<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<p id="id00054" style="margin-top: 5em">This etext was prepared by the PG Shakespeare Team,
a team of about twenty Project Gutenberg volunteers.</p>
<p id="id00055" style="margin-top: 5em">King Edward the Third</p>
<p id="id00056" style="margin-top: 3em">The Reign of King Edward the Third, attributed in part to<br/>
William Shakespeare.<br/></p>
<h4 id="id00057" style="margin-top: 2em">PERSONS REPRESENTED.</h4>
<p id="id00058">EDWARD THE THIRD, King of England.<br/>
EDWARD, Prince of Wales, his Son.<br/>
Earl of WARWICK.<br/>
Earl of DERBY.<br/>
Earl of SALISBURY.<br/>
Lord AUDLEY.<br/>
Lord PERCY.<br/>
LODOWICK, Edward's Confident.<br/>
Sir WILLIAM MOUNTAGUE.<br/>
Sir JOHN COPLAND.<br/>
Two ESQUIRES, and a HERALD, English.<br/>
ROBERT, styling himself Earl, of Artois.<br/>
Earl of MONTFORT, and<br/>
GOBIN DE GREY.<br/>
JOHN, King of France.<br/>
CHARLES, and PHILIP, his Sons.<br/>
Duke of LORRAIN.<br/>
VILLIERS, a French Lord.<br/>
King of BOHEMIA, Aid to King John.<br/>
A POLISH CAPTAIN, Aid to King John.<br/>
Six CITIZENS of Calais.<br/>
A CAPTAIN, and<br/>
A POOR INHABITANT, of the same.<br/>
Another CAPTAIN.<br/>
A MARINER.<br/>
Three HERALDS; and<br/>
Four other FRENCHMEN.<br/>
DAVID, King of Scotland.<br/>
Earl DOUGLAS; and<br/>
Two MESSENGERS, Scotch.<br/></p>
<p id="id00059">PHILIPPA, Edward's Queen.<br/>
Countess of SALISBURY.<br/>
A FRENCH WOMAN.<br/></p>
<p id="id00060">Lords, and divers other Attendants; Heralds, Officers,<br/>
Soldiers, &c.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00061">Scene, dispers'd; in England, Flanders, and France.</h5>
<h4 id="id00062" style="margin-top: 2em">ACT I. SCENE I. London. A Room of State in the
Palace. Flourish.</h4>
<p id="id00063">[Enter King Edward, Derby, Prince Edward, Audley, and<br/>
Artois.]<br/></p>
<p id="id00064">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Robert of Artois, banished though thou be<br/>
>From France, thy native Country, yet with us<br/>
Thou shalt retain as great a Seigniorie:<br/>
For we create thee Earl of Richmond here.<br/>
And now go forwards with our pedigree:<br/>
Who next succeeded Phillip le Bew?<br/></p>
<p id="id00065">ARTOIS.<br/>
Three sons of his, which all successfully<br/>
Did sit upon their father's regal Throne,<br/>
Yet died, and left no issue of their loins.<br/></p>
<p id="id00066">KING EDWARD.<br/>
But was my mother sister unto those?<br/></p>
<p id="id00067">ARTOIS.<br/>
She was, my Lord; and only Isabel<br/>
Was all the daughters that this Phillip had,<br/>
Whom afterward your father took to wife;<br/>
And from the fragrant garden of her womb<br/>
Your gracious self, the flower of Europe's hope,<br/>
Derived is inheritor to France.<br/>
But note the rancor of rebellious minds:<br/>
When thus the lineage of le Bew was out,<br/>
The French obscured your mother's Privilege,<br/>
And, though she were the next of blood, proclaimed<br/>
John, of the house of Valois, now their king:<br/>
The reason was, they say, the Realm of France,<br/>
Replete with Princes of great parentage,<br/>
Ought not admit a governor to rule,<br/>
Except he be descended of the male;<br/>
And that's the special ground of their contempt,<br/>
Wherewith they study to exclude your grace:<br/>
But they shall find that forged ground of theirs<br/>
To be but dusty heaps of brittle sand.<br/>
Perhaps it will be thought a heinous thing,<br/>
That I, a French man, should discover this;<br/>
But heaven I call to record of my vows:<br/>
It is not hate nor any private wrong,<br/>
But love unto my country and the right,<br/>
Provokes my tongue, thus lavish in report.<br/>
You are the lineal watchman of our peace,<br/>
And John of Valois indirectly climbs;<br/>
What then should subjects but embrace their King?<br/>
Ah, where in may our duty more be seen,<br/>
Than striving to rebate a tyrant's pride<br/>
And place the true shepherd of our commonwealth?<br/></p>
<p id="id00068">KING EDWARD.<br/>
This counsel, Artois, like to fruitful showers,<br/>
Hath added growth unto my dignity;<br/>
And, by the fiery vigor of thy words,<br/>
Hot courage is engendered in my breast,<br/>
Which heretofore was raked in ignorance,<br/>
But now doth mount with golden wings of fame,<br/>
And will approve fair Isabel's descent,<br/>
Able to yoke their stubborn necks with steel,<br/>
That spurn against my sovereignty in France.<br/></p>
<p id="id00069">[Sound a horn.]</p>
<p id="id00070">A messenger?—Lord Audley, know from whence.</p>
<p id="id00071">[Exit Audley, and returns.]</p>
<p id="id00072">AUDLEY.<br/>
The Duke of Lorrain, having crossed the seas,<br/>
Entreats he may have conference with your highness.<br/></p>
<p id="id00073">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Admit him, Lords, that we may hear the news.<br/></p>
<p id="id00074">[Exeunt Lords. King takes his State. Re-enter Lords;
with Lorrain, attended.]</p>
<p id="id00075">Say, Duke of Lorrain, wherefore art thou come?</p>
<p id="id00076">LORRAIN.<br/>
The most renowned prince, King John of France,<br/>
Doth greet thee, Edward, and by me commands,<br/>
That, for so much as by his liberal gift<br/>
The Guyen Dukedom is entailed to thee,<br/>
Thou do him lowly homage for the same.<br/>
And, for that purpose, here I summon thee,<br/>
Repair to France within these forty days,<br/>
That there, according as the custom is,<br/>
Thou mayst be sworn true liegeman to our King;<br/>
Or else thy title in that province dies,<br/>
And he him self will repossess the place.<br/></p>
<p id="id00077">KING EDWARD.<br/>
See, how occasion laughs me in the face!<br/>
No sooner minded to prepare for France,<br/>
But straight I am invited,—nay, with threats,<br/>
Upon a penalty, enjoined to come:<br/>
Twere but a childish part to say him nay.—<br/>
Lorrain, return this answer to thy Lord:<br/>
I mean to visit him as he requests;<br/>
But how? not servilely disposed to bend,<br/>
But like a conqueror to make him bow.<br/>
His lame unpolished shifts are come to light;<br/>
And truth hath pulled the vizard from his face,<br/>
That set a gloss upon his arrogance.<br/>
Dare he command a fealty in me?<br/>
Tell him, the Crown that he usurps, is mine,<br/>
And where he sets his foot, he ought to kneel.<br/>
Tis not a petty Dukedom that I claim,<br/>
But all the whole Dominions of the Realm;<br/>
Which if with grudging he refuse to yield,<br/>
I'll take away those borrowed plumes of his,<br/>
And send him naked to the wilderness.<br/></p>
<p id="id00078">LORRAIN.<br/>
Then, Edward, here, in spite of all thy Lords,<br/>
I do pronounce defiance to thy face.<br/></p>
<p id="id00079">PRINCE EDWARD.<br/>
Defiance, French man? we rebound it back,<br/>
Even to the bottom of thy master's throat.<br/>
And, be it spoke with reverence of the King,<br/>
My gracious father, and these other Lords,<br/>
I hold thy message but as scurrilous,<br/>
And him that sent thee, like the lazy drone,<br/>
Crept up by stealth unto the Eagle's nest;<br/>
>From whence we'll shake him with so rough a storm,<br/>
As others shall be warned by his harm.<br/></p>
<p id="id00080">WARWICK.<br/>
Bid him leave of the Lyons case he wears,<br/>
Least, meeting with the Lyon in the field,<br/>
He chance to tear him piecemeal for his pride.<br/></p>
<p id="id00081">ARTOIS.<br/>
The soundest counsel I can give his grace,<br/>
Is to surrender ere he be constrained.<br/>
A voluntary mischief hath less scorn,<br/>
Than when reproach with violence is borne.<br/></p>
<p id="id00082">LORRAIN.<br/>
Degenerate Traitor, viper to the place<br/>
Where thou was fostered in thine infancy,<br/>
Bearest thou a part in this conspiracy?<br/></p>
<p id="id00083">[He draws his sword.]</p>
<p id="id00084">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Lorrain, behold the sharpness of this steel:<br/></p>
<p id="id00085">[Drawing his.]</p>
<p id="id00086">Fervent desire that sits against my heart,<br/>
Is far more thorny pricking than this blade;<br/>
That, with the nightingale, I shall be scared,<br/>
As oft as I dispose my self to rest,<br/>
Until my colours be displayed in France:<br/>
This is my final Answer; so be gone.<br/></p>
<p id="id00087">LORRAIN.<br/>
It is not that, nor any English brave,<br/>
Afflicts me so, as doth his poisoned view,<br/>
That is most false, should most of all be true.<br/></p>
<p id="id00088">[Exeunt Lorrain, and Train.]</p>
<p id="id00089">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Now, Lord, our fleeting Bark is under sail;<br/>
Our gage is thrown, and war is soon begun,<br/>
But not so quickly brought unto an end.<br/></p>
<p id="id00090">[Enter Mountague.]</p>
<p id="id00091">But wherefore comes Sir William Mountague?<br/>
How stands the league between the Scot and us?<br/></p>
<p id="id00092">MOUNTAGUE.<br/>
Cracked and dissevered, my renowned Lord.<br/>
The treacherous King no sooner was informed<br/>
Of your with drawing of your army back,<br/>
But straight, forgetting of his former oath,<br/>
He made invasion on the bordering Towns:<br/>
Barwick is won, Newcastle spoiled and lost,<br/>
And now the tyrant hath begirt with siege<br/>
The Castle of Rocksborough, where inclosed<br/>
The Countess Salisbury is like to perish.<br/></p>
<p id="id00093">KING EDWARD.<br/>
That is thy daughter, Warwick, is it not?<br/>
Whose husband hath in Brittain served so long<br/>
About the planting of Lord Mountford there?<br/></p>
<p id="id00094">WARWICK.<br/>
It is, my Lord.<br/></p>
<p id="id00095">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Ignoble David! hast thou none to grieve<br/>
But silly Ladies with thy threatening arms?<br/>
But I will make you shrink your snaily horns!<br/>
First, therefore, Audley, this shall be thy charge,<br/>
Go levy footmen for our wars in France;<br/>
And, Ned, take muster of our men at arms:<br/>
In every shire elect a several band.<br/>
Let them be Soldiers of a lusty spirit,<br/>
Such as dread nothing but dishonor's blot;<br/>
Be wary, therefore, since we do commence<br/>
A famous War, and with so mighty a nation.<br/>
Derby, be thou Ambassador for us<br/>
Unto our Father in Law, the Earl of Henalt:<br/>
Make him acquainted with our enterprise,<br/>
And likewise will him, with our own allies<br/>
That are in Flanders, to solicit to<br/>
The Emperour of Almaigne in our name.<br/>
My self, whilst you are jointly thus employed,<br/>
Will, with these forces that I have at hand,<br/>
March, and once more repulse the traitorous Scot.<br/>
But, Sirs, be resolute: we shall have wars<br/>
On every side; and, Ned, thou must begin<br/>
Now to forget thy study and thy books,<br/>
And ure thy shoulders to an Armor's weight.<br/></p>
<p id="id00096">PRINCE EDWARD.<br/>
As cheerful sounding to my youthful spleen<br/>
This tumult is of war's increasing broils,<br/>
As, at the Coronation of a king,<br/>
The joyful clamours of the people are,<br/>
When Ave, Caesar! they pronounce aloud.<br/>
Within this school of honor I shall learn<br/>
Either to sacrifice my foes to death,<br/>
Or in a rightful quarrel spend my breath.<br/>
Then cheerfully forward, each a several way;<br/>
In great affairs tis nought to use delay.<br/></p>
<p id="id00097">[Exeunt.]</p>
<h4 id="id00098" style="margin-top: 2em">ACT I. SCENE II. Roxborough. Before the Castle.</h4>
<p id="id00099">[Enter the Countess.]</p>
<p id="id00100">COUNTESS.<br/>
Alas, how much in vain my poor eyes gaze<br/>
For succour that my sovereign should send!<br/>
Ah, cousin Mountague, I fear thou wants<br/>
The lively spirit, sharply to solicit<br/>
With vehement suit the king in my behalf:<br/>
Thou dost not tell him, what a grief it is<br/>
To be the scornful captive of a Scot,<br/>
Either to be wooed with broad untuned oaths,<br/>
Or forced by rough insulting barbarism;<br/>
Thou doest not tell him, if he here prevail,<br/>
How much they will deride us in the North,<br/>
And, in their wild, uncivil, skipping gigs,<br/>
Bray forth their Conquest and our overthrow<br/>
Even in the barren, bleak, and fruitless air.<br/></p>
<p id="id00101">[Enter David and Douglas, Lorrain.]</p>
<p id="id00102">I must withdraw, the everlasting foe<br/>
Comes to the wall; I'll closely step aside,<br/>
And list their babble, blunt and full of pride.<br/></p>
<p id="id00103">KING DAVID.<br/>
My Lord of Lorrain, to our brother of France<br/>
Commend us, as the man in Christendom<br/>
That we most reverence and entirely love.<br/>
Touching your embassage, return and say,<br/>
That we with England will not enter parley,<br/>
Nor never make fair weather, or take truce;<br/>
But burn their neighbor towns, and so persist<br/>
With eager Rods beyond their City York.<br/>
And never shall our bonny riders rest,<br/>
Nor rusting canker have the time to eat<br/>
Their light borne snaffles nor their nimble spurs,<br/>
Nor lay aside their Jacks of Gymould mayle,<br/>
Nor hang their staves of grained Scottish ash<br/>
In peaceful wise upon their City walls,<br/>
Nor from their buttoned tawny leathern belts<br/>
Dismiss their biting whinyards, till your King<br/>
Cry out: Enough, spare England now for pity!<br/>
Farewell, and tell him that you leave us here<br/>
Before this Castle; say, you came from us,<br/>
Even when we had that yielded to our hands.<br/></p>
<p id="id00104">LORRAIN.<br/>
I take my leave, and fairly will return<br/>
Your acceptable greeting to my king.<br/></p>
<p id="id00105">[Exit Lorrain.]</p>
<p id="id00106">KING DAVID.<br/>
Now, Douglas, to our former task again,<br/>
For the division of this certain spoil.<br/></p>
<p id="id00107">DOUGLAS.<br/>
My liege, I crave the Lady, and no more.<br/></p>
<p id="id00108">KING DAVID.<br/>
Nay, soft ye, sir; first I must make my choice,<br/>
And first I do bespeak her for my self.<br/></p>
<p id="id00109">DOUGLAS.<br/>
Why then, my liege, let me enjoy her jewels.<br/></p>
<p id="id00110">KING DAVID.<br/>
Those are her own, still liable to her,<br/>
And who inherits her, hath those with all.<br/></p>
<p id="id00111">[Enter a Scot in haste.]</p>
<p id="id00112">MESSENGER.<br/>
My liege, as we were pricking on the hills,<br/>
To fetch in booty, marching hitherward,<br/>
We might descry a might host of men;<br/>
The Sun, reflecting on the armour, shewed<br/>
A field of plate, a wood of picks advanced.<br/>
Bethink your highness speedily herein:<br/>
An easy march within four hours will bring<br/>
The hindmost rank unto this place, my liege.<br/></p>
<p id="id00113">KING DAVID.<br/>
Dislodge, dislodge! it is the king of England.<br/></p>
<p id="id00114">DOUGLAS.<br/>
Jemmy, my man, saddle my bonny black.<br/></p>
<p id="id00115">KING DAVID.<br/>
Meanst thou to fight, Douglas? we are too weak.<br/></p>
<p id="id00116">DOUGLAS.<br/>
I know it well, my liege, and therefore fly.<br/></p>
<p id="id00117">COUNTESS.<br/>
My Lords of Scotland, will ye stay and drink?<br/></p>
<p id="id00118">KING DAVID.<br/>
She mocks at us, Douglas; I cannot endure it.<br/></p>
<p id="id00119">COUNTESS.<br/>
Say, good my Lord, which is he must have the Lady,<br/>
And which her jewels? I am sure, my Lords,<br/>
Ye will not hence, till you have shared the spoils.<br/></p>
<p id="id00120">KING DAVID.<br/>
She heard the messenger, and heard our talk;<br/>
And now that comfort makes her scorn at us.<br/></p>
<p id="id00121">[Another messenger.]</p>
<p id="id00122" style="margin-top: 2em">MESSENGER.<br/>
Arm, my good Lord! O, we are all surprised!<br/></p>
<p id="id00123">COUNTESS.<br/>
After the French ambassador, my liege,<br/>
And tell him, that you dare not ride to York;<br/>
Excuse it that your bonny horse is lame.<br/></p>
<p id="id00124">KING DAVID.<br/>
She heard that too; intolerable grief!<br/>
Woman, farewell! Although I do not stay…<br/></p>
<p id="id00125">[Exeunt Scots.]</p>
<p id="id00126">COUNTESS.<br/>
Tis not for fear, and yet you run away.—<br/>
O happy comfort, welcome to our house!<br/>
The confident and boisterous boasting Scot,<br/>
That swore before my walls they would not back<br/>
For all the armed power of this land,<br/>
With faceless fear that ever turns his back,<br/>
Turned hence against the blasting North-east wind<br/>
Upon the bare report and name of Arms.<br/></p>
<p id="id00127">[Enter Mountague.]</p>
<p id="id00128">O Summer's day! See where my Cousin comes!</p>
<p id="id00129">MOUNTAGUE.<br/>
How fares my Aunt? We are not Scots;<br/>
Why do you shut your gates against your friends?<br/></p>
<p id="id00130">COUNTESS.<br/>
Well may I give a welcome, Cousin, to thee,<br/>
For thou comst well to chase my foes from hence.<br/></p>
<p id="id00131">MOUNTAGUE.<br/>
The king himself is come in person hither;<br/>
Dear Aunt, descend, and gratulate his highness.<br/></p>
<p id="id00132">COUNTESS.<br/>
How may I entertain his Majesty,<br/>
To shew my duty and his dignity?<br/></p>
<p id="id00133">[Exit, from above.]</p>
<p id="id00134" style="margin-top: 2em">[Enter King Edward, Warwick, Artois, with others.]</p>
<p id="id00135">KING EDWARD.<br/>
What, are the stealing Foxes fled and gone,<br/>
Before we could uncouple at their heels?<br/></p>
<p id="id00136">WARWICK.<br/>
They are, my liege; but, with a cheerful cry,<br/>
Hot hounds and hardy chase them at the heels.<br/></p>
<p id="id00137">[Enter Countess.]</p>
<p id="id00138">KING EDWARD.<br/>
This is the Countess, Warwick, is it not?<br/></p>
<p id="id00139">WARWICK.<br/>
Even she, my liege; whose beauty tyrants fear,<br/>
As a May blossom with pernicious winds,<br/>
Hath sullied, withered, overcast, and done.<br/></p>
<p id="id00140">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Hath she been fairer, Warwick, than she is?<br/></p>
<p id="id00141">WARWICK.<br/>
My gracious King, fair is she not at all,<br/>
If that her self were by to stain her self,<br/>
As I have scene her when she was her self.<br/></p>
<p id="id00142">KING EDWARD.<br/>
What strange enchantment lurked in those her eyes,<br/>
When they excelled this excellence they have,<br/>
That now her dim decline hath power to draw<br/>
My subject eyes from persing majesty,<br/>
To gaze on her with doting admiration?<br/></p>
<p id="id00143">COUNTESS.<br/>
In duty lower than the ground I kneel,<br/>
And for my dull knees bow my feeling heart,<br/>
To witness my obedience to your highness,<br/>
With many millions of a subject's thanks<br/>
For this your Royal presence, whose approach<br/>
Hath driven war and danger from my gate.<br/></p>
<p id="id00144">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Lady, stand up; I come to bring thee peace,<br/>
How ever thereby I have purchased war.<br/></p>
<p id="id00145">COUNTESS.<br/>
No war to you, my liege; the Scots are gone,<br/>
And gallop home toward Scotland with their hate.<br/></p>
<p id="id00146">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Least, yielding here, I pine in shameful love,<br/>
Come, we'll pursue the Scots;—Artois, away!<br/></p>
<p id="id00147">COUNTESS.<br/>
A little while, my gracious sovereign, stay,<br/>
And let the power of a mighty king<br/>
Honor our roof; my husband in the wars,<br/>
When he shall hear it, will triumph for joy;<br/>
Then, dear my liege, now niggard not thy state:<br/>
Being at the wall, enter our homely gate.<br/></p>
<p id="id00148">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Pardon me, countess, I will come no near;<br/>
I dreamed to night of treason, and I fear.<br/></p>
<p id="id00149">COUNTESS.<br/>
Far from this place let ugly treason lie!<br/></p>
<p id="id00150">KING EDWARD.<br/>
No farther off, than her conspiring eye,<br/>
Which shoots infected poison in my heart,<br/>
Beyond repulse of wit or cure of Art.<br/>
Now, in the Sun alone it doth not lie,<br/>
With light to take light from a mortal eye;<br/>
For here two day stars that mine eyes would see<br/>
More than the Sun steals mine own light from me,<br/>
Contemplative desire, desire to be<br/>
In contemplation, that may master thee!<br/>
Warwick, Artois, to horse and let's away!<br/></p>
<p id="id00151">COUNTESS.<br/>
What might I speak to make my sovereign stay?<br/></p>
<p id="id00152">KING EDWARD.<br/>
What needs a tongue to such a speaking eye,<br/>
That more persuades than winning Oratory?<br/></p>
<p id="id00153">COUNTESS.<br/>
Let not thy presence, like the April sun,<br/>
Flatter our earth and suddenly be done.<br/>
More happy do not make our outward wall<br/>
Than thou wilt grace our inner house withal.<br/>
Our house, my liege, is like a Country swain,<br/>
Whose habit rude and manners blunt and plain<br/>
Presageth nought, yet inly beautified<br/>
With bounties, riches and faire hidden pride.<br/>
For where the golden Ore doth buried lie,<br/>
The ground, undecked with nature's tapestry,<br/>
Seems barren, sere, unfertile, fructless, dry;<br/>
And where the upper turf of earth doth boast<br/>
His pied perfumes and party coloured coat,<br/>
Delve there, and find this issue and their pride<br/>
To spring from ordure and corruption's side.<br/>
But, to make up my all too long compare,<br/>
These ragged walls no testimony are,<br/>
What is within; but, like a cloak, doth hide<br/>
>From weather's Waste the under garnished pride.<br/>
More gracious then my terms can let thee be,<br/>
Intreat thy self to stay a while with me.<br/></p>
<p id="id00154">KING EDWARD.<br/>
As wise, as fair; what fond fit can be heard,<br/>
When wisdom keeps the gate as beauty's guard?—<br/>
It shall attend, while I attend on thee:<br/>
Come on, my Lords; here will I host to night.<br/></p>
<p id="id00155">[Exeunt.]</p>
<h4 id="id00156" style="margin-top: 2em">ACT II. SCENE I. The Same. Gardens of the Castle.</h4>
<p id="id00157">[Enter Lodowick.]</p>
<p id="id00158">LODOWICK.<br/>
I might perceive his eye in her eye lost,<br/>
His ear to drink her sweet tongue's utterance,<br/>
And changing passion, like inconstant clouds<br/>
That rack upon the carriage of the winds,<br/>
Increase and die in his disturbed cheeks.<br/>
Lo, when she blushed, even then did he look pale,<br/>
As if her cheeks by some enchanted power<br/>
Attracted had the cherry blood from his:<br/>
Anon, with reverent fear when she grew pale,<br/>
His cheeks put on their scarlet ornaments;<br/>
But no more like her oriental red,<br/>
Than Brick to Coral or live things to dead.<br/>
Why did he then thus counterfeit her looks?<br/>
If she did blush, twas tender modest shame,<br/>
Being in the sacred presence of a King;<br/>
If he did blush, twas red immodest shame,<br/>
To veil his eyes amiss, being a king;<br/>
If she looked pale, twas silly woman's fear,<br/>
To bear her self in presence of a king;<br/>
If he looked pale, it was with guilty fear,<br/>
To dote amiss, being a mighty king.<br/>
Then, Scottish wars, farewell; I fear twill prove<br/>
A lingering English siege of peevish love.<br/>
Here comes his highness, walking all alone.<br/></p>
<p id="id00159">[Enter King Edward.]</p>
<p id="id00160">KING EDWARD.<br/>
She is grown more fairer far since I came hither,<br/>
Her voice more silver every word than other,<br/>
Her wit more fluent. What a strange discourse<br/>
Unfolded she of David and his Scots!<br/>
'Even thus', quoth she, 'he spake', and then spoke broad,<br/>
With epithites and accents of the Scot,<br/>
But somewhat better than the Scot could speak:<br/>
'And thus', quoth she, and answered then her self—<br/>
For who could speak like her but she her self—<br/>
Breathes from the wall an Angel's note from Heaven<br/>
Of sweet defiance to her barbarous foes.<br/>
When she would talk of peace, me thinks, her tongue<br/>
Commanded war to prison; when of war,<br/>
It wakened Caesar from his Roman grave,<br/>
To hear war beautified by her discourse.<br/>
Wisdom is foolishness but in her tongue,<br/>
Beauty a slander but in her fair face,<br/>
There is no summer but in her cheerful looks,<br/>
Nor frosty winter but in her disdain.<br/>
I cannot blame the Scots that did besiege her,<br/>
For she is all the Treasure of our land;<br/>
But call them cowards, that they ran away,<br/>
Having so rich and fair a cause to stay.—<br/>
Art thou there, Lodowick? Give me ink and paper.<br/></p>
<p id="id00161">LODOWICK.<br/>
I will, my liege.<br/></p>
<p id="id00162">KING EDWARD.<br/>
And bid the Lords hold on their play at Chess,<br/>
For we will walk and meditate alone.<br/></p>
<p id="id00163">LODOWICK.<br/>
I will, my sovereign.<br/></p>
<p id="id00164">[Exit Lodowick.]</p>
<p id="id00165">KING EDWARD.<br/>
This fellow is well read in poetry,<br/>
And hath a lusty and persuasive spirit;<br/>
I will acquaint him with my passion,<br/>
Which he shall shadow with a veil of lawn,<br/>
Through which the Queen of beauties Queen shall see<br/>
Her self the ground of my infirmity.<br/></p>
<p id="id00166">[Enter Lodowick.]</p>
<p id="id00167">KING EDWARD.
hast thou pen, ink, and paper ready, Lodowick?</p>
<p id="id00168">LODOWICK.<br/>
Ready, my liege.<br/></p>
<p id="id00169">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Then in the summer arbor sit by me,<br/>
Make it our counsel house or cabinet:<br/>
Since green our thoughts, green be the conventicle,<br/>
Where we will ease us by disburdening them.<br/>
Now, Lodowick, invocate some golden Muse,<br/>
To bring thee hither an enchanted pen,<br/>
That may for sighs set down true sighs indeed,<br/>
Talking of grief, to make thee ready groan;<br/>
And when thou writest of tears, encouch the word<br/>
Before and after with such sweet laments,<br/>
That it may raise drops in a Tartar's eye,<br/>
And make a flintheart Scythian pitiful;<br/>
For so much moving hath a Poet's pen:<br/>
Then, if thou be a Poet, move thou so,<br/>
And be enriched by thy sovereign's love.<br/>
For, if the touch of sweet concordant strings<br/>
Could force attendance in the ears of hell,<br/>
How much more shall the strains of poets' wit<br/>
Beguile and ravish soft and humane minds?<br/></p>
<p id="id00170">LODOWICK.<br/>
To whom, my Lord, shall I direct my stile?<br/></p>
<p id="id00171">KING EDWARD.<br/>
To one that shames the fair and sots the wise;<br/>
Whose bod is an abstract or a brief,<br/>
Contains each general virtue in the world.<br/>
Better than beautiful thou must begin,<br/>
Devise for fair a fairer word than fair,<br/>
And every ornament that thou wouldest praise,<br/>
Fly it a pitch above the soar of praise.<br/>
For flattery fear thou not to be convicted;<br/>
For, were thy admiration ten times more,<br/>
Ten times ten thousand more the worth exceeds<br/>
Of that thou art to praise, thy praises worth.<br/>
Begin; I will to contemplate the while:<br/>
Forget not to set down, how passionate,<br/>
How heart sick, and how full of languishment,<br/>
Her beauty makes me.<br/></p>
<p id="id00172">LODOWICK.<br/>
Write I to a woman?<br/></p>
<p id="id00173">KING EDWARD.<br/>
What beauty else could triumph over me,<br/>
Or who but women do our love lays greet?<br/>
What, thinkest thou I did bid thee praise a horse?<br/></p>
<p id="id00174">LODOWICK.<br/>
Of what condition or estate she is,<br/>
Twere requisite that I should know, my Lord.<br/></p>
<p id="id00175">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Of such estate, that hers is as a throne,<br/>
And my estate the footstool where she treads:<br/>
Then maist thou judge what her condition is<br/>
By the proportion of her mightiness.<br/>
Write on, while I peruse her in my thoughts.—<br/>
Her voice to music or the nightingale—<br/>
To music every summer leaping swain<br/>
Compares his sunburnt lover when she speaks;<br/>
And why should I speak of the nightingale?<br/>
The nightingale sings of adulterate wrong,<br/>
And that, compared, is too satyrical;<br/>
For sin, though sin, would not be so esteemed,<br/>
But, rather, virtue sin, sin virtue deemed.<br/>
Her hair, far softer than the silk worm's twist,<br/>
Like to a flattering glass, doth make more fair<br/>
The yellow Amber:—like a flattering glass<br/>
Comes in too soon; for, writing of her eyes,<br/>
I'll say that like a glass they catch the sun,<br/>
And thence the hot reflection doth rebound<br/>
Against the breast, and burns my heart within.<br/>
Ah, what a world of descant makes my soul<br/>
Upon this voluntary ground of love!—<br/>
Come, Lodowick, hast thou turned thy ink to gold?<br/>
If not, write but in letters Capital<br/>
My mistress' name, and it will gild thy paper:<br/>
Read, Lord, read;<br/>
Fill thou the empty hollows of mine ears<br/>
With the sweet hearing of thy poetry.<br/></p>
<p id="id00176">LODOWICK.<br/>
I have not to a period brought her praise.<br/></p>
<p id="id00177">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Her praise is as my love, both infinite,<br/>
Which apprehend such violent extremes,<br/>
That they disdain an ending period.<br/>
Her beauty hath no match but my affection;<br/>
Hers more than most, mine most and more than more:<br/>
Hers more to praise than tell the sea by drops,<br/>
Nay, more than drop the massy earth by sands,<br/>
And sand by sand print them in memory:<br/>
Then wherefore talkest thou of a period<br/>
To that which craves unended admiration?<br/>
Read, let us hear.<br/></p>
<p id="id00178">LODOWICK.<br/>
'More fair and chaste than is the queen of shades,'—<br/></p>
<p id="id00179">KING EDWARD.<br/>
That line hath two faults, gross and palpable:<br/>
Comparest thou her to the pale queen of night,<br/>
Who, being set in dark, seems therefore light?<br/>
What is she, when the sun lifts up his head,<br/>
But like a fading taper, dim and dead?<br/>
My love shall brave the eye of heaven at noon,<br/>
And, being unmasked, outshine the golden sun.<br/></p>
<p id="id00180">LODOWICK.<br/>
What is the other fault, my sovereign Lord?<br/></p>
<p id="id00181">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Read o'er the line again.<br/></p>
<p id="id00182">LODOWICK.<br/>
'More fair and chaste'—<br/></p>
<p id="id00183">KING EDWARD.<br/>
I did not bid thee talk of chastity,<br/>
To ransack so the treasure of her mind;<br/>
For I had rather have her chased than chaste.<br/>
Out with the moon line, I will none of it;<br/>
And let me have her likened to the sun:<br/>
Say she hath thrice more splendour than the sun,<br/>
That her perfections emulate the sun,<br/>
That she breeds sweets as plenteous as the sun,<br/>
That she doth thaw cold winter like the sun,<br/>
That she doth cheer fresh summer like the sun,<br/>
The she doth dazzle gazers like the sun;<br/>
And, in this application to the sun,<br/>
Bid her be free and general as the sun,<br/>
Who smiles upon the basest weed that grows<br/>
As lovingly as on the fragrant rose.<br/>
Let's see what follows that same moonlight line.<br/></p>
<p id="id00184">LODOWICK.<br/>
'More fair and chaste than is the queen of shades,<br/>
More bold in constance'—<br/></p>
<p id="id00185">KING EDWARD.<br/>
In constance! than who?<br/></p>
<p id="id00186">LODOWICK.<br/>
'Than Judith was.'<br/></p>
<p id="id00187">KING EDWARD.<br/>
O monstrous line! Put in the next a sword,<br/>
And I shall woo her to cut of my head.<br/>
Blot, blot, good Lodowick! Let us hear the next.<br/></p>
<p id="id00188">LODOWICK.<br/>
There's all that yet is done.<br/></p>
<p id="id00189">KING EDWARD.<br/>
I thank thee then; thou hast done little ill,<br/>
But what is done, is passing, passing ill.<br/>
No, let the Captain talk of boisterous war,<br/>
The prisoner of emured dark constraint,<br/>
The sick man best sets down the pangs of death,<br/>
The man that starves the sweetness of a feast,<br/>
The frozen soul the benefit of fire,<br/>
And every grief his happy opposite:<br/>
Love cannot sound well but in lover's tongues;<br/>
Give me the pen and paper, I will write.<br/></p>
<p id="id00190">[Enter Countess.]</p>
<p id="id00191">But soft, here comes the treasurer of my spirit.—<br/>
Lodowick, thou knowst not how to draw a battle;<br/>
These wings, these flankers, and these squadrons<br/>
Argue in thee defective discipline:<br/>
Thou shouldest have placed this here, this other here.<br/></p>
<p id="id00192">COUNTESS.<br/>
Pardon my boldness, my thrice gracious Lords;<br/>
Let my intrusion here be called my duty,<br/>
That comes to see my sovereign how he fares.<br/></p>
<p id="id00193">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Go, draw the same, I tell thee in what form.<br/></p>
<p id="id00194">LODOWICK.<br/>
I go.<br/></p>
<p id="id00195">[Exit Lodowick.]</p>
<p id="id00196">COUNTESS.<br/>
Sorry I am to see my liege so sad:<br/>
What may thy subject do to drive from thee<br/>
Thy gloomy consort, sullome melancholy?<br/></p>
<p id="id00197">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Ah, Lady, I am blunt and cannot straw<br/>
The flowers of solace in a ground of shame:—<br/>
Since I came hither, Countess, I am wronged.<br/></p>
<p id="id00198">COUNTESS.<br/>
Now God forbid that any in my house<br/>
Should think my sovereign wrong! Thrice gentle King,<br/>
Acquaint me with your cause of discontent.<br/></p>
<p id="id00199">KING EDWARD.<br/>
How near then shall I be to remedy?<br/></p>
<p id="id00200" style="margin-top: 2em">COUNTESS.<br/>
As near, my Liege, as all my woman's power<br/>
Can pawn it self to buy thy remedy.<br/></p>
<p id="id00201">KING EDWARD.<br/>
If thou speakst true, then have I my redress:<br/>
Engage thy power to redeem my Joys,<br/>
And I am joyful, Countess; else I die.<br/></p>
<p id="id00202">COUNTESS.<br/>
I will, my Liege.<br/></p>
<p id="id00203">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Swear, Countess, that thou wilt.<br/></p>
<p id="id00204">COUNTESS.<br/>
By heaven, I will.<br/></p>
<p id="id00205">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Then take thy self a little way a side,<br/>
And tell thy self, a King doth dote on thee;<br/>
Say that within thy power it doth lie<br/>
To make him happy, and that thou hast sworn<br/>
To give him all the Joy within thy power:<br/>
Do this, and tell me when I shall be happy.<br/></p>
<p id="id00206">COUNTESS.<br/>
All this is done, my thrice dread sovereign:<br/>
That power of love, that I have power to give,<br/>
Thou hast with all devout obedience;<br/>
Employ me how thou wilt in proof thereof.<br/></p>
<p id="id00207">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Thou hearst me say that I do dote on thee.<br/></p>
<p id="id00208">COUNTESS.<br/>
If on my beauty, take it if thou canst;<br/>
Though little, I do prize it ten times less;<br/>
If on my virtue, take it if thou canst,<br/>
For virtue's store by giving doth augment;<br/>
Be it on what it will, that I can give<br/>
And thou canst take away, inherit it.<br/></p>
<p id="id00209">KING EDWARD.<br/>
It is thy beauty that I would enjoy.<br/></p>
<p id="id00210" style="margin-top: 2em">COUNTESS.<br/>
O, were it painted, I would wipe it off<br/>
And dispossess my self, to give it thee.<br/>
But, sovereign, it is soldered to my life:<br/>
Take one and both; for, like an humble shadow,<br/>
It haunts the sunshine of my summer's life.<br/></p>
<p id="id00211">KING EDWARD.<br/>
But thou maist lend it me to sport with all.<br/></p>
<p id="id00212">COUNTESS.<br/>
As easy may my intellectual soul<br/>
Be lent away, and yet my body live,<br/>
As lend my body, palace to my soul,<br/>
Away from her, and yet retain my soul.<br/>
My body is her bower, her Court, her abbey,<br/>
And she an Angel, pure, divine, unspotted:<br/>
If I should leave her house, my Lord, to thee,<br/>
I kill my poor soul and my poor soul me.<br/></p>
<p id="id00213">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Didst thou not swear to give me what I would?<br/></p>
<p id="id00214">COUNTESS.<br/>
I did, my liege, so what you would I could.<br/></p>
<p id="id00215">KING EDWARD.<br/>
I wish no more of thee than thou maist give:—<br/>
Nor beg I do not, but I rather buy—<br/>
That is, thy love; and for that love of thine<br/>
In rich exchange I tender to thee mine.<br/></p>
<p id="id00216">COUNTESS.<br/>
But that your lips were sacred, my Lord,<br/>
You would profane the holy name of love.<br/>
That love you offer me you cannot give,<br/>
For Caesar owes that tribute to his Queen;<br/>
That love you beg of me I cannot give,<br/>
For Sara owes that duty to her Lord.<br/>
He that doth clip or counterfeit your stamp<br/>
Shall die, my Lord; and will your sacred self<br/>
Commit high treason against the King of heaven,<br/>
To stamp his Image in forbidden metal,<br/>
Forgetting your allegiance and your oath?<br/>
In violating marriage sacred law,<br/>
You break a greater honor than your self:<br/>
To be a King is of a younger house<br/>
Than to be married; your progenitour,<br/>
Sole reigning Adam on the universe,<br/>
By God was honored for a married man,<br/>
But not by him anointed for a king.<br/>
It is a penalty to break your statutes,<br/>
Though not enacted with your highness' hand:<br/>
How much more, to infringe the holy act,<br/>
Made by the mouth of God, sealed with his hand?<br/>
I know, my sovereign, in my husband's love,<br/>
Who now doth loyal service in his wars,<br/>
Doth but so try the wife of Salisbury,<br/>
Whither she will hear a wanton's tale or no,<br/>
Lest being therein guilty by my stay,<br/>
>From that, not from my liege, I turn away.<br/></p>
<p id="id00217">[Exit.]</p>
<p id="id00218">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Whether is her beauty by her words dying,<br/>
Or are her words sweet chaplains to her beauty?<br/>
Like as the wind doth beautify a sail,<br/>
And as a sail becomes the unseen wind,<br/>
So do her words her beauties, beauties words.<br/>
O, that I were a honey gathering bee,<br/>
To bear the comb of virtue from this flower,<br/>
And not a poison sucking envious spider,<br/>
To turn the juice I take to deadly venom!<br/>
Religion is austere and beauty gentle;<br/>
Too strict a guardian for so fair a ward!<br/>
O, that she were, as is the air, to me!<br/>
Why, so she is, for when I would embrace her,<br/>
This do I, and catch nothing but my self.<br/>
I must enjoy her; for I cannot beat<br/>
With reason and reproof fond love a way.<br/></p>
<p id="id00219">[Enter Warwick.]</p>
<p id="id00220">Here comes her father: I will work with him,<br/>
To bear my colours in this field of love.<br/></p>
<p id="id00221">WARWICK.<br/>
How is it that my sovereign is so sad?<br/>
May I with pardon know your highness grief;<br/>
And that my old endeavor will remove it,<br/>
It shall not cumber long your majesty.<br/></p>
<p id="id00222">KING EDWARD.<br/>
A kind and voluntary gift thou proferest,<br/>
That I was forward to have begged of thee.<br/>
But, O thou world, great nurse of flattery,<br/>
Why dost thou tip men's tongues with golden words,<br/>
And peise their deeds with weight of heavy lead,<br/>
That fair performance cannot follow promise?<br/>
O, that a man might hold the heart's close book<br/>
And choke the lavish tongue, when it doth utter<br/>
The breath of falsehood not charactered there!<br/></p>
<p id="id00223">WARWICK.<br/>
Far be it from the honor of my age,<br/>
That I should owe bright gold and render lead;<br/>
Age is a cynic, not a flatterer.<br/>
I say again, that if I knew your grief,<br/>
And that by me it may be lessened,<br/>
My proper harm should buy your highness good.<br/></p>
<p id="id00224">KING EDWARD.<br/>
These are the vulgar tenders of false men,<br/>
That never pay the duty of their words.<br/>
Thou wilt not stick to swear what thou hast said;<br/>
But, when thou knowest my grief's condition,<br/>
This rash disgorged vomit of thy word<br/>
Thou wilt eat up again, and leave me helpless.<br/></p>
<p id="id00225">WARWICK.<br/>
By heaven, I will not, though your majesty<br/>
Did bid me run upon your sword and die.<br/></p>
<p id="id00226">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Say that my grief is no way medicinable<br/>
But by the loss and bruising of thine honour.<br/></p>
<p id="id00227">WARWICK.<br/>
If nothing but that loss may vantage you,<br/>
I would accompt that loss my vantage too.<br/></p>
<p id="id00228">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Thinkst that thou canst unswear thy oath again?<br/></p>
<p id="id00229">WARWICK.<br/>
I cannot; nor I would not, if I could.<br/></p>
<p id="id00230" style="margin-top: 2em">KING EDWARD.<br/>
But, if thou dost, what shall I say to thee?<br/></p>
<p id="id00231">WARWICK.<br/>
What may be said to any perjured villain,<br/>
That breaks the sacred warrant of an oath.<br/></p>
<p id="id00232">KING EDWARD.<br/>
What wilt thou say to one that breaks an oath?<br/></p>
<p id="id00233">WARWICK.<br/>
That he hath broke his faith with God and man,<br/>
And from them both stands excommunicate.<br/></p>
<p id="id00234">KING EDWARD.<br/>
What office were it, to suggest a man<br/>
To break a lawful and religious vow?<br/></p>
<p id="id00235">WARWICK.<br/>
An office for the devil, not for man.<br/></p>
<p id="id00236">KING EDWARD.<br/>
That devil's office must thou do for me,<br/>
Or break thy oath, or cancel all the bonds<br/>
Of love and duty twixt thy self and me;<br/>
And therefore, Warwick, if thou art thy self,<br/>
The Lord and master of thy word and oath,<br/>
Go to thy daughter; and in my behalf<br/>
Command her, woo her, win her any ways,<br/>
To be my mistress and my secret love.<br/>
I will not stand to hear thee make reply:<br/>
Thy oath break hers, or let thy sovereign die.<br/></p>
<p id="id00237">[Exit.]</p>
<p id="id00238">WARWICK.<br/>
O doting King! O detestable office!<br/>
Well may I tempt my self to wrong my self,<br/>
When he hath sworn me by the name of God<br/>
To break a vow made by the name of God.<br/>
What, if I swear by this right hand of mine<br/>
To cut this right hand off? The better way<br/>
Were to profane the Idol than confound it:<br/>
But neither will I do; I'll keep mine oath,<br/>
And to my daughter make a recantation<br/>
Of all the virtue I have preacht to her:<br/>
I'll say, she must forget her husband Salisbury,<br/>
If she remember to embrace the king;<br/>
I'll say, an oath may easily be broken,<br/>
But not so easily pardoned, being broken;<br/>
I'll say, it is true charity to love,<br/>
But not true love to be so charitable;<br/>
I'll say, his greatness may bear out the shame,<br/>
But not his kingdom can buy out the sin;<br/>
I'll say, it is my duty to persuade,<br/>
But not her honesty to give consent.<br/></p>
<p id="id00239">[Enter Countess.]</p>
<p id="id00240">See where she comes; was never father had<br/>
Against his child an embassage so bad?<br/></p>
<p id="id00241">COUNTESS.<br/>
My Lord and father, I have sought for you:<br/>
My mother and the Peers importune you<br/>
To keep in presence of his majesty,<br/>
And do your best to make his highness merry.<br/></p>
<p id="id00242">WARWICK.<br/>
[Aside.] How shall I enter in this graceless arrant?<br/>
I must not call her child, for where's the father<br/>
That will in such a suit seduce his child?<br/>
Then, 'wife of Salisbury'; shall I so begin?<br/>
No, he's my friend, and where is found the friend<br/>
That will do friendship such indammagement?<br/></p>
<p id="id00243">[To the Countess.]</p>
<p id="id00244">Neither my daughter nor my dear friend's wife,<br/>
I am not Warwick, as thou thinkst I am,<br/>
But an attorney from the Court of hell,<br/>
That thus have housed my spirit in his form,<br/>
To do a message to thee from the king.<br/>
The mighty king of England dotes on thee:<br/>
He that hath power to take away thy life,<br/>
Hath power to take thy honor; then consent<br/>
To pawn thine honor rather than thy life:<br/>
Honor is often lost and got again,<br/>
But life, once gone, hath no recovery.<br/>
The Sun, that withers hay, doth nourish grass;<br/>
The king, that would disdain thee, will advance thee.<br/>
The Poets write that great Achilles' spear<br/>
Could heal the wound it made: the moral is,<br/>
What mighty men misdo, they can amend.<br/>
The Lyon doth become his bloody jaws,<br/>
And grace his forragement by being mild,<br/>
When vassel fear lies trembling at his feet.<br/>
The king will in his glory hide thy shame;<br/>
And those that gaze on him to find out thee,<br/>
Will lose their eye-sight, looking in the Sun.<br/>
What can one drop of poison harm the Sea,<br/>
Whose huge vastures can digest the ill<br/>
And make it loose his operation?<br/>
The king's great name will temper thy misdeeds,<br/>
And give the bitter potion of reproach,<br/>
A sugared, sweet and most delicious taste.<br/>
Besides, it is no harm to do the thing<br/>
Which without shame could not be left undone.<br/>
Thus have I in his majesty's behalf<br/>
Appareled sin in virtuous sentences,<br/>
And dwell upon thy answer in his suit.<br/></p>
<p id="id00245">COUNTESS.<br/>
Unnatural besiege! woe me unhappy,<br/>
To have escaped the danger of my foes,<br/>
And to be ten times worse injured by friends!<br/>
Hath he no means to stain my honest blood,<br/>
But to corrupt the author of my blood<br/>
To be his scandalous and vile solicitor?<br/>
No marvel though the branches be then infected,<br/>
When poison hath encompassed the root:<br/>
No marvel though the leprous infant die,<br/>
When the stern dame invenometh the Dug.<br/>
Why then, give sin a passport to offend,<br/>
And youth the dangerous reign of liberty:<br/>
Blot out the strict forbidding of the law,<br/>
And cancel every cannon that prescribes<br/>
A shame for shame or penance for offence.<br/>
No, let me die, if his too boistrous will<br/>
Will have it so, before I will consent<br/>
To be an actor in his graceless lust.<br/></p>
<p id="id00246">WARWICK.<br/>
Why, now thou speakst as I would have thee speak:<br/>
And mark how I unsay my words again.<br/>
An honorable grave is more esteemed<br/>
Than the polluted closet of a king:<br/>
The greater man, the greater is the thing,<br/>
Be it good or bad, that he shall undertake:<br/>
An unreputed mote, flying in the Sun,<br/>
Presents a greater substance than it is:<br/>
The freshest summer's day doth soonest taint<br/>
The loathed carrion that it seems to kiss:<br/>
Deep are the blows made with a mighty Axe:<br/>
That sin doth ten times aggravate it self,<br/>
That is committed in a holy place:<br/>
An evil deed, done by authority,<br/>
Is sin and subornation: Deck an Ape<br/>
In tissue, and the beauty of the robe<br/>
Adds but the greater scorn unto the beast.<br/>
A spatious field of reasons could I urge<br/>
Between his glory, daughter, and thy shame:<br/>
That poison shews worst in a golden cup;<br/>
Dark night seems darker by the lightning flash;<br/>
Lilies that fester smell far worse than weeds;<br/>
And every glory that inclines to sin,<br/>
The shame is treble by the opposite.<br/>
So leave I with my blessing in thy bosom,<br/>
Which then convert to a most heavy curse,<br/>
When thou convertest from honor's golden name<br/>
To the black faction of bed blotting shame.<br/></p>
<p id="id00247">COUNTESS.<br/>
I'll follow thee; and when my mind turns so,<br/>
My body sink my soul in endless woe!<br/></p>
<p id="id00248">[Exeunt.]</p>
<h4 id="id00249" style="margin-top: 2em">ACT II. SCENE II. The Same. A Room in the Castle.</h4>
<p id="id00250">[Enter at one door Derby from France, At an other door<br/>
Audley with a Drum.]<br/></p>
<p id="id00251">DERBY.<br/>
Thrice noble Audley, well encountered here!<br/>
How is it with our sovereign and his peers?<br/></p>
<p id="id00252">AUDLEY.<br/>
Tis full a fortnight, since I saw his highness<br/>
What time he sent me forth to muster men;<br/>
Which I accordingly have done, and bring them hither<br/>
In fair array before his majesty.<br/></p>
<p id="id00253">What news, my Lord of Derby, from the Emperor?</p>
<p id="id00254">DERBY.<br/>
As good as we desire: the Emperor<br/>
Hath yielded to his highness friendly aid,<br/>
And makes our king lieutenant general<br/>
In all his lands and large dominions;<br/>
Then via for the spatious bounds of France!<br/></p>
<p id="id00255">AUDLEY.<br/>
What, doth his highness leap to hear these news?<br/></p>
<p id="id00256">DERBY.<br/>
I have not yet found time to open them;<br/>
The king is in his closet, malcontent;<br/>
For what, I know not, but he gave in charge,<br/>
Till after dinner none should interrupt him:<br/>
The Countess Salisbury and her father Warwick,<br/>
Artois and all look underneath the brows.<br/></p>
<p id="id00257">AUDLEY.<br/>
Undoubtedly, then, some thing is amiss.<br/></p>
<p id="id00258">[Trumpet within.]</p>
<p id="id00259">DERBY.<br/>
The Trumpets sound, the king is now abroad.<br/></p>
<p id="id00260">[Enter the King.]</p>
<p id="id00261">AUDLEY.<br/>
Here comes his highness.<br/></p>
<p id="id00262">DERBY.<br/>
Befall my sovereign all my sovereign's wish!<br/></p>
<p id="id00263">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Ah, that thou wert a Witch to make it so!<br/></p>
<p id="id00264">DERBY.<br/>
The Emperour greeteth you.<br/></p>
<p id="id00265">[Presenting Letters.]</p>
<p id="id00266">KING EDWARD.<br/>
—Would it were the Countess!<br/></p>
<p id="id00267" style="margin-top: 2em">DERBY.<br/>
And hath accorded to your highness suite.<br/></p>
<p id="id00268">KING EDWARD.<br/>
—Thou liest, she hath not; but I would she had.<br/></p>
<p id="id00269">AUDLEY.<br/>
All love and duty to my Lord the King!<br/></p>
<p id="id00270">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Well, all but one is none.—What news with you?<br/></p>
<p id="id00271">AUDLEY.<br/>
I have, my liege, levied those horse and foot<br/>
According to your charge, and brought them hither.<br/></p>
<p id="id00272">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Then let those foot trudge hence upon those horse<br/>
According to our discharge, and be gone.—<br/>
Darby, I'll look upon the Countess' mind anon.<br/></p>
<p id="id00273">DERBY.<br/>
The Countess' mind, my liege?<br/></p>
<p id="id00274">KING EDWARD.<br/>
I mean the Emperour:—leave me alone.<br/></p>
<p id="id00275">AUDLEY.<br/>
What is his mind?<br/></p>
<p id="id00276">DERBY.<br/>
Let's leave him to his humor.<br/></p>
<p id="id00277">[Exeunt.]</p>
<p id="id00278">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Thus from the heart's aboundance speaks the tongue;<br/>
Countess for Emperour: and indeed, why not?<br/>
She is as imperator over me<br/>
And I to her<br/>
Am as a kneeling vassal, that observes<br/>
The pleasure or displeasure of her eye.<br/></p>
<p id="id00279">[Enter Lodowick.]</p>
<p id="id00280">What says the more than Cleopatra's match<br/>
To Caesar now?<br/></p>
<p id="id00281">LODOWICK.<br/>
That yet, my liege, ere night<br/>
She will resolve your majesty.<br/></p>
<p id="id00282">[Drum within.]</p>
<p id="id00283">KING EDWARD.<br/>
What drum is this that thunders forth this march,<br/>
To start the tender Cupid in my bosom?<br/>
Poor shipskin, how it brawls with him that beateth it!<br/>
Go, break the thundring parchment bottom out,<br/>
And I will teach it to conduct sweet lines<br/>
Unto the bosom of a heavenly Nymph;<br/>
For I will use it as my writing paper,<br/>
And so reduce him from a scolding drum<br/>
To be the herald and dear counsel bearer<br/>
Betwixt a goddess and a mighty king.<br/>
Go, bid the drummer learn to touch the Lute,<br/>
Or hang him in the braces of his drum,<br/>
For now we think it an uncivil thing,<br/>
To trouble heaven with such harsh resounds:<br/>
Away!<br/></p>
<p id="id00284">[Exit.]</p>
<p id="id00285">The quarrel that I have requires no arms<br/>
But these of mine: and these shall meet my foe<br/>
In a deep march of penetrable groans;<br/>
My eyes shall be my arrows, and my sighs<br/>
Shall serve me as the vantage of the wind,<br/>
To whirl away my sweetest artillery.<br/>
Ah, but, alas, she wins the sun of me,<br/>
For that is she her self, and thence it comes<br/>
That Poets term the wanton warrior blind;<br/>
But love hath eyes as judgement to his steps,<br/>
Till too much loved glory dazzles them.—<br/></p>
<p id="id00286">[Enter Lodowick.]</p>
<p id="id00287">How now?</p>
<p id="id00288">LODOWICK.<br/>
My liege, the drum that stroke the lusty march,<br/>
Stands with Prince Edward, your thrice valiant son.<br/></p>
<p id="id00289">[Enter Prince Edward.]</p>
<p id="id00290">KING EDWARD.<br/>
I see the boy; oh, how his mother's face,<br/>
Modeled in his, corrects my strayed desire,<br/>
And rates my heart, and chides my thievish eye,<br/>
Who, being rich enough in seeing her,<br/>
Yet seeks elsewhere: and basest theft is that<br/>
Which cannot cloak it self on poverty.—<br/>
Now, boy, what news?<br/></p>
<p id="id00291">PRINCE EDWARD.<br/>
I have assembled, my dear Lord and father,<br/>
The choicest buds of all our English blood<br/>
For our affairs in France; and here we come<br/>
To take direction from your majesty.<br/></p>
<p id="id00292">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Still do I see in him delineate<br/>
His mother's visage; those his eyes are hers,<br/>
Who, looking wistely on me, make me blush:<br/>
For faults against themselves give evidence;<br/>
Lust is fire, and men like lanthornes show<br/>
Light lust within them selves, even through them selves.<br/>
Away, loose silks of wavering vanity!<br/>
Shall the large limit of fair Brittain<br/>
By me be overthrown, and shall I not<br/>
Master this little mansion of my self?<br/>
Give me an Armor of eternal steel!<br/>
I go to conquer kings; and shall I not then<br/>
Subdue my self? and be my enemy's friend?<br/>
It must not be.—Come, boy, forward, advance!<br/>
Let's with our colours sweet the Air of France.<br/></p>
<p id="id00293">[Enter Lodowick.]</p>
<p id="id00294">LODOWICK.<br/>
My liege, the Countess with a smiling cheer<br/>
Desires access unto your Majesty.<br/></p>
<p id="id00295">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Why, there it goes! That very smile of hers<br/>
Hath ransomed captive France, and set the King,<br/>
The Dauphin, and the Peers at liberty.—<br/>
Go, leave me, Ned, and revel with thy friends.<br/></p>
<p id="id00296">[Exit Prince Edward.]</p>
<p id="id00297">Thy mother is but black, and thou, like her,<br/>
Dost put it in my mind how foul she is.—<br/>
Go, fetch the Countess hither in thy hand,<br/>
And let her chase away these winter clouds,<br/>
For she gives beauty both to heaven and earth.<br/></p>
<p id="id00298">[Exit Lodowick.]</p>
<p id="id00299">The sin is more to hack and hew poor men,<br/>
Than to embrace in an unlawful bed<br/>
The register of all rarities<br/>
Since Letherne Adam till this youngest hour.<br/></p>
<p id="id00300">[Enter Countess escorted by Lodowick.]</p>
<p id="id00301">Go, Lodowick, put thy hand into my purse,<br/>
Play, spend, give, riot, waste, do what thou wilt,<br/>
So thou wilt hence awhile and leave me here.<br/></p>
<p id="id00302">[Exit Lodowick.]</p>
<p id="id00303">Now, my soul's playfellow, art thou come<br/>
To speak the more than heavenly word of yea<br/>
To my objection in thy beauteous love?<br/></p>
<p id="id00304">COUNTESS.<br/>
My father on his blessing hath commanded—<br/></p>
<p id="id00305">KING EDWARD.<br/>
That thou shalt yield to me?<br/></p>
<p id="id00306">COUNTESS.<br/>
Aye, dear my liege, your due.<br/></p>
<p id="id00307">KING EDWARD.<br/>
And that, my dearest love, can be no less<br/>
Than right for right and tender love for love.<br/></p>
<p id="id00308">COUNTESS.<br/>
Then wrong for wrong and endless hate for hate.—<br/>
