The
Second part of Henrie
the fourth, continuing to his death,
and coronation of Henrie
the fift.
With the humours of sir Iohn Fal-
staffe, and swaggering
Pistoll.
As it hath been sundrie times publikely
acted by the right honourable, the Lord
Chamberlaine his servants.
Written by William Shakespeare.
LONDON
Printed by V.S. for Andrew Wise, and
William Aspley.
1600.
The second part of Henry the fourth,
continuing to his death, and coro-
nation of Henry the
fift.
31Enter Rumour painted full of Tongues. 42OPen your eares; for which of you will
stop
53The vent of hearing, when lowd Rumor
speaks?
64I from the Orient to the drooping We
st,
75(Making the wind my po
ste-hor
se)
still vnfold
86The a
cts commenced on this ball of earth,
97Vpon my tongues continuall
slanders ride,
108The which in euery language I pronounce,
119Stu
ffing the eares of men with fal
se reports,
1210I
speake of peace while couert enmity,
1311Vnder the
smile of
safety, woundes the world:
1412And who but Rumor, who but onely I,
1513Make fearefull mu
sters, and prepar'd defence,
1614Whiles the bigge yeare,
swolne with
some other griefe,
1715Is thought with child by the
sterne tyrant Warre?
1816And no
such matter. Rumour is a pipe,
1917Blowne by
surmizes, Iealou
sies conie
ctures,
2018And of
so ea
sie, and
so plaine a
stop,
2119That the blunt mon
ster, with vncounted heads,
2220The
still di
scordant wau'ring multitude,
2321Can play vpon it. But what need I thus
2422(My wel knowne body) to anothomize
2523Among my hou
shold? why is Rumor here?
A2
2624I runne before King Harries vi
ctorie,
2725Who in a bloudy
field by Shrewsbury,
2826Hath beaten downe yong Hot-
spurre and his troopes,
2927Quenching the
flame of bold rebellion,
3028Euen with the rebels bloud. But what meane I
3129To
speake
so true at
fir
st? my o
ffice is
3230To noy
se abroad, that Harry Monmouth fell
3331Vnder the wrath of noble Hot-
spurs
sword,
3432And that the King before the Douglas rage,
3533Stoopt his annointed head as low as death.
3634This haue I rumour'd through the pea
sant townes,
3735Betweene that royall
field of Shrewsbury,
3836And this worme-eaten hole of ragged
stone,
3937When Hot-
spurs father old Northumberland
4038Lies crafty
sicke, the po
stes come tyring on,
4139And not a man of them brings other newes,
4240Than they haue learnt of me, from Rumors tongues,
4341They bring
smooth comforts fal
se, wor
se then true wrongs.
4643Enter the Lord Bardolfe at one doore. 4744Bard. Who keepes the gate here ho? where is the Earle?
4945Porter What
shall I
say you are?
5046Bard. Tell thou the Earle,
5147That the Lord Bardolfe doth attend him heere.
5248Porter His Lord
ship is walkt forth into the orchard,
5349Plea
se it your honor knocke but at the gate,
5450And he him
selfe will an
swer.
Enter the Earle Northumberland. 5651Bard. Here comes the Earle.
5752Earle. What newes Lord Bardolfe? euery minute now
5853Should be the father of
some Stratagem,
5954The times are wild, contention like a hor
se,
6055Full of high feeding, madly hath broke loo
se,
6156And beares downe all before him.
6358I bring you certaine newes from Shrewsbury.
6459Earle Good, and God will.
Bard
Henry the fourth.
6560Bard. As good as heart can wi
sh:
6661The King is almo
st wounded to the death,
6762And in the fortune of my Lord your
sonne,
6863Prince Harry
slaine outright, and both the Blunts
6964Kild by the hand of Dowglas, yong prince Iohn,
7065And We
stmerland and Sta
fford
fled the
field,
7166And Harry Monmouthes brawne, the hulke
sir Iohn,
7267Is pri
soner to your
sonne: O
such a day!
7368So fought,
so followed, and
so fairely wonne,
7469Came not till now to digni
fie the times
7570Since C
aesars fortunes.
7671Earle How is this deriu'd?
7772Saw you the
field? came you from Shrew
sbury?
7873Bar. I
spake with one, my lord, that came from thence,
enter Trauers. 7974A gentleman well bred, and of good name,
80That freely rendred me the
se newes for true.
8175Earle Here comes my
seruant Trauers who I
sent
8276On tue
sday la
st to li
sten after newes.
8477Bar. My lord, I ouer-rode him on the way,
8578And he is furni
sht with no certainties,
8679More then he haply may retale from me.
8780Earle Now Trauers, what good tidings comes with you?
8881Trauers My lord,
sir Iohn Vmfreuile turnd me backe
8982With ioyfull tidings, and being better hor
st,
9083Out rode me, after him came
spurring hard,
9184A gentleman almo
st fore
spent with
speede,
9285That
stopt by me to breathe his bloudied hor
se,
9386He askt the way to Che
ster, and of him
9487I did demand what newes from Shrewsbury,
9588He told me that rebellion had bad lucke,
9689And that yong Harrie Percies
spur was cold:
9790With that he gaue his able hor
se the head,
9891And bending forward,
strooke his armed heeles,
9992Again
st the panting
sides of his poore iade,
10093Vp to the rowell head, and
starting
so,
10194He
seem'd in running to deuoure the way,
A3 Stay-
The second part of
10295Staying no longer que
stion.
Earle Ha? againe,
10496Said he, yong Harry Percies
spur was cold,
10597Of Hot-
spurre, Cold-
spurre, that rebellion
10799Bard. My lord, Ile tell you what,
108100If my yong Lord your
sonne, haue not the day,
109101Vpon mine honor for a
silken point,
110102Ile giue my Barony, neuer talke of it.
111103Earle Why
should that gentleman that rode by Trauers,
112104Giue then
such in
stances of lo
sse?
114106He was
some hilding fellow that had
stolne
115107The hor
se he rode on, and vpon my life
116108Spoke at a venter. Looke, here comes more news.
enter Mor-ton 118109Earle Yea this mans brow, like to a title leafe,
119110Foretells the nature of a tragicke volume,
120111So lookes the
strond, whereon the imperious
floud,
121112Hath left a witne
st v
surpation.
122113Say Mourton, did
st thou come from Shrewsbury?
123114Mour. I ranne from Shrewsbury my noble lord,
124115Where hatefull death put on his vglie
st maske,
126117Earle How doth my
sonne and brother?
127118Thou tremble
st, and the whitenes in thy cheeke,
128119Is apter then thy tongue to tell thy arrand,
129120Euen
such a man,
so faint,
so
spirritle
sse,
130121So dull,
so dead in looke,
so woe begon,
131122Drew Priams curtaine in the dead of night,
132123And would haue told him, halfe his Troy was burnt:
133124But Priam found the
fier, ere he, his tongue,
134125And I, my Percies death, ere thou report
st it.
135126This thou would
st say, Your
son did thus and thus,
136127Your brother thus:
so fought the noble Dowglas,
137128Stopping my greedy eare with their bold deedes,
138129But in the end, to
stop my eare indeed,
139130Thou ha
st a
sigh to blow away this prai
se,
140131Ending with brother,
sonne, and all are dead.
Mour.
Henry the fourth.
141132Mour. Douglas is liuing, and your brother yet,
142133But for my Lord your
sonne:
144135See what a ready tongue Su
spition hath!
145136He that but feares the thing hee would not know,
146137Hath by in
stin
ct, knowledge from others eies,
147138That what he feard is chanced: yet
speake Mourton,
148139Tell thou an Earle, his diuination lies,
149140And I will take it as a
sweete di
sgrace,
150141And make thee rich for doing me
such wrong.
151142Mour. You are too great to be by me gain
said,
152143Your
spirite is too true, your feares too certaine.
153144Earle Yet for all this,
say not that Percie's dead,
154145I
see a
strange confe
ssion in thine eie,
155146Thou
shak
st thy head, and hold
st it feare, or
sinne,
156147To
speake a truth: if he be
slaine,
157148The tongne o
ffends not that reports his death,
158149And he doth
sinne that doth belie the dead,
159150Not he which
saies the dead is not aliue,
160151Yet the
fir
st bringer of vnwelcome newes
161152Hath but a loo
sing o
ffice, and his tongue
162153Sounds euer after as a
sullen bell,
163154Remembred tolling a departing friend.
164155Bard. I cannot thinke, my Lord, your
sonne is dead.
165156Mour. I am
sory I
should force you to beleeue,
166157That which I would to God I had not
seene,
167158But the
se mine eies
saw him in bloudy
state,
168159Rendring faint quittance, wearied, and out-breathd,
169160To Harry Monmouth, who
se
swift wrath beat downe
170161The neuer daunted Percy to the earth,
171162From whence with life he neuer more
sprung vp.
172163In few his death, who
se
spirite lent a
fire,
173164Euen to the dulle
st pea
sant in his campe,
174165Being bruted once, tooke
fire and heate away,
175166From the be
st temperd courage in his troopes,
176167For from his mettal was his party
steeled,
Which
The second part of
177168Which once in him abated, al the re
st 178169Turnd on them
selues, like dull and heauy lead.
179170And as the thing thats heauy in it
selfe,
180171Vpon enforcement
flies with greate
st speed:
181172So did our men, heauy in Hot-
spurs lo
sse,
182173Lend to this weight
such lightne
sse with their feare,
183174That arrowes
fled not
swifter toward their ayme,
184175Than did our
souldiers aiming at their
safetie,
185176Fly from the
field: then was that noble Worce
ster,
186177So
soone tane pri
soner, and that furious Scot,
187178The bloudy Douglas who
se well labouring
sword,
188179Had three times
slaine th'appearance of the King,
189180Gan vaile his
stomacke, and did grace the
shame
190181Of tho
se that turnd their backes, and in his
flight,
191182Stumbling in feare, was tooke: the
summe of all
192183Is, that the King hath wonne, and hath
sent out,
193184A
speedy power to incounter you my lord,
194185Vnder the condu
ct of yong Lanca
ster,
195186And We
stmerland: this is the news at ful.
196187Earle For this I
shal haue time enough to mourne,
197188In poi
son there is phi
sicke, and the
se newes,
198189Hauing beene wel, that would haue made me
sicke:
199190Being
sicke, haue (in
some mea
sure) made me wel:
200191And as the wretch who
se feuer-weakned ioynts,
201192Like
strengthle
sse hinges buckle vnder life,
202193Impacient of his
fit, breakes like a
fire
203194Out of his keepers armes; euen
so my limbes,
204195Weakened with griefe being now enragde with griefe,
205196Are thrice them
selues: hence therfore thou nice crutch,
206197A
scaly gauntlet now with ioynts of
steele
207198Mu
st gloue this hand, and hence thou
sickly coife,
208199Thou art a guard too wanton for the head,
209200Which princes,
fle
sht with conque
st, ayme to hit:
210201Now bind my browes with yron, and approach
211202The ragged
st houre that Time and Spight dare bring,
212203To frowne vpon th'inragde Northumberland,
Let
Henry the fourth.
213204Let heauen ki
sse earth, now let not Natures hand
214205Keepe the wild
floud con
find, let Order die,
215206And let this world no longer be a
stage,
216207To feed contention in a lingring a
ct:
217208But let one
spirite of the
fir
st borne Cain
218209Raigne in all bo
somes, that ech heart being
set
219210On bloudy cour
ses, the rude
sceane may end,
220211And darkne
sse be the burier of the dead.
220.1212Vmfr. This
strained pa
ssion doth you wrong my lord.
221213Bard. Sweet earle, diuorce not wi
sedom from your honor,
222214Mour. The liues of all your louing complices,
223215Leaue on you health, the which if you giue ore,
224216To
stormy pa
ssion mu
st perforce decay.
239217Bard. We all that are ingaged to this lo
sse,
240218Knew that we ventured on
such dangerous
seas,
241219That if we wrought out life, twas ten to one,
242220And yet we venturd for the gaine propo
sde,
243221Choakt the re
spe
ct of likely perill fear'd,
244222And
since we are ore
set, venture againe:
245223Come, we will al put forth body and goods.
246224Mour. Tis more then time, and my mo
st noble lord,
247225I heare for certaine, and dare
speake the truth.
269226North. I knew of this before, but to
speake truth,
270227This pre
sent griefe had wipte it from my mind,
271228Go in with me and coun
sell euery man,
272229The apte
st way for
safety and reuenge,
273230Get po
stes and letters, and make friends with
speed,
274231Neuer
so few, and neuer yet more need.
exeunt. 276232Enter sir Iohn alone, with his page bearing his sword 277234Iohn Sirra, you giant, what
saies the do
ctor to my water?
278235Page He
said
sir, the water it
self was a good healthy water,
279236but for the party that owed it, he might haue moe di
sea
ses then
B Iohn
The second part of
281238Iohn Men of al
sorts take a pride to gird at me: the braine
239of this fooli
sh compoũded clay-man is not able to inuent any
283240thing that intends to laughter, more then I inuent, or is
inuẽted 284241on me, I am not only witty in my
selfe, but the cau
se that wit is
285242in other men. I do here walk before thee, like a
sow that hath
286243ouerwhelmd al her litter but one, if the prince put thee into my
287244seruice for any other rea
son then to
sett me o
ff, why then I
289245haue no iudgement thou hore
son mandrake, thou art
fitter to
290246be worne in my cap, then to wait at my heels I was neuer man
- 291247ned with an agot till now, but I wil in-
set you, neither in golde
292248nor
siluer, but in vile apparell, and
send you backe againe to
293249your ma
ster for a iewell, the iuuenall the prince your ma
ster,
294250who
se chin is not yet
fledge, I will
sooner haue a beard grow
295251in the palme of my hand, then he
shal get one o
ff his cheek, &
296252yet he will not
sticke to
say his face is a face royal, God may
fi- 298253ni
sh it when he will, tis not a haire ami
sse yet, he may keepe it
299254still at a face royall, for a barber
shall neuer earne
sixpence out
300255of it, and yet heele be crowing as if he had writte man euer
301256since his father was a batcheler, he may keepe his owne grace,
302257but hees almo
st out of mine I can a
ssure him: what
said ma
ster
303258Dommelton about the
sattin for my
short cloake and my
305260Boy He
saide
sir, you
should procure him better a
ssurance
306261then Bardolfe, he would not take his band and yours, he liked
308263sir Iohn Let him be damn'd like the glutton, pray God his
309264tongue be hotter, a hore
son Achitophel! a ra
scall: yea for
sooth
310265knaue, to beare a gentle man in hand, and then
stand vpon
se
- 311266curity, the hor
son
smoothy-pates doe now weare nothing but
312267hie
shooes and bunches of keyes at their girdles, and if a man is
313268through with them in hone
st taking vp, then they mu
st stand
314269vppon
security, I had as liue they would put rat
sbane in my
315270mouth as o
ffer to
stop it with
security, I lookt a
should haue
317271sent me two and twenty yards of
sattin (as I am a true knight,)
318272and he
sends me
security: well he may
sleepe in
security, for he
319273hath the horne of aboundance, and the lightne
sse of his wife
shines
Henry the fourth.
320274shines through it: wheres Bardolf, & yet can not he
see though
321275he haue his owne lanthorne to light him.
323276Boy Hees gone in Smith
field to buy your wor
ship a hor
se.
325277sir Iohn I bought him in Paules, and heele buy me a hor
se
326278in Smith
field, and I could get me but a wife in the
stewes, I
327279were man'd, hor
sde, and wiu'd.
328280Enter Lord chiefe Iustice. 329281Boy Sir, here comes the noble man that committed the prince
330282for
striking him about Bardolfe.
331283sir Iohn Wait clo
se, I will not
see him.
332284Iustice Whats hee that goes there?
333285seru. Fal
sta
ffe, and't plea
se your lord
ship.
334286Iust. He that was in que
stion for the rob'ry?
335287seru. He my Lord, but he hath
since done good
seruice at
336288Shrewsbury, & (as I heare,) is now going with
some charge to
337289the lord Iohn of Lanca
ster.
338290Iust. What to Yorke? call him backe againe.
339291seru. Sir Iohn Fal
sta
ffe.
340292Iohn Boy, tell him I am deafe.
341293Boy You mu
st speake lowder, my ma
ster is deafe.
342294Iust. I am
sure he is to the hearing of any thing good, goe
343295plucke him by the elbow, I mu
st speake with him.
345297Falst. What? a yong knaue and begging? is there not wars?
346298is there not employment? doth not the King lacke
subie
cts? do
347299not the rebels need
souldiers, though it be a
shame to be on any
348300side but one, it is wor
se
shame to beg then to be on the wor
st 349301side, were it wor
se then the name of Rebellion can tell how to
351303seru. You mi
stake me
sir.
352304Iohn Why
sir, did I
say you were an hone
st man,
setting my
353305knighthood and my
souldier
ship a
side, I had lied in my throat
355307seru. I pray you
sir then
set your knighthood, and your
sol
- 356308dier
ship a
side, and giue me leaue to tell you, you lie in your
357309throate, if you
say I am any other then an hone
st man.
B2 Iohn.
The second part of
359310Iohn I giue thee leaue to tell me,
so I lay a
side that which
360311growes to me, if thou get
st any leaue of me, hang me, if thou
361312tak
st leaue, thou wert better be hangd, you hunt
coũter, hence,
363314seru. Sir, my Lord would
speake with you.
364315Iust. Sir Iohn Fal
sta
ffe, a word with you.
365316Falst. My good Lord, God giue your lord
ship good time
366317of day, I am glad to
see your lord
ship abroade, I heard
say your
367318lord
ship was
sicke, I hope your lord
ship goes abroade by ad
- 368319ui
se, your lord
ship, though not clean pa
st your youth, haue yet
369320some
smack of an ague in you,
some reli
sh of the
saltnes of time
321in you, and I mo
st humbly be
seech your lord
ship to haue a re
- 371322uerend care of your health.
372323Iustice Sir Iohn, I
sent for you before your expedition to
374325sir Iohn Andt plea
se your lor
ship, I heare his maie
sty is re
- 375326turnd with
some di
scomfort from Wales.
376327Iust. I talke not of his maie
sty, you would not come when I
378329Falst. And I heare moreouer, his highnes is falne into this
380331Iust. Well, God mend him, I pray you let me
speake with
381333Falst. This appoplexi as I take it? is a kind of lethergie, and't
382334plea
se your lord
ship, a kind of
sleeping in the bloud, a hor
son
383336Iust. What tell you me of it, be it as it is.
384337Falst. It hath it originall from much griefe, from
study, and
385338perturbation of the braine, I haue read the cau
se of his e
ffe
cts
386339in Galen, it is a kind of deafenes.
387340Iust. I think you are falne into the di
sea
se, for you heare not
389342Old. Very wel my lord, very wel, rather and't plea
se you it is
390343the di
sea
se of not li
stning, the maladie of not marking that I
392345Iust. To puni
sh you by the heeles, would amend the atten
- tion
Henry the fourth.
393346tion of your eares, and I care not if I doe become your
394348Falst. I am as poore as Iob my lord, but not
so pacient,
395349your Lord
ship may mini
ster the potion of impri
sonment to
396350me, in re
spe
ct of pouerty, but how I
should be your pacient to
397351follow your pre
scriptions, the wi
se may make
som dramme of
398352a
scruple, or indeede a
scruple it
selfe.
399353Iust. I
sent for you when there were matters again
st you for
400354your life to come
speake with me.
401355Falst. As I was then adui
sde by my learned coun
sail in the
402356lawes of this land
seruice, I did not come.
403357Iust. Wel, the truth is
sir Iohn, you liue in great infamy.
404358Falst. He that buckles him
selfe in my belt cannot liue in
405360Iust. Your meanes are very
slender, and your wa
ste is great.
406361Falst. I would it were otherwi
se, I would my meanes were
407362greater and my wa
ste
slender.
408363Iust. You haue mi
sled the youthfull prince.
409364Falst. The yong prince hath mi
sled me, I am the felow with
410365the great belly, and he my dogge.
