?
15971460Glen. Come here is the map,
shal we diuide our right?
15991461According to our three fold order tane.
16001462Mor. The Archdeacon hath diuided it
16021464England from Trent, and Seuerne hitherto,
16031465By South and Ea
st is to my part a
ssignd:
16041466Al we
stward, Wales beyond the Seuerne
shore,
16051467And al the fertile land within that bound
16061468To Owen Glendower: and deare coo
se to you
16071469The remnant Northward lying o
ff from Trent,
F1 And
The Historie
16081470And our indentures tripartite are drawn,
16091471Which being
sealed enterchangeably,
16101472(A bu
sine
sse that this night may execute:)
16111473To morrow coo
sen Percy you and I
16121474And my good Lord of Worce
ster wil
set forth
16131475To meet your father and the Scotti
sh power,
16141476As is appointed vs at Shrew
sbury.
16151477My father Glendower is not ready yet,
16161478Nor
shal we need his helpe the
se fourteen daies,
16171479Within that
space you may haue drawne together
16181480Your tenants, friends, and neighbouring gentlemen.
16191481Glen. A
shorter time
shall
send me to you Lords,
16201482And in my condu
ct shall your Ladies come,
16211483From whom you now mu
st steale and take no leaue,
16221484For there wil be a world of water
shed,
16231485Vpon the parting of your wiues and you.
16241486Hot. Me thinks my moity North from Burton here,
16251487In quantity equals not one of yours,
16261488See how this riuer comes me cranking in,
16271489And cuts me from the be
st of all my land,
16281490A huge halfe moone, a mon
strous
scantle out,
16291491Ile haue the currant in this place damnd vp,
16301492And here the
smug and
siluer Trent
shall run
16311493In a new channell faire and euenly,
16321494It
shall not wind with
such a deepe indent,
16331495To rob me of
so rich a bottome here.
16341496Glen. Not wind it
shal, it mu
st, you
see it doth.
16351497Mor. Yea, but marke howe he beares his cour
se, and runs mee
16361498vp with like aduauntage on the other
side, gelding the oppo
sed
16371499continent as much as on the other
side it takes from you.
16391500Wor. Yea but a little charge wil trench him here,
16401501And on this North
side win this cape of land,
16411502And then he runs
straight and euen.
16421503Hot. Ile haue it
so, a little charge will do it.
Glen.
of Henrie the fourth.
16481509Hot. Let me not vnder
stand you then,
speake it in Wel
sh.
16501510Glen. I can
speake Engli
sh Lord as well as you,
16511511For
I was traind vp in the Engli
sh court,
16521512Where being but yong I framed to the harpe
16531513Many an Engli
sh ditty louely well,
16541514And gaue the tongue a helpeful ornament,
16551515A vertue that was neuer
seene in you.
16561516Hot. Marry and
I am glad of it with all my hart,
16571517I had rather be a kitten and cry mew,
16581518Then one of the
se
same miter ballet mongers,
16591519I had rather heare a brazen can
sticke turnd,
16601520Or a drie wheele grate on the exle tree,
16611521And that would
set my teeth nothing an edge,
16621522Nothing
so much as min
sing poetry,
16631523Tis like the forc't gate of a
shu
ffling nag.
16641524Glen. Come, you
shal haue Trent turnd.
16651525Hot. I do not care, ile giue thrice
so much land
16671527But in the way of bargaine marke ye me,
16681528Ile cauill on the ninth part of a haire,
16691529Are the Indentures drawn,
shal we be gone?
16701530Glen. The moon
shines faire, you may away by night
16721531Ile ha
ste the writer, and withal
16731532Breake with your, wiues of your departure hence,
16741533I am afraid my daughter will run mad,
16751534So much
she doteth on her Mortimer.
Exit
16761535Mor. Fie coo
sen Percy, how you cro
sse my father.
16781536Hot. I cannot chu
se,
sometime he angers me
16791537With telling me of the Moldwarp and the Ant,
16801538Of the dreamer Merlin and his prophecies,
16811539And of a Dragon and a
finles
fish,
16821540A clipwingd Gri
ffin and a molten rauen,
16831541A couching Leon and a ramping Cat,
16841542And
such a deale of skimble
scamble
stu
ffe,
16851543As puts me from my faith.
I tel you what,
16861544He held me la
st night at lea
st nine houres
16871545In reckoning vp the
seueral Diuels names
F2 That
The History
16881546That were his lackies, I cried hum, and wel go to,
16901547But markt him not a word. O he is as tedious
16911548As a tyred hor
se, a railing wife,
16921549Wor
se then a
smoky hou
se. I had rather liue
16931550With chee
se and garlike in a Windmil far,
16941551Then feed on cates and haue him talke to me,
16951552In any
summer hou
se in Chri
stendome.
16961553Mor. In faith he is a worthy gentleman,
16971554Exceedingly well read and pro
fited
16981555In
strange concealements, valiant as a lion,
16991556And wondrous a
ffable; and as bountifull
17001557As mines of India;
shal I tell you coo
sen,
17021558He holds your temper in a high re
spe
ct 17031559And curbs him
selfe euen of his natural
scope,
17041560When you come cro
sse his humor, faith he does,
17051561I warrant you that man is not aliue
17061562Might
so haue tempted him as you haue done,
17071563Without the ta
st of danger and reproofe,
17081564But do not v
se it oft, let me intreat you.
17091565Wor. In faith my Lord you are too wilfull blame,
17101566And
since your comming hither haue done enough
17111567To put him quite be
sides his patience,
17121568You mu
st needes learne Lord to amend this fault,
17131569Though
sometimes it
shew greatnes, courage, bloud,
17141570And thats the deare
st grace it renders you,
17151571Yet oftentimes it doth pre
sent har
sh rage,
17161572Defe
ct of maners, want of gouernment,
17171573Pride, hautine
sse, opinion, and di
sdaine,
17181574The lea
st of which hanting a noble man,
17191575Loo
seth mens harts and leaues behind a
staine
17201576Vpon the beauty of all parts be
sides,
17221578Hot. Wel
I am
schoold good maners be your
speed,
17241579Here come our wiues, and let vs take our leaue.
17251580Enter Glendower with the Ladies. 17261581Mor. This is the deadly
spight that angers me,
17271582My wife can
speake no Engli
sh,
I no Wel
sh.
17281583Glen. My daughter weepes,
sheele not part with you,
Sheele
of Henrie the fourth.
17291584Sheele be a
souldior to,
sheele to the wars.
17301585Mor. Good father tell her, that
she and my Aunt Percy
17311586Shal follow in your condu
ct speedily.
17321587Glendower speakes to her in Welsh, and she answeres 17351590A peeui
sh selfe wild harlotrie, one that no per
swa
sion can doe
17381593Mor. I vnder
stand thy lookes, that prettie Wel
sh,
17391594Which thou powre
st downe from the
se
swelling heauens,
17401595I am too perfe
ct in, and but for
shame
17411596In
such a parley
should I an
swere thee.
17431598Mor. I vnder
stand thy ki
sses, and thou mine,
17441599And thats a feeling di
sputation,
17451600But I will neuer be a truant loue,
17461601Till I haue learnt thy language, for thy tongue
17471602Makes Wel
sh as
sweet as ditties highly pend,
17481603Sung by a faire Queene in a
summers bowre,
17491604With raui
shing diui
sion to her Lute.
17501605Glen. Nay, if you melt, then will
she run mad.
17511606The Lad e speakes againe in Welsh. 17521607Mor. O I am ignorance it
selfe in this.
17531608Glen. She bids you on the wanton ru
shes lay you downe,
17551609And re
st your gentle head vpon her lap,
17561610And
she will
sing the
song that plea
seth you,
17571611And on your eyelids crowne the God of
sleepe,
17581612Charming your bloud with plea
sing heauine
sse,
17591613Making
such di
fference twixt wake and
sleepe,
17601614As is the di
fference betwixt day and night,
17611615The houre before the heauenly harne
st teeme
17621616Begins his golden progre
sse in the ea
st.
17631617Mor. With all my heart ile
sit and heare her
sing,
17641618By that time will our booke I thinke be drawne.
17651619Glen. Do
so, & tho
se mu
sitions that
shal play to you,
17671620Hang in the aire a thou
sand leagues from hence,
17681621And
straight they
shalbe here,
sit and attend.
F.iii Hot.
The Historie
17691622Hot. Come Kate, thou art perfe
ct in lying downe,
17701623Come quick, quick, that I may lay my head in thy lap.
17741626Hot. Now I perceiue the diuell vnder
stands Wel
sh,
17751627And tis no maruaile he is
so humorous,
17771629La. Then
should you be nothing but mu
sicall,
17781630For you are altogither gouernd by humors,
17791631Lie
still ye thiefe, and heare the Lady
sing in Wel
sh.
17801632Hot. I had rather heare lady my brache howle in Iri
sh.
17821633La. Would
st thou haue thy head broken?
17851636Hotsp. Neither, tis a womans fault.
17901641Here the Ladie sings a welsh song. 17911642Hot. Come Kate, ile haue your
song too.
17931644Hot. Not yours in good
sooth. Hart, you
sweare like a com
fit
- 17941645makers wife, not you in good
sooth, and as true as I liue, and as
17961646God
shall mend me, and as
sure as day:
17971647And giue
st such
sarcenet
surety for thy oathes,
17981648As if thou neuer walk
st further then Fin
sbury.
17991649Sweare me Kate like a ladie as thou art,
18001650A good mouth
filling oath, and leaue in
sooth,
18011651And
such prote
st of pepper ginger bread
18021652To veluet gards, and Sunday Citizens.
18051655Hot. Tis the next way to turne tayler, or be redbre
st teacher,
18061656and the indentures be drawn ile away within the
se two houres,
18071657and
so come in when ye will.
