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- $Unique_ID{SSP00310}
- $Title{King Henry VI, Part II: Act III, Scene II}
- $Author{Shakespeare, William}
- $Subject{}
- $Log{Dramatis Personae*00300.txt}
-
- Portions copyright (c) CMC ReSearch, Inc., 1989
-
- The Complete Works of William Shakespeare
-
- KING HENRY VI, PART II
-
-
- ACT III
- ................................................................................
-
-
- SCENE II: Bury St. Edmund's. A room of state.
- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
-
- {Enter certain Murderers, hastily.}
-
- First Murderer: Run to my Lord of Suffolk; let him know
- We have dispatch'd the duke, as he commanded.
-
- Second Murderer: O that it were to do! What have we done?
- Didst ever hear a man so penitent?
-
- {Enter SUFFOLK.}
-
- First Murder: Here comes my lord.
-
- SUFFOLK: Now, sirs, have you dispatch'd this thing?
-
- First Murderer: Ay, my good lord, he's dead.
-
- SUFFOLK: Why, that's well said. Go, get you to my house;
- I will reward you for this venturous deed.
- The king and all the peers are here at hand. 10
- Have you laid fair the bed? Is all things well,
- According as I gave directions?
-
- First Murderer: 'Tis, my good lord.
-
- SUFFOLK: Away! be gone.
-
- [Exeunt Murderers.]
-
- [Sound trumpets. Enter KING HENRY VI, QUEEN
- MARGARET, CARDINAL, SOMERSET, with Attendants.]
-
- KING HENRY VI: Go, call our uncle to our presence straight;
- Say we intend to try his grace to-day.
- If he be guilty, as 'tis published.
-
- SUFFOLK: I'll call him presently, my noble lord.
-
- [Exit.]
-
- KING HENRY VI: Lords, take your places; and, I pray you all,
- Proceed no straiter 'gainst our uncle Gloucester 20
- Than from true evidence of good esteem
- He be approved in practice culpable.
-
- QUEEN MARGARET: God forbid any malice should prevail,
- That faultless may condemn a nobleman!
- Pray God he may acquit him of suspicion!
-
- KING HENRY VI: I thank thee, Meg; these words content me much.
-
- {Re-enter SUFFOLK.}
-
- How now! why look'st thou pale? why tremblest thou?
- Where is our uncle? what's the matter, Suffolk?
-
- SUFFOLK: Dead in his bed, my lord; Gloucester is dead.
-
- QUEEN MARGARET: Marry, God forfend! 30
-
- CARDINAL: God's secret judgment: I did dream to-night
- The duke was dumb and could not speak a word.
-
- [KING HENRY VI swoons.]
-
- QUEEN MARGARET: How fares my lord? Help, lords! the king is dead.
-
- SOMERSET: Rear up his body; wring him by the nose.
-
- QUEEN MARGARET: Run, go, help, help! O Henry, ope thine eyes!
-
- SUFFOLK: He doth revive again: madam, be patient.
-
- KING HENRY VI: O heavenly God!
-
- QUEEN MARGARET: How fares my gracious lord?
-
- SUFFOLK: Comfort, my sovereign! gracious Henry, comfort!
-
- KING HENRY VI: What, doth my Lord of Suffolk comfort me? 40
- Came he right now to sing a raven's note,
- Whose dismal tune bereft my vital powers;
- And thinks he that the chirping of a wren,
- By crying comfort from a hollow breast,
- Can chase away the first-conceived sound?
- Hide not thy poison with such sugar'd words;
- Lay not thy hands on me; forbear, I say;
- Their touch affrights me as a serpent's sting.
- Thou baleful messenger, out of my sight!
- Upon thy eye-balls murderous tyranny 50
- Sits in grim majesty, to fright the world.
- Look not upon me, for thine eyes are wounding:
- Yet do not go away: come, basilisk,
- And kill the innocent gazer with thy sight;
- For in the shade of death I shall find joy;
- In life but double death, now Gloucester's dead.
-
- QUEEN MARGARET: Why do you rate my Lord of Suffolk thus?
- Although the duke was enemy to him,
- Yet he most Christian-like laments his death:
- And for myself, foe as he was to me, 60
- Might liquid tears or heart-offending groans
- Or blood-consuming sighs recall his life,
- I would be blind with weeping, sick with groans,
- Look pale as primrose with blood-drinking sighs,
- And all to have the noble duke alive.
- What know I how the world may deem of me?
- For it is known we were but hollow friends:
- It may be judged I made the duke away;
- So shall my name with slander's tongue be wounded,
- And princes' courts be fill'd with my reproach. 70
- This get I by his death: ay me, unhappy!
- To be a queen, and crown'd with infamy!
-
- KING HENRY VI: Ah, woe is me for Gloucester, wretched man!
-
- QUEEN MARGARET: Be woe for me, more wretched than he is.
- What, dost thou turn away and hide thy face?
- I am no loathsome leper; look on me.
- What! art thou, like the adder, waxen deaf?
- Be poisonous too and kill thy forlorn queen.
- Is all thy comfort shut in Gloucester's tomb?
- Why, then, dame Margaret was ne'er thy joy. 80
- Erect his statue and worship it,
- And make my image but an alehouse sign.
- Was I for this nigh wreck'd upon the sea
- And twice by awkward wind from England's bank
- Drove back again unto my native clime?
- What boded this, but well forewarning wind
- Did seem to say 'Seek not a scorpion's nest,
- Nor set no footing on this unkind shore'?
- What did I then, but cursed the gentle gusts
- And he that loosed them forth their brazen caves: 90
- And bid them blow towards England's blessed shore,
- Or turn our stern upon a dreadful rock
- Yet AEolus would not be a murderer,
- But left that hateful office unto thee:
- The pretty-vaulting sea refused to drown me,
- Knowing that thou wouldst have me drown'd on shore,
- With tears as salt as sea, through thy unkindness:
- The splitting rocks cower'd in the sinking sands
- And would not dash me with their ragged sides,
- Because thy flinty heart, more hard than they, 100
- Might in thy palace perish Margaret.
- As far as I could ken thy chalky cliffs,
- When from thy shore the tempest beat us back,
- I stood upon the hatches in the storm,
- And when the dusky sky began to rob
- My earnest-gaping sight of thy land's view,
- I took a costly jewel from my neck,
- A heart it was, bound in with diamonds,
- And threw it towards thy land: the sea received it,
- And so I wish'd thy body might my heart: 110
- And even with this I lost fair England's view
- And bid mine eyes be packing with my heart
- And call'd them blind and dusky spectacles,
- For losing ken of Albion's wished coast.
- How often have I tempted Suffolk's tongue,
- The agent of thy foul inconstancy,
- To sit and witch me, as Ascanius did
- When he to madding Dido would unfold
- His father's acts commenced in burning Troy!
- Am I not witch'd like her? or thou not false
- like him? 120
- Ay me, I can no more! die, Margaret!
- For Henry weeps that thou dost live so long.
-
- {Noise within. Enter WARWICK, SALISBURY, and many
- Commons.}
-
- WARWICK: It is reported, mighty sovereign,
- That good Duke Humphrey traitorously is murder'd
- By Suffolk and the Cardinal Beaufort's means.
- The commons, like an angry hive of bees
- That want their leader, scatter up and down
- And care not who they sting in his revenge.
- Myself have calm'd their spleenful mutiny,
- Until they hear the order of his death. 130
-
- KING HENRY VI: That he is dead, good Warwick, 'tis too true;
- But how he died God knows, not Henry:
- Enter his chamber, view his breathless corpse,
- And comment then upon his sudden death.
-
- WARWICK: That shall I do, my liege. Stay, Salisbury,
- With the rude multitude till I return.
-
- [Exit.]
-
- KING HENRY VI: O Thou that judgest all things, stay my thoughts,
- My thoughts, that labor to persuade my soul
- Some violent hands were laid on Humphrey's life!
- If my suspect be false, forgive me, God, 140
- For judgment only doth belong to thee.
- Fain would I go to chafe his paly lips
- With twenty thousand kisses, and to drain
- Upon his face an ocean of salt tears,
- To tell my love unto his dumb deaf trunk,
- And with my fingers feel his hand unfeeling:
- But all in vain are these mean obsequies;
- And to survey his dead and earthly image,
- What were it but to make my sorrow greater?
-
- {Re-enter WARWICK and others, bearing
- GLOUCESTER'S body on a bed.}
-
- WARWICK: Come hither, gracious sovereign, view this body. 150
-
- KING HENRY VI: That is to see how deep my grave is made;
- For with his soul fled all my worldly solace,
- For seeing him I see my life in death.
-
- WARWICK: As surely as my soul intends to live
- With that dread King that took our state upon him
- To free us from his father's wrathful curse,
- I do believe that violent hands were laid
- Upon the life of this thrice-famed duke.
-
- SUFFOLK: A dreadful oath, sworn with a solemn tongue!
- What instance gives Lord Warwick for his vow? 160
-
- WARWICK: See how the blood is settled in his face.
- Oft have I seen a timely-parted ghost,
- Of ashy semblance, meagre, pale and bloodless,
- Being all descended to the laboring heart;
- Who, in the conflict that it holds with death,
- Attracts the same for aidance 'gainst the enemy;
- Which with the heart there cools and ne'er returneth
- To blush and beautify the cheek again.
- But see, his face is black and full of blood,
- His eye-balls further out than when he lived, 170
- Staring full ghastly like a strangled man;
- His hair uprear'd, his nostrils stretched
- with struggling;
- His hands abroad display'd, as one that grasp'd
- And tugg'd for life and was by strength subdued:
- Look, on the sheets his hair you see, is sticking;
- His well-proportion'd beard made rough and rugged,
- Like to the summer's corn by tempest lodged.
- It cannot be but he was murder'd here;
- The least of all these signs were probable.
-
- SUFFOLK: Why, Warwick, who should do the duke to death? 180
- Myself and Beaufort had him in protection;
- And we, I hope, sir, are no murderers.
-
- WARWICK: But both of you were vow'd Duke Humphrey's foes,
- And you, forsooth, had the good duke to keep:
- 'Tis like you would not feast him like a friend;
- And 'tis well seen he found an enemy.
-
- QUEEN MARGARET: Then you, belike, suspect these noblemen
- As guilty of Duke Humphrey's timeless death.
-
- WARWICK: Who finds the heifer dead and bleeding fresh
- And sees fast by a butcher with an axe, 190
- But will suspect 'twas he that made the slaughter?
- Who finds the partridge in the puttock's nest,
- But may imagine how the bird was dead,
- Although the kite soar with unbloodied beak?
- Even so suspicious is this tragedy.
-
- QUEEN MARGARET: Are you the butcher, Suffolk? Where's your knife?
- Is Beaufort term'd a kite? Where are his talons?
-
- SUFFOLK: I wear no knife to slaughter sleeping men;
- But here's a vengeful sword, rusted with ease,
- That shall be scoured in his rancorous heart 200
- That slanders me with murder's crimson badge.
- Say, if thou darest, proud Lord of Warwick-shire,
- That I am faulty in Duke Humphrey's death.
-
- [Exeunt CARDINAL, SOMERSET, and others.]
-
- WARWICK: What dares not Warwick, if false Suffolk dare him?
-
- QUEEN MARGARET: He dares not calm his contumelious spirit
- Nor cease to be an arrogant controller,
- Though Suffolk dare him twenty thousand times.
-
- WARWICK: Madam, be still; with reverence may I say;
- For every word you speak in his behalf
- Is slander to your royal dignity. 210
-
- SUFFOLK: Blunt-witted lord, ignoble in demeanor!
- If ever lady wrong'd her lord so much,
- Thy mother took into her blameful bed
- Some stern untutor'd churl, and noble stock
- Was graft with crab-tree slip; whose fruit thou art,
- And never of the Nevils' noble race.
-
- WARWICK: But that the guilt of murder bucklers thee
- And I should rob the deathsman of his fee,
- Quitting thee thereby of ten thousand shames,
- And that my sovereign's presence makes me mild, 220
- I would, false murderous coward, on thy knee
- Make thee beg pardon for thy passed speech,
- And say it was thy mother that thou meant'st
- That thou thyself was born in bastardy;
- And after all this fearful homage done,
- Give thee thy hire and send thy soul to hell,
- Pernicious blood-sucker of sleeping men!
-
- SUFFOLK: Thou shall be waking well I shed thy blood,
- If from this presence thou darest go with me.
-
- WARWICK: Away even now, or I will drag thee hence: 230
- Unworthy though thou art, I'll cope with thee
- And do some service to Duke Humphrey's ghost.
-
- [Exeunt SUFFOLK and WARWICK.]
-
- KING HENRY VI: What stronger breastplate than a heart untainted!
- Thrice is he armed that hath his quarrel just,
- And he but naked, though lock'd up in steel
- Whose conscience with injustice is corrupted.
-
- [A noise within.]
-
- QUEEN MARGARET: What noise is this?
-
- {Re-enter SUFFOLK and WARWICK, with their
- weapons drawn.}
-
- KING HENRY VI: Why, how now, lords! your wrathful weapons drawn
- Here in our presence! dare you be so bold?
- Why, what tumultuous clamor have we here? 240
-
- SUFFOLK: The traitorous Warwick with the men of Bury
- Set all upon me, mighty sovereign.
-
- SALISBURY: [To the Commons, entering] Sirs, stand apart;
- the king shall know your mind.
- Dread lord, the commons send you word by me,
- Unless Lord Suffolk straight be done to death,
- Or banished fair England's territories,
- They will by violence tear him from your palace
- And torture him with grievous lingering death.
- They say, by him the good Duke Humphrey died;
- They say, in him they fear your highness' death; 250
- And mere instinct of love and loyalty,
- Free from a stubborn opposite intent,
- As being thought to contradict your liking,
- Makes them thus forward in his banishment.
- They say, in care of your most royal person,
- That if your highness should intend to sleep
- And charge that no man should disturb your rest
- In pain of your dislike or pain of death,
- Yet, notwithstanding such a strait edict,
- Were there a serpent seen, with forked tongue, 260
- That slily glided towards your majesty,
- It were but necessary you were waked,
- Lest, being suffer'd in that harmful slumber,
- The mortal worm might make the sleep eternal;
- And therefore do they cry, though you forbid,
- That they will guard you, whether you will or no,
- From such fell serpents as false Suffolk is,
- With whose envenomed and fatal sting,
- Your loving uncle, twenty times his worth,
- They say, is shamefully bereft of life. 270
-
- Commons: [Within] An answer from the king, my
- Lord of Salisbury!
-
- SUFFOLK: 'Tis like the commons, rude unpolish'd hinds,
- Could send such message to their sovereign:
- But you, my lord, were glad to be employ'd,
- To show how quaint an orator you are:
- But all the honor Salisbury hath won
- Is, that he was the lord ambassador
- Sent from a sort of tinkers to the king.
-
- Commons: [Within] An answer from the king, or we will
- all break in!
-
- KING HENRY VI: Go, Salisbury, and tell them all from me. 280
- I thank them for their tender loving care;
- And had I not been cited so by them,
- Yet did I purpose as they do entreat;
- For, sure, my thoughts do hourly prophesy
- Mischance unto my state by Suffolk's means:
- And therefore, by His majesty I swear,
- Whose far unworthy deputy I am,
- He shall not breathe infection in this air
- But three days longer, on the pain of death.
-
- [Exit SALISBURY.]
-
- QUEEN MARGARET: O Henry, let me plead for gentle Suffolk! 290
-
- KING HENRY VI: Ungentle queen, to call him gentle Suffolk!
- No more, I say: if thou dost plead for him,
- Thou wilt but add increase unto my wrath.
- Had I but said, I would have kept my word,
- But when I swear, it is irrevocable.
- If, after three days' space, thou here be'st found
- On any ground that I am ruler of,
- The world shall not be ransom for thy life.
- Come, Warwick, come, good Warwick, go with me;
- I have great matters to impart to thee. 300
-
- [Exeunt all but QUEEN MARGARET and SUFFOLK.]
-
- QUEEN MARGARET: Mischance and sorrow go along with you!
- Heart's discontent and sour affliction
- Be playfellows to keep you company!
- There's two of you; the devil make a third!
- And threefold vengeance tend upon your steps!
-
- SUFFOLK: Cease, gentle queen, these execrations,
- And let thy Suffolk take his heavy leave.
-
- QUEEN MARGARET: Fie, coward woman and soft-hearted wretch!
- Hast thou not spirit to curse thine enemy?
-
- SUFFOLK: A plague upon them! wherefore should I curse them? 310
- Would curses kill, as doth the mandrake's groan,
- I would invent as bitter-searching terms,
- As curst, as harsh and horrible to hear,
- Deliver'd strongly through my fixed teeth,
- With full as many signs of deadly hate,
- As lean-faced Envy in her loathsome cave:
- My tongue should stumble in mine earnest words;
- Mine eyes should sparkle like the beaten flint;
- Mine hair be fixed on end, as one distract;
- Ay, every joint should seem to curse and ban: 320
- And even now my burthen'd heart would break,
- Should I not curse them. Poison be their drink!
- Gall, worse than gall, the daintiest that they taste!
- Their sweetest shade a grove of cypress trees!
- Their chiefest prospect murdering basilisks!