411366Iust. Wel, I am loth to gall a new heald wound, your daies
412367seruice at Shrewsbury, hath a little guilded ouer your nights
413368exploit on Gad
shill, you may thanke th'vnquiet time, for your
414369quiet orepo
sting that a
ction.
416371Iust. But
since all is well, keepe it
so, wake not a
sleeping
417373Falst. To wake a wolfe, is as bad as
smell a fox.
418374Iust. What you are as a candle, the better part, burnt out.
419375Falst. A wa
ssel candle my lord, al tallow, if I did
say of wax,
420376my growth would approue the truth.
421377Iust. There is not a white haire in your face, but
should
422378haue his e
ffe
ct of grauity.
423379Falst. His e
ffe
ct of grauy, grauie, grauie.
424380Iust. You follow the yong prince vp and downe, like his
B3 Falst.
The second part of
426382Falst. Not
so my lord, your ill angell is light, but I hope he
427383that lookes vpon me will take me without weighing, and yet
428384in
some re
spe
cts I grant I cannot go. I cannot tell, vertue is of
429385so little regard in the
se co
star-mongers times, that true valour
430386is turnd Berod, Pregnancie is made a Tap
ster, & his quick wit
431387wa
sted in giuing reckonings, all the other giftes appertinent
432388to man, as the malice of his age
shapes the one not worth a
433389goo
sbery, you that are old con
sider not the capacities of vs that
435390are yong, you doe mea
sure the heate of our liuers with the bit
- 436391terne
sse of your galles, and we that are in the vaward of our
437392youth, I mu
st confe
sse are wagges too.
438393Lo. Do you
set downe your name in the
scroule of youth,
439394that are written downe, old with all the chara
cters of age? haue
440395you not a moi
st eie, a dry hand, a yelow cheeke, a white beard,
441396a decrea
sing leg, an increa
sing belly? is not your voice broken,
442397your winde
short, your chinne double, your wit
single, and e
- 443398uery part about you bla
sted with antiquitie, and will you yet
444399call your
selfe yong?
fie,
fie,
fie,
sir Iohn.
445400Iohn My Lorde, I was borne about three of the clocke in
401the afternoone, with a white head, and
something a round bel
- 446402lie, for my voyce, I haue lo
st it with hallowing, and
singing of
447403Anthems: to approoue my youth further, I will not: the truth
448404is, I am onely olde in iudgement and vnder
standing: and hee
449405that wil caper with me for a thou
sand markes, let him lend me
450406the money, and haue at him for the boxe of the yeere that the
451407Prince gaue you, he gaue it like a rude Prince, and you tooke
452408it like a
sen
sible Lord: I haue checkt him for it, and the yong
453409lion repents, mary not in a
shes and
sackcloth, but in new
silke,
456411Lord Well, God
send the prince a better companion.
457412Iohn God
send the companion a better prince, I cannot
459414Lord Well, the King hath
seuerd you: I heare you are go
- 460415ing with lord Iohn of Lanca
ster, again
st the Archbi
shop and
461416the Earle of Northumberland.
462417Iohn Yea, I thanke your prety
sweet witte for it: but looke
you
Henry the fourth.
463418you pray, all you that ki
sse my lady Peace at home, that our
464419armies ioyne not in a hote day, for, by the Lord, I take but two
465420shirts out with me, and I meane not to
sweate extraordinarily:
466421if it be a hot day, & I brandi
sh any thing but a bottle. I would
467422I might neuer
spit white again: there is not a dangerous a
ction
468423can peepe out his head, but I am thru
st vpon it. Wel, I cannot
469424la
st euer, but it was alway yet the tricke of our Engli
sh nation,
469.1425if they haue a good thing, to make it too common. If yee will
469.2426needs
say I am an olde man, you
should giue me re
st: I would
469.3427to God my name were not
so terrible to the enemy as it is, I
469.4428were better to be eaten to death with a ru
st, than to be
scoured
469.5429to nothing with perpetuall motion.
470430Lord Well, be hone
st, be hone
st, and God ble
sse your ex
- 472432Iohn Will your lord
ship lend me a thou
sand pound to fur
- 474434Lord Not a penny, not a penny, you are too impatient to
475435beare cro
sses: fare you well: commend mee to my coo
sine
477437Iohn If I do,
fillip me with a three man beetle: A man can
478438no more
separate age and couetou
sne
sse, than a can part yong
479439limbs and lechery, but the gowt galles the one, and the pox
480440pinches the other, and
so both the degrees preuent my cur
ses,(boy.
483442Iohn What money is in my pur
se?
484443Boy Seuen groates and two pence.
485444Iohn I can get no remedy again
st this con
sumption of the
486445pur
se, borrowing onely lingers and lingers it out, but the di
s- 487446ea
se is incurable: Go beare this letter to my lord of Lanca
ster,
488447this to the Prince, this to the Earle of We
stmerland, and this to
489448olde mi
stris Vr
sula, whome I haue weekely
sworne to marry
490449since I perceiud the
fir
st white haire of my chin: about it, you
491450know where to
finde me: a pox of this gowt, or a gowt of this
492451pox, for the one or the other playes the rogue with my great
494452toe. Tis no matter if I doe hault, I haue the warres for my
495453color, and my pen
sion
shal
seeme the more rea
sonable: a good
wit
The second part of
496454wit will make v
se of any thing; I will turne di
sea
ses to commo
- 499456Enter th'Archbishop, Thomas Mowbray (Earle Marshall) the 457 Lord Hastings, Fauconbridge, and Bardolfe. 501458Bishop Thus haue you heard our cau
se, and knowne our(meanes,
502459And my mo
st noble friends, I pray you al
503460Speake plainely your opinions of our hopes,
504461And
fir
st Lord Mar
shall, what
say you to it?
505462Marsh. I well allow the occa
sion of our armes,
506463But gladly would be better
sati
sfied,
507464How in our meanes we
should aduance our
selues,
508465To looke with forehead, bold, and big enough,
509466Vpon the power and pui
ssance of the King.
510467Hast. Our pre
sent mu
sters grow vpon the
file,
511468To
fiue and twenty thou
sand men of choi
se,
512469And our
supplies liue largely in the hope
513470Of great Northumberland, who
se bo
some burnes
514471With an incen
sed
fire of iniuries.
515472Bard. The que
stion then Lord Ha
stings
standeth thus,
516473Whether our pre
sent
fiue and twentie thou
sand,
517474May hold vp head without Northumberland.
519476Bard. Yea mary, theres the point,
520477But if without him we be thought too feeble,
521478My iudgement is we
should not
step too far.
526479Bish. Tis very true lord Bardolfe, for indeede
527480It was yong Hot-
spurs cau
se at Shrewsbury.
528481Bard. It was my Lord, who lined him
selfe with hope,
529482Eating the ayre, and promi
se of
supplie,
530483Flattring him
selfe in proie
ct of a power,
531484Much
smaller then the
smalle
st of his thoughts,
532485And
so with great imagination,
533486Proper to mad-men, led his powers to death,
534487And winking, leapt into de
stru
ction.
535488Hast. But by your leaue it neuer yet did hurt,
To
Henry the fourth.
536489To lay downe likelihoods and formes of hope.
557490Bard. We forti
fie in paper, and in
figures,
558491V
sing the names of men in
steed of men,
559492Like on that drawes the model of an hou
se,
560493Beyond his power to build it, who (halfe thorough)
561494Giues o're, and leaues his part-created co
st,
562495A naked
subie
ct to the weeping clowdes,
563496And wa
ste for churli
sh winters tyrannie.
564497Hast. Grant that our hopes (yet likely of faire birth)
565498Should be
stil-borne, and that we now po
sse
st 566499The vtmo
st man of expe
ctation,
567500I thinke we are
so, body
strong enough,
568501Euen as we are to equal with the King.
569502Bard. What, is the King but
fiue and twenty thou
sand?
570503Hast. To vs no more, nay not
so much, Lord Bardolfe,
571504For his diui
sions, as the times do brawle,
572505And in three heads, one power again
st the French,
573506And one again
st Glendower perforce a third
574507Mu
st take vp vs,
so is the vn
firme King
575508In three diuided, and his co
ffers
sound
576509With hollow pouertie and emptine
sse.
577510Bish. That he
should draw his
seuerall
strengths togither,
578511And come again
st vs in full pui
ssance,
580513Hast. If he
should do
so, French and Welch he leaues his
581514back vnarmde, they baying him at the heeles, neuer feare that.
583515Bar. Who is it like
should leade his forces hither?
584516Hast. The Duke of Lanca
ster and We
stmerland:
585517Again
st the Wel
sh, him
self and Harry Monmouth:
586518But who is
sub
stituted again
st the French
587519I haue no certaine notice.
612520Bish. Shall we go draw our numbers, and
set on?
613521Hast. We are Times
subie
cts, and Time bids be gone.
ex. 615522Enter Hostesse of the Tauerne, and an Officer or two. C Hostesse.
The second part of
616523Hostesse Ma
ster Phang, haue you entred the a
ction?
618525Host. Wheres your yeoman? i
st a lu
sty yeoman? wil a
stand
620527Phang Sirra, wheres Snare?
621528Host. O Lord I, good ma
ster Snare.
623530Phang Snare, we mu
st are
st sir Iohn Fal
sta
ffe.
624531Host. Yea good ma
ster Snare, I haue entred him and all.
625532Snare It may chaunce co
st some of vs our liues, for he will
626534Host. Alas the day, take heed of him, he
stabd me in mine
627535owne hou
se, mo
st bea
stly in good faith, a cares not what mi
s- 628536chiefe he does, if his weapon be out, he will foyne like any di
- 629537uell, he will
spare neither man, woman, nor child.
631538Phang If I can clo
se with him, I care not for his thru
st.
632539Host. No nor I neither, Ile be at your elbow.
633540Phang And I but
fist him once, and a come but within my
635542Host. I am vndone by his going, I warrant you, hees an in
- 636543finitiue thing vppon my
score, good mai
ster Phang holde him
637544sure, good ma
ster Snare let him not
scape, a comes continually
638545to Pie corner (
sauing your manhoods) to buy a
saddle, and he
639546is indited to dinner to the Lubbers head in Lumbert
streete to
640547ma
ster Smooths the
silk man, I pray you
since my exion is en
- 641548tred, and my ca
se
so openly knowne to the worlde, let him be
642549brought in to his an
swer, a hundred marke is a long one, for a
643550poore lone woman to beare, and I haue borne, and borne, and
644551borne, and haue bin fubd o
ff, and fubd o
ff, and fubd o
ff, from
645552this day to that day, that it is a
shame to be thought on, there is
646553no hone
sty in
such dealing, vnle
sse a woman
should be made
647554an a
sse, and a bea
st, to beare euery knaues wrong: yonder he
649555comes, and that arrant malm
sie-no
se knaue Bardolfe with him,
650556do your o
ffices do your o
ffices ma
ster
Phãg, & ma
ster Snare,
651557do me, do me, do me your o
ffices.
651.1558Enter sir Iohn, and Bardolfe, and the boy. Falst.
Henry the fourth.
652559Falst. How now, who
se mare's dead? whats the matter?
653560Phang I arre
st you at the
sute of mi
stris
Quickly.
654561Falst. Away varlets, draw Bardolfe, cut me o
ff the villaines
655562head, throw the queane in the channell.
656563Host. Throw me in the channell? Ile throw thee in the chan
- 657564nel, wilt thou, wilt thou, thou ba
stardly rogue, murder murder,
658565a thou honi
suckle villaine, wilt thou kill Gods o
fficers and the
659566Kings? a thou honi
seed rogue, thou art a honi
seed, a man quel
- 660567ler, and a woman queller.
661568Falst. Keepe them o
ff Bardolfe.
662570Host. Good people bring a reskew or two, thou wot, wot
663571thou, thou wot, wot ta, do do thou rogue, do thou hemp
seed.
664572Boy Away you
scullian, you rampallian, you fu
stilarian, ile
665573tickle your cata
strophe.
574Enter Lord chiefe iustice and his men. 666575Lord What is the matter? keepe the peace here, ho.
667576Hostesse Good my lord be good to me, I be
seech you
stand
669578Lord How now
sir Iohn, what are you brawling here?
670579Doth this become your place, your time, and bu
sine
sse?
671580You
should haue bin well on your way to Yorke:
672581Stand from him fellow, wherefore hang'
st thou vpon him.
673582Host. O my mo
st wor
shipful Lord, and't plea
se your grace
674583I am a poore widdow of Ea
stcheape, and he is arre
sted at my
676586Host. It is more then for
some my Lord, it is for al I haue, he
677587hath eaten me out of hou
se and home, he hath put all my
sub
- 678588stance into that fat belly of his, but I wil haue
some of it out a
- 679589gaine, or I wil ride thee a nights like the mare.
681590Falst. I think I am as like to ride the mare if I haue any van
- 682591tage of ground to get vp.
683592Lord How comes this
sir Iohn? what man of good temper
684593would endure this tempe
st of exclamation; are you not a
sha
- 685594med to inforce a poore widdow, to
so rough a cour
se to come
C2 by
The second part of
687596Falst. What is the gro
sse
summe that I owe thee?
688597Host. Mary if thou wert an hone
st man, thy
selfe and the
689598mony too: thou did
st sweare to me vpon a parcell guilt goblet,
690599sitting in my dolphin chamber, at the round table by a
sea cole
691600fire, vpon wedne
sday in Whee
son weeke, when the prince
692601broke thy head, for liking his father to a
singing man of Win
- 693602sor, thou did
st sweare to me
thẽ, as I was wa
shing thy wound,
694603to marry me, and make me my lady thy wife, can
st thou deny
695604it, did not goodwife Keech the butchers wife come in then and
696605cal me go
ssip Quickly, comming in to borow a me
sse of vine
- 697606gar, telling vs
she had a good di
sh of prawnes, whereby thou
698607did
st de
sire to eate
some, whereby I told thee they were ill
699608for a greene wound, and did
st thou not, when
she was gone
700609down
stayers, de
sire me, to be no more
so familiarity, with
such
701610poore people,
saying that ere long they
should cal me madam,
703611and did
st thou not ki
sse me, and bid me fetch thee thirtie
shil
- 704612lings, I put thee now to thy booke oath, denie it if thon can
st.
705613Falst. My lord this is a poore made
soule, and
she
saies vp
706614and downe the towne, that her elde
st sonne is like you,
she
707615hath bin in good ca
se, and the trueth is pouerty hath di
stra
cted
708616her, but for the
se fooli
sh o
fficers, I be
seech you I may haue re
- 710618Lo. Sir Iohn,
sir Iohn, I am wel acquainted with your maner
711619of wrenching the true cau
se, the fal
se way: it is not a con
fident
712620brow, nor the throng of words that come with
such more then
713621impudent
sawcines from you, can thru
st me from a leuel con
- 714622sideration: you haue as it appeares to me pra
cti
sde vpon the
715623ea
sie yeelding
spirite of this woman, and made her
serue your
715.1624v
ses both in pur
se and in per
son.
716625Host. Yea in truth my Lord.
717626Lo. Pray thee peace, pay her the debt you owe her, and vn
- 718627pay the villany you haue done with her, the one you may doe
719628with
sterling mony, and the other with currant repentance.
720629Falst. My Lord I will not vndergoe this
snepe without re
- 721630ply, you cal honorable boldnes impudent
sawcine
sse, if a man
wil
Henry the fourth.
722631wil make curt
sie and
say nothing, he is vertuous, no my Lord
723632my humble duty remembred, I will not bee your
suter, I
say
724633to you I do de
sire deliuerance from the
se o
fficers, being vpon
725634ha
sty imployment in the Kings a
ffayres.
726635Lord You
speake as hauing power to do wrong, but an
- 727636swer in th'e
ffe
ct of your reputation, and
satis
fie the poore wo
- 729638Falst. Come hither ho
ste
sse.
730639Lord Now ma
ster Gower, what newes.
enter a messenger. 731640Gower The King my Lord, and Harry prince of Wales,
732641Are neare at hand, the re
st the paper tells.
733642Falst. As I am a gentleman!
735Falst. As I am a gentleman, come, no more words of it.
736644Host. By this heaunly ground I tread on, I mu
st be faine to
737645pawne both my plate, & the tape
stry of my dining chambers-
739646Falst. Gla
sses gla
sses is the onely drinking, and for thy wals
740647a pretty
sleight drollery, or the
storie of the prodigal, or the
741648Iarman hunting in waterworke, is worth a thou
sand of the
se
742649bed-hangers, and the
se
flie bitten tape
strie, let it be x. l if thou
743650can
st: come, and twere not for thy humors, theres not a better
745651wench in England, goe wa
sh thy face and draw the a
ction,
746652come thou mu
st not be in this humor with me, do
st not know
747653me, come, come, I know thou wa
st set on to this.
748654Host. Pray thee
sir Iohn let it be but twentie nobles, ifaith
749655I am loath to pawne my plate
so God
saue me law.
750656Falst. Let it alone, ile make other
shift, youle be a foole
stil.
752657Host. Well, you
shall haue it, though I pawne my gowne,
753658I hope youle come to
supper, youle pay me al together.
755659Falst. Wil I liue? goe with her, with her, hooke on, hooke
756660on.
exit hostesse and sergeant. 757661Host. Will you haue Doll Tere-
sheet meete you at
supper.
759662Falst. No more words, lets haue her.
760663Lord I haue heard better newes.
761664Falst. Whats the newes my lord?
762665Lord Where lay the King to night?
C3 Mess.
The second part of
763666Mess. At Billing
sgate my Lord.
764667Falst. I hope my Lord al's wel, what is the newes my lord?
766668Lord Come all his forces backe?
767669Mess. No,
fifteen hundred foot,
fiue hundred hor
se
768670Are marcht vp to my lord of Lanca
ster,
769671Again
st Northumberland, and the Archbi
shop.
770672Falst. Comes the King back from Wales, my noble lord?
771673Lord You
shall haue letters of me pre
sently,
772674Come, go along with me, good ma
ster Gower.
775677Falstaffe Mai
ster Gower,
shall I intreate you with mee to
777679Gower I mu
st waite vpon my good lord here, I thank you
779681Lord Sir Iohn, you loyter heere too long,
780682Being you are to take
souldiers vp
683In Counties as you go.
781684Falstaffe Will you
suppe with mee mai
ster Gower?
782685Lord. What fooli
sh mai
ster taught you the
se manners,
sir
784687Falstaffe Mai
ster Gower, if they become me not, hee was a
785688foole that taught them mee: this is the right fencing grace, my
786689Lord, tap for tap, and
so part faire.
787690Lord Now the Lord lighten thee, thou art a great foole.
790691Enter the Prince, Poynes, sir Iohn Russel, with other. 792692Prince Before God, I am exceeding weary.
793693Poynes I
st come to that? I had thought wearines dur
st not
794694haue attacht one of
so hie bloud.
795695Prince Faith it does me, though it di
scolors the complexi
- 796696on of my greatnes to acknowledge it: doth it not
shew vildly
797697in me, to de
sire
small beere?
798698Poynes Why a Prince
should not be
so loo
sely
studied, as
799699to remember
so weake a compo
sition.
800700Prince Belike then my appetite was not princely gote, for
801701by my troth, I do now remember the poor creature
smal beere.
But
Henry the fourth.
802702But indeed the
se humble con
siderations make me out of loue
803703with my greatne
sse. What a di
sgrace is it to mee to remember
804704thy name? or to know thy face to morow? or to take note how
805705many paire of
silke
stockings thou ha
st with the
se, and tho
se
806706that were thy peach colourd once, or to beare the inuentorie of
807707thy
shirts, as one for
super
fluitie, and another for v
se. But that
809708the Tennis court keeper knows better than I, for it is a low eb
810709of linnen with thee when thou keepe
st not racket there, as thou
811710ha
st not done a great while, becau
se the re
st of the low Coun
- 812711tries haue eate vp thy holland: and God knows whether tho
se
812.1712that bal out the ruines of thy linnen
shal inherite his kingdom:
812.2713but the Midwiues
say, the children are not in the fault where
- 812.3714vpon the world increa
ses, and kinreds are mightily
strengthe
- 814716Poynes How ill it followes, after you haue labored
so hard,
815717you
should talke
so ydlely! tell me how many good yong prin
- 816718ces woulde doe
so, their fathers being
so
sicke, as yours at this
818720Prince Shall I tel thee one thing Poynes?