Exit. 18091658Glen. Come, come, Lord Mortimer, you are as
slow,
18101659As Hot. Lord Percy is on
fire to go:
By
of Henrie the fourth.
18111660By this our booke is drawne, weele but
seale,
Exeunt.
18151663Enter the King, Prince of Wales, and others. 18161664King. Lords giue vs leaue, the Prince of Wales and I,
18181665Mu
st haue
some priuate conference, but be neare at hand,
18201666For we
shall pre
sently haue neede of you.
Exeunt Lords.
18221667I know not whether God will haue it
so
18231668For
some di
splea
sing
seruice I haue done,
18241669That in his
secret doome out of my blood,
18251670Heele breed reuengement and a
scourge for me:
18261671But thou do
st in thy pa
ssages of life,
18271672Make me beleeue that thou art onely markt
18281673For the hot vengeance, and the rod of heauen,
18291674To puni
sh my mi
streadings. Tell me el
se
18301675Could
such inordinate and low de
sires,
18311676Such poore,
such bare,
such lewd,
such mean attempts,
18321677Such barren plea
sures, rude
societie
18331678As thou art matcht withall, and grafted to,
18341679Accompanie the greatne
sse of thy blood,
18351680And hold their leuell with thy princely heart?
18361681Prin. So plea
se your Maie
stie, I would I could
18371682Quit all o
ffences with as cleare excu
se,
18381683As well as I am doubtle
sse I can purge
18391684My
selfe of many I am chargd withall,
18401685Yet
such extenuation let me beg,
18411686As in reproofe of many tales deui
sde,
18421687Which oft the eare of greatnes needs mu
st heare
18431688By
smiling pickthanks, and ba
se newes mongers,
18441689I may for
some things true, wherein my youth
18451690Hath faulty wandred, and irregular,
18461691Find pardon on my true
submi
ssion.
18471692Kin. God pardon thee, yet let me wonder, Harry,
18491693At thy a
ffe
ctions, which do hold a wing
18501694Quite from the
flight of all thy aunce
stors,
18511695Thy place in coun
sell thou ha
st rudely lo
st 18521696Which by thy yonger brother is
supplide,
18531697And art almo
st an allien to the harts
Of
The Historie.
18541698Of all the Court and princes of my blood,
18551699The hope and expe
ctation of thy time
18561700Is ruind, and the
soule of euery man
18571701Prophetically do forethinke thy fall:
18581702Had I
so laui
sh of my pre
sence beene,
18591703So common hackneid in the eyes of men,
18601704So
stale and cheape to vulgar companie,
18611705Opinion that did helpe me to the crowne,
18621706Had
still kept loyall to po
sse
ssion,
18631707And left me in reputele
sse bani
shment,
18641708A fellow of no marke nor likelihoode.
18651709By being
seldome
seene,
I could not
stirre
18661710But like a Comet I was wondred at,
18671711That men would tell their children this is he:
18681712Others would
say, where, which is Bullingbrooke?
18691713And then I
stole all curte
sie from heauen,
18701714And dre
st my
selfe in
such humilitie
18711715That I did plucke allegiance from mens hearts,
18721716Loud
shouts, and
salutations from their mouths,
18731717Euen in the pre
sence of the crowned king.
18741718Thus did I keepe my per
son fre
sh and new,
18751719My pre
sence like a roabe ponti
ficall,
18761720Nere
seene but wondred at, and
so my
state
18771721Seldome, but
sumptuous
shewd like a fea
st,
18781722And wan by rarene
sse
such
solemnitie.
18791723The
skipping king, he ambled vp and downe,
18801724With
shallow ie
sters, and ra
sh bauin wits,
18811725Soone kindled, and
soone burnt, carded his
state,
18821726Mingled his royaltie with capring fooles,
18831727Had his great name prophaned with their
scornes,
18841728And gaue his countenance again
st his name
18851729To laugh at gibing boyes, and
stand the pu
sh 18861730Of euery beardle
sse vaine comparatiue,
18871731Grew a companion to the common
streetes,
18881732Enfeoft him
selfe to popularitie,
18891733That being dayly
swallowed by mens eyes,
18901734They
surfetted with honie, and began to loath
18911735The ta
ste of
sweetne
sse, whereof a little
More
of Henry the fourth.
18921736More then a little, is by much too much.
18931737So when he had occa
sion to be
seene,
18941738He was but as the Cuckoe is in Iune,
18951739Heard, not regarded: Seene, but with
such eies
18961740As
sicke and blunted with communitie,
18981742Such as is bent on
sun-like maie
stie,
18991743When it
shines
seldome in admiring eies,
19001744But rather drowzd, and hung their eie-lids down,
19011745Slept in his face, and rendred
such a
spe
ct 19021746As cloudy men v
se to their aduer
saries,
19031747Being with his pre
sence glutted, gordge, and full.
19041748And in that very line Harry
stande
st thou,
19051749For thou ha
st lo
st thy princely priuiledge
19061750With vile participation. Not an eye
19071751But is a weary of thy common
sight,
19081752Saue mine, which hath de
sired to
see thee more,
19091753Which now doth that I would not haue it do,
19101754Make blind it
selfe with fooli
sh tenderne
sse.
19111755Prin. I
shall hereafter my thrice gratious Lord,
King. For all the world,
19141757As thou art to this houre was Richard then,
19151758When I from France
set foot at Rauen
spurgh,
19161759And euen as I was than, is Percy now,
19171760Now by my
scepter, and my
soule to boote,
19181761He hath more worthie intere
st to the
state
19191762Then thou the
shadow of
succe
ssion.
19201763For of no right, nor colour like to right,
19211764He doth
fill
fields with harne
sse in the realme,
19221765Turnes head again
st the lions armed iawes,
19231766And being no more in debt to yeares, then thou
19241767Leads ancient Lords, and reuerend Bi
shops on
19251768To bloudie battailes, and to brui
sing armes.
19261769What neuer dying honour hath he got
19271770Again
st renowmed Dowglas? Who
se high deeds,
19281771Who
se hot incur
sions, and great name in armes,
19291772Holds from al
souldiors chiefe maioritie
G.1. Through
The history
19311774Through all the kingdoms that acknowledge Chri
st,
19321775Thrice hath this Hot
spur Mars in
swathling cloaths,
19331776This infant warrier in his enterpri
ses,
19341777Di
scom
fited great Dowglas, tane him once,
19351778Enlargd him, and made a friend of him,
19361779To
fill the mouth of deepe de
fiance vp,
19371780And
shake the peace and
safety of our throne,
19381781And what
say you to this? Percy, Northumberland,
19391782The Archbi
shops grace of York, Dowglas, Mortimer,
19401783Capitulate again
st vs, and are vp.
19411784But wherefore do I tel the
se newes to thee?
19421785Why Harry do I tell thee of my foes,
19431786Which art my neare
st and deare
st enemy?
19441787Thou that art like enough through va
ssall feare,
19451788Ba
se inclination, and the
start of
spleene,
19461789To
fight again
st me vnder Percies pay,
19471790To dog his heeles, and curt
sie at his frownes,
19481791To
shew how much thou art degenerate.
19491792Prin. Do not thinke
so, you
shal not
find it
so,
19501793And God forgiue them that
so much haue
swaide
19511794Your maie
sties good thoughts away from me.
19521795I will redeeme all this on Percies head,
19531796And in the clo
sing of
some glorious day
19541797Be bold to tell you that I am your
sonne,
19551798When I will weare a garment all of bloud,
19561799And
staine my fauors in a bloudy ma
ske,
19571800Which wa
sht away
shall
scoure my
shame with it,
19581801And that
shal be the day when ere it lights,
19591802That this
same child of honour and renowne,
19601803This gallant Hot
spur, this all prai
sed knight,
19611804And your vnthought of Harry chance to meet,
19621805For euery honor
sitting on his helme
19631806Would they were multitudes, and on my head
19641807My
shames redoubled. For the time will com
19651808That
I shal make this Northren youth exchange
19661809His glorious deedes for my indignities.
19671810Percy is but my fa
ctor, good my Lord,
19681811To engro
sse vp glorious deeds on my behalfe.
And
of Henry the fourth.
19691812And
I will call him to
so
strickt account,
19701813That he
shall render euery glory vp,
19711814Yea, euen the
sleighte
st wor
ship of his time,
19721815Or I will teare the reckoning from his heart.
19731816This in the name of God
I promi
se heere,
19741817The which if he be plea
sd I
shall performe:
19751818I do be
seech your maie
sty may
salue
19761819The long grown wounds of my intemperance,
19771820If not, the end of life cancels all bands,
19781821And
I will die a hundred thou
sand deaths
19791822Ere breake the
smalle
st parcell of this vow.
19801823King. A hundred thou
sand rebels die in this,
19811824Thou
shalt haue charge and
soueraine tru
st herein.
19821825How now good blunt thy lookes are full of
speed.
19841827Blunt. So hath the bu
sine
sse that I come to
speake of.
19851828Lord Mortimer of Scotland hath
sent word,
19861829That Dowglas and the Engli
sh Rebels met
19871830The eleuenth of this month at Shrew
sbury,
19881831A mighty and a fearefull head they are,
19891832If promi
ses be kept on euery hand,
19901833As euer o
ffred foule play in a
state.
19911834King. The Earle of We
stmerland
set forth to day,
19921835With him my
sonne Lord Iohn of Lanca
ster,
19931836For this aduerti
sement is
fiue daies old.
19941837On Wedne
sday next, Harry you
shall
set forward,
19951838On thur
sday we our
selues will march. Our meeting
19961839Is Bridgenorth, and Harry, you
shall march
19971840Through Gloce
ster
shire, by which account
19981841Our bu
sine
sse valued
some twelue daies hence,
19991842Our general forces at Bridgenorth
shall meet:
20001843Our hands are full of bu
sine
sse, lets away,
20011844Aduantage feedes him fat while men delay.
