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  • Title: Henry IV, Part 2 (Folio 1 1623)
  • Editor: Rosemary Gaby

  • Copyright Rosemary Gaby. This text may be freely used for educational, non-profit purposes; for all other uses contact the Editor.
    Author: William Shakespeare
    Editor: Rosemary Gaby
    Not Peer Reviewed

    Henry IV, Part 2 (Folio 1 1623)

    Scena Secunda.
    790Enter Prince Henry, Pointz, Bardolfe,
    and Page.
    Prin. Trust me, I am exceeding weary.
    Poin. Is it come to that? I had thought wearines durst
    not haue attach'd one of so high blood.
    795Prin. It doth me: though it discolours the complexion
    of my Greatnesse to acknowledge it. Doth it not shew
    vildely in me, to desire small Beere?
    Poin. Why, a Prince should not be so loosely studied,
    as to remember so weake a Composition.
    800Prince. Belike then, my Appetite was not Princely
    got: for (in troth) I do now remember the poore Crea-
    ture, Small Beere. But indeede these humble considera-
    tions make me out of loue with my Greatnesse. What a
    disgrace is it to me, to remember thy name? Or to know
    805thy face to morrow? Or to take note how many paire of
    Silk stockings yu hast? (Viz. these, and those that were thy
    peach-colour'd ones:) Or to beare the Inuentorie of thy
    shirts, as one for superfluity, and one other, for vse. But
    that the Tennis-Court-keeper knowes better then I, for
    810it is a low ebbe of Linnen with thee, when thou kept'st
    not Racket there, as thou hast not done a great while, be-
    cause the rest of thy Low Countries, haue made a shift to
    eate vp thy Holland.
    Poin. How ill it followes, after you haue labour'd so
    815hard, you should talke so idlely? Tell me how many good
    yong Princes would do so, their Fathers lying so sicke, as
    yours is?
    Prin. Shall I tell thee one thing, Pointz?
    Poin. Yes: and let it be an excellent good thing.
    820Prin. It shall serue among wittes of no higher breed-
    ing then thine.
    Poin. Go to: I stand the push of your one thing, that
    you'l tell.
    Prin. Why, I tell thee, it is not meet, that I should be
    825sad now my Father is sicke: albeit I could tell to thee (as
    to one it pleases me, for fault of a better, to call my friend)
    I could be sad, and sad indeed too.
    Poin. Very hardly, vpon such a subiect.
    Prin. Thou think'st me as farre in the Diuels Booke, as
    830thou, and Falstaffe, for obduracie and persistencie. Let the
    end try the man. But I tell thee, my hart bleeds inward-
    ly, that my Father is so sicke: and keeping such vild com-
    pany as thou art, hath in reason taken from me, all osten-
    tation of sorrow.
    835Poin. The reason?
    Prin. What would'st thou think of me, if I shold weep?
    Poin. I would thinke thee a most Princely hypocrite.
    Prin. It would be euery mans thought: and thou art
    a blessed Fellow, to thinke as euery man thinkes: neuer a
    840mans thought in the world, keepes the Rode-way better
    then thine: euery man would thinke me an Hypocrite in-
    deede. And what accites your most worshipful thought
    to thinke so?
    Poin. Why, because you haue beene so lewde, and so
    845much ingraffed to Falstaffe.
    Prin. And to thee.
    Pointz. Nay, I am well spoken of, I can heare it with
    mine owne eares: the worst that they can say of me is, that
    I am a second Brother, and that I am a proper Fellowe of
    850my hands: and those two things I confesse I canot helpe.
    Looke, looke, here comes Bardolfe.
    Prince. And the Boy that I gaue Falstaffe, he had him
    from me Christian, and see if the fat villain haue not trans
    form'd him Ape.
    855Enter Bardolfe.
    Bar. Saue your Grace.
    Prin. And yours, most Noble Bardolfe.
    Poin. Come you pernitious Asse, you bashfull Foole,
    must you be blushing? Wherefore blush you now? what
    860a Maidenly man at Armes are you become? Is it such a
    matter to get a Pottle-pots Maiden-head?
    Page. He call'd me euen now (my Lord) through a red
    Lattice, and I could discerne no part of his face from the
    window:
    The second Part of King Henry the Fourth. 81
    window: at last I spy'd his eyes, and me thought he had