819721Poynes Yes faith, and let it be an excellent good thing.
820722Prince It
shall
serue among wittes of no higher breeding
822724Poynes Go to, I
stand the pu
sh of your one thing that you
824726Prince Mary I tell thee it is not meete that I
should bee
sad
825727now my father is
sicke, albeit I could tell to thee, as to one it
826728plea
ses me for fault of a better to call my friend, I could be
sad,
828730Poynes Very hardly, vpon
such a
subie
ct.
829731Prince By this hand, thou thinke
st me as farre in the diuels
830732booke, as thou and Fal
sta
ffe, for obduracie and per
sistancie,
831733let the end trie the man, but I tel thee, my heart bleeds inward
- 832734ly that my father is
so
sick, and keeping
such vile company as
833735thou arte, hath in rea
son taken from me all o
stentation of
sor
- Prince.
The second part of
836738Prince What would
st thou thinke of me if I
should weep?
837739Poynes I woulde thincke thee a mo
st princely hypocrite.
838740Prince It would bee euery mans thought, and thou arte
839741a ble
ssed felow, to thinke as euery man thinkes, neuer a mans
840742thought in the world, keepes the rode way better then thine,
841743euerie man would thinke me an hypocrite indeede, and what
842744accites your mo
st wor
shipfull thought to thinke
so?
844745Poynes Why becau
se you haue been
so lewd and
so much
845746engra
ffed to Fal
sta
ffe.
Prince And to thee.
847747Poyne By this light I am well
spoke on, I can heare it with
848748mine owne eares, the wor
st that they can
say of me is that I am
849749a
second brother, and that I am a proper fellow of my hands,
850750and tho
se two things I confe
sse I cannot helpe: by the ma
sse
852753Prince And the boy that I gaue Fal
sta
ffe, a had him from
853754me Chri
stian, and looke if the fat villaine haue not tran
sformd
856756Bard. God
saue your grace.
857757Prince And yours mo
st noble Bardolfe.
858758Poynes Come you vertuous a
sse, you ba
shfull foole, mu
st 859759you be blu
shing, wherefore blu
sh you now? what a maidenly
860760man at armes are you become? i
st such a matter to get a pottle-
862762Boy A calls me enow my Lord, through a red lattice, and I
863763could di
scerne no part of his face from the window, at la
st I
864764spied his eies, and me thought he had made two holes in the ale
865765wiues peticote and
so peept through.
867766Prince Has not the boy pro
fited?
868767Bard. Away you hor
son vpright rabble, away.
869768Boy Away you ra
scally Altheas dreame, away.
870769Prince In
stru
ct vs boy, what dreame boy?
871770Boy Mary my lord, Althear dreampt
she was deliuered of
872771a
firebrand, and therefore I call him her dreame.
873772Prince A crownes worth of good interpretation there tis boy.
Poines
Henry the fourth.
875773Poines O that this blo
ssome could be kept from cankers!
876774well, there is
sixpence to pre
serue thee.
877775Bard. And you do not make him hangd among you, the gal
- 879777Prince And how doth thy ma
ster Bardolfe?
880778Bard. Well my Lord, he heard of your graces comming to
881779towne, theres a letter for you.
882780Poynes Deliuerd with good re
spe
ct, and how doth the mar
- 884782Bard. In bodily health
sir.
885783Poynes Mary the immortall part needes a phi
sitian, but that
886784moues not him, though that be
sicke, it dies not.
888785Prince I do allow this Wen to be as familiar with me, as my
889786dogge, and he holds his place, for looke you how he writes.
euery man must know that
892788as oft as he has occa
sion to name him
selfe: euen like tho
se that
893789are kin to the King for they neuer pricke their
finger, but they
894790saye, theres
some of the Kings bloud
spilt: how comes that
895791(
saies he) that takes vppon him not to conceiue the an
swer is as
896792ready as a borowed cap: I am the Kings poore co
sin,
sir.
898793Prince Nay they will be kin to vs, or they will fetch it from
Sir Iohn Falstaffe knight, to the sonne of
900795the king, neare
st his father, Harry prince of Wales, greeting.
902796Poynes Why this is a certi
ficate.
I will imitate the honourable Romanes in breuitie.
905799Poynes He
sure meanes breuity in breath,
short winded,
I commend mee to thee, I commend thee, and, I leaue
907801thee, be not too familiar with Poynes, for he mi
su
ses thy fa
- 908802uours
so much, that he
sweares thou art to mary his
sister Nel,
909803repent at idle times as thou mai
st, and
so farwel.
910804Thine by yea, and no, which is as much as to
say, as
911805thou v
se
st him, Iacke Fal
sta
ffe with my family,
912806Iohn with my brothers and
sisters, and
sir Iohn
914808Poynes My Lord, Ile
steep this letter in
sacke and make him
D eate
The second part of
916810Prince Thats to make him eate twenty of his words, but do
917811you v
se me, thus Ned? mu
st I marrie your
sister?
918812Poynes God
send the wench no wor
se fortune, but I neuer
920814Prince Wel, thus we play the fooles with the time, and the
921815spirits of the wi
se
sit in the clowdes and mocke vs, is your ma
- 924818Prince Where
sups he? doth the old boare feede in the old
926820Bard. At the old place, my lord, in Ea
stcheape.
928822Boy Ephe
sians, my lord, of the old church.
929823Prince Sup any women with him?
930824Boy None my lord, but old mi
stris Quickly, and mi
stris Dol
932826Prince What Pagan may that be?
933827Boy A proper gentlewoman
sir, and a kin
swoman of my
935829Prince Euen
such kinne as the pari
sh Heicfors are to the
936830towne bull,
shall we
steale vpon them Ned at
supper?
938831Poynes I am your
shadow my Lord, ile follow you.
939832Prince Sirra, you boy and Bardolfe, no worde to your ma
- 833ster that I am yet come to towne; theres for your
silence.
942834Bar. I haue no tongue
sir.
835Boy And for mine
sir, I will gouerne it.
943836Prince Fare you well: go, this Doll Tere-
sheete
should be
946838Poyns I warrant you, as common as the way between S. Al
- 948840Prince How might we
see Fal
sta
ffe be
stow him
self to night
949841in his true colours, and not our
selues be
seene?
950842Poynes Put on two letherne ierkins and aprons, and waite
951843vpon him at his table as drawers.
952844Prince From a god to a bul, a heauy de
scen
sion, it was Ioues
case
Henry the fourth.
953845ca
se, from a pince to a prenti
se, a low tran
sformation, that
shal
954846be mine, for in enery thing the purpo
se mu
st weigh with the
955847folly, follow me Ned.
exeunt. 957848Enter Northumberland his wife, and the wife to Harry Percie. 959849North. I pray thee louing wife and gentle daughter,
960850Giue euen way vnto my rough a
ffaires,
961851Put not you on the vi
sage of the times,
962852And be like them to Percy trouble
some.
963853Wife I haue giuen ouer, I will
speake no more,
964854Do what you wil, your wi
sedome be your guide.
965855North. Alas
sweete wife, my honor is at pawne,
966856And but my going, nothing can redeeme it.
967857Kate O yet for Gods
sake, go not to the
se wars,
968858The time was father, that you broke your word,
969859When you were more endeere to it then now,
970860When your owne Percie, when my hearts deere Harry,
971861Threw many a Northward looke, to
see his father
972862Bring vp his powers, but he did long in vaine.
973863Who then per
swaded you to
stay at home?
974864There were two honors lo
st, yours, and your
sonnes,
975865For yours, the God of heauen brighten it,
976866For his, it
stucke vpon him as the
sunne
977867In the grey vault of heauen, and by his light
978868Did all the Cheualry of England moue
979869To do braue a
cts, he was indeede the gla
sse
980870Wherein the noble youth did dre
sse them
selues.
1005872Faire daughter, you do draw my
spirites from me,
1006873With new lamenting ancient ouer
sights,
1007874But I mu
st go and meete with danger there,
1008875Or it will
seeke me in an other place,
1011878Till that the nobles and the armed commons,
1012879Haue of their pui
ssance made a little ta
ste.
1013880Kate If they get ground and vantage of the King,
D2 Then
The second part of
1014881Then ioyne you with them like a ribbe of
steele,
1015882To make
strength
stronger: but for al our loues,
1016883Fir
st let them trie them
selues,
so did your
sonne,
1017884He was
so
su
ffred,
so came I a widow,
1018885And neuer
shall haue length of life enough,
1019886To raine vpon remembrance with mine eies,
1020887That it may grow and
sprout as high as heauen,
1021888For recordation to my noble hu
sband.
1022889North. Come, come, go in with me, tis with my mind,
1023890As with the tide,
sweld vp vnto his height,
1024891That makes a
stil
stand, running neither way,
1025892Faine would I go to meete the Archbi
shop,
1026893But many thou
sand rea
sons hold me backe,
1027894I will re
solue for Scotland, there am I,
1028895Till time and vantage craue my company.
exeunt. 1031897Francis What the diuel ha
st thou brought there apple
898Iohns? thou knowe
st sir Iohn cannot indure an apple Iohn.
1034899Draw. Mas thou
sai
st true, the prince once
set a di
sh of ap
- 1035900ple Iohns before him, and tolde him there were
fiue more
sir
1036901Iohns, and putting o
ff his hat,
said, I will now take my leaue of
1037902the
se
six drie, round, old, withered Knights, it angred him to
1038903the heart, but he hath forgot that.
1040904Fran. Why then couer and
set them downe, and
see if
1041905thou can
st find out Sneakes Noi
se, mi
stris Tere-
sheet would
1042.1907Dra. Di
spatch, the roome where they
supt is too hot, theile
1043909Francis Sirra, here wil be the prince and ma
ster Poynes a
- 1044910non, and they will put on two of our ierkins and aprons, and
sir
1045911Iohn mu
st not know of it, Bardolfe hath brought word.
1047913Dra. By the mas here will be old vtis, it wil be an excellent
1049915Francis Ile
see if I can
find out Sneake.
exit 1050916Enter mistris Quickly, and Doll Tere-sheet. Quickly
Henry the fourth.
1051917Quickly Yfaith
sweet heart, me thinkes now you are in an
1052918excellent good temperalitie. Your pul
sidge beates as extraor
- 1053919dinarily as heart would de
sire, and your colour I warrant you
1054920is as red as any ro
se, in good truth law: but yfaith you haue
1055921drunke too much cannaries, and thats a maruelous
searching
1056922wine, and it perfumes the bloud ere one can
say, whats this,
1058924Tere. Better then I was: hem.
1059925Qui. Why thats well
said, a good heart's worth gold: loe
When Arthur first in court,
empty the iourdan
: how now mistris Doll?
1064930host. Sicke of a calme, yea good faith.
1065931Falst. So is all her
se
ct, and they be once in a calme they are
1067933Tere. A pox damne you, you muddie ra
scall, is that all the
1069935Falst. You make fat ra
scals mi
stris Dol.
1070936Tere. I make them? gluttonie, and di
sea
ses make, I make
1072938Falst. If the cooke help to make the gluttonie, you helpe to
1073939make the di
sea
ses Doll, we catch of you Doll, we catch of you
1074940graunt that my poore vertue, grant that.
1075941Doll Yea ioy, our chaines and our iewels.
1076942Fa. Your brooches, pearles, & ouches for to
serue brauely,
1077943is to come halting o
ff, you know to come o
ff the breach, with
1078944his pike bent brauely, and to
surgerie brauely, to venture vpon
1079945the chargde chambers brauely.
1079.1946Doll Hang your
selfe, you muddie Cunger, hang your
1081948host By my troth this is the old fa
shion, you two neuer meet
1082949but you fall to
some di
scord, you are both ygood truth as rew
1083950matique as two dry to
sts, you cannot one beare with anothers
1084951cõfirmities, what the goodyere one mu
st beare, & that mu
st be
1086952you, you are the weaker ve
ssell, as they
say, the emptier ve
ssel.
D3 Doll.
The second part of
1088953Dorothy Can a weake empty ve
ssell beare
such a huge full
1089954hog
shead? theres a whole
marchãts venture of Burdeux
stu
ffe
1090955in him, you haue not
seene a hulke better
stuft in the hold.
1091956Come, ile be friends with thee iacke, thou art going to the
1092957wars, and whether I
shall euer
see thee againe or no there is no
1096960Dra. Sir, Antient pi
stol's belowe, and would
speake with
1098962Dol Hang him
swaggering ra
scal, let him not come hither
1099963it is the foule-mouthd'
st rogue in England.
1101964host. If he
swagger, let him not come here, no by my faith I
965mu
st liue among my neighbours, Ile no
swaggerers, I am in
1103966good name, and fame with the very be
st:
shut the doore, there
1104967comes no
swaggerers here, I haue not liu'd al this while to haue
1105968swaggering now,
shut the doore I pray you.
1107969Fal. Do
st thou heare ho
ste
sse?
1108970Host. Pray ye paci
fie your
selfe
sir Iohn, there comes no
1110972Fal. Do
st thou heare? it is mine Ancient.
1111973Ho. Tilly fally,
sir Iohn, nere tel me: & your ancient
swag
- 1112974grer comes not in my doores: I was before mai
ster Ti
sicke
1113975the debuty tother day, & (as he
said to me) twas no longer ago
1114976than wed
sday la
st, I good faith, neighbor Quickely,
sayes he,
1115977mai
ster Dumbe our mini
ster was by then, neighbor Quickly
1116978(
saies he) receiue tho
se that are ciuil, for (
saide he) you are in an
1117979ill name: now a
saide
so, I can tell whereupon. For (
saies he)
1118980you are an hone
st woman, and well thought on, therefore take
1119981heede what ghe
sts you receiue, receiue (
saies he) no
swagge
- 1121982ring companions: there comes none here: you would ble
sse
1122983you to heare what he
said: no, Ile no
swaggrers.
1124984Falst. Hees no
swaggrer ho
ste
sse, a tame cheter yfaith, you
1125985may
stroke him as gently as a puppy grey-hound, heele not
1126986swagger with a Barbary hen, if her feathers turne backe in any
1127987shew of re
sistance, call him vp Drawer.
1129988Host. Cheter call you him? I will barre no hone
st man my
house,
Henry the fourth.
1130989hou
se, nor no cheter, but I do not loue
swagering by my troth,
1131990I am the wor
se when one
saies
swagger: feele mai
sters, how I
1132991shake, looke you, I warrant you.
1134993Host. Doe I? yea in very trueth doe I, and twere an a
spen
1135994leafe, I cannot abide
swaggrers.
1136995Enter antient Pistol, and Bardolfes boy. 1137996Pistol God
saue you
sir Iohn.
1138997Fal. Welcome ancient Pi
stoll, heere Pi
stoll, I charge you
1139998with a cuppe of
sacke, do you di
scharge vpon mine ho
ste
sse.
1141999Pist. I will di
scharge vpon her
sir Iohn, with two bullets.
11431000Fal. shhe is pi
stoll proofe:
sir, you
shall not hardely o
ffend
11451002Host. Come, Ile drink no proofes, nor no bullets, Ile drink
11461003no more than will do me good, for no mans plea
sure, I.
11481004Pist. Then, to you mi
stris Dorothy, I will charge you.
11501005Doro. Charge me? I
scorne you,
scuruy companion: what
11511006you poore ba
se ra
scally cheting lacke-linnen mate? away you
11521007mouldie rogue, away, I am meate for your mai
ster.
11541008Pist. I know you mi
stris Dorothy.
11551009Doro. Away you cutpur
se ra
scall, you
filthy boung, away,
11561010by this wine Ile thru
st my knife in your mouldie chappes, and
11571011you play the
sawcie cuttle with me. Away you bottle ale ra
s- 11581012call, you ba
sket hilt
stale iuggler, you. Since when, I pray
11591013you
sir: Gods light, with two points on your
shoulder? much.
11611014Pist. God let me not liue, but I will murther your ru
ffe for
1161.11016sir Iohn No more Pi
stol, I would not haue you go o
ff here,
1161.21017di
scharge your
selfe of our company, Pi
stoll.
11621018Host. No, good captaine Pi
stoll, not here,
sweete captaine.
11641019Doro. Captain, thou abhominable damnd cheter, art thou
11651020not a
shamed to be called Captaine? and Captaines were of my
11661021mind, they would trunchion you out, for taking their names
11671022vpon you, before you haue earnd them: you a captaine? you
11681023slaue, for what? for teareing a poore whoores ru
ffe in a bawdy
11691024hou
se: hee a captaine! hang him rogue, he liues vpon mowldy
stewd
The second part of
11701025stewd pruins, and dried cakes: a captaine? Gods light the
se vil
- 11711026laines wil make the word as odious as the word occupy, which
1171.11027was an excellent good worde before it was il
sorted, therefore
11741029Bard. Pray thee go downe good Ancient.
11751030Falst. Hearke thee hither mi
stris Dol.
11761031Pist. Not I, I tell thee what corporall Bardolfe, I could
11771032teare her, Ile be reuengde of her.
11791034Pist. Ile
see her damnd
fir
st, to Plutoes damnd lake by this
11801035hãd to th'infernal deep, with erebus & tortures vile al
so: holde
11811036hooke and line,
say I: downe, downe dogges, downe faters haue
11831038Host. Good captaine Pee
sell be quiet, tis very late yfaith, I
11841039be
seeke you now aggrauate your choller.
11851040Pist The
se be good humors indeede,
shal pack-hor
ses, and
11861041hollow pamperd iades of A
sia which cannot goe but thirtie
11871042mile a day, compare with C
aesars and with Canibals, and tro
- 11881043iant Greekes? nay rather damne them with King Cerberus, and
11891044let the Welkin roare,
shall we fall foule for toies?
11911045Host. By my troth captaine, the
se are very bitter words.
11931046Bard. Be gone good Ancient, this will grow to a brawle
11951048Pist. Men like dogges giue crownes like pins, haue we not
11971050Host. A my word Captaine, theres none
such here, what
11981051the goodyeare do you thinke I would denie her? for Gods
sake
12001053Pist. Then feed and be fat, my faire Calipolis, come giues
12011054some
sacke,
si fortune me tormente sperato me contento, feare we
12021055brode
sides? no, let the
fiend giue
fire, giue me
some
sacke, and
12031056sweet hart, lie thou there, come we to ful points here? and are &
12061058Falst. Pi
stol, I would be quiet.
12071059Pist. Sweet Knight, I ki
sse thy nea
ffe, what, we haue
seene
Dol.
Henry the fourth.
12091061Dol. For Gods
sake thru
st him down
staires, I cannot indure
12111063Pist Thru
st him downe
staires, know we not Galloway
12131065Falst. Quaite him downe Bardolfe like a
shoue-groat
shil
- 12141066ling, nay, and a doe nothing but
speake nothing, a
shall be no
- 12161068Bard. Come, get you downe
staires.
12171069Pist. What
shall we haue inci
sion?
shall we imbrew? then
12181070death rocke me a
sleepe, abridge my dolefull daies: why then
12191071let grieuons ga
stly gaping wounds vntwinde the
sisters three,
12211073Host. Heres goodly
stu
ffe toward.
12231075Dol I pray thee Iacke, I pray thee do not drawe.
12251077Host. Heres a goodly tumult, ile for
sweare keeping hou
se a
- 12261078fore ile be in the
se tirrits and frights,
so, murder I warant now,
12271079alas, alas, put vp your naked weapons, put vp your naked wea
- 12291081Dol. I pray thee Iack be quiet, the ra
scal's gone, ah you hor
- 12301082son little vliaunt villaine you.
12311083Host. Are you not hurte i'th groyne? me thought a made a
12331085Fal. Haue you turnd him out a doores?
