The First part of King Henry the Sixth

Players:

ACT I

ACT I, SCENE I. Westminster Abbey.

[Dead March. Enter the Funeral of KING HENRY the Fifth, attended on by Dukes of BEDFORD, Regent of France; GLOUCESTER, Protector; and EXETER, Earl of WARWICK, the BISHOP OF WINCHESTER, Heralds, & c]

  • BEDFORD:

  • Hung be the heavens with black, yield day to night!
  • Comets, importing change of times and states,
  • Brandish your crystal tresses in the sky,
  • And with them scourge the bad revolting stars
  • That have consented unto Henry's death!
  • King Henry the Fifth, too famous to live long!
  • England ne'er lost a king of so much worth.
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • England ne'er had a king until his time.
  • Virtue he had, deserving to command:
  • His brandish'd sword did blind men with his beams:
  • His arms spread wider than a dragon's wings;
  • His sparking eyes, replete with wrathful fire,
  • More dazzled and drove back his enemies
  • Than mid-day sun fierce bent against their faces.
  • What should I say? his deeds exceed all speech:
  • He ne'er lift up his hand but conquered.
  • EXETER:

  • We mourn in black: why mourn we not in blood?
  • Henry is dead and never shall revive:
  • Upon a wooden coffin we attend,
  • And death's dishonourable victory
  • We with our stately presence glorify,
  • Like captives bound to a triumphant car.
  • What! shall we curse the planets of mishap
  • That plotted thus our glory's overthrow?
  • Or shall we think the subtle-witted French
  • Conjurers and sorcerers, that afraid of him
  • By magic verses have contrived his end?
  • BISHOP OF WINCHESTER:

  • He was a king bless'd of the King of kings.
  • Unto the French the dreadful judgement-day
  • So dreadful will not be as was his sight.
  • The battles of the Lord of hosts he fought:
  • The church's prayers made him so prosperous.
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • The church! where is it? Had not churchmen pray'd,
  • His thread of life had not so soon decay'd:
  • None do you like but an effeminate prince,
  • Whom, like a school-boy, you may over-awe.
  • BISHOP OF WINCHESTER:

  • Gloucester, whate'er we like, thou art protector
  • And lookest to command the prince and realm.
  • Thy wife is proud; she holdeth thee in awe,
  • More than God or religious churchmen may.
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • Name not religion, for thou lovest the flesh,
  • And ne'er throughout the year to church thou go'st
  • Except it be to pray against thy foes.
  • BEDFORD:

  • Cease, cease these jars and rest your minds in peace:
  • Let's to the altar: heralds, wait on us:
  • Instead of gold, we'll offer up our arms:
  • Since arms avail not now that Henry's dead.
  • Posterity, await for wretched years,
  • When at their mothers' moist eyes babes shall suck,
  • Our isle be made a nourish of salt tears,
  • And none but women left to wail the dead.
  • Henry the Fifth, thy ghost I invocate:
  • Prosper this realm, keep it from civil broils,
  • Combat with adverse planets in the heavens!
  • A far more glorious star thy soul will make
  • Than Julius Caesar or bright--
  • [Enter a Messenger]

  • Messenger:

  • My honourable lords, health to you all!
  • Sad tidings bring I to you out of France,
  • Of loss, of slaughter and discomfiture:
  • Guienne, Champagne, Rheims, Orleans,
  • Paris, Guysors, Poictiers, are all quite lost.
  • BEDFORD:

  • What say'st thou, man, before dead Henry's corse?
  • Speak softly, or the loss of those great towns
  • Will make him burst his lead and rise from death.
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • Is Paris lost? is Rouen yielded up?
  • If Henry were recall'd to life again,
  • These news would cause him once more yield the ghost.
  • EXETER:

  • How were they lost? what treachery was used?
  • Messenger:

  • No treachery; but want of men and money.
  • Amongst the soldiers this is muttered,
  • That here you maintain several factions,
  • And whilst a field should be dispatch'd and fought,
  • You are disputing of your generals:
  • One would have lingering wars with little cost;
  • Another would fly swift, but wanteth wings;
  • A third thinks, without expense at all,
  • By guileful fair words peace may be obtain'd.
  • Awake, awake, English nobility!
  • Let not sloth dim your horrors new-begot:
  • Cropp'd are the flower-de-luces in your arms;
  • Of England's coat one half is cut away.
  • EXETER:

  • Were our tears wanting to this funeral,
  • These tidings would call forth their flowing tides.
  • BEDFORD:

  • Me they concern; Regent I am of France.
  • Give me my steeled coat. I'll fight for France.
  • Away with these disgraceful wailing robes!
  • Wounds will I lend the French instead of eyes,
  • To weep their intermissive miseries.
  • [Enter to them another Messenger]

  • Messenger:

  • Lords, view these letters full of bad mischance.
  • France is revolted from the English quite,
  • Except some petty towns of no import:
  • The Dauphin Charles is crowned king of Rheims;
  • The Bastard of Orleans with him is join'd;
  • Reignier, Duke of Anjou, doth take his part;
  • The Duke of Alencon flieth to his side.
  • EXETER:

  • The Dauphin crowned king! all fly to him!
  • O, whither shall we fly from this reproach?
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • We will not fly, but to our enemies' throats.
  • Bedford, if thou be slack, I'll fight it out.
  • BEDFORD:

  • Gloucester, why doubt'st thou of my forwardness?
  • An army have I muster'd in my thoughts,
  • Wherewith already France is overrun.
  • [Enter another Messenger]

  • Messenger:

  • My gracious lords, to add to your laments,
  • Wherewith you now bedew King Henry's hearse,
  • I must inform you of a dismal fight
  • Betwixt the stout Lord Talbot and the French.
  • BISHOP OF WINCHESTER:

  • What! wherein Talbot overcame? is't so?
  • Messenger:

  • O, no; wherein Lord Talbot was o'erthrown:
  • The circumstance I'll tell you more at large.
  • The tenth of August last this dreadful lord,
  • Retiring from the siege of Orleans,
  • Having full scarce six thousand in his troop.
  • By three and twenty thousand of the French
  • Was round encompassed and set upon.
  • No leisure had he to enrank his men;
  • He wanted pikes to set before his archers;
  • Instead whereof sharp stakes pluck'd out of hedges
  • They pitched in the ground confusedly,
  • To keep the horsemen off from breaking in.
  • More than three hours the fight continued;
  • Where valiant Talbot above human thought
  • Enacted wonders with his sword and lance:
  • Hundreds he sent to hell, and none durst stand him;
  • Here, there, and every where, enraged he flew:
  • The French exclaim'd, the devil was in arms;
  • All the whole army stood agazed on him:
  • His soldiers spying his undaunted spirit
  • A Talbot! a Talbot! cried out amain
  • And rush'd into the bowels of the battle.
  • Here had the conquest fully been seal'd up,
  • If Sir John Fastolfe had not play'd the coward:
  • He, being in the vaward, placed behind
  • With purpose to relieve and follow them,
  • Cowardly fled, not having struck one stroke.
  • Hence grew the general wreck and massacre;
  • Enclosed were they with their enemies:
  • A base Walloon, to win the Dauphin's grace,
  • Thrust Talbot with a spear into the back,
  • Whom all France with their chief assembled strength
  • Durst not presume to look once in the face.
  • BEDFORD:

  • Is Talbot slain? then I will slay myself,
  • For living idly here in pomp and ease,
  • Whilst such a worthy leader, wanting aid,
  • Unto his dastard foemen is betray'd.
  • Messenger:

  • O no, he lives; but is took prisoner,
  • And Lord Scales with him and Lord Hungerford:
  • Most of the rest slaughter'd or took likewise.
  • BEDFORD:

  • His ransom there is none but I shall pay:
  • I'll hale the Dauphin headlong from his throne:
  • His crown shall be the ransom of my friend;
  • Four of their lords I'll change for one of ours.
  • Farewell, my masters; to my task will I;
  • Bonfires in France forthwith I am to make,
  • To keep our great Saint George's feast withal:
  • Ten thousand soldiers with me I will take,
  • Whose bloody deeds shall make all Europe quake.
  • Messenger:

  • So you had need; for Orleans is besieged;
  • The English army is grown weak and faint:
  • The Earl of Salisbury craveth supply,
  • And hardly keeps his men from mutiny,
  • Since they, so few, watch such a multitude.
  • EXETER:

  • Remember, lords, your oaths to Henry sworn,
  • Either to quell the Dauphin utterly,
  • Or bring him in obedience to your yoke.
  • BEDFORD:

  • I do remember it; and here take my leave,
  • To go about my preparation.
  • [Exit]

  • GLOUCESTER:

  • I'll to the Tower with all the haste I can,
  • To view the artillery and munition;
  • And then I will proclaim young Henry king.
  • [Exit]

  • EXETER:

  • To Eltham will I, where the young king is,
  • Being ordain'd his special governor,
  • And for his safety there I'll best devise.
  • [Exit]

  • BISHOP OF WINCHESTER:

  • Each hath his place and function to attend:
  • I am left out; for me nothing remains.
  • But long I will not be Jack out of office:
  • The king from Eltham I intend to steal
  • And sit at chiefest stern of public weal.
  • [Exeunt]

ACT I, SCENE II. France. Before Orleans.

[Sound a flourish. Enter CHARLES, ALENCON, and REIGNIER, marching with drum and Soldiers]

  • CHARLES:

  • Mars his true moving, even as in the heavens
  • So in the earth, to this day is not known:
  • Late did he shine upon the English side;
  • Now we are victors; upon us he smiles.
  • What towns of any moment but we have?
  • At pleasure here we lie near Orleans;
  • Otherwhiles the famish'd English, like pale ghosts,
  • Faintly besiege us one hour in a month.
  • ALENCON:

  • They want their porridge and their fat bull-beeves:
  • Either they must be dieted like mules
  • And have their provender tied to their mouths
  • Or piteous they will look, like drowned mice.
  • REIGNIER:

  • Let's raise the siege: why live we idly here?
  • Talbot is taken, whom we wont to fear:
  • Remaineth none but mad-brain'd Salisbury;
  • And he may well in fretting spend his gall,
  • Nor men nor money hath he to make war.
  • CHARLES:

  • Sound, sound alarum! we will rush on them.
  • Now for the honour of the forlorn French!
  • Him I forgive my death that killeth me
  • When he sees me go back one foot or fly.
  • [Exeunt]

  • [Here alarum; they are beaten back by the English with great loss. Re-enter CHARLES, ALENCON, and REIGNIER]

  • CHARLES:

  • Who ever saw the like? what men have I!
  • Dogs! cowards! dastards! I would ne'er have fled,
  • But that they left me 'midst my enemies.
  • REIGNIER:

  • Salisbury is a desperate homicide;
  • He fighteth as one weary of his life.
  • The other lords, like lions wanting food,
  • Do rush upon us as their hungry prey.
  • ALENCON:

  • Froissart, a countryman of ours, records,
  • England all Olivers and Rowlands bred,
  • During the time Edward the Third did reign.
  • More truly now may this be verified;
  • For none but Samsons and Goliases
  • It sendeth forth to skirmish. One to ten!
  • Lean, raw-boned rascals! who would e'er suppose
  • They had such courage and audacity?
  • CHARLES:

  • Let's leave this town; for they are hare-brain'd slaves,
  • And hunger will enforce them to be more eager:
  • Of old I know them; rather with their teeth
  • The walls they'll tear down than forsake the siege.
  • REIGNIER:

  • I think, by some odd gimmors or device
  • Their arms are set like clocks, stiff to strike on;
  • Else ne'er could they hold out so as they do.
  • By my consent, we'll even let them alone.
  • ALENCON:

  • Be it so.
  • [Enter the BASTARD OF ORLEANS]

  • BASTARD OF ORLEANS:

  • Where's the Prince Dauphin? I have news for him.
  • CHARLES:

  • Bastard of Orleans, thrice welcome to us.
  • BASTARD OF ORLEANS:

  • Methinks your looks are sad, your cheer appall'd:
  • Hath the late overthrow wrought this offence?
  • Be not dismay'd, for succor is at hand:
  • A holy maid hither with me I bring,
  • Which by a vision sent to her from heaven
  • Ordained is to raise this tedious siege
  • And drive the English forth the bounds of France.
  • The spirit of deep prophecy she hath,
  • Exceeding the nine sibyls of old Rome:
  • What's past and what's to come she can descry.
  • Speak, shall I call her in? Believe my words,
  • For they are certain and unfallible.
  • CHARLES:

  • Go, call her in.
  • [Exit BASTARD OF ORLEANS]

  • But first, to try her skill,
  • Reignier, stand thou as Dauphin in my place:
  • Question her proudly; let thy looks be stern:
  • By this means shall we sound what skill she hath.
  • [Re-enter the BASTARD OF ORLEANS, with JOAN LA PUCELLE]

  • REIGNIER:

  • Fair maid, is't thou wilt do these wondrous feats?
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Reignier, is't thou that thinkest to beguile me?
  • Where is the Dauphin? Come, come from behind;
  • I know thee well, though never seen before.
  • Be not amazed, there's nothing hid from me:
  • In private will I talk with thee apart.
  • Stand back, you lords, and give us leave awhile.
  • REIGNIER:

  • She takes upon her bravely at first dash.
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Dauphin, I am by birth a shepherd's daughter,
  • My wit untrain'd in any kind of art.
  • Heaven and our Lady gracious hath it pleased
  • To shine on my contemptible estate:
  • Lo, whilst I waited on my tender lambs,
  • And to sun's parching heat display'd my cheeks,
  • God's mother deigned to appear to me
  • And in a vision full of majesty
  • Will'd me to leave my base vocation
  • And free my country from calamity:
  • Her aid she promised and assured success:
  • In complete glory she reveal'd herself;
  • And, whereas I was black and swart before,
  • With those clear rays which she infused on me
  • That beauty am I bless'd with which you see.
  • Ask me what question thou canst possible,
  • And I will answer unpremeditated:
  • My courage try by combat, if thou darest,
  • And thou shalt find that I exceed my sex.
  • Resolve on this, thou shalt be fortunate,
  • If thou receive me for thy warlike mate.
  • CHARLES:

  • Thou hast astonish'd me with thy high terms:
  • Only this proof I'll of thy valour make,
  • In single combat thou shalt buckle with me,
  • And if thou vanquishest, thy words are true;
  • Otherwise I renounce all confidence.
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • I am prepared: here is my keen-edged sword,
  • Deck'd with five flower-de-luces on each side;
  • The which at Touraine, in Saint Katharine's
  • churchyard,
  • Out of a great deal of old iron I chose forth.
  • CHARLES:

  • Then come, o' God's name; I fear no woman.
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • And while I live, I'll ne'er fly from a man.
  • [Here they fight, and JOAN LA PUCELLE overcomes]

  • CHARLES:

  • Stay, stay thy hands! thou art an Amazon
  • And fightest with the sword of Deborah.
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Christ's mother helps me, else I were too weak.
  • CHARLES:

  • Whoe'er helps thee, 'tis thou that must help me:
  • Impatiently I burn with thy desire;
  • My heart and hands thou hast at once subdued.
  • Excellent Pucelle, if thy name be so,
  • Let me thy servant and not sovereign be:
  • 'Tis the French Dauphin sueth to thee thus.
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • I must not yield to any rites of love,
  • For my profession's sacred from above:
  • When I have chased all thy foes from hence,
  • Then will I think upon a recompense.
  • CHARLES:

  • Meantime look gracious on thy prostrate thrall.
  • REIGNIER:

  • My lord, methinks, is very long in talk.
  • ALENCON:

  • Doubtless he shrives this woman to her smock;
  • Else ne'er could he so long protract his speech.
  • REIGNIER:

  • Shall we disturb him, since he keeps no mean?
  • ALENCON:

  • He may mean more than we poor men do know:
  • These women are shrewd tempters with their tongues.
  • REIGNIER:

  • My lord, where are you? what devise you on?
  • Shall we give over Orleans, or no?
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Why, no, I say, distrustful recreants!
  • Fight till the last gasp; I will be your guard.
  • CHARLES:

  • What she says I'll confirm: we'll fight it out.
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Assign'd am I to be the English scourge.
  • This night the siege assuredly I'll raise:
  • Expect Saint Martin's summer, halcyon days,
  • Since I have entered into these wars.
  • Glory is like a circle in the water,
  • Which never ceaseth to enlarge itself
  • Till by broad spreading it disperse to nought.
  • With Henry's death the English circle ends;
  • Dispersed are the glories it included.
  • Now am I like that proud insulting ship
  • Which Caesar and his fortune bare at once.
  • CHARLES:

  • Was Mahomet inspired with a dove?
  • Thou with an eagle art inspired then.
  • Helen, the mother of great Constantine,
  • Nor yet Saint Philip's daughters, were like thee.
  • Bright star of Venus, fall'n down on the earth,
  • How may I reverently worship thee enough?
  • ALENCON:

  • Leave off delays, and let us raise the siege.
  • REIGNIER:

  • Woman, do what thou canst to save our honours;
  • Drive them from Orleans and be immortalized.
  • CHARLES:

  • Presently we'll try: come, let's away about it:
  • No prophet will I trust, if she prove false.
  • [Exeunt]

ACT I, SCENE III. London. Before the Tower.