Exeunt.
20041846Fal. Bardoll, am I not falne away vilely
since this la
st a
ction?
20051847do I not bate? do I not dwindle? Why, my
skinne hangs about
20061848me like an old Ladies loo
se gowne. I am withered like an oulde
20071849apple Iohn. Well, ile repent and that
suddainly, while I am in
G2. some
The history
20081850some liking, I
shall be out of heart
shortly, and then I
shall haue
20091851no
strength to repent. And I haue not forgotten what the in
side
20111852of a Church is made of, I am a Pepper corne, a brewers Hor
se,
20121853the in
side of a Church. Company, villainous company, hath been
20141855Bar. Sir Iohn, you are
so fretfull you cannot liue long.
20161856Fal. Why, there is it; come
sing me a bawdie
song, make me
20171857merry. I was as vertuou
sly giuen as a gentleman need to be, ver
- 20181858tuous enough,
swore little, dic't not aboue
seuen times a weeke,
20191859went to a baudy hou
se not aboue once in a quarter of an houre,
20201860paid money that I borrowed three or foure times, liued wel, and
20211861in good compa
sse, and nowe I liue out of all order, out of all
20241863Bar. Why, you are
so fat,
sir Iohn, that you mu
st needes be out
20251864of all compa
sse: out of all rea
sonable compa
sse,
sir Iohn.
20271865Fal. Do thou amend thy face, and ile amend my life: thou art
20281866our Admiral, thou beare
st the lanterne in the poope, but tis in the
20291867no
se of thee: thou art the knight of the burning lampe.
20311868Bar. Why,
sir Iohn, my face does you no harme.
20321869Fal. No ile be
sworn, I make as good v
se of it as many a man
20331870doth of a deaths head, or a
memento mori. I neuer
see thy face,
20341871but I thinke vpon hell
fire, and Diues that liued in Purple: for
20351872there he is in his robes burning, burning. If thou wert any waie
20361873giuen to vertue, I would
sweare by thy face: my oath
should be
20371874by this
fire that Gods Angell. But thou art altogether giuen o
- 20381875uer: and wert indeede but for the light in thy face, the
sonne of
20391876vtter darkene
sse. When thou ran
st vp Gad
shill in the night to
20411877catch my hor
se, if I did not thinke thou had
st beene an
ignis fa- or a ball of wildfire, theres no purchase in money. O thou
20431879art a perpetuall triumph, an euerla
sting bone
fire light, thou ha
st 20441880saued me a thou
sand Markes in Linkes, and Torches, walking
20451881with thee in the night betwixt tauerne and tauerne: but the
sacke
20471882that thou ha
st drunke me, would haue bought me lights as good
20481883cheape, at the deare
st Chandlers in Europe. I haue maintained
20491884that Sallamander of yours with
fire any time this two and thirty
20511886Bar. Zbloud, I would my face were in your belly.
20521887Fal. Godamercy,
so
should I be
sure to be hartburnt.
How
of Henrie the fourth.
20541888How now dame Partlet the hen, haue you enquird
Enter host.
20561890Hostesse. Why
sir Iohn, what do you thinke
sir Iohn, doe you
20571891thinke I keepe theeues in my hou
se, I haue
searcht, I haue en
- 20581892quired,
so has my hu
sband, man by man, boy by boy,
seruant by
20591893seruant, the tight of a haire, was neuer lo
st in my hou
se before.
20611894Fal. Yee lie Ho
ste
sse, Bardoll was
shau'd, and lo
st manie a
20621895haire, and ile be
sworne my pocket was pickt: go to, you are a
20641897Ho. Who I. No,
I de
fie thee: Gods light I was neuer cald
so in
20661899Fal. Go to. I know you well inough.
20671900Ho. No,
sir
Iohn, you do not know me,
sir Iohn, I knowe you
20681901sir Iohn, you owe me mony
sir Iohn, and now you picke a quar
- 20691902rell to beguile me of it, I bought you a douzen of
shirts to your
20711904Falst. Doulas,
filthie Doulas. I haue giuen them away to Ba
- 20721905kers wiues, they haue made boulters of them.
20741906Host. Now as I am a true woman, holland of viii s. an ell, you
20751907owe mony here, be
sides
sir Iohn, for your diet, and bydrinkings,
20761908and money lent you xxiiii. pound.
20781909Falst. He had his part of it, let him pay.
20791910Host. He, alas he is poore, he hath nothing.
20811911Fal. How? poore? looke vpon his face. What call you rich? let
20821912them coyne his no
se, let them coyne his cheekes, ile not pay a
20831913denyer: what will you make a yonker of mee?
shall I not take
20841914mine ea
se in mine Inne, but I
shall haue my pocket pickt? I haue
20851915lo
st a
seale ring of my grandfathers worth fortie marke.
20871916Ho. O Ie
su,
I haue heard the Prince tell him I know not how
20891918Falst. How? the prince is a iacke, a
sneakeup, Zbloud and hee
20901919were here, I would cudgell him like a dog if he would
say
so.
20921920Enter the prince marching, and Falstalffe meetes him 20931921playing vpon his trunchion like a fife. 20951922Falst. How now lad, is the winde in that doore ifaith, mu
st we
20971924Bar. Yea, two, and two, Newgate fa
shion.
20981925Host. My Lord, I pray you heare me.
G.iii Prin.
The Historie
20991926Pr. What
sai
st thou mi
stris quickly, how doth thy hu
sband?
21001927I loue him well, he is an hone
st man.
21031929Falst. Preethe let her alone, and li
st to me.
21051931Falst. The other night I fel a
sleepe here, behind the Arras, and
21061932had my pocket pickt, this hou
se is turn'd baudy hou
se, they pick
21081934Prin. What did
st thou loo
se iacke?
21091935Fal. Wilt thou beleeue me Hall, three or foure bonds of forty
21101936pound a peece, and a
seale ring of my grandfathers.
21121937Prin. A tri
fle,
some eight penie matter.
21131938Host. So I told him my Lord, and I
said I heard your grace
say
21141939so: & my lord he
speakes mo
st vilely of you, like a foule mouthd
21151940man as he is, and
said he would cudgel you.
21181942Ho. Theres neither faith, truth, nor womanhood in me el
se.
21201943Fal. Theres no more faith in thee then in a
stued prune, nor
21211944no more truth in thee then in a drawn fox, and for womandood
21221945maid marion may be the deputies wife of the ward to thee. Go
21241947Host. Say what thing, what thing?
21251948Fal. What thing? why a thing to thanke God on.
21261949Ho. I am nothing to thanke God on, I would thou
should
st 21271950know it, I am an hone
st mans wife, and
setting thy knighthood
21281951a
side, thou art a knaue to call me
so.
21291952Fal. Setting thy womanhood a
side, thou art a bea
st to
say o
- 21311954Host. Say, what bea
st, thou knaue thou?
21321955Falst. What bea
st? why an Otter.
21331956Prin. An Otter
sir
Iohn, why an Otter?
21341957Falst. Why?
shees neither
fish nor
fle
sh, a man knowes not
21361959Host. Thou art an vniu
st man in
saying
so, thou or anie man
21371960knowes where to haue me, thou knaue thou.
21381961Prin. Thou
sai
st true ho
ste
sse, and hee
slaunders thee mo
st 21401963Host. So hee doth you my Lord, and
saide this other day you
ought
of Henrie the fourth.
21421965Prin. Sirrha, do I owe you a thou
sand pound?
21431966Falst. A thou
sand pound Hall? a million, thy loue is worth a
21441967million, thou owe
st me thy loue.
21451968Host. Nay my Lord, he cald you iacke, and
saide hee woulde
21481971Bar. Indeed
sir Iohn you
said
so.
21491972Fal. Yea, if he
said my ring was copper.
21501973Prin. I
say tis copper, dare
st thou be as good as thy word now?
21521974Falst. Why Hall? Thou knowe
st as thou art but man I dare,
21531975but as thou art prince, I feare thee as I feare the roaring of the
21561978Fal. The king him
selfe is to be feared as the Lion, doe
st thou
21571979thinke ile feare thee as I feare thy father? nay and I doo,
I pray
21591981Prin. O, if it
should, howe woulde thy guts fall about thy
21601982knees? but
sirrha, theres no roome for faith, trueth, nor hone
- 21611983stie, in this bo
some of thine. It is all
fild vp with guttes, and mid
- 21621984ri
ffe. Charge an hone
st woman with picking thy pocket, why
21631985thou hore
son impudent imbo
st ra
scall, if there were anie thing
21641986in thy pocket but tauerne reckonings, memorandums of baudie
21651987hou
ses, and one poore peniworth of
sugar-candie to make thee
21671988long winded, if thy pocket were inricht with any other iniuries
21681989but the
se; I am a villain, and yet you will
stand to it, you will not
21691990pocket vp wrong, art thou not a
shamed?
21711991Fal. Doe
st thou heare Hall, thou knowe
st in the
state of inno
- 21721992cencie Adam fell, & what
should poore iacke Fal
stalfe do in the
21731993daies of villanie? thou
see
st I haue more
fle
sh then another man,
21741994& therfore more frailty. You confe
sse then you pickt my pocket.
21761995Prin. It appeares
so by the
storie.
21771996Fal. Ho
ste
sse, I forgiue thee, go make ready breakfa
st, loue thy
21781997hu
sband, looke to thy
seruaunts, cheri
sh thy ghe
sse, thou
shalt
21801998find me tra
ctable to any hone
st rea
son, thou
see
st I am paci
fied
21811999still, nay preethe be gone.
Exit Hostesse 21842000Now Hal, to the newes at court for the robbery lad, how is that
Prin.