12341086Bar. Yea
sir, the ra
scal's drunke, you haue hurt him
sir i'th
12371089Dol A you
sweet little rogue you, alas poore ape how thou
12381090sweat
st, come let me wipe thy face, come on you hor
sone
12391091chops: a rogue, yfaith I loue thee, thou art as valorous as He
- 12401092ctor of Troy, woorth
fiue of Agamemnon, & ten times better
12411093then the nine Worthies, a villaine!
12431094Fal. Ah ra
scally
slaue! I will to
sse the rogue in a blanket.
12451095Dol Do and thou dar
st for thy heart, and thou do
st, ile can
- 12461096uas thee betweene a payre of
sheetes.
E Boy.
The second part of
12481097Boy The mu
sique is come
sir.
enter musicke. 12491098Fal. Let them play, play
sirs,
sit on my knee Doll, a ra
scall
12501099bragging
slaue! the rogue
fled from me like quick
siluer.
12521100Dol Yfaith and thou followd
st him like a church, thou
12531101hor
son little tydee Bartholemew borepigge, when wilt thou
12541102leaue
fighting a daies and foyning a nights, and begin to patch
12571105Fal Peace good Doll, do not
speake like a deathes head, do
12591107Dol Sirra, what humour's the prince of?
12601108Fal. A good
shallow yong fellow, a would haue made a
12611109good pantler, a would a chipt bread wel.
12631110Dol They
say Poines has a good wit.
12641111Fal. He a good wit? hang him baboon, his wit's as thicke
12651112as Tewksbury mu
stard, theres no more conceit in him then is
12671114Dol Why does the prince loue him
so then?
12681115Fal. Becau
se their legges are both of a bigne
sse, and a plaies
12691116at quoites well, and eates cunger and fennel, and drinkes o
ff 12701117candles endes for
flappe-dragons, and rides the wilde mare
12711118with the boyes, and iumpes vpon ioynd-
stooles, and
sweares
12721119with a good grace, and weares his bootes very
smoothe like
12731120vnto the
signe of the Legge, and breedes no bate with tel
- 12741121ling of di
screet
stories, and
such other gambole faculties a has
12751122that
show a weake minde, and an able bodie for the which the
12761123prince admits him: for the prince him
self is
such another, the
12781124weight of a haire wil turne
scales between their haber de poiz.
12801125Prince Would not this naue of a wheele haue his eares cut
12821127Poynes Lets beate him before his whore.
12831128Prince Looke where the witherd elder hath not his poule
12851130Poynes Is it not
strange that de
sire
should
so many yeeres
Prince
Henry the fourth.
12881133Prince Saturne and Venus this yeere in coniun
ction? what
12901135Poyns And look whether the
fierie Trigon his man be not
12911136li
sping to his ma
ster, old tables, his note booke, his coun
sel kee
- 12931138Falst. Thou do
st giue me
flattering bu
sses.
12941139Dol By my troth I ki
sse thee with a mo
st con
stant heart.
12971141Dol. I loue thee better then I loue, ere a
scuruy yong boy of
12991143Fal. What
stu
ffe wilt haue a kirtle of? I
shall receiue mony
13001144a thur
sday,
shalt haue a cap to morrow: a merry
song, come it
13011145growes late, weele to bed, thou't forget me when I am gone.
13041146Dol By my troth thou't
set me a weeping and thou
sai
st so,
13051147proue that euer I dre
sse my
selfe hand
some til thy returne, wel
13091151Falst. Ha? a ba
stard
sonne of the Kings? and arte not thou
13111153Prince Why thou globe of
sinfull continents, what a life
13131155Falst. A better then thou, I am a gentleman, thou art a
13151157Prince Very true
sir, and I come to drawe you out by the
13171159Host. O the Lord pre
serue thy grace: by my troth welcom
13181160to London, now the Lord ble
sse that
sweete face of thine, O
13201162Falst. Thou hor
son madde compound of maie
stie, by this
13211163light,
fle
sh, and corrupt bloud, thou art welcome.
13221164Doll How? you fat foole I
scorne you.
13231165Poynes My lorde, he will driue you out of your reuenge,
13241166and turne all to a meriment if you take not the heate.
13261167Prince You hor
son candlemine you, how vildly did you
13271168speake of me now, before this hone
st, vertuous, ciuill gentle
- E2 Host.
The second part of
13291170Host. Gods ble
ssing of your good heart, and
so
she is by my
13321173Prince Yea and you knew me as you did, when you ranne
13331174away by Gad
shil, you knew I was at your backe, and
spoke it,
13351176Falst. No, no, no, not
so, I did not thinke thou wa
st within
13371178Prince I
shall driue you then to confe
sse the wilfull abu
se,
13381179and then I know how to handle you.
13391180Falst. No abu
se Hall a mine honour, no abu
se.
13401181Prince Not to di
sprai
se me, and cal me pantler and bread
- 13441185Falst No abu
se Ned i'th worlde, hone
st Ned, none, I di
s- 13451186prai
sde him before the wicked, that the wicked might not fall
13461187in loue with thee: in which doing, I haue done the part of a
13471188carefull friend and a true
subie
ct, and thy father is to giue me
13481189thankes for it, no abu
se Hall, none Ned, none, no faith boyes
13501191Prince See now whether pure feare and intire cowardize,
13511192doth not make thee wrong this virtuous gentlewoman to clo
se
13521193with vs: is
she of the wicked, is thine ho
ste
sse here of the wic
- 13531194ked, or is thy boy of the wicked, or hone
st Bardolfe who
se zeal
13541195burnes in his no
se of the wicked?
13561196Poynes An
swer thou dead elme, an
swer.
13571197Falst. The
fiend hath prickt down Bardolfe irrecouerable,
13581198and his face is Lucifers priuy kitchin, where he doth nothing
13591199but ro
st mault-worms, for the boy there is a good angel about
13601200him, but the diuel blinds him too.
13631202Falst. For one of them
shees in hell already, and burnes
13641203poore
soules: for th'other I owe her mony, and whether
she be
Host
Henry the fourth.
13681206Falst. No I thinke thou art not, I thinke thou art quit for
13691207that, mary there is another inditement vpon thee, for
su
ffering
13701208fle
sh to be eaten in thy hou
se, contrary to the law, for the which
13721210Host. Al vitlars do
so, whats a ioynt of mutton or two in a
13761214Fal. His grace
saies that which his
fle
sh rebels again
st.
13781216Host. Who knockes
so lowd at doore? looke too'th doore
13811218Prince Peyto, how now, what newes?
13821219Peyto The King your father is at Wemin
ster,
13831220And there are twenty weake and wearied po
stes,
13841221Come from the North, and as I came along
13851222I met and ouertooke a dozen captaines,
13861223Bareheaded,
sweating, knocking at the Tauernes,
13871224And asking euery one for
sir Iohn Fal
sta
ffe.
13881225Prince By heauen Poines, I feele me much too blame,
13891226So idely to prophane the precious time,
13901227When tempe
st of commotion like the
south,
13911228Borne with blacke vapour, doth begin to melt,
13921229And drop vpon our bare vnarmed heads,
13931230Giue me my
sword and cloke: Fal
sta
ffe, good night.
13951232Fal. Now comes in the
sweete
st mor
sell of the night, & we
13961233mu
st hence and leaue it vnpickt: more knocking at the doore?
E3 Bar.
The second part of
13991235Bar. You mu
st away to court
sir pre
sently,
14001236A dozen captaines
stay at doore for you.
14011237Fal. Pay the mu
sitians
sirra, farewel ho
ste
sse, farewel Dol,
14021238you
see (my good wenches) how men of merit are
sought af
- 14031239ter, the vnde
seruer may
sleepe, when the man of a
ction is calld
14041240on, farewell good wenches, if I bee not
sent away po
ste, I will
14071242Dol. I cannot
speake: if my heart be not ready to bur
st: wel
14081243sweete Iacke haue a care of thy
selfe.
14111245Host. Well, fare thee well, I haue knowne thee the
se twenty
14121246nine yeares, come pea
se-cod time, but an hone
ster, and truer
14131247hearted man: wel, fare thee wel.
14171250Bard. Bid mi
stris Tere-
sheete come to my ma
ster.
14181251Host. O runne Doll, runne, runne good Doll, come,
she
1418.11252comes blubberd, yea! will you come Doll?
14211254Enter the King in his night-gowne 14221256King Go call the Earles of Surrey and of War.
14231257But ere they come, bid them o're-reade the
se letters,
14241258And well con
sider of them, make good
speed.
14251259How many thou
sand of my poore
st subie
cts,
14261260Are at this howre a
sleepe? ô
sleepe! ô gentle
sleep!
14271261Natures
soft nur
se, how haue I frighted thee,
14281262That thou no more wilt weigh my eye-liddes downe,
14291263And
steep my
sences in forgetfulne
sse,
14301264Why rather
sleepe lie
st thou in
smoaky cribbes,
14311265Vpon vnea
sie pallets
stretching thee,
14321266And hu
sht with buzzing night-
flies to thy
slumber,
14331267Then in the perfumde chambers of the great,
Vnder
Henry the fourth.
14341268Vnder the canopies of co
stly
state,
14351269And lulld with
sound of
sweete
st melody?
14361270O thou dull god, why li'
ste thou with the vile
14371271In loth
some beds, and leaue
st the kingly couch,
14381272A watch-ca
se, or a common larum bell?
14391273Wilt thou vpon the high and giddy ma
sse,
14401274Seale vp the
ship-boies eies, and rocke his braines,
14411275In cradle of the rude imperious
surge,
14421276And in the vi
sitation of the winds,
14431277Who take the ru
ffian pillowes by the top,
14441278Curling their mon
strous heads, and hanging them
14451279With dea
ffing clamour in the
slippery clouds,
14461280That with the hurly death it
selfe awakes?
14471281Can
st thou, ô partiall
sleepe, giue them repo
se,
14481282To the wet
sea
son in an howre
so rude,
14491283And in the calme
st, and mo
st stille
st night,
14501284With al appliances and meanes to boote,
14511285Deny it to a King? then (happy) low lie downe,
14521286Vnea
sie lies the head that weares a crowne.
14531287Enter Warwike, Surry, and sir Iohn 14541289War. Many good morrowes to your maie
stie.
14561291War. Tis one a clocke, and pa
st.
14571292King Why then good morrow to you all my lords.
14581293Haue you read ore the letter that I
sent you?
14601295King Then you perceiue the body of our kingdome,
14611296How foule it is, what rancke di
sea
ses grow,
14621297And with what danger neare the heart of it.
14631298War. It is but as a body yet di
stempered,
14641299Which to his former
strength may be re
stored,
14651300With good adui
se and little medicine,
E4 My
The second part of
14661301My Lord Northumberland wil
soone be coold.
14671302King O God that one might reade the booke of fate,
14681303And
see the reuolution of the times,
14691304Make mountaines leuell, and the continent
14701305Weary of
solide
firmene
sse melt it
selfe
14711306Into the
sea, and other times to
see,
14721307The beachie girdle of the ocean,
14731308Too wide for Neptunes hips, how chances mockes,
14741309And changes
fill the cup of alteration,
14751310With diuers liquors! O if this were
seene,
1475.11311The happie
st youth viewing his progre
sse through,
1475.21312What perills pa
st, what cro
sses to en
sue?
1475.31313Would
shut the booke and
sit him downe and die:
1314Tis not ten yeeres gone,
14761315Since Richard and Northumberland great friends,
14771316Did fea
st togither, and in two yeare after,
14781317Were they at warres: it is but eight yeares
since,
14791318This Percie was the man neere
st my
soule,
14801319Who like a brother toyld in my a
ffaires;
14811320And laied his loue and life vnder my foote,
14821321Yea for my
sake, euen to the eyes of Richard,
14831322Gaue him defyance: but which of you was by?
14841323You cou
sen Neuel, (as I may remember)
14851324When Richard with his eye-brimme full of teares,
14861325Then checkt and rated by Northumberland,
14871326Did
speake the
se wordes now proou'd a prophecie:
14881327Northumberland, thou ladder by the which
14891328My cou
sen Bolingbrooke a
scends my throne,
14901329(Though then (God knowes) I had no
such intent,
14911330But that nece
ssitie
so bowed the
state,
14921331That I and greatne
sse were compeld to ki
sse.)
14931332The time
shall come, thus did he follow it,
14941333The time wil come, that foule
sin gathering head,
14951334Shall breake into corruption:
so went on,
14961335Fortelling this
same times condition,
And
Henry the fourth.
14981337War. There is a hi
storie in all mens liues,
14991338Figuring the natures of the times decea
st:
15001339The which ob
seru'd, a man may prophecie,
15011340With a neere ayme of the maine chance of things,
15021341As yet not come to life, who in their
seedes,
15031342And weake beginning lie intrea
sured:
15041343Such thinges become the hatch and broode of time,
15051344And by the nece
ssary forme of this,
15061345King Richard might create a perfe
ct gue
sse,
15071346That great Northumberland then fal
se to him,
15081347Would of that
seede growe to a greater fal
sene
sse,
15091348Which
should not
find a ground to roote vpon
15111350King. Are the
se thinges then nece
ssities,
15121351Then let vs meet them like nece
ssities,
15131352And that
same word euen now cries out on vs:
15141353They
say the Bi
shop and Northumberland,
15171356Rumour doth double like the voice, and eccho
15181357The numbers of the feared, plea
se it your grace,
15191358To go to bedde: vpon my
soule, my Lord,
15201359The Powers that you alreadie haue
sent foorth,
15211360Shall bring this pri
se in very ea
sily:
15221361To comfort you the more, I haue receiued,
15231362A certain in
stance that Glendour is dead:
15241363Your Maie
stie hath beene this fortnight ill,
15251364And the
se vn
sea
soned howers perforce mu
st adde
15271366King. I will take your coun
saile,
15281367And were the
se inward warres once out of hand,
15291368We would (deare Lords) vnto the holy land.
exeunt 15321369Enter Iustice Shallow, and Iustice E5 Shal.
The second part of
15341371Shallow Come on, come on, come on
sir, giue me your
15351372hand
sir, giue me your hand
sir, an early
stirrer, by the Roode:
15361373and how dooth my good co
sin Silens?
15371374Silence Good morrow good co
sin Shallow.
15381375Shallow And how dooth my coo
sin your bed-fellowe?
15391376and your fayre
st daughter and mine, my god-daughter El
- 15411378Silens Alas, a blacke woo
sel, co
sin Shallow.
15421379Shallow By yea, and no
sir: I dare
saye my coo
sin Wil
- 15431380liam is become a good
scholler, he is at Oxford
still, is hee
15461383Shallow A mu
st then to the Innes a court
shortly: I was
15471384once of Clements Inne, where I thinke they will talke of mad
15491386Silens You were cald Lu
sty Shallow then, co
sin.
15501387Shallow By the ma
sse I was cald any thing, and I would
15511388haue done any thing indeed too, and roundly too: there was
15521389I, and little Iohn Doyt of Sta
fford-
shire, and Blacke George
1390Barnes, and Francis Picke-bone, and Will Squele a Cot
sole
15531391man, you had not foure
such
swinge-bucklers in al the Innes
15551392a court againe: and I may
say to you, we knew where the bona
15561393robes were, and had the be
st of them all at commaundement:
15571394then was Iacke Fal
sta
ffe (now
sir Iohn) a boy, and Page to
15581395Thomas Mowbray duke of Nor
ffolke.
15601396Silens Coo
sin, this
sir Iohn that comes hither anone about
15621398Shall. The
same (
sir Iohn) the very
same, I
see him breake
15631399Skoggins head at the Court gate, when a was a Cracke, not
15641400thus high: and the very
same day did I
fight with one Sam
son
15651401Stocke
fish a Fruiterer behinde Greyes Inne: Ie
su, Ie
su, the
15661402mad dayes that I haue
spent! and to
see how many of my olde
15681404Silens We
shall all follow, coo
sin.
15691405Shal. Certaine, tis certaine, very
sure, very
sure, death (as the
Psalmist
Henry the fourth.
15701406P
salmi
st saith) is certaine to all, all
shall die. How a good yoke
15721408Silens By my troth I was not there.
15731409Shal. Death is certaine: Is olde Dooble of your towne li
- 15761412Shal. Ie
su, Ie
su, dead! a drew a good bow, and dead? a
shot
15771413a
fine
shoote: Iohn a Gaunt loued him well, and betted much
15781414money on his head. Dead! a would haue clapt ith clowt at
15791415twelue
score, and caried you a forehand
shaft a foureteene and
15801416foureteene and a halfe, that it would haue doone a mans heart
15821417good to
see. How a
score of Ewes now?
15831418Silens Thereafter as they be, a
score of good Ewes may be
15871421Silens Heere come twoo of
sir Iohn Fal
sta
ffes men, as I
15861423Enter Bardolfe, and one with him. 15901425Bard. I be
seech you, which is Iu
stice Shallow?
15911426Shall. I am Robert Shallow
sir, a poore E
squire of this
15921427Countie, and one of the Kings Iu
stices of the Peace: what is
15941429Bard. My Captaine,
sir, commends him to you, my Cap
- 15951430taine
sir Iohn Fal
sta
ffe, a tall gentleman, by heauen, and a mo
st 15971432Shall. He greets me wel,
sir, I knew him a good back
sword
15981433man: how doth the good knight? may I a
ske how my Ladie
16001435Bar. Sir, pardon, a
souldiour is better accommodate than
16021437Shallow It is well
sayde in faith
sir, and it is well
sayde in
- 1438deede too, better accommodated, it is good, yea in deede is
it,
The second part of
16041439it, good phra
ses, are
surely, and euer were, very commenda
- 16051440ble, accommodated: it comes of
accommodo, very good, a
16071442Bardolfe Pardon me
sir, I haue heard the worde, phra
se
16081443call you it? by this good day, I knowe not the phra
se, but
16091444I will mayntayne the worde with my
sworde, to bee a
soul
- 16101445diour-like word, and a worde of exceeding good command,
16111446by heauen: accommodated, that is, when a man is, as they
16121447say, accommodated, or when a man is, beeing whereby, a
16131448may be thought to be accommodated, which is an excellent
16161451Iust. It is very iu
st: looke, here comes good
sir Iohn, giue
16171452me your good hand, giue mee your wor
shippes good hand,
16181453by my troth you like well, and beare your yeeres very well,
16201455Fal. I am glad to
see you well, good mai
ster Robert Shal
- 16211456low, mai
ster Soccard (as I thinke.)
16221457Shal. No
sir Iohn, it is my coo
sin Silens, in commi
ssion with
16241459Falst. Good mai
ster Silens, it well be
fits you
should be of
16261461Silens Your good wor
ship is welcome.
16271462Falst. Fie, this is hot weather (gentlemen) haue you proui
- 16281463ded me heere halfe a dozen
su
fficient men?
16291464Shal. Mary haue we
sir, will you
sit?
16301465Falst. Let me
see them I be
seech you.
16311466Shall. Wheres the rowle? wheres the rowle? wheres the
16321467rowle? let me
see, let me
see,
so,
so,
so,
so,
so (
so,
so) yea mary
sir,
16331468Rafe Mouldy, let them appeere as I call, let them do
so, let
thẽ 16341469do
so, let me
see, where is Mouldy?
16371471Sha. What think you
sir Iohn, a good limbd fellow, yong,
strong,
Henry the fourth.
16411475 Fal. Tis the more time thou wert v
sde.
16421476Shal. Ha, ha, ha, mo
st excellent yfaith, things that are moul
- 16431477dy lacke v
se: very
singular good, infaith well
said
sir Iohn, very
16461479Moul. I was prickt wel enough before, and you could haue
16471480let me alone, my old dame will be vndone now for one to doe
16481481her husbandrie, and her drudgery, you need not to haue prickt
16491482me, there are other men
fitter to go out then I.
16511483Fal. Go to, peace Mouldy, you
shall go, Mouldy it is time
16541486Shal. Peace fellow, peace,
stand a
side, know you where you
16551487are? for th'other
sir Iohn: let me
see Simon Shadow.
