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- ALL IS TRUE (HENRY VIII)
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- Act 3 Scene 1
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- (Enter Queen Katherine and her women, as at work)
- l1l Queen Katherine Take thy lute, wench. My soul grows sad with
- troubles.
- l2l Sing, and disperse Æem if thou canst. Leave working.
- l3l Gentlewoman (sings) Orpheus with his lute made trees,
- l4l And the mountain tops that freeze,
- l5l Bow themselves when he did sing.
- l6l To his music plants and flowers
- l7l Ever sprung, as sun and showers
- l8l There had made a lasting spring.
- l9l Everything that heard him play,
- l10l Even the billows of the sea,
- l11l Hung their heads, and then lay by.
- l12l In sweet music is such art,
- l13l Killing care and grief of heart
- l14l Fall asleep, or hearing, die.
- (Enter Griffith, a gentleman)
- l15l Queen Katherine How now?
- l16l [Griffith] An Æt please your grace, the two great cardinals
- l17l Wait in the presence.
- Queen Katherine Would they speak with me?
- l18l [Griffith] They willed me say so, madam.
- Queen Katherine Pray their graces
- l19l To come near.
- (Exit Griffith)
- What can be their business
- l20l With me, a poor weak woman, fallÆn from favour?
- l21l I do not like their coming, now I think on Æt;
- l22l They should be good men, their affairs as righteousù
- l23l But all hoods make not monks.
- (Enter the two cardinals, Wolsey and Campeius, ushered
- by Griffith)
- Cardinal Wolsey Peace to your highness.
- l24l Queen Katherine Your graces find me here part of a housewifeù
- l25l I would be all, against the worst may happen.
- l26l What are your pleasures with me, reverend lords?
- l27l Cardinal Wolsey May it please you, noble madam, to withdraw
- l28l Into your private chamber, we shall give you
- l29l The full cause of our coming.
- Queen Katherine Speak it here.
- l30l ThereÆs nothing I have done yet, oÆ my conscience,
- l31l Deserves a corner. Would all other women
- l32l Could speak this with as free a soul as I do.
- l33l My lords, I care notùso much I am happy
- l34l Above a numberùif my actions
- l35l Were tried by evÆry tongue, evÆry eye saw Æem,
- l36l Envy and base opinion set against Æem,
- l37l I know my life so even. If your business
- l38l Seek me out and that way I am wife in,
- l39l Out with it boldly. Truth loves open dealing.
- l40l Cardinal Wolsey Tanta est erga te mentis integritas, Regina
- serenissimaù
- l41l Queen Katherine O, good my lord, no Latin.
- l42l I am not such a truant since my coming
- l43l As not to know the language I have lived in.
- l44l A strange tongue makes my cause more strange
- suspiciousù
- l45l Pray, speak in English. Here are some will thank you,
- l46l If you speak truth, for their poor mistressÆ sake.
- l47l Believe me, she has had much wrong. Lord Cardinal,
- l48l The willingÆst sin I ever yet committed
- l49l May be absolved in English.
- Cardinal Wolsey Noble lady,
- l50l I am sorry my integrity should breedù
- l51l And service to his majesty and youù
- l52l So deep suspicion, where all faith was meant.
- l53l We come not by the way of accusation,
- l54l To taint that honour every good tongue blesses,
- l55l Nor to betray you any way to sorrowù
- l56l You have too much, good ladyùbut to know
- l57l How you stand minded in the weighty difference
- l58l Between the King and you, and to deliver,
- l59l Like free and honest men, our just opinions
- l60l And comforts to your cause.
- Cardinal Campeius Most honoured madam,
- l61l My lord of York, out of his noble nature,
- l62l Zeal, and obedience he still bore your grace,
- l63l Forgetting, like a good man, your late censure
- l64l Both of his truth and himùwhich was too farù
- l65l Offers, as I do, in a sign of peace,
- l66l His service and his counsel.
- Queen Katherine (aside) To betray me.
- l67l (Aloud) My lords, I thank you both for your good wills.
- l68l Ye speak like honest menùpray God ye prove so.
- l69l But how to make ye suddenly an answer
- l70l In such a point of weight, so near mine honourù
- l71l More near my life, I fearùwith my weak wit,
- l72l And to such men of gravity and learning,
- l73l In truth I know not. I was set at work
- l74l Among my maids, full littleùGod knowsùlooking
- l75l Either for such men or such business.
- l76l For her sake that I have beenùfor I feel
- l77l The last fit of my greatnessùgood your graces,
- l78l Let me have time and counsel for my cause.
- l79l Alas, I am a woman friendless, hopeless.
- l80l Cardinal Wolsey Madam, you wrong the KingÆs love with these
- fears.
- l81l Your hopes and friends are infinite.
- Queen Katherine In England
- l82l But little for my profit. Can you think, lords,
- l83l That any Englishman dare give me counsel,
- l84l Or be a known friend Ægainst his highnessÆ pleasureù
- l85l Though he be grown so desperate to be honestù
- l86l And live a subject? Nay, forsooth, my friends,
- l87l They that must weigh out my afflictions,
- l88l They that my trust must grow to, live not here.
- l89l They are, as all my other comforts, far hence,
- l90l In mine own country, lords.
- Cardinal Campeius I would your grace
- l91l Would leave your griefs and take my counsel.