    865made two holes in the Ale-wiues new Petticoat, & pee-
    ped through.
    Prin. Hath not the boy profited?
    Bar. Away, you horson vpright Rabbet, away.
    Page. Away, you rascally Altheas dreame, away.
    870Prin. Instruct vs Boy: what dreame, Boy?
    Page. Marry (my Lord) Althea dream'd, she was de-
    liuer'd of a Firebrand, and therefore I call him hir dream.
    Prince. A Crownes-worth of good Interpretation:
    There it is, Boy.
    875Poin. O that this good Blossome could bee kept from
    Cankers: Well, there is six pence to preserue thee.
    Bard. If you do not make him be hang'd among you,
    the gallowes shall be wrong'd.
    Prince. And how doth thy Master, Bardolph?
    880Bar. Well, my good Lord: he heard of your Graces
    comming to Towne. There's a Letter for you.
    Poin. Deliuer'd with good respect: And how doth the
    Martlemas, your Master?
    Bard. In bodily health Sir.
    885Poin. Marry, the immortall part needes a Physitian:
    but that moues not him: though that bee sicke, it dyes
    not.
    Prince. I do allow this Wen to bee as familiar with
    me, as my dogge: and he holds his place, for looke you
    890he writes.
    Poin. Letter.
    Iohn Falstaffe Knight
    : (Euery man must
    know that, as oft as hee hath occasion to name himselfe:)
    Euen like those that are kinne to the King, for they neuer
    pricke their finger, but they say, there is som of the kings
    895blood spilt. How comes that (sayes he) that takes vpon
    him not to conceiue? the answer is as ready as a borrow-
    ed cap: I am the Kings poore Cosin, Sir.
    Prince. Nay, they will be kin to vs, but they wil fetch
    it from Iaphet. But to the Letter: ---
    Sir Iohn Falstaffe,
    900Knight, to the Sonne of the King, neerest his Father, Harrie
    Prince of Wales, greeting.
    Poin. Why this is a Certificate.
    Prin. Peace.
    I will imitate the honourable Romaines in breuitie.
    905Poin. Sure he meanes breuity in breath: short-winded.
    I commend me to thee, I commend thee, and I leaue thee. Bee
    not too familiar with Pointz, for hee misuses thy Fauours so
    much, that he sweares thou art to marrie his Sister Nell. Re-
    pent at idle times as thou mayst, and so farewell.
    910Thine, by yea and no: which is as much as to say, as thou
    vsest him. Iacke Falstaffe with my Familiars:
    Iohn with my Brothers and Sister: & Sir
    Iohn, with all Europe.
    My Lord, I will steepe this Letter in Sack, and make him
    915eate it.
    Prin. That's to make him eate twenty of his Words.
    But do you vse me thus Ned? Must I marry your Sister?
    Poin. May the Wench haue no worse Fortune. But I
    neuer said so.
    920Prin. Well, thus we play the Fooles with the time, &
    the spirits of the wise, sit in the clouds, and mocke vs: Is
    your Master heere in London?
    Bard. Yes my Lord.
    Prin. Where suppes he? Doth the old Bore, feede in
    925the old Franke?
    Bard. At the old place my Lord, in East-cheape.
    Prin. What Company?
    Page. Ephesians my Lord, of the old Church.
    Prin. Sup any women with him?
    930Page. None my Lord, but old Mistris Quickly, and M.
    Doll Teare-sheet.
    Prin. What Pagan may that be?
    Page. A proper Gentlewoman, Sir, and a Kinswoman
    of my Masters.
    935Prin. Euen such Kin, as the Parish Heyfors are to the
    Towne-Bull?
    Shall we steale vpon them (Ned) at Supper?
    Poin. I am your shadow, my Lord, Ile follow you.
    Prin. Sirrah, you boy, and Bardolph, no word to your
    940Master that I am yet in Towne.
    There's for your silence.
    Bar. I haue no tongue, sir.
    Page. And for mine Sir, I will gouerne it.
    Prin. Fare ye well: go.
    945This Doll Teare-sheet should be some Rode.
    Poin. I warrant you, as common as the way betweene
    S. Albans, and London.
    Prin. How might we see Falstaffe bestow himselfe to
    night, in his true colours, and not our selues be seene?
    950Poin. Put on two Leather Ierkins, and Aprons, and
    waite vpon him at his Table, like Drawers.
    Prin. From a God, to a Bull? A heauie declension: It
    was Ioues case. From a Prince, to a Prentice, a low trans-
    formation, that shall be mine: for in euery thing, the pur-
    955pose must weigh with the folly. Follow me Ned. Exeunt