16571488 Fal. Yea mary, let me haue him to
sit vnder, hees like to be
16611492Fal. Shadow, who
se
sonne art thou?
16631494Fal. Thy mothers
sonne! like enough, and thy fathers
sha
- 16641495dow,
so the
sonne of the female is the
shadow of the male: it is
16651496often
so indeede, but much of the fathers
sub
stance.
16681498Fal. Shadow wil
serue for
summer, pricke him, for we haue
16691499a number of
shadowes,
fill vp the mu
ster booke.
16761505Fal. Thou art a very ragged wart.
16771506Shal. Shall I pricke him
sir Iohn?
16791507Fal. It were
super
fluous, for apparell is built vpon his back,
F and
The second part of
16801508and the whole frame
stands vpon pins, pricke him no more.
16821509Shal. Ha, ha, ha, you can do it
sir, you can do it, I commend
16861512Shal. What trade art thou Feeble?
16891515Fal. You may, but if he had bin a mans tailer hee'd a prickt
16911516you: wilt thou make as manie holes in an enemies battaile, as
16921517thou ha
st done in a womans peticoate.
16931518Feeble I will do my good will
sir, you can haue no more.
16951519Fal. Well
saide good womans tailer, well
saide couragious
16961520Feeble, thou wilt be as valiant as the wrathfull doue, or mo
st 16971521magnanimous mou
se, pricke the womans tailer: wel
M. Shal
- 17001523Feeble I would Wart might haue gone
sir.
17011524Fal. I would thou wert a mans tailer, that thou might
st 17021525mend him and make him
fit to goe, I cannot put him to a pri
- 17031526uate
souldier, that is the leader of
so many thou
sands, let that
17061529Fal. I am bound to thee reuerend Feeble, who is next?
17081530Shal. Peter Bul-calfe o'th greene.
17091531Fal. Yea mary, lets
see Bul-calfe.
17111533Eal. Fore God a likely fellow, come pricke Bul-calfe til hee(roare againe.
17131534Bul. O Lord, good my lord captaine.
17141535Falst. What, do
st thou roare before thou art prickt?
17151536Bul. O Lord
sir, I am a di
sea
sed man.
17171538Bul. A hor
son cold
sir, a cough
sir, which I cought with
17181539ringing in the Kings a
ffaires vpon his coronation day
sir.
17201540Fal. Come, thou
shalt go to the warres in a gowne, we wil
17211541haue away thy cold, and I wil take
such order that thy friendes
17221542shal ring for thee. Is here all?
17231543Shal. Here is two more cald then your number, you mu
st haue
Henry the fourth.
17241544haue but foure here
sir, and
so I pray you goe in with mee to
17261546Fa. Come, I wil go drink with you, but I
cãnot tary dinner:
17271547I am glad to
see you, by my troth ma
ster Shallow.
17291548Shal. O
sir Iohn, do you remember
since we lay all night
17301549in the windmil in
saint Georges
field?
17311550Fal. No more of that ma
ster Shallow.
17331551Shal. Ha, twas a merry night, and is Iane Night-worke a
- 17351553Falst. She liues ma
ster Shallow.
17361554Shal. She neuer could away with me.
17371555Fa. Neuer neuer,
she wold alwaies
say,
she could not abide
17391557Sha. By the ma
sse I conld anger her too'th heart,
she was
17401558then a
bona roba, doth
she hold her owne wel?
17421560Shal. Nay
she mu
st be old,
she cannot chu
se but be old, cer
- 17431561tain
shees old, & had Robin Night-work by old Night-work,
17451563Scilens Thats
fiftie
fiue yeare ago.
17461564Shal. Ha cou
sen Scilens that thou had
st seene that that this
17471565Knight and I haue
seene, ha
sir Iohn,
said I wel?
17491566Fal. We haue heard the chimes at midnight
M. Shallow.
17511567Sha. That we haue, that we haue, that we haue, in faith
sir
17521568Iohn we haue, our watch-worde was Hemboies, come lets to
17531569dinner, come lets to dinner, Ie
sus the daies that wee haue
seene,
17551571Bul. Good mai
ster corporate Bardolfe,
stand my friend,
17561572& heres foure Harry ten
shillings in french crowns for you, in
17571573very truth
sir, I had as liue be hangd
sir as go, and yet for mine
17581574owne part
sir I do not care, but rather becau
se I am vnwilling,
17591575and for mine owne part haue a de
sire to
stay with my friends,
17601576el
se
sir I did not care for mine owne part
so much.
17631578Moul. And good
M. corporall captaine, for my old dames
17641579sake
stand my friend,
she has no body to doe any thing about
F2 her
The second part of
17651580her when I am gone, and
she is old and cannot helpe her
selfe,
17681583Feeble By my troth I care not, a man can die but once, we
17691584owe God a death, ile nere beare a ba
se mind, and't bee my
17701585de
stny:
so, and't be not,
so, no man's too good to
serue's prince,
17711586and let it go which way it will, he that dies this yeere is quit for
17731588Bar Well
said, th'art a good fellow.
17741589Feeble Faith ile beare no ba
se mind.
17751591Fal. Come
sir, which men
shall I haue?
17761592Shal. Foure of which you plea
se.
17771593Bar Sir, a word with you, I haue three pound to free Moul
- 17801596Shal. Come
sir Iohn, which foure wil you haue?
17821598Shal. Mary then, Mouldy, Bulcalfe, Feeble, and Sadow.
17841599Fal. Mouldy and Bulcalfe, for you Mouldy
stay at home, til
17851600you are pa
st seruice: and for your part Bulcalfe, grow til you
17861601come vnto it, I will none of you.
17871602Shal. Sir Iohn,
sir Iohn, doe not your
selfe wrong, they are
17881603your likelie
st men, and I would haue you
serude with the
17901605Fal. Wil you tel me (ma
ster Shallow) how to chu
se a man?
17911606care I for the limbe, the thewes, the
stature, bulke and big a
s- 17921607semblance of a man: giue me the
spirit
M. Shalow: heres Wart,
17931608you
see what a ragged apparance it is, a
shall charge you, and
17951609di
scharge you with the motion of a pewterers hammer, come
17961610o
ff and on
swifter then he that gibbets on the brewers bucket:
17971611and this
same halfe facde fellow Shadow, giue me this man, he
17981612pre
sents no marke to the enemy, the fo-man may with as great
17991613aime leuel at the edge of a pen-knife, and for a retraite how
18001614swiftly wil this Feeble the womans Tailer runne o
ff? O giue
18021615mee the
spare men, and
spare me the great ones, putte mee a
caliuer
Henry the fourth.
18031616caliuer into Warts hand Bardolfe.
18041617Bar. Hold Wart, trauers thas, thas, thas.
18051618Fal. Come mannage me your caliuer:
so, very wel, go to, very
18061619good, exceeding good, O giue me alwaies a little leane, olde
18071620chopt Ballde,
shot: well
said yfaith Wart, th'art a good
scab,
18091622Shal. He is not his crafts-ma
ster, he doth not do it right; I
18101623remember at Mile-end-greene, when I lay at Clements Inne,
18111624I was then
sir Dagonet in Arthurs
show, there was a little
18121625quiuer fellow, and a would mannage you his peece thus, and a
18131626would about and about, and come you in, and come you in,
18151627rah, tah, tah, would a
say, bounce would a
say, and away again
18161628would a go, and againe would a come: I
shall nere
see
such a
18181630Fal. The
se fellowes wooll doe well
M. Shallow, God keep
18191631you
M. Scilens, I will not v
se many words with you, fare you
18201632wel gentlemen both, I thank you, I mu
st a do
sen mile to night:
18211633Bardolfe, giue the
souldiers coates.
18231634Shal. Sir Iohn, the Lord ble
sse you, God pro
sper your af
- 18241635faires, God
send vs peace at your returne, vi
sit our hou
se, let
18251636our old acquaintance be renewed, peraduenture I will with ye
18281639Shal. Go to, I haue
spoke at a word, God keep you.
18301640Fal. Fare you well gentle gentlemen.
exit 1641Shal. On Bardolfe, leade the men away, as I returne I will
18311642fetch o
ff the
se iu
stices, I do
see the bottome of iu
stice Shallow,
18331643Lord, Lord, how
subie
ct we old men are to this vice of lying,
18341644this
same
staru'd iu
stice hath done nothing but prate to me,
18351645of the wildne
sse of his youth, and the feates he hath done a
- 18361646bout Turne-bull
street, and euery third word a lie, dewer paid
18371647to the hearer then the Turkes tribute, I doe remember him
18381648at Clements Inne, like a man made after
supper of a chee
se pa
- 18391649ring, when a was naked, he was for all the worlde like a forkt
18411650reddi
sh, with a head fanta
stically carued vpon it with a knife,
18421651a was
so forlorne, that his demen
sions to any thicke
sight were
F3 inuin-
The second part of
18431652inuincible, a was the very genius of famine, yet lecherous as a
1843.11653monkie, & the whores cald him mandrake, a came ouer in the
18441654rereward of the fa
shion, and
sung tho
se tunes to the ouer
- 1844.11655schutcht hu
swiues, that he heard the Car-men whi
stle, and
1844.21656sware they were his fancies or his good-nights, and nowe is
18451657this vices dagger become a
squire, and talkes as familiarly of
18461658Iohn a Gaunt, as if he had bin
sworne brother to him, and
18471659ile be
sworn a nere
saw him but once in the tylt-yard, and then
18491660he bur
st his head for crowding among the Mar
shalles men, I
18501661saw it and told Iohn a Gaunt he beate his owne name, for you
18511662might haue thru
st him and all his aparell into an eele-
skin, the
18521663ca
se of a treble hoboy was a man
sion for him a Court, and
18531664now has he land and beefes. Well, ile be acquainted with him
18551665if I returne, and t'
shal go hard, but ile make him a philo
sophers
18561666two
stones to me, if the yong Da
se be a baite for the old Pike,
18571667I
see no rea
son in the law of nature but I may
snap at him, till
18611669Enter the Archbishop, Mowbray, Bardolfe, Hastings, within 18631671Bish. What is this forre
st calld?
18641672Hast. Tis Gaultree forre
st, and't
shal plea
se your grace.
18661673Bishop Here
stand, my lords, and
send di
scouerers forth,
18671674To know the numbers of our enemies:
18681675Hastings We haue
sent forth already.
18701677My friends and brethren (in the
se great a
ffaires)
18711678I mu
st acquaint you, that I haue receiu'd
18721679New dated letters from Northumberland,
18731680Their cold intent, tenure, and
sub
stance thus:
18741681Here doth he wi
sh his per
son, with
such powers,
18751682As might hold
sortance with his quallitie,
18761683The which he could not leuy: whereupon
18771684He is retirde to ripe his growing fortunes,
18781685To Scotland, and concludes in hearty prayers,
18791686That your attempts may ouer-liue the hazard
18801687And fearefull meeting of their oppo
site.
Mowb.
Henry the fourth.
18811688Mowb. Thus do the hopes we haue in him, touch ground,
18821689And da
sh them
selues to peeces.
Enter messenger 18851691Messenger We
st of this forre
st,
scarcely o
ff a mile,
18861692In goodly forme comes on the enemy,
18871693And by the ground they hide, I iudge their number
18881694Vpon, or neere the rate of thirty thou
sand.
18891695Mowbray The iu
st proportion that we gaue them out,
18901696Let vs
sway on, and face them in the
field.
18921697Bishop What wel appointed Leader fronts vs heere?
18931699Mowbray I thinke it is my lord of We
stmerland.
18941700West. Health and faire greeting from our Generall,
18951701The prince lord Iohn and duke of Lanca
ster.
18961702Bishop Say on my lord of
We
stmerland in peace,
18971703What doth concerne your comming?
18981704We. Then my
L. vnto your Grace do I in chiefe addre
sse
19001705The
sub
stance of my
speech: if that rebellion
19011706Came like it
selfe, in ba
se and abie
ct rowtes,
19021707Led on by bloody youth, guarded with rage,
19031708And countenaun
st by boyes and beggary.
19041709I
say, if damnd commotion
so appeare,
19051710In his true, natiue, and mo
st proper
shape,
19061711You, reuerend father, and the
se noble Lordes,
19071712Had not beene heere to dre
sse the owgly forme
19091714With your faire Honours. You (lord Archbi
shop)
19101715Who
se Sea is by a ciuile peace maintainde,
19111716Who
se beard the
siluer hand of Peace hath toucht,
19121717Who
se learning and good letters Peace hath tutord,
19131718Who
se white inue
stments
figure innocence,
19141719The Doue, and very ble
ssed
spirite of peace.
19151720Wherefore do you
so ill tran
slate your
selfe
19161721Out of the
speech of peace that beares
such grace,
19171722Into the har
sh and boy
strous tongue of warre?
19181723Turning your bookes to graues, your incke to bloud,
Your
The second part of
19191724Your pennes to launces, and your tongue diuine,
19201725To a lowd trumpet, and a point of warre?
19211726Bish. Wherefore do I this?
so the que
stion
stands:
19221727Brie
fly, to this end we are all di
sea
sde:
19481728The dangers of the daie's but newly gone,
19491729Who
se memorie is written on the earth,
19501730With yet appearing blood, and the examples
19511731Of euery minutes in
stance (pre
sent now,)
19521732Hath put vs in the
se ill-be
seeming armes,
19531733Not to breake peace, or any braunch of it,
19541734But to e
stabli
sh heere a peace indeede,
19551735Concurring both in name and quallitie.
19561736West. When euer yet was your appeale denied
19571737Wherein haue you beene galled by the King?
19581738What peere hath beene
subornde to grate on you?
19591739That you
should
seale this lawle
sse bloody booke
19601740Of forgde rebellion with a
seale diuine,
19611742Bishop My brother Generall, the common wealth
19621744I make my quarrell in particular.
19631745West. There is no neede of any
such redre
sse,
19641746Or if there were, it not belongs to you.
19651747Mowbray why not to him in part, and to vs all
19661748That feele the brui
ses of the daies before?
19671749And
su
ffer the condition of the
se times,
19681750To lay a heauy and vnequall hand
20061752West. But this is meere digre
ssion from my purpo
se.
20071753Here come I from our princely generall,
20081754To know your griefes, to tell you from his Grace,
20091755That he will giue you audience, and wherein
20101756It
shall appeere that your demaunds are iu
st,
20111757You
shall enioy them, euery thing
set o
ff 20121758That might
so much as thinke you enemies.
20131759Mowbray But he hath forcde vs to compel this o
ffer,
And
Henry the fourth.
20141760And it proceedes from policie, not loue.
20151761West. Mowbray, you ouerweene to take it
so:
20161762This o
ffer comes from mercy, not from feare:
20171763For loe, within a ken our army lies:
20181764Vpon mine honour, all too con
fident
20191765To giue admittance to a thought of feare:
20201766Our battell is more full of names than yours,
20211767Our men more perfe
ct in the v
se of armes,
20221768Our armour all as
strong, our cau
se the be
st:
20231769Then Rea
son will our hearts
should be as good:
20241770Say you not then, our o
ffer is compelld.
20251771Mow. Well, by my will, we
shall admit no parlee.
20261772West. That argues but the
shame of your o
ffence,
20271773A rotten ca
se abides no handling.
20281774Hastings Hath the prince Iohn a full commi
ssion,
20291775In very ample vertue of his father,
20301776To heare, and ab
solutely to determine
20311777Of what conditions we
shall
stand vpon?
20321778West. That is intended in the Generalles name,
20331779I mu
se you make
so
slight a que
stion.
20341780Bishop Then take, my lord of We
stmerland, this
scedule,
20351781For this containes our generall grieuances,
20361782Each
seuerall article herein redre
st.
20371783All members of our cau
se both here and hence,
20381784That are en
sinewed to this a
ction,
20391785Acquitted by a true
sub
stantiall forme,
20401786And pre
sent execution of our willes,
20411787To vs and our purpo
ses con
finde,
20421788We come within our awefull bancks againe,
20431789And knit our powers to the arme of peace.
20441790West. This will I
shew the Generall, plea
se you Lords,
20451791In
sight of both our battells we may meete,
20461792At either end in peace, which God
so frame,
20471793Or to the place of di
ffrence call the
swords,
20481794Which mu
st decide it.
Exit Westmerland G Mow.
The second part of
20501796Mou There is a thing within my bo
some tells me
20511797That no conditions of our peace can
stand.
20521798Hastings Feare you not, that if we can make our peace,
20531799Vpon
such large termes, and
so ab
solute,
20541800As our conditions
shall con
sist vpon,
20551801Our peace
shall
stand as
firme as rockie mountaines.
20561802Moub. Yea but our valuation
shal be
such,
20571803That euery
slight, and fal
se deriued cau
se,
20581804Yea euery idle, nice, and wanton rea
son,
20591805Shall to the King ta
ste of this a
ction,
20601806That were our royal faiths martires in loue,
20611807We
shall be winow'd with
so rough a wind,
20621808That euen our corne
shal
seeme as light as cha
ffe,
20631809And good from bad
find no partition.
20641810Bish. No, no, my lord, note this, the King is weary
20651811Of daintie and
such picking greeuances,
20661812For he hath found, to end one doubt by death,
20671813Reuiues two greater in the heires of life:
20681814And therefore will he wipe his tables cleane,
20691815And keepe no tel-tale to his memorie,
20701816That may repeate, and hi
story his lo
sse,
20711817To new remembrance: for full wel he knowes,
20721818He cannot
so preci
sely weed this land,
20731819As his mi
sdoubts pre
sent occa
sion,
20741820His foes are
so enrooted with his friends,
20751821That plucking to vn
fix an enemy,
20761822He doth vnfa
sten
so, and
shake a friend,
20771823So that this land, like an o
ffen
siue wife,
20781824That hath enragde him on to o
ffer
strokes,
20791825As he is
striking, holdes his infant vp,
20801826And hangs re
solu'd corre
ction in the arme,
20821828Hast. Be
sides, the King hath wa
sted al his rods,
20831829On late o
ffendors, that he now doth lacke
20841830The very in
struments of cha
sticement,
20851831So that his power, like to a phangle
sse lion,
May
Henry the fourth.
20881834And therefore be a
ssurde, my good Lord Mar
shall,
20891835If we do now make our attonement well,
20901836Our peace wil like a broken limbe vnited,
20921838Mow. Be it
so, here is returnd my lord of We
stmerland.
20951840West. The prince is here at hand, plea
seth your Lord
ship
20961841To meet his grace iu
st di
stance tweene our armies.
21001842Enter Prince Iohn and his armie. 20971843Mow. Your grace of York, in Gods name then
set forward.
20991844Bishop. Before, and greete his grace (my lord) we come.
21011845Iohn You are well incountred here, my cou
sen Mowbray,
21021846Good day to you, gentle Lord Archbi
shop,
21031847And
so to you Lord Ha
stings, and to all.
21041848My Lord of Yorke, it better
shewed with you,
21051849When that your
flocke a
ssembled by the bell,
21061850Encircled you, to heare with reuerence,
21071851Your expo
sition on the holy text,
21081852That now to
see you here, an yron man talking,
21091853Cheering a rowt of rebells with your drumme,
21101854Turning the word to
sword, and life to death.
