Not Peer Reviewed
- Edition: Edward III
Edward III (Quarto 1, 1596)
- Introduction
- Texts of this edition
- Facsimiles
THE
RAIGNE OF
KING EDWARD
the third:
As it hath bin sundrie times plaied about
the Citie of London.
LONDON,
Printed for Cuthbert Burby.
1596.
1THE RAIGNE OF
2K: Edward the third.
3Enter King Edward, Derby, Prince Edward, Audely
4and Artoys.
5King.
6RObert of Artoys banisht though thou be,
7From Fraunce thy natiue Country, yet with vs,
8Thou shalt retayne as great a Seigniorie:
9For we create thee Earle of Richmond heere,
10And now goe forwards with our pedegree,
11Who next succeeded Phillip of Bew,
14Yet dyed and left no issue of their loynes:
17Was all the daughters that this Phillip had,
18Whome afterward your father tooke to wife:
19And from the fragrant garden of her wombe,
21Deriued is inheritor to Fraunce.
22But not the rancor of rebellious mindes:
23When thus the lynage of Bew was out;
24The French obscurd your mothers Priuiledge,
25And though she were the next of blood, proclaymed
26Iohn of the house of Valoys now their king:
28Repleat with Princes of great parentage,
29Ought not admit a gouernor to rule,
31And thats the speciall ground of their contempt:
32Wherewith they study to exclude your grace:
3
35Art: Perhaps it will be thought a heynous thing,
37But heauen I call to recorde of my vowes,
38It is not hate nor any priuat wronge,
39But loue vnto my country and the right,
40Prouokes my tongue thus lauish in report.
41You are the lyneal watch men of our peace,
42And Iohn of Valoys, in directly climbes,
44Ah where in may our duety more be seene,
45Then stryuing to rebate a tyrants pride,
46And place the true shepheard of our comonwealth,
48Hath added growth vnto my dignitye,
49And by the fiery vigor of thy words,
50Hot courage is engendred in my brest,
51Which heretofore was rakt in ignorance,
52But nowe doth mount with golden winges of fame,
56A mestenger, Lord Awdley know from whence,
57Enter a messenger Lorragne,
59In treates he may haue conference with your highnes.
60King: Admit him Lords, that we may heare the newes.
61Say Duke of Lorrayne wherefore art thou come.
63Doth greete thee Edward, and by me commandes,
65The Guyen Dukedome is entayld to thee,
66Thou do him lowly homage for the same.
68Repaire to France within these forty daies,
69That there according as the coustome is.
Or
Edward the third.
71Or else thy title in that prouince dyes,
74No sooner minded to prepare for France,
75But straight I am inuited, nay with threats,
76Vppon a penaltie inioynd to come:
78Lorrayne returne this answere to thy Lord,
81But like a conquerer to make him bowe,
83And trueth hath puld the visard from his face,
85Dare he commaund a fealty in mee,
86Tell him the Crowne that hee vsurpes, is myne,
87And where he sets his foote he ought to knele,
88Tis not a petty Dukedome that I claime,
89But all the whole Dominions, of the Realme,
90Which if with grudging he refuse to yeld,
91Ile take away those borrowed plumes of his,
92And send him naked to the wildernes.
94I doe pronounce defyaunce to thy face.
96Euen to the bottom of thy masters throat,
97And be it spoke with reuerence of the King,
98My gratious father and these other Lordes,
100And him that sent thee like the lazy droane,
103As others shalbe warned by his harme,
105Least meeting with the Lyon in the feeld,
106He chaunce to teare him peecemeale for his pride.
Is
The Raigne of
110Then when reproch with violence is borne,
111Lor. Regenerate Traytor, viper to the place,
112Where thou was fostred in thine infancy:
114He drawes his Sword.
117Is farre more thornie pricking than this blade.
120Vntill my collours be displaide in Fraunce:
126Our gage is throwne, and warre is soone begun,
127But not so quickely brought vnto an end.
128Enter Mountague.
129Moun. But wherefore comes Sir william Mountague?
130How stands the league betweene the Scot and vs?
132The treacherous King no sooner was informde,
133Of your with drawing of your army backe:
134But straight forgetting of his former othe,
135He made inuasion on the bordering Townes:
137And now the tyrant hath beguirt with seege,
139The Countes Salsbury is like to perish:
140King. That is thy daughter Warwicke is it not?
142About the planting of Lord Mouneford there?
143War. It is my Lord.
Ignoble
Edward the third.
145But silly Ladies with thy threatning armes:
148Go leuie footemen for our warres in Fraunce;
149And Ned take muster of our men at armes,
152Such as dread nothing but dishonors blot,
153Be warie therefore since we do comence,
154A famous Warre, and with so mighty a nation:
155Derby be thou Embassador for vs,
156Vnto our Father in Law the Earle of Henalt:
157Make him acquainted with our enterprise,
158And likewise will him with our owne allies,
159That are in Flaundsrs, to solicite to,
160The Emperour of Almaigne in our name:
162Will with these forces that I haue at hand,
163March, and once more repulse the trayterous Scot:
166Now to forget thy study and thy bookes,
167And vre thy shoulders to an Armors weight.
169This tumult is of warres increasing broyles,
170As at the Coronation of a king,
171The ioyfull clamours of the people are,
172When Aue Caesar they pronounce alowd;
175Or in a rightfull quarrel spend my breath,
176Then cheerefully forward ech a seuerall way,
177In great affaires tis nought to vse delay.
178Exunt.
B Enter
The Raigne of King
179Enter the Countesse.
180Alas how much in vaine my poore eyes gaze,
182A cosin Mountague, I feare thou wants,
184Wth vehement sute the king in my behalfe:
185Thou dost not tell him what a griefe it is,
186To be the scornefull captiue to a Scot,
187Either to be wooed with broad vntuned othes,
189Thou doest not tell him if he heere preuaile,
190How much they will deride vs in the North,
191And in their vild vnseuill skipping giggs,
192Bray foorth their Conquest, and our ouerthrow,
193Euen in the barraine, bleake and fruitlesse aire,
194Enter Dauid and Douglas, Lorraine.
197And list their babble blunt and full of pride.
198K. Da: My Lord of Lorrayne, to our brother of Fraunce,
199Commend vs as the man in Christendome,
200That we must reuerence and intirely loue,
202That we with England will not enter parlie,
203Nor neuer make faire wether, or take truce,
205With eager Rods beyond their Citie Yorke,
207Nor rust in canker, haue the time to eate,
209Nor lay aside their Iacks of Gymould mayle,
211In peacefull wise, vpon their Citie wals,
212Nor from their buttoned tawny leatherne belts,
Chr
Edward the third.
214Cry out enough, spare England now for pittie,
215Farewell, and tell him that you leaue vs heare,
217Euen when we had that yeelded to our hands,
218Lor: take my leaue and fayrely will returne
219Your acceptable greeting to my king. Exit Lor.
220K. D: Now Duglas to our former taske again,
222Dou: My liege I craue the Ladie and no more,
225Da. Why then my liege let me enioy her iewels,
227And who inherits her, hath those with all.
228Enter a Scot in hast.
229Mes: My liege, as we were pricking on the hils,
230To fetch in booty, marching hitherward,
233A field of plate, a wood of pickes aduanced:
234Bethinke your highnes speedely herein,
235An easie march within foure howres will bring,
236The hindmost rancke, vnto this place my liege.
242King: She mocks at vs Duglas, I cannot endure it.
244And which her iewels, I am sure my Lords
247And now that comfort makes her scorne at vs.
248Annother messenger.
2 After
The Raigne of King
250After the French embassador my liege,
251And tell him that you dare not ride to Yorke,
253K. He heard that to, intollerable griefe:
255Count: Tis not for feare, and yet you run away,
256O happie comfort welcome to our house,
258That swore before my walls they would not backe,
259For all the armed power of this land,
260With facelesse feare that euer turnes his backe:
262Vpon the bare report and name of Armes.
263Enter Mountague.
265How fares my Aunt? we are not Scots,
270Deare Aunt discend and gratulate his highnes.
272To shew my duety, and his dignitie.
273Enter king Edward, Warwike, Artoyes, with others.
275Before we could vncupple at their heeles.
276War: They are my liege, but with a cheereful cry,
277Hot hunds and hardie chase them at the heeles.
278Enter Countesse.
281As a May blossome with pernitious winds,
As
Edward the third.
288When they exceld this excellence they haue,
289That now her dym declyne hath power to draw,
291To gaze on her with doting admiration.
292Count: In duetie lower then the ground I kneele,
293And for my dul knees bow my feeling heart,
294To witnes my obedience to your highnes,
297Hath driuen war and danger from my gate.
299How euer thereby I haue purchast war.
300Co: No war to you my liege, the Scots are gone,
301And gallop home toward Scotland with their hate,
303Come wele persue the Scots, Artoyes away.