But,—sith I see your majesty so bent,<br/>
That my unwillingness, my husband's love,<br/>
Your high estate, nor no respect respected<br/>
Can be my help, but that your mightiness<br/>
Will overbear and awe these dear regards—<br/>
I bind my discontent to my content,<br/>
And what I would not I'll compel I will,<br/>
Provided that your self remove those lets<br/>
That stand between your highness' love and mine.<br/></p>
<p id="id00309">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Name them, fair Countess, and, by heaven, I will.<br/></p>
<p id="id00310">COUNTESS.<br/>
It is their lives that stand between our love,<br/>
That I would have choked up, my sovereign.<br/></p>
<p id="id00311">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Whose lives, my Lady?<br/></p>
<p id="id00312">COUNTESS.<br/>
My thrice loving liege,<br/>
Your Queen and Salisbury, my wedded husband,<br/>
Who living have that title in our love,<br/>
That we cannot bestow but by their death.<br/></p>
<p id="id00313">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Thy opposition is beyond our Law.<br/></p>
<p id="id00314">COUNTESS.<br/>
So is your desire: if the law<br/>
Can hinder you to execute the one,<br/>
Let it forbid you to attempt the other.<br/>
I cannot think you love me as you say,<br/>
Unless you do make good what you have sworn.<br/></p>
<p id="id00315">KING EDWARD.<br/>
No more; thy husband and the Queen shall die.<br/>
Fairer thou art by far than Hero was,<br/>
Beardless Leander not so strong as I:<br/>
He swom an easy current for his love,<br/>
But I will through a Hellespont of blood,<br/>
To arrive at Cestus where my Hero lies.<br/></p>
<p id="id00316">COUNTESS.<br/>
Nay, you'll do more; you'll make the River to<br/>
With their heart bloods that keep our love asunder,<br/>
Of which my husband and your wife are twain.<br/></p>
<p id="id00317" style="margin-top: 2em">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Thy beauty makes them guilty of their death<br/>
And gives in evidence that they shall die;<br/>
Upon which verdict I, their Judge, condemn them.<br/></p>
<p id="id00318">COUNTESS.<br/>
[Aside.] O perjured beauty, more corrupted Judge!<br/>
When to the great Star-chamber o'er our heads<br/>
The universal Sessions calls to count<br/>
This packing evil, we both shall tremble for it.<br/></p>
<p id="id00319">KING EDWARD.<br/>
What says my fair love? is she resolute?<br/></p>
<p id="id00320">COUNTESS.<br/>
Resolute to be dissolute; and, therefore, this:<br/>
Keep but thy word, great king, and I am thine.<br/>
Stand where thou dost, I'll part a little from thee,<br/>
And see how I will yield me to thy hands.<br/></p>
<p id="id00321">[Turning suddenly upon him, and shewing two Daggers.]</p>
<p id="id00322">Here by my side doth hang my wedding knifes:<br/>
Take thou the one, and with it kill thy Queen,<br/>
And learn by me to find her where she lies;<br/>
And with this other I'll dispatch my love,<br/>
Which now lies fast a sleep within my heart:<br/>
When they are gone, then I'll consent to love.<br/>
Stir not, lascivious king, to hinder me;<br/>
My resolution is more nimbler far,<br/>
Than thy prevention can be in my rescue,<br/>
And if thou stir, I strike; therefore, stand still,<br/>
And hear the choice that I will put thee to:<br/>
Either swear to leave thy most unholy suit<br/>
And never hence forth to solicit me;<br/>
Or else, by heaven, this sharp pointed knife<br/>
Shall stain thy earth with that which thou would stain,<br/>
My poor chaste blood. Swear, Edward, swear,<br/>
Or I will strike and die before thee here.<br/></p>
<p id="id00323">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Even by that power I swear, that gives me now<br/>
The power to be ashamed of my self,<br/>
I never mean to part my lips again<br/>
In any words that tends to such a suit.<br/>
Arise, true English Lady, whom our Isle<br/>
May better boast of than ever Roman might<br/>
Of her, whose ransacked treasury hath taskt<br/>
The vain endeavor of so many pens:<br/>
Arise, and be my fault thy honor's fame,<br/>
Which after ages shall enrich thee with.<br/>
I am awakened from this idle dream.—<br/>
Warwick, my Son, Darby, Artois, and Audley!<br/>
Brave warriors all, where are you all this while?<br/></p>
<p id="id00324">[Enter all.]</p>
<p id="id00325">Warwick, I make thee Warden of the North:<br/>
Thou, Prince of Wales, and Audley, straight to Sea;<br/>
Scour to New-haven; some there stay for me:<br/>
My self, Artois, and Darby will through Flanders,<br/>
To greet our friends there and to crave their aide.<br/>
This night will scarce suffice a faithful lover;<br/>
For, ere the Sun shall gild the eastern sky,<br/>
We'll wake him with our Marshall harmony.<br/></p>
<p id="id00326">[Exeunt.]</p>
<h4 id="id00327" style="margin-top: 2em">ACT III. SCENE I. Flanders. The French Camp.</h4>
<p id="id00328">[Enter King John of France, his two sons, Charles of<br/>
Normandy, and Phillip, and the Duke of Lorrain.]<br/></p>
<p id="id00329">KING JOHN.<br/>
Here, till our Navy of a thousand sail<br/>
Have made a breakfast to our foe by Sea,<br/>
Let us encamp, to wait their happy speed.—<br/>
Lorraine, what readiness is Edward in?<br/>
How hast thou heard that he provided is<br/>
Of marshall furniture for this exploit?<br/></p>
<p id="id00330">LORRAINE.<br/>
To lay aside unnecessary soothing,<br/>
And not to spend the time in circumstance,<br/>
Tis bruited for a certainty, my Lord,<br/>
That he's exceeding strongly fortified;<br/>
His subjects flock as willingly to war,<br/>
As if unto a triumph they were led.<br/></p>
<p id="id00331">CHARLES.<br/>
England was wont to harbour malcontents,<br/>
Blood thirsty and seditious Catelynes,<br/>
Spend thrifts, and such as gape for nothing else<br/>
But changing and alteration of the state;<br/>
And is it possible<br/>
That they are now so loyal in them selves?<br/></p>
<p id="id00332">LORRAINE.<br/>
All but the Scot, who solemnly protests,<br/>
As heretofore I have informed his grace,<br/>
Never to sheath his Sword or take a truce.<br/></p>
<p id="id00333">KING JOHN.<br/>
Ah, that's the anchorage of some better hope!<br/>
But, on the other side, to think what friends<br/>
King Edward hath retained in Netherland,<br/>
Among those ever-bibbing Epicures,<br/>
Those frothy Dutch men, puft with double beer,<br/>
That drink and swill in every place they come,<br/>
Doth not a little aggravate mine ire;<br/>
Besides, we hear, the Emperor conjoins,<br/>
And stalls him in his own authority;<br/>
But, all the mightier that their number is,<br/>
The greater glory reaps the victory.<br/>
Some friends have we beside domestic power;<br/>
The stern Polonian, and the warlike Dane,<br/>
The king of Bohemia, and of Sicily,<br/>
Are all become confederates with us,<br/>
And, as I think, are marching hither apace.<br/></p>
<p id="id00334">[Drum within.]</p>
<p id="id00335">But soft, I hear the music of their drums,<br/>
By which I guess that their approach is near.<br/></p>
<p id="id00336">[Enter the King of Bohemia, with Danes, and a<br/>
Polonian Captain, with other soldiers, another way.]<br/></p>
<p id="id00337">KING OF BOHEMIA.<br/>
King John of France, as league and neighborhood<br/>
Requires, when friends are any way distrest,<br/>
I come to aide thee with my country's force.<br/></p>
<p id="id00338">POLONIAN CAPTAIN.<br/>
And from great Musco, fearful to the Turk,<br/>
And lofty Poland, nurse of hardy men,<br/>
I bring these servitors to fight for thee,<br/>
Who willingly will venture in thy cause.<br/></p>
<p id="id00339">KING JOHN.<br/>
Welcome, Bohemian king, and welcome all:<br/>
This your great kindness I will not forget.<br/>
Besides your plentiful rewards in Crowns,<br/>
That from our Treasury ye shall receive,<br/>
There comes a hare brained Nation, decked in pride,<br/>
The spoil of whom will be a treble gain.<br/>
And now my hope is full, my joy complete:<br/>
At Sea, we are as puissant as the force<br/>
Of Agamemnon in the Haven of Troy;<br/>
By land, with Zerxes we compare of strength,<br/>
Whose soldiers drank up rivers in their thirst;<br/>
Then Bayardlike, blind, overweaning Ned,<br/>
To reach at our imperial diadem<br/>
Is either to be swallowed of the waves,<br/>
Or hacked a pieces when thou comest ashore.<br/></p>
<p id="id00340">[Enter Mariner.]</p>
<p id="id00341">MARINER.<br/>
Near to the coast I have descried, my Lord,<br/>
As I was buy in my watchful charge,<br/>
The proud Armado of king Edward's ships:<br/>
Which, at the first, far off when I did ken,<br/>
Seemed as it were a grove of withered pines;<br/>
But, drawing near, their glorious bright aspect,<br/>
Their streaming Ensigns, wrought of coloured silk,<br/>
Like to a meadow full of sundry flowers,<br/>
Adorns the naked bosom of the earth:<br/>
Majestical the order of their course,<br/>
Figuring the horned Circle of the Moon:<br/>
And on the top gallant of the Admiral<br/>
And likewise all the handmaids of his train<br/>
The Arms of England and of France unite<br/>
Are quartered equally by Heralds' art:<br/>
Thus, tightly carried with a merry gale,<br/>
They plough the Ocean hitherward amain.<br/></p>
<p id="id00342">KING JOHN.<br/>
Dare he already crop the Fleur de Luce?<br/>
I hope, the honey being gathered thence,<br/>
He, with the spider, afterward approached,<br/>
Shall suck forth deadly venom from the leaves.—<br/>
But where's our Navy? how are they prepared<br/>
To wing them selves against this flight of Ravens?<br/></p>
<p id="id00343">MARINER.<br/>
They, having knowledge, brought them by the scouts,<br/>
Did break from Anchor straight, and, puffed with rage,<br/>
No otherwise then were their sails with wind,<br/>
Made forth, as when the empty Eagle flies,<br/>
To satisfy his hungry griping maw.<br/></p>
<p id="id00344">KING JOHN.<br/>
There's for thy news. Return unto thy bark;<br/>
And if thou scape the bloody stroke of war<br/>
And do survive the conflict, come again,<br/>
And let us hear the manner of the fight.<br/></p>
<p id="id00345">[Exit Mariner.]</p>
<p id="id00346">Mean space, my Lords, tis best we be dispersed<br/>
To several places, least they chance to land:<br/>
First you, my Lord, with your Bohemian Troops,<br/>
Shall pitch your battailes on the lower hand;<br/>
My eldest son, the Duke of Normandy,<br/>
Together with the aide of Muscovites,<br/>
Shall climb the higher ground another way;<br/>
Here in the middle cost, betwixt you both,<br/>
Phillip, my youngest boy, and I will lodge.<br/>
So, Lors, be gone, and look unto your charge:<br/>
You stand for France, an Empire fair and large.<br/></p>
<p id="id00347">[Exeunt.]</p>
<p id="id00348">Now tell me, Phillip, what is thy concept,<br/>
Touching the challenge that the English make?<br/></p>
<p id="id00349">PHILLIP.<br/>
I say, my Lord, claim Edward what he can,<br/>
And bring he ne'er so plain a pedigree,<br/>
Tis you are in the possession of the Crown,<br/>
And that's the surest point of all the Law:<br/>
But, were it not, yet ere he should prevail,<br/>
I'll make a Conduit of my dearest blood,<br/>
Or chase those straggling upstarts home again.<br/></p>
<p id="id00350">KING JOHN.<br/>
Well said, young Phillip! Call for bread and Wine,<br/>
That we may cheer our stomachs with repast,<br/>
To look our foes more sternly in the face.<br/></p>
<p id="id00351">[A Table and Provisions brought in. The battle hard
a far off.]</p>
<p id="id00352">Now is begun the heavy day at Sea:<br/>
Fight, Frenchmen, fight; be like the field of Bears,<br/>
When they defend their younglings in the Caves!<br/>
Stir, angry Nemesis, the happy helm,<br/>
That, with the sulphur battles of your rage,<br/>
The English Fleet may be dispersed and sunk.<br/></p>
<p id="id00353">[Shot.]</p>
<p id="id00354">PHILLIP.<br/>
O Father, how this echoing Cannon shot,<br/>
Like sweet harmony, digests my eats!<br/></p>
<p id="id00355">KING JOHN.<br/>
Now, boy, thou hearest what thundering terror tis,<br/>
To buckle for a kingdom's sovereignty:<br/>
The earth, with giddy trembling when it shakes,<br/>
Or when the exhalations of the air<br/>
Breaks in extremity of lightning flash,<br/>
Affrights not more than kings, when they dispose<br/>
To shew the rancor of their high swollen hearts.<br/></p>
<p id="id00356">[Retreat.]</p>
<p id="id00357">Retreat is sounded; one side hath the worse;<br/>
O, if it be the French, sweet fortune, turn;<br/>
And, in thy turning, change the forward winds,<br/>
That, with advantage of a favoring sky,<br/>
Our men may vanquish, and the other fly!<br/></p>
<p id="id00358">[Enter Mariner.]</p>
<p id="id00359">My heart misgives:—say, mirror of pale death,<br/>
To whom belongs the honor of this day?<br/>
Relate, I pray thee, if thy breath will serve,<br/>
The sad discourse of this discomfiture.<br/></p>
<p id="id00360">MARINER.<br/>
I will, my Lord.<br/>
My gracious sovereign, France hath ta'en the foil,<br/>
And boasting Edward triumphs with success.<br/>
These Iron hearted Navies,<br/>
When last I was reporter to your grace,<br/>
Both full of angry spleen, of hope, and fear,<br/>
Hasting to meet each other in the face,<br/>
At last conjoined; and by their Admiral<br/>
Our Admiral encountered many shot:<br/>
By this, the other, that beheld these twain<br/>
Give earnest penny of a further wrack,<br/>
Like fiery Dragons took their haughty flight;<br/>
And, likewise meeting, from their smoky wombs<br/>
Sent many grim Ambassadors of death.<br/>
Then gan the day to turn to gloomy night,<br/>
And darkness did as well enclose the quick<br/>
As those that were but newly reft of life.<br/>
No leisure served for friends to bid farewell;<br/>
And, if it had, the hideous noise was such,<br/>
As each to other seemed deaf and dumb.<br/>
Purple the Sea, whose channel filled as fast<br/>
With streaming gore, that from the maimed fell,<br/>
As did her gushing moisture break into<br/>
The crannied cleftures of the through shot planks.<br/>
Here flew a head, dissevered from the trunk,<br/>
There mangled arms and legs were tossed aloft,<br/>
As when a whirl wind takes the Summer dust<br/>
And scatters it in middle of the air.<br/>
Then might ye see the reeling vessels split,<br/>
And tottering sink into the ruthless flood,<br/>
Until their lofty tops were seen no more.<br/>
All shifts were tried, both for defence and hurt:<br/>
And now the effect of valor and of force,<br/>
Of resolution and of cowardice,<br/>
We lively pictures; how the one for fame,<br/>
The other by compulsion laid about;<br/>
Much did the Nonpareille, that brave ship;<br/>
So did the black snake of Bullen, then which<br/>
A bonnier vessel never yet spread sail.<br/>
But all in vain; both Sun, the Wind and tide,<br/>
Revolted all unto our foe men's side,<br/>
That we perforce were fain to give them way,<br/>
And they are landed.—Thus my tale is done:<br/>
We have untimely lost, and they have won.<br/></p>
<p id="id00361">KING JOHN.<br/>
Then rests there nothing, but with present speed<br/>
To join our several forces all in one,<br/>
And bid them battle, ere they range too far.<br/>
Come, gentle Phillip, let us hence depart;<br/>
This soldier's words have pierced thy father's heart.<br/></p>
<p id="id00362">[Exeunt.]</p>
<h4 id="id00363" style="margin-top: 2em">ACT III. SCENE II. Picardy. Fields near Cressi.</h4>
<p id="id00364">[Enter two French men; a woman and two little<br/>
Children meet them, and other Citizens.]<br/></p>
<p id="id00365">ONE.<br/>
Well met, my masters: how now? what's the news?<br/>
And wherefore are ye laden thus with stuff?<br/>
What, is it quarter day that you remove,<br/>
And carry bag and baggage too?<br/></p>
<p id="id00366">TWO.<br/>
Quarter day? Aye, and quartering day, I fear:<br/>
Have ye not heard the news that flies abroad?<br/></p>
<p id="id00367">ONE.<br/>
What news?<br/></p>
<p id="id00368">THREE.<br/>
How the French Navy is destroyed at Sea,<br/>
And that the English Army is arrived.<br/></p>
<p id="id00369">ONE.<br/>
What then?<br/></p>
<p id="id00370">TWO.<br/>
What then, quoth you? why, ist not time to fly,<br/>
When envy and destruction is so nigh?<br/></p>
<p id="id00371">ONE.<br/>
Content thee, man; they are far enough from hence,<br/>
And will be met, I warrant ye, to their cost,<br/>
Before they break so far into the Realm.<br/></p>
<p id="id00372">TWO.<br/>
Aye, so the Grasshopper doth spend the time<br/>
In mirthful jollity, till Winter come;<br/>
And then too late he would redeem his time,<br/>
When frozen cold hath nipped his careless head.<br/>
He, that no sooner will provide a Cloak,<br/>
Then when he sees it doth begin to reign,<br/>
May, peradventure, for his negligence,<br/>
Be throughly washed, when he suspects it not.<br/>
We that have charge and such a train as this,<br/>
Must look in time to look for them and us,<br/>
Least, when we would, we cannot be relieved.<br/></p>
<p id="id00373">ONE.<br/>
Belike, you then despair of all success,<br/>
And think your Country will be subjugate.<br/></p>
<p id="id00374">THREE.<br/>
We cannot tell; tis good to fear the worst.<br/></p>
<p id="id00375">ONE.<br/>
Yet rather fight, then, like unnatural sons,<br/>
Forsake your loving parents in distress.<br/></p>
<p id="id00376">TWO.<br/>
Tush, they that have already taken arms<br/>
Are many fearful millions in respect<br/>
Of that small handful of our enemies;<br/>
But tis a rightful quarrel must prevail;<br/>
Edward is son unto our late king's sister,<br/>
When John Valois is three degrees removed.<br/></p>
<p id="id00377">WOMAN.<br/>
Besides, there goes a Prophesy abroad,<br/>
Published by one that was a Friar once,<br/>
Whose Oracles have many times proved true;<br/>
And now he says, the time will shortly come,<br/>
When as a Lyon, roused in the west,<br/>
Shall carry hence the fluerdeluce of France:<br/>
These, I can tell ye, and such like surmises<br/>
Strike many French men cold unto the heart.<br/></p>
<p id="id00378">[Enter a French man.]</p>
<p id="id00379">FOUR.<br/>
Fly, country men and citizens of France!<br/>
Sweet flowering peace, the root of happy life,<br/>
Is quite abandoned and expulst the land;<br/>
In stead of whom ransacked constraining war<br/>
Sits like to Ravens upon your houses' tops;<br/>
Slaughter and mischief walk within your streets,<br/>
And, unrestrained, make havoc as they pass;<br/>
The form whereof even now my self beheld<br/>
Upon this fair mountain whence I came.<br/>
For so far of as I directed mine eyes,<br/>
I might perceive five Cities all on fire,<br/>
Corn fields and vineyards, burning like an oven;<br/>
And, as the reaking vapour in the wind<br/>
Turned but aside, I like wise might discern<br/>
The poor inhabitants, escaped the flame,<br/>
Fall numberless upon the soldiers' pikes.<br/>
Three ways these dreadful ministers of wrath<br/>
Do tread the measures of their tragic march:<br/>
Upon the right hand comes the conquering King,<br/>
Upon the left his hot unbridled son,<br/>
And in the midst our nation's glittering host,<br/>
All which, though distant yet, conspire in one,<br/>
To leave a desolation where they come.<br/>
Fly therefore, Citizens, if you be wise,<br/>
Seek out some habitation further off:<br/>
Here is you stay, your wives will be abused,<br/>
Your treasure shared before your weeping eyes;<br/>
Shelter you your selves, for now the storm doth rise.<br/>
Away, away; me thinks I hear their drums:—<br/>
Ah, wretched France, I greatly fear thy fall;<br/>
Thy glory shaketh like a tottering wall.<br/></p>
<p id="id00380">[Exeunt.]</p>
<h4 id="id00381" style="margin-top: 2em">ACT III. SCENE III. The same. Drums.</h4>
<p id="id00382">[Enter King Edward, and the Earl of Darby, With<br/>
Soldiers, and Gobin de Grey.]<br/></p>
<p id="id00383">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Where's the French man by whose cunning guide<br/>
We found the shallow of this River Somme,<br/>
And had directions how to pass the sea?<br/></p>
<p id="id00384">GOBIN.<br/>
Here, my good Lord.<br/></p>
<p id="id00385">KING EDWARD.<br/>
How art thou called? tell me thy name.<br/></p>
<p id="id00386">GOBIN.<br/>
Gobin de Graie, if please your excellence.<br/></p>
<p id="id00387">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Then, Gobin, for the service thou hast done,<br/>
We here enlarge and give thee liberty;<br/>
And, for recompense beside this good,<br/>
Thou shalt receive five hundred marks in gold.—<br/>
I know not how, we should have met our son,<br/>
Whom now in heart I wish I might behold.<br/></p>
<p id="id00388">[Enter Artois.]</p>
<p id="id00389">ARTOIS.<br/>
Good news, my Lord; the prince is hard at hand,<br/>
And with him comes Lord Awdley and the rest,<br/>
Whom since our landing we could never meet.<br/></p>
<p id="id00390">[Enter Prince Edward, Lord Awdley, and Soldiers.]</p>
<p id="id00391">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Welcome, fair Prince! How hast thou sped, my son,<br/>
Since thy arrival on the coast of France?<br/></p>
<p id="id00392">PRINCE EDWARD.<br/>
Successfully, I thank the gracious heavens:<br/>
Some of their strongest Cities we have won,<br/>
As Harflew, Lo, Crotay, and Carentigne,<br/>
And others wasted, leaving at our heels<br/>
A wide apparent field and beaten path<br/>
For solitariness to progress in:<br/>
Yet those that would submit we kindly pardoned,<br/>
But who in scorn refused our proffered peace,<br/>
Endured the penalty of sharp revenge.<br/></p>
<p id="id00393">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Ah, France, why shouldest thou be thus obstinate<br/>
Against the kind embracement of thy friends?<br/>
How gently had we thought to touch thy breast<br/>
And set our foot upon thy tender mould,<br/>
But that, in froward and disdainful pride,<br/>
Thou, like a skittish and untamed colt,<br/>
Dost start aside and strike us with thy heels!<br/>
But tell me, Ned, in all thy warlike course,<br/>
Hast thou not seen the usurping King of France?<br/></p>
<p id="id00394">PRINCE EDWARD.<br/>
Yes, my good Lord, and not two hours ago,<br/>
With full a hundred thousand fighting men—<br/>
Upon the one side of the river's bank<br/>
And on the other both, his multitudes.<br/>
I feared he would have cropped our smaller power:<br/>
But happily, perceiving your approach,<br/>
He hath with drawn himself to Cressey plains;<br/>
Where, as it seemeth by his good array,<br/>
He means to bid us battle presently.<br/></p>
<p id="id00395">KING EDWARD.<br/>
He shall be welcome; that's the thing we crave.<br/></p>
<p id="id00396">[Enter King John, Dukes of Normandy and Lorrain,<br/>
King of Boheme, young Phillip, and Soldiers.]<br/></p>
<p id="id00397">KING JOHN.<br/>
Edward, know that John, the true king of France,<br/>
Musing thou shouldst encroach upon his land,<br/>
And in thy tyranous proceeding slay<br/>
His faithful subjects and subvert his Towns,<br/>
Spits in thy face; and in this manner following<br/>
Obraids thee with thine arrogant intrusion:<br/>
First, I condemn thee for a fugitive,<br/>
A thievish pirate, and a needy mate,<br/>
One that hath either no abiding place,<br/>
Or else, inhabiting some barren soil,<br/>
Where neither herb or fruitful grain is had,<br/>
Doest altogether live by pilfering:<br/>
Next, insomuch thou hast infringed thy faith,<br/>
Broke leage and solemn covenant made with me,<br/>
I hold thee for a false pernicious wretch:<br/>
And, last of all, although I scorn to cope<br/>
With one so much inferior to my self,<br/>
Yet, in respect thy thirst is all for gold,<br/>
Thy labour rather to be feared than loved,<br/>
To satisfy thy lust in either part,<br/>
Here am I come, and with me have I brought<br/>
Exceeding store of treasure, pearl, and coin.<br/>
Leave, therefore, now to persecute the weak,<br/>
And armed entering conflict with the armed,<br/>
Let it be seen, mongest other petty thefts,<br/>
How thou canst win this pillage manfully.<br/></p>
<p id="id00398">KING EDWARD.<br/>
If gall or wormwood have a pleasant taste,<br/>
Then is thy salutation honey sweet;<br/>
But as the one hath no such property,<br/>
So is the other most satirical.<br/>
Yet wot how I regard thy worthless taunts:<br/>
If thou have uttered them to foil my fame<br/>
Or dim the reputation of my birth,<br/>
Know that thy wolvish barking cannot hurt;<br/>
If slyly to insinuate with the world,<br/>
And with a strumpet's artificial line<br/>
To paint thy vicious and deformed cause,<br/>
Be well assured, the counterfeit will fade,<br/>
And in the end thy foul defects be seen;<br/>
But if thou didst it to provoke me on,<br/>
As who should say I were but timorous.<br/>
Or, coldly negligent, did need a spur,<br/>
Bethink thy self how slack I was at sea,<br/>
How since my landing I have won no towns,<br/>
Entered no further but upon the coast,<br/>
And there have ever since securely slept.<br/>
But if I have been other wise employed,<br/>
Imagine, Valois, whether I intend<br/>
To skirmish, not for pillage, but for the Crown<br/>
Which thou dost wear; and that I vow to have,<br/>
Or one of us shall fall into his grave.<br/></p>
<p id="id00399">PRINCE EDWARD.<br/>
Look not for cross invectives at our hands,<br/>
Or railing execrations of despite:<br/>
Let creeping serpents, hid in hollow banks,<br/>
Sting with their tongues; we have remorseless swords,<br/>
And they shall plead for us and our affairs.<br/>
Yet thus much, briefly, by my father's leave:<br/>
As all the immodest poison of thy throat<br/>
Is scandalous and most notorious lies,<br/>
And our pretended quarrel is truly just,<br/>
So end the battle when we meet to day:<br/>
May either of us prosper and prevail,<br/>
Or, luckless, curst, receive eternal shame!<br/></p>
<p id="id00400">KING EDWARD.<br/>
That needs no further question; and I know,<br/>
His conscience witnesseth, it is my right.—<br/>
Therefore, Valois, say, wilt thou yet resign,<br/>
Before the sickles thrust into the Corn,<br/>
Or that inkindled fury turn to flame?<br/></p>
<p id="id00401">KING JOHN.<br/>
Edward, I know what right thou hast in France;<br/>
And ere I basely will resign my Crown,<br/>
This Champion field shall be a pool of blood,<br/>
And all our prospect as a slaughter house.<br/></p>
<p id="id00402">PRINCE EDWARD.<br/>
Aye, that approves thee, tyrant, what thou art:<br/>
No father, king, or shepherd of thy realm,<br/>
But one, that tears her entrails with thy hands,<br/>
And, like a thirsty tyger, suckst her blood.<br/></p>
<p id="id00403">AUDLEY.<br/>
You peers of France, why do you follow him<br/>
That is so prodigal to spend your lives?<br/></p>
<p id="id00404">CHARLES.<br/>
Whom should they follow, aged impotent,<br/>
But he that is their true borne sovereign?<br/></p>
<p id="id00405">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Obraidst thou him, because within his face<br/>
Time hath ingraved deep characters of age?<br/>
Know, these grave scholars of experience,<br/>
Like stiff grown oaks, will stand immovable,<br/>
When whirl wind quickly turns up younger trees.<br/></p>
<p id="id00406">DARBY.<br/>
Was ever any of thy father's house<br/>
King but thyself, before this present time?<br/>
Edward's great linage, by the mother's side,<br/>
Five hundred years hath held the scepter up:<br/>
Judge then, conspiratours, by this descent,<br/>
Which is the true borne sovereign, this or that.<br/></p>
<p id="id00407">PHILIP.<br/>
Father, range your battles, prate no more;<br/>
These English fain would spend the time in words,<br/>
That, night approaching, they might escape unfought.<br/></p>
<p id="id00408">KING JOHN.<br/>
Lords and my loving Subjects, now's the time,<br/>
That your intended force must bide the touch.<br/>
Therefore, my friends, consider this in brief:<br/>
He that you fight for is your natural King;<br/>
He against whom you fight, a foreigner:<br/>
He that you fight for, rules in clemency,<br/>
And reins you with a mild and gentle bit;<br/>
He against whom you fight, if he prevail,<br/>
Will straight inthrone himself in tyranny,<br/>
Makes slaves of you, and with a heavy hand<br/>
Curtail and curb your sweetest liberty.<br/>
Then, to protect your Country and your King,<br/>
Let but the haughty Courage of your hearts<br/>
Answer the number of your able hands,<br/>
And we shall quickly chase these fugitives.<br/>
For what's this Edward but a belly god,<br/>
A tender and lascivious wantoness,<br/>
That thother day was almost dead for love?<br/>
And what, I pray you, is his goodly guard?<br/>
Such as, but scant them of their chines of beef<br/>
And take away their downy featherbeds,<br/>
And presently they are as resty stiff,<br/>
As twere a many over ridden jades.<br/>
Then, French men, scorn that such should be your Lords,<br/>
And rather bind ye them in captive bands.<br/></p>
<p id="id00409">ALL FRENCHMEN.<br/>
Vive le Roy! God save King John of France!<br/></p>
<p id="id00410">KING JOHN.<br/>
Now on this plain of Cressy spread your selves,—<br/>
And, Edward, when thou darest, begin the fight.<br/></p>
<p id="id00411">[Exeunt King John, Charles, Philip, Lorrain, Boheme,
and Forces.]</p>
<p id="id00412">KING EDWARD.<br/>
We presently will meet thee, John of France:—<br/>
And, English Lords, let us resolve this day,<br/>
Either to clear us of that scandalous crime,<br/>
Or be intombed in our innocence.<br/>
And, Ned, because this battle is the first<br/>
That ever yet thou foughtest in pitched field,<br/>
As ancient custom is of Martialists,<br/>
To dub thee with the tip of chivalry,<br/>
In solemn manner we will give thee arms.<br/>
Come, therefore, Heralds, orderly bring forth<br/>
A strong attirement for the prince my son.<br/></p>
<p id="id00413">[Enter four Heralds, bringing in a coat armour, a
helmet, a lance, and a shield.]</p>
<p id="id00414" style="margin-top: 2em">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Edward Plantagenet, in the name of God,<br/>
As with this armour I impale thy breast,<br/>
So be thy noble unrelenting heart<br/>
Walled in with flint of matchless fortitude,<br/>
That never base affections enter there:<br/>
Fight and be valiant, conquer where thou comest!<br/>
Now follow, Lords, and do him honor to.<br/></p>
<p id="id00415">DARBY.<br/>
Edward Plantagenet, prince of Wales,<br/>
As I do set this helmet on thy head,<br/>
Wherewith the chamber of thy brain is fenst,<br/>
So may thy temples, with Bellona's hand,<br/>
Be still adorned with laurel victory:<br/>
Fight and be valiant, conquer where thou comest!<br/></p>
<p id="id00416">AUDLEY.<br/>
Edward Plantagenet, prince of Wales,<br/>
Receive this lance into thy manly hand;<br/>
Use it in fashion of a brazen pen,<br/>
To draw forth bloody stratagems in France,<br/>
And print thy valiant deeds in honor's book:<br/>
Fight and be valiant, vanquish where thou comest!<br/></p>
<p id="id00417">ARTOIS.<br/>
Edward Plantagenet, prince of Wales,<br/>
Hold, take this target, wear it on thy arm;<br/>
And may the view thereof, like Perseus' shield,<br/>
Astonish and transform thy gazing foes<br/>
To senseless images of meager death:<br/>
Fight and be valiant, conquer where thou comest!<br/></p>
<p id="id00418">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Now wants there nought but knighthood, which deferred<br/>
We leave, till thou hast won it in the field.<br/></p>
<p id="id00419">PRINCE EDWARD.<br/>
My gracious father and ye forward peers,<br/>
This honor you have done me, animates<br/>
And cheers my green, yet scarce appearing strength<br/>
With comfortable good presaging signs,<br/>
No other wise than did old Jacob's words,<br/>
When as he breathed his blessings on his sons.<br/>
These hallowed gifts of yours when I profane,<br/>
Or use them not to glory of my God,<br/>
To patronage the fatherless and poor,<br/>
Or for the benefit of England's peace,<br/>
Be numb my joints, wax feeble both mine arms,<br/>
Wither my heart, that, like a sapless tree,<br/>
I may remain the map of infamy.<br/></p>
<p id="id00420">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Then thus our steeled Battles shall be ranged:<br/>
The leading of the vaward, Ned, is thine;<br/>
To dignify whose lusty spirit the more,<br/>
We temper it with Audly's gravity,<br/>
That, courage and experience joined in one,<br/>
Your manage may be second unto none:<br/>
For the main battles, I will guide my self;<br/>
And, Darby, in the rearward march behind,<br/>
That orderly disposed and set in ray,<br/>
Let us to horse; and God grant us the day!<br/></p>
<p id="id00421">[Exeunt.]</p>
<h4 id="id00422" style="margin-top: 2em">ACT III. SCENE IV. The Same.</h4>
<p id="id00423">[Alarum. Enter a many French men flying. After them
Prince Edward, running. Then enter King John and Duke
of Lorrain.]</p>
<p id="id00424">KING JOHN.<br/>
Oh, Lorrain, say, what mean our men to fly?<br/>
Our number is far greater than our foes.<br/></p>
<p id="id00425">LORRAIN.<br/>
The garrison of Genoaes, my Lord,<br/>
That came from Paris weary with their march,<br/>
Grudging to be so suddenly imployd,<br/>
No sooner in the forefront took their place,<br/>
But, straight retiring, so dismayed the rest,<br/>
As likewise they betook themselves to flight,<br/>
In which, for haste to make a safe escape,<br/>
More in the clustering throng are pressed to death,<br/>
Than by the enemy, a thousand fold.<br/></p>
<p id="id00426">KING JOHN.<br/>
O hapless fortune! Let us yet assay,<br/>
If we can counsel some of them to stay.<br/></p>
<p id="id00427" style="margin-top: 2em">[Exeunt.]</p>
<h4 id="id00428" style="margin-top: 2em">ACT III. SCENE V. The Same.</h4>
<p id="id00429">[Enter King Edward and Audley.]</p>
<p id="id00430">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Lord Audley, whiles our son is in the chase,<br/>
With draw our powers unto this little hill,<br/>
And here a season let us breath our selves.<br/></p>
<p id="id00431">AUDLEY.<br/>
I will, my Lord.<br/></p>
<p id="id00432">[Exit. Sound Retreat.]</p>
<p id="id00433">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Just dooming heaven, whose secret providence<br/>
To our gross judgement is inscrutable,<br/>
How are we bound to praise thy wondrous works,<br/>
That hast this day given way unto the right,<br/>
And made the wicked stumble at them selves!<br/></p>
<p id="id00434">[Enter Artois.]</p>
<p id="id00435">ARTOIS.<br/>
Rescue, king Edward! rescue for thy son!<br/></p>
<p id="id00436">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Rescue, Artois? what, is he prisoner,<br/>
Or by violence fell beside his horse?<br/></p>
<p id="id00437">ARTOIS.<br/>
Neither, my Lord: but narrowly beset<br/>
With turning Frenchmen, whom he did pursue,<br/>
As tis impossible that he should scape,<br/>
Except your highness presently descend.<br/></p>
<p id="id00438">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Tut, let him fight; we gave him arms to day,<br/>
And he is laboring for a knighthood, man.<br/></p>
<p id="id00439">[Enter Derby.]</p>
<p id="id00440">DARBY.<br/>
The Prince, my Lord, the Prince! oh, succour him!<br/>
He's close incompast with a world of odds!<br/></p>
<p id="id00441">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Then will he win a world of honor too,<br/>
If he by valour can redeem him thence;<br/>
If not, what remedy? we have more sons<br/>
Than one, to comfort our declining age.<br/></p>
<p id="id00442">[Enter Audley.]</p>
<p id="id00443">Renowned Edward, give me leave, I pray,<br/>
To lead my soldiers where I may relieve<br/>
Your Grace's son, in danger to be slain.<br/>
The snares of French, like Emmets on a bank,<br/>
Muster about him; whilest he, Lion like,<br/>
Intangled in the net of their assaults,<br/>
Franticly wrends, and bites the woven toil;<br/>
But all in vain, he cannot free him self.<br/></p>
<p id="id00444">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Audley, content; I will not have a man,<br/>
On pain of death, sent forth to succour him:<br/>
This is the day, ordained by destiny,<br/>
To season his courage with those grievous thoughts,<br/>
That, if he breaketh out, Nestor's years on earth<br/>
Will make him savor still of this exploit.<br/></p>
<p id="id00445">DARBY.<br/>
Ah, but he shall not live to see those days.<br/></p>
<p id="id00446">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Why, then his Epitaph is lasting praise.<br/></p>
<p id="id00447">AUDLEY.<br/>
Yet, good my Lord, tis too much willfulness,<br/>
To let his blood be spilt, that may be saved.<br/></p>
<p id="id00448">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Exclaim no more; for none of you can tell<br/>
Whether a borrowed aid will serve, or no;<br/>
Perhaps he is already slain or ta'en.<br/>
And dare a Falcon when she's in her flight,<br/>
And ever after she'll be haggard like:<br/>
Let Edward be delivered by our hands,<br/>
And still, in danger, he'll expect the like;<br/>
But if himself himself redeem from thence,<br/>
He will have vanquished cheerful death and fear,<br/>
And ever after dread their force no more<br/>
Than if they were but babes or Captive slaves.<br/></p>
<p id="id00449">AUDLEY.<br/>
O cruel Father! Farewell, Edward, then!<br/></p>
<p id="id00450">DARBY.<br/>
Farewell, sweet Prince, the hope of chivalry!<br/></p>
<p id="id00451">ARTOIS.<br/>
O, would my life might ransom him from death!<br/></p>
<p id="id00452">KING EDWARD.<br/>
But soft, me thinks I hear<br/></p>
<p id="id00453">[Retreat sounded.]</p>
<p id="id00454">The dismal charge of Trumpets' loud retreat.<br/>
All are not slain, I hope, that went with him;<br/>
Some will return with tidings, good or bad.<br/></p>
<p id="id00455">[Enter Prince Edward in triumph, bearing in his hands
his chivered Lance, and the King of Boheme, borne
before, wrapped in the Colours. They run and imbrace him.]</p>
<p id="id00456">AUDLEY.<br/>
O joyful sight! victorious Edward lives!<br/></p>
<p id="id00457">DERBY.<br/>
Welcome, brave Prince!<br/></p>
<p id="id00458">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Welcome, Plantagenet!<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00459">PRINCE EDWARD.</h5>
<p id="id00460">[Kneels and kisses his father's hand.]</p>
<p id="id00461">First having done my duty as beseemed,<br/>
Lords, I regreet you all with hearty thanks.<br/>
And now, behold, after my winter's toil,<br/>
My painful voyage on the boisterous sea<br/>
Of wars devouring gulfs and steely rocks,<br/></p>
<p id="id00462">I bring my fraught unto the wished port,<br/>
My Summer's hope, my travels' sweet reward:<br/>
And here, with humble duty, I present<br/>
This sacrifice, this first fruit of my sword,<br/>
Cropped and cut down even at the gate of death,<br/>
The king of Boheme, father, whom I slew;<br/>
Whose thousands had entrenched me round about,<br/>
And lay as thick upon my battered crest,<br/>
As on an Anvil, with their ponderous glaves:<br/>
Yet marble courage still did underprop<br/>
And when my weary arms, with often blows,<br/>
Like the continual laboring Wood-man's Axe<br/>
That is enjoined to fell a load of Oaks,<br/>
Began to faulter, straight I would record<br/>
My gifts you gave me, and my zealous vow,<br/>
And then new courage made me fresh again,<br/>
That, in despite, I carved my passage forth,<br/>
And put the multitude to speedy flight.<br/>
Lo, thus hath Edward's hand filled your request,<br/>
And done, I hope, the duty of a Knight.<br/></p>
<p id="id00463">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Aye, well thou hast deserved a knighthood, Ned!<br/>
And, therefore, with thy sword, yet reaking warm<br/></p>
<p id="id00464">[His Sword borne by a Soldier.]</p>
<p id="id00465">With blood of those that fought to be thy bane.<br/>
Arise, Prince Edward, trusty knight at arms:<br/>
This day thou hast confounded me with joy,<br/>
And proud thy self fit heir unto a king.<br/></p>
<p id="id00466">PRINCE EDWARD.<br/>
Here is a note, my gracious Lord, of those<br/>
That in this conflict of our foes were slain:<br/>
Eleven Princes of esteem, Four score Barons,<br/>
A hundred and twenty knights, and thirty thousand<br/>
Common soldiers; and, of our men, a thousand.<br/></p>
<p id="id00467">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Our God be praised! Now, John of France, I hope,<br/>
Thou knowest King Edward for no wantoness,<br/>
No love sick cockney, nor his soldiers jades.<br/>
But which way is the fearful king escaped?<br/></p>
<p id="id00468">PRINCE EDWARD.<br/>
Towards Poitiers, noble father, and his sons.<br/></p>
<p id="id00469">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Ned, thou and Audley shall pursue them still;<br/>
My self and Derby will to Calice straight,<br/>
And there be begirt that Haven town with siege.<br/>
Now lies it on an upshot; therefore strike,<br/>
And wistly follow, whiles the game's on foot.<br/>
What Picture's this?<br/></p>
<p id="id00470">PRINCE EDWARD.<br/>
A Pelican, my Lord,<br/>
Wounding her bosom with her crooked beak,<br/>
That so her nest of young ones may be fed<br/>
With drops of blood that issue from her heart;<br/>
The motto Sic & vos, 'and so should you'.<br/></p>
<p id="id00471">[Exeunt.]</p>
<h4 id="id00472" style="margin-top: 2em">ACT IV. SCENE I. Bretagne. Camp of the English.</h4>
<p id="id00473">[Enter Lord Mountford with a Coronet in his hand;
with him the Earl of Salisbury.]</p>
<p id="id00474">MOUNTFORD.<br/>
My Lord of Salisbury, since by your aide<br/>
Mine enemy Sir Charles of Blois is slain,<br/>
And I again am quietly possessed<br/>
In Brittain's Dukedom, know that I resolve,<br/>
For this kind furtherance of your king and you,<br/>
To swear allegiance to his majesty:<br/>
In sign whereof receive this Coronet,<br/>
Bear it unto him, and, withal, mine oath,<br/>
Never to be but Edward's faithful friend.<br/></p>
<p id="id00475">SALISBURY.<br/>
I take it, Mountfort. Thus, I hope, ere long<br/>
The whole Dominions of the Realm of France<br/>
Will be surrendered to his conquering hand.<br/></p>
<p id="id00476">[Exit Mountford.]</p>
<p id="id00477">Now, if I knew but safely how to pass,<br/>
I would at Calice gladly meet his Grace,<br/>
Whether I am by letters certified<br/>
That he intends to have his host removed.<br/>
It shall be so, this policy will serve:—<br/>
Ho, whose within? Bring Villiers to me.<br/></p>
<p id="id00478">[Enter Villiers.]</p>
<p id="id00479">Villiers, thou knowest, thou art my prisoner,<br/>
And that I might for ransom, if I would,<br/>
Require of thee a hundred thousand Francs,<br/>
Or else retain and keep thee captive still:<br/>
But so it is, that for a smaller charge<br/>
Thou maist be quit, and if thou wilt thy self.<br/>
And this it is: Procure me but a passport<br/>
Of Charles, the Duke of Normandy, that I<br/>
Without restraint may have recourse to Callis<br/>
Through all the Countries where he hath to do;<br/>
Which thou maist easily obtain, I think,<br/>
By reason I have often heard thee say,<br/>
He and thou were students once together:<br/>
And then thou shalt be set at liberty.<br/>
How saiest thou? wilt thou undertake to do it?<br/></p>
<p id="id00480">VILLIERS.<br/>
I will, my Lord; but I must speak with him.<br/></p>
<p id="id00481">SALISBURY.<br/>
Why, so thou shalt; take Horse, and post from hence:<br/>
Only before thou goest, swear by thy faith,<br/>
That, if thou canst not compass my desire,<br/>
Thou wilt return my prisoner back again;<br/>
And that shall be sufficient warrant for me.<br/></p>
<p id="id00482">VILLIERS.<br/>
To that condition I agree, my Lord,<br/>
And will unfainedly perform the same.<br/></p>
<p id="id00483">[Exit.]</p>
<p id="id00484">SALISBURY.<br/>
Farewell, Villiers.—<br/>
Thus once i mean to try a French man's faith.<br/></p>
<p id="id00485">[Exit.]</p>
<h4 id="id00486" style="margin-top: 2em">ACT IV. SCENE II. Picardy. The English Camp before
Calais.</h4>
<p id="id00487">[Enter King Edward and Derby, with Soldiers.]</p>
<p id="id00488">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Since they refuse our proffered league, my Lord,<br/>
And will not ope their gates, and let us in,<br/>
We will intrench our selves on every side,<br/>
That neither vituals nor supply of men<br/>
May come to succour this accursed town:<br/>
Famine shall combat where our swords are stopped.<br/></p>
<p id="id00489">[Enter six poor Frenchmen.]</p>
<p id="id00490">DERBY.<br/>
The promised aid, that made them stand aloof,<br/>
Is now retired and gone an other way:<br/>
It will repent them of their stubborn will.<br/>
But what are these poor ragged slaves, my Lord?<br/></p>
<p id="id00491">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Ask what they are; it seems, they come from Callis.<br/></p>
<p id="id00492">DERBY.<br/>
You wretched patterns of despair and woe,<br/>
What are you, living men or gliding ghosts,<br/>
Crept from your graves to walk upon the earth?<br/></p>
<p id="id00493">POOR.<br/>
No ghosts, my Lord, but men that breath a life<br/>
Far worse than is the quiet sleep of death:<br/>
We are distressed poor inhabitants,<br/>
That long have been diseased, sick, and lame;<br/>
And now, because we are not fit to serve,<br/>
The Captain of the town hath thrust us forth,<br/>
That so expense of victuals may be saved.<br/></p>
<p id="id00494">KING EDWARD.<br/>
A charitable deed, no doubt, and worthy praise!<br/>
But how do you imagine then to speed?<br/>
We are your enemies; in such a case<br/>
We can no less but put ye to the sword,<br/>
Since, when we proffered truce, it was refused.<br/></p>
<p id="id00495">POOR.<br/>
And if your grace no otherwise vouchsafe,<br/>
As welcome death is unto us as life.<br/></p>
<p id="id00496">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Poor silly men, much wronged and more distressed!<br/>
Go, Derby, go, and see they be relieved;<br/>
Command that victuals be appointed them,<br/>
And give to every one five Crowns a piece.<br/></p>
<p id="id00497">[Exeunt Derby and Frenchmen.]</p>
<p id="id00498">The Lion scorns to touch the yielding prey,<br/>
And Edward's sword must flesh it self in such<br/>
As wilful stubbornness hath made perverse.<br/></p>
<p id="id00499">[Enter Lord Percy.]</p>
<p id="id00500">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Lord Percy! welcome: what's the news in England?<br/></p>
<p id="id00501">PERCY.<br/>
The Queen, my Lord, comes here to your Grace,<br/>
And from her highness and the Lord viceregent<br/>
I bring this happy tidings of success:<br/>
David of Scotland, lately up in arms,<br/>
Thinking, belike, he soonest should prevail,<br/>
Your highness being absent from the Realm,<br/>
Is, by the fruitful service of your peers<br/>
And painful travel of the Queen her self,<br/>
That, big with child, was every day in arms,<br/>
Vanquished, subdued, and taken prisoner.<br/></p>
<p id="id00502">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Thanks, Percy, for thy news, with all my heart!<br/>
What was he took him prisoner in the field?<br/></p>
<p id="id00503">PERCY.<br/>
A Esquire, my Lord; John Copland is his name:<br/>
Who since, intreated by her Majesty,<br/>
Denies to make surrender of his prize<br/>
To any but unto your grace alone;<br/>
Whereat the Queen is grievously displeased.<br/></p>
<p id="id00504">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Well, then we'll have a Pursiuvant despatched,<br/>
To summon Copland hither out of hand,<br/>
And with him he shall bring his prisoner king.<br/></p>
<p id="id00505" style="margin-top: 2em">PERCY.<br/>
The Queen's, my Lord, her self by this at Sea,<br/>
And purposeth, as soon as wind will serve,<br/>
To land at Callis, and to visit you.<br/></p>
<p id="id00506">KING EDWARD.<br/>
She shall be welcome; and, to wait her coming,<br/>
I'll pitch my tent near to the sandy shore.<br/></p>
<p id="id00507">[Enter a French Captain.]</p>
<p id="id00508">CAPTAIN.<br/>
The Burgesses of Callis, mighty king,<br/>
Have by a counsel willingly decreed<br/>
To yield the town and Castle to your hands,<br/>
Upon condition it will please your grace<br/>
To grant them benefit of life and goods.<br/></p>
<p id="id00509">KING EDWARD.<br/>
They will so! Then, belike, they may command,<br/>
Dispose, elect, and govern as they list.<br/>
No, sirra, tell them, since they did refuse<br/>
Our princely clemency at first proclaimed,<br/>
They shall not have it now, although they would;<br/>
I will accept of nought but fire and sword,<br/>
Except, within these two days, six of them,<br/>
That are the wealthiest merchants in the town,<br/>
Come naked, all but for their linen shirts,<br/>
With each a halter hanged about his neck,<br/>
And prostrate yield themselves, upon their knees,<br/>
To be afflicted, hanged, or what I please;<br/>
And so you may inform their masterships.<br/></p>
<p id="id00510">[Exeunt Edward and Percy.]</p>
<p id="id00511">CAPTAIN.<br/>
Why, this it is to trust a broken staff:<br/>
Had we not been persuaded, John our King<br/>
Would with his army have relieved the town,<br/>
We had not stood upon defiance so:<br/>
But now tis past that no man can recall,<br/>
And better some do go to wrack them all.<br/></p>
<p id="id00512">[Exit.]</p>
<h3 id="id00513" style="margin-top: 3em">ACT IV. SCENE III. Poitou. Fields near Poitiers. The French camp; Tent of the Duke of Normandy.</h3>
<p id="id00514">[Enter Charles of Normandy and Villiers.]</p>
<p id="id00515">CHARLES.<br/>
I wonder, Villiers, thou shouldest importune me<br/>
For one that is our deadly enemy.<br/></p>
<p id="id00516">VILLIERS.<br/>
Not for his sake, my gracious Lord, so much<br/>
Am I become an earnest advocate,<br/>
As that thereby my ransom will be quit.<br/></p>
<p id="id00517">CHARLES.<br/>
Thy ransom, man? why needest thou talk of that?<br/>
Art thou not free? and are not all occasions,<br/>
That happen for advantage of our foes,<br/>
To be accepted of, and stood upon?<br/></p>
<p id="id00518">VILLIERS.<br/>
No, good my Lord, except the same be just;<br/>
For profit must with honor be comixt,<br/>
Or else our actions are but scandalous.<br/>
But, letting pass their intricate objections,<br/>
Wilt please your highness to subscribe, or no?<br/></p>
<p id="id00519">CHARLES.<br/>
Villiers, I will not, nor I cannot do it;<br/>
Salisbury shall not have his will so much,<br/>
To claim a passport how it pleaseth himself.<br/></p>
<p id="id00520">VILLIERS.<br/>
Why, then I know the extremity, my Lord;<br/>
I must return to prison whence I came.<br/></p>
<p id="id00521">CHARLES.<br/>
Return? I hope thou wilt not;<br/>
What bird that hath escaped the fowler's gin,<br/>
Will not beware how she's ensnared again?<br/>
Or, what is he, so senseless and secure,<br/>
That, having hardly past a dangerous gul,<br/>
Will put him self in peril there again?<br/></p>
<p id="id00522">VILLIERS.<br/>
Ah, but it is mine oath, my gracious Lord,<br/>
Which I in conscience may not violate,<br/>
Or else a kingdom should not draw me hence.<br/></p>
<p id="id00523">CHARLES.<br/>
Thine oath? why, tat doth bind thee to abide:<br/>
Hast thou not sworn obedience to thy Prince?<br/></p>
<p id="id00524">VILLIERS.<br/>
In all things that uprightly he commands:<br/>
But either to persuade or threaten me,<br/>
Not to perform the covenant of my word,<br/>
Is lawless, and I need not to obey.<br/></p>
<p id="id00525">CHARLES.<br/>
Why, is it lawful for a man to kill,<br/>
And not, to break a promise with his foe?<br/></p>
<p id="id00526">VILLIERS.<br/>
To kill, my Lord, when war is once proclaimed,<br/>
So that our quarrel be for wrongs received,<br/>
No doubt, is lawfully permitted us;<br/>
But in an oath we must be well advised,<br/>
How we do swear, and, when we once have sworn,<br/>
Not to infringe it, though we die therefore:<br/>
Therefore, my Lord, as willing I return,<br/>
As if I were to fly to paradise.<br/></p>
<p id="id00527">CHARLES.<br/>
Stay, my Villiers; thine honorable min<br/>
Deserves to be eternally admired.<br/>
Thy suit shall be no longer thus deferred:<br/>
Give me the paper, I'll subscribe to it;<br/>
And, wheretofore I loved thee as Villiers,<br/>
Hereafter I'll embrace thee as my self.<br/>
Stay, and be still in favour with thy Lord.<br/></p>
<p id="id00528">VILLIERS.<br/>
I humbly thank you grace; I must dispatch,<br/>
And send this passport first unto the Earl,<br/>
And then I will attend your highness pleasure.<br/></p>
<p id="id00529">CHARLES.<br/>
Do so, Villiers;—and Charles, when he hath need,<br/>
Be such his soldiers, howsoever he speed!<br/></p>
<p id="id00530">[Exit Villiers.]</p>
<p id="id00531">[Enter King John.]</p>
<p id="id00532">KING JOHN.<br/>
Come, Charles, and arm thee; Edward is entrapped,<br/>
The Prince of Wales is fallen into our hands,<br/>
And we have compassed him; he cannot escape.<br/></p>
<p id="id00533">CHARLES.<br/>
But will your highness fight to day?<br/></p>
<p id="id00534">KING JOHN.<br/>
What else, my son? he's scarce eight thousand strong,<br/>
And we are threescore thousand at the least.<br/></p>
<p id="id00535">CHARLES.<br/>
I have a prophecy, my gracious Lord,<br/>
Wherein is written what success is like<br/>
To happen us in this outrageous war;<br/>
It was delivered me at Cresses field<br/>
By one that is an aged Hermit there.<br/>
[Reads.] 'When feathered foul shall make thine army tremble,<br/>
And flint stones rise and break the battle ray,<br/>
Then think on him that doth not now dissemble;<br/>
For that shall be the hapless dreadful day:<br/>
Yet, in the end, thy foot thou shalt advance<br/>
As far in England as thy foe in France.'<br/></p>
<p id="id00536">KING JOHN.<br/>
By this it seems we shall be fortunate:<br/>
For as it is impossible that stones<br/>
Should ever rise and break the battle ray,<br/>
Or airy foul make men in arms to quake,<br/>
So is it like, we shall not be subdued:<br/>
Or say this might be true, yet in the end,<br/>
Since he doth promise we shall drive him hence<br/>
And forage their Country as they have done ours,<br/>
By this revenge that loss will seem the less.<br/>
But all are frivolous fancies, toys, and dreams:<br/>
Once we are sure we have ensnared the son,<br/>
Catch we the father after how we can.<br/></p>
<p id="id00537">[Exeunt.]</p>
<h4 id="id00538" style="margin-top: 2em">ACT IV. SCENE IV. The same. The English Camp.</h4>
<p id="id00539">[Enter Prince Edward, Audley, and others.]</p>
<p id="id00540">PRINCE EDWARD.<br/>
Audley, the arms of death embrace us round,<br/>
And comfort have we none, save that to die<br/>
We pay sower earnest for a sweeter life.<br/>
At Cressey field out Clouds of Warlike smoke<br/>
Choked up those French mouths & dissevered them;<br/>
But now their multitudes of millions hide,<br/>
Masking as twere, the beauteous burning Sun,<br/>
Leaving no hope to us, but sullen dark<br/>
And eyeless terror of all ending night.<br/></p>
<p id="id00541">AUDLEY.<br/>
This sudden, mighty, and expedient head<br/>
That they have made, fair prince, is wonderful.<br/>
Before us in the valley lies the king,<br/>
Vantaged with all that heaven and earth can yield;<br/>
His party stronger battled than our whole:<br/>
His son, the braving Duke of Normandy,<br/>
Hath trimmed the Mountain on our right hand up<br/>
In shining plate, that now the aspiring hill<br/>
Shews like a silver quarry or an orb,<br/>
Aloft the which the Banners, bannarets,<br/>
And new replenished pendants cuff the air<br/>
And beat the winds, that for their gaudiness<br/>
Struggles to kiss them: on our left hand lies<br/>
Phillip, the younger issue of the king,<br/>
Coating the other hill in such array,<br/>
That all his guilded upright pikes do seem<br/>
Straight trees of gold, the pendants leaves;<br/>
And their device of Antique heraldry,<br/>
Quartered in colours, seeming sundry fruits,<br/>
Makes it the Orchard of the Hesperides:<br/>
Behind us too the hill doth bear his height,<br/>
For like a half Moon, opening but one way,<br/>
It rounds us in; there at our backs are lodged<br/>
The fatal Crossbows, and the battle there<br/>
Is governed by the rough Chattillion.<br/>
Then thus it stands: the valley for our flight<br/>
The king binds in; the hills on either hand<br/>
Are proudly royalized by his sons;<br/>
And on the Hill behind stands certain death<br/>
In pay and service with Chattillion.<br/></p>
<p id="id00542" style="margin-top: 2em">PRINCE EDWARD.<br/>
Death's name is much more mighty than his deeds;<br/>
Thy parcelling this power hath made it more.<br/>
As many sands as these my hands can hold,<br/>
Are but my handful of so many sands;<br/>
Then, all the world, and call it but a power,<br/>
Easily ta'en up, and quickly thrown away:<br/>
But if I stand to count them sand by sand,<br/>
The number would confound my memory,<br/>
And make a thousand millions of a task,<br/>
Which briefly is no more, indeed, than one.<br/>
These quarters, squadrons, and these regiments,<br/>
Before, behind us, and on either hand,<br/>
Are but a power. When we name a man,<br/>
His hand, his foot, his head hath several strengths;<br/>
And being all but one self instant strength,<br/>
Why, all this many, Audley, is but one,<br/>
And we can call it all but one man's strength.<br/>
He that hath far to go, tells it by miles;<br/>
If he should tell the steps, it kills his heart:<br/>
The drops are infinite, that make a flood,<br/>
And yet, thou knowest, we call it but a Rain.<br/>
There is but one France, one king of France,<br/>
That France hath no more kings; and that same king<br/>
Hath but the puissant legion of one king,<br/>
And we have one: then apprehend no odds,<br/>
For one to one is fair equality.<br/></p>
<p id="id00543">[Enter an Herald from King John.]</p>
<p id="id00544">PRINCE EDWARD.<br/>
What tidings, messenger? be plain and brief.<br/></p>
<p id="id00545">HERALD.<br/>
The king of France, my sovereign Lord and master,<br/>
Greets by me his foe, the Prince of Wales:<br/>
If thou call forth a hundred men of name,<br/>
Of Lords, Knights, Squires, and English gentlemen,<br/>
And with thy self and those kneel at his feet,<br/>
He straight will fold his bloody colours up,<br/>
And ransom shall redeem lives forfeited;<br/>
If not, this day shall drink more English blood,<br/>
Than ere was buried in our British earth.<br/>
What is the answer to his proffered mercy?<br/></p>
<p id="id00546">PRINCE EDWARD.<br/>
This heaven, that covers France, contains the mercy<br/>
That draws from me submissive orizons;<br/>
That such base breath should vanish from my lips,<br/>
To urge the plea of mercy to a man,<br/>
The Lord forbid! Return, and tell the king,<br/>
My tongue is made of steel, and it shall beg<br/>
My mercy on his coward burgonet;<br/>
Tell him, my colours are as red as his,<br/>
My men as bold, our English arms as strong:<br/>
Return him my defiance in his face.<br/></p>
<p id="id00547">HERALD.<br/>
I go.<br/></p>
<p id="id00548">[Exit.]</p>
<p id="id00549">[Enter another Herald.]</p>
<p id="id00550">PRINCE EDWARD.<br/>
What news with thee?<br/></p>
<p id="id00551">HERALD.<br/>
The Duke of Normandy, my Lord & master,<br/>
Pitying thy youth is so ingirt with peril,<br/>
By me hath sent a nimble jointed jennet,<br/>
As swift as ever yet thou didst bestride,<br/>
And therewithall he counsels thee to fly;<br/>
Else death himself hath sworn that thou shalt die.<br/></p>
<p id="id00552">PRINCE EDWARD.<br/>
Back with the beast unto the beast that sent him!<br/>
Tell him I cannot sit a coward's horse;<br/>
Bid him to day bestride the jade himself,<br/>
For I will stain my horse quite o'er with blood,<br/>
And double gild my spurs, but I will catch him;<br/>
So tell the carping boy, and get thee gone.<br/></p>
<p id="id00553">[Exit Herald.]</p>
<p id="id00554">[Enter another Herald.]</p>
<p id="id00555">HERALD.<br/>
Edward of Wales, Phillip, the second son<br/>
To the most mighty christian king of France,<br/>
Seeing thy body's living date expired,<br/>
All full of charity and christian love,<br/>
Commends this book, full fraught with prayers,<br/>
To thy fair hand and for thy hour of life<br/>
Intreats thee that thou meditate therein,<br/>
And arm thy soul for her long journey towards—<br/>
Thus have I done his bidding, and return.<br/></p>
<p id="id00556">PRINCE EDWARD.<br/>
Herald of Phillip, greet thy Lord from me:<br/>
All good that he can send, I can receive;<br/>
But thinkst thou not, the unadvised boy<br/>
Hath wronged himself in thus far tendering me?<br/>
Happily he cannot pray without the book—<br/>
I think him no divine extemporall—,<br/>
Then render back this common place of prayer,<br/>
To do himself good in adversity;<br/>
Beside he knows not my sins' quality,<br/>
And therefore knows no prayers for my avail;<br/>
Ere night his prayer may be to pray to God,<br/>
To put it in my heart to hear his prayer.<br/>
So tell the courtly wanton, and be gone.<br/></p>
<p id="id00557">HERALD.<br/>
I go.<br/></p>
<p id="id00558">[Exit.]</p>
<p id="id00559">PRINCE EDWARD.<br/>
How confident their strength and number makes them!—<br/>
Now, Audley, sound those silver wings of thine,<br/>
And let those milk white messengers of time<br/>
Shew thy times learning in this dangerous time.<br/>
Thy self art bruis'd and bit with many broils,<br/>
And stratagems forepast with iron pens<br/>
Are texted in thine honorable face;<br/>
Thou art a married man in this distress,<br/>
But danger woos me as a blushing maid:<br/>
Teach me an answer to this perilous time.<br/></p>
<p id="id00560">AUDLEY.<br/>
To die is all as common as to live:<br/>
The one ince-wise, the other holds in chase;<br/>
For, from the instant we begin to live,<br/>
We do pursue and hunt the time to die:<br/>
First bud we, then we blow, and after seed,<br/>
Then, presently, we fall; and, as a shade<br/>
Follows the body, so we follow death.<br/>
If, then, we hunt for death, why do we fear it?<br/>
If we fear it, why do we follow it?<br/>
If we do fear, how can we shun it?<br/>
If we do fear, with fear we do but aide<br/>
The thing we fear to seize on us the sooner:<br/>
If we fear not, then no resolved proffer<br/>
Can overthrow the limit of our fate;<br/>
For, whether ripe or rotten, drop we shall,<br/>
As we do draw the lottery of our doom.<br/></p>
<p id="id00561">PRINCE EDWARD.<br/>
Ah, good old man, a thousand thousand armors<br/>
These words of thine have buckled on my back:<br/>
Ah, what an idiot hast thou made of life,<br/>
To seek the thing it fears! and how disgraced<br/>
The imperial victory of murdering death,<br/>
Since all the lives his conquering arrows strike<br/>
Seek him, and he not them, to shame his glory!<br/>
I will not give a penny for a life,<br/>
Nor half a halfpenny to shun grim death,<br/>
Since for to live is but to seek to die,<br/>
And dying but beginning of new life.<br/>
Let come the hour when he that rules it will!<br/>
To live or die I hold indifferent.<br/></p>
<p id="id00562">[Exeunt.]</p>
<h4 id="id00563" style="margin-top: 2em">ACT IV. SCENE V. The same. The French Camp.</h4>
<p id="id00564">[Enter King John and Charles.]</p>
<p id="id00565">KING JOHN.<br/>
A sudden darkness hath defaced the sky,<br/>
The winds are crept into their caves for fear,<br/>
The leaves move not, the world is hushed and still,<br/>
The birds cease singing, and the wandering brooks<br/>
Murmur no wonted greeting to their shores;<br/>
Silence attends some wonder and expecteth<br/>
That heaven should pronounce some prophesy:<br/>
Where, or from whom, proceeds this silence, Charles?<br/></p>
<p id="id00566">CHARLES.<br/>
Our men, with open mouths and staring eyes,<br/>
Look on each other, as they did attend<br/>
Each other's words, and yet no creature speaks;<br/>
A tongue-tied fear hath made a midnight hour,<br/>
And speeches sleep through all the waking regions.<br/></p>
<p id="id00567">KING JOHN.<br/>
But now the pompous Sun, in all his pride,<br/>
Looked through his golden coach upon the world,<br/>
And, on a sudden, hath he hid himself,<br/>
That now the under earth is as a grave,<br/>
Dark, deadly, silent, and uncomfortable.<br/></p>
<p id="id00568">[A clamor of ravens.]</p>
<p id="id00569">Hark, what a deadly outery do I hear?</p>
<p id="id00570">CHARLES.<br/>
Here comes my brother Phillip.<br/></p>
<p id="id00571">KING JOHN.<br/>
All dismayed:<br/></p>
<p id="id00572">[Enter Phillip.]</p>
<p id="id00573">What fearful words are those thy looks presage?</p>
<p id="id00574">PHILLIP.<br/>
A flight, a flight!<br/></p>
<p id="id00575">KING JOHN.<br/>
Coward, what flight? thou liest, there needs no flight.<br/></p>
<p id="id00576">PHILLIP.<br/>
A flight.<br/></p>
<p id="id00577">KING JOHN.<br/>
Awake thy craven powers, and tell on<br/>
The substance of that very fear in deed,<br/>
Which is so ghastly printed in thy face:<br/>
What is the matter?<br/></p>
<p id="id00578">PHILLIP.<br/>
A flight of ugly ravens<br/>
Do croak and hover o'er our soldiers' heads,<br/>
And keep in triangles and cornered squares,<br/>
Right as our forces are embattled;<br/>
With their approach there came this sudden fog,<br/>
Which now hath hid the airy floor of heaven<br/>
And made at noon a night unnatural<br/>
Upon the quaking and dismayed world:<br/>
In brief, our soldiers have let fall their arms,<br/>
And stand like metamorphosed images,<br/>
Bloodless and pale, one gazing on another.<br/></p>
<p id="id00579">KING JOHN.<br/>
Aye, now I call to mind the prophesy,<br/>
But I must give no entrance to a fear.—<br/>
Return, and hearten up these yielding souls:<br/>
Tell them, the ravens, seeing them in arms,<br/>
So many fair against a famished few,<br/>
Come but to dine upon their handy work<br/>
And prey upon the carrion that they kill:<br/>
For when we see a horse laid down to die,<br/>
Although he be not dead, the ravenous birds<br/>
Sit watching the departure of his life;<br/>
Even so these ravens for the carcasses<br/>
Of those poor English, that are marked to die,<br/>
Hover about, and, if they cry to us,<br/>
Tis but for meat that we must kill for them.<br/>
Away, and comfort up my soldiers,<br/>
And sound the trumpets, and at once dispatch<br/>
This little business of a silly fraud.<br/></p>
<p id="id00580">[Exit Phillip.]</p>
<p id="id00581">[Another noise. Salisbury brought in by a French Captain.]</p>
<p id="id00582">CAPTAIN.<br/>
Behold, my liege, this knight and forty mo',<br/>
Of whom the better part are slain and fled,<br/>
With all endeavor sought to break our ranks,<br/>
And make their way to the encompassed prince:<br/>
Dispose of him as please your majesty.<br/></p>
<p id="id00583">KING JOHN.<br/>
Go, & the next bough, soldier, that thou seest,<br/>
Disgrace it with his body presently;<br/>
For I do hold a tree in France too good<br/>
To be the gallows of an English thief.<br/></p>
<p id="id00584">SALISBURY.<br/>
My Lord of Normandy, I have your pass<br/>
And warrant for my safety through this land.<br/></p>
<p id="id00585" style="margin-top: 2em">CHARLES.<br/>
Villiers procured it for thee, did he not?<br/></p>
<p id="id00586">SALISBURY.<br/>
He did.<br/></p>
<p id="id00587">CHARLES.<br/>
And it is current; thou shalt freely pass.<br/></p>
<p id="id00588">KING JOHN.<br/>
Aye, freely to the gallows to be hanged,<br/>
Without denial or impediment.<br/>
Away with him!<br/></p>
<p id="id00589">CHARLES.<br/>
I hope your highness will not so disgrace me,<br/>
And dash the virtue of my seal at arms:<br/>
He hath my never broken name to shew,<br/>
Charactered with this princely hand of mine:<br/>
And rather let me leave to be a prince<br/>
Than break the stable verdict of a prince:<br/>
I do beseech you, let him pass in quiet.<br/></p>
<p id="id00590">KING JOHN.<br/>
Thou and thy word lie both in my command;<br/>
What canst thou promise that I cannot break?<br/>
Which of these twain is greater infamy,<br/>
To disobey thy father or thy self?<br/>
Thy word, nor no mans, may exceed his power;<br/>
Nor that same man doth never break his word,<br/>
That keeps it to the utmost of his power.<br/>
The breach of faith dwells in the soul's consent:<br/>
Which if thy self without consent do break,<br/>
Thou art not charged with the breach of faith.<br/>
Go, hang him: for thy license lies in me,<br/>
And my constraint stands the excuse for thee.<br/></p>
<p id="id00591">CHARLES.<br/>
What, am I not a soldier in my word?<br/>
Then, arms, adieu, and let them fight that list!<br/>
Shall I not give my girdle from my waste,<br/>
But with a gardion I shall be controlled,<br/>
To say I may not give my things away?<br/>
Upon my soul, had Edward, prince of Wales,<br/>
Engaged his word, writ down his noble hand<br/>
For all your knights to pass his father's land,<br/>
The royal king, to grace his warlike son,<br/>
Would not alone safe conduct give to them,<br/>
But with all bounty feasted them and theirs.<br/></p>
<p id="id00592">KING JOHN.<br/>
Dwelst thou on precedents? Then be it so!<br/>
Say, Englishman, of what degree thou art.<br/></p>
<p id="id00593">SALISBURY.<br/>
An Earl in England, though a prisoner here,<br/>
And those that know me, call me Salisbury.<br/></p>
<p id="id00594">KING JOHN.<br/>
Then, Salisbury, say whether thou art bound.<br/></p>
<p id="id00595">SALISBURY.<br/>
To Callice, where my liege, king Edward, is.<br/></p>
<p id="id00596">KING JOHN.<br/>
To Callice, Salisbury? Then, to Callice pack,<br/>
And bid the king prepare a noble grave,<br/>
To put his princely son, black Edward, in.<br/>
And as thou travelst westward from this place,<br/>
Some two leagues hence there is a lofty hill,<br/>
Whose top seems topless, for the embracing sky<br/>
Doth hide his high head in her azure bosom;<br/>
Upon whose tall top when thy foot attains,<br/>
Look back upon the humble vale beneath—<br/>
Humble of late, but now made proud with arms—<br/>
And thence behold the wretched prince of Wales,<br/>
Hooped with a bond of iron round about.<br/>
After which sight, to Callice spur amain,<br/>
And say, the prince was smothered and not slain:<br/>
And tell the king this is not all his ill;<br/>
For I will greet him, ere he thinks I will.<br/>
Away, be gone; the smoke but of our shot<br/>
Will choke our foes, though bullets hit them not.<br/></p>
<p id="id00597">[Exit.]</p>
<h4 id="id00598" style="margin-top: 2em">ACT IV. SCENE VI. The same. A Part of the Field
of Battle.</h4>
<p id="id00599">[Alarum. Enter prince Edward and Artois.]</p>
<p id="id00600" style="margin-top: 2em">ARTOIS.<br/>
How fares your grace? are you not shot, my Lord?<br/></p>
<p id="id00601">PRINCE EDWARD.<br/>
No, dear Artois; but choked with dust and smoke,<br/>
And stepped aside for breath and fresher air.<br/></p>
<p id="id00602">ARTOIS.<br/>
Breath, then, and to it again: the amazed French<br/>
Are quite distract with gazing on the crows;<br/>
And, were our quivers full of shafts again,<br/>
Your grace should see a glorious day of this:—<br/>
O, for more arrows, Lord; that's our want.<br/></p>
<p id="id00603">PRINCE EDWARD.<br/>
Courage, Artois! a fig for feathered shafts,<br/>
When feathered fowls do bandy on our side!<br/>
What need we fight, and sweat, and keep a coil,<br/>
When railing crows outscold our adversaries?<br/>
Up, up, Artois! the ground it self is armed<br/>
With Fire containing flint; command our bows<br/>
To hurl away their pretty colored Ew,<br/>
And to it with stones: away, Artois, away!<br/>
My soul doth prophecy we win the day.<br/></p>
<p id="id00604">[Exeunt.]</p>
<h4 id="id00605" style="margin-top: 2em">ACT IV. SCENE VII. The same. Another Part of
the Field of Battle.</h4>
<p id="id00606">[Alarum. Enter King John.]</p>
<p id="id00607">KING JOHN.<br/>
Our multitudes are in themselves confounded,<br/>
Dismayed, and distraught; swift starting fear<br/>
Hath buzzed a cold dismay through all our army,<br/>
And every petty disadvantage prompts<br/>
The fear possessed abject soul to fly.<br/>
My self, whose spirit is steel to their dull lead,<br/>
What with recalling of the prophecy,<br/>
And that our native stones from English arms<br/>
Rebel against us, find myself attainted<br/>
With strong surprise of weak and yielding fear.<br/></p>
<p id="id00608">[Enter Charles.]</p>
<p id="id00609">CHARLES.<br/>
Fly, father, fly! the French do kill the French,<br/>
Some that would stand let drive at some that fly;<br/>
Our drums strike nothing but discouragement,<br/>
Our trumpets sound dishonor and retire;<br/>
The spirit of fear, that feareth nought but death,<br/>
Cowardly works confusion on it self.<br/></p>
<p id="id00610">[Enter Phillip.]</p>
<p id="id00611">PHILLIP.<br/>
Pluck out your eyes, and see not this day's shame!<br/>
An arm hath beat an army; one poor David<br/>
Hath with a stone foiled twenty stout Goliahs;<br/>
Some twenty naked starvelings with small flints,<br/>
Hath driven back a puissant host of men,<br/>
Arrayed and fenced in all accomplements.<br/></p>
<p id="id00612">KING JOHN.<br/>
Mordieu, they quait at us, and kill us up;<br/>
No less than forty thousand wicked elders<br/>
Have forty lean slaves this day stoned to death.<br/></p>
<p id="id00613">CHARLES.<br/>
O, that I were some other countryman!<br/>
This day hath set derision on the French,<br/>
And all the world will blurt and scorn at us.<br/></p>
<p id="id00614">KING JOHN.<br/>
What, is there no hope left?<br/></p>
<p id="id00615">PHILLIP.<br/>
No hope, but death, to bury up our shame.<br/></p>
<p id="id00616">KING JOHN.<br/>
Make up once more with me; the twentieth part<br/>
Of those that live, are men inow to quail<br/>
The feeble handful on the adverse part.<br/></p>
<p id="id00617">CHARLES.<br/>
Then charge again: if heaven be not opposed,<br/>
We cannot lose the day.<br/></p>
<p id="id00618">KING JOHN.<br/>
On, away!<br/></p>
<p id="id00619">[Exeunt.]</p>
<h4 id="id00620" style="margin-top: 2em">ACT IV. SCENE VIII. The same. Another Part of
the Field of Battle.</h4>
<p id="id00621">[Enter Audley, wounded, & rescued by two squires.]</p>
<p id="id00622">ESQUIRE.<br/>