The Historie
21862002Prin. O my
sweet beo
ffe, I mu
st still bee good angel to thee,
21892004Fal. O I do not like that paying backe, tis a double labor.
21912005Prin. I am good friends with my father and may do any thing
21932006Fal. Rob me the exchequer the
fir
st thing thou doe
st, and doe
21962009Prin. I haue procured thee Iacke a charge of foot.
21972010Fal. I would it had been of hor
se. Where
shall I
finde one that
21982011can
steale well. O for a
fine thiefe of the age of xxii. or therea
- 21992012bouts: I am hainou
sly vnprouided. Well, God be thanked for
22002013the
se rebels, they o
ffende none but the vertuous;
I laude them, I
Bar. My Lord.
22042016Prin. Go beare this letter to Lord Iohn of Lanca
ster,
22052017To my brother Iohn, this to my lord of We
stmerland.
22062018Go Peto to hor
se, to hor
se, for thou and I
22072019Haue thirty miles to ride yet ere dinner time,
22082020Iacke, meete me to morrow in the temple haule
22092021At two of clocke in the afternoone,
22102022There
shalt thou know thy charge, and there receiue
22112023Money and order for their furniture,
22122024The land is burning, Percy
stands on high,
22132025And either we or they mu
st lower lie.
22142026Fal. Rare words, braue world ho
ste
sse, my breakfa
st come,
22162027Oh I could wi
sh this tauerne were my drum.
22212028Per. Wel
said my noble Scot, if
speaking truth
22222029In this
fine age were not thought
flattery,
22232030Such attribution
should the Douglas haue,
22242031As not a
souldior of this
sea
sons
stampe,
22252032Should go
so generall currant through the world
22262033By God, I cannot
flatter, I do de
fie
22272034The tongues of
soothers, but a brauer place
22282035In my harts loue hath no man then your
selfe,
22292036Nay ta
ske me to my word, approue me Lord.
22302037Doug. Thou art the King of honor,
22312038No man
so potent breaths vpon the ground,
22322039But I will beard him.
Enter one with letters. Per.
of Henrie the fourth.
22342040Per. Do
so, and tis wel. What letters ha
st thou there?
22362042Mes. The
se letters come from your father.
22372043Per. Letters from him, why comes he not him
selfe?
22392044Mes. He cannot come my lord, he is grieuous
sicke.
22412045Per. Zounds, how has he the lei
sure to be
sicke
22422046In
such a iu
stling time, who leads his power?
22432047Vnder who
se gouernment come they along?
22442048Mes. His letters beares his mind, not I my mind.
22452049Wor. I preethe tel me, doth he keepe his bed?
22462050Mes. He did my Lord, foure daies ere I
set forth,
22472051And at the time of my departure thence,
22482052He was much fearde by his Phi
sitions.
22492053Wor. I would the
state of time had
fir
st been whole,
22502054Eare he by
sickne
sse had bin vi
sited,
22512055His health was neuer better worth then now.
22522056Per. Sicke now, droupe now, this
sicknes doth infe
ct 22532057The very life bloud of our enterpri
se,
22542058Tis catching hither euen to our campe,
22552059He writes me here that inward
sickne
sse,
22562060And that his friends by deputation
22572061Could not
so
soone be drawn, nor did he thinke it meet
22582062To lay
so dangerous and deare a tru
st 22592063On any
soule remoou'd but on his own,
22602064Yet doth he giue vs bold aduerti
sement,
22612065That with our
small coniun
ction we
should on,
22622066To
see how fortune is di
spo
sd to vs,
22632067For as he writes there is no quailing now,
22642068Becau
se the king is certainly po
sse
st 22652069Of al our purpo
ses, what
say you to it?
22662070Wor. Your fathers
sickne
sse is a maime to vs.
22672071Per. A perillous ga
sh, a very limbe lopt o
ff,
22682072And yet in faith it is not, his pre
sent want
22692073Seemes more then we
shal
find it: were it good
22702074To
set the exa
ct wealth of al our
states
22712075Al at one ca
st? to
set
so rich a maine
22722076On the nice hazard of one doubtfull houre?
22732077It were not good for therein
should we read
H1. The
The Historie
22742078The very bottome and the
soule of hope,
22752079The very li
st, the very vtmo
st bound
22782082Where now remaines a
sweet reuer
sion,
22792083We may boldly
spend vpon the hope of what tis to come in,
22812084A comfort of retirement liues in this.
22822085Per. A randeuous, a home to
flie vnto
22832086If that the Diuel and mi
schance looke big
22842087Vpon the maidenhead of our a
ffaires.
22852088Wor. But yet I would your father had bin heere:
22862089The quality and haire of our attempt
22872090Brookes no deui
sion, it will be thought
22882091By
some that know not why he is away,
22892092That wi
sedome, loialty, and meere di
slike
22902093Of our proceedings kept the Earle from hence,
22912094And thinke how
such an apprehen
sion
22922095May turne the tide of fearefull fa
ction,
22932096And breed a kind of que
stion in our cau
se:
22942097For wel you know we of the o
ffring
side
22952098Mu
st keepe aloofe from
stri
ct arbitrement,
22962099And
stop al
sight-holes euery loope from whence
22972100The eie of rea
son may prie in vpon vs,
22982101This ab
sence of your fathers drawes a curtain
22992102That
shewes the ignorant a kind of feare
23022105I rather of his ab
sence make this v
se,
23032106It lends a lu
stre and more great opinion,
23042107A larger dare to our great enterpri
se
23052108Then if the Earle were here, for men mu
st thinke
23062109If we without his helpe can make a head
23072110To pu
sh again
st a kingdome, with his helpe
23082111We
shal oreturne it top
sie turuy down,
23092112Yet all goes well yet all our ioints are whole.
23102113Doug. As hart can thinke, there is not
such a word
23112114Spoke of in Scotland as this tearme of feare.
Per.
of Henrie the fourth.
23142116Per. My coo
sen Vernon, welcom by my
soule.
23152117Ver. Pray God my newes be worth a welcome lord,
23162118The Earle of We
stmerland
seuen thou
sand
strong
23172119Is marching hetherwards, with him prince Iohn.
23202122The King him
selfe in per
son is
set forth,
23212123Or hetherwards intended
speedily
23222124With
strong and mighty preparation.
23232125Hot. He
shal be welcome too: where is his
sonne?
23252126The nimble footed madcap prince of Wales,
23262127And his Cumrades that daft the world a
side
23292130All plumde like E
stridges that with the wind
23302131Baited like Eagles hauing lately bathd,
23312132Glittering in golden coates like images,
23322133As ful of
spirit as the month of May,
23332134And gorgeous as the
sunne at Mid
somer:
23342135Wanton as youthful goates wild as young buls,
23352136I saw yong Harry with his beuer on,
23362137His cu
shes on his thighs gallantly armde,
23372138Ri
se from the ground like feathered Mercury,
23382139And vaulted with
such ea
se into his
seat,
23392140As if an Angel drop down from the clouds,
23402141To turne and wind a
fiery Pega
sus,
23412142And witch the world with noble hor
seman
ship.
23422143Hot. No more, no more, wor
se then the
sun in March,
23442144This prai
se doth nouri
sh agues, let them come,
23452145They come like
sacri
fices in their trim,
23462146And to the
fire-eyd maide of
smoky war,
23472147Al hot and bleeding will we o
ffer them,
23482148The mailed Mars
shal on his altars
sit
23492149Vp to the eares in bloud. I am on
fire
23502150To heare this rich reprizal is
so nigh,
23512151And yet not ours: Come let me ta
st my hor
se,
23522152Who is to beare me like a thunderbolt,
23532153Again
st the bo
some of the Prince of Wales,
H2. Harry
The History
23542154Harry to Harry
shal hot hor
se to hor
se,
23552155Meete and neare part til one drop down a coar
se,
23582158I learnd in Worce
ster as I rode along,
23592159He can draw his power this fourteene daies.
23602160Doug. Thats the wor
st tidings that I heare of it.
23622161Wor. I by my faith, that beares a fro
sty
sound.
23632162Hot. What may the kings whole battel reach vnto?
23672165My father and Glendower being both away,
23682166The powers of vs may
serue
so great a day,
23692167Come let vs take a mu
ster
speedily,
23702168Doomes day is neare, die all, die merely.
23712169Doug. Talke not of dying, I am out of feare
23722170Of death or deaths hand for this one halfe yeare.
Exeunt 23762172Falst. Bardol get thee before to Couentry,
fill me a bottle of
23772173Sacke, our
souldiors
shall march through. Weele to Sutton cop
- 23792175Bar. Will you giue me money captaine?
23812177Bar. This bottell makes an angel.
23822178Fal. And if it do, take it for thy labour, and if it make twenty
23832179take them all, ile an
swere the coynage, bid my Liuetenant Peto
23852181Bar. I will captaine, farewell.
Exit 23862182Fal. If I be not a
shamed of my
soldiours,
I am a
sou
ct gurnet,
23872183I haue mi
su
sed the kinges pre
sse damnablie. I haue got in ex
- 23882184change of 150.
soldiours 300. and odde poundes. I pre
sse me
23902185none but good hou
shoulders, Yeomans
sonnes, inquire me out
23912186contra
cted batchelers,
such as had been a
skt twice on the banes,
23922187such a commodity of warme
slaues, as had as lieue heare the
23932188Diuell as a drumme,
such as feare the report of a Caliuer, wor
se
23942189then a
strucke foule, or a hurt wild ducke: I pre
st mee none but
23952190such to
stes and butter with hearts in their bellies no bigger then
23972191pinnes heades, and they haue bought out their
seruices, and
nowe
of Henrie the fourth.
