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- Edition: Henry VI, Part 3
Henry VI, Part 3 (Folio 1, 1623)
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307Flourish. Enter Richard, Edward, and
308Mountague.
310leaue.
311Edward. No, I can better play the Orator.
313Enter the Duke of Yorke.
317Yorke. About what?
318 Rich. About that which concernes your Grace and vs,
319The Crowne of England, Father, which is yours.
320Yorke. Mine Boy? not till King Henry be dead.
321 Richard. Your Right depends not on his life, or death.
322Edward. Now you are Heire, therefore enioy it now:
324It will out-runne you, Father, in the end.
326reigne.
327 Edward. But for a Kingdome any Oath may be broken:
328I would breake a thousand Oathes, to reigne one yeere.
330sworne.
332 Richard. Ile proue the contrary, if you'le heare mee
333speake.
335Richard. An Oath is of no moment, being not tooke
336Before a true and lawfull Magistrate,
337That hath authoritie ouer him that sweares.
338Henry had none, but did vsurpe the place.
340Your Oath, my Lord, is vaine and friuolous.
341Therefore to Armes: and Father doe but thinke,
342How sweet a thing it is to weare a Crowne,
343Within whose Circuit is Elizium,
344And all that Poets faine of Blisse and Ioy.
345Why doe we linger thus? I cannot rest,
346Vntill the White Rose that I weare, be dy'de
347Euen in the luke-warme blood of Henries heart.
348Yorke. Richard ynough: I will be King, or dye.
350And whet on Warwick to this Enterprise.
Thou
150The third Part of Henry the Sixt.
351Thou Richard shalt to the Duke of Norfolke,
352And tell him priuily of our intent.
353You Edward shall vnto my Lord Cobham,
355In them I trust: for they are Souldiors,
356Wittie, courteous, liberall, full of spirit.
357While you are thus imploy'd, what resteth more?
359And yet the King not priuie to my Drift,
361Enter Gabriel.
363poste?
364Gabriel. The Queene,
365With all the Northerne Earles and Lords,
367She is hard by, with twentie thousand men:
368And therefore fortifie your Hold, my Lord.
369Yorke. I, with my Sword.
370What? think'st thou, that we feare them?
373Let Noble Warwicke, Cobham, and the rest,
374Whom we haue left Protectors of the King,
377Mount. Brother, I goe: Ile winne them, feare it not.
378And thus most humbly I doe take my leaue.
379 Exit Mountague.
380Enter Mortimer, and his Brother.
381York. Sir Iohn, and Sir Hugh Mortimer, mine Vnckles,
382You are come to Sandall in a happie houre.
383The Armie of the Queene meane to besiege vs.
385field.
388A Woman's generall: what should we feare?
389 A March afarre off.
390Edward. I heare their Drummes:
391Let's set our men in order,
393 Yorke. Fiue men to twentie: though the oddes be great,
394I doubt not, Vnckle, of our Victorie.
395Many a Battaile haue I wonne in France,
396When as the Enemie hath beene tenne to one: