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- Edition: King Leir
The History of King Leir (Quarto, 1605)
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The true Chronicle Historie of King
Leir and his three daughters.
ACTVS I.
1Enter King Leir and Nobles.
3THus to our griefe the obsequies performd
6Doth ride in triumph 'mōgst the Cherubins;
7Let vs request your graue aduice, my Lords,
9For whom our care is specially imployd,
10As nature bindeth to aduaunce their states,
11In royall marriage with some princely mates:
12For wanting now their mothers good aduice,
13Vnder whose gouernment they haue receyued
14A perfit patterne of a vertuous life:
17Although our selues doe dearely tender them,
18Yet are we ignorant of their affayres:
22And course of time hath cancelled the date
23Of further issue from our withered loynes:
24One foote already hangeth in the graue,
25And age hath made deepe furrowes in my face:
26The world of me, I of the world am weary,
28And thinke vpon the welfare of my soule:
30Then by resigning vp the Crowne from me,
31In equall dowry to my daughters three.
32Skalliger. A worthy care, my Liege, which well declares,
33The zeale you bare vnto our quondam Queene:
The History of King Leir
36What seuerall Suters your princely daughters haue,
37To make them eche a Ioynter more or lesse,
38As is their worth, to them that loue professe.
42Both old and young shall haue alike for me.
44That God had lent you an heyre indubitate,
45Which might haue set vpon your royall throne,
48And as by you, by him we might haue peace.
49But after-wishes euer come too late,
50And nothing can reuoke the course of fate:
52To match them with some of your neighbour Kings,
53Bordring within the bounds of Albion,
57And mine (I hope) do sort with heauenly powers:
58For at this instant two neere neyghbouring Kings
59Of Cornwall and of Cambria, motion loue
60To my two daughters, Gonorill and Ragan.
61My youngest daughter, fayre Cordella, vowes
62No liking to a Monarch, vnlesse loue allowes.
63She is sollicited by diuers Peeres;
64But none of them her partiall fancy heares.
65Yet, if my policy may her beguyle,
66Ile match her to some King within this Ile,
69Perillus. Of vs & ours, your gracious care, my Lord,
71To be inrol'd in Chronicles of fame,
72By neuer-dying perpetuity:
Yet
and his three daughters.
73Yet to become so prouident a Prince,
74Lose not the title of a louing father:
75Do not force loue, where fancy cannot dwell,
79To try which of my daughters loues me best:
80Which till I know, I cannot be in rest.
81This graunted, when they ioyntly shall contend,
82Eche to exceed the other in their loue:
83Then at the vantage will I take Cordella,
87Accept a husband, whom my selfe will woo.
90Then will I tryumph in my policy,
91And match her with a King of Brittany.
93Per. Thus fathers think their children to beguile,
96Enter Gonorill and Ragan.
97Gon.I maruell, Ragan, how you can indure
99So slightly to account of vs, her elders,
100As if we were no better then her selfe!
102Or new made fashion, of our choyce inuention;
104Or study newer to exceed vs both.
107That all the Court hath worke ynough to do,
108To talke how she exceedeth me and you.
110To find a cure for this contagious ill:
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112To dimme the glory of her mounting fame;
116She daily hath, and of the best degree?
118And haue a husband when as we haue none:
119Why then, by right, to her we must giue place,
122A husband before me,
123Ile marry one or other in his shirt:
124And yet I haue made halfe a graunt already
125Of my good will vnto the King of Cornwall.
129Hauing good newes which doth concerne you both,
130And craueth speedy expedition.
132I am with child vntill you vtter it.
134Your father in great secrecy to day,
135Told me, he meanes to marry you out of hand,
136Vnto the noble Prince of Cambria;
137You, Madam, to the King of Cornwalls Grace:
139Vpon the rich King of Hibernia:
141For hitherto she ne're could fancy him.
142If she do yeeld, why then, betweene you three,
143He will deuide his kingdome for your dowries.
144But yet there is a further mystery,
Which
and his three daughters.
149Which of you three do beare most loue to him,
150And on your loues he so extremely dotes,
151As neuer any did, I thinke, before.
153To be resolu'd of this tormenting doubt:
159 (Striuing to go beyond you in her loue)
162The Hibernian King in marriage for to take.
164Which being done, I humbly take my leaue,
168Shall not be vnrequited, if we liue. Exit Skalliger.
170To be reueng'd vpon her vnperceyu'd.
172Shall be accounted piety in vs:
176To match me to a begger, I will yeeld:
177For why, I know what euer I do say,
178He meanes to match me with the Cornwall King.
181Who dotes, as if he were a child agayne,
182I shall inioy the noble Cambrian Prince:
184To say, I am content with any one
185Whom heele appoynt me; this will please him more,
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188Cordella will be, when we answere thus:
190To ioyne in marriage with the Irish King:
191So will our father think, she loueth him not,
193Which we will aggrauate in such bitter termes,
194That he will soone conuert his loue to hate:
195For he, you know, is alwayes in extremes.
196Rag. Not all the world could lay a better plot,
198 Enter Leir and Perillus.
200Will them immediately come and speak with me.
202Leir. Oh, what a combat feeles my panting heart,
203 'Twixt childrens loue, and care of Common weale!
204How deare my daughters are vnto my soule,
205None knowes, but he, that knowes my thoghts & secret deeds.
206Ah, little do they know the deare regard,
207Wherein I hold their future state to come:
209These aged eyes do watch for their behalfe :
210While they like wantons sport in youthfull toyes,
211This throbbing heart is pearst with dire annoyes.
213So much the fathers loue exceeds the childs.
215Affords not children more conformable:
217I know not what; and yet I feare some ill.
218Enter Perillus, with the three daughters.
219Well, here my daughters come: I haue found out
220A present meanes to rid me of this doubt.
221Gon. Our royall Lord and father, in all duty,
222We come to know the tenour of your will,
Ye
and his three daughters.
228And pale grym death doth wayt vpon my steps,
230Therefore, deare daughters, as ye tender the safety
233Which of you three to me would proue most kind;
236Gon. I hope, my gracious father makes no doubt
237Of any of his daughters loue to him:
238Yet for my part, to shew my zeale to you,
239Which cannot be in windy words rehearst,
240I prize my loue to you at such a rate,
241I thinke my life inferiour to my loue.
242Should you inioyne me for to tye a milstone
243About my neck, and leape into the Sea,
244At your commaund I willingly would doe it:
245Yea, for to doe you good, I would ascend
246The highest Turret in all Brittany,
247And from the top leape headlong to the ground:
248Nay, more, should you appoynt me for to marry
250Without reply I would accomplish it:
251In briefe, commaund what euer you desire,
252And if I fayle, no fauour I require.
257To tell the true intention of my heart,
258Which burnes in zeale of duty to your grace,
259And neuer can be quench'd, but by desire
262But make a challenge of her loue with me;
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264Her father halfe so well as I doe you.
266How much my zeale aboundeth to your grace:
268To ratify my loue before your eyes:
269I haue right noble Suters to my loue,
270No worse then Kings, and happely I loue one:
271Yet, would you haue me make my choyce anew,
272Ide bridle fancy, and be rulde by you.
275Leir. Speak now, Cordella, make my ioyes at full,
276And drop downe Nectar from thy hony lips.
277Cor. I cannot paynt my duty forth in words,
278I hope my deeds shall make report for me:
279But looke what loue the child doth owe the father,
280The same to you I beare, my gracious Lord.
286Doth our deare loue make you thus peremptory?
288As that you scorne to tell vs what it is?
289Do you loue vs, as euery child doth loue
290Their father? True indeed, as some,
293That they make meanes to rid them from the world;
295Whether their aged parents liue or dye;
297What care I had to foster thee to this,
299Our life is lesse, then loue we owe to you.
Nor
and his three daughters.
305I loue my father better then thou canst.
311Cord. Deare father.-------
313I will not heare thee speake one tittle more.
314Call not me father, if thou loue thy life,
316Looke for no helpe henceforth from me nor mine;
318My Kingdome will I equally deuide
322To haue a childs part in the time to come,
325Gon. I euer thought that pride would haue a fall.
327You need no dowry, to make you be a Queene.
328Exeunt Leir, Gonorill, Ragan.
332In him will poore Cordella put her trust.
334And so ile liue vntill my dayes haue ending.
337Ah, if he but with good aduice had weyghed,
338The hidden tenure of her humble speech,
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341Enter the Gallian king with Mumford, and three
342Nobles more.
344This next fayre wynd to sayle for Brittany,
346Be not too prodigall in the wondrous prayse
347Of these three Nymphes, the daughters of King Leir.
349And eyes allow of what our eares haue heard,
351And Fortune fauour what I take in hand;
352I will returne seyz'd of as rich a prize
354Mum. Heauens graūt you may; the match were ful of honor,
355And well beseeming the young Gallian King.
356I would your Grace would fauour me so much,
357As make me partner of your Pilgrimage.
359And feed mine eyes vpon their rare perfections:
360For till I know the contrary, Ile say,
361Our Dames in Fraunce are more fayre then they.
363In offring that which I did meane to aske:
364And I most willingly accept your company.
367Mum. So that you do not tye mine eyes for looking
368After the amorous glaunces of fayre Dames:
369So that you do not tye my toung from speaking,
371My hands from congees, and my knees to bow
372To gallant Gyrles which were a taske more hard,
376Were but a meane to make thee seeke it more:
And
and his three daughters.
379Now heare thy taske. I charge thee from the time
381To vse no words of dignity to me,
383Make vse of me as thy companion:
388dred; therfore if I bee too blunt with you, thank your selfe for
389praying me to be so.
392I do commit the gouernment to you
395The wynd blowes fayre, and I musstneeds away.
398Enter the King of Cornwall and his man booted and
399spurd, a riding wand, and a letter in his hand.
401Ser. Some twenty miles, my Lord, or thereabouts.
403Yet hope I to be there within this houre.
405I thinke, my Lord is weary of his life.
408Enter the King of Cambria booted and spurd, and his
409man with a wand and a letter.
on the
letter.
411I am past patience, longer to forbeare
413Deare Ragan, stay and comfort of my life.
B3He
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415He thinks he ne're shall come at's iourneyes end.
416I would he had old Dedalus waxen wings,
418For e're we get to Troynouant, I see,
420Cornwall & Cambria looke one vpon another, and
421start to see eche other there.
422Corn. Brother of Cambria, we greet you well,
423As one whom here we little did expect.
424Cam. Brother of Cornwall, met in happy time:
425I thought as much to haue met with the Souldan of Persia,
426As to haue met you in this place, my Lord.
431Hath blowne you hither thus vpon the sudden.
433For at this time I cannot brooke delayes:
434Tell you your reason, I will tell you mine.
435Corn. In fayth content, and therefore to be briefe;
437I am sent for, to come vnto King Leir,
439His eldest daughter, louely Gonorill,
440To me in mariage, and for present dowry,
441The moity of halfe his Regiment.
443But vntill now I neuer had the fathers.
444Cam. You tell me wonders, yet I will relate
445Strange newes, and henceforth we must brothers call;
447Being weary of the troubles of his Crowne,
448His princely daughter Ragan will bestow
449On me in mariage, with halfe his Seigniories,
450Whom I would gladly haue accepted of,
451With the third part, her complements are such.
452Corn. If I haue one halfe, and you haue the other,
Then
and his three daughters.
453Then betweene vs we must needs haue the whole.
454Cam. The hole! how meane you that? Zlood, I hope,
455We shall haue two holes beweene vs.
456Corn. Why, the whole Kingdome.
457Cam. I, that's very true.
458Cor. What then is left for his third daughters dowry,
459Louely Cordella, whom the world admires?
461Vnlesse they meane to make a Nunne of her.
464But howsoe're, if Leirs words proue true,
465It will be good, my Lord, for me and you.
467For feare delayes doe alter his intent. Exeunt.
468Enter Gonorill and Ragan.
470That prety piece, that thinks none good ynough
472She hath a little beauty extraordinary?
474I neuer saw her, that I can remember.
476I thinke, her dowry will be small ynough.
478As he will neuer be reclaymd agayne.
479Rag. I was not much behind to do the like.
484I tell you true, it cuts me to the heart.
485Rag. But we will keepe her low enough, I warrant,
486And clip her wings for mounting vp too hye.
489For they, men say, do loue faire women well,
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490And many times doe marry them with nothing.
492Rag. I meane, no money.
495Sheele lay her husbands Benefice on her back,
496Euen in one gowne, if she may haue her will.
499Well, I thinke long vntill I see my Morgan,
500The gallant Prince of Cambria, here arriue.
503Peace, here commeth my father.
504Enter Leir, Perillus and others.
506Our censure, which is now irreuocable.
508Vnto the Kings of Cambria and of Cornwall;
511As to make shipwrack of our kingly word.
512I am as kind as is the Pellican,
514And yet as ielous as the princely Eagle,
515That kils her young ones, if they do but dazell
517Within this two dayes I expect their comming
518But in good time, they are arriu'd already.
520The feruent loue you beare vnto my daughters:
521And think your selues as welcome to King Leir,
522As euer Pryams children were to him.
523Corn. My gracious Lord, and father too, I hope,
524Pardon, for that I made no greater haste :
Then
and his three daughters.
528Then what my brother hath inform'd your Grace:
529For our vndeserued welcome, we do vowe,
530Perpetually to rest at your commaund.
532The Regent, and the Soueraigne of my soule,
533Is Cornwall welcome to your Excellency?
534Gon. As welcome, as Leander was to Hero,
535Or braue Aeneas to the Carthage Queene:
536So and more welcome is your Grace to me.
538Since heauens do know, my fancy is as much.
539Deare Ragan, say, if welcome vnto thee,
540All welcomes else will little comfort me.
541Rag. As gold is welcome to the couetous eye,
542As sleepe is welcome to the Traueller,
545Or any thing more welcomer then this,
546So and more welcome louely Morgan is.
548The celebration of these nuptiall Rites?
549My Kingdome I do equally deuide.
550Princes, draw lots, and take your chaunce as falles.
551Then they draw lots.
555And make you two my true adopted heyres:
557And take me to my prayers and my beades.
558I know, my daughter Ragan will be sorry,
560Would I were able to be with both at once;
565But loue or feare tyes silence to their toungs.
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566Oh, heare me speake for her, my gracious Lord,
568As thus to disinherit her of all.
569Leir. Vrge this no more, and if thou loue thy life:
571To tell her father how she loueth him.
572Who euer speaketh hereof to mee agayne,
573I will esteeme him for my mortall foe.
574Come, let vs in, to celebrate with ioy,
575The happy Nuptialls of these louely payres.
576 Exeunt omnes, manet Perillus.
578The neere approch of their owne misery?
579Poore Lady, I extremely pitty her:
580And whilest I liue, eche drop of my heart blood,
582Enter the Gallian King, and Mumford, dsguised
583like Pilgrims.
586And bound you to the contrary, you know.
587Mum. Pardon me for once, my Lord; I did forget.
590Mum. Swounds, I could bite my toung in two for anger:
593Mum. Might I be made the Monarch of the world,
595King. Then call me Will, ile call thee Iacke.
598A fayrer creature ne're mine eyes beheld.
600Wherein they both are maried vnto Kings;
601And I by byrth, as worthy as themselues,
602Am turnd into the world, to seeke my fortune.
603How may I blame the fickle Queene of Chaunce,
That
and his three daughters.
604That maketh me a patterne of her power?
605Ah, poore weake mayd, whose imbecility
606Is far vnable to indure these brunts.
607Oh, father Leir, how dost thou wrong thy child,
608Who alwayes was obedient to thy will!
609But why accuse I fortune and my father?
610No, no, it is the pleasure of my God:
611And I do willingly imbrace the rod.
613On fortune, and th'vnkindnesse of her father.
615I will exchange for other meaner habit.
616Mum. Now if I had a Kingdome in my hands,
617I would exchange it for a milkmaids smock and petycoate,
619Cord. I will betake me to my threed and Needle,
620And earne my liuing with my fingers ends.
623For all the shirts and night-geare that I weare.
627For if I do, I think my heart will breake.
630As that I know not which way to get out.
633Mum. Prithy Wil, to her, and try her patience.
635That euer any mortall eyes beheld,
636Vouchsafe to me, who haue o'reheard thy woes,
639When there's no meanes to find a remedy?
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643Releas'd the princely Lyon from the net.
645The tragick tale of my vnhappy youth:
646Know this in briefe, I am the haplesse daughter
647Of Leir, sometimes King of Brittany.
648King. Why, who debarres his honourable age,
649From being still the King of Brittany?
651And giuen all his Kingdome to the Kings
654Cor. He lou'd me not, & therfore gaue me nothing,
657Doth Fortune tryumph in my ouerthrow.
660To craue your loue, would you accept of him?
662Nor do not think, though fortune haue the power,
665For if the greatest Monarch on the earth,
666Should sue to me in this extremity,
667Except my heart could loue, and heart could like,
668Better then any that I euer saw,
670Then mountaynes moue by blast of euery wind.
673Therefore in witnesse of my true intent,
674Let heauen and earth beare record of my words:
675There is a young and lusty Gallian King,
676So like to me, as I am to my selfe,
677That earnestly doth craue to haue thy loue,
678And ioyne with thee in Hymens sacred bonds.
Oh
and his three daughters.
680Oh liue to adde new torments to my griefe:
681Why didst thou thus intrap me vnawares?
684Whilome when as I liu'd in honours height,
685A Prince perhaps might postulate my loue:
690Then be aduised, Palmer, what to do:
692King. Your birth's too high for any, but a King.
693Cor. My mind is low ynough to loue a Palmer,
694Rather then any King vpon the earth.
695King. O, but you neuer can indure their life,
697Cor. O yes, I can, and happy if I might:
699And thinke it is the Scepter of a Queene.
700Sometime ile set thy Bonnet on my head,
701And thinke I weare a rich imperiall Crowne.
702Sometime ile helpe thee in thy holy prayers,
703And thinke I am with thee in Paradise.
704Thus ile mock fortune, as she mocketh me,
705And neuer will my louely choyce repent:
706For hauing thee, I shall haue all content.
709Ah, deare Cordella, cordiall to my heart,
710I am no Palmer, as I seeme to be,
712To view th'admired beauty of those eyes.
713I am the King of Gallia, gentle mayd,
714 (Although thus slenderly accompanied)
715and yet thy vassayle by imperious Loue,
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718All's one to me, I do request but this:
719That as I am, you will accept of me,
720And I will haue you whatsoe're you be:
721Yet well I know, you come of royall race,
724Fayth, then I hope the next that falles is myne:
726I would for euer weare a Palmers weed.
727I like an honest and playne dealing wench,
728That sweares (without exceptions) I will haue you.
731them ten tymes worse then poyson.
735King Leirs three daughters were wedded in one day:
736The celebration of this happy chaunce,
737We will deferre, vntill we come to Fraunce.
738Mum. I like the wooing, that's not long a doing.
739Well, for her sake, I know what I know:
740Ile neuer marry whilest I liue,
742My humour is alienated from the mayds of Fraunce. Exeunt.
743 Enter Perillus solus.
746His youngest daughter he hath turnd away,
747And no man knowes what is become of her.
752It grieues her heart to see her father liue.
754When children thus against their parents rage?
755But he, the myrrour of mild patience,
Puts
and his three daughters.
756Puts vp all wrongs, and neuer giues reply:
758To call him foole and doterd to his face,
761Oh yron age! O times! O monstrous, vilde,
762When parents are contemned of the child!
764And will, e're long, the other halfe, I feare:
766But that which doth her fathers life maintayne.
768Since daughters proue disloyall to the father.
770Would I were able to redresse his wrong.
771Yet what I can, vnto my vtmost power,
773Enter Gonorill, and Skalliger.
775Could any woman of our dignity
776Endure such quips and peremptory taunts,
777As I do daily from my doting father?
779Who is not able for to keepe himselfe?
780But as if he were our better, he should thinke
781To check and snap me vp at euery word.
782I cannot make me a new fashioned gowne,
784But his old doting doltish withered wit,
786I cannot make a banquet extraordinary,
788But he, old foole, is captious by and by,
791Should stand alone charg'd with his vaine expence,
793To whom he gaue as much, as vnto me?
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794I prithy, Skalliger, tell me, if thou know,
795By any meanes to rid me of this woe.
797Binde me in duty to aduise your Grace,
799The large allowance which he hath from you,
802That hauing lesse, he will more thankfull be:
803For why, abundance maketh vs forget
805Gon. Well, Skalliger, for thy kynd aduice herein,
806I will not be vngratefull, if I liue:
807I haue restrayned halfe his portion already,
809That hauing no meanes to releeue himselfe,
812The heauens, no doubt, will punish thee for this:
813And me a villayne, that to curry fauour,
815But vs the world doth this experience giue,
817Enter King of Cornwall, Leir, Perillus & Nobles.
819Me thinks, you frollike not as you were wont.
820Leir. The neerer we do grow vnto our graues,
821The lesse we do delight in worldly ioyes.
823It is a meane for to prolong his life.
825Who doth desire his troubled dayes had end.
831In fayth, I feare that all things go not well.
Gon. What,
and his three daughters.
832Gon. What, do you feare, that I haue angred him?
833Hath he complaynd of me vnto my Lord?
834Ile prouide him a piece of bread and cheese;
836Then carry tales from one vnto another.
838'Twixt you, my Lord, and me your louing wife:
839But I will take an order, if I can,
842He ne're complaynd of thee in all his life.
843Father, you must not weygh a womans words.
846Gon. What, breeds young bones already! you will make
847An honest woman of me then, belike.
848O vild olde wretch! who euer heard the like,
849That seeketh thus his owne child to defame?
851Gon. For any one that loues your company,
852You may go pack, and seeke some other place,
858Else aged Leir them could neuer find
859Cruell to him, to whom he hath bin kind.
862Ah, gentle Death, if euer any wight
864Then come, I pray thee, euen with all my heart,
867Nor dew your aged cheeks with wasting teares.
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876For now I am so poore and full of want,
877As that I ne're can recompence thy loue.
879And men in fauour liue not most secure.
881I were the hatefulst excrement on the earth:
882Which well do know, in course of former time,
883How good my Lord hath bin to me and mine.
885Of all thy ancestors which were before?
889The due reuennues which thy father left?
890Per. I had ynough, my Lord, and hauing that,
891What should you need to giue me any more?
893And giue thee halfe my Kingdome in good will?
897For with good reason I can thee confute.
899Do owe to me the tribute of their liues;
900If they to whom I alwayes haue bin kinde,
901And bountifull beyond comparison;
902If they, for whom I haue vndone my selfe,
903And brought my age vnto this extreme want,
Ah,
and his three daughters.
908Ah, good my Lord, condemne not all for one:
909You haue two daughters left, to whom I know
912To thinke of my vnkindnesse to Cordella!
915And for her sake, I thinke this heauy doome
916Is falne on me, and not without desert:
917Yet vnto Ragan was I alwayes kinde,
918And gaue to her the halfe of all I had:
919It may be, if I should to her repayre,
920She would be kinder, and intreat me fayre.
922By force of Armes for to redresse your wrong.
925Enter Ragan solus.
927Which bodeth vnto me such happy Starres!
928How may I thank kind fortune, that vouchsafes
930I rule the King of Cambria as I please:
931The States are all obedient to my will;
933Not any one, that dareth answere no.
935And wanteth nothing fitting her degree:
937As that her hony sauoureth much of gall.
939And many times restraynes her of her will:
940But if he were with me, and seru'd me so,
944Enter Cornwall, Gonorill, and attendants.
945Corn. Ah, Gonorill, what dire vnhappy chaunce
D2 Hath
The History of King Leir
947That no report can yet be heard of him?
949Exceeding far the bounds of patience:
951He would forsake vs without notice made.
953Or who hath interest in this griefe, but I,
955But that I know his qualities so well?
958And spend a little time with her, to note
959How all things goe, and how she likes her choyce:
961And vnawares returne to vs agayne.
962Therefore, my Lord, be frolick, and resolue
963To see my father here agayne e're long.
968And temper him before he doth depart,
971And make my Lord cease further to inquire.
974He happely may, by trauelling vnknowne wayes,
976Be dead and buried: would God it were so well;
977For then there were no more to do, but this,
978He went away, and none knowes where he is.
979But say he be in Cambria with the King,
980And there exclayme against me, as he will:
982As water is into a broken ship.
Of
and his three daughters.
985That all the blame shall be remou'd from me,
986And vnperceiu'd rebound vpon himselfe.
987Thus with one nayle another Ile expell,
988And make the world iudge, that I vsde him well.
989Enter the Messenger that should go to Cambria,
990With a letter in his hand.
992Mes. To Cambria, Madam, with letters frō the king.
993Gon. To whom?
994Mess. Vnto your father, if he be there.
997Betweene me and my neck-verse, if I be
998Calld in question, for opening the Kings letters.
999Gon. 'Twas I that opened them, it was not thou.
1002And when a man's hang'd, all the world cannot saue him.
1003Gon. He that hangs thee, were better hang his father,
1004Or that but hurts thee in the least degree.
1005I tell thee, we make great account of thee.
1007Kind Queene, had I a hundred liues, I would
1008Spend ninety nyne of them for you, for that word.
1010And that's as many as thou art like to haue.
1011Mes. That one life is not too deare for my good Queene; this
1015thing, tye me to a dung cart, and make a Scauengers horse of
1016me, and whip me, so long as I haue any skin on my back.
1017Gon.In token of further imployment, take that.
1020in law: if I keepe not the condition, let my necke be the forfey-
1021ture of my negligence.
D3 Gon. I
The History of King Leir
1024at Billinsgate hath: why, I haue made many of my neighbours
1027our parish: My toung being well whetted with choller, is more
1028sharpe then a Razer of Palerno.
1033the Kings letters to my father, carry thou these letters to my
1038riance, and made mutinyes amongst the commons.
1044This do, thou winst my fauour for euer,
1045And makest a hye way of preferment to thee
1046And all thy friends.
1048I will so toung-whip him, that I will
1049Leaue him as bare of credit, as a Poulter
1051Gon. Yet there is a further matter.
1054importeth, to make him away, hast thou the heart to
1058kisse the paper.
Gon.About
and his three daughters.
1061Enter Cordella solus.
1062 I haue bin ouer-negligent to day,
1063In going to the Temple of my God,
1064To render thanks for all his benefits,
1067When as I was deuoyd of worldly friends,
1069As far exceeds the reach of my deserts.
1070My kingly husband, myrrour of his time,
1073By his appoyntment was ordayned for me.
1074I cannot wish the thing that I do want;
1075I cannot want the thing but I may haue,
1076Saue only this which I shall ne're obtayne,
1077My fathers loue, oh this I ne're shall gayne.
1078I would abstayne from any nutryment,
1079And pyne my body to the very bones:
1080Bare foote I would on pilgrimage set forth
1081Vnto the furthest quarters of the earth,
1082And all my life time would I sackcloth weare,
1084So he but to forgiue me once would please,
1085That his grey haires might go to heauen in peace.
1086And yet I know now how I him offended,
1089It was not he, but you that did me wrong.
1090Yet God forgiue both him, and you and me,
1091Euen as I doe in perfit charity.
1092I will to Church, and pray vnto my Sauiour,
1093That ere I dye, I may obtayne his fauour. Exit.
1094Enter Leir and Perillus fayntly.
1096The way seemes tedious to your aged lymmes.
D4 Leir. Nay,
The History of King Leir
1098Thou art as old as I, but more kind.
1100Should leane vpon the person of a King.
1102That had no cause to come along with me.
1103Through these vncouth paths, and tirefull wayes,
1104And neuer ease thy faynting limmes a whit.
1105Thou hast left all, I, all to come with me,
1106And I, for all, haue nought to guerdon thee.
1108With these kind words, which cuts my heart in two,
1109To think your will should want the power to do.
1112Per. That honourable title will I giue,
1113Vnto my Lord, so long as I do liue.
1114Oh, be of comfort: for I see the place
1115Whereas your daughter keeps her residence.
1116And loe, in happy time the Cambrian Prince
1117Is here arriu'd, to gratify our comming.
1118Enter the Prince of Cambria, Ragan and Nobles: looke
1119vpon them, and whisper together.
1121I am asham'd to tell this heauy tale.
1125Me thinks, I should remember well their lookes.
1128She runneth to him, and kneeles downe, saying:
1129Father, I bid you welcome, full of griefe,
1131And ill befitting for your reuerend age,
1132To come on foot a iourney so indurable.
He
and his three daughters.
1135He cannot speake for weeping: for Gods loue, come.
1137And at more leysure we may better know,
1138Whence springs the ground of this vnlookt for wo.
1139Cam. Come, father, e're we any further talke,
1143Whom I do know, he greatly hath abusde:
1144And now like a contentious crafty wretch,
1148Nor yet beleeue his doting vayne reports:
1151And here (forsooth) he hopeth to haue harbour,
1152And to be moan'd and made on like a child:
1155Yet will I make fayre weather, to procure
1157Enter Messenger solus.
1158Mes. Now happily I am arriued here,
1159Before the stately Palace of the Cambrian King:
1162Now bags of gold, your vertue is (no doubt)
1167Mes.Kind greetings from the Cornwall Queene:
1169She opens the letters.
1171Mes. I did leaue her at my parting, in good health.
1172She reads the letter, frownes and stamps.
E See
The History of King Leir
1173See how her colour comes and goes agayne,
1175See how she knits her brow, and bytes her lips,
1177Mixt with reuenge, and violent extreames.
1178Here will be more worke and more crownes for me.
1180And is he now come hither, with intent
1181To set diuorce betwixt my Lord and me?
1182Doth he giue out, that he doth heare report,
1183That I do rule my husband as I list,
1185That I shall know my Lord to be my head?
1186Well, it were best for him to take good heed,
1187Or I will make him hop without a head,
1188For his presumption, dottard that he is.
1189In Cornwall he hath made such mutinies,
1192That had he there continued any longer,
1196And now already since his coming hither,
1197My Lord and he are growne in such a league,
1198That I can haue no conference with his Grace:
1199I feare, he doth already intimate
1203It is too late for them to be reuerst.
1207But that (I hope) she found me alwayes faythfull:
1208So will I be to any friend of hers,
1209That hath occasion to imploy my helpe
And
and his three daughters.
1211And giue a stabbe or two, if need require?
1213Which neuer knew what melting pitty meant.
1214I weigh no more the murdring of a man,
1216When I doe catch her byting on my skin.
1217If you will haue your husband or your father,
1218Or both of them sent to another world.
1219Do but commaund me doo't, it shall be done.
1220Rag. It is ynough, we make no doubt of thee:
1221Meet vs to morrow here, at nyne a clock:
1223Mes. I, this is it will make me do the deed:
1227Why, heres a wench that longs to haue a stabbe.
1228Wel, I could giue it her, and ne're hurt her neither.
1229Enter the Gallian King, and Cordella.
1231And smiling ioy tryumph vpon thy brow?
1234When will my louely Queene cease to lament,
1235And take some comfort to her grieued thoughts?
1237Yet pitty me, whom thy griefe makes despayre.
1239Let not my passions moue your mind a whit:
1240For I am bound by nature, to lament
1245I am the stock, and thou the louely branch:
1248Forget thy father and thy kindred now,
E2 Since
The History of King Leir
1251And bury them, where black obliuion lyes.
1252Think not thou art the daughter of old Leir,
1253Who did vnkindly disinherit thee:
1254But think thou art the noble Gallian Queene,
1255And wife to him that dearely loueth thee:
1256Embrace the ioyes that present with thee dwell,
1259My old acquaintance or my ancient friends,
1260Doth any whit distemperate my mynd,
1261Knowing you, which are more deare to me,
1262Then Country, kin and all things els can be.
1263Yet pardon me, my gracious Lord, in this:
1267And mount aloft into the element,
1270To liue and thriue without the helpe of water
1271As easy is it for the Blackamoore,
1272To wash the tawny colour from his skin,
1274As I am able to forget my father.
1275King. Myrrour of vertue, Phoenix of our age!
1276Too kind a daughter for an vnkind father,
1277Be of good comfort; for I will dispatch
1278Ambassadors immediately for Brittayne,
1279Vnto the King of Cornwalls Court, whereas
1280Your father keepeth now his residence,
1281And in the kindest maner him intreat,
1282That setting former grieuances apart,
1285Ile offer him the halfe of all my Crowne:
1286If that moues not, weele furnish out a Fleet,
And
and his three daughters.
1291The King of heauen remunerate my Lord.
1293This and much more ile do to comfort thee.
1294Enter Messenger solus.
1296How many friends I purchase euery where!
1297How many seekes to creepe into my fauour,
1298And kisse their hands, and bend their knees to me!
1299No more, here comes the Queene, now shall I know her mind,
1302And art before me here, me thinks, to day.
1303Mes. I am a poore man, and it like your Grace;
1304But yet I alwayes loue to keepe my word.
1306That of a poore man I will make thee rich.
1307Mes. I long to heare it, it might haue bin dispatcht,
1308If you had told me of it yesternight.
1310And well I cannot vtter it in words.
1313Were it to meet the Deuill in his denne,
1314And try a bout with him for a scratcht face,
1315Ide vndertake it, if you would but bid me.
1318Yet it must needs be done.
1321Mes. Why, thats ynough.
1322Rag. And yet that is not all.
E3 Mes. Here
The History of King Leir
1325Mes. Here are two hands, for eche of them is one.
1326Rag. And for eche hand here is a recompence.
1327Giue him two purses.
1328Mes. Oh, that I had ten hands by myracle,
1329I could teare ten in pieces with my teeth,
1330So in my mouth yould put a purse of gold.
1332Rag. To morrow morning ere the breake of day,
1333I by a wyle will send them to the thicket,
1334That is about some two myles from the Court,
1337About some newes I haue receyu'd from Cornwall.
1338This is ynough, I know, they will not fayle,
1339And then be ready for to play thy part:
1344There let him read his owne inditement first,
1345And then proceed to execution:
1348Of Mercury, which charm'd the hundred eyes
1349Of watchfull Argos, and inforc'd him sleepe:
1354Enter Cornwall and Gonorill.
1359Ile teach him how to dally with his King,
1362My father meanes to come along with him;
And
and his three daughters.
1364For to attend vpon him on the way.
1367Enter Seruant.
1369Arriued from Gallia and craues admittance to your Maiesty.
1371Hither import? is not your father happely
1372Gone thither? well, whatsoere it be,
1373Bid him come in, he shall haue audience.
1374Enter Ambassador.
1377By me, their honourable father, my Lord Leir:
1378Next, they commend them kindly to your Graces,
1380Letters I haue to deliuer to my Lord Leir,
1387He is at this time absent from the Court:
1388But if a day or two you here repose,
1389Tis very likely you shall haue him here,
1390Or else haue certayne notice where he is.
E4 Am. No,
The History of King Leir
1404Am.Oh no, her griefe exceeds, vntill the time,
1405That she be reconcil'd vnto her father.
1406Gon. God continue it.
1407Am.What, madam?
1408Gon.Why, her health.
1410And send her father in a better mind,
1411Then to continue alwayes so vnkind.
1413And seeke all meanes to expiat his wrath.
1414Am. Madam, I hope your Grace will do the like.
1417Am.To expiate or mittigate his wrath:
1422Am. Then how, Madam?
1426And that thou hadst need of an Interpreter:
1427Well, I will know thy message ere't be long,
1429Corn.Come in, my friend, and frolick in our Court,
1431Enter Leir and Perillus.
1432Per. My Lord, you are vp to day before your houre,
1433Tis newes to you to be abroad so rathe.
1435That I can scarcely keepe my eye-lids open.
Ile
and his three daughters.
1440Pull out a booke and sit downe.
1441Per. Sheele not be long, I warrant you, my Lord:
1449For feruent prayer much ill hap withstands.
1451Yet was I ne're so heauy in my life.
1452They fall both asleepe.
1453Enter the Messenger or murtherer with two
1454daggers in his hands.
1456should meet me, and lay me downe in a ditch, and play robbe
1457thiefe with me, & perforce take my gold away from me, whilest
1459escape? Fayth, when I were at liberty againe, I would make no
1460more to do, but go to the next tree, and there hang my selfe.
1461See them and start.
1462But stay, me thinks, my youthes are here already,
1464I thinke, they know to what intent they came,
1465And are prouided for another world.
1466He takes their bookes away.
1468And in a maner put them to no payne;
1472This letter to them, ere I did the deed.
1474So shall I come vpon them vnawares.
1475They wake and rise.
F Per. I
The History of King Leir
1480As much amazeth me to think thereof.
1482And slight imaginations of the brayne.
1484Confesse, that dreames do often proue too true.
1486I may go neere to gesse what it pretends.
1487Mes. Leaue that to me, I will expound the dreame.
1488Leir. Me thought, my daughters, Gonorill & Ragan,
1490Eche brandishing a Faulchion in their hand,
1491Ready to lop a lymme off where it fell,
1492And in their other hands a naked poynyard,
1493Wherwith they stabd me in a hundred places,
1494And to their thinking left me there for dead:
1495But then my youngest daughter, fayre Cordella,
1496Came with a boxe of Balsome in her hand,
1497And powred it into my bleeding wounds,
1498By whose good meanes I was recouered well,
1500And with the feare of this I did awake,
1501And yet for feare my feeble ioynts do quake.
1504Leir. We do, my friend, although with much adoe.
1505Mes. Deliuer, deliuer.
1508And then perhaps, you might haue scapt my hands:
1509But you, like faithfull watch-men, fell asleepe,
1510The whilst I came and tooke your Halberds from you.
1511Shew their Bookes.
1512And now you want your weapons of defence,
1513How haue you any hope to be deliuered?
But
and his three daughters.
1521Shewes his purses.
1522Leir. If that I haue will do thee any good,
1525To do thee pleasure, it were twice as much.
1526Take his, and weygh them both in his hands.
1527Mes. Ile none of them, they are too light for me.
1528Puts them in his pocket.
1530In any thing, to vse me to the Queene,
1531 'Tis like ynough that I can pleasure thee.
1532They proffer to goe.
1535Would you do one thing for me I should aske?
1536Leir. I, any thing that lyes within my power.
1539Me thinks, a comely honest ancient man
1540Should not dissemble with one for a vantage.
1541I know, when I shall come to try this geare,
1542You will recant from all that you haue sayd.
1544He is her father, therefore may do much.
1545Mes. I know he is, and therefore meane to try him:
1546You are his friend too, I must try you both.
1548Mes.Stay gray-beards then, and proue men of your words:
1549The Queene hath tyed me by a solemne othe,
F2 So
The History of King Leir
1554And proue your selues true old men of your words.
1555And here I vow in sight of all the world,
1556I ne're will trouble you whilst I liue agayne.
1559Play not the Cat, which dallieth with the mouse;
1560And on a sudden maketh her a pray:
1561But if thou art markt for the man of death
1562To me and to my Damion, tell me playne,
1563That we may be prepared for the stroke,
1566That ere your eyes are likely to behold,
1568To giue a finall period to your dayes,
1572Mes. From France? zoones, do I looke like a Frenchman?
1573Sure I haue not mine owne face on; some body hath chang'd
1574faces with me, and I know not of it: But I am sure, my apparell
1579As euer any father did of child,
1580Is Queene of Fraunce, no thanks at all to me,
1586I neuer will intreat thee to forgiue,
1587Because I am vnworthy for to liue.
1589Whether Cordella will'd thee do this deed?
I neuer
and his three daughters.
1591I neuer heard Cordellaes name before,
1592Nor neuer was in Fraunce in all my life:
1593I neuer knew thou hadst a daughter there,
1595But thy owne toung declares that thou hast bin
1596A vyle old wretch, and full of heynous sin.
1597Leir. Ah no, my friend, thou are deceyued much:
1598For her except, whom I confesse I wrongd,
1599Through doting frenzy, and o're-ielous loue.
1600There liues not any vnder heauens bright eye,
1601That can conuict me of impiety.
1603For I am in true peace with all the world.
1606Know thou, the Queenes of Cambria and Cornwall,
1607Thy owne two daughters, Gonorill and Ragan,
1608Appoynted me to massacre thee here.
1610In charity with all the world? but now
1612That they haue hyred me t'abbridge thy fate,
1614That would deceyue, euen at the poynt of death.
1615Per. Am I awake, or is it but a dreame?
1616Mes. Feare nothing, man, thou art but in a dreame,
1617And thou shalt neuer wake vntill doomes day,
1618By then, I hope, thou wilt haue slept ynough.
1619Leir. Yet, gentle friend, graunt one thing ere I die.
1620Mes. Ile graunt you any thing, except your liues.
1622That my two daughters hyred thee to this deed:
1623If I were once resolu'd of that, then I
1624Would wish no longer life, but craue to dye.
F3 Leir. Sweare
The History of King Leir
1633To swallow thee, and if thou do this deed.
1634Thunder and lightning.
1635Mes. I would that word were in his belly agayne,
1636It hath frighted me euen to the very heart:
1638His words haue turned my mind from this exployt.
1639Then neyther heauen, earth, nor hell be witnesse;
1640But let this paper witnesse for them all.
1641Shewes Gonorils letter.
1644I will not crack my credit with two Queenes,
1645To whom I haue already past my word.
1647I get heauens hate, earths scorne, and paynes of hell.
1648They blesse themselues.
1650Doth gouerne all things in this spacious world,
1652To be committed without iust reuenge?
1653O viperous generation and accurst,
1655Leir. Ah, my true friend in all extremity,
1656Let vs submit vs to the will of God:
1659My friend, I am prepared for the stroke:
1660Strike when thou wilt, and I forgiue thee here,
1661Euen from the very bottome of my heart.
1664That euer liued in aduersity:
1666Is that thou go vnto my daughter Cordella,
And
and his three daughters.
1669For I haue wrongd her without any cause.
1670Now, Lord, receyue me, for I come to thee,
1671And dye, I hope, in perfit charity.
1672Dispatch, I pray thee, I haue liued too long.
1674By him that neuer meaneth to deliuer it:
1675Why, he must go along with you to heauen:
1676It were not good you should go all alone.
1679But that time shall not come, till God permit.
1681I haue a Pasport for him in my pocket,
1683Shew a bagge of money.
1685It only toucheth me, no word of him.
1687And I am payd for him, as well as you.
1688Per. I, who haue borne you company in life,
1690It skilleth not for me, my friend, a whit,
1691Nor for a hundred such as thou and I.
1693are past: though it bee no matter for you, tis a matter for me,
1694proper men are not so rife.
1696Vpon the high anoynted of the Lord:
1700And I am he that hath deserued all:
1701The plot was layd to take away my life:
1702And here it is, I do intreat thee take it:
1703Yet for my sake, and as thou art a man,
1704Spare this my friend, that hither with me came:
F4 I brought
The History of King Leir
1705I brought him forth, whereas he had not bin,
1706But for good will to beare me company.
1707He left his friends, his country and his goods,
1708And came with me in most extremity.
1710Who is the cause of it, but only I?
1711aMes. Why that am I, let that ne're trouble thee.
1712Leir. O no, tis I. O, had I now to giue thee
1713The monarchy of all the spacious world
1715But I haue nothing but these teares and prayers,
1717O, if all this to mercy moue thy mind,
1718Spare him, in heauen thou shalt like mercy find.
1719Mes.I am as hard to be moued as another, and yet
1721a little.
1722Per.My friend, if feare of the almighty power
1723Haue power to moue thee, we haue sayd ynough:
1724But if thy mind be moueable with gold,
1725We haue not presently to giue it thee:
1730What horrour still will haunt thee for the deed:
1731Think this agayne, that they which would incense
1732Thee for to be the Butcher of their father,
1733When it is done, for feare it should be knowne,
1734Would make a meanes to rid thee from the world:
1735Oh, then art thou for euer tyed in chaynes
1736Of euerlasting torments to indure,
1738Such paynes, as neuer mortall toung can tell.
1740next to Perillus.
1742Now when thou wilt come make an end of me.
He
and his three daughters.
1743He lets fall the other dagger.
1745The King of heauen continue this good mind.
1747Mes. I am as wilfull as you for your life:
1748I will not do it, now you do intreat me.
1752Well, to be flat, ile not meddle with you:
1753Here I found you, and here ile leaue you:
1756Per. Farewell. If euer we together meet,
1757It shall go hard, but I will thee regreet.
1759Let vs giue thanks to God, and hye vs hence.
1761And know not whither for to go from hence:
1762Death had bin better welcome vnto me,
1763Then longer life to adde more misery.
1764Per. It were not good to returne from whence we(came,
1765Vnto your daughter Ragan back againe.
1766Now let vs go to France, vnto Cordella,
1769Since the other two are quite deuoyd of loue;
1770To whom I was so kind, as that my gifts,
1771Might make them loue me, if 'twere nothing else?
1772Per. No worldly gifts, but grace from God on hye,
1773Doth nourish vertue and true charity.
1774Remember well what words Cordella spake,
1775What time you askt her, how she lou'd your Grace.
1776Se sayd, her loue vnto you was as much,
1777As ought a child to beare vnto her father.
1779As should a father beare vnto a child.
G If
The History of King Leir
1782You haue tryed two, try one more for my sake,
1783Ile ne're intreat you further tryall make.
1784Remember well the dream you had of late,
1785And thinke what comfort it foretels to vs.
1788If this third daughter play a kinder part,
1790Enter the Gallian Ambassador solus.
1791Am. There is of late newes come vnto the Court,
1792That old Lord Leir remaynes in Cambria:
1793Ile hye me thither presently, to impart
1794My letters and my message vnto him.
1795I neuer was lesse welcome to a place
1796In all my life time, then I haue bin hither,
1798Who would not cast one gracious looke on me,
1800Would take exceptions at each word I spake,
1801And fayne she would haue vndermined me,
1802To know what my Ambassage did import:
1803But she is like to hop without her hope,
1804And in this matter for to want her will,
1806Well, I will poste away for Cambria:
1808Enter the King and Queene of Gallia, & Mumford.
1810And our kind greetings sent to him of late:
1811Therefore my mind presageth ere't be long,
1812We shall receyue from Brittayne happy newes.
1814For she to me hath always bin vnkind.
1817If hee'le not come to Gallia vnto vs,
1818Then we will sayle to Brittayne vnto him.
Mum. Well,
and his three daughters.
1820I haue sworne, ile ne're come home without my wench,
1821And ile not be forsworne,
1822Ile rather neuer come home while I liue.
1825Ile take her at all aduentures, if I can get her.
1826Cord. I, that's well put in.
1827Mum.Well put in? nay, it was ill put in; for had it
1828Bin as well put in, as ere I put in, in my dayes,
1829I would haue made her follow me to Fraunce.
1834And able to make a wench do more then she would do.
1836Will hold all your mocks.
1847Mum. Well, you are two to one, ile giue you ouer:
1852Therefore you owe it me, and you shall pay it me,
1855Mum. Fayth, nothing but this,
1856That the next fayre weather, which is very now,
G2 You
The History of King Leir
1858Which is very neere.
1859King. Fayth, in this motion I will ioyne with thee,
1860And be a mediator to my Queene.
1861Prithy, my Loue, let this match go forward,
1862My mind foretels, 'twill be a lucky voyage.
1863Cor. Entreaty needs not, where you may cōmaund,
1864So you be pleasde, I am right well content:
1869Mum. And I the third: oh, I am ouer-ioyed!
1870See what loue is, which getteth with a word,
1871What all the world besides could ne're obtayne!
1874Like a playne country couple, and you shall be Roger
1875Our man, and wayt vpon vs: or if you will,
1877Mum. 'Twere more then time; this deuice is excellent.
1879 Enter Cambria and Ragan, with Nobles.
1881Hath thus depriu'd vs of our fathers presence?
1882Can no man tell vs what's become of him,
1885To scoure about through all our Regiment.
1887To see if any newes be of him there;
1889And all about our Cities neere at hand,
1890Till certayne newes of his abode be brought.
1894To weepe the lesse, which teares cannot redeeme.
O,
and his three daughters.
1898What hath remou'd my father thus from hence?
1899O, I do feare some charme or inuocation
1901Stird by Cordella, moues this innouation,
1902And brings my father timelesse to his end.
1903But might I know, that the detested Witch
1904Were certayne cause of this vncertayne ill,
1907For since I am depriued of my father,
1908I loath my life, and wish my death the rather.
1910And will (no doubt) reueale such haynous crimes:
1911Censure not any, till you know the right:
1912Let him be Iudge, that bringeth truth to light.
1914Exceeds the bounds of common patience:
1915Nor can I moderate my toung so much,
1919Enter the Gallian Ambassador.
1923With letters to your honourable father,
1925I was directed hither to repayre.
1928Which my Commission is for to deliuer.
1932Ra. There is good packing twixt your King and you:
G3 You
The History of King Leir
1933You need not hither come to aske for him,
1934You know where he is better then our selues.
1937No meanes to colour her detested deeds,
1939(Because he gaue her nothing to her dowre)
1940But by the colour of a fayn'd Ambassage,
1941To send him letters hither to our Court?
1942Go carry them to them that sent them hither,
1946And were it not, it is 'gainst law of Armes,
1949As should inforce thee to reueale the truth.
1950Am. Madam, your threats no whit apall my mind,
1952My King and Queene, I dare be sworne, are free
1953From any thought of such impiety:
1954And therefore, Madam, you haue done them wrong,
1956Who in meere duty tender him as much,
1958The King your husband will not say as much.
1960Till more apparance giue vs further light:
1961Yet to be playne, your comming doth inforce
1963And that you do resemble, to be briefe,
1969God and my King, I trust, ere it be long,
Rag. How
and his three daughters.
1976Were to my euerlasting obloquy:
1977But I will take reuenge vpon his master,
1978Which sent him hither, to delude vs thus.
1980Now that my father thus is made away,
1981Sheele come & clayme a third part of your Crowne,
1982As due vnto her by inheritance.
1983Cam. But I will proue her title to be nought
1984But shame, and the reward of Parricide,
1985And make her an example to the world,
1986For after-ages to admire her penance.
1987This will I do, as I am Cambriaes King,
1991Enter Leir, Perillus, and two Marriners, in sea-
1992gownes and sea-caps.
1995In that at this time we are brought so low,
1996That we want money for to pay our passage.
1998A little before we came aboord your ship,
1999Which stript vs quite of all the coyne we had,
2000And left vs not a penny in our purses:
2001Yet wanting mony, we will vse the meane,
G4 Ile
The History of King Leir
2011gowne for it, & your cap for mine, & ile forgiue your passage.
2017it for your cloke, and aske you nothing for your passage more.
2018Pull off Perillus cloke.
2019Per. My owne I willingly would change with thee,
2021But would my friend might keepe his garment still.
2022My friend, ile giue thee this new dublet, if thou wilt
2023Restore his gowne vnto him back agayne.
20241. Mar. Nay, if I do, would I might ne're eate powderd beefe
2027bargaine: but the best is, a bargayne's a bargayne.
2029For by this meanes we may escape vnknowne.
2030Till time and opportunity do fit.
20312. Mar. Hark, hark, they are laying their heads together,
2032Theile repent them of their bargayne anon,
2033 'Twere best for vs to go while we are well.
2036Leir. I know thou wilt; but we hope to bring ready money
2038Were euer men in this extremity,
2039In a strange country, and deuoyd of friends,
2040And not a penny for to helpe our selues?
2041Kind, friend, what thinkst thou will become of vs?
2042Per. Be of good cheere, my Lord, I haue a dublet,
2043Will yeeld vs mony ynough to serue our turnes,
2044Vntill we come vnto your daughters Court:
2046Leir. Ah, kind Perillus, that is it I feare,
And
and his three daughters.
2047And makes me faynt, or euer I come there.
2049Or loue be reapt, where hatred hath bin sowne?
2050Can Henbane ioyne in league with Methridate?
2051Or Sugar grow in Wormwoods bitter stalke?
2052It cannot be, they are too opposi}te
2054I haue throwne Wormwood on the sugred youth,
2055And like to Henbane poysoned the Fount,
2056Whence flowed the Methridate of a childs goodwil:
2057I, like an enuious thorne, haue prickt the heart,
2061My bitter words haue gauld her hony thoughts,
2062And weeds of rancour chokt the flower of grace.
2063Then what remainder is of any hope,
2064But all our fortunes will go quite aslope?
2066Can neuer be corrupted by the bad:
2069And therfore, though you name yourselfe the thorn,
2070The weed, the gall, the henbane & the wormewood;
2072The hony, milke, Grape, Sugar, Methridate.
2075O ioyne with me, and thinke of nought but crosses,
2076And then weele one lament anothers losses.
2078And death is better then for to despaire:
2079Then hazzard death, which may conuert to life;
2082To be directed by thee, as thou wilt;
2083As thou yeeldst comfort to my crazed thoughts,
2084Would I could yeeld the like vnto thy body,
2085Which is full weake, I know, and ill apayd,
H For
The History of King Leir
2087Per. Alack, my Lord, my heart doth bleed, to think
2091Enter the Gallian King and Queene, and Mumford, with a
2092basket, disguised like Countrey folke.
2094Cannot be pleasing to your tender ioynts,
2096Cord. I neuer in my life tooke more delight
2097In any iourney, then I do in this:
2098It did me good, when as we hapt to light
2099Amongst the merry crue of country folke,
2101To win them commendations 'mongst their friends.
2103And in their quirks to go beyond the Moone,
2105That one would think they were beside their wits!
2106Come away, Roger, with your basket.
2107Mum. Soft, Dame, here comes a couple of old youthes,
2110Men much o'regone with griefe and misery.
2113Shall end our dayes in this vnfruitfull soyle.
2115And thou, I know, in little better case.
2117To comfort vs, vntill we meet with men:
2119Vnto a place where any comfort dwels.
2122Per. Ah, my deare Lord, how doth my heart lament,
2123To see you brought to this extremity!
2124O, if you loue me, as you do professe,
Or
and his three daughters.
2127But there is vertue left to comfort you.
2128O, feed on this, if this will do you good
2135So dearely, as I do thy loyall loue.
2138And yet not thou dost make me to complayne,
2139But they which were more neere to me then thou.
2140Cor. What do I heare? this lamentable voyce,
2141Me thinks, ere now I oftentimes haue heard.
2142Leir. Ah, Gonorill, was halfe my Kingdomes gift
2144Ah, cruell Ragan, did I giue thee all,
2146Ah, poore Cordella, did I giue thee nought,
2147Nor neuer shall be able for to giue?
2148O, let me warne all ages that insueth,
2150Well, vnkind Girles, I here forgiue you both,
2151Yet the iust heauens will hardly do the like;
2152And only craue forgiuenesse at the end
2153Of good Cordella, and of thee, my friend;
2156Of her, deare heart, whom I for no occasion
2158Of thee, kind friend, who but for me, I know,
2159Hadst neuer come vnto this place of wo.
2161My noble father in this misery.
2162King. Sweet Loue, reueale not what thou art as yet,
2163Vntill we know the ground of all this ill.
H2 Cor. O,
The History of King Leir
2165How neere they are to death for want of food?
2168Oh, comfort, comfort! yonder is a banquet,
2169And men and women, my Lord: be of good cheare;
2170For I see comfort comming very neere.
2171O my Lord, a banquet, and men and women!
2172Leir. O, let kind pity mollify their hearts,
2173That they may helpe vs in our great extreames.
2176Euen for his sake that saued vs all from death,
2179And would it were far better for your sakes.
2180Perillus takes Leir by the hand to the table.
2181Per. Ile giue you thanks anon: my friend doth faynt,
2185Per.The ble}}d God of heauen hath thought vpon vs.
2188Cor.And may that draugh tbe vnto him, as was
2189That which old Eson dranke, which did renue
2190His withered age, and made him young againe.
2191And may that meat be vnto him, as was
2192That which Elias ate, in strength whereof
2193He walked fourty dayes, and neuer faynted.
2194Shall I conceale me longer from my father?
That
and his three daughters.
2204It hath recall'd my spirits home agayne,
2208But the best meane that I can think on, is this:
2209Ile offer them my dublet in requitall;
2213Perillus proffers his dublet: they will not take it.
2218Cor. Ah, good old father, tell to me thy griefe,
2219Ile sorrow with thee, if not adde reliefe.
2221For thou art like a daughter I did owe.
2225So haue I lost the title of a father,
2226And may be call'd a stranger to her rather.
2228A man may do as him list with his owne.
2229But haue you but one daughter then in all?
2230Leir. Yes, I haue more by two, then would I had.
2232They that are bad, may haue the grace to mend:
2235 'Twould make a heart of Adamant to weepe;
2236and thou, poore soule, kind-hearted as thou art,
2237Dost weepe already, ere I do begin.
2238Cor. For Gods loue tell it, and when you haue done,
2241And had three daughters by one louing wife:
H3 And
The History of King Leir
2244For her perfections hardly matcht could be:
2245On these I doted with a ielous loue,
2246And thought to try which of them lou'd me best,
2247By asking them, which would do most for me?
2249And vowd they lou'd me better then their liues:
2252And presently in an outragious mood,
2254And all I had, euen to the very clothes,
2255I gaue in dowry with the other two:
2257I gaue her nothing, but disgrace and care.
2258Now mark the sequell: When I had done thus,
2260Where for a time I was intreated well,
2262But euery day her kindnesse did grow cold,
2263Which I with patience put vp well ynough,
2267That in most vild and contumelious termes,
2269Then was I fayne for refuge to repayre
2270Vnto my other daughter for reliefe,
2273As neuer any daughter did before:
2274She prayd me in a morning out betime,
2275To go to a thicket two miles from the Court,
2276Poynting that there she would come talke with me:
2279Then iudge your selfe, although my tale be briefe,
2280If euer man had greater cause of griefe.
King. Nor
and his three daughters.
2281King. Nor neuer like impiety was done,
2282Since the creation of the world begun.
2284Of her, to whom I haue bin so vnkind;
2288It comes of God and her, not my desert.
2292Vsde me as ill as euer you did her;
2293Yet, that his reuerend age I once might see,
2294Ide creepe along, to meet him on my knee.
2295Leir. O, no mens children are vnkind but mine.
2297But looke, deare father, looke, behold and see
2307You gaue me life, you were the cause that I
2308Am what I am, who else had neuer bin.
2309Leir. But you gaue life to me and to my friend,
2311Cor. You brought me vp, when as I was but young,
2312And far vnable for to helpe my selfe.
2314And far vnable for to helpe thy selfe.
H4 And
The History of King Leir
2321As if you were the Monarch of the world.
2323Vntill I haue your blessing, and your pardon
2324Of all my faults committed any way,
2327Vnto the trybe of Iuda, light on thee,
2329Thy childrens children prosper after thee.
2330Thy faults, which are iust none that I do know,
2332Cor. Now is my heart at quiet, and doth leape
2333Within my brest, for ioy of this good hap:
2334And now (deare father) welcome to our Court,
2335And welcome (kind Perillus) vnto me,
2336Myrrour of vertue and true honesty.