23982192now my whole charge con
sists of Ancients, Corporals, Lieu
- 23992193tenants, gentlemen of companies:
slaues as ragged as Lazarus in
24002194the painted cloth, where the gluttons dogs licked his
sores, and
24012195such as indeed were neuer
souldiours, but di
scarded, vniu
st ser
- 24022196uingmen, yonger
sonnes to yonger brothers, reuolted tap
sters,
24032197and O
stlers, tradefalne, the cankers of a calme world, and a long
24052198peace, ten times more di
shonourable ragged then an olde fazd
24062199ancient, and
such haue I to
fill vp the roomes of them as haue
24072200bought out their
seruices, that you woulde thinke that I had a
24082201hundred and
fiftie tottered prodigals, latelie come from
swine
24092202keeping, from eating dra
ffe and hu
sks. A mad fellowe met mee
24102203on the way, and tolde mee I had vnloaded all the Gibbets, and
24112204pre
st the dead bodies. No eye hath
seene
such
skarcrowes. Ile
24132205not march through Couentry with them, thats
flat: nay, and
24142206the villains march wide betwixt the legs as if they had giues on,
24152207for indeede I had the mo
st of them out of pri
son, theres not a
24162208shert and a halfe in all my companie, and the halfe
shert is two
24172209napkins tackt togither, and throwne ouer the
shoulders like a
24182210Heralds coate without
sleeues, and the
shert to
say the trueth
24202211stolne from my ho
st at S. Albones, or the red-no
se Inkeeper of
24212212Dauintry, but thats all one, theile
find linnen inough on euerie
24232214Enter the Prince, Lord of Westmerland. 24242215Prin. How now blowne iacke? how now quilt?
24252216Fal. What Hal, how now mad wag? what a diuel do
st thou in
24262217Warwick
shire? My good Lo. of We
stmerland, I cry you mercy,
24272218I thought your honour had alreadie bin at
shrewe
sburie.
24292219West. Faith
sir Iohn tis more then time that
I were there, and
24302220you too but my powers are there already, the king I can tel you
24312221lookes for vs all, we mu
st away all night.
24332222Falst. Tut neuer feare mee, I am as vigilant as a Cat to
steale
24352224Prin. I thinke to
steale Creame indeed, for thy theft hath al
- 24362225readie made thee butter, but tell me iacke, who
se fellowes are
24392228Prince. I did neuer
see
such pitifull ra
scals.
24402229Falst. Tut, tut, good inough to to
sse, foode for powder, foode
H.iii. for
The Historie.
24412230for powder, theile
fill a pit as well as better; tu
sh man mortall
24432232West. I but
sir Iohn, me thinkes they are exceeding poore and
24452234Falst. Faith for their pouerty I know not where they had that,
24462235and for their barene
sse I am
sure they neuer learnd that of me.
24482236Prin. No ile be
sworne, vnle
sse you call three
fingers in the ribs
24492237bare, but
sirrha make ha
ste, Percy is already in the
field.
Exit. 24522239West. He is
sir Iohn I feare we
shal
stay too long.
24542240Fal. Wel, to the latter end of a fray, and the beginning of a fea
st 24552241fits a dul
fighter and a kene gue
st.
Exeunt.
24582242Enter Hotspur, Worcester, Doug:Vernon. 24602243Hot. Weele
fight with him to night.
24622245Doug. You giue him then aduantage.
24642247Hot. Why
say you
so, lookes he not for
supply?
24662249Hot. His is certaine, ours is doubtful.
24672250Wor. Good coo
sen be adui
sd,
stir not to night.
24702253You
speake it out of feare, and cold hart.
24712254Ver. Do me no
slander Douglas, by my life,
24722255And I dare well maintaine it with my life,
24732256If well re
spe
cted honor bid me on,
24742257I hould as little coun
sell with weake feare,
24752258As you my Lord, or any Scot that this day liues,
24762259Let it be
seene to morrow in the battell which of vs feares.
Ver. Content.
24822263I wonder much being men of
such great leading as you are,
24832264That you fore
see not what impediments
24842265Drag backe our expedition, certaine hor
se
24852266Of my coo
sen Vernons are not yet come vp,
Your
of Henrie the fourth.
24862267Your Vncle Worce
sters hor
ses came but to day,
24872268And now their pride and mettall is a
sleepe,
24882269Their courage with hard labour tame and dull,
24892270That not a hor
se is halfe the halfe of him
selfe.
24902271Hot. So are the hor
ses of the enemie
24912272In generall iourney bated and brought low,
24922273The better part of ours are full of re
st.
24932274Wor. The number of the King exceedeth our,
24942275For Gods
sake coo
sen
stay till all come in.
24952276The trumpet sounds a parley. Enter sir Walter Blunt. 24972277Blunt. I come with gracious o
ffers from the king,
24982278If you vouch
safe me hearing and re
spe
ct.
24992279Hot. Welcome
sir Walter Blunt: and would to God
25012281Some of vs loue you well, and euen tho
se
some
25022282Enuy your great de
seruings and good name,
25032283Becau
se you are not of our qualitie,
25042284But
stand again
st vs like an enemie.
25052285Blunt. And God defend but
still I
should
stand
so,
25062286So long as out of limit and true rule
25072287You
stand again
st annointed Maie
stie.
25082288But to my charge. The king hath
sent to know
25102289The nature of your griefes and whereupon
25112290You coniure from the brea
st of ciuill peace
25122291Such bold ho
stilitie: teaching his dutious land
25132292Audacious crueltie.
If that the king
25142293Haue any way your good de
serts forgot
25152294Which he confe
sseth to be manifold,
25162295He bids you name your griefes, and with all
speede,
25172296You
shall haue your de
sires with intere
st 25182297And pardon ab
solute for your
selfe, and the
se
25192298Herein mi
sled by your
sugge
stion.
25202299Hot. The king is kind, and well we know the king
25222300Knowes at what time to promi
se, when to pay:
25232301My father, and my vncle, and my
selfe,
25242302Did giue him that
same royaltie he weares,
25252303And when he was not
sixe and twentie
strong,
25262304Sicke in the worlds regard, wretched and low,
A
The Historie.
25272305A poore vnminded outlaw
sneaking home,
25282306My father gaue him welcome to the
shore:
25292307And when he heard him
sweare and vow to God,
25302308He came but to be Duke of Lanca
ster,
25312309To
sue his liuery, and beg his peace
25322310With teares of innocencie, and tearmes of zeale,
25332311My father in kinde heart and pitie mou'd,
25342312Swore him a
ssistance, and performd it too.
25352313Now when the Lords and Barons of the realme,
25362314Perceiu'd Northumberland did leane to him,
25372315The more and le
sse came in with cap and knee,
25382316Met him in Borroughs, Cities, Villages,
25392317Attended him on bridges,
stoode in lanes,
25402318Laid gifts before him, pro
fferd him their oathes,
25412319Gaue him their heires, as Pages followed him,
25422320Euen at the heeles, in golden multitudes,
25432321He pre
sently, as greatne
sse knowes it
selfe,
25442322Steps me a little higher then his vow
25452323Made to my father while his blood was poore
25462324Vpon the naked
shore at Rauen
spurgh,
25472325And now for
sooth takes on him to reforme
25482326Some certaine edi
cts, and
some
streight decrees,
25492327That lie too heauie on the Common-wealth,
25502328 Cries out vpon abu
ses,
seemes to weepe
25512329Ouer his Countrey wrongs, and by this face
25522330This
seeming brow of iu
stice did he winne
25532331The hearts of all that he did angle for:
25542332Proceeded further, cut me o
ff the heads
25552333Of all the fauourits that the ab
sent king
25562334In deputation left behind him here,
25572335When he was per
sonall in the Iri
sh warre.
25582336Blunt. Tut, I came not to heare this.
25602338In
short time after he depo
sd the king,
25612339Soone after that depriu'd him of his life,
25622340And in the necke of that ta
skt the whole
state,
25632341To make that woor
se,
su
ffred his kin
sman March
25642342(Who is if euerie owner were well plac'd
Indeed
of Henry the fourth.
25652343Indeed his king) to be ingagde in Wales,
25662344There without raun
some to lie forfeited,
25672345Di
sgrac't me in my happy vi
ctories,
25682346Sought to intrap me by intelligence,
25692347Rated mine vnkle from the coun
sell boord,
25702348In rage di
smi
sd my father from the Court,
25712349Broke oath on oath, committed wrong on wrong,
25722350And in conclu
sion droue vs to
seeke out
25732351This head of
safetie, and withall to prie
25742352Into his title, the which we
find
25752353Too indire
ct for long continuance.
25762354Blunt. Shall I returne this an
swere to the king?
25772355Hot. Not
so
sir Walter. Weele withdraw a while.
25792356Go to the king, and let there be impawnde
25802357Some
surety for a
safe returne againe,
25812358And in the morning early
shal mine vnkle
25822359Bring him our purpo
ses, and
so farewell.
25832360Blunt. I would you would accept of grace and loue.
25872363Enter Archbishop of Yorke, sir Mighell. 25882364Arch. Hie good
sir Mighell, beare this
sealed briefe
25892365With winged ha
ste to the Lord Mar
shall,
25902366This to my coo
sen Scroope, and all the re
st 25912367To whom they are dire
cted. If you knew
25922368How much they do import you would make ha
ste.
25942369Sir M. My good Lord I ge
sse their tenor.
25962371To morrow good
sir Mighell is a day,
25972372Wherein the fortune of ten thou
sand men
25982373Mu
st bide the touch. For
sir at Shrew
sbury
25992374As I am truly giuen to vnder
stand,
26002375The king with mighty and quicke rai
sed power
26012376Meetes with Lord Harry. And I feare
sir Mighell
26022377What with the
sickne
sse of Northumberland,
26032378Who
se power was in the
fir
st proportion,
26042379And what with Owen Glendowers ab
sence thence,
26052380Who with them was a rated
sinew too,
I1. And
The history
26062381And comes not in ouerrulde by prophecies,
26072382I feare the power of Percy is too weake
26082383To wage an in
stant triall with the king.