21111855That man that
sits within a monarches heart,
21121856And ripens in the
sun-
shine of his fauor,
21131857Would he abu
se the countenance of the King:
21141858Alacke what mi
scheefes might he
set abroach,
21151859In
shadow of
such greatne
sse? with you Lord bi
shop
21161860It is euen
so, who hath not heard it
spoken,
21171861How deepe you were within the bookes of God,
21181862To vs the
speaker in his parliament,
21191863To vs th'imagine voice of God him
selfe,
21201864The very opener and intelligencer,
21211865Betweene the grace, the
san
ctities of heauen,
21221866And our dull workings? O who
shal beleeue,
21231867But you mi
su
se the reuerence of your place,
G2 Imply
The second part of
21241868Imply the countenance and grace of heau'n,
21251869As a fal
se fauorite doth his princes name:
21261870In deedes di
shonorable you haue tane vp,
21271871Vnder the counterfeited zeale of God,
21281872The
subie
cts of his
sub
stitute my father,
21291873And both again
st the peace of heauen and him,
21311875Bishop Good my Lord of Lanca
ster,
21321876I am not here again
st your fathers peace,
21331877But as I told my lord of We
stmerland,
21341878The time mi
sordred doth in common
sen
se,
21351879Crowd vs and cru
sh vs to this mon
strous forme,
21361880To hold our
safety vp: I
sent your grace,
21371881The parcells and particulars of our griefe,
21381882The which hath beene with
scorne
shoued from the court,
21391883Whereon this Hidra,
sonne of warre is borne,
21401884Who
se dangerous eies may well be charmd a
sleepe,
21411885With graunt of our mo
st iu
st, and right de
sires,
21421886And true obedience of this madnes cured,
21431887Stoope tamely to the foote of maie
stie.
21441888Mow. If not, we ready are to trie our fortunes,
21461890Hast. And though we here fal downe,
21471891We haue
supplies to
second our attempt,
21481892If they mi
scarry, theirs
shal
second them,
21491893And
so
succe
sse of mi
schiefe
shall be borne,
21501894And heire from heire
shall hold his quarrell vp,
21511895Whiles England
shall haue generation.
21521896Prince You are too
shallow Ha
stings, much too
shallow,
21541897To
sound the bottome of the after times.
21551898West. Plea
seth your grace to an
swere them dire
ctly,
21561899How far forth you do like their articles.
21571900Prince I like them all, and do allow them well,
21581901And
sweare here by the honour of my bloud,
21591902My fathers purpo
ses haue beene mi
stooke,
21601903And
some about him haue too laui
shly,
Wrested
Henry the fourth.
21611904Wre
sted his meaning and authority.
21621905My Lord, the
se griefes
shall be with
speed redre
st,
21631906Vppon my
soule they
shal, if this may plea
se you,
21641907Di
scharge your powers vnto their
seuerall counties,
21651908As we will ours, and here betweene the armies,
21661909Lets drinke together friendly and embrace,
21671910That all their eies may beare tho
se tokens home,
21681911Of our re
stored loue and amitie.
21691912Bishop I take your princely word for the
se redre
sses,
21701913I giue it you, and will maintaine my word,
21711914And therevpon I drinke vnto your grace.
21721915Prince Go Captaine, and deliuer to the armie
21731916This newes of peace, let them haue pay, and part.
21741917I know it will well plea
se them, hie thee captaine.
21761918Bishop To you my noble lord of We
stmerland.
21771919West. I pledge your grace, and if you knew what paines,
21781920I haue be
stowed to breed this pre
sent peace,
21801921You would drinke freely, but my loue to ye
21811922Shall
shew it
selfe more openly hereafter.
21841925Health to my Lord, and gentle co
sin Mowbray.
21851926Mow. You wi
sh me health in very happy
sea
son,
21861927For I am on the
sodaine
something ill.
21871928Bishop Again
st ill chaunces men are euer mery,
21881929But heauine
sse fore-runnes the good euent.
21891930West. Therefore be mery coze,
since
sodaine
sorrow
21901931Serues to
say thus,
some good thing comes to morow.
21911932Bishop Beleeue me I am pa
ssing light in
spirit.
21921933Mow. So much the wor
se if your owne rule be true.
shout. 21931934Prin. The word of peace is rendred, heark how they
showt.
21951935Mow. This had bin cheerefull after vi
ctory.
21961936Bishop A peace is of the nature of a conque
st,
21971937For then both parties nobly are
subdued,
G3 And
The second part of
22001940And let our army be di
scharged too,
22011941And, good my lord,
so plea
se you, let our traines
22021942March by vs, that we may peru
se the men,
22051945And ere they be di
smi
st, let them march by.
enter Westmerland. 22061946Prince I tru
st Lords we
shal lie to night togither:
22081947Now coo
sin, wherefore
stands our army
stil?
22091948West. The Leaders hauing charge from you to
stand,
22101949Wil not goe o
ff vntil they heare you
speake.
22111950Prince They know their dueties.
enter Hastings 22121951Hastings My lord, our army is di
sper
st already,
22131952Like youthfull
steeres vnyoakt they take their cour
ses,
22141953Ea
st, wea
st, north,
south, or like a
schoole broke vp,
22151954Each hurries toward his home, and
sporting place.
22161955West. Good tidings my lord Ha
stings, for the which
22171956I do are
st thee traitor of high trea
son,
22181957And you lord Archbi
shop, and you lord Mowbray,
22191958Of capitall trea
son I attach you both.
22201959Mowbray Is this proceeding iu
st and honorable?
22221961Bishop will you thus breake your faith?
22241963I promi
st you redre
sse of the
se
same grieuances
22251964Whereof you did complaine, which by mine honour
22261965I will performe, with a mo
st chri
stian care.
22271966But for you rebels, looke to ta
ste the due
22291968Mo
st shallowly did you the
se armes commence,
22301969Fondly brought heere, and fooli
shly
sent hence.
22311970Strike vp our drummes, pur
sue the
scattred
stray:
22321971God, and not we, hath
safely fought to day:
22331972Some guard this traitour to the blocke of death,
22341973Trea
sons true bed, and yeelder vp of breath.
22351974Alarum Enter Falstaffe excursions 22361975Fal. whats your name
sir, of what condition are you, and
of
Henry the fourth.
22381977Cole. I am a Knight
sir, and my name is Coleuile of the
22401979Fal. well then, Colleuile is your name, a Knight is your de
- 22411980gree, and your place the dale: Coleuile
shalbe
still your name,
22421981a traitor your degree, & the dungeon your place, a place deep
22431982enough,
so
shall you be
stil Colleuile of the Dale.
22451983Colle. Are not you
sir Iohn Fal
sta
ffe?
22461984Fal. As good a man as he
sir, who ere I am: doe ye yeelde
22471985sir, or
shall I
sweat for you? if I doe
sweate, they are the drops
22481986of thy louers, and they weepe for thy death, therefore rowze
22491987vp feare and trembling, and do ob
seruance to my mercie.
22511988Colle. I think you are
sir Iohn Fal
sta
ffe, and in that thought
22531990Fal. I haue a whole
school of tongues in this belly of mine,
22541991and not a tongue of them all
speakes any other word but my
22551992name, and I had but a belly of any indi
fferencie, I were
simply
22561993the mo
st a
ctiue fellow in Europe
: my womb, my wombe, my
22571994womb vndoes me, heere comes our Generall.
22591995Enter Iohn Westmerland, and the rest. Retraite 22601996Iohn The heate is pa
st, follow no further now,
22611997Call in the powers good coo
sin We
stmerland.
22621998Now Fal
sta
ffe, where haue you beene all this while?
22631999When euery thing is ended, then you come:
22642000The
se tardy trickes of yours wil on my life
22652001One time or other breake
some gallowes backe.
22662002Fal. I would bee
sory my lord, but it
shoulde bee thus: I
22672003neuer knew yet but Rebuke and Checke, was the rewarde of
22682004Valor: do you thinke me a
swallow, an arrow, or a bullet? haue
22692005I in my poore and old motion the expedition of thought? I
22702006haue
speeded hither with the very extreame
st inch of po
ssibi
- 22712007lity, I haue foundred nine
score and od po
stes, and here trauell
22722008tainted as I am, haue in my pure and immaculate valour, ta
- 22732009ken
sir Iohn Colleuile of the Dale, a mo
st furious Knight and
22752010valorous enemy,: but what of that? he
sawe me, and yeelded,
22762011that I may iu
stly
say with the hooke-no
sde fellow of Rome,
their
The second part of
22772012there co
sin, I came,
saw, and ouercame.
22782013Iohn It was more of his curte
sie then your de
seruing.
22802014Falst. I know not, here he is, and here I yeeld him, and I
22812015be
seech your grace let it be bookte with the re
st of this daies
22822016deedes, or by the Lord, I wil haue it in a particular ballad el
se,
22832017with mine owne pi
cture on the top on't, (Coleuile ki
ssing my
22842018foote) to the which cour
se, if I bee enfor
st, if you doe not all
22852019shew like guilt twoo pences to mee, and I in the cleere skie of
22862020Fame, ore-
shine you as much as the full moone doth the cin
- 22872021dars of the element, (which
shew like pinnes heads to her) be
- 22882022leeue not the worde of the noble: therefore let me haue right,
22912024Prince Thine's too heauy to mount.
22932026Prince Thines too thicke to
shine.
22942027Falst. Let it do
some thing, my good lord, that may doe me
22952028good, and call it what you will.
22982031Prince A famous rebell art thou Colleuile.
22992032Falst. And a famous true
subie
ct tooke him.
23002033Col. I am my lord but as my betters are,
23012034That led me hither, had they bin rulde by me,
23022035You
should haue wonne them deerer then you haue.
23032036Fal. I know not how they
sold them
selues, but thou like a
23042037kind fellow gaue
st thy
selfe away gratis, and I thanke thee for
23072039Prince Now, haue you left pur
suit?
23082040West. Retraite is made, and execution
stayd.
23092041Prince Send Colleuile with his confederates
23112043Blunt leade him hence, and
see you guard him
sure.
23132044And now di
spatch we toward the court my lordes,
23142045I heare the King my father is
sore
sick,
23152046Our newes
shall go before vs to his maie
stie,
23162047Which co
sin you
shall beare to comfort him,
And
Henry the fourth.
23172048And we with
sober
speede will follow you.
23182049Falst. My Lord, I be
seech you giue me leaue to go through
23192050Glo
ster
shire, and when you come to court,
stand my good lord
23212052Prince Fare you wel Fal
sta
ffe, I, in my condition,
shal better
23232054Fal. I would you had the wit, twere better than your duke
- 23242055dome, good faith this
same yong
sober blouded boy doth not
23252056loue me, nor a
mã cãnot make him laugh, but thats no maruel,
23262057he drinkes no wine, theres neuer none of the
se demure boyes
23282058come to any proofe, for thin drinke doth
so ouer-coole theyr
23292059blood, and making many
fish meales, that they fall into a kind
23302060of male greene
sicknes, and then when they marry, they gette
23312061wenches, they are generally fooles and cowards, which
some
23322062of vs
should be too, but for in
flammation: a good
sherris
sacke
23332063hath a two fold operation in it, it a
scendes mee into the braine,
23342064dries me there all the fooli
sh, and dull, and crudy vapors which
23362065enuirone it, makes it apprehen
siue, quicke, forgetiue, full of
23372066nimble,
fiery, and dele
ctable
shapes, which deliuered ore to
23382067the voyce, the tongue, which is the birth, becomes excellent
23392068wit. The
second property of your excellent
sherris, is the war
- 23402069ming of the blood, which before (cold &
setled,) left the lyuer
23412070white & pale, which is the badge of pu
silanimitie and cowar
- 23432071dize: but the
sherris warmes it, and makes it cour
se from the
23442072inwards to the partes extreames, it illumineth the face, which
23452073as a beakon, giues warning to al the re
st of this little kingdom
23462074man to arme, and then the vitall commoners, and inland petty
23472075spirits, mu
ster me all to their captaine, the heart: who great, and
23482076pu
fft vp with this retinew, doth any deed of courage: and this
23502077valour comes of
sherris,
so that skill in the weapon is nothing
23512078without
sacke (for that
sets it aworke) and learning a meere
23522079whoord of gold kept by a diuell, till
sacke commences it, and
23532080sets it in a
ct and v
se. Hereof comes it, that Prince Harry is
23542081valiant, for the cold blood he did naturally inherite of his fa
- 23552082ther, he hath like leane,
sterile, and bare land, manured, hu
s- 23562083banded and tilld, with excellent endeuour of drinking good
H and
The second part of
23582084and good
store of fertile
sherris, that he is become very hote
23592085and valiant. If I had a thou
sand
sonnes, the
fir
st humane prin
- 23602086ciple I would teach them,
should be, to for
sweare thin potati
- 23612087ons, and to addi
ct them
selues to
sacke. How now Bardolfe?
23632089Bar. The army is di
scharged all, and gone.
23642090Fal. Let them goe, ile through Glo
ster
shire, and there will
23652091I vi
sit
M. Robert Shallow E
squire, I haue him already tem
- 23662092pring betweene my
finger and my thumb, and
shortly will I
23702094Enter the King, Warwike, Kent, Thomas duke of Clarence, 2095Humphrey of Gloucester. 23712096King Now lords, if God doth giue
succe
ssefull end,
23722097To this debate that bleedeth at our doores,
23732098We will our youth leade on to higher
fields,
23742099And draw no
swords but what are
san
cti
fied:
23752100Our nauie is addre
st, our power colle
cted,
23762101Our
sub
stitutes in ab
sence wel inue
sted,
23772102And euery thing lies leuell to our wi
sh,
23782103Only we want a little per
sonal
strength:
23792104And paw
se vs til the
se rebels now afoote,
23802105Come vnderneath the yoke of gouernment.
23812106War. Both which we doubt not, but your maie
sty
23832108King Humphrey my
sonne of Glo
ster, where is the prince
23852110Glo. I thinke hees gone to hunt, my lord, at Win
sor.
23892113King Is not his brother Thomas of Clarence with him?
23912114Glo. No, my good lord, he is in pre
sence here.
23922115Clar. What would my lord and father?
23932116Kin Nothing but well to thee Thomas of Clarence,
23942117How chance thou art not with the prince thy brother?
23952118He loues thee, and thou do
st negle
ct him, Thomas,
23962119Thou ha
st a better place in his a
ffe
ction
Then
Henry the fourth.
23972120Then all thy brothers, cherri
sh it my boy:
23982121And noble o
ffices thou mai
st e
ffe
ct 24002123Betweene his greatne
sse and thy other brethren:
24012124Therefore omit him not, blunt not his loue,
24022125Nor loo
se the good aduantage of his grace,
24032126By
seeming cold, or carele
sse of his will,
24042127For he is gracious if he be ob
seru'de,
24052128He hath a teare for pittie, and a hand,
24062129Open as day for meeting charitie,
24072130Yet notwith
standing being incen
st, he is
flint,
24082131As humorous as winter, and as
sodaine
24092132As
flawes congealed in the
spring of day:
24102133His temper therefore mu
st be well ob
seru'd,
24112134Chide him for faults, and do it reuerently,
24122135When you perceiue his bloud inclind to mirth:
24132136But being moody, giue him time and
scope,
24142137Till that his pa
ssions, like a whale on ground
24152138Confound them
selues with working, learne this Thomas,
24162139And thou
shalt proue a
shelter to thy friends,
24172140A hoope of gold to binde thy brothers in,
24182141That the vnited ve
ssell of their bloud,
24192142(Mingled with venome of
sugge
stion,
24202143As force perforce, the age will powre it in,)
24212144Shall neuer leake, though it doe worke as
strong,
24232146Cla. I
shall ob
serue him with all care and loue.
24242147King Why art thou not at Win
sore with him Thomas?
24262148Tho. He is not there to day, he dines in London.
24302150Tho. With Poines, and other his continuall followers.
24322151King Mo
st subie
ct is the fatte
st soyle to weeds,
24332152And he, the noble image of my youth,
24342153Is ouer
spread with them, therefore my griefe
24352154Stretches it
selfe beyond the howre of death:
24362155The bloud weepes from my heart when I do
shape,
H2 In
The second part of
24372156In formes imaginary, th'unguyded daies,
24382157And rotten times that you
shall looke vpon,
24392158When I am
sleeping with my aunce
stors:
24402159For when his head-
strong riot hath no curbe,
24412160When rage and hot bloud are his coun
sellors,
24422161When meanes and laui
sh manners meete together,
24432162Oh with what wings
shal his a
ffe
ctions
flie,
24442163Towards fronting peril and oppo
sde decay?
24452164War. My gracious Lord, you looke beyond him quite,
24462165The prince but
studies his companions,
24472166Like a
strange tongue wherein to gaine the language:
24482167Tis needfnll that the mo
st immode
st word,
24492168Be lookt vpon and learnt, which once attaind,
24502169Your highne
sse knowes comes to no further v
se,
24512170But to be knowne and hated:
so, like gro
sse termes,
24522171The prince will in the perfe
ctne
sse of time,
24532172Ca
st o
ff his followers, and their memory
24542173Shall as a pattern, or a mea
sure liue,
24552174By which his grace mu
st mete the liues of other,
24562175Turning pa
st-euils to aduantages.
24572176King Tis
seldome when the bee doth leaue her comb,
24582177In the dead carion: who's here, We
stmerland?
24612179West. Health to my
soueraigne, and new happine
sse
24622180Added to that that I am to deliuer,
24632181Prince Iohn your
sonne doth ki
sse your graces hand.
24642182Mowbray, the Bi
shop, Scroope, Ha
stings, and al,
24652183Are brought to the corre
ction of your law:
24662184There is not now a rebels
sword vn
sheathd,
24672185But Peace puts forth her oliue euery where,
24682186The manner how this a
ction hath bin borne,
24692187Here at more lei
sure may your highne
sse reade,
24702188With euery cour
se in his particular.
24712189King O We
stmerland, thou art a
summer bird,
24722190Which euer in the haunch of winter
sings
24732191The lifting vp of day: looke heres more newes.
enter Harcor. Harc.
Henry the fourth.
24762192Harc. From enemies, heauens keep your maie
sty,
24772193And when they
stand again
st you, may they fall
24782194As tho
se that I am come to tell you of:
24792195The Earle Northumberland, and the Lord Bardolfe,
24802196With a great power of Engli
sh, and of Scots,
24812197Are by the
shrieue of York
shire ouerthrowne,
24822198The manner, and true order of the
fight,
24832199This packet, plea
se it you, containes at large,
24842200Ki. And wherfore
should the
se good news make me
sicke?
24862201Will Fortune neuer come with both hands full.
24872202But wet her faire words
stil in foule
st termes?
24882203She either giues a
stomach, and no foode,
24892204Such are the poore in health: or el
se a fea
st,
24902205And takes away the
stomach,
such are the rich
24912206That haue aboundance, and enioy it not:
24922207I
should reioyce now at this happy newes,
24932208And now my
sight failes, and my braine is giddy,
24942209O me, come neare me, now I am much ill.
24972212West. My
soueraigne Lord, cheere vp your
selfe, look vp.
24992213War. Be patient princes, you do know the
se
fits
25002214Are with his highne
sse very ordinary.
25012215Stand from him, giue him ayre, heel
straight be wel.
25032216Clar. No, no, he cannot long hold out the
se pangs,
25042217Th'ince
ssant care and labour of his mind,
25052218Hath wrought the Mure that
should con
fine it in,
25062219So thin that life lookes through.
25072220Hum. The people feare me, for they do ob
serue
25082221Vnfather'd heires, and lothly births of nature,
25092222The
sea
sons change their manners, as the yeere
25102223Had found
some moneths a
sleepe, and leapt them ouer.
25112224Clar. The riuer hath thrice
flowed, no ebbe between,
25122225And the old folk, (Times doting chronicles,)
25132226Say, it did
so a little time before
25142227That our great grand
sire Edward,
sickt and died.
H3 War.
The second part of
25152228War. Speake lower, princes, for the King recouers.
25172229Hum. This apoplexi wil certaine be his end.
25182230King I pray you take me vp, and beare me hence,
25202232Let there be no noy
se made, my gentle friends,
25212233Vnle
sse
some dull and fauourable hand
25222234Will whi
sper mu
sique to my weary
spirite.
25232235War. Call for the mu
sique in the other roome.
25242236King Set me the crowne vpon my pillow here.
25252237Clar. His eie is hollow, and he changes much.
25262238War. Le
sse noy
se, le
sse noy
se.
Enter Harry 25282239Prince Who
saw the duke of Clarence?
25292240Clar. I am here brother, ful of heauine
sse.
25302241Prince How now, raine within doores, and none abroad?
25332244Prince Heard he the good newes yet? tell it him.
25352245Hum. He altred much vpon the hearing it,
25362246Prince If he be
sicke with ioy, heele recouer without phi
- 25382248War. Not
so much noy
se my Lords,
sweete prince,
speake
25392249lowe, the King your father is di
spo
sde to
sleepe.
25412250Cla. Let vs withdraw into the other roome.
25422251War. Wilt plea
se your Grace to go along with vs?
25432252Prince No, I wil
sit and watch heere by the King.
25442253Why doth the Crowne lie there vpon his pillow,
25452254Being
so trouble
some a bedfellow?
25462255O poli
sht perturbation! golden care!
25472256That keep
st the ports of Slumber open wide
25482257To many a watchfull night,
sleepe with it now!
25492258Yet not
so
sound, and halfe
so deeply
sweete,
25502259As he who
se brow (with homely biggen bound)
25512260Snores out the watch of night. O maie
stie!
25522261When thou do
st pinch thy bearer, thou do
st sit
25532262Like a rich armour worne in heate of day,
25542263That
scald
st with
safty (by his gates of breath)
There
Henry the fourth.
25552264There lies a dowlny feather which
stirs not,
25562265Did he
su
spire, that light and weightle
sse dowlne
25572266Perforce mu
st moue my gracious lord my father:
25582267This
sleepe is
sound indeede, this is a
sleepe,
25592268That from this golden Rigoll hath diuor
st 25602269So many Engli
sh Kings, thy deaw from me,
25612270Is teares and heauy
sorowes of the blood,
25622271Which nature, loue, and
filiall tenderne
sse
25632272Shall (O deare father) pay thee plenteou
sly:
25642273My due from thee is this imperiall Crowne,
25652274Which as immediate from thy place and blood,
25662275Deriues it
selfe to me: loe where it
sits,
25672276Which God
shal guard, and put the worlds whole
strength
25682277Into one giant arme, it
shal not force,
25692278This lineal honor from me, this from thee
25702279Will I to mine leaue, as tis left to me.
exit. 25722280Enter Warwicke, Gloucester, Clarence. 25732281King Warwicke, Glouce
ster, Clarence.
25772284King Why did you leaue me here alone, my lords?
25782285Cla. We left the prince my brother here my liege, who vn
- 25792286dertooke to
sit and watch by you.
25802287King The prince of Wales, where is he? let me
see him: he
25822289War. This doore is open, he is gone this way.
25832290Hum. He came not through the chamber where we
staide.
25852291King Where is the Crowne? who took it from my pillow?
25872292War. When we withdrew, my liege, we left it here.
25892293King The Prince hath tane it hence, go
seeke him out:
25912294Is he
so ha
stie, that he doth
suppo
se my
sleepe my death?
25922295Finde him, my lord of Warwicke, chide him hither.
25932296This part of his conioynes with my di
sea
se,
25942297And helps to end me:
see,
sonnes, what things you are,
25962298How quickly nature falls into reuolt,
For
The second part of
25982300For this, the fooli
sh ouer-carefull fathers
25992301Haue broke their
sleepe with thoughts,
26002302Their braines with care, their bones with indu
stry:
26012303For this they haue ingro
ssed and pilld vp,
26022304The cankred heapes of
strange atcheeued gold:
26032305For this they haue beene thoughtfull to inue
st 26042306Their
sonnes with arts and martiall exerci
ses,
26052307When like the bee toling from euery
flower,
26062308Our thigh, packt with waxe, our mouthes with hony,
26072309We bring it to the hiue: and like the bees,
26082310Are murdred for our paines, this bitter ta
ste
26092311Yeelds his engro
ssements to the ending father,
26122312Now where is he that will not
stay
so long,
26132313Till his friend
sickne
sse hands determind me.
Enter Warwicke. 26142314War. My Lord, I found the prince in the next roome,
26152315Wa
shing with kindly teares, his gentle cheekes,
26162316With
such a deepe demeanour in great
sorrow,
26172317That tyranny, which neuer quaft but bloud,
26182318Would by beholding him, haue wa
sht his knife,
26192319With gentle eie-drops, hee is comming hither.
Enter Harry. 26202320King But wherefore did he take away the crowne?
26222321Loe where he comes, come hither to me Harry,
26232322Depart the chamber, leaue vs here alone.
exeunt. 26242323Harry I neuer thought to heare you
speake againe.
26252324King Thy wi
sh was father (Harry,) to that thought
26262325I
stay too long by thee, I weary thee,
26272326Do
st thou
so hunger for mine emptie chaire,
26282327That thou wilt needes inue
st thee with my honors,
26292328Before thy howre be ripe! O fooli
sh youth,
26302329Thou
seek
st the greatne
sse that will ouerwhelme thee,
26312330Stay but a little, for my clowd of dignity
26322331Is held from falling with
so weake a wind,
26332332That it will quickly drop: my day is dim,
26342333Thou ha
st stolne that, which after
some few houres,
26352334Were thine, without o
ffence, and at my death,
26362335Thou ha
st seald vp my expe
ctation,
Thy
Henry the fourth.
26372336Thy life did manife
st thou lou'd
st me not,
26382337And thou wilt haue me die, a
ssurde of it,
26392338Thou hid
st a thou
sand daggers in thy thoughts,
26402339Whom thou ha
st whetted on thy
stony heart,
26412340To
stab at halfe an hower of my life.
26422341What, can
st thou not forbeare me halfe an hower?
26432342Then get thee gone, and digge my graue thy
selfe,
26442343And bid the mery bells ring to thine eare,
26452344That thou art crowned, not that I am dead:
26462345Let all the teares that
should bedew my hear
se
26472346Be drops of Balme, to
san
cti
fie thy head,
26482347Only compound me with forgotten du
st.
26492348Giue that which gaue thee life, vnto the wormes,
26502349Plucke downe my o
fficers, breake my decrees,
26512350For now a time is come to mocke at Forme:
26522351Harry the
fift is crownd, vp vanitie,
26532352Downe royall
state, all you
sage coun
sailers, hence,
26542353And to the Engli
sh Court a
ssemble now
26552354From euery region, apes of idlene
sse:
26562355Now neighbour con
fines, purge you of your
scumme
26572356Haue you a ru
ffin that will
sweare, drinke, daunce,
26582357Reuell the night, rob, murder, and commit
26592358The olde
st sinnes, the newe
st kind of waies?
26602359Be happy, he will trouble you no more.
26612360England
shal double gild his trebble gilt,
26622361England
shall giue him o
ffice, honour, might:
26632362For the
fift Harry, from curbd licence, plucks
26642363The mu
ssel of re
straint, and the wild dogge
26652364Shal
fle
sh his tooth on euery innocent.
26662365O my poore kingdome!
sicke with ciuill blowes:
26672366When that my care could not withhold thy riots,
26682367What wilt thou do when riot is thy care?
26692368O thou wilt be a wilderne
sse againe,
26702369Peopled with woolues, thy old inhabitants.
26712370Prince O pardon me, my liege, but for my teares,
26732371The moi
st impediments vnto my
speech,
I I
The second part of
26742372I had fore
stald this deere and deep rebuke,
26752373Ere you with griefe had
spoke, and I had heard
26762374The cour
se of it
so far: there is your crowne:
26772375And he that weares the crowne immortally,
26782376Long gard it yours: if I a
ffe
ct it more,
26792377Then as your honour, and as your renowne,
26802378Let me no more from this obedience ri
se,
26812379Which my mo
st inward true and duteous
spirit,
26822380Teacheth this pro
strate and exterior bending,
26832381God witne
sse with me. When I here came in,
26842382And found no cour
se of breath within your maie
sty,
26852383How cold it
strooke my heart! if I do faine,
26862384O let me in my pre
sent wildne
sse die,
26872385And neuer liue to
shew th'incredulous world,
26882386The noble change that I haue purpo
sed.
26892387Comming to looke on you, thinking you dead,
26902388And dead almo
st, my liege, to thinke you were,
26912389I
spake vnto this crowne as hauing
sence,
26922390And thus vpbraided it: the care on thee depending,
26932391Hath fed vpon the body of my father,
26942392Therefore thou be
st of gold, art wor
se then gold,
26952393Other le
sse
fine, in karrat more precious,
26962394Pre
seruing life in medcine potable:
26972395But thou, mo
st fine, mo
st honourd, mo
st renown'd,
26982396Ha
st eate thy bearer vp: thus my mo
st royall liege,
27002397Accu
sing it, I put it on my head,
27012398To trie with it as with an enemy,
27022399That had before my face murdered my father,
27032400The quarrell of a true inheritour,
27042401But if it did infe
ct my bloud with ioy,
27052402Or
swell my thoughts to any
straine of pride,
27062403If any rebel or vaine
spirit of mine,
27072404Did with the lea
st a
ffe
ction of a welcome,
27082405Giue entertainement to the might of it,
27092406Let God for euer keep it from my head,
And
Henry the fourth.
27102407And make me as the poore
st va
ssaile is,
27112408That doth with aw and terror kneele to it.
27132409King God put in thy mind to take it hence,
27142410That thou might
st win the more thy fathers loue,
27152411Pleading
so wi
sely in excu
se of it:
27162412Come hither Harry,
sit thou by my bed,
27172413And heare (I thinke) the very late
st coun
saile
27182414That euer I
shal breathe. God knowes (my
sonne)
27192415By what by-paths, and indire
ct crookt waies,
27202416I met this crowne, and I my
selfe know well,
27212417How trouble
some it
sate vpon my head:
27222418To thee it
shall de
scend with better quiet,
27232419Better opinion, better con
firmation,
27242420For al the
soyle of the atchieuement goes,
27252421With me into the earth, it
seemd in me,
27262422But as an honor
snatcht with boi
strous hand,
27272423And I had many liuing to vpbraide
27282424My gaine of it, by their a
ssistances,
27292425Which daily grew to quarrell and to bloud
shed,
27302426Wounding
suppo
sed peace: all the
se bold feares
27322427Thou
see
st with perill I haue an
swerd:
27332428For all my raigne hath beene but as a Scene,
27342429A
cting that argument: and now my death
27352430Changes the mood, for what in me was purcha
st,
27362431Fals vpon thee in a more fairer
sort.
27372432So thou the garland wear
st succe
ssiuely,
27382433Yet though thou
stand
st more
sure then I could do,
27392434Thou art not
firme enough,
since griefes are greene,
27402435And all thy friends which thou mu
st make thy friends,
27412436Haue but their
stings and teeth newly tane out:
27422437By who
se fell working I was
fir
st aduaun
st,
27432438And by who
se power I well might lodge a feare
27442439To be againe di
splacde: which to auoyde,
27452440I cut them o
ff, and had a purpo
se, now
27462441To leade out manie to the Holy Land,
27472442Le
st re
st, and lying
stil, might make them looke,
I2 Too
The second part of
27482443Too neare vnto my
state: therefore, my Harry,
27502444Be it thy cour
se to bu
sie giddie mindes
27512445With forraine quarrells, that a
ction hence borne out,
27522446May wa
ste the memory of the former dayes.
27532447More would I, but my lungs are wa
sted
so,
27542448That
strength of
speech is vtterly denied me:
27552449How I came by the crowne, O God forgiue,
27562450And grant it may with thee in true peace liue.
27582451Prince You won it, wore it, kept it, gaue it me,
27592452Then plaine and right mu
st my po
sse
ssion be,
27602453Which I with more then with a common paine,
27612454Gain
st all the world will rightfully maintaine.
enter Lancaster. 27642455King Looke, looke, here comes my Iohn of Lanca
ster.
27662456Lanc. Health, peace, and happine
sse to my royall father.
27682457King Thou bring
st me happine
sse and peace
sonne Iohn,
27702458But health (alacke) with youthfull wings is
flowne
27712459From this bare witherd trunke: vpon thy
sight,
27722460My worldly bu
sines makes a period:
27752463King Doth any name perticular belong
27762464Vnto the lodging where I
fir
st did
swound?
27772465War. Tis cald Ieru
salem, my noble Lord.
27782466King Laud be to God, euen there my life mu
st end.
27802467It hath bin prophecide to me many yeares,
27812468I
should not die, but in Ieru
salem,
27822469Which vainely I
suppo
sde the Holy Land:
27832470But beare me to that chamber, there ile lie,
Enter Shallow,Falstaffe, and Bardolfe 27842471In that Ieru
salem
shall Harry die.
27882472Shal. By cock and pie
sir, you
shal not away to night, what
27902474Falst. You mu
st excu
se me ma
ster Robert Shallow.
27912475Shal. I will not excu
se you, you
shall not be excu
sde, ex
- 27922476cu
ses
shall not be admitted, there is no excu
se
shall
serue, you
Shal
Henry the fourth.
27962479Shal. Dauy, Dauy, Dauy, Dauy, let me
see Dauy, let me
see
27972480Dauy, let me
see, yea mary
William Cooke, bid him come
27982481hither,
sir Iohn, you
shal not be excu
sed.
27992482Dauy Mary
sir thus, tho
se precepts can not be
serued, and
28002483againe
sir,
shal we
sow the hade land with wheate?
28022484Shal. With red wheat Dauy, but for
William Cooke
28042486Dauy Yes
sir, here is now the Smiths note for
shooing and
28072488Shal. Let it be ca
st and payed:
sir Iohn, you
shal not be ex
- 28092490Dauy Now
sir, a new lincke to the bucket mu
st needes be
28102491had: and
sir, do you meane to
stop any of V
Williams wages, a
- 28112492bout the
sacke he lo
st at Hunkly Faire?
28132493Shal. A
shall an
swer it:
some pigeons Dauy, a couple of
28142494short legg'd hens, a ioynt of mutton, and any pretty little tinie
28152495Kick-
shawes, tell william Cooke.
28172496Dauy Doth the man of warre
stay all night
sir?
28182497Shal. Yea Dauy, I will v
se him well, a friend i'th court is
28192498better then a penie in pur
se: v
se his men wel Dauy, for they are
28202499arrant knaues, and will backbite.
28222500Dauy No wor
se then they are back-bitten
sir, for they haue
28242502Shal. Well conceited Dauy, about thy bu
sine
sse Dauy.
28262503Dauy I be
seech you
sir to countenance
William Vi
sor
28272504of Woncote again
st Clement Perkes a'th hill.
28292505Sha. There is many complaints Dauy again
st that Vi
sor,
28302506that Vi
sor is an arrant knaue on my knowledge.
28322507Dauy I graunt your wor
ship that he is a knaue
sir: but yet
28332508God forbid
sir, but a knaue
should haue
some countenance at
28342509his friends reque
st, an hone
st man
sir is able to
speake for him
- 28352510selfe, when a knaue is not: I haue
seru'de your wor
ship truly
sir
28362511this eight yeares and I cannot once, or twice in a quarter beare
28372512out a knaue again
st an hone
st man, I haue litle credit with your
28392513wor
ship: the knaue is mine hone
st friend
sir, therfore I be
seech
I3 Shal
The second part of
28422515Shal. Go to I
say, he
shal haue no wrong, look about Dauy:
28442516where are you
sir Iohn? come, come, come, o
ff with your boots,
28452517giue me your hand ma
ster Bardolfe.
28462518Bard. I am glad to
see your wor
ship.
28472519Shal I thank thee with my heart kind ma
ster Bardolfe, and
28482520welcome my tall fellow, come
sir Iohn.
28502521Falst. Ile follow you good mai
ster Robert Shallow: Bar
- 28512522dolfe, looke to our hor
ses: if I were
sawed into quantities, I
28522523should make foure dozen of
such berded hermites
staues as
28532524mai
ster Shallow: it is a wonderfull thing to
see the
semblable
28542525coherence of his mens
spirits, and his, they, by ob
seruing him,
28552526do beare them
selues like fooli
sh Iu
stices: hee, by conuer
sing
28562527with them, is turned into a Iu
stice-like
seruingman, their
spirits
28582528are
so married in coniun
ction, with the participation of
society,
28592529that they
flocke together in con
sent, like
so many wild-gee
se.
28602530If I had a
suite to ma
ster Shallow, I would humour his men
28612531with the imputation, of beeing neere their mai
ster: if to his
28622532men, I would curry with mai
ster Shallow, that no man could
28632533better commaund his
seruants. It is certaine, that eyther wi
se
28642534bearing, or ignorant cariage is caught, as men take di
sea
ses one
28662535of another: therefore let men take heede of their company. I
28672536will deui
se matter enough out of this Shallow, to keepe prince
28682537Harry in continuall laughter, the wearing out of
sixe fa
shions,
28692538which is foure termes, or two a
ctions, and a
shal laugh without
28702539interuallums. O it is much that a lie, with a
slight oathe, and
28712540a ie
st, with a
sad browe, will doe with a fellow that neuer had
28722541the ach in his
shoulders: O you
shall
see him laugh til his face
28742542be like a wet cloake ill laide vp.
28762544Falst. I come mai
ster Shallow, I come ma
ster Shallow.
28792545Enter Warwike, duke Humphrey,L. chiefe Iustice, Thomas 28812547War. How now, my lord chiefe Iu
stice, whither away?
28842549War. Exceeding well, his cares are now all ended.
War.
Henry the fourth.
28872551War. Hees walkt the way of nature,
28882552And to our purpo
ses he liues no more.
28892553Iust. I would his Maie
stie had calld me with him:
28902554The
seruice that I truely did his life,
28912555Hath left me open to all iniuries.
28922556War. Indeede I thinke the yong King loues you not.
28932557Iust. I know he doth not, and do arme my
selfe
28942558To welcome the condition of the time,
28952559Which cannot looke more hideou
sly vpon me,
28962560Than I haue drawne it in my fanta
sie.
28972561Enter Iohn, Thomas, and Humphrey. 28992562War. Heere come the heauy i
ssue of dead Harry:
29002563O that the liuing Harry had the temper
29012564Of he, the wor
st of the
se three gentlemen!
29022565How many Nobles then
should holde their places,
29032566That mu
st strike
saile to
spirites of vile
sort?
29042567Iust. O God, I feare all will be ouer-turnd.
29052568Iohn Good morrow coo
sin Warwicke, good morrow.
29072570Iohn We meete like men that had forgot to
speake.
29082571War. We do remember, but our argument
29092572Is all too heauy to admit much talke.
29102573Iohn Well, peace be with him that hath made vs heauy.
29112574Iust. Peace be with vs, le
st we be heauier.
29122575Humph. O good my lord, you haue lo
st a friend indeede,
29132576And I dare
sweare you borrow not that face
29142577Of
seeming
sorrow, it is
sure your owne.
29152578Iohn Though no man be a
ssurde what grace to
finde,
29162579You
stand in colde
st expe
ctation,
29172580I am the
sorier, would twere otherwi
se.
29182581Cla. Well, you mu
st now
speake
sir Iohn Fal
sta
ffe faire,
29192582Which
swimmes again
st your
streame of quallitie.
29202583Iust. Sweet princes, what I did, I did in honor,
29212584Led by th'impartiall condu
ct of my
soule.
29222585And neuer
shall you
see that I will begge
29232586A ragged and fore
stald remi
ssion,
If
The second part of
29242587If truth and vpright innocencie faile me.
29252588Ile to the King my mai
ster that is dead,
29262589And tell him who hath
sent me after him.
Enter the Princeand Blunt 29292591Iust. Good morrow, and God
saue your maie
stie.
29302592King Henry This new and gorgeous garment Maie
sty
29312593Sits not
so ea
sie on me, as you thinke:
29322594Brothers, you mixt your
sadne
sse with
some feare,
29332595This is the Engli
sh, not the Turki
sh court,
29342596Not Amurath an Amurath
succeedes,
29352597But Harry Harry: yet be
sad, good brothers,
29362598For by my faith it very well becomes you:
29372599Sorrow
so royally in you appeares,
29382600That I will deeply put the fa
shion on,
29392601And weare it in my heart: why then be
sad,
29402602But entertaine no more of it, good brothers,
29412603Then a ioynt burden layd vpon vs all,
29422604For me, by heauen (I bid you be a
ssurde)
29432605Ile be your father, and your brother too,
29442606Let me but beare your loue, Ile beare your cares:
29452607Yet weepe that Harries dead, and
so will I,
29462608But Harry liues, that
shal conuert tho
se teares
29472609By number into howres of happine
sse.
