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.