[Enter GLOUCESTER, with his Serving-men in blue coats]

  • GLOUCESTER:

  • I am come to survey the Tower this day:
  • Since Henry's death, I fear, there is conveyance.
  • Where be these warders, that they wait not here?
  • Open the gates; 'tis Gloucester that calls.
  • First Warder:

  • [Within]

  • Who's there that knocks so imperiously?
  • First Serving-Man It is the noble Duke of Gloucester.
  • Second Warder:

  • [Within]

  • Whoe'er he be, you may not be let in.
  • First Serving-Man Villains, answer you so the lord protector?
  • First Warder:

  • [Within]

  • The Lord protect him! so we answer him:
  • We do no otherwise than we are will'd.
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • Who willed you? or whose will stands but mine?
  • There's none protector of the realm but I.
  • Break up the gates, I'll be your warrantize.
  • Shall I be flouted thus by dunghill grooms?
  • [Gloucester's men rush at the Tower Gates, and WOODVILE the Lieutenant speaks within]

  • WOODVILE:

  • What noise is this? what traitors have we here?
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • Lieutenant, is it you whose voice I hear?
  • Open the gates; here's Gloucester that would enter.
  • WOODVILE:

  • Have patience, noble duke; I may not open;
  • The Cardinal of Winchester forbids:
  • From him I have express commandment
  • That thou nor none of thine shall be let in.
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • Faint-hearted Woodvile, prizest him 'fore me?
  • Arrogant Winchester, that haughty prelate,
  • Whom Henry, our late sovereign, ne'er could brook?
  • Thou art no friend to God or to the king:
  • Open the gates, or I'll shut thee out shortly.
  • Serving-Men Open the gates unto the lord protector,
  • Or we'll burst them open, if that you come not quickly.
  • [Enter to the Protector at the Tower Gates]

  • [BISHOP OF WINCHESTER and his men in tawny coats]

  • BISHOP OF WINCHESTER:

  • How now, ambitious Humphry! what means this?
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • Peel'd priest, dost thou command me to be shut out?
  • BISHOP OF WINCHESTER:

  • I do, thou most usurping proditor,
  • And not protector, of the king or realm.
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • Stand back, thou manifest conspirator,
  • Thou that contrivedst to murder our dead lord;
  • Thou that givest whores indulgences to sin:
  • I'll canvass thee in thy broad cardinal's hat,
  • If thou proceed in this thy insolence.
  • BISHOP OF WINCHESTER:

  • Nay, stand thou back, I will not budge a foot:
  • This be Damascus, be thou cursed Cain,
  • To slay thy brother Abel, if thou wilt.
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • I will not slay thee, but I'll drive thee back:
  • Thy scarlet robes as a child's bearing-cloth
  • I'll use to carry thee out of this place.
  • BISHOP OF WINCHESTER:

  • Do what thou darest; I beard thee to thy face.
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • What! am I dared and bearded to my face?
  • Draw, men, for all this privileged place;
  • Blue coats to tawny coats. Priest, beware your beard,
  • I mean to tug it and to cuff you soundly:
  • Under my feet I stamp thy cardinal's hat:
  • In spite of pope or dignities of church,
  • Here by the cheeks I'll drag thee up and down.
  • BISHOP OF WINCHESTER:

  • Gloucester, thou wilt answer this before the pope.
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • Winchester goose, I cry, a rope! a rope!
  • Now beat them hence; why do you let them stay?
  • Thee I'll chase hence, thou wolf in sheep's array.
  • Out, tawny coats! out, scarlet hypocrite!
  • [Here GLOUCESTER's men beat out BISHOP OF WINCHESTER's men, and enter in the hurly- burly the Mayor of London and his Officers]

  • Mayor:

  • Fie, lords! that you, being supreme magistrates,
  • Thus contumeliously should break the peace!
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • Peace, mayor! thou know'st little of my wrongs:
  • Here's Beaufort, that regards nor God nor king,
  • Hath here distrain'd the Tower to his use.
  • BISHOP OF WINCHESTER:

  • Here's Gloucester, a foe to citizens,
  • One that still motions war and never peace,
  • O'ercharging your free purses with large fines,
  • That seeks to overthrow religion,
  • Because he is protector of the realm,
  • And would have armour here out of the Tower,
  • To crown himself king and suppress the prince.
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • I will not answer thee with words, but blows.
  • [Here they skirmish again]

  • Mayor:

  • Naught rests for me in this tumultuous strife
  • But to make open proclamation:
  • Come, officer; as loud as e'er thou canst,
  • Cry.
  • Officer:

  • All manner of men assembled here in arms this day
  • against God's peace and the king's, we charge and
  • command you, in his highness' name, to repair to
  • your several dwelling-places; and not to wear,
  • handle, or use any sword, weapon, or dagger,
  • henceforward, upon pain of death.
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • Cardinal, I'll be no breaker of the law:
  • But we shall meet, and break our minds at large.
  • BISHOP OF WINCHESTER:

  • Gloucester, we will meet; to thy cost, be sure:
  • Thy heart-blood I will have for this day's work.
  • Mayor:

  • I'll call for clubs, if you will not away.
  • This cardinal's more haughty than the devil.
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • Mayor, farewell: thou dost but what thou mayst.
  • BISHOP OF WINCHESTER:

  • Abominable Gloucester, guard thy head;
  • For I intend to have it ere long.
  • [Exeunt, severally, GLOUCESTER and BISHOP OF WINCHESTER with their Serving-men]

  • Mayor:

  • See the coast clear'd, and then we will depart.
  • Good God, these nobles should such stomachs bear!
  • I myself fight not once in forty year.
  • [Exeunt]

ACT I, SCENE IV. Orleans.

[Enter, on the walls, a Master Gunner and his Boy]

  • Master Gunner:

  • Sirrah, thou know'st how Orleans is besieged,
  • And how the English have the suburbs won.
  • Boy:

  • Father, I know; and oft have shot at them,
  • Howe'er unfortunate I miss'd my aim.
  • Master-Gunner :

  • But now thou shalt not. Be thou ruled by me:
  • Chief master-gunner am I of this town;
  • Something I must do to procure me grace.
  • The prince's espials have informed me
  • How the English, in the suburbs close intrench'd,
  • Wont, through a secret grate of iron bars
  • In yonder tower, to overpeer the city,
  • And thence discover how with most advantage
  • They may vex us with shot, or with assault.
  • To intercept this inconvenience,
  • A piece of ordnance 'gainst it I have placed;
  • And even these three days have I watch'd,
  • If I could see them.
  • Now do thou watch, for I can stay no longer.
  • If thou spy'st any, run and bring me word;
  • And thou shalt find me at the governor's.
  • [Exit]

  • Boy:

  • Father, I warrant you; take you no care;
  • I'll never trouble you, if I may spy them.
  • [Exit Enter, on the turrets, SALISBURY and TALBOT, GLANSDALE, GARGRAVE, and others]

  • SALISBURY:

  • Talbot, my life, my joy, again return'd!
  • How wert thou handled being prisoner?
  • Or by what means got'st thou to be released?
  • Discourse, I prithee, on this turret's top.
  • TALBOT:

  • The Duke of Bedford had a prisoner
  • Call'd the brave Lord Ponton de Santrailles;
  • For him was I exchanged and ransomed.
  • But with a baser man of arms by far
  • Once in contempt they would have barter'd me:
  • Which I, disdaining, scorn'd; and craved death,
  • Rather than I would be so vile esteem'd.
  • In fine, redeem'd I was as I desired.
  • But, O! the treacherous Fastolfe wounds my heart,
  • Whom with my bare fists I would execute,
  • If I now had him brought into my power.
  • SALISBURY:

  • Yet tell'st thou not how thou wert entertain'd.
  • TALBOT:

  • With scoffs and scorns and contumelious taunts.
  • In open market-place produced they me,
  • To be a public spectacle to all:
  • Here, said they, is the terror of the French,
  • The scarecrow that affrights our children so.
  • Then broke I from the officers that led me,
  • And with my nails digg'd stones out of the ground,
  • To hurl at the beholders of my shame:
  • My grisly countenance made others fly;
  • None durst come near for fear of sudden death.
  • In iron walls they deem'd me not secure;
  • So great fear of my name 'mongst them was spread,
  • That they supposed I could rend bars of steel,
  • And spurn in pieces posts of adamant:
  • Wherefore a guard of chosen shot I had,
  • That walked about me every minute-while;
  • And if I did but stir out of my bed,
  • Ready they were to shoot me to the heart.
  • [Enter the Boy with a linstock]

  • SALISBURY:

  • I grieve to hear what torments you endured,
  • But we will be revenged sufficiently
  • Now it is supper-time in Orleans:
  • Here, through this grate, I count each one
  • and view the Frenchmen how they fortify:
  • Let us look in; the sight will much delight thee.
  • Sir Thomas Gargrave, and Sir William Glansdale,
  • Let me have your express opinions
  • Where is best place to make our battery next.
  • GARGRAVE:

  • I think, at the north gate; for there stand lords.
  • GLANSDALE:

  • And I, here, at the bulwark of the bridge.
  • TALBOT:

  • For aught I see, this city must be famish'd,
  • Or with light skirmishes enfeebled.
  • [Here they shoot. SALISBURY and GARGRAVE fall]

  • SALISBURY:

  • O Lord, have mercy on us, wretched sinners!
  • GARGRAVE:

  • O Lord, have mercy on me, woful man!
  • TALBOT:

  • What chance is this that suddenly hath cross'd us?
  • Speak, Salisbury; at least, if thou canst speak:
  • How farest thou, mirror of all martial men?
  • One of thy eyes and thy cheek's side struck off!
  • Accursed tower! accursed fatal hand
  • That hath contrived this woful tragedy!
  • In thirteen battles Salisbury o'ercame;
  • Henry the Fifth he first train'd to the wars;
  • Whilst any trump did sound, or drum struck up,
  • His sword did ne'er leave striking in the field.
  • Yet livest thou, Salisbury? though thy speech doth fail,
  • One eye thou hast, to look to heaven for grace:
  • The sun with one eye vieweth all the world.
  • Heaven, be thou gracious to none alive,
  • If Salisbury wants mercy at thy hands!
  • Bear hence his body; I will help to bury it.
  • Sir Thomas Gargrave, hast thou any life?
  • Speak unto Talbot; nay, look up to him.
  • Salisbury, cheer thy spirit with this comfort;
  • Thou shalt not die whiles--
  • He beckons with his hand and smiles on me.
  • As who should say 'When I am dead and gone,
  • Remember to avenge me on the French.'
  • Plantagenet, I will; and like thee, Nero,
  • Play on the lute, beholding the towns burn:
  • Wretched shall France be only in my name.
  • [Here an alarum, and it thunders and lightens]

  • What stir is this? what tumult's in the heavens?
  • Whence cometh this alarum and the noise?
  • [Enter a Messenger]

  • Messenger:

  • My lord, my lord, the French have gathered head:
  • The Dauphin, with one Joan la Pucelle join'd,
  • A holy prophetess new risen up,
  • Is come with a great power to raise the siege.
  • [Here SALISBURY lifteth himself up and groans]

  • TALBOT:

  • Hear, hear how dying Salisbury doth groan!
  • It irks his heart he cannot be revenged.
  • Frenchmen, I'll be a Salisbury to you:
  • Pucelle or puzzel, dolphin or dogfish,
  • Your hearts I'll stamp out with my horse's heels,
  • And make a quagmire of your mingled brains.
  • Convey me Salisbury into his tent,
  • And then we'll try what these dastard Frenchmen dare.
  • [Alarum. Exeunt]

ACT I, SCENE V. The same.

[Here an alarum again: and TALBOT pursueth the DAUPHIN, and driveth him: then enter JOAN LA PUCELLE, driving Englishmen before her, and exit after them then re-enter TALBOT]

  • TALBOT:

  • Where is my strength, my valour, and my force?
  • Our English troops retire, I cannot stay them:
  • A woman clad in armour chaseth them.
  • [Re-enter JOAN LA PUCELLE]

  • Here, here she comes. I'll have a bout with thee;
  • Devil or devil's dam, I'll conjure thee:
  • Blood will I draw on thee, thou art a witch,
  • And straightway give thy soul to him thou servest.
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Come, come, 'tis only I that must disgrace thee.
  • [Here they fight]

  • TALBOT:

  • Heavens, can you suffer hell so to prevail?
  • My breast I'll burst with straining of my courage
  • And from my shoulders crack my arms asunder.
  • But I will chastise this high-minded strumpet.
  • [They fight again]

  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Talbot, farewell; thy hour is not yet come:
  • I must go victual Orleans forthwith.
  • [A short alarum; then enter the town with soldiers]

  • O'ertake me, if thou canst; I scorn thy strength.
  • Go, go, cheer up thy hungry-starved men;
  • Help Salisbury to make his testament:
  • This day is ours, as many more shall be.
  • [Exit]

  • TALBOT:

  • My thoughts are whirled like a potter's wheel;
  • I know not where I am, nor what I do;
  • A witch, by fear, not force, like Hannibal,
  • Drives back our troops and conquers as she lists:
  • So bees with smoke and doves with noisome stench
  • Are from their hives and houses driven away.
  • They call'd us for our fierceness English dogs;
  • Now, like to whelps, we crying run away.
  • [A short alarum]

  • Hark, countrymen! either renew the fight,
  • Or tear the lions out of England's coat;
  • Renounce your soil, give sheep in lions' stead:
  • Sheep run not half so treacherous from the wolf,
  • Or horse or oxen from the leopard,
  • As you fly from your oft-subdued slaves.
  • [Alarum. Here another skirmish]

  • It will not be: retire into your trenches:
  • You all consented unto Salisbury's death,
  • For none would strike a stroke in his revenge.
  • Pucelle is enter'd into Orleans,
  • In spite of us or aught that we could do.
  • O, would I were to die with Salisbury!
  • The shame hereof will make me hide my head.
  • [Exit TALBOT. Alarum; retreat; flourish]

ACT I, SCENE VI. The same.

[Enter, on the walls, JOAN LA PUCELLE, CHARLES, REIGNIER, ALENCON, and Soldiers]

  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Advance our waving colours on the walls;
  • Rescued is Orleans from the English
  • Thus Joan la Pucelle hath perform'd her word.
  • CHARLES:

  • Divinest creature, Astraea's daughter,
  • How shall I honour thee for this success?
  • Thy promises are like Adonis' gardens
  • That one day bloom'd and fruitful were the next.
  • France, triumph in thy glorious prophetess!
  • Recover'd is the town of Orleans:
  • More blessed hap did ne'er befall our state.
  • REIGNIER:

  • Why ring not out the bells aloud throughout the town?
  • Dauphin, command the citizens make bonfires
  • And feast and banquet in the open streets,
  • To celebrate the joy that God hath given us.
  • ALENCON:

  • All France will be replete with mirth and joy,
  • When they shall hear how we have play'd the men.
  • CHARLES:

  • 'Tis Joan, not we, by whom the day is won;
  • For which I will divide my crown with her,
  • And all the priests and friars in my realm
  • Shall in procession sing her endless praise.
  • A statelier pyramis to her I'll rear
  • Than Rhodope's or Memphis' ever was:
  • In memory of her when she is dead,
  • Her ashes, in an urn more precious
  • Than the rich-jewel'd of Darius,
  • Transported shall be at high festivals
  • Before the kings and queens of France.
  • No longer on Saint Denis will we cry,
  • But Joan la Pucelle shall be France's saint.
  • Come in, and let us banquet royally,
  • After this golden day of victory.
  • [Flourish. Exeunt]

ACT II

ACT II, SCENE I. Before Orleans.

[Enter a Sergeant of a band with two Sentinels]

  • Sergeant:

  • Sirs, take your places and be vigilant:
  • If any noise or soldier you perceive
  • Near to the walls, by some apparent sign
  • Let us have knowledge at the court of guard.
  • First Sentinel:

  • Sergeant, you shall.
  • [Exit Sergeant]

  • Thus are poor servitors,
  • When others sleep upon their quiet beds,
  • Constrain'd to watch in darkness, rain and cold.
  • [Enter TALBOT, BEDFORD, BURGUNDY, and Forces, with scaling-ladders, their drums beating a dead march]

  • TALBOT:

  • Lord Regent, and redoubted Burgundy,
  • By whose approach the regions of Artois,
  • Wallon and Picardy are friends to us,
  • This happy night the Frenchmen are secure,
  • Having all day caroused and banqueted:
  • Embrace we then this opportunity
  • As fitting best to quittance their deceit
  • Contrived by art and baleful sorcery.
  • BEDFORD:

  • Coward of France! how much he wrongs his fame,
  • Despairing of his own arm's fortitude,
  • To join with witches and the help of hell!
  • BURGUNDY:

  • Traitors have never other company.
  • But what's that Pucelle whom they term so pure?
  • TALBOT:

  • A maid, they say.
  • BEDFORD:

  • A maid! and be so martial!
  • BURGUNDY:

  • Pray God she prove not masculine ere long,
  • If underneath the standard of the French
  • She carry armour as she hath begun.
  • TALBOT:

  • Well, let them practise and converse with spirits:
  • God is our fortress, in whose conquering name
  • Let us resolve to scale their flinty bulwarks.
  • BEDFORD:

  • Ascend, brave Talbot; we will follow thee.
  • TALBOT:

  • Not all together: better far, I guess,
  • That we do make our entrance several ways;
  • That, if it chance the one of us do fail,
  • The other yet may rise against their force.
  • BEDFORD:

  • Agreed: I'll to yond corner.
  • BURGUNDY:

  • And I to this.
  • TALBOT:

  • And here will Talbot mount, or make his grave.
  • Now, Salisbury, for thee, and for the right
  • Of English Henry, shall this night appear
  • How much in duty I am bound to both.
  • Sentinels:

  • Arm! arm! the enemy doth make assault!
  • [Cry:]

  • 'St. George,' 'A Talbot.'
  • [The French leap over the walls in their shirts. Enter, several ways, the BASTARD OF ORLEANS, ALENCON, and REIGNIER, half ready, and half unready]

  • ALENCON:

  • How now, my lords! what, all unready so?
  • BASTARD OF ORLEANS:

  • Unready! ay, and glad we 'scaped so well.
  • REIGNIER:

  • 'Twas time, I trow, to wake and leave our beds,
  • Hearing alarums at our chamber-doors.
  • ALENCON:

  • Of all exploits since first I follow'd arms,
  • Ne'er heard I of a warlike enterprise
  • More venturous or desperate than this.
  • BASTARD OF ORLEANS:

  • I think this Talbot be a fiend of hell.
  • REIGNIER:

  • If not of hell, the heavens, sure, favour him.
  • ALENCON:

  • Here cometh Charles: I marvel how he sped.
  • BASTARD OF ORLEANS:

  • Tut, holy Joan was his defensive guard.
  • [Enter CHARLES and JOAN LA PUCELLE]

  • CHARLES:

  • Is this thy cunning, thou deceitful dame?
  • Didst thou at first, to flatter us withal,
  • Make us partakers of a little gain,
  • That now our loss might be ten times so much?
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Wherefore is Charles impatient with his friend!
  • At all times will you have my power alike?
  • Sleeping or waking must I still prevail,
  • Or will you blame and lay the fault on me?
  • Improvident soldiers! had your watch been good,
  • This sudden mischief never could have fall'n.
  • CHARLES:

  • Duke of Alencon, this was your default,
  • That, being captain of the watch to-night,
  • Did look no better to that weighty charge.
  • ALENCON:

  • Had all your quarters been as safely kept
  • As that whereof I had the government,
  • We had not been thus shamefully surprised.
  • BASTARD OF ORLEANS:

  • Mine was secure.
  • REIGNIER:

  • And so was mine, my lord.
  • CHARLES:

  • And, for myself, most part of all this night,
  • Within her quarter and mine own precinct
  • I was employ'd in passing to and fro,
  • About relieving of the sentinels:
  • Then how or which way should they first break in?
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Question, my lords, no further of the case,
  • How or which way: 'tis sure they found some place
  • But weakly guarded, where the breach was made.
  • And now there rests no other shift but this;
  • To gather our soldiers, scatter'd and dispersed,
  • And lay new platforms to endamage them.
  • [Alarum]

  • [Enter an English Soldier, crying 'A Talbot! a Talbot!']