- Queen Katherine How, sir?
- l92l Cardinal Campeius Put your main cause into the KingÆs protection.
- l93l HeÆs loving and most gracious. ÆTwill be much
- l94l Both for your honour better and your cause,
- l95l For if the trial of the law oÆertake ye
- l96l YouÆll part away disgraced.
- Cardinal Wolsey (to the Queen) He tells you rightly.
- l97l Queen Katherine Ye tell me what ye wish for bothùmy ruin.
- l98l Is this your Christian counsel? Out upon ye!
- l99l Heaven is above all yetùthere sits a judge
- l100l That no king can corrupt.
- Cardinal Campeius Your rage mistakes us.
- l101l Queen Katherine The more shame for ye! Holy men I thought ye,
- l102l Upon my soul, two reverend cardinal virtuesù
- l103l But cardinal sins and hollow hearts I fear ye.
- l104l Mend Æem, for shame, my lords! Is this your comfort?
- l105l The cordial that ye bring a wretched lady,
- l106l A woman lost among ye, laughed at, scorned?
- l107l I will not wish ye half my miseriesù
- l108l I have more charity. But say I warned ye.
- l109l Take heed, for heavenÆs sake take heed, lest at once
- l110l The burden of my sorrows fall upon ye.
- l111l Cardinal Wolsey Madam, this is a mere distraction.
- l112l You turn the good we offer into envy.
- l113l Queen Katherine Ye turn me into nothing. Woe upon ye,
- l114l And all such false professors. Would you have meù
- l115l If you have any justice, any pity,
- l116l If ye be anything but churchmenÆs habitsù
- l117l Put my sick cause into his hands that hates me?
- l118l Alas, heÆs banished me his bed alreadyù
- l119l His love, too, long ago. I am old, my lords,
- l120l And all the fellowship I hold now with him
- l121l Is only my obedience. What can happen
- l122l To me above this wretchedness? All your studies
- l123l Make me accursed like this.
- Cardinal Campeius Your fears are worse.
- l124l Queen Katherine Have I lived thus longùlet me speak myself,
- l125l Since virtue finds no friendsùa wife, a true one?
- l126l A woman, I dare say, without vainglory,
- l127l Never yet branded with suspicion?
- l128l Have I with all my full affections
- l129l Still met the King, loved him next heavÆn, obeyed him,
- l130l Been out of fondness superstitious to him,
- l131l Almost forgot my prayers to content him?
- l132l And am I thus rewarded? ÆTis not well, lords.
- l133l Bring me a constant woman to her husband,
- l134l One that neÆer dreamed a joy beyond his pleasure,
- l135l And to that woman when she has done most,
- l136l Yet will I add an honour, a great patience.
- l137l Cardinal Wolsey Madam, you wander from the good we aim at.
- l138l Queen Katherine My lord, I dare not make myself so guilty
- l139l To give up willingly that noble title
- l140l Your master wed me to. Nothing but death
- l141l Shall eÆer divorce my dignities.
- Cardinal Wolsey Pray, hear me.
- l142l Queen Katherine Would I had never trod this English earth,
- l143l Or felt the flatteries that grow upon it.
- l144l Ye have angelsÆ faces, but heaven knows your hearts.
- l145l What will become of me now, wretched lady?
- l146l I am the most unhappy woman living.
- l147l (To her women)
- Alas, poor wenches, where are now your fortunes?
- l148l Shipwrecked upon a kingdom where no pity,
- l149l No friends, no hope, no kindred weep for me?
- l150l Almost no grave allowed me? Like the lily,
- l151l That once was mistress of the field and flourished,
- l152l IÆll hang my head and perish.
- Cardinal Wolsey If your grace
- l153l Could but be brought to know our ends are honest,
- l154l YouÆd feel more comfort. Why should we, good lady,
- l155l Upon what cause, wrong you? Alas, our places,
- l156l The way of our profession, is against it.
- l157l We are to cure such sorrows, not to sow Æem.
- l158l For goodnessÆ sake, consider what you do,
- l159l How you may hurt yourself, ay, utterly
- l160l Grow from the KingÆs acquaintance by this carriage.
- l161l The hearts of princes kiss obedience,
- l162l So much they love it, but to stubborn spirits
- l163l They swell and grow as terrible as storms.
- l164l I know you have a gentle noble temper,
- l165l A soul as even as a calm. Pray, think us
- l166l Those we professùpeacemakers, friends, and servants.
- l167l Cardinal Campeius Madam, youÆll find it so. You wrong your virtues
- l168l With these weak womenÆs fears. A noble spirit,
- l169l As yours was put into you, ever casts
- l170l Such doubts as false coin from it. The King loves you.
- l171l Beware you lose it not. For us, if you please
- l172l To trust us in your business, we are ready
- l173l To use our utmost studies in your service.
- l174l Queen Katherine Do what ye will, my lords, and pray forgive me.
- l175l If I have used myself unmannerly,
- l176l You know I am a woman, lacking wit
- l177l To make a seemly answer to such persons.
- l178l Pray do my service to his majesty.
- l179l He has my heart yet, and shall have my prayers
- l180l While I shall have my life. Come, reverend fathers,
- l181l Bestow your counsels on me. She now begs
- l182l That little thought, when she set footing here,
- l183l She should have bought her dignities so dear.
- (Exeunt)
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