- Their softest touch as smart as lizards' sting!
- Their music frightful as the serpent's hiss,
- And boding screech-owls make the concert full!
- All the foul terrors in dark-seated hell--
-
- QUEEN MARGARET: Enough, sweet Suffolk; thou torment'st thyself; 330
- And these dread curses, like the sun 'gainst glass,
- Or like an overcharged gun, recoil,
- And turn the force of them upon thyself.
-
- SUFFOLK: You bade me ban, and will you bid me leave?
- Now, by the ground that I am banish'd from,
- Well could I curse away a winter's night,
- Though standing naked on a mountain top,
- Where biting cold would never let grass grow,
- And think it but a minute spent in sport.
-
- QUEEN MARGARET: O, let me entreat thee cease. Give me thy hand, 340
- That I may dew it with my mournful tears;
- Nor let the rain of heaven wet this place,
- To wash away my woful monuments.
- O, could this kiss be printed in thy hand,
- That thou mightst think upon these by the seal,
- Through whom a thousand sighs are breathed for thee!
- So, get thee gone, that I may know my grief;
- 'Tis but surmised whiles thou art standing by,
- As one that surfeits thinking on a want.
- I will repeal thee, or, be well assured, 350
- Adventure to be banished myself:
- And banished I am, if but from thee.
- Go; speak not to me; even now be gone.
- O, go not yet! Even thus two friends condemn'd
- Embrace and kiss and take ten thousand leaves,
- Loather a hundred times to part than die.
- Yet now farewell; and farewell life with thee!
-
- SUFFOLK: Thus is poor Suffolk ten times banished;
- Once by the king, and three times thrice by thee.
- 'Tis not the land I care for, wert thou thence; 360
- A wilderness is populous enough,
- So Suffolk had thy heavenly company:
- For where thou art, there is the world itself,
- With every several pleasure in the world,
- And where thou art not, desolation.
- I can no more: live thou to joy thy life;
- Myself no joy in nought but that thou livest.
-
- {Enter VAUX.}
-
- QUEEN MARGARET: Wither goes Vaux so fast? what news, I prithee?
-
- VAUX: To signify unto his majesty
- That Cardinal Beaufort is at point of death; 370
- For suddenly a grievous sickness took him,
- That makes him gasp and stare and catch the air,
- Blaspheming God and cursing men on earth.
- Sometimes he talks as if Duke Humphrey's ghost
- Were by his side; sometime he calls the king,
- And whispers to his pillow, as to him,
- The secrets of his overcharged soul;
- And I am sent to tell his majesty
- That even now he cries aloud for him.
-
- QUEEN MARGARET: Go tell this heavy message to the king. 380
-
- [Exit VAUX.]
-
- Ay me! what is this world! what news are these!
- But wherefore grieve I at an hour's poor loss,
- Omitting Suffolk's exile, my soul's treasure?
- Why only, Suffolk, mourn I not for thee,
- And with the southern clouds contend in tears,
- Theirs for the earth's increase, mine for my sorrows?
- Now get thee hence: the king, thou know'st,
- is coming;
- If thou be found by me, thou art but dead.
-
- SUFFOLK: If I depart from thee, I cannot live;
- And in thy sight to die, what were it else 390
- But like a pleasant slumber in thy lap?
- Here could I breathe my soul into the air,
- As mild and gentle as the cradle-babe
- Dying with mother's dug between its lips:
- Where, from thy sight, I should be raging mad,
- And cry out for thee to close up mine eyes,
- To have thee with thy lips to stop my mouth;
- So shouldst thou either turn my flying soul,
- Or I should breathe it so into thy body,
- And then it lived in sweet Elysium. 400
- To die by thee were but to die in jest;
- From thee to die were torture more than death:
- O, let me stay, befall what may befall!
-
- QUEEN MARGARET: Away! though parting be a fretful corrosive,
- It is applied to a deathful wound.
- To France, sweet Suffolk: let me hear from thee;
- For wheresoe'er thou art in this world's globe,
- I'll have an Iris that shall find thee out.
-
- SUFFOLK: I go.
-
- QUEEN MARGARET: And take my heart with thee. 410
-
- SUFFOLK: A jewel, lock'd into the wofull'st cask
- That ever did contain a thing of worth.
- Even as a splitted bark, so sunder we
- This way fall I to death.
-
- QUEEN MARGARET: This way for me.
-
- [Exeunt severally.]
-