26092384Sir M. Why my good Lord, you need not feare,
26102385There is Douglas, and Lord Mortimer.
26112386Arch. No, Mortimer is not there.
26122387Sir M. But there is Mordake, Vernon, Lord Harry Percy.
26132388And there is my Lord of Worce
ster, and a head
26142389Of gallant warriours, noble gentlemen.
26162390Arch. And
so there is: but yet the king hath drawn
26172391The
speciall head of all the land togither,
26182392The Prince of Wales, Lord
Iohn of Lanca
ster,
26192393The noble We
stmerland, and warlike Blunt,
26202394And many mo coriuals and deare men
26212395Of e
stimation and command in armes.
26222396Sir M. Doubt not my Lo: they
shalbe wel oppos'd.
26232397Arch. I hope no le
sse, yet needfull tis to feare,
26242398And to preuent the wor
st,
sir Mighell
speed:
26252399For if Lord Percy thriue not ere the king
26262400Di
smi
sse his power, he meanes to vi
sit vs,
26272401For he hath heard of our confederacy,
26282402And tis but wi
sedome to make
strong again
st him,
26292403Therefore make ha
ste, I mu
st go write againe
26302404To other friends, and
so farewell
sir Mighel.
Exeunt
26322405 Enter King, Prince of Wales, Lord Iohn of Lancaster, Earle of 26332406Westmerland, sir Walter Blunt, Falstalffe. 26352407King. How bloudily the
sunne begins to peare
26362408Aboue yon bulky hill, the day lookes pale
26392411Doth play the trumpet to his purpo
ses,
26402412And by his hollow whi
stling in the leaues
26412413Foretels a tempe
st and a blu
string day.
26422414Kin. Then with the loo
sers let it
simpathize,
26432415For nothing can
seeme foule to tho
se that winne.
26442416The trumpet sounds. Enter Worcester 26462417King. How now my Lord of Worce
ster, tis not wel,
26472418That you and I
should meet vpon
such tearmes
As
of Henry the fourth.
26482419As now we meete. You haue deceiu'd our tru
st,
26492420And made vs do
ffe our ea
sie roabes of peace,
26502421To cru
sh our old limbs in vngentle
steele,
26512422This is not well my Lord, this is not well.
26522423What
say you to it? will you againe vnknit
26532424This churli
sh knot of all abhorred war?
26542425And moue in that obedient orbe againe,
26552426Where you did giue a faire and naturall light,
26562427And be no more an exhalde meteor,
26572428A prodigie of feare, and a portent
26582429Of broched mi
schiefe to the vnborne times.
26602431For mine own part I could be well content,
26612432To entertaine the lag end of my life
26622433With quiet houres. For
I prote
st 26632434I haue not
sought the day of this di
slike.
26642435King. You haue not
sought it, how comes it then?
26652436Fal. Rebellion lay in his way, and he found it.
26672438Wor. It plea
sd your maie
sty to turne your lookes
26682439Of fauor from my
selfe, and all our hou
se,
26692440And yet I mu
st remember you my Lord,
26702441We were the
fir
st and deare
st of your friends,
26712442For you my
sta
ffe of o
ffice did I breake
26722443In Richards time, and po
sted day and night
26732444To meet you on the way, and ki
sse your hand,
26742445When yet you were in place, and in account
26752446Nothing
so
strong and fortunate as I.
26762447It was my
selfe, my brother and his
sonne,
26772448That brought you home, and boldly did outdare
26782449The dangers of the time. You
swore to vs,
26792450And you did
sware that oath at Danca
ster,
26802451That you did nothing purpo
se gain
st the
state,
26812452Nor clame no further then your new falne right,
26822453The
seat of Gaunt, Dukedom of Lanca
ster:
26832454To this we
swore our aide: but in
short
space
26842455It rainde downe fortune
showring on your head,
26852456And
such a
floud of greatne
sse fell on you,
I2. What
The history
26862457What with our helpe, what with the ab
sent king,
26872458What with the iniuries of a wanton time,
26882459The
seeming
su
fferances that you had borne,
26892460And the contrarious winds that held the king
26902461So long in his vnlucky Iri
sh wars,
26912462That all in England did repute him dead:
26922463And from this
swarme of faire aduantages,
26932464You tooke occa
sion to be quickly wooed
26942465To gripe the general
sway into your hand,
26952466Forgot your oath to vs at Danca
ster,
26962467And being fed by vs, you v
sd vs
so
26972468As that vngentle gull the Cuckoes bird
26982469V
seth the
sparrow, did oppre
sse our nea
st,
26992470Grew by our feeding to
so great a bulke,
27002471That euen our loue dur
st not come neare your
sight,
27012472For feare of
swallowing: but with nimble wing
27022473We were infor
st for
safety
sake to
flie
27032474Out of your
sight, and rai
se this pre
sent head,
27042475Whereby we
stand oppo
sed by
such meanes,
27052476As you your
selfe haue forgde again
st your
selfe
27062477By vnkind v
sage, daungerous countenance,
27072478And violation of all faith and troth,
27082479Sworne to vs in your yonger enterprize.
27092480King. The
se things indeed you haue articulate,
27102481Proclaimd at market Cro
sses, read in Churches,
27112482To face the garment of rebellion
27122483With
some
fine colour that may plea
se the eye
27132484Of
fickle changlings and poore di
scontents,
27142485Which gape and rub the elbow at the newes
27162487And neuer yet did in
surre
ction want
27172488Such water colors to impaint his cau
se
27182489Nor moody beggars
staruing for a time,
27192490Of pell mell hauocke and confu
sion.
27202491Prin. In both your armies there is many a
soule,
27212492Shall pay full dearely for this incounter
27222493If once they ioine in trial, tell your nephew
27232494The prince of Wales doth ioine with all the world
In
of Henrie the fourth.
27242495In prai
se of Henrie Percy, by my hopes
27252496This pre
sent enterpri
se
set of his head,
27262497I do not thinke a brauer Gentleman,
27272498More a
ctiue, valiant, or more valiant yong,
27282499More daring, or more bold is now aliue
27292500To grace this latter age with noble deedes,
27302501For my part I may
speake it to my
shame,
27312502I haue a truant beene to Chiualrie,
27322503And
so I heare he doth account me too;
27332504Yet this before my fathers maie
stie,
27342505I am content that he
shall take the oddes
27352506Of his great name and e
stimation,
27362507And will to
saue the blood on either
side
27372508Trie fortune with him in a
single
fight.
27382509King. And prince of Wales,
so dare we venture thee,
27402511Do make again
st it: no good Worce
ster no,
27412512We loue our people well, euen tho
se we loue
27422513That are mi
sled vpon your coo
sens part,
27432514And will they take the o
ffer of our grace,
27442515Both he, and they, and you, yea euery man
27452516Shall be my friend againe, and ile be his,
27462517So tell your coo
sen, and bring me word
27472518What he will do. But if he will not yeeld,
27482519Rebuke and dread corre
ction waight on vs,
27492520And they
shall do their o
ffice. So be gone:
27502521We will not now be troubled with replie,
27512522We o
ffer faire, take it adui
sedly.
Exit Worcester.
27532523Prin. It will not be accepted on my life,
27542524The Dowglas and the Hot
spur both togither,
27552525Are con
fident again
st the world in armes.
27562526King. Hence therefore, euery leader to his charge,
27572527For on their an
swere will we
set on them,
27582528And God befriend vs as our cau
se is iu
st.
Exeunt: manentPrince, Falst 27602529Falst. Hal, if thou
see me downe in the battel
27612530And be
stride me,
so, tis a poynt of friend
ship.
27622531Prin. Nothing but a Colo
ssus can do thee that friend
ship,
I3 Fal.
The History
27642533Fal. I would twere bed time Hal, and all well.
27652534Prin. Why, thou owe
st God a death.
27662535Falst. Tis not due yet, I would be loath to pay him before his
27672536day, what need I be
so forwarde with him that cals not on mee?
27682537Well, tis no matter, honor prickes me on; yea, but how if honor
27692538pricke me o
ff when I come on? how then can honor
set to a leg?
27702539no, or an arme? no, or take away the griefe of a wound? no, ho-
27722540nor hath no
skil in
surgerie then? no, what is honor? a word, what
27732541is in that word honor? what is that honour? aire, a trim recko
- 27742542ning. Who hath it? he that died a Wedne
sday, doth he feele it?
27752543no, doth he heare it? no, tis in
sen
sible thẽ? yea, to the dead, but wil
27762544not liue with the liuing; no, why? detra
ction will not
su
ffer it,
27772545therefore ile none of it; honor is a meere
skutchion, and
so ends
27812547Enter Worcester, sir Richard Vernon. 27822548Wor. O no, my nephew mu
st not know
sir Richard,
27832549The liberal and kind o
ffer of the king.
27862552It is not po
ssible, it cannot be
27872553The king
should keepe his word in louing vs,
27882554He will
su
spe
ct vs
still, and
find a time
27892555To puni
sh this o
ffence in other faults,
27902556Suppo
sition, al our liues
shall be
stucke full of eyes,
27912557For trea
son is but tru
sted like the Foxe,
27922558Who neuer
so tame,
so cheri
sht and lockt vp,
27932559Will haue a wilde tricke of his ance
sters,
27942560Looke how we can, or
sad or merely,
27952561Interpretation will mi
squote our lookes,
27962562And we
shall feed like oxen at a
stall,
27972563The better cheri
sht
still the nearer death,
27982564My nephewes tre
spa
sse may be well forgot,
27992565It hath the excu
se of youth and heat of blood,
28002566And an adopted name of priueledge,
28012567A hair-braind Hot
spur gouernd by a
spleene,
28022568All his o
ffences liue vpon my head
28032569And on his fathers. We did traine him on,
28042570And his corruption being tane from vs,
We
of Henrie the fourth.