  • [They fly, leaving their clothes behind]

  • Soldier:

  • I'll be so bold to take what they have left.
  • The cry of Talbot serves me for a sword;
  • For I have loaden me with many spoils,
  • Using no other weapon but his name.
  • [Exit]

ACT II, SCENE II. Orleans. Within the town.

[Enter TALBOT, BEDFORD, BURGUNDY, a Captain, and others]

  • BEDFORD:

  • The day begins to break, and night is fled,
  • Whose pitchy mantle over-veil'd the earth.
  • Here sound retreat, and cease our hot pursuit.
  • [Retreat sounded]

  • TALBOT:

  • Bring forth the body of old Salisbury,
  • And here advance it in the market-place,
  • The middle centre of this cursed town.
  • Now have I paid my vow unto his soul;
  • For every drop of blood was drawn from him,
  • There hath at least five Frenchmen died tonight.
  • And that hereafter ages may behold
  • What ruin happen'd in revenge of him,
  • Within their chiefest temple I'll erect
  • A tomb, wherein his corpse shall be interr'd:
  • Upon the which, that every one may read,
  • Shall be engraved the sack of Orleans,
  • The treacherous manner of his mournful death
  • And what a terror he had been to France.
  • But, lords, in all our bloody massacre,
  • I muse we met not with the Dauphin's grace,
  • His new-come champion, virtuous Joan of Arc,
  • Nor any of his false confederates.
  • BEDFORD:

  • 'Tis thought, Lord Talbot, when the fight began,
  • Roused on the sudden from their drowsy beds,
  • They did amongst the troops of armed men
  • Leap o'er the walls for refuge in the field.
  • BURGUNDY:

  • Myself, as far as I could well discern
  • For smoke and dusky vapours of the night,
  • Am sure I scared the Dauphin and his trull,
  • When arm in arm they both came swiftly running,
  • Like to a pair of loving turtle-doves
  • That could not live asunder day or night.
  • After that things are set in order here,
  • We'll follow them with all the power we have.
  • [Enter a Messenger]

  • Messenger:

  • All hail, my lords! which of this princely train
  • Call ye the warlike Talbot, for his acts
  • So much applauded through the realm of France?
  • TALBOT:

  • Here is the Talbot: who would speak with him?
  • Messenger:

  • The virtuous lady, Countess of Auvergne,
  • With modesty admiring thy renown,
  • By me entreats, great lord, thou wouldst vouchsafe
  • To visit her poor castle where she lies,
  • That she may boast she hath beheld the man
  • Whose glory fills the world with loud report.
  • BURGUNDY:

  • Is it even so? Nay, then, I see our wars
  • Will turn unto a peaceful comic sport,
  • When ladies crave to be encounter'd with.
  • You may not, my lord, despise her gentle suit.
  • TALBOT:

  • Ne'er trust me then; for when a world of men
  • Could not prevail with all their oratory,
  • Yet hath a woman's kindness over-ruled:
  • And therefore tell her I return great thanks,
  • And in submission will attend on her.
  • Will not your honours bear me company?
  • BEDFORD:

  • No, truly; it is more than manners will:
  • And I have heard it said, unbidden guests
  • Are often welcomest when they are gone.
  • TALBOT:

  • Well then, alone, since there's no remedy,
  • I mean to prove this lady's courtesy.
  • Come hither, captain.
  • [Whispers]

  • You perceive my mind?
  • Captain:

  • I do, my lord, and mean accordingly.
  • [Exeunt]

ACT II, SCENE III. Auvergne. The COUNTESS's castle.

[Enter the COUNTESS and her Porter]

  • COUNTESS OF AUVERGNE:

  • Porter, remember what I gave in charge;
  • And when you have done so, bring the keys to me.
  • Porter:

  • Madam, I will.
  • [Exit]

  • COUNTESS OF AUVERGNE:

  • The plot is laid: if all things fall out right,
  • I shall as famous be by this exploit
  • As Scythian Tomyris by Cyrus' death.
  • Great is the rumor of this dreadful knight,
  • And his achievements of no less account:
  • Fain would mine eyes be witness with mine ears,
  • To give their censure of these rare reports.
  • [Enter Messenger and TALBOT]

  • Messenger:

  • Madam,
  • According as your ladyship desired,
  • By message craved, so is Lord Talbot come.
  • COUNTESS OF AUVERGNE:

  • And he is welcome. What! is this the man?
  • Messenger:

  • Madam, it is.
  • COUNTESS OF AUVERGNE:

  • Is this the scourge of France?
  • Is this the Talbot, so much fear'd abroad
  • That with his name the mothers still their babes?
  • I see report is fabulous and false:
  • I thought I should have seen some Hercules,
  • A second Hector, for his grim aspect,
  • And large proportion of his strong-knit limbs.
  • Alas, this is a child, a silly dwarf!
  • It cannot be this weak and writhled shrimp
  • Should strike such terror to his enemies.
  • TALBOT:

  • Madam, I have been bold to trouble you;
  • But since your ladyship is not at leisure,
  • I'll sort some other time to visit you.
  • COUNTESS OF AUVERGNE:

  • What means he now? Go ask him whither he goes.
  • Messenger:

  • Stay, my Lord Talbot; for my lady craves
  • To know the cause of your abrupt departure.
  • TALBOT:

  • Marry, for that she's in a wrong belief,
  • I go to certify her Talbot's here.
  • [Re-enter Porter with keys]

  • COUNTESS OF AUVERGNE:

  • If thou be he, then art thou prisoner.
  • TALBOT:

  • Prisoner! to whom?
  • COUNTESS OF AUVERGNE:

  • To me, blood-thirsty lord;
  • And for that cause I trained thee to my house.
  • Long time thy shadow hath been thrall to me,
  • For in my gallery thy picture hangs:
  • But now the substance shall endure the like,
  • And I will chain these legs and arms of thine,
  • That hast by tyranny these many years
  • Wasted our country, slain our citizens
  • And sent our sons and husbands captivate.
  • TALBOT:

  • Ha, ha, ha!
  • COUNTESS OF AUVERGNE:

  • Laughest thou, wretch? thy mirth shall turn to moan.
  • TALBOT:

  • I laugh to see your ladyship so fond
  • To think that you have aught but Talbot's shadow
  • Whereon to practise your severity.
  • COUNTESS OF AUVERGNE:

  • Why, art not thou the man?
  • TALBOT:

  • I am indeed.
  • COUNTESS OF AUVERGNE:

  • Then have I substance too.
  • TALBOT:

  • No, no, I am but shadow of myself:
  • You are deceived, my substance is not here;
  • For what you see is but the smallest part
  • And least proportion of humanity:
  • I tell you, madam, were the whole frame here,
  • It is of such a spacious lofty pitch,
  • Your roof were not sufficient to contain't.
  • COUNTESS OF AUVERGNE:

  • This is a riddling merchant for the nonce;
  • He will be here, and yet he is not here:
  • How can these contrarieties agree?
  • TALBOT:

  • That will I show you presently.
  • [Winds his horn. Drums strike up: a peal of ordnance. Enter soldiers]

  • How say you, madam? are you now persuaded
  • That Talbot is but shadow of himself?
  • These are his substance, sinews, arms and strength,
  • With which he yoketh your rebellious necks,
  • Razeth your cities and subverts your towns
  • And in a moment makes them desolate.
  • COUNTESS OF AUVERGNE:

  • Victorious Talbot! pardon my abuse:
  • I find thou art no less than fame hath bruited
  • And more than may be gather'd by thy shape.
  • Let my presumption not provoke thy wrath;
  • For I am sorry that with reverence
  • I did not entertain thee as thou art.
  • TALBOT:

  • Be not dismay'd, fair lady; nor misconstrue
  • The mind of Talbot, as you did mistake
  • The outward composition of his body.
  • What you have done hath not offended me;
  • Nor other satisfaction do I crave,
  • But only, with your patience, that we may
  • Taste of your wine and see what cates you have;
  • For soldiers' stomachs always serve them well.
  • COUNTESS OF AUVERGNE:

  • With all my heart, and think me honoured
  • To feast so great a warrior in my house.
  • [Exeunt]

ACT II, SCENE IV. London. The Temple-garden.

[Enter the Earls of SOMERSET, SUFFOLK, and WARWICK; RICHARD PLANTAGENET, VERNON, and another Lawyer]

  • RICHARD PLANTAGENET:

  • Great lords and gentlemen, what means this silence?
  • Dare no man answer in a case of truth?
  • SUFFOLK:

  • Within the Temple-hall we were too loud;
  • The garden here is more convenient.
  • RICHARD PLANTAGENET:

  • Then say at once if I maintain'd the truth;
  • Or else was wrangling Somerset in the error?
  • SUFFOLK:

  • Faith, I have been a truant in the law,
  • And never yet could frame my will to it;
  • And therefore frame the law unto my will.
  • SOMERSET:

  • Judge you, my Lord of Warwick, then, between us.
  • WARWICK:

  • Between two hawks, which flies the higher pitch;
  • Between two dogs, which hath the deeper mouth;
  • Between two blades, which bears the better temper:
  • Between two horses, which doth bear him best;
  • Between two girls, which hath the merriest eye;
  • I have perhaps some shallow spirit of judgement;
  • But in these nice sharp quillets of the law,
  • Good faith, I am no wiser than a daw.
  • RICHARD PLANTAGENET:

  • Tut, tut, here is a mannerly forbearance:
  • The truth appears so naked on my side
  • That any purblind eye may find it out.
  • SOMERSET:

  • And on my side it is so well apparell'd,
  • So clear, so shining and so evident
  • That it will glimmer through a blind man's eye.
  • RICHARD PLANTAGENET:

  • Since you are tongue-tied and so loath to speak,
  • In dumb significants proclaim your thoughts:
  • Let him that is a true-born gentleman
  • And stands upon the honour of his birth,
  • If he suppose that I have pleaded truth,
  • From off this brier pluck a white rose with me.
  • SOMERSET:

  • Let him that is no coward nor no flatterer,
  • But dare maintain the party of the truth,
  • Pluck a red rose from off this thorn with me.
  • WARWICK:

  • I love no colours, and without all colour
  • Of base insinuating flattery
  • I pluck this white rose with Plantagenet.
  • SUFFOLK:

  • I pluck this red rose with young Somerset
  • And say withal I think he held the right.
  • VERNON:

  • Stay, lords and gentlemen, and pluck no more,
  • Till you conclude that he upon whose side
  • The fewest roses are cropp'd from the tree
  • Shall yield the other in the right opinion.
  • SOMERSET:

  • Good Master Vernon, it is well objected:
  • If I have fewest, I subscribe in silence.
  • RICHARD PLANTAGENET:

  • And I.
  • VERNON:

  • Then for the truth and plainness of the case.
  • I pluck this pale and maiden blossom here,
  • Giving my verdict on the white rose side.
  • SOMERSET:

  • Prick not your finger as you pluck it off,
  • Lest bleeding you do paint the white rose red
  • And fall on my side so, against your will.
  • VERNON:

  • If I my lord, for my opinion bleed,
  • Opinion shall be surgeon to my hurt
  • And keep me on the side where still I am.
  • SOMERSET:

  • Well, well, come on: who else?
  • Lawyer:

  • Unless my study and my books be false,
  • The argument you held was wrong in you:
  • [To SOMERSET]

  • In sign whereof I pluck a white rose too.
  • RICHARD PLANTAGENET:

  • Now, Somerset, where is your argument?
  • SOMERSET:

  • Here in my scabbard, meditating that
  • Shall dye your white rose in a bloody red.
  • RICHARD PLANTAGENET:

  • Meantime your cheeks do counterfeit our roses;
  • For pale they look with fear, as witnessing
  • The truth on our side.
  • SOMERSET:

  • No, Plantagenet,
  • 'Tis not for fear but anger that thy cheeks
  • Blush for pure shame to counterfeit our roses,
  • And yet thy tongue will not confess thy error.
  • RICHARD PLANTAGENET:

  • Hath not thy rose a canker, Somerset?
  • SOMERSET:

  • Hath not thy rose a thorn, Plantagenet?
  • RICHARD PLANTAGENET:

  • Ay, sharp and piercing, to maintain his truth;
  • Whiles thy consuming canker eats his falsehood.
  • SOMERSET:

  • Well, I'll find friends to wear my bleeding roses,
  • That shall maintain what I have said is true,
  • Where false Plantagenet dare not be seen.
  • RICHARD PLANTAGENET:

  • Now, by this maiden blossom in my hand,
  • I scorn thee and thy fashion, peevish boy.
  • SUFFOLK:

  • Turn not thy scorns this way, Plantagenet.
  • RICHARD PLANTAGENET:

  • Proud Pole, I will, and scorn both him and thee.
  • SUFFOLK:

  • I'll turn my part thereof into thy throat.
  • SOMERSET:

  • Away, away, good William de la Pole!
  • We grace the yeoman by conversing with him.
  • WARWICK:

  • Now, by God's will, thou wrong'st him, Somerset;
  • His grandfather was Lionel Duke of Clarence,
  • Third son to the third Edward King of England:
  • Spring crestless yeomen from so deep a root?
  • RICHARD PLANTAGENET:

  • He bears him on the place's privilege,
  • Or durst not, for his craven heart, say thus.
  • SOMERSET:

  • By him that made me, I'll maintain my words
  • On any plot of ground in Christendom.
  • Was not thy father, Richard Earl of Cambridge,
  • For treason executed in our late king's days?
  • And, by his treason, stand'st not thou attainted,
  • Corrupted, and exempt from ancient gentry?
  • His trespass yet lives guilty in thy blood;
  • And, till thou be restored, thou art a yeoman.
  • RICHARD PLANTAGENET:

  • My father was attached, not attainted,
  • Condemn'd to die for treason, but no traitor;
  • And that I'll prove on better men than Somerset,
  • Were growing time once ripen'd to my will.
  • For your partaker Pole and you yourself,
  • I'll note you in my book of memory,
  • To scourge you for this apprehension:
  • Look to it well and say you are well warn'd.
  • SOMERSET:

  • Ah, thou shalt find us ready for thee still;
  • And know us by these colours for thy foes,
  • For these my friends in spite of thee shall wear.
  • RICHARD PLANTAGENET:

  • And, by my soul, this pale and angry rose,
  • As cognizance of my blood-drinking hate,
  • Will I for ever and my faction wear,
  • Until it wither with me to my grave
  • Or flourish to the height of my degree.
  • SUFFOLK:

  • Go forward and be choked with thy ambition!
  • And so farewell until I meet thee next.
  • [Exit]

  • SOMERSET:

  • Have with thee, Pole. Farewell, ambitious Richard.
  • [Exit]

  • RICHARD PLANTAGENET:

  • How I am braved and must perforce endure it!
  • WARWICK:

  • This blot that they object against your house
  • Shall be wiped out in the next parliament
  • Call'd for the truce of Winchester and Gloucester;
  • And if thou be not then created York,
  • I will not live to be accounted Warwick.
  • Meantime, in signal of my love to thee,
  • Against proud Somerset and William Pole,
  • Will I upon thy party wear this rose:
  • And here I prophesy: this brawl to-day,
  • Grown to this faction in the Temple-garden,
  • Shall send between the red rose and the white
  • A thousand souls to death and deadly night.
  • RICHARD PLANTAGENET:

  • Good Master Vernon, I am bound to you,
  • That you on my behalf would pluck a flower.
  • VERNON:

  • In your behalf still will I wear the same.
  • Lawyer:

  • And so will I.
  • RICHARD PLANTAGENET:

  • Thanks, gentle sir.
  • Come, let us four to dinner: I dare say
  • This quarrel will drink blood another day.
  • [Exeunt]

ACT II, SCENE V. The Tower of London.