2338That euer man had in aduersity.
2340I am so rauisht with exceeding ioy.
2342And in few words much matter here conclude: he kneeles.
2343If ere my heart do harbour any ioy,
2347Let me be counted for the periurdst man,
2352And do returne from thence without my wench,
2356Enter Ragan sola.
2358Tormenting me with horrour for my fact,
And
and his three daughters.
2359And makes me in an agony of doubt,
2360For feare the world should find my dealing out.
2363O, could I get him for to make him sure,
2366Haue sau'd their liues, and made him to relent;
2367Then are they fled vnto the Court of Fraunce,
2371O God, that I had bin but made a man;
2372Or that my strength were equall with my will!
2374And melt as butter doth against the Sun.
2375Why should they haue preeminence ouer vs,
2376Since we are creatures of more braue resolue?
2377I sweare, I am quite out of charity
2379A poxe vpon them, when they are affrayd
2383My selfe would haue bin executioner:
2384Tis now vndone, and if that it be knowne,
2385Ile make as good shift as I can for one.
2386He that repines at me, how ere it stands,
2389Leir, Mumford and the army.
2391Whereas our ships are ready to receyue vs:
2396Wherefore, my louing Countreymen, resolue,
I That
The History of King Leir
2402Shall be in danger, but ile second him.
2403To you, my Lord, we giue the whole commaund
2404Of all the army, next vnto our selfe,
2405Not doubting of you, but you will extend
2406Your wonted valour in this needfull case,
2407Encouraging the rest to do the like,
2408By your approued magnanimity.
2410Thats apt enough to run himselfe to death:
2412Which are the starres, which guide me to good hap,
2413Eyther to see my old Lord crown'd anew,
2414Or in his cause to bid the world adieu.
2415Leir. Thanks, good lord Mumford, tis more of your good will,
2416Then any merit or desert in me.
2417Mum. And now to you, my worthy Countrymen,
2418Ye valiant race of Genouestan Gawles,
2419Surnamed Red-shanks, for your chyualry,
2421Shew your selues now to be right Gawles indeed,
2422And be so bitter on your enemies,
2423That they may say, you are as bitter as Gall.
2424Gall them, braue Shot, with your Artillery:
2425Gall them, braue Halberts, with your sharp point Billes,
2426Each in their poynted place, not one, but all,
2427Fight for the credit of your selues and Gawle.
2429That rather wish to deale, then heare of blowes?
2430Let's to our ships, and if that God permit,
2434 Enter a Captayne of the watch, and two watchmen.
2436To watch in this place, neere about the Beacon,
And
and his three daughters.
2437And vigilantly haue regard,
24411. Wat. I, I, I, feare nothing; we know our charge, I warrant:
2442I haue bin a watchman about this Beacon this xxx. yere, and
2445watching the Beacon, wee'l go to goodman Gennings, & watch
2446a pot of Ale and a rasher of Bacon: and if we do not drink our
2448we come out agayne.
2451the Beacon: asse for example.
2460a faithfull watchman, I fire the Beacon, and call vp the towne.
2464Enter the King of Gallia with a stil march, Mumford & soldiers.
2466And we are neere approching to the towne:
2467Then looke about you, valiant Countrymen,
2472Deuoyd of sence, new waked from a dreame,
2473That know not what our comming doth pretend,
2474Till they do feele our meaning on their skinnes:
I2 Alarum,
The History of King Leir
2476Alarum, with men and women halfe naked:
Enter two
2477Captaynes without dublets, with swords.
2481And neuer giuen notice to the towne?
2482We are betrayd, and quite deuoyd of hope,
2483By any meanes to fortify our selues.
24861. Cap. A whirl-wind carry them quick to a whirl-poole,
2487that there the slaues may drinke their bellies full.
2489Enter the watchmen drunke, with each a pot.
24901. Cap. Out on ye, villaynes, whither run you now?
24932. Cap. What, with a pot of ale, you drunken Rogues?
2496Enter Mumford, Captaynes run away.
24981. Wat. Reele? no, we do not reele:
2499You may lacke a pot of Ale ere you dye.
2501Wel, theres no dealing with you, y'are tall men, & wel weapōd,
2504Come, neighbour, let's go.
2506Alarum, excursions, Mumford after them, and some halfe naked.
2507Enter the Gallian King, Leir, Mumford, Cordella, Perillus, and soul-
2508diers, with the chiefe of the towne bound.
2511And quite reuoke your fealty from Cambria,
2514Wee come in iustice of your wronged King,
And
and his three daughters.
2515And do intend no harme at all to you,
2516So you submit vnto your lawfull King.
2517Leir. Kind Countrymen, it grieues me, that perforce,
2519Noble. Long haue you here bin lookt for, good my Lord,
2521And had we known your Highnesse had arriued,
2523And now, my gracious Lord, you need not doubt,
2524But all the Country will yeeld presently,
2526For to maintayne their ouerswelling pride.
2528When they haue notice, they will come apace.
2530Thanks, my kind daughter, thanks to you, my Lord,
2531Who willingly aduentured haue your blood,
2534I haue bin much beholding to your Grace:
2536But I was neuer in the like to this:
2537For where I was wont to meet with armed men,
2538I was now incountred with naked women.
2540Will pray to God, to sheeld you from all harmes.
2542Our hearts shall pray, the foes may haue the foyle.
2545King.Me thinks, your words do amplify (my friends)
2547But harke, I heare the aduerse Drum approch.
2548God and our right, Saint Denis, and Saint George.
2549Enter Cornwall, Cambria, Gonorill, Ragan, and the army.
2552And more then that, to take our townes perforce,
I3 Be
The History of King Leir
2554Be sute to buy it at as deare a price,
2555As ere you bought presumption in your liues.
2556King. Ore-daring Cornwall, know, we came in right,
2557And iust reuengement of the wronged King,
2558Whose daughters there, fell vipers as they are,
2559Haue sought to murder and depriue of life:
2561And we are come in iustice of his right.
2564Thy slaunders to our noble vertuous Queenes,
2565Wee'l in the battell thrust them down thy throte,
2566Except for feare of our reuenging hands,
2573Me thinks, an old man ready for to dye,
2576To call our father lyer to his face.
2579Anon, when as I haue you in my fingers,
2585More odious to my sight then is a Toade.
2588You come to driue my husband from his right,
2589Vnder the colour of a forged letter.
2590Leir. Who euer heard the like impiety?
2591Per. You are our debtour of more patience:
2592We were more patient when we stayd for you,
Within
and his three daughters.
2593Within the thicket two long houres and more.
2594Rag.What houres? what thicket?
2596Seald with your hand, to send vs both to heauen,
2597Where, as I thinke, you neuer meane to come.
2598Raga. Alas, you are growne a child agayne with age,
2602But neuer wake more till the latter day.
2605You get no other answere at their hands.
2606Tis pitty two such good faces
2607Should haue so little grace betweene them.
2608Well, let vs see if their husbands with their hands,
2609Can do as much, as they do with their toungs.
2614Sound alarum: excursions. Mumford must chase Cambria
2615away : then cease. Enter Cornwall.
2620Enter Cambria.
2621Cam.I thinke, there is a deuill in the Campe hath haunted
2623more. Enter Mumford.
2625Mumford followes him to the dore, and returnes.
2627Thou hast a light and nimble payre of legs:
2628Thou art more in debt to them then to thy hands:
2629But if I meet thee once agayne to day,
I4 Alarums
The History of King Leir
2632lus, King, Cordella, and Mumford.
2633King. Thanks be to God, your foes are ouercome,
2638With all my heart I will resigne to you:
2639For it is yours by right, and none of mine.
2641Of valiant Souldiers; (this comes all from you)
2644My kingly title I by thee haue gaynd.
2646Commaund my vtmost, I will neuer grutch.
2647Cor. He that with all kind loue intreats his Queene,
2648Will not be to her father vnkind seene.
2649Leir. Ah, my Cordella, now I call to mind,
2651But now I see, I am no whit beguild,
2652Thou louedst me dearely, and as ought a child.
2653And thou (Perillus) partner once in woe,
2654Thee to requite, the best I can, ile doe:
2655Yet all I can, I, were it ne're so much,
2657Thanks (worthy Mumford) to thee last of all,
2659No, thou hast Lion-like layd on to day,
2660Chasing the Cornwall King and Cambria;
2661Who with my daughters, daughters did I say?
2662To saue their liues, the fugitiues did play.
2663Come sonne and daughter, who did me aduaunce,
2664Repose with me awhile, and then for Fraunce.
2666FINIS.