305And let the power of a mighty king
306Honor our roofe: my husband in the warres,
307When he shall heare it will triumph for ioy.
308Then deare my liege, now niggard not thy state,
309Being at the wall, enter our homely gate.
311I dreamde to night of treason and I feare.
316Now in the Sunne alone it doth not lye,
317With light to take light, from a mortall eye.
319More then the Sunne steales myne owne light from mee:
321Incontemplation that may master thee.
3 War-
The Raigne of King
322Warwike, Artoys, to horse and lets away.
325That more perswads then winning Oratorie.
327Flatter our earth, and sodenly be done:
328More happie do not make our outward wall,
329Then thou wilt grace our inner house withall,
331Whose habit rude, and manners blunt and playne,
333With bounties riches; and faire hidden pride:
334For where the golden Ore doth buried lie,
337And where the vpper turfe of earth doth boast,
338His pride perfumes, and party colloured cost,
341But to make vp my all to long compare,
343What is within, but like a cloake doth hide,
345More gratious then my tearmes can let thee be,
348When wisedome keepes the gate as beuties gard,
350Yt shall attend, while I attend on thee:
353His eare to drinke her sweet tongues vtterance,
355That racke vpon the carriage of the windes,
A
Edward the third.
358As if her cheekes by some inchaunted power,
359Attracted had the cherie blood from his,
361His cheeke put on their scarlet ornaments,
362But no more like her oryent all red,
363Then Bricke to Corrall, or liue things to dead,
364Why did he then thus counterfeit her lookes,
368To waile his eyes amisse being a king;
371If he lookt pale, it was with guiltie feare,
372To dote a misse being a mighty king,
373Then Scottish warres farewell, I feare twill prooue
375Here comes his highnes walking all alone.
376Enter King Edward.
378Her voice more siluer euery word then other,
380Vnfolded she of Dauid and his Scots:
382With epithites and accents of the Scot:
386Breathes from the wall, an Angels note from Heauen:
388When she would talke of peace me thinkes her tong,
389Commanded war to prison: when of war,
393Beauty a slander but in her faire face,
394There is no summer, but in her cheerefull lookes,
N
The Raigne of King
396I cannot blame the Scots that did besiege her,
398But call them cowards that they ran away,
400Art thou thete Lodwicke, giue me incke and paper?
401Lo: I will my liege.
403For wee will walke and meditate alone.
405Ki: This fellow is well read in poetrie,
407I will acquaint him with my passion,
411Enter Lodwike.
413Lo: Ready my liege.
416Since greene our thoughts, greene be the conuenticle,
417Where we will ease vs by disburdning them:
419To bring thee hither an inchanted pen,
421Talking of griefe, to make thee ready grone,
422And when thou writest of teares, encouch the word,
424That it may rayse drops in a Torters eye,
425And make a flynt heart Sythian pytifull,
426For so much moouing hath a Poets pen:
427Then if thou be a Poet moue thou so,
428And be enriched by thy soueraigne loue:
430Could force attendance in the eares of hel:
How
Edward the third.
436Containes ech generall vertue in the worlde,
437Better then bewtifull thou must begin,
438Deuise for faire a fairer word then faire,
441For flattery feare thou not to be conuicted,
442For were thy admiration ten tymes more,
443Ten tymes ten thousand more thy worth exceeds,
445Beginne I will to contemplat the while,
448Her beautie makes mee,
449Lor: Writ I to a woman?
451Or who but women doe our loue layes greet,
457Then maist thou iudge what her condition is,
458By the proportion of her mightines,
459Write on while I peruse her in my thoughts,
460Her voice to musicke or the nightingale,
464The nightingale singes of adulterate wrong,
465And that compared is to satyrical,
C But
The Raigne of king
469Like to a flattering glas doth make more faire,
470The yelow Amber like a flattering glas,
471Comes in to soone: for writing of her eies,
473And thence the hot reflection doth rebounde,
476Vpon this voluntarie ground of loue,
477Come Lodwick hast thou turnd thy inke to golde,
478If not, write but in letters Capitall my mistres name,
479And it wil guild thy paper, read Lorde, reade,
480Fill thou the emptie hollowes of mine eares,
481With the sweete hearing of thy poetrie.
484Which apprehend such violent extremes,
485That they disdaine an ending period.
486Her bewtie hath no match but my affection,
491Then wherefore talkest thou of a period,
492To that which craues vnended admiration.
493Read let vs heare,
496Comparest thou her to the pale queene of night,
499But like a fading taper dym and dead.
Read
Edward the third.
508Out with the moone line, I wil none of it,
509And let me haue hir likened to the sun,
516And in this application to the sunne,
517Bid her be free and generall as the sunne,
519As louinglie as on the fragrant rose,
522More bould in constancie.
524Lo: Then Iudith was,
526And I shall woo her to cut of my head
527Blot, blot, good Lodwicke let vs heare the next.
528Lo: Theres all that yet is donne.
531No let the Captaine talke of boystrous warr,
536And euery griefe his happie opposite,
537Loue cannot sound well but in louers toungs,
538Giue me the pen and paper I will write,
2 Enter
The Raigne of King
539Enter Countes.
541Lodwick thou knowst not how to drawe a battell,
543Argue in thee defectiue discipline,
545Co. Pardon my boldnes my thrice gracious Lords,
546Let my intrusion here be cald my duetie,
549Lor: I go.
555Since I came hither Countes I am wronged.
557Should thinck my soueraigne wrong, thrice gentle King:
559How neere then shall I be to remedie.
560Cont: As nere my Liege as all my womans power,
561Can pawne it selfe to buy thy remedy.
563Ingage thy power to redeeme my Ioyes,
564And I am ioyfull Countes els I die.
565Coun: I will my Liege.
566King: Sweare Counties that thou wilt.
567Coun: By heauen I will,
569And tell thy self a King doth dote on thee,
570Say that within thy power doth lie.
572To giue him all the Ioy within thy power,
573Do this and tell me when I shall be happie.
All
Edward the third.
575That power of loue that I haue power to giue.
576Thou hast with all deuout obedience,
577Inploy me how thou wilt in prose therof,
581If on my vertue take it if thou canst,
582For vertues store by giuing doth augment,
583Be it on what it will that I can giue,
584And thou canst take awaie inherit it.
585King. It is thy beauie that I woulde enioy,
586Count. O were it painted I would wipe it of,
589Take one and both for like an humble shaddow,
593Be lent awaie and yet my bodie liue,
594As lend my bodie pallace to my soule,
595A waie from her and yet retaine my soule,.
596My bodie is her bower her Court her abey,
603Nor beg I do not but I rather buie,
604That is thy loue and for that loue of thine,
605In rich exchaunge I tender to thee myne,
607You would prophane the holie name of loue,
608That loue you offer me you cannot giue,
C3 That
The Raigne king
610That loue you beg of me I cannot giue,
611For Sara owes that duetie to her Lord,
612He that doth clip or counterfeit your stamp,
615To stamp his Image in forbidden mettel,
616Forgetting your alleageance, and your othe,
617In violating mariage secred law,
618You breake a greater honor then your selfe,
619To be a King is of a yonger house,
620Then to be maried, your progenitour
621Sole ragning Adam on the vniuerse,
622By God was honored for a married man,
623But not by him annointed for a king,
624It is a pennalty to breake your statutes,
625Though not enacted with your highnes hand,
626How much more to infringe the holy act,
628I know my souereigne in my husbands loue,
629Who now doth loyall seruice in his warrs,
630Doth but to try the wife of Salisbury,
631Whither shee will heare a wantons tale or no,
633From that not from my leige I tourne awaie: Exit.
634King: Whether is her bewtie by her words dyuine,
635Or are her words sweet chaplaines to her bewtie,
638So doe her words her bewties, bewtie wordes,
639O that I were a honie gathering bee,
640To beare the combe of vertue from his flower,
642To turne the vice I take to deadlie venom,
643Religion is austere and bewty gentle,
645O that shee were as is the aire to mee,
O
Edward the third.
647This do I, and catch nothing but my selfe,
648I must enioy her, for I cannot beate
649With reason and reproofe fond loue a waie.
650Enter Warwicke.
651Here comes her father I will worke with him,
652To beare my collours in this feild of loue.
654May I with pardon know your highnes griefe,
655And that my old endeuor will remoue it,
658That I was forwarde to haue begd of thee,
660Whie dost thou tip mens tongues with golden words,
661And peise their deedes with weight of heauie leade,
662That faire performance cannot follow promise,
663O that a man might hold the hartes close booke,
664And choke the lauish tongue when it doth vtter
666War: Far be it from the honor of my age,
667That I shouid owe bright gould and render lead,
668Age is a cyncke, not a flatterer,
669I saye againe, that I if knew your griefe,
670And that by me it may be lesned,
671My proper harme should buy your highnes good,
673That neuer pay the duetie of their words,
675But when thou knowest my greifes condition,
677Thou wilt eate vp againe and leaue me helples.