[Enter MORTIMER, brought in a chair, and Gaolers]

  • MORTIMER:

  • Kind keepers of my weak decaying age,
  • Let dying Mortimer here rest himself.
  • Even like a man new haled from the rack,
  • So fare my limbs with long imprisonment.
  • And these grey locks, the pursuivants of death,
  • Nestor-like aged in an age of care,
  • Argue the end of Edmund Mortimer.
  • These eyes, like lamps whose wasting oil is spent,
  • Wax dim, as drawing to their exigent;
  • Weak shoulders, overborne with burthening grief,
  • And pithless arms, like to a wither'd vine
  • That droops his sapless branches to the ground;
  • Yet are these feet, whose strengthless stay is numb,
  • Unable to support this lump of clay,
  • Swift-winged with desire to get a grave,
  • As witting I no other comfort have.
  • But tell me, keeper, will my nephew come?
  • First Gaoler:

  • Richard Plantagenet, my lord, will come:
  • We sent unto the Temple, unto his chamber;
  • And answer was return'd that he will come.
  • MORTIMER:

  • Enough: my soul shall then be satisfied.
  • Poor gentleman! his wrong doth equal mine.
  • Since Henry Monmouth first began to reign,
  • Before whose glory I was great in arms,
  • This loathsome sequestration have I had:
  • And even since then hath Richard been obscured,
  • Deprived of honour and inheritance.
  • But now the arbitrator of despairs,
  • Just death, kind umpire of men's miseries,
  • With sweet enlargement doth dismiss me hence:
  • I would his troubles likewise were expired,
  • That so he might recover what was lost.
  • [Enter RICHARD PLANTAGENET]

  • First Gaoler:

  • My lord, your loving nephew now is come.
  • MORTIMER:

  • Richard Plantagenet, my friend, is he come?
  • RICHARD PLANTAGENET:

  • Ay, noble uncle, thus ignobly used,
  • Your nephew, late despised Richard, comes.
  • MORTIMER:

  • Direct mine arms I may embrace his neck,
  • And in his bosom spend my latter gasp:
  • O, tell me when my lips do touch his cheeks,
  • That I may kindly give one fainting kiss.
  • And now declare, sweet stem from York's great stock,
  • Why didst thou say, of late thou wert despised?
  • RICHARD PLANTAGENET:

  • First, lean thine aged back against mine arm;
  • And, in that ease, I'll tell thee my disease.
  • This day, in argument upon a case,
  • Some words there grew 'twixt Somerset and me;
  • Among which terms he used his lavish tongue
  • And did upbraid me with my father's death:
  • Which obloquy set bars before my tongue,
  • Else with the like I had requited him.
  • Therefore, good uncle, for my father's sake,
  • In honour of a true Plantagenet
  • And for alliance sake, declare the cause
  • My father, Earl of Cambridge, lost his head.
  • MORTIMER:

  • That cause, fair nephew, that imprison'd me
  • And hath detain'd me all my flowering youth
  • Within a loathsome dungeon, there to pine,
  • Was cursed instrument of his decease.
  • RICHARD PLANTAGENET:

  • Discover more at large what cause that was,
  • For I am ignorant and cannot guess.
  • MORTIMER:

  • I will, if that my fading breath permit
  • And death approach not ere my tale be done.
  • Henry the Fourth, grandfather to this king,
  • Deposed his nephew Richard, Edward's son,
  • The first-begotten and the lawful heir,
  • Of Edward king, the third of that descent:
  • During whose reign the Percies of the north,
  • Finding his usurpation most unjust,
  • Endeavor'd my advancement to the throne:
  • The reason moved these warlike lords to this
  • Was, for that--young King Richard thus removed,
  • Leaving no heir begotten of his body--
  • I was the next by birth and parentage;
  • For by my mother I derived am
  • From Lionel Duke of Clarence, the third son
  • To King Edward the Third; whereas he
  • From John of Gaunt doth bring his pedigree,
  • Being but fourth of that heroic line.
  • But mark: as in this haughty attempt
  • They laboured to plant the rightful heir,
  • I lost my liberty and they their lives.
  • Long after this, when Henry the Fifth,
  • Succeeding his father Bolingbroke, did reign,
  • Thy father, Earl of Cambridge, then derived
  • From famous Edmund Langley, Duke of York,
  • Marrying my sister that thy mother was,
  • Again in pity of my hard distress
  • Levied an army, weening to redeem
  • And have install'd me in the diadem:
  • But, as the rest, so fell that noble earl
  • And was beheaded. Thus the Mortimers,
  • In whom the tide rested, were suppress'd.
  • RICHARD PLANTAGENET:

  • Of which, my lord, your honour is the last.
  • MORTIMER:

  • True; and thou seest that I no issue have
  • And that my fainting words do warrant death;
  • Thou art my heir; the rest I wish thee gather:
  • But yet be wary in thy studious care.
  • RICHARD PLANTAGENET:

  • Thy grave admonishments prevail with me:
  • But yet, methinks, my father's execution
  • Was nothing less than bloody tyranny.
  • MORTIMER:

  • With silence, nephew, be thou politic:
  • Strong-fixed is the house of Lancaster,
  • And like a mountain, not to be removed.
  • But now thy uncle is removing hence:
  • As princes do their courts, when they are cloy'd
  • With long continuance in a settled place.
  • RICHARD PLANTAGENET:

  • O, uncle, would some part of my young years
  • Might but redeem the passage of your age!
  • MORTIMER:

  • Thou dost then wrong me, as that slaughterer doth
  • Which giveth many wounds when one will kill.
  • Mourn not, except thou sorrow for my good;
  • Only give order for my funeral:
  • And so farewell, and fair be all thy hopes
  • And prosperous be thy life in peace and war!
  • [Dies]

  • RICHARD PLANTAGENET:

  • And peace, no war, befall thy parting soul!
  • In prison hast thou spent a pilgrimage
  • And like a hermit overpass'd thy days.
  • Well, I will lock his counsel in my breast;
  • And what I do imagine let that rest.
  • Keepers, convey him hence, and I myself
  • Will see his burial better than his life.
  • [Exeunt Gaolers, bearing out the body of MORTIMER]

  • Here dies the dusky torch of Mortimer,
  • Choked with ambition of the meaner sort:
  • And for those wrongs, those bitter injuries,
  • Which Somerset hath offer'd to my house:
  • I doubt not but with honour to redress;
  • And therefore haste I to the parliament,
  • Either to be restored to my blood,
  • Or make my ill the advantage of my good.
  • [Exit]

ACT III

ACT III, SCENE I. London. The Parliament-house.

[Flourish. Enter KING HENRY VI, EXETER, GLOUCESTER, WARWICK, SOMERSET, and SUFFOLK; the BISHOP OF WINCHESTER, RICHARD PLANTAGENET, and others. GLOUCESTER offers to put up a bill; BISHOP OF WINCHESTER snatches it, and tears it]

  • BISHOP OF WINCHESTER:

  • Comest thou with deep premeditated lines,
  • With written pamphlets studiously devised,
  • Humphrey of Gloucester? If thou canst accuse,
  • Or aught intend'st to lay unto my charge,
  • Do it without invention, suddenly;
  • As I with sudden and extemporal speech
  • Purpose to answer what thou canst object.
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • Presumptuous priest! this place commands my patience,
  • Or thou shouldst find thou hast dishonour'd me.
  • Think not, although in writing I preferr'd
  • The manner of thy vile outrageous crimes,
  • That therefore I have forged, or am not able
  • Verbatim to rehearse the method of my pen:
  • No, prelate; such is thy audacious wickedness,
  • Thy lewd, pestiferous and dissentious pranks,
  • As very infants prattle of thy pride.
  • Thou art a most pernicious usurer,
  • Forward by nature, enemy to peace;
  • Lascivious, wanton, more than well beseems
  • A man of thy profession and degree;
  • And for thy treachery, what's more manifest?
  • In that thou laid'st a trap to take my life,
  • As well at London bridge as at the Tower.
  • Beside, I fear me, if thy thoughts were sifted,
  • The king, thy sovereign, is not quite exempt
  • From envious malice of thy swelling heart.
  • BISHOP OF WINCHESTER:

  • Gloucester, I do defy thee. Lords, vouchsafe
  • To give me hearing what I shall reply.
  • If I were covetous, ambitious or perverse,
  • As he will have me, how am I so poor?
  • Or how haps it I seek not to advance
  • Or raise myself, but keep my wonted calling?
  • And for dissension, who preferreth peace
  • More than I do?--except I be provoked.
  • No, my good lords, it is not that offends;
  • It is not that that hath incensed the duke:
  • It is, because no one should sway but he;
  • No one but he should be about the king;
  • And that engenders thunder in his breast
  • And makes him roar these accusations forth.
  • But he shall know I am as good--
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • As good!
  • Thou bastard of my grandfather!
  • BISHOP OF WINCHESTER:

  • Ay, lordly sir; for what are you, I pray,
  • But one imperious in another's throne?
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • Am I not protector, saucy priest?
  • BISHOP OF WINCHESTER:

  • And am not I a prelate of the church?
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • Yes, as an outlaw in a castle keeps
  • And useth it to patronage his theft.
  • BISHOP OF WINCHESTER:

  • Unreverent Gloster!
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • Thou art reverent
  • Touching thy spiritual function, not thy life.
  • BISHOP OF WINCHESTER:

  • Rome shall remedy this.
  • WARWICK:

  • Roam thither, then.
  • SOMERSET:

  • My lord, it were your duty to forbear.
  • WARWICK:

  • Ay, see the bishop be not overborne.
  • SOMERSET:

  • Methinks my lord should be religious
  • And know the office that belongs to such.
  • WARWICK:

  • Methinks his lordship should be humbler;
  • it fitteth not a prelate so to plead.
  • SOMERSET:

  • Yes, when his holy state is touch'd so near.
  • WARWICK:

  • State holy or unhallow'd, what of that?
  • Is not his grace protector to the king?
  • RICHARD PLANTAGENET:

  • [Aside]

  • Plantagenet, I see, must hold his tongue,
  • Lest it be said 'Speak, sirrah, when you should;
  • Must your bold verdict enter talk with lords?'
  • Else would I have a fling at Winchester.
  • KING HENRY VI:

  • Uncles of Gloucester and of Winchester,
  • The special watchmen of our English weal,
  • I would prevail, if prayers might prevail,
  • To join your hearts in love and amity.
  • O, what a scandal is it to our crown,
  • That two such noble peers as ye should jar!
  • Believe me, lords, my tender years can tell
  • Civil dissension is a viperous worm
  • That gnaws the bowels of the commonwealth.
  • [A noise within, 'Down with the tawny-coats!']

  • What tumult's this?
  • WARWICK:

  • An uproar, I dare warrant,
  • Begun through malice of the bishop's men.
  • [A noise again, 'Stones! stones!' Enter Mayor]

  • Mayor:

  • O, my good lords, and virtuous Henry,
  • Pity the city of London, pity us!
  • The bishop and the Duke of Gloucester's men,
  • Forbidden late to carry any weapon,
  • Have fill'd their pockets full of pebble stones
  • And banding themselves in contrary parts
  • Do pelt so fast at one another's pate
  • That many have their giddy brains knock'd out:
  • Our windows are broke down in every street
  • And we for fear compell'd to shut our shops.
  • [Enter Serving-men, in skirmish, with bloody pates]

  • KING HENRY VI:

  • We charge you, on allegiance to ourself,
  • To hold your slaughtering hands and keep the peace.
  • Pray, uncle Gloucester, mitigate this strife.
  • First Serving-man :

  • Nay, if we be forbidden stones,
  • We'll fall to it with our teeth.
  • Second Serving-man :

  • Do what ye dare, we are as resolute.
  • [Skirmish again]

  • GLOUCESTER:

  • You of my household, leave this peevish broil
  • And set this unaccustom'd fight aside.
  • Third Serving-man My lord, we know your grace to be a man
  • Just and upright; and, for your royal birth,
  • Inferior to none but to his majesty:
  • And ere that we will suffer such a prince,
  • So kind a father of the commonweal,
  • To be disgraced by an inkhorn mate,
  • We and our wives and children all will fight
  • And have our bodies slaughtered by thy foes.
  • First Serving-man Ay, and the very parings of our nails
  • Shall pitch a field when we are dead.
  • [Begin again]

  • GLOUCESTER:

  • Stay, stay, I say!
  • And if you love me, as you say you do,
  • Let me persuade you to forbear awhile.
  • KING HENRY VI:

  • O, how this discord doth afflict my soul!
  • Can you, my Lord of Winchester, behold
  • My sighs and tears and will not once relent?
  • Who should be pitiful, if you be not?
  • Or who should study to prefer a peace.
  • If holy churchmen take delight in broils?
  • WARWICK:

  • Yield, my lord protector; yield, Winchester;
  • Except you mean with obstinate repulse
  • To slay your sovereign and destroy the realm.
  • You see what mischief and what murder too
  • Hath been enacted through your enmity;
  • Then be at peace except ye thirst for blood.
  • BISHOP OF WINCHESTER:

  • He shall submit, or I will never yield.
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • Compassion on the king commands me stoop;
  • Or I would see his heart out, ere the priest
  • Should ever get that privilege of me.
  • WARWICK:

  • Behold, my Lord of Winchester, the duke
  • Hath banish'd moody discontented fury,
  • As by his smoothed brows it doth appear:
  • Why look you still so stern and tragical?
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • Here, Winchester, I offer thee my hand.
  • KING HENRY VI:

  • Fie, uncle Beaufort! I have heard you preach
  • That malice was a great and grievous sin;
  • And will not you maintain the thing you teach,
  • But prove a chief offender in the same?
  • WARWICK:

  • Sweet king! the bishop hath a kindly gird.
  • For shame, my lord of Winchester, relent!
  • What, shall a child instruct you what to do?
  • BISHOP OF WINCHESTER:

  • Well, Duke of Gloucester, I will yield to thee;
  • Love for thy love and hand for hand I give.
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • [Aside]

  • Ay, but, I fear me, with a hollow heart.--
  • See here, my friends and loving countrymen,
  • This token serveth for a flag of truce
  • Betwixt ourselves and all our followers:
  • So help me God, as I dissemble not!
  • BISHOP OF WINCHESTER:

  • [Aside]

  • So help me God, as I intend it not!
  • KING HENRY VI:

  • O, loving uncle, kind Duke of Gloucester,
  • How joyful am I made by this contract!
  • Away, my masters! trouble us no more;
  • But join in friendship, as your lords have done.
  • First Serving-man:

  • Content: I'll to the surgeon's.
  • Second Serving-man:

  • And so will I.
  • Third Serving-man :

  • And I will see what physic the tavern affords.
  • [Exeunt Serving-men, Mayor, & c]

  • WARWICK:

  • Accept this scroll, most gracious sovereign,
  • Which in the right of Richard Plantagenet
  • We do exhibit to your majesty.
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • Well urged, my Lord of Warwick: or sweet prince,
  • And if your grace mark every circumstance,
  • You have great reason to do Richard right;
  • Especially for those occasions
  • At Eltham Place I told your majesty.
  • KING HENRY VI:

  • And those occasions, uncle, were of force:
  • Therefore, my loving lords, our pleasure is
  • That Richard be restored to his blood.
  • WARWICK:

  • Let Richard be restored to his blood;
  • So shall his father's wrongs be recompensed.
  • BISHOP OF WINCHESTER:

  • As will the rest, so willeth Winchester.
  • KING HENRY VI:

  • If Richard will be true, not that alone
  • But all the whole inheritance I give
  • That doth belong unto the house of York,
  • From whence you spring by lineal descent.
  • RICHARD PLANTAGENET:

  • Thy humble servant vows obedience
  • And humble service till the point of death.
  • KING HENRY VI:

  • Stoop then and set your knee against my foot;
  • And, in reguerdon of that duty done,
  • I gird thee with the valiant sword of York:
  • Rise Richard, like a true Plantagenet,
  • And rise created princely Duke of York.
  • RICHARD PLANTAGENET:

  • And so thrive Richard as thy foes may fall!
  • And as my duty springs, so perish they
  • That grudge one thought against your majesty!
  • All:

  • Welcome, high prince, the mighty Duke of York!
  • SOMERSET:

  • [Aside]

  • Perish, base prince, ignoble Duke of York!
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • Now will it best avail your majesty
  • To cross the seas and to be crown'd in France:
  • The presence of a king engenders love
  • Amongst his subjects and his loyal friends,
  • As it disanimates his enemies.
  • KING HENRY VI:

  • When Gloucester says the word, King Henry goes;
  • For friendly counsel cuts off many foes.
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • Your ships already are in readiness.
  • [Sennet. Flourish. Exeunt all but EXETER]

  • EXETER:

  • Ay, we may march in England or in France,
  • Not seeing what is likely to ensue.
  • This late dissension grown betwixt the peers
  • Burns under feigned ashes of forged love
  • And will at last break out into a flame:
  • As fester'd members rot but by degree,
  • Till bones and flesh and sinews fall away,
  • So will this base and envious discord breed.
  • And now I fear that fatal prophecy
  • Which in the time of Henry named the Fifth
  • Was in the mouth of every sucking babe;
  • That Henry born at Monmouth should win all
  • And Henry born at Windsor lose all:
  • Which is so plain that Exeter doth wish
  • His days may finish ere that hapless time.
  • [Exit]

ACT III, SCENE II. France. Before Rouen.

[Enter JOAN LA PUCELLE disguised, with four Soldiers with sacks upon their backs]

  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • These are the city gates, the gates of Rouen,
  • Through which our policy must make a breach:
  • Take heed, be wary how you place your words;
  • Talk like the vulgar sort of market men
  • That come to gather money for their corn.
  • If we have entrance, as I hope we shall,
  • And that we find the slothful watch but weak,
  • I'll by a sign give notice to our friends,
  • That Charles the Dauphin may encounter them.
  • First Soldier:

  • Our sacks shall be a mean to sack the city,
  • And we be lords and rulers over Rouen;
  • Therefore we'll knock.
  • Knocks
  • Watch:

  • [Within]

  • Qui est la?
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Paysans, pauvres gens de France;
  • Poor market folks that come to sell their corn.
  • Watch:

  • [Enter, go in; the market bell is rung.]

  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Now, Rouen, I'll shake thy bulwarks to the ground.
  • [Exeunt]

  • [Enter CHARLES, the BASTARD OF ORLEANS, ALENCON, REIGNIER, and forces]

  • CHARLES:

  • Saint Denis bless this happy stratagem!
  • And once again we'll sleep secure in Rouen.
  • BASTARD OF ORLEANS:

  • Here enter'd Pucelle and her practisants;
  • Now she is there, how will she specify
  • Where is the best and safest passage in?
  • REIGNIER:

  • By thrusting out a torch from yonder tower;
  • Which, once discern'd, shows that her meaning is,
  • No way to that, for weakness, which she enter'd.
  • [Enter JOAN LA PUCELLE on the top, thrusting out a torch burning]

  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Behold, this is the happy wedding torch
  • That joineth Rouen unto her countrymen,
  • But burning fatal to the Talbotites!
  • [Exit]

  • BASTARD OF ORLEANS:

  • See, noble Charles, the beacon of our friend;
  • The burning torch in yonder turret stands.
  • CHARLES:

  • Now shine it like a comet of revenge,
  • A prophet to the fall of all our foes!
  • REIGNIER:

  • Defer no time, delays have dangerous ends;
  • Enter, and cry 'The Dauphin!' presently,
  • And then do execution on the watch.
  • [Alarum. Exeunt]

  • [An alarum. Enter TALBOT in an excursion]

  • TALBOT:

  • France, thou shalt rue this treason with thy tears,
  • If Talbot but survive thy treachery.
  • Pucelle, that witch, that damned sorceress,
  • Hath wrought this hellish mischief unawares,
  • That hardly we escaped the pride of France.
  • [Exit]

  • [An alarum: excursions. BEDFORD, brought in sick in a chair. Enter TALBOT and BURGUNDY without: within JOAN LA PUCELLE, CHARLES, BASTARD OF ORLEANS, ALENCON, and REIGNIER, on the walls]

  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Good morrow, gallants! want ye corn for bread?
  • I think the Duke of Burgundy will fast
  • Before he'll buy again at such a rate:
  • 'Twas full of darnel; do you like the taste?
  • BURGUNDY:

  • Scoff on, vile fiend and shameless courtezan!
  • I trust ere long to choke thee with thine own
  • And make thee curse the harvest of that corn.
  • CHARLES:

  • Your grace may starve perhaps before that time.
  • BEDFORD:

  • O, let no words, but deeds, revenge this treason!
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • What will you do, good grey-beard? break a lance,
  • And run a tilt at death within a chair?
  • TALBOT:

  • Foul fiend of France, and hag of all despite,
  • Encompass'd with thy lustful paramours!
  • Becomes it thee to taunt his valiant age
  • And twit with cowardice a man half dead?
  • Damsel, I'll have a bout with you again,
  • Or else let Talbot perish with this shame.
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Are ye so hot, sir? yet, Pucelle, hold thy peace;
  • If Talbot do but thunder, rain will follow.
  • [The English whisper together in council]

  • God speed the parliament! who shall be the speaker?
  • TALBOT:

  • Dare ye come forth and meet us in the field?
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Belike your lordship takes us then for fools,
  • To try if that our own be ours or no.
  • TALBOT:

  • I speak not to that railing Hecate,
  • But unto thee, Alencon, and the rest;
  • Will ye, like soldiers, come and fight it out?
  • ALENCON:

  • Signior, no.
  • TALBOT:

  • Signior, hang! base muleters of France!
  • Like peasant foot-boys do they keep the walls
  • And dare not take up arms like gentlemen.
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Away, captains! let's get us from the walls;
  • For Talbot means no goodness by his looks.
  • God be wi' you, my lord! we came but to tell you
  • That we are here.
  • [Exeunt from the walls]

  • TALBOT:

  • And there will we be too, ere it be long,
  • Or else reproach be Talbot's greatest fame!
  • Vow, Burgundy, by honour of thy house,
  • Prick'd on by public wrongs sustain'd in France,
  • Either to get the town again or die:
  • And I, as sure as English Henry lives
  • And as his father here was conqueror,
  • As sure as in this late-betrayed town
  • Great Coeur-de-lion's heart was buried,
  • So sure I swear to get the town or die.
  • BURGUNDY:

  • My vows are equal partners with thy vows.
  • TALBOT:

  • But, ere we go, regard this dying prince,
  • The valiant Duke of Bedford. Come, my lord,
  • We will bestow you in some better place,
  • Fitter for sickness and for crazy age.
  • BEDFORD:

  • Lord Talbot, do not so dishonour me:
  • Here will I sit before the walls of Rouen
  • And will be partner of your weal or woe.
  • BURGUNDY:

  • Courageous Bedford, let us now persuade you.
  • BEDFORD:

  • Not to be gone from hence; for once I read
  • That stout Pendragon in his litter sick
  • Came to the field and vanquished his foes:
  • Methinks I should revive the soldiers' hearts,
  • Because I ever found them as myself.
  • TALBOT:

  • Undaunted spirit in a dying breast!
  • Then be it so: heavens keep old Bedford safe!
  • And now no more ado, brave Burgundy,
  • But gather we our forces out of hand
  • And set upon our boasting enemy.
  • [Exeunt all but BEDFORD and Attendants]

  • [An alarum: excursions. Enter FASTOLFE and a Captain]

  • Captain:

  • Whither away, Sir John Fastolfe, in such haste?
  • FASTOLFE:

  • Whither away! to save myself by flight:
  • We are like to have the overthrow again.
  • Captain:

  • What! will you fly, and leave Lord Talbot?
  • FASTOLFE:

  • Ay,
  • All the Talbots in the world, to save my life!
  • [Exit]

  • Captain:

  • Cowardly knight! ill fortune follow thee!
  • [Exit]

  • [Retreat: excursions. JOAN LA PUCELLE, ALENCON, and CHARLES fly]

  • BEDFORD:

  • Now, quiet soul, depart when heaven please,
  • For I have seen our enemies' overthrow.
  • What is the trust or strength of foolish man?
  • They that of late were daring with their scoffs
  • Are glad and fain by flight to save themselves.
  • [BEDFORD dies, and is carried in by two in his chair]

  • [An alarum. Re-enter TALBOT, BURGUNDY, and the rest]

  • TALBOT:

  • Lost, and recover'd in a day again!
  • This is a double honour, Burgundy:
  • Yet heavens have glory for this victory!
  • BURGUNDY:

  • Warlike and martial Talbot, Burgundy
  • Enshrines thee in his heart and there erects
  • Thy noble deeds as valour's monuments.
  • TALBOT:

  • Thanks, gentle duke. But where is Pucelle now?
  • I think her old familiar is asleep:
  • Now where's the Bastard's braves, and Charles his gleeks?
  • What, all amort? Rouen hangs her head for grief
  • That such a valiant company are fled.
  • Now will we take some order in the town,
  • Placing therein some expert officers,
  • And then depart to Paris to the king,
  • For there young Henry with his nobles lie.
  • BURGUNDY:

  • What wills Lord Talbot pleaseth Burgundy.
  • TALBOT:

  • But yet, before we go, let's not forget
  • The noble Duke of Bedford late deceased,
  • But see his exequies fulfill'd in Rouen:
  • A braver soldier never couched lance,
  • A gentler heart did never sway in court;
  • But kings and mightiest potentates must die,
  • For that's the end of human misery.
  • [Exeunt]

ACT III, SCENE III. The plains near Rouen.

[Enter CHARLES, the BASTARD OF ORLEANS, ALENCON, JOAN LA PUCELLE, and forces]

  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Dismay not, princes, at this accident,
  • Nor grieve that Rouen is so recovered:
  • Care is no cure, but rather corrosive,
  • For things that are not to be remedied.
  • Let frantic Talbot triumph for a while
  • And like a peacock sweep along his tail;
  • We'll pull his plumes and take away his train,
  • If Dauphin and the rest will be but ruled.
  • CHARLES:

  • We have been guided by thee hitherto,
  • And of thy cunning had no diffidence:
  • One sudden foil shall never breed distrust.
  • BASTARD OF ORLEANS:

  • Search out thy wit for secret policies,
  • And we will make thee famous through the world.
  • ALENCON:

  • We'll set thy statue in some holy place,
  • And have thee reverenced like a blessed saint:
  • Employ thee then, sweet virgin, for our good.
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Then thus it must be; this doth Joan devise:
  • By fair persuasions mix'd with sugar'd words
  • We will entice the Duke of Burgundy
  • To leave the Talbot and to follow us.
  • CHARLES:

  • Ay, marry, sweeting, if we could do that,
  • France were no place for Henry's warriors;
  • Nor should that nation boast it so with us,
  • But be extirped from our provinces.
  • ALENCON:

  • For ever should they be expulsed from France
  • And not have title of an earldom here.
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Your honours shall perceive how I will work
  • To bring this matter to the wished end.
  • [Drum sounds afar off]

  • Hark! by the sound of drum you may perceive
  • Their powers are marching unto Paris-ward.
  • [Here sound an English march. Enter, and pass over at a distance, TALBOT and his forces]

  • There goes the Talbot, with his colours spread,
  • And all the troops of English after him.
  • [French march. Enter BURGUNDY and forces]

  • Now in the rearward comes the duke and his:
  • Fortune in favour makes him lag behind.
  • Summon a parley; we will talk with him.
  • [Trumpets sound a parley]

  • CHARLES:

  • A parley with the Duke of Burgundy!
  • BURGUNDY:

  • Who craves a parley with the Burgundy?
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • The princely Charles of France, thy countryman.
  • BURGUNDY:

  • What say'st thou, Charles? for I am marching hence.
  • CHARLES:

  • Speak, Pucelle, and enchant him with thy words.
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Brave Burgundy, undoubted hope of France!
  • Stay, let thy humble handmaid speak to thee.
  • BURGUNDY:

  • Speak on; but be not over-tedious.
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Look on thy country, look on fertile France,
  • And see the cities and the towns defaced
  • By wasting ruin of the cruel foe.
  • As looks the mother on her lowly babe
  • When death doth close his tender dying eyes,
  • See, see the pining malady of France;
  • Behold the wounds, the most unnatural wounds,
  • Which thou thyself hast given her woful breast.
  • O, turn thy edged sword another way;
  • Strike those that hurt, and hurt not those that help.
  • One drop of blood drawn from thy country's bosom
  • Should grieve thee more than streams of foreign gore:
  • Return thee therefore with a flood of tears,
  • And wash away thy country's stained spots.
  • BURGUNDY:

  • Either she hath bewitch'd me with her words,
  • Or nature makes me suddenly relent.
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Besides, all French and France exclaims on thee,
  • Doubting thy birth and lawful progeny.
  • Who joint'st thou with but with a lordly nation
  • That will not trust thee but for profit's sake?
  • When Talbot hath set footing once in France
  • And fashion'd thee that instrument of ill,
  • Who then but English Henry will be lord
  • And thou be thrust out like a fugitive?
  • Call we to mind, and mark but this for proof,
  • Was not the Duke of Orleans thy foe?
  • And was he not in England prisoner?
  • But when they heard he was thine enemy,
  • They set him free without his ransom paid,
  • In spite of Burgundy and all his friends.
  • See, then, thou fight'st against thy countrymen
  • And joint'st with them will be thy slaughtermen.
  • Come, come, return; return, thou wandering lord:
  • Charles and the rest will take thee in their arms.
  • BURGUNDY:

  • I am vanquished; these haughty words of hers
  • Have batter'd me like roaring cannon-shot,
  • And made me almost yield upon my knees.
  • Forgive me, country, and sweet countrymen,
  • And, lords, accept this hearty kind embrace:
  • My forces and my power of men are yours:
  • So farewell, Talbot; I'll no longer trust thee.
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • [Aside]

  • Done like a Frenchman: turn, and turn again!
  • CHARLES:

  • Welcome, brave duke! thy friendship makes us fresh.
  • BASTARD OF ORLEANS:

  • And doth beget new courage in our breasts.
  • ALENCON:

  • Pucelle hath bravely play'd her part in this,
  • And doth deserve a coronet of gold.
  • CHARLES:

  • Now let us on, my lords, and join our powers,
  • And seek how we may prejudice the foe.
  • [Exeunt]

ACT III, SCENE IV. Paris. The palace.

[Enter KING HENRY VI, GLOUCESTER, BISHOP OF WINCHESTER, YORK, SUFFOLK, SOMERSET, WARWICK, EXETER, VERNON BASSET, and others.]

[To them with his Soldiers, TALBOT]

  • TALBOT:

  • My gracious prince, and honourable peers,
  • Hearing of your arrival in this realm,
  • I have awhile given truce unto my wars,
  • To do my duty to my sovereign:
  • In sign, whereof, this arm, that hath reclaim'd
  • To your obedience fifty fortresses,
  • Twelve cities and seven walled towns of strength,
  • Beside five hundred prisoners of esteem,
  • Lets fall his sword before your highness' feet,
  • And with submissive loyalty of heart
  • Ascribes the glory of his conquest got
  • First to my God and next unto your grace.
  • [Kneels]

  • KING HENRY VI:

  • Is this the Lord Talbot, uncle Gloucester,
  • That hath so long been resident in France?
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • Yes, if it please your majesty, my liege.
  • KING HENRY VI:

  • Welcome, brave captain and victorious lord!
  • When I was young, as yet I am not old,
  • I do remember how my father said
  • A stouter champion never handled sword.
  • Long since we were resolved of your truth,
  • Your faithful service and your toil in war;
  • Yet never have you tasted our reward,
  • Or been reguerdon'd with so much as thanks,
  • Because till now we never saw your face:
  • Therefore, stand up; and, for these good deserts,
  • We here create you Earl of Shrewsbury;
  • And in our coronation take your place.
  • [Sennet. Flourish. Exeunt all but VERNON and BASSET]

  • VERNON:

  • Now, sir, to you, that were so hot at sea,
  • Disgracing of these colours that I wear
  • In honour of my noble Lord of York:
  • Darest thou maintain the former words thou spakest?
  • BASSET:

  • Yes, sir; as well as you dare patronage
  • The envious barking of your saucy tongue
  • Against my lord the Duke of Somerset.
  • VERNON:

  • Sirrah, thy lord I honour as he is.
  • BASSET:

  • Why, what is he? as good a man as York.
  • VERNON:

  • Hark ye; not so: in witness, take ye that.
  • [Strikes him]

  • BASSET:

  • Villain, thou know'st the law of arms is such
  • That whoso draws a sword, 'tis present death,
  • Or else this blow should broach thy dearest blood.
  • But I'll unto his majesty, and crave
  • I may have liberty to venge this wrong;
  • When thou shalt see I'll meet thee to thy cost.
  • VERNON:

  • Well, miscreant, I'll be there as soon as you;
  • And, after, meet you sooner than you would.
  • [Exeunt]

ACT IV

ACT IV, SCENE I. Paris. A hall of state.

[Enter KING HENRY VI, GLOUCESTER, BISHOP OF WINCHESTER, YORK, SUFFOLK, SOMERSET, WARWICK, TALBOT, EXETER, the Governor, of Paris, and others]

  • GLOUCESTER:

  • Lord bishop, set the crown upon his head.
  • BISHOP OF WINCHESTER:

  • God save King Henry, of that name the sixth!
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • Now, governor of Paris, take your oath,
  • That you elect no other king but him;
  • Esteem none friends but such as are his friends,
  • And none your foes but such as shall pretend
  • Malicious practises against his state:
  • This shall ye do, so help you righteous God!
  • [Enter FASTOLFE]

  • FASTOLFE:

  • My gracious sovereign, as I rode from Calais,
  • To haste unto your coronation,
  • A letter was deliver'd to my hands,
  • Writ to your grace from the Duke of Burgundy.
  • TALBOT:

  • Shame to the Duke of Burgundy and thee!
  • I vow'd, base knight, when I did meet thee next,
  • To tear the garter from thy craven's leg,
  • [Plucking it off]

  • Which I have done, because unworthily
  • Thou wast installed in that high degree.
  • Pardon me, princely Henry, and the rest
  • This dastard, at the battle of Patay,
  • When but in all I was six thousand strong
  • And that the French were almost ten to one,
  • Before we met or that a stroke was given,
  • Like to a trusty squire did run away:
  • In which assault we lost twelve hundred men;
  • Myself and divers gentlemen beside
  • Were there surprised and taken prisoners.
  • Then judge, great lords, if I have done amiss;
  • Or whether that such cowards ought to wear
  • This ornament of knighthood, yea or no.
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • To say the truth, this fact was infamous
  • And ill beseeming any common man,
  • Much more a knight, a captain and a leader.
  • TALBOT:

  • When first this order was ordain'd, my lords,
  • Knights of the garter were of noble birth,
  • Valiant and virtuous, full of haughty courage,
  • Such as were grown to credit by the wars;
  • Not fearing death, nor shrinking for distress,
  • But always resolute in most extremes.
  • He then that is not furnish'd in this sort
  • Doth but usurp the sacred name of knight,
  • Profaning this most honourable order,
  • And should, if I were worthy to be judge,
  • Be quite degraded, like a hedge-born swain
  • That doth presume to boast of gentle blood.
  • KING HENRY VI:

  • Stain to thy countrymen, thou hear'st thy doom!
  • Be packing, therefore, thou that wast a knight:
  • Henceforth we banish thee, on pain of death.
  • [Exit FASTOLFE]

  • And now, my lord protector, view the letter
  • Sent from our uncle Duke of Burgundy.
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • What means his grace, that he hath changed his style?
  • No more but, plain and bluntly, 'To the king!'
  • Hath he forgot he is his sovereign?
  • Or doth this churlish superscription
  • Pretend some alteration in good will?
  • What's here?
  • [Reads]

  • 'I have, upon especial cause,
  • Moved with compassion of my country's wreck,
  • Together with the pitiful complaints
  • Of such as your oppression feeds upon,
  • Forsaken your pernicious faction
  • And join'd with Charles, the rightful King of France.'
  • O monstrous treachery! can this be so,
  • That in alliance, amity and oaths,
  • There should be found such false dissembling guile?
  • KING HENRY VI:

  • What! doth my uncle Burgundy revolt?
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • He doth, my lord, and is become your foe.
  • KING HENRY VI:

  • Is that the worst this letter doth contain?
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • It is the worst, and all, my lord, he writes.
  • KING HENRY VI:

  • Why, then, Lord Talbot there shall talk with him
  • And give him chastisement for this abuse.
  • How say you, my lord? are you not content?
  • TALBOT:

  • Content, my liege! yes, but that I am prevented,
  • I should have begg'd I might have been employ'd.
  • KING HENRY VI:

  • Then gather strength and march unto him straight:
  • Let him perceive how ill we brook his treason
  • And what offence it is to flout his friends.
  • TALBOT:

  • I go, my lord, in heart desiring still
  • You may behold confusion of your foes.
  • [Exit]

  • [Enter VERNON and BASSET]

  • VERNON:

  • Grant me the combat, gracious sovereign.
  • BASSET:

  • And me, my lord, grant me the combat too.
  • YORK:

  • This is my servant: hear him, noble prince.
  • SOMERSET:

  • And this is mine: sweet Henry, favour him.
  • KING HENRY VI:

  • Be patient, lords; and give them leave to speak.
  • Say, gentlemen, what makes you thus exclaim?
  • And wherefore crave you combat? or with whom?
  • VERNON:

  • With him, my lord; for he hath done me wrong.
  • BASSET:

  • And I with him; for he hath done me wrong.
  • KING HENRY VI:

  • What is that wrong whereof you both complain?
  • First let me know, and then I'll answer you.
  • BASSET:

  • Crossing the sea from England into France,
  • This fellow here, with envious carping tongue,
  • Upbraided me about the rose I wear;
  • Saying, the sanguine colour of the leaves
  • Did represent my master's blushing cheeks,
  • When stubbornly he did repugn the truth
  • About a certain question in the law
  • Argued betwixt the Duke of York and him;
  • With other vile and ignominious terms:
  • In confutation of which rude reproach
  • And in defence of my lord's worthiness,
  • I crave the benefit of law of arms.
  • VERNON:

  • And that is my petition, noble lord:
  • For though he seem with forged quaint conceit
  • To set a gloss upon his bold intent,
  • Yet know, my lord, I was provoked by him;
  • And he first took exceptions at this badge,
  • Pronouncing that the paleness of this flower
  • Bewray'd the faintness of my master's heart.
  • YORK:

  • Will not this malice, Somerset, be left?
  • SOMERSET:

  • Your private grudge, my Lord of York, will out,
  • Though ne'er so cunningly you smother it.
  • KING HENRY VI:

  • Good Lord, what madness rules in brainsick men,
  • When for so slight and frivolous a cause
  • Such factious emulations shall arise!
  • Good cousins both, of York and Somerset,
  • Quiet yourselves, I pray, and be at peace.
  • YORK:

  • Let this dissension first be tried by fight,
  • And then your highness shall command a peace.
  • SOMERSET:

  • The quarrel toucheth none but us alone;
  • Betwixt ourselves let us decide it then.
  • YORK:

  • There is my pledge; accept it, Somerset.
  • VERNON:

  • Nay, let it rest where it began at first.
  • BASSET:

  • Confirm it so, mine honourable lord.
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • Confirm it so! Confounded be your strife!
  • And perish ye, with your audacious prate!
  • Presumptuous vassals, are you not ashamed
  • With this immodest clamorous outrage
  • To trouble and disturb the king and us?
  • And you, my lords, methinks you do not well
  • To bear with their perverse objections;
  • Much less to take occasion from their mouths
  • To raise a mutiny betwixt yourselves:
  • Let me persuade you take a better course.
  • EXETER:

  • It grieves his highness: good my lords, be friends.
  • KING HENRY VI:

  • Come hither, you that would be combatants:
  • Henceforth I charge you, as you love our favour,
  • Quite to forget this quarrel and the cause.
  • And you, my lords, remember where we are,
  • In France, amongst a fickle wavering nation:
  • If they perceive dissension in our looks
  • And that within ourselves we disagree,
  • How will their grudging stomachs be provoked
  • To wilful disobedience, and rebel!
  • Beside, what infamy will there arise,
  • When foreign princes shall be certified
  • That for a toy, a thing of no regard,
  • King Henry's peers and chief nobility
  • Destroy'd themselves, and lost the realm of France!
  • O, think upon the conquest of my father,
  • My tender years, and let us not forego
  • That for a trifle that was bought with blood
  • Let me be umpire in this doubtful strife.
  • I see no reason, if I wear this rose,
  • [Putting on a red rose]

  • That any one should therefore be suspicious
  • I more incline to Somerset than York:
  • Both are my kinsmen, and I love them both:
  • As well they may upbraid me with my crown,
  • Because, forsooth, the king of Scots is crown'd.
  • But your discretions better can persuade
  • Than I am able to instruct or teach:
  • And therefore, as we hither came in peace,
  • So let us still continue peace and love.
  • Cousin of York, we institute your grace
  • To be our regent in these parts of France:
  • And, good my Lord of Somerset, unite
  • Your troops of horsemen with his bands of foot;
  • And, like true subjects, sons of your progenitors,
  • Go cheerfully together and digest.
  • Your angry choler on your enemies.
  • Ourself, my lord protector and the rest
  • After some respite will return to Calais;
  • From thence to England; where I hope ere long
  • To be presented, by your victories,
  • With Charles, Alencon and that traitorous rout.
  • [Flourish. Exeunt all but YORK, WARWICK, EXETER and VERNON]

  • WARWICK:

  • My Lord of York, I promise you, the king
  • Prettily, methought, did play the orator.
  • YORK:

  • And so he did; but yet I like it not,
  • In that he wears the badge of Somerset.
  • WARWICK:

  • Tush, that was but his fancy, blame him not;
  • I dare presume, sweet prince, he thought no harm.
  • YORK:

  • An if I wist he did,--but let it rest;
  • Other affairs must now be managed.
  • [Exeunt all but EXETER]

  • EXETER:

  • Well didst thou, Richard, to suppress thy voice;
  • For, had the passions of thy heart burst out,
  • I fear we should have seen decipher'd there
  • More rancorous spite, more furious raging broils,
  • Than yet can be imagined or supposed.
  • But howsoe'er, no simple man that sees
  • This jarring discord of nobility,
  • This shouldering of each other in the court,
  • This factious bandying of their favourites,
  • But that it doth presage some ill event.
  • 'Tis much when sceptres are in children's hands;
  • But more when envy breeds unkind division;
  • There comes the rain, there begins confusion.
  • [Exit]

ACT IV, SCENE II. Before Bourdeaux.

[Enter TALBOT, with trump and drum]

  • TALBOT:

  • Go to the gates of Bourdeaux, trumpeter:
  • Summon their general unto the wall.
  • [Trumpet sounds. Enter General and others, aloft]

  • English John Talbot, captains, calls you forth,
  • Servant in arms to Harry King of England;
  • And thus he would: Open your city gates;
  • Be humble to us; call my sovereign yours,
  • And do him homage as obedient subjects;
  • And I'll withdraw me and my bloody power:
  • But, if you frown upon this proffer'd peace,
  • You tempt the fury of my three attendants,
  • Lean famine, quartering steel, and climbing fire;
  • Who in a moment even with the earth
  • Shall lay your stately and air-braving towers,
  • If you forsake the offer of their love.
  • General:

  • Thou ominous and fearful owl of death,
  • Our nation's terror and their bloody scourge!
  • The period of thy tyranny approacheth.
  • On us thou canst not enter but by death;
  • For, I protest, we are well fortified
  • And strong enough to issue out and fight:
  • If thou retire, the Dauphin, well appointed,
  • Stands with the snares of war to tangle thee:
  • On either hand thee there are squadrons pitch'd,
  • To wall thee from the liberty of flight;
  • And no way canst thou turn thee for redress,
  • But death doth front thee with apparent spoil
  • And pale destruction meets thee in the face.
  • Ten thousand French have ta'en the sacrament
  • To rive their dangerous artillery
  • Upon no Christian soul but English Talbot.
  • Lo, there thou stand'st, a breathing valiant man,
  • Of an invincible unconquer'd spirit!
  • This is the latest glory of thy praise
  • That I, thy enemy, due thee withal;
  • For ere the glass, that now begins to run,
  • Finish the process of his sandy hour,
  • These eyes, that see thee now well coloured,
  • Shall see thee wither'd, bloody, pale and dead.
  • [Drum afar off]

  • Hark! hark! the Dauphin's drum, a warning bell,
  • Sings heavy music to thy timorous soul;
  • And mine shall ring thy dire departure out.
  • [Exeunt General, & c]

  • TALBOT:

  • He fables not; I hear the enemy:
  • Out, some light horsemen, and peruse their wings.
  • O, negligent and heedless discipline!
  • How are we park'd and bounded in a pale,
  • A little herd of England's timorous deer,
  • Mazed with a yelping kennel of French curs!
  • If we be English deer, be then in blood;
  • Not rascal-like, to fall down with a pinch,
  • But rather, moody-mad and desperate stags,
  • Turn on the bloody hounds with heads of steel
  • And make the cowards stand aloof at bay:
  • Sell every man his life as dear as mine,
  • And they shall find dear deer of us, my friends.
  • God and Saint George, Talbot and England's right,
  • Prosper our colours in this dangerous fight!
  • [Exeunt]

ACT IV, SCENE III. Plains in Gascony.

[Enter a Messenger that meets YORK. Enter YORK with trumpet and many Soldiers]

  • YORK:

  • Are not the speedy scouts return'd again,
  • That dogg'd the mighty army of the Dauphin?
  • Messenger:

  • They are return'd, my lord, and give it out
  • That he is march'd to Bourdeaux with his power,
  • To fight with Talbot: as he march'd along,
  • By your espials were discovered
  • Two mightier troops than that the Dauphin led,
  • Which join'd with him and made their march for Bourdeaux.
  • YORK:

  • A plague upon that villain Somerset,
  • That thus delays my promised supply
  • Of horsemen, that were levied for this siege!
  • Renowned Talbot doth expect my aid,
  • And I am lowted by a traitor villain
  • And cannot help the noble chevalier:
  • God comfort him in this necessity!
  • If he miscarry, farewell wars in France.
  • [Enter Sir William LUCY]

  • LUCY:

  • Thou princely leader of our English strength,
  • Never so needful on the earth of France,
  • Spur to the rescue of the noble Talbot,
  • Who now is girdled with a waist of iron
  • And hemm'd about with grim destruction:
  • To Bourdeaux, warlike duke! to Bourdeaux, York!
  • Else, farewell Talbot, France, and England's honour.
  • YORK:

  • O God, that Somerset, who in proud heart
  • Doth stop my cornets, were in Talbot's place!
  • So should we save a valiant gentleman
  • By forfeiting a traitor and a coward.
  • Mad ire and wrathful fury makes me weep,
  • That thus we die, while remiss traitors sleep.
  • LUCY:

  • O, send some succor to the distress'd lord!
  • YORK:

  • He dies, we lose; I break my warlike word;
  • We mourn, France smiles; we lose, they daily get;
  • All 'long of this vile traitor Somerset.
  • LUCY:

  • Then God take mercy on brave Talbot's soul;
  • And on his son young John, who two hours since
  • I met in travel toward his warlike father!
  • This seven years did not Talbot see his son;
  • And now they meet where both their lives are done.
  • YORK:

  • Alas, what joy shall noble Talbot have
  • To bid his young son welcome to his grave?
  • Away! vexation almost stops my breath,
  • That sunder'd friends greet in the hour of death.
  • Lucy, farewell; no more my fortune can,
  • But curse the cause I cannot aid the man.
  • Maine, Blois, Poictiers, and Tours, are won away,
  • 'Long all of Somerset and his delay.
  • [Exit, with his soldiers]

  • LUCY:

  • Thus, while the vulture of sedition
  • Feeds in the bosom of such great commanders,
  • Sleeping neglection doth betray to loss
  • The conquest of our scarce cold conqueror,
  • That ever living man of memory,
  • Henry the Fifth: whiles they each other cross,
  • Lives, honours, lands and all hurry to loss.
  • [Exit]

ACT IV, SCENE IV. Other plains in Gascony.

[Enter SOMERSET, with his army; a Captain of TALBOT's with him]

  • SOMERSET:

  • It is too late; I cannot send them now:
  • This expedition was by York and Talbot
  • Too rashly plotted: all our general force
  • Might with a sally of the very town
  • Be buckled with: the over-daring Talbot
  • Hath sullied all his gloss of former honour
  • By this unheedful, desperate, wild adventure:
  • York set him on to fight and die in shame,
  • That, Talbot dead, great York might bear the name.
  • Captain:

  • Here is Sir William Lucy, who with me
  • Set from our o'ermatch'd forces forth for aid.
  • [Enter Sir William LUCY]

  • SOMERSET:

  • How now, Sir William! whither were you sent?
  • LUCY:

  • Whither, my lord? from bought and sold Lord Talbot;
  • Who, ring'd about with bold adversity,
  • Cries out for noble York and Somerset,
  • To beat assailing death from his weak legions:
  • And whiles the honourable captain there
  • Drops bloody sweat from his war-wearied limbs,
  • And, in advantage lingering, looks for rescue,
  • You, his false hopes, the trust of England's honour,
  • Keep off aloof with worthless emulation.
  • Let not your private discord keep away
  • The levied succors that should lend him aid,
  • While he, renowned noble gentleman,
  • Yields up his life unto a world of odds:
  • Orleans the Bastard, Charles, Burgundy,
  • Alencon, Reignier, compass him about,
  • And Talbot perisheth by your default.
  • SOMERSET:

  • York set him on; York should have sent him aid.
  • LUCY:

  • And York as fast upon your grace exclaims;
  • Swearing that you withhold his levied host,
  • Collected for this expedition.
  • SOMERSET:

  • York lies; he might have sent and had the horse;
  • I owe him little duty, and less love;
  • And take foul scorn to fawn on him by sending.
  • LUCY:

  • The fraud of England, not the force of France,
  • Hath now entrapp'd the noble-minded Talbot:
  • Never to England shall he bear his life;
  • But dies, betray'd to fortune by your strife.
  • SOMERSET:

  • Come, go; I will dispatch the horsemen straight:
  • Within six hours they will be at his aid.
  • LUCY:

  • Too late comes rescue: he is ta'en or slain;
  • For fly he could not, if he would have fled;
  • And fly would Talbot never, though he might.
  • SOMERSET:

  • If he be dead, brave Talbot, then adieu!
  • LUCY:

  • His fame lives in the world, his shame in you.
  • [Exeunt]

ACT IV, SCENE V. The English camp near Bourdeaux.

[Enter TALBOT and JOHN his son]

  • TALBOT:

  • O young John Talbot! I did send for thee
  • To tutor thee in stratagems of war,
  • That Talbot's name might be in thee revived
  • When sapless age and weak unable limbs
  • Should bring thy father to his drooping chair.
  • But, O malignant and ill-boding stars!
  • Now thou art come unto a feast of death,
  • A terrible and unavoided danger:
  • Therefore, dear boy, mount on my swiftest horse;
  • And I'll direct thee how thou shalt escape
  • By sudden flight: come, dally not, be gone.
  • JOHN TALBOT:

  • Is my name Talbot? and am I your son?
  • And shall I fly? O if you love my mother,
  • Dishonour not her honourable name,
  • To make a bastard and a slave of me!
  • The world will say, he is not Talbot's blood,
  • That basely fled when noble Talbot stood.
  • TALBOT:

  • Fly, to revenge my death, if I be slain.
  • JOHN TALBOT:

  • He that flies so will ne'er return again.
  • TALBOT:

  • If we both stay, we both are sure to die.
  • JOHN TALBOT:

  • Then let me stay; and, father, do you fly:
  • Your loss is great, so your regard should be;
  • My worth unknown, no loss is known in me.
  • Upon my death the French can little boast;
  • In yours they will, in you all hopes are lost.
  • Flight cannot stain the honour you have won;
  • But mine it will, that no exploit have done:
  • You fled for vantage, everyone will swear;
  • But, if I bow, they'll say it was for fear.
  • There is no hope that ever I will stay,
  • If the first hour I shrink and run away.
  • Here on my knee I beg mortality,
  • Rather than life preserved with infamy.
  • TALBOT:

  • Shall all thy mother's hopes lie in one tomb?
  • JOHN TALBOT:

  • Ay, rather than I'll shame my mother's womb.
  • TALBOT:

  • Upon my blessing, I command thee go.
  • JOHN TALBOT:

  • To fight I will, but not to fly the foe.
  • TALBOT:

  • Part of thy father may be saved in thee.
  • JOHN TALBOT:

  • No part of him but will be shame in me.
  • TALBOT:

  • Thou never hadst renown, nor canst not lose it.
  • JOHN TALBOT:

  • Yes, your renowned name: shall flight abuse it?
  • TALBOT:

  • Thy father's charge shall clear thee from that stain.
  • JOHN TALBOT:

  • You cannot witness for me, being slain.
  • If death be so apparent, then both fly.
  • TALBOT:

  • And leave my followers here to fight and die?
  • My age was never tainted with such shame.
  • JOHN TALBOT:

  • And shall my youth be guilty of such blame?
  • No more can I be sever'd from your side,
  • Than can yourself yourself in twain divide:
  • Stay, go, do what you will, the like do I;
  • For live I will not, if my father die.
  • TALBOT:

  • Then here I take my leave of thee, fair son,
  • Born to eclipse thy life this afternoon.
  • Come, side by side together live and die.
  • And soul with soul from France to heaven fly.
  • [Exeunt]

ACT IV, SCENE VI. A field of battle.

[Alarum: excursions, wherein JOHN TALBOT is hemmed about, and TALBOT rescues him]

  • TALBOT:

  • Saint George and victory! fight, soldiers, fight.
  • The regent hath with Talbot broke his word
  • And left us to the rage of France his sword.
  • Where is John Talbot? Pause, and take thy breath;
  • I gave thee life and rescued thee from death.
  • JOHN TALBOT:

  • O, twice my father, twice am I thy son!
  • The life thou gavest me first was lost and done,
  • Till with thy warlike sword, despite of late,
  • To my determined time thou gavest new date.
  • TALBOT:

  • When from the Dauphin's crest thy sword struck fire,
  • It warm'd thy father's heart with proud desire
  • Of bold-faced victory. Then leaden age,
  • Quicken'd with youthful spleen and warlike rage,
  • Beat down Alencon, Orleans, Burgundy,
  • And from the pride of Gallia rescued thee.
  • The ireful bastard Orleans, that drew blood
  • From thee, my boy, and had the maidenhood
  • Of thy first fight, I soon encountered,
  • And interchanging blows I quickly shed
  • Some of his bastard blood; and in disgrace
  • Bespoke him thus; 'Contaminated, base
  • And misbegotten blood I spill of thine,
  • Mean and right poor, for that pure blood of mine
  • Which thou didst force from Talbot, my brave boy:'
  • Here, purposing the Bastard to destroy,
  • Came in strong rescue. Speak, thy father's care,
  • Art thou not weary, John? how dost thou fare?
  • Wilt thou yet leave the battle, boy, and fly,
  • Now thou art seal'd the son of chivalry?
  • Fly, to revenge my death when I am dead:
  • The help of one stands me in little stead.
  • O, too much folly is it, well I wot,
  • To hazard all our lives in one small boat!
  • If I to-day die not with Frenchmen's rage,
  • To-morrow I shall die with mickle age:
  • By me they nothing gain an if I stay;
  • 'Tis but the shortening of my life one day:
  • In thee thy mother dies, our household's name,
  • My death's revenge, thy youth, and England's fame:
  • All these and more we hazard by thy stay;
  • All these are saved if thou wilt fly away.
  • JOHN TALBOT:

  • The sword of Orleans hath not made me smart;
  • These words of yours draw life-blood from my heart:
  • On that advantage, bought with such a shame,
  • To save a paltry life and slay bright fame,
  • Before young Talbot from old Talbot fly,
  • The coward horse that bears me fail and die!
  • And like me to the peasant boys of France,
  • To be shame's scorn and subject of mischance!
  • Surely, by all the glory you have won,
  • An if I fly, I am not Talbot's son:
  • Then talk no more of flight, it is no boot;
  • If son to Talbot, die at Talbot's foot.
  • TALBOT:

  • Then follow thou thy desperate sire of Crete,
  • Thou Icarus; thy life to me is sweet:
  • If thou wilt fight, fight by thy father's side;
  • And, commendable proved, let's die in pride.
  • [Exeunt]

ACT IV, SCENE VII. Another part of the field.

[Alarum: excursions. Enter TALBOT led by a Servant]

  • TALBOT:

  • Where is my other life? mine own is gone;
  • O, where's young Talbot? where is valiant John?
  • Triumphant death, smear'd with captivity,
  • Young Talbot's valour makes me smile at thee:
  • When he perceived me shrink and on my knee,
  • His bloody sword he brandish'd over me,
  • And, like a hungry lion, did commence
  • Rough deeds of rage and stern impatience;
  • But when my angry guardant stood alone,
  • Tendering my ruin and assail'd of none,
  • Dizzy-eyed fury and great rage of heart
  • Suddenly made him from my side to start
  • Into the clustering battle of the French;
  • And in that sea of blood my boy did drench
  • His over-mounting spirit, and there died,
  • My Icarus, my blossom, in his pride.
  • Servant:

  • O, my dear lord, lo, where your son is borne!
  • [Enter Soldiers, with the body of JOHN TALBOT]

  • TALBOT:

  • Thou antic death, which laugh'st us here to scorn,
  • Anon, from thy insulting tyranny,
  • Coupled in bonds of perpetuity,
  • Two Talbots, winged through the lither sky,
  • In thy despite shall 'scape mortality.
  • O, thou, whose wounds become hard-favour'd death,
  • Speak to thy father ere thou yield thy breath!
  • Brave death by speaking, whether he will or no;
  • Imagine him a Frenchman and thy foe.
  • Poor boy! he smiles, methinks, as who should say,
  • Had death been French, then death had died to-day.
  • Come, come and lay him in his father's arms:
  • My spirit can no longer bear these harms.
  • Soldiers, adieu! I have what I would have,
  • Now my old arms are young John Talbot's grave.
  • [Dies]

  • [Enter CHARLES, ALENCON, BURGUNDY, BASTARD OF ORLEANS, JOAN LA PUCELLE, and forces]

  • CHARLES:

  • Had York and Somerset brought rescue in,
  • We should have found a bloody day of this.
  • BASTARD OF ORLEANS:

  • How the young whelp of Talbot's, raging-wood,
  • Did flesh his puny sword in Frenchmen's blood!
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Once I encounter'd him, and thus I said:
  • 'Thou maiden youth, be vanquish'd by a maid:'
  • But, with a proud majestical high scorn,
  • He answer'd thus: 'Young Talbot was not born
  • To be the pillage of a giglot wench:'
  • So, rushing in the bowels of the French,
  • He left me proudly, as unworthy fight.
  • BURGUNDY:

  • Doubtless he would have made a noble knight;
  • See, where he lies inhearsed in the arms
  • Of the most bloody nurser of his harms!
  • BASTARD OF ORLEANS:

  • Hew them to pieces, hack their bones asunder
  • Whose life was England's glory, Gallia's wonder.
  • CHARLES:

  • O, no, forbear! for that which we have fled
  • During the life, let us not wrong it dead.
  • [Enter Sir William LUCY, attended; Herald of the French preceding]

  • LUCY:

  • Herald, conduct me to the Dauphin's tent,
  • To know who hath obtained the glory of the day.
  • CHARLES:

  • On what submissive message art thou sent?
  • LUCY:

  • Submission, Dauphin! 'tis a mere French word;
  • We English warriors wot not what it means.
  • I come to know what prisoners thou hast ta'en
  • And to survey the bodies of the dead.
  • CHARLES:

  • For prisoners ask'st thou? hell our prison is.
  • But tell me whom thou seek'st.
  • LUCY:

  • But where's the great Alcides of the field,
  • Valiant Lord Talbot, Earl of Shrewsbury,
  • Created, for his rare success in arms,
  • Great Earl of Washford, Waterford and Valence;
  • Lord Talbot of Goodrig and Urchinfield,
  • Lord Strange of Blackmere, Lord Verdun of Alton,
  • Lord Cromwell of Wingfield, Lord Furnival of Sheffield,
  • The thrice-victorious Lord of Falconbridge;
  • Knight of the noble order of Saint George,
  • Worthy Saint Michael and the Golden Fleece;
  • Great marshal to Henry the Sixth
  • Of all his wars within the realm of France?
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Here is a silly stately style indeed!
  • The Turk, that two and fifty kingdoms hath,
  • Writes not so tedious a style as this.
  • Him that thou magnifiest with all these titles
  • Stinking and fly-blown lies here at our feet.
  • LUCY:

  • Is Talbot slain, the Frenchmen's only scourge,
  • Your kingdom's terror and black Nemesis?
  • O, were mine eyeballs into bullets turn'd,
  • That I in rage might shoot them at your faces!
  • O, that I could but call these dead to life!
  • It were enough to fright the realm of France:
  • Were but his picture left amongst you here,
  • It would amaze the proudest of you all.
  • Give me their bodies, that I may bear them hence
  • And give them burial as beseems their worth.
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • I think this upstart is old Talbot's ghost,
  • He speaks with such a proud commanding spirit.
  • For God's sake let him have 'em; to keep them here,
  • They would but stink, and putrefy the air.
  • CHARLES:

  • Go, take their bodies hence.
  • LUCY:

  • I'll bear them hence; but from their ashes shall be rear'd
  • A phoenix that shall make all France afeard.
  • CHARLES:

  • So we be rid of them, do with 'em what thou wilt.
  • And now to Paris, in this conquering vein:
  • All will be ours, now bloody Talbot's slain.
  • [Exeunt]

ACT V

ACT V, SCENE I. London. The palace.

[Sennet. Enter KING HENRY VI, GLOUCESTER, and EXETER]

  • KING HENRY VI:

  • Have you perused the letters from the pope,
  • The emperor and the Earl of Armagnac?
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • I have, my lord: and their intent is this:
  • They humbly sue unto your excellence
  • To have a godly peace concluded of
  • Between the realms of England and of France.
  • KING HENRY VI:

  • How doth your grace affect their motion?
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • Well, my good lord; and as the only means
  • To stop effusion of our Christian blood
  • And 'stablish quietness on every side.
  • KING HENRY VI:

  • Ay, marry, uncle; for I always thought
  • It was both impious and unnatural
  • That such immanity and bloody strife
  • Should reign among professors of one faith.
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • Beside, my lord, the sooner to effect
  • And surer bind this knot of amity,
  • The Earl of Armagnac, near knit to Charles,
  • A man of great authority in France,
  • Proffers his only daughter to your grace
  • In marriage, with a large and sumptuous dowry.
  • KING HENRY VI:

  • Marriage, uncle! alas, my years are young!
  • And fitter is my study and my books
  • Than wanton dalliance with a paramour.
  • Yet call the ambassador; and, as you please,
  • So let them have their answers every one:
  • I shall be well content with any choice
  • Tends to God's glory and my country's weal.
  • [Enter CARDINAL OF WINCHESTER in Cardinal's habit, a Legate and two Ambassadors]

  • EXETER:

  • What! is my Lord of Winchester install'd,
  • And call'd unto a cardinal's degree?
  • Then I perceive that will be verified
  • Henry the Fifth did sometime prophesy,
  • 'If once he come to be a cardinal,
  • He'll make his cap co-equal with the crown.'
  • KING HENRY VI:

  • My lords ambassadors, your several suits
  • Have been consider'd and debated on.
  • And therefore are we certainly resolved
  • To draw conditions of a friendly peace;
  • Which by my Lord of Winchester we mean
  • Shall be transported presently to France.
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • And for the proffer of my lord your master,
  • I have inform'd his highness so at large
  • As liking of the lady's virtuous gifts,
  • Her beauty and the value of her dower,
  • He doth intend she shall be England's queen.
  • KING HENRY VI:

  • In argument and proof of which contract,
  • Bear her this jewel, pledge of my affection.
  • And so, my lord protector, see them guarded
  • And safely brought to Dover; where inshipp'd
  • Commit them to the fortune of the sea.
  • [Exeunt all but CARDINAL OF WINCHESTER and Legate]

  • CARDINAL OF WINCHESTER:

  • Stay, my lord legate: you shall first receive
  • The sum of money which I promised
  • Should be deliver'd to his holiness
  • For clothing me in these grave ornaments.
  • Legate:

  • I will attend upon your lordship's leisure.
  • CARDINAL OF WINCHESTER:

  • [Aside]

  • Now Winchester will not submit, I trow,
  • Or be inferior to the proudest peer.
  • Humphrey of Gloucester, thou shalt well perceive
  • That, neither in birth or for authority,
  • The bishop will be overborne by thee:
  • I'll either make thee stoop and bend thy knee,
  • Or sack this country with a mutiny.
  • [Exeunt]

ACT V, SCENE II. France. Plains in Anjou.

[Enter CHARLES, BURGUNDY, ALENCON, BASTARD OF ORLEANS, REIGNIER, JOAN LA PUCELLE, and forces]

  • CHARLES:

  • These news, my lord, may cheer our drooping spirits:
  • 'Tis said the stout Parisians do revolt
  • And turn again unto the warlike French.
  • ALENCON:

  • Then march to Paris, royal Charles of France,
  • And keep not back your powers in dalliance.
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Peace be amongst them, if they turn to us;
  • Else, ruin combat with their palaces!
  • [Enter Scout]

  • Scout:

  • Success unto our valiant general,
  • And happiness to his accomplices!
  • CHARLES:

  • What tidings send our scouts? I prithee, speak.
  • Scout:

  • The English army, that divided was
  • Into two parties, is now conjoined in one,
  • And means to give you battle presently.
  • CHARLES:

  • Somewhat too sudden, sirs, the warning is;
  • But we will presently provide for them.
  • BURGUNDY:

  • I trust the ghost of Talbot is not there:
  • Now he is gone, my lord, you need not fear.
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Of all base passions, fear is most accursed.
  • Command the conquest, Charles, it shall be thine,
  • Let Henry fret and all the world repine.
  • CHARLES:

  • Then on, my lords; and France be fortunate!
  • [Exeunt]

ACT V, SCENE III. Before Angiers.

[Alarum. Excursions. Enter JOAN LA PUCELLE]

  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • The regent conquers, and the Frenchmen fly.
  • Now help, ye charming spells and periapts;
  • And ye choice spirits that admonish me
  • And give me signs of future accidents.
  • [Thunder]

  • You speedy helpers, that are substitutes
  • Under the lordly monarch of the north,
  • Appear and aid me in this enterprise.
  • [Enter Fiends]

  • This speedy and quick appearance argues proof
  • Of your accustom'd diligence to me.
  • Now, ye familiar spirits, that are cull'd
  • Out of the powerful regions under earth,
  • Help me this once, that France may get the field.
  • [They walk, and speak not]

  • O, hold me not with silence over-long!
  • Where I was wont to feed you with my blood,
  • I'll lop a member off and give it you
  • In earnest of further benefit,
  • So you do condescend to help me now.
  • [They hang their heads]

  • No hope to have redress? My body shall
  • Pay recompense, if you will grant my suit.
  • [They shake their heads]

  • Cannot my body nor blood-sacrifice
  • Entreat you to your wonted furtherance?
  • Then take my soul, my body, soul and all,
  • Before that England give the French the foil.
  • [They depart]

  • See, they forsake me! Now the time is come
  • That France must vail her lofty-plumed crest
  • And let her head fall into England's lap.
  • My ancient incantations are too weak,
  • And hell too strong for me to buckle with:
  • Now, France, thy glory droopeth to the dust.
  • [Exit]

  • [Excursions. Re-enter JOAN LA PUCELLE fighting hand to hand with YORK.]

  • [JOAN LA PUCELLE is taken. The French fly.]

  • YORK:

  • Damsel of France, I think I have you fast:
  • Unchain your spirits now with spelling charms
  • And try if they can gain your liberty.
  • A goodly prize, fit for the devil's grace!
  • See, how the ugly wench doth bend her brows,
  • As if with Circe she would change my shape!
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Changed to a worser shape thou canst not be.
  • YORK:

  • O, Charles the Dauphin is a proper man;
  • No shape but his can please your dainty eye.
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • A plaguing mischief light on Charles and thee!
  • And may ye both be suddenly surprised
  • By bloody hands, in sleeping on your beds!
  • YORK:

  • Fell banning hag, enchantress, hold thy tongue!
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • I prithee, give me leave to curse awhile.
  • YORK:

  • Curse, miscreant, when thou comest to the stake.
  • [Exeunt Alarum. Enter SUFFOLK with MARGARET in his hand]

  • SUFFOLK:

  • Be what thou wilt, thou art my prisoner.
  • [Gazes on her]

  • O fairest beauty, do not fear nor fly!
  • For I will touch thee but with reverent hands;
  • I kiss these fingers for eternal peace,
  • And lay them gently on thy tender side.
  • Who art thou? say, that I may honour thee.
  • MARGARET:

  • Margaret my name, and daughter to a king,
  • The King of Naples, whosoe'er thou art.
  • SUFFOLK:

  • An earl I am, and Suffolk am I call'd.
  • Be not offended, nature's miracle,
  • Thou art allotted to be ta'en by me:
  • So doth the swan her downy cygnets save,
  • Keeping them prisoner underneath her wings.
  • Yet, if this servile usage once offend.
  • Go, and be free again, as Suffolk's friend.
  • [She is going]

  • O, stay! I have no power to let her pass;
  • My hand would free her, but my heart says no
  • As plays the sun upon the glassy streams,
  • Twinkling another counterfeited beam,
  • So seems this gorgeous beauty to mine eyes.
  • Fain would I woo her, yet I dare not speak:
  • I'll call for pen and ink, and write my mind.
  • Fie, de la Pole! disable not thyself;
  • Hast not a tongue? is she not here?
  • Wilt thou be daunted at a woman's sight?
  • Ay, beauty's princely majesty is such,
  • Confounds the tongue and makes the senses rough.
  • MARGARET:

  • Say, Earl of Suffolk--if thy name be so--
  • What ransom must I pay before I pass?
  • For I perceive I am thy prisoner.
  • SUFFOLK:

  • How canst thou tell she will deny thy suit,
  • Before thou make a trial of her love?
  • MARGARET:

  • Why speak'st thou not? what ransom must I pay?
  • SUFFOLK:

  • She's beautiful, and therefore to be woo'd;
  • She is a woman, therefore to be won.
  • MARGARET:

  • Wilt thou accept of ransom? yea, or no.
  • SUFFOLK:

  • Fond man, remember that thou hast a wife;
  • Then how can Margaret be thy paramour?
  • MARGARET:

  • I were best to leave him, for he will not hear.
  • SUFFOLK:

  • There all is marr'd; there lies a cooling card.
  • MARGARET:

  • He talks at random; sure, the man is mad.
  • SUFFOLK:

  • And yet a dispensation may be had.
  • MARGARET:

  • And yet I would that you would answer me.
  • SUFFOLK:

  • I'll win this Lady Margaret. For whom?
  • Why, for my king: tush, that's a wooden thing!
  • MARGARET:

  • He talks of wood: it is some carpenter.
  • SUFFOLK:

  • Yet so my fancy may be satisfied,
  • And peace established between these realms
  • But there remains a scruple in that too;
  • For though her father be the King of Naples,
  • Duke of Anjou and Maine, yet is he poor,
  • And our nobility will scorn the match.
  • MARGARET:

  • Hear ye, captain, are you not at leisure?
  • SUFFOLK:

  • It shall be so, disdain they ne'er so much.
  • Henry is youthful and will quickly yield.
  • Madam, I have a secret to reveal.
  • MARGARET:

  • What though I be enthrall'd? he seems a knight,
  • And will not any way dishonour me.
  • SUFFOLK:

  • Lady, vouchsafe to listen what I say.
  • MARGARET:

  • Perhaps I shall be rescued by the French;
  • And then I need not crave his courtesy.
  • SUFFOLK:

  • Sweet madam, give me a hearing in a cause--
  • MARGARET:

  • Tush, women have been captivate ere now.
  • SUFFOLK:

  • Lady, wherefore talk you so?
  • MARGARET:

  • I cry you mercy, 'tis but Quid for Quo.
  • SUFFOLK:

  • Say, gentle princess, would you not suppose
  • Your bondage happy, to be made a queen?
  • MARGARET:

  • To be a queen in bondage is more vile
  • Than is a slave in base servility;
  • For princes should be free.
  • SUFFOLK:

  • And so shall you,
  • If happy England's royal king be free.
  • MARGARET:

  • Why, what concerns his freedom unto me?
  • SUFFOLK:

  • I'll undertake to make thee Henry's queen,
  • To put a golden sceptre in thy hand
  • And set a precious crown upon thy head,
  • If thou wilt condescend to be my--
  • MARGARET:

  • What?
  • SUFFOLK:

  • His love.
  • MARGARET:

  • I am unworthy to be Henry's wife.
  • SUFFOLK:

  • No, gentle madam; I unworthy am
  • To woo so fair a dame to be his wife,
  • And have no portion in the choice myself.
  • How say you, madam, are ye so content?
  • MARGARET:

  • An if my father please, I am content.
  • SUFFOLK:

  • Then call our captains and our colours forth.
  • And, madam, at your father's castle walls
  • We'll crave a parley, to confer with him.
  • [A parley sounded.]