28052571We as the
spring of all
shall pay for all:
28062572Therefore good coo
sen; let not Harry know
28072573In any ca
se the o
ffer of the King.
Enter Percy.
28082574Ver. Deliuer what you will; ile
say tis
so. Here coms your coo
sen.
28122576Deliuer vp my Lord of We
stmerland,
28142578Wor. The king will bid you battell pre
sently.
28152579Doug. De
fie him by the Lord of We
stmerland.
28162580Hot. Lord Douglas go you and tell him
so.
28172581Doug. Marry and
shal, and very willingly.
Exit. Dou. 28192582Wor. There is no
seeming mercie in the king.
28202583Hot. Did you beg any? God forbid.
28212584Wor. I tolde him gently of our greeuances,
28222585Of his oath breaking, which he mended thus,
28232586By now for
swearing that he is for
sworne,
28242587He cals vs rebels, traitors, and will
scourge
28252588With haughtie armes this hatefull name in vs.
Enter Douglas.
28272589Doug. Arme gentlemen, to armes, for I haue throwne
28282590A braue de
fiance in king Henries teeth,
28292591And We
stmerland that was ingag'd did beare it,
28302592Which cannot chu
se but bring him quickly on.
28312593Wor. The Prince of Wales
stept forth before the king,
28322594And nephew, chalengd you to
single
fight.
28332595Hot. O would the quarrel lay vpon our heads,
28342596And that no man might draw
short breath to day
28352597But I and Harry Monmouth; tell me, tell me,
28362598How
shewed his ta
sking?
seemd it in contempt?
28372599Ver. No, by my
soule I neuer in my life
28382600Did heare a chalenge vrgde more mode
stly,
28392601Vnle
sse a brother
should a brother dare,
28402602To gentle exerci
se and proofe of armes.
28412603He gaue you all the duties of a man,
28422604Trimd vp your prai
ses with a Princely tongue,
28432605Spoke your de
seruings like a Chronicle,
28442606Making you euer better then his prai
se,
28452607By
still di
sprai
sing prai
se valued with you,
28462608And which became him like a prince indeed,
He
The History
28472609He made a blu
shing citall of him
selfe,
28482610And chid his truant youth with
such a grace
28492611As if he ma
stred there a double
spirit
28502612Of teaching and of learning in
stantly,
28512613There did he pau
se, but let me tel the world
28522614If he outliue the enuie of this day,
28532615England did neuer owe
so
sweete a hope
28542616So much mi
scon
strued in his wantonne
sse.
28552617Hotsp. Coo
sen I thinke thou art enamored
28562618On his follies, neuer did
I heare
28572619Of any prince
so wilde a libertie,
28582620But be he as he will, yet once ere night
28592621I will imbrace him with a
souldiours arme,
28602622That he
shall
shrinke vnder my curte
sie,
28612623Arme, arme with
speed, and fellowes,
soldiors, friends,
28622624Better con
sider what you haue to do
28632625Then I that haue not wel the gift of tongue
28642626Can lift your blood vp with per
swa
sion.
Enter a Messenger.
28662627Mes. My Lord, here are letters for you.
28682629O Gentlemen the time of life is
short,
28692630To
spend that
shortnes ba
sely were too long
28702631If life did ride vpon a dials point,
28712632Still ending at the arriuall of an houre,
28722633And if we liue we liue to tread on kings,
28732634If die, braue death when princes die with vs,
28742635Now for our con
sciences, the armes are faire
28752636When the intent of bearing them is iu
st.
Enter another.
28772637Mes. My Lord, prepare the king comes on a pace.
28782638Hot. I thanke him that he cuts me from my tale,
28792639For I profe
sse not talking onely this,
28802640Let each man do his be
st, and here draw I a
sword,
28822642With the be
st bloud that I can meet withall.
28832643In the aduenture of this perillous day,
28852645Sound all the loftie in
struments of war,
28862646And by that Mu
sicke let vs all embrace,
For
of Henrie the fourth.
28872647For heauen to earth
some of vs neuer
shall
28882648A
second time do
such a courte
sie.
28892649 Here they embrace the trumpets sound,the king enters with his 28902650 power, alarme to the battel, then enter Douglas, and sir Wal- 28922652Blunt. What is thy name that in battell thus thou cro
sse
st me,
28932653What honour do
st thou
seeke vpon my head?
28942654Doug. Know then my name is Douglas,
28952655And I do haunt thee in the battell thus
28962656Becau
se
some tell me that thou art a king.
28982658Doug. The Lord of Sta
fford deare to day hath bought
28992659Thy likene
sse, for in
steed of thee king Harry
29002660This
sword hath ended him,
so
shall it thee
29012661Vnle
sse thou yeeld thee as my pri
soner.
29022662Blunt. I was not borne a yeelder thou proud Scot,
29032663And thou
shalt
find a king that will reuenge
29052665They fight, Douglas kils Blunt, then enter Hotspur. 29062666Hot. O Douglas had
st thou fought at Holmedon thus
29072667I neuer had triumpht vpon a Scot.
29082668Doug. Als done, als won here, breathles lies the king.
29112670Hot. This Douglas? no, I know this face full well,
29122671A gallant knight he was, his name was
Blunt,
29132672Semblably furni
sht like the king him
selfe.
29142673Doug. Ah foole, goe with thy
soule whither it goes,
29152674A borrowed title ha
st thou bought too deare.
29162675Why did
st thou tell me that thou wert a king?
29172676Hot. The king hath many marching in his coates.
29182677Doug. Now by my
sword I will kill al his coates.
29192678Ile murder all his wardrop, peece by peece
Hot. Vp and away,
29222680Our
souldiers
stand full fairely for the day.
29242682Falst. Though I could
scape
shot-free at London, I feare the
29252683shot here, heres no
skoring but vpon the pate. Soft, who are you?
29262684sir Walter Blunt, theres honour for you, heres no vanitie, I am as
K1 hot
The Historie
29272685hot as molten lead, & as heauie too: God keepe leade out of me,
29282686I need no more weight then mine owne bowels. I haue led my
29292687rag of Mu
ffins where they are pepperd, theres not three of my
29312688150. left aliue, and they are for the townes ende, to beg during
29322689life: but who comes here?
Enter the Prince. 29342690Prin. What,
stands thou idle here? lend me thy
sword,
29352691Many a noble man lies
starke and
sti
ffe,
29362692Vnder the hoofes of vaunting enemies,
29372693who
se deaths are yet vnreuengd, I preethe lend mee thy
sword.
29382694Falst. O Hal,
I preethe giue me leaue to breath a while, Turke
29392695Gregorie neuer did
such deeds in armes as I haue don this day,
29402696I haue paid Percy, I haue made him
sure.
29412697Prin. He is indeed, and liuing to kill thee:
29432699Fal. Nay before God Hal, if Percy be aliue thou gets not my
29442700sword, but take my pi
stoll if thou wilt.
29452701Prin. Giue it me, what? is it in the ca
se?
29462702Falst. I Hal, tis hot, tis hot, theres that will
sacke a Citie.
29472703The Prince drawes it out, and finds it to be a bottle of Sacke. 29482704Prin. What is it a time to ie
st and dally now?
29492705 He throwes the bottle at him. Exit. 29502706Falst. Well if Percy be aliue, ile pierce him; if hee doe come in
29512707my way
so, if he doe not, if I come in his willingly, let him make
29522708a Carbonado of me. I like not
such grinning honour as
sir Wal
- 29532709ter hath, giue me life, which if I can
saue,
so: if not, honor comes
29572711Alarme, excursions. Enter the King, the Prince, Lord Iohn 29582712of Lancaster, Earle of Westmerland. 29602713King. I preethe Harry withdraw thy
selfe, thou bleede
st too (much,
29612714Lord Iohn of Lanca
ster go you with him.
29622715P.Iohn. Not I my Lord, vnle
sse I did bleed too.
29632716Prin. I be
seech your maie
stie make vp,
29642717Lea
st your retirement do amaze your friends.
29652718King. I will do
so. My Lord of We
stmerland lead him to his(tent.
29672719West. Come my Lord, ile lead you to your tent.
29682720Prin. Lead me my Lord? I do not need your helpe,
29692721And God forbid a
shallow
scratch
should driue
The
of Henrie the fourth.
29702722The Prince of Wales from
such a
field as this,
29712723Where
staind nobilitie lies troden on,
29722724And rebels armes triumphe in ma
ssacres.
29732725Ioh. We breath toolong, come coo
sen We
stmerland
29742726Our dutie this way lies: For Gods
sake come.
29752727Prin. By God thou ha
st deceiu'd me Lanca
ster,
29762728I did not thinke thee Lord of
such a
spirit,
29772729Before I lou'd thee as a brother Iohn,
29782730But now
I do re
spe
ct thee as my
soule.
29792731King. I
saw him hold Lord Percy at the poynt,
29802732With lu
stier maintenance then I did looke for
29822734Prin. O this boy lends mettall to vs all.
Exit. 29842735Doug. Another king, they grow like Hydraes heads,
29852736I am the Douglas fatall to all tho
se
29862737That weare tho
se colours on them. What art thou
29872738That counterfet
st the per
son of a King?
29882739King. The king him
self, who Douglas grieues at hart,
29892740So many of his
shadowes thou ha
st met
29902741And not the verie king, I haue two boies
29912742Seeke Percy and thy
selfe about the
field,
29922743But
seeing thou fal
st on me
so luckily
29932744I will a
ssay thee and defend thy
selfe.
29942745Doug. I feare thou art another counterfet,
29952746And yet in faith thou beare
st thee like a king,
29962747But mine I am
sure thou art who ere thou be,
29982749They fight, the king being in danger, Enter Prince of Wales. 29992750Prin. Hold vp thy head vile Scot, or thou art like
30002751Neuer to hold it vp againe, the
spirits
30012752Of Valiant Sherly, Sta
fford, Blunt are in my armes,
30022753It is the Prince of Wales that threatens thee,
30032754Who neuer promi
seth but he meanes to pay.
30052756Cheerly my Lord, how fares your grace?
30062757Sir Nicholas Gaw
sey hath for
succour
sent,
30072758And
so hath Clifton, ile to Clifton
straight.
K2 Thou
The Historie
30092760Thou ha
st redeemed thy lo
st opinion,
30102761And
shewde thou mak
st some tender of my life,
30112762In this faire re
scue thou ha
st brought to me.
30122763Prin. O God they did me too much iniury,
30132764That euer
said I harkned for your death,
30142765If it were
so, I might haue let alone
30152766The in
sulting hand of Douglas ouer you,
30162767Which would haue been as
speedy in your end
30172768As al the poi
sonous potions in the world,
30182769And
sau'd the trecherous labour of your
sonne.
30192770King. Make vp to Clifton, ile to S. Nicholas Gaw
sey.
Exit Ki: 30212772Hot. If I mi
stake not, thou art Harry Monmouth.
30222773Prin. Thou
speak
st as if I would deny my name.
30242775Pr. Why then I
see a very valiant rebel of the name;
30252776I am the Prince of Wales, and thinke not Percy
30262777To
share with me in glory any more:
30272778Two
stars keepe not their motion in one
sphere,
30282779Nor can one England brooke a double raigne
30292780Of Harry Percy and the Prince of Wales.
30302781Hot. Now
shal it Harry, for the houre is come
30312782To end the one of vs, and would to God
30322783Thy name in armes were now as great as mine.
30332784Prin. Ile make it greater ere I part from thee,
30342785And al the budding honors on thy cre
st 30352786Ile crop to make a garland for my head.
30362787Hot. I can no longer brooke thy vanities.
30382789Falst. Well
said Hall, to it Hall. Nay you
shall
find no boyes
30402791Enter Douglas, he fighteth with Falstalffe, he fals 2792down as if he were dead, the Prince 30422794Hot. Oh Harry thou ha
st robd me of my youth,
30432795I better brooke the lo
sse of brittle life
30442796Then tho
se proud titles thou ha
st won of me,
They
of Henrie the fourth.
30452797They wound my thoughts wor
se then thy
sword my
fle
sh,
30462798But thoughts the
slaues of life, and life times foole,
30472799And time that takes
suruey of all the world
30482800Mu
st haue a
stop. O I could prophecy,
30492801But that the earthy and cold hand of death
30502802Lies on my tongue: no Percy thou art du
st 30522804Pr. For wormes, braue Percy. Fare thee wel great hart
30532805Ill weaud ambition, how much art thou
shrunke,
30542806When that this body did containe a
spirit,
30552807A kingdom for it was too
small a bound,
30562808But now two paces of the vile
st earth
30572809Is roome inough, this earth that beares the dead
30582810Beares not aliue
so
stout a gentleman,
30592811If thou wert
sen
sible of curte
sie
30602812I
should not make
so deare a
shew of zeale,
30612813But let my fauors hide thy mangled face,
30622814And euen in thy behalfe ile thanke my
selfe,
30632815For doing the
se faire rights of tenderne
sse,
30642816Adiew and take thy prai
se with thee to heauen,
30652817Thy ignominy
sleepe with thee in the graue,
30662818But not remembred in thy Epitaph.
2819He spieth Falstalffe on the ground. 30672820What old acquaintance, could not all this
fle
sh 30682821Keepe in a little life? poore Iacke farewell,
30692822I could haue better
sparde a better man:
30702823O
I should haue a heauy mi
sse of thee,
30712824If I were much in loue with vanitie:
30722825Death hath not
strooke
so fat a Deere to day,
30732826Though many dearer in this bloudy fray,
30742827Inboweld will I
see thee by and by,
30752828Til then in bloud by noble Percy lie.
Exit.
30772830Fal. Inboweld, if thou inbowel me to day, ile giue you leaue
30782831to powder me and eate me too to morrowe. Zbloud twas time
30792832to counterfet, or that hot termagant Scot had paide me
scot and
30802833lot too. Counterfet?
I lie,
I am no counterfet, to die is to bee a
30812834counterfet, for he is but the counterfet of a man, who hath not
K3. the
The Historie.
30822835the life of a mã: but to coũterfet dying when a man therby liueth,
30832836is to be no counterfet, but the true & perfe
ct image of life indeed.
30852837The better parte of valour is di
scretion, in the which better part
30862838I haue
saued my life. Zounds I am afraid of this gunpowder Per
- 30872839cy, though he be dead, how if he
should counterfet too and ri
se?
30882840by my faith I am afraid hee woulde proue the better counterfet,
30892841therefore ile make him
sure, yea, and ile
sweare I kild him. Why
30902842may not he ri
se a
swell as I? nothing confutes me but eies, and no
30912843body
sees me: therefore
sirrha, with a new wound in your thigh,
2845He takes vp Hotspur on his backe. Enter Prince 30952847Prin. Come brother Iohn, full brauely ha
st thou
fle
sht
30972849Iohn of Lan. But
soft, whom haue we heere?
30982850Did you not tell me this fat man was dead?
31002852Breathle
sse and bleeding on the ground. Art thou aliue?
31012853Or is it fanta
sie that playes vpon our eie
sight?
31022854I preethe
speake, we will not tru
st our eies
31032855Without our eares, thou art not what thou
seem
st.
31042856Fal. No thats certaine, I am not a double man: but if
I bee
31052857not
Iacke Fal
stal
ffe, then am I a Iacke: there is Percy, if your
31062858father will doe me anie honour,
so: if not, let him kill the next
31072859Percie him
selfe: I looke to bee either Earle or Duke,
I can a
s- 31092861Prin. Why Percy, I kild my
selfe, and
saw thee dead.
31102862Falst. Did
st thou? Lord, Lord, howe this world is giuen to
31112863lying, I graunt you I was downe, and out of breath, and
so was
31122864he, but we ro
se both at an in
stant, and fought a long houre by
31132865Shrewe
sburie clocke, if I may be beleeude
so: if not, let them
31142866that
should rewarde valour, beare the
sinne vppon their owne
31152867heads. Ile take it vpon my death, I gaue him this wound in the
31162868thigh, if the man were aliue, and would denie it, zounds I would
31172869make him eate a peece of my
sword.
31192870Iohn. This is the
strange
st tale that euer I heard.
31202871Prin. This is the
strange
st fellow, brother Iohn,
31212872Come bring your luggage nobly on your backe.
For
of Henrie the fourth.
31222873For my part, if a lie may do thee grace,
31232874Ile guild it with the happie
st termes I haue.
31252876Prin. The Trumpet
sounds retrait, the day is our,
31262877Come brother let vs to the highe
st of the
field,
31272878To
see what friends are liuing, who are dead.
Exeunt.
31282879Fal. Ile follow as they
say for reward. Hee that rewardes mee
31292880God reward him. If I do growe great, ile growe le
sse, for ile
31302881purge and leaue Sacke, and liue cleanlie as a noble man
31332883 The Trumpets sound. Enter the King, the Prince of Wales, Lord 31342884 Iohn of Lancaster, Earle of Westmerland, with Worcester, 31372886King. Thus euer did rebellion
find rebuke,
31382887Ill
spirited Worce
ster, did not we
send grace,
31392888Pardon, and tearmes of loue to all of you?
31402889And would
st thou turne our o
ffers contrary?
31412890Mi
su
se the tenor of thy kin
smans tru
st.
31422891Three knights vpon our party
slaine to day,
31432892A noble Earle and many a creature el
se,
31452894If like a Chri
stian thou had
st truly borne
31462895Betwixt our armies true intelligence.
31472896Wor. What I haue done my
safety vrg'd me to:
31482897And I embrace this fortune patiently,
31492898Since not to be auoided it fals on me.
31502899King. Beare Worce
ster to the death and Vernon too:
31512900Other O
ffendors we will pau
se vpon.
31542902Prin. The noble Scot Lord Dowglas, when he
saw
31552903The fortune of the day quite turnd from him,
31562904The noble Percy
slaine and all his men
31572905Vpon the foot of feare,
fled with the re
st 31582906And falling from a hill, he was
so brui
sd,
31592907That the pur
suers tooke him. At my tent
31602908The Douglas is: and I be
seech your grace
King.
The Historie.
31632911Prin. Then brother Iohn of Lanca
ster,
31642912To you this honorable bounty
shal belong,
31652913Go to the Douglas and deliuer him
31662914Vp to his plea
sure, ran
somle
sse and free,
31672915His valours
shewne vpon our Cre
sts to daie
31682916Haue taught vs how to cheri
sh such high deeds,
31692917Euen in the bo
some of our aduer
saries.
2918Iohn. I thanke your grace for this high curte
sie,
2919Which
I shall giue away immediatly.
31702920King. Then this remaines that we deuide our power,
31712921You
sonne Iohn, and my coo
sen We
stmerland
31722922Towards York
shal bend, you with your deere
st speed
31732923To meet Northumberland and the Prelate Scroope,
31742924Who as we heare are bu
sily in armes:
31752925My
selfe and you
sonne Harry will towards Wales,
31762926To
fight with Glendower and the Earle of March,
31772927Rebellion in this land
shall loo
se his
sway,
31782928Meeting the checke of
such another day,
31792929And
since this bu
sine
sse
so faire is done,
31802930Let vs not leaue till all our owne be won.
Exeunt