679Did byd me run vpon your sworde and die.
Say
The Raigne of King
680 Say that my greefe is no way medicinable,
685War: I cannot nor I would not if I could.
688That breake the sacred warrant of an oath,
690War. That hee hath broke his faith with God and man,
691And from them both standes excommunicat,
693To breake a lawfull and religious vowe.
696Or breake thy oth or cancell all the bondes,
698And therefore Warwike if thou art thy selfe,
699The Lord and master of thy word and othe,
700Go to thy daughter and in my behalfe,
701Comaund her, woo her, win her anie waies,
703I will not stand to heare thee make reply,
708To breake a vowe made by the name of God,
709What if I sweare by this right hand of mine,
710To cut this right hande of the better waie,
711Were to prophaine the Idoll then confound it,
712But neither will I do Ile keepe myne oath,
713And to my daughter make a recantation,
714Of all the vertue I haue preacht to her,
Ile
Edward the third.
716If she remember to embrace the king,
719Ile say it is true charitie to loue,
720But not true loue to be so charitable;
722But not his kingdome can buy out the sinne;
725Enter Countesse.
726See where she comes, was neuer father had,
729My mother and the Peeres importune you,
731And do your best to make his highnes merrie.
733I must not call her child, for wheres the father,
736No hees my friend, and where is found the friend
738Neither my daughter, nor my deare friends wife,
739I am not Warwike as thou thinkst I am,
740But an atturnie from the Court of hell:
742To do a message to thee from the king:
743The mighty king of England dotes on thee:
744He that hath power to take away thy life,
745Hath power to take thy honor, then consent,
746To pawne thine honor rather then thy life;
747Honor is often lost and got againe,
748But life once gon, hath no recouerie:
750The king that would distaine thee, will aduance thee:
D The
The Raigne of King
751The Poets write that great Achilles speare,
752Could heale the wound it made: the morrall is,
753What mighty men misdoo, they can amend:
754The Lyon doth become his bloody iawes,
755And grace his forragement by being milde,
756When vassell feare lies trembling at his feete,
757The king will in his glory hide thy shame,
760What can one drop of poyson harme the Sea,
762And make it loose his operation:
763The kings great name will temper their misdeeds,
764And giue the bitter portion of reproch:
766Besides it is no harme to do the thing,
767Which without shame, could not be left vndone;
768Thus haue I in his maiesties behalfe,
772To haue escapt the danger of my foes,
773And to be ten times worse inuierd by friends:
775But to corrupt the author of my blood,
777No maruell though the braunches be then infected,
779No maruell though the leprous infant dye,
780When the sterne dame inuennometh the Dug:
782And youth the dangerous reigne of liberty:
784And cancell euery cannon that prescribes,
786No let me die, if his too boystrous will,
Will
Edward the third.
790And marke how I vnsaie my words againe,
791An honorable graue is more esteemd,
792Then the polluted closet of a king,
793The greater man, the greater is the thing,
794Be it good or bad that he shall vndertake,
795An vnreputed mote, flying in the Sunne,
799Deepe are the blowes made with a mightie Axe,
801That is committed in a holie place,
802An euill deed done by authoritie,
804In tissue, and the beautie of the robe,
807Betweene his gloomie daughter and thy shame,
811And euery glory that inclynes to sin,
815When thou conuertest from honors golden name,
819Enter at one doore Derby from Eraunce, At an other doore,
820Audley with a Drum.
821Der. Thrice noble Audley, well incountred heere,
2 Aud: Tis
The Raigne of King
825Which I accordingly haue done and bring them hither,
826In faire aray before his maiestie:
827King: What newes my Lord of Derby from the Emperor.
829Hath yeelded to his highnes friendly ayd,
830And makes our king leiuetenant generall
831In all his lands and large dominions,
835The king is in his closet malcontent,
836For what I know not, but he gaue in charge,
837Till after dinner, none should interrupt him:
838The Countesse Salisbury, and her father Warwike,
839Artoyes, and all looke vnderneath the browes.
841Enter the King.
843Ar. Hhere comes his highnes.
846Der. The Emperour greeteth you.
850Au. All loue and duety to my Lord the King.
851Kin. Well all but one is none, what newes with you?
853According as your charge, and brought them hither.
855According too our discharge and be gonne:
856Darby Ile looke vpon the Countesse minde anone,
858Kin. I meane the Emperour, leaue me alone.
859Au. What is his mind?
Lets
Edward the third.
862Countesse for Emperour, and indeed why not?
863She is as imperator ouer me, and I to her
866Enter Lodwike.
869Lo: That yet my liege ere night,
871Ki: What drum is this that thunders forth this march,
873Poore shipskin how it braules with him that beateth it:
874Go breake the thundring parchment bottome out,
876Vnto the bosome of a heauenly Nymph,
877For I wiii vse it as my writing paper,
879To be the herald and deare counsaiie bearer,
880Betwixt a goddesse, and a mighty king:
881Go bid the drummer learne to touch the Lute,
882Or hang him in the braces of his drum,
883For now we thinke it an vnciuill thing,
885The quarrell that I haue requires no armes,
887In a deepe march of penytrable grones,
889Shall serue me as the vantage of the winde,
893That Poets tearme, the wanton warriour blinde:
894But loue hath eyes as iudgement to his steps,
895Till two much loued glory dazles them?
3 How
The Raigne of King
896How now.
897Enter Lodwike.
899Stands with Prince Edward your thrice valiant sonne.
900Enter Prince Edward.
903And rates my heart, and chides my theeuish eie,
904Who being rich ennough in seeing her,
906Which cannot cloke it selfe on pouertie.
907Now boy, what newes?
910For our affaires to Fraunce, and heere we come,
919Shall the large limmit of faire Brittayne.
920By me be ouerthrowne, and shall I not,
922Giue me an Armor of eternall steele,
924Subdue my selfe, and be my enimies friend,
925It must not be, come boy forward, aduaunce,
926Lets with our coullours sweete the Aire of Fraunce.
927Enter Lodwike.
Hath
Edward the third.
932The Dolphin and the Peeres at liberty,
933Goe leaue me Ned, and reuell with thy friends. Exit Pr.
934Thy mother is but blacke, and thou like her.
938For shee giues beautie both to heauen and earth,
939The sin is more to hacke and hew poore men,
940Then to embrace in an vnlawfull bed,
941The register of all rarieties,
942Since Letherne Adam, till this youngest howre.
943Enter Countesse.
946So thou wilt hence awhile and leaue me heere.
947Now my soules plaiefellow art thou come,
948To speake the more then heauenly word of yea,
949To my obiection in thy beautious loue.
952Coun: I deare my liege, your due.
954Then right for right, and render loue for loue.
955Count: Then wrong for wrong, and endles hate for hate:
957That my vnwillingnes, my husbands loue,
959Can be my helpe, but that your mightines:
960Will ouerbeare and awe these deare regards,
961I bynd my discontent to my content,
962And what I would not, Ile compell I will,
964That stand betweene your highnes loue and mine,
That
The Raigne of King
967That I would haue chokt vp my soueraigne.
969Co. My thrice loning liege,
970Your Queene, and Salisbury my wedded husband,
971Who liuing haue that tytle in our loue,
972That we cannot bestow but by their death,
975Can hinder you to execute the one,
976Let it forbid you to attempt the other:
977I Cannot thinke you loue me as you say,
979 No mor, ethy husband and the Queene shall dye,
980Fairer thou art by farre, then Hero was,
983But I will throng a hellie spout of bloud,
984To arryue at Cestus where my Hero lyes.
985Co: Nay youle do more, youle make the Ryuer to,
986With their hart bloods, that keepe our loue asunder,
987Of which my husband, and your wife are twayne.
988Ki. Thy beauty makes them guilty of their death,
989And giues in euidence that they shall dye,
990Vpon which verdict I their Iudge condemne them.
991Co: O periurde beautie, more corrupted Iudge:
992When to the great Starre-chamber ore our heads,
994This packing euill, we both shall tremble for it.
997Keepe but thy word great king, and I am thine,
998Stand where thou dost, ile part a little from thee
999And see how I will yeeld me to thy hands:
1000Here by my side doth hang my wedding knifes,
1001Take thou the one, and with it kill thy Queene
And
Edward the third.
1003And with this other, Ile dispatch my loue,
1005When they are gone, then Ile consent to loue:
1006Stir not lasciuious king to hinder me,
1007My resolution is more nimbler far,
1008Then thy preuention can be in my rescue,
1010And heare the choyce that I will put thee to:
1012And neuer hence forth to solicit me,
1016Or I will strike and die before thee heere.
1019I neuer meane to part my lips againe,
1022May better boast of then euer Romaine might,
1024The vaine indeuor of so many pens:
1025Arise and be my fault, thy honors fame,
1026Which after ages shall enrich thee with,
1027I am awaked from this idle dreame,
1028Warwike, my Sonne, Darby, Artoys and Audley,
1029Braue warriours all, where are you all this while?
1030Enter all.
1031Warwike, I make thee Warden of the North,
1032Thou Prince of Wales, and Audley straight to Sea,
1034My selfe, Artoys and Darby will through Flaunders,
1035To greete our friends there, and to craue their aide,
E Wele
The Raigne king
1040Enter King Iohn of Fraunce, his
1041 two sonnes, Charles of Nor-
1042 mandie, and Phillip, and the
1043 Duke of Lorraine.
1044King Iohn.
1046Haue made a breakfast to our foe by Sea,
1047Let vs incampe to wait their happie speede:
1048Lorraine what readines is Edward in?
1049How hast thou heard that he prouided is
1050Of marshiall furniture for this exployt.
1053Tis bruted for a certenty my Lord,
1056As if vnto a tryumph they were led.
1057Ch: England was wont to harbour malcontents,
1060But changing and alteration of the state,
1061And is it possible,
1064As heeretofore I haue enformd his grace,
1065Neuer to sheath his Sword, or take a truce.
1067But on the other side, to thinke what friends,
1068King Edward hath retaynd in Netherland,
1069Among those euer-bibbing Epicures:
Those
Edward the third.
1070Those frothy Dutch men, puft with double beere,
1071That drinke and swill in euery place they come,
1072Doth not a little aggrauate mine ire,
1073Besides we heare the Emperor conioynes,
1074And stalls him in his owne authoritie:
1075But all the mightier that their number is,
1076The greater glory reapes the victory,
1078The sterne Polonian and the warlike Dane:
1079The king of Bohemia, and of Cycelie.
1080Are all become confederates with vs,
1081And as I thinke are marching hither apace,
1083By which I gesse that their approch is neare.
1084Enter the King of Bohemia with
1085 Danes, and a Polonian Captaine
1086 with other soldiers another way.
1087King of Boheme.
1088King Iohn of Fraunce, as league and neighborhood,
1090I come to aide thee with my countries force,
1092And lofty Poland, nurse of hardie men,
1094Who willingly will venture in thy cause.
1095K. Io: Welcome Bohemian king, and welcome all,
1096This your great kindnesse I will not forget.
1097Besides your plentiful rewards in Crownes,
1099There comes a hare braind Nation deckt in pride,
1100The spoyle of whome wiil be a trebble game,
1101And now my hope is full, my ioy complete,
2 At
The Raigne of King
1102At Sea we are as puissant as the force;
1103Of Agamemnon in the Hauen of Troy:
1104By land with Zerxes we compare of strength,
1106Then Bayardlike, blinde ouerweaning Ned,
1107To reach at our imperiall dyadem,
1108Is either to be swallowed of the waues,
1110Enter.
1112As I was busie in my watchfull charge.
1113The proud Armado of king Edwards ships,
1115Seemd as it were a groue of withered pines,
1119Adornes the naked bosome of the earth.
1121Figuring the horned Circle of the Moone,
1122And on the top gallant of the Admirall,
1123And likewise all the handmaides of his trayne:
1124The Armes of England and of Fraunce vnite,
1125Are quartred equally by Heralds art;
1126Thus titely carried with a merrie gale,
1127They plough the Ocean hitherward amayne:
1128 Dare he already crop the Flewer de Luce:
1129I hope the hony being gathered thence,
1130He with the spider afterward approcht
1131Shall sucke forth deadly venom from the leaues,
1132But wheres out Nauy, how are they prepared,
1135Did breake from Anchor straight, and puft with rage,
1137Made forth, as when the empty Eagle flies,
To
Edward the third.
1139Io: Thees for thy newes, returne vnto thy barke,
1145First you my Lord, with your Bohemian Troupes,
1146Shall pitch your battailes on the lower hand,
1148Togeither with this aide of Muscouites,
1149Shall clyme the higher ground an other waye:
1151Phillip my yongest boy and I will lodge,
1152So Lords begon, and looke vnto your charge. Exunt.
1153You stand for Fraunce, an Empire faire and large,
1154Now tell me Phillip, what is their concept,
1155Touching the challenge that the English make.
1157And bring he nere so playne a pedegree,
1160But were it not, yet ere he should preuaile,
1161Ile make a Conduit of my dearest blood,
off.
1165To looke our foes more sternely in the face.
1166Now is begun the heauie day at Sea,
1168When they defend their younglings in their Caues:
1169Stir angry Nemesis the happie helme,
1170That with the sulphur battels of your rage,
3 K.Io.Now
The Raigne of king
1174 Now boy thou hearest what thundring terror tis,
1175To buckle for a kingdomes souerentie,
1176The earth with giddie trembling when it shakes,
1177Or when the exalations of the aire,
1182O if it be the French, sweete fortune turne,
1183And in thy turning change the forward winds,
1184That with aduantage of a sauoring skie,
1186Enter Marriner.
1188To whome belongs the honor of this day,
1189Relate I pray thee, if thy breath will serue,
1191Mar. I will my Lord.
1192My gratious soueraigne, Fraunce hath tane the foyle,
1194These Iron harted Nauies,
1195When last I was reporter to your grace,
1196Both full of angry spleene of hope and feare:
1197Hasting to meete each other in the face,
1198At last conioynd, and by their Admirall,
1199Our Admirall encountred manie shot,
1200By this the other that beheld these twaine,
1201Giue earnest peny of a further wracke,
1204Sent many grym Embassadors of death,
1205Then gan the day to turne to gloomy night,
1207As those that were but newly reft of life,
As
Edward the third.
1210As ech to other seemed deafe and dombe,
1212With streaming gore that from the maymed fell,
1216There mangled armes and legs were tost aloft,
1217As when a wherle winde takes the Summer dust,
1218And scatters it in midddle of the aire,
1221Vntill their lofty tops were seene no more.
1222All shifts were tried both for defence and hurt,
1224Of resolution and of a cowardize:
1225We liuely pictured, how the one for fame;
1226The other by compulsion laid about;
1227Much did the Nom per illa, that braue ship
1228So did the blacke snake of Bullen, then which
1230But all in vaine, both Sunne, the Wine and tyde,
1231Reuolted all vnto our foe mens side,
1232That we perforce were fayne to giue them way,
1233And they are landed, thus my tale is donne,
1234We haue vntimly lost, and they haue woone.
1236To ioyne our seueral forces al in one,
1237And bid them battaile ere they rainge to farre,
1238Come gentle Phillip, let vs hence depart,
1240Enter two French men, a woman and two little Children,
1241meet them another Citizens.
1244What is it quarter daie that you remoue,
1245And carrie bag and baggage too?
Two Quater
The Raigne of King
1246Two: Quarter day, I and quartering pay I feare:
1247Haue we not heard the newes that flies abroad?
1248One: What newes?
1250And that the English Armie is arriued.
1251One: What then?
1254One. Content thee man, they are farre enough from hence,
1255And will be met I warrant ye to their cost,
1256Before they breake so far into the Realme.
1258In mirthfull iollitie till Winter come,
1259And then too late he would redeeme his time,
1260When frozen cold hath nipt his carelesse head:
1261He that no sooner will prouide a Cloake,
1262Then when he sees it doth begin to raigne,
1263May peraduenture for his negilgence,
1265We that haue charge, and such a trayne as this,
1266Must looke in time, to looke for them and vs,
1267Least when we would, we cannot be relieued.
1269And thinke your Country will be subiugate.
1275Of that small handfull of our enimies:
1276But tis a rightfull quarrell must preuaile,
1278Where Iohn Valoys, is three degrees remoued.
1280Published by one that was a Fryer once,
1281Whose Oracles haue many times prooued true,
And
Edward the third.
1284Shall carie hence the fluerdeluce of France,
1286Strike many french men cold vnto the heart:
1287Enter a French man.
1288 Flie cuntry men and cytizens of France,
1289Sweete flowring peace the roote of happie life,
1290Is quite abandoned and expulst the lande,
1292Syts like to Rauens vppon your houses topps,
1295The forme whereof euen now my selfe beheld,
1296Vpon this faire mountaine whence I came,
1299Corne fieldes and vineyards burning like an ouen,
1300And as the leaking vapour in the wind,
1303Fall numberles vpon the souldiers pikes,
1305Do tread the measuers of their tragicke march,
1306Vpon the right hand comes the conquering King,
1307Vpon the lefte is hot vnbridled sonne,
1310To leaue a desolation where they come,
1311Flie therefore Citizens if you be wise,
1312Seeke out som habitation further of,
F A
The Raigne of King
1316Away, away, me thinks I heare their drums,
1317Ah wreched France, I greatly feare thy fal,
1318Thy glory shaketh like a tottering wall.
1319Enter King Edward and the Erle of Darby
1320With Souldiors, and Gobin de Graie.
1322We found the shalow of this Riuer Sone,
1324Go: Here my good Lord.
1325Kin: How art thou calde, tell me thy name.
1328We here inlarge and giue thee liberty,
1329And for recompenc beside this good,
1332Whom now in heart I wish I might behold.
1333Enter Artoyes.
1334 Good newes my Lord the prince is hard at hand,
1335And with him comes Lord Awdley and the rest,
1336Whome since our landing we could neuer meet.
1337Enter Prince Edward, Lord Awdley and Souldiers.
1339Since thy arriuall on the coaste of Fraunce?
1342As Harslen, Lie, Crotag, and Carentigne,
1343And others wasted, leauing at our heeles,
1344A wide apparant feild and beaten path,
1348Indurde the penaltie of sharpe reuenge.
1350Agaynst the kind imbracement of thy friends,
How
Edward the third.
1351How gently had we thought to touch thy brest,
1352And set our foot vpon thy tender mould,
1353But that in froward and disdainfull pride
1354Thou like a skittish and vntamed coult,
1356But tel me Ned, in all thy warlike course,
1358Pri. Yes my good Lord, and not two owers ago,
1360Vppon the one side with the riuers banke,
1361And on the other both his multitudes,
1362I feard he would haue cropt our smaller power,
1363But happily perceiuing your approch,
1365Where as it seemeth by his good araie.
1366He meanes to byd vs battaile presently,
1368Enter King Iohn, Dukes of Normanndy and Lorraine, King of
1369Boheme, yong Phillip, and Souldiers.
1370Iohn. Edward know that Iohn the true king of Fraunce,
1372And in thy tyranous proceeding slay,
1374Spits in thy face, and in this manner folowing,
1375Obraids thee with thine arrogant intrusion,
1376First I condeme thee for a fugitiue,
1377A theeuish pyrate, and a needie mate,
1378One that hath either no abyding place,
1380Where neither hearb or frutfull graine is had,
1381Doest altogether liue by pilfering,
1384I hould thee for a false pernitious wretch,
2 With
The Raigne of King
1388They labour rather to be feared then loued,
1390Heere am I come and with me haue I brought,
1392Leaue therfore now to persecute the weake,
1393And armed entring conflict with the armd,
1395How thou canst win this pillage manfully.
1398But as the one hath no such propertie,
1400Yet wot how I regarde thy worthles tants,
1401If thou haue vttred them to foile my fame,
1402Or dym the reputation of my birth,
1403Know that thy woluish barking cannot hurt,
1406To painte thy vitious and deformed cause,
1407Bee well assured the counterfeit will fade,
1409But if thou didst it to prouoke me on,
1411Or coldly negligent did need a spurre,
1413Now since my landing I haue wonn no townes,
1414Entered no further but vpon the coast,
1416But if I haue bin other wise imployd,
1417Imagin Valoys whether I intende
1419Which thou dost weare and that I vowe to haue,
1420Or one of vs shall fall in to this graue,
Pr Ed: Looke
Edward the third.
1422Or rayling execrations of despight,
1423Let creeping serpents hide in hollow banckes,
1426Yet thus much breefly by my fathers leaue,
1429And our pretended quarell is truly iust,
1430So end the battaile when we meet to daie,
1431May eyther of vs prosper and preuaile,
1437Or that inkindled fury, turne to flame:
1442Pr Ed: I that approues thee tyrant what thou art,
1443No father, king, or shepheard of thy realme,
1444But one that teares her entrailes with thy handes,
1446Aud: You peeres of France, why do you follow him,
1449But he that is their true borne soueraigne?
1451Time hath ingraud deep caracters of age:
1454When whirle wind quickly turnes vp yonger trees.
1457Edwards great linage by the mothers side,
3 Fiue
The Raigne of King
1458Fiue hundred yeeres hath helde the scepter vp,
1460Which is the true borne soueraigne this or that.
1461Pri: Father range your battailes, prate no more,
1463That night approching, they might escape vnfought.
1465That your intended force must bide the touch,
1466Therfore my frinds consider this in breefe,
1467He that you fight for is your naturall King,
1469He that you fight for rules in clemencie,
1470And raines you with a mild and gentle byt,
1473Make slaues of you, and with a heauie hand
1475Then to protect your Country and your King,
1476Let but the haughty Courrage of your hartes,
1477Answere the number of your able handes,
1479For whats this Edward but a belly god,
1480A tender and lasciuious wantonnes,
1481That thother daie was almost dead for loue,
1482And what I praie you is his goodly gard,
1483Such as but scant them of their chines of beefe,
1484And take awaie their downie featherbedes,
1486As twere a many ouer ridden iades,
1488And rather bind ye them in captiue bands,
1494Either to cleere vs of that scandalous cryme,
Or
Edward the third.
1495Or be intombed in our innocence,
1499To dub thee with the tipe of chiualrie,
1500In solemne manner wee will giue thee armes,
1501Come therefore Heralds, orderly bring forth,
1503Enter foure Heraldes bringing in a coate armour, a helmet, a
1504lance, and a shield.
1505Kin: Edward Plantagenet, in the name of God,
1506As with this armour I impall thy breast,
1507So be thy noble vnrelenting heart,
1510Fight and be valiant, conquere where thou comst,
1511Now follow Lords, and do him honor to.
1512Dar: Edward Plantagenet prince of Wales,
1513As I do set this helmet on thy head,
1514Wherewith the chamber of this braine is fenst,
1515So may thy temples with Bellonas hand,
1517Fight and be valiant, conquer where thou comst.
1518Aud. Edward Plantagenet prince of Wales,
1519Receiue this lance into thy manly hand,
1521To drawe forth bloudie stratagems in France,
1522And print thy valiant deeds in honors booke,
1524Art: Edward Plantagener prince of Wales,
1525Hold take this target, weare it on thy arme,
1529Fight and be valiant, couquer where thou comst.
1530Ki. Now wants there nought but knighthood, which deferd
We
The Raigne of King
1532 My gratious father and yee forwarde peeres,
1533This honor you haue done me animates,
1536No other wise then did ould Iacobes wordes,
1538These hallowed giftes of yours when I prophane,
1539Or vse them not to glory of my God,
1540To patronage the fatherles and poore,
1541Or for the benefite of Englands peace,
1542Be numbe my ioynts, waxe feeble both mine armes,
1543Wither my hart that like a saples tree,
1544I may remayne the map of infamy,
1546The leading of the vowarde Ned is thyne,
1548We temper it with Audlys grauitie,
1549That courage and experience ioynd in one,
1550Your manage may be second vnto none,
1551For the mayne battells I will guide my selfe,
1552And Darby in the rereward march behind,
1556After them Prince Edward runing.
1557Then enter King Iohn and Duke of Loraine.
1559Our nomber is far greater then our foes,
1561That cam from Paris weary with their march,
1562Grudging to be soddenly imployd,
1563No sooner in the forefront tooke their place.
More
Edward the third.
1568Then by the ennimie a thousand fold.
1571Enter King Edward and Audley.
1573With draw our powers vnto this little hill,
1578How are we bound to praise thy wondrous works,
1579That hast this day giuen way vnto the right,
1581Enter Artoys.
1586With turning Frenchmen, whom he did persue,
1590And he is laboring for a knighthood man.
1591Enter Derby.
1594Ki: Then will he win a world of honor to,
1595If he by vallour can redeeme him thence,
1596If not, what remedy, we haue more sonnes,
1597Then one to comfort our declyning age.
1598Enter Audley.
1599Au, Renowned Edward, giue me leaue I pray,
1600To lead my souldiers where I may releeue,
1602The snares of French, like Emmets on a banke,
G Mustar
The Raigne of king
1604Intangled in the net of their assaults,
1605Frantiquely wrends and byts the wouen toyle,
1606But all in vaine, he cannot free him selfe.
1607K: Ed: Audley content, I will not haue a man,
1609This is the day, ordaynd by desteny,
1611That if he breaketh out, Nestors yeares on earth,
1615An: Yet good my Lord, tis too much wilfulnes,
1617Kin. Exclayme no more, for none of you can tell,
1618Whether a borrowed aid will serue or no,
1619Perhapps he is already slayne or tane:
1621And euer after sheele be huggard like:
1622Let Edward be deliuered by our hands,
1625He wil haue vanquisht cheerefull death and feare,
1626And euer after dread their force no more,
1627Then if they were but babes or Captiue slaues.
1628Aud. O cruell Father, farewell Edward then.
1632The dismall charge of Trumpets loud retreat:
1633All are not slayne I hope that went with him,
1634Some will returne with tidings good or bad.
1635Enter Prince Edward in tryumph, bearing in his hande his
1636 shiuered Launce, and the King of Boheme, borne before,
1637 wrapt in the Coullours: They runne and imbrace him.