  • [Enter REIGNIER on the walls]

  • See, Reignier, see, thy daughter prisoner!
  • REIGNIER:

  • To whom?
  • SUFFOLK:

  • To me.
  • REIGNIER:

  • Suffolk, what remedy?
  • I am a soldier, and unapt to weep,
  • Or to exclaim on fortune's fickleness.
  • SUFFOLK:

  • Yes, there is remedy enough, my lord:
  • Consent, and for thy honour give consent,
  • Thy daughter shall be wedded to my king;
  • Whom I with pain have woo'd and won thereto;
  • And this her easy-held imprisonment
  • Hath gained thy daughter princely liberty.
  • REIGNIER:

  • Speaks Suffolk as he thinks?
  • SUFFOLK:

  • Fair Margaret knows
  • That Suffolk doth not flatter, face, or feign.
  • REIGNIER:

  • Upon thy princely warrant, I descend
  • To give thee answer of thy just demand.
  • [Exit from the walls]

  • SUFFOLK:

  • And here I will expect thy coming.
  • [Trumpets sound. Enter REIGNIER, below]

  • REIGNIER:

  • Welcome, brave earl, into our territories:
  • Command in Anjou what your honour pleases.
  • SUFFOLK:

  • Thanks, Reignier, happy for so sweet a child,
  • Fit to be made companion with a king:
  • What answer makes your grace unto my suit?
  • REIGNIER:

  • Since thou dost deign to woo her little worth
  • To be the princely bride of such a lord;
  • Upon condition I may quietly
  • Enjoy mine own, the country Maine and Anjou,
  • Free from oppression or the stroke of war,
  • My daughter shall be Henry's, if he please.
  • SUFFOLK:

  • That is her ransom; I deliver her;
  • And those two counties I will undertake
  • Your grace shall well and quietly enjoy.
  • REIGNIER:

  • And I again, in Henry's royal name,
  • As deputy unto that gracious king,
  • Give thee her hand, for sign of plighted faith.
  • SUFFOLK:

  • Reignier of France, I give thee kingly thanks,
  • Because this is in traffic of a king.
  • [Aside]

  • And yet, methinks, I could be well content
  • To be mine own attorney in this case.
  • I'll over then to England with this news,
  • And make this marriage to be solemnized.
  • So farewell, Reignier: set this diamond safe
  • In golden palaces, as it becomes.
  • REIGNIER:

  • I do embrace thee, as I would embrace
  • The Christian prince, King Henry, were he here.
  • MARGARET:

  • Farewell, my lord: good wishes, praise and prayers
  • Shall Suffolk ever have of Margaret.
  • [Going]

  • SUFFOLK:

  • Farewell, sweet madam: but hark you, Margaret;
  • No princely commendations to my king?
  • MARGARET:

  • Such commendations as becomes a maid,
  • A virgin and his servant, say to him.
  • SUFFOLK:

  • Words sweetly placed and modestly directed.
  • But madam, I must trouble you again;
  • No loving token to his majesty?
  • MARGARET:

  • Yes, my good lord, a pure unspotted heart,
  • Never yet taint with love, I send the king.
  • SUFFOLK:

  • And this withal.
  • [Kisses her]

  • MARGARET:

  • That for thyself: I will not so presume
  • To send such peevish tokens to a king.
  • [Exeunt REIGNIER and MARGARET]

  • SUFFOLK:

  • O, wert thou for myself! But, Suffolk, stay;
  • Thou mayst not wander in that labyrinth;
  • There Minotaurs and ugly treasons lurk.
  • Solicit Henry with her wondrous praise:
  • Bethink thee on her virtues that surmount,
  • And natural graces that extinguish art;
  • Repeat their semblance often on the seas,
  • That, when thou comest to kneel at Henry's feet,
  • Thou mayst bereave him of his wits with wonder.
  • [Exit]

ACT V, SCENE IV. Camp of the YORK in Anjou.

[Enter YORK, WARWICK, and others]

  • YORK:

  • Bring forth that sorceress condemn'd to burn.
  • [Enter JOAN LA PUCELLE, guarded, and a Shepherd]

  • Shepherd:

  • Ah, Joan, this kills thy father's heart outright!
  • Have I sought every country far and near,
  • And, now it is my chance to find thee out,
  • Must I behold thy timeless cruel death?
  • Ah, Joan, sweet daughter Joan, I'll die with thee!
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Decrepit miser! base ignoble wretch!
  • I am descended of a gentler blood:
  • Thou art no father nor no friend of mine.
  • Shepherd:

  • Out, out! My lords, an please you, 'tis not so;
  • I did beget her, all the parish knows:
  • Her mother liveth yet, can testify
  • She was the first fruit of my bachelorship.
  • WARWICK:

  • Graceless! wilt thou deny thy parentage?
  • YORK:

  • This argues what her kind of life hath been,
  • Wicked and vile; and so her death concludes.
  • Shepherd:

  • Fie, Joan, that thou wilt be so obstacle!
  • God knows thou art a collop of my flesh;
  • And for thy sake have I shed many a tear:
  • Deny me not, I prithee, gentle Joan.
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Peasant, avaunt! You have suborn'd this man,
  • Of purpose to obscure my noble birth.
  • Shepherd:

  • 'Tis true, I gave a noble to the priest
  • The morn that I was wedded to her mother.
  • Kneel down and take my blessing, good my girl.
  • Wilt thou not stoop? Now cursed be the time
  • Of thy nativity! I would the milk
  • Thy mother gave thee when thou suck'dst her breast,
  • Had been a little ratsbane for thy sake!
  • Or else, when thou didst keep my lambs a-field,
  • I wish some ravenous wolf had eaten thee!
  • Dost thou deny thy father, cursed drab?
  • O, burn her, burn her! hanging is too good.
  • [Exit]

  • YORK:

  • Take her away; for she hath lived too long,
  • To fill the world with vicious qualities.
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • First, let me tell you whom you have condemn'd:
  • Not me begotten of a shepherd swain,
  • But issued from the progeny of kings;
  • Virtuous and holy; chosen from above,
  • By inspiration of celestial grace,
  • To work exceeding miracles on earth.
  • I never had to do with wicked spirits:
  • But you, that are polluted with your lusts,
  • Stain'd with the guiltless blood of innocents,
  • Corrupt and tainted with a thousand vices,
  • Because you want the grace that others have,
  • You judge it straight a thing impossible
  • To compass wonders but by help of devils.
  • No, misconceived! Joan of Arc hath been
  • A virgin from her tender infancy,
  • Chaste and immaculate in very thought;
  • Whose maiden blood, thus rigorously effused,
  • Will cry for vengeance at the gates of heaven.
  • YORK:

  • Ay, ay: away with her to execution!
  • WARWICK:

  • And hark ye, sirs; because she is a maid,
  • Spare for no faggots, let there be enow:
  • Place barrels of pitch upon the fatal stake,
  • That so her torture may be shortened.
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Will nothing turn your unrelenting hearts?
  • Then, Joan, discover thine infirmity,
  • That warranteth by law to be thy privilege.
  • I am with child, ye bloody homicides:
  • Murder not then the fruit within my womb,
  • Although ye hale me to a violent death.
  • YORK:

  • Now heaven forfend! the holy maid with child!
  • WARWICK:

  • The greatest miracle that e'er ye wrought:
  • Is all your strict preciseness come to this?
  • YORK:

  • She and the Dauphin have been juggling:
  • I did imagine what would be her refuge.
  • WARWICK:

  • Well, go to; we'll have no bastards live;
  • Especially since Charles must father it.
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • You are deceived; my child is none of his:
  • It was Alencon that enjoy'd my love.
  • YORK:

  • Alencon! that notorious Machiavel!
  • It dies, an if it had a thousand lives.
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • O, give me leave, I have deluded you:
  • 'Twas neither Charles nor yet the duke I named,
  • But Reignier, king of Naples, that prevail'd.
  • WARWICK:

  • A married man! that's most intolerable.
  • YORK:

  • Why, here's a girl! I think she knows not well,
  • There were so many, whom she may accuse.
  • WARWICK:

  • It's sign she hath been liberal and free.
  • YORK:

  • And yet, forsooth, she is a virgin pure.
  • Strumpet, thy words condemn thy brat and thee:
  • Use no entreaty, for it is in vain.
  • JOAN LA PUCELLE:

  • Then lead me hence; with whom I leave my curse:
  • May never glorious sun reflex his beams
  • Upon the country where you make abode;
  • But darkness and the gloomy shade of death
  • Environ you, till mischief and despair
  • Drive you to break your necks or hang yourselves!
  • [Exit, guarded]

  • YORK:

  • Break thou in pieces and consume to ashes,
  • Thou foul accursed minister of hell!
  • [Enter CARDINAL OF WINCHESTER, attended]

  • CARDINAL OF WINCHESTER:

  • Lord regent, I do greet your excellence
  • With letters of commission from the king.
  • For know, my lords, the states of Christendom,
  • Moved with remorse of these outrageous broils,
  • Have earnestly implored a general peace
  • Betwixt our nation and the aspiring French;
  • And here at hand the Dauphin and his train
  • Approacheth, to confer about some matter.
  • YORK:

  • Is all our travail turn'd to this effect?
  • After the slaughter of so many peers,
  • So many captains, gentlemen and soldiers,
  • That in this quarrel have been overthrown
  • And sold their bodies for their country's benefit,
  • Shall we at last conclude effeminate peace?
  • Have we not lost most part of all the towns,
  • By treason, falsehood and by treachery,
  • Our great progenitors had conquered?
  • O Warwick, Warwick! I foresee with grief
  • The utter loss of all the realm of France.
  • WARWICK:

  • Be patient, York: if we conclude a peace,
  • It shall be with such strict and severe covenants
  • As little shall the Frenchmen gain thereby.
  • [Enter CHARLES, ALENCON, BASTARD OF ORLEANS, REIGNIER, and others]

  • CHARLES:

  • Since, lords of England, it is thus agreed
  • That peaceful truce shall be proclaim'd in France,
  • We come to be informed by yourselves
  • What the conditions of that league must be.
  • YORK:

  • Speak, Winchester; for boiling choler chokes
  • The hollow passage of my poison'd voice,
  • By sight of these our baleful enemies.
  • CARDINAL OF WINCHESTER:

  • Charles, and the rest, it is enacted thus:
  • That, in regard King Henry gives consent,
  • Of mere compassion and of lenity,
  • To ease your country of distressful war,
  • And suffer you to breathe in fruitful peace,
  • You shall become true liegemen to his crown:
  • And Charles, upon condition thou wilt swear
  • To pay him tribute, submit thyself,
  • Thou shalt be placed as viceroy under him,
  • And still enjoy thy regal dignity.
  • ALENCON:

  • Must he be then as shadow of himself?
  • Adorn his temples with a coronet,
  • And yet, in substance and authority,
  • Retain but privilege of a private man?
  • This proffer is absurd and reasonless.
  • CHARLES:

  • 'Tis known already that I am possess'd
  • With more than half the Gallian territories,
  • And therein reverenced for their lawful king:
  • Shall I, for lucre of the rest unvanquish'd,
  • Detract so much from that prerogative,
  • As to be call'd but viceroy of the whole?
  • No, lord ambassador, I'll rather keep
  • That which I have than, coveting for more,
  • Be cast from possibility of all.
  • YORK:

  • Insulting Charles! hast thou by secret means
  • Used intercession to obtain a league,
  • And, now the matter grows to compromise,
  • Stand'st thou aloof upon comparison?
  • Either accept the title thou usurp'st,
  • Of benefit proceeding from our king
  • And not of any challenge of desert,
  • Or we will plague thee with incessant wars.
  • REIGNIER:

  • My lord, you do not well in obstinacy
  • To cavil in the course of this contract:
  • If once it be neglected, ten to one
  • We shall not find like opportunity.
  • ALENCON:

  • To say the truth, it is your policy
  • To save your subjects from such massacre
  • And ruthless slaughters as are daily seen
  • By our proceeding in hostility;
  • And therefore take this compact of a truce,
  • Although you break it when your pleasure serves.
  • WARWICK:

  • How say'st thou, Charles? shall our condition stand?
  • CHARLES:

  • It shall;
  • Only reserved, you claim no interest
  • In any of our towns of garrison.
  • YORK:

  • Then swear allegiance to his majesty,
  • As thou art knight, never to disobey
  • Nor be rebellious to the crown of England,
  • Thou, nor thy nobles, to the crown of England.
  • So, now dismiss your army when ye please:
  • Hang up your ensign, let your drums be still,
  • For here we entertain a solemn peace.
  • [Exeunt]

ACT V, SCENE V. London. The palace.

[Enter SUFFOLK in conference with KING HENRY VI, GLOUCESTER and EXETER]

  • KING HENRY VI:

  • Your wondrous rare description, noble earl,
  • Of beauteous Margaret hath astonish'd me:
  • Her virtues graced with external gifts
  • Do breed love's settled passions in my heart:
  • And like as rigor of tempestuous gusts
  • Provokes the mightiest hulk against the tide,
  • So am I driven by breath of her renown
  • Either to suffer shipwreck or arrive
  • Where I may have fruition of her love.
  • SUFFOLK:

  • Tush, my good lord, this superficial tale
  • Is but a preface of her worthy praise;
  • The chief perfections of that lovely dame
  • Had I sufficient skill to utter them,
  • Would make a volume of enticing lines,
  • Able to ravish any dull conceit:
  • And, which is more, she is not so divine,
  • So full-replete with choice of all delights,
  • But with as humble lowliness of mind
  • She is content to be at your command;
  • Command, I mean, of virtuous chaste intents,
  • To love and honour Henry as her lord.
  • KING HENRY VI:

  • And otherwise will Henry ne'er presume.
  • Therefore, my lord protector, give consent
  • That Margaret may be England's royal queen.
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • So should I give consent to flatter sin.
  • You know, my lord, your highness is betroth'd
  • Unto another lady of esteem:
  • How shall we then dispense with that contract,
  • And not deface your honour with reproach?
  • SUFFOLK:

  • As doth a ruler with unlawful oaths;
  • Or one that, at a triumph having vow'd
  • To try his strength, forsaketh yet the lists
  • By reason of his adversary's odds:
  • A poor earl's daughter is unequal odds,
  • And therefore may be broke without offence.
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • Why, what, I pray, is Margaret more than that?
  • Her father is no better than an earl,
  • Although in glorious titles he excel.
  • SUFFOLK:

  • Yes, lord, her father is a king,
  • The King of Naples and Jerusalem;
  • And of such great authority in France
  • As his alliance will confirm our peace
  • And keep the Frenchmen in allegiance.
  • GLOUCESTER:

  • And so the Earl of Armagnac may do,
  • Because he is near kinsman unto Charles.
  • EXETER:

  • Beside, his wealth doth warrant a liberal dower,
  • Where Reignier sooner will receive than give.
  • SUFFOLK:

  • A dower, my lords! disgrace not so your king,
  • That he should be so abject, base and poor,
  • To choose for wealth and not for perfect love.
  • Henry is able to enrich his queen
  • And not seek a queen to make him rich:
  • So worthless peasants bargain for their wives,
  • As market-men for oxen, sheep, or horse.
  • Marriage is a matter of more worth
  • Than to be dealt in by attorneyship;
  • Not whom we will, but whom his grace affects,
  • Must be companion of his nuptial bed:
  • And therefore, lords, since he affects her most,
  • It most of all these reasons bindeth us,
  • In our opinions she should be preferr'd.
  • For what is wedlock forced but a hell,
  • An age of discord and continual strife?
  • Whereas the contrary bringeth bliss,
  • And is a pattern of celestial peace.
  • Whom should we match with Henry, being a king,
  • But Margaret, that is daughter to a king?
  • Her peerless feature, joined with her birth,
  • Approves her fit for none but for a king:
  • Her valiant courage and undaunted spirit,
  • More than in women commonly is seen,
  • Will answer our hope in issue of a king;
  • For Henry, son unto a conqueror,
  • Is likely to beget more conquerors,
  • If with a lady of so high resolve
  • As is fair Margaret he be link'd in love.
  • Then yield, my lords; and here conclude with me
  • That Margaret shall be queen, and none but she.
  • KING HENRY VI:

  • Whether it be through force of your report,
  • My noble Lord of Suffolk, or for that
  • My tender youth was never yet attaint
  • With any passion of inflaming love,
  • I cannot tell; but this I am assured,
  • I feel such sharp dissension in my breast,
  • Such fierce alarums both of hope and fear,
  • As I am sick with working of my thoughts.
  • Take, therefore, shipping; post, my lord, to France;
  • Agree to any covenants, and procure
  • That Lady Margaret do vouchsafe to come
  • To cross the seas to England and be crown'd
  • King Henry's faithful and anointed queen:
  • For your expenses and sufficient charge,
  • Among the people gather up a tenth.
  • Be gone, I say; for, till you do return,
  • I rest perplexed with a thousand cares.
  • And you, good uncle, banish all offence:
  • If you do censure me by what you were,
  • Not what you are, I know it will excuse
  • This sudden execution of my will.
  • And so, conduct me where, from company,
  • I may revolve and ruminate my grief.
  • [Exit]

  • GLOUCESTER:

  • Ay, grief, I fear me, both at first and last.
  • [Exeunt GLOUCESTER and EXETER]

  • SUFFOLK:

  • Thus Suffolk hath prevail'd; and thus he goes,
  • As did the youthful Paris once to Greece,
  • With hope to find the like event in love,
  • But prosper better than the Trojan did.
  • Margaret shall now be queen, and rule the king;
  • But I will rule both her, the king and realm.
  • [Exit]