How fares my Lord?<br/></p>
<p id="id00623">AUDLEY.<br/>
Even as a man may do,<br/>
That dines at such a bloody feast as this.<br/></p>
<p id="id00624">ESQUIRE.<br/>
I hope, my Lord, that is no mortal scar.<br/></p>
<p id="id00625">AUDLEY.<br/>
No matter, if it be; the count is cast,<br/>
And, in the worst, ends but a mortal man.<br/>
Good friends, convey me to the princely Edward,<br/>
That in the crimson bravery of my blood<br/>
I may become him with saluting him.<br/>
I'll smile, and tell him, that this open scar<br/>
Doth end the harvest of his Audley's war.<br/></p>
<p id="id00626">[Exeunt.]</p>
<h4 id="id00627" style="margin-top: 2em">ACT IV. SCENE IX. The same. The English Camp.</h4>
<p id="id00628">[Enter prince Edward, King John, Charles, and all,
with Ensigns spread.]</p>
<p id="id00629">PRINCE EDWARD.<br/>
Now, John in France, & lately John of France,<br/>
Thy bloody Ensigns are my captive colours;<br/>
And you, high vaunting Charles of Normandy,<br/>
That once to day sent me a horse to fly,<br/>
Are now the subjects of my clemency.<br/>
Fie, Lords, is it not a shame that English boys,<br/>
Whose early days are yet not worth a beard,<br/>
Should in the bosom of your kingdom thus,<br/>
One against twenty, beat you up together?<br/></p>
<p id="id00630">KING JOHN.<br/>
Thy fortune, not thy force, hath conquered us.<br/></p>
<p id="id00631">PRINCE EDWARD.<br/>
An argument that heaven aides the right.<br/></p>
<p id="id00632">[Enter Artois with Phillip.]</p>
<p id="id00633">See, see, Artois doth bring with him along<br/>
The late good counsel giver to my soul.<br/>
Welcome, Artois; and welcome, Phillip, too:<br/>
Who now of you or I have need to pray?<br/>
Now is the proverb verified in you,<br/>
'Too bright a morning breeds a louring day.'<br/></p>
<p id="id00634">[Sound Trumpets. Enter Audley.]</p>
<p id="id00635">But say, what grim discouragement comes here!<br/>
Alas, what thousand armed men of France<br/>
Have writ that note of death in Audley's face?<br/>
Speak, thou that wooest death with thy careless smile,<br/>
And lookst so merrily upon thy grave,<br/>
As if thou were enamored on thine end:<br/>
What hungry sword hath so bereaved thy face,<br/>
And lopped a true friend from my loving soul?<br/></p>
<p id="id00636">AUDLEY.<br/>
O Prince, thy sweet bemoaning speech to me<br/>
Is as a mournful knell to one dead sick.<br/></p>
<p id="id00637">PRINCE EDWARD.<br/>
Dear Audley, if my tongue ring out thy end,<br/>
My arms shall be thy grave: what may I do<br/>
To win thy life, or to revenge thy death?<br/>
If thou wilt drink the blood of captive kings,<br/>
Or that it were restorative, command<br/>
A Health of kings' blood, and I'll drink to thee;<br/>
If honor may dispense for thee with death,<br/>
The never dying honor of this day<br/>
Share wholly, Audley, to thy self, and live.<br/></p>
<p id="id00638">AUDLEY.<br/>
Victorious Prince,—that thou art so, behold<br/>
A Caesar's fame in king's captivity—<br/>
If I could hold him death but at a bay,<br/>
Till I did see my liege thy royal father,<br/>
My soul should yield this Castle of my flesh,<br/>
This mangled tribute, with all willingness,<br/>
To darkness, consummation, dust, and Worms.<br/></p>
<p id="id00639">PRINCE EDWARD.<br/>
Cheerily, bold man, thy soul is all too proud<br/>
To yield her City for one little breach;<br/>
Should be divorced from her earthly spouse<br/>
By the soft temper of a French man's sword?<br/>
Lo, to repair thy life, I give to thee<br/>
Three thousand Marks a year in English land.<br/></p>
<p id="id00640">AUDLEY.<br/>
I take thy gift, to pay the debts I owe:<br/>
These two poor Esquires redeemed me from the French<br/>
With lusty & dear hazard of their lives:<br/>
What thou hast given me, I give to them;<br/>
And, as thou lovest me, prince, lay thy consent<br/>
To this bequeath in my last testament.<br/></p>
<p id="id00641">PRINCE EDWARD.<br/>
Renowned Audley, live, and have from me<br/>
This gift twice doubled to these Esquires and thee:<br/>
But live or die, what thou hast given away<br/>
To these and theirs shall lasting freedom stay.<br/>
Come, gentlemen, I will see my friend bestowed<br/>
With in an easy Litter; then we'll march<br/>
Proudly toward Callis, with triumphant pace,<br/>
Unto my royal father, and there bring<br/>
The tribute of my wars, fair France his king.<br/></p>
<p id="id00642">[Exit.]</p>
<h4 id="id00643" style="margin-top: 2em">ACT V. SCENE I. Picardy. The English Camp before
Calais.</h4>
<p id="id00644">[Enter King Edward, Queen Phillip, Derby, soldiers.]</p>
<p id="id00645">KING EDWARD.<br/>
No more, Queen Phillip, pacify your self;<br/>
Copland, except he can excuse his fault,<br/>
Shall find displeasure written in our looks.<br/>
And now unto this proud resisting town!<br/>
Soldiers, assault: I will no longer stay,<br/>
To be deluded by their false delays;<br/>
Put all to sword, and make the spoil your own.<br/></p>
<p id="id00646">[Enter six Citizens in their Shirts, bare foot, with
halters about their necks.]</p>
<p id="id00647">ALL.<br/>
Mercy, king Edward, mercy, gracious Lord!<br/></p>
<p id="id00648">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Contemptuous villains, call ye now for truce?<br/>
Mine ears are stopped against your bootless cries:—<br/>
Sound, drums alarum; draw threatening swords!<br/></p>
<p id="id00649">FIRST CITIZEN.<br/>
Ah, noble Prince, take pity on this town,<br/>
And hear us, mighty king:<br/>
We claim the promise that your highness made;<br/>
The two days' respite is not yet expired,<br/>
And we are come with willingness to bear<br/>
What torturing death or punishment you please,<br/>
So that the trembling multitude be saved.<br/></p>
<p id="id00650">KING EDWARD.<br/>
My promise? Well, I do confess as much:<br/>
But I do require the chiefest Citizens<br/>
And men of most account that should submit;<br/>
You, peradventure, are but servile grooms,<br/>
Or some felonious robbers on the Sea,<br/>
Whom, apprehended, law would execute,<br/>
Albeit severity lay dead in us:<br/>
No, no, ye cannot overreach us thus.<br/></p>
<p id="id00651">SECOND CITIZEN.<br/>
The Sun, dread Lord, that in the western fall<br/>
Beholds us now low brought through misery,<br/>
Did in the Orient purple of the morn<br/>
Salute our coming forth, when we were known;<br/>
Or may our portion be with damned fiends.<br/></p>
<p id="id00652">KING EDWARD.<br/>
If it be so, then let our covenant stand:<br/>
We take possession of the town in peace,<br/>
But, for your selves, look you for no remorse;<br/>
But, as imperial justice hath decreed,<br/>
Your bodies shall be dragged about these walls,<br/>
And after feel the stroke of quartering steel:<br/>
This is your doom;—go, soldiers, see it done.<br/></p>
<p id="id00653">QUEEN PHILLIP.<br/>
Ah, be more mild unto these yielding men!<br/>
It is a glorious thing to stablish peace,<br/>
And kings approach the nearest unto God<br/>
By giving life and safety unto men:<br/>
As thou intendest to be king of France,<br/>
So let her people live to call thee king;<br/>
For what the sword cuts down or fire hath spoiled,<br/>
Is held in reputation none of ours.<br/></p>
<p id="id00654">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Although experience teach us this is true,<br/>
That peaceful quietness brings most delight,<br/>
When most of all abuses are controlled;<br/>
Yet, insomuch it shall be known that we<br/>
As well can master our affections<br/>
As conquer other by the dint of sword,<br/>
Phillip, prevail; we yield to thy request:<br/>
These men shall live to boast of clemency,<br/>
And, tyranny, strike terror to thy self.<br/></p>
<p id="id00655">SECOND CITIZEN.<br/>
Long live your highness! happy be your reign!<br/></p>
<p id="id00656">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Go, get you hence, return unto the town,<br/>
And if this kindness hath deserved your love,<br/>
Learn then to reverence Edward as your king.—<br/></p>
<p id="id00657">[Exeunt Citizens.]</p>
<p id="id00658">Now, might we hear of our affairs abroad,<br/>
We would, till gloomy Winter were o'er spent,<br/>
Dispose our men in garrison a while.<br/>
But who comes here?<br/></p>
<p id="id00659">[Enter Copland and King David.]</p>
<p id="id00660">DERBY.<br/>
Copland, my Lord, and David, King of Scots.<br/></p>
<p id="id00661">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Is this the proud presumptuous Esquire of the North,<br/>
That would not yield his prisoner to my Queen?<br/></p>
<p id="id00662">COPLAND.<br/>
I am, my liege, a Northern Esquire indeed,<br/>
But neither proud nor insolent, I trust.<br/></p>
<p id="id00663">KING EDWARD.<br/>
What moved thee, then, to be so obstinate<br/>
To contradict our royal Queen's desire?<br/></p>
<p id="id00664">COPLAND.<br/>
No wilful disobedience, mighty Lord,<br/>
But my desert and public law at arms:<br/>
I took the king my self in single fight,<br/>
And, like a soldiers, would be loath to lose<br/>
The least pre-eminence that I had won.<br/>
And Copland straight upon your highness' charge<br/>
Is come to France, and with a lowly mind<br/>
Doth vale the bonnet of his victory:<br/>
Receive, dread Lord, the custom of my fraught,<br/>
The wealthy tribute of my laboring hands,<br/>
Which should long since have been surrendered up,<br/>
Had but your gracious self been there in place.<br/></p>
<p id="id00665">QUEEN PHILLIP.<br/>
But, Copland, thou didst scorn the king's command,<br/>
Neglecting our commission in his name.<br/></p>
<p id="id00666">COPLAND.<br/>
His name I reverence, but his person more;<br/>
His name shall keep me in allegiance still,<br/>
But to his person I will bend my knee.<br/></p>
<p id="id00667">KING EDWARD.<br/>
I pray thee, Phillip, let displeasure pass;<br/>
This man doth please me, and I like his words:<br/>
For what is he that will attempt great deeds,<br/>
And lose the glory that ensues the same?<br/>
All rivers have recourse unto the Sea,<br/>
And Copland's faith relation to his king.<br/>
Kneel, therefore, down: now rise, king Edward's knight;<br/>
And, to maintain thy state, I freely give<br/>
Five hundred marks a year to thee and thine.<br/></p>
<p id="id00668">[Enter Salisbury.]</p>
<p id="id00669" style="margin-top: 2em">Welcome, Lord Salisbury: what news from Brittain?</p>
<p id="id00670">SALISBURY.<br/>
This, mighty king: the Country we have won,<br/>
And John de Mountford, regent of that place,<br/>
Presents your highness with this Coronet,<br/>
Protesting true allegiance to your Grace.<br/></p>
<p id="id00671">KING EDWARD.<br/>
We thank thee for thy service, valiant Earl;<br/>
Challenge our favour, for we owe it thee.<br/></p>
<p id="id00672">SALISBURY.<br/>
But now, my Lord, as this is joyful news,<br/>
So must my voice be tragical again,<br/>
And I must sing of doleful accidents.<br/></p>
<p id="id00673">KING EDWARD.<br/>
What, have our men the overthrow at Poitiers?<br/>
Or is our son beset with too much odds?<br/></p>
<p id="id00674">SALISBURY.<br/>
He was, my Lord: and as my worthless self<br/>
With forty other serviceable knights,<br/>
Under safe conduct of the Dauphin's seal,<br/>
Did travail that way, finding him distressed,<br/>
A troop of Lances met us on the way,<br/>
Surprised, and brought us prisoners to the king,<br/>
Who, proud of this, and eager of revenge,<br/>
Commanded straight to cut off all our heads:<br/>
And surely we had died, but that the Duke,<br/>
More full of honor than his angry sire,<br/>
Procured our quick deliverance from thence;<br/>
But, ere we went, 'Salute your king', quoth he,<br/>
'Bid him provide a funeral for his son:<br/>
To day our sword shall cut his thread of life;<br/>
And, sooner than he thinks, we'll be with him,<br/>
To quittance those displeasures he hath done.'<br/>
This said, we past, not daring to reply;<br/>
Our hearts were dead, our looks diffused and wan.<br/>
Wandering, at last we climed unto a hill,<br/>
>From whence, although our grief were much before,<br/>
Yet now to see the occasion with our eyes<br/>
Did thrice so much increase our heaviness:<br/>
For there, my Lord, oh, there we did descry<br/>
Down in a valley how both armies lay.<br/>
The French had cast their trenches like a ring,<br/>
And every Barricado's open front<br/>
Was thick embossed with brazen ordinance;<br/>
Here stood a battaile of ten thousand horse,<br/>
There twice as many pikes in quadrant wise,<br/>
Here Crossbows, and deadly wounding darts:<br/>
And in the midst, like to a slender point<br/>
Within the compass of the horizon,<br/>
As twere a rising bubble in the sea,<br/>
A Hasle wand amidst a wood of Pines,<br/>
Or as a bear fast chained unto a stake,<br/>
Stood famous Edward, still expecting when<br/>
Those dogs of France would fasten on his flesh.<br/>
Anon the death procuring knell begins:<br/>
Off go the Cannons, that with trembling noise<br/>
Did shake the very Mountain where they stood;<br/>
Then sound the Trumpets' clangor in the air,<br/>
The battles join: and, when we could no more<br/>
Discern the difference twixt the friend and foe,<br/>
So intricate the dark confusion was,<br/>
Away we turned our watery eyes with sighs,<br/>
As black as powder fuming into smoke.<br/>
And thus, I fear, unhappy have I told<br/>
The most untimely tale of Edward's fall.<br/></p>
<p id="id00675">QUEEN PHILLIP.<br/>
Ah me, is this my welcome into France?<br/>
Is this the comfort that I looked to have,<br/>
When I should meet with my beloved son?<br/>
Sweet Ned, I would thy mother in the sea<br/>
Had been prevented of this mortal grief!<br/></p>
<p id="id00676">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Content thee, Phillip; tis not tears will serve<br/>
To call him back, if he be taken hence:<br/>
Comfort thy self, as I do, gentle Queen,<br/>
With hope of sharp, unheard of, dire revenge.—<br/>
He bids me to provide his funeral,<br/>
And so I will; but all the Peers in France<br/>
Shall mourners be, and weep out bloody tears,<br/>
Until their empty veins be dry and sere:<br/>
The pillars of his hearse shall be his bones;<br/>
The mould that covers him, their City ashes;<br/>
His knell, the groaning cries of dying men;<br/>
And, in the stead of tapers on his tomb,<br/>
An hundred fifty towers shall burning blaze,<br/>
While we bewail our valiant son's decease.<br/></p>
<p id="id00677">[After a flourish, sounded within, enter an herald.]</p>
<p id="id00678">HERALD.<br/>
Rejoice, my Lord; ascend the imperial throne!<br/>
The mighty and redoubted prince of Wales,<br/>
Great servitor to bloody Mars in arms,<br/>
The French man's terror, and his country's fame,<br/>
Triumphant rideth like a Roman peer,<br/>
And, lowly at his stirrup, comes afoot<br/>
King John of France, together with his son,<br/>
In captive bonds; whose diadem he brings<br/>
To crown thee with, and to proclaim thee king.<br/></p>
<p id="id00679">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Away with mourning, Phillip, wipe thine eyes;—<br/>
Sound, Trumpets, welcome in Plantagenet!<br/></p>
<p id="id00680">[Enter Prince Edward, king John, Phillip, Audley, Artois.]</p>
<p id="id00681">As things long lost, when they are found again,<br/>
So doth my son rejoice his father's heart,<br/>
For whom even now my soul was much perplexed.<br/></p>
<p id="id00682">QUEEN PHILLIP.<br/>
Be this a token to express my joy,<br/></p>
<p id="id00683">[Kisses him.]</p>
<p id="id00684">For inward passion will not let me speak.</p>
<p id="id00685">PRINCE EDWARD.<br/>
My gracious father, here receive the gift.<br/></p>
<p id="id00686">[Presenting him with King John's crown.]</p>
<p id="id00687">This wreath of conquest and reward of war,<br/>
Got with as mickle peril of our lives,<br/>
As ere was thing of price before this day;<br/>
Install your highness in your proper right:<br/>
And, herewithall, I render to your hands<br/>
These prisoners, chief occasion of our strife.<br/></p>
<p id="id00688">KING EDWARD.<br/>
So, John of France, I see you keep your word:<br/>
You promised to be sooner with our self<br/>
Than we did think for, and tis so in deed:<br/>
But, had you done at first as now you do,<br/>
How many civil towns had stood untouched,<br/>
That now are turned to ragged heaps of stones!<br/>
How many people's lives mightst thou have saved,<br/>
That are untimely sunk into their graves!<br/></p>
<p id="id00689">KING JOHN.<br/>
Edward, recount not things irrevocable;<br/>
Tell me what ransom thou requirest to have.<br/></p>
<p id="id00690">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Thy ransom, John, hereafter shall be known:<br/>
But first to England thou must cross the seas,<br/>
To see what entertainment it affords;<br/>
How ere it falls, it cannot be so bad,<br/>
As ours hath been since we arrived in France.<br/></p>
<p id="id00691">KING JOHN.<br/>
Accursed man! of this I was foretold,<br/>
But did misconster what the prophet told.<br/></p>
<p id="id00692">PRINCE EDWARD.<br/>
Now, father, this petition Edward makes<br/>
To thee, whose grace hath been his strongest shield,<br/>
That, as thy pleasure chose me for the man<br/>
To be the instrument to shew thy power,<br/>
So thou wilt grant that many princes more,<br/>
Bred and brought up within that little Isle,<br/>
May still be famous for like victories!<br/>
And, for my part, the bloody scars I bear,<br/>
And weary nights that I have watched in field,<br/>
The dangerous conflicts I have often had,<br/>
The fearful menaces were proffered me,<br/>
The heat and cold and what else might displease:<br/>
I wish were now redoubled twenty fold,<br/>
So that hereafter ages, when they read<br/>
The painful traffic of my tender youth,<br/>
Might thereby be inflamed with such resolve,<br/>
As not the territories of France alone,<br/>
But likewise Spain, Turkey, and what countries else<br/>
That justly would provoke fair England's ire,<br/>
Might, at their presence, tremble and retire.<br/></p>
<p id="id00693">KING EDWARD.<br/>
Here, English Lords, we do proclaim a rest,<br/>
An intercession of our painful arms:<br/>
Sheath up your swords, refresh your weary limbs,<br/>
Peruse your spoils; and, after we have breathed<br/>
A day or two within this haven town,<br/>
God willing, then for England we'll be shipped;<br/>
Where, in a happy hour, I trust, we shall<br/>
Arrive, three kings, two princes, and a queen.<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00694">FINIS.</h5>
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