Au. O
Edward the third.
1639Der: Welcome braue Prince.
fathers hand
1642Lords I regreet you all with harty thanks,
1643And now behold after my winters toyle,
1645Of warres deuouring gulphes and steely rocks,
1646I bring my fraught vnto the wished port,
1648And heere with humble duety I present,
1650Cropt and cut downe euen at the gate of death:
1652Whom you sayd, had intrencht me round about,
1653And laye as thicke vpon my battered crest,
1654As on an Anuell with their ponderous glaues,
1655Yet marble courage, still did vnderprop,
1656And when my weary armes with often blowes,
1657Like the continuall laboring Wood-mans Axe,
1658That is enioynd to fell a load of Oakes,
1659Began to faulter, straight I would recouer:
1660My gifts you gaue me, and my zealous vow,
1661And then new courage made me fresh againe,
Soldier.
1665And done I hope the duety of a Knight
1667And therefore with thy sword, yet reaking warme,
1668With blood of those that fought to be thy bane,
1670This day thou hast confounded me with ioy,
2 Eleuen
The Raigne of King
1675A hundred and twenty knights, and thirty thousand
1677 Our God be praised, Now Iohn of Fraunce I hope,
1680But which way is the fearefull king escapt?
1684And there begyrt that Hauen towne with seege:
1686And wistlie follow whiles the games on foote.
1688Pr: A Pellican my Lord,
1689Wounding her bosome with her crooked beak,
1691With drops of blood that issue from her hart,
1693Enter Lord Mountford with a Coronet in his hande, with him
1694the Earle of Salisbury.
1696Mine ennemie Sir Charles of Bloys is slaine,
1698In Btittaines Dukedome, knowe that I resolue,
1699For this kind furtherance of your king and you,
1701In signe where of receiue this Coronet,
1702Beare it vnto him, and with all mine othe,
1703Neuer to be but Edwards faithful friend.
1704Sa: I take it Mountfort, thus I hope eare long,
1705The whole Dominions of the Realme of Fraunce
1708I would to Calice gladly meete his Grace,
1709Whether I am by letters certified,
Yet
Edward the third.
1710Yet he intends to haue his host remooude,
1712Ho whose within? bring Villiers to me.
1713Enter Villeirs.
1715And that I might for ransome if I would,
1716Require of thee a hundred thousand Francks,
1720And this it is, procure me but a pasport,
1721Of Charles the Duke of Normandy, that I,
1723Through all the Countries where he hath to doe.
1726He and thou were students once together:
1733Thou wilt returne my prisoner backe againe,
1735Vil: To that condition I agree my Lord,
1737Sal: Farewell Villiers,
1738Thus once I meane to trie a French mans faith. Exit.
1739Enter King Edward and Derby with Souldiers.
1741And will not ope their gates and let vs in,
1743That neithet vituals, nor supply of men,
3 Enter
The Raigne of king
1746Enter sixe poore Frenchmen.
1748Is now retirde and gone an other way:
1749It will repent them of their stubborne will,
1752 Callis.
1754What are you liuing men, er glyding ghosts,
1755Crept from your graues to walke vpon the earth,
1761The Captayne of the towne hath thrust vs foorth,
1764But how do you imagine then to speed?
1769As welcome death is vnto vs as life.
1771Go Derby go, and see they be relieud,
1772Command that victuals be appoynted them,
1773And giue to euery one fiue Crownes a peece:
1774The Lion scornes to touch the yeelding pray,
1777Enter Lord Pearsie.
1779Per: The Queene my Lord comes heere to your Grace,
1780And from hir highnesse, and the Lord vicegerent,
I
Edward the third.
1782Dauid of Scotland lately vp in armes,
1784Your highnes being absent from the Realme,
1785Is by the fruitfull seruice of your peeres,
1786And painefull trauell of the Queene her selfe:
1787That big with child was euery day in armes,
1793Denies to make surrender of his prize,
1794To anie but vnto your grace alone:
1797To summon Copland hither out of hand,
1801To land at Callis, and to visit you,
1804Enter a Captayne.
1805 The Burgesses of Callis mighty king,
1806Haue by a counsell willingly decreed,
1807To yeeld the towne and Castle to your hands,
1808Vpon condition it will please your grace,
1809To graunt them benefite of life and goods.
1814They shall not haue it now although they would,
I will
The Raigne of King
1817That are the welthiest marchaunts in the towne,
1818Come naked all but for their linnen shirts,
1819With each a halter hangd about his necke,
1824Had we not been perswaded Iohn our King,
1825Would with his armie haue releeud the towne,
1827But now tis past that no man can recall,
1829Enter Charles of Normandy and Villiers
1831For one that is our deadly ennemie.
1833Am I become an earnest aduocate,
1834As that thereby my ransome will be quit,
1836Art thou not free? and are not all occasions,
1837That happen for aduantage of our foes,
1838To be accepted of, and stood vpon?
1844Ch. Villiers I will not, nor I cannot do it,
1847Vil: Why then I know the extremitie my Loid,
1849Ch. Returne, I hope thou wilt not,
1850What bird that hath e(s)capt the fowlers gin,
Will
Edward the third.
1853That hauing hardely past a dangerous gulfe,
1854Will put him selfe in perill there againe.
1855Vil: Ah but it is mine othe my gratious Lord,
1856Which I in conscience may not violate,
1858Ch: Thine othe, why that doth bind thee to abide:
1860Vil: In all things that vprightly he commands:
1861But either to perswade or threaten me,
1862Not to performe the couenant of my word,
1863Is lawlesse, and I need not to obey.
1864Ch: Why is it lawfull for a man to kill,
1865And not to breake a promise with his foe?
1866Vil: To kill my Lord when warre is once proclaymd,
1867So that our quarrel be for wrongs receaude,
1868No doubt is lawfully permitted vs:
1871Not to infringe it though we die therefore:
1872Therefore my Lord, as willing I returne,
1874Ch: Stay my Villeirs, thine honorable minde,
1875Deserues to be eternally admirde,
1878And wheretofore I loued thee as Villeirs,
1879Heereafter Ile embrace thee as my selfe,
1880Stay and be still in fauour with thy Lord.
1883And then I will attend your highnes pleasure.
1886Enter King Iohn.
1887K. Io: Come Charles and arme thee, Edward is intrapt,
1888The Prince of Wales is falne into our hands,
H An
The Raigne of King
1893Ch: I haue a prophecy my gratious Lord,
1895To happen vs in this outragious warre,
1897By one that is an aged Hermyt there,
1898when fethered foul shal make thine army tremble,
1900Then thinke on him that doth not now dissemble
1901For that shalbe the haples dreadfull day,
1902Yet in the end thy foot thou shalt aduance,
1903as farre in England, as thy foe in Fraunce,
1906Should euer rise and breake the battaile ray,
1907Or airie foule make men in armes to quake,
1909Or say this might be true, yet in the end,
1911And forrage their Countrie as they haue don ours
1913But all are fryuolous, fancies, toyes and dreames,
1915Catch we the father after how we can. Exeunt.
1916Enter Prince Edward, Audley and others.
1917Pr: Audley the armes of death embrace vs round,
1918And comfort haue we none saue that to die,
1922But now their multitudes of millions hide
1923Masking as twere the beautious burning Sunne,
1924Leauing no hope to vs but sullen darke,
And
Edward the third.
1925And eie lesse terror of all ending night.
1927That they haue made, faire Prince is wonderfull.
1928Before vs in the vallie lies the king,
1929Vantagd with all that heauen and earth can yeeld,
1930His partie stronger battaild then our whole:
1931His sonne the brauing Duke of Normandie,
1932Hath trimd the Mountaine on our right hand vp,
1935Aloft the which the Banners bannarets,
1937And beat the windes, that for their gaudinesse,
1939Phillip the younger issue of the king,
1940Coting the other hill in such arraie,
1941That all his guilded vpright pikes do seeme,
1942Streight trees of gold, the pendant leaues,
1943And their deuice of Antique heraldry,
1945Makes it the Orchard of the Hesperides,
1946Behinde vs two the hill doth beare his height,
1947For like a halfe Moone opening but one way,
1948It rounds vs in, there at our backs are lodgd,
1949The fatall Crosbowes, and the battaile there,
1950Is gouernd by the rough Chattillion,
1952The king binds in, the hils on either hand,
1953Are proudly royalized by his sonnes,
1954And on the Hill behind stands certaine death,
1955In pay and seruice with Chattillion.