29482610Bro. We hope no otherwi
se from your maie
sty.
29492611King Henry You al looke
strangely on me, and you mo
st,
29502612You are I thinke a
ssurde I loue you not.
29512613Iust. I am a
ssurde, if I be mea
surde rightly,
29522614Your maie
sty hath no iu
st cau
se to hate me.
29532615King Henry No? how might a prince of my great hopes forget,
29542616So great indignities you laid vpon me?
29552617What, rate, rebuke, and roughly
send to pri
son,
29562618Th'immediate heire of England? was this ea
sie?
29572619May this be wa
sht in lethy and forgotten?
29582620Iust. I then did v
se the per
son of your father,
29592621The image of his power lay then in me,
29602622And in th'admini
stration of his law,
Whiles
Henry the fourth.
29612623Whiles I was bu
sie for the common wealth,
29622624Your Highne
sse plea
sed to forget my place,
29632625The maie
stie and power of law and iu
stice,
29642626The image of the King whom I pre
sented,
29652627And
strooke me in my very
seate of iudgement,
29662628Whereon, (as an o
ffendor to your father,)
29672629I gaue bold way to my authority,
29682630And did commit you: if the deed were ill,
29692631Be you contented, wearing now the garland,
29702632To haue a
sonne
set your decrees at naught?
29712633To plucke downe Iu
stice from your awful bench?
29722634To trip the cour
se of law, and blunt the
sword,
29732635That guards the peace and
safetie of your per
son?
29742636Nay more, to
spurne at your mo
st royall image,
29752637And mocke your workings in a
second body?
29762638Que
stion your royall thoughts, make the ca
se yours,
29772639Be now the father, and propo
se a
sonne,
29782640Heare your owne dignity
so much prophan'd,
29792641See your mo
st dreadfull lawes
so loo
sely
slighted,
29802642Behold your
selfe
so by a
sonne di
sdained:
29812643And then imagine me taking your part,
29822644And in your power
soft
silencing your
sonne,
29832645After this cold con
siderance
sentence me,
29842646And as you are a King,
speake in your
state,
29852647What I haue done that mi
sbecame my place,
29862648My per
son, or my lieges
soueraigntie.
29872649King Henry You are right Iu
stice, and you weigh this well,
29882650Therefore
still beare the Ballance and the Sword,
29892651And I do wi
sh your honors may encrea
se,
29902652Til you do liue to
see a
sonne of mine
29912653O
ffend you, and obey you as I did:
29922654So
shall I liue to
speake my fathers words,
29932655Happie am I that haue a man
so bold,
29942656That dares do iu
stice on my proper
sonne:
29952657And not le
sse happie, hauing
such a
sonne,
29962658That would deliuer vp his greatne
sse
so,
K Into
The second part of
29972659Into the hands of Iu
stice you did commit me:
29982660For which I do commit into your hand,
29992661Th'vn
stained
sword that you haue v
sde to beare,
30002662With this remembrance, that you v
se the
same
30012663With the like bold, iu
st, and impartial
spirit,
30022664As you haue done gain
st me: there is my hand,
30032665You
shall be as a father to my youth,
30042666My voice
shall
sound as you do prompt mine eare,
30052667And I wil
stoope and humble my intents,
30062668To your well pra
ctizde wi
se dire
ctions.
30072669And princes all, beleeue me I be
seech you,
30082670My father is gone wild into his graue:
30092671For in his toomb lie my a
ffe
ctions,
30102672And with his
spirites
sadly I
suruiue,
30112673To mocke the expe
ctation of the world,
30122674To fru
strate prophecies, and to race out,
30132675Rotten opinion, who hath writ me downe
30142676After my
seeming, the tide of bloud in me
30152677Hath prowdely
flowd in vanitie till now:
30162678Now doth it turne, and ebbe backe to the
sea,
30172679Where it
shall mingle with the
state of
flouds,
30182680And
flow henceforth in formall maie
stie.
30192681Now call we our high court of parliament,
30202682And let vs chu
se
such limbs of noble coun
saile,
30212683That the great bodie of our
state may goe,
30222684In equall ranke with the be
st gouernd Nation,
30232685That warre, or peace, or both at once, may be,
30242686As things acquainted and familiar to vs,
30252687In which your father
shall haue formo
st hand:
30262688Our coronation done, we wil accite,
30272689(As I before remembred) all our
state,
30282690And (God con
signing to my good intents,)
30292691No prince nor peere
shall haue iu
st cau
se to
say,
30302692God
shorten Harries happy life one day.
exit. 30322693Enter sir Iohn, Shallow, Scilens, Dauy, Bardolfe, page. 30342694Shal. Nay you
shall
see my orchard, where, in an arbour we
will
Henry the fourth.
30352695will eate a la
st yeeres pippen of mine owne gra
ffing, with a
30362696di
sh of carrawaies and
so forth: come coo
sin Scilens, and then
30382698Falst. Fore God you haue here goodly dwelling, and rich.
30392699Shal. Barraine, barraine, barraine, beggars all, beggars all
sir
30402700Iohn, mary good ayre:
spread Dauy,
spread Dauy, well
saide
30422702Fal. This Dauy
serues you for good v
ses, hee is your
ser
- 30442704Shal. A good varlet, a good varlet, a very good varlet
sir
30452705Iohn: by the mas I haue drunke too much
sacke at
supper: a
30462706good varlet: now
sit downe, now
sit downe, come co
sin.
30482707Scilens A
sirra quoth a, we
shall do nothing but eate and
30492708make good cheere, and prai
se God for the merry yeere, when
30502709fle
sh is cheape and females deare, and lu
sty laddes roame here
30512710and there
so merely, and euer among
so merily.
30532711sir Iohn Theres a merry heart, good
M. Silens, ile giue you a
30552713Shal. Giue ma
ster Bardolfe
some wine, Dauy.
30562714Dauy Sweet
sir
sit, ile be with you anon, mo
st sweet
sir
sit,
30572715ma
ster Page, good ma
ster Page
sit: proface, what you want in
30582716meate, weele haue in drink, but you mu
st beare, the heart's al.
30602717Shal. Be mery ma
ster Bardolfe, and my litle
souldier there,
30622719Scilens Be merry, be mery, my wife has all, for women are
30632720shrowes both
short and tall, tis merry in hal when beards wags
30642721all, and welcome mery
shrouetide, be mery, be mery.
30662722Falst. I did not thinke ma
ster Scilens had bin a man of this
30682724Scilens Who I? I haue beene mery twice and once ere now.
30702726Dauy Theres a di
sh of Lether-coates for you.
30722728Dauy Your wor
ship: Ile be with you
straight, a cup of wine
30742730Scilens A cup of wine thats briske and
fine, and drinke vnto
K2 the
The second part of
30752731the leman mine, and a mery heart liues long a.
30762732Falst. Well
said ma
ster Scilens.
30772733Scilens And we
shall be mery, now comes in the
sweete a'th
30792735Falst Health and long life to you ma
ster Scilens.
30802736Scilens Fill the cuppe, and let it come, ile pledge you a mile
30822738Shal. Hone
st Bardolfe, welcome, if thou want
st any thing,
30832739and wilt not call, be
shrew thy heart, welcome my little tiny
30842740theefe, and welcome indeede too, Ile drink to ma
ster Bardolfe,
30852741and to all the cabileros about London.
30862742Dauy I hope to
see London once ere I die.
30872743Bar. And I might
see you there Dauy!
30882744Shal. By the mas youle crack a quarte together, ha will you
30912747Sha. By Gods liggens I thanke thee, the knaue will
sticke by
30922748thee, I can a
ssure thee that a wil not out, a tis true bred!
30932749Bar. And ile
stick by him
sir.
One knockes at doore. 30942750Sha. Why there
spoke a King: lacke nothing, be mery,
30952751looke who's at doore there ho, who knockes?
30962752Falst. Why now you haue done me right.
30972753Silens Do me right, and dub me Knight,
samingo: i
st not
so?
31002755Silens I
st so, why then
say an olde man can do
somewhat.
31012756Dauy And't plea
se your wor
ship, theres one Pi
stoll come
31022757from the court with newes.
enter Pistol. 31032758Falst. From the Court? let him come in, how now Pi
stol?
31072760Falst. What wind blew you hither Pi
stol?
31082761Pistol Not the ill winde which blowes no man to good:
31092762sweete Knight, thou art now one of the greate
st men in this
31112764Silens Birlady I think a be, but goodman Pu
ffe of Bar
son.
31132765Pisto Pu
ffe? Pu
ffe ith thy teeth, mo
st recreant coward, ba
se,
31142766sir Iohn, I am thy Pi
stol and thy frend, and helter skelter, haue
I
Henry the fourth.
31152767I rode to thee, and tidings do I bring, and luckie ioyes, and gol
- 31162768den times, and happy news of price.
31182769Iohn I pray thee now deliuer them like a man of this
31202771Pistol A footre for the world and worldlings ba
se, I
speake
31222773Iohn O ba
se A
ssirian Knight! what is thy newes? let King
31242775Scilens And Robin Hood, Scarlet, and Iohn.
31252776Pistol Shal dunghill curs confront the Helicons? and
shall
31262777good newes be ba
ffled? then Pi
stoll lay thy head in Furies lap.
31282778Shal. Hone
st gentleman, I know not your breeding.
31302779Pistol Why then lament therefore.
31312780Shal. Giue me pardon
sir, if
sir you come with newes from
31322781the court, I take it theres but two waies, either to vtter them, or
31332782conceale them, I am
sir vnder the King in
some authoritie.
31352783Pistol Vnder which King, Be
sonian?
speake, or die.
31382785Pistol Harry the fourth, or
fift?
31402787Pist A fowtre for thine o
ffice:
sir Iohn, thy tender lambkin
31412788now is King: Harry the
fifts the man: I
speake the truth: when
31432789Pi
stol lies, do this, and
fig me, like the bragging
spaniard.
31452790Falst What is the old King dead?
31462791Pistol As nayle in doore, the things I
speake are iu
st.
31482792Fal. Away Bardolfe,
saddle my hor
se,
M. Robert Shallow,
31492793choo
se what o
ffice thou wilt in the land, tis thine: Pi
stol, I will
31502794double charge thee with dignities.
31522795Bard. O ioyful day! I would not take a Knight for my for
- 31542797Pistol What? I do bring good newes.
31552798Falst. Carry ma
ster Scilens to bed: ma
ster Shallow, my
31562799lord Shalow, be what thou wilt, I am fortunes
steward, get on
31572800thy boots, weel ride al night: ô
sweet Pi
stol, away Bardolf, com
31582801Pi
stol, vtter more to me, and withall, deui
se
something to doe
31592802thy
selfe good, boote, boote ma
ster Shallow, I know the yong
K3 King
The second part of
31602803King is
sicke for me: let vs take any mans hor
ses, the lawes of
31612804England are at my commandement, ble
ssed are they that haue
31632805bin my friends, and woe to my Lord chiefe Iu
stice.
31652806Pist. Let vultures vile
seize on his lungs al
so: where is the
31662807life that late I led,
say they, why here it is, welcome the
se ple
- 3167.12809Enter Sincklo and three or foure officers. 31712810Host. No, thou arrant knaue, I would to God that I might
31722811die, that I might haue thee hangd, thou ha
st drawn my
shoul
- 31742813Sincklo The Con
stables haue deliuered her ouer to mee,
31752814and
shee
shal haue whipping cheere I warrant her, there hath
31762815beene a man or two kild about her.
31782816Whoore Nut-hooke, Nut-hooke, you lie, come on, Ile tell
31792817thee what, thou damnd tripe vi
sagde ra
scall, and the child I go
31802818with, do mi
scarry, thou wert better thou had
st strook thy mo
- 31812819ther, thou paper-facde villaine.
31832820Host. O the Lord, that
sir Iohn were come! I would make
31842821this a bloody day to
some body: but I pray God the fruite of
31862823Sincklo. If it doe, you
shall haue a dozzen of cu
shions
31872824againe, you haue but eleuen nowe: come, I charge you both
31882825goe with mee, for the man is dead that you and Pi
stoll beat a
- 31902827Whoore Ile tell you what, you thin man in a cen
sor, I will
31912828haue you as
soundly
swingde for this, you blewbottle rogue,
31922829you
filthy fami
sht corre
ctioner, if you be not
swingde, Ile for
- 31942831Sinck. Come, come, you
shee-Knight-arrant, come.
31952832Host. O God, that right
should thus ouercom might! wel,
31972834Whoore Come you rogue, come bring me to a iu
stice.
31992835Host. I come, you
starude blood-hound.
32002836Whoore Goodman death, goodman bones.
32022838Whoore Come you thinne thing, come you ra
scall.
Sincklo
Henry the fourth.
320828422 The trumpets haue
sounded twice.
320928433 Twill be two a clocke ere they come from the coronati
- 3209.22845Trumpets sound, and the King, and his traine passe ouer the 3209.32846stage: after them enter Falstaffe, Shallow, Pistol, 32122848Falst. Stand heere by me mai
ster Shallow, I will make the
32132849King doe you grace, I will leere vpon him as a comes by, and
32142850do but marke the countenaunce that he will giue me.
32162851Pist. God ble
sse thy lungs good Knight.
32172852Falst. Come heere Pi
stoll,
stand behinde mee. O if I had
32182853had time to haue made new liueries: I woulde haue be
stowed
32192854the thou
sand pound I borrowed of you, but tis no matter, this
32202855poore
shew doth better, this doth inferre the zeale I had to
see
32232858Falst. It
shewes my earne
stne
sse of a
ffe
ction.
32262861Pist. It doth, it doth, it doth.
32272862Fal. As it were to ride day & night, and not to deliberate,
32282863not to remember, not to haue pacience to
shift me.
32302864Shal It is be
st certain: but to
stand
stained with trauaile, and
2865sweating with de
sire to
see him, thinking of nothing els, putting
32332866all a
ffaires el
se in obliuion, as if there were nothing els to bee
32352868Pist. Tis
semper idem, for,
obsque hoc nihil est, tis in euery
32382871Pist. My Knight, I will in
flame thy noble liuer, and make
32392872thee rage, thy Dol, and Helen of thy noble thoughts, is in ba
se
32402873durance, and contagious pri
son, halde thither by mo
st mecha
- 32412874nical, and durtie hand: rowze vp reuenge from Ebon den, with
fell
The second part of
32422875fell Ale
ctoes
snake, for Doll is in: Pi
stoll
speakes nought but
32452878Pist. There roared the
sea, and trumpet Clangor
sounds.
32502880Falst. God
saue thy grace King Hall, my royall Hall.
32512881Pist. The heauens thee gard and keep, mo
st royal impe of
32532883Falst. God
saue thee, my
sweet boy.
32542884King My Lord chiefe iu
stice,
speake to that vaine man.
32562885Iust. Haue you your wits? know you what tis you
speake?
32582886Falst. My King, my Ioue, I
speake to thee, my heart.
32592887King I know thee not old man, fall to thy praiers,
32602888How ill white heires becomes a foole and ie
ster,
32612889I haue long dreampt of
such a kind of man,
32622890So
surfet-
sweld,
so old, and
so prophane:
32632891But being awakt, I do de
spi
se my dreame,
32642892Make le
sse thy body (hence) and more thy grace,
32652893Leaue gourmandizing, know the graue doth gape
32662894For thee, thrice wider then for other men,
32672895Reply not to me with a foole-borne ie
st,
32682896Pre
sume not that I am the thing I was,
32692897For God doth know,
so
shall the world perceiue,
32702898That I haue turnd away my former
selfe,
32712899So will I tho
se that kept me company:
32722900When thou do
st heare I am as I haue bin,
32732901Approch me, and thou
shalt be as thou wa
st,
32742902The tutor and the feeder of my riots:
32752903Till then I bani
sh thee, on paine of death,
32762904As I haue done the re
st of my mi
sleaders,
32772905Not to come neare our per
son by ten mile:
32782906For competence of life, I wil allow you,
32792907That lacke of meanes enforce you not to euills,
32802908And as we heare you do reforme your
selues,
32812909We will according to your
strengths and qualities,
32822910Giue you aduauncement. Be it your charge, my lord,
To
Henry the fourth.
32832911To
see performd the tenure of my word:
set on.
32852912Iohn Ma
ster Shallow I ow you a thou
sand pound.
32862913Shal. Yea mary
sir Iohn, which I be
seech you to let me haue
32882915Iohn That can hardly be, ma
ster Shalow: do not you grieue
32892916at this, I
shall be
sent for in priuate to him, looke you, hee mu
st 32902917seeme thus to the world: feare not your aduauncements, I will
32912918be the man yet that
shal make you great.
32922919Shal. I cannot perceiue how, vnle
sse you giue me your
32932920dublet, and
stu
ffe me out with
straw: I be
seech you good
sir
32942921Iohn let me haue
fiue hundred of my thou
sand.
32962922Iohn Sir I will be as good as my worde, this that you heard
32982924Shall. A collor that I feare you will die in
sir Iohn.
32992925Iohn Feare no colours, go with me to dinner:
33002926Come lieftenant Pi
stol, come Bardolfe,
Enter Iustice and prince Iohn 33012927I
shall be
sent for
soone at night.
33022928Iustice Go cary
sir Iohn Fal
stalfe to the Fleet,
33032929Take all his company along with him.
33052931Iust. I cannot now
speake, I will heare you
soone, take them
33072933Pist. Si fortuna me tormenta spero contenta.
33092934Iohn I like this faire proceeding of the Kings,
33102935He hath intent his wonted followers
33112936Shall all be very well prouided for,
33122937But all are bani
sht till their conuer
sations
33132938Appeare more wi
se and mode
st to the worlde.
33152940Iohn The King hath cald his parlament my lord.
33182942Iohn I wil lay ods, that ere this yeere expire,
33192943We beare our ciuil
swords and natiue
fier,
33202944As farre as France, I heard a bird
so
sing,
33212945Who
se mu
sique, to my thinking, plea
sde the King:
L First
33252948Fir
st my feare then my cur
sie, la
st my
speech.
33262949My feare, is your di
splea
sure, my cur
sy, my duty, & my
speech,
33272950to beg your pardons: if you looke for a good
speech now, you
33282951vndo me, for what I haue to
say is of mine owne making, and
33292952what indeed (I
should
say) wil (I doubt) proue mine own mar
- 33302953ring: but to the purpo
se, and
so to the venture. Be it knowne to
33312954you, as it is very well, I was lately here in the end of a di
splea
- 33322955sing play, to pray your patience for it, and to promi
se you a bet
- 33332956ter: I meant indeed to pay you with this, which if like an il ven
- 33342957ture it come vnluckily home, I breake, and you my gentle cre
- 33352958ditors loo
se, here I promi
sde you I would be, and here I com
- 2959mit my body to your mercies, bate me
some, and I will pay you
33362960some, and (as mo
st debtors do) promi
se you in
finitely: and
so I
3336.12961kneele downe before you; but indeed, to pray for the Queene.
33382962If my tongue cannot intreate you to acquit mee, will you
2963commaund me to v
se my legges? And yet that were but light
33392964payment, to daunce out of your debt, but a good con
sci
- 33402965ence will make any po
ssible
sati
sfa
ction, and
so woulde I: all
33412966the Gentlewomen heere haue forgiuen me, if the Gentlemen
2967will not, then the Gentlemen doe not agree with the Gentle
- 33422968women, which was neuer
seene in
such an a
ssemblie.
33442969One word more I be
seech you, if you bee not too much
2970cloyd with fatte meate, our humble Author will continue the
33452971storie, with
sir Iohn in it, and make you merry with faire Ka
- 33462972tharine of Fraunce, where (for any thing I knowe) Fal
sta
ffe
33472973shall die of a
sweat, vnle
sse already a be killd with your harde
2974opinions; for Olde-ca
stle died Martyre, and this is not the
33482975man: my tongue is weary, when my legges are too, I wil bid