1956Pr: Deathes name is much more mightie then his deeds,
1957Thy parcelling this power hath made it more,
1960Then all the world, and call it but a power:
1961Easely tane vp and quickly throwne away,
2 The
The Raigne of King
1963The number would confound my memorie,
1964And make a thousand millions of a taske,
1965Which briefelie is no more indeed then one,
1967Before, behinde vs, and on either hand,
1968Are but a power, when we name a man,
1971Why all this many, Audely is but one,
1972And we can call it all but one mans strength:
1973He that hath farre to goe, tels it by miles,
1976And yet thou knowest we call it but a Raine:
1977There is but one Fraunce, one king of Fraunce,
1978That Fraunce hath no more kings, and that same king
1979Hath but the puissant legion of one king?
1980And we haue one, then apprehend no ods,
1981For one to one, is faire equalitie.
1982Enter an Herald from king Iohn.
1985Greets by me his fo, the Prince of Wals,
1986If thou call forth a hundred men of name
1989He straight will fold his bloody collours vp,
1992Then ere was buried in our Bryttish earth,
1993What is the answere to his profered mercy?
1994Pr, This heauen that couers Fraunce containes the mercy
1997To vrge the plea of mercie to a man,
1998The Lord forbid, returne and tell the king,
My
Edward the third.
2000My mercie on his coward burgonet.
2001Tell him my colours are as red as his,
2003returne him my defiance in his face.
2004He. I go.
2005Enter another.
2006Pr: What newes with thee?
2008Pittying thy youth is so ingirt with perill,
2009By me hath sent a nimble ioynted iennet,
2017And double guild my spurs, but I will catch him,
2018So tell the capring boy, and get thee gone.
2019Enter another.
2022Seeing thy bodies liuing date expird,
2023All full of charitie and christian loue,
2024Commends this booke full fraught with prayers,
2025To thy faire hand, and for thy houre of lyfe,
2026Intreats thee that thou meditate therein,
2027And arme thy soule for hir long iourney towards.
2028Thus haue I done his bidding, and returne.
2029Pr. Herald of Phillip greet thy Lord from me,
2030All good that he can send I can receiue,
2032Hath wrongd himselfe in this far tendering me,
2033Happily he cannot praie without the booke,
2034I thinke him no diuine extemporall,
2035Then render backe this common place of prayer,
3 To
The Raigne of King
2038and therefore knowes no praiers for my auaile,
2039Ere night his praier may be to praie to God,
2040To put it in my heart to heare his praier,
2041So tell the courtly wanton, and be gone.
2042He. I go.
2046Shew thy times learning in this dangerous time,
2049Are texted in thine honorable face,
2051But danger wooes me as a blushing maide,
2052Teach me an answere to this perillous time.
2053Aud. To die is all as common as to liue,
2054The one in choice the other holds in chase,
2055For from the instant we begin to liue,
2056We do pursue and hunt the time to die,
2059Followes the bodie, so we follow death,
2060If then we hunt for death, why do we feare it?
2061If we feare it, why do we follow it?
2062If we do feare, how can we shun it?
2063If we do feare, with feare we do but aide
2066Can ouerthrow the limit of our fate,
2067For whether ripe or rotten, drop we shall,
2068as we do drawe the lotterie of our doome.
2070These wordes of thine haue buckled on my backe,
2071Ah what an idiot hast thou made of lyfe,
2073The imperiall victorie of murdring death,
Since
Edward the third.
2074Since all the liues his conquering arrowes strike,
2075Seeke him, and he not them, to shame his glorie,
2076I will not giue a pennie for a lyfe,
2077Nor halfe a halfepenie to shun grim death,
2078Since for to liue is but to seeke to die,
2079And dying but beginning of new lyfe,
2080Let come the houre when he that rules it will,
2081To liue or die I hold indifferent. Exeunt.
2082Enter king Iohn and Charles.
2084The windes are crept into their caues for feare,
2087Murmure no wonted greeting to their shores,
2090Where or from whome proceeds this silence Charles?
2092Looke on each other, as they did attend
2093Each others wordes, and yet no creature speakes,
2094A tongue-tied feare hath made a midnight houre,
2096Ioh: But now the pompeous Sunne in all his pride,
2097Lookt through his golden coach vpon the worlde,
2099that now the vnder earth is as a graue,
2101Harke, what a deadly outcrie do I heare?
2102Ch. Here comes my brother Phillip.
2107Kin: Awake thy crauen powers, and tell on
2110What is the matter?
Pri:
The Raigne of King
2112Do croke and houer ore our souldiers heads
2113And keepe in triangles and cornerd squares,
2114Right as our forces are imbatteled,
2115With their approach there came this sodain fog,
2116Which now hath hid the airie flower of heauen,
2117And made at noone a night vnnaturall,
2118Vpon the quaking and dismaied world,
2119In briefe, our souldiers haue let fall their armes,
2121Bloudlesse and pale, one gazing on another.
2123But I must giue no enterance to a feare,
2125Tell them the rauens seeing them in armes,
2127Come but to dine vpon their handie worke,
2128and praie vpon the carrion that they kill,
2130although not dead, the rauenous birds
2131Sit watching the departure of his life,
2134Houer about, and if they crie to vs,
2135Tis but for meate that we must kill for them,
2136Awaie and comfort vp my souldiers,
2140French Captaine.
2141Cap: Behold my liege, this knight and fortie mo,
2144And make their waie to the incompast prince,
2148Eor I doo hold a tree in France too good,
To
Edward the third.
2149To be the gallowes of an English theefe.
2151And warrant for my safetie through this land.
2152Ch. Villiers procurd it for thee, did he not?
2153Sal: He did.
2155En: Io: I freely to the gallows to be hangd,
2156Without deniall or impediment.
2157Awaie with him.
2160He hath my neuer broken name to shew,
2161Carectred with this princely hande of mine,
2162and rather let me leaue to be a prince,
2165Ki: Thou and thy word lie both in my command,
2167Which of these twaine is greater infamie,
2169Thy word nor no mans may exceed his power,
2170Nor that same man doth neuer breake his worde,
2171That keepes it to the vtmost of his power.
2174Thou art not charged with the breach of faith,
2175Go hang him, for thy lisence lies in mee,
2179Shall I not giue my girdle from my wast,
2180But with a gardion I shall be controld,
2181To saie I may not giue my things awaie,
2183Ingagde his word, writ downe his noble hand,
2184For all your knights to passe his fathers land,
2185The roiall king to grace his warlike sonne,
I But
The Raigne of king
2187But with all bountie feasted them and theirs.
2189Say Englishman of what degree thou art.
2191And those that knowe me call me Salisburie.
2193Sa. To Callice where my liege king Edward is.
2194Kin: To Callice Salisburie, then to Callice packe,
2195and bid the king prepare a noble graue,
2196To put his princely sonne blacke Edward in,
2198Some two leagues hence there is a loftie hill,
2200Doth hide his high head in her azure bosome,
2201Vpon whose tall top when thy foot attaines,
2202Looke backe vpon the humble vale beneath,
2203Humble of late, but now made proud with armes,
2204and thence behold the wretched prince of Wales,
2205Hoopt with a bond of yron round about,
2208and tell the king this is not all his ill,
2209For I will greet him ere he thinkes I will,
2211Will choake our foes, though bullets hit them not. Exit.
2216Art. Breath then, and too it againe, the amazed French
2220O for more arrowes Lord, thats our want.
2222When feathered foules doo bandie on our side,
Vp
Edward the third.
2225Vp, vp Artoys, the ground it selfe is armd,
2226Fire containing flint, command our bowes
2227To hurle awaie their pretie colored Ew,
2228and to it with stones, awaie Artoys, awaie,
2231 Our multitudes are in themselues confounded,
2233Hath buzd a cold dismaie through all our armie,
2234and euerie pettie disaduantage promptes
2237What with recalling of the prophesie,
2241Enter Charles.
2242 Fly father flie, the French do kill the French,
2246The spirit of feare that feareth nought but death,
2248Enter Phillip.
2250An arme hath beate an armie, one poore Dauid
2254Araid and fenst in al accomplements,
2260and all the world wilt blurt and scorne at vs.
2261Kin: What is there no hope left?
2 Make
The Raigne of king
2263Ki. Make vp once more with me the twentith part
2264Of those that liue, are men inow to quaile,
2265The feeble handfull on the aduerse part.
2269Enter Audley wounded, & rescued by two squirs.
2270Esq. How fares my Lord;
2271Aud. Euen as a man may do
2275and in the worst ends but a mortall man,
2276Good friends conuey me to the princely Edward
2277That in the crimson brauerie of my bloud,
2278I may become him with saluting him,
2281Enter prince Edward, king Iohn, Charles, and all
2282with Ensignes spred.
2283Retreat sounded.
2284Pri. Now Iohn in France, & lately Iohn of France,
2285Thy bloudie Ensignes are my captiue colours,
2286and you high vanting Charles of Normandie,
2291Should in the bosome of your kingdome thus,
2292One against twentie beate you vp together.
2293Kin. Thy fortune, not thy force hath conquerd vs.
2294Pri. an argument that heauen aides the right,
2295See, see, Artoys doth bring with him along,
2297Welcome Artoys, and welcome Phillip to,
2298Who now of you or I haue need to praie,
2299Now is the prouerbe verefied in you,
2300Too bright a morning breeds a louring daie.
Sound
Edward the third.
2303Alas what thousand armed men of Fraunce,
2304Haue writ that note of death in Audleys face:
2307As if thou wert enamored on thyne end,
2309And lopt a true friend from my louing soule:
2311Is as a morneful knell to one dead sicke.
2312Pr: Deare Audley if my tongue ring out thy end:
2314To win thy life, or to reuenge thy death,
2315If thou wilt drinke the blood of captyue kings,
2316Or that it were restoritiue, command
2317A Heath of kings blood, and Ile drinke to thee,
2319The neuer dying honor of this daie,
2320Share wholie Audley to thy selfe and liue.
2323If I could hold dym death but at a bay,
2324Till I did see my liege thy loyall father,
2326This mangled tribute with all willingnes;
2329To yeeld her Citie for one little breach,
2332Lo, to repaire thy life, I giue to thee,
2334Au: I take thy gift to pay the debts I owe:
2336With lusty & deer hazzard of their liues;
2337What thou hast giuen me I giue to them,
3
The Raigne of king
2340Pr: Renowned Audley, liue and haue from mee,
2342But liue or die, what thou hast giuen away,
2345With in an easie Litter, then wele martch.
2346Proudly toward Callis with tryumphant pace,
2347Vnto my royall father, and there bring,
2348The tribut of my wars, faire Fraunce his king. Ex.
2349Enter sixe Citizens in their Shirts, bare foote, with
2350halters about their necks.
2351Enter King Edward, Queen Phillip, Derby, soldiers.
2353Copland, except he can excuse his fault,
2357To be deluded by their false delaies,
2359All: Mercy king Edward, mercie gratious Lord.
2360Ki: Gontemptuous villaines, call ye now for truce?
2362Sound drums allarum, draw threatning swords?
2363All: Ah noble Prince, take pittie on this towne,
2364And heare vs mightie king:
2365We claime the promise that your highnes made,
2366The two daies respit is not yet expirde,
2367And we are come with willingnes to beare,
2369So that the trembling multitude be saued,
2371But I require the cheefest Citizens,
2373You peraduenture are but seruile groomes,
2374Or some fellonious robbers on the Sea,
2375Whome apprehended law would execute,
2376Albeit seuerity lay dead in vs,
No
Edward the third.
2377No no ye cannot ouerreach vs thus,
2379Beholds vs now low brought through miserie,
2380Did in the Orient purple of the morne,
2381Salute our comming forth when we were knowne
2382Or may our portion be with damned fiends,
2386But as imperiall iustice hath decreed,
2392And kings approch the nearest vnto God,
2393By giuing life and safety vnto men,
2394As thou intendest to be king of Fraunce,
2395So let her people liue to call thee king,
2397Is held in reputation none of ours.
2398Ki: Although experience teach vs, this is true,
2399That peacefull quietnes brings most delight,
2403As conquer other by the dynt of sword,
2404Phillip preuaile, we yeeld to thy request,
2407Two: long liue your highnes, happy be your reigne
2408Ki: Go get you hence, returne vnto the towne,
2409And if this kindnes hath deserud your loue,
2410Learne then to reuerence Edw. as your king. Ex.
2411Now might we heare of our affaires abroad,
2412We would till glomy Winter were ore spent,
2414But who comes heere?
Enter
The Raigne of king
2415Enter Copland and King Dauid.
2416De, Copland my Lord, and Dauid King of Scots:
2418 North,
2419That would not yeeld his prisoner to my Queen,
2425But my desert and publike law at armes.
2428The least preheminence that I had won.
2429And Copland straight vpon your highnes charge,
2430Is come to Fraunce, and with a lowly minde,
2431Doth vale the bonnet of his victory:
2432Receiue dread Lorde the custome of my fraught,
2433The wealthie tribute of my laboring hands,
2435Had but your gratious selfe bin there in place,
2440But to his person I will bend my knee.
2442This man doth please mee, and I like his words,
2443For what is he that will attmpt great deeds,
2445all riuers haue recourse vnto the Sea,
2446and Coplands faith relation to his king,
2447Kneele therefore downe, now rise king Edwards (knight,
2448and to maintayne thy state I freely giue,
2449Fiue hundred marks a yeere to thee and thine.
2450welcom lord Salisburie, what news from Brittaine
2451Enter Salsbury.
2452Sa: This mightie king, the Country we haue won,
And
Edward the third.
2453And Charles de Mounford regent of that place,
2454Presents your highnes with this Coronet,
2455Protesting true allegeaunce to your Grace.
2457Challenge our fauour for we owe it thee:
2458Sa: But now my Lord, as this is ioyful newes,
2459So must my voice be tragicall againe,
2461Ki: What haue our men the ouerthrow at Poitiers,
2464With fortie other seruicable knights,
2467A troupe of Launces met vs on the way,
2469Who proud of this, and eager of reuenge,
2470Commanded straight to cut of all our heads,
2471And surely we had died but that the Duke,
2472More full of honor then his angry syre,
2473Procurd our quicke deliuerance from thence,
2474But ere we went, salute your king, quothe hee,
2475Bid him prouide a funerall for his sonne,
2477And sooner then he thinkes wele be with him:
2481Wandring at last we clymd vnto a hill,
2482From whence although our griefe were much be-(fore
2485For there my Lord, oh there we did descry
2486Downe in a vallie how both armies laie:
2487The French had cast their trenches like a ring,
2488And euery Barricados open front,
K Heere
The Raigne of King
2492Here Crosbowes and deadly wounding darts,
2500Anon the death procuring knell begins,
2503Then sound the Trumpets clangor in the aire,
2504The battailes ioyne, and when we could no more,
2506So intricate the darke confusion was,
2507Away we turnd our watrie eies with sighs,
2508as blacke as pouder fuming into smoke,
2509And thus I feare, vnhappie haue I told,
2510The most vntimely tale of Edwards fall.
2511Qu: Ah me, is this my welcome into Fraunce:
2512Is this the comfort that I lookt to haue,
2514Sweete Ned, I would thy mother in the sea
2515Had been preuented of this mortall griefe.
2517To call him backe, if he be taken hence,
2518Comfort thy selfe as I do gentle Queene,
2519With hope of sharpe vnheard of dyre reuenge,
2520He bids me to prouide his funerall.
2521And so I will, but all the Peeres in Fraunce,
2522Shall mourners be, and weepe out bloody teares,
2523Vntill their emptie vaines be drie and sere
2525The mould that couers him, their Citie ashes,
2526His knell the groning cryes of dying men,
and
Edward the third.
2527And in the stead of tapers on his tombe,
2530After a flourish sounded within, enter an herald.
2532The mightie and redoubted prince of Wales,
2533Great seruitor to bloudie Mars in armes,
2534The French mans terror and his countries fame,
2535Triumphant rideth like a Romane peere,
2536and lowly at his stirop comes a foot
2537King Iohn of France, together with his sonne,
2538In captiue bonds, whose diadem he brings
2539To crowne thee with, and to proclaime thee king
2540Ki. Away with mourning Phillip, wipe thine eies
2541Sound Trumpets, welcome in Plantaginet.
2542Enter Prince Edward, king Iohn, Phillip, Aud-
2543ley, Artoys.
2545So doth my sonne reioyce his fathers heart,
2546For whom euen now my soule was much perplext
2549Pr. My gracious father, here receiue the gift,
2550This wreath of conquest, and reward of warre,
2551Got with as mickle perill of our liues,
2552as ere was thing of price before this daie,
2553Install your highnes in your proper right,
2554and heerewithall I render to your hands
2558Then we did thinke for, and tis so in deed,
2560How many ciuill townes had stoode vntoucht,
2561That now are turnd to ragged heaps of stones?
2563that are vntimely sunke into their graues.
2564Io: Edward, recount not things irreuocable,
Tell
The Raigne of King
2569How ere it fals, it cannot be so bad,
2570as ours hath bin since we ariude in France.
2573Pri: Now father this petition Edward makes,
2577So thou wilt grant that many princes more,
2578Bred and brought vp within that little Isle,
2580and for my part, the bloudie scars I beare,
2581The wearie nights that I haue watcht in field,
2583The fearefull menaces were proffered me,
2585I wish were now redoubled twentie fold,
2586So that hereafter ages when they reade
2587The painfull traffike of my tender youth
2589as not the territories of France alone,
2590But likewise Spain, Turkie, and what countries els
2591That iustly would prouoke faire Englands ire,
2592Might at their presence tremble and retire.
2594an intercession of our painfull armes,
2597a daie or two within this hauen towne,
2598God willing then for England wele be shipt,
2600Ariue three kings, two princes, and a queene